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                  <text>| TERMS: $1.60 per Year
( Credit SrBK.irrrox. tl.TS.

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun.

ORNO tSTROb ,|
I tWT&lt;l»
I_____

NUMBER li

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, JANUARY 7, 1882.
ivy wind storm passed over
rn portion of the county desasiderable property.
16 E. 1 Feighner made his proposal

OBOHOLOG'S ?0B 1881.
JAXUR.T.
f A bright meter passe &gt;ver the vil­
lage, causing wondermen or stargoz&lt;sra.—Amos Hall of Rutla suicided.
[nick
9 Joe. Comfort died
‘ ' con*
sumption.
Isatfefact8 The inspirator safely a
orily affixed to A. W. Old’s mgine.
4 Isaac Smith of Nortn Castleton,
sent $16,60 to Buffers of Noi In county,
Lee sold Mb int

to take { 00 ‘for an old tin-type, of
Senator! •urkee.
bank burglarized by several
small bo]
36 Mur iy convicted of penury in
the Smol will case.
29 Bur irs infest Woodland and
Vermont
juke.
2 RoduJ 'aylor died, aged 33 years.’
3 Geo. 1! nerton’s barn, In Wyndland HtrucI iy lightning.
0 Grouni broke for Dickinson’s
mill.
20 The ©
visible in Nashville,
20 .UM
Messi
inly, Flint and Jenson
arn)8ted
d with bribery.

in the

V Mr. Ransee, father of M

Chee.
Bass, found dead in bed.
0 Wood wassoscarco in As« rria that
the sweet ones had to ait in’ the boys
lajw
uqrn to
io keep
Keep warm.
waiui.
t
11 A horse belonging to Heiy Webb
1 was killed by a falling tree. ;
,
. 18 Geo. Marshall’s house in Maple f 3 BusinesdiInces draped in mourn(Jrove. damaged by fire.
I ing on receil
of Gartields assassinaI 14 Business booming, and ibetttreets . tion.
I filled with teams hauling logs.
4 Everyboa i celebrated at Thornap16 Esq. Parady received his cXnmis- pie and Mor J

sion as postmaster.
8 The old 1 E. church moved to its
I 9ff Nashville Dramatic assochtion present locati i on Main St
i reorganized.
13 Ivy Lodi i of Knights of Pythias,
31 Senator Durkee presented t4 the inaugurated I knshville.
Senate, a petition from the Barri Co.
13 DickPd b’s mill at Morgan desvoters asking for a prohibitory an|snd- troyed by firu.
ment
16 Selah M js, thrown frqm his
38 Mrs. Sophronia Troyer of Maple . buggy, and hi &gt;llar bone broken.
GtQve, died.
39 C. C. Wc tt sold his hotel prop27 The Barney mill house in Rnlti- erty to A. 8. !
moroburned, also A. J. Hardy’s heuse
dedicated.
27 Masonic
north of town.
n the M. E. church
38 Brick wc
I 98 Postmaster Parody took posacecompleted.
tsion of the postofficc.
&gt;per arrested for lar30 Alniertim
39 A slight fire, damaging Levi
ceny,
Smith’s hom»® just east of town.
}C8T.
31 The McKelvy school house burnI A. S. Foots■ &gt;k possession of tho
Wolcott Hoose. 1
FEnnuART.
9 Mrs. Lucia 1 ’aylor died, aged 54
1 Snow blockade on this diviaion,
years.
(and no mail came.
6 C. C. Wolco old hi* hardware
8 Dick Graham married.
buildings and stl to C. L. Glasgow.
0 Baptist Sunday school organized.
9 Mcrt. Cooper tenred to Ionia for
7 Al. VanNocker bought the Daughertys building and opened a grocery. three months.
10 The dry kill the M. E. church
8 The trial erf Banta and Edwards,
tried before Esq. Killen, who ordered burned, 5,000 feet lumber destroyed.
I1 Divorces g ted to ^Clarence
Bachcllor, JEdna, ilmcs and Juouisa
0 Senator Durkee sick with Hemor­ Roberts.
14 Jacob Culp
turned in Tupper
rhage of the lungs.
[glO H. T. Davidson’s stock seised by Lake, Woodland.
15 FredApplc^ commenced buildDeputy Sheriff Lee.
[ 12 Hrs-Geo. Marshall of Maple Grove ing his brick horn
30 Dr. Winn pw asted J.L.Sigsbce’s
1C John barker sentenced to board dental practice.-;
purchased I&gt;. C.
vith tho Sheriff for 50 days and pay
Griffith’s remaioini lock.
►300 for stealing wheat
27 New iron bri&lt; arrived.
21 The jury on the bridge case award
29 Diphtheria a Justing, and the
lira. Holston $150.
angel of death hoi nfc over the city.
MARCR.
1 The Hoosier School Master played
it the opera house by home talent.
4 Dr. Wickhauf and dead in hie
8 Sarah Bernhardt passed through office.
•
his village with her retinue.
16 Wm. King’s -W i in Maple Grove
9 Minnie, daughter of Stephen destroyed by a whra rind.
. 13 Andy Plum bind in effigy.
Bprinkett, died.
10 Afire at Harry Jones’ house, dam­
14 The first $100« is raised here for
fee light.
the fire sufferers. 1
1 14 Village election. Everybody ex21 Council appoixM 1 a health officer,
ixeited, 973 votes were polled. Grand and ordered all Glthr ] paces cleansed,
tow wow in the evening.
22 Mrs. Alex. Prfa^ pll down cellar
। 17 The old nud new council locked
at J. Parkey’s and tm ko both arms.
torus at the council rooms. The now
I succeeded the
fame off victorious.
late Dr. Wickham h Is practice.
( 33 Nathan Weeks of Maple Grov
30 Memorial servi I on the death of
the doors locked to keep' the crowd
put.
.

30 Rev. Jones closed his pastoral la-

24 Wm. Spier of Kalamo lost an aim
u his saw mill.
29 Geo. Miller of Nqrth Castleton
ied, aged 75.
131 John Lake drowned at Vermont,
April.
Martin Texter of Irving, - killed by
oj. Trego.
Trego-arrested and

*4 Township election, 549 votes’cast.

"

11 Senator Durkee died, aged fifty

Garfield. Business ■ ftes closed.
29 Mrs. S. E. Hart A died.
5 Mart Stevens cooa
7 The fire relief fuj
$700.
10 Harvey Troxellfi
at the Scipio mill, bred
13 The extension of
Streets opened.
13 P. Holler’s grist n
operation.
18 Geo. Francin sold
lot in Brooklyn.
33 A 44 lb fish takes

•shop burned.
had reached

from a scaffold
ng his leg.
lain and Evart

commenced
house and

&gt;m Tornnpple
harlie Brown
13 Obsequies of Senator ;Dut koe atkilled at, Brown &amp;l Spa ling’s croquet
^Bnded by Legislature, in a body.
10 Greenback Senatorial committee factory at Hastings.
at Powlee’
34 Spinning common
met at the Wolcott House and nomina­
mill.
ted R. J. Grant,
SO D. R. Cook of Hasting, nominated
XOVJtl
by die Republicans.
15 The Trego mv
91 Mra. Julia Bigelow died at Chic­ cod.
ago, whero she was visiting friends.
23 Miss Nellie Wi
25 Hon. D. R. Cook elected Senator
to fill vacancy.
the effects of being I
26 Ground brokenjlor the new M. E.
97 The new M. E.
. church.
3 Trego sentenced to &gt;
30 The Smoko will case concluded,
years.
and the will pronounced a fraud.
7 Harry' Jones stabbod
10 Johannes Reuks 1
4 N. S. Boothe of Kalamo, died.
killed by falling from U
5 Geo. Gillis died, aged 1V years.
?7 A child of Layar
&amp;

ed, aged 90.
; died from
aged 81.
dedicated.

LIFE IN NASHVILLE

LOCAL BIBBLE-GABBLE ,

the machine tuned up again for

GLEANINGS HERE AID THERE.

And Pe renal Cktt-Chat.

And Her Environs.

installment of cold chisels through
again bringing things to grief.
It may be of interest to all late sol­
diers of Michigan, or rather all credit­
ed t&lt;| this state in any branch of the .
service during the late war, ac least to
those not aware of die fact, that the
book entitled "Michigan in die War” is
is now being published, and any per­
son credited os above can procure a copy
free of charge byJ addressing the Ad­
jutant General of Mich., atr Lansing,
who will forward the neccessary in­
structions.
Another old land mark gone. About
noon, on Monday last, the building
known for over forty years as Herrings
tavern, standing exactly at tho center
of Kalamo was discovered to be on fire.
The alarm was given, but before help
arrived, the entire structure was in
fiames and past, saving, but a few doors
mid windows werh wrenched from the
building, and most of the contents,
saved. The fire is supposetl- to have
originated in the garret by reason of ,
some defect in the stove pipe or chim­
ney. The premises were owned rfud
occupied bv Mr. Norton, whose loss
must be corftderable, os it was a large

ILD CONTRIBUTOR.

Henry Roe is building an ice house.
18 C 8
The ice crop is npe, and ready for
Tumi
sw leaf.
the saw and tongs.
His News.
—Small boys, skates and hand sleds
Nave ol
Last Monday morning, a daughter
Its and form'new.
’hit old
mingle joyously together now-a-days. was born to Mrs. C. W. Wickham.
bft us as it began with
Mrs. Libbie -McDerby ia* visiting
—The Turkey that has safely passed
A
kind
w
her
parents
and
friends
at
Parma.
i
its nothing and makes
through the holidays without loosing
Geo. Morgan and wife started Mon-I
He more a
its head, is congratulating itsself over
day for Plattville, Wis. to visit friembl
[The hoik
ing over the schools
its narrow escape.
Eli Strong of Kalamazoo, Mich.j
—Chas. Scheldt opened his saloon called on relatives here, the present
cd the holidays by
again on Wednesday notwithstanding
1 with n mantle of
the injunction of the council to the
F. C. Courier audjpanjily of
contrary. Are our laws good for any­
Creek spent the/ * iys with
- • Yrjyi
IcKjim
ic Nashville suburbs
thing, or can anyone run a saloon,
I
together for a new
whether .they have asnfficientLond or here.
The
ticket
not V
over $200 Morfl
of Bellevue tpwn—Now that tho weather is so unfav­ ■hesdhy.
S
sgonei iun Arbor to visit a
orable to out door amusements, a little
John ClancJ
ightcr.’
game called "Ring
h*8 “®de Its brother Orr#H
hVintej id wife of P&lt;itterappearance, and the parlors are fast be­ vicinity.
&lt;
jen£ Nt Cears with Mr.andi^cn co®P«
ing supplied with the neccessary ap­
ktwcll i
Mercury Iuqm
alamo.
.
purtenances for enjoying the harmless to succumb to^
c^l toany discoverpastime.
go down a few a
iiniVer wagon over a
—C. P. Larabee. of Cellar Creek, was
Mrs. G. A. Tr
jScWfiJF deGnind Rapids, acin town on Thnrodny, looking fotE. B. Wilson visited
lay1
Trumble, who taught school in this Wednesday and TIj^
_&gt;d by hiojmother Is on a visit
vicinity last winter, and is ’wanted at
If the weather keepi
_ JK grand I.-it her H. J. St-icking.
Williamston to await trial tor adultery.. will be in good sbnpe
■"‘"’The year seems to have s^&gt;t out to
He was bound over to the circuit tourt wood you promised,next week.
giveus a slight.taste uf winter, as it
and escaped the officers Wednesday,
The social at Rev. A- D. Newtons on lias been cool, snowy weather so far.
Wednesday • last, was well attended,
while looking for bail.
"Wild Biir-iam don’t fowl the Hawk
and
everybody enjoyed a pleasant time any more. Ronson : the Hawk broke
—The occurrence of Monday morn­
The Hastings house is the boss place loose and wounded ‘him ‘in a tei rible
ing will probably serve to make young
boys who go skating on the river, more to get a square meal and gentlcnmnly manner.
Charley Slosson of West Kalamo
cautious. We understand that there attendauce, and we know whereof we
spent the holidays with hla parents,
are many places in the current of the speak.
Tho Nashville Dramatic Club is be­ Charley js teaching school in nortliriver where the ice is unsafe, and
youths who arc adverse to watery ing again resurrected, and will soon east Castleton.
Ed. Reese, wife and family, of Rntgraves should shun them as they would place an interesting drama on the
boards.
land, formerly residents of West Kal­
sin.
Wm. Eckard and wife, of Grass amo, spent the new year day among
—The time has passed when any
I^kc, who were visiting friends here their old Kalamo friends.
'
should come down with the small pox,
From appearances Ztlio trial of that
who might have been exposed by the during the holidays, returned home on
Mondaj'.
noted
assassin
Guitean
is
likely'
to
young man who was stopping in Maple
The Pittsburg Sunday Leader quotes; create a sad precedent in the trial of
Grove a few weeks ago, and as he did
Mr. Martin Karg, Silver Creek, Minn- any criminal in pny court hereafter.
not have it either, the health officers [
cured a badly wounded horse with St.
Asa P. Goodwin formerly of ‘West
might give the persons quarantined
JhcobsOil.
Kalamo. now of Potterville, began the
thftir freedom papers, and let them be­
A special meeting of Laurel Lodge
new year by leading to the bymenial
come citizens again.
will be held Tuesday evening, Jan. 10,
—G. W. Strong and son Wnljer, of to make nrraugemeutH for installation altar one of Pottcrvillo’s fair daugh­
Bridgewater, Ohio, arrived here *bn n
ters.
of officers.
Levi Evans lost a pet sheep a few
visit to the editor hereof Saturday eve­
The dance at thq opera house
ning. The latter celebrated the event Monday night was not so largely at­ days ago by ite getting killed under a
straw
stack, from which ho got 36 lbs,
on Monday morning by getting through tended as tho Christmas dance, but a
6 oz.. of tallow without reifflcring the
an air hole into the river, ;but through
good time was enjoyed.
carcass.
Hie kindly assistance of Wm. Baugh­
Miss Belle McCormick, of Grand
The holidays are past and the stock­
man and George Galatin. was rescued Rapids, and Miss May Roberta of Hast­
from the water, a wetter if not a wiser ings were guests of Miss Bello Tru­ ings are all being "darned.” especially
those that failed to get tlieir quota of
lad.
man’s on Wednesday.
good things, and will now be put to
—An association known as Hie Cen­
W. I. Marble, principal of the Au­
tral Union Telegraph Co., has been gusta schools, and his family, wlio better use.
The writer is in receipt of a copy of
formed here, with Arthur Stanton as were spending tlie holidays with friends
"Michigan ami its Resources” a book
Supt,, and Richard Drake,as General here, returned home this week.
issued by the Cofiimissioncr of Immi­
Manager. A line has been formed run­
Jesse Chance living on the state road
ning from Mrs. Drake’s to A Stanton’s, two miles east of Hosmer’s comers is gration, and from a careful examina­
and several students are patronising dangerously sick with Bright’s disease, tion Of its contents can pronounce it a
work of great merit.
tho company. The enterprise of the and his recovery is doubtful.
Mrs. Reynolds, an old pioneer of
village will crop ont, even among the
Albert Parker, aged 85 years, died at
south Kalamo, a lady of 86, uf remark­
young people of the ^lace.''
1 charlotte. Jan. 8. He hod lived on a
good
health for one of her years, is
—One cold morning this week, just ] farm adjoining
. tho city
. nearly
- forty
. spending a short period in visiting
after break of &lt;tyiy, a man was seen j years, ane was well known and respecther old home and friends which she
nioviog slowly toward tho saloon, and | e&lt;^Y all­
left a few years ago.
The sermon delivered New Years, by
looking wistfully up and down Main
""
There is a festive, though modest,
St., and resting his gaze upon each Rev. Bissell, was excellent, and we in
book agent perambulating Knlamo,
pump., Presently ho got to the door, tended to give a brief synopsis of the who makes it a practice to dilij.ently
and turning around shouted to the same in this issue, but unavoidable inquire nt each house stopped at wheth­
only man he saw on tho street, *1 circumstances have prevented.
er there are any girls at the next
Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Truman will en­
guess there ain’t any water in town,”
house, and if so. how many.
and immediately disappeared - behind * tertain the Christian social, on Wed­
A son and daughter of Levi Evans’,
nesday
evening,
Jan.
11th.
They
ex
­
the screen.
aged respectively seven and nine years
tend 3 very' cordial invitation to all, •
—Freddie Baker was made one of
of age, living on the Bellevue-Kolamo
the happiest boys in North America on and a pleasant time is expected.
town line, have, during the past fall
Last Tuesday, Miss Hortiu Osman
Thursday last ;by a present from his
gathered pared, dried and sold with­
celebrated her seventh birthday by a
parents, a splendid organ. It was a
out other aid, 819.00 worth of dried ap­
grand
party, the joys of which were
birthday present and J^reddy lias be­
ples, getting 6 cents per pound.
gan at once to take .music lessons. If participated in by about twenty-five
Mr. Chairman, I move that "Silver
more parents would do likewise and of her little lady friendly, who each Star” and all other starts, as well as
try and make home attractive for their presented her with a handsome pres­
those
not stars, designate the school
boys there would be less street rowdy­ ent.
The edidor was taken on Wednesday house in district No. 1 of Kalamo as
ism and fewer boys would bo ruined
the
Matteson
school house, ia honor of
by die evil association of bad com­ with PhlifituscopetusphilandecochetUM- George Matteson, the only remaining
tonsiletuar^We think that is what the
pany.
pioneer
living
in the vicinity, and as
doctors call it,—and has been confined
—Quite a member of our citizens who i
to the house oversiuoe, consequently no time was tlie first name given it years
signed the petition to bust the corpor­
.
excoseses are necessary regarding the ago.
ation and let ail those wealthy farmers
Representative E. 8. Lacey of this
merits of this issue.
out are begining to get their eyes open,
In eighteen hundred and eigHly-two, district is fourth on two committees of
and are begining to think that it may
Hurrah! Hurrah! In eighteen hun­ th6 House. Evidently our worthy M.
be a little game that is being played on dred and eighty-two, Hurrah! Hurrah! C, docs not belong to the "ring,” or
them, and the taxes that these farmers
In eighteen hundred and eighty-two. else hs would have secured several
are paying will have to be made up by The Nkws will prosper and the pat­ good berths. Never mind, we don’t
themselves, and those remaining in rons too, and labor together their duty fear but be will have a clean record
tho corporation. Several have already . to do; delinquents pay your dues.
when he comes back to his constitu­
decided to withdraw their names from
Mr. and Mrs. F. C. and F. T. Boise ent*.
the petition.
started on Wednesday night for Chica­
—Tnwuieeting of the Homeopathic go, where they are to meet a sister of
MedicalSociety
“
. at the Wolcott House
. tjie Roue Bros., and from thence go to gid finished her week’s work and was
—The Methodists have observed this
week as a week of prayer.

Blair;

VERMONTVILLE.
Di. Adams says there is a case of
small pox in Kalamo.
H. J. Martin whs presented with an
elegantstreet lamp, Christmas by life
employees.
Willie Hill fell from a fencM on Sun­
day anil dislocated his thumb. The
doctors here foiled to set it properly,
and be was taken to Ann Arbor, but .
no better success, the thumb won’*
stay set.
Tho oyster supper for the benefit of
tho M. E. church, last Friday night net­
ted $8.
Last Saturday evening tho class uf
'78 of the Vermontville high whool held
.11 reunion at the home of Jno. Srevena, 1
just cost of this village, presented Mrs.
Steveus with u silver castor mid pickle
dish, made serions depredations on'oyftters.aud bad a good time generally; ’

LOCAL MATTERS.
Tax Sales Notice.
«

fourto-nth d.yul no-.m-y, A. v.

the. bank
of Barry Xverua Cn .al Na.hT|’.leM(eh.. &lt; ,11__ i_ _

IWrintlou.
AJonxo Ti»LU. Lots A. W. PMIIt p» addition,
M. L.Cooper.. LdSSavi
Thojnpaon Jone*. l»t T3.

NEW MEAT MAKfiT.
I hare opened a Meat Market '•next dw to
my Bakery, and sba!l keep meatfcot every &lt;!eM-rAlow it tbc lowest price*. Buy of me am’
vavefrom 2 to 3 ct*. on each pound of
Price* on other Meat* correBpoiidipg^low^

SWCollara, CuH*. Tics nud BUk Wipes ir.
latent Hylca nt
A. L. Riscr’a.
. ry Think of part favors and don’t forget
your failings gel your Harucea nt
A. R- Wolcott’s. ..
W ARNING.
All jH-'reonv ore cautknied against buying
any note bearing inv rignature, as T bare reason
U1 udieve there U farged pepers funding
against me. 14-17
James Hunt

W. O. Edward*’.
Z3T The place to get the Stoutest, Nerteat
andocat ilann-es Is at
A. R- Wolcott’s.

MUST BE SOLD.
will

bring. VJT11 be sold on time 1

LUMBER! LUMBER!
Costoui Saving and ButLUng Mat&lt;.rial fnrnUhed on abort doUcv, at our new tnUl In Mspic Grove.
James 8. Perry.
J

One 8 Spring Doable Buggy or Wi

i

¥

about to return home, she demanded
her wages $1.50, but the man would I
pay her only one dollar, saying her I
'
father owed him far service of boar,—
fifty rents, which he would retain, I
telliug tor to settle*riH
Crowell Brow., tonueriy ol KaUmo
CUMltiig
H. A. Barber; Asst. Supt., oowof W»U»».old thrmben. bh&gt; nor
'
iworth; Heste, b'. D. Haw- npu&gt; taek ol f
their

wort u

:son for 12 on Wednesday last, was well attended. j Villisca, Iowa, to visit their father.
Papers of interest and importance to i 3^ party wni take a trip through
n tramp.
the society were read and discussed, Kansas before they return home.
Johnstown and a pleasaut-und profitable time ws»
At a meeting of the teachersand pt­
enioyed by all in attendance. The so­ fleers of the M. E. Snndav school held
Eestman ciety baa held quarterly meetings since
olio wing

mill.

building,

W. G. E-lwaris'.
announcement.

John Dorland, an cxper!&lt;'T4c*d hala
proprietor erf th? N.uhvHle ’!*kery.
lock of Bread. finite Busk.
nokbaof all kinds alwayn m&gt; band,
in every rtyte All who furor in» *
p,

Soo w.

MONEY W.
nw. ud I &gt;

c-’

�main line.

with rilr.r lx.

hat a Paris nergeon
tnd dollars for rethe oom of a wornry good loosing at

k, let them not forget that good aur»and delicate care for the riek and

Hoatiiig Stoves, Cook Stoves i

Until similarly situated none can fully
realise the horrors of oon valescenco, un­
less some good angel, with placid brow
and smiling lips, stands Cy the ride
ready at the right moment to step down
aud trouble the watere continually, until
the right spring is touched that will
send healing ano strength through tho
languid veins.—Mrs. H&amp;nry Ward Beech­
er, in Christian Union.

ALL SIZES
EES AND PRICES TO SUIT.

__The Yankees have outdonw the with the whole routine . of domestic
Boaght for cash and can kxi&gt; WILL bo sold cheap. Call and nee them and yo»
Xcrplu. In » tthna. Island
k"“« *“&gt;“• Tk. g~will bo convinced. A large assortment to aeloct from among them
_____
•__ i________________
~.,r
Us attentions
and anwearving
and unwearying
nalieuoe
patience
quarry
a single
alone has been
cut Ba
outattentions
that is about the shape ai the obelisk so necessary to nurse the invalid back
to health and strength in the gentlest,
. Uhd much larger.
*
most unobtrusive manner, are too little
. --------IN THE MARKET-------—Alexander Hamilton in hu lifetime
thought of; yet courageous and effectual
effort
is among the lessons that a moth­
■ in the city of New York hi honor of tho
The
Mock Delusion.
er
should
begin
darly
to
teach
her
B thirteen Statei of tho Union, and they
daughters. A little girl with quick sen­
Cal! and Mt ik anyway. I also have a full
- are still standing■
The delusion which prevailed twenvy
conaialing of
B
—A daughter of Lieutenant W. it sibilities, and sympathy for suffering, and more years ago regarding the nuk,
will lay these lessons to heart and weave
Foster, of Lowell, Mjuw., was born on them in with growing knowledge much nurial value of what is known as' muck 1
the day President Garfield w&amp;? elected, soonvr than fl , the rudiments were not has lost some of its force, but It still ex­
wan taken ill the dAy ho was shot and
among
farmers,
especially
unfolded before her until she had seen ists
died the day he was buried.
more of the pleasures of life, •through
’——** those new in the industry. Among tha
—Ln the old Rogers baryihg-ground society, and her interest iin individual newspapers “ the great value of muck, Both Iron and Wood, also pipe for lame, and a
near Chatham, N. C.. an oak tree has sufferings had not been i brought
into to farmers" is. a standing text from
1
other things. Tho
|nd unselfish. which .a labored sermon is preached
grown on a grave in which a person was action while more tender*
Ki no skill or once or twice a year. Twenty-five or
buried seventy-five years ago. and the
It is true that some B
■Kwuman'A thirty years ago Dr. Dana, a Lowell
. tree is now five feet in diameter.
sympathy with this paB
make chemist, employed in one of the dyeing
■ —A ship canal in Spain, from tho duty, and will probablB
■ flfet all establishments of that city, which sup­ I&lt; under the management of ALBERT
Bay
Biscay to tho Mediterranean, great attainments in thiiB
SElXlCK, * man of ;
plies the material for these sermons, icdee. who can do yon a first-daas job of any
■I/EXkFw
the
more
reason
that,
ba
through the valley of the Garonne and
ujj kind. Please call anc
and, will continue to do so perhaps for uiywrlf will show yo« goods and l»e pleased1 to sell job anything in
the Aude, has been ciphered down to a and unwearied and pB
lino you
the next half century. That book is full
coat of $140,000,000, and there is a fair mothers should endeaiB
of errors and absurdities, and has led
daughters should so farjB
prospect of its accomplishment.
more
fanners
into
incurring
serious
ex
­
principles of good nurriB
—A farmer in San Bernardino Coun­ who may bothrown
penditures without corresponding roty, California, set lire to a pile of brush. when they are mistreBi:
I teips than any book on .manure over Double Hardware, West Side Main St., Nashville,
A heavy gust of wind spread it with in­ shall not absolutely so®)
►
'-”-^y of muck consists
iin the error of,
dredible rapidity, until it spread over a and ignorance, or go t^Bi,
ling it as manure,
. tract qf country obout ^four miles wide starvation that must bMil
. turns spontaneousby torw-rtwelve long, and was at last
ut cost to the farmsurrounded by those
accounts «UQ_j3»gtagf '
Mok” is usually apthrough ignorance, an Am
—Uephas Thayer, of Medway, Maia.. standing some of thiB^l
Runctious product
[£n»m thT&amp;
noWin his ninety-third year, attended nursing.
Bid tho black mud
tho funeral ceremonies of President
lakes and frog
One can easily tell iBa
Garfield. Ho also attended the funeral instinctive talent for Bw
ilWpies greatly in
no two^L401!'
I ^Kmical compoof President Washington in 1709, being them for a few momcaR
□^Kken from difthen elevon years old, and is still vig­ or by th? side of ont-BB
orous, both mentally and physically.
The advoconvalescent stage. ^^B
OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE i
jl^Mters upon the
—One of the new London bubbles ia ticalarly to those mu^^B
■
.
b
u«
say in regard
the . “Pure Beverage Company^ formed illness—weak and.jyf-'1
V
important
The
^Hlcations; with
for the purpose oi manufacturing and through great ertBb 91
Kether it be made
. promoting the use of pure hcallh-giv certain class of pers&lt;BBK
^vegetable debris
ing, non-intoxieiittag beverages, pos­ rustle of a silk dres»—
sessing such stimulating and invigor­ never be heard in tb.e sick-i _ _many * ®mck fs n 1ac^“Jal decomposition.BNFmanure, whether it
ating properties uj shall be an induce­ —is to one very weak almost u£3MM|
Kat meadow or from the
ment to their popular adoption as sub­ ble. Loud talking, sympathy cxf^HHQ
__
pts of a dried-up frog
statutes for alcoholic dri^gs.”
in an off-hand way, because the cSflfef
thinks it the proper thing to db, but
. —The British Board of Customs is
A
endeavoring to prevent tho introduction which has no heart in it, and a long list
U—Z~TTT
TTTT A i—
B of the Colorado beetle into England. A of inquiries, rapidly uttered, with no expense of time and labor which tho r B , TTTA
IB fright-has been caused by - the rumor pause between for an answer: “What’s
■ that Irishmen in the West' were gath- the matter? What does the ddetor say?
What could given much attention to muck, and I
■ ing potato beetles and securing them in Have you any appetite?
instituted a series of experiments I
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETUNG
I small boxes for transportation to Ea- you relish most—a little soup?’some have
broth? a good bit of hot steak?” etc. with it in the laboratory and in the (
■ gland, ivhere they were to be turned
All this rattled off in a way that irritates
H-' loose to prey upon English crops.
and rasps the nerves like the filing of a modifications in which it is found
—A quantity of bees,- destined for saw.
upon the New England, and we
■ Ontario, have been received in London
With transient callers one can bear it, say now what we have often said before, j
■ from Cyprus. They were let out near
,_
_
because such calls arc not often long. it is a material which, in general, farm- 1
|B London for a Uy. and afterward re- But if this were the usual tone of every­ era can not afford to spend much time
We believe 11.
the
is detied to come
■ packed for the remainder of the jour- day, from those on whose care the sick upon. U it had absolute or potential • u rrnneral use
hi Ktrnnernl
Cull and gee them.
euera‘ neo.
UhC■ noy. They are conveyed in small boxes, person is thrown, it would be intolera­ value as manure, the wet mud from I 1,110
■ partly covered with perforated metal,
ble. However, there is a drop of com­ meadows can not be hauled long dis­
■ and are provided wi h honey anil water.
fort and some compensation in every tances with profit, but it has not under i
■ A similar consignment of this unusual
dark corner.
Usually those who have any circumstances manurial value. The
I freight was successfully forwarded to no sympathy with
the sick or talent for peat of bogs, as freshly taken out, aver­ Hastings, Mich., Sept. 15th, 1881.
.
Canada last year.
j
nursing them are not often tempted to ages of water fully ninety per cent., and
I ■ —Paper currency is regarded with enter
a load of this of 2,000 pounds gives but ;
the room.
B .aspecind favor by the people of Japan.
ji
One of the most important things to a couple of hundred pounds of dry 'w»
,9 it no doubt possesses inany advantages.
-j
/*"\ "T/’S
h""
bear in mind when ministering to the humus of the barn. If through inexpe- ( I
I buVimmunity from fraud is not one of sick is to ask as few questions as possi­ rience or want of close observation a
I them. Counterfeit notes are very ble. Lot judgment, instinct, end close farmer bocks up his cart to a mud-hole,
plentifully in Osaka/ where ns many as
dry in summer, he loads into it a sub­
I fifty and sixty a day have lately been observation toll if sponging the head and ______________
_______
Fall and Winter Goods are arriving every diyi Due prepvalueless. Wa_ I
hands will be a comfort, and, if needed, stance which is usually
■ detected. Many have also been circu- do it without asking a question, and do Ihave
_____________
" farmers
____ ~ hard at work,. arution is half the battle of life, and nnticipatoff the needs of
seen many
■ lated in Tokio. but, in spite of extra it gently and noiselessly. Turn the pil­ after havimr.
.
,
1 , ° - ..
haying, ni»on
upon a denosit
deposit of this nnna­
■ precaution and vigilance, the source or low on which the head lies, or which ture, and have often had the pleasure of (»ur customers, we are “laving in a good supplr of the necessources whence they emanate have not may support it in the back of the chair, saving them much toil by proving on tho caries for protection and comfort against the reais of the fast
yet been discovered.
or put a fresh, cool one in its place while spot the worthlessness of the substance approaching winter.
’ —A rival to the Standard Oil Com­ tho one removed is airing, but do it so they were endeavoring to utilize. A
pany Of Pennsylvania is said to lie softly and with such tender touch that substance holding seventy per cent, of
A better stock of Boots and Shoes can not ie found anygrowing up in California, where vast the patient is not disturbed-, None but clear sand and thirty per cent of black where.
Clothing a specialty.
quantities of undeveloped petroleum those who have suffered for the lack of mold is “one well calculated to de­
Huts and Caps of the latest styles.
exist. The walers of Santa Barbara such grateful, unobtrusive attentions ceive." It looks rich, and is tempting
channel are covered for miles with can realize their value and comfort.
to many who desire to increase their
Ladies and Misses Cloaks and Dolmans.
crude oil that ia seeping away, and the
A little of this
Let ono with no knowledge of how to manurial resources.
Children’s Knit sacques.
hollows in the mountain sides are fill­ act come in and attempt these kind material put into a tumbler and stirred
ing with asphaltum, produced by this offices, and mark the difference. With up with much water at once reveals it­
Printa, from 5 cents to 8 cents.
seepage. A few capitalists are reported a loud voice, and rapid movements, self, as the sand settles to the bottom,
Dress Goods in variety and shades to ait the most
to be buying np all this oil territory, so “ Here, lets change your pillow—your and the black vegetable matter floats
fastidious.
as to obtain a monopoly of the prod uc- head will be cooler. Raise your head above.
tion on the Pacific coast, and to their while I remove it, and give it a good
Tho true value of muck is well under­ ■ Our aim is to deal justly with everebody, ani if we don’t do
efforts must be ascribed the lack of full shaking up,” and with energy sufficient stood among chemists, or at least it
The lighest market
information on the subject.
to knead a batch of bread the kindly but ought to be. It really holds no availa­ the fair thing, we ask you to make us.
10,000 lbs. Drbd Apples, 10,­
—The cedars of Lebanon have suf­ too boisterous friend pulls out the pil­ ble plant food, although it contains some price will be paid for produce.
nitrogen
and
carbonaceous
elements.
low
with
a
jerk
that
sets
tho
head
throb
­
fered from vandal visitors. The Gov­
000 bus. Corn wanted in exchange for goods, also 500 solid
ernor General has therefore built a wall bing, and with much noise and rapid These do not exist in it in available
around the cedar grove of Becherrc, motion beats and shakes the pillow, and forms, and con not be brought into that cords of stove wood, seasoned.
and. although the cedars will be acces­ as roughly pushes it, freshened and state at a cost which will under ordinary­
With two of the best clerks in the country, ^eare not only
sible to travelers wishing to visit them, cooled, to bo sure, behind the drooping conditions warrant transportation and
the erection of tents and establishment heat!, with a vehemence altogether out manipulation. Muck has a certain value ready to serve you, but take pleasure in terving you in
as
an
absorbent
of
liquid
manure,
and,
of encampments will not be permitted of place in the sick room. If one could
whatever way we can. Give us a call.
within this enclosure, except in such note the sufferer’s pulse before this it may pay to procure and dry it for
Very greatful for past favors we respectfully ask a continu­
places as may be pointed out by the “ mighty rushing mind” swept into the such purposes ? but to meet this want it
guard. No fires may be lighted in the room, and compare it with what it will must lie convenient to tho barn, and of ance of your patronage.
vicinity of the trees, and all cooking be after the pillow is twitched out, and good guality. Fanners can not afford
operations must be carried on outside this "nergetic .shaking up has been ac­ to be deluded or led astray on any point,
ef the enclosure. Three of tho largest complished, and the victim is permit­ and therefore it is imoortant that the
cedars were recently burned through ted to lay the head back in peace, she true value of what is called muck should
the carelessness of servants attached to would readily comprehend the import­ bo understood.—Boston Journal of Chem­
_____
________
the suites of travelers. It is prohibited ance of quiet, gentle ways in a sick istry.
to cut branches or sprigs.
room.
Predlcitions for the Coming Winter.,
The
next
important
step
ia
to
find
—As the down train on the Hudson
The Chairman of the Weather Bureau
River Railroad wi» leaving Tarrytown food absolutely necessary to a healthy
the other night, a woman who had just convalescence after a long and protract­ announced that he had no prediction,
alighted and walked
er to the plat­ ing illness. That is just the time when for the coming week, owing to the fact;
form suddenly commenced to wring her the nurse’s skill and -ingenuity will be that his goose-bone had either been
hands and weep as she pointed frautic- taxed to the utmost, To coax the np- stolon by some designing villain or had
■ ally to the disappearing train. A crowd ■petitc, never ask the patient what is been eaton by one of his dogs. He had.
■ of sympathizing passengers collected wanted. Bring in some dainty unex­ sent to Kentucky for another, and mean­
| about her. and when she became some­ pectedly. If on first trial it is not satis­ while had employed himself in observ­
what cqmposed she said her name was factory, say nothing: do not look or feel ing such signs ar would indicate the sort
Carrie Purdy, and that in her hdrry to disappointed; quietly remove the dish of winter the country would have. He
get ofl the train she had left he** baby- from sight, and then try again, prepar­ felt himself authorized to predict as
on the seat of one of the cars. Station ing something entirely different, until follows:
November will be an open month,
Agent De Rivero came to her relief at last you hit on something that pleases
and telegraphed to Yonkers. When the eye and which the stomach will re­ neither cold enough for winter nor warm
the train arrived at that station the babe tain without any nausea, and then there enough for lawn parties.
December will be a deceiving month.
was found, and sent back by the Grat is an important step taken which tends
You will first imagine that it is time to
train to its anxious mother at Tarry - toward rapid and healthy recovery.
No professional nurse can for a mo­ plant corn, and will next be engaged in
-town/
—The shares of the Chemical Bank. ment be compared with the mistress of
New York, have reached $1,780, the the family, who has catered for the
highest quotation of any banking house pleasure of her flock for years and people a chance to scald bedsteads, clean
in the world. This is not to be won- knows each individual taste and pecu­ out the pantry and get ready for winter.
January will bring more or less winter
derod at, since the bank declares an liarity. Taking counsel with th? physi­
average quarterly aivident of twenty­ cian, and learning what will be narm- v. gather, and red noses will bo thicker
fire per cent The name of the bank. leee, in case the patient fancies it, she than blackberries.
February will come next to Jannary
. which is a queer one, really tells the will with her own hands, if at all effi­
history of the institution. A gentleman cient, prepare some dainty form of nour­ this year. Peach trees have been known
in New York got a charter from the ishment, or superintend its being nro- to blossom in this month, but the peaches
Legislature, many years ago, to estab­ pared, watching carefully that nothing hardly ever get ripe before the boys
is scorched. Always remembering a stepl ’em. If the blossoms come sei’
lish a chemical manufacturing estab­
lishment. He was also granted for little more sugar or salt can easily be your cutter for half price.
March wiil be a very quiet month,
thia purpose certain banking privileges. added by the patient if not quite euosgh;
The manufacture of chemicals fell bat &gt;f too salt or too sweet for the weak and you needn’t be surprised to sec
through, after a large fortune had been stomach, love’s labor is lost and the in­ fanners out mowing hay by the 20th.—
valid suffer*. When neatly prepared, Detroit Frte, Press. __________
choose the prettiest bowl or cup, "cover
—Cakes, puddings, eta., are improved
Don’t buy until you We our Goods and get our prices.
*nk. which now annual- a small waiter with a snewy napkin sad
orfjHhal stockholder* a quietly bring it to the patient Sit down by making the currants, sugar and floes
hot before using them.
iuharthey inverted tail

Thi Handiest,

GRAN

RAPIDS
KAferfwAjH

BTATIO!

Corn Shelters, Cutters, Bob-sleighs
levy, Clothes Wringers,

kST^ARb.
‘ Pae'ic Mail. G.R."

a l. GLASGi

P Coaches and Sleeping Can loand from
and Detroit. Alt Inin, connect la
bt «t Detroit with Ore.t Western, Grand
d *annda .Southern Ballway..
»ow:.-.
a. B. liDTAKD.
len'ltJupi-Jackson. Uen’i bup’i Detroit
C. Warrwoara.
Gtn’lPaa.and Ticket Acant.Chleaao.

1Z

i

WEIIAVE MADE

\ IShERN, Attorney and Counsellor ,
4al luiw, practical in all State Courts. ColIcdAns promptly attended to. Office over
8]&gt;aildlng's store, Hastings Mich.

A. BARBen, M. D..

FEW WITHI

1HREE

TIRE

BETTE R THAN COMMOMIRE
Three inch Tire

BENTLEY BROS. &amp; VIKINS-

I ’

homceovatiuc

Physician and Surgeon.
Office first door east of Opera House, and
near residence on corner of Wtuhingtou and
State Streets, Nashville, Mich.

£ A. BUSU,
“TMI BOSS”

’

BOOT AMD SHOE MAKER,
MASIIVILLK,

■-

SUCH.

R»p*lricj 4oa« vtta NeetaMt sad DUpetoK

jgOOT AND bMOE SHOP.

I im as* al home in ray as* shop In ths VsUd’nt
recently rscatsd bj Mn Crocker, where I un prepared to Brake

BOOTSut SHOES,
In a vorkraanllke manner and st lev pcicsa.
riME SHOES a ipectalty.

f\

A. BURCMAN

OBSERVE, COMPARE, REFLECT, ACT!
WEW DENTAL PARLOR.
I wish to make known to the citizen* of
Nashville and vicinity that I have purchased
the'practlcc of J. L. Slgsbee, ami am pennanncntly located over G. A. TRUMAN’S flora.
AU kinds of DENTAL WORK done, from th*
simplest operation to the most difficult,—Arti­
ficial Palates. Irregular natural teeth straigh­
tened, teeth extracted without pain for 50 eta;
one-half deducted when artificial work is mad*
All work warranted, advice to regard to teeth
free call and w me.
P. S. Will do dental work for S cord* of wood.

I»H. A. II. WIWW.

^yoix’OTT house;
INaHlxa'llle hltctilsun.

A. S. Foote, Proprietor.
This U a new Hotei, erntralij located, w*H kept,
ai d its patron, are always iun» of celling better a^
commodatloEe for the amoantnal.*., than at any
other hotel in Hany county. Thro flr»l-cla». Sam­
ple Itoourt on first door,
M yr 1

J^ATHBUM house;
X B. ANTISDKL, Pauranrroa.

Grand Itcsplda. MIolx.

yyiLLIAM JONES,

We are Ready

J£OXK1 SAVED
-------- BT BUYING— ”

GOODS,

New Furniture

Clothing. Boots, Shoes, Hat*, Caps, Groc*
ries and Prorislons, of

-Arriving Daily.

E.

Parlor Suits, Bedroom Suits, Seats’ Easy. Chairs,

L. STEVENS JU. COOK.
’
At E. Uook’a Old Stand,

Ladies’ Rockers, Camp Chairs. Pine
Couches, E^ension Tables, Center
Tables, What-nots, Picture Frames,
Bureaus, and in fact Everything
Else Needed to Furnish a House.

-a

UNDERTAKING a Specialty,
KELLOGG, BELL &amp; CO.

L

REESE.

A trial wfU convince. Goods of every dcacrip
tian always new and freah-

MICHIGAN.

1* th* ta*t and chea;&gt;e*t place to get your

H0BS1 &amp; 01 SHARIS.
1

AND DON'T YOU FOBGEt IT

�« a lltti’. ol th. brer yotut;?
muscle into this channel. As

J^BOOliAaaA&amp;SHAIX.

By
that this diaeaae ordinarily make, quick
work, and that animals attacked with

cffecta are beatxtifhlly shown on brushy,
weak, ar sickly hair, an which s few
. men retire farther and farther iplo the
any distance. The disease is known : appliratlous will produce lire gl.&gt;t.s and
Trt Ar»vr»T!sm! West and North, the "cow-puncher” is among veterinary physicians as in flam- I freshness of youth. Hannless and bare
Tkb Nawa hMdiKibii U*e number of rnaden ', the first precursor of civilisation. Tho matory fever, but among farmers in . in Its results, It Is iucompvrable ^as
i the Fliwt Reprreenutlrr Thstri.1 «f Bam very great advantage of being the first England and our own country it is I a dressing, and is especially valued
known os black-leg. quarter-evil, joint­ for the soft lustre aud richness of tone
it imparts.
murrain, blood-nicking, shoot of blood,
AvkIi’s Hair -Vigor Is •rolorica.’*;
black-quarter, etc.
Our Waterbury correspondent says | coutains neither dll uor dye; and will,
that nearly every year the disease not soil or color white cambric; yet
It
lasts long on the hair, and keeps
makes its apnearanco among his calves
PKKU8* THESE LIBERAL AD. RATES.
- --------- —
the way of encounters with all the nu- and those iff his neighbors, during the it fresh and * vigorous, Imparting un­
।“
Lmorons varieties of wild animals which last of August or the -early part of Sep- 1 agreeable perftmre.
For sale by all druggists.
“ '
' “ ASS'! &lt;-5.00 $ s.00 abound there, and has beside the vari- tember, alter they have been turned ,
$.00
&amp;50| U.&lt;X ous attractions as well as the hardships into tho fall feed and are just begin­
Gult-eaut!
•
tJM
18.80 _.3o.&lt;*0 that belong to genuine pioneer life. ning to gain in flesh. This is generally '
b | Kbif] ifl.oti Before a man has been in the business the experience
"i®| ~£c
16o
Jtnr)
__________of_ those who
_ lose ___
eifTLOH B CONSUMl’TION CURE.
ani5.001 fcbf ld.00' 80.00 many years he is pretty certain to be mala by this diaease, and plainly indiJtaetei?
Ibu-Iorl™-!. r™ Op~ Wltatooo, -ngagcil in om or morn ot tho long
itS °aU^?’ OT “or® PIPRcr* ‘ invariably cure tba vrerst carearil dough, croup
BustMiM cards of five lines or lew. &amp; per yr. ' cattie-dnvcs which transfer enormous ly its
u- chief cause. The
ri.., animal is
,« k..,r,re
being i a:xl Br..ncliitl«, white «• wonderful aoccawte
Local Notices, um cenu a Him for flm hirer- j -herds across wide stretches of territory, over fed, and is making blood too fast., In the cure of eonauiupildn te without n parnltion and eight cents for each subsequeai larer-:Tn this way many workmen drift in the The rich, tender feed of tlio mowing- i lei iu the hbtory ot nirdienc. .Since ft* first
““
O1LNO 8TIIOW.
oourw of a year or two Iron. T.xm to fields h too great a temptation to ani­ dtecovery It 1&gt;m Ikcu sold on nguarutre, atest
which e&lt;&gt; other medicine can stand. 11 you
Mw w4 rmrrtew. Wyomtag or Montana, or Iron Oregon mals that have been kept a little short haves Cough we‘earurstlv ask joutotrv it.
----------------- - ------------------------------ --------- io Nebraska; and thus ttto “cow- for some weeks, and they just gorge Price lOcts, SOcts; snd 81,1'0 It your lungs are
| puncher” often comes, in time, to Eave themselves and clog the machinery wire. Chart, or Back Lame, and Shiloh’s
a wide and varied experience of the cf the system. More food is crowded Parous Fleeter. Fold bv R, T. Boisa-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- least-known
wide
.
ANSWER THIS QUESTION.
into theregions
stomach of
thanour
can be
thorough­
Why da so many people we see around us,
'vnLLkS^omcEiis.
I country.
ly-digested, or more food* is-digested, seem
to prefer Ui suffer and be made miserable
j
Perhaps the greatest attraction about and converted into blood than the sys­ by Indlgcatinu, constipation, dlxxlnew, Jom of
Pre«Met/-Wm. H. Yoons.
Recordar—Frtnk MeDwby
J this life to a frugal workingman is the tem can assimilate. It is like over­ appetite, coming up of the Food, yellow - skin,
great variety of chances that exist for crowding a threshing machine with when for Rtets, we will aell them fehfloli’s Vita-.
to cure them. Sold
T.
।—
j profitable investment of every dollar tendfeof^rrtL There i&gt; a limit to
Marshall—W:
SHILOH’S CAITARRH REWtfuu CaAiarI* able to lay
All ora- tho amount of work that any machine
uauu. ujtki Demir.y . .■ •!&gt;, “
■&gt; aaide.
....
, ploycrs will jicrmit a good hand, who can do, as there is to the number of per- 1 velous cure for Catarrh, inifth each b&lt;Ger
; invests his savings in horses, to turn his sons that can pass out of a church or I mouth, and Head Ache. ‘Abjcctor ^°\Z?dc
JFarirtiW.
Urao. A little !?re,.‘‘
little band in with tho other stock with- luUl door ta » .pitted
„n
-rkr. more—,;;;
eucceaarul treatment of
p*r •
V— charge. Frlce
wUbout .extra
TVAPTisTcunRCH
r b. Mood, P^tn, ।
charge. Th us he goes into over crowding rtopa all prtrreM. The wit?;,
B SMrvioe* »«riy bu»day st loan*.»./tfahfoti* I «tock raising on a 8maltvBcale without a animal system ia wonderfully fitted tn
t-n...u.
■
iffowrt
to ' »•
p- t
.Boibk.
circum­ |
•cinoiat u- m; Pr.yer end Tereaor»‘
! dollar of running expenses to pay. If 'adapt itself to surrounding circumTbar*d«y evening.
•__________ .
man ean buy ft fow mare5 al a bargain stances. Animals, subjected for long I Rhode island hai&gt;u i.irgcr.school Income than
tlear annual profit . periods or through many successive any other state except NaMachuactte.
va«- he can often make a clear
* t eiuoimstt ei-awpal chit/jh—j
i»A TOa,P«4U&gt;t-. terelnM every 9*bba
lew hundred dol- generations, to certain conditions,
iuh
of fifty per cent, on ai tew
whether" favorable
or
wih
TRUTH AND HONOR.
___________
. selling
and care■
~ unfavorable, **
a,M lars. if he is shrewd in selling
and care-srr , «.a_wa.-.
.■ "■
- ful in breeding up. This is a very fa- so adapt themselves to those conditions
Query:—What lathe' 1w*t family medlcitm*
TVY LODGE NO. 87. K. of P., meets at its voritc way of investing earnings, as. it that any sudden change, either for the tn die world u&gt; regulate the bowels, purify the
± Castle Hall, NashHUe, Michlgau, even’ i is at once very safe ana verr profitable. better or the worse, may cause trouble. I blood, remove cuMivenere ami blih&gt;Uwuei.'-. ai.l
It is very poor economy, as every one ' &lt;Ugv*tJ»n and tone up the whole systcoi! Truth
J and honor compel u# to answer'Hop Bitter*,
orable Birther Knte’hte.
“ handsome income for a small in- knows, to starve or under-feed an ani­ | beln? pun-, perfect and harmlesii.—Ed. See
L. E. Lextz, K. R. 8. Obno Stkoxo.C. C. vestment in the Far West, though hard- mal. All the food given in such coses i another column.
I ly any of them is so perfectly safe as is wasted. .Merely keeping an animal
this which I have mentioned. There alive, under ordinary conditions, is in­ ! A Miu«4tk&gt;mil report l« called a canard bcSUfrcrlla.-uvus
excusable.areIf well-known
on a voyage
at sea, ^or
or catine
jaopportunities
one canardly believe It.
,
for preI empting land, investing in appreciating during a snow blockade, it is found that
short jdWATCH CAREFULLY YOUR HEALTH.
W SiBit °?»m KJ11
01 town real estate, mining stocks an£ animals, must be put upon1’ a"_1__1
“to U‘"“ b““”
"l-teb
to .toy ”to »ito ta . iowance to save life, the case is differ- । Are your bands and
aud feci
feel cold I Docs your
nulre beat
irnt’ulnr t Ifocs
!)■»•&amp; your
rnur lheart
uurt' &lt;**i^kjv
.ent, and a partial starvation may bo the ! putec
tea: irn-gularl
quick);,
,;______________________ very new country; so that a man who
only nrudent course to pursue. Work- j s«dplu.tc at the lout cxenio:, worrirnent
rorrirnent. or
WH.
01U3W0LD.
M.
D-.
___
Jab
”
tadurtriom.
..ring
and
.hrowd
can
H. GRISWOLD, M. D., .1---- ^ihic
animals, cows in milk, and all ani- I I!''1’?’,*1'* ‘■•^tetncnil Dcxm y*&gt;ur face often
Surgeon. oi
Ums i^ud
re» hardly fail to roll up a neat little prop- ing
• Physician and burgeon.
OBlta
ad re*toll,
lhal
are
ol
th,
proper
a^
lo
fro!
SlliSuL.
S
Wenca opposite tho Wolcott House. Prompt erty from his savings in a few years.
Altsntlnn -tHVMn
tn calls
r.11, &lt;!■
nlirht5.________ .
,
attantion
given
to
dayr ro
or night.
---------------------------------Thig
hf0 W1U nQt b(J foun(J and gain m flesh, must hare more food | w.lne urinary disorderi Benrt! Death m»v
than merely what is required to sustain , ri anv time suddenly came from apoplexy. Do
LA. FOOTE PHYSICIAN d: .SURGEON satisfactory to every one who enters it. life, and the more they are given, up t» ' i"’t dclav. Your system needs retne true
• SuccMor io Dr. Wickham. Office and it is impossible to say certainly of any
point, the better will thov pav
.7 remedy “
.nrow
In*
reildexKe .!
al Dr. Wtekham
Wickluuu’.a fo.„
late, »m«.
oflicc. individual or anv class of men that they a certain
ikn frLl
. ■ Iron L.-lcrs. vnu".
This rzccHeut
will
awiot
Prompt attention lo-eshi night or day..
for the food consumed, but there
» i nature la quickly regaining her lost hold on
; will not succeed
in meu
it. Some
—---------- ----- p i r»*“ UUI auuvovuiu
|U ovtuc
wuo men who point beyond which it is positively dan- berith aud life, h Mrengtbeite every j»n of
............. ....
W.-WHITMORE, 5T. I)., Edecilc Pbyil- ! at first seem less adapted for the work gerous to go.
1 the system, and rvau&gt;rea the differeut’orgnna of
•d*n and Surgeon. Ofik-e. eut aide” of become moat excellent hands bv long
A farmer with a good cow giving -'fe to their normal condition. In diseases of
oigbte.o iu.ru, rt «S»r d.y on tail I
“d
p’™emphatically
v?.nu;r
•» of
.
- _____________________ ....“*• p'??k
said
more
of this man
feed, thought, by a little extra crowd- iikcactann.
.,
'
bo learned ing with groin, to moke his eighteen- '
T-lll. a W. BOUCHER. El«.-Ue rb,.lcUn »nd other
ocher callings
eallinp that it
U should
»h&lt;
' ------- - --------- -—-----AA Surgeon, la prvixirr-! to aniwer al) calls in
1 youth. The chances of marked suc­ quart cow a twenty-quart cow. It took ■
l,rUl,e»l mau," »ayn a witty FrcncLman,
that may be made lor hla icrrtvea, OCIco and cess are against a man who begins the but n few days to ruiu his animal. The I ,M likr a I”1'- lIl« hesd prevents Llm frvui goreridesce opposite Roe's meal market.
work after he is twenty years old. Men extra forcing clogged the machine, and | tag tartar.•’
.
vv—
wearer
I. PARMENTER, M. D. Offlce
over whoh.vB been trained to it ^most Irom he soon got no milk and in a little whiltf |
----------- —-----TV Hull
’s Drug
childhood in Texas and Colorado are. had no cow. Calves and young cattle, I
Hull'i
Drue More,
Mure, Vermontville,
Venae “ *Mich,
‘
WHY WEAR PLASTERS I
w, Z---------------------------------------- as a class, the most successful. Among
that have been kept a little short durThey mar relieve, bat they can’t eure that
Ing the dry weather and scanty feed of terne back for the kidneys are tho trouble, and
Ajt Fn«pl
|tirn&gt; to 111 “in™.
brought up On I.nns, with . good midsummer, should be turned in to the ! vuu want a remedy u&gt; act direct)? on ihufr re­
entrusted»o my care. Conveyanclug a special- understanding of the management of rich after feed of the moving fields with j
u*rlr
5^-£
ty. Office oppiadte Unkm House.
| horses, adapt themselves most readily .™u de.! ol ruu3 Tb„y
not be turned in to stay till they arc so txjwete perfectly. Don’t wait io Ret ate):, but
UEBHAUSER, Merchant Tailor and denl- j
full that they can scarcely .valk or | get a tMckage to^tey, and cure youmelf. Eitli-'
• er in Ready Made Clothing. See me
before you purchase clothing. Flu g-aar- of success ip, this rough life, and yet breathe, but should be left in but a ®r 1'quid or dry for sate at the 'druggist-^-— Re­
anteed. '
‘
'------------------- ! not a few of them have, by long persist­ short time at once, until they get over । Publ*can.
* T vrrv i
O . .—&lt;—d~---- ", ' «dco. mode themselves sldllfulin it.
their undue hunger, or till the system i T.
.
f'tALMN A. NICHOLS, dealer In Bootxand |
,
,
VJ Shtxta, Rubbers, Hate and Caps, Gents’ |
A man who believes himself to have hu hid timetouoomod.te iuellto lb.
“•1 --aetalbt. rf&lt;»taronm. T&lt;„ loap.
FurnishingGtxxlij, Gloves and Mittens,Trunks, J already some training and fitness to en- chMS. ta the eh.meter ol th. food.
Blooding end tho insertion ol seton, mse l«ul« us. th, mtn. h^ll, rani, owing u..
W^llte Mrin i*%Svfflefla,°
’
at OQCO QP°n lho WOrk WOuld do
Wert ricte Mata 81., A\aabvffle._____________
wok e^loynient l^Choyenne in the dewlap uro common methods of ^undcnrtandtaK. they both met for “work"
l11'’ r-anurevi-ning. High‘-&lt;&gt;v&lt;-reig:i Holland
CN. DUNHAM, Proprietor Temperance Bil- or Gr8«l®y
th« spring. That is the treatment for the prevention and cure
• Hani Parlors and Pool RoomA A choke season when cattle men are making ol diseases caused by such ovor-f.-oding, of Missouri Union Ixalge was seated on hla
line of cigars constantly oo baud. Rooma under their plans and hiring their hands for and this •treatment is founded upon , throne, arniyrd in purple regalia, when High
D. C. Grtifith’a store.
the year. Most of the “round-ups” correct principles; but it ia far better | Sovereign Andrews of the future Great Lodge
Both were
ASET, Ew
1»“'r &lt;“«.&lt;&gt;' to avoid the necessity of the practice, enteredlauddemanded the ptetr.
ONAH B. RASEY,
Express .nd
and DtapranDrayman­ ' J*0 lho.i' “«?
in ““YAt tliat t,rae A raaE who has by withholding tho excessive ninoimt of ' armed with big aworda, and with theae a
Goods and Baggage carried to any place In
the village.
been trained to the management of rich food. This may bo done by taking fierce combat wax fought. The rneinlxrs join,hc
,„d
horses and is quite at home in the sad­ th. animus out ot th. attar led ns I
IRAM R. DICKINSON,, manufacturer of dle need have littlp fear of not finding soon as they have oaten all they need,
the police Lad to break tn to restore jwace.
wwreareimber.
Build-­ ai° nceu uave illuP tear oi not ending
and dealer la Hani Wood
Lumlier. Build
paid for logs. Mill — work, even though he Aay bo without nnd letting them lie in a short pasture
ing Material a special! •h----MTC-E-R-croMlug. friends or recommendation. But any whit, they chow tho cud .nd dif-ost tho
Loss of memory, umverrallasritundc, pain In
and yard on Sherman
~~~/ — ------ - person who is not fitted must work into - rich food; or they may be tethered by the back.■premature old age. promptly aured
AMES FLEMING, pn w2dwa8iiwMd tho busin®“ ““ch more gradually. A rope and pin. so that
.toto. they cannot over- । u-------------&gt;’h Browu’a ----Iron -------Bittern,u Jt restore# lout
. Watch-maker. Clock*
tanctl«ins and rtnmgthensthe weakened parte.
fill themselves. A few ropes, or a lit- *■
_ Jewelry
„__ _____
tl].e phdns feels at first
Plated. Ware,
and t Optical Good*. Rock-; ne'’’co“ur
Watcbesa
••Prisoner* havc'you ever been convicted!"
ford Watches
a specialty. Repairing
w__. and Engrav- : as much out of his element 0,5 a fish out tie extra time devoted to changing
r—
nonor I jiaVe a]wava employed
lag done In a workmanlike manner.
———
of water. The habits, the wavs of life, stock from one field to another are ..^-o
,„rm;.
NDT PLUM, manufacturer of Boots and
pupations and e ven the dialect are ebrap oomprawd to the lo™ .nd dirop- j
A NDY PLUM, manufacturer of Boots and
pointment attending the sickness and | - — — ■
, L
Siwes.
Every
description
of
Bool
and
Shoe
a11
strange
10
him.
He
is
as
easily
recX*. Shoes. Every description of Boot and Shoe
,
..
,,
&lt;inatn or ctiot
nfacturtnr a specialty. Repairing promptprompt- ognized
Ognized as
aa “green’1 as any foreign death of choice animals.—Neto An- I .:SMOLSODI
• manufacturing
ly attended to. Leather and findings for sale. 1 clodhopper just landed in New York. 5”an“ -cormer.
TMrt door north of old Unton Hocae.
i He hears himself called a “tenderfoot.”
TIYISS M. JEFFREY, Practical Milliner, and I The plains are mainly a grazing region.
qx maxes ninety­ 1
' "1.ami wt.I cotupieOly rhnnttu the blood In
ill dealer ta Millinery and Fancy Goods. Drew All the United States east Of the plains
xouay
xo-daj t&amp;cptemoer
(September ai
3) makes ninety- ;
in t.tr»&lt;e
&gt;.. Anvpmou
?
Cultural; consequently eight
ight veari
years since the
tho signing ot
of tfie
the jI *:’o'”:,lia;.tti pi’.l"r-hr&gt;iir:*tfromitnjtwsoki
______ 1.7
. , t। III
*-»*rt«red
••••••! |i~n!’l&gt;. tf »:*r’ia th
cntxMlteVt'aws office.
” ^•®lulBurj and customs of tho two definite treaty of peace..,
between
Great
—------------------------------------------------ diririct* are. and must always be, very Britain and the United States of Amor-1
f\RNO STRONG, plain andfaaey Job Primer, different. To learn the ways of the ica, bv which the war for unr indo- I r'2’lr
OOUQtO’ U&gt; outgrow the ••tenderfoot” , pendeiice
idehce was terminated. It was on 1 1^., — n 'yrexn-gn evki»ywhkrk m hi
.tomb., ». 1TM.
stage of existence, b a gradual and Septembers,
1783, Ore,
that th.
the work wre
was I ;Wf..
before yem buy.
’
| •ometimea a trying process. A man done, eight years four months and lif- »•?—**&gt;
’"IX---------------------- coming to the far West with the inten- teen days after the battle of Lexington.

PR!CI; 51.50, IF PAID IN ADVANCX

a^isiiiillt fittrtonj,

fS&amp;'SffifeX

»««*••” “• “-r

-4-. ot «X

W

H

jjsSoS’Jtk.e;

W

S

J
H

Nashville Elevator!
• Paythehlgbeatmarketprieaforallkindaof. j
Grain and l^j^oclixce- j

J^EW EEKVATOB.

FOWLER &amp; IHGERSON
HIGHEST MARKET fPRICE

GRAIN AND PRODUCE.
A fun stock of

’

LUMBER, LATH,&amp;C-,
‘ ConstaBtiy

Hn::d.

LTBNRT ROE. raoPKiBToa
—OLD RELIABLE-—

AiEAT MARKET.

MS »«&gt;M &lt;ta wdl tooom. mtbo Ml. It
POMiW.-tor,
tbousl. it is
U not a
.good
toahownoda. Call and see me before buyinc. P°
“ible—for, though
good
m
1--------aerth
■* -f
— i.kt. —
_____ *
timratime
tr\t- afor
wnrlnnomnn
tzv tin/l
ru.........
Bhop two doon
ofeSmith's
grocery.
a workingman
to find
occupa.------ r------- - \ tion, it is usually possible to find chances
to work abont so“e «toek-raneh or farm
sod aevad Boom and 81mm. PrompTatStK through the winter either for small
paid to all order work, aud repairing neatly and wages or for board, and in this way a
quickly done at reasonable rate*. Couuaeu man grows well accustomed to the wavs
to
aM?- h'-HL.
01 tho country and acquainted with the

lain, John Adorn, and John J.r. «nd
Darid Hartley signed for Great Britain.
-w~
'Tt. ..
1-1____ 1 • . .. I ■ ■_____ _1______ 1
I
The provisional
treaty
had been signed
in November, 1782, nnd the definite
treaty was the same thing; yet the En­
glish did not evacuate New York City
till the beginning of( tho last week of
November. 1783. The elose of the con­ At PAR with a BONW of 40 'Acree for each 10
test dates from September 3, 1783. ns
all the nations that had taken part in ot'vrrr'j . • Third fc thceium ;m»_ I'blUdcIpbla.
Shop oo east Uw of Maia etreciT at the sign f°r securing a profitable situation when the contest then returned to a state oi ° FIGEa . | na Jkw4wVt y. Y. 8o0MW mfnx
«f tbe R«J Boot.
the spring Work with the cattle begins. peace.- Uonton Traveller.
DtuiU Prufrrto with durrrplin eifs I

FLORIDA

fM-ro ui T;tr Sex’s wrun.
• TnsSr^of-iwS will te

By a libv^J uhCoI the incaoa wh
ut: abtt» •:
dan; prosperity
wc mall make-it' tarttoe . j
than ever before.
Wej'hal! print all the near, imtlfag il h&gt;to '
readable rliapc, aud tucx-ut’.ug iu importancenot by the tr|dill&lt;mal y^rd-UcK, hut bv its real .
Interest to the pcoplg. Distance from Trintjn*
Houtw- tiqUare i* not lite f)r-t etinviderelfou
with-The S-rx. Whenever anything happens
worth reporting we get t).c particulars, Whttfti*
It happem* tn Brooklyu ui in Bvklmra.
In politic* we base Godded opinions; and art
arem-tomwi to express them in bngtmcv that
ean t-e unden-texfii. We s.-y what
"think ■
about men and event?. That habit is the. only
secret nf Tire Si n’s poBl’cal oxiree.
Tire W.-.EKLY Sex gathers Into eight pagM
tlie best matter of the Mven dully t-eucs. An .
A'zrkultunil Depurtm«.:;t &lt; f uneqtUflgd merih
,
full market reports, ax d a ;:te-rri j-n port’on qz
Mtercry. rricaUflc, ami dofncMiu luteii^ems &gt; j
complete Tin: Wkxkly Si ?;, .-.nd make ft the
'
best yiew«3ajH.T for the farmer housebrid that
was ever pstateL . "
’
Who d&gt;&gt;cs not k’:r*» atxj rer.tl nnd like Tins
Svniiay br.v, each number • ' which U a tloV ‘ Muda of intcrcrtlug l.ivtafure, wfth. the i*^

Fresh and Salt Heats,

" SmW Earns ani Sluwlisrs,
IK TUEIR HFtotBllN.

L'trd, by the tb. nr Barre
C"“ The Highot M
for Hide*. PttltB. A-r.

wisd bonk, and InflnlteH trore vartfuiwd ct&gt;tartrining than air. book, h’U or little.
If our idea of r,‘nut a ispsper shqttM be
pleaser xiri, send lor Tub Spx. ,
Our-tenns are u» follows;
,
,
For the dully BvN, four-pnge sheet of twentyelgbi columns, the price by mall, port paid.IS
55 cents a me-nth. or t&amp;hU a year: or. Including
Uu- S»m lay p iper.and right-j-age sheet of ftftytdx &lt; &lt; *utntL% the price te-d5 *vu:« per mouth, or
&lt;7. hi&lt;-.,r, jA&lt;*iagc paid.
Ti.c .Suniiay.edition nf Tnu 8cm is also * ftu*
ni tied jurratelv at Sl.23 a veer, postage paid.
The; r.t.v of Tire WexxhT Sex, right pages,
*

FrcBn Soods. Full Weights
Satisfaction Guaranteed.

Address I. V.*. ENGLAND, '
Publisher of The Srx, New York City.

ROE.

.
JOSEPH COLE,

A T T H E N E-W

MEAT MARKET!
---- K E E P 8-----

Fresh, Salt and Smoked

MEATS!
------ IIP EVERY DESttflirnON-----All nt prices that will

Live and Let Live.
puRxrrrKE m:i’&lt;rr.

J. LENTZ &amp; ST NS,
Manufacturer*, and dealers in
THE GREAT

P.LtNGTON BOVTE.

FURNITURE!

N • other lino runs Three Throngb-Ih&lt;
,
r Trains Dully between Chicngu, L‘»r '
s Council Bluffs Otuahn. Lincoln.
.
tr, Atchison, Topeka and Ki»aavs C«». '
t &gt;-annectlons for nil '-tint* in Ksu-&gt;ua,
-k Colorado. Wyoming. M.-uinaa, Xe'
Mexico, Arizona, Ide.lm,Oregon end
im'n.
5u •rtr’t. Spoediwit nnd NottCpmforta- 3
... .. .ii...... fi.xi.to'to..-.,*
-.

In Every Style&amp; Variety.
For the fall trade/ um

STOCK IS [COMPLETE,
And will be sold so low that^

PRICES WILL AST0HI8I8B YOU,
WE ALSO CARRY

J

MK.

5

Seeds. Feed, Limo, Salt, Plaster. Ntueeo, Hair. Flue Lumber, lath
of Tire
jt effected
and Nfcingku,
m the style of American
lm|M&lt;tt«iit journal ct-iabl:#
AT THE LOWESTj^VING PRICES. in u:e dozen vrara txtet bnt
T K Srx. Every tnqx*i

UNDERTAKERS’ GOODS,
And are prepared to give our time and atten­
tion to everyth!n/pertaiu Ing to the
uudertakingjltne.

J. LENTZ &amp; SONS.

nd nil points In Texes.
.
■
. i-;
T;: ■ un-i|nale&lt;l liidnoemiT.tS ' Tered te- tula
I.i-&gt; • rirnv -icrsandTcurit : . ere a.s iollpwa:
'• rated Pullman Ci&gt;v.br&lt;4&gt; Fa.aco
_•
Si■•r Cnra. run only an thh Line. C„ B. &amp;
'
(.» !■ ice Drawing-Room Care, v(th Honon’a
R t .ini- i.'li.Hri- No extra chor,;«:-for
•

ti

p&gt;
Ttinntj'Cars, n'nrew !Ja'"lr1n?Ort
Pf - ;
Elegnn* Higb-B teked JUutah ReK-'.r i- - «.!:ilra lor the exclusive u:&gt;e of first'
eta- n--'—sera.
■! Trick mid Suporlrr Equipment, con&gt;
t :r I .’. V. I.i tholr Groat Through Car Arrnture,
r t;r. mui.rii ihli.nborn ?J)or!: .'ra,tbefttvortfe’
I: .ii- io the South, Sot th-We st, nnd the Fur -

’i’r- it, and you Will find travallng.a luxury
ln&lt;tmd of a discomfort.
Thrrei'-h Tickets via thl« Celebrate-’ Line
for ule ut all offices In the United States and ■
Canada..
Al! Information about Ret-* of Fn.-.?, r.ecpinir Car Accommodation'1, Time Tribi.-' f e., • ,
will be cheerfully given by applying to
, ■• .
General Pas server Agent. CkIvwjo* ’ ■'?
. T. J. ITlTTErt,

NERVOUS
DEbiLiTY

E^Z^CEBCAN OE CURED.^ZE3OT
mind, canting you to )e«l gl&lt;
.nervous, timid, forgertnl er

you hare applied for help wltauut gattlag relief
you can be cured of all your ditaenwBbic rymaU»tn«. and fully icatored to jrerfret phrvlca' bralQt
In the (honest poMibla Urnu. Havluf during tba

50,000SHARES, $10 EACH
nt.

1 l. on ^1&lt;xi /ana aenunty; PrineF-al and ta ine elements oi plain camp-cookery, he
—Anti-Fever Trees.—The bine gum
tarat payable at the Khmi«~3 Natracri Beak.
* strong
■Iroug string
Knngtor
for hi.
his bow,
bow. for
tor the
th. W!U l,Uk1
„ rere
, re ^rerere f________
hretlawl
tlltt* WAS '
Offlea 1st doer a»vth of Rpauidiafe’*, 8a»hi«a. easiest way of preparing
propra-ln,for
tor more agree- toimprov&lt;j. M Cart, all malarious dis‘
*
‘
?
t
“
k««I
^
,
“
l
oJ
r
&gt;
T
»
&lt;
&gt;»»
i
triou.
Paod paar ™ th. dhappobu.
S^TT^ior &lt;.!•*?'? work
„ OIlue
of th. "
•• round-up"
round-up • wagons
wa^-on. and
and prepare
prepare ment wben £ „„ ,ouud lhu h
dirilla army 80
an ‘' ^
the
Simula moata.
5b a_u
m. . .. almost like the orange. It is
«Mad will
ie «imple
meals. Work of this kind is
climate
&lt;’Mere for Eta. nearly bm well paid as the work with now being declared that the willow is
' "f----- . — the cattle, and it is the easiest stepping quite as uxeful for malaria districts ns
rfstors Planfag stone to the pleasanter work. The av- the blue gum. and even more so, nnd
dring. Rreawiritf erago American man scorns the thought
a epectalty. ScnAl aowluK. cf cooking for wages iw a most unmanly well deserving the name of the Anti­
JbraJrirea eto oocupHtkm, but in this far Western re­ Fever tree. The malarious shores of fi,
the Levant, from which fevers and ,
------------- -----gion where women are in the small mi- ague* were never absent, have been i &gt;'».
aw In---------------- nority it is loosed on m a most desiraren:if*rr-d nmi-faetlv heallhv bv the ITbie n^oo»pli*hn»«nt f&lt;* all men u&gt; no.Ax.
‘
Zt4"?.*!?•*•■ Monthly.

bj- IrtUT »r at r.ffi,e. Wa prepare aad furalsh
pat Jem- oar m medlrin—. AU«inw«
MAUteON bUU'MNUAKY, lUlfoathClaritl
CaicAKiHlil.

M.*3S»n

NERVOUS
C
A curcRimr
THYSELF.i^ST^

.'aliu^DaNUX*^

10 fail eat GtMen

�Oaptata

service.* during the UR

Carter met a pooriy-elsd itttte boy, who was
“PiheaM.?

to IcgiaJ&amp;Ctm
required by tho Territory.
ThixTT leading Republicans of Texas held
a secret conference at Dallas recently, and

to order tbe guaraito
At Gore, Ohio, ou the night of the 28th an

dance of Mary Terrell, a widow, and sent a
bullet through her brain.
Ix New York City a few nights ago the
driver of the baggage transfer wagon left tbo
Grand Central depot with a load of eleven
trunks, most of which contained costly cloth­
ing. Ho stopped to deliver one package, and

Price, of the Sixth United States Candry, and
ColonelH. 8. McComb, the well-known rail­
way builder, died ou the 30th ulL '■

•tore, he bought him a suit of warm clothes
and a pair of mittens. Hs then asked the boy
bis name. “Aaron Dunlap,” was the reply.
Carter was thunderstruck. •* Aaron Dunlap!”

mother!” •• Father ia dead," the boy replied.
"Well, tale me to your mother, then, aa
quickly ns you eon,” said Carter. The boy
ter entered
bouse the boy's mother rushed
into his arms with a shriek that made all the

Fore Um.
The Abbe Rlchery, after quarreling with
Father Hyacinthe, recanting the Loyson here­
sy, and re-entering the Church of Rome, then
abjuring Rome ngaiu in an American Episco­
pal Chape!, recently jierformcd a fourth ero
lutlca by publicly retracting in the Loyson
Church, Rue d’Arras, sg much of Romanism
as Father Hyacinthe rejects, and teu written
to the papers that he made a great mistake in

in tho night the wagon was found in another
portion of the city, and tt contained but one
piece of baggage.
General Terry han sen t a detachment of the
&amp;BCBETAHT Forster on the 29th gave $500
Second Cavalry from Fort Custer to the upper
the quintic* of sanity or insanity, Yellowstone, to protect the Northern Pacific ‘to a scheme for assisting farm servants to em­
related incidents within his knowledro
igrate to the United States. The police in
rimes white constructors from tho marauding Crows.
Tm health officers of New York recently County Cork arrested a man named Corneil
found in*a tenement-house a family of six per­ with a number of loaded revolvers In 1x1* pos­
session, and a list of persons upon whom out­
sons prostrate with small-pox.
1M a recent affray at Bcllfosit, Ala., bet ween rages were to be committed. A large.quanUty of rifles, bayonets and cartridges were
found lajbc vault of a Protestant Church in
.--■n-.-'-nh-nt term and John Martin were fatally shot
Ar a meeting of leading citizens of Bis­ County Fttviv.
Pi
(iL'hc eminent‘ ~
French
* point­
marck a few evenings ago resolutions were
’
‘in Paris ou the 29th.
adopted favoring a division of Dakota, the
southern half to enter the Union us a State.
valued nt SI,200,sunk i
kish waters a few days
Mbs. Crux, of Florence, Cal., hscently gave 000,
prayer, ubould be taken M evidence of lnu*re birth to six perfectly-formed female children.
ity. He replied: “by no means. Wo all know
nt report of the Chinese Custom
While playing with a loaded gun st Oebthat thousands and thousands of sane people
House shows-tliat nineteen ports of tbe Em­
prayed dully for tho aalvatlon ot President
- Garfield's life. They would hardly have do no
pire ore open to foreign commerce. The im­
sulf they had not entertained aomo belief in
ports of the country last year aggregated
tho cOlency -of prayer." Tbo hypothetical Russcl!.'
Ox tbe 30th ult. George Wood, of Philadel­ (231^91,835, and tbe exports $US,97L7C3.
Witness said that, taking tho facts sut forth to phia, who personated Frederick Schultx ou a
Since tlie antl-SociuUst law was promul­
be true, tbe prisoner was unquestionably sane.
The orosvcxamlnatiaa of tho witness was coo- Jury, was sentenced to seventy months in tbe gated In Germany in 1878, 225 Socialist socie­
tinued until the hour of adjournment without I Penitentiary.
ties have lieen dissolved and 738 Socialist pub­
eliciting any answers favorable to tte dofend- ' llosrxT L. Lindsay, the famoos Missouri lications have been suppressed.
I lond^windter, was arraigned at Steubenville,
The amalgamation is announced of tbe
O., on the 80th ult., and sentenced to nine Great Western Railway of Canada, the Credit
years in the Penitentiary.
Valley, the Ontario &amp; Quebec, Md the To­
Ex-Tuzasubkxs Kilgore and Murray, of ronto, Gray «fc Bruce Roads.
■ will laugh this case out of court.*
Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, withheld
Tile Rank of Halifax, N. 8., has stopped the
Id a loud voice Dial bo bad reoclrcd a telegram from the State three-fourths of tbe money re­ city's credit.
Oxb TtiouaAND SEVEN m'xnaBD persons
ceived from liquor licenses in 1875, 1870 and
1877, amounting to about $153,000. Treasurer have been arrested tn Warsaw for participa­
in the antl-Jcwteh riot growing out ot the
off into a ram tillng hara mra &lt;•„ quoting Sc ri pt u re McCallin turned over recently to the Pennsyl­
and comparing himself to the “meek and vania State Treasurer £43,887. being tlie church panic of Christmas day. Tho prison­
Jowly Jesus." who used plain language, amount recovered in suits brought against the er* are mostly young men.
(bough sometimes severe. “1 have been ao­
A PAMEXQEU train on the 30th made a suc­
. euMd of using too harsh language,*' he added, ex-Tieosurers.
The depositors in the Massachusetts Sav­ cessful trip through the recently-completed
“but I take my pattern from the Savior of man­
kind. ' 1 shall submit my name to tbo ings Banks number 738,951, and the amount of tunnel under Bt. Gothard Mountain, in the
next National Republican Convention.
I aball expect to be before
IL money deposited by them amounts to t±»,- Alps. Tbe time occupied* in the round trip
was eighty-three minutes.
Colonel T. IL Talbot, a Boston lawyer,
Three stcaniers*are reported to have l&gt;ccn
am con vlcp-d, end tho other ta fterkhiU. who residing &gt;t Brookline, Mass., has sued a week­ lost recently, two of them in the Mediterra­
expects to get bounced,
ly newspaper fur $3,000 for falsely announcing nean. Oue hundred ind ten persons were
that he had come out for B&lt;n Butler, thereby drowned.
causing Talbot to lore a nomination for Blate
The Khedive of Egypt recently forwarded
Senator.
1400 to the- fund for the erection of a Garfield
Esox Boun, a carpenter residing at Rogers, hospital at Washington, and promises to bend
Ark., was recently shot dead in bed by bls f1,000 more.
wife. She claimed that he had killed two
After the inauguration on the 2d of Daw­
nf the Governson as Lord Mayor of Dublin, the Corpora­
cued her life- Her three elder children were tion, largely comjtosed of Land leaguers, re­
sent p&gt; the poor-bonse at Bentonville, and she fused, by a vote of 28 to IS, to pass the ciu.
Dr. John P. Gray, Superintend*'nt of tte New
York 8ut • L-.matte Aayl-.un, vtated that h- bad took an infant with her to jail, where abe tomary compliment of a vote of thaniu to cxmi»d&lt;* tb«« study of insanity bta bualnes* since killed herself with a knife.
Mayor George Moyers, in retaliation for his
W£, nod hnd trcut*«d or invest
ed over 12,O»
A colored man named Gabriel White, was refusal a few months before to convene a spe­
eanca. Hvh.vl never seen na Instance where
the only cvuienca of Insanity was Immorality hanged at Watcraboro, 8. C., on the 30th ulL, cial meeting of the Corporation to confer tho
nr wtefcednr»&lt;. InsunitB in llwlf bod no more for tlie murder of Frederick Bellinger. Will­ freedom of the city u|»on Messrs. Parnell and
UmdcDcy to excite toerfce thwi neuralri.i or iam II. Erb, who killed bls wife, suffered exe­ Dillon. In his progress through the streets
any other disease. He had made a thorough
the unpopular cx-Mayor was hissed by a rank,
mnantnsHton of the prisoner in the Jail. Dur­ cution in the jail nt St. Louis.
ing his conversation with him be asked him:
The customs duties paid at the port of but no personal violence was offered.
“If th** President bad otfered you the Paris Chicago during 1881 aggregated 82,ftJS,31ft.
Donsubite would you have ahatbim." nnd he
replied: “Wt-ii, that would have settled the The direct exports amounted to $3,343,213, of
LATER NEWS.
matter. I should have taken the portion?' which about one-third was carried iu American
Tne public-debt statement Issard on tho
Wltneas naked the prisoner bow tie came tn
3d makes the following exhibit: Total debt
■boot the iTt'Sidcut. nnd bls reply was: “ I camo
The Missouri River closed at Sioux City on (including interest of $15,5iM.t&gt;l‘J,, $2,018,to th*' conclusion that the political situa­
tion justified it.
I gradually lx*eaiue tbe night of the 2Vth ult. On the With ult. ice
convinced of th!*, and 1 resolved upon bls re­ g »rgcd around tho pile bridge of the Omaha H/J.GU7. Cash in Treasury. $258,377,950.
moval." In reply to a qficntlon whether hta
Debt, loss amount in Treasury, Si,7181,401,717.
alteprd Inspiration came to hkn in tho form of Road, and swept um ay three hundred feet of 'Decrease during December, $12,793,523. De­
Bvotoe or vision, or direct command, th" prts- the structure.
.
crease since June 30, 1881, $75,107,034.
onePa reply w»: “Ko, it camo into my h.-;u!
G
eobge
S.
R
ebd
,
of
San
Francisco,
became
«aw conception, nnd 1 reficct*«d upon It until I
Six thousand Irish landlords, representing
rroolved that it was justified by the altuatton. &lt;terangcd by too dose attention to buainesa.
Thainspirttoou was In tho form of a'prcw«uro On the 1st he killed bis mother-in-law, Borah all the principal intercsta^atbcre-l at Dublin
on tbe 3*1 aud adopted resolutions protesting
upon, me to act. "The examination was Iu
A. Smith, fatally wounded hta young daugh­ against the adnilnislratlou of the Land act as
progress when the Court Bdjourncd.
The Guiteau trial was rrtnin.ed -on the 31M ter, ami then took hia own life.
unjust to the landlords, and claiming enmpenUnder the Presidency of Thomas Davis, sation for losses sustained through thwdimiulL at the usual hour. At tho opening of ths
Court Guitenu called out that Cunmn^mm, a company was recently organized in Boston uution of the values of estates iu consequence
to build domed steamships which are ex[&gt;ect- of the decisions of the Land Court The cor­
ed to cross the Atlantic tn Jess than a week. poration of Cork conferred the freedom of the
• . _1
*•* ...
lulu Nearly $2,W0,0.XI stock has been taken.
city &lt;ui John Dillon, and scut copies of the
■with GulUiui In the JaiL H&gt;: did -nut notice ■
Monday, 2d Instant, tbe legal Hew Year's resolution to Gladstone and Foster.
single cireiur.ntiu-.c,- throuEtnu* lh«un all that
gwjcH^Bd inaanity. Iu ausw.r to the hypo- Day. was generally ooserved throughout the
During the twelve months ended Novem­
Iheticaltiuratibnof thepnw'cut! “
‘
United States m a holiday. In Washington ber 30, 1881, the excess oUcxports of merchan­
MM Guiltuui.WM sane on the 2&lt;1
tbe President held a grand reception, which dise from the Unipxl States wm $IV3, 123,212.
and the excess of imports of gold and silver
tiona were held by tho ladies of Cabinet eoin and bullion for the same period was $62,­
tad been fcixnlnr end act'ng- n p-irt
983,0%, as against an excess of $511,342,MX) for
___ _
rt-ronm. ard b- did m&gt;t th.nk tb.it he
Tur Cotton Exposition at Atlanta closed on the preceding year.
CGultcav' really believed that be was insp.r
the evening ot the 31st ulL Director General
Im his further examination in the Gutteaa
Kimball delivered the farewell address.
trial on the 3d Dr. Gray testified that in con­
versation with Guilcau In the jail the nsaaMfn
Knights o.* Pythias were liolding a festival In bad t.tatcd that he had beard of the case of
Goiter's Hall, which was densely packed with Lawrence, who attempted to assassinate Gen­
j«i»pte. Jurt aa the band began playing the eral Jackson, and who acted at his trial very
floor gave way with a erash, precipitating about much as Guiteau had conducted himself. Tlie
300 people to the flrat floor. Two persons pnwccutiun closed its case with the testimony
were kilted outright, three fatally burned and of Dr. Gray. Mr. Scoville called Dr. B &gt;wkcj,
of Kansas City, who testified tlmt Gnitoau'a
divorced wife bad once entertained grave
seriously injured.
doubts as to his mental condition. The assas­
sin was twice ordered lo be silent, and retort­
ended ou the 31st ulL, Fitzgerald made over ed with a threat to strike a bailiff.
It la announced that General Grant has re­
582 miles in six days, surpassing all previous
nt this point acljuuriud walkers. N orc mac wts second, with 505 miles. cently reaehed tbe conclusion ■ that General
the 3d.
FiUgerald will receive about $2,000 and the Fits John Porter was deeply wronged by dt&lt;F
missal from tlie army, and that he will address
Domi-rtlc.
an earnest appeal to Prescient Arthur for tbe
prompt restorotiCL of the disgraced leader.
The death is announced at Philadelphia &lt;rf
Br tbe burning of a lx«rding-bou*c at Rich- ex-C*ui4nTs«msu Edward Jay Morris.
Duming J881 there were 5,.r82 irarincks fail­
_ __
ir/. N. Y., oa the let, Gilbert Abera am!
ib named r tiller, in Os- [
were seriously horned, ami their three ures Id the United States, Involving liabilities
YoA, msotly unjrnook : &lt;iadnai
Dux..
of more than $81,800,000. Durlug I’m pre- 1
be, _and1 .her j Twenty-four horses were burned to desth vt'JUS year the number of failures was 4,783,
U.
sckeaed his '
and the liabilities W5/100,OOU.
Jebbmiab M. Rusk was duly ,/iaugurated
Governor of Wisconsin on the 2ii. The Lcgia.
la lure will meet on the llth.
of Navajo (Near Mexico) !
The high-lk-etxse Liquor law of Nebraska
went into effect on the 2d. Out of the 140
out Canada.
saloons in Omaha 108 suspended operations.
Cai-tajm Howoate, under indiettneut at
personal nnd Political
large numter of depositions filed with
by Judjp Cox to leave Jhe jail in charge of a
i entstives by Lynch, the colon 1 contestant bailiff. and spend New Year with. Li- friends.
from the Bboeslring dtatricV&gt;( Mississippi,
to have recently starved to death in h room in
the Arcade IruiMtng In Buffalo. repulsing all
offers ot aid. They were the nrchllc.-ts erf the

Carter had found a sitter

Now takes pleasure in announcing to the Public that

HIS NEW GROCERY IS IN FULL BLAST
I HAYE A COMPLETE LINE OP

Sugars, Coffees, Teas, Syrups, Tobacco, Cigars,
Soaps—Washing and Toilet, Canned

A Down-Hill Fight.

Goods, Ground Spices,

One of those curious and dangerous epi­
sodes that characterise the miner’s life in the
snowy mountains of Colorado was brought to And in tact, everylhlnK Hint Wonga to tbo Grocer)- Department.
tbe attention of the reporter yesterday. Tom
.
*
a fine collection of
Cox sod Jim Null are two miners working far
up on the bleak, snowy slopes of Mount El■ tert, near Twin Lakes. They sleep iu a tent
near the mouth of Golden Lode, in which they
.wore working all night, when they went into
the tent for the purpose of going to sleep.
One of them got in ted and, enveloping him­
self with the blankets, was snug aud comfort­
able .and drowsy in a moment The
other, not in so great a hurry, noticed that tho
A LARGE AND WELL SELECTED STOCK CF
, melting snow was drlppiifg through the roof of
the tent and right where he bad to sleep. He
couldn’t stand a wet couch, aud, arousing bis
companion, asked him to get up so that the
। bed might be moved to a position where the
. incited »now would not touch IL His sleepy
■ partner growled out a refusal. There was a
. Iiot reply, and In. less time than it takes to
; write it the two men were engaged in a fierce
----------- 1 KEEP IN STOCK-:----------i personal encounter. They were both clad In
their night shirts alone, and a small tent ir but
i limited space for two angry men lo fight each
other in. They hail hardly clinched before one
carried the other through the front flaps of
the tent.
i Right here It is necessary to say that tbe
tent was pitched on tbe fearfully steep elope
| of Mount Elbert, and there wasn’t more than
ty All my goodfi arc tresh. Just bought for spot cash and
two feet of level ground between the f.-outof
the tent and the precipitous slope of the
i mountain. Tills *lopc was covered With four will be sold only for cash, nt the lowest prices.
A cordial invitation is extended to every man, woman
feet of soft snow, and it extended down for
' 2,000 feet before there was a resting-place. In child, to cull and examine prices! nnd qualities ot Goods.
; the Cerce fight between the two miners they
1 tnke pleasure in showing Goods, whether you wish to
were carried down the dizzy slope, and. with
their hands upon each other’s throat*, they buy or not.
went whirling down the mountain like a pair
Nashville, Jdich., Dec. 3,1881.
of bowlders. They had gone but a short dis­
tance when anger vanished in the presence of
a poe dble death, and each man tun ed his
attention to the parunount work of raving
| his life. Down they went along the fear­
, ful slant of the great mountain, and at each
i revolution they sunk in the soft snow
i sometimes head first and sometimes feet
i first. They were paralyzed with fright, and
’ no sound escaped their lips. The further
down they went, the greater the momentum
| of their bodies, and when about 500 feet from
the point where they started, they bounded
■ in the air rod alighted in snow so deep that
। they stuck’ fast. After arduous efforts they
l managed to extricate themselves and get back
I to their tent, bruised and bleeding and their
quarrel healeit No matter what • the future
; has in store for these two men, they will
never forget the time when they were whirling
. down the snowy slope* of the continental &lt;11vide of North America, and a snow drift oared
taetn from landing 1,500 feet below, in a coo­
' dition in whleh none but the Coroner and tho
undertaker would feel any practical interest

STAND AND HANGING LAMPS
And Glassware of the Latest Pattern

English and American White Ware

Brown Ware, Yellow Ware, Stone Ware
WOODEN WARE, BASKETS, YANKEE NOTIONS, ETC.

C. AINSWORTH

3

Pi

K

nnd will, doubtle**, continue so.—

Completion of the Alpine Tonne! it
Colorado.

The recent completion of the Alpine tun­
nel by the Denver, South Park it Pacific Rail­
road Company demonstrates tbe daring na­
ture of tbe nineteenth century engineering,
and in addition thereto the tunnel is an ole
ject of interest a* a wprk of no ordinary char­
, actor. Through the courtesy ot Superintend­
ent C. W. Fisher and Chief Engineer Evans,
the .V&lt;im has been enabled to present the fol­
lowing facts regarding the huge artificial
cavern.
Tbe tunnel ia situated In Alpine Paas and
pierces tbe great continental backbone. The
summit of the mountain la also the boundary
line between Chaffee and Gunnison Counties,
entering the tunnel In the former county
and emerging in the latter. The town of Han­
cock ia situated about three miles to the cast
of the eastern entrance, and Pitkin, nine miles
away, is the drat town encountered while jour­
neying westward.
'.he elevation of the tunnel was one of the
* rlous obstacles encountered while perform1 tg the work. At an altitude of 11,524 feet it
enters u mountain whose crest is 12,000 feet
utrove the sea, and constant changes were ne­
cessitated among the workmen, for only tbe
most robust could endure the effects of that
rarifled atmosphere. From the eastern en­
trance to the western exit the tunnel is 1.773
feet in length, white its height ia 18 feet, with
a width of MX feet.
The work was commenced about two years
ago and it was proaouncod finished on the
second day of the present mouth. Wille the
benefit* accruing from the work to
road company warranted tlie expens
nevertheless expected or anticipated
veins or bcxlies would Le encounter
hopes of such a nature were not
however, for throughout its entire length
coroptwed granite was lhe predominant cli_.
octerlstic of the rock. The interior is finished
throughout with Csllfamia red wood, and
when completed the aggregate cost of ths
work was found to be FAb.OOi. By means of
the tunual Gunnison and all points westward
are lirought eighty mites nearer to Denver,
whlie the disadvantages accruing from a con­
stant warfare with the snows are greatly
diminhihed, rs snow sheds for a short distance
from either end of the tunnel will protect the

Sash, Doors, Blinds, JeffersoD Nails, Glass, Putty, Paints,
Oils, Vanishes, Color', Brushes, Etc. Castor, Sperm, Golden
Black, Linseed and Kerosene Oils.
Shovels, Spades, Forks, Hoes. Snaths, Apple Parers, Farm
Bells. Fence Wire, Well and Cistern Pumps. Wood and Iron,
Pipe, Points, Cylinders, Lead Pipe, Sinks * &amp;c.
------------ AGENT FOR------- :—

DOMESTIC SEWING MACHINE

The Lightest Running and most Durable Machine in use.
I shall aim to keep none but first class goods, and sell them
at a small profit. Call and see me when needing hardware,

FRANK C.^BOISE
jjAVE you seen those

New—Fall Goods
—_____
just in at

KOCHER BROTHERS
If not, do

bo

nt once and be happy

In this lice we are bound to lead all competition, and our
stock just in is likrgpr and belter selected than ever before. It
consists in part, of

New StYle Cashmeres, Plaids, Brocades, Etc
OUR STOCK OF-------- r

traveroc U:e jlaUrriuth of canyoas necessary to

To a certain extent railroading at very high
altitudes is even now experimental, and tbe
difficulties to te aurmounted are more serious
than would be imsgmexl from a hasty glaut-c
at the subject- Shorter curves and steeper
curves tliaii were deemed practicable ten 'ears
ago are now constantly and advantageously
empteyed by the mountain roods, aud thlnkvantages to be derive! by employing tunnels
as a eater of dDUtuevs, white the danger from
Hoods and snows incident to the I reversing of
water-course canyons are an important factor

tnLUimarlc.-. $t:e-tipiing to boM
—Nearly one-seventh of Ireland is

IS FULL AND COMPUTE.
The larbest line of Beaver Sbawli* in two counties
A large variety of Ready Made C oaks; also Cloakings of all
shades and qualities.
300 Pieces of New Prints. An endless variety of Blank’ts
A big line'of Underwear and Flannels.
CtiBtomera tire plenty, and we are too busy to enumerate
further at present.

KOCHER BROS
—

�UM
K&lt;rs are “taroal” scarce.
Wakh h visiting in this Domin­

thorn U

ion.
.
day morning, from the text, “I wikh
Law aud order is prevailing at Bbyou all a happy New Year.”
mark.
.
Mr. Davis living on the town .line uf
Well we did oysters, last Saturday
Woodland, is quite trick. - HuIim not
night.
been
able to do much the postsmum er.
The old "Nick” hM got into the Hay
About six couple gave Dr. Baugh­
family.
man and wife a surprise, on Wednes­
Mrs. Martin Harris has gone .tolud.,
day night The refreshments were
on * visit.
oysters, '•
‘
.
j
J. Young has gone to the shady woods
John Gerhartemule driver hM mis­
used,
and
pounded
said'
animals,
be
­
Mrs. Atnos Downs is quite ill. ' Heart
yond all reason, and now the matter
disease is the cause.
will be taken in hand. A word to the
John has lost his Molly for sure, as
wise is sufficient.
■be wanted "More-HoMe.”
Cutters and sleghs were prepared to
Mr. John Prince hM been sick sever­
take in some of tho sleighing the fore
al weeks. Tape worm is tho cause.
part of the week. Our farmers would
Mrs. Herbert Grinnell, of Ann Ar­
like to see some good roads bo that they
bor, is visiting at her parental home,
Could get to market and then business
Would be lively again.
Sickness hM been a constant visitor
H. F. Rawson and family living near
in N.H. Kinnes family, for seventeen
Lansing were visiting at John R. Buryears.
num’s and other relatives in A’oodland
Conundrum :—When a family is fast
on New Years. John reports that tbe;
decreMiu^wbj^should the aged parents
did justice to two fat turkeys and also
want "Mo|e-boUse2^--—z
Hulkdto &amp;. Co., are done hulling,and enjoyed a rabbit hunt.
The hunters around here have been
are in pllice ready to grind feed, for all
after the lynx that has been infesting
wishing corn dodgers,
tbe
Hager neighborhood for the past
We are watching James Wheeler,
and hope in the near future to give few weeks. Some of the boys that go
to see their sweeAiearts, and have
some news worth the while.
Ha! ha! ha! ho! ho! ho! her you evil in their ■ hearts, imagine they see
herd or. thet belling over in the Lake this an imal.
Mr. Giegory commenced to move to
neighborhood. Law, next, is reported.
Jt has been demonstrated that those NMhville on Monday.Mr. Gregory
and wife have made a good many warm
who go to another state to marry, are
liable to get a belling at both ends of friends here in the short time they
have been with us, and m they move
the road.
Mr.^Morehouse returned from Ind., frame here to Nashville, we can reccommen
them to the good people there,
last week bringing a quantity of Hay,
Mary, m a trophy. Next night ho en­ there, m worthy of your respect.
The young people’s New Years party
joyed n charivari from the boys.
,
There is young tornado blowing over at G. Risings, last Monday night, wm
Shay town, because a young American b success. There wore about sixly
got his pants striped at school.
How present nnd everybody seemed to en­
sad it is that big boys are expected to joy themselves. Some of our youpg
Indies were so anxious to go, that they
obey the rules of tlie school room.
I would trade my farm for a stock of. went uf«»ot, a distancu os 3j .miles. W.
goods, a printing office or a jacknife Carter was chosen president for the
I would, however, prefer tlie latter, as next two years.
The pioneer meeting wm not alto­
it would be of some use to me. For
for particulars inquire at The News gether a failure. Tho«o present re­
port a good time, and they chose T.
office.
Does that reporter in West Sunfield, I loughten, Pres; Vice H.Kilpatrick E.P.
know that he is treading on dangerous Barnum, Sec.; and W. H. Lee, Treas.
ground f Does he know ho is encroach­ This pioneer gathering ought to l&gt;e
ing upon my territory gobbling news made one of tbe most interesting
at my expense 1 Has he paid hia license meetings held in tbe town. The one
and affixed the proper stamp , on his next year will l»e held in tlie Town
* production ! Beware and make your Hall.
At a regular meeting of Woodland
will "Day Watch.”—He has been chris­
Lodge,No. 389 I. O. O. F.,beld on Mon­
tened aud commissioned.—Ed.
day
evening, the 2d day of January,
Writist.
1883, the following officers were instal­
HASTINGS.
ed by D. D. G. M. Andrew S. Carpen­
ter: James H. Black, N. G,; John
School opened Tuesday.
Velte; V. G.; Henry Holmes, Sec’y.;
Dr. Upjohn hM the diphtheria.
Lewis C. Barden, Treat.; • Ludwig
The b*ard of supervisors are in Hes- Faul, Warden; Calvin Sawdy, Cond.;
don.
Irt Jordan, I. G.. D. B. Cooper, 0. G.;
Rev. Moody will preach at the Bap­ Daniel Miller; R. S. N. G.; James G.
tist church Sunday Jan. 8. morning and Jordan, 8. S.N. 8.; John Wonderlich,
evening.
R. S, V. G.. -Wm. Jo'rdan. R. 8. 8.;
Union services were held last Sun­ John W. Whisler, 8. S. 8.; Nicholas
day evening by the Presbyterenn mid Brown, Chaplin.
Methodist societiee.
Edwin Smith was bronghteJ&gt;efore
New Years call were indulged in by ’Squire Hough last Friday afternoon,
quite a number of gentlemen on Mon­ nnd pleaded not guilty. Ths usual ex­
day. Sobriety was a marked feature, amination took place. Mr. Hnight and
all Imlics dealing out nothing stronger Palmerton appearing for the plaintiff
than coffee.
and Mr. Perry for the defense. After
The Presbyterian social nt the resi­ the prosecution had closed their case,
dence of E. G. Holbrook, was largely the defendant made a statement which
attended and all enjoyed themselves. was pretty thin. Justice Hough bound
The society have extended a call to him over to circuit court under a bond
Rev. R. A. Carnoham. of New York
aud as he failed to give.bail, was
who will take up bis duties about Juoe taken to jaiL This in not bis tirat of1st. Mr. Carnaham is a young man of scnce ; he has served eight years' sen­
y.talcutand will doubtless do a good tence in the reform school in Ohio,
wot k here.
and this is the third note he has forged
On Wednesday, A. R. Bovee from since he came here, and now will prob­
Calndonia wm trying to sell a note able have to go over the road for some
amounting to $84.00 drawn in his favor, time.
and against John Teeple to H. L. New­
' ton. Sheriff Babcock wm present, and
MAPLE GROVE.
the anxiety and discount offered, arous­

ed his suspicions, so he had Mr. New­
ton take the note, paying $3.00 down,
with the understanding that he wm to
receive the rest iu the morning. In
the meantime the Sheriff found out
that it wm a forgery and procured
rooms for Mr. Bovee . He don’t go out
in company much now, the probabili­
ties are that when be comes into court
next Friday he will look croos-eyed
and plead insanity.

Haxb.
KALAMO.
E. Welch is visiting his sister, ia Al-

Election of officers at the R, R.' tf.
last Friday night.
Jack Lundquist's daughter Mary, hM
the diphtheria.
Joe Mix and wife are stopping at his
mother’s, for a short visit.
A danee wMheld at Sihs Slosaon’s
last week Thursday night.
A. Spencer hM n dance and oyster
■uDpcr this week Thursday.
A drover from Portland, hM been
buying up all tbe sheep and cattle in
this vicinity.
Will Fowler has the diphtheria, in a
I*- Snell of Kalamo is at-

id Saturday, old winter
meaa to the amount of

iiMi

Quarterly meeting at theM. E.cburch
the 21st and 29d,
Loienxo ha* gone to keeping hous*
with his new wife.
Elsie Stephens and Frank Wing were
made one,on Thursday.
Otto Walker and Preston Jewell hav«
returned from Nebraska.
Seiger At Servin’s shooting match
turned into raffling match.
Lather McDerby hM a hen that lays
eggs weighing four ounces.
Mr. Youngs from Canada Um bought
the Miller farm,
paying therefor
$1,800.
The private school under the instruc­
tion of Winney Russel is progressing
finely*
A temperance lectureatthe Congreg­
ational church Sunday night, it had a
female speaker.
Charlie BakerIim taken the contract
to build the school house in the Baker
district at $800.
My opinion is that any one who
signs a petition to tax churches, will bs
scorned by devils ia the infernal re-

Boy’s” profile, he ainclt something
Htrottgc
Mr. Edward Gates and Miss Maggie
Durfee attended die Masonic ball, nt
Hastings.
Mrs. E. M. Bartlett, after making a
seven weeks stay with her brother. M.
M. Slocum has returned home to Tole­
do.
.
,
Edward, there in no use in whining,
the gal is married and the large hill
and dreaded caosway are things ot

If anybody is slighted because they
do not sue their name in print just do
something cunning, and then come
and tell me.
.
Jacob Johnson has taken up, and re­
corded on the town book, a black hog,
that has been lingering nronnd his
premises some time.
Wm, Hendershott has gone to Penn.,
to bring back the remains of ins wife,
who died their while on a visit, the
fore purt of last summer.
gtona.
One of the many valuable gifts op
Helen Mills had a present of a gold the Christmas tree, at Dowling Granwt
ring. She slipped the same on her fin­ Hall, wm a ailver tea set Hd*~* . A
ger and it being a little small caused gold for Mrs. Clara Gnujfcr’B
t
her finger to swell so badly that the from her father, D. C.
' liMJ
ring had to be cut off.
Sidney Hull is doing cliortHfe^L^qf■
Ed. Bartley i« in the habit of swap­ board this winter. Last fall hefffekta
ping horses. He came across Sam. up his traps aud went to dwell with
Cotton at the Creek, ami traded horses his sons, and since colli weather has
with him, but found he had got a balky come back with a contrite heart, to
horse. On his waj- home he stopped roost with his better half again.
and borrowed a chain to draw the ani;
Rcirhard Freer has traded the farm
nial home, stating that it wbs sick, but where he lives, for the farm he tracts,
tbe next morning was heard giving the ed to Mr. Roberts, about a year ago,
sick horse a coursegf sprout*. H. H.
just'over the town line, in the edge of
Hastings, Roberts hud an auction sale
EAST MAPLE GROVE.
Jan. 4th, nnd will move back to Hast­
Suffering—wood and sawlogs.
ings.
Calvin Basnett mourns tho loss of a
Aaron E. Durfee and wife, while at­
pair of twin boys.
tending tbe grange, last Saturday, re
Every one seems to lie chock full of ccived a telegram that their absent son
work since tho snow storm.
Pliney, was not expected to recover
Casper Bowen is making preparation from a disease of the kidneys.
They
to build a barn, next summer.
started at once for the sick lied of their
Joe Clarkson of Caro, wm a guest at only boy.
W. C. Wilcox’s the fore part of this
Doxt.
week. He returned Tuesday.
EATON COUNT!.
- School commenced at the Quail Trap

on Monday,and Miss Edna Griffin rings
the bell for tbe third term of school in
that district.
There is a child that resides id this
town whose blood relation is of a
somewhat complicated character.
He
is his mother’s brother, his aunts are
his sisters, be is the grandson of his
father and his own nephew.
The Now Year opened with a veryfine day, nnd also very quiet iu this
vicinity, not even a roasted chicken or
turkey for dinner as is generally cus­
tomary. The children forgot to get
up nt midnight to see if the cattle were
kneeling, but as soon as daylight they
ran to see if Santa Clnus had brought
them anything, but how great wm
their Mtonishment to find nothing but
an empty stocking for them. Nothing
but the crowing of the roosters or the
cackling of the bens that brpke the si­
lence all day long.
.
A mnn living in Knlamo said that
one nighL about 12 o’clock. De was
awakened from his slumber by his
clock striking ton great excess, ns soon
m he was arousezl
he commenced
counting the number of times that the
clock struck and kept it up until he
wm completely tiled out.
Meanwhile
it had wakod up tlie baby aud it was
trying to keep tune with the clock and
the dog thought that it wm a fourth of
July and ho*commenced howling. By
this time the wife had g &gt;t upon her
dignity, and said that if he did not
throw that clock out of doors, she
would. He shot out of bed like a load
uf coal and made for the clock. By the
time he reached the clock it had ceased
Where did you spend your New striking and he returned to bed, nnd
Years.
the house wm quited down and they
There wm quarterly meeting at the all enjoyed the remainder of the night­
U.B. church last Saturday and Sun­ in a good sound sleep.
Peter.
day.
WEST SUNFlfeLD.
How many of our boys swore off
their bad habits, and ore determined to
Here we are again.
do better this year.
Miss Ella Powers, the teacher at the | Ho! for a sleighride.
What beautiful evenings.
McQmber district, is having a two
. Did you observe watch night!
weeks vacation.
Miss Jane Miller, of Nashville, has । Mr. Fay, teacher at Barns Town, in
been spending the holidays with her stead of Sunfield center.
Among those who have gone North
sister, Mrs. George Marshal.
The Good Templets Lodge at Nor­ this winter, we would note Jim. Walch
nnd
George Quick. ,
ton’s hall, is in a flourishing condition,
Charlie Sackett hgs returned from
and bills fair to be the means of doing
KansM,
and will again settle on bis
good.
The boys gave Charley McKing, a farm vacated by Mr. Prince.
William
Bowser took a rest from
cow-beU social lMtxThursdsy evening,
audlben Charley gave them a cider school duties last week, aud spent the
time in bunting nnd visiting.
social before they left.
Schools in this town seem to have
.’■Ira. Levi Elliott received a telegran.
'rtst week, announcing the death of her improved, aa also have teacher’s wages,
since
the new system of examination*.
brother, Reuben Coats, of Brookfield,
Mr. Edwin Harper is putting up
Eaton County.
another
building, for James Hunter.
Tlie Union Sunday school at tbe Nor­
ton’s school house, has reorganized fur Hury up Ed. or yoa will have cold
fingers.
the coming yyar. and the following are
No marriages, no deaths, no fights,
the officers: J. H. McKee, Supt; Phil­
but in nd, mud.
lip Shaffer. Aiwistant Supt; C. R. Par­
scarce do not
mer, Trea«, Libra’n

was a resident of Flint, was' ruu over
by a passing ^engine nnd cut to pieces
on the line of the Chicago &amp;. Grand
Trunk Railway., between Lapeer and
Elba, Dec. 31. He was drunk nr«l
walking on tbe track at tbe time.
Rev John Hincock, a Methodist min­
ister at Jonesville, met a ringu'nr
death, Jan. 2. He wm kading'his cow
and fastened tbe rope tujiis wrist. Tbe
cow ran away andalrew him about so
violently as to cause his death. He
was 79 years old and leaves n wife nnd
son.
At Detroit last Wednesday while
August John, a night watchman em­
ployed nt tlie. Michigan Central, car
works, was walking towards home on
the Lake Shore A Michigan Southern
railroad truck, a pony engine struck
him, aud falling on the trank he wAs
rub over and instantly killed.
Miss Martha Hide, a young lady 23 ot
24 years uf age, committed suicide nt
Flint, Dec. 81. The family missed her
and nftcr searching for her some lime,
found her body fin the Thread mill
pond. She hud gone out dressed sim­
ply in her night clothes. No cauw
assigned for the desperate act, and her
friends know uf nd reason whatever
which should Lave led her to take het
own life.
■
Fenton wm greatly excited last week
by the sudden death of n girl mimed
Hunter, who was but 17 years old and
about to become b mother. Before she
died a yuung man mimed Kegb : mo
accused uf being tho seducer, and
owned
up.
They &gt;.•••!••• •n’t—ie«l
Wednesday night and -ho «iui lo-xt
morning and-wa-Hfliumed before night.
An examination was held, which re­
flected so much discredit upon a cer­
tain phycian that he Ims run away.
If some of the philanthropic seuti;
nient in the country which i* slopping
over on costly attempts to get inven­
tive genius to produce ways uf killing
chickens without hutting them, or for
seading cattle to New York in palaceenrs, could lie diverted into endeavor*
to rig Michigan saw mills so that it
wouldn’t take so much human blood
to grease up the saw journals, there
would he less cripples and fewer wid­
ows anti orphans in the luml^rdistrictn.
The waste of life in the Michigan saw
mills is something horrible, nnd much
of it could be presented by proper leg­
islative action, ju*t hr the death and
accident ratio in the Pennsylvania coal
mines hns been reduced.—Detroit News.

There have been 30 deaths iu the
township of Roxaud, during 1881.
A man named Cox was arrested at
Eaton Rapids last week Thursday for
stealing clover seed. Resold the seed
to a buyer in tliat city.
The night-watchman of Eaton Rap­
HA! Hl! HA! HU! HO! HO!
ids pi oposes to take every horse he
finds on the street at unseasonable
hours, and put them in a feed' barn.
Everybody supposed tlie BarnardHaWkeve ]
Curtis trial had closed until they saw
It seems to Iw very funny indeed.
_______
the Believe Gazette, whish is yet giving The Amcricansare a fun-loving, mirth­
it in detail.
ful people. We must have our little
joke. We must laugh, and tbe more
MICHIGAN NEWS.
solemn the occasion the more neceaRary that we should indulge iu the re­
Anton Serr. n fanner of Venice, Sin- laxation of laughter mid merriment.
We have suflervd ro much from the
awaatee County, tree fatally kicked by
death of President Garfield that it is
a colt, Dec. 39.
but natural the reaction from mensurvSeven, men have been accidentally less grief should set in. Oh, very nat­
killed in the lumber woods near Snm- ural indeed. We suffered in Rympathv
with the stricken majtyr through all
in it, thia aeoaon.
the long, hopeless suiniuerof voiceless
Key worth's hotel luirn in Imlay City, agony and patient endurance. Tbe
was burned Dec.31, together with con­ shattered
bone, and the fester­
ing truck of the fatal uullet: the cruel
tents and ten horses.
knives of the anxious, perolexed sur­
Tbe Central railroad Company ha a geons; the burrowing pus; the burn­
taken possession of the extension of ingfever; the chills like the hand of
the Saginaw n»ad to the straits.
death ; the longing cry from the home­
A young lady of Adrian fumigates all sick heart for the old home at Mentor;
the wean'nights of wakefulness; the
the lettera she receives from Chicago, the long hot days; then pain that nev­
an account-of her fears of small-pox.
er slept, and the agony that never
It is stated that a young lady iu In­ ceased; tbe long, hungry look at the
diana will build a church at Harbor billowy- sea; stretching away, wide and
shoreless as eternity ; the strong, goixl
Springs next summer, and present it life, ho full of hope, love and strength
to the Episcopal society.
for God mid uinn, stricken down in the
The jewelry store of W. C. Reynolds, hour of hi»innocenceand honor by the
in Armada, was entered by burglars on Inina of the vilest assassin that ever
cursed the earth by living in it; the
Sunday night, aud articles to the value peace that only come with death; the
of $350 taken therefiom.
land palid in the gloom of starless
The temperance people of Manistee night from sea to sea; a sobbing world
have raised a fund of $500 to be used kneeling about an open coffin ; nations
beyond the seM caliing*but their sym­
in prosecuting saloon-keepers who run pathy to tlie stricken republic, nnd
theirestabliHhmeut contrary to law.
wuKhing our tears away with their own
—
was ever sorrow like this? Was ever
William Dignor, a brakeman ota the
C. &amp; G. T. railway, fell under a yarS agony like his or grief like ours T
Au«l now—you will kindly excuse
engine at Fort Gratiot, on Monday, the hilarity of a Wnshinglon audience,
and his head was severed from his but it seems so funny, they cannot
help it. Lt is the man who Iim catwed
body.
Cupt. John R. King of St. Joseph was this long day of agony and night of
sorrow who is ou tnal; that is all.
raising his fathers house to put a new Over there last a little way, the shot
a new foundation under it, Dec. 30, was fired’: Just here, may be vou can
and while brf was under it the house see the stains ou the floor yet, if you
look closely—the President sank down,
fell, crushing him to death.
crying, ".My .God what is tbisT” Over
Louis Bertboon, aged 71, died of yonder, in the capitol, bis dead body,
heart disease at Monroe, Jan. 3, at St. worn and-emaciated r.nd drawn with
Mary’s Roman Catholic church, daring sufl'ering, lay in state. Here—but we
are missing Rome-thiug go.-d: the
the funeral services of Mrs. Caldwell, court-room is ringing with laughter
while acting aspall-bearer.
over something the asaassm Mid.
Michael Hand, of Summerville, was Something funny: ho is a droll man.
arrested at Dowagiac, on Monday, by He says so many things. Ab, there is
•'great laughter” in the court-room
officer Duff, charged with poisoning again. Out west, or down here in Tex­
two cows belonging to Wm. Bates, a as a police mauiatrate would promptly
check laughter in his court, during the
neighbor, some time Inst summer. ■
The suit against Homer village, Cal­ trial of a man who stole h mule: but
this is a WaMiiugtou court-room mid it
houn county, brought by Cole Bros, ia the trial of the wretch who killed the
for a wind mill sold that corporation President*. They do things diflereutly
several years ago, was concluded last in tbe LHstnet of Colntubia court*, vou
week by a verdict against Homer for sec. And now the audience breaks' in­
to uiiThnslHMic anplaiis. Thev nre
nearly $500.
cheering a good telling point made by
R. II. Morrison, the defaulting treas­ tberpnireel lor the hmmsiu. It i* m
urer of tbe Michigan Grand Lodge of Wiiihingtou crowd that is enjoying
the trial tiut seems to Im
oddfellows, is in Washington, wears
full of mi rriweut and mthmdiuou.
\\ e who live far h wny from the r.ipiio)
daughter of a rich Boston iglergyman. of our country and chu only gtean ,th&lt;theSturgi* Timex aiM Journal.
' thi
‘ this amusing trial

ion—the earue«t appeal ufa maowhuM
wliol-.- nature was rnppcd up in a p*u»ijon he could neither cod ire1 nor cast
iside—that My tilt- had -|N*kt&gt;n the
words with which our xturj open*. She
had watched him closely during an acquaintonce of nearly two jears. and
noticed with pain how he retluiously
avoided candy stores and ice cream
saloons. "I can never marry a man.”
she had said to her mother one day,
"■who shies at the sight, of a candy
store like a country horse at a tire en­
gine.” And when rhe expected avowal
came she had kept her word.
Adelbrrfrturned around in a- dazed
sort of way after Myrtle hail rejected
him, walked swiftly toward tlie dry
goods store which hail been so fortu­
nate as to sfeure his services.
All the afternoon Adalbert stood
moodily behind the ribbon counter,
thinking of how be should n venge
himself on the naughty girl who had
wrecked bls happiness. At preChtdr
4i o’-. lock a fierce joy lighu-d up hoi
countenance, and putting on his bat,
he left the More. &gt;

As the bells of St. Agnes’s church
were Mrikiug 9, a young man sprang
lightly up the steps ot a magnificent
residence, aud was «o«»n Heated in the
sumptuously fnnusbed parlor. The
nropiietor of the Iioum*. a benevolentlooking old gentleman, entered ’ the
loom. "Doyon r.jsli to wi- ineT* lie
said to Advlbert Tomkins—for it was
J(E who had sprung lighflv up the steps.
•' "Yes,” he replied. "You arc the
iMiuon I seek.”
•7w’hat would yon?”ysaid the old
ponth-mmi.
"You are the cashier in tins—Bank',
I believe f” said the young man.
•‘I am.”
"You have been stealing the con­
cern’s muuy. Do you not reek to de­
ceive inc. You are u cashier: ’tis
enough. Give tut- $20,000 or I will exposeyuaand ruin your life. Having
heard me twitter, you cun choose your
, own cottrre-.”
Foran n.*:wirilic ca hier did not
move, and then, going to an elegant
escritoire which stood in a corner of
tbe room. Im wrote a cheek for &gt;*50,000.
certified it. ami handed tin* piece of
paper, now ii tortuLe. :&lt;&gt; tic- youth.
“I have bin one tavur id .» k,” he
Midi "and that in that yon will mm:y
my daughter." I wouldn’t like to let as
sure u thing a* you arv go out of the
family.. She b.;a dlW.IM) in her own
right, mid when I ain dead and tbe
u.uik directors arc in jit.il on account of
my bookkeeping it will suffice to keep
you ui comfort,”
.
Two months later Myrtle Mahafl^r,
the cashier’s only child, heemne Adelbert’s bunny bride. One child, n blue­
eyed boy with gnhleu hair, has blessed
the union, aud ns he site on bin grand­
father’s knees in front of the fire, and
iisksiu his Innocent, childish way if
“papa isn’t a smart man,” tlm old gen­
tleman kisses him fondly mid says in
soft, low tones:
"You’re singing on the right key
now, sonny.”—Chicago Tribune.

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RHEUMATISM,

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�-CALLON-

*=
natural that

they were oct in the freexing, gray
twilight, with the flakes of snow al­
ready beginning to flutter in the air, “r
, told you 1 wouldn't have any of this
nonsense.” ’
“Itfs my own money, Caleb, that 1
•ared out of the housekeeping allow­
ance,” said Mrs. Darrow, stung by a
keen sense ot injustice.
“If the housekeeping allowance is so
much too ample for your requirements,
my dear, I will see that it is cut down,”
said her husband. .“When I said that
the children were not to have any
Christmas toys thiayoar I meant it”
Mrs. Darrow went home aud had a
■ slept th-holy
good cry. How wa, she ever to make
table dim:
the little ones believe that Christmas
.xnes of Bethlehem
was not to come for them this year?
“poroomM for Him!
They were dancing about the Bittiugroom when she came in, those wild
I Use anrrli »ln&lt;:
little elves.
“ Mamma,” cried Adelaide, “ Bessie
wants to go to bed now—absolutely now
, thrvurh all tbo ages,
at land ao far away.
—ho that Santa Claus will coma quick­
er.”
■ “ He never comes till little baby-girls
are asleep.” said Bessie, pouting out
her red lips, decidedly. “ Old nurse
Tbr CkrhC-ehlld't lowly birth.
said so.”
“ Mamma!” shouted Joe, “ I almost
know Santa Claus will bring me a tool
• chest! O. mamma, don’t you wish it
was to-morrow morning?”
“ Children!” said tho crisp, harsh
Glad ohimea from tbe belfries ring.
( voice of thoir father, who had entered
Aud tbe CarUtma* waits under EoglUh arias1 from an.opposite doorway, “thismorn­
ing or to-morrow morning will make no
sort of difference with you. Business
Are sleeping, sad dreaming they hear tbo voloc, has been bad this year, and there is uo
Of tbe beautiful Chriat-cbllJ caJL
money to spend for such folly as toys.
And the sooner you make up your minds
For th*y^n roily bellevn, when tho midnight to that the better!”
The children stared incipdulously at
him; then they turned their glances to
their mother, aud perceived that she
had been crying.
But tbe spirit of Christina* Is always
Tbe same, in whatever gul»e
Mr. Darrow sat by the fire after
Ha may come. whether that of the holy child. supper—a
cheerful
little heater,
whose red eves of fire shone vividly
through the darkened room, and whose
ra through the night in a rcludeo.- pipe carried the surplus peat into n
register in the nursery above.
fuli to tho brim with loyal
•• Those children not in bed ret?”
said Mr. Darrow to himself, aa he heard
He know* where tbe flrtrees stand
tho patter 'of childish feet, the ring of
Waitinc to bloom, and the stocking* to grow
childish voices, above. “ What in tbe.
At the mseieal touch of hl* hand.
world keeps them up at ibis time of
And up through the chltnncy away ho Alee
night?”
As soen a* hi* work Is dune:
• Stepping softly, in his slippered feet,
And out ot tbe darkness we bear him call.
“Merry Christmas to every one!"
ho went up stairs, and peeped in at the
.
— YouUSi Companion.
crack of the door.
Bessie wasstanding on tiptoe to hang
a little, red-striped stocking on a nab
OS CHRISTMAS EVE.
beside the chimney-piece. Addie was
“Maa ay for Christmas presents, in­ helping her, while Joe stood sadly by.
“ It’s no use, chicks,” said Joe.
deed!** cried Mr. Darrow. •• That’s all
“ Papa said we weren’t to have any
•• My dear!” said Mrs. ^Darrow, depre- Christmas presets this year.”'
“ I don’t cere,” cried little Bessie,
catingly.
“But there's an end to a man’s excitedly. " Don’t you know. Joo. it
punv!” said tho head of the family. isn’t papa that sends the Santa C'.aus
“Rant, teats, insurance, school-bills. presente? It’s Santa Claus’ ownsclf.
Church eapeaiiBs, and now on top of all And hu never forgets good little girls
the rest, Uk« the last hair that breaks on a Christmas Ero—does he, Addie?”
“ No. indeed!” said Addie, her inno­
the eaoierB back, comes a demand for
—Christaias presents! 1 can’t do it. my cent face tilled with undoubting faitiu
“ You'll see. Joe! To-morrow morning
dear, aad I won’t!”
“Eat tho children!” said Mrs: Dar­ these stocking* will bo full.”
••If you really-think so.” said Joo.
row, who sal with her hands folded in
her lap, with a frightened air, as if making for his "own particular bureau­
some great catastrophe were about to drawer. “I may as well hang up mine,
befall her
too. For I’m sure I’ve tried to be a
To her,Christmas had always bean good boy.”
So the little ones crept to bed.
the great festival of the year, the day
Caleb Darrow stood there, with a
when earth and Heaven came nearest
together—the time to rejoice and be Bang of remorseful shame at Iris heart.
lid ne not stand in the place of Provi­
glad with exceeding great joy.
“O, the children!" and Mr. Darrow dence to these children? Had Heaven
\ ‘ ■ ahrugged his shoulders. “They won’t been a* deal to the prayers of his faitl.
suffer: Didn’t I give Addie a doll on as he was to these little ones, where
her last birthday? And hasn’t Joe got would ho have been?
He went down-suiirs to the room
a pair of skates? And what has become
of little Bessie's blocks? Besides, chil- where his wife sat, sadly darning
draa should be brought up to know thal stockings.
“Abby,” said he, “put on your hat
life isn’t all play. 1 was cash-boy in a
’
store when I was onlyitwo rears older and cloak. It is not nine yet,” as ho
lliaa Joe!”
saw her astonished glance st the clock.
“Yes, 1 know," said Mrs. Darrow, “I want to buy some Christmas toys for
meekly; “ but they have been looking the children.”
“Caleb!” she cried, almost incredu­
forward all tho year to Christmas, and
I don’t know how they’Ll enduro the lously.
“I’m ashamed of myself!” said ho.
disap pain tmeDL"
“it won’t hurt ’em." said Mr. Dar­ *Tv;e behaved like a heathen Turk.”
Then be told her what ho had over­
row, as he buttoned his coat-pockets.
heard.
“Times are hard, and a man must be­
“God bless the littlo ones!” said she,
gin to economize somewhere.”
Mra. Darrow sat down when tho with tears in her eyes. “They are their
. heavy footsteps of her lord and master own best special pleaders.” ’
And the last customers in the toy­
had ceased to clink down the frosty
shop, that Christmas Evo, wgre Mr.
pavement, and began to calculate.
Th« noisy singing of the canary in and Kin. Darrow, buying too!-chcste.
tbe gilded cage disturbed her, and she dolls.’ games, Noah’s arks and muslcbang it in another room: tbe unaccus­ boxeB, with fruit, and nuts, nnd bon­
tomed task of trying to make two and bons.
“They shall have a merry Christ­
two make five drew wrinkles on her
forehead, and brought :i sharp pain be­ mas,” said Mr. Darrow, "if I don’t
hind her eyes. She hod just so much smoke another cigar for a month.”
And Mrs. Darrow could only look up
boasekceping-moncy allotted to her
every month, and, good economist in his face nnd say:
“O, Caleb, I am so happy!”
though she was, it was impossible to
save much. air. Darrow was a thrifty
And almost before the crimson glory
man. aud for e-cry dollnt he prided of tho Christmas morning irradiated
the east, they heard the children shriek­
himself upoq getting a dollaty value.
“I was going to buy a new wicker ing aud shouting with joy, in tlie ad­
hamper for the clothes.” said Mr. Dar­ joining room.
“Didn’t me tell you, Joe?” said Ad­
row. •‘and a set of new table napkins.
But I must darn up the old linen to last die, exultantly.
“Santa Clous neverJorgete little chil­
a few weeks longer, and do without the
hamper. so as to have a few dollars to dren!" cried Bessie, hugging a curly■
buy toys for the children. I can’t cheat headed doll to her breast.
“Dear Caleb,” whispered Mrs. Dar­
them out of all their Christmas happj- i
row to her husband, “now we can un­
u*. poor Uule dewf
Mr. Darrow was sauntering comforta­ derstand what our Saviour meant when
bly np the snowy streeL the day before He saht ‘Oh, woman, great is thy
—-^“Suiuw. when ho saw his wife, faith. Be it unto these even as thou
ed m the little bob! brown velvet will.’Saturday Night.
uni neatly trimmed cloth cloak
bhe knew so well, enters toystore
Condensed Furniture.
be opposite corner. He looked
a moment, then followed her.
The high rente and crowded condi­
I can't be. after all that 1 said,” he tion ot New York have evolved a pe­
pi, “that She actually means to culiar kind ot furniture, which is made
&gt;e atdefianoer’
to serve two or three purposes at once.
ere she was, however, in the An elaborate writing desk, with ink,
pens and paper. Is really a washstand.
to the counter, handling the An elaborate ctagere, or bookcase, is a
[B pending over their relative bed or a wardrobe A chair can bo
changed into a foot tub. A “chromo”
m was actually turning out her proves to bo
looking glr-ss; a slop
The shopman was looking bucket and pitcher and basin is a pray­
ing stool; and a candelabra with wax
candle* proves to be an amuigementfor
couceallpg fowls and tooth brushes.

Bdw in 1 fc* *f «n krgun ia tol laUc

D(GM.

BOOK’S
‘
’
picked crew of thirty-two men. and tpeaking. Go up to an Engmhman in
commanded by an officer who had had the stre-c and bluntly ask him tbe way
JEWELRY,
experience in Arctic exploration. There to such a building, and he will reward |
¥1 ALL PA PER,
has been no sign since that day. The tbe unprovoked onslaught upon his
WINDOW MHADEK,
two missing whalers, which were seen privacy with the very coolest vi asteu- j
nYBSTCFFM,
about the some time, were driven by ished stares.
But if you preface yonr I
the ice floss toward the Asian coast, one question wish an “I beg your pardon,” j
PBOFBIBTABY MEDKHHB8,
wrecked and the other abandoned.
' ackno wit
There is still, good ground for believing
PBmcniFTiewM, &gt;
that the Jeannette reached Wrangell
RECEIPT*,
swer you very civilly, indeed, and even
Land.
The Corwin, following her go out of. his way to show you yours. In ‘ ।
course so far as the records ran. ap­
the dense crowd coming out of one of &gt; '
proached. that mysterious ooaet a year the concerts at a Birmingham festival a |
ago without catching a glimpse of her, wsll-dressed American looked into tho
and now tho news comes that the at­
tempt has been repeated and a landing face of an equally well-dressed English­
man (a total stranger to him) and said
effected, but that no. traces of the
missing steamer have been found. The jokingly, “Pretty tight quoexe, isn’t it?”
The
Englishman replied, with withering
coast was too extensive to ba thorough­
SEPARTWE T
ly explored, and tho Corwin too fragile coolness, “I’m-sure I can’t sec why you
a craft to be detained in such dangerous should address me in this disgustingly
waters, so that the evidence that the familiar manner!” A conversation ab­
Jeannette did not reach her first desti­ ruptly launched into in an English rail­
nation is by no means conclusive. She way carriage will probably be cut short
may have* wintered there and then at the outeet by whit strikes us Ameri­
headed northwaro. The presumption cans as very gratuitously rude curtness.
that she was compelled to lix&gt;k else­ But if the conversation is introduced by
where for winter quarters is, however, that unfailing open sesame, “I beg your
greatly strengthened by the Corwin’s pardon,” it will flow on very pleasantly
and likely aa not' end in an invitation to
fruitless search.
While it was Lieutenant De - Lang’s pass a week -or so at a country bouse.
Q.EO. IV. FRAMCTS;
expectation that he would be able to Americans are often shocked at the ap­
skirt the eastern edge of Wrangell parently insolent bearing of German
------ nKALER IK------Land and winter there, it was also his shopkeepers, especially of German
bankers. It rarely occurs to them that
fixed determination to take advantage
Fancy and Staple
of open water and to push northward. they themselves have opened hostilities,
The
bu descried on this latest as it were,' by breaking the very first
voyafjs^r .-wen sea leading no one rule of German good-breeding in keep­
In Germany a man
^hotoIcI it r; 8aTe *n th® direction of ing their hate on.
the
eV*possible that the Jean- just as scrupulously takes off his hat,
noty^ &gt;rtu/*^n&lt;lcr was tempted by the and keeps it off, in a shop or countfngCOXHIB riXG IN PART OF
cleAwGtTr to pu«h ahead and to search room as in a lady’s parlor.
An American of our acquaintance SUGARS. TEAS.
for a harbor in the unknown seas near­
COFFEES. SPICES.
happened
to
ba
one
of
a
party
of
six
er to the Role. If ho succeeded in forc­
SYRUPS, MOLASSES,
ing an entrance and in finding an an­ who went to the top of a certain tower
TARCH, SOAP,
chorage beyond the horizon which in Germany, the view from which is
CRACKERS. CHEESE,
famous.
The
party
was
shown
tho
way
closes in upon Wrangell Land, he would
BEST NICKLE SOAP IN TOWN.
have had the opportunities for explora­ by the daughter of the guardian of the
SALMON.
tion of which ho was in quest So open tower, a comely young girl of seventeen
WHITE EISH,
TROUT.
, a season as tho present one would, or thereabouts; onr friend treated her .•
MACKEREL.
however, havo enabled him to set his with common polttoncta, buLa French­ ■
HALIBUT. .
face homeward, and the Corwin won Id man, who was 0110 ot the party, was so
COD FISH.
naturally havo seen traces ot tho Jean­ ■demonstrative and overwhelmingly at­
HERRING.
tentive and gnllau; that the American
nette in tho vicinity-of Herald Island.
COOKED OAT
MEAL.
Tho safest conjee lure that can be male began to feel as if he bad been some­ STEAM
CROCKERY.
under the circumstances is that the lit­ what rude in oompari.&lt;on with such a
tlo vessel was carried by tho ice to want pyrotechnic display &lt;&lt;f courtesy. Well,
the east, and that her commander, find­ when the party hall got to tbe top of tbo
FLOWER POTS
ing that it would be impossible to push towor they only found one chair there,
north, has directed his energies to mak­ upon which the Frenchman immediately 0310
STOXS: WARE.
ing his way to the Atlantic. The fact Hooted himself. This authentic auepdete
that tho Siberian coast has been toler­ is quite characteristic. If we Ameri­ TOBACCOS,
CIGARS,
ably well explored this season dimin­ cans stand pro-eminent for good, solid
PIPES,
ishes the chance that the Jeannette was efficient politeness, we certainly are de­
OUR
FIFTY-CENT TEA.
swept away with tho whalers and plorably deficient in manner. We have TRY
wrecked in tho quarter where they havo neither the dignified repose of the Eng­
been found. It is certainly premature lish, nor the graco of continental Eu­
to assdme that tho fate of the Jeannette ropeans. Possibly we arc shy and try
FP* Remember we got no fancy pri
is already sealed by tbo Corwin’s dis­ to hide our shynesa under an assumed ri-p. inn roll till goods as low as the
closure?.
gruffnow of bearing. Certainly it seems, lowe.sk (quality considered).
Respectfully,
Wrangell Land, it must be borne in nine times out of ten, as if an American,
mind, is a coast line of undetermined even while performing a very polite act,
CEO. W. FRANCIS.
extent Tho Admiral whoso name it thought himself degraded by any out­
bears never caught a glimpse of it, but ward show of courtesy. ILo may will­
merely reported its existence from ingly and cheerfully offer his scat to a
statements’ made to him by natives of lady, and be perfectly content to stand
the mainland. Captain Hooper, of the himself, but liis manner of making tho
We continue tn art as Solicitor* for Patent*. Caveats,
Corwin, who was so fortunate a year offer is almost insulting. He will growl Trade
Marks. Copyright*. etc., for the United State*.
ago as to approach it on a very clear •out, “Take my seat,” in a voice that
day, described it in his official report scams to imply, “and be hanged to
Patent* obtained thmucti ua an? lu^lced In the Scjas covering ot a distance of twenty-five yau! ” Or else be will make the offer KiTtric AmxkicaX. Th!* larro and rplendld HJu&gt;
miles on arc of tbe horizon of about with a jovial familiarity of manner which tnu-dwwkly;'ti|M?r.?3.!U&gt;ay»ar.«!jovr»lhcProRress
11 Science, b v«-nr f ntereKing, nnd has an enoraou*
fifty degrees. At tho southern extrem­ would be quite in keeping between two ■rfrculatfon.
Adifana MDhlTA CO, Patent 8oUdity were three mountains' apparently old pot companions in a tap-room. We u rn. Pub'*, of setemne Axnucax. 37 Park Bow,
3,000 feet high nnd entirely covered may be rich in the solid gold, but we New Ycrk. Hand book about Patent* free-______ x
with snow, while northward was a are poor indeed in the smail change of
chain of rounded hills gradual'/ ap­ politeness. “Fine words batter no par­
proaching tho sea level. It was’Cap­ snips,” say wo; this i* a mistake; Uno
tain Hooper’s opinion that Wrangell words (and manner*) butter all sorts el
Land wa.* a large island, nnd possibly parsnips; indeed, as Thackeray says,
one of n chain of islands passing en­ there are many people whose parsnips
tirely through the Polar regions to are buttered in no other way.—Boston
Greenland. That there are other isl­ Transcript.
________ .
ands lying north of it in the direction
of the open water which he has himself
Barbers in Europa.
descried this season there can be Jittle
J havo now been shaved in seven
doubt. It
|/ossible. therefore, that
luitxt or tiumoualt^l
the Jeannette, while unable to land in kingdoms and six language*. They all
in-1
rntfb.'-.
tho quarter which has been viMted by perform tho ceremony differently. Buf
K&lt;-i.il for liluuraled
•AY Ml* *O\N.
Captain Hooper, wont forward boyouii they all, from Scotland to Naples, insist
tho reach pf any relief ship, and'that on seating vou in a plain straight back
she will yet reappear bearing tidings of choir, and bending your toad over back
remarkable discoveries. The expedi­ till your spine howls in agony. And
tion under Payer and Weyprecht re­ they agree in another custom—they
never wash off tho soap they put on.
turned a few years ago from the Far
North after its existence had been But they bring you a bowl of water,
despaired of. and although the ship Ixad hold it under your chin ns you are lean­
been lost very high latitudes had been ing back, and insist on you washing
reached, and Bn entirely new group of your own face then and there. If you
islands and a stretch of coa-t line ex­ object to the attitude they shrug all the
plored.—N. y. Tribune.
upper part of themselves and sling a
disdainful umilo at vou; if you comply
little rivulets run pleasantly down insida
A Selfish General.
of your shirt, and some of tho soap they
Ono night in tho spring of ‘62 Gen­ have generously swogglod into your
eral Richardson, who then commanded ears gets into your stockings. I have
a brigade, took it into his head to in­ seen no barber wash his victim's taco
spect the picket line. Coming upon a since I landed at Glasgow. Prices vary,
reserved picket of about thirty men un­ in London they charge a shilling (25
der oommaftd of a Captain of tho Second cents) for a shave; in Naples they will,
Michigan Infantry, the General saw lit for 80 centimes (10 coats), shave you,
cut your hair, wash your face and hands, Have Signed or Endorsed tho
to interogate as follows: '
‘‘Captain, in case of an alarm by the curl your eyebrows and wax your musFollowing Remarkable
tach till you look like Victor Emmanuel,
advance picket what would you do?”
“ Send off a reinforcement at once.” and can pass for a Prince on any of the
Document:
side streets. Yesterday I was shaved for
“And if tho firing continued?”
“ I should move up with the remain­ ten centimes—about two American cents
der ot my force.”
"
—but I took the balance out in. garlic,
C cnUcutcn :-For the past few years wo
•• And* suppose a whole company of of which I had a generous bath in the
tbe enemy should press forward?”
form of respiration. In Verona, the city
of tho loved and loving Juliet, the barber
“We’d whip them."
“ But if it was a regiment?”
asked me if I would have my feet washed
“ I’d form a line of battle and check and my toe-nails oat! That, certainly,
them until 1 sent back* and got orders is going to extremes.—W. A. Croffid's
fow roli&amp;blo household remedies worthy
to charge and capture the whole lot”
Naples Letter.
“Well, suppose a brigade should
move down on you in battle line?”
—In order that the rising generation
“Td orders charge, split the col­ of men in France may be Instructed in
umn in two, and whip both halves in rifle practice before even they enter tho
detail.”
■
army, a sum of 1.000,000 francs is to bo
Capone Pl-W ta a gvreuhxa
At midnight the brave Captain was applied by the Minister of War, to the
relieved from further duty on picket. purchase of guns for the use of boys .in*
He was very indignant and considera­ elementary schools.
These arms will
bly puzzled, but after thinking the mat­ be similar to the regulation army rifles,
ter over for awhile he said to’a brother but of course, lighter.
Each school is
to receive three, of which 'one will be
“ Say. I’ve struck it! Old Rich was specially adapted to being taken to
afraid my company might gobble the pieces, foe tho practical teaching of the
I whole Confederate army and throw principle and construction of firearms.
him onto! a Bummer's job! If that ain't
selfisliness. then I'd like to know what
—When the King of Dahomey was J .1;
is?”— Detroit .Free /¥&lt;•«.
tho English settlement on tho coast ha
saw an officer having hh boots blac’.od.
hare any
—The International Parcel Post came The King didn’t happen
into operation ou October 1 between shoes on, but ho waited up and had hi
France, Germany, Belgium and Di&gt;n- bare feet polished. He could Wag style-

PAINT AND BRUSH

Call and Examine!
F. T. BOISE

GROCERIES!

PATENTS

aud !&gt;anj, Nearly all tmpfwcd. Price *1,600.
40arre*, 8--i mfi«i Inxn| NaabrUle. Jf Kdd
»oou Will take $1,130.
be sold for wbM it will bring on account o
poor health of present owner.
50 acres, 4 miles from NuhvUlr; nearly all
Improved; fair builabngs aud lu all a good barguln., Price $1,600; part «i«&gt;wn.

tuUf down down.
,
G&lt;mx1 House and four acre* of Land on Fran­
ce* Street- Price $150.
$700 or will cXL-funute for farm property wear
Naahvllle or Hastlug*.
acres, 1 ‘; miles from Nashville on the best
road leaving the village; all improved except 8
acres; tlieredlining 8 acres good timber; 1*
well watered by a never-falfing apriug. Good,
young orcHard; building* fail; 18 acre* of
w heat on the ground; pruaent owner engaged
in other basinet*-aud will tell for 82,6007*1,ttX) down, balance ou long time.
Vacant lot on Philips SL Price $180 if sold

LEE &amp; DURKEE.

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BITTERS
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life to the -nerves. Acta like a
charm on the digestive organs,
removing all dyspeptic symptoms,
nnch as taating the food. Belching,
Heat in the Stomach, Hcartbrirn,
etc. The only Iron Preparation
that will not blacken the teeth or
fTlvc headache. Sold by all Drug£Lta nt $1.00 a bottle.
BROWN CHEMICAL CO.
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EEWARE OF IMITATIONS.

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#500 Reward!

‘

�THAT ARE BARGAINS, AT
family men
MS. AR who

that smtmnt it is quite another matter.
When Macaulay, before proceeding to
vwtbwd. Without tbe slightest faith Lu ‘M*11 India, consulted Sydney Smith'* ex­
perienced brother, the famous •'Bo­
bu*,” as to expense* at Calcutta, he
wa* told that he could not be com­
fortable under £3,000 a year, and
could not possibly get through £3,000.
This ia a measure true of the United
States. It might bo safely assorted
that in tho whole of this country there
fared from KW«y ami Liver CompljUnu; and are not five persons, if as many, who
.^public that the ‘Favorite Remedy’ •pend on their estaulishmentB $100,000.
A careful estimate, made a year or two
ago by person* eminently qualified to
make it, brought such expenditure up
‘Favorite Remedy' a* I did."
to $95,000. It included a town house,
Sever be at your place of buslnraa worn a a yacht, a villa at Newport, and a
country seat.
What runs away with incomes of from
$50,000 to$250,000 in England is tho
keeping up of country seat*, hounds,
hospitidity and game preserves. At
Drumlanrig Castle, for instance, on* .of
it* owner's ten residence*, there are
eighty mile* of grass drive kept in
■Bv
hl nownicrly heated order; at Gridge, more than forty. Add
WBM' fnrtria new building' to thia acres olgarden and glass and the
expenses of park keepers, and game
• hM addedTetock of keepers, and it is easy to see where the
monev goes. If there is a hunting
CROSS-CUT A OfRCULlR SAWS,
establishment on a liberal scale, at least
$20,000 a year must be addod.
Again, while the hospitality of an
average well-to-do American favorably
Prices on Saw Work.
compare* with that of an Englishman
Circle saw gamming and hammering all taw* with similar meuBs, that of the broadup to 40 Inche*, W ccnU per Inch.
acred Englishmen is immensely greater
40 Inch, Gammed, Fl-00
Hammered, &gt;3.00 than that of the American millionaire.
60 &gt;■
•&gt;
8.00
”
4.00
oo »»
”
4.oo
”
aoo The latter gives some dinner parties,
Gumming and Hammering x-cut saws,
75c. and, perhaps, an annual ball, and keeps
Regular Filing,
■ 60c. a dozen servants; tho Englishman, on
Hammering crooked saw*,
60c.
Prompt attention given lo circular saw work tho other hand, besides constantly en­
tertaining in town, often rits down to
A. C. BUXTOX.
dinner for weeks at a time with twenty
pieats, staying, with Choir servants, in
Parkers
bi* country house, and foods from fifty
to sixty every day in hi* servants’ half,
U -'-r-—■ Bad
Me&gt;ene.
toro Groyor Faded Hair
with as much beef and beer as they
&gt; cu. (■*&lt;! abaaalaM Orw: uu.
please to consume. Moro than this, he
at times entertains whole school* and
parishes, besides giving away hundreds
' of pounds in the shape of beef and
blankets at Christmas, Ho subscribes,
too. to every public charity in the
county; sometimes in two or three
countlea
Merely to take a single example,
there is Lord Derby, with ten mon
servants in his house, and about forty
more domestics feeding daily at hut
board. Supposing to-morrow ho nnd
his wife should agree lo struggle along
on 8100.000 ayear, ho could save at least
$800,000 a year; while wore tho Dukes
of Westminster. Devonshire nnd Bed­
ford to do likewise, their saving* would
be still greater. Supposing Lord Derby
to save at this rate for thirty years,
what on archl-mUUonalre he would be­
। k&gt; * ni, a* io nuke tlx CrcaicU UooJ Purifier&amp; tlie
come.
Best Health aad Sttnjlli Beiisrer Evtr Uttd.
Twenty years ago there died a queer
old bachelor. Lord Digby, who owned
Raleigh's ill-fated homo of Sherborne
Castle. He was a most liberal Land­
lord, but did not care to spond more
than some $35,000 a year, and let hU
money go rolling up, investing It al! in
tho threo-pcr-cents. Hi* hicomo was
not a fourth ot Lord Derby's, but he
left in the funds 81,500,000. As a rule
Administrator**! Male.
a peer leaves comparatively little be­
In Ito mat tar of tho Estate of
hind him; $1,000,000 would bo regard­
HENRY TROYEU-dacaaaed.
ed an unusually large sum for a mah
4 Notloo is hereby given that I thall aoll at
with $400,000 ayear to have, an'l there
is but one case-on record—thataf Lord
Dysart, an eccentric recluse—ot a peer
place herein described. In the towtnhlp of Maple leaving over $7,500,000 personalty.
Grove ia tho County of Barry, in the Sista of Mich­
On very large properties the surplus
igan, pursuant to IJcenw and Authority grant­
income
is chiefly expended in very
ed to me on the SIM day of Novamber A- L&gt;.
1MI, by tho Pr.&gt;l&gt;au Court of Harry Count-. costly improvements. Thus the Duke
MlehUau, all of tho catatc, right. UUe and
of Devonshire has built Eastborune, and
much of Buxton. The Duke of Buocleuch has expended thousands at
-Granton, and both have put vast Bums
into enterprises connected with Barrowin-Furness. About $10,000,0C0 of Lord
Bute’s has gone into docks at Cardiff.
The late Lord Westminster built and
rebuilt probably Dot less tbah a thou­
it-to
sand house* in London, and Northum­
berland and Sutberlandshire reflect on
Probate Order.
all sides tho generous expenditure of
the Dukes of their name; while beauti­
of Barry, hoklen at the Probate Office. I n the City ot ful churches, commodious schools, and
HasUnao, In said coetnty on Monday the 19th day of handsome homesteads soon inform the
December in tbo year one tbouaaod el&lt;ht bundrod
and eighty-one. Freoeut.Clemrnt Smith. Judge of traveler in Wiltshire and Bedfordshire
that he is on the broad domain of the
Earl of Pembroke or the Duke of Bed­
ford. Had the vast sums thus spent
been mainly put into stocks, or bonds
and mortgages, tho present holders of
the lands might have been richer men.
but the country would have been in
many respects the loser, and it would
be a widely different-looking region
from what it is to-day.—New fork nun.

BUXTON

ATTENTION! SAW MILL MEN!

Hair Balsam

PARKER’S -GINGER TONIC

Bennets and Unia.

a*-iu

CLEHE5T SMITH.

NO PATENT NO PAY.

WHITS

Caveata. Aaoignmea*-. I oierfaranees, faftneaaenu •*« a)i atbar MaUoro relailsg to pau-ifir
reUr atteaa-a to.

1111111111$®=^

Malte l»e Pa-eet Oftoe, Waare *M» M malts

Openings of millinery st fashionable
houses oonfirm the announcement made
early in the season that the picturesque
will prevail in mUBnery, but that while
large pokes and round hats are shown
in great numbers, the small bonnets
and becoming turbans will also find
favor. There can be no definite rule
about these shapes, a* large bonnet* are
not limited to largo heads, for they are
sometimes particplariy becoming to
small ladles; the face alone decides the
matter, and in the great variety of
shape* shown something is easily
found to suit each physiognomy. The
poke bonnets are greatly improved in
shape by the small tapenng crown now
used instead uf the broad fiat crown,
like that of an old lady's bonnet, worn
when they were first introduced; indeed,
nothing can be more coquettish than
these quaint poke*, arranged aMthey
are now to leave tbe small sloping
crown quite prominent and bare, and
mass all the trimming on the brim
The meet youthful-looking pokes have
the brim covered or edged with down,
or fur, or plush with very long pile,
while the crown is of smooth plush or
of moleskin velvet This is beautiful

HER DAUGHTER’S STORY.
their breasts and
“My mother, reeMlax at Stamford, Conri,, la
throats.
There are also Marie Stuart pokes
entirely covered with pearl lace, with
feather tips for their trimmings, but unable to ranee about tbe h&lt;&gt;u»c. A lady
fewer white or light dress bonnet* are friend indure.1 her to try your‘Favorite Rem­
shown than usual, as dark bonnets are edy.' She did ao and found great relief.'• Tbe
known to be most becoming, and are of stxwe ia a quotation . from a letter addreaaed to
«uch rich fabric* that they are dressy Dr. David Kennedy, of Roodout N. T. “Ken­
enough for most occasions. A novel
nedy'* Favorite Remedy" not only cure* rheu­
trimming laid on the outside of the
brim ima below the crown is three fall, matism, bAt ia tbe popalar specific- for all di*frills of uncut velvet laid double, fully eaaea of the Blood and tbe ill* iucMcnt to fegathered, and overlapping. These raf­
The patriotic American can . Whir wipe bl*
fles-are an inch deep.when finished,
and are vary effective when made of tho noac on a atIk handkerchief made in this counglace velvet showing two colors, one of
which is in the plain velvet that covers
.You had better cut out thi* addreM— “Dr,
the crown; thus a brown velvet small
C. R, Sykes, HD Madlsou »L, Chicago," for
crown has frills of rod and brown you may need hi* “Sore Core for Catarrh,”
changeable uncut velvet, and tho edge
Tho marriage aervica uniting a Chicago
of the brim has a gathered binding
like a puff mode of red uncut velvet. couple was, It h asaerted. performed by depart
Ribbon of uncut vel vet on one side and ed eplrttA, a medium actin g under their control.
satin oft the other forms a square bow
you Catarrh I “Dr. Syke*’ Sure Care”
low on the left side, and there are three ia Have
an unfailing remedy. Have you beard
tips of ostrich feathers at tbe top. of IU
'Another poke that points down on the
forehead instead of projecting above it
The “old pewter” craze threatens to rival
has the brim covered with lophophore . the craxe for old por celaln In New England.
feathers, while the crown is green vel­
Tbe symptoms of Itching Piles are moisture
vet- There are also black lace pokes
of tho new heavy guipure silk lace with like ptvepiralion, intense itching, most at night
seems as if pin worms were crawling In or
droopiug jet ornaments along the lace about the rectum. Tlie more you scratch Die
and on the strings, while black os­ worse they itch, very d^tn-esing. The private
trich tips are the only trimmings; a parts are often affected. Dr. Bwayna’a Oint­
bow of narrow moire ribbon ties the ment la tlie moat effective retoetk eytant for
tormenting complain}. Gh cpwyVa night
lace strings below the throat Anoth­ thia
without that desire to scratch.
’■pe on
er black poke of real Spanish lace has Sual in quickly eradicating Teter, ‘ pV Salt
two rows of large jet beads that are
leumc. Erysipelas, Barhen-' Jlc*h * "&gt;?lc*,
made to droop aud dangle on the edge all Scaly, Crusty, Itchy Skin ErttytifiSftr Here
of the brim. A black felt poke that lathe proof, “Ccrtatnlv (he best remedy ercr
u«ed In my practice," "Dr. Cotton, Woodstock,
has a fur-beaver brim has two rows of VL. “troubled with Itching Piles for over twen­
black Spanish lace on the outside of this ty years, it cured me completely,” L. S. Mesaer
Enfield, Me. Seat fur 5u cis (in 3 ct. stamps)
brim.
The bows on pokes are very flat and 3 boxes, &gt;1.25, By Dr. Swayne A Son. Pbllud’a
have long loops -either two or four Pa. Sold by all druggists.
loops— of double-faced ribbon, and one
After a wedding j»rty bus assembled In
edge of this ribbon is folded over so church at Bloomington, HL, the father of the
that both faces are seen. Moire ribbon girl offered her
is she would back oul. She
with satin or plush back is very effec­ took tbe money, fuinalned at home, and sent
tive for such bows. These bows arc
word
lo
the
minsster
to dismiss the assembly.
placed far back just on top of tho
crown, with the middle closely strapped,
BABY SAVED.
and a loop falling toward each side of
We are i*&gt; thankful to aay that our babv was
tho crown, or else both loops arc long permanently cured of a dangerous ind proand extended down tho right side, tracte-d Irregularity of ths bowels by the use of
while the left has a panache or pompon Hop Bitters by its mother, which at the same
of feathers. Another fancy is for a time restored her to perfect health and atreusth
—Tbe parents, Rochester N. Y. See another
bow with very long loops placed with column.
the strap close to the orim on top, and
the loops extending fr.r down the left person wants to borrow money of you; be­
side. A stylish and useful small poke cause if you are in, you wiH be out, but if you
of black beaver has a double bow of arc out, you will be tn.
black ribbon —satin on one side and
Lydia E. Pinkham's vegetabls Compound
moire on the other -placed at the top
ha* done thousand* of women more good than
of the crown, hnd falling close back the tnqdicincs of many doctors. It is a positive
upon it. Two. jet-turtles fasten the cure for ail female complaints. Send to Mrs.
loops down; a small black panache is Lydia E. Finkham.
on the left side; a row ot black faceted
President Arthur's message to Congress was
beads half an inch in diameter is on the
outside of the brim.
Strings are wrtten on .paper
. with n broad black margin and
“bowed" up close to tlie throat without. tied with blsck tape,
long hanging ends. Bias velvet or I
- -.
,
plush, hemmed and not lined, is used l
Of Rinehart's Pills for a dose;
for strings as well ns ribbon.
I M-an-c can believe it true.
Tlie great round hais of plu«h. felt
.*.11 olhera require from,four to alx.
An^tben little good they do.
or beaver are much larger tnan any yet
worn. They are like the picturesque
hats worn by players in old comedies, i
ELEMENT SK1TH,
nnd have forests of feathers that droop
nnd nod with every motion of the wear­
Attorney at LaW|
er. The upcring'crowns are also «ceu
on these hats, nnd are usually in bold
relief, with the trimmings of feathers
nnd of plush massed on the wide brim.
Sometimes the edges are plain, and the
brim is so broad that a plaiting three
inches wide of doubled velvet is sewed
inside the brim, beginning where the
Attorney A Counsellor,
crown leaves off, and this surrounds the
face, without coming near the outer
edge of the brim. Smooth beaver and ,
felt are liked for these hats, but the ■ JgLACtt.dk. m,
brim is moat often of fur beaver, or
plush with long pile, or else tho edge is •
bound with a puff ofvelvet that breaks
,
__ _ _
tho hard line, and is very becoming.—

X shall commence a

COST cash SALE
OF MY ENTIRE STOCK

And continue the same until Feb. 15th, 1882, at which
tijn my Brick Store will be for sale or rent

N making this grert Cost Cash Sale, I must say that a)l parties owing me,

either by note or account, will be expected to walk up to the Captain’s office
Iand
settle at once.

Purchasers can effect^ big saving
By patronizing me for the next sixty days
Ah the Stock is all fresh, having aB been bought during September and October
last, at figures that no dealer in this section can duplicate. Buying as 1 do for
my Big ifapids store and this, it gives me the inside track over a small dealer.

THE REDUCTION IN PRICES
On my Clothing, lints. Capa, Boots nnd Shoes
Will astonish you, while all tlx. Dry Goods and Groceries will soon follow in
the same track.

XrOU are especially invjted to bring all your Butter, Eggs, Lard and Dried
JL Apples to rue as 1 have several lumber camps at Big Rapids, ro supply, and
am in a situation to pay you higher prices than other dealers can.

O my old customers, whom I have sold goods during the past 13 years, I trust

you will respond to the calls of the old ledger,ami balance the account
Ttherein,
without a niurmer, and ever oblige,

W. ». JnSWORTH.

BuHoJapa^eMRobes
At Low City Prices.

SINGLE and; DOUBLE,
‘ LIGHT and HEAVY,
PLAIN and FANCY

Amentu ui Feniga Marble,

Benefits of a Classical Education.
By a recent change in tho curriculon*
of the Milwaukee High School, Greek
has been droj
’
though Latin t_
is ----still-----------retained,
---------and---a
city paper regards the dropping of
Greek as a mistake. We think so, too.
Years ago we held old fogy notions ut&gt;
on educational matters, and thought
that English ought to be taught
in the public schools. It seemed to u* .
that as English was the language ol ths I
country and the English sciences th* '
only ones used in business, it conld not |
do children any particular harm to
teach them a little English occasionally
—not too much, so that it would inter*
fere with their Greek, Latin, painting,
drawing and dancing, but enough sc
they could buy two yards of factory
cloth at eight cents a yard and feel sat*
is Bed in their minds that it came to
ten cents. We were running a little
country paper at that time, and work
ns hard as over we might wo could noi
make any money, and we could not ao
count for it. One dav we dropped, in
to a school examination, where Latia
was being peeled off in great flakes,
and Greek was being talked like a man
filing a circular saw. Wo saw at once
where we were making our life a
failure and wasting our energies, and
we returned to the office, resolved to
remedy tbe defect. We opened on ths
public the next week with plenty ol Latin
and Greek, and the effect was wonder*
fuL The public had been suBering for
just that kind of thing and the edition
was exhausted. Subscriptions begnu
to pour in from all quarters; we en­
larged the paper and came to Milwau­
kee, still crowding its columns will
Latin and Greek. The public know*
the rest. Money has flowed in upon u*
so that we have to keep a man with *
splint broom at tbe door to sweep it
back. This is what Latin an-1 Grech
has done for us, and we can truthfully
say that we had rather see a boy abh
to write a beautiful essay iu Greek, any
time, than to see him hanged for horse
stealing. It is more creditable to him.

ws- ““ L

°F LTM- “»s-

2
«j
£
©
&gt;
£

Curry Combs, I itshes, Cards, Harness
Callars, Collar Pads, Halters, Circingles, Bug­
gy Washers, Snaps, Ankle Boots, Neekyokes,
Etc. Shop west side South Main St.

A. R. WOLCOTT.

»

WHITER, COLD WHITER
Is coming, and so is my New Stock of

g

LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S
V^SgTABMi COMPOUND.

To fill every department, which will be fillbd with the

Choisest and Newest Styles
In the market, arid shall be receiving something new almost
''every day during the season.
My store being the only ready pay store in town, enables
me to make you terms that no long credit store can compete
with. Persons having cash or produce to pay as they go, can
save from 10 to 15 per cent by trading at a ready pay store for
no man an do a credit business without losing from one to five 1
hundred dollars per year, which must be charged up Sn some
way to parties who do pay

I aim to keep first &lt;'-ss goods, and by dealing feff*a&amp;
square with all parties,. ’ill expecta liberal share of [ »♦?!••
age, and am satisfied, ■&gt; 'll the little experience I have Wd
since I commenced bus; w here, that a ready pay stole Ifiil
succeed. I shall always pay the highest price for produce.

�ttwea.

You know him.

Well, this fol-

• Which fellow?”
••I oan’t think of his name. It’s a case. Have ye any wid iron cases T”
of Parlia-1
coot
"No, ma’am: but all our coach nre
good joke, and I nearly died when I
beard it. He’d come up from that big made extra wrong.”
i
—
i
• iby
...—t...
“How much’ll you take for that piScarcely a day pAMcA but tre luar olt —
plantation
Lu rLouisiana
kept
by,
uv« uutrHjroa, new murderent; nod the | Who’s that big banker in St. Louis? annieT’
"Four hundred dollars, ma’am.”
pacification of Ireland appears to be as The man who built a line of steamboats
‘‘Do you M’llon the dow-pay plan?”
far off a« ever. Yet how lamentably from Keokuk to—to—DI think of the
“Yes occasionally we sell to reliable
.
.
. .. - Damn
nnvnn in
in a
n minute
mlnntn—
_ the
tkn mouth
tvwilvth of
nf—
__you
rrtn
purchaser* on the installment plan.
ignorant the people must be of their
know that river in Arkansas. Anyway The installment on this piano would
■ advantages, we may se^by an incident he’d oorue up on the—that road that
be $15 a month.”
tjiathaajust occurod. Tho Empress of runs at the west’ bank of the Mississippi
*‘WiH yc thro win a cove/ and thule!”
Austria hud intended to spend the from that place opposite Cairo—consol'
Hard|y fair to ask it, ma’am: but
early spring nt Kildare for the sake of idated with the Cairo 4k Fulton road. well throw in those articles this time.”
“An’ n buko’ music F
the hunting, nud the arrangements What’s the name of that line?” '
“Yes; we won’t bejnean about it.”
“Don’t know; never was in that
were made which would have led to
“Now. ff.ye’H insure tlie piannio FU
country. What did your man do that
her Majeoty spending forty or fifty was so funny?”
take it.”
“Well, really, ma’am, the purchaser
thousand pounds in the country. But,
“Why, he’d come up from that plan­
owing to the disturbed, not to wiy dun- tation on this line to the town in Wi»- usually Insures the nutriment; but, to
dose to bargain, we’ll insure this piano
geroUH state of the country, the visit cousin, and struck for the—the--that and agree to take all risks.”
“Ye so, betwane me nn’ you.” said
had to be nbnndoned, nnd Ches­ hotel on thotorner of Jefferson and that
other street—named after a Frenchman. she, after she had made her mark on
hire, instead of Kildare, will be tho
Strange I can’t remember it. Dqn’t tbe necessary papers and deposited the
favorite locality for the hunting enjoy­ you know the house?”
first installment receipt iu her bosom,
ments of the Empress. Nor will her
“Never beard of it. Don’t know any­ “I’m glad to feci aisy about the insur­
Majesty bo the only wealthy absentee. thing about it. Go on with vourstory.” ance, as I want to get the better of me
“Well, he got there, and” he perpe­ ole man, who tuk on oath that if I
The nobility and tbe landowners may
brought n piunnie into the houre he’d
lovo theia native land, but they have trated the best pun you ever heard on smash it up wid an ax. An’ faith, he’s
no desirfCto'die for it from the bullet the landlord’s name. The landlord got tlie bi to do it tho nixt toime he gets
off a pretty good thing on this man’s
■ ,uf an ftEskssiu o^-toDebeirieged by Boydhrurik!”—Cincinnati Muxical People.
name; but I can't remember what it
eottiniMMirties. The Empress of Aus­ was.
Anyhow, this man asked the
DR. KENNEDY
tria will be the guest of the Marquis landlord: • Why are you like an insur­
of Combenuere. and her visit Will take ance company’- -he named the compa­ Would iuva it understood that, while be is
ny. but Pre forgotten what it was. '•ngagjpJMi the introduction of hie medicine,
place next month,
The “Wimbleton Mystery,” as it is • Why are you like this insurance com­ “FanJ^nRemedy,” he still continues the
Pr^9Lj of’la profcaalon, but confines hlmaelf
already called, seems likely to attract pany? Give it up?”
“Yes, I give it up.”
to office practice. He treats all
t as much attention as any other sensa­
“ Well, sir, the answer is the funniest diseases auB peforms all tbe minor and capital
tional vise I have recently bad to re­ thing you over heard. It broke
• me all
•■ operaUoua of Surgery.
cord. -The incidents are peculiar nnd up when 1 heard it.”
Parties living at a distance, (except In sur­
mysterious enough to justify the ex­
“What hit?"
gical cases,) by sending a statement of their
“Why, if I could remember the case, can be treated at home. Addrtsa
citement in the public minds. It will
be remembered that a young student name of the landlord I'd know in a
DR. D. KENNEDY,
residing at the establishment of Mr. moment Who’s that fellow that in­
___
Rondoat, N. Y. ■
vented the—pshaw! that machine for
Bedbrook, at Wimbleton, being visited making—what’ro they called? You
Some lawless sportsmen nre killing
by his brother-in-law, partook of some understand, something about stair­ large numbers of the farmers friend,
wine witli him. The young mao. Per­ rods.”
the quail. Please spare these birds
dear friends, spare these birds.
“Nover heard of him.”
cy Malcolm, John, not liking tho
“
It's
the
same
name
except
the
last
flavor of tlie wine, some pounded
A pure, wboleaamc distillation of wltcb hazel
syllable. Funny I couldn't catch it”
white sugar was added. The brother­
American pine, Canada fir, marigold, clover
“Is that all of your story?”
blossoms, etc;, fragrant with the healing es­
in-law, John Henry Lanson, ’also pro­
“ Why, yes. You see if I could re­ sences of balsam and of pine. Such is San­
duced some jujubes in capsule mses, member my man’s name and the insur­ fords Radical Cure for Catarrh. Complete
which he said came from New York. ance company and the landlord’s name, treatment for 61.
After Mr. Lawson had departed, stat­ I’d bust you right open with the best
A boy at Columbus, 0., swallowed
ing his intention to -proceed to Flor­ thing you ever listened to. By tho way, twenty feet of red ribbon in order that
ence, tlie young student felt ill, and we nad a little party at our house last he might afterward pull it out of his
night, and tho queerest thing is that I mouth, cnnjuror fashion, and astonish
said, ‘‘My brother has given me a qui­ didn’t know I'd forgotten to invite you
the family. He succeeded.
nine pill, for I feel the same kind of until my wife asked why you wasn't
pain 1 felt when he gave me one at there. Good one on you, wasn’t it? I
Death to rats, mice, roaches and anta; Par­
Barna, granaries and
Sharklin. The presumtion is that said to—that fellow I loaned 825 to on sons’ Extcrmlnjtor.
something far more potent than qui­ your guarantee, what's hLs name—fat households cleared in a single night. No fear
of
smells. Best and cheapest vermin killer
nine was taken by the unfortunate fellow? Never paid it, and I wish you in bad
the world. Sold everywhere.
young student, for lie was shortly at- could let me hare the money."
terwards found in great agony, nnd, in
“Don’t remember the name; don’t
A drunken Wisconsin man who
■ spite of. the efforts of two medical men, recollect tho circumstances, and didn't
wanted to shako hands witli a bear
died the aauie night. Suspicion was
% awakened, and the police were com­ know you had a wife. I'd bean! you belonging to a butcher, was so­
the instant
he
missed
municated with, a new aspect given to would have a party, but couldn’t re­ bered
member the number of your house. I three fingers nud saw how bruin relish­
the ease on Tharsday by the appear
once of Mr. Lanison at Scotlaud-yard should have forgotten to come JI you’d ed tlie chance luncheon.
where he addressed himself to Inspect­ invited me," and the bored man de­
F. H. DRAKE'S SUFFERINGS.
or Butcher, stating that he had only parted in dudgeon.
F. H. Drake, Esq, Detroit, suffered beyond
just arrived from Paris, having intend­
A vast proportion of society is made
ed to travel to the South ot Italy, and of a vacuum inmemory, and some of the all dlscrtptiou from a skin disease, which ap-'
veared
ou his hands, head and face, and near­
he hud only heard of the death of bis shining social lights of Brooklyn will
destroyed his eyes. The most careful doc­
brother-in-law upon his journey. The compare pleasantly in conversational ly
toring failed to help him, and after all liad
Inspector detained Mr. Lamson until ability witn the genuine here portrayed. failed to help him, be used theCutlcure Resol­
tlie police bad communicated with the —Brooklyn Eagle.
vent (blood purifier) Internally, Cutlcura and
• treasury, and ultimately it was desided
Cuticura Soap (the great akin cures) externally
aud was cured, and has remained perfectly well
to take Mr. Lamson before the mnjisto this day.
trate Wandsworth. After an examin­
A Life Saved.
ation before Mr. Hagcct, the necused
“ROUGH ON RATS."
requested bail, but tho magistrate said
He wanted legal advice, and when
he mart consider that question, os the tho lawyer told mm to state his case, ho
The thing desired found at last. Ask Drug­
bail must be vcr/substancial under the began:
gist Tor “Rough on Rata." It clears out rata’
circumstances, therefore, tbe accused
mice, roaches, Acs, bed-bugs. 15c. boxea.
••About two years ago I was fool
was remanded until Friday. He was
RENEW YOUR LEASE.
removed to the cells, exclaiming that enough to fall in love.”
“Certainly—I understand.”
be “should go mail.
The father of
*• And for a year past I have been en­ ergy fails and a miserable feeling cornea over
tlie prisoner ia-an American chaplain
them, mietaken for laziness. Danger lurks In
at Florance. and he is otherwise re­ gaged to her.’’
these symptoms, an they arrise from itbeascd
“Of course.”
spectfully connected.
organs. Parker's Ginger Tonic wifi restore
The Chinese evidently do not intend
“A few months ago I found, upon jxrfcct ac-dffly to the stomach, Liver and Kid­
to be left behind iu the march of civil- analyzing mv heart, that I did not lovo neys,'purify the blood, and renew your lease of
tuition, and they also display that eag- her as I should. My affections had grown health and comfort.—Advocate.
cnica&lt; respecting the main chance is cold.”
TAKEN UP.
nntversiil in these days. The Celest­
" Certainly they had—go on.”
Notice is hereby given that on tlie 24th day
ials have been jealous for some time of
“I saw her pug-nose in its true shape,
tlie traffic in the tea tpide, whict|, of and I realized that her shoos were No. of Nov. A. D. 1881, two 3-year-old spotted
heifers
broke
Into
my enclosure, and tbe owner
. course, has been carried on by Euro­ 6.”
is requested to call on ine, prove property, pay
pean reuels. Great was tbe astonish­
“Exactly, and you made up your charges and take them away, or they will be
ment, therefore to learn that the
disposed ol according law.
Chinese intend to carry tbeir tea to mind to break off the match? That was
Dated Maple Grove, Dec. 27th, 1801.
Europe in their scow vessels, and for perfectly proper.”
15-17
J. C. Embht.
“Yes, that was my object; but sho
dint purpose they have arranged to
start a fleet of steamers, the first of threatens to sue me for breach ol prouiTScirrr bellies.
which vessels, called the Mesfoo, ar­
Oa account of its remarkably delicate and
rived in tlie Thames this week from
. “Certainly she does, and she’ll do it, lasting fragrance society bellies are loud in
bhaugaai with a cargo &lt;»f three thous- too. Has she any lovo-letters from tbeir phriuMa of Floreston Cologuc.
, and tons of tea. Others will rapidly yooF’
’ follow, and only will our Celestial ri­
J
M. WOOD
“That's the hang of it. She tallies
vals bring their tea to market, but up 326.”
they also intend to sell it themselves,
“And do they breathe your love?”
non gtaitlemen have arrived
to
—IS NOW READY TO“ I should say they did'; but 1 think
managers of a huge establishment
in Loudou, where purchasers will be Tve got her tight. All them letters are
written
on
wrapping-paper
and
with
sure of having real China tea. for they
will be able to purchase it from the pencil, and Tve come to ask you if such
growers. Thia was never dreampt of writing as that will stand law?”
“ Of course It wilt If you had writ­
in past days. Fancy a new establisbinent with pig-tailed, almond-eyed- ten with slate and pencil she could hold
shopmen behind the counter, and with you.”
smiles child-like and bland, rrconi“Great hokey! but is that soF’
rueudiugtheir flowery ucksc or tbeir
“It is.”
yoqpg hvw.n or sou-chnug to the no­
“And she's got me fastF*
tice of the British housekeepers.
“She has.”
August.
“ Well, that settles that, and I sup-

SHOE HORSES
BETTER THAN EVER,

Gi-d. Carr ia a good Indian fighter.
Hu’a no parlor Carr.—£x.
No, .but
you’re brave enough to dtserve n pal­
ace Citrr.—Salem Sunbeam. And when
yon die you dial I hurt a fine box. Cnrr.
—gtwhewiO- Herald.
Y nur stock,
Carr. iarising.—Elevated Hlw'y Journ­
al. Sny/don’t you think their jokes a
little Hal, Ckit!—Ruf. Pitch mem in­
to th.- street, Can-.—The y'pslantian.
Should you liud yourself unable to bold

TWAttve. Well, wbnt a world
^-bui dtiy. don’t you think you’d,
[er take them in hand. Carr.—Box
1 CUy. Better give them all the.
up, Carr.—Maxon Democrat. Gwm
are all general Jo.. Cart*. -Eaton
Wo AII

WILL TAKE
“Udlwswhatr
“ You can buy her off.”
“Egad! that’s it—that’s Ute idea, and
you have saved my life! fliy her offwhy didn’t I think ot it before? Say,
where's the Dollar Store? I’ll walk in&lt;
on her with a set of jewelry, a flirta­
tion fan, a card case and two bracelets,
and she'll give xue a quit-claim deed and
throw in all the poetry I ever sent her
to bootT’—Detroit Free Bren.
—Those people'woo have for years
Mt annually expressed sorrow for
kid-headed men in fly-limo have
chrn that fliea avoid bxld-h&lt;*a&lt;}» on ac-

CLOAKS

AND

DOLMAMS!

rarJkT COST.*®!

HOODS. NTH3I AS&amp;SHATVLS
rarjAT

COST.ja

100 Patterns New Prints, best brands, I will
sell at 7 cts, Sold everywhere at 8 dts,
60 two-strap Horse Blankets at 90 cts. Sold
earlier in the fall-for $1.30.
Kerosene Oil at 15 cents per gallon.
12 1-2 lbs. good Brown Sugar for one dollar.
As I wish to reduce my stock $5000 worth by Feb’y 1st, I will make special inducements
on my entire Stock.
K-

TRUTH IS MIGHTY! Oitlcuia
N making the following statement, we utter the truth, and can verify it.
*

I

tor
Skin, Scalp aad Blood DlMaae*. conaieta In the
। Internal um of Cutlcur- Resolves*., tbe new Blood

THE LARGEST STOCK OF GROCERIES
In the city, at bottom prices, fair nnd square weight and measure.
we advertise the most complete Stock ot

When g»»»f»iiy Mkaow*led&lt;M a«are oi salt iheupt^an
P*"!

Crockery, Glassware,
Etc., in Bairv and Eaton counties, wc are telling the people a fact that can­
not be siicceWiuly nnd truthfully denied. It consists of a large variety of sta­
ple good**, and a large assortment of

’’ifPfi'pAFSi.
x. t.
Paoriaala orJarproay, of twenty year*' Handing, by
the Cutlcura Resolvent Internally, ar»d CusGmra
and Cuticura Soap externally. (Ttic rao»t wonder­
ful caM on reeonl. Cure certified lo before a josUceof the peace and prominent buuo*** men. All
afflicted with Itching and *ca)y diaeaaee abonld send
to ua for thi* teetlmonlal ia full.

Mii.joliea Wai-e and J?*x-encl« China,
In various designs and styles, also a well selected Stock of

CHINA

ENGLISH DECORATED

In Tea Setts, Water Setts, Cups, Saucers, Pitchers, Etc. An endless variety
of Vases, Toilet Setts, Flower Setts, Etc. in

F. U. braEe,
Detroit. MicK, *nff«red beyoad
all dltcriptlon from a *kln dln'aec wirich appeared
on hi* Lande, head and lace, aud nearly dretrered
hl* eye*. The txoat careful doctorinsr failed lo help
him, and alter all had failed he need tbe Cutlcura.
RcaoUent [blood purifier] internally, Cutlcura and
Cuticura Soap [the great Skin care*] externally

Too numerous to mention, and so cheap that all can afford to buy.

ttAJVCHIVGt Ac

I.LIMIT’S
SKIN HUMORS.

Of every style, color nnd design. When you are ready to bny, I am ready
to sell. All kinds of Produce taken iu exchange for Goods.

Mt*. 01 V- WbiMilu, Lecaiu

• iilf«r»d fNufuUjr and tri»-4 everything. Perma­
nently cured by Cullcun Itesalrent [blood puri­
fier) and Cutlcura and Cutlcura Boap [taa great
akltfcure*.]
-

CUTICURA

,

•nd Cutlcura Soar externally and Cutlcura B
rent internally will pusttirely care every »pecie.

I

dragwUu.
Work, nnd Fatter. Betien, .Hmm.

fi&lt;F" AU mailed free on receipt of priec.

CATARRH
Sanford's Radical Cure.

Head Cokb, Wound Dlacharge* from tbo Xbm
aad Eyaa, Blnrinr Nofaea la tbe Head. Mervotu
Headacb* and CbUU aad Fever hntenily relieved.
Chokhr. putrid aaucu* Itdlalodged. membrane
cleaned, dhlnfectrd and bealaJ, braaih .weetened.
unclt. iMto .nd bearing ralo.cd and can.tilntlonal

CHICAGO, BOCK ISLAND &amp; PACIFIC RT

Couch, BtcdcJi
Pile* tn the Cl.e
Bad FJeah, Lms
...
One bottle Radical Cure, on* box Catarrhal Boh
vent and one Dr. Sanfoid't Inhaler, in ooa package
of all druggiat* for |1. JUk far Sanford’. (Radical
(Jure.
WEEKS 4k POTTER, Ro.too.Mam.

fc’ LIGHTNING
I» not quicker than Co)lint*

Pastes*

R U PT U RE

WOOD

ess

For all Shoeing.

Bro-away New fork. Illa book with Photograph­
ic llkenc* of bad ornca before and after tore, mail­
ed for 10 ce«te____________________ Ifl.lyr.

Unde ofail Kock Elm,

PENSIONS

A FEW CUTTERS
TO SELL, AND THE

BEST

WAGONS

In the Mate of Michigan.
au&lt;l all warranted,

CAJLL, A.\l» BEE J1IN.
• S. I have n good Yoke of
mat merit the famntia wibI. Jacobs fjil. 1ms steadily w«u»
-rUto -lsy rh»
ri; ’ uotioiuii
......
■
.
I1
f,w rkH&amp;tttW
Lawy.n..

CLOSING OUT

of

M.

tfi'w

�Wu.binifton.

action.

It

I &gt;. &lt;

TEX11ST » r»„ Prop.. _

llir^n aud Democrat, depraved and'
| ountnl warmth U for tbe ?&gt;»xL whU
| iKAdlwcomfwt cu tbe blistering ba

_______
- -

muscle into this

f life
seem

■df wto meAclue.- &lt;hd Baying.

r.

Nashville Elevator11-t-

atroyed nr the gland* -decayed. Its
effects arc bcantifttlly shown on brashy,
Pay the hlgtiest marketprice for all kinds of
weak, or sickly hair, on which a few
application', will produce the gloss and
freshncM of youth. Hartniev-au-l sum Cri’ain -a-nd Produce.
in its results, it fat incomparable «a
a dressing, and U especially valued Needs, Feed, Uwe, Salt, Platter, Ntucfor the soft lustre aud richness bf tone
re, Hair. Fine Lumber, Lath
'
it Imparts.
mid Shinglex,
Ayer's Hara Vigor is colorless;
contaiua neither oil nor dye; and will AT THE LOWEST IR VING PRICES:
not soil or color white cambric; yet
it lasts long ou tbe hair, anti keeps
EUKVATOB.
it fresh and vigorous, imparting un­
agreeable pdrfttme.
For sale by all druggists.

even by mail, could be received from
luen retire farther aad further into the j
any distance. Tbe dieeane ia known
TUAnrartoBM:
__
^?£E!“’he t,” among veterinary physicians as in flam- j
Thx News has double the numbar &lt;rf reader* the fintl precursor of ciVilizaUon. ♦ Tho matory fever, but among farmers in I
tn the Firn Reprtwcntattvc Dirtri.-.t of Barry very prat atlrnutage of being the first England and our own country it is |
twenty, than any other papnr circulating 'Acre | ocenpent of a new range kcene tho known as black-leg. quarter-evil, joint- I
ta, aud our rates of
wwrtnte* cattlu-mcn forever puabing onward aud
'wSS?‘Oi.'K th. rirt.or C ckL ptoximkv murrain, blood-sticking, shoot of blood,
black-quarter, etc.
ot loui bonafidc subscrilicrs, * ho, for the «u&gt;k- to tho savage*. The life on one of i
Our Waterbury oorreepondent sayaj
tag, are Hable to tawmoyoar pttrora.
i these frontier ranges bga a good deal that nearly every year thp disease
WttwTuRERAL AQ. ratbl
ot adventurous excitement about it in makes its appearance among his calves
PKKUBK ------- C .
; the way of encounters with all the nu- and those of nis neighbors, during the
Sp*”'
*
।meroiiB varieties of wild aiiimalB which j last of August or tbe early part of Sep- i
ftoch......... * I *3 LtL*
abound there, and has beside tho vari- tember, alter they have been turned
jfts^tea.... j t-fig!__ S oo I__ 5.M p 1&lt;X)O , ou&gt; attractions as well as the hardships into the fall feed and' are just begin­
Gult-eaut I
.
, r- .
„ . 20.0b that belong to genuine pioneer life. J ning to gain in flesh. This is generally '
Tai'
2S.(X&gt; Before a man has been in the business the experience of those who lose ani- I
HIGHEST MARKET JPRICE
DO.QO
I
runny
years
he
is
pretty
certain
to
be
।
W
Jludwi?
male by this disease, and plainly indi- •
Medicine we have ever told, a few do«c«
................
-" ■
Fn..P»w.««10O, •■MW'i.l" »»•
U»&gt; l»»g caies one of ito causes, or more proper­ Cough
Invariably cure tiw wand camw of Cough, croup
Buafoeas cards Of fterilruM or lew,$3 per yr. ' cattle-dnves which transfer enormous , ly ito chief cause. Tho animal is being ' aud Brv.TH-hitl*, while t!s wonderful sncccM in
Lora) NoUces, ten cents a line tor first laser-1 herds across wide stretches of territory. ! over fed, and is making blood too fast i in. the cure of corautnptlon ts without a paral­
tion and eight amta for each auiMequent taser- ‘ Jn t-jils way .m&amp;nv workmen drift in the The rich, tender feed of the mowing i lel iu the hbtory of nuxlicnc. Since lt» flirt
fields is too great a temptation to ani- J discovery It him been xold on aguarutc*. a test
OHNO HTBONG.
. ^UI*&gt;Iof *
°.r VWO
full stock of
which co other medicine can stand. If you
Editor Md Propricw Wyoming or Montana, or from Oregon mala that have been kept a little short
■
,,
„ —— —
■■
.... — ’ to Nebraska; and thus the ‘‘now­ for some weeks/ and they just gorge j
'
'
I puncher” often comes, in time, to have j themselves’and dog the machinery
CoiMtautly &lt;»E flu id.
a wide and varied experience of the of the system. Moro food is crowded | Porous Pioter. Bold by F. T. Boise.
ANSWER
--------- J—T------- - —:------ ---------------------least-known
regions
of THIS
ourQUESTION.
wide
into the stomach than can be thorough:
m&gt;.
.J, Kr .nK.aa .... J J EXRV ROE. P»o„.,tu«
OFFIC^liS==
country.
ly digested, or more food, is digested, i seem
to.prefer to suffer and be made mlacrable J X
■
Perhaps the greatest atlractiou about and converted into blood than the sya- by indlgcrftiou, coartipatiou. dizzftieM, Iom of
.... n liritiniD
ULL) KELIABLE—
1 this life to a frugal workingman is tbe tem can assimilate. It is like over­ appettte,'coming up oftbeFred, vcllow skin,
for 73ct*. we will m&gt;T1 them gMtoh’s yiti&gt;
great variety of chances that exist for crowding a threshing machine with I when
fixer, guarauted to cure them Sold
bundles
of
grain.
There
is
a
.limit
to
----------------- —
| profitable investment of every dollar
Boise;
tho amount of work that any machine I SHILOH’S CATTARRH RE
---------------- •------------------------- — ployera will permit a good hand, who can do. as there is to the number of per­ vcloua cure for Catarrh, Did
Krcjw crbiuaotiy nn hand s big Mock at
i invests his savings in horses, to turn his sons that can pass out of a church or mouth,-and J lend Ache. 1
jtcrirtiw.
here is an ingenious ;ia&lt;al i
■ little band in-with the other stock with- hall door in a specified time. A little more successful treatment of. t
jjj
over crowding stops all progress. The without extra charge. Price
■RAlTOrcHVBCn. &gt;«. t a M~.,.
1
"
JO Sorrier* »v»iy Sunday at laao a. ia.. Sabbath j stock raising on a small scale without a animal .system is wonderfully fitted to F- T. Boise.
acbaol at IX m; Prayer aad Teacztcra* meeting dollar of running expenses to pay. If adapt itself to surrounding circum­
Tlmraday evening.- - ,
. a man can buy a few marcs at a bargain stances. Animals, suojected for long
Rhode Island ho* u larger school income than
it Erfiohfsr XP'dCOPAL. carmen-a. D.x*w ! he can often make a clear annual profit periods or through many successive any other Mate except MaMadmaetu.
x»l
ftnnrirea every sabbath »t wj* of fifty per cent. Gn aTew hundred dol- generations, to certain conditions,
•----------------------------------15 TBEIR ML16U5.
TRUTH ANI) HONOR.
,
y #
“11
In U he i, abrewd in M)lin- ,nd c„„. whether favorable or unfavorable, will
Query:—What Is the brat family medicine
0\{ t]lP //). f)/’ b(l.F/*Ct
-—
--------------------- ,— ..
। ful in breeding up. This is a very fa- so adapt themselves to those conditions
that
any
sudden
change,
either
for
the
I
in the world to regulate the bowels, purify the
x.. (rr
tr
IV’Y LODGE NO. 37, K. of P.. meets at Hal vorito way of investing earnings, its it
__
'”
'
'
Castle Hall, NaabVIUc, Michigan, every j5 at once very safe ano verv profitable. better or the worst;, may cause trouble. blood, remove costivcncsa and biiktUx tit-cf.
aud tone up the whole system! Truth
!
Th* Highest M ....
Ba‘ ther’ ftre maDF othei "ays of get- It is very poor economy, as every one digestion
and honor conijel* u# to answer Hop Bitter*. rnr index. Pel to. At.
' '
oraEfeBrother Kni-'li’ts^
•
tinK a handsome income for a* small in- knows, to starve or under-feed an ani­ beiniTpunr,
perfect uirJ harmless.—Ed.
Fresh Goods, Full Weights at
L. E. Lextz, K. R. 8. Oaxo Stboxg.C. C. vestment in the Far West, though hard­ ma’. All the food given in such cases another column.
is
wasted.
Merely
keeping
an
animal
--------1------------------------ '---------- —-------- ! ly any of them is so perfectly safe as
Satisfaction Guarantcod.
A sensational report,is called a canard be
this which I havo'meutioued. There alive, under ordinary conditions, is in­
iniKrn?.nrju&gt;
■
.
nnxtti- roi:
are well-known opportunities for pre- excusable. If on a voyage at sea. or cause one cunsrdly believe IL
during
a
snow
blockade,
it
is
found
that
j.
j empting land, investingin anpreeiating
WATCH CAREFULLY YOUR HEALTH.
J OSEPH COLE,
W
Hii 01nm °“l a,d®
‘ town real estate, mining stocks and animals must be nut upon a short al­
V v • Maludt., NaahvUle. Office hours from :
,i_
. lowance to save life, the case is differ­
Arc your hands and feet cold! Docs your
7 to9 a. m., and 4 to 7 P. m.
trade which are so easy to seize in a
I' very new country; so that a man who ent, and a partial starvation may bo tho pulse beat Irregular! Does your heart quickly
at tbe least rxerttoi, werriment or -a rin i m
Ar i
TT rtm s
industrious, saving and shrewd can only nrudent course to pursue. Work­ palpitate
H. GRISWOLD. M‘. D., .Jx-ia .‘I,if
mrvous
excitement' i&gt;ocs your face often il j h A 'I
jVl A l'-|&lt; Hi' I
• Physician and Surgeon. Otitic aud■ rec&gt;- hardly fail to roll up a neat little prop- ing animals, cows in miik. nnd all ani­ flush troru a rush uf blood to the head! Are 111 EJ A 1
liJL Ad tlx Lu 1 .
mals that ate of the proper age to grow you troubled with dy«|«p&lt;ia, indigestion, or
tdeaca oppuaite tbe Wolcott Houms. Prowl
.-jpt erty from his savings in a few years.
and gain in flesh, must have more food wane urinary disorder! Beware! Death may
attention given to call* day or night.
____________________________________This cowboy life will notthan
be found
merely what is required to sustain , at any time suddenly ensue from apoplexy. Do
LA. FOOTE PHY8IC1AN &amp; .SURGEON satisfactory to every one who enters it. life, and the more they are given, up lo not delay. Your system needs some true
Fresh, Salt aud Smoked
• Suceaeor to Dr. Wickham. Office nnd It is impossible to say certainly of any a certain point, the bettor will they pay । medicinal tonic. Nothing la so good os Browns
omaL,
„or
o£.’‘'cn U" ‘key for the food consumed; but there is a ( Iron Bitters. This excellent remedy will awirt
nature
iu
quickly
regaining
her
lost
hold
ou
., r ■
.
2,j will not succeed in it. Some men who
point beyoiid which it is positively dan- | health arid life. U ftrcngtbcns every part of .
W. WHITMOHE. M. D„ Sciatic &gt;by,|. I at first seem less adapted for the work
tbe system, and restores the different'organa of
to go.
•clan and Burgeon. Office, cast side of ' become most excellent hands by long gcrous
A farmer with a good cow giving 1 life to tbeir normal condition. In diseases of
MainRu Residence, north Phillip* 8k Calls I pluck and perseverance. But it inay bo
exhaustive nature, baring a tendency to
eighteen quarts of milk per day on full j an
promptly attended at all hour*.
weaken both mind and body, it inrariablv acts
said more emphatically of this man of feed, thought, by a little extra crowd­ like
a cliann.
.
other
callings
that
it
should
be
learned
ing with grain, to make his eighteen- '
*T\R- a W- GOUCHER, Electlc Physician and
.._
, nRlwr
X/ Burgeon, fi nrejured to answer all calls in youth. The chances of marked suc­ quart cow a twenty-quart cow. It took ] “A prudent man," says a witty Frenchman,
1 r&lt;
n,jl ° 1 ’
that may be nude for hie service*. Office aud ; cess are against a man who begins tho but a few days to ruin his animal. Tho ; tsUkeapw. HU head prevent* him fowu go- p 1
work after he is twenty years old. Men extra forcing clogged the machine, nnd I lug tixjfiir?’
,
M. PARMENTER, M. D. Office over who have been trained to it almost from he soon got no milk and in a little while
Hull's Drug alort, Vermontville, Mich. 1 childhood in Texas and Colorado are, had no cow. Calves and young cattle, 1
V»7IY WEAR PLASTERS I
as a class, the most successful. Among
pHAS. H. BRADY, Lawyer, Circuit Court those who are born farther east, young that have been kept a little short dur- ' They may relieve, but they can't cure that
ing the dry weather and scanty feed of ■ Janie back for Hie kidney* are tin trouble, and
XJ Commissioner, Reul Estate and Insurance
Agt Prompt attention given to all bualueM , men brought up on farms, w ith a good midsummer, should be turned In to the you want a remedy to :-.-t directly on tlnir ac­
Manufacturers, and dealer* fn
entrusted to inv care. Conveyancing a special­ understanding of the management of rich after feed of the moving fields with ’ cretions, to purify and restore tlielr healthy
ty. Office ipppodtc Union House.
■ horses, adapt themselves most readily a great deal of caution. • They should . oiuifitlon. Kidney Wort has that specific ac
Ihm—and at the same t!:nc it regulates tbe -r—x ITT T~a « . TmT'r-v~\ t-m •
not
be
turned
in
to
stay
till
they
arc
so
j
bowels
perfectly.
Don
’
t
wait
to
get
sick,
but
Ll'
B
I
L&gt; ft! .1 HU I 1/ L’ I
I
full that they can scarcely walk or j get a rackage to-day, and cure yourself. Bitii-' P ■ I fj. j V fl I ft j I a. “f ’
JLvJ.il—. X. O — .w
»
before you purcbiuc clothing. Fits guar- ' °r success in tins rough IxfjQ. aud yet breathe, but should be left 'in but a cr liquid or dry for sale at tbe druggists.—Re- •*"
anteed.
’
'
not a few of them have, by long persist- short time at once, until they get over publican.
piLVIX A. xicnptX
H
“d*
their undue hunger, or 'till the system .
The Knights of Columbia are a Weateni se­
81mh», Rubber*, Hats and Caps. Gents’
A man who believes himself to have has had time to accomodate itself to the cret organization of colored men. Two lodges
FurubbingGoods, Glove* and Mittens.Trunks, already some trainin*'- and fitness to en- change In the character of the food.
Bleeding and the insertion of setons In 6L Louis use the same hall, and, owing to a
Itobr,-tu- *« «&lt;•““ upon the work would do
Fur the fall trade/out
West okk Main St, Nashvine._____________
et^jo&gt;.ment in Ch(n;enno in the dewlap are common methods of mlzundersUndiug. they botli met 'or "work"
the Mtuec-vening. High Sovereign HoUsnd
CM. DUNHAM, Proprietor Temperance Bll- or Greele7 in “e spring. T^iat is the treatment for the prevention and cure on
ofSilMouri Union Dxlge was seated on bls
ol
diseases
caused
by
such
over-feeding,
• Hard Parlore and Fool Roo.ni A choice season when cattle men are making
ita« of dgara constantly on hand. Booms under । their plana and hiring their hands for and this treatment is founded upon throne, arrayed In purple regalia, when High
D. C. Griffith's store.
t}10 year. Most of the ••round-ups” correct principles; but it is far better i Sovereign Andrews of the future Great Lodge
And will be sold *o low that'
to avoid tlrtf necessity of the practice, eiiteredpind demanded the place. Both were
TONAH
.nd
I l‘!k“
•*»« .1” th"
ONAH B.KASCT.
B. RASEY, Eow
Express and Drayman.
At that time a man who has by withholding tho excessive amount of armed with big swords, and with these a nqtr.pn UHT I / Q'TnVKTQII
Goods and Ba-guge carried to any place In May.
tbe village.
been trained to the management of rich food. This tuny be done by taking fierce eotnbat was foughL The members join- llulliO WILL A»lUflloluU
the animals out of the after feed as
" IRAM R. DICKINSON, manufacturer" of horses and is quite at home Tn the sad­ soon as they have eaten all they need, cd the fray, tbe throne was demolished, and
and dealer in Hard Wood Lumber. Build­ dle need have little fear of not finding and letting them lie in a short pasture the pollce hsd to break In to restore peace.
ing Material a specialty. Cash;&gt;aid for logs. Mill work, even though he Any bo without
WE A LSO CARRY
Loss of memory, utbvcn*alla*siiundc. pain In
aad yard on Sherman St., at M. C. RR crossing. friends or recommendation. But any while they chew the cud nnd digest tho
to rich food; or they may be tethered by the back, premature old age. promptly cured
person who is not fitted must work into
AMES FLEMING, practical Jeweler and the business much more gradually. A : rope nnd pin. so that they cannot over- 1 with Ilrowti'a Iron Bitters. It., restores lost
Watch-maker. Clock*. Watches, Silver aad
J
fill themselves. A few ropes, or a lit- | functions tod strengthens the weakened parts.
Plated Watt, Jewelry and Optical Goods. Ro k-new comer on tbe plains feels at first
timeA devoted
| "Prisoner’have you ever been convicted!"
ford Wstcbeaaspecialty. Repairing and Engrav­ as much out of his element ns a fish out tie- extra
j~; - -------il'V ” to7uchanging
—° ~n
tc “»*«. ««
“a , “No, your Honor. I have always employed
_ done in a workmaoHke wanner.
ol wMer The hebiu. the wave ot We. *!“*,ro,n o',&lt;1, h“1J. “
ing
cheap compared to tho loss and disap­
A HOT HUM, moebcunr ot Boou «d
U'“
‘‘r’
pointment attending the sickness aud j
A Shoe., ETwJdaotpUoeor Boot end She. »U elraage lo Inta. He u M cully reo. death
a
of choice animals.—Ncu&gt; En- I
Sbopp.“j^de “ta^.w'^oS1
And are jurpared to give our time nnd atten­
tion
to
even-tlilugpBrtalningto
the
•Thirddoor north of old Untau Houmu
He he&amp;rs hlnueU ^4 ft -tenderfoot.”
Thl, &lt;77^ J ’ *
uudertakinKpine.
TtfMBM. JEFFREY, Practical MUlinor, and The plains are mainly a grazing region. |
1
_
Revolution.
make New Rich

PRIOR; HAO.
.... IF. PAID IN aWaNCZ.

’

FOWLEH &amp; INGERSON
GRAIN AND PRODUCE.

lumber, LATH.&amp;C.,

J&amp;tsltiillr girertory.

* MEAT MARK firr.
Fresh and Salt Meats,

F"- saaiei Haas ail Mta,

i»t tbe rtipcrflu'jUA trarcta and

im(x4t«nt journal entablbd:
in UkkIozcii vchw juM ha«
T ». Rex. Evaty importa

TuctJvs of ifes&amp; will i&gt;e thMMw &lt;»ut&gt;poken
trattetetiuig. w,i! inlrrertinir neWf'pajicr. • • •
By ftilb&gt;-ra! ureof lire mt'aue alu-.'b ^iiabttm* j
ihu.t pro pertly affords, we shall make it i»cUarthan ever before. •
.
WeslMlIpnutall the news, putting it Intoreadable *bn;ie, ami meu^ur.tig it* importance. .
not by tlie traditlbmi) yardstick, but by |r« real •
interest to the people. 'Dlrtarre* from IVnitittg
House ^quara Is not the firat iimsidcrutkiu *.
with The Sexi Whenever anything happeto &lt;
worth reporting wr, get the partlruiani, whether
it happens iu Brooklyn oj iu Bokhara.
In pcRUcs-wb haw decided opinions; nnd ora
areurtomedto express thefuki luuguage that ■
can be understood. We say wtiat w»&gt; think
about un«n and events. TJ:*tltablL ia the only ‘ ’
,-crret of The Si x'- jHilltYui course
■ •’
'
The Weekly StTfgatuers into eight Hgs*
the beat mutterof the seven dully feftts. An .
Agricultural Department i t unequalcd merfh /tj
full market reports, ai d a du-ral prupcwtkmni ■ p
literary, repeat;Be, and d rfue.uk&gt;
complete’1 nn Wsekmt m v, r.ndmake U tbe
ten jww»pajx:r for the farmer houjeluiil that
waBcrerprintC'l.

ft
jiewr. hunior—inaltir i-aausrfi to fill a gu6d
__d book, anti infiniU-H irnre
and co-,
•rtsinlng than any book,- tig or little.
•J^our Idea of v.bat a i.c.wsp; pax should bt
pkaser.yQP. tend forTKE Spx
Our,tern. are a* followH:
.
. For tttc «Ullr Sex, fow-ptige »b«rt of twenty­
eight columns, the price By mail, poet paid, tt
h5 cent# a i^nth, or f G.f-- n yenr:«&gt;r, lin iudihg
’lie •■•■in 1 ly pipcr.and elght-j-age sheet of fifty#'x n himo*,
price Is W*tnt» |«rmonth, or
57.7*&gt;.;-.c,.;, j«*tagc paid.
Tiic ^unilay cdluoii of The 8kk I* also fur#
:.i-hed -• paratcly at SLUD a year, pcstage paid.
Tlie; i;vc of Tire Wbxki.v'Svx, ci;,’ht page*,

.Wdrewl. W. ENGLAND,
PtiWiaber of The Sts, New Todt City.

W

H

Live and Let Live.

W

J. LENTZ £ STHS

In "Every Styles Variety.

STOCK IS 'COMPLETE,

J
H

YOU.

J

UNDERTAKERS’ GOODS,

JT1 dealer in MUUnery aad Fancy Gouda. Dre»
Sifd&amp;atta’
onnnfni Nk»» office.
----- 3-------- :----------------------r\RN0 STRONG, plain and fancy Job Printer,
3-f.Tb®hf
at,bIa,^ht
d°ffi^.;orkof
..“H*£«
';VlU1e*
« tw
farming
work of any
before vou buy. 3
*
--------------------- —---------------------------------TLTISS. E. CHAPMAN, Milliner aud Dress-

to show good*. Call and see inc before buying,
~ ~------ r--------;
F Anffaete^f^^«d
and sc wet! Boots and 8b»«s.
paid to ali order work, aud repairing neatly and
quickly done at reasonable rate*. Contracts
£S*tw
him- and get prices bef«u- ordering elsewhera.
Shop on east 2de of Mala strset, at the sign
&lt;rf As R«d Boot

All tho United States east of the plains
Y® roainl-v
consequently
manners and customs of the two
diotricta are. and must always be. very
different- To learn the wars of t’ e
oounlry,
“tenderfoot
”
oountiy, to outgrow tho ••
tenderfoot"
•“«" °'
u • gradual and
“d
sometimes a trying procesi. A man
coming to the far
West with
,------------.... tthe intention ot making
making 'it 'his
’ permanent homo
An
to come in the fall, if
r
------- ——
possible
for,, though 1:
it L
is —
not1 a good
time for a workingman to find occupannd chances
&lt;
tion, it is usually possible to find
--------_»-----------------—.«------- ilJjr
tO
WOrkuftboUt
S'On?0 Btock-rauch
O! farni
through tho winter either for
&gt;r small
wages or for board, and in this way a
. man grows well accustomed to the wavs
°f th° oountry “d ««I^ted with the
• P00?1®*
80 baa the lx»t preparation
1 ^or aecuringa profitable situation when
the spring work with the cattle begins.

’sStodoI’-% - b-u u

-

To-day (September 3) makes ninetveight years since the signing ot t£&gt;e
definite treaty of peace between Great
Britain and the United States of Amcrica, bv which the war for our indopcndence was terminated. It was on Antpryrj waUTcn laEkYwnKRK t&lt;* mu
&lt;•••»*•»».
trrill 1 LU ta&lt;i«uXamilvKnltrSeptember 3, 1783, that the work was tin*
: I .-v.Mno *r»r mrealr... Win kv.tapafrot
. done, eight years four months and fif» ..........
.. "...
..... •
iBncrteen days after the battle of Lexington, wcikloT MiJea them 1» a!wa«» » rv«,ly market S-a.l
The American signers were Dr. Fran- !X»cIiJue Co.. «.O W**a»£uu;
klin, John Adams and John Jav. aud
Da vid Hartley signod for Great Britain,
The provisional treaty had been signed
in November, 1782, aud the definite
treatv was the Eamo thing.; yet tho EnI glish did not evacuate New Yorit City
till the beginning of the last week of
November. 1788. The close of the con­
test dates from September 8, 1788. as
:$&lt;»..
riiumielpbla.
all the nations that had taken part in ntrmrna
Or FICEo .• j’ Third
JU * Cheataut
K. y.
Booui&lt;
in, 113.
the contest then returned to a state ol
peace—Botlon TravdUr.
ire nip
I

¥ ta«1«™
H” w,UI
e pUln
tbeMmp
*'“«■
» , h.
the
bU *ol
«x&gt;hkwT
-Anti-Fever Trees.—The blue gum
bus a-strong string for his bow, for the was hailed as a great bless ing, that was
easiest way of preparing for more agreo- to improve, at least, all malarious dis­
S’^^'rotiml uS’wJirm^ 1° d ™« °D* tricts, and great was the disappoint­
round-up wagons and prepare ment when it was found that it needed
tbe simple meals. Work of this kind ft a climate almost like the orange. It is
nearly as well paid as tho work with now being declared that the willow is
'
.
' the cattle, and it is theSuite
easiest
asstepping
useful for malaria districts ns
TT'KLLOGG &lt;fc BELL, proprietors Planing atone to the plwrtanter work. Tue av10 blue gam. and even more so, and
-IV Mill. Pianing and Mstehmg. Bumming eragv American man scums tbe thought
well deserving tho name of the Anti­
Fever tree. The malarious shores of
the Levant, from which fevers and

“s’ &gt; oiherdlno runs Three Through-,l’*
•t.- :■ Trains lla’ly lielwctif Cbi-rgo* i:*r
■'r;
Cxuneil Bluffs. Or.mlin. l lneSfu. &gt;*
•k.&lt;. Colorado. Wyranipsr. Montrn.'. Ne■&lt;&gt;-o Mexico. Arizona, lu^bo,Oregon and
Suortcat, Speediest &gt;nd Most Cornformut»* vialiunnibal t«l\&gt;rt Scott. DenlApn,
. Houston, .‘.urtln. Fan Antonio, Gulvcs- ■
ul e)| points in Teams.
tni-'iuah-d indu-reini'ti'.J ■ ' ■
’ '-hiv
■it Cun’. run only on this ’.hw.C.. li. &amp;
.- Orawinit-Hoom Care, vita HnrtWS
i'.Ii Elcgnnt HUb-B.tokcd Rattan Re­
,.- tiitirs for thj exgUuive t»c of first#
prxf.ngera.
I Track nnd Superior Enuipincnt. coak
v. ,:n their Great Thrmgh Cer Arrctum-

Trv it, and you will had trsvcllug.a luxury
!:«&lt;!-. .«J «.f a dlsctxnfort.
Th •'■Xi ch Tickets via th!-? Celrtirnt’s’ Line'
for rale nrall offices in the United Siatcs and
Canada.
Al! Information about Rn!-* of Fii.-e. ?!ccp».
inir Car Accommodsttoii-. T-mo Tobi.-.
will be checrfully given by applylrg to '
General PnMen^rr Agent. Cidcttjn.
T. J. POTTEIt,
General JIauacvr, Cklatgo,

NERVOUS
DEbiLiTY
1! vou are »uCertn» with Xc.-raaa BcMflty
•s&gt;y ui«c*M&gt; or aymptom, weanoj ou- bjdy
mind. eaoMiog you to i««l gloomy, dofpondai
.nerroua, timid. furgoUnl er Budi fur bu&gt;iuai

FLOKIDA

50,000 SHABM, $10 EACH

T
L. inm'1
ou good farm
terest psvable at the Hartlags MaUoual Bank,
Offies 1st dow sswth •/ Spaulding's, Rasthaga.
M*
ITRttDMAN, tbs Marub^ Tailor cl
. CbMlntte. will Visa NashviBs evwy 80
days, wub a chrice lUsaf ptaerwto, al will
offerywc
Save y«ur ufdars tor hint,

gentle-

J. LENTZ &amp; SONS.

THE GREAT

::; nidNGTOir rf&gt;vte..

eo«r.4r&lt;tlal. Patlanu at a distance by giving

Thr Mt h!t»n V**ntnU KallriaW. «ri'-h tla couoon
Uo&lt;tK«t Chicago, aJ!br&lt;)« the m&lt;nl &lt;1 tract «imJ r»ll»
•He route of trnrel from Jlte'iteau to ■:!
fa
Kan»n». Ncbrnakn, I'oiorart.., 'lexa«.
-In
Dakota, Manttcita, etc. Michigan Onlr.il train*
make tare mH clvoeconawto-v* at Chlir.^o with
t!inM&gt;shexptn-« irainom nil Wratero iiw». iUt. •
wlilalvnya tw.aaluv aatba
l'«rtl-» tfuiuk
West tt&gt;h apriog will rto«t ft to Slnlr ter ip«l lor. ■
-r-potHf with Jfrnrt C Wmlawk, OtwMl t*M» n«rr bimJ ’I^ket lev: of ll&gt;&lt;; burnt * l.le-tfn. wbo
•rill cheerfully lutpi: t »ajr In* rtiuatton cH dlff to
Ih» nut nurchoar rnc&lt; t irkete ur»« ■
1
your freight until yuo
I.from the JJMtl

"*r&gt;rit*»wd«,MH4r»WALZ FT, Hlif It 1*«&gt;h*Hv«S
&lt;&gt;*?. $ew BtH valwrlwc impTWru-xatij put mWm!.
B-rA. Mitc'c. R'.tt-r! »r.ii &lt;h&gt;tlrerc&gt; ~o b «ini
rar* L&gt;re. price .nir ftixtv I&gt; &gt;JUra. N« Ca»h Hat
1&gt;f0c-i-*nJp:!«nu*'&lt;4lr.r,»ry jwtfqptar «.r mnn-y
ss*PKfacr3tS«si'51

:*m;&gt; to prepay yv*‘CS") can lie trettod a» vri
iy letter aa a; ..ffl.-r, Wa prepare aud furntok
■Micro# ■-•ar owt. uwdlcitm. A«lr*«
MAIHHJN OlSiXXCAKY, XI bcutk Clark 0

�GHOCERY!

of tbe late President Garfield during hU ni­
nes*, ha* refused to take any rannnrmtkwi

&gt;4 from latest PiipstalM.

1881,

849,4a?,ooo.ooo,
TrbU of Gulteau. the AaHaNNiru

Mka N. T. CorrEOE, of New Orieana, took
a loaded revolver and taught her four-year-old
child how to um it- Tbe little one recently
tn ala.
mouth, N. C., wm threatened on the 29th, and
the Governor.

take anything for his serrice* during tbe IHnessof Mrs. Garfield, and returned a-81.000
check which General Garfield actit him the re­
Govbxxor Murray, of Utah, »«» recently
summoned to Washington by a Cor.gressiuna’
Conunlttee tor consultation aa to tegialattou
required by tbe Territory.
Thirty leading Republicans of Texas held
a secret conference at Dallas recently, and
outlined an lodejxmdent movement, selecting

northweet wind- While going along tbe street
Carter mvt a poorty-cis.-’ little boy, who was
running along, crying bitterly. Carter asked
sobbed out: “I'm cold.” “Come with me,”
said Carter, aud, taking the boy to a clothing
store, he bought him a suit of warm clothes
and a pair of mittens. He then asked-the boy
bis name. “ Aaron Dunlap,” waa tbe reply.
Carter was thunderstruck. “ Aaron Dunlap!”

mother!” •• Father ta dead," tbe bdy replied.

erosa-axMBainatiou waa Murawl Mr. ScovlUo

ttroturh life, of aollettiiur money from lources
expect tt. Mr.
question of tho
that, upon that

•m-lnMoe Hospital, bad devoted his
•ttontiou to the study of insanity during
tto&gt;.- Iasi fifteen years. Ho did not attach much
ImpOrtanoe toHhe shape of tho bead in determininx tho MQrtrtkin of aulty hr insanity.
Wituess ivlatbd ineHtonta withlqAls knowledge
of Demons rtho toadVewnrnntied crimes while
•cfinrucdwAbe influence Of‘nsone delus.ona,
■ud dflineywhu: he considered insane delusplraUon

, aud ho act* quickly and ln&gt;ere did not believe in tho dle_ ...lauJty dcuomlnstcd moral lo­
r. That was simply a convenient terra
ted tn excuse tbe commission of belnou*
■. Witness bad never seen a cmo where

staked irthe belief of the prisoner's father,
W. Gulteau. that disease could be cured I
that thousands and thousands of sane people
prayed dally for tho salvation of President
Garfield’s life. They would hardly have dona
•Gif they bad not entertained some belief in
tbe eOirncy of prayer." Tho hypothetical
question of tho prosecution wm road and tbo
tinued until tbe hour of adjournment without
eliciting any answers favorable to the dufend-

A.i Gumtau entered the court-room on tbe
•aid: “If you will only keep quiet to-day, I
will laugh this case out of court." Aa soon m
from Boston which ataU’d tint all Boston

Off into a nunbllnr harangue, quoting Script u rv
jmd WRta MM&gt;lf to tho “ mock and

though aometimes
vused of using too I

National

Language,’' he ridded,
om the Savior of man­
ray name to tbo
bllcnn
Convention.

known I am

Dr. Kcmpater
did Ui.t b.-li.-ve

one more
art of the Gorernthe defense) would
require the whole of th- first week In January
before tbe cwm could be concluded on its part.
.. Dr. John F. Gray, ttupcrtntotntont of the New
York Stat ? Lunatic Asylum, stated that he had
made th- study of insanity bis business since
She only evidence of inoanlty wm immorality
ar wickednciw. insanity in itself bad no more
tendency to exetto to crime than neuralgia or
any other dbensc. Ho hod made a thorough

inv bis conversation with him be asked him:
•“If tbe Pre*ld&lt;&gt;nt bad offered you tbe Porto
CoturabUc would you have shirt Dim." nnd he
replied: “ Well, that would have settled tbo
matter. I should have taken the position.'*
WltnoM Mkrxl the prisoner bow be enmc to
about the President, and hLt reply wm : “ I came
to the conclusion that tbe political situa­
tion Justified it.
I gradually beenmo
convinced of this, and I resolved upon his nmoval." In reply to a qacKtion whether his
alleged inspiration came to him in the form of

as a copception, and I reflected upon it until I
resolved that tt was jujrtiflci by the situation.
The inspiration «vu in tbe form of a prrasuro
upon me to act. ••The cxamlnntlou wm .u
progre** when tho Court adjourned.
Th* Gulteau trial was resumed on tbo 31M
ult. at tho usual hour. At tho openimr of ths
Court Guttcwu called out that Cunningham,

1 alrcumatuncc throughout th&lt;tm nil that
Iteeticnl queatibnof the prnaocut loath- witness
Mid GuitcuU-WM snuc on tbe 2d of July. Wit. er lu court, aad said that tb-.-y only uonfirrned
fcto opinion that toe waa aaue. Ho belliA-cd the

or
that hS views ujxm K«e types &lt;,( in,unity
had changed slnnc be Ixrm K&gt; study tbe sub­
ject. II&lt; had nlawKioncd tin: theory of “mend

and was lynched by his i&gt;igbbors.
Ar Gore,' Ohio, on the night of tbe 38th an
__« —— —
.
-.f ,

bullet througii her brain.
.
In New York City a few nights ago the
driver of the baggage transfer wagon left the
Grand Central depot with-a load of eleven
trunks, most of which contained costly cloth­
ing. He stopped to deliver one package, and

with the wagon and remaining trunks. Later.
In the night the wagon was found in another
portion of the city, and it contained but one
piece of baggage.
Gexeual Texet has sent a de taehfiient of the
S'ooud Cavalry from Fort Custer to the upper
Yellowstone, to protect the Northern Pacific
constructors from tlui marauding Crows.
The health officers of New York recently
found in a tenement-house a family of six per­
sons prostrate with small-pox.
In a recent affray at Bellfont, Ala., between
rival merchants, W. D. Martin, C. M. Fennel
and John Manin were fatally shot.
At a meeting of leading citizens of Bis­
marck a few evenings ago resolutions were
adopted favoring a ‘ division of Dakota, the
southern half tn enter tlie Union as a State.
Mbs. Chux, of Florence, Cal., recently gave
birth to six perfectly-formed female children.
While playing with a loaded gun at Osh­
kosh, Wl*., ou the 29th a young son of A. H.

’

The bonds (8300,(0) ia value) recently
tolan from D. P. Ellis, -of Cleveland, have
hepald830,a») tcT their recovery.
czr±ACKEM named Fuller, in Osjy, New York, recently undertook
Nellie Cook, when

M spreading a*, an alarming rata

pal Chapel, recently performed a fourth evo­
lution by publicly retracting in Ute Loyson
a* Father Hyacinthe rejects, and baa written

I HAVE A COMPLETE LINE OF
into tho hall to see what wm the matter.
Carter had found a sister whom be had not

A Down-HUl Fight.

Oneof those curious and dangerous epi­
sodes that characterize tbe miner's life iu tbe
snowy mountains of Colorado war brought 16
the attention of the reporter yesterday. Tom
Cox and JIra Null are two miners working far

J’rrwon»l nnd Political.
A Larue number of depositions filed with
me vtcra
tbe
Clerk of tbe
uw National
.wt/Kau House
now of
ot Repreuef&gt;retentative* by Lynch, the &lt;-o!o»el contestant
.__ .. ...
...
..... - ... . . .
have unaivountab y disappeared. .
Lx a r: cent letter to Cotone! BiU* la regard

the Arcade iuliding in Buffalo, repulsing all

termort penny tawtaaaiy taken front tbe public

building hi which they perished.
In orc of tbo suburbs of London two
Mnritrf’i* mistdonarii’.-. ftterupting to hold

Rusaell.
Ox tbe 30th nit. George Wood, of Philadel­
phia, who personated Frederick Schultz on a
jury, was sentenced to seventy mouths ia the
Penitentiary.
Robekt L. Lindsay, the famous Missouri
limdJwindier, was arraigned nt Stcutieavlllc,
O., on the 30th ult., and sentenced to nine
years in the Penitentiary.
Ex-Tueasueems Kii.ooxe and Mubrat, .of
Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, withheld
from tbe State three-fourths of tbe money re­
ceived from liquor, licenses tn 1873, 1870 and
1877, amounting to about 8153,000. Treasurer
McCallin turned over recently to the Pennsyl­
vania State Treasurer 842,867. being the
amount recovered in suits brought against tbe
ex-Treasurers.
The depositors in the Massachusetts Sav­
ing* Banks number 738,951, and the amount of
money deposited by them amounts to 8230,Coiz&gt;nel T. H. Talbot, a Boston lawyer,
residing i-t Brookline. Mass., has sued a week­
ly newspaper for 85,000 for falsely announcing
that he had come out for Ben Butler, thereby
causing Talbot lo loec a nemiustion for State
Esox BoUN, a carpenter residing nt Rogers,
Ark., wm recently ahot dead in bed by hla
wife. She claimed that he had killed two
men, was a horse-thief, and hod twice threat­
ened her life. Her three elder children were
sent to the poor-bonac at Bentonville, and she
took an infant with her to jail, where she
killed herself with a'knlfe.
A colored man named Gabriel White, was
hanged at Watereboro, 8. C., ou the 3Utii ult-,
for the murder of Frederick Bellinger. WillSam IL Erb, who killed his wife, suffered cxc
cution in tlie Jail at St. Louis.. '
The customs ' duties paid at the port of
Chicago during 1SS1 aggregated 82,928,319.
Tbe direct exports amounted to 83,343,215, of
which about one-third was carried iu Atuericsu

Tub Missouri River closed at Sioux City on
tbe night of the 29th ult. On tb^SOth ult. ice
gorged around tbe pile bridge uf tbe Omaha
Rood, ami swept away three hundred feet of
the structure.
George 8. Reed,'of San Francisco, became
deranged by too dose attention to business.
On the 1st he killed bls mother-in-law, Sarah
A. Smith, fatally wounded his young daugh­
ter, and then took his own life.
Under the Presidency of Thomas Davis,
a company was recently organized in Boston
to build domed steamships which are expect­
ed to cross tlie Atlantic in less than a week.
Nearly 82,&lt;JUO,O9O stock has Ix-cn taken.

Day, was generally uoserved throughout the
United States as a holiday. In Washington
tbe President held a grand reception, which
w». very largely attended, and other reecptions were held by the ladles of Cabinet
offlivrs.
«
The Cotton Exposition nt Atlanta closed ou
tbe crenlng of tbe 31st ult. Director General
Kimball delivered tbe farewell address.
At Sbanasville,
on New Year’s eve the
Knights of Pythias were holding a festival iu
Goilcr's Hull, which was densely packed with
people. Just m tbo band began playing the
floor gave way wltbaeraah, precipitating about
300 people to the first floor. Two |&gt;enions
were killed outright, three fatally burned and
a large number of others .were more or less
•oriously injured.
In tbe walking-match at New York, which
cnd&amp;l ou the 31st ult., Fitzgerald made over
5*2 miles in six days, surpassing all previous
Fitzgerald will receive about 82,000 and the
silver trophy; Norcmae 8e00, and liartr ifO).
York City reports for the year 1881
tbe erection of nearly 2.5J0 buildings, at a
cost ot 847,000,000.
Br the burning of a ixiarding-house at Rich­
burg. N. Y., on the 1st, Gilbert Abers and
w’Jr were aerioiuJy buniel, and tbeir three
children perished in the flame*.
Twenty-four htnics were burned to death
in the livery stable of George P. Kendall &lt;t

1 Ratxs were detained at Petersburg, Va.,
on the 1st by a fall of ten inches of snow.
Tbe day was ike coldest of the season tlirougbout Canada.

tn lie derived by employing tunnels
of distance*, while the danger from

—Near] vone-ae venth of I reland i* I

PhitarWpHa end uaOa

HIS NEW GROCERY IS IN FULL BLAST

into hb arm* with a iibriek that made all the

Foreign.
The Abbe Rfchery, after quarreling with
Father Hyacinthe, recanting the Loyson here­
sy, and re-entering the Church of Rome, then

Now takes pleasure in announcing tv the Public that

quickly

separating from him.
Secretary Forster on tbe 29th gave 8500
to a scheme for assisting farm servants to em­
igrate to the United Blates. The police iu
Coqnty Cork arrested a man named Cornell bert, near Twin Lakes. They sleep in a tent
with a number of loaded revolvers in hla pos­ near the mouth of Golden Lode, in which they
session, and a list of persons upon whom out­ were working al! night, when they went into
rages were to be committed. A large quanti­ tbe lent for the purpose of going to sleep.
ty of rifles, bayonets and cartridges were One cf than got tn bed and, enveloping him­
found is the vault of a Protestant Church in self with the blankets, was snug and conifortable and # drowsy in a moment.. Tbe
County
er jtjhe eminent French palnt- other, not in so great a hurry, noticed that the
r melting snow was dripping through the roof of
' ' tn Paris on tbe 29tiL
, valued at 81,200,- the tent aud right where he had to sleep. He
rklsh waters a few days ' couldn't stand a wet couch, and, crousing his
&lt;nu.
companion, asked him to get up so that the
nt report of tho Chinese Custom I bed might be moved to * position where the
House shows that nineteen porta of the Em­ । melted snow would not touch it. Hl* sleepy
pire arc open to foreign commerce. Tlie Im­ : partner growled out a refusal. There was a
ports of the country list year Aggregated * hot reply, and in lew time than it takes to
write it tlie two men were engaged in a fierce
8231,391,855, and the exports 8UL2,9TL765.
Since the anti-Boclaliflt law wm promul­ i personci encounter. They were both clad in
gated in Germany in 1878, 225 Socialist socie­ ’ tbeir night shirts alooe. and a small tent is bub,
ties hare been dissolved and 738 Socialist pub­ I limited space for two angry men to fight esch
other in. They had hardly clinched before one
lications have been suppressed.
The amalgamation Is announced of the carried the other through the front flaps of
Great Western Railway of Cauada, the Credit the tent.
Valley, tbe Ontario &lt;fc Quebec, and the To­ . Right here it ia neccsaary to say that the
i tent was pitched on tbe fearfully steep slope
ronto, Gray &lt;fc Bruce Road*.
The Bonk of Halifax, N. 8., has stopped the i of Mount Elbert, and there wasn't more than
two feet of level ground between the frout of
One thousand seven hundred persons ' tbe tent and the precipitous slope of the
' mountain. This slojic was covered With four
in the aati-Jewi»h riot growing out of the I feet of soft snow, and it extended down for
church panic of Christmas day. Tho prison­ ' 2.000 feet before tberc wm a re«tlng-placc. In
■ the Cerce fight between tlie two miners they
ers ere mostly young men.
A I’amiexoeu train on the 30th made a suc­ Iwerc carried down tbe dizzy slope, and, with
their hands upon each other's throats, they
cessful trip, through the recently-completed
tunnel under St. Gothard Mountain, in the went whirling down the mountain like a pair
Alpq The time occupied in the round trip | of bowlder*. They had gone but a short dte&gt; tance when anger vanished in the presence of
was eighty-three minutes.
a poenble death, and each man tun ed hto
Tukek steamers are mj'ortcd to have been
lost recently, two of them in the Mediterra­ attention to tlie paramount work of saving
nean. One hundred and ten jKirsons were his life. Down they went along the fear­
ful slant of the great mountain, and at each
drowned.
Tue Khedive of Egypt recently forwarded revolution they sunk In the soft suow
8400 to the fund for the erection of a Garfield j sometime* head first and sometimes feet
hospital at Washington, and promises to send I first. They were paralpuxl with fright, aud
11.000 more.
’ no sound escaped their lips. The further
After the Inauguration on tlie 2d of Daw­ down they went, the greater the momentum
son ae Lord Mayor of Dublin, the Corpora­ I of their bodies, and when about 500 feet from
tion, largely comjiosed of Land Leaguers, reg the point where they started, they bounded
fused, by a vote of 28 to 18, to pass the cus­ j in tbe air and alighted in snow so deep that
tomary compliment ot a vote of thanks to ex­ j they stuck fast. After arduous efforts they
Mayor George Moyers, in retaliation for his ' managed to extricate themselves and get back
refusal a few months before to convene a spe­ ' to their tent, bruised and bleeding and their
cial meeting of the Corporation to confer tlie quarrel healed. No matter what • the future
freedom of tbe city upon Messrs. Parnell and
has iu store for these two men; they will
Dillon. In his progress through tho streets
Dever forget the time when they were whirling
the unpopular cx-Mnyor was hlMcd by a xnob,
down the snowy stopes of tbe continental di­
but no personal violence was offered.
vide of North America, andntuow drift saved
them from landing 1,500 feet below, in a con­
LATER NEWS.
' dition in which none but tbe Coroner and the
Tita public-debt statement luacd on tho
undertaker would feci any practical Interest
Rd makes the following exhibit: Total debt
in theta. They are the best of friends uow,
(including interest of 8l5.53li.6ill), 82.GI8,aud will, doubties*, continue so.—Lsmtoffis
K/J.an. Cash in Treasury, €33,377,980.
CArowfcto.
Debt, 1ms amount In Treasury, 81,7&gt;15,491,717.
Decrease during December, 812,7TO.&lt;il3. Do- Completion of the Alpine Tunnel In
Colorado.
crcasenin^June30, 1881, 873,107,091
Six thousand Iglsb landlord*, representing
Tho recent completion of the Alpine tun­
all tbe principal Interests, gathered at Dublin
&lt;m tbe 3d and adopted resolution* prop-sting nel by the Denver, South Park «t Pacific Rail­
rood Company demonstrates the daring na­
against the admiuistratiou of tlie Laud act as
unjtut to the landlords, and claiming compen­ ture of the nineteenth century engineering,
and in.addition thereto tlie tunnel Is on ole
sation for losses sustained through tu«»dlHd- jcct of Intereat as a work of no ordinary char­
uullou of the value* of estate* iu consequence
acter. Through the courtesy of Superintend­
of the decision* of the Land Court. Tbe c«&gt;rent C. W. Fteber and Chief Engineer Evans,
[oral ton of Cork conferred the freedom of the
the
has been enabled to present the fol­
city on John Dillon, and scut copies of the
lowing tacts regarding the huge artificial
resolution to Gladstone and Foster.
cavern.
Durino tbe twelve months ended Novem­
The tunnel is situated In Alpine Pass and
ber 80,1881, tiie excess of expnrts of merchan­ pierces the great continental backbone. Tlie
dise from the Vnitcd States wu 8195,123,212, summit of the mountain is also the boundary
line between Chaffee and Gunnison Counties,
aud the excess of import* of gold and silver
the tunnel iu the former county
eolu and bullion for tlie same periofi was 8&amp;J,- entering
and emerging in the latter. The town of Han­
OS3,Ot», m against an excess of 859,342,990 for cock to situated about three miles to the east
the preceding year.
of the eastern entrance, and Pitkin, ninemile*
Lx his further examination in the Gulteau away, Is the first town encountered while jourwestward.
trial on the 3d Dr. Gray tcattfled that In con­ nevtng
The elevation of the tunnel was one of the
versation with Gulteau iu the jail tbe mssmIq serious obstacles encountered while perform­
had stated t hat he had heard of the cue of
ing the work. Al an altitude of 11,534 feet it
Lawrence, who attempted to BMassinaic Gen­ enters a mountain whose crest is • 12,000 feet
eral Jackson, and who acted at his trial very above the sea, and constant changes were ne­
much a* Gulteau hod conducted himself. Tlie cessitated among the workmen, for only the
pni cc-.itlun ctorcd tta case With the testimony most robust could endure tbe effects of that
of Dr. Gray. Mr. Scoville called Dr. Bowker, rarified atmosphere. From tbe ciutcrn en­
of Kansas City, who testified that Guiteau's trance to tlie western exit the tunnel Is 1,773
divorced wife bad once entertained grave feet in length, while its height is 13 feet, witli
a width of 1&lt;$X ^e€tdoubt* a* to his mental condition. The assasThe work waa commenced about two years
ago and it wm pronounced finished ou the
ed with a threat to strike a bailiff.
second day of the present month. While thu
It is announced that General Grant has re­ benefits. accruing from the wotk, to the rail­
cently reached the conclusion that General road company warranted the tftpense. it wm
Fitz John Porter was deeply wronged by dis­ nevertheleM expected or anticipated that ore
missal from tiie army, aud that be will address veins or bodies would be encountered. Any
of such a nature were not realized,
an carnert apjeol t® President Arthur for tbe hopes
however, for throughout Its entire length dcprompt restorailCL of the disgraced leader.
coniposed granite was lhe predominant char­
Tita deatit to amiouscel at Philadelphia pf acteristic of the rock. The luterior is finished
throughout with California red wood, and
ex-Cungressman Edward Juy Morris.
cvNupleted the aggregate coat of the
Duuixo 1881 there were 5,'X2 huslnoM fail­ when
work waa found to be 81»w)0d. By means of
ures in the United States. Involving Uubllittoe thr tunnel Gnunison and all point* westward
of more than 881,000,000. During the pre- ar.: brought eighty miles nearer to Deaver,
vions year tbe number of failure- was 4,785, whiic the disadvantages accruing from a &lt;»dstont warfare with the snows are greatly
and the Itabilittos 805,000,000.
diminished, m snow sheds tor a short distance
Jeremiah M. Rcsjc was duly .naugunited
from either end of tbe tunnel will protect the
Governor of Wisconsin on the t? &gt;. The Legis­ track and permit uninterrupted transit, when
this would not be practicable were tlieroad to
lature will meet an the 11th.
The hlgb-liccusc Liquor law of Nebraska traverse the labyrinth of canyons necessary to
the dealreu point.
went into effect on the 2d. Out &lt;ff the 140 gain
To a certain e&gt; tent raiirosuUng at very high
saloon* tn Omaha 108 suspended operations.
altitudes Is even now experimental, and the
CalTAlN Howuate, dudcr bidictmeut at difficulties to t&gt;e sunnounted are more serious
*
y Judge Cox
to leave the jail In charge o£ a at tbe subject.
’
. I New Tear with bis friends.
ballin, and spend
Two aoed linJ
brothers, named Rose, arc raid

n: Thin pomt aiiiuanu.d

.pwawitlfi,

At Philadelphia Lieutenant-Colonel W. K
Price, of the Sixth United Stales Cavalry, and
Colonel H. B. McComb, tbe well-known rail­
way builder, died on the 30th ult '■

CALVIN AINSWORTH

Sugars, Coffees, Teas, Syrups, Tobacco, Cigars,
Soaps—Washing and Toilet, Canned
Goods, Ground Spices,
And in fact, everything that belongs to tbe Grocery Department.
a fine collection of

Also

STAND AND HANGING LAMPS
And Glassware of the Latest Pattern.
A LARGE AND WELL SELECTED STOCK CF

English and American White. Ware.
----------- 1 KEEP IN STOCK,----------

Brown Ware, Yellow Ware, Stone Ware,
WOODEN WARE, BASKETS, YANKEE NOTIONS, ETC.
F?" All my RoodM arc treah, Ju*t bought for spot cneh and
will be sold only Tor cakIi, tit the low&lt;*st prices.
A cordial invitation is extended to every man, woman
child, to call and examine prices: and qualities ol Goods.
I take pleasure iu show iiiK Goods, M hcther you wish to
buy or not.
Nashville, Mich., Dec. 5,1681.

C. AINSWORTH
If

C. BOISE

DETORf STOVE WORKS
trt

3
K
2

B uilders

Sauh, Doors, lilindh, Jefferson Nnik. Glass, Putty, Painty
Oils, Varnishes, Color.', Brushes, Etc. Castor, Sperm, Golden,.
Black, Linseed and Kerosene Gils.
Shovels, Spades, Forks, Hoes. Snaths, jXpple Parers, Farm
Bells. Fence Wire, Well and Cistern Pumps. Wood and Iron,
Pipe, Points, Cylinders. Lead Pipe, Sinks,' &amp;c.
------------ AGENT FOR--------—

DOMESTIC SEWING MACHINE

The Lightest Running and most Durable Machine in use.
I shall aim to keep none but first class goods, and sell them
at a small profit. Call and see me when needing hardware.

FRANK C. BOISE.
JJAVE YOU SEEN THOSE

New Fall G-oods
------ JUST IN AT------

KOCHER BROTHERS.
If not, do so nt once and be happy.

In this lice wc are bound to lead all competition, and our
stock just in is larger and better selected than ever before. It
consists in part, of

New StYle Cashmeres, Plaids, Brocades, Etc.
OUR STOCK OF-

IS FULL AND COMPLCFK.
The larbest line of Beaver Shawl, in two counties.
A large variety of Beady Made 0 oaks; also Cloakings of all
shades and qualities.
300 Pieces of New Prints. A n endless variety of Blank’ts
A big line'of Underwear and Flannels.
easterners are plenty, and we are too busy to enumerate
further at present.
.

KOCHER BROS.

�his bod yM
HI H WARK

Jaooli Hartom has put up a wiadmiU
to draw water. ,
.
Helen and Albert spent New Years

th

ish
mark.
•
•
Well «. did vyatrn, tart Srturdw

night.
'
Tbe old "Nick" b»«o&lt; talo tbe Hay
family.
_ ,
Mr». Martin Harris has gone .tolnd.,

on a visit.
{.
J. Young haagone to the shady woods
again, to work.
Mrs. Amo* Downs is quite ill. ' Heart
disease is thecause.
John has lost his Molly for sure, os
she wanted “More-House.”
Mr. John Prince ho* been sick sever­
al weeks. Tape worm is the cause.
Mrs. Herbert Grinnell, of Add Ar­
bor. I* visiting at her parental hoine,
here.
. •
Sickness has been a constant visitor
in N. H. Kmnee family, for seventeen
years.
Conundrum:—When a family is fast
decreariug why should the aged parents
fwaaVMore-homie."
! HullettcrSrCo., ar® done* hulling,and
y^are in place ready to g+iud feed, for all
wishing corn dodgers,
We are watching James Wheeler,
and hope in the near future to give
s^le news worth the while.
Ha! ha! ba! ho! ho! ho! hev you
herd ov tbet belling over in tlie Lake
neighborhood. Law, next, is reported.
It has been demonstrated that those
who go to another state to marry, are
liable to get a belling at both ends of
tlie road.
Mr. Morehouse returned from Ind.,
last week bringing a quantity of Hay,
♦ Mary, as a trophy. Next night ho en­
joyed a charivari from the boys.
,
There is young tornado blowing over
Shaytown, because a young American
got his pants striped at school. How
end it is that big boys are expected to
bbey tho rules of the school room.
I would trade my farm for a stock of
goods, a printing office or a jacknife
I would, however, prefer the latter, as
it would be of some use to me. For
for particulars inquire at The News
office.
Does that reporter in West Sunfiqld,
know that he is treading on dangerous
ground ! Does l.e know ho is encroach­
ing up*m my territory gobbling news
at my expense ? Has he paid his license
and affixed the proper stamp on his
production T Beware and make your
will "Day Watch.”—He has been chris­
tened and commissioned.—Ed.
.
Writist.

HASTINGS.
School opened Tuesday.
Di. Upjohn has the diphtheria.
The board of sup c reisers are in eession.
Rev. Moody will preach at tho Bap­
tist church Sunday Jan. 8, morning and
evening.
Union services were held last Sun­
day evening by thiT Presbyterean and
Methodist societies.
New Years call were indulged in by
quite a number of gentlemen on Mon­
day. Sobriety was a marked feature,
all ladies dealing out nothing stronger
than coffee.
The Presbyterian social at the resi­
dence of E. G. Holbrook, was largely
attended and all enjoyed themselves.
The society have extended ■ -a call to
Rev. R. A. Carnaham. of New York
who will take up his duties about June
1st. Mr. Carnaham is a young man of
y. talent and will doubtless do a good
woikhere.
On Wednesday, A. R. Bovee from
Caladonia was trying to sell a note
amounting to $34.00 drawn in his favor,
and against John Teeple to H. L. New­
ton. Sheriff Babcock was present, and
the anxiety and discount offered, arous­
ed his suspicions, so he had Mr. New­
ton take the note, paying $2.00 down,
with the understanding that he was to
receive tbe rest in the morning. In
the meantime the Sheriff found out
that it was a forgery and procured
rooms for Mr. Bovee . He don’t go out
in company much now, the probabili­
ties are that when he comes into court
next Friday he will look crooe-eyed
and plead insanity.

KALAMO.

E. Welch is visiting biff sister, in Al­
legan.
Election of officers at tbe R, R. (f.
last Friday night.
Jack Lundquist's daughter Mary, has
the diphtheria.
Joe Mix and wife are stopping at hit
mother’s, for a short visit.
A dance was held at Silas SIomod’m
last week Thursday night.
A. Spencer has n dance and oyster
supper this week Thursday.
A drover from Portland, has been
buying up all tbe sheep aud cattle in
this vicinity.
Will Fowler baa the diphtheria, in a
Rght form. Df. Snell of Kalamo is at­
tending him.
Lost Fi
irday, old winter
j the amount of
held thia week
behalf of the

Mr. Davis living on tbe town lino of
Woodland, is quite rick. Helms uot
been iibk to do much the past summer.
About six couple gave Dr. Baugh­
man and wife a surprise, on Wednes­
day night. Tbe refreshments were
oysters,
,
&lt;
John Gerharts mule driver has mis­
used, aud pounded said animals, be­
yond all reason, aud now the matter
will be taken in hand. A word to the
wise is sufficient.
.
Cutten and alegba were prepared to
take in some of tlie sleighing the fore
part of tbe week. Our farmer* would
like to see some good roads so that they
could gel to market, and then business
would be lively again.
..
H. F. Rawson aud family living near
Lansing were visiting at John R. Bar­
num’s and other relatives in Woodland
on New Yean. John reports that they
did justice to two fat turkeys and also
enjoyed a rabbit hunt.
.
The hunters around here have- been
after the lynx that has been infesting
the Hager neighborhood for the past
few weeks. Some of the boys that go
to see their sweethearts, and have
evil in their hearts, imagine they see
this animal.
Mr. Gregory commenced to move ,to
Nashville on. Monday.
Mr. Gregory
and wife have made a good many worm
friends here in the short time they
have been with us, and as they move
frome here to Nashville, we can reccommen them to the good people there,
there, as worthy of your respect.
Thu young people's New Years party
at G. Risings, last Monday night, was
a success. There were about silly
present and everybody seemed to en­
joy themselves. Some of our young
ladies were so anxious to go, that they
went afoot, a distance os 3j .miles. W.
Carter was chosen president for the
next two years.
The pioneer meeting was not alto­
gether a failure. Those present re­
port a good time, and they chose T.
lloughten.Pres; Vice H.Kilpatrick E.P.
Barnum, Sec.; and W. H. Lee, Treaa
This pioneer gathering ought to be
made one of tbe most interesting
meetings held in the town.
The one
next year will lie held in the Town
Hall.
At a regular meeting of Woodland
LodgtsNo. 289 L O. 0. F.,beld on Mon­
day evening, tlie 2d- day of January,
1882, the following officers were instal­
ed by D. D. G. M. Andrew S. Carpen­
ter: James H. Black, N. G,; John
Velte; V. G.; Henry Holmes, Sec’y.;
Lewis C. Barden, Tieas.; Ludwig
Faul, Warden; Calvin Sawdy, Cond.;
Ira Jordan. I. G.. D. B. Cooper, 0. G.;
Daniel Miller; R. S. N. G.; James G.
Jordan, S. S. N. 8^ John Wunderlich,
R. S. V. G.. Wm. Jordan. R. S. 8.;
John W. Whisler, 8. 8. 8.; Nicholas
Brown, Chaplin.
Edwin Smith was brought before
'Squire Hough last Friday afternoon,
and pleaded not guilty. The usual ex­
amination took pl^cc. Mr. Haight anil
Palmerton appearing for the plaintiff
and Mr. Perry for the-defense, After
the.prosecution had closed their case,
the defendant made a statement which
was pretty thin. Justice Hough bound
him over to circuit court under a bond
$-JbO aud as he failed to give bail, was
taken to jail. This is not bis first ofsence ; he has served eight years sen­
tence in the reform school in Ohio,
and this is the third note lie has forged
since he came here, and now will probabio have to go over the road for some
time.

Quarterly meeting at tbe M. E.charch
the 31 st and 33d,
Lorenzo ha* gone to keeping house
widi his new wife.
•
Elide Stephens and Frank Wing were
made one,un Thursday.
Otto Walker and Preston Jewell havo
returned from Nebraska.
Seiger 4c. Servin’s shooting match
turned into raffling match.
Luther McDerby has • ben that lays
eggs weighing four ounces.
Mr. Youngs from Canada has bought
the Miller farm,
paying therefor
$1,800.
The private school under tlie instruc­
tion of Winney Rossel is progressing
finely.
A temperance lecture at tbe Congreg­
ational church Sunday night, it had a
female speaker.
Charlie Baker has taken the contract
tg_build the school house in the Baker
district at $800.
My opinion is that any one who
signs a petition to tax churches, will be
scorned by devils in- the infernal re­
gions.
Helen Mills had a present of a gold,
ring. She slipped the same on her fin­
ger and it being a little small caused
her fl tiger to swell »o badly that the
ring Inul to be cut ofl.
Ed. Bartley is in the habit of swap­
ping horses. He came across Sam.
Cotton at the Creek, ami traded horses
with him, but found he had got a balky
horse. Ou his way home he stopped
and borrowed a chain to draw the ani­
mal home, stating that it was sick, but
the next morning was heard giving the
siek horse a course of sprouts. H. H.

EAST MAPLE GROVE.

Suffering—wood and sawlogs.
Calvin Bassett mourns tho loss of a
pair of twin boys.
Every one seems to l&gt;e chock full of
work since the snow storui.
Casper Bowen is making preparation
to build a barn, next summer.
Joe Clarkson of Caro, Xas a guest at
W. C. Wilcox’s the fore part of this
week. He returned Tuesday.
School commenced at the Quail Trap
on Monday,and Miss Edna Griffin rings
the bell for the third term of school in
that district.
There is a child that resides in this
town whose blood relation is of a
somewhat complicated character.
He
is his mother’s brother, his auuta are
his sisters, he is the grandson of his
father and his own nephew.
The Now Year opened with a very
fine day, and also very qufetin this
vicinity, not even a roasted chicken or
turkey for dinner as is generally cus­
tomary. The children forgot to get
up at midnight to see if the cattle were
kneeling, but as soon ns daylight they
ran to see if Santa Claus had brought
them anything, but how great was
their a*tonishment to find nothing but
nn empty stocking for them. Nothing
but tbe crowing of the roosters or tho
cackling of the hens that broke the si­
lence all day long.
A man living in Kalamo said that
one night about 19 .•’’clock, he was
(wakened from his si umber by his
clock striking ton great excess, ns soon
as he was aroused he commenced
counting the number of times that the
clock struck and kept it up until he
was completeli^lid out. Meanwhile

it had waked up the baby nnd it was
trying to keep tune witli tho clock and.,
the dog thought that it was a fonrth of
July and he commenced howling. ~
By
tins time the wife had got upon her
dignity, and sard that if lie did not
throw that clock out of doors, she
would. He shot out of lied like a load
of coal and made for the clock. By the
MAPLE GROVE.
timo ho reached the clock it had ceased
Where did yon six’nd your New striking and he returned to bed, nnd
the house was quited down and they
There was quarterly meeting at the all enjoyed the remainder of the night
U. B.church last Saturday and Sun­ in a good sound sleep.
Petek.
day.
How many of our boys swore off
WEST SUNFIELD.
their bad habits, and are determined to
Here we are again.
do better this year.
Ho! for a sleighride.
Mias Ella Powers, the teacher at the
What beautiful evenings.
McOmber district, is having a two
Did you observe watch night T
weeks vacation.
Mr. Fay, teacher at Burns Town, in
Mias Jane Miller, of Nashville, has
stead
of Sunfield center.
been spending the holidays with her
Among those who have gone North
sister, Mrs. George Marshal.
Tbe Good Templets Lodge at Nor­ this winter, we would note Jim. Walch
ton's hall, is in a flourishing condition, and George Quick.
Charlie Sackett has returned from
and bids fair to be the mean* of doing
Kansas, and will again settle on !ns
good.
Tbe boys gave Charley McKing, a farm vacated by Mr. Prince.
William Bowser took a rest from
cow-bell sscial lastJEhursday evening,
and then Charley gave them a cider school duties last week, and spent tbe
time
in hunting and visiting.
social before they left.
Schools in this town seem to have
Mrs. Levi Elliott received a telegram
last week, announcing the death of her improved, as also have teacher’s wages,
brother, Reuben Coats, of Brookfield, since the new system of examination*.
Mr. Edwin Harper is putting up
Eaton County.
The Union Sunday school at the Nor­ another building for James Hunter.
ton’s schoolhouse, has reorganized for Hury up Ed. or yon will have cold
tbe coming year, and the following are fingers.
No marriages, no deaths, no fight*.
the officers: J. H. McKee, Supt; Phil­
lip Shaffer. Assistant Supt; C. R. Par­ BO runawajo, nothing but mud, mad.
therefore if new* are scare® do not
tner, Treas, Libra’n and Sect’y.
Zip Cook.
to
SKINNY MEN.
ehsMu'r
tornmi -

The News was quite newsy last
week, the best local paper in Barry
Co.
. Judging from the looks of the^Scliool
Boy’s” profile, lie smelt something
Strong,
Mr. Edward Gates, and Miss Maggie
Durfed attended the Masonic ball, at
Hastings.
,
Mrs. E. M. Bartlett, after making a
seven weeks stay with her brother, M.
M. Slocum Las returned home to Tole­
do.
Edward, there ia no use in whining,
the gal is married and the large hill
and dreaded cuusway are things of
the past.
If anybody is slighted because they
do not see their name in print just do
something cunning, and then come
and tell me.
.
Jacob Johnson has taken ud, and re­
corded on tbe town book, a black hog,
that. has . been lingering around his
premises some time.
- Wm, Hendershott has gone to Penn.,
to bring back the remains of his wife,
who died their while on a visit, the
fore pure of last summer.
One of the many valuable gifts on
tbe Christmas tree, at Dowling Gmiuw
Hall, was a silver tea act Hm-**^* Jj
gold for Mrs. Clara Grai^r’
, t
from her father, D. C. SanlxA“’ J ]tiA
Sidney Hull is doing chore^,5£^,Xi
board this winter. Last fall he fnckea
up his traps aud went to dwell with
his sons, and. since cold weather has
come back with a contrite heart, to
roost with his better half again.
Rcirhard Freer has traded the form
where he lives, for the farm he trad­
ed to Mr. Roberts, about a^rear ago,
just over the town line, in the edge of
Hasting*, Roberts had an auctiou eale
Jan. 4th, nnd will move bnck to Hast­
ings.
Aaron E. Durfee and wife, while at­
tending the grange, last Saturday, re
reived a telegram that their absent son
Pliney, was not expected to recover
from a disease of the .kidneys. They
started at once for the sick bed of their
only boy.

drowned, the buggy . swamped, and
Smith, well, there are just as many
Smith’s a* there ever war.
.
Thomas Costello, an old man. who
was a resilient of .Flint, was run, over
by a passing engine and cut to pieces
on tbe line of the Chicago &amp;, Grand
Trunk Railway, be tween Lapeer and
Elba, Dec. 31. He was- drunk and
walkingon the track at the time.
Rev. John Hiscock, a Methodist min­
ister at Jonesville, met a ringu'nr
death, Jan. 2. He wit* leading his cow
mid fastened the rope tojiis wrist. Tbe
cow ran awn; and drew him about so
violently as to caa»e his death. He
was 79 yearaold and leaves a wife nnd
son.
.
At Detroit Inst Wednesday while
August John, n night watchman em­
ployed at tlie Michigan Central car
works, was walking towards borne ou
tlie Lake Shore 4c Michigan Southern
railroad track, a pony engine struck
him, and falling on the trunk he was
run over and instantly killed.
Miss Martha Hale, n young lady 23 or
24 years-uf age, committed suicide nt
Flint, Dec. 81. 'Tlie family missed her
and after searching for her some time,
found |jer laxly in tlie Thread mill
pond. She hud gone out dressed sim­
ply in her night clotlie*. No cause is
assigned for the desperate net, and her
friend* know of no reason whatever
which should have le&lt;l her to jrta. her
own life. .
(
L Fenton was greatly excited KsQreek

ternoon

ion-i-the earurat appeal &lt;
wholr nature was rujqxi

iside—that Myrtle had spoken the
words with which our story pja-us. She
Imd watched him closely dr.riug *u ac­
quaintance of nearly two jt-ar*. ami
noticed with pain how be xedulounly
avoided candy -stores and k-e errata
saloon*. “I can never marry a man.”
*lie had iwiid to her niotlier one day,
“who shies at tlie right of a candy
store like a country horse at a tire en­
gine." And when the expected avowal
came she hud kept her word.
. Aiielbrrt turned around in a dazed
•drtufway after Myrtle had rejected
him, walkcil swiftly toward the dry
good* suirc which had lieen so forlazate us to secure hi* services.
’ All # the afternoon Adelbert stood
moodily behind the rilibon counter,
thinking of how be should n vengu
hiuiM-lt on the naughty girl who hud
wrecked hl* Imppines*. At precisely •
4j o’-.lock a fierce joy lighted up his
countenance, and putting on bis bat-,
he left the store.

I

by the sudden dentil of a girl iintned
Hunter, who was but 17 yearn, old and
about to become n mother. . Before she '
died a young man named Kvgl« t ua.,
accused *&gt;f being tho seducer, and
owned
up.
Ttliy
•
nt’eried
Wednesday night nu.l -lw *n« «i next
morningnud wasfbunied betme night.
An examination was held, which re­
flected no lunch discredit upon a cer­
tain phycian that he ha* run away.
If some of tho philanthropic sentinient in tbe country which I* slopping
over on costly attempts tu get inven­
tive genius to produce ways of killing
chickens without, hurting them, or for
sending cattle to New York in palace
cars, could be diverted into endeavor*
Doxt.
to rig .Michigan «w mill* *o that it
wouldn't take so much human blood
EATOX COUNTY.
to grease up the saw journal*, there
would he les* cripples and fewer wid­
There bare been 30 deatlu iu the owsand orphans iu tho la mlA-districts.
township of Roxand, during 1881.
The waste of life in the Michigan saw
A man named Cox was arrested nt mill* is something horrible, and much
Eaton Rapids last week Thursday for of it could be presented by proper leg­
stealing clover seed. Hr sold die seed islative action, just as the death and
accident ratio in the Penusylvaniacoal
Co a buyer in that city.
mine* has been reduced.—Detroit News.
The night-watchman of Eaton Rap­
HA! HA! HA! HU! HU! HU!
ids proposes to take every hors© he
finds on the street at unseasonable
hours, aud put them in a feed- barn.
Everybody supposed the BarnardCurtis trial had closed until they saw
It seems to lie very fumiy indeed.
the Believe Gazette,whhh is yet giving The Amcricnnsaro a fun-loving, mirth­
it in detail.
ful people. We must have our little
joke. Wo must Inugb, and the more
M1CHIGAN NEWS.
solemn the occasion tho more neces­
sary that we should indulge in the re­
Anton Serr. a farmer of Venice, Shi* laxation of laughter nnd merriment.
\Vu Have suffered so much from the
awasdee county, was fatally kicked by
death of President Garfield that it is
a colt, Dec. 99.
but natural the reaction from rneasureSeven, men have been accidentally lUBS gut-f should set in- Ob. very nat­
killed in the lumber wo&lt;xls near Sum­ ural indeed. We suffered in syrunathv
with tlie stricken martyr through all
mit, thia aeoann.
the long, hopeless summer of voiceless
Keyworth’s hotel bam in Imlay City, agony and patient endurance. The
was bullied Dec.3l, together with con­ shattered
bone, and the fester­
ing truck of the fatal Pallet; Uie cruel
tent a and ten horses.
knives of the anxious, perplexed sur­
The Central jail road company ha* geons; the burrowing pus; the burn­
taken possession of the extension of ing fiver; the chills like the hand of
death; the longing cry from the home­
the Saginaw road to the straits.
A young lady of Adrian fumigates all sick heart for the old home at Mentor;
the wean' nights of wakefulness ; the
the letters she receives from Chicago, | the long not days; tlien pain that nev­
an account of her fears of small-pox.
er slept, and the agony that never
It is stated that a young ludy iu In­ ceased; tbe long, hungry look at the
diana will build a church at Harbor billowy sea; stretching away, wide and
shoreless as eternity; the strong, good
Spring* next summer, and present It life, so full of hope, lovo and strength
to the Episcopal society.
for God and man, stricken down iu the
The jewelry store of W. C. Reynolds, hour of hit innocence and honor by the
in Armada, was entered by butglaraon liana of the vilest assassin that ever
cursed the earth by living in it: the
Sunday night, and articles to tlie value peace that only come with death ; the
of $350 taken therefrom.
laud paiid in the gloom of starless
The temperance people of Manistee night from sea to sea; a sobbing world
have raised a fund of $500 to be used kneeling aliout on open coffin ; nation*
beyond the seas calling*but their sym­
in prosecuting saloon-keepers who run pathy to the stricken republic, nnd
their establishment contrary to law.
washing our tears away with their own
William Diguor, a brakeman oh tlie —was ever sorrow like this t Was
C. &amp; G. T. railway, fell under a yard agoiO' like his or grief like ours ?
Au&lt;l pow—you will kindly excuse
engine at Fort Gratiot, oh Monday, the hilarity of a Washington audience,
and his head was severed from his but it seems so funny, they cannot
help
it. It is the man who lias caused
body. ■
.
thi- long day of agony and night of
Capt. John 11. King of St. Joseph was sorrow who is on trial; that is all.
raising his fathers house to put a new Over there lust n little way. tbe shot
a new foundation under it, Dec. 30, -wns fired: just here, may be vou can
and while hit was under it die house see the stain* on the floor yet, if you
look closely—the President sank down,
fell, crushing him to death.
*
'
crying, “My God what is tbisT” Over
Louis Bcrthoou, aged 71, died of yonder, in the enpito], his dead body,
heart disease at Monroe, Jan. 3, at St. worn and emaciated and drawn witli
Mary's Roman Catholic church, during ■ Buffering, lay io state. Here—but we
are missing some-thing go.&gt;d: the
the funeral services ot Mrs. Caldwell, court-room is ringing with laughter
while acting as pall-bcarer.
over something the assassin said.
Michael Hand, ot Summerville, was Something funny: he is a droll wan.
arrested at Duwagiac, ou Monday, by He says so many things. Ah, there is
“great laughter” in the court-room
officer Duff, charged with poisoning again. Out west, or down here in Tex­
two cows belonging to Wm. Bates, a as u police madstnite would protnptiy
check laughter in hi* court, during Un­
neighbor, sonic lime last Rummer.
The suit against Homer village, Cal­ trial of a man who stole a mule: but
this is a Washington court-room and it
houn county, brought by Cole Bros, is the trial of tlie wretch who killed the
for a wind ruill sold that corporation President. They do thing* difli-iviitl;
•sveral years ago, was concluded last in the District of Columbia court*, you
week by n verdict against Homer for see. And now the audience break* in­
to cpthnihmtic anplnus. The* annearly $500.
cheering a good telling point made by
R. II. Morriron, the defaulting treas­ tlie counsel n&gt;r rhe aMuMin. Ji i* u
urer &lt;»f the Michigan Grand Lodge of
oddfellow*, is in Washington, wears
good clotlieA and has married the We who live far away from the Cdpha)
daughter of a rich Boston clergyman. of our country mid mu only gh sn the •
80
Br«rgh^im&lt;-and JiHimsl. funny thing*, of this aftiUHing trial
W’m. Proud, of Blackman, aged IS,

/la the bells of St. Agnes’s church
were striking 9, a young man sprang
lightly up the steps of a magnificent
rcxidcnce. and was soon rented in the
sumptuously furnished-parlor. The
uropnefnr of the hoitsp, a In-lievolent­
looking- old geutleniuii* entered the
loom. “Doyou wish to see me V he
said to Adelbert Toinklus^for it wo*
he. who hnd sprung liglitlv itp the steps.
“Yes,” he replied. “You are tlie
l*erson I seek.”
“What would joti!” said the old
geiitlenmu. s
“You are the cashier in the------ Bank',
I believe Fsaid the young uiau.
“7 am.”
"Yon have been stealing the con­
cern’* iiiuuy. Do you not seek to de­
ceive me. You are a cashier; ’tie
enough. Give me $90,000 or I will eXix&gt;*e y&lt;&gt;.i am! ruin your life. Having
heard me twitter, you can choose your
own course.”
Fur uii ii.xtuui the ca.-hier did not
move, and then, going to an elegant
escritoire which stood in a corner of
tbe room, he wrote a check for $50,000,
certified it. and banded , tlie piece of
paper, now u fortune*, to the youth.
“I have but'one Incur
ah.** he
sniffi "and that is that yon will many,
my-diiughtcr. 1 wouldn’t like to let as
sure a thing »s you are go out of the
family. She bus $160,000 in her own
right, ami w ben I aio drad and tbe
u.uik director* tire in jail on account of
my bookkeeping it will suffice t&lt;» keep
vou in comfort.
•
•
•
•
•
*
&gt;•
•
Two months later Myrtle Muliaffv.
tbe cashier’s only child, became Adelbert’s bonny bride. One child, a blue­
eyed boy with gulden hair, has bleseed
the union, aud ns he site on his grand­
father’s knees in front of the fire, and
ask*in his innoci-nt, childish wny if
“papa isn’t u smart man.” the old gen­
tleman kisses him fondly and says ia
soft, low tone*:
“You’re singing on the- right key
now, sonny.”— Chicago Tribune.
"BUCHUFAIBA."
New, quick, complete cure 4 day*, urinary
affection*, BmartiDg.frvqueiit or dilhcult urina­
tion, kidney dUcasex &amp;1. at ilruggi*:*. Mich.
Depot, JAMES E. DAVIS -t CO., Detroit,
Midi.
______________
ANNOYANCE AVOIDED.
Gray hairs arc honorable but their premature
appearanee la annoying. Parker'* Hair Balsam
prevents the annoyance by promptly restoring
the youthful color.

BUYS THEM HY THE GROSS
Steubenville, Ohio, May 25,1881.
Please tend me at once one gr-iar of yoor
most excellent medicinal tunic. Brown’s Iron
Bitten. I have used them Iu my practice, for
indigestion, dyspepsia, tour stomach, heart­
burn, uaurca, vertigo, etc., and have met-with
great success, in effec-.ing*curv*. I And they
give perfect tone and real strength to every
part of the body, and tn cases of kidney dLseaae
and consumption tbev quickie step all decay.
K. B. ALEXANDER. M. Di and druggist.
LIVING WITNESSES.
The hundred* of healthy looking man, wom­
en nnd children, that have been rescued from
beds of pain, sicknew and well nigh death by
Parker's Ginger Tonic are the best evidences
in the world of its »tori lug merit aud ■K.trtli.
You will And such in ulnx.&lt;. ever;- community.

Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, *
Backache, Soreness of the Chert,
Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Spell­
ings tsftd Sprains, Bane an4
Pains,
Tooth, Ear

�F. T. BOISE,

Tbs OrksKAlld'a towfy birth.

Is feU.on Chrt.it mas

- Glad chime- from tbe belfries nnir.
And the Carlstmaa waits undur English akies
Their sweetest chorals slug—

For tb^rfirmly behave, when tho midnight

But the spirit of Christmas is always
Tbe same, In whatever guise

Be may rone, whether that of tbe holy ebtid.

Or tbe fur wrapped Paint of our early dreams.
night tn a reindeerHe fattens tbs aecreta of every bouse.
He knows where tbo fir-trees stand
Wsilinrtobloom, and tbe stockiays to grow
At ths magical touch of hla band.

— TouU.'i Companion.

OJi CHRISTMAS EVE.
"Maney for Christmas presents, in­
deed!” cried Mr. Darrow. “That’s all

" My dear!" said Mrs. Darrow, deprocatiDgly.
"But there’s an end to a man’s
purse!" said the head of the family.
“Beat* tagea. insurance, school-bills,
church expeaae*, and now on top of all
ths rest, like the last hair that breaks
the camel's back, comes a demand for
—Christmas presents! I can’t do it, my
dear, aad I won’t!"
"Ihst the children!” said Mrs: Dar­
row, whe sat with her hands folded in
her lap, with a frightened air, as if
some great catastrophe were about to
befall her.
9
To her, Christmas had always been
the great festival of the year, the day
when earth and Heaven came nearest
together—the time to rejoice and bo
glad with exceeding great joy.
"O, tho children!" anil Mr. Darrow
shrugged his shoulders. "They won’t
suffer! Didn't I give Addie a doll on
her last birthday? And hasn’t Joe gnt
a pair of skates7 And what has become
of little Bessie’s blocks? Besides, chil. drew should be brought up to know that
life isn’t all piny. 1 was cash-boy in a
• store when I was onlyitwd years older
than Joel"
"Yea, 1 know,” said Mrs. Darrow,
meekly; "but they have been looking
forward all tho year to Christmas, and
I don’t know how they’ll endure the
disappointment."
•
"It won’t hurt ’em." said Mr. Dar­
row, as he. buttoned his coat-pockets.
** Times are hard, ami a man must beIfqpbi to economize somewhere."
Mrs. Darrow sat down when tho
heavy footsteps of her lord and master
had ceased to clink down the frosty
pavement, and began to calculate.
Ths noisy singing of tbe canary in
tbe gilded cage disturbed her, and she
hang it iu another room; the unaccus­
tomed task of trying to make two and
two make five drew wrinkles on her
forehead, and brought a sharp pain be­
hind her eyes. She had just so much
botuteLeeping-money allotted to her
every month, and, good economist
though nhe was, it wm impossible to
" save much. Mr. Darrow was a thrifty
mam and for every dollar he prided
himself upon getting a dollar’s value.
"I was going to buy a new wicker
hamper for the clothes,” said Mrs. Dar­
row. "and a set of new table napkins.
But I must darn up the old linen to last
a few weeks longer, and do without the
hamper, so as to have a few dollars to
buy toys for tbe children. I can’ l cheat
them out of all their Christmas happi­
ness, poor little dears!”
Mr. Darrow was naunttring comfortnHy/wp the snowy street, tho day before
- Chrisuuas, when ho saw his wife,
dressed in the little seal brown velvet
hat and neatly trimmed cloth cloak
which he knew so well, enters toy store
.

I a moment, then followed her.

told you 1 wouldn’t have any oi this
nonsense." *
“It’s my own money, Caleb, that 1
saved out of tbo housekeeping allow­
ance," said Mrs. Darrow, slung by a
keen sense of injustice.
"If the housekeeping allowance is so
much too ample for your requirements,
my dear, I will see that it is cut down.”
said her husband. “When I said that
the. children were not to have any
Christmas toys thia Year I meant it”
Mrs. Darrow went homo and had a
good cry. How was she ever to make
the little ones believe that Christmas
was not to come for them this year?
They were, dancing about the sitting­
room when she came in, those wild
little elves.
“ Mamma,” cried Adelaide, " Bessie
wants to go lo bed now—absolutely now
—no that Santa Claus will come quick­
er."
" Ho never comes till little baby-girbi
are asleep.” said Bessie, pouting out
her red lips, decidedly. •• Old nurse?
said so."
•• Mamma!” shouted Joe,
I almost
know*Santa Claus will bring me a tool
chest! O. mamma, don’t you wish it
was to-morrow morning?”
“ Children!” said the crisp, . harsh
voice of their father, who had entered
from an opposite doorway, “this morn­
ing or to-morrow morning will make no
sort of difference with you. Business
has been bud this year, and there is no
money to spend for such folly as toys.
And the sooner you make up your minds
to that the better!”
. The children stared incredulously at
him; then they turned their glances to
their mother, and perceived that she
had been crying.
•
Mr. Darrow sat by the fire after
supper—a
cheerful
little heater,
whose red eyes of tire shone vividly
through the darkened room, and whose
pipe carried the surplus jieat iato a
.register in the nursery above.
••Those children not in bed yet?”
said Mr. Darrow to himself, as he heard
tho patter of childish feet, the ring of
childish voices, above. ** What in tbe
world keeps them up at this time of
night?’’.
Stepping softly, in his slippered feet,
he went up stairs, and peeped in at the
crack of the door.
BcAsio was standing on tiptoe to hang
a little, red-striped stocking on a nail
beside tho chimney-piece. Addie was
helping her, while Joe stood sadly by.
•• It’s no use, chicks," said Joe.
“ Papa said we weren’t to have any
Christmas presets this year’’’
“ 1 don’t core.” cried little Bessie,
excitedly. “ Don’t you know, Joe, it
isn’t papa that sends tho Santa Claus
presents? It’s Sants Claus’ ownself.
And he never forgets good little girls
ou a Christmas Evo—docs he, Addie?”
“ No. indeed!" said Addie, her inno­
cent face filled with undoubting faith,
•i You’ll see, Joe! To-morrow morning
these stocking* will bo full."
"If you really-think so." said Joe.
making for his own particular bureau­
drawer. "1 may as well hangup mine.too. For I’m sure I’ve tried to be a
good boy.”
So the little ones crept to bed.
Caleb Darrow stood there, with^a
pang of remorseful shame at his heart.
Did he no; stand in the place of Provi­
dence to lhe.se children? llrul Heaven
been a, deaf to the prayers of his faith
as he was to these little ones, where
would he have been ?
He went down-stAirs to the room
where his wife sat, sadly darning
stockings.
“Abby,” said he, “put ou your hat
and cloak. Il is not nine - yet.” as he
how her astonished glance at tho clock.
“I want to buv some Christmas toys for
the children.”
“Caleb!” she cried, almost incredu­
lously.
"I’m ashamed cf myself!” said he.
•Tve behaved like a heathen Turk.”
Then he told her what ho had over­
heard.
“God bless the little ones’" said she,
with tears in her eyes. "They arc their
own best special plcadera”
And the last customers in the toy­
shop, that hristmas Evo, w&lt; re Mr.
and Mrs. Darrow, buying toot-chests,
dolls,* games, Noah’s arks and music­
boxes, with fruit, and nuts, and bon­
bons. ■
“They shall hove a merry Christ­
mas,” said Mr. Darrow, “if I don’t
smoko another cigar for a month.”
And Mrs. Darrow could only look up
in his face and say:
"O, Caleb, I am so happy!”
And almost before the crimson glory
of the Christmas morning irradiated
the east, they heard the children shriek­
ing and shouting with joy, in the ad­
joining room.
"Didn’t raff tell you, Joe?” said Ad­
die, exultantly.
••Santa Claus never/orgete little chil­
dren!” cried Bessie, hugging a curlyheaded doll to her breast.
’•■Dear Caleb,” whispered Mrs. Dar­
row to her busband, "now we can un­
derstand what our Saviour meant when
He' said. *0h, woman, great is thy
faith. Be it unto these even ns thou
will.’ ”—Saturday Night.

Condensed Furniture.

The high rents and crowded condi­
tion of New York have evolved a pe­
culiar kind of furniture, which is made
to serve two or three purposes at once.
An elaborate writing desk, with ink,
pea* and paper, is really a washstand.
counter, handling the An elaborate etagere, or bookcase, is &amp;
ling over their relative bed or a wardrobe A chair can Le
changed into a foot tub. A ••chromo”

commanded by an officer who had had
experience in Arctic exploration. There
has been no sign since that day. The
two missing whalers, which were seen
about the as me time, were driven by
the ice floe* toward the Asian const, one
wrecked and the other abandoned.
There is still good ground for believing
that the Jeannette reached Wrangell
Land.
The Corwin, following her
course in far as. the records ran, ap­
proached that mysterious (toast a year
ago without catching a glimpse of her.
and now the news comes that the at­
tempt has been repeated and a landing
effected, but that no traces of the
missing steamer have been found. The
copst w:m too extensive to be thorough­
ly explored, and the Corwin too fragile
a emit to be detained in such dangerous
water*. &gt;0 that the evidence that the
Jeannette did not reach her tint desti­
nation is by no means conclusive. She
may -have wintered there and then
headed northward. Tho presumption
that she was compelled, to look else­
where for winter quarters is, however,
greatly strengthened by the Corwin’s
fruitless searen.
While it was Lieutenant De ' Lang’s
expectation that he would be able to
skirt the eastern edge ot Wrangell
Land and winter there, it was also his
fixed determination to take advantage
of open water and to push northward.
The CtfYOn has descried on this latest
vovaE5 -. . . ^en sea leading no one
knoWioleXn «1 8*Te
t*10 direction of
the 4 \ A “j possible that the Jeannetyl-gjJJRander was tempted by the
cleAwSt^t to push ahead and tosearidi
for a harbor in the unknown seas near­
er to theTole. If he succeeded in forc­
ing au entrance and in finding an enchorago beyond tbe horizon which
closes in upon Wrangell Land, he would
have had tne opportunities for explora­
tion of which he wm in quest So open
a season as the present one would,
however, have enabled him to set his
face homeward, and the Corwin would
naturally have seen traces of the Jean­
nette in tho vicinity of Herald U'and.
The safest conjecture that can be made
under the circumstances is that the lit­
tle vessel was carried by the ice toward
the east, and that her commander, find­
ing that it would be impossible to push
north, has directed his energies to mak­
ing his way to the Atlantic. The fact
that the Siberian coast has been toler­
ably well explored this season dimin­
ishes tbe chance that the Jeannette was
swept away with- the whalers and
wrecked in the quarter where they have
been found. . It is certainly premature
to assume that tbe fate of the Jeannette
is already sealed by tho Corwin’s dis­
closures.
Wrangell Land, it must be borne in
mind, is a coast Hue of undetermined
extent. Tbo Admiral whose name it
bears never caught a glimpse of it, but
merely reported its existence from
statements mode to him by natives of
the mainland. Captain Hooper, of tho
Corwin, who was so fortunate a year
ago as to approach it on a very clear
day. described it in his official report
as covering ait a distance of twenty-five
miles an arc of the horizon cf about
fifty degrees. At die southern extrem­
ity were three mountains apparently
3,000 feet high nnd entirely covered
with snow, while northward was a
chain of rounded hills gradually ap­
proaching the sea level. It was Cap­
tain Hooper’s opinion that Wrangell
Land was a largo island, nnd possibly
one uf a chain of islands passing en­
tirely through the Tolar regions to
Greenland. That there are other isl­
ands lying north of it in tbe direction
of tho open water which he has himself
descried this season there can be little
doubt. It Is )K&gt;.&lt;SIble, therefore, that
the Jeannette, while unable to land iu
the quarter which has been visited by
Captain Hooper, went forward beyond
the reach ot any relief ship, and that
she will yet reappear bearing tidings of
reiuarkaole discoveries. The expedi­
tion under Payer aud Weyprecht re­
turned a few years ago from tho Far
North after its existence had been
despaired of. and although tho ship had
been lost very higfulatltude* had been
reached, and an entirely now group ot
island* and a stretch of coast line ex­
plored.—N. K 'Jribiine.
k Selfish GeneraL

One night in the spring of ’62 Gen­
eral Richardson, who then commanded
a brigade, took it into his bead to in­
spect the picket line. Coming upon a
reserved picket of about thirty men un­
der oommahd of a Captain of the Second
Michigan Infantry* tne General saw lit
to intcrogate as follows:
"Captain, in case of an alarm by the
advance picket what would you do?”
" Send off a reinforcement at once."
"And if tbe firing continued?”
“I should move up with tho remain­
der of my force.”
•
" And suppose a whole company of
tbe enemy should press forward?"
" We’d whip them.”
" But if it was a regiment?"
" I’d form a line of battle ,and check
them until 1 sent hack and got orders
to charge and capture the whole lot.”
"Well, suppose a brigade should
move down on you in battie line?”
“I’d order a charge, split the col­
umn in two. and whip both halves in
detail.”
At midnight the brave Captain was
| relieved from further duty on picket.
I He was very indignant anil considora। bly puzzled, but after thinking the matI ter over for awhile he said to a brother
I officer:
I
•• Say. I’ve struck it! Old Rich wm
! afraid my company might gobble tho
| whole Confederate army and throw
him out of a summer’s job! If thatain’t
selfishness, then Td like to know what
! is?"—Dcifoil Free Preu.

tie street and bluntly ask Hm the way
to such a building, and he will reward
the ■ unprovoked onslaught npon his
privacy with the very coolest of aston­
ished stares.
But If you preface your
question with an -‘I beg your pardon," I
(acknowledging thereby that you are !
asking * gratuitous favor), he will an- i
swer you very civilly, indeed, and even [
go out-of his way to show you yours. In
the dense crowd coming out of one ot
the concerts at a Birmingham festival a &gt;
well-dressed American looked into the
face of an equally well-dressed English­
man (a total stranger to him) aua said
jokingly, "Pretty tight queexe, isn’t it?"
The Englishman replied, with withering
eoolnesj, "I’m sure I can’t see why you
should address me in thi- disgustingly
familiar manner!” A conversation ab­
ruptly launched into in an English rail­
way carriage will probably be cut short
nt the outset by what strikes us Ameri­
cans as very gratuitously rude curtness.
But if. the conversation is introduced by
that unfailing open sesame, "I beg yonr
pardon," it will flow on vciy pleasantly
and likely as not end in an invitation to
pass a week or so at a country house.
Americans are often shocked at the appatently insolent bearing of German
• shopkeepers, especially of German
bankers. It rarely occurs to them that
they themselves have opened hostilities,
m it were, by breaking the very first
rule of German good-breeding in keep­
ing their hate on. ‘ In Germany a man
just as scrupulously lakes off his hat,
and keeps it off, in a shop or countngroom a* in a lady’s parlor.
An American of our acquaintance
happened to be one of a party of six
who went to the top ef a certain tower
in Germany, the view from which is
famous. "lie party wm shown the way
by the daughter of the guardian of tho
tower, a comely young girl of seventeen
or thereabouts; our friend treated her
with common politonmu, but a French­
man, who was one of the party, was so
demonstrative end overwhelmingly at­
tentive and gallan; that the American
began to feel »a if he bad - been some­
what rude in comparison with such a
pyrotechnic display of courtesy. Well,
when toe party had got to the top of the
tower they only found one chair there,
upoa which the Frenchman immediately
seoXud himself. This authentic anecdote
is quite characteristic. If w&lt;&gt; Ameri­
cans stand pre-eminent for good, solid
efficient politeness, we certainly are de­
plorably deficient in niwncr. We have
neither the dignified repose of toe Eng­
lish, nor tho grace of continental Eu­
ropeans. Possibly we are shy and try
to hide our shyness under an assumed
gruffnoM of bearing. Certainly it seems,
nine times out of ten, aa if an American,
even while i&gt;erforming a very polite act,
thought himself degraded by any outwaru show of courtesy, lie may will­
ingly and cheerfully offer his aeat to a
lady, and be perfectly content to stand
himself, but his manner of making tho
offer is almost insulting. He will growl
out, "Take my seat," in a voice that
Kernan to imply, "and be hanged u&gt;
you!” Or else he will make tlie offer
with a jovial familiarity of manner which
would be quite in keeping between two
old ;&gt;ot companions in a tan-room. We
may be rich in tbs solid gold, but we
are poor indeed in the small change of
politeness. "Fiae words batter no par­
snips,” say wo; this is a mistake; fine
words (and manner*) butter all sorts oi
parsnips; indeed, a* Thackeray says,
there are many people whose parsnips
are buttered in no other way.—Zfoston
Transcript.
'__ ________ •

BOOKS,
.
JEWELRY,
WALLPAPER,
WIXMW SHADES,
1&gt;1 E STIFFS,

NAAHV1LLE, MICH.

40 aavs, »’•{ tnllm fnxn| NstorUk. H wdd
•obo will take &gt;1,180-

25 acres. Id the village of Naahvaie. Mutt
PROPRIETARY KEDIC1NES,
be sold for .what ft will bring ou account o
PRESCRIPTIONS,
RECEIPTS,

PAINT AND BRUSH
BEPABTSR

T

people.

Call and Examine I
' F. T. BOISE

imtvoretl; fair buildings and in all a good b«rgnin. Price *1,600; part down.
House and Lo^ on Phillips *tract; tbe bett
tiargalu* in town. Price 1350.
Ilouae and Lot, ou State atrecL Price &lt;350,
half down down.
Good House and four acre* of Land on Frax&gt;ce» Street. Price &lt;450.
Houae and lot on State St. bouse dsw : good
cellar and plenty of good water. For sale at
&lt;700 or will exchange for farm property near
Nashville or Haatinga.
sO acre*, 1; ’ tnllM from Nashville on tlie beat
road leaving tlie village i all improved except 8
acres; the remaining 8»acrw good timber; is
well watered by a never-tailing - spring. Good,
young orchard; buiklluga fair; IS acres of
wheat on the ground; present owner engaged
in other business aud will sell for &lt;2,000/11,OOiI
down,lot
balance
on lotiff
Vacant
on Philips
8* time.
Price &lt;120 tf sold
LEE &amp; PURKEE.

QEO. W.- FRAXC1M.
------ PKALKK IK-------

Fancy and Staple

GROCERIES!
SUGARS. TEAS,
COFFEES. SPICES,
SYRUPS, MOLASSES,
TARCH, SOAP,
CRACKERS. CHEESE
BEST NICKLE SOAP IN TOWN
WHITE EISH.
TROUT.
MACKEREL.
HALIBUT.
COD FISH.
HERRING
STEAM
COOKED
OAT
MEAL
CROCKERY.

*•

.

LAMPS.
FLOWERPOTS

onio

TRY

STOXE-:

OUR

wake

I' ! I1 E S.
FIFTY-CENT
TEA.

CP* Remember we get uo faucy pri
res. but M*ll nil goods as low ns tbe
lowest, (quality considered).
Respectfully,

IRON

SITTERS
nnowvs IRON BITTKItS are
n certain euro for all diseases
requiring a complete tonic; espe­
cially Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Inter­
mittent Fevers, Want of Appetite,
IxiM of Strengtii, Lack of Energy,
etc. EnricbcH the blood, strength­
ens tlie muscles, and gives new
life to the nerves. Acts like a
charm on the digestive organs,
removing all dyspeptic symptoms,
nncii an tasting the food. Belching,
Heat in the Stomach, Heartburn,
etc. Tlie only Iron Preparation
that will not blacken the teeth or
^ista nt $1.00 n bottle.
BIIOWN CHEMICAIj CO.
Baltimore, MtL

GEO. W. FRANCIS.

PATENTS

We continue to art a* SoUeltors for Patents, Csretts,
Trade Mark*. Copyright*, etc., fur Uic United HUuvv
Canada. Cuba. England, Fraocc, Gcraumv. ete. Wo
have had thirty-five year** ripcrkucc.
Patentsotrtalr.'rf thmugh u* tro :.&lt;.Ured tn tbe 80cvrinc Amkiucax Thi* large and splendid illuatrited wrek1jrr*per.&lt;3.*Oay&lt;ArAbowstboPTogTea
cf Science, I* very interesting, and baa an enarmous
clrcu!ttK&gt;n. Address MUNN * 00, Patent SoUclters. Bub's, of Scientific imirx’, Bl 1'art Bow,
New Ycrt;. Hand t&gt;»&gt;k about Pntentafree._____

KIDNEY-WORT
does

WONDERFUL nJ! j {
CURES!
Brnmi

| B*caa«e it oeta «a th* LITEU, BOWELS |

PAYNE’S FARM ENGINES.

Barbers in Europe.

I have now been shaved in seven
kingdoms and six languages. They all
perform the ceremony differently. But
they all, from Scotland to Naples, inaht
on Heating you in a plain straight back
chair, and bending your hand over back
till your spine howls in agony. And
they agree in another custom—they
never wash off the soap they put on.
But they bring 'you a bowl of water,
hold it under your chin as you are lean­
ing back, and insist on you washing
your own face then and there. If you
object to the attitude they shrug all the
upper part of themselves and sling s
disdainful smile st you; if you comply
little rivulets run pleasantly down inside
of your shirt, and some of the soap they
have generously swoggled into your
ears gets into your stockings. I nave
seen no barber wash his victim's face
since I landed at Glasgow. Prices vary.
In London they charge a shilling (25
cente) for a shave; in Naples they will,
for 80 centimes (10 cents), shave you,
cut your hair, wash your face and hands,
curl yonr eyebrows anti wax your mustach till you look like Victor Emmanuel,
and can pass for a Prince on any of tlie
side streets. Yesterday I was shaved for
ten centimes—about two American cents
—but I took the balance out in garlic,
of which I had a generous bath in the
form of respiration. In Verona, the city
of the loved and loving Juliet, the barber I
n
— J». - washed
—. —X. — J
asked
me 1/
if FI would have my
feet
and my toe-nails out! That, certainly,
is going to extremes.—W. A. Orqffut'a
Naples Letter.
—In order that tho rising generation
of men in France may be Instructed in
rifle practice before even they enter the
army, a nun of l,(X*),uvO franca ia to l&gt;e
applied by the Minuter of War, to the
purchase of guns for the use of boye in*
elementary schools.
These arms will
be similar to the regulation army rifles,
but of course, lighter.
Each school is
to receive three, of which 'one will be
specially adapted to being taken to
pieces, for the practical teaching of the
principle and construction of firearms.
—When the King of Dahomey was in
the English aettkiuent on the coast ho
saw an offi/er haring bis boots Hacked.
The King didn’t happen to have any

uuinoublnl

Over 5000
PERMANENTLY CURE*

Druggists
AND

Physicians
Have Signed or Endorsed tho
Following Remarkable
Document:
ing Chemists, 21 Platt St, New York:

{KIDNEY DISEASES,
I
LIVER COMPLAINTS,
Constipation and Pileo.
. —“ ' • I. . &gt;• Hr*
VIhw T ‘ 1 &lt; W ■ ■ I. f H

'

�Aylswo

HER DAUGHTER’S STORY.

nratouy

Thera are also Marie Smart poke*
proceeding to entirely covered with pearl lace, with
India, consulted Sydney Smith’s ex­ feather tips for their trimmings, but onabJeto more about lira house. A lady
perienced brother, the Jamon# “Bo­ fewer white or light drew bonnets are friend induced her to try your ‘Favorite ’Rem­
bus.” u to expenses at Calcutta, he shown than usual, a* dark bonnet* are
edy.’ She did »o and found great relief.” Tbe
was told that be could not be com­ known to be most becoming, and are of
fortable under £3,000 a year, and such rich fabrics that they are dressy
could not possibly get through £5,000. enough for most occasions. A novel Dr. David Kennedy, of Rondout N. Y; “KcnThi* ia a measure true of tho United trimming laid on the outside of the nedy'a Favorite Remedy” nut only cure# rheu­
States. It might be safely asserted brim and below the crown is three full matism, but b lira popular specific tor all dbthat in tbo whole of this country there frills of uncut velvet laid double, fully eaaeaof theBhxxlaad the Illa incident to feare not five persona, if-, ns many, who gathered, aud overlapping. Those raf­
■Morettepablk: tbalthc ‘Favorite Remedy’ spend on their establishments $100,000. fles are an- inch deep when finished,
The patriotic American can ifbw wipe Liu
A careful estimate, made a year or two and ore very effective when made of the now ou a silk handkerchief made iu thia counago by persons eminently qualified to glace velvet showing two colors, one of
make it, brought such expenditure up which is in the plain velvet that covers
Tou bad better cut oat ihl# eddreas—“Dr,
‘Favorite Remedy' as I did."
to $95,000. It included a town house, the crown; thus a brown velvet small
Never l»e al your place of busiccM ween a a yacht, a villa at Newport, aud a crown has frills of rod and brown C. R, Sykea, 100 MxdLwn 8L, Chicaxo," for
you may need bl* "Sure Core for Catarrh,"
changeable uncut velvet, and tho edge
country seat
The marriage eervice uniting a Chicago
What runs away with incomes of from of the brim has a gathered binding
$50,000 to $250,0()n in England ia the like a puff made of red uncut velvet. couple waa, It is swetted, performed by depart
A. C.
keeping up of country seats, hounds, Ribbon of uncut velvet on one sideaad ed spirit*, a medium acting undertbeircontrol.
hospitality and game preserves. "At satin on tho other forms a square bow
Have you Catarrh! “Dr. Svkes’ Bure Cure”
And continue the same until Feb. 15th, 1882, at which
Drumlanrig Castle, for instance, one of low on the left side, and there are three
it* owner’s ton residences, there are tips of ostrich feathers at the top. I# an unfailing remedy. ’Hare you heard
tim my Brick Store will be for sale or rent
eighty miles of grass drive kept in Another poke that poixts down on the
Is DOW nicely located oroer; at Gridge, more than forty. • Add forehead instead of projecting above it
The‘-old pewter” craze threatens to rival
to
this
acres
ofgarden
and
glass
and
the
har.
tho
brim
covered
with
lophophore
the
craze
for
old
por
celala
Ln
New
Eu^nd.
to ids' new building,
expenses of park keepers, and game feathers, while the crown is green vel­
added a stock of keepers, and it is easy to see where tho vet There are also black lace pokes
Tira symptoms ot Itdiing Pile# are moisture
money goes. If there is a hunting of tho now heavy guipure silk lace with like prcspiratlou. Intense itching, most at night TN making tin, irert Co.1 Cub Sale, I mart ufr that allpartiM owing me,
CBM^-CTT k C1KCVL1B SAWS.
establishment ou a liberal scale, at least drooping jet ornaments along tho lace seems aa if pin worms were crawling in or X either by note or account, will bo expected to walk up to tbo Captain’, office
•boot the rectum. The more you scratch the ana settle at once.
.
$20,000 a year must be added.
and on the strings, while black os­ worse they Itch, very distresaltijr. The private
Again, while tho hospitality of an trich tips are the only trimmings; a parts are often affected. Dr. Swaynfea Oint­
average well-to-do American favorably bow of narrow moiro ribbon ties the ment is the most effective remrotf- rttiaut for
Prices on Saw Work.
compares with that of an Englishman lace strings below tho throat Anoth­ thia tormeutingcomplaint. Glrs&gt;ww&lt;»t night
on
Circle saw gnmtnlng ntsl hammering all aaws with similar meals, that of the broad- er block poke of real Spanish lace has without that desire to scratch.
equal In quickly eradicating Teferi
Salt
up to 40 iache*. 10 cents per Inch.
40 Inch, Gummed, $2.00
Hammered, $3.00 acred Englishmen is immensely greater two rows of large jot bends tlmi are Rlieuuic, Eryri|&gt;e)aB, Barbers' Itch’
60 ” ”
3.00
”
4.00 than that of tho American millionaire. made to droop and danglu on tho edge all Scaly, Crusty, Itchy Skin En.’CJwrWr Here
“ “
•4.00
—
••
&amp;00 The latter gives some dinner parties, of tho brim. A black felt poke that lathe proof, “CertainIr the best remedy erer
eo
»»
”
Gamming nnd Hammering
75c. and, perhaps, an annual ball, and keeps. has a fur-beaver brim hai two rows of used In my practice,"/Dr. Cotton, Woodstock,
Vt.. “troubled with Itching Piles for over twen­
Regular FfTing,
toe.
toe. a dozen servants; the Englishman, on black Spanish laco on the outside of this ty years, it cured me completely,” L. 8. Messer
Hammering crooked aaws,
---Enlleid, Me. Sent far to cts (in 3 ct. stamps)
Prompt Attention given to circular raw work the other hand, besides constantly en­ brim.
tertaining
in
town,
often
sits
down
to
3
boxes, *1.25, By Dr. Swayne Jc Son. Philad’a
Tho
bowd
on
pokes
are
very
flat
and
AXBIXTOY.
dinner for weeks at a time with twenty havo long loops —either two or four P*. Sold by all druggists. ’
Aj* the Stock mall fresh, havingajl been bought during September and October
guests, staying, with their servants, in J loops— of double-faced ribbon, and one
After a wedding party has assembled in last, nt. hgtircH that no dealer in this section cun duplicate.. Buying as Ido for
Parkers
his country house, and feeds from fifty edge of this ribbon 1s folded over so
to sixty every day in his servants hall, that both faces are seen. Moire ribbon church at Bloomington, HI., the father of ttie my Big Rapids store and thi*, it gives me the inside track over a small dealer
with as much beef and beer as they with satin or plush back is very effec­ girl offered her 6500 is she would back oul. She
; please to consume. More than this, he tive for such bows. These bows are took tbe money, remained st home, and sent
J at times entertains whole schools and placed far back just on top of the word to tbe mlnaster to dismiss the assembly.
parishes, besides giving away hundreds crown, with tbo middle closely strapped,
BABY SAVED.
erf pounds in the shape ot beef and and a loop’falling toward each side of
We are *o thankful to say that our babv waa
blankets at Christmat. He jubscribcs, tho crown, or elso both loops are long permanently
cured of a dangerous and pro­
On my C lothing. lints. Caps, Boots nnd Shoes
*
too, to every public charity in the and extended down tho right side, tracted irregularity of ths bowels by the use of
county; sometimes in two or three whilo tho left has a panachoor pompon Hop Bitters by Its mother, which at the same Will astonish you. while all the Dry Goods and Groceries will soon follow in
counties.
of feathers. Another fancy is for a time restored her lo perfect health aud strength
the same track.
The parents, Rochester N. Y. See another
Merely to tako a single example, bow with very long loops placed with —
column.
there is Lord Derby, with ten men the strap close to the brim on top, and
servants in his house, and about forty the loops extending fr.r down tho left person wants to borrow money of you; be­
more domestics feeding daily at his side. A stylish and useful small poke cause If you are in, you will be out, bul if you VOU arc especially invjted to brine all your Butter. Eggn. Lard and Dried
A Apples to me as I have several lumber camps at Big Rapids, to supply, and
board. Supposing to-morrow he nnd of black beaver has a double bow of are out, you will be Im
am in a situation to pay yon higher prices than other dealers can.
his wife should agree to struggle along black ribbon—satin on one side and
Lydia E. Pinkham's vegetable Compound
on SlOO.OOOaycar. he could save at least moire on the other -placed al tho top
ha#
done
thousands
of
women
mure
good
than
$800,000 a year; while were the Dukes of tho crown, nnd falling close bock the medicines of many doctors. It is a positive
O my old customers, whom I have sold goods during the past 13 years, I trust
of Westminster. Devonshire and Bed­ upon it Two jot turtles fasten tho cure for all female coinplaints. Send to Mr#.
you will respond to the calls of the old ledger, and balance the account
ford to do likewise, their savings would loops down; a small black ponacho is Lydia E. Pinkham.
therein, without a murmei, and ever oblige,
be still greater. Supposing Lord Derby on the left side; a row of black faceted
President Arthur’# meauge to Congrcsa was
to save at this rate for thirty years, beads half an inch in diameter is on the
what an archi-millionaire he would be­ outside of tho brim.
Strings are writeu on paper with a broad black margin and
come.
“bowed” up close to the throat without tied with black tape.
Twenty years ago there died a queer long hanging ends. Bias velvet or
on’ly One
old bachelor. Lord Digby, who owned {ilush. hemmed and not lined, is used
Of Rinehart's Pills for a done;
Raleigh’s ill-fated home of Sherborne or strings as well as ribbou.
JJKR.K WE A.R.E AGAIN.
I acarve can believe it true.
Castle. He was a most liberal land­
The great round hats of plush, felt
All olbcni require from, four lo ail.
lord, but did not care to spend more or beaver are much larger than any yei
And then little good they do.
than some $35,000 a year, and let his worn. They nro like the picturesque
money go rolling up, investing it all in hats worn by players in old comedies,
LEME3T SUTHj
the three-per-cents. His income was aud have forests of feathers that droop
not a fourth of Lord Derby’s, but he and nod with evory motion of the wear­
Attorney at Law,
left"in the funds $4,500,000. As a rule er. The tapering crowds are also scon
Administrator'll Male.
a peer leaves comparatively little be­ on these hats, and aro usually in bold
1’i.anccry, wlU
hind him; $1,000,000 would be regard­ roliof. with tbe trimmings of feathers
Commwtli
ed an unusually large sum for a man nnd of plush massed on tlie w;de brim.
i Noti;
with $400,000* year to have, and there Sometimes the edges are plain, and the
is but one case on record—chat of Lord brim is so broad that a plaiting three
Dysart, an eccentric recluse—of a peer inches wide of doubled velvet is sewed
leaving over $7,500,000 personalty.
inside the brim, beginning where the
. On very large properties the surplus crown leaves off, anil this surrounds the
Attorney A Counsellor,
income is chiefly expended in very- face, without coming near the outer
costly Improvements. Thus, the Duke edge of the brim. Smooth beaver and
of Devonshire has built Eistborune, and felt are liked for these hats, but tho i JJLACRA BON,
much ot Buxton. The Duke of Buc- brim is most often of fur beayer. or
Ioa ikn
.clench has expended thousands at plnsh Witj
ith1 !**»»**
long nilo
pile, av
or a
else
the edge ««
is I .
©safer fa
•Granton, and both have put vast sums bound wi
^rith a putF of velvet that breaks I
t
•fovea ini town two (3) north, range seven J7J
west, tn the township of Maple Grove Barry Co., into enterprises connected with Barrow- ua^.
Mlehlgan. oontaln*3K forty (M) scree of land, to be in-Furness. About $10,000,0C0 of Lord
VOW euMect to the power and Homsfoad rtehts of Bute's has gone into docks at Cardiff.
Mr^umsat* T*®kstoitz, Maudes, to.,
Martha Troysr. widow of arid deceased, to.rein. The late Lord Westminster built and
BcBCfits of a Classical Education.
baud. Maple Orov», Dec 20th. A- O.1M1.
rebuilt probably not less than a thou­
IMO
T. S. BRICK. Administrator.
By a recent change in tho curriculum
sand houses in London, and Northum­ of the Milwaukee High School. Greek
.rn th.-.1^: «K. WBI* E- HKHMI. OF W“«■.
Probate Order.
berland and Sutherlandshire reflect on has been dropped iroi
_1_
all sides tbe generous expenditure of though Latin is still retained,
■ntnlnnd And
and ma
At AMraion of the Probst* Oourl far the Count) the Dukes of their name; while beauti­ city paper regards the dropping of i J
»f Barry, bolden nt the Probate Offlee. In the City oi ful churches, commodious schools, and Greek as a mistake. We think eo, too. c
SaaUoge, to eaki county on Monday the IDtb day of handsome homesteads soon inform the
Uecaxnber tn tbo year one tbotuand el«ht hundred traveler in Wiltshire and Bedfordshire Years ago we held old fogy notions uj&gt; £
rad eighty-one. Prw«nl,ClenM-nt Smith, Judge ot
on educational matters, and theugnt °
that he 1* on the broad domain of the that English
ought to be taught
Ead of Pembroke or the Duke of Bed­
in the public schools. It seemed to u&gt; . £
ford.
Had
tho
vast
sums
thus
spent
Ou rw-ilD&lt; »nd mine th. petition duly verifed. of
that a* English waa the language of th*
the ’'
Wm. H. F«l&lt;hMr sdmtalrtrator of said aatete pray­ been mainly put into stocks, or bond* country and the English science* th* *
rlish sciences
j »
ing Uut he mav b. lieeuaad to mB tberral eataus and mortgages, tho present holders of
only ones used in business, it wild not
of aald dacMMa for reasons therein Mt forth.
tho lands might have been richer men, do children any particular harm to
but tho country would have been in teach them a little English occasionally
many respects the loser, and. it would —not too much, so that it would inter­
fere with their Greek, Latin, painting,
drawing and dancing, but enough so
they could buy two yards of factory
Bonnets and Hats.
cloth at eight cents a yard and feel sat­
Is coming, and so is my New Stock of
isfied in their minds that it came to
Openings of millinery at fashionable ten cents. Wo were running a little
houses confirm tho announcement made country paper at that time, and work
early in tbe season that the picturesque as hard as ever we might we could nol
make any mopey, and we could not ac­
To fill every department, which will be fillbd with the
count for it. One day we dropped Id
in great numbers, the small bonnets to a school examination, where Latia
CLIMENT 6Mirn.
and becoming turbans will also find was being peeled off in great flakes,
0«-K)
favor. There can be no definite rule and Greek was being talked like a man
about those shajies. as large bonnets are filing a circular saw. We *aw at once
VEGSTABLE compound
not limited to large heads, for they are where we were making our life a
In the market, and shall be receiving something new almost
sometimes particplariy becoming to failure and wasting&gt;our energies, and
/
every day during the season.
small ladies: tho face alone decides the we returned to the office, resolved to
matter, and in the great variety of remedy the defect. We opened on the
shapes shown something is easily
public the next week with plenty ot Latin
found to suit each physiognomy. The and Greek, and the effect was wonder­
My store being the only ready pay store in town, enables
poke bonnhta are greatly improved in
fuL The public had been suflering for
rtie to make you terms that no long credit store can compete
shape by the small tapering crown now
just that kind of thing and the edition
used instead of the broaa flat crown,
with. Persons having cash or produce to pay as they go, can
was exhausted. Subscrivtions begun
like that of au old lady’s bonnet, worn
to pour in from all quail cm; we en­
save from 10 to 16 per cent by trading at a ready pay store for
when they were first introduced; indeed,
larged the paper and camo lo Milwau­
nothing con be more coquettish than
no man an do a credit business without losing jrom one to five
kee, still crowding its columns witi
these quaint pokes, arranged aafthey
hundred dollars per year, which must be ehatged up in some
arc now to leave the small albping Latin and Greek. The public know!
t 1____ *__ A the rest. Money has flowed in upon
way to parties who do pay
so that we have to keep a roan with a
mar
splint broom at the door to sweep it
pokes have hack. This is what Latin and Grech .
the brim covered or
I aim to keep first &lt; ’tb goods, and by dealing f
ha* done for us, and we can truthfully |
say that we had rather see
1.TDIA R. riKKMAKm YntKT*BUI ©•&gt;*- square with all parties,.
vdl expe :ta liberal share of]
to write a beautiful essay In
age, and am satisfied, i &lt;h the little experience I ha
time, than to see him
Stealing. It is more i
since I commenced bos;; « hare, that a ready pay ate

wliall commence a

OF MY ENTIRE STOCK

BUXTON

ATTENTION! SAW MILL MEN!

Purchasers can effect a bigs saving
By patronizing me for the next silty days

Hair Balsam

THE REDUCTION IN PRICES

T

W. A. AYLSWORH

BrfaloJapaaeseMWes
At Low City Prices.

SINGLE and'DOUBLE,
‘ LIGHT and HEAVY,
PLAIN and FANCY

1L’X“di’ ”ry “'■’“‘"K- America ui Feraga Marble,

t Curry Combs, I ishes, Cards, Harness

Callars, Collar Pads, Halters, Circingles, Bug­
gy Washers, Snaps, Ankle Boots, Neekyokes,
Etc. Shop west side South Main St.

A. R. WOLCOTT.

s

WINTER, COED WINTER

LYDI

KO P1TEBT HO PH
MIHIIsSS^

.

Choisest and Newest ■ Styles

succeed.

I shall always pay the highest price for prodi
La_

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                  <text>Illi

r

tom
hni

•

r -

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun

Editor amd-Pbo**1*1,01*'

did’not appear antil Friday morning,
LIFE IN NASHVILLE
consequently a part is laid over until
And Penoaxl Chlt-Ch*L
And Her Environs.
next week.
About sixty persons were socially
Ram
and
sleet.
—The prospect for an abundant
and
hospitably entertained under the
Have you backalidden.
sugar crop is good, many predicting
auspices
of the ladies of the Christain
Business is getting more lively.
that the yield will be larger than for
chnrch,
at Mr, and Mrs. G. A. Truman’s
Judge Smith was iu town yesterday.
year*.
.
,
last
Wednesday
cvemqg. The receipts
W. E. Bael went to Grand Rapids on
—Pne a red flannel cloth around your
wore $6.70.
Thursday.
neck and you will be watched as close
,
Miss
Nett
Gardner
of Hastings, a
Perly Butler has moved back from
by the doctor*, as though they had a
sister of Mrs. C. C. Wolcott, was mnrMontague.
»
.
,
ried
last
Wednesday
evening
to James
lien on you.
We may be favored with a few weeks
Landon, at the homo of the brides par­
-^Farmers have improved what little winter, yet
ents.The
bridfil
party
left
immediate
­
Bkiightog we bqyohud so far Jhis week
Mrs. Rosa Rasey is seriously ill with
inAkiddlnglog*^ and some have even
ly for Grand Rapids and Chicago.
typhoid fever.
had the pluck to haul some of them to
Mrs. A. Plum’s Sunday school class
Scott Ellis is again employed at the।
will hold a taffy candy social at the
mill.
Wolcott house.
Mrs. John Furgerson of Texas, is residence of Mr. and Mrs.' Horace Flint,
—Wheat has been bringing a little
Wednesday evening, Jan. 18th, the
better price this week, and in conse­ visiting friends here.
The Baptists havo no regular Sun­ proceeds to go towards the bell fund?
quence, considerable has been market­
All lovers.of candy are cordially invit­
ed. As high as $1.28 has been paid for day preaching at present
ed to attend.
A son was born to Mr. and Mrs.
some choice lots.
Owing to the mislaying of some of
—A duel was being fought by two E. Shields, one day last week.
Mrs. C. A. Nichol’s examination papers
for
JohnM.
Roe
is
exporting
flour
dogo^ou Main St., one day this week,
by the county board, her name was
when tbe seconds interfered, and the the Grand Rapids retail trade.
Curtis Mullin and wife, of Farewell, omitted from tlio published list of those
dogs becoming ashamed, trotted off in
who received n second grade certifi­
are sojourning ia tills vicinity.
different directions.
If you can’t bring that wood, money cate. She was none the less qualified,
—The examination of Steve Cawuuwand tbe mistake has boen rectified and
will not be refused on subscription.
ner, the tramp who gashed Harry
Miss Hattie Peckham, who has been certificate received.
Jones, near Kalamo, a few weeks ngo,
At a recent meeting tbe following
sick since Christmas, is convalescing.
had his examination at Charlotte Inst
Jake Osmun has purchased a splend- officers for the Bine Ribbon society
Monday, and was sentenced by Justice
cd pleasure sleigh, of E. Cook’s make.., were elected: Pre*., Mrs. Ben’j. Meiser;
Mend to one year at Ionia.
L. E. Knappen of Hostings made The■ Vice Pres., Richard Drake; Sec’y..
—Chua. Scheldt was arrested last '
News a brief call Thursday . morning. ' Edith Fleming; Treas.. Geo. Hubbard,
Friday, charged with selling liquor
Geo. Witte and wife have been and organist, Ota Wheeler. The next
without sufficient bonds, but owing to visiting friends at Ionia the past week.‘' meeting will be held at the Christain
some t4N*hincalitics in the complainL
B. W. Austin of East Castleton, has church next Sunday afternoon at three
and tbe fact that one of his bondsmen, two nephews from Dakota,’visiting o’clock.
C. C. Wolcott, has not yet permanent­ him.
The universal satisfaction given by
ly moved from here, the case was dis­
Esq. Killin has rented his house, and tlio Chicago News os clubbed with thU
missed by the prosecutor, Thursday.
will take up his abodein bis shop, paper last year, toall who paid for both
—C. A. Nichols has closed out his adjoining.
papers in an advance, has induced us
stock of boots aud shoes, vacated his
Frank Gokey was united in matri­ to renew the offer again this year. The
store in the Yates block, and as soon mony to Miss Melissa Price, one day extremely low price at which we offer
as he can close up his private matters, last week.
1 ^»ou both papers makes it necessary
will depart with his family for the
A. B. Whitmore and wife of Allen, that all arrears, and one year in ad­
West. He is known here os a straight are visiting nt their son’s, Dr. W. H. vance be paid to thi* paper.in order
forward honest dealer, and Nashville Whitmore.
‘that you may reccivd the Chicago News
regret* the loss of »o good a business
S. IL Darier lias moved into the bouse for fifty cents extra? Two dollars in
man. The News wishes him success on Middle street, lately .vacated by 5. advance pays for both papers one year.
in whatever new field he may locate.
P. Bement.
Vick’s floral guide is before us, and
—Prof. Niles was called by telegram
John Gutchcss returned from Climax those who send 10 cents to James Vick,
last Friday, to the bedsiife of his wife, on Wednesday, where he has been vis­
Rochester, New Yori, for it, Will be
who has been stopping for about three iting friends.
disappointed.
Instead of getting a
months with herMuother nt Breedsville,
Mrs. M. Heit returned on Thursday, cheap thing, as the price would seem to
and lias been dangerously ill during from n four week’s visit among fiieuds
indicate, they will receive a very hand­
Aio time. A letter received from Mr. iu York State.
some work of 130 pages, and perhaps
Niles on Wednesday, stated that she
Miss Hattie Austin has returned from 1000 illustrations—not cheap, but ele­
she died after hi* arrival and that be Grand Rapids, to spend a few weeks
gant illustrations, on the very best of
might be expected home this week. with friends here.
calendared paper, and os a set off to
Hi* department of the school has been
The merry sleighK-lls jingled along the whole, two beautiful colored plates
closed daring the past week, but is ex­ our streets for the first time this wii&gt;,
. that are worth twice the price of the
pected to commence again on Monday. ter, on Wednesday.
. book.
—The waste basket used in this of­
Mrs.Dr. Knight and daughter of Ea­
fice holds nearly a bushel, but one of ton Rapids were guests of Mrs. Truman
—The village charier vacation peti­
much larger capacity will have to be and Belle, this week?
tion lias died a nntand death, from
ordered unless persons who wish to
L. L. Loomis has moved his family wtfntof substancial nourishment.
give their neighbors a left handed puff, to Grand Rapids, where ho has been
stop sending their anonymous commu- living for some time.
—Dull timoa, did you say 7 Well we
ications to The News. Either sign
C. H, Brady has a swelling coming- should relax our features: Talk about"
your name iu full to your articles and on his neck which threatens him withi stagnation of buBiuesK, hard times to
abide the consequences, or do the bet­ serious inconvenience.
.get news, and every body quiet, but
ter aud more economical way, serve
C.W. Granger will offer winter goodsi there is a man living not a hundred
your papers personally ou whom you at cost for the next 30 days, look for: miles from here, that solemnly avers,
wish to spit your venom.
his change of ad next week.
and is willing to take his oath before
Mr. Strong is better, though he hasi any postmaster, that he rode eighteen
—Last week Friday was the day ap­
pointed for Rev. C. I. Deyo’s address been able to mako but a five minutesi toiles last Sunday, and neither passed
’nor qjet a single vehicle or conveyance
at the opera house, on greenback ism, visit to the office during the week.
Over 100 pounds of fish were taken। of any public or private character; and
but as that is, and has been a long time,
,t said deponent furthermore says that
recognized as press day, The News did from the pond last Tuesday, n portion^
uot have the privilege of hearing him of which found their way to ye editor’si Le neither panged nor mot a single or
married man nor woman, and the only
delude the chronic grumblers with tbe table.
Frank Huffman of Maple Grovei living things observed on the entire
bright prospects hoped for by those
who espouse the almost "holy” cause sighted his gun fine, one day last week. .route, were two boys who looked nearof greeubackery. From what could be and brought down a screech owl, six Jy as lonesome as an energetic business
/ man of Nashville, would be in wander­
gleaned from those iu attendance, it ap­ inches in length.
M. D. Smith, living near the ceme­ ing about Vermfintville. P. S. The
pears that tbe meeting was devoid of
deponent furthermore says that if he
tery,
is
dangerously
sick
with
typhoid
enthusiasm, probably because it ia a lit­
is indicted upon thi above statements,
tle out of season for such luxuries, as fever, and his family are In a needy and
be will not plead hsaiiity, nor quibble
destitute
condition.
Mr. Deyo ia an acknowledged orator of
Miss L. Addie Nichols has moved her about tbe technicaltics of jurisdiction.
marked ability.
stock
of
fancy
goods
into
Mrs,
Wick
­
—Daniel Hobbs claim* that he is vis­
The Babylon L.
South Side Sig­
ited almost nightly by the spirit of hi* ham’s building, lately occupied by C.
nal quote* from n Missouri paper:
wife, accompanied by several other C. Wqlcott’s collecting agent.
Mr.
Wm.
P.
Quinlop,
Crystal
City.^Mo,
Mrs.
Deyo
accompanied
tier
husband
spirits of departed perrons, with whom
he has not the honor of an acquaint­ here last week to visit friends, when suffered occasionaly from rheumatic
ance. The spiritual party make so he came in tbe employ of the groen- pains in bis knees, for which he suc­
cessfully tried St Jkeobs Oil.
much noise that he cannot rest, and if backera to deliver his lecture.

LOCAL GIBBLE-GABBLE ,

w.

be gets up and goes at the dead hour
of midnight to the saloon, to be alone
he finds the party have gone before
him and are engaged in smoking,
drinking and carousing. He also claims
that they drink his cider, leaving him
only a small portion with which to
quench hi* raving thirst
—The Great West a valuable paper
published by M. M. Pomeroy, at Denvei, Col., has been greatly missed from
among our exchanges for a few weeks
but tbe cause of it* non-appearance
Jia* beer, removed since “Brick” has re­
covered from hit recent sickness. The
Great West is brim full of interesting
t mining news, and contain* sharp round
and witty editorial* upon the leading
^topics of the day. Parties desiring a
yesterp paper should Dot fail to send

K

Credit Subscriptions $1.75.

(

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO, MICH, SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, 1882

VOLUME IX.

&lt;•

(TERMS; $1.50 per Year

ob

the in-

The protracted meetings at the U.
B. church of East Castleton have clos­
ed. Thirty-five conversions are re­
ported, fifteen of whom have jpine^
the church.
.
5 s
The Baptist social will be entertaiced
by Mr. and Mra. Frank McDerby on
Wednesday evening Jan. 18th, refresh­
ments will be served and pleasant time
is anticipated.
A. W. Olds was in town over Sunday,
and it was remored that he jjiad sold
bis house and lot to certain parties
here, but we are reliably informed that
be ha»Dot disposed of. it.

COMMON COUNCIL PBOOEEDINGS.
•

Covsiil Rooms,
,i
NsshrllL. Jsu. 11, 1882. J
x Regular meeting.
Present, Young, PnsMent; Barter, Diddn-

SYNOPSIS'OF BEV. F. A. BISSELL’S
NEW YEAR’S BEBMON.
txxt, 2md. ooa. n: 16.
“And who is sufllccnt for these things!”
If we ask what it was thstso weighed on tbe
mind of Paul, we have otily to turn to the con­
text. It was tbe simple thought of the conse­
quences of offering-tbe gift of grace to inunor

LACEY'S LU0KATIVENE8S.
Lacet, Jsk. 9,1883,

i Mr. Editor :
Th is is surely an ago of progression.
Some time ago an idea struck the skull
of some .of our enterprising citizens,
that os there was a great demand for
dry wood the present season, and but
our from life into life,” but to tome it would . very little of that article in the country
certainly prove a “taroar from death.”’ No that some plan might be devised to
thoughtful man can deal in a trifling way with 1 kiln dry green wood and put in the
the-preacntation of truth to man’s conscience . market in a very short time. And as
the effect at what must be either to heal, or io green wood is veary cheap and dry
kill. There Is also another difficulty in Paul's wood very high, they fhougt there
mind, the difficulty of fldclitj In preaching tbe
might Ije.a nice fortune realized by the
Gospel. “For we are not as the many, cor­
rupting, or making merchandise of the word fransaction provided it could be done
of God.” It would be easy to throw in a bit without too much expense.
Accordingly a notice was give out
of flattery here, or an ounce . of indulgence
thcYe; but to preach the Gospel in the way about two weeks ago, that a meeting
that Paul describe* in the last werda of this would be held • at the Sanitarium,
chapter,—“a* of sincerity, a* of Y^od, in the south-east corner of Clark and/ Bark
sight of God, speak we In Chria, this de­ St’s., to see what could be done, ansLif
mands an unswerving fidelity, which Is as rare possible to organize a company for said
as it Is noble and bpautiful. If Paul, after all
purpose, a week ngo last Saturday af­
his year* of varied experience, with the clear­
est evidence that Gods presence was with him, ternoon was the time appointed for the
could nevertheless seriously and anxiously ask, meeting and by one o’clock the hull
"what is sufficient for these things 1” bow waadensely crowded, and the multi­
much more must a preacher of tod&lt;v, if he tude of people, and the vehicles of all
knoiA anything of himself and his work, ask descriptions thronged the streets in
and crave that sympathy from hi* hearers that part of the city au. that busiucas
which will show them the need of asklug, was completely blocked for the re"Who is sufficient for these things!”
nia.niier of the day.
At two o’clock
It I* easy to say, the first days of preaching
were more filled with anxiety than these days: the meeting was called to order by the
Mayor,
and
Alderman
Durfee chosen
how important that the new faith should gain
a hearing, and yet how hard to secure for it temporary chairman; after a few re­
such a bearing 1 And we know through what marks from die chair, stating tbe ob­
perils and bitter persecutions, the church hare ject of die meeting a company was
to pa*s iu 1U beginnings. Even those who formed, known ns the Lacey Fuel Co.,
care little for their own spiritual interest* will with a cash capital of $40,000,000 and
often admit that for the world It was a mat­ the following officers elected :
ter almost of life or death to adopt Christ or to
President, N. E. Clark; Secretary
refuse. They even pretend to sympathize
with a Paul or Peter, when realizing the rasl- and High Stepper, IL W. Burk ; Trees,
and
Heavy Setter, L. N. Mosher; At­
ncse of the work, and their own bumble tal­
ent*, felt their strength unequal to the task. torney and Business Manage, W. M.
Humphry;
Bone Setter and Pill(e)
But these very men have no y mpathy for one
who in tai*IVth century 1* giving up his time Driver, Dr. VanHorn ; Corresponding
and strength, his whole life, to carrying this Secretary, Festina Lute, Executive
gospel into the minds and h cart* of his people. Committee, J. H. Miller, J.S. Stevens,
They regard it as mere sentiment or cant if O. H. Adams, / ustin Stanton, Geo. L.
they bear him declaring there is need of d'vius
Brings; General Backer for the Co,,
aid to fit him for hi* work. Such thought* as
A. C. Butler.
these find expresaion in almost every commun­
After a few closing remark* by the
ity. And they form a real obstacle in the way
President the meeting adjourned, to
of the gospel.
But what was the nature of those difficulties meet again in two weeks, and every
against which Pau) and ids fellow laborers one went away with the impression
were struggling! There was, ontbe one band
the bigotry of the Jews whicii made them cling I that Lacey is itound to rival the world
to the sacred ritual of their ancestor*, on the iu enterprise or bust her belly-band.
other hand were the philosophical speculations
For the last few days the company
of the Gentiles. -Hence as Paul himself says,
Christianity was to ths Jews a stumbling block, Las been nt work with a vim that shows
and to the Gentiles, fwlUiineM. In the midst they mean business,
They have al­
of bitter persecution*.—"fightings without,
fear* within,” the life of the *poetle was one of ready purchased about six thousand
continual interest- But there were some ex­ acres of choice beach and maple timber
perience* which Paul was spared,—experience*
that did not belong to his age. Indeed be mid have put up three kiln* with a
forewarns Timothy of the ip’levous times that capacity to bold a thousand cords each
shall come when men will not endure sound
teaching; when "rneu shall be lover* of self, the company intend t&lt;&gt; ruu one kiln by
lovers of money; holding a form ut goodline**, steam, and on^&gt;by horoc power, and
but having denied the power thereof; "ever oun by water power.
learning, but never able to come to the know l­
The steam, and hovsu powers arc al­
edge of tbe truth.” But even here be doc* not
sound the depth of our troubles. We find in ready ou tbe ground, and the water
our day a restless Impatience of that which is
power
will be here hood, it comes from
old, even if it bo God'S truth: an almost con­
temptuous regard for for Christ's ordinance of Chicago aod is to bo shipped by the
preaching, except iu so far as the preacher luter-Ocean Co. The company have
will throw aside the Bible and preach out of
his spirit: a trifling, flippant way of treating now about six hundred men at work
■acred subject*; a choosing out from among tbe and expect two hundred more to be
plain statements of revealed truth, those which
shipped with the water power.
They
suit one* taste and rejecting the rest;
-There is another peculiarity of our time think when they get everything in
which mu*t trouble thoughtful men and there
working
order
that
they
can
cut,
fill,
is the timidity of the believing in the face of
freee thought and scientific discovery. It dry and ship each kiln three times a
must be regarded a* a great evil when true be­
week,
and
have
already
received
some
liever* grow uneasy in the presence of true
seekers. “Truth and th* truth can never really heavy orders from all parts of the
be at varauce.” Let not the Christian church
ever fear lest the God who created nalnre country, they Lave one from Chicago,
should prove false to the spiritual interests of of
1 50,000 cord*, one from London of 2,­
men. Let u* be brave if we really believe that ।000,000 one from France of 5,000,000
God ba* spoken to us, with aueh a curagr as
Milton bad when be said, “Though all the and one from Mexico, Australia and
mind* of doctrine were let loose upon the Holland, each for one million, beside* a
earth, so truth be among them, we need not
fear; let her and falschooc grapple: who ever number of smaller orders iu the United
knew truth te be put to tbe wont In a free and States.
:
They have aR. R. nearly com­
open-encounter F' O for one breath of the Di­ pleted and n* soon os spring opens,they
vine spirit to make us uot only more earnest
for the truto, but also more charitable and re- intend to put in a'ship canal to run
spectfui toward* an antagonist; to give us a from their ground to the Lake.
deeper insight into tbe faith; to make tbe
Property here has already advanced
bringing of the heavenly wilt into earthly ex|&gt;erlencc the one aspiration and endeavor of one hundred per cent and emigrant*
and
bush wackers are flocking in from
“Who is sufficient for these thingsF’ The '
averave American audience And* do superior all
i
quarters of the globe and every
iu the average audience of any other nation on body
■
is anticipating a great----[ContinUMi mxi week-J
ordinary gift*, is to stand here week by week,
ami speak to you of things which are between
Don Pedro Fitzpoodle.
you and your God, to reason with you of rightsclouanesa, temperance, and judgement to
WEST SUNFIELD.

NUMBER 17.
The
Presbyterian society of this
place ia desiriooa of obtaining a min­
uter, to supply the vacancy caused by
the resignation of Bev. McMartin.
.. -1
Correspondence from ten different
toWns, besides a vast amount of local
ana general news, makes an excellent *
and commendable newspaper, Such is Tria News.
The U. B. Missionary Society met at *
the residence .of Andrew Kilpatrick on
Thursday of last week. We are not in­
formed as to where their fffext meeting
will be held.
The ladies aid society of the First
Presbyterian church met at the resi- ,
donee of Mrs. C. 3. Childs on Wednes- .
day of this week, with a fall attendance
and the time passed off' pleasantly to
all present. This society ia now in a
thrifty condition with a large mem­
bership and still increasing^ Let the
good work go on.
Oh Writist! Why art thou so cruel 7
Ait thou a monarch 7 To what extent
host thou domnin 7 Cans’t we not take .
up the pen in ^defense of our country!
How wo would tremble had it not been
for the Strong arm that interceded in
our behalf. No wonder you deal in
deadly weapons, but do not for that
jack knife till we nre out of reach.
&gt;

SMITH—BISSETT.—At the residence of Mr.
G. W. Gallatin in thi* vtllogr, Jan. 7th, Mr.
Simon Eugene Smith to M1m Julia Eliza
Bi'sett, bo^b cf Eaton county. By Elder P.
Holler.
SKINNY MEN.
Well*' Health Reuewer. Absolute cure for
Dervou* debilityhind weakness of the genera­
tive function*. 81. at druggirta. Mich. Depot
JAMES E. DAVIS &lt;fc CO, Detroit. Mich.

LOCAL MATTERS.

Tax Sales Notice.
Notice la hereby civen that I will offer al public
■ale, al ten o'clock In the forenoon of Tuemlay tbe
fourteenth day of February. A. D. 2SH2, in front of
tn acii tbcm-f *■ rany to nvccM-vy to imjp Um t**p»
duu ou them ol tbe village of Nubvllle Mlchljfan,
Or the year 1SHJ, together with lexal cv»l* i ,m! laterert add&lt;xi. Tbo dltcription* tolug given below:
Description.
Tax Ink Total.
AJonxo Tnbto. Ix&gt;t G A. W.-l'thl
• Ito'addition.
g.-|)JIC3|7C»
M. L. Cooper. L A KJ A9t
4 74 1 13 5 87
Tbompaon J&lt;mo«. Ix&gt;t 73.
4 74 1 13 b 87

rldlb 'off North

•tore,
8 S4
Dated N**hrille, Mleh. Deewnter Mtb,

LIVING WITNESSES.
The hundred*of healthy looking man, wom­
en and children, that have been rescued from
bed* of pain, sickncM and well nigh death by
Parker's Ginger Tonic are the beat evidences
In the world of it* sterling merit and north.
You will find «uch in sltpwt every community.
»hup.

FARM FOR SALE.
40 acres on Sec. 27 in Maple Grove, one mile
cost and k' mite muth from Norton* corner*.
•JO acres Improved, gmxl orchard and well wa­
tered, bouse second class. For terms call on,
J. W. LeoGrrr, Maple Grove.
NEW MEAT MAKET.
I have opened a Meet Market next door to
my Bakery, and shall keep meat* of every de­
scription at the lowest price*. Buy of me and
nave from 2 tn 8 eta. on eadi pound of steal
Prices on other Meat* correspondingly low.
John Dorland.

MrCoiiars. Cuffs, Tie*

umI

Silk Wipe* in

FARMERS
Take advantage of tbe lov price* and buy ynur
horne** of Clark rbo will give you No. 1 Kock
and reliable work.
Wm. Clauk.

WARNING.
All persons are cautioned against buying
any note bearing mv signature, a* I haverc**oa
to believe there is forged papers Btaodlug
agaiust me. 14-17
James Hurd.
money at

•

W. G. Edwards’.

Tbe place to get the Stoutest, Neatest
and Best Harn'-** Is at
A. R. Wolcott's.
for wood.

Wm.Clxmil
MUST BE 80LD.

bring. WD1

Locals scarce.
A- R- Wolcott’s.
Likewise good roads.
Mud and rain plenty.
LUMBER!
LUMBEt!
Also wet feet and. sore turoata.
Custom Sawing and Building Material furAll quiet and orderly in our midst.
Dished on short notice, at our new mill in Ma­
Janna A Perry.
Subscribe for The News and be hap­ ple Grove.
FoKTaEE-------pyS. Green and T. Barker are getting
One 3
inblc Buggy or Wagon, also
Crockery aud Glass Ware.
out bolts and heading:
|
C. W. Smith.
What has become of Vennort Has he
frozen to death this cold weather 7
W. G. Edward. ’.
We arc sorry to learn that Mrs.
Stuck is failing in health very rapidly.
ANNOUNCEMENT.
We havo quite a minature post office
in our neighborhood. It seems to be .
branch of the Bismark offiex
C. 8. Childs, Henry Hauter and Mr.
Beecher went to Ionia*last Saturday, patronage can rely upto rwivfc* satisfaction.

My friend*,! have accepted the coll which ha*
come to me to labor among yon through the
coming year. Let us not miauoderataod each
other at tbe Btsrt. 1 am mo«t certainly u»
Minute* of last meeting read and approved. addrcM you os follower* of Christ; not as i.nThe following accoutt* were presented and fadel* before whom I mu*t be careful that
on motion allowed by ^e* and nay* a* follow*: everything I«*r la aound in logic, and perfect
in rhetoric, before whom I can assume nothing
but must prove everything. I* the gospel to
Reynold*. Naya, no
bean open question between us! Incamatlonl
Frank MeD«rby,
916 68 resurrecUon. the divinity of Christi Like PauC. M. Putnam,
38 W on Mar’s hill! Then I’m not the man. Orig
W. IL Burges*,
1807 inality, profound learning I have not. I '■sn
Morri* Wool.
200 only hope to bring for the storehouse of truth
100
Mrs. C. A. Nichols has tendered her DennU WanL
Motion by Bar!*-, tMt the treasurer to iurehicnatioa as teacher in tbe gram mer
structad
to
p*y
toe
t&gt;o«i*
of
Christopher
Kill,
the preacher, but t
department of the Union school, and
Her sister, Miss Kattie Eckard of Graa*&gt; PMUtoBaDaraadB •
hinu
carried by
-------------jayes
m| nay* m follows;
L«^_h*f.ber.n engaged to .filLtiiejW-J
Ayes,tarter,: IMtkiuKm.'DeEurnrvKKJ
sitiou.
The school in the Huuter district is
noJd*. Nay*, none.
glad » hen toy said to me let u* go up Into tl»e.
MONEY WANTLD!
Owing to some fault of the mail de­
house of the toed.” Then tool!that strength progressing finely under tbe control of
be war* which ha* it* root in faith: a sympathy
n.iwiry to par ray bilk. It.
partment, our Woodland letter that
F. McDxrby,
W. H. Yovxo,
Aiiaa Newell, a teacher of many yean account
wiil be flared in a
I
Presided.
.
Ctat

?

�Will
Well, he’s a friend of Tom's, and

“NELL AM) TOM.”

•‘WMWngton Star! New York Her­
ald! Times! Tribune! and Baltimore

Thio voice that ottered these common
and familiar words in the car going up
Pennsylvania Avenue was so unlike that
usually heard to utter them that several
persons looked up to see the speaker,
who. enconrag^by the looks, turned
from onetoancftheF&gt;saying, pleasantly:
“Havo a paper? Star^Timu! Hcr■ aid?'
- 7
••
And several gentlemen did count
I ,.
over some of their loose pennies, and
receive in exchange one or the papers;
but a tall, dandified looking fellow, who
■ had been eyeing curiously thc^wnerof
the papers, called out in a voice that
could be heard all over the car:
“Sav, there! I don’t want a paper;
but I'll give you ten cents if you'll tall
me whether you are a girl or a lx&gt;y.
It might, at first, have puzzled a cas­
ual observer to discover the sex of the
BRE| owner of the papers, for the long boy’s
overcoat almost reached to the bottom of
short skirt^ beneath it, and the cap that
*
covered the tpp of the head was cer­
tainly a boy’s; but then the hair beneath
—certainly there was no mistaking that,
tucked away, as It was, as much out of
.sight as possible. It was light and exil­
ing at every loose end. and the face was
one not easily forgotten, especially after
hearing the voice. So, at least, thought
one old -gentleman, sitting by tbo door
and watching the whole proceeding.
The young dandy jingled his loose
money, anil, picking out a tcn-cent
niece, handed it to the girt, as he spoke;
but, instead of the laugh ho bad expect­
ed to create, he saw on the faces of
those about him looks denoting dis­
'
pleasure, while the girl herself, with a
bright crimson spot on either cheek,
flashed at him a look from her bright
eyes that so combined, scorn and dig­
nity that, even young as she was, made
him lower his eyes with a sense of shame
and humiliation visible to all those about
The girl turned then, and was about
to leave the car, when the old gentle­
man by the door said, in a low tone:
“ Td like a Herald, please.”
She was about to hand it to him, when
she noticed the money he was holding
our to her—a silver dollar.
“ I’m sorry,” she said, looking up,
with a bright smile; “butl can’t change
- ’ •

|
[

!
I •

•• Change!^ muttered the old gentle­
man. “Who asked for change? I don’t
want any. It’s always in my way. I’d
like my paper, though.”
“ But, sir. you don’t mean to pay a
whole dollar just for a paper?"
“ Well, if it’s worth that to ma why
shouldn’t I? See hero, my friend,” os
she still hesitated, “ I want that paper,
and it’s worth more to me just now than
that; and I don’t know why you couldn’t
use it, you know. Haven’t you got
some one you like very much that you
might buy a Christmas gift for?"
The girl’s face, that had become quite
serious, brightened at this, and she hand­
ed the old gentleman the paper he
wanted, took the money ho offered, but
the face that was turned to him as she
left the car, though wearing a smile,
supported 3 solitary tear, that made the
old gentleman .forget his paper and
watch her as she went over to the pave­
ment He fancied a second tear fol­
lowed the first for she seemed for
awhile to forget her papers; but the
the car making one or two stoppages,
he was enabled to keep her in sight for
some little time, and at last camo the
words, sounding sweeter and more deli­
cate than be had ever heard them:
“Washington Star! Now York Her­
ald! Times! Tribune! and Baltimore
jlmerican !"
He turned at this and, opening his
paper, as though deeply interested, he
muttered to himself:
“I thought so. Humph! I wish I'd
made it two.
It would have been
worth ft.”
Then he tried to read; but that one
tear seemed in some way to havo been
transferred to the paper, and to blur
the words so that they lost all meaning.
Somehow all that day the face of the

“ Why, Tom lives where I do; down
the next-street there to the left, with
Mrs. Andrews. May I give you a paper,
please?"
,
“ Well, I don’t want the trouble of
it now; but you might keep it for me till
later. What are you going to do when
you sell out?
“Well, von see it’s Christmas Eve.
and I might got eome bundles to carry
home.”
’ “That’s so. Well, meet mo here st
five o’clock, and Til have eome for you
to carry for me.”
“All right,” said the girl, as she
moved on with her papers, while the
old gentleman looked about him until
he discovered a druggist, where he
found out just wheroMrs. Andrews,
who lived on the next street to the left,
was to be found; which lady he called
upon.and proceeded to interview, in­
quiring into thu family history of a cer­
tain Tom, who had broken his leg.
“And a sorry day it was for the girl
when he was brought home oa a
stretcher,” said Mrs. Andrews. “You
see, he'd slipped sudden like and fallen
d?wn the stairs of the newspaper estab­
lishment; aud they had to bring him
hero just so. It’s been nigh three
weeks now; and he ain’t never said a
word ’bout the sufloring—only ’bout
the girt”
“And the girl--his sister;” said the
old gentleman.
•
“Lor* bless ye,-she ain’t his sister
neither. You see, it all came about
like this. His ma took a room hero
when she’s at work in the Postoffice
Department She could have lived like
a lady as she was, only her husband
was dead, and he had left some debts
behind, that she worked and saved and
sfcraped to pay, so that when the boy
grew up he might meet the people his
father owed and never have it flung out
agin him. You see, they had oome
from some other place here, and no one
knew them to talk about them, if they
lived plain and quiet like; and I never
thought a body could be so happy as
she was when the receipts come in.
Every one of them is tied up in a little
bundle for the boy. She was a-savin^
up , so much
every month till
she took the girt You see, that come
about this way. The mother had been
in the Postoffioe with her; but she
couldn't stand it, and just wasted
away, till she had tb leave. And then
the money went for one thing and
another, till when she died, there was
no more than enough to bury her de­
cent. Then the girl was fetched here.
You see, the boy’s mother couldn’t
turn the child off, and she promised the
dying woman, who said she hod no
friends nowhere, that she’d tend to her,
and so she just come hero to go to school
like the boy. There wern’t no money
to pay no debts that month, and it’s my
'pinion that the money was used for
the poor dying woman, so they could
keep telling her she had enough left to
pay for her burying. After that the
debts begun to bo paid again, till they
was all gone; but they wasn't paid qnito
so fast, on account of the girt But
when they’s all gone we had a kind of
a jubilee, and the poor mother, that had
worked so hard for her boy, just flung
hdr arms round his neck and cried like
to break her heart. For a couple of
months she was gay and happy, like a
young girl, and then the worry and all
somehow begun to show that it had been
too much, and she begun to grow week,
until it all ended by her having the ty­
phoid, and she never knew nothing till
the end come. She just seemed to finish
what she had set her mind on doing for
the boy, and then going to meet the
husband she’d helped along. Dear!
deai*! but it was sad for the boy and
girl; and Tom told me as how, if I'd
keep them and take care of the girl,
he'd see that it was all right. And.so he
has done, sir; bless him! i ain’t neverlost
cent by them, and yet I never could
have turned the girl out. I could have
kept her to help me in the house, and
more than paid for her keep; but the
boy set his mind on having her go to
school. The little bit of money that
was left aftci the funeral and the doc­
tor was paid that boy put in the bank
to grow, and to save in cose he might
die, so the girl could have something;
and the gin, knowing he's keepln’ it,
but not knowing what for, just set
her foot down and says it shan’t be
touched while he’s sick to pay the dootor nor nothing. And so she goes out
and sells papers and such like, so’s to
keep the boy’s money from going down
too fast. I reckon she don't like it
much; but then it’s for Tom and he
looks so pleased when she comes home.
1 declare, it makes my eyes water to
think of them two.”
“Humph!” said the old gentleman.
“Do you suppose Tom would care to
have a visitor?”
“I guess any one who lies in one po­
sition all day and night, too, doesn't

dreamed that he saw her weeping over
the low of her papers, while the dandy
stood behind and smiled exuitingiv;
“I didn’t say I had anything kind to
sad the next day he found himself
J. Me might take mo for a meddlowateking for a sight of her at the place
ime, inquisitive old fellow, better out
where she had entered the car the day
before.
Hu had not long to wait be­
, sir, you can but give bima little
fore be heard what now sounded so fa- kindness and you won’t miss it.” And
Mrs. Andrews led the way up stairs to
•• Washington Star! New York Her­ a room that, though it lacked some com­
ald! Titacs! Tribune! mid Baltimore forts and luxuries, that might have been
acceptable to an invalid, at least admit­
1 she was, waiting to enter ted plenty of warm, bright sunshine.
f up the street; but M it ap­ The boy had been moved to an oldb eyed it closely and then fashioned lounge near the window, and
tbe book in his hand indicated that he
r.” he said, half aloud. “if had been reading; but his head was
ar she took yesterday, and turned to the door as it opened, and
naolent young dandy r’
Mrs. Andrews admitted the old gentle­
»t notice that the girl was man, saying, at the same time:
9 direction until be turned
“Tom, if you’ve a mind to talk
awhile, there's a gentleman that^might

ISO Clou’t speak so about
.
look like a boy, but she
didn’t have anything to wear so nice
.and warm as my cost and hat, and she
won’t get anything cither till the doctor
is paid and lam wail. O! sir, you should
;not speak so about NelL"
“ selling papers is not fit work for a

“ Do you think I’d let her do it if I
could help it? Don’t 1 know bow tbe
boys laugh and make fun of her? -But
she don't mind that half so much as
would to stay here and do nothing, and
I couldn’t lie so quit, as the doctor says,
if she looked unhappy. And so I let her
go, but I mean to make it up to her
some day.”
“ Humph! You think 00 now; but the
some day may never come. What kind
of a blood-and-thunder story are you
reading?"
He held out his hand for the book,
and, tut Tom gave it to him, he said,
gently:
“ It’s not a blood-and-thunder star/.
The book belonged to my father,”
“ Eh! Well, who’s your father?
Didn’t he read blood-and-thunder sto­
ries?”
“ My father’s name was Thomas
Wheeler, sir; and I don’t think he ever
read blood-and-thunder stories.”
■
But the old gentleman scarcely heard
what the boy said. He was looking as
if spell-bound at the fly-leaf of the book,
on which was written: “Thomas Wheel­
er, Pittsburgh, Penn.”
“ ThonOk Wheeler, Pittsburgh!” re­
peated the old gentleman.
“ I didn’t‘say Pittsburgh, sir,” said
Tom; “ but,” seeing at what the old
gentleman was looking, “ we did live
there.”
“ And ho was your father?” said tho
old gentleman, slowly and thoughtfully,
still examining the name in the book.
“ Yes, sir; no was my father.” •
“ Humph!” said the old gentleman,
looking up at the boy now. “ Anything
wrong or unusual about him, about his
appearance, yon know?”
“ No, sir,” said the boy, wonderingly. “ Nothing wrong. He looked dif­
ferent from other people because he had
lost one of his arms—lost in the war.”
But the old gentleman had risen be­
fore Tom had finished, and was on his
way to the door. He turned, as he
reached it, and, before opening it, said:
"Who did you say was your doctor?”
“ I didn’t say; but he’s Doctor Reed­
er, just round the corner.”
“Just round the corner, yea. You
need not tell the girl Tve been befe.”
Before Tom could say anything tho
old gentleman was gone; and he turned
his head and said thoughtfully.
“A strange old gentleman.'’
Tom would have thought him stran­
ger still could he have followed him to
Dr. Reeder's office and witnessed tho
interview that took place.
‘ ‘I am truly glad to see yon, Mr. W es­
ton,” said the Doctor, shaking the old
gentleman by the hand.
“Well, weU, Reeder! Yes, it’s some
time sinco we met; but Pm in haste
now, and Tvo come to see about that
boy with the broken leg.”
“Which boy?”
"Tho one round the corner. He’s in
the wrong box.”
"Tom? Has anything happened to
him?”
"Yos. he’s got into tho wrong box.
I want him moved just os soon as you
can conveniently spare tho time.”
“Where do you want him taken?”
asked the doctor, who knew something
of the old gentleman and his peculiari­
ties, and understood pretty well how to
manage him.
“To my own house, if you please.”
“And what about the girl?”
“Well, I thiufthe boy would rather
stay where he is with her than go away
without her, and if it bad not been for
her I should never hate found------ See
here, do you- know anything of the
girl’s family or antecedents."
"Nothing. I have tried every way
to discover her mother’s friends, and
havo followed up every duo I could get;
but in vain.”
“ So much the better. There won’t
be any one to interfere with my adopt­
ing her.”
“Do you mean to adopt the boy,
too?”
“ Td be a brute if I didn’t do all in
my power for Thomas Wheeler’s child.”
“You knew the father, then?”
“See here, Reeder, my youngest bov
was in the army during the war; and,
once when his life was in danger and
be knew it not, Thomas Wheeler did.
My boy was saved and is nowa wealthy
Californian: while Thomas Wheeler
went for the rest of his life with but one
arm. And that’s his boy with the
broken leg. and Nell’s the girl that’s
trying to pay his doctor’s bllL”
Dr. Reeder said nothing for a mo­
ment; but before they parted he had
heard about his friend’s finding Toni
through the girl and knew something
of what he intended to do. It was ar­
ranged between them that the gentle­
man. was to go home and acquaint his
family with tho change he propose4 to
make in the family; and then ho was to
meet the doctor and be with him when
Tom was moved.
The tears chased each other down
Mrs. Andrews* face when she found
she was to lo»etbe children, for she was
truly fond of them; but, after tho boy
had really gone, she threw herself into
a chair anti caught her breath as a bank
note met her eye lying on tbe table.
Tho removal of tho boy was effected
eten better than they had hoped; but
Tom himself remained very auiet and
looked ranch paler than he dia in the
morning. He could not quite under­
stand it all, and hardly knew bow to
take it, though he hod been assured he
should not l&gt;e separated from Nell.
As the old gentlepxan parted from the
doctor to keep his appointment with
NelL a -bank-note was placed in his

•• And you’ll oome up 1
“ Yw. TU be bank U

“ No buts in the case. I’ve got. the
money and it’s in my way. Come on.
aud let me spend it before I lose it. I
hate to have other people’s money to
take care of.”
Nell followed him. in a kind of dream,
into an establishment where ready­
made, clothing was for sale; but when
there she turned, as though she would
fly from the place. But Mr. Weston
spoke to her and said, kindly:
“O! I don’t think it can be for me,
There must be acme mistake.”
“ No. there’s no pVstakc, aud it’s to
please Tom. you ktrow.”
'Then Nell remained auiet while he
took one of the lady clerks aside and
gave her some instructions; after which
he left Noll in her care, saying that he
would be back in a little while. Ho
waited, however, till the coat Nell had
va was sent out to him; and then pro­
ceeded to a clothing store, where ho
ordered a suit of clothes to fit inside the
overcoat.
When he went back for Nell he hard­
ly recognized her in tbeextremely pret­
ty girl, with her hair plaited down her
blck and a simple, but noat, suit of
dark blue! He smiled as ho saw her,
and said:
“Do you think Tom will know tho
Nell who left him a few hoars ago?"
“O! don't sayrthat, or I’ll take them
all oft”
“Well, well, I can’t wait for that
now, for it’s getting late; and I want
you to help buy some presents for my
grandchildren.”
“O!” said Nell, suddenly, when they
had gone some distance from the store.

•si left Tom’s coat and hat”
“It’s all right. • I told them to send
it to Tom.”
Nell looked surprised; but the old
gentleman hurried her into a store, and
she soon became interested in his pur­
chases, for he appealed to her from time
to time to assist in selecting something
for a girl about her age or for a boy
something like what he imagined Tom
to be.
“Aud now,” ho said, when they were
nearly through, “you see I didn’t pay
you all that paper was worth yesterday;
and I thought you might like some more
of it now, to ’buy something for Tom,
you know.”
“Why, you paid a whole dollar, and
that was a great deal more than it was
worth.”“Not to mo. A thousand dollars
would havo been cheap. So you see
you might as well take a little more of
it; and it’s not to go to doctor’s bills,
but must be spent now.”
Nell took hesitatingly the fivo-dollar
bill he handed her, and again a tear
met his eye; but ho soon removed that
by interesting her in the disposition of
her money. Tom came first, then Mrs.’
Andrews, and then a little sick child in
the inext house.
When they reached Mr. Weston’s
house both he and Nell had their arms
full of bundles; but Nell was frightened
at the sight of children running here
and there and calling loudly for Grand­
pa! Grandpa!”
“Bun! run! Run away, every one of
you!” ho replied: “ You don’t suppose
I’m going to let you see even the out­
side of these bundles, do you, till the
appointed time? Come, Nell, we must
get these up-stairs before they get hold
of them.”
Nell followed him; but kept very close
to him until they entered a room, where
she was told she could put them down.
Scarcely had she done so when she
Sprang forward, and, throwing herself
on the floor by the side of a lounge,
cried, excitedly:
“ Why, Tom!”
“ Well, Nell. How nice you look!”
“But, Tom. what does it all mean?”
asked Nell, bewildered.
Then came the explanation, after
which Nell said, with the tears in her

“ Do you mean that this is really to
be your home and mine, Tom?”
“Yes, Nell; and you won’t have to
sell papers any more. Think of it!”
But Nell was crying no&lt;; and the old
gentleman, standing by the table,
stopped in his work ol unfastening the
bundles to wipe his eyes, while the
pleasant looking lady who was assist­
ing him looked attentively at the boy
and girl before her. i
“O Tom!” was all Nell could say.
And when her cry was over the kind­
looking lady led her away to take off
her wrappings and kave something to
eat; ana then there were lots of chil­
dren to see and gel acquainted with,
and then there was the Christmas tree.
tNell had never seen prie lighted before,
though Tom had; and to her it was all
new and so delightjuL Such lots of
beautiful things for everybody, even
‘for Tom and herselfHow did it hapK? It was just lilia fairyland, and the
I doctor there,!too.* Nell would
have been afraid slo would wake up
that that she could take bold of Tom
every pnee in a white and know that he
was flesh and blood. I
“NelL” he said, when the excitement
began to subside al little, “how very
nmttv you
von are.
ara.”
I
pretty
’’
. “O, Tom," said
e girl, blushing,
’‘you ought not to t
mo that.”
“I can’t help it I
“Then tell me wl
you're going to
mm nn.“
i say it and I'll stop
But when Noll 10
j
1 he was looking puziied over a paper
that some one had hiuded him.
“ What is it, Tom?’
“ A receipted bill jfrom the doctor;
but I don’t understood it. Who paid
him, Nell?”
“ I don’t know.” j
“You have paid mi yourselves,” said
the doctor, quietly, ’land it’s one of tho
^Jeawmiest payments 1 ever received.”"
•• But Idon'tuademtand.” saidrts’elL
“Don’t try to understand until you
are as old as I am.”
“ I haven’t told Tom,” said NelL

Christmas He has given us.”
Nell was looking st the old gentleman
while Tom spoke, and something she
saw about him made her go to him nud
put her arms about his neck, saying,
tenderly:
“ 1 don’t remember my father and I
don’t know how it seems to have one,
but you’ll Jet me tell you sometimes,
won’t you. bow much I love you for
whatyou’ve done for Tom and meF’
•* WeU, well, we'll see about it,” said
the old gentleman, patting his own
arms about her. “ But if you keep on
in this way you will make a ruined
man of me. That paper was worth
more than I can tell you on Tom’s ac­
count, but now it’s beginning to be
worth something on your own account,
and—well, it’s time for us to say ‘Mer­
ry Christmas to all and to all a good­
night.’ "—JIT. Y. Independent.

The Arab and Ufa Mare.

Son tarn m ben Sontamm of the tribe
of Aneyzs has probably had more ex­
perience-with horseflesh than any other
child of the desert. From boyhood up
he has passed his life among tho horses
of the Orient, and on more than.pne oc­
casion he has been obliged to trust him­
self to the fleetnees of his courser to
escape from the handi of wandering
hordes while traversing the desert.
Some time since. Sontamm was seen
leading a mare of extraordinary beauty
and symmetry through the streets of
Damascus. Upon being questioned
upon tho breeding of tho steed, he pro­
nounced her to be die famous Shensss,
of tho got of Abeyeh Shovrak, four
years old, her dam* being Hagar, and
her sire Kehilan Ajuz. *
I asked him to tell me about the
breeds of Arabian horses.
“Our father, Ismail ben Ibrahim (Ish­
mael, son of Abraham),” he replied,
found two foals of the wild horse by
their dam. whom he had shot with »n
arrow, and he put them in a sack and
carried them on a camel till they were
strong enough to walk, wherefore their
backs were curved in to meet tho sad­
dle, and they ware called Bint el Ahwaj
or the ‘Daughters of the Crooked.’ Ab
they grew up ho rode them, and the
wild horses followed them. From these
two foals, both fillies, camo our horses.
Wherefore wo Arabs reckon all our
pedigrees from the dam, not as tha
fools of Franks do. from tho sire.”
“Are there any of tho original breed
left?”
“Abd el Kader—on whose head bo all
blessings—telh us that it is still found
among our brethren in the Sahara.
And I have heard that in Uzd, in Ara­
bia, is another strain of that blood,
called Zaid el Musefar. Who can tell?
God knows.”
“Which are the best for speed?”
“The most noted for spood is Kehilan
Aiuz; for Kehilan has forty breeds, of
which Kehilan Ajuz is said to be the
swiftest, though its mares are ewenecked and long-legged. There are six
breeds of Seglawi, of which Scglawi
Shoyfi is the best.”
“But Kehilan is tho bestF’
“Ne, no. I have not said so. Kohilan alone is nothing. It is tho secon d
name which shows the breed. Kehilan
Ajuz is the swiftest, but Kehilan alone
is no breed. Abeyan Sherrak foi
beauty, Saadan Togan, Hamdan es
Simri and Seglawi Sheyfi for spoed and
bottom. All theso are good, and this is
3 mare to be proud of my son.”
“And Franks think all Arab horses
are alike. How little they know.”
Sontamm’* lip curled. “Tho Franks
have no horses. Ono of them sent a
long-legged creature to Damascus. Ho
called it a ‘thoroughbred.’ and truly it
could run fast. But what of that ? It
could not run a hundred miles a day on
a few handfuls of barley, as our horses
can, and it had a hood like a block of
wood. No Arab would send his more
to such a Radish as that Bah!"
“But I have heard ray father say that
tho English once sent one of their mares
that they cal) a thoroughbred to Egypt
to run races with your horses, and that
she beat them olL the best in tho Pa­
sha’s stable. How Is that?”
Sontamm smiled again.
“The Pasha of Egypt never had a
horse that was Hadud in his best days.
The Shammar and Aneyza have them
all, save those that are found in the
stables of Tyzoul Abdallah, at Doraiah.
Still? as I said, these English horses
can run well, but only for short dis­
tances and on good food. Take them
to the Desert ou a ghasou lor sue!
marches as we have, and they are gone
on the second day.”—American (Jenllcmen’s Magarine.
'

Roman Remains In London.
Modern London is built on the debris
of the London of the times of Julius
Cossar and Agricola, and it is by no
means infrequently that 1800-year old
relics of the Boman town are found
many feet below the surface of the ex­
isting streets. There was a rich find
recently in the vicinity of Warwick
Square at the depth of nineteen feet.
The most interesting relic that came to
light was a hitherto unknown coin, of
the year 50, which lay alongside of
about a dozen unis containing the prod­
ucts of cremation. Just think of the
pangs which dying would havo inflicted
on those ancients if they had known
that their ashes would be seen and han­
dled by an unknown race eighteen centAries and a half, nearly, after their de­
mise! The most aristocratic urn was
of glass and fifteen inches high. Well
executed l»den pots inclosed several
of these depositories, and roofing tiles
the rest. Ina use of lead, as well as of

duction of tin there. Emblems of more
or leas significance touching the future
state appeared on some of the recepta­
cles. Along with the coin of the year

AU
must die. Finally, my wife induced :
a bottle of Dr. Kennedy's -Favorite
_ _
which On had auvMwhore board al or satm ad­
vertised. Without the 8ll«hto&lt;t faith in ft, but
solely to gratify her, I bought a bottle at a drug
gist to pur rClxgv. I used that aud two or
threv bottles more, aud—to make a long nay
short—I am cow as healthy a mau as there 1c In
the country,
Since then I bars recommended ‘Favorite
Remedy to others whom I knew to have suf­
fered from Kidney and Liver Cornjiiatota; ant!
assure the public that the ‘Favorite Remedy’
has done its work with a similar compictnes*
to every instance, and I trust some other riek
discouraged mortal-may hear of it and try the
‘Favorite Remedy’as I did.”

(jitieuia
^LRttRJh-.
cod Ide case bodeksa, permao udy cured hr Cu.&gt;
cum Foolrent ftlcod purifier] totor-udly: aud
CutlcumAnd CutlcuraHcap [the great skin cures)

Peoriaale or Leprosy, of twenty rear
the Cutlcurx ’Resolvent internally^
and Catleu ra Soap externally. tTlie
ful care on record. Cure certified t&gt;
fee of the peace and prominent bnati
afflicted with Itching and scaly disear
to us for this testimonial In lull.

al) dlaeriplon from a skin disease which appeared
on bis Landa, head and lace, and Marly destroyed
his eyes. The most careful doctoring failed to help
him, and after all had failed he used the CuUcura
Resolvent (blood purifier] internally. Caticura and
Cuticura s«an [tbe great Skin cures] externally
and was curod, and has remained perfectly well tn

Her]and Cuticura aud CuUcura Soap [the great
skin cares.}
and Cuticura Soao extcrosllr and Cuticura Rcsovent internally will positively cure «very apecls,
nf Humor, from a Common Pimple to EerofnU.
Price of Cutlcuia, small boxes, toe.; large boxesji:
Cuticura R'Solven, 'fl par bottle. Cuticura Soap.
-*■, Caticura Shaving Soap, lie. Sold by ail
druggists .

Weeks nud Potter. Bsaslou, .Haas.

•3“ AU mailed free on receipt of price.

CATARRH
Sanford’s
Hesdjttbc and Chills and Fever instantly relieved.
Choking, putrid mucus is dktodgsd^ membrane

Couth, BronchlUs. Droppings Into tbo Throat,
“alns in tbo Clict, Dyspepsia, WmUuj of strength
Ono bottle Radical Curs, one box Catarrhal Sob

WEEKS « POTTER, Boaton.M am.

Lure. &gt;

SSM-Ws-LIGHTNING
yd/1' u Do‘ QnifI“'r U&gt;*a Collin*’
itv
Voltaic f'buteo In rwHev'.ng
'
pain and weakness of Um
jSfcfll'^L Kid »&lt;•}»- IjTC' and Lungs,
X
'KbcumatUm,
ZTeaalgfe
Jlyiteti*. Female Wcakncea,
bj
qS Malarta and Fever and a&lt;ue.
&lt;ASTU''Price 55c- Soul Everywhere.
*—7

s'I

Over 5000
Druggists
AND

Physicians
Hive Signed or Endorsed the

Following Remarkable
Document:

prodsc. rf tb. huh-t

�all stages,
and the only substance, with which we
may hope to destroy their eggs.
HUCBt WJ0, IF PAID IM ADVANCE.

tempt the appetite of. an invalid is to
To Advertise**: ■
make a stew wherein cream is substilumber of reader* tuted for milk; salt Lt well; then line a
IMstrlet of Buriy
tber©- small vegetable dish with thin slices of
bj-v lower than buttered toast, and pour the stow in.
—An inventive genius filled a small
utrletan sack with a spoonful of cayenne
pepper and tacked it over a rathole.'
When the rat bounced out his eyes
PERUSE. THESE LIBERAL AD. RATES.
were peppered by the sjfting from the
shaken sack. He squealoalike a pig
t trip iis iTmo"
and escaped. The whole tribe have
since migrated.
Tool 12.00
jinches
5SO. 00
—Pork chops fried and served with
^rioo apples are not to be trowed upon; put
80.00 the meat in the frying pan. and then
scatter a little sage and pepper and salt
over it; cook thoroughly; if it is fat
enough so that there is plenty of gravy,
fry the sliced apples in that; If not, add
a lump of butter, brown the apples,
ORNO STRONG,
________ Editor aad Proprietor. and lay them over the pork.

I further opportunity of plying his
’ vocation, 'rhe New York pilot must,
therefore,for the good of all concerned,
pass through a long and rigorous course
of training. He must serve, man and
boy, before the matt till he mnatera
every problem in the management of
every form of rig. To this he must add
a thorough knowledge of navigation.
Then he must contrive to obtain the poboat-keeper, or pilot’s mate.
In that capacity he must servo three
full years on one pilot-boat before he
can be admitted for his examination for
a license. If through ill-fortune he lose
his position, he must begin de novo, and
serve the full time on another boot.
Sometimes, a boat-keejxjr serves nine
or ton years on various "boats be­
fore his apprenticeship is complete.
Alter all this, he must pass a most
rigid .examination on all points of
seamanship and navigation before
—Jumbles made Yrom this recipe are the Board of Pilot Commissioners,
a thorough knowldelicate and dainty: One quarter of a and exhibit
pound each of butter, sugar and flour; &lt;^lge of the tides, rips, sands and all
one. egg; beat the butter and sugar to a other phenomena for hundreds of miles
b offic es
cream; add the well-beaten egg; stir in out from tho piers of the East and
tho flour a little at a time; flavor with North Rivera. But even after receiv­
rose water; bake in gem pans, or add ing his license, he is sometimes forced
flour enough to roll them out and bake to wait years, until some pilot happens
as-you do cookies. If you follow the to die and leave a vacancy for him.
,— .
—
jWMi:*, ” nu oo«u&gt;
Barber, II. K. DtaUnaan, DarM riemaray.
latter method, after tho jumbles are in The first year of pilotage he Is granted
the tins take a fork and pick tho a license to pilot vessels drawing less
tops of the cakes to make them look than sixteen look If he give satisfaction
the following year he ts permitted to
rough.
,
take charge of ships drawing eighteen
—Chicken Cream Soup.—Boil an old
fowl with an onion in four quarts jit cold feoL If he pass a satisfactory examina­
wnter until there remains but two tion the third year, he then receives a
quarts. Take it out and let it get cold. full license, entitling him to pilot ves­
EF&gt;X&gt;PAL CHURCH-i
Cut off tho whole of the breast and sels of any draught, Mid is then first
'
chop very fine. Mix with the pounded called a branch, or full pilot.
This matter of draught often gives rise
yelks of two hard-boiled Oggs, and rub
to amusing maneuvers between captain
VY LODGE NO. 37, K. of P., meets nt lu through a colander. .Cool. skim, and and pilot—the former sometimes en­
Castle Hall, Nashville, Michigan, every strain the soup into a soup-pot. Season;
Friday evening, for . the encouragement and add the chicken and egg mixture;, sim­ deavoring to evade a correct statement
support of all worthy, true, steadfast and hon­ mer ten minutes and pour into the of the actual draught of the vessel nt tbo
orable Brother Knight*.
time, and the latter in turn employing
'----- ”
" Oaxo Stkoxo.C. C. tureen. Then add a small cup of boil­ his wits to get at the truth without ap­
ing milk.
pearing to doubt the word of the cap­
—
To
make
fishballs
cut
or
pick
cod
­
tain. Vessels drawing under fourteen
atUjreltaneotui
fish in small bits, taking care to remove feet pay three dollars and seventy cents
every piece of bone; let it soak in cold
H. YOUNG. M.D. Office cast *Wc of water; lot it cook slowly for twenty-five a foot; the rate increases oy degrees,
until ship* drawing twenty-one feet and
• Main St., Nubvffle. Office hours tram
minutes; season with milk, butter and upward pay uix dollars and fifty cents
eggs; mix with this about double the pe* foot.
quantity
of
boiled
j&gt;otaloes:
add
milk
or
H. GRISWOLD, M« D., ___ „-Lhlc
On receiving his license the pilot
• Physician and Surgeon. Office and ro- cream to give the desired amount of must give bonds for the proper dis­
Uenee opposite ths Wolcott House. Prompt moisture: shape in round cakes, roll in charge of his duty, and he is liable to
attention given to calls day or night.
flour and fry until brown in hoi lard. heavy fines if he declines to till s va­
A. FOOTE PHYSICIAN A BURGEON If the lard is not hot when they are put cancy or to board a vessel making sig­
• SnceMor to Dr. Wickham. Office aud in they will soak up the fat and will be nals for a pilot. He is also required to
residence at Dr. Wickham's laic office. unpalatable.
bo temperate in his habits and of repu­
Prompt intention to calls night or day.
—Mixed Feed.—One of the points in table character. The proper execution
wTwHITMORE, M. D.,Eelsctle Physl- favor of the much-praised ensilage is of these regulations is to a large de­
•clan knd Sorgeou. Office, east side of that animals eat it with a relish. No gree insurou by the great competition
Main St. Residence, north Phillips SL Calls
food, however rich it may be in food el­ among tho boats, and the consequent
promptly attended at all hours.
ements, will prove profitable if the farm vigilance of each to detect delinquen­
TXR. G- W. GOUCHER, Electto Physician and stock cannot be made to Lake to it kind­ cies in his rivals.
■kJ Socgeon, is prepared to answer all ealls ly. It is on this account that a mixing
that tuny ba mads for his aerrices. Office end of feed has been so successful. Same­
The Old-Fashioned Stage-Coach.
raafdenee oppoalts Roe's, meat market
ness palls upon the appetite—a change
It is hard not to feel a pang of rogret
L PARMENTER, M. D. Office over of diet encourages and sharpens it A when thinking that the days’ot the
Hull's Drug auee, Vermontville, Mich. few roots cut, or better, pulped and giv­
IJko the
en to the animals, will make them cat sta^e-coach are numbered.
HAS. H. BRADY, Lawyer, Circuit Court
Indian, it has been driven farther and
Comtnlssioner, Real Estate aud Insurance the corn fodder or cut straw with nil farther Westward as the railroads havo
the
greater
relish.
Try
and
make
a
Agt. Prompt attention given to all busineei
jutruvted to my care. Conveyancing a spoclal- little change in the diet of the animals, pushed on into - newer country, and it
iy. Office opposite Union House.
even though it be only once a week, will not bo many years before it will be
entirely a thing of the pasL The huge,
UEBHAUSER, Merchant Tailor and dcal- with some roots, potatoes, apples, etc.: cumbrous vehicle, with its six horses,
• er in Ready Made Clothing. Sec me Itwillpey.
its load of trunks and boxes, its jolted
before you purchase clothing. Fits guar­
—A cracked-hoof can only be re­ and uncomfortable passengers often
anteed.
paired by new growth from the coronet, halted and relieved of their valuables
ZXALVIN A. NICHOLS, dealer in Boot* aud where the new horn is secreted. Horn by some successor of Dick Turpin and
Shoes, Rubber*, Hats and CapaJpenU’ consists of precisely the same elements Robert Hood, has served faithfully and
Furulshlug Goods, G lore* and Mittens, Trunks,
Traveling Bag*. Lap and Buffalo Robes, etc. as hair, and is really a solid, compact well. It deserves some record in order
form of hair growth; the hair of the that its history may servo to remind
West side Main SL, Nashville.
skin ends where the growth of horn be­ generations to come, whose comfort
ISS M. JEFFREY, Practical Milliner, and gins. and this goes on downward to ro­ will be so thoroughly provided for that
dealer In Millinery and Fancy Goods. Drew Eair the constant wear at the solo of the their pampered bodies wHi never receive
making, in all its branches, done with neatnessoof-crust. But a crack in the hoof
and dispatch.. Salesroom east side Maki street, will alwsj-s extend up into the new and a jar or bruise of tlio divconiforts "their
fathers endured. Il must not bo that
opposite Nxwa office.
weak growth because the horn is ex­ tho annals of the stage coach shall fail
RNO STRONG, plain ud fancy Job Printer. panded by tbe pressure of the horse’s to be recorded by a pen Mint will be ad­
The beat facilities fur doing work of any weight upon the foot. To prevent this
printing office in Barry county. When in seed the sides of the crack must be sup­ equate for the work. In many parts qf
New Mexico, Colorado aud other West­
•f printing of any description, whatever, see me
ported and held together by some ern States and Territories, the stage­
means. 'Ibis may be done bv boring driver is in his glory. As his vehicle
ISS. E. CHAPMAN, Milliner and Drcsa- holes through the horn on each side of bowls down tho steep mountain roads,
maker. A choice line of Millinery and the crack and putting horse-shoe nails
his strength of arm taxed to the utmost
Fancy Goods constantly on hand. No trouble
to show goods. Call and sec me before buying. through and drawing the hoof together to restrain the willing horses and hold
and clinching the ends of these nails ou b&amp;ck4he coach, he feels a natural pride
Shop two doors north of Smith's grocery.
each side. The top of the crocK should in his skill, which is shared by those
then be burned across so as to obliterate whoso safety depends upon it. In go­
the opening and form a solid starting
lino of cigars constantly on band. Room* ud£.' place for the new growth. The hbol ing from Espanola, the southern termi­
nus of the Denver &lt;i Rio Grange, to San­
D. C. Griffith's store.
should be kept soft and elastic by fre­ ta Fe, one has a tasic of stage-coaching
TONAH B. RA8EY, Exprc** and Draynun- quent dressings of equal parts of glycer­ which is novel and enjoyable. iSe all­
V Goods sad Baggage carried to any ptaoe fa ine and water.—New York Times.
days’ ride across tho i-oHing plains, pant
the village.
the curious red boulders and in sight of
tbe snow capped Singuede Cristo
HUM R- DICKINSON, manufacturer et
Foul Cistern Water.
and dealer in Hard Wv&gt;d Lumber. BuildMountains, down through the wild,
«.)ur cistern is about six feet deep rugged Comanche oauon to the swift
and the same in breadth.
Formerly Rio Grande; here a boiling, rapid,
lUMINO,
Jeweler »0J the water became so unpleasant that mountain torrent prepares the traveler
j-tnaker. Clocks. Watches, Silver aud we were obliged to pump it uut and for a sound night’s sleep ou the cots in
Ware, Jewelry and Optical Gfxxl*. Rock,
the adobe store of the Mexican of Espa­
ford Wakmeeaspeclu.lt r. Retiring and Eagrev- dean up thrice from the last of March
to November. Iu order to obviate this nola. Early in the morning the stage
luv done in a workmanlike wanner.
we first resorted to putting half a rolls up which is to drag him through
RUSSELL has money, to Joan, at
bushel of charcoal lumps in the cistern. the sand hills and cedar forests to the
• on good farm •ecurity; Priadm
This enabled us to get along with only capital of New Mexico. Those whoso
terert payable at tbe Hasting* NaXia
two
cleanings during the season.
We ideas of the vehicle are based on the
Office Irt door aoatbef Spauidlug'a,
then added two bushels of pure white true Concord coach of the natty New
sand to the .charcoal, which rendered Yorker, whose time, because of his
Charlotte, will virit Nashville every 30
wealth, hangs on his hands, will be
with a choice Una of piece Roods, and wfll the necessity of cleaning still more grievously disappointed when thev see
seldom. But as the cistern had a tight
wooden cover over it, we thought it the canvas covered, rolling, unwieldy
might be still better for the water if it old coach which is to be their carriage.
TACOB OSMUN, LI
W colt Hoar*. Flr.t
could be weU aired. To effect this we But the discomforts are not as great as
cut a hole six inches square in the anticipated, and there is real enjoyment
cover, inserted a wooden ventilator in­ during all theydays’ ride among the
to this, on the top of which wire gauze s’.nd-nilla aforeftid. fording the mount­
ain creeks, crossing tbe dry beds of the
TT’ELLOC.G &lt;t BELL,
Planing was fastened, so as to keep out flits spring torrents, through tho adobo vil­
Xx Mill. Planing aud
Ryswtag and all else. The frosh air now enter­
ing the waste-pipe passes over the water lages of lazier, dirtier Indians, and up
of the cistern and out through and down the hillsides. Yet after toil­
order. Wood Turning in oil Its branches.
this ventilator, and thus keeps up a ing up a long hill, among tbe cedars
C/*r£S‘i.W*«DK¥A,^AT’ Dealer ,n Watches, good circulation, and prevents its be­ and rocks, when a turn is made and be­
coming foul there.
A wire screen is fore him is the old city of Santa Fo.
fastened over the outside end of the coziiy nestling.in the valley below, the
waste-pipe to prevent insects or any­ traveler is glad thft Lha,cnd is near,
thing else getting into the cistern and that he may soon take his rest in a
through it. Tbe water now is kept Pullman car. The experience is one to
\y ILL1AM JONES,
free from any unpleasant smell: still be remembered, even though he may
ever afterwards better

Hashvillt girtrtart).

S . ■

I

W

W
L

W
C

S

M
O

M

.—---- Nashville Elevator!

over any other compound is that it
contain* no Quinine, Arsenic, or mln«
eral; consequently it produces, na
quinism or injurious effects 'whatever
upon the constitution. Those cured
by it are left as healthy a« if they had
never had the disease.
The direct action of Aykb’b Ague
Cche upon the Liver and Digestive
Organs. makes it a superior remedy
for Liver Complaints, producing many
remarkable cures, where other medlclned have failed.
For sale by all druggists.

Two girls at Greenwich. Eng, climbed five
fundra, wrenched &lt;»S. a lock, and plundered • a

Grain nndProdnce.
;Seeds, Feed, Ume, Salt, Plaster, Stuc­
co, Hair, Pine Lumber, L&amp;ih
and Hhiaglea,
AT THE LOWEST LIVING PRICES.

J^JEW KLKVATOB.

*

FOWLER &amp; INGERSON
HIGHEST’ MARKET -PRICE

will have to atnie, like the cigar men,

of Wheat, good Orchard, very fair

OH, WHAT A COUGH I
Will you heed the warning. The signal per
hope of tbe sure approach of that more lerribldi*case conVurnpUuu; A*k vourseif if you can
afford for tbe sake of saving 50 cU to run tbe
x full stock of
risk aud do nothing foe it We know from ex_
__ _ _________
prrienve that-Shiloh's Cure will-cure your T TTllf R T?,T?.
Xr.C/.
cough. Il never fail*. This explains why
UJxlDP/1.M LA 1 LL,
j
mt re than a million- buttle.* were sold lart year.
zonsiaHt 1 v on fl nod.
It relieves Croup, and wlmo.xngcough, al unce
„ --------Mi'thcra do pot be without ft For fame back,
side or chest u*e Shiloh’s Porous PlaMera. J.TF.XRY ROE. honlnn
Sold by p. T. Boise.
"
—OLD RELIABLE—
DYSPEPSIA * LITER COMPLAINT.
I* It not worth tbe small price of 75 cent* to
'free youraef of every symptom of tho*e distrc»sing complaint*,.If yoti think so call at our
store and get a bottle of SSUoli's Vltalirer.
etcry buttle has a printed guirantcrpa It u«e
i &lt;&gt;u*taDtly on bsnd a Hr ttockrwf
according!v aud if it doc* von no g.od It will
cost you nothing. Sold by F. T. Boise. .
We have a speedy end positive cure for
Catarrah, Dipfithtuia, Canker mouth and
Head Ache, in SHILOH’S CATARRH REM­
mu eh
EDY, A nasal Injector free with each bottle.
Use It If you dartre Ividfh and sweet breath.
Price 50cent*, tsold by F. T. Boise.
FRESH FISH atd PCULTR'.

GRAIN ANO PRODUCE.

be w!d lor wait It

50 acre*, 4 mile* from Na»hvQlB: nearly aH
Improved: fair bti'ldlnoand In all a good* barg*(u. Price $1,GW»; part dow n.
■
Hoase and Lot, on Phillip* atreet; tbe best
bargain* in town. Price tSSd.
Hotue and Lot, on State street - Price
.
half down down.
■
%
Goo-1 H»u*t? and four acres of laud on Fnoce* Street Price MW.
Hou** and lot on State St, house new: jk**&gt;
edllar and plenty of gtmd water. For sale st
STOP or will exenauxe for farm property tfear
Naahvllic’ar Iluting*.
. 80 acre*. 1J» mile* from Nar.hrlbc otr the Ios4
rc«td leaving the village; all improved except • K
acres; the remaining a acreq good timber; I* •
well watered by a never-falling spring. Good. .
young orcliaru; building* lair; I1? aenr» &lt;4
wheaton the ground; present- owner engaaetl ■
In other bajinevi and win kU for
’
C03 do» n. balance ou long time..
Vacant lot on Philips Et. Price &lt;120 (f sold
LEE &amp; DURKEE.

MEAT MARKET.}
•esh and Salt Steals.!
Smiled Haas ani S H , '

Id the case of Edward Maxell, who was
dragged but of conrt room by lynchers at Durat:&lt;l Wl*., tbe nooee killing him befiijy tbe mob
got him to a tree, a Cproncr’* jury ka* declared
Uut he "fell from the. court lioutv steps and
broke hi* neck.
___________________
A WBOMO IDEA.

'

IX THEIH SEABON.
_
- ,
L/Z /'C/-, by ttlC lb. OF
&lt;fc.. dr
The IlighiM '
itlr*. Pelts. Ar.

. \

Freeh Goods, Full Wois

Many pefwns having gotten the wrong Idea
SSatisfactior. G-oarzintee
that hope arc strengtbeulns, have taken to
drinking beer aud ale very freely. Tbe con*eUF.V SfY ROK.
quence u they feel bettrf'for a short time, but--------------------------------------------- :---------when the renctlon come* lix-y arc much weak- rnuvim t&gt;r\i v
er than before Reader, ii you value your life.
I
11 LVl.r,,
lav haide all malt and alcoholic beverage# and “
- ,, ». -, ...
put your true: In that teinperunee preparation
* "r "r “x* v
v
of Iron aud vegetable touies exiled Brown'*
Don Bitters. It give* real health and strcuv Ih
to every jart ot tbe Ixaly, retresbc* the mind,
aud restores the m-rvuua rysicm to it* pru|&gt;cx
i.taihlard. Over 1,OOU,QOO buttles have been

MEAT MARKET!
Fresh, Salt and Smoked

Once ujx&gt;n a time a woman died, and, as the
mourner* wen? carrying her to the grave, they
tripped agalu.-t a stump nod let die coffin fall.
She revived, having been ouly In a deep trance
Two year* after she really died, aud a* they
Were carrying her down the tune rood aud
neared the same stump, the disconsolate wid­
ower sobbed; '•Steady, iwys! Steady there I

&gt;F KVEIU* DESCBirnON--------

Live and Let Live.
pt'RXlTL’RB DEPOT.

KIDNEf DISEASES.

Kidney disuse* afflict the greater part ot the
human race, awl they are constantly ou the Ioi-rcase, but where the virtue* of Kidney Wort
have become known, they ore held lu cheek
imd spccdly cured. Let thDw.- who have had to
coustaully d-jHie spirit# of uitruand such stuff,
give this great remedy* a triai and be cured. Ju
Uieilry form It is moat economical, iu the liquid
tbe most convenient.—Press.

There will be an unutuul demand for beau­
tiful nomen next manner, as nearly every Cir­
cus will make one the feature of its atreet pro-

CONSTIPATION.
Thai great enemy of all ix-rxins leading seden­
tary (Ives, pcnnaneully cured by the occasional
u&gt;c of Rinvliatt'a Liver Pills. Try theui.
••Honesty is a good policy.” Bat you hare
to pay the premium In this world and realize
ou your insurance Inihe rcxl
You imd better cut out this address—“Dr,
0. K, 8ykee, 1W Madbtm St., Chicago,
you may need hl*-Sure Cure lorCaUrrh,

I
J

I
I

’ Rj
f If

j ?
I /

-■ ■&gt;
x V Q Rs Q
« J
In Q,
"

FURMITUEE!

O. Puiitce Drawing-Room C ir*.
Reclining Chair*. No extra
In R elining Chairs. Tho 1
I’.ii " '■ ’Mnr»T Ci-.rn. G.irgftttid with Elegant Higb-k
cis’' p.i* -i- .(rer".
Suvl Track ar..1
blued with :hctrGreat Tb

All inzinmath*
titr Car Accural
rill be cheerfully glv&lt;

For tlio fall trade, uui

STOCK IS • (COMPLETE,
And will be sold so low that"

PRICES WILL ASTOHISISH YOU,

zon

THOUSANDS CF CASES

Nebraska, Colorado. Wyoming
v'adn. New Mexico, Arizona. Id
California.
The Sho.-tcs’. Speediest and
ide llotito via Hannibal V» Fort
Pulln*. Houston, Austin. Beu .’»ni
ton and all points in Texas.
The un equaled inanecmer.ta «
Line to Travelers and Tcnrl-' .«

In Every Style&amp;jVariety.

HE GREAT C!
LIVER AMD BOWELS.

at'UKvr Trains Daily betweri
M i,
Connell 1.

Manufacturers, and dealer# In

WE ALSO CARRY

.liEliMATiSK

THE CR

jiUnLINGTO

19136523

GOODS,

And arc prepared to give our time and atten­
tion to every tilingpertaining to tbe
undertaking;linc.

J. LENTZ &amp; SONS.

PERFECTLY CURED.

NERVOUS
DEBILITY
If you axe ruflcrini with Xettous brtuiit;
any discare or symptom, wearing ori bM
mind. cauolnj: you to f-ei gloomy. dewpoaH
nervous, timid, fbri-etml or until for basil
you have applied for heip wllhout getting relief
r»u can bo cured of all your dtaairrecable rjnpCum*, and fully iv*-'&lt;&gt;red to perfect physical health
In the etiorteat pow.hlu tltno. Having during the

a specially, and inrin!: cared such a large aaa&gt;
her of earre, many or whom (after cx&gt;cadlag
hundreds oi dollar-) tad been given up m in­
curable. we.now offer our »rnfcra arid UvattntaV
to tho afflicted al price within their reach. CopsultaUon cither personally or by letter free nod
conTIdeatlxl- Patient- at a distance by c-ving#
statement of their case, or by anawcritn'tftreflaha
(which will be rent to any addies* ea receipt ot
stamp to prepay postage) can be treated as w«D
by letter a* at office. w«- prepare and Jurauh t«.
patients our owu medicin- &lt; Aedrvss
.
MADlr-UN DlJsPBNSAUY.aubooth UlsrkSL,
Chicago. Hl-

NERVOUS
DEBILITY:
A cure £iiaramt*ed.

’EY-W,

a rpocidc fur liyaUria, dlnfnc«». i&lt;
ou» headache, ttvnta) drMeMlon,

L

oau prqwb'. on receipt of nr
Voxel teeura v yra-o. laid

for Ihr tillage , f Na.h«ilk

SPRING MEDICINE.

TIhi Mt-hinn Central Railroad. with
Uom al Chicago, aCbrd* the most dirrei

S.-.tiilS
MOO Reward!

�rowr. Imt be understand* fully tho taw of
wre." Guiteau replied: ‘•TrujiNitorv
i-'MCs my cairn. 1 don't pretend
ss.r.'S: iSroir ..TiixJ
Tttdtate him mid Uls whole theory of
Ail I wantts two hours before that
aud I can settle this thing *B right."

tern, a great majority of thorn from ladles.
When I RetUms I shall attend to them. I
Want tn send my grnettnea to tho ladles of
America, and thank them for thof r sympathy.
They don't want mo to be hanged. EUblio
opinion Is fast chawing. I received Satur­
day a check for f1JU00 from the btalwarta of
Brooklyn, and anothor for IS)0 from the StaL
ward* of N’&lt;^ York. I want thia Jury to un­
derstand bow public opinion'is on this esse."
arh&lt;-

ter: wv want light. We don't mean to let this
prisoner escape in acluud. but wo want from
your Honor a clear and perspicuous ruling, so
that twelve averagera-n sitting up^n thr jury
cannot pcrouMr go *&gt;tn»y." Mr. IMvidgi* severrlv bandL-d the clerruth and twelfth pray3T» nt tho def.-tw, nod characterized them as
mean irttempt* c-a** ospemionsupon experts
who had tesuaed f ir thepro*-*cuti&lt;&gt;n and upon
emins-l foi th? prosecution thr.niselvoL Tho
Court then orijouruud.

ConerressionaL
In the Senate on tht tth n number of pete
tlrnjs were presented, many of them praying
railroud tnuis[»'rt*tlon charges. Bills were
intnsluecd: By Mr. Anthony, to promote the
efficiency of tbe navy: t&gt;y Mr. Maxey, tn 1ncnNuse tbe rffldency of the nlgnsl servlwsof
the army.... In the Him** Atr. Orth gave notfcx* that
to
I ... I he
II Iwould
’ll—1,1 aftintroduce
.IlL— l .... a...proposition
...I.H &lt;« • A,— . 1.A
j strongly nrotcstMi against inc alleged 'ndone him and his constituent* by the
aker In the late appointment &lt;&gt;f
iinutrc*. and gave a summary Of bis
i record in Congress, and thought
rr-owdmtiUra! him to more cnns!di-nite
tment than be had received from Speaker
ter; h • Uicn nuked to be. and was. rxcuMxl

’ -uf Cleopatra's i
r the oteiert of
the youngert cool
• were introduced I

xnA Grounds, as his private buslnnui retatlnns
were auch.u-&lt; might moke it Improper for him
to serve. Adjourned to the tah.
Im the Senate c-n tbe Oth Mr.Maxey offered a
•reoolnUon, wh ch wm adopted, instructing tbe
. Sccre'.ury of tite Interior to furnish a report.
If any twl been mode, of the Survey of th j
United
itn l Texas Boundary Cwnalr
&amp;'B. in • -• un-ter tHaot of Jun- « 1«V. and
Jf n-&gt; tii-al rep-*.-: of x.:i.l cutum sttou w. s
moo.-tar win report thwt fart. log. tlu-r w&lt;!h
^^^■Mkskirrt-y. and &lt;ji— report of Ur’ work
h»r.*.» It w,n prcMueuu’L Mr. Halo's
re^vtutfc’n fur * 8pe:md Cmninifteo &lt;u th ?
of ••iveting the Preo-imt and VicePrrxhJ'-tit and ol e »unilngxo&lt;l o^rtlfyinv the

\PW1M W.Stoughton, ex-Mtatater to Rus­
sia, died in New York, of Bright’s &lt;11m?*«\ on
the 7th.
Geonkr A. Joses, of the Milwaukee JfynAUcan, dropped dead in that &lt;d ty ou the evening
of tbe 7th.
'
The physicians who attended President
Garfield decided on the 9th to present bill*
for &lt;110,000. Dr. Bliss leads the list, with
&lt;50,000; Dm. Agnew and Hamilton ask 11ft,000each; Dr. Boynton and Mrs.Edson &lt;10,­
000 each, and Dr. Heyburn &lt;8,000. The Penn­
sylvania Road want* nothing, and it is said
that the State of Ohio wWtake care of bills
footing up 4'200,000.
Governor Hubbard and tbo other State
offlrers of Minnesota were inaugurated on the

DomeHtlc.

HIS NEW GROCERY IS IN FULL BLAST.
I HAVE A COMPLETE LINE OF

Soaps—Washing and Toilet, Canned
Goods, Ground Spices,

Rev. Dr. John Cottom Smith, a distin­
guished Episcopal minister of New York City,
died on the morning of the 9th.
Governor Foster. of Ohio, was Installed’
for his second term on the 9th.
Justice Grat was on the 9th sworn Iimm a
member of tbe Supreme Court of the United

.Uf to the *th the exodus of negroes from
South Carolina to Arkansas had reached a to-tai tri about 7,ooa Itwas stated that 20,000
acres of land in South Carolina would go un­
cultivated next season for want of laborers.
The Appellate Court at Chicago has decided
that a telegraph company Is not responsible
for error* in tbe transmission of a cipher .
__ ____________________ _
message l&gt;cyo«d the amount paid for sendingP ing open and emjjiatic grounds against
doctrine of eternal punishment­
A trial at Yankton, Dakota, the other day
Colonel F. A. Jones, an attorney of
resulted in the convWtlou of Brave Bear, a Macon, Mo., and also editorof tbe Herald, died
Sioux chieftain, of the murder of David John­ In a Wabash passenger coach near Fort
son near Fort Sully.
Wayne recently.
Tux total values of exports of petroleum
John Piehi-ont, Chief Justice of the Su­
and petroleum products from tbe United preme Court of Vermont, died at Vergennes
States during the eleven months ended Nov­ a few days ago, aged seventy-six years.
ember SO, IBS’, were &lt;44.413,013; same period
in 1880, &lt;31,4&amp;4.0O7.
Foretirn.
Or a crew which took to a boot from a sink­
The Khedive of Egypt was notified on tbe
ing vessel off Gloucester, 'Maas., recently, 7th that England and France, which placed
two died from exposure, aud lire were badly him on the throne, are determined to main­
tain his authority against any attempts to
The wife of Rev. James Cameron, pastor of create disorder.
the Second Presbyterian Church of Oakland,
lx tbe French elections on the 8th Victor
Cal., recently gave her husband a dose of car­ Hugo and De Freycinct were chosen for the
bolic add by mistake for medicine. The poi­ department of the Seine, ar.d Leon Say for
son caused tbe reverend gentleman’s death in Versallles. The Republicans gain twenty-two
seat! in the Senate.
.
Seven murderer* were banged on the Oth—
A recent St. Petersburg dispatch stated
two at St. Ixiuls, one at Marshall, Mn.. two at that Admiral Saulkdwaky, who sailed in the
Franklin, Lx, one at Elmira, N. T., and one at Russian man-of-war Chasseur in search of tbe
Jersey City.
Jeannette, had informed hta Government that
D. D. Richards, one of the gang implicated be had been in company with the Rodgers,
in tbe Missouri land frauds, was convicted ia search vessel, which be hud left August 0, re-,
the Criminal Court of St- Louis on the Oth, turning to Irkutsk, and that the Rodger* hod
and sentenced to five years in the Peniten­ sailed for Herald Island, having heard that one
tiary.
of the Jeannette’s boats (containing corpses)
Tub Superintendent of tbe Railwar Mall
Service has instructed Division Superintend­ had been cast ashore there. The commander
ents to suspend communication with ftrfectod of the Rodgers hid made preparations lorwinlocalities without waiting to consult him, in tering at Herald Island.
A BERUNjllspatch to a French newspaper,
order that tho Department shall not be re­
the Emperor WHIsponsible for the spread of contagious dte- published on tbe 9tb,
tam bad decided to proclaim tbe Crown Prince
Recent Texas dispatches state that the Frederick William Rcgcut of the Empire on
massacre of the Chinese laborers on the South­ the 22d of March next, the Emperor’s eightyern Pacific Railroad was not &lt;fone by Indians, fif th birthday.
Louise Mjchel was arraigned before the
but by white men, who took this means of
being avenged. on the Asiatic*, who worked Correctional Tribunal in Paris on the 9th and
sentenced to Imprisonment for fi! teen days for
for lower wages than their white comrades.
By a recent decision of the Indiana Supremo disoideriy conduct during the Blanqui demon­
Court a large number of claims for bounty by stration. . Others implicated were given from
volunteers who enlisted in the Union army eight to sixty days.
The Garfield, tbe largest sail vessel afloat,
are forever tarred, the Court bolding that an
offer of bounty by a Board of County Com­ was recently launched at Belfast, Ireland. She
la
steel covered and registers 2,220 tons.
missioners was not a contract In writing, and
Two officers of the Fifth Mexican Infant­
that action.^ to recover such bounty are barred
ry fought a duel with pistols at Chllponanxo,
Thirtt-one warrants were Issued at Wash­ a few days .ago. Lieutenant Cano being
ington ou the 7th for the arrest of mail con­ kilted by a shot through the lung.
Richard II. Dana, Jr., of Cambridge,
tractors. A. E. Boone was held in &lt;15,000,
several were released on &lt;2,0i)0, and three Maas., died of pneumonia at Home, Italy, a
tew days ago.
more jailed In default of bail.
The requisitions for stamjts received at the
later news.
Post-Office Department on the 7th aggregated
In the Republican Senatorial caucus ai Des
&lt;040,000—the largest issue in the history of
Moines, Iowa, on the Krth. Governor Gear re­
tbe mail service.
Tur. stage-couch running between Tomb­ tired from the coutewt, aud tbe name of John
stone and Bisblc, Arizona, was on the 5th at­ A. Kasson was withdrawn. James F. Wilson
tacked by five robbers, with whom the express was nominated for the lung Icon aud J. W.
messenger hail a lively battle with a Winches­ McDill for the Kirkwood vacancy.
A BOOT 160 delegates f tom Agricultural col­
ter rifle. The thieves found &lt;0.500 in the
leges and societies met at tbe Ag.'cultural
The Secretary of the United States Treas­ DepartmetffJn Wanbingtou on the 10th. Comury has issued a circular embodying a commu­ nusrlor.cr Loring was elected Chairman. In
nication froth the National Board of Health, his address Dr. Loring predicted a grand fu­
recommending vaccination or revaccination of ture for all branches &lt;&gt;f the tcieuce, as be said
'
all employes of tlie Government*in connection agriculture should be called.
Tur police of Cork on the 10th dug up a
with the Treasury Department on duty in
various ports of the- country where they may case containing Snider i uies, dynamite, gun­
cotton aud ammunition. Iu a letter to tbe
bcfexpoiicd to contagionof small-pox.
Tnn migur-bouac of Theodore A. Have- Town Clerk of Dublin, Parnell and Dillou
meyer, in Brooklyn, was swept away by fire, expressed their thanks for tbe freedom
a few days ago. The loss was estimated erf the city. Heavy seizures of onus had been
made at Tiylcc and Clonmel. A warrant
at &lt;1,500000.
The famous bank bond-robber, William ngaiuet the police bod been Issued at Dublin
Burke, alias “ BDly the Kid," who was ar- far seizing Irish-American papers nt newsres.cd recently for being connected with tl&gt;e
Tur. Iowa Legislature organized on’tbc 10th
robbery at Mr. Kells. of Cleveland, of &lt;117,­
000 in bonds, and who, after his release in by the election of G. IL Struble, of Louisa
Cleveland, was taken to Albany, N. Y., on a County, for Speaker, and ColoneT E. C-Ifayna.
requisition to answer a charge of robbing the of Appanoose County, for Clerk of the House-.
Manufacturers* Bonk of Cohoes of &lt;9,000, L. D. Jackson, of Butler, was elected Secre­
tary of the Senate.
escaped from jail recently.
Me. Scoville stated on the Oth that the
In his recent report for the Department of
Dakota General Terry admitted that the In­ checks for sums amounting to &lt;1,500 received
by
Gpilcau were worthless and sent by some
dian outlook In Northern Montana was un­
favorable. The buffalo are rapidly diminish­ practical joker. It was uot the first lime during
ing, the savages raid on the herds of cattle, the trial that such a thing had occurred. Scoand the i-whmm arc organizing forces for rule himself had had worthless checks sent
him, one for &lt;15,tX)0.
protection.
.
At the o;iening of the Guiteau trial on the
Personal and Political,
10th Judge Porter began bis argument, aud at
Box. John Phelps Putnam, one of the once commanded the attention of every jjerJudges of the Superior Coart of .New York, soa iu the court room. Writhing under the
flagellations adminlr.l err'd, tbe asfoxsln ahuutdied a few days ago.
Washington telegrams of the 6th slate 64 i&lt;ut that he a t s willing to goto the goli'jjrs
that Bcoville had been offered &lt;1,000 for the . if ft tc tbe Lord’-, will Judge Porter cunbody&lt;of Guiteau after execution, the would- ciud-.-d by reading a letter written by President
be purchaser offering to wait twenty years for G-.oi&gt;o! t to Judge Pavue, contpliuivuting iuia
for restricting the
of insanity ns an exthe delivery of the body. Guiteau was in cu-e
for crime. Jndgi* Cox deddwl that jurisfavor of accepting &lt;3,000.
d.c:lun in complete at tlie niaccwherea wound
I’KEsntSNT AitTHt'B on tlx- Cth nominated :« milhled, and that an appreciation of lire
Samuel C. Parka, of New Mexico, to be Asso­ .difference between right and wrong ia the cor­
ciate Justice of the Supreme Court of Wyo­ rect te»t of taeaulty. Adjourned to the 12th.
In lire Untied State* Senate on the lOCJt Mr.
ming, and Joseph Bell, of New York, to bo As­
sociate Justice of the Supreme Court of New Darn*., from tfcc Commtltfe ou Indian Af­
fair*, reported » bill to ratify the agreement
Mexico.
New development* were brought to light lx» try tlioCrow Indians of Mn*u *m f-.r tee
in the Star-route rascality, on the Cth, of rak'-of part of their rvscrvslhm. Mr. Bjyard,
such proportions as to call for a mesaage by frvm the I’lnaure Commilt-x-, r^xmed wite
the President to lao Senate on the subjoct.
A letter from Hon. George Bliss, ■pedal coun­ Tariff Counnfa’dpD 1411, tunl siro. with an ad­
sel for tbe United States for tbe prosecution verse report, the Garland Gorr.mission IO.
of tbe eaces, wbdwa condosivrly that there Mr. Bayard said he favored removing the
tariff question, from the arena &lt;if aectkAial
feeling l&lt;y selecting rirflteas lor Comiuisatan-

And in inrt. rvrrylblng tbnl belong, to tbe Grocery Deportment.
»
a fine collection of

AUo

And Glassware of the Latest Pattern.
A LARGE AND WELL SELECTED STOCK CF

I KEEP IN STOCK-

Brown Ware, Yellow Ware, Stone Ware,
WOODEN WARE, BASKETS, YANKEE NOTIONS, ETC.
CP* All my goodn are IrrKb. .just bought for spot cnahnud
w ill be Hold only for cash, nt the lowest prices.
A cordial imitation is extended to every man, woman
child, to call aud examine prices and qualities ot Goods.
&amp; take pleasure in showing Goods, whether you wish to
buj or not.
Nashville, Mich.. Dec. 5,1881.

WINTER,, COLD WHITER
Th coining, and so is my New Stock of

WIITTEI^ G-OOIDs,
To fill every department, which will be filled with the

Railroad Building in 18S1.

The Matheny Age of a recent date gives the
following statistics of rdlway coastruction
during lost year:

In the market, and shall be receiving something new almost
every day during the season.

My store being tbe only ready pay store in town, enables
me to make you terms that do long credit store can compete
with. Persons having cosh or produce to pay as they go, can
save from 10 to,15 per cent by trading at a ready pay store for
no man an do a credit business without losing from one toffve
hundred dollars per year, which must be charged up in some
way to parties who do pay

sw
Marytacd.. 2
2-» | Total....... S3
It will be seen that the work of railway ex­
tension has been carried on in forty-two States
and Territories, the only Stale in which, uo
dcw track is reported laid being Connecticut
and Delaware, and the only Territories lhu«
distinguished being Idaho, Indian Territory
and Utah, although It is probable that a few
miles were laid in the latter. The remote pos­
session of Alaska, of course, does not come Into
this category. Texas leads Che country in re­
sect of railway building. Laving added last
year, by our table, 1,411 miles, which final re­
turns will probably increase to 1,000, or more.
Colorado appears to come next , with about 500
miles, of which no leas than 370 are officially
reported to us as laid by that enterprising
narrow-gauge railway company, the Denver &amp;
RU, Grande. This company built during the
year no leas than ten different line* or por­
tions of lines. Iowa comes next, with nearly
5 0 mile*. and Dakota und Otilo .-u*i&gt; ‘show
thua far between 100 and 500 inl.'ts. Indian*,
Illinois, New Mexico and New York appear to
The narrow-gauge- makes no insignificant
■bowing iu the Hat. of railway mileage con­
structed In 1881. Of the 238 di erent Hoes
thus far reported to be built during tbe year,
not leas than forty-three, or over 17 yer ccnu
were of three-feet gauge; and of the 8,240
miles of new track which we already repor,
1,400 miles, or about 14 per cent., were of that
—A fastidious Poaffhkeep«i&lt;j girl hrm
written to the presraente “f
the
prindpal eoileges in thia countn- to in­
quire Whether fhe ehonhl sny *'kmamn»
b” or “mumps art-.”
Some &lt;4 the
presidente mkikc feelingly of “one
mump,” while others worn tenacious of
“ uno mumps.” It fa* strange that au­
*
such vitai questions

I aim to keep first
goods, and by dealing fbf
U expect a liberal share off
square with all parties,
she
little experience I hui
age, and am satisfied, •
iiare, that a ready pay stoi
since 1 commenced bus'
succeed. I shall always pay the highest price forproduc

C. W. GRANGER
WOOD

SHOE HORSES
BETTER THAN EVER

WILL TAKE

WOOD

For all Shoeing.

DIGS,
BOOKS,
JRIVKLRY,
WAtr PAPER.

,

PRO! sietaby medioiks

PRt^4€RIPTIO.\M,
RRCEIPTS,
Hade ofnll Rock Kinij

A FEW CUTTERS

PAINTANDRRUSH
In fact, if you

any kind of worl^ nearly
and all warranted,

CALL AND KBJK Bin.
P.S, I have * irood Yoke of

�b&lt;ud

Mr*. Mary A. Livermore
Union
Hall Ju. 12.
at Red Ribbon
C. F. Dwight of Chicago ha* been
viaitiug, a few days,'.in this city.

Gr*enb*ckfan lit the court house.
Mra. C. A. Nichols, m»d Miss Kate
Eckard of Nashville, were in the city
hurt Saturday.
. ■
The young married ladies of the
Emanuel church will entertain the so­
ciety on Thursday ©vi Jan. 1$.
D. C. Sanborn© wou a $415 shot gun
on Ida dogs. Tho gun Is ou exhibi­
tion at the store of Goodyear &amp; Co.
Tr.e M. E.-aocial will be entertained
by Mrs. 0. D. Spalding and Mrs. Striker
at the residence of tlio former on Wed­
nesday Jan 18.
Mrs. Clement Smith entertained
about fifty of her lady friends with a
tea party last Tuesday evening. A very
pleasant time was reported by those
who attended. We haven’t heard
from the gentlemen who stayed at
home.
\
Jne Meal! cut bi* foot severely last
Friday. lie 8cvemt“tTe main artefy
and os urliad to walk some distance,
came very near bleeding to death be­
fore ho reached the house. Dr. Tim­
merman tied the arteries and he is re­
covering.
Friday night an old barn owned by
Mrs. H. J. KehfiOld was discovered to
be on fire. A span of horsea owned by
Wm. Hitchcock, also a cow and quan­
tity of feed was in the.barn at the time
The building burned m&gt; rapidly that all
were consumed. The barn was insur­
ed and it is rumored that the horses
wcre*also. The origin of tho fire is not
known.
The old Centra! House has been di­
vided into three apartments. One is
already occupied by Blanchard’s res­
taurant; a second will soon lie, by Geo.
Simpson, who will still continue to rob
hungry children of their bread, and
sufiering women of tbe necessaries of
life by dealing out liquid cusseduess to
the "Lords of Creation." The third
will probably be occupied ns a billiard
hall.
On Wednesday tbe pioneers began to
flock into town in tho morning, and
by noon Union Hall was packed full.
Dinner was served at twelve o’clock,
the company took about two hours for
the stomach's aake, and to talk over,
old times; "Auld Lang Sine"'was then
Rung by a male quartette. Rev, A. A.
-Khappen delivered the address, giving
a history of the first settlers of Barry
Co., o( their trials and also inuny
laughable incidents of pioneer life
which was listened to with grqat inter­
est by all present, The elder remem­
bers tbe time when a bag was partly
filled and thrown across the back of an
old i$»rse; tiow he sat on that bag, and
rode through tho woods to mill part of
the time,falling off tlio rest of tho time,
At tlie close of the address the quar­
tette sang "Home Sweet Home” and
soon tiiey ware od their way to that
home viiich many had carved out of
the wilderness ; that home endeared to
them by the associations of neatly half
a century.

BISH ARK.

.edeUhiV.

C’harle*
mill yard.
.
John Gay has a new wind mill to pioneer meeting or Wednesday, and
draw water.
all enjoyed themselves.
H. Bristow has gone to Ohio to see
Charley Sackett Im* returned from
Omahn, and will take possession of his
.Rheuben Jones is building au addi­ farm in Sanfield, in the spring.
tion to his house.
Hrs. Calvin. Barns, fell Sunday eve­
The farmers are hauling wood to tbe ning and broke her ankle, but is doing
Creek at a lively rate.
us well as can be expected.
W, W. Cole ia doing a lively business
Old snow made us a call on Tuesday
in the insurance line.
night, and we could hear sleigh bell*
CIirs. Nickerson han a ssousin from on Wednesday, in every direction.
,N. Y. visiting him.
John Cramer and Geo. Bybaugh are
A social was hcltT at Charley Clapk'a in Germany- visiting and will be nt
home about the first of, next month.
Friday night, receipts $8.
The primary department of school
A socio/ will beheld atC. Butlers
dosed.on Tuesday. Miss Della Pal-*
this .week Friday night.
Chat-lea Tuckerman has bought 90 mCrton wiU commence again on Mon­
acres of land of Chas. Baker.
day.
Frank Hilbert has sold the hard­
Charlie Baker sawed 46 logs into
ware he bad in bis store, to L. Faul,
lumber Monday afternoon.
Four persons were taken into the and (Lewis started on Thursday 'for
Congregational church at.their prepa- Detroit to complete his stock.
Some of our boys that went to the
Uiry meeting.
John Tasker bits bought onte acre of pioneer meeting instead of taking din­
ground where.liis sorgum mill stands, ner with the pioneers, went to the
of Geo, Tompkins, paying therefor ware house with shnckels on..
The Rev. Bridenstine preached at the
$100.
There will bo a donation at the M. E. center last Sunday night, and will com­
church on Wednesday night, Jan. 18tb, mence a protracted meeting* at the
for Elder Tanner. A good time is ex­ Kilpatrick church on Tuesday night.
pected.
About a dozen teams have been
A debate nt the Briggs school house hauling lumber to Morgan, to ship to
this week Friday night, female* on Grand Rapids. The all live in hopes
oue side and male* on the other. The of batter roads, as there is about 75,­
question is: "Had women ought to 000 ft*, yet to haul.
vote."
John Summ will soon move on his
Mrs, J. T. Welcher iihd two cats that farm, to get his wood for another year
would get into the stove oven to keep and prepare to make sugar. He is go­
warm when tha fire was down, tlio ing to build a shop and do blacksmith­
door was shut on them nnd they were ing, to pass away time.
roasted to a crisp when discovered.
Nell.
Some time ngo Wm. Jewell laid a
k'ALAXO.
road between Daniel McCarthy’s and
Charles Edison's to tiie north meadow
Wm. Fowler hail’ to be taken to the
farm to accomodate .Covel, Foreman
and Campbell. Some parties have ap­ county farm.
Mr.
Wm. Hoover has a son, from O.,
pealed the case to the town board.
The News made three mistake* in visiting him.
Forty-seven numbers were sold at
my item* last week: first, it made mo
say that Mr. Youngs from Canada hud A. Spencers dance and oyster supper
bought the Miller farm it should have lost week Thusday.
Mr. Gee. Matteson has one hog salt­
said Y'ourex. Second, J. B. Norris has
has tin addition to his barnit should ed down for tho spring; it is under the
have said a well nt his barn. Third, ice. It seems as if it would be cheaper
Frank Wing and Elsie Stephens were to ditch the mud hole.
Will Karrick talks of going west iu
married, it should have said Frank
the spring, but from all appearance I
Wing and Elsie Cleveland.
H. H.
should judge he was going to einmi­
grate north, by the frequent visits he
MORE ITEMS.
makes in that direction.
Our January thaw has come early.
Silver Star.
John McCollum has a child sick with
SUBURBS.
sore throat.
Willis Humphrey and wife are visit­
Snow once more.
ing friends in the east, nnd are having
Allen Carrand mother have gone to
a good time with the friends of his
Union City, to sojourn for a season,
boyhood.
Wm. Feister, better known as Billy,
Will Miller says the one that put that
little fellow on tbe Christmas tree for has gone up North to seek his fortune.
Mr. Mallett of Grand Rapids, son-in­
him was not a very sweet Scented nurse
or they would have cliaugcd the (what- law of Alex Price, with his family vis­
do-you-call it) on jt, before they ited at Mr. Price’s during last week,
returning last Saturday.
brought it out in public.
There was a small charivari at
Young Mike Kearney was shelling
preacher
Price’s, last Friday evening,
corn with a high-toned sheller, and un­
dertook to grind corn and sausage nt in honor of the marriage of Lis daugh­
ter.
Rather
thin, wasn’t it boys ?
the same time, and now bo goes around
Probably it is not generally known
on crutches and one finger Lail stripiied
that
a
series
of
interesting literary ex­
off nearly up to the elbow. Bad cess to
ercises are held on Saturday evenings,
the bloody machine.
'
each week at the Troxel school house.
Rat Terrier.

EAST MAPLE GROVE.
Lumber moveth not.
Dogs run free this year.
Taxes are nearly all paid,
Cough and colds abundant.
The poultry trade is waning.
Everybody complaining of bad colds.
Who can safely bet on tlie weatherT
Mra. Amos Downs is now considered
better.
A whopping pile of wood in J, Wheel­
ers woods,
Boas time to break wagons, and
many are trying it.
What paper will you take this year!
is the question now in order.
Clias, Sackett will soon manipulate
his own farm in Sunfield.
Mra. Alvord, of Gratiot Co., is visit­
ing her daughter, Mrs. Will Gorham.
Ibid, what can I say, aud be brief, to
cancel your woe, and soothe your
grief.
Mrs. Mary Gillett and Miss Jqne Gor­
ier of Kent Co., are visiting relatives iu
this place.
,
At tills date, snow is falling beauti­
fully. A little good sleighing would
enlived business.
Marion Prince, n lad about 21 years
old is early learning what the word af-‘
fllctiou means. He is in very poor
health.
West Sunfield, come down with your
very best, let Tur News sparkle with
your "genius” let tlie outside world
tremble at the touch of your quill,
force tiie picket lines of wrong, stand
firmly, fight vaiivntly ou the aide of

rightShould I attempt to write out the dif
ferent characters of the neighborhood
and yet call no names,
the people
would aort tiwcnarlves each one to
peculiarities mentioned.
Should I
speak of extreme aclflahneas one aays
dial means me.
Should I question

WrITIST.

James Perry is paying cash for saw
logs.
Our January thaw has caught cold
and turned into a snow storm.
Ayoungman of Maple Grove is at
tbo point of loosing a moustache cup.
Al. and Wm. Rrooks cut, with across
cut saw, one cord of wood in just 27
minutee. Who can beat it f
•
H. Eldred and wife who have been
visiting relatives at Hillsdale, returned
ou Thursday of last week.
Montie Matteson and Mark Wilcox
have gone into partnership.and bought
a ferret. They are now making the
rabbits suffer.
Emory Buck and family who have
been stopping in this vicinity, for tbe
past few days, have returned to their
home in Nashville.
Died:—On Thursday of last week at
his residence in Battle Creek, Trione
Downs, of heart disease. The funeral
services were conducted at the Norton
school house, on Sunday last, at quo
o’clock, by Rev. Harder of Nashville.
On Saturday night of last week at
the hour of nine a crowd of boys, from
West Kalamo, were seen making their
way from Nashville toward home, so
full of poor gin that they could scarce­
ly tell whether they were a foot or on
horseback.
Some people carry ths ’ idea that a
correspondent don’t havo any hard­
ships to hear, if they had tlio respons­
ibility upon themselves, they would
change their mind immediately. Some
people say that if they could get hold
of that little "pimp" they would yank
every hair out of his head, and others
say that if be cwn&amp; tito their door
yar4.be will get the broom stick over
his back; the girls give him the mitten
and tell him that he has tbe itch and
nine kinds of lice, and yet if you say
anything you are the meanest fellow

Pjetxb

it.glidei
glad v«rti
nIyOr

hi* hand* found a man’s hot and a

and we earuc*lly hope that this day
will be to you tdl,a happy onr4
We have just returned from a t—
WH
। month’* campaign'in the wilds of the
! upper peninsula, and feeling in need lied General Grunt on hi* rnp around
the world.
We found him a very
[ of a little recreation, after climbing
pleasant and jovial man, and were
•
tbe rugged hills and snow clad monuhighly entertniood by the many amus­
tains of this northern clime, have eon a
ing incideiita he related to us concern­
eluded to null tlie latch string for' a
ing his life tin the rocky billows.
short time iu the town of Ontona­
MICHIGAN NEWS.
In ^peaking of t he aoil in this coun­
gon.
.
•
try, will say there is a Variety, that
There are 15,100 colored people in
Circumstances at present are such ns
along the lake shop-, being sandy,
this-state.
.
to prevent us from giving you an ac­
while that on the high kiui*. is elny
There is a well-to-do farmer in Jack- count of our extended trip from the
loam and quite prwinefive.
Some­
sou county, forty-five years old, who south shore of Lake Superior, to the
thing is living done in the way of agri­
deciares ho never voted in his life.
, 'Montreal
'
river. Porcupine mountains,
cultural, but tlie people are for tbe- .
Samuel S. Ward, a prominent and and bouudry line of the state of Michi­
most part miners, hence 'not skilled ii&gt;
wealthy citizen at Port Huron, com­ gan and Wisconsin, though we hope to
tilling the roil. It is thoughtdhat the
mitted suicide. Jan. 7th, taking a dose beside name future day to give yon a
of strychnine.
few incident*, "relative to our travels mineral recourses of Ontonagon county
are richer tlrnn any orlxTin flic unpnr
Two fnmiles of Hollanders arrived at over tbe m ineral ranges of this coun­ peninsula; consisting of copper, iron,
Spring Luke last week, having been 54 try. We will however, endeavor to give lead ami silver.
The copper nrim-s
days on tbe way and twice shipwreck­ yon a . brief outline of Ontonagon, have bcow worked since 1874 although
evidences
exists
of
thi*
v. nrk of «u nned while en route.
.
and surrounding country.
cieut miner, of whose history aoihhig
A telephone wire came iti contact
Ontonagon is a thriving little village, is known, but |ii* oldpiuum! trenches
with a wire used for tbe electric light situated at the mouth of Ontonagon rude stone and-.vnodruiniplmueutsaud • '
in Detroit recently, and set the central river ou the east bank.- and on the masses of copper left apparently hackum! they in re to heavy to be n-innvtelephone office on fire.
south shore of Lake Superior, and is a Cil.give*people the imp';'*9b.:i that it
Tbe contract for printing 20.000 cop­ very healthy and pleasantly located wna the Aztl'c* &lt;&gt;r nioci'd |mild« is that
'
ies of tbe book "Michigan in tlio War” town.
did the work. Their mine* are rude,
.
has been let to tbe state printers, they
An old man at our elbow informs us irregularly disposed shnl’ow pits in
earth,
which
on
being
chared
of
rub.
•
get 08 ernjs per volume.
.
that the government is now spendinga biidi are.ranly found to exc'-vd tho-'
A young man named Goodenungh, large amount of money iu improving exceed the depth of 10 feet, but in
about 17 years of age, nt St. Johns, and making permanent the entrance to some ins!&gt;i:iees reach the depth of 20
committed suicide, Jan. 4th, by hang­ the haibor with a vjew to making it a item. . Various article* have been
foubd in tliem* pita, or iu their Defgbing himself from a ladder in a uarn.
harbor of refuge scceranble to all sized Jmi'liood iiniRUy copper implements,
Frapk Pritchard, a young man of vessels, nnd in all weather. Iris ak.i &gt; tiHi a* chisel*, knives, nrrovv-heuds.
'
Battle. Creek, aged 25. took strychnine destined to become before many year*, etc. A huge wooden Mmwl originally
with suicidal intent, Jan. 5th, but was a large iron niaiiithtU'.. leg nnd *!iip-‘ a’Hiiit three feet in diameter, which had
probably been used for Ixiiliug Water
saved by a stomach pump. The cause ping point, ns iron in huge &lt;pi;i:.to.- j- w»x r« &lt;-ent)y taken from one of those
of bis desire to die was despondency.
known to exist in the sontiien^ por­ pi;*, soibe timber which is found in
sumr’ «»1 il»v i xw
brat the
There is a break io funeral hack rat^s tion of tbe county.
,u&gt;ark»r&lt;if nn ax, the Idt &lt;:. which must
in Grand Rapids, and prospects now
The town affords an excellent Union haw m en r.Uitir two indies in width '
indicate that ere long a man can attend school, one large saw inill.fon churches,
If we should imk who were the men,
the funeral of a friend without mort­ five saloons, (cannot say what class of and where did they lire, and where
k
in &gt;
hut twl tlu*to
gaging his house and lot to pay the liquor, have not sampled) several good have they r*
livvnyl
we would *«• •« ‘king ■» i . ,t i:iii&lt;l*
.
b ackman.
hotels, stores ami groceries, and any vsliogquestions, Ii!:«i «•!!«• '• O'-tthl
The state band tournament to be amount of handsome belles and old leave us in total dnrkncx*, tlmu^u l.-un • _•
held nt Jackson this year will lie iui
•
maids whn an; waiting patiently and observation we would place them m:t»ny
'
der the auspices of the Knights of hoping against an impossibility that general inns Lack. Qt 1 -------- - —
Iv know
earth, we areigiioraul,
Pythias band of that city.
Tbe their ship may yet enter port.
or believe front utiserv................ili.. it such
dales me June? and 8, and the $1,000
As we first Entered the. town we were a nic * of giant* did nurintly exist* a*
for prizes, etc., has been guaranteed.
struck withthe beauty of the thrifty we know roo that monmin men tiMtally
A ghost 'up in North Star, Gratiot mountain ash, growing Spontaneously have more than one wife, and as we
have ber-n told by our bos* tlwt Chriscounty, tried to scare a small boy, but along the streets ana waving in nearly toplier Columbite wa» ilie first man
the s. b. bad his pockets full of stones every door yard. Our attention was that discovered America,
But perhaps our letter is getting
and pelted die ghost fora half a mile next brought to bear upon the large
on the run. That ghost will not re­ crowds of drunken men (it being pay lengthy: when.we writri to TiZk News
we are like a young man writing U&gt;
sume buisuess until his sore* heal.
day nt tbe mines) reeling and hilling his sweetheart, don’t know when to
An inmate of the state nsiyltiiii for around ns nearly us fast as bravo men । stop, but allow us to any Imlore closing
the insane, at Kalamazoo, attacked and fell, beneath tbe stars tuid stripes, and that we nie Va-uig well treated by thj'se
stabbed Dr. Adams, one of the mem- the stars and bars at, the battle of the northern people, anti the country suit*
us to a, T.
ben* of the assylum staft of physicians. Wilderness, though laurels never bore
Now os the old year Las passed and
Monday, the wound proved fatal and them down.
gone, never to return again, let u* all
turn over anntberpage in the book of
there is considerable excitement there
For ‘lie last two or three years tlie life* great hisloiy mid endeavor if
about the matter.
immigration to this shore has been very possible to perform better the duties
Dr. C. J. Hilliker, of Harrison, start­ great^n* the place Is widely known and that, devolve upon ns. The dinner bell
ed to see a patient oat in the country, noted for its healthy climate and beau­ is ringing and we smell turkey.
Youra,
but not returning on timescearch was tiful scenery, hence during the sum­
z.
V. D. Anprkws.
instituted, and bis conveyance, etc., mer and autumn season of the year, is
was found in the woods; but Hilljker visited by large numbers of tourists,
Thp Milwaukie Wis.,.Evening Wis­
was not found, and foul play is sus­ invalids aud pleasure seekers of all de­ consin says; "In all our experience we
pected.
nominations, and from all climes be­ have never heard so many favorable
The great "Chandler farm” near Lan­ yond the briny waves, and from near­ reports from all classes as we have,
sing, where the ’.ate Zach Chandler ly every state, city and hamlet in the concerning St. Jacobs Oil.
"BUCHUPAJBA. ”
was engaged in reclaiming a great Union.
New, quick, couipletc cure 4 dart, urinary
swamp from which to make a noble
The citizens are at present rejoicing aflecUonn, Nuartbig.frequent &lt;»r difficult urina­
farm, is now alleged to be a rapidly go­ over their new line of transportation: tion, kldnev diwavs. SI. ut druggist*. Midi.
ing back to its original doudition, viz., The Ontonagon &amp; Brule River R. R. Depot, JAMES E. DAVIS &amp; CO., DeireU,
Mich.
______
___
a huge nnd unpromising jungle.
which is now being pushed rapidly for­
Occasional.
ANNOYANCE AVOIDED. '
Thirty farmers living near Poitlnnd, ward, and when completed will make
Gray hairs are honorable but tbcfr premature in
Ionia
county,
have
signed
an
agrecappearance
U
annoying.
Parker
’
s
Hair
B
xImuu
direct connections with tho Chicago,
EAT05 COUNTY.
ment.to take up all stock found run - Green Bay &amp;. North Western R. R. prevent* tlie mmoysnee by promptly restoring
the youthful color.
ning at large in their township con­ which will give tho Ontonagon people
Too many New Year’s calls un.de
. For disease* of the nerves, Innin, blood and
Fred Hamilton of Eaton Rilpids, sick. trary to law. This course is a move in a much sinter and quicker line of com­ lungs, s superior medicine to all other* U
the direction of no fences, which in law munication and transportation from Brown's Iron Bitters.
Mrs. Levi Lemmon of Shay town,
are
not
necessary.
the out side world.
dislocated her shoulder, by falling from
Last week Wednesday, while Detroit
The town nt present is supporting
a buggy, a few days ago.
The house of a Mr. Hoover, near officers were taking the Norrisnrtrder- two weekly newspapers, nut it is only
Hoytville, was burned New Years ersto Jackson, tho prisoners, Clark a question of time when the opposition
night including contents. Insured for nnd Graham, each drew revolvers and paper, The Herald will have to suc­
tried to intimidate the officers into let­ cumb to the Ontonagon Miner, one of
$500.
Olivet college has received $5,OOo by ting them escape, but after a short the oldest nnd best mining journals
fight
they were disnrmed*and conclud­ pnlilisned on the Lake.
the will of the late Wm. A. House, of
ed that the officers understood their
In politics, the town is Republican by
Kalamazoo, who died recently from
biz.
a small majority, in religion, Catholic.
the kick of a horse.
Tho Pontiac Enterprise wants an ap­ Thu Presbyterians are supporting n
On Sunday last, os Alvin N. Jones, of
Delta, was crossing Grand River, two prentice "who does not use liquor or minister nnd endeavoring to do some­
miles above Grand Ledge, Iris boat cap­ tobacco in any form and does not know thing iu the way of saving souls, hut
sized and he was drowned. He leaves more than the proprietor.” Anyone their efforts seem to be fruitless to a
knowing of an angel idiot of the mate certain extent, those who attend church
three daughters.
The snpervisors.jt&gt;f Eaton county .un­ sex who is out of work will do a truly apparently go more to see and be ^seeu,
good
editor a favor by for wanting the than for tlie good they might receive
animously voted to submit to tho peo­
ple a question of appropriating $40,000 thing to Pontiac—with ail charges pre­ therefrom. On Sundays when boats
paid.
—
Evening News.
with which to build a new court house.
enter the harbor, so eager are the peoOn Sunday night, as the Adrian fire­ pin to go to tho dock, that it is nearly
The amount named was a compromise.
men
were
responding to an alarm of. impossible for tbe presiding Elder to
A trial occupying three days was held
before Judge Jennings of Charlotte last fire, they attempted to take water from succeed in getting a hearing. 0» one
week, relating to the appointment of a a reservoir near Broad St. M.E. church, of these occasions tbe congregation
guardian for Mrs. Elisabeth Milburn and a lad named-Riley Force fell into consisted of four, two ladies and two
of Eaton. Tbo judge will render his it. The reservoir was 20 feet deep, 29 gentlemen. The minister made a few
feet in diameter, and contained 10 feet remarks appropriate to the occasion
decission at some future time.
The Republican of Charlotte firmly of water, and of course was asdark as aud-closed die meeting by making the
asserts that there ii^not a case of diph­ a blind negro, Clark Aldrich, one of Announcement that there would be
the steamer company, bravely plunged
Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago,
theria, scarlet fever orsmall pox with­
service* tlie next Sunday nt tlie usual
in and paved the lad, though he had a
in its precinet*, and wants tbe fact
1 hour, providing tha^^no boats ar­ Backache, Soreness of tho Chest,
hard time doirg it.
Gout,
Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swell­
rived. (Missionaries wanted!)
noted, so that the city may not acquire
A few days ago, Us a train on the1
ings and Sprains, Burns and
During our stay at this place we have
a bad name among her sister towns.
Port
Hurou
&amp;
Northwestern
railroad
Scalds,
General Bodily
1 been greatly interested in watebing
A society for the prevention of cruel­
Pains,
ty to animals could find considerable was approaching a badge, tbe engin- the way and manner that these north­
tftrsawa
woman
on
the
bridge
and
in
ern ]*eople make use of dog*, which is Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted
work to do in Grand Ledge. Tbe oth­
er day a fellow who bears the historic danger of being killed. Tliere was no' similar to that of the Esquimaux.
Feet and Ears, and all other
and tbe brakes1 Tim dogs are bitched up iu spans, then
name of Smith, was seen shamefully way for her to get
Pains and Pahas.
beating and misusing one of his horse* would not stop the train, therefore tho1 attached to muall sleigh or train, and
th at bod fallen down, the animal being engineer yelled to her to "lie down.” work performed with them as easily
too weak from lack of food to keep ou She obeyed, lying upon the ends of the and handy ns it is with homes in our
tics just outside of tbe rail. Tne train country. It w hard for one to believe
its feet
A sad and fatal accident occurred at passed over her and she was saved,' but that these animals pos*«M such great
SOLD BY ALL DA!
the saw mill of Hiram Overshire, at ; she vows she will hereafter swim a power aud knowledge, until the f»-ts
Bellevue last Monday in which a mill, river before she will try to cross it ou a are proven by witne*&lt;ing the feats
hand named Martin O'Donnell, met J
which they perform. The first place of
few days after, a peddler’s pack, con­
taining towels, table linens, etc„ was
found in the same place, but placed
tliere after the watch and chain were.
No one has yet put in a claim for the
property, and the owner or owners aud
the way the goods came there is a mys­
tery.

‘r

QdHIkil

RHEUMATISM,

—---

�co
UJ

3

the tree. UH acme

had not half exhausted the do­

i an than his daughter. Her mouier. a i
to
V
I lineal dosoendaut. from Benjamin j
' Franklin, had contributed by her tai- i
Then, after distributing the gifts to ; ents and charms largely to the soocess '
—- I of her husband in politics, law and so- ’
all the other children from her throne
at every ! cial advancement. The* happy bride- i -j—a
-■—r~
T "
on a high chair, and laughing
L *‘
fresh kus undertbe bit u.
fell sound asleep at last, w.w .
} —------- ;— ------ - ------------- - —- —
,
candy in one hand, a box of china
dish- —
families
The marriage ■i
—--r—.of Lonisiana.
■ ,
Sm)&gt;, Doom, BlindH, Jefferson Nails, Glass, Putty, Paint*.
ca in the other, and hr—’— *J ’
1------------ ----------------- * *v--------*■ *—”*‘—* 1
»°£Sk
otUf»irs! . cS™S«r
M Tb.....
PnBido
Castor,.Sperm, Golden,
breast a wax doll, and a
-------R—
.---------------------.—’,t.- «r«7
,—m,m! ' Oils, Varnishes, Color-, Bru-hes, Etc.
stories, and a paint-box, and a bottle of bcr of the Cabinet, the foreign minis- i Black, Linseed and Kerosene Oils.
cologne, and-----tern, the Senators, ia fine, all the
Apple
Parers,
Farm
Bhb there! what is the
attended,
me use of naming
namin" notabilities
«UU4«“'W’» of
u‘ Washington
nnaauigtvu sm
-icuucu. ~
_ Shovels,
..
- Spades,
*
. ' Forks,.
&lt; Hues,■ Snaths,
- -----------&gt;—
rr—-—
- ------ »---------in ------upon blessed and were enthused by tbe happy t&gt;e l is. rence Wire, Well and--Cistern Pumps. Wood and Iron,
the possessions that poured
j -—J *Matty that night? Let
. nuvro S.
----- ------------——---- -----------“d“0O,1• PiPe-Point8- Cylinder ua&lt;i ripe. sink,, &amp;c.
?!
o
l:i»d?.n^
tov-shopluli; for never had any child genial, suitable, and felicitous.
rooh»ChrUtrnm Er. before.
After their mxrrtage the yonng
____________
AGENT
FOR-

K
a
2

i getting sleepy, and wm quite
his rubber doll and rattle, be­
gan to frat. She ran to get him and
brpugbt him oat into the mall; and it
occurred to her that a seat ou that fur
robe would be a capital thing for the
baby while she pursued her pleasure.
And no sooner said than done; she
climbed in herself, lifted the baby over
and set him dawn; smoothing the fur
and saying "Pobr'pu»y” to it. The baby did just as she did, nnd
patted the fur and said "Pussh,” and
cuddled down hl&gt; Hub «l«&gt;*py heul
_____ 1.
__ ___ __ ___ 1__
upon it and let Matty go
on opening
this tiny box, and pulling out that tiny
drawer, till all at once the grocer mother ro'hlppy”'M^“ Wktto^'wra
“d rook up their rraidraou ta
—
- - boy’s quick ring at the area bell u .be bung oier her two children th»t Puru. where they wjoarnud for «ime
The Lightest Running and most Durable Machine in use.
startled her so that she jumped, and, night, andfelt thnlthegrratchNt which month*. Their nmi wot ample *nd
hurriedly scrambling out, she hit the had been the de,I re id her heart, and
clrc.e of friend, and araociatoe
iceiii,
IJshall aim to keep none but ui.i,
first vine,
class gwun,
goods, nuu
and «ni
sell them
great lid and down it fell and shut; fast.
.
uc .“A. UUIUEUI.
U4 uci eyes.
_ —----- — ——
,
— ------- .
deM
Cnll nnd see me when needing hardware.
Matty came very near scranfaior splendid Chrbamu
boxhtm U wwt. with ~
«”» “■» “™ « at « small profit.
But shr -thought it wouldn’t hi-*
burt- *"• it, tarred chcmln and crowns, wo only their married life ran smoothly, ,
&gt;uld
keep
stnallost part ol her Christina..- nntu
disasters,
political.
seo- ,
baby for a minute, if he wou
-------r I
still whileshe opened it.again;; and she Harriet JrcW.t bpqfTord. in lauths' I kiona.1 and financial, feu upon them and '
here, and Companion.
*
families. ----------------At tho breaking
of
called out that sister was there,
-their
------------_out
-----HAVE you seen those
listened to hear him cry? but beard
I our civil war. Robert J. Walker attached ; *-.-*■
; himself to the fortunes of the North, j
nothing—for the baby hid gone fast
OM Veulro.
j His son-in-law felt himself compelled, j!
asleep ou the soft fur. ana even the
: bv even* obligation of honor. State nride '
dropping of the lid bad not waked him.
So Matty stooped again to Her task of tames worn by Venetian ladies trace and duty to the oncientfamiiv of which
opening the chest, and tugged and their origin entirely to Venetian cru- he was a member, to identify himself i
------ JUST IN AT-----j
tugged, and pushed with her shoulders saders and commerce in the East Be- | with the South.
an tipailed with her hands, and wished fore 1071 the Venetians were comTheconseguent alternations and disZAZ&gt;5TTT?T')
O
Z\rT'T'TT7'T'&gt; C&lt;
withall her heart she had let the chest
alone.
^’r‘^ir
“Oh. he’ll be smothered!” she ex­ Selvo, married a Constantine Ducas. to her mother and family in PhiladelIf not, do so :it ^nce and be happy.
claimed. ’‘He’ll be smothered!” And She brought with her Eastern costumes nhia. and there resided for several year*
she burst out crying and ran to find her and luxuries, which made deep im- in seclusion. In the meantime Mr. Rob- ,
mother, screaming: "The baby! Oh, pressibn upon her simple-minded con- ert J. Walker had lost by the invest- ;
the baby!”
temporaries in Venice; she was wont to ment in a railroad enterprise the Jargs .
Just
outside
foot
-------------r- the vestibule
. —her----; waj-h in scented water, lo cover her fortune he had acquired by his nrofes- |
slipped on the frozen dripping from an body with perfumes and rich unguet s. sional success, and at his death left his |
In this lire we are bound to lead nil competition, and our
icicle overhead, nnd she fell from top
—
toP 1 an(
andj lo
to Lathe
bathe her face every morning family in n&amp;riun
narrow circumstances. II'
His
ist larger and better selected than ever before. It '
to bottom of Ute slops and lay on the
ith d
ow gathered expre.-sly for her by |I widowed daughtered.
t116 w
with
dew
daughtered. despite her ex t ntock• just
j*-- -in*—
sidewalk
senseless.
slaves. The chroniclers contemptu- | treme reserve,
her OIU1CO.
reserve, could not fail to attract
attract consists in part, of
---i.------ w.7
----- t
ill.
.
.. ber
Util
Mrs. Watrous. who bad been kept ouaJ_ gpe;
...tho orange water she &lt; the attention. Bvmn.thi. sympathy
and interest
and interest
nf i ot ।
much loneer then ehe wlehed by Cousin proli,„(y
of* he/porFimod
rlovi-n, the
friends of the father and mother.
' — irftimed gloves,
........................
Kato, came running up, only to meet
her aiikon vratt, and of the gofd atiok Many advances were made by gentle­
knw husband
hnchand at
nt the
tint door,
Hrwtx hurrying
hurrrmrr for
frtr ,
•
. .
.
* » .
her
she made use of to convey her food to men of wealth and prominence to en­
the doctor. For he hod turned the cor- UO1
her mouth, and they attributed to tho gage her favorable consideration of pro­
OUR STOCK OFner iust in season to seo Matty fall and jadgment
posals ot marriage. She resisted, for
’
it of God on tliis excessive
to pick her up, himself almost turned loxJry
j
luxury her
declining health
and some time, all Bitch advances. At last,
to stone with terror. And then Mrs. early ’ death.
however,
her
friends
and
society
were
Yet, could they but
Watrou.
into 'hc lraure. to finddno have
„„„ witnessed .
o„
a .few
centuries astounded by tho report that she hail
child UBCOMCIOM »nd the other child : |,tta lhB hoM l)1M0 l,1IllriM w„uu accepted the hand of a gentleman di«18 FULL AND COMPLETE.
gone; and she fainted dead away her- have,
...
uot only over the
fair ones tinguished in the profession and politi­
The larbest line of Beaver Shawls in two counties
of Venice, but likewise over the cal world, but cursed with a deformity
You can imagine what a moment it 1 men. they would with reason have and mutilation as repulsive and revolt­
A
large
variety
oflteady Made Cloaks; also Cloakings of all
was for Mr. Watrous when he came quaked for the well-being of the'r re­ ing as that of the veiled Mokanna of
back
vol* with
wuu the doctor—his wife coming public. Tho
The rich dresses of Venetian Moore’s Lalla Rookh. In boyhood ho shades and qualities.
Ohl other .WOOD on v to wroxm tor bee
„ wd| tn„,.n lo Ul nil in the hod fallen into the fire on his face, and
300 Pieces of New Prints. An endless variety of Blank’ts
bnh* nnd Matty .till .tunned with tho canv„M o( Tiu„„. J.„,| Veronese, nnd bo burned it as to present even now, in
A big line of Underwear and Flannels.
ML And thl, wm tl.c h»ppy Chn.tu
,lowi
,lcBre* theii n-lvanced age, a most pitable and hidontM.Ere ho had t.romued httmelI!
, k.wotod ho.d-dro-.ex the rwhne.. ol ous aspect
Customers are plenty, and we are too busy to enumerate
Those who are accustomed to inako further at present.
,
I
»1U“ “h'1 satins, and, moreover,
tor said, at last; he only feared con- thoir lo-^r.tiowjn .- trains, of which summer visits and sojourns at Long
cuxion ol the brain now. but poMibly L.hrisloIo*
lloru &lt;OTOp|aiM lhu,; Branch have not failed to observe in tho
they might avoid that -«nly Mrs. .._'.[arr,od women hare etceeding long parlors of the West End Hotel, on tho
Watr°n. mU.t control b.n»H and bend j
thBir vl.,tmenU. whlcb dr^ promenades and drives of that delight­
ail her etrength to MaUy. reoorery; ।
lho
nll wb|ch lhin
S
ful resort, the unhappy victim of this
and then it traj evidon that Matty disb5liaJ...
„stmraganco ol
cruel misfortune, in a stout genUeman
knew what had happened to the baby ■
,
j jcwe,
dre„ of good figure, of dignified and grace­
herald, and tbe rooner Ma|j coufd „
bl raln „„
.sheboid, mid
ful carriage, but with a face so blurred,
«umpr.iarj- law. ol latte. scarred and distorted as almost to con­
ceal and abolish all human resemblance,
l0Rhi^hd?Ih&lt;?!II^n K.tn which the evil had run. A, an instance and repel with disgust all advance to
Sf obil
seoentricitv m Venice, we closer observation and acquaintance.
“« high-heeled
boou
aunJ •‘4 ’»"&gt;•
Invented
originMly
tc Upon that gentleman’s arm leans a
lovely woman, whose pale face still re­
Mr.iSSrou hadTraced a neighbo’r: I £•£ ‘^u’^w ° taro
tains tho most relined and beautiful ex­
and had Marched tho boMC from root - “ i^J .i„e7|1,. th.
«nd pression, and whose harmonious feat­
excessive size that the soles and ures
।
and lithe and graceful figure may
to basement, every room, every closet, heels were frequently over a foot |
even the cellar: and then he Lad run to in height; consequently a Venetian 1bo quickly recognized as those of tlie
beautiful Miss Walker, who twenty-fire
tho nearest police-station with the ba­
lady bad great difficulty in locomotion. years
•
before, had enthralled all behold­
by’s photograph, to call out tho force in
and required two maid-servants and Jers and given her the unquestioned title
a public searen.
two man-servants to accompany her on ।to tho sweetest and prettiest girl in
I hIiiiII commence n
His wife sat there like a statue when
her walks as a support from falling; Washington City. The marked atten­
he came back. . Cousin Kate was doing
and to prevent this folly and unncccs- tion
।
of the brilliant company at tbo
everything she could have done; for
sary expenditure froquentslatntes were West End. through which they passed,
with this fearful calamity overtaking
passed: but. says one Government de- ;
both her children at once. Airs. Wat­ cree, “tlie ladies of Venice pay. but ,and tho eagerness of all persons to ex­
rous waa so overcome that she could little heed to our orders.” Into'their change courtesies and engage in con­
hardly move; she could only sit still baths these devotees of fashion would versation with tho gentloman.and lady,
the attention and respect with which
and feel an unspeakable longing for
throw musk, amber, aloes, myrrh, ,
Mattv to open her sweet eyes, to open. cedar leaves, lavender, mint, etc.; everything which fell from the gentle­
man wits received by all listeners, be­
her dear lips, and whisper just one word
. i their pale cheeks they would rduge tokened tho high consideration in which
about the baby. But no; Matty lay
' u ith paint, nnd during the night they he was held. To draw him into con­
stone-still.
would place slices of raw veal, which versation and drink in every utterance
It was certainly an awful hour; one
child perhaps dying; the other child had been soaked for several hours in appeared to be the ambition of every
milk, over theft- faces, to dispel the pal­ one.
lost; the neighborhood in a wild alarm;
lor incident on dissipation. In short,
the police bringing two lost children to
-Who is that couple?” would be tho
hundreds of strange recipes are extant
And continue the same until Feb. l&amp;tb, 1882, at wh5ch
the door, for whom other parents were
for preparing unguents to make their natural inquiry of all strangers—"that
in equal sorrow—nnd all in the middle
tim my Brick Store will be for sale or rent
hands and leeft soft, make their nails terribly mutilated and defaced gentle­
of it the Christmas bells rang out from
man
and
that
unhappy
daughter
who
rosy and their akin glossy. In the se­
hangs upon his arm?’1 The ready an­
tho ohnrch-lower not far away.
clusion
of
their
rooms
the
Venetian
Then Matty opened her great dark
Indies gave much time to music, and to swer would be, that gentleman is the
eyes wide, os if ju-t waking from a
ablc-t, most eloquent and impressive
pleasant nap. "There’s tbe chime!” the singing of marlrignls; they took but lawycx and
orator ol
Philadel­
little
exercise, except in gondolas; they
N making this *r»Pi t Cost Cash Sale, 1 must say that nllparties owing me,
she said. "See if the baby will------ O
delighted in chess, nnd even in this phia, who for many years has led that
either by note or account, will be expected to walk up to the Captain’s office .
mamma!” as it all rushed over her, "the
bar.
and
is
the
most
agreeable
and cap­ and Hettle nt once.
baby! the chest! the new chest!” And modest pastime their extravagance was tivating gentlemen of the very polished
unlimited, for richly-wrought gold an
she foil back again into the arms of the
silver men, set with cbalcedon, jasper society of that relined city. The lady
doctor, who instantly began to pour a
and jewels, or ot the finest crystal. is the daughter of Robert J. Walket, so
cordial down her throat.
distinguished in our political and finan^
In another minute her father had would alone satisfy their taste. Dearly cud history.
did they love all games of chance, for
dashed downstairs and had pressed the
rusty old spring of tho great chest, nnd many authorities tall us tharln Venice
Tho Washington Republican adds to
tossed up the lid. aud thoro. cuddled cards were first invented; tarucchi was the above the following concerning the
down all rosy and warm in tho white the favorite game, for which elegantly- Sentlemau spoken of, whose name has
fur of tho robe, lay the baby, as sound designed cards were executed and
ot heretofore been mentioned:
asleep as if ho were in his little crib— stamped, as the law demanded, with
Hon. Benjamin Harris Brewster, tho
for the moth-holes in the red leather the Senatorial permission. It wm not eminent Philadelphia lawyer, who has
that was-stretched under tho open work long before the evils of gambling mani­ been in attendance upon the sessions of
As tbe .Stock in nil fresh. having al I been bought during September and October
top bad given him plenty of air to fested themselves, for a decree of the the Criminal Court this week, bears
last, at figures that no dealer in this section cn:i duplicate. Buying a* I do tor
Council of Ten, in 1505, prohibited
breathe.
through life the marks of an accident mv Big Rapid* store aud this it give** me tlie inside track over a small dealer
With what an ecstacy his. father games of chance, the sale of cards and by which he was severely burned in t he
caught him and sprang up those stairs, dice, and obliged servants to denounce face when only one year old, though iU
to put him in his mother s anus! And their masters who had gambling par­ effects have been greatly alleviated by
his mother seized him, covering him ties in their- houses. Yet this must transplantation of tho skin, for which
have soon been repealed, for nowhere
with kisses and tears, till he set up a
purpose several journeys to Paris were
lively roar; and then everybody laughed, &lt;hd gambling go to greater lengths than ! maae. He was boruin'1816. Ho speaks
aud everybody cried, nnd Matty joined nt Venice in later years; the Ridottio deliberately without other memoranda
Ou ray Clothing, Unix, &lt;&gt;]M, Roots aud Shoes
the chorus with her little pipe, and her and Cnsinl of Venice were far greater , than references to authorities, as is the
father fell on his knees and said: "Let hells than e .en Monaco or Homburg.— j‘ practice of the bar in Pennsylvania gen­ Will astonish you, while all the Dry Good* nnd Groceries will soon follow in
/rtucr't Ala'jasinc.
the some track.
•
us tliank,God.r'
erally. His memory is wonderful, many
And there never was such a Christ­
—A ninety-seven pound Pennsyl- ; long quotations being rendered by its.
mas Eve as that one. after all. Tho
;
aid
alone,
and
he
is
well
read
in
tho
neighbors came Hocking in; tho church- vafeia girl has a beau that tips tbo beam
llteralnre of his profession. His law
OU are especially invited to brine all yonr Butter, ■'figgo, Lard and Dried
belw rang another chime
if in con­ at 310. She keeps him in attendance
library is worth between fifty and sixty
Apples to me as I have several lumber camps at Big Rapids u» supply, aud
gratulation for tho lost that was found. every night up to twelve o'clock, seat­ I thousand dollars, and it lines the walls
nm in a situation to pay you higher prices than other dialers can.
Mrs. Watrous could only continue to ed comfortably in an arm chair. She
sit still and sob till tbe doctor said Mat- explained to a companion, under th i bf his comfortable law offices In Walnut
tr was all right if no new symptoms seal of secrecy, that beneath the cushion Street. In his private office a fire of
should make their appearance, partly ah® kept her autumn leaves in a book, t anthracite coal, over which a solation i rF0 my old cnMonim. whom I have sold goods daring the past IS
to prevent which, Matty must on no and a* soon as they were sufficiently ! of liine has been t&gt;oured. is kept burn- i -1. you will respond to the calls of f he old IcOger, and Lain nr
pressed site would give him the mitten. •. ing. resembling white marble in flames. &gt; tbereio, without a mwrmei, and ever obBgi\
account be allowed
! Delicate white ruffles on his wrists aud

irSXr»^

MAMMA'S CHRISTMAS

PRESENT.

Mrs. Watrous had taken a great
fancy to old-fashioned furniture. She
already had a good deal that had been
her great-grandmother's; and she had
modern furntlnr. ro .action,
►... old U~,
n„kl from
fOTro fkn.rw.x_
and had •the
brought
the gar­
ret and rubbed with linseed oil and
vinegar till it shone like gla&amp;s, and then
had rummaged round in the garrets of
her cousins who did not care for inch
things, and among the second-hand
furnilarc-.shaps. and had sent far and
near into the country, wherever she
■ heard of an article of the sort, to learn
if she could add to her collection.
'
At last she bad rested from her la­
bors, her house equipped with a brass
knocker, with brass sconces for candles,
with little mirrors iu open-work brass
frames, with straight-backed chairs and
"thou«iAd--leggc&lt;r' tabled, and every­
thing, ii shohe except a great chest for
. the halLS whicfi“8fie?wanted exceeding­
. ly. butwbieh she could nowhere find.
She'knew there had been such a chest
in the family, all covered with carving
that told in wood tbo stoty of some
Middle-Age legend; but the tra?k of it
had been lost almost a hundred years
ago. She would havo given anything
for it, ahe used to say; they were so
very nice to stand in tlio hall, and so
ornamental.
She wanted a great chest nearly as
tall as Matty, with panels full of carv­
ing and long shining hinges; but it was
no to be lound. And although Mr.
Watrons would have had one made for
her,, that would not have been the
genuine old article, and she would not
listen to such a thing.
But one morning—it was on the
morning before Christmas--Mr. Wat­
rous took Matty on his knee and told
- her he was going tt have a little secret
- with her. it she thought she could keep
a secret; and of course Malty a-sured
him that she coaid. and began to tell
him all about several that she knew in
order t &gt; prove how well she had kept
them, clapping her hand on her little
mouth m tho middle of each, as she
■ found h »w nearly she had betrayed ev­
ery one of them.
"Well,” said her father, “I think
my little girl can keep this one; and it
is only for a very little while. It is
about mamma’s Christmas present."
"Oil yes. indeed!" cried Matty.
. "I have found the chest for her”-----“Papa! O papa!” cried Matty, clasp­
ing her hands. “Oh, how happy it
wid make her!”
* Papa laughed and continued: "Now,
‘ you know that this afternoon the s-ervants will be ail gone*-for in Mr. Wat­
rous' family the servants had the day
and night before Christmas for a holi­
day. so that the rest of the family might
have Christmas Day itself for theirs—
••and there will bo nobody but mamma
' and vou and the baby in the house.
•
“ The cart will come with tho chest
.in it, amt will wait just round the cor­
ner: aud as soon as Cousin Kate sees it
i from her window she will tend across
| for mamma to run in nnd see her a mo­
I ment, and taste herChristmas puoding,
and tell her if it needs any tiling eb.c boI fore boDing. Anti what 1 want you to
I do &gt;anot to be airaid to stay a one about
| live minutes”-----■i&gt; “Of course not!" said Matty.
*• And to tell mamma that you will
Ljuind' the baby while she run’s across

“Oh. yes. indeedf’
k- ‘‘And then the men will briAg in the
I chest, and you may tell them w-here to
■ put it—under the stag’s horns, you
■■know-and when mamma comes back
“Oh. won't she have a happy Christ­
is Eve! She said it was all she

Papa laughed again. •♦ Wo shall all
arre a happy Christmas Eye,” said he.
‘And as tor my little Matty. 1 hope she
as a stocking to hang up that will bear
Hide stretching!”
And then Malty hugged her father,
nd laid her head on his shoulder. u&gt;
&gt;ve him a little while; and presently ho
ntnt c&lt;&gt; the office, and she went to look
K the mi key. as to the monstrous size
fed tttnoss of which there was just then
■sic an outcry coming up from tho
So the day wore away. A short winbut it seemed longer and
felger to Maur. At last it was getting
■ towards three in. the afternoon, and
Ltre came a ring at the door, and
■M.n Kate had sent over for Mrs.
patrons to come and taste her Christir me! ’ said Mrs. Watrous. "1
aye the babv.”
Papa said—1 mean—Til stay

the baby with Matty,
Ihrew a shawl over her
aeroM to Cousin Kate’s.
i afterword, tbe men
chest iu tbe hall, un­
ns. and had gone, and
ind them.

iin'g dark
-It
a match.
ttp and lighted one ot
sconces
, thing,” she
sides, altnob’t
all covered

| -B nilclere’

HL ardware

DOMESTIC SEWING MACHINE
FRANK C. BOISE.

-LN

“ITIQ 1 1 CL™/] d

w jd dii CrOOCio

KOCHER HRO1 HERS

New StYle Cashmeres, Plaids, Brocades, Etc.

KOCHER BROS.

BARGAINS
THAT ARE BARGAINS, AT

5!Z5 »Lw,5^

Aylsworth’s

COST cash SALE
OF MY ENTIRE STOCK

I

Purchasers can effect a big saving
By patronizing me for the next sixty days

THE REDUCTION IN PRICES

Y

—Quite a number of leading
lantawho speculate iu cotton

: two large seal-ring-;, worn on his left
i hand, are other indications of fastidi*
I OD« Uste
'___________ ■--------

W.4

�TO SUIT.
w.u ro i-uaworu.

Call and aee them and you
jarjre gawriwrui to aelect
•eject from
from; among them

‘ Th» Handiest, Most Durable and Best Round Stove
—A Baptist association, embracing
twenty-seven churches, has been organ­
ized by the Choctaw and Chickasaw In­
dians. At its recent annual meeting
106 baptisms were reported for the
Two churches had been organand two Indians licensed to preach.
The whole number of members is 865.
Considerable missionary work was sooomplisbod during the year.
—A medical mtn in Toronto has been
ventilating in the newspapers recently
the subject of overstudy among the chil­
dren in attendance at tho public schools.

&amp;
uja
is IJ

WE8TWAKD.

STATIONS.
DetroK...

Owdotte,...
Vi-risorc.lli
Hatdrvfna...

1K0
1'1.;. ■■
11:10
n.n
j"

Middtedii-^
Hnaotri...

Oread

i at Dfliroit with Great Western, Grand
Canyl* Southern Railway*.
--------------- DWN,
H. B LEDYARD.
Am’iGmi'I Hupl-J*ck»on. Gen'l bup’l Detroit

HasarO-WasrwoRia.

__________ O*a’l P*a**nd Tteket A«*nt.Chicaa*.

W. NISKERN. Attorney and Counsellor
• at Law, practices in al! State Court*. Col­
lections promptly attended to. Office ovar

P

J.J A. BARBER, M. D.&lt;

• smraDOPAvxiExc

Physician and Surgeon.
Ofllce'flret door east of Opera House, and
near residence on corner of Washington and
Bute Btrou, Naahville, Mich.

JgOOT AND SHOE SHOP.

BOOTB-jBHOES
rurxauoEs

A. BURCMAK

OBSERVE, COMPARE, REFLECT, ACT!
NEW i DENTAL PARLOR.
Nashville and vicinity that I hare purchased
the jjtucUcc of J. L. Sigsbee, and am penhanncutiy located over G. A. TRUMAN’S store.
AB kinds of{DENTAL WORK ddbe. from ths
simplest operation to the most tlifficult,—Arti­
ficial Palate*. Irregular natural tebth straigh­
tened, teeth extracted without pain for 50 exa;
one-half deducted when artificial work is mad*
All work warranted, advice in &gt;eganl to teeth
free call and see me.
P. 8. Will do dental work for 8 cools of wood.

B1L A. H. WI.VX.

J£ A.

BOOT AMD 8H0E MAKER,
yyOLCOTT HOUSE,
Nashville IMClvlilgran.
A. 8. Foote, Proprietor.

pATHBUN HOUSE.
A. B. ANTISDSL, FxorarrTcx

GrandJlapKlw, B&amp;lotx.
IMs Soess fnrnlshea ths best acennanndaMohs &lt;X any Boom in the dty for tbs sansa

Attorney at Law.

Attorney * Counsellor,
J^£O1VEY WAVED

DRY

GOODS

Clothing. Boots, Shoes, Hats, Capa, Groce
riesand Provtoous, of

tigation made by him show that several
deaths of school-children which came
under his observation were duii solely
to a too close application to books by
scholars of nervous temperament, and
weak constitutions. He claims that the
course of study in the Toronto public
schools is so severe that many of tho
pupils are compelled, in order to keep
•up with their classes, to apply them­
selves to their books outside of school
hours, and that no such condition ol
affairs should be allowed to exist. An
investigation of the same matter in oth­
er cities would doubtlcss reveal a simi­
lar fault in the public-school system.
—As you camo into church last Sab­
bath with your creaking shoes, aftet
services commenced, you disturbed tho
whole congregation, and many of the
young folks turned round‘to see who
you were. And yet, you were not in
tho least disconcerted, and entered your
pew with as much complacency as if
you had respected the house of God and
the opinions of your Christian neigh­
bors. Was it right? If thiuhad been
the first time of your dereliction, I was
going to say. there might be a slight
excuse for you; a second thought tells
me there is none. A person has no
business to be late at church or any­
where else. I know of a man. more
than threo-score-and-ten years of age,
who was never late at the house of God,
even for a minute. In future see if you
cannot improve and pay some little re­
spect to the services of the sanctuary.—
licligiaut Herald.

yon Catarrh! “I):
naftllhxg remedy.

PretSdent Garteid't portrait to to be ptacod
upon the flve-ceut IntemMkxud puetage
•temp*.
x

Judge Tourgee’s "A fool’s Errand" proved a
failure iu the form of a drama,- and the com­
pany which went on a tour with it has dirbanded'.
Lydia E. Pinkham’* vegeUbls Compound
ha* done thousands of women more good than
the medicines ol many doctors. 11 ia a positive
cure for all female complaint*. Bend to Mr*.
Lydia E. Pinkham
In Arkansas, when a couple of len-ycar-old
boy* are not at home for supper their - mother
l&lt;x&gt;kstroubledabd observes; “Now'where in
the world are them clilldren 1 If they’re out
robbing trains again, I’ll take the bide off o'
them when they come home. Consam them!”
~HOW TO GET WEI.C

Thousands of person* are constant!v troubled
will) a combination of diseases. Diseased kid­
neys and costive bowels are their tormentors.
They should know that Kidney Wort acta on
these organ* at the same time, causing them to
throw off the poison* that havo clogged them,
and so renewing the whole man. Hundreds

J L. SWEJT8 A J. COOK.
*
At E. Cook’s Old Stead,
MICHIGAN.

”

”

4.0)

Gamming and Hammering x-cut
Regular Filing,

An Illinois man with a foresight worthy of a
.better cause, jxjpped the question ou a railroad
train, and now tlio maiden is at a loss to decide
as to which county she had better commence
proceedings in fora breach of promise.

LYDIA E. PINKHAM’8
vegetable compopto.

A.C.BUXTOW.

C. L. GLASGOW

Double Htrdware, Weet Side Main St:, Nashville, Mich.

SO Wagons
FOR SALE!
OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE

Administrator's Sale.

. WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH

the ceremony in a floral grotto made of
chrysantuemums, asters, lilies, passion­
flowersand smilax.” At Chicago wed­
dings the newest feature is for the
groom to hustle around and get a living
lor himself and wife after they arc mar­
ried. Fathers of Chicago girls hail the
innovation with delight—Chicago Trib­
une.
—*• I see you have tho motto ‘ Excel­
sior* over your door.” remarked a
stranger who entered a Detroit saloon
the other day, •• Yes; I gif a bainter
two toiler for dot” “ Il’s a beautiful
motto.” •• Yes, 1 tink so.”
•• You
know what it means, I suppose?” “Of
course. It means dot rhen one of der
boys says' • Shalk it down, Yacob,’ I
shalk him on der neck mid a glub. I
doan ’take feefty dollar for dat motto.”

It sometimes happens that the
horny-handed prospector knows little
or nothing of the forms required by law

Call and tee it anyway. I also have a full line ot aoanonable goods
consisting of

Corn Shelters, Cutters, Bob-sleighs, cut
lery, Clothes Wringers, Pumps,

• matter of the Estate of
HENRY TKGY Eli. debased.
Untie* Li hereby &lt;i»*n that I »h»ll »•!! at public

THREE INCH TIRE,
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING

Iu»n, pursuant u.
*4 In ni» nn lli*

BETTER THAN COMMON TIRE
We believe the Three inch Tire is destined to come
into general use: Call and sec them.

BENTLEY BROS. &amp; WILKINSHastings, Mich., Sept. 15th, 1881.

Pioneer Store

Fall an4 Winter Goods are arriving every day. Due preparatioiK^sJjalfJhe^battle of life, and anticipating the needs of
our customers, we are “laying in” a good supply of the necescaries for protection, and comfort against the reigns of the fast
approaching winter.
A better stock of Boots and Shoes can not be ‘found any­
where. Clothing a specialty.
Hats and Caps of the latest styles.
Ladies and Misses Cloaks and Dolmans
Children’s Knit sacques.
Prints, from 5 cents to 8 cents.
Dress Goods in variety and shades to suit the most
fastidious.
Our aim is to deal justly with everebody, and if we don’t do
the fair thing, we ask you to make us. The highest market
price will be paid for produce. 10,000 lbs. Dried Apples, 10,­
000 bus. Corn wanted in exchange for goods, also 500 solid
cords of stove wood, seasoned.
With two of the best clerks in the country, we are not only
ready to serve you, but take pleasure in serving you in
whatever way we can. Give us a call.
Very greatful for past favors we respectfully ask a continu­
ance of your patronage.

own two (») north, runge seven (71
townahip of Maple afore, Berry Co..
Michigan. coctolniDc forty (Uhecrve otland, to be
. ...
___ _-« »»

fated, MapleGrove, Dec 20&lt;h.
14-30
t T. S. BRId

Probate Order
WMU,11 Vf M AKMl| I
At aaeaaloa ot the f*ro bate Court far the County
of Barry, balden at tbe Probate Office, In tbe City of

Will. H. Fdshncr adminl»tr»U&gt;r of Mid MXaU
Thereuitoa it la ordered, that

Office, in tbe eit

CLEMENT SMITH,

NO PATENT NO PAY
Finns
•eornatly etteMM tw. •

n inoiias?®

L. J.Wheeler

We are Ready PATENTS
tatod wr-eLln-aper.t».2O a ye*.-

New Furniture

A Miner’s Nstke.
A trill will convince. Goods of every descrip
/
lion always new and frcsh-

SO

.

The BrnipUHuB of Itching Piles are moisture
like praipiraltoo, iutoure itching, moat at night
aeema aa If pin worm* were crawling in or
alxmt the rectum. Tae more you scratch the
worae they itch, very distressing. Tbe prlvaU;
paru are often affected. Dr. Swayne's Oint­
ment is the moat effective remedy extant for Both Iron and Wood, also pipe for same, and a few thousand
tills tormenting complaint. Gives rest at night
other things. Tho
without that desire to scratch. Also has on
equal In quickly eradicating .Tetter, Ilch, Salt
Riieume, Erysipelas, Barbera' Itch, PUnp'.es,
ail Scaly, Crusty, Itchy Skin Eruptions. Hen.U tbe proof, “(krtalnly
•—- ------- •- —used in my practice,” I
Is under tbe management of ALBERT SELLICK, a man of years’ experVl. “troubled with ltd
twca- i«ne«. who can do you a first-claaa job of anj kind. Pleoae call and HENRY or
tr years, it cured me co
■ayaalf will allow yow goods and be pictured to sell job anything in my line yon
finfleld, Me. Sent for ____ ____ _______ _
8 boxes, 61.25, By Dr. Swayne Son. Fhllad'a
Pa. Sold by all druggists.

UNQUESTIONABLY THE VERY BEST.
Baltimore, Md., April 29,1881.
I hare recently been using your Brown’s
PUNGENT PARAGRAPHS.
Iron Bitten in my .*m!ly, consisting of myself
—Strictly speaking, a march is about wife and three children, and tbe effect has
the only music that can bo called sole­ l&gt;ccn always as marked as in tbe case of Mr.
ITmlpa. It is unquestionably a wonderful
stirring.— Yonkcrt Slatcmian.
medirinc. ______________ A. J. BOWEN.
—When you reach the plane of man­
It Is not always safe to give a piece of your
hood it is quite natural that you should
indulge in a little sharing. —Boiton mind to an erring friend because you live so
close to your incerse that any expenditure ot
Courier.
—Appearances are deceptive. One that kind my bankrupt you.
cheese may seem to be the exact coun­
terpart of another and yet be a mighty 18$. lYDU L PflHIll, OF LtU, USS.?
signt richer.—Boston Globe.
—“Are you fooling very ill?” asked
the physician; “let me see your tonguo.
please.” “It’s no use, doctor,” replied
the poor patient; “no tongue can toll
how bad I feet”—Boston Transcript.
—A frank old granger, in advertising
his household goods for sale, wound up
the list of articles with “aud a lot of
trash not worth much.” If he had been
an esthetic he would have called it “a
lot of valuable bric-a-brac.”—Norrie
town Herald.
"
—There is a town down the peninsula
that seems to be improving itself to
death. Every time a citizen pnts on a
new button on his front gate, or white*
washes his pig-pen, the local ^aper
cries that there is a fear in tho commacript.
•
—Fullness under tho eyes, says a
phrenological journal denotes language.
A close observer might infer that full­
ness under tho vest also causes a flow
of language. It has been noticed that
towards the winding up of a dinner
party there is a wonderful flow *f lan­
guage among the guests.—Texas Drift­
ings.
—An exchange says that “ at Boston
weddings the newest feature is to have

ATTENTION! SAW MILL MEN!

-------- IN THE MARKET-

American and Foreign Marble.

Arriving Daily.

PAYNE’S FARM ENGINES.

Mcnamsrt*. Tantaoncj*. Maotlea, &amp;a,

ahead and do tho best they know how.
A grizzled old bunch of antiquity re­
cently struck a lead near Gunnison.
Col, and left the following notice writ­
ten on an old envelope and stuck in a
split stink t
“TAKNOT1S!
The underained dame this lode with

Diary Free!XmM.'!JSE!l:to.

FLORIDA
50.000 mi

Parlor Suits, Bedroom Suits, Gents’ Easy Chairs,
Ladies’ Rockers, Camp Chairs, Fine
Couches, Extension Tables, Center
Tables, What-nots, Picture Frames,
Bureaus, and in fact Everything
Else Needed to Furnish a House.

heaut:

it

�SATURDAY.
Th* faithful delight in water brougl
Madame Tussand’s and the Tower.
The thing which surprises me most
diaebM-breeding filth that the chemists about these places is that though they
pvtmouce it "bottled cholera.”
’
have completely dropped out of my
life as resorts of interest an it with tho
A woman caused a commotion at
usual Belt-sufficiency of humanity I
Wadena, Minn., by wildly chasing a
big dog and crying: "Stop him! he has think, if I think of thorn at all, that
all the world ia of my way of thinking
swollowed a twent-dollar bill,” *_
concerning thorn, tbo moment I resist
’ obliging butcher promptly caught the
them I find I am utterly mistaken and
beast, killed him andi*recovered tho
that their interest to thousands of peo­
money.
ple is as keen now as it ever was
"I want silver,* wud Jane Jackson to you or me in our green and salid
&lt;of Louisville, in demanding tbe settle­ days. Our party actually drove away
ment of Hauser's board bill. "I ain’t from the tower, when wo had arrived
got no silver.” tbe angry man retorted, at the entrance gate,because there was
, "but Hl give you all die lead you such a tremendous qnens of people
want,” and he shot three bullets into Watingthat we foresaw it dark be­
fore our turn came. Visitors are token
the landlady.
_ __
in by tbe beef eaters in small squads,
A Christian army has been formed npt exceeding twenty in number at a
iu Chicago, like the salvation Army of- time, and being the last arrivals ot sev­
England, with a General in command. eral hundred we thought a judicious
Captains for exh ortern, "knee drills” retreat tbe best geuernliaiu. To bo
instead of-prayer meetings, "skirmish­ sure, this was un tho Saturday halfes” by small parties in saloons, and boliday, when the tower is thrown
"battlespu^ public hall./
open free to tlie sons and daughters of
Tho tncdciU—Ltculty in England the cruel Gringe Toil. We forgot it
were discussing the' question whether was not a pay day, and returned subse­
or notzto attend a reception in evening quently when tho barrier of a shilling
costume. Prof. Charcot, who had not entrance fee saved us from undue jost­
Nevertheless tho crowd was
yet learned the niceties of tbe lan­ ling.
guage, quietly remarked, "As for me, great. It was composed of well dressed
people, of .whom Americans were in
I shall go in my night dress.”
tlio minority. French predominated
Among the retail dealers in copper aud the German element camo next.
ntensils in Chicago were.six who were It has become tho height of fashion,
willing, .for the sake of multiplying the very summit of 'chic among the
their profits, to buy goods which they French, to visit England. Formerly
knew had been stolen from the manu­ it was only hotel keepers and shop­
facturer.
The thief suppltai them men to whom it was a matter of ad van­
with $18,000 worth, for about $500.
tage to make tho tempting announce­
Mlle Sarah Burnhardt’s in-treatment ment of "English Spiked,’’ now tho
at tbe hands of her anti-Semit jc assail­ requirements of ettiquette demand
ants iu the south of Russia does not ap- . that all young people of good position
pear to bare had any prejudicial effect &gt;“
ahall know haw to parlor
on tbe pecuniar, aueceas ot her tonr.
"bile tbe borbeat ambition of
The receipts of four nights at Odes-a the young French swell is to imitate
Mid two at Kieff amounted to $17,500. the toggery of the English jockey, and
if on his travels in Switzerland he is
The question whether North Web­ mistaken for a milor, then indeed is his
ster ever taught a singing school in cup of satisfaction full to overflowing
Baltimore has been after a thorough So far as tlie Germans are concerned,
and somewhat excited discussion in they are always present in large num­
that city, decided in the affirmative. bers in England. There must be a
He became pressed for money while on tremendous German population in Lon­
a journey to Washington, nnd stopped don, But they are a very different
long enough to till his purse in that class from the most of those wo see in
manner.
.
America. Tlie vast army ot German
impecuniosities of good birth from the
Victoria Stinson has just receivefl
miscroscopic grand duke who aspires
$60 in Toronto, because she happened
to tbe hand of an English princess
to be born in a military barrack at Ai­
down to university students, when
dershot, England, while Queen Vic­
highest aim is a good situation in
toria was visiting the building. Her some solid English house of busine&amp;i
majesty named her after herself, and look forward, almost from their birth '
deposited $25 in a bonk, to be paid to to tbe day when they shall seek for
her at tbe age of 21. The principal happiness and fortune in England.'
Their presence here is not unresented, !
and interest have now been paid.
whether as princes or plodders. The
one popular feature about tlie LomeA plausible rogue made money fast Louisa marriage is that at. least one
in Ch£ago by saying that he was on princess has not married a German
his way to St. Louis to see his sick petty aoverign.orsomething less, while
on all hands I hear complaints of tho
mother; that all he hod was $5 which ubiquitious German clerk in business
he exhibited; that for $8 be could get a houses, whose employment leaves an
ticket, with a rebate of $4 pn arrival Ehglishman out in tlio cold. Nor can
at St. Louis; and would some kind per­ one wonder at the preference given to
the foreigner if foreigner a German
son lend him the lacking $3, which he can be calledin a country ruled by a
would promutly return by mail ! The queen whose, proudest boast is that she
story was so well told and reasonable is the reigning representative and lin­
that it deceived nearly everybody who eal descendant of the house of Han­
over. These Germans Arc men of
heard it.
good birth, gentlemanly in manners,
skilled accountants and wonderfully
A stone bridge to be built at Minne- fluent linguists. There is nothing new
appolis bids fair to become one of the under tbe sun, and though the Tower
notable structures of the world. It will is' hardly ever1 under the sun never­
theless there is nothing new about ye
consist of sixteen 80 feet spans and Tower. Poor old Madame Tussaud
four 100 feet spans, and including the busies herself beyondthe grave through
shore pices, will hare a total length of her heirs and assigns to secure novel­
l.uOO feet. It will support two railway ties to attract people, while tho grime
bid Tower, solely by reason of its
tracks at a height of over sixty feet grimeness and its oIuuam draws it*
above tbe water, and will run diagon­ eaily
contingents
of "Innocents
ally across tbe river below St Anthony Abroad” from their homes in all parts
Falls. The cost is estimated at nearly of the world without tlie slightest ex­
pense of billing, advertising or new at­
$500,000..
~
tractions.
Mr. Barrable, a well known artist,
A hotel in tlie exact shape of an ele­
has for some time been tho victim of a
phant has been built at Atlantic City. series of extraordinary annoyances.
Tbe idea, of course, is to draw excur­ On one occasion his studio woa invodsionists by means of a novelty. Tbo •dby a host of govern esseas, all anxi­
Another
structure is 86 feet long and 65 feet ous to impart instructions.
advertisement was to the affect that be
high. Stairways inside the legs lead wanted "290 pretty girls.” Now^ one
np to a big restaurant and other rooms pretty girl as a model for an artist is
iu the body, while on the bock is a car all very well, but not two hundred.
forming a good place of outlook. The There was another advertisment for
"lady housekeepers.” Then a still
exterior is painted and sanded so as to more singular method of annoyances
resemble an elephant’s skin, except for was adopted. -One hundred sandwhich
the windows. The cost cost was $20,000. men paraded before his studio announc­
ing that it would be opened free to the
public from 10 to 4 o’clock, Mr- Bar­
Henry Hennoy was engaged to mar­ rable was bewildered for a time, but at
ry Viola Van Hou ton nt Delaware, length found that the originator of
Ohio. He got intoxicated at a Fourth these freaks Iras a literary lady named
Knight Brace; and she was, therefore.
of July celebration to which ho had
jKgtqs shows to large a percentage of

taken her, and she refused to let him
escort her home. He never returned
to her, and soon married another girl.
Viola now sues him for damages, and
the courts will be called on to decide
whether her action on tbe occasion of
his diundcaoeM amounted In law to
releasing' him from his marriage en­
gagement.
Fox hunting is done more economi­
cally in Ireland this year than ever be­
fore. Poor Reynard is despatched by
the Leaguers with the utmost prompt­
ness, and without. the intervention
either of hotaes or hounds. Under the
■ciramstences, each killing of a fox pos­
sibly gives as keen an enjoyment to
the slayer aa when performed in the

cd and undoubted proof-found that he
had btsm interred olive, the body be­
ing found turned upon ifca aide arid the
hair torn and fingers bitten In tlie agony
of the death by auffocation in the coffin.
Diligent investigation bos failed an yet
to cither prove or disprove the atory,
•and it ia believed by many and reoffed
at by many more.

CLOSING OUT SALE!

School Report.
Tbe following is the average standing for
the fall term. Much absence ia4a serious hin­
drance'to the pupils as they sorely find out on

Melser, Jemle

Hobba, Ina
Ainsworth, Nora
Evart.., Boy
Francis, Clyde
VanNocker, Minnie
Roe, Minnie
Roe, Waller
Collier, Mary - Moody, Alice
Slmniocs, Eva
Dctnaray. Ferde
Burgess, Rattle
Carter, Adrin
Flint. Johnny
Furalsa, Victor
Furnlsa, Clare
Pennock, Earnest
Parody TUte .
Mallory. Eddie,
Boise, Claud
Potter, Minnie
Beard, Maud
Hummel, Hattie
Gross, Dorie
Boston, Mabe!
Ball, Jessie
William a, Minnie
Wolcott. Ettu
Moore, Wesley
Reese. Della
VanNocker, Emma
Hcckathom, Charley
Blair, Manford
Russell, Frank

96
86
100
90

COST.'S

I
' M
Mia
91.2
91

100 100 100
100 100 100
100 “ “
100

BTAT

1OO Patterns New Prints, best brands, 1 will
sell at 7 cts, Sold everywhere at 8 cts,
60 two-strap Horse Blankets at 90 cts. Sold
earlier in the fall for $1.30.
Kerosene Oil at 15 cents per gallon.
12 1-2 lbs. good Brown Sugar for one dollar

95 to to
06 80 100
90 100 “

40
80 __ 70 b.')
V0 100 HO
Grammar Dep.

IXPOHTAMT TO TUAVLLEttS,

Special inducements are offered you by the
Burlington Route, It will ray you to read their
advertisements to be found elsewhere In this
issue.

TRUTH IS MIGHTY! WEEKLY NEWS
CHICAGO

TN making the following statement, we utter the truth, and can verify it.

Millwaukec lawyers think "no small
potatoes.” of themselves. One of them
has just sued another for libel, laying
tire damages nt $U0,0O0,

AND THE

THE LARGEST STOCK OF GROCERIES NASHVILLE NEWS

A pure, wholesome distillation of witch hazel
American pine, Canada fir, marigold. clover
blossoms, etc-, fragrant with the healing etIn the city, at bottom pricca, fair and square weight and measure.
scnces of bulsam and of pine. Such is San­ wc advertise the most complete Stock ot
fords Radical Cure for Catarrh. Complete
treatment for $1.

When

Etc., iu Baity and Eaton counties, we are telliog the people a fact that can­
not bo successfully and truthfully denied. It consists of a largo variety of sta­
ple goods mid a large assortment of

$2.00 A YEAR. POSTAGE IMCUJDED.
passed in all the requirements of American

Majolica Ware a.u«l ITi-eneli China,

F. H. DRAKE'S SUFFERINGS.
In various designs and styles, also a well selected Stock of
F, H. Drake, Esq, Detroit, suffered beyond
all inscription from a skin disease, which ap­
peared on his hands, head and face, aud near­
ly destroyed bi* eyes. Tbe most careful doc­
toring failed to help him, aud after ail had
In Tea Setts. Water Setts, Cups, Saucers, Pitchers, Etc. An endless variety
failed to help him, be used IheCuticum Resol­
vent (blood purifier) Internally, Cuticura and of Vases, Toilet Setts, Flower SeLte, Elc. in
Cuticura Soup (the great skin cures) externally
and was cured, and has remained perfectly well
to this day.
Too numerous to mention, mid *o cheap that all can afford to bi$.
TAKEN UP.
Notice is hereby given that on the 34tb day
of Nor. A. D. Is»l, two 3-ycar-old spotted
Of every ntyle, color anil design. When you are ready to buy, I am ready
heifers broke Into my enclosure, aud the owner
Is requested to call on me, prove property, nay to sell. All kinds of Produce taken in exchange for Goods.
charges and take them away, or they will be
disposed of according law.
Dated Maple Grove, Dec. 27ti». 1801.
15-17
J. C. Embrt.

ENGLISH

DECORATED

CHINA

C. W. SMITH.

the metropolitan Journals of tho country m
a complete Vrrrpaper. Ita Tolosraphlc

Western Associated Press and the National

portant points. As a A'rarpaper it has no
superior. It U INDEPENDENT in Politics,
presenting all Political News free from par-

PER. Each Lamo contains SCL COMPLEX­
ED STORIES, besides a rich variety of con.
densod notes on Foahioiw, Art, Industries,

SOCIETY BELLIES.
On account of iu remarkably delicate and
lasting fragrance society bellies are loud in
their phraiaca of Floreaton Cologne.

Quotations are complete and tu be relied

sons’ Extermlnytor.
Banis, grvuarica and
households ciearvd in a single night- No fear
of bad smells. Best and cheapest vermin killer
In the world. Sold everywhere.

ITiY NEWSPAPER. Our special Clubbing
teruM b.-iaz it within tho reach of a!L Sped

r2Sr*l&gt;s.d iob»CT-tlon’ to Jiis office.

QEO. W. FRANCIS,

Fancy and Staple

GROCERIES!
CONSISTING IK PART OF

MARK

8UGARS/TEA8,
COFFEES, SPICES,
SYRUPS, MOLASSES,
‘ TARCH. SOAP, •
CRACKERS, CHEESE,
--------------------------------BEST NICKLE SOA1
SALMON,
WHITE FISH,
TROUT,
MACKE
HALIBUT,
COD FISH,
HERRING.
STEAM COOKED OAT MEAL.
CROCKERY,
a J
GLASS WARE,
9
LAMPS,
FLOWER POTS

BITTERS
'%et^

BROWNS IRON JHTTERS arc
a certain cure for all discar.ch
requiring a complete tonic; ewpe-

mittent Fevers, Want of Appetite,
Loss of Strength, Iack of Energy,
etc. Enriches the blood, strength-

life to the nerve*. Acts like a
charm on the digestive organs,
. removing all dyspeptic symptoms,
such as tasting the food. Belching,
missed the summons, but said the peo­
Heat In tlie Stomach, Heartimrn,
ple who had been sent to Mr. Barrabies
studio might take proceedings against
her. If fonr hundred persons take the
that will not blacken the teeth or
Magistral’s advice, Mrs. Knight Bruce
give headache. Bold by all Dragwill perhaps regtiifc annoving the artist
and have-to pay a considerable sum in
BItOWN CHEMICAL CO.
damages.
Baltimore, M&lt;L

Injtton. Fstrfieh! El
___
.
jq
:&lt; n. Trenton. &lt;
ron.JLMvaawoHb. AidiHon, an
Waahlniwn to»l«oarory. oakaio
vttlec Kookul. to .anDlnsua, £
tonsport. Indeporaleai.Eldon. ot
IK'S^SS.’'
MotaM toiDdUBoUand Winters

August.

OHIO

STOKE

THAT MUSICAL WONDER!
DR KENNEDY
Would liars tt understood that, while he b
engaged tn the introduction of his medicine,
"Favorite Remedy,” he still continue# the
practice of his profession, but confines himself
•xdurively to office practice. He treats all
diseases mid pefonn* all the mlunrand capital

$$ it sara

Shunting.

.

A

WA«E, •—r

TOBACCOS,
■
CIGABS,
TRY

OUR

PIPES,
FIFTY-CENT
TEA.

cea, but Bell all goods as low a* the
lowest, (quality considered).
Respectfully,
,

CEO. W. FRANCIS.

RUPTURE

"ROUGH ON RATS.”
Tbe thing desired found st lost. Ask Drug-

DR. D. KENNEDY,
Kmdout, N. T.

make special inducements

As I wish to reduce my stock $-5000 worth by Feb’y let,
oni my entire Stock.
f

King thcTr anlumn imr invert for

in Ireland an St.

OOST.jgj

E| 1

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                  <text>ORNO STRONG, 1
Enrron

axd

Protkiktor.

VOLUME IX.

)

Devoted to the Interests of the Beet Party under the Sun.

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, JANUARY 21, 1882.

The Detroit Evening News should
BALTIMORE.
LMAL GIBBLE-GABBLE ,
LIFE IN NASHVILLE be—awarded
the pay of a whole corps of
Aad Pone**! Chit-Chat.
And Her Environs.
detectives, by the city of Detroit, for
Everybody is well.
Hvnry Roe has been rick tliis week.
Smoke bouses are being fired up.
—Sixty-one cars of wood have been its effective work in bringing to justice
John Koeber is at Parkville visiting
Mrs. Tanner has returned home.
shipped from this station this winter. the perpetrators of the quadruple .parents.
George Arnold has mode another
crime, of seduction, abortion, arson
—The replevin suit of E. Cook vs
No more grumbling about the hot horse trade.
and murder. The result of the Hugh
. Mrs. Al» Middleton, was tried at Ver­
weather.
Wanted—A clover huller in this
S. Peoples’ libel case has been a boom
R. Pool and wife havo moved to Bat­ neighborhood. . ■
montville last week and ft jury render­ to that paper, unparalleled in history,
ed a verdict in favor of the defendant
tle Creek.
Joseph French’s daughters, Abbie
and one which The News justly deser­
Mrs. C. C. Wolcott was in town on
* —Darier &amp; Son’s have their ma­ ves. In the matter of progress and en­
and Ida, have returned home Secbrook,
chinery all In Dickinson’s mill, have terprise, the Evening Newp lays over Thursday. '
Maas.
Ed.
Oldfield and family have moved
their finishing room completed just east them nil. Long may she wave.
Pretty thin, but saw logs are being
to Jackson,
.
of the nrilk aud on Thursday, com­
haonledat
the saw mill, at Clear Lake,
—Last Thursday, Dick Elliston of
Wheat boomed up co $1.30 at this on sleighs.
menced
‘ goars,
\
%
North Castleton went to the woods to market, last Saturday.
Protracted
meetings commenced at
_
ghmau while cross­ draw a load of wood, and after loading
enry
The roads are good aud .teamsters
the Durfee school house, by the U. B.
river at the foot of. Middle St. up his wagon, sat his little girl aged
for
are improving the time.
society,
ou
Monday
evening of last
broke through. His lusty cries failed ;about four years, on the load and start Hurry Jones has moved into the week.
to eljgit help, and he had quite a tussel to drive out to the clearing before he
rooms over E. Reese’s store.
Mr. J. Herington, Gate Keeper; Mrs.
to save himself from a watery’ grave, got on. He had driven but a short dis­
Large quantities of ice are now being
Segar, Pomona; Mt. G. R. Dnrfee,
but did it, unaided and alone.
tance before the wheel dropped into a
stowed away for summer’s use.
Ceres; Mrs. Jones, Flora; and Mias.
—Allie Brigham of East Castleton &gt;deep pit and the child was thrown un­
Mrs. Myra Spellman of York, Neb., ; Maggie Durfee, Lady Assistant Stew­
was seriously injured last Friday, while4 1der the hind wheel, which passed over is vrsitiug friends in this vicinity.
ard.
Dr.
loading logs at f barley McClue’s. He ’her, just above the the hips.
A son was born to Mrs. and Mr. |
While loading Straw on a wagon the
was lifting with a hand spike, when it Goucher was summoned, but the child Horace Martin one day this week.
team of Frank Pierce" took fright and
slipped, hitting him Od the jaw and in­ lies in a critical condition.
11'rum Feglesof Barryville is visit­
lit
out, leaving Frank and part of the
flicting a serious injury.
—Last Monday evening,.)udge Killen, ing friends at Girard and Tekonsha.
load behind. Fortunately no damage
—From a recent copy of tho Petoskey forraerlv known ns “Old Killen,” built
Note C. W. Granger’s new ndvt. All was done.
Recprd we learn that A. W. Olds has up ni roaring fire in tho stove in his winter goods be is selling off at cost.
The young kids who attend the pro­
his mill on Bear Lake completed and is shojj which he now uses as a - dwelling
S. Spnngeft moved his portable saw
tracted meetings just for sport, should
paying cash for all the logs he can get. and with his usual carelessness, left to mill to Zeb Park’s place, on Thursday.
remember
it is no place for such, and
35,000 feet of logs were cut anil bank­ enjoy the evening sitting on box by
S. W. Walrath and daughter Dora unless they can stay inside during ser­
ed by four men in six days, from three' the fire in some of the stores, where he arc at Middleville, on a two week’s
vices,
they
hud better stay at home.
is wont to hang around, smoke and visit.
acres of land.
•
The following officers of Baltimore
Mrs. Phoebe Loomis, mother o^. L.
—Ono of the Mowerys of Maple quote constitutional law, as he thinks it
Grange
have
been elected: Mr. A. E.
Grove wAs in tjie village, the-otber day should read. Not long after he-had Loomis, left for Grand Rapids on Wed­ Durfee, Master; Mr. G. R. Durfee,
making inquires in regard to the own­ left his shop,some citizens were attract­ nesday.
Overseer;
Mr.
Porter Burton. Lecturer;
Quarterly meeting services'were held Mr. Warren Warner, Steward; Mr. J.
ership of the Baptist church. He fitt­ ed thither by a bright light which
ed that the Catholics of Maple Grove. which showed through the windows, at the M. E. church Fast Saturday and S. Jones, Assistant Steward; Mrs. A.
Vermontville and other contingent and they Yound the bnilding in flames. Sunday.
E. Durfee, Chaplain; Mr. E. B. War­
Wm. E. Fleming of New York city,
points—wanted, and had the cash to Fortunately for the whole norther por­
tion of Main St., the fire had not got so was visiting bis brother James here^ ner, Trearaurer; Mrs. Granger, Sec’y;
buy it, for a Catholic church,
Geo. D. Babcock and wife, while re­
far along but what a few pails of water over Sunday.
—G. M. Dewey, county agent for the
turning homo quite late Tuesday night,
sufficed to quelch the flames and the
J. L. SteveDshas moved into II. J. capsized in the gutter near E. Edmond’s
state Reform School was in town Wed­
building was saved.
llNnchctts house opposite the Union breaking the shafts to their buggy.
nesday evening, for the avowed pur­
—Some time last summer, A. J. Har­ school building.
With the aid of Mr. Edmonds and some
pose—as we nnderstand from one who
dy took a chattle mortgage on u horse
John Barry has been suficring this rails, they resurrected the bosse, and
knows—of
looking up
evidence
belonging to Pete Winans, a clause
against Esq. Killen in the matter of the being inserted in .raid mortgage, giv­ 1 week with neuralgia in his face, and the twaino plodded eonie a foot. It is
1ms been confined to his bod.
Rado Reynolds larceny case, to have
rumored that some crooked whisky was
ing Winans the privilege of taking the
At tho social held by Mrs. Plum’s S.
the’Squire removed from office, if not
horse to Jackson, where he is working S. class, al H. W. Flint’s, last Wednes­ aboard, but the night was very stormy,
and George is a president of u temper­
sent, over the road for compound fel­
iu the employ of the M. C. R. -R. Last day evening, $8 50 was realized.
ony.
ance club, and could very easily of
tall Hardy felt insecure and took the.
About 50 friends surprised Pete ■driven where he did, accidentally.
—The Ovid Union reports the Ed. of horse away from Winans, who was not
Deller and family last Tuesday night
Doxy.
the Hawk as being drunk, a feW even­ long in again getting possession of
and enjoyed the evening pleasantly.
ingsago. We have always looked up- him, when Hardy again took it and
Deb. Green has resiaued his position,
BISMA UK.
©a F. M. Mti solid temperance man, placed it in the charge of fl. M. Lee,
as fore nan at theeievatoi, and taken
but his item in the lost issue of his pa­ thinking that Winans would not dan*
a clerkship in C. Ainsworth’s grocery
We took in Potterville last Tues­
per stAing there was a case of small to take it from n deputy Sheriff. . Last
store.
day.
pox reported in this village, leads us to Monday night, Winans foiced an en­
Mrs. Frank Overamitli was attacked
Our singing school has furled its
think that the item must have been trance to Mr. Lee’s bam, and in the.
Inst week with diphtheria, resulting banner.
written at the time referred to by the morning when Herb went to the barn
frorh taking a violent cold, bat is now
A big gathering at Mr. Morehouse's
Union.
to feed the animal, be found an empty recovering.
last Saturday.
—DutJarraru, well kuown in this stall. H. M. says that if he catches
The editor is able to be around and
I am glad to say the roads are quite
vicinity, and to the M. C. R. R. Co. and anyone breaking into his barn again hopes to be able, in a short time, to good just now.
employees as an efficient and trusty he will shoot them full of eggs, but grasp the "rudder of business” with re­
John Ellsworth intends to build a
conductor, has secured a position as owing to the high price of that amuni- newed energy.
uurn in the spring.
passenger conductor on tho Northern tition, he will probably loifd his sling
11. M. Ixse went Io MiddlevilleThurs­
News is scarce, which is a sure aign
Pacific R. R., and will start west in a with cracked ones which come cheaper day tondjust the losses of tVe iouiu
that rascality lias lost its grip in these
short time to take command of a train. and explode easier.
Barry &lt;k«Kent Ins. Co. in the recent parts.
That success and prosperity may fol­
—Last week Friday Itado Reydolds, fire at that place.
It is reported that Mr. Hen worth,
low him, is the worst luck The News who recently returned from the Reform
Mr. and Mrs. F. McDerby entertain­ and Frank Pern ber, each, have a little
could wish him.
School on leave of absence, entered the ed the Baptist social last Wednesday visitor.
.
—LasffSatnrday evening the Morgan house of A. J. Hardy, while Mr. and evening. A pleasant time was enjoyed
John Prince has gone, or will go, to
IL R. club elected the following officers Mrs. Hartly were away at the farm, and about $4.65 collected.
Ann Arbor, this week, to see if any­
Barber Mead Pres, Mr. Kellogg First and stole a ten dollar bill, which he
F. D. Soule’s and wife started yester­ thing can be done to rid him of his
Vice Pres., Mrs. Nellie Feglea, Second found in the bouse. He then went in­ day to visit friends at Union City aud pet. ,
,
Vice Pres., Henry Haman Sec’y, Geo. to Glasgow’s hard ware and purchased a Coldwater, in this state, and at Apgola
Good time for little boys to back­
Norton Financial Sec’y, Henry Lathrop revolver of Henry Zusch'uit, who took Ind. They went by horse power.
slide, they ought not however, to let
Treas., James Miller Steward, Chas. the bill and gave him the change. He
The funeral of Mrs. Melissa A. Phil- their heads get all the benefit of the
Carr Marshall. W. N. Devine, retir­ then went to tho livery stable of J. lipa.danghter of L. Wood, of Maple fall.
ing Pres., was presented with a fine Oman, and said that his mother and Giove., will be held at the Quail Trap
P. C. G.. is subjected to many knotty
Mrs. Berger wanted a rig to go to Ver­ school house to-morrow, nt 2 p. m.
scarf, by ladies of the W. C. T. U.
z questions this winter. Young America
Benjamin Benner, of Gtxhen, Ind., is anxious to know wbeq the mill will
—Last Saturday, about twenty or montville, and bad sent $1.50 by him
thirty of the members of the Hastings to pay for it. Jake unsuspectingly let an interested reader of The News has run, os each fiave, evidently, an uix”
Eastern Star Lodge came down here him have the rig, and he drove up been visiting friends and attending . to to grind, etc.
and installed the officers of tho new town, took John Hager Into the buggy some business in this vicinity tliis
Van, as soon as I found that you had
Laurel lodge recently organized here. and both left for Vermontville,, soon
affixed the proper stamp, and had been
Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Wood will enter­ authorized to quill and quib for The
The new lodge starts in with thirty- after Mr. Hardy returned homo be
four members. After the exercises, missed tho money and suspicion at tain the M. E. Social. Wednesday eve­ News, I was willing to give you a
the entire company repaired to the once rested on Young Reynolds, and ning, Jan. 25th. Refreshments will be chance for life, at least as much ns to
Wolcott bouse, where a grand banquet Mr. Osmun started for Vermontville served. A cordial invitation is extend­ tight a duel with me. Now sir, as we
had been prpared for them, and ap­ armed with vsummons for his arrest. ed to all.
are both engaged in the same holy call­
There will bo a special meeting of ing let us be friends and friendly, and
peased their hunger, which bad grown He was brought back and arraigned
before Esq. Killen, where he plead the Nashville Reform Club, at C. H.
acute, from training the new goat.
if you find a local so heavily charged
guifty to the charge of larceny, and Brady’s office, on Monday evening,
—The Nashville Dramatic Club was
that you dare not fire .it for fear of a
was lodged in the village jail for the next, at 7 o’clock. A full attendance
reorganized last Tuesday evening, and
recoil, send it to me and I will pull
night which allowed the bungling Esq. of officers and members is earnestly
G. F. Truman elected Pres., H.A. Dur­
the “lanyard” in the name of Sunfield,
kee, Sec’y; M. B. Brooks, Treas^ and time to deliberate on the enormity of requested, as business of importance or any other man.
offense, and make out the commitment will be brought before the society.
Capt. L. C. Boise, Stage Manager.
Oh I How I would like to .know who
papers to return him to the Reform
L. C. Boise has issued tickets for a
They will place before the public on
“Van” is, that I might embrace him,
School,or to conclude a treaty with the select dance at the opera house on
Wednesday evening, Feb. 1st The
shake his warm band, exchange kind
parents of the boy, whereby he might Friday evening, Jan. 27th, and wants
Molo-drama in three acta, entitled;
words, and receive a new impetus to
get hls«fees a little sooner than he it distinctly understood that none
“The Gun-Maker of Moscow: Elegant
our quill machine. How sad it is that
could
by dealing out justice ns the oath need apply for admission, except those
costuc.es v, ill be engaged for the occa­
the thing is withheld from the wise
of bis office demands. True to his favored with invitations, and each
sion and the lovers of amusement may
and prudent, and revealed to babes
principles of greed, he concluded a gentleman is expected to be accom­
expect to be satisfactorily entertained.
and sucklings. Now “Van,” my friend
treaty, let crime go, unpunished for the panied by a lady.
make yourself kuowu to us, that we
—Rev. H. M. Joy, who wm at the re­
paltry sum of his fees, discharging the
About forty invivted guests were rnuy sit together on a front stool, and
cent dedicat io© in this village, will de­
prisoner after he had commenced mak­ pleasantly
entertained
by
Miss draw the sin cere milk of native inteliver a lecture next Tuesday evening,
ing out his commitment papers.
Clara Bachellor last Saturday evening, ligence, thereby tilling onr half column
at the M. E. church, entitled. "The
Latkr—The Squire staunchly affirm* it being the occasion of her 31st birth­ with fire and living ginger, bringing
Jewish I.aw Giver.” This lecture has
day. Good victuals, music and danc­ forth things new and old, in season and
that
the
boy
is
yet
in
the
custody
of
been delivered in several plates in the
State with great acceptability. W. H. tho officer.and that he has not discharg­ ing were among the entertainments of out of season, for I am persuaded that
the evening, and all present enjoyed neither dies nor debts, nor any other
ed
him,
but
-acknowledges
that
he
re
­
Ha«&lt;,M. D., of Lansing, having listenceived from Mr. Reynolds $1.50. the themselves immensely.
creature shall be able to separate us
E. R. White, a resident of this vil­
amount of his fees, in the face of this
from a good hearing in The News.
“The lecture was one tact, and also that the officer had been lage so long that he has become an al­
Last Sunday night a bonanza passed
satisfied for his expense, and Mr. Har­ most indispenribie fixture, has accept­
delivered in this city."
over a portion of Ionia street, to-wit:
dy reimbursed with the amount of bis ed a position in Mudge’s clothing store
Two young gentleman (I
term
to**, and the boy still at large, al though at Hastings. Tag News joins with
gentlemen so as to be shielded from the
ire of residents in that vicinity.) hod

| TERMS; $1.50per Yea«
I Credit Svbscriptioxs $1.75.

NUMBER 18.

imbibed quite 'freely of sap from tbo
Jerry has got a wife and baby too.
orchard. Yon know that orchard juice He ought to thank the Sheriff of Barry
when taken in too largo Quantities is Co. for bis services. I suppose the
very loosening oh one’s character. presentation was a grand affair and he
These young Americans' with their will not forget it. He says that he
filling had heard of royalty on gates would like to stand in front of the man
and proposed to make a collection of five miigites that sent in his marriage
the same. Therefore they made sever­ certificate to tha Banner for publica­
al farmers c. call, and without making tion. Never mind Jerry, yon will out­
a personal demand, as the law directs, grow it.
proceeded to unjoint and maltreat
The house of Hat Corey was badly
several gates in a workmanlike man­ stoned the qther night, by a baud of
ner. The young men werenot stealthy roughs from Hastings. The door was
about their business, .as their voices knocked down and some other slight
were heard as they pronounced bless­ damages done. It him been known as
ings and curses (mostly curses) ming­ a rough place for years, and it ought to
ling therewith Vanguage corrupting to hove been atoned years ago. It lias
anything this side of thn"Tameracks.” been kept up by a class of inep that
Law when properly administered is an would not like to have their names
antidote to a loosened character; made known to the public, as fostering such
thusly by an excessive suck on the a place of ill-fame.
cider barrel. Which will be held ac '
Nero.
countable for damages done, the cidAr
meeting of the children's Blue Rib­
or the boys! We do not know, but ex-"^A
’
pect a little legal dispensation will fol­ bon society was held'* at the Christian
church, on Sunday last, when the fol­
low.
lowing officers were elected for tho
W RITIST.
ensuing six months: Pres., Miss Fraqk
Meiser; Vice Pres.. Richard Drake;
WOODLAND.
Sect’y.. Miss Edith Fleming; Trees.,'
Dr. Barber; Organ {pt, Miss Ota Wheel**
The roads nre boss.
It is quite sickly in our vicinity at er; Loaders, Mrs. Jas. Fleming and
C.
II. Brady. The meeting was for the
present.
It is reported we are u&gt; have a music purpose of reorganizing the society,and
putting it in good order again, as well
store in our little ville.
as for the election of officers. It is de­
Stowell Bros, are making some of
signed
to
hold
monthly meet­
those solid extension tables.
ings again, and the next one is to bo
There is some fine fish being caught
held on the 12th of Feb. A good pro­
out of Jordan Lake, now-a-days.
gram will be prepared, and all interest­
Tax time is drawing to a close and
the most of the taxes have been paid. ed in the cause of temperance are in­
vited to attend.
Shoeing horses and repairing wag­
ons is the substantial trades at present.
LIVING WITNESSES.
hundreds of healthy looking man, wom­
Wc understand John Mills has enThe
and children, that have been rescued from
bought a farm west of the one he sold. beds of pain, nickncss and well nigh death by
There is a suit going on in Odessa, Parker’s Ginger Tonic arc the best evidences
in the world of it* sterling merit and worth.
over a dog, that is creating quite an ex- You will And such in aimosTfrvery community.
citemcnt.
Rev. J. F. Orwick had a brothcr-inLOCAL MATTERS.
1 :w visiting him the past week, from
Plain well.
Tax Hales Xotire.
E. P. Barnum is going to build a
large barn in the spring. The Stowell fimrlwuth daruf February, A. D. lKS2.li&gt; front at
ibe Lank of lUiry Ererta A Co . at NaahrllicMieltboys do the job.
igan. Ibe following iletcriU^i iota or Laix!. or an
The Fox that comes out and maketb mueti U'fics't «■ may be lunxau.ry lo nay the toxca
due on tbein of tbo viUage of Na«hrille Michigan,
a track on this tracking snow, might as for thp &gt;c*r iS.“0, tmreti.er with legit eoola red InU-rrai ivUleJ. The dlacripdona bvlug Riven belov:
well give up his hide.
Deacrtpdon,
D. B. Kilpatrick while attending a Afonso Totb*. IM 6 A. W. i’1.11,
addition,
patient hut Thursday, was taken very M- L. Cooper. llua
I. »t S3 AM
suddenly with heart disease. He was Thornpeon .louea. Lol 73/
brought home and Dr. Baughman was
I-. W. H«rel4.
'»en!r f«--t In
summoned, and although he is quite
rlJUi off North
sick, yet is now ou the gain.
Andrew Ingram has bought a farm
within three miles of Portland and
paid $4,200. Mr. Ingram informs us ho
ATTENTION CITIZENS!
has a cleared 80. well watered, a good'
Owing to the action ot the court hi Nashville,
orchard, plenty of *smali fruit, good in the case of the jieonle vs. Ka&lt;1o Reynold*,
and
in
consideration
at the growing k-ixlency
barn, a comfortable house and a good of our court* hicompromise
with the purpelrslocation. We wish Mr. Ingram good tors of crime. It is deemed expedient by many
of
our
citizens
who
are
iu favor of law and or­
success, and may The News reach
der. that a meeting be called for the expreas
him weekly.
purpose of publicly prote*t!ug against such
sdmluUlrarion of justice. Therefore it
In the South-West part of Town, is a lawless
Ip requested that all thu«e who are intoreotadln
club that meets at Sutton’s hall, and good order and In the suppression of crim*,
elsewhere to shake their hoofs for en­ meet al the Town 11*11 Saturday evening, Jan.
31st 1882 st 7:30 to take eueh action in the
joyment and take a little cider to keep matter a* the necessaries of the ca.-e demand*.
By Ordek Or Committee.
up their spirits. Wo understand that
some of the lambs of the dock mingle
ar Call for harness at E. A. Basil's shoe
with them, and would advise such that snop.
Wm. Clark,
they better metft and have a prayer
FA RM FOR SALE.
meeting as it would sound much bet­
40 acres on Sec. 27 in Maple Grove, one mile
ter to tbo pjiblic, and to those who cast and mite south from Nortons eoracr*.
meets with them on the Sabbath and 30 acres Improved, good orchard and well wa­
tered, house second class. Fur tenn* call on,
bear them tell of the love you have for
J. W. Leggett, Maple Grove.
the Master.
NEW MEAT MAKET.
Nell.
I have opened a Meat Market next door io
my Bakciy, uud ahall keep meal* of every de­
scription at the lowest price*. Buy of me *ix’
CARLTON.
save from 3 to 8 cte. ou each pound tA »te*X.
Prices on other Meats correepondinriy low.
Smith Holmes is recovering from the
typhoid fever. He has worked for M.
O-Collnre, Cuffs, Tic* and Silk Wipes tn
P. Fuller f.»r two seasons, and is latest style* at
A ’ -------known as an inteligentand useful man.
FARMERS
It is rumored that uncle Wilson has
ordered his name taken from the class Take advantage of toe low pric
harriers of Clark who will give 1
book, at-the Friend school house. Some and reliable work.
' Wm. Clark.
of his friends think he is getting crazy.
He is an old mau and is getting very money Al
W. G. Edward**.
infirm.
.
On Thursday of last week Darius
Foster came near getting seriously in­
jured, while moving his clover holier.
Harness repaired and oiled in exchange
•
Wm. Clark.
He was setting on the fodt board, the for wood.

axle broke and the huller turned over.
He barely escaped. He receiving a cut
on the head.
The diphtheria has nearly abated in
town. James Cole had a severe time
with it. His sister had it, but not so
hard, and are both doing well, Mrs.
Barton’s family all had it, her youngest
girl died. Dr. Wright has showed him­
self an expert in treating the dread­
ful disease.

Al bridge says tliat it was Hawes, who
wrote those Carlton items three weeks
ago. I guess he will© u it if it will
tie of any accommodation to him. It
did not set well on his stomach by his
actions. He does not deny the facta in

priced his botoes than to bare It

MUST BE SOLD.

Whips, Curry Combs aud ever) thing that h
nice and good tost v. A. R. Wotzxnr'*.

LUMBER! LUMBER!
Cuatom Hawing and Bailing Material fur
nitaed ua abort notice, at our new mil
pie GroveJatuenfe

fortalc —

�oo
«».

Judge-Smith appeared before the
l»oa rd arid presented a formal protest
against the action taken by the twiard
with .reference to his ^getiflon. which

MjkTMrrriS;. N,«

and Towne—fl.
Mr. Nye moved that tb® bill bo al­
lowed in the sum of $75, .which motion
was lost by the following vote:
Ayes—Barry, Creasy, Mack, Nye,

On motion of Mr. Towne, board tben^
• The renewal l&gt;ond of Henry Nough­ took a recess ’till the boor of one
ester, Merrick, Nichols, PoUy, Wing,
ts] in M Sheriff waa presented, and on
Youngand Chairman—IS.
'
motion et Mr. Creasy the same was
Afternoon Session, Jan. 0,1883.
Mr. Merrick moved that the account
I to be prewnt except ^‘fti^iKa^thrnugh an over right
r, Jordan, Latty, Mack
Board met at the hour of one o’clock he allowed at the sum of $69, which
motion »•"
was )««»&gt;.
lost by th.
the following vote:
"■oUoo
having failed to fix the amount of the ,-j.I pm^Ml-ded u&gt; bu,ta.«.
J— J.. ., LAty,
“Chester,
legal holiday, on mo- county drain commisrioners bond at
Mr. Nichol, moved that Um protect
Aye»-Jord»n,
L-tty ^
Mmielu
Nichols, Polly, Winj,
Wing, _Y
1 oung
rwwy. board udjonnied the OcioInT seasiou, brt motion of Mr. •nd notice ot Judge Smilb. iilod Ull«l Merrick, N&gt;chol»,Po1lly,
morning nt. the. hour of Towne, the same was fixed at tho siim morning, l&gt;e received and spread upon and Chairman—9. Nays—Abbey, Bairy, Crewjy, Dawson, Gott, Mgck, Nye,
the journal, which motion -prevailed.
of one thousand dollars.
t
,
The following is the protest and mo­ OBgiiod and Towne—9.
On motion of Mr. Towne, board then
rith adjourniul ’till to-morrow morning at tion.
Mr. Towne moved-tlmt the bill be
* J
allowed at $74.00, which motion was
the hour of 8:30 o’clock.
Abbrv, jQawsciu and Merrick.
lost by the following vote:
Thursday, Jan. 5, .1882.
Ayes—Barry, CreMY, Dawson, Gott,
MiiiuU'Kut yesterday’s actmion read
Board met at the hour of 8:80 with
and approved.
the members all present, journal read 3d “mi., and on the same day read to’ you, re- Mack. Nye, Osgood, Towne and Young
On motion of Mr. Nichols all claims and approved.
—9. Nuys—Abby, Jordan, Latty, Man­
quostnuryour
body
to
direct
the
clerk
of
this
. dow iu the hands of the clerk, were re­
The report of Judge Smith referred county in U*ue and deliver’ to me, sn orter or chester, Mernck, Nichols, Polly, Wing
ferred tn the committee on mi^cellan- back to him for correction, was return­ warrant on the county treasurer of tIda county aUM&lt;^rrickTuoved’thnt the bill be laid
for my salary m Judxe of Frobalo tor
&lt;xma claims.
*
ed corrected by striking out the word for Itxno
county for the year imi. And,
Mr. Towne moved that the chair ap­ •-•Cgrlton’’ and inserting the words said
Whkrkab. I am in need of money, and the on the table, which motion was lost
point a’sq»ecial committee of five to “Maple Grove” therefore.
said clerk U ready and wlllina to draw and de­ by the following vote: •
nettle with the county Treasurer, the
Ayes—Barry, Jordan, Manchester,
On motion of Mr. Mock, the report liver me such warrant or order for the sum of
mover to be excused from service on was adopted. .
^w therefore. I- hereby notify ynu that I Merrick, Nichols, Wing and Chairman
_
. X1
such committee.
The committee on claims offered the shat) apply for and reeclve such order for »7uo. —7. Nays—Abbey. Creasv,. Dawsqu,
,
Motion prevailed by tho following following farther report.
Gott,
Latty, Mack, Nye, Osgood, Polly,
but that I shall only receive and
«ur ‘
vote.
Ayi?*—Measra. Barry, Creasy,
order or warrant to apply on ®L 8x1(1 !*B1*kr&gt; • Towne and Young—11.
..
aud not In fail thereof,* and that I receive the
Ain't
Ain’t
Gott. J&lt;&gt;rdoHr31unehenter, N'lcbola, O«On motion of Mr. Abbey the bill was
und«•^roipct. and that ! prartt a&lt;alMt
No.
Name,
Nature
of
claim
Claim'd
Kcc'm
’
d
jrood, Pollay, Tiwne, Winy, Young an/1 WCtmncey R. Crosby, service as^ *
y7^urt^»y^
«^lhout then allowed at the sum of $73 50 by
/ Shairman-112. NayB=3Itt«&lt;rs. Latty.
the following vote:
* Mark atul Nye—8. Absent Messrs.
Ayes—Abbey, Barry, Cressy, Daw­
n«
Abbey, tmwson nnd Merrick —3.
able Body to compel the payment to me for the son, Gott&gt; Mack, Manchester. Nye.
On motion of Mr. Towne, board then 32 Frank'll. Uttiefleld. board of
9xn that will stiU &gt;e ray due for salary as Judge Nichols, Osgood, Polley, Towne and
took a recess ’till the hour of one
of I’rebsle as sfuraaid for the year Jem, after
receiving the &gt;700 that I shall apply for and reNaj-s—Jordan, Latty, Merrick, Wing
o’clock p. m.
■
Afternoon Session,-Jah. 3d, 1883.
and Chairman—5.
Sxrr..
a. l-roS...
. Board met nt the hour fixed with a
On motion of Mr. Towne, board then
Dated. Jan. 5th, 1«W1.
•
quorum present.
adjourned ’till to-morrow morning at
38 Wm EalrbroUiem" “
*» ’»
Mr. Cressy moved that the chair ap­ the hour of 8 o’clock.
2
3 40
The chair announced ns the special 39 JuiUon Kitchen, ■ “
•
4b John Daynxmt.
1 « 1 « point a committee of three,. the mover
com mi tire to settle with tho county 41
Enoch Andrus, Clerk,
Alonzo E Southwick, ’*
«
« to be excused from service upon such
• Treasurer. Messrs. Manchester, Barry, 43 Samuel (3 Rich
“
•
1
«
Saturday, Jan. 7, 1889.
Nichol*, Nye and Latty.
43 Samuel A Armstrong. “ y
«
** committee, to attended to the interests
of the county, in case suit should be
John Carveth Esq. presented te the 44 CiuuleaH Bauer, service al in­
Board
met
at
the hour fixed.
Roll
quest ........................................ * 00 2 00 commenced uy Judge Smith.
board the petition of Judge Smith, 45 William
called. Journal read and approved.
M Brown, justice foes 13 oo 12 oo
Mr. Latty moved, as an amendment,
. asking the board to instruct the clerk 46 George Hughes, constable fees 18 38 18 38
Mr. Jordan presented the claims of
that
the
chairman
of
this
board
be
■ to draw him an order for the sum of 47 Oren A H ughw et al Justich gnd
chairman of such committee, which Abram Armstrong and George Richard
Y one thousand dollars for salary, as 48 JeterrCobb.' et'al jura anil wit­
for witness fees, and on motion of Mr.
prevaled.
.
, ,
Judge of Probacp for the year 1881, and
ness fees........................ .... 48 00 21 8i motion
The original motion, as amended, Towne the sums were allowed.
to instruct the county Treasurer to pay 49 Wm Upjohn et at. coroner, juror
The committe to settle with the
was
the
adopted.
nnd witness fee*............... 32
17 70
biicli &lt;mlcr.
Upjohn ct al. witness fees
On motion of Mr. Mack, board then County Treasurer now offered tho fol­
After some discussion, on motion of .-X) Wm
lowing report;
and medicine aervieM.......... 23 00
8 10
Mr. Abbey the petition was accepted.
51 Wm L Cobb justice fees.
c (6 6 ft. took a recess ’till the’hour of 4 p. id.
To the Honorable Board of Superrison of par­
r.’
63
Mr. Latty moved that the petition be r.2 AlmiraSbrrmnn,wltne®» fees..
Afternoon Session Continued.
* County:
••••
&lt;«
««
refered to a special committee of three, 63 Edwin Sherman. “
Gknti.kmkn.—Your committee to whom was
54 Fierce Furtlicrton. “
“----- ’ «
«
On again coming to order, the chair a-uUnied the duty of scttliUK with the County
who hhould report at their earliest con- 55
John P Ferguson. •
announced as the two other members Treasurer, respectfully report as follows :
vieoce.
•
M Ed Powei s tk Co-. Haniware.... 18 &lt;0 1 •
. 2s of the hist named committee, Mack John Liehty iu account wltn Barry’ County.
Mr. Towne moved that the commit­ 57 C P Mathews, constable fees ... 7 M
tee consist of Messrs. Dawson, Abbey M Clement Smith, postage and
and Merrick.
, .
Balance on hand Jan. 1st. 1881--------- fl
wood....................................... Il M H 02
The committee’on claim# reported library fund.........................................
and Creasy.
•Balance referred to claimant.
that satisfactory explanation had been Hu|4. of Schools. Institute fund.........
Mr. Merrick offered as an amend­
On motion of Mr. Nichols, the report made, of claim No. 83, by the claimant, Bcdemptluns.........................................
ment, that the chair appoint the the
Tax receipts......................................
.
and they would recommend the allow­ l*rlncii&lt;al and Intereat on Primary
committee, which amendment was ad­ was accepted.
After some discussion, on motion of ance of the same at the further sum of
Bcnool Lands............................
, opted.
Primary school fund ................ . .......
The original motion was then adopt­ Mr. Abbey, the report was adopted by $31 83.
fees (ran county clerk---- . ..
_
n
The committee also submitted the Court
ed and the chair appointed ns such the following vote:
Liquor tax.............................................
Nays—Messrs. Abby, Barry, Cressy, balance of their report as follows:
committee, Messrs. Latty, Manchester
Itecelpu from town treasurer ...........
Dawson,
Gott,
Jordan,
Latty,
Mack,
Foor
fund
ree’d per Co. Farm ............
and Dawson.
,
.
Am’i
Ain’t
Received from J. F Sutton...............
On motion of Mr. Nyc, board then Manchester, Merrick Nye. Nichols, Os­
No.
Boc’md’ Kcc’rd from &gt;upcr»laur ot Orangeville
U. Name.
.'illlll. Nature of Vclaim,
■ — claim'd
-• --55 Chrtetupber A Hough rt aL,
adjourned ’lfll8^Jd o’clock to-morrow Good. Polly, Towne, Wing, Young
Received on back lax..........................
justice constable and witness
and Chairman—18.
morning.
Total Receipts........................... 9
Wednesday, Jan. 4,1889.
Mrf Dawson offered the following 86 Daolol 'MUier.’rajatabieJees
,—•--•T-r 7 24
Overpaid by town treasurer of Carlton
Board met at8:30 and was called to
87 Dennis &amp; Slingeriand, printnnd paid back........................
6 oo
k order by the chair. Roll called; Journ­ preamble nnd resolution:
M fell .irej'.'wltncss foes........
Total Receipts........ -....................8
WheRcas, a clerical error was mode in the
al read and approved.
rf-x
of state and county taxes for tho 88 Milton F. Jordan justice few..
Mr. Latty and Mr. Manchester teing statement
CONTRA.
year IBM. furnisln-d the supervisor of the town­ »o John IXilau, el al., constable
members of the committee to settle ship
.. ►.••• ........ . .................... .
of llutianil, whereby said supervisor was 91 fees
AC Maynard, constable fees..
with the county tresurer.. asked to ,l»e aHired to raise a«»out eight hundred and
Insane amyiura............... ..........
4
Court orders .
........................
y dollars more than the amount of state 93 W II Schantz, merchandise. ..excused from serving upon the com­
93
Barry
County
Democrat
printCounty orders........................
.
county ua as apportioned by the appor­
mittee to consider the petition of Judge and
County dfflrrn ...
..................
tionment committee. Therefore,
94
Frank
T
CampbeC*.
justice
Smith, and Messrs.Young and Osgood
Hetvool examiner*......
................
Rksoi.vxd, that said supervisor is authorized
Institute fees
.............
. ..
and required to correct the asacwmenl roll of 95 James A 'Nuiu court atten­
was appointed in their ateod.
dance
...
.
.......
.............
County canvasser*................................
The following communications was the township, and re-assess the state and coun­
sheriff orders........................................
ty tax.
received from Judge Smith:
’Draf and dumb assy lam... ■
On motion of Mr. Towne tbo resolu­ fM James Waltz.
“
••••'
Primary school fund. ..........................
w Wm C Downing,
’
.•- •tion was ndobted.
Jftnemiwe*...... •............. ..................
100
C.
H
Snyder.
"
••••
i
’rim.nrv m-Im-J Interest ........
The unacrwgned respectfully rej»orts to your
Mr. Dawson also offered the follow­
101 John Palmerton, •*
body. :hat since the session in October irei. ing:
Ijquor tax....................................... .
la: John Txnlother. “
. ...
House ot correction. ...... :..................
there has been committed to the Asylum at
Resolved further, that the township board 1&lt;B Nick Brown, furor fees...........
Kalamazoo, Michigan. the following named
Fuel.......................................................
“
witness fees........ .
Rent ot probate offler ........ .
perM»:iA by him adjudged insane, there to be of Rutland, be and are hereby nuliiorizcd to 1M ••
”...........
give orders on tbo' township treasurer ot raid 105 C M Runyan, "
supported at the expense of the county.
Town treasurer on settlement .
Return of births and deatiui
* October 12th ,1881, George Mean, 4th Ward. township to persons who have paid their Ux 106 C A Hough. JtwUec fees.......... 9 01
for the amount they have .been required to pay IV&lt;
V .11 niuijuu,
----■'
W.
8, George binding ameMment rolls
Hastings City,
'
}S 9. M
Nov. S9tb. Jeremiah Brotherton of Carlton over and above their rightful tax.
State treasurer..................................... 1
liw wTjpJohnTecpert testimony .T.
Mich.
Respectfully,
On
motion
of
Mr.
?
bbey
the
resolu
­
HO II E Warner, witness fees......
'
Clement Smith.
tion was accepted and adopted.
111 John Mead.
“
........
Hated January 3d. 1882. Judge of Frobaie.
On Motion of Mr. Merrick, the board 112 M H Stebbins, constable fees...
On motion of Mr. Creasy, the report
113 John A Robinson, witness fees
.
fl47 773 C7
was accepted, and on like motion, the then took a recess until tho tiftur of one 114 John Tecpie,
“
Annexed schedule slunringf the amount on
o
’
clock
-p.
m.
__
.
115 Frank Charlton. “
^... . ~
same was refered back to Judge Smith
hand tmlouglng to each fund.
Afternoon Session, Jan. 5,1889.
UAn^wUch la respectfully aubmltte
for correction.
Balance
asylum
fund
.................
.
Bnardlmet at the hour fixed, with a
Court fund....................................
I
The committee on claims through
Fine...........................-...........................
their chairman, Mr. Mack, offered the quorum present. ■
House of correction........................... .
The committee on claims father re­
following partial report:
Committee.
Institute fund................ -........... ..........
ported
on
theiollowing
claims:
T.tUJWrrf
CtnUtmtn.
Poor fund........................................ .
Your committee having examined the annual
On morion of Mr. Nichob the report Liquor tax...,.......................................
’£!!««
claims. would recommend their allowance as » 'KrtW TUnwr, «&lt;»£■£•
Miaceuaneoun........................................ I
wns accepted.
01 kuascu * rowers, niruwarr.. .
follows:
•
Ain’t
Ain’t .
63 Henry Houghtalln Board of
Total............................................ • I
Mr. Nye moved tho adoption of tho
No. Name. Nature of claim Claim’d Uec’m’d
All ot which is respectfully submitted.
Prisoners........................
Geo. B. Manchester. Chair
1 William McKenney, witness foes fl 88 fl 88 63 Henry HounbUlln, turnkey fees 38 45 38 45
Mr. Creiwj’ moved to amend by al­
2 John Hall.Juror-fees................... 1 oo 1 oo M Orson Swift, services for Insane
.
John E. Barbt.
3 Lewis Birman, witness tees....... 1 io 1 lo
'
,Gko. C. Nichols,
persons...... ................................. 8 30 8 60 lowing claim 109 at $10, which motion
4 J. Birman, witness teas.........
110
110 65 Herbert M. Lee, deputy sheriff
wan
lost
by
the
fallowing
votq
:
8 J. Wickham. witness tees.,......
Nt M
fees......... ’.... ..........
31 84 21 84
Ayea
—
Abbey,
Barry,
Creasy,
Gott,
&lt; A Titus.Juror fees..................
so
ao 66 C; W. Goucher, medical services " oo 6 oo
On mtrtion of Mr. Polley, the report
7 Georgs Brink, witness foes........
Ki
89 67 W.S.Goodyear, merchandise,.. 38 72 38 73 Osg.Mjd and Wing—6.
8 F R ffi-hee, ’’ - .............
85
M M L. E. Stauffer, juror tees........... 1 90 i oo
Nays—Dawson, Jordan, Latty, Mack, was dteepted, and on motion of. Mr.
9 James Townsend, juror tees....
50 so (» Ed. Morrill.
“
’’ ........... 1 6d 1 co Manchester, Merrick, Nye, Nichols, Towne the same was adopted. .
10 George letter, ” "
....
1 w 1 oo 70 F. A.Mattison. “
” ........ 1«
1 oo
Mr. Latty offered the following reso­
Polley,
Towhe,
Young
and
Chairman
11 Bentley Bros. £• Wilkins, lumber 5 is 0 18 71 William U Brown. eU al.. Jus­
13 O II GrecnOeld, justice tees...... 3 SB 3 22
tice and Constable fees......... 16 7S 18 75 —19.
lution and moved ita adoption.
• 13 Waldou T. Barber, Justice ...
The question being on the adoption
Rk30Uvei&gt;. that the County Tnmaarcr be, aud
. Constable and witness fees.... 14 04 14 04
of the report, the same wai then ad­ is hereby Instructed to procure all printing and
15 John Carretb. service in...
stationery necesuary for the rnn-cral County
Trego case............................... i» co loo 00. 75 Jacob Burgbdoff, "
opted by the following vote ;
" ......
and to procure the same at the lowest
IS Justin E Emerson, same............ 45 00 45 00 76 Charles Hotchkiss. criminal acAyes—Abbey, Barry, Creasy, Daw­ ORlces,
possible rates.
17 William L Cobb, Justice fern.... 11 as 11 35
.count......... ...J....................
son, Gott, Jordan, Latty, Mack, Man­
18 Albert Ricli. constsbie feet.... 6 30 4 30 7T Charles Hotchkiss, court at­
Mr. Towne moved to lay the resolu­
chester, Merrick, Nyc, Nichols, Osgood
19 William. Burst*r. Justice.. .
tendance.................. —...
toss....................
30 85 20 13
Polley, Towne. Wing, Young and tion on the table, which motion pre­
90 Enoch Andrus, express aud...
vailed by the following vote:
Chairman—18,
Jxjne» A. Nlut«, criminal ac­
Aycn— Abbey, Barry, Creasy, Daw­
Nays—0.
count......... . .........................
Claim No. 59, which had been refer­ son, Gott, Jordan, Mack. Merrick,
Wm. M. Beudder. lime...............
S2 Henry Hougbtelln.w'^nj:
red the claimants for correction was Nye, Nichols, Osgood aud Towne—18.
bill........ . ........................
Nays—Latty, Manchester, Polley,
retnrned duly corrected.
X3 Henry Honthhk’ln, court at-,
Mr. Cressy moved that the same be Wing, Young aud Chairman—fl.
tendance........................
84 Christopher A. Hough.
Mr. Creasy moved that the committee
M Henry Houghtalln, criminal.
allowed at the sum of $75 15, as|daimJustice, constable aud
25 Henry Bouxbt*llu,mmmou-.
fees...'.................................... 36 21 37 15 ed.
appointed to look after the interest of
*
Ingjura*etc... ...........
•Rtfrrred to committee ot the whole.
Mr. Latty moved to amend by allow­ thecountv, in Judge Smith’s matter,
be
authorized to draw orders on the
On motion of Mr Nichols the report ing the bill at $7015, which motion was
IT Charles UougittiUin. court,
County Treasurer for necessary expen­
lost by the following vote :
was accepted.
attendance....................
Ayes—Abbey, Latty, Wing and ses.
After some disenssion, on motion of
Motion carried by the following
Mr. Dnwaon, claim No. 59 waa referred Chairman—4.
Nays—Bnrry, Cressy, Dawson. Gott, vote:
back tn the claimants for correction.
Ayes—Abbey, Barry, Creasy, Daw­
. On Motion of Mr. Creasy, the report Jordan, Made, Manchester, Merrick,
On mot ion of Mr. Miclioh the report waa then adopted.
Nye, Nichols, Osgopd, Polley, Towne son, Gott. Jordan, Latty, Mack, Man­
chester, Merrick, Nye. Nichols,Osgood.
was accepted, and on • motion of Mr.
Tho apecnsi committee anppointed to and Young—M.
Abbey, tn* same wm adopted.
consider the petition of Judge Smith
The vote now occurring on the origi­ Polley, Towne, Wing, Young and
of Mr. Latty the time for through their Chairman, Mr. Young, nal motion, the same was lost by the Chairman—18.
Nays—0.
in the township now offered the following report:
following vote:
,
There appearing no further1 business
wm extended for the
Aye*—Barry. Cressy* Dawson, Gott,
To the honorable Board of SuperrlMjn of tho Mack. Nichols, Nye, Osgood and after the reading of the journal, on
Coduty of Barry:
motion
of Mr. Towne, board adjournan opportiiuTowne—9.
_
On motion of Mr. Polly,
Nays—Abbey, Jord*nr Latty, Man­ e&lt;l. title die.
Enoch Andrus,
Orson Swift,
tecew ’till tie hour of
chester, Merrick. Polley, Wing, Young
County Clerk.
Chairman.
and Chairman—9.
Mr. Jordan moved that the bill I «c al­
lowed at the sum of $6 85, being the
Beecher stock is palpably declin­
amount of the bill, less the charge for
printing schedule of teachers examina- ing even in the Plymouth congregat ion.
When tho Beecher-Tilton trial was on
hand
the friends of Beecher rallied,
Mr. Latty moved to amend by allow
oit^by ftbe&gt; following and at the annu al Bale of pews iu his
inr
church $70,819.50 was realized. At the
annual sale for the current year the
Latty, Wing and total amount realized wa» $95.41)2, with
about thirty pews for which there were
’ sera nt all. It looks as if the
de had, struck Plymouth

sr by

sSrS.SsI ss
: .5 ■«

'

Builders’
‘

Hardware,

Sash, Doors, Blinds, Jefferson Nails, Glass, Putty, Paints,
.
Oils,
Varnishes, Colors, Brushes, Etc. Castor, Sperm, Golden,
’
Black, Linseed and Kerosene Oils.
Shovels, Spades, Forks, Hoes, Snaths, 'Apple Parers, Farm
Bells,
Fence Wire, Well and Cistern Pumps. Wood and Iron,
.
.Pipe, Points, Cylinders, Lead Pipe, Sinks. &amp;c.
------------ AGENT FOR—--------

DOMESTIC SEWING MACHINE

.

The Lightest Running and most Durable Machine in use. •
I shall aim to keep none but first class goods, and sell them
Call and see me when needing hardware.
1at a small profit.
:

FRANK C. BOISE.

YOU SEEN THOSE

New Fall Goods

1

------ JUST IN AT—

.

'

KOCHER BROTHERS.
If hot, do so at once and be happy. \

In this line we are bound to lead nil competition, and our
stock just in is larger and better selected than ever before. It
consists in part, of

New StYle Cashmeres, Plaids, Brocades, Etc.
•OUR STOCK OF18 FULL AND COMPLETE.

The larbcst line of Beaver Shawls in two counties.
A large variety of Heady Made Cloaks; also Cloakings of all
shades and qualities.
300 Pieces of New Prints. An efidless variety of Blank’ts
A big line of Underwear and Flannels.
.
Customers are plenty, and we are too busy to enumerate
further at present.

KOCHER BROS.

BARGAINS
THAT ARE BARGAINS, AT ’

Aylsworth’s.
I shall commence a,

COST cash SALE
OF MY ENTIRE STOCK

And continue the same until Feb. 15th, 1882, at which
tiift my Brick Store will be for sale or rent

« making this grtrt Cost Cash Sale, I must say that all parties owing me,

by Dote or ac»eunt, will be expected to walk wp’to the Captain’s office
Peither
and settle at once.

Purchasers can effect a big s
By patronizing me for the next sixty days
As the Stock ir all fresh, having all been bought during September and October’
laat, at figures that no dealer in this section can duplicate. Baying as Ido for
my Big Rapids store and thia, it gives me the hiaide track over a small dealer-

THE REDUCTION IN PRICES
On my (lothing, Hats, ( ap«, Boots and Mboea
Will astonish you. while all the Dry Goods and Groceries will soon follow in
the same track.
♦

JfJSTRffi!

’’’pO my old customers, whom I have sold goods during
A yon will respond to the calls of the old ledger, i
therein, without a murmer, and eyer oblige,

�STOVES.
Heating Stoves, Cook Stoves and Ranges.

Grand rapids division

•oj-tvlUe,.

Throurt UosrhmMDd Slr«piii&lt;Ci&gt;ni
froo
Gniad ttaiad* au&lt;! Detroit. Ail train* oonnrct It
**m«
at Detroit with Great Wmcrn. Or»o.
Trank »nd CannU Hout lx n&gt; ttallwiy*.
Jt. C. BROWN,
H-H. LKDTARD.
Am'i G.-n’l 8apt&gt;J*ck*ou. Uett'i rinp’l IX troV

jj A. BARBER, M. D..

*

" noMax)PATinc

Physician and Surgeon.
•Office’llrdl door east of Opera House, and
near resldnice on corner of * Washington aud
State Street*, Nadirille, Mich.#

BOOTBoua SHOES

In swurtmaalik* nranticr and al lav prices
vixx shoes * *pectaitjr.

•

.

A. BURCMAK

OBSERVE, COMPARE. REFLECT, ACT!
NEW DENTAL. PARLOR.
I wish to make known to the cltlEen* of
Nashville and vicinity that I have purchased
the practice of J. L. 8Ig»lwe.' and urn pennannenlly located over G. A. TRUMAN'S store.
All kind* ofRENTAL WORK done, from the
almaleat operation to the mo« difficult,—A rtiflebd Pklatcs. Irregular, natural teeth straigh­
tened, teeth extracted without pain for 50 ct*;
onv-iMltdeducUxl when artillcial work la made
All work warranted, advice in regard to teeth
free call nnd see me.
P. 8. Will do dental work for 8 cords ot wood.

1»K. A. BJ. WIX.X.

P A. BUSH,
“THE BOCS"

’

BOOT
AND SHOEMAKER,
WABRnriULE,
. a*icn.
Bepalitaf doo* with

Nmumm

sad DlipsUk.

yY'&lt;&gt;lxxJTT house,

'

X«*shvlllo Mlolilffan.
A. S. FgoTK, Proprietor.

Thi« Is a 111-w Hut*:, rentrally located, well kept.
Aid it* jaairuos Cm sl&lt;r«r« «ir,-1&gt;( ^riling l*y.-r **•
entnmo-lsXb'r* for tlw s'tnum p&gt;&gt;'-L i&gt;-an a-- any
^tU-r bouJ in H*ny enuuly. Tsre tir«t-claM £am-

J^ATHBLX HOUSE,
A. IL ANTISDEL, Pitornivron.

Grand Knplda, Mich.

This Hoom furulahea the beat acconunodaMo*a «f any house fa tho dty for tha.raait

Attorney &amp; Counsellor,

&gt;IaA&lt;JK&amp; son.

‘ Aierican and Foreign Marble,
;

MonnfflertE, Tmhrtcirez, M.-nlba, &amp;c.,
__
SfaaiidntfM. Mich.

qjy

nA Is tmw nicely located
,n
r,*w' building.

ba* added • stock of
CRIWS^ET Jt CI HIT LI R RAWS? '

EUTIBbTsAWMIIL MEN!
I'ricra on Mow Work.

««l hammering all rawk
W *&gt; loebes. 10 cexta per
», Ouwtied, XAO1
Hammered,
_
. 8.00
- ”
4.O»

and hand labor in Die different parts
at Ao country. Tho figures show that
— Uie farm and correspondingly
the capital that can be }u______ employed inexpensive ma­
chinery, the lower is the cost in the la­
bor per acre. This would seem a Strong
argument in favor of large farms; and
yet we know that more money is made
—that is, the pro raU profits of capital
are greater on a moderate-aized farm,
than on the mammoth concents where
machinery that will'thrash out one of
two thousand bushels of wheat a-day
arc employed. It shows that there are
other factors to enter into the question
of profits beyond that of the mere labor*
question alone.
.
Yet machinery of some sort is fast
superseding all kinds of hand-labor.
The article we refer to shows that In
the matter of threshing the' old flail will
soon be as much of a curiosity as the
carthcm pots, or the woven doth of the
ancient mound-builders. Most of the
crops are threshed by horse-power. In
most States, however, steam-threshers
have been introduce^; indeed we be­
lieve in all but South Carolina. As wc
have said, the average cost of threshing
is no guide to profits ia farming, ana
yet the figures nave a great value.
It
seems from the researches of the' De­
partment that the lowest cost is in
Caiiforuia where the largest farm*
on tho average prevail This oosl
is -put at five and eight-tenths cents
per bushel The greatest cost is in
South Carolina where the wheat costs
I nineteep and two-tenths cents; a re­
markable difference in cost.
PennsyL
vauii manages to get its wheat threshed
for seven and seven-tenths; while New
Jersey has to pay ten and five-tenths.
Maryland manages to get her threshing
done u little less than l*ennsylvama,*being rated st six and eight-tenths. • The
whole list of figures show that wherev­
er there are the largest tracts of land
under individual culture and conse­
quently a chance to use machinery of a
powenul character, where from a
thousand to two thousand bushels of
wheat per day can be cleared out, tho
cost is the lowest. In some of the
States East, where farms are not so
very large, however, much is being,
done by co-operatioa in the use of ex­
pensive macliiaery. A setof neighbors
will oft**: club together and get a ma­
chine which can be used by all of them
in turn. This of course is not very
satisfactory except where the barns are
large, and the work can be done under
cover regardless of wind or weather.
In the Wesltlie crop has to be threshed
on the field, and it is well to chooie
one's own time to do it- Ou the com­
munity plan tiie one has the enrtaiaty
of fine weather, while the others have
to leave a good chance go by at the
risk of loss.
In the East however,
many own absolutely the machines and
hire them out successfully to the neigh­
bors. All of this tends to cheapen the
cost. If it does not add to the profits.
—Germantown 'Idcgraph.

It is said by Dr. Maudsley that statis­
tics Bhow that a larger per cent, of
farmers’ wives become insane than
any other class of women. The cause
is not, ns might naturally bo supposed,
the hard work they arb obliged to per­
form, but the monotony of their lives.
Many a woman who is in a comfortable
home, surrounded by highly cultivated
land, is almost an automaton bo far as
tho act* of her daily life are concerned.
Her life was mapped out for her com­
pletely on the day kho entered the
farmhouse a bride, with the exception
of u :'t slight events as the birth'and
po ib'.y the death of children. While
ner.nusband goes about the country to
transact business she stays at home, re­
freshing herself by piecing a bed quilt.
Whoa ho sits down at evening to enjoy
his pipe, and his agricultural paner, to
which periutpe he has contributed some
article on sheep husbandry, or the most
appeuved method of onion raising, she
sits by hie side, busy with her knitting
work, or with carpot-rag catting, won”
dering meanwhile how she will bo able
to got money enough to buy the
warp. He carries oat the old patri­
archal idea; he is the head of the
house; he determines how the money
saved during .the year should be
invested; he selects the pew in
tho church; he subscribes to relieve suf­
ferers by flood aud fire. She, like a
new and uncertain player at euchre,
simply passes. It would bo an unwar­
rantably sweeping assertion to sav that
this is true of oil farm lives. Many a
farmer's house is as nearly the true and
ideal home as any in the land, but it is
tine too often. If a man has married
a-wife who has no opinions of her own,
he ought to seek to develop some la­
tent mind-force in her. Let him, as the
jwiser half, suggest to her that she try
to retain health of mind with health of
body by taking active interest in some­
thing.
Where the materials for the
study of, let us say,' botany - lie before
her all the time, what nn excellent
thing it would be for her to study that.
This is only one illustration. Too many
women who begin to have some leisure
on the shady side of forty think they
are too old to leant, or to bo­
gin to do thing#
they once as­
pired to do. They believe they have
lost the capacity for mental labor, when
the reverse is true. Thera is another
aspect of this subject that women weald,
do well to think of. and that is that
nothing will eo effectually preserve
good looks and the spirit and strength
of youth and early womanhood as to be
filled with intense and hearty interest
In tho best things of this life.—(br. Jf.
Y. PosL

The co tn tn on term of piuk-eye is used
by horao-owneni oo nocount of the col­
oration nnd general appearance of the
eye. Thia b not a new diae&amp;M, b
might bo inferred from the report* ol
i the newwpapeni. The Unit account ol
nn affection similar to it dates as fax
back a* 17*9. In 1732 it prevailed in
A Greenback campaign sting Is entitled
England, in 1746 in Germany, In 1758 “Dreamer* awake!” If they awake they will no
in tho north of Scotland, and bo on; in longer be Given backers.
j modern times it prevailed Jn 1841) in
The symptoms of Itching Pile* are moisture
। France, iu 1858 in,Germany. in 1860 in
prcaplmUoh. intense itching, most al night
1 Franco again; while every one remem- Uke
seems as if pin worms were crawling in or
bera the epizootic of 1872 'which pre- .about the rectum. Tlic more you scratch die
j vailed in thia country. This started in j' worse they Itch, very dlstre»*ing. The private
Canada and spread all over this conli- parts are often affected. Dr. Swavue’s Oint­
Is the most effective remedy extant for
। nent, disabling horses, preventing their ment
dil* tormenting complaint. Give* rest at night
; use, and thus for a number of weeks without that desire to scratch. Also has on
► interfered with the immense traffic of equal in quickly eradlcadng Tetter, Itch, Salt
। our people, while it carried off hundreds Rheum#, Erysipelas, Barbers* Itch, Pimples.
of valeable animals, either by disease,
or, in many instanoas, improper and in- used In my practice,” Dr. Cotton. Woodstock,
jutliolous treatinenL The latest appear- VL. ‘.“troubled with Itching Piles for over twen­
‘ anoe of this affect ion was just one year ty yearn, It cured roc completely," L. 8. Meraer
! ago, whan sevenU of our large cities Lufleld, Me. Sent for 30 eta (in 8 cL stamps)
8 boxes, $1.25, By Dr. Swayne &lt;fc Son. Fhilad’a
suffered-from the same trouble.
Pa. Sold by nil drugglsu.
*
I
Influenza is a disease essentially epl­
Tldqlatbeway the Chicago Timesputa it:
, zootic, that is, affecting a large number
' of horses upon a large territory, and its 'Guiteau wishes a suspension of public opin­
sudden appearance can M yet only ba ion for one year,-and public opinion wishes, a
vaguely explained. It appears in all cuspcnslon of Gutteau for about80 minutes.”
climates and under all temperatures.
WONDERFUL POWER.
: Many causes have beep assigned for it.
When a medicine perform# such
u
I such as a sudden change of air, mias­
Sidnev Wort la constantly doing, it may truly
matic influences, a peculiar electrie con - ■be
Baid to have wonderful power. A carpenter
. dition of the air. etc. The presence of in Montgomery, Vt., had Buffered for eight
j ozone in excess in the atmosphere, the yearn from the wont of kidney diseases, and
influence ot continued eastern or wesE- luM been wholly incapacitated for work. He
rays, “One box made a new man of tnc, aud I
' ern winds, are considered by some au­ sincerely
believe it will restore to health, all
, thora as essential causes, but careful in­ that arc similarly affilcted.” It la now sold iu
i’ vostigation has shown most of them to both liquid and dry fonn.—Danbury Ndw*.
i be groundless. Drafts or currents of
Base-ball rectos to be of ancient origin, for
[ air. low and badly ventilated stables,
; arc regarded ns predisposing causes, we read that Rebecca, went down to the well
but this rests on no real ground, as we with a pitcher and caught Isaac| have seen it in New York prevail in the
THE BUSl^ESd MAK'S BEST FRIEND.
| beat stables where all hygienic ruitm
Mr. C. L. Oudealuys, a leading Importer of
were carefully observed, m often as iu Baltimore, 1ms mated that nothing lias done
the poorest shanties, where fresh air bls dyspepsia. ldlge*tkm Ac. so milch good us
। and light were almost unknown, and that most wonderful of ail tonic and retiring
—Brown’s Iron Bitters. Just think
where filth was gathered without regard medicines
of it, ata supper the other night, although?,
to health. The sex, the age. tlie breed chronic dyspeidlc, be says its ate. at 12 o'clock
of the animal, seams to have no influ­ fried oratcre, chicken salad aud Ice cream, af­
ence, though in the last two outbreaks ter which takings dose ot Iron Bitters, be nev­
bjenta more pleasant night, with uo dyspepI in the United States mares seemed to er
UcmpUiu.s in the morning.
Buffer in greater numbers, and they al­
so made a more general recovery, geld­
“What's the man yelling al I” asked a farmer
. Ings, as a general thing, yielding less ot Ills boy. “Why," chuckled the boy, "He’s
readily to treatment
yelllDg at the lop of bl* voice.”
The question of contagion is yet un­
DAILY CALLS.
settled; many admit it while many oth­
ers deny it. Tho symptoms make their
.appearance suddenly; aa animal, ap- •ent! tiie two doz. cl yvur Liver 1'IIIa I am oat
■u&lt;i
need
them
bwlh. TUfcV are ealk.1 tor dul­
parchtly perfectly well at a given time,
ly.
'
fi. 8. JACKSON.
may a few hours afterwards be very
To plesre, o v tnunt make up his mind to be
| sick. At first the animals may show
only a slight loss of appoute, a little taught many thing* which he already knows,
: fever which may vary in intensity, the* by people who do not know th&lt; m.
pulse becoming quicker, the respira­
to
Lydia E. Pinkhutn, 2311 West­
tion increased, aud the temperature ris­ ernWrite
are. Lytffi,
for pamphlet* relative to
ing several degrees. The throat be­ tiie curative properties oilier Vegetable com­
comes tender on pressure, and then a pound In i.li It-nulc complaints.
dry and painful cough appears. The
eyes become bloodsLot aud swollen, . “You are on the wrong tack,” sold the pilot’s
with a discharge more or less abundant. wife when t! e hardy son of the l.uid-soundlng
Sometimes there is an inflammatory
condition of the eye, followed by the cbunation. "No!" he replied. after a critical
formation of pus, and often the extrem­ exam'matl&gt;n, “I am un the right lack, 1 guera,
ities are swollen.
Soon a discharge but shoot roe dead If I cln't on die v .ong end
from the nose takes place, at first thin
and watery, afterwards more pus-like
in character. According to the type
and severity ot the disease and the pe­ MRS. LIDIi E. PIKIH1M, OF mH, USS.
culiarity of the individuals, nervous
symptoms show themselves, or troubles
of the chest and bowels are detected.
Thus we find symptoms of lunfr fever,
or bronchitis, colicky pains or inflam­
mation of the bowels, complicating the
original disease, and again rheumatic !
symptoms are observed.
Generally
the disease run# a regular course, and I
lasts but a few days, from seven to ton, '
unless it becomes complicated. In tho
Grat case there is no fear ror ultimate I
recurery. while in the other fatal re­
suits may occur. The epizootic may
last a short time, or it may continue
for weeks or months; cases arc re- I
corded where
it lasted a whole 1
year. Irregular in its appearance (
and in its manipulations it may affect i
a few horses or may lay up all the ani­
main of a stable. When the disease is
simple in its character there is no mor­
tality; in the epizootic ot Cleveland, iu
1860, it is said that only one horse died
out of*400 Bick ones. When it is com­
PINKHAM S
I plicated tho mortality is likely to be
VZ6ETABL2 COIgOUHD.
greater, and specially is this the case
where the disease kuown as purples
(purpura hemorrhagica) appears.
The treatment ot simple mfluenza is
very easy. Rest,care in the diet,abundant
drinks with small doses ot saltpetre,
I are the principal things to be observed.
Where there is sore throat employ slight
counter irritations by liniments and
blisters. A mixture of honey or molas­
ses, with liquorice, gum arabic and cxtract of belladonna, Will allay the cough.
If there is extreme debility alcoholic
stimulants mny be given iu the water,
and if the administration of pills does
not produce too much cough, two
drams of carbonate of ammonia, with
one dram of camphor, may be given.
Careful attention to hygiene, proper
ventilation, fresh and clean bedding,
bandaging of the smaller extremities,
and judiakMM blanketing according to
the*condition of external air, are ox the
greatest advantage in tl*e management
of influenza. Complications require a
different treatment according to their
nature. It io impossible to- give any
rules relating to the prevoutiou of the
disease; cleanliness and disinfection be­
ing about tho only advice to give;
but influenza will appear, no matter J U 8TETEKS k J. COOK.
what precautions may have been taken
’
At £• Cook’s Old Stand,
against it.—Prof. A. lAantarrl. V. S.,
in American AgricuUurist.
NASHVILLE - - - MICHIGAN.
—Mr. Walter, of the Loudon Times,
calls for miMiouaries to spread infor­
mation concerning America in every
ooanty of England. He. has become so
ilelighted with this country that tho
next thing we hear may be that he in­
tends moving the Thnndsrer over this

LYDIA E.

—Another
highway of tn

’

ALL SIZES AND PRICES TO SUIT.
Bought far cull ud ran .an aux be ~1&lt;&gt; rh«p. Call and m them sad Ton
Will K* e-i'iK,vtrtz-uaf
A Iii.iim .a..'.,... ...I..,.. 4*n..r.. .
_ .1 .__

The Handiest, Most Durable and Best Round Stove
—j—IN THE MARKET--------

‘

Tlx® 3xz£oxx-cLxn.exi.-t9.1.
Call and nee it anyway.

I also have .a full line &lt;rt aea*onal&gt;!« goods
consisting of

Corn Shellers, Cutters, Bob-sleighs, out lery. Clothes Wringers, Pumps,
Both Iron and Wood, also pipe for same, and a few thousand
other things. The
•

TI1T
Is under tho management of ALBERT NEIJLICK, a’luan of year*’ exper­
ience. who can do you a first-claw job of any kiiwi. Please cal! ant HENRY or
myself will show you goods and be pleased to sdl you anything iu my liuo you
may want.
. ,
.
.

C. L. GLASGOW
Double Hardware, West Side Maip St., Nashville, Mich.

OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE

FOR SALE!
WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH

THREE INCH TIRE
AS OUR HOADS DEMAND SOMETHING

BETTE R THAN GOMMON:TIRE
We believe the Three inch Tire is destined to come
into general use. Call and see them.

BENTLEY BROS. &amp; WILKINS.
Hastings, Mich., Sept. 15th, 1881.

Pioneer Store.

Fall and Winter Goods are arriving every day. Due prep­
aration is half the battle of life, and anticipating the needs of
our customers, we are “laying in” a good supply of the necescaries for protection and comfort against the reigns of the fast
approaching winter.
A better stock of Boots and Shoes can not be found anywhere. Clothing a specialty.
Hats and Caps of the latest styles.
Ladies and Misses Cloaks artd Dolman:
Childrens Knit sacques.
Prints, from 5 cents to 8 cents.
Dress Goods in variety and shades to suit
most
fastidious.
Our aim is to deal justly with everebody, and if we don’t do
the fair thing, we ask you to make us. The highest market
price will be paid for produce. 10,000 lbs. Dried Apples, 10,­
000 bus. Corn wanted in exchange for goods, also '500 solid
cords of stove wood, seasoned.
With two of the best clerks in the country, we .are not oiHjr
ready to serve you, but take pleasure in serving you in
whatever way we can. Give us a call. •
Very greatful for past favors we respectfully atfc a continu­
ance of your patronage.

We are Ready
I^OTT A. SI.ASIIINQ

'

Parlor Suits, Bedroom Suits, Gents’ Easy Chairs,
Ladies’ Rockers, Camp ChairSjFiiie
Couches, Extension 1'fibles, Center
Tables, What-nots, Picture Frames,
Bureaus, and in fact Everything
Else Needed to Furnish a ” ouse-

�GROCERY!
a day., Mix. Caroline IU

the 14th. She positively refused to be vacci-

Lnited titatesduring the seven day* ended on
Ax alarming rhe in the Cumlie.-iand Hirer

MgJur improper tn ro
H&gt;t rtixul-J therefore den*
Uh &lt;x&gt;unwd oould. It

Tbe World Mutual Relief A**od*l!on, a
graveyard insurance concern of Pennsylvania,
«m dissolved by judicial procesa on the 14th.
It tud iseuod policies representing over &lt;13,­
000,000. Tbe throe largest companies in that
Stale had previously been swept away by the
Latx on the evening of the 14th the wb«Jeof Chicago, made an assignment to H. M.
Humphrey, to cover liabilities of &lt;250,000.
Br a misplaced switch on the New York
Central Road on the 14th, at Fox Bridge, near
Syracuse, a freight train compoaed at thirty

Mm. Blain* baa filed upon Friday, the 9Tth
day cf January, as the time for his eulogy
upon the Ute President Garfield, before the
United States Senate.

Hudson and tho oilier at Poughkecpoic. From

Turkish and electric bath establishment in
New York. Dr. Sayre finds that she suffers

forty miles an hour waa mainUlned until tbe
Spuyun Duyvil Cretk Station wa* rtiaebed.
Here tbe engineer slowed down and

baa appeared in both eyes.
Tnx Illinois Supreme Court. tn a case ap­
pealed from Quincy, has just decided that
school authorities have no right to exclude any
child from the privileges 61 the common schools
of the State on account of color, race or re­
ligion.
Cattaix Gxobqk JL Ttsox, who drifted for
seven months on an ice-floe In the Arctic re­
gions, is said to heartily indorse the scheme of
Cheyne to attempt to reach the North Pole
by balloons.
_

pnopbr. and they will overrule you,
111 rodown to future agn* with a .Charles Chapman, was fatally Injured.
ion your name.** Mr. H«*ed&lt;hen
BEdtnaaT Hunt sent the following cable­
Forelm.
gram from Washington on the 14th to Lieu­
Tnx Bank of England on the 1.1th snbserib-d
tenant Dauenhauer and Chief Melville, of the
£300
to
the
Irish
property
defense fund.
Jeannette, at Irkutack, through J{ offman at
Bijmamck ha* resolved not to submit tbe
St. Petersburg: “ Remain on the ground till
the remainder of the expedition Is found. Impel 1*1 rescript to the Reichstag.
Tax French Govemmeat will a*k for a proHelp the search by every means tn yonr
longstLua of the time for concluding the Anpower.”
A ran at Albion, N. T., on the 14th, origi­ gl --French commercial treaty.
was pai nt to alL Oonunulng
Tnx Softan of Turkey, ha* eommbialoDcd a
this strain, Mr. Heed said that, in bis opin­ nating in Parchard’a fancy store, on Main
n. if ••this poor creature was sent to an street, from tbe explosion of a lamp, caused a number ot German officers to reorganize his
would be a driveling idiot within lues of &lt;250,000.
force of gendarme*
■
Tax Canadian Parliament wa* formally
Fuhthxu partfcrlars of the railroad dis­
aster on the Hudson River Road at Bpuyten
ofaman. They swear only to- opm^n. and
tcnant-Govcrnor, tn the absence of the Gov­
you hurra n ilablr instam-r how far from the Duyvil on the 18th show that eight persons ernor-General, the Marquis of Lome.
naif* tbe opinions of most learned doctor* were killed anil eleven wounded. Tiie half­
Ma. Gladstone ba* again remitted ten per
■ar irwd fh th&lt;- sad case of the late FrcsfdrnL It burned body of Bute Senator Wagner, the
would I*- u sbatno to »-nd a man to the rbIIuw*
cent of the rentals of his Hawarden estate.
ou tbr* opinion of doclo.-*.” Alluding to the palace-car projirietor, was Ukeu from tbe
Tux President and Secretary aud two mem­
■tricturcs of Mr. David;re upon tbe course &lt;rf wreck and sent to New York tn a special
etstnlu members of GulU-uu's family in atick- coach. The remains of the seven other vic­ bers of the committee of the Drumcolhigber
Itur to the prisoner when they should hare cut tims were uken to the city by Coroner Knox. brunch of the Ladles’ League were committed
With the exception of Miss Mary Daniela, to Limerick Prison on the 14th, fqy bolding
erst b.-r brother a mental wreck. and should tbe injured were able to go to their home* Illegal meetings since the 1st of January.
Gambktta ascended the tribune In the
The bodlea of Mr. and Mr*. Valentine, Ute
newly-married couple, were forwarded to Ver­ Chamber ot Deputies ou thc*!4th and resd his
mont. George Melius, a brakeman on the bill for the revision of the French Constitu­
tion. It provides for the election of life Sen­
ators by Separate vote* of the Chambers. ’ for
criminal carelessness.
R. L- Hoon, Cashier of the Wabash freight the Insertion of the principle of sendin de
All the tcMimony th'iy bad b?en aide to socure office at Detroit, disappeared several days ago. lirfr; for depriving the Senate of the power to
for the dcfeiuM* wus » veritable God-&lt;-n(L aud It is now learned that be Irad cmbcxxled restore to the budget Items stricken out by the
Mr. tt»-cd then armird nt r-nnsim-rabra
&lt;15,000 or more, which was lost in the gnm- Deputies, and for tire abolition of public
prayers at the opening of the Legislature.
bling dens.
Ax Alexandria (Egypt) dispatch, published
muuit v. thnt vcstltnile of belt In conclusion ’ Tut am.ouucetnenl was rci-rutly made by a In London ou the Ukh.says the Egyptian sit­
hr swmindctl the jury of the oath they bud- 'Rochester (N. Y.) newspaper thaf on the I5tb
tak'-u »t rb' U-g.nningof tbo trial; am! adjured a collet t on would be taken up in St. Story's uation was becoming very grave. Parliament
refused
to surrender the right ot voting the
ju l &lt;-x&gt;*eutU&gt;n of the prisoner would l»e Catholic Church in that c-ty for the Landtlfniny beypnd d.-aeriptluti—an Indelible U'uguers confined in Kllmiinhatn Jail. On budge L The programme of Parliament
on Am- ricsu juries ami American juri*- Ur- opening ot service on tbe 15th Bishop Mc­ dialled with that of tbe Khedive and Cherlf
TbcCuurt ndjourued at Um- couclu*
Quaid walked Into the pulpit at St. Mary's Pasha, the Primo Minister. If Parliament
itixd** rcmariM until the UUl
and read a statement that be could not permit persisted In it* attitude Cbcrif Pasha would
the church to be used for any purpose having resign. The Anglo-French note bad not over*
rornunr bls unfamlllarity with the m-xlea of a t^ngc ot political action about it, and for- awed the National party. The policy of En­
bule the method, while approving the end, de­ gland and France was anxiously awaited
fair, candid and impartial sired. He thought the Coercion bill wanted Precipitated action might produce actual
danger.
.
tn. a Mr. Be rille then rretd an indlrtci' tit fur strong e&gt;n&lt;je:uuat&gt;oa, and its victims were
Tub total number of Immigrant* arrived In
justly &lt;n;titled to aid; and be gave permission
to orgasj.xc a relief committee outside the Ontario for 1881 was 79.153. Of this number,
58,300 went to the United States, 330 to
•
•Xpert*, for conspiring to btuig the prisoner, church.
Frank Burr, the engineer of the Tarrytown Quebec Province, 2,281 to Manitoba, and 18,233
tiratcou'i
-v &lt;1 perversion-I th- Uw
la the case. In illustration or support &gt;rf ibis train which ran into the Chicago express at remained tn Oulario. Tbe total number of
Bpuyten Duyvil on the 13th. testified at the immigrauts arrived at Quebec during 1881
Coroner’s Inquest on the 16th that there »a*
So ixtmnselt cold has been the weather on
xtni-JiMtteltd, aud said htd a no warning given him by(th*t train untn it
&gt;n guilty of such n boM-faced
the Sahara frontier of Algeria that hundred'
•ttem|&gt;t t&lt;&gt; lu’lueneo the «lcc&gt;*lou In a pending was too late. He stayed on his engine to the of soldiers aud camels perished.
“Sbjert to last.
There hare been twenty-one earthquake
Fivb colored convicts employed in cutting
A then be wood near Little Rock, Ark., were drowned on shocks in the Swiss Alps since December.
At Manitoba on the ifith the thermometer
the 16lh while crossing a stream in a row boxl.
indicated twenty degree* below zero.
Ax enormous mass of rock recently fell one
waukee &lt;fc St- Paul Railroad op the 14th, the
breaking of a wheel derailed the train, and in­ thousand feet from the mountain side near
jured twenty person*. One chili was killed Glaruo, Switzerland, and destroyed orchards,
roads and meadows.
and three ;&gt;cr*&lt;,ns fatally Injured
A fahnkr residing near Lynn, Ind., re­
•
LATER NEWS.
suttttn the cently received from Cincinnati a letter con­
In the trial of Gultean on tbc 17th, Mr.
Dnvld/o's
eprw. h and corep-in-d It with th evident •. He taining two small-pox scab* It was neither Scoville continued his argument for tbc de­
•untended that tacts were perverted. •:»! p.«r- dated nor signed, but gave the advice to go fense. He reviewed tbc life of the prisoner,
Bcularh lb&lt;- evidence, a* t»&gt; the Inun-vru! :of home ami die. Detectives have been put to
claimin'; that it was that of an unfortunate. ■
th-* prisoner. - After rvceaa. an ’, duri'ir tin
•emu- &lt;&gt;f tbe IMrtrict-Attomey. Mr. Sc&lt;»» '.ie,
J. W. BahxeVt, of Gnssvtlle, Cot, while re­ rather than a wicked man. and who bad con­
vtng intimated that he desired to er; :-l*e
stantly sought Christian affiliations, Gultean
turning from a trip in the country on horse­
stated to the Jury that he had signed
name
bin d sHkud tn do s&gt;^ wfa.'n be wh« absent. back, discovered tri* coat on fire, caused by
Cdont i Corkhill was sent for, and n-lucrantlr put ling a lighted pipe in hl* pocket. While to check* cSiling for &lt;30,750, all of which Ire
came Into court. Mr. Bcovil!'* then attacked attempting to put it out hi* horse became believed were genuine. He also asked the
tec theory of tbo proscrutlou that it was
Court to Instruct that if it appear that be wo*
the i&gt;ri*:&gt;n&lt;-r'a own innate or acquired frightened and ran away. ThU fanned the
depravity that naturally IM him up to fire into a blaze, and he was shortly enveloped forecd by the Deity to remove the P^ekdent
te- killing of tbe Preaidctit, and &lt;ll*cu*»ed in flames, the fire streaming several feet be be may tie acquitted on the ground of transi­
the evidence Introduced by
tory mania,
,
bind as the maddened bone dashed along the
lx the United States Senate on tire 17th
highway. Barnett al last succeeded in jump­
Senator Plumb presented a petition from cit­
ing from tbe animal, and extinguished the
izen* of Rantas favoring woman suffrage.
flame* by rolling upon tbc ground. He was
badly if not fatally burned
to provide for a commlsalou on the alcoholic
A few days agn Thomas J. Melvin who had
liquor traffic #by Mr. Cameron (Wla.), to au.
one wtf. at Monticello, Me., just thi* side of
tborize the cutting acd sale of dead and dam­
the Ixiundary between the United 8UU« and aged timber on Indian reservations; by Mr.
Canada, aud another In the Dominion, mar­
BLair, granting a pension to Lucretia R. Gar­
ried a third in the United State*. He was ar­
a bridge acroM the Missouri rested and lodged in jail. During the night field. In the House, Mr. Armfield offered
a resolution for a committee to inves­
masked Canadians broke open the jail and
tigate internal revenue, abuses In the
carried tbe bigamist over the border. Tbe Sixth District of North Carolina. Mr.
manner of hl* taking ha* caused considerable
rxrileiucnt in Maine, and the . United State* Belmont presented a resolution calling for tbe
correspondence relative to efforts to secure
mraime imeagoHistorical Society, asking
•Migration in the celebration of the two authorities have been notified of the lasnlt to peace between Chili, Peru and Bolivia. Mr.
hundredth anniversary of the discovery erf the flag.
Tux flood in tbe Cumberland River at Nash­ Robeson called up the report of the Commit­
ville has rvudered six hundred families home­ tee on Ruin, and stated that tbe thirteen
less, aud on the liitb water was pouring into committees whose membership it was proposed
duoed a bill to
the cellars cf wholesale bouse* on Front and to Increase had before them nearly ninety per
cent- of all the business of tbe House. De­
Broad street*.
bate occupying tbe remainder of tbe day took*
place over the report.
reaoiutioa
Personal and Political.
Ex-Govxnsoa Bullocx. of Massachusetts,
Tax Ohio Senate on the 11th adopted a reso­ dropped dead on the aides alk at Worcester on
lution to .place a statue of Garfield In the the 17lh, from a stroke of apoplexy.
House of Representatives at Washington.
The Iowa Legislature on the 17th elected
ix’tbe Star-route cases ou the I3lh counsel James F. Wilson Senator for tbe long term,
for the cmsplrators objected to the evidence and Judge MeDill for the Kirkwood vacancy.
which the Government proposed to submit,
Senator Lam am wu re-eiected by the Leg­
aud claimed that tbc existence of a conspiracy islature ot Ml**l*sippl nn the 17th, the Repub­
lican vote being east for General Fitzgerald,
wax made to reduce the amount of ball reThe announcement waa made from Wash­
ington on the 17th that it bad been ascertained
A CosoxxoatoXAL ■ub-c'iuimitlce waa an- that Captain Howgate’s defalcation would
reach • total of &lt;300,000.
The r mall-pox is said to be epidemic In six­
teen States of tbe Union, and rapidly spread­
The Cabinet session on tbe 13th considered, ing. e*q&gt;eehdly in the East and &amp;,uth.
Joux W. Gcmac, brother of tbe assadns,
Judge Advocate General asserti that the eaid on tbc 17tb that he expected hl* brother
court which tried him was illegally consti­ would be hnng by the 1st of April.
tuted.
Ax association has been formol at Berlin
in nil- to promote the use of bimetallic curreucy in
Germany.
A clerk in the employ of the Western Union
Telegraph Company at New York ha* been
re:;. | Court.

the Spuy tea Duyvil roilroozl disaster wu
Ti'i- Ainrrir?)

OeHth,

Now take* pleasure In Annoanciog to the Public that

said by tbe train attendant*, was
tbe nutter with the air brake. For some re.vson it failed to work. It waa then a few min­
ute* pas*, ceven o'clock. The delay must have
continued between five and ten mfautea Sud­
denly one shrill blast from a locorroltvc wa*
heard, when the sound of grinding wheels
from tbc rear grated harshly on tbe ear- Tbe
next Ins tan t there wa* a shock which shivered
tbe Idlewild'to splinters, drove IU heavy frame
like a telescope into the Empire, and com­
pletely wrecked that csr In KU iLsUnL Two
minutes later the Idlewild was on fire from the
store in the forward cud, Vhlch had been
thrown over by the shock. Thr flume* leaped
epoa tbc splintered Empire, and that, loo, wm
filled with fire aud smoke almost twfore the
occupants could escape. At least a dozen per­
sons who were !n tbe IdlcwUd were cut off
from escape, cstight I7 the jagged timbers,
and there hcH to be slowly roosted alive.
Three Tammany ARtcmUymen h*d tost left
a compartment st the rear of the Empire,
where they had been making merry, and -were
going toward tbe front of tho car when the
cruth came, which splintered the very com­
partment they bad just abandoned. Senator
Webster JVagner had passed them on his way
to the Idlewild. He was not ten feet from
lust ttepp^l upon the rear platform of the
Empire when the Idlewild shot forward and
telescoped the Empire. Tiie first Indication
that tbe Empire's passengers had of danger
was the single whistle ot the locomotive of
the local train, the Tarrytown express. The
shock hurled them from their seat*, and they
were flung along the car floor. The awivei
chairs, wrenched from their fattenings, were
thrown after them and lay piled on top ot the
struggling occupants. A shower of glass
rxaie down from over head, and the roof of
the Empire was crushed in upon them by tbe
weight of the Idlewild's roof, which seemed to
have been lifted bodliv and shot forward Upo*^ i
that ot tbe Empire. To odd to tbe confusion 1
the light* beean to glimmer and the darkness '
to deepen. Nearly all tbc occupanta found
their way out through windows whose sashes
had becti shattered by the shock. The ladles
were burled In a heap of debris, and were ex­
tract'd without haring received any severe
bruises. Assemblyman Munk was pinned be­
tween titulars close to the roof. Tbe roof
was pried off, and he Was with great difficulty ■
Nrnrly all of the Idlewild’s paaM-ngera were
caucht in the timbers, cud were unable to
move tisiid or foot. Tbe r shrieks were *;►palling. Tbc flame* were gaining headway,
and there wv neither Ii.m»c, nor paila. rnr
water at hand to quench them. WutcrU.cnwas enough in tbe creek, nut two hnndred
feet distant from the doomed cars, but In tbe
absence of vessel* of some descript lor itcould
not be obtained. Finally some of the neigh­
bor* wbooc dwelling* fronted on the railroad
track, furnished a few wooden pall* Valua­
ble lime had been lost, and the flames were
now beyond control. Tiie villagers continued
to throw water through the windows uesrest
those spots where a human voice could be
beard, until the beat drove them far beyond
a point where tbc primitive fire apparatus
could be utilized.
LATER.

A survivor, speaking of the accident, says
tbe aaruing whistle had hardly effected a
brake, and when her engine struck the Idle­
wild, it cut through I lie car like a knife, and
buret into tbe Empire, till the glare from its
broken headlight streamed upon tbe startled
and affrighted naseengvra there.
The occupant* of the last car were dashed
hither aud tillther, some made for the doors
crashing seat* sad rtruggln! to extricate
themselves. A few were cru-d c I to de ttb at
the moment of Um.* collision. But tho*c who
. were only ditabled crawled to tbc openings
nnd strove—with what despairing effort* tbe
witnesses of that scene alone knew— to drag
themselves out of reach of tbr terrible death
that wa* Coming upon them.
As the whistle of the Tarrytown express
sounded so fearful-y close at band, .only &lt;&gt;ue
person in the Empire gathered its signltkxm-c.
“ Bit still.” he called. 'Hie crash drowned hl*
word*. They had scarcely been uttered be­
fore the cow-catchcr of tbc locomotive wj*
’cutting through the timber of the car, and tbe
hot breath of tbe boiler waa fearfully palpable
to the affrighted poasengen.'
The group of inen that found themselves
scattered about on the soft ground iu a mo­
ment—dazed *u! bewildered every one ot
them—were presently to ba witnesses of a
spectacle dreadful beyond conoeptloii.
In a breath fire had added iu Horrors to the
other dreadful accompaniments of the disas­
ter. Ttp overturned store* and the dropping
as he* from the engine furnace had done their
work. Tiie wood and upholstery h.vl burst
into flamed, and a blase wa* now leaping up
above the wreck', and sweeping along as if to
swallow IL Dreadful cries rang Upon the air.
Tiie hoarse calle -if men were ming,&lt;ul with the
horrified shrieks of women, ami there wu* a
depth of agony about tbe tone* tint betokened
too well Imjw keenly those who uttried tlx-in
felt the sense of the fate that waa overtiklisg
them. All along the train tbe light* had been
put out br-thc alioek of tbc coll.aion. and iww
the long line of forward car* ley dark and sul­
len with the engine snorting in front, while
there emerged from platform and window a
throng of terrified and bewildered beings.
The glare of tbe fire brought all swarming
to the rear. Train hands hallooed and went
rushing wildlrabout in a futile quest for
bucket*. The more cool-headed passengers
lent a hand where it could be of servic e.
Assemblyman Kobb crawled through a win­
dow and came out bruised and bleed!ug. Sen­
ator Browning, shut up in a compartment of
tbe Empire, sma.-bed the window-trame and
took out with him * couple of ladies impris­
oned there.
It was then learned that from nine to twelve
persons perished, among whom was State
Senator Webster Wagner, who was burned to
a crisp In one of his own palace-cars.
Tbe following Hat of the dead is a* complete
aa it waa poMlble to obtain last night:
• Webster Wagner, Senator from tbe Eight­
eenth District. aged sixty-Are yean; burned
to death. D. L. Ransom, a guest of tbc Hoff­
man House, this city. Mias Maud Brown,
443 West Fifty-third street. Oliver B. Keeley.
Spring Valley, I’a. Mr. Park Valentine and
wife, Bennington, Vt.: married on Thursday.
Four other bodlea lie tn the KUcullen Hotel
at Siiuytcn lluyril, and one other tn tbe
Thirty-fifth Precinct Button House, unidcntl—A cariots case of nniiunJ instinct
has lately como to light in the behavior
of tho Cape Cod door, which, u the
hunters report, are accustomed when
hunted to mike their way to the sheep
ranch, not far from Snake Pond, anil,
leaping the wire fence, seek their safety
among the sheep, where neither dogs
nor guns are allowed to come.

HIS NEW GROCERY IS IN FULL BLAST
I HAVE A COMPLETE LINE OF

Sugars, Coffees, Teas, Syrups, Tobacco, Cigars,
Soaps™Washing and Tqilet, Canned

Goods, Ground Spices,
Aod iu fact, everything that belong* to the Grocery Department,
a Ado collection of

STAND AND HANGING LAMPS,
And Glassware of the Latest Pattern.
A LARGE AND WELL SELECTED STOCK CF

English and American White Ware.
----------- 1 KEEP IN STbCK------------

Brown Ware, Yellow Ware, Stone Ware,
WOODEN WARE, BASKETS, YANKEE NOTIONS, ETC.
K?" All my k&lt;hm!n are treah, just bought tbr spot cash and

will be sold only Tor ensh, nt the lowest prices.
A cordial imitation is extended to every man, woman

child, to call and einmine prices; aud qualities of Goods.
I take pleasure in showing Goods, whether you wish to
buy or not.
Nashville, Mich., Dec. 5,1881.

C. AINSWORTH.

Prices Reduced
From January 15th to February 15th. 1882, I shall offer
the. balance of of such goode as I do not wish to carry over,,
at prices that will insure them sale, regardless of cost, to close
them out before taking an inventory.

SPECIAL BAEGAEfS
will be found in‘Men’s npd Boys’ Clothing, Ladies and Gents
Underwear, Knit goods, Shawls, Ladies Cloaks Horse and Bed
Blankets, Glove^and Mittens, Men’s and Boys Caps, and oth­
er articles Coo numerous to mention.

All Goods morked in plain figures, so that anyone can tel)
the exact price.
f
It will pay everyone to look through my stock, as decided
bargains will be found in each'department,

BS“I will not be Undersold..^

C. W. Granger
J

fl. WOOD
—IS NOW READY TOALLON--------

SHOE HORSES
BETTER THAN EVER

WILL TAKE

WOOD

For all Shoeing.

EOBS! BOBS

F. T. BOISE,
JEWELK1
WAUL PAPER,
WIXVOW SHADES.
DYKHTCFFB.
#
PROPRIETARY MEDI0IKES,

PRESCRIPTieNM,
RECEIPTS,

Made &lt;»rall Rock Elm,
. ----- ALSO-----

A FEW CUTTERS!
TO BELL, AND THE
BES'l’

WAGS'OTKS

PAINT AND BRUSH
BEPARTME

T

z In the State of.Ilichlgan.

In fact, if you want any kind of work, nearly j
and all w arranted,
—Io sonic parts of England the mteson h unusually open. In Kent pritn*caiaL and see mn.
ros*-.*! are in bloom, violda perfume the
deRsr Mid Uiu- m.BfrLlriL
&gt;• iuA 1-wL.
their summer notex. while win tlw wnA OErnamrn M tl ur *•«
immn the hWilber is purple turd Utu single Hun&gt;r.i for sate,
with gokku bloom.

F. T. BOISE­
'

.

.&lt;•• ‘..a.

�Mr. C. A.

Mra. A. R. Quick is oft the sick list.

ITY LOCALS.
ASSYRIA.

J. T. Wekher has bought a horse.
Wm. IM,
A candy pull.t Seorgc Vwnocknr,.

Tnn-l.y night.
.
A dnnee at Loror Cmuminga laat

Friday night.
Quarterly meeting at the M. P.
church the 8*1.
t
Town Board meet the 80th. to decide
that road cm®.
-.
Mr. Hanlck of N Y., has bought the
Williams farm.
Henry Mayo will soon build a hooae
od hia west forty.
Cbaa. Baker went to Grand Rapid*.
Saturday on buaineas.
W. W. Cole, says Tint Naw a is a
very spicy paper after all.
Mr. Getty of Grand Rapids, waa-in
town ou business Friday. -.
*
Six dollars waa the receipts at the so
cial at C. Butler**. Friday.
There was an old folk* visit nt Jasperil]llvr*. Tuesday njght.
E. Packer, ainl (}ha*. Wilnoq of Kalany*, are nbSuTto swap farms.
/James Driscoll and wife^were at the

Tiic toads are improving m&gt; that
wood is moving to town lively.

day 7
.
Manson Gerthanis' visiting friends
in Canada.
Mrs. Jane Mayo is very sick with iofiamatory rheumatism.
Mrs. Wangeman of Ohio, daughter
8. Fox, ia visiting her parents.
Joe Smith has returned from the east
and reports the crops a failure.
Mrs. Emma Dunham of York State,
is visiting friends in Maple Grove.
Luther Cole nod family, of Oakland
| Co., are visiting A: S'. Quick, and other
relatives in thia vicinty.
Messrs. Quick, Slade and Bowen,
have quit clover hulling, and Charles
is now working for 8. Sprinkatt
A young man of this town, who re­
full house.
•
The oyster supper given by the ladies cently traded bis farm for a store in
aid society, at. Mr. Rawson’s, was a Nashville is now working for hia board
i
success financially, there being nearly in Assyria.
Fred Quick’s valuable home, Printer,
110. realised from it.
is
dangerously
sick
ivith
pink
eye.
The neat meeting of the U, B. Mis­
sionary Society, will be held at tbe Dr. McBeth of Battle Creek, ia treat­
ing
him,
and
says
Fred
must
lose
him.
Kilpatrick church od the first Thurs­
Mrs. Staley, and old lady who has
day in February.
•
Wm. Hill has been investing in a set been staying at B. Miller’s, for the
of scales from the Buffalo scale works. past eight months, i&amp; pronounced by
Will, wu arc coming down to be wvigh- the doctors unable to be moved to tho
county house.
ed soon ns we flesh up a little.
‘
The Methodirte are making prepara­
Mr. J. Fast Takes the cake on raising
tions
to build a fine church. They had
hogs. He has the finest lot of young
pigs; to be found in the country. Keep a bee Thursday to draw brick, and tbe
ladies
are talking of having a fair next
them, Jake for “their’s millions in it.”
Henry Teal, who has been north this fall, to furnish it. .
As
we
began these items it was rumwinter, -returned one any .last week
with tht* remains of his little girl, for. oreC a wedding was afloat for Sunday
burial, Tbc Iwreaved parents have but Inter news brifigs the sad tidings
that tbe happy couple ran away from
tbc sympathy of the community, We had the pleasure last Sunday, of Ben Miller’s, in the night, it being his
hired
help, commonly called Old Fan,
listening to n sermon from Rev. Mr.
*
_
Jewell, of Ionia,* an able and efficient and Jim Marble.
Nix Com Rouse.
Sunday School worker. In the even

Mr. Rawson's last Saturday evening.
Mr. Vanartwicks little girl, Lena,has
been very sick, but is now convales­
cent
Was that young lady running horses
the other day, wh$n she was thrown
from the sleigh’f
Rev. Bridenstine,’ of Woodland, is
holding protracted meeting- at the
Kilpatrick church.
We understand that a saw mill is to
be erected in this part of the town 'ere
long. Hope it is a fact.
Rev. Bridenstine will preach In tbe
First Presbyterian church of this place,
next Sunday evening. Let there be a

visiting at T. Goulds.
On Thursday of last week Kora Butintends to make her home.
.
Tbe young folks met at M. Andrews,
on.Friday night of last week, for the
purpose of baying a social hop.
The
house waa filled Conveniently full and
e*ry one seemed to enjoy tbemsidve*,
having a good time, and also good
music.- •
*
. Pa-ncn.
SATOR COUNTY.
Tbe Charlotte RtpuWican looks nob­
by in its new suit of clothes.
Charlotto subscribed &lt;2,700 toward
the prospective new court house.
•
Joseph Kelly of North Eaton Rapids
died last week of consumption.
■ Borne hunters of Auretins chased a
little *yaller dog” all day recently,
thinking it was a fox.,
Some of Charlotte’s fine blooded
poultry was on exhibition at the Mar­
shall poultry sliow last week.
Edmund Leaven worth of Eaton Rtpids died last week Wednesday, of ty­
phoid paeumonia, ag-d 65 years.
,
A little daughter of Jacob Bohney of
West Humlhsp was bitten io the face
recently by a .(log. the cheek being
torn from the mouth to the base of th*

Center, over Saturday and Sunday.
L. C. Taylor of the Charlotte Repub­
Singing school at the M E. church
lican was called to Ohio last week by.a
led by Mis. E. Clark, every Saturday
telegram announcing tbit his brother,
night.
a conductor on the Wabash road, waa
The carpenter work is done on the
killed nt Toledo, by being run over by
town Louse, and a little paint will
a train
finish it,
&lt;
The
Stoudt-Shepherd
seduction
Elder Holler will commence a pro­
case, occupied nearly alll Inst week,
tracted meeting at the Advent church
1 and the jury failed to agree. The suit
the 25th.
was brought for &lt;5.(il0 damages. In a
The females won the day at the de­
previous suit a judgement ‘for &lt;3.000
bate Friday night. No doubt they will
damages was rendered, but a new trial
vote next spring.
was granted by the court.
Lora of logs coming into Baker’s neo lag he preached upon-the subject of
K A LA MO.
W. C. Westland, editor of thif Grand
mill. Those at the old otw he will soon "Home and Foreign Missions.” ,
Ledge Independent, wasajrested Tues­
News
are
short
this
week.
move to the new mill.
day,
ou a charge of libel od N. F. Dan­
A dance at Francis Showalter's last
John Wilkinson has a new front to
iela, of Wacousta, tbe venerable corPRICHARDVILLE,
Tuesday.
his porch, with four windows iu it, and ■
ouer
in the Dew murder case last fall.
Mrs. John Fowler, jr., ia visiting
' Sleighing is getiing thin.
a window in the door.
Mr. Daniela haring shown a dispod•
Misa Emma Gibson has returned to friends hereabouts.
Elder Prescott now preaches at the
ion
to
withhold the facta in the cose
Mr. Warren King ia about selling
M, P. church, once in two weeks on j■ Ionia county.
from the editor of the Indipendent for
Sunday, and Thursday nights, at the 'I Mrs. Wooton is at IlaMtingA. under his farm, and also Mr. Ell Wells.
The Rarrick brothers are cutting immediate publication, was severely
i the doctor’s care.
M. E.-church.'
criticised by that p;yp*r, and the siilwWhile on our wny to Nashville, Sat- i Levi Fry
. and son have returned wood by the wholesale this ‘winter, in
quent articles in the Independent by J.
this vicinity.
urday, we lost a bag of corn. It was | from a visit in Ohio,
H. Myers. The community seems to
Mire Nellie Granger ia at Battle 1 Dr. Adams has bought him a nice
picked up by Mr. Herrick and returned
be in sympathy with Mr. Westland,
• Creek, visiting her sister Mrs. Isaac microscope that cost one hundred and
to ue. Thanks.
believing
him to bo justified in ’bin
fifteen doling.
While Mrs. Baker was going through Risbridger.
Cold weather again, aud more show position.
II. H. Dickson is at work for Wth.
the gate at Bernie Casudays, Friday
night, she taught her foot ou a board Howe, of "Hope, helping* put up that wanted for the benefit of the farmers
MICHIGAN NEW*.
who have wood to haul.
new saw mill.
and fell.hurting her severely.
Look out for a cyclone,—the Mason
Last Suudily night a certain man
Win. Sisco of Roas, Kalamazoo Co.,
Marcella* has two cares of small pox.
thinking some one was trying to get in is making his home with Ed ward Mow­ brothers arc threshing henna, for tbc
Forty-three deaths occured nt Detroit
West Kalamo insane assylum.
his house, went out to listen, and soon ry this month.
last week.
A birthday party at 8.’ A. Shepard’s
heard foot steps.
He followed after
Elmer Clark has returned from his
Michigan has 57 employes in the In- .
and found it was Alex,going to see his wedding tour, and has settled down to in honor of his daughter, Mrs. Jeff tenor D -partraent at-Washington.
Showalter, last Monday evening.
Over 100,000 hogs have been slough- |
gal.
take married life easy.
«
A select birth day party at E. E. tored in Michigan during the present
A Mr. Harris, of
.
Grove, is
Alex. Potter has rented' a place and
says he is guing to keep old bach., but staying with Chet Granger, and learn­ Tiech’s housb last Saturday evening, month.
and the old heads had a high old time,
the way he cute around with that dutch ing him the tYappcra trade.
* farmer bought a boy u glass of
gal over east, we think he Will take her
Miss Me Hie Holcome has been un­ kissing the pretty girls.
liqnor in a Stanton saloon, and went to
Roe Marsh is boss ou turkeys. He jail for so doing.
Aritb him. Go In for all you are worth, der the doctor’s care for some time, but
killed one, which, when dressed,
Alex.
.
The Hall murdi-i case. wfiioh has
was getting better at last reports.
While C. Baker’s month hand was
Our school is progressing finely. weighed 44 pounds and it brought him been tried twice in Oakland county, is
&lt;4.40.
Beat him if you can.
driving his team through thcimte nt Dannie is ap old teacher, and knows
to be sent back fur another trial.
Wild Bill has the job of filming
the barn, tiie wugon slid around against how »u .please the .parents as well as tbc
Mrs. Emanuel Custer of Monroe,
one of those nice steel engravings and mother of the iate George A. Caster,
the gate post, the horses jumped tear- 1 pupils.
.
ing thegute to pieces, upset the wagon । While Johnnie Marabon, aged aliout cromo panels for F. M. Potter, of the died Jan. 19. after a lingering illness.
broke the harneas, threw the driver j 9 years, was pitching hay from a acaf- VL Ville Hawk, which was presented
Four case* of small pox at Grand
nnft
ant loose from •).—.....
|wiriji |lt. ft.]i injuring him­ to him by Geo. Stinson, of Portland, Rapid* have proved fatal. Fifteen
out,got
the wagon,ran
on to 1 fo]^ jM
Maine.
a drag, cut there legs badly, aud scared self severely.
.
crimes in all have been reported there.
A unhappy New Year’s night for a
the hired man out of a years growth.
Maud Fisher, while returning from
The Berrien Springs people propose
H. H.
scbdol one night, slipped and fell on family uf Chas. Powers, his wife died to dam the St. Joseph river at. that
aud
left a family uf seven children to
the ice, breaking her arm, but she still
place
aud so create a Ifig water power.
BA RRYMLLE.
attends school carrying her arm in a- mourn her loss. Mr. P. was formerly
The body of a man with the head
of this place, but dow of Coffeyville,
It is reported that three of H. H. sling.'
sticking iu the ice was found close to
11. M. Tobias is dangerously sick, Kan., to which place they moved one
Hull's children havebeeu afflicted with
" I the dock at Saginaw the night of Jan.
tbe diphtheria, also one of Henry Lath­ and for some time back was not ex­ year ago.
13th.
'
Report
says
that
the
last
addition
to
pected
to
live,
but
be
was
a
trifle
bet
­
rop’s children.
A newly married couple at Mt. Mor­
The small pox element throughout ter at last account, and there is hopes Hawk office is a dog, and it attracts so
ris, “stood off”’ a charivari party by
much
company
at
tbe
office
that
if
of
hln
recovery.
the country has reminded parents of th^
.playcarding the house witli a small pox
The quarterly meeting nt the Balti­ Topsy is not discharged Mr. P. will
importance of having their families
sign.
vaccinated, and some are having a se­ more M. E. church was well attended have to hire help to run the office, os it
Beware of the book agent who goes
from this part of the town." Tho pre­ is it takes all the present force to tend
vere time of it.
about selling farmers’ acccount books
that
little
Miss
d^g.
M. J. Lathrop of Ripon, Wis., for­ siding elder being sick, his place was
Three young men were returning at big prices. He is a .delusion and n
merly of this plpce, has been visiting filled by Rev. Steel.
snare.
Oh say. Doxy, we failed to see your home from the burg, nnd one of them
bis children and old neighbors for the
Peter McNally, a prominent business
thought
that Mr. Frank Rarrick’s
point
a
few
weeks
since,
nevertheless
post few days. He is well pleased witli
if ypu made one, point it out and the bouse would look better to have one of man of Point Ignacv, committed sui­
his new home in the west.
cide, Jan. 11, by hanging. He was 83
the
windows
smashed
out,
so
he
smash
­
cigars
are
youra,
we
always
give
up
Wo^rk on the new church has been
, ed out one whole sash iu»l glass, but years of age. .
resumed, with the intention of finish­ when we fairly beaten.
Tho new hotel at Potoskey is being
This scribe has been sojourning ia Frank says he bod better look a' little
ing nt an early day. It only needs to
this
winter, consequently out, or he will shingle his eye in it black. finishied with all possible speed, and
be plastered, lighted, seated and paint­ Barry
will
bo in readiness for the public when
S
ilver
$
tar
.
we have been irregular is our corres­
ed. to complete the audience room.
the traveling season opens.
It is astonishing what an amount of pondence to Thk News, but hereafter
F. W. Atwood, living near Union
Fire
al
Middleville.
gossip ia indulged in and relished by will try and be more prompt.
City, hit Samuel J. Wjptou with a
__ ________ Phil Phi*.
I Saturday night nt about 9:15 a fire
some sensation lovers, and how quick I
stone iu a quarrel about a year ago,
they are to bear, to know and tell all
was discoved in the furniture store of and has just had to pay &lt;1,000 for it.
HASTINGS.
that goes to make up a
sensa­
Henry Chapman of thia place, which
Joseph Eaton, a boy IS tears old, son
The original New Orleans Minstrels, totally destroyed the store of said
tional story. They have Just had a rich
of F. L. Eaton, a lawyer of Saginaw
treat ia this direction. It runs thus: at Union Hall, next Friday night.
Chapman, together with the stores of
Dancing school at Union Hall Friday Albert Morgan, occupied by Win. City, skated into an airhole in the riv­
Mr*. Sensation 'tells her confidential
er, January 18th, and waa drownded,
friend* that Dr. Homeopath of Hastings Jan. 90. conducted by L. J. Mackey.
Gunderman as a furniture store, and
Tbc face of L. E. Knappen wears an the hardware store of B. A. Almy. also
Tbe Atheiatan club of Battle Creek
has been vaccinating several person*
around here, and one of Bedspells boys expression of perfect satisfaction. It’s doing great damage to the brick store,, is in receipt of &gt;101.75 sent by the
^heistan
club of Mobile. Alabama,
has gnt the small pox, for pr. Alapath a daughter.
and stock of 8. B. Smith, loss “about
Tbe knights ot Pythias hold a select
of Naahville was there yesterday and
&lt;4.000, on which there was do insur­ for the benefit of the Michigan suffer-*
prpnonaord it a plain case of small pox. social party at their Castle Hall, Fri- ance. Loss on stock about &lt;1,500
Mrs. Finelin Olmstead, a widow
Yon must ndtlook that way when you dsy, Jan. 38.
which was partialy covered byl insur­
about 75 years old, was found dead tn
The Choral Society will give a public ance.
go by there. The precious! news soon
rm-bed tbe ears uf Mr. Sensation, who rehearsal at Red Ribbon Hall, Wednes­
B. A. Almy and Albert Morgan an* I her room at her house ia turgia on tho
the principal losers, and have ■ no ia- j 16th. She had lived alone for several
having no businea* vf her use, starts day, admission ten ennta.
Mr. Newton lost a child Wednesday, surance. II, J. Chapman was fully in- | years.
,
out direcdr to give it. pnblcity and
The body of an old woman, named
whatever was needed to woke it a night, with diphtheria, there only one sured in the Home of N. Y.
Mattenum, wds found in a creek Dear
H. D.P.
big thing, and soon it was told that or two other cases iu the city, and (hey
,
Otsego, Allegan county. Whisky is
three vaccinated children of another are^ery light.
E. L. I-Awrencc, Em. cashier of tbe supposed to have been the cause of her
Tbe Red Ribbon social last Tuesday
family bail gut the diphtheria, aud this
Cincinnati Southern Railroad, says tbc
day would decide whether they lived was a success. Ten cents was charged Cincinnati Enquirer, was cured by St- death.
Jennie Hawkins, u servant girl at the
or died. It was as sarprising to tbe at tbe &lt;ioor, and the receipts for; the Jacoba OU &lt;d a stubborn case of rheu­
matism, which wouldn’t yield to phy­ St. Johns bouse in St. Johns, killed her­
self with itrychnine on Jau. 18th.
The case of Smith vs Barry County, sicians treat men t.—Brotik ty n Euyle.
deckled bkt Tuesday, bv the&lt;upremc
Trouble at home is given as the reason
“BVCHL’PAIBA.”
court, and through tbe stupidity ot the
for the raah act.
William

SS

C«,WM

from England.
thia oompnny are held iu England, mid
an Engli«Ji firm of trlvirt.sphi&lt;t&lt;« haca
coo tract •&lt;! to lay the cable from F.r ’«n
the water fpr the purpose &lt;»£ repairing to Valencia, which i4 ia expected w.ll ■
them. Such a tiling it* that part of the
Lake coast will be as handy as a pveketdtK shirt.
Many public men h&lt;v«
The men who tried to lynch Voscamp
when he was in jail- at Grand Haven
be concluded with Frau
have .pleaded guilty of assault and bat tbe friendly feeling* «-j
tery and been lelrared ou suspended
sentence. Thu* it is shown that juutice in Ottawa county squints-nnd pub- had to Im- submitted to. 1 gu a' bmg way with them in the desire, to rerijMs- 1
| lie opinion is also a little cock' eyed.
cat*, every wish which may rnnt the 1
Two Lawrence youths pointed two Channel for an enduring alliance lire j
twi*rn
France .nnd Englamt. Butaurb .
queer shaped doughnuts ata man our
night last week and scared him into ai&gt; alliance will not Ire built un -»■«
। believing he was to bo shot. Being n. Konnd foundarion if: uiidvr-’nyfaa ih-:
. "effusive terms in whirl) it is the cnst-'wif . [
friend-' 1
man who omldn’r take a joke,he caused of diplomatists ty declare
their arrest, and they were ench fined ship which exists between the high con­
tracting parties, there exists &gt;1
of
&lt;15 and coats. Thus the deadly dough­ wrong or unfairness, susUihied and t-.»nut is judicially declared to be n foe to foseed by the French Government
a
"French
interest”
peace.
Taking a stroll on a saj^nrimn r&lt;-ad.
I Noah Priest, a young man living
one day last week, i was arrnugty ire ।
nhar Calkinsville, and whp has been miikh-d nf America, nhd nil- l»y meet- *1
intaDe at different times in years past, ingXyellow »rart containing a
1
come to Mt. Pleasant last Saturday nnd and n man cook baking waffles, wh ir,
in a frenzy went into the court room, his chief aud their aides offered them &lt;ub
triiyscovered.with white napkin* ot
। w here the sheriff after some coaxing, every door. What otlu r striejjy Am­
succeeded in getting him to jail and erican custom will next inVmle ••of i
locked him up. He will probably l&gt;e England I know not. The weather
hen-rlii* winter, iintwiths'iuidiiig llw» sent to Kahiir.nxoo.
predictions of Vennor to.the coidnuj,
•The Second Adventists in the vicini­ ••ns lieen exceedingly mild nnd
nut.,
Primros4-S and oilierhaidy flowty of Sliermnn, Labella county, have
I swollowed up tiie society of United era ore in bloom nnd the gntMouiBs
lawns i.&lt; r.s green and us bright ns lu
Brethren there, all the mt mbera but May. Much interest i- eviu&lt;-.-&lt;i here 1
two having gone over to the Adventists, as to the result of the trial of »i'l:trji8.
who have organised and talk of build­ The opinion is very griiontl a-* Io ’-.the ;•]
ing a church nt an early date. Mr. sanity ot the n*s:i-«si!i n;id tot’;- prob­
I WeHman is the Adventist clergyman ability of n verdict of guilty bring ren­
dered by the jury. Tlt»-r«« muu doubt;
who has accomplished the work/
whatever but were lie tiled by an EngRjley Leyhm of Union, Braneff*^.. lidi jury mid under l»riti«h l:«ws Ilia
would be forfeits! for hisrrime.
wl.il. rotur.il&gt;.h-m- horn C-lilwutorl life..................................................
pnwI There has been a niodejate uu&lt;l pn^the evening of Jnn. 6th, drove oft the i tv gem-nil increase in the demand for |
Hid
rites
keep
firm
V
to
the ‘ I
road into a marsh nnd in cudenvoriiig I money
’
'
,___ .....
UhUsoIs nrr ntnilled on the"
Ito gvttbohoraea out hocatrevntnnglrd . P«"*.v«
‘
I t&lt;ek. nr 0»|. Other leading .-•.•urilies, . I
in the'linrness and « « tonnd
“hiiv.-,
ji7o7.^vl
vi .. fell somewhat heavily al ouo
morning with his h»-ml and si........ .
I nun.»&gt; the absence of busir.i-.-‘S
t&lt;u&gt;ro*i
'
the&lt;-.&gt;ii'im:i-.i strength of the Money- '
on the ice and his body 411
I.in. M.:r k»-i. :. :i i.c-’&gt;.&gt;111 ■ r;iil x.- v -I.. KM
and one of the lioises lying a■I.-I...
IOS- turn. . . (l
f ;.|;H.d at the last,
I He died next day. One of the hot sea _______
_______
Arottat. &gt;
were drowned.
A boy dropped n live r&lt;i:t! d&lt;*wu the
The libel suit «&gt;f Hugh S. People*
.
ra
the Evening News, Inis been 0 trinl | back &lt;»f a srli

verdict was pfthlidy given long before
lire jury’ were permitted to reader
theirs, and there is a marked coincldcnce in both verdicts. Hngh S. Perples lias been arrested charged with tho
murder of Martha Wliitln. May the
bl. seiugs of prosperity attend the News,
and every man or company of men who
fearlessly stand up for tho right nnd
ns fenilessly denounce such eniqnitien
us Hugh S. People* is charged with.
OUR EUROPEAN LETTER.

I &lt;1.000damages,
*
Gniteiui’s viole
ourt was cx!
«t-i-&lt;b-«l by a convicted murderer at
’
Yankton, Dakota, who cutm-d the pro1sccntor and jury, made a dash for the
beucli to wiiipAhe Judge, and fought
so d&lt;*s|wr.:tely that at one time he waa
und« r ;&lt; heap of Marshals on U»e floor.

Without doubt many prople were
right glad to we the en&lt;l of 1881. and
to know that mother Shiptoh wns a
fraud. Let not such persons rejoice
to much, fur hero comes a Hartford
man who says that it is a mistake
limit the fM-riod of the dame’s prophecy ’
with the 31st of Deccmlwr, 1381. He
holds thn| the time should l&gt;r cnmpnk*
ed under the old style, which would
extend the year 1881 to tliu 3lcli of
March next. So there are some eighty­
odd days yet in which . to fuljjl tho
prophecy.
What an uncomfortable
bore this Hartford mon ia, to lie sure J

Loxdom, Exo., J ax. 3, 1882.
Few people have mid tho accounts
of the recent Vienna disaster without
feeling sad. Such a deplorable event­
may well make the most devoted play­
goers nervous for some time to • come.
Yet it will not ki*rp people awujr.from
the theatres. People must be h mused,
do matter what the risk.
Here in
Loudon every one Is agnail that every­
The Albany, N. Y., Pitraaaad Kiii«*hthing should Im* done to prevent the
possibility of nnj such disaster. But erbockei snys: “The largest -following
we know of to-duy ia that of St. Jund«
probably, as io the past, the excite­ Oil. for where St. JaooIm Oil is, there ,
ment will wear "away and no practical rheumatism is not"
result will follow.
1. for ’one, do not
SOCIETY BELLIES.
believe that Ine officials of any English
On ««i&gt;unt of it* retnarUah y delicate and
theatre would become confused and laatlna fragrance aociely bel!te« are loud , ia
tlicir phraiaea ot Flore»^m C- Irarue.
lose all self-control as did those.of the
A positive cure for malar.*, dicr*tlre and
Ring Theatre. Still, it is best not to
urinary troubles la found tn Brown's Iron Bhplace toe much confidence in such an
idea and it is well to urge all possible
“ROUGH ON RATS.-’
.
precaution to lie taken.
Tbe thing desired found at la-X. Ask Dnue
Tbe Chief of the Police in Ireland has gUt
lor ••Rough oo IUu.
Il dear* out rau’ «
giveh notice that the association known mice, roadie*, flea, bed-bug*. 15c. boxes.
os tbe Ladies' Lund League is illegal.
Tbe Ladies’ Land League, however,
met on Tuesday nnd were not inter
rupted by the police, who arrested
their messenger conveying letters and
other documents. The defense of Irish
property is now admitted to be a na­
tional duty, aud the fact that it should
have to lie undertaken by volunteers
os the call of the Lord Mayor of Ismdon is the l&gt;est proof of the extraordinaro nature of the crisis. Opinions dif­
fer widely aato whether the Govern­
ment is making the best use of its pre­
sent powers. Every official, from the
Lord Lieutenant down to the youngest
sub-constable, is now bearing a grevious burden, and those who tijid most
fault arc in do danger of having to
touch it witli one of their fingers. But
it can hardly i&gt;e denied that the the
police are terrible harassed. Their be­
havior is dimply beyond praise, but
there Is a limit-to human endurance.
People ore constantly alarmed by shots
fired all over the country nt night.
Noctural fires are also frequent and
gives great force to no rent placards,
Heuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago,
to threats of “boycotting” aud to revo­
lutionary despatches from Paris aud Backache, Saraneu of tho Chart*
Gout,
Quincy, Sore Throat, Stnll*
New York. The police being otberings and Sprains, Burns and
wi&lt;«c employed, cannot Im always avail­
Scalds,
Genera! Bodily
able for night duty, nod the shootings
‘ •
Pai",
and burnings take place when their
tracks are turned. Whether xthe new Tcoth, Ear and
FrastuB
men wires of the Government foi
Feet and Earc,
other
strengthening the police force will be
Pains and Bchss.
*
effectmil. remains to be aven, but I may
state with liule fear of coutradictiop,
that ths constabulary are at pre* nt
over worked mid that some their mo*t
nectwraty duties cannot ba etfidejitly
j SOLD BT ALL
lx rfinmrd.

RHEUMATISM;

�Dumber,

plaint which the pbyririan* called Gravel.
gration, and was fully capable of supjiorting at least six times its present
population.
Its mining,' agricultural
and commercial features were unsur-

at least 75.000.0W worlds. But this is
not all. In addition to tbe luminous
heavenly bodies, we can not doubt that
&gt; there are countless others,’invisible to
us from their greater distance, smaller,
j size, or feebler light; indeed, wo know
that there are many dark bodies which
,*bow emit no light, or comparatively
' little. Thus, in the case of P^ooyon, tbe
existence of an invisible body is proved
i by the movement of the visible star.
Again, I may refer to the curious phe1 nomena presented by Algol, a bright
star in the head of Medusa. This star
ahines without change for two days and
thirteen hours; then, in three hoursnnd
a half, dwindles from a star of the sec­
ond to one of the fourth magnitude;
and then, in another three ana a half
hours, reassumes its original brilliancy.
These changes seem' certainly to indi­
cate the presence of an opaque body,
which intercepts at regular intervals s
part ot the light emitted by Algol.
Thus the floor of heaven is not only
“thick t inlaid with patines ot bright
gold," but studded also with extinct
stars; once, probably, as brilliant os
our own sun, nut now'dead and cold, as
Helmholtz tells us that our sun itself
will be,\aome seventeen million years
hence.
The connection of astronomy with the
history of oar planet has been a sub­
ject of speculation and research during
a great part of the hilf century of pur
existence. Sir Charles Lyell 'devoted
some of the opeiflng chapters of bis
great work to the subject. Haughton
has brought his very original powqrs to
bear on the subject of secular changes
in climate, and CroU's contributions to
the same su eject are of great interest.
Last, but not least, I must not omit to
make mention of the series of massive
memoirs
(I am happy to* say,
not
yet
nearljr terminated)
by
George Darwin on tidal friction,
and the influence of tidal action
on the evolution of the solar system. I
may, perhaps, jus^ mention, as regards
telescopes, that the largest reflector, in
1830, was Sir W. Herschel’s, of four feel; .
the largest at present, being lx&gt;rd
Rosse.’s, of six feet; c" regards refrac­
tors, the largest then had a diameter
of eleven and a-quarter inches, while
your fellow townsman, Cooke, carried
tho size to twenty-five inches, and Mr.
Grubb, of Dublin, has just successfully
completed one of twonty-seveu inches
for toe Observatory of Vienna. It is
remarkablo that the two largest tele­
scopes in the world should both be
Irish.—Sir John ‘Lubbock, in Popular
Science Monthly.

their owners when they loft them bo
oonunmu- hind. Two large basket* are full ot
pocket-books, containing various turns watered and as well protected against
la, in his line,.undoubt- of money. They are mostly portemon- all possible drought Its mineral prod­
Mt woufler ever brought naic£. as the shopping sex have the ex- ucts consist of gold, silver, cooped and
leal profession. Tholact elusive right, apparently ,lo carry pur­ lead. A carbouiferous formation exists
Dr. Hamilton has devoted several ses hi their hands, and consequently to that will,*do dohbt, bo developed and
tn his case in his •• New Surgery’’ lose them.
Lurnctj to practical use at an "early day.
de guarantee that his contortions
There are several bushels of traveling The mines are suitably located and
9 really phenomenal and worthy tho
bags, which probably were lost by per­ yield ore that averages from WO to 870
Itskleration of medical science. Coa­ sons passing through the city, and will per ton. and from one of thuse mines;
ming him, l&gt;r. Hamilton says:
never be called for. 'One day a big bass situated near tho Durango boundary
‘•1 think it may bo safely said that if drum camo to the property clerk, and a line *3,*000,000 had b$en taken out in
«*«*. Warren d«ea not dislocate his hips, feW days after the big bass German four vears. The gre^t drawbag^s with
- Vbea none of those seven or eight cases owner after it A oornet'was also sent which the population has to contend
hitherto reported, and referred to by in, as if to support the drum. One day are a lack of railroads and the heavy
me in my Treatise on Fractures anil a rabbit was left in a car, cosily tucked tax on coinage.
Th© Government is
DWocations, were veritable dislocations. up in • baakeL The property dork actunfod by a libAal policy and lands
also had the company of a poodle dog cun easily bo located by appearing be­
WMuii by an autopsy. And it is to bo for a while. A woman telegraphed in fore tho Federal Court and paying for
Ent haste one day,' inquiring for a the aurvoy and title papers, the quanti­
ket of jewels she haa brought in ty being limited to 2,500 hectares to
upon hit death a careful dissection of from the country. When she had iden­ each applicant. A great diversity of
his hip joints shall be made by compe- tified the jewels, she did not reward soil exists, both tho altitudes and val­
Mot persons.”
the needy man who bad been so honest leys being covered by a rare luxuriance.
Dr. Agnew, a surgeon of scarcely less as to return them, nor did she conde­ Ebony, mahogany and tho fruit trees of
reputation, says: “ I have never seen scend to say “thank you," as she swept other states flourished abundantly, and
an individual who presented such a re- down tho stairs. Tho clerk says that often gigantic trees were met, measur­
not one in ten parcels has the owner’s ing nine feet in circumferpnap. At an
name on it. If they were marked they elevation of -4.000 feet above the sea
Nearly
e other emiltent physi- would be more apt to be returned when sugar cane, rice and indigo are found,
have seen found by fellow-passengers, many of whilp wheat, onto and other. csreals
Bouncing him tbe whom do not know of the property grow at higher altitudes. The popula­
- most
muscular specimen on clerk’s office. Notices formerly were tion of binaloa is divided into four
posted telling passengers where to look closes: The descendants*of the original
His exhibition Wednesday morning for lost parcels, but for some reason conqueren, Indians, crosses between
was a most remarkable one. notwith­ they have been removed from the sta­ these, and finally foreigners. Tho man­
ufacture of mescal amounts to 15.0U0
standing that he professed himself ham­ tions.
pered by a temporary attack of rheuma“ Yon will .probably receive many barrels annually. The exports amount
turn. He began by displaying a dislo­ umbrellas to-day, as it is rainy?” sug­ 8200,000 annually, besides gold, silver
aud pearls, w^ile tho Imports amount to
cation of the tbuipb, which was perfect. gested the reporter.
The students were permitted to exam­
•• Not so many,” said the clerk, “ as 83,00*1,000, ol which one-tenth comes
ine wjdi the sense of touch this peculiar if it had been threatening, in the morn­ from this city.—San Francisco Owonphenomenon. The subject then exhib­ ing and had cleared ofl- Then people icle.
i
ited a dislocation of the .wrist, equally would forget their umbrellas, whereas
remarkable. Next, he produced by to-day the rain will remind them of
A Case for Charity,
muscular contraction a partial subgle­ them. However, I shall probably get
Une of I &gt;etroit’s millionaires was walk­
noid dislocation of both shoulders. a dozen.—AC K Tribune.
ing homeward yesterday when he en. wikidi Dr. Kitchen .pronounced a most
; wintered a lame man with a greasy
remarkable feat. This was followed by
Sailor&lt;’ Yarns*of Arctic Life.
} paper in bjs hand. As tho pair camo to
• dislocation of tho scapula upwards,
a halt th*) Irmo man asked:
and a partial dislocation of the tarsak
Six blue jackets from tho United
“Will you do me the favor to read
bones.
•
.
States man-of-war Alliance, which ar­ this paper?”
But the most remarkable feat, that
rived here yesterday from the Arctic
“Can’t do it—loft my eye-glasses
which brings the greatest consternation
regions, were seen at the fool of West home.” was the reply.
to the mediool profession, was a cotn-/•Then I will state tho content* to
pie!© luxation of both hijw upwards and Twenty-second street by a reporter.
I backwards. Thisacodmplishraent,which They were all young and bright look­ you.”
••No use—no two. I'm so deaf that
has been made th© subject of most care­ ing fellows talkative nnd merry.
“ We had a rough time,” said one of I couldn't catch more than one word
- ful study by Dr. Hamilton, was com­
mented upon by Dr. Kitchen at some them. “ and have got enough of Arctic out of three.”
“ I’m a poor man with a wooden leg,
expeditious. We’ll never go up there
. length.
•
Mr. Warren-also twisted his ankles as again unless we're forced to it. it was sir.”
“Yes—I see—I see. Lots of poor
A Skeleton in the Desert.
if his feet hung upon a swivel, and pro­ nothing but fog. hail, rain, and snow all
duced a sub-luxation of the lower jaw. the time. I tell you we were mighty- men have no wooden legs. You are
A few days ago. while travefthg over
Another performance of. hi&gt; was the glad when we reached New York. lucky, sir, and 1 congratulate you
Must
’
havo
cost
you
fifty
dollars,
and
1
tho trackless expanse of the American
. withdrawal of the viscera from the ab- Our four month's voyage has done us
Ddlert, about fifty feet from the sur­
domcn and forcing of them into the little good. We bad io pay forty dol­ presume it is a nice leg.”
“If you had any clothes, sir.”
veyed line of the Salt Lake &amp; Western
©heat This feat her performed with lars for our outfits, which are almost
Railroad, about fifteen miles from Fish
alternate efforts, producing an effect so useless to us now, and wo never got
* •• Or old boots.”
Springs, betweenlhe north end of Duga&gt; unnatural as to call forth most enthusi­ more than a few hours liberty during
••
I
’
m
wearing
my
ol«l
boots,
you
see
all
the
time
we
were
up
there
among
way Mountain and the north end of the
astic applause from tho students. .
1 * Dr. Kitchen then measured the chest the ico aud snow. I seen a statement You are just six months too early to Fish Spring Canyon, I came unexpect­
get 'em."
edly across a strange object. On close
expansion of the subject, stating that that we cooked eggs in the hot springs
•• 1 haven’t had a meal since yester­ inspection I found it to be the remains
■ the customary limit is about three in Iceland. That is not so. We nover
'of a young man.
inohfc. Tho result was' two measvre- had a chance to go to the hot springs. day."
•• Nor I. either. We are cleaning
The sudden discovery hail a very
I meats, 301 inches in a state of contrac- There’s not a sailor aboard who wants
house,
and
for
the
last
three
days
I
’
ve
startling effect upon myself •and my
nny
more-service
like
we
have
gone
! lion, and 39 inches in a state of expan­
bad to eat a cold lunch od the piano.” companions, who soon gathered around
sion; making a difference of 81 inches. through without extra pay.”
••Thon you couldn't spare a nickel?’’ the lonely spot where lay tho last of the
Another sailor said: “ T!
The only real
I This difference has been a&lt; high is 12
‘•How can I? Ain’t 1 walking home mortal eoil of a human being, who must
laches. On a former occasion, when sport that I can remember“ was when
j Dr. Kitchen measured tho exhibitor, we sighted a bear on the beach of because I haven't money to ride on the have perished in dreadful agonies, tor­
car?”
tured by hunger and driven to despair
t&amp;e dlfferei^e amounted to 11 inches. Dune's Island-. He was a big white
••Is that so? Then we're both hard by thirst. The osseous, frame of'the
This (ailing off, coupled with a cough fellow, and must have been very hon­
man was bleached to snowy whiteness,
o&lt; Mr. Warren’ls, suggested tho fear, gry to venture so clo«e to our ship, op”
•• Of course we are.”
as were the clothes found on and about
.
bear.
which was afterwards corroborated by Somebody tired and struck the
•‘ And being you’re the wor«’ &lt;»S the skeleton. In tbe ciat we found,
____ _a
testimony, that the gentleman is a can- and he leaped into the water. Then
here
’
s
a
cold
sassage
1
got
at
the
in.
use
besides numerous papers and letters, a
did.ile for the grip of that prince of dis- whole broadside was poured mto it.
Cases, causumption. The exposure of Tho firing was kept up so long that I below, ana here’s a nickel to ride on tooth-brush, looking-glass, lead-pencil,
auch an exhibition as that of Wednes- think some of tho men must have shot the car! I tell you, sir. us poor folks razor, and quite a number of pocket
has
got
to
have
more
pity
for
the
rich
.trinkets.
,day morning, together witli the abnor­ in the same hole two or three times.
do better by ’em or we’ll all go to
On unfolding the papers which were
mal nature of his work, cannot bo very Well, finally we brought the ‘carcass on and
rendered quite brittle by exposure nnd
board.
It was kill of bullet ^holes. the poor-house lr’—Detroit Free Press.
eomlucive to longevity-.
age, and the writing on which, partly
* . Mr. Warren concluded his perform- The boys say the Captain is going to
in lead pencil, partly in ink, was al­
The Power of Imitation In Dogs.■
PaBoe by wiggling his ears, and then use the skin as a sieve.”
most illegible, wc came across piteous
An imaginative tar, with poetry
performing a series of gyrations and
. the
. in .II The following anecdote may interest appeals of the wyetched castaway in
his* soul,■ spoke
glowing
XXXJtortions which are simply indescriba­ hl
.
. in ,
- terms ,of
V n? ' those of your readers who are accus- the inhospitable solitude, tender sum­
ble. During all the exhibition the dis- beauty of the icebergs they encountered.
™U. tomod tn
to riliiuxrVM
observe thn
tho r.Lara/'tAriut.ir,
characteristic iuv
:u&gt;
splay of muscles and surface markings of “They wore all colors—green, blue, tious of dogs. 1 can vouch for its ac­ mons for succor in his helpless destitu­
the body was most instructive to those purple, red. and pink. The sen. which curacy, os I was an amused oye-witness tion. Some of these cries from the
interested iu tbe study of anatomy. The shone all night, made ’em purtier than and several members of my family were depths of misery appeared to be di­
anomaly of Mr. Wnrrep’s cose is the a picture. It was a sight to watch t^e also present, and have often told tho rected to tho address of a lady, pre­
sumably his wife. Her name was given
fact that he is able to produce by mus­ mountains of ice pass between us and the story.
as June Ba'lger. Fairplay, P. O., Grant
cular action a voluntary dislocation of sun. Most of them had big and little
A friend of ours nnd his wife were spend­ County, Wisconsin."
peaks al! mixed together, and capped
Dearly every joint in tho body.
ing a musical evening with us, and an
borne of the writing conveys the im­
The Captain
Mr. Warren i«now traveling and cx- with pure white ice.
old, black, English terrier, who belonged
hlbiiing his physical versatility th the noticed an iceburg one day that to tho house, had been in tho drawing­ pression that the one who penned it
[medical profession at tho leaning med- ha&lt;i a peak on it with nearly all room, which was up-etaira. Tho dug was then laboring under the ban of that
“11 colleges in the land. He has been colors. It must have took his fancy had been kindly, noticed by our friend, fearful mental derangement which is
former years connected with differ- for he ordered out a boat and had the who was partiallv lame from paralysis. brought on by the torments of un­
quenched thirst and general privation,
Ho said he
I organizations as an athlete, but uow men tow it to the ship.
On leaving the drawing-room, the dog
ptee all his time to the cause of mod- wanted it to put it in his ice-box to followed niin to tbe top of ih«* stair­ combined with the horrors of being
thrown far away from all civilization.
preserve the meat. I guess he must
Bcieneo.—Cleveland Herald.
case (we, with his wife, were waiting
have though that red. white, and blue
One of the papers is a receipted bill
below in the ball), and with cocked tail
fhings People Leave In Railway ice-sort ot United States ice—would and ears stood gravely watching his and bears the o|ly date furnishing a
preserve better'n ordinary ice.
The
slow, limping descent. When the in­ possible clue to the discovery of tho
Cars. .
meat tliat would rot up there where wo
valid was nearly at tiie foot of the stain, idcutity of tho victim of isolation. It
Tribune reporter recently lost a were I’d call pOrty bad. Sometimes tho dog began to follow, limping on is the year 1863, which indicates that
It knife iu one of the elevate*! cars. the sua shone all night as bright as it three legs (he was quite sound), in hu­ tho remains fhust have lain there nearly
did
at
midday.
As
we
moved
toward
B asking an employe was told that
morous imitation of our poor, afflicted a score of years, “unknown, unwept,
■Jit powibly be found in the repos- home we began to get a little more friend, aud his assumed lameness wa* unsung.”—Cor. Ogden (U. T.) Herald.
lor loot articles at No. 4 Front night First the sun would dip down gravely kept up, till he arrived on tho
, Ou going up two flights of n little and then come up again, like a mat. It was impossible to repress a
Girl Postboys.
into the building designated the big red ball bouncing on the ground. smile, though our politeness was at
£r found a Hmall room occupied Aa we got further south it would go stake, and tbe unconsciousness of our
In “ Tbe Land of the Midnight Sun”
down
andjtay
a
few
minutes.
Finaliy
0 property clerk, and across the
friend added to the' difficulty.—I^ndon Paul B. Du Chaillu gives many D.ovel
po way another room in which the it gave us*a good old-faahioned home­ Spectator.
experiences. Not the least interesting
g articles wereatorc&gt;l. Of course like night”—A". Y. Sun.
of thesu were his rides with girl drivdrs
Issing knife was not found. Kuires
—This is a Boil. It is on the Man's over Scandinavian roads. “At every
roverbially elusive. But the moreA Clever Railway Theft,
Neok. Would you like to Feel it? If station in Finland.” he writes, •• I had
proved that the conductors find a
you Do, the Man will Feok it, too. The a ydung girl for a driver, and these
many articles and turn them over
A young lady traveling from Paris to Boil u a mean Thing, and it is a Cow­ children of the North seemed not in the
»csHnpany. Mr. Reeves, tbe clerk. Aix by tbe 8:40 train on Sunday had her ard. If you Strike it it will Run. But lAst afraid of me. My. first driver’s
Itutt t!ae railway employes were a box broken open during the night and tbe Man will not Run. He will Dance -name was Ida Catherina; she gave me
Oijc«t class of men; but be would £44 in gold abstracted. Tbc box was and make Remarks. Boils may start a silver ring and was delighted when
say as much for the passengers, locked, strup:»ed and registered. The Way down near a little Boy’s waist­ she saw it on my finger. I promised to
fh he admitted that ha some- thief was evidently not pressed for time band But they always come to a Head bring her a gold one tho following win-.
received articles found bv pas- and no novice at the art, as all the at last.—Denver Tribune Francr.
। ter, and 1 kept my word. She was
» in the cars. The conductors contents o! tbe box had been carefully
glad, indeed, when at the end of the
lied many small articles that they readjusted and the small dispatch box,
—The ’marines in France nre to be drive, after paying, I gave l^er a silver
easily keep without detectioa. whence moat of the money was abstract­
driver,
doubled in strength, and will henceforth I piece. Another “
••’^“ twelve years of
le reward for this tho company ed. had been looked again, the lock form
an army corps which wiU be the j a^n‘ wa’ named Ida Caruana. - The tire
0 return to the employe who being a simple one. A frieud's appeal dbponble nuclei/, for torrism o.podi- j »1o'»«r »l&gt;ori. boeum. loow. but
V article such pocket books or to the Paris authorities only resulted in
A--&gt;r».----- .—i
nt »he was equal to the emergenev; she
&gt;— tadudi things as are unclaimed after ! the usual formula of taking details.
.tad,
Mocked lb. wb«l with .
ri.rwn-.ol .boulder, .nd b"au.H.)!on £» 3^1“^
hue.
j stone, went to a larmhonse and bor­
to
a
higher
authority,
etc.
The
box
the
re
serves,
at
W,00fl
m
en,
in a year the aocumulalod nn. eowed a few nails and a hammer, and
parMta are sokt In the room and its contents were untouched when
—Tbe large black swan, for the past ! wi,h u‘.e ho,P &lt;)f * I»«»®r tuade everyrwr .-:iw the accumulation of ! handed oyerto the irgistration office at summer one of the attractions ofj Pros- &lt; thing right in a few minutes. She did
. montlw. The most rramer- Paris, and was taken direct from the poo. Put. Nimrt, Frib, committed i
~«m in.be luri pu. out by the »»•
, ,.
,—
, , -.......
“ pees rars, wxagara fans, comm
Aix station to an hotel and unstrapped £ioJde, ----otb
7r duy
..77:
j__, by junioinjc yM
chatted with me ml the
by the porter in the buiy’s presence. lhe
“ U {’ °y J“ * g’
, time, though I did not understand what
the mounted silk to C onsedgtitm was offered in the shape ot
----------- ——
fur I did not know thou the
octt&lt;m article. Parroost in I
She was
**“

K

WllbMtt

Hi?

must die. Finally, my wife Induced me tn try
a battle of Dr. Kennedy's j'avoriU1 Remedy*

veniMd. WUhoat the ellghtot faith In it, bpt
aolely to gratify her, I bought a bottle oft drug
girt In ouf village. I uml that and two . or
three bottles more, and—-to make a long »rory
abort—I am now ha healthy a man a» there is in
the country,
Since then I hart recommended ‘Favorite
Remedy to others whom I knew to have suffared from Kidney and Id ver Complaints; and
aasure the public that the 'Favorite Remedy'has dene its work with a similar qompletncsa
in every Instance, and Ttrust some other sick
dl-x-ouraged mortal may hear of it and try the
‘Favorite Remedy’ as I did.”

NERVOUS
DEBILITY

bill

BARKER'S CiNCER TWl

lasqx axvj.xa &gt;.&lt; i&gt;urt.xn tiie ocuatt

Administrator'fl Sale
In tie maoer of tbe Entate of
'
HENRY TROYER, deceued.
Notir* I* hervby given that 1 .bail aeU

luOI. till!
i.ijttcr w!
hjve’appUud fur iH'lp without getting reflet;

In tl&gt;n &gt;bort*at poMiblu iitno.* Haring daring tbe
pa-t twenty-lire ycara &lt;p&gt;ade
men*, o. diwum of tbe Mled

b, letter «» at tJUce. WV prepare aud roralah W
patient* onr owu medlclnna Addrcaa
MADlbON DlSiOiNBAHY, SU1 South Clark SL,
Cbtcsxu. Ul.

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PATENTS
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PER- Each iwuo eo n tains SIX COMPLET­
ED srorJEL, betides a riah variety of ooa_

Utcrature. Science, etc., etc. Its Market
Quotat

�NABHVUJ

Belrt m i fca rf ht
tn a. stationery

and curative powers no other Pllte
can lie compared with them; and every
person, knowing their virtues will

cleared warty 11.000.000.

further opportuni1
hi®
vocation. The Net
mnit,
Maas., w driven oat of her school by
the sight of a loaded pistol in tbe head pass through a king and rigorous couraa cffbctual. they are especially adapted
of a pupil she had reprimanded, but she of training. He most serve, man and to the needs of the digestive apparatus,
met one of the committee at the door boy, before the miftt till he masters derangements of which they prevent
and he went in and disarmed the boy. every problem in the management of and cure, if timely taken.
They are
—A tract of land in Oregon, between •very form of rig. To this he must add the best nnd safest physic to employ
the waters of the Santiam and Clack­ a thorough knowledge of navigation. for children and weakened constitu­
PKBUSI THESE LIBERAL Ab. RATIB.
amas, «boat twenty by ten miles in di­ Then he must contrive to obtain the po­ tions, where a mild but effectual
mensions, is covered by a dense forest sition of boat-keeper, or pilot's mate. cathartic is required.
For sale by all druggists.
» 1.TO r» MS| B &amp;.00 9 S.00 of larches. The trees grow from 250 to In that capacity he must serve three
ftoch...
“14.00 800 feet in height, many of them rising full years on one pilot-boat before be
fitoebte?
Like a beautiful flower full of color, but with­
'can
be
admitted
for
his
examination
for
tool 1&amp;0Q'
150 feet without a limb.
a license. If through ill-fortune he lose out scent, are the flue fruitless words of him
his position, he must begin de novo, and who ddtH not act accordingly.
rammer residence, on the Hudson, which serve the full time on another boat.
SHILOH'S CONSUMPTION CURE.
were. burned ten months ago, have all
Sometimes, a boat-keeper seryes nine
This in beyond question the most successful
•been rebuilt. They are 872 feet long
or ten years on various boats be­ Cough Medicine we have ever sold, a few doses
by eighty wide, and it requires sixteen fore his apprenticeship is complete. in variably cure the worst cases of Cough, croup
men, 250 tons of coal and five large After all this. he must nau a most add Bronchitis, while tta wonderful -success is
furnaces to transform the freezing air rigid examination on all points of in the cure of consumption la wilhout a paral­
OIUVO STRONG,
lel In the history of mt-dicoe. Since its first
Editor aad Proprietor. to Tropical during the winter season. . seamanship and navigation
before
If you
—Ben Hilliard, of Washington Coun­ the Board, of Pilot Commissioners,
ty, Ga., is perhaps the greatest sufferer and exhibit
a thorough knowl­
in the world. Ila has been thirty-threo edge of the tides, rips, sands and all
years In his bed, enduring the most ex­ other phenomena for hundreds of miles
VILLAGE OFFICERS.
cruciating agony from rheumatism,
out from the piers, of tho East and
ANSWER THIS QUESTION.
,Ht—W^Tr.'^Tnanr.
/
Why do *o many people we sce around us,
unable to move any part of his body ex­ North Rivers. . But even after receiv­
cept his lower jaw and to slightly shrug ing his license, he is sometimes forced seem to prefer to Buffer and be made mincraWe
ny
indlgvstiau,
coustipstidn. diExinesa, loss of
his shoulders. For all those long years
to wait years, until some pilot happens appetite. coming up of the Food, yellow skin,
Marshall—1
Wm. Boclun, of Buffering his joints have been as stiff to die and leave a vacancy for him. when tor 75ctt&gt;. we will sell them Shiloh’s Vltad Demarsy.
os if grown together solid.
The first year of pilotage Im is granted llxer, guaranted to cure them. Sold by F. T.
a license to pilot vessels drawing less Batea.
—One of the most fashionable New
SHILOH’S CATTARRH REMEDY, A mar­
York amusements is “ a horse hop;” than sixteen feet If he give satisfaction velous cure for Catarrh, Diphtheria, Canker
that is,, some society woman engages tho following year he is permitted to mouth, and Mead Ache. Witli each bottle
the riding grounds and horses, ana then take charge of ships drawing eighteen here ia an Incenloua nasal ‘.Injector for the
successful treatment of these complaints
invites twenty-five or fifty of her friends feet, if he pass a satisfactory examina­ more
without extra charge. Price 50cte. Sold by
to be present. Two or three hours ore tion the third year, ha then .receives a F T.Botsa. ‘
spent in cantering, galloping and dan­ full license, entitling him to pilot ves­
M 4 KTHOOIBT KFJtOOPAI. CHURCH-A. D. Nawsels of any draught, and is then first 9 ‘‘John, I have stood my drink; I think we
IVA ua, I'Mtor. H-rrtowi every Sabbath st ,JOJf cing quadrilles on norseback and then
the guests adjourn to tho house of their called a branch, or full pilot.
might be better of another.'* “But, Sandy, I
This matter qf draught often gives rise have no money." “Then I think wo have had
hostess, where they find an elegant
to amusing maneuvers between captain enough."
supper.
.
•
and
pilot
—
the
former
sometimes
en
­
—Henry Clay, a grandson of the
THE TROUBLE ALL OVER.
famous bearer of that nanfe, went to deavoring to evade a correct statement
“A patient In Middletown” writes to Dr. D..
Greenland a year or so ago. with the of the actual draught of the vessel at the
purpose of joining the Howgate expe­ time, and the latter in turn employing Kennedy, ot Rondout, N. Y.: “I wrote to you
dition there. The expedition, like his wits to get at tho truth without ap­ alxiut fire weeks ago for advice in taking your
Captain Howgate, was a failure, and pearing to doubt the word of the cap­ medicine, as at that time two atones bad Just
mificellaittou^ l.m.
Mr. Clay was left to look for the north tain. vessels drawing under {purteen passed from my kidney;, the effect of using
pole on his own hook. He did so, trav­ foot pay three dollars aud seventy cents Kennedy's Favorite remedy. I have taken tho
IL YOUNG. M.D. Office east side of eled a great deal by dog-team and got n foot; the rate increases by degrees, Favorite Remedy ever since, aud have no more
•, Main St, Nashville. Office hours from enough of it He has just reached nil until ships drawing twenty-one feet and
upward pay six dollars and fifty cents tr ruble from that source. It la also toning my
home in Kentucky.
whole system.
—In some parts of the Maryland pen­ per foot
IL GRISWOLD. M. D.,
^thie
On receiving his ■ license the pilot
“Oh, Jhe perils of the deep!" exclaimed the
• Physician and Surgeon. Office and res­ insula the following is believed to be a must give bonds for the proper dis­
traveler as he reached tbe shore- When he
idence opposite tbe WolooU House. Prompt sight core for chills and fevers: a live
attention given to calls day or nlchL
spider is caught and placed in a thim­ charge of his duty, and ho is liable to secs bls trunk tn tbe hands of the baggage anheavy
fines
if
be
declines
to
fill
a
va
­
ble, and a cloth tied over securely to
nlhiiator, be changed his cry to "Tbe perils of
A- FOOTE PHYSICIAN &amp; SURGEON
cancy or to board a vessel making sig­
• Succssor to Dr. Wickham. Office and keep it confined. The thimble is sus­ nals for a pilot. Ho is also required to the depot!”
residence at Dr. Wickham’s late office.. pended around the neck of the afflicted
be
temperate
in
hie
habits
and
of
repu
­
A HEALTHY STATE.
Prompt attention to calls night or day.
person until tho spider dies, which not
table character. The proper execution
People are constantly changing their homes
W. WHITMORE, M. D., Eclectic Phy.i- only cures, but prevents the chills. It of these regulations Is to a largo de­ from East to West, and from North to South,
will
doubtless
tickle
the
spider
to
lr
irn
•clan and Surgeon.. Office, cast side of
or vice versa. In search of a healthy State. If
Main St. Residence, north Phillips St. Calls that he is worth anything to anybody. gree insured by the great competition they would learn to be contented, and to use
among tue boats, ana the consequent tbc celebrated Kidney Wort when t&gt;ick, they
promptly attended at all hours.
* *—At the recent funeral of the Kai l of vigilance of each to detect delinquen- 1 wvuld be much better ofL The whole aystem
can be kept In a healthy state by thia simple
G W. GOUCHER, ElertleFhyUcianand Airlie, in Scotland, Lady Airlie followed cies in his rivals.
but effectual remedy. See large adv.
X-7 Surzeon, is prepared to an»wer all call* the coffin, leaning on the arm of her
that may be mad* for his services. Office and eldest son. Lord Airlie having. been
Those who ar» disposed to be uneasy will
The Old-Fashioned Stage-Coach.
chief of the clan Ogilvy, the procession
never want something to be Uneasy about.
It is hard not to feel a pang of regret
-1X711. rxRMESTZK, M. D.. Omc 0.0 was headed by the pipers, who played
there isVonuNiTuKEit
W Hull’* Drug store, Vermontville, Mich. the “Portuguese Hymn” and “The when thinking that the days of the
Tiie falling powers of digestion, assimilation,
Land o’ tho Leal,” while, » before it staxre-coach are numbered.
Likotthe
started, the pipers of Lord Breadalbane Indian, it has been driven farther and , secret too and excretion, are restored to pennacommiMiuncr, kou r.utau&gt; anu insurance
’neip health, strength and activity, by using
Agt Prompt attention given to ail business and other noolemon played in front of farther Westward as the railroads have Brown’s Iron Hitters—a true tonic, a perfect
•atracted to, my car*. Converanclng a special­ the Castle. The pibrochs were “Loch- pushed on into newer country, and it ctrengthcmer, a sure reviver.
aber
no
More
”
aud
“
Glengarry
’
s
Lawill
pot
be
many
yoars
before
it
wilFbe
ty. Office eppoaite Union House.
SorrArs are our best educators. ’A man may
entirely a thing ot the past. Tbe huge,
LIEBlAuSER, Merchant Tailor and deaT- menu”
—Various cases of poisoning from the cumbrous vehicle, with its six horses, see farther through c tear than a telescope.
. er in Ready Made Clothing. See me
liefore you purchase clothing. Fits guar- use of perfumes have been reported in its load of trunks and boxes, its jolted
You had belter cut out .this address—“Dr,
recent English journals. In^ one in­ nnd uncomfortable passengers often C. R,Bykes, 160 MadBon St, Chicago,” for
halted and relieved of their vrlnables you may need bls “Sure Cure tor Catarrh,"
l ALVIN A. NICHOLS, dealer in Boots and stance a fittlo girj had bought some by some successor of Dick Turpin aud
J Shoes, Rubbers, Hats and Caps. GenU* heliotrope perfume at a “bazar, and had
Butter la made out of cotton seed oil. Tbe
Furnishing Good*, Glove* aud Mittens, Trunks, applied it on her face. This caused a Robert Hood, has served faithf^Jj
hianufacture of artificial milk has become quite
toll. It deserve aome record/n order
Traveling Bags, Lap and Buffalo Robes, etc. vesicular eruption, swelling, itching,
an industry, and an Eastern firm is making an .
West side MMn St., Naebville.
and in fact erysipelas, which lasted for list its history may serve to remind
excellent article out of paper. Now, If some
some time. The scent was made with generations to come, whose %omfort
some of the products of coal tar, end will be so thoroughly provided for that one one would invent artificial beef, tbe cow
not with the odoriferous pirobiplea of theig pampe. e(f bodies will never receive
plants, thus acquiring its irritating a jar or bruise of the discomforts their
SKINNY MEN.
properties.
fathers endured. It must not b: that
Wells* Health Renewer. Absolute cure for
—Bradhaur accepted an invitation to the annals T&gt;f the stage-coach shall fail nfcrvoux debility and weaknes# of tbe genera­
/"hRNO STRONG, plain and f ancfJob Printer.
tive function*, fll. at drugzUte. Mich. Depot
Vz The best facilities for doing work of any dine with Frohberg at'Columbia, S. C. to be recorded by a pen that will be ad­ JAMES
E. DAVIS A CO., Detroit, Mich.
' f/wben in need Tho meal passed pleasantly, and a bot­ equate for the work. In many parte of
, whatever, see me tle of wine was drunk. The subject of New Mexico, Colorado and other .West­
Ond Individual may dye a coat or a pair of
baptism came up, and one held that im­ ern States and Territories, the stage­ whlskcra, bat it al says takes two to dialogue
Tl.f ISS, £. CHAPMAN, Mffltncr and Dreea- mersion was tho only proper mode, driver is in his glory. Ab his vehicle
JxL maker. A choice line of Millinery and while the other argued that sprinkling bowls down the steep mountain roads,
ANNOYANCE AVOIDED.
Fancy Goods constantly on hand. No trouble answered the purpose quite as welL his strength of arm taxed to the utmost
Gray hair* ore honorable but their premature
t*how goods. OH and see me beiore buying. They grew earnest and then angry. to restrain the willing hones and hold appearance ia annoying. Parker’s Hair Balaam
op two doors north of Smith’s grocery.
prerente
the
annoyance by promptly restoring
Bradhaur withdrew in a rage. Froli- beck the coach, he feels a natural pride
the youthful color.
•
/S N. DUNHAM, Proprietor Temperance BU‘ berg followed him into the dooryard, in his skill, which is shared by those
UtPOBTAXTJO
TKAVLLERR,
V. Hard Parlors and Pool Rooma. A choice where his antagonist stabbed him with whose safety depends upon K. In go­
Special Inducements are offered you by the
Hno of cigar* constantly on hand. Rooms under a knife. Frohberg hastily got a gun ing from Espanola, tne southern termi­
D. C. Griffith’s store.
and shot Bradhaur. The baptismal nus of the Denver &lt;fc Rio Grange. to San­ Burlington Route, It will pay rou to read their
question, however, was not settled.
ta Fe, one has a taste of stage-coaching advcruacmcnhi to be found elsewhere in. thia
ONAH B. RASET, Exprees and Dreyman­
Goods and Baggage carried to any place in
—Dr. Tuttle, of Naugatuck, Conn,, which is novel and enjoyable. Tbe all­
lost a valuable horse in a most singular days' ride across the rolling plains, past
the carious red boulders and in sight of
IRAM R. DICKINSON, manufacturer ot manner. His two horses stood side by the snow capped Sanguede Cristo
aad dealer in Hard Wood Lumber. Build­ side in the stable as they have done for Mountains, down through the wild,'
ing Material a specialty. Cash paid for lags. Mill
yean; but the other morning one of
«nd yard on Bharman St., at MIC. E.R. crowing. them was found bleeding at the mouth, nigged Comanche canon to the swift
and the manger and stable floor were Rio Grande; hers a boiling, rapid,
covered with gore. Investigation showed mountain torrent prepares the traveler
THE ONLY MEDICINE
that in some way the other horse had for a sound night’s sleep on the cots in
IS K1TI1KU LiqClB OU BBT FOBS
gotten hold of the wounded animal’s the adobe store ot the Mexican of Espa­
nola.
Early
in
the
morning
the
stage
&lt;■&lt; doae fa a work-nan like manner.
tongue and literally pulled it out by tiie
roots. The tongue was found in the rolls up which is to drag him through
the sand hills and cedar forests to the
r; Principal and to- other horse’s manger with plain teeth- capital of New Mexico. Those whose
ig* National Bank. marks upon 1L The hones were wont
to nip-at each other in play, and it is ideas of the vehicle are based on the
true Concord coach of the natty New
raEEDMAN toe Merchant TaDor of supposed that one got hold of the other’s Yorker, whose time, because of his
&gt; Charlotte, will visit NaehviUe every BO tongue as if it had been a bit of rope
dy». wki&gt; » choice line of piece goods, «a&lt; will or other inanimate substance. The in­ wealth, hangs on his bauds, will be
Aiaaoreare tiunfon forced into
jured horse was killed to end its euf- grievously disappointed when they see
the canvas covered, rolling, unwieldy
Mat sfawMAe apedednatnrtBf.
old coach which is to be their carriage.
TACOB OSMUN, Liveryman, barn neaifWot—
A
singular
criminal
case
has
just
t" cott House. First close turnouts at reason­
But the discomforts are not as great as
able rata*. Special rales to commercial men. been triea at Berlin. Some time ago anticipated, and therh is real enjoyment
Funeral and wetliag parties furnished with cu Prince Eristuff, a Russian, called on a
I WILL SURELY CURE
riages on short notice. .
firm of jewelers in that city, and under
KIDNEY DISEASES,
false pretences induced them to send win creeks, crossing the dry beds of the
* LIVER COMPLAINTS,
to his hotel articles to the value of about spring torrents, through the adobe vil 9,000. marks, for which be also per­ Inges of lazier, dirtier Indians, and np
suaded the hotel porter to advance in and down the hillsides. Yet after toll­
an» &gt; ERveci Bifcounr.Bs,
payment the sum of 3,000 marks. Thus ing up a long hill, among the cedars
possessed of the jewelry tbe Prince sold
HAB. W. DEMARAT, Dealer ia Watches, part of it and was about to depart from and rocks, when a tarn is made and be­
fore him is tbe old mty of Santa Fe,
Clocks, fine Jewelry and Biivarware. Being
the Eastern Station for St. .Petersburg omcily nestling in the valley below, the
when he was arrested on suspicion at traveler is glad that the end is near,
! Why frljriitraed aver di*erde«4 Kidneys!
tho instance of the confiding porter. aud that he may soon take his rest in a
The counsel for the defense staled that Pullman car. The experience is one to
^yiLLIAM JONKS,
be remembered, even though he my
•ver afterwards bettor Huprexnate tbe
modern and rapid
of traveling.—
the Court to

ilashrille girrrtonj.

W

W

L

Nashville Elevator!
Grain and Produce,
—, jhurt wn------- Seeds, Feed, Lime, Kalt, Plaster. Ktuc- aOon will
co, Hair, Piae Laaiber, Lath
and Shingles,
AT THE LQWEST LIVING PRICES?
Improved; fair building* and In all a good*
gain. Priee Sl.COO; part down.
ELtlVATOll.
House and Lot, on Phillip* street; the
teuTprina in town. Price
House and Lot, on State street. Pnec :
half down down.
Good House and four acres of Land on 1
;—villpayjthe----ces Street. Price fdfiO.
House and lot on State St., house new:

FOWLER &amp; INGERSON
HIGHEST MARKET PRICE

A ftil) stock of

LUMBER, LATH, &amp;C-,
Constantly ou Hand.

J-JENRY ROE,

J
H

Nashville or Hasting*.
acres, 1W mile* from Nashville on tbe Iwst
road leaving the village; all improved exenpt b
acres; theremMning- B acres gooj timber;. L.
well watered by a nc?cr-falling spring. Good,
young orchard; buildings fair; IS acres of
wheat on the. ground; proscht owner engaged
in other bnsineas and will sell for *2,000. »L000 down, balance on long time.
Vacant lot on Philips St Price »120 if sold
LEE A DURKEE.

Proprietor

MEAT MARKET
Freeh and Salt 3/eate,
Saoisi Ham ani Shoulders,
FBBSH FXBH and POtrLTHI
IN THEIR BEASON.

Lard, by the lb. or'barrel,
&amp;e., die., &lt;Cr.
t'-s?1* The Highest Market Price paid
tor Hides, Pelts. Ac.
Frosii Goods, Full Weights and
Satisfaction Guarantocd.

BFARY ROK.
08EP1I COLE,

THE GREAT

AT THE NEW

MEAT

MARKET!
-----KEEPS-----

Fresh, Salt and Smoked

H

C

For all kinds of—

I

GRAIN AND PRODUCE.

-------- OF EVERY DESCRIPTION.-------AU at prleca that will

I4ve and Let Live.
pURXITURE DEPOT.

J. LENTZ ASONS,
Manufacturers, and dealers In

FURJNITURE!In Every Style&amp;jVariety.

TiVltLISGTON nOVTi.
other line run* Three Thrr;tirt r«'njcr Trains Dally between Chicago, ! '
»I« mr% Council Bluff*. Omaha. LlncUn
.
Joseph. Atchison. Topeka ami Kansas Cir. ■
Direct connection* for all points la Kan*iNebraska, Colorado, Wyoming, lyontam. Nr
vails. New Mexico, Arizona, Idaho.Oreffim am
California.
Tbe Shortest, Speediest nnd Most C-'riZr-rtn
bio Route via Hannibal to FortrcnSt.
rnilM.Hnm.toh. Austin. Stfu Antonio; GrIvotton and all points in Texas.
‘Hie unequnled inducements offered bvthfe
Ijne to Travelers nnd Tourist.-, am fts
The celebrated Pullman (1&amp;-wI&gt;'-l!j PalaQr'
Sleeping Cars, run only on this
O. Palace Drawing-Room CLra. With H'‘rton’F
Reclining CImItr. No extra cbnrs»* for 8-vfIn lO elinir.g Chain*. Tbo tamor* C-. IL Jt G '
Palace DininsrCars. Ooryoous Sm&lt; klntr Cur
ntti-d with Elegant High-Barked Itftttnrt Re
vnlvimr Chair* tor tbc exclusive
i.f first
cla*’ MMcngcra.
Steel Track and Superior Eouiptitrn*. com­
bined with their Great Timnir’i Car /.rrgiure ment. makes this, above nil other/, the fr-.orf:Route io the South. Boutn-Wi si, su-jl tb.- F-.
West.
. ‘ '
Try it, nnd you will find travelhig a luxur
In*tcn4 of a discomfort.
Titr&lt; :iph Tickets vin this C«-&gt;!.-*tAd &gt;.h» ’
for Kile nt all office* In the Cnltcrt State* ar-4’
Canada.
All information abmit.ltnte* «.f *¥r».
Ing Car Ace.immodntions. Tinv FlnW
will bo chcerfuHy given by .tpr-h !&lt; - ■ •
General Pnwnr;

For the fall tiade, our

STOCK IS COMPLETE,
And will be sold sb low that"

PRICES WILL ASTONISISH

NERVOUS
DEBILITY
A cure guaranteed.

yon.
decay sod death.

WE ALSO CARRY

JLITVE

A.

UNDERTAKERS’GOODS,

thorlxrd agent for the village cf KaahviUc. JOHb
C. WEST Sc CO.,FoI« rroprlaton, IM and IM W
Mad’.aoa 81, CU'eajo, I IL
It 1

And are prejiared to give cur time andatlen
tion to everythlngjpcrtaining to the

J. LENTZ &amp; SONS,
bCjK&gt;-’iW««. Sent by null for 8 irt’cr at
form-rfiz Jlnnt/er, .’te.

AGENTS WANTED

TBim, TSXBOWILS,
in thx man.

M

KiDNEY-WORT

HOP
NEVER

FAIL

C

w. tho Prince did not in-

Uoo* st CWt

�«ian be taken out of badly other weapon w th which to dispatch other misfortunes . this season, which
is by Isriag them on the him, and.tbe frightened rat, taking ad­ have resulted in an .inferior crop of
- - ; vantage of the opening, scrambled corn, a considerable amount ot poor
■ across tbe room over tbe man’s bare feet se -d operated toward the same result;
“•Qi but of tbe,d&lt;»r before it could be and- if a few suggestions to those who
^gbj.tvina.n until 'dry. The streaks will closed. Tbe rat ran down tbe back stairs have thus Suffered'will aid them to
and into tho kitchen, followed by the avoid a like difficulty in the future, we
^-Horse poisoning from the effect of man clad only in his night robe, with a shall be abundantly re^d for making
drugs administered to make the coat kerosene lamp in one band aud a broom them,.and they will be c ,u.uly well paid
It is no. longer,
. gl'AHiy. or for other reason, has become in the other. Before beginning the for reading them.
■&lt;&gt; irequeot iu England that a bill in Kht in earnest, the gentleman let in thought possible to produce the best
young dog, thinking this would be a corn from the poorest seed, or to grow
Tariiament imposes jienalties of large
hae or imprisonment for selling to good time to initiate the animal into tbe any crop, inferior or otherwise, irom
ssurvants or unauthorized use by them. mystery of rat killing. The dog got seed which is destitute of vitality.
hia eye upon the rat-a large old Fel­ Perhaps it would not be correct to say
—All the Year Round Pudding-—Line
■ p-o-dish with paste, spread on three low—and then skulked off into one cor­ that it was ever thought that these
•cuices of* any kind of jam (raspberry ner and lay down. Tbe gentleman, could be done; but certainly in times
i tiie b»l), then beat well In a basin seeing his “purp” was not to bo de­ past ft has looked as if a kernel of
the following: Three, odnaes of bread Cended upon, ’‘went for” the rat with corn was all that was desirable, re­
ia broom. He brought the weanon gardless of its intrinsic merit In our
•rumba, the same of sugar and butter,
tiie rind nnd juice of half a large lemon: down with a vengeance, but. 'like Pat­ rapid march of progress in all arts and
rick
’s Uea. the git wasn’t there. After industries, we have learned many new
add this to the pastry and jam, and
two or three miss-strikes the man’s things jn regard to the workings of na­
Make half an hour.
- A young colt should be fed on food ‘•dander ria” and the battle was vigor­ ture, and have learned to. apply the
*at is not bulky und is nutritious and ously waged. The rat circlpd round principles of science to all our work in
nnd round the room, followed by his the fields. In the growing of corn we
human foe, with high-hfied lamp and have been taught that the principle of
, ttobittooa. ud .boold beglrenin
b™&gt;m- Tbl, Mlmrted ran. like producing like is as applicable as
ra.ll quuliUM fl.ro. droroa d.y u alw In^laDad :b. dog. rad h. weM it is m the breeding of live stock, and if
■■zular hour, Tb« roll', wind and rou“d
w.lb rwter there are any who still persist in
fha^Td.iwnd uponT thoiood characlnr “d ml, adding to tbr unroar. The ral planting poor seed, or rather in­
St l „ loid and^onmoferat. fending.
“ droperatolyroarodlbalbeallul. ferior ’.seed, they are still growing
’"w^1^dS£:^t
s
t
Inferior corn with what would seem to
bo, discout aging regularity. Without
-wblnped.croani Ho.-Sweeten a hl, body before he wa. dWodged. Thi; wasting time or space in elaborating
teaenofjlof r.rv thick ,wrot cream andden onalangbt eairad tbo gentleman noon this phase of the subject, it is
rad makwMcold aa poAiblo wflbont u, retire ,or
minutw *&gt;d. when
quite sufficient to say that we must
trau nA Like yto amair pie-t.u. With , he relurnod. h„ w„ in (ull dre.fc with ■ have good seed, seed that is possessed
raxlendnly ri.h cruau packed in .or- ^b,, boot, on and broochea log, of vitality, and seed which is like the
rad pi.ee, to preront blwtenng and tuck„d , „
w
No
rAt,
corn we wish to produce. To this may
bjkelna .m ckoTen. Flavor Ute cold
।
No„ he wa.
added that a crop which is so vastly,
*fcam and whip a. you would egg. or , „Bdj for
in Butwberew„ bo
A« I wish to reduce my stock $5000 worth by Feb’y 1st, I will make special inducements
important to us as individuals, and as’
a Nation, as corn, should receive tho
•proad on the cream and dyn Ua to I Th0 gentleman looked in every nook best and most studious attention in its. on my entire Stock.
add a hmah. put lot. ol Jelly on top.
„d
,or bim but ho wa, not to culture from the selection and preserva­
—A valuable property m tobacco u be found. Tho dog .till occupied bi, tion of tho seed to the harvesting of tho
the resinous gufn which the leaf freely ' corner and was trembling ns though crop; and it is pertinept to remark in
exude, dunng the procea. ol ripening. b,diy frightened. Hi, matter .po.o this connection that our farms do not ।
and wh ch. being wiluble In water, may ; kindiv to him. and-the animal camo average what they should iu corn. Kot |
U.waahod off by a heavy rainfall tor tc.nl him, whon. In! tbo rat was ex­ only is this owing often to poor seed,
tols reason tobacco should not be cut | pO8ed to view. In his fright he hud and imperfect cultivation, but not infre__
immediately
a rain. -If —
the-work
1 token
the dog.
""
----------- rafter
--------------------[ um.cu
ruiugurefuge
unuerunder
lv,c uwg.
The genquently to poor or comparatively
poor _;:r
lb
nnnt.il for
Fnrnfutv
n mtn.
_________
__ ___
.
Sb n-tsf
postfxined
a few rlnva
days "ftnr
after a
ram- 1| .1
tieman
om-e
more
went lor the rat and land? IPoor
’c; 7™d
land is not profitable under I
mil, t|io leaf has time to again
secrete j the °same
scene n
was
repeated, .uo
tho
rat auj
any vifCuTuntpuCus,
circumstances, but
butititnever
XX
-Mil
*“***'-' ov«&gt;uo
aa iu|zvu.vu,
in.
ijuvufproves
pFvveS
the ■necessary supply of gum--------:—
—•------safety.
n_in
------------------------.. .
__ planted
. im. Naitlinr
Neither l I —
ngaiu
running
to tho jdogfor
He
moreto
unprofitable
than when
running
tho dogfor
safei
r»f
■ Tfl
K! Mr
j JN making the following statement, we utt^tlie truth, and can verifv it.
should tobacco be
«« cut whei
njen wet, for if . was dislodged from this retreat a sec- { to corn. * If
Il tho
the land is in line condi
condi-­
Mid upon the ground in this condition Ond time, and once more. When *bard
- ■ j tjODi the crops will bo enabled to gel a
•irt will adhere to the leaves, causing pressed, he turned upon his two-logged good start in tho spring, and get out of
damage to the crop.
,
1 adversary. But before tho rat could tho way of drought, and some other
-Chow-chow made at homo is deli- clamber up his person, a blow from the common dangers.
During the past
v * much
iblc trouble
'to broom
eious. and1 it‘ is not
to stunned him and a boot heel fin­
season, which began bo late that a great
In the city, at IxiUoni prices, fair nnd square weight and measure. When
make it. Tho following recipe is ssafe
" 1 ished tho fight. Tbo skirmish last about deal of corn will not even reach tho
---------.. ------------— of __^dl
and sure:
Take one peck
small cu- | half an hour, no rat over before mak- 1 dignity of respectable fodder, we have
------ „ ■ halt
..
3L of of green tonia- ing a more desperate struggle for his
enmbers,
a peck
seen corn upon old barn sites, for in­
toes, half a pock of small onions, and . life. But the odds were “agin him” stance. that was equal to auj- corn in
two heads of cauliflower. After pro- from tho start, anil one more victory tho most favorable seasons/ while all
Etc., in Bairy and Eaton counties, we are telling the people a fact that canparing these by peeling tho onions, I must bo credited to tho enemy of tho । other corn in the neighborhood was
i not l&gt;e successfully and truthfully denied. It consists of a large variety of staaenarating the cauliflower in small bits, 1 —
rat*----race.—Hartford. (Conn-) limes.
I backward and unpromising. Indeed
j pie good-, nnd a large assortment uf
washing the encumbers and tomatoes [
j we have not seen a single field of corn
And slicing the latter if they aie not
this season, on extra rich land, that was
January and May.
I
"Ware
China,
vCnr small, sprinkle salt over them all j
| not in excellent condition. If we would
nitOWS IRON BITTERS are
ami let them stand twenty-four hours. ,
As tho Avalanchian was looking over I Consult our own interests, therefore,
xz.-u we
- &lt;j
In various designs and styles, also a well selected Stock of
n certain cure for all diseases
Then rinse tho salt off. and drain lh&lt;-m the marriage licenses in the County wrfli
"l bring up the condition of our land.
recuiring a complete tonic; espewell; then add three heads of celery. Clerk s Office yesterday a ternoon there i
One lesson
lesson has
has been
been so
so prominently
prominently
cinlly Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Inter­
Ono
'broken in small’ pieces, and a handful
appeared a youth. Wfth epidermis of the I taught this year that it would seem immittent Fevers, Want of Appetite.
ofser ped horseradish root, then take midi^ht hue, leading a female of the ( possible for any one not to recognize it.
In Tea Setts, Water Setts, Cup*. Siuiccre, Pitchers, Etc. An endless variety
Iams of Strength, Lack of Energy,
half an ounce each of tumeric, cloves
cuter known as “ griff" in the olden , Yhe late wet spring of the present year
etc.
Enriches the blood, strength­
and cinnamon, an eighth of a pound time, and al-out fifty years old. lhe t was disastrous to the corn. The ground
ens
tho
muscles,
and
gives
new
each of ground black pepner and of
Jlfb to the nerves. Acts like a
sugar, naif a pound each of white youth sidled up to the counter in a was so full of water that the roots
bashful way, and asked:
I cou]d not penetrate to any depth, and,
charm on tho digestive organs,
Too numerous to mention, nnd so cheap time all can afford to buy.
mustard seed and of mustard flour; put
"Ar you de gemman?
i when the drought began, they were
removing all dyspeptic symptoms,
all these into cold vihegar and boil for
“l^am. certainly, a perfect gentle- I near the surface, exposed to the full
such tut tasting the food. Belching,
flteen minutes; take vinegar enough to
man answered the scribe; “what can I force of the long, dry spell. Drainage
Heat in the Stomach, Heartburn,
•over the pickles. When boiled pour I do for you?
Of everv^tylr, color nnd’design. When you are ready to buy, I am ready
I is the lesson that such a state of things
etc. The only Iron Preparation
•ver the vegetables. Tho chow-chow
•■I want, somebody to jine
rev- I tcxchc,. and if anv one ha, wen alhorthat will not blacken the teeth or ! to sell. All kinds of Produce taken in exchange for Goods.
will bo readv for use in a few weeks, ponded tbe mm. with a baahtol glance oughly drained field ot corn chia roagive headache. Sold by all Drug­
but will grow better steadily until it is
ac hia inamorata, which was returned I eon. ho will profit by tho iesaqn. for.ha
gists at $1.00 a bottle.
used up. Put in bottles or cans.
With interest, but without tho ba,Will- has sein a good stand ot Coro, in most
BBOWX CHEMICAL CO.
nos. Ho handed over ml ho spoke St excellent condition. In a ride through
Baltimore, Md.
Forest Fires and More Timber.
in silver and a marriage license.
portions ot Illinois not long; since,
The scrilxi said he coul&lt;|. of course, where tho corn was literally burned up.
From ail sides come discussions and
perform a more binding marriage cere- I we came to a field where the corn was
suggestions on the timber question, mony
than any other man in the ward. I of vigorous growth, looking at healthy
li re before us is an article in a Lon­
don paper, showing the enormous but didn't like to steal tho job from i and promising as any corn ever looked,
amount of red cedar used for pencils, friends of his who made a specialty of ; The secret was in drainage; The land
the business.
| was thoroughly drained.
and the incredible difficulty of obtain­ *i’“
Deputy Clerk Shea here interposed
ing it. Fearful, it is said, that the sup­
Returning to thesubiectof seedcorn,
ply will fail, tho celebrated Faber has and said he would send for’Squire------ . tho strictest care should bo exercised
he winter tn lunulng districts. \ cry
Bought a large tract of land and planted A message was dispatched? and in a in its selection while it ii yet in* tho
returns for canipamuveljr IflUc labor.
it with cedars, which may help his firm short while tho ’Squire appeared and field, on the stalk, and before the frosts
Ci.1l
I nr, ■'lit tv—ji 1 m TtmiH k t.il v
alter he is gone, if it does no good to took charge. Advancing to the counter come. Opening constantly iu view the
ho
eliminated
hiahat
and
said:
himself. 'I hen we have also before us
principle of like producing like, go
“Join jour riebt hands.”
a cry.from New England. The mill
through the field and select such oars
The groom stuck out a toil-hardened as are perfect, and such corn as is
owners use large quantities of spools
which are maue from the birch, but the digit and the bride-elect clasped it with wished to be produced. Place this in
the
grip
of
death.
As
is
usual
in
such
some position, safe from ruts and mice,
birch forests are giving out, and what
are they to do next? So it is with vari­ cases ho looked sheepish, and as if ho as will enable it to be smoked and
ous trades and occupations, requir ng would rather not go on. She gazed artificially dried. Tying it up, and sus­
upon
the
assembled
spectators
with
the
peculiar kinds ol woods in their manu­
pending it from something is a good
factures. The timber which they sev­ air of a fisherman who is reeling in a .plan. Then thoroughly smoke and dry.
erally require is undoubtedly getting coveted and exhausted trout. Adjust­ Tho creosote which comes from the
ing
his
spectacles
the
’
Squire
read
the
scarcer, aud it is a natural anxiety which
smoke is a preservative, and the corn
asks us what we are going to do about it ? following address, pasted in the crown will be found iu the spring to be full of
The only ro&lt;ponse is, plant more. of his hat:
vitality and vignri This jas been our
“
You,
who
have
come
before
me
this
But who is to do it and how is it to be
usual plan, and when wo hare neglect­
together
”*L“ in the
~ *holy
,_
dune? The caay-going citizen who is da" to be joined tc.
ed it we never raised as good corn as
edlock Imane.should' we did when wo foBowcu it Caro in
imbued with the majesty of the law. stale of Ten —no. wet
Uoa Wlthuat Taking Chloroform.
consider
yourselves
lucky
bey
ant
tbe
thinks Government ought to do it.
this respect will certainly ’essen the
Governments do it in other countries, luck that generally befalls the human complaints about tbe failure cf secur­
whr should not ours attempt what oth­ species. hlAtriraony is a terri—that is, ing a stand of corn, which are now so
ers successfully do? It does not follow lovely state, when rightly understood. prevalent that they indicate that about
as a thing of course. Other Govern­ Tho wife should labor to plaze her hus­ one quarter of the seed corn used every
ments are paternal. They are accus- band, and tho husband should turn hit year is worthless.— H'atem Hural
ed gainful Influnitory action therein for two long
temed to supply their immediate no- whole attention to plazing his better
Musitjes and provide for the future. half, which is bim—that is. I mane hia
—Among tbe rare and beautiful
Our Government is our servant It is wife. You should attind to each other
•imply to keep peace and order among in health and in sickness till death do things with which General Grant’s now
rrrx testa r
BALOOM wl
•urselves aud.lo so arrange that each you part, which I aincerelv hope, will house in New York is to be filled is a
at all
las tbc largest liberty possible without not be in tbe near future- You should sideboard of magnificent onyx pre­
ks
sented
to
him
by
Mexico.
Shortly
after
remember
that
a
.
friend
in
need
is
a
me chlorufortn. Lei my huabaad ait by my elde
ini ringing on his neighbor.
•
Hoe. and tran&gt;tera*n&gt;B.ofaedMOMBenmaSK
the
General
became
President
Mexico
during
the
u|Kmk&gt;u.
and
I
will
neither
ary
oat
nor
CUT. LMvenwortb and Aichlaoa. &lt;*•That forest culture can bo made to friend indade, and govern your actions
stir." The work &lt;r« done and the poor woman
nenlctu bcinit miuSe tn Union Depots.
pay. when judiciously managed. has accordingly. And now. therefore, by gave him a beautiful service of silver. kept !&gt;or word. T*lk of aoidl-rly courage! Thia
been shown in our columns for years the power In me vested by vartue of thia This tbe General transferred to his wife, • f.-wed gmter pluck than it lakea to face c hun­
lii&amp;ieax’- “
“frr
dred
zui««
To
r»«lore
her
reneral
health
and
give
as
the
President
could
not
aeoept
such
It need not take a lifetime to get license and my commission, I pronounaa
At KsHunrooD. with the X-S. * MA. «Mr.
«M's money back, but for all this there vou husband and wife—and may God a gift This silver, ^hicb has never yet
been
used,
is
now
to
be
unpacked.
knd
■
n
ported
new
Ufa
Io
the
loog
■
have
mercy
on
your
sowls
”
*
W
aahibotom
HmsMTS.
with
r,trttf
are many drawbacks which will pro­
&gt;. She rapidly sained health and i
And with that the ’Squire pocketed Mrs. Grant is occupied St•present in
ven* investments in that line. Here,
now well Tbo Favorite lU-tnedy la ।
lov jnatan e, as we write wo are in a the dollar and went out at one door, furnishing her new home. Colonel and
daoae smoke from the burning forests while the olderiy bride led her victim Mrs. Frederick Grant will, it is re­
ported. live with their father end* moth­
out at another.
er. Mr- and Mrs. Sartoris will shortly
—In front of Cplonal Thomas Mead’s arrive in New York with their three
house in Greenwich, Coon., stands a
JFew Eagiaod bring every year to Ger­ sycamore, or ballwood ttee, which is children, and will spend- the winter
Th. beat C-iugh Medicine tor Children or
mantown their disaatrum tale of smoke, ni-years old, having been .planted in there.
bb poor encouragement to the fonst- 1710. It is about 150 feet high, and fif­
—An appetising way to cook slices of
teen feet fromtheground its circumfer- ' beef is this: Melt a lump of butter in a
ence is twenty-eight feet, and its diam­
Warrasi* d tu ri«» »MI.l action or money will be r»*mzer must be encountered if we are eter nine feet. A bole In the trunk, frying pan; cover the bottom of the fnodwl
by the deal- r where yon buy II. Price Wa.
to increase to any great extent our tim­ which is now no bigger than a man’s pan with onions sliced very thin; then
ber supply. There are risks in every- band, was not many years ago large lay tbe steak over them; when the
onions are fried until they arc tender
fciug we undertake.
enough for a man co crawl mto, and
It w evident that the whole subject is wm once used by children as a son of put tbe beef on the bottom of tbe pan
0B* beset with difficulties. Th^t tim­ playhouse. As the tree has grown of and cover it with the onions; add but­
ber is growing scarcer we all know; late years, the aperture has gradually ter or lard as you need ft. Liver cooked
in this way is nice. also. When it is
hot an abundance of timber is twn- closed.
done lay it on a platter and heap the
_d to our National progress is clear;
bat some precautions should be taken
—A hi tin brought to Woodland, Cal,, onions on the meat A very little gravy
the other day k queer animal, which he made in the jiau in which you have
li.SbiKt.TTON WITH TBF.NKWB
enise new forests is desirable, all can had captured in the southern portion of cooked the meat and onions i/an addi­
rie Job PridtlNc ea««t4M&gt;t»aai la
»&lt;• xJIeit anJcrs from oarfriMds
ii helteve; but just how to go about tbe State. It is called tbe Pacific cat, tion. but make only a little and turn
yet), rally. AH work domlatha
has
some of. the characteristics of a over the meat, seasoning it well with
I a problem that has not vet . and
—____
_________
style,mat.
clean,.imeurj,aa4««
lowtti
&gt; salt and peppur.
RorkodoAk—W rmnnlointtk • «U.,fox. dog. ooon and squirrel

CLOSING OUT SALE!
CLOAKS

jAND

DOLMAMS!

tJfAT COST.-®!

HOODS, NUBI AS
X3TA.T

•'

SHAWLS

COST, jgj

100 Patterns New Prints, best brands, I will
sell at 7 cts, Sold everywhere at 8 lets,
60 two-strap Horse Blankets at 90 cts.’ Sold
earlier in the fall for $1.30.
Kerosene Oil at 15 cents per gallon.
12 1-2 lbs. good Brown Sugar for one dollar,

IRON ™TH IS

THE largest stock of groceries
Glassware.

BITTERS

aud Creneli

Mtijolica

ENGLISH

DECORATED

CHINA

Diary Free

UTIVE, EMPLOfMENT

g

•4 BRAYf LADY

-S

10 CURE, 10 Pill

WILSON'S COUGH MIXTURE I

PRINTINC

___ ___ „_

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                  <text>’LOCALiJPk

ORNO STRONG.

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun.

Editor akd Proprietor.

Year

NUMBER 19.

"

—Some time ago, A. R. Wolcott re­
ceived an older fora harness from the
And Her Environs.___
State of New York, which was prompt­
ly filled, and this harness has proved a
—Wheat i* booming abd the price a good advertisement for him, as bq
has been ditto.
has this week received an order for two
—Chilly, puggy, rainy, foggy, mud­ . more from the same locality. Nash­
dy, alippery, etc.,- etc., is the weather ville’s wares are appreciated wherereport for the past week.
ever they go, and it is quite frequent
—Ice, nt the rate of 25 car loads per that they go a long way from home.
dAy, is being mined from Thornapple
—The losses of the Ionia Barry &amp;.
Lake, and shipped to Jocluon.
Kent Mutual Insurance Co., in in the
—E. Chipman has sold his farm recent fires at Hastings and Middle­
north of the village to John Furniss, ville, were adjusted by H. M. Lee, last
taking as part payment the latter’s week, as follows : W. B. Hitchcock of
Hastings, $275. CapL Smith $177,,Dr.
house and lot in this village.
—Thusday moaning, when the Dews Hanlon $80, and C. Reynolds $40, at
f the verdict of- Middleville. The two latter were aim:
arrived st Nosh
not a ply damages to goods and buildings
“guUty” in the] Gui
from an adjacent lire, The company ad­
dissenting voicirf was heard.
justs its losses with commendable
—John Wotring living three miles
promptness.
Dorth of town is preparing to build
—The indignation meeting, called to
one of the finest bank barns in the
county, in the spring. H. Larkins has be held at the town hall on Saturday
evening last, for the purpose of taking
the contract for the capeuttr work.
—Darier &amp; Sons have moved the action against tbo unjudicial course of
temporary building erected last sum­ Judge Killin, was well attended, but
mer at the depot for storing oars, to owing to some irregularities about
their place of business, Dickinson’s procuring the hall from the proper
mill, to be used for the same purpose authorities, the village President put a
veto on the proceeding by barriug the
there.
convention out of the hall. However,
—Ham. Brown, an enterprising far-m: the public generally have expressed
tT living just outside tlie village limits,
itself quite empatically against the non
west, has sold his farm to a Mr. Smith,
of Ohio, for $0,000. We understand c nnpot mentis justice, and the end is
tliat Mr. Brown intends to seek a west­ not yet.

LIFE IN NASHVILLE,

ern home.
—Ed. Owen has sold his farm of 200
—A letter was received this week acres, just east of this village, to T. E.
Potter,
of Potterville, who will imme­
from Sam. Norton of Hastings, Neb.,
ft former resident of Maple Grove. He diately put a saw mill, clear the land
appears well pleased with the west, and .convert the timber into lumber.
and speaks in gfowiug terms of its fu­ We understand that the mill now lo­
cated at Bismark and owned by P. C.
ture prospects.
Grimes is the one that will be moved
—A night telegraph office has been
here, and Mr. Grimes will come here
opened at this station by Sup’L Reed,
to manage it. The above transaction
and T. N. Kettlewell appointed as op­
will bo a boom in the business depart­
erator. The move is a good one, and
ment of Nashville, as Mr. Potter will
it is hoped that it may prove more than
employ a large force of men and teams
a temporary affair.
to do the work of clearing the land and
—Ono day last week, Fred Quick of hauling logs and lumber.
Maple Grove, lost a horse valued at
—The Homo Dramic Club, composed
$150^ with the pinkeye. Last Wednes­
day night hia neighbors called on him exclusively of home talent, will put on
the
stage, the popular Molo-drnma,
in tbo form of a surprise party and
left him about $60, ns a token of their “The Gun Maker of Moscow,” on Wed­
nesday
evening, Feb. 1st, They have
sympathy m his low.
been to great pains and no little ex­
—Only about $500 of the township
pense in preparing for this entertaintaxes yet remains unpaid, and next
inent; elegant costumes have been se- '
Wednesday is the last day of graue. cured, and good iqusicwill enliven the
Treasurer Martin snys that nearly all
the occasion. The following is a very
has been promised for to-day, and
brief outline of the piny: The hero,
probably he will not hove to levy on a
"Ruric Novel,” is a prosperous arm or
single article to secure a payment.
. maker of the city of Moscow, Russia,
—A team belonging to F. Brock was he seeks and wins tlie love of “Rosa­
left at the depot without bitching, last lind Valdai," the daughter ot a deceas­
Saturday, and becoming frightened at ed nobleman, the disparity of thei r
a coming train, started off into the stations of life seriously embarasscs
marsh south of the depot, where they them, and their embarassment is much
left the wagon, and ran over into the increased by the “Duke” who is a guar­
north part of the village, where they dian of “Rosalind” who, through lust
andavoric seeks to force her to a marwere captured. Damages nominal.
—Ruric Nevel and Count Conracf mage with himself, us hateful and
odious to “Rosalind”, as it is wicked in
De man off were practicing a sword ex­
the “Duke.” The character of “Ruric
ercise for the Gun-Makcr of Moscow,
Novel” is acted by Mr. Geo. Truman,
one night this week, when, by n simple
“Rosalind” by Miss Hattie Peckham.
twist of the wrist and a slight slip of
They will be supported by as good
the foot»Ruric8 sword was made to pen­
home talent as there is' in Nashville.
etrate thepantalooDR of the Count, but
The evenings entertainment closes
fortunately did not go far enough bewith a farce, the very name of which
yoed, to do any serious damage, or
suggests a plaster for aching sides, vis.
spill much gore.
“Paddy Miles’ Boy,” 'the Irishman is
—The lecture delivered at the M. E represented by Mr. David Fitzgerald,
church on Tuesday evening, was one and needs no further comment. The
of the most interesting and instruct­ surplus* revenue will be devoted to
ive that has ever been our good for­ some charitable purpose. The prices
tune to listen to. Rev. H. M. Joy is an of admision have been placed at the
orator in every sense of the word, and very low figures of twenty-five cents,
by the manner which he handled the with a slight addition for reserved
subject “The Jewish LawGvier.” He seats. The people of NaahvUle will
shows that he is a thorough student, avail themselves of this opportunity to
and a man of unusual ability. The witness a good play, and one in which
attendance was good, the receipts they can indulge an emotion, which if
oot excesaed, prolongs life. It is a
amounting to over $18.00.
—Some time early in the spring there play for the people, let them come one
was placed in the hands of the village and all.

treasurer $150, to be paid on demand
to Mrs. Ralston for damages, as award­
ed by the Jury, for opening a road
across her her premises. The above
amount has never been called for, and
as the limitation clause expires the
first day of March, the council wfl) un­
doubtedly appropriate the money for
highway-purposes, unless called for by
;ihat time.
—According to instructions from
Hon. C. A. Grower, Supt. of the re­
form school at Lansing, H. M. Lee, re turned Rado Reynolds to that institu-tion last Wednesday, The latter de▼elopements in the case have shown
conclusively that the boy had been dis­
charged by Judge Killin, and was not
in the custody of an officer, as be claim­
ed, for neither the Judge nor the of­
ficer were mentioned in Mr. Lee’s in­
structions. Esq. Killen is now in a
deep study to know how to fill out his
report to the comity clerk, the disposal
-of the case bothers fatal

per

Credit SunscRimojrs *1.75.

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, JANUARY 28, 1882

VOLUME IX.
11

TERMS; $1.50

W. A. Smith, uf Ashtabula, Ohio, is
SUBURBS.
visiting his brother, Reuben, and
friends here.
The young and old, and all who at­
The editor was taken with a relapse tended the lyceum at the Troxell school
on Saturday evening, and has been house bad quite an . interesting time.
confined to his home since.
A goodly number were In attendance
It has been so sljppery, a part of this and good order prevailed during the
week, tliat several good sized locals debate. The question for considera­
have slid ont of the reach of reporter.
tion was to substance, ‘'Resolved, that
C. A. Nichols disposed of his house­ money has more influence over men
hold goods at auction, last Saturday, than women has.” Both sides did well,
and in a few days will start for the considering the number that took part
west.
in the debate. One or two. gentlemen
L. B. Stanley, the efficient K. of R. A tumbled in from Nashville and after
8. of the Hastings Knights of Pythias ; they got seated seemed to enjoy the ex­
lodge, was in the village on business | ercises with a great deal of satisfaction.
Tuesday.
The result was, the negative wore off
Fred. Appleman and wife, and W; the belt. Of course all women loving
G. Aylsworth and -wife werb at Char­ man would expect such a decision.
lotte Thursday, attending a missionary The lyceum adjourned foi one week,
meeting.
&lt;
when the following question will tie
Dnn’t fail to see the Home Dramatic discussed: Resolved that mind has done
Club in those elegant costumes, in the more for our country, than labor. We
“Gun-Maker of Moscow,” at the opera hope to be encouraged by the presence
house next Wednesday evening.
of all in the district, and hope all will
Simeon Overholt, a well known and take hold of the work with n vengence,
highly respected citizen of north-west and make it profitable to the young, as
Castleton has been very sick with well as for the older class of citizens.
pneumonia, but dow is considered out
Nero.
of danger.
.
ASSYRIA.
A. J. Hardy has invitations out for a
select dancing party to be held at the
Down'to zero.
opera house, Tnuraday evening, Feb’y
How itsnowH.
8th, nnd a pleasant evening’s enter
The town board sustain that new
tnininent is expected.
road.
Young Matteson, who Ims been suf­
The Russels have a siater visiting
fering for several months with spinal
disease and absesses of the hips, is very them.
Charles
Baker haa bought a new saw
low, and no hope . whatever is enter­
gu miner.
tained of his recover}'.
J. B. Norria'bnsa friend risking him
Conductor Comstock has been trans­
from the north.
ferred from this division to the Main
Twelve were baptised at the M. E.
Line, nnd Harwood takes his place on
church, Sunday.
way freight.
Ed. Oldfield is also
Two of our bullies bad a fight, both
working on the same train breaking.
coming out second beat.
C. C. Granger, of York state, ac­
Several of our town folk took in
I companied by his family, and his
Whitneys show at Bellevue.
father-in-law, Mr. Burt and family, are
Fifty dollars was the receipt at the
at his brother’s, C. W. Grangers, visit­
donation for Elder Tanner.
ing while on their way to their future
Walter Hyde of Maple Grove, lost
home in California.
hia wife the 10th, in Mnnistec.
The social al J. M. Woods on Wed­
Elder Holler will commence his pro­
nesday evening passed off very pleas­
tracted meetings next Sunday.
antly, and everyone seemed to have a
Wm. Seigerand partner have dissol­
good time. All present did ample jus­
ved. Ben Dean will drive the noils lieretice to the good supply of refresh­
। after.
ments,, and demoDRtmted their appro- I C. F. Wilkinson and family, of Coarinfion
cotitri-­
ciation of the same bv
by a liberal contri
| tieton, made us a visit one day last
bution.

WOODLAND.
L. Towns has n sick child.
G. B. Kilpatrick ia gaining slowly.
Geo. Barden has sold his place for
$4,000.
Mrs. J. F. Orwick is visiting friends
at Kalamazoo.
Billy Barrel is to have a large sign at
his meat market.
S. Height has a brother-in -.aw visit­
ing at hia honsc, thia week.
Frank Hilbert has bought the John
Snmm shop for an ice house.
A. L. Cooper gbd wife hove been vis­
iting friends near Grand Rapids.
James Black has sold hia farm of one
bundrvd acre, to on Ohio man tw
$5,300.
Joel St. John la puttintt up a aaw mill
_ Mr. r-&gt;
_____ __s farm,
.i_____________
_ is
on
Davenports
and there

already quite a number of logs in the
yard.
George Bardeu has bis sale notices
out for the Jan. tflst. We understand
that Geo. has bought a farm in the
township of Eagle.
Rabbit bunting is quite an 'amuse­
ment for the sportsman. They start
out for a fox bunt and when they re­
turn, it has beeu a rabbit hunt.
L. Faul's hardware is now on band
and he is able to furnish buildera with
i
nails, glass and in fact everything they
will find nt a first class hardware.
Pad«ock jerked his coat tofight Mr.
Aspenall. After he had torn up the
ground awhile, he got so cold he soon
put it on again, and posponed the
squabble.
100AL GIBBLE-G ABBLE
About forty people made Burt Holly
Ab* P.rsonal Chit-Chat.
and wife a surprise party last Friday
Mra. C. W. Demaray is seriously HL night, and oysteis were the sacrifice.
Fred Kirtland wm in town this week. We had a jolly good time and the surLook tot C. L. Glasgow's new ad.
The neighbors and brethren turned
• S. D. Hawthorn moves into his new out, cut and drew twelve cords of
wood for Hugh Potts, last Saturday.
house to-day.
Arthur Allen is viaiting fneuds in Mr. Potts has been unable to get out of
the house for a long time.
the south part of the otate.
The boys say tlie bulge is on the
Frank Benner of Go«hen,Ind.,i5 here
Deputy Sheriff this time. The joke is as
on business nnd visiting friends.
About three inches more snow and follows: It was rumored that Gear­
hart had a horse team stolen last Sat­
how tlie sleigh-bells would gingle.
M. D. Smith, who has been sick for urday night. Mr. Gearhart was on his
some time, is slowly convalescing.
way to Vermontville to work when the
Mrs. A. J, Boothe, of Berry vUle, is Sheriff went to the place, and Mi's.
Gearhart sent him after the thief and
visiting her brother, L. O. Crocker.
. Miss Lettie Hammond of Lapeer. horse’. Charlta proceeded immediate­
B visiting her sister Mrs. H. R. Dickin­ ly into the Polar regions, returning
home on Sunday, and the team was st
son.
George Strong of Kalamazoo, has Vermontville
.
....... ..all
__ the time nt work.
been visiting the editors family this Now tl-e question is who pays the $18.

—;—

Dewitt Sackett of Chicago, was iu
town on on Monday, trying to sell his
fanu.
At the dance at Frank Vannocker’s,
Thuosdny night, several of the boys
lost their caps.
Walter Webester has established a
law office in Bellevue. He was once a
a fleecer of aheep, but now will fleece
men.
Jim Marble and Old Fan have not
got thejr things together yet, as was
reported last week by the Maple Grove
scribe.
Some time ago John Cooper of Battle
Creek, bought some cattle of James
McKclvy,
Grove, -paying
$5
- of Maple
' m&gt; »mn&gt;. When be went after them.
McKelvy refused to let him have them
[ »nle«&gt; Cooper would pay more than Im
had mrreod.
agreed. Coooer
Cooper could not see it
it
that way so he asked for his five dollars
McKelvy refused to give it to him, and
Cooper has commenced a suit against
him before Esq. Milin.
A young married man living one mile
east of Maple Grove Center, who
claimed to be boas on swapping horses,
came to Assyria and swapped teams
with Youngs boys. The next day he
came and begged to swap back, said he
was just married, that his wife was
mad and his father and mother were
mad, and they gave him fits. He gave
the boys a watch, he paid $90 for, and
$3 in money to swap back.
Wnile Henry Tasker was at Battle
Creek, Friday, ho hitched his team
near the railroad getting scared at the
train they broke loose, and started for
home. After crossing the railroad,they
left the box and hind wheels,at Verona
they lost the front wheels and escaped
with R few scratches.
A man was
seen to pick up the evener, and whiffletrees, and lug them off. but no one
has seen him bring them back yet.
*
Last fall Win. Prescott bought forty
acres of land of Mr. Mars, of Chicago.
Mars got possession of the land by sell­
ing it on a mortgage, and bidding it in
the time for redemption running out
this spring. Dewitt Sackett being the
only heir, comes on with Dwight Sack­
ett, and forbids Prescott cutting timber
or even hauling what he has cut.
Chas. Knappen of Hastings being Mars’
agent, is the one to whom Prescott
will go for counsel. #

WEST SUS FIELD.

The M. E. social will be on tertaired
by Mrs. Jones Mud Mrs. Tinkler, at tin
Good time for hunting rabbits.
residence of R. J. Grant, Feb. 1st
Sterling Green is visiting relatives in
Judge Smith was at Lansing, Wed­
Kalamazoo.
.
nesday. as a representative to tfa&lt;
Jim. Walch has returned from the Grand Lodge of Royal Templars o!
lumber country.
temperance.
Mrs. Terman is numbered among the
Tlie Choral Society have purchased s
sick list this week.
new piano, of Fredrisk Brea., Grand
Mrs. Downs is still very low, with Rapids. The citizens subscribed $13('
but little hopes of recovery.
towards the instrnment.
’
Dr, Hull from I Morgan, and Charles
The protracted meetings at the U. B.
church, are still propressing.
Biddleman found their individual op­
The ladies aid society will meet at inions so diametrically opposite in re­
’Mrs. James Hunters, next Wednesday, gard to what was said ab»ut a spavin,
Feb. 1st.
horse etc., that they laid their troubles
Rev. Bridenstrine preached in the before Esqhre Burger, and six jurymen •
Presbyterian church, Sunday evening, who gave tue doctor $35 damages. '
to a good -house.
Mt. Biddleman failed to give full ex­
We are sorry to state the fact that planation of the, spavin aad it seems
Mrs. Weeks docs not seem to improve that tlie doctor was unable to distin­
her mental condition.
guish the difference between’&amp; spavin
We understand a school exhibition and the agitation that would be pro­
ia soon to come off in our midst. Suc­ duced by the presence of a Thorn.
cess to the enterprising originators.
Hans.
Mr. Lain! has hnd several teams em­
ployed in hauling lumbpr, the past
/
LIVING WITNESSES.
Theqnnxlrcds of healthy l.»jklng.man, wom­
week from his sawmill here to Ver­
en and cWtlren, that have been rescued from
montville.
bod* of jMin, aickneM and well nlgX death by
Mr. Bowser’s bouse caught fire from Purkrr’ii Ginger Tonic are the best cridencer
in the-world of Its sterling merit and worth.
the chimney, the other evening, but You will flud such in almost every community.
was discovered In time to prevent any
serious damage.
LOCAL MATTERS
Mrs. J. Fust was called away Lust
Saturday, to visit her sister, Mrs. King
Administrator’ll Sale
of Odessa, who was taken sick with
ie tastier of lhe r-tatcof
XATIUX WEARS. dceMscd.
bleeding of the lungs.
Once again is the familiar buzz of
the sawing machine heard in our neigh­
borhood, and its proprietor, Mr. E Har­
per, is not loth to announce that he can
everage 23 to 30 cords of stove wood
per day.
Those who enjoy the excellent U. B.
It»n.lti&gt;-*wn an'ld-’»crlt&gt;- l *.« fnll.jw, tn _
music given each Suudav at the Sab­ north 1ihy
the cmt ona hundred [100.
bath school, are under obligations to
Mr. P. Wheeler, who so efficiently con­ in the towt^bip of Maple
trails the musical exercises of the choir
Widow's Dovrrand llomn»t»s4 rlxh-s ILarvio.
and S. S.
Dsjo-.’ '
—*- '
One great source of improvement to
WiL IJ. FE1GHNEK. A&lt;lmiubtra»r.
1»®
the country in irencral, and to our
Tax .Males Notice.
town in particular, is the ditching of
la hereby alien that J will offer Bi Qiihll*
the land, whereby all the swamp and
low ground may become arid and til­
lable. Mr. Wesley Fay has done his iK»n. the following {teierilwd Iota or tend* or sc
share in this direction this fall, by dig­
ging over eighty rods of ditch upon a
small swamp of six or seven acres,
Wiiat a contrast to be observed be­ Alonzo Tobi
tween the present winter and last win­ U. L. Cooper. :it» addition.
ter. Jan. has almost passed nud we Tbonifwon Janet
have not had enough snow for sleigh­
ing, while last year at this time snow
ildtb off North
lay nearly two feet deep on a level. A
store.
H M 2 M 10 M
year ago now, fodder began to be
Dated Xashvlllc. MirV December30th, A. D. 1881
16-22
"-------"
— ”*’*----- ”■—*-----scarce among stock growers and farm­
ers, while at the present writing, fod­
WRESTLING MATCH .
dering and stabling lias but fairly be­
gun, and the prospect is that hay and tween David V. Dacons of Charlotte, and Min­
other fodder will be cheap in the er Miller of PortianJ.will take place al the op­
spring, for this is indeed a very mild era Louse Vermontville. Friday evening Feo.
3. Dacaus weight Is ITOIbsand MIUchm* 180.
winter.
and a derperate straggly Is anticipated. Be»t
It is tbo lot of man to lie separated three In five wins. Admission 25cte, reserved
25cts. Ladies are rxpeclally Invited,
from his dearest friends, those whom
the world would seem a blauk without.
FARM FUR SALE.
And thus we feel toward our friend I 40 acres IX miles north west from Nashville,
acres Improved, four ncrea of timber, aoco
Writist, tliat. although we may have 86
fences i&gt;ew barn and suuiU bouse, and will be
been the nearest and dearest of friends, sold at a bargain.
19-23.
O. P. Nrad.
yet it has ever been our lot’to be seporated, Time, oh! relentless time, shop.
Wm. Clark,
when will the opportunity present it­
FARM FOR SALE.
self that we may embrace each other as
40 acres on Sec. 27 in Maplo Groce, one mB&lt;
it is our wont to do T And now Writ­ east
nnd X lnite «»ulh from Nortons corners.
ist, that you are trilly repentant of any 20 acres improved, good orchard and wall wa
class. For terms call on.
wrong done us in the past, we gladly tercd, hones w«md
J. W. Lzooktt, Maple Grove.
forgive you and extend to you the
NEW MEAT MAKET.
hand of fellowship in all that is true,
I have opened a Meat Market next door U
pure ami holy in the noble cause for
my Bakcrv, and shall keep idmsU of every de
which we now labor. We live in hopes scription at the lowest price*. Buy of me *n&lt;
tliat ePe long we shall meet as all good
friends meet, and then shall we ex­
change signs, tokens and emblems of
WCollars, Cuffs, Ties and Silk Wipes hi
our noble order, smoke the pipe of
latest styles at __________ A. L. Ras»T’».
peace, and ever be earnest and hearty
co-workers in tbo cause of right and
FARMERS
justice.
Van.
Take advantage of the low prices nnd bay yuw
harnces of Clark who will give you No. 1 stock
and
reliable
work.
Wm. Clakk.
HASTINGS.

John Buss is going to New Mexico
to live.
Hoffman Bros, have moved ip to
their new quarters.
Miss Belle Greble gave a birthday
Thursday evening,
M. L. Cook started forTlenver, Col.,
Thursday morning.
V. J. Tefft, editor of the Mason News
spent Sunday in Hastings.
Social entertainment by the Knights
of Pythias, Friday evening.
The M. E. Sunday school has added
about 80 new books to their library.
Mr. Easton has moved hisphotograpb
gallery to the new Stebbins building.
John R. Clark will speak at Red
Ribbon Hall Sunday afternoon at throe
o'clock.
Rev. H. M. Jay preached a very fine
H.H.
sermon, Sunday morning, at the M, E.
church.
1MLA KllLISI).
The residence of Mrs. Daniel Shoa
HADDIX- SWITZER-At the U. B. Mrjonaco
la Woodland Jul 15th. bv Rev. B. B. Sherk. was burned hut Wednesday evening,
about fl o’clock. Loss $500.
Etta Stricter, of tfebew*.

money at

W. G. Edwards’.

Haram, go fast, leave your order
. The beat whins for the money, alac
COur
the best Horne HUnkenta, all at,

IT Hsroess repaired aud oiled in r.xduuigc
MUST BE SOLD.

brtig. Will be sold untime If desired. Call m.
H. M. Lke, Deputy Sheriff.
LUMBER! LUMBER!
Custom Sawlug and Building Material fur­
nished on slxjrt notice, at our new tail! in Ma­
ple Grove.
Jotnea S- Perry.

KOK LAuE.

One 3 8j
a lot of G&gt;
W. G. Kdwanto’.
MONEY WANTLD!

�but I

«EI ONLY TOLD WH
'HEARD.

1‘oniy tenYou «.n»»r »no well—
What folks have told w:

•• And who would think
That Smith should drink
do«. good Lordl

b way ho

YouwUulut !&lt;Senjr word.

Tbo other &lt;lar
st Her. Dr. BM

Down Broadway—*o I board.*
In chillinir tones.

—Boston Trantcrljit.

TUI ENGINEER’S STORY.
. .Mayb^p, .trtuww-7*. hev ben Over
the L’enpsylvany Ccntral Railroad. As
you may say, I was born and brought
up on that line, first as fireman, then
engineer nigh on to twenty years. It's
allers cxcilin’ to run a machine, and
wen I was a fireman I used to think it
wm better to be top of one of them
Slendid engines than to be President
the United States. Tho day they
first put me on the footboard and I took
the lever in my hand and knew it was
ray engine, I reckon I was the proudest
man between Pittsburgh and Altoona.
I kinder thought that everybody was
Eiin’ to be out, that day, to see how
o train made her run, and you kin
bet all your specie that she went smack
up to the minit, the whole 117 miles.
But this kind of spirit wore off. after
awhile, ’n I settled down into a sober
stiddy goin’ man; ’n they did say that I
wor as safe 'n reliable a man as they
hed in the business. I hev to say it,
stranger, ns there’s nobody else to do
it; elsewise you wouldn’t know iL
I was turned twenty-three wen mo
and Mary was married. Twenty-eight
years ago! You hev a wife, stranger?
Ilevn’t got no wife! Well! may naps
it’s just as well! 1 hed Mary some
eight years, but it don’t seem like no
time, now. I left her there in tho old
Keystone State, her an’ the boy. Some­
times I think I’d like to go back agin,
and see the place where they both lie,
but I sunjKise J never shall. Don’t
•ecm as if I had the heart to do it It
wasn’t in any church-yard, you know;
but a little way up tho mountain there
was a green quiet spot among tho trees,
and they’ are there—not more’q 100
feet, aay, above the track—and I often
wonder if Charley doesn’t still dream,
when tho Now York express thunder
by. that his old father is holding the
throttle.
1 put up a snug cabin by the side of
the road when I had a small clearin’,
and between whiles I used to plant
my potatoes nnd things, enough to
keep ais going, and Mary had her
garden. Mary idlers took to flowers, ns
I used to tell”her, jokin' like, ’cos sho
was one of the family. Then wo find a
cow, and Mary raised chickens.
Our little cabin was in amorg the
mountains, a good ways from any other
house, and I used to sometimes think
that Mary must be lonely, with me
away so much of the timo. You seo, I
was nllcrs out three nighta in tho week.
I went up in the daytime, passing my
house nt noon, and down a^ain that
night, passing nt midnight. But I was
home two or three days in tbo week,
and allers Sunday. The place where
we lived wac a wild region of country,
and the storms wn used to have up
.there, so high in the air, was fearful.
I didn’t tell you anything about tho
boy? No! Well, do you know I took
to him the very first moment And
that’s a very curious thing about ba­
bies. Now, I never fancied’em much,
but I tell you, stranger, it makes all the
difference in the world whether it’s your
baby or whether it belongs to somebody
else. I’ve seen a great many of ’em in
my time, and accordin’ to their parents
they was the most uncommon babies;
but I could never seo much of it 1
used to laugh a good deal when people
made such fools of themselves over their
children, but I know exactly how it is
now, for I suppose 1 was the greatest
fool over mv Charley as over lived.
Mary named him Charley. That was
after me. Seems to me that boy took
to a locomotive from the Lime he was
six months old.
His mother would sit
out in front of the house, with him in
her Up, when 1 was np at noon, and
•he’d kin her hand and wave the baby
at me. By the time he was three years
old he’d got so tbai I used to take him
up to ride with me. There was a water
tank near the house, and when I
stopped to waler he wa* allers there,
ana I’d ketch him ap'ncarry’im off ten
or twenty miles, till I met another train,
and some of tho boys’d carry him back
home. ’Twasn't long afore there wa*
•carte a man on the road us didn’t know
Charley Latham’s baby.
They’d pick
him up wherever they could find 'im.
and sometimes he’d be gone neurlv all
■day. 'but somebody’d set 'Im down
afore night.’n he’d come toddlin’ homo.
Annetimes I’d think it’» queer how the

One of tlie first things Charley learned
to say, when he was beginnin* to talk.
Vm this: You see the men on the road
used to call one another “Pard”—short
for “Fardner.” Charley he caught it,
and he alway* called me "Pard.” I
don’t think be aver called me father or
papa, like other children do; but it was
oilers “Pard.” “You and me is pards.
Isn’t we?” he used to say. An’ that'*

rnnvais’ and had nuned *11 day. By
in th* mornin’, after breakfaet. Ma*y night th* wind chopped around to th* two of ’em hold a blanket over 'im to
would' fill up a basket with some bread north ’n began to turn, oold, to that wen keep the sleet off, ’n’ one goes ahead
’n butter’n meat’n things, and w*three we started it wa* rainin’, and .sleetin’ with a lantern, and two or three more
would go off into the mountain* and : with an outlook for a heavy storm. A about with lanterns, so’s to light the
stay aB day. We used to do this every ' darker night I never saw, /n wen the
Bunday, and *o -Charley got to callin’ conductor pulled the bell I sez to my
it his pard’* day. You *oe, he got a fireman, •• Crazy, this is goin’ to be an everythipg gone, dean as you could cut
notion that it was the beat day in the ugly run.” My fireman was a crazy, it with a knife. The water was pitchin’
week ’co* 1 was alien horn* with him. harum-scarum sort of a boy, and so they down the ran six feet deep canjin’ big
1 didn't never go to churoh much—it bad nick-mimed him “Crary Jake.” rocks and boulders that bounced and
was, a long ways, and then I thought But they soon dropped the Jake *n left bumped from side to side and up into
Charley would get as much religion by him Crazy, and that’s the name he al­ th* air, clear out of the water. It was
going around in the wood* and among ien went by. So he sea to me, **Bom1 awful to look at. How the child got
tlie monntains, where the trees and I guess your*a right there.” Crazy was over the gap, which was at least twenty
leave* were *o beauGiul and the rocks one o’ them boys thot's often in des­ feet wide, I don’t know. A tree hod
ao grand, as any other way. If they perate tight .places, but I never known oom* down and lodged crossways, end
don't tell us that the Creator who made ’im was afeard o’ nothin’. I’ve never I suppose he most have gone over on
’em all is powerful and good, too, there seen’im to show the white feather. *1 that. W’en w* came to it we wo* most
ain’t no preacher can dolt.
don’t believe man or- devilJcould scare afraid to try it, for if you slipped off the
You went up to the top of Pike’* Peak ’im, but this night he seemed to be un­ log It was ail day with you. I didn’t
the other day. I’v* been there, too. *n easy like.
like to trust the. boys, and I tex to
I’d like to mow If a chap can go up
Sometimes there’s something makes Jake, “Crazy, yo J won't drop the baby,
there, among those awful precipice* and you think beforehand that something is will you?” He points down into the
gorges, and look over the country for goin’ to happen—a kind of—of—pro- break, and sez, “Latham, we'd all been
one hundred miles and see tho mount­ sentiment? Yes! that's it Presenti­ down there, livery mother’s son of us,
ain* around, and the plains ’way off in ment You can’t tell exactly how it is, but for your little pard. I’d drop my
front that don’t seem to have an end, but if there is speerits in accidents or soul first.”
and then look at hisself and aay wheth­ disasters, seems like they was tryin’
Well! Wo got ’im home safe at last
er he doe* really amount to a row of some way to let folks know in time, and
pjna. You seo I never was any Chris­ oouldn’t quite do it Everything seemed Mary was asleep when we got to the
tian, and never give Charley no sich to go wrong with ns that night The house, and was scared as bad as me
trainin’, and sometimes I think maybe passengers was all a-growlin* cog we when tfhe heard what was up. We put
im back in his bed, and sure enough
I didn't do quite right right by him. hurried’em up at supper; and when I
But, Lord love you, stranger, when he pulled out my machine hed the very he never waked up. Next mornin’
went among tho angels. I’m Just certain old boy in her. No. 29, as I was tollin’ they threw a trestle over the break and
Bnt the doothere wasn’t none of’em had any clean­ ye, was one of the surest engines on trains was runnin* agin.
tor stay od’ with us. Just out of his own
er soul 'an what ho had.
the road, but when she did git Into her
Tboro was a place, about three-quar­ didos she wm- more obstreperous ’n a head, you know, but he seemed anx­
ters of a milo from our place, where wo government mule. Ingines is like these ious. Seemed as though he took to the
Don't wonder at that, neither.
used to go a good deal Sundays, and sewin' machines or planners, and them child.
Mary would read tho Bible to us and things. They git out o’ kilter without Most everybody did.
I
watched
by ’im all that night, and
sing, She was a good singer, Mary no reason, and yer can’t tell w’at’s the
was. Wo used to call tho place “ Dev­ matter with ’em, only they jest won’t toward day I got out all his old Christ­
il's Run.” It was a sort of a crock, and that’s all there is about It. She mas .things and set ’em on to a - table
but didn't have no water in it, *c«tpt wouldn’t steam, she fretted and snorted near the bed, where ha could see ’em
after a hard rain. It came down be­ and foamed, and wouldn’t do her work the first thing. But a fever camo on ' im,
tween two high mountains, where it no ways at all. Me and .Crazy fussed ’n’ wen he woke up he was out of his
was cteep as could be. When a storm with her. and worked with her, and head. I speaks to ’im and ses, “How
camo up I’ve known it. in half an hour coaxed aud cussed her. but it wasn’t no goes it. pard?” But he didn’t know
to have six fcotof water in it- An' then’ use. We kept runnin’ behind all the mo. That was Thanksgiving Day, you
it would bring down big trunks of trees time -instead of rankin’ up. 'n the con­ know, ’n’ I sat there by him, hopin’
and great stones, roaring that way you ductor swore like a pirate. He was a every minit as he might come round, so
could hear it for miles.’
engineer hisself, and hr camo out into I-could give 'im his things and we could
It’s got its name because it was such the cab and for live or ten mile he ' hev our holiday jest as wo used to do.
an iufernal place. Often I've been fussed and worked and coaxed and But he kep' gettin’ worse from hour to
woke up at night by a heavy shower, cussed. I believe that ingiuo knew hour.
and Td hear Devil’s Run howling as just as well that Satan was out loose
Ho was sick jest a week and wanthough it would tear Everything to that night as if she’d been a real human. dorin' nnd wild from first to last. I
pieces. There couldn't bo no worse Ingines is like women—they can't toll stayed with ’im all the time, for 1
place fixed for the road, if they had you why a thing is so, and can’t giro hadn't wits enough left to handle a ma­
hunted the whole country through, than no reason for it, but they jest know it chine, and the boys sent word not to
right there. There was n sharp curve, is so.
bother myself about business ’n’ they’d
and on tho outside of it was a straightMebbe we’d made thirty mile or sich ! sec mo through. So, between ’em they
uji-and-down precipice for hundrcih of matter. The rain and sleet and hail did my duty and No. 29 went up and
feet, so that if a train went off it would and snow was cornin’ down fearful. down in her reg’lar runs jest us if I was
be smashed into kindlin’ wood nnd ten- The water was pourin' down the mount­ at the lover. You know I was tollin'
penny nails. Devil's Ruu went under­ ain and tillin’ the ditches nnd runnin’ about th* water-tank near the house.
neath tho track, near the point of the much as you saw it last night. The It didn't use to be used much, but that
curve, through a barrel culvert, and wind was 'biowin’ a tornado, and came wook it seemed as though there wasn’t
once there came on n hard storm, ’n tearin’ through the passes—gulches | a train either way that didn't got out o'
the trees ’n stone, nnd so on, chockqd they call 'em in this country—m gusts water just there, and some of 'em
up the culvert, which wasn’t largo that would strike the locomotive like a ' would come over to see about the boy.
enough, 'n the water dammed up nnd big* wave striking a ship, and almost ' And their wives kept sendin’ nice
rose, till by ’u by the whole ciubniik- throw her over. It was so dark, too, things—and they were poor people,
raent gave way, and twenty foot of the that I couldn’t hev seen Crazy on the too. You see, somehow it traveled
road went rippin’ down the mountain. other side of the cab but for the lantern, !I about as fast as what little Pard had
They found out tho break before any and wen he opened the furnace door. I done, stoppin' tbo train that night, ’n’
accident happened, and the culvert was But I had to get along all I could. It he sich a mite of a child. An’ it got
rebuilt, a guod deal larger than before. wouldn’t do to slow up, as I was runnin' ( into the newspapers, and the president
But that place the whole road was for a mcctin’ point.
I of the road camo to sco ’im ana all that.
afeared of.
Just before vou get to the curve at ' But he just went on from day to day,
As I was a tcillu’. If it hadn’t been Devil's Ruu there’s a short stretch of for death struck ’im from the first mo­
such a wicked place Devil's Run was the straight track. Soon a* I struck that I ment as ho stood there in the winter
prettiest one on the whole mountain. began to look for the light in Charley's rain.
The bed of the stream was deep down, window, which was the other side of the
From his talking while he was de­
'n full bi ferns and graasea that Mary run. Strainin’ my eyes through the dark lirious avo found out pretty much all
was allers gatherin', trad we could set just ut the point of tbo curve I saw alight how it was. I reckon he heard the
there in the holtesl day 'a the sun could swinging backward and forward slowly storm in his sleep and the roarin' of the
never find bis way through the trees across the track. You know 1 was run and that set him to dreamin’. Of
overhead.
a-tellin’ you as everything went crook­ course he knew it was my night, ’n I
As 1 was idlin’, Charley was born to ed that night. Soon as 1 saw that light had often told ’im what a bad place it
be an engineer. By the time he had 1 I knew what it all was in a minit. It was and what to do if anything hap­
got to be six years -old he knew the came on me with a rush, like. My hair pened—never thinking that he’ugo to
name of nigh all the parts of a machine. stood on end. I blow brakes. I screams doin’ of it hisself. But he gits up in
He'd learned all the signals that was to the fireman, ••Crazy! Devil’s Run his sleep, takes his lantern and goes
used on the road. He know that a red culvert is gone, by the i&gt;in’ Godt” He out to meet me. I’d be a sittin’ there
flag or a rod light meant danger. That jumped’n set the tender brakes, and watchin’ of ’im by his bed, 'n he’d bna lantern, at night, swung backward 'n slid the wheels in a flash. The brake­ gin first, jast kind o’ mutterin’, and I’d
forward, slowly, across tho track would man behind didn’t answer. They was hear him say, softly like, os ef ho was
bring a train up. all standin’. All that dozin’ in the cars, I reckon. I blew talkin' to hissolf:
sort o’ thing he’d jest picked up his­ brakes agin with a blast to wAe the
“Pard’s duo at the run in twenty
self. He know the sound of every dead, antirihrew her over. The drivers
whistle and bell’on tho road, 'n could ground and groaned under me, but the minits. I kin get there in time.”
'Pears like it was all goin’ through
tell what ingino they belonged to, and rails were sleety and slippery, and I
I believe he know tho tread of No. 29 was forging ahead to a gulf 500 feet his mind agin and he was doin’ over
whenever »he wont by. night or day. square down and 150 lives behind me. jest what ho did that night. We could
No. 29, that was my ingine, I run her 1 was tollin' yo as No. 29 that night tell wen he got to tho place where the
about three years, auu there wasn’t was dead square agin goin’ ahead; out road broke, for he ses, “Kin I git over
nothin’ in God’s world I couldn't git w’en I threw her back seems like she on that log? Ef I don’t my pard ’ll bo
out of her wen she was in a: good knew her biz and how much laid on her killed.”
Then.seemed as though he was goin’
humor. We sort o’ understood one an­ doin’ of it well. Women, agin, is en­
other, and she hardly ever went back gines. Crabbed, crooked, cantanker­ down to tho curve where we found him.
on me. Once in a while aho did, and ous cusses w’en they don’t want to, but An’ he'd shiver like, asef the cold rain
then she was a perfect cu«a.
where it’s works of goodness or mercy, was strikin’ ’im.
You seo wo conld mostly toiler’im by
Yes! he was seven that winter. Just call on ’em and they’re right there.
seven years old afewdays before Christ­ No. 29 took hold on that reverse with a watchin’ ’im and ketchin’ what ho said.
mas. After Charley got a year or two grit I never seen in no engine afore. Onct or twico be shook right hard, and
old I allers made much of Christmas. She put all there was in her into every his teeth chattered. We thought it was
Mostly I contrived to layoff that day so turn, and the whole affair took less tho cold ho was feelin’ agin as he folt
as to be home with my ifttle pard. Some time than I’m a-tellin' of it till the dan- it out there in the night with nothin’
on *|»n. Thon he keen* still awhile like
of the boys was allors ready ’n willin’
to take my run that day—them as didn’t
When wo stopped within twenty feet he was a waitin’ and listenin’ for the
have no wives or children. They’d of the light, which was swingin’ still, train, and you’d see ’im hold his breath
come and say: “ Now, Latham, there’s backward and forward, slowly across fearin’ ho’ couldn’t ketch the sound.
your little pard, he'll be a wantin’ of the track, I sez to Crazy, “Who’s got Pretty soon he speaks agin, gently like,
fou to-morrow, which is Christmas. So that lantern?”
Knew it couldn't be and sez:
“ Kin he see tho light in timeF’
11 jest take your run down. An’ this the trackman, for we'd just met him
'N he waits a bit. Next he jumps
'ere basket, why, the boya, you know, twenty miles below, and 'cept him there
they sea, wc ain't got no chick nor child, was nobody nearer’n ten miles at that right up in bod on his knees and screams
ana wo’H send this along to Latham’s time of night. So I git* down from the out at the top of bis voice:
little Charley.”
" Stop her. Pard! Stop 29F’
machine and run* up the road. A* I
The first Lime they did that I was comes up I see’s a little figure in white.
Stranger, I've seen frightful things in
took back that way I stood and gaped, It was still a-swingin’ of we light back­ my time, but I never see anything so
a lookin’ around like a natural, and wards and forwards slowly across tho awful as that was. Palo and wild, with
couldn’t say a word. And the things track. He was in his nightgown, just the fever on ’im. that mere baby was
they used to send Charley Was aatonish- as he got out of bed, hadn't no hat and tryin’ to mako me hear, and the wind
in’; toys and so on. Why, one Christ­ was barefoot. The sleet had froze in howlin’ and the train roarin’ the war it
mas they aent ’im a real silver mug. O! his hair and his nightgown was stifl was. An’ we’d try to keep ’im still 'n
stranger, them days was such times as with ice. I come* up to ’im—well, I his mother could coax him, and Td try
Fve never hed since. There wasn’t no was took that way I couldn't speak. to quiet him ’n he’d scream agin:
other children around for Charley to An’ he kep’ swingin’ tho light back­
“ Culvert’s gone! Stop her, Pard!”
play with, but mo ’n his mother was all wards and forward* slowly across the
An’ Td tako 'im in my arms ’n he’d
he seemed to care for, ’n we’d carry on track, and he sez to me. he sez, "You be all of * quiver. Thon it seemed like
together all day just as if nono of us aud me’s pard*. isn’t weF" 1 look* at bo hoerd me whistle, for he sez:
waa more’D seven years old.
‘im a minit His eye* was open and
“ All right! ho's blowin’ brakes.”
Charley hed a little room by hisself, looked queer. He waa dead fast asleep.
An’ I puts ’im back in bed and ho
where he slept, which had a window Crazy ketched me or I’d gone over, lays Rtill a minit like he was listenin’,
that looked down the track. I gave him which it were my logs seemed weak and sez:
-.
a railroad lantern, which ho trimmed like. Then I sits down on the rail aud
“ He’s a reversin’ of 29, he is! My
and filled hisself after I showed him Crazy picks up the child, ’n buglin' of pard—pard's safe.”
bow, ’n when it was my night down he’d ’im Up busted right out a-cryin', he did.
Then he’d shut his eves and drop off,
light hia lantern ’n put itm the window
The conductor and some of the men and smile in his sloop, like he was satis­
at the head of hia bed. L could see it got out of the cars and come where wo fied. By-end-bv he’d begin and go all
a long way, before I got to the house, was. It was sleetin’ still, ‘n’ growin’ ever it agin, and so, day after day, oi­
’n you don’t know, stranger, what com­ bitter cold. The boys carried the baby lers the name. He seemed to hov it in
fort it was wen I was a cornin’ down to into the baggage car, where there was a his mind all the time.
see that light and know that my little stove, and took ofl his night clothes and
The doctor, you know, him I was a
boy was lyin’ there fast asleep and wrapped ’bn up in blanket* and great tollin’ about: well he stopped off that
dream in’ that the roar of the train was coat*. There was a doctor on the train. night and staid with us the whole week
.
,
‘niiHMjktohed
the footsteps of hi* old pard flying at
and nursed baby like he was his own.
forQr mils an hou*
without waitin' of
up p’raps it ’ N wen it was ail over 1 thmight it was

forehead.”
8o Mary UkSa the adsrors and cut* it
off H* kissed it’n put it In hi* pocket
’a went away.
On tho night of tho break at Devfl’r
Run. w’enIgot off the machine to see
what wa* the matter, I pulled out my
watch and it was twelve o’clock and
three mtait*. It was exactly a week
after that I-took out my watch and it
was twelve o’clock and. three minits.
Some of tho neighbors had c.ome around
in tho mountains, ,’n’ a minister from a
village about fifteen miles off. 1 didn’t
give no attention to nothin’, for I wa*
stunned like and didn’t know how it all
was. I was sittin’ in front of the house
on a large stone where Charley used'to
sit and wait for me w’en I was coming
by, and I beered a whistle. An’ I see a
train. It stopped near where I was.
। The locomotive was No. 29. The boy*
had her dressed in mournin’. Bill
Walker was runnin’ her and Craxy wa*
1 firin’. There was throe coaches filled
with the boya and their wive* and chil-,
dron.
They was in. their beat clothes,
’n’ when they came by where I was sit­
tin’—they all knew it was little Char­
ley’s place—the men took off their hats
and the women had their handkerchiefs
to their faces. I alien knowed they
was very fond of him, but it seemed ns
though they had lost on only child.
There was six little boys, all the same
size, and they took ’im up, and we all
fdllered up the side of the mountain. It
was a mild day, and the sun shinin’
bright. We crossed Devil’s Run and
came to a place of level ground where
there were some largo pine trees. It
was just over the cliff a little ways from
tho road, say a* hundred feet, and in
plain sight of where he stood wavin’ his
lantern backward ami forward slowly
across tho track when he said, “You
and me’s pards, isn’t we?”
After all, it was harder on Mary than
on me. In three months’ time I took,
her there, too.
I stayed on tho line!
a while after that, but 1 couldn’t never
go back to my house agin, and when­
ever I was goin’ by and saw those two
heaps of fresh earth it worked on meso
I couldn’t stand it.
As I was tellin’, I sometimes think
Td like to go back there and see tho
place once more, but seems os if I was
afoored. I don’t believe in ghosts, but
on a dark night I’d see my little Char­
ley wavin’ his light as he did that night
when it cost him his life.

uutst div. Finally, uiy wlfc iuduct^ Jnc try
a bottle of Dr. Kennedy'* Favorite Remedy’
which she had eoinewlwre heard uf or seen advertiscil. Without the allghtwit faith in it, but
KoJeiy to gratify her, I bought u l&gt;ottlc of a drug

tlie country,
Since then I bare recoin mended ‘Favorite
fared from Kidney and Idver Complaint*; and
assure the public tliat the ‘Favorite Remedy’
has done Its work with a similar completneM

difcournged mortal may bear uf it and try the
'Favorite Remedy’ aa I did.”

NERVOUS
DEBILITY
yon have ■ ppllad'for help without getting-relief
In tbo riiurteet povelulu time. Having daring the
part twe4ty.|lve year* mile the eludy and treat­
ment ot dltssse* ■&gt;! thu Mind and .fervon* System
a apedalty, and having cured auch a large num­
ber of caaea. many of whom (after expending
hundred! ol dollar-) had been given up as tnenrabie. wo nr.w eff.-r oar terrier* and treatment
to the afflicted at price within their reach Coosaltation either personally or by letter fr»e and
eoafidrctiid. Patient, al a d'vtance by giving a
^tamp to prrpar poatap-, can be treated aa Weil
by letter aa at office. We prepare and Inrnlah to
patients oar owutnedleta-a Aiidmw
«_BAl&gt;lbON DISPENSARY, MH South Ctadt 8*,

Cored without an operation ortho Injury friuau
inBieXby Dr.S. A.shelrnau’o Mt-ldod. Office »1

Tho Cypress Graves of the City
Mexico.
The following interesting sketch of_
the famous trees of Taxodium distidium
is from the pen of Moses Thatcher, in
the Contributor, of Salt Lake City:
“For quiet repose and peaceful fheditalion the cypress groves of Chapultopec afford, perhaps, the most attractive
features of any spot near tho city. The
POSITIVELY CURED
castle, located on the abrupt rocky hill,
BY
is quite massive and imposing. It has
recently undergone many improve­
ments of a desirable character, which
add much to the beauty of the place.
Here is the National Observatory, a
position well chosen, healthy and beau­
tiful, while affording the most attract­
ive view of the surrounding country.
"Between it and the end of the Passeo, leading to the capital, stands a
monument of gray sandstone, recently
erected to the memory of the national
cadets, who, refusing to retreat, fell in
battle, September 12, 1847, when our
t-^rtab!e eomblnstlan which arte with incountrymen, under General Scott,
gained the victory which led to the
surrender of the capital a few days
later. There are in the park probably
•J t y the profaadou.
not less than 1,000 fine cvpreas, whose
planting by the Toltec* (Nephite*) ante­
once.
dates, perhaps, many centuries, the rise
of the Aztec Empire. Some of these
are nearly fifty feet in circumference,
and from 100" to 125 feet in hight,
with huge limbs extending all around
•toisrily tcetl
to a great distance, and being always
clad with dry, bronzeti and fresh green
leaves, mingling with* drooping silvery
mosses, form the most enchanting
bowers imaginable. The arrangement
of these trees is in groves and double
rows, sometimes crossing at right
angles and affording splendidly shaded
SEASURY 4 JOHNSON,'
_______ Mancfsctcnng Cbenlwa, N.-w York.
narrow avenues. An exceedingly fine
svttE KF.3YEDV ATI.AST. PrccrkSI
spring of pure water gushes from the
IOD'$
rated CORNr-d BUNION PLASTER.
rocks of the south aide of the hill.
Throe hundred and seventy years ago
the waters of the spring were conveyed
S5OD Reward!
by the Aztecs to the city, through an
WE will pay the Lbove reward for any cate of
aqueduct of masonry constructed for Over complaint, dy*p«p«ia, tick headache, ludfgve*
that purpose. A portion is now forced
with a steam pump for use in tho gar­
dens of the palace above, while the re­
mainder still flows to the capital”

Denson’s Cspcine
Porous Plasters

. rsaa’s CapciuB Forans Pte!

Two Noblemen.

Among the passengers of the steamer
Scythia, on which I returned from Eu­
rope. was an English Earl, a quiet gen­
tleman, in no way remarkable or inter­
esting, who comes to our country al­
most yearly to hunt in the West. The
obseqnious homage of the captain and
officer* of the ship in the presence of
the little great man, and the painful,
cringing deference of the stewards were
almoat as disgusting as was the ineffa­
ble silliness of two American women,
who became oblivious of the commonest
rules of good breeding in their raptures
over a live Earl. There was another
gentleman among the passengers, a
nobleman in.the highest sense, but un­
titled, and of the people—Samuel Mor­
ley, member of Parliament, a grand
man, a-philanthropist, finding his hap­
piness in work for the race. Hi* chari­
ties are unbounded, hi* contributions to
the tcmiwrance work of England alone
amounting in some year* to *25,000.
But while officers and stewards gave to
him, a* U&gt; all the passengers, t he most
courteous attention, there was in their
manner an utter lack of the fawning
and self-effacement to oonspionotu in
their behavior toward the Earl. One
wa* an hereBitary nobleman, by birth
—the other, every inch a nobleman,
without a tide-and this made the dif-

QEO. W. FItAXCIH,

Fancy and Staple

GROCERIES!
COJiaiBTINQ IN PABT OP

SUGARS, TEAS,
COFFEES. SPICES. •
SYRUPS, MOLASSES,
BEST NICKLE SOAP IN TOWN.
SA'&amp; PISH.

TE°U7dKEREL.

HAJJ BUT,
COD FISH,
HERRING.
STEAM COOKED DAT MEAL.
CROCKERY,
GLASS WARE,
LAMPS.
,
FLOWER POTS

emo

WAHE

TOBACCO

TRY

OUR

-CENT

TEA.

—In a “plug” of "natural leaf’ chew­
C*T Remember we gpt no fancy prf ing tobacco may be found licorice, oils,
molasses, glucose and slippery elm bark. CCS,/but Mil! all good* ae low aa the
lowest,.(quality considered).
The component parts of a chew of un­
Respectfully,
natural leaf cannot be contemplated
with composure.— Hartford Foul.

CEO. W. FRANCIS.

�XVn-hin

F TENXI

to

ami
. ---------- Proprietor------ —

fctroam; and everything appears to cal eh
the nun. A very thin mist often ri*M
i over the undulating ground and gives
'
our sink, poriorma «urgic*l ojreirstlonk, additional
n'idtlioual charm to tbo scenery. Of the
t«k&lt;w photographs, runs aowing-ma- Condo Chateau only a single ogive win­
chinea.* nlato&lt; our dinner services, al­ dow exixts. George Sana once inhab­
lows itaelf to l&gt;e condensed and stored ited PalaiMSBu, and wrote there “Mdlle.
away in boxes, regulates the blood,ger- I^a Quintinie.” She bought an old
minates seeds, is the most favorite form house, and in attempting to improve
in which Nature chooses to display her it got into debt. M. Taino is very fond
energy, and is even pronounced capa­ of tho scenery round PaloiBcou. Ho has
PERUSE THEM LIBERAL AD. RATES.
ble of transportdhg the .tremendous a country house not far from it at Cha­
horso-power of Niagara to undertake t ill on. His brother lives a few miles
msohanical work in Montreal, New on Ln the Chevfeuxe direction. Joseph
"MOf 'mo | KOO York. Philadelphia, and Boston at once Bara’s father was a woodranger on the
Palaiseau estate of the Coudes, and hk
Shwhcu.
«K5q
mother was a domestic in the chateau.
as yet know comparatively little of She was a widow when her son, at the
5»ocbm
its possibilities.
'
age of twelve, enrolled himself as a vol­
Almost every day seems to add to unteer. His head had “taken fire” at
these possibilities. The latest of them a patriotic meeting where Carnot’s ap­
is Mr. Siemens' curious experiments peal for 450,000 men was read before
with tho electrio light in its influence
ORNO HTIIOIVO,
upon vegetation. Hitherto it has been
The boy learned to play the fife and
known that vegetation jaeeds light, and drum, and furnished the arms and
it has been also supposed that vegeta­ cleaned the horse of a major of Spahis
tion must repose in the darkness, or, to who had fought in India under Bussy.
speak more familiarly, that plants must This officer “le petit tambour” followed
sleep at night, as they do not grow in io 1&gt; Vendee. To harraas and throw
mS^OFFICEkiti.
tho darkness. Mr. Siemens boldly con­ tho cnemv off the track, this major often
ceived that they ought to grow tn the sent his little drummer running through
night as well as in the day, and that the bocage to beat here and there the
they would do so if he could provide drum or sound the fife. Bara was one
them’with an artificial sunlight At day surprised by a band of peasants,
EL A. Berber, H. R. iMckibMa. D.rkl Detnwray.
first his plants withered and sickened lie was a boy of delicate features and
in the electric light, but by diffusing it aristocratic air. The Vendeans thought
Jlorirtirj.
through a dear glatft shade ho repelled him some nobleman’s child who had
the refrangible rays in the electric arc .been perverted, and told him that if he
which destroy vegetable cells, and shed cried “Vive le Roil” they would let him
upon them onlythoete which quicken off. He answered by beating his drrre.
their life. The ritsnlt was marvelous.
“Are you deaf P” roared a country brute,
He compelled bis flowers and fruits to
who took aim at him. “I’m a Republi­
grow night and day. giving them do
can,” replied the boy. “Ah! young
rest except Sunday nights, and ho says
that tho “grapea-Envo a stronger flavor brigand, have a care! Give up your
than others, tlie melons are more aro­ drumming, and, like us, cry, “Vive le
VY LODGE NO. :,7. K. of P., meet* at its matic, the strawberries are richer col­ Roil” »»Vive Is Republique!” cried
Cu.«trc Hal), Nashville, Michigan, every
Bara. Twenty firelocks were discharged
Friday evening, for the encouragement anil ored. nnd the bananas have less than at him, and ho full dead. Horrified at
support pt a!) worthy, true, slcaxlfast«nd hon­ usual the taste of unscented soap.'” To
orable Brother Knights.
generate tho electricity he has to have the execution, the Vendeans fled. But
L. E- Ijsxtx, K.k 8. OaRo Sruoxo.C. C. an engine, but ho manages to make it some of them returned, picked up the
profitable by substituting the waste corpse, and respectfully bore it to the
steam ’-ondonsed for his former green­ camp of thp Blues. The Convention
|HixeUaniv&gt;:.
house stoves. What ho does' upon a decreed a pension to Bara’s mother,
and ordered that an engraving of tho lit­
H. YOUNG. M.D. Office cast side of small scale he thinks can be dono by tle drummer’s execution should bo made
• Main St., Nashville. Office hours from wholesale, which leaves tho London
7 to 9 a. in., and 4.to 7 p. in.
to draw tbo following glowing and hung up in every primary school to
picture of tho possibilities of this inter­ show what a child can do when inspired
by a noble sentiment. Chenier, in “Le
IL GRISWOLD, M. !»., ------ ^hlc esting discovery:
• rhjrictan aux] tfurjrvoii. Olliit and re*••There is no reason why tho Man­ Chant do Depart,” alluded to Bara’s
tdeuce oppuaiu tba WoleuU llom»e. Procnpt chester mill-owner, after displaying his execution, ana David (d’Angers), who
aUautlun siren to cal la duy or nUtbt
calico machinery, should not usher his found one of the engravings ordered by
A. FOOTE PHYSICIAN &amp; SURGEON guest into vineries and pineries on tho the'Convention, chose his death as a
J* Suce&gt;-*&lt;ir to Dr. Wlrkham. Office and other side of the wall. There the light subject for his chisel in 1837. The statue
residence at Dr. Wickham's late office. which moves the shuttles will have at Palaiseau represents tho youthful
Prompt alien tjou to call* night or day.
been up nil night mellowing fragrant hero' in the uniform of a hussar. A
fruit Tho iron and steel kings of the drumstick has fallen from one of his
W. WHITMORE, M D . E
tie P:.-. :
•clan and Surgeon. Office, cul side at North nnd the West will be able in tho hands, the other ho still holds. The boy
Main St. Rerideuce, north Pullilps St. Calls morning to reveal to tho bewildered lias been struck with the twenty bullets,
promptly attended at all h-xtr».
visitor Titanic hammers tractable to the but the expression of heroic exaltation
still lingers on tho delicate face.—Pall
‘ R- C. W. GOUCH ER, Electlc Physician and thrill ol a wirefu! of electricity. After
Surgeon, b iirejkirvd to answer all calls dinner they may escort him a mile off Mall GatciU.
that may be made'lor bl* •crricca.' Office and to sco one cornfield growing yellow
A Governor’s Daughter Elopes.
residence opposite Rxie's meat market.
under tho radiance of tho same light
JL PARMENTER, M. D.' Office over which subjugated tho metal mass, and
Society circles here are excite*! over
Hull's Drug store, Vermontville, Mich. anol her crop already falling beneath an the recently discovered marriage of Miss
electric sickle. Tbo neighborhood of a
pHA&amp; II. BILADY, Lawyer, Circuit Court fa .‘lory, or a forge, now the most insu­ Clara Hamilton, aged seventeen, daugh­
Couimlsnlouer, Real Estate and Insurance perable of*objections, will then bo a ter of Gov. Hamilton, to John Stanhope,
Act. Prompt attention given to all business
Advertisements aged twenty,which occurred lost August.
e^trunted U) my care. Conveyancing a special* distinct attraction.
may be expected to dwell rhetorically The Stanhopes and Hamiltons resided
ty. Office opposite Union House.
on the advantages of garden land in near each other in Hagerstown and it
LIEBHAU8EK, Merchant Tailor and deal- the near vicinity ot» busy manufactur­ was known that Sir. Stanhope had been
• er in Beady Made Clothing. See inc
paying attentions to Miss Hamilton.
before you ..purchase clothing. Fits guar- ing town with abittidanco of engine The Governor objected some months
power. ’ If London &lt;!» not spin cotton
or forge iron, it is an insatiable con­ ago to the young man’s attention*, and
/"1ALV1N A. NICHOLS, dealer in Boots and sumer of mechanical force in other consequently all intercourse between the
SLoee, Knhtora, Hat.&lt; and Caps. Gents'
It
.
The more &lt;• tricity it acen- two was apparently broken off.
Furai*.’nug(rooii». Glove* and Mittens,Trunks,
transpires, however, that about the
Traveling I!
Ln.n ami Buffalo Robes, etc. . mulatcs for its ordinary daylight re­
midille
of
August
the
lovers
planned
an
quirements the better for its vegetable
West side Matt. SL, Nashville.
produce. By tho tilde tho metropolis elopement and young Stanhope pro­
ISS M. JEFFREY, Practical Milliner, and has rebelled finally against its gas com­ ceeded to carry it out with naste. He
dealer in Millincty and Fancy Goods. Drees panies and bathes in a shnwer of elec­ jvent to Westminster, Carroll County,
making. In all its branches, done’ will, neatness
ant^secured a marriage license and the
and dispatch. &lt;&amp;ito&gt;ro&lt;&gt;m cast aide Main street, tric moonbeams, fresh exempliilcatiooH services of a Methodut minister, Rev.
of the system may cover tlie roofs of
opposite News office.
Ixtmburd street with exquisite orch­ Dr. Murry, who agreetl to marry them.
RNO STRONG, plain and fancy Job Printer. ards. and raise bright gardens in tho It was arranged that tho ceremony
The beet facilities for doing work of any then superfluous ercl-ce’lkrs.”
should take place at Penmar, a summer
printing office in Buriy county. When in need
of printing of any description, whatever, see me _ There is something of tho humorous report on the summit of the Blue Ridge
in the manner that Mr. Siemens has Mountains, a few miles from Hagers­
before you buy.
taken hold of his flowers and vege­ town.
IBS. E. CHAPMAN, Milliner and Dresik tables nnd compelled them.-to disobey
One day a pleasure party went to
maker. A cbok-e line of Millinery and
Fancy Goods constantly on hand. No trouble the great law of Nature by working Penmar, Miss Hamilton being, of the
to show gods. Call and see me before buying. night and day, giving them no rest, and number, and on her arrival the young
hurrying up their vitality nt railroad lady was met by Stanhope and the cler­
Shop two doors north of Smith’s grocery.
speed. It may be a pleasant thought gyman. They proceedexi up the side of
N. DUNHAM, Projirictor Temperance Bib for tho farmer that his com is growing the mountain to Ili^h Rock, said to be
• Hard Parlors sod Pool Rooms. A choice while
he is H.nupiujc,
sleeping, but
seems s
3 litwuno iiv
out it Hecms
tu- the most elevated point in the State,
line of clears constantly on hand. Rooms unxk: tie hard that the corn should be bereft ' Bn&lt;l there among the clouds the marriage
D. C. Griffith's store.
of its rest and sleep. It n^eds its sleep. I was solemized. The young people reON .All B. RASEY, Express and Drayman­ aud it does not seem consistent to force turned to their companions as if nothing
Goods and Baggage carried to any place in Nature and upset her practices, nor do of importance had transpired. They
we believe that the corn, or the grape, seperated, «■"«*
-----and since that time ।have
IRAM R. DICKINSON, manufacturer of or the banana will bp any the better for lived at their respective homes. It is
and de-jlcr In Hard Wood Lumber. Build­ doing compulwv night-work. It is in said that the fact of tho marriage was
Keeping, however, with the tendency di'kiovcred by a friend of Gov. Ilaming Material • »pwklty. Gubpald for log*. Mill
and yard ou Sherman ac.at M. C. R.R. crossing. of the prevent age to do everything on iltoc, who chanced to look over the
perpetual high pressure. Dr.’ Siemens records of the Court-house at Westmin­
^HES FLEMING, practical Jeweler and
v» stob-makcr. Clocks, Watches, Silver and may hurry up his plants, buttbey finish ster and saw the record of the license.
ruled W are, Jewelrv aud&lt; mtical Gnod*. Itodt-their work nit the sooner end disapMrs. Stanhope has been kept closely
fordMtotchxsaaspecUUy. HepetrlugaudEngrav- pcar just as human being* do. The old. secluded at her father’s country seat
inedone In a workmanlike numuHT.
slow ways of Nature are the best, and since the announcement, but it is proba­
RUSSELL has money u, loan, allow rates she is quick to revenge any interfer­ ble that the Governor will have to relent.
ence with her processes.
Vegetation
a clerk 114
in 4.
a U.41
Baltimore
• on gcxvl farm security; prioritial and
‘
------- ---- - I THe groom is .»
44444Ul U
terpt nayabls al tl»e Hastfngv National Bank. no more than man can overwork with- commission house. Tho bride’s family
Office 1st dour south of Spaulding’*, Hartings. out danger.
—Chicago
I regunl Ul(J Uie
.lamn-r—
CAxx-^ Tribune.
w a me»3lliante
FREEDMAN, the Merchant Taltor a
bMquwt given
Her. I
J*id
-—At a recent L.
*
*In ~
• Charlotte, will virit Nashville every 30
n. __
u.«_____
Tm,*n
explorer. | b.ri‘.le T™
1» her owe
______
days, with a choice, line of piece goods, and wffi lin to Schliemann,
--------------—oernhur riSht whea *ho oo“0’ of
•—Annapooffer you bargaina. Save your orders far hhn. he corrected some errors concern!
rounds
lig
s
P
ecial
10
ehila£jphia
Timet.
his life that have been going the i *
TACOBOSMUN. Llrerrman, bare near-Wol- of the newspapers. His father was a
—
When
the
Southern
Pacific
Rail­
,. cnn House. Flrrt chow turnout* at reason­ preacher in a ettiall German village, nnd
able rates. Special rate* to commercial men. although he understood no Greek, was | road is completed, with ita connections,
New
Orleans—an event ‘that
is exFuneral sral wediotf |urtk.* fumisbed with car an enthusiastic admirer of Homer, i to
~
r
,
’
’
.
“
7"
f
riages on ri.ort notice.
-hum be n»d in &gt;n excellent tran.ta
*”
bT
™raUr“&lt;rt'r^'^u"“Ak »:nu“!,wUI ’’t MnrevilIr^-IhU ronto
‘AID IN ADVANCE- '

To

luta ws Ulk to

Advertisers:

^lashrilk giredarj.

T~

I

W

W

I

H

D

W

S

M

O

C
J

H

J

Nashville Elevator!

!: to th'- tii-Md. •• •&lt;monilcal pri-pareticn
r*«'r ntf- red to tire public, os its effteto
rx-n tin m long time, ^nakhir only •an
'K-ca-ltHj-i! ‘ajtpHctttou necessary. It is
r -&gt;-niiinieiid'*d and list'd by eminent
.iriito-t! men. and officinHy endorsed by
State Atwayer of Massachusetts.
co, Hair. Pine Lumber, Ijith
*I"hc. popularity of llall's Hair Reucwer’
and Shingles,
:&lt;incrctMied with thp test of many
y--irs. both In this country and in AT TME UiWEST LIVING PRICES.
foreign lands, and it is now known end
•^EW E1.RVSTOK,
■&lt;*-*d in all the civilized countries of
tte world. *
For sole by aU dealers.

FOWLER &amp; INGERSON

There is nothing like being graphic. . A man

“Why, my friends, after millions and triiiknis
of years had rolled away it woutd be a hundred
thousand years to breakfast time,”

erdrr.
Turning in all Its branches.
rjW.^D^RATTitwUer’io Watched
\L9?F*fr.g|&gt;e /e*»’!rr and Silverware. Being
• practical Jrw.l*.
....
..... ..

William Jones,

into

----- For all kinds of—?

GRAIN AND PRODUCE.

OH, WHAT A COUGH I
Wil) you heed the warning. The signal' per
hapa of tte aure approach of that more terrlblfull stock of
disease consumption. Aide yourself If you can
afford for the sake of saving 50 eta to run the
risk and do nothing for IL' We know from cxlierienee that 8hlloh'« Cure will cure your
Constantly on (land.
cough. It never (ails. This explains why
more than a million bottles were sold last year.
Il rcllcres Croup, and whooping cough, al'ora c J | ENTRY ROE. Proprixtok
Mothers do not be without ft- For lame back,
ride or ctert use Shiloh’s Porous Plasters.
Bold by F. T. Boise.
DYSPEPSIA A LIVER COMPLAINT.
Is it not worth the small price of 75 cents to
free youracf of every symptom at th&lt;*e dUtre*sing complaints, If you think so call at our
store and get a bottle of Shiloh's VItai Izer,
K'vi* cmutantly on hand a big Hock of .
every buttle has a printed guarantee on it, use
axxordingiy and If It does you no good It will
cost you nothing. Sold by F. T. Boise.
We have a s;&gt;ecdy and positive cure for
Catarrali. Diphtheria. Canker mouth and
Head Ache, in SHILOH’S CATARRH REM­
EDY, A nasal injector free with eax-b tetllc.
Use It If you desire health and sweet breath. FRESH FISH and POULTR’.
Price 50 cents. Bold by F. T. Boise.
IS THEIR SEASON.

LUMBER, LATH, &amp;C,

4l&lt; ncr.K, »)&lt; mttei fftnn Nadurilir.. If »oM
Kfon will take gl.lbO.
-JTi turt-H. in the village of Natovllie. Must
be sold for what ft wilt brin g ooaeeoant »
jxx&gt;r health of present owner.
M) acres, 4 miles from Nashville; nearly ail
Improved: fair buildings and In all agnrxl bar­
gain. Price f 1.010; part down.
House and Lit, on pitlllip- street; the test
bargains in town. Price 8350.
half down down.
Good Houae uno four acre* of Land on Fran­
ces Street. Price SCO.
House and lot &lt;m Emu- St., bouse new: good
cellar and plenty of good water. For sale al
&gt;7&gt;J0&lt;tr will exchange for farm property near
Nashville or Hastings.
HI acres. 1W mile* from Nashville on the best
roml leaving U;&gt;-villagi, all improved except ti
ocrea; tire remaining ri acres good limber; it
well watered by a never-falling spring. Good,
young orchard; buildings fair-. IS ’ acre* of.
wheat on the gnruitd; present owner’ engaged
In otter boslnea* and will sell for . $2,600, fl,OOf&gt; down, balance on tong time.
Vacant totem Philips St Price SUM if sold
LEE &amp; DUKKEEv

M EAT MARKET.
I'renh and Salt Meats,

Singled Hams ani Siioaldsrs, '

“Why don’t you literary men gel rich I”
uked a lady of a Bohemian “I don’t kqpw” he
replied, “unless Its that dollars and sense never
go together.”

Lftrd\ by the tb. or barrel,
ih., rf-r., .f--.

“IT IS CURING EVERYBODY,"
writes a druggist “Kidney Wort is the most
popular medicine we sell.” it should be by
right, for no other medicine has such specific
action on the liver,bowels and kidneys. If you
have those symptoms which indicate blllousneas or deranged kidneys do not f. ii to procure
it and u»e faithfully, in liquid or dry form it

Fresh Goods, Full Weights and
Satisfaction Guaranteed.

There ore some men w vain that they would
te willing to get up behind their own carriage
tri order tx&gt; persuade tlie world tliat they keep
a footman.

MEAT MARKET!

WEAKNESS CURED.
Lyuu, Mom., Dee., 18, 1880.
I gave tbst valuable nredklue, Browu'a Iron
Bitters, to my »kter for weakness. After tak­
ing two IxX I!'&lt;-*, ate was able to walk an J run
as well aa ever. It Is certainly a wonderfull
tonic.
Win. Jones.

Fresh, Salt and Smoked

One of the sadde't tights in this world Is to
sec a young man trying to treat his sweethearts
small and depraved brother, ns though be were
his dearest fried.
THE TROUBLE ALL OVER.
"A patient in Middletown" writes to Dr. D.
Kennedy, of Romtout, N. Y.: “I wrote to you
about five weeks ago for advice in taking your
medicine, as at that time tyro stones, had Just
passed from my .kidneythe effect of using
Kennedy's Favorite remedy. I have taken the
Favorite Remedy ever since, nnd have no innrc
trouble from that source. It is also toning my
whole system.

r.J" The Highest Mur.rt Price paid

IIE.VKLI ROE

J ONEPM COLE,

MEA.TS!
------—OF KVr.RY DE8CR1PT1OK.-------All «1 er.,.-, that trlR

Live and Let Lnve.
K.V 1TI KE DEPOT.

J. LENTZ &amp;SDNS,
Manufacturers, and dealers in

FURNITURE!
In Every S',yle&amp; Variety.

LIXGTO^r ItOlTr.
.
&lt;

otter line runs Three Tbrongb
Trains Dally between Chl-ego, I •
Council Bluffs, Omaha. I.inecta. I*
J■
Atchison, Topeka and Kaunas Cl"
&gt;.t .'onn'-ctions for ail point- in Knr.sao.
r e krt, Colorado, Wyoming, Montana, R’t&gt; Mexico, Arizona, Idaho,Oregon and
Cabf-'ruio. '
■ ", Shortest, Speediest su&lt;! Most Comfortal ■ i - v Hannibal to Fort Scott. Denison,
C.-.!?-.&lt;. Houtton. Austin. San Antonio. Galvete
- mid aii points in Texas.
■Th- unequalcd ioduxx-ments offered by thia
I '.-u- toTravclera and Tourists, are aJ follows:
T,»~ . olx&gt;i,ratod Pullman (Ifi-wheel) Palace
-'
Ing Cars, run only on ibis Line. C.. B. i
k&gt;. i . :eo Drawing-Room Cara, with Horton’s
I.'-, ihtir Chairs; No extra chargn for Seats
in t.icl:nimr Cbafra. Tile famous C.. R. 4Q.
P..lr;xs DlntturCora. Gorgeous Smoking Cara
I
| ! l.-u- nt Hialt-Bitcketl Rattan Ite-t

■•&lt; '1 Track and Superior Equipment. eon&gt;.l;.k I with ttorir Great Through Car Anapn-&gt;i' t. maket this, above all otters, the favorite
(•:to the South, South-Weet, imd the Far
I i•• ir, and you will find traveling a luxury
in, tend of r discomfort.
■
ibn’fxh Tickets viu this CoWwtr&lt;J Line
for suit* nt nil offices in the United States nnd
Cc-indn.
1»■ _
Alt Inf'rtnalion about Buies of Fare. Slcewfmr Cur Accommodation*. Time Tabb-a.
'Till bx- cheerfully given ty applying to

General Par.«enger Agent. Chvrt.»r&gt;
T. J. PUTTUR.
General Manager, Chicago.

For tile fall trade, out

some all the nuxleaty of girlhood, without be­
ing Jlowed to feign !•* Ignorance.
You imd tetter cut out this address—“Dr,
C. R, Sykes, 160 Madison St-. Chicago,” for
you may need his •"Sure Cute forUatarrh,''

' A grocer had a pouud of sugar returned with
a note aayitiq; ‘Too much mud tor table use
ami not enough for building purposes.”
'
SKINNY MEN.
Wells’ Itoaltli Reaewer. Absolute cure for
nervous debility and weakness of the generalive functions. Fl. at druggists. Mich. Derail
JAMES E. DAVIS &amp; CO., Detroit, Mkh.

STOCK IS COMPLETE,
Atal will be sold so tow that^

,11® WILL ASTOHIc-lSH YOU.
WE ALSO CARRY

LIjN’ T&lt;
——OF-------

UNDERTAKERS’ GOODS,

Tte man that says that woman ten never In­
vented anything should listen for a few minu­
And are prepared to give-our Unto andatten
tes at the keyhole x»f tte sewing society,
tiou to evcrythlug'pcrtainlngto the
ANNOYANCE AVOIDED.
uudertakingitne.
Gray hairs arc honorable but their premature
appearance is annoying. Parkcr’i. Hair Balsam
prevent* the annoyance by promptly featuring
tte youthful color.

J. LENTZ &amp; SONS.

AtlmlniHtrafor’H Snle.

■&lt;k'idney-wg
WONDERFULHI t i j
A D. DM,i

CURES!

—!■! ;

[Bresasadtaelsea the MTEtt, BOWELS^;
Ziid KriHKTS at the same Hair.
H

L

most every evening the
read or declaimed pamaga* irom the •
TJ*‘*il* 12?k?d f'»nyard to as beIliad or the OdnMv while hia ^mnnra- •
tIxe
cf its problem present■ible son listened wiUt delight and emoCalifond^i dtatanco from the
lion. Otuo.
SchhnmMn. .!«» I &lt;I,UCT,.?&lt;. efrlMWtob »n&lt;l by tb« Mn^wninK
,nob u llnelor . ~&lt;li»« Mgh r.44. nMrdgbt w.d pojenUrrwell u, .iTdronmebo. .m md. f^r "•«'*’FfUd.&gt;n thnt £,,« Urelutore
both tabor nnd Kmffnra wnyto (heir I
1 "
—....
-—
feeling*, and mmgledtbeir team. The ,
iuipt eaaicrtiM Hum receiv**! were never ■
•A now material for arehitectsra.1
lost by-the lx&gt;y, and during the years !

HIGHEST MARKET PRICE

40. acres, Bmflmfrom Nashville.

MCl.lfn Hl* to die by tour prOWdnuu-i&gt;m!UMtbo«MatlwHanUaiT«l by
[kUuej-WwU
Jl.H.n CoM«ta.a»MUlvets Ch—W*. Ofcta,
|«®y« 1i«wmnet e»i«« t.-4 to
tx-«»ff »-.'o,.iv..
liOoaUbuiW. UukUueytVvlL.-.ire4hh:u
Anna I. Jarrett n( South Snjem. X. Y„ re-,

PERMAMKwTLr CURSS.
.JuNEY DISEASES,
UVE9 GOMFLA1HTE,
onetlnptlor. «i.il Piton.
j

'.•
ri
&gt;1
32
c

'IMIt »&gt;y Uic i'r-&gt;b*u» Court of Barry County,
wi. i..... .1, ..e
. ..
.^4

PAYNE'S FARM ENGINES,

NERVOUS
DEB5LITY:
A cure ^uarasji&lt;*.&lt;■&lt;!.
Da.

�lOlOj
thiilv-lwo year*, the p*n»s:lc*

S

Mr.
pw»

widows: hy MT. Willi*, to rogtitate a.-wl Bmit
Chhrav '.rnnHyrotkrn :bvMr.Ca*nMy .to eotabPxh
a Bureau of Mines and Mithutr: by UnHarmw.
IliSiniHr’wwcitx-IvotwuiTnuwu*y&gt;-3r« In tno
TMparvmentx, and providing h* follows:
PrtmJmit,
tuem.bere of &lt;&gt;»"&lt;[**•
beads of LWMrtm-nta &gt;7JO»: CklefJnatiec of tbe Unites Mates Supreme Court.
C’AOO; Aasoetete JuM-cm. &gt;0.808: by Mr.
aarlton. granting pensions to pererm* diw

National Baud of Trade adopted roaoiuUo**

and Dr. Erarick belle*
Now takes pleasure in announcing to the Public that

ell Bankruptcy bill; and one in4avorof mak­ questioning the victim* the doctor discovered
ing the Consular service subservs the iuter- that st a wedding held in the house about
Christina* hia patient* had partaken of some
Ox the 21»t the Senate Committee on Pen- half-cooked ham, outfit was by means of this
meat that the animalcule entered their sys­
Ing Mr*. Lincoln &gt;15,1X10 for arrears and tn- tems. Dr. Rmrich was seen last night by a re-

Hzxirr Rocrwjux. Secretary of the United
wbotu he promised a
Ma grateful ocknowk

■
DonieHtlc.
Im the eounllng-nxxn of th* fisatta*!, at
Indianapolis, early on the morning of the 20th,
Green bury B. Hawkins, tee night derk, wa*
accidentally shot dead by a carrier named
John Greene.
Ths aho’.csale shoe home ol A. W. Bartlett

30th, »1th liabilities of IdO.OOO.
John F. But, clerk of the Ught-Hoase
Board at Sen Fraudaco, wa* arrested on the
fiOtb for forging signature* to Government
voucher* and embezzling &gt;15,000.
Tub Nath.nal board of Health on the 20th
declared small-pox epidemic In the United
State*, end ordered an inspection of several
lmi&gt;.rtani quarantine station* U&gt; ascertain If
the rules of the Board are enforce.!Tub Chief of the Bureau of Statistic* rejortr that for the past t welve months ended .
December 31, 21J200,W1 pounds of butter,
One letter engy***** teat General valued at &gt;4,072,017, and 140.357,pound* of
ebeeatt, valued at &gt;15,506^871, were exported
from this country.
Lx the United States Court at Chicago re­
cently Judge Drummond decided tliat a pas-

The fury ma;.’
t my sou) will
innt&lt;d wrln'.’r
----- , Jody/* etoatag
with “Glory. Glory, Hallelujah." TUcoourt
adjourned until the sat

mxx&gt;

AT its recent session the Illlnote State
Grange elected £. A. GUlcr, of Green Gouty,
aa Grand Master.
New York City on the morning of the 23d
from an apoplectic stroke. Ho was fifty seven

Foreign.
Ox the 18th Beaumlene, a e**hler in the
French Treasury. committed suicide because
of M&gt;m: unfortunate speculation* on the
Bourse.
A lath Loodou dispatch says the explosion
which destroyed the aloop-of-w*r Dotertl, In
the Strait* of Magellan, last April, was slmi-

recently on board the Cagship Triump, la the
Padfte station.
Thb jail term of Parnell and the other Irish
member* of Parliament and Land Leaguer*
haa been extended for three mouth*.
Exoixun Mu-viixb, of the Arctic steamer
Jeannette, telegraphed tbe Secretary of the
Navy from Irkutsk, Siberia, ou the 30th, that
be and bis party of eleven men were sll well
al that point. No tkliuga were received of the
missing second cutter.
.
The Herzegovinians slaughtered a squad of
tbisc-um under a misapprehension tempt* to eight from a car until it has actu­
—.... ,^rt of General Arthur, oth.-rwiou he ally stopped.
ten Austrian soldiers, near Dobar, on the 2dth
wtmMnrt b &gt; in tho eaao. He don't property
Tbu city of Washington ba* been quaran­ and burned their quarters.
repreaont the Government. He only repre­
sents himself." Judge Porter then be- tined against the small-pox. All ;&gt;cr*ou* ar­
Ax attempt to saaaMlnate President Sal­
ehi argument by briefly reclttnr riving there from town* and cltU-a tn which omon, of Hayti, waa mode on the 21st by five
scene* ef disorder, the abuse and tbe *niall-j»x exists are subjected to exami­
armed men, who bad secreted theuwelvea In
Binder Xu which every one upon the nation.
coat* hml for two month** bexn subjected.
the executive mansion. Forty arrests were
Dt nrxo tbe month of December, 1881, there
“ And yet,” be said, “of the three speecbctt
made In connection with the plot.
which bud be» n mrwl-* by the d of-use. 1 will do arrired in thia country 37,037 Immigrant*.
A CAMxauAM on the Slat stated that the
the prl«on**r the Justice to say that hfs was the
At* recent meeting of the trunk railroad
leartriijectinnaWe." After «k* tcblug the drinsurrection in Herzegovina was becoming
------ ---- -- ----- —-subject of freight rates were placed on an am­ more fonnidAble. Insurgent coqxi were fo.ining In the mountains, and the orthodox Mo­
his attention to the prisoner, and proceeded to icable footing, and the famous war of the hammedan population were in full sympathy
Oepict hi* i Liinu'trr ta the following term*: trunk line* was declared coded.
“ A ixxanr, a hypocrite, a robber, and ■ awtni*HK National Board of Health official* at with tbe revolt. The garrison ot Ragurn waa
tUi-r—■ lawyer who never won a cauan; no
sent Iorward iu the night to reinforce endan­
court, no Jury failed to seo tn him a dishon­ Washington maintain that the present small­ gered posts, and two thousand additional
est rorur. and such men cannot win cause*. pox epidemic originated from the Unmtgraxita
Be batt left his trail of infamy tn a hun­ who arrive al. Castle Garden, infected with troops were shipped from Trieste.
dred direction*. The man who ms a lawyer
Tub suspension wa* announced on tbe Slat
bad such notion* of morality that when be the disease, and carry it West tn tbe emigrant of the Canada Farmer*’ Mutual Insurance
had taken debt* to collect end collected them train*.
by dogging the debtor, he held them
G»iux&gt;BT Srxnxoxi, an Italian merchant of Company, which had done buainesa for over
Pctereburg, Va., was recently convicted of thirty year*. _
A rssTOUAL letter from Archbiabop McCabe,
had Uvud for year*, and sUll rcomlxcd a* recejr .:g stolen tobacco, and *entenccd to re­
teHWife; a man who, when he tired of this ceive twenty *trtpes st the public whipping- urging the people to refrain from violence,
woman, pretending to lx* a Christian au.l bre
wa* read on the 23d In all the Catholic churches
iievor ot th&lt;* Hlbte. kw.kixl In that book and |O»,tA
strnDBUBB
wa*
lynched
at
Ironton,
Ohio,
read: ‘Thou shalt not commit adultery.’and
of Dublin.
thru wen: out and deliberately vtotatrd that at midnight on the 19th.
Tnx Marrinis of Ixtruc and Lady Balfour ar­
; a man who pushed hltnA stockmax from Wordsworth, Ind., wa* rived at Halifax on the 21st and took a special
ie feilowahlp of Christian
a follower of the Saner when slugged by a thief and robbed of over &gt;1.000, train for Ottawa.
&gt;
r year* ef foul aascxdaUon In Chicago, on the evening of tbe 20th. The
Mn- Match and hie daughter, living near
Aiiuinuuity. 1*m*m«'*&lt; in review
th- principal events at tbo prl« -no-’* life.
Cumminsville, Ontario, were recently mur­
Judge Porter showed up tn all k* hl Icon* &lt;1rAt Hampton, Pa, on the 20th, while W|ll.-_ dered with an ax by a boarder named Michael
lam Cork was dying of small-pox. hU wife Rourke.
placed a lighted candle In his hand* and knelt
Thb balloon which carried Walter Powell to
“Thia beside the bed in prayer. She instantly sne- sea from England in Dcccmberha* been found
cnffltied to exhaustion, the bedding was set
on fire, and she and her chHd and husband basket.
(wrisbed in the flame*. .
Tnx financial panic tn France continued on
TniKTV-SXXB cases of small-pox were dis­ the 23d, and buslneas on the Faris Bourse waa
covered in Now York during the week ended completely paralyxed.
tnuchlsjt eulogy utxmhu nu-mory. Thu claims
of the prisoner to be a praying man wore n-'xt the 21st, 4,SOU vaccinations being performed.
CitK-innAli reported 123 patients under treat­
LATER NEWS.
ment &lt;-n the 31st, and on that day forty new
Tx tbe United State* Senate on the 24th
CAses were discovered at Pitteb^rgh and eight James W. McDlll, of Iowa, was sworn In tor
the unexplnxl term. Tbe bill giving Mr*.
Lincoln &gt;15,000 arrears of pension and inMoblle, Ala., suspended on the 21st. Their dbeasing^cr allowance to &gt;5,000 per annum
liabilities arc reported at over &gt;100,000, most waa passed. Bills wen* Introduced: By Mr.
of wh ch amount is due to New York parties. Beck, for tbe punishment of National Bank
Tbe flood al Nashville, Tenn., on the 21st officers who illegally issue certified check*,
stating that the practice Is going on at
•bulbdog' pistol in bls band, would have shot a thouKund persons had fled from their home*, the rate of &gt;100,000,000 per day; by Mr. Voor­
bullet through Juda* Cax when be refused to and two thousand workmen were unemployed. hees, to compel railroads to heat ms 11 cars by
permit him tn speak: would have put a but- North Nashville was cut off. and the breaking steam from the locomotlvo; by Mr. Plumb,
let through Davldgn when he mm denounuru: him m h mnMerer." . Alludlnr of the gas-pipes left South Nashville in dark- proponing an amendment to the Constitution
prohibiting the manufacture, importation, or
A nnx which originated In the candy fac­ tale of liquors aa a beverage. Mr. Teller sub­
wa* bo praying fbri The man who rl ilnu-d
tnhav&gt;’ received divine I n» pi ration himself tory of F. E. Black, at Atlanta, Go., ou the mitted a joint resolution forfeiting land
prepar's bi* defense its advance for an act ta Slat destroyed seven building*, on which the grant* to twenty-two railroads. In the House
dowblehhe waa d.vlnely inspired. Tho be&gt;Mr. Reed asked the I^mediate coutid.
iterer ta Inspiration. b&lt;- would blma-if sttrr
tbe inspired i»nnk. and substitute for It a book
A coluuox occurred on the Slag on the eratlon Qf tbe Senate bill to retire
r. ran nah Road, alxmt tvrenty-eeveu miles AssociateJustice Hunt, but Mr. Holman
from Charleston, between passenger trains.
Mall Agent Fox and a colored fireman were duties on aome clothing sent from Europe to
killed and Ms I Agent Bcerbridge fatally In­ colored settlers in Kansas. A resolution was
jured. Five other* were seriously hurt.
adopted calling ou tbe Secretary of War for a
A poirnox of the Catholic Orphan Asylum Ktatcnicut of Use account* of Captain H. W.
to defend hia father, waa
Howgate. The Fortification Appropriation
Fifty-two children were rescued, but one was bill of &gt;375,000 was pmwed.
With graphic p.cturtnj
Tub Grand Jury of Mercer County, New
suffocated.
Tnx house of Henry Cleer, of De* Moines, Jersey, on the 24th Indicted twenty-thre*
Iowa,
took
fire
in
the
abseoce
of
hia
wifp
on
freshmen
of Princeton College for malicious
OMion witch baffled him. Preiident Garfleltfa
the 22d, and two small boy* were burned be­ mischief.
yond recognition.
Ix tbe German Parliament on the 34th, in a
CtUUi-K* Daxa, engaged In the bc&lt;f trade debate on tbe budget, Bismarck said tbe Im­
i, - j
this crime
Use itwal.'i’r ear. He laic! in hiding In tbo fit Boston, failed and fled ou the 23d. His 11a- perial rescript remained unshaken by the at­
ey. Why. with the Inspired &lt;-ruiiv&gt;K&gt;id up.-n Ulitles are aisled at fil'JO.OM.
tacks upon It; it was to the Sovereign, and not
"Bohtox Lad one of tlie most severe wind- to Parliament, that Germanyewed the i&lt;oaitlon
she enjoyed.
At Fort Garry, Manitoba, on the night of
Ox the S4th the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland
the 2AI the thermometer registered thirty- stated that lie would not permit the cerrmony
two degree* below xern, and at St. Vincent, of tbe presentation of tbe freedom of Dublin
Dakota, thL-ly-xrvcc below.
to Parnell and Dillon In Kilmaiuham JalL
Tub rcp-irtcd number of immigrant* arrived Tiw latter I* aald to be very 111.
in the United States during 1881 wtw 716,863.
By the explosion bf . Jynamlte factory at
Up to toe 21»t a few port* liad not reported, Port Vendrcs, France, ou the 3ttb, sixteen
but It wa* edlmsted that tbo total would be jtersona were killed.
about 719.0)0
Dsoxrcio Gancta. a postal maa*enger at
A nrr flights ago Fred Parker, a hotel clerk Lando, Tex., and Fernando Garris, employed

a

34th for stealing eight hundred letters in De­
cember.
Flambs on tbe 34th awept away the high
school at Hartford, Co»r., valued at &gt;120,00Q;
insured tor &gt;70,00).
H. L. Brumes, paymastem at Murphey's
pecking lx&gt;u.w at the Union Block-Yard*,
thicros ou die 34th.
Jctxjx Poktmc continued his remark* tor

He

and that tn

Who fair-

had removedaome of the muscle from the body
of tbo woman and submitted ft to examina­
tion under a microscope, and found It to
be completely filled with iricbtex, as many
a* 300 of the parasite* appearing In a
particle one-eighth of ac inch lu size and uptv arda of 40,006 in a square inch of the muscle.
Be stated that the symptoms of Illaess tn all
the case* were identical, beginning with

tn the stomach and In teatinea and muscular
contraction and sorcuc**- . He knew of no
lieved that most physicians la tte treatment
would confine themselves to watching the
symptom* and trying to counteract tbciu,
with a view in tbe earlier stages bf keeplag
the parasite* oat of the muscular tlaauea aad
confined to the Intestinal chaaoel* unto toey
were dcsfroj-cJ. The fatality usually de­
pended upon the amount of the diseased meat
eaten and tbe physical condition of tbe victimTbe men in tbe present ca*c are all strong and
hardy, aad, a* stated, will probably recover.—

Accidentally Poisoned.
- Rev. James Cameron, paster of the Second
Presbyterian Church, Oakland, wa* aeddeutally poisoned yesterday afternoon by a doae
of carbolic odd, administered in mistake By
his wife. He resided with hl* wife at the

HIS NEW GROCERY IS IN FULL BLAST
I HAVE A COMPLETE LINE OF

Sugars, Coffees, Teas, Syrups, Tobacco, Cigars,
Soaps—Washing and Toilet, Canned
Goods, Ground Spices,
And in fact, everything that belongs to tlie Grocery Department.
a fine collection of

Also

STAND AND HANGING LAMPS
And Glassware of the Latest Pattern.
A LARGE AND WELL SELECTED STOCK CF

English and American White Ware.
----------- 1 KEEP IN STOCK------------

Brown Ware, Yellow Ware, Stone Ware.
WOODEN WARE, BASKETS, YANKEE NOTIONS, ETC.

ing treated by Dr. Barber. An operation had
been performed on hl* foot on Monday, and
he wa* using a carbolic wash for the wound.
He was also taking a tonic digestive medicine.
A tew minutes after tour o'clock yesterday
afternoon Mrs. Cameron waa reminded by Dr.
Barber that the patient had not taken his
E7* All my Roods are treiib, Jost bought Tor upot cash and
medicine. She went Into the back room
where the medicine was kept. The room was will be sold only fbr ca»h, at the lowest prices.
somewhat dark, the blind* be.ng drawn down,
A cordial invitation in extended to every man, woman
and Mr*. Cameron took a bottle off the man­
tel, not noticing any other, or thinking of any child, to call and examine prices, aud qualities of Good*.
I cake pleasure in allowing Goods, whether you wish to
8be brought It to him and he drahk off about
»
half of it, and then stopped, saying: “It buy or not.
Nashville, Mich., Dec. 5,1681.
.
testes very strong. Is there anything In
It!" Then he swallowed the remainder of the
dos*. Mr*. Barber said: “Could it be any­
thing else!” Then Mr*. Cameron perceived
the odor of carbolic add, and remembered
that the bottle of carbolic add was also on the
mantel. Sb* whispered her suspicion* to Dr.
Barber, who quickly obtained aa emetleand
ordered an antidote to follow. The emetic

C. AINSWORTH.

but they forced down aa much ntagnesla and
oil as they seuld. Dr. Wythe and Dr. Buck
alliance, as be died in a few minutes after.
The bottle which contained the tonic mixt­
ure hypophosphite* which Mr. Cameron was
taking was a high -sboulde red medicine bottle,
about three sizes larger than the carbolic add
bottle, and both were labeled, but Mr*. Cam­
eron had not been In the habit of giving her

native of Greeaock, Scotland, and wa* slxtyDashed to Atoms.

Prices Reduced.

From January 15th to February 15th. 1882, I wball offer
the balance of of such goode as I" do not- wish to carry over,
at prices that will insure them sale, regardless of cost, to close
them out before taking an inventory.

SPECIAL BARGAIN'S

Intenm-tlon l» just received here from will be found in Men’s and Boys’ -Clothing, Ladies and Gente
Cuautla, Mexico, of an extraordinary and ter­
rible accident that occurred there on Satur­ Underwear,’Kflitfgoods, Shawls, Ladies Cloaks Horse and Bed
day. It had been widely advertised that a ba&gt;
loon nscensl m would be made there ou that ffIanket8,[Glove8*and Mittens, Men’s and Boys Caps, and oth­
day. and a targe number of natives bad as­
sembled to witness tho spectacle. The aero­ er articles too numerous to mention.
naut wa* Senorlta Catalina Guogora,a beauti­
ful young maiden only seventeen year* of age,
All Goods morked in plain* figures, bo that anyone can tell
whose teats of daring upon the trapeze dur­
ing balloon ascensions bad made her famous
throughout all Mexico, and whose bravery was the exact price.
onlv excelled by her beauty.
Tbe balloon, which waa inflated with hot air,
It will pay everyone to look through my stock, as decided
and wa* not expected to make lone flight*;
had t»6 car attached, but in place of It earned
a trapeze. When toe moment for her ascen­ bargains will be found in each department.
sion arrived the intrepid young girl grasped
the trapexe, tbe rope* were cut^ and amid a
flourish of musical instruments Sc nori ta Gongnra and her frail ship floated toward the
clouds. Cheer upon cheer arose from the
crowd* below as the brave young aeronaut
went through her usual feats upon the trapexe,
unto the distance finally Itecame so great that
It waa hardly possible to distinguish her per­
formance*.
The balloon had reached an elevation of
fully three-quarter* of a mile, and every eve
was still strained toward it, when suddenly J
M. WOOD
one great scream arose from tlie multitude,
and toe collapsed balloon, with its fair young
navigator, was seen to fallawtflly a* a meteor
—18 NOW READY TO—
to the earth. Horror seemed to freeze tbo
spectator* for a mohvent, when, rushing to the
spot where the balloon bad fallen, they found
the terribly smashed and mangled body of the
poor young girl lying lifeless boslde the wreck
of her tmlloon.The Mexican women wrung their band* find
wept over the dead girl, whose remains were
afterward tender!v cared for by tlie people
-----HAS THE----and buri.'d in the cemetery near the town.
It was afterward dl*covere.l that tlie balloon
roi:waa of altogether too frail constructIon for
the risk of human life, a* the material of
DUGS,

tSTl will not be Undersold.^!!

SHOE HORSES
BETTER THAN EVER,

Mv.

WILL TAKE
bride of two weeks, by her coolness aud roarsgc saved the life probably of her husbau I
an.I herself, m well aa their team. The rains
and snows of tbe last tew day* have made many

WOOD

For all Shoeln*.

BOBS! BOBS

F. T. BOISE,
BOOKS,
JEWELRY,
W ALL PAPER,
WINDOW SHADES,
DI E STUFFS,
PB0PRIETAEY MEDICINES,
PRESCRIPTIONS,
RECEIPTS.

Made ofall Boek Eta&gt;

a two-horse wagon, and when near the middle
of the river thev were ws«hcd by tbe current
from the ford and down tbedangerous stream.
The coupling* becoming unfastened, they
were in a imrilous situation, nnd the gcnlle___ ■_

A FEW CUTTERS
TO BILL, AND THE

cost, be wonld.have tn all proboMUtv been
drowned, but the lady caught him with one
km-', and with the other

ESA'

WAGONS

In tbe Slate orWIeMaa*
and ah'

CAUL AJWD

PAINT AND BRUSH
BKPABTXK T

�1EEZ7-

Th.

fnreabadowetl

- - JAN. «,

UNITY LOCALS.^BALTIMORE.

There is hardly a village in New York
ing at Shaytown.
Thia week I cannot fill tbe bill,

Attend the revival.
. The laulie* Aid Society will give an
Lot* of new* develop*****
uy»ter»upper, in the near future.
M. PUinim
»e"
Qrinio* may yet b«»come h Nashvil­
H. Hammond marketed &lt;» rabbit.
trial booth. This I* tbe final decision.
lian a* our way* are to atraigh for
Chart™ F. Smith's cigar More, at Port Hu­
one pop.
_ ,
...
Mr*. Daniel Wright u suffering with him.
ron, was robbed of W00 worth ot cigars, Thurs­
Pete Siroont ba* gone in twaren of n day night A* the robbery was committed with­
intermittent fever. •
Perry Honrj haa a Tramp boarding furture home. A* he «eek* an abiding in 300 feet of headquarters, it is believed
that tiie thieves intended to goUiere and Ateal a
city.
•
with him this winter.
Fred Ward*’ bouse wa* found on fire policeman, but made a mistake in the house.
Janie* Ensley vinited his brother,
A Detroit toy named John Portcous has re­
nod extinguished without damage, last
north of Hastings, Isat Sunday.
turned ffom a trip around the world, having
JamesK. Ensley has rented his farm Sunday.
visited Australia, Japan, China, India, the
One of tlie boy* spoken ot last week,
for two years, to M. H. Slocum.
Holy Land, Europe and the Artic Circle. He
A. E. Durfee bad a valuable colt a* being imbued with cider, has gone says he was handed a copy of tho Detroit Free
where the whang-doodle mourueth.
hooked so badly toot it died. .
Press at Jerusalem, by the consul.
Not far from 130,000 feet of lumber
Edward Gates traded colt* with Mr.
One “Col.” Ingcrsol, a young man about 31
cleared the dock at Bismark, last week yean, of age, living with hi* brother-in-law on
McGrath, receiving 818.00 to boot.
To-day the sun betokens a warm and will be nearly doubled this week. tbe bare line in Cheshire, Allegan county, waa
Frosted fingers are not uncommon foorel dc&gt;d, hanging by hia neck in the barn,
spell, who can tell anything about it. .
|u*t now,, neither nro linger* - with Jan. 1». An inquest was held by Justice Har­
Gay. D. Latham, of Branch county,
splinters, tbe truth ot both l ean well man, but no cause was found tor the act, and
is visiting friends and relative* in Bal­
tbe jury returned a verdict of death by suicide.
attest.
timore. ‘
Two brothers by tbe name of Bence, at Fife
There is a tramp frequenting this
R. K. Stanton had a straw stack up­
Lake, attempted to drive acirose the track
place
who
claims
to
be
a
preacher,
and
set, hdrying a colt, heyWaa extricated
ahead of tlie 5 o’clock express train going
teacher, but it strike* me that the in­ north, on-Saturday rfight, and were struck by
wWitjCidihmMre.
y.
.
the engine, receiving injuries from which
A vhcal anff'Tnstrurneutal entertain- sane o*ylnm i* minus n victim.
My head is »o filled with lumber’, both have since died. One died within a few
roeutat G. R. Durfee’s, Saturday eve­
that it ia bard to allow local thought* tours aud.the other Sunday ulgbt. Both of
ning, by friend* and relative*.
I haves washing machine in my pos­ to collect in very large qunntirie*. I tbo horse* which they drove were also killed.
Mr. Washburn, living three mile* north of
session, patented by J. C. Lampman of reached boni(41a*t night at8nowit .is Portland, has quite a curiosity tn the shape of
Hasting, it make* wash day tbe glad half past two Wednesday morning, a spring chicken without a bill. In place of a
and to-day my exertion* must be seen
day of the yenr.
bill it has a mouth, nose and face, exactly re­
Rev. Barnaby of tbe U. B. Church at The New* office or I be marked sembling tliat of a dog. It picks up its food
gave an eloquent discourse to a crowd­ delinquent. I
with its tongue, and when it drink* laps the
Writibt.
water like a »dog, swallowing with the usual
ed house Monday evening, at the Dur­
fowl performance of stretching np it* neck.
fee school house.
EATOM COUNTY.
State Senator Henry Ford, of Lawton, was
While Jacob Erb wa* loadiuglnmbcr
married on the evening of the 18th to Miss
at tbe Quimby saw mill, the whistle
Tbe Adelphlc Sodeuy, of Olivet have a new
Florence Walker, of that place. CapL Ford
blew, frightening the teams, which ran W50 piano.
is a stalwart republican, but the lasso of lore
Gopd road have reduced tbe price of wood at which enclrtlcd him in it* silken coll* was held
two miles, breaking one tire of the
Charlotte.
wagon.
by the daughter of a race of bourbon demo­
Thieves
entered
the
Taylor
House
at
Bellevue
Phil, my claim for a cigar is Jhi* :
crats. Senator Ford is a Cue man, and his
you staled some time ago. chat "Isaac qoe night and stole lhe clerk'a clothes.
new wife I* reputed to be a lovely lady.—EveEnos
Cartit
of
Charlotte,
nearly
lost
bis
life
Weeks hail been under Dr. Van Hutu
one day last week in trying to stop a runaway
W. H. Phi! port, * former resident of Superior
of Dowling, but is recovering slowly,”
team.
town*!tip, Washtenaw county, a short time ago
aud | copied tlie above, and added:
Phil Sheridan is expected to be at -Charlotte
“there being not much difference in Feb. 8th at the re-aulou of tbe second Mich., returned from Colorado, aud report had It that
bad Strack It rich.” He left after a *bort time
size, Isaac ha* my sympathy for get­ cavalry.
»nd since then the detectives have been look­
ting tiie worst of it,” but the' typo
The Eaton Ca Fannera Institute was held al ing for him, under the ctorgo they make
think 1 hod inode u mistake inserted Charlotte lost week, with the best attendance again*; him of realizing $18,000 or so by means
known
in
the
history
of
tbe
society.
tbe words: “the cast* of,” making it
I ot forged papers in Denver. A reward offrt.OOO
A couple of freight trains collided od tbe is offered for hiaarrest and conviction.
reud proper. I fancy I am smoking.
Grand Trunk R. IL at Charldtte last week
John Lee, living tliree miles east of Portland,
David Ickes and family started to go
Charlotte tart week Wednesday, demolishing
a visiting last Saturday, with a spun two engines, and tearing tiie train men ter­ wa* xTrested Saturday I**t charged with dis­
turbing a public meeting, he having attempted
of cults. Soon after starting, one of ribly.
•' to break up a singing school by creating disor­
the bit* broke, the bridle pulling back
The Hebrews of Charlotte, participated In a
der, and when attempt* were made to quiet him
over tbe horse* ears. Mr.-Ickes jump­ feast of circumcision, Wednesday at tbe risibe drew hl* revolver, flourished It-over tboec
ed out to try- and *top them wheu they dence of M. Freedman, the occasion lieing the
present and threatened to shoot tiie Unit one
took fright and ran. Coining to the circumcising of Mr. Freedman's e’.ght-day old who &amp;houkl|molest him. He plead not guilty,
son.
Tbe
ceremony
was
performed
by
Prof.
corner by Mr. UnderhiEs, they turned
but gave ball for appearence, and will be tried.
south and when in front of Silas Hen­ Fqrsb, of Heidelberg Unlveraity. After the
Tho*. Crocker of Flushing, caught a man
ry’s, mode for the barn-yard gate which ceremony bail been completed those assembled named Banning tn a bedroom with Mrs. Crock­
sat down to sumptiuus repast er, and *bot at Banning through the door,
was partly open, the wheel* striking
hut bit Mrs. Crocker. Banner escaped and bunt­
the gate throwing one burse down and
MICHIGAN NEWS.
ed the nelghboritood with a gun aa long as he
the"other on his knees. Ickes *on who
dared to remain, to find the num who put
wa* driving, gut out aud held them
Bertha Power* I* trying to get pay for a WO- Crocker “on to it-’’ The affair has created
until his father came. How they ran 000 knee cap, spoiled by a defective sidewalk at
quite* sensation at Flushing, aa all parties are
the three-quarters of n mile, with.the Kalamoaou.
*
wealthy and have been among the most refAiily in tbe wagon making so short a
James Minock killed James Carr, of Red­ •pected citbtep*.
’
turn in tlie road without hurting any­ ford township, last Tueaday, because Carr
Daniel Baker, n fanner of Rollin, Lenawee
stole
$41
from
nlm.
thing i* a wonder.
county,
aged
65,
went
Into the wood* on ThuraA Mr*. Farrand, of FruJjport, went out of
Doxy.
d*y to cut down some tree*. His *on and Mr.
door* leaving her baby beside tbe store, Jan.
Boodry were sawing a short way from where
Baker was chopping. Tbcyheaid a tree fall,
KA LA MO.
Tbe Coldwater firebug cases are still under
but not bearing any further chopping, they
going examination. Tbe more the accused try

Mr. Chas. SIobhou came home last to exculpate tbcmnelver the more they do not
Saturday.
A BliMfleld man brags\of having been to
Wm. Hoover ho* a wood Hawing bee,
church regularly for 50 years at n total cost of
Wednenday.
John Fowler, jr., i* visiting friend* SI—-and may God have mercy on Ida stingy
soul.
.
hereabouts. ’
A human hog in South Bay City tried to eat
TnL Morri* i* aliout to start a meat
six cans of select oysters, but failed ou the
market,
tlie burg.
fourth can. The Lord has not yet removed
Delmte nt tho Matteson school honre him.—Evening News.
tbi* week Friday evening. Question*
Mrs. Chit lock of Jackson died last week
for debate: Resolved that tbe . Amu- Friday from tbe effects of chloroform, admin­
sin Gultrati ought to lie hung witlidbt istered for the purpose of having a tumor re­
a trial. Chief for the affirmative, W. moved from her face.
Lou. Griffeth, aged ‘25 years, waa thrown
II. Pont, and for the negative, II. J.
from a wagon by a runaway team, Saturday
Stocking. A lively tune expected.
night at Niles, Jan. 23, and received injuries
In regard to the window, that wa* that will probably prove fatal.
spoken of lost week, we would say,
Murdock McFadden was instantly killed at
that tlie sash as it seems, wa* broken Ogemaw Spring* one day thia week, a log
before the boys come along that which rolled over him crashing him from hi*
night. The worat feature of tbe case head tn bis bead to his knees.
John Hogg, •upcrintendentof the Michigan
is, tliat one of the boy’s brother had on
apairoftwo dollar gloves, anti wa* coal company'* mine near Jackson, waa struck
going to school one cold morning, aud by a dcMudiu^ cage in the shaft Friday, caus­
ing wounds that may prove fatal.
the man that owned the window* saw
Eighteen loaded cars of a log train on tbe
fit to take the glove* from the boy to Harrison branch of Ute Flint and Plere Mar­
pay for the broken window. The quette railroad were thrown down an embank­
father went for tbe. glove*, aud the man ment Saturday and badly wrecked.
of the window* saw fit to give them
William Cross, a resident since 1834, died In
up.
YysilanU ou Sunday, aged TJ.yeara. He wa*
War I War I War at the burg. Two torn in Geneseee Co., New York, in 1805, and
yonug men, one by the name of Chac*- came to Michigan with bls parent*.
Dell Rathburne, of Bridgeville, Gratiot Co.,
ley, and the other by the name of Bert.
The latter called the furmer“ccffie” af­ was shot by Mrs. Ben. Kelly, Jan. 31, a white
u oman who has a colored hucbouL Tbe shoot­
ter th* name of hi* sweetheart* pet dog
ing was J be result of a religion* quarrel.
and Charley thought that it was a little
,
,
AJDCrt
Albert jasnu,
Marsh, 01
of rewarna,
Pewamo, sner
after eating
too ranch to Dt AT, so he prepared for breakfaaL went up to bis bodroom and blew
n.*,.
Ilk...
f
'
PH
.
&gt;1.1
1
....
. .
.
_
war, and called Bert into Crandell’*
store, and as he came in Charley hit on acOunt of financial
him under the eye. Bert kicked out
Henry Howland, tried at Paw Paw last week
into the street, aud began retreating
backward toward* home.
He fought fpr murder, because he killed his father la a
family
quarrel last summer, while the old man
bravely on every inch of ground that
he passed over. Imt when he thought
quitted by the Jury.
1 he had retreated Lu- enough, or aa far
ashi* conscience*would allow him go, C. Bock way, throe Royal Oak lads, hare been
he picked up a barrel stave, and Char­ arrested ou * charge of putting timbers across
ley thinking Bert a hog, beat a hasty
retreat to Crandell's fort and procured were put in jail at Pontiac.
An Adrian man who attended the fnneral of
a large hog hook.,and returned to tbe
scene of th® conflict. Eweb swing that
about IL that lx could vol endure tbe pain of
their warlike attitude ntid began a par­
ley of rough won!*, which ended tlie
war. Charley bud a few rernteiir*.
while Bert returned home with a Wack

we uf this wonderful town, tlie more
perplexed urn I to discover how ia daily
buainessis carried on.
Even during
the few yearn that I hav'e known lamdor. new bridge* have been made and
new baildings have gone-up on every
side of me; not to mention that 1 have
also won such manifentatidn* uf tuttional enetgy, enterprise, and opulence
as would have astonished the Emperor
Augustan in the heyday of his power ;
but bow theae narrow street* contrive
to find room for the ever increasing
traffic by which they arc choked is. a
problem which I must confess that I
am utterly unable to solve. Among
tho countless improvements which have
helped to make the city acces*ible to
the throngs of hnman beings who get
their daily bread, within it* restricted
confines, none has been more servic­
able, or would have filled him with
more astonishment, the Underground
Railway. ' It will, be remembered that
on the 18th of last January, a sadden
nnd unparalled storm of snow shut off
the metropolis for two days from the
provinces; and that during the 10th and
20th the city was almost unapproach­
able to vehicles, yet the Underground'
Railway afforded opportunities to pas­
sengers to reach the Mansion House
and Broad street, other metropblitaa
stations, which were denied to them in
other way .
Close upon the arrival of a Chinese
merchant venae! itr the Thames, cuiar*
news that an electric telegraph line ba*
been stretched between Shanghai and
Tiontam. In a few week* this lirst
w’re of tlie Flowery Land will
car­
ried on to Pekin. A tne**agu can then
!&gt;e sent direct from London to the Chi­
nese capital. This i* an immense in­
ovation for the pig-tailed people, al­
though for tlie present it is only a
Government enterprise forced upon the
Vermillion Pencil by the anxiety fell
during tbe late quarrel of the China
Court with Russia, when their coasts
might have been invaded nnd cities
captured while couriers were slowly
bringing news.
Railway* will some
day follow the electric wire, the dif­
ficulty being that the bodies of depart­
ed Chinese must not be disturbed by
the sacrilegious shovel of a navoy. nnd
that the custom has always been to
bury the dead Chinese "al! over the
place.” It is next to impossible, there­
fore. to make a mile of railway with­
out making a scandal to match. But
the Celestial son* growing so practical
that they will soon find something in
Confucius to get them over tbe pious
obstacle.
Mr. Alsop, solicitor to Lord Craw­
ford, has ordered 50,000 placards, of­
fering a reward of £500 for information
with regard to the robbery of the late
carl’s body—£100 nnd free panion to
any accomplice on behalf of the Gov­
ernment, and £500 on behalf of Lord
Crawford. There will be circulated all
through the* country at once, 'It is be­
lieved that there were at least six par­
sons implicatedin tbeoutrage, and two
of them are at prerent in direct com­
munication with tho authorities and
Mr. Alsop. A difficulty ia experienced
gettmg anything like definite informafroii™ tiem, however, owing to the fear

were horrified to find Mr. Baker lying uncon­
scious U[»n the ground a few, feet from the
tree, while a bruise upon his forehead, as
though mode by a forked stick, was observed.
He was taken to the house aLd a physician
summoned, but be died in a short time." He
wn* restored to consciousness enough to sty of arrest, but Mr. Alsop believes that
that a broken limb fell -from lhe tree under
the publication of the Government of­
which be stood.
v
fer of pardon to an accomplice will rcasure them to such au extent that some
One-Legged Pants.
statement a* to the crime will be forth­
coming. It is thoroughly understood
A one-legged soldier walking »ip the
Bowery wa* accosted by a clothing that the reward is merely for informa­
merehnnt with the usual “Sell you tion, and not for the recovery of tbe
aomepiing to-dayf”
Entering 'the body, as Lord Crawford still adheres to
store the .veteran was invited to in­ hi* determination not to ransom the
spect the large stock, but haring look­ body under any circumstances.
ed through the army of coats nnd vests
The Premiercompleted his aeventymid trotisera. he turned toco, saying •econd yenr yesterday. Members ot
shat he saw nothing there that would the Cabment. Liberal M. P.’s, and Lib­
suit him.
eral association* sent Mr. Gladstone
“Veil, vat you vanta!”
congratulations from all parts of the
“Iwauta pair of one legged panta country. Three year* ago a movement
loon*.
originated among the working men of
“Vo* dot all ! Yacob, bring me one Chester to recognize Mr. Gladstones
of dem one legged gray pant* on dat birthday in tlie same wayas the Colston
pile in do corner.
anniversary is celebrated at Bristol*
In a few minntes Jacob returned nnd This year the movement culminated in
reported that the last pair hud been a banquet given m honor of tip* occa­
Hold.
sion at the Town Hall, kindly placed nt
Meantime the partner nqyt door, who tlie disposal of the committee by Sir
had been listening til rough the thin Thomas Gibbons Frost, Mayor of Ches­
partition, had mapped out a plan of ter. Congratulations came from nil
campaign against the one legged crip­ part*of the kingdom. A resolution
ple.
wa* passed to convey the cordial good
“Yohh” he whispered to an attend­ wishes of the aarembly to Mr. Glad­
ant, “cut me off de leg of dem gray stone.
This was telegraphed to the
pant*. Send him np quick.”
Premier. The speeches made in bi*
By the time this had been done the honor were received with the greatest
soldier had hobbled out of tbe first enthusiasm.
store only to be inveigled into the Sec­
At present the military force in Ire­
ond. Again he went through tbe in­ land is reprereiited by eight regiments
spection of odds and ends, and again of cavalry, thirteen Imtteriers of Royal
demanded one legged trouser*, intima­ Horse and field garrison artillery, three
ting that he didn’t belfeye the trader companlM of Royal Engineer*, seven
hnd them.
companies of the Commiiwariat and
“Not haf one legged pant*! Fodder Transport Corps, and twentv-nine batMoses, vut you takes mo for? Yohn, tallions of infantry. The st&amp;tifltics is
bring me one of dem one legged stay sued by tlie WarOfflce of the Mtreuirth
pants in dot pile m de back of de of the arinj* in Ireland for the past tea
•thorn f”
veara posww more than usual interest.
The newly altered trouser* were pro­ During the ten year* the smallest force
duced. aud tlie waggish taildier gave quartered in Ireland waa in 1879. when
hitiiM-lfiipa* lost. But as be spread it was under 19,000.
them Iwfore him he became conscions,
Adgcbt.
as did rhe dealer, of something wrong.
“Mein Gort!
Fodder Abraham!
Cato Of Thank*.—Wo tender onr
Yohn you haf ruined me! You have, cut
thank*
to
our
many
L
ienda
and
neigh­
off de wrong leg
■
bor*, that gathered at our residence,
Wedne*d:iy evening, in the form of a
Seveeral week* ago at North Bradlov. surprise, also to all the other* that
iri-qjyjsnorod during tta« sermon.
a little7-year old son of h man mained *&lt;» generously gave, we will over re­
Daniel O'Keefe, aged 21 was inauufly klK- Hextrom disap-ared. Itnowturns out member.
that tbe lad wa* abducted In* an old
Mr. And Mr*. Filed J. Q cjck.

td al! over Ameriea^dr it* sickness.
Thojr.tell Hirto^df a Uttle boy, a
young scion of tbe house of. Be&amp;her,
that, on being rebuked for his noisy
conduct in which his sister had a share,
be declared that she ought to'be in­
cluded in the scolding." If I was bois­
terous,” be said, “she wo* girlsterou*.”,

Since the death of the oiginal Heller
numerous *h'ight-of-liand perfotner*
have adopted hia name. The teat which
one of there Hellers performed at West
field, Mui*., was to remove a fourteeu
year old girl from her home and marry
her before her parent* were aware of it,
and considered it- a Heller(v) a joke.
There w a bird in the London Zo­
ological Garden called tbe hornbiil
whose keeper stnnd* ten feet off and
tosses grape** at tlie bird *o rapidly
that nobody's eye can follow them
through the air, bat the bird’* eye doe*,
cat ching every one in it* bill at almost
every conceivable angle; of half a doz­
en grapes shot at him in rapid succes­
sion, he will not mis* more than one.
In this country he could get a first cla.**
position in the Nation Bas© Ball
League.

GREAT

RHEUMATISM,

Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago,
Backache, Soreness of the Chest,
Gotft, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Spell­
ings and Sprains, Burns and
Scalds, Genera! Bodily
.
Pains,
Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted
Feet and Ears, and all other
Pains and Aches.
P.&lt;-rdy

A

SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AID DEALTST
II MEDICINE.

A. VOGELER A CO.,

Philadelphia ha* a reputation Jur
ausceptibility to titled furigiiers.
iimbuB O'Donnell of Bultimo:
young man of wealth, good look*, and
politihed manner*, thought it would be
fun to apend a few week* in Philaddlphia society in the character of n
French Duke. He ii--.'l*t®r»*d at the

gut himself in traduced tit tiro' v&lt;aladelcphiu Club, and, uh Iie spent money
freely instead1 of borrowing it, bis pre­
tension* were not questioned until
somebody recognized him.
Stranger* at Seville, Ohio, are astouished when they see a -bonne with
doors ten feet high, and everything
eke about it proportionate in size.
Under a shed stand* au enormou* car­
rage, and, on entering lhe building,
Hindi of the furniture is found to be
about- twice a* big a* ordinary article*.
This is the residence of Mr. nnd Mrs.
Bate*, the giants. who nre familiar ob­
ject* in the *how world. They are i»etween seven nnd n bidf. and eight feet
in height, ami common room* nnd fur­
niture are too Hindi .or them.

The Bank Caxhier.
Once upon a time a man became very
discouraged because bis salary was not
as big ns a tobacco factory, so he bor­
rowed $3,000,000 of a bank, and forgot
to pay* it buck. He had neglected to
mentum to the bunk people anything
about the matter at the time he had
negotiated with himself for tlie pinking
of the Iuud. There caine u day when
it was necessuty, in Hie tranouctiou of
some business, for the Iwink to .make
use of some of its alleged money, and
it was then discovered Chut the funds
bad disappeared.
Ofcburse the bank
folk* were more or 1cm perplexed over
thisHtoteof affairs, and tbe cashier,
who, by the way, had taken the miss­
ing wealth, was questioned concerning
it* whereabouts. He frankly acknowl­
edged that lie hnd erred in making the
appropriation, and was perfectly will­
ing to pay it bu€k; so he examined his
pockets, and he could only turn out
81.19.
The cashier was real mrrry
about not being able to settle, he- sai&lt;i
he h id lost the money, but that he hnd
no intention of doing so nt all, nnd
tbnt us soon ns h® found it lie would
bryig it back to the bank. He said bu
would not like to have the matter, go
any further; his Sunday school class
might hear of it and think strangely of
him. nnd altogether it wonld be bt-.-t,
he felt, if the whole matter wore hush­
ed right up.
4NI*OBTANTTOTKAVELERK,

Special
dal Inducements arc offerei
offered you by the
—— ..
—».
)U t—
;, rejul
Burlington
Route,
It _
will ------payvoi.
----- t]iplr
advertisements to be found efaewbercin
'
this
issue.
SOCIETY BELLIES.
On account of it, remarkably delicate anil
— 1..
—^ ,u
society bellies —arc
loud
their pbraiica ot Flurciton Cologne.

&gt;^1^. a,
.... ।
-lasting
fragrance

CHICAGO

WEEKLY MEWS
NASHVILLE NEWS
$2.00 A YEAR.POSTAGi IN’JLUDED. ‘
THE CHICAGO WEEKLY NEWS la

Journalism. It tanda cujrtpinnnna
the znoLropolitan journals of th* country
as a complete Kewrpaper. Its To’.agraphto
Kervico comprises all the dirpatchco of tbo

rorta.:t points. Ab a tfwpspar it has no
superior. It is INDEPENDENT in Politics,
presen Uns all Political Nows fire® from par-

It is, in the fullest sense, a FAMILY
PAPER.; Each issue contains S*re.-aX
COMPLETED STORIES, A FERIAL
STORY of absorbing interest, and a rids-

atc. Its Market Quotations arm
and to bo rcliod upon.

CONTINENT
A new lltabtrauid

LITERARY WEEKLY JOURHAL.
Conducted by ALBION W. TOURUEE. satbar nl
I A Foofs Errand," ne„ etc.
by iMmel. U.
Briotop sad Robert 8, bar;*.

• OurCuoilocnt " II

JSlJllF^XX.

�to his
tender­
way in which he
Hushing of the
check whenever
on him a careless caress. He wa* not
well and had given up hunting; but he
went Into society more than formerly,
and Lilian could not help noticing when
■he entered a drawing-room leaning
upon his arm that there' was a little iulk
in conversation and people looked at
him admiringly. He was a handsumo
'man. with his abundant gray .hair and
fine soldierly figure- -she contrasted him
thankfully with stout little Mr. Van
Rensselaer, and felt that she would be
proud of him even in a Philadelphia
assemblage of diplomats and dignita­
ries. If only she could hear his name
called with some high-sounding title
attached! Perhaps it was not too late
even now. “Father,” she asked one
day as they rode through the wood
together, “why don’t you go into pol-

brought to the bedside t
earing and served with log_________
tines*. If there is but one bit of real
china cr Silver in the house let it serve
to set out the simple repast to tbq best
advantage^ Tempt eye and appetite
by eveiy appliance. Spread a clean
| napkin over the tray; let bdood and
. glass be bright; that which should be
; eaten hot be made very hot, and tho
cold very cold. Make savory season­
ing a study. Insipidity in such cases is
a crime the palate will not forgive.
Avoid with equal care over-sweetening.
My experience tends to prove that
sweets are among' tho * least desirable
dishes to bo offered to the sick. Acid
jellies and fruits, smartly-flavored
broths and iuicy meats are more popu­
lar and wholesome. The most notable
exceptions are in the matter of ice­
creams and ices, which are eaa,erly
craved by many and usually harmless.
While you lure the sick person to
taste and eat, forbear to- urge upon
him that which he declares he . cannot
relish. Be careful in the beginning not
to surfeit his imagination by kiting
him see too large a quantity of that
which you have.prepared for his use. I
knew one mother who, when raw oys­
ters were ordered for her consumptive
daughter, carried into her a bowl con­
taining a quart of just-opened bivalves,
and reported to tbe physician that the
' “child turned-sick at the very sight.”
',
Tlie doctor who had tact as well
'। as skill, stepped into the next room,
I selected an especially white and plump ,
oyster, and laid it in a pretty china i
• saucer, a tiny slice of lemon beside it.
xmu
dujuju cracaer,
Half ui
of a
a »puv
split Boston
cracker, ugnuv
lightly
^Mted, accom[&gt;anie(l it on a small

8

u3

When Lilian's aunt read the letter
she looked pale and frightened. “ You
must go at once, poor oMld,” she said.
“Of course,” Lilian replied, and hur­
riedly prepared for her journey. How
odd, she thought, that her father had
not mentioned the name of the foreign
Siwh, Doorn, Blinds, Jefferecn Nails, Glass, Putty, Paints.
country to which he was sent. Ns
and«suro sky,
matter, it was enough to know that the
Oils, Varnishes, Color., Brushes, Etc. Castor, Sperm, Golden,
mcv deemed
embassy was an honorable, and an Im­
Black,
Linseed an'd Kerosen” Oils.
portant one. She had a!,way« been
Shovels, Spades, Forks, Hoes, Snaths, Apple Parers, Farm
proud of her father; ahe was not sur­
prised that be should be chosen for
Bells. Fence Wire, Well and Cistern Pumps. Wood and Iron,
such a mission; and now her delighted
Pipe, Points, Cylinders, Lead Pipe, Sinks, lie.
imagination pictured the homage which
■he would receive as tho daughter of a
------------ AGENT FOR——t—
Foreign Minister. Her father need not
have feared that she would miss him—
she had grown accustomed to their sep­
aration and it did not pain her. He
The Lightest Running and most Durable Machine in use.
And wearily Iroru day W» day
bad said that -she should come,-too.
Dnu&lt;s out an aimless piierii
I shall aim to keep none but first class goods, and sell them
Hc leaned forward and gently ca­ She hoped the atatiou'would prove gay
at a small profit. Call and see me when needing hardware.
ressed tho head of one of the bounds and interesting, one of tho principal
with tho handle of his riding whip. capitals of Europe, and she almost re­
A FOREIGN EMBASSY.
“ If I went into politics, Lilian/’ he re­ gretted her rash expression of willing­
Nestled in a
ed nook betweeh plied, “1 would have to leave the Lodge ness to follow her father io some re*
How
two ranges of
th one and perhaps bid farewell to Principle, mote exile.
[-JA.VE YOU REETH THOSE
-dormer windo^ commanding a bend of Peace and Prosperity.”
The stage left her at the wayside
tbe Hudson,with its ample porch
Lilian thought of the words only as tavern, half a mile from the Lodge.
facing the gorge which led like a steep the names of the dogs. “I don’t see She was surprised not to find her father
staircase to the wilderness, stood for why you are so attached to them.” she here to meet her, and Questioned the
many years the hunting lodge of Peter replied; “I was so ashamed all last inD-Veeper, who seemed embarrassed
Van Vechten.
winter to have people say when I was at meeting her.
it had a wild, solitary look, and yet introduced: ‘Van Vechten, it seems to
“ Your fattier has gone away, miss,”
------JUST IN AT-----there were signs of comfort aud even of mo 1 knew your father—let me see— he stammered.
luxury about the place. It^.lonely sit­ wasn’t he a member of Congress for
Lilian cried^ “t:im
—
uation might have been the choice of ------,’ or ‘ are vou tho daughter of Col­ I too late? He must have been sent for
either a very happy or of a grief-strick­ onel or of Jud™ Van Vechten.’ Then suddenly.”
.
. ,
,.
plate. The sick girl smiled at the minen man. At all events it was the her-* some of tho Philadelphia families are
“Yes, mi
_____
. very sudden, Jaia re repast, ate it readily and with
If not, do po at once and be happy.
he was
took
milage of a man who loved to live apart descended from Earls and Dukes, and at the last,” replied the
he man.
positive zest.
from the world. The broad carriage­ have coats of arms emblazoned on the
Tuero/vas nothing to do but to climb |
•'Give one oyster an hour, alternatdrive which swept up to the hospitable panels of their coaches. I never could the hill, vexed that she had had he?
big with a tablespoonful of beef-tea,”
porch was grass-grown and had lost all
find that any of our family were noble journey for nothing, and wondering
nignsof ruu of wheels.
Onlv hoof­ —and one or two of tbe girls have been what messages her father might have . was the doctor’s concluding direction.
A dear young friend once complained
prints here and there told that Peter to England and have been preseated at left for her with tho housekeeper.
Tn, this
line
competition, uuu
and our
our
MS
.
. \ we are bound to lead all vviupvtiiivu,
to me that she could not so much as
Van Vechteuwas as fond of the hunt as court. Edith Verplanck showed mo an
Aa she
onened the
the gate,
crate, Iream
As
she opened
eace laid touch the’muUon-broth ordered for her. &gt;tock just 111 IS larger and better selected than ever before. It
ever, and that h*H daughter Lilian often amber satin dress sho wore at a royal
hugrest muzzle&gt; aflectionately apdnst
“ I foaMe it!” she said, shuddering.
consists
in
Dart
of
‘
rode to the hounds with him.
°
j Mkod to see tho rejected nourish- ( *' ' ' 1,1
reception, to which she was invited just her hind, and Prince laaoed joyfully;
He had been a kind and try» father because her father had been sent on a but old Prosper only looked toward the ——
-------. .had.&lt;,
.
—
It
was exhibited just as she
to his little girl, almost too indulgent diplomatic mission. 1 don’t seem to bouse and howled. So preoccupied | menL
Bent it away—a turccntuf, with floats of I
for,her own bqst good, parting with have anything to be proud off’
was she with her own thoughts that It I clear fat swimming like jelly fish on the j
her company.wuch of lhe lime that she
Lilians father glanced aside.
“I was not until she stood upon tbo very
top, tlie tallowy vapors pouring up from ,
might acquire on elegant education in am sorry you have had occasion to be threshold that she noticed a long scarf
lhe depths. Unfit for tne family table,
■OUR STOCK OF
the city, and living a’ lonely life with
ashamed of your father.” he said, of crape which fluttered from the
it was an abhorrence to tho delicate [
onlv his three hounds as eompanions. quietly.
knocker.
convalescent. It was set by until cold,
At length Lilian's education was pro­
Thou
all
the
awful
force
of
tho
words.
Tho girl’s better nature asserted it­
nounced finished, and she returned to self for tho moment. “I never could “Gone away,” struck the girt Her the congealed tallow removed; to a '
the Lodge. The little window that kept be ashamed of you, dear, kind father.” grief was intensified by her remorse for cupful of the soup was added a tea- .
IS FULL AND COMPLETE
spoonful of soaked raw rice, and sim- i
watch over the Hudson was her own, she cried impulsively. “It is just be­ her selfish behavior, and for a time sho
The lacbest line of Beaver Shawls in two counties
mered in it for half an hour. This was :
and she would look at the passengers cause you are so much more worthy wept for her father as one who could
Kured upon a gill of hot milk, the
flirting by in tho swift-winjp*d schoon- i
A large variety of Ready Made Cloaks; also Cloakings of all
not be comforted. He had been very
atenjdkof an egg stirred in; the
ers on their way to Albany- or New Ji than other men that I fret that you are ill, so tb(f housekeeper told her, all
I not recognized.
1 should think our
whole stood three minutes ina vessel of shades and qualities.
York, for this was before the time of •; country would feel honored to be able winter; but he would notallow any ono
boiling
water,
and
was
turned
into
a
300
Pieces of New Prints. An endless variety of Blank’ts
steamboats or rail-car.
It was very to point to you as its Minister in some to alarm Liliai.. He wrote to her from
dull at the Lodge, in spite of rides upon European city. I am every bit as proud time to time when quite unable to do ; china bowl. Tbe patient ate it all relA big line of Underwear and Flannels.
her pony, and the harpsichord which of you ns Cora Livingston is of her so. He spoke of her lovingly but re- ‘ ishfully, without a suspicion that it had
the remotest connection with the de­
Customers are plenty, and we are-too busy to enumerate
her father loved to listen to in the even­
father—she. always looked so ag- fused to have her sent for.
spised “abomination.”
ing* He had a rich full voice and some­
He had said once, after reading one I
gravatingly when people praised him
Beef Tea.—Chop a pound of lean further at present.
times joined her in
of ter eager quesMnning letters asking 1 beet fine, nnd break the mass apart, that
to her.”
•‘My bcart'a la the Hljrhl*n&lt;ls."
“ But, Lilian, if I were to be sent up­ where he was goiW, “ Tell her this is
He escorted her in her dills at the on a foreign mission, perhaps I could the guide-book. She will find tho city 1 the heat may penetrate it freely. Put
into a glass or stone jar, screw down
O^°?M^ot
take
you
I' _ _. nke
with me. How would all described here.”
the cover, but not tightly or it will
rattled up-1you
----- ”like be'ing left behindF’
Lilian took up the worn Bible and
crock. and set in a pot' of cold water,
n Living••I should not mind it in the least,” found a mark at the passage:
with a flat-iron or other weight on top
“
Eye
hath
not
seen,
nor
ear
heard,
Lilian exclaimed, thoughtlessly. •• I
to keep it from floating. The water
!d visit at should hear people praising you, and so ■ neither hath it entered into tho heart of onuulu
rc;
should nub
not_ reach
the cover, even in
boiling. Brin;
wduld Cora and Gertrude and the other nmo. tb. thing, which God h.th preZ.lag very slowly to a gentle
There' we redwoods for botanizing and girls; and I could hold up my head pared for them that love Him.
»—
&gt;• -and
- ’ cook
-•-* six hours. Ixit the conboil,
embroidery frames for rainy days, but with any of them.”
Then she remembered that her father
lents of the jar got perfectly cold be­
in spite of all this, Lilian was discon­
“And you would not mind if I were ■। had
na(* said
°-t,u that
inM ahe
“ne should
snouia join him
ntm sous
some
fore opening it- Empty into n bowl,
tented. She could not have cared to spend the rest ot my days in Turkey &lt;f»y. nnd she knew how little she d“and remove every particle ot fat.
or India?”
served such an honor as thia. She lacked
Squeeze the meat hard to extract all
jealous of his pets, the three great dogs
•• You would dot have to spend your jithe
lb” graces
Kr-'™« suited
"uiled to the
tbo daughter of‘ an
the nourishment, bait the essence of
with their odd nzmco: Prince, Peace
' '
1 ”--------'
She
beef thus obtained, peppering also, if
and Prosper; so called, their master whole Wo there, would you?” Lillui remembered that Cora Livingston had
explained, because if you held fast to asked: “if you did, couldn't you find ' said; “ I have to be very careful of my I desired; heat quickly to a boil, and
'
strain
through a clean cloth. Mostpeosome
way
tor
me
to
join
youF*
. Principle. Peace and Prosperity would
I
conduct
—
my
father
’
s
position
demands
“ And leave Philadelphia? are you •
• pie like to drink it hot. Should your
follow. Prince was in fact the leader sure
that you would care toF’
\
*I it;” nnd that Edith Verplanck bail told
patient'
prefer it cold, set on ice or in a
of the little pack, and, if you held him
, her that she was more trightened than
“Why, of course, dear father.”
very cold place.
well in leash, £he others never wan­
“Even if it were a half civilized post, I glad when she knew that she was to bn
Arrow-Root Jelly.—Dissolve a lump
dered. Peace was a quiet, inoffensive
' presented at eotjyt, for she 1 eared that
of loaf-sugar in a cupful of boiling
dog. a poor hunter, witnh lovinir dispo­ somethin" like the LodgeF’
water and set this over tlie fire. Wet
“Yes, indeed; and to prove it I’11 not ' she might make some mistake iiretisition aud a melting eye. Old Prosper
quette m the presence of the KingW
np two heaping teaspoonfuls-of best
Was always Incky, and would come leave you this winter. 1 am afraid 1
“
The
King
of
that
world
’
’
—
thought
leaping back with the game lightly but have been a •selfish daughter, and I will Lilian; nnd slje set herself earnestly to ' Bermuda arrow-root with a very little
cold water, and stir into the boiling un­
securely held in his deep jaws, while giro up Philadelphia if you wish it-”
a
study
of
the
code
of
sweet
and
gentle
A smile of bilinite content crossed
til it becomes thick and clear. Should
Prince looked cn with the air of a com­
Peter Van Vechten’s face, but he shopk courtesy which made Christ “tho most the patient crave acids, add a little lem­
manding General.
perfect gentleman of all time:” and to
on-juice. When cold and firm, serve
Lilian wondered that her father could his head... “ No. no, the sacrifice would the acquirement of accomnlishmcnts
i
with powdered sugar and cream. Many
be so happy in the society of these be too great—you enjoy Philadelphia which bho might carry with nor some­
dumb friends. His easy-going temper even though vou are not a grandee's time when she joined the celestial em­ like the cream flavored with rose-water.
daughter,
and
you
shall
go
again
this
i
Cream Toast—Cat slices of stale
grated against her ambitious spirit.
bassy; Little by little the spirit of I bakers’ bread into rounds with a cako.
She chafed, at the Lodge, uot so much winten”
Christ grew within her, she became cutter, raid toast nicely. Butter each
Lilian had forgotten this conversa­
because she was lonely aud longed for
more meek and loving and tr-.sting,
pleasant companionship, for friends to tion when, just before leaving for her and, serving her King, she became wide­ shoe ns you take it from the fire,
love, for opportunities to do good, second w’-nter with her aunt, as the ly known among the poor and suffering sprinkle with salt and put into a hot
And continue the same until Feb. lath, 1882, at which
bowL Have ready a cuptiil of scalding
as chat her proud, imperious nature stage was climbing the hill and the as tbo “kindlylady.”
milk—half cream if you can get it and
tim my Brick Store will lie for sale or rent
1 ringed for continual admiration. She servant carrying out her little cow-skin
An embroidered satin picture of the ■ slightly salted—for every four rounds
did not care whether anyone really covered trunk and well corded cedarn kind that were fashionable when our
loved her. provided she could be envied, boxes, her father took her hand and , grandmothers were young, hangs still of toast Pour into tbe bowl, cover
closely and set in a hollow pan of hot
spoke hurriedly as though moved by I
praised and flattered.
over tho little mantel of the chamber
When winter began she moped -aud sudden impulse: “ And. Lilian, one last overlooking the Hudson, and on a spe­ water in the oven until the bread is like
sulked, and fancied herself the must word; if I should obtain a foreign mis- cies of memorial tablet which adonis its custard in consistency, but not broken
N nmking this grert Cost Cash Sale, I must sny that all parties owing me,
unhappy girl in the world, until early ' sion and go away—I know you love me, center is delicately worked in faded from its shape. Turn out carefully
either by note or account, will be expected to walk up to the Captain’s office
upon a heated saucer.
December an invitation came Xrunx child, but don't grieve—1’11 manage silk this stanza:
and settle at once.
Steaksand Chops.—Remove skin, fat
aunt in Philadelphia, urging her to some w »y to send for you, so be glad •’My boast U not that I deduce my Urth
and
gristle,
and
broil
over
clear
coals,
of
mr
p-omotion.
”
From
Kings
enthroned,
and
rulers
of
tbe
end two months in that city. Philaearth;
turning often to prevent drip and
LH'an was delighted; was it possible But hlyher
Ijihia was thep tho seat of Govern­
far my proud pretentions rise.
Bmokc. Pepper anti salt when both
ment. and a gay and fashionable center. that hex other was keeping back a se­
Tbe child ot parents passed into tbo skies.'*
cret
as
a
glad
surprise
f6r
her
some
Lilian was delighted. She did not ask
I talced In this room with a bent old sides are nicely browned, nnd lay be­
She kissed him rapturously, woman who in her old days had been tween two hot plates for five minutes
herself whether her father might not be day!
lonely in her absence, nor did she for a sprang into the coach, aud, waving a the dressing maid of -aged Mistress Van to draw the juices to the surface.
Pork and veal are pernicious fare for
moment suspect that ho hnd written pretty ellk-mittened hand to the lonely Vechten. “Her senses failed her at
her aunt requesting this invitation—she man standing there with the dogs caper­ loot,” said tho old tiring woman, “for invalids, and often unwholesome for
was simply overjoyed to leave tho ing about him and striving in vain to she took a strange notion that she was ' well people.—Marion Harland, in Ex­
Lodge and to think that now dresses ccnsole him. she rolled gaily away to­ the daughter of*a Foreign Embassador. aminer and Chronicle.
•nd invitations to routs and parties ward Philadelphia.
She grew restless like—and used to
awaited her.
Very touching and tender were the say that she wanted to go to * th*j Em—President Garfield's cousin, Mr. \h the Stock i»nTT fresh, having nil been honght dnn’ng September and October
But even in -Philadelphia Lilian was letters which came to Lilian in tbe early bassv.’ She had always bedn so simple- Harry Boynton, relates a pleasant little t»Dt. at figure* that no dealer in thia m*cti&lt;&gt;n &lt;nn duplicate. Buying ns I do for
quite h&amp;ppy. The society in which winter; they were brief, however, and minded and unostentatious that it story of his school life: There was a air Big Rapids store and this, it give* me the inside track over a small dealer
| thrown was political, at^l young infrequent, and, sometimes, in a pause teemed all the queerer to beo her tak­ rpellinjT-mstch in the little log schoolonoredquit? as much from in tho gay whirl of excitement in which ing such a high fancy. The very dumb bouse.ln which Janies, who was thir­
positions as for their own she found herself,’ Lilian would wonder animals lovedher. I’ve heard her repeat teen years old. took part. The teacher
or beauty. It waa mortifying to why her father wrote so seldom. Per­ the names nf a pack of hounds that used told her scholars that if any w his [Mired
osce Miss Van Rensselaer, of haps he was busy with negotiations in to belong to her father. ‘Peace and Pros­ sue would send them home. The lad
leading the contra dance, just i regard to tho foreign ministry or em­ per,’ she’d say; ‘keep Principle and standing next to James became con­
«l»o told her jealous heart, bassy. He referred to it sometimes in you'll always have Peace and Prosper.’ fused. and to help him James told him .
On my &lt;’f&lt;Mhing, Hain, Cn|m, Boots nnd Hhocs
an Renssetn-r’s paua was s great a sentence like this:
She was a dear, kind lady. The night Low to spell his word. The teacher Will .'uitonikli you. while all the Dry Goode and Groceriea will spoil follow in
How provoking, too, to count
“Don’t be aihamed of your old before she left us, she came out of her saw this and said: •• James, you know
tho muue track.
_ ...
’
1
’
bouquets and the ad- father; a prospect of high honor opens room. ‘Get my best brocade, Calisty,’ the rule. You must go homo.” James
round Gertrude Van before, him;” or “When I am gone said site. ‘ I am going to the Embassy
picked up his cap and left In a very
She was sure .-Cora don’t forsake Principle, and may Peace My white brocade with gold-thread few seconds he returned, and took his
ce would pot lave and Prosperity never desert you.”
figure—I mm* look my best—in the place In the class. “ Why, how is this, VOU arc especially hivjted to bring all your Butter, Eggs, Isud and Dried
Occasionally he .spoke of a “long presence of the King.’ * Then she let James? 1 told vou to go home.” said
sation if her father
I Apples to nn- ns I Fave several luinltcr camps nt Big Rapid*, to supply, end
journey;’! but, though Lilian wrote me put her to bed as peaceable as s his teacaer. “ 1 know it, and I went ttn i« a rikuation to
you higher prices than other dealers can.
;
heard of enthusiastically. or curiously, and child; but about midnight she sat tip.
tho asked her- begged him to confide bi-t projects to ‘It’s my turn, Calisty, she cried, her
her,he kept his necret well
voice all trembling with hapninesa. Il’s
'F*O myoid cQAtomem, whom 1 htive
One dismal day in February Lilian
I you will respond tn the call#
and confer dlMinc- ■W quite atoll
ben in. without aniutxwt, and r-■
Ir ill and k—
raia drove
a oandlu as
e«ld BM to thraul • needle

B nilders

H ardware,

DOMESTIC SEWING MACHINE

____________ FRANK C. BOISE

New .Fall Godds
KOCHER BROTHERS

New StYle Cashmeres, Plaids, Brocades, Etc.

KOCHER BROS.

BARGAINS
f TEAT ARE BARGAINS, AT

Aylsworth’s
I £thall commence n

COST cash SALE
OF MY ENTIRE STOCK

I

Purchasers can effect a big saving
By patronising me for the next sixty days

THE REDUCTION LN PRICES

�Heating Stoves, Cook Stoves and Ranges.
One dollar a bottle.
ertion aud poraevenyico which ba*
thousand* of men from tbe con-

ALL SIZES AND PRICES TO SUIT.

the young tool or tbe old fool p but tbe old lool

Boaicbt far caali and can AJTO will be sold cheap. Call,and nee them and you
will be convinced. A large aMprtwent to select from ; among them

The Handiest, Most Durable and Best Round Stove

an old foot

-*------- IN THE MARKET---------

GRAND RAPIDS

DIVISION.

•TAT1ON8.

mimmmu.^

STATIONS.

VcrmotlvUK.

Bubvili*.......

12:12

IftSD 1205
Throuti Co»cbr»~Zu&lt;fs&gt;eeptn&lt; Can to and from
■GrauJ Rjpui. nod DcUuit. AU trains connwit In
aame dapot at Detroit witkOraal Wealorn, Grand
Trunk and f’anida Southern Railway!.
S. O. BROWN,
H. B. LEDYARD.
Aaa't Gon’l Bupt'Jaekaon. Uan’l Bnp't Detroit

II a fai C. WaaTvoai n.

Oati'l Past and Ticket Aacnt.Cblcaao.

W. NI8KERN, Attorney and Counsellor
• at Law, practices in all Stale Courts. Col­
lections promptly attended to. Ofllce over
Spaulding’s stored Hastings Midi.

P

J J A. BARKER, M.
*

HOMCEOPATHIC

Physician and Surgeon.
OflJcc’flrat door east of Opera House, am!
T&gt;ear residence on comer of Washington and
Slate Streets, Nashville, Midi.
J^OOT AND SHOE SHOP.
I ara naw at home In my now ahopla tb« balMhx
rerently vacated by Mra Cctwker, where I am pre-

BOOTHandSHOES

F1»8HOE0» sMctalty.

___________ A. BURCMAH

OBSERVE, COMPARE, REFLECT, ACT!
NEW DENTAL PARLOR.
I wish to'inakc known to the citizens of
Rashville am! vicinity that I hare purchased
the practice ot J. ll Sigsbee, and am permanntmtiy located over G. A. TRUMAN’S store.
All kind* of.DENTAL WORK done, tram the
simplest operation to the most difficult,—Arti­
ficial Palates. Irregular natural teeth etralgbtened. teeth extracted without pain for 50 eta;
one-half deducted when artificial work is made
All work warranted, advice in regard to teeth
free call and see me.
P. B. Will do dental work for 8 cords of wood.
I&gt;K. A. II. W1SN.

BUSH,
*

"THE BOSS"

BOOT ABD SHOE MAKER,
NASHVILLE,
.
MICH.
Bapatriwg &lt;— vttt gsoasss and BUyaUk.

■yyOLCOTT HOUSE,
A. S. Foote, Proprietor.
Tlil» U a new Hole!, centrally located, w

J^ATHBLM HOUSE,
A- B- aNTIBDEL, Pzonirroa

Grand Iteplds, Mloti.
This Boom furnishes tta best uxoannotoMou of any beuM ta ths city far ths Basra
wmay.

QLEMEIT SMITH,

Attorney at Law,

about fifteen acres, in a high state of
fertility, and was divided into atrip*
across the field a distance of forty rod*,
on which were growing tobacco, rye
and grass, they selecting the rye-patch
and a atrip of the grass alongside of the
rye for their feeding, resting,and trans­
forming ground. A noticeable feature

with which their encampment is lined
out. About twenty feet in the grass
the “dead Udo” was fixed the whole
distance across tiie field, which was
plainly traceable by tho difference in
the height of tho grass. None were
•con over lhe line save an occasional
straggler. The tobacco ground made
the opposite boundary, and, the
end* being fenced, completely lined
them in, which was strictly observed by
them all through the bcwoh. Unlike
many armies, they were well .supplied
with food in their own camp. When
supplies are exhausted and ••starvation
stare* them in the face,” they prepare
to move for other fields simultaneously.
Forming themselves into a solid body,
they move in military order, each
••covering it* file-leader;” stopping at
intervals to •• take in stores” cn route
to their new feeding-grounds. Thus
the name given them. Like all ani­
mal*. they have their feeding and rest­
ing hours. "Those they observe with
tlie same precision that characterizes all
their movements. When feeding-time
comes, tbo whole camp is in motion.
They are seen crawling up the rye, un­
til the whole field presents one mass of
blackness. The repast over, they des­
cend to the ground and conceal 'them­
selves under any thine that comes in the
way, where they rest in a sort of
stupor.
It has been said by some writer that
they puncture the blossom-cud of the
berry, and extract tbo milk or juice
from it, which was claimed caused a
shrinkage in the berry. I failed to see
much difference in the size of the berry
iu the head and beardless heads. The
rye-stalks were left standing, not hav­
ing been disturbed bv them. The foli­
age and beard to the heads were cleanly
strip|&gt;cd off,giving tho field the appear­
ance of having been sown to some
"bald-head” variety.
The heavy
yield of straw and grain (forty bushels
to the acre) wa* satisfactory to the
owner. Tho gras* fell short fully twotbirds of the average yield to the field.
I brought from the field some twenty
that were in tho pupa state, with a view
to producing increase from them, for
experimenting purpo os. In about a
week two millers camo to tho surface.
One was perfect, the other very im­
perfectly matured and soon ' died.
After waiting a short time for the de­
linquent*. I made an examination of their
condition, and found they had nearly
all come out of the shell and were dead,
showing they too had suffered in like
manner. Thinking the trouble camo
from removing them from the field, I des­
troyed them, thus losing an important
opportunity to investigate the cause of
the trouble, A vigilant -search was
made in the field by night and by day
for the millers, in "their season. Two
only were secured, which soon died.
All insect* have their^encmies. In­
sectivorous and parasitic insect* destroy
a large proportion 61 all insect*, friends
and foes. They hold in check vast
horde* of destructive species that would
otherwise devastate the whole country.
Not being quite satisfied with what I
had already learned of their mysterious
disappearance, I visited fiie field again
soon after tho crops were harvested. I
began by prospecting on the surface,
and then digging for something to "turn
UD,” without finding sa much as a pupa­
shell to show where tbe millions had
entered the grouniLA
,
We were told by^bnre'ehtomological
writers two broods or generations
might he exacted in the same season.
•Wah kindred insect* we might reason­
ably have expected it, as they entered
the ground regularly and apparently in
good order. Not a worm or miller
(save the two mentioned) has been
seen there or anywhere in that region
since they entered the ground, a year
'go, for the chyraali* change.
I know of no way to account for what
appears to be a complete annihilation
of the entirely colony, except through
the agency of parasitic insects.—Cor.
If. Y7 Independent

Attomay A Counsellor,
CieluMd Mu.

JgLACKX BONt

Ainericaii and Foraign Marble..
XamUEGRtS. ’Frjpiliri.rr-M VbhHm An

If any one wishes to know something
of the unbiassed and their despair, he
has only to advertise for a junior clerk,
a time-keeper, night porter, or other
employe ot the untrained sort. For
days he will be overwhelmed with let­
ters from many parts of the country.
Some of them will be concluded in Ad-

mental power. Others will be pathetic
appeals for a trial, concluding with a*suraocea of life-long devotion if en­
gaged. Others will contain recitals of
a struggle for bread so painful as to
equal anything found! in fiction. Rut if
the advertiser wishes to know the
darker deep* in which many of the unin hia new building, ciassed dwell, he will receive the appli­
cants in person. Tiie veil which hides
the obscurer movements of society will
CBOMS-CUT A CIRCTL1R SAWB.
then be lifted, and the spectator will be
amazed at what he ttoei and hears.
What waste of life, what corrosion of
energy, what desperate tragedies' The
.
Prices on Saw Work.
terrible epoch for tbe unclassed lie*
Circle raw gumming and iununering all s*wa from tlie twenty-fifth to the thirtieth
ma , JP
40
W rent* per inch.
year. Friend* aud relatives of the same
40 Inch, Gummed, 9»n, Hammered, 03.00
W ”
”
8,00
‘««
*00
■ 00 n
"
4.®
’’
5.1J0
(HmmfiiKaml Hammeringx-etrt«aw«,

BUXTON

ATTENTIOm SAW MILL MEH!

Ilaiuun-riiHt cnxikej
Prompt Ltu-utkru g.vm to circular saw work
A.&lt;\ BI XTOX.

b»

Mere'* Engineers.

Modern engineer* think they have
carried tbe art of surveying to very
great perfection, but a good deal of it
must have been known in ancient times.
No read is so imperishable as a Roman
road, which indicate* that the enginMra
not only built well, but -chose good
route*, especially in their exemption
from the action ot flood?- The Indian
engineers seldom fiucLthat they can im­
prove on "the route* selected for ancient
native canal* or the site* chosen for
huge tanks, and this week Colonel Tarr
Siteda stlllmoro striking instance.
had been savveying for the canal to
•be cut through the Isthmus of Corinth,
and after a most careful examination of
three alternative routes has decided
that tiie one selected by tlie Emperor
Nero's engineers is by far the best. Not
to mention that it I* shorter than all
others, the •‘Xrace of Nero” termi­
nate* at each end in calm and deep
water; and "another advantage of the
Nero trace consist* in the disposition of
the slopes, which favors it, inasmuch
a* the canal would be then protected
'against tho flood* in the ravines along
the slopes, while -the two other line*
would catch these waters.” That shows
scientific surveying; and it is to be
noted, that Nero's engineers, like Alex­
ander's, bad freed themselves from the
singular superstition which so greatly
influenced modern opinion, that the
wiUjcrs of tho two seas were never ot
tho same height This'argument waa
actually thrown at M. De Lcsscps as a
serious one. not only against tho buoz
C inal, but the Canal of Corinth.—Lon­
don Spectator.
Disparity in Ages.

PONDER ON THESE TRUTHS.
Kidney Wort Sr nalurc* rcmefly for kidney
and liver dUeaw. pile* and cotulpation,
Sediment ur meu-ous tn the urine U a aure iadlcation of dlMwe, Take Kidney Wort,
Torpid liver and kidneys puiwti the blood.
Kidney Wort revives them aod cleanses tbe
system.
Headache, bilious attacks, dizziness, and
loMi«rf appetite are cured by Kidiwy Wort. •

In money matters treat strangers m though
they were your relasvcs.
.

A Constantinople Fire.

Both Iron and Wood, also pipe for same, and a few thousand
other things. The

It is a good rule to find out whetbertt Is Is under the management of ALBERT SELLICK, a man of year*’ exper­
ience, who can do you a first-claas job of any kind. .Please call an I HENRY or
bread or stone before yon bite IL
myself will jdiow yoa goods and-be pleased to seSl yon anything in my line you
MATRIMONY.
may want.
.•
Thousand.* arc wedded for life to the use of
Rinehart* Liver Pilis, because they never sick­
en or gripe and require only one for a dose.

C. L. GLASGOW.

Double Hardware, West Side Main St., Nashville, Mich.

after the rapture of moments.
Tbe symptoms of Itching Piles are motature
like prvj&gt;piiaUou, in tense itching, m&lt;Mit at night
seems as If pin worms were crawling in or
about tbe rectum. Tbe more you scratch the
»urn! they itch, very dlstra-Ming. Tbe private
port*.are often affected. Dr. Swayne's Oint­
ment. liHbe most effective renu-dy extant for
ibis tormenting complaint. Gives rest at night
without that desire to scratch. Also has on
eqnjil in quickly eradicating Tetter, Itrh. .Salt
Rlwume,Tr)sij&lt;la«. Barbera’ Itch, Pimples,
all Scaly, Cnisty. Itchy Skin Eruptions. Here
lithe proof, “Certainly tbe best remedy 'erer
iiacd In my practice,” Dr. Cottou, Woodstock,
VL. “troubled with Itching Piles for over Ken­
ly- yeans R cured me completely,’’ L. S. Messer
ffn’field. Me. Sent for 50 eta (in 3 cL stamps)
.1 iMixt-s. *1.25, .By Dr. Swayne Sun. Phil ail’a
P*. Sold by nil druggists.

- Truth is violated by falsehood, and It may be
equally outraged by silence.

OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE

FOR SALE!
WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH

THREE INCH TIRE,
AS OUR HOADS DEMAND SOMETHING

BETTE R THAN COMMONJTIRE.
We believe the Three inch Tire is destined to come
into general use. fiall and see them.

BENTLEY BROS. &amp; WILKINSHastings, Mich., Sept. 15th, 1881.

Pioneer Store.

■ |

Fall and Winter Goods are arriving every day. Due preparation is half the battle of life, and anticipating the needs of
our customers, we are “laying in” a good supply of the neces­
saries for protection and comfort against the reigns of’the fast,
approaching winter.
•
A better stock of Boots and Shoes can not be found any­
where. Clothing a specialty;
Hats and Caps of the latest styles.
„
Ladies and Misses Cloaks and Dolmans
Children’s Knit sacques.
Prints, from 5 cents to 8 cents.
Dress Goods in variety and shades to suit the. most
&lt;
E. PINKHAM’S fastidious.
vesetabm: coxpouiro.
Our aim is to deal justly with everebodv, and if we don’t do
the fair thing, we ask you to make us. The highest! market
price will be paid for produce. *10,000 lbs. Dried Apples, 10,­
000 bus. Com wanted in exchange for goods, also 500 solid
cords of stove wood, seasoned.
a*
With two of the best clerks in the country, we are nor only
ready to serve you, but take pleasure in serving you in
whatever way we can. Give us a call.
Very greatful for past favors we respectfully ask a continu­
ance of your patronage.
.

Dolma-Baghtsche were homed to the
ground. Tho buildings were construct­
ed by Saltan Mahmoud, early in the
present cfcnturv. as barracks for the Im­
perial Guard, but wen. converted into
stables, and have been used for this
purpose daring the reigns of the last
three Sultans. Formerly the whole of
the imperial stud wa* rtabled in the
buildings; bat of late years the choicer
LIBIA E. riXKUAX-B VEGETABLE COVspecimens of Arab blood have been
transferred to a theater opposite, built
by Abdal Aziz, which, after being
pitted by fire, was fitted up with loose­
boxes for gems of the Imperial stud.
When the nre broke oat there were
w!lhc«t LYDIA X. ITVXJUKT
upward of three hundred and fifty
horses in the stables, many of great
value, especially tlie selected team* of
grays, blacks, chestnuts, bay*, browns
and iron-grsy*. All these animals were
saved, bat uot before they had trampled
four persons to death. Among other .
We continue to act aafaUcltara farPat«ita.ClBrBai3,
property destroyed, such a* stores
of Trade
•
res Ol
Marks. &lt;v.;.yrigtUL &lt; te.. fur tbo tidied Males,
forage, stable-furniture, and so forth,
fc^L. pmada. Qiba, EnglaiidTyraDee. Germany, etc. Wo
' JD^er to*™
bad Ualrty-ave years’exiMTiencc.
were a number of carriages, no longer
' 1 P«t«it*obtained Ujrmgh iu are t:utieed In tbe 80In use, but objects of interest a* lllasillus- nmm Anmvxs. ThfRlargn and splendid iffusweekly l«prr. $3.20ayrar,*bcw» tbe Progress
traling the changes in the fashion of‘ bated
'
very h:u-n«tlng, and has ail enormous
ooech-building in the coarse of the last of
{ Science, b Address
etreutation.
MUNN A CO. Patent fotlc!tora. Pub's, ot Scnrimnc AMnucax, S7 Pur» Bow,
century.—St. Jamcst Gaz&gt;.Uc.
KewTcrk. Hand book about fiumtafree.

PATENTS
NO PATENT NO PAY.

—A Free Education League ha* been
formed in great Britain to procure tho
abolition of all fee* in connection with ' n i T f UT A
National education. Tbe Lcsgae cite*
the example of the United States in free
education, and notes that Franca,
profiting by tho experience of other
nations, has this year established free i . u u' iai
education In all her primary schools.

IP1TEITS

__ —In Paterson, N. J., tbe girl* who
work in the factorlc* are paid no much
better than the young men that the
girh do the treating and pay for the
ice cream and oysU’ru when they ga
oat together.

Cora Shelters, Cutters, Bob-sleighs, cut lery, Clothes Wringers, Pumps,

Have you Catarrh! “Dr. Sykes’ Sure Cure",
b an unfailing remedy. Have you heard

HOW WONDERFULLBMAN: •»
Tho old man who marries a young
Man la a physical, intellectual, and moral be­
girl doe* not do a very wise thing, aud
nis bride risks her happiness and often ing. becomes most completely developed in all
hia
parts
bu I faculties by using daily, at least,
lose* it. But there is a certain beauty
doc of Brown’s Iron Bitters. Many thouin tlie admiring protection of the bin­ ^sands arc ready to testify that It is tlie best
band, and, whatever' her disappoint­ medicinal ionic in' tbe world! It strengthens
ment may be, in nine case* out of ten every part of the body and excels everything
she keep* hor own secret. Her ro­ else In It* soothing and refresiug effects on the
whole general animal system. •
mance may bo dormant, but affection
is very strong in women, and she m'w- A Texas man was lynched for riding a mule
bo.fond and proud of a very old man on Sunday. It n as another man's mule, by tiie
who retains nis faculties and his emo­
tions and loves hor well. But of the
Write to Mn*. Lydia E. Pinkham, 233 West­
old woman who marries a boy what cun
we say, what can wo think? In such a ern eve. Lynn. Mai-*, for pemphleta relative to
the curative i&gt;ro|&gt;«ilca of her Vegetable cumunion there can bo neither dignity nor pound iu all female complalnla.
beauty. Tho man’s motive is usually a
mercenary one, and the woman is simfdy his dupe. Tho clergyman who per- Mar. LYDIA E. HIUM, OF LYBH, MISS..
orm* the marriage ceremony know*
thi* at the altar; tho friend* who go to
church to see them married feel it
acutely. The conCTatulation* are hol­
low and forced. Even where an old
woman’s lingoring beauty has tempora­
rily captivated a youth, the looker-on
can feel nothing but sorrow—the infat­
uation must bo so brief, the rebound *o
terrible. Man’s love i* often so light a
thing oven when youth and borfty
rivet, it! A wife has sometime* so
much to suffer oven whore she ha*
chosen wisely. "Die contempt one can­
not help feeling for- the woman who
barters her freedom, the scorn one
must cherish for the man who aclt*
himself for a fortune, are scarcely so
strong as the pity that anses for two
bound together for life under such cir­
cumstances a* make even ordinary con­
tentment an utter impossibility.—TAc
Daisy.
'

Constantinople is a city of fires, nud
"vast conflagrations” are in, that city
commqp incidents. A fire, however,
which occurred there tlie other day at­
tracted more than usual sympathy, tbo
damage done being estimated at three
hundred and fifty thousand pounds ster­
ling. and tbe property destroyed being
of a peculiarly valuable character. On
the night of September 11 tho stables

Cali and so* it anyway. I also have a fall line ot aeaaonable goods
qonsiating of

ehtaiMdfar mscbaolsal Aevir

1011188$

।
41^

x ?

L. J.Wheeler.

We are Ready
FOR.

A

SLASHfcvO

New Furniture
' A_rriving Daily.

Parlor Suits, Bedroom Suits, Gents’ Easy Chairs,
Ladies’ Rockers, Camp Chairs, Fine
Couches, Extension Tables, Center
Tables, What-nots, PictureFranies,
Bureaus, and in fact -JSyi’rytiling
Else Needed to Furnish a House.

UNDERTAKING a Specialty.
Don’t buy until you see our Goods and get our prices.

KELLOGG, BELL &amp; CO.

...

1

-Ji

�A Ch..
Ud
three mee .
‘
barbarous. When an animal’s head is
robbink a honae. He procured a Distol
kept in one position constantly for any
andaenthi* younger brother to ring length of time, it must necessarily be­
W. Gnitean. tbe cowardly
1 President James A. Garfie^l, the door 1*11. white he posted himmslf come tiresome and painful. Whether
at the rear. Tbe thieve* ran put when
"tlirylieani the'bell. The boy colluretl
x conthe first, allot the second, and sent two in the atancblon ia nudnUtned. How­
Wedever strenuously and honestly the ad­
bullet* alrtr the third.
vocates and defenders of tbe stanchion
M«1.X afternoon.,
•
Tbe trial which has lasted fif ty-three - A Connecticut clergyman lately disday* is now at an end, tbe jury which tiuguiidied himself in a hand-to-hand
fact remain* that common experience
have did their part of the work nobly, struggle with a burglar, and.now Fath- and common sense alike teach that the
have been discharged, and the people erDanenhaucr of a Baltimore Roman almost rigid position of an animal’s
of the United States have drawn a loug Catholic church ia praised for a simi­ head fastened in a stanchion can not
i breath of relief.
lar achievement. A thief, who hnd I be comfortable when confined therein
Judge Porter in hj* dosing argu­ robbed the poor box, drew a knife nnd for any length of time. It is not a sick­
ment used very scathing term* in regard warned the priest hot to touch him. ly sentimentality that prompts the op­
to the prisoner, and was constantly Then tlie reverend gentleman took a position which haa been made to this
unbuman fastening. However easy and
interrupted by the babbliug balder­ piatol from under hi* cassock and gave comfortable it may be to stand in the
dash of Guiteau.
tlie rascal a choice between death and natural position for awhile, it necessari­
Judge Cox occupied an hour and a surrender.
ly becomes irksome and at last painful.
There are a number of devices for fas­
half in his charge to Um jury, in which
A man aud wife found a stranger ill tening that are simple and economical,
be briefly stated the different phases of
the case, cleared up all dark aud mys­ under their woodshed, at Irondale, II].,' any one of which are, in oar opinion,
preferable to the stanchion. The ad­
tified points,.and explained the law in and kindly put him to l&gt;ed. On .learn­
liis disesMi waa small pox, they ' vantages claimed for the stanchion are
■ a clear, effective and credible manner. ing that
with which tney
they are mampumanjpu,,
.
...
। ' tljo
‘■yo ease wilu
.Innot
—.n,aHow the
__animals
- 1
■_
to
When the jury had received the case would not turn him out, but nursed teud: they do
and gone to tbeir room, tbe prisoner him throuh it, at the cost of consider- Btep backward beyond a certain line,
who has all along maintained all the able time, labor and money, neither of • nor lie down in their droppings. The
brazen pomp of a conquering hero, which they could afford to give away, arguments in favor of stanchion* rests
mainly on these claims, but as against
broke entirely down, and begged to be When be hod recovered he stole $17
the cruelty of the method it loses its
taken fnoni tbe room, which request from them and fled.
force.
L‘ “
uted; When Ute jury returned
Among other devices used are gates
The laws of acoustics are so imperfect
of various kinds, halters of different
. to thei* placi ’ -afteFttu absence ot less
ly undestood that, in building a public
than ‘ hour, the prisoner was led in,
styles, some of them with a,chain slid­
hall, it is largely a matter of luck whelh ing through a groove in the manger in
. breathless silence reigned
and
er audiences will be able to hear well in which is a roller of light weight attached
Ah I wish to reduce my stock $5000 worth by Feb’y 1st, I will make special inducements
throughout the room, yet everybody
it. Horticultural Hall, in Philadelphia, to tho end of tho chain. Sliding halters on my entire Stock.
teemed excited to the highest pitch.
was so defective in this regard that the of various kinds are used; but among
Tho foreman announced that they had
owner decided to try the effect of cer­ the simplest devices is the old-fashioned
agreed upon upon a verdict of guilty,
strap, to
tain alterations, and, if tbej failed tear broad leather VTU.u
-----fasten
i------ around
and a burst- of applause ensued which
i
. .
•
. ,
the animal’s neck with a ring attached,
th. bulliboKdowo. A tateoocert,!«.«- A
chlln
hoJk or MU,h
could not be checked. When order had
ever, proved that a remedy had been attached ada*Ai of fastening or releasagain been restored, Guiteau said:
found.
.
. | Ing the animal instantly. Tho chain
"My blood will bo upon tho heads of
— ■
■ ■
I may slide on a roller either in or over
this jury, and don’t you forget it.”
Hanlson, "the boy Evangelist,’ the manger, » as not to admit of enJudge Cox then thanked the jury for worked up a great relgious revival in tangling the animal. Another device is
their faithfulness in the discharge of hidiannpoils last spring, and the num- made to fasten around the horns—or in
memberof 1polled
is ----------attached to
their duty and dismissed them, after erous
&lt; tuun converts
Luiin.nr swelled
nuviivv* tho
liiu
uiiniwii- ■ the case
,
&gt;---- ■catUe,
------ 1
—
JN making tbe following statement, we utter tbe truth, and can verify it.
z
*or
PurPos« two
which tho court was declared adjourn­ ship of the Koberts Park church beyond *, .U5r
ed.
in Ci.,
Tho general opinion is that a new city, H.irnsou has now returned and I
» f r________________
trial will not be granted, although Sco­ begun
beirun similar
Mmilnr hs-rvices.
-rrieea The
Tlie Method- I
s____ - of rt
__ o_u_
Influence
Lime
on Soils.
ville will file a motion for one to-day. ist clergy discussed him iu their Mon- .
In the city, at bottom prices, fair nnd square weight aud measure. When
Should bis motion be not granted, an day meeting, nnd the weight of sentiL-nti- '
Profe-wor E. W. Hilgard, in discussing
we advertise the most complete Stock ol
appeal brill be taken to the court en ment was strongly against him. One
tho “Objects and Interpretation of Soil
(
banc in April.
minister accused him of insincerity, on Analyses,’’ gives among other things tho
Scoville believes that when tbe ex­ the ground that, while protesting an following advantages resulting from an
citement of the trial has entirely left entire devotion to revivalism, ho id- ■ adequte supply of limo in soils :
Etc., in Batry and Eaton counties, we are telling the people a fact that can­
1. A morS rapid transformation of
not be successfully and truthfully denied. It consists of a large variety of sta­
the prisoner he will become a raving ways demanded high wages, and wen t
vegetable matter into active humus,
ple goods and a large assortment of
maniac.
where the greatest pecuniary induce- which
r
manifests itself by a dark, or
The jury has shown the world that ments were offered. Harrison replies deep black tint of the soil.
w are
BROWN’S IRON BITTERS aro
this conscienceless, cowardly, cgostis- that bis detractors are simply jealous
—------2. The ------------retention of
such —
humus.
a certain cure fbr all diseases
In various designs nnd styles, also a well selected Stock of
tical and
assassin
■* ■depraved
’
’ --------* has *been on account of his success in saving ak&amp;inst the oxidizing influences of hot
requiring a complete tonic; espe­
shielded froni public violence, not be­ «...!* and pr»v. for tbem in an «... '
cially Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Inter­
centag&amp;4 of such soils, as against all
cause there existed a particle of sym­ plintic manner.
mittent Fever*, Want of Appetite,
: other*, in thp Southern Slates.
pathy for him, but because the law is
In Tea Setts, Water Setts, Cups, Saucers, Pitchers, Etc. An endless variety
Loss of Strength, Lack of Energy,
3. Whether through tlie medium of
Fox hnijting is done more economi­
of Vases, Toilet Setts, Flower Setts, Etc. in
■greater than vegenance. The verdict
etc. Enriches tho blood, strength­
this humus, or in a more direct manner,
ens tho muscles, and gives new
is a righteous one, aud “So say we, all cally in Ireland this year than over Im- it areaders adequate for profitable cullife to tlie nerve*. Acts like a
tore t
_________
.
of w»” cornea up from the hearts of the fore. Pobr Reynard is despatched by j। tire
percentages
of phosphoric
acid and
charm on the digestive organs,
sh so
so small
smiul that^
that, in
in the
the case
case of
of de
de-­
people of every nationality, from every the Leaguers with*tbe utmost prompt- potash
Too numerous to mention, nnd so cheap that all car afford to buy.
removing all dyspeptic symptoms,
quarter of the globe. The only thing nes*. and without the interventions ticienCy or absence of lime, the soil is
such
ns tasting the food. Belching,
we can add to this is, let the hangman either of horses or hounds. Under die practically sterile.
Heat in the Stomach, Heartbum,
4. It tends to secure the proper main­
do his work ns well as the jury did circumstance*, each killing of a fox ।
Of everj- style, color and design. When you are ready to buy, I am ready
etc. The only Iron Preparation
tenance of lhe conditions of nitrification,
to sell. AU kinds of Produce taken in exchange for Good*.
possbly gives ns keen an enjoyment Io ■ whereby the inert nitrogen of tho soil is
that will not blacken tho teeth or
theirs.
give headache. Sold by all Drug­
the slayer as when performed in die rendered available.
Nearly $10,000,000 was taken from costlier sportsmanlike fashion. Never­
gists nt $1.00 a bottle.
5. It exerts a most important physical
- tbe mines at Utah last year, and a bul­ theless, the huntsman are not happy action on the flocculation, and there­
BROWN CHEMICAL CO.
lion product of $13,000,000 is predicted
Baltimore, Mil.
fore
on
the
tillability
of
tho
soil,
as
at having their autiuu labor saved for
for the present year.
them. At the present rate of destruct­ shown by Schloasing and by myself.
Professor Hilgard adds that in the ma­
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.
A Virginia father has eleven child­ ion the Leaguers will in^ke as clean • jority of soils (excepting thc’ie that are
arv
’AP for 19&lt;_! wiih improved Id
ren named in the consecutive Latin work of the foxes in Ireland as Sr. extremely sandy), tho lime percentage
dry F'
U tret;
u-rmt table. calendar. etc e
is greater in tno subsoil than in tbe Scut to any oddrvw ou rcc-’inl of two th&lt;®«-ccnt
numerals from "Primus” to “Undcci- Patrick did of the snake*.
•limp, Adders CHARLES t. HIRES, 49 N. D»cl
surface
soil.
This
is,
doubtless,
he
ex
­
mus,”at the birth of hi* tenth boy the
A curly-haired boy, being .complain­ plains, the result of tbo easy solubility
WHO IS UNAC
YITH the okocraphy of this country.
latter waa named “Decimus Ultimus”
ed of by a New York merchant, for of calcic carbonate in the soil water,
or tenth and last, but, somehow, aud
which
carries
it
downward
and
thus
peddling buttons in front of bis store,
other son followed, and was dubbed
for lhe winter In tnmilnB iliuri&lt; tx. Very
This
pleaded his own case before tho justice tends to deplete the surface soil.
lUrc® return* lor ecisnparaurciy little labor.
“Undecimu*.”
nh".ilam ftiidro-* ImnitMliatrlr
as follows: "I live with my father and fact is strikingly shown in tho results of
Loughridge's investigation or tho commother.
I
am
a
poor
boy,
and
if
my
TheDapkards; ef Indiana consided
positioiWH the several sediments. The
parents were rich I would not have to efficacy of limo in preventing “runninggrammar frivelous and therefore pr&lt;H
peddle. My father was a merchant to-wecd” in fresh soils, ana in favoring
test against their children being
tho production of fruit, is conspicuously
taught it in tbe public schools. The not many years ago, but now he has to shown in a number of cases. '
state uperinteudent decides that the peddle too.” The justice remarked that
teachff* may omit tbe offensive study, the complaining merchant took up
Action of Paris Green on Potatoes.
but tells them to impart orrally to the more of the sidewalk with bis busi­
Jlddiwa PaabaaySn^
Dunkard pupils “all that is practical of ness than the boy did, and that ns be
The action of Pans green on potatoes,
lnow
was tiying to earn an honest living be
the subject.
: it is thought by some growers, is to
would not interfere with him.
‘ hasten their maturity. The American
After stealing h barrel of flour from
It iu a great thing to begin a year Cultivator' expresses the following opin­
a’Fittabnrg store the other evening
ions on tbrt subject:
“As Paris green
that has nothing ominous about it It does not enter into the composition of
and taking it bom© in a wagon, the
k also a great thing to have passed the plant, it is impossible that it should
thieves were much surprised to find
through a year winch had a good deal affect in any way or manner the tubers.
tlon Wlthoat Taking Chloroform.
themselves arrested almost as soon as
that was ominous about it. Though We might, however, say that the lack
they had reached the bam. In lifting
the famous prophecy regarding 1881 of Paris green or other "insect destroyer
(Krubi ite Courier.]
the'barrel into the wagon they started
Mr». Schoonmaker, of Cfeek Locks. Cutef Co.
was bogus, yet that date was undenia­ would increase the maturing qualities of
the hoops which allowed so marked a
the tubers.
Most of our farmers apply
ble one in which two eights backed up
Paris
g.-oen
freely
to
the
potato
vines
up
trail of white flour to track them tlie
against each other and and two ones to the time of their blossoming when
cd painful inQatuatory action therein for two Ton*
whole way that even a policeman
flanked them. It is only once in 110 the tubers are forming.
After this years ; the other eye Anally becomia* aympatlwileould not err therein.
I, Th, Craat CmneotlM Link bMwMn th, (ut and the West t
years that this sinisterjuxtaposition of time, however, another brood of bugs
There are theatrical manager* who name rain happens, and when it does make* its appearance, but farmers are Hi ihh terrible atrait th« conMilted Dr. D»*U
SMOKING
ant to argue that the polotoes, being
&gt;Ul N. T. who told hrr at O-.i-e
lie in waft for ambitious amateur* wftii happen ii. worries a smaller or larger about grown, will suffer no harm from
•• Harama muki bo rrmorrd. Bbs quUtly
II rtcht, Doctor, but don’t trlyr
plenty of money. The usuhI plan is to porion of tbe human race. Besides, this second brood, so the latter are left
inflate the self-confidence of the no­ looking at this 3881 again, 1 from 8 is to work at pleasure upon the vines,
Kldon. BeJkaap,
n. Gallatin. C»mtTice (usually a woman,) induce her to 7, and 8 less 1 is 7—two conjunctions of which they cause to die much sooner
Knd Kinul Clt-J;
go on a tour , and then secure as much 7, a fatalistic number. But now that than they otherwise would. Of course
the
result
of
dying
down
in
this
way
is
of her capital us possible during-the the year has has passed, nnd the world
MlfWibM
brief and disastrous experiment. A still exists^in noneof tlie twelvemonths fcrOdUse much earlier maturity on the
part of the tubers than would other­
St. Ionia victim, with the stage name numerous comets pitched into our
1. Sht&gt; iipldly Mined
wise ocebr. If an additional dose of
now well. Tbe Marot
of Racheile. put $10,000 iu a manager’* planet, and even its great events—the Paris green or London purple was aahoods, and at tbe end of two weeks he Czar’s death, th© Irish rebellion, the ministered to this - latter brood the top*
♦ nnd tbe ti cautry disappeared together. conquest of Pnru, tbe mulcitcdinous of the potatoes would be kept alive »r. Dvr d Kennedy.
disasters on land and sea. and lhe mur­ longer, the tubers would grow larger
.
Punishing chfldrrn by mustard poul­ der of Garfield—Lave not jogged this and would be some weeks longer in ma­
tice* is a startling variation on tbe tenestria! ball of our* a hair’s breadth turing. Thus it will be seen that the
Paris green or London purple, properly
atarringsand floggings which are in out of its orbit, we can trust the old used, is really tbe preventive of early Tbe U-ai Cough MwliclDe for Cklldren or
vogue in many so-called edncatioual glob© more implicity hereafter to go maturity rather than it* cause.”
■nd charitable institution*. The little its way*. Tlie figure* 1883 bar© noth­
, mu-Mifteetii Dinini- Caia 1
people of the Hafyey Ipsiitute, in Mon­ ing mysterious about them, and no
—A Nice Cream Pie.—One eup white
treal, who were blistered by Mr*. Craig, twisting can make them auspicious. sugar, two-thirds of a cup of cream, two
the matron, so tjiey couldn’d *it Yet may not their events eclipe in egg”. two cups flour, one tenspoonful
iVaaliville Markets
cream-tartar, half teaspoonful soda.
down with comfort for days, have per- mngnitpde ©ven those of 1881!
This will make seven thin cakes, be­
h»p« been worse off than some of the
loixa*.
tween which spread tho cream. For
children who are pnnidied with rattan
"BUCH UPAl BA.”
the cream, take half a pint of milk, put
New, quick, complete cure 4 *.&lt;*,
and fanile. Guaidian* of children of­
Gon nut oUt*lmabto at juur horn* oBm, addras*.
into a basin of hot water on the stover
nn Vt?.*’ «“rtlnKJ»*qn«at or difficult urii.a- beat one egg with white sugar enough
as. ht. JOKW.
ten seem endowed with a strange in
to sweeten and add two tablespoonfuh
J tmtnity in scarring the boddics of their r^nnt, JAME8 E. DAVIS &amp;
of corn starch; stir this into tbe milk
bttieehar «*,** if oaly in that way
Health
hale mind* be enlarged and tbeir _ --- —and atn-UElh &lt;iren to I
put bUWMA tn.

si'rruv &lt;x&gt;xvictk».

CLOSING OUT SALE!
BTAT COST.^

BT-A.T

COST.jgj

100 Patterns New Prints, best brands, I will
sell at 7 cts, Sold everywhere at 8 cts,
60 two-strap Horse Blankets at !9O cts. Sold
earlier in the fall for $1.30.
Kerosene Oil at 15 cents per gallon.
12 1-2 lbs. good Brown Sugar for one dollar,

IRON

THE LARGEST STOCK OF GROCERIES

BITTERS
'%ET^-

Mpjoliea

and Krench China,

ENGLISH DECORATED. CHINA

HAXilAG Ac STAM)

C. W. SMITH.

MAH

D

UCRATIVE EMPLOYMENT

i BRHE LID!

®Wgg|

CHICAGO, BOCK ISLAND &amp; PACIFIC B Y

NO CURE, NO PH!

WILSON’S COUGH MIXTURE I

PRINTING.

ilyle Deal, rlcan, Mtlr.irtire, *irf al lowcM Uftu&lt; r*t«« ter dr.id**. w&gt;rk’.

"

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                  <text>ORNO STRONG, 1
Editor *xi&gt; Proprietor.

&gt;

VOLUME IX.
LIFE IN NASHVILLE

| TERMS; $1.50per Yea*
( Credit Subscriptions $1.75.

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1882.
ham, notwithstanding the disadvan­
tages she haw labored under during pre­
paration, not being able to. meet withi
the company at all the rehearsals -onl
account of sickness. Barney Brooks,,
as Vladimir, the mysterious Monk, re­.
tained all his former reputation of ani
amateur actor, Charley Woolcott, asi
Paul Bieswacks, the man with a vocif­
erous appetite, provoked to audience to.&gt;.
mirth and laughter, by his drolleries,
•_
and did ample Justice to the character,
represented. Miss Bello Truman, asj
Claudia, played her role with an case।
and grace seldom acquired by* those।
having much more experience upon thei
stage. The minor characters, which।
■dm want of space will not allow us toi
enumerate, were well handled, and all
did much better than the public hadI
dared to hope. The elegant costumes
procured from Grand Rapids, did
much to render the play more real, and
disguise the actors while playing their
role. Paddy Mile#’ boy was greeted
with rounds of applause, and the en­
tire audience seemed well pleased ayd
perfectly satisfied with the entertain­
ment The receipts of the evening
were over $60.

A DREAM

ASSYRIA.

BIBHARE.

NUMBER 20.

COMMON COHN OIL PE00EEDIHG8
Town board met Friday.
The Muse wm slumbering peacefully
No sickncM reported.
WalLWebester of Bellevue was in
Id his rude cot. last night, with bright
Peace reigns supreme.
—Fodder is plenty yet, and can be
Regular meetlug.
dreams
of
the future
flitting town last week. ‘
Labor amply rewarded.
A dance was hold at R. D. Chapman’s
obtained at. a reasonable price.
Present,Young, President: Barber, Boston
through bis tired brain, when his visNo
serious accidents this week.
Dickinson, trust.th.
—Numerous changes in retd estate
ionary imagination was suddenly ur- last Thursday night. '
The saw mill warmed this week.
No quorum being prevent council adjourned
are anticipated in this vicinty, the
rested by seeing a calendar which ' A lyceum is held at the Briggs school
Fodder is keeping step with the win­ till Friday Jan. 27th.
house every Friday night
coming spring.
boro the impressive figures: 1900.
•
F. McDruar,
W. H. Y'orxo,
Geo. Brown’s team ran away last ter.
Could it be possible, he thought, that
—Apples are scarce aud command a
Jas. Phillips, baa rented the Simopt
Friday, breaking his wagon.
eighteen years had passed away since
high price, probably the result of ship­
estate.
‘
v
The
Lords
meeting
commenced
at
he journeyed from Nashville, the home
ping so many, last fall,
CocxlHL Rooms.
»
.
Our school machine runs still, no
the Advent church Sunday.
NsahvtUc, Jan. 3.1888. )
ef his youth, to seek his fortune in the
—OverftR-ords of wood belongingto
.
A surprise party was held at Bert. grating.
Council met pursuant to adjouramet.
west, and grow np. with the thriving
the defunct Chemical Works, have
Pete Simoot, has moved to West­
Herrings last Saturday night
Present, Barber, President pro tern; Boston,
and lastly populating country 1
been seized for the taxes of the afore­
R. Smith bought 80 acres ofdand of ville; Mont Calm Co.
Dernary, Dickinson and Reynolds, tnsrtroa.
Yea! eighteen years had quickly
said defuuct o, w.
Our mother-in law, Miss Roberta, is Absent, Young and Cook. '
Mr. Foreman, paying therefor $1,000.
flown, and no tidings had reached him
—The
ros. are building a
Minutes of lait meeting read and on motion
C.Baker has tradedJiis-horee to Bar­ visiting near Portland, Ionia Co.
ofthooneahe knew in Nashville, in'
■
barn for Hi
with 18
The Chicago Evening News will be approved.
the days of his boyhood, save that ney Casoaday, for 80 acres of land, near ours, this coming year, also three '
The
aceout of C'M. Putnam- for *3.25 was
foot posts;
four feci longer than
local
Petoskey.
gleaned from the column of The News,
presented and on motion allcired by ayes and
John Wotrings barn, mentioned last
&gt;
The suit commenced, by John Coop­ papers.
which had been a constant visitor and
The Hope estate lias recently been nays as follows:
week.
Ayes, Barber, Boston, Demaray, Dickinsou
had now grown from an eight page er agnist J-unes McKelvey, was settled sold to Charles Phillips, who will
soon
—A Choral society is to be formed
by McKelvey paying the $5 aud $2.20
and Reynolds. Nays none.
■
weekly, to a sixteen page daily, and
take
possession;
in this village. Good music is soul in­
cost.
_
t
■
Motion by Reynolds that the time for th#
gave him unmistakable evidence that
Truth is its own benefactor. Abe is collection of the Village Taxes b&amp; ezteneded
spiring, and there is enough musical
While John Yourex was hauling
the scenes of hia younger days bad ho
only
supported
by
a
lie
;
therefore
it
is
talent hero to make good music, if
HR4he flrat day of March. Motion carried by
lumber from Baker’s mill, Monday, the
changed Jthat perchance a visit to his
.
.
a/c»aod nay* as follows;
properly cultivated.
tiro run off of one wheel and the wheel I self-supporting.
early home would result in nothing
Now is the time to secure a copy of
Barter, Boston, Demaray, Dtektoooa
collapsed.
—Geo. Fargerson and wife, of Hast­
but disappointment, ns he would be
and Reynold#. Nays, none. \
"Michigan
in
the
War.
”
Send
your
The
school
board
was
called
into
the
ings came into the vicinity of North
everywhere confronted with new^ faces,
Gn motion council adjourned.
school at the Center last week, and name to the Adjutant General’s office.
Castleton a few weeks ago to visit'
and those with whom he was wont to
F. McDsunr,
H. A. Binntu,
tamed a number of scholars out for Lansing.
friends, and while there their little
associate in bygone days, would be
Clerk.
Pres, pro tenu
Sixtv thousand feet of Bismark lum­
not obeying the rules.
child was taken violently ill, and has
LOCAL GIBBLE-0ABBLE ,
scattcd here and there around thia wide
ber
let
down
nt
Vermontvillo
station
Fred. Quick swapped horses witll
not yet Keen able for them to ruturn.
School Reports.
and i?ver-diangingglobe. He ho s ever
Henry Mayo Saturday forenoon, and in . last Wednesday.
—Notwithstanding the fact the west­
resolved to pay u visit to Nashville,
Thirty-one thousand feet of lumber I
the afternoon Fred, camo back and
Star Scholars in Nashville Union School' far
The ice crop is about garnered.
ern country is lauded greatly, as a parand learn of the weal or woe of his
ending Jan. 27th, 1882.
squealed.
Mayo tieing a very accom­ was drawn to Vermontville by Mr. | the montbOKAMHEB
A high wind has prevailed for the last many associates in youth.
odise in which to raise stock, and es­
DEPARTMENT.
modating man, swapped both times Gearhart’s team in one day last week, i Number cnro!h-&lt;l, 80.
pecially for its wool growing advanta­ ten days.
Taking passage on board n steamer,
Average
dstlr attendance, 40.
just
ns
Fred
wanted
to.
IL D. Purdy of Middleville, was in on the line of Cnpt. End’s rhip railway,
David Chatfield went to Saranac
ge*, Nashville has received an order
Sura, Jet si..-, McBer, Cora Blair, John Flint,
Three brothers wore escorting a grass last Friday, to administer to the wants Mary Collier, Mabie Belleck, Clyde Francis*
town Monday.
from Nebraska for stocking yarn.
he started, and before reaching the
Minnie Roe, Walter Roe, Ina Hobbe, Myrt*
Peter Mulvauy of Marengo was in Mississippi, passed through a beautiful widow to the lyceum last Friday night, of a relative aud his family. D. C. Gregory.
—The prophetical second day of
one on each side and one behind. Ono carried the proper element with which
town Tuesday.
t
city called Stanton, which be after­
Feoruary is passed, and according to
Dr. Timmerman, of Hastings, was in ward learned waa named in honor of nnt being entirely HatisOcd knock­ to make it a deed, and not simply it
Number enrolled, 36the old theory, our winter has come
ed the one on the side he wanted to oc I word.
Average dally attendance, f&lt;0.
town Wednesday.
its founder, Arthur Stanton, who had
this time tail foremost, and may be ex­
Stars,—Fannie Ajlaworth, Elsie Meker,
.
| Mrs. Kimball, a lady, of three score
Mrs. A. J. Boothe has returned to her organized a colony and moved west be­ copy, off bis base aud took the place
Grade Emmons. Francis Collier, George SaL
pected to back out with a head like a
himself.
W
. arrived at “
When **they
the 1_______
and ten,_______________________
was taken last Sunday__night, Jcvk, Eu::a Tin man, Will. Putnam, Elmer
home at Berryville.
fore the railway was completed. When
gigantic Num id inn lion. If it gets too
breathing.
was Griggs, Clinton Coe Minnie Lefbtuurer, Alice
te one
nnp oKtbe
nF thn boys
lxiv&lt; seated
ntmtorl the
tlin I with ..n difficult i.......&gt;l.:
.... Help
xr..i„ „„„
The Methodists are holding a series ho arrived at Chicago, he learned that school house
cold we will pray Vennorto givens a
Evans, Newton, Kellogg, Daisy Gregory, Bert
lady,
but
before
he
could
sit
down
be:
secured
in
haste,
but
at
last
accounts
nvvunu
CM.,.,.
,
I.MV
.,v
■
of revival meetings.
Flaluurty. ,
Willis’ ship canal hod been completed
change.
C. A. Nichols aud famly started last across, Michigan, and determined to side her, one of the other boys had she was no better, and possibly may
—Steve. Sprinkett has his saw mill Saturday for the west.
planted himself on the seat and the »&gt;uccunib to her old disease: phthisic.
Number enrolled, 50.
.
enter the state via this route. He ac­
on Zeb. Park’s place in running order,
Average tntcudaocc, 44.
Mrs. Collier has been nt Battle Creek cordingly-embarked, aud in a short other two were left out.
Two lads, adopted sons of Jobu
Stars.—Cora Kettlewell. Lob Marshall,
and claims to have the neatest running this week on business.
Jim Marbel and old Fan were mar­ Elsworth, left their benefactors and Hurtle
■
Osman, Lizzie Simmons, Allie Hardy,
time
was
nearing
the
scenes
and
as
­
portable mill in this part of the counried the 22nd at Esq, Taylor#, John home, early last Friday morning. Wc Bernice Nile*. Brrty Parady. Maury Moore,
8. W. Mapes recently sold a span of sociations of his youth.
yy. From five to six thousand feet of 4-year-old colts for $273.
Wilkinson and wife standing up with hear the boys retained to their home Frankie Lentz, Haney Bell, Wilber Shepard,
Irving Boston. Levant Kesler. Frankie Beard,
At Hastings, a toll grey-headed for­
lumber per day is the amount cut. He
Mrs. Sate. Akoft, of Hastings, has lorn looking man, standing' near the them. Thursday they started a foot shelter after an absence of over two Vernle Martin. Hrbie Hoag. Johnny Reynolds.
has logs enough promised to keep him been at A, L. Raney’s this week.
Inorder to be a “Star,” the scholar must be
on their wedding tear first halted at J. days, suffering from cold and hunger.
|
neither abwal nor tardy, must uoc wbiaper-aud
depot, attracted his attention, and he
busy uliout three months.
.
The street fakir was busy vending was informed by a fellow passenger Bolows. Fan complained of wet feet The eldest has now the privilage of must have su crerage •landing of 100 In any
one study during the month.
and Jim said ho was sorroy, but did not going at will.
—Last Tuesday night a couple of his wares on the street, Tuesday.
that it was a former friend, Bowers, of
ghosts! or female figures clad in Cos­
C. C. Wolcott and family will return the Banner, who had written primmer stop for the rain, went to the Center
Van’s other name we’ve heard to-day,
LOCAL MATTERS.
ivheru the sole catne oft of one of her
tumes like those usually worn by these to their western home next week.
lessons until he had become gray and
to tell it nbw would block the play;
alleged visitors, were promenading
Miss Effie Hand, of Ottawa Co., is childi h. ’Tlas be ever been married!” shoes. They bought a pair of rubbers.
but will bannish all ill will, and will
They went south from the Center, in­
the southern portion of the village, at visiting her aunt, Mrs. E. Parody.
asked the Muse. "No” replied the pas­
burnish the droppings of our quill.
a late iio$r. One mark of difference
Charley Woolcutt has the appoint­ senger, "bo was disappointed in love, quiring for an empty house, and final­
.And should we ever meet his, gaze,
ar B.x&gt;U am! Shue* ul !cm than coat at
between these and the ghosts we read ment of baggageman at the depot.
some eighteen years ago, and that Aie ly brought up in Penfield, nt :Jim Per­ we’ll set his gennius all a blaze; or
ry’s where Fan has got work for the
of, is, they did not have the faculty-of
Arthur Allen has returned from his
little episode in his life has been a
should we blunder o’er his quill, we’ll
Colinra, Cuffs, Ties aud Silk VHp«s ia
summer. Jim camo back and hired oat
vanishing from sight os suddenly.
visit to the south part of die state.
thorn in his flesh ever since.
.
latest styles at
A. L. Rasky's.
make redress if lie will.
to D. Miller, so they are five miles a
James Cook has moved into Frank
—Last Thursday night about eleven
Ip a few moments after leaving Hast­
We have delayed closing our items
Overcoats at!«« than cost a:
HydeloutTs house, overin Brooklyn.
part at present, hoping the day will
o’clock, C. W. Smith was standing on
ings, lofty spires and gorgeous palaces
in
order
to
take
in
the
oyster
supper,
come when they can get the family to­
J. W, Stone, Editor of the Laings­
the top of a step ladder, fixing up a
came within the view of the eyo of the
Accordingly wo
burg News, was in town last Friday.on wonderer, and his ear was greatcd with gether. as Fan has four children. A Tuesday evening.
FARMERS
lamp in the back room of his store,
were on the stat, ready to pen. We Take advantage of the low prices and buy yuur
pretty fair start.
H. H.
basinets.
when a brace on the ladder broke, let­
the familiar name of Nashville, at
however
weye
allowed
at the first table, Larne* a of Clark who will give you No. 1 stock
Dr. W. H. Whitmore and fan?flj- have which place he arrived in due season.
ting him fall to the floor, bruising hia
and
reliable
work.
Wm. Clark.
KALAMO.
and did not stop to consider what
head and dislocating his arm at the el­ moved buck to his old home, Allen, The population of, the place had in­
wonld l&gt;e the result of
tight jacket,
wBcatault ofclotbes ln Barry County for
Mr. Eli Wells bos a dance at hie
bow. Prompt me&lt;Ucal and surgical Hillsdale Co.
creased from 1,200 to 120,000, and e very­
when one is expected to grind out a
No one appeared to trip the light thing seemstrange and unnatural.
house, this week Friday night.
aid was sommoned and the contusion
local. 150 were present, every nook , BF You can get the best harnM* for the
Frank.Barrick has said his farm to
dressed. He is getting along finely, fantastic, at CapL Boise's dance last
As he was wnnderderiog about the
W. G. Edwards’.
and corner was tilled, but to the cred­ money at
Friday
night.
-but suffers much pain from the dislo­
city in search of some familiar land­ John Fowler, Jr., for the sum of 81,­ it of the ladies, a bountiful supply of
CST Our Harness, go fast, leave your order
No one could ask for better wheel­ mark; a chime of bells peeled forth on 200.
cated membei.
good things were provided to satisfy In time. The best whins for the money, also
Win. Fowler’s little child Is not ex­
—The Hastings Banner arises to ing, either for heaving teaming, or on the still eveningair,and heentareda
all. A good time was had. The small the best Horse Bl auk ent*, all at,
A. R- Wolcott’*.
.
spacious church filled with au atten­ pected to live, mflamation of the bow­ hours of the night rolled around, be­
state that Senator Cook did nqt vote pleasure riding.
els is the cause.
Elite
Ogden
has
moved
to
Eaton
tive
audience,
and
listened
to
a
very
CST Go aud rec thoaenev good* at
for the Yorktown grab, but almost in
fore the crowd seperated. Every one
Writist
fans
an
oyster
supper
this
Adda Nighol's (tore.
the same breath given the reader to un­ Rapids, to be nearer his headquarters eloquent sermon delivered by Arthur
declared it good to 1m» there. About
Allen, founded upon these words: week Tuesday night, so he informs me thirty dollars was cleared for the ladles
derstand that he took his share of the for peddling supplies.
ar Harness repaired and oiled In exchange
Ad. Stanton has been laid up again "Stay me with flagons, comfort me I hope that he may have a jolly time
grab—the transportation ticket, which
aid society of Bismarkt
and enjoy himself amazingly.
would lead au unprejudiced observer a part of this week, and Dick Graham with apples, for I am sick of love,” and
Writist.
The meeting commenced at the Mat­
found in the Songs of Solomon, second
LUMBER! LUMBER!
to conclude that no very large amount has handled his dray business.
F.
C.
aud
F.
T.
Boise
and
their
fami
­
chapter and fifth verse. After sendees teson school house, last week Friday
Custom Sawing and Building Material fur­
of principal was considered by the
NORTH
CASTLETON
night, win th pretty high flown words,
nished on abort notice, at our new mill In Ma­
Senator in his votes or he would have lies have returned from their western ho got into conversation with a man
ple Grove.
James 8- Perry.
but wound up ivith a well conducted
not let the the paltry sum of $12.00 trip having had a pleasant time visit­ who seemed to be of some prominence
FOR LAtE.
Cold weather.
ing friends.
in the city, whom he afterwards learn­ debate, the decissiou given in favor of
conflict with that principle.
One
8
Spring
Double
Buggy
or Wagon. also
’
We
have
good
roads
now.
of
the
negative.
Geo. Morgan and wife returned last ed was Claud Pottor; Rep-esentative
* lot of Groceries, Crockery and Glass Wara,J
—Mutilated coin, since the discount Saturday from a visiting trip through to Congress from this district. From
I have the honor of recording quite a
H. Perkins is going to build a house
placed upon- it by some one, has been a Wisconsin, Illinois, Iowa and other
number
of
birthday
parties
in
West
in the spring.
him he learned the whereabouts of
continual pest and bother to all who western states.
0. Wellman has been on the sick list
W.G. Edwort*’.
many of his old friends and associates. K alamo, first that of John Mason, and
have occasion to use much change, aud
Frank Reynolds and A. D. Jarrard, Geo, F. Truman was a star, in a fam­ the old heads had a high old time play­ for the last few days.
to rid this community from as much of represented Nashville Lodge, F. A. A.. ous theatrical troup traveling ih Aus­ ing “going west.’’ It happened last
MONEY WANTED!
Mr. Blocher has returned from Ohio,
You an: owing me, and I muni
the troublesome stuff us possible. Geo. M.t at the session of the grand lodge
Next
OD where he has been on business,
”
tralia. H. A. Durkee was a noted law­ week Wednesday evening.
looey to par my bills. If not paid i
Francis has saved up nil he has taken held at Detroit last week.
Lewis Wellman is preparing to build
yer at Washington, with his time the docket was this week Monday
C. W. Demajuy.
in for some time, and this'week has
The News has received from Gov. mostly occupied in lobbying bills at Geo. Longs house, aud Tuesday an addition on his house in the spring.
collected from the business men here Jerome, the repore of Tax Commission
Geo. Crabb met with quite an acci­
■ods on the Sami 10 cent
through Congrete; C. H. Brady had evening at Al. Mix’s.
upoa Nrti«.'k store.
all they had on hand and shipped it appointed by the Governor, pursuant
A birthday party at Mr. Slosson’s dent, breaking a bone in his hand, but counters
married a wealty widow with ten chil­
away. If every business man here to act No. 158, passed by the legislature
LOST! A pair of King's steel-bowed
dren, moved to Calaforoiau and be- dwelling on Friday, the 37ih of Jan. it is doingwell,
would refuse mutilated coin entirely,
it
being
his
birth
day
and
also
bis
spectacle*,
with
drop
glasaes.
in cheap black
Geo.
Dillenbeck
has
traded
his
hon»e,
of188L
■ came president of th® National Horae
case. Finder will please leave at C. Demwe would not long be pestered with
The News has received from Post­ Trader’s AMoeialion; Dr. A. H. Winn brother Cyrus’and Charles’. The lat­ for a three-year-old colt, getting the arary’a, and get 50 cents reward.
the troublesome stuff.
’
master Ainger the annual bullentiu of had studied German, and was now ter brother I would say is in New York difference in money.
—The Home Dramatic Club acquited the Washing post office. It is a hand­ teaching German and music in Quimby city so that he could not attend the
Spy.
THE LAST CALL.
iteelf in u credible and praiseworthy some little pamphlet and on the cover Seminary.
party. Mr. and Mr*. Ambrose Slosson,
Is your time to secure bargain* at W*.
From the Big Rapid# Pioneer Mag­ A-Now
manner at its entertainment last Wed­ is a fine portriatof Mr. Ainger.
AyLsworth's. Prints at 4 cla per yard,
When he inquired about Vermont­ were not aware that they were to be
net.
we
learn'
that
W,
A.
Aylsworth
nesday evening. The opera house was
surprised
on
their
birthday,
till
the
beat
Cotton
Flannels at
f°°d Tow ling 7.
All wood promised in payment for ville he was informed that ten years
filled, almost to its utmost capacity, at ThkNews should be hauled by Feb’y ago it bad been annexed to the city un­ crowd all arrived with their baskets, of and C. H. Ladoncer have opened a
P. HOLLER’S NASHVILLE MILLS.
ah early hour, over one hundred re­ 15th, hs its year's supply will then be der the title of Vermontville addition provisions, so sudden was the surprise branch store at Cadillac. Wz A. is a
I have succeeded tn arranging the mill so
i that MnuSiosaon was found rinsing out live business man, and between bis
served seats being taken before the completed, aud the money expected to the city of Nashville.
that I on GRIND GR18T8 tn tte edd way.
■
stores at Cadillac, Big Rapids and this giving each man the floor from his own wheat
evening of the play.
'The Gun-Maker from the remaining delinquents.
.
When he asked about Potter, who clothes. Her sons had built a fire in
There place, his time mint be pretty well oc­
was well handled by the entire cast,
In’anticipntiou of a long sugar sea­ used to edit a little paper called the th* parlor, unknown to her.
and rendered, with but few breaks in1 son; C. L. Glasgow presents a change Hawk, he was informed that he had were eighty person* present. Rube. cupied.
I rhall *l*o continue
grown so corpulent that he had been Gridley furnished the cigars for the
the lines,
Dave Fitzgerald, as Olga,
this week, setting given a large salary by a widely known
Editor Strong has been unable since
Duke of Tula, rendered his part in fine
pe of using of the muaeum manager, end was being ex- occasion, ana after dinner the gentle­
men retired to the chamber to enjoy his relnpacof tw&lt;f weeks ago. to leave ridemble dawson wheat for that purpose, and
bu on ea!e at his hibitid in the cities of the old world.
Just as he waa asking about that their smoke. Vermontville, warlotte the house or attend to any .»! the work will give nsd wheat Ikhit for nice cfaaa cUwasm
e hard ware.
WeM Kalamo man, he heard a strange and of course Kalamo was represented of the office, and acting upon the ad­ wheat when wanted.
and Mrs. Geo. Hubbard will en­ noise, and tor a moment everything
have
n the Baptist. Social at their home
med in a perfect chaos, butpresent- at the gathering. It seems strange that vice of his physician and friends here,
ly he IwcaiDi-d conscknis that it was three brothers’ birthdays should occur left on Wednesday, for a course of
Jnnah’sdray, bound for the 7:38 train, on the same day., but such is the case treatment at the Battle Creek Sanita­
TO WHOM IT MAY
and. that the dreamer would be docked with the SkNwon Bros., although there rium. His disease now is termed pneu­
an hour unless he reported immediate- is three or four years difference in their
monia.
Rat^Revub.
And Her Environs.,

�a, has -resulfed in
bear to his grave.

PRESIDENTS’ GRAVES.

Washington’s remains wore in 1837
fenuivdd troru the old vault where they
;
rto kun t-&gt; a roomy brick vault.
Simple and Kubstaut’al. His body and
Chut of hh wife are inclosed In coffins
in Pennsylvania marble, one ‘
’
American slfcTibx and the diher tho
... _____
words. “—
Mnff.ha
__ Washington
.._____„—These
. are placed iwtho vestibule of the vault
proper, wbith is closed against tho pub­
lic with an iron gate.
John Adams and bis son, John
Quincy Adams, sleep side by side be­
’
neath tho Unitarian Church of Quincy,
. Maas., their wives with them. The
tomb is an apartment in the front part
of the cellar, walled in with largo blocks
of roughly-faced granite, and having
for a door a granite slab seven feet by
three, with niosaivc hinges and lock-of
wrougbi-iron. in-the church above,
on either side of the pulpit, are tablets
of clouded marble, each surmounted by
a bust and inscribed with the familiar
aud high-sounding epitaphs ot tho only
' father and son that over held the high­
est office in tho gift of the American
people.
’ • Jefferson find his wife and daughter
were buried in a thick growth of woods
a few hundred yards to the right of
the road leading from Charlottesville to
"Monticello, in a small private cemetery
about one hundred feet square. Two
year.s ago the inclo^tirc was matted
with weeds, the walls bleached, the
graves trodden level with the ground,
and tho coarse .granite obelisk over
Jefferson’s resting place chipped aud
battered by relic-hunters till only- two
' lines of tho inscription were decipher­
able. Since then a new shaft has bean
erected.
Madison reposes in such a scene and
amid such surroundings ns tho mention
of his .nenie would lead one to look
for.
Montpelier, near Orange, Va.,
in the center of a softly picturesque
region, is a fair and trim estate, and
the cemetery lot, in the center ot a
level 'field, well-kept
and neatly
turfed. From a pedestal of four pieces
rises a graceful and slender obelisk, in­
scribed with Madison’s name and birth
date, wliilo by his side a les-i lofty shaft
marks the resting-place of tho fairest
, ef-Republican Queens, Dolly Madison.
.Monroe’s body reposes in Hollywood
Cemetery, Virginia, on an eminence
near its extreme southwestern limit,
commanding a beautiful view of Rich­
mond and tho James. Above tho body
Is a huge block of polished Virginia
marble supporting a coffin-shaped block
of granite, on which are brass plates
suitably inscribetL The whole is sur­
rounded by a sort of gothic templefour pillars supporting a peaked roof—
to which something of the appnarance
ef a bird-cage is imparted by filling in
the interstices with iron gratings.
.
Jackson and his beloved wife, Rachel,
are buried in a corner 6f the garden of
the Hermitage, elevon miles from Nash­
ville on the Lebanon pike. The tomb
is a circular area of Tennessee lime­
stone, eighteen feet in diameter, approauhodby three steps; eight fluted
columns support an urn. In tho center
of the area is a square supporting a
pyramid. Jackson lies on the left under
a plain stone slab; his wife on thexight.
Magnolia trees encircle the grave, on
which a small dump of hickories cast
their shade.
Van Buren’s body rests in the center
of the Van Buren lot in the northeast­
ern corner of the cemetery at Kinder­
hook. Above it is a plain granite shaft
fifteen feet high, bearing a simple in­
scription about half way up one face.
Descriptions on two other faces are in
memory of his wife and their son. Mar­
tin. The lot is unfenced. unbordered,
unmarked by shrub or flower.
Harrison’s body in 1879 lay in a plain
brick vault on the summit of a hillock
at North Bend. Ohio, fifteen nwles from
Cincinnati. A thicx undergrowth then
covered the hillock, and the tomb was
not marked by a single letter. It was
understood that the body was to be re­
moved to Spring Grove’ Cemetery, at
Cincinnati.
Tyler’s grave is a turfed mound in
HollvwooaCemetery, at Richmond, ten
yard’s from that of Monroe. No stone
marks it, though the State is ultimately
to erect a monument above the spot;
but a deodar and a magnolia stand sen­
tinel over it, and. it is surrounded with
-Bowers.
Polk’s burial-place is in the garden of
the mansion hepurdhased on the eve
of his death. The site is on the corner
oi Vine and Union streets, in the City
of Nashville, and the tomb is near the

.

dazzling whitenesz. The monument is
of limestone —Dorio columns support­
ing the usual architrave, frieze, cornice
and attic. The monument proper is a
■tone rising soma five feet from the floor
and bearing trie long record of Polk’s
pabBc iervicex.
h» 187» Taylor's bodv was at Cave
Sill Cimrotery. Louisville, awaiting »jno? s' to Frankfort, where a suitable
n. ..
was to he erc •ted over it,

bewixfif »h*» family. The monument
rises aPtfie bear! of his grave: a great
Norway spruce costs iu shadow on the
foot.
- .’
Pieroe’s grave is in ths Minot ioclofure.adjoining the old cemetery at Con­
cord. N. H. Above it is a monument
of pure Italian marble, a ppire with
cap, die and plinth resting on a base of
granite and surrounded ov a draped
cross. “ Pierce" is carved on the
plinth, and there is a brief inscription
on the panel of thedie. His wife and
their two sons are buried near him.
Buchanan s tomb is in Woodward
Hill Cemetery, at Lancaster, Penn. It
is inclosed by a fence of black Iron,
with posts.of mottled granite, the iron
bars being interlaced by a fragment
hedge of roses. The grass within is
velvety and dotted with rosebushes.
The body rests in a vault of heart ma­
sonry, covered with largo limestone
Hags. A base of New Hampshire gran­
ite supports a monument in* the Roman
style—a single, block of Italian marble,
wrought with heavy molded tsp and
base, carved with an oak branch stud,
dod with leaves and acorns, and simply
inscribed.
,
.
Lincoln’s monument is a great pile oi
marble, granite and bronze, in Oak
Ridge Cemetery, at Springfield. I1L,
with the inscription of which all Amer­
ican readers have been made familiar
from timo to time. The body of the
martyred President lien in a catacomb
in a leaden coffin, inclosed in a cedar
caso within a sarcophagus of rich white
marble,-having carved on uno end tho
word “Lincoln.,”
Johnson’s grave is on tho summit of a
lofty cone-shaped eminence half a mile
southwest of Greenville, Tenn. The
monument is of marble onn base o!
granite. From piers on‘each side of
the graves of Johnson and his wife
springs a granite arch of thirteenstones.
On this ra.ts tho monument proper, a
plinth suitably inscribed, a die carved
with the Constitution (minus tho Four­
teenth and Fifteenth Amendments),
and an open Bible, on which rests a
hand as if in tho act of taking an oath,
and a tapering shaft of marble, festooned
nt tho top with tho American ling and
surmounted by an eaglo with out­
stretched wings.
Garfield’s remains are deposited in
the beautiful vault of the Lake View
Cemetery, Cleveland, Ohio, and will
soon bo buried in a lovely and pictur­
esque part of the cemetery grounds
where a costly monument will ’be
erected.
About Shetland Ponies.

Any brief notes of Shetland would
be incomplete without allusion to
the small breed of horse* called Shet­
land ponies, for which tho islands
are famous. Tradition says that the
ancient Scandinavians brought this
breed of .Boise from Mount Caucasus
to Scandinavia, and thence to Shet­
land. The small size of the animal is
doubtless largely owing to a long course
of exnoaure and poor feeding, con­
tinued* from sire to son over many gen­
erations.
When transported to dess
rugged climes, and fed well and regu
larly, they gradually become larger,
knd the traveler cannbt avoid noticing
that in the northern islands of Yell nnq
Unst, the ponies are more diminutive
than in the neighborhood of Lerwick.
Their hardiness and powers of endur­
ance are wonderful. I have known to
be ponies nine to ten hands high only,
caught fresh from the liiilsides aud
ridden thirty to forty miles by men of
average weight, whose legs nearly
touched the ground on cither side of the
little animals they bestrode.
Formerly “shelties” conld be bought
for about $10 apiece, but of late years
the price lias gone up, owing to the in­
creased market for the ponies in mines
and collieries. None but male ponies
are used in the mines, and these fetch
from $40 to $50, while the mares are
worth about $25. Part of the island of
Bressay, and the small, contiguous islet
of Noss are rented by tho Marquis of
Londonderry for a pony farm, and here
are reared all ponies required for his
Lordship’s coal pits.
On Feltlar, an island ' south of Unst,
an interesting and successful experi­
ment has been made in crossing the
native ponv and horse. The progenitor
of the “Feltlar breed” was a fine mus­
tang, ridden by tho famous Bolivar in
his last great battle. Bolivar presented
•him to Captain Arthur Farquhar, who
brought him to England, and ultimate­
ly Sold him to Sir Arthur Nicholson,
the proprietor of Feltlar.—Cor, Phila­
delphia Telcgraoh.
Spanish Court Etiquette.
By the unwritten yet immutable laws
of the Spanish Court no one but a Span­
ish? physician can attend the Queen of
Spain. When the illness of the late
Queen Mercedes became desperate her
doctors called in their German colleague
in consultation, but told him that he
must prescribe for Dona Mercedes with­
out seeing her on their report of the
symptoms and condition only. Dr. Kisbert declared that it was essential for
him to examine the patient before he
could indicate whut remedies would be
efficacious. That, however, could on
no account be permitted. He then sugCted that he might be allowed to see
through some open door or window
without approaching her or.even enter­
ing the mck room. That concession,
too. was refused. “Then, gentlemen.
I can do nothing,” was the reply. “I
am willing to prescribe, but I cun hard-

bars and brought it down with terrible
force upon his head. The animal's
claws tore up the flesh and left a deep
scar upon his forehead.
Some years
•go in St. Louis, Winner leaned his
head against the bars of a cage contain­
ing hyenas, and while he stood explain­
ing the habits of these animals to some
viators, one hyena snapped off his lit­
tle finger and devoured It.

animal equal to the tiger. It is the gen­
uine king among beasts, for it is not
only more ferocious thkn the lion, but
comparatively stronger. Of four lions
that Barnum has m tho cage with his
show, two were bom In captivity. Syd­
ney, the one who escaped some years
ago, is named after his birth place,
Sydney, Australia. The lioness, which
has two whelps now, is considered most
valuable property, as she is one of the
few lionesses which raise their’young in
captivity.”
“But many whelps are bom in this
oountrvP”
“True enough; but they starve to
death, as their mothers refuse to suckle
them."
“ li there any difference in ferocity
between males and females among
wild beasts P”
“ In all animals of the cat species tho
females are more vicious and dangerous
than tho males.”
“ Have you trained any animals late­
ly?”
“les, there’s Beecher, the. Poonah
bear, a very funny animal, unlike any
othpr bear I ever saw. It stands on its
hind legs and gesticulates like a speak­
er. It has a number of amusing tricks,
but {t was easily taught."
“ How is the baby elephant?”
“ It weighed 9G0 pounds lost June,
and 1 guess it weighs over a thousand
now. It weighed 213 1-2 pounds upon
its birth in Philadelphia on March 10,
1880, and when it was three months old
|t weighed 235 pounds. Wo are now
watching to sec how long before its
mother weans it. Wo expect that it
will be between two and three years, if
it is not taken from her.”
“What food does it eat?”
“ It has never yet been fed, but Hobe,
its mother—by the way, one of the best
trick elephants in tho world—is teaching
it to eat. The mother picks out tho hay
for the baby, which minces at it. But
what do you think Ls the baby’s favorite
drink? Being a native American, you
think it jsa gin cocktail, but it is not.”
“ What then?”
“ Why, circus lemonade! It will suck
lemonade ah day up in its trank.”
Mr. IL II. Copeland is tho keeper of
Barnum’s twenty elephants. He says
that while most animals will respond to
kindness tho elephant is controlled by
fear, and ho thinks there is no such
thing as affection for its keeper ivith an
elephant.
Sometimes, after patient
training, when they seem to have been
mastered so that they understand every
command and obey it like a man, they,
become all at once sulky and obstinate.
In one of these fits it taxes terrible pun­
ishment to master them. It is necessary
to chain their feet, join the chains to a
rope, run the rope through a block and
tackle, hitch another elephant to tho end
and throw the refractory beast. When
they are thrown they have to be pun­
ished with prods until they yield. Chief
is the ugliest elephant Barnum has got.
At East Saginaw two years ago Chief
broke out of the line of tho street pa­
rade and started after a countryman
who was passing in a two-horse wag­
on. The elephant bellowed aud lifted
his trank and steadily chased Jue
man for thre^ miles.
He caught up
with the wagon, which ho overturned
into a ditch, and was about to dq
further mischief.when he was captured.
Chief rebels every time he has to go into
a car, and he has to be prodded with a
steel point before ho moves. Albert is
another elephant that has tho sulks. At
Ottawa last month all of tho elephants
were turned into the river to bathe, and
while Albert was in the water ho was
seized with the sulks.
When his keep­
ers camo about him he seized one with
his trank and came very near drowning
him. Juno, one of the best-trained of
the elephants, after a recent perform­
ance in the ring, to take revenge upon
■ Prof. ArstingaU, one of tho ring-mas­
ters, squirted a pailful of dirty water
over his spotless linen from her trunk.
To punish her a steel prod was ran
into her hind leg until she roared with
pain.
R. H. Dockrill, the horse-trainer, who
is the husband of Mme. Elisa Dockrill,
the bareback rider, relates that a few
years ago, when ho was with a circus
near Basle, in Switzerland, one of the
elephants became mad, and, breaking
away, began to tear up everything with­
in its reach. No one dared capture it,
and its mad career was stopjied only
when a cannon was loaded with grape­
shot and fired into its body.
A carious noise was heard in the cage
occupied by the seven anacondas and
the two boa-constrictors । in Barnum's
menagerie early one morning recently,
and the keepers who were aroused wit­
nessed a magnificent fight. The ana­
condas had joined forces against the two
boas, bat the latter conquered. When
tho smallest of the anacondas was killed
the largest boa cohered it with slime
and swallowed it bodily.
The other
snaixe was severed aud divided between
Che boas. The nine snakes were foa tne
day before on fourteen live chickens
aud the boss, which hud not been fed
for two months, had their appetite
; whetted to voracity. When the snake­
charmer entered, the bow attempted to
। eoil about him, but he kept them from
encircling his throat aud separated
j them from the anacondas.—N. x. Sun.

&lt;z&gt;

*3

laJ

. B-

=
No legal act is signed; -no important
basinexs negotiated, no new connection
formed, no family ceremony connected
with birth, marriage, or death, per­
mitted until the head of the family has
been consulted in the first instance.
Nor is this an idle ceremony. Hia
voice is supreme, and all the members
of the household so regard it. In-the
Sash, Doors, Blinds, Jefferson Nails, Glass, Putty, Paints,
daily distribution of food the younger
members of a family ■ are helped first, 1Oils, Varnishes, Colors, Brushes, Etc.
Castor, Sperm, Golden,
and tho mistress of ,the household sel­
dom attends to the other matters until Black, Linseed and Kerosene Oils.
this important portion ol the day’s duty
Shovels, Spades. Forks, Hoes. Snaths, Apple Parers, Farm
is complete. On’oceaaionB of festivity
the male hood of the household and his Bells, Fence Wire, Well and Cistern Pumps. Wood and Iron,
mistress are enjoined, both by social Pipe, Points, Cylinders, Lead Pipe, Sinkst &amp;c.
•
law aud practice, to fast till the last
—-------- AGENT FOR------------guest has been served. Even then the
mistress will not take her meal until
her husband has finished eating; but
this is a practice of self-denial familiar
The Lightest Running aud most Durable Machine in use.
to the female members of Hindu house­
I shall aim to keep none but first class goods, and sell them
holds. Festival days are very numer­
ous in India, and well-constituted fami­ at a small profit.
Call and see me when needing haniware.
lies pride themselves on a rigid atten­
tion to punctilious observances during
such times.
The miatroas of the family is usually
content with tho food left by the in.de PJjXVE YOU HEEIK THOSE
members of the household. It is un­
usual for any particular food to be pre­
pared for her csjiecially when in good
health. The thought of her being the
head of the-household is supposed to be
sufficient to make her despise nil de­
•• .
------ JUST IN AT-—
privations. She does not seek person­
al comfort. She would have all the ’
members of the household live .happily
and contentedly together.
Brothers
and sisters, husbands and wives, domes­
•
If not, do so at ouce^wd be happy.
tics and slaves, arc treated alike with
consideration by tho intelligent and de­
voted head of tho family. There is a
certain simplicity in the domestic life
of a-well-regulated Hindu household
that is very charming. For instance,
In this line we are bound to lead all competition, and our
at a feast or festival, all the members
of the household consider themselves wtock just in is larger and better selected than ever before. It
bound in honor to attend chiefly to the consists in part, of
comfort and enjoyment of the guests.
They never think of their own wonts in
comparison.
It is only when the
guests have been abundantly supplied
and attended to that ’they think
OUR STOCK OFof themselves.
Among the. high­
er
castes
tho
food
consists
chiefly of wheat and maize, floor,
grain, poise,
clarified butter or
ghee, milk and sweets.
Fish and
IS FULL AND COMPLETE.
meats, particularly mutton and fowls,
The larbest line of Beaver Shawls in two counties.
are not objected, to by the lower castes
if they can procure them, but beef is
A large variety of Ready Made Cloaks; also Cloakings of all
an abomination as coming from a
sacred animal, and pork is abhorred as shades and qualities.
vile, and as containing the germs of
Pieces of New Prints. An endless variety of Blank’ts
disease. Only outcast Hindus partake
A big line of Underwear and Flannels.
of these last. Like the Buddhists, the
higher castes of Hindus reverence the
Customers are plenty, and we are too busy to enumerate
sanctity of life. They are warned by further at present.
.
their religious writings against shed­
ding of blood, against the infliction of
pain, against the taking of life. They
hold every living animal as sacred ns a
human being; in Bengal, however, fish
is very generally used ns an article of
diet by all classes, in contradiction to
their religious tenets. Nor does this
abstinence from animal food impair the
physical strength or warlike .vigor of
tho best classes of Upper India. The
Mahratta cavalry h*ve been praised
for endurance and courage by all our
writers, and the Gurkas. and Tilingas
are admitted to make first-rate soldiers
—wiry, obedient to discipline, ready to
endure fatigue and hardship, and by
no means deficient in energy and cour­
age.
The household expenses are usually
defrayed by the senior member or head
of the family, who is supplied with
funds' by all the residents in the house­
hold possessed of separate incomes. It
is not usual for any interference to bo
Now takes pleasure in announcing to the Pnbllc that
caused by the other members as to the
details of the daily expenditures, nor is
any attempt usually made to-apportion
those expenses ratably. The whole is
done in a spirit of mutual conciliation
and family.affection; nor are quarrels
as to the nature of the provisions sup­
plied matters of frequent occurrence.
I HAVE A COMPLETE LINE OF
Living under the same roof and partak­
ing of the same food constitute the chief
ingredients of domestic concern aud
amity among the Hindus. Their sys­
tem of caste renders the family circle
very exclusive, aud prevents much in­
discriminate entertainment. In many
respects tho Hindu life resembles that
of ancient Greece. In both wo find the
sanfe reverence for the family home­
stead, the same comparative freedom
of women in the management of the And In fact, everything that Mongs to the Grocery Department. Also
households, and the same embodiment
a fine collection of
of mythological legends in the ancient
history of the country. In culture and
civilization the Bengals are the Athe­
nians of India.—Englith Magazine.

r

Build, ers’

Hardware,

DOMESTIC SEWING MACHINE

- '

FRANK C. BOISE.

New Fall Goods
KOCHER BROTHERS.

New StYle Cashmeres, Plaids, Brocades, Etc.

300

KOCHER BROS.

CROCERV?

CALVUf -AUSWOETH.

HIS NEW. GROCERY IS IN FULL BLAST.

Sugars, Coffees, Teas, Syrups, Tobacco, Cigars,
Soaps—Washing and Toilet, Canned
Goods, Ground Spices,

STAND AND HANGING LAMPS

An Extraordinary Skeleton,

An anatomical museum has opened
at Burlington House in connection with
the International Medical Congress now
being held in London, and amongst the
interesting object* on view there is an
extraordinary skel&amp;on which has been
lent by the Sussex County Hospital. It
is that of a man born with both arms
broken, and who, all his life, was
afflicted with a frame that mu it have
been almost as brittle as gloss, though
seemingly with very little of the rigidity
and hardness of that material. His
baby arms were set, but he seemed al­
ways to be breaking himself some­
where. He lived a tolerably long life,
however, and at the time of his mar­
riage, at about thirty years of age. ho
b*4 managed to attain some five feet
four inches in height. At forty, his
son&amp;lly inspecting tho patient.’’
He
strength appeared to have left him, and
wrote a prescription and left the palacethough he lived some twenty years
Three days later the fair young Queen
longer, the constant breaking and con­
was dead, but the laws ot Spanish Court
tortion of his bones had reduced him to
etiquette remained intact.
thirty-nine and one-half inehes, aud the
--------- ---------------unfortunate man’s skeleton, as now
shown, looks to be about a yard high.
—There are 60.000 boatmen employed
on the “raging cauawl'* known as the
His two children are said tq-have been
continually breskingtheir bones in a sim­
* *
---------- .
I —The Duke of Devonshire has spent ilar way.—Brighton {Eng.,) Gwxrdian.
—One-third of the members of the $1,500,000 in improving East bourne, a
Mawxihnsetts Frobibito;?/ State Con- watcring-olocu w the Smuex coast, not-r
—The tobacco crop of Virgi^jt will
be short this year.

And Glassware of the Latest Pattern.
A LARGE AND WELL SELECTED STOCK CF

English and American White Ware.
----------- 1 KEEP IN STOCK------------

Brown Ware, Yellow Ware, Stone Ware,
WOODEN WARE, BASKETS, YANKEE NOTIONS, ETC.
tp- All my goodz are fresh, Junt boughr'ftor ipot cash and
will be »ol&lt;i only fi»r cash, at the lowest prices.
A cordial invitation Is extended to every man, woman
child, to call and examine prices’ and qualities oi Goods.
I cake pleasure in showing Good*, whether you wish to
buy or not.
Nashville, ilich., Dec. 5,1S81.

.

___

�IND

R A FIDS DIVISION.
I
!
i
I
j
.
■

(tand Itap a- aud Detroit. Al? tra:c.«e&lt;.t&gt;u«A lx.
Mr dvyot at Dc-iroti with GreU WeiUrn. Grant?
rirak and V«avla'SmiU»m Railway'.
L C. BROWN,
H. B. LKDTARU.
A»*‘t Qan’l HapvJackaon. Uia'IBup't Detroit

Physician and Surgeon.

OBSERVE, COMBE, REFLECT, ACT!
NEW DENTAL PARLOR.
I wish to make known to the citizens of,
NaabrUlc aud vicinity that I hare purchased
the practice of J. L. 81gd»ee. and am penuannently located over G. A- TRUMAN'S etore.
All kinds of DENTAL WORK done,.from the
aimph-st operation to the most difficult,—ArtiflcUkPalaUT,. Irregular natural teeth straigh­
tened, twth extracted witberat pain forte cts ;
oue-balf.d&lt;nhic:ed when artiflclai work is made
All work warranted, advice in reguni to teeth
free call and see me.
I’. 8. Will do dcnutlwork tpr S cord* of wood,
me. A. II. WINN.

yyiLLIAM JONES,

Boston Ln believed to have committed
tfliicidc. He had been sick for some
time. His owner and several other per­
sons saw him go into the street, wait
for some lightly-laden wagons to paw,
and then deliberately lie down in front
of the wheels of a truck loaded with
—Hereafter every French soldier will
be comiM-Ued to wear suspended from
his neck a small metal plate, cm which
will be engraved his name and the num­
ber of the regiment to which he belongs,
all this being done in order that in case
of death identification will bq. an easy
matter. In point of being thoroughly
equipped, the army of Franca leads tho
world, but in spite of this fact it doesn’t
seem to be remarkably sucxieesfnl.
—Rat preserves have lately been es­
tablished In Barbadoes by some sharp
nativos, who make an easy livelihood by
breeding rat».»olely for the sake of their
tails. The creatures do immense dam­
age among the sugar plantations, so Id
per tail is paid to encourage their de­
struction ; but as recently the tails were
brought in in enormous numbers, inqui­
ries were made and the .trick was dis—There lately died in England a man
who has done more service to his coun­
try than thousands whose names are
household words. ThLs was Prof. Post­
gate. Working as a boy in n grocer’s
shop, he became disgusted with the
adulterations he saw practiced, and re­
solved, when he got the chance, to try
and arouse public opinion on the sub­
ject. This he was at length enabled to
do, through one of the members for
Birmingham, and the recommendations
of the select Parliamentary committee',
now law, against adulteration were al­
most entirely based on Mr. Postgote’s
recommendations', which have done very
much to secure for tha jK&gt;or man es­
pecially the worth of his hard-earned
—Consul-General Weaver, at Vienna,
has constructed a" table showing the
population of each of the chief countries
of Continental Europe, which is more
nearly accurate than any which have
yet appeared in the books. From this
table it appears that the population of
Saxony, according to the last census, is
2,970.220; of Pru«ia, 27,251,067; of
Germany, 45; 194,172;
of Denmark,
1,980,675; of Bavaria, 5,271,5X6; of
Wurtemberg, 1,970,132; of . Austria,
22,130,684; of Switzerland, 2,846,102:
of Norway, 1,806,900;
of France,
86,905,785; of Hungary, 15,610,729,
and of Portugal, 4,160,000. In this ta­
bic, though the figures for Saxony and
Prussia are separately given, they are
also Included in the total for Germany.
The population of great Britain is put
down in round numbers at 85,000,000.

On a DUigencc Road to Mexico.

.TIIBlrx HOUSE,

I.EMENT SMITH,

American anil Foreign Marble.
Nmrumsrta^Tatnhftoofi^ Kaatles, tx.,

BUXTON

The diligtncia generaPis th* ordlnaiy
Concord coach, drawn by eight inulc**,
harnej-ied in a complicated tangle,which
is technically described as “two wheel­
ers, four pn a swing, and two leaders,”
i. e., two at the wheels, four abreast in
the middle, and two ahead. Tho driver
wore a pair of goat-gkin breeches, with
the long yellow hair outside, comically
suggesting the legs of a satyr. Ho had
an assistant beside him, who wielded the
whip, or, if whipping failed, pelted the
mules with small stones from a leather
bag filled for the purpose.
There was
. .--- .---- " V
““Xi pu.-Linniu ill
hi* aim. The offender was admonished
by sharp, unerring little taps on the ear,
. or the root of the tail, or a projecting
■ bin-joint.
On these occasions, unlike
the teamster of the Northwest, theMerican1* do not rely on profanity.
j Thus far we had met no vehicles ex1 cept the two-wheeled carts drawn bv
i oxer--wheels without tires, hewn out
[ and showing the separate strokes of tho
ax, but many humble travelers on foot,
trotting into Mexico with back-loads of
market stuff.
Fruita and vegetables
were carried in a four-sided hamper or
caguudled a huacal, made of osiers;
often it whs filled with live fowls, the
tail-feathers of the cock gsvly fluttering
through the bars of the cage, or was di­
vided into compartments, with eggs be­
low and fowls above.
Wo met huge
-mas»M of )&gt;ottery ingeniously woven
together with cords of theayuccand tow­
ering periluudy above the bearer’s head;
roll* of matting’, wooden trays, bundles
. of sugar-cane, cainote (a kind of sweet

in hie new btiiiding. ami.-w, swinging by the legs from a, dis­
engaged hand, or tied to an available
law added a etocAr of corner of the load. Whole families were
en route, even to the baby rolled in one
CMWS-Cl’T A CIBITUB 8AWN.
end of the long cotton scarf which the
Indian mother wears over her head, or
aur-peaded in its folds at her book. I do
not think a stranger procession could be
Prices on Maw Work.
Circle
and banurwrinx all saw* tu-i with on the nigh roads of this cenup to 40 tucbei*. M» crata per inch.
40 led:, Gunitncd,
Jiuiiin&gt;en.d, 13.0)
» ”
”
xoo
”
4.0i&gt; ing poorer and wilder, we pass many
httle heap* of stones supporting the
fatal, cross—the place of a murder­
making a mute appeal to the traveler to
iven to tdn-tdarMtw woric pray tor one cm-wff in hi* rins.
We
A. C. HIXTON.
enter the mountain poa-es, dark with
pine* and firs, and ateend to the battle­
ground of 1ms Cruces, on the divide
*"
“ i vallrv of Mexico
i®.
We pass the
go, and I ask with
algo, and am an­
our Washington—

ATTETTiON! SAW MILL NEK!

of a wit.dow in the male ward of the
Work-house, and after a short surv.-y
from the rill he flew down upon 1 be
stone floor and began to -earch for din­
ner. It happened that five or,six pris­
oners were in the ward at the time, and
they hardly dared breathe while the tiny
intruder hopped about and gatlu-iod a
morsel here and there. . He finally fb’W
aw.:y, but in the afternoon returned with which this gre.st remwfy Ma specific. It f* put
hi* mate. Crumbs had been prepared up lu Hqukfmrf drv torim. equally -effide-it.—
in anticipation, and thi« visit was fraught Catan,
with great reunite. There were 'biwl
A blacksmith ^always on the strike—when
men there, but the little bit ds trusted
th-.ra and asked for their friendship. It he h&gt; not biowing,
touchtid men’s heart* to find them-dv.-s
GodDFoil’HE.WOM^C..
visited by the messengers from the outer
Many ladits suffer from an extreme dotous,
world, and as the days went bv tho ono seuu-textorieal
conditavu, Tuey have de-turirsparrow became a hundred. They grew ing dremtia. exciting
juuaculsr .Mrting* prmnre and more confident, and to-day
imlul k.ii:; u;-;.f nlZ.:• re. They
' ‘ “ V brain toire fllgLLi
they would build their nest* against tho
Hgtit, sec.r-ding to n»cell doors if so permit Led. - They have
ru’» Iron B.ttir* give
no fear of tho men who oome and got
muni'll ml -itii-ii .n,.r.
and men.sent there for murder hold out
their bands and the brown b!.r&lt;L fly
down and pick food from the palm once
stained with blood. Tears have started
at the sight of .the innocent creatures
niEAINANDNj^lyE.
hopping about in the cells, and hardened
Well*’ Ht i-HM iteiwwer. greatest renwly ou
hearts have grown womanish as. the
sparrowa nestled on the .window-sill Mtti&gt; forunpicuce, leaiuie#*, &lt;N*xiul 'dutPlitr,«fc«-., il. •tdruM*1'!-*- Mieb. Dep n, J A M Es £.
and chattered a reward for their dinner. DAVlt &amp; CO^elrolLJiieh.
•
All summer long the bfnis have come
in over the tops ofthe pitlled-down up­
per sashes. They mint* soon bo closed
against cold weather,and the other day,
OUR FATHERS AXU WE,
when the prisoners were grieving that
Our fathers n*«l thoec o!&lt;l style of gripttu;
they must soon be sc: aralcd.from their
pUh
—
requiring
•‘•x for a dose. ‘We have them
feathered friends, “Ctipt. Joe” made ;«auL-r e.».itcd. and
by -XMflgt Itioetiarte, only
them happy by saying that he would need tee for a si; v. and no griping.
remove a pane of glass .and aid them all
No
num
I*
at
all
tl:u
-- pr-cqnnl to !:l».
he could to keep old visitors and secure
own average,
new ones.—Detroit Free Preft.
- • Write to Mr*. Lydia E- Fmkhuu, ’ASJ W«&gt;:rrn Avenue. Lynn, Maw,, for n»me»ot ladle*
that lia'e Im-ii reMured io perfev’. 'i .'altli by the
A souvenir of the Electrical Exposi­ UM of her Vegetable Curt-;., uml.
Ha j!-&gt;i&gt;ition in Paris has been brought to this Uve cure tor the most stubborn c-.- &lt; n oi tenude
country by the Hon. Strickland Kneass,
of the Pennsylvania Railroad, who has
jealously guarded it since his return from
his European tour. It is a life-like
A WOMAN’S EXPKltlKNCR. .
drawing of the shoulders, head, face
and mouth ot an officer of the French
Mothers ntd Daughters slmuld feci alarmod
Grenadier Guards, which was transmit­ when ucar:ws&gt;c»):wUui;jn»j&gt;5«e*«** them. "If
ted a considerable distance by electrici­ I am fretful Ir&lt;.uf exhaustion' &lt;il vital inner*
ty. The drawing is about six inches and ll.ecolor ri fuuiug tn'irt my fwt. Pa.-kcn»
Tonic gives quick JclleL It huUds me
l°ng by three wide, pn ordinary white Ginger
up and drives mm V pain with wonderful cwpaper, and the method of executing tainty.”—Buffalo lady.
tliis rdmarkasle feat was in this wise:
Buoy Smiled,’’ 1*
The original sketch was made by hand'
wt.in'fhbbe sup­
in the form of dote, metallic ink being
used. The sheet was then placed .on a posed but a srrtawr potheiw. t*ce just out.
table directly under the pointer of an
ordinary telegraph wire. This pointer
was moved rapidly to and fro over the
drawing, a receiver at the other end be­
ing worked in precisely the same way.
Each time that the pointer comes in
The nren who wmft work for « ddhar'n day
contact with the metallic ink dote tho .will sj*u«l tw&lt;&gt; hour* a day trying to wdvc a
circuit was closed, and a corresponding riddle for nothing.
impression made upon a piece of paper
at |he other end of the line. This ptocess was condoned until every- dot had
been ccried over the wires, and the
transmission was so nerfeetthat without
a distinguishing mare the person who
made the original drawing could not
have told one from tho othei. The
words “Parteouneaux, First Brigadier
do Paris” were also transmitted in fac­
simile. Daring tho session of tho Con­
■RS. LYDU L PiRtflia, GF ITU USS.
gress letters were also written and trans­
mitted by electricity, and signatures to
checks and notes of hand are now being
forwarded hundreds of miles in the
tamo manner in tho sister Republic.—
Philadelphia Record.

Anthony McDonald, a sailor belong­
ing to the English ship Forest Rights,
was drowned while bathing near the
Central wharf. Being a good swimmer,
it is not known whether he was soiztd
with cramps or attacked by a shark.
Tho mate of a vessel lying near went to
his assistance as soon as It was known
that he was in peril, but before reaching
tho spot the ufilortunate youth had sunk
out of sight. The body was dragged
for, but was not recovered until the next
morning, when it was found to have
been horribly mutilated by sliarks. De­
ceased was aged 18, a native bf Liverjxiol, and this was his first voyage. We
are told that while quite a party of gen­
tlemen were viewing the body, an im­
mense shark—estimated to be moreth&amp;n
fift^n feet in length—arojo to thoeurfaco and, seizing the body, instantly
carried it under the, wharf. Psutieg
standing near took hold of tho rope and
after a tug with the monster they de­
prived him of his pray. The subsequent
attack of the man-eater is conclurive
proof that the young man met an nwful
death in the voracious jaws of a shark.
His head and one arm and one leg were
gone, while a large gash was visible in
his left side. This is the second death
of the kind that has come to our knowl­
edge within the year. The other was
that of the mate of a small vessel, who
was knocked overboard between here
and Mobile a few months ago, and who
wits seized by one of these large finli and
carried below in the presence of.1 his
shipmotrfl.—Pensacola Gazette.

power nt rtwjurarxe. Thul» »y Uxd l«a treat­
ed fur month, in the naval w«y for Kry^pria#
of thr band, wiUiont bewfft. Mi* until bey
haod bad bcaoare a qu&gt;.» o' ;u!ritted fte*li &lt;i*
»be cum
Kennedy, proprietor nf the Fararitr Er-nsdy, fur help.

;e e&gt;hcr.r stipulatiug turrefr tn
s»d’* hand during- the optaatsrA.'
t the painful - process wllhouf.
zle or uttering a groan. Dr.1
&gt;vc FawHta Remefy freely to

diatM^r, ;md Mrz, Myen now Hvra and rejoice*
in her great delirer»nee.
.
,
“Favorite Bewdv" fa fast bceumlug attuated honicbold frfe:-d In all cnee* of Fettude
Wcaidiube aud Jireanea of the blood. One doiar a boltje. Your druggist ba* ik

tina bias dr ocloring, and sbaohxtaly wttteou*. fau or faror as to partiatu
It is, in tha fullest mqsb, a FA MILT

Pure, and Truttworthy GENEBAIj FAM­
ILY NEWSPAPER. Our KpoclalGlubbhc
terms bring it within tha reach of aS.

CONTINENT

LiTERAR WEEKLY JU’.iAAL,

Neither rplldual nor Sectarian;
Conducts by ALfHOX W.TOlUi. i &gt;. .uita* «
: A Fi»!S Ern.n.1." ale., etc.. o-K.-ri by ImuwI. G.

Backache or Lamo Dae.’:.
Rhfmmatism cr Lctr.-.o Joints.
Cramps or Sprains.
Heure.i;::a or Kic’noy Disease-..
Lumb’'ixo, Coveoo Achesor F’a!
Fomalo WcaJmass.

LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S
vegetable CQT-rFJW).

liKXi y.

Fancy and Staple

BARS, TEAS,
COFFEES. SPICES.

syrups.

Molasses.

TARCH. SOAP,
CRACKERS, CHEESE,

OAIj.UV.A,

lion bei ng the Elevated Road. He found
the stock selling at an attractive figure
aud at once purchased a controlling in*&gt;•
—As
\ soon
c/i.'.n oe
terest.
ns llJa
this was I-...
known quo­
tations began to advance. Gould now
control* the longest and shortest steam
roods in America—the Union Pacific on
the one hand and the New York Etevntod
an Use other. Everybody now predicts
that hw will bring the latter out of all its
difficultly, but this is a labor which will

■ — - FOB-------

$i.MiTElB.POSTJBE!

WHITE FISH.
TROUT.
MACKEREL.
.
*
HALIBUT,
COD FI.HH.
_
HERRIN!
STEAM
COOKED OAT MEAi
CROCKERY.
LAMPS,
FLOWER l»O'

TRY

OUR

CH1CMV, ILL

�SIP BHCKETS, (Tin or Wood,) SIP PAIS, EV
He »M aixty-cight year# old.

other day four men were fatally burned.
While Alice Woods was aiding to start the

her kerosene can exploded, and she was fatally
burned.

Mr. Cux offeree! a iwnltiUon r-aJlli

Hu destroyed by fire a few days ago, involving
a lean of FlSkOOO.
The boiler in the mill of the Kennebec
Framing Company at Fairfield, Me., exploded
on the morning ot the 2Sth. killing live per­
sons and .wounding several others.
cently murdered Vandereook at Austerlltx, N.

wards of $750 have been offered for hbcapl-

were
Hemal li.atrd of Health; by Mr. Edmund*, to

Biunchs Dovottass, who was arrested with
the Malley Brothers for the murder of Jennie
Cramer at Now Haven, Conn., has definitely
concluded at the forthcoming trial to give the
full details of the crime.
Dvbino the week ended on the 28th small­
pox and acariet-fevcr increased in New York
during the preceding week.
At the dumping-ground Ln Ninety-ninth

filled with grease. An explosion which re­
sulted killed one person and seriously in­
jured nine others.
’
'
. Ax investigation into the. recent outbreak
of trichinw at Minneota, Minn., abowa that it
waa generated in the hogs by a diet of rata.
Sows miscreant adjusted a double-barreled
shot-gun at the residence of Dr. A. J. Erwin,
al Mansfield, O., in such a manner as to dischargo when the gate waa swung. The doctor
returned from a professional call after mid­
night the other night and received nearly two
hundred shot in his clothing, but was not fa-(
bill wm
tally wounded.
Ur to noon on the 30th ulL three Inches of
snow bad fallen at the city of Rome, Go., and
tion nt command in reward to Indian outrages
tn ArizotMi tni'ticd by the Mormons. Several snow wm still falling.
private bills were paiwed. Tho President trarwTbk wiflow of the late General Dorriii, resid­
miit-&lt;l acommunscatlon from the Sec retary of
ing near St. Louia, waa mnrden.d.on the night
M...
L'--- giving Information r..
-J
.....
the Nary,
fn —
regard
of the 28th ulL by a’dissolute grandson and a
Cbirtqnl grant. Adlourned to the anh.
thievish companion.
. A rocii woman, with two sons, living in
tatu transportation between Lake* Michigan
Greenabnrg, Pa-, has fallen heir to 1300,0W by
and Erie. Mr. Edmunds reported favorably
the death of a brother-in-law in Sweden. .
tBe bill to rt-ctt*hjtah the Court of CommlsA few days ago a carriage belonging to a
funeral procesdon recklessly drove before a
train In the suburbs of Boston, and was
awuid. Tho eonsMcnitlun
smashed to fragments. The driver was killed
tnd four occupants terribly bruised.
By Mr. Berry. to
For the week ended on the 28th UlL there
fix rellro-d t*re* flt..W, tu
eer.w per mile:
were
forty deaths from small-pox in Chicago
by M r. Cobb, to rr [&gt;•■&lt;•. I the tend grant# of several
’
at tb.'unnnWictl PtM'ihe rnilrotoli*. Measure#., t।and twenty-four in' Allegheny City, Pa. Nlnewere «!*«&gt; presented for the admlninn of Arr ’’tecn new cases developed In Pittsburgh on the
."Oth ult., five st Memphis, tweuty-slx at Cindnnali and fifteen at Chicago.
Six store* and factories st Atlanta, Ga.,
were burned on the night of the 30th ult.
reported.
The first public trial of the street-car cable
iuJo|A&lt;-d.
railway in Chicago was made on the 28th ult.
and proved an unqualified success. The train

4

_

Domestic.
Aftee at Woonsocket, IL I., on the 35th
destroyed the Providence depot and the ma.
chiuc-ihop of Edwards Alqott A Talcott,
caualug a loss of SlUU OjO. Engineer Reed
wm fatally chilled and two firemen were in-

Thojiaji H. Stuteghox, who wm totally disnli'ed by the fall of nn elevator in the storcAouae of Mrs. A. T. Stewart, at Garden City,
hat been awarded 816,000 danugca, and the
Conn gave him $500 extra.
Thk Coroner’» Jury in, tint Hudson River
l EaUroMl disaster at Ppuyfeu Duyvil declared
too the 25:1? that Brakeman Melius waa guilty
W willful and cn.lpable neglect In not
varnir.g the approaching train, and prOukutKed him rcnpoarible for the Joes of
U* which follow ed. George J*. Hanford, the
cuKurtor of.tta- wrecked train, and Edward
SLAtord. Archibald Huttusnan and" Frank
BuA ^hgiueer*. were held responsible for
■ex At ot duty, as wm also Sup-rintcndcnt

aviTJgv #pecd of eight miles per hour.
The town of Johnsonville, on the TcnneMee
River near Knoxville, has been virtually de­
stroyed by th^high waler. 'On the 28tli ult.
the tailcat peak of the Buffalo Monntains,
havingbeen undermined by th£ cons tan trains,
fell from a height of three hundred feet.
Ox the 29th ult. a crevasse occurred at
Tropical Bend^I-a., flooding tho country for
tax miles back and causing inunetue destruc­
tion.
The jury in the Gultesu case haifc indig­
nantly denied the assertionVnode by Mr. Sco­
ville fa bls motion for a new trial that they
read newspapers during the time they were
impanrted.
. ■

I’rrKonnl and Polltlnal.
Pit«*inEXT Abthvk on the 2flth nnmljisted
Frederick A. Trille, of Nevada, to Be Gov­
ernor of Arizona, and Edwin H. Webster to
be Collector of Custom# at Baltimore. 8. A.
Whitfield was named for Postmaster al Cin­
cinnati, and Leofaild Markbret for A-statant
Treasurer.
Mn. Scovkxe and Warden Crocker' airanged on the 3fith that Guiteau should not
be latsrviewed nor have written communica­
UM -i;|A higher __
Nt..a..Yrt of tbc Ashland (Ky.) fiends., has tion wtth the outside work!except through Mr.
guilty and r-euteuced to be bung.. Scoville for a week. Scoville said Gultcau's
’Iwombli died a few days ago egtithui would sustain him until sentence-!—
it, aged 103. Nearly fifty years then be would-go to piece#. •
lx various part# of the country on the 20th
rosor end removed from her
hlcii Mxjtemled to the bone and the anniversary of Robert Burns waa appro
y pounuk
. The Treasurer of the United State* on the
with great aulltlaeiioa 2Gth reversed his decision in reference to re­
ceiving payment on called txmds held as
k- who had partaken of oome security for National Kok circulation, and
■ a butcher’s tn Mmueota, bankers can bow have them forwarded to the
Secretary for payment.
Edmund Bt.'iutK, ,who was a member of Con­
Ind., fired JOT guns gress and United Btatos Patent Commissioner
e verdict of the Gak more than thirty years ago, died at Newport,

ibeArra’Ueestate in Rhode
e-&gt; cmrOOO
non for
t
Inland hi.•» see*--: x I afitoffar at 82,G»)
w property In lA hands, subject to the
or the Court. 1

The two rival factions ta the majority of
the House is m uncertain m over.
The Ohio State Tempcnmee Conv#ntlow,
lately tn session at Culumbua. adopted rosota:tkm# favoring the submission of a Prohibitkm
AnMmdmrnt to the Constitution to the j*eople.
A Woshixotos dispsteh ot the 37th stated
that GuiU-au'» »pjXrtJte had failed, and that be

cHned to ap{*ear before the House Banking
the act to extend N stomal Bank charter:..

would hereafter be dumped into the Potomac,

CUTTERS AND BOBS AT COST!!
Only two pair of tboac Haslinga Chilled Shoe Bob# left. It will pay you

•

____ ________
Pre-ideal Garfield, to be delivered before both
bouses of Congres# February 87, the Prasi-

It i# stated that, during Ids business career.
ropolltan National Bank, has given to relig­
ious. charitable and educational luatitutioms
tho sum of &gt;l,4sasUOO.
Forctga.
Tnr. Asiatic cholera ha# broken or.t among
to Allahabad..in tLe northwestern jwrtion of
British India, and the Government has ordered
their dispersal.
.
London dlspstehee of the 36th announce
the departure of fre»li troops for Ireland.
Gar the 96th the aged steward on the estate
of Mrs. Morony, in County Clare, I reland, was
shot dead by unknown persona.
The Paris financial pgnic has extended to
Geneva, Switzerland. On the 27th there were

taken the jury called to the billiff hi waiting

HASTINGS AND JACKSON LUMBER WAGONS

They wane informed that a roreas had been
taken and Judge Cox had.left the court-room.
So they remained la their room until tho court

Snub,

The rumor that the jury hid agreed was
quickly apread from one to another, and the
excited crowd surged back into the court­
room, and anxiously awaited what all seemed
to expect, a verdict of guilty. The musty,
antique room is devoid of gas. and a scare or
more of candles which had been placed upon the

Blind*. €ilaii«. Oi! &lt; &lt;»tavm. W hile and Capered Lead
Jefferson nakfa. Sloven and Rnngrn. Cutlery , Silv’er
Warr, Pumps, (Wood and Irtiu,) I^4d Pipe,

In fact, everything found in » first claw Hardware Stofk. Headquarters for ail kinds
of the latest and moat improved Form Machiury, from the

Wheelbarrow to a Cltamphtu Mower or .Ylanimoth Cord Binder
p. S. Paper
Old Rubber* nnd Old Iron wanted.

C. L. GLASGOW.

I*arted a weird and fanciful, • unnatural aa-

J
the somber procession of those who held in
their hands the-dertiny of a human life.
. First came the prisoner, with a quick, nerv­
ous step, and, as he rested himself in the dock,

Ury candle fell full upon hb face, and dis­
closed its more than usual pallor. Not a tre-

SI. WOOD
—IS NOW READY TO—

SHOE HORSES
BETTER THAN EVER,

T. BOISE,

----- HAS THE----2Sth said: “The latest news from Irkutsk la
that Engineer Melville has proceeded to the
mouth of the River Lena to resume the search
for I.lcutcnant-Cominander De Long with the
greatest energy, aided by natives. Provisions
are plentiful, and so • the search can be pro­

through which the jury were to enter.
Judge Cox soon afterward took his scat.
The crier called “ Order,” and tho jury, at
5:85, Clod slowly into their Mata. Every
sound wav hushed save the voice of the clerk
a# he propounded to the foreman the usual in qulry: “Gentlemen of the jury, have you
agreed upon a verdict!”
Clear and disttuct came the reply: "Wo

WILL TAKE

WOOD

BWB#
BOOKS,
JEWELRY,
WALL PAPER,
Wl.XDOW SHADES,
DYE STI FFS,

companies Engineer Melville.” .
The Irish constabulary on the 38th found
For all Shoeing.
in bags in Lough Mask,, sunk by means of
PROPRIETARY MEDICINES,
huge stones, the indies of Hudley, the proc“What is your verdict, guilty or not gnlltyV'
eM-server, and his nephew, who recently dlaPBBSCRIPTIDKS,
With equal dislinclncas came the reply:
. appeared from Ballinrobe. Twenty arrests
“Guiltyas indicted.”
RECEIPTS,
were made by military at Athenny and Lough
Then the pent-up feelings ot the crowd
Hade ofnil Rock Kim.
Rea for necreting aona.
found exprcwion In uproaroua domonstraA Pa Bis dispatch of this 28th stated that De tiouu of applause and approval.
Freycluct was to be Minister of Foreign Af­
“Order,” •*order,”shouted the bailiff.
fairs In the new French Cabinet; Jules Ferry
Mr. Scoville and counsel for the prosecution
will have charge of Publie Instruction, Goblet were simultaneously upon their feet. Mr.
of tho Interior and Worship, Varroy of tcuviilc attempted' to addrou the Court, but
TO SELL, AND THE
Finances, and Cochcry of Poots and Tele­ tuc District-Attorney shouted: “Wait till we
graphs.
•
WAUONS
DtPAHTME T
A coxtract wm awarded at Montreal on "L;;ve the verdict complete and in due form of BEST
the 38th for luatwsMng the 8u Lawrence; at a
Order wan at length restored, and the clerk,
In the State of JRiehignn.
c&lt;*l of $3,3(K\0u the work to be completed
again addrc-sing the jury,.said:
within four yean*.
‘
Your foreman gays: ‘Guilty, as indicted.’ In tact, If you want any kind of work, nearly
YelijOw fetes haa swept away 2h! persons
aud all w arranted,
_ii
r&lt; utl’.
at Tcmox, Yucatan, and there were 1,700 cases
sjxmded.
CALL AWD8EE 111 JI.
under treatment mi the 28th.
Anothar
demonstration
of
approval
follow
­
O Doxxeu. &amp; Wuitixwk, •toek-brokcni of
P.8. I have a croud Yoke of
Dublin, closed their doors on the 28th, with ed this announcement, but not so prolonged Oxen and a sett of double hiu.
m the first., Mr. Scoville demaudei a poll of
ItabUitie# ot £180,000.
single IlaruesM for sale, cheap.
8kv*eai. banking houses at Hamburg .and the jury, which was granted, aud each juror
was called by Dune, and each, in a linn voice, •Tos.
WOOT&gt;.
Cologne have failed lately.
A riCHoob-novsE and two other buildings promptly responded: “Guilty.” Aa the last
were swept away by the bursting of a reservoir ljuac waa exiled, the prisoner shrieked:
“
Uy
blood
will
be
upon
the
Beads
of.
that
at Calata, France, on the 30th ulL Twenty­
jury. Don’t you forget it.”
seven bodies had been tiken from the ruins. '
Mr. ScoviHe again addressed the Court, say­
Tn bob was a slight earthquake shock at
ing: “ Your Honor, I do not desire to forfeit
Canada on the 20th ult
. The Union Generalc Bank of France stopped any right I may have under the law ar d prac­
lor tbc winter is uroilng dutrieu. • cry
payment on tl»c 80th ulL The Banks of Ep- tice in this District. If there is anything that
tarwe remrar. for commratively liifle talxt.
gland . :id Belgium immediately raised tbeif I ought iodo now to save those righto, I would
b^Forjnl1. wwtie*ilar»a*l&lt;ln*s imiueduurly
rates of discount, and several failure ot&gt; be indebted to your Honor to indicate it tome!
Judge Cox, in reply, assured him he sheukl
curred on the Stock Exchange.
hare every opportunity, that the charge would
be furnished him in print to-morrow, aud he
LATER NEWS.
M A f?K|
TRAI
would be accorded all the time allewed by taw
In the United State# Senate on the 81rt ulL in which to file hl# exception, and that ho
Mr. Windom reported a resolution requesting would also be entitled to four day# within
the PresMcnt to transmit all correspondence whloh to move arrest of judgment.
with our diplomatic agents in Mexico and Gus*
Guiteaa, who, from the moment Judge Cox
temala since January, 1SSL Mr. Harris intro­ begun delivering bls charge, had dropped
duced a bill for a bridge across the MiaaL.I ppi completely hl# air of flippant arrogance, and
TSYSHWzat Memphis. *Thc Sherman Three-per-cent. sat with rigid feature* ami conijwetaed lips,
Funding bill was taken up, and the V est amend, called out in tunc* of desperation: “God will
ment was defeated and that by Mr. Plumb was avenge thia outrage.”
agreed to. The tatter provides for a rc&lt;lcnipJudge. Cox then turned to the jury and said:
Uou fund of only 8100,000,000. In the House
“Gentlemen of ike j try: I cannot expresa
BROWNS’IRON BITTERS arc
a resolution was adopted requesting the Pres­ too many thanks for toe manner la which you
a certain euro for all diseases
fihe Eadart# the Pate of a Severe Sarvfeal Opera*
ident to obtain a list of American citixcna con­ have discharged your duty. You have richly
requiring a complete tonic; espe­
:i*n|H Ithaut TaAlaaChlcieforM.
fined in English prisons. The annual Post­ merited the thank# of your countrymen, and 1
cially Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Inter­
route bill was reported nnd jessed. Mr. Cole- feel assured, you will take with you to’your
mittent Fevers, Want of Appetite,
rick introduced an Apportionment bill fixing hottca the approval of yam c*Ju#c;eiK«s. With
[Brow the Courier.]
Ixms of Strength, Lack of Energy,
the number of Representative# at 816, and Mr. thanks, gentlemen of th# jury, I dismiss yon.”
etc. Enriches the blood, strength­
Cox presented otje providing for 307.
With thia announcement the coart waa doens the xnnscles, and gives' new
GriTEAU is very mucli subdued, and saya elured adjourned. And now the famous triaL
llfb to the nerves. Acta like a
little except to his guards. Dtetnct Attorney which has absorbed public intercal and atten­
charm' on the digestive organs,
Corfchi!l received from Cameron, Mo., on the tion for more then ten weeks, waa eadwl
removing all dyspeptic symptoms,
cally aibctvOer #«*peralh elth »vriof.»ly •ufi'.-rictg
81#l ult.-a package of new rope with which to
The crowd quickly left the court-room, and
reck, a walking tikchon.
such as tasting tho food. Belching,
hang the ataAMln. It is stated that Mr. Sco­ (be prisoner, gesticulating with his manacled
I tuvid
Heat in the Stomach, Heartburn,
ville has accepted a pro;x&gt;sitloa fro* a r.ianuetc. Tho only Iron Preparation
facturer of refrigerators in Philadclpbta to ers’ ulde he leaned over aud called out to an
that will not blacken the teeth or
take Gtiiteau’s body immedlat-ly after death, acquaintance: “The coart in* banc will re­
give headache. Sold by all Drug­
preserve it, and exhibit it tn all the principal verse this business.”
gists at $1.00 a bottle.
cities of the United Slatea and Europe, half
Hi# aptvarance was that of a man deeply
BROWN CHEMICAL CO.
moved with indignation at eome outrage or
Baltimore, Md.
The heaviest snow-storm of the winter was Indignity which Lad been put upon him. As
reported on the Hist ulL from Virginia. Ken­
gt»« the Faynritr It Hird
tucky, New York and New England. Tbfi and boys yelled and shouted themselres
blood -u* c. Mtt-d new I
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.
horsehairs went withdrawn at Boston.
iiruree in mockery of the prisoner’s boost:
The Austrians and Herzegovinians had an­ “The American press and people are all with
other desperate encounter at Bilek on the me."
81st ulL, in which twenty men were killed on
The van was quickly driven away, fallowed
each side. Thirty-five soldiers of a Dalmatian by the jeers and yells of the crowd.
Mr. Scoville will probably flic a motloB la
M. D* FBgrcnnrT read the platform of the
arrc*l uf judgment and for * new trial on ex­
new French Ministry In the Chamber of Dep- ceptions. The law giver defendant four days
to file a motion and reaxms for a new triaL
fmwM by ti.e
the right of the peopik* to hold public meet­ day to hear argument thereon. Should this
ings. and a postponement of the revision of motion be overruled, defendant will appeal to von &gt;* tiie tiwk

BOBS! BOBS;

A FEW CUTTERS

PAINT AND BRUSH

Call and Examine!
F. T. BOISE

BROWN’S

IRON

Diary Free

LUCRATIVE EMPLOYMENT

BITTERS

i BRHE HOY

NO 6URf, NO PH!

ST taSIML WOHOEBi

WILSON’S COUGH MIXTURE I

Oacah L.
tho Cashier of the
wrecked Mechanic#* National Bank of Mew

exceeding thirty days. The January general

It la stated that SOO fishermen perished
Aocoxpixo to JlradM-teTt telegrams from
twenty-eight leading cltlea, recxuird on the

out the country wax improving with the nd-

tween rx-Swretarr Rtaiue and the diplomatic
dawn. Extender brick buikting-

while chatting familiarly and guod-nattiT«d'y.
t be thought the jury would
‘ 1 think they will acquit ruo

morning of tl»c Slat ulL, m
though Uie

atOct
MOf
live#

there, but wlU be appealable to the April

July sad Augurt. But should it hr closed by
the ):tttrr r#rt of May, then. If judgment is

July.

She gtashviue glcirs

—Tire ineu, with two wagons, went
5nto Marysville,. CaL, the other day,
W»*ii ♦85,000 worth of gold dust, the
r—utk of thirteen months’ work on «
•VunM* in York Flat.

PIeec 2Bd Artistic Jeb Printing

CM.

�Asylum;
white cwto

Findiue the iw «li—d, broken there
no li.no in &lt;r«dino in. Tile field
U amide for ibo dH&gt;l«y of the renin,
•of both.
Our Literary Society is increasing in­
terest. “A fvsatof fat things, of wine*
on the lees well refined,” will be fur­
nished those that attend. Oo Saturday
evening last notwithstanding the in­
clemency of the wfcsther.' a goodly
nnmlrer both old and young were at­
tentive listeners to the discussion of
the question previously announced.
The field was hotly contested. Nearly
all of the home talent was brought in­
to requisition, also aided by C. Down­
ing and Mr. Benedict from the State
RniuL Victory finally perched on the
ban lie** of the negative.
ym

i
'

\_—/ • OCCASIONAL.
MORE ITEMS.

The exercises at the Troxel school
house, were very interesting, except
that cayenne peper that was put on
tile »tove by some unrincipled, mis­
creant. As.the man was building the
fire, he felt a tickling sensation in hia
throat, thinking things were not all
right, looked under the top piece of the
stove, and discovered a quantity of
cayenne ju-pper over top of the stove.
He swept it off before any serious dam­
age was done. There was enough to
strangle rhe house full to death. If it
was done to spite any one, or break up
the lyceum. wu will any, you mny work
at that game and you will fine your
mutch after a Utile. It is not hard for
a mean person to do any kind of a
mean net, that '-c takes into bis head
to do, whether it injures his best friend
or not. or to what extent he injures
them. We hupp in the future that we
will not have reason to make mention
of any more snch acta. The exercises
fur next Saturday evening, will be of
a literary character, such as select lead­
ings, &lt;•** :y», speeches and other ex­
ercises to make it interesting.
Nero.
WEST SUNFIELD.
Snow all gone.
Rough roads again.
'
James Walch 1ms bought the Rufns
Harrisforui.
,
Good skating for the bo^a, an they
sorm to Hppreciate it too.
Cimghs, colds and sore throats are
atil' in onler, owing to the chnugable
weather.
* Ira. King, of whom we spoke last

week, hita gone to Detroit for medical
treatment.
Charley Sackett bought him a team
Itrat Wednesday, of George A. Dillcn-.
beck of CaStleton.
Several teams from Woodland have
bd-ti hauling ice from the Kilpatrick
lake, the past week.
.
We had the unspeakable pleas­
ure of visiting Bismiuk last Friday,
but did not have the pleasure uf meet­
ing friend writiat.
' One hundred and fifty cords of stove
wood, is-whai Charley Childs eati m nt vs
he will bave whvn done sawing. Pretty
gmxl wimxI pile Charley.
Peter Weeks advertises his form for
sale. Wc understand p&lt;M&gt;r health is
hi* reason for «o doing. This is a good
cliunvf for some one who wishes, a
farm.
Charley Hammond went to Ionia,
Iwt Thurwlay, to return bis adopted
Ixiy to it* father, as he (tire father) has
re •;ui(ly been married again aud de­
sired to haw his son with him.
R*«r. Tbeodore Marsh, of Grand Rap­
ids preathed at- the Presbyterian
cliurch lust Sunday afternoon. One
wwk fromn^xt Sunday there will bo
service* again «t this church, conduct­
ed by Rev. Jewell.
.

BALTIMORE.

Squatty.
Pock away your ice.
Erl. nnd a. P. Warner are
filling their ice houses.
M. M. Siucnm ha* pnrrirasvd J. Endstey’s team, wagon, etc. James talks
of railroading.
A Jubhnycane passed through this
section; laying fence* prostrate, patent
Miller &amp; Strong hare shucked nut
TOO bushete of clover seed this winter,
with their new Bridsc! Hullcr.
The top of M. Pilgrim* straw stack

place at Union Hall Fob. 20th.
Chan. Houghtaliu of .Hastings is
teaching school in what is known as
the Sponable district. Lost Thursday
while lie was trying to correct a young
girl for lutaltehavior. three rough., by
the names of Crook, Carter, and Crakes
rose up and taking the teacher entirely
unawares, knocked him down nod
dragged him out .of the door.
They
were arrested and fined $15. apiecc.and
turned out of school. It wquid be a
great, deal better for tire community if
they had been sent to Ionia for a full
term and allowed to graduate from that
institution. The district has been no­
ted M&gt;me;time for its rowdyism and the
better cl.ira of people have made up
their minds to put a stop to it Young
Honghtnlin still “holds the fort.”
'
Hans.

wood money.
Now Mister Sfoimg, the hull thing is
a He from begiuiu to end and a durned
slander wa our disreputable citizens,
and I jest think I can whollop nine
nine kinds ot motasea oqt ofiwiy lung
eared weaaed faced lantern Jawed bow
legged pot bellied gol durni'd fliibfi gasted six months sou of a sea cook
that will rite any sich stuff alxiuv our
quiet and offensive uuyborhod.
Whyjdon’t he cum out like a man
and sine his name like .white folks nnd
not go snc&amp;kcn around uud ritin a lot
of libs, and then sine his name in
French, on purpose, so we can’t trll
who he is? 1 want to tell yon Mister
Strong that when I rite anything for
tho ntMMpnper, I hint ashamed to sine
my own name to it, and liear it la.

Paddy Gowhollopthedmviloutofem

EAST MAPLE GROVE.

E1TOR COUNTY.

Mrs. Hall is recored with the sick,
this week.
•
Maty Ruse is the possessor of a bran
new organ.
Tim Brooks is talking of going west
next spring.
Tho West Kftlamo Reform Club has
bad another skirmish.
John Ehret is making picpartions to
build a house next summer.
L. Eastman lost a horse last week
from the effects of a broken leg.
On Thursday of last week the house
of James Moon caught tire, but, before
it had gained any headway, help was
secured and tho fire put out,
.
A few days ago, two families living
in the eastern portion of Mnple Grove,
and under the same -roof, got down to
business and had a regular old fashion
ed family jar.
Peter.

Bellevue hud another slight fire, one
day lastvv,eek.
John Clark died Jan., the 32nd, nt the
Residence of hia brother, David Clark,
in Eagle, aged S3 years.
Bellevue is talking big over n manu­
facturing enterprise, which they pro­
pose to locate there, if they can sell
enough stock at $23 a share to -make
the industry a success.
Jus. Johuson, of Charlotte, fot a
number of years a deputy Sheriff of
Eaton county, -was last week deposed
by Sheriff Lazell and n young man
mimed Holt appointed in his place.
P. Casey of Eaton, foil a distance of
90 feet in a well one dny last week,
while trying to get n bucket out, which
had been lost therein. He received
several slight bruses, but none serious.
Ijrst Friday evening when tho chil­
dren were going hone from school in
Windsor, they discovered a bundle ly­
ing at the end of a sluice; examination
proved that it containtcd a very young
infant.
Next day it was broght to
1Charlotte, and put in the hands of phy­
sicians
who
decided that the child was
1
born,
deoil, It is illegitcmate, end the
1
mother
is
a
girl of herctofore;question'
1able character.

LACEFS LICENTIOUSNESS.

Lacey, Jan. 55,18&amp;2,
Editor Nashville Noosfaper :
Now see hear, I jest wont tu say a
few words about that go! darned lot of
stuff that that darned Fitz Caboodle
put in the paper awhile ago about the
folks here in Lacey. Now I jest want
MICHIG1N VEWB.
tu tell you, and all tho rest of the folks
that the hull thing is a confomled lye.
Two new towqships, Mentor nnd
and I can prove it. Then- nin’t no Rich Nunda,
;
have been organized iia Che­
cuiupany hear and everybody known* boygan
■
county.
it
N. F. Beebe A. Co., general merch­
Now he sed there waa a Clark and ants,
,
of Pinckney, have failed. Their
Burk Strut hear, now that’s nil bosh. liabilities
1
exceed $58,00 &gt;.
there aint no stret. hear at all nothin
A quantity of "crooked” beer has
only*common roads'; and then he sed been
'
seized at Allegan, there being no
the mectin was held id the sanktimnn- .revenue stamps on the ksgs.
ions; now I diile'nt know what sankti-.
Parties from Detroit are going to es­
Biontons was so I asked Mister Clark tablish
■
on extensive charcoal furnace
and he has been all around all over at
. Hersey, three miles from Reni City.
every where and he sed they want no
A smart young man of Port Huron,
sicli place in the .country, so yon sec paid $100 for a few minutes’* mntrsethat’s a lie.
\
inent with three can! mon to men,
And then he sed the meetin was call- Tuesday.
‘
ed to onler by the city Mare, now
Battle Creek hnckmen Rave hmde n
that* an u th er lye for they hnint got blasted monopoly of themselves, and
iii» rich thing hear.
Daily Cortright now charge $2.50 to $3 for 'attending
kna got on old mare, but she dout be- funerals.
fbng to any city by a durned site. She
■A plat of 11 acres hns been added to
belongs to him, he give seven doUara tho village of Petoskey. It takes., in
for her and paid it himself out of his the old chief Petoskey’s cottage and
own pocket, and then ho calls this a grounds.
city; now Mister Strong you know tills
About half the stun needed with
nint so because you have lp&gt; hear your which to build and equip an astrono­
self (don’t you know ydneum along mical observatory at Albion college,
one day when Al and I was skinin has been secured.
skunks up on Mungers hill !) and you
ILS. Tarbell, ex-superintendent of
know it don’t look nnthin like a city; public instruction in Michigan, has
and any contnrnAlcd Flabergnsted fool been elected president of tho state
that (font know any letter than tu call teacher’s association e.i Indiana.
it a city, don’t know so much as Bar­
W- E. Dickenson, of Ontonagon, of­
ney’s dog an she dident knotV her own fers $8,000 reward “and nn questions
pyps till they was nine days old.
. asked” for the return of his boy, Willie,
Now you know, Mister Strong, that supposed to have been stoled for tho
it takes lots of work tu make a city. ransojn.
In the first place we would have tu get
“Torpedo” Smith, well known in the
up a perdition and send it up tu Lan­ Saltwelldistrit of MichM wns married a
sing when the Alligator won in session, few days ago. Ho has often said he
(butof course we should have tu send would never be blown up, but now we
up a little money and a keg of whisky,) will see.
and then they would give us a charac­
When the authorities seized a re­
ter, Then we should have to set out a spectable Saginaw jnan’s team for nonlot of hitehcn posts and sum side walks pHjmeut of taxes, the papers charita­
with sum broken plunks in them, so bly said they, “were stolen from the
the girls will stub their toes aud foil stable in broad day-light.
down, and the boys stand around on
Bowe smart'youths near Kalamazoo,
the comers and laugh at ’em ; and we stopped a lone farmer in hh -wagon
wood have to plant sum lamp posts, or “just for fun,” pretending to be high­
else use election lites, and we wood waymen, bnt the fun was not so fnnny
have to make a lot of officers, sieh as a when the farmer belabored them with
mayor audcity acorder and prostitut­ a good strong whip.
ing attorney and sum city sconndrelThe Michigan Central railroad com­
rneu, and snm of th- m big fot valea- pany have had 1,8000 of their employes
men, that go around with pin* coats vaccinate. Doctors were kept waiting
and big brass buttons on them, and at the depots and when a train came in
diink so much lagar beer that they the train men had their anus scratched
look as if they had n hay widow stuck in the orthodox stylr.
on tiie fore side of tbepb and u lot 1 Contract* have been closed by alum-

inrrv-ing, the attendance is large, but
nn-c rings will probably close thia more thing. We havent got any of Iwring firm si C.'ndiliac with the Grand
tiw.-m at mH, nothin bnt an old bl.tck- Rapid* aud Indiana railroad company
Henry Strong. Mr. Miller’s partner
for 1,000 cars for the purpose of deliv­
of t’Hstieron, is hulling clover in
ering ice to parfitw in Cincinnati, St.
Baltimore. H. take* well .’irnong the
L»&gt;uisand elsewhere.
full.
Bay City haa a cat with one green-

the older daily uewspaiM-ra In that city
and hire souk* brain* for their wlitor*.
Burgbun entered Camp.' Murril 5t
Camp’* dry goods store, at Jiickooit.
through the rear window in the hastment, and completely cleaned out the
stxwk of rilks and aatino, trained at
:$10,000. They left no trace, and no
,cl mi has been obtained yet. *

thoughtful consideration worthy of all
praise
the gift* acre distributed "on
I
■Saturday, so that tire recipients were
.enabled
Urvujoy a g&lt;xxi dinner ami a
•’
1go'xl fire on Sunday. To make the
I arrangements
all the more cheerful,
‘
the
bells of the parish church rang mer1
: riiy,
and
hundreds
went- home with
1
h-gs
of. mnttdn, ribs of btef, loins of
’
ixirk.nnd
other jiiint*. and fours! the
I
rouls ready to cook them when they
reached their dwellings. Her Majesty
also
contributed one hundred pounds
’
to ti&gt;e clothing fund.
Mr, Gladston’s "body guard” was the
subject
of a discussion at the Flint­
1
shire Session on Tuesday. It has not
hern generally known that it was unfbrtnuiitely considered advisable to
.
have a special body of police to look
after
the Prime Minister nnd take care
1
.that-he was not matte the victim of
suiuc Feaiiin plot.
The Chief Con­
stable of Flintshire wns ordered to
provide ext?a coustahle*,'and now the
question is whether thr Government or
the couptj’ is to pay these new. The
Clioirnuur -i
Mr. .Glaestone would
soon be going to London, and the ex­
pense would cease. After a discu^rfon
sometimes taking a humorous \u&gt;d
sometimes almost an angry tnne, rb
was decided tlirt the county would pay.
theexpesesnf guarding the Premier
diiriug the recess. His safety during
the Parliamentary Session will lie a
subject for tire consideration of the
London ptdice.
The negotiations for nn AngloFreuch'Treaty of Commel’co haw been

.

.Total,
lues. ri*k«i miieeiiM.
A lot of 500,000 whitefish eggs .ship­
ec2,flut«
rd tcnnlimled,...
ped from Northville, Midi., tn Sou
V ’
Franeiacut ovas by some aecident deRESOURCES.
of premium (or XMI
rained on the journey, qud being sent
in near, the fish hutched out. and only
about one-fifth of theqdantity shipped
12.17
ItsLvkiual htxe,.
has been saved.—Evening News.
A Grand Rapi-!s man mistook a vac­
vioms j ear.
cine point’ for a tooth pick, uhile clmt*
Total resource*.
ting in a’ ducter’s office, and fooled
JJAHLITIE*.
with ft until he pyicked hb tongue so
T&gt;»t»i Ltabjitira..
that it bled. The vnccin “took” and
INCOM K.,
he now wears his tongue outride his
mouth, in a*sling fastened to his ears.
wr.w
The poatoffice locution .question at
Amount roltwirti tins
Anu Arbor has be. n »M-ttlvd, the gov­
ernment having accepted Ricji A. Beal's
Aiuouut recel &lt;-&lt;! irura rasa bal­
Idferlo build an office on the ro-'ner &lt;»t
ance of pniv.lous year.....
Main nnd Ann streets. The new post­
Income from all i»ti&gt;crtource\ vta:
Individual note.......... ....
office building will lie the IhmI arrang­
ed in the state, having plate glass front,
Total UKOua.- ft r U«c year
marble floors, etc.
EXPaNbilUKig*.
Friday afternoon at Pontiac. John
Amount paid for Iomck duriDg Uic
year (of wbfcbf&amp;LSt occumri
Meloy, who keeps n glix cry nnd bar
in prior year*,)................
audit also a city Alderinan, was ar­
Amount bl saury ao.l ivt» psij to
officers stui directors as jxr it­
raigned before Justice Fitzpatrick
ems tn Schedule A......
charged with selling spirituous liquor
Amount of rii oi;.cr cxpctUuires
dunug t-c year as per &amp; beon Sunday. -The jury pronounced him
duie B,..............................
guilty. Fined $50 and teii days in jail.
Decision appealed.
Total expcodltare* during the year,
SCHEDULE A.
An exchange says “nZpriliters ‘devil’
AMOUNT.
employed in'an office not more than « i* a chance this time of the French mid
4 I fiO
thousand miles from Vassar, says his English Government* coming to- terma S’frctary..^.............. . .................
2.00
The
great
bone
of
contention
Imtweeu
1.80
Treutunir,.................. .
earthly lot b a hard our. AL his boanl2.00
lug house they charge him with nil the the two Governments, viz.; the .duties Rreafdcttt,........................ .
Total8cl^l. A....
pic they can’t find, and an the office on woolen good*imported into Frnnae
• 7JO
his employer charges him with all the will lie removed in the following man­
8CHEDI I B Bner:—The French 'Government will
'pie’ they do find.”
Henry Willis, of Battle Creek, aged place that of Great Brit inn in the same Coltectlug uMxsisncot.............. .
Total Sched. B..................
84, is now at Washington urging Con­ poaition'as regards woolen goods it oc­
MlaCELLANEOlb QUEoTIONS.
gress to dig a ship canal across the cupied in the I860 Treaty, audio re­
turn the. British Government will low­
How many jusorincDta Iim»c t&gt;n-n uuuk- dur­
State of Michigan, from Detroit to
ing the year? A1*"- “ta'- Wh*l i» lie niruuat
Lake Michigan. Mr. Willis Ims been er the duties on French wines by one- uf all U:c aMeMtnciita made during the year!
a fervent and persistant advocate of half the current rates. TJiu British Au.-. B57.9I What is the tale per crfit of »uch
Government will therefore have the afsewi.cuts on vbeproperty insuedf An*., 4X)L
this scheme from the time to whicli
Slate of Michigan, I .
the memory of man runneth not back advantage of again testifying ite faith Comity of Barry - J ’
in Free Trade principles by actual Coii8. S. logcxtou. 1 re»i&lt;lvnt, and E. v.
to thr contrary.
Secretary of »a&gt;d company, do. «:&gt;d each fur
cessions,
aud
the
French
Government,
Saturday evening nt Muskegon An­
himaclf doth depuw! and
tiwrt Uicy have
son Johnson, n Swede, fell from n scaf­ on ita aide, will obtain a snlwtantinl rvud the foregoing atatemeut, and know the
advantage for the French wine grow- content* thereof, and that they gave good
fold with other workmen on top of
reason
to
believe,
aud
do
beiiev,
&gt;ivd atateWK. '
him and died bhoitly alter from tin
It had long been contemplated to
' 8. S. INGERSON, PrrsMent. ainjuries. John Johnson broke an arm
E,J.
NA8H,
Sectary. &lt;
have a National Exhibition of Ait* and
by the fall, nnd the other carpenter
Sworu and rpl&gt;»cr:t»etl belorv nsv, nt W oodwas seriously injured. Anton Johnson Manufactures in Ireland, and a meet­ tand, hi Kahl state aud county. tht&gt; 25tb day, &lt;4
was 34 years old, and leaves wife au&lt;! ing was held in Dublin respecting it
last week. But Mr. Dawson,• M. PM
Justice of thr Peal®, “j
four children.
Lord Mayorelect, objected to the patHarry Count* Mich.j|
A sleigh packed full of young peo-t
roiingu of the Queen or any member of
pie, near Edenville, Midland County,
the Royal f »mily, and, as other - differ­
Adminiatrnfor'a
Kale.
Thursday night, slipped over a blufi
ences of opinion arose, it was finally
£lld tell about 40 feet, lodgi ng on a
NATHAN WE tKA &lt;**« w&lt;
resolved to abandon the exhibition al­
narrow shelf, with its load under it,
except two young men, who bellied the together. These pretended “patriots”
appear determined to do all in their
rest out. Two persons were badly
hurt; the rest, with the team, almost power to ruin their country,
I hear that the promoters of the tele­
miraculously escaped unhurt.
The Marcrilns m-ImhiI? have been re­ phone are hampered by Government
restrictions, lest the revenues from
opened, the smnll-pox scare having
telegrams should suffer, but even now
subsided. Tlirrc were two cases in
m many ns 20,000 messages a day are
iiorth fitly [W&gt;): acre «»t O.* ■■.»*» ou l-.irK.-4
(lie village., both .in cue Iiuumi iilni
srr.^of tliexutb tis»t &lt;juaner(l-l'c
neither fatal. At Ixiasburg, Kalamu- sent by the agency in London alone, ill] in unru two (Sjoorth at tMHn
and its advocates look forward to the tn the tahrn-Mp of 1U .!&lt;• ttrorr.
z&lt;h&gt; county, six miles vast of Marcellus,
Mlohixu. cmitai'iinc lUsy [Ml aw
time when evcrylxaly will be able to
there have Iwen 15 casi-s and one death
—that of the postmaster. No trnim forward a spoken me-sapgc to any part
WM. U FEHHINER. Aimlnbtrrtor.
of
the
metropolis
for
a
penny
or
have
stop there and no mails tire taken nr
it d livered for three pencel
left.
It is positively stated that in the
At Britton affiant a month since Jacob
Chee ver's oldest son, aged 34, died ol event of new disturbances in Egypt,
consumption.
Almost immediately which has been anticipated, England
five of the family wet® faked sick aud France will join in supporting the
either with typhoid or lung fever. On Khedive with an effective force suf­
tho 29nd inst, the youngest, aged 18 ficient to suppress the movement. It is
years, whs hurried, mid on the S3, a not expected that any other Power will
daughter about the wine age died. raise an active opposition to such a step
Another daughter and the mother are although official protests are likely
very low and probably will yield to enough to lie heard. The French aud
English Governments will know their
the burning fever.
W. B. Keyser mid R. J. W. Bowen own interest ami duty too well to take
are farmers, and live in tho same heed of such comments. It would bo
neighlxirhood in the Town of Tecum short sighUxl policy indeed to permit
seh, Lenawee Co.
Their residences anarchy in Egypt,
Miss Langtry commenced her pro­
are connected by n line of telegraph
about one-half mile long. R. J. W. fessional career not as a beauty, but as
an
actress—■on Tuesday at Brighton.
Bowen takes the Weekly Free Press.
When he got the news of the result of The freaks of fashion are indeed, a
puzzle
to ordinary mortals. Tho “fri­
the assassin Guiteau’a trial, be tele­
graphed it to W. B. Keyser. Thau the volous world” worships frivolous things
When
its'liomage
is paid to an actress
news wna telegraphed tram Washing­
ton to the Free Pre«s; that paper who Itnnwns how to act. we can bettor
understand
and
sympathize
with it.
brought it by mail to IL J. W. Boweu^
American touriste and travelers on
mid he sent it by telegraph to W./fi7
Keyser. Is there another line inf the their way to Italy and Bwitrerlind are
world operated by formers? Who says losing little time this season in sight­
They fly through
farmers are not progressive?—Free seeing excursions.
here as if they were in fear of arriving
Fresa.
too late elsewhere. If we all went on
Gout.
like this for a while we should prob­
18CHNURE-8TUCKE.-AI the' rrridence &lt;4 ably get ahead of the old planet itself
Elder P. Holier, Jan. Wib. Mr. Phillip
.
Bctnurr of Ca*Ueten to Mtu Mary Stuckey in its daily evolutions.
Adgubw
of Ohio.
Toafh, Gar and H&amp;adache,
J:MILLER-STRICKLAND -At the rmidenee
A woman at Burlington, Vt, hum a
C. A- Roush, at Woadland. Jmi. 37th, by C.
A. Hough," !&gt;;-■ Mr. Wm. H. differ to Mk« preacher for $10,000 damages because
Dehnsy Striekutid lolii of Wo&lt;xfl*ud.
be refilled to marry her to a sixth hus­
band. The preacher said there waa
DOST DIE IN THE HOLRE.
such a thing as overdoing business.
A*k drunrUta for. “Rough on Rata." It
'cieuni oel rata, n:»ec,t*ii-bug»&gt;. ro«'i&gt;ci, venntu
ELEGANCE AND PURITY.

�From January 15 th to February 15th, 1882,1 shall offer
the balance of of »uch goode as I do not with to carry over,
at prices that will insure them sale, regardless of cost, to elose'
them out before taking an inventory.

with her own kev or taken the one ta
• the wardrobe, nnd, securing tbe money.
; bid it cither in or out or the house
without awakening the old lady. I
finally told Mollie that I should have
to search her anti make a thorough ex­
amination of the house.
^•* Well,’she naively remarked, .‘if
yon do firxl any money about the house
it won't prove'that I stole it, will it?*
*• ‘ It will ba prima facie evidence. I
said.'
Upsat
“I locked her up in her bedroom
and began a thorough search; band­
•tip:
boxes pried into, bureau-drawer* pulled
Xou
out, cupboards ransacked, and ftatdb*
0!.
went through her own room. Unddrthe
carpet undur her bed I found .in a com­
pact wad twelve §100-dollar bills. Now
tbe total amount kown to I&gt;e rniasing*
was only §1.045. Where had the §155
como? Where had tho gold coins gone
to? yVes thv bureau-drawer paying in­
terest on It* deposit?
‘Now I’ve got you, Mollie,” I said.’
as I confronted her.
“ Mollie fainted.
CIECTMSTANTLIL EVIDENCE.
•• A bottle of camphor and a little
. cold water brought lier speedily to.
yet rthq sturdily proclaimed her inno­
cence.
•
uiul • Decorllvc.
“ • I didn't take Mis* Smith’s money;
44 Never condemn a person on cir­,
cumstantial evidence; it is unreliable, no, I did not,’ 'she convulsively ex­
even when the circumstances seem to, claimed between her sob*.
•• Mis* Smith would not allow ifae to
fit into each other like a couple of cog­
wheels," said John T. Morn*, who u, take her to jail, whore I reasoned con­
au experienced detective of Springfield, finement would soon compel her to con­
fess.
Ohio.
“My work, however was but partial­
‘•Give us tho story, Uncle John.”
••Not long ago there resided in ly done, for the gold coin* had not
Franklin County a wealthy old maid. turned up.
“I determined that, those coins must
Miss Sabina Smith. By inheritance she
be ta the house, and resolved upon o
which wm mi old-fashioned, though thorough search from cedar to garret,
comfortable, dwelling-house. She was The cellar disclosed nothin", atid at
reputed to hyve a good, square bank last I stumbled upon a small stairway
account.”
leading to the garret, the door to which meal porridge, too. is so healthful an
“Jim Webster, you are accused of
“How old is *he?”
wa* a common trap-door, securely fas­ article of food that it should bo used being drunk. I mu very sorry to see
••Welk on the shady side of s&amp;ventv, tened by a padlock, to which was at­ universally.
- ; .
&gt; you here, but 1 liave my duty to ]&gt;erbut she had a weakness like all old tached three links of a chain.
If it i* necessary, in order to econo- ; form all the same,” and the Recorder
•“Give me the key,’ I said to Mis* mizo time in the morning, to act the looked very hard and starn.
nmid», not for kittens, poodle.% or ca­
Smith,
door
naries. but for children.
She had —
—. to
—that
.— trap
-.-r ..
—. up in the attic. breakfast- table the night before, it;
••1’fo mighty sorry to see myself
raised wjveral orphan girls, who are now i
“•Oh. no use-*oflooking
loot
•••''*---------there, the
should be carefully &lt;x&gt;vered with an old • here, Jedge. I scarcely cber drinks,
■well settled in life. In 186.5. she adopted j keys have
_ 'ztbeen
overlost
fivefor
years,
j linen table-cloth, or something of the &gt; but jos* now I b3* so ‘much trpbblc at
a 8ix-ycor-old, black-eyed girl, bright ] andI rno
’n one has
hn' «v»r
ever been up there kind kept for the purpose. Tlio tea or 1 home. Bar’s nuffiri but sick ies, :.n’
as a button, named Mollie-MoUann, ' since.
s'mci There were cobwebs on the door, coffee service should-be placed in a line ■ grief rtnd sorrer, and 1 jess got dcaporwhose father had fallen in battle, fightlight- L--L
but 1 noticed that over ,the
______________
crack of the at one end of the table before the host- ! ate. Dar's my two chiiuus at home,
tag for his flag and country, while her door’* edge they appeared to have C**, and it is no longer customary to ■ aud one aui as bad off as de udder. I
mother, craxed with grief, pined and broken away, caused by the door hav- stand them on a traj. Mats, which are don't know now. Judge, which one ob
faded away. Mollie soon learned to tag been recently opened. With an ax prettiest if they arc pure white, are 1 dem is gwine tor die fust."’ nnd Jim’s
love her new mother, and .from a prat- I apeediiy got the door open and saw put at the opposite end of the table for ! voice was shaky as he wiped traces of
fling maid in hhort clothe* and pinafores I laree footprint* in tho dust By the the one or more substantial dishes and ' moisture from his eye*.
she Boon bloomed forth Into a gushing ’ aiaof a lamp I followed the course of »llho .idea lor vegetable.. A ubl.
n,. Boconler was visibly .dotted;
achool-girl, and at eighteen was the , the track* over the board* which lay .ot in thia way took, much better then , ho
Mmell,in|. ,lx)ut there being »»
bifilc of every rustic gathering—the across the slinky rafters to tho furthest when the ho.1 Md lio.teM .tt opnooit. Iliach m&lt;jrtulily tunung the oUlWren.
pretty Mis* Mollie McCann, over whom j part of the garret, where over aa old each other M the ..de. o( the Ubfe. t» ;UK1 ,ina|h. tollfWob.te? that In rondd. * raved am! the girls envied, i cross-beam, hung a pair of old-fash- In tlut M.e .11 the lurger dijhe. ,re : „ratlon oj hi, do.ne.tlo .dliclion the
To all her admirers she-turned a deaf Honed saddle-bags. Tho dust on the
erow-ded in the center. Afork should , chergo ugainat him was diemlMOd. Jim
ear. and. with a pretty toss of thebe.-ul, | bogs had been recently disturbed. In bo placed «l the left ot em:h plate «nd „nt
in high glee, followed by
and merry twinkle of'her roguish eye. one of tho pockets I found the five 8100- . knlte end spoon M tb- nghn The Und. M&lt;w&lt;.. who1’„k?od.
bade them be off nnd not bother her.” | bilk which.disnnpenred on the night of tablespoons
----- -v-r----- . and
-rr---------------pepper and
,----------------salt stands
-,
“
•• What
what pack ob lies
lie,* was dst
dm you tolo
••Mmdl Smith was sensible;. know | the 30th of ilay. the §355 that was are
•™ arranged
4r™“R“d together
togoUmr at
ut tho
tbe corners
corner, of
ot\j ,lo Kocorder?
R3cori|cr? lies*
i
„„„ t. assed
M;„,| yore
uuw
fruit which
out
that Mollie would probably marry aud missed in tho summer of. 1875. tho §290 the
Um table,
table. it
Iftrait
wbreb requires
require. handW-' i&gt;o,Se,\nd
boure.
out in
in do
do v«ni
v»nl was
to bote
but, ver
ver
have a home of bir own some day. so , that was lost ta IBS'!, nnd, better than Ung is to form the nrst course, as . ChUun offiishiatin’ at the eclipse ob a
she neither discouraged her fondness i all. the rare old gold coin* upon which oramres
orDcaches.
Dlate upon
noon which wa
.....t..P—
.tn™. »»”
orange* or
poaches, a plato
nnillion.
for society nor har}&gt;ed upon the | Mb* Smith set such store a* an heir- I* o.
‘°ru,“d
'
"Who Mid dur WM.netl.lng de tnuU
mLverie* of wedded life in the maiden's ’ loom. 1 had found the money, but 1^
ear. but when rfhe came back from the I found §1.200 too much. The mystery
?
State Fair'at Columbus in 1878. and tolil । deepened. I rqsolyud upon uno thing, be set in a pile before tho host. aM the . '
her adopted mother about *he young and'that was that''Mollie must know extra knife and fork put al the right . :. . .
&lt;r-rinn
trr d
I
••Anu
so:r uevI
gentleman she had mut, hi* attention* something about the money that was end left oteneb place. ’
mid 1 didn’t know which one ob dem
and good qualities. Miss Smith was not hid under tho carpet boncatu her bed.
After ll.o fruit ha. been removed the chillun» was gwine ter die fu«. aud »o
pleased.'nor did she hesitate to frown I talked kindly tocher, told her that
tln i u,;| which one am
her displeasure and advise her ward to Mis* Smith’s money had been found., more sub.unl.al part ot the brea.fast \ j doB.,.
turn a willing ear to the many suitors and urged her to tell me l ow the §1,200' u broug.fton. Ibe pot In winch.the ( g„in„ ter die Inst. G’way. ole man,
eolfeo la made should be ot a kind , Tcr ought, ter Im looked up. Vou la
of the neighborhood instead of seekiag came under the carpet of her bed.
ta far-off Sold* that which was nearer! “• You will not believe mo if I tell wh.eh is preaentoblo al table, a. Iho &lt; ihowln’ ‘apiciou. armptonu ob being a
coffee u
is not ,O
*ogoo£if
it is
poured of!
,0.1 ft I.
&gt;« nf.ured
cd crunk.”—Tero, tiijcinj’.
home.
j you- but if Miss Smith will goout I will
the ground* into an urn. If ?■ is not
-• But Mollie wa-i, like many another, explain. I put that .money there: it ■possible to have cream for it, boiled
struck on a traveling man. and she was my lover’s. He had raved it out. milk with a spoonful of condensed milk
Good For File*.
carried on a secret correspondence of !»is Wage* and given it to me to in each cup to make it richer is tho
“Say, do you know what’s good
with him through a lady friend fora keep. 1 destroy ed nis fetters, to* fear best substitute. Cakes to be oaten
for
flies?
”
queried
a Woodward avenue
long time, until at lastthey were eu-; my aunt would find it. out.’ There's with sirup should bo served at tho list;
gaged.
the story.”
of t'qe meal, aud the plates and knives i butcher as he entered a drug store tho
“Miss Smith and Mollie were the1
“• But ho\rd!&lt;ttho old lady’s money and forks changed for them. It is well other day.
Bole occupants of the house. ’Ibe bod- get into the garret?’
•• I guess 1 can jiut you up some­
to have all the plates which will be
room* were four ta number, two of
••-She careied It there herself. She neetled ready for use on tho buffet, ex­ thing for about d quarter,”-wo* the
which were used a* spare rooms, one 1 was a somnambulist nnd walked ta her cept in winter, when they.may bo con­ reply.
occupied by .41** Smith and containing sleep.’
signed to tho plate-warmer.
When the dose was ready tho butch­
LWO...Pff*- ?!“lr"
Mk' : “ HO’
VM prov&lt;» It. Mr. Morri,?
Though tho table may W set by a er was told to pour it out on states a'.id
Smith be oth«-. I Ire to.irth bedroom • DiJ lb,
,&lt;.tv
v,)a
„ t lx,;|.
set them
tho counter, and—he —
hurservant it should be inspected and* re- —
-—-on
------------------------------TO railed MoU.e . but to only use.l
hc'r.
1•
ceivt the lost touches from the mistress, I tied away to give it a trial. In about
bv her when a lady friend was visiting I
,
. ...
,, . , . . . .
her. In one of these spare bedrooms ' ._.&lt;', ’,.uo' 1 gP1 the old lads to take to bo sure that it is all in order before ; an hour he sent for tho druggist to
TOMOlddldnooed buromi and book- ^bor.hoe.aad «ookm« .□donee the family is summoned. It ought to ; como over. Tho 10,000 dies in. the shop
co, rombinol. lb. top drewer o! ; l»r-No. C b«.t down on a cbee: el wlu.o bu as easv to place a dish straight as j boioro the dose was fixed had been
wbbd. could be etmnrud Into . dMc. ' ?•?“; * “1 “ I“d Pf”"1 1 “’"ted crooked, but it does not seem to be so '
“ Great lands! but I’m being carried
for tho ordinary servant. She will re­
Th.-b.-k&lt;^o(thb drawer to hired 55“”
bat
op with «m.U drew.,re. On. of Um. ;
4 rt * “ ‘“J’ J.
c,,t quire long and patient training before off by flies!” exclaimed the butcher. as
.Audi drawers bad Irom time Immento- lh.8." ,al” " Ore old lady . foob she can be mode to realize that the ho waved a long knife around his head.
“ Well, why don’t yon gut Something
nd bean ™.l a. a money-drawer. In
titled euretly.n Uie track, m lire ••lines ot beauty” for the table are
straight, nnd broken of her propensity to kill ’em off!”
the summer o&lt; 1XT9 ini sum of *36.5
to set Chings on askew. If no llowora
wre mirecl front Ute drewer; In tbo t ‘at
”=" “"f11
••Didn't I. but it hasn't killed *
summe r of IWJSiW mr«.riooMy dis. ■ ,ht- "°'J“T1' "*-' • '»• 2&lt; «h-&gt;e. and can be found, a pretty potted plant one.”
might bo given the place of honor in
appeared, toother with a q&gt;„ntity of w™‘d.
“ ““
,1.aUo
“Of course it hasn't You wanted
the
center
of
the
table.
—
Christian
O.M o.d.1 eo?us which bad brei. in the «“**“}
ST* ?!
something good for Hies and I gave you
Ihoiilr lor over aentory. On the 21Kb oob’“b“
tbe “ld W* Union,
clarified sirup! It’s tho best stuff to
dav..’ re.tSUy .’I,. tta.U. loaned toa “ghturej., while Mollre wore no m~hldraw flies and keep ’om contented I
oeltAtor SMU irtriic him her cheek
J.
o
7‘h
Shoplifter*.
ever heart! of. Why didn't you tell mo
and be sxom- a now in her favor. ;'“d‘
W, Hoad an J by Iwr
you wanted a fly-kilter?”—JbelroU-J^ree
EfekTO. prevented I.U pk,wLun|f the
I,^Pj,ined 4,1 '»•“*’ •4‘”&lt;»fl&gt;«a&gt;
Said a city retail dealer: •• I could
Cheek at Ibo bank at Colombo* an.l. I
he,’“'J.
dispense with
..—-„
a ---------------------------------number of my clerks
—An old Scotch gentleman had, in
Inantinutbat Mia. Smith sU|o.mB Jnd,J I’red’&lt;'‘ 4J‘S’N “ ‘he were it not for t he necessity of guarding
that e.ty ... the Stab, he re.,mit«l'ber
&lt;“h -f.V*
“ against the thieves which infest all
the
course of a long life, gained a great
largo
stores.
Shoplifting
is
w
crime
to get It TOhod. .S|,O del -., ano re-,-11'br,llc- -Commaol. Bnymrrr.
reputation for bravery. The shortest
that is becoming onoruwus in it* pro- wav to hi* own home from the little
turned with Moliie about dark on that ।
------------------- -------------ertipn*.
and
at
present
wo
are
powcrvillage club that he nighUv resorted to
*,f.-^T£K,he
i —Mustard owes its pun;reney to a
13 to combat it All our clerk* are so lay l through a church’-vartl. and it oc­
Th. hmue was all Mtmrely kecked TOlui|eaold oil which it Sattoltot. This
dieposed behind my counter* that they curred to some would-be wag* to try if
‘’'I”*114'1 , oil Is bitter, and .Ire I.it..,rare...I freshcan watch each other** customers, and ho was impervious to tear of the spirit­
the nve jjunarea
in the secret
is vervvei
nmuirctit
itn- un­
. dollar*
&gt;.,^1
, arj
, . i j.. mixed mustard
utunuzru
v apparent
.tin y are instructad to do at alt ual as well a* the rtruv.nl world- Owe,
draw er, c&lt;«od the* drawer. locking rt leBsao-rtain quantity of salt is added
time*. We detect a woman in tho act
.to ’u This removes the bitter (favor. of pocketing good*, call ta an officer therefore, drewed up in the orthodox
W™ vr
To CTere ounee or tableajMMxifu! of drr ana have her arraMtcd. What is the re­ •beet, using a litt’e ’ »ul: har judiciously
nmstard add a tea*poonfnl of -alt. and sult? At tbe examination her friends here aud there to mak : it more gha-tly,
just a* the old gentieman one dark
«
L lhu y«y in » mix with cob! water, adding vinegar fa
and relatives come forward and testify night reached the loneliest port of the
ii! ; which taragon, dill, nr other desirable
5.?rt®'forin8 herb« have been.taeped The that she i* insane, or subject to lit* of churcft-.vftrd.suddenly upfieared to him.
insanity, and she is db/*harged -to go
ini
ami German mustard* are thus end prey upon some othei^ merchant. But of tbe two the ghost w:-,. most disconccrUd. for hi* intended victim,
Mpanue bros m the same room. The ’ ;ireMire(i
Once fa a while one of them fe held for quietly finishing the pinch of snuff first
next inorotag, April' Irt. the neighbor 51 r
b
trial, but a *peei»u« lawyer works upon that ho wm at 1 "
who h «d borrowed the money, having [
a too# journey to perform, during ( —Bob Humphrey*, of 8L Jxrai*. ie
addressed him
tmiohac expected to inaka a
• plunder u«. Quite recent*/
wxr truly rre-dfag in arista­
* in with aomo elected one v

u

.

’

'.

.

'

।

F-

for carrying off plunder; but so::ie u-e
a capacious pocket or bag fastaaed I
V. and any diacord about the waist and hanging beneath i
to echo through the
dieir skirt*. To get the plunder fath .
w. Care should be this tbe opening in the drew that would i
it in served at a aufiibo taken for a Docket - u« merely a slit. J
hour for tho member* of hidden by fold* of an ample skirt, and
the family wboM duties call them away similar openings are in the underskirts.
for a busy day to have a comfortable A dexterous thief in a morning’s shop­
and orderly meal before starting. Much ping, will make a i'ew trilling purchases j will he found in Men&gt; and Boy«’ Clothing, Ladies and Gents
dyspepsia and consequent ill-humor are and pocket a bushel of good*.’’
Underwear, Knit goods, Shawls, Ladies Cloaks Horse and Bed
caused by tho habit of taking a harried
aud insuul'dent breakfast, followed by
1 Blankets, Gloves and Mittens, Men’s and Boys Cape, and otha rapid walk to catch a boat or train. '
Hot Bath for Borey*.
| er articles too numerous to mention.
lg France the first “breakfast consist*
In our garden we have a dwarf-apple
■Imply of a eup«of coffee and a roll,
.while in England it is a hearty meal tree, whim, after the manner of dwarf I
All Gorxls morked in plain J figures, so that anyone can tell
composed oi various substantial dishes, .trees, hits many roots issuing immedi­
both hot and cold, of which the mem­ ately at the surface. Borers have made | the exact price.
tree and mv.
the gnarly |
wio of the
mu jaiuuj
iiicu vuuber*
family partake a.
at tjieir
con­ an attack upon this ......
venience. instead of assemblfag at a | tortuous growth amid these root* and
It will pay everyone to look through my stock, as decided
ctata- hour. C
Our
busy American life metr
their crown
crowd maxes
makes n
it impossible to fol- I,
j
•.
-n ,
c
i •
i i
.
stated
—v
‘ demand
'
and something
flomnthimr more sub
sub-­ low the grub*
erub* with knife aud wire with- •: o.irgams will be lound in each department,
seems to
out
greatly
increaafag
the
destructive
.
stantia! than the one and more prompt
and regular than the other, and Ameri­
can breakfasts are made a special feat­ Thc tree produces apple* of Summer !
ure at some of tho French restaurants. Bose and other sorts, so • fihe in quality j
The housekeeper should study varie­ ami quantity that wa could not bear io i
ty in tho breakfasts she offers her fam­ think of surrendering it to these tasidij__
__ _dav
____
___ Qus
ily, ____
not ___
only
from
toj,
day.
bntminers. So we instituted n reguchanging them a* much as possible ; tar course of siege, surrounding their
with the season*. The things which -j fort with a wall of iron Ca deep pan.
are mort suggestive of comfort on n j bottomle**, and slit down one aide),
the ground with
cold winter’s morning are by.no mean* and,
* after soaking
’’
*'
tempting fa July, when we need nos water, covered It. inside the pan. with
only lighter clothing but lighter food. tough mud of potter’s clay to retain
water;
leaving,
the
4
entrances
of tho
Too of tan the meal lone* all character
fa a continual round of steak or chops borer galleries (shown by their thrown
the year through, and dainty dishes out chips) open. A targri boiler of
which are really less expensive uro water was heated, and. when boiling hot,
ignored. Cold 'meat* or chicken can poured into tho pan. the half-dried bot­
be easily made into croquette?, or tom of the clay retaining it long enough
_______ ___________
minced and well _
seasoned
amt served to reach and drown or scald out tho
OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE
can be enemy ta time, as we hope, to save the
on slices of water1 toasttoast. Eggs
~
that- tree.
bark and
cooked in such a variety or ways
-------- -- Old
-----------— wood will . endure
... of .knew.
.1 «the
k„ , ozviIHItio*
1 ««
rPfih!nn.
one need never tire
them, and
scalding well,
as mnnv
many serviceable
apsanje may be said of potatoes. In their plications of it to peach tree* have
On
only-ciears
season, tomatoes sliced nnd served with 1 proved.
pre*-’
r'- them
•»•“"• it
’• not —
’••
~ off
”
but often seem* effective instar­
a Maijonnaisc dressing, or a simple ' _jrers,
poi
dressing of oil and vinegar, are very fag
s"" the yellows, and restoring the col-’ ,
or arid Ipxurktace of the foliage.—Car.
nice for breakfast.
.
There is no more wholesome or N. Y. Tribune.
WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH
tempting addition to the morning meal
Hew Jim Webster Got Off.
than fruit served as afirst course. Oat­

lined that in the
lived if was the

tS?*I will not be Undersold....6H

|£EEP YOU EYE OY THIS.

50

Wagons

THREE INCH TIRE
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING

BETTE R THAN COMMON TIRE
'

We believe the Three inch Tire is destined to come
into general use., Call and see them.

Sold by C. L. Glasgow, Nashville, Mich.

BENTLEY BROS. &amp; WILKINS.
Hastings, Mich., Sept. 15th, ISb’l.
■

T14 x-w -v-.
Q
- 1

x-s. -v.

f* t

I*

,

C'l 4I ■ ilF*
UkJL

’।

Fall Airl Wipter Goods are'arriving every dav.
Due prep­
*•
itr.i
t *.*1
rrr
t •
*• •
u '
j 1 c
j nratl0P
tlie battle
tind anticipating
. 1H
, of. life, „
,
* . " the needs of

.otii' customers, we are “laying m
.
n
r .

a good supply of the ueces• ■ .
•
,. ,,
,. ,

canes lor protection and comfort against the reigns ol the last
i approaching winter. '
A better stock of Boots and Shoes can. not be found any‘ where.
Clothing
■
am
gwine ter
die. i a specialty.
Hats and Gaps of. the latest styles.
Ladies and Misses Cloaks and Dolmans
Children's Knit sacques.
’
,
; Prints, from 5 cents to 8 cents.
Dress Goods in variety nnd shades to suit the most
fastidious.
•
! Ou; aim to deal justly with everebody^ and if we don’t do
i the lair thing, we ask you to make us. The highest market
: price will be paid for produce. 10,000 lbs. Dried Apples, 10,­
, 000 bus CornAvanted in exchange for goods; also 500 solid
; cords of stove wood, seasoned.
With two of the best clerks in the country, wcare not only
; ready to serve you, but take' pleasure in serving you in
.whatever wa; we can. Givehsa call.
Very gteiitful for past favors we respectfully ask a continunnce of your'patronage.

L. J.Wheeler

।We are Ready
a

SLASHING^

.
I

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/&gt;'« T7' •

fc/ - VV

'^Tl "*8 "Vb"V“^ "1

Tk&gt;Z^

P LLx XXX U ill V

Parlor Suits, Bedroom Suits, Gents’ Easy Chairs,
Ladies’ Rockers, (.'amp Chairs, Fine
Couches, Extension Tables, Center
Tables, What-nots. PicturcFrames,
Bureaus, and in fact Everything
Else Net
to Finnish a House.

IBTh

�* MARSHALL

serious disorder*,
PAID JN ADVANCE.

To

Advertisers:

have dnvcn any
to dbtraction.

chert dtoortfeni,
have uothi
miuun in a social way.

kept always ou hand in every home.
• No person can afford tu fa? without it.
and those who have once used it never
will. From tbeir knowledge of Its
composition and operation,. physicians
use the Cherny Fkctobal extensively
in their practice, and clergymen recom­
mend it. .It,.fa absolutely certain in
its healing' effects, and ,wlh always
cure where cures are possible. ,
For sole by hll'druggists!

The salutation is said' to be the touch­
wrote tlioae letters on the blackboard,
and received an approving smile from stone of good-breeding. Between gen­
tlemen a nod suffices; but if a lady is
Mr. So.
‘•What does that spell?” continued walking with you or with the ono to
i whom you bow, the hat mustbe slightly
the instructor.
i lifted. A well-bred person bows in­
PERUSE THESE LIBERAL AD. RATES.
The pupil smiled, scratched his left stinctively the moment that he reoogside and reflected.
nfaes an acquaintance, ’j
" That is hon—a cliicken,” said the
«ajftfe«xn
I F8X0
Bowing onee in passing on a public
'tin
promenade or drive, is all that civility
"tM —Mort» iux&gt; teacher.
Little drops ;nf rain brigiitcn the meauows,
** Mo sabe ben,” replied Mr. So, as requires.- Ip subsequent meetings the
coolly as though the information was eyes may be averted, or if more than a and Utile acts nf. kindness brighten the world.
not by any means new.
mere acquaintance, one smiles aligiitly.
SHILOH’S CONbUMPTlON CURE.
■
WolL write it,” said the teachor, A bow of ceremony should not be ac­
Thia is twyond question the tnost successful
thrusting a piece of chalk into the companied by a broad amlie; but unless Cough MeduSnc we have ever Kild, a few doses
Mongolian's right hand. The idea of you are bowing to a superior fa ago or Invariably cure tbe worst cases of Cough, croup
asking him to write struck the other station you sbould'let a beam of good­ and Bronchitis, while tts wonderful success fs
in the cure of consumption Is wiihoul a paral­
seekers after knowledge as extremely will lighten your eye.
lel in the history of .medlcnc. Since its first
ORNO STRONG,
funny, and Sam Hing, King Gee, Moi
Gentleman invariably offer the right discovery it lias been sold ou a guarntee. a test
Editor and Proprietor. Keo and Chong Lung giggled like over­ arm to ladies, when it is necessary to which no other medldpe can stand. If you
grown schoolboys. The slow pupil give the arm, instructions to the con­ have a Cough we earnestly ask you to try It.
smiled, eyed tho writing on the black­ trary notwithstanding. This rule is tho Price lOcts, odets, and f1.00 If your lungs are
•ore, Cheat, or Back Latn«y. and Shiloh's
board critically, grasped his crayon same on the street, without regard to
firmly, and. to the astonistynent of the the wall, as It is in the parlor, st mar­
’
ANSWER THIS QUESTION.
VILLAGE OFFICERS.
Caucasians in the room, executed an riages, at all entertainments and on all
Why do so mauy people we see around us,
almost perfect imitation of the teachers’ other occasions. A fady does not take seem to pfefer to stiffer and be made miserable
by Indlgertiaii, constipation; dlraineffi, loss of
chirography of the word hen.
the arms of two gentlemen; nor does a appetite, coming up of the Fond, yellow, skin,
” Read it,” said the teacher.
.gentleman offer both of his. nrms when when forTOcts, we will sell them Shiloh's VltaWin U. Barpna.
“Chlicken,” was the nonchalant re­
walking with two ladies; American gen­ llxer, guaranied ta curt tliera. Sold by F. T.
E- Cook. U F Reynolds, Wm. Beaten,
sponse of the pnpii, as he moved toward
.
. H. B. Dickinson, iKrid Dcmaray.
tlemen do not smoke when driving or Boise
SHILOH’S CATTARRH REM EDY, A mar­
walking with ladies.
velous Cure for Catarrh, Diphtheria, Canker
“ Not chicken, hen,” said the in­
JUtutkJ.
Introductions are not made on the mouth, and Head Adie. With each bottle
structor in correction.
street, unless a lady Is walking with her here is an ingenious nasal injector- for, the
aptistcnuitcn. Her. k r. Moody. Pw«or.
“Allo same hen, alle same chicken.”, host or hostess; in which case if either more successful treatment of there complaints
without extra charge. Price 50eU. Sold by
S«nrlces cvciy Sunday at lfK30».m.. Sabtetb replied Mf. So, philosophically, as he
meet a friend an introduction would be F- T.Boise.
■cbool at 12 ra: Prayer and Tcaenora’ meeting
dropped into-his seat and fanned bis given. When two persons are intro­
foverfld brow with his primer.
duced in a house both bow slightiy nnd
A pretty blonde Is likely enough to become a
EHIODUfr Ei'XXiPAL CHUntSH—A. D. SirCELESTIAL PHILOSOPHY.
commence conversation. A gentleman belle, but she will go cracked if »hc Is tolled so
run. Pm tor. Nr-nricva every Sabbath at 1UU
. _ ....I - ..
O.k.1..-k.
— t.____ A lady and gentleman were the only- [ is introduced to a lady; “ Mr. Grey, too often. _
. ’
teachers in this school yesterday. Tho Mrs. Birch," ir the form.
Young ladies are taken up to be in­
VY LODGE NO. 87, K. of P., meets at Its lady devoted herself to Ah How, while
The reason whypr. David Kennedy’s “Fav
. Castle Hall, Nashville, Michigan, every John Lung looked ou and yawned at troduced to elderly ones and the un­
Friday evening, for the encouragement and regular intervals as though he was married to the married. A gentleniau "oriie Remedy" curea com plain U of tbe Liver.
support of all worthy, true, steadfast and hon­ dreadfully bored. Ah How, however, when introduced does not offer his Kidneys, Bowel#, and Blood, is that It is com­
orable Brother Knights.
pounded of the very remedies which tiatare
"
'
O&amp;xo Stbono.C. C. appeared to take great interest in his hand to a lady, as that is the lady’s herself ba# proviued forth!# purpose. Being
studies. The male teacher spent tho privilege. The mistress of n house
greater part of tho school hour in in­ shakes hands with every ono who is in­ nt’ first scattered through the woods and field#.
SBwrlteucouf.
structing Quong Wha and Ah Loon, troduced to her in her own home— Dr. K, has collected them and condensed their
tho latter being much-tho brighter stu­ whether the person is brought by a virtues in the form which be now confidently of
W H. YOUNG. M. D. Office east side of dent “The fox has a hen,” said the common friend, or comes by invitation. fere to the sick and suffering. One dollar ex­
» » • Main St., Nashville. Office hours from teacher, reading from tho primer. “Tho She would not shake hands with a visit­ pended for a bottle will convince you and make
7 U) ‘J a. in., and 4 to.7 p. m.
fox has a hen, returned tho pupils, or who came to call on a guest, unless you grateful that you read this Item, The
spelling out the words.
she had some special reason for doing so. Doctors office Is in Rondout, N. Y. Write him a
EL GRISWOLD, M. D., J___ ^ihlc
• Phyilclan and Burgeon. Office and rc»“This is tho picture,” said the tutor,
A gentleman rides on the rteht side statement of your care.
^denc# opposite the Wolcott House. Prompt pointing to an engraving.
of a lady. A lady keeps the right-hand
The next great display of meteors is ret
attention given to call# day or night.
“Me sabe flox. mo sabe hen.” re­ side of" her carriage, unless another
down &lt;cr the year 1809.
lady older than herself is driving with
A. FOOTE PHYSICIAN &amp; SURGEON plied Ah Loon, eyeing tho picture.
!• Sucessor to Dr. Wickham. Office aud
THE KEY TO HEALTH.
“What fol flox got him hen?" in­ her. A gentleman does not permit a
reaidence at Dr. W’ckham’fl late ‘office.quired Quong, examining the wood­ lady to sit with her back to the horses,
Have you found the key to perfect health ar.il
Prompt attention to calls night or day.
even though she be younger than him­ strength! U l» kidney wort, the only remedy
cut
“He wants to eat it,” answered tho self, when he can, by taking that seat, that overcomes at once the Inaction of the kid­
' R. C. W. GOUCHER, Electlo Physician and
neys and l&gt;owelit. it purifies the. blood by
give her one facing tho horses.
Burgeon, la prepared to answer ail calls teacher.
ths system of foul humors nnd by
Nover speak of your children as cleansing
that may be made for his services. Office and
“ Belly good flox.” was the, sent'engiving straight to the liver, kidneys uud bow
residence opposite Roe’# meat market.
“
Mis?
Ethel,
”
or
“
Master
Harold,
”
cla
tn pefonn their regular fniu-tions, See
tiouf criticism of Quong. as he looked
excepting
to
servants.
Give
them
their
displayed
advertisement.
TTTM. FARMENTER, M. D. Office over gravely at the teacher, who was evi­
Tv Hull's Drug store, Vermontville, Mich. dently, unprepared for any such philo­ Christian names.
To make to most ot the good and the least
Gentlemen should precede ladies, to of the evil of Hfe is the best philosophy of life.
sophical utterance and consequently did
RAB. H. BRADY, Lawyer, Circuit Court
clear the way, in a public hall, unless
Commissioner, Real Estate and Insurance not attempt to reply to it
there is an usher preceding them. In
KIDNEY DISEASE CURED.
Agt. Prompt attention given to all business
About this time the attention of near­
Christiansburg, Va., 1881.
entrusted to my care. Conveyancing a special­ ly every ono in the room was attracted entering a drawing room, the lady pre­
cedes the gentleman, but never takes
ty. Office opposite Union House.
Suffering from kidney disease*, from which
by the suppressed laughter of Moi Keo
his arm.
1 could get no relief either from medicine or
(J I.IEBIIAU8ER, Merchant Tailor apd dcah and King Gee, who were enjoying the
die promhieut physicians of our oeuntry. I
To
yawn
in
the
presence
of
others,
IO. er in Ready Made Clothing. Bee me fluttering of a paper butterfly, manufac­
tried Brown’s Iron Bitters, which cured me
before you ^purchase clothlug. Fits guar­ tured and set afloat by Sam Hing. Tho bent time, to hum or whistle, to lounge, '■ntnpletely. A child of mine recovering from
anteed.
artificial insect was captured and tho to put your feet on a chair, or to do ^canet fever, had no appetite, aud did not
anything which shows indifference, sel­ -rein to be able to cat al all: I gave him Iron
/N ALVIN A. NICHOLS, dealer in Bootsand course of study Went oil Tho teach­ fishness or disrespect, is unequivocally Bitters with the happiest results.
V/ Shers, Rublx-ra, Hata and Caps, Gents’ ers hear tho lessons of each pupil sepa­
J. Kyle Montague.
FurnlsbRig Goods, Gloves and Mitiens, Trunks, rately. and so long as they are under vulgar. Snuffling, expectoration, hawk­
Traveling Bags, Lap and Buffalo Robes, etc. the eyes of their preceptors the pupils ing, scratching the head, gulping, pick­
A Georgia woman is.losing powerof speech
West side Main St., Nashville.
are as meek and studious as any one ing tuo teeth and blowing the nose, through Indulgence fa canned Dulls. Now you
s*hould be avoided in society.
IBB M. JEFFREY, Practical MHllner, and could wish, but their othbr moments
Avoid saying “you know,” “says know what lotbfnkof a man who la going home
dealer in Millinery Ad Fancy Goods. Dress are not spent-fa study—that is. to any he,” and “Bays she,” when narrating with slot of canned fruit under his arm.
great extent. The teachers, however,
making, in all 1U branches, done with neatness
CATARRH OF THE BLADDER.
.
and dispatch. Salesroom east aide Main street, are loud in their praises of the scholars incident*. Do not speak of absent per­
opposite News office.
and say they learn with remarkable sons by their Christian names. Above
Stinging, smarting. Irrita^on of the urinary
all, never name any one by the first let­ i
il»eared di-charei-.*. fun-1 by ilud.tiRNO STRONG, plain and fancy Job Printer. rapidity.
ter of his or her name, os “Mr. G.” for irtblu. 81. at druggists. Mich. Depot, JAS.
Tbe best facilities for doing work of any
“ Mr. Grey.” This is a vulgarity Which -E. DAVIS * CO . Detroit, Mich.
printing office In Barry county. When In need
Summer in Norway.
married persons sometimes use.
of printing of any description', whatever, see me
Marrying at a distance by elcctrlcty may be
before you buy.
A lady who sits cross-legged, or side­ Segal, but it doesn't a flon) to the wedded parIn tho Norway summer, ono comes ways on a chair, who twists her trink-,
■MflBS. E. CHAPMAN, Milliner and Dre#&gt; actually to yearn for a little Christian ets, or {Ticks at anything, and a man u«s oiie-huiul.-etb part of the consolation that
IvJL maker. A choice line of Millinery and
Fancy Goods constantly on band. No trouble darkness to'go to bed by; much as ho who sits across his chair, bites his nails
to show goods. Call and see me before buying. may crave a strong sun by day, to or nurses his log, manifests an unmis­
A WORD To MOTHERS.
Shop two doors north of Smith’s crocery.
kesp him warm, he would like to have a takable want of good-breeding. Both
Mothers should remember It is a most linreasonable night time for sleeping. At should be quiet, easy and graceful in porLuiif duty at tills reason to look after the
N. DUNHAM, Proprietor Temperance Bib first there is a stimulus, and a weird their carriage.
health of their families Mid cleanse the nnluii i
'
. Hard Parlors and Pool Rooms. A choice sort of triumphant sense of outwitting
Well-bred persons never elbow tbeir and Impurites from their systems, and that
line of cigars constantly on hand. Rooms under
nature, in finding one's self able to read way in a crowd, nor force themselves nothing will tone up the stomach and liver,
D. C. Griffith’s store.
the bowel# nnd purity, the blood bo
or to write by the sun’s light till nearly in seats at concerts and lectures,' which regulate
perfectly a* Porker’s Ginger Tonic, advertised
TONAH B. RASEY, Express and Drayman- midnight of tho clock. But presently are already full; nor do they talk nnd In our columns,—Post, Bee other column.
v Goods and Baggage carried to any place in it becomes clear that tho outwitting is laugh in tones so loud as to disturb
the village.
Drowning her kitten# hurts the old cat’s feon the other side. What avails it that others.
■
TTIRAM R. DICKINSON, manufacturer of there mi light enough for ono to write
When you have jostleor incommo­
and dealer in Hard Wood Lumber. Build­ by at ten o'clock at night, if he is tired ded a person, bo quick to say, “ I beg
Ask your druggirt for “Dr. Sykes’ Sure
ing Materia) a specialtv. Cash paid for logs. Mill on’ does not want to write, and longs
and yard on Sherman BL, at M. C. R.R. crossing. for nothing but to go to sleep? If it your panlon.” “ I thank you.” is now Cure for Catarrh." Don': take any other,
the form, instead of “Thanks," whenaowere
dark,
and
h«
long*
J
co
write,
noth
­
TAMES FLEMING, practical Jeweler and
knowlcdglng any attention “Thanks”
Watch-maker. Clocks, Watches, Silver and ing would be easier than to light can­ has become a vulgarism from the abuse
Plated Ware, Jewelry and Optical Goods. Rock­ dles and write all night, if he choose and of the word.
ford Watches a specialty. Repairing and Engrav- could pay for his candles. But neither
In railway oars no one has a right to
money nor ingenuity can compass for more than ono seat unless more than
T RUBBELL lias money to loan, allow rates him normal darkness to sleep in. Tho one is paid-for. To beat time, shuffle
XJ. 6a good farm oecurily; Principal and la­ Norwegian house is one half windows: the feet, or make any monotonous
tere* Dtyabla at the Hartfag# National Bank. in their long winters they need all the
noise, which is a nuisance to fellow­
sun they enn get; not an ouaide blind, travelers, shows bad breeding or neg­
mniu« ti» itaduu -ruior &lt;r not an inside shutter, nor a dsifc shade, lect in training.—‘Mn. H. O. Wood, tn
■ CtaitoU. .Ill
HuhrllU rm » to no seen; streaming, flooding, radiat­
Youth's Companion.
ing in and round aboutihe rooms, comes
«w«r ran hamlM
.......
i.i__
the light, welcome or unwelcome, early
—There is a society in Europe known
TACOB O8MUN. LLvrvmatx. bmn ne^ol- and late. And to the words ••early”
as the Rhenish Cigar-tip Collecting As­
tf entt House. Find claw turnouts at reason­ antP’late” there are in a Norway sum­ sociation, numbering 1,982 members,
able rates. Special rates to commercial men. mer new meanings: the early light
Funeral and weding parties Jurniahed with car of the summer morning sets in about and the report is made that they have
flages oa short notice.
gathered 4,569 pounds of cigar tips
half past two; the late light of the sum­ (butts?), which have sold for 25,000
mer evening fades into a luminous marks, all of which has been spent for
Mm. Planing and Matching, FiewwinJ twilight about eleven. Enjoyment of
Moulding a sjieclalty. Bcroh Sawing, this species of perpetual day *&gt;oou comes useful gifts to 1,728 children.
keta. Window and Door Frames made to to an end. After the traveler has
r. Wood Turning in all Its branches.
—"This butter, Mr. Spioer," said the
written home to everybody onee by
pHAK W. DEMARAY, Dealer In Watches, broad daylight at ton o'clock, the fun dealer, "carried off the prize at the
V7 Clocks, fine Jewelry and Silverware. Being of the thing is over: normal sleepiness farmers’ fair," and Seth spat out a tanto
begins to- hunger for its righta, and of the compound and remarked: "Un­
dmsatis.'action takes the place of won­ less the prize was a ship's anchor and
dering amusement This dissatisfac­ chain cable, I should think the butter
A- BUSH,
tion reaches its climax in a few days; could have carried it oft easily.”—Bos­
then, if he is wise, the tgiveler pre • ton Commercial Bulldin.
“THE BOBB’
vides himself with several pieces of
dark green cambric, which he pins up
—The barber’s children are little
at his windows at bed-time, thereby shavers; tho upholsterer’s are little
making it possible to get seven or eight tackera; the butcher's are young lambs;
SUHVILLE,
HIGH.
hours’ rest for his tired eyes. But the the carpenter’s are chips from the old
green cambrio will not shut out sounds i block; the baker’s are cram baby tarts, i
and he is lucky if he is not kept; awake i1 and the angry man’s are little pets.—
\VOIXVTT HOCHE,
until one or'two. o’clock every ni
L" by New York Daily News.
light
the unceasing tread and load chattel
&lt;___.
--------- ——-----------of the cbeennl Norwegians, who have ! —The last church attended by tho
“‘
the habit of sitting [ fate J*resident Garfield was that of St.
fate, to get in the &gt; James at Long Branch. The pew he
ocnn. ol
occupied wm on one of the side juries,
I and is indicated by drapery on the waiL

Nashville girrrtunj.

B

M

W
A

Btw» are i Hi if

-Pruprfc

Nashville Elevator!
Grain and JP’rodxice
Seeds, Feed, Lime, Sait, Planter, Stuc­
23 acres,-in the village
co, Hair, Pine Lumber, Lath
be sold for what it wilT I
and Shingles,
poor health uf present owner.
AT THE LOWEST LIVINO PRlbES.
Improved; fair trafldtngii and
piin. Price Bl,800; part doe
JQEW ELEVATOR.
' House and Lot, on Phlllipi
bargains in town. Price B33t!
Houre and Lot, on State street. Price *250, •
half down down.
Good House and four acres of Land on Fran----- will pay’ the----ces^tm't. Priee$45O.
House and lot on State BL, house new: good
HIGHEST MARKET PRICE cellar
and nlentrof g- &lt;xl waler. For sale at
S700 or Will exchange for farm property Dear
----- For all kind# of----Nashville or Hartings.
SO acres, 1’4 miles from NasbvOle on tbe-best
road leaving the village; all improvwl except 8
acres; tb4remaining 8 acres good timber; fa
well
watered by a never-failing spring. Good,
A full stock of
young on-hard ;• buildings fair; 18 acres of
wheat on the ground; present owner eugagrd
In other irtuluew and will sell for FJJS8O7W»"
000 down, balance ou long time.
. Conxtnutly ou Hand.
Vacant lot on Philips St. Price 8120 if, sold
"OOU
LEE &amp;, DURKEE.

FOWLER &amp; INGERSON
GRAIN AND PRODUCE.

LUMBER, LATH, ■&amp;(',
{JEWRY ROE.

Pbofbistob

MEAT MARKET.
.

K»ci*« constantly ou hand a big stock of

Fresh and Salt Meats,

Smoked Hams ail Shoulders, ,
FRESH FISH and POULTR?
IN THEIR SEASON,

Lard, by the- lb. or barrel
itc., rf-c„ &lt;f-c.
t.P" The Highest Market Price paid
for Hides. Pelts,

Fresh Goods, Full Weights and
Satisfaction Guaranteed.

JOSEPH COLE:

THE CREAT

MEAT MARKET!
Fresh, Salt and Smoked

M

O

C

XL

BURLINGTON ROUT
other line runs Three Thn-.t-'l:
c iurr Trains Dally between Chi- g“.
M-btien, Council Bluffs, Omalm. l.tor u»
.!&lt; eph. Atchlsnn, Ti'p’ku uikI
Direct connections for nil jxiini
California.
The Shor
blc Route v

D
G

• on ALL. POINTS

m:\Ri roll

Lire and Let Live
puiixiTi

mllial to

Pullania

ici:»bpot«

I?.

J. LENTZ &amp; SONS

Hi’ &lt;.r urst

Manufacturers, and dealers !n

FURNITURE!

Canada.

In Every Style &amp; Variety
For the fall trade, out

STOCK IS COMPLETE,
PRICES WILL ASTONISISH YOU.
WE ALSO CARRY

ETnE

. UNDERTAKERS’GOODS,

NERVOUS DEBILITY
A cure guaranlred.

• ncnaatorrhcrn, itn
premature old

by o» for dx boxes, sec on&gt; pin led with fl»e dollars,

And arc prepared to give our time and atten­
tion to crerythliigfperiafaingto the
Madison 8U CUlcaso, 111
undertakings* ine.

J. LENTZ &amp; SONS.
Aduiiuistrntor'K Naic.
E25* HEN RY TROYER, dec-aaed.
Notice Is hereby given that I shall sell at public
... .
LI.,__ . *.l-^.._ ....

Biooel. and will com:&gt;’Ctrlv change tbe blood tai
thccntirearrtcm in three month#. Anvnemm

place herein described In the lownshlf. of Maple

ftiEKTR WANTED ESTffiLftjJ!
tiwc Mu. Mine ever UtveaW. . Wui ttitapnlrcrf
-.tn KEEL and TOE consteS. tn

right, title

M

to the Dowaratkl Hor.utcad
f. 8. BUICK Administrator.

PAYNE’S FARM ENGINES.

J£

BOOT AID SHOE MAKER,

p.o. Box itn.

PENSIONS

�pie art acewtomed to rail
honor” and which, far all
little that is honorable about

555Y55555LY5555559555555555555555555555555555555

And be wjs sick and aycamorv.
THE MYSTERIOUS COACHMAK.

•

‘

•

.

tremo agitation. Tho General also
learned that after the dinner the Aus­
trian officer, had inquired for Muller,
and that, after hearing where he was,
ho had hurried to join him.’ and that for
a long time they bad been closeted
together; that one of the other servants
had heard between them a spirited con­
versation. and that at last they hud
both left the hotel,'continuing tbeir
conversation. The next day tho Gen­
eral sent down for an explanation of
this mystery. Then he' learned that
Muller had reappeared at the stable and
was taking care of his horses with his
ordinary impassibility. The General,
whose curiosity was greatly excited,
went Immediately to tho stable, think­
ing to surprise Muller and question him
unexpectedly; but as soon as the latter
perceived him ho respectfully ap­
proached his master and presented
him a letter almost exactly in these
terms:
••On my honor, I answer for the fidelity and
koo I conduct ot tbe coachman. Mailer, and I

My children, I will relate to you.a
story, which was related to me m I am
about to toll it to you, and it happened
just as it was told me. It is not an in- I
vention designed to show you how a
fault is often sufficient to lose a man's
life; it is an actual fact, in the recital
Of which we will not give the real
names, because they would expose tho
aecretk of a family holding an illustrious
rank in one of the principal States of
Germany.
Marshal C------ (ho was then only a
General) found himself in need of a
coachman) He mode his wants known ox istenoo of this man.
Tms Comer V•
And if I wished to know it?” said
to a wuidan^of Saint Domingue who
kept a fiirntobhd-hotel,' and rented’at the General to bis coachman.
•• I would be forced to quit your serv­
the same time lively carriages At
first, thw woman declared that she was ice,” said he. “I would do it with
unable to procure one for whom she great regret, because I esteem myself
happy to
live wm
with you; but I would do
could answer; almost all of those who j nappy
w uvo
look care of her coaches were hired by it immediately.”
the day. and did not live with her. I The good oont
—
----man. Jand
conduct
of this
There was only one, who was a sort of , the recommendation of tho Austrian
the •"
General
not
overseer of the others, who would suit officer, decided
--J •*-------- ’ —
* to push
the General, and it was on account of his inquiries any further. Muller re­
his good qualities that the woman de­ mained in his* stable, and in a few
sired to retain him herself. The Gen­ months this event was completely for­
eral insisted so much the more on hav­ gotten. Probably it hid been entirely
ing him. At last, tho mistress of. the effaced from tho General’s memory,
furnished hotel yielded him up to tho when a terrible accident again called it
to his mind.
employ of tbe General.
। One morping when Muller was loadWhen this man entered the service of
the General, nothing extraordinary was ing his horses to the watering place he
' noticed in him, except in extreme po- jI was upset by
oy one of
or them,
incm. ana carried
carnsa
htene«s, an attentive care nev?r to en- |I to the hotel with his skull fractured,
gage ’n tho recreations of tho other I -.
nnd
—2 1-in such
_ *_______
a condition
—-__ ' as to leave _?
no
hope
recovery. In fact,u"he died
servants, and a rare promptness in the v
----- *of his
--------------accomplishment of his duties which ren­ the same day. without having recovered
dered n m precious to his master. By consciousness.
The next day, when they wore pro­
an exception very rare, this preference
of the master for his coachman did not ceeding with’ the burial, the GentJral
excite the envy of the other servants. charged one of his aides-de-camp to ex­
There was such a continued sadness amine Muller's chamber and to take
about this man that-no one could think note of everything he , found there.
that it was through pride that he kept Muller was a caretul and economical
aloof from his comrades. At the gen­ man, aud probably had accumulated
eral dinner hour he seated himself si­ some savings; he possessed, besides, a
lently at the table, ate soberly, and re­ gold snuff-box and a fine gold watch of
tired to his stable immediately after tho Eeat value, and the General desired all
ese objects to be collected that they
meal. In tho chateau of tho General,
at the time when tbe service of tho might bo delivered to his family in ease
horses gave Muller a great deal of leis­ they discovered who bo was. The aidede-camp prwvvu"
proceeded Lutuunoi
to Muller’ovi
s chamber
ure. he was not accustomed to go to the un-vamp
&gt;&lt;mmuc»
cabaret, nor to play as did the others; to execute the orders of the General,
he seated himself under some tree in pbut
—*-*his
’ surprise was great when, on
the park and spent all his time in read- opening the coachman’s trunk, the first
jng. At the time these singularities, thing he found was an Austrian uni­
which were remembered later, caused form, a Colonel’s epaulettes, a commis­
but little surprise; they contented them­ sion for that rank and diplomas for
selves by saying that Muller was a bear other orders. The regalia for these
and permitted him to follow his taste orders, many of them ornamented with
without concerning themselves, further diamonds, were inclosed in this trunk
about him.
with the uniform. The aide-de-camp,
Almost two years passed in this way; who was not aware of the adventure of
Muller followed the General wherever the dinner table, suspected at once that
th«&gt; duties of war called him. This was these objects were the product of nu­
in tht^neighborhoud of 1807.
merous petty thefts on the port of Mul­
Muller had accompanied the General ler: but when he gave an account of
to Ragusa in Dalmatia, of which the what he had dtecovered to the General,
Emperor bad mode him Governor, and the latter recalled the event we have
it was in this village that tho little ad­ recorded above, and wished to see for
venture happened which I am about to himself the objects Mund in tho cham­
relate:
ber of the coachman. He hoped to find
One day, when the Governor-General there some papers which would explain
badnnvited to his table a large party of this mystery; but he found no other in­
the-officers of his staff and tbe principal formation than what was contained in
officers of a corps of the Austrian army the commission spoken of, and which
which was stationed in the vicinity, it wore all issued in the name of the
happened that he was obliged to press Count de V—. Outside of these there
intn the sendee of the table all tbe was no correspondence or previous act
servants of hts ho -sehold, and Muller of the coachmap which betrayed what
found that he was included in this there was in common between tho
requisition; at the hour of dinner he coachman. Muller, and the Count do
waa in tbe dining hall, a napkin ever!, V..
...Colonel
-in the service of Austria.
his arm. The great nupiber of guests j He was again left to his conjectures,
present no doubt prevented Muller j and many weeks passed without tho
■ from noticing any one in particular, be-i General learning anything new concause the dinner was over before any j coming this strange man. when one
trouble occurred, but at the commence- l day he saw the Austrian officer who
ment of the second service, as he was had
1”*------recognized
'“*J Muller in —
such
*- —
an —
ex­
in the act of placing a dish on the table. traordinary manner enter his apart­
ope 'of the foreign general officers ment. He had not appeared nt Ragusa
turned himself a little, to give more since tbe event of the dinner table, al­
room to Muller, and uttered a cry ot though he lived in the vicinity.
surprise as he recognized him. Muller
A chance conversation had apprised
in his turn, looked at the general offi­ him of the death of the General’s
cer, turned pale as he did. was fright­ coachman, and he presented himself to
ened as he was. In his surprise, he reclaim the papers which bad been
dropped the dish which be held in his found in Muller s chamber. The name
hand, and left the dining ball in a con­ of this oilicerand the consideration he
fusion which struck all the guests with enjoyed were sufficient to remove any
. astonishment.
doubt as to his right to this heritage
All this happened so quickly that no tbe moment ne claimed it: nevertheless,
one could explain whether it was tho the General believed it his dutv to de­
surprise which caused the accident or mand some explanation of him, and
tbe accident which had caused the sur­ the officer replied immediately:
prise. and tne dinner continued wi'fa“ I will inform you the more willingly
out, Muller's Reappearing.
But the on what you wish to know, since you
General had too well remarked thattho have relied on a simple attestation from
Austrian officer and the coachman rec­ me in keeping this unhappy Muller in
ognized each other; be also noticed your service notwithstanding the mys­
that their astonishment could not be tery which surrounded him. This uni­
that of a master who simply recognized form. these epaulettes, these decora­
again an old servant, or that of a serv­ tions belonged to him justly; he bravely
ant who found again an old master. A earned them as a soldier. A fault
singular emotion, a profound terror was caused him to lose them, but he has so
shown in the faces or these two men. nobly expiated it that I think I can bet­
when they found themselves face to I„
ter ______________________________
render homage to his memory by
face, and the preoccupation of the 1 revealing it to you, than by leaying
Austrian General daring the remainder &lt; you perplexed by doubts which you will
ot the dinner did not escape tho atten-' not be able to explain.
tioj; of the General. If war had existed {
“Muller is none other then the Count
at that time between
There ia
un France
trance aud Aus-j
Aus- d®
qe V------ ., my elder brother.
or
tri*. tbe General- might
night have thought |1 nothing extraordinary in his history exthat this Muller, whose manners an- I cept
ccpt what you know. At an early ago
he had gained the grade and the dis­
man. was n spy. whom the hope of a tinctions, tho titles of which you have
great reward had induced to play this e discovered, and his military fortune
role. But as things were, there was no
been so rapid that he raised hopes
in my father's mind that he would rise
we that to the highest offices ot honor in the
himself State- A single event, as so often hap­
pens, destroyed all these hopes. My

he had di
to retire

f, was forced
. Carlsbad in
Hu found there a
large number of his fellow countrymen

he wished to
a; »rrraata who j play b carried in these reports, where

«"A_T COST.Tta

COST.ja

100 Patterns New Prints, best brands, I will
sell at 7 cts, Sold everywhere at 8 cts,
60 two-strap Horse Blankets at 90 cts. Sold
earlier in the fall for $1.30.
Kerosene Oil at 15 cents per gallon.
12 1-2 lbs. good Brown Sugar for one dollar,
■

.
*■
■
• ■—■—r—
■
As I wish to reduce my stock $5000 worth by Feb’y 1st, I will make special inducements
on my entire Stock.

OUB HIGHWAYS-

—'TRUTH IS MIGHTY I
JL JL V

JL JL1.

KJ

Ivl J-

-B- -I - J- JL I

our beutiful Michigan is her poor roads.
Especially is this true in Barry county.
At least four months in tho year our
roads are simply mud drives—and al^| ‘N making tho following statement, we utter the truth, and can verify it.
most impassible, and not fit for heavy]
teaming one-half of tbe balance ot the I
year. And there is no necessity of '
this. Highways are something that I
In tbe city. at bottom prices, fair and square weight and measure. When
everybody is interested in and should '
i wo advertise the most complete Stock of
receive proper attention.
।
[
The defects most prominent are I
road-beds rounded up so that teams I
necessarily pass on the summet and
Etc., in Bai ry and Eaton counties, we are telling the people a tact that can­
cut the way into rnta and ndges. The not be successfully nnd truthfully denied. It consists of a large variety of sta­
first heavy rain produces mud-holes ple goods, and a large assortment of
aud broken surface. Efforts to escape
and
them only make matters worse, and, as
In various designs and styles, also a well selected Stock of
a consequence, the road becomes near­
ly impassable. Each year tho same I
remedy is applied—a quantity of dirt I
plowed nnd scraped from the ditches
In Tea Setta, Water Setts, Cups, Saucers, Pitchers, Etc. An endless variety
and ridged upon the driveway. The of Vases, Toilet Setts, Flower Setts, Etc. in
body of the. road becomes from six
inches to two feet higher in the center
Too numerous to mention, and so cheap that all can afford to buy.
than at the siaes. Except in the best
of weather, there is never good driving.
c
The “path-master” is a busy farmer or Hj
Of every style, color and design. When you are ready to buy, I am ready
some one’s hired man, changed annto
sell.
All
kiuds
of
Produce
taken
in exchange for Goods. .
ally and tad looted with no idea to bis
fitness. He orders out his neighbors,
each ono ns ignorant os himself of
what to do, plows, digs, scrapes, until
tho tax is worked out, and stops, no
matter in what iliapp the work is left.
This is our road “system” and it b as
bad as it can be. In many case* it
would be better to let the roods entire­
ly alone.
COUNTRY,
The road-beds are generally too nar­
row. The conseauenoe is the same as
.when to high—necessary rutting. Tho
driveway should not be leas than 15 or
30 feet in width, with a slight slope or
roll. Such a road will not be so.lreadily graded at first, but in the end will
pay. Let it be well set in gravel or
slmle, audit will need bat very I slight
repairs in ten years. It will be good in
all
weathers.
The path-master’s
work should then be to se that small
brooches ore promptly repairedfiand
the grade kept.
In building a country road, of course,
the first requirement is good drainage,
without which no material will endure.
This, unfortunately, Is the least con­
sidered of all matters by tho “path­
master’’ system. Good, clean gutters
tdiotild bo established, discharging
readily into a creek or reservoir, Gut­
ters with no outlet simply receive the
water and hold it till it evaporates or
is absorbed by thi soil. Ih-this way
country roads become very frequently
a source of malaria and sickness.; This
community is especially poisoned by
roadway stagnant pools.
The second requirement is gravel, or
tia». Waablnfft
Cc litre rille. Pri
shale, or urokeu stone, not lesaYthan
roa, Larm»
ten or twelve inches in thickness. A
sares.?;
road once carefully made of this ma­
Mt^taoWKM
terial can be then eaaily kept in repair
by tho present system of annual tax­
ation or labor. There will be but few
holos or ruts, if the road-bed be of suf­
ficient jwidth and proper inclination
and drainage.
Let it be understood that all labor js
thrown away that it is not used to conrtruct a load-bed thoroughly in every
wav. If slighted in any particular,
nothing will result but ruta. mud
nnd misery. Stone. graveL sliale must
all be used with uuderstar.ding ti» make
them of any more value than clay.
The wear of bad roads is estimated
to demand from two to five times the
horse-power of a reasonable good road.
So the farmer really pays m wagon" ear and hnrae-wrtkr far more per year
than be would if subject to a road-tax
Mifficieiit to secure a tiret claw roadln*d. It is, therefore, a matter of policy
to improve, and to do it so thoroughly
that tbe wmk will endure. The chief

THE LARGEST STOCK OF GROCERIES

Crockery, Glassware,

Prench China,

Nlajolica W are

ENGLISH DECORATED CHINA

VTVGITS’O A

STAND LAMPS

C. W. SMITH.

but on the
equally deal
and vehicle

PRINTING.

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                  <text>ORNO STRONG,!
Editor

a mu

Profhiktox-

( TERMS; $1 .60 m Ybar
( Credit StrascMimoM* 81.75.

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun.

1

VOLUME IX.NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1882.NUMBER 21,
LIFE Ilf NASHVILLE
And Her Environs.
—H. Webcster has given the section
men working on his •division; *'the
grand bounce, and hired a new gang.
• —Last Wednesday, Will Troxel,
while at work on HilbbaxtiOfiey’s barn,
cut his foot in a severe manner with a
broad ax.
—The suit of Stevens vs Wolcott,'
was tried at Hastlns last Wednesday,
and a judgement rendered for the
Plantiff. (
%
—Owing to thiHiigh price of buck­
wheat, Scratching is not so vigorously
executed as when that staple is more
abundant, and the price nominal.
—F. T. ia Boise erecting au addition
on the rear of his drug store, and also
making some repairs and improve­
ments on the inside of hi* place of
business.
'
-Jn the case of James Mix vs Isaac
Townsend, appealed from jistice court
here to the circuit court, tue sentence
was changed from 61 days at the Dei
troitjlouse of Correction, to a fine of
$25. Decision in the case was render­
ed Thursday evening.
—Mr. LikJin does not profess to be
an atbelete, yet will wrestle any man
in the Eastern, Middle or Western
states, catch-as-catch-him if you can.
for 85,000, if *they will agree to not
throw him so far that ho cannot get
back before the spring election.
—H. Dean of Maple Grove, recent­
ly sold his farm, taking 810 to bind the
bargain until the papers could be.made
out. The buyer afterwards bought
another farm m Maple Grove, and Mr.
Dean still has a farm for sale, and 810
to spend while he is looking for anoth­
er buyer. ,
•
z

—The home Dramatic Club has a
differance In opinion among its mem­
bers in regard to what charitable pur­
pose it will give the proceeds of its last
entertainment. The News suggest*
that it form a library association, buy
what books it can now, and odd more
as the association prospers financially.
. —Late lost Thursday night, a disI graceful free-for-all fight was indulged
in by several who had considerable
noisy Whiskey. on board. Out of the
whole number of rioter*, only two
found lodging in the lock-up, Sid.
Kocher, aud a peddler named DuBaisc,
the first onea picked from the crowd,
and the rest ditpened.
—Last Thursday H. B. Ledyard, E.
C. Brown and other R. R. officials came
over this division of the line, and they
talk strongly of locating a turn-table
here to be used hi the place of the one
at .Hastings which is so badly out of re­
pair that a new one is a necessity. This
being a water station gives us thp- in­
side track ovjr Hastings and will make
the night office here-, permanent.
'
neM man of Nashville for the last four­
teen yean years, and during the last
five years his son Geerge ha* been a
faithful clerk in the store.- A change
has been made and George taken in as
partner, the firm name hereafter to
read G. A. Truman &amp;. Son. They
have been invoicing, this week, look
out for their new ad in the next issue.
—E. Chipman and Emmet Everts are
perfecting arrangements to open a roll­
er skating rink in the opera house in a
few day*. The fun loving part of the
community cau then have the privilege
of buckling on a pair of roller skate*,
and then ait down on the floor as un­
ceremoniously and a* hard as they
please, by paying the proprietors a
nominal admittance fee.
—Jas. Matteson the young man of
whom previous mention ha* been made
as suffering from spinal disease and
abcess of the hip resulting from the
' diseased condition of the spine died at
• ‘the residence of his fath^r-ln-law
Chaoncy House, on Tuesday morning.

•orrnption, the outside muscular sub­
stance being all that was left of it.
The diseased condition of the kidney
M well as the spinal difficulty was un­
doubtedly caused from an injury he
norin* tor w five rwn.«ob7 f«Uhi.l»ek Op«O

TIME CHANGES ALL,

LOCAL GIBBLE-GABBLE
AM F«n«a*l Chit-Chat.

Battle Creek, Feb. 7, 1882.
Dear News :
You arrived here all right Saturday
evening! and was heartily welcomed.
I bad chance only to read Muse’s re­
port of the growth ot Nashville and a
portion of the locals, when yoa were
wanted and went out from my pre­
sence forever. The last I saw of your
welcome •‘phis” was peeping from the
breast pocket of Dr. Kellogg’s coat
Then I made a tedious trip down town
for yoa. At the Tribune office you bad
been loaned to a Mr. Poole, at the
Journal you had been carried off by a
Barnes, and the editor of the Moon had
you up to the house for Sunday read­
ing.
I can hardly realise that time has
wrought such important changes in
Nashville, until I stroke my beard aud
notice that it hasturned to a silvery
grey or endeavor to Jump a picket
fence ond discover that my legs have
grown old and feeble.
And so the Michigan- Ship Canal in
completed through Nashville 1 I saw its
founder Mr. Willis, yesterday. Time
has dealt gentler with him than me.
Although 81 years old when he took
the contract from the government to
build the canal for five million dol­
lars. and although many years have
passed since that time, the change in
him is hardly perceptible. He walks
erect, without the aid of a cane,
and at the time I saw him was engaged
in showing a party Battle Creek, from
the roof of the Sanitarium. He is the
same kind, big-hearted man a-* of eld.
Virtue, surely in his case, is its own
reward. I suppose he will never get
sick or old, but when bis time comes
will simply drop to deep In death.

How glad I am that Nashville* has
grown to such a city. I notice the
names of Truman, Ainsworth. Wheel
er, Kocher- Bros., Smith, the Boisea,
Glasgow, Dickinson,Lee,Francis,and a
score of other live men in your col­
umns. It must be that these men have
contributed materially to the prosperi­
ty of Nashville, and that the dead
heads and town drone* have been
driven out, or she would never have re­
ceived the unparallelled growth she
has. Well, we have always thought
that nature had mapped out Nashville
for a city, and all that was needed to
make her one was to get rid of the
drones and pull back's.
And you, too, dear News, must have
enjoyctl a share of the prevailing pros­
perity; Paper bills, wash bills, and the
demands of hired girls, are easier met
than of old. Does Dorlantf accept your
orders now T
Dear News I should love to com­
mune further with you, but I am want­
ed as a victim to the electric bath, and
mast go hence.
Good bye,
Orno Strong.

THE BANNER AND GOV. JES0ME.
Dowd at the county seat is published
a school-primer paper of a limited cir­
culation, entitled the Banner. It is
edited by a couple of silly simpering,
a.’die-paled simpletons, who are wont
to boast of what they are, and intend
to do, in the newspaper line. Noto­
riety is what the editors long for, and
lacking the necessary talent to gain it
by‘worth and abilityKh^F are endeav­
oring to reach it by libel and under­
handed insinuations. A short time
since this paper was represented at
the Yorktown celebration by D. R.
Cook, Senator to fill vacancy from
from this district Now the Banner
charges Gov. Jerome with “roystering,
^ojsterousness, and booziness” while at
the celebration. We attended that
celebration, and having a pride in our
glorious state and its representatives,
took some little pains to note the Gov­
ernors deportment. 'Every evening
during the celebration we were at his
headquarters and saw no liquor, drinking,or appearance in the Governor chat
would indicate booziness. And as to
“roysterousnes* ” we saw none, unless
the Banner would term a serenade royBterousnes*, which our Governor was
complimented with on two different
occasions—once by the Tennessee mil­
itia and again by the Virginia militia.
On these occasions he was called upon
to make a speech, and did it in a man
ner that reflected credit upon himself
and state, and did not sound at all like
a boozy man speaking. Gov. Jerome
was not drunk at the Yorktown cele­
bration and no journal nwd fear his
chance* for a Meoadtena will be in­
i’^ by anything that the pigmy editorooCtM^MMr may say. Ger. Je-

Everything is lively.
Get yoar valentine ready for next
Tuesday.
Thos. Purkey is building an addition
to bi* house.
Mr*. A. L. Rasey In&gt;* recovered from
her recent illness.
Ed. Young, of Charlotte, spent Sun­
day with friend* here.
The weather this week ha* been as
pleasant as Indian summer.
Charles Berry and -Ida Clever were
married last Monday night.
‘0. E. Hawthorn &gt; was -vitihng his
brother, S. D. over Sunday.
Miss May Jack way*, of Mattawan, is
visiting at S. D. Hawthorns.
.
Nell, of Woodland, was perigrinating around town on Tuesday.
The proprietor* of the oar factory are
trucking logs at a lively rate.
If it keeps this weather long, we will
be able to lick lasses in a few days.
Several of our citizen* have been at­
tending court at Hostings this week.
Miaa Helen Kelley, of Grand Rapids,
visited at S. S. Ingerson’s over Sunday.
Mr. and Mr*. Jos. P. Roberts, of
Hastings, spent Sunday at H.G. Hale’s.
J. L. Roe of Bellevue was visiting his
brother Henry on Tuesday and Wed­
nesday.
A shooting gallery and ball alley is
being fitted up in the basement of ths
Yutes block.
- .
Mrs. Valiant, bf Hastings, and Mr*.
McDuff, of Texas visited at J. J. Put­
ters Inst week.
L. P. Cole and wifi, of Thcrnapple,
returned last week from a visit among
friends in Arkansas.
Miss Delia Hudson, of Battle Creek,
has been visiting atL. O. Crocker’s the
fore pan. of this week.
Peter Adams of Kansas, aud Mary
Stevens of Albion, have been visiting
at J. L. Stevens’ this week.
A party of six or eight men and boys
were camping out at Jordon Lake, lash
week, catching fish and colds.
Ed. White has given up his position
at Hastings, and is now employed as
salesman in Kocher Bros, store.
r
Steve Sprinkett’s saw mill is situated
on Jos. Ilewtut’sfarm, instead of Zeb
Park’s,was stated last week.
George Morgan left a half bushel of
the finest apples of the season, for The
News boys, yesterday morning.
The Christian church society have
decided to reseat their house of wor­
ship, and will do so immediately.
Latest letters received from Editor
Strong, state that he m getting better,
although he is recovering slowly.
A. D? Jarrard hopes to get a position
on this rood, instead of going West,
as he anticipated a few weeks ago.
.
About thirty couple attended the se­
lect party held by Hardy &amp; Putnam nt
the opera house, Thursday evening.
Thos. Braun of Middleville, and his
sister, Mrs. Wagoner of Caladonin,
have been visiting friends here this
week.
The monthly meeting of the Blue
Ribbon society was held at the M. E.
church last Sunday, and an interesting
time enjoyed.
An oyster auppet^uid social will be
held at the residence of W. Lathrop,
on Friday evening, Feb’y 17th, for the
benefit of the M. P. church.
Chipman and Gregory have invita­
tions out for a Washington's birthday
party at the upera house, Feb. 23nd,
and propose to have a jolly good time.
The social entertained by Mr. and
Mrs. Hubbard Wednesday evening was
well attended and a pleasant time en­
joyed by all. 88.45 was added to the
treasury.
Capt. Wall and two daughters, Mrs.
Hawkins, Mrs. Reeves, and Mr. Syd­
ney Allen, of Charlotte, were visiting
at N. P. Frink’s and other friend* here
this week.
L. J. Wheler announces a grand dos­
ing out sale of hit) entire stock, and of­
fers rare bargains in every department
of his trade, examine his new ad, and
see his prices.
The ladies mite society in connection
with the U. B. church of Maple Grove,
will be held at Mr. and Mrs. Horace
Dean’s, Thursday afternoon, Feb. 16th.
All are invited.
Owing to a typographical error iu
the printing of A. WT. FeUtfs danee
cards the bill lead* 81.00 whereas it
should be 81.50, and the enjoyment
wilt be cheap at that price.
Mr*. Orno Strong and Miss Hattie
Peckham left on Wednesday for Cli­
max, to attend the golden wedding of
Mr. and M.S. Sheldon Peckham, an
unci* and ,iu&gt;t ol tbein. who

Mr. Eno, departed this life, Sunday
night. The funeral was held Tuesday,
at the Norton school house, with Rev.
F. Holler conducting the service*. The
deceased was an old resident, and
leaves many friend* and relatives to
inorn bis loss.
The News has received from W. H.
Holme*, formerly of Hastings Journsl,
an interesting letter giving a descrip­
tion of Ripon, Wis. hi* present home,
and a short sketch of the Northwestern
Colony Associateion, but a pres* of
other work forbid* its publication.

MAPLE GROVE.

Sagar making' get oat your buckets.
. Ad. Wolf has his house nearly finish*
ed.
. Charley Brooke has returned from
the north.
The dance at John Bigge’ last week
was a failure'.
Quite a large quantity of brick ia on
the ground for the new M. E. church.
Mrs. Wilcox and Miss Mary Beatle,
epent Saturday and Sunday at Hast­
ing*.
The teacher in the McOmber Diat, is
The Baptist Sunday school will have getting excited; look- a-leeile-out, little
their jug breaking, Monday evening, boys.
Farmers are taking advantage of the
Feb. 18tb. An nd mission fee of 10 c&lt;*
for adalts and 5 cts for children will be good roads, by hauling wood to Battle
Creek,
taken at the door. The exercises will
Mrs. Geo.- Warner of Oliyet, was in
be interesting especially the closing,
when tbe‘jugs will be broken and the Maple Grove during Saturday aud Sun­
content* counted. All are cordially day, visiting friends.
Arlie and Nellie &amp;rcher, Cora Pearceinvited to attend. The proceeds are
to be used to finish paying for the or­ 1 and Mr*. Termen have had a sore time*'
with their arms caused by vaccination.
gan. Come one come all.
Mr. Piniscy aud Mr. Covel had the
The Hastings Democrat published a draw bolts taken out of their wagons,
poem lost week, purporting to have
one night last week. B&lt; tier take them
been written upon the death of Edgar
back, lioys.
A. Haskins, who died 'Nov. 7th, 1881.
Brother Clark omitted the authoAi I There was a dance at BJprt Cum­
mings’ last week, and according to the
Dame, which is Nancy W. Priest; aud
report, they had a fine large time.
also omitted the statement that the Hastings, Buttle Creek and Nashville
poem was written years ago, and that
being represented.
a copy of it, graces nearly every
The Good Teip plant Bodge is in a
scrap-book in the country. In the or­ prosperous condition. They installed
iginal, the gender of the pronoun is the foliowiug officers last Saturday
changed to the feminine.
night: C. It. Palmer, W. C. T; Nellie
A wrestling match is billed for Archer, W. V. T; R. Swift; W. 8; H.
Thursday evnning F«&lt;b. 16th, at the Mayo, W. T; . G. Pearce, W. O. G;
II. Dunham,
opera house, between Clark Strank, of Arlie Archer, W. I. G ;
A. J. Wolf. W. M ;
Eva
Eaton Rapids, champion of the state, W. F. S ;
and Hat Bosworth, of Roxnnd, Eaton Dunham, W. R. II. S; Hattie Palmer,
W.
L.H.8.
BooE.
R
ec
.
county. The style of the contest is to
t&gt;e catch-as-catch-can, best three in
HASTINGS.
five; for a purse of 850 and door
money to the winner. ' The managers
The roads are splendid.
will preserve good order, and ladies
W. B. Sweezy (started on Thursday
are espeially invited to attend. As
for Dakota.
neither of the contestants have ever
Sixty-five cases on the Calender for
lost a match, an intering contest may
this term of court.
be expected.
‘
•
J. L. Wilkins is getting a fine lot of
logs. He trucks them in.
—A couple of Vermontville youths
The last club dunce will be at Union
came down hero last Sunday to dese­ Hall, Friday evening.
crate the holy Sabbath day by skating
The bribery case of A. J. Hardy
on the pond, and while having their was continued until next term.
sport, a revolver in the hands of ono
L. B. Stanley left the city for his old
of the boys wn« accidentally discharg­ home in New York, where he will re­
ed, the ball entering the thigh of the side.
.
other toy. The wounded boy whose
A donation for the benefit of Rev.
name we learn is Ime*. was taken Moody was held at Red Ribbon Hall
home and the wound dressed, but the i Thursday night.
ball ha* Dot yet been found.
; The Choral Society will give a con­
WEST SUNFIELD.

Be honest.
Judge fairly.
Injure no one.
Roads still improving.
Farmers are jubilant again.
Mrs. Stuck is still considered in a
critical condition.
The U. B. missionary society met at
the church last Thursday, with a good­
ly number in attendance.
The'ladies aid society met at the
residence of Mr*. James Hunter, last
Wednesday and had a delightful time.
We visited Woodland ceutei a few
days ago and found the street* well
filled with teams, which is indicative
of a thriving business.
It seem* the auction fever i* raging
at present, there being ns many as three
or four a week, but that’s just what
suits ourjovial auctioneer, Mr. Elliott.
No eclipse of either the sun or moon
visible thi*year in Michigan, *o tho*e
who love astronomy, will have to look
to other sources for amusement..
Rev. Brideostine, we are glad to say,
is meeting with unparalleled success
with his revival* nt the U. B. church,
and will continue the service* another
week.
There will be preaching at the Pres­
byterian church next Saturday after­
noon, and communion services on
Sunday, conducted by Rev. Jewell of
Ionia.
A medical councel was Meld at Mr
Stuck’s last Thursday, and her case
pronounced as passed recover, yet Dr.
Snyder will continue to do all in his
power to allevite her suffering, while
she remain* in her present condition.

The most perilous hour in a man’s
life, is when he tempted to despond.
If he loses his courage, he loses his «1L
He may may be prostrated on a bed of
sickness, or forsaken by friends, but if
he keeps up courage, there is hope for
him. It matter* not how poor he may
be, or how much pushed by dreum-

! cert next Wednesday evening, at Un­
ion Hull, general admission. 25c; re­
served scats 35c.
Hopper aud Damoth. the Middleville
burglars were sentenced, Thursday,
to three years hard labor at Jackson,
by Judge Hooker.
.
John Beamer is fitting up the store
lately occupied by Powers &amp; Barlow,
and will move his stock of groceries
there as soon as it is ready.
A boy by the name of Christie, found
a very moist spot in the ice down on
the mill pond Friday, some of the oth­
er boys had to help him get away from
it.
Mrs. J. W. Bentley and Miss Rose
Goodyear entertained a Jlarge com­
pany of the friends st the residence of
H. A. Goodyeaa Wednesday evening.
A pleasant time was reported by all
participating.
Monday morning Mr. Kennedy start­
ed to bring his chileren to Hastings, to
attend school. While on the way the
horses became frightened. Tan away
and upset the rig. They were consid­
erably shock up, and frightened, but
luckily sustained no senou* injury.
Hans.

lb. bunk of Harry E»orU A Co.. »l
ir»n.tho follow! n&lt; doKr'btd luU

width oft 1

LOCAL MATTERS.

C3T I will psy the highest market price ia
ca«h or goods for butter, egg«, lard, dried *p, pies, green apple*, potato** and other produce.

nr Boot* ami Shoe* at le*« than cost st
Qf Butter 34 cents and good Print 4 cent*
at G. A. Trfman A Son’s.

DO YOU KNOW
That mv $40 Carriige HarueMe* hare been
nold at Battle Creek for ffxi. and thought to be
cheap as compared with Battle Creek . prices!
This I* a fact and t ean prove It. Call and get
my prices* before you buy. A. R- WoLoott.
ST Juzt received those celebrated La Basta
Chimneys with with which you can drive nail*,
warranted fire proof.
C. AINSWORTH,
OT Overcoats at le** than cost al
Wx. A. AruwoRTO’s.
jy I keep eonBtanlly on hand, bolted Meal,
Buck Wheat Flour, Graham Flour, also sell
Holler'*, DlcWMon'* and PotterrilleV Floor.
C. AINSWORTH.

FARMERS
Take advantage of the low price* and buy yuur
harne** of Clark who will give you No. 1 stock
and rcllabie work.
Wm. Clark.

or Canada Oat Meal, Carolina Rice.
Hominy, Prunes Saur Kraut, Maccarunla, at
AINSWORTO’8.
GUIT^AUywILL BE HUNG Jl.’NE

30th, but III be hanged any time if I can’t fix
vou out with a better harries* for the money
than yon ran get elsewhere, at
,
A. R. Wolcott’*.
, WANTED.
One hundred cord* of IS inch wood for ninety
dollar*, or oue hundred curd* of 20 inch for
one hundred dollars, cash. Enquire of C.
Ainsworth,
M. B. BROOKS.
*arBe*t*uIt of clothe* in Barry County for
$5.00 al
Wm. A. Atlswoktu.

sr “No. 1” White Fish, Mackerel. Trout,
Cod Fl*h, Halibut. Sardine*. Oyateni, Lobsters,
canned grxd* of al! descriptions.' vou can find
at AINSWORTH’S.
nr Harness repaired and oiled hr exchange
for wood. .
Wm. Claxk.
**_ Kerosene OH cheap a* the cheapest,
present price 15 cents.
C. AINSWORTH.
LUMBER! LUMBER!
Custom Sawing and Building Material fur­
nished on short notice, at our new mill in Ma­
ple Grove.
Jam** 8. Perry.
car Green Coffee for 15c ft
Ainsworth's.

FOR LALE.
One 3 Spring Double Buggy or Wagon, alao
a lot of Groceries*, Crockery and Glaaa Ware,

C. AINSWORTH’S-

MONEY WANTLD!

mooev to par my bills. If not paid *oou you
account will l&gt;c placed tn a collector’* hand*.
.
C. W. Dsmaaxt.

just received which I will sell cheap
*1 AINSIWRTH’S.
THE LAST CALL.
Now la yoar time to aecure bargains at Wm.
A

.A A

--

V.**

P. HOLLER’S NASHVILLE MILLS.
I hare succeeded in arranging the tuill x&gt;
that I can GRIND GRISTS in the old way,

KALAMO.
etter flour than I used to make In the old mill.
I all also continue to exchange grists for
Mrs. Timer Morris and two children
I1 who wish It, and can give red wheat flour
have been siek with the diphtheria, bat for red wiwaU
are on the gain.
Mr. Hod. Stocking lost his little boy,
last wegk Th uraday. Funeral last Sat­
Bring in your grist and **y whether you wHk
urday at the Matteson school house.
are it exchanged or ground.
Mr. Dan Karcer has rented John
Fowler’s farm, and moved on the same.
TO WHOM n W.JY COW
Mr. William Fowler is to move down
to the county farm.
AT1A1
Twenty-seven numbet* were sold at
Eli Wells’ dance, last week Friday
evening. A good time is reported, and
a good supper wo* served.
i. Liberal diaguunt* ot
pay you
A good time wao reported at the R.
R. Club last week Friday night, also a
good bouse. This week Friday nigh4
reading aud speaking by the member*,
in the program.
Victor Case, of Ohio, is
friends

M

�fur

that

sm hungry,” he told her.
•‘But haven’t you jny tea, or flour,
rotue.
or butter?1’
“There may be a little butter,” said
the old man, reluctantly; “ but I don't
*&lt;UrtoMt," ••tnald,"
lUiosrt," "darling,” think there’s any flour, aud tea is noma*
thine I don’t use.”
“,But you' like'It, uncle?” ,
“ Why, yes—but it costs too much.”
“And sugar, hare yon any of that?”
“ No. I get along very well without
it.”
- .
“ Then you wait a few minutes, and
"Charlotte," I’ll run out and get some. 1 saw a store
as I came by, only a few rods back from
«*• Bay."
ilia "isle of here.”
And as she spoke she put on her bon*
net and shawl.
&gt;n* have gender all could mm.
“ But I dou t have any account at the
T. &gt;«• adjectives to nouns belong,
store,” uttered the old man, fparfully^
;»ud uuuiiM and certain verbs tigre®. '
“They won’t trust me.”
“Thin verb is active.” whispered John:
“Nevermind. I have the money. Just
you see to the fire, and mind the tea­
kettle bolls.”
*
' .
And thus speaking, Kate ran out. In
"I wmM We loved." hummed Malx l J.
‘•AtrMjia;’* the laofxl!" upokc Tommy 8. about fifteen minutes she returned, and
(Rt*T&gt;ri»fK: h- r). "AWd.lt 1 may, ,
•Th cMUyeMr-mfeoiheart'-ntay If" "Yea" in her arms she bore, quite a little heap
of packages. A little bundle of flour, *a
•J|H I Annwleved." alxbcd Vary Gold.—
package of tea, some sugar, a small
"You nan;” cried AU, “I do declare!
new tin pail full of milk, and so on.
Her next movement was to hunt up
the bread. She found a loaf of baker’s
©.’ ccmra- be mjirhtI bow could »bo bo
bread, and having cut it up into slices,
&gt;o cruel m to tell him "nay?"
So C»:&gt;id dturood for very glee,
she placed it near the fire to toast.
While ifniw the school from day to day.
Then she moved out the old table, and
after the leaves were raised she inquired
O nauirtty Cupid i thus to fool
Your Mother Venue, throned above.
for a table-cloth, but the old man had
Aud. a Idle »bc boa«ta you love your ecbool, uone.
UewitchluK all the school with love.
But she was prepared for this, 'and
. —Nr- tlmtr'a Cwtery Afaparlas.
more, too. In her trunk she not only
found a cloth, but also‘a cream-pitcher,
THE OPENING OF A HARDENED
sugar-bowl, and a few articles of like
HEART.
description ^'hich she kept as remem­
“ And so Kate Owen is coming here! ” brances of her mother. The snow­
said Absalom Burr to himself, as he white cloth was spread, the dishes put
paced to and fro in his-small, dingy on, and then Kate hunted up a stewSarftnent. “ Why don’t she get mar- q&gt;an.
This she cleaned, and having fixed it
d and go about her business? A
plague on her, I say. Just because my on the fire she proceeded to make a dip
‘ sister chose to marry Jim Owen, and for the toast.
She found Absalom’s dishes bidden
then- die, and leave this girl behind, I
must take the thing and provide for it. away in various places, as though stuck
What a fool I was to tall my sister I’d away from the sight of assessors and tax­
see to her child
Why, here’ll be my gatherers. But there were more of them
house. turned topsy-turvy, and evary- than she had imagined, though they all j
ahinglike peace tly out of the window^. had to go through a washingbefore they 1
And then 1 RppoM the flirt thinks that were put on the table.
Finally the toast was done, the tea
3’11 find her spending money. But she’ll
soon find out her mistake there. Not a was made,' and Uncle Absalom was in­
penny—no—not—one. She says she can formed that supper was ready.
“ Now, uncle,” spoke Kate, as they
sew, and she shall. By the host, she
don’t touch a penny of mine. And if were about to rise from the table, “ isn't?
t
she stays here, she shall do my sewing this better than cold bread and water?”
“ Why, yes, it tastes a little better,
to pay for hou-e-room, and do my cook­
Sag andjynshing to pay for her victuals. but it costs more, Kato.”
“ No, no, uncle, it doesn’t cost so
A plague on poor nieces!?’
much..
It may take a little more money,
Thus spoke Absalom, and then he sat
'
down and stuck his feet close up to the but look at the comfort and satisfaction
fce. Absalom Burr was a miser. He it affords, which would be lost without
&gt;ad seen his sixtieth birthday, and his it. What is money good for, if we can
hair was sparse and white.
His form not purchase comfort with it? Who so
was short and spare, and somewhat poor as he who has no comfort and no
But I know what you mean.
bent. His face was deeply furrowed by joys?
the pacing time, and its lines were bard , You would be prudent and saving —and
and cold.
His clothes were old and so we will l&gt;e; and yet wo will have some
comfort,
too.”
.... •
.
patched, and his shoes, even, were sadly
The table was soon cleared away,
Mwant of mending. The cold breath
and
then
Kate
proceeded
to her dishes.
•Cwinter was close at hand, and yet the
•uly fuel he had was such as he had After this, she sat down and conversed
been able to pick up by the roadside with her uncle, and for two hours she
and at the edge of the pond. The house entertained him with '’■accounts of her
in which he lived was but a poor hovel. own and her parents’ experience.
When bed-time came, she found her
With only two rooms, and With furniture
. more fit for firewood than anything cot ready for her, and though she saw
vise. There were four windows in the plainly how she could better it, she said
house, and every spare rag of clothing nothing.
In the morning he was aroused by
he owned wa&gt; in use for the replacing
the notes of a blithe, sweet song. He
&lt;d broken panes.
' And yet Absalom Burr was worth fif­ started up and listened, and he heard
ty thousand dollars, though he contrived the same song which his mother used to
to be taxed for only about ten thousand, sing in her happiest moments.
He arose and dressed himself, and
which was invested in houses that he
shortly afterwards Kate came in. She
Tented in town.
He was never known, to bestow a I had built a fire in the old fire-place out
penny in charity, though many a poor in the porch, and coffee was already
and suffering fellow-creature
had made. She greeted the old man with a
smile, and another kiss. Her fajrcheeks
begged for assistance at his bands.
Alone had he lived for many a long were all aglow, and her face presented
year, and his heart was hardened and the very picture of health and happiness.
A breakfast of dry toast and butter,
’ closed up against every kindly feeling.
Ho spent his time in attending to lus coffee, and a few warm buscuits, was
. rente, picking up wood and rags by the soon on the table, and as the old man
wayside, and counting his money at sat down, that shade upon his face grew
softer still. After breakfast, Kate came
home.
■
One Monday evening near the last c! and put her arms around his neck, and
‘ November the stage stopped in front said:
“ Now, uncle,- that you have a woman
of Absalom’s hut, and ayoung woman
was helped out by the driver, and a in the house you ought to slick up a lit­
trunk arid bandbox put down after her. tle—enough for comfort, at any rate. In
the first place, we want just seven panes
It was Kate Owen.
The old man had not seen her for ten of glass set. -Nowgo to the glazier and
years, but he remembered well how his have this done at once.”
suiter htfd*looked when she was a girl,
“ Yes—well—I have been thinking of
and here was her exact image. Kate’s this for some time, Kate; but it costs so
mother was the only sister he ever had, much.”
and Kate was the only near relative he
“ Never mind that, Uncle Absalom.
had living.
Let us first have those things which are
The girl helped carry her own trunk absolutely necessary to our health and
in, and m soon as she had removed her comfort, and then we will examine the
bonnet, she threw her arms around her state of our funds, and if we are likely
ancle’s neck and kissed him He started" to fall short, we can economize in some­
back at this, and a severe look passed thing else.”
over his face.
“ So we can,” said the old man; and
Kate Owen was a preUy girl, and she thus speaking, lie left the house. In
bad left behind her not one acquaint­ half an hour after ward the glazier came,
ance who did not love her.
She was a and before noon the windows were per­
short, plump, laughter-loving being, fect.
with brown hair and hazel eyes, and
And all that forenoon Kate worked
. when she laughed the dimples deepened briskly about the house, with mop and
in her cheeks and chin, and the dark water, so that when Absalom camo
eurls shook about her fair temples. In home he was astonished. The floor
fact, one look at her happy face was as was clean and white, the fire-place neat,
good as medicine for the blues, and the and the new panes let in such an extra
quantity of light that it seemed like a
new room.
One afternoon, when the wind blew
I herself at the fire, “ are oold and the snow was falling fast., a
poor girl rapped at the door and Kato
let her in. Her name was Martha Allen,
aud her father wns a day laborer, who
had been confined to his bed for several
months having been severely injured by
I'll return blasting rocks. She was only fifteen,

A dollar, or two dollars. You would
not miss it, while—”
“ Not miss it! and do you think I am
made of money?”
At this moment Kate left the room,
and in a moment more she opened the
door and called for her uncle to come
out.
“ What Is it?” he asked, m he came
into the back room, leaving the poor
girl alone. “ Uncle Absalom, you must
not send that girl off empty-handed,”
she said, placing both hands upon his
shoulders. “ Just think of her poor fa­
ther, and of how much she suffers for
him. You are able, and so long as you
give in charity to her so sure shall your
reward be.”
“And who’s to reward me, child?”
“Your own thoughts and feelings,
uncle.*’ .
“ But I haven't the money to spare.”
“ Then give her ten dollars—”
“Ton dollars!
Mercy! Kate, would
you ruin me?” .
'
“ Here me out. Give her ten dollars;
if at the end of six months you want
it
pledge myself to see it
“ You see it paid! And where will you
gel it?”
“I' have more than that—money
which I have laid up to buy clothes
with.”
, “ Then you can hot spare it.”
“ I can go without clothes easier than
I can see a poor, honest man suffering.
Oh, I would rather have the free, heart­
felt blessing of one honest soul than all
the dresses in the world! To walk
forth and feel that I am loved for the
good I do were better far than millions
of money piled away in dark corners.
Go and give her ten dollars, and keep
me to my promise, for I will not break
it. But mind you, my name must not
be mentioned. Give to her as your own
gift.”
“ But you will pay mo?”
“ When you ask it.”
“ I think it’s foolish for you to throw
away your money so, and yet I’ll give it
to her.
You won’t come to mo for
dresses, though?”
“ No, sir.”
The old man returned; having pulled
out his pocket-book, he drew out ten
dollars and handed it to Martha Allen.
“Here,” he said, “ take this and see
that you make good use of it.”
The poor gin took the money with
trembling hand, and as she looked at
the bills—two fives—she was startled.
“ You have made a mistake, sir,” she
said.
“ How so?”
“ You have given me ten dollars.”
“ So I meant, girl.”
A moment tho child gazed into the
old man’s face, and then she burst into
tears.
“ Oh, sir,” she uttered, catching his
hands and pressing her lips upon them,
‘•God bless you for this! God bless you,
now and forever!”
When Martha Allen was gone, Absa­
lom Burr wiped a tear from his eye.
That night when Absalom Barr laid
his head updn his pillow be had a new
emotion, and it was a strange one to
him. He hod done a deed of charity,
and tho blessing of that poor girl vet
rung in his ears and dropped upon his
soul; and he imagined he could hear
the prayers of Mark Allen ascending to
Heaven in his behalf. He knew Mark
Allen for an honest and industrious,
steady, hard-working man, and he felt
sure that Mark would r-ay for him.
Sunriy the thought was a blessedone.
___
But stop! Who gave that saving gift?
Who did that deeuof charity?
“ By the saints,” murmured tho old
man, starting half up in bod, “I did it.
Kate shan’t pay me one cent! She shan’t,
bless mo if she shall.”
Two days afterward Kate proposed
that they should go and visit Mark Allen.
“For,” said she, “our presenoe may
cheer him.” And tho old man finally
consented to go.
They reached the humble cot and were
welcomed in by Martha. They foupd
old Mark sitting in a great, stuffed
chair which a neighbor hud sent in, and
though he looked pale and wan, yet a
warm smile suffused his face as he saw
the visitors.
“ Mr. Burr,” be said, while big tears
stood in his eyes, “I can never .pay you
for the kinunoss you have shown me. I
may at some time pay the money, but I
can not pay you all, for the bare money
is as nothing compared with the knowl­
edge that I have such a generous
friend.”
“Talk not of money to me,” returned
Uncle Absalom, earnestly and warmly.
“ If it served you, I am already more
than repaid. The blessings of men are
cheaply purchased when so slight a ram
can do it;' and, moreover, I have been
more than repaid in the very knowledge
that I have been of service to a suffering
fellow-creature.”
Even Kate syas surprised by this; but
she knew that it was real, and she was
glad.
*
When they rose to depart, at the end
of nearly an hour, Martha followed
them to the dopr, and here she blessed
tho old man again. He wm moved by
a generous impulse, and took a golden
half-eagle from his pocket and handed
it to her.
When Absalom Burr sat down to his
rapper that night, that shade upon his
face was as soft as tho radiance of the
setting sun.
And now he could re­
turn Kate’s smile. And on that night,
too, his dreams were more pleasant than

“Now look here, Uncle Absalom.
How much would yon
taxed for that
money?”
“Over a hundred dollars a year.
Just think of it.”
“ Yes, and just think’ of this: Here ।
the railroad company has just advertised
for a loan of twenty-fire thousand st
five per cent. Vou can make up the ;
five thousand ajd let them have it. ’
Have you not five thousand more lying;|
idle somewhere?”
.
|
“i’erhaps so, said the old man '
thoughtfully. ■
1
•• Then look at it. Thus you would :I
not only be helping the community and ■
assisting a great public good, but you
would at the same time be realizing .
twelve hundred and fifty doll am,, where ;
yoq do riot now get a cent. And again,1
when the company have done with the ।jI
money, you can build houses hero in !
t bis town, every one Of which will let as I
soon as finished and at fair rents. Think II
how you will thus be benefiting die ,
community, and at the same time ren- ।■
dering yourself more able to bestow in
charity such sums ar your own good |:
judgment shall dictate. And tncn, '
think again,” resumed Kate as she
noticed the doubtful look upon her .‘
uncle’s face, “ how much easier you i&lt;
would feel to know that your money ;|
wm safe than to be worrying all the
while for fear some one will come in the I'
night and rob you.”
. '•
This iMt hit touched the vulnerable j
.polnj., and Absalom said he would think j;
of it. And he did think of it to some ;
purpose, for on the very next morning
no started off for P—and having
found the proper officers, he told them ’
he could acoommodate them with the •&lt;
desired loan. They were much pleasod, i
and in short time they had the money ’;
in gold and current bills, and Absalom
had tho notes and good security.
Ho .
went home with a bettor opinion of his '
fellow mon and of himself than be ever :
had before, for be had been thanked for I
his kindness, and his opinion had been |
asked on various important matters,and
he had partly promised, too, that if the
new road wanted more help, he would •
give it.
.
[
Six months passed away from this ;
period, and tho troublesome niece still ,
lived with her uncle.
They also still I
inhabited the little house into which
Kate had first come.
On the morning j
of tho day which saw tho sixth month
from the time of giving ten dollars to
Martha Allen pass away, Kate came
into the room where her uncle sat and '
in her hand she held a ten dollar note. I,
“ Uncle Absalom,” said she, “you re- ।,
member what I told you when you gave ’'
.ho ten dollars to Martha Allen.
The
six months are up and I have come to
redeem my promise.
Here is the
money.”
“ Thank you,” said tho old man, as
ho took tho bill and put it in bis pocket.
“ I am glad you- are so punctual.”
That was all bo said, and then ho took
his hat and went out. Kate was puz­
zled, but not astonished, for she no­
ticed a twinkle in tho old man’s eye
which meant more than ten dollars i
amounted to.
It was near the middle of the after­
noon when Uncle Absalom returned,
and under his arm he carried a small
box which ho gave to Kate, saying as he
did so:
“ Here Kate, this is for you—the first
present from your uncle.”
There was a tear in his eye and his
voice .trembled; and when the bright­ i
eyed girl kissed him he wept outright
j
She hurried away to her little room
and opened the box. Tho first thing
she saw wm a letter directed to herself
in her uncle’s handwriting. Tho next
was a neatly embossed ebony casket,
in which she found a gold watch and
chain with a locket attached, within
which was a miniature of Uncle Absa­
lom. Below this wm a small book, and
by looking into it she discovered that on
that very day the sum of ten thousand
dollars bad been deposited in her name,
at six per cent, interest, to be drawn by
her in whole or in part at will. As soon
as she could sec clearly enough through
her tears, she opened her uncle’s letter
and read as follows:
June I8tb—.
Mt Dear Kat«—Six tnontbi ago my heart
was oold and bardu and eloaed to every
kindiv emotion. I distrusted all mv fellows
antfsaw no good in humanity. But you
came to mo with sunlight and Joy, and by
your sweet music and gentle persuasions my
heart was opened, and the light of love en­
tered, and since then some good has escaped
from tho opened heart And now to you,
who performed the happy work, I give the
accompanying as a slight token of my love
for you and my appreciation of your many
virtues. But you will not leave me. Per­
haps at some time you mav be called upon
to enter into a new and boiler partnership,
but I beg of you not to forget me. Tell the
happy man who may claim you that you can
not go without me, for my life would be
but a living death without you.
Your unele,
Absalom Burr.
When Kate next met her unde, her
Sos were jed with weeping and her
eeks were wet. She moved to his
side, and as she kissed him she simply
whispered, “God bless you! I will
never own a home where you may not
go-”
When the warm breath of rammer
came the old man moved into a good

gave her hand to an honest, industrious
mechanic—a carpenter by trade. And
then came the business. Absalom found
the money and Kate’s husband found
the skill, and new houses went up in the
thriving village. The old man was busy
now, and as his simple, abstemious life
had left him with a noble constitution,
he wm spry and strong.
Aud -Absalom Burr and his niece were
not the only ones who were blessed by
the opening of that hardened heart.
No, far from it. Hundreds there were
Some time daring the next day, Kate who basked in the warm sunlight of the
came up from the cellar and asked her charity that flowed from the ample
uncle what that dark vault wm for.
sources which Kate’s wand had opened.
“ How did you find it?” he cried, in —Lynn (JfaM.) Transcript.
quick alarm.

•did forget to
r.”

my scholars, gazing
lets; one funny boy,

-------- FOR--------

$2.00 A YEAP.POmGEINCUTDED.
aalike ar a

It is' the fMhion, in my school, for
Dotes to come to mu from the parents,
written on the children’s slatea:

let sit beside of Liberia Tuck. The famblies not settin’ horses nt time present.”
“I would like Willy Anna to learn the
planner. I hear you pick the chunw
very dever.”
“ I request of you to hold in my .son
Adoniram. ' He is a forrud child and
will get ahead of his helth unless hdd
in.”
A boy with a mouth like a catfish

portant points. Aa a Jrawpapor it has no
oupert ?. It is DTDlEMENDXNTia PoUtas,

“ Oh, Miss Simpson! Pa he says he
don’t want no grammar spread on me,
EEBIAli
and I am to spell in his old y'aller speller; for he ain't got no confidence in
them blue spellers.”
Having occasion to correct a boy for
B*ying “that ar slate,” the same catfish
and to be relied vpon.
scornfully observes: “Don’t it sound
jest like a nigger? I always says that
thar.”
Tommy comes late, but instead of an
excuse he beams upon me with eyes like
stars.
A little muddy dog slinks in,
nearly throwing him down, and he
draws out of his bag a mangled, draggled squirrel, and holds it up in triumph.
“ That’s what me and Trot done. He
treed him, and I throwed at him, and
me and be and him had it thar, tipiiin’
like wildcats; and I hope you’ll ’oeptof
him, marm.”
Oh, but they do smite the English
grammar in the face!
A new TiltMtrnUd
“ Mary, what is a quadruped?”
“ A dangerous weapon used in war.”
“ No.”
Ntilber PuUtkal nor Hectar u ;
“ A large, violent bird.”
Conducted by ALBION W. TOURGEE, author at
rAFool’. Errand."cte..aMbtcd by Dani&lt;!, G.
“No.”
,
“Oh, Miss Simpson,” from the irro- Bnbton and Robert S, I*av&gt;»First Number Issued February
pressible catfish. “ I seen one at the
The most dbllnuulshed authors and skilful artist
circus.' Hit’s got a tail like a catter—
catter—cattermouut, and cars like a
nnecls
arid .lories !■» Helen Campbr-IL Mrs. Alnxpossum.”
r, E P. t&lt;oe,Ju!Un Hawthorn, Sobn Habbetoa
The pride of this world and the glory! tud.
R H. Davis, etc ; |K»era* l.v
Wilde. Louisa
It freely flourishes in n free school. Chandler Moltun, U IL iioker. .Sidne, l-anlcr, G. P.
There is the pride of family which keeps ta.hrop, Cell* Tluratcr, etc.: enterulninx sketches
bri- G LeloiiJ flioju RAitmanj D. G.Mitc eU,
Sary Ann apart from Mi?w Tuck. The like
Marvel] Felix Oswald otti solui^&gt;apero by
nriue of four ruffles creates an impassoble gulf between -Miss Charity Stubbs
and the one-ruffle' girls with a bias Louia C, Tlfeny; Miuince br
Hothroek, Birpiece. There is the pride of spelling and bcr.ctv.; •orialctiquccue br Mr». Moniion, rural
imprvrrrarut by Hon. J: G. Northrop; tun and
the pride of Johnny's pa, owning a pea i.umor
by «* IL Clark (Max Adkr]“Uncle Iletnn,”
paten and a mule, o-er Tom, Dick arid and a host of olhera.
•
.
; . . •- •
Erautlfnl llltntratlona are a lending Iraturo of
Harry, who own nothing and must “get
further.”
Price IOcmIUi
Oh, the head-tossings, and the snffflings, and this one too good to go with
that one!
Vanitas vanitatum!—Cor.
“Onr Co»Um-»l’’ to their curtoznt-ra,
N. Y. Sun.
are Invited to Uk&lt; aubscOptions.

CONTINENT

LITERARY WEEKLY JOURNAL,

Scandinavian Hospitality.

L'-lxrral i-nraraiMlon.
F»ok Cat&lt;v»»«eT&gt; ran an&gt;! largely to thi-ir incomea
vUbout interfcrins with their n'gulai Imaineaa: by
aciiax for “ourOonilntni."
Write lor parttatHra to
■ ,

The most striking quality of Scandi­
"OUR CONTINENT,"
navian character seems to be hospitali­
10-23
Philadelphia. Pa.
ty. Throughout Norway, Sweden and
the far North the author was heartily re­
ceived by every one, from the King in
his palace to the Laplander in his tent.
During five years of almost incessant
travel, in the course of which evenr part
of the peninsula was visited, Mr. Du
Chaillu was coolly treated only once.
The Swedes and Norwegians have the
reputation of being reserved and cold,
but this is true of them only when they
meet strangers of the class best suggest­
ed by the word “tourist.” To any oue
whoso interest in them can not be mea.sured by a stare or two and a few im­
pertinent questions they are unsus­
picious and communicative, as well as
cordial to the verge of affection. Mr.
Du Chaillu wCht among them freely,
conversed in their language, wore
garments like their own, and took part
in their labors, sports and ceremonies.
The treatment he received in return
tiliicer, Buriia, K*ndriAa, builtagia and
causes him to speak most enthusiasti­
cally in flpuse of their sociability and
kindness.
i Ctttorer Ever (bed.
As in all other countries that retain
primitive habits, hospitality in Scandi­
navia always implies eating and drink­
ing. The poorest farmer or fisherman
always has something to offer the vis­
itor, and lack of appetite is generally
construed as a slight.
The author
mentions one occmIod on which, to
avoid hurting any one’s feelings, be ate
thirty times in two days, and drank
thirty-four cups of coffee. Often strong
cheese is offered just before a meal to
provoke appetite, and in the cities a
formal dinner is preceded by a ttuorgax,
or lunch, at a table crowded with al­
leged appetizers. On a single emorgas
table the author noted smoked reindeer
meat, smoked salmon with poached
CHICAGO, ILL.
eggs, raw salmon freshly salted, hard- 201 So. Clark St.
boled eggs, caviare, fried sausage, an­
chovy, smoked goose breast, cucum­
the -kUAnd
bers, raw salt herring, several kinds of jure. Orchltb, tapture.
cheese and as many of bread, and ? bonra, mercurial ».&gt;ro th mat etc. aaMy and prlvat*salad made of pickled herring, boiled

Park

ER'S .GINGER TONIC

Dispensary.

rious dishes the guests helped them-

ton, tn Harper't Magazine.
—K fund of 95,000 has been contrib-

of “ information tending to popularize

tacks on other spirituous drinks.

field's illnoM at 9100,000, of which the
doctors’ bills are expected to be &lt;53,­
000. Dr. BIJsa is accredited with a claim
of 925,000.
•

NO PATENT NO PAT.

�rapids

division.

:peered

■ The symptoms of Itching Piles are moisture
Aid of any
HkepresjriratlotJ, Intense Itching, most at night
very common victim.
seemed an insult la
I »cents as it pin worms were crawling in iw
w
r----------------- —----------1 about the rectum. The more you scratch the
ant of one of the oldest families of En- j interest to witness such an incident as I . u-orae they itch, very dUtrermlng. The private
SaBh,_Doors, Blinds, Jefferson N*ib». Glass, Putty. I’n'mi, J
glish gentry. She had offended them have here pictured, where one of these parte are often affected. Dr. Swayne’s Oltit.dhjotato lUJUa
™
Oils, Varnishes, Colors, Brushes, Etc Castor, Sperm, CJ.si.i. a J
Marquis, w.io had died and left her pen- ov erpowered by the strategy1 of three withoul
dchirt, toscraich. Also bos on
MUHWTllr
Host Ini.**.—
nileMand homeless with one child, now black ante.
equal In quickly eradicating Tetter, Itch, Balt Black, Linseed and Kerosene Oils.
Na-hrlll.-.......
a boy of six. But aid of -the grpsser
I had left the meadow, and was as- ,---------RheuiDe,- Jtyripelas,
Erysipelas, Bartiera'
Barbers’ Itch, Pimples, I
Shovels, Spades, Forks, Hoes. Snaths, Apple Purer-. Farm
VnrmoMtvIH*
Crusty,
Eruption*.
sort in ths way of invitations, costly i cending a spur of the mountain by the nil Scaly, •'
—*- Jtrhy Mkin «■
—■«— Here
**—. Ch&gt;rf»tt« —.
the proof, “Certain!v the beat remedy ever Bells, Fence Wire, Well and Cistern Pumps. Woo^ ami Iron r
i gifts and money was' urged upon her, ! ®dge of a pine wood, when suddenly I ■j! is
iiacd In my practice,’’Lr-Cotton, WoodsUxrk,
Pipe,
Points, Cylinders, Lead Pipe, Sinks &amp;c.
I which she accepted in an innocent, espied the hornet in question almost at । Vt.. “troubled with Itching Piles for overtweo| childish way. She was nothing but a ' my feet. He immediately took to wing, ; tv years, it cured me completely,” L. 8. Messer.
—--------- AGENT F01!—---i grown-up child. Gray old financiers, I and as he flew on ahead of me I ob- j EirAeld, Me. Bent for M eta (in 3 ct. atetnps)
boxes, 11.25, By Dr. Swayne A Son. Phllad’a
Preabyterian doctors of divinity, the served a long pendant object dangling | 3Pa.
Sold by all druggist*.
; Sous of St. George, Episcopalian bish- | from his body.
The incumbrance
STATIONS.
Curiosity Is aotnetimca easily satisfied. If
t ops were in turn her friends and guard- proved too great an obstacle for oonllnThe Lightest Running and most Durable Machine in use'
tans. Nobody looked very curiously | uous flight, and he soon dropped again you want to know whether the hornets are at
I 8hall aim. to keep qone but prst class goods, uml sell thorn ’
tes* • IMO ; MS
into her antecedents. Her'blown hair-1 aP°Q the path, a rod or so in advance home just tap with your cane on the nest and
I curled in rings about so sensitive a face, oi me. I overtook him, and on closer they will come out and tell you. •
at a small profit. Call and see me when needing hardwatc. '
her eves were so soft and appealing, inspection discovered a plr.cky black
Clergymen, lawyers, physician*, fanners,
her voice, low as Cordelia’s, struck such »nt clutching tightly with its teeth upon
nwrchanU, toisinesa men, gentlemen of leisure,
' a pathetic minor that nobody cared, to the hind foot of its captive, while with and tbelr woman “folk and children, al! use
j
look
behind
them.
’
wr
'
hind
I
attj
It
nlnnoriMTMlrutfllv
tn
its
two
hind
legs
it
clung
desperately
1
Brown’s Iron Bitters. It keeps thetti well.
MMflWvUM.
JJAVE YOU SEEN THOSE
।
ftescntly it was noticed however. a long cluster of pine-needles which
। What sunshine fa to Cowers smiles are to
I ‘hat one society and clique of bumanidid'
the
hornet
touch
the
ground
than
humanity.
They
are
buttrifles,
to
be
sure,
but
। tartans after another dropped *1110 tan•ii4 i&gt;*tr»!t. ’ All train* conur-.i n der-oyed Evangeline or thrust her on the ant began to tug and yell for help. scattered along life’s pathway the gtxxl they
Durett with Grent Wratera. Gran.' [ jnto Othor hands. She began to shim- There were certainly evidences to war­ do Is Inconceivable.
h lUtlwav*.
8hi(t ber
bo(()ra tbe rant such a belief, for a second
H. B. LEDYARD.
E. C. BROWK,
BRAIN AND NERVE.
ant immediately
the
: «y» of lb, rood ybilsdelpbiuui Ilk, &gt; f »nl
InimMiktoly appeared
kppwu-M upon un------JOST IN AT-----emerging hurriedly from a
Protean artiste on tbe burle.que ,Uuro. ' scene,
roene, emerrinp
Wells’ Hay th Rcncwcr, greatest rentedv od
Now ,ba badJuM bran forgiven by Her neighboring thicket of pinu-troa poe». earth for Impotence, Icanni-Mu sexual deb'llltv,
Ac..
SIat
druggist*.
•Mich.
Depot,
JAMES
E.
haughty relatives and inherited an I He wai too late, however, for the horW. N18KKIIN, AUornev and Counsellor Eliaabethan mansion in Kent, with net again sought escape in flight. But DAVIS &lt;k CO . Detroit Mich.
• at la w, ; •radices tn all State Court*. Col
Little Ar;le came running in from the tlchl
If-not, do 80 at oiku^and be happy.
lection* promptly attended to. Office over £*-*0,000 per annum, and went about this attempt was even more 'futile than
♦-ut^
ro I*awa
nlnc.ky little SLSSiul- one day, exclaiming: "Mb! ma! I *eed eufllu
taking
leave nf
of haw
her Irtwrt
kind fwtawrl«
friends wtfh
with I thr»
the former,
former, for
for that plucky
Spaulding's Mure, Hasting* Mich.
a
imped- down here that Kicked bls lirad right down In
n crape bordered kerchlel
kerchief to hpr
her eyes. I' ant had now laid hofdof
hold of another
an
' In a f?w days later she appeared on ; iment, and this time not only the long htemouf." Investigation proveil that he bod
J.J A. UABHKIt. .’ll. !&gt;..
* the platform beside Messrs. Xloodv and i P&gt;ne needle-, but •, small branched stick found a mndtnrtle.
’ HOMOEOPATHIC
Sankey, the accredited' correspondent also, went -.winging through the air,
' SHAN’T 1 TAKE A BLUE PILL!
of a well known London-journal. Ono ; Only a yard or so wa« covered in this
In this lit e
re bound to lend nil competition,
week she
as the ant.still yelled fot rcsne was arrested
arresteu on a chv
cu/ ge of
oi ' flight;
uikui., and
miuusuwauusuijeucuiui
rudon't
aixtnro
risk of iner
No. don
’t take It
it and
run tbe
the the ri*k
tner stock just in is larger and better selected than ever before. D
Office first door east of Opera House, and theft, and the next she was escorted by enforcements, its companion again ap- curia! po!«ju, butu-tienlilllotn- am! constipated'
cuard of eminent Congressmen to the peared, and rushed upon the common j tret a package ot the celebrated Kidney W&lt;-rt, consists in part, of
•
near residence ou corner of Washington ano a
.15,««d daUta U»C«nt«,W ground. KTwiU.-ch (unuu, ,«!IU.« I felUfc. i
State Street*, Nashville, Mich.
and seated beside the President and the patting him on the back. The whole It ney
uey and Mvcr
liver di»&lt;*aee«.
diwa^n. It
nets promptly on
on
ft acta
Emperor of Brazil, while tho Exposition ; significance oi the aceno ho had taken
| these great organa, and so reatoree health.
strencth and vigor.
vtenr. It ia
is put
nut up
ut&gt; In
in llqult!
llonld and
was opened. She next appeared iu I in nt a glance, and iu an instant he hod ! strength
Washindon as tho guest of a committee taken a vise-like grip upon tho other
£dng " ,h w,ual
OUR STOCK OF
ofSe.ator.Mdfon.il
- ----------- ---------------------NEW DENTAL PARLOR.
oreign diplomatist
and1 hindleg. ”
Now
came*'
the final tug of
their instance
a study war. .The hornet tried to rise, but this
Everybody Is complain lag at the high price
—,
I wish to make known to the citizens oi read in public at
second passenger was too much for him;
Nashville and vicinity that I have purchased of tho Life of Sumner. A few weeks he ooula only buzz along the ground, of Cour. People can't seem to comprehend
later sho was again in custody for steal­
that corn, aud wheat, and rye ore used for oth­
the practice of J. L. t9gsl.ee, and am pcnnnn
ing, and contrived almost to strangle dragging hl-, load after him, while his
IS FULL AND COMPLETE.
nently located over G. A. TRUMAN S store- herself with a veil knotted tightly now assailant clutchod desperately at er purposes than to support bakers.
The larbest line of Beaver Shawls in two conn tie.-.
Al! kinds &lt;&gt;f.DENTAL WORK done, fnun ;! . around her throat.
. “MAUD 8J’
Mme. Trenilia1 everything within its reach, now a dried
nlmplest operation to the most difficult,—Art' then disappeared from Philadelphia, leaf, now a tiny stone, and even over­ Haa made the faatant time on recon!, but
A large variety of Ready Made Cxaks; alto Cloakingr *i a '
ficial i'aUlM. Irregular natural teeth straigh­
tened, teeth extracted without i-aln for 50 &lt;-t*. and Mabel Carter entered a missionary turning an.aeorn cup in its grasp, fi­ Rlncharta Liver Pills have made more rapid shades and qualities.
one-half deducted when artificial work i* math meeting in Pittsburgh, walked shyly up nally, a small rough stick the size of a npced h&gt; gainin'? the lead of ala other pills.
300 Pieces of New Prints. An endless variety
Bhuik t­
All cork warranted, advice in regard to tcet; to the pulpit, caught .a venerable old maUh was secured, and this proved the
No woman would Ins happy to lie the only
free rail and sec me.
clergyman by both hands and claimed “laat straw.” In vain were the strug­ woman In the world and bare all the men wor­
A big line of Underwear and Flannels.
P. 8. Will do dental work for 8 cord* &lt;?f wood
recognition as a fellow worker with him gles of -escape. The hornet could do ship her. 8hc wouldn't be aathfled. She’d
Customers are plenty, and we are too busy to eimnier t»IHC. A. H. WINN.
years before for the souls c-f thl heathen no more than lift his body from the want another woman or two to envy her*
further at present.
in Shanghai. He rubbed hiaipectaeles, ground. He rolled and kicked and tum­
YY ILL 1AM JONES
A WOMAN’S EXPERIENCE.
did recognize her, and tho devout Mabel bled, but to no purpose, except to make
was handed tenderly around from one it very lively for h»s captors; and the
Mothers and Daughtrra should feel alarmed
pious old lady to another as a religious thrusts of that lively dagger were wasted when wt anneas cunhiatiily.o|ijin *K * them, “if
prodigy during that winter. Again the on tho desort air, for whether or not 1 am fretful frem exhaustion of viral powcra
and
the color in fading from mv face. Parkers
those
ants
know
its
searching
propensi
­
police interfered, and the saintly young
Ginger Tonic gives quick relief II builds me
missionary vanished to reappear as a ties, they certainly managed to keep up and drives awav pain with wonderful cer­
ministering angel in Plevna and through clear of this busy extremity.
tainty.’’—Buffalo lady.
How long t hh pell-mell battle would1
the Turco-Russian war, back in En­
“You think you're some pumpkins,“ re­
gland os a second Florence Nightingale, have lasted I know not, for a third ant
and now sentenced as Mabel Wilber­ now appeared, ond it was astonishing to marked the potato to the Mjua-h, “Yes, and I
force, alias Jones, after a trial which see him; with every movement of"tho see you’re going on the mash," retaliated the
JJATfalSCN BOISE,
attrfleted attention throughout all En- | hornet, he in turn would-lay hold of s *qua»h as the hous»M Lie came In with a club
“land, to nine months’ hard
labor in I third stick, and at :he «&lt;ame time clutch and bowl In her hand.
gland,
bi
A. R. ANTISDEL, Pr.ortnrroB.
dl.—PULiburgh
PUitburrth Chnmifbti
' upon those pine needles to add their
jail.
Chronicled
ALWAYS REFRESHING.
—------- &gt;
I impediment
imped
to the burden of his own
body.
A dellclou, odor Is imparted by Florcaton
Hereditary Crime.
'
Prsi
This House furnishes the best accommodx------ -----Practically
the ants hod won the vic- Cologne, which i* ahvnjs rcfrvah.ug, ik&gt; mat­
Is cripe hereditary? There is much j tory, but what they intended to do with ter Low freely used.
evidence to show that it is. A recent I the floundering elephant in their hands
interview with Air. A. H. La Monte, the 1 seemed a problem. But it was to them
Superintendent of the Susquehanna I only a question of patience. They had
Ti:e beat :uivlie "• ( at; irii SuITercr—write
QLEMENT SMITH,
Valley
who, from
hi^ —
position, now pinnod lheir victim securely, and I&gt;r. C1 R. Sykes. It® Madison btret t, Chicago,
V-I1-,.Home,
-- ------ ---t----- Lra
has an excellent opportunity for obser­ held nim to await a-uistmice. It came. for full Informal!. » of a rurc Cure—Free.
Attorney at LaW|
vation, strongly corroborates this prop­ Tho entire neighborhood had been ap­
IMPORTANT TOTKAVEi-EHS,
Now takes pleasure in announcing to the Public rliitt
osition.
Nearly a year ago a boy who prised of the battle, and in lesstuan five
Bpeda! induceuiei’.:* are offered 'you bv the
was considered one of the most trusty minutes the ground swarmed wifh an । •Buniugton
Route, It will pay you U&gt; read their
and honest in the Hume was placed tffmy of re-enforcements They came advertkerucutf) to be found elsewhere In this
with a good family, and for a time bis from all directioiu; they pitched .upon
conduct, was in every way exemplary. that hornet with terrible ferocity, and
JAMES A. 8WEEZET,
Of late, however, ho has developed so i his complete destruction was now only
strong a propensity for stealing that | a question of momenta.—IPff/iam Ham- MRS. LYDI4 E. PIIIUN, OF LYXH. USS.,
Attorney &amp; Counsellor,
the family, who are’ earnestly sbheitous
itous ilton
tlion Gibton,
Giliton. in Harper*}
Harner*} Magazine.
I HAVE A COMPLETE LINE OF
forthe boy’s welfare, nre very nnxioua
on his account. The boy that was sent
MIks Fletcher Among the Sioux.
JJLACK&amp; mon;
this week from the Home to the House
of Refuge has never, so far as can be
While nt Randall our informant met
learned, been so situated as to be edu­ Miss Fletchvr, of Boston, who, in com­
cated to thievery. He had been an in­ pany with Mrs. Tibbatts (Bright Eyes),
mate of the Home for nearly three is visiting the agencies on the Lower
ye..73, and until recently no tendency Missouri for the purpose of investigating
' . Horiorcerta. T'itnbrtenes, Mantles, 4c.,
to kleptomania was discovered. As he the folk lore and traditions of the Nortn
interesting and Bright, much pains American Indian, and especially the le­
taken with him. Very few boys of gendary and fairy tales that nave server!
sge or of any age ha&lt;l ns much Bible to interest and amuse the Indian youth
wledge as he, aud bp was noticea­ for many a generation. Miss Fletcher's
Aud iu fact, everything that belongs to the Groceiy Departimnrt. ASw
ble for general dnthlligencc. A few researches are made for tho nnrpo?o o!
a fine collection of
months since, to the great surprise of comparison, and to trace, if possible,
the Superintendent and all who knew the resemblance to the legends of other
the lad intimately, suspicion strongly races as tending to show a common ori­
pointed to him as having been guilty of gin. Already she claims, to have heard
I» now nicely located taking money from-the room of the a
&gt; story which
nu&lt;wu is
» identical
&gt;UOUmv«m with
wjw v
Cinder1UuciIn his. new building, Assistant Superintendent. He con- 1 ella, and doubtless other discoveries will
fessed the- arime. promised complete -----follow
so--fast
that1 Egypt
"
......................
...-------------and
India will
has added a stock of reformation, and the matter was have to look to their laurels, and the red
dropped. Afterward, however, occa- man’s claim to antiquity and tho right
CBONN-CTT a CI ECULI R SAWS.
cioallly little losses occurred at the to be considered one of tho first fanii■
- A LARGE AXD WELL SELECTED STOCK CF
Home, but nothing could be proved lies, if not the first, murt soon be recogagainst this boy nil last week, whan ntzed. Miss Fletcher, like most of ha
compound
sums were taken from the j Eastern sisters, seems pretty thoroughly
'considerable
’■*
---------Prices on Saw Work.
rooms of three employes of tho Home,
----- j, imbued with the romance of Indian life
Circle aaw gumming and hammering bH saw* into which he gained access while I*
they ' and somewhat inclined to consider the
up.10 40 Inches, 10 cents per Inch.i had ps^ as tho golden age of Indian history.
were al breakfast. The boy’s case
40 inch, Gummed, $2.00
“*--------- * *"
now reached a point where- it
BO *
”
3.00
.. was
--J ; At the mmo time her remark that she
T,.(5fr
« ”
”
4.00
thought that hia well-being require
-I KEEP IX STOCK----------juirod LU
bis expected very many of the youth now
removal to the House of Keftq,,,
—I . being educated at Hampton and Carlisle
.\ige.r and
».««
uvyui-u.uijQ
Bviiu
Lucio.
II
cfv '; would lapse into barbarism, andTeturo
he
wm
accordingly
sent
there.
Here
Hsintnering crookerf mwa,
S
Prompt alteatkm given to'circulareaw wo
wm a boy who fur yean irad been unto the ancestral blanket and topee, and
der-good instruction a"hd careful dis- that it will take many year* for the
\
A. C. BUXTON.
cipline, with the whole Ten Com- ‘ leaven of enlightenment to imbue the
mandments at the end of his tongue, ! mass of the race, indicates that with all
and Christ’s 8ermon on the Mount in I the sentiment she has considerable Yanbis memory— guilty of larceny—and ; kec insight into character which will, it
that, apparently, without any real mo- is honed, save her from much of the
live, except a suddenly developed dta- ' mawkish sentimentality over Mr. La
cr All my good. *iiV fresh. Jwd ho
position to steal. The hereditary seed which prevails throughout the East,
of crime, long latent^ at length sprang There ha-* been some delay in filling the
will be sold only for rt»b« nt the low ent prlrjpa
us with the above results, where the requisition for clothing for the Indian?
A cordial. imitation r« exf«ended to every
better fruita were, looked for. Tfce 1 at Randall, and this Jady-.i sympathiechild, to caJl'and exnmisir prices} imd &lt;
xmwt diflicult problem that educators &lt;m WeFw so wrought upon that she has writ
children and
cards of j ten to her Boston friends to forward lStake pleasure in sbonlns Gaals,
prevent the discom-

B ui k lei-s’ ; I I arclwn i •&lt; /1

DOMESTIC SEWING MACHINE

.

FRANK C. BOISE:

1

New Fall Goods

KOCHER BJtOTHERS.

P

Physician and Surgeon.

New StYle Cashmeres, Plaids, Brocades, Etc.

OBSERVE, COMPARE, REFLECT, ACT:

KOCHER BR'

GROCER?!.
CALVIN AilSWOSTH,

HIS NEW GROCERY IS IN FULL BLAST.

Sugars, Coffees, Teas, Syrups, Tobacco, Cigars,
Soaps—Washing and Toilet, Caused '

Amerfcajt and Foreign Harb!:

Goods, Ground Spices,

BUXTON

STAND AND HANGING LAMPS
And Glassware of the Latest Pattern

ATTENTION! SAW MILL MEN!

LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S
vegetable

.

English and American White

Brown Ware, Yellow ’Ware, Stone War

Nashville, Mich., De-c. 6,1881.
KSEHAFU

WOOD

�I SHALL OFFER FOR SALE-----bled (xinduton of Lieutenant Dancnbauer, on
the 4th ordered that officer to return from
Russia, and brine with him the invalided surGaona x ScovruJt lett Washington for Chi.

pe*l papers iu the Gulteau case before March.

of tlmtan. Mr. Teller reporuri a bill granting
lift- pension* of $$.«» i»rr annum tn U»p widows
of tbe late Prerittouta Garth-Id. Polk and Tyler.
Adjourned to tbe «h
In the House the only
measure coowldcre*! wa* otic tn release tho
Philadelphia k Heading Hixul from tee tax a»E^^ln/jXkTm11 Tblsblll^a/d^tefl'm

Jltxjb Ezn* Wrumrsox, of, the Bupertar
Court of Massachusetts, died at Dedham ou
tbe Cth, at the age of elghty-cnc.
Gcitkau is now In charge of the Warden
fare, not being allowed *a knife and fork to
est with.
It Is stated that Mr. Blaine baa the originals

wm dry

«««1 crop. with alight tow from the

lar on the Naasau* street
New Y*rk Belting and P:

upteJ by the

e! ths building. The sffneturs was old and
the woodwork was as dry m tinder. This,
however, while It facilitated tbe. rapid spread

ST COST OB UNDER DOS'
------ MY ENTIRE STOCK OF GOODS-—

at be attributed. The BcitPacking Company had stored
.This ia computed of pure rubber dissolved In

$9,000 WORH!
*

•

a.

•

.

■rut out during bi* licpc, but left behind au-

A rt’sxntxoTox dispatch of the Cth says so
many small-pox scabs were being sent to
Guiteau that the Warden of the District
Jail bad refused to receive hi* malt The
I'ost-officc Appropriation bill an Ham was Health Officer had begun a general vaccina­
■greed t&lt;&gt; providing the sum of $.LO)).OQO for tion, appointing twelve assistanta.
the payment of letter-carriers and the inci­
Tua Governor of Maine has nominated
dental expert*.-* of the freodeUvery system, W. L. Putnam as Justice of tbe Supreme
which may be used for the estab­
lishment of the fre&lt;-dellvrry system at new Court.

ForeUm.
Tna Cangbnawaga Indians, occupying a re­
serve near Montreal, holds convention recent­
ly and rcaolvcd to petition the Canadian Gov­
ernment for admission to all the rights of citi-

foroe in the n qut-st; but a dozen or more wit­
nesses teetltiod on the trial a* to hbt manner
and appearanoe covering th" period of time
from March until th*- commission of the act

upon the trial. Judge Cox arid unsworn admterif thl* Character could never be consid­
ered a* ground for overturning a renll&lt;-t that
sUltbejMpam presented Judge Cox summed
up: ” 1 ntn imalile to find any reason to grant
n&gt;&lt;‘ motion, which 1* therefore overruled."
Mr. hcovtllu excepted formally to the dodriou.
and Colonel Corkhiil then moved that the
Gultz

his right*,
hould have

the rules of practice applicable to
f hts exceptions. and, after thia
been arningi-d. Colonel Ourkhtll
then directed tbo prisoner to stand up and
nuked him if he had anything to *ny why *cnshould not lx- prvnouwed. Gulteau
asked that the f-i-ntence be postponed a* long
a* puaMible, but when Judgt* Cox repeated hln
order to state! he aronc. pale, but with lip*

came wild and violent, and. pounding upon
the table, he delivered hltnsclr of the follow­
ing hanuigw.: “ I am not guilty of the charge
set forth iu the indictment. It wha Goo's
pie forget it.

even- initn on that Jury and every m&lt;&gt;ml&gt;vr of
UH* bench, will pay for it, ami the American
Notion will roll In blood if my body goes into
tbe *m&gt;u:id and I am hunj,-. The Jew. put tho
deepmed GaliHewn in Um grave. ForthnUme
they triumphed, but at tho destruction of
Jerusalem, forty year* afterwanl. the AJmirtity gut even with them. 1 am not afraid
of d-ath. I ita here mm God'* man Kill mo
the prisoner
convicted of
anrnstance*, ai

trvm**n| Tbe excitement produced by euch on
cS«nteAna&lt;le It no •tuty ta** tn secure for you
a fair and impartial tnal; but vou hare had the
power of tbe United Ktatea Treasury and of
the Government in our service to protect your
person from violence and to procure evidence
as fair and impartial a jury ns ever tUKcmbtod
In • -court of justice. You have iM-em de-

that merits the highest encomium, and 1 cer­
tainly have done my bret to secure-a fair
nsnsentation of your defense. NotwjthstandIng all tills you have been found guUty.
It would
n U...
a comfort
I* have Im-,..f
...
. I to many
t

■ponaibie man. It would have left tho people
the *aU*fytng bdlrf that tbe crime of political

crime can lie cotnmltt&lt;-d. and tho Court will
have to deal .with it with tbe highest penalty
known to the criminal code, to servo
aa an example to other*. Your career ha*
been so cxtraunl'nary that -people might
well at tnno* have d.iubte&lt;! your sanl-

Your own testimony

own mind you worked y&lt; ur«ci: up
you

m agnlwt your will br nr. Innanc tmc TbetMUnumy showed that you deliber*
Htedvod to do It. and that dcllb.-nito and

Hut

day of June.

Lx a recent attempt to capture the murder­
AMOTC th* bills introduced in tbo Senate on
ers of Huddy and hi* nephew, tbe Irish con­
cellation of illegal entries and sales of pub­ stabulary seized nearly every person residing
•
lic lands and for refunding tho purchase in a town on Lough Mask.
money, and one by Mr. Harriaon. defining the
Lixutxxant DaXKXHavza has sent a tele­
power* «nd jurisdlctiqn'of tbe Mississippi. gram from Irkutsk, which wa* received in
Paris on the 'Jd, stating that Captain DeLong
had been heard from and located as late as
Hunk property in Washington. Mr. Ingulls
called up hl* resolution declaring that the October 34. They were then in a wilderness
Pension law ought not to be repealed. He on the west bank of the Lena, destitute of
stated that the rolls of the War IX- provisions and suffering greatly from the in­
partnient
C0A4&amp; pensionable
__
I ——... showed
....
U..1 Km- caws, clemency of tbe season.
These were 146 business failures In tho
Morgan offered a concurrent resolution for a United States during tbe seven day* ended on
treaty of reciprocity between Mexico and tbe
United States....Several bills and resolutions the 2d.
Tu*
military commander at Limerick npti
were introduced In th. House, among them
oue by Mr. Ilorr. for tho appointment of an fled the magistrates on the 5th that hl* men
Inter-Oceanic Commission to determine tho rould not walk the streets at night without
being stoned, and gave warning Uiat tn selL
psaaed providing that no person guilty ol big­ defense they may be compelled to fire upon
amy or pollgamy shall be eligible to a scat in
Congre*s a* n Delegate from any Territory. A citizens.
Tux British steamer Cosmo foundered In ths
rvsoiuuon was adopted directing the Secretary
of State to investigate tbe imprisonment in Black Sea on tbe 5th. Ten corpses had al­
Mexico of three citizen* of the United States ready been washed ashore from the wreck.
The authority* at Belgrade recently took
possession of a bank In that ally and appro­
Domestic.
priated the funds to pay laborers on the Ser­
A nw days ago a mob of negroes in Union vian RaUioad.
Pariah, La . took Alph Davenport, a colored
Tux police of Dublin are inquiring Into the
man, from hi* house and beat him to death
•dhree of a letter received by Secretary Fors­
with clubs and stones. Tbe victim had com­
ter on the Cth, containing a damp substance
mitted an outrageous asssuit upon a colored
which sxploded on becoming dry.
woman.
Tub Home-rule party In the House at Com­
A jbwtuit store in Massillon, O., waa en­ mons on the Cth re-elected Parnell their &lt;_ hair­
tered a few evening* *go by two young men,
man, and want to agitate Irish grievances in
who threw tbe ;&gt;roprietcr on the fluor and kept
the Commons In reply to tbe speech from the
him quiet with a revolver while they packed
up eighteen watches and cscaped.
Coat. containing dynamite having teen
Ax explosion In the coal-pit* in Chesterfield
smuggled Into tbe Russian Imperial Palace,
County, Virginia, on tbe 3d buried thirly-tw®
the Czar on the Cth ordered the exclusive use
miner* In the shaft
IL W. Millbs, a clerk in tbe Pittsburgh
Tin new Egyptian Premier recently visited
Post office, was arrested on the 3d for purloin­
the Consul* General and Informed them that
ing stamps to the value of $l,Mu.
the
Government would respect all foreign ob­
Tna Commercial elevator at Buffalo, N. Y.,
valued at $125,010, was destroyed by fire oj ligation*.
A FoaxiDanLX insurrection against Turktbe 3d. The insurance is $00,0».
Dckixo the burning of a farm-house near Uk authority 1* reported in Arabia.
‘LateiTnews.
Walla-Walla, W. T., a fe~ - -----------Elias Medler, Emma Med
Arthur MedThe search for tbe bodies of U.j victims flk
ler were burned to death.
the Midlothian cori-talne disaster tn Virginia
Cbxtkxl Alabama baa suffered severely
from the overflow of the river* Warrior, Bigbee and tbe shaft will be closed up. Twenty­
and Tombigbe*. Tbe Alab.ima A G real South­ seven bodies are in the mine.
ern Railroad ha* been damaged 413O.LW worth. - Ox tbe 7th the President appointed John J.
Flinn, of Chicago, United States Consul st
the sentence of death imposed \by the court, Chemnitz, Germanymartial iu the caac of three Indian scouta.
Cbavt and El.Ua, perpetrators of tbe horri­
“Dead Shot," “Dandy Jim" and “Skippy,” ble murder at the Gibbons farm, ■ near Ash'
convicted of mutiny st Ciblcu, and ordered
their execution March 8 next.
sentenced to be hanged April 14.
Tna disaster in the Midlothian mine In
Tux British Parliament reconvened on the
Chesterfield County, Va, on the 3d, left be­
hind it twenty seven widows and one hun­ the Lord High Chancellor. Her Majesty an­
dred and eight orphan children, for whose re­ nounces a peaceful condition of affairs abroad*
lief subscription* have been started iu lUch- and an improved condition in Ireland. She
jnoud.
also announces the prospective marriage of
Tux glass works at Brilliant, Ohio, employ­
ing over one hundred men, were swept away
Tub Ryan-8ulUvan prixe-flght took place at
by tire, on tbe 4th, canring a loss of $50,000
Mississippi City, half-way between New Or­
Donor’s box-factory at Jersey City, N. J., leans and Mobile, on tbe 7th, and resulted In
a victory Tor SulBvaa. Eight round* were
$200,000. One fireman wm fatally Injured. fought, Kyan falling to come to time on the
A lamp explosion in the oil-town of Tour ninth round- The time of tbe contest wa*
Mile, N. Y., on the 4th caused tbe burning of twenty-six minute*.
three hotelsand otherproperty valued al $100,.
Tub Central Vermont Itallroad « selling
tickets from Boston to Chicago at $5. In the
Tux Jefferson school-house, locale-1 on VlK hope of forcing the Boston A Albany to cease
glnla avenue, in Washington, valued at $133.­ cutting rates to Montreat
000, and which accoiwpodatcd sixteen hundred
Laboe quantities of gold were shipped from
pupils, was burned on Urf"4th. .
Pari* to London on the 6th.
Tim First Methodist Church at Racine,
The Secretary of the Treasury on the 7th
Wi*., which coal $45,000, wa* destroyed by fire called in for redemptioc $90,000,000 of six per
on the morning of the 5th. There is tn*urance eent. bond*.
to tbe amount of $15,000.
Tnx stove-plate foundries of Pittsburgh
Tna territory between Maine and Virginia have been closed by a strike, the proprietor*
was on tbe 4th covered with enow to the depth refusing a tcn-per-cenL advance In wagea
of a foot or more, giving the raOrpsd* the
Ax elevator tn a Newark (N.J.) factory fell
tbe other day, and two person* were killed and
two badly Injured.
Tub recent a-'ow-fall in Boston cauMd an
gen attempted to croae tbe Mayo bridjp’ over
expenditure of $CD,uX&gt; to dear the rtreeta

•cventy-flvo feet long fell thirty feet to th
water without tilling, carrying tbe coach and
It* k»d safely down.
Chablb* M&lt;:Lb*X, a member of the M**»achuaella Legislature, trx* recently arraigned
1 have mercy no your soul, ia tbe Boston Municipal Court as a coremon
and sentenced to three months’
»&gt; your Honor stanna. 1 m drunkard
,
I Hand Lt-re aa God's man, Imprikonment.
rfrty will cunH&gt; every | G.t the 6th but Arc bodle* had been recorUte Midlothian coal mine., Che*ter­
Tmbxx wct*.1,17s death* in Chicago dux .ng

Personal and Political.

projectile that bean hi* name, la dead.

street* tell with a terrible crash, wrecking
the whole building.
Ix the United State* Senate on tbe Tib the
bill to donate bronze cannon fora statue to ths
late President Garfield was amended to au­
thorize the Secretary of War to pay
87,000 to tbe Society of the Army
A favorable

nltod this—one that, during ac experiment
witt an electric current, the vapor took fire
from a *park, and tbe other that it kindled
from a match or candle. Whichever story la
true, tbe naphtha caught. A dull explosion
was beard aa tbe cas« containing tbe ccmcn1
buret. Tbe heal at the burning Cold turned

after touie exploded, new volumes of
the
intensely Inflammable
gas were
driven
out
inlc the building.
On
the south side there was an eieruahed with a roaring sound. A* it reached
the different floors It filled them and turned
the atmosphere itself into fiame, kindling the
dry -woodwork, until the whole side of the
buildlog was one mass of fire. The thing was

Wool Cash meres,..60 worth .90
Wool Canbmercs, .80 worth $1..
Half wool do. 45 worth .85.
Plain Suitings, .25 worth .35
Plnin Suiting*, 6|.
.
Print*. .5.8.7
•
Wool dreas Flannel. .40 wortli .65 Waterproof*, .75 wo:th tl
Waterproofs, fl worth $1.25
Wool Tweeds JO worth .75
* Half wool Tweeds, 3s worth 4a.
Cottonndr, .16 to 90
Farmer*
to .25
”
*•’ &amp;.
** Mechanics
*— .90 •~
Lin. Table Cloth, .18 worth 95
Lin. TableClotii, 3a worth 4s.
■ Lin. Table Cloth, .50 worth 75
Cotton Goods, .6 .7 .8
Bleached Goods, .6.7.8.9 .10
White Goods cheap.
White Goods Cheap.
Table Oil Cloth, .25 worth .85
Floor Oil Cloth. JSw’th .50
Horae Blankets .90 worth 9s.
________ ___
Overall*
.40
Overall# .00
OventUn 35.
TrimW Silk .15 worth Si
Silk Riblwn* at coat.
Trim ng S:«in, J1 worth $1.50
Ladies Stockings.
ChildrenV^ockiDga.
Gloves At Mittens.

was standing iu ha office with his bat and
eoat on and hl* umbrella In hi* Land,

the door when tbe explosion came,
but before be rescued, the sidewalk Lla
scorched from passing through the se* of
flams*. When tbe first fire engine arrived'll
wa* evident that the building was doomed.
Within tan minutes three alarms were sound­
ed. aud about thirty cagicr* were *oon on the
spot The beat was so great that men could

Post-office buildlag, and ft was beginning to
Jtol building, and that tn the new Kelly
building, which ia in process of erection at

Ingrain Carpets, .25 worth .35
Ingrain Carpets, .35 worth .50
Ingrain Carpets, .60 worth .80
Ingrain Carpets, .70 worth $1
Men’s Suita, $5 worth 8.
Men’s Suits, $10 worth 15
Men’s Suits, $15.worth 20. Boys Suits $3 worth 5.
Boys Suits 5 doll, worth 8. Overcoats 2.50 to 10 dolls.

building, next to the one destroyed, could
not be saved- Fortunately, when it wa* built

Mens Stoga Kip Boots, 2 dolls, worth 2.50
Mens Stoga Kip Boots, 2.50 worth 3.5o
Mens Fine Calf Boots, 2 dolls, worth 4
s
Mens Fine Calf Boots 2.50 worth 3 dolls.

Tbe Horta building wo* occupied by s targe
number of tenanu, most at whom lost every­
thing. Among tbe periodical* and uewipa-

on the building wa* $.100,000, and the other
tosses were iu the neighborhood of $000,000

tbe 1st four persons were known tn have per­
ished la tbe flame*, and about a dozen more
who worked In the building were reported to
INCtDKXTS.
Tbe scene, at the time when the occupants
of tbe upper floors were making their escape
were often exciting and touching. Man could
bv seen balding the hand* of women, evidently
encouraging them to calmness.
Three women ran on a roof and tell through
the skylight of one of the northern building*,
receiving serious injuries.

covering drew up under the windows, and ।

ground, were told by tbe driver to jump ou
tbe waguu, which they did, and c*caped any
Oue young woman stood upon tbe window,
till of tbe fourth *tory until Lhc firemen ar.
ranged a large piece of canvass which they

Kid* Button Shoes 1 doll, worth 1.50p
* Fine Kid Button. 2 dolls worth 2.50
Tampico Goat 2.25 worth 3 dollars
Childrens Shoes 50 cts. worth 1 dollar.

Tea,’25 worth 5oc. Tea[45c worth 60c. Coffee 13 worth 17
Coffee 16c worth 20c.T} Qrown Coffee 17c. Molasses, blk.
Strap, 30c worth 40c. Common Syrup. 30c worth 40
N. O. molasses best in the market 50c worth 70.
Maple flavor 50c worth 70. Sugars, Granu­
lated 10 1-2 Standard A. 10 Brown 7 8.
The prices quoted are suffient to indicate what bargains are
offered, all of tfliich will be strictly adhered to.

The highest market price will be paid fsr Butter, Eggs,
Potatoes, Beans, Lard, Dried Apples &amp;c.
' On all sums ol $25 and over, six months’ credit wilj be giv­
en on approved notes bearing 7 percent interest.
- Come early! these goods will not last long at prices given.

she threw her hand* straight over her bead
and jumped. She fell upon the outstretched
canvass and escaped Injury.
An old gentleman with white hair got out
•f tbe fourth *tory window on the Bcrkmut J
street side. He stood on tbe sill for fully five
tnluUtes, bolding on to the narrow tup-piece
With hi* hands. Tbe flame* were approaching
men raised a ladder, but it only reached to tbe

a Urpau’in and a score of willing hands
braved the dingers of falling debria
and cinder*, and a shout went up which was
plainly heard by the old gentleman to jump.
“Jump for your life; we'U *avn you;" but be
lottked at tbe sixty feet distance below
to make tbe attempt. He turned forward,
lacing the street, and with bi* hand* behind
him stood like a statue braving death. Mean­
while two brave men got a abort ladder, went
up the long flr* ladder, and held it up to him
and steadied It while be slowly climbed down.

flames burst through tbe window* where
he bad stood, but bo reached the ridewalk in
safety amid tbe cheers of tbe crowd.

M. WOOD
-IS NOW READY TO—

■CALLON--------

SHOE HORSES
BETTER THAN EVER,

F. T. BOISE,

-----HAS THE-----

BEST SHO’R
WILL TAKE

WOOD

For all Shoeing;.

BOBS! BOBS,

Dies,
BOOK*,
JEWELRY,
WALL PAPER.
DYE8TLFFS,
PBOPBETABT MEDICIKES,

PRESCKIPTISXN,
ItKC'EIPTS,

Maule ofall Rock Elm,
fourth-story window imploring aid with outairetched arms. None wa« possible from
Without, but a quick-witted negro a bootblack
in Park Bow. named Charie* Wright, climbed

A FEW CUTTERS
TO BILL, AND THE

I3ESrr

lion* committed by the Utea at tbe .White
bill to grant the right of way through Indian
Tcrr.tory to the .Mi,sitrippl. Albuquerque A
Imeroeean Railway. It, the -House loa­

This is jio dodge, but ia a bona fid£ offer. The time and
opportunity to make mouny is by saving from 25 to 5o per
cent on your purchases. In Dres? Goods we quote:

A girl stepped from n window in Beekman

WAGONS

PAINT AND BRUSH
DEPART.WK T

In tbe State of.YUchiftan.
In fact, if you want any kind of work, nearly

National Bank

CA1*I* AXDMEE HIM.
.S. iWmve a Rood Honr
I n lell of double and;
itKerert of $1,000

Jo». M. WOOD.

CM and

�terifWl,
Unci©

not able to work.

A atenmer 100 feet long ia to be run

Iwjre firii he told John Fapelter to

be careful aud not cut the line.
He
by a South Bend company.
drew imp; not tbe fish but i: huge
P. T. Hower, arrested oji a charge of
prils
stocking filled with afonea. Oh those
weather^
, stealing $500 iu cash, jewelry, etc., at a naughty, naughty gtrhu
and say* he has only just begun.
John Yui ger of Freeport had an ol- ; Jtenton Harbor hotel, has born held for
T«» much dry and freezing weather
3ylvenus Doty lost his wife test Sattercation
with
toe
renowned
-fightpaid.
Sun
urday,
and
she
wm
buried
ou
for wheat
er, Arch Emory of Woodland, concern- | Ole Nelson, Sweede, 29 years old and
J. Norton has sold bis farm of 79 day.
(XIRRESPONBEHCE.
ing
n
paint
brush,
and
as
words
and
unmarried,
while at work irvDowling’s
Mrs.
C,
A.
Hough
no*been
been
visit
­
acres for $4,200.
.
' "
camp, near Newago.'had a log roll over
W. A. Wells will build a barn the ing her sister, at Lanning, toe past cheek did trot settle the matter John
The following letter him been re­
brought his death maul into requisi­ him, Feb. 4. causing ip Slant death
coming season.
ceived from 8. W. Rising, brother of
____ _young
_____ mp.n
, ________
A Ghim_Lake
is chewing **
Jake Lake has •• fine a two-year-ola
Reuben Molar baa bought toe Fox tion, and toealtercation was adjourned_______
'
Warburton, of Maple
for
too time bein^. It took’tuime time asafetida to take the taste of a boilerfarm, and will move thereon in tlie
colt as you find.
,
given to The News read­
to bring Emory too. For the first time I cleaning compound out of his mouth.
Why don’t courtship cast anchor or spring,
.
er* for the benefit of any who are af­
Arch bad to give up that he can find ! jjo mistook another for a cidot barrel
There has been plenty of fisherman
land at this port.
flicted as Mr. Rising has been;
| in a growry.
‘
“Auld” Gritnea is making nev( unr- on Jordan lake, but they seem to have bis mutch.
Rising Cirr.' Neb.
A few days ago a book agent or some । &amp;
A Polock named Constantine TreTo whom it may concern: For the
dost tob week.
poor luck.
- Jas. Smith will build sheds to his
A. Whitcomb and S. D. Carpenter, otber kind of an agent came to th© gauonki was found dead in too woods benefit of others who may be afflicted
with duw a*c of toe kidneys, or other
barn thia spring.
have gone to Naahville; to work iu the Center end traded n-horee he had bor­ south of Manistee Saturday, afternoon. urinary diseam-s I wish to add my testrowed of a friend to keep and to im­ He had wandered away while intoxi am on ini in favor* of Bethesda water.
Parties are palling ice out of Round oar factory.
My disease was hemorrhage of the
Lake, for summer use.
A, W. Petitt has a Washington’s prove his condition, with Mr. Austin, cated and frozen to death.
There seems to be some marie in toe birthday party advertised for the 22nd, for his horse, and gave him a note to
A Miss Freeman- of Leslie, aged 15 kidneys, pawing a bloody substance
boot and ho went his way rejoicing. In years caught a runaway horse by the instead of healthy urine, I had been
air, post office is toe cause.
.
at the Woodland bouse,
treated by the most eminent physicians
Tueaday night—warm, storm clouds
Tbe Stowell Bros, will build a horse a few days the owner came and took bite and tiros probably saved toe lives in Butler Co., but to un avail, after
visible. Loads move heavily.
barn, 26x30, for Mr. Hilbert, soon. The his horse from Mr. Austin and left him of two ladies and a child ;wbo were in which I wss strongly solicited by the
Rev, Dr. Miller formerly of Wakoaba
without any horse, and all he had to the carrage. Honor to her.
Emerson Kinne will build about material is on the spot.
and Milwaukee, Wjs.. to visit the Bet­
Tlie mild winter has hid on excellent hesda Spring ut Wakesha,Wis., indeed
100 rods of wire fence as soon as winter
We are having torn* splendid roods show for his borse was a good for
nothing
note.
Mr.
Austin
is
nn
old
.effect on the coming peach crop, and my physician advised me toe same. I
and pleasant weather, but ought to
man without any m?ans exceut n house th&lt;r prospects now are that unless heavy therefore concluded to do so, although
lAAily mail fo/What Biumorkera are have about two weeks sleighing yet.
with much relnctunce, not expecting
lwantihgTMtEey want news while it is
W. H. Powers gave the witnemes ou and lot at the Center. It is u hard frost sets iu within a fow week* the (unless benefited by the Bethesda min­
the Blake and Smith suits an invita­ blow on the old man to be robbed by yield will be larger than ever before.
eral water) to ever see my home again
such
a
miserable
riliian.
A
non
.
In u walking match between Miss in Rising
Round Lake, in northern Vermont­ tion to too county seat, last Monday.
Rismg City, out after reaching tout
ville, is where the boys assemble nights
May Marshall, ot Chicago, and an In place, and drinking the water; I was
A. W. Diilcnbeck. a large farmer, is
ASSYRIA.
dian named “Charley Jo,” at*Luding- ulmoet Instantly cured of my lingering
for skating.
going to build a house the coming
com plaint. It is now nearly two years
The Rnlison school lias temporarily summer. A. T. Cooper is the builder.
A social was held at Clark's Friday ,ton, the Indian won, making 97 miles since, and nearly toe whole of this
closed, on acount of the sickness of the
in 34 hours, the girl making 85 miles.
time, have been free from that com­
■ Warner &amp;. Grant will open up the night.
*
plaint, and to-day feel inyselL-a well
A
young
man
in
Coldwater
got
.a
teachers mother.
John Bloomer is to build a barn next
trade io agriculture! impliments, this
Thomas Hunter received a whack week. Warner has bought him a road­ summer.
pice© of candy in his throat at church man. Aqd now my advice to nil af­
flicted with kidney and liver kymplaint
over his gob, at Vermontville, the ster.
We intend to to build a houso next the other evening, and was carried in to visit the Bethesda Sprin£''&gt;*ritoYours with respect,
night of the Snl.
If no misfortune happens to tbe summer.
; home in an uncoucioas condition. Tin out delay.
S. W. Rising.
We are now ready to . draw on the wheat crop, there will lie the largest
There was a dance Friday night at doctor was sent for and his trouble re­
new crop of lumber for Grimes as fast yield known, in Woodland for some Carl Newtons.
lieved.'
;
8PEAK1NU A PIECE.
Win. Haight, a lumber camp employe,
as he threshes it out.
C. Baker’s mill did not run Friday,
time.
Miss Juno Carrier, who has been
is in jail at TawasCity, ou a charge of
The Sunday school at the Center is Baker and Bolo both being sick.
The other evening there was a little
visiting here for the past four weeks, in a prosperous condition, with C. A.
Daniel Davis has sold his farm to J. raping a Mrs. Belmont, whose home cotppany, and during the entertainment
returned last Monday to her home near Hough ns Superintendent, We num­ Cornwell, .»( Bellevue, for $1,600.
is near a lumber camp where Haight the hostess dragged her little boy to tbe
Berlin, Kent Co., Mich.
Mrs. Bristow and girl went to visit wna employed. Ho is held in default front to “speak n piece.”
ber about 75.
"Come, Johnny, like n good bov. and
Wednesday morning,—The frown
.
Rev. Bridenstine closed bis meetings her folks, south of Battle Creek, Sat­ of $1,000 bail.*
speak‘Mary’s Little Lamb’for tlie la­
spoken of last night appears in smiles at tbe Kilpatrick church on ■Wednes­ urday.
8. R- Luxmore, a youug man of Qold- dies aud gentlemen.”
this morning, and a continuation of day night. We understand they have
Johnny
knew that there was remu-.
Mr. Gosling of Penfield, preached at water, a carriage trimmer by trade and
iteration in the background, and the'
‘ weather is likely to follow. ■
the M. E. church Sunday, in place of a man respected by all, attempted sui­ preliminaries having been arranged iu
hod good spirit in the meetings.
Mrs. Kimball, the lady we referred
cide while walking toe streets of Bron­ an undertone, she slicked his hair
A man passed through this place last Elder Tanner.
null’
to last week, completed her earth work week, that has - been exposed to the
A donation was held at Jasper Mil- son, where he was visiting, Feb. 7th, he couimenod;
last Friday. The pale messenger call­ small pox, and so wo are all about to lens, Tuesday, for Elder Wood,
‘‘Man- bad a little fleece,
$50 by shooting himself iu the mouth.
- It's snow was white as wool.
ed her home.
She leaves an aged come down with toe fatal disease.
Prof. John O’Hara of Anu Arbor, one
was received.
And every time that Mary lambed
companion, and a host of relatives and
'Dial fleece would go to schooi."
There has been a good, lot of ice
It was Jack Parks who traded bug- of the oldest and most learned of Mich
friends tu mourn her loss.
"Now, now, Johnny I” said his moth­
harvested this season, although uot as gios with the Youngs’ Iwye, and then igan’s citizens, died in Washington, D.
It is a source of grief among tho fair thick as last year is as good a quality. squealed $5 worth.
C., Saturday night of paralytic stroke, er, “you know that isn’t right. Say it
ones of this place that the employer of । It was brought mostly from the Kilpat­ , C, Baker has bought 30 acres of land at tho stage of 80. The body will be just aa you did this afternoon and &lt;1’11—
here she broke into a maternal whis­
of a certain damsel, is willing to rick lake.
of Joseph Balo. Baker will stay at the st ut to Ann Arbor for interment.
per, and the boy commenced again.:
“Grant” ’ her more “Chat field’* than
The examination of J. R. Watson, of
A church social was held at A. J. old mill, s while,unless there should be
‘ Mary bad a lltttelaxnb,
they have hitherto enjoyed. And that Carpenter’s, last week, for the purpose sleighing. Draw your logs til you get Battle Creek, accused of setting fire to
Whose white was anow as fleece.
And everywhere that Mary went
said chat is allowed until the small of paying the sexton. They organized, notice.
his goods to obtain insurance money,
The lamb would go apiece."
hours of the night, she can not bo ac- and willj hold the socials on Friday
That Mr. Witeon who was compelled hist November, in Greenville, b-gsn
"Johnny! Johnny!”
chided
------ the
accused of talking in her sleep, at least evening,every two weeks.
Speak
8^—- it
to marry against his will, left here, on Saturday and has been continued mother, "that irn’t right.
once n week.
R. Puddock took a job of moving a went wewt, -and came back, and for over until. Febuary 20. His bail was this time. Tho ladfesand gentleman
never
heard
it
Now
go
on
!
”
Earnest- Sprague’s horse knowing building, of Mr. McArthur, and did not whom the fatted sknnk was killed, has fixed at $1,000.
Once more tho little fraud went at
that hanging is tho order of the time, do as he agreed, so McArthur, sued left for parti unknown.
There were 691 prisoners in the State it:
H. H.
and wishing Gmteau’s notoriety, him for damages, aud Padock has sued
prison at Jackson, Jan. 81, 18 having
“Mary had a little snow,
EATO.1 CUCNTt.
Ils "fleei-c was lined with white,
thrust his head through a hole in the McArthur for pay for moving toe build­
been received during the month. Of
And even where tlie lamb would go.
stall, and thereby effected a complete
those
eight
wore
from
Wayne
county,
Mary was sure tibitc.
ing.
The Charlotte Republican has a new
hanging, but having only a little
three from Van Buren, and one tach
Herb Lee and H. M. Sidman, general press and engine.
“What a naughty boy!” exclaimed
flouncing room, did not succeed in
agent of the Michigan Aid Association,
A new postofflee to lie dubbed, from Allegan, Midland, Ottawa, Clin­ the proud mother, who hud been train­
breaking his neck. The animal was
wan in town last week, aud got a good “Banff” is to be located at Olivet stat­ ton, Marquett, St. Joseph and Jackson ing the child nil the forenoon for this
display. Now speak it right or mam­
found and extricated in time to save it,
counties..
number of members. Herb is just toe ion.
ma won’t kiss you when you-go to bed!’
with a full set of loose teeth.
A serious mistake wna recently made
man for such business and we think it
Thus prepared the boy perpetrated
Harlow Billings, now of Olivet, sold
Wnmsr.
te a good tevestment.
307 sheep off hte Eaton farm last week by winch a prayer meeting and a sing­ himself once more:
“Mary had a little »oSl.
ing
achool
were
announced
for
the
There
is
some
talk
of
running
an
for which he received $1,800.
BALTIMORETta fleece was lined with snow,
electric telephone from here. to Hast­
Bert Hall, aged 13 years, was arrest­ same evening at a Kalamazoo county
And everyone that Mary fleeced
z
The white waa sure to show."
school
house.
Both
parties
were
on
ings. It is calculated this could be ed by officers from Eaton Rapids on
Revival meetings have dosed.
“
I
’
m
nriiiimed ot you, Johnny, that
done, with an expense of about $800. charge of promiscuous thieving ut that hand an a ballot was taken to deride
Daniel Wight has returned from the
which should have the house. Th • you don’t speak it right! You must do
They propose tr\ make a stock com­ place.
it this time, or mamma will have to
pinery.
pany of it, aud this is what we want.
The subscription accounts of the singers won bv a vote of 56 to 4.
punish yoa.”
Richard Freer is cutting cord wood
A number ot boys were coasting on
We are now partly promised a cheese Bellevue Gazette, Mill slowly, and if
"I won’t!” bawled the urchin.
for hi« sou, Covert.
But.his mother promised him Home
factor}', by a Mr. Holbrook from th^ cost of advertising is added* to them “bolra” upon the Streets of Marquette,
Clover roots are rising up to get a
on the 8d, they unexpectedly ran into a additional candies or buns, or Home­
east. It will be a grand thing for us if they will soon bedome worth-less.
thing that bail tbe great social advan­
peep nt the fine weather.
cow,
tripping
her
and
causing
her
to
we pan get a factory here, and run by
Samuel Root, of near Bellevue, tried
tage of bring heavily on his stomach,
Deacon Vanbrunt, formerly of Hast­
fall npou toe lads, severely injuring and the little wretch l»egun :
ings. came to G. R. Durfee’s Jan. 31st, an honest man ; if not it will ba a to kill himself by a'sbot through the
“Mary bad a Huie school
Mr. Hol­ bowels, Thursday, and lie now reajsts three of them. One of the boys is so
and at present is very sick with lung nuisance as it was before.
Its snow was fleece as lamb
brook. tolls n" that has been bis occupa­ the efforts of the doctors to give him badly hurt that he is out of his head.
And everywhere that Mary went
fever.
Another
was
unconscious
34
hours
af
­
You'd surely find that ram."
Our teacher, James Miller thought tion for some time, and we wish him relief.
Then the guests very properly inter­
Look out for u thief with four ter, and the third is snfferhig severely.
it would be nice to take a ramble to
A divorce suit is going on in the fered, and said it whs a shame to tor­
*'fMiles Lipscomb and wife have been satchels and a quantity of harnesmakPine Lake, at noon time, taking the
Washtenaw county court, between D. ment the sweet child. He had done
school children along. The result was called to mourn the loss of three chil­ er’s material. He stole them from A.
nobly, and should.have bis pay rigkt
G. Rose, of Sharon, and his wife, Cor­ off.
*
four children were poisoned by poison dren, aged, three, seven and nine years *M. Lockards' harness shop at Charlotte
delia.
The suit is brought by th© hus­
He bad toe candies and buns, and
with
diphtheria.
They
have
seven
ou Tuesday night,
sumach, Nettie Slocum so badly that
band, who ia none other toon the pon­ his nioibvr packed him off to bed,
children
in
the
family.
The
youngest
Aeix-ycar
old
son
of
Wm.
Bivins,
at
she could not attend school for several
while the company found solace in the
derous state senator, more • fttmiliarly reflection
tout before morning he
days, her eyes being swolen nearly died on Friday last, one on Saturday, Eaton Rapids, while playing alone on
and on’’Monday, tho board ot health the ice near a bole where a man had known as ’‘the Rose of Sharon.” It is would probalfiy be crying with tha
abut.
interesting
to
note
in
this
connection
stomach
aqlie and writhing under the
A. E. Durfee’s son Plinny, hereto­ proposed to move the family out of the been cutting, fell in and was drowned.
that when Representative Kinnie, of nightmare.
fore spoken of as being ill at Allegan, old log House to Mr. Carter’s, and The body has been recovered.
Reuben Hall, of Bellevue, convicted Ann Arbor, was last winter pushing
died Saturday night, Feb. 4th. Tbe whitelh^yAvere moving, the child died
his bill forbidding Hi© remarriage of J\TOW I8THETINE
io
its
mother
’
s
arms.
The
father
and
of
rape
at
the
last
April
term
of
the
funeral was held at the M. E. church
divorced persons within a year from
Monday, tho Rev. Mrs. Graves, of mother have tbe sympathy of the weolc circuit court, and sentenced to state
date
of decree,' Rose was said to be
town.
'
There
are
no
other
cases
in
prison for twenty years, has been
Grand Rapids, officiating. Although
The board of granted a new trial by the Supreme very strongly opposed to it.
tbe day betokened storm, tbo church town at this writing.
A
wide-awake
young girl attends a
health
are
trying
to
keep
it
from
spread
court. H, F. Pennington, of the law
was filled to overflowing.' Plinny has
toll gate near Grand- Rapid-. An im­
been a great sufferer for tome time. ing. There are some cases in Carlton, firm of Pennington fit Dean, secured
portant
youth
recently
drove up.and
The entire community deeply sympa­ but not as many as has been report­ the new trial.
-----FOR----ed.
Nell.
Some one poisoned a valuable horse when toe girl came out to collect the
thize with the afflicted family.
five
cents,
took
a
silver
dollar frojn
for John C. C. Cote, of Roxand, last
Bat tew days at most will past.
SUBURBS.
his pocked and tossing it in the mud,
Sunday
nighL
The
dose
was
fed
from
When tbe Angel Death will come
said: “Take your change out of that.”
Ami bls parents will be called
S. E. Hartman has returned to Ohio. the hand and consisted of Paris green
The young lady picked up the doF-tr,
Frank Feighner has gone to .Ohio on mixed with salt, as was shown by’the
person wiping his hand on the horse’s went in, counted out 95 pennies, step­
business.
ped to the door threw them out andThe beet of order prevails at the shouldep leaving the prints of his fin­
gers on the hair. The animal died told the youth that- there was his
meetings of our lycemn.
change. Of course they were badly
and took tbe conceit oat of the other fellow.
Harrison Clink has moved to town, Tuesday evening.
scattered, but he gathered too “pay in
It is said that Guittau was present in his own coin” in silence.
aud engaged in teaming for the oar
1870atan M. E. camp meeting held in
Executed In line ntyle
factory.
A CARD.
We are sorry that Nero got' so badly Benton township, Eaton county. * He
The above appeared in th© Hastings
A long experience bis forecd Ibee-avieUona
Journal lout week. The Journal in­ peppered, and heartily indorse his came uninvited and was not allowed by upon im that the true policy in tmlr, l« to p*y
the managers to speak from tbe plat­ ub you go. Tiw argument ia abundant.
formant could not bare «een how it views of the awe.
A. G. Murray has sold his farm of 40 form. However; he went off one side Ucnee ou and after the 15th insu, I propone
waa going to :&lt;ound, or ho would not
to mH for ready pay only, except aa specified
acres, one iuilo north of town for 1,800, and started a little camp meeting of Id my large •dvertisement. I take tM« oppor­
his own, speaking from a wagon, and tunity to thank my euatomers for thetr libera)
of the child.
. to E. J. Everett of York State.
patronage
on the credit system, aud earoeaUy
About a dozen boys, and some quite gathered the larger part of tho crowd
makes Mack a pugilist, but makes toe
child, (only rleven years old) eecond aid boys too, engaged in a belling, at about him, and complained that after
liable tor vou as well aa for niysclL
•bert pereon in Baltimore.
While we ^’hillrp GarliBger’s one night last week, coming from Illinois be was not allowand imbibed so freely of hard cider

|la5hvilk IJews.

Plain and Artrstic Job Printing

The Lowest Living Rate

MjwUUy oor roJieally ti

—

—

I
■ I
»,
I

turbiug a religious meeting. He was
tried by jury before Mr. Hooker, now
circuit judg-. made his own defeuse,
and cleared himself.

DON'T DIE IX THE HOUKE.
A»k druggists for “Bough on Rate.”

*
It

$5tO$20*ES'.~
L

RHEUMATISM,

Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumt&gt;ago,
Backache, Sarenecs of the Chezi,.
Gout, Quinty, Sore Throat, Spell­
ings and Sprains, Bum and
Scalds, Genoral Bodiiy
Pains,
\Tcofh, Ear and Headache, Prosed
Feet and Ears, and all other
Pains and Aches.
'
tri.liLc ouJbv »C M (rets

SOLD BY ALL BEUGGIST8 AMD DEALFKS
II MED10IIE.

A. VOGELER &amp; CO..
.InntiMl Stn'euieut.

Forthc year vndtng Dec, 3l»4, A. D. 1881, of
the coUuJtion and i-ffairc of tbe Woodirnd Fire
Im. €!o. of Woodland- Iu». Co., locale d at
Woodland, organized under the laws of the
State of Mtchijuu, end doing busIncM in the
County of Barry, in uulu Mate. 8. 8. lugrrsoo,
ITvMl’ent. E. •&gt;. Naah, Secrrtary.
.
Memberships.
Nctubcrof members Dec. Slat, of
previous year..'.........
Number of membenr added during.
the present year.
Deduct minubet» withdrawn dur-

other* L&lt;c
Number of iik-inlicre now t.-eluug0
, ing to company..................
RI8K8.
Amount of property nt risk Dec.
81#t, of previous year
0C2,OWX»Amount uf risks addled during the
Total 062,010.00
Deduct risks omeeted. withdrawn,
ro lennluated............062,01(1.00
Net amount now at resk by Co....
RESOURCES.
Amount &lt;&gt;f premium (or nanessmenta) actually on hand....
Amount of outstanding aasesa12.1Z
,
raunts not canceled................
Individual, note..............................
Uncollected assessment of pre­
vious year..........
6.51

027.48

Total resources..
LIABILITIES,
Claims for losses due aud payable
Total Liabilities..
INCOME.
Amount collected on aisoMuonta
which were levied during the
present year.....................
Amount collected this year on as­
sessments which were levied In
prior years...................
Amount received from easl: bal- .
mice of previous year......
Income from all other sources, viz:
Individual note................

030.06
80.06

045.10

a.or

484
58.96

Total Income for tbe year
EXPENDITURES.
Amount paid for losres during tlie .
year f of which 05M.84 occurred
tn pnm
..'....I...
Amount of
» paid to

7JO
cum in Schedule A
Amount ot nil other .expeditures
during the year m per Sche­
dule B,.................................

009.14

Total expcadllures during the year,
SCHEDULE A.TO WU«&gt;M PAID.

Director,..................... ™...
Secretary,
Treasurer,
President.....................................

AiiorxT.
» 1.50
2.UD
2.0U

Total Schcd. A,...
SCHEDULE B.
ITEMS or “ALLOTHHR KXPZXl

AMOVNT.

CoUocUng assessment..............

08.00
“w

Total Scbed. B
.
MISCELLANEOUS QUESTIONS.
'
How many- assess menu have bee:&gt; mate dur­
Ing the year J Ana. one. Wlist is the amount
ofaHthe aatessmcQls made during the year! f
Ans. 057.91 What te the nite per cent of such
lustaiementa on the property Ineued! A.n*-» -IMHState of Michigan, I
County ol Barry. I
S. 8. Ingerson, President, and E. J. Nash*
Secretary of &gt;aid company, du. and cadi for
himself doth depose and say that they have
read tbe foregoing statement, aud know tha .
contents thereof, ami that they gave gv.l
reason to tadieve, and do teltev, ’said Mateis lobe true.
•
S. S. INGERSON. Preridcnt.
E, J.
J|
Sworn atul sutecribed Ixifore ma, st WoutM
land, in said slate aud county, this 25th day ot
Jan. A. D. 1882’ ’
IRA STOWELL,
•
JusUct- of tbe Peace, ■
Barr y Cbunty Micb.
Adinittiatrnfor'K Sale

�rd for month. lu the uraal w»j for Xrjrtfprtap

Treatment: 'when the services of a
oritfl Retried/, far help.
iM* water to give it the comcistency of
Moe, add * patch of salt nnd two or
taree tatdestpooufuLi of tarragon vinefar, then stir in, off the fire, a gill of
nam, beatea up with the. yelk of an

-—A writer in the Poultry Yard sugjesfet to owners of egg-eating fowl, how
» gat rid of the trouble. In the fail re­
mm all the old hens with pullets, proare aome China neat eggs, and take in
he new-laid eggs every night in cold
leather, and pftencr if you wish to save
ham tram freezing, and prevent the
—German Noodles.—Never put any
water into your dough; use only eggs
and fionr, with a pinch of salt; then,
whea rolled out as thinly ns possible
and dried a little, cut in pieces aliout
one fourth of an inch wide and two
once or twice, them take them
poor keinc melted butter over
nodsugarhnd clnnaj»on; dish

■

—Turkey Drewed with Oysters.—
For a ten-pound turkey take two pints
of bread-crumbs, half a teacup of butter
out in bite (not melted), one teaspoonfal of powdered thyme, or summer
aavory, pepper, salt, and mix thorough­
ly. Rub the turkey well inside a.-'d out
with salt and pepper,then fill with, first,
a spoonful of crumbs, then a few welldrained .oysters; strain the oyster liquor
and use to baste the turkey. Cook the
giblete in the pan, and chop fine for the
gravy. A fowl of this size will require
three hours in a moderate oyen.
—A correspondent of tbo Ohio Farmer
advises farmers, instead of burying their

and moles, oY finding them half rotten
When wanted for use, to pull up the
heads, shake off the earth well, pull off
a few of the outside leaves aud hang
them up in the cellar by twine tied to
the stems and nail? driven into the

■

-

'
•

well ventilated.
—“ Foul in the hoof ” is but another
name for “contagious foot rot,” r» disease
common V* cattle and sheep pxstured in
low, wet lands, or kept m wet, filthy
yards aud stables.
Itamove the affect­
ed animals to a dry yard by themselves,
and then wash out the diseased parts
with strong warm soap suds, and pare
away all diseased part; after which ap­
ply chloride of zinc, Ono dram dissolved
m a pint of water. After washing thorogghly with this solution two or three
times a day for two days, smear over
the sores with warm pine ter.
In verv
bad cases it is well to apply a poultice
for a day or two before using the other
remedies.
Keep the diseased animals
out of the pasture or yard occupied by
the healthy ones, because virus from the
■orcs will be left on the ground nnd
caught up by those with healthy feet.
The diseasais contagious.—N. Y. Sun.
—All kinds of burns, including scalds
and sunburns, are almost immediately
relieved by the application of a solution
of soda to the burnt surface. It must be
remembered that dry soda will not do
unless surrounded *rith a cloth mout
enough to dissolve it.
This method of
sprinkling it on and covering it with a
wet cloth is often the best.
But it is
■ufficieflt to wash the wound repeatedlv
with strong solution. It would bo well
to keep a bottlo of it always on hand,
made so strong that more or less settles
on the bottom. This ia what is called a
aaturated solution, and really such a so­
lation as this is formed when tho dry
■oda is pnt on and covered with a mois­
tened cloth. It is thought by some the
pain of a burn is caused by the harden­
ing of the albumen of the flesh, which
arcsses on tho nerves, and that tho
oisaolves the albumen, and relieves tho
serves. —Ifousckcrp:r.

Preserving Autnuin Leaves.

production of small fruits. It ia always
advisable to obtain a reliable work on
tbe subject and to study it carefully be­
fore attempting to plant evdh a small
piece of land to small fruits. The works
of Thomas aud Fuller are admirable in
most respects. Solomon's advice about
getting wisdom nnd underfitanding is
especially valuable to the beginner in
the business of raising small fruits.
It
is well to lay in a stock of knowledgeon
the subject some time before there is oc­
casion to put it in practice. Winter af­
fords an excellent opportunity to learn
how to raise small fruits, or at least to
acquire such information ns is contained
in jho best books. Learning by experi­
ence is both slow and costly.
This
method of learning bow to raise small
fruits costs time, money, and a large
number of plants.
♦
Another frequent cause of failure in
saising small fruits is failing to take
proper care of them at the proper time.
Farmers are careful to give attention to
their field crons at the season when
they have need of it. They do not or­
dinarily neglect their hay, potatoes corn,
and small grains. Daring the seasons,
however, when these crops are receiv­
ing close attention they are very apt to
neglect their small fruit. The work of
pruning, cultivating and protecting is
delayed on account of the demands of
labor in other directions tiU.it is too late
to perform it to any advantage. The
proper way is to assign one person to
the care of the plantation of small fruit,
and to hold him'tesponsibh for the con­
dition of it at aU times. His entire time
need not be given to tho plantation of
fruit, and it will require but a small
portion of it if it is of small extent, but
the person in charge should always
have such command of his time as will
aUow him to “ labor in the vineyard”
and the berry-patch wbrn his services
are required in them.
StiU another
cause of failure in small fruit culture is
due to the exertions of unreliable nur­
serymen to dispose of very inferior or
worthless varieties, often at exceedingly
high prices. Snide nurserymen and dis­
honest agents and peddlers have been
the means of discouraging many farm­
ers from engaging in tho culture of small
fruits, or from continuing in it after
they have made on unsuccessful beginDing. Quack nurserymen, who often
seek to render themselves conspicuous
at horticultural conventions, whose writ­
ings occasionally appear in papers,
should be treated like frontier hprsothievesi
The production of small fruits for
shipping to a distant market may not
be, and generally is not, a profitable
branch of business to the general farm­
er. It is generally attended with too
much care, trouble and anxiety, and
calls the farmer too often away from his
regular duties. Unless a farmer is situ­
ated where he has good shipping facili­
ties, and has an abundance of help, he
will not generally find it profitable to
raise small fruit to ship to a distant
town. He may, however, find it profit­
able to raise it for supplying the town
near his farm to which he goes to do
his trading and &lt;o get his mail. If he
has a light spring wagon, he can take a
load of fruit to market when he goes to
town on business, and realize consider­
able money at the expenditure of a small
amount of labor. Small towns are often
so poorly supplied with fruit that prices
are much higher than in large cities. Bv
delivering directly to customers, retail
prices are obtainedj and the cost of
packages is saved. The regular fare of
farmers may be greatly improved by
having a supply of small fruits during
tbei?sea&gt;*&gt;n. They may also be dried
and canned for use during the other
months of the year. The fruit will save
store bills, and add to the comfort of
the family.—Chicayo Times.
Pink-Eye.

This is a horse disease, which is be­
Last fall, writes a correspondent of
.the fjadtes' Florid Cabinet^ was particu- coming too prevalent to be treated with
feriy rich in bright-colored leaves. I neglect. “ Fink-eye *’ is not a scientific
entered into the business of preserving term applied by veterinary surgeons, as
.. them with great ardor, and nave been thev recognize it as a severe form of
well repaid for my trouble. All winter typhoid influenza. The disease has re­
my room was brilliant with their gay ceived the popular name of “pink-eye”
colors, and they are still as beautiful as .for the reason of tho.redutfss of the ex­
when I broke them from the trees.
ternal coat of tbe eye and lining of the
When pressed, leaves of a solid color eye-lids. Its cause is unknown. The
do not have as striking an effect as those symptoms vary in different localities.
with green or yellow centers slightly Some animals, from constitutional,
touched with crimson on the edges. weakness or peculiar condition of the
’ Young maple trees usually have brighter system, are more susceptible to the dis­
foliage than those of maturer growth. ease than other animals in the same lo­
Oak leave*, if sought early, are some­ cations and surrounded by like influ­
times found &lt;rf great brilliancy, and ences. It is said not to be a new dis­
these are particularly pretty because of ease, as it was prevalent among horses
in this country in 185-1 and 1856.
their graceful form.
The symptoms of the disease are so
Handsomer decorative effects are pro­
duced with boughs or twigs than with variable, there are a great variety of
detached leaves. Three or four grace­ opinions among veterinary surgeons as
ful branches form a very handsome cor- to cause and treatment. The general
■ice for lace curtains, and there is no ' symptoms are: “ Slight watery or thin
richer frame for a somber old engraving : mucous discharges from the nostrils,
than a few sprays of many-colored eves watery, with matter collecting in
/ maple laaves, or a duster of graceful ,the
--------------------------------------------inner
corner,; eye-lids
swollen
and
oak leaver. Tbe houghs themselves puffy, tbe membrane on the inner side
form a
pjeture if •'tastefully
tastefully presenting yellowish red color; appetite
ist a
a- white or
dirin mostmost, cases lost or suspended;.'dull
suspended'dull
grouped anti nailed against
delicateiy tinted wall.
Quite large appearance of the countenance; in some
kz.f wirt.
boughs may be pressed between news- ' Miaaa
cx-os mAnfk
mouth hot,
with &lt;■
a corresponding
papers, two thiek.n-h.'K-s of newspapers increase of temperature of the akin; in
---------------------------- ---------- must
most cases there is great prostration of.
t bough. The
papers
every day for about ten
ms.

Some people propaper, as that tioed be
e in two daysr«* are dry, sprinkle
and. pan a lw&gt;t iron
arcful doc to have the
the
will shrivel

£e»rt samethtHM violently agitated, and
respiration increased.” Sometimes there
is ft cough, accompanied with a sore
throat. Not al) of the symptoms are
prevalent in any one caMi.
*
The disease has not been verj fatal,
except iu cw of bad treatment, bard

a mistake In the character of the dis­
ease may prove fatal to the animal nnd
loss to the owner. It is difficult to lay
down a course of medication in a dis­
ease presenting so many complications
as thia disease doos at the present time.
In ordinary bases tonics and stimulants
are called for. In cases where the fever
runs high give the following •. Tartrate
of antimony and nitrate of potassa, of
each, one dram ; mix both together
and give night and morning. When the
fever is broken tonics and stimulants aro
called for. Tbe following may be used
In ordinary cases with good effect:
Gentian root, pulverized, and nitrate of
potasaa, each one ounce; Jamaica gin­
ger, pulverized, half an once; fenugreek
or anise-seed, pulverized, six drams;
mix and divide in four parts, give one
pight morning. When there Is dropsi­
cal swelling of the legs, half an ounce
of sulphate of iron may bo added to the
above with good effect. If the lungs are
involved give the following:
Aconite
root In tincture, with tincture of bella­
donna, one part each; water, two parts;
dose, one teaspobnful every three nours.
If the liver is affected, which may be
known by the vellow tinge of tho mu­
cous membrane,horse lying on his side,
and occasionally looking at his aide as
if in.pain, with occasional fits of uneasineas, give Barbadoes aloes, three drams,
calomel and pulverized digitalis, of each
half a dram; make into ball with mol.'tsses.
This must not be repeated.
When there is soreness of the throat,
blisters should be applied, the fly-blister,
made thin with turpentine, answers a
good purpose. Tbe animal should be
placed in a box stall, well littered with
straw, and kept clean; as pure atmos­
phere as possible Is necessary, the con-'
laminated air of tv badly ventilated sta­
ble retards or defeat, restoration to
*
health.—Iowa State Register.

Lie to nave Ung hand—it mart be ai£ptitate&lt;}.
She received this terrible Intelligence quietly,
declined to take ether, stipulating merely to

Found only at C. L
Glasgow’s
Big Hardware Store
SAP BUCKETS,

Where yon can un
Un per cent
by purchasing your

(Tin or Wood,)

SAP PANS, EVAPORATORS

And all fugar maker*' made from the best material, and -by a Tinner of twenty years

CUTTERS AND BOBS AT COST!!

and underwent the painful procesa without
Only two pair of those Hartings Chilled Shoe Bobs left It will pay you
moving a muxde or uttering a grvan. Dr.
Kcandy then gave Favorite Remedy freely to
clou* the blood and prevent the return of tbe
disease, and Mrs, Mycratmw Uvea and rejokes
in her great deliverance. __
“Favorite Remedy". it fart beecmlug a trust­
ed household friend InuJl case* of Female
Siub. Bm.ru. ItllnM,. Ulun. Oil Color*. Whllr and Colorrd Lead
Weakness and dbteosea of the blood.. One do!Ji-U'.tmhi naltx, Stove* mid nmwem-Cutler}. MHver
ra boule. Your drugijiat baa it.
Wore, I’iiiihh. (Wood and Iron.) Ix-nd Pipe.
In Inct. ev.-rylliln*
In a Bod du, Hudwo. Slack, Iladquano. tor .11 kind,
of tbe latest and moat Improved Fann Machinery, from the '

HASTINGS AND.JACKSON LUMBER WAGONS

One Dollar
A YEAR.

...
.....MU IV»UUIi
piliitnl upon linjv. s.Ulu typo
Ioxi'4 wr«I
*r&lt;l msllad to u&gt;y
in th.- Unlted-rtni...
A4d'n».

a pntmlon.
CHICAGO 1

BEAUTIFUL ORGAN Hie “MOZART." New
»»yls. No, IJWOo, *7 &amp;»p«. »t&gt; full art Gnl.l.-n
•rrue reel*.holid walnut, niriv PiM.-Ihi)

refunded ■Her on- ytstr', u»e. Every onereibki
other. It u a Blinding a&gt;1v«-rtl&lt;nurnt. Oldtir a

Hhcclbumm tnn Clinmplon Moser or Hiunmolh Cord Binder
P. M. Paper Buga. Old Bubbrr mid Old Iron wanted.

.

0. L. GLASGOW.

Prices Reduced
From January 15th to February 15th, 1882, I shall offer
the balance &lt;.f of such goode as I do not wish to carry over,
nt prices that will insure them sale, regardless of cost, to close
them out before taking an inventory.

cal) upon DANIEL F BKATTY.VVuhlnutua. N' I

Mrtdnd. Otter .-f.l

M.lyr.

A Good Feedint Pen.

We have a fanner friend who ha, a
feeding pen, which he calls his “mort­
gage extinguisher”—a good name, in­
deed. for its adoption by him permitted
that blessed sort of a job to be done for
his farm. Our friend is the owner of a
Snorter section in the central portion of
le State, and the raising of hogs has
been tlie leading feature of his agricul­
tural work. Finding that he had illluck with his hogs, he conceived the
sensible idea'that if he would feed his
hogs on floors,, keep them supplied with
abundant good water,and where be conld
reasonably protect them against storms,
he would escape, no he went to work on
the following plan : Selecting a place
sloping to the west in his hog lot, he
built a pen, twenty by sixty feet The
posts were cut from the timber and put
in so that.the bottom of the pen was
HAVE BEEN IMITATED,
four feet above tho ground. He hewed
out the timber necessary to mako tbo
And their cxeollent reputation in­
frame good and strong, running a beam
- : .'■cd l?y worthless irtitatfoiB. Tho
through the middle. This was covered
Dublin aro cautioned against buywith two-inch plank, twelve inches wide
i: g Plactcrc having tiniilar soundbeing used, with u slope of one foot in
i' ’ r.ewoa. Eco that tho word
twenty. Sides and ends were put on
C A P-C I N-E ia correctly spelledfour feet high of the samp plxnk. A
“run-away” was made atone comer for
tho hogs to run up to the feeding place.
A water trough was put in, reaching
along tho whole upper side, eight
inches deep and ten wide, out of twoinch stuff. The witter problem was
Arc tho only improvement ova?
settled by the digging of a well at tho
made in Piasters.
end of the pen, where the pump could
Ono is worth more thqp adoacn
turn its supply directly into the trough.
At the lower sjde the planks serving as ‘• of any other kfcd.
Will positively curs whero othor
sides were raised two inches or more
from the floor, so hat tbo cobs and ex­ r '-mcdles will not even roliovo.
crement would won. through and fall
Prico 25 cents.
out. Thin pen, unroofed, was used one
iSewaro cf cheap Plasters modo
season; then a light, movable roof wa,
put up that could be run on rollers into
JOHNSON,
sections, so that half the pen conld be
made to have suffiight. A platform was
•. ‘
r l-Af-T. Prfrrtscta,
made on one side where a couple of
ixaUlCOMttd BWI10H HASTES.
hundred bushels of com could bo piled
up, to bo shoveled over as required.
$300 Reward
When the And work of fattening came
on, tho pen was subdivided into six or
more places, so that about twelve or
fifteen hogs wye together. This pre­
vented piling up to a dangerous extent
in the early cold weather, and kept thorn
quiet. All that was fed those hogs
counted. In tbe oold'rains of the fall
they were under good protection, and
they were always ready for market abou*
twenty days before any others in the
neighborhood.
Q.E®. "• FBAXC1H,
Other improvements were made bv
our enterprising farmer. All the swill
from the house was hauled away, to the
Fancy and Staple
penin a barrel hung ou pivots, and
emptied into a tank opening.directly in­
to thetrongb. and by raising a twoincb
gate the fclop, which bad been mixed
with meal and stuff, so that it “soured,”
had free aooess to tho “boarders” in the
coNSiariNo in part of
pen. This investment paid, and paid
yery.largelv. AIt is the thing that has SUGARS, TEAS.
COFFEES.
SPICES.
&gt;
given us this farm; it is qur • mortgage
SYRUPS. MOLASSES,
extinguisher,' and has no patent on it,”
.
'TARCH. SOAP, •
said our friend, in whose cheerful home
.
CRACKE its. CHEESE,
wo found genuine hospitality. So wo BEST NICKLE SOAP IN TOWN.
give a picture of that pen as we saw it,
SALMON.
and commend it a, the be«t thing of the
WHITE FISH,
.
kind we have seen.—Oskaloosa (Iowa)
TROUT. '
lieraid.
__
MACKEREL.
HALIBUT,
—Cellars must have ventilation in the
*
COD FISH.
coldest weather, and this should ba '
■
HERRING.
provided for by making a double air- STEAM
------ -M
COOKED OAT MEAL.
flue from outside having two outlets—one ! * CROCKERY,
CIK
GLASS
WARK,
□ear tbe ground into the bottom of the I
LAMPS.
cellar, and one some feet above from i
FLOWER POTH
the upper part of the cellar. A double i
window tiboukl then be. provided which OHIO

Fraud

SPECIAL BARGAINS
will he found in Men’s nnd Boys’ Clothing, Ladies and Gents
Underwear,.Knit goods, Shawls, Ladies Clonks Horse and Bed
Blankets, Gloves and Mittens, Men’s and Boys Caps, and oth­
er articles too-numerous to mention.
x
।
All Goods morked in plain.® figures, so that anyone can tell
the exact price.
.
It will pay everyone to look through my stock, as decided
bargains will be found in each department.

tSTl will not be Undersold.^?

SAPOINE
PLASTERS

Eanson’s Capcine
Pcrcus Plasters

50 Wagons
FOR SALE!
OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE

WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH

THREE inch tire,
AS OUR. ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING '

BETTE El THAN COMMON TIRE.
We believe tbe Three inch Tire i« destined to come
into general use. Call and see them.

Sold by C. L. Glasgow, Nashville, Mich.

BENTLEY BROS. &amp; WILKINSHastings, Mich., Sept. 15th, 1881.

We are Ready
A. SLASHING

GROCERIES!

___

_______ ______

STOWE

WARE.

rtrXw xnayr be pln«red igdnst tiuTwall ! T 0 B A C C 0 S,
outside for protection, and held by i
CIGARS,
boards or rail?, nnd covered with*!
PIPES,
boards and Mime earth, but a odLr TRY OUR FIFTY-CENT
TEA.

New Furniture
Parlor Suits, Bedroom Suits, Gents’ Easy Chairs,
Ladies’ Rockers, Camp Chaits, Fine
Couches, Extension Tallies, Center
Tables, What-nots, 1’icturcFrames,
Bureaus, and in fact Everything
Else Needed to Furnish a House.

NDERTAKING a Specialty'.
Don't buy until you see our Goods and get our prices,

KELLOGG, BELL S CO....

�Nashville Elevator!
W ADVANCE.

—Tbo latest invention

PERUSE THESE LIBERAL AD. RATES.

LX T'AOO

'5.00

8.50

14.00
20.00

IROO

30.00

Local Notices, Un cent* a line for first inaer-

EdJtor and Proprietor.

ilashrilk girrrtanj.
VILLAGE OFFICERS:

JSirirtio.
AITIBTCHUECn. Bev. B. B Moody. Prator.
.■xnrkx* arciy Baaday al lOan&gt;„ Sabbalb
».
... .1 ---- -.1 —_.

B

U El HODtHT EP-3COFAI. CUt'RCHA»l- :o«, Putt r. Harriet* every tUbl

mwUug &lt;v«ry Thursday evening.

.

*

"*VY LoS NO. Sr’lc^f P.. meeu at its
Castle HaU, Nashville, Michigan, every
Friday evening, for tbe encouragement and
support ot all worthy, true, steadfast and hon­
orable Brother Knights.

I

atUcttUuroiu la'
TV H. YOUNG. M. D. Office east side of
' V . Main BL, Nashville. Office honra from
H. GRISWOLD, M. D.,----- L ^toie
• Phyaidoa aud Burgeon. Office and re»Vtence opposite tbo Wolcott Boum. Prompt
attention given to calls day or nlfibt.
17FOOTE PHYSICIAN * SURGEON
• Buceuor w Dr. Wickham. Office and
reaideuce at Dr. Wickham’* late office.
Prompt attention to calls night or day.

W

Tar. C. w. GOUCHER, Electfc Physician and
J-I Surgeon, is prepared to answer all calls
that may be made for his ecrViccs. Office aud
M. D. Office over
’s Drug store, Vermontville, Mich.
WI.HallPARMENTER,
/^HAB. H. BRADY, Lawyer, Circuit Court
V7 Commissioner. Real Estate and Insurance
Agt. Prompt attention given to all business
entrusted to my care'. Conveyancing a special­
ty. Office opposite Union House.

.

meats, is said to have
making rifles of silk,
scribed “as rigid os iron guns, while
they Are easy of carriage and have a
very long range.'5
—Tho. chief medical officer of tho
Now Jersey State Lunatic Asylum
points out the fact that notwithstanding
too great prevalence of malaria in that
section, not a single case of that disease
has been found among tholunatics, who
last year numbered 672. Attendants
and laborer* abwut the institutiorr suf- 1
fered severely.
Tho explanation is
found to Uo in the fact, not that insanity
protects from malaria, but that toe luna­
tics are never allowed to be out after
nightfall.
,
.
^-Charles F. Brash, tho inventor of
the Brash light, says there is no good
reason why the elevated trains in New
York should not be ran by electricity,
on the same principles a» toe Siemen's
electric railway, tbe success of which la
beyond controversy. lie thinks the n»e
of such a system for long distances will
not be practicable until the storing of
electricity haa been accomplished, but
he admits that M. Faure's • experiments
in such storage have opened “a wide
field which will soon revolutionise every
branch of electricity.”
—An Austrian engineer named Lauer
has discovered a new method of disin­
tegrating rock. The chief feature of his
system is to employ a hollow cylinder ;
hke
like a gas-pipe, ana
and to place tho dynadyna­
mite cartridge, not as hitherto in a hole
bored into the rock to be blasted, but in
the cylinder in question. The cartridge
only touches the surface of thb rock
which it is desired io shatter. The ex­
plosion of the dynamite is effected by
means of electricity, and the effect is
said to be greater than with tho usual
cartridge in a holo bored in the rock.
The rock is shattered into fragments so
small that a fair stream is able to wash
them away without help, whereas in tho
case of gunpowder the rock is only split
up into small blocks more or less largo
and troublesome to remove. The Lauer
system is calculated to effect a saving of
fully 40 per cent, as compared with the
old system.

PITH AND POINT.
—“It is a cold day when we get left,”
said one neglected ice-cake on the side­
walk to its fellow.—Boston Traacript.
—** Riches have win*s,” says the maxim old.
Have you noticed where they fly?
They generally fly, so I*ve been told.
To where more richeslie.

—A South End man found a covered
basket on his steps the other day. But
he had family enough and would not
touch it, and went and got an officer to
come and remove it» and the officer
V 'I ALVIN A. NICHOLS, dealer In Boots and found it contained a watermelon.—Bos­
Shoe*. Rubbers, Hata and Caps, Gents’ ton Post.
Vuratahing Goods, Gioves and Mitten*, Trunk*, 1 —In Australia an enterprising firm
Travelin* Bags, Lap and Buffalo Robes, etc. built a house of paper, and furnished it
West side Hain St-, Nashville.
throughout with furniture and fixtures
In America a
TtflSS M. JEFFREY, Practical Milliner, and also made of' paper.
1’1 dealc. In Millinery and Fancy Good*. Dre** great many houses are built with paper,
making, in all it* brauche*, done with neatucM and the unhappy men who go on tbo
and dl*p*tch. Salesroom east side Main street, ,1 paper have the houses to pay for, and
opposite Nxws office.
______________________________________ I that’s tho gaul of it, stranger.—Burf\RNO STRONG. p'.«»n and fancy Job Printer. ' lington Hawkeye.
I „
ye.r,'^
^1
&amp; nrtotlDgof anydeaa-iption,whatever,Meme happy?” incredulously muttered the
heforayoubuy.
■ henpecked husband. “Sixteen years
--------------- 5
- --------------------------- married,” repeated the good-natured
XT 158. E- CHAPMAN, Milliner and Drtsa- man, “and happier now than ever.”
JLlA maker. A choice line of Millinery and
Fancy Goods constantly on band. No trouble “You surprise me.” “I don’t mean to.
to show goods. Call and see me before buying. My wife ran off with another man six
Shop two doors north of Smith's croccry.
months after our wedding.”— Brooklyn
Eagle.
K. DUNHAM, Proprietor Temperance Bib
—A Newark church member, who
. Hard Parlors and Pool Rooms. A choica
lh» of dears constant!j on band. Rooms under aays on Sunday that he is too tired to
stand up in church while the hymns are
D. C- Griffith's store.
sung, stood tho other day for an hour on
Broad Street waiting for the circus to
come along. His neighbors say that he
did not complain of being weary on that
TTIRAM R. DICKINSON, manufacturer of occasion.—Hartford Times.
AA. and dealer in Hard Wood Lumber. D.. dd—“Lav off your overcoat, or you
ing Material a specialty. Cash paid for logs. Mill
■nd yard on Sherman St, at M. C. R.R. crossing. won't feel it when you go out,” said the
landlord of a Western inn to a guest who
AMES FLEMING, practical Jeweler and was sitting bv the fire. “That’s whkt
Watch-maker. Clocks, Watches, Silver and
Fisted Ware, Jewelry aud Optical Goods. Rock­I’m afraid of,” returned the man. “The
ford Watches a specialty. Repairing and Engrsv-

LIEBIIAUBEIL-Merrhan’. Tailor and de»l• er in Ready Made Clothing. See me
tieforv you ^purchase clothing. Flu guar­
anteed. '

S

C

J

T RUB8ELL haa money to loan, allow rate*
-Ue on good farm aecunty; Principal and intare* t payabJa at the Haatmgs National Bank.
Offic* 1st door south of Spaujdlng’a, Haattng*.

sad I haven't felt it since.”—Saturday
Night.
9

—A young lady who has a slight de­
fectin the off eye, entered a drug store
the other afternoon and railed for a
• Charlotte, will vlalt Nashville every 30 glass of soda-water. The clerk mistook
4*ya, with a choice line of piece goods, ana will the movement of the optic for the usual
hint, and ten minutes after the woman
TACOB OSMUN. LIvernnan, bam near Wol- left the store she felt an irresistible de­
&lt;f eott House. First class turnouts st reason- sire to sing “We—bio—won’t go home
■iterates. Special rates to commercial men. —hie—till mornin’,” and her necktie
Funeral and wetUng parties furnished with car
riagnt, ou rLort notice.
nonBMAN, tbe Merchant TAftoTi

M

&amp; little more caution.—Norristown
aid.
wcfolty.
Distwrban.ce s on Jupiter.

E.A

"THS 1OS»’

BOOT AID SHOE MAKER,
mimuA

Parties who have been contemplating
a removal from this planet to the planet
Jupiter will do well to pause a moment
and count the coat ere engaging passage
in oneof the passenger balloons predicted
for an early day. An astronomer has
been investigating Jupiter and presents
a not very flattering report of the state
of affairs

muntoM in one, why so many creodtj,
why so many empty pews, aud so few
£radical advantages! Now, I believe
i churches aud the aacrameuta; I be­
lieve in all that, is essential to tbe
Kwth aud exaltation of humanity, but
m not for my life comprehend the
necessity of so many different ways ol
worshiping and honoring our Maker,
and the necessity of bg many different
routes-to heaven. I believe that greater
good on earth and honor to His holy
name would be attained if some of these
numerous churches were turned into
school houses or workshops. Just look
over that pile of letters, and you will
find applications for means to accom­
plish all sorts of things. Hero is an ap­
plication for a contribution iq build a
church in Arkansas costing $30,000,
which, if I grant, l am promised that
the name and the amount given are to
be engraved on a tablet and placed in
the church. This is a solicitation for
money to publish a medical book, which
the writer says is ‘a gigantic'benevolent
work.’ This is from the financial agent
of a/Western college. He savs:. ’I de­
sire you to enjoy with us tho luxury of
building up and sustaining it. We need
a larger endowment and now building
—would like the pleasure of giving you
a prominent place iu the history of tbe
college.’
• r
“ This letter is from a woman asking
for $200 in cash, or if she can not have
that amount. 926 to enable her husband
to join the Odd Fellows, when, if he
gets sick, he will receive benefits. Chi­
cago writes aud says that he wants
84,000 to %uy a grocery with, and that
if he hod such a start ho could manage
to support himself and family.’ This
ono ia from Missouri. A physician
with a family and an income of $1,290
js in need of surgical instruments, ajod
requests me to send them at once. He
incloses mo a long list of articles that I
never heard of before. Here is one
from a temperance lecturer, who invites
me to aid him in the * broad field of
ghilantbropy’ bv sending him about
75 worth of ‘ illustrated views.’ And
a married lady from ------City, in this
Slate, writes to ask, * would I be so
kind iu my gracious goodness to pro­
vide her with pocket money, as her
husband is ono of those kind of men
who thinks more of his money than his
family, consequently keeps a light hold
upon his purse-strings.’ Thenhoro are
a dozen or more solicitations for money
to start or sustain newspapers, etc.,
etc-, ad infinitum ct ad nauseam. These
letter applicants are easily disposed of
by filing their letters. Not so with
those who are within personal reach of
me. They come. And if by chance I
am induced to give aid or even audi­
ence to one of those who have a request
or a scheme to benefit mankind, I am
at once possessed of an affliction worse
to get nd of than the neuralgia. To
give, to assist, to investigate ijnd then
refuse tb continue, ia to be * just like a
woman’—what ever that means. But
after all said and done, to become dis­
gusted with trying to do good, because
the object benefited is unworthy, is to
render charity a worldly calculation
and not the impulse of a grateful heart
That a fellow-creature suffers is suffi­
cient reason for us to try to aid him and
the remembrance of that act is, I believe
ample recompense?’

hlood. By
always relle
Oomphduta, Female Weaknesses and

Grrain and Produce

---------- And sell---------- .
Seeds, Feed, Lime, Salt, Plaster. Stiic- ■tai wilt take fl.UW.
- -ee, Hair, Pine Lanber. Lath ....... JESS
of waning vitality. For purifying the
and Nhlngks, »
blood it has no equal. It tones up the
system, restores and preserves the AT THE LOWEST LIVING PRICES.
improved; fair buildings and in
health, and imparts vigor nnd energy.
gain. Price fl.flUU; part down.
For forty years if has !&gt;ecn in extensive J^EW EEEVATOB.
House and Lot, on .'■“•it"
use, and, is to-day the most available
medicine for the .suffering sick. half down down. Good House aud four acres of Land on Fran­
God had not time to attend to everything ao
ce* Street. Price $450.
he made mother*.
Home awl lot on Sutc BL, bouse new: good
HIGHEST MARKET PRICE cellar
and plenty of gotnl water. For «**r at
OH, WHATACOUGH!
F7u0 or wilt exenatuce for farm proix'rty near
----- For ob kinds of——'
Will yon heed the waprtng. The aigna) per
Naehvllle
ur I lastIn**.
haps of tbe sure approach of that more ternbl80
acres,
1U miles from Nashville on tlie beta
disease consumption. Ask youraclf if yon can
rood leaving the village; all Unproved except 8
afford for tbe sake of raving &amp;0 eta to run the
aotes;
the
remaining b acres goad timber;. fa
risk and do nothing tor it. We know from ex­
well
watered
by a ncver-fallhw spring. Good,
perience that Shiloh’s Cure will cure year
A full stock of
young orchard; buildings fair; 18 acres of
cough. Il nevir fails. This explains why
mon* than a million ixjttles were sold last year.
It relieves Croup, and v. hooping cough, at once
(MX) down, balance on long time.
Mothers do not be without it. For lame back,'
Constantly on Hand.
Vacant lol on Philip* Bt. Price $120 If aold
aide or chret use 8hlto»'a Porous PUltcn.
Sold bvT- T. Bolac.
“Xm’ ‘ x
LEE At DURKEE.
. DYSPEPSIA A LIVER COMPLAINT. . J JENBY ROE. Propbietor
Is it not worth ttin.amall pefee of 73 cents to
free youreef of every symptom of those distres­
sing complaints, if you think ao call, at our
store and get a bottle of Shiloh’s Vital brer,
eycry botfle haa a printed guarantee on It, use
accordingly and if ltdoes you no good it will
cost you nothing. Bold by F. T. Boise.
We have a speedy and positive cure for
Catarrah, Diphtheria, Canker mouth and
Head Ache, in SHILOH’S CATARRH REM­
EDY, A nasal injector free with each bottle.
Um It if you desire lieu]th and sweet breath.
Price 50 cents. Bold by F. T. Boise.

FOWLER &amp; INGERSON
gra’in and produce.

LUMBER, LATH, &amp;C,

MEAT MARKET,

Fresh and Salt Meats,

Sems people arc very cxn*l«M. They go out FRESH FISH and POVLTJH
without anyth ing. whalerer in In their heads,
IM THEIR BEASON, .
and then wonder why they catch cold.
Lard, by the lb. or barrel,
WHY IT IS SO.
The rexson why Dr. David Kennedy’s “Fav
&lt;fc., tie., &lt;£-e.
orite Remedy’-’ cures complaints of the Liver.
ViT The Highest Market Price paid
Kidneys, Bowels, and Blood, Is thaCit Is com­ for Hides, Pelta, &amp;c.
pounded of tlie very remedies which nature
herself lias province! for this purpose. Being Fresh Goods, Full ‘Weights and
Satisfaction Guaranteed.
at first scattered through the woods and fields,
Dr. K. has collected them and condenacd their
” UE.WRY ROE
virtues in the form which he now confidently of
fers to the sick and suffering. One dollar ex­
JOSEPH COLE,
pended for a bottle will convince you and make
yougrateful that you read this item, The
Doctors office Is iu Rondout, N. Y. Write him a
statement of your case.

There arc twn things you cant do. Yon can’t
hold pn eel by his toil, nor a bad man by his
word of honor.
*
CATARRH OF THE BLADDER.
Stinging, smarting, irritation of tbe urinary
passages, diseased discharges, cured by Buchtiitabla. $i, ut druggists. Mich. Depot, JAs.
11 DAVIS £C(£ Detroit, Mich.’
When a party is in tbe minority iu most act­
ive men are called leaderswhen it is in the
majority the same men are called “bosses.”
A WORD TO MOTHERS.
Mothers should rememixrr it is a uinat irnKriant duty at tills season to look alter tlie
a I th ol tuclr famillea and cleanse the malaria
and itnpuritca from tbelr rystems, and that
nothing will lone up the «.b&gt;maeh and liver,
regulate the tx&gt;wel.-and purify the blood h&gt;
perfectly as Parker * Ginger Tonic, advertised
tn our columns,—Pont, See other column. ,

Ananias, Jr. *, How can you learn 'to be first
class liar I Get engaged to two girl.*, aud the
faculty will sort of come to you.

MEAT MARKET
Fresh, Salt and Smoked
-------- OF EVERY DESCRIPTION______
Alt at prices that will

Live and Let Live.
pUlLMTLKE DEPOT.

J. LENTZ &amp; SONS,
Manufacturer*. and dealers in

FURNITURE!
In Every Style■&amp;Variety

of all descriptions arc relived at once, and
speedily cured by Kidney Wort. It *ccra» in­
tended by nature for the cure of all diseases of
For tlie fall trade, oui
the kidneys caused by weakness and debility.
Iu great tonic powers are es|&gt;eanliy directed io
the removal of this class of diseases. We
know of persons that have suffered for thirty
Poker In the Legislature.
years that have been pennanetiy cured by tak­
And will be sold so low that;
G
ing Kiduev Wort a short time. Try It, ’cither
In the years gone by a certain Repie- liquid or dry.—Sun.
•entative in our State Legislature was
Miss Kellogg rays that during her late trip iu
supposed to Lave beet ‘’seen” on a
certain bill, but as he kept his own Europe her friend and financial agent, tbe late
counsel no one could get any proofs Henry G. Stebblna, of New York, made $350,WE ALSO CARRY
against him. He had been elected as (W fur her, by a fortunate investment.
an honest, upright man, and when his
GENERAL
DEILITY
CURED.
constituents heard the rumors against
Chesterville, Kent Co., Md,, Jan. 31,1881.
his integrity they were amazed. A
Feeling broken down and generally debilitat­
delegate was appointed to go down to
Lansing and hear his side of the story, ed, I was induced by B ur d:U’j&gt;fat to'try a bot­
tle of Brown'* iron Bitter*. From tbe third
and when this man returned home he &gt; dose, I liegau to feel the good cffecU of your
wm invited to make known his re­ medicine, and I really think It did me more
And are prepared to give our time aud ntten
searches before an open meeting.
good than any medicine I ever took.
tlon to cvcrything'pcrtaiuing to the
•tMy friends,” ho began, “I went to
Success soon balts, Tbe joyous Ume ia when
undertakln^line.
Lansing with the determination to sift the breeze first striker your sails, and tlie
the matter to the bottom. 1 found that water rustle u nder your bfrwa,
S——was living high and dressing like
Aak your druggist for “Dr. Sykes’ Bure
a lord.”
Cure for Catarrh. ’’ Don’t Uke any other,
A groan went through the meeting
AdnrhiiMrator’s Sale.
and men shook their heads in a solemn
&gt; - HENRY TROYER, deceased.
Not
lev
is hercb, given that 1 .hall .ell al public
•• He sports a gold watch and a cane,”
continued tbe delegate, “and he was
does
WHVQ
talking of buying a $500 horse to bring
WONDERFUL Hll I {
home - with him. You remember he
went away from here a poor man.”
CURES!
••Then he sold his voter’ shouted
one of the yeomen.
I»S1. br tbe I*r»baM Court of Barry County.
“ I confess it looked that way to me
at first, replied tho delegate, •• bat
when I came to tackle him personally
be explained everything as clear as day.
He had not sold his vote. He had not
rtaven (it) town
forgotten that an honest constituency
was behind him and no money could
have bribed his conscience. No, my
friends, there is no slain on his reputa­
tion.”
“Then how did he get his moneyP”
asked three or four at once.
“ Well, I don't know as I can explain
it as well as he did, and I’m sorry I
didn't write it down. It seems that the
members don't have anything to do
evenings, and instead of reading novels
or attending the wicked theater they
gather in little crowds around tlie table
and the one who has four of a kind of
something or other rakes in some­
thing or other called the |X)t. I don’t
know where the money comes in. but
itfi somehow or other, and some how or
C3P. O.BOX
resentutive alKIDNEY DISEASES,
thon any one
LIVER COMPLAINTS

STOCK IS COMPLETE,
PWWUTASTOHiSISH^YOD.

UNDERTAKERS’ GOODS,

J. LENTZ &amp; SONS.

Ki DNEY-WORT

PAYNE'S FARM ENGINES.

KIDNEY-WORT

ana i suggest a vow ot continued con­
fidence in our member until he himself
to do with iu"—

tetaAZra

Constipation and Piles.

Mg

THE GREAT

B LB LING TON BO I 7 Z
aenacr Trains Daily between (fib
Moines Council Bluffs, Onutlui. .ii
Joseph, Atchison, Topeka and Ku.
Direct connections for nil point- .■

California.
The Shortest. Speediest and Mraa On f-nr
bio Route viuHannibnl to Fort ScotU Dii-ot"' ■
rallas. Houston. Austin. San Autonle. Cl ive ■
ton and all points in Texas.
Tbe uncqualcd inducements «&lt;Tcro'’ b» »»•
Line tb Travelers and Tourist*, an- a* bl...
Tbe celebrated Pullman il6-wh&lt;Ti&gt; &gt;
Slipping Curs, run only on this 1 itic.i';. It i
Q. I’itliice Druwlng-Iioom Cnra. Wtth H •••:
Kccllninr Chaira. No extra rli:o-”' 1*
•
in Rcclininr (’hairs. The
&lt;’. &lt; . .’ *
Palaeo Dinin* Cars. Gorjrei u* Sw •; •
"

Steel Track nnd Suiw for Ennipme
Lined with thrir Great Tbrnigh Cle­
ment. makes t Ms.'abovc alt other., »• •
Route to tbe South. Sontt-We«t. :i: :
West.
Try It. and you will Rm! trnvrtin • ■
instead of a discomfort.
Through TiekrtM via rW«
'
for rale at all oflicc* In llv- • Hi ■
Canada.
Ail Infonuarion about U
Ina .Car Accommodation*.
will bu cheerfully given by «•&gt;)■

NERVOUS
DEBILITY:
A cure guaranierd
a specific

�OUK EU BOP EAX LETTER.

SATURDAY

FEB. 11.

1882.

Tim .canary bird beneath hi* wing
now hide*.his head; tbe cramp witliin&lt;
■taiion hoQse'now seek* hi* little lied.
I^to wearer of the liver-pad another
peff has got, and eo the soulful puzziteer doth take his sunflower hot.

During the warGtn. Lee fonad one
of hi* soldiers (a North Carolinian, no
doubt) eating green persimmons, and
and said to him: “Mj friend, those
pendmmon*, hre not fit for food.” The
soldier replied: “General, I am not
eating them for food, blit to draw my
. atouiach up to fit my ration*.”
Young Haines was one of inc worst
fellow* of Bedford, Ind., and when he
went forward for prayers in revival
meeting,* with an air of deep contrition,
a daughter of the pastor knelt by hi*
aide to give him consolation and advice.
After the service* were over tlie girl
■missed her gold watch, and it was con­
jectured that Haines had stolen it. She,
would not believe this, but went with
the party who set out to follow him.
They found him on his kneees under a
tree, and for a moment they thought
he was praying; but a cltuwer inspect­
ion showedlhat be wjjb burying, the
. watch. )
"7

Patrick Simpson closely resembled a
a fugitive Kentucky murderer, and was
taken to that State from Ohio tinder
arrest. He was kept, in jail several
month* before he conld convince the
anchorities that a mistake in identity
had been made. Having done this, he
found that only onejdage of his peril
was over. A dissatisfied mob under­
took to lynch him, the county officials
■were too cowardly to protect him, aud
ho was compelled-to escape by a long,
skulking journey afoot through the
.woods, sleeping ou£ of doors by day,
walking by mgl.t, and all the time suf­
fering p-om hunger.
Wheeling to Charleston, W. Vo.. is
asking for the free right of way through
the farnis ou the line of its route. The
the right of way, where that is given
freely as one of the .conditions of the
ecKxion, that the railroad company
shall stop nt least one train each way—
on being flagged—at a point nn the
farm to l»e agreed upon, to take up or
putoff either passengcas or freight.
This will give every man on the line
of the road a station of his own—he
and his family enn step on the cars nt
Ilia own door to ride to the city or to
the nearest village to do business, or
oven to ride to the next neighbor’s on
nn errand or a visit.

A iumliernian broke hie leg in the
Wisconsin woods, and desired to go to
conld receive good treatment. But
Sorel was a thousand miles away, and
'he oidy hud a few dollars. It this di­
lemma, he resolved to travel cheaply as
freight. He inode a box six feet long,
two feet wide nnd sixteen inches long,
marked it. “This side up with great
care,” aud had himself nailed 'n and
shipped. Some wide cracks gave him
air, mid ho took along a supply of
food and water. He got along very
well, though not without discomforts,
until he arrived m Montreal, where
■flic box was set upon end. and the in­
mate left standing on his head. He
was forced to make an outcry. He had
been three days on the journey, which
the railroad officials enabled him to
complete ns a regular passenger.

A man ou crutches, with one leg
•waddled, registered at a St. Louis
hotel as Col. Starr, and hobbled to his
room. He had the gout terribly, he
oaid, and for a day or two kept several
waiters busy attending to his numer­
ous and petulant wants. Then ho re­
marked that, just to kill time, bo would
like to play poker with some body. It
waa not long before a professional
grmbler came around to gratify him,
and took away $100.
Another won
&lt;300, and so it went until about 1,000
hud been carried away from the room.
By that time all the gamblers in the
town were wild to get at tho victim.
Then his luck changed suddenly, and
on ono day of his play the Col. put
himself over $5,000 ahead. No symp­
tom of gout was visible when he paid
his bill and departed.

1
'
I

How to Fattea Tarkoyi.

Lokbom. Emg., Jam. 88, 1882.
turkey crop. Many farmer* do not un­
There in every indication that we derstand this. Their turkeys grow on a
shall have a stormy and exciting Par­ limited range, get little or no food at
liamentary Session this year. There- home through the summer, and if fed at
all with regularity it is only for two or
oaembling of the Cabinent and dis­ three week* before killing. I nee these
cussions amongst its chief members as lean, bonv carcasses in thelocal markets
uTtho best method of treating “obstruc every winter, and feel sorry for the
tion" is a sign of what we may shortly owner’s Ion. They have received a
expect. This will, probably, be one of small price for their birds -and a still
the earliest considerations of the Gov­ poorer price for the food fed out. The
average life of a turkey is only seven
ernment. It is said that tbe Liberals
mouths and the true economy of feeding
are determined, come what may, that is to give tbe chicks all they can digest
the Session shall not be h barren one. from the shell to the slaughter. If they
Respecting the cloture, the explana­ get all they can eat on the range that u
tion is simple enough. It is not a ve­ well. Usually this should be supplementhicle of tyranny, as some call it, but is
metely devisee with the object of end­ from tho roost in tho morning and two
or three hours before they go to roost at
ing a debate when it is considered that night. The food may be slack in the
the subject has been discussed as much morning, so that they will go to the
os its merit* demanded. It is practical­ range with good apjietites, and fuller at.
ly employed e very where, from a Ves­ night. They should be put upon a reg­
try meeting to a Privy Council, nor ular course of fattening food as early as
can it be possibly called unfair when tho middle of October, when yon pro­
pose to kill the beet birds at Thanks­
it may be applied to any, or all, who
giving. The younger and lighter birds
binder political progress by* useless- should be reserved for the Christmas
talk. If the Government wishes work and New Year’s markets. They contin­
to be done, tbe workers, nnd the chat­ ue growing quite rapidly until midwin­
ter, and you will be paid for tho longer
terers, must be considered.
The joint note addressed by tbe Gov­ feeding. There is nothing better for
fattening than old corn, red partly in
ernment of England and France to the
the kernel and partly in cooked meal
Khedive, declares that tbo two powers mashed up with boiled potatoes. Feed
intend to make a positive stand against three times a day, giving the warm meal
all interference m the affairs of Egypt, ,in the morning, and feeding in troughs
and expressing tbe hope that the Khed­ with plenty of rooin, so that all the
ive will gain confidence and support flock may have a chance. Northern
by this assurance, has caused no little corn has more oil in it than Southern,
and is worth more for turkey food. Use
excitement in Turkey. Tbe Sultan is milk in fattening if you keep a dairy
said to be positively indignant, os he farm. Feed only so much as they will
Ims always been particularly jealous of eat up clean. Cultivate the acquaint­
the influences given to the .Khedive by ance of your turkeys as you feed them.
the support of the European Powers.. No more charming eight greets your
The Sultan insists that tho interior- j vision in the whole circle of a year than
a large flock of bronze turkeys coming
anco of England and France takes at call from their roosts on a frosty No­
place at a time when the.-** vas no war­ vember morning. New corn is apt to
rant for it, and that it has been dune make tho bowels loose, and this should
There is usually
without even the courtesy of giving the be guarded against.
Sultan warning of their intentions. So green food enough in the fields to meet
grave was tho subject considered at their wants in tbe fall, and cabbage and
turnips need not be added until winter
Countedtinople that a Cabinent Coun­ sets in.
If the bowels get loose give
cil took place immediately and it is un­ them scalded milk, which will generally
derstood that a protest will lie publish­ correct the evil.
Well-fattened and
ed against the action ot England and well-dressed turkeys will bring two or
three cents a pound more than smaller
France.
birds. It will not only be better for the
A joint note of another kind, but I purse, but for your manhood, to send
likely in all possibility to lie attended nothing but finished products to the
with equally important consequences, market.—Michigan Farmer.
is (bat addressed to the people of Ger­
many by the Emperor and Prince Bis­
What You Do, Do Well.
marck. This is an imperial edict sign
There Is nothing attended with such
poor results as the careless transplant­
by his famous Chancellor, asserting the ing of trees.
It is positively painful to
right of the Emperor personally to dir- watch and see what efforts are taken to
• t the policy of the State, and requir­ insure either the stunting or slow dying
As treoing all ofliieialn to abstain at election.* of.a newly transplanted tree.
nlanting time is again at hand, it may
• plantii
from any form of agitation against
! ------somer value
us to. mako
tbe Government.
Asin
ivurnmeut. As
in Germany state i
-—j - for
. —
. , this
.
।
i&gt;
i.
H
statement: One day last spring in dnv'*• lutB» a,,,I .wall, h&lt;,.rally .
loD(? ono o, „ur principal WOMM.
swarm,i, and. therefore, are important ’ wbieh abounds with many beautiful and
agents in the promulgation of imperial costly residences, we observed a party
ideas, the mandate of tho Emperor, setting out shade-trees in front of a re­
is regarded as a stronger desire than cently-built countrv-seat. it wxs a sorry
eVer on the part of the German ruler sight. Tbe holes dug were about the
diameter of the bottom of a common
fur absolute power. The Liberals are
water-bucket, the trees meantime, with
most of their roots hacked off, were ly­
ing in the hot sun ready to be stuck into
these holes as soon aa they could ba
i bored through tbe hard,. stony=ground
fought so ura
....
fortress of feudalism. They mnriitaiii , °n which the men were operating. Close
•
. .
■
by these were rows of trees, which must
। have been set out in tho same way, as
' they were all stnnted, partly dead, and
advance of Germany, which must, if it | had
‘ ' inot grown six inches since they had
yields take a much lower place than it been planted, probably two or three
was destined to do amongst .Continen­ years before. They had, beside, no pro­
tal Powers, Many, however, in Ger­ tection al all, but allowed to stand by
many regard it merely as the natural themselves, crooked, scared by ill-treat­
ment, and two or three had been broken
clinging of an aged monarch to the tra­
off some three or fonr feet from the
dition of the past, and thVse say that ground. It pained us to see the same
tbe Crown Prince, when be conics ta kind of planting renewed and contin­
the throne, will entirely reverse this ued, whjje one of ths men appeared to
be a gardener and naturally ought tai
policy.
have known better. But there are many
Nothing whatever is known however persons who get
employment as
at tbe German Embassy be:o respect­ gardeners of experience who really
ing tbe proximate proclamation of the know next to nothing about the proper
Crown Priuce of Germany as Kegent of way of conducting a garden, and they
the Empire, which was announced by are kept simply because their employ-,
the France on Sunday. Tbe so-called era, whose business takes them much of
the time away from homo, know still
intelligence is believed to be mere
, less.
guess work, and not at all likely to be i
It should always be borne in mind
supported by the course of events.
r no tree ought to be planted within
that
Ixondon, notwithstanding the attract- ’1 reach of horses, cattle, cr
c: the small boy,
without being fully protected against in­
Irons of tbe chase, remains far from •
: jury.
And this is especially tbe case
empty.. Bright sunshine, an unusual 'j suuug
along uitun
highways. There need be no ex­
thing in thwsoinke and fog-begrimed | -------pensive
v be constructed
i—box.
ft1.mav
and eticlouded city, and balmy airs, • out
... of rough
„ boards
■
■ and■ scantlinj
anrini.dil.-n in their
tliair softness, bring a ' ing
ino- niirht
eight narrow strins
strips to a tree.
tree, but it
springlike
well dressed crowd to the morning pai k should be strongly done, and if so will
Another mode is to
and there have been some lively little last many years.
make the protection in the shape of the
dauces given, too, that are something letter A, with strong cross pieces at the
unusual at this season. Among them bottom and top.
I may men tin one each nt Lady Augus­
Unless tress along the highways, es­
tus Fitz ClarenceXthe Hon. Mrs. Pasco pecially in front of residences, are very
Glyn’s and Mrs: Charles Hammendey’s large, they are liable to be gnawed by
that were charming indeed.
Really horses, to which they are frequently
hitched.
We have bad some fine trees
Loudon is very enjoyable now and
badly damaged in this way. Henoe we
stTolla in tbe open air ou the fitreets or have our trees protected, no matter how
in tbe patks are a luxury. By the way large they may bo.—GerrncuLtwn Tele­
I met, in my ramble* a few days since a graph.
__________
fellow countryman who but recently
—Tlie clover-seed midge, Cccidomya
arrived ou the Cunard steamer Gallin,
trifolii, the insect which for a few years
According to his statement he had a past has committed more or less dam­
very rough and boiatrous passage, age in the clover fields of New York,
which has fully convinced him that a has made its appearance along the lines
mid-winter voyage on tho Atalautic of the Canada Southern Railway and
is one of those things that should be elsewhere in the Dominion clover fields,
doing considerable damage the past
avoided at all bazards.
season. This pest is of tho *ame family
August.
sembles. It lays Ito eggs in September
CONSUMPTION.
on the heads of clover, and the perfect
Thousands who had long suffered from weak fly appears in June, lays its eggs, and
lungs, short breath, asthma and consumption, the larvi from these last are what cause
have found relief in Brown'* Iron Bitters, a the damage. The larva arc of a brigh*
true toule.
■

A thoroughly American city has been
laid out in the State of Chiapm*, Mex­
ico. The site is a plateau of. land,
through which runs a never failing
stream of mountain spring water, clear
a* crystal, full of fish, and affording
power for any amount of manufactur­
ing machinery, *£ nn atitude of 3,000
feet abosc the 4* level, on the line of
the Mexican Soashern Railroad. It is
•called Allen City,around the city are
laid out and taken up twenty-four
coffee fartta, each touching the city
plat. There will be over 3,000,000 cof­
fee trees in nursery cultivation at this
place within .the coming year, all to
be trnnsplnntetl nnd raised to bearing
Write to Mrs. Lydta E. Pinkham, 283 West. within the next four years. All goods,
ctd Avenue, Lytm, Ma*., for names of
store* and supplies, agricultural im- Ef,Sti'KISET!
plirnente, machinery, building materi­
tire cure.
al, and furniture for the colonists arc
exempt from duty? also all exports and
iaiports of production* of the county,
ELEGANCE AND PURITY
and stock for wutkr nr bleeding purL*dh-* who sppwciAte elegance *nd purity
po***s,
ten«
yearn..
_______
- are exempt fur
---------------- The
- — 9"
Hair Itel4*m. It I. Uh- t,r.'t
rr..iu--------------------- “,ru',u
BS Th. raUKmd which i« to run trvui

an eighth of an inch in length. The
one remedy appears to bo to stop grow­
ing clover, though it is reported that the
cutting of the first crop of clover some­
what earlier than usual, about the tim j
the first heads ore forming and then not
attempting to get a seed crop, has had

THIS SPACE BELONGS TO

G. A. TRUMAN &amp;
WHO

ARE

IRON

BUSY OPENING NEW GOODS.

TRUTH IS MIGHTY!
JN making the following statement, we utter the truth, and can verify it.

THE LARGEST STOCK OF GROCERIES
In the city, at bottom price*, fair and square weight aud measure.
wo advertise tlie most complete Stock ot

BITTERS

When

Etc., in Bain- and Eaton counties, we are telling the people a fact that can­
not l»o HiiccesHfuily and truthfully denied. It confustaof a large variety of *tapie goods, and a large nsiuirtnient of

.Miijoliea Wmid French China,
BROWNS IRON BHTKRS are
n certain euro fbr all diseases
requiring a complete tonic: espe­
cially Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Inter­
mittent Fevers, Want of Appetite.
Loss of Strength, Lack of Energy,
etc. Enriches the blood, strength­
ens the muscle*, and giveo new
life to the nerves. Acts like a
charm on the digestive organs,
removing all dyspeptic symptoms,
such as tasting the food. Belching,
Heal in the Stomach, Heartburn,
etc. The only Iron Preparation
that will not blacken the teeth or
give headache. Sold by all DrugBROWN CHKMICAL CO.
Baltimore, Md.

In various designs nnd style*, also a well selected Stock of

ENGLISH DECORATED CHINA
In Tea Setts, Water Setts, Cups, Saucers, Pitchers, Etc.
of Yases, Toilet Setts, Flower Setts, Etc. iu

Too numerous tomention, and

ho

An endless variety

cheap that all can afford to buy.

Of every style, color and design. When you are ready to buy, I nn&gt; ready
" All kinds of Produce taken in exchange for Goods.
to sell.

C. W. SMITH

leal Work.wAXTMUdtbabmaad

THE D. &amp; H. CANAL’S
Term Um l&gt; at Kondost, H. Y., a «d thh U
alaotthe location of

Dr. David Kennedy,
Proprietor of the new medlolae now being intro
doo&gt;!ln Ohio »od Michigan. Tbo name of the
-n-dlclt.* la Dr. David Kennolr'o

FAVORITE REMEDY,
m...

prrvo i» ONLY ONE DOLLAR
a bottle

THE
PUBLIC 1ARE CAUTIONED
!
Tlie Dnirtfiata
raaka'no

arnrequeated to
nnfortunate
ntUiak-a. and thia can he dona by rvmetubcrin* the
facte. Name •/the proprietor, Dr Dawid Kennedy,
name ot M&gt;-dlcluo, 'Favorite Ramady;* prlec per
boitie only JI: location of the proprietor and manu­
facture, Bondout, N Y

Dr. David Kennedy’s Favorite Remedy

!• for •*!* bv al&gt; wholesale-DruntoM io tbe prlncl
palcillraof Ohio.Mlcliltfan_ New York and Naw
England State*.
Van Behaek. Stevenaon A Co, , and Marrtaon,
Plummer 4Co«o ngent* In Chlaago
Dr Rwnneky'* “Favorite Remedy" la offered as a
reliable tn*dlelno for the cure nf Kidnev and Liver
Otnptelnta. Coniilpatlnn and all dlaordwrw arlwing
from an Impure «late of '.be blotxl. To women who
differ from any ot the 111- peculiar te tba aex Dr
Kennodr'* “Favorite Bemady*. proves a real ble**ln«.
’
Jl-1»

CHICAGO, BOCK ISLAND &amp; PACIFIC BY
Is The Great Connecting Link between the East and the West!
IU main Un. ma. from Cblojr&gt; * C™"'"

—“ n——U-----------------—

SS.*^ ••

Ubertw lownClO
MsrtSffWMrooklyti.®rtMM
li^MolnM
&lt;tlSoflowa
1.Stuart. AUa
KranohM from l.re

AtCatcaoo, with
Uut and South.

At F.I«U.IWOOD| w

10 GURE, 00 Pill

The beat

Cuagli

Medicine
adulu te

tor

Children or
t

WILSON'S
COUGH MIXTUREbegrr-I
Warranted to ptv. aaUotectlon or
money will
tuoded by the dealer where yoa buy It. Price 60c.

as the Hessian fly, which it closely re­

orange-red color and measure less than
i (BW1 Ute Imi
tie warrantin'
hat tnliComt—.^------------------- —

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                  <text>“A’LOCA

ORNO STRONG, |
Editor axd Proprietor.

VOLUME IX.

J _________ «

_______

•

Devoted to the Interests of
the Best Party under the Sun.
t
t

.

*

•

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1882.

!( TcVKKPIT
^5,“
XT
OLDraUrTlUSo
NUMBER 22.

—We are pleased to inform our many
A PLEASANT SURPRISE.
LOOAL GIBBLE-GABBLE
The social at Mr. Ainsworths was one
Tax .Sales Mwtiee.
LIFE IN NASHVILLE readers
that E. R. White has returned
of the pleasantest of the season. The
And Her Environs,
to Nashville and made arrangements to
Last Tuesday evening being the 10th
house was filled to its utmost capacity
stay with Kocker Bros., the coming anniversary of the wedding of Rdv,
and everybody seemed to enjoy them­
—The streets have been filled with
year. He no doubt will be pleased to A. D. Newton and wife, a surprise tin
Herb Patterson is visiting friends io selves to the utmost. The amusement
teams, every day this week* and brnusee his old friends and make many'new wedding was- carefully planned, and town.
consisted
in "charades,” ‘•proverbs,”
•
.
Bess has been brisk.
ones. Kocker Bros, will next week snccessfuUy exec tired.- Rev. Newton
W. A. Aylaworth was in town Mon­ "kingdoms,” etc. Dr. Foote and Mr.
—The tourist will soon stait out from open a flne line of new goods. -Look and family were invited out to spend
Francis
mystified
the audince for some
day night.
his winter quarters, on a tramp in out for their ad.
the afternoon at Daniel Staley’s, ^and
J. M. Powers, Esq., of Bellevue, was time by a remarkable display of mind
quest of food, and to shun labor.
when
they
had
gone,
their
house
was
reading. Refreshments consisting of
—Last Saturday, a' little child aged
in town this week.
—St. Valentine’s day passed off with­ about three years, son of Joseph Over­ entered by some of the ladies, all the
Steve Springett has moved into the boiled ham and eggs, coflee, biscuits,
out a struggle; the shortest month in smith, was left in the house with some preliminary arrangements completed, country, near his saw mill.
and “kraut” were served in great abun­
the year is more than half gone, and other children, while the mother went and at an early hour in the evening
Mrs. C.N, Young is visiting friends dance. Collection amounted to $8.00.
the windy month will soon be march­ to a neighbor’s house for a few mo^ the guests came thronging in, bring­ at Maple Grove Center.
F. M. Potter of the Hawk, was in
Dated Nrabvlllc, Mtch. December 3Mh, X.D. UM.
ing in.
10-22
-riujlK C. Bono, VUtagc Treasurer.
meats. The little fellow got to play­ ing their presents of tin-ware and oth­
Joshua Martin, living in West Cas­ town on Tuesday. F. M. is on the Sen­
—Mr. Alex. Price has one of the finest ing near the Are and the blaze caught er useful articles,-and also a bounteous tleton, is dangerously ill.
atorial war-path, and cites with pride
spans of four-year-old horses in the io his clothes and burned hts lower supply of provisions, such as usually
LOCAL MATTERS.
A. G. Snyder and family have moved to Bis statesmanship and oratory as
•x. known
county.
‘
displayed at the soldiers re-union held
limbs and body in a frightful manner. fl fids its way to entertainments of this te Freemont Center Mich.
.
nr Coll for hinicm ' at E. A. Biirii’r shoe
horse is and, kuoXs how to Cake care of Dr. Goucher was summoned, who dress­ character.
J. D. Harris, of Fairport, N. Y., is at Charlotte Iir«t week, and founded
Wm. Clxhk,
At about half post seven, Rev. New­ visiting at C. W. Grangers.
’ one too.
;
-------upon the • following text: ’ "Hardtack •hop.
ed the burn and rendered the little
ton
and
family
returned
home,
but
the
rar
I Wil) pay the highest. naritet prietr in
and
Salt
Horse.
”
Mr.
Potter
is
firm
in
The Choral Society will bo formed
—F. T. Hoise lias the brick work on sufferer all the comfort possible. The
I
cash
or
goods
for
butter,
eggs,
Jani,
dried apHIKIWI LUI UUtMTi,
•••'I, •••
the belief tlmt the':- office should seek &lt;pics,in
his addition to his slore completed, and child’s mother, not thinking of the con­ curtains being drawn, they did not dis­ this (Friday) press evening.
firnloi potatoes and
hnr! rrfher
green apples,
other nrrwHlfft.
produce. Some of our - correspondence came the man. and not man the office; bat
the rear structure makes a decided im­ sequences, dashed cold water on the cover that anything unusual was trans­
considers it a very trogentlemanly act,
provement in the looks, as well as the burn as soon as she returned, and that piring about their premises until they too late to appear in this issue.
got to the door.
Butter 24 cents and good Print.4 centahas made the suffering more intense.
C. W_ Srqitb, bought 85 pounds of for the man not to bo around where
convenience of his place of business.
at G A. TarMxY Ji Son's. • ?
• About eighty persons were present, new maple sugar, Wednesday.
the office can find hhn about caucus or
—Now thatDur bridges are built and
—The first shipment of Maple sugar
and
after
the
bride
and
groom
had
-a#Just received those celebrated La BastaMrs. Hernan Fowler, of Fremont Cen­ convention time.
waA made from Nashville, last Monday paid for, it would seem that the next
(. Iiimnevs with with which vou candrive nails,,
been cengratulated,
L. J. Wheeler ter, is visiting nt W. P. Eddy’s.
'jrarrantril fire proof.
C. AINSWORTH.
and a greater part of it was new sugar, most essential thing the town needs is read
au
interesting
biograph­
H. G. Hale is building a barn on his
made in January, Several sugar mak­ something in the shape qf a fire pro­
[ y I keep constantly oo itfnd. I nfted Meal..
A
DILEMMA.
ical
sketch
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Newton,
lot in the rear of his drug store.
Buck Wheat Flour. Graham Flour, also* sell&lt;
ers have opened their bushes, and are tection. It is a well known fact that
Holler’s, Dickinson's and Pottenil&gt;’s Flour.
Mr. Green, of Chester, whs visiting
there is nothing whatever in tho vil­ which proved to be ns much of a suiready for the first run;
C. AINSWORTH.
prise to the couple,as incident after in­
Did you ever look for the definition
—Messrs. Hager and Banta, have pnr- lage that can be used in case of fire ex­ cident of their past life was brought C. W. Demnray’s Wednesday.
S7 S. Ingerson lias been attending of this short word ! Well to illustrate :
^FARMERS
cept
such
articles
as
can
be
picked
up
at
chasedjof the creditors, the saw-mill
fresh
to
their
memory
hy
the
biogra
­
Suppose
you
had
a
half
column
in
a
Take advantage of the low prices and buy yuur
court, ns juror, for two weeks past­
formerly owned by Dick Pelton nt the moment of alarm, what few ladders pher. This history of the couple hpd
E. Gates and wife spent Sunday with Jively, newsy, local paper to fill with harness of Clark who will give you No. 1 stock
Morgan, and arc moving it to Glenn's the town owns are large, heavy and been obtained by corresponding with
local happenings, and the aforesaid lo­
relatives and friends in this vicinity.
old site, on the Castleton—Venbout- , cumberson affairs and are seldom if the parents of each, and friends at dif­
rar Canada »&gt;at Meal. Carolina. Rice,
cal happenings did not happen to hap­
A
A dangter of tender age arrived at
Saur Kraut, Macraronla. at
ville town line, one mile north of ever in shape to use when wanted.
ferent circuits where Rev. Newton Iiur
pen. and it they did happen, yon would Hominv. Prunes,
’
AINSWORTH'S.
good hand engine and hook and ladder
Dick Ellestons, north of town, on Mon­
Downing’s corrers.
not happen to hear of their happening ;
been pastor.
out fit could bo purchased for a few
day.
u^.
S.
A.
Barries
Charlotte, wauh»t'x sei! ’
The
remainder
of
the
evening
was
1
—As the time for our charter election
or if yon did hear of their happening. 1 his imported EnglishofDraft
Horse.
Die rea­
hundred dollars and might be the means
The rain of Saturdry and Sunday
is near at hand it behooves us ns citi­
it might happen to be some happenings son l» for a change. Will BOine of our horse­
spent in singing, visiting and various
of saving twice there cost in a years
nights put the roads in a bad condition
zens of this village to begin to look
that the readers of the aforesaid lively, men go and buy him.
other amusements. The party disper­
time; It would seem as though this is
again.
ST We are "manufacturing Mime of the
newsy, local paper might not happen
about us and see who are the most fil­
sed about eleven o’clock, each having
a matter that the council ought to take
E. A. Manley and daughter of Jack­
finest harness ever made in BarryCo., eali and1
to like if they saw them- in print, and
ing men fof the various positions. All
enjoyed a pleasant time.
in hand and one that the taxpayers
son are visiting friends north of this
might happen to happen into the sanct­
partizan feelings (should by laid on the
should be particularly interested in.
village.
’HE WRESTLE.
um on the eve of press day, and order
shelf and look only for the men best
Mrs. Ewer's and family, ol Buttle
—The debating society at Troxell’s
their copy of the aforesaid lively,
qualified for the office to be filled.
The &lt;cn tch - as-catch - can
w rest! i n g Creek, were guests of G. A. Howe, newsy, local paper stopped, adding in
school house is to lock horns with a
c. w. GRANGER'S;
—Rev. Snyder of the Evangelical,
society of the same nature, at the contest,, between Hat. Rosworth &lt;&gt;l Sunday.
sotto
voice: "It any such happenings
church of Maple Grove, with his fam
LOST OR STOLEN.
Rev, F. A. Bissell attended the Con­
Chaneo school house this (Friday) press Roxqnd, and Clark Strank of Eaton
happen to
happen
again, and
Between
Nashville
and
Bellevue on the Tlb ol
ily, was called by telegraph, Monday,
evening, and paw logic in each other’s Rapids, last Thursday night drew a gregation Ministerial Association last you happen to write them up for February 1SS2. A unuli Straw and IcaUiiN
to attend the funeral of his grand­
sachel coutaing a UuIIcs pur*e In which was
faces, bellow with oratory, and finally large house and after choosing a referee Wednesday.
that tjirnal. flnb&lt;*rgnsted, libelous, about S18 in money, and a note of S3(X), dated:
sort. nt Benton Harbor, Mich. As a
Geo. Brumm returned last Monday
submit to the judges for decision the and umpires, the contestants appeared
scandalous infamous dirty sheet. I'll Aug. 3rd 1881, given by Evans «fc HunsIkcK of
consequence, the protracted meetings
following knotty problem : "Does mon­ upon the stage. Strank is the cham­ from a trip to McBrides, anil other shoot the man that writes it, if it Lup­ Bellevue, to me, tbe saebel was filled with a« which have been in progress at his
quantity of lare anti other art fr!&lt; s much valued
ey have more influence over man, than pion of the state, and weighs 220 lbs. northern toirns.
pens to happen to be the editor him­ This Is tn wani all perrons against purchasisg
church, ale discontinued.
Mrs. Collier has gone to Battle Creek,
woman liasT” Mr. Hewes of Castleton Bosworth is a farmer, has had but two
self, ot his sub, you can just put Chat said note, and further to ray that 1 will liberaly
reward any person who may return to me- the
—Ther are men who think it so great will lead the band who contend that or three contests, and weighs 210 lbs. where she is engaged ns nurse in a
down” mid by this time they are so far raid property at Nashville. ’
.
a privilege for a country editor to give money
The first bout lasted seven minutes private family:
is
monarch over
man,
CLARA GARMS4
from y&lt;ro that you oannot hear what
Thd birds have been singing mid en­
them 410 large pages of good reading and Mr. Surrioe will champion the wo­ and a fall was gained for Strank.
Af­
they may happen to finish up with, or
Kelly
’
s
Steel
Barb
Wire,
one
pound
th4. matter for $1.50, that he wil&lt; be glad to man’s cause.
It is expected that this ter waiting 20 minutes, the second trout; joying the sunshine of the past few even wlint they may happen to be re­ the rod. Manufactured and Sold i&gt;v Thsnr WiroBM
publish gratis, all their wants, and lit­ question will be entirely wiped out of was commenced and in a few minutes days, amazingly.
Hedge company. A sample of the abree csD" .
lating to a t»o.M»m friend.
be
found
at
CLGLASGOW
’
S
'
tle notices tlmt will benefit no one but existence, and tlte decision be final. Bosworth secured a hold on Strank, by
Cyrus Stiles and niece of Battle
On the other hnnd, suppose that it
themselves, and some even have the We hope in the future to bear of some which be would uudoubtcdly have Creek, jwere visiting nt E. Chipman’s
shou'd happen, that you did not hap­ Cod Fish, Halibut. Sardines. Oysters, Lobsters,
cheek
do this after they have stop
new question up for discussion before thrown him farily, but being* near the the fore part of this week.
pen to be the proprietor of the afore­ canned goods of all descriptions, you can find'
ped their own paper and borrow of these dabating societies, some live is­ edge, Strank fell head foremost off the
The subject of Rev. F. A. Bissell's
at AINSWORTHIS.
said livelX newsy, local paper, and it
theirgenerous neighbors.
sue, something that will impart knowl­ stage, and Bosworth followed, but for­ discourse next Sunday morning, will should happen to happen tliat the pro­
SV IlanicM repaired aud oiled h: exebangolie: “A Practical Religeon.”
—Catherine Ralston, after waiting edge to those who listen, and be of tunately both escaped uninjured.
prietor should happen to be away, anil
The contestants continued the contest
C. N. Dunham has sold his billiard you might Imppen to expect him to hap­
Dearly a year since the jury awarded benefit to those who ‘take on active
c»- Kerosene OU cheap a* Die clwapesl
C. AINSW0JCTH.
her $150. in pay ior land taken for the P|rt in the discussion.
with occassioiinl grapplings, but neith­ tables and fixtures »&lt;&gt; Will Fracv, who pen in at any time, and if you did not prevent price 15 cents.
will
hereafter conduct the business.
extension of Main and Everts Streets;
happen to have the aforesaid half
—A well snbstanciated report comes er gaining a fall until one o'clock, when
LI MBER! LUMBER!
has nt last called on the village treas­ to us from Assyria, of inhuman brutal­
The Evangelical society of Maple column in the aforesaid lively, newsy,
Custom Sawing mul Building Materiel fururer and drawn the money, thus end­ ity, which if true brands ita perpetrator could not be finished that night, and
rove, are holding a scries of revival 1 local paper llllcd’ with local happen uialied on »i&gt;ort notice, our ,1,,w ™fll I” Ma­
ple Grove.
.Jaine* 8. Berry.
ing all controversy in regard to legality as a scoundrel of the deepest'dye, and agreed to call it a draw, giving each meetings, conducted by Rev Snyder.
inga.be might happen to be exceedingly
&lt; of the matter. Only a few days yet re­ a fit subject for the state boarding one tall. This did not please the aud­
Mr. M. McLain of Spring Lake, re­ wroth that you hud allowed it to happen
mained before the money would have house at Jackson John Perryman had ience who dammored loudly fot their
Aixswcwn’i
turned home on Wednesday, from a that said half column was not tilled
become village property, and been a mule which was so poor that he had door nion/^ Several propitious were visit to his cousins, the Kocher Bros.
with lively, newsy, local happenings
used for other purposes,
FOR
LALE.
made,
and
nt
last
it
wasdecieed
to
ad
­
ceased to love the faithful anima), and
Mrs. A. J. Hardy and daughter Allie, and he put you in as much fear ns did
One 3 Spring Double Buggy or Wagon. nl»o.
journ the contest until Thursday eve­
your visitor o» press-dny eve.
t ■ ...
U'.ra
—In a school district not a thousand one morning he found it cast and un­ ning, Dec. 16th, give each person in are visiting friends at Grand Rapids.
That would be a dilemma, but the al very low prices,
G. A. Truman A Son, are doing bus­
miles from Nashville, they have a de­ able to get up, and made up bis mind the room a ticket as they passed out,
to
get
rid
of
the
beast
then
and
there.
half
column
is
full,
and
by
getting
ina good Jan
iness on the ready pay system. Look
bating society, and spelling school. As
to a dilemma,, .we have escaped a di' K
’
and that Win. Atki^pon, who sold
C. AINSWORTH’S.
is perfectly natural and right, they in­ Hc.pounded the poor brute on the tickets should keep the door money us •at their new ad, then step in and see
lemma.
------------•
vite their friends and neighbors from bead for a long time, but did not suc- a forfeit until tlmt time, aud if the their stock.
MONEY WANTLD!
deed in killing it, yet he dug a shallow
C. W'. Granger returned on Wed­
other districts to meet with them. A
You are owing me. and I mart have the
contest was not rendered to redeem
money to pay my bills. If not paid soon your
WEST MAPLE GROVE.
party of such invited guests being pres­ hole and dumped the mule in, while it the tickets. This is a fair and squad* nesday, from the cast where ho has
account will be placed tn a collector’s hands.
was still kicking and suffering terrible
been buying goods, look for his now ad
ent nt their lost meeting and hearing
match,
neither
party
being
willing
to
agony, and burned it while it was act­
n&lt; xt week.
it read from the minutes that the spell­
Fjne-weather for the 8CM»n.
ually alive, leaving its feet sticking draw, and Strank claims Bosworth to
•if A fine line of Teas, Coffees and spices
The annual fellowship meeting of
ing school was to be one of the events
J. Emory is repairing his house.
Jut received which I will sell cheap
out of the ground. The inhabitants to be the best man he Iim ever met in
the Christian -church, will be held the
of the evening, are now wondering
at AINSWORTH’S.
The roads are iu a muddy condition.________ ______
of that section will do themselves cred­ a wrestling contest. They both declare last Saturday in February, and a full
why the spell did not come off.
This winter has been quit© easy on
THE LAST CALL.
it by making an example of the perpe­ upon word and honor to be here march
attendance is desired.
fodder, so far.
NowlS vour time to secure bargain* at Wm
—Last Wednesday, Israel Cheesman. trator of this crime, that would be a 116th, and finish the match. The Sun­
A. D. Jarrard has given up Lis idea
People have gave up all hopes of a. AyLswowhi’s. Prints at 4 cts pec yard,
of Maple Grove came to town bring­ warning to any who might afterwards field cornet band was present and furlx'si Cotton Flannels at 12J-.C, good fowling 7.
of going west, and will commence there being any sleighmg thia year.
ing a large amount of batter and other be tempted to^usc cruelty to dumb nished music for the occasion.
There were three dances and one de—
ktod of rtyrop. 7nd Mblaraea
about the middle of March, to run a
produce to barter for goods, and as he brutes.
road train again on the M. C. R. R.
bate on Friday night af last week, and
at AINSWOBTB’S.
was carrying a large basket containing
STMPATHY.
—The scholars in the McKelvey dis­
------- ■
■■■ ■" " •
W. E. Dodge, of Charlotte, has mov­ eveiy one a success.
nearly a hundred weight of batter trict, Maple Grove, have great sport
On
Saturday
at
last
week,
Dm.
P.
HOLLER
’
S
NASHVILLE
MILLS.
ed
to
this
village,
and
will
open
a
intoC. Ainsworth’s store, hr stepped with one of the farmers, who lives hard
The Journal regrets to learn that our
I hare succeeded in arranging
mill so
bowling alley in the basement of Tate's Young and Adams hold a council over
■with his well leg. (the other being a
by. Betimes they are inclined to walk brilliant and enthumostic editorial
friend Ohio Strong, of the Nashyille block, as soon ns the rooms can l&gt;o pot Mn, H.11, who ha. bean daoproiui,
wooden one) on the end of the raised
across the corner of hib field, on their News, has been obliged to go to the
Rick.
and stibo same time make better ycilds and
platform just off the walk in front of
in proper shape.
way home, but no sooner do they step Battle Creek Sanitarium for the benefit
Milon Andrew. h» Jn.i recoved
the store, and the plank being old. and
The Christian eburen society will hold
fooVon the forbidden pasture lot where ot his impaired health. His is un­
not supported at the end, broke, letting cattle have run all winter, than a doubtedly a case of overwork for he is a post office s6cinl at the residence of from a sttvere sickness, caused by vac- all who wish It, and can give rod wheat tioar
not
one
of
the
kind
who
will
rust
out.
cinnatioli.Almost
every every one that for 0x1 whqat.
Mr. and Mrs. James Fleming, Wednes­
him fall with his leg through the hole.
ghostly form with red shirt pierces the —Eaton Ilapids Journal.
day evening, Feb. 32nd, all are cordial­ h« never been vaeeioaU,! Ixdore .r.
'Si
Mr. Cheeaman is a man weighing about
horizon and with cudgel in hand gives
Onio
Strong,
the
enterprising
prop
­
350 Ibe. and it is a wonder that his leg
ly invited to attend.
now doing «O.
wm givc red wheat flour for nloa cleanclawsou
chase. At noon the "big” boys fancy rietor of the Nashville News, is ill and
P
eter
.
was nqt broken.
Chas.
Marshal),
of
Hickory
Corners,
when the ghost is near that there is n has gone to Battle Creek to take a bath
Here’s hoping it won’t kill him.—De­ is visiting his sister, Mrs. A. Beebe. Mr.
—Nashville has not been visited rabbit bidden under a hay stack near troit Eveniug Newt.
Jons Nt. Roe.
Marshall is a deaf mute, yet can read
often daring the past winter by trav­ the corner and proceed to'scare him
Orno Strong has taken quarters at and write with ease, and bis commun­ COMMON COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS
eling dramatic organizatioDS,and home hence. It is no sooner attempted, than the Battle Creek Sanitarian for the
ication
is
all
did
with
pencil
and
paper.
talent has aspired to fill the. wants of th© ghostgives lively chase, and it is benefit of his health. Onio has Jone
Council Rooms,
&gt;
per lb. Liberal discounts on large I
At the jug opening at the Baptist
the public, and give them a good en­ hugh sport to see the boys while dodg- some very hard work, and be begins to
Nashvills, reb. 14, 1881 (
ft will pay you to call Mure you buy.
realize it. — Vermontville Hawk.
church last Monday evening the ex­
tertainment. The Nashville dramatici ing the missiles hurled at them, and
Regular meeting.
Our friend Strong, of the Nashville ercises were interesting, ami upon
club has produced one drama, and won eluding the grasp of the ghost, still Newt, one of the most enterprising
Present, Young, Pre*Went: Harber. Boston,
Knshvllle Market!.
the highest approbation from the pub­ keep on the hunt for the coveted rab- country publishers in Michigan, is ser­ opening the jugs they were found to Cook, DidSnson, Demaray and Rcynoldr.
contain $9.00. The admittance fees tnutaM, Absent, none,
Wlwi.per m
lic. It is now proposed to organize a&gt; bit When a man gets so mean that iously ill.—Gratu&amp;edge Jndejwndent.
Minutes of last meeting read axxi on motion o*t», par
Editor Strong &lt;n the Nashville Newt collected at the door amounted to &gt;18.
dramatic club number &gt;o, althoght it; hardened steel will not cut his finger
Corn .per
jm
The News has received from A. W. approved.
will be A No. 1 in every respect, and and toe nails, the most refined Shef- has gone to the Battle Creek Sanita­
rium for treatment. Wo trust hi« ill­
The account of W. H. Burgess for 111.83 Poutow,
place and interesting drama on the' field shears will not ent his hair, will ness will not bo of long duration.— Tonrgee, the maiden copy of Oar Con­
tinent, am on th ly magazine, devoted to
boards in a few weeks.
There is tal­ fight for the possession shot on his Haetinge Democrat.
and nays as follows:
on t enough here for both societies, premises, will not allow school childOrno Strong, the lively, hardworking Art and Literature. Helen Campbell,
without either infringing upon the। ren to walk on his fields near the fence young editor of the Nashville (Born’ E. P. Roe, Mrs. Alexander, Max Adder, Demon,j- and Reynolds. Nays, none.
county)
N
ews, is at the Battle Creek
rights of the othsr, and we hope by where cattle run, he will lay awake
and other noted writers will be regular
Ou motion council adjourned.
recover lost; heath.
sanitarium to recc
*—IL. All
nights to think of mean tricks to play work and no play is what is the matter contributors to this interesting month­
Fmank McDzirar,
W. H, Touxo,
od his neighbors.
ly.
with him.—banting Republiean.
Clerk,
President.

�“ I do not believe that it .
her,” I answered. impatiently
was tired of Tom’s oonjecturai about
the owner of that bracelet. I had heard

A PRIHCE88.

m mixht be her own.

.

Ju»«! tn her haughty bosom
Tk*rc surxetl a wUd unit-.,
y«x a woman’s heart, be R slave’s or queen's,
J* a troublesome thing at best.

What &lt;Ud a kingdom matter.
When a plume anil vildlnriy air.
And a laughing
and » stalwart form.
Had brought her son! despair?
She loved beneath tier station;
In *ptte of birth and pride.
For on* lond glance from a •oKUcr’s eyo
She would have gladly died.
uecaawMiwr comunuu:
B&gt;n he did not dream of lifting his eyes
To tho Princess of tho land.
He wooed a peasant maiden.
Who oomt-time. sighed: “Ah.mel
If I were only a Prinoeae grand,
How happy 1 would bo F*
t a peasant,

’“htht

&gt;

-

(despair. •

THE STORY OF A MORTAR-BED.

^window.
It overlooks a very quiet
street, but ever since I have been kept
from going about bv this wretched
t ’ sprain in my ankle, I have found much
'
to interest ine in the street in front,
t
Ever wince they began the building iqst
across the way J have been absorbed in
watching its progress, to the neglect of
my needle-work, and even the new
books which Tom brought me to read.
I have taken such delight in tho laying
of the brick wall, of seeing it grow day
by day till it reached its height and was
- crowned by a cornice.
It suggested to
me many ideas about life which per-haps would be laughed at as the fancies
of an old woman.
I have been anxious from the first that
the houses‘would be a success, for Tom
Neale was the architect and Tom was
my favorite nephew and the finest fellaw that ever cheered A lonely old worn
an.
HD father has been so skeptical
about Tom’k success as an architect that
he hesitated about using his plans for
the new row he was to build; but he
finally decided to give the boy a chance,
and, in my opinion, the result is satis­
factory. One of the houses is Tom’s,
and he goes over it with great interest
every morning just before paving me
Ms.dally visit. Turn is a thoughtful boy
* and doesn’t neglect me.
One day, when they began the plas* taring, I watched the men all day as
they worked.
Some were sifting the
■’ M . sand which was dumped there by some
Kuh* carts that were hacked up and un• jfiMfaed and then driven away for an-•-ethi r load. The limo had seethed and
, . bubbled in a long white box, spattering
V far over tho aides, and after this was all
’ ‘ over they lifted the little gate in tho end
.. of the b &gt;x and the white stream ran in­
to a betMof clean, cool sand ; then the
men took their shovels and covered this
f soft little lake with a thick layer of sand
till it might have passed itseff off for a
solid bank of the real article, and. the
day’s work being done, the men took
their dinner-pails and went home.
the time I had finished my tea
and taken my seat at the window again
it was quite dark, though I could still
see the figures uf the passe-s-by in the
dim light. My attention was attracted
the figure of a woman on the other
e of the street. She was in evident
haste. Tho walk was entirely block­
aded by the building materials, and as
the streets were covered with mud I
watched her with idle curiosity to m-c
what she would do. She hesitated for
a moment and then placed one foot cau­
tiously on one of the sand banks that
finnked that treacherous bod, and find­
ing it firm hurried forward.
A few
ateps and she slipped and went down in
the slimy mass. As she fell her arm
Btruek sgninst the board en which a
bntern wan hung. Its light gave me a
glimpse of her face. It was haggard,
but still young. She caught the board
as she struck it, and regained her foot­
’ ing. 1 threw up my window, calling at
t tiie same time to Jane to go to the girl’s
’ assistance; but, seeing that she was ob­
served, the stranger plunged into the
muddy road ana was soon lost in tho
darkness.
The next morning when Tom came
in I saw that he was quite excited, and
without waiting for any greeting he at
on co showed me a bracelet he had
just faund. Where did I suppose he
found it?
In the mortar.
Alter the
bud-carriers had emptied their hods he
himself happening to be there saw
something shining, and fished thin
bracelet out of the mas*. I examined it
•oriou.-dy. It was an old pattern. Two
heavy wire* of unpolished gold, twisted
together, the ends bent into a hook and
050, and on the inside a small letter L
«n graved.
It did not occur to me at first to con­
nect this bracelet with the little incident
of the night before, but in a few minutes
it flaahed upon me, and with strange
perversity I did not mention it to Tom.
Be was already inclined to weave some
romance about the affair, and I was not
going to give him material for any such
aon**nre; so I advised him tn advertise
it. He finaUy consented, though I could
aec he baa some wild idea about find­
ing the owner without such aid.
A
week’s advertising brought no response,
and at the end of that time Tom took
me down to the neatest point on the
coast to get a breath of fresn air.
We
had nut been there twenty-four hours
when he rushed into my room, shooting

a

you go and restore it to her?”
Tom was hurt at mv lack of inter­
est, and went down to look at the regis­
ter to find if her initials agreed w ilh
those on the bracelet
He returned
somewhat crestfallen. The names were
registered, “Mrs. John Carey,” “Miss
Helen II. Carey.” Though he was puz­
zled be was not convinced.
Now, I am an old woman, and
ought to be past any romantic follies,
but I determined to bobble out on the
porch and see this young woman for
myself. In view of what occurred the
night before the bracelet was found, I
felt confident of being able to tel! at a
glance if Miss Helen H. Carey was the
young woman who bad fallen into Tom’s
mortar-bed about two weeks before, and
then lost the article which had cmised
Tom so much speculation; so I told
him that I *vzould like to see her. The
following afternoon I went out, sup­
ported by his strong arm. The young
lady and her mother were there, sitting
a little apart from the others, and I saw
at once tnat she was very pretty, with
eyes and hair of the same shade of hazel
and a fresh pink color in her face: but
I alsoeaw at once that she was not the
girl that had fallen into the mortar, and
consequently the bracelet wm npt hers,
although its undeniable counterpart was
on her arm. - My curiosity was not quite
satisfied when I turned away; and after
that day T. made many visits to tho
porch where ovenrthing was so bright
and pleasrjit, and I noticed that a Bad­
ness hung oyor the Carey’s—a gloom
that they did' not seem able to dispel.
They were unnaturally quiet, especially
Helen, and I longed to see her enjoying
herself with the other ypung folks; but
she seldom left her motlier’s side, and
they both seemed oppressed by some
sorrow. Now and then Helen chatted
with Tom, and once or twice had gone
down to the beach with him when I
was talking with her mother. During
one of these strolls Tom had spoken in
a careless way of the old bracelet she
wore. “ It w something quite out of the
usual line,” he had said, and she hud
explained that it was one of a pair that
was made from gold that her brother
now dead had brought from the mines.
“ Have you lost the other,” Tom had
blurted out in his eagerness, and she
had Hushed and trembled and had asked
him to take her to the house and had
made him no answer at all.
I was
much perplexed when Tom told me this
and I feared that this girl was involved
in some painful mystery, and as I was
afraid Tom was getting too much inter­
ested in the girl, I told him that he
ought to show her the bracelet aud ask
her if it were hers.
He assented, but
&lt;lid not like to ask her before her moth­
er or all those people on the porch; bo
I, like a deceitful old woman, agreed to
entice her into my room—she had sev­
eral Limas stopped and chatted with me
—and tho next afternoon as she passed
my d(K&gt;r I called to her to come in. She
was not unwilling, and after a fuW mo­
ments Tom Neale came whistling along
the hall and stopped at my door.
“Why!
Didn’t you go “ailing?” I
aske&lt;i deceitfully.
“Too calm,” answered Tom as he
lounged in and closed the door after
him.
The way in which we two conspirators
managed io bring nbo_t a discussion of
jewelry was really diplomatic^
“ Will you Jet Aunt Marcy see that
bracelet vou wear? It is such a curious
one,” saul Tom to Helen Carey.
“Why!” I exclaimed in fraudulkul
surprise.
•* Lt is exactly like the one
you found, Tom. Let. mo see it.”
He took the trinket from bi-** pocket,
and then I looked at Helen Carey. She
had grown white to her lips, aud when
she saw the braclet on Tom’s hand, she
gave a wild scream and fell down on the
door.

Well, I hope this excitement is about
over. Here I am in my bed again, with
a good prospect of staying a month or
more, and my nerves all unstrung. It
serves me right for trying to humor
anything so foolish as Tom’s whim
about that wretched bracelet. The la^t
thing I remember when my ankle
turned again wm that Tom was bend­
ing over Helen Carey, calling her every
endearing term that his silly brain could
invent, while his poor old aunt, unno­
ticed and uncared for, was fainting from
pain. I would never have believed it of
Tom, and I told him so when he came
in to explain it all to me.
It seems that i^wasn’t Helen’s brace­
let after al!,.bulbelonged to her sister,
who ha, been insane ever since last win­
ter, when her lover was drowned, and
who escaped from the asylum over a
month ago and had not 'been traced.
She had worn this bracelet at the time
of her escape, and was without doubt
the young woman whom I saw deliber­
ately walk into the mortar-bed.
I
thought she was crazy at the time. I
told Tom all about it this morning, and
that I knew all the time that the brace­
let wasn't Helen’s, and he left me to
cool off his indignation. They have
since been in my room asking me so
many questions about the girl (which
way she went and how she looked) that
I am nearly crazy myself. Tom has
been Bending telegrams to Mrs. Carey's
husband all the morning and you would
think he was one of the family.
I thought I should never take up this
subject again, but I must express my
surprise. Tom and Helen Carey ara
actually engaged. They found her sis­
ter through the finding of the bracelet,
they said. Much help that would have
been if I hadn’t been sitting al this very
window to see the whole thing. I was
the only person who was able to furnish
any facte.—Church Union.

—John H. Surratt is engaged a. a
clerk on the wharf in the freight depart­
ment of the Norfolk Steamboat Companv, generally called the “ Old Do­
whom’’’ I demanded, seeing ’ mi mon Tine.”

—Thirty tbunssand shop girls are try­
ing tn live in Boston.

One Dollar

failures from some cause
_
and told her
prevent, leading one to believe more that his* eon had been chased from
The case of Mr#. Edward Myer#, of Roodnut,
firmly than aver in the Innate depravity school and had burst into the bouse out
A YEAR
of inanimate matter. Indeed, this is a of breath and with a red face, and if it N. T., furnishes an apt Illustration ot woman's
doctrine that impresses iteelf with pain­ ocwirred again be should remove him power of endurance. This lady had. Iieen treat­
ful distinctness on the womoli who Sees from the school. He said it wm rather ed for months tn the usual way for Erysipelas
her carefully-prepared custard separate hard upon his child, as he was not al­ of the hand, without benefit. Not * until her
into curds and whey at the moment lowed to retaliate in any way. The boy hand had become a mass of putrified flesh did
when it ought io attain perfection; or had with great forethought concealed abe turn to Dr. Kennedy, proprietor of the Fav­
I.EDO EK. Chl«&lt;o.
the jelly that should stand proudly erect, from bis father that be had given the orite Remedy, for help.
■
clear as crystal, lying limp and muddy children any occasion to run after him,
He at once Informed her that It was impossi­
BEAUTIFUL ORGAN the “MOZART.” N«w
in ite mold. Happy the patient that hM and also said that he had reported them ble to save thtf hand— It must be amputated
StyX No, 13D0M. n stop.. 11&gt; full art *CteMsa
x&gt;ru-e rerd., SOLID WALK VT, Rig. )y Polished
3 nurse that rises to the occasion and to the teacher, 3 statement which she She received this terribJc tatelUgeoce qnictly,
iw. New aud valuable improv.axrnl» &gt;&gt;M»ddsdtries until ebe does succeed.
characterized m untrue. The question declined to take ether, stipulating merely to
When fresh eggs are to be had they naturally arose in her mind whether that hold her husband's hand during the operatic*.,
are 3 great resource. They can be pre­ boy would not stand a better chance to and underwent the painful process without
pared
and
I'
— ~ in ~so many different ways, —
— gn»w
grow iuw
into u
a luauij
manly man
mail u
if uu
he ui
had been moving a muscle or uttering a groan. Dr.
are usually liked and are eaten with ral-- allowed to act
upon
nt “
“ impulses a little Kenndy then gave Favorite Remedy freely to
talk
__
... .___ ‘
.1__ * I____
ish. In-dropping eggs I.
it is hometimoe more
and to turn on those boys and say cleanse the bftlod and prevent the return of the every M Jay*, very
■MMMHJh VW.M
difficult to preserve the form.
Little “I’m not afraid of you, and if you hit
disease, and Mrs, Myers now lives and rejoices
wire strainers are sold for the purpose me I shall very likely hit you real hard,”
call upon DANI Kb F BEATTY,W»*’b!B|fU&gt;a. N.J
in her great deliverance.
which are fery useful. When one is rather than to be counseled to run like a
“Favorite Remedy” is fast becoming a trust­
not at hand a small half teaspoonful of coward, and then retaliate in the most
vinegar added to the water helps to set forcible way possible by telling his ed. household friend in all- cases of Female
the egg. The water most be boiling at father, and na^e him make so serious Weakness and diseases of. the blood. One doithe moment the egg is put in, and a and important a matter of it. (1 pur­ ra bottle. Your drngjlst has it.
square of hot buttered toast ready to re­ posely leave out of the question the fact
ceive it when it is taken out. A simple that the punishment would really fall
p
omelette is made with an egg beaten upon the teacher.) As our most en­
very light, a dessertspoonful of flour, lightened physicians now give great op­
the third of a cup of milk, and a little portunity for nature to’ effect cures, so
salt. Grated ham may bo added if de­ in endeavoring to help oar children to
sired, or fresh parsley shredded fine, or health of mind, and what we will call
spice. The omelette is poured into a health of heart, it would be well many
hot pan with a little batter melted in the times for us to lessen our doses of max­
bottom.
It is unwise for an amateur ims and precepts, and let nature have a
cook to attempt to toss an -omelette. chance to do her work. A healthy, act­
When one side is nicely browned fold it ive boy will do a great many things he
ovtr in tho shape of a half-moon, and ought not to before he arrives at man’s
serve on a hot aish.
estate, and what ought to concern us
It is asserted that gelatine contains most, I think, is not so much the act in
absolutely no nutriment; so, however itself, but*the disposition of which it is
tempting the jelly made from it may the outcome.— Cor. N. Y. Post.
look, it u practically useless except as a
vehicle for wine or nourishing sub­
stances. A nourishing jelly is made Indian Criminals on Their Way to Ba*
kota for Trial.
from rice by boiling a quarter of a pound
of rice-flour with sufficient sugar to
Deputy United States Marshal Charles
sweeten it, and a slice of lemon or other
A cure guaranteed.
flavoring, with a quart of water, until A. Gray, of Dakota, passed through St.
the whole becomes a glutinous mass. Paul yesterday, en route for Yankton,
The jelly is then strained into u mold. having in charge Brave Bear, 3 jietty
HeJ’-h andStfcEsth Retear Cssr Used.
Jauno mange is a pleasant change from chief of the Yanktonnais tribe of Sioux,
blanc mange, of which most convales­ who is as thorough-faced a villain as
cents have a surfeit in the earlier stages ever scalped ft prostrate body or stole aj
of their recovery. To make it, boil half rival’s wife, and ho is particularly ex-1
an ounce of gelatine in a little more pert in the latter accomplishment,by the
ruarantre tlx
than half a pint of water, strain it and way. Tho doughty Sioux was shackled
add tho juice, with a small part of the and hand-cuffed, and the precautions
grated rind of an orange, a tablespoon­ were wisely taken, for he is noted as
ful of sherry,the yelks of two eggs beaten much for his escapes as his murders.
JOHN
and strained, with sugar to taste. Stir The writer has known him for some
it over a gentle fire until it just boils ; years, and is constrained to admit that
he knows of nothing to his credit.
His
then strain into a shape.
Ixjmon Htiongtt is very light and deli­ appearance is singularly in his favor, as I
cate. Nothing that contains the whites his features are regular and his smile
of eggs must be looked upon as unim­ pleasant; but give nim a taste of liquor
'J’ar^oiut’ I’arffutlrr-]‘&lt;lu u:ake Nirr Uld i
portant in an Invalid’s bill of fare. It is or a scent of blood and he becomes a
•■'..I
Etui will
11ill coinj-lcUty
mir.t’Ictl’I V rbaniro
rl.Ern.it die
I in* bUxuliU
it.
■I. r.tid
mado with half a pint of water in which devil incarnate. He was wont to boast,
is dissolved half an ounce of gelatine, when counting his coups in the dances
and a quarter of a pound of sugar, with of his tribe al Standing Rock, of having
the juice of one large lemon, or two exterminated a family at St. Joseph,
small ones. The whites of two eggs Pembina County, and would gloat over
beaten to a stiff froth aro stirred in last. the neatness and dispatch with which he
It must come scarcelv to a boil and bo buried his knife in the bodies of his vic­
put to cool in the dish in which it is to tims, three oi whom, were children.
bo served. Snow jelly has a refreshing He speaks a little English—that is, he
sound in warm weather, when even a sug­ will do so when apart from all other
gestion &lt;»f coolness isgndeful. To make it Sioux—and told the writer one day,
take half of a small box of gelatine am! when he was in a confidential mood,
soak it in half a pint of cold water; add that he was naturally kind-hearted, but
one gill of boiling water, one cup of when ho had taken whisky, or when ex­
sugar, and the juice and grated peel of cited by battle, some wicked spirit took
two small lenlons. Pnt in a dish to cool,i possession of him and made nim irre­
and when stiff add the whites of two sponsibly savage. He was arrested for
eggs very lightly beaten, and beat the tiie St. Joseph murder, but broke jail
mixture well. Serve with 3 custard and ,joined his tribe at Standing Rock.
HAVE BEEN IMITATED,
201 So. Clark St.
CHICAGO, ILL.
” was afterward
rearrested by
around it mado with tno yelks of the , Ho
.
_ Capt.
t
And their excellent reputation in­
The l«t«t and mo«t wlentlfie In.’ltutloa tn th*
eggs and half a pint of milk. In sum- I Tom Custer, at Fort Lincoln, but again
Untted State*, lur the Cur. of Cbrooic tnd Prita!*
jured
by worthless imitations. Tho dl.caM^i.
mer it is advisable to make this dish the , escaped, and did not turn up for some
OAnorrhira. &lt;Jlc»,l nt lonx .landing. Stric­
t'ublic aro cautioned against buy- ture, Orehltl., Rapture, dleeaire of the .kin and
day before it is desired to use it.
time.
In 1877 Lieut. Kislingbury pul
. mercurial
throat etc .aicly and private­
The use of sago is not as g. neral in | him in the guard-house at Fort Yates,
ms Plasters having similar sound­ bonee
ly treated. SPERMATCURIKKA. s, inal' Debility
this country as it is in England. If its 1 but he again got away, and this time, it
ettflering from weaking names. Sco that thn word Speedily e*rrd. Toaac
ne««. cauied b) Imprudence, aecret habit*, exec**merits were better known it would l&gt;o is presumed, joined the hostile*.
But
C A-P-C I-N-E is correctly spalled. ««. producing Plmptc* on the fa.-e. ruah ot blood to
more popular. Put a dessert spoonful ; there wasn't grub enough for him there,
the head. confu»l»in of idea*, headache, defective
of sago into three-quarters of a pint of j and it is represented he came near bavmemory. lo»a of sexual power, night luaae*, avet*
•mu to *ocicty. •lceple»»i&gt;&lt;-»». t&gt;er»oo* proatrw
cold milk, and let simmer gently for an in?
ing the top of his bead
head blown off bv
by the
lion, general debility ant! ‘.udlgeatlaa, rendering
hour and a tpiarter, stirring frequently; husband of a squaw he tried to steal, so
marriage Improper, aafely cured. We eaar. ale*
c*rr« in Sil i'aaea we undertake, no need to aufiel
skim it as it approaches ^piling, and he hied to fresh fields and pastures new,
sweeten with a dessertspoonful of sugar. and added to his record by the murder
Aro tho only improvement ever and the whole ayaum 1. nouri-hed can*Ina tho
It may be flavored with nutmeg if the of a man named Johnson, at Fort Sully,
train and nervea to regain th«ir vi^or. Cormpoomado in Piasters.
taste is lilnd.
shooting the noor fellow u he stood in
Cent rconfldcntlal. Full directions sent with ths
Tapioca can boast more friends, and the door of hi's shack. Not many months
Ono is worth more than a dozen wwdlclnee. Address as abovs.
makes a delicious dish. Put a large ago he returned to the vicinity of Stand­
of any other kind.
tablespoonful to soak over night; boil a ing Rock, and Louis Agard, Ilenry Mar­
#500 Renard!
Will positively cure where other
pint of new milk the next morning, tin and other ranchmen, catching him
remedies will not oven relievo.
Bver complaint, dy.pep.ta. eick headache, isdlgsssweeten it, add the tapioca and tho yelks in the act of stealing horses, corralled
Uon,
eotMllpaUon
or costivenese we cannot cure
Prico 25 cents.
of two eggs well beaten; flavor with ex­ him.
Louis Agard snapped a pistol at
with Weel'e Ve«etabl« Liver Pills, when lbs dlr**.
ns are etriedv complied with. They are purely
tract ot vanilla, and put in a dish to his head six time.# but none of the eart­
Bowaro of cheap Plasters mado Ik
Vegetable, and never fail to rive satisfaction. Socool. Thea cover tho top with the ridges would explode—more’s the pity
with lead poisons.
.
whites of the eggs beaten stiff, with a —and after sober second thought the
SEABURYA JOHNSON,
Imitations. The ncu'ss mannfvetured only J. C.
little sugar and vanilla, and place in tho captors concluded to take him to Bis­
WEST A CO.. Th. PHI Makers," 181 and 19 W.
oven to brown slightly.—Elizabeth R. marck aud turn him over to the United
sraa kkmedy at last. pn«s6&lt;tZ
States authorities.
This they did, and
Scovil, in Christian Union.
MEAD'S Medicated CORN asd BUNION PLASTER.
he was recently put on trial at Fargo
for Johnson’s murder, but the Court de­
A Problem for Parents.
ciding that it had no jurisdiction.he will QEO. W. FRAXC1S.
The day on which your boy with his be tried in Yankton next month, at the
| T r II T O o'**10”!tor wtcbauiaal d.vto
“shining morning face” steps out of same term in which Crow Dog, mur­
LJ g I L U I \ «, medical, or other rotapoutxb
------- DEALER IN------tho door with a first reader under his derer of Spotted Tail, will be arraigned.
arm, and is transformed from a baby Brave Bear claims to be a son-in-law of
Fancy and Staple
and pet into a schoolboy, your relations Sitting Bull, which is probably fiction,
with the world are changed as in the though he may have borne such a rela­
twinkling of an jaye. A now class of tion for a time, as, when the writer
problems are thenceforward to be pre­ knew him, be had four wives, none of
sented for your solution. I confess that whom hail enjoyed the felicity of his
CONSISTING IN PART OF
I have found nothing in life so puzzling espousal more than 3 month. He has
os the complications which inow out of one Nemesis, whom be fears greatly, in SUGARS, TEAS,
the association of one small bey with
COFFEES. SPICES,
tho shape of a middle-aged Uncapapa
others. What is a mother to do when squaw, deserted by him for a bach of
SYRUPS, MOLASSES,
her six-year-old boy comes in with a ydunger brides, but unwilling meekly to
"TARCH. SOAP,
CRACKERS. CHEESE,
torn hat and flushed face, and explains accept the one-sided divorce and apt to
.trinl, ~n&gt; fldenctal. pries* low
BEST
NICKLE SOAP IN TOWN. mposdsAcr
by Baying, “ I have been fighting, mam­ make a large hole with a knife in his
tboss at any rslUiX- aenney.
SALMON,
ma. A boy hit me, and I hit back P” copper-colored hide if opportunity
Ws reO»r to OMklal. h&gt; the Pslsnl OSes. sw4
WHITE FISH,
Your theory may be that if a boy hits should serve.—8t. Paul Pioneer Preu.
TROUT,
him unjustly, he ought to hit back: bat,
MACKEREL,
like some other theories, it does not
'
HALIBUT,
—Tho daughter of tho War Governor
work exactly as it ought to in practice
IS THE TIME
.COD FISH,
of
South
Carolina,
Miss
Douschka
Pick
­
for it usually ends in the smaller boy
/
HERRING.
being severely worsted, whether he is ens, at her marriage, the other day, STEAM
COOKED OAT MEAL.
in the wrong or right. You aro afraid counted among her wedding presents
CROCKERY.
of developing a cowardly spirit .if you a aet ot elegant diamonds from the Czar
GLASS WARE,
tell him he must never hit back, and the of Russia. She was born in St. Peters­
LAMPS.
FLOWER POTS
policy of turning the other cheek when burg while her father represented the
United
States
at
that
court,
and
wae
one has l&gt;een smitten would never do
STONE WARE,
to be applied in the world the small boy given the favorite name of “tho em- OHIO
lives In. This question of belligerence, preM”—an endearing title of Russian TOBACCOS.
it seems to me, can noi wisely and suc­ derivation, which translated means “MtCIGARS,
Dounihka is now Mrs.
cessfully be generalized upon. There tle darling.”
PIPES,
________
is do one maxim you can lay down for Dugas. ________
TEA.
TRY OUR FIFTY-CENT -----a child's guidance; each case may need
—In Brazil some experiments have
to be dealt with in a peculiar way. I
was interested fn observing the effect of been tried by M. de Laoerda, showing
ty Remember we get no fancy pri
Laying down a maxim, not long ago,upon that permanganate of potash is an al­ cea, but eel! all goods as low a* the
aboy of seven years.
Ift Is the ton most certain antidote for the bite of lowest, (quality considered).
Respectfully,
of a minister, one of those who still find snake-;. M. do Laconia has not as yet
in Jonathan Edwards the true expound­ tried its efficiency on himself, but in the
CEO. W. FRANCIS.
Executed in fine style
er of their views. The child haa been cms of thirty dogs on whom he experi­
mented only two died under exoeptmnai
retaliate if a boy waa unkind or ugly; circumstances, and all whom he did not
he was to bear it without a word ot re­ treat with the injection of ngnnanganate
^ni^.“yddreHJu“°HXEB&amp; HIRE** « N. Date
proach.
Ila waa sent to a private of potash died in the usualVay.
AM^Thil*.

ssr,!

I a r k e r:$. H a irsKaJs a fi
Lc

lie

B7 S G1N (

NERVOUS DEBILITY

Beware

Fraud

BENSON’S
CAPCINE
PLASTERS Dispensary.

Benson’s Capcine
Porous Plasters

A

NO PATENT NO PAY.

I &amp; I L HI 0

GROCERIES B/7D

IHURT0RS

Oe glasbrille |Jews.

Plain and Artistic Job Printing

Diary Free

The Lowest Living Rate.

�Sdto^“khiturog^wth wd develop: he had an amaxing aptitude for serious
ment Well-fed stock look robust and learning, and bis father had an equally
ESkr Th', p^ £t£X.to£ mtomtaj d-mmimriton UmJ b. AouM and faded cheeks of age often conic* when the
m«nteJt &lt;»n&gt;*i,P*ud thurefon l^oomo 1"*™- 1 &gt;'• bur P»«l din&gt;« 1™“ cnjnvniciit of lite should be at Its height. . Dr.
David Kennedy's ".Favorite Remedy ” turns
this kind of old age into youth again. Head­
ache, pains In the limix, troubles of the liver,
bowels, or kidneys, vanish before it, and fee­
ble women become like rollckiog school boys
aud girls .nice more. One dollar a bottle,
. STATIONS.
therefore out ®f *11 proportion. They begruj
iu hU
year. h*t ing .e-ther at vour Druggists or from the doctor,
have not had sufficient food to supply «ad by th*, time a
^T,pe*k ™ at Rondout, N. T.
Sash; Doors, Blinds. Jeffers n Nails. Glasr*. Puiii, Piiiids,
the natural waatc of the body, and to thors. some of which ho avows it w*g
Bl ushes' Et&lt;-. Castor. Sperm, Golden,
It coats Mr. Beecher S3,(XX&gt; a year for life In- Oils, Varnishes, C«
: r:
1&amp;40
replenish the blood with firing matter, imjiossible to understand. As to En­
Black, Linsee&lt;i,:md Kerosene O K .
. to be depoutod in the remotest parts of glish Yuadingrat,that mature age he had
already
gone
through
a,
whole
historical
The aymptotas of Itching Piles are mou-tlrc
Shovels, Spades..i^‘*’ks. Hc-es-. Smiths. Apple Parer-, Form
the body to nourish and invigorate its
i 47
Varmooii
prcspiration, Intense itching. must at night
afi88
growth into full-matured form. - Colts library, including Robertson, Hume. like
seems aa if pin worms were crawling hi or Belle, Fence W re, Well mid C stern Pumps. Wood and Ittm,- .
half-starved when young, grow up with Gibbon, some volumes of Rollin, Bur­ about the rectum . The moro you Scratch the
lank bodies, long legs, narrow chests, net, Watson, and Hooke. Miliaria His­ worse they, itch, very distressing. The private Pipe, Points, Cylinders Lead Pipe. Sotk-r &amp;c.
and deformed quarters.'— Cor. National ■ torical View of the English Government; parts a re often aHrx-ted. Dr. Swayne's Oint­
gent foil
lAiK-Sloclt Journal.
t
j and much more. But was he a child ment I* life nfost effective remedy extant for
W &gt;• - .
। at all? And who could have chatted Hits tormenting complaint. Gives rest at night
i and.playod with a seven-year-old wire­ without Uifel desire to scratch. Alt.) has on
STATIONS.
equal in quickly eradicating Tetter, Itch, Salt
- ; A Perfect Cup of Coffee.
. J acre? Five-year-old scholars of a very- Rlietime, ErvaipcUs, Barbers' Itch, Pimples,
The Lightest Rtbiniug and ’ i.»: Ihirnhk- Machine in use.
I different sort are to be found peopling all Scaly, Crusty, Itchy Skin Eruptions. Here
trull.
CoaMi.th«aMi^otE*^^;^-ui,-ones
6n^.’ gallery
„||Orr ln
uy of the is the proof, “Certainly tire best remedy erer
I shall aim to keep n ne blit fir. t -h-s goods, a.ud sell th-m •
7,- I the ulittle
in any
pltality--the
climax
of
the
visit.
Ono
,____ ______
u
r____
----- - r,
---------------~~~ ~
, boarding
schools."
Compulsory ...i
education used in my practice,” Dr. Cotton* Woodstock, at jt small profit.
E
___ ________.__ *
Cail
and
see
me
when
heeding
hardw
ire.
TOognltoA, on entering, th. toondol the 'snatches these pinafored mites
mite, from
from Vt.. “troubled withItch!ng Piles for over twen­
years. It cared me completely,” L. B. Messer
coffee mortar; for in every propwiy their mud-pies and doorstep convoca- ty
Enfield, Me. .Sent for 50 eta (in 3 ct. stamps)
regulated household in the East Ute oof- tinnt
£ lg
3Mkrille
even though 8 boxes. 31.25, By Dr. Swaypc &amp; Son. PhUad’n
tions. Tho
There
is. a
a klndoMa
kindness,. qyen
•fee « not ground, but pounded to an a hard kindness, in thus gathering them Pa. Sold by all druggists.
’
•
impalpable powder, having been roasted . in out ot tho city by-streets, or. placing
I2:in
Some people have a Bunday soul which they
that morning, each day its provision, |1 _
ifcrjj jrjas
thorn for the test hours of tho, day in screw on in due time, and take off again every
Md pounded U&gt;. moment U 6 needed.
^.d' br wirm .inter li'reA
And no one who hu not drunk it there ta
lor i,ir ^o^ter freedom Mouilay morning.
ted tho. c»n preeume to judge ot the u y,, (ou^ro( clQMt unhenllby room,
HIS LAST DOSE,
beverage.
1 with cheerless hearths in winter. But Saida Bullerer from kidney trouble*, .when
Trank and Canids Southern Hallways.
■
— -JUST IN AT^—
■
s- ;
K. C. BROWN,
II. B. UCDTARB.
In England we roast it till it bbbok. how
110W reglmcn and tho awful asked tb trvKiduey Wort. “I’ll trv It but It
will
be
tny
lost
d&lt;»&lt;-. Tbc man got well, and is
grind it*, we would owl* food, boihng hoi hu
Mtody ,nusi .tagger
It like IU*h for beer, ted when wedrtak the oourmre
of the.,
tehdUr, now recoiumendtag Hie rcuwxly to all.
courage of
------ wee
_
derangement of the stomach acts u;&gt;on
the bitter and unaromatic fluid which Think*of the whole alphabet rushing theWhen
kluncvs and liver Imaging disease and pain.
W. NISKF.RN, Attorney and Counsellor remains, say we hav'e taken our coffee. "~&gt;n them all at once, a confusion of Kidney Wurt iu Un tiue remedy. It removes
If no:. ;g h at once^hnd be happy.’
. at- Law, practices in all State Courts. Col­ The Eastern ooffee-drinktir knows all the M.droglyphics
n
ttis cause and cure* the dlsea.H-^ l.iaukl; very
and
of
disconnected
lection* promptly attended'to. Office over
grades of berry and preparation as a sounds, with the future prospect of be­ conccntraU'u, or dry uc^equally cHlcieutiy.—
Spaulding’* store, Hastings Mich.
silk merchant knows the quality of silk; ; ing expected to decipher pages where Am. Cultivator,
the caffeejee knows that to roast it a : the letters seem to unaccustomed eyes
“What!» that, motlier’.*'It U the Legislature 1
A. BIKBER, Hl.
shade beyond the point
my child- “What docs iVdo, mother!” "Itre­
—- where
-r-------ittoobreaks
small and cloee to be rightly seem
-crisply under the pestle
»tle is to spoil it,and Hoirlitde children over learn to read, peal* acta passed by the. last Legislature, my
'1IO M&lt;EO I» ATI II c
to I ' .'.l nil competition, and our
In this
when tho slow pulverizing is done^
each , is one of the greatest mysteries in the
-----------child.”
•&gt;
ib i &lt; !&lt;‘cted than ever before. It '
measure goes into its little copper ibrik, I world, as the‘almost natural familiarity
.
A PLEASANT SURPRISE.
receives its dore of boiling water, just of deciphering not .letters but the seconsists in pin t, *d
Office first door cast of Opera House, ami one of the tiny cups full rest* an instant
A friend was pleasantly surprised in trying
near residence on comer of Washington abd on the coals to restore the he.it lost in qucnce of ideas at a glance, is one of Rineharta Liver P&gt;il* totfnd them free from all
| its grandest wonders. Pity the liveSlate Streets, Nashville, Mich.
the ibrik, and is poured into the eggshell year-old scholars, then, in their stupen­ nausea or gripiug, and that only one was a
cup, and re it came to us, each cup in a dous difficulties and don’t keep their ■noht vfficieut cuiiiarttc.
— Of.; MOCK OF-------gold-cnameled holder.
The rule in quick-silver spirits too quiet, or hurry
A little Maine girl, on s cold day last week,
' those lands seems to be that few things their lessons too fust. Let them sing said: -‘It’s awful cold—ten degree* below
NEW DENTAL PARL.o'R. . arc worth doing, but these few are their tables and refresh them with the I Zion."
worth doing well, and there is no waste blithe ballad of tho Cock-sparrow, be­
IS FULL AND COP/.PLETE^
DRAIN AND NERVE.
I wish to make known to ttie dtlxens of ot life or fnaterial by over-haste—Pall fore passing on to give them their first
The Lii’bi st lirv oI Bhuwt Shawls in two counties
Nashville and vicinity that I have*- purchased Mall Gazette. ।-------------------------------------- I lesson in the great art of putting two
Wells' Heal th Rruewer, greatest remedy on
earth
for
im;«
tciMv,
leanness.
sexual
debility,
A
large
variety
ofRvady Made Cloaks; also CloaKings of alt
the practice of J. L. Sigsbec, and am pertnanimd two together.—Chambers' JoumaL «k&lt;'.,$l. at druggist*. Mich. Depot, JAMES E.
ncntly located over G. A. TRUMAN’S store. How an Ingenious Thief Obtained Pos­
shade- and qunlit'
DAVIS * CO-, Detroit Mich.
All kinds of,DENTAL WORK done, from the
session of a Pair of Diamonds.
Shrewdness That Saved a Newspaper.
ints. Au endleSH variety of Btank't*
300 Pivces
Judge Porter Is to be given s complimentary
simplest operation to the most difficult,—Arti­
The London Globe tells this story:
I
T^he recent suspension for six months
ficial Palates. Irregular natural teeth straigh­
Flannels.
. • ' •
|
tened, teeth extracted without pain for bU cl»;
The theater of Of6n (Buda-Pesth) was of the Goh», writes a correspondent at
one-half deducted when artificial work Is made tho scene of his debut, though this was St. Petersburg, would have brought a
nmI we are too busy to enumerate1
Customer
A WOMAN'S EXPERIENCE.
AB work warnuitod, advice in regard io tceU
made
in
a
I
geo
,
not
on
the
stage.
It
ap
­
loss of no less than 170,000 rubles to its
Mothers aud Daughters ahould foci alarmed furl her at present
free call and see me.
’
.
P. 8- Will do dental work for 8 cords of wood. pears that last week a certdin Hunga­ unfortunate editor, but, happily, pre­ when wcarlE. &gt; cut:-tantiv oppresses them. “If
rian Countess, well known for her riches cautionary measures had been taken in 1 am fretful from exhaustion' of vital powers
and the color is failing from niy face. Park.-rs
and beauty (the same spirited lady who time, and the authorities have been Ginger Tonic gives quick relief. It builds me
last year seconded her brother in a complexly tricked. Soon after the re­ upand drive .a«av jnin with wonderful cer­
WILLIAM JONES,
J EE A DURKEE,
duel), graced with her presence the per­ turn of. General Ernroth from his mis­ tainly. —Buffalo lady.
formance at the Arera, or summer sion in Bulgarin, one or two articles ap­
The “Eli Perktua” ci
theater. On one of her fair fingers my i peared in the Golos exposing, in cau­
lady wore two splendid diamond rings, tious and moderate language, the ab­
Health. Iiop- and happ
exactly like each other. During an surdity of shedding Russian blood fur the useuf Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable coni•&gt;entr’acte there presented himself in :ho sake of making Bulgaria free only jiotiud. It Ifrom «
her box a big fellow in gorgeous livery to hand her over a few months later to i-awti
to Mrs. Ly.”
Office on second (floor pf Buxton's new briek ' S
—six feet of tho finest flunkey- imagina­ the despotic rule of a Battenberg. Of hue, I.yun,
or pamphlets.
ble^ Quoth he, in finest Hungarian, course, the General was angry, and
NASHVILLE, MICH.
“My mivtross, Princess P----- , has sent thanks to the influence he enjoys in
-Ship
it
to
Australia.
Bebv
are a fcwof eor Barpins io D .tl E_4atc
mo to beg of your ladyship the loan of high places, easily secured the sup­
RATHBUN HOLME,
one fit your rings for five minutes. Her ; pression of the paper, and, when he had ’
-------- POK--------.
! bO teres in Maple Grove, 45.cleared, 22 acres
ALWAYS REFRESHING.
H»ghnes« has observed them from her no longer occasion to fear being an- ]
A. IL ANTISDEL, Piioputetob.
of Wheal, good Orchard, very fair Imldmgn, S
box- opposite', and is very anxious to swered, published a lillibustering let­
refreshing, bo matg xsl .-prlng near bouse. Price3,000. Payments -3
Grand lUiplds, Alloli.
have one made after the pattern.” ter, in which he accused the Golos ot j
circulating
“
impudent
anti
unfounded
[
Without
an
instant
’
s
hesitation,
the
This Room furnishes ths best accommoda­
A
Rhode
Island
l«b&gt;
swallowed
an
«.*»'
-!&lt;i acn-n, 3 nillm from Nashville, fair house
THE CHICAGO WEEKLY NEWS is
tions of any house tn the city for the tarns Countess handed a ring to “Jeemes,” lies.” But for once the bellicose Gen- ।
and h.’.ni, Nearly all improved. Price f 1,000.
money.
who bowed with ro^pertful dignity and era! had reckoned without his host, nnd diamond l&gt;c
fOucn-B, 3’^ milci from NoobvQle. If Mild
retired. The jierforniancc over, the two the man of the pen proved more cun­ thus becsr-&lt;
1 mm&gt;i&gt; Kill take 51,160.
great Indies met on the staircase, and ning than (he man of tlie sword. Among
Journalism. It stands concplouousamor.E
offerer—write
2b acres, in the village of Nashvillo. Must
Th.- b
QLEMEST SMITH,
the Countess begged her friend to keep the contributors to the Golos, Professor
I
reel,
Chicago,
tho metropolitan Journals of tho country bc~J«l lor wtiat it will bring - on account uf
Dr. C I!
'
the ring at her convenience. “What Modestoif has long occupied n^-.igh and for full 1
.
■ f
as a compiota Xewrpapcr. Its Telegraphic poor l:eaitii of present owner.
Attorney at Law
ring,my dear?” -Denouement! Tableau! honorabfe place, and some months ago50acres, 4 mile* from Nx-.hv.lk-; rawly al!
Service comprises all tho dispatches of tho
IKPOKTA5TTO TtUYELKRS,
The “powdered menial” was no flunkey he obtained tho necessary permission to
;
improved:
fair
butldlngsaud
m
all
a
good
bar
­
WestemAasodated Prea and tho National
Special inducement? are offered you by the
gam. Price $IJMX); part down.
. Ml
at all, but a thief, and the ring was establish a daily political paper. Tho
It will nay you to read their
.
. _
.
i.
■.
!w&lt; .• '■
gone. The police were informed of the permission, it is generally Reported, BurllngUurlloute,
advcrtfecmenta to be found elsewhere in tide
service of Special Telognuns from all Im- bargain* in town. Price S3J0.
impudent trick;. Justice seemed to have was applied for in consequence of a.
portant potato. An a X/irrpaper It has no
Houseaxul Lot, on State street, pnev I2M,
i
overtaken tho culprit in a vc^1 few fear that beiore long the Golos might
—
JAMES A. SWEEZEY,
rapwlor. ItUIXDKrENXIKNTtal-oUUra,
.
” “
■
7,
strides, for next morning tho Countess, , got into trouble, and, therefore, no im-1
u“'
vrtiile stfll en robe-de-chamhre, received
.top, were taken to jtart the BBS. LTDIJk E. PIXKH1M, OF LUII, (USS.,
Attorney &amp;. Counsellor,
a letter informing her that the thief had new journal. But when the blow fell ,
LtobU.oroolortnC.uid.6-auUlyW.b„ sm,
t„,„w „„:
been caught and the ring found on his Professor Modestoff was ready, and
out fear or fkvor as to parties.
' | cedar and plentvof good water. For '«le at
person—“Only,” added the note, “tho within two days of tho suspension the c
It Is, In the fullest sense, a FAMILY ?70Q or will exchange for farm jin.]«-rty uouman stoutly denies the charge and de­ first number of the New GastUc was ®
PATER.* &amp;cli Im. oonuau torito 5N.rtrtBe.mUu u &lt;
jgLACKA BOX,
clares the ring to bo his own. To clear published. In form. type, political E
COMPLEXPAD STORIES, A SERIAL road leaving the village; all iuipr&gt;ivctfexc’i&gt;t A'/S
up all doubt, pray come at once to the opinions, .everything save the name, it , 2
STORY of absorbing interest, and a rich acres; the renrataing 8 acres g&lt;*»a V'ml-’r; U •
i ulico station, or send the duplicate is an exact reproduction of tho defunct *
to&lt;.tyoroo«Im-aB.u.-^io.s
'
ring by bearer.” To draw the second paper, aud is even printed in tho same &gt; ~
Art. Industriaa, Literature, Science, etc., wheHt on the groaiid; present owner engaged
,
ring from her finger and entrust it joy­ office. All SL Petersburg is laughing &gt;
etc. Its Market Quotations are complete, in other buaineH and will bc!1 for flU'.fifKJ. ♦!,fully to tfia^messenger—a fine fellow in at the sly trick, which, for sharp bold-1 *
Monunrem. Tmnhrtonei, Mantles, &amp;c„
.nri tw.
rnr*
&lt;AD down, balance on long time.
full police uniform—together with a ness. reminds us of Alphonse Karr, i n
^dtob.uUo.looon.
____
VMrttot no Pblll,. bi Pri.. W AHI -14
I»Tt«s»tiitUM. Mich.
It is unsurpassed u an Enterprising,
.
j.re ,t DURKEE.
handsome
for tho glorious nows, ' who, when his paper, Lu Guepe, was ! £
V-ypa and
nH2NMR.AT. FAW. i
was the work-bf a moment. Only when suppressed, continued to publish it with- **
my lady/an hour later, betook herself out any title at all.—Pall Mali Gazdlc.
ILY NEWSPAPER. Our special dabbing i
radiant to the Police station, to recover
terms bring it within tho reach of all.
E
her jewels, a slight mistake came to Lead Poisoning from the Use of CosSpecimen copies maybe seen at this offloa.
E
light. “Well, my rings? I could not
O'bend subscriptions to this office. ’
'
mcllre.
o
come myself the instant I got your let­
At the recent mooting of tho Ken­
ter.” “What letter, Madame?” Dotucky
State
Medical
Society,
Dr.
Hol
­
Is Dow nicely located nouement! Tableau -No. 2! The thief
land called attention to the fact that
had got them both.
tn h!s new buBdtag.
there are certain distinctions, though
rather vague symptoms of lead-poison­
A Brakeman’s Dream.
ing which, precede the more'marked
CROSS-CUT A CIHCUMR SAWS.
M Daring the heavy rush of freight on । symptoms of wrist-drops, colic, and
PINKHAM'S
the Erie Railway 1m; summer,” said a | load-line, and which, when moro care- ■
brakeman, “I had been on duty three ! fully studied, would sullice to lead to
VEGETABLE COMPOUND.
days and nighta, and was completely on earlier diagnosis. These symptoms
. Prices on ftow Work.
jaded out. Between Deposit and Han­ , he describes as headache, vertigo,
ChtioMW gumming and hanmwring all saws cock our train broke in two, and run­ : slight colicky paint, and constipation.
up to 40 inches, 10 cents per inch.
ning together again caused a wreck.
I He then gave notes of the case of a
40 inch, Gummed, S-MXl
Hammered, J3.00
woman who, two years ago,- began the
”
4.00
3.00
use of flake-white powder as a cos­
QerV.nalner.l-"
4.00
5.00
cred a proper distance I sat down on the metic. After exhibiting the symptoms
outside of the rail to wait. I was soon already mentioned, she had an attack
CtatnJfcr Nu'ifan. i&gt; JJ. Hot
asleep with my head leaning upon my 1 of melancholia of a month’s duration;
LMbpra. U*1U Tl
hand and my face turned up tue track. i afterwards of plumbum—double wrist­
ly.:‘tf.Lela04
A. C. BL’XTO.V.
I dreamed that I waa lying on the truck drop and the blue line on the gums—
I'Ike Matvei) tel
Prasidl I'-.rtor
and that the Atlantic express ran me were abruptly presented. Ho related | „
down, cutting off both my arms and in detail several similar cases, illiutrat- j CwrB;
•
-'.T—«no€ ing the esseutial jroiuts deduced from juki
start, the paper; that lead may be. introduced
us the into the system to tho extent of its
*
toxk. effects when applied on the skit.
bearing down
in the form of powder and lotions, aud
ilifying Aomo-

Bui IdeX-S

r i

’-------- ^A

—------

DOMESTIC SEWING- IMACHINE
FRANK C. EOI3El

New Fall Goods

KOCHER MOTHERS.

P

Physician and Surgeon.

Nev/ StYle Cashmeres, Plaids, Brocades, Etc.

OBSERVE.COMPARE, REFLECT, ACT!

KOCHER BROS.

REAL ESTATE AGENTS,

DffilTTISTS

NASHVILLE NEWS:

" $?.00 A YEAR-’O’TAG I'• sLU-'-n.

American and Foreign Marble

BUXTON

iSFOVJt
CONTINENT

LYDIA E.

ATTENTION! SAW MILL MEN!

FINK1IXW. VBUETAWJB COM-

LITERARY WEEKLY JOURNAL.

�rw§.
SATURDAY

FEB. 18,

1882.

iwtorod »XM00.

suffocated by as*

at Bulr.ur (BollnoH) and alsterouek (Usto-

law by which Cumurauwealth Attorneys may
require w-couda In a duel to tdkiify, which

THE NEWS.

State* were 131.
.
Ax emigrant car reacted Rawlins, Wy. T.,
a few daya ago which waa found to contain
wren well-developed ca*e« of small pox. It
wM'slde-trackcd, and the locality quaran­
tined.
»' '
Two CAXXOM ball* end a box of old Eugilah
pennies, relics of tte Revolutionary war, were
recently upearthed al New York on the site of
the new Produce Exchange.
William Haskixs, of Chicago, read a pa­
per a few evening* ago before the Illinois
State Microscopical Society, in which, bo
stateil that &lt;&gt;leon»Arg*rine and otiier butter
adulterations could be tetter shown by the
microscope than by chemical analyst.'
Tusreftort of tho Mississippi River Confmisekm, recently issued, shows that *144,003
had Ik-cd expended for salaries, expenses and
preliminary surveys, while 1110,000 more will
be required before June- 30, and *100,000 for
the succeeding fliical year. Tills is aside from
the *l,OJ0,0W appropriated for actual improvameuts. The Co mmission adheres to Its
-plan of revetments, and approximately esti­
mates the cost of the entire work at «35,0&amp;J,000. Captain Cordon bolds that it will reach
*30,001,0011
Th* Illinois Board of Railroad' and Ware­
house Commissioners have Issued a circular
letter to the railroad companies operating in
the State prohibiting them from charging ex­
tra for loadin'g. This is lu consequence of nu­
merous complaints from shippers by the Chi­
cago A Alton Rcilroad, which company was
exacting au extra charge of two cents per
bushel tor loading grain.
Albert Wilde, anarchltect, once a wealthy
e tlzeti of Cleveland, of late imprisoned a* n
vagrant at Kmuuu City, Lauged himself in his

William Jexximos, Superintendent of
Zton’a Co-operative MereanUle Institute, waa
elected Mayor of Salt Lake on the 13th. He is
Dots potyj^mlst

Forelam.
ment tv the OwatltnUon probltatlna U»
SraWngjAM Palliser. the Inventor of a
■uuuifaeture, sate, importation and exportaprojectile that bears tils name, i* dead.
tton at nlcobobc liquors and other poi**unou*
A Jcdob at Toronto bee ordered the extra­
beverages from and after tbc year ItoJ Mr.
. McCall offered resolution* directing the Bccrodition of Jaafer Miller, who escaped from the
Is for a reciprocity
Perfltcntlary at Pittsburgh la a shoe-box.
.
and^Bouth American
Ix the British House of Compsons on the
Sth Justin McCarthy, on behalf of tha Irish
memters, gave notice of a long amendment to
body consist
the address to ’he Throne, categorically con­
demning every point in the Government's Irish
policy, and urging andimucdiate return tocoustltulional methods.
Akol’t half the resident* of Port au Prince,
Hayti, are reported to be suffering from yel­
(or kwues by burglary. (in-, or
low fever, and a rigid quarantine is enforce !.
Dtnuxo the past, year Mr. W. E. Forster,
The consideration of the Apportionment bill
Secretary of State for Ireland, received 44&gt;0
waa thru resumed. Mr. Mills submitting »n
threatening letters from Irish petriots.
.
mueodmeat fixing the number of KcprescntaA DTXAMITB explosion In the Ariberg tun­
tlvrs At :»7. Tbc Bberman Thnx-ix_-rocnL
Funding bill was taken fn.m the Speaker's
nel recently killed several workmen.
tabieaud referred to the Ways and MoatM
Ixtxlugxxcx ba* been received in London
Oununittec. Bulogbw wen- pronounced upon
the late Hnprearntallve O’Coanor, af South
that Herat, in Afghanistan, Is In a condition
Carnllua, sad the usual reaolutluns were
of revolt caused by the Governors refusing to
vacate bis post and accept the Governorship of
son tho 9th tbc Wil to promote
Candahar. The Ameer has, it la reported, re­
iftbo Lifc-Bwvjag Mrvice, with
taliated by beheading the Governor’s brother.
erreHnTSn^adriiUiinal station­
Bills were Introduced: By Mr.
Tobix, the Fenian lately on trial at Leeds.
a __
bridge
octoas the Misaourt
Eng., Los been sentenced to seven yehrs’ peas;
1
fcrvitude
It is announced that the Spanish Govern
mtion by Mr. Harris to appoint Neil 8. Brown.
Jr_ of TenoCTWe, to p-Ttorm thr&gt; duties of
ment has resolved to prohibit the propose !
Chief Clerk of the Senate, while tho present
pilgrimage to Rome if it assume any other
form than a religious dernonstralioa.
' pro-tem. Daria voted aye. with lb&lt;- Democrats,
The death of Berthold Auerbach, the dis­
■ and Mr. Brown 4G*.) no. with tho Republicans.
tinguished German novelist. Is announced Mr. Mohoue also voted no, with the RepublicTubke outlaws tn New Mexico, who had for
ana. The reuydndcr of Un- day wk* occupied In
LouI&amp;Achabd, a London East India mer­
eulogies u non the late Hcpresentatlro U’Con- some time been robbing and wounding travel­ chant, failed on the Ulli for »l,0&gt;»,000.
Dqr.uf South Carolina... A bill was Introduced ers at a point 136 miles west of AlbU iUerque,
Lx afreect debate in the British House ot
Il the Houte, by Mr. H'-wltt, fixing u &lt;lay for the
meeting of the Elector* of President and were shut dead by a Sheriff a posse on U:c Commons Sector' Forster claimed tbst pub­
Viix-I’resffient. and providing for nnd regu­ 11th.
lic
sentiment’ in the United State* favored tha
lating thft counting of the votes for President
policy of tbc British Govi-ramcnt, all Lough
. and v ic-PremJdcnt. and the &lt;!&gt;-ciaton* of qurstkms tv^ung thsrefrom. Bill* were reported niary II. there were twenty-one death* from
from committees: By Mr. McCook, for the small-pox. and forty-one new cases were re­
from this side ot the Atlantic.
retin'ment of Brevet MaJor-Gen- ral M. C.
ported.
.
By the spilling of cual-oti on the floor, the
Barings and Trust Company: by Mr. Pound,
Ont., took Ore &lt;ra the 10th. and hi* wife. Step,
to require payment of costa In certain cut*
A fireman name.! daughter and three children were burned to
&lt;&gt;f trvspua* &lt;&gt;r conversion of rautcrtal from
Kbllc lamls. T--------- - hlU ---Tho Apportionment
*a* Uavi.I Mardengrr w as fatally Injured.
death.
rthrr &lt;l&lt;-listed.
Jail at
Tut car-«he&lt;] of the lulcreolonlal Railwty at
Thb bill to ydnev General Grant on tho re- i
diggin :
tired list came up In the Senate on the 10th. but
10th, causing a loss of *utL00l&gt; In
-. Mnxcy uMsd the rt.lurgi-mcnt of th- Mcxh
n wnr-Ust. nA Mr. Beck expressed hl* wlll-

Lhc date&lt;■: cnllrtuicntavuiust protecution i r-r f going *outb on the Wheeling &lt;k
Tblr-

tins were injured, none fatally.

by Nr. Plumb, to regulate nrarmy an ! Increase ■ it-* *rfi« I

In tho ' guard house.

employ**, was priwe l. a n**. 'ot
■
ndopteolc-iiMng for 4nf&lt;&gt;rtoati&lt;m
• r &gt; tin I shot and dangerously wounded while attempt
the peril* or American Mta-d'-iuri •»
ins; to escape
Pentia. &lt;*C- Bills were Intrextorv-i- jj.
Herndon, proposing a Constnut -xial n: •-&lt;
mt-ut limiting the number of Mcml-re ■ ■
tunnel of tin- Baltimore A |*ut&lt;xnai' Railroad.
Hnu-et'i 8S&gt;; by Mr. Payson, prohib tun
I near Baltimore, &lt;&gt;ti the J’ilh. They *thp|~&lt;l
polygnmbt or lifiran.b&lt;t from voting or a.
! from uue track to get out of the way of a px**ing office *n th-- 'I'l-rriViri-'*; by Mr. Kill-. t&lt;i
j ing train, and were run down by n locomotive
| on the other trpcl-

.lutionar*t«a:tle-tleMr;
Warner.
to Indianapolis Mrs
V
.
”nri..-r. to
Mrs..Doty
Doty aud
and Mrs. ta
Scnuett were
ata4l&lt;h Sntlonal hanks. Mr. Amlerson iknn L I ,
from th" Committee &lt;n&gt; Agriculture. report d killed by a work train on the IJQt.
a trill eiti&gt;*rK&gt;ug tb&gt;* powers &lt;&gt;f the 1&gt;--p-irtnivitt
8ix
Six firms
firmsof
of speculative
speculative cotton
cotton brokers in
New Orleans euspemlA'd on the 13th. *
Tex prisoners escaped from the jail at
sprea&gt;! • ( inf".-tiou*x-r coutagiou* diseases
among ouimuuL
Clarendon, .Irk., on the 13lh. Five were
murder* rs.

Domestic.

Wmilb traveling on a hand-car near Waco,
Tex., on the Sth, Major D. W. Washburn and
M. H. Stall, with hl* wife and sou, were run
into by a train, and all were killed.
afflicted wkh cancer of the stomach, died re­
cently after a fast of fifty-one days.
Tur reports of the Illinois State Board of
Health indicate that.the small-pox in Use State
fat subsiding.
‘ » Two hex were blows to pieces by an ex
• plosion of giant powder .near Newburgh, N.

A suootixg affray oeearre&lt;l in the office of
the .Vtuhiaal llratMieaH at Washington on «he
tyh lietween A. M Soteldo, a clerk in the
Senate, and Clarence JL Barton, news edttar
o/ the RtpuHieaK. Mr. Soteldo was probably
'fatally, and Mr. Barton was seriously, wouiU-

The trunk lines on the Oth ordered tho
restoration of emigrant rate* from New. York
.to Chicago to S13, commencing on tiie IBtit
The disagrccniLut between the Central Varnior.t aud the Boston &amp; AHixny Roads has
been harmoulzefl, and orders have gone forth
tlmt rates west of Chicago must be immedi­
ately restored.
Ax explosion in the Kickbstn mil!, at Doc­
tortown, Ga.. killed «ae man aud scalded six
■olbcra on the 9th.
L«wi* Powell, a White citizen of Lynrhburg, Va.. was on the 9th sentence-1 .to W
llubcs on the bare Lack for housebreaking.
The cot ton-proses of New Orleans have
been brought to a stand still by a goncrsl
strike of employes, who insist upoo the dis-

their association.
Chaklkt Hixa, a Chinaman who killed one

A Ootuxiog on the Pennsylvania Kailroad
on the fttb cmued the death of throe citix'-ns of

error by Justice Miller, of the United Statzs

6s, the 10th the foUowtng exeeutseut took

the Chilian Goren.mi-lit January 14, and hi!

friendly resjonsc
It Is announo-d that the King of Burmah
hat abolished monopolies throughout his do­
main ah 1 appointed an embassy with a view
to re-establish agreeable relations with India.
Paris advice* of the 13th report the occur
rance of failures In all part* of France. The
markets were greatly depressed, and it was b-llcvcd that It would i*ke sixty days to restore
confidence.
Mr. Li.ovd. a tcm]*&gt;rary magistrate of
County Clare, was fired al from behind a wall
at Bodyke. Ireland. Eleven arrests tor out.

-X SHALL OFFER

------ MY ENTIRE STOCK OF GOODS------

ly pressed by ire most of the time. The men­
tal strain was heavy on all of the ship’s com­
pany. The result of the drift for the first five ’
months was forty miles Thera wa* a cycloid­
al movement of the ice.. The drift the last
six months was very rapid. Soundings were
pretty even. They were eighteen fsthoms
near Wrangell L*nd, which was often visible
- This is no dodge, but is a bona fide offer. The time and
seventy-five miles distant. The greatesbdepth
found was eighty fathoms, snd the average
opportunity to make moony is by saving from 25 to 5o per
thirty-five. ’ The bottom was blue mud.
Shrimps and plenty of algzlogical specimens cent on your purchases.
In Dress Goods we quote:
were brought up from the bottom. The sur­
face water had a temperature at twenty de­ Wool Cashmere*. .80 worth $1.
Wool Cnahmeres, .GO worth .80
gree* above zero.
Half wool do. .35 worth .85.
plain Suitings, .25 worth .85
“The extremes of temperature of air -were:
Plain Suitings &lt;H.
Pn.-ta, ;5 .C .7
Greatest cold M below scro and greatest best
Wool dress Flannel, .40 worth ,65 Waterproofs, .75 worth tl
44 above zero. The tirsi winter -the mean
Wnten&gt;roofs.*tl worth *1.35
Wool Tweeds .-50 worth .75
temperature was 33 below zero; the sec­
Half wool Tweeds, 8s worth 4a.
Cottonade, .la to 20
ond winter 3J b-low zero. The first
Farmers &amp;• Mechanic* .30 to.35
Lin. Table Cloth, .18 worth 35
summer the mean temperature was 40 degrees
Lin. TableCloth, 3s worth4s.
Lin. Tabic Cloth. .50 worth 75
Cotton Goods, .6 .7 .8 &lt;
Blenched Goods, .6.7.8.9 .10
shore zero. The heaviest gale showed a
White
Got
win
cheap.
White Goods Cheap.
velocity of sbout fifty miles per hour. Such
Table Oil Cloth, .35 worth .35
Floor Oil QJotli, .35 w’th .50
gales were uol frequent The barometric and
Horae BlunketH .90 worth 9s.
Overalls .40
*
thermometric fluctuations were not great.
Overalls .00
Overalls 35.
’
There were disturbance* of the needle co­
Tiim
’
ng
Silk
.75
worth
$1
Silk Ribbons at cost.
incident with the auroras The winter’s
Trim'ng Satin, $1 worth $1J5O
Ladies Stockings.
Children’s Stockings.
Gloves i. Mittens.
twenty-three feet. The engineer rtates that
a heavy truss saved the ship, November21, from
being crushed. The telephone wires wer®
broken by the movement of the ice. Tho
photographic collection a a* lost with the ship.
Lieutenant Chipp's 2,000 auroral observations lugrnin Carpets, .25 worth .35
Ingrain Carpets, .35 worth .50
were also lost. Ths ualurallsl’s Dotes were

$9,000 WORK!

Ingrain Carpets, .60 worth .80
Ingrain Carpets, .70 worth $1

•• Jeannette Island was discovered. May Id,
tn latitude 70 degrees 47 minutes.north, long!-

can. at Brownavil&gt;, Tex., and Henry IL Hall,
&lt;t Tncaon, Arixona.
Irnoon on ' iSeTWrGS-.rg*: TRimsKw.-lT
-driver «f an uw-wagon, eutenst Um* kitchen twenty-five rears In Congress, celebrated his
’Alt birthday on the 11th.
bill was-taken up, and Mr. Oates ar­
r*s jury tn the Sotel- -tfonmrnt
gued in favor of fixing the number of BsproZmutiwaataO.

1
|

..

,

c .

(
X. J
. Q

».

,

.

-.n

1L

......................Mens bints, $•&gt; wnrth 8
Men s bints, $10 worth la
Men’s Suits, $15.worth 20. Boys Suits $3 worth 5.
but glaciers arc plenty.
Boys
Suits
5
doll,
worth
8. Overcoats 2.50 to 10 dolls.
“ Bennett Island lies tn latitude 7C degrees |

38 minutes north, longitude 14S degrees 20 I
minutes east. It is very large. On It we ‘
found many birds, old horns, driftwood and
coak but no seal or walrus. A great tidal ac­
tion was observed. The coast 1* bold and |
•- We drifted back the first week of the retreat twenty-seven miles more than we could

Mens Stoga Kip Boot#, 2 dolls, worth 3.50
Mens Stoga Kip Boots, 2.50 worth 3.5o
Mens Fine Call' Boots, 2 dolls, worth 4
i
j
Mens Fine Calf Boots 2.50 worth 3 dolls.
5l

seven times with load*.
.
“ Lieutenant Chipp’s boat
better tnan
our* (Melville’s) during the afternoon of Sep­
tember 12, the three boats having got clear of
the Ice oil Seiniuovsky Island at noon that

KiiPButtcn Shoes 1 doll, worth 1.56’
Fine Kid Button. 2 dolls worth 2.50
Tampico Goat 2 25 worth 3 dollars
Childrens Shoes 50 cts. worth 1 dollar.

triaagulai drag. Nothing was seen of
Lieutenaat Chipp’s boat at daylight. He ’
could not get back to the island in a northeast ।

•a, 25 worth 5oc. Tea 45c wortIrGOc. Coffee 13 worth 17
Coffee 16c worth 20c. Brown Coffee 17c. Molasses, blk.
Strap, 30c worth 40c. Common Syrup. 30c.worth 40
N. O. molasse# best in the market 50c worth 70.
Maple flavor 50c worth 70. Sugars, Grnnu- .
latdQ 10 1-2 Standard A. 10 Brown 7 8.

provisions.

District nt Auauicff on the 13th.

Floods in t’w rivers tributary t«. tho Mis­
sissippi aiCgreatly endangering the levees of '
that river. At Delta, Miss., on the Uth a
crevasse (00 feet long vi» reported.
land, died of diphtheria aud were buried in
A tire at Troy (N. Y.) bn the Hlhdeitroycd
one grave on the 13th.
Gardner’s laundry, with 25,000 dozen collars
J. M. Dixon. Postmaster st Ennis, Tex.. and cuff.*.
was arretted on the 13th for Uic embezzlement
The House of Commons on the 14th. by a
Vote of 87 to 22, adopted the Royal address.
Justin McCarthy's Amendment, condemning
Personal and Politico).
the Government’s Irish policy, was rejected
JrxxiB Chabijl* Fox, the oldest member of by a vote of 98 to 30.
the bar of Cincinnati, died on the sth.
A plot to wreck the Missouri Pacific train
Fob the discovery of a-*vcn comets. Prof. Dear Kansas City on the Uth was discovered
Swift, of the Rochester Observatory, ha* by the police, and a t&gt;qu*d captured four men
equipped with revolver*, guns, mask* and
emy of Science* of Paris.
lantern*.
Tub RMdicbergcr bill for the settlement of
Gkxeral Carr wa* released from arrest on
the debt of Virginia lias passed the House of the Uth, President Arthur declining to order
Delegates by Dei, to 30 the amendment to sub­ a court-martial on the charges preferred by
mit ft to the people being defeated by 14 to 71- General Willcox in Arizona.
dcLLivAN'jJiu Alancr of Ute late prize-fight.
Oxk Smcal, a colored man living .near
Is said to I w about to locate In Chicago.
Athena. Ga., being suspected of stealing a
That part of the Kansas Prohibition law boree, was whipped by a mob on the Uth un­
which prescribes a punishment tor drunken­ til he confeased, and then lunged.
The second trial of Johnny Lamb for the
ness has been declared unconstitutional by
murder of Officer Race, In ''Chicago, resulted
the State Supreme Court.
The Virginia Senate has passed the bill on the Uth la an acquittal. On the flrat trial
be was convicted and sentenced to be hung.
abolishing the whipping post.
A rtvK-csNT postage-stamp bearing an ex­ Lamb tiad been tn Jail over three years.
Abol-t *l,5U0.OB In gold wx* exported from
cellent Illumes* of the late President will be
New York to Europe on the Uth.
March 1.
Jobx C. N*w, of Indiana, waa appointed
William Mi liasr, the oldest Mason Id the
United .‘ tatci^dicl recently at Caldwell, Q., Assistant-Secretary of the Treasury on tho
aged ninety-eight years.
14th.
Coloxei. Rucker, the father-lu-law of Gen­
J. W. Gvitkav stated on the 10th that hl*
broU^r had no fear of death, and would meet eral Sheridan, ha.* tieen confirmed by the Sen­
ate as Quartermaster-General In place of
.1
U sited States Bexatob Lamar, of Missis­ Melggs, retired.
The cittecn* of Greenwood, Steuben County,
sippi, was run over by a reckleMly-driveu car.
Wage on the evening ot the 9th and seriously N- Y-., have resisted the sale of prqperty to pay
istcrest on railroad bonds, and Governor Cor­
PtTBB toopBK entered upon his* ntnoty. nell on the Uth declared the township in a
scqpnJjearon the 12th, ami the event (ws* state of lusuirectlon, and warned t lie [Kxyilo
celebrated by * party of friends who gathered to desist from unlawful act*
Ix the United States Senate on the Uth Mr.
at trfs residence la New York.
PBBsiDBjrr AKTiivk on the 11th signed the Edmunds was defeated tn an attempt to take
commission of Frederick A. Tuttle a* Gov­ up tbc anU-Folygamy bill out of it* regular
ernor of Ar'aona, In place of General Fremont. order. Mr. McCall introduced a bill to ex­
empt vessel* of less than twenty-fire tons on
Tub Postmaster-General on the 11th ad
dressed a letter to tlie Postmaster* through­ inland waters of the Unite*! States, and uot
out Ute country, asking them to respond to carrying passengers, from !n»j«ecth&gt;;i usd li­
the appeal of the 8&gt;xlety of the Army of the cense. Mr. Morgan offered a resolution re­
CumberlaDd, and solicit contribuUoBS for a questing the 1‘rotldeut to bring to the atten­
monument s6Wasihiugton to the late Presi­ tion oi tbc Government of Nicaragua the
necessity of arranging for the flual settlement
dent Garfield.
ot all unadjusted claims czlstlux between UM
A. M. Sotbldo, the rirtim of tl&amp; shooting United Bfatoft aud Nicaragua. In tbc Hou**
affray st Washington, died on the evening of Mr. WQIetta re;«ortod a bm to prevent po'DC*mist s fr&lt;«m holding civil office in the Terri­
tories or serving as delegates In Congress.

FOR SALE------

IT COST OR UNDER GOST

We took plenty of exercise. Everybody
hunted. Game was scarce. We pit about
thirty bean, two’hundred and fifty seals. and
six walrus. No fish or whales were seen.
•* AU possible observations were made dar­
ing tha drift, the result showing a northwest

Thb Marquis of Huntley has been arrested
in Loudon for obtaining f I2,'*A) under false
pretenses.
Nbab Luraja.*. Mexico, on the Kith Charles
Bowers. Fred Dougin** and Allen Murdm-k
wen.- murdered for their money while a-leep.
A Jewnm family, consistin ' &lt;&lt;f a mother,
a daughter aged seventeun and a son aged

LATEB NEWS.
Tub propeller Wisconsin, of the Gc»lrich
Ttansportatlou Company, was wrecked at
Grand Haven, Mich., on the 14th. No lives

NEXT

SIXTY DAYS

Lon*'* party push south.

ever, tneh of the region, which la plowed by
heavy drift-ice every spring,
,
“We visited Nordenakjold's winter quar­
ters, and found he was safe before we entered
the lee near Herald Island.
■
'•The general health of the crew during ths
tWenty-oue months’ drift was excellent. No
scurvy appeared- We uaeddlstlUed water and

and rocky, and we did not visit IL
•• Henrietta Island wa* discovered and vislied. May 24. in latitude 77 degrees 8 minutes

vi-terans only.

the House the bill authorizing
the President tn ap)x&gt;int to a Capudncy in the
army T. D. Kirby who
cnshtered for lng
^magr on ll.e 11th.
druakninrss when a Brevet Brigadier-General,
.
.
.
.__
wa* pwwd-07 to Si. A report was receive.i
A *-uca from » l.icnmoUve ignited r.n al)
from tho Secretary at the Treasury to the I tank at Olean, N. ¥.. on tho 12th, and two
effect that In ttoe enfmxx-mcnt of the Internal
t|^
u )ll firi. riic ,,MB u climated
Revenue laws tweuty-nine officers had tx-en
_ . *
killed and fifty wounard. awl &lt;-lxbt Infortnvni I nt over 8100.1*18.
had been nnnaileti a*te wounded. Adjourned
to the Uth
&gt;n Um- IHb. th.- treasurer found a
Bills were unwed in the Senate on the 13th: I
To provide for tho sale of the hind* of th.- ML

FOR THE

long, deviAd of habitations sad game. Jerome
J. CoU'.na volunteered to stand by the dying

the Lena deh;
_

“Jack Cole’s mind Is not wholly alienated.
He ha* not been violent for*twelvc days, out
Is happy and harmless. Getting home may
Liqaor Statistics.

Wasiiixotox, February A
The Chief Clerk of the Bureau of Statistics
has prepared the following, table of the an­
nual average consumption of spirituous and
malt liquor* and wine* in the United States
during the three years ended June 30, 1878,
and th&lt;s consumption for the years ended Juns
3J, 1879,1’vO and 1SS1:

53

5 2

The prices quotedjare Miflient to indicate what bargains are
offered, all of which^will be strictly adhered to.
The highest market price ; will be paid fsr Butter, Eggs,
Potatoes, Beans, Lard, Dried Apples &amp;c.
On all sums ol $25 and over, six months’ credit will be giv­
en onjapproved notes bearing.7;‘ percent interest.
Come early! these goods will not last long at prices given.

JI. vV&lt;M&gt;I&gt;

j

-18 NOW READY TO--------- CALL O N----------

SHOE HORSES
BETTER THAN EVER
HAS THB—

F. T. BOISE,

DUGS,
BOOKS,
JEWELRY
&lt;
WAU PAPER,
wixbow shades,
i 1&gt;1 K STAFFS.

WILL TAKE WOOD
For

hi.

PROPRIETARY MEDIODTOS,

BOBSI EOBS,

PREMCRIPTIWNH,
RECEIPTS,

Made ofall Rock Elm,
•Estimated.
•In computing tho quantity of sparklipg and
still winos in bottles, five atecalkA quart l&gt;oSties are r.*ekonud as equivalent t.&gt; the gnllou.

cenL of the spirits and mult liquors produced
In tb»- country escape taxation. If thin mt&gt;
mate is correct, the above amounts of product
represent only about ninety per cent. of the
also been estimated tnatabuut one third of tha
Spirituous liquors consumed tho countrv is

A7EjW CUTTERS
TO SELL, AND THE

BEPAHTnE T
In the State of niebiffan.
In fact, If you want ofay kind of work. Dearly
and all warranted,

CAUL AW »EE Uin.

aud
—New York spend* •8.O00.000 year­
ly in charitably relieving 40,000 person*.

PAINT AND BRU.SH

Aroenh for hm!&lt;% rlirup,

Job. M. WOOD

F. T. BOISE

�Rapid.;
viUr; Adjt,-Gm. Hoyt.

SILVER STAR.

Your »eribe han been conrting-for the
to th&lt;- V. S. dirtriei court, to t» h"ld In

A MUprbu' party at Perry Henry’s
O. D. Snnnl.liug i« bnU.llug » new theevening of the iOtb.
. _
_
I* ill to luPlinny Durfee’s funeral wnsou Tues­
oecaniwl l» Hr- VpJc*"day instead of Monday•
to Imildj,
Crows have made their appearance,
bridge OCTOM the Tliornapplr. »u Jeff and they holler "how.”
ereon BU
peHUou i. is in elrcnDeacon, Vanbrunt, reported sick
' ^Tlu! Presbyterian social, on Friday last week, is slowly, recovering.
James Crawly nud wife are visiting
evening, will he entertained by Mrs. friends and relative* in Ohio.
Kcnfleld and Mrs. Hitchkiss, at the
Covert Freer is pa on u small scale, a
residence of the former. ,
girl and weighs about, 8pounds.
Four persons, who lately joined the
Who will wo have for our. next Sup­
Baptist church, were baptized last Sun­ ervisor ? Don’t all speak at once.
day. It was attended with an appro­
Mr. Cramer has had a quantity; of
priate amount of shivering for Feb.
corn stoletuwbile ho was absent, from
In the case of Mra. Taylor vs Ryan, home, one night last week.
the jury were all night trying to «ettlc
IL Freer has traded pipperty in
on their verdict, during the time they Hastings, for Wm. Murray’s farm, in
. Ingvrson Baltimore.
a of them,
were on
t his brother
tel
------G. IL Durfee, has sold his span of
received
bat be was’not allowed to go three-year-old colts, to Aaron Jones,
until tliojury were discharged.
of Allegan for $350.00.
The cose of the farmers against the
Petty thieving, still continnes in our
Irving mill, is progressing slowly. The midst. It-will be well to look well to
farmers aro represented by Mr. Smiley your granaries that they are securely
of Grand Rapids, Mr. Pennington of fastened.
Charlotte, and ■ Mr. Clark. The mill
The News editor has my sympathy,
company are represented by Mr. though Strong yet weak, hoping he
Champlin of Grand Rapids, Mr. Car­ may soon return Stronger in body and
’s eth of ’Middleville, nnd Mr. L. E. mind than ever before*,
Peter Kemberling. while threshing
Kuappeu.
.
Quite a number of our citizens have Clover seed at 8. Altman’s, thought he
been at work trying to get a depot a had lost his pocket book, and after
little nearer the Center of the city. overhawling a stack of clover chaff,
The M. C. R. IL company finally agreed found the pocket book in his boot.
to put up tho depot just north of the
George Arnold’s house is supposed to
Hastings house, if the city would fur­ have cauf^ht fire by n spark dropping
nish the ground and give $800. The on the roof, from the stove pipe. Mr.
city .have fulfilled their part of the Ceiia came along and assisted Mrs. Ar­
contract, and they will commence nold who hud not yet aiscovered it.
Mr. Arnold was at M. Pilgrim’^ at
work immediately.
The Hurst embezzlement case at­ work, but was soon notified by his
tracted considerable attention nnd the child, and by the time they arrived,
verdict of the jury—not gnity was re­ Celia had it nearly out. A hole in the
ceived with general satisfaction. P. W roof large enough to admit a person was
Niskern worked faithfully to acquit the result.
Doxr.
Hunt, who is a poor man and his suc­
cess is deserving of a great deal of
WOODLAND.
praise. Henry Worms, the prosecut­
ing witness does not stand very high
Items scarce.
in the estimation of the people iu this
Some sugar is being mado this week.
city, wc should say about 40 degrees
The goose chose her mate Inst Tues­
below zero.
day.
Hans.
Our district schools aro beginning to
close for the winters term.
BISMARK.
Our sick are somewhat better, and no
Days are lengthening.
more new cases of diphtheria.
Grime® is slatting, this week.
The snakes were out receiving the
The bottom is out of the roads.
rays of the warm sun, on Monday.
Fred Turner is offering his farm for
IL Chitatian and brothers. Win. and
sale.
Varney have sold their farms to an
Wo are afflicted with despondency Ohio m»n.
justgow.
. Rev, Bridcnstine commanced meet­
Ed. Rawson intends to build a barn ings at the North Castleton cl^irch, on
this spring.
Tuesday night.
.
Limpy horses are quite common,
Rev. J. F. Orwick vqent after his
nowadays.
wife at Kalamazoo,, where she has been
We expect «oon to hear of transfers veiling friends the past two weeks.
of real estate.
Sewing machine agents are getting
How many crows does it take to to be about as big a pest, as lighting
moke spring.
rod men. There were three agents nt
The cartage of wood and lumber is the center last weak.
stopped fora season.
Jehu Giger was thrown from his
J. C. D. hasjust received 19 bushels wagon, aud one of the wheels passed
of hickory nuts from lud.
over him and. broke a rib, one day lust
Teachers are looking after our school week.
for the summer term.
The house vacated by Mr. Lipscomb,
Don’t you forget we will pay for this will be burned, to keep others front
warm weather after awhile.
catching the disease.
The clothing
The prospects are thought to be in was all left tn the house,
favor of Mrs. Downs' recovery.’,
»;
C. Collins and wife are visiting
Mr. Cook has just returned from1 friends in town this week, and they reTennessee and reports it very wet■ port that when they left East Jordan
there.
the snow was eighteen inches on tho
Frank Pcmber is preparing to build a level. Charley says The News is the
house, thia spring; A. Campbell best visitor he has up in his new home.
ditto.
They will start back next week.
Some are trying to make sugar. They
Have you all heard how those boys
would succeed well if the sap would , fromNashviRe who were flailing two
flow freely.
weoks Ago got their hones kept. They
We were in Nashville about an hour put their'horses in a farmer’s barn
last Saturday, and saw many afflicted without leqX'e, fed the farmers fodder.
with tanglefoot.
The n^in hud but a few cornstalks aud
The stock holders of the Marshall &amp;l was financially poor. They took their
Coldwater R.R.aro beginning to breath team oat Sunday morning before the
once more. A little earnest action on farmer awoke from his slumbers, and
their part, would soon cause the-iron Dever as much os thanked him. We
courser to snort along the line. Then have the names on the black book.
Ictus one and all arise and goto In- Boys do you think you would like
gersol and declare against him, choose, thisf
a captain of honor if not of means.
Nell. •
________
____ Writist.
KALAMO.
MAPLE GBOVeT"
—

Mr. Warren King has sold his farm.
Adam Wolf has a new wagon.
. U. T. Morris, has sold 68 acres of his
Geo. Mosey was home Sunday.
fanu to John Wilson.
Jdhn McCartney is on the sick list.
Albert Ackley and family have mov­
Sam Shafer has returned from Jack­
ed into Dan. Karcher’s bouse.
Janies McCroby bod a smoke bouse
A few fanners have began making
burn, last week Friday, loss100 lbs of
sugar.
,
Nell McOmber has bought a sawing ham.
A debate at. the Matteson school
machine.
house
this
week Friday evening, W. H.
Hauk Spencer and Dick Griffin have
Pont aud 8. A. Shepard arc the
returned from the north.
Mr. and Mrs. O. Swift had relatives chiefs.
Mr. Norton, at the Center, has his
visiting them last week.
Frank Burnham and wife aro visit­ new house up and enclosed, to fill the
place of the old one, recently burned
ing friends near Lansing.
A family Liu moved into the hou

CORRBSrOOKtrK.
Mr. Editor ;
Porn long tian*, in fact for several
years, I have bt*n receiving anony­
mous dommunication fronr* some per­
son or pttrsous unknown to me. Some­
times I have received them by way of
post office, but more frequently I have
found them in the morning on niy
door step or placed in other similar pos­
itions where they were most likely to
call my attention. , There is a very
striking rcaemblaaee in tire "senti­
ment” contained in all of these many
communications. Being desirous of. a
more intimate acquaintance with this
person, who, .apparently, ' so fondly
dotes on "pure and noble cliaracter,”
"pure principles,” "uoble aspirations,”,
etc, I take this means of calling his at­
tention to tho fast that be has either
forgotten or neglected to sign his name
sothntlmight know who, where and
what he is. I presume however that be
is one of "Goil’s noblemen” nnd his in­
nate modesty induces this reticence.
It is true many of these tender missives
are signed "P” but this is not suf­
ficient to identify him, ns many names
besides "Partello” commences with n
“P.” In order to faclU(tate p. mutual
recognition I herewith send you one ol
bia tender epistles for publication hop­
ing that should this meet his eyes he
will i nsome way make himself known
to^ie so tbatjiia "unrequited lovc”may
bereciproated.
■ Inquirer.
,

'

THE LETTER.

Nashville, Dec. 1/
Let me go to .die grave yard where
broken friendship He* scattered around
beneath the cold sod. Their friend
ship is deep down in oblivion, mine is
here, but misguided. While their happiiiess is complete, mine is full of «lisiippoinment am! sorrow. Theta 18 a
lingering love for them, none for me.
They once had friends, I have none.
Their friendship, although broken by
death was pure; mine is full of disap­
pointment, grief and sorrow.
It is now ever two years and three
month’s since I was forbidden, ever to
speak to the one I loved. There by the
giuve of an aged one, deep down, lies
crushed the pure principles of affection
and there is my home.
Tied by laws to one I cannot love;
spurned with contempt by the one I do
love, why should I not feel sad and
sorrowful ?
Go now. brignt lady, for thy hair is
fast turning white; search earth all
over,nnd if you find nobler and purer
love, do not pass it by scornfully, for a
true principle is a pearl that will not
stain nor tarnish.
&gt;
Seven long years have passed nnd
gone, yet love, waiting for thee, un­
changed. Away from all vice I found
the pure and beautiful love that I
woulu offer you. YoU may refuse it,
and prefer dross, vartiished with a lit­
tle gold ; if so, thy future days shall l»e
davs of sorrow nnd full of grief.
Go find that purer soul with nobler
thoughts, nnd learn in the full days of
thy womanhood to love, and may not
that love be disappointed and mis­
guided, nnd may thy future life be full
of sweet happiness.
I will stand oil'at a distance mid re­
joice to fee you Uinppy. Remember
that purity ot mind is nil I ask for,even
though my cup of life is bitter,
May^oiue beautiful angel give thee,a
kiss and respects. A kiss on thy beau­
tiful cheek, may some friend of yours
impress---------

EATOS COUSTY.
While drawing wood on the ice nt
Grand Ledge, one day last week,
team belonging to Wm. Tinkham broke
through and came near drowning.
Mrs. Frank Sanford's bUby, whs
found dead iu its bed nt Charlotte.
The coroner’s idqnest on the body,
ended in a verdict of death from naturcauses.
A "green hand” helping 0. Smith
run a buzz saw at Bellevue caused the
latter to hare his arm and fingers hor­
ribly mangled. Moral; Don’t hire
green hands.
Eaton Rapids capitalists have sunk
$95,000, learning t(F guess when the
price of wheat is going to rise or fall.
The game is popularly called d ealiug
iu options.
Mra.Hiyam Welch, of Charlotte, has
been arrested on a charge of trying to
kiU her husband. She is crazy. Iu
fact they all are nowdays when they
try to kill some one.
Miss M. Kinnie’s new brick block, at
Charlotte, was on Friday capped by a
large zinc display cornice with raised
lettering of "Old Maid’s-block. 1881,.”
in very large and plain letters on the
front. Tho christning of the block as
the "Old Maid's block” caused consid­
erable comment. Miss Marintha Kinnle, who quite well off has mado the
most of her money in the millinery
business in Charlotte, which has been
her home for nearly thirty years. Al­
though an old maid, she is "Auntie
Kinnie" to half the population.
The reunion of the Second Michigan
Feb. Sth, wm a great

awaken the old companionship and
. tod feeling between the men. The
audience was profuse with cheers. and
thesoldiera seemed to enjoy tjie after­
noon meeting to the fullest extent. The
■banquet to the soldiers, which was
given by the.ladies of the Unitarian
Church society, wa* very chilmrate and
embraced a splendid bill of fare which
the hungry soldier proceeded to do
justice to in the most approved style.
When the meeting, adv urn rd, tho reteraas lingered about, giaspitig hands
ami reminding each other of incidents
of camp life. The ball in the. evening
was a grand sncce. s, ns everything pre­
vious had been, and altogether the
persons who have worked so untiring­
ly feel well repaid for, their efforts by
the grand results of the day.
MICHIGAN NEWS.
White Cloiid has three Dew cases of
small-pox. '
Detroit officials are still trying to.
find out who killed Martha Whitla.
Miss Jessie V. Blood, of St. Clair,
supjMised to. have drowned herself,
Feb. 13th.
Major Frank Flanders of Sturgis, a
veteran of the Mexican war, was found
dead in bed, Feb. 8.
Brook trout nre being caught with
hook and line in the streams in the
vicinity of Farwell. .
There is danger everywhere. Mrs.
E. Kremer, of East Saginaw, fell over
a clothes pin and broke her anu.
Battle Creek is not quite settled in
its mind yqt about whether it has &gt;&gt;cared the location of those GraudTruuk
shops.
The trial of Mayor Stcketee at Grand
Rapids, Feb. fltli, on the charge of viol­
ating the liquor law, resulted in an acquital.
Frank Y. Rowley of Fredonia, Cal­
houn county, is on trial for obtaining
money under false pretenses from
Charles T. Gorham.
Sidney Q. Williams of Byron, Kent
couuly, fell through a sidewalk at
to
Graud Rapids and wants the city
"
pay him $5,000 for it.
. L. J. Harris, of Eckford, has a Durham cow that furnishes milk for sixteen pounds of putter a week, That is
butter than most cows do.
John S. Scodin, son of Wm. H. Scodin, of Webster Township, Washtenaw
Co.,-died on Saturday from tho rcstrit
of a fall ou the ice while skating.
H. Frank, of Detroit, has applied for
a patent ou a new process in melting

glass, which he claims will revolution­
ize the present system completely.
Hiram Studley, of Edwardsburg, who
was bitten by a mad dog about ,ten
years ago, is in a very low condition
with hydrophobia-. He is expected to
die.
Tho house, burn, granary, and out
building on the farm of J. P. Guilford
about four miles southwest of Owosso
were totally destroyed by fire Saturday
night.
A gentleman nt Greenville, while
eating raw oysters a few days ago,came
across one too large to cat, and cutting
into it found a live tape worm 2j inch­
es long.
John A. White and Wm. Stewart es­
coped jail at Saginaw by crawling
through a 14-iuch pipe into the vault
and then escaping by lifting an iron
grating.
John Edmonds was -thrown from a
load of wood near Big Rapids, Thurs­
day, aud so badly injured that he died
soon afterward. He leaves u faiily in
destitute circumstances.
E. F. Curtis, a prominent fruitgrow­
er of near Spring Lake, wns drowned,
Feb. fitb, while skating toa neighbor’s.
He leaves a wife and one child. His
body has been recovered.
Steven Watson, of Caledonia, a
prominent Shiawassee county farmer,
was thrown from a wagon and fatally
injured, while engaged in trying to
“break in’’ a coIl Feb. tttJi.
.
Dwight F. Gillett, of Paama, made
an effort to board a west-bound freight
train Feb. loth, missed his footing, fell
and was run over. His right am will
have to be amputated above the elbow.
A great many cases of ffiphtheria are
reported in Hudson and in in the
country for miles around. When a
death occurs no demonstration is al­
lowed at the burial, but tho victin of
the dreadful malady is immediately
laid away.
Wm. Billsborrow, a wealthy farmer
living a few miles east of Paw Paw. at­
tempted suicide Feb. 14tb, by cutting
his throat with a razor. He is a rather
weak-minded person and eccentric in
his ways. Domestic troubles are stat­
ed as the cause.
Michigan was recently disgraced by
a third-grade prize fight near Bay City.
The pounders fought like dogs for 30
minutes, when one of them hud to be
put in his little bed. It is feared that
he may recover.
When a real smart young Bay City
man wants to do something exquisiteone’s

Leesburg, u Qio last place whose in­
habitant, aft enf off from their mail,
by the illness from small-pox erf the
postmaster. The department’* action
in such cases reveals to Ute 4-n relies^ of
Postmasters a responsibility on which
they never reckoned. They art- requir­
ed to enter the infected office, burn all
the supplies, except firet-cluss mail
matter, which they have to fumigate,
and they must then establish the ptfet
office in a safe place.
t
*The school house at’ Coral was de­
stroyed by fire at 11:30 p. tn., Saturday.
There had la-en a school meeting
held in the building, and it had not Backache, Soreness of the C;&gt;^'r,
been over more than half an hour.when
Goui, Qfiinsy, Sore Throat, Sitt­
the flames were discovered. There
ings and Sprains, Burns and
hqfl been quite a bitter feeling shown
Scalds, General Bodily
at the meeting. The file was found to
Pains,
have’bcen started under the r.tairway
Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted
and not near any stove or pipe, and
Feet and Ears, and al! other
was undoubtedly the work of an in­
Pains and Aches.
cendiary. The bouse waa insured for
rttrr, •Itnjtlr
$2,500, and it. original coat waa $3,700.
trial tn tall, I
A distrcsMing accident occurred at
Commerce FebJfcth, by which two well
known young people lost their live*.
LD BT ALL DRUGGISTS AKD DEALE23
Frank Wix., a son of Wm. Wix, a well
IB MEDI0IKE.
known merchant of Commerce, was
A. VOGBUER &lt;fc CO.,
skating on Commerce lake and pushing
before him a sled on which were seatedMiw Bickens. a Schon] teacher, and
AfflMml Ntalemeut.
Miss Polly Wilson. The kc broke be­ “*^Kor the year ending Dec. 81st, A. D. 1881. of
neath them and Wix and Miss Bickcns ! tbc condition nnd nflutra afctbe Woodland 1 ire
Ins'. Co. o( Wildland, Ior. Co, located nt
were drowned. Wix might have saved WunliatMt organized amler tbe law® of'the
his own life, but he heroically exerted Stateof Michigan, and doing tmsbiemi In the
of Bare.-. In rain Mate. 8. 8. Ingerton,
himself to save the girls and Mi went County
Froidrnt. £. J. Nsab.Secretary.
down. The bodies have been recover­
MEMBERSHIPS.^
ed^
Neml&gt;crof members Dec. 81st, of
previous year..................
Number r.f tneodien added during
in the Wesrtcru Uni&lt;iti telegraph office
tbc picsent year..
nt Jackson; who warned Thomas, the
Total.....
silk thief, that the |Mtliee had knowl­
ing the yew, and caoccted
edge of his doings nnd were after him.
poltete*
by
n-aiwo
ot Bale or
A member of the robbed firm went to
otiicrwteeL'......... . ...............
ia
Albion and identified the silks mild Number of membera now lieLynging
to
company
.............
there by Thomas ns belonging to his
RISKS.
house, and immediately telegraphed
Amount of property al rink Dec.-*
back to n Chief Dilley to effect the fel­
atst, ot pbwlou* vear......
*e,ow.a&gt;
Amount
of
risks
added
during the
low’s arrest. It seems it wns the busi­
pres-cut year.......................
ness of this girl to copy dispatches,
and she wrote the message out ns usual,
nnd at the snine time indited n note to I
Thomas rending as follows: "Flee for
your life; Dilley is after you!” She
then instructed the messenger to de­
liver the the missive to the thief first,
and then hand toehief Dilley the Al­
bion telegram. Tlife boy did as she
directed and Thonfns fled.
The city of Adrian was thrown into
a state of great excitement lost week,
by the announcement tlmt unnutliorir.ed water bonds of that municipality to
the amount of $150,000 had been thrown
upon tho market in the cast. The story,
wjiieh indicates that pnu.of the shhrpI est and most stiipcndims swindles of
the day has lieeu-perpetrated, is about
ns follows: The city voted last October
to issue these bonds, but usyet no gen­
uine ones have been issued. Tom. Na­
vin. city mayor, and fornjerly the prin­
cipal actor in ?!k» "Only Lung Pad”
swindle, frnnduleutiy issued thenc
bonds, gujrthe city recorder to sign
them and placed tjivm on the market,
securing about liult the '-wag, $05,500,
mid has taken hi* departne from the
city. The city offlcinls are taking every
measure to'get rid of paying these
‘
bonds.
•
- g

A CARD.
A lang expericnee has forced pie conri ctlous
upon me that tl.c true policy lu trade, I* to pay
as you gn. The Argument is abundant.
Hence on and after the 15th !n*t., I propose
to sell for ready jmy only, except as specified
tn my large adverUaemeut. I tike lliia &lt;»pp&lt;Ktunlty to thaukmTcn»UMnerB ftr tlieir liberal
patronage on tbc credit system, and earnestly
• solicit your continuance on the ready system.
I know whereof I aillnn, and will make ft prof(table for you £-■» well a* for myself.
Nasbtillc, Feb. Uth. IS31

Total • ?e-i,nia.00
Deduct ri*ks canceled, withdrawn,
$tM,OW.O&gt;
ro termiiiaud.........
.........
0
Nel amount now at reskby Co...,
RESOURCES.
Amount of premium (or a.Mewments) actually on Land....
Amount of outstanding aascsanicnts not canceled.
12.17
Individual note................... ..........
Uncollected aawssment of pre­
fiUtt.
vious yesr.............. ;.............
227.48

Total resource*..
LIABILITIES.
Claims for Iomcs due and payable
Total Liabilities..
INCOME.
Amount collected on m&gt;«.*M&gt;:ncnU
which were levied during the
present year, v
Amount collected this year on a»WKstncnta which were levied iu

30.06

W5-16

606
Amount received from cash bal­
3.38
ance ut previous year.
Income from all other rourres, vte:»
Individual note............. 4.34
te.95
Total Income for tbc year
EXPENDITURES.
Amount paid for lowes during the
year tot which 65o.M occurred
f5&lt;MM
in prio
Amount of
ofHcera
__ _
cm* In bcbedule A................
Amount of all other cxpedlturea
during tbc year as j&gt;er Bche3.U0
.
dulc 11,............................

•00-14

Total cxpcadlturea during the year,
SCHEDULE A.
TO WHOM PAID.

Director,
Secretary,.....................................
Treasurer,
President,...
.
itemsop

amovxt.

Total Sched. A
SCHEDULER.
“Aixoniaa expzxbb.” amount;
ma

3.00
Total Sched. B.,
MISCELLANEOUS QUE8TI0N8.
J
Huw luxny a^sciwncnt* h*ve been made dur­
ing theyesrt Ans. ouc. Whsl is the amount
ELEGANCE AND PURITY.
SMCMinebto matte during the yeart
Ladles who appreciate elegance and purity ofallthe
Ans. W7.0I \Vh»t Is the rale per cent of »ud»
are using Parkers Hair Balaam. It la the ben
article sold for restoring gray hair to Ila orlgl.
State
of
Michigan,
I
ual color, beautyaud lurtrr.
County of Bony. I
.....
8. 8. lugermm, Preddent, and E. i. Ns*!*,
Secretary of Mid company, do, and cadi
him celf Cloth depose aud suy thfet they b^re
read the foregoing statement, nod }nnw th*
For Simplicity, for Durability for Light Run­ contents Uiercof, and Uwt they gave g&gt;«&gt;d
ning Qualities, aud tor the Greatest
reason to believe, aud do telluv, i-uid Mote­
Range of Work, It stands
ls to be true.
- 3
S. 8. INGER8ON, PreddenL
E. J. NAffil,Sectary.
Sworn and Kubacribcd before nw.nl W.-xdland, tn wdd state aud county, this !A&gt;th day of
The embodiment of all the latest improve­ Jau. A. D.-1882.
meats known to Sewing madiiae nwhijntam,
IRA STOWELL,
I
the elegance of design and beauty of finish,
* rticc of UrtilhMMb-f-jS
comblue to make the
Barry County Mteh.

THE WHITE! THE KING!

WITHOUT A RIVAL!

Ailntinistrwtor'M Sale.
NATHAN WEARS. OoreMKd.
------ iwhervUy gh«n thx
auctloa to the htahevt -Mder,

�«wrll Mid with Uli,

»• Th** Iu IU roe. yet toums« me so!
. "I come, and I go.”

Bing tho joy of To- ■K.
fo njipht. Kternity'B'ftow,

•Wh»» dm mountains give mo

Thy rhythm of del betat
It my MMur tn the night:
. glad with t by glzdnesa; 1

AKDREW

JACKSON WASHINGTON
JONES.

Andrew was quite as black a little col­
ored boyAtif ho had bcen.wcll painted,
and bis ijiaminv was in the habit of (ellhim shat hb-wffs" ns lazv as he was
Hack, sf fact which Andrew Jackson
never took the trouble to deny. He had
not a very clear idea of the proper defi­
nition of the word lazy; but even though
he never made any attempt to correct
tbe error into which his mother had fal­
len, he believed he could .point out at
least a dozen boys who were really in­
dolent, while be was only what might
be called tired.
He looked upon such work as carry­
ing wood and water as something espe­
cially adapted to cultivate the muscles
of older people, but decidedly injurious
to boys of his age. Therefore, whencverjio saw anything at home which in­
dicated the possibility of his being set at
work, he always bad immediate and ur­
gent business which called him as far
away ns. he felt able to walk, and he
could go a long distance, however warm
the day, when he believed he was flee­
ing from labor.
But one day Andrew Jackson Wash­
ington Jones's father came home with a
very long and stout willow switch in his
hand, and told the ever-tired little darky
that it waa his intention to “use it upon
his back, shuah,” if a certain pile of
wood was not split and into the shed by
•unset. Andrew would have turned
pale if his skin had not been quite so
dark, for from tho way his father spoke
he was quite certain he would be just
cruel enough to carry his threat into ex­
ecution ; and ho went out by the wood­
pile wondering which would be the
hardest—to do the work or receive the
promised whipping. He had just made
up his mind that he would rather have
the willow switch cut up by his back
than to cut that pile of wood with the
dull ax, while all the other boys were
oat cat-fishing; and he was already
•marting from anticipation wl\cn an­
other and more horrible thought came
to him. He would probably not only
be obliged to feci tho willow, but to do
the work also, and ho was discouraged.
“Daddy’ll lick mo fo’ a fac’, and
mammy will tear round dreffuf till it’s
done,” he said, musingly, aud he shiv­
ered at tho thought. “Dar’s gwine to
be no rest fo' dis chile till dat yerc wood
am cut.”
If Andrew had only ceased diseasing
matters with himself then and set to
work in earnest on that unlucky wood­
pile all would have been well, nnd one
little colored boy would not have been
missing from homo that night. But he
continued the discussion until he hud
decided to do the task, and afterward
concluded that he could, by trying re­
markably hard, catch just ’one catfish
and yet have the wood in the shed be­
fore the sun got through work and went
to bed.
.
“Keep rememb’rin’ dis yerc switch,”
cried his mother, when she saw him feel
of the ax, then put his best bone clap­
pers mi his pocket and start in the direc­
tion of the wharves.
Andrew nodded his head and shrugged
his shoulders as if he had it ever before
his eyes, but hurried on. If he had at­
tacked the wood-idle with half the en­
ergy that he started for the catfish, all
would have been well with both him and
the wood, for he walked along at a really
rapid rate, considering how tired he
always was. At the wharves ho saw
□one of his friends, but a steamer was
there taking on freight, and to Andrew’s
mind it would be quite as interesting to
examine her as to catch three or even
four catfish.
His wanderings on board, unchecked
by any of the officers because there was
a possibility he might be a passenger,
led him to the furnace-room, which was
entirely deserted. A cosy scat made of
rough boards y as just beside the open
door of the furnace, from which the heat
was escaping in very welcome quantL
tie-, and Andrew pop|&gt;ed into it, smiling
as be thought of the difference between
cutting the wood and sitting there where
he was bo thoroughly comfortable'.
“Talk ’bout dat yore wood-pile,” he
muttered, and then ba Was sound asleep,
while the light of the glowing coals
played about his face, causing it to as­
sume all shade?, from a light bronze to
an ihtenM black.
No toy eVer slept more soundly than
did Andrew Jackson Washington Jones
then, aud none ever awoke more quick­
ly than he when a heavy hand was laid
upon his shoulder, and bo was pushod
on to the iron floor in anything rather
than a gentle manner.
“ G’wuy from me, ghvay—” and then
be rtcpjMid speaking that he might open
h;n month wide with astonishment as ho
raw a num, a very big, stout man, look­
ing as him angrily.
“What are you doimrhere?” asked
big nw, rcbm Andrew woald
have known to be the fireman, if he had
town better acquainted with steamboat

* gpall,”
wide as

if it had been all up hill, so often wm
Andrew called upon to get down aud
yalir,
His father nnd motherjvere both out
hunt.ing.for him when he arrived home,
__ I the __
.l.—
aud
way
he made that wood J3fly,
tired and hungry though he"was, should
have been a caut ion to any lazy boy.
It was all cut and in tho shod when hfa
parents got home, but nevertheless the
willow switch was well worn, aud from
_ day forth Andrew Jackson Wash_­
that
ington. Jones wa* nearly, if not quite,
cured of being lazy.—harper's Young

■is=si'e Post’s Patent Sap Spouts,
Rivera, whom he rescued from the Comanehes a quarter of a century ago:
“In 1856 I wm United States Indian
“
*
t --------------------at the Comanche
reservation;, __
ou
, Agent
--------------------; the Clear fork of the Brazos,then Throek­
■ morton County. One. day I found a
i note on my table from a boy who asked
‘ that ho bo taken from the Indians. Soon
j afterwarj thB boy walked into my office ;
■with a bunch of turkey feathfcrs fastened .
to the top of his head, and his-face
painted, and dressed in the Indian cos­
tume, and said he was tbc boy who left
Experience. Abo tfle best place* iu the state to buy
the note on my table.
asked him '
where he camo from, and ho said his i
father was a Spaniard and lived in tlm
.
Only two pair of tbow Haattnga Chilled Shoe Bobs left It will pay you
mining town of Tapio. in the State of ;
To buy them, for next year. Wagons!
Durango, Mexico. He spoke Spanish 1
and also Comanche. 1 didn’t believe i
that he had Written the note, and, to
try him, asked him to sit down at my
desk and show me how he could write.
Warranted in every respect, for cash or on t
Ho wrote a beautiful hand for a boy.
Questioning him aS to how ho came to Saab. IRoorv. Hfinda. Glass, Oil Colon, White and Colpreo a.en&lt;z
fall into the hnpda of tho Indians, he
JFellbnou nulls, Stovea mid Kmigen. Cutlery, HU ver
said that his father owned a pack-train,
_ Ware, Pumps, I Wood andlroul) Kx*ud Pipe,
and one day ho went out with the mules,
In fact, cverythlnx found in a flrat class Haniware Stock. Headquarters for all kinds
and the men in charge of tho mules, and
of tbe latest and nx»t Improved Farm Machlnary, from the
camped. The Indians came on them
and took him into captivity. After hear­ Wheelbarrow to iv Champion Nlower or Hlauimoth Cord Binder
ing his story I sent for the Indian who
. I’. S. Paper Bags, Old Rubber and Old Iron wanted.
claimed to own tho boy, and when ho
came I told him 1 must have Tito. He
replied that I could not, and I told him
I would or wo would fight. Ho said
that fight it would be, then. Tho boy
cotild not go. I went to see Gen. Robert
E. Loe.who was then Lieutenant-Colonel
of 24 United States Cavalry, a*. Camp
Cooper,-and who had been stationed
there to protect tho Comanche camp.
While theyo Chief Catemoso, of the ComFroth January loth to February 15th. 1882, I shall offer
anohos who had beard of tho object of
my visit, camo to see mo and said that ho the balance of of such goode w I do not wish to carry over,
wanted no trouble between myself nnd
tho Indians, and that if I would give up at prices that will insure thcm.^ale, regardless of cost, to close
5100 worth of goods I could get the boy.
s
L gave him an order on tho sutler and them out before taking an inventory.
ho was given tho goods, and tho boy
was turned over to me.
I sent tho lit­
tle fellow to my house and hp lived with
cay children for about two ycaw, being
treated as one of tho family. Afterward
I met Xfajor Neighbors, who then livfc^l
| near San Antonio, on the Salado. Maj­
or “Neighbors said ho wanted him, and_ will be found in Men’s and Boys’ Clothing, Ladies and Gents
if I would give him to him ho would
send him back to his mother. I turned Underwear, Knit goods, Shawls, Ladies Cloaks Horse and Bed
him over to tho Major, but ho didn't Blankets, Gloves and Mittens. Mens and Boys Caps, and oth­
semi him back to his mother, and tho
Confederate war came on and he went er articles too numerous to mention.
into the Confederate army.
Tho boy
was twelve years old when I took him, i
Ail Goods morked in plain® figures, so that anyone can tell
and tho Indians captured him when ,
nine, having had him three years.
He the exact price.
spoke tho Cqpanabe language per- I
feplly, and J used him as interpreter. '
It will pay everyone to look through my stock, as decided
Major Neighbors left the boy on hLs ।
ranch on tho Salado, near Son Antonio, bargains will be found in each department
and the boy entered tho Confederate
army when about sixteen. Upon re­
turning from the war ho stopped with ;
Capt. Albert Wallace, on tho Cibole, I
fifteen miles north of San Antonio, and
from there went ■ to Galveston, and
thcncc to Corpus Christi.
While with
Captain Wallace he earned his living as
a cow-boy. I went to Corpus Christi to
sec thb boy, Tito JJivera, now Cashier of
the bank of Davis &amp; D &gt;dridge, in Cor­
pus Christi, and ono of tho most re­
spectable men in Corpus.
Ho married
a Miss Moliie Woodward, and now has
ono boy and two little girls, and the
i best of my visit was that tho little chil| dren camo about me, threw their arms
। urounj my neck, and called mo grand­
|&gt;a 1Uvt,r
&gt;bout lt,iHy.jix'-ycOT I

Ho won’t do it half u aniek as I
” roared the fireman, evidently en­
d' by the astonished way in which
the boy stared at him, his eyes seeming
to increase in size each moment.
Before Andrew Jackson Washington
Jones had any idea aa to what was
about to be done, the man had seized
him by the collar of his jacket, -and he
felt blows compared with which those
from the willow switch would have been
pleasure.
In tho lee Off Wrangell Land.
“ Now shovel over that coal,” shout­
ed the man, as he released his hold of
After cruising along the Siberia
Andrew Jackson's collar so suddenly coast for a few d; ya and calling at the
that the boy spun around against the Cape Wankern village to procure as
iron-clad aides of tho room like a top in
many m possible of the articles taken
a box.
'
, ’
by the nntiyes from the wreck of one of
“Mammy says I’s to come right the lost whniers, we found ourselves
back,” blubbered Andrew, as he nibbed I once more on the edge of Wrangell ice,
ooahdust over his face in his efforts to and onoe more in dense fog on the
wipe his eyes.
morning of August 9.
A huge white
■ “ It’ll bo quite a spell before you do bear camo swimming through the driz­
get back, for tho steamer deft the dock zle and gloom and black, heaving waves
tan minutes ago.”
toward tho ship ns we lay at anchor,
“Den I mtu’ shinny along, far I guided, doubtless, by scent.
He was
cara’t stay here,” said Andrew hurried­ greeted bv a volley of rifle balls, no one
ly, as he started toward the door. • of which injured him, however, and for­
“Come back here,” and the man tunately ho could not be pursued. The
made sure he would obey by catching fog lasted in dismal thickness until 1
him bv the jacket, and pulliqg him to­ o'clock in the morning of the 11th, when
ward him. “Didn’t you hear me say we once more saw the hills and dales of
that the boat had left the dock? We’re Wrangell Land hopefully near.
We
two miles away by this time.”
discovered a load that enabled us to ap­
“Wha—wha—wha’llldo?” and An­ proach within perhaps fifteen miles of
drew Jackson burst into a fresh flood of tho nearest portion of the coast.
At
tears, as the most lonely feeling he ever times we thought ourselves much near­
had in his life camo over him.
er, when the light falling favorably
“ You’ll take hold of that shovel and would bring out many of tho smaller
exercise itns lively as you know how,” features, such as tho subordinate, ridges
replied tho man, and from tho way in on the faces of tho mountains and hills,
which he spoke Andrew did not think it nnd tfao small dimpling hollows with
prudent to make any objections. Shovel­ their different shades of color, furrows
ing coal in the hot furnace-room of a that -seemed the channels of small
steamer is work by the side of which al­ streams and tho peculiar rounded out­
most any other seems like mere play, lines due to glacial action. Then push­
and if Andrew Jackson Washington ing eagerly through the huge, drifting
Jones could suddenly have been carried masses toward the nearest cape, judg­
back to that wood-pile ho would have ing by the distinctness of its features, it
attacked it with an energy tlmt would would suddenly seem to retreat again
have astonished hi* mother.
But he into tho blue distance, and some other
was not there, which was his o.wn fault, point catching tho sunlight would be
and he was obliged to shovel coal, which seen rising grandly across the jagged
was the fault of the ill-natured fireman, Uummockv ice plain, relieved against
both of which facts made of Andrew tho blue Jiodowy portions to right and
Jackson a-, miserable a little colored boy left a4 a background.
It was not long,
as ever strayed into misuhiei fur tho however, after tracing one lend after
sake of a few cat-fish.
another, anil coming to a stand-still
For nearly two hours—and ho would with the ship’s prow against ice of
not have been surprised had he been enormous thickness, before wo were
told two days had passed—be shoveled forced to tho conclusion that all efforts
coal, while the perspiration rolled down made hereabout would now be vain.
in streams from his face, and to add to Tho ico did not seem to have been
his misery he lost bis valued clappers broken or moved in any way for years.
through the grating. Then the fireman Wo turned, therefore, nnd made our
said:
way buck to open water with difficulty
“ Now. tlten, boy, we’re going to stop and steamed along the edge of tho pack
pretty soon, and you’d better get on to the northeastward. After a few
deck if you want to go ashore; for you’re hoyrs’ run we found tho ice more prom­
only about twenty miles from home now, ising, showing traces of having been well
nnd at the next stopping-place you'll be crushed and pounded, enabling us to
fifty miles away.”
bear jrradaolly in toward tho land
Andrew dropped that shovel as if it through a we’dgo-ahapcd led go about
had suddenly become hot, and when twenty milos in length.
the steamer stopped bo was the first
Next morning, steaming ahead once
person who landed, having carelessly more to tho end of our water lane, wa
stepped on the mate’s foot and been were rejoiced to find that though there
thrown ashore by him before the gang was now about eight or ten miles of ico
plank was out. Tho moment ho Bras separating us from tho shore it was less
fairly on his feet he started up the pier firmly packed, and onr little vessel made
toward tho town nt a speed that would a way through it without difficulty until
have persuaded his mother he had a lit. we were within two miles of the shore,
could she have seen him, and it was not when we found tho craggy blocks ex­
until ho got into the very confer of the tremely ihard---and wedged
. -o - closely, but
—.a
village that be attempted to form any :patch
- ' ■of' open water
- gear :*_!
the bench,
plan as to tho future. There he whs, now plainly in
... sight,
,l»h. tempted ...
us to con­
twenty miles from home, without any tinue the struggle, nnd, with the -throt­
money, and his clappers lost.
His tle wide open, the barrier was forced, of age, and is a magnificent looking
bands were blistered, hliVlutbes cov­ and by l‘J o’clock a. in. the Cvrwiu was man.”
ered with cinders and-coal dust, and he j
Another Youthful Train-Robber.
was more thoroughly hungry and tired | length from :* dry gravel bar stretching
than ho ever remembered being fa-fore, in front of the mouth of a river. The
It was night.
lie looked down the road which a gen­ long battle we had fought with the ice
Night in Arkansas.
tleman told him led to his home, and as was now fairly won, and neither Um en­
It was night in several other States ns
he thought of that wood-pile twenty gine nor tho hull seemed to have suf­ ■ well, but Arkansas is the one with which
miles away, it seemed as\if it would fered any appreciable damage from the we have to deal at this writing.
have been liappintws indeed if bo could terrible shocks and strains they had un­
It being our turn to deal.
only be there cutting it up and carrying dergone. Going inland, alon^tho left
A lightnitjir express was booming
it into the shed. lie was hungry, too, bank of *fra river, we found it lunch along at the rate of sixty milos an hour.
wonderfully, hungry, but fortunate­ larger than it at first appeared to lie. Every car was full, many standing in
ly
an
old Indy gave him two There wai n&gt;&gt; snow left ori the lowl
the aisles with that meekness and pa­
doughnuts and three crackers after she or any of the hill* or mountain* in’ right, tience only seen on an American rail­
heard bis story, and then s.ho told him excepting the remnants of heavy drift-1; road, to accomm&lt;Klato the fellow who
be was a cruel, wicked buy for not hav­ neverthelessii. was still abuutseventy-fivc wants four seate all to himself.
ing done as his father bad commanded yards wide, twelve feet tldcp and wa?
Thu lamps blazed fitfully over the
him. He kew it’was necessary for him flowing on with n clear, stately current passengers’ dusters, which seemed to
to trudge along if he ever wanted to gat at a speed of about three miles nn boar. fl: fully as well us traveling dusters usu­
home, and every lazy bone in his body While the snow is melting it must be at ally dd.
rebelled against tho exercise.
He least two hundred yards wide and
Tho conductor had passed through
walked and*walked until he thought he twenty feefctleep, and its sources lie well (which was more than he would allow
must have gone fully a hundred and hack in the interior of the country. Not any one els: to do without tho reonlsite
seventeen miles, and yet there was no the slightest trace, however, could we pass,) punching people into wakeful­
sign of a town, while it had grown as find alongthQ river, along the shore ot ness in order that no might punch their
dark as it well could bo on a moonlight on the bluff to the northeastward of the tickets.
.
night. He sat down by the side of the Jeannette party or of any human in­
Tho train boy had filled the passen­
road to rest, but he heard so many habitants. A land more raverely soli­ gers’ laps with books, to keep them
strange noiws, and fancied ho saw so tary could hardly be found anywhere on from bouncing in their seats while go­
many horrible things, that he was forced the face of tho gl&lt;»bo.—John Muir, in ing over rough places.
to go on ngain^jfttbough his -legs were the San Francisco Uullclin.
The brakeman hod put his head Ih
so tired it sefimed as if they would drop
and shouted, “Tho next stopping place
from his body, and his feet were very
is------ !” tho name of the station being
The Phica Where Cat* Can’t Lire.
sore.
lost in the slamming of the door.
There was one thing ho could do,
Tho boy who is always dry had made
Jim Townsend, of Lpndy, has bean
which was to cry, and ho set about that miikin" some experiments with an ordi­ his fifty-second pilgrimage to the water
work with more energy than he had nary domestic cat. It has been repeat­ tank.
over set about anything before.
He edly stated that a cat could not livje at
And tho woman who wants air bad
roared so that tho woods fairly rang an attitude of 13.000 feet above tho Mba. just torn off her last remaining finger
with the echoes, and the night bird.-i Mr. Townsend has demonstrated that' nail in trying to get her.window up.
peered out very carefully to see what such is tho fact. On Monday last he
This was on a railroad in the State of
the matter was. But all’his crying did aud another gentlemen mode the ascent Arkansas.
not take him one inch nearer home, and of Cwtio Peak, which is a Ettie over
Suddenly tho car door opens.
the sound of his own voice actually 13.000 feet high. They took with them
A youthful figure appears, holding
frightened him.
a cat—Thomas—that was a year old, something in his hand upon which tho
Alter bo bad walked what ought to and had lived at nu altitude of 6,COO fact li"ht glitters. He presents it in a sig­
have been another hundred miles, and with no symptoms of disease. . Mr. nificant manner ana cries:
“Now, gentlemen, your money------ ”
thought he should surely die from fa­ Townsend had the 'cat In a box, and as
Fifty men turn pale and cry, “Don’t
tigue, he heard sounds in the rear which they went up he took observations aud
caused his heart to stand almost still, noted very carefully its every movement. shoot.”
Twenty fi/mulcs scream with one voice
while he expected every moment to be When the summit was reached they
killed and scalped.
No such fearful pitched their tent. This was about 2 and some faint.
There is a hasty thrusting of watches
fate awaited him, however, for the hor­ o'clock iu tho afternoon. Tho cat par­
rible noise he heard was simply the took of some food, and after playing for and pocketbooks beneath cushions aud
driver of an ox-team singing to cheer an hour or so, fell asleep and did not into boots.
Strong men fight for a place under
himself on his journey. It was singul tr wake up until near midnight. When it
how sweet that music sounded after An­ dul recover consciousness it ret up a the seats where they can secrete themdrew knew what it wa?, and he ran howling, nnd appeared much distressed. ielves.
“ Gentlemen,” again cries the .boyish
back to meet the team rather than wait Townsend pitied it and endeavored to
for it to come to him. The oxen and make it feel at home, but of no use. It voice, ringing high and clear above the
the man were going directly past his kept up its eunstanr. moaning and dis- jereams of women and din of the train
home, though it would, of course, be played rympt-jins of having fits. When (gasps for mercy from some otthe men),
soma time .-before they reached there, morning eamn tha cat was offered food, • “let me sell you some of this excellent
and tho boy who went’for catfish rather but it retused to eat, and acted even ' tropical fruit,” and he extends in his
than chop wood was to bo allowed to more strangely than during the night, - dexter hand—a banana!
ride over all level places in the road, Townsend says it would op^u its mouth ; It was the train boy, pursuing his useand down hill. Up hill he must walk, M If gasping for bifyath; jump about, fal and harmless vocation.—Cincinnati
for ths load was heavy, and the patient and then go to sleep and wake up with | Satvniay Night.
—
.r
oxen bad about al! ttey could draw a start. All this while clorc watch wa« ’
“ That butter fa too Msh,” as the
without him. If the driver of that team kept and every movement nraed. At 5 !
was to bo believed, Andrew Jackson o’clock in the afternoon the cat died ol • m-m remarked when tho goat lifted him
had walked about four miles; but the

Fonnd only at C. L.
Glasgow’s
Big Hardware Stere

ly

Where yon can save
ten per cent
by purchasing your

SAP BUCKETS, (Tin or Wood,) SAP PAIS, EVAPORATORS

CUTTERS AND BOBS AT COST!!

HASTINGS AND JACKSON LOTSEE

C. L. GLASGOW.

Prices Reduced.
SPECIAL BARGAINS

C. W. Granger

50 Wagons
SALE!
OE OUR OWN MANUFACTURE

|

WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH

THREE INCH TIRE,
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING

BETTE R, THAN COMMON TIRE.
We believe the Three inch Tire is destined to come
into general use* Cull and see them.

Sold by 0. L. Glasgow, Nashville, Mich.

BENTLEY BROS. &amp; WILKINSHastings, Mich., Sept. 15th, 1881.

We are Ready
New
Parlor Suits, Bedroom Suits, Gents’ Easy unair!
.

Ladies’ Rockers, Camp Chairs, Fine
Couches, Extension ’fables, Center
Tables, What-nots, PictyreFraines,
Bureaus, and in
House.
Elsq
'

&lt;

■
i

Don’t buy until you

our Goods aud get our prices,

�c«mr

F. TEK.WEY A CPM Prepa.

JgROOKM k MARKHALL

UMU»b&gt;lNl.

Umrpo

Gordon Cartie

&lt;*» »*« Serr-eeuore l&gt;

lived.

PERUSE THESE LIBERAL AD. RATES.
16.001 S'gJob
IMFROO
12.00 | 20.00

aw.

tffacbwu.

pto.06

OKNO STRONG,
Editor and Proprietor.

Jbshvillr gjirertonj.
VILLAGE OFFICERS.

?!?*»
’m. H?

JlorirtitM.

Thursday evsulag.
ethodist kksoopal chgrch-a. d.

TOW, PM tor.
-M
M
.. ...

tkwvioca rrerr Sabbath at )0U
..___ ’

_
.
— .
1
IVY LODGE NO. 37, K. of P., meet* at Ite
CMtle Hall. Naaiivilk*, Michigan, every ;
Friday evening, for tbc encouragement and
“* l‘"°‘ !
0FL. E. Lkxtz, K. R. &amp; Orxo Stboxo.C. C.

gabrrlUunu Sard
TXT H. YOUNG. M. D. Office cast side of
VV • Main 8U, Nashville. Office hour* from
H. GRISWOLD, M. D.,--------^thle
• Physician and Surgeon. Office and resW
Vlencs opposite the Wolcott House. Prompt

attention given to calls day or night

The

London

lotto Btill draw £120 6*. 4d. from the
public funds, and £10 is paid to those
of George Hl., though that estimable
monarch died sixty-one year* ago.”
—Mew*. Moody and Sankey are hard
at work .at their second campaign in
Great Britain. They have begun at
Newcastle.
Tbe London Ettes *ay*
their opening meetings, afternoon and
evening, were greatly crowded. Over­
flow' meetings were held, and the largest
chapel in town is not large enough for
the crowd* that gather to hear them.
—Not a little has been said and writ­
ten recently upon the question of chil­
dren’* dree*. Now that it is so gener­
ally known that the Princess of Wales
dresses her children in very plain style,
many English and American ladies are
adopting the same course. There aro
many who sincerely hope that thia fash­
ion may reach from “ shore to shore.”
—Mr. Jackson, the young Aulerican
who hasfocen appointed reader to&lt; the
King of Wurtemberg, i* living in abso­
lutely colossal clover. He is the King’s
closest friend, has been frescoed with
titles and decorations, and has a bat­
talion of flnnkicj to jump at his com­
mand. He is a cultivated young man,
and pleasant, but not too utterly hand­
some.
—One of the wealthiest Irish peers i*
the Earl of Pembroke. Early in this
century died Viscount ■ Fitzwilfiam, on
eccentric character, fond of literature
»nd science, who founded and endowed
the splendid Fitzwilliam Museum at
Cambridge. Dying childless, he beboonuathed his
hi. IriA
hi. ooti.in.
queathed
Irish eSute.
estates to
to his
cousin,
tho Earl of Pembroke, with remain­
der to the Earl’s second son, Sidney
Herbert. Lord Fitzwilliam hail a nearer
relative, but this relative had offended
him. The property has since trebled in
value, and is now worth about $350,000
a year. It comprises Merrion and Fitzwilliam squares and the adjoining
streets, the swell-reddented quarter of
Dublin, and stretches away miles sea­
ward.

Tokio Street Scenes.
A- FOOTE PHYSICIAN A SURGEON
• Suceaaor to Dr. Wickham. Office and
midctKe at Dr. Wickham's laic office.
Japanese children, like our own, are
Prompt attention to calls night or day.
exceedingly fond of sweets, and the
- „ „
__ „„rrr.„ _ ,
. islands of tno moii-yaki (literally “ letburners”) and imeya (modelers of
that
aervlces. Office and barley sugar) and tho little, canopied
residence opposite Roe’» me*t market.
wagon of the masked kompcito (candy)
■YTDTt. PARMENTER,----------------------------M.~a Office over peddlers, are always surrounded by ea­
Tho
VV Hull’* Drug *tore, Vermontville, Mich. ger crowds of boys and girls.
moji-yaki- is a great favorite with tho
HAS. H. BRADY. Lawyer, Circuit Court youngsters, who stand for hours and
ConimlMioncr, Real EsUte *im1 Insurance watch his actions with dilated eyes.
Agt. Prompt attention given to all bustnew
entrusted to my care. Conveyancing a «pecial- Ijo is usually seated in a reces* between
two houses, behind a portable counter,
ty. Office opposite Union Houac.
on which are placed a small bowl of Jive
LIEBHAUSER, Merchant Tailor iy&gt;d dcab charcoals, some little copper griddles
• *r In Ready Made Clothing. See me and a vessel filled with thick sirup. He
before you purchase clothing. Fit* guargenerally knows tho names of all his
Ertrons, whom he addresses after’ the
/NALVIN A. NICHOLS, dealer in Boot* and
llowing fashion:
Stex-N Rubtwrw, Hate and Capa. Gent*’
“Hei-yaku-hai"- (“hundred bows”—
FurnGinugGikmU, Gloves sod Mitten*, Trunks,
Traveling Bag*, Lap and Buffalo Robes, etc. a respectful form of salutation,) “hon­
West *idc Main St-, Nashville.
orable master boys, my bosom opens a&lt;
I once more behold your faces. You nil
■Rf ISS M. JEFFREY, Practical Milliner, and know I am the only man in Tokio who
1V1 dealer In MilllMry sod Fancy Goods. Dressj can make a su"ar fish lift-like enough
making, In all Its branches, done with neatness
and dispatch. Salesroom east aide Main street, to deceive the iMwasemi (king-fisher).
Now, produce your rin and I will begin
opposite N«ws office.
my manufacture.”
RNO STRONG, plain and fancy Job Printer.;
Having secured a customer, he places
The beet fadlitie* far doing work of any
। one of hi* griddle* upon xtho glowing
i embers and proceed* to pour some ol
the liquid sugar upon it; then, taking
ISS. E. CHAPMAN, Milliner and Dreas- the handle, rtins the melted mass evenmaker. A choice line of Millinery and। ly upon the mold and dabs it with
fwagj Goods constantly ou hand. No trouble
। patches of brilliant color. When it Is
to show goods. Call and see me before buying. crisp, he dexterously peel* off the can­
Shop two doora north of Smith’s Grocery.
died figure, fastens It to a splinter of
bamboo and hand* it to hi* customer,
N. DUNHAM, Proprietor Temperance Bib; saying:
. Baid Parlors and Pool Rooms. A choice
■
“Taro for “Oh Momi”), you know a
line of cigars constantly an hand. Rooma under
good article when you see it. One rin.
D. C. Griffith's store.
■
Thank you." Who is my next honora­
TONAH B. RASEY, Express and DraymanV Goods and Baggage carried to any plane in' ble customer!”
The ameya is a more accomplished
individual than the “ letter burner,” he
TTIRAM R. DICKINSON, manufacturer ofI combining modeling with painting.
Al and dealer tn Hard Wood Lumber. Build­
ing Material a specialty. Cash paid for logs. Mill[ Like his brother artist, he occupies a
and yardou Sherman St.,at M.C. R.R. crossing. szaail bench, over which Is erected a
. bamboo frame for the exhibition of hi*
AMES FLEMING, practical Jeweler andI manufactures, while tho lower part is
Watch-maker. Clocaa. Watches, Silver and1 furnished with drawers containing hi*
Plated Wane, Jewelry and Optical Goods. Rock­
ford Watches a specialty. Repairing nnd Engrav-; Hock in trade. He is usually a shrewd
aid man, who ha* failed in some busiqw and hMtiken to the trade of asneya,
RUSSELL has money to loan, at low rates which require* very little capital. Af• on good farm security; Principal and in­
tercut payable at the Hastings National Bank.‘ ter ringing a short ditty in order to oolCMka IM door south of Spaulding**, Hastings. loct the children.ho smile* benevolently,
• bows and savs:
'
“ Tell mfl what I can do for you.
Jia.
Nashville every SO‘
4*T», wfck a abate* line of piece goods, and willI Give me something really difficult to
•Ser you bargains. Save your orders for him., make. I am tired ot modeling ducks
and frogs.
Don’t be bashful or expect
TACOB O8MUN. Liveryman, bam ne*r;WUV cott House. First elara turnouts at reason­' that I shall empty your purses; I only
able rates. Special rates to commercial men.’ charge two rm each for my ware*.’’
“
Please
make
me a monkey hanging
Funeral and wedlug parties funtiebed with car
Wages on short notice. '
. rom A tree,” timidly rer““*- - *-------cheek little fellow,
'
own

L

S

O

M

C

J

L

The ameya think* for a moment,blinks
Ma eye* merrily, and replies:
“ Oh, that i* too easy I f Give me a,
HAS. W. DEMARAT, Dealer tn Watebea, task that will enable me to display my
Clock*, fine Jewelry and Silverware. Being ability.”
a practical Jeweler, patron* can depend upon
“Two, monkeys,” 'suggest* a little।
having their repairing done right- Two doora
'
•

C

J£ A. BV8H.

BOOT AND SHOE MAKER,
lAlRYILLK,

-

MICK.

“ You are not paying for thi*, Mis*,’’
he sharply answers, taking a bamboo1
tube and dipping it into some thick,
opaque barley gluten. “Master Tomi
ordered me to make one monkey; if you
want two I will attend to you a* soon a*i
I have complied with bis wishes.”
He then applies tho other end of the
bamboo to- his mouth, dilate? his checks

painted to indfctte it* now. a Nd Hoe ble. No desirable burglar swears—at
added tor the grinning mouth, and the such times.
Now, Blifkins, for that isn’t the gen­
paws and leet are devdoped with streaks
of black. Then the old fellow exhibit* tleman's name, has declared, all through
th." twenty years of his wedded life, that
the burglar he caught in Ms house
caution* not to tease this, or it may bite would be eternally thankful* for the re­
you. (Handing it to the little fellow.) vision of tho New Testament. It was
Take my advice—kill the saru (mon- true that Mrs. Blifkins was away from
home and couldn’t possibly arrive in
time for tho funeral, ana that there
was no one to applaud his valorous
deed. The burglar had got to die, just
other children and says: ,
“ What shall I make next! A mouse the same.
“Now,” thought Blifkins, “ that was
nibbling a daikon (radish), a
*
certainly a kitchen chair he ran against,
rata chasing one another, or a
and he Is waiting * to see if he has dis­
your father* sake (rice wine) f
He will wait a few
Although I have many times watched turbed any one.
tho ameya, I never saw one of his cus­ minutes and if I don’t move he will. I
tomers eat their purchases, but I have don’t believe I locked the back door
been told that the children, after keep­ when I came to bed and that’s how be
ing the pasty-looking, highly-colored got in. Then he came into the kitchen,
figure* until they become hard, devour cracked hi* shins against a chair. Hl*
next move will bo in this direction, for
them with tho greatest satisfaction.
The kompeilo seller, who is not a man­ there fa nothing for him to steal out
ufacturer, attracts his customers by there. I’ll be all ready for him when he
wearing a grotesque white mask repre­ arrives.”
Then Blifkins slowly slid one foot from
senting the head of the god Fox. He is
also provided with a small tambour under the coverlet, aad protruded the
member
outward and downward until it
(drum), which he beats continuously,
as he aoe* so singing a short stanza m touched the floor. Then the other foot
Inch by
praise of tbe deity, krho watches over noiselessly followed the first.
the safety of the city. His stock in trade inch he raised his head, his shoulders,
consists of the kompeilo (little candles bis body, until he sat erect on the side
All this he had accom­
covered with spine-like protuberances of tbe bed.
But hark 1
and flavored with peppermint, ginger plished without a sound.
and an essential oil tasting like winter­ There was a slight noise, as if tho bur­
green), burnt peas and beans coated glar was beginning to move. Blifkins
with sugar; lozenges and cakes of bean­ raised hi» hips as carefully as if he had
A
flour and a brilliant array of candies, the rheumatism, and stood erect.
the names of which are only known to stealthy, sideways step, and bis band
encountered
tbe
bureau,
glided
along
Japanese children. Each kind is ex­
posed in a neatly-made box and tho col­ tho polished top to one of the small
lection is carried in a little wagon, with drawers, drew it out with a very slight
a tent-like roof of paper, the side* of the grating sound, seized a 42-calibre revol­
vehicle being furnished with screens of volver, drew back the hammer, and the
split bamboo, to protect tho delicacies burglar was practically a dead man.
from thieves. Ho moves all over tho - He did not come; but Blifkins could
Moreover, Blifkins did wait.
city, but has regular hours for visiting wait.
certain places, where he halts, beats hu Waited ten, fifteen, twenty minutes, a
half
hour.
He waited until his arm
tambour, lowers hi* mask, executes a
sort ot breakdown, and repeats his .song ached with holding the revolver at point
in praise of tho grid Fox, which brings blank. Ho waited until he couldn't wait
the rin from tho sleeves of the mothers, any longer, and then he struck a match
and enables them to gain a good living. and lighted a lamp. With the light held
Tho foregoing describes only a few of high above his head in his left hand,and
tho many quaint object* that may any tbe revolver ready cocked in his right
day be seen upon tho streets of Ibkio.— band, bo started on a tour of inspection.
Edward Grcey, in San Francisco Chron­ The first place waa the kitchen. No
one w:ii there; not even a chair lying
icle.
upon its bock and thrusting its legs into
Parlor, dining-room, bed­
An Ingenious Student's Curious Inven­ tho air.
rooms, summer-kitchen,
wood-shed,
tions.
all were visited, but not a burglar could
be find.
Twenty years ago there came to Wis­
Tho next morning Blifkins-carried his
consin University a queir genius named
Jofen Muir.
He wo*\)f Scotch parent­ investigation to the cellar and the mys­
age, studious, industrious, inclined to tery was explained. Upon tho floor lay
have but few companions, yet social, Mrs. Blifkin's hanging-shelf for fallen
was a lover of quiet fun and long ram­ hanging-shelf), while, grouped about it
bles in the country, and like many oth­ in a most pathetic tableau, was a large
ers, who have had their way to make, and costly assortment of uncanned to­
cooked his meals in in his room. In all matoes, peaches, pears, plums, grapes
things he was not singular; his remark­ and berries, with here ana there an unable trait wa* his love of practical me­ tumblered mass of jelly, shaking its
Blifkins • laughed, too.
Ho
chanics and invention. He seemed to sides.
need few tools; an ax, saw, jack-knife hasn’t got to twist away at the cover of
and gimlet were his chief weapons, a single fruit-jar all winter. Ho says he
b going to take the garden rake and get
while almost anything served as materi­
al. His clock served as a center about the broken glass^out of that moss, stir in
barrel of flour and a pail of yeast, and
which several of his most interesting a
bake a fruit cake that wifi last till
machines clustered. This was in tbe
Christmas.—Detroit Free Press.
form of n scythe and snath, hung in an
old gnarled burr-oak grub where Father
Chinese Fondness for Poultry.
Time is supposed to have left it. - Tbe
scythe was split lengthwise, and in the
The number of chicken* sold daily in­
opening thus formed was a train of
wheels constituting the work*.
The cludes those consumed by the Chinese,
motor was a heavy stone, concealed un­ who, as is well-known, are great lovers
der the roots and moss from which the of gallinaceous food. Their admiration
clock rose on the table. The year, of a plump and tender fowl is not ex­
month, week, day, hour, minute and ceeded by tho veriest old fox that ever
With tho Chi­
second were indicated by index arrows raided a chicken-yard.
on the various pnj^cr dials.
The pen­ nese tho chickeu is not only an object
dulum was also an arrow with a heavy of culinary delight, but one of religion*
respect. Nothing will extract the truth
copper point.
His sfiidy desk was provided with a- from a Chinaman’s unwilling Ups but
spring trap-door, under which moved a tho shedding of innocent chicken blood.
rack in which his book* were set up sep­ The sight of that in a court of justice is
arately on their backs.
He arranged sufficient to make him disclose hi* most
his study hours for each lesson, and secret thought* and purpose*, and woe
connected the machinery of his clock, so betide the Mongolian who has the
that, at the appointed moment, tbe temerity to make use of the sacrificed
trap-door opened, dropped tho book flesh for tho ordinary purposes of food.
into it* rack, moved this along, threw up The Spanish inquisition would be pleas­
the next book and closed the trap under ure coihparod to the tortures such a
one would undergo at the hands of his
it.
It is said
Hi* bed wa* a machine utterly de­ more devout countrymen.
structive to tho “little m re sleep of the that a Hong Kong Chinaman will steal
sluggard.” I was hung on a pivot, and anything ho could lay his hands on, but
supported at such a height that, when Chinese criminal record* show that the
turned up, it stood nearly perpendicular, number of them who will willingly for­
foot down. The foot wa* held up by a feit their hopes of future happiness and
lever. Beside the bed was the lamp­ reward by stealing and eating a chicken
stand, on which the fluid lamp, then in sacrificed on the altar of truth is even
use, was placed at night.
To this bed fewer than those who have led honest
the clock was connected and then set and virtuous live*.—San Francisco Bul­
for rising. In the morning the machine letin.
took of! the extinguisher, struck a match,
Her Ladyship’s Broken Crockery.
lighted the lamp and then withdrew tho
lever, letting the bed down, and bring­
Lady
Pigot wm the possessor, among
ing its occupant out on his feet. I have
known him to satisfy the curiosity ol many art manufactures, eoually beauti­
visitors by putting them into the bed ful and scarce, of an old Worcester tea
wrong end to, and so bring them ou» service, which wa* occa«ionally in use,
head down. In summer time he con­ and which consisted of eight cups and
nected this bed to the east window by a saucer* and a little teapot. One fatal
linen thread. A sun-glass was so ad­ afternoon the footman, tn carrying out
justed m. to burn off this thread when the tray with these charming object*
upon it, tripped over tbe lap-dog, or the
the sun came to the right position.
I roomed opposite him, and he ar­ rug, or some unlucky impediment, and
The effeci
ranged signal* by which I was often sent evervthing flying.
called to see a bit of fun, in particular, of this awewara mishap wm that tbe
with hi* “loafer-chair.”.
This was a entire service, excepting one solitary
wooden chair with Its bottom split. Ap­ cup and four of the saucers, wm smash­
parently to cure this split an awkward ed to atoms. So hopeless appeared the
chunk was nailed over it, near the front, wreck that, though it was carefully
This caused the sitter to spread hu gathered together and preserved, no at­
knees. As soon as the suppoeed loafer, tempt wm afterward made to unite the
but real victim, leaned book, he pressec fragments. There was nothing among
a concealed spring which fired an . ok them so presentable even m those “bro­
pistol, directly under the seat.
Tb&lt; ken teacups, wisely kept for show, which
wonderful leap* of the victim* wen on the chimney glittered in a row,” M
chronicled by Goldsmith, in “The De­
worth seeing.
Nor did’John forgot the ladies wh&lt; sorted Village.” Last week, at a sale of
sometimes came to see bh machine*.
Out of a raisin a huge victoufc-lnoitlng
over £90; while the broken pieces
brought ILs remarkable solatium of fifty
ittoe when she wm well seated in hi* best guinea*.—Londoa IWepropA.
chair." It was delidbu* to hear them ,
•cream.
John ha* the reputation of
—Antique “ grandfather’s clock*’
Knowing more of the YcMmito valley j now imported from Holland. Tb.

“MOTHER HAS RECOVERED”
wrote au Hlihok girl to hereaMern reia
“She took bitter* for a long time but wl

Nashville Elevator!
Grain and Produce,
Seed*, Fred, Ume, Salt, Planter, Stac■ co, Hair. Pine Lamber, Lath
and Shingles,

AT THE LOWEST LIVING PRICES.

coMtantly getting mashed.
“NOW IBM!"
So raid the'Mind man after the Saviour had
healed bim. Actual bltodtteM I* Dot easy to
cure, although It I* •otnrtfmcs done. But re-

’ think your bad eyea may have coax from thia
cause, lox uot an hour of time in buying a
boule of Dr. David Kennedy * “Favortc Rem­
edy,” which will cxet you only one dollar, and
take it to cleanse yraxr blood. You can Im­
plicitly trurt it to do this. Or drop aline to
Dr. David Kennedy, IRoudout, N. Y. State
yr urease fuly and get tbe doctor# opinion
free.

It I* always slinging hot time* with tbc borVarious Causes—
Advancing years, ctnr. sickness, disap­
pointment, aad hereditary predisposi­
tion—all operate to turn tin* hair gray,
and either of them Inclines it, to sh&lt;*d
prematurely. Arzn’s Hair Vigor will
restore- faded or gray, light or red hair
to a rich brawn or deep black, a* may
be desired. It softens and cleanses the
scalp, giving it a healthy action. It
Tctnoves-ond cures dandruff atwl humor**
By it* use Ldiing 'hair is checked, an^
a new growth will be produced in all
case* where the follicles arc not fir­
st toyed or the glands decayed. It*
effects arc beautifhlly shown op brashjr.
weak, or sickly hair, on which a few
applications will produce tbe gloss and
freshness of youth. Harmless and sure
in its results, it is incomparable as
a dressing, and l« especially valued
for the soft lustre and richness of tone
it imparts.
Ayer’8 Hair Vigor is colorless;
contains neither oil nor dye: and will
not soil or color white cambric; yet
it lasts long on the hair, anil keeps
it fresh and vigorous, importing on
agreeable perfume.
For sale by all druggists.
Guitcau «ays lie doesn't care ateiut having
“the drop” on the public. '

OH, WHAT A COUGH!
Will you heed the warning. The signal per
hajis of the sure approach ot that more ternbldisease consumption. Ask yourself if you can
a iford fur tbe take of saving 50, t* to run the
risk aud do nothing for it We know from expcrience that Shiloh'.* Cure will cure yuur
cough. It never fails. Thia explains why
mure than a million !&gt;ottle* were sold last year.
Il relieves Croup, and whcop'.ngcough, at once
Mothers do not bo without it. For lame back,
side or chest u~e Shiloh's Porous Plasters.
Sold bv F. T. Boise.
DYSPEPSIA a LIVER COMPLAINT.
Li it not worth tho small price of 75 cents to
free youraef of every symptom of those distres­
sing complaints, if you think so call at our
store and get a bottle of Shiloh's Vltalizer,
every bottle has a printed guarantee on it, use
accordingly and if it doe* yon do good It will
cost you nothing. Sdd Ly F. T- Boise.
We have a speedy nnd positive cure for
Catarrab, Diphtheria. Canker month and
Head Ache, fa SHILOH’S CATARRH REM­
EDY, A nasal injector free with each bottle.
L m- it If you »lr*ilsv health and sweet breath.
Price Stl cent*. Sold by F- T. Boise.
.

Jl^EW ELKVATOR.

FOWLER &amp;, INGERSON
HIGHEST MARKET PRICE

GRAIN AND PRODUCE
*

Constantly on Hand.
pjEIV'RY ROE, PnoraiKTo*

Marrying a drunkard*to reform him is like
drinking up medicine U&gt; mvc It.

A WORD TO MOTHERS.
Mothers should remember it I* a most__
Importaut «iuty nt this season to look alter tbe
health of tticir families aud cleanse tbe malaria
and iinpurites from their systems, and that
nothing will tone up the stomach and fiver,
regulate tbe ln«el» and purify tbc Hood so
perfectly a* Parker's Ginger Ionic, advertised
to our columns,—I'oel, Bee other column.

.

MEAT MARKET.
Fresh and Salt Meats,

Smoicl Hams and Shoulders,
15 THEIR BF.ABON,

Lturd, by the Ih^r barrel,
de., tfew &lt;f-e.
The IlighcMt Market Price paid
for Hide*, Pelt*,

kc.

Frosh Goods, Full Weights aad
Satisfaction Guaranteod.

I1EXRY KOK.
JOSEPH COLE,

MEAT MARKET!
Freak Salt and Smoked
»E KVLRY DkscniPTlON__ _—

Live and Let Live,
pt’RMTCItK DEPOT.

J. LENTZ &amp; SE NS,
Manufacturer*, and dealers In

FURJNITURE!
In Every Style &amp; Variety

Tberv arc faint evidence* that button «tring»

CATARRH OFTHE BLADDER.
Stinging, smarting, irritation of tbc urinary
paMBgcs. diseased discharg**. cured by Bucbupabta.
fti, t-al druggists. Mich.
L'
V.l I. Depot, JAS.

A full stock of

LUMBER, LATH, &amp;C-,

For the fall trade, out

STOCK IS COMPLETE,
And will be sold to low tbat^

PRICES WILL AST3NISISH YOU.
WE ALSO CARRY

FULL LTTVL

UNDERTAKERS’ GOODS,

And are prepared to give our timo and atten­
A Chicago dealer advertise* corset.* for ten
tion to everything'pertalnlng to the
eent*. It’s wonderful bow cheap squeezing
undertaking line.
has become in tills country.

J. LENTZ &amp; SONS.

■A«k your druggist for “Dr. 8ykea' Sure
Cure for Catarrh. ” Don’t take any other,

Administrator'* Sale.

KIDNEY-WORT
DOES
WONDERFUL
CURES!

WIIV Q
ffljl J

HENRY TROYEB, d—**d.

plaaehrn
Grove tn

1&gt;.

r&lt;. i&gt;ec onn. A. u. 1HL
T.H. BRICK. AdmlaWrator

PAYNE'S FARM ENGINES.

K DNEY-WORT
PERMANENTLY CURES
KIDNEY DISEASES,
LIVER COMPLAINTS,
Constipation and Plica.

WKLLS, BICSA ItDSOS A Co.. Pray *.

�iu.pwr^by^ootunel

lationm

the city. Ills a mag­
brick building of four stories
nuent with extreme measureof IfiDxlXJ fret. A beautiful
t hade »«*«, s fncniain and gn»vit. Um- summer time—v^ry invitand refreshing. The building is
died with all the modern hotel conlenrra. having elevators, heated
with •titan and each room supplied
J with hot and cold water.
Of connte the principal feature of tho
institution, and ono which everybody
is interested in, is tbe treatment. Tbe
ladies and gents treatment rooms each
'
occupy u space of sixty feet square. Of
the farmer we will not speak, as they
are veiled from male eyes, but we are
told that they are the same iu arrange­
ment—except being furnished a little
more vllcg&amp;ntly—as the '’Gents,” con
, scqueirtly one xiiscriplion will answer
:
for Iroth.
f~~
Having received iHreatiucut ticket
...
from tho physician, with some hiero' glyphics—at least to you—penciled up­
on it, yon aro conducted to the treat­
ment rooms. The first room, you en­
ter is the dressing room, lined ou two
• .
aides with small toilet rooms. Here
. • yon are introduced ‘to Dr. Isaac L.
Wood, whohas charge of the treat­
ments, aud who with Harry Kyuett
an J. H. Ashbaugh, his assistants, are
doing a good work for suffering hu­
manity. You Will And Mr. Wood
"chuck full” of business, and arrayed
in something of the order of raiment
we imagine the girl chose when she
.
soliloquized: "I’ll dress myself. in
what he loves best—a ribbon in my
hair.” You are heartily welcomed by
Mr. Wood, supplied with a clean sheet
and, undoubtedly, soou ready for the
bath. Suppose it isau "Electro-Vapor;"
you are conducted to tho electrical de­
partment, and take a seat ou a cush­
ioned stool iu an apparatus which is
closed all around you. except the head,
which is left protruding, and your
body gently steamed for fifteen to
twenty miuutes uutil the patient feels
that Ins impurities have all been wash­
ed away. In this bath electricity may
be applied to any portion of the body,
and tbe apparatus is so constructed
that it can be wholly controlled from the
Outside, aud the attendant enabled to
know not only the temperature of the
bath—which is from 115 to 180 degrees
fahrenheit—-but the temperature of the
water employed in the shower nnd
spray Perhaps you require an allo­
pathic dose-bath, and a “sharnpo” has
been added. Then you are taken from
the Electro Vapor and laid upon a
marble
when you are soaped,
lathered, rubbed and squeezed until
your skin is as soft, ns fresh and spark­
ling ns your heart may desire. Then
fallows a virgorous graduated spray­
ing until you are cooled dowu to a nor­
mal temperature, when yon are dried
an oiled and go forth a new man.

■

&lt;
।

'-

In this department is the HydroElmetric bath, an agreeable and bracing
bath, and adjoining on the south are
tlie Turkish nnd Russian bath depart­
ments. In the general bathing room,
which is said to be the most complete
apartment of the kind in America, are
administered every conceivable form
of water-bath except the swimming
bath. Adjoining the general treatment
room is the pack room, always kept at
a general temperature, and in which is
administered to patients lying on
couches, the mattage, which improves
nutrition, balances the circulation and
secures many other desirable results.
Id the third story is located the
movement rooms, where, by the use of
ingenious machinery, passive exercise
isgvien to the inactive and torpid
parts.. They are pirtronizcd by persons
Buffering from nervous debility, chron­
ic difficulties and paralysis. Ou this
floor is also located the surgical room,
which is kept busy, patients coming
from long distances to have surgical
operations performed.

anatomy, And he always "gets thar”
with ’em. And how old do you sup­
pose he ia Y Only thirty. He has a
valuable assistant in person of Dr.
Sprague.
There are four lady M. D’s, here,
who are termed house physicians, via:
Kate Lindsay, Mrs. M; V. Doane, Miss
I*. M. Lainsop and. Anna H. Stewart, so
it will be seen that the wants of the
lady patients are well looked after.
We could not close this article with­
out speaking of tbe matron, Mrs. Lamson. She greets the stranger with a
kindly smile and hand-shake. In sick­
ness she is a comfort, and. in health a
pleasant companion. In fact kindness
and courtesy is one of the fundament­
al principles of this institution.
• Orno Strung.
k (jBEAT EVENT.

On a beautiful morning in February,
A. D., 1883, in the quiet village of
Woodland, there might have been seen
the modern “Old Man Eloquence.” I
was filled with emotions of sublimity
as I watched him move slowly dowu
ono of the principal thoroughfares of
our lively little hamlet, the balmy
zephyrs playing- idly with his whiten­
ed locks, as they lay in graceful ring­
lets on his massive brow, Iris eyes were।
ablaze with fires of eloquence, that were1
ready to burst forth like a periodicali
volcano, the muscles of his "pale­
face,” were strung to their highest ten­
sion, there was a firmness about his।
lips that betokened a desperate deter­
mination, his step was firm, and' bisi
whole beanng that of a Demosthenese
or Cicero. The picture is complete ini
a frame of beautiful blue smoke, that
curls fantastically around his head1
from his old “mere-sham” pipe. Slow •
ly but grandly ho enters tbe Justice।
Office, nnd anchors near the door, and
then tho storm of his pent up feelingsi
burst forth on tho terrified men who
bad assembled there to discuss the।
merits of the great trial. “Gentlemen,
it is outrageous, it is infamous, it is a.
blot upon the fair name of Woodland,
I cannot, will not, shall not stand it, I
will not livo in ^community where six.
able bodied men, will, in cold blood,,
and at the dead hour of midnight, un­
der the guise of jurymen, deliberately
wrong, rob, and otherwise maltreat a
fellow citizen.
Why! gentlemen,
think of his orphan children, who no।
doubt arc nt this very moment stand­
ing with tezirs in their eyes, crying for■
bread, and you, gentlemen have rob­
bed them of the last crust. Why!I
gentlemen, my blood runscold in my
veins, my hair stands on end like squillsi
on the fretful porcupine, my tongue।
cleaves to the roof of my mouth, I de­
mand redress. Gentlemen, I thirst for
gore. And, gentlemen, in the language।
of the immortal young man, who work­
ed on tbe gravel train; 'I’ll have it, or
have hair.’ Oh! shades of the depart­
ed St Patrick! Oh! Oh!” And tiie old.
man collapsed, then silently passed
away. We drew a long breach andI
the court adjourned tint die.
Rhetoric.

Eating sausages imported fromi
France Jias been the cause of the deathi
of a popular physician at San Antonio,,
Texas. The sausage contained some&gt;
irritant poison that produced a fatalI
peritonitis.
An English statistician calculatesi
that every man on an average speaks»
fifty-two volumes of 600 octavo pages;
per annum, and that every* womani
yearly brings out 520 volumes of thej
same size in talk.

A Washington marriage ceremony
was interrupted hy the bride’s father•
who whippedwith a rawhide, andI
kicked tho bridegroom out of tbe housej
It is interred that he disapproved off
the match.

ing order tbe jourhey from Loudou
will be accomplished in seven hours,
and au entire day will be saved in the
voyage to America. Tbe Great West­
YOU WILL FIND UNDER ONE ROOF IN BARRY COUNTY AND WE
ern Railway Company anticipate that
tbe new line aud tbe steamers connect­
INTEND TO MAKE
ed with it will effect e complete revolu­
tion in the traffic between England anti
America. A magnificent Dew vessel
called the Majestic was inspected by
the visitors. This beautiful new ship
is to bo launched by the Ducbcsa of
Edinburgh ou the 25th of March. ‘The
WE HAVE JUST OPENED
advantages of Milford Haven are enor­
mous, as it is formed by Nature, os for
tbe purpose for which it will in future
be employed. The docks, pier, and
railway will be lighted by electricity.
O FAnother feature will be the National
Fishery. Vessels can tlsh in deep wa­
ter close to tbe pier, and the tub are
always abundant and fine.
After a most searching inquiry there
is now every reason to believe that tbe
recent explosion on board her Majesty’s
ship Triiimph has brought to light the
AND WE INTEND TO SELL
true cause ot the lamentable disaster by
winch .the 'Doterel was destroyed,' and
the lives of 145 officers and men sacrjficcd on April 96 hut. The' court martial
which inquired into the sad catastropho came to tbe conclusion that it was
occasioned by the accidental ignition
of the coal gas liberated m the bun­
kers, and special methods of ventilationwere'at once adopted on board
some of the largest ships in the navy to
avoid tho recurrence of a similar cal­
amity. By the accident to the Triumph
however, a new and startling light has
been thrown on thc'whole matter. That
JN making the following statement, we utter the truth, and cau verify it.
explosion was traced beyond question
to the accidental ignition of a “patent
drier” knowji as “Herotine siccative,”,
TRADE
nnd this fact has educed new* evidence
In tbe dty. at bottom prices, fair and square weight and measure. When
with regard to tho Doterel, making it
we advertise the most complete Stock ot
iu the highest degree probable that her
destruction was attributed to the same
cause.
How rapidly the electric light is
Etc., in Bai ry and Eatou counties, wo are telling the people a fact that can­
coming into rogue, and there is little
not be successfully nnd truthfully denied. It consists of a large variety of sta­
ple goods and a large assortment of
doubt that the exhibition at the Crystal
Palace will greatly tend to popularise
it. Meanwhile, we hear of experiments
BROWV8 IRON BITTERS aro
every where with a view of making
In various designs and styles, also a well selected Stock of
a certain cure for all diseases
London a brighter city at night.
req airing a complete tonic; espe­
cially Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Inter­
Would that we could have it gayer in
mittent Fevers, Want of Appetite,
tbe daytime. We have had to pay this
In Tea Setts, Water Setts, Cups, Saucers, Pitchers, Etc. An ctidless variety
Xkmm of Strength, Lack of Energy,
winter for the mildness of the season by
of Vases, Toilet Setts, Flower Setts, Etc. in
etc. Enriches the blood, strength­
very dark nnd gloomy weather, and
ens tho muscles, aud gives' now
frequent fogs. Soon we shall have the
Hite to tbe nerves. Acts like a
electric light in Regent street Piccadil­
charm on tho digestive organs,
Too numerous tomention, and so cheap that all can afford to buy.
removing all dyspeptic symptoms,
ly circus, Waterloo place, and elsesuch as tasting the fbod. Belching,
where at the West end. A Dew system
Heat
in
the
Stomach,
Heartburn,
will be tried iu this case by an English
Of every style, color nnd design. When you are ready to buy, I am ready
etc. The only Iron Preparation
company working a French patent. It
to sell. All kinds of Produce taken in exchange for Goods.
that will not blacken the teeth or,
is said their plan has been tried on tbe fgive headache. Sold by all Drug­
Continent with remarkiible success at
gists at $1.00 a bottle.
several railway stations and public
BROWN CHEMICAL CO.
Baltimore, Md.
buildings, and it is believed that, with
h dozen lamps, the whole of Regent St.
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS;
may be illumined.
As it is understood, Mr. Parnell and
the other imprisoned Irish Members
i.OOO.OOOAcres
decline to give an undertaking to ab­
stain from taking further partin tbe
WHO 18 UNACQUAINTED WITH THE GEOGRAPHY OF TH18 COUNTRY,
coLand League agitation, they will not
_____________ WILL SEE BY CXAM[piMO THIS MAP, THAT THE____________
appear in their places in Parllrmeut at
the opening of the Session. In that
case the Speaker would report their
absence to tbe House,and it would then
be open to any Member to raise a .dis­
cussion on tbe subject.
At Bow street, on Thursday, Dr.
Lamson, against whom a coroner’s jury
had pronounced a verdict of willful
murder, by poisoning bis brother, was
brought before Sir James Ingham for
the purpose of being formally commit­
ted for trial. The proceedings were
very simple, os, after the evidence givTermlaiM b st
a nd thin l&lt;
en by the eminent medical authorities
alrolthe location of
at the Wimblefiou inquest, there was no
other course to be taken. Mrs. Barnaby, Lady St. Leonards, and Lady Ed­
ward Spencer Churchill occupied seats
mW.'dtNOffv being h»iro
on the bench. The prisoner appeared Proprietor of tbo new ..u
w-___—
_
in good health and unmoved by his
position. Inspector Butcher watched
the case on behalf of Scotland yard
authorities. Mr. Birch attended on beand tbe prrte la OMLY ONE DOLLAR
• boiUe
half of the prosecution. On the pris­
oner being placed in the dock Sir Jas.
Ingham said "you ore now- committed
for trial at tbe Old Bailey for murder.”
Tbe prisoner was then removed by 8ergcat White, the jailor.
August&gt;
faclur,!, Roudout. N Y

PRICES THAT WILL SECURE A LARGE SALE AT ONEE.

300 SUITS!

Man’s, Boys’ and Children’s Clothing
THAT WERE BOUGHT CHEAP I CHEAP FOR CASH

&amp; SON

TRUTH
IS
EIGHTY!
IRON
THE LARGEST STOCK OF GROCERIES

BITTERS

Crockery, Grlassware,

.Majolica Ware and French China,

ENGLISH DECORATED CHINA

HANGING Ac ST^T*ir&gt;

C. W. SMITH.

Ch®!^

M MAH

THE O.&amp;H. CANAL’S
13320683
Dr.*
..........

FAVORITE REMEDY,

THE PUBLIC ARE CAUTIONED I

- A gentleman of Ottawa, Canada,,
All iu al! the institution is a great gave an order for a silver-mounted[
claret
jug to a Montreal dealer, in­
-oue, and judging from appearances, is
- doing great good to suffering humani­ structing him to send it by express'
Tbe practice se prevalent nowadays
ty. The two-meal plan is observed,— marked C. 0. D. A couple of days ago. in all large cities of trying to attract I, tor tala by all wholesale Drcgitlrts in •prlnelbreakfast being served at 7:30 a. m., the fug arrived, having engraved on it purchasers to shops by placards an­ |M1 ci.Urouf Oht»,MI«b^ann Naw York mid Now
and dinner at 1,30 p. m.
There are in beautiful letters "C. O. D.”
nouncing for sale nt low prices goods
Plummer * Co’nro n«enia In Chisago
three grades ot fare, know as tho liber­
Col. Ingersoll does not mean that it “damaged by fire,” “purchased nt
f&gt;r Kenwky'a •• Favorite Rctnedy” la offered as
. al, conservative and radical. We hold
shall be sold, after his death, that he, bankrupt sale,” or “in consequence of rd isMe mNbciM for the cure of KWaey and Mver
a M-at at the Hlternl table and are well
CoOTplainte, Constipation aud all disorder* arising
dissolution
of
copartnership,
”
is
being
turned from infidelity on his dying
from an Impure state of the blood. To wom-n who
satisfied with what is served.
bed. His secretary, who writes short restricted rigidly in Berlin to cases in suffer from anvotUto Hie j-rtuIUr U the ecx Dr
J. H. Kellogg js the Medical Super- hand, is instructed to-take down ac­ which such anuoucements are strictly Kennedy'*' FsvuriU- Remedy’, proves a real bias*ivtendant und he is a busy mon. In curately whatever he may say on that true. Five shopkeepers in that City
. 1P76 when he became Superintendent occasion.
“There will then be no op­ have just been arrested, and are to be
of the institution, it was a small affair, portunity,” he says, "for any one to, prosecuted by the municipal authori­
located in a cottage and treating six­ put into my month utterances contra­ ties for fraud in putting up such pla­
Tlie twat Ccugb MaDdne for Cbildrtn or
teen patients. He reorganized the in- dicting the expressions of mv entire cards untruthfully.
adult* Is
"

Dr. David Kennedy’s Favorite Remedy

10 GUBE, 10 HU

Hfe.”
coiumenced the erection of the present
building. We are told that he drew

r. To-day the

The only blttcni and the only preparation of
iron that given complete satisfaction is Brown’s
A snowball stopped an elopement in Iron Bittanu It contains no alcohol. It does
Louisville. It wa* thrown bv a boy in
driver of the carriage in which the
runaway couple were riding to a rail­
road station, and thus causing just

Thus
and m

by

the girl’s

DON’T DIE IN THE HpURK.

»XJQX&gt;.
BLANK—Feb. IX, Fk&gt;r» M&gt;y aged 7 montba,
» daughter*trtMro, BUtXof Aaayrl*.

WILSON’S COUGH MIXTURE I

Throurhkxpro*?Passenger TraUn. Flit)PbUn&gt;«B nuio*mF*Ul*ch^»n&gt;n:n«ch w.ydarty
iwtwn-n Uvicaoo and Pkobia. Kaxkab Citt.

«SKSs-SUW."^^AE?s:fl«I

w fe$£££*« mw win be the pin** UM1
SzfflacE.'sftxt«j
our nuMtartSceni p:“!** Cara thal aeconr-an y all

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                  <text>ORNO STRONG,}
Editor and Proprietor.

&gt;

VOLUME IX.

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun,

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1882.

| TERMS; $150 rtR Ybax
I Credit SuBscwTrnon $1.75.

NUMBER 23,

Uncle Dan. Palmater is very ill with
—Dr. Johnson, a fire sufferer of
BELLEVUE’S BLAZE.
WEST SUNFIELD.
Joe. VsoTlete, who received inteqjui)
Bellevue was iu town Wednesday, kidney complaint, antf his recovery
injuries at Vermontville a few days ag&lt;r
And .Her Environs.
looking for a new location, and offered is considered extremely doubtful.
ns tbe resirtta of n wrestle, died sud­
Very quiet/his week.
.
$3,000 fot the Yates block, bnt $3,000
Sam. -Robinson has been promoted
denly Mondoy morn big. His funeral
Dry time for feemizers.
—The night telegraph office at this was asked, and Mr. Johnson is looking from baggageman on this division, to
was held at tiie Bismark clnireh, from
station has proved to be one of the un­ elsewhere. He also looked over the conductor on the main line of tbe M.
Rather premature sugar weather.
thence he was borne rzrhiS-lwH renting
certainties of life and on Tuesday night Buxton block with a view to buying C. R. R.
Winter school are closing already.
Last Saturday morning the fire fiend
place"
It
is
not
good
sugar
weather
now.
wm discontinued, T. N. Kettlewell tak­ that, if he did not close a bargain on
Charley Woolcott has left tbe depot lapped its forked todgue around the
Several ladle* have from- time Io
ing his old positilth as baggage master. die former block.
West Sunfield wants a post office.
nnd will soon go west with T. H. main portion of our sister village,
time Ireeu robbed of their waDets at
—An excellent spedmen of penman
Who will teach our school next sum­ Jarks^n. The person crsuinitrog the
Brooks, to help dispose of two car loads Bellevue, aud could not be induced to
—The “Euterpean Society” of Nash­
ship executed by J. M. Pilbeam is on
of potatoes.
desist until seventeen of the most cen­ mer?
crime could -nor be identified.; It m&gt;
ville was organized last Friday even­
Widow Smith has sold part of her
exhibition at the post office. The de­
Tbe4&gt;owling alley in in full blast and trally located building hod been entire­
happened that the Hawk was minus a
ing, at Dr. Foote’s office, with tlfo' fol­
farm.
sign is «■ family record, and shows a
the pips drop into tbe pit, while the ly consumed. The
printer last Saturday.- F. M.-sent red
lowing corps of officers: Musical Di­
Wilson Bowser closed his school last
grext amount ot genius, and origin­
dimes drop into the pockets of the
ORIGIN OF THE FIKE
' one Dtavi*, or more commonly called
rector Rev. F. A. Bissel, President Dr.
ality.
proprietors.
Is supposed to have been carelessness'• Friday.
Hancock, . late typo- on the. JhckooD
H. A. Barber, Vice P&amp;sidept J. J.
Mrs. Harper was visilmg at Char­
—A l^ook agent with the appropriate Potter Esq., Secretary Mrs, Dr. Foote, - Kocher Bro’s, have a change of ad on the part of a jour., at work in Bren
Star. A good commend wa» giwn-Iiim
.
name pUGa^sawsy, came all the way Treasurer Mrs. M. J. Timmerman, Or­ tills week, and thqy have been patting neris harness shop, who was told to lotte last week.
from that office. A short traie l&gt;efere
S. P. Rhobart who sold bis farm to
from .kickHoVlastrweak, and pe'ddled ganists Miss Belle Truman and Mrs.. iu the largest stock of goods they have build a fire in the stove to keep some
boiu-diiig- tiM.* train lie encountered- two
Articles from freezing, and the fire be­ Fender, had au auction sale last Thurs­ ladies, Hnd succet ded in robbing eoe
bis spperfluous guss away on the in­ M. J. Timmerman. The object of the ever before carried.
j,
The Washington’s BirtH-day party ing first discovcd iu this building, it is day.
habitant* of this quiet and peacable society is mutual improvement in mu­
of them of her walleLcoi&gt;tainiog $6dE.
Wesley Fay closed his school at Bums
at theoper house Wednesday,evening, thought that ho left wood against the
village.
The Indies waged war on tbe yviiwg
sic and a desire to reach a higher stand­
passed off quietly, not a very large stove door which finally forced it open, town last Friday, after a very success­ pirate, who retreated leaving lii»- bat
—Alex. Price says that certain young ard of musical culture. Some attention
ful
term;
crowd being present.
thus starting the destructive conflagra­
and handkerchief while be carried the
men who get filled with esquebaugh, will probably be given to elementary
It is rumored that more real estate
Mr. and Mrs. Howe will entertain the tion. ‘
money. On he come to-Vcnurntville
and make n practice of singing obscene instructions, but the design is not to
Baptist social at tho their residence
Although Bellevue was visited thir­ transfers will take place in onr neigh­ the same dnjr, and-the rascal was- iden­
songs as they pass bis premises, must form nu elementary class, but rather
borhood.
tified by the bat. Sheriff Wil lionis-redesist orAfiey will be dealt with ac­ benefit those who have somewhat of a ni;xt Wednesday, March 1st. Refresh­ teen months ugo by the firey monster,
Mr. Bell and family of Kalnmo, hirvsx.
ments will be served.
she has not seemed to awake to the
cording to the law forth with. #
• reived a telegram Monday morntajp to
knowledge of. music. The Director
Washington's Birthday; Ash Wed­ necessity of organizing a fire company, l&gt;een Visiting relatives and friends, in arrest said Dw*is Xnd Iwkl hiw fo*
—The News has received from Hou. Rev. F. A. Bissel, is well titled to lead
West Sun field.
nnd like Nashville, lias
nesday
the
begining
of
lent,
and
tho
passage on tho 1:47 train. Young Dav­
E. 8. Lacey, M. C. aud Chairman of the tbe society, having hatl years of exper­
Farmer* nre hiring hands for the
NO FIIIE PROTECTION
middle of thia week all occured at the
is was greatly excited at first and tried
committee on postal savings banks, a ience in similar wor.k. The regular re­
And thus fell and easy proy to the de­ coming season, at wages verying from hard to make hiaescape. He succeed­
same
time,
last
Wednesday.
copy of a bill introduced by him pro­ hearsals nre held on Tuesday evening
The Maple Grove Mite society will vouring clement. The fire was dis­ $10 to $20 per month.
ed in causing 3 foot races, bat wuscomviding for the establishment of a snve- of each week. The llrst took place at
Andrew Kilpatrick, Homer Hagar pelled to tarry. This reporter took 'a
lie entertained by Mr. and Mrs. Emer­ covered about 1:30a. m.and the ql^nn
ings bank iu connection with post the Christian church last Thesday eveson Hyde on the evening of March 2d. given, when every man that could car­ nnd Win. Bowser have gone to Olivet, part in rhe run and witnessed his de­
offices, ft is a good bill and should uing,the next will beheld nt the M. E.
ry a bucket of water huiried to the to attend school this spring.
parting from thc-sata ide world at Jackchurch next Tuesday evening at 7.80 I Evciy oue is cordially invited.
become a law.
s , The W. C. T. U. have moved their scene and did what he could t-&gt; save
A large number from the Sunfield sou. It is thought that the young lady-Tbe A. No. 1. dramatic chib No 2,1 »'cIm!|£
A c»rdi“! i"’&gt;&lt;«U.in i.
I Library to A-.'Nichols’ stoic, one dour the buildings and contents, but could j Grange attended the oyster supper giv­ robber nt Jackson ha-* been captured
was formally organized last Thursday exlemit-d to any in the village or vicin­ j mirth of G. W. Francis’ grocery. The do but little at either, and the greatest en by the Grange nt Hoytville.
’ in the person of ymrag Davis.
.
evmipg, C. W. Granger, President; ity, to join the society. For particulars ;
io rap.nl to momboralup. apply to Dr. I Llbr?7
!&gt;atunl..J at tbo excitement prevailed. The Battle
Whitest.We nre are much pleased to note that
C. N. Young, Sec’y; and Dan. Smith, Barber or F.T. Boise.
Creek and Charlotte fire companies Mrs. S. Weeks is rapidly improving, so
j usual
......1 hour.
Treasurer. It was decided to piny, the
| C. W. G ranger comes out with a full were telegraphed for but owing to a that she is able to work some.
COMPLICATE DU {EASES.
—Another pioneer has lieeu called column nd in this issue, and yet one chain of unavoidable circumstances
"Lancashire Lassie” a highly sensa­
B. Thomas has bought him another
A'prr-rnineut gentleman in Cerro Gordo Co.,
tional drama in four nets, nnd a com­ from time to eternity. Joshua Martin, cauuot imagiue the rare bargains bo did not get there until after live o’clock .
rtnj w5ll run two wagons here- Iowa, write* uh that iw. tUuK KidneyJiVort lb
be the t&gt;e»t remedy he ever kt
fora compli­
mittee was appointed to cast tbe char­ who fur tbe last 27 years, has lived on offers until they step in, examine bis and could do little more than to save
after, in the rag and tin trade.
cation of dlaeaxe/. It is Hk apeclflc actiou
acters, which will mace its report at the State road in West Castleton, died goods aud get prices.
adjoining biiildiug from igniting.
Simon Unger started for Kansan last which it ha_« -&gt;n thellrer kidn. jya and- bowels,
the next meeting, next Monday night. last Wednesday noon, utter only about
wbkh give* it such curative j» »’wcr, and it is
It
is
also
a
singular
fact
that
many
of
week Wednesday, when helms bought the thousands of cum wine b it is perform­
L. A&gt; Nichols, member of the Legis­
—A dangerous counterfeit in the two weeks sickness. Mr. Martin mov­ lature from the western district iu this the heaviest loosens were carrying.
a farm, and will make it his future ing which gives IU great celu britr. Liquid,
(very concentrated) ordrf, bot&gt;'J set efficiently.
shape of a silver dollar is getting too ed from Ohio to his present location county, called on his wav to Lansing,
NO INSURANCE
home.
—N. H. Journal and Courier.
when
(his
township
was
a
wilderness,
decidedly numerous in this vicinity,
The new saw mill owned by Mr. St.
to visit Mrs. A. 8. Foot and family on Or if any, a sitiad amount us compared
and is hard to distinguish from the and tbe village ot Nashville unknown Weilnvsday of this week.
with the value of the property.
It is John, nnd located on the farm of Jas.
genuine, the only discerned is iu tbe nnd UDthougbt of. His nearest neigh­
The children, grand-chihlreu and a diilicult to estimate the loss, toanyde- I Boyles, is running steady aud seems to
LOCAL MATTI IRS,
weight, the counterfeit being several bor* were over n mile distant, and the few iuvitetl friends, surprised N. P. k-nt-or coruinty, but from MirwmoliU &gt;
very good internment,
grains lighter. The color is almost roads of the township, nothing more Fi ink last Wednesday afternoon, aud made by the losing parties the next I
CASH FOB LOGS ’.
; The Ladies Aid Society is prospering
than
trails
through
the
woods.
For
day
after
the
conflagration,
perfect, and it will ring almost equal
the-Morgsn saw mill. Elm. Maple; Ahli.
celebrated his birth day in a manner
finely nnd has so much btisineee on At
lUswocxl aud Cherry logs, from 12
14- feet
THE LOSS
to the genuine ■irhen dropped upon many years Mr. Martin’s homo was that pleased the old gentleman greatly.
j hand that a special meeting was held long wanted.
Sa u Tnoxxu
Is estimated at $38,090. aud distributed
the counter. The line imitation shows made the Imlf-way-house by the early
last week Wednesday, at Mrs. Hiram
... ...,j ,-,r
„
The ladies Christian social was euas follows, the insurance In-iug append
that it is not the work of a novice, hut settlers while on their way to Hastings
•upplies for ____
family
U M. CLAJtK,
shop.
..rf tertained last Wednesday evening, by ed wheu any occurs: L.S. Brenner, har­ Sacketts.
that of a novice, but that of an experi­ to mill, and to get
We failed to mention last week that
Mr. and Mrs. Jas. Fleming. A pleasant
FARMERS ~
ness shop, $1,300, insured for $800; L.
enced workman in that line. Who is be? Ute, aud many pioneers remember with
gratefulness the kind hospitality ex- and enjoyable time was had aud six W. Elmendorf, barbershop; $50; Jud­ Charlie Phillips mid wife, of Castleton, Take advantage of tbe low prices and buy your
—The 7.35 p. m. east bound train
teuded by the generous host and ob'.ig- dollars added to the funds iu tho treas- son York, .building, $550; John York, ; were visiting friends here. Charlie’s hanic’s of Clark who will gtveyoi i No. I attxk
Tuyday evening on arriving at the de­
’ V m. CuaKfl.
team is one of tbe nicest to be found on and reliable work.
ing hostess. Mr. Martin was an ener­
store|building,groceriex,boots nud shots
pot discovered a three inch crossing
tbo roads.
J. F. and Chas. Holbrook started for
GT We arc mannfacturing some of the
getic man of marked ability, nnd lias
$5,300, insured for $1,500; Dr. L. O.
plank 10ft. long and 1 ft. wide wedged
finest harness ever made to Barry Co., caliard
Tbe
school
in
the
Kilpatrick
district
Dakota
last
Monday,
to
"look
for
land,
”
probably did more Surveying in this
Johnson, store biiildiug. drugs, station­
see for yourself.A. R. Wolcott.
into the pilot. At a crossing just west
county, than any man nhw living in it. and from nil accounts given of that ary, boots and shoes, $10,000: Dr. Tay­ closed last Friday, and the teacher, Mr.
W 80&gt;s of coffee for fl at
»
of Hastings, a jar was felt by the en­
nud has always l&gt;een prominent among country, they will uothave much troub­ lor, store building, $1,000; Dr, Berry, Warren Barry, has returned to Lan­
C. W, GKANGXn'*.
gineer, but the cause was not known
his townsmen, haring filled the office le finding some, for there is lots of it drugs, and Porter Hisrwnod, groceries, sing, to continue biscourse at tbe Ag­
Never burs Sewing Wochiue u nltll you liav,until arriving here. After splitting
ricultural
Qoilege.
■
there.
of Justice of the Peace with credit to
tested the New Victor.
L. J . Wheels■.
^aw,
vv. Evans, niuru
$200; ixuiiDiKvi
Hunsiker &amp;.
store uuiiu
build
and considerable prying and pulling
• Geo. Downs closed his school tern- 1
An oyster supper will be held at 0.
himself nud equity to his neighbors for
ing aud Intuber yard, $1,000; Enos I ,
[y Winter goods still at cost. al
the intruder was removed.
last week, on aceouiU of bis
several terms. He was 72 years of age, Warren's, Friday evening, March 3d, Boughton, dwelling, $1,300; J. K. Tay-. porarily
,
C. W. C RANGERS*.
—The News is authorized to say to the father of nine childr«r..six of whom for the benefit of the Sunday school iu lor, "Taylor house,” and barn, $3,500: &lt;mothers sickness, but she has so far re­
C3F" Kelly’s Steel Burb Wire , one pound t«
now, that he returned to his
the young people who went to that survive him, a kind father nnd hus­ the Mudge district; bill, 50 cts. per insurance on contents, $1,100, L. B. covered
the rod, Manufacturo^oodSoD i by Thorn Wire
(
school house expecting to have a spell band, much respected by all who knew couple, and a cordial invitation ia ex- Moigan, store building nnd grocery sebooi duties again thia week.
Hedge company. A aamplwoC . the ab.v o- ctuj
be
found at
C. L. GLASGOW’S
The
ditch
commissioners
met
ar.d
.
nnd the spell did not come off, that they him, and bis loss will be mourned by a tendmil tu ail.
store, $1,000, insured for $300: Henry
laid out over three miles of ditch in
W. J. Clifford has a splendid span of
may have the privilege of having a large eirde of warm friends. His last
ASH LOGS BRINU CASH,
Hunsiker, store building and burn, $1,­
spell on Saturday evening of this week sickness wns lung difficulties nnd heart 4-year-olds, which ho claims is every 200; By. Flowers, liarlier shop; Wil­ the northern portion of town lost week,
nnd the bids for laying the same were
and they will be prepared to meet disease.
Funeral service* were at­ whit as good as Alex Price’s. They liam Hooker, hariicM shop. $300, fully '
them. It was a misunderstanding that tended yesterday forenoon, at the resi­ are large rangy fellows, and look ex­ insured, Union Hall block, owned by mtule last Tuesday, at Buinstown.
Ing elsewhere.
ceedingly well, considering the amount Chicago parties, $1,500, iiiaurarcc not
they were to have a spelling match that dence of the deceased.
We are glad to note that the Vt. Ville
KF Htrness repaired ux ( oiled In &lt;xchang&lt;
of work they do.
,
-evening, and nothing intentional on&gt;
Hawk
has
a
correspondent
from
our
known. John Huston, furniture, $300,
the part of the society to mislead them
While in' Bellevue the fore part of ful|y insured; Eno* Boughton, store part of the country. Welcome to you
VICTOR! VICTORI VICTOR*
LOCAL GIBBLE-GABBLE
or have them think they dare not meet
this week, we called on A. L. Hamilton, building and justice’s office, $1,500; R. "W, 8. P.” and may you ever find
The atill light running New Victor Bewtai.
them was intended. They cordially
editor of the Gazette, aud found him R. Kinney, hard rare, $1,500, insured; items plenty is our worst wish to yon. Machine is the Machine for the UkiuhumV
invite all to meet them, and will try to
to be a" wide-a-wake, energetic young Henry Robison, dwelling, $500.
The S. 8. Institute held at the U, B.
use everybody neighborly nnd courte­
man, and exceedingly pleasing in man­
Tbe blow is a sad one to Bellevue, ''church last Sunday evening, was well
Logs begin to move.
ously.
ners,—as j* usual with the craft.
and we are as liable, to be visited simi­ attended, anil a very interesting pro­
The merry sleigh bell jingleth.
LUMBER! LUMBER!
A grain was well carried ouL instructing,
Mrs. A. W. Olds and daughter Edua, larly at any time as she has been.
Curtom Sawing sad Building Msteriltf fur
Geo. Bale was in town this week.
and springlike as April, and the farm­
of Bear Lake, arc visiting their many few dollars expended in zometing to ns well os intere.'ting all who were
pie
Grove.
present.
er* were arranging for the spring’s z Mr?. Geo. Simpson of Hostings
friends in this village. They have fight,fire might save ten times tbe
visitiugJriends here.
campaign in the sugar bush, getting
The controversy between 8. Brown
come to stay several weeks. From amount invested in lea* than a yean*
FOR JLAUL
Who jll be the first to raise a boom
their fences repaired preparatory to
and Mr. Wellman relative to the land,
them we learn that Mr. Olds lias a big time.
One 3 BpriigyDoable Buggy or Wag*u. al»&gt;e
company
?
for
tbtr
getting their atqck out to pasture, and
occupied by the latter, after being in
season’s work ahead, having already
Mrs.
A.
D.
Stanton
is
slowly
recover
­
BARRYWLLE.
■doing such other work as spring time
camp for a long time has finally been
several million feet of logs scaled.
always brings with it, but on Monday ing from her severe illness.
decided in favor of Brown, so that now
MGNEY WANTLLH
Laurel Chapter O. E. 8. will enter­
H. Davis has moved into the house
Kellogg 6l Atkins have opened a Mr. Wellman will be oMiged to vacate
■of this week old Probs, had another
You are owiug rue. aiuk 1 muM. bavu- th«
tain
a
social,
Tuewiny
evening,
Feb.
lately vacated l»y Mrs. Snyder.
money to pwr mj bllb. JX not
wm, tougrocery store at Morgan.
program which was announced in tbe
Ins island home.
38th, at the residence, of B. F. Rey­
account wiMbu placed In-a rnUecKr'a haods.
Mrs
M.
P.
Perry
of
Bellevue
is
visit
­
Our friends that were making maple
shape of a regular blizzard, aud snug
nolds. Refreshmentfl served, and all
winter of prodigious magnitude. The ing her brother, Frank McDerby.
sugar, have adjourned fora while.
are invited to attend. Will the Ma­
Geo. F. and Belle Truman have been
THE CROWN SEWING MACHINE
There has been 848 car loads of ice
farmers however do not complain, as
BINMARK
sons please remember tbe help of the
they have plenty of work that can be 'visiting friends at Lansing, this week.
shipped from Thornapple lake this
ladicfl, at their Dedication supper, and
E. R. White is making a boom in the
done on snow, providing they have
return the compliment, by attending winter.
Business is dull.
,
sewing machine business, set; his new
ken the good feature* in all other uachitn
enough of it
Rev. Mr. Crosby of Rutland, deliver
this social bringing their wives and
Ira Phillips is able to limp.
nnd pus them in one grand combination. nu»
ed a good temperance lecture at the
—Orno Strong returned last Faiday
Ing this the Handsorawt, Largest; Mti*t 8i}eu
Stornjing Monday and Tuesday.
friends.
,
Chas.
Neal,
who
has
been
acting
in
night, from the Battle Creek Sanitari­
One hundred and one reserved seat R, R. hall at Morgan last Saturday
"Tatera,” locals and beans are scarce. and Ligb lest Run triag moehlar yot tAtrad. A.
um, much improved, but still quite tbe capacity of nah gatherer has van­ tickets for Hazel Kirke were sold at evening.
Onr winter may get the big head yet.
ished.
Mr. Lorenzo Mudge, one of the first
has proved tabeataointcly gy-wd^rs to b
weak from the exertion necessitated
Charlotte in thirty two minutes. Haz­
Tuesday was die wildest day of the work
found only In tho- “Crown," (nhec nadilrn
Eli Strong, of Kalamazoo, baa been
settler in this township has been
by bis travel in coming home.
While
el Kirke will be produced at Sampson
winter.
visiting his brother, the editor, the
there his topeils were cut out by the
hall, Tuesday eve Feb. 38th in a man-' in very poor health this fall, but we
We looked through the Daily Citizen
past week.
are glad to sec him out once more.
attending physicians, and being cut
net never equalled on the local stage.
office at Jackson last Monday.
taschhiea will be found is. the “Cteku.
.
O. E. Howthorn, a brother *of 8. D.
Mrs. Annie Root, formerly Annie
very close to an artery, a violent fit of'
Send to Dr. Frank Merritt for reserved
Mrs. Grimes has gone to Ind. on a
is to take the Nermontvilic telegraph
Souls, who has been visiting nt her old
coughing on Saturday morning, caused
*aat, nnd see n first class theatre much
visit. Old Grimes will go next week.
office March laf.
borne for the last four months, proposes
a hemorrhage which came near result­
Amos Ilalette is here on butineas
cheaper than by going to Grand Rap­
Frank Purcbia is putting od airs over
to return to her home in Emmet Co.
ing fatally, but Dr. Young was sum­
ids or Jackson.
and visitiag. He reports favorably of
a new 7 lb boy, which arrived last
tbe
last
o
r
this
week.
moned, and after considerable difficul­
his Isabelle home.
Prof. Kennedy, a renowned mesmer­
narfteta
Monday morning.
The church here had an oyster sup­
ty succeeded in stepping die flow of
Mr. Hay of Ind., fo visiting relatives
ist who comes well recommended by per at Willis Lathrops last Friday
The thermometers were considera­
blood, but not until Mr. Strong hail
the pres*, will commence a series of night. On account of the bod roads, herealjoutx. He proposes to buy a
bly surprised at the appearance of the
entertaiiimcHts at theopera bouse, next but few were out, but all that were farm and live atwmg Iih children.
Wood.
were excluded from blizzard ou Monday.
Tuesday evening, continuing through
The last importation in the fora* of a
About fifteen di
thia village the week. These entertainment* sur­ present, report a very nice time. Pro­ printer at tho Hawk office, wm arrest­
by the aid
ceeds about $12.
G aster.
visited Bellevue I
pass any of the minstrels or comic op­
ed by Sheriff Wi'.liams last Monday.
eras for fun laughter and amusement,
Mr. Davida young man lately from
The latest news from the North Side while they aford a grand opportunity, in the suit of the farmers, vn tbe Irving odc the printing hooaea of Jackson, was
iaofaboyUmt will eall Jim Gregory •tody and investigation. Admission mill, the farmer* gained a judgement arrested and named &lt;rrer the road for
of$?.V»trial.
35 nnd 15 cent.

LIFE IS NASHVILLE

�wpereyon can save
ten per cent
by purchasing your

Glasgow s
Big Hardware Store

so as to receive their supply ’ of water
i-w.
’ crMnk maY be left to the' individual
from below a stratum of soil imjiervidus water, of Groton Lake would have to re- reader lyr w, fad-ment, after bring intn surface drainaare.
X
2,
«&lt;
F.nU.nuu,
(Tin or Woodj
Lakes and ponds contain less, but the
11
nllu&lt;!®d to—for Mr. Strong Wm not getsame kind of hnpuritie* as springs.
aad lt
take nbout tkreo st-able-as to the nature and extent of
Experience.
AtoQ the best places in the «Ute to buy
While the water from spring* al! flows year* to procure »*me Inventor’s claims.
through soil from widen it dissolves it*
If arsenic were used, they must have
„ r_ .l,
.
impurities, much of the lake and pond
water only flows over the surface of the would require 114 tons—a canal boat doe- ftWaJ wi,h ttMtheoryof on(iui*.
Only two pair of tbow Uartinp' Chilled Shoe Bob* left. It will pay you
ground.
flJfnra nlrwln* T wish
A.11
T°
• telephony Ho*,
Rivera or any rapid streams contain
Before closing I wish to call your at-1 iMl used the rid theory of undulatory
generally a large amount of suspended tention to the following figures, which currsnU,
on that m^ry has patent
matter which makes the water thick
water
pcr
! ed an
by ’Tbich a telephonic
and dark in color. Ve ry little of this to some laige citta*.
| oonx^taon can be made. Strong has
Warranted in every n-speci, for c**h or on lime. Alao
suspended matter dissolves, and it may
.................... SSJiSS*: K°°* *
further, and claims that
I U» haif-«i&gt;ti
be removed by filtering or allowing it to
1 iib&gt;- hAIltl it 1
....... •••••;•..........
MsaUraa lht;rfi
no RU°b thing as undulations io Saab. Doors. Blind*. Ginas, Oil Cotorg. White nud Colored Lead
settle.
GUmow...... .I.../..- .. fiOgalloM I electricity; either in the current of 'otbJrftVrson nails, Ntoves and Raisgea, Cutlery, Mirier
When there turbid streams empty into
..
IhwSlioM cnr“e’ and that
telephonic oom­
lakes or ponds the suspended matter set­
Ware, Pumps. (Wood and Iron,) Ix*a&lt;l Pipes
Imperial Rome.'raUoui munication to established by polarity.”
tles, leaving the lake water clear, but in
In
fact,
everything found in ■ ilrat claw Hard wan.- Stock. Headquarters
If the amount of water used has any‘‘ M°,r. d®01 be propose to get his
running streams there is ho opp&lt;wtunity thing to do with tbe health of a nation,
of tbe latest sod most improved Fann Machmary, from the
7
good working »hape?’r
for the sediment to settle.
upon IU •beil;
we are far behind Rome in the days of
“ " ‘tb™1.
you just ho^ he Wheelbarrow ton Champion Hower or Hammotb Cord Binder
The water of the Misstxsipni contains the C«ara.
Imperial Rome then sup- P™po«w * do it, I can give you what
P. M. Paper Bogs, Old Bobber and Old Iron wanted.
forty grains of mud per gallon. It is plied her citizens three times „ much jI
w
M/ MW. ±
It may asestimated that this river carries 400,000,­
*• For the nun was warm an! tbe earth waa fair;! 000 tons of sediment per annum into the water as to now used per capita by the 1 tontoh von a little, but he says the time
is
coming
when
people
can
communicate'
Gulf of Mexico. This mud ia rich in citizens of our largest city.—Herbert C. without any wire between them.”
Foote, tn a lecture before the Students
plant food, and produces fertile land.
“WHalP”
Cann*
The water of rivers is often mode very of the Cleveland Homeopathic College.
and that, wy child.t
“Yes, that’s just it All you’ve got
’ impure by receiving the drainage ot towns
to do, in principle, is to put a wire in
on its banks. These impurities often'
the ground and a telephone to your ear,
make the water unfit to drink.
Rivers,
I
iM«&gt;y and 1 don't know
I and the man you want to talk to over
*11.HI( uullnr: Bui baliieeBndev'yonoknowa' however, will purify themselves by
Mr. George Sanger, having engaged
That KTWMi-a don't mink, for they only rrowa oxidation in a short time.
with Mr. Paul Cleves, the proprietor { the way does the same thing, without
Mr Matu-iua b»i fold mo ao.
connection
overhead, and
tbe Porte St. Martin theatre, Pi3«. to |I any wires in 5°"
ne&lt;!t|
What rnnku. ‘eta »;art an1
btrror an’ blr-■
The quality is often ot more import­
"JN making the following statement, we utter the truth, and can verify it.
a
ance than the quantity of the impurity. .upplr eight lione, two dromwUrie, end I
And poiarny
polarity is
is aat the bottom of i»
-.T™
Five or jux grains of lime or magnesia two elephants, to appear in a spectacular i
play,
the
lions
were
brought
to
the
theni
ftU
r
—
—
will render .water unfit for the cooking
“ Ye«.
Thai a twiby could understand?
r *, He
*"i" claims that the whole
"Z
, of some vegetables, while such impurity tre. At nine the next morning the man in ! •
‘
'
with
"
will be of great advantage when the charge ot the elephaau; with an oxpn»■ion oi terror in hi» oounttnance, said in
1 U ‘«Io«r»pl&gt; wire,
water is used for making tea or coffee.
In the city, at bottom prices, fair and square weight aiyl measure. When
In therich and fruitful land:
‘
we advertise the most complete Stock of
Soft waters aregeherally better for Mak­ a whisper to Mr. Sanger: "The lions are ;
For over then all waa the myttcry
“ And it’s a success, is it?”
■Or wid an&lt;i a icu.dlnzhaod.
ing and for washing purposes, and hard out.” “Well,” said Mr. Sanger, "why
“
Yes,
as
far
as
it
’
s
gone.
He
has
al
­
water for tea or coffee. It is on account don’t you catch them P Where’s the ready telephoned In this way on railroad
What oonul I rather from learning more
of this that certain wells have a reputa­ keeper, Maoomo?” “Don’t know, sir.”- tracks ana iu the- water. He says he
Mr. Sanger, taking an oil-lamp, with a
Etc., in Bairv und'Enton counties, we are telling the people a fact that can­
On u.e ro.-ki «»&lt; truth from tho mystio ahoro, tion as tea wells. In years gone by there wretched, smoked globe, went on to the can do more than that, even. He claims
' were two or three such wells in New
And, hufnbly lowlmr low,
to be able to pick up sounds on their not l»e successfully nnd truthfully denied. It consists of a large variety of st
I an«r oed ■&lt;!! .v tho man and child;
A’orkCity and a boy was employed by stage, and, after walking about for a ' travels, and a short time ago intercepted pie good*, and n large assortment of
5“ O. there you
the coqxiration to pump water for the time, was heard to sav:
message passing over a telephone­
are, are you!” and. looking over a trap a
benefit of the inhabitants.
'Wai-e
IVi-oiwli Cliisie
wire under the water in one of the West
The reason why hard water is better in the stage, he saw tbe big lion Tich- 1 Side parks. His theory, as I said, is
In various designs and styles, atoo a well selected Stock of
WATER AXD HEALTH.
for making tea or coffee is because the borne, and presently the other two camo • that the whole earth is simply a mass of
lime salts prevent the water from dis- prowling by. "All right, I will soon
One of the most important subjects1 solving the astringent matter contained have them/’ said Mr. Sanger. At this. I polarity, with every particle a telegraph
for 1 Ife consideration of the inhabitants‘ in the tea or coffee, but it does not pre- the big. lion, as though he understood wire, and when yen touch a cable at any
point you get a message which is being
of any thickly populated district is the1 vent the extraction of theine.
In Tea Setts, Water Setts, Cups, Saucers, Pitchers, Etc. An endless variety
what was said, threw up his head and
sent over it. In this way he proposes to of Vanes, Toilet Setts, Flower Setts, Etc. in
aani'ary chemistry of waters. Particu­
Largt?r quantities of these above-men- opened his ponderous jaws, showing his
larly is this important to the inhabitants1 Boned impurities make wat&lt;y injurious great tusks. Mr. Sanger took a heavy I put it into the power of a ship crossing
of iuq;* cities, where the death rate is1 to health. If it is known that water has whip tued by the elephant-keeper, and tho ocean to tap the cable aud get the
tocrea-M-d by a number of diseases that; a high degree of permanent hardness, with this in one hand and the lamp in j latest news from home. The use of his
Too numerous to mention, and ho cheap that all can afford to buy.
haw been. and. others that perhaps may the chances are that it is a bad water. another, dashed into the cellar. The telephone on railroads will do away
be. traced to tho imperfect and the im­' It will probably contain the sulphate of lions instantly dashed off. Presently he with the' mistakes and errors of tele­
graph
operators
and
the
accident*
re
­
proper .-apply of water.
lime, cnloride of calcium, and perhaps was heard to'say: "It’s all right, I have
Of every style, color nnd design. When you arc ready to buy, I am ready
Good water, fresh air and sun-light are' salts of magnesium. Magnesium salts got one of them.” Mr. Sanger came up­ sulting from them, for conductors would
three of nature's great remedies, but they are especially objectionable fo water, and on the stage, and said the other two were get their orders from headquarters by to sell. All kinds of Produce taken in exchange for Goods.
telephone, and there couldn't be any
are not advitfRMKl by our druggists be­
water containing even a small amount ot concealed among the broken timber and mistake about them then. In addition
cause there is no money to be made. these salts should be rejected. Water waste at the bottom of tbe cellar, and
Aud if they were brought more forcibly containing these salts causes diarrheen that he would have them directly. Sev­ to that, he says ho can fix it so you can
to our notice, the chances are that we' when drank. They are also said to cause eral tried to fiersuade him to forego any take a message from the track whilt
would prefer some of the more costly dyspepsia. It is supposed to be the nres- further attempt. "What am I to do?6 you are riding along in the car.”
“ And he’s got all this patented?”
-cures done up in bottles and wrapped in' e'noe of these salts in water that produces he answered, "I have engaged to bring
“ No, not all. We've just msda ap­
paper* printed with the recommenda­ g-oitrc (a swelling of the glands of tbe eight lions bore to appear in the play,
tions and epinions of those who, per­ neck.) Cretinism, which is a certain and not to roam about in the theatre. ” plication for patenting the railroad and
hap*. nre unconsciously victims to the kind of idiotic infinity, is also referred At this moment something was heard to water part of the scheme.”
patent drug. We people of the nine­: to the same impurities in large quanti­ fall. Mr. Sanger, leaving without saying
“ What kind of a machine does house |
teenth cent ory would, like Naaman of ties. Among the inorganic impurities a word, went into the cdlar again, |na, to do all this?”
old, rather do some great thing than to' of water, lead nnd copper are often after searching in vain for the lions for
“ Well, it wouldn’t be wise just now j
vu’h and be clean.
found, and csjiecially is lead found. A some time, discovered that they bad got to go into a description of the whole
The character of spring water depends' water which acts freely upon lead is not into the bottom cellar. They had fallen business. Part of it, you see, is patent­
Jargelv inion the nature of the soil suitable for the supply of a town, as our a depth of twenty feet “All right. I ed, and part is not, as I have just told
Ufnih which it flows. Although spring !
service pipes arc made of lead. Almost have got them; come on. come on, cried you. But the main difference between
OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE
walers mar appear very clear and
any water will act upon lead if left in Sanger. Thinking the lions were secure, Strong’s telephone and tbe Bell is this:
sparkling, y.-t they may contain large
contact with it long enough. For this some friends descended, but they were The Bell has one diaphragm. When
wuaniities of impurities held in solution. reason we should alwaysVmpty the bouse only caught up in a corner. "Bring up . the voice speaks, he claims that it vi- j
The fact tbit the water flows through
pipes of water which has stood in them those shutters; be quick!” was next । brales the diaphragm, aud thereby iu- .
aanh and gravel h enough to account over night, before drawing any for cook­ heard; and seeing such bravery shown tempts or produce* a fluctuation in the
for its cleaniess—the soil, although giv­
ing purposes.
Lead is a cumulative by Mr. Sanger, they plucked up courage, , flow of electricity. The truth of the I
ing it its impurities, filters from it any
poison, and a very small quantity taken Carried several shutters, and hemmed matter is that Strong speaks with his
aedimentarv matter.
them in. Then the cages from which they 1 telephone without any diaphragm st all,
Tiie total quantity of dissolved impur­ into the.system each day will finally had so recently broken being lowered, I showing that there is no current to
produce lead-poisoning,
ity in spring waters varies from one or
fluctuate; he speaks diivctly to the
WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH
The products of the decomposition of the capture was easily effected. The I magnet.”
two grains to eighty oi ninety grains in
hunt was carried on in the most calm and I
one 0. 8. gallon. (281 cubic inches.) animal matter in water arc the most ob­
or otherwise is thia
collected manner possible, «nd proved
, “How reeent Vo
jectionable
impurities.
These
are
high
­
Waters are said to be hard or soft. Lime
beyotyj all doubt that there was not the
&lt;^*®OT®ry f
aalts make water hard. These lime salts ly dangerous.even when in minute quan­ slightest fear on the part of Mr. George
•‘Ho
He teT9
says h8
he CBn
can prove
by reputable
D1
decompose the soap and destroy its de­ tities. They are the more dangerous be­ Songer, the modern lion-hunter
witnesses that he used his telephone in
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING
cause
waters
containing
such
poison,
in
­
tergent properties.
1856. Bell simply took up his ideas,
With hard water much more soap is stead of being disagreeable to tho taste,
probably • without knowing, however,
are
frequently
of
very
fine
flavor
and
A
I'henomenal
Spring.
necessary, as scene to used up in making
that they were his. The fact is. Strong
the water soft It is said that the people much sought after. Many cases of dis­
let the thing rest for a number of year*,
In April last David Manners, a farmer beginning on it now and then until
of Glasgow, in introducing the pure ease havebeep traced to the use of water
contaminated
by
drainage
from
sewer*,
living
in
Kingwood
Township,
Hunter
­
waler of Lock Katrine in place of the
1876, I believe, when he took out
We believe the
is destined to come
&lt;?es.spools.
etc.
don
County,
N.
J.,
discovered
a
spring
hard well water, made a saving of $180,­
a patent on it.
But the patent
The old saying "There was health in right alongside, of another spring which probably
Call and see them.
000 per annum.'
wasn’t
broad
enough, into general use.
the
old
houses;
while
there
is
death
in
has
been
in
existence
about
eighty
yean,
Some hard waters may be made soft
and Bell stopped in in 1877 and
by boiling, viz., such as have bicarbon­ the new” is easily explained. New vil­ but lias yielded no water, not even in took his patent before Strong got his
ate of calcium. This compound may be lages are generally supplied with waler, wet seasons, since the Pattenburg tun­ perfected. Tbe problem now is to fix
from
springs,
and
as
the
number
of
in
­
nel
was
imide
several
years
ago.
Why
destroyed by boiling, liberating carbonic
the patent up in good shape, and see, as
acid gas, and forming insoluble calcium habitants increases wells are used for this spring should flow while the other we believe to be the case, whether it will
carbomite, which will settle and may be greater convenience. Wells often re­ is dry baffles the wisdom of the neigh­ I* a' bar to Bell. Of course, if Bell lets
ceive contamination from sewage and borhood. Just how water can flow us alone, we’ll let him alone; but Strong Hastings, Mich., Sept. 15tb, 1881.
removed by filtration.
This explains how certain incrusta­ cesspools, while spring water is free from through the crevices of' rock from the naturally
thinks,
and
so
does
tions are formed in tea-kettles. I have such contamination The famous Broad mountain regions beyond I'altenburg to | moot everybody,
I
guess,
that
apecimens of incrustations more than an Street ptnpp in London in 1848 killed 508 the Delaware River adds to the mystery its a shame for Bell to have a
persons
in
a
single
week
by
dissemina
­
of
the
spring.
That
which
is
most
sur
­
inch thick that were precipitated in the
monopoly of another man’s invention.
above manner in the boilers of an ocean ting eholera In 1866 many deaths oc- prising respecting it, however, is tho By the way, there’s another important
cureed from the use of waler from a fa­ fact that every time the moon changes, thing about the Strong telephone. You
line of steamers.
mous pump in Brooklyn. All trouble whether there to rain or not, the spring have, of course, noticed the buzzing
wily temporary hardness and may be re­ was brought to an end when the Health rises about eleven iuches, and then folk noise, inseparable from tho telephones
again some four inches. This causes a now in use.
moved by boiling, water is made nernvv- Officers removed the pump handle.
The trouble is they have
tirutly hard when the calcium is tliere as
There are substances dissolved in water gain of seven inches with every change an adjustment. The Strong telephone.
sometimes, which are themselves harm­ of the moon, and tbe spring is therefore
the sulphate.
growiM
rapidly.
AJnrady
there
are
.
...
less.
and
yet
they
should
cause
the
water
Organic matter to almost always pres­
ent in water. There must bo a distinc­ to be looked upon with great suspicion. ■igM rf. «reun bemg termed, end the bandie ^d^tUl the btmlmr entirely
ooaree which it will tie ii clearly out- , dlrappeara, and you tret tho dear, rattion made between vegetable, matter The fira^is sodium chloride or common lined among thorodraaoderundownln obst?KSd K&gt;und oi the human voloe.
which in harmless, and the objectionable। salt This substance may get into the
* *
"
eigauic matters derived from decompos- water by infiltration from the sea or the meadow land. Tbe question which An opera-glasi
from strata containing qommon salt But agitates the rural mind outride of the | tents a clew
blurring ’___
another source of chkrides in a water is phenomenon of the spring’s curious con- &gt;
duct to as to the reaiut should a stream orly adjusted, does away with the rum, polution by sewage.
One word in regard to living ani
of any size be formed. Blocked in by bli* ihim^and generally diabolical
and plants in water. Although I
Although the presence of chlorides in
animals when seen under the micro*
water does not show positively that the the buto, it would be apt to rush down sound you now hear, and gives yon the
are very formidable in appearance aud. water is contaminated, yet when found over the fields and destroy the rich farm- c]ear anj perfect tones of the human
frightful in motion, yet they are no
in any quantity the water mast be con­ ing soil. A sagacious school teacher has voice.”
jectionable. They only inhabit
demned until the source of the sodium
chloride has been ase?rtained.
wire water. The planta e*tf&amp;e b
andw fer as thev have
tying influence on tbe water by
Nitrates and nitrites are sometimes tinues st its present rate and the stream
ZraiberewUl EZbodvrf wJer neu£ th,T
elrnmi.
SLt
found in water, and they may be there
as tbe products of the decomposition of yeun there wUl be . body ot water pone- week we ihiH [rare . onmber ot other
B&gt; aejue peculiarity of the season, that organic matter. Allowing that they are
““i!” erperimenle, end U the telephone corn
the-* little animal*
'
*
not injurious in themselves, yet they at
annoyance. once make you suspect that the water houses will bo washed away, unless
—«jOIC lB a very uumiur
containing them haa at some time or moved Iforehand. These tilings are UBTO wo
Tribue.
other been contaminated with organic not ngrwmbk. k.oontempUle.ble forttne in
Manners and his neighbors are seriously
ittera to a large extent.
Impurities from factories aad chemical dim-wwing the taking of sjiemly ar —
—The selling of book* in rural towns
ures to prevent the prophetic flood.
j in England is mainly in tbe hands of
peddlers and Gypsy women, and the
i trade is increasing.

SAP PAKS, EVAPORATORS

SAP BUCKETS,

CUTTERS AND BOBS AT COST!!

HASTINGS AND JACKSON LUMBER WAGONS

C. L. GLASGOW

TRUTH IS MIGHTY!

THE LARGEST STOCK OF GROCERIES
Crockery, Glassware
and

AI.ijoliea

ENGLISH DECORATED CHINA

C. W. SMITH

50 "Wagons
FOR SALE!
THREE INCH TIRE,

BETTE R THAN COMMON TIRE
Thyee inch Tire

Sold by C. L. Glasgow, Nashville, Mich.

BENTLEY BROS. &amp; WILKINS-

We are Ready
FOR

Xl^VXIIIXi

New Furniture
x' A.rriving Daily

Parlor Suits, Bedroom Suits, Gents’ Easy Chairs,
Ladies’ Rockers, Camp Chairs, Fine
Couches, Extension Tables, Center
Tables, What-nots, Pictur^Frames,
Bureaus, and in fact' Everything
Else Needed to Furnish a House.

UNDERTAKING a Specialty
Don’t buy until you see our Goods and get our prices.

KELLOGG, BELL &amp; CO

�C—

with th® help of a

sume» the form of a brilliant. Its
purity of color and compactness of
Six wwn have been burned to dealt In
make it a beautiful object, even
jgROOKn A MARSH ALL
their bedf tbelart month, but all were married
•aaLiftUtenant on board of a private
n.»r It model, dl I £» «• &lt;«»P
vessel, Which, after a brilliant
career, was finally captured and carried other I.inotu duimona.. lhe KolebNoor | ■■“•I ■»” ttoteut mcnor^mem.
_
(106 1-16carate), with which Mr. Rhodes ]
“WHO KILLED COCK ROBIN ”
triedty enough to keep 37 Swan lamps ie
“XI:
R,nr
a state of incandescence in his house. In
PRICK: 61.80, IF PAID IN ADVANCEmission, to a
e it »t rijnilaor, yne tert* Liver l*f!l, that did tbe heart* of tliouthia case the niuftvc power ooata noth­ bis Captain, his brother JJeutenanto, the Star of the-------- --fthH
cmud Brazinan land* with gladnewflll, and stopped tte doc­
,
To Advbstimiw:
ing, and electric lighting ui this way L common men even, obtained freedom, stone), the Dresden Drot
, together I tore.
■
---------- Andacll---------Ta. Sm Lu douU. U.
an exceptional luxury.
but Lafitte himself remained prisoner. with tbe uninue jewel tt_ —,---I AD Arfcan»a* man w.-. atrlckc-n with paralyIn th. n«
DbUtel
Needs, Feed, iJme, Mlt.-Pl t-ter. Stuc­
—When the rapid increase of the His friends, however, and relatives left mond, in which a smaller stone has been 'I *!• while Cursing the Lord for not Mmdiog ritin,
co, Hair. Pine Lun n; r, Luth
earth’s motion was observed, the idea nothing undone to proeuro his release. embedded by some freak of nature. It anil n Maine dcacim wasvMted Uk'mok way
nnd Shingles,
was advanced that thu moon’s orbit was Several times were prisoners of equal was interesting to compare with these while praying for mln. Tbe coudtutouto be
of WiX) boiisfidc oute-nlier*, who, foe tbe a'x growiug shorter and would end by rank sent into English porta through gems the more valuable jcwelfrom South drawn from these fact* le that it'abeH nut to AT THE LOWEST LIVING PRICES.
tog, arc liable to become your putrou*.
coming down upon us. But ruo -a recent tbe agency of his otd Captain, in order Africa, and the comparison was enjoyed put your oar In on the rain quertlon, anyway.
PKHUBK THK8K LIBERAL AD. RATTO."/ calculation shows that.instead of the to be exchanged for him, but it w-as not on.Saturday by a numerous company,
J^EW El^EVATOiC.
moon coming nearer our day is growing till many long years had passed that La­ among whom^were many nienil.H-rs of
longer, owing to the friction of the tides fitte found'himself free. This long im­ the G&gt;rp« Diplomatique,’ Mr. Childer, • So mid the blind man after the Saviour had
•8.00 upon the earth’s surface, by which the prisonment aroused*in him an almost Lord E. Churchill and others. The dia­ iu-alcd him. Actual bllnibiea* la not easy to
ujo speed of the earth’s rotation is slowly savage thirst for vengeance against En­ mond was shown to the Queen and to cure, although it U sometimes done. But r»m L---- wfllpayJUie----- J
gland; and on bis release ba returned Princess Beatrice and the Dnke of Al­
metnbe? that disease ot ’the eye* often ranull*
Immediately' lb privateering, principally bany al Osborne, in January of this year,
4 Inches. .
—The English have admitted tho sucfrom Impure Blond. If you have any reason to
80.00 oess of the Electric light. Lomp-pojts for tbe harm he might thus Visit on and’Her Majesty presented Mr. Rliodes think yoar bad eye* may have come from thl* HIGHEST JMARKET' PRICE
English shipping and English com­ &lt;»n that occasion with a watch, which he
---- F«r
...---have been erected in Bristol. Tbe,Lan­
cause, lose not an hour of time in buying a
merce.
(
showed on Saturday with as much pride
cashire tyid Yorkshire Railway Compa­
bottle of Dr. David Kenued.v** ‘ Favorte Rem­
The treaty of Foutainblcau and the as his big diamond!—Londun Tima.
Local Notices, ten cent* a Hue fur Ann Inter-- ny illuminate their station platforms
edy,
”
which
will
con
you
only
one
dolla
r,
nu&lt;b
subsequent pacification of Europe de­
tion nod eight cent* for each aubaequcml ln*crwith it and regard it cheaper than gas. prived him of the means of .legally con­
take it to cicunseyour l&gt;kx&gt;d. You can im­
Titled Americans.
' . A full *u«ek of
Alnwick Castle, the scat of tbe Duke of tinuing his revenge. But long years fit
ORNO STRONG,
plicitly trust It to do thl*. Or drop a"line to
Lncv Hooper writes from Paris to the 'Dr. David Kennedy, Rundout, N. Y. State
Editor and Proprietor. Northumberland, has also been illumin­ solitary broodingin th© dungeons of bis
ated. Tho library, a very targe apart­
,
English prison, and during his night Philadelphia Telegraph: And, by-the-by, your
ease fully ami get the doctor* opinion
ment, is lighted by three lamps, and the watches afterword on the lonely sea. had I think wo slrali soon have to set up an ;
('onataiitly &lt;»n 8«;:tid.,
effect is reported superior to any light destroyed to a great extent his reverence American peerage if. titled Ag&gt;erica&lt; free.
An affectionate mother, -uuUdng her llttc
i before used.
for humau laws, and he determined to continue to increase in number. I do n&lt;
[JJt'KKY
ROE. r«-.F«;noi
ILLAGE OFFICEEH.
। —By securing variety in temperature, continue his career. As it was only refer to tho ladies of our land who ha\( 1daughter witx: her mouth wtih her drew* sleeve
' through planting oysters in different against England besought rt^venge. he Ivecome Princesses, Duchesses, or Count) *«ked w hat her handkerchief wm for, and re­
—4)LD RELIABLE—
■ depths of water, os practiced in Con­ never aUacked any but English vessels. oases by 'the simple process of marriage, ceived
far
answer:**lt
’
»
to
shake
at
the
ladle*
।
necticut, the Scientific American says His relations In France heard of his but to those more fortunate inditiduah iin tbe street. That'* what papa &lt;1oc* with hi*.
I oysters can bo obtained in a fit condi- course with pain, and remonstrated with who bear upon their erst republican
A Vegetable Product,
i tion for the table every week in the year. him earnestly and tearfully. But Lafitte brows the round and top of continental
Only used in* Ayer’s Aouk Cure, hits
The greater tho heat, tho earlier the was inexorable. His friends, aware how nobTlily. There is quite a goodly group
oysters will spawn. Tho.se in the deeper great had been the provocation, could of these trans-Atlantic nobles in Taris ut proven itaelF a never failing and rapid
&gt;fldrtUF.
and colder water feel the heat later and say &lt; no more, but from tlhrt hour, for the present time. First in order of senior­ cure for every form of Malaria! Dis-,
order, Fever and Ague, or Chills anti
APTI8TGHUtt6h. R«v. E. ti. Moody, r**t&lt;»r. spawn later. Some portion of tho oyster many long years, the name of the wan­ ity of rank come tho Baron and Baroness Fever. No injury follows its-use, an:r&gt;
s®n &gt;rv* avciy Hnnday at
K*M&gt;aih field Ro to speak, wiH iherefore bo ready
D’Oyley, originally Dr. and Mrs. John i its effects nre permanent. It rouses
Kteol &gt;t » m: Prujer am! Tcaeaora* _moel.ua .
’.it
- dering outlaw ceased to be spoken in the
Evons.
’
The
Baron
is
one
of
the
most
for harvesting at all‘times.
houseaold of his father, and children, in
flourishing nnd popular dentists of tho | the system to a conditi.a of vigorous
TOUX.TB-.
—Although
Although consiaerca
considered mute,
mute, uikch
insect* whose vejns ran blood kindred to his
health, cleanses the blood of malaria) FBESH FISH
\ • EiL'iiPHiufAL ciH'ttoft-A. t». Srw
—
X»1 T.m. w«tor. n-rti.c t»rry s.bbith »t
have thepowerofproducingsoundsby own. grew up to manhood ignorant of American colony, and came originally, , poison, nnd imparts a feeling &lt;»f c6niIK THKIU 8KA8ON.
I believe, from Philadelphia, deriving his furt and security most desirable In
*. ra. *nd 7 P iu. febteth IK-Loa *t m u. Prayw certain movements which, to some cx­ his very existence.
__________ I fent* ore characteristic of the differentThe subsequent career of Lafitte is title through his mother, who was a Miss Ague districts. It is an excellent tonic
j Lard. by the
or barrel,
VY LODGE NO. 37. K_of 1’.. mcete at it* | species. The shrill chirp of the cricket well known. Though he committed acts Doyle, her surname, ns any one can see, ■ nnd preventative. as well tw cure, of
&lt;f-c., rfr.
sill complaints peculiar to malarious.
the rubbing
C**tlc Hall. Nashville, Michigan, everyy is produced
r.r_.’...Z.d by t*
*'v’ * together
*
" of of piracy only on British vessels, he paid being a corruption of the name of I )&lt; wky.
Friday evening, fur Hie encouragement and1 tj10 win^-eases.
&lt;v The Hiehfvt :
~
The harsh shriek of . no regard to the revenue laws of any na­ There is a branch of lhe Do) icy fam­
paid
»up|»irt of all worthy, true, steadfast ihid b«i-’ tho
- gras&gt;borper
■ •
'.-S, IVhs. A.
is caused by friction of । tion. For a long'period he had under ily still flourishing in England, the great superiority of ATKtt'&lt; Ar.-’t: Ccic;
arable Brother Knight'.
over any /otlicr compound t- that it
.
- *• - onxo Btroxg.C. ( ■_ 1 the logs against tho wings. The shrill I his command a large force, which she!- head, of which is the Admiral of that contain' no Quinine, Aracuir, or min­
= 1 trumpet sound of the mosquito and the I tered in the Buy of Barataria, and as the name, but whether they are on intimate
eral ; consequently it produces no
busy hum of bees and flies result from j Pirate of the Gulf and the terror of Brit, terms or not with their rrancd^Ainerican , quinism or Injurious cflVet* whatever
SlbceUanrcu.- &lt;'.u.
tho rapid motion of the wings while fly- . ish commerce in American waters, his cousins I do not know. They ought to i upon the constitution. Those cured
:or
be, for the Baron by reason of Ills title is by It are left as healthy aa if they had
| ing.
j name will dwoend to the latest times.
of course the chief of the house. 1 am never had the disease.
w n YOUNG. M. D. Office cast side of'I|
The composition of buckwheat has Driven from the Gulf by British cruisers
J
OSLP11
COLE,
\ » • Main hi., Nashville. Utlicc hours from been examiudd by M. G. Luchartiur. He to hik so-called Temple ou Grand Terre, told that the Baron was recently created ,
The direct action of Ayek's Anus
stales that the proporion of mineral j and, hotly pursued, lie would cross the a Marquis by the Pone, but that he hesi- ' CuRK upon the Liver nnd Digestive
tates to assume his higher title while in
IL GRISWOLD, M. D .
. .'tor matter in the straw increases with the i Bay of Barataria into Grand Pass, run­ the active practice of his profession. Organs mnk»s it a superior retneuy
for Liver Complaints, producing many
• Physician aud Surgeon Oil...
n:»- weight. The straw may indeed become ning his fleet into Cnsminodo Bay. with
kteuce opposite the Wolcott Houtc. Prompt richer in phosphoric acid than tbe grain, ita many islands, or. passing through Then wo have the Baron nn&lt;l Baroness rcmarkabio cures, where other medi­
attention £lreu to call* day or nigilt.
differing thus completely from that of Little Lake into Bayou Picrot, or through de Hoffman, lhe Baron formerly having ' cines have failed.
For sale by all druggists.
The straw of a crop Bayou Barataria.aud Lake Ouicha into !&gt;ceu a banker in New York. 1 think his
A. FOOTE RBTBICIAN &lt;S SURGEON the oilier cereals.
• Succas,r to Dr. Wickham. Office and ' of buckwheat may contain more mineral j Bayou des Allemandes. he successfully title descended to him from his father,
Fresh, Salt and Smoked
residence' at Dr. Wicklium’it late office. । matter than does the grain. The sum Eluded
eluded the vigilance of his pursuers.
pursuers, but I have never had any precise infor- ।
mation
on
the
subject.
The
Marquis
'
l,w
b1o°fn ”f youth, were pacing up Austin
Prompt attcuttou to calls night or day.
I of the principal fertilizers removed holding high revel with his desperadoes
I from the aoil by an entire crop is much almost within hearing of both State and and Marchioness Muqvhy. who usually Avenue when the man wo* teani to *ay:-Mi**
R. C. W. GOUCHER, Electic Physician and
reside in London, but who are at present Matlldy Johnslng, do * you transpire lik«- 1
Burgeon, is prepared to answer all call* more considerable than for a crop of ; National forces.
OFXVERY DES&lt; KIITIOX.‘
‘
‘
'
* — &lt;loe*{” “Reckon m&gt;—I ewcats like a bog.”
at‘ '*
the ”
Hotel
Bristol,
an?
from
oct of his eventful career w..
was stopping
•wheat containing the same quantity of । *The
r&gt;'- last ■•'•*
that may be made tor In* service'-- Oflicc and
California, the gentleman's title having
, reaMenoe dppoaita R-«'* nu'at market.
।
the
culmination
of
his
l&lt;*ag-treasured
regrain.
EHILOH’tJ- -■ — &gt;n
him
bv
the
Pope.
------------been
conferred
upon
by
Pop। venge, and served also to restore him to
...
. - . . 1
lilt*. i« bcyi&gt;l»l &lt;JUiti.«- lisest rlSci-c*ftful
TVm PARMENTER, M. D. Ofltoa over
J favor with the people and the authorities So I really think that the above instances | Cough Mulivine »«• have cvt-r'told. a few d&gt;w»
PITH AND POINT.
VV Hull's Drug store, VernioulvBio, Mich. .
invariably &lt;■
a»c* of Cough, croup pL UMTl ICE DEPOT.
' of Louisiana, whose laws he bad so long form quite a sufficient nucleus for the
am!
Rrrin&lt;-li
wotulerful RUcrCfW L*
commencement-of
an
American
peerage.
HAS. H. BRADY. Lawyer, Cireult Court j
—Carlyle frequently made mistakes in , WJt at defiance. It was at the battle of
ComtniMtouer, Real Estate aud inaura nee | spelling. It is the same way with Josh New Orleans. He was the genius of the
Agt. Prompt attention given to all buiklne**
Twenty Hiles of Whales.
Billings.
—
N.
0.
Picayune.
j
great
battle.
His
blood
boiled
at»the
entrusted to my care- Conveyancing a special­
—When you reach tbe plane of man-■ sight of the red-coals. “Les Anglais
ty. OClce opposite Union House.
The steamship Newport, of the Ward’s
hood it is quite natural that you should I periides!” he shouted to hts men; “make
LIEBIIAU8ER, Mercban4. Tailor and deal- | indulge in a little shaving.—Boston | every shot tell! lire low mr boys—fire!” Line, which is now having her Ixjttom
Manufacturer*, aud denier* lit
scraped and painted on the dr)--dock at
. • in Readv Mode Clothing. See me 1
■ he thundered to them, and his were the the foot of Market Street, had an un­
before you pttrehftM clothing. F1U guar- | Courier.
—inquirer: Does a man’s size vary? ; 3rst guns to fire. La'ter in the battle a usual experience during hey recent but- 1
aulccd.
i
Yes, sir: we’ve seen a man in a bar- । General officer iss«?en to lead tie British ward trip to Havana. She sailed from
ISS M. JEFFREY, Practical Milliner, and room treating the crow^, and ho was | forces. He mounts the parapet, waving this port on Thursday, October 27. and :
dealer in Millinery and Fancy Good*. Drcsa the biggest man in the town till his I his sword and cheering his nen. Lafitte before daylight next morning she was )
making, in all It* hra-whes, done with neatness
aud diKpstch. S ilc»romu east aide Main street, mother-in-law came in aud took him by sprang forward with pistol in hand—a off the (Japes of Delaware. At about |
tho ear, and then he was a very little' flash, and Pack'‘nham falls mortally eight o’clock, when she was steaming at '
opposite News oflicewounded. Tho victory is gained and the rale of fifteen mile* per hour, she
fellow.—lifiMton l*oal.
RNO STRONG, plain and fancy Job Printer.
Lafitte's revenge sated.
For the fall tr.uli
ran into an immense school of whales
—* • You are. ’ he worst boy I ever saw I ’ ’
The bert tiu-UiUe» for doing work of any
Shortly after the battle citizens of New
exclitiwd Brown to his son. “Why will
Orleans gave a "ran*! hall to theofii.-ers mile
The animals were of ail
you go on r.&lt; you do? i, should think
isjiortnd themselves iu tho
you would have some respect for your of General Jackson’s army, at which
Lafitte was an honored guest, nnd was
.
enjoying iL Suddenly the
Aud will be add m
ice Bllmi“How can I, d;ul, have any
N. DUNHAM, Proprietor Temperance
introduced to ail as one ot tiK* heroes of ship shook from stem to stent as she
.............................
• hard
Parlon ami Pool Room*. A choice ' respect tor a tun with .uela Rurally the battle. General Coffee, of Jackson’s struck a monster about sixty feet lon»
oHiMautly oa hand. Room*under son?” a;Ke&lt;l the young reprobate.—Uoaline of cigar*
c
stat)', was thus introduced, and seemed which was attempting to cross the pain
arufllh’* store. ,
\.ton Tmtistirijd.
to exhibit some hesitation when the name of the Newport. The- whale was cut in I
—In a couple of hundred years from of Lalitte was spoken, and Which he halves which passed astern on either
ONAH B. RAbET, Expn-s and Drayman­ '
EWE ALSO CARRY
Goods aud Baggage carried to any place in - this, if the Bible is again revised to suit could not distinctly hear LAIille immo- side, while the water was dyed red with |
the village.
the times, the passage in the parable of diately drew himself up with hauteur, his'blo&lt;»d. The steamer come to a stand- |
IRAM R. DICKINSON, manufacturer of the ten virgins which reads thus, “Give anil hurriedly advanced a step or two. •till and her stum was examined. It I
■ and dealer iu Hord Wood Lumter. Ituild- us of your oil, for oar lamps have gone exclaiming with peculiar emphasis, “La­ was found to have escaped injury, but
tojt Material atycclalty. Ca*b paid for log*. Mill
out,’’ will he change&lt;l to, “Give us of fitte, die Pirate; ’ General Coffee im- the steering-gear was slightly damaged.
and yard on Sherman St., at M. C. R.R. crossing. your electric li&lt;;hta, for our circuit is
mediatelv advanced to Lafitte, and. tak­ This was soon repaired, and the New­ kfd.nappcr
AMES FLEMING, practical Jeweler and temporarily broken.”—Somerville Jour­ ing him by tl*e hand, apologized for tho port proceeded, but the passengers were
Watch-maker. Ctor**. Watches, Stiveraud nal.
A WORD TO MOTHERS.
lardy manner in which he recognized not so delighted with the whales as they
Plated Ware, Jewelry aud Optical Goods. Rock­ —Dr. Rtslcy, of Philadflelp.bin, speak- the introduction, and explained thecause had been before the shuck. The sight
Mothers ahnuM remember it is a uto*t im­ And Ire prepared to give oat LT..c and atten­
ford Watcbcaa specialty. Rc|airii&gt;gaud Engrav- 1 ing of tbe condition of the eyes of school of his hesitation. Subsequently General
portant duly at Illi*
to took after the
tion to everythln^ftwriainliigto.thv
of the monster’s head as it shot upward ■health of their fcimlikv and eleatue the malaria
h&gt;v dOM Iu a workmanlike manner.
children, says, “Hypermetropic eyes are Coffee visited Lafitte at the Temple, on from the water had been anything but and fmpurites from I heir sratem*. nud that
inndettaklDjc hi e.
RUSNELL ha« money to loan, at low rate# more numerous thaa both myopic and Grand Terre, and parted warm friends. pleasant to them. Ten minutes after the nothing will tone up the stomach nnd liver,
• on good Lum aci-urity; Principal and t»- emmetropic; that next to myopic astigShortly after this visit old memories vessel startl'd up there was another and regulate the bowel* and purifv the hh&gt;od h&gt;
terc*t parable at the HtsUOf* Nutiomd ILink. ipstum, distinct lesions are most preva­ were reawakened, his early education,
perfectly a* Parker’? Ginger Tonic, advertised
heavier shock, which almost threw the iu our columns,—P«&gt;-t, See other column.
Ofllee hi door mjuUi of Bpstulding’a, Jiarlluga.
lent iifxyes with hypermetropic astig- which had been strict, asserted its influ­ passengers from their feet Another
FREEDMAN, tile Merchant Tailor of matism.’X From this it appears that ence, and he sighed to return again to whale nail been cut in two. The body
• Charlotte, will vialt Nashville every 3)' “the cyfc-yhave it”—but what it is they civilized life, today down the - sword of
day*, with a choice Hoe of piece grxxla, and w ill havqds a conundrum to us, ami we re­ the pirate chief, and pass his days in of this animal passed under the vessel
A-k your druggtet for “Dr. Sykes’
and struck the propeller with great- vio­
offer you bargain*. Save your orders for him.
gret that they have it.—Norristown Her­ quiet The volcano of passion or insan­ lence. 'Fhe engineer rushed on deck, Cure for Catarrh.” Don’t take auy'vthv:
ity, for it was as much Ute last as the imagining that the ship had struck a
TACOBtWMUN. Livcnman, tern near WoL ald.
V co»t Hous-c. First els* } turnouts at rewon—She waa a Boston woman; tall, thin, first bad burned out.jn that fiorv heart. submerged wreck. Captain Sundberg j
abto rales- 1 peciit rate* tn c-xanirreial men.
Resigning in favor of his faithful Lieuten­ ordered the course of the steamer changed
Funeralxsid wedlug parties furnished a it* car with false curls and a sour visagg. Be­
side
her sat her husband, a little, meek, ant Chauvct he returned to his native and she soon ran out of the troublesome
riagw** -' '&gt;*- tx'iice.
demure-looking man, who seemed inca­ land, where he became reconciled to his whales. The oldest sea-going men on
proprietor of the Sew mntintnr m-v he mt Intro
YZ ELI^QG A BELL, proprietor* Plxninx pable of boldness of speech or action, family, liv-don die old homestead where the Newport, and some of them had
Juwtir. Ohw «nd Mlebiran
T»* naiiMof the
AX Mill. Phulng *n:l MBlchiiic, Re-u.v;f: - presently a guest at the other end of the he was born, and died in 1846, after been on whaling vessels, could not re­
-aMfrite UDr; I.’x-Id Kennwi)-’*
•
Md MouMteR * ^UlXy.
bABln|r
Bracket* Window and Door Frame* made to table bawled out at the top of his voice, many years of usefulness, charity and member such an experience.—N. Y.
•‘Waiter! fetch tbe vinegar cruet.” devotion; his wife, whom he had married Tima.
,
■ &gt;
order.
ood Turning in &lt;11 Iu branebe*.
in
Louisiana,
surviving
him
but
a
few
Then
tho
demure-looking
littie
man
H^^ DEM7pJr7l&gt;rater in Watcbea
Net Easily Killed.
and the prree h ONLY QNB ROLI.AR
years. It has been said that Lafitte re­
Clock*, fine Jewelry and Silverware. Being tamed to her and said, “Dovey, some­ tained to the last moment of his life his
a bottla . ' . .
a prartk-at Jeweler, patnop* can depend upon body wants you.”—Brooklyn Eagle.
J. B. Hayes, the trackwalker who was
life-long animosity; almost his last words
having tlidr repairing done right. Two ikor*
—Two gou tiemen were seated upon were, la Anglais' perfida!—Jf. 0. Cor. tossed like a feather by the engine of train
■oaLh of Truntan'* ctnre.
the .steps of the house of one ot them, on
fifteen
on
the
GcnevaJlhaca
de
Sayre
Road
pti,j
Louisville Courier-Journal.
a mild evening this summer, when a
A. BLSH,
a few days ago, is not dead yet, notwith­
very large woman, with rustle of volu­
standing the speed of the train was forty’
“THE BOSS”
minous silks and roll at voluminous per­ The Largest Diamond Found this Ontury. five miles an hour. To the astonishment
son, entered the next dwelling. “Who
of his friends he visited Ithaca Friday
On Saturday night, Nov. 12, one of the just as if he never was in a railroad
is that?” a«ked the visitor. “That,”
auswened tho master of the house, “is great dianjunds ofthe world—the largest, wreck. Hays has been in thirteen smashfa for
by al* wbaleaalc I&gt;rct/iai» in the wln*fNARHVILLE. MICH.
according
to
Mr.
Edwin
Streeter,
which
my neighbor Webster’s wife.” “Oh/I
upe in his time, and upon one occasion
Administrator'^ Rale
pul eltMnfOM
EhvUn.1 Staten
see,” was the ready rejoinder, “Web­ has been found this century—was ex­ waa picked up by a cow-catcher and car­
In the mat ter of the e«t*taof
hibited at 18 New Bond Stteet. It was ried eight miles without receiving serious
ster’s Unabridged.”—Boston Courier.
NATHAN WKAKH.
•yyOIAUlT H4MJMC,
—“I have returned yoar umbrella; discovered in the claim of 'Mr. Porter hurt. Hr says he is called the indiaMarnnvuie Michigan.
much obfiged,” and he stood the affair Rhodes, in the Kimberly Mine, South rubber man, as he might well be, for he
A. S. Fvotk, Prnnriwor.
of ribs and alpaca in the corner and has­ Africa, and by its remarkable whiteness uses his limbs as if tiiey were made of
whalebone.—Ithaca (If. Y.) Journal
tened awav “Wall, that is a surprise,
I never expected to see that again,”
-&lt;-A five year old boy at Bergen Point,
said the owner. “Let’s see. Well, no monds. The surface diamonds had, in­
N. J., thwi described his danger aud his
wonder. See how tbe thing opens. Ev- deed, a yellow hue, but now that the
miners have gone below the trap, they escape from a terrible fate: “I wasa-tumrf Hasty, liM';
find in J:igersi»nU'in and other famous miu atoss the tack, when I seen the ingin in« in tUregions of the Griqua diamond fields the atu minin’. I knowudl couldn't git atoas
clearest blue-white stones. The Porter quick enough so I started to Inn. 1 iunned
up the tacit a little ways and tumbled. I
the heard theiugin trtxaa.ri~ ‘ *
Armstrong, at Craigate, England, boa utu
uno-electro

Nashville Elevator!

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GRAIN AND PRODUCE

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MEAT MARKET.

Fresh and Sult .'Seats,
■*- Smoked Hausaai Stiiiim,

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C

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PRICES WILL 1STC1 .! TOD. ’

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THE D. 4 H. ttNIL’S

Dr. David Kennedy,

FAVORITE REMEDY,

THE PUBLIC ARE MBTIBSEDI

BOOT AND SHOE MAKER,

Dr. Danfl Kennedy's Favorite Esmcir

10

and burned down Um hank.”

�Chicago. Feb:

SATURDAY

had roeaiYed a ®evere blow during the past
week or tea days, for In that lime uot v-era

THE NEWS.
from Litert DispatchM.
ConrrcswlonaL

Rabert Allison, on tbe 18th of June, PW0.
Tua dty of Haverhill, Maaa., was tbe victim him. His egotism remained groat, however.
*
‘ on tbe morning ot

farturer® aud over 300 dealers, representing a
capital of over IT,500,000, were burned out,
and taorc than 2,000 people were thrown out

NEXT

SIXTY DAYS

era! letter® to Charles H. Reed, offering to
give bi* note for &lt;3,030. payable in one year,

make &lt;50,000 next winter by lecturing.
Tax Democratic Convention at Schenectady,
N. T., ou the 18th nominated Alexander Bau­
•hoe btulnes* of over '&gt;10,000,000, and cus, of Saratoga, for State Senator, in pUce of
tbe late Senator Wagner.
factor tea.
_TO,. „-tii,|. ji,r-- .
All the Protestant churches in Washington
shoe quarter®. It wa* certain that thro- lives adopted outI-polygamy resolutions on the
were loat, and perhaps more, as several per­ 19th.
son* w«e missing. A telegram of the 18th
In Washington on the 20th Sergeant Mason
says: •• Most of the mauufartnrora wJB flfl entered a pica of not guilty of in attempt to
their order®, liaring made arrangement* to kill Gulteau, and tbe Court-martial adjourned
»tart Luxincsa to-morrow, morning. There
will not be a stampede of workmen. The rounding®. burnt district will bs rebuilt more substan­
The Gsand Jury at Washington on the 20th
tially. Haverhill has received a blow, but la indicted twelve persons for conspiracy iu the
not ruined.”
Star-route case®, among them being General
Ur to the 10th the total number of deaths Thomas Brady, ex Senator 8. W. Dorsey,
canned by the explosion at Chester, I‘a-, were John W. Donxv, M. C. Relpeu, W. H. Turner
and Minier, Vaile «fc Cd.
twenty.
.
High water In the streams of Northwest­
ern Texas was doing great damage on the
Foreum.
HAb. iteilroad bridge® on the Texas Pacific
The Egyptian Mlnliter® on the Iflth oe.
Road had been swept away aud travel* sus­ elded upon the total abolition of slavery, and
pended.
to enforce it Kader Pasha war appointed Gov.
Tuxns were forty-six new cases of smalL ernor ot the Soudan, and a sjxclal department
f&gt;ox reported tn New York City* for lhe week will be created al Cairo
ended February 18, against forty nine the week
Pfeister Baoa., of Munich, failed on the
previous.
Iflth, with liabilities exceeding &gt;1,000,000.
A dispatch from Helena, Ark., on the 19th
Travel otr the Halifax &amp; Capo Breton Rail­
stated that the overflow of the Mississippi way baa been altogether suspended by reason
River between Memphis and Vicksburgb was of a heavy snow-fall.
.
doing great damage. Cattle and hog® hod
Rival editor* of Guadalajara, Mexico,
been drowned by the hnndred®, barn® had fought a due) with plitol® on the 17th, both
been ®wcpt away and their contents wasted, falling dead simultaneously.
mules and ’bones were suffering, and the loaa
Fortt bodies had been recovered from the
to planter* in Crittenden, Lee and Philip colliery at Trimdon Grange, Eng., on the 17thCounties, Arkansas, and in Do Soto, Tunica and ft wa® believed that the Iom of life would
and Coatioma Couutlea, Mississippi, would be be seventy.
heavy. Tlx sc are the largest cotton-growing
Tip: mildness of the winter in Sweden has
prevented the transportation 'of produce, and
counties In the Mi*s ®«ippi Valley.
The Merchant*’ Bank &lt;^f Watertown, N. Y., there is great distress among the farmer®.
Gould’* Mexican Railroad had been com­
nunpended nn the 18th.' Its capital wa® &gt;310,'
0C0. It* deposit* on the day of failure were pleted from Laredo to a point forty mile® be­
yond tlx boundary on the 17tb, and it wn* cxabout &gt;1,00.1,000.
Eleven store® and 'seven dwellings at pacted that Monterey would be reached by
Bellevue, Midi., were swept away by fire on September 1.
Vienna, the Austrian capital, I® threatened
the 18th, lhe loss aggregating &lt;50,000.
A white man at Centreville, Tex., named with a tOUHallure of tt® water supply.
A CABLEORAM on the 19th stated that En­
Lyle, killed two colored men and mortally
wounded their wives, on the 20tb, fur Laving gland, France, Germany and Italy had re­
jected the proposition of the 8wi»* Federal
a dt-putc with ni® little sos in the road.
A ruEioilT train on thl- Pittsburgh A Lake Council for an International Treaty to fix Jhe
Eric Road broke through a trestle near Pitts­ standard for gold and ailvnr coinage.
Advices from Bueno® Ayres were received
burgh on the ISth and went to lhe ground,
killing Engineer Albert Wilt and Fireman in London on the 18th which stated that
Colucci Na*, with six hundred Peruvian sol­
William Long.
Five masked men entered the fann-houix dier®. sacked lhe city of Pisco ou the 341b of
of Michael Ulrich, five mile* east of Harris­ January, killing 1.&lt;MX) person*, of whom .kn
burg, I'a., on lhe 19th and intimidated the were foreigner®.
Nearly three hundred women confined in
aged-couple Into imrrcndering &lt;1,01)0 secreted
inchest* and kettle* in an adjoining build- the prison just outside of Montreal made a
desperate attempt to escape ou the 18lh. and
Tux Ohio River, at Cincinnati, was fifty-two were oniy «uppres*ed by vigorous blow* from
feel above low-water mark on the IStb and still the police. Three constables are said tn have
been fatally woundedrising.
Vue following failures were announced lu
Tun Newcomb-Bnebanau Distilling Com
pany, of Louisville, tlx largest establishment Canada ou the 18th: J® Cavalier &amp;, Jacques,
of She kind In the world, filed an assignment dry-good* dealer®, at Montreal, for &gt;30,000;
to J. M. Atherton on the 20th. Its nubilities Octave Gendron &amp; Co., dry good®, of Sher­
brooke. for &gt;00,000, and Roper &amp; Co., dry
good®, of Ottawa, for 840,000.
&gt;2,.7X1.000.
A Montreal dispatch of the 19th stated
In n hotel at Louisville on the 20th a des­
perate n«ni
fight ‘look
plat® »
between John Wyatt,
oo»v place
Breton during the post three weeks had not
i a Deputy Marshal, and
—
•
Fourteen shots
Were -fired. Wyatt twing mor­ been equaled in Intensity for many years
Snow bonk? twenty-five feet high were met
tally wounded
-j
Tur rag warehouse of Berge &amp; Meyer, nt j with in many (dace*.
At Carrick-on-Sulr, Ireland, lhe military
Philadelphia, burned oi tbe- 30th.
l.o*s
fWO.O.O. John Meyer, foreman of tbe ware­ custodians of a house, from which a "no­
rent" tenant had been evicted, were fired at on
house, pcriibml in the flames.
A Fike in the Albion Print Works, at i'bite- the 20th. They responded with a volley
dclphiu, on the morning of the 20th destroyed which dispersed the mob.
1 Rev. Dn Rterson, who founded the Cana­
nropi-rty valued al 1130.000.
dian nchool system and was the pioneer of
sin all military expedition, reehntly captured j Methodism in the Dominion, died a few days
coven sloop®, contalnia" crows aggregating
slXly-fivc tn«u, who were rubbing oyster bed*
LATER NEWS,
on the shore* of Chesapeake Bay and it* tribTua nerxerovlnians have defeated
„
.
An
SevEntenx railroad* bi Pennsylvania hare Austrian* in seven! minor engagements.
incurred a penalty of S5.0Q0 each because of attack wa* made on Motlia on the 2lst in
which
ten
women
and
six
children
were
failure to make their annual export*, and lhe
Allorney-Geueral will bring them to Judg­ killed, but the insurgents were driven away.'
In the United State* Senate ou tbe 91st Mr.
ment
,
Tub Director of the Mint hoc decided that Dawe* presented a petition in l*»&lt;.alf ot tbe
Indian
trob«, and said that one hundred thou-*
coin which hi* been mutilated raunot be re­
earn! cHIecbs of Influence had signed him liar
stored to it® position a® coin-by merely tilling
up the hole® made. Il cannot become money appeal*. Mr. Piuuib hoped to see the rela­
again, properly speaking, withcut being rc. tion* of the Government to the 'Indians
placcdon a practical basis. Tbe House Ap­
coined.
portionment bill was passed. Mr. McMillan
The Board Of Indian Commissioners, iu
introduced
an art to set tipart a por­
their report to ike-National House of Repre.
ten tatIves, show that tbe following named tion of Montana Cor certain Indian
missionary aocicUe* expended for Indian cd. tribes, and to pay each &gt;50,090 per
ucaLlou durlug tlx year 18*11 as follow*: Bap. annum for ten year®. The resolution
list Home Missionary Society, F2,'.l56; Ameri­ that the Arrears of-Pension law should be re­
pealed was tabled by 28 to 2i. Adjourned to
can Board Foreign Missions, &gt;30,025; Ameri­
lhe 2?d. hi the House, an amendment to the
can Mhsionary Aastciatlon, SL7U3; Protest­
Text office Apytofiriaifr-n bul, providing that
ant Episcopal M sslon Board, &lt;38.489; Meth­
odist Episcopal Mission, &gt;3,550: Pscsbyterhui mol!* shallbe carried ou the fastest trains,
without extra eh urge, wa® agreed to. After
Foreign Board. 818,'XO; Presbyterian Home a tong dlsrusakiuan adjournment to the 33d
Mission, «4,QS&gt;; Friends, &gt;7,898; total re­ wa* ordered.
»
ported; **
8139,44a
P°™**
iW,**a
I A. C. Sotello,-Of Washington, was r.n tfee
WiLUAWBunnsoN. living on a farm near 1 21®t Indicted for deadly aaaault &lt;»n Clarence
Indianapolis, hid &gt;345 in currency In a com- jj. Barton, and tor manslaughter in killing Ids
erib. Ratju^wcd it inlo fragments suitable j ora brother.
, fiTC perjoj-j wbo lived on
a Hat-boat were drowned during the stanu on
Personal and Political.

FOR TJH.JE

IngytnawHl not tura

letol &gt;500,000 more. Haverhill U thirty-two

bill wag

W of pensions to anrvlrpr® of Indian wars
or to 1MK ... In the Hmu6 dlscnwkm* upon
Apportionment bill occupied the entire

Daunt) tor the snioHtMM of Ataakn. Tho bill
authorUlng the FostmastoroGonera-. to adjust
certMtn claim® of PoairmuiteM from low by
bunrtaE*. tiro and other uiinvnlditbie casualties
was ■ rebortm) favorably. The entt-Polygamy

Apportionment Xll wa* then taken up. and a
rranlutkm was pieMod that to* boat® of dirtalon
«tudl be tort used in too Forty-Sixth Congress,
amendment, fixing tho b tai
tho Hou®- — ~
•
-1&lt;B to 10L 'Tho

duecd a bin 1® appropriate &gt;l.”,0O) for public
buildtnxs an8 other improvement® in Louisiiina. The H«u*e bill providing that compensa­
tion authorised by the Census Deficiency bill

dent sen’ in tbe nomination of Wakefield G.
FYre.of M::t»c, to tx tConsul-General at Halifax.
Adjourned to the 3Mb....Tbe Apportionment
bill, fixinglhe number of Representative® in
CoEitrc-- nCU&gt;.- March 3,1X83. nt 325, waa pa**e-d
&lt;n»he Hatme without a division. Memorial*
against p-dyxnmy in Utah and Jewish inidtreatincmtln Itoesla were pretw-nted. Mr. Valentine
reported the Agricultural Appropriation bill,
which calls Tor f stl.tne. A mc«*agv wa* n&gt;
cell ed trom the I’r.-sident, in further compli­
ance withhh'- House resolution calling for
corwrep ui’itencc respecting tho war on tho
Pacific, traikimltting the report of the Secretncyul Stare im&lt;! accompanying documents.
House a bill wa* reported to promote tbe
cAcienvy-cC the Life-Saving Sep Ice. The
In. mediate-Pendency bill (fl.tffi.MD was then

nroprl-res #*.'&gt;,000 for additional vaults in tbe
Treasury* srd *ub-Troa*urics. Mr. Hewitt
&lt;-br.rr.L't«rli»fl tho silver dollar a* a fraud,
wtule Mtsasu. Stephens and Marsh declared it
tin tnivtmlteif value. The bill wa* flnnlly

Ik the Hern.te on the 3Mh Mr. Hale, from
theUcusus Uoiumlttec, made u favorable re.
'port on the 4Iom»e Apportionment bill, and
j staS-sl that Hr- committee were unanimous In
support of th* mewture. Mr. Saunders introMluttda bill fa- an appropriation &lt;&gt; improve
kbeMisAouri River opp.site the State® of No
lubllcs to sitUcthc eoutro-

.
■■
1
&lt;
&lt;
I
1
L

sub—1.
The Pension-Arrears resolution
vm token np. and Mr. McPhetunn of-

lered nnd anvtNiated n substitute dctarlur that too St mate adbenw-to the printple thst - pennio n* shall be computed
VomWie time &lt;rf tils ttbllity. nnd directing lhe
tension ComnUUcc to bring in a bill by which
te business of the Pension Bureau mar be
gpedited and fraudn dvtoctfti and punished,
. In Qxe House bill* were -Introduced; By
r. C&gt;&gt;iS» (Ind.).providing that nil silver eolu
c. 1'orXhc construction of a bridge acne® the

a

are entitled; by Mr. Hand ill.
tat oi: public litilldiutr* shall lx&gt;
of material found t» the state
ilMlng* arc to be erected. Mr.
Rot •noon Introdtxhx! n resolution extending
»ym g&gt;«thy -L&gt; the laboring classes of Ireland

ASM
dutl.

I Japanese Indemnity fund. lunountlng

.rTO-Un. w. tt&gt; the except.on of
sihall bs&gt; p. lid to the office nt on J crew of
sited Bait ft t ahip Wyoming.

ducted tiyColnnel Hyatt, wx* destroyed by
fire on tbeltUk loss WJWJ.
Ox tl e Iflth£nos 8yhester. of Providence.
■3 an ‘-Sn®pLratkui" which told him to
offer up blssix-yrar-old boys* a burnt-offering
trd. Neigh!w* interfered iu time to

Tuboe, OBE Payton, a prodigal son &lt;»f the
ex-8herif&gt; !
Detroit, wa* shot dead in a
saloon on its 1ZU&gt; by some person unknown.
tecked the &lt;!oor® of her bouse on the Inside,
atd boat &gt; •‘a’ motbor-ln-Jaw to death. She
thencoufe »®d her crime to the authorities.
and expre: toodihe hope that some one would
MB her.
0KZ.ANDO B. I'otteil, the owner of the
World build tag in New York which wa* re‘ceully de®tr ®»e J by fire, ho* been held to bail
in tbe i um o ! 45,000.1o await the action of t£e
Grand Jury.
Tur A tinne Wte Grump.- has adopted resolu­
tion* th® t the stew rtjJer for buying and grad­
ing whe® t pu t in fore® by the miller* cut
* priees fro. n ten to thirty cents per bushel, and

,

Chaeles Stanford baa been nominated by
tlx Republican* for the New York Senate, to
fill the vacancy caused by .the death of Webster
Wagner In tbe Spuyten Dsyvil disaster.
Rev. Dr. Hansen, of Philadelphia, has ac­
cepted the call to the pastorate of the First
Baptist Chunk of Chicago.

■Ox the 21*t ■eventeen vitrtirna had been re­
covered from the rulu® caused by tbe explo*

Tua Court-martial at Washington for tlx
and that tl te remedy Ilea iu encouraging local
trial of Sergeant Mason for the shooting at
buverr- azu. &lt; in shipping wheat outaade the
Gulteau, heard some testimony on the 21st
of a routine kind, but adjourned without
• State.
Tun authr ‘Titles of Wyoming Territory have
signed coetr. icta for keeping their prisoners in Ugtaktore abolished capital punishment On eral times during the testimony.
■ tlx Penitent 1 iry al JolieiU
j thc ,Clh * blU PLssed the Senate providing for
T ua milling firm of JUcklen &amp; Sons, of
- - - • it* restoration.
Fredericksburg, Ya., suspended on the 21st
Tya National House of Represent at Ives has with llabilistes of &gt;130,0JO.
staffs far the * even mouth* ended Jnntlary 31,
1882. was &gt;124 372.W7; same priori In 1881, passed the bill granting a petuioa uf &gt;5,&lt;XX) to
Tux United States Senate on tbe 21st con­
firmed John C. New as Assistant Secretary of
Tickets to represent tbe fnU capacity of
IT decided that n.?&lt;&gt;ue has th® right to put the boll of the House of Representatives bare
already been issued fc*r tbe Garfield xneraoriol to Consul-General at Halifax.
Mrrlce»,jnd requests continue Lu pour in
In tbe British House of Commons ou tho
from every part of the Ufllon.
21«t a motion for a new election was defeatedMBs. GajtriELo on the 17th acknowledged Bnullsugh took tbe oath, but was not allowed
The boiler of tbe car-works at Cartersville,
17th with such force as the receipt of a letter fram Mrs. Scoville, and
authorised the stulemcnt that she ehcri*b. 1
High water in nil Western rivers and dis­
no malice toward Gulteau, aud felt profound astrous floods iu many places, interfering
Tile Garfield Andl’.ia(&gt;' Committee al Wnsh- pity tar his sister and other members ot his with railroad and telegraphic ootamunicatimj
iAgton received on the 17th from Mr. Jeu- family, but saked to be left alone with her
aJngs. of Boston, a bill for 15,(X» tor the non- ——-w—ju&gt;ricu
portedon
onme
thewist.
21st. Not ___
only __
the MImUmpp
BXXATOE Buie's MD to appropriate &gt;15,- ; and Ohio Hirers,but Mvre# ol smaller stre
atntrftl-m of tlx cooling apparatus In ike
009,000 for public education drew out a com- ; were booming. Memphis, Tenn., and He.
White itouoe.
,
T. W. MacFarlane A Co., of New York, pilmautary memorial from the Union League Ark., were practically umlcr water, ar
lard rotner*,' suspended oa th® 17th. LiabiL 2I
S"”'"/".'
!&amp;• “mrateS'*'
dro
Ion occunel at th® pyrotechnic.
JUHed and
txiscr® wsnndrtl, aome at ilia Utter fa­
r. The building was assd far th® Lomunre a dyn»wKe.

the appointment of aCengrrM
tw- of Inquiry to vlatt tbe Terri

terrific snow storm' prevailed, IntanupB
travel.
x

I SHALL OFFER FOR SALE------brought nw on that dark day in July: "Hewa* j
bnun-alck. deluded, enuy: forgive’ him, «ves»
aa Christ shall fonrivo us all."
Both our martyred President add h’s family,
having shown nucb an example of Christian
fortitude aud trust in the Mort High M tho
wus shown, be tempered with that mc-riaiful
forjrivcncM which Is indeed Christ-4 ke.
.
All these dreadful we de* of the Prnridrmf®

AT GOST OR UNDER GOST
MY ENTIRE STOCK OF GOODS-------

$9,000 WORE!

When the p.u&gt;j&gt;le of tfaj whole world cuUcd
mightily unto Him to Interpose |n bls beh»lr,
r luddi “Surely He will show forth His
giury.” But. alas !■ the t udorcst oire of wife,
family and fr ond*, tho prayer® of the people,
could net move tbe Rufcr of the Univerae to
countermaial th- decree® of. His al&gt;-wiso and
This is no dodge'but is ,a bona [fide offer. The time and
myrtonous Providence: could not k«-cpin bis
pear, despoiled l»tx!y his grandly bwuitlful
opportunity to - make^monny , is by raving from 25 to 5o per
aouL
Despite the vigil t. tbe tsara and ton prayer*
of his family, of tho Natkin, of th? w.irld, tho cent on your purchases.
In^Dress Goods wa quote: ten— Lmidnight hells were toll rd, tbe midnight cry
was heard; ”Tbe President!* dead."
W'ool CfluhmereR, .flO worth .80
Wo gazod upon tho lifeless clay—ruik-— Wool Cnshinert*. .80 wnrtli fl.
Exe to dwell with the glorified saint* of tho
llnlf wool do. .25 worth .85.
Plain Suitinga, .25 worth .85
rd. And wo—our tears Bowes! without stint,
Plnin SuitingH, G|.
Prints, .5 .6 '.7
and wo raid: - “I* then- no God?"
Wool
drt*a
Flnnncl,
.40
worth
.05 Wnterpioofii, .75 worth fl
Truly, i two* a grievous wrung. The Lord,
Wutt-ipioof®.
fl
worth
f
1.25
W-Wool
’ m-----J
-• — .75
nnd He al me, can Judge where lies too moral
Tweeds
.50 worth
responsibility. Tb&gt;s people nre in Hi® hands.
.
Hnlf wool Tweeds, 3s worth 4*.
Cottunnde, .Id to 20
They walk on holy ground. It ixtlt* them
F’nmiera &amp; Mechanics .20 to .25
Lin. Table Cloth, .18 worth 25
that they seo to It, putting off toelr feet the
Lin. TableCloth, 8a.worth 4s.
Lin. Table Cloth. .50 worth 75
unolean ^h&lt;&gt;ea nf their worldly walking, being
«hod wltb tbe snndals of rightcousnc**. tost
Cotton Goods, .0 .7 .8
Blenched Goods, .0.7 .8.9 .10
they tread carefully, tenderly, to the end tost
Whitt- Good* chettn.
White Goods Cheap.
justice, and truth, nnd mercy. *h ill prev.il).
Table Oil Cloth, .3 worth .85
Floor Oil Cloth, .35w’th .50
In July, when it was reported that tbcauffer'
Horn* Blankets- A • worth 9b.
ing President wa* likely tn recover, I wrote u
Overalls .40
letter to you stating toe facts in my broth-r1* ।
■
Overalls .60
»Overalla 25. .
life and even theory of this case, thinking that ;
Trini
’
iig
Silk
.75
worth
$1
Silk' Riblmna nt coat.
both yourself nnd too President would bo glad ।
Trim ng Satin, $1 worth $1.507
Ladies Stockings.
to k’jow that n poor crnXV train had done the &gt;
deed. Instead of the hiudoncd wretch ho wn® |
Children’* Stockings.
Glovea &amp; Mittens.
painted. At too time It wn® reported the Pres!- j
.dent wo* interested In anything regarding tho ।
terrible affair, that bo even ®md one duj-: “ 1 ।
wonder what that poor fellow would think 11 I
ho knew that I had forgiven him?" oh! that I
might know from hl® own wife If that wtwo I
Ingrain Carpe ts, .2-5 worth .35
truck My heart, lx still 1
lu Heaven we know, a* wo are known: tho
Ingrain Carpets, .35 worth .50
saluted Garflcld knows wow that be “ had todu
It;” and I feci sure If be could speak he would
Ingrain Carpets, .60 worth .80
say: "Forgive that deluded man, even a* 1
forgive him; safely keep him from doing any
more barm, but forgive."
Ingram Carpets, .70 worth $1
I never sent tbe letter. The report came nlmost immwllately that the President wa*
worse, nnd 1 know you would not wish to i*.
troubled with anything from Oulteau’s slater.
I had hoped by waiting to come before you
with a bettor showing—rin. tlcatrd - so far as In­
Men’s Suits, §10 worth 15
sanity 1* nn excuse for crime, but my heart Men’s Suits, $5 worth 8.
burn.* within me, and. notwithstanding that
Men’s Suit.*, $l-5.wortb 20. Boys Suits $3 worth 5.
unjust verdict und barbarous Bcntchce, 1 must
speak. My poor brother shut nwnr from the
Boys
Suits
0
doll,
worth
8. Overcoats 2.50 to 10 dolls.
work! for month* In a tcmb-likncell; not a ra&gt;
of *un«hlnc', not a blade of gra**, not n flower,
not u bird, not n friend to speak n kind word:
who I* there to speak In his behalf. If not hit
heart-broken sister? Did 1 not speak, the very
stone* would cry out!
Hi® sainted mother, the purest nnd noblest Mens Stoga Kip Boots, 2 dolls, worth 2.60
of women, that mother who gave her life for
hl*, who suffered torture for seven long yean
Mens Sti'ga Kip Boots, 2.50 worth 3.5o
Ixwause of hl* birth, until death made her
frv*i; that father, tender and kind, but mis­
Mens Fine Calf Boots 2 dolls, worth 4
taken tn hi* direction of the boy, would, if
Bible, make toelr voice® beard from beyone
Mens F ne Calf Boots 2.50 worth 3 dolls.
the grave. Even, us 1 verily believe, would
the gioriou.* Garfield cry out In horror nt that
verdict. What of that verdict? Wa.’ It no
cording to truth. Justice and money? Vorily.
no. ’
1 had hoped to be able to cast myself at the 1
fwt of Juan C &gt;x; tn l»o able, so long n* I hud Kid Button Shoes 1 doll, worth 1.50
breath, to look up to him a* the grand, the no
Fine Kid Button, 2 dolls worth 2.50
Me, tho just Judge, who could stand n* Arm ar
tho everlasting rock® for the weak and doTampico Goat 2 25 worth 3 dollars
fen«cl"«* ngaiiut too whole world But. ala*
my idol!
Childrens Shoes 50 cts. worth 1 dollar.
And that jury! God only knows how 1 had
trusted in their honesty and *teadfu*tnc«. I

along." commencing in a low. sail melody rd
tflr ®«ng, bn liking up and ending in thawefru.
hjTterienl lituxh. th-n-vfitl laugh, of the In
•nn«-. on-' could fix-1 the silence. I thought
surely it I* enough; no power on earth car I
prevail upon tho*- m&gt;-n tn say thus i&gt;oor lutut (
tic, without revenge. Without motive except
to obey what bodft-med the will &lt;&gt;f God. &lt;x&gt;m i
mined a willful murder.
Rut they did. They must hsvr- rea’onod. as
some do. that it 1* a gum! thing to hung u crazy
mini, a» an example t-&gt; other crazy mon.
I know that my brother ha* been. In some e»
iwntlal mutter* of judgment, defective *inc&lt;
hl* birth. 1 kn iw that ho I* art exaggerated
counterpart of bls father, who wu*. in semi
things, fpMine: that there 1* n strong heredita­
ry mint of insanity in tho^tomily. nnd that ht
Is now m t himself. Thi**ud&lt;len,*upcrnatura.
dcvt-I &gt;pn;cnt of intellect In *- mo directions 11
of it-eff n symptom of inanity.
Knowing him. ini'letstan tlng him. us I claim.
lx?ttcrtb:ui a iy &lt;&gt;nr&gt;c!s .-. 1 a*.»ert and can provt
that my brother ha« always intended to do right
and live honestly. Hlssburteuiiilngihave beet
those uf a-i unbalanced, distracted brain, rath
er than n l*td heat L His heart ha* ever beer
kind rtud tender it* that of a woman. But b&lt;
ha* teen most unfortunate; he wn* uclthe:
born r.ght, reartil right, nor married right
Even with his defective organization, hud be.
Inst* a I of b -lug fore si into the Oneida Com­
munity, Ik- -n allowed tn obtain a goo&gt;! educa­
tion, cnterol upon some pnict'csu luwlnes*
so that hit m’n&lt;l would n &gt;t dritt into ruatric&lt;; and, mo*t Important of all. had hr, whan
married, found in hf* wife a helpful, honc« woman, he might have gone through
l.fe comfortably, happily, and respected
tn it* cImo, a* u d hl® father. But
ala*! h.'s mother died; father married
■t' woman who disliked his chlldron. and
Cbarl&lt; s. tec only one needing n homo witt
mind, lo on-&lt; t ) snide him, no ono tocaro foi
h-in (but ui) a If. ldi&lt;! wimt I could, it wo* but
I ttle), the b &gt;y &lt;1 iltftl out Into th • cruel worfct
Ev'-rythtnr wc.-.t wring'with him, and dow.
wltti sorrow unspeakable, 1 look up.&gt;n tht
wn-ck of what might have been.
Shall thfi t.no story &lt; f Ch-rlus Gulteau'® lift
ever lx&gt; told, the world will see that he bai
m m- Mnn'cd against than tinning. He

Tea, 25 worth 5oc. Tea 45c worthf60c. Coffee 13 worth 17
Coffee 16c worth 20e. Brown Cfffce 17e. Molasses, blk.
Strap. 30c worth 40c. Common Syrup. 30c worth 40
N O. ni' lasses best in the market 50c worth 70.
Maple flavor 50c worth 70. Sugars, Granu­
lated 10 1-2 Standaid A. 10 Brown 7 8.

The priees quoted [are buflient to indicate what bargains are
offered, all of which1 will be strictly adhered to.

The highest market j rice will he paid fsr Butter, Eggs,
Potatoes, Beans, Lard, Dried Apples &amp;c.
On all films of $25 and over, six months’ credit will be giv­
en on approved notes bearing 7 percent interest.
Come early! these goods will not last long at prices given.

L. J. Wheeler
DRY
We are

from a minister which he never returned, that
hi'pnwti-ila wntch fi«r &gt;35. thst he alnnri
iun&gt;ln«t bm&lt; -lf. and only him®-If. tv give an
unworthy womnn s loyal divorce. Little did ]
think the Umo would ever wme when she. tb«
wwain who cmid n&lt; t aav bo had evci
wr.ng- d h r. would travel aerrsi th - contor.eiAio *w«nr hi® life away. When hn di»
m '**-&lt;! th-- woman he htd tnee loved, with hi*

p-or br.'.h.r pn&gt;v&gt;4 that the bleed of agontlt'.imn tlowa ‘a, h&gt;® veins he proved It thou.
W reck tho-.‘gh b« ia. I was proud of him.
{cunnut cio*o fhl* lott-. r without one word erf

GOODS

"A Nic’de Saved,
1h better than five ceiita earned.’’

Opening a fine line of NEW GOODS and will
Offer Some

SK ENDID BARGAINS
Bargains you can't Afford to Pass.
CvT We do not iwe onr Competitora AtKertlxed Price 14*
to make price*.
r?' We don't liHve them kind of^oods.
X3T Our Roods are nil I'reth and Ocsirableand we never had
a larger Stock to nelert from.
?

DREES GOODS AND

DRESS

TRIMMINGS

-------In Endless Variety-------

BOOTS AND SHOES
That we Warrant in Every particular
‘
We aim to keep Only Good Goods and .are ’satisfied with

Re m eruheF 11 i e
KOC

BROS.

�Im l fixrd st •1,000.

auv« rti*rd for

mon aood-ioahlng^
and family are visiting
building a bora* barn. 18128 on his
the Micbigau Central air line. Hi*
_____
Iff
Frank Bum hum Iim rented Mr., borae w*. killed and aud buggy de­
lot.
A North Carolina1 |a«ticr of the prcce
Ge&lt;i. Mooch has been having a time j
molished.
,
recently married a roupte «• Iro sat en­
with the rheumatism, but is getting
A dunce Waa held at John Wolf's.
Hiimn Whitney, of Maple Rapids,
throned in state on tiro hack uf a mule,
.
last Friday night.
diet! Sunday from the effects of taking
M. W. Riker wm admitted to the better.
Mias Hattie Carpqpter started on I__
__ of
„ Hillsdale,, chloroform on Friday for the avowed and tbe animal for once realized that
Ex.__________________
Whitmore aud wife
there was bigger trouble going on than
bar last Monday.
purpose of ending hia life. He had
P. T. Colgrov. .peak. A Red Ribbon Munday, for a four weeks visit at Bay lire vitdtiug at Mr. Shaffers.
City.
1 Fred. Wendell has sold his bouse andI been on a long spree. Intemperance is be could produce, aud kept bis heels
aull.
Hal! next Sunday.
the only known cause of bi* act.*
New maffle sugar is on band and our . C. Collins and wife started for their lot at tile Center to H. Demnray.
Thcrostliric crate has struck the
new home nt East Jordan, the fore part
Time, was, aud time is again wheni
'It. is one ot the uoexphiinable things
under jaw begins to wax lame.
Jas. Burt is repairing clocks for thei advertiuug man of the Jackson Wag­ ,ot moral ethics how people decide so
The boll given by the Arbeiter Ver- of the week.
people
of
Maple
Grove,
but
their
time
on
Company,
and
ho
ha.
issued
a
new
Chas.
Collins
has
sold
the
lot
and
promptly m to how little rain and bad
ein, cleared the aoefety about *70.
N. T. Parker bn* commenced moving store that belonged to his wife, to Geo, will stop short, never to go again, till edition of tiro Jackson song, the first weather it takes to keep, them away
Daguillustrated with a huge sunflower from prayer meeting and how much is
die old man dies.
.
his barn, and preparing the ground for Trabert, for $75.
Maple Grove to the head again. A and the lost with a lily.
We were sorry’ to hear on Monday,
1‘eqirtjd to keep them away from a
the new depot.
Twenty-four hundred bushels of on- good show.
The Royal Templar* ef Temperance while at Nashville thnt tbe Editor waa certain young man living not over Si
Heuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago,
•
ions,
200
bushels
of
potatoe.
and
3,000
miles
from
Norton's
school
honse
went
at
home,
and
mi
tatter.
held, their annual social Wednesday
An electric light machine drew many Backache, Sorenett of the Chect,
The I. 0. of 0. F. cleaned their hall, to see his girl, aud stayed all night. hood of cabbage, valued at $2,500, are
evening. They always have Mplendid
Gout,
Quinsy, Sore Throat, SoreUand put down a now carpet last Satur­ Remember we do not call any names what James Johnson, of Clyde, Allegan visitors at Louisville, and they intrudings and Syraihs, Burn* and
time.
this time.
Co., took from nix acres of reclaimed &lt;ied upon the workmen in an exasper­
The woman’, foreign mission society day. They have a fine hall.
Scalds,
Genera! BodUr
Board of-Health Report—There is swamp land, an aver ugeof over $400 ating way, wholly disregarding the
Lewis Faul has a new show cn*e, nnd
will have a social gathering at the resi­
Pains,
“no admission” placard. By hitclring
.
dence of Mrs. Traverse Phillips, Mar. the dutchman has made over 1.000 tin such a large quantity of Miasma float­ per acre.
sap buckets this spring. Next !*
,
ing id tbe atmosoberr, caused by the
A cock fight witneaaed by a great wircit to the metal door knob, and turn­ Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted
lat Tea froiji 6 to 7.
Feet
and
Ears,
and all other
ing
on
a
powerful
current,
tbe
men
seWarner A Grant have a very fine decomposition of the vegetable matter, numper of people, was one of the at­
• r*
moved hhgtock of
Pains and Aches.
drill on hand, Uiat will sow anything that it is liable to cause several ’bilious tractions at Kalamazoo on Sunday. ctiied the desired seclusion nnd tbe in­
attacks, lihich if Dot arrested in die Tho unlawful assemblage was held truder were dreadfully shocked.
Bartow. .It
been rearanged aud
The cheese factory that was talked course of seven or eight days, is ' liable within the corporation and near its
painted
is dow one ot the finest
From Spain there ja
to assume a ty phoid form.
about
a
few
weeks
ago,
is
like
the
pro
­
business center. An eflort will be Catholic pilgrimage to
store, in the city.
.
Tin
which
Boo E Rue.
made to arrest all participants.
V. Leins lias formed a co-partnerahip ceeds of the other factory, it has fixit is said that at
30,000 pilgrims
A chnp is going about this state will take part, led by£be principal dig­ SOLD BY ALL DBUOGIRTB AND DEALERS
with A. Woolley in tbe Boot and Shoe tied.
iff MEDICINE.
MORE ITEMS.
A, J. Carpenter and Jerome Walt*
gulling the farmers by means of a ma­ nitaries of the church. It seeius to be
busiDca. The new firm will commence
A. VOGELER de CO.,
Mr. and Mrs. A. 3. Quiek are visiting chine fur sharpening the knives of
business as won ns Mr. Leins can get were delegates-to the Grand Lodge of
agreed all round that the pilgrimage
mowing machines. Tbe farmer signs shall not take the character of a politi­
hi. store ready in the old Central bouse Odd Fellows, held at Lansing, this al Battle Creek.
- Quite 'a good many have tapped a contract for one, and when he next cal demonstration against the Italian
block.
LPIKH4M, OF LIU, IUXS_
There wns some splendid sugar dieir sugar bushes.
goes to tbe bank he finds tliot little government, aud that tiro pilgrims
Last week a couple of fisherman from
D. P. Wolf has a curiosity in the contract has grown to bu Jii. note for while in Rome shall do as tiro Romans
this place went to Jordan Lake to Vn- made in onr town, last Week, and our
$108 for a quarter of a gross of sharp­ do, and refrain from anything that
joy their favorite sport. They return - farmers have the faculty and the tools tdiapqof a rooster.with four wings.
Mr. nnd Mrs. Ed. Warburton visited eners. It ha. already coat some men
.
ed with 6! pickerel, one ot which I to make nice sugar.
could be taken as an insult to the civil
Mr. Fay will open a select school at at their uncle’s in Climax tbe past that much to have their wits sharpened : authority,
weighed 16 lire; they also had ba., anil
the Center, March 20th, “knowledge is week.
by this process.
~r~j—r?**--------------perch by the bushel.
Investigation is being made into the xT,u‘ principal fun of a farce played
Russel glade lias two sisters, both old
Wc wish’ Mr.
Last week Wednesday Dr. Will Up­ better than wealth.”
. . —
.
. ..
....
.
•! t n
n Vr. hai.., .. , I......... 1. • .
ladles, who never saw one another. feed of cows in Detroit, and it lias been at a Suu Francisco theatre lay in the
john’s horses got the start of him near Fny success, In starting a school.
Mr. Fisher is patting a board fence They both live in York State.
found that nearly all of them nre fed butting of the Iqw comedian by a '.goat.
the Hastings House and ran away,thro­
Gen. Bettes and Ff. G. Potter pro­ upon “sugar meal,” which is the hull The manager thought he had oveicome
wing him out and bruising bis arm on the south nud east sides of his farm
nounced
those
oysters
they
ate
at
J.
K.
He
burns
nnd
tars
the
end
of
the
post
and
gluten of corn after its syrup-pro- all the difficultigx of the piece when he
quite severely, and shaking him up
obtained a goat thst had bqen taught to
generally.Tlirrc were no bones broken. thnt goes in the cround, nnd it looks, Smith’s expense die 22ud, uf February, during qualities have been extracted
delicious.
axthonghhe
was
putting
them
in
to'
in
the
glucose factory. This meal is plunge madly at every stooping person,
The' annual meeting of the Barry
Bon Potter has just bad a kernel of liable to foment, makes the cow sick, but the first night's spirited perform­
and Eaton Farmer. Insurance Co, was last,
ance, though it pleased the audience
held in this city last Tuesday.' C. E. ’ There are plenty of farms for sale in wheat taken out of his ear that he pH nnd then children who partake ot the
mightily, caused tlie butted actor to
Chappell of Charlotte, was elected Woodland. Although there has been in seven years ago last full. It could milk also suffer in health. The meal
send in his resignation. Tho matter
always
be
seen.
nt its best produces poor milk.
treqsrirtrnnd the. following gentlemen a good many sold, some have taught
On Saturday evening while A. W. was arranged however, by introducing
directors, Hiram Coleman Johnstown, here again. Some talk of goir.g to Da- . The snrprise party at E. G. Potter’s
Orson Swift Maple Grove, G. C. Nich­ kota, but it is my opinion you will find passed off very pleasantly, they had Connblc, a student at the Albion col­ a stalwart aud padded negro to receive
goad music and stayed until they saw, lege, was being initiated in the Delta ; tiro goat’s onslaught.
ols Carlton, A. C. Towne Pnuieville; no tatter farming land there.
Tau Delta society, one of the seciet
We notice the Hastings papers, take Bellevue burn up.
F, E. Andrews Bellevu, Z. B. Hoyt
The evil of deadheadism on railroad,
Doujtlas says when he went to the societies of the college a serious com­
a
good
many
items
from
T
he
N
ews
Yankee Springs, W. L. Squire Ver­
lias been turned to personal profit by
montville, 8. L. Bentley Eaton Rapids, and so you, see they nre not fresh, drama at Assyria Center, that he drove plication arose, the candidate’s upper some of the Western conductor*. The
VEGETABLE COCTOTOD.
J. W.- Ewing Oneida and S. W. Hnrmvn please take The News nnd then you two miles without seeing his horse and maxillary and nasal bones being brok­ passes are sometimes lent by tin- per­
en. At latest accounts there were no sods to whom they are issued. The
will not.nced to take ao many papers. now folks wonder be was.
Chester.
John
Clever
closed
his
school
in
tho
fears ot fatal consequence, but the conductor may take advantage of this
* Last Friday.evening a largo number This paper has the news from nearly
Baker district last Friday as he wished young man was still insensible.
of people gathered at the M. E. church every town in the county.
to go back to Ohio to attend college. | Sojourner Truth says that the stories in the matter dUcribed by one of them,
Nell.
about 8 o’clock with baskets of provis­
as follows: "A man handed me a Sena­
His leaving was very much regreted by going about iu the press -relative to
ions and armed with a fine gold-l&gt;e*dtor’s pass. ‘Now,’ said I, ‘you are not
the most of his scholars.
her having deeded her property to her Senator----- .’ I could see that the man
PRICHARDYILLE,
ed cane and a magnificent easy chair.
Fred Quick has been pining away children, owning several farms, etc.,
They proceeded to tbe residence’ of
would’t have the thing get out for a
every since he saw that piece in the hre pureinventions. She has had but
Hon. R. J. Grant. Thu M. E. choir
We’re here oucu xuore.
hundred dollars. lie tried to smile,
paper about hi- squealing on tbe horse five children, two of whom died many
were ahead and cautiously going up to
Better late than never.
but I looked determined. Then he betrade lie made with Henry Mayo, butI years ago; she owns no farm or farms,
lhe porch and sang a verse of “Home
We got that valentine.
.
giiu to enter upon a long explanation
if the truth bad been told him, he nnd only has a little bonne in Bnttle
Sweet Ho&amp;e.” Mr. Grant was very
MissLibbie Clark Urick.
pf huw Senator-------- had pressed the
would not cared to have traded back.
Creek, and even that is encumbered pass upon him, and wound up byhund-.
much surprised and proposed that (bey
Diphtheria i* -.gain With UH.
*
with a mortgage nt lOper cent. Her
"
sliould get a pan of apples, and he
Mr. mid Mrs. Carpenter, of Charlotte,
ing me n twenty dollar dill to
his
only income is from the sale of lhe fine. When I told him J would have
would call in the crowd and treat them are visiting at Mrs. Pierce’s. &gt;
EATOM COUNTY
narrative of her life nud hr«- photo- troriOIe To ger The Dote changed, he
R. II. Dixon haft taken « contract for
but when he opened tiro door and 1W
smiled and said, ‘Never mintLl so I
graphs.
of bi« fifends walked in, he gave up running the Cedar Creek, flouring
kept the whole bill.” A detective has
Eaton Rapids hows lias the pi nkeve.
Miss Jennie Dean, a well known caught rcveral conductors nt this trick.
the idea of treating them with one pan mills.
Eaton county is reported to be out
Michigan lady who is a missionaiy in
Chas.
Prichard
went
last
Monday,
to
full. Hon. D. Striker then addressed
of debt, its R. R. bond having been re­
Probate Order.
the Festoriun region, writes &lt;&lt;J n friend
Mr. Grant, and at the close of his re­ Ohio on business, and to visit among cently paid.
in Jlctroit denouncing the Persian CoVxtt or B*knr. ,
\
marks. presented him with the cane his relatives.
J. V. Johnson Ims sold the Charlotte
At u.cwloti oftho Probatettairtfor thrCouni)
Benjamin Eshoo. now lecturing in
The attendance at our school has
nud chair. Mr. Grant responded but
Leader, to Mr. Frank A. Ells, of Char­
of IHrrj .holdcn st the ProbolsOfllce.Jn t!.i» City oi
Michigan, as a lazy fraud, begging Hs&lt;lir&gt;K*.lnMdd!c&gt;xinly on Thurvl.r thu 23•! day o(
it was with great difficulty that he been rather slim tho past week, ou ac­ lotte, a former editir of the Leadc.'.
money for purposes to which be never February lu lheyear one Cboueand eight hundred
could control his feelings. A letter count of diphtheria.
and eJgbiy-two. Prreout,Gi'tarnt Smith, Jui*o ut
A young married man of Bellevue
puts it, and having a mother and sister
E. Haynes will go to Calnfomia. as
wax then read from Rev. Masters, and
admits that his wife has a right to
in his own hand whom the mission RIUHABD%ta»aMd.
0. D. Spaulding made some remarks soon us he finishes the school which he whip him whenever he gets drank. &gt;
where Miss Denn serves are obliged to _Oi£rvwling and flllng the pailUonttaiy terUWd.af
on thoclass meeting, after which re­ is now teaching.
Four years ago a Mrs. Shaw, of ’Eat­
support, ns Eshoo never sends them a
There was no preaching nt the school
freshments were served. The caue
on Rapids, drank at a spring, and as
•Meh
bears this inscription. “Presented to R. house last Sunday, on account of sick­ she had strange sensations in the cent nor has ho devoted any of the j
funds raised in this country for “build­
J. Grant on his -60th birth-day, as a ness-in the neighborhood.
stomach thereafter, concluded that she ing a church” to the purpose indicated.
II. H. Mendion is drawing logs and
token of Christain friendship.”
tbe fiOtb,
had swollowed some living animal.
S.-W. MtGerry of Ovid went to Port­
lumber, and preparing to build a large
Hans.
Recently, by the aid of a dnse of worm­ land the other day on information that
residence the coming summer.
wood nnd oi|, she expelled from her bis daughter, not yet 14 years old, was
KALAMO.
C. D. Prichard has finished his school,
stomach a leech as long nnd as large nn going to marry a dissolute young man.
and is home again. Ife expects to go to
TRADE ■■
her fore finger, and she very naturally He took her to Muir, where he was met Offloc.lp the eUy
MARK|
end «how ranw.lf
The sugar busher arc froze up again. Hastl'igs to school next month.
feels better.
by a mob of friends of the would-be
Miss Bergman has nearly recovered
, Crandell is doing quite a driving
I
’
.irr
loiiie
person
.mirr-.it.&gt;
in
»a&gt;'i
m»&lt;c,
mine
bride-groom who attempted to take the
from the diphtheria, this is the first
business in his dosing out sale.
MICH WAX MEWS.
rodnney of**ld petition, nrul lb» be*rinr thereof,
girl from him, but at last account* had
jr en««li&gt;M s copT at Uil» order io be published In
Quito a lively debate at the Matte­ case thot1m&lt;i been cured in these parts,
.
. Jackson,
. .. made
Goguac lake will have a steam yacht not succeeded. McGerry telegraphed
son school house- last week Friday, * Mrs. Mary fternnrd.of
her
mother
and
jutber
relatives
at
to
Portland
for
help,
and
about
20
have
•
’
*
■
'
this
this summer.
evening.
A case of the itch seared Paw Paw gone to him, armed fori fight. The
CLKMENT SMITH,
R, King is running a hotel at the place a pleasant visit the first of the
CS-W)
Catholic priest was in readiness to per­
into a general vaccination.
burg. He has out dance tickets for
A man from Maple Grbve, has pur­
A six-foot vein of Coal has been dis­ form the ceremony, but on being in­
the 22nd.
Roh. saysthat red head lias given him chased the Wcedman farm, and will covered in Elba township,,Gratiot Co. formed that it was against the law to
unowira iron nrmms ar­
Regular trains arc now running un marry girls under 10 years of age, said
the mitten. We pity him with all our -erect a huusu on the same, the coming
a certain cure for all tli&amp;caon the narrow gage road between Port he would not marry them under any
requiring n complcuTtonic: c
heart. He looks so sad we can’t help summer.
■
.
consideration.
•
P. C. Strobridge was home not long Huron and East Saginaw'.
it.
George W. Oakes, a clothing dealer
8. D. Slosoun aud Lethe Babcock since to make hia family a vimt, bill has
.Strengthen brain and inuecle.culUvatc nerves
have entered the state of matrimony. returned to Kent City, where he is at Flint, made an assignment for the of inm,tuake labor easy and work a pleasure, by
etc. Euricbes -tiro blood,
/
.
benefit of his creditors to Horace C. using Brown’s Iron Bitters.
They talk of going west, to &gt;wk their working .-t the carpenter trade.
cos tiro muscles, and J™1®111Last Sunday afternoon Mr. Wm. A. Spencer.
fortune.
POINTS IN SELECTING A SEWING EVE«Y\IGHT XFXTWEEK Un, to Uio nw.19.
ebarm on the &lt;Ut“cu'
*
The Chipps boy* are talking of go­ Hendershot and Miss Frances Crow
A funeral in Pine River township,
MACHINE.
Commencing Tuesday Eve.
A-morlns all &lt;!,.,&gt;
^Uv&lt;’ &lt;»»«»•.
ing to Dakota the fl rat of March' to were united in holy matrimony at tbe Gratiot county, bad to be adjourned
Whether for his or her own uw,tbe purchaser
.mhmiumlnc)
seek A fortune. We wish them pros­ M. E. parsonoge, Johnstown, by the In-cauae the sexton was too drunk to should y aside prejudice and make his own
HeU In tho S.
“ &lt;bo&lt;L B«lohl»«.
selection,' after examining the merits ot alldig the grave.
1
perity.
Rev. 8. D. McKee.
me. Tho or
omm*. Htmnbnrt,
Do not take my “say so” or the word of anv
'
Combined.
West Kalamo is to organize a new
Mell Holcomb went to Eaton county
The nuns in charge of the Catholic other dealer, but try and test for yourself and
that w ill ,r
r«*Par»to»n
deride
on
the
merit*
of
the
machine.
A
ma
­
eirc hea&lt;* X M*ckea the seech or
club this week-Saturday night, to be to purchase ahorse. He bought one parochial school at Alperm fecentiy chine to meet the requirements of today niu#l
known u* tbe West Knfamo debating warranted in every rwpect, but when sent all girls with “banged” hair home be able to do all kinds of work perfectly, must
$1.00 a bottle.
dub and benefit association. It will he returned be found that the horse to have their hair comoed.out of their
ilOWN CHEMICAL CO.
form with about thirty signers.
Be­ had the heaves. Mell thinks his old
Tho GresteKt Living Mesmerist,
Albert Bradley, a Ilbtuer youth of 14, tea, Muciuaeuu and improvements. See tbe
tween Hie
give* the most wonderful and
“Cre«a."
E. R. Waits.
fur both old and
exciting entertainment conReport* are rife that the couple at the who is the heir presnmptive to much
tertainnu
BEWARE
mating of
DONT DIM IN THE H0URE.
young.
aonth. wore married ln«t week,
We wealth, hits bre,n sent to the reform
A&gt;k drarghrt* for “Roegli on Rats.” It
school. He was trying to make believe
clean out nos, iniw.lied-bux*, roaches, vermin
not, but if jt
true, we wish them he wax a brigand.
Articles of association have been til­
will not fol­
Im not n he untried nuchfae,
ed
in
Lansing
by
a
company
organized
fur a divorce
LonwhkhfttMMNlto clstai*
fer tbe purpow of exploring and minTiro.— entertaiataents
of the Minstrels or Ctrcmw^ for y ■
Laughter and Amnsrmenri whi',e tht-v
to think of
1 Vitboul afford the grandeat opr .lYtauiri f,»r in
Charles Coitalh. Ute Deerfield farmWwrtL
Tuesday night.

RHEUMATISM,

LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S

IRON

BITTERS

OPERAHOUSE
NASHVILLE,

FUN LAUSHTER AND SCIENCE

PROF. KENNEDY!

Experiments io Animal Magn^ PAYNEPlft EKG1NES.
tism or mental electricity

nW, wn« arrested
while at hisfathCaa

rureii, •TElk Rapids, has

ELEGANCY. AND i’CRITY.

and m e tofvonrMHv^ jj.,. W)lMt jauich.
able enh*rtei»uier-x,nver swit.
Admission, » and 15 vents. *
;

’iS.”

�One Dollar
A YEAR
lnj»&gt;7 h&gt; .lighctog.

for motaUi* ip

Great. he bad won his laurel* al Prague

hour ou your hand* ? Whereunto no &lt;t ■
Nowhare in parVcular. Smoke your
Hu canie to u* nt a dark period of the French cigar. Made of tobacco grown
war, uo&lt;1 hi* first aerviecs were rendered on French tobacco far.ua and so&gt; «-d in ortic Remedy, |&lt;«r beljx
amid the wintry want of Valley Forge, a liquid in which Havana tobawo ha*
__ ___ __ ___
aropouwd. I £
trotms as he only
on!v could | v—i gxeoped.
He drilled onr troops
1 nm. ■ the
uw .Idea u
....
(teeped. ’Tiial'a
of. thio
position, and without any apparent have drilled them. Be wm » thorough wonderful| eople. To got the A'trengt:
She reoctatd thl* terrible luteHlgcoce quietly, |
cause, her right knee-cap snapped and dieciplinarian. end bis manuAl for tbe oat ot tjje f„re..ra tblmcco and iacoi
Hrv-liiwwl tn
ether, stlnulaliae incrviv 'to S*
wa* fractured. There was no slipping army was approved by Congreee in porate it with their own.—Frenfici .Vau
or stumbling, no blow or force of any 177». He wa* an accomplished »oldior
in
CJuvnicle.
an-.l underwent lhe painful proccw without
kind. She brought suit, ascribing the ot
of great
threat knowledge and exwyience.an&gt;f
exnwience.ohd
• - --------- - -------------- ’
inaving a mtwcle or uttering a groan. Dr. j
casualtv to strain attributable to the sometimes, it is said, the clumsiness of
Lord Urac's Costly Magazine.
Krntxlv tbew gave Favorite Remedy freely to j
step being extravagantly high from the his men sorely tried his temper. His
cIcadm tbe blood and prevent tbe return of the
ground. Tbe oomjmny denied that the knowledge of the English language was
‘• Would yon .like to buy that maga­
step was unusually high, and said that limited, and the tradition is that he zine P” asked tho soil-voiced and timid
the injury could only be attributed to swore very freely at the troops in Ger­ peanutter on the east-bound Union Pasome constitutional weakness .of the man and French. Once, when particu­ cliic train tho other day to a mjddleuUtut-rcixUnir aerrtuu.
lady's knee: and they brought a witness larly exasperated, he called out to his aged passenger who was looking over. ed lKrt»wboId friend in all owe* of Female
Pm&lt; WWMIfnr but*. pert Hying farm*.
or two to show that the left knee-cap aid: “Venez, xnon ami Walker, sacrex , the October Harper. and reading Judge
Hhrb furnbe-. th-: nr*. wtx*.&gt; critnaon «
had previously been broken almost as de gauchcri of deso badouds-je n’en Goodwin’* article on the Mormon situ­ r* bottle- Yoar druixiat ba« lu
unaccountably. The Court said the jury puis plus—I can curse dem no more.” ation.
••No,” said the middlo-ag*d party,
must decide as well a* they could wheth­ lie was a member of the court-martial
er the injury
attributable to any which tried and doomed Major Andre •*it is my own magaziuc. tmd therefore
11—..nr. rtf
rnn&gt;nan\? in 170U. and in the same year had com­ I do not care to buv ih"
•• Excuse me.” said the poor little
Airi vvcry amUeS known.
'
mand of the troops in Virginia, and did
We thank thrc, O, them Titan train.
have been anticipated and provided good work in making matters uncom­ frightened pcannttcr. while toe tears
against—there wa* no liability. But in fortable for Benedict Arnold, who was came to his eyes; *.‘I tear you want
a case like this negligence must be af­ in command of the British forces. Sub­ to chest a jxior orphan boy out of hi*
firmative!Iv proved. There was ao sequently be was attached to Lafay­ book. Please pay me, sir. or let me
CASES OF PERSONAL ground for presuming it The care ette’s division, and took port in the ■ have the magazine back again. Ah,
K0TEW01
were at a standstill; there was no jar or siege cd Yorktown.
I'air,
—. you would not rob me of my
breaking of machinery; the lady wa*
•Maj or Ebcnezer Denny, a diarist of 1 goods.”
________
"We jMnrtionrd some month* ago a alighting without any interference from the Revolution, writing at William*•• No.” said the stem
stran,iger. •* I do
ton of y
your book, my
Kansas case holding a company liable the company; and, if the step appeared burg Septem’ier 15, 1781, says: “Baron not wish to rob you
it this on the
for injuries which a boy. while playing too high, site might havedemanded bet­ Steuben i* our great military oracle, boy; buvl bought
— Utah
—
about a disused turn-table, sustained ter facilities.
The guard* attend the grand parade at, Northern Road and paid for it. When
through it* defective condition. From
A car on the Northern Pacific Road an early hour, where tbe Baron is al- [ I went into tbo eating-hou^e for breaka recent decision it appears that the left the track, and, a* it wa* bouncing wavs found waiting with one or two tost the train butcher took it out of my
right of email boys in Kansas to play along, one of the passenger* endeavored aid&lt; on horseback. These men are ex- seat and sold it to mo again in the aftabout the railriwh is not without limit*. to save himself by nwhing to the plat­ ercised and nut through various
varlou* evolu- ernoon.
Near a station was a switch track 280 form and jumping off. He wn* badly tion* 'and military
**
lilitary experiment* for two
“I was
w« in tbe middle of an article
feet long, and inclined four aud a lailf hurt, but. as the result proved, bo hours—many officers and spectators when we got to tho dinner-station, *o 1
feet in that distance; bo that. a car would probably have been safe if he had present;
fire sent; excellent school this. At turned down tbo leaf and left it aga'-n
A cure ffiiaranierd.
ength tho duty of tho parade comes
switched off upon it needed to be fast­ remained in tho car. The company length
cz----- in my sea'.. I bad to buy it once more.
,. . guards,are
------ j_. — told
*_«.i off;
..a-, officers
-aa----- Now, the magazine has cost me two
ened, else it would run down tho grade. urg»*d tlxrt the injury was clearly hi* on. - ra
Tho
The cars were usually fastened by means own fault. But the Coiirt said that the take their post*; wheel by platoon* to dollars, and you want mo to give it to
■pacific for bynaria, dlMlaaaa, coavnWana. nervv
ua
h.adaclta,
n.rtiuf tkprcaal.m, loaa of Wrawag
of the brakes. But the boy* of the pl.vce wisdon of jumping in snch a case is not tho right; fine corps of music detailed you »o that you can stall it through Ne­
:rtr Evtr u::j.
awrpiBforrbrra, ImjxrteiwY, ln»alunl*ry atnla.fona,
wenraddicted to climbing upon the cars, to be determined by the result. Tbe for this duty, which strikes up; the braska. no 'doubt. No. my |»oor little
prematura ohI »*»■. ra&lt;‘&gt;cd by over exenton. ae&lt;P
•buan. or over Indulrcarr, which Uada U» miaery.
loosening the brakes ana taking a free passenger must judge of the compara­ whole march off, saluting tho Baron orphan lad, you may go nnd soak \ou*»
ami iiciu-wuicOT
»um day
«*••_» r« »they
“«» head tor an hour or two, and bathey&lt;-ur '
liold-officer v*
ot tho
ride down. This was not done by consent tive danger of remaining still or at­ and
imngin. the
•’ '? Brfron
”±-c- tenf-bodimmed eyes, but I cannot give |
of the company; on tho contrary, it was tempting to get off by the circumstance* fin**.” We con here imagine
■ail nrrTAid on racelpt of twica. Wr •uarantr* «!i
n hi*
his element, hi* vigilant eves watch- up
_ my two-dollar inngaz ne.
forbidden. One day a young boy while as they appear to him. He has to net
his volubleJ “Peddle
Peddle out
ont your
your bead
bead mocca*.
moccasins
— ,
taking a ride in this manner, and en­ upon the probabilities at the time. The ing every movement* and hi*
mingled
!ngled French,*!l ma-lo
male by the
tho hostile Indians of CbicaChina­ '
deavoring to get off the car before it hail jury mint judge the case in the Baine tongue execrating in —
'
’ ’ Sell
~
if nice
quite ft'-pned? fell under the wheels and
German and English every- *igu ol iggo.
out your little stock of
ni&lt; e
way. If the leap was an act which a
eating
apples
---------"* at $-’7 per barrel, with•
was killeu. The Court bold that the person of ordinary prudence might do | norance, of indolence and of ciumsi-'
company was not liable, for the rea.*on under the circumstance*, it does not ness. In a separate command he did two prize worms in each nnd ever , ap­
that it had not failed in any duty. prevent the passenger from recovering not win much distinction; indeed, ho ple. but do not disturb my expensive
did not have much chance, for his op­ perlqdiesl*.
Neither the track noy tho cars were de­
damages.
“ I will not bother you while you «ell
erations in Vinrinia were brief and
fective or out of repair. This boy was
Two recent cases have cwcurrcd of in­
not a M.«rn«r or an employe; he had jury to an employe ocensiohed by his be­ were not very fortunate. Congress, i your fancy mixed candies that have been
no right to climb upon tho cars; but was ing knocked from the lop of a car by a however, put a high estimate upon bis ruun ng back and forth over the road
a mere trespasser. As toward him the bridge over the road. Both have been &gt;ervicc«, for in 179U it voted him a life Since ’03. 1 will not interfere with you
UI-jm tn
company was not bound to fasten the decided, in accordance with previous annuity of 8-.500: and he had a plenty while \ou sell your Indian curiosities
cars in any particular way; nnd it had decisions, that a company is not bound of land also voted him bv diiibrent mode in Connecticut. Go ahead mid
fastened them sulliciently to prevent in­ toward employes to place it*’ bridge* States. New York gave him 16,000 make all the money you can. but give
jury to all persona except one using high enough to admit of a man standing acres near Utica. He trans: erred a mu a chance to peruse this article with­
good deal of it to bis aids. Some of it out the regular assessment.”
thein wrongfully. ’
erect on a car underneath. Injun’ from be himMilf improved, and be lived until
TLe hurt and aggrieved orphan bov
Another sma^l boy case comes from
ij»ntHyhu&lt;ia low bridge is one of lhe risks of a brake­ 1731.
wont to the sleeping-car conductor and
•
w.
Ponnsyhaniu. He was a newsboy and
man'* enjjdoynient.
i :&lt;&gt;F. rwtnjtfc
When Steuben was appointed In- &gt; asked who that sarcastic old cu&lt;s over
was accustomed to ride back and forth
An Illinois decision discusses the ef­ spector there seemed to have been ’ yonder might be. and the conductor said
on tho trains to sell papers. He had fect of a conductor' * urging a person to
tome oral permission from the conductor a dangerous act. A long freight train some fear that the undefined duties of it was the Marquis of Lome.
Audit was, too.—Aye’s Boomerang.
for riding as he did; but lhe rules of the ran into tho city of Knoxville and was his ollipe might give rise to dissatisfac­
company forbade any person except em­ left standing on the track in such posi­ tion and occasion embarrassment. Ham­
ployes to ride without paying fare or tion that tho middle part of the train ilton was apprehensive that “a fondness
In Appearance.
showing a pass; tho conductor bad not stood opposite a street, and thus tho cars for power nnd importance, natural to
authority to give the leave. At length obstructed any one in crossing. This every man, might lead him to wish for
Tho least rain of wives desires that
the boy was killed under circumstances street was the natural passage for parsons more extensive prerogatives in his do- her husband should appear to lovo her
partmeui than it would bo for.the good as well as actually’ to do so; aud go.i.o
which, would have enabled his mother, if
coming to take passtrngcr traips. The
he bad been a passenger, to recover dani- trainmen ought to have divided the of tho service to grant.” Yet Hamil­ act of graceful courtesy, some little
ton considered the Baron “a valuable ; word or motion, nothing in ituelf, per­
HAVE BEEN IMITATED,
agen. AAnd *ho brought suit, claiming
freight train; but they had not done so. man." nnd thought that ho ought to bo
CHICAGO, ILL.
that the leave to ride, given to her son,
And their excellent reputation in- 201 So. Clark St.
Mr. Syke*, approaching with intention treated “with tdl the deference which haps, but indicative ot tho tnndernoos
in effect mado him a passenger, even
ho
feels
lor her, gives the good wi o a
j
tired
by worthless imitations. The
of boarding an expActdd train, found
though the conductor ought not to have himself hindered by the freight care, and good polio* might warrant.’’ At times moment of triumph so iuuoccnt and
Public are cautioned against buy­ turn. Orchltl*. Rapture. di.eMcief lit* *kiu and
given it. The Court said that when a stopped on t!,ie sidewalk, hesitating hmv Steuben was ver. much disconten ed, sweet that no one should begrudge it to
ing Plasters having similar eound- boni-r. mercurial .orc threat etc. •afely*ad private
parson gets leave from a conductor to to cross. The conductor ailled to him. i and almost resolved to quit the service. her. A carulo** word, a litUo lorgetful­
.............. . .. ............... ........ I HU
UI
He wa* [KUUI
particularly
hampered br Leo ness, quite pardonable or even unnoticed
irg names. Boo that tho word ly treated. NPKKMATCBKtlO:*. SeSMl DoMllty
make a trip without paying fare, which .v
leave is granted contrary to the rules of “ Come on under; you will have plenty ani| .\n.i.iu, orr he thought so; but the when they a&lt;o alone, gives pain when
C-A P-O IN-E is correctly spelled.
offline.” Thus encouraged. Mr. SyLe* matter win
was patched
vote
up
by
sending
him
.
watchful eves, anxious to find a i’atv iy
the company, the traveler is legally lia­ tried to creep'under the freight cars, but I
LU'. iM, .... ' VW
W
- --------their wedded happiness, ate upon thfe
memory, Io*» of marl power, night l&gt;woao, aver
ble for the fare and the company can re­ nt that moment tho engineer started !j to Rhode Island.
The
Republic
undoubtedly
owed
tbo
•ion u&gt; Kcloty, •!&gt; npicMnncr.ocu pro-?r&gt;
two
whe
ore
bound
lor
lifq
to
ca^u
cover it from him by an action. There­
tion. general debility And ludiseailon. rendering
them, and Mr. Sykes was fataHy injured. , services of Baron Steuben to Frouah in- other. But men are singular creatures.
fore he has tlui rights of a passenger
tn»rr.«ge tmpropdr. aafciv cored. We gu*r atee
The Court said that a conductor has not fluoaces. He camo to this country Generally, it is at exactly such a mo­
r«r*&gt; In AllCaara wo undertAkeKno neaa U&gt; «,t:ffer
while on tho trip. But this boy rode
unlimited authority to invite persons to partly through tho fiersuasioris of St. 1 ment that a busband chooses to give
O«e bar longer. Under onr treatment the body la
back and forth not as a passenger, but to
enabled to take os lle«h. the apetlte'ta lucre..&lt;4
take risks, nnd n traveler or passenger is Gennait^ Perhaps, as a soldier, ho was , herthoonh* sharp won! ho utters oa
Arc
the
only
improvement
ever
sell paper*. Howas only a trespasser.
and tho whole •ysu-m i» noari-tied eaurin* tha
not justified in doing what Is evidently readv for service in any honorable tho occasion:or to say something, quite
made in Plasters.
b_»ln and nerve* io regain their vLpie. CorrwponThe company owed him no duty—except
nene
ncunfidcntlal.
eent with th*
foolhardy because a conductor tells him cause; but he liked tho United States unconsciously, which would lead any
Ono
is
worth
more
than
a
dozen
_
___ ,1 «-------Foil. direction*
to refrain from any willful injury, etc. to. But, under circumstances like these,
well
enough
to
remain
in
them
the
rest
one to accredit them with a multitude
Damages coifld not bo claimed for an or­
of
any
other
kind.
tbe jury might well oousidcr the compa­ of his life. Ho gave us the benefit of of quarrel* and bicker ngs. Ho &lt;1; cs
S5OO
Reward!
dinary railroad casualty by which he was ny
Will
positively
cure
whoro
other
as doubly' liable: 1, for fault in. not hi* great knowledge and military ex­ not Know what he has done, and it does
hurt.
remedies will not even relievo.
rivet c &gt;c&gt;p-.»lnU •ly*p, p*1*. "lek L-.'torhc, UJiyA Kansas woman phi two little girls dividing the train; 2, for the conductor's perience: and it is paying to his mem­ not improve her temper. Yet men gen­
invitation. The •negligence, if any. at­ ory no doubtful compliment to say that erally love thoir wives better than all
Prico 25 cents.
aboard a train of car* intending they
Beware of cheap Plasters mado
should ride to-Iowa Point. One of them tributable to Sykes, was too slight to de­ ho’ was precisely the man wanted at the the other women they know put togeth­
1 moment when he .’ent us his sword.— er. Thosa who have tho gra e to show
with lead poirons.
was less than five years of age: tbe feat nn action tor damages.
or OBli’l L»'K» ►«'«&lt;»• contaluinx SO I’ll », 3 eta
The question has often been discussed Scio lurk Tribune.
this delicately to others uro loved the
other older, but weak and aickh*. They
For
T But*. Bewarvof conf'erfrlu *o4
SEABURYA JOHNSON,
■ . tai... by
. F.
tl._..i- r n
best by women.
were not pUced in any one’s charge, what agent* have authority to bind the
Kannfteturlns Chcmlwit, New York.
{The Pari* Morgue.
company
by
calling
a
physician
or
sur
­
. nor was any money given them to pav
F wfTRR ttKMElfV AT LAST. Price ii&lt;t».
Chieaxo. Free trial package Mat by
geon to treat a jicrson suddenly injured
The Morgue is a pleasant, cno-s* c;ed
fare. It was the bustom to allow more
k : LUI’S Mediated CORN sad BUNION PLASTER.
A Warm Berth for Pa-wy.
children traveling with adult* to side by a railroad accident. A laborer on the building, located on the middle of a
My next door neighbor last wintt.’
free. When the train reached Iowa Atchison &amp; Nebraska Railroad had his bridge close to Notre Dame. Every
Point it stopped long enough for pa*- foot nearly cut oQ by some accident convenience is afforded the public for was a well-to-do German family. It
«eng»?rs to leave. The little girls, how­ with the machinery in use. and the seeing tho show. The entire front of the wa* the custom for the hired girl to
ever, seem not to have known, until too “ boss’"- of the gang in which be wa* dead reception-room is of glass. You place a basket out at tho back door with
trwla
isle, tliat the stopping place wa* Iowa working telegraphed to the General pass in line in at one door and out at a plate in it every night, and at on
Fancy and Staple
Point; at any rale they did not reach Superintendent to know if ho might the other, and take tbo corpses as you early hour iu tho morning, generally
Cavi-wir A—l^xitn-inu.
» • &lt;&lt;’i ct!.-r :ifIler* nlnila;-V»
the car platform to quit the car until the “get a drrtor for him.” The Supenn- file through. Everybody living in this before any one was up about the place,
tendontTelegraphed
in
answer:
“
Ye*;
part of town takes *iu the Morgue on tho baker would leave a dozen steam­
train wa* jixst starting. However, they
tried to alight. A passenger tried to do all you can to save the foot and make their morning trips to business Work­ ing-hot roll* in the basket for t he morn­
help them. The elder one succeeded; him comfortable.’’ The Court held that girls, laborers, washerwomen, soldiers ing meal. During that terribly cold
but the younger one, when her feet by this telegram from tbe General Sn- and citizens, all Bock hero to see the weather I wo* looking out o: my win­
coxsisriNO nr part of
pcrinteudeutthe**tea*” waaauthorized | latest-arrived dead man or woman. dow one morning and saw the baker
touched the platform of the station, ftll
JXTrtl
forward and *he rolled to the ground to employ a physician or surgeon, and , There is disappointment and vexaticH put the rolls ip tho basket. No sooner SUGARS, TEAS,
»r&gt;- r
fr,.w W.-bluglon.
also
to
engage
reasonable
board
while
COFFEES. SPICES.
on mornings when the zinc beds on had he gotten out of the gate than a
bcUvrrn that platform nnd the cor. tf,
SYRUPS, BID LASSES,
nor. she had lain perfectly utill she the foot was being treated. Board and which the dead are exposed, are found eat darted out of a shed, and jumping
‘•TARCH. SOAP,
would not have been hurt: out *hc had cajp while one 1* suffering from a wound empty. The Parisian wants a corpse into the basket, spread itself over the
CRACKERS. CHEESE,
-—•j.nnd
—- he want* a frosh one.
,— It
— is
- hot rolls and was soon enjoying a nice BEST ’ NICKLE SOAP IN TOWN.
not presenco of mind for this, and her ore within tbe direction " to make him daily,
ittaL
struggliM brougiit her feet unon the comfortable.'' And it was not ncci-^nry singular how quickly one hero can cul- UttIK when the girl arose and started
SALMON,
tivate
this
taste
for**
corpses.
There
is
.
H«.t«
thia
t
—
tM
Mr
M
maM
Thoro
ia
opon
lJje
door
tfco
cat
leaped
oat
to
wait
for
a
formal
letter
signed
by
the
track and they were badly ejushed.
WHITE FISH.
Meantime the conductor had no inform­ Superintendent; a telegram wa* suffi­ a fascination in their rigidity and im­ and disappearod from view. After
TROUT,
i'/.uih liAiin: i: *■ ' ••.
When an employe goes to a tel­ mobility, as they lie there quite nude ■ that I ot course watched, and for weeks
ation tlrai tbe children were to leave cient
'
MACKEREL.
Mat i*®~, W*-Mw«wa. D. ■
the train at Iowa Point, or that they egraph office and sends a dispatch to save the doth over lhe loins. Through tho cat warmed itself over tho roll* a*
HALIBUT,
hu superior, and in a short time receive* with breathing, through with eating regular a* the day came. Tho family
COD FISH.
J^TOW 18 THE TIME
from the same oj»cratur what purports and
drinking.
——
o- No
— quiver
■»T’,7* or
" shiver as। wero novor aoy th® wiseAsml I pro?
HERRING.
the cold jet* of spray fall on tha naked Bume
roll&gt; tolU)d ju&lt; M goo 1 to STEAM COOKED OAT MEAL.
dispatch, he is warranted in presuming Cesh. No uneasy turnings or&gt;hift
ngs lhem M
CROCKERY,
■^hiflngs
as if puMy
pussy hadn’t roosted on
sy. while
.
*
3
that tho, dispatch received ts genuine, of position. So it stay sail day,
GLASS WARE,
—lhcm
LAMPS.
— glass,
and in acting according to it.—Riiilwithout,
peering thruught-----------the _—.
------------ FLOWER POTS
Ib.unuuy bring crow.l rtuOln &lt;u&gt;d j _A rou
M m,;,™, drum U bo»n&gt;
rvad
___
which could render it
"!
1 •* A1HI.CmM&lt;&gt;. in ScoHnud. a. a warnbound to carry the child
STONE WARE,
—Charlotte Bronte thought it wo*
1. J!! t”g «t th. death ot tho head ot th, OHIO
1 tart thl* wan done. Ibe com*
g,, rnua tbe tradition, and in TOBACCOS,
wtw nnt bound to know that tbe wrong for her sisters to make their he- thera oor ba any rr tv go, or think. ।
rriines, a* a matter of course, beautiful. ’, ...
-__ _ ■. IM'.', when tho Lord Airiio ot that day
CIGARS,
They differed with her, nnd said it was tljat stiff man of tieah Im* for them. '
PIPES,
died, several pcr-ons declared that they
impossible to make them interesting if । Yesterday, alive and poking about in
heard the mysterious drum beat (A TRY -OUR FIFTY-CENT TEA.
plain. Heropiuion not coinciding with ' the gutter for a crust, while itatroublo­
;
course
it
is
now
said
that
a
similar
oo
theirs, sh
wn* | some *’&lt;&gt;mach gnawed au-l cried for
right—thl
GT RememlHtr we get uo fancy pri
fault of the traiu- small and
:wUh roorn or Indimtronoe. To.Ja,-. Alrlio• douhin Colorado.
era. bnt wit nW good* a* low a* the
a* any of
lowest, (quality considered).
—Ice-Cream
Respectfully,

'Gel

4 lilt

RVOUS DEBILITY

Beware

Fraud

BENSON’S
GAPGINE
PLASTERS

Dispensary

Benson’s Capcine
Porous Plasters

NO PATENT NO PAY

GROCERIES!81

She Nashville ghirs.

GEO. W. FRANCIS.
with Tamil

�“W«k

GRAND

Pips

acqualn-

DIVISION

' Oh, nothing,
little joke,” wud Mr. Breeay,

gave mere * sera
balls, coDcerta and

STATI OX*.

ace is incomparable. Capri, Sorrento,
and Cape Mycente are mirrored in tbe
blue and limpid sea. Vesuvius may be
seen and sometimer heard; but the life

STATIONS.

Na»h*lile..

SKKk

Hamns.&gt;ud,.
Grand •Stopld*,.

Detroit with Oiwi Wastern, Grand
u Railway*.
k V. OKOWR,
H. B LKDYAJIU.
Aas'l Gen'tdupt-Jackeon. tirn’l 8up"l Detroit

W. NISKERN, Attorney and Counsellor
• at Lay, practice* in all State Court*. Cob.
lections promptly attended to. Office over
Spaulding’s store, Hastings Mich.

P

A. BARBER,
HOMlIKJPATHIC

Physician and Surgeon.
' Office first door east of Opera House, and j
nr*r residence on rerncr of Washington aud '
Stole Streets, N**brllle, Mich.
-------- ——‘
'

cavaliers and the elegant court that once
peopled these gardens, now only a fig­
ure in white appears from time to time
in the deserted walks. Is it a phantom ?
No; it is one of the Egyptian princesses
or a slave taking a walk. For two years
past the chateau has been the dwelling
of Ismael Pasha, ex-Khediro of Egypt.
He lives at Resina, aa at Cairo, with hi*
wives, his children, and a numerous
suite, observing abroad the usages of
his country ana his faith. A European
is rarely admitted to visit the Princesses,
but having requested this honor I ob­
tained it for a certain day, and was told
to call. I drove through the entranoogate end drew up before a large and el­
evated iron railing opening on a stair­
way. Opposite to this was the private
entry of the Khedive.
Two small
domestic*
wearing
the
tarbouch
were waiting for me on either
eido of the ratling; a gate was opened
by a kind of giant, and was locked be­
hind me aa I walked in. The creature,
without speaking a word, made me an
Oriental salute and gave me a sign, to
follow him.
The habitation of the
women is in the second story. There I
was received by another personage, big,
black and fat. Ho opened the door
and, lifting a heavy screen like those in
use in Italian churches, led the way in­
to a gallery or corridor from which
opened a great number ot doors, just as
Th®, we™ ue room., ot
the women. Near one of these doors
there were fourteen slaves ranged in a
row, who bowed to the ground as I ap­
peared.
This was the apartment of
Mlle. Ott, a Swiss lady, who acts as interpreter to the Princes# Tchechmi-Afet.
Ml*®- Ott conducted me up another corri,do,r with a glass roof to the apartment
Of her U.ffKnw,.
H«r HlglinMI
ceived me standing, with her adopted
child, the Princess Talka, daughter of
the Khedive, by her side. Behind her
stood her reader, a beautiful Circassian,
with dark eyes and ivory skin.
Tchechmi-Afet is a woman of imposing
aspect, with the bearing of a Queen.
She offered me her hand and invited me
to take a seat by her side. Mlle. Ott
made a little speech to thank me in the
name of the Princess for having thought
of her and for having given myself the
trouble of coming to see her. TchechmiAfet does not speak French, but she un­
derstands all that is said to her in that
language,. Sometimes she takes cour­
age, and when we are alone (I go there
very often nowY she replies to mo in
French. Tchechmi-Afet seems to be a
favorite, for she alone receives visitors.
She is always very elegantly dressed in
Parisian toilet* from Worth’s.
The
Princess wears neither rings nor brace­
lets, though I am assured that each
Prince** has several millions’ worth of
pearls and diamonds.
The Princess
Talka is twenty years old, a delicate
and graceful creature, with beautiful
hair.
She
speaks
French well
and talks with naivete and without
embarrassment. At t^o end of a quar­
ter of an hour seven slaves came in and
ranged themselves in military fashion.
The one in the middle carried a large
tray, ujx»n which were the little Turkish
goblets containing coffee; the other
slaves carried the things taken with the
coffee. After the coffee they brought
cigarettes, which were exquisite, in spite
of their mildness. I suppose they con­
tained a little opium. Tchechmi-Afet
sees all the illustrated papers, and what
she does not understand in them she
asks to have explained to her. One day
I talked to her about her existence in
the harem, and asked her if she did not
find tlii* perpetual seclusion wearisome.
‘Should you not like to see Naples and
the neighborhood P’ I said; ‘doesnot
this confinement weigh on yoar spirits P’
‘Oh, no,’ she replied. *1 am accus­
tomed to a sedentary life, and I could
not live otherwise unless I were in my
own country. The very thought of go­
ing out without a veil is revolting to me.
Boides, it seems to me that abroad one

OBSERVE, COMPARE,
REFLECT,
ACT!!;?
’
• »
'
NEW DENTAL PARLOR.

I wish to* make known to tbe citizens of
Nashville and vicinity that I have purvbaM-d
the practice of J. L. Sigsbee, and am permanneatly located over G. X TRUMANS store.
All kinds of .DENTAL WORK done, from the
.fepl'Uoperation
—Uo.Utte
m»u difficult,—Arti­
simplest
to the moat
ficial Palates. Irregular natural teeth *traightened, teeth extracted without palu for 50 eta;
one-half deducted when artificial work is made
All work warranted, advice in regard to teeth
free call and see me.
P. S. Will do dental work for 8 cords of wood.

DR. A. II.
yyiLLIAM JONES,

DENTISTS
J^ATHBUN HOUSE,
B. ANTIHDEL, PaoimrwroB.
Grand Itnnldw, MloTi.

£}LEMENT SMITH,

Attorney at Law,

Attorney &amp; Counsellor,
JgLAC’laA SOM.

Americas and Foreign Marble.
Monumecta, Tccihrtcne’s, Mantles, 4a.
Uiurtinga Mioh.

BUXTON
Is DOW nicely located

These senthwenta

in bl* new building,

Princess has given me her photograph,
allows me to show it to my friend*, and
even asks me if I think she is prettier
than that. I asked her if it did not
make her suffer to see the Khedive offer
attentions to other Prinoeaaee. Shu re­
plied. with a smile: ‘You get used to
it. I admit that sometimes it annoys
new 1’rinceas comes

CROSS-CUT A CIBCULIR SAWS.

ATTENTIM1 SAW MILL MEN!
Price. i« Saw Wark.

GUARD AGAI8T DIBXA8E,
If you find youraelf getting bilimt*. brad
tide he was reading.
heavy,
mouth
foul, eyes yellow, kidney*, dis­
“Your joke is, a» usual, poinUetut,
Mr. Breezy, and 1 wish you would drop ordered, symptom* of pile* tormenting vou. ^Sash, Doors, Blinds, JeiBersGn Nails, Glass, Putty, Paints,
joking iu the future. My mother always
Oils, Varnishes, Colors, Brushes, Etc. Castor, Sperm, Golden,
told me that you possessed a light, friv­
Block, Linseed and Kerosene Oils.
olous character, but I' confess 1 didn’t l«ge
^Shovels, Spades, Forks, Hoes, Snaths, Apple Parers, Farm
have sense enough to discover 11 until
wlth a briglllUlc boy at hi* aide when the Utile Bells, Fence Wire, Well and Cistern Pumps. Wood ami Iron,
too late.n
“Too Jate!” echoed Mr. Breezy, in « fellow cried out,' “Oh, pa there goes an editor 1”
suspiciously doleful tone of voice.
“Hush, bush!" Mid tho father, “don’t make Pipe, Points, Cylinders. Lead Pipe, Sinks, &amp;c.
“ From your tone of voice, Mr. Bree- •port of tbe poor man; God only know* what
--------------AGENT F.OR------------«y, I should imply that you rather re­
gretted its being too late,” said Mrs.
A BOY AGAIN.
1’aln and slckncee bring ou old age with
time, Mr. Breezy, to go bacfc to my
The Lightest Running and most .Durable Machine in use.
father. I was so happy in that dear old fearful rapidity. They moke an incessant
I shall aim to keep hone but first'class goods, and sell them
home—”
Call and see me when needing hardware.
“Don’t you think you are talking anJ fided cheek* of *£v often come* when tix at a small profit.
nonsense, dear?” asked Mr. Breezy, in enjoyment of Hfc &lt;hould.be at its height. Dr.
a mild tone of voice, and quietly folding David Kennedy'* “Favorite RemecJjr’’ tarna
up his paper.
thia kind of old age into youth again. Head­
“ Oh, I see you have got through with ache, pains in thalimb*, trouble* of tbe liver,
JI. WOOD
that article,” said Mrs. Breezy, ignor­ boweb, or kidney*. vanUh before it, and fee-,
ing her husband’s remark. “ Now, ble women become Tike rollcktng acbool boyt
—IS NOW READY TOjierhaps, you can tell me a little about and girl* occc more. One dollar a bottle,
your trip.”
either at your Drnggirta or from tbe doctor,
“With pleasure, dea?,” said Mr. at Rondout, N. Y.
Breezy. “What do you wish to know
The PbUxleidlibL Chronicle aaya: “Some
aboutF”
“ Now, Mr. Breezy, do you suppose New York tenement bouaen have ten families
----- HAS THE----upper floor. Probably thereto where
I’m going to sit down and write out a .ou
lot of questions for you to answer, like the express! n.‘upp« ten’ originated.”
one of those newspaper-interviewing
dbw
Tbe aymptom* of Itching Piles are moistore
fellows? I’m sure there is plenty for you like
BOOKS,
I .
BOA
pre»;&gt;ii ation, tnlenae itching, moat at night
—---- AN1 .
to tell me if you will only get up energy ecerni aa if pin wonna were crawling in or
JEWELRY
enough to talk; but my presence seems about tbe rectum. Tbo more you *cratch the
WAlX PAPER,
worse they itch, very dtotresstng. The private
to have a silencing effect upon you—”
part* arc often affected. Dr. Swayne'* Oint­
H1AMH SHADES,
“It does,” Raid Mr. Breezy.
ment to tbe moat effective remedy extant for
For all Shoeing. .
BYE STUFFS,
“I’m told you nre an awful talker ILito tormenting complaint. Gives real at night
among your gentlemen acquaintances, without that dcaire to scrateh. Al*o ha* on
PBOPREETAEY MEDICIHE8,
but the moment you get home you take equal in quickly r.nulicatlng Tetter, Itrh, Salt
ilueumc, try*lj«l*4. Barbers* Itch, Pimplea,
a newspaper, settle in the most com­ *11
PREMRI PTlOSttfr
Scaly, Crustv, lu hr Skin Eruptions* Here
fortable chair in the house and remain i» the proof, “Certainly the best n nicdy ecer
Jlndc ofnII Rork Elm.
RFXnPTS,
as. du mb and uninteresting as an oyster. u«ed tn my practice,” Dr. Cotton, Woodstock,
I’m sure I do my part, Mr. Breezy. I Vt.. “troubled with Itching Pile* for over twen­
ty year*, Il cured me completely,” L. 8. Me**er
don’t sit as dumb as a mummy—”
------- MY-------Enfield, Me. Sent for SO eta (in 3 cu stamp*)
“No!” said Mi. Breezy, with em­ 3 bona, ei.25. By Dr. Swayne «fc Son. Philad'a
phasis.
Pa. Bold by *11 druggtote.
TO SELL, AND THE
“You think not, Mr. Breezy. Perhaps
It la again awerted that Scoville did agree to
vou accuse me of talking too much.
You coul4 be just unreasonable accept a certain sum of money for Gulteau'* BEST WAOOINS
DEPART TILL T
enough,” said Mrs. Breezy, nervously dead body, but that he wa* ihamed oul&lt;»f the
In the Ntntc omiclilgan.
pulling at the fringe of a table cover. project by Recd and others.
In fact; if you want any kind of work, nearly j
“You should be prond, Mr. Breezy, to
BRAIN AND NERVE.
and all waarantod,
.
have a wife with two ideas in her head
Welln’ Health Rcuewcr, greatest remedy on
and a tongue capable of expressing earth for impotence, leanne**. rexuai debilitv,
(ALLAM)SEEIlin.
j
them. You—”
31. aldfcunrtot*. Mich. Depot. JAMES £.
P. M. I have n c«mmI Horse j
“1 am proud, dear,” said Mr. Breezy. DAVIS &amp; COjDetroit Mich.
“ But you know, love, there i« a limit—”
l'i"'*. *1.
When a Berlin «i»opkecpcr advertise* good* single
Harness for s«le, cheatp,
“ Yes. Yes, Mr.Breezy, a(l;mit F Will
“at cost,” or “a great reduction,” any pur­
you go on?” said Mrs. Breezy, growing
chaser ha* a right to a*k for invoices and com­ Jos. m
more nervous every moment.
“A limit to a fellow’s patience. pel proof that price* have been cheapened.
J KE A DURKEE,
There!” said Mr. Breezy, with the least
A WOMAN’S EXPERIENCE­
sign of firmness in his voice.
Mother* and Daughter* nltoutd feel alarmed
“ Mr. Breezy, I have done forever. I when wrarlncMronatantiy u|.pre»«e* tlie in. “If
will never attempt to converse rationally I am fretful from 'cxhanstfoti t»f vital powers
with you again. When I am—when! and tbe color to fading from my face. Parkers
—when I am no mo—more, Mr. Breezy Ginger Tonic gi™ quick relief. It builds me
up and drives away pain with wonderful cer­
—But no, I am nothing to you— Noth­ tainty."—Buffalo lady.
ing!” and Mrs. Breezy dnap^ared,
AND THE
Office ml second floor of Buxton * new brick
shutting tho door with derided force.
NASHVILLE, MICH.
“ Another skirmish safely over,” Mme expreMton of countenance at a wedding
sighed Mr. Breezy, unfolding his paper. that they do a funeral. Of course they do.
Wow art a frw of »ar Bargains ia
Esiaic
—Brooklyn Eagle.
Can a man get rid nt a red mwe tbe Mme a*
BO acre* in Maple Grove, 45 dssred. 22 ocrea
you pul! off a boot I
of
WlieaL
good
Orchard,
very
fair
buildings,
Fashion Notes.
Health, luipcaad ba,&gt;MM«&gt;a are ry*U.red by
good spring near house. Price 3,000. Payments
easy.
Spanish girdles of bl«ok velvet are pout'd- It to a positive cure for all those dt*40 acres, 3 miles from NashvAle. Fair liouae
ti-ei from which women suffer so much. Send
very stylish.
Old-fashioned Louis XVI. pelises are to Mr*. Lydia E. Pmkliam, 233 We*terti. Ave­
paper uxarar- and barn, Nearly all ImproredL Price (1,000.
nue, Lynn, Ma**, for juinpblcts.
1 40 acres,
miles from] Nashville. If aold
again in favor.
soon will take &lt;1,150.
Grecian bands for the hair are made
A double exi&gt;criencv: “ShsD i rcatl you a
acres, in the village ot NaahvUle. Must,
of silver, inlaid with mock gems.
pretty story, Effie!” “Ha*it got a moral to lit’
tho crofopolitaa josnmla of tho country be25
aold for what it will bring on account at
Gigot puffs are seen upon many im­ ‘•Y«. darting.” “Then. Muusey, I’d rather
a complete Xvwrpoper. Its Telegraphic poor iiealth of present owner,.
portant carriage and dinner dresses.
Dot. A story with a moral la like Jam with
m all the dispatehee of the
5®acre*, 4 mile* from Nashville; nearly all.
Surah moire Is the name of a raw ma­ powder in itted Presn and tho National i mproved; fair buildings anddk all a good bar­
terial designed for dress trimmings and
gain. Price 31,000; part down.
.
ALWAYS REFRESHING.
House and Lot, ou Ph‘llipa street; tbe best,
military purposes.
.
bargain* lu town. Price 3SW.
Long plain skirts of velvet will be
A delicious odor I* Imported by Floreston
House and Lot, on State street. Price 3250,.
worn with Louis XV. coats and scarf Cologne, which I* always refreshing, no mat­
superior. It is IND EP ENDENT la Politics, iialf down down.
ter how freely used.
draperies of light-hued brocade.
Gmxl House and four acres of Land on Franrrcfjcntias all Political No» i froo from par­
“My lady” jackets of dark green
cm
Street. Price 3450.
“I declare, John, I never mw such a mao I
ti aa bias or coloring, and abaolataly witbcashmere embroidered in gold or silver,
Houm: and lot on State 8k, bouse new
and fastened with small buttons to Yob are always gelling a»«ne new wrinkle.”
cellar and plenty of good water, f
Aud
the
brute
calmly
replied,
“
Matilda,
vou
FAMILY S7UO or wUl exebaxme lor farm pro;
match, are imported.
NaobviUe or Wasting*
Hungarian scarfs of scarlet, green and are not, thank fortune. If you had a new
bO acres, 1W mile* fromjiaahvlllc
gold striped surah arc draned over jer- wrinkle, you would bare no place to put ft
COMPLETED STORIES, A FERIAL road
leaving the village; al! improved exerpt &amp;
STORY of absorbing Interoat, and a rich iicre*; the remaining 8 am* good timber;. is
well
watered by a never-failing spring. GooA
The best advice to Catarrh Sufferer—write
young
orchard; buildfags lair; 18 acres at
The newest colors are the “Rose Re- Dr. C- R.-8yke«, JflO Madison Street, Chicago,
Art. Industrie*, Literature, Science, wUk, wheal oulhe
ground; present owner engaged
genoe,” a very delicate pink; tbo “Ste­ for full infunnation of a sure Core—Free..
etc. iu Uarhet Quotations are complete, in oilier busineas and will acll fur &lt;2,000731;phanie,” a soft silver gray, and a dull
000 down, balance on loag time
ugly shade of oUve, which to called Tu­
Vacant lol on Philips St. Price 3130 If sold
nisian green.
LEE &amp; DURKEE.
Pure, and Trustworthy GEN A FAM­

DOMESTIC SEWING MACHINE
FRANK C. BOISE

SHOE HORSES
BETTER THAN EVER,

WILL TAKE

WOOD

A FEW CUTTERS

PAINT AND BRUSH

"«•* \Call and Examine f

uf

F. T. BOISE.

:. WOOD.

C2rf 1C AGO

“ REAL ESTATE AGENTS,

IUHVILLE NEWS

$2.00 A YEAR. POSTAGE INCLUDED.

KIDNEY WORT

contrasting stripe*, or in
designs, nre exhibited, which nre to
make very handsome yet durable dresses
for schooLgiria.
Square
Oriental

DOES
rniTV Q
WONDERFUL Hill ■
CURES!

ER L

ILY NEWSPAPER. Our wpcctal Cubbing

aub kt.nil n* to tins oOca

_ OVL
CONTINENT

with stylish young girls.
Handsome new qualities of “fur
plush, showing a long heavy pile, to be
used for rioak trimmings, pelerines, and
muff-, are as costly and elegant as fur
itself, but much less durable.
Visitea made of India shawls are to be

A MW BtaMrated

LITERARY FoUtiusl
WEEILY JOVRRAL,
Neither

son. They will be trimmed with sable
fur or with costly Oriental fringes, and
fastened with large silver clasps.

1 0*^
i

F. T. BOISE

BEST SHO’B

ict silence at the Fo- on the veat frot
troubles tho harem. deep collar, are
They speak by signs there; they salute
by carrying the hand to the brow.”

circular saw work

A.C.BUXTOY.

Hardware,

Builders

Tho

DtlroU,.

s
K
s
S

dear, Ihw.,"

—A writer in the Providence (R. I.)
“ Here you have been home a whole Journal says that the latest comer among
the new comets of the year, which was
discovered by Prof. Barnard, of Naahville, on the night of the President’s
death, makes small advances toward
visibility, for ft can yet be
the aid of the

(IDNEY-WORT
IHkota. Manitoba. sU.

KIDNEY DISEASES,
LIVED COMPLAINTS
Constipation and Piles.

M

n«r etoetar

�ueaday, It waa the old form of colli-

and m!
, mueliHndo vialine

YOU WILL FIND UNDER ONE ROOF IN BARRY COUNTY AND WE

on the line.
Moorgate street was waiting for »be
signal when the other train, due five

Atlantic-Aacifir Tunnel. It tw Attentic-Piclfc Tunnel I* briug pu-bed orc
in at the Imae of Kehomountain, »iW tbe ricbrtt k&gt; this section, and *&lt;«old crushing tbe last carriage, hi fact tbe
■ tebmilva aouthwwd from die city of be piease.1 If bundtwd* of mterprWnr men a. last carriage, a third class one, had en­
tirely disappeared. A suggestion made
Groigriown, in Clear Creek cojmty,
years ago has again been reyivived as
Colorado, and nlmnt sixty milt* from
Denver, with the rare now running to able, to cougmlulutv you ou the paying rcsulU a method, not of preventing accidents,
but reducing their proportions where
Georgetown, on the railraad’undercon- you will have rHaitwaL
Satnnal Nath. Merchant.
they do hapjxm. This is to have at the
t rarinnd i#eing rapidly pushed for­
Ike H. HUdednmd, Awayw.
end of eve-ry passenger train • buffer
Geo. W. UoUtoa, Jeweler.
* t
ward to a point within about a mile of
FredO. L. Buck, Real eatate dealer.
carriage, co break the shock. It is gen­
therset end of the Tunnel, at the foot
W. M. Fletcher, Mine Superintendent.
erally found that the last carriage, if
J. 3. Harrat. Merchant and Mine Owner.
of Mount Kelso, which at a point 8.0W
George H. Barrett. Merchant.
full of paslengers. suffer most severely,
feet from Urn entrance to the Tunnel,
C. H. Jaeotouu, Merchant.
Tho fact has become aa wall known
east end, liars to the height nf 3,460
that "passengers who travel much on
.
feet above the level of the Tunnel. In
C. H. Wade, Merchant.
.
railway a avoid the last carriage when
driving thia great Tunnel, ten feet wide
W. H. Kcllift', JounMlIst and Mine Owner.
Charles T. Ballamy, Mine Owner and Editor it is possible to do vo.
aud nine feet high, into this -mountain
tbe Cnloradr Minor.
The tower of London is likely to un­
8,000 Coat, thirty-five veins of silver- fThomas
A. Jobs, AtU.rner-at-Law.
J. G. Pohle, Mine Owner and Bupcrintcnd- dergo some clianges. Iris intended, I
beaming ore will be crowed! Tho ore
* believe, to remove the present Armory
in eomeof these veins y ields over$1,000 nt.
W. H. Hutchinson, Merchant.
and to restore as far as possible tbe an­
worth of silver p-T^ton. The idea is to
F. H. Alliron. Editor Courier.
J. B. Randall, Proprietor Courier.
cient characteristic of.the Tower, so as
get at the veins ntCgreltt depth and as
Sill*
8.
Bennett,
Mln*
Owner.
to make it more'interesting to the anti­
to
they are- crow-ci ’by *tbe-TTHTnel
i A. R Forbes, Druggisl.
quarian anil the student of history. The
C. R Meade, Merchant.
_
_ ___ for rp jg ditances to the
.o|»eutiiem
only fault to be found with thisintimaright and left from the Tunnel, and co
tiou is the use of. tbe - word “restora­
'work up the veins, letting the orc fall
Sok ILibhmon. Mine Owner.
O. E. Clark, Mine Owner.
tion;” Which, in too many cases, simply
down instead of digging down into a
L. H. Bbepbcrd. Attoraey-al-Law.
means moderinzing famous relics of by
vain from it* top and slowly bawling
John. S- FUher, Mine Agent.
B. R. Ellloli, Miner. .
gone ages. St. Alban’s is being “re­
the ore to the top of the mountain as a
W. P. FarrU, Miner.
,
wan would go down a chimney after
stored,” and with what results. Anew
A. R. Kinney, Livery.
meat in the pot instead of working in
W. A. Oamlft, Capitalist and Manager of ugly conventional roof has been placed
.
upon tiiis magnificent building which
upon a level with it, or reaching up MineA
F. L. Peck. Mine Owner and Recorder Clear
looks ata distance like a gigantic barn.
Creek county.
for it.
Geo. Howe.
The west end of the great Tunnel is
Tho best thing to be done with the
w; F- Barton. Proprietor of Barton House.
on the Pacific side of the range of
Tower is to keep it in repair,but other­
J. E. Dixon. AUorueyat-Law.
.
Not one of the gentleman who have thus In­ wise to leave it alone, and thus give to
mountains which here rise nearly 4.000
dorsed this great enterprise as an opportunity
feat above the line of the Tunnel, for safe and profitable investment, would have my friends who have y^t to cross the
which Tunnel will not only open the done so were It other than flr*t-cl«M In all re­ Autlantic an opportunity to view this
Spiels. They are men who know what well historic monument in its ancient form.
wny for the ore from more than 200 •directed
labor nccompIMiM in a rich mining
Acgvst.
veins to bo run oqt, but will also opcu dirtricu and who are Interested In preserving
tlie way for trains of cars to run through and atldlng to the good luuuti of the stale.
Those
who have a few or many dol­
Three men arc digging for. treasure
the mountains, a distance of 35,200 feet
instead of over the range nt great ex­ lars to spare to help on a great enter­ near Dufouln, Ala. ' They think they
pt nee of time distance nnd money. prise that must, in the nature of things, arc ’guided by spirits, aud every mid­
Work was begun on the great enter­ pay targe profit* for years to come, will night they hold a seance, receiving a
prise, at the cast end, November .12, do well, according to tbe above, to communication directing their labor
They have
1881, tbe Tunnel had been driven 568 purchas shares in this company, which for the rest of the night.
feet at the west end. cutting two veins can bo bad by writing or sending to M. dug a hole fifty feet deep without get­
M.
Pomeroy,
President,
Denver,
Col.
ting to either treasure or the end of
of silver and lead-bearing ore, and
their faith.
nearly 900 tons of ore worth about $50
OUR EUROPEAN' LETTER.
per ton taken out and piled at the
at the month of the Tunnel waiting
A Philadelphia thief’s case was be­
From uur roirtiHreorrMpondtnl.]
shipment the coming spring, when the
fore the Grrfnd Jury, nnd his indict­
London, Eng., Fkb. 8, 1882.
cars will be near there. • At the east
ment was sure to follow unless some
It is no secret that the Government, obstacle could lie interposed.
end, the Tunnel had been driven 700
His
feet, cutting the cash vein, and the Po­ in meeting again in Parliament, count brother-in-law, who was in the ante­
tosi vjin, and on the 15th of January upon a stormy session, nnd one in room, told the complainant that the
was within 360 teei of the celebrated which the Irirfli party will strain every hearing was adjourned. Having thus
Diamond Joi ode, which yields largely, nerve nud use every artifice tu undo got rid of the chief witness, ho per­
worked as it is several hundred feet what has been done by the Liberals- sonated him before the jurors, giving
Ministry. It is doubtful whether the such an account as to clear the- prisonabove the level of the Tunnel.
How han this work been done? our eminent statesman who presides over
the destinies of the English Liberal
readers ask.
An Arkansas man, a reputable and
hi 1880 Mark M. Pomeroy and others party will succeed in'pacifying Ireland.
had the Atlantic-Pacific Tunnel com­ If he succeeds he will rank among his prosperous fanner, says that the actual
pany ’incorpera|ed un .1er the laws of country’s greatest and most illustrious inconvenience of being hanged ia very
Colorado, with authority for the com­ benefactor*. If, on the contrary, he slight. Robbers subjected him to tho
pany to issue 700,000 shares of stock, fails in the heavy task so couragnonsly process once, and after a slight clink­
par value, $10 per share. Of these 200­ undertaken by him, he will, at lei^st. ing sensation he became insensible,
000 shares were set apart for the purch- have the consolation of hnvjng had nnd so remained until he was taken
a«e of mines and properties heretofore predecessors' in failure. The Irish | down and resuscitated. The regain­
discovered, crossing the line of tbe question was not invented by the Lib­ ing of consciousness, however, was
Tunnel. Then 800,000 shares were set eral party, it has existed three centu­ rather unpleasant.
•part to be sold for cash, the starting ries. All ha retried to solve it,sonie by
Every
price being $350 per share. The other rigour, others by mildness.
The Methodist Church ut Engle
900,000 shares are to purchase controll­ means have failed. England is now Bridge. N. Y., is divided on the ques­
ing interests in other companies own­ making a supreme effort jn that path. tion of accepting as a gift the money
. ing rich properties. During the first In her own interest, as iu that of civi­ raised by a ball. JTiid paator has de­
-y»fff, the company sold 41,120 shares lization, her success must be desired. clined the donation, but some of the
of stock, realizing $100,81X50 in cash, Mr. Gladstone is not quite so positive members argue that, as the church did
and for this money paid for all the as he was on the subject of Cloture, not promote or countenance tbe ball,
work in the Tunnel and about $30,000 or the new rule proposed by him to the there would be no impropriety in tak­
for machinery, etc., besides paying House of Commons to facilitate the ing the proceeds.
back to those who wished to sell their transaction, of business, and which has
stock, about$6,000. Sometime a stock­ become the chief political issue in I . A sneak thief stopped seven horw
holder would have need for money nnd Great Britian, and the fate of parties j cars in Memphis, but not after the
would get back from the company the seems to hang upon it. The filibust­ manner of a highwayman. He entered
same price that he paid for the stock, ering of the home rulers ar Irish party n boarding house where seven drivers
at the late session of Parliament so Were asleep, and stole their vrrtebea
so there was no chance to loose.
.
The Tunnel will open the way to the obstructed business that the ministry and wallets. A rule„ of the company
great belt of mines that run clear across determined upon the submission of new requires each driver to have a watch
Colorado. It cuts them where they rules to cut off debate. The right of nnd $10 at the outset of every trip,
are nearest together. The work has the minority in the English mind, has and, as the manager would not make an
been continuous day and night, and been regarded an aue that could not be execution on this occasion, the cars of
goes on every hour of time, the men safely overthrown, f«r. in the United the robbed men did not start.
now making about three feet per day States tbe majorjtrvf one year may be
The truly good Deacon Richard
progress aa they drill and blast through minorityo^next This measure has
tbe granite rock.
This Tunnel is roused strong opposition, even within Smith of Cincinnati. call- Sullivan and
The Ryan “tbe alleged pnze fighters.’’ The
opening the mines so they can bo prolit- the ranks nf the liberal party.
ably worked for generations and it is moderate liberals have declared their ; Boston Herald says: “It is ten to one
believed tliat the output of ore will be unwillingness to follow the ministry in j that tbe good Deacon would not have
about a half a million dollars this year, support of the “cloture,” nnd shave vir- j stood between the pugilists when Suland increase steadily year after year tually become a part of the opposition. 1 Hvan’s triphammer fist flattened Paddy
till the output will exceed $5,000,000 The estimate of tbe liberal leaders is i Ryan’s nose, for the highest honor in
per year, the profits to be divided pro­ that the rule will be adopted by it ma- ; the gift of State of Ohio, howevermuch
of thirty, but that it may lead to ■ h® muj covet it.” But the Herald for­
' rafa among stockholders, who will in a jority
,
•abort time receive as dividends all their th e overthrow of the liberal govern- j get* that the truly good Deacon already
The ; posmtMes the highest honor iu tbe gift
Stock east them, and then for years ami went is not entirely improbable.
opposition seem inclined to concede to j of Ohio, which is the distinction of true
years receive profit*.
the minisitry-strength enough to carry ] goodness.
b
----- ■swwww------------or $7 diaeount from face value. In May the rule, but they maintain* that the j
; Two masked robbers were lying in
they may be advanced to $850 per victory will be short lived.
SoraetbInK life WMWve promfe i&gt; w*ii for n lumber merefenr «t
share. At least 10 per cent interest on
tbe money ihvn«ted is guaranteed. Kirea Ihr.t an attempt trill be made thia : rille, Ind., on a day whea be wa, known
or shore* arc fully paid for amnion to reform tlie.y.tem ot local I to be earryiog a larfe «um ot monv
his mH!
tohU
“
*"
-“x
*’ residence. A clerk
pries the comp my sells government. It is, indeed* time for' from
something to be done, for evil* long came along first, and they mistook him
ccfDpiaiiM»d of have grown until they for their intended victim. When they
though here was a safe can be borne no longer. The middle discovered th®blunder, one wished to
pnAtable imesUnoat daaamin Loodoa are especially the
it wiu foolish to
•re ever

•

INTEND

&gt;.

,

to make

PRICES THAT WILL SECURE A LARGE SALE AT ONCE.
WE HAVE JUST OPENED

300 SUITS!
----------------- -OF---------------------

THAT WERE BOUGHT CHEAP I CHEAP FOR CASH
AND We intend to sell

G. A. TRUMAN &amp; SON
IS

4
See tho Crown Sewing Machine at Kocher's, E. White agt.

First to the front!
---------- 1 AM NOW RECEIVIOG

A Full Stock of Goods
Of Goods suitable for the Spring trade.

Also the Largest and best Stok of

Ready Made Clothing, for Men, Boys, and Youths,
Ever brought to Nashville, and ranging in price from

Ladies, Misees, Gents &amp; Children’s Fine .Shoes
I KEEP THE CELEBRATED ROBHESTER MAKE, STYLISH, DURABLE AND CHEAP.

In Hats and Caps I have tlie lat­
est styles and can fit all parties.
I always keep a Full Stock of CHOICE FAMILY G ROCERIES
at prices that defy competition.
You can always rely upon getting the lowest prices on Goods
and the highest prices for your produce at my store. Call and get
prices before you buy.
DROWNED.
Ed. White’s little boy and D. H.
Pratt’s little boy were playing on the
ice Friday forenoon, when the ice gave
way and both went in. Ed. White’s
boy was rescued all right, bin Mr.
Pratt’s, at thia writing is unconsdona,
and it is doubtful as to hia being resusciteted.

One auditor fired at another during a
performance at tho Front St theatre,
Baltimore, and tho excitement had
scarcely subsided when a shot was
heard in another part of the house. A
nervous man had cocked a pistol in his
pocket, so as to be ready for selfdefeuce, nud had accidentally pulled the
trigger.

School Report.

HALL’S

[THE WHITE! THE KING!
i For Slmpiiciiy. for Durability for Light Run-

(jd^dlI»IjHLS WITHOUT
Si~dd
sTob RfrAMMttggl
Is
la Recommended by Physic!
pnyalclan.J

a

RIVAL!

Tbe cffibndln-etit of al! t5«. lute-i liuntovenuuU&gt; kc-iuc t«, S-uing tlUriiinr .-urctanitan.
the elcpmcc “• drsicu amt bdmtv of flubh.

#emaimfMtare and mU it »lth» pc«lth

5&gt;’rrp3?‘.,»'.jMS!a*ApS2

iMMe.uk your Drocgiit for ll.And
MJTAT10S OB SUMIIICTL. If he

lASTHMA cuRgnf
MJrruian A*i*mu Care &gt;
in li-H*‘

I

;

&gt;

Tbe following te Uw Report for school district
No-M** the t«nn ending Fcb.17,1882.
No. day* taught.
No. webotera enrolled.
Average dally aUcndaoee,

c. L. GLASGOW.

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                  <text>ORNO STRONG,)
EDITOK AM1&gt; PnOPRIETOK.

VOLUME IX.
LIFE IN NASHVILLE
And Her Environs.
—A home stock company for the
manufacture of bedsteads, is talked of.
—A gang of men are at work just
east of the village, getting out stave
bolts for a Grand Ledge firm.
—The Thornapple has swelled to its
utmost extant, overflown its borders
and covered the adjacent flats until they
look like a minaturo sea.
—The remainder of A. W. Olds
ehinery, including plane?
waa shipped to him this
and will
be put in his new mill at Bear Lake.
—That we need something to fight
. fire with is now conceeded by all good
Nashvillo-ites, and Holler’s, proposition
to furnish plenty of water and power
for mains along Main St, is too good a
one to bo given the “go-by.” Then
let’s move m the matter, ana quickly,
too, before disaster overtakes us. “In
times of peace prepare for war.”
—Prof. Kennedy,an alleged mesmerist
held forth at the Opera bouse; Tuesday
and Wednesday evenings, but did not
succeed in getting any subjects under
his control, although several candidates
volunteered to count their own pulse
and keep their eyes closed. The Prof,
seemed to be laboring under a disad­
vantage from fear that ho could not
control, and consequently did not.
—Although the storm made last
Tuesday uigbt a most disagreeable
time to be out, a large company, num­
bering about 80 persons gathered nt the
Eastern Star social held at B. F. Rey­
nolds’ and passed the evening pleas­
antly. Singing and other amusements
served to make the entertainment in­
teresting and enjoyable, and the re­
ceipts of the evening netted the society
&lt;17.90.
—During the past week a paper has
been circqlated among the young men
of the village, and the signatures of
twenty-five men have been obtained of
of those who are willing to organize
themselves into a fire company, and
offer their services to the village, if the
village is willing to equip them with
an engine and hose, or they will form a
hook and ladder company*if the neces­
sary appurteuances will be furnished
them. Those who have signed the
paper are requested to meet next Mon­
day night at C. W. Grangers to perfect
the organization.
—The likes of the past winter has
never been known, heretofore, by the
oldest inhabitant.
Only two snow
storms has occurred,—the weather in
the main being soft and balmy, re­
sembling spring nearer han winter—
February went out with a regular April
shower, and the weathersince has been
in keeping with that we are rsually
blessed with in May,
Perhaps there
is something in the theory that during
the perihelion of ^planets in 1880 this
world was jostled out of its usual
course, and that now the equator runs
through the United States instead of
Brazil,
—Last Tuesday was the stormiest
day of the week, and a consultation
with the almanac failed to throw any
light upon the cause of such proceed­
ings on the part of the clerk of the
weather; but on Wednesday morning,
a basket of cakes and knick knacks
appeared at The News office, and a
long story told, of how about 40 ladies
had planned and exceed a surprise vis­
it on the aforesaid rainy Tuesday. The
victim of this surprize waa Mrs. A. W.
Cids, whom these designing women
had sucessfully decoyed away from her
home until they had taken complete
possession of her house, and filled the
table with inviting comestibles of every
descriptions. The specimens left this
office have folly repaid The News for
all the inconveniences of a very rainy
day.

—Daniel Palmatier, who has for the
last sixteen years has been a resident
of this village, died last Saturday, af­
ter and illness of about two w«eks,
during which he Buffeted the most in­
tenseagony. He was born in Dutchess
Co., N. Y. July eth, 1805. moved to
Southern Michigan in early life, living
in Branch Co. until 1866, when he
moved to NaahvUIe. For the past few
years he has been an invalid, being
troubled with rheumatism and unable
to walk without the aid of crutches.
He waa tb« father of eleven children.
followed by five of them to hie last

( TERMS; $1.50 rzx Viau
( Credit 8ubsc*iptiox» tl.W.

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun.

)

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, MARCH 4, 1882.
THE FIKE FIEND.

LOOAL GIBBLE-G ABBL E
*

Friday Morning, abont six o’clock,
afire wm discovered breaking from
thereof of Perly Butler’s residence on
North Middle street, by M. B. Brooks,
who Immediately gave the alarm, and
in almost an instant citixens were flock­
ing from every direction to the scene
of the c6nflagration. Perly Butler and
Charley Middleton, bad stayed in the
house all night, and had only left the
few minutes, before it was
to be on fire. They had
t a fire in one stove, and left for
their work, having gone only a few
blocks when they heard thetolarm.
■
It is thought that the fire must have
caught from the stove pipe in the up­
per story and spread rapidly among
clothing and other things stowed away
in the chamber, for when help arrived,
the flames had got under such head­
way tliat the building could not be
saved by the bucket brigade, who were
on hand in time to have saved every­
thing, had they been provided with
an engine, or hooks and ladders.
As soon as it was decided that the
building must go, the attention of all
was turned towards saving the furni­
ture and all movable articles in the
lower part of the bouse, and in a few
moments everything, even to the doors
and windows were carried to a place of
safety.
Nothing in the chamber was saved.
It contained their clothing, bedding,
trunks, and all their valuable papers,
besides many family relics which can
never be replaced.
The loss on building and contents, is
about $600, insured in the Ionia, Barry
fit Kent, for 8450. •
This is another striking public de­
mand on the village, to procure some­
thing to aford protection in cases of
tire. Action, and not words, is what in
needed in the matter. Shall we have it!

Floating Gossip From West Kalamo. •

Aad Pvraoaal Chit-Cist.

Caucuses will be in order next week.
Look for a cold snap in about ten
days.
Our correspondents are nearly all on
deck this week.
Mrs. Herm Clark is visiting friends
at Battle Creek.
Blackbirds, fish and maple^ugar are
becoming quite plenty,
The winter commenced last week
was of short duration.
Ex. Whitmmore and wjfe are visit,
ing friends in town.
One week from next Monday is re­
gular village election day.
A few more pleasant days will put
the roads in an excellent condition.
Miss Mabie Chappell, of Fowler, is
visiting friends and relatives here.
Ed. Young of Charlotte paid a short
visit to Nashville, last Wednesday.
- 'George Matccson of West Kalamo,
has been seriously ill for several weeks.
J. M. Wood will have a change of ad.
next week. Call and see his now wag­
ons.
Tom Niles has the material on the
ground to erect a new bouse, on Phil­
lips street.
Barney Brooks will start tor Texan
about the IStli of this mouth in quest
of more ponies.
Omar Gregory has moved into the
rooms in the Yates block, lately vaca­
ted by C. A. Nichols.
The Blue ribbon society will hold its
regular meeting at the Christian
church Sunday afternoon.
Miss Hattie Foote, and Mrs. F. A.
Bacon, visited friends at Lansing,
Thursday and Friday.
Scott Ellis, a former*employee at the
Wolcott House, is now clerk at the
Sherwood House, at Charlotte,
During tha storm of last week, the
windmill of 8. J. Bailcock’s, was blown
to the four comers of the earth.
—Last Friday, just as The News
Ed. White's little boy, Clyde, is ser­
was going to press, it learned tliat a iously ill, brought on by exposure
from
falling into the pond last week.
couple of boys, playing on th© ice on
the pond, Ijad broken through and one
E. W. Peckham and C. F. Crocker,
of them drowned, but had not time to News employees, took in “Hazel Kirget the particulars of the terrible cal­ ke,” at Chhrlotte, last Tuesday eve­
amity. Two little boys, sons of D,.H. ning.
.
Pratt and Ed. White, and aged re­
Mrs. L. A. Xichols and daughter,
spectively, five and four years were Mrs. F. A. Bacon, of Orangeville, were
playing on the popd near the ashery, visiting at A. S. Foot’s the fore part of
when the ice broke, letting them both this v^eek.
into the water. Their cnee were beard . The editor is recovering much faster
by Andrew Wright who humeu to the
rescue. Clyde White was not entirely than was anticipated, and has been en­
under water when found, and was tak­ abled to put iu about half a man’s
en home where he was soon made com­ work this week.
fortable, but Mr. Pratt’s bov was lying
Arthur Alien, who has fur the past
at the bottom of the pond and when
taken from the water, life was so nearly two years been clerking in Truman’s
extinguished that, although medical store, closed his engagement last Wed­
aid was promptly sumtnoued, all efforts nesday, and his place has been supplied
to resuscitate him proved futile. The by Peter Redliair, a German^'outli.
remains were taken to Sunfield, Sun­
H. IL Dickinson fic Co are Jnow fully
day for interment. The mother of the
drowned boy was so suddenly stricken equipped at their new mill for custom
with grief that for several days she grinding of all kinds,and hope by close
was almost a raving maniac, but is now attention to business to merit a liberal
convalescing. This sad calamity has a
moral which should prove to be a warn­ patronage. See their ad in this issue.
The young mon of class No. 11, of the
ing to children who make a practice of
goinp on the pond ns soon as there is M. E. Sunday school, will bold a spec­
any ice formed, and of continuing to go
there when the ice has become so rot­ tacle social at Mr. and Mrs. Beoj.
ten as to be unsafe; and sheuld also be Meiaer’s, on Wednesday eve. March
a warning to them not go there at 8th. Wann sugar will be served, and
any time without permission from their everybody is cordialy invited.
parents.________ ___ ____
The high water has driven the musk­
Daxoebol-slt III.—We extreme!v regret to rats from their houses, and they are
learn that Onio Strong has returned home in reported to be swimiug around on the
a veiy precarious condition. While at Battle
Creek nc eubmltted to a Burgical operation for flats in squads of dozens and more, and
the removal of the ton ils from hU throat, they fall on easy prey to hunters who
which caused such a profusion of blood as to
endanger his life. It waa finally checked and were not long in scenting the game and
Mr. Strong started for borne. At Jackson the giving pursuit.
wound again commenced bleeding, but be «UCW. P. Wilkinson, living on the state
eeeded in reaching home in a very prostrate
condition. It is thought that some blood vea- road, east of Hosmers corners, was
8c! must have been cut In the operation.— bom Feb, 23d, 1800, consequently last
[Haatings Democrat.
week Wednesday was his 82nd birth­
A number of items similar to the
day, and was celebrated by about 25 of
above have appeared in our exchanges.
his friends who gave him a happy sur­
We do not call attention to the fact to
prise on that occasion.
find fault with our editorial brethren,
It gives us pleasure to call attention
but as an act of justice to Dr. J. H. Kel­
to the advt. of the Battle Creek Medi­
logg, Superintendent of the Sanitarical and Surgical Sanitireum, which ap­
rinm, and the surgeon who removed
pears in this issue. The popularity
the tonsils. The tonsils were cut on which this creditable institution has ac­
Monday and we returned home Satur­ quired in a very short time,.as a home
day. Daring all this time there was and a place of succor for afflicted hu­
but very little hemorrhage, and then manity, is simply marvelous.
We regret exceedingly to knbw that
only at long intervals, although we
the condition of his health is such that
took considerable exercise; every morn­ Ohio Strong, editor of the Nashville
ing going through the “calisthenics.” (Mich.) NeWs, is now seeking relief at
We cannot think that the hemorrhage the Battle Creek Sanitarium. We jour­
was the result of the operation or neyed to Yorktown with Mr^.last Oct.,
and liked him; we have welcomed bis
it rould have occurred immediate­ newsy and readable paper to our table
ly, or. at least, during the exer­ for several years and like it. In a word,
cises, which at one period during their Orao is a capital good fellow and a live­
progress are quite trying ou the mus­ ly newspaper man, and hope to hear of
his speedy recovery.—Itkaoa Journal. .
cles of the throat. With pleasure we
produce Dr. Kellogg’s opinion in re­
3TA.RRrE:X&gt;.
gard to the matter, which we think is FENDER—1*EA8TER—At the reaUenceof Mr.
PaaMer, four iiiBea north of thia Tillage, Feb.
the true one. He say b:
28th. by KMer P. Under, Mr. Peter Vender,
“1 am «tn&gt; every candid ' penwu^wlll agree
of the town of Woodlawn, to Mliw Elizabeth
that tf ■ bemorrtagt of the tomtit* waa a di­
Jane Peaoter. of the town &lt;rf Castleton.
rect result of the operation, it would have fol- SEELEY—HARDT—In Charlotte. Feb. 25ih.
'eek later,
1882, bj Rev. I). H. Shelly. Mr. Marrin Seemind, but
lev, of Maple Grote, ami Mias Joanna Hardy,
of Harttoga, Barry county, Michigan.
BCHAFHAUBER—VXDDER—At the real-

Sagar, wax and lasses.
Streams are booming with the sur­
plus water.',
Sagar makers have fairly opened
business this week.
Mrs. S. A. Hess is afflicted with a
terrible felon on her hand.
'
C. G. Brundige is spending the week
with a suiter in Eaton Rapids.
Those everlasting grumblers say,
we’re going to have a wet summer.
Joe Mix of Battle Creek made a fly­
ing visit to his old home last Saturday.
Mr. Jacob Showalter baa been spend­
ing some time past in Ind. on business.
Messrs Bradley and Hartwell spent
last Sunday among friends in Middle­
ville.
.
t
John Ehret has about concluded to
take an agency for the fire proof roof­
ing paint.
The winter schools are about all clos­
ed. and the teacher are looking for
bigger wages.
If you should hear something drop
from West Kalamo ’fore lone, don’t ’be
surprised.
Charley Sloason closed his school m
Castleton last Saturday and is now
borne.
Again it is in order to say bring only
the beat and most trusty men to the
front for township officers.
Dell Fitch pulled his wagon tongue
"idonchways,"trying to gain the heights
from Rapons gully on Monday last.
Bring on your news and we’ll write
’em down by the ligh of fire in the sug­
ar camp. No trouble now, the spirit
says write.
The most drenching rain of the sea­
son visited this section on Tuesday,
drawing the frost all out of the grouud
and setting the mud.
Chas. S. Slater has sold his stock in
trade in Charlotte, and is now spend­
ing a short season with his parents,
preparatory to starting in business in
Clare Co.
Dist. No. 1, has a special meeting
next Monday evening, to decide on the
length of a summer school. The voters
got tilings a littlb mixed last fall, hence
the special meeting.
Mr. Baker, who purchased the King
farm, takes posession this week. Mr.
Baker comes to us well recommended,
and we gladly welcome him among us.
May he find neighbors worthy of the
name.
Mrs. Susan M. Hyde, wife of Roland
Hyde of Maple Grove, died on Sunday,
Feb., 19th. Her remains was deposit­
ed iu the Kalamo Cemetery. Mrs. Hyde
was a sister of I. M. Vaiidyka, and an
old resident of this town.
Mr. Andrews begins to feel some
alarm on account Jf the long silance of
Verne from, whom no news liar© been
received for a long time. We sincere­
ly trust that nothing serious has befall­
en, Verne, as he is highly respected
wherever known.
George Matteson, who has been af­
flicted with inflamatory rheumatism
for over four weeks, and whom friends
trusted hail about recovered, has again
been attracked with the malady and is
in ; serious condition. Dr. Parmenter
of Vermontville has charge of the
cause.
A Mr. Hash rook of Fredonia was up
in these parts Monday, and engaged
William Green and wife to go into lys
employ. Mr. Hasbrook is a large farm­
er and has bad Mr. Green in his employ
before. Will is a tip top fellow, and
we dislike to part with him, or loose
the society of his most amiable of wives.
The writer had the pleasure of grasp­
ing the mind servant of “ye Editor"
Strong on the Streets of Nashville last
Monday. Mr. Editor did’nt look the
least bit Strong, and when this child,
saw his wasU d frame and viewed his
sallow phiz, the thought struck him
that “ye Editor” needed real from Ed­
itorial toil.
The writer was a few days ago,
shown the manner of making flour as
practiced at Mr. Hollers mill. The
gentlemanly miller, John Roe conduct­
ed the writer through the miD, point­
ent all the peculiar workings of the
machinery, and the manner of manu­
facturing the flour which bears such a
good reputation among farmers.
Now we’ll see.
Mm. A. attends a
birth-day party of Mrs, B., Mrs. A. is
accused of breaking a lamp chimney,
price (five cents) with an apple seed.
Mrs. B. says ’twas done trying to pop
out Mr. 0’s. eyes, which no one believes,
as Mrs. A. is one of our most estimable
ladies. Mrs. A. hears the slander, calls
Mrs. B. to account for it, buys x new
lamp chimney to ben! the wounded I
pride of Mrs. B. and give more light on j
the subject. Now, what we want to
know is, how many Mrs. B’s. it wonld
---------- one believe such a

That Same Old Chai*.

ooiocoir ootnran

NUMBER 24.

pbooeedhob

LOCAL MATTERS.
A &lt;20.00 BIBLICAL PRIZE,
The publisher of Rutledge’s Monthly to the

Present, Young, President; Dickinson and
Demars&gt;, trustees.
.
No quorum being present council adjourned
.until March 1st 1882.
F. McDembt,
New Revision) by March 10th, 1883, we will
W. H. Totmo,
give *20.00 in gold as a prize. Should two or
President.
more correct answers be received tbe prize will
Couwcil Rooms.
)
be divided, The money will be forwarded to
Nashville, Mar. 1,1882. )
the winner March 15th, 1882. Those who try
Council met pursuant to adjournment.
for the prize must tend 20cU.'ln silver (no pos­
Present, Barber, Pre., pro tern; Boaton, Dick­
tage stampa taken) with their answer, for
inson and Dcmaray, trustees.
which they will receive the April number of the
Absent, Young, President; Cook and Rey­ Month! v, in which will be publUhcd the name
and addreas of the winner of the prixe, with the
nolds, trustees.
correct answer thereto. Cut this out: it may
Minute, of last meeting read and approv- be worth *20.00 to you. Addreaa, Rutuwgx
Pvsubbixo Compact, Easton, P*.
A petition signed by Thos. NBea, J. Cole,
THANKS. FRIENDS.
Jas- Fleming, and ten other, requesting the
I desire to publicly express my thanks for the
council to order a side walk built on the east expreaaions
of sympathy and good will accord­
side of Philip, street, from the north line of ed me, by the good people of Naahrllle.and vi­
Reed Street, to the north line of Washington cinity, during my late
May good health,
long
life
and
prosperity betbeir portion.
Street and on the north side of Washington
. Orso Sthoko.
Street from the east line of Phillipa Street to

L

Middle Street, waa presented.
Motion by Boaton, that the prayer of the
petitlonecrs be grunted, and that the Street
Committee be Instructed to see that the walk
was completed in a reasonable length of time.
Motion carried by ayes and nay. as follow.:
Atm, Barber, Boston, Dickinson and Dcm­
aray. Nay., none.
The account of F. C. Boise for 118.75 wm
presented and on motion allowed by aye. and
nays as follow.:
Ayes, Barber, Boston, Dickinson and Dcm­
aray. Naysunoue.
On motion the following committees were ap­
pointed : To settle with Marshal and Treasurer,
Barber and Boston; on registration,Boetonand
Demaray; on election, H. R. Dickinson.
On motion council adjourned,
F. McDerbt,
W. H. Youko,
Clerk,
President ■

TREASURER’S REPORT
For tbc village of Nashville, Mich., for year
closing March flth, 1882.

CARD OF THANKS.
We desire to publicly express our thank, to
the many kind friends who rendered assistance
and comfort In our late bereavement, in the Iom
of our little Willie, and especially do we thank
Andrew Wright, who did all in his power torescuc him.
Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Pratt.

MONEY! MONEY!
•
Money to loan ou good note* at reasonable
raxes of interest, or to invert in “gilt edge” pa­
per. Apply *oon to
Ornd Strong.
Pure Wisconsin Buckwheat flour *4-00
pcrcwL
Geo. W. Francis.
GF1 The Mowery Bros, have Just had maun
factured, one of the beat nickle plated carriage
haroeM ever made in Barry Co. The mounting
were made af Newark, N. J., and the- harnesa
by,
A. K. Wolcott.

CASH FOR LOGS.
At the Morgan saw mill. . Elm. Maple, Ash.
Baswood and Cherry log», front 12 to 14 feet
long wanted.
Sol. Troxel
shop.

SCHOOL FUND.

FARMERS
.
To amt, raised during year,
ei.636.flb
Take advantage of the low price, and buy yuur
By “ paid out,
*500
harnc-s of Clark who will give you No. 1 stock
“ " borrowed and placed
Wm. Clark.
to credit of incidental fund.
835.C8
835.08 and reliable work.
To amt on band,
*700.00
ar 81b»-of coffee for *1 at
C. W, Granger’s.
To amt cash on band beginning
of year,
*50.93
rar winter good# still at cost at
C.W.ORANGMra.
To aint rash received during
27.00
E3T Kelly’s Steel Barb Wire, one pound to
the
rod.
Manufactured
and
Sold by Thom Wire
By amt paid out during year
Hedge company. A sample of the atxr e can
To amt on hand
*22.1b be found at
C. L. GLASGOW’S
niOHWAT FUND.

To amt cash in fund at begin­
ning of year,
To amt rac'd daring year

ASH LOGS BRING CASH
* 298.45
2.010.00
*2,308.45

By amt paid out during year, *2373.M
*34.51

To amt cash on band at begin­
ning of year.
To amt received during year,

M56.71
3,179,38
*3,836.09

By amt paid ont during year, *3,748,40
To amt cash on hand,
*87.KJ
- We the umlerslgncd committee appointed to
settle with the village treasurer, do hereby
certify that the above is a true and correct
stotementof monies received and paid from the
several different funds during the year.
F. McDerbt,
H. A. Barber I
Village Clerk.
Wm. Boston, |

Ing elsewhere.
»r Harness repaired and oiled in exchange
for wood.
Wm. Clark.
WANTED! WANTED!
A load of corn stalks immediately. Call at this
office.
LUMBER! LUMBER!
Custom Sawing ami Building Material fur­
nished ot&gt; .bort notice, at our new mill In Ma­
ple Grove.
James 8. Perry.

t3F”Dr. Bristol, the Occuliat and Aurist and
Specialist on chronic diaeaM*, who has made
such remarkable cures of sore tyt*, bltodflaaa
and deafness, around Bellevue, has his head­
ELECTION NOTICE.
quarters now at the residence of D. Davis, in
The annnal election of officers for the village Assyria, two and oae-half miles north-east o!
of Nashville, will be held at the Town HallTin Assyria Center.
•aid village, on Monday, March 13th, 1882. The
FOR LALE.
officers to elected are as follow*: One Presi­
dent tor one year, one Clerk for one, three
One 3 Spring Double Buggy or Wagon, also
Trustees for two years to fill the
a lot of Groceries, Crockery and Glass Ware,
Boaton, Eugene Cook and B. F.

Frank McDerbt,,
Village Clerk.

REGISTRATION NOTICE.
The Board of Trustee., acting a. the Board of
Registration, of the voter, of the village of
Nashville, will meet at the office of the Village
Clerk, in said village, on Saturday, March 11th,
1882.

MONEY WANTLD1
You arc owing me, and I must have the
money to pay my bills. If not paid soon yom
account will be placed fn a collector's hands.
C. W. Dkmarat.
THE CROWN SEWING MACHINE.
IT The “Crown ’ comes into the market
the last of all the machines, but has sprung to
front rank at once from the fact that U has U
And pul them In one grand combination, mak­
ing Uiisthe Handsomest, Largest, Moat Silent

to all kinds of faxnDy and light manufacturing
work baa proved to be absolutely rood are ti be
found only to the “Crown.” Other machlno»
may have one, two or three of lheae “pointe"
but none but tbc “Crown” baa them all
VILLAGE CAUCUS.
Every device that is really desirable in other
There will be a Cttlaena Caucus at the village machines will be found tn the “Crown.” Adball, on Friday evening, March 10th. inat,, for
the purpose of putting fn nomination, candlFrank McDkbby,
Village Clerk.

At hi. residence in Vermontville
Feb. 94. 1882, of Bright'. dtoeaae oi
neyo, Jew Chance, aged 00 yearn,
lived on the farm on which be diet

followed to their final resting place bythe'relaUtm and a large concourse of sympathizing
friend, and neighbors.
*
.
Is our Father and immutatlons of His nature, wr can
to the providences of life,

we are the Lord's, Ikaliztog that

Star scholars in Nashville Union School tor

Report of Intermediate
Number enrolled 34, a,
».?7.

Report of Primary department.
Number carolled Vi. averag**
Keulawell, Wffiw I
Bertha Marshall, Fn
moms Bernice-:
Hoag, Allie Ha

�in MoroHa, In Mexico, whs
fht reoently, was fined fifty
mj his bolls were not brave.
—At Zwickcn,
spectacles have
cured a very shorteiglited' mare of Shy­
ing. How ‘ many poor animals hare
been beaten on account of a natural de-,
feet in the eyes.
—Tbe Emprc&amp;s of Austria declines to
follow tbc • French fashion of wearing
abort 'hair. When she is not in the sad­
dle she allows her long chestnut trusses
to float, loosely over her shoulders.
—The murder of Mr. Gold in a com­
partment carriage in England hoi: al
last waked up the whole country to the
necessity of having railway carriages
Often, with a passage way through the
middle.
—There is a superstition among Pennwylvania &lt;&gt;&gt;al miners that if any person
whistles in a mine some disaster is auro
to follow. The theory is that whistling
drives away the good luck spirit, tearing
the miners to the mercy of spirits of evil.
A whistler was lately mobbed in a Lack­
awanna mine.
#
—James J. Horsmon, twenty years of
age, while playing in a football match at
Middleton, England, recently, lost his
life. The teams were Middleton Rangers
and Higher Crompton, an
« Rugby­
rules were observed. One
ton men throw Horsmon, land
heavily upon him, fractu
’bis
’ spine.
y __
has telo—The Goyernor of Bo
graphed&lt;oLord Dufferin that the cholera
has ceased in Surat. Owing, however,
to a habit amontr the Japanese of disin­
terring and bathing the dead on eventhird year, tho world is liable to a fresh
ii+uptiop. of that plague, as the 'dead
there of three years ago were the victims
of a great cholera epidemic.
---- The Washington Capital says that Sec­
rotary Frelinghuysen is far from being a
man with a cold heart, and it tells howon a winter night, when the sleet was
■driving and a poor Irish woman was
struggling along the icy pavement with
a heavy bundle in her arms, he came out
of his fiousc on his way to a state dinner.
And-with courtesy invited her to take
Ms carriage and tell the driver where to
take her.
—A hotel in the exact shape of an ele5hunt has been built at Atlantic City. N.
. The'ide:i. of course, is t-&gt; draw exxjursionists by means of the novelty. Tho
structure is eighty-six feet long anil sixtyfive feet high. Stairways inside the legs
lead up to a big restaurant and oilier
room?' in the body, while on the back is
a car forming a good place of outlook.
The exterior is painted and sanded so ns
to r&lt; ■&lt; nible an elephant's skin, except
for tho windows. The cast was $2d,0U0.
—Citizens pt Virginia Citv, Nev., were 1
for the moment attracteif. a few days
ugo. by the sight of a medium-sized In­
dian iMjtiaw passing through the streets
carrying on her bark a stove weighing
fully 15U pountls. It was sustained only
by a narrow band passing over her fore­
head, and she hail carried it thus nearly
two miles. The stalwart buck strode
along liefore her with lordly step and
mien, feeling as if the whole earth was
his and nothing good enough for hi;
scalp-bunting mightiness.
—Two telegraph poles were erected in '
front of Mr. Gay’s property, in St. Louis,
despite his declaration thft he would not
allow his place to be disfigured. He set I
a gang of men to digging them up. and I
the company had another gang there to I
throw buck the earth as fast as it was
shovelied out. Then a gross-cut saw was |
manned, and the obstructionists' held ,
atones against its teeth. Next, a fight was
followed by general arrests. But the I
poles were sawed off, an enthusiastic ■
crowd taking ilr. Gay’s side in the con­
troversy.
—An attendant at the telephone sta­
tion in the Rue do Bsc in Paris, recently
ojpned communication with another staH»n. and was awaiting a reply, when a
volume of flame and smoke issred from
the tube containing the wires. The fire
quickly spread to the walls of the room,
and was not extinguished until consid­
erable damage had been done, and
several sets of apparatus destroyed.
On the matter being investigated
it was found that s workman in a
sewer under the Boulevard St, Germain
hod accidentally burst open a gas pipe
and so set lire to the inflammable cover­
ing of the telephone wires running along­
side.' The flumes spread rapidlv, and
thus reached the office in the Kuo de Bae.

the result of
tain field. I
wheat titan wan expected; and it is a part ? firms the belief that this particular body
Troy, N.Y. April 8,
little mace, mixed; rub some over of the winter work, upon the farm to : really does revisit and circumnavigate Dr. D. Kennedy, Readout
, N. Y, •
ece; dip iu egg, then in cracker learn why such an agreeable increase | the sun every seventy-five or sevetrty- - Dear Sir:—Until within a recent date I had
i. fry as oysters.
was produced. It may be that the year I six years. This waa pretty surely un­ for several years Miflered greatly from grave!,
called
by
the
doctor*
the
Brick
dust v~
ccdincut
iteelf was a favorable
—Spiced Fish.—Cold fresh fish may useu
tavorauie one,
one. and
ana tiiis'wili
uus win ,1 deretood
ueiwwa before,
oeiore, but
out recent historical
niwoncai tr
“
SlTaS
be used in this way. Remove all bones, lead the mind to consider the influence I notices establish the fact, and those who JXM iJt£
bits of skin; lay in deep dish, barely cover of the climate upon a crop; the effect of live so Jong may count on seeing Hal- mutated, omnia# me uulold' pain. Having
with hot vinegar, in which a few cloves a good rainfall, a oool summer, or both, ley’s comet about A- D. 1910. It will heard of “Kennedy's Favorite Remedy” I tr ied
zto
.1 _
.1. .. 1 . 1 .1
. . ..
---- .L-. —____ :__ _______________ _______ ft in mv eaMn. anti nft.-r ndnir al.wtt
.nd ■
and all-spice have been boiled. Ready On
the other hand, the granary-bins, on that occasion come very close, in­, fl in my.case, and after n»lng aitont one and a
half bottle, I voided a stone from the bladder.
for use as soon as cold.
'
after threshing, tell the sad story of a deed. to the earth, ten times closer than
light crop, perhaps not half Daring for at ita last appearance, in 1885, closer
--- Lamp shades are fashionable and
qseful. First get the shape, which should the labor bestowed upon the ffeld. Here even than in 1456, when it almost piece that you may
lheu I bare h
be cut and re-cut in paper until it fits the again the causes are lobe sought for, and frightened Eufope and Pope C&amp;Uixtus Since
tny*elf cured, aud cannot
it may be remarked that'in this case they out of their wita. But nobody now en­ fulue** anti urn U LUde for
will be more apt to lead to an investiga­ tertains any fear of comets, partly by from a terribkfdlaeaac.
satin, with fringe for border, oryou may tion than when tho field is remunerative reason of the information afforded by to use tbi* IcUar, should you wUh to do *p. for
arrange ferns or dried flowers on silk an,d satisfactory. It is only when the sciencejand partly, no doubt, becsbse benefit of other *uflercrc.
Your truly, James Andrew*.
with Ulin gum nrabic. This latter work system is out of order, and the good re­ familiarity breeds—if not exactly con­ No. 10 Mar*bal Hr.,
Hill.
sults of health are not Obtained, that the tempt—a feeling akin to indifference.
is pretty and novel.
When we consider that the medicine whH-h
Yet
wo
should
no
more
show
disrespect
did this service f&lt;lr Mr. Andrews cost only a
—Senunbled eggs.—Have a spider bo. physician is desired. In the same sense
to comets than to the equator. They re­ doi ar a bottle, it would seeta thutjpenwns of
and buttered; break the eggs into a dish, the field may be “ out of sorte,” at least
main mysterious and wonderful, though flirted In like fanhion can affom tbcexpense of
being careful not to break the yelks: does not fulfill its functions as a profita­
they have ceased to be dangerous, and tesUug Its virtues, (let It of your dr ulyrist, or
slip Uurm into the spider, add a very lit­ ble producer of crops. Lund is.some­
Dr. David Kennedy, ItondouL N, Y.
if people nowadays lightly speculate addre«a
•‘Dr. Kennedy's Favorite Remedy"
tle salt, with butter the size of a nutmeg times spoken of as •• clover slek.” and
upon a good vintage because there have all druggists.
with
some
propriety
afield
tliat
is
“
jfoorfor half a dozen eggs, or three table­
appeared
four
of
those
“
tailed
stars,
”
spoonfuls of rich cream. When the S" ” may" be void to be sick, Granting or at worst put down the bad weather
Is, it is very natural to. tty and discov­
eggs begin to whiten, stir carefully from
Parkers Hair B a I s a‘rh
er the nature of the malady, and, having to their influence, this same Halley’s
the bottom, until cooked to suit.
found it,. if possible apply the remedy, comet reminds us of the painful nerv­
—A pudding, which we call “Kate’s or remedies. There arc already, even in ousness of our ancestors. In B. C. 12
Never Falla to Reitoro Crey
---'
Brqwn Bettie” is for a simple and easily this new country, many fields that are it swept through the sky, and was. be­
le dish eminently successful.
Pul undergoing a slow but sure starvation.' lieved by the trembling Romans to Ke
Uirnate Invtn of grated bread crumbs Food is being withheld, and at the same the soul of Julius Ctcsar, foreboding
or chopped apples in a pudding dish, time hard work is demanded- As well death and ruin. In A. D. 837 it became
season each layer with sugar, cinnamon, hope to get the best speed or greatest visible' during Holy Week, aftd so
a little lump of butter. Fora dish hold­ possible power from a horse, that is alarmed Louis the Debonnaire that he
ing a quart and a half you need two tea­ pinched at the manger. A horse on half passed the night in religious services,
cupfuls of hot water.. Bake an hour and rations is not half a horse, as far as those and spent thousands of crowns in ex­
a half. Have the top brown; serve with products are concerned for which ahorse piatory masses. In 989 its4 appearance
plenty of sweet cream.
.
is kepi. Tire engineer who only furn­ was taken as so certain a sign that the
—Professor A. J. Cook gave results of ishes his engine with fuel enough to world would come to an end at the close
experiments showing the value of car- keep the water in the boiler a trifle be­ of the thousand years that legal docu­
lx»lic acid as a remedy against insects, low the boiling point, or, better, only ments used to begin: “ Now that the
he also inferred that the electric light x makes sufficientjiteam to run the ma­ consummation of things approachcth.”
promises much in this direction. The chine of the engine, with no surplus for The comet came agam in A. D. 1066,
corn worm (Hcliolhis armi^era) was de­ work, practices a most wasteful econo­ just before the Norman invasion of En­
scribed. and its great and exceptional my. He may save some coal or wood, gland, and the Bayeux tapestries rep­
raid in the Northern States referred tc but that which is used is thrown away. resent King Harold-and his English peoduring t he past year. The remedies rec­ The same reasoning applies to the culti­ f»le gazing in horror and dismay upon
tlliijtrr. llttrlia, Jfaadrake. hlitlincia _
uuy cf tr.c Lcrtmnlicine* known are Hcc ■■
ommended were fall plowing, trapping vated soil. The grain field is in more ts fiery nucleus and streaming tail, to
i.mlintoarrc- lBwof meh vat»-&lt;1 3f&lt;i e.'r -ticonfidently atby use of sweet liquids, and attracting sense than one. a factoiy in which the i which
„
■ general opinion
,
!&lt;T afterward
afterward pie
the catastrophe
catastrophe of
of
products of the form are made. The tnbuted
and burning with bright lights.
tj L.t Healib anti Strtng’uRetire? Ever U:J.
the Battle of Hastings. 5,°P?
Pone "
Urban
rb“
—Pigs arc often lost for want of proper Bull and air are the sources of tho food IV. died in July, 1214, and
bis death
.uiia use
uow ui
uunuuig ■,
----- --------- .--------- ------- ---------in buMding
-------•
attention. A sow that farrows in a lot or fuel which the plants
The question
the
Put tlo'v’n to the comct then show,
’ 1 of' "1
with a drove of other hogs is almost sure up their structure. T'
&lt;1, for
for it
it’ seldom,
seldom, if
if &gt;°g. »ut in June 1456. •• Halley’s” wild
to lose her offspring before a day old. air may lie dismissed,
especially if the weather is cold and many ever, fails to’yield the necessary food wanderer was so near, so brilliant and
so big that all Christendom was
gather t&lt;&gt; bed in one place. When a sow elements in sufficient quantity. If the
troubled, and Pope Callixtus—already
saves only one or two pigs it is often soil does its part the greatest difficulty in
mentioned—declared it with much
better to take them away, os it docs not the way of a gixxl crop is removed.
perturbation of mind, to be a vision of
Lol
us
consider
briefly
some
of
the
fac
­
pay to suffer her to nurse so small a litter.
the cross; while the Saracen Sultan
The mother should bo fed liberally ou tors of a good soil, and then tho reader Proclaimed that it was "the scimitar of
slop. and grain when her pigs are young, may perhaps be the better able to seethe
iahomet” presaging victory: Ou that
fault
in
his
own
field,
if
he
should
be
so
as it is nli-hnportant that their growth
unfortunate as to have a faulty one, and date the comet showed a train moro
should be pushed forward..
seeing it, may apply the proper remedy. than sixty degrees long; and was nearly
The soil must contain all of those ele­ as terrible when it returned in 1527,
Rapid Movement In Beef.
ments of plant f&lt;xxl furnished by the “ putting many into so great a fright
OF
soil; the potash, phosphic acid, magne­ that they died, and making others
So long
is
p as our surplus beefsent
abroad for market. European competi­ sia, iron, lime, nitrogen, etc. More than sick.” Imaginative minds saw upon
this
phenomenon
figures
of
weapons
they
tion will fix a limit to the upward ten- their simple
. ,presence is demanded;
.
-"t t:
zzzz, that 11s
dency of price. As population presses , —
must
be _
in _
an available ‘form,
the and decapitated heaths; hens are said to
plant may readily extract
upon pasturage, and adds to the value of growing
:
•
j them have laid eggs with a picture of the
corn, the cost of beef-making will in­ from the soil. It is on this account tliat comet on their shells, and persons of
Jvsis to i
rank took the warning of such
crease. Thus the margin for breeder the chemist is not able by. an annly
if the ' bodies deeply to heart—as if heaven
estimate of
and feeder is gradually narrowing. Will give an exact
sqJI
cared so much for rank and title. The
of
an
agricultural
it render unprofitable the production *bl worth
... to
M brother ol Loab XIV.. when . comet
in
beef? Mot at all. It will sharpen the The phosphic acid may be
iutoluble form.
form, and' Ute iMtuh mar bo
,‘be courtiers were
wits of those engaged in the business, insoluble
induce study of animal physiology and locked up to wrmrely in its combination. ditoUMtng the monit.on, of the portent
teach a multitude of economies in the with other substances as not to be with- i W11h skepticism, exclaimed with n sigh:
practice of feeding and management in the read: of the delicate roots of the I " Ah. gentleman, you can talk at your
• ease if you like; you are not Kings and
There are instances of success tn feed­ plants.
In order that the plants may feed with ’ ^Tioces. *
ing on the sterile soils of Now England,
U, however, mankind has ceased to
ana at the same time failures in the tiio greatest advantage they must have ;
HAVE BEEN IMITATED,
country of broad prairies and cheap corn the^oil deep and mellow, thus securing f"ar these ethereal pilgrims, it can not
And their excellent reputation in­
west of the Mississippi. There is &lt;|uite. the conditions for the growth and spread- but m~rvel at the one species of heavening
of
many
fibroin
roots.
The
work
of
I
iy
bodies which thus fly from universe
as much in the man a* ip the land. It
jured by worthless imitatiorB. Tho
absorption is done largely bv the delicate i f° universe. Cornels must have a
Public aro cautioned against buy­
pacity for this business is not equal to 1 root haire. and tliey must be able U&gt; pass i business and function of some sort,
ing Plasters having similar sound­
the whole breadth of physical and I between and come in contact with the I Something or other, important to all
ing names. See that tho word
economic differences that modify its । fine particles of the soil. Besides being the planets which they skirt u|H&gt;n their
C-A-P-O I-N-E is correctly spelled.
profits.
rich and deep and mellow the soil should flight must result from their proximity
Whatever else may contribute to profit. ' be j^arm and moist. The absence of and passage. There is. indepd, already
as the margin lessens, early maturity these two last essentials will make good a “moral to their tail” ia the exploded
will be very
prominent.
Great crops im|&gt;ossible, rfb matter how well absurdity of the belief that they come
Britain
was
the first to
learn stocked the soil may be wfth the food to portend the demise of great men, or
some natural catastrophe. Shakespeare
this practical lesson. The Shorthorn elements of plants.
An examination of the leading essen­ puts such an idea into the mouth of Are the only improvement ever
is a result of it in English breeding, and I
It is enforced and emphasized in En­ tials leads to a word as to the remedy Calphurnia. “Whe« beggars die there
made in Plasters.
glish feeding. American feeders are al- . for the absence of any one or more of are no portents seen. The heavens
One is worth more than a dozen
ready learning it. They are finding out ■ thorn. If food elements are locking they themselves blaze forth, the death of of any other kind.
Princes,
”
We
measure
the
vain
Igno
­
that good flesh can be taken on. not by must be supplied either in a return of
Will positively cure whore other
spasmodic generosity of ration, but by i those that nave boon removed in the rance of our race when we dwell upon
continuous abundance. The flush suo-' crop as barnyard manure, or in the ap­ the bygone superstitions that Halley’s remedies will not even relievo.
eulenee of summer diet does not bar- i plication of the same elements in a more comet could travel 8,200,000.000 of
Price 25 cents.
monize well with an excess of. hitr.sh ' concentrated form as commercial fertil­ miles to betoken a Pope’s decease or
Beware of cheap Plasters made
straw aud coarse stover in winter. Good | izers. If there is a lack of. depth and the landing of William the Conqueror.
with
lead
poisons.
Yet
will
the
earth
and
its
inhabitants
hay aud sound grain may compensate for mellowness, these must be obtained
’
SEABURYA JOHNSON.
loss of vital heat in a pitiless storm, while । through a more thorough tillage. A wet have got rid of all such foolish notions
Manafnctn. Ing Cbcmlrt*, New York.
it may not lay on at. ounce of flesh. Jt and cold soil has its remedy in the re­ when this same silver roamer among
“ KORR REMEIIY AT LA KT. Price SSct*.
the worlds returns in May. 1910? It A
has long since beep learned that the cov­ moval of the excess of water by open
MEAIFS IMiotad CORN ud BUNION PLASTER.
is but slowly that human beings have
eted mixture of fat and fibre, the ditches or nnderdraining.
—A Mormon Bishop, who claims the “marbling” of beef, is not obtained by
It may be that a neighbor having like learned that the universe was not crea­
power of curing diseases by the laying on alternate stuffing and starving. The problems to solvo may drop in for an ted to furnish a spangled curtain at Q.EO. W. FRAXC'IN,
of hands, has had great success among a loss in this country from periodical cessa nour, and while it is all cold withont, night for them. Very few have been
of iiM-nlids who hod not much the matter tion of growth, in summer’s drouth or the discussion—let it be warm rather the ethereal journeys made by Halley’s
with them, and to whom imagination winter’s cold, is enormous.
than none—may go on to the advantage comet since it was a capital offense
against the church for Gallileo to pro­
was much the same as medicine. When
There is another reason for early ma-’ of both; the boys may be taken into the
Fancy and Staple
he tried his ecclesiastical hands ou a turity. The cost of a pound of flesh is debate, and the evening will yield a rich claim that the sun did not go round
balky horse, he made a lamentably con­ always greater during the second year return
in thoughts that afterwards may this infinitesimal ball, and could not be
-----------K' rtaoas failure. The man who owned than in the first; greater in increasing be
’ put* *to good
use in the practical work­ stayed, therefore, at Ajalon-or else­
g,
horse hail paid the Bishop three dol­ ratio tiie third, the fourth. This may ■ ings of the
-----------------------------— 'farm.
----- . The
mind active fn where. Men have changed these nar­
lars, as tho ecclesiastic would sot make be generally known but is seldom fully ' winter, alive to the demands made upon row and egotistical views for concep­
CONSISTING. IN PART OF
the attempt unless paid that price in ad­ realized. The Fat Stock Show in Chi- it by the circumstances of a competitive tions of the world of life and light lass
vance. The laving of hands on the cago illustrated forcibly the fact. There farming, means a planning and a sys­ flattering to ourselves, but infinitely SUGARS. TEAS.
more
full
of
splendid
possibilities
of
ex
­
beast
’
s
bead
had
the
effect
of
frighten—--------- j—------------------- ----------- o
were nine young animals exhibited, not I tern in future work that must bring see­
COFFEES. SPICES.
istence and boundless developments of
ing him and making him furious. So, i Shorthorns but Herefords, from 193 to----SYRUPS, MOLASSES.
creative power and glory. Many and
from a balker, he suddenly changed ton 8G5 days old. none of which hod gained
‘•TARCH, SOAP.
many
another
illusion
—
derived
from
CRACKERS. CHEESE,
-kicker. Knocking the Bishop down, the (
tjjan two pounds per day from birth,
—Marsh hay and straw differ from the the feeble and deceitful senses—abides BEST NICKLE SOAP IN TOWN.
animal ran away. and. as he ran, kicked weighing .from 400 to 880 pounds, and
best hay in being deficient in nitrogenous
SALMON,
to pieces the buggy which wm fastened averaging 603 pounds. Their orerage matters, starch, sugar, and fat, and in with ns, at which perhaps generations
to come will smile, as wo do at Harold
WHITE FISH.
behind bint- The Bishop's reputation in ! daily gain was two and fifty-seven onehaving more indigestible, woody fibre.
TROUT,
Salc Lake City as a healer of disease ; hundretb pounds. Then there were nine If a sufficient quantity of wheat bran, on the Bayeux tapestries and Pope CalMACKEREL.
lixtus exorcising the comet. Thirty
dom tot 'toad ~i high M il did brforo gntd. Shorthorn, about two yearn old,
HALIBUT,
ground
oate,
and
coni
or
cotton-seed
­
years,
even
at
the
present
rate
of
scien
­
he aTO ruptod that experiment tn boro. I
6i» to M0 daya. all ol which
COD FISH,
meal is added to these coarse fodders, tific and social progress, may work a
—oeionug.
gained above two pound, daily, arcrag­ this addition increases the amount of
HERRING.
considerable
difference
in
the
thoughts
—White the Portuguese church of St. i ing scarcely two and one-tenth pounds.
STEAM COOKED OAT MEAL.
and
beliefs
of
men;
and
those
who
gaze
John tho Baptist in Boston was under- • These were the only beef animals in the
CROCKERY,
.
in 1910 on the returning prodigy will
GLASS WARE,
going repairs last September, the work- exhibition that came up to two-pound that is, are formed of carbon and hydrosee some strange alterations, perchance.
LAMPS.
men found a spring of pure water, be- gain daily or were less than two years K) and renders tliem quite equal to the
What
they
will
be
who
knows
9
but
the
FLOWER
POTS
■esth the building. A well was dug. j old, though there were 133 all told,
, of hay- It is by mixing such con­
olxive it a shrine was erected, and the some of which had made less than a centrated fooils as these with hay tliat same firmly-fixed law of order which
controls every loaerue In the sparkling OHIO
STONE WARE.
w-iter was consecrated. The pastor of pound per &lt;lay. One bad lived 2,900 we arc able to enlarge the product of
sweep of these wild wanderers—so that
the church M-mred the people that there dgys, making but ninety-two ona-hun- milk, butter, flesh or fat of our animals,
their dates can be foreseen with perfect TOBACCOS,
WO5 no miraculous power or even medi- dreth pound per day. Another at 2,760 and a little larger admixtures will make
CIGARS,
accuracy—justifies the faith that life
eal virtue in the water, and that if a«y days showed a gain of one and fifteen '। even coarse, marsh hay or straw equally
PIPES,
and nature move everywhere toward
cores had been effected they were simply one-htindreths daily. As a rule, ths I
OUR FIFTY-CENT
TEA.
TRY
boundless development of good, and
U,o result
nwH of faith
f.iUi in
In God. ' Br.l the
tongw“
Lj*
olXdlnj"
the
-------- -------------— •th.of
’
-—”-------'
1l
that
those
are
wisest
who
hope
and
be
­
»te would n.,.
UKOm g^o Sborttom. &lt;ml)r6&lt;9 day. old I ,nd u,,!
method, of .tJogllng
lieve
most—
LondoA
Telegram.
foe
of the reuarfa&amp;le r.rtuy
bred by H. C.
wrigM UM | uiem to ptiu tho b«t nwolu oon-SuuS
E3T Remember we get no fancy pri
ccs. but sell all goods as low u the
the water spread rapidly, boon there pounds, and J. D. GUett’s “Wild BUI” । the scietwe and scientific practice of food• I®***
“U- wj.Uto.ejouphto pul o».; Wright,ol I
S. kuo^^TuTu.ri tol
—The wife of the bonanaa monopolist lowest, (quality considered).
Respectfully,
■church und it
tound mxxatory to 1.8S.'&gt; pound, in 872 dxr,. Il » quite
imooruut »tormnrron noiuete.
of California rides in a carriage in Faris
e-tabliih re.-trieti&lt;mK iu regard to sup- eertoin that these animals were fed at a
1
that cost *80,000 and requires an an*
CEO. W. FRANCIS.
upal outlay of *2.000 for repair*. Like
the lilies of the Geld sne toils not, n«ith&gt;
-iu lu-nromr.- rod to drop . .,•«
th. route olrttaJlttnn. ol
; d ’ l"J?
into rm- euatributi’-n-box, and. aiv ,up- the fourth Fat Stock Show of Chicago.- ,
d
P°U h
“ fiis glory couldn’t nkng on to the tail­ Seal to any adir.-ia on r-crlpt of two thrownvol
■tamp*. Attn* CHARLESL HIRDS, AS N. Date
board of such a turnout as that.
’

One Dollar
A YEAR.

BEAirriFtrn ORGAN the • MOZART.” New

Get

(lie

GINGER Th

NERVOUS
DEBILITY
A cure guaranteed.
oua headache, nentM d--pr'«-l&lt;&gt;n. !&lt;*■ of memory
apematorrhrr*. Impotence, Involuntary en&gt;l»«loca,
prrmatu.rv o»d aye, eauved by over-exertion, aolA
abuae, or over IndulKrncc, which lc*.l* to misery,
r&lt;ay and death. One box will evra recent eaaea.
&gt;eh box Contain* one month'* trra^mcat. Om

by u* for *!x b-'xn.aceonipanivd with fl»* dollars,
i.t.„
nriilcn guarrnu*

CO., Sole Proprietor*, 181 *ud 133 W.

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Fraud

' HUTTED

BENSON’S
CAPCINE
PLASTERS

Benson’s Capcine
Porous Plasters

Dispensary.
fOl So.Clark St.

CHICAGO, ILL.

The latest and most ecienllflc invitation 1n th*
United State*, for tho Care of Chronic »nd Prlvat*
dlneaM*. Gonorrbira. (ilcrl of long *tandlnc. Stric­
ture, Orchltli, Rupiurc, di»r»*r» of the .kin and
boner, roercnrial »&lt;&gt;r«? thn-at etc. rafely and private
|y treated. hPtHMATOKKHtKA, Scxna! Debility
Be**, caused by Imprudence, aecret habit*, exceaaea, produdBj; piniplca on th* foce. ru&gt;b of blood io
the head, confu.ion of Idea*, headache, dcfactlr*
memory. los* of *cxaal jwwrr. nt«hi Jo**®*, aver­
sion to *oc!ety. alecple*«ne»«. ner&gt;oa* proatroUon. genoral debility and ludiceailoo. rendcrtuc
taarr&gt;a&lt;« improper, aab.-lv cured. W* *aar. «t&lt;*
c«rr« In Ail Imo we undertake, no neeto euffcr
O»« Day ionacr. Under our treatment the body ia

brain and nerve* 'io regain their tlgur. Curre»po».
cent ecoafldcntlal. Full direction* *eat with tbo

$500 Reward!
f&gt;er complaint.
*lck Iwndache, ledlgo*Uon, constipation or coaliv«ne«* we ran not cur*
with Wcet’e V'ryeUbl* I.lvor Pill*. &lt;ben th* dlrcetb n* »ir »trlellr compiled with. They are purely
VerrUblc. and tirrer tall to fif* aaxlefactlon. Snrar coated
hoxc«, containing 30 I’Ha 23 ct*.

mail prr;-ttrr-J on receipt of a 8 cent atamp.

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Executed tn line style
------- AND AT-------

�UXSfrt.
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Ww» *»-*«&gt;■* ■

DET
cz&gt;

i. «£ub£i tgurol |,ro&gt;ai-

‘•Mta Miriam.” her reoogniaed name ia - bty7511
the hmwebold. The life of a lie comtxt
meuced the following day- and the two i
_____
the tears of friends and expres­ Mflea of this realisUc drama were well
fcd
sions of sorrow, and regret on every sid*.
sustained for a period extending over I
A» the fiorufiy ladea casket wm lowered tbn» r&lt;«n. during «hi^U» health of
u
ap.tv,,
3
Ju laacripUon: “Nancy Miriam Rob­
the old man’s daughter dceUued slowly
m.. urinc h ifee Irom wdiment, and my
bins” cartght the eye of a yrxmgiemalo bulsurelv. Her withdrawal from aoci- ! *lui»twr unbroken and dreamk a 1 now feel
domestic, who broke her emotions of
«, wn und-n.lot.d In Ihu. Mid the w i ^rtertl,
,jd F“
P3
grief with tho whispered utterance: non nt her nurringe w. in potion j
.-«* o’" 1 d&lt;u»d
least faUgucd.
••Why should they buiy her under
bar maiden name?
What is the of but four living souls who never be- ]
the trust.
/
LsxtneM travel* k&gt; alow that poverty aou«
GRAND RAPIDS DIVISION- um of i&gt;crpetuating a living lie?” traved
The revelation came after the death of I (overtake* btra.
Those words were Intended
for
no one in particular; they fell upon the Mrs. North a few weeks since. The
Thaityniptom* of Itching Mica ant nrowture
whispered 'impres-tiou. gathered frpm
ear of a pall-bearqr, who was visibly
praapiraUon, Intense itching; moat at night
kitchen goarip which fell upon the pall­ like
Hteni* a* If pin worm# were craw-flag In or
Saab, Doors, Blinds, Jefferent Nails. Glass, Putty, Pit in tn.
moved by the startling self-addressed
query, and when the young girl returned bearer’s ear set him in tun investigating about the rectum. ' The more you acrateb the Oik, Varnishes, Colors, Brushes, Etc.
Castor, Sperm, Golden, ■
mood and he had not very far to go to worae they Iteh, very dirtreaalnir. The private
to the line of carriagennwsuting mourn­
part* are often, anerted. Dr. Swrayne'* Oiut- Black, Linseed and Kerosene Oil*.
obtain
a
cine.
The
Post-Dbpaldi
legal
MHkUvHU*
ers and friends she wm pressed for an
lathe moat effective remedy extant for
column announced a grant of lettersuf meut
this tormenting complaint. Give* rest at night
explanation of her voluntary remark.
Shovels,
Spades,
Forks,
Hoes.
Snaths,
Apple Parers, Fann
administration to the executor of without that detrtrv to scratch. Also haa on.
This wm given with some .reluctance
North.”
and lower auwl in quickly eradicating Tetter, Itch, Salt Bells, Fence Wire. Well and Cistern..Pumps. Wood and lion,
Charlotte--during the brief interval of closing the ••Nancy hL
lenme,
wyripeloo,
Barls-ra'
Itch,
Ptintfle*,
down the record of the probate of
Pipe, Pointe, Cylinders. Lead Pipe, Sink-, &amp;c.
vault, and its import wm dearly stamped
ths will wm made. The testatrix *11 Scalv, Croatv, Itchy Skin Eruption*. Here
0:10
upon the visage of the questioner, a had devised all her property to her hus­ |« the proof, “Certainly the beri, remedy ercr
1 &gt;4 j
------------- AGENT FOR.—---------young man well known in society here, band. Dr. J. IL North. A few days be­ uoed in my practice,” Dr. Cotton, Woodstock,
“troubled with Itching Pile* for over twen­
whose ill-conccaled agitation was gener­ fore this confirmatory evidence had de­ VL.
ty tear*, it cured me completely,’’ L. 8. Meaaer
al Iv remarked on the return of thelunor- veloped a letter was received by Mr. EdtekLMc. Bent fur 50 eta (In 3 cL *tami»)
STATIUI.S
al cortege homeward. Hs wm snared Robbins from the pall-bearcr and dis­ 3 boxes, 51.25, By Dr.’Bwayne &amp; Bon. Philad’a
The Lightest Running and most Durable Machine in use.
P*. Sold by all druggists.
any reference to the interview with the
carded lover, informing him that his
I shall aim to keep none but first cln:-s goods, and Bell them
daughter had been married and had
A learned man I* a tank; a wi*c man ia a •at a small profit.
Call and see me when needing hardware.
carriage, for it was preUy * well under­ lived throe veara beneath his roof in that spring. __ __________________ r_
relation without his knowledge. The
stood among them that the hopes of old man wai&gt; in a condition bordering
’ QUICK AND BURE,
\
their friend had been buried in the vault upop
&lt;
frenzy, but he pronounced the
Many miserable Jicople drag themselves
£st closed. The conversation took the ’
.whole thing’a lie and spoke pf the writer about with falling strength, feeliugthat they J
M. WOOD
rm of a discussion in memoriam of the 1
as a scoundrel. When Mr. .0’Rourke, are steadily sinking into their grave*, when by
using Parkers Ginger Tonic they would find a
qualities of mind and heart possessed by '
the executor named in his daughter’s cure commencing with the flrat doac; and vital
—IB NOW READY TOthe deceased young lady. Nancy Rob­
will, called upon him; the letter wa- pro­ ity asid- strength quicfelv and aurely coming
i Coaebesaud Sleeping Can
bins was a great favorite in social cir­
duced, and the colloquy that ensued was back to Uiem.
and Drtrolu Ail tral
cles, and as long as her health would 1
lai Dotroll with Or«.t Wo
.
os follows:
,
permit she shone conspicuously in the somewhat
1
The great hope of society I* individual charMr. R.—What do you think of a
reception, saloons of the West End. The
Aw'lGeu‘1 tfapVJaekaon. G.n'l Hup'I Dolrolt
scoundrel who would write'suuh a letter
only daughter of a wealthy retired citl- 1
A FOOLISH MISTAKE,
-----HAS THE——
sen, this charming young Indy stepped m
1 that?
Executor—He has stated whnt is true.
from the portals of the Sacred Heart Con­
Don’t make the mistake of confounding u
Mr. R.—Do you mean te sny that my
w. NISKERN, Attorney and Counsellor vent into society herc,five years since,and
• at Law, practices IpaEStale Court*. Col­ made a decider! impression among the Nancy was married to Dr. North? Do
believe it? What proof have you ? kcra Ginger Tonic b&gt; a sterling* health restor­
BOOKS,
lection* promptly attended to. Office over beaux of the last semi-decade.
------- AND-------Her you
,
Spaulding's store, Hastings Mich.
Executor—The best proof in tbe world ative which will do all that l» claimed for it.
JENELKY,
sweet girlish grace asd innocent face won
We have used It ourselves with the happiest.
__
rrmrv-n
WALL PAPER.
admirers
everywhere. She assumed tho —take the will for one thing.
results
for
rheumatlMPand
when
worn
out
by
|
\A/T
r
;T
।
T
AK
h
Vv
OOJD
JJ A. RAKBEIt, M. D..
Mr.
R.
—O! I don’t care for that. It
duties of directing her father’s house­
W IM DOW NUADES,
* HOMOEOPATHIC
hold, her mother having died many years is not worth the paper uj»on which it is
For nil Shoeing.
DYESTUFF*,
Measures, nut incn, have always
.
since, and the indifferent health of Mr. written.
Execntor—Would a marriage certifi­
Robbins rendered a daughter’s care and
PROPRIETARY MEDICINES,
attention a marked feature of her daily cate ‘by a minister of the Presbyterian
There Is a general complaint among drugPEtEM’KIPTIOMS,
Office flrat door cost of Opera. House, and life. After a time the daughter's health, Church be satisfactory evidence.
glst* th.it they cannot g«-t enough of "Dr.
Tt:idr oUnil Rock Elm,
I
Mr. it—That, of course, would be • Sykes' Sure Cure for Catarrh" to supply the
near residence on comer of Washington and too, declined in such a manner as to
RECEIPTS,
State Streets, Nashville, Mich.
demand. If thu» disappointed write direct to
occasion serious alarm, and, acting upon conclusive. Have you got it?
------ALSO----the
Doctor.
Ifib
Madison
St.,
Chlcagt&gt;.
Executor—It can be produced.
the advice of medical men and friends,
------MY
—
L
Mr. R.—Well, that Fettles it To
Miss Robbins went to a Water-cure es­ think that all this should have gone on | ••Well,” said au Irish attornry. "if it plaze
the court, if I am wrong hi Ihl* I have another |
tablishment at Cleveland. There she
met and surrendered her heart to the right under my nose and I knew nothing print that isequalty conclusive "
NEW DENTAL PARLOR.
TO SELL, AND THE
about it! It did seem remarkable,
assistant physician of the establishment.
I wish to make known to the citizens of Dr. J. H. North, a dignified gentleman though, when the doctor left the house
DEPARTKE T
Our druggist* aav vr never fear to recom­
Nashville and vicinity that I have purchased several years her senior. Miss Robbing। the other day. He could not stay to hear
fin the Stateof'TIirliitxmi.
the practice of J. L. Slgabcc, and am pennon- was a willing captive, and in letters। mo undeceived in this matter. I shall mend Rinehart.-. Liver Pills for they always
nently located over G. A. TRUMAN'S store, home to her confidential friends here she, put in a claim for funeral expenses satisfy the buyer.
.til kind* of.DENTAL WORK done, from the told of her admiration for the doctor in! against the state.
nnd all warranted.
A hint to bashful lovers who can't muster up
,
The executor satisfied the father’s
simplest operation to the most difficult,—Arti­ such terms that the verdict from gentle
ficial Palate*. Irregular natural teeth etraign- lips was: “ Nancy means to marry thatt claim for his daughter’s funeral by a
not.
botrae in Dairy or Eaton eountl-n.
tened, teeth extracted without pain for 50 cts; man! It is an easy conquest for him.”■ chock for the amount right away, and
I Imvc a good Horae
one-half deducted when artificial work is made
the inscription wer the vault will be
GOOD WORDS FOR A GOOD THING
Among her friends at home, however, altered from the maiden to the marriage
.ma » »e« &lt;&gt;i; d&lt;&gt;iii&gt;i. amt
All work warranted, advice tn regard to teeth
ve call and see nfe.
single
Harness
t«&gt;r
sale,
cheap.
who discussed this penchant for the’ name in a few days.
All tilings are not humbugs, nor are all state­
P. B. Will do dental work for 8 cords at wood. Cleveland doctor, it was conceded that
।
Mr. Robbins amassed the greater po&gt; ments ilea Dr. David Kennedy’s “Favorite
a.dissentient voice would be raised by old tion of his wealth at New Madrid and Remedy” is exactly what it claims to be. Hear Jos.
Mr. Robbins. Although devoted to his' tha neighborhood, where he has a son
VVILLIAM JONES,
daughter, it was known that hs discour­’ now living. He held at one time mort­
| EE &amp; Dl'BjiEE,
ties N. Y. He say* 1 "My little daughter was
aged the attentions of any and all suitors’ gages for'over ten miles of land. He
for her hand. Somewhat of a cynic, the5 wm in earlier days a teacher and did not covered with Sait Rheum form head to foot.
Dr.
Kennedy
’
s
•Favorite
Remedy
’
cured
her
al
old gentleman placed mercenary con­’ thrive much at that, but gave Ids attenstructions upon the advances of everyr tion to business at New Matlrid. '•The
male visitor at the family mansion, aJ old gentleman enjoys a parlor game of pearcd. This was twoyrara ago " Hucl: words
comfortable residence cn the corner of euchre occasionally, and frcuuently took
al RondJefferson Avenue and Walnut Street. a hand with his daughter and son-in-law
Office on .-ccond floor of Buxton's new brick
AND THE
The young, penniless sprouts hangingj of a winter evening. - He has recovered out. N. Y. ?!. n Ixdllv.
NASHVILLE, MICH. .
on the skirts of society, feasting arid* from the first emotions of surprise and
A peanut ta a peanut, now. The price per
wining from one house to another during• indignation at the long-concealed marbushel is double what It was last summer.
Beltr
are
i
few of wr Birgiiss in Real LUU:
the
social
season
on
the
passport
of
a
J^ATHBLM HOUSE,
। riage, and now remarks philosophically
spry foot and a swallow-tail, were not1 tliat “what is dono cannot be undone.”
“THE DOCTOR TOLD ME
80 acres in Maple Grove,• 45 cleared, 22 acres
---------FOR--------------------------.welcome beneath' Mr. Robbins' roof. —St. Louis Posl-Dispatch.
R-^ANTIBDEL, Paoranrroo.
nn A VPAD DnQ'T!1 PP INDI nnpn of Wheat, good Orchard, very fair buildings,
His only aim for his daughter was that
n-un . Thtj i $4,UU A I Dull* rUulAUD i EluLU Uulli gQ^depriiig near houwe. Price 3.0OU. Pay meats
«j&gt;raxi&lt;X Rreplda. Mloti.
she should be a comfort to him in his de­
irt, ami I did
The Golden Ladder of Charity.
pusneos and
This House furnishes the best accommoda- clining years of sickness. It savored of
140 acre*, 3 inQea from Nashville. Fair house
HE CHICAGO WEEKLY NEWS la
sacrifice, and the old gentleman knew
There are eight degrees or steps, says COllFtltrJtlwn,
and barn, Nearly all Improved. Prii e $1,000.
Torpid kidn«
it, for he gave in money, notes and real Maimonides, in the duty of chanty.
40 acres, 3U miles from} Nashville. If sold
p «:d in all tho requirements of Axosrican
The first and lowest degree is to give,
estate about 935.000 tx&gt; iris daughter'
soon will take ?l,150.
j I'.-nn’uan. It stair cls conspicuous among
during her ministrations beside his couch. but with reluctance or regret. This is
Q LEM ENT SMITH,
25 acre*, in the village of Nashville. Muat
Uo tno-ropolitan journals of tho country tie sold for what it will bring on account of ’
Before leaving the Water-cure Miss Rob­ the gift of the hand but not • f the heart.
When is a c
bins addressed a letter to a you*z lady
Th&lt;rsccond is to give cheerfully, hut
as n compl-jto Arxrpaper. Its Telegraphic poor health of present uwnet.
Attorney at Law
friend in Sl Louis, staling that she hail not proportionately to the distress of the
&amp;0 acres, 4 mile* from Nashville: nearly all
Sendee comprises all tho dispatches of tho
If fhcincthc
improved; fair buildings *&gt;&gt;&lt;1 hi all » good bar­
fully resolved to marry the doctor at all sufferer.
’
,
her children should be sfrong. Lydia E. Pink­
gain. Price Bl.OJO; part down.
odds, and that even her ftdhcr could not•
The third is to give cheerfully and pro- ham's Vegetable compound la u perfect specific
House and Lot, on PhlUlpa street; the best
stand between them. When she returned Krtionately. but not until w*e are solio- In nil-chronic diseaM-* of tbc sexual system of
bargains in town. Price F350.
wopen. Bend to Mr». Lydta E. Pinkham. ZB,
home Mr. Robhtns became somewhat
d.
yo't-’.at point-:. As a
it has no hjlouac nnd Ix&gt;t, on State street. Price *250,
JAMES k. KW££ZE1,
impressed witli the curative qualities of■
The fourth is to give cheerfully, pro- Western Avenue, Lynn Ma»».. for pamphlets.
half
down down.
superior. It is INDEPENDENTin Politics,
the system prescribed by the doctor andl portionalely and even unsolicited; but to
NOWS u
o! Un&lt;! “
A Chicago lawyer hold* that an attorney ha*
prvsentlni all Political News free from parits result upon the health of his daughter' put it in the ixx&gt;r man's hand; thereby
.
..
. .
_
__ _______ ,.u . ces Street, rru-e *4&lt;ju.
Attorney &amp; Counsellor,
a
right
to
council
hl*
client
to
skip,
If
skipping
tiran
bias
or
coloring,
and
absolutely
with;
and he sent for him to come on to fjt. exciting in him the painiui emotion of
' House and lot on State St., house new : good
! Ix&gt;uis for treatment in his own case. shame.
out fear or fa.-. or aS to parties.
; ccnar au&lt;j pi,inly of good water. Fbr Saks at
It is, to tlw fullest aonsw, a FAMILY i S700 or will exchange for farm property near
Dr. North succeeded in capturing not1
The fifth is to give charity in such a ever, the lawyar can beat the law or bull-doze
J^LACKA SOM.
only the daughter Wht the old man, who’ way that the distressed may receive the the Jury.
PAPSX
to. •»«&gt;» e~w«&gt;
suwm.«. u&gt;. «
pointed out to him what a fine’ bounty aad know their benefactor withCOMPLETE ETOHIES, A FCRIAL ; njaJ
tV village; all Improved except 8
’
"AOUGH ON RATS.”
field for
practice the West Endl out their being known to him. Such
ST03Y of absorbing Interest, nnd a rich | acres; llic remaining S acres good timber; is
The thing derired found at la&lt;t. Ask Drug­
was and offered to build an office on the&gt; was the conduct of some of our ancestors,
variety of coud™r notaa on Fashion | well watered bv a neyer-f.iling .pring. Good.
, , . __ _ ,
young orchard; buildings lair; 18 acres of
corner lot for him. This •rrangement- who used to tic up money in the hind gist lor "Rough uu Kata.” It clears tint rats’
Utoto. Sc...™, ..... liJEootfc, gT,.uixl;|&gt;™&lt;al owner n.iptol
was entirely acceptable to the doctor.■ corners of their cloaks, to that the poor mice, roaches, flee, bed-bug*. Ific. boxes.
etx Ita Martrtt Qtmvitlons are complete. In other Im-itM^ and will sell fur
ff,Moaumar’-t, Totnbrroucs, Mantles, Ac.,
He pitched his tent right there, andI might take it un perceived.
• IX«» down, balance ou long tune.
The sixth, which rises still higher, is
boarded with the Robbins family, va­*
Vacant lot on Philips St- Price S19U if sold
cating His position at Cleveland. ’While’ to know the objects of our bounty, but
soon
LEE A DI ItKEE.
the olit gentleman appreciated the ad-* remain unknown to them. Such* was
vantagefiof a physician under the roof,- the conduct of those of our ancestors
does
urnv o
he steadily discountenanced anything in' who used to convey their chartiable gifts
WONDERFUL Vf UI l
&gt;.n oSoc.
the shape of matrimonial attentions to&gt; into poor people’s dwellings, taking care
his daughter, and the two hearts beating that their own persons ana names should
CURES!
as on« met at the same table day after* remain unknown.
day with little prospect of authorizedI
The seventh is still more meritorious,
I* new nicely located union. Indeed the respectful awe for’ namely, to bestow charity in such a way
In hl* new building, the head of the house was of such a de-• that the benefactor may not know the
-gree that in order to ward off suspicion1 relieved objects, nor they the name of
has added a stock «f tn the paternal mind an air of indiffer­* their benefactor; as -wm done bv our
ence was ■ affected on both sides. Butt charitable forefathers during thdLxistCROSS-CUT A CIBUUUR SAWS.
this condition of things conld oot be suf­• ence of the temple. For there was in
fered long, and the doctor and the1 that holy building a place called the
Nritbvr Polllkwl nor Hretar an ;
.
daughter determined upon a secret mar­* Chamber of Silence or Inostentation,
Conducted by ALBION W.TOVROsE, author a
riage. It so happened that a Presby­- wherein the good deposited secretly
Price, ou Maw Work.
terian minister knpwn to the doctor wm' whatever their generous hearts suggestin town upon a visit, and he wm ap­■ ed, and from which the most respectable
prised of the facts in confidence. After' poor families were mainuuned with equal
The rarxt dhtliwuUhed author* and idclful artmt
satisfying himself that Miss Robbins was1 secrecy.
of age, and of her own free wHJ and con-'
Ltvrtl’r, the eighth and the most mer’ itorious of all is to anticipate charity, by
' preventing poverty; namely, to assist the
mony. One evening about three yean1 reduced brother either by a considerable
Laihrep. Vella Tluixt
byf. rf Leland Har
■inee a carriage drove up to the Rcbbins' gift or a loan of money, or by teaching
like Muivol] Felix &lt;
residence containing the minister and1 him a trade, or by putting him in the
one or two friends. They repaired to on1 way of business, so that he may earn an
apartment in the ■ upper portion of the1 honest livelihood, and not be forced to
house where the bride and grwom stoodI the dreadful alternative of holding up
able route of travel from Mlchlptn to ail petal* In lor.^-aelBlet'UiMUette t? Mra. Mmdteo.'rattf
Kan***, Nebruka, Colorado, lex**. Minneota lomrovement by lion. H. (J Ncnbreu: *tm ini
in silent waiting and ia a few brief his hand for charity. And to this Scrip­
Dakota, Manitoba, etc. Mlchlnn Centra', tralnt
words uttered in an r.n
whisper the' lure alludes, when it says: *' And if thy
make aura and clooecdnaeriiotui *t Chlu.so with
KIDNEY DISEASES.
' brother be waxen poor and fallen in de­
LIVER COMPLAINTS
: cay with the.:, then thou shall support
rplratUd UIu&gt;* atlon and Piles.
parlor below, entirely ignorant of all
that wm happening above, turned him­
self uneasily in nix chair wondering Levit. 26: 35. T
•’where Myrie was.”
The minister and the summit of
rigned the marriage certificate and left,
and the liride and groom Fat down to
wrij.s. nou

B:uilders’

H ardware,

DOMESTIC SEWING MACHINE

FRANK C. BOISE.

SHOE HORSES

. _ .4S5e“-“OT&gt;Ml’Si&gt;rAiu&gt;.

BETTER THAN EVER

F. T. BOISE,

P

Physician and Surgeon.

OBSERVE, COMPARE, REFLECT, ACT!

FEW CUTTERS'
iPAINT AND ERUSH

cau an(i Examine!

TH. AVOOl)

F. T. BOISE.

REAL ESTATE AGENTS,

ENTISTS,

NAHVILLE NEWS

A’ewrpapar

American and Foreign Marble,

KIDNEY-WORT

BUXTON

OVI
CONTINENT

LITERARY WEEKLY JOURMAL,

ATTENTION! SAW MILL MEN!

KIDNEY-WORT

�FOR THE

T^EXT

—drawing interest upon
county.
the rate of two per cent—with the full
nraumnee that their bank can’t bust,
per day.
uuleas the government boats. That tbe
hamlet,
white
tho
father,
frantic
with
grief,
militia company is to I*
vainly followed, pleading for hla loved on**. bill is-drawu in the interests of tbe in­
Grand Rapids, for the state
dustrious poor is clearly proven by the
-------1 SHALL OFFER FOR SALE------provision which provides that not more
_ is Sunday school baa been rcaihiuK tho
that #100 can be deposited at on© tim©
in systematically robbing the
fonn a group of ths mother and children. The or within a period of thirty days, and
contribution box.
that not mor© than #500 can stand at
Fire destroyed the extensive candy
their clothing aaturaled with oil, fagots placed any time to the credit of any one per­
manufactory nt Putnam' &amp;• Brooks at around their feet, and (bo torch applied. Alson. Mr. Lacey estimates that there
Graud Rapitls. Feb. 85.
are at present upwards of nine hun­
The new foundry at Allegan was in
dred million dollars outside of bank
operation 11 days from tnc time work torture of hla wife and children, who ,in rain
atretchod ont their hands to him who could no vaults andrthe national treasury, which
began on the building.
-------MY ENTIRE STOCK OF GOODS------is not only useless, in a commercial
A Kalamazoo man ahip&lt;»ed over 11
point of view , but is liable to loss to its
tons of celery to New York last year. leased and informed that he was at liberty
possessors from fire and robbery.
The express charges ontt were over
When applied according to tbe provis­
#700.
ions of hia bill, this Vast sum would be
Fifteen wolves followed a team from Loving family.
Nurtulle Rlskoff, a lam of eight years, and invested by die secretary of the treas­
Beaver Lake station at Au Sable, near the picture of health, tell* the following sto­
ury in. any interest-bearing securities
St. Helen’s, one night last week. Tbe ry'of the anaatural eatrangem-'nt of a son
of the United States or bonds guaran­
driver kept them off by swinging his and father through the aon embracing tho
teed by the United States, or approved
This is no dodge, but is a bona fide offer. The time and
faith
of
the
GouUloa
:
Her
father
waa
a
watch
lantern.
State securities, thus enabling tbe gov­
Saturday afternoon John W. Perry,
Oabaasa, who thought hl* father treated him ernment to refund ita debt al a minim- opportunity to make moony tb' by saving from 25 to 5o per
a farmer of Independence, Oakland
unkindly- Cabaaaa embraeed the faith of the ujn mte and have for ita creditors, in cent on -your purchases.
In Dress Goods we quote:
wing a load/ of hay to GenUiee and ipent bis leisure time in their
lieu of tbe bloated bond4*61ders, die
Aune and re- society. Lila father remonstrated with him.
Pontiac,
Wool Cashmeres, .60 worth .80
frugal and industrious of the poorer Wool Cashmeres, A) worth #1.
ceived a
Half
wool
do.
.35
worth
.85.
_______
Plain Suitings, .25 worth .35
ciassea. The lull has been referred to
Plain Suitings, 6j.
Print!
Prints, .5 .0 .7 \
The
(lest on th© body of Mrs. arnored of a Gentile maiden. Oca afternoon the aub committee on postal savings
Wool dress Flannel, .40 worth .65 Wai
Waterproofs, .73 worth fl
Ruth Porta, of Carey, 0., found dead
Waternroofs, #1 worth #1.25
Wool
the Mat day returned with a party of Gentile bank—of which Mr. Lacey ia chairman
Wool Tweeds
Tweeds 450
450wori
worth .75
in "Mother Nelsotfs” den at Marshall
Half
wool
Tweeds,
8s
worth
4s.
Cottonade, .16 to
_ 90
20
—but whether it becomes a law or not
Lin, Table ™
Cloth,
Farmers A Mechanics .20 to .25
*•- .18 worth 25
showed her character was frail, and
aa
one
of
the
uncertantiesof
tbe
future.
*.
Lin.
Table
Cloth,
8s
worth
4s.
Lin. Table Cloth, .50 worth 75
her death the reonlt of neglect, and not and. while th* other tormentor* held the fath­
Cotton Goods, .6 .7 .8
er aa ta a vise, tba *on throat the iron into hi* In any emergency our representative
Bleached Goods, .6.7.8.9.10
malpractice
father’* eye*. The next day tba son married has done a creditable and praiseworthy
White Goods cheap.
White Goods Cheap.
Facts are coming to light to show the Gentile, and within a year the father died
Table Oil Cloth, .25 worth M
Floor Oil Cloth, .35 w’th .50'
In poverty. The unfortunate child Lt with act ia proposing tbe same.
Horse
Blankets
.90
worth
9«.
Overalls .40
tbat Wilber F. Dennis, treasurer of ker unde and aunt.
r Overalls .60
vOveralls 25.
Isreal BaLagbor waa In Odeeaa when the
Columbia towmhip, Van Buren Co.,
A delegation of Arrapaehe Indians
Trim’ne Silk .75 worth #1
Silk Ribbons at cost.
did not commit suicide. His skull was
recently paid their respects to tbe Pres­
Trim’ng Satin, #1 worth #1.50
Ladies Stockings.
fractured as if from a blow from a club and rifled them of their tnUrt contents. Tho ident. They were, perhaps, less in­
Children’s Stockings.
•
Gloves A Mittens.
men
were
beaten
and
K&gt;oe
killed.
Women
whilebis own revolver remained undis
and ch Idren were assaulted. Even Innocent formed as to tbe demands of civiliza­
charged.
babes were thrown out of upper -story win­ tion than the delegations of politicians
The health nuthonticM of Grand. dow*, and their brain* duhedouton the pave­ who call upon him; but in a consider­
ment below. A wealthy farmer named Bo­
Rapids are congratulating themselves ra* kl offered 150,000 rouble* to the' bowling ation of their not wanting office, their Ingrain Carpets, .25 worth .35
that there is noil no small poxiu the mob who had attacked.hl* dwelling to Bparc short-coinings were doubt less cheerful­
Ingrain Carpets, .35 worth .50
‘
hla wife and daughter* from outrage, but tho
city. The hist case has been safely fiend* assaulted ate family and boat him al- ly overlooked.
Ingrain Carpeta, .60 worth .80
discharged'from the peat-house, ami
the-yellow symbols of contagion are OMtratlona occurred in December last. CltiIngrain Carpets, .70 worth $1
zcaa at tint attempted to defend themaclvea,
taken doyn.
Some genius—we expect him to be­
finding it waa UMlea* to ap|&gt;eal to the '■uthorThe manager of the Bell telephone itie*.
They armed themaclvea with club*, and long to thte jovial-order of humanity—
company has nearly completed a can- far a time were aucccaalul in repelling lb* has raid: ‘‘The day to drone aqd
vraof Anu Arbor, Ypsilanti, Dexter mob ; but when thl* tact became known to th* dream; the night to learn and ramble.’’ Men’s Suits, $5 worth 8.
Men’s Suits, $10 worth 15
•utteoritle* tbe police swooped down upon We do not propose to dispute this
and other towns on the Central, nnd them and demanded their arm*, which were worthy’s view t&gt;t the matter, but pre­
Men’s Suits, $15.worth 20. Boys Suits $3 worth 5.
baa obtained enough guaraatees to riven up. Then the persecuted [&gt;eople were Bent herewith the experience of a Phil­
left to the merer of Lae beartlea* inquisitor*.
Boys Suits 5 doll, worth 8. Overcoats 2.50 to 10 dolls.
warrant the belief that these places Children were thrown out of thlrd-«tory win­ adelphia journalist, Mr. William H.
will be-counected with Detroit early in dow*, men were murdered, children alaurht- Cunuington, 1712 North Twentieth St.,
one whose nocturnal rambles he thus
April.
refers to, beginning his narration
rather peculiarly, however: "I aa* not
Talliinir&lt;il)out polygamy, the Kala­
stood by without offering any interference.
Mens Stoga Kip Boots, 2 dolls, worth 2.50
mazoo Mail pays ita own town the fol­ Four hundred more of three long-tufforing a rheumatic, and have been troabled
■very little with bodily pains. Last
Mens Stoga Kip Boots, 2.50 worth 3.5o
lowing compliment: "Evers' second or
Tuesday morning I experienced a ven­
third male citizens of Kalamazoo is a
annoying stiffness of the neck, which
Mens Fine Calf Boots, 2 dolls, worth 4
grew
worse
as
the
day
wore
on.
To
­
polygamist. Many of tbe officers of
Mens Fine Calf Boots 2.50 worth 3 dolls.
ward evening it became very severe,
Kalamazoo are polygamists. The most
and I could scarcely turn my head in
Frigktaaed Into Hopeless Lernaey.
high-toned people of Kalamazoo are
any direction. Arriving home at tea
polygamist*.”
».
time, it was with difficulty that I could |
tag from a practical joke ha* just come to eat my meal. My wife wanted to rub
August Sepp, a German cigar manu­
light In thia city, bat aa yet little or no pub­ my neck with St, Jacobs Oil, but I re­ Kid^Button Shoes 1 doll, worth 1.56
facturer, was found dead at his home
licity has been given the matter. Living, fused. raying I though the affiction
Fine Kid Button, 2 dolls worth 2.50
in Jadkaon, by bis wife, about 10 o’clock
about two mHes from town Is a family by the would soon pass away. Ten ovef,
Tampico Goat 2.25 worth 3 dollars
against the remonstrances of my fami­
Friday morning. He had reasoved the
ly, I left home to ramble toward the
Childrens Shoes 50 cts. worth 1 dollar.
bedding-from tbe tied, laid down on the
Chestnut-Street Opera House, about
mattrajs nnd shot himself threagh the
two and a-half miles f«om my residence.
I started iu the midst of a heavy
temple.- He was formerly foreman in
aaow storm, and remained at the theatbe prmon cigar shop.
tne until the close of the performance, Tea, 25 worth 5oc.
Tea 45c worthJ60c. Coffee 13 worth 17
Twenty-five years ago the supervis­
I could fee! my neck getting
handtoiur. manly young fellow of skhongh
vwirse and Incoming very painful.
Coffee 16c worth 20c. Brown Coffee 17c. Molasses, blk.
ors of -St. Joseph county purchased the
Leaving
the
play
the
trouble
came
to
present county poor farm, buying it in
him many frieada.
Strap, 30c worth 40c. Common Syrup. 30c worth 40
roach home, lhe storm continued:
at Sheriff's rale on a forfeited bond.
the car in winch I waa became blocked
N. 0. molasses best in the market 50c worth 70.
Tlte 'have bought it over again for $1,­
•ie* nearly every square, a cold current
Maple flavor 50c worth 70. Sugars, Granu­
of air swept through the car, and I did
459, the -courts holding that the old
•tricted
to
a
ktagle
wtelt
to
Cleveland
at
the
-nut reach my home until 2 a. dl, by
lated 10 1-2 Standard A. 10 Brown 7 8.
homestead could not be seM and con­
time of the Garfield funeral Ou.equlea. He which time my neck hod become ab­
veyed by the sheriff.
•waa much given to reading light literature of solutely rigid. Then I consented to
tlw*
uke
of
St.
Jacobs
Oil,
which
my
the
blood
and-CUunder
kind,
and
hla
associates
In endeavoring to return the money
wife applied two or three times Ix'fore
to the parties wJh&gt; bought the bogus
I arose. T continued ita use that day
The prices quoted are suffient to indicate what bargains are
Adrian bonds the Union Trust com­ •rtetw Umea expreaaed himaelf aa beUerlng In and by evening I was free from pain,
pany found it necessary to have a Re­ -tbe*e *traagw fauLMiea had *o worked upon and the next morning I amused my­ offered, all of which will be strictly adhered to.
self
by
twisting
my
neck
in
any
direct
­
linquishment or disavowal of any claim hte *imple nature that he alway* atept with a
The highest market price will be paid fsr Butter, Eggs,
l*&lt;ge, old-fashioDod -Colt’* revolver at ti» ion that suited me, and mot a vestige
on the part &lt; of Adrian to the money
of stiffness remained.—Boston Herald. Potatoes, Beans, Lard, Dried Apples &amp;c.
head of hi* bed, where he could place hl** baud
Having lost all confidence in Adrian
upon It in an taatafflofficials the company sent C.I. Walker,

SIXTY DAYS

AT GOST OR UNDER GOST

$9,000 WORH!

KANSAS CITY
TUrousb
Ticket* via

MleatalloOee*

Canada

1. J POTTER.
PERCEVAL LOWELL,
lice FrWl &lt;i Oa'I Jfoaopw,
G«a. Jtax*. AgtChicago, Hl.
Chicago, UL

illicit ill SOIGICit SlIITlUn:

chronic IntalWa

CLOTHmvqH

of Detroit to Adrian to find somebody
who has authority to sign the necessary
papers.

R. DICKUVffiOW A CX&gt;.

borhood boy* pUnned, dn th* best of humor, a
aebeme to frighten him with a mske-heUeve
ghoat at midnight'* «vC hour. A night waa

------ JOW------

On all sums of $25 and over, six months’ credit will be giv­
en on approved nores bearing 7 percent interest.
Come early! these goods willjnot last long^t prices given.

President Angell and wife returned
tag that afteroooa owe «f the young men care­
to Ann Arbor Feb. 96, and were wel­ fully drew all the ballets from Henry’* plated,
comed atthe-depot by a crowd -af about,
3,000 pen*ou8 including the 1.200 stud­
READY FOR BUSINESS
ents of the university.
A graad re­
ception was held at University hall in half pa* eight, and about midnight, joat aa the Every day In the year—Sundeya excepted.
theeveuing, at which addressee were
^DVICE TO BUYERS
delivered by professors of the natver----------------- 0 F-----aity and other prominent citizens, con­ with oufatratched anna, alowlr muttortae tu»gratulating Irin on the success of bis Inteulgibte aenteucc*.
With aa awakenlug tremor,Heary eonvutet re­
ly grasped lite revolver andaat upright to bed,
-manner, at the drop of the bat; and
Every hononAly discharged soldier dumb through fear. Tbe gboit advanced a
Satisfnction guaranteed.
who served in a Michigan regimet dar­ ■Cep, the lautteringa coat I □ tied, Uli Henry,
ing the rebellion as entitled to a copy wrought up to ahnoat a . frenxy, drew to an
"A Nickle Saved.
aln! l/! *eapou he auppoaed
ebirged
of "Michigan in the War.” which is a «.th death, ,nd stammered: “If you are a
Is better than five cents earned.”
man J shall kill you: if yoasre a ghoat. thia
compiled history of each regiment dor
woirt
I
a
iyoa;
’
'
and
with
thrtthe
loud
reWe
are
Opening
Fa
fine
line of .NEW GOODS and will
iug its term of service. In order to P'rtrfhl* d»toi startled tba nlrht’* aUllobtain it, soldiers are required to oln
, l«c’c wa* a quick rnotton of the ,
Offer Some
shruudrd
jrm,
and
the
bullet
waa
thrown
tain and fill out tl»e necessary blanks back, striking tbe hea-l-bxn! st Henry’*
and send them with 33 cents to pay fide, /ha sent a cold c dll through hi* frame,
buta,'C&gt;on&lt;i t&lt;me be took deliberate alm at
postage to the adjutant general at the
ff-r------- ■ -■ - motloa
—
m -If
Lansing.
t
Four children of David Pelkey*/ of
A moat n.r urged with fear, Henrr filed a
third, a fourth and filth that, only to have tbe
Bay City ate colored candy the even­
Bargains you can’t Afford to Pass.
ing of Feb. 30, and in the night one bulcm Uur*d lack with noimelcM motion
was taken with spasms and died sud­
GF We do not use our Competitors Advertised Price Lis
denly. Another diedat 8:80 next day.
pf u-rror, be ' rv.l the laslbirak cartridge and it a liberal patronage fnna the farmers of Ude to make prices,
‘
The other two are very sick.
No one hu o I :Lc t*4tot at the ghost.
victatty.
*'
'*“«*- li* If^Uy vi.:ter
seems to know whether it is the candy
brep off h * flowing garment*,*aod through
rV-Owrg*MMls are aU Fresh and Desirable and we never had
that caused their mckneas or not. The ibe &lt;U*w rgsM those who It* i ratbe.-ed withH. R. DICKINSON. CO.
a Larger Stoek to select from.
physicians are puzzled but suggest
that they are perhaps remarkable cases
of spinal meningitis.
in Ind could
A young man claiming to be Frank
------- In Endless Variety------Braith, and from Detroit, was found in though «ev«
the Michigan Central yards, alxmt
eighty rods east of the depot, st Jack­
son, just after the Pacific express had
That we Warrant in Every particular
pawed, on Tuesday morning, with his
bead badly ent and bruised. He told
We aim to

CBSTOi FLBURfflE MILL

CUSTOM GRINDING!

DRY

unequal*! aucceaa.

HALL’S

IJatarrhQure
Is Recommended by Physician^!

sioo mwaimi
tarantee that It will cur* any
&gt;80, md we will forfeit lhe above amount

immediately. Price, 75 MiaU per bottle.

F. 1 CHENEY it CO.. Toledo. Obit.

PIMPLES
TO CONSUMPTIVES
that dread dtecaac, Conaumpt-i

Coug&gt;’». Coldj. Ccntumptlsn. Aalhma. Rronehitte,
As Partlvt viable* ths Prescription will ntaasa
add re**, Rcv.E-A.WILSON; IM Penn 81. Williamebnrg.N. Y.___________ ____ ____________________

ERRORS OF YOUTH

GOODS

FLOUR. MEAL AND NULL FFED

Our Graham Flour

SPLENDID DARGAINS

A

drees goods and

dress trimmings

BOOTS AND SHOES

Small Profits.

SEWING .MACHINE
“Let another Man Praise
Thae, and not Thine own

Mouth; a Stranger and not

Thine own Lipa.**
the CwwiU KmImt

�maion am, in Un old N.wton build-

Hatwniwrx.cDingGeo. Greenfield has sold his farm to
a Mr. Baker from Hillsdale Co.
James
Hurd, living east of here, lost
Chas. Abby is going to the Creek to
a valuable Ironic a few days ago.
work.
'Hie
M.
P. church here propone to
Henry Uretingbnrg has bought a
finish and neat their chureh thia spring.
8. Fast fill clone his school at' Mor7
J. W. Abby has bargained
gaii and go home to his wife thin week.
away.
LBorn : to Mr. and Mrs. Alva D. BadNorm Clark has sold
cock, a sou, on the 23th, and weighing
Mr. Hagar, of Sunfield was in town 9 pounds.
The last of the machinery of the
Sunday.
John Sbafe has bought "a sawing Pelton mill, at Morgan, was drawn
a
way a few days ago.
'
machine.
Elijah Hale has sold his farm in BtdAlva and Fred Woolcot have gone to
timore,
and
moved
into
the
Pelton
Colorado.
house, at Morgan.
A show at the M. P. church, last Sat­
Kellogg
Atkins have moved their
urday night
Francis CovelLbas sold his farm to broom machinery from the depot nt
Moigan, to their stole opposite.
Joseph Bolo.
Dr. Hull has fitted, up a cosy office
Elder Patton preached at the Advent
over his father’s store, nnd may be
church Sunday.
.
found there by the sick, night or day.
Old Uncle Baker bus obtained a bill
Miller A Strong have threshed their
from his wife.
Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago,
hut job and laid up their clover hnller.
skacbe, Sorenstt of tho Chert,
C. Baker has told 20 acres of land to
They have had a long run and' given
Gout,'Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swell­
C. Tuckerman.
good satisfaction.
ings and Sprains, Burns and
DeWitt Sackett hits sold his farm to
Some of the boys around here have
Scalds, Genera! Bodily
E. Moorebouse.
'
been trying to find out if a certain
’ Pains,
Michael Wilber has moved into Mrs.
.couple are married, but so far the old
Elliott’s house.
Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted
man has the best of them:
James Durham has bought 30 acfes
Feet
and
Ears, and all other
Charley Broken, formerly of Sheri­
of land of W. Hartom.
Pains and Aches.
dan was visiting friends at Morgan the
Joseph Miller is to build a new house
fore part of this week. He is now em­
the coming summer.
ployed in Leonard’s grocery store,
The lyceuni is progressing at the
Grand Rapids.
Briggs school house.
. Lester Mend has been west, where
Chas. Stanton is going to Kansas, as
timber is. scarce. The other day he ;0LD BY ALL DBUGGIBT8 AHD DEALEBB
soon as his school closes.
IB MEDIOIKE.
wns trying to split what he Jhought
N. Olmstead and R. Stephens will
A.VOGELEB_____ _
was a small log, but it proved to be his
build barns the coming summer.
big toe. He now goes with a crutch.; "
Mrs. Hall has given ber children
II. H. Hull, lias been calsemik^
away, and will take care of herself.
ing and ^fixing up the inside of bis
Fanny and her husbind are putting
store, at Morgan. One of the old fre­
up at head quarters, in Maple Grove.
H. Winslow, Chas/ Tuckerman ami quenters went in there the other day,
and thought ho had got in the wrung
Henry Tasker all have new wagons.
11 pen.
Mrs. Russel has two brothers and
G ASTER.
their wivaa from Jackson visiting hpr,
Mrs. C. F. Wilkinson, of Castleton,
EATQN CO I NT Y.
Was visiting relatives in town last
LT ft AI
David Long, an -arly settler uf Ent- .
week.
Alex. Courtright lost a child Thurs­ on Rapids township, died on Tuesday
day. Funeral at the Congregational last, aged 62.
Mrs. Melinda Brook, wife of Francis
church.
H. Munger ami family have return­ Brooks, uied at her residence, on Mon­
day.
Feb. 30, aged 8-A years.
ed from the north, they have been the
It is reported from Hoytville that a
last year.
Levi Stanton has sold his farm to male resider-’t of that tqwn has allowed
Geo. Clark, for $3,000, nnd is now go­ four horses to die on his hands within
a year from starvation and neglect.
ing west.
BROWVS IRON RITTERS aro
Mr. nnd Mrs. Charles Shaw celebrat­
a certain cure fbr all diseases
Protracted meeting at the M. P.
requiring a complete tonic; espe­
church was commenced Thursday, by ed the 30th anniversary of their wed­
cially Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Inter­
ding day ou Monday,- Feb. 30th, at
Elder Mills;
mittent Fevers, Want of Appetite.
John Kitaou and wife have gone their home in Chester. There was pres­
Loss of Strength, Lack of Eoergj.
back to Livingston, county from where ent friends from Charlotte, Vermont­
etc. Enriches the blood, strengt h­
ville and Chester. They were tjie re-! ens the muscles, and gives new
they came.
life to the nerves. Acts like a
Chas. Holton has taken Mrs. Wolcott cipients of many valuable presents.
A man named Delano is traveling I charm on the digestive organs,
place. Mrs. Wolcott has moved in with
.through the north part of Eaton and I removing all dyspeptic symptoms,
her brother.
such Us tasting the food. Belching,
Chas. Stephens, of South Battle the south part Ionia counties begging: Heat in the Stomach, Heartburn,
Creek, was visiting friends in Assyria, money, clothing, etc., representing
etc. The only Iron Preparation
that
it
waa
for
Cyrus
Hoover,
of
Rol
­
tliat will not blacken the teeth or
last week.
give headache. Sold by all Drug­
At the social at J. B. Norris’, Friday and, whose house was burned last Dec.;
gists at $LOO a bottle.
night, $7, was received, and $5 dam­ and claiming further that Hoover
BROWN CHEMICAL CO.
.
never received the insurance on his
age done to bis pump.
Baltimore, Md.
Mrs. S. Wilber received a severe kick house, or only a part of it, and that he
in the side from a colt one day last is very destitute. What he gets in
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.
thiswnyhe appropriates to his own
week. She is improving.
use.
W. M. Ilumpliery and wife have re­
turned from the cast, where they have
A young dramatist showed one of his
have been visiting friends.
fiends through his gallery of family
The champion liar of the state stop­ portraits. “Lucky dogs those ancestors
of
mine!" he observed thro ughtfully;
ped with L, N. Mosher one night last
“I’ve made a name for them!”
week. He ia from Mason.

Alfred Lewis has returned from tbe

gATOBDAY.

-

- MARCH &lt;. law.

VICINITY LOCALS
WOODLARD.

Good cows are in good demand now.
Burt Holly’s school closed on Fri-

Geo. Barden Iim iweu t«kiiw a trig
Good eprinj wwrther l&gt;nt not mueb

^Geo. Palmerton recently bail his foot
caught between two logs and janibed
quite badly.
’
James Black has been quite sick, but
we learn be is on the gain,
A revival meeting, has been held at
the M. E. German church, the past two
weeks.
There is another forgery case brew­
ing, but as it ia not .ripe, we will not
lance it yet
Woodland has paid out $50 more
than her dog tax amounted to the past
year for sheep.
Frank Hilbert has the Dakota fever
and the doctors say he must go before
be has ATtlap&amp;c.
.
Chasj Cook'is-very low with tbe’lung
disease'. He has not been able to do
Many of our farmers are going to put
up barb wire fences this spring.
Why
wouldn’t this be good to put across

Mr. Wonderlich will put up an up­
right and wing, to house this summer,
and Dave Smith will bo the boss car­
penter.
It is first a hand shake, and then,who
who are we going to run for supervi­
sor this spring and also highway *oommisioner!
Mr. Ingram will move to his now
home, near Portland, soon, and the
man that bought him ouu'will soon
move here.
*
Rev. Monroe preached at the Baptist
church last Sunday evening. He had
a large congregation and all were
pleased to hear the gospel fall from his
lips once more.
The boys are trying to organize a
band. They have met a few times with
drums and flfe,but the music so charms
Jordan’s mongrel animal,that his brays
out vies them all.
Ira Stowell was called to Mr.Hager’s,
last Saturday, to adjust the loss of
sheep killed by. dogs. We understand
the farmers have each a well loaded
gun in their houses for these animals
It seems Jas though our supervisors
ought to assess these animals accord­
ing to the worth of the sheep killed.
We have in our enterprising and
quiet little village, several drawbacks
or to use a more common phrase,
“Hunchbacks,” tbe most noted of
which is known by the name of .......■■■.
This peculiar and over sensitive indi-

ing a notonty, which if followed up,
would put to flight, the best record that,
Guiteau has made, even in killing the,
President
For instance, only the
other day by way of amusements whip­.
ped, kicked and otherwise maltreated[
a little boy, (whom he happens to stand[
in the capacity of step-father to,) sim­
ply because the boy happened to1 fall
while playing around in the house.
His wife, the mother of the boy, while
interceeding in her child* behalf, next
became the victim of his unheartless,
cruelty; leaving tbe child be seized it’s,
mother and taxing her by the throat,
be commenced to choke her, and would
undoubtedly have seriously injured
her, had she not taken a knife and de­
fended herself in such a manner as to।
cause him to leave her for that time.
Next be appears as hostler at a dance(
on the 23d, and after imbibing consid­,
erable of the “magnetic water,” found
here in large quantities. He tried to,
make himself as conspicuous as possi­
ble, and immagined himself to be some,
great orator continuing until he had
disgusted himself as well as the crowd.
Then like a trick dog in the circus, he
quietly picked himself up and slid back
to bis kennel to sober off. Tbe ques­
tion naturally arises, what does he re­
mined a person of! The nearest com­
parison that I can make is this. He re­
minds me of the man who puts his!
mouth in gear in the morning and sets!

it a going, and then goes of on a visit.
For a Kelley Moter, be can’t be boat,
for be is propelled entirely by wind.
Null.

EAST MAPLE GROVE.
Mary Ruse is taking music lessons.
The Quail Trap school house is in a
flourishing conditio n.
The robin and blue bird have already
Tim Biggs and Leri Goodrich have
bought a farm together.
Mrs. Hall who has been sick for the

the law log business quite brisk.
Farmers who have ah gar bushes are
making preparations for sugaring.

to visit among friends and

new firm will soon start, out in tho
• Mr. Wrllm«n
Wellman I.
is reported qalto
quite rick
. Washington’s biribday passed off
quietly.
■John Walch started for the uorth
wood* last Monday.
John Schroder now occupies his
house here for a short time again while
be is making sugar.
The little snow that fell last week
week was put to good uAe by these who
had sawlogs to draw.
Mrs. King is home from Detroit, but
we understand she contemplates re­
turning soon for further medical treat­
ment.
School in the Hunter district closed
last Friday after a very successful term
under the efficient management of Miss
Emma Newell.
While at Woodland Center last Mon­
day we bad the pleasure of meeting
friend “Nell” the lively itemizer for
The Nfws from that pleasant little
village.
• It has been reported that the new
saw mill is not to remain with us long,
but one need only to pass along the
road to be convinced that enough bus­
iness can be done to make it profitable
for them to remain for quite awhile
yet.
The blizzard which visited us last
week caused a good many to think tliat
winter had but fairly began its work,
and we would yet have a good chance
to shove! snow; but it soon disappeared
and tbe genial rays of the sun now
shine as of old.
Considerable fear has been enter­
tained the present winter among far­
mers that wheat would be greatly dam­
aged by the alternate thawing and
freezing, but st tbe present writing
there doesnot seem to be any serious
damage in this direction.
Considerable excitement has been
created in Sunfield over the removal Of
the Bismark post office from its present
location to the store down at the burg.
Petitions pro and con have beeu circu
lated so that every voter baa had a
chance to exert his influence in tbe
matter by signing one petition or an­
other. The decision has not yet been
made by the postmaster general but
many anxious ons are waiting the re­
sult.
For the past month or six weeks we
have anxiously looked over the column
of Thf. News for items from North
Castleton but hi each instance have we
been disappointed.
Now being ac­
quainted in that region to some extent
we know there must be plenty of news
worthy of reporting if some one would
only take the pains to do so,
There­
fore by and with the consent of The
News weappoiutourselves)a commit­
tee to call on “B. Y. L. E.” for said
items from his pen and hope to hear
from him regular in tbe future,.

3IBMAKK.

P. T. Colgrove addressed the Reform
Club last Sunday.
_
Rev. Masters, of Albion, wm in tbe
city last Tuesday.
C. H. Olmstead, of this city, lias lo­
cated some land near Larimour. Da.
W. M. Scudder has gone to Lansing,
where he has received an appointment
of assistant engrossing clerk, of the
senate.
Rev. Tanner, from near Springport,
occupied tlie pulpit at the Presbyterian
church Sunday, and also spoke at the
temperance meeting iu thfe afternoon.
In the case of the Farmers vs Irving
Mill a verdirt was rendered in favor of
tbe former of $3,042, which netted
them about 66 cts a bushel. The’ own­
ers of tho mill claimed there was eight
or nine thousand bushels in tho mill at
the time of the fire. The jury were
convinced that there was not over
500.
A stranger had been hanging around
the city, for several days, and during
the time hinted that he would like to
run a race with some one. The fact
reached Charlotte and a lot of soakers
came up with Jack Ives and all tbe
spare change they could muster. When
' they proposed to have Jack run the
stranger he hung off a little and Jock,
backers became very anxious to bet.
At last the stranger concluded to run
and began to bet and when they began
to lag a little he offered to bet them
four to one. Some of the Charlotte
soakers become so excited at this that
they wanted to bet their boots and
clothing but their boots were so large
and their hatz so small that of course
they would fit no one out side of Char
lotte. After the stranger saw they had
put up all their money he very quietly
and very easily won the race. There
was some talk about another niee to
come off Wednesday but it fizzled.
Hams.

MAPLE GROVE.

Mr. Elliott is recovering.
Walt Dunham has gone to Kansas.
The McOmber school house has some
new steps.
Mias Rosa Wendell of Muskegon, is
visiting friends here.
Billy Phinisy is talking of going to
Battle Creek to live.
• Amon Wolf was rustitating at his
brother Dan’s, last week.
Mis. Kilburn has bought a fine span
of cults of Mr. McIntyre.
Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Quick have re­
turned from Battle Crock.
Mr. Griffin has the foundation layed
for anew house, on his place west of
the center.
Mr. J. Huffman met with an accid­
ent while chopping, last week, cutting
off three fingers from his left hand.
Tramps entered Frank Burnham’s
house one day last week, during the
absence of the family, nnd helped them­
selves to a loaf of bread.

Strange weather.
Schools are closing fast.
Sugaring is a mixed affair.
Tho ladies of the M. E. church are
Wheat strives to look cheerful.
making a quilt to be sold, and the pro­
We are looking for more snow.
ceeds to go towards furnishing the
Minor Wells did some big sawing for
new church. You can tell who these
Ed. Wells.
ladies are as soon as you see them.
Grimes shipped a carload of bed
They will come to you with a smiling
alate last Friday.
J. B. Millsand wife, and Mrs. Wm.
face and say, “give us five cents and
The Hawk man passedthrough these
Lewis went to Rice Creek last week to
we will put your name on our quilt.”
parts last Saturday.
celebrate
their mother’s birth day.
That young man whom w■' spoke of
Wednesday morning a young flood
It was John Talbert who turned his
in ourfast. got upon his ear and called
was prevailing.
toes
heavenward,
and made a full
Unkind words like small-pox, leaves us ail the pet names he could think of. grown custard of seven dozen eggs.
nnd then said that it was none of our
pits everywhere.
Rev.
Wood
preached
a very able ser­
The three days of sleighing brought business where he went, or how long mon tbe Congregational church, lust
a host of logs to Grimes’ mill last week. he stayed. Wo will admit that, but as Sunday, subject: “The Creation of
Jerome Deuel, while loading a log, this ia an advansing age, we thought it
Man."
got a leg badly badly bruised last Fri- no harm to let the people know what
Ros. Burk and John Wheeler tried
is going on, but if that young man
day. •
titles about a buggy wheel and a black­
Emmet Benedict, is getting the ma- I wants to get out a patent on the idea, smith bill. It is better to be square,
so
that
ho
can
collect
a
royalty
on
all
terial together to build a house, this
intringdinents, we will take back what Johnny.
summer.
The dramatic club of Assyria, will
Uncle Hay has gone back to Ind. He we have said about it.
show at the Hicks school house iu Pen­
Boo E. Rue.
will soon return and bring back all the
field, Mar. 4th, tbe proceeds to go for a
Hay in his control.
I library.
BALTIMORE.
Ed. Wells split 25 cords and piled 15
There will be a prayer meeting Thura
cords of stove wood in one day, and
| day night or each week at Johd Darl­
Frogs.
waa tired when night came.
ings, it being nearer for the members
Spring birds.
Charley Hammond is not fast recov­
to gather than the chureh.
Softened up a little.
ering from the results of his fall, but
Charles Baker has traded the George
Horatio has gone to Kansas to reside.
continues to wear 9 crutch.
Revival meetings at the M. E. church Hartom forty to B. Cassoday for 80
Thomas Hunter was on a “tear,”
Mr. and Mrs. David Ickes are making acres of land near Petoskey. He now
most of tbe week. It is simply ridicu­
has 160 acres there in a body.
a short visit to Ohio.
lous, circumstances considered.
J.
Abby, John Parker, Lorenzo
Mr. Harshbarger has timber on the
Miss Libbie Lee, ex-teacher in the
Dean. Peter Hartom, Lqrenzo Parker
ground for a new barn.
Vermontville school, is expected to
and
their
wives went to Carlisle, last
Aaron Jones and family of Allegan,
tench the Bismark pchool this summer.
week, to celebrate Mrs. James Driscoi’s
are visiting in this vicinity.
We are glad to chronicle the fact
Sydney accidentally slipped down 25th birthday.
that Mrs. Downs, is gradually on the
D. Hall departed this lite last week
and put his knee cap out of place.
gain, and may yet be spared to do
Wm. Harrington carries a brighter Tuesday night; funeral Thursday at tbe
good, which seemed always to be her
countenance ofjate. The cause is girl Advent church service by Elder Smith.
Mr. Hall leaves a wife and four clul
moving principle.
drun to mourn his loss.
Dr. Hunt of Wyoming Co., N. Y., ( baby.
The law suit between Crispetl and J.
but more lately of Charlotte, Eaton
county, has moved to Bismark, where ; Litchty, for destroying security was de­
In a Cincinnati daily we notice that
be expects to disperse proper anidotes cided by the Judge in favor of Lichty.
Mr. Tim Gleeson, ex-member of the
to the sick. Success to ye Doc.
G. R. Durfee has a girl seven years
Auld Grimes is getting things down old, on trial for the purpose of adop­ Council from the Forth Ward of that
city, says that he suffered terribly with
rather fine. He entertained a lady vis
rheumatism all lost winter and spring.
itor tbe other night, next morning tion, if he adopts her it will make six He tried all kinds of liniments ana
weighed her just before breakfast, and children he has raised by adoption, medicines without any benefit until he
directly after weighed her again, and three girls and three boys.
used St. Jacoba Oil, the first-applica­
found an increase iu her weight of H.
A terrific hail and sleet storm visited tion of which insured a full night’s re­
Mrs. Stuck who has been for a long
pose, and its subsequent use entirely
time confined to hex bed with consump­ this locality Monday* evening. Il left cured Lim. It is a great remedy.—Ak­
tion, still lingers, awaiting the final an 8 lb. boy at M. M. Slocum’s residence,
ron (Ohio) Beacon.
summons. Medicalakill has been ex­ and he is so elevated over the occurhausted, and her sojourn here will soon
POINTS IS 8«LEC FINGA SEW ING
end. She says “welcome the hour of unce that he has concluded to adopted ]
MACHINE.
departure, and glory beyond the over.” him as his own.
Whether for his or her own uac.thr. purchaser
The prospect for a new U. B. church should . y wide prejudice and make his own
The typo lately arrested at the Hawk
office, just prior to his arrest, told me is good, two sites are spoken of, one selection, after examining the merit* of all.
he had been studying punctuation, but ou the farm of E. Edmonds, and the Do not take mv “t&gt;uy so” or die word of anv
other dealer, but try and teat tor yourself and
we concluded that be had falsified,
for as soon as arrested, he knew no other on Silas Henry’s the moat being decide on the menu, of the machine. A masubscribed for the latter—Later, $1,000
baa been rained for tbe U. B. church,
and is located 8. Henry’s place. The
job of building ia noon to be let.
Doxy.

IRON

�SUGA

Post’s Patent Sap Spouts,

t you
til! yo
are owin’ pooty much
good health and to her
md that worthijrt the be quite a fortin to my coal man,
He looked sheepish for a minit, but h«
is on to.
“£ I walked ou, twin’ tofeel’s-boM asa spunked up. and says be, ••Yes, marm,
and Jove—about c^ual
lion; but I’didn’t—t felt like deth; and I Z’tr had enough myself; I thank ye
parte—is ray rule formakiu’ a haiukoma
kindly;
but I thought as how ’tw&lt;»uldn’t
giuv.-s Minty knew it, for she never said
woman.'
be no barm ter carry wmc tor Jim—.Jim
Wall, the next day, when I’d got rest­ another word about it
Rasher—be’stick.ye know; and he hain’t
After
this,
I
kep
pooty
quiet
for
awhile
ed a little. Minty and I talked tbe mat­
got nobody but me ter look out for him,
ter over, and we concluded that the fust —only I ran'in to a peanut stand one day he haln't/’
.
thing we’d better do, was to advertise. and had ter pay a dollar and a half dam­
Of course we was interested to once;
ages;
and
once
I
chased
a
coal
cart
till
I
So she writ a piece and seat it to the
was clean beat out, and had to hire a and we asked a good many question^;
(Tin or Wood,)
’“"ffilt'n fetch him,” sayt she, “ if he conch to kerry me home.
and Minty told the boy to wait till the
And all sugar makers' made from the Im*&lt; material, and by a Tinner of twenty years
But the woet on ’t was. I was gitti*’ others was gone, and she put up a
can read and ever looks at s paper; but
Experience. Also the beet place* In Um state to buy
basket
of
things
for
him
to
take
along
to
in the meantime we'll keep our eyes all discouraged, and I wm willin’
Jiis sick fricni
open. He may turn up when we ain’t to own at last that I had got the . While she was talkin’ I was a-thinkin”
monomaxuer, or a touch ouYt any­
exDectin*.” says she.
'
'
Only two pair nt those Hartings Chilled Shoe Bobs left. It win pay you
and I says ter myself: “You’d better go
From that davit seemed as of I didn’t way; and finally, I consented to let ’em and see this sick man; mebby it’ll ease
To buy them for next year. Wagons I
think o’ nothinr but my coal man. Jack call in a doctor.
yer
mind
to
do
something
for
some
coal
He
said
how’
tmy
sistim
needed
tonin
’
said how t I’d got a monomanier. bill 1
man, if you can’t for the right one.”
knew better, and I'told him so; nothin’ «p, and he left me soxpe medicine. I
So I run up stairs and put on my bnnin the world ailed me, and I should be took tho medicine faithful; but I knew, nit and clapped my purse Into my
.
.
Warranted in every respect, for caah or omtirne. ' Also
all right soon's thisbizness was ofTn my and Minty knew, too, that I couldn’t
never git toned up right, till I found that pocket, and was-ready and waitin’ when
mind.
tie come out with his basket. So we Nnsb. Doors. Blind*. Gins*. Oil Colors, White and Colored Lead
Tbe fust time 1 went on the street I pesky coal man.
went along together, and—wall. I might
Our
advertisin
’
didn
’
t
amount
to
Jrffcruoii
nail*. Stoves and Kangea, Cutlery, Silver
come pooty" nigh gittin’ killed myseM
as well tell ye fust as last—I found my
or kilim’ somebody else, a number o’ shucks. A few smutty-faced. lyin’ fel­
Warr, Pumps. (Wood and Iron.) llead Pipe.
lows called on us, expectin' to make coal man!
times,
In fact, everythin* found in a flrat clasa Hardware Stock. Headquarters for all kinds -.
Te'see my eyes was everywhere to. somethin’ out on ’t, t s’pose; but we ■ He was sick, sure enough; and he lay
of the latest and most improved Farm Machinary, from tbe
once, but mostly in the road, lookin’ out won’t bo easy took in. and they went in a mis'able room on a mis’able
bed, and the flies was eatin’ on him up, Wheelbarrow ton Champion Mower or HnmmothCord Binder
for coal carts, and every one I spied 1 away as poor as they conje.
and there wa’nt no air in the room tit
One
day.
Minty
showed
in
a
young
generally mafic a dive bockards or forards, tor git a sight o’ the driver’s face Irishman. He come bowin’ and scrapin’ for a human bdh’ to breathe, and he
was Loosin’ and moanin’, burnt up with
ye know, ana ’twant a safe way to do in up to tho table, where I sot sewin’, threw
‘
down his old hat and put out his black fever.
a crowded street, by no means.
Somethin’ told me I had found him
Once I run into a man and iobbed a paw with a flourish, as if he was tickled
afore I see hia face, and when I went up
stool he was carryin’ right inter his to death to see me.
“Bv my sowl.” says he. “if it isn’t the to him and laid my cool hand on his
stummick, so't he bellerea out, and ev­
identlldc old lady, herself, now! I knew head he knew me. too. He looked at
erybody turned and stared.
me forn minnit in that stupid, stunned
“Old lady." says he, “mind where ye as quick’s I set my two eyes on ye!” kind of a way o’ his’n—I remembered it
"Singular,” says I. cool’s could be—
yer goin’, can’t yer? Ain’t there n»m
perfeckly—but he knew me, and his
for
I
’
d
got
used
to
’
em,
you
know.
for my stummick and yourn too, on this
••Singular, but I never sec you afore,” great hrniest-eyes kinder smiled, though
ere siatfwalk?"
nis mouth was’ so solemn, and he says: JN making the following statement, we ujter the truth, and can verify it.
says
I.
Some hughed.and I felt cheap enough.
•*O. now,” says he, coaxin’ like—“ye “Oldlady, is it you?”
Another time I walked right straight
I couldn’t speak to once if I'd died,
into a lady’s face and eyes, my gaze bein’ wouldn’t forgit so aisy. Think, now, but I opened the basket and got him out
fixed ahead iu the road, qn i^coal cart how would it be, say, barrin’ the baird, some gripes and giv’ him. and scut tlie
and
the
short
cut
o
’
me
hair,
for
the
hot
just heavin’ in sight; I jest bumped
boy fur some cool water; then I bathed
square inter her face, and her spectacles weather!” says he.
In the city, at bottom prices, fair and square weight and measure. When
••Barrin’ as much as yer mind to,” his head, and by ’n’ by I asked him if we advertise the most complete Stock ot
fell off, she dropped her purse, and let
there wa’nt no one to take care on him,
says
I,
“
I
don
’
t
know
ye
and
I
don
’
t
go the string tliat was hitched on to her
NobTxly
but
Sam.
ho
said;
the
little
feller
wantar,” says I; “and now if you’ll stop
poodle dog, and I lost my bag: so we
that coine with me; and ho lived some
had ter paw round quite a spell 'afore vour blarney and tell me what ye want, ways off and was as poor as himself.
I’ll be obliged to ye."
wo got nght side up agin.
Etc., in Batrv and Eaton counties, we are telling the people a fact that can­
He looked all struck of a heap for a There seemed ter be somethin' more ho
I ’pollygized as well’s I knew how. niiuule,
.in&lt;l then snys !;&lt;•. “Didn't yer wanted to say. but he couldn't seem to not 1h- succeofnlly nnd truthfully denied. It coiiHiKUof a large variety of sta­
and asked her if I couldn’t do somethin’
advertise for the young man as driv.ye git it out: so I went on talkin’. I told ple good-, and a large aRxortniertt of
to kind er bring her teu. and make her ter the depot on his coal cart last Christ­ him bow I felt when I found I'd forgot
feel better, and so on. She was leanin’
China.
his address, and how I had worried ever IMajolica Ware and l-’
up agin a store winder, nnd site Jest put mas ?”
sencc; and all how I’d bunte&lt;l for him.
“I did.” says L
In various designs and styles, also a well selected Stock of
up her hand and fixed her spectacles ot;
nnd
about
thsrJre*!
lunch,
and
every
­
“And isn’t it meself as is the very fel­
to her nose, more firm, and then she
ler?” says he, slappin’ his knee, ami thing.
looked tne over calmly, and says she:
“And now,” says I. “1 want ye to
“ Mow very peculiarf'
I was awful lookin' up as bold as brass, agin.
••Now I think on’t, I dunno* but ye ch-vr right up. for I'm goin’ ter t»?nd
In Ten Setts. Water Setts, Cups, Saucers, Pitchers, Etc. An endless variety
mad!
you a d . tor. and will hnvc ye well and j ot Vases, Toilet $etta. Flower Setts. Etc. in
be.
”
says
I.
“
Yes.
I
guess
you
be
the
If she’d jawed and scolded I wouldn’t
ridin’ on your coal cart in no time. Is I
a cared, but to have her treat me ’s’ if I very feller; and so I ’sposo you’ve come the old white hoss alive and well?”
was a mcnagery or some sort of a curi­ to pav over that live dollars I lent you,”
says 1. and I rizupand hildoutmyhand says I.
osity—I couldn't stand it nohow.
Too numerous to mention, and so cheap tliat all can afford to buy.
Upon this he smiled as bright as a but­
.
••’Madam,” says I, “p’raps you’d be to him.
Yon ’orter seen that man; he looked ton.
■ peculiar’ vourselfif you had a whole city
“Yes marm." says he, “tlie old mare’s
all wqys to once, and everywhere, but to
full o’ coal men to look arter!" says I.
all right, thank vc.”
Of ever}" style, color nnd design. When you are ready to buy, I am ready
She only stared the more insultin' and me; then’be picked up hb» old hat, and
“wall," says I pooty soon. “I must
&lt;ell. All kinds of Produce taken in exchange for Goods.
I went off ami left her standin’ there as says he:
“It’s mistaken I am now entirely! It’s leave ye now. You try and thiuk if
if she’s paralized; I dunno but what she
there aint some body we can git ter come
stands there yit—I don't care a snap if not nn -u-lf at all. I mane, it’s not your- and stay with ye a spell.”
/■-If al all.”
she does.
He picked nt’lhe bed-clow and colored
“
O
yes,
it
is.
”
says
1.
“
it
’
s
mytclf.
but
But that w'a'nt a circumstance to what
it aim yourself ” So sayin’ I opened the up; and finally I managed to make out
I come teu another time.
on ’em both that there was a girl he was
Minty and I went one afternoon to a door, and he went out in a hurry.
this was only one of ouito a num­ goin’ ter marry, and slic’d be glad to
concert to the Music Hall. We thought berAnd
o’ experiences we went through, and come, but she didn't even know he was
it would rest us and do us good, and
sick yet.
anybody'd think that I wouldn’t be such all for nothin’. No great wonder I had • So the little feller anil I, we went away
a tool as to look for a coal man there; the monomanicr. was it? It was a mercy together, and we hunted up the girl and
but I sot through the fust half &lt;»’the con­ that Minty didn't ge&lt; it fastened on to her mother. Thf girl’s nanu*w:ix Berher, too. * I guuss she did come dretful
cert—lhe music w’a’nt very interestin'
lindy, and they promised to go and take
ter me—too high-toned. I ’spose." I don’t nigh it.
But there’s an end 'o some kind to all care on him. and I paid 'em some in ad­
like tliis belter skelter music; I like
vance, and fixed things all right, and
somethin’ with n tune to it. if its no more tilings; and there’s an end ter this story,
went home to Minty.
than “Yankv Doodle.” Wall, as I was as you’ll see. if you wait till I git
OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE
Minty was wonderful excited over it.
a' sayin’, 1 didn't feel interested in the through.
One morning Minty came to n&lt;e after “Our ‘free lunch' was a success arter
music, and so F got tar thinkin’ and
breakfust, and says she. ••Aunt Ruth. all!” says she; and we went to bed that
wonderin’ about my coal man; when all
Jack is goin' ter be away few days, and night two happy women, if we was tuck­
to once a man right in front on us had a
y«*i nnd me'11 give a party; a coal man's ered out.
little coughin’ spell, and turned his head
Wall, the rest is soon told. We kep
“We’ll advertise in
round soil could see his face; I grabbed parly,” says she.
every way we can for two days, and on an eye on Jim Rasher, and arter a while
Mint)*’8 arm.
Jack give him a place in his own store,
“Minty!’ I whispered, “there’s my Thursday we’ll hold tiie rcecpshun in
our basement.
We'll have lemonaid and aunty took Berlindy into the house
man—the ref’
as a servant.
WETIAVE MADE A FEW WITH
She looked where I pin ted, and says and donuts and sandwldges enough for
When they waa married, we helped ter
all the coal men in town. What c’v yon
she: "Aunt Ruth, you’re crazy! that
fit ’em out, and among other tilings, I
think
on'!?*
says
she.
man is a gentleman; be looks like a
I hild my broth’s much as a minit, I giv Jim the twenty-dollar gold piece and
Beacon Street swell! Do be quiet!’ ’ says
the man's message along of it.
was so struck with the idea.
* ■
she.
••Minty, it’s jest tho thing!” sayk I.
He looked more stupid nnd. akunned
“ I can't help that,” says I. •• He’s the
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING .
than I ever sec him afore. But his girl—
feller I rid on the coal cart with, or less "You are a genius.”
So we set right about it. It was awful Berlindy1—she swallered it all, and more,
he’s a twin.” says I; •• and Pm goin’ ter
too;
for
she
loosed
up
her
bead,
and
says
hoi
weather,
and
it
stood
to
reason
that
s]&gt;eak to him after this show is over,
uo hard workin’ coal man would miss a she:
sure’s my name is RuthT’
“I should like ter see tlie man that can
“ How’ foolish!” says Minty. ‘ 'Tain’t chance o' gtftiif a good lunch and a cool
very likely that coal men make a bizness drink o’ lemonniu, free, for nothin'. come up to Janies in good looks, if he is
We believe the
is destined to come
o' washin5 up and puttin' on their white ••That must fetch him," thinks I, and I a uiillingnair!" says sue.
Minty and Jack both say that my into general use.
Call and see them.
kidfjlovr j, and goin’ to concerts right ia felt eneoum^ed.
monomanier brought us all some good.
The
advertisement
run
this
way:
the middle o’ the day,”
“Free lunch to Coal Men! At No. 35 But I don’t never want another ope; and
But there I sot and looked at him: and
Clay Street (basement), from eleven a. in the future, I intend ter pay all my
the more I looked the more sartin I grew in. ’to one o'clock. Come one, Come bills 03 I go.—Oodcy't Lady's Book.
that he was tbe very man. Ever feature
all!"
of his face looked natural.
I asked Minty what she r posed the
Female Physicians in New York.
“Who knows but that he’s had a for­ neighbors would think, when they see
Hastings, Micb., Sept. 15th, 1881.
tune left to him,” raj’s I ter mvself. the doin’s.
There are ten properly matriculated
“Stranger things have happened.’1
She said she didn't care what they lady physicians here, who make, on an
So whejTtKb concert was over, I jest
thought; but they’d probably think we average, an income of $4,000 a year.
pushed my way along side on him, and
was exsen trick, and took that way o’ Ono of the best, however, is Dr.. Jacobi,
laid mv hantLon his arm.
doin’ good. It was fashionable ter be w*jo is in professional as well as matri­
“Excuse me, sir,” says I, all of a exsentrick.
'
monial partnership with her busband,
tremble, “but ain’t you tbe coal man
Wall, when the time come, it was nnd lias a Immc that almost deserves to
that kerned me to the depot one day
well worth all our trouble, jcs| ter see be called a mansion in the richness of its
’ bout Christmas time last year?”
’em; and if it hadn’t a’ben for mv mon- furnishing and appointments. She is a
The man drew back a little, and omanier, we sh’d had lots o' fun out Putnam, and a direct descendant of the
looked at me serious and inquiring. I
stanch old Israel, of revolutionary fame.
was Aw-ful scairt, but he didn't speak,
There w^t a line o’ coal carts standin’ Mrs. Jacobi is not what is called a
and I’b bound I’d make him. So I fol­ up and down our streets as far as you ••woman's rights woman," but she thinks
lows on, and says I:
could see, both ways, and them - fellers many of their cherished doctrines would
“Mebby you’ve had a fortune left ye— kep’ a pilin’ inter that basement as biri- come to pass if they would first bend
it looks like it—and if so. I’m glad on’t; ness-like as you please, as of, for all the their energies on a jxjnt to which they
but ye •needn’t bo ashamed ter remem­ world, it was an everyday thing to ’em; give comparatively little attention, that
ber doin’ a kind act, and I want ter thank and they scrambled for the vittles, and of gaining the same educational advan­
ye and relieve my mind all the same, if drank whole tube-full o’ lemonaid, as if tages for women as are provided for
ye don't need my money,” rays I.
it did ’em good. I guess it did. We men.
We was half'way out by this time,
Of course there are countless other
didn’t worry none about that.
;
and he seemed ter have his mind made
Wall the time passed, and it was women physicians In New York, but I
up about me; for he turned 'o me, and be
S&gt;in’ on two o’clock, and among all have limited myself to those of the regu­
saya,'very serious nnd respectful:
lar
school, and those whose education.exera smutty-faced fellers, I hadn’t aecn
“Madam, you are laborin’ under a
one that looked at all like my coal man. perience and talents have been recog­
miaappre.berndon; but I beg you to take
I had on my best esliker dress, and I’d nized by the moot eminent physicians W
this, and when you find the honest coal
spited it long ago—they slop’t the lem­ the opposite sex.
man that does me the honor to resemble
Obe wonders why women liavo not
meso close, will you give it
him for onaid around so; and Minty she'd spiled evinced
a more decided liking for the
ber’n, too; but we didn't care for that,
me?”
we was so disappointed. 1 was almost profession of dentistry, whieh offers fewer
a cryin’, but 1 kep’ round among 'em obstacles in the way of preparation and
waitin’ on ’em, kinder mekanikle, when popular prejudice than that of medicine.
all to one*; an uproar was riz. loud The leaning dentist of Buuia is an
his head to me, aa if I’d hen the queen,
laughin' and talkin’ and Jokin’ back and American woman, living in St. Petersand walked on;
forth about somethin’ nr 'nuther we
I looked al the money and wondered
couldn't make out what; but tiually we
whether or no I wa&lt; awake or dreamin’.
And Minty, she ketched hold o’ me and diqkivured the cause on’t.
They was all settin’ on to one little fd- this country tii.-U it Is difficult to find out
hauled me away and down tho stairs.
anything about them, *^hoae in this city
are motsti
’ J “
v"'~
Don’t buy until you see our Goods and get our pricee,
their h

S'.

Found only at C. L
Glasgow's
Big Hardware Store
SAP BUCKETS,

Where you can sate
ten per cent
by purchasing yonr

SAP PANS, EVAPORATORS

CUTTERS AND BOBS AT COST!!

•tat* the i^-ranW ripenJnjr crop*.
.

They »«ng their ribald ««u».
White bhhlrn evils darted forth
wm

Bodanrtodcl

Among her pl-a*ant aumwi er fie
No pMceful bat vest brought.

Witata 8 bortlie land.
And then returned rejoicing;
But be. tbe nation*' fate.

HASTINGS AND JACKSON LUMBER WAGONS

C. L. GLASGOW.

। retained
Bcfora tab goideb-ekjnl
lode forth Commander Mortler:

netr blazliMT boo&gt;M and lands.**
Then forward stepped tbe pastor:
Hla cyea were brixbt as flame:
“If any man la ab&lt;»t. aboot mo!
Mine ia Uw suilt and abame.

1 gent them to tbe BwedUb shorts;
Twas 1 urged on the fray.
“Hear me. O sire, bow innocent
Th£sc people surely are;
I pray tbeo burn my guilty rrxif.
But all these others spare."

Tho stern Commander Mortlcr
Heard what tho pastor said.
Oue moment stood irresolute.
And putting spurs to flank, they roda
Out from the wondering town:
And u they passed, tho word wu givou
•These fisher-hut* burn d. . n!”
A few poor sheds where no man dwelt I
No blood that day wn« spilled.
And thus Commander Mort let
The Emperor's law fulfilled.

I)&lt;tn t« tbeir iflory now;
But t Irtuu ever wakeful ablucs;
Tbu pastor In bls flowing gown.
Before the armed host.
Joyfully giving life anil homo
If be may eave the tort:
Deep In the German father-land
Till rooted memory grow*.
And safe within the cbildreu's heart
Tbe living picture glows.
—Annie Fields, in Harper’s Afapazino.
AUNT RUTH FINDS THE COAL MAN.
You knew, I s'pose, that Jack’s folks
had moved to Boston? Yes; and soon’s
they got kinder settled down. Minty
wrote me a letter urgin’ me to come
down right off, nnd stay with ’em a good
long spell.
. They’d be glad ter have me make it
my homc^vith erp, you know, but some­
how. 1 can't seem ter make up my mind
to settle down in any one stiddy place—
I s’pose that's alwcrs the way with widders nnd old- maids—generally kinder
onea«y, ain’t they?
.
But't any rate. 1 looked on that invite
of Minty’s as a regular providence; and
I fairly jumped out o’ my chair when 1
read it; and says I at once, “I’llgo—it’s
just the thing!’'’
You remember I told ye about my
scrape with that coal man,last Christmas,
when I was to Boston—bow I made him
take me to the depot;' and then hadn’t a
cent o’ money to pay him, artcr prom­
isin’ to reward him liberal, too!
•
I didn't mean no harmmore'na baby;
but I know Ac thought 1 was a swindlin’,
lyin’ female woman, goin’ round loose,
a giftin’ my livin’ bv workiu’ onto folks’
feelings, and stealin’ rides outer coal
men. He hadn't no means o’ knowin’
the truth o' the matter, ye see. and it
did look bad—it looked against me,
that’s, a fact
It would a ben easy enough ter sot the
matter right if I’d only remembered the
feller's address he gin me the last min­
.
utc when I took the cars; but I'd gin up
’ tryin’ to do that long ago—’twant no
kind o’ use.
So that’s how ’twas when I got Minty’s
letter. Pd turned the matter over in'
Wi niy mind a good deal, and I’d come to the
decision that sometime; and pooty soon,
too, that cool man and me would have a
reckonin’ together.
And now, here was a good chance to
go and hunt him up. So I got myself
ready’s quick's I could, and went along.
Mmty met mo to tbe depot, and tho
fust words she said was:
“Aunt Ruth! what under the canopy
Is the matter with ye? You look as if
£ou’d had a fit of sickness! Have ye

z-

“No, Minty, I hain’t” says I. “but
there’s.other troubles in this world as
wearin’m sickness.”
“For pity’s sake,” says she; “what
do you mean?” And then I told her.
“It’s that coal man that’s wearin’ me
away to a shadder, and nothin’ else,”
saju I. “It’s quiet up home, ye know,
and likely enough my mind’s dwelt on
the subject more’n what’s reasonable
day—about how I cheated that poor fel­
ler. And now I’ve come down to Bos­
ton, bad Tm goin’ to find him and hev
a settlement. wi.h him. if it costs fifty
dollars ?' says I; “and you’ve getter
promise to help me, too, or else i'll go

p, ’ aays sue, " we II have,
noued conscience o’ yourn
in no time. The c.nl man
nd hind aide afore to do it,

TRUTH IS MIGHTY!

THE LARGEST STOCK OF GROCERIES
Glassware
reneh

ENGLISH DECORATED CHINA

C. W. SMITH

50
FOR SALE!
THREE INCH TIRE

BETTE R THAN COMMON TIRE
Three inch Tire

Sold by C. L. Glasgow, Nashville, Mich.

BENTLEY BROS. &amp;, WILKINS-

We are Ready
New Furniture
z A-rriving Daily

Parlor Suits, Bedroom Suits, Gents’ Easy Chairs,
Ladies’ Rockers, Camp Chairs, Fine
Couches, Extension Tables, Center
Tables, What-nots, PictyreFfames,
Bureaus, and in fact Everything
Else Needed to Furnish a House.

UNDERTAKING a Specialty

Mi

I

�One

F. TEXNET * (*., Pr^s.

i the driver end tbe writer.

On

a teamster stuck in a rut with a kmd of
coals from a neighboring hillside, where
To Advertisers:
ft crops out in a solid wall of black richness. Tbe teamster'hw worked his
mule* for some time in useless efforts to
extricate his wagon. The wheels on one
•ids were sunk to the hubs in the yielding sandy ground, while tbe coal was
badly canted, The road was so narrow
whole tbe mishap occurred that it was
peruhe nn?8i liberal ad. rates.
neceasaiy for the coal wagon to pass us
before we could proceed on our journey.
Out- driver, Frank, took in the situa• mo* • g.00
■~8J0 _H-a? tion, and handing the reins of his four
12.0° _«.oo grays to the writer, said: ‘‘I'll try to
get him out of that hole.”
Swinging his six feet of bone, muscle
and well-hardened flesh to the ground
with but one touch on tbe wheel, in an
instant he was at the head of the leading
tion and eight cent* for each subsequent iijser- pair uf mules, speaking kindly while arranging the harness. He did the same
fl°D‘
OBNO STRONG,
Editor and Proprietor. to the wheelers, and then, gathering the
lines carefully in his hands, took the
teamster's scat and straightened out tho
double team to the apparent limit of its
strength. It was of no avail; the mules
barely twisted the front wheels an inch
or so, and that was all. Loaning over
villageofficers
tho team, tho stage driver then curled
his whip over the leaders’ head, chirped
cheerfully into the ears of the wheelers,
started them in unison, and then fairly
whooped them out of tho ruL
When Frank hod regained his seat I
asked him if he had often been delayed
SaritUM.
by teams stuck with their loads.
••O, yes,” he replied; 4‘that little
APTIST CHURCH. Rev. E. B Moody PMlor
Services eveijr Bunday »t 1030 a. m., Hahtath affair was nothing.- Sometimes wo have
_ __ &lt;
..._ _
to cut out a new road to get around- ob­
structions. Tremendous loads have been
drawn over these mountains.
Your
KtltODnrr EVACOFAL CHVnCH-A. 1&gt;. Saw
Commodore Webb; of New York, for in­
ro«, Pulor. Service* •v«ry8*bb*tb *t
stance, built a smelter up hero, which we
will pass this afternoon. The machinery
was all drawn, nearly or quite 150 miles,
VY LODGE NO. 37, K. of P., meet* at it* by oxen, to its present height of 11,000
Guile HsU. Nashville, Michigan, every
Friday evening, foe tbc encouragement and feet One piece weighed 8,000 pounds.
support of all worth?, true, steadfast and hon­ It took twelve yoke of oxen about three
orable Brother Knights.
months to drag if from the car to Ruby
L. E. Lkktz, K. IL 8. Onso 8tbox&lt;i,C. C. Camp. The freight on the machinery in
its last stage was more than five cents a
pound.’’
fftiBrcllKBCOUjl €■«.
' *Ar* you fond of driving?”
‘•Ye*; I. love to be around horses.”
H. YOUNG. M. D. Office cast side ot
4'You must have had some adven­
■ Main St-, Nashville. Office hours from
tures?”
7 toD.a. tn.', and 4 to 7 p. m.
•*A few,” replied Frank, quictlv.
“Where did you first begin to drive?”
IL GRISWOLD. M. D., —— ^U*lc
• Physician and Surgeon. Office and re»••In the East. I came from Lockport,
Hence opposite tba Wolcott House. Prompt N. Y. I used to drive trotters. You ask
attention given to call* day or night.
Dan Mace if he remembers Frank En­
A- FOOTE PHYSICIAN &amp; SURGEON sign.”
Just then we passed an encampment
• Succaaor- to Dr. Wickham. Office and
residence at Dr. Wickham'* late office. by the side of a living stream from the
Prompt attention to call* night or day.
mountains.
••That is a Mormon outfit,” said Frank.
R. a W. GOUCHER, Electio Physician and
Burgeon, I* prepared to answer all call* , “You .can always tell them by the water
that may bo made for hl* rarrice*. Office andbarrels strapped to their wagons. The
reridenco opposite Roc'* meat market.
Mormons help construct the railroads.
TXTM. PARMENTER, M. D. Office over They are frugal and save- their money.
V V Hull’s Drug store, Vermontville, Mich. They adopted the water-barrel precau­
tion after once crossing tlie Forty-Mils
HAS. H. HRADY, Lawyer, 'Circuit Court Desert, between the Colorado river and
Commissioner, Real Estate and insurance
AgL Prompt attention given to all bu*lnea* the cascades. There is no water to drink
entrusted to my care. Conveyancing a special­ tbe entire distance. Before the over­
land railroad was bui(t, all the trails
ty. Office opposite Union House.
crossing it were lined with bleached
O' LIEBHAUSEK, Merrhan’. Tailor and dcal- bones of cattle and horses, and dotted
O. er In Ready Made Clothing. Bee mo with graves ef immigrants. In winter
before you purchase clothing. Fit* guar­
it was inviting death to cross this terrible
anteed.
________
waste.”
“Yoa must have had some cold rales.”
ISS M. JEFFREY, Practical Milliner, and
“Yes, I've been chilled to tho marrow
dialer In Millinery and Fancy Goods Dress on several occasions; once on the road
making, in all it* branches, done with neatness
and dispatch. Balearoom east Bide Main street, over the ground we are now traveling.
It was two winters ago. when the dis­
opposite Nkwb office.
coveries of these diggings began to make
RNO STRONG, plain and fancy Job Printer. a noise in the world. Men would undcrThe best facilities for doing work of any
printing office in Barry county, n'heu in need S&gt; any hardship to reach tho mouytains.
ne morning I had a stage load for Ruby
Camp. From signs in the air I made
up mv mind that before night a blizzard
TONAH B. RASEY, Express and Draymsa- would roll down with frost sharp enough
CJ Good- aud Baggage carried to any place in
to freeze whisky in your breast pocket.
the village.
I put on mi layers of clothing. First silk
IRAM B. DICKINSON, manufacturer rf underwear, then woolen, next buckskin,
sod dealer In Hard Wood Lumber. Build- a suit of woolen clothes, a thick ulster,
and finally a big bearskin coat that cov­
ered all up to my ears. I wore three pair
TAMES FLEMING, practical Jeweler and of socks, a pair of arctics, and high flan­
V Watch-maker. Clock*. Watd^s, Silver and nel-lined rubber boots over them. I
Plated Ware, Jewelry and Optical Good*. Rock­
ford Watcbe* a specialty. Repairing and Engrav- wound a flannel bandage around my
head and forehead, and pulled my fur
cap down to my eyebrows. A pair of
T RUBSELL h** money to loan, at low ra*** goggles protected my eyes, and a muffler,
JU. ca good farm security; 1*711101 pal and in­ which I managed to breathe through,
terest payable at the Hastings National Bank.
Office l»t door south of Spaulding's, Hiatlngs. covered my mouth, cheek* and nose.
-Heavy fur gloves, encased in rubber mit­
tens, protected my hands. One of the
Charlotte, wHl visit Naahvflls every 80 members of the stage company had to go
with a choice Uns of piece good*, and will
up on business, and he started off with
me kt the seat you occupy. He was
ACOB OSMUN, Liveryman, barn nesrfWol- pretty well bundled up, and said he
eott Houk- First das* turnout* nt reason­ didn’t want any of the men to ride where
able rate*. Special rates to commercial men.
Funeral and wedlng parties furnished with car he wouldn't go.
“Before wepassed Castle Mountain the
rlages on short notice.
blizzard was on us. It came shrieking
over the bare rocks and through the
Retawing stunted trees louder than If a million
Utes were swooping down after our
scalps. It whistled around tbe coacb and
over the horses, fairly raising the harness
pHAK W. DEMARAY, Dealer tn Watches, from their backs. Icicles formed fringes
V Clock*, fin* Jewelry and Mverware. Being
from their mouths, and their sides were
white with glistening frost. They low­
ered their beads to the storm and plunged
bravely on with their load. ‘Are yoa
cold, Frank?’ inquired the boss, with
chattering teeth, ’Warm as toast,’ says
I. The point of my nose was tbc only
sensitive thing about me; that tingled as
if aroal of fire had come in contact with
it. rretty soon we came to a bend around
IMHTIIXK, •
MICH.
the mountain, where we had a little sbclPRICK: »L», IF PAID IN ADVANCE

Bashville girtrtonj.
.

B

M

I

W

W
L

D

M

O

J

P *. BUSH.

BOOT AND SHOE MAKER,
OIAX»TT HOUSE,
Nft*hvllle RXlohfwran.
A. S. Foote, Proprietor.

tMU*r-»e-

another half hour.’ Then turning to the
landlord the boM inquired: • What time
did the coach from the other aide getinF
“4 The coach isn’t in st all yet.’ ”»iT
hind time,’ said the boss
watch. * Some accident — — «nea:TUgive fifty dollars to any driver who
■
will
go out and help them in.’
• “ *Who's driving?" I inquired.
‘“Buffalo Hank,” growled a lazy
:kicker, who was roasting himself near
i
the
stove.
“ Hank was n pard of mine, stranger.”
।
•aid
Frank to me. “ So in less ibitn ten
iminutes I was on the rotnl with a good
team of horses and a strong covered
•wagon. 1 came up to tho stage three
imiles from tbe station, at the top of the
range. 4 My Gori. Hank, why don’t you
'drive in?" I shouted.
44 4 1 can’t,’ be answered,huskily. *My
ihands are frozen, and the pnssengcra are
;paralyzed with ould. If I should start
the team down the range I couldn’t
'check or guide them, and every moth­
।er’s son inside would be killed, as well
ins myself,’
44 In two minutes I hsd my team fast­
,ened to tlie back of tho stage, and Hank
inside
the wagon with his hands in snow.
:
1Then I mounted tho box and brought in
the passengers.”—New York Sun.

ho* the weakness to assort that science
is • nuisance, book learning a fraud, and
newspapers bpt an invention of the
I M oM boy ” to cheat farmersoulof a lit| tie money. When yoa know he baa
never taken a newspaper, never attends
church, don’t know hpw to read or
write, your astonishment ceases, and
yoc pity the poor man from the bottom
of your heart- Such men as this believe
It moon farming, butchering by the
moon, iu charms, and evil spirits only a
little les* powerful than our Creator.
They are full of the strangest notions,

headed men could tell ruck *wect He* and be so
deceiving.
’

OH, WHAT A COUGH !
Will you heed, the warning.' The signal pef
hap* of the *urt approach of that more terribL
disease couaumptton. Ask yourself if you can
afford for tbe sake of raving M cU to run tbe
—.'.V &lt; Ar,
l« ' W— L..«

Nashville

co, Hair. Pine Lumber, Lath
more tb*u a million bottle* wrre M&gt;hi last year.
It relieve* Croup, and wiMXtpLugeougli, at once
and Shingles,
Mother* do not be without it. For lime back,
aide or chest use Shiloh’* Porous Plasters. AT THE LOWEST LIVING PR1CE8.
Bold bv F. T. Boise.
DYSPEPSIA &amp; LIVER COMPLAINT.
J^fEW EI-KVATOR.
it not worth tlie small price of 73 cent* to
. Is youraef
free
ofx-very symptom ottboae distres­
,sing complainto, if you think so call at our
,
store
ami get a bottle of Shiloh’s Vitajiser,
&lt;every bottle ha* u printed guarantee on it, use
accordiugly
and if it does you no good It will
.
I—rill Withe—1
■
■
cost
you
nothing. Bold by F. T. Boise.
■
1
We have a speedy and positive cure for HIGHEST?. 34ARKET
.Catarrah.
Diphtheria. Conker mouth and
---- For all kind* of----.
Head Ache, in SHILOH'8 CATARRH REM­
:
EDY,
A-n**al Injector free with each bottle.
Use
it if you (levin- health and sweet breath.
;
Price 50 cent*. Bold by F. T. Bobe.

make no jmpremion on them, because
they do not understand tho reasoning!
tliat prove the truth of the propositionThey are the next door
to barbarism, and all that sarea
them is their living in the midst of
education and scientific minds, and ab•orb, aa it were, the dews of example,
and almost unconsciously practice the
precepts of civilisation. The fanner is
instructed by science that the continual
raising of one kind of grain from the
same picco of ground takes from it
the peculiar elements necessary to the fishmonger, “without great risk of getting into
■
growth of the grain, and so the qaanti- Ihot water."
ty raised per acre diminishes until the
By Universal Accord,
crop no longer pays for raising. Sci­
ence points out what special elements Aykr’8 Cathartic Pills are the best
Chinese Pirates.
have been used, and as science con of all purgatives for fitmlly use. They
tell the particular kinds of manure re­ are the product of long, laborious, and
The towns contain a due amount of quired to supply the loss there need be
successful chemical Investigation, and
tame cheata, but the bold, hectoring no loss of time experimenting, or vain­
their extensive use, by physicians- lu
highwayman, the truculent sea robber, ly trying to raise the same crop on tho
their practice, and by all civilized na­
must be sought elsewhere. All along .exhausted soil. Silica1 and limo for
tions, proves them the best and most
the Blue and Yellow River tiro found re­ wheat, ammoniacal and nitrogenous
tail buccaneers, who hawk at a trifling manures for corn, and so on. but as a effectual purgative Pill that medical
science can devise. Being purely veg­
quarry, and fatten on slender profits. general thing barnyard manure, es­
etable no harm can arise from fchclr
These poor rogues do not aspire to a ship pecially for corn and grass, is sufficient,
of their own; they come patidling out of and will increase tho com crop from use, and being sugar-coated, theysajr
muddy creeks in the smallest of sam­ fifteen to twenty-five or thirty bushels pleasant to take. In intrinsic vniuc
and curative powers no other Pills
pans, ill-Armed, ill-clad, but plentifully to the acre, while' the meadow is cor­
can be compared with them; «nd every
smeared 'with fish-oil.
If confronted respondingly benefited. Manure in any
person, knowing their virtues will
they fly, if grappled by the crews of tlie quantity is never wasted on corn employ them, when needed. They
fourth-class junks, which they select as ground, but for an oat crop on our keep the system In perfect order, and
prizes, they slip like so many eels prairio soil it will almost certainly
maintain In health}- action the wholethrough the hands that grasp them, and cause such rank growth as to cAusc it machinery of life. Mild, searching and
their swimming makes amends for tneir to lodge and spoil one-half of the crop.
effectual, they are especially adapted
fax courage. §eldom any ven--sinister
Ornithology teaches us that thrushes to the. needs of the digestive apparatus,
results follow one of these attacks. If and many other birds arc great lovers derangements of which they prevent
They are
tlie fresh-water pirates prove victorious of worms and caterpillars, and tliat nnd cure, if timely taken.
they ore mild conquerors, and only loo I each bird makes away with on hundred or the best nnd safest physic to employ
for children and weakened constitu­
eager to be on shore again with their inorfi of them everyday as long os they
booty of rice and corn, stray garments, abound, and thus are the means of sav­ tions. where a mild but effectual
odd fragments of chain, bits of copper ing fruit and Howers for our use. Tho cathartic is required.
For sale by all drtiggista.
and brass hastily ripped from the poop unscientific and ignorant, instead of
and cabins, and perhaps tlie glorious I' encouraging the birds to stay and eat
Virtue dwells at the head of a river, to which
trophy of a few rattling strings of cash. II what fruit they want, load their old we can not get but by. rowing against the
The dollars and silver bars are generally shot guns and with malice aforethought stream.
too well hidden to be detected by such murder the innocents. We sec in this
NO. SIR!
hurried scarehens; food, rather than for­ case that science protects while igno­
A Scotch minister once raid no woman could
tune, is the object of the foray; and. ex­ rance kills. Zoology teaches us what
cept in rare cases of remarkable tempta­ are our enemies, and experiments and bear pain well a* a man. That Is not so. The
tion. no life is attempted and no torture experience [joints out what cases the fact l;i generally the other way. Mrs. Edward
resorted to. With these amphibious, shot gun, traps or poison is best adapted Meyer*. of Rondout, N- Y. submitted to the op­
petty larceny rogues the magistrates I to rid us ot tlie pests. Geology un­ eration of the removal ot her hand by amputa­
deaf mildly, "according to the traditions earths the fossil remains of extinct ani­ tion, without taking either, or moving a iuusof Chinese justice.
Three hundred mals in regions whdro now no cognate clc, dr uttering a groan. Dr. Kennedy, also of
strokes of the bamboo may be endured species exist, and the leaves ot plants Rondout, x. Y.,.who performed the operation,
by the human frame. Four sleepless have left their everlasting impression raid ho never saw such brnilfin. The lady’s
w’eeks in the “cangue,” or bamboo pil­ upon stone, and the different forma­
dUcasewas Erysipelas, and afterward the doc­
lory. may fail to madden a stolid, unim­ tions of earth and rocks which have
tor gave his Favorite Remedy’ to cleanse lhe
aginable coolie. A few minor tortures been elevated by '-olcanic power bring
need only be added to these two first- together links of prehistoric history blood- Mra Myers t* now well and strung.
named inflictions, and the culprit is used, which makes our earth venerable with
Louisrille would would like to have Oscar
to have been most tenderly dealt with. age. say a hundred thousand years, Wilde for Police Justice. HL* Suntywry senPilferers in a fair or tire streets of a । since &amp;&gt;d set it in its place among the teneca would become famous.
town are considered as still more venial | innumerable host that lights up tho
CAST-IRON FELLOWS,
offenders. A rigorous bastinado and a I blue vault above ns. Geology shows
week of tlie pillory Is tlie law’s award us how water, air and chemical changes
Men of endurance have bealthy.kidneys and
in such trivial eases. Petty assaults are form tho soil which is arich inheritance liver. No aches in the back, n&lt;» pile* or con.
as leniently disposed of. but-fire-raising from our Father in Heaven. Mineral­ stipation. The cure of these diseases &lt;ls Kid­
Wort. This.great remedy keep* up the
is a sin of the deepest dye; ami the mali­ ogy and metallurgy have unearthed the ney
tone of tlie whole body by enabling the liver,
cious piercing of n neighbor’s dyke, to precious metals and converted them to towel* and kidney* to perform their functions
let in n devastating flood, is punished the uses of man. The rich vintage of perfectly. Both the liquid and dry arc sold by
with extreme rigor. Murder and treason­ Europe is drank from gold and silver
able practices, wholesale piracy and goblets in the mansions of the rich—
armed brigandage, all cry aloud for our moyey is made of them, and orna­ • Shake, Mr. Vcnnor' You .said cold, and she
whirled. V ou said «now and she *ue«cddeath, more or less slow nnd painful, ments of great value set with precious
and parricide evokes tbe sternest chas­ stoz.es grace the arms, ears and lin­
THE HIGHE^r RANK.
tisement of the Chinese, as it once did gers of belles and mothcra whoso
from harpties* material*, and adapted
frivolity leads to ornament rather to Mode
of tbe Roman law.
the needs of fading *i»d falling hair, Parker*
than usefulness.
But tho science lla.r Balsam hn* taken the highest rank is an
of entomology, which embraces the elegant aud reliable lyslr restorative.
President Arthur’s Carriage.
whole list of Insects injurious to vogelaIt has been n whole month since a new
blooranimal life,isof vast importance to
Ever since tlie days of ,4the Father of the farmer: for, unless he understands “crank” put In an appearance.
his Country” people, particularly the ft in part, he cannot always discrimin­
GRATEFUL TO INVALIDS.
residents of the Capital, have taken a ate between his enemies and friends;
lively interest in lhe rtyle of equipage in ajid hence, to act Aright under all cir­
Flowstone* Cologne is grateful to invalid*,
which the various Presidents of the cumstances he wants to know their because ft is refreshing without the sickening
United State* were accustomed to ap­ individual history, habits, and their effect of most perfume*.
pear in public. President Arthur has changes from larva to pupa and from
Never cry over spilled milk, says the Louis
not been without a due share of interest pupa to the perfect insect—the time vlllc CourierJournal; the milkman ha* al­
of this kind. Indeed, for various rea­ they remain in their different states. ready wasted enough water on it.
sons, there has been more tlian the usual We want to know their enemies, and tho
SKINNY MEN. ~
curiosity to know whether his “turnout” best method of producing them in num­
woufd be shabby or “loud.”
Tills bers suffioient to annihilate the enemy, ^Wells' Health Rencwer. Absolute cure for
debility and weakness of the genera­
curiosity may now be put at rest or at least render them comparatively nervous
tive function*. «1. al drugght*. Mich. Depot
President Arthur’s carriage and horses harmless by reduction of their numbers. JAMES E. DAVIS A CO., Detroit, Mich.
are in Washington. * The establishment The quail eats millions of chinch bugs,
IIPORTAST TO TRAVELERS,
is in everyway arich and handsome one; and therefore should be fed and raised
Special inducement* arc offered yoa by tbe
indeed, it is no exaggeration^ to say that in numerous flocks, protected by
it is the finest whicn has ever appeared stringent laws. The lady bag destroys Burlington Route, It will payrou to read their
to be found elsewhere tn this
in the streets of the Capital. At the large quantities of the Colorado bee­ advertisement*
issue.
t
same time, however, all its appointments tle's eggs and young larva; and young
are subdued, modest, and in the best ducks in sufficient numbers will clean
of taste. The camage is • landau of out a potato patch in a few days. The
novel design, painted a dark, mellow science of entomology as applied to the
green, relieved with enough picking out interests of the farmer is yet in its in­
m red to show the outline without being fancy, and we believe its thorough
conspicuous. The trimmings are of knowledge is destined to work remark­
morocco and cloth, the cushions and able changes in the treatment of animal
doors being faced with heavy lace. The dlseasca Let the boys and girls too,
harness has been made in keeping with begin its study now, and their minds
the carriage, and is heavily mounted will have healthful and useful employ­
with plain silver. The dress blanket* ment for life.—Oor. Western IturaL
are of heavy dark-green kersey, and the
—Ambrosia Cake.—Pour a pint of
coachman's lap-rol&gt;e of rreen English
box-cloth. These arc oil ornamented boiled custard, hot, over one pound of
with the President's monogram. The nice sponge-cake sliced in a shallow
lap-robe for the inside of the carriage is dish; when cold, take two smooth
Labradore otter, beautifully lined with molds or forms holding about one pint
dark green, and having tlie monogram each; put into each alayerof the cake,
“C. A. A.” worked in silk. The horses, then a sprinkling of almonds blanched
two in number, are magnificent animals and sliced (ot which you must have two
—mahogany bays with black points and ounces), and bits of preserved fruit,
without a white spot anywhere. They then another layer of cake, almonds
Admiufatrator’s Male.
and fruit till the molds are full; then
»e matter of the eetateof
'• ‘Pall up a minute, Frank,’ said ths are five years old, sixteen hands high, cover with the cake. . Let it stand on
NATHAN WEARS. deceased.
have fine flowing manes and tails, and
ico
an
hour,
then
turn
from
tlie
molds
re.’ Every man inside was stamping are half brothers. They are matched and servo. You may use a variety of
i feet. A fearful howl arose when the almost to a hair, were raised by the nuts and fruit; the latter must be rich
proprietor opened the door and dove in same man. and have always been driven and well drained from the sirup­
among the half-frozen, cramped-up trav­ together. Their heads and neck? are par­
elers. Between the roaring gusts 1 heard ticularly fine, and, though ven- stylish
—Two prisoners were charged in a
the lively tattoo kept up until we began and showy, they are prompt, firm,’and London police court with exchanging
resolute, yet very kind and gentle. sentences of imprisonment by each an­ Ue'ortayjrtidt^ p tl
They can be driven on an easy rein, swering to the other’s name. This is
without check or martingale. They were not an unoommoii thing in India, where
the President’s persona! selection, a« was1 a native jailer had been known to aliow
also the carriage, and reflect no little’ a prisoner to go out to get married and
credit upon his judgment as a horseman.

E

! toy awn now set ms all rigi

Grain anti Produce,

FOWLER &amp; TNGERSON
JPKIC1

GRAIN AND PRODUCE.
A lull stock of

LUMBER, LATH, &amp;C,
Constantly on fl and.

JJENRY ROE, Pbofkibtob

MEAT MARKET.
Fresh and Salt Meats,

Smoked Hams and’SIioiilders,
IN THEIR SEASON,

Lard, by tlie lb. or barrel,
&lt;fcc., tic.1
, de.
LV The Highest Market Price paid
for Hides, Pelts, &amp;c.
Fresh Goods, Full Weights and
Satisfaction Guaranteed-

II EX BY ROE.
JOSEPH COLE,

MEAT MARKET!
Fresh, Salt and Smoked

Live anti Let Live.
pi KMTI RE DEPOT.

J. LENTZ 4 SONS,
Manufacturers, and dealers in

'

FURIN ITUKE!
In Every Style &amp; Variety
For the fall trade, oui

STOCK IS COMPLETE,
And will be sold bo 1o% that"

PRICES WILL ASTOBISISH YOB.
8WE ALSO CARRY

UNDERTAKERS’ GOODS,
And are prepared to give our time and atten
tion to everythlDg*pertaiuing to tbc
landertaktogfUne.
’

J. LENTZ &amp; SONS.

THE D. &amp; H. CANALS
'

■hnltlir location of

*

Dr. David Kennedy
Proprietor of tbe new nv-Jlcin* new betng UrtK
ducnilo Ohio and Nlet»w»n. The name of lb.
•nedielto U I‘-, Darid Kennedy’*

FAVORITE REMEDY,
and the prrre i* ONLY ONE I*OLLAR
a bottle

THE PUBLIC ARE GAUTIOHEBI

Dr. Dai

�BOOTS AND SHOES
President weretcld fn lhe Matiooal House of

by a landslide.

David McMinn, tba pay-

were injured.

New York just after midnight on the 27th.Five of those a ho started have made record*

YOU WILL FIND UNDER ONE ROOF IN BARRY COUNTY AND WE

INTEND TO MAKE
speriatore were President Arthur and hit

of tbe Supreme Court. Tbe Army and Navy

PRICES THAT WILL SECURE A LARGE SALE AT ONCE.

mlrala Ammon, Rogers and Rodger*. Several

favorite.

WE HAVE JUST OPENED

WJwEtbepSE

300 SUITS!

aald to have perished from absolute starva-

in a body. Tbe Vice-President took a seat
on the right of the presiding officer'* chairquite surrounded by water. Tbe water waa
IlfI y-three feel above low-water mark. »
Rcnt on the 25th to cover liabilities of S50X-

Cntted States
the controversies exisUng
--~-'ianr! Peru or Chill and Bolivia

•one officially i

rvcily with any such alleged contracts In
which Um) mediation aa aforesaid of the Uni ted

melon to tho widow of Major-

MlUtary Affnlrs the Senate bill retiring Gen­
eral Grant, but Mr. Springer objected.

official business, shall be transmitted
-•—n. Tb0 Committee rose
to the House. Anamend-

Domestic. •
Neb^ a new National Bahk,
called tbe Nebraska National Bank, was or­
ganized on the 23d, with a capital of &lt;250,0X1.
A CARTY of 835 Jewish refugees from Rus­
lis arrived ah Philadelphia on tbe 23d by tbe
steamship Dlmoi*.
Btbfhbx Bboadbbnt, once a leading lot­
tery agent in Maryland, recently threw him-

Brookfield, Mass, valued at &lt;40,000, was
burned on tbc 25th. A fireman named Will­
iam Aiken was seriously injured by a falling
brick.
A Chicago &amp; Alton freight-car, loaded
with brick, in which ten tramps bad secreted
themselves, waa ditched near Joliet on tbe
27th ult. Two men were killed and tbe other*
terribly wounded.
Becbxtakt Lincoln on tbe 27th ulL ordered
the dispatch of 100,000 rations from BL Louis
to the sufferers by overflowed river* in
Arkansas and Mississippi.
At Helena, Ark., the Miraiasippl River waa
still rising on the 27th ulL Railroads were
seriously damaged, and a further disastrous
rise was anticipated.
At New Orleans on the 27th ulL the first car
of through freight from Ban Francisco without
breaking bulk arrived. It waa fourteen and
a half days en route.
The Government Agent stationed at San
Carlos Agency has asked that the execution
of tbc three scouts, lately convicted of mur­
der, be postponed, because of tbc hostile atti­
tude of the Indians.
In San Francisco John Morony, a witness in
the Police Court, recently fatally abot D. J.
Murpby, a lawyer, because in reviewing Morony’s testimony he characterized him as an
Australian convict
lx BL Louis a few days ago a twelve-yearold boy fatally stabbed his comrade because be
teased him on account of hla inability to speak
English.
Tub Sunday Liquor law was quite success­
fully enforced in Brooklyn on tbe 26th ult.
The Attorney-General on the 27 th ulL advised
proceedings to cancel to the Government all
lands located with scrip stolen by parties to
tbe Missouri land frauds, in cases where the
present holders are believed to have been im­
plicated. Innocent owners will not be mo­
lested.
A rsxroirr train conveying a large amount
of sulphuric add broke in two jn«t before
reaching Lapeer, Mich., on the 27th ulL When
the cars came together an a down grade, fire
waa caused by the breaking of tbe bottles, and

oughly flooded.
Personal and Political.

ribly mangled.
The district overflowed In Mississippi on the
■33d was thirty miles wide by sixty long.
The boiler of a portable saw-mill at New
Carlisle, O., exploded a few days ago with
such force aa to kill five men and blow off the
Drnvem contains an estimated jnpulatton

• During the seven days ended on the 23d
■there were 128 business failures in tbe United
■States. They were distributed as follows:
■Middle States, 30; Eastern, 10; Southern, 35;
Western, 84; Pacific coast and Territories, 13;
New York City, 7.
Hobbs, Bbockminr &amp; Co.’s fllnt-glaiw
manufactory, at Wheeling, W. Va., one of lhe
largest tn the United States, was destroyed by

at &lt;40,000.
Ix Big Cottonwood Canyon, Utah, a few
days ago, a snow-slide buried a wood-chopper
and hi* wife and five children.

Deaver, OoL, for the murder of Montgomery

Iris stated that the Auditing Committee in
charge of the account* of tbe late President
Garfield’s illness have made tbe following al­
lowances: Bliss, 335,000; Agnew and Hamil­
ton, &lt;15,000 carb; Revburn and Boynton,
&lt;10,000 each, and Mr*. Edson, 35,000; Crump,
&lt;3.000.
.
Eleven of tbe twenty-two veterans of the
war of IBIS in New York were banqueted a
few nights ago by the Dahlgren Post of the
Grand Army.

vent gambling- In railroad stocks, grain, or
other commodities, imposing s fine of from
&lt;20 to &lt;500 or confinement la jail for six
months.
Thb Legislature of Michigan met in extra
bill as recommended by the State Tax Com-

to Congressional Districts and to devise meas­
ure* of relief for the fire sufferers.
leged “tar-route conspiracy to Washington
tor consultation.

Indicated a feverish condition of alia Ira in
neyviUe, Ky., confessed on hU death-bed that

the burning to death of Wiley Embry and six
children last rear.
A Helena (Ark.) telegram ot the iMth
state* that the Mfsslrelppl Elver was falling
■lowly, and tbe backwater was receding somceuffertng dong the St Francis

It ia held by the United States Circuit Court

Thu Dliuote legislature has been called to
Gbnbhai. D. 11. Rucker, recently nppolnt-

rant General Rufus Ingalls baa been apEx-Shxator Rosoor Conxltno waa on the
date Justice of Um United States Supreme
Court, and A. A Sargent, of California, for
United Stole* Minister to Germany.
The Republican leaders of Texas bavere-

White Brown (colored) suffered death at Pine

The MU which was passed by the Uaited

the late President Garfield.
Thb 26th day of April, the sixty-third an-

F-

Men’s, Boys’ and Children’s Clothing
THAT WERE BOUGHT CHEAP I CHEAP FOR CASH

Odd Fellow* In tbe United State*, is to be
observed by tbe order as a day. of thanksgiv­
ing.

AND WE INTEND TO SELL

Robbrt H- Pbutn, a bank President at Al­
bany, N. Y., and Minister to Japan under Presj
ident Lincoln, died a few days ago.
Bibhop Lt'nch died al Charleston on tbe
36th ulL, aged sixty-five year*.

G. A. TRUMAN &amp; SON

ForeVm.
All except two of the Nihilists on trial at
BL Petersburg on tbc 34th pleaded guilty.
It was resolved in the British House of
Lord* a few days since to appoint a commit­
tee to inquire into the working of the Land

Judoa Torrence, one of -the ablest law­
yer* of Montreal, decided on tbe 25th that a
Canada.
Tub death was announced on the 21th of
Victor Theodore Junod, the celebrated Swiss
physician and medical writer.
Tub recent elections for the Hawaiian As­
sembly Indicated the complete downfall of tbe
old missionary Influence in tbe Sandwich
Islands.
A cablegram of the 28th states that Aus­
trian troops had a battle lasting nine hours
with a force of one thousand insurgents, and
defeated them. Two Austrians were killed

By an explosion in a coal mins in Styria,
Austria, on tLo 25th, 150 persons were killed.
A Dublin cablegram of the 27th ulL states
that all tbe forms on' Dursey Island, thirtyfour in numt^r, had been sold for non-pay­
ment of renL Tbe Land League propose to
build bouses and support the tenants on the
island.
An armed party attacked a fanner'* bouse
in Feacle, County Clare, Ireland, on the 27th
ulL, shot the farmer in' the leg, stabbed his

Announcement is made tliat Turkey 14
mobilizing her armies, in view of taking a
part when the war between Russia and Aus­
tria over the Balkan provinces takes place.
An informer named Bailey, who disclosed
tbe situation of a Fenian armory, has been
shot dead in the streets of Dublin.

LATER NEWS.
Tn tbe pedestrian match at New York on
the 27th ult. Rowell made 100 miles in 13
hours, 28 minutes and 56 seconds—the best
The dry-goods house of E. Malley, at New
Haven, Conn., in which tbe Malley boys, son
and nephew of the proprietor, were employed
at tbe time of Jjie death of Jennie Cramer, for
whose murder they ore about to be tried, was
destroyed by fire on the morning of tbe 2sth
ult. Lum, 3100,000.
At New York tbe French Importing bouse
of Coaadc, Crooks &amp; Rcyuaud failed on tho
28th ulL for about &lt;200,000.
Hon &amp; Temple, stock-brokers at Toronto,
made an assignment on the 28lh ult. Their
liabilities are &lt;200,000.
While unloading can* of nitro-glycerine
from a wagon at a magazine near Bolivar, N.
Y.. on the 28th ■ ult., an explosion occurred,
killing John Grant and William GrcuU.
More than twelve thousand acres of land
were under water in the vicinity of Helena,
Ark., on the 28th ulL, owing to the overflow
of the Mississippi River.
A London cablegram of the 28th ulL state*
that of the Nihilists oo trial at 8L Petersburg,

•ervitnde.
In tbe House of Commons on tbe 28th ult
the election of Michael Davitt as member for
Meath waa declared void, the. vote standing
flOStoSOL
One of tbe most horrible outrages on record
waa perpetrated by unknown Sen 1* on tbe 38:h
ult. at a school-house near Salem, Ind. The
teacher, Emma Number*, a beautiful girl of
high character, was round by her pupils lying
torn out, and her neck pinned to the floor by
a large alrk. Her body bore traces of horrible
treatment by ^gang of rilllana.

First to the front!
------ —I AM NOW RECEIVIOG-

A Full Stock of Goods
Of Goods suitable for the Spring trade.

Also the Largest and best Stok of

Ready Made Clothing, for Men, Boys, and Youths,
Ever brought to Nashville, and ranging in price from

Ladies, Misees, Gents &amp; Children’s Fine Shoes
I KEEP THE CELEBRATED ROBHESTER MAKE, STYLISH, DURABLE AND CHEAP.

est styles and can fit all parties
I always keep a Full Stock of CHOICE FAMILY GROCERIES
at prices that defy competition.
You can always rely upon getting the lowest prices on Goods
and the highest prices for your produce at my store. Call and get
prices before you buy.
BB.ITOUL PliniM, Of LTII, USS.,

THE WHITE--TH Lilt I
For Simplicity, for Durability for Light Run­
ning Qualities, and for the Greatest
Range of Work, it stands

»
S

WITHOUT A RIVAL!

E

The embodiment of all tbe latest Improve­
ments known to Sewing machine mechanism,
the elegance of design and beauty of finish,
combine to make tlie

I

Probate Order.

ulL Mr. Windom reported a resolution in­
structing the Committed oo Foreign Rela-

aud to place him on the retired list with the
pay of a General.
tbe House Committee on Invalid Penaiona

thorlxing tbe President to appoint Alfred
pleaaanton
a
Brevet
Major-General
and place his name on tbc retired
list- Tbe Post-office Appropriation bill
was passed.
In
tbe
House
bills

The moat popular machine Ln the world.

U..- Ltrf)

Miiuiaslppl at Keithsburg, III., and appropri­
ating &lt;100,000 to continue work on tbe harlxir

Soilth.Judae of Probate,
Present,'
ha aatatoofHEMBT TBC
On reading and flUiw lha petition, duly verified,
of Thomae 8. Brise, sdmlnlitreior of said estate

LYDIA E. PINKHAM S

General Grant authorize* the President to
to &lt;7.«D, belonging to tbe Lake Brie A West

Probate Order.

C. L. GLASGOW

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                  <text>ORNO STRONG,)
Editor

awv

Proprietor.

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun.

1

VOLUME IX.;

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, MARCH 11, 1882.
VICINITY LOCALS

TERMS; $1.50 ns Yeas
Credit SuBsatiraosg 81.75.

NUMBER 25.

sap brought to the bouse for culinary
HASTINGS.
LOCAL HIATTER8.
purposes, and soon after, while at tea.
A large amount of weather lately.
.
IMPORTANT TO TBAVELVR*.
was asked if he would-not prefer a glass
Rev. Knappen will speak atR. R. H.,
Special inducement* are offered you by ths
of sap, replied in the affirmative, and
Gentleman, select your offices.
Burlington Route, It will payyou to read their
p
—.Belectlog'efficicnt men to fill the
Bunday.
was
somewhat
taken
aback
when
his
advertisement*
to be found elsewhere in thia
Geo.
Dark
was
in
town
last
Friday.
Stolen
maple
sugar
is
sweet.
township offices is now in order.
Judge Smith has been very sick, but
Everything quiet and lamb-like, thia
Eli Wells has been on the sick list the hostcooly proceeded to fill the gloss
—Maple sugar dealers are busy hand­
from the aforesaid pail, and excitedly is recovering.
past week.
week-.
TiOItlS'.
ling the sweet stuff, and boxing it for
Miss Emma Stevens and her sister
In thia village, March 5, to Mrs. and Mr. C.
Noto the change in J. M. Wood’s ad.
All kinds of spring birds are getting exclaimed: “Is that sap! I thought it
W. Dwnaray, k son.
Roe, have removed to Albion.
shipment- Quite a large quantity of
numerous.
. tasted sweet around my mouth white
in thia issue.
sugar has already been inadc, although
The report that a case of small pox
Capt Boise and family will move to
Lassies and molasses mingle and washing.”
FREDERICK DOUGLASS.
"
the weather has been so unfavorable1 Dakota in a few weeks.
- waxeth lovingly.
The Mason brothers had rather an existed in the city 1- a canard.
We would Invite attention, to the adverUseThe
Hyers Sisters Combination fail­ ment of J. 8. Goodman A Co., of Chicago, D1M
the moat of the time.
Mrs. L. Angie Keet, of Battle Creek,
West Kalamo will have a graded unpleasant and not very trusty employe
who have recently Issued the AutolMography
—Michael Heitjiving half a mile east isviaiting friends in town.
and, after “forbearance had ceased to ed to put in an appearanc, Wednesday of Frederick Douglass. Our readers are all
school this summer.
night.
of Price’s corners has sold, his farm to1
more or 1c»r aqtiaintcd with the history of tbte
Last week The News prophesied a
Farmers are spreading broadcast be a viritue”they quietly dispensed with
man and should make themselves familiar ^ith
Rev.
Marsh
of
Grand
Rapids
will
a man from Qhio and purchased W. cold snap, and she snapped.
his
services,
but
were
somewhat
sur
­
money in the shape of grass seed.
hia book. The Cleveland Leader (Ohio) aaya:
’
G. AylswortkThanse and lot,p4i Middle
Rev. A. D. Newton went to Ypsilanti
Mr. Drallet, Mr. L. Evans and Wal­ prised the next day to find some of preach at the Presbyterirn church next Tills Book will gain instant recognition as on*
Sunday.
■
of
the healthiest and most important works
8t. Mr. Heli will W»e'H/ Nashville to visit friends, last Monday.
their property destroyed by the reven­
ter Mapes have each a sick child.
ever contributed to American literature. Il
Au unusual large number of drunks will
about the lasof April. ’
8. P. Robart of Sanfield, gave West geful chap. John met the “discharg­
Hon. L. A. Nichols of Orangeville,
take Its plaee as a column dispensable In
were
noticed
on
the
streets
Saturday
the
complete records of our national history.
Miss Kate Eckard has tendered her spent Sanday with friends in town.
Kalama a looking over the first of the ed” a few days after and kindly cau­
The life struggle it portray* will be erected as
afternoon and evening.
tioned
him
against
running
afoul
of
resignation to the school board, as
week.
a
etandanj
of emulation to the youth and man­
Several large fish have been taken
Spangemacher &amp;. Mason have a red hood of America, who without such examples,
Mr. nnd Mrs. Andrews of Campbell, his (John’s) brother Will, ns the shock
teacher in the grammar department of from the river during the past week.
might well doubt the posibility ot climbing so
Ionia Co., are the guests of their son, would be offensive to the nerves of chair in front of their store largp eu- high from a condition so low. The narrative
the school, and it has been accepted.
Andy Reese, of Shiloh, Ohio, is visit­
of Douglas's days of kiavery and escape from
such revengeful chaps as the said dis­ ough for auybodyes hip pocket.
Miss Lottie Evans, of Almont, has been ing relatives 'and friends in Maple James.
The Hustings House is having a larger twnjlagc is Ixardly Icm interesting than “Und*
engaged to till the vacancy, and will Grove.
Mr. Atherton of Bellevue, is helping charged.
T.-m’* Cabin," while the truths, lose nothing
West Kalamo challenges the state to run of patronage than ever before. i.'i comparison with the ideality of that work,
commence teaching next week.
his
son
Charles,
of
this
section,
make
Tom Niles has bought Steve Sprinkproduce a child of 18 months of age I Ninly-six commercial men registered a*4Jt carries it* subject through a wide rang*
—Next Tlinrsday evening is the time ett’s trucks and apparatus for moving sugar.
of seRwnplishmcnt to a rank sufficiently exalted
there
last
week.
Mrs. John Ehret has enjoyed very who has performed what the little 18 |
to win nil admiration. It is tAcdles* to spook
■ appointed for the continuation of the buildings.
C. H. Olmstead has returned from the of the literary style Of the book; the accom­
wrestle, between Hat. Bosworth and I Henn Clark and wife have agreed to poor health for the past winter, and is mouths old daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
plishments r&gt;l tlic writer are known to all who
John Mhrrt of this section done a few I west. He gives glowing accounts of reatl. Americans will be proud of this dona­
Clark Strnnk. It is expected that the !I disagree, and Mrs. C. has moved to still suffering.
Elk Valley, where he intends to make tion to their literature, and thankful to Mr.
W. H. King had an auction of per­ days-ngo. Mrs. Ehret had prepared the
contestants will be on hand, but if they •' Battle Creek.
Douglas, that be ha* made it btinscif.
•
hi-* future lome.
arc not, those having tickets can call;I Asa Matteson, of Hesperia, has been sonal propertv on Monday, on the churn (a common crunk one) for one of ) Win. Gazette, a printer quite well
the children todo tliechurning.and lh-n
HOUSE AND LOT FOR SALE.
on Wni. Atkina and draw their money. j| visiting friends in this vicinity during farm he recently sold.
'known by the typographical fraternity
Desirably located on Main St., just north of
"The beautiful snow" spread itself stepped into another room todo some*
—•The Dakota fever is raging among the past week.
of this city, died March 1st. He was Wolcott House. 25 27 Apply to C. H. Brady.
al I classes in this vicinity and many !I J. F. Holbrook returned from Da- over this sort ion on Monday night, and necceitaary work, and on returning
Pure Wisconsin Buckwheat flour W 00
found her little child im«i toddled to
from Nashville, Hastings nnd Wood- 1 kola, last Friday, the possessor of- a the Rap refused to flow.
of that dread destroyer, consumption. per cwu
Geo. W. Francis.
It is with ple-istire the writer can the churn and actually churned the
land nre so much afflicted with the Dakota farm.
C. G. Holbrook hits returned from
state that Geo. Matteson is recovering ’-reaiii to butter by turning the crank,
malady that nothing but a farm in the
Mrs. A. W. Olds who has been 1with I
the
West.
He
is
very
much
pleased
C. W. GRANGER’S.
as it had oliserved other* do, and nil
nrtcd :1 from his severe illnes*.
big territory of the would-be-state, will us for the past five weeks, started
with the country, has located IGO acres
Anson Curtis having sold his farm to without the knowledge or design of
allocate the mental suffering they me homewards yesterday.
of land, Ixiught some village property THE CROWN SEWING MACHINE.
any person.
j
J.
Fowler,
had
an
duction
of
personal
undergoing. The first “blizzard” they
Miss Dora Walrnth is sick, and fears
in Huron, and expects to move there the Ia*t &lt;&gt;f all the machines, but ha* aprung to
encounter will^anse a reaction and a are entertained that she may be attack­ property on Wednesday.
the first of April.
front rank at once from the fact that ft ha* ta*
The sudden change in weather put a
ken the good feature* in all other machines
fever to return to Michigan. “My Mich
ed with quick consumption.
The Mctho&lt;:ists have concluded to and
MAPLE GROVE.
put them in one grand combination, mak­
igan.”
invest 8330, for the purpose of reliev­ ing uii* the Handsomest, Largest, Most Silent
James Hurd, livings few miles west, a quietus on eugar making, and up to
this writing no prospects of a thaw.
Mary Phinsy has returned from Low­ ing some of the pressure from below, and Light.st Runn.iig machine yet offered. All
—Master Bon Potter,of Maple Grove, was married last week Tuesday,
the ••point*” that the cxrtcrieec of twenty years
“
Maple
Grove,
”
please
excuse.
Mr.
ell.
while the Elder is bearing down on In all kind* of family and light manufacturing
has presented The News with a coup­ to the widow Fank, of this village,
Wm. Feighncr has the material on the
work has proved lobe absolutely.good are to be
le ofhens eggs which present a strik­
Andrew Haitz baa returned from the t iem. Either the Elder is a long time
Brooks
Marshall
contemplate
only In the “Crown.” Other machine*
bearing down on them or else their sit­ found
ing contrast in size. One of the eggs enlarging their feed mill and putting groiinfl for a barn nnd will begin its north.
may have one, two or three of these ‘ points”
but none but the “Crown” ha* them all.
Hans.
. was apparently layed by a ben that was in a larger engine as soon as spring erection soon.
There is a report of a double wedding uation) is very tender.
Every
device that i* really desirable In other
Joe
Curran
was
summoned
by
telcextraordinarily stont, and measures fl opens.
last Sunday.
machine* will be found in the “Crown.” Ad­
ASSYRIA.
gram on Thursday of last week to the
Pete Anderson and wife.of McBrides
by 8i inches in circumference, while
vantage has been taken of the experiment* and
Richard Graham has purchased the liedside of his father who was lying
experience with al) kind* of tnscmoc* ever In­
the other was probably layed by a hen house and lot on the corner of Gregg
are visiting here.
Dr. Baker is fitting up a fine office.
vented, nnd the “Crown” i» a perfect ombodlwhich had little or no ambition, and Middle streets, of J. B. Nichols, and dangerously sick in South Haven.
Lizzie Ma-oD and Katie Mayo have
C. L. Briggs is preparing to build a ment of crcryling go &gt;d in them.
Mr. Lundquist had the misfortune; a gone to HariSngH to school.
only measures4 by 4j inches in circum­ will take possession Apnl 1st
barn.
few
days
ago.
to
fail
a
tree
across
his
ference. The above is nottggs-aggerAd Wolf Ims moved into Lis n. w
B. Cassaday moved on his farm last
MONEY! MONEYT
21 disagreeable storm of rain and sugar arch, completely ruining l.is two
house, also has bought a horse.
ated in the least.
week.
Money to loan on g&lt;xxl note* at rensonabl*
sleet, visited this section, Thursday, sap pans. Mr. L. is a poor man and the
. There was a party at Mr. Archer’s
Heavy thunder and rain Saturday rare* of interest, or to invest in “gilt edge” pa
—A meeting of the young men, who but Aurora smiled as warm amt genial
per, Apply »oon to
Onxo Stiiono.
one night last week, also one a: Jim night.
are willing to organize themselves into as usual on the following morning.
Asa Matteson had rather an unpleas­ Mayo’s.
HJT A few ga Ions of Syrup Wanted nt TMB
Covell will Htart for Kentucky next
a fire company, was held at the town
Nkwb office, upon subscription.
At the sugar social of class No. 11, of ant visit while at his old home, being
Kill the fatted calf, the prodigal sou Monday.
hall last Monday evening, and com­ the M. E. 8. 8., held at Ben’j Meiser’s confined to his bed with illness the
baa returned, or rather I. L. Dodge,the
FIRE. WIND AND WATER.
The meetings have closed at the
mittees appointed to draft resolutions, Wednesday evening, an enjoyable
most of the time, but being somewhat former scribe from Maple Grove, ia Center.
Fire will not burn—Wind will not blow over
and interview the council in regard to time was had and 810,50 added to the
—Water will not rot out—a Barb Wire Fence
recovered returned home on Wednes­ home again.
That
big
ditch
job,
was
let
last
week
madi of Kelly’s Steel Barb Wire. Glasgow has
procuring the necessary apparatus. bell fund.
day.
Old Fan and her husband are scout­ by Ei«q. Taylor.
•old all he lias, and hm ordered more. Call at
The meeting then adjourned until
L. A. Hinchman of Assyria, has pur­
hl* store and get a book free, which will tell all
Agreeably to an old custom, many
fVe would
Bert Heron has moved iu one ot C. about
Thursday evening, when the commit chased a thoroughbred short horn bull, persons whose physical condition for­ ing around the country.
IL
-...
tee on resolutions reported. The report of Mr. Wood of Mason, and started on bids severe manual labor, have taken suggest a shot gun loaded with rotten Baker’s houses.
eggs as a cure.
Mrs. C. Tompkins bad a visiting Nichols’ store.
was accepted. It was voted to sub­ Wednesday to bring home his purchase. their flailing traps and hied themselves
Bog E Rum.
party last week.
mit the resolutions to the council at the Mr. Hinchman now has a fine herd of away to Jakes and streams, to indulge
BUILDINGS MOVED.
Mrs. Bristow has relatives from Dry
first regular meeting after the new short horns.
\
I am ready to move buildings la good chaps
in piscatorial sports and regain their
Prairie, visiting her.
councilman take their oath of office.
and at reasonable rate*. Give me a call.
Mrs. C. W. Dcmaray is lying very health. May they succeed.
Asa Pratt went to Augusta last week,
25-27.
Tom. Niiam.
There are about thirty voters, besides
low, and serious doubts are entertained
Weather fine.
Mr. L. Andrews received a lett t on
to visit relatives.
several younger men who have signed in regard to her recovery. Last Sun
WANTED.
Wheal is looking good.
Geo. Jonas of Colorado, is visiting . To Rent a House in this village. For partiotheir names to the resolutions, and they nay, she gave birth to a child, since Monday fnifii his son, who is in the
Hollister McCartney is preparing to relatives in town.
ulara inquire at this office.
are going into the matter as though which time her condition has been ex­ northern pcninnnla. The reason of the
long silence of Verne is being snow­ go to Ohio, to work at his trade.
Helen Mills and Mary Chase are at
they meant business.
w A new supply of goods on the 5 and 10
tremely critical.
Will. Jarraid haa bought Tom Brice’s Hostings, going to school.
bound, the snow being over live feet
cent counters,
at Adpa Nichols’ store.
—A couple of Hastings bloods came
Ham. Brown will hare an auction deep. Verne writes he is tough, fat farm. Tpin rents his father’s farm.
Ed. Bushev and Mr. Dagett of Alle­
AUCTION^
over to this village, Tuesday night to next Tuesday, to dispose of his person­ and lively, and is eRjoying himself
Wm. Sanford in moving his house, gan, are in town on business.
I
will
dispose
of
my personnl property al
have a little fnn, and after driving the al property, and as soon as he can settle hugely.
and preparing to building a now one.
J. Bolo and E. Bartlett hove moved auction, 2*; miles couth of Woodland center on
livery team until they were quite warm, up his affairs here, which will take
Wo understand Henry Mayo thinks on the place Bolo bought of Covell.
The writer was surprised with a visit
Thursday, March 16.
R. CunisTtAX.
left them standing on the street, with­ about a week, he will move with his from Mr. Alphas Brundage of Benzie of joining tho Masons—not the Masonic
An agent from Jackson, put bis pat­
ar Harness repaired and oiled in cxrhang*
out even covet ing them with blankets. family to Cross Village, where he has county, on Monday last
for ur/wrl
U’w Z'. .
Mr. Brun­ fraternity, but the Masons by nature, ent dogs iu C. hakor’s mill last week.
The Marshal soon discovered the team, bought him a farm.
dage was an old army comrade, and wo Henry could not quite get there.
If Wm. Latty holds his bigness, he
LUMBER!
LUMBER!
which was ahivering with the cold, and
We bursted our sides wide open to will build a house the coming summer.
Mrs. and Mr. L. C. Boice, who are have not met or known of each other’s
Custom Sawing and Building Material farordered Ed. Benson to take it the barn soon to leave for Dakota, were the re­ whereabouts until recently, since our see a tandem team take fright and run.
C. Baker bought 330 act os ot land in nlahcd on short notice, at oar new mill in Ma- ■
and feed it,' which he did. The bloods cipients of a surprise party on Thurs­ muster out in 1885.
James 8. Ferry.
Verily, scenes The team consisted of a two-year old the north east part of Assy ria, all tim­ pie Grove.
soon discovered what had been done, day afternoon and evening. The ladies change.
.
_
bull and Jim., hitched together by an ber.
ST 8tts of coffee for fl at
and walked bravely up and down the had prepared a fine repast of which
A leather wedding was held at the arm nnd a tail,—the bull in the lead.
A social was held at Mr. Woods last
street in search of the Marshal, whom forty-eight persons partook. The party
residence of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rar- The bull jumped clear of a ditch but week. A very fine time was had .and
they swore to annihilate, but when was a most-successful one, and the
MONEY WANTLD?
rick on Monday last, to commemorate the other part of said team did not by $5. received.
You arc owing me, and I mnrt have th*
they found him they were meek as good wished of not only those present
the third anniversary of the wedded life just half the width of the ditch. Thus
School closed at the Center, Friday, money to pay my bill*. If not paid *&lt;xin your
lambs, and said they were glad ho cared on this occasion, but scores of others,
of Mr. and Mrs. Rarrick. A pleasant ended said runaway. No lives lost.
with a spelling school at night.
Mias account w111 be placed In a collector’s hands
for the team, shook hands with him,
will^go with Mrs. and Mr. B. to their time was enjoyed, but your correspon­
Jim.
Frost spelt them all down.
wished him good luck, paid for the
western home.
dent wasn’t there, consequently he still
While Chas. Willis and Will Cargo
keeping of the team and departed.
were at C. Baker’s mill Monday, their •hop.
Gossip is usually quick to catch at retains his head.
—On Monday next, March 13th, oc­ everybody^ business as soon or sooner
The West Kalamo "Tiger” and job
J. Emory is laying very low with the team got loose and ran four miles. No
FARMERS
curs Naahville’s annual election. There than the interested parties themselves printing office has just received a new
damage done.
Take advantage of the low prices and buy yuur
death hiccoughs.
seems to be a lack of the decided in­ know-to a oertanty of any transactions, invoice of type, and is better than ever
J. Anson who moved from here to baroes* of Clark who w J give you No. 1 stock
There are quite a number on the sick
Wm. Clark.
terest usually manifeated about this but a notable exception to this rule has prepared to give satisfaction in the
Battle Crock, has lost two children and reliable work.
list this week.
’ time and upon this question, but un­ lately occurcd in the business circle of job printing line. Give the office a call
ELECTION NOTICE.
E. Teich ia quite sick with the in fla­ with the diphtheria. At this writinng
doubtedly the caucus, which is to be Naahnlle. Feb. 22d, George Gallatin when in town. Editorial and job room
the
third
child
and
-wife
are
very
The
annntl
election
of
officer*
for the village
msti on of the lungs.
of Nashville, will be bold at the Town Hallam
held this press, (Friday) evening, will' bought a third interest in Brooks A. first door north of the corners. Shanty
Cora Van Wagner who has been aiok low.
said village, on Monday, March 13th, 1H82. The
set things to bobbing after the old Marshall’s elevator, and took immedi­ Brook 8L. and Seminary avenue.
Annie
Cornwell
who
was
sent
to
officers to be elected are a* follows: One PresF
for the past few weeks is recoving.
fashioned manner.
Evidently the ate possession, but the fact of the
The young folks met at J. Emory’s the Kalamazoo Insane Asylum, two Trustees for two yean to fill the places ot
J. L, Merryfield, late of this town,
greatest fight will be for the MarshaU- change has not been made publicly
more recently of Missouri, called upon on Friday night of last week, and had years age, is out and in Ohio, near her Boaton, Eugene Cook and B. F. Revnold*
ahip, not less than seven persons being known until now.
husband. He obtained a bill and mar­ Treasurer, one Asseaaor, One Marshal
his old Kalamo friends a few days ago, a good time.
StreclCoininiMipKicr. and one Constable.
mentioned as candidates for that office.
L. J. Wheeler’s closing out sale has, and then left for Ohio to join his wife
Uriah Buck and wife, of Yankee ried a bn ckeye girl. 0
Four persons have been mentioned as thus far. been a success, and hundreds
The Assyria Dramatic Club played at
who ia there among relatives.
Springs, who have been visiting in thia
Frank McDekbt,,
candidates for President, but matters
are thronging his store to avail them­ Merryfield was not entranced with vicinity for the past few days,returned the M. P. church at the Canter, March
in regard to Trustees are uar not so selves of the unsual bargains being of­
4th, instead of Penfield. It was a good
Miasouri’s Eden like beauties, and
___ home Monday.
.plain, but one or two names having fered to customers. But the sixty days
REGISTRATION NOTICE.
mgha: “Michigan, 0, my Michigan,”
On Friday of last week a little child play, entitled: the “Last Loaf.” Music
l»een mentioned as available candi­ in which Mr. W. promised to sell goods
W. H. King had a large quantity of of James Andrews, which was apparent­ by the Assyria string band.
dates
for.»«
this
responsible position. ^cortor under are fart drawing to a
Th - Kmw
i » hT »
wheat and oats stolen from his gran­ ly os well as usual, was suddenly taken
We bare a funny hens egg. It will
&lt;
7 good
kcIo~- Md tho* who
to make
ary a few nights ago, the wheat being ill and in just 36 hours from the time it not lie on its side nor stand on the big
will be placed in nomination,—men their money go furtherert should make
all put up in bags by Mr. King a few was taken, it died. The cause of its end, and will only stand on the tip end.
Awho will be in favor of enterprise and
haste and secure bargains before ’tis too days previous for removal. No clue to death was, diphtheria.
If set on the big end it will jump right
'tillage improvement*.
Naahvillo is
late. Those fire dollar suite, six cent the thieves yet Mr. King had sold his
A few day ago Adrin Cooper, aged over on the tip emt It is a curiosity.
register their namea.
yy ”*d enough and rich enough to be- prints, dollar kid button shoes, ten
farm
recently
and
there
was
no
one
Frank MoDanav.
about
13
years,
while
playing
on
Hager
­
Quite a number of ouv town folks are
SKMo make public improvements, and
cent granulated sugar and fifty cent living on the premises at the time of the man’s mill pond broke through the ice troubled with sore throats and lungs.
■ten who can bo relied upon to N. O. molasses, ore bargains which
theft.
and would have drowned bad it not The disease goes through whole fam­
CARD OF THANKS.
should be allowed to fill should not be passed. We might enu­
A pretty good story ia told at the ex­ been for Mr. Hagerman, who beard the lies. They have a fever that will last
Ar offices. We cannot afford to take
merate scores of other good bargain? pense of a prominent: newspaper writ­ boy yell, and immediately went to the 36 hours, and their eyes are pink. The
being ofierded at the old pioneer, but er of this town ftte’nt me) about his
doctor says it is the same as horses
have.
H.H.

LIFE IN NASHVILLE
And Her Environs.

LOCAL GIBBLE-G ABBLE
Aa4 rersoaa! Cklt-CkaL

Floating Gossip Fror^JYest Kalamo.

�jo

vicrra:
bavu lbl» flavdr of masculinity than men
have anything of that tendernew which i»
caaentlaily and purely femiulturi Were I
in a poeitlon of authority, I aboffid
■very soon diamta the cut-and-dried hackwrftera . wboae ooatributiooa, although
amootb and polished, lack the freehnna. tba
apontanelty, which fa cfiinotaristlo of the
contribution* we aotnefime* receive from
unknewn writer*, and notably from you.
Hut, you see, 1 am merely an aaalita.it ed­
itor, and a pereon of do cooaequence atoll,
except a* I am useful to do the work, all
the glory of which goea to the dhtlnguiibed
Individual* whose name* are emblazoned at
the head of the paper. There'. that aound*
bluer. I am afraid; but .my dear Mlaa Bell,
the fates have not been ao kind to me aa to
vou, and it U pot for fame I write, but for
the wherewithal to keep me fed and clothed.
What makes it perhaps harder la that J have
known what It u to have my bread and but­
ler fresh and sweet—ay, and honey with It,
loo—end, therefore, tbe thin dice* that are
doled out to me uoW Uste the drier by com­
partton.
“Forgive me tor boring you with ao much
about myaelL Pray write to me again.
Your luxurious stationery, with the faint,
delicate perfume pervading it, Is In itself a
dellghL

CROOKED HAYS.
Like a good many other young men
—and women too. for that matter—I
was once badly afllicted with racoclhrx
terihenui. Of course greater evils might
have be alien me: I might have been
seized with a passion tor whisky or
gambling; but, still, my ca-otlhct a riuen-i was serious enough. During my
college days tho symptoms showed
themselves plainly; but the malady did
not really assume its true and awful
proportions until after I had taken my
degree. Then, forsooth, it fastened
upon me like a leech, and before many (
months had elapsed it overmastered me i
completely.
In accordance wilh my
mothers wish. I went to Dundas,1
OKlensi ly to rend law with my un- 1
cle. but it was a mere pretense of law
read ng, tor the mornings that I ought
to have spent over Blackstone were de­
voted to the composition of a novel and
the afternoons to the polishing of some
poems.
Uncle Dick shook his head
gravely nnd rumanstrated, sometime in
■adne.is and sometimes in anger.
“That scribbling will never amount
to anything.” he would sav. contempt­
uously. 'Ihis was hard to bear; but my
lofty ampliations sustained me, and, firm
in my belief of ultimate success, I scrib­
bled on and ever, and bombarded all
the magazines in the country with mv
manuscripts. The magazines did not
Open their columns to me, and I fell
back at last upon the weekly newspa-

As I read this letter I felt myself a
scoundrel My first impulse wm to
write a hitter ot confession to Miss
Screven; but the desire to keep up the
correspondence and try my hand at
composing letters that should be sweet­
ly feminine overcame my scruples, at)d
I so nt off the following reply:
*• Dkar Minh Sckcven—Instead of boring
me, tbe glimpse you gave me of your life interckted me more than I can tell. But, at
tbe same dime, the contrast between your
life and tnino .made nr- envious. Perhaps
your lot Is a htrJ on*, but it is at least hrare
and independent. Here am I, an only daugh­
ter, petted and spoiled to a shameful de­
gree, nnd bound by fetters of luxury. Yqs,
I envy you. Hitting here this morning in
my silly pinx-curtalned boudoir, wiiii n
Dresden ’ shepherdess simpering at me
from the top of my •••critolr--, 1 feel rnv nil

When 1 reached this point of my let­
ter. 1 r&lt;-nd over approvingly what I
had written.
Arrived at the lines
descriptive of my imaginary boudoir, I
smiled us my glances fell on a b &gt;otjavk in one corner and the shaving-ap­
paratus in another. Glancing at tho
place where t..e Dresden shepherdess
ought to have been, inv eye fell in­
stead upon a pipe, which 1 took down
and tilled, and then resumed my writ­
ing with considerable complacency.

girlish, and i nu» m well confess that it h
not many year»—perhap* month* would be
more accurat. —&lt;unce I left the precinct* of
a ilni*bing-«ch«ul. b'inlshiug-*choul. In­
deed! .Much 1 L arned there beside* h - a-,
of doing up mv hair! However, the detect*
&lt;&gt;f my education I must remedy myself, and
I try every day to devote a few hour* to
serious etudy. But it I* very hard to
seclude myself long enough to accomplish
anything. People call; I must go to garden­
parties; 1 niU’t hold solemn conclave with
milliner itn&lt;l drr&gt;.»
my essavs, and a certain oas'staul edit­ the
have c instant demand*
or, whose initial.H were “ F. B. 8.,” sunt nature upon my time.
me polite notes from time Ur time. It
" Ah tnis you will probable laugh at: and.
wm something to see my productions
in print; it would have been n
disgusted with me, do write again
had these productions once ii
Faithfully voura.
while brought in n check,
But
theg never, did; they elicited &lt;only
I may as well confess that I thought
polite notes from F. B. S Fina.Ti, _
wrote a letter to the assistant editor this letter a successful imitation of some
upon the subject, ami by return peat I of the epistles that I had myself re­
received a reply. It was sent to my ceived froniieminine hands. Il sounded
private box at the Post-office, but, to enthusiast* nad t«flry •• Mfasish," and I
my great amu-’emenL. was directed to sent it off that afternoon wilh a bold
“Jane Bell,” instead of “John.” My heart.
“Jock." quoth my uncle, who met
handwriting was not very distincL and
perhajis a triile feminine, and the sig­ me as I came from tho post-office, “1
nature, upon which I rsther priced my­ verily believe you are making un ass of
self, certainly left it an open question yourself over ’some girl.' I don’t be­
whether John or Jane were meant lieve it is the muses you are courting:
it is no muse; it is a miss.” And with
The note. too. began—
this he passed on, chuckling at his own
“ Miss B
: In repty to your question,
ell

I would uy that this journal pays only lu
regular corps of writers. We are glad to
receive your articles, and perbapt later may
make adequate compensation therefor; but,
as a young writer, it would be wiser far you
to think at present only of securing a foot­
hold. You have an excellent chance of »ueeci&gt;s in tbe end; but much patience isnecessarv at the out»eL
*
*• Please say whether I shall direct future
communications to John Bell, Miss Bell, or
Mrs. Bell. At present I do not venture to
give you any title. “ Very trulv youm.

This letter at once amused and piqued
mo. It wm pleasant and rather encour­
aging, but it was plain the writer set mo
down as an impecunious young woman,
whereas the truth was I had a very fair
inco.ue of my own. and was a six-foot,
moustached sj&gt;ecimen of masculinity.
The idea of playing the role of Miss
Jane Bell tickled my fancy, and there­
fore, giving my imagination free rein,
upon the spur of the moment I sat down
and wrote as follows:
“F. B. Sent:vkx—At present I »l»o am
in a quandary, for I do not know whottier i
ougbt-to addrcM you as Madame, MouMeur
or MademuiMsIle. Tbe last title 1* mine Just
now, although ot courae I feel at liberty
to change it when I eboone, or rather
when tbe proper opportunity offers
itself. Perhaps malrimony would be
a more profitable speeulatlon than litera­
ture.
Do not, however, suppose that
J am dependent on tny pen tor my bread
and butter. In that case, I fear, the butter
would be very thin. Indeed. No? tbe fates
have given ui*&lt; most of the luxuries ot life;
but these, of course, do not satisfy me. Tbe
reaaon why 1 wrote as 1 did about payment
far the articles was simply because 1
Iboueht if they Were good eaou»h to print
they were-roo I enough to be paid for. Lt
seems I wm mistaken; but to show you
that I take your advice, I send you aaotner
outlay. I will nt least try to secure a fo«Abold. and pray that greater success may
follow.
"1 am, dear Madame, Monsieur or Mad­
: T.-t.-n,
•‘Sincerely yours.
•Mank Bell*
Laughing in my sleeve, I sent this
communication off. and planned that,
if the aKshtant editor sent m» a frluodly-reply, I would op«i acorre-pondenco
inin.ro/cof Mas Jane Bell and fool
F. II. Screven as never man had been
fooled iMjiore. Judge. then, of mv dis­
may when 1 received a fatter in what I
knew w*w Screven’s writing, but Dot
written -«a office p.Mjer. and signed Fran -

As the days went on. however, my
uncle's words seemed in a fair way to
prove true. I thought only of Miss
Screven. My novel I left untouched,
and my rhyming dictionary accumu­
lated dust ’slowly, but surely. Fled
were my visions ot astonishing the
world with my genius. I lived only
for tho mail from Boston.
As I re-read the letters I received
from Miss Screven. I can make some
excuse for my infatuation. They were
frank and outspoken, and sometimes,
indeed, tingeu with cynicism; but
through them there breathed a sympa­
thy, a tenderness, that touches me even
now as I read them over. Finally, at
my solicitation, she sent tne her photo­
graph, which showed her to be a regu­
lar-featured, large-eyed woman, of
rather a serious cast of countenance,
indeed, but with a lurking smile in the
mouth that 1 could not but confess was
a large one. She was not a beauty, I
saw that, but she had an earnest, in­
teresting face that grew upon me every

Little by little I gave mvsclf up to
thoughts of her by day and dreams of
her by night Iler letters I awaited
with a feverish impatience, and if one
were delayed I was in a torment 1
make no excuses for my folly, dear sir
madam, but prav do not forget that I
wks only one-and-twentv then, and had
fed myself plentifully with novels and
poetry.
The correspondence was kept up all
the summer and autumn; but in De­
cember there befell what was .to me an
awful calamity. Mis* Screven did not
Write- I sent imploring letter after
letter, but no response gladdened me.
“ Has she jilted your’ said Uncle
Dick, hearties dr, when he noted my
pale face. In truth. I could not sleep
nor cat; I was consumed with fear and
anxiety. What could' have befallen
her?
I endured it for just ten days, and
then 1 packed my sachel and went to
Boston. ' .Bah! what a day it was when
1 arrived there! It had snowed a little,
and then a thin, cold rain began to driz­
zle down despairingly. The weather
suited me better than the garish suleu-e
dor of the hotel, and I .wandered forth
that evening, half-unconsciously wend­
ing my wav toward the street in which
rfficv. w|&gt;ereby a small boy,' Miss beveven hoarded. I found myself
KWiih
opposite lin biiusa—Emm
H i .per
a-ivniabiueul ti.e poslsge- window a light struggled faintly oe-

woraa gtilL by a alatutrnlr servant. 1
went up the atape and nag the bell. A
blip of n girl opened the door to me,
and I handed her my card, saying me­
chanically: “A&gt;k Miaa Screven if ah«
will see me.”
I trusted that the napte, John Bell,
would perhaps lead her to Muppoae
that I wa* a cousin or the father of her
friend.
The alip of a eervanVmaid looked at
the. card and then looked at me.
••Frances ScrevenF’ she said, inter­
rogatively.
“ Yes," I replied. Then I took the
card, ran my pencil through tha en­
graved name, and scrawled my illegibla
Bignature below it. Tho servant took
the card again and skurried awa&gt;', leav­
ing me standing there in the oold. d'ark
entry.
It wm several minutes before she re­
appeared, and then it wm only to say
in a sing-song tone, “ Three llighu up;
first door to the right."
I went up the three flights and rapped
at the first door to the nghL
A voice called out, “Come in."
I entered a medium-sized, plainlyfurnished room that wm redolent of to­
bacco, with which wm mingled a faint
smell of whisky. There were two arm­
chairs, a large table, covered with a
faded cloth, and an old-fashioned horse­
hair lounge,.from which, as I entered,
a Toung man rose. He wm thin and
hollow-eyed, and a beard of several
days' growth made him look, to say the
least, unkempt. “Mr Bell, I presume,"
ho said, offering me his hand and then
drawing up a cualr for me.
“1 have called tc see Mini Screven."
said I“ Have you. indeed?" ho replied in a
nasty, sneering way.
It' flashed through me at once. It
was her husband! She had deceived
me!
“ May I ask if you are any relation
to Miss Jane Bell, ot DundM, Wash­
ington County, New York, post-o.iiix)
box 462?" he continued, in tbe same
sneering way.
I stuttered and stammered, tried to
lie. and nearly choked tn . sell to death.
1 wanted to be diplomatic; 1 wanted to
shield her from hw anger.
“Who the devd are you. anvway?”
he exclaimed.
“I—lam John Bell," I answered;
“and 1 have called to sec vour sister.
Is she ill?"
"1 haven't any sister." said he, nonrbalantly; “that is. I atu mv own
sister, and she has just escaped pueu-

DETROIT STOVE WORKS’
AND

Physicians
Have Signed or Endorsed the

13 nildLers’

LI ard ware,

Sa«h, Doors, Blinds, Jefferson Nails. Glass, Putty, Paints,
Oils, Varnishes, Colors, Brushes, Etc. Castor, Sperm, Golden,
Bliick, Linseed and Kerosene Oils.
.
Shovels, Slides, Forks, Hoes. Snaths, Apple Parers, Farm­
Bells, Fence Wire, Well and Cistern Pumps. Wood and Iron,
Pipe, Points, Cylinders, Lead Pipe, Sinks, &amp;c.
------------ AGENT FOR—------

Following Remarkable
Document:

tcra. Fhyfalana and the Public prefer
BcnaOj^CajjcineJ^aroTiii^laatMT to all
others. Wo consider them aueef tbe vary
few reliable household remedies worthy

DOMESTIC SEWING MACHINE

The Lightest Running and most Durable Machine in use.
I shall aim to keep none but first class goods, and sell them
at a small profit. Call and see* me when needing hardware.

*

FRANK C. BOISE.

KURte Rioim A'fiJkKf."Trior MdZ
HEAD'S Mcjfcafaf CORI wdBUNION PLASTER.

^tEGbRyt

?SEEIM

-atalog|JI

Thu truth flashed u&gt;onme
“You
re an impostor, sir!" 1 exclaimed.
•• low s sler doesn’t think so.” said
B, complacently.
“ i haven’t any sister.*' said 1. in my
He wheeled sharply about: "Who is
Miss Bell, then?"
. *• I am all the Miss Bell that exists,"
! answered, grimly.
"What!” he exclaimed; “you are
the petted darling who wanted to be a
poet and an essayist and Ixird only
knows what all? You ore the only
child of wealthy parents? You are the
lovely creature who sits in a pink bou­
doir and writes verses wilh a gold pen
and on perfumed paper?"
“ Yes,” said I, desperately.
Screven dropped into a chair and
roared. “A sell all round!’' said “he.
And then he laughed until he cried,
while 1 quietly stole away back to the
hotel, a sadder but a wiser man.—LspJ/uyazine.

i’JSIOAL WONDER?

CHICAGO, BOCK ISLAND &amp; PACIFIC BY

Is The Croat Connecting Link between tho East and tho West!

Old and young personsar* often sore­
ly troubled' by small, hard particle* of
matter tha? gel under the eye-lids.
When children suffer -n this way. their
parents may not even suspect the cause
ol tbe trouble. The irritation may go
on increasing for years; for tho inflam­
mation strongly resembles catarrhal
conjunctivitis, which has quite a differThe conjunctiva (as the termination
ilu in medicine always means "in lam­
ination of,” conjunctivitis means in­
flammation of the coniuctiva), is a
mucous membrane which begins near
the edge of the lids, upper and lower,
line&lt; them, and then, turning back,
covers also the eyeball It thus forms
two sacs. It is exceedingly sensitive,
and is very liable to inilammation of
various kinds, all painful and some wry
difficult of cure.
A foreign body beneath tho eyelid
soon in (lames it Such a body beneath
the upper lid is not as readily detected
as one beneath the lower, audit is hard­
er to remove it.
A child that had long suffered from
what was supposed to bo catarrhal in­
ti am mat ion. and for which it had been
energetically treated, only to grow
worse, was brought to Dr. Broosa, pro­
fessor of ophthalmology in the Now
York University. On turning back the
child's upper eyelid, tho source of the
trouble was found in-a small bad of a
cherry-tree. Relief and cure followed
its removal.
In all such cases the main thing to do
is to evert the lid. The lower lid is
easily turned over the finger. If the
particle is beneath the upper lid, press
the lid against the eyebrow and have (
the patient look down. Then seize the
eyelashes and edge of the lid and turn
the lid quickly over the thumb. Re­
move the speck with a handkerch'ef,
and show it to the patient; for he will
often feel for some time as if the object
were still in the eye.—Youth'i Compan-

—There is a most disagreeable brig­
and prowling about in the neighbor­
hood of Smyrna. He is the chief of a
band of nine, who have committed
many atrocities, and is described as a
veritable savage beast
Some in­
teresting details respecting the rec­
reations of Khakirdji have
been
given by an unfortunate villager who
shocked the officials at Che Leodikeai
railway station the other day by arriv­
ing there without either nose or cars,
having just escaped from the bandit's
hands, after being subjected to this
horrible mmilaUon.

—The records of the latent Office
show that more patents have b~n
hsued to 1UOIBM i.dtaon than to any
other single inventor. He has taken
wn airty pauats relating to his eloctrio-

I’ULT.MAN PALACE CABS rare ran ihroueb
IVSCIL liLl Flh. KANSAS CITI'. ATCHI.-ON.
Ticket* via tni&gt; Lino, known n» the • Great K
1 Irkrt Agents In tho United States and Canad
For Information not obtainable Mt joar Dome
. II. CABLE,

PIMPLES
&gt;

TO CONSUMPTIVES.
The mjvertlw’r having Iwm |&gt;arti&gt;3nentlv cured of
that dri-.'xt iIIm-mc, Con*limp, ou, by a almple ren.edy l&gt;anxlou*:u make known to lila f«llow-euffcreta the mean* of cure. Tu all who desire it, he

HE BEST
CALICO.

ERRORS OF YOUTH

HEW. SIMPSON &amp; SONS'
MOURNING. SECOND MOURNING
SOLID SLACKS.

„ Eddystone
FANCY DRESS PRINTS
The EDDYSTONE PRINT WORKS is
one of the largest and most complete estab­
lishments iu the country.

THE EXPERIENCE OF HALF A
CENTURY
.
has enabled them to attain each perfection
that they can with confidence ask you to test
the quality of their work. They carefully
avoid all poisonous drugs, malic only fast col­
ors,which are thorueghly washed in hot water
and soap, thereby removing anything which
would stain underclothing.
Those who buy and wear their print* will,
they feel confident, find them superior in dur­
ability, artistic style and finish. Be sure and
ode for their goods, and see that their marks
and tickets are on them.

THE SURGEONS KNIFE
WMdSrfbi Sarfiral Operattva Haawval of t'riaar
Klaaaa from tbe Bladder—Sacea**fcl.
Mr; Simon TImmII, of rnocerUca, N T.,t»»d been
treafa. foramen year* by vprioo* phyaieiaM for

NO PATENT NO PAY
TI« l»&gt;II’. nworery wss rapid »:&gt;d jmfret.
Wol»«“K»vo’:ta lUrnclj- i**a'«cfAe fa all kt*ney andbU-Ww 4&lt;•*»*«■*, Itia^iMlty valuabfo la
ca»c* of-iHliou* diaorilen. CtfattlpaHoii of ths bov
»i«, aad oU U»c rtaM of III* apjwraMJr ia*aprn,b*a
trotn ttw reMikuiton of wom»a Try II Your
dnantbl t.M it, sndiia co*: &gt;• only on« dollar a
tauJo. Tba lurky man to he who put- *hU adriae
fa practice- Dot/l L-rcrt
namnand rddre**.
Dr. Part i Keuotsly. H&lt;&gt;o.lo«a. N . Y. The doctor
would iduv It utHk-.'u&gt;od -.hvtwliiln hop annwed
tn th* ln:.t&gt;(t:rt.rn of id* tncxHclur. •‘Farwiie 1Utnedy," M Mill r&lt;&gt;u,ln-j'-» th- practice of bis pnftmloii, but c»uf|nr*«bi&gt;tMHdfeaeltM&gt;*«!y u&gt; office
practksc. Hr treat* alt d'rrnw* of a rbiflrdc ebar.
artor. atx] perform* *11 the minor aud capital ojM&gt;rBtloa* ot *uqtrry.

iiTn f O««'-bovi.ri ~ Korn—

4

�AIN LINE
GioiTiK Wf«t rrom Juok»on

GRAND RAPIDS DIVISION.
■

BAOT^AHI

STATIONS.

Exp.

9rM Rapid*---- Lv.
MMdtanU*-------NMbrffi*....... Lv...
Vwrraou-.vll.e
Ph«rlO&lt;t« ----- —Katon R*|.i J»,
IU*** Juac-.lon —

Detroit-............Ar.

TmH Evantak
Bxp. Kxp&gt; i
nm
fc-u 1'ir.lj
IV.lu
f.53 12#®
7;(3
74* 145
EXT
VlU
•xn •
»;0l 3 V.

UM
liiX
12:41
1JU
W1
2:13
MT
a.M
1:M
6:30

iuw

■m

-#u
n

WESTWARD

STATIONS.

Dr.-iul lUpI !»,

n oo
la?.«i

,
H. B. LEDYARD.
A*s't G-'D'I Hupt'Jackaon. Gen') Hop’l Petrol

STONESIN THE KIDNEY
and Blaiblcr Expelled—Long suffering of one
of Troy'* Beat Pcple— A lucky man.

It Is by no means a strangv thing chat D
Kcutu-dj stuukl have received the fottowiu
utc why James Andrews was tankfu):
v V April H. IHSO
Kicatly from grave
I Io the doctors tbe Brick dust sedliuei.
a year pai-l this sediment has to.
I off iu U.V usual men’-.vr, but has I'" I
muluU'I. causing me untold paiu. Haem,
lirani oi “Kennedy’s Favorite Remedy" 1 trie
11 in my case- and alter tutug about one and
halt G.ttle, I voided « stone Irorn the bladdci
of an oval shape, b-10 of an nrh long, am
rough ihi it« »unacc. I scud you the largo­
piece tuat you may see of what it la composed
Siner um u I have felt no p«iiu. I now couside
my*elf ■ urvd. aud cauuot express mv thank
fulness and gratitude for so signal a delivrraii
from a tririMc^llsrase. You have my cotiscn
to use ibt* letter, should you wish to do to. l«
benefit of other suHrrrra.
Your trulv. James Andrews.

When we consider that the medicine whir’
id this M-rricv for Mr Andrews cost only
dol »r a brrt’le. it would **”' that*per»ou* al
Dieted In Hire fashinu can afforn the expense u
testing Its virtues. Gel it of your druggist, o
addrv-s Dr. David Kennedy. Kohdout, N Y
“Dr Kennedy's Favorite Renifdjr” for sale b
all druggists.

■RTv

GREAT CORE H
.

Li^ATiSM

—Tha'fast trains bstwesu Chicago
■nd New York now make au average
run of about thirty-five miles per hour.
_An extensive e'slabliahment for the
maaufacture of macaroni, vermicelli,
and all other aorta of Italian pastry in
Jixiladelphia hae seriously damaged
the importations of such articles from
—The phosphate royalty of South
Carolina, at Si a ton (which royalty
is paid on only the phosphate rock ob­
tained in the riven and navigable
streams oi the State), amounted in the
last fiscal year to Ute sum of 812L&amp;41.
—A tool that weighs 130,000 pounds
has just been made at a Wilmington
(Del) machine-shop for an Alliance
(O.) iron company.
It Is a huge
planing-machine, capable of .planing a
sheet ot iron ten feet wide and twentyfour feet long.
—An English resident of Chili saye
that people on the island of Chiloe make
the potato a staple article of food, and
thin* that outsiders neither know how
to raise good potatoes nor to cook them
well. Potatoes there are so mealy that
they fall to pieces in cooking.- and when
roasted in hot ashes cue imuue ia much
like ilour when the akin ia broken.
Bui there is plenty of rain in (Jbiloe.
- Agents of California fruit-grower*
arc in Oregon buying up all the nursery
trees they can obtain There is said to
be a great demand forthe Bartlett pear,
for plums and prunes, and for choice
brands of appletv California is going
into fruit-growing more extensively
than ever Delore. The business has
received a fresh impulse from the ex­
tensive use of new processes of drying
fruit, and from the increased number of
canneries going into operation. The
fruit trees of California have been de­
stroyed in large numbers by noxious
insects during the last two or three
years, and this is a further cause of the
new demand.
—It yearly takes 200,000 acres of
forest to supply bross-ties for the rail­
roads of the United States. It takes
15.(XX),000 ties to supply the Remand,
for which on an average the con­
tractors get thirty-live cents apiece,
making in
*the
u*
aggregate
----------$5,230, V00.
In building
_ ..
a new .road
_____
tho
contractors figure on 2.700 ties to the
mile, while it takes 300 ties to the mile
to keep a constructed road in repair.
The average oi a good piece of timber
land is 200 trees to the acre and 12 ties
to the tree. White or burr oak is con­
sidered tho best timber for the purpose,
although cherry, maple, ash. and even
locust have been used. Tbe business
gives employment to an army of chop­
pers, who are paid ten cents apiece for
each tie. A slug e man has been known
to get out thirty-five tics in a day. yet
the average is only ten. while an expert
will probably gel out twenty.
—In Chins machinery for coal min­
ing to lighten labor is unknown. The
Chinese have not even an idea of the
pumps indispensable to draw off the
water. If local circumstances allow
they cut drainage galleries; if not- they
abandon the work whenever the inun­
dation has gained too far upon them.
Tho matlock and shovel, the pick and
the hammer are the mining Instruments
—the only ones in fact, which the Chi­
nese employ in working the coat The
water of the mine is emptied by a slow
process of tilling small casks, which are
brought up to tbe surface by manual
labor. Tue coal when mined is put
into baskets and drawn upon sledges,
which are raised to the suriace by man­
ual strength. Each basket contains
about throe pounds of coal, and one
man can raise about twelve cwt. per
day. The wages paid per day are equal
to seventy-six cents.

ulVT2 AGO BOWEuS.

WIT AM) WISDOM.

iiiOUSAUDS OF CASES
PERFECTLY CURED.

^tdney-wci

SPRING MEDICINE.

rroPYoru imvccnrr. nuctot-oo
t.. ELLS, MCUIBPSON ACa..Fr®pX

PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM.

The I&gt;*l Om*t and

tuatm
fimstai Mme.

GINGER TONIC

—How a man decides where he will
build bis house—By
lot. — Lowell
Courier.
—If a fellow goes skating for the first
time he can never tell what's going to
turn up.—.V. I . C&lt;inuncrctal AdcerliMr.
—A good meal for a fast man—Has tv
pudding.—Bo.\lon Courier.
A good
lunch for a beat—Sponge cake. — 1'aiocob Ulruuxi.
—The force of habit for example has
no effect on the man in the moon. Ho
stays sober when the moon gets full.—
Chronicle- Herald.
—The difference between a defaulter
and a thief is very simple. One steals
enough to hire good lawyers, and tbe
other don’ L—fruladclphia Newt.
“IQ ffie fall the young man’s fancy
lightly turns to thoughts of love; for he
thinks it would be handy to have some
one mend his glove.—Lowell Citizen.
—Tho man who stood in front of his
glass for two hours getting tbe right
color on bis mustache, said ho was just
“dyeing to see his giiL*’— Yon^rt
Slaletinin.
—Scientific men assert that the onlv
healthy wav to sleep is with tho bead
to the north. No attention has been
paid to this by church architects, and
yet astonishment is expressed at the
falling oft in church attendance.—Tcxat
Biftingt.
—There are mean men in this world,
and occas onally there is one in the
farming community who wid set up a
barrel on his Lack piazza, just like a
cider barrel, and let a tramp skirmish
for two hours for it to get dark enough
for him to crawl up to it. and when ho
gels at it find it filled with water. •—But­
ton PotL
—Vennor says it is going to be co
cold next week that the oldest liar will
be unable to cite a parallel to it. Con­
versely, this reminds you of Luther
Benson's description of Hades, old
style, •• the place where it is so hot if
you were to hand a man a spoonful of
molten iron, he would swallow it glad­
ly and think it was ice-cream.”—Butattglon Hawkeye.
—See the Fish. The Fish is a Trout
and Breathes through his Ears. He
lives in the Brook and May be if you
trv you can Catch him Any little Boy
who catches so many Measles ought to
be Able to Catch one little Fish. The
Trout Weighs four Ounces, but you
can s*v he Weighs four Pounds. Do
uot call him a Speckled Beauty or you
will be Shot. Eat him Head. Tail. In•■ards and AH. nnd get a little Bone ia
j-oui- Throat if your Can— Louver 'irii^
vat Printer.

ioUooemMi iu a mil.
order of tbe day by num-: frariul c itcc,
ttesre be stand* to arrest our atta..
mid compel us to forget lhe m\;lion.
c
our cities and larger towns. one,
,
who hare gooe quietly ab --.it that
Formerly small-pox removed a large day's
,
duties. An iooud idou hides trim
per cent, of those who contracted it. Its .us al! the rivers which flow m.-i e.iely to
preventive power fa not a matter of tha t»ea, and one volcanic, out break all
opinion, but of facL And still we now the m aintains that stand quietly clad ia I might try Bro mi’s Imo Bl
and then meet with weak men and pines and crowned with white g!«»ry,
weaker women, who resist the evidences- and a fire like that by Lake Hur &gt;n u*!:»g the rrmtnlv alxiut two months atd
uf hu.1t. We have known several men brings the smell or fire, as we read of. It bare
born out of. tied
nearty two
who were exposed to this dreadful mal­ as it is rtiU raging, into our liriug-roum* » wks. «t&gt;4 now help shoot tbe hooae. Il han
ady, nnd oontracted it and died. No in­ and offices. And-this fa the way the acted like a miracle Ln my case.”
telligent man can ignore the fact that timed take ns captive wherever wo turn.
Tora Thumb Ira* bad It announced Ural be
ths deaths from this disease is dow &amp; It used to be sold of the wicked, they g*Te bto wife *7,000 worth of -nt diamond* on
very small per cent, of what it wm in are like a troubled ma. It fa id some ber late birttidsy. That'* pretty good for *
former days before the Introduction of »&gt;-nae true now uf tho whole life we have
little *hsTrr who Irad to mortgage hl* home nil
the
prevention.
Not that did to live, when time and space are dost in
many die in the former days, but very the telegraph wires, and the day draws months *flo.
“MY TORMENTED BAQ^’’
many who did not die recovered only near when we shall “put a girdle rouud
with fhattered health and extreme dis­ the world in forty minutes.” Tbe n •
Ta the exclamation at more than one poor hard
figurement. Even at the present time paper taps the electric courses ol working uraa and woman. Do you know why
it
&gt;
It l» because vOur kMix v* are over
some men exist who resist pbrswtently thought at various point*, and takes
and needttrer :nb&lt; ti!iig.andyour *vrt.m
lhe power bf cow-pox to prevent the fr&gt;&gt;ru them the vital spark for the beiiellt tanked
nerd-, io l&lt;e cteansc-d of bad humor*. Kidney
coming of small-pox.
We can not but of Ita rea-lcra. No wonder th-re fa m »re Wort i» the mcdk-lne you need. “It act* like *
urge every one to embrace the kine-pox, distraction qmong. men, and- that tlie chsr.Tt.” rar* a well known phvBirlon. “1 never
in order that small-rxix may not wrize newspaper Is the fuc.igu.uoil c^ase of is. k’ew It t-» fall-’’ Liquid or dry told by drug­
Boston Foot.
,
and destroy or’entail noon the human It brings society into close nddioni
system a vast amount of suffering.
with events as regards tim-. While it
Riijpore we do have a jxwtal can! with a
No doubt the best time (or vaccinat­ tolls Ito-Story the smoke is stilb ri-in;’ fifty! How long will it take a person of ordinary
ing infanta is between the forti^h and from the conflagration; the blood i* yet energy to flap that flap over and discover that
one hundredth day of life. During this warm from the death wound of the mur­ the t&amp;Uur must have hl* pay or begin a suit!
interval the process of dentition does dered man; the pa-nUMW are tulll hot
not irritate the system, and so duos not that have stirred up strife. Once the
G(M)fl WORDS FOR A GOOD THING.
render the usual sufferings.
thought of meu and tim roctrd of th-ii
All tldng* arc uot humbug*, nor are all state­
Some few persons can not be vaccin­ actions traveled by forced marches with ments lie*. Dr. David Kennedy’* “Favorite
ated. The virus does not take.
If in­ painful slowness, ahd when nows ar­ Remedy’’ I* exactly what it claims to be. Hear
serting the virus in the arm does not rived at iu far away destination it was a '» Muni from Mr. Israel II. Snyder, ot Saugcrtake, insert it in the calf of tho leg. Re­ tale of a meqe or lea* remote past frdru tiea N. Y- He say*! “My little daughter wa*
peat the vaccination four or more times. which the soul had lied.
Now the cor­ covered with Salt Rbetnn form head to foot.
Observation shows that all persons arc ner* of tho earth are aa near together Dr. Kennedy's ’Favorite Remedy’ cured her al­
not eqnslly disposed to receive the vi­ as adjacent towns, considered with
rus, and that n very few ixsnvjns are reference to their interchange of news. together, and the disease has never since apnever susceptible to Its influence.
A A new bond, not only of interc&lt;&gt;tn&gt;nuni prared. This wa* two year* ago.” Such wool*
physician exposed himself to small-pox cation, but of resultant sympathy and c» to the pifat- Get ‘Favorite Remedy' of
nearly every day for four years without interest, is established. No wonder that your druegint. or write to the Doctor, at Romlcontracting the disease, but at last took the subject is thought larpj enough fdr
the disease and died.
the pulpit. It pff-rs food for the best
Few inrents would believe it, but la never­
It is important to obtain perfectly- thofclght uf the preacher and the essay­ theless true that their boys in college had much
healthy vaccine lymph, and snonld be ist, and it acta upon more inlerc-t* than rather win a medal for swinging Indian^dubs
taken from a perfectly healthy infant or any of its rivals in the field ol influence.
young heifer. Mothers usually prefer to A little comparison, occasionally, with
have their children vaccinated from an old-time m- lli&lt;Mfa will show belter than
,er children should be strong, Lydia E- i'lnkinfant whom
they know
inJ anything
good
—
—------— . to be
..........
else can do the real uxpan-ion
.wi’» Vegetable compound is a perfect rjwlfir
health and free from any constitutional of journalism atid it* value to euhgiitduease.
eued society.—Bo-don I'ost.
We usually introduce the vaccinating
- • -------------i •: pamphlet*.
matter at some six inches below the'tip
Straw in the Manjrt
of the shoulder and a little to the outer _ ,
~
.
side. In some rural district*, phy-icians J1 *?*,t at al1 dibi ''’It to nd
are so sparse that mothers may safely
. 1” u’ n’" •'
do it themselves. It fa only neeeasaty a. ,
m-«t of
for us to say that the matter taken from ,a‘"cl t“en'in • b
lhe pustules already mature should be '
t.’ c
..
taken on the seventh day. It is then «,
a"’' *’
"t'’ !
clear as water. The present wav of thorough y w-tu-d by mdl.ng
vaccinating is to scarify two spofa on | llr:Us nn‘1
,l'it th
lhe infant's arm, cutting several par-'”1
al "‘st
'
allel lines at right angles to each other.
!',,,ea in ipiantitl--*.
A needle may scarify the skin ns well I tl‘" must common and L
n- a JanceL On these scarified sputa a” llu:
P1"
rub in the virus. The virus fa taken on । T’a»"’y of p'»ta*h. nitrogen
ivory tips. When the spots have been 11‘"on® ,w’"‘ ”*
scarified, dip the tips in pure water and
nt once rub them upon lhe spots hart!
enough to rub off the virus on the tips. manttro containing any more
rur» »r»- iiK.inttuv
It fa not necessary, but it may be wise, valuable elumeaU than were in the I
•Uitig. ttioel Al flight
to cover the spot with court-piaster, so stack originally. If we tread thm pile
that clothing the arm may not era«e the down it will only Imi a pile of wet straw,
virus from the surface, bn lhe fourth nnd if we rot it ever so thoroughly it
[»r. Swayne's Oitil
day, or earlier, the vaccinated sputa will o»ly be a smaller pile of more tm »rI rffrrtnr remedy extant fol
may begin to look red and form a vesi­ otlghly rotted «traw and, tit heat, little
omplaitit. (lives rest at night
l
&gt;tter
than
so
much
swamp
muck.
cle. Be cautious not to rub it lest the
It is only by the use of the straw a*
rubbing should rupture the vc-sido.
Keep the clothing over the vehicle verv an absorbent, ttnd as a coarse fowl for
loose as lhe arm begins to swell. If the futUtoing animals, and by u-ong with it
vesicle is broken before the seventh day, much rich food, such a* corn, bran, oil
the virus, or clear serum, fa unfit to vac­ or cottonseed meal, etc., that wo can
cinate others with. The healil. of the
child from whom tho virus fa taken be irury valuable to u*e and that wifi
should be considered- He should be free largely increase the crops where used.
from all infectious maladies, and from We must not expect that we c.tn rai-e
nil constitutional diseases.
Not only large crops of grain year alter year and
should the child be healthy and free sell the niG-t valuable part, and by tiny
Hi waul him *al*. uprightly,
from all morbid diathesis, but its par­ method turn the straw into a in inure
that shall keep tip the fertility of the
ents also should be free.
IT WAS THE RIGHT THING TO DO.
The process of vaec'nation may not soil; if we manure only with straw we
must
ftxpect
to
grow
only
straw
upon
Ctor
&gt;.tir
pnynlrnt
dutggirts fnsp-akingnf
produce any constitutional disturbance,
nor fa it important that it should be so. the land. It is unfortunate (or anv m in proprietory medicines said if all proprietor med­
. ... ,1.
a* Ki&gt;i&lt;-tian» Liver Hits he
If constitutional symptoms do appear to lie so situated that he ran not afford would take piersun- iu selling Uieui.
on the seventh or eighth day, lhe infant
‘ ‘‘ ‘
will be restless and feverish, ami the I ,5u'
tkn'’
nc-u’f
bowels may be mure or less disturbed. ®M ,n'kL‘ a ful1
o&lt; ncl'
■Utlllg
In infants of a fuU habit, on the tenth J'l’h n;,v
,,f &lt;!‘rn‘,n2’ we now
aleraday an eruption may appear on the k*v,‘’ ,J”‘ ,
'“&gt;’»ner or later,
limbs, often extending L; the trunk.
hera.m*. exhs.Kted and case tertold
There &gt;■ u getiriaj ctimplalut allkiUK drUK*
J'wo of the vesicles should not be profitablu crops if we fail to return to *I'..*t&gt; 1t&gt;at they tnnnot act euoRgb ot “Dr.
k&lt;-«‘ -■'lire &lt; isre Jof C»Urrl&gt;" to supply the
touched, but lie allowed to complete tho soil the e«*entiol elotuenta of plant
their growth nnd reach maturity, and food removed in such crops.—J. 8. ■letuaiiil. if tlu- dl-*pj«.li&gt;t&lt;-&lt;l write direct to
the iJnctor, &gt;09 MadbonSu, Chicago,
fall on the twenty-first day. If more, IVoodwanl, in N. K. Tribune.
’han two pustules have formed, lymph
When t«o nutneu are talktug together, it Is
Disposing of Manure.
or vaccine virus tuay be taken from any
safe to predict that they arc *ayiug evil of a
of the others. Two vesicles should be
Not many years ago many farmers de­ third; when to meu, that they are saying good
let alone and allowed to mature. Those clared that manure in a heap paid better uf thetujclvca.
^“sicles that mature and fall leave a than money drawing ten per cent, inter­
prominent circular scar, somewhat de­ est. As a rule, no manure was applied
“HOUGH ON RATS."'
pressed, and showing six or eight minute to land until it was thoroughly decom­
The thing dcsiied fouud at last. Ask Drugnits. This fa the proper course of a posed. Il was generally hauled to the gt»l lor “Rough &lt;&gt;u Rate." it clears out
genuine nnd efficient vaccine vesicle. If field where it was to be applied, and mice, roaches, tics, bvd-buga 15c. boxes.
the coureo of its growth is defective in placed in heaps, to ferment and rot.
A California silk worm lias spun ayarn nine
any of these points, especially* if the in­ The manure made in the winter was miles
long Aca captains might aa well bang
flamed ring does not form, the vaccina­ drawn out in the spring and allowed to
“P_______________________
tion fa not worthy of confidence, and so remain in heaps till the time of corn­
The most saered obligation Is the marriage
the infant should be vaccinated the sec­ planting the next season. This practice contract.
The moat sacred duly la to maintain
ond time.
is now generally abandoned, except one's health. The beat medicine is Brow n's
Vaccinating does not prevent contract­ where the manure is wanted for a f--w Iran Bitter*.
ing small-pox for an indefinite period wpeuiai
special purposes,
pnrp «■•&lt;•*, a*
a, ior
for raising
rafaing uowers,
flowers,
of time; so that revaccination mny bo1 or certain kind«»»f vegetables. Scientific
done every seven years. It seems to l&gt;e men, as well as practical farmers, agree
necessary in some cases, as whet, the in thinking that manure lows its value
vaccinations have becoltae indistinct, or by being exposed'to the action of the
small-pox prevails, or if occupation ex­ elements, and that its genera! condition
poses them to this disease. In a few fa not improved. By storing manure
weeks after the vaccine scab has fallen, the use of it fa lost one year, and mneb
a good vaccine scar is distinct, indented of its substance is wasted. A large part
and dotted, with well-defined edges. A fa washed away by the rains, and a con­
poor scar is indistinct, smooth, not in­ siderable portion fa carried away by
dented, with irregular and ill-defined evaporation.
During the process of
decomposition considerable ammonia is
formed, which is diffused in the atmos­
Newspapers.
phere, and is lost for all practical pur­
HOOKS,
poses, unless gypsum or sulphuric acid
JBWKLR1',
The newspaper has become more than is employed to retain it. By plowing
an incident, of life. It is one of the the manure under in the spring, the
WALL PAPER,
mighty forces that are behind the pro­ ammonia that fa funned fa absorbed by
W IMLOW MIIADEM,
gress of the present, and it compels the tbe soil above it, and taken up by the DYIJ STIFFS,
recognition of moral teachers, of philos­ plants as soon as they commence to
ophers, and of all who arc interested in grow. There is a great saving of time
PROPRIETARY MEDICINES,
the forward movements of our genera­ and labor in hauling manure directly to
PRESCRIPTIONS,
tion. The proof of this is in the fre­ the place where it fa to be used, and by
quency with which the place of the scattering it where it is wanted. The
RECEIPTS^
newspaper in society is discussed and best farmers no longer suffer manure to
lhe complimentary estimate that is al­ accumulate about their barns and sta­
-------MT
--------most Invariably given it by those whose bles. They haul it out during favorable
►pinions rest upon an impartial but ja- weather in winter, using sleds for the
iteial basis. The newapaper has become purpose when the ground fa covered
a favorite theme for the clergyman, and with snow. There fa no injury to grass
it generally finds approval at his hands. fields by drawing sleds over them when
Rev. Dr. Collyer, in his Sunday sermon the ground is frozen, and very -large
bitarthi t
at the Church cf the Messiah,' in New loads can be taken at such times.—ChiYork, is the latest to add bis testimony cago Timet.
to the mass in his acknowledgment of
the function of the daily newspaper, and
—In making little gifts at home, a
he said to his congregation: “The whole mucilage is often required. The follow­
AU to
ritb any
world makes ynur home and mine a ing recipe will be found godfl for deli­
whispering gallery through the d^ily cate work: Dhuulv^gum arabic to tbe
papa’s, and a. b t-lie busintvev of the pa- coariitoncy of creailj ibeu thicken with
yerrto give us the distraotJo" rather flour and boil until perlaotiy* smooth.

F. T. BOISE,

Route
PRINCIPAL+LINE

••I* »Mt M. PMM.

KANSAS CITY

Injury,

PERCEVAL LOWELL
r, Gen Arae. AptChlcaco, All

T J POTTER.

mTW3
BIIUWVS IRON BITTERS arc
i i-rtuin cure for all tliHcttses

«-iu.lly Indigestion, Dyspepsia, IntcrI* ran of Strength. Lack of Energy,
etc. Enricbct* the blood, strength­
ens tho muscles, and gives new
life to tho
'
nerves. Acts
‘
“
like a
rrnioving all dyspeptic synij»toius&gt;
Heat in the Stomncli, Heartburn,
etc. Tho only Iron Preparation
that will not blacken the teeth or
give headache. Sold by all Drug*

BROWN CHEMICAL CO.
Baltimore, Md.
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS

FREDERICK DOUGLASS
I

tbe general public!. It abound* in raei&gt;» graceful
to mwl about him. «t»d no wonder."—ILmUiq CvagreaatlecalM.
' Il ia a*it.*|&gt;lrlt:gaa t; oom." - Wonuia'* Jourr.'!
“No Itranfrr »tory h«* tw*o. or evrr will W“,
told.”—Hoatri. AdTcrtl*cr
- It i« a more auaorbing tale than an; creiC.ioecaf
fletlon."-Troy :N Y ] l
“PraUned to a wide arnle.*’—Harford Coorant.
"Tbe whole »lory la extcedii.Jy well totd,**Rocbe-ter I»emocrat.
AddrraaJ.S. GOODMAN A CO.. Cblctjw. DL
vol.

v„ iwe.

The Sanitary Engineer.
Tbe recogui*cd authority on all matters re­
lating to Public Health, Food and Drag Ado)teration, Drainage and Water Supply. Scam
•
and hot water beating, plumbfbg aod gaa fitUng. ga&gt; and electric lighting, hcatlug and I
vcutllation.
Questioua on any of these tubjccU will be
anawend in tbe columns of The SxxtTAKr KmotMEEB, free ot charge.
The opinion of thia Journal upon ail techni­
cal rutyecU arc cither prepared or nevlwd by

OPINIONS OF THE PRESS.
Thl» Journal ha* become tbe Iraditw -otbnrity u&gt;
th I* country upon Military qua*U-&gt;i&gt;* —Ohio Midlc»l Journal.

gratifying at a proof of public apprcUt-nn «: ilX
eery u»clul work whlehoar contemporary has dune
for tbe publie.—Nev York WerM
title that of th* PrarUcal i’iiliaoUiropUt. fa* H&gt;eh
II r«rr.v— IfMirto Iu* I" If.-.&gt;&gt;&gt;.1 __1 . —
Weekly.
Prat, rhau.lkr.wbsu &lt;leliv»rli« • pomdnr I
rao*t telling lecture on naultation l»ul&gt; si 1
Cooper lnsliHkr,MlviMM hb hearer* t.. mbeerl
lelujLtUwmvT ltwrn»ii*,» public,Hue 4ev&lt;*

PAINT AND BRUSH
!

Call and Examhic I
F. T. BOISE.

ii.

—_ _■

THE SANITARY ENGINFEB ia
by all newsdealer* In the United Bit
f'.nwtn jifocrlr ■
~f
T. .

’

�Ly --------- MARCH 11,1888. ferred with tbe French and English
Consul*. Meanwhile tbe Prime Minis­
Thf fl rut stock ojM*Tatiou mentioned
ter seeing no chance .of his getting on
in literature i*‘ when the two bean
• Midr-n -a,v | in future with tbe Egyptian Chamber,
’Itahara^k
Totally resigned. It is doubtful if any
bolstering up the Elisha stock.
other Minister will have bettor fortune.
An important meetfug took place on
Philadelphia has been st rack with!
। Thursday of tbe share-holders in the
an elopement maniac, and it is now all
।
Channel
Tunnel piqjcct. Tbe chief
the style for husbands and wives to l»e
, discussion was respecting the bill to be
at fhedepota when trains'go out to twe
- immediatelv introduced in Parliament
If. either party has skipped.
entitled “The Channel Tunnel Rail­
Ao Ohio journalist fired twenty-six way.” Lord Richard Groaoener, M. P.,
bullets at a stnefl'd alligator lying on a in hia speech, met the objections to the
sand bank, and then ‘paid a boy two scheme by numerous explanations and
•hillings to tell'him whether he .was by most emphatic declarations as to ita
feasibility and oven necessity. He con­
cross-eyed or oqly stone blind.
sidered theft would wj no greater dif­
A man 86 years old and a woman 66 ficulty in tunnelling through twenty•who live in tho lower part of Dawson one miles of chalk under the sea than
county,-Ga., ran away last week and in ordinary railway tunnels/the chalk
got married. This is the first instance being considered by the engineers to be
ot the old folks running away from most favorable to the enterprise, The
idea that the Channel Tunnel would bo
their children to marry.
a source of danger to this country id
Rev. Dr. Newman, of New York, sug­ the ease of any complication with
gested in his last Sunday’s discourse France was ridiculed, but it was agreed
that “tbe generally accepted fact that that should tbe Government demand
women are more pions than men may any military works to be connected
possibly be attributed to the afternoon with the scheme, the company would
visits oAthe pastors.” There is certain­ be ready to assist in carrying them out
ly no lacE~&lt;»f clerical assurance in^ this Colonel Shakespeare laughed at tho
. didm. IPerhaprirtnakea some differ­ idea of danger from the tunnel in tho
ence who the pastor and women are, event of war. He said if the tunnel
whether these afternoon visits are pro­ was closed atone end it would bo im­
vocative of piety.
possible to run a train through it while
it could be defended with a single siege
The last trip of the Cnnard steamship gun or a stoker with a couple of boilers
Servin to Liverpool is said to have been of hot water. Tbe motion for the bill
the fastest across the Atlantic yet ac­ was unanimously adopted. It is
complished. The apparent time of the thought possible that in seven years we
. passage is 7 days, 12 hours, 39 minutes, shall be able to take a trip to
and the actual time of the passage from Paris without a thought of sea-sick­
Sandy Hook, 7 days, 7 hours, 41 min­
ness.
utes. This is by several minutes the
The relations between the leading
shortest passage on record, notwith­ branches of the English and Danish
standing that the Cunard route in by courts, which has been somewhat
ninety miles longer than that taken by stained recently, owing to a supposed
most of the other lines. On several flight passed by the one on tho other
days theServia had easterly winds.
have been satisfactorily adjusted. The
Prince of Walesand the Prince of Den­
Vincennes University has just start­
ed rt lottery for its benefit, the legis­ mark met nt a dinner a week ago un­
der very happy auspices and it is likely
lature Imving granted this privilago be­
fore the adoption of the new constitu­ that the first named will soon pay u
tion, which prohibits lotteries hence­ visit to the latter and inspect the roses
forth. Louisville lottery' men have now id full bloom—n proof of tbe ex­
charge of the affair, the university be­ treme mildness of the winter. About
ing guaranteed $20,000 of the profits. the middle of this month SirB. P. Sey­
It is rather odd tn find churches and mour, the commander in chief of the
colleges going jnto lotteries when they Mediterranean fleet, will start on a
are denounced as sinful in some places cruise in H. M. S. Helicon to the island
and punished as crimes in others. Cer­ of Sicily. In March the fleet is to ren­
tainly gambling could not be taught dezvous at Syracuse, preparatory to
more insidiously than when people arc joining the Bacchante, with the royal
urged to try their luck for tho good of middies ou board, the expectation be­
ing that they will escort Lord Charles
religionand education.
Scotts corvette to the different ports to
Tho latest intelligence from tho West be visited in the Mediterranean by
Indies sbowes that tho islands are en­ Prince Victor and Prince George of
joying tiieir usual degree of tranquill­ Wales.
The recent treat to 5,000 poor chil­
ity. General Guillermo is about to or­
ganic-. a force to invade San Domingo, dren given by the kind-hearted pro­
and the Dominican government is on prietors of the Illustrated Loudon
the alert. The President has just pro­ News,will I hope have many followers,
mulgated a revised Constitution. Gon­ They hired the theatre at Covent Gar­
zales tnd Baez have come to tonus, and den for a night, and then went out in­
they will also invade San Domingo to die highways arid by-ways for poor
with joined forces. President Solomon, neglected children, to whom, probably,
of Hayti, has discovered a conspiracy no such eruuyment hadxever before
in which his ministers were the lenders, come.
Rapid progress is l&gt;eing made at the
a new cabinet has been formed, and the
largo packages of imfiammable materi­ Crystal Palace in the reception and ar
al which had been secreted iu tbe pal­ rangement of the vast number of ex­
ace have been removed. “A general hibits which bid fair to make tbe elect­
Tbe
revolution at an early date,” sayc the ric exhibition a great success.
Postal Telegraphic Department of her
dispatch, “is emminent.”
Majesty’s Government have sent speci­
mens of tho most modern aupnratus
OUR EUROPEAN LETTER.
employed in tho vast telegraph business
of the United Kingdom.
Lokdon, Eng., Feb. 14,1882.
The Empress Eugenia’s visit to the
The mistreatment of tbe Jews in
Queen will extend over the next week
Russia has secured for them the great­
or two. She is at present located at
est sympathy in England, yet it is not Tbe Cottage on the Osborne domains,
seen what this Government can do where she haa been a guest of her Ma­
farther then to protect against the in­
jesty during tho two proceeding years.
humanity displayed, or to appeal to tbe
The Empress will occupy her new
better feelings of the higher and more
country rest near Farmborough early
cultivated classes. It is not alone in in the spring, and will contiuuo to re­
Russia that the Jews have suflered. It
st Je there the greater part of the year
is but a few months ago that savage
with her household.
acts were cotmuitted against them in
August.
Germany, and nobody thought of pro
testing against the Germans. I do not
A Smile of Satisfaction
mean to insinuate that the feeling of
This from the Cleveland(Qhio) Penny
England against Russia is less considPress, carries ita own suggestion :Rcate than when tlie Germans were in cently meeting Mr. H. G. Keffer, treas­
fault. The question is whether the ure of the Cleaveland Herald, our re­
cruelty and injustice of Germany did presentative inquired of that gentleman
after stating his mission, if he per­
not stimulate any latent feelings of sonally knew anything about the
enmity against the Jews amongst the Great German Remedy, St. Jacobs Oil.
Russian people. Public opinion in other A smile played across Mr. Keffer’s ex
countries will be strongly expressed presaivo face and his eyes twinkled
meyrily as be replied in the affirmative,
on the subject, and if it is out of the I will not refuse to state my experience
question for other Governments to in­ with it. and you may use it ns you
think
best. Fouryears ago I sprained
terfere, there will be everywhere such
earnest manifestations of sympathy as one of my ankles, an accident which,
asyou are aware, entails much suffer­
will shame tho most tyrauical rule. Tbe ing and sometimes leaves the limb in a
cause of the Jews is, I learn, taken up condition to remind one frequently of
Unfortunately this re­
very warmly in America. The tend­ the old bort.
ency of th*» Russian authorities to make sult ensued. Whenever tbe weather
became damp or my system absorbed
excuses for the shameful conduct of the the slightest cold my ankles pained me,
people has a very black look indeed, This went on at intervals for over three
and will cause more civilized nations to years, and I could not obtain relief.
belive that the fearful statements made Last winter I applied the St. Jacobs
Oil and it completely cured me. I
respecting lhe treat of the Poles re­ have net since felt a return ot the pain.
cently must have been not far from the
truth. All this helps to verify tho old
Administrator’ll Stale.
saying that if you scratch a Russian
GEOBOE GILLIS, deeeeeed.'
you find a Tartar beneath.
hereby given thai I shall mH at publl e
ia.
ijm-. ....
There are signs of a crisis in Egypt
Clouds were gathering for a long time
over the land of tbe Pbaroahs, and tho premises dearctibed In thia notice. In the
temporary lull caused by the action of Nashville In tbe County of Barry. tn tho

England and France only gave time
for the 'disaffected to discuss their
gnevances. VVliat these are is not very
dear, but the first step towards a -solu ­
tion will probably be a change of Min­

IWtil- by tae Fr.vbat* Court of Barry Cooaiy*
Michigan, ail of the e«talc, rigM. tlUc and
Intern* cf the *ald drenwed of, In and in
lite real MUte altwued and Mag In the Coun­
ty of B«rry in the State
Mictihtan. known
and doKribeu a* follow* lo-wit: la tbe rillaao of

FOR

wm. ailll refunding with the cheer*, a
shabby, til-looking man. about tblitytae or forty yeara old, standing at

the; other spectator*, about thirty pace*
from the carriage, deliberately reload

Volver was struck from his hand by James
Burnside, a photographer of Windsor. Others
seized him, and lhe police rushed in and took
him Lalo custody. Meantime the Queen’s
coachman-drove on m though nothing bad

him: Lynch him 1" nnd a rush wm made to-

NEXT

TRUMAN'S store.
•U1 kinds &lt;/ DENTAL WORK doc*, taw tbs

SIXTY DAYS
------ 1 SHALL OFFER FOR SALE------

without pain for SO cte;
free call and we me.

INK. A. n. WINK.

pfEN’KY ROE. Ptnni.ro.

IT COST OR UNDER COST MEAT MARKET.
Krcp. coB«tently on hand a Mf **ack of

Fresh and Salt Meats,
Srnutei Bam ui SWbn,

—=MY ENTIRE STOCK OF GOODS------

$10,000 Worth!

IN THKIK 8BA80X,

Lardk by the lb. or barrel.

Uough UTtnly hurtled.

thorough “crank,” gave his asms m Roder­
ick Maclean, aged thirty-two. He stated
ford street.
The weapon u*ed wm a six chambered Colt’s
revolver, of Amerlcati make. Macl.ean aald

ho took a hearty meal at a Windsor coffee
house shortly before tho attempt. No bullet

Mauch 8.
The prisoner who fired at the Queen wea
driven to the town-hall In an open fly at halfpMt one, in charge of Superintendent HayeA
Ho has a wretched look, and is a man very
much of tho Gulteau type. Hs was unclean
and unshaven. He has a slight mustache. He
was immediately taken before the Magistrates,
the Mayor of Windsor presiding. Mr. Steven­
son, Solicitor for tbe Treasury, prosecuted. In
reply to the Mayor, the prisoner said, in the
moot aS-hand manner and firm voice, that his
name wm “ Ms-Lean—Roderlek MacLean."
Superintendent Hayes then swore to the fact*
of the shooting, and also testified to tbe
letter found on the prisoner. The letter was
read- It said that the prisoner would not
have done tbe crime haa ten shillings been
given him instead of the insultingly small
sum of Mix shillings. He was compelled to
tocracy," be added, by “that old lady Mrs
Vic.” The witness further Mid that thi*
morning tb* prisoner wiihed to make a writtrn
tur: “I have a romnlrln
ten statement, tir
*iyng:
complete
answer to the charge." He then wrote a letter.
In it tho prisoner said he was not guilty of
shooting at tbe Queen with the Intention of
doing her grievous bodily harm. His object
was only to cause public alarm, wilh the ob­
ject of having his grievances redressed. His
pecuniary straits and circa instances tended to
prore '.he truth of this statement. Had be
cared to have Injured the Queen, he would

This is no dodge, but is a bona fide offer. The time afid
opportunity to make mduny js by saving from 25 to 5o per
cent on your purchases. In Dress Goods we quote:

ing article* en the attempt on the life ef the
Queen. Th* Timo My*:
“The intention we prefer to think wm no
mor* than a deetre to create alarm and rain
notoriety at whatever coat- There i« a kind
of 'nfarnou* notoriety much eoreteJ by »ome
disordered mind*, which cm be fu ly and cer­
tain y earned by meh deed* a* that of Mac­
Lean yesterday To bar* fired a |&gt;lelol at a
woman, and that wumui tbe Queen of En­
gland. confer* on th* culprit tbe mod unen­
viable dxatlnct.oa, but dictinction none tbe
fered by her Mejeaty. but the com might eas­
ily bar* been &lt;itb*rwi»e. We tout, however,
that tbe coat of Macl^an'a notoriety will be
borne oaly by himself. It may chauca la ba
a somewhat heavy one. If all other reetrainta falL and if there are men with

But there

sfy nebody
MacLeaa tl

nd m Yesterday.
evIdeaM that he
an be admitted.
a pillty ef a tao
b in the eplaioe
aaity, but it will

punlahmet.1 he has brought upon hlseaerf.'

CV* The Highest Market Price pail
for Hides, Pelts, &amp;c.
Frosh Grooda, Full Weights and
Satisfaction Guaranteed.
n

RENRY ROE-

Wool Cashmeres, .so worth fl.
Wool Cashmeres, .00 worth a80
A DURKEE,
Half wool do. .25 worth .85.
Plain Suitings, .25 worth .35
Plaid Suitings, 6|.
Print- ' " Wool dress Flannel. .40 worth .65 Wi
faterproofH, .75 worth $1
Wateronrofs. Si worth $1.25
I
Wool
Tweeds .50 worth .75
.
Halt wool Tweeds,'8s worth 4a.
Cottonade, .16 to 20
Fanners &amp;. Mechanics .20 to .25
Lin. Table Cloth, .18 worth 25
Lin. Table Cloth, 3s worth 4a.
Lih. Table Cloth, .50 worth 75
*
*
Cotton Goods, .6 .7.8
Bleached Gooda, .6.7.8.9 .10
Office on second floor of Buxton's new brick
White Goods cheap.
White Goods Cheap.
NASHVILLE, MICH.
Table Oil Cloth, .25 worth .35
Floor Oil Cloth, .35w’th .50
Horse Blankets .80 worth 9s.
Overalls .40
*44&lt;i« &gt;n i fr, if Hr hrgiiii ii Ini tshlc
Overalls .60
Overalls 25.
Trim’ijg Silk .75 worth $1
Silk Ribbons at coat.
80 acres In Maple Grovi1, 45 cleared, 23 acres
Trim ng Satin, $1 worth $1.50
Ladies Stockings.
of Wheat, good Orchard, very fair buildings,
Children’s Stockings.
Gloves &amp; Mittens. good spring near house. Price 3,00ft. Payments

REAL ESTATE AGENTS,

Ingi;rain Carpets, .25 worth .35
Ingrain Carpets, .35 worth .50
Ingrain Carpets, .GO worth .80
Ingrain Carpets, .70 worth$ 1
Men’s Suits, $5 worth 8.
Men’s Suitfl, $10 worth 15
Men’s Suits, $15.worth 20. Boys Suita $3 worth 5.
Boys Suits 5 doll, worth 8. Overcoats 2.50 to 10 dolls.

BOOTS
Mens Stoga Kip Boots, 2 dolls, worth 2.50
Mens Stoga Kip Boots, 2.50 worth 3.5o
.
Mens Fine Calf Boots, 3 dolls, worth 4
Mens Fine Calf Boots 2.50 worth 3 dolls.

wheels, but tbe pistol kicked and the bullet
might have hi: the earrlage-door. Tho pris-

Kid Button Shoes 1 doll, worth 1.50
Fine Kid Button, 2*dolls worth 2.50
Tampico Goat 2.25 worth 3 dollars
Childrens Shoes 50 cts. to 1 dollar.

Tea, 35 worth 5oc. Tea 45c worth GOc. Coffee 13 worth 17
Coffee 16c worth 20c. Brown Coffee 17c. Molasses, blk.
Strap, 30c worth 40c. Common Syrup. 30c worth 40
’
N. O. molasses best in the market,50c worth 70.
Maple flavor 50c. worth 70, Stigar Granlate d 10 Standard A. 10 Brown 7 8.
PF’The prices quoted are suflient to indicate what bargains are
offered, all of which will be strictly adhered to.

The highest market price will be paid fsr Butter, Eggs,
Potatoes, Beans, Lard, Dried Apples &amp;c.

On all sums ol $25 and over, six months’ credit will be giv­
en on approved notes bearing 7 percent interest.
Come early! these goods willfnot last long at prices given.

40 acres, 3 mile* from NeahvfBe. Fair house
and barn, Nearly ail improved. Price *1,600.
40 acres, 3% miles from Nashville. If cold
soon will take 81,150.
25 acre*, in the village of Nashville. Must
be sold for wbat It will bring on account of
poor health of present owner.
50 acres, 4 miles from Nashville; nearly all
improvetl; fair buildings and In all a good' bar­
gain. Price 81,(U)-, part down.
House and Li&gt;t, on Phillipa street; the beet
bargalna tn town. Price 8350.
■RHouac and Lot, on State street Price 8330,
half down down.
Good House and four acre* of Land on Fran­
ce* Street Price 8-150.
House and lot on State St, house new: gucxl
cellar and plenty of rikxI water. For aale at
87UU or will exciiange for farm property near
Nashville or Hartings.
80 acres, Ik' miles from Naahville on the best
road leaving tne village; all improved except 8
acre*; the remaining S acres good timber; is
well watered by a never-failing spring. Good,
young orchard; buildings fair; 18 acres of
nbeat on the ground; present owner engaged
In oilier business and will sell for 82,600, Jl,000 down, ImImk-v on long lime.
Vacant lot cm Philips St Price 8120 if sold
soon.
LEE d: DURKEE

pj

R. DICKINSOM A &lt; O.
'

-----NEW-----

CUSTOM FLOURING MILL
READY FOR BUSINESS

Every day in the year—Bundays excepted.

CUSTOM GRINDING!
Of every dcrcriptlon, done in a superior
manner, at tbe drop of the hat; and
Satlafaction guaranteed. .

FLOUR. MEAL AND MILL FFED
Kept constantly on hand.

Our Graham Flour
By a strict attention to businesa, and square
dealing with all our customers, we hope to mer­
it a liberal patronage from the farmers of this
vicinity.

Conititutien HUL Oxford was found iniaue
by a jury, and, a*the Ingliab custom where

Mills on railroad,—cast of depot.
.^DVICE TO BUYERS

John Francis Cred at the Quean May JO,
1842, from the very spot where Orford had
stood. He wm but a few feet from th* car­
riage, but missed hl* elm. He wm tried and
condemned to death, bnt the sentence wm
commuted to imprisonment for life.
the mitigation of Frauds’ punishment wm

backed boy named Bean. Be presented a
pistol at the Queen's carriage, but did not get
a chance to fire it. The pistol was loaded with
powder, paper tightly rammed down, and

prisoned for eighteen month*.
An Iri*h bricklayer named Hamilton, on
May 19, 1840, fired a pi.tal loaded ealy with
tutior Hill, the acene of Oxford and Frannie’
attempts. He wm transported for seven
years.
Robert Pate, a cashiered Lieutenant of Hus-

DRY

^yAGONS.

GOODS

WAGONS
WAGONS

“A Nickle Saved.
Is better than five cents earned.’’

We are Opening ,_a fine line of NEW GOODS and will
Offer Some

The Best, and most

Thoroughly Reasoned Haterial

SPLENDID BARGAINS
Bargains you can’t Afford to Pass.
EF* We do not use our Competitors Advertised Price Us
to make prices,
ST We don’t have thrift kind orgoods.

drees goods and

dress trimmings

------ InJEndless Variety——g.V
escaped with a
and a whipping.
—Buffalo, N. Y.. haaa girl of ten who
whistles beautifully.”

BOOTS

Ofany in Barry Co.,

READY FOR SALE!

D^//+D

ty Our goods are all Fresh and Desirablennd wenever had
a Larger Stock to select from.
The last attempt prior to that made yeetersy wm by a boy named Arthur O’Connor,

’

II. It. DICKIN8OA* A CO.

--------------- OF-----from the asylum ea condit.on that ha would

hlsekanilta tar “ foagery.'
Ctarit J&gt;eb*, in .MfcBiptitur to please

THE

BLACKSMITHING!
BLACKSMITHING!

,

AM) SHOES

That wejWarrant jn Everyj particular^ ■
:
We aim to keep Only G&lt;xxl_ Goods and .are ;aatiafied with
Uemember the
Small Profits.

KOCHER BROS.

BU6GV &amp; WAGON REPAIRING

jo». a*,

wood

�«be will come home soon

Ms. Baftianger went for new spring
hat* thia week.
Pete p----- , had better call around
with the cigars.
Plenty of call for working cattle,
sheep and cows this spring.
Joel St. John will soon move his mill
south of tbe center two miles.
Tboac going west this spring, should
not forget to sign fcr The News.
Miss Della Palmerton will teach the
South Jordan School the coming sumTherein a great deal in the way of
improvemenu going on throughout
tbe town.
Stowell Bros, have moved their shop
into the Lowell block on Wall St., for
this month only.
D. B. Coorille commenced work on
Monday, for Jackson Palmerton, build­
ing an addition to his barn.
Frank Hilbert is haying his store re­
painted, and you may look out for a
nice stock of goods this spring.
John Holmes hM bis saw mill in run­
ning order again near his father. Chas.
McArthur furnishes him the steam.
McCracken hM been putting a new
roof on his kitchen, and a new floor in
his barn. It looks m though he wm
fixing up to rent.
W. Barrel hM sold his interest in the
meat market,1 to Shad Rogers, and
would like to settle with bis customers.
He will go west soon.
There hM beeq a few thousand
pounds of sugar made in our town this
spring. Price® are very low, ten cents
being the general price.
Mr. and Mrs. L. Rogers lost n boy
aged 9 years, lost Sunday, with the
spinal fever. The remains were taken
to Ohio for interment.
One of our hunters has a very nifee
receipt for making strawberry short
cake, one he experimented on while up
Dorth, and is also handy in repairing
bedstead.
We were glad to hear -through The
News that ita editor wm able to be io
tbe office part of the time. Our beat
wishes are that be may become a Strong
man soon.
.
One more case of diphtheria at John
Kilpatrick’^. His little boy died Mon­
day night. Tbe disease has hM gone
from the north part of the town to the
south part.
Some of ear capitalists are talking of
buildings school house, the present
summer nt the center. What we pay
for rent at the town hall winters, for
the advanced class, will pay the inter­
est on the money that we would need
to complete the house.
While Nashville is agitating a fire
protector, we would recomend tho
“Holly” system, one of the best systems
in the United States. Yotfcan get all
information you wish of Bert Holly,
Lockport, N.Y. All those having seen
tht,“Holly” system reccomened it m be­
ing the best.
We learn that Levi Holmes is to be­
come a resident of our little hamlet
He has bought a lot and we understand
ia going to place a nice house on the
same. We all say welcome. Mr. H.
and his son John, begins to think their
Jtore is too small for their tirade, and
we an all looking for them to put up a
new store.
Those boys who wanted to trounce
John Bulling, found a good woman
who promised to stand by John in all
his lawful undertakings, and after one
of them received a few death blows, she
dealt out from the sb oulders, tbe boys
made up their minds that they had let­
ter wait until they had grown some
more before they completed tbe job.
______
Nell.

LACEY.

George Lisbrigerhas moved, into J.
L. Steven’s new house.
Our water power is coming—N. E.
Clark iaputiBg up a wind mill.
,
We Laceyana are in mourning. Our
' blacksmith bM sold out, and is about

Tuesday eve,, March 10th, for the ben­
efit of the M. E. church.
James Ho want and wife are to work

worked
, lick M tb- b.„ i.

brnwe of many to sweat.
March rune in gentle a* a lamb, bat
look out for LHxxards in consequence
of it the but of tho month.
The U. B. Missionary society met at
the church hut Thursday, with a good
attendance, considering the bad road*.
Easter Sunday ia approaching, and
the boys are preparing for it by laying
in a good store of eggs for tbe occasion.
Mrs. Stuck, who has been so hapless­
ly low for the pa&lt;,t two months, we are
pleased to state, seems to be on the
gain once uioie.
The quarterly meeting at the Kilpat­
rick church last Saturday and Sunday,
was well attended, and much good
work was accomplished.
* Ben. Cool bough’s little boy has been,
and still remains, in a critical con­
dition, from spinal disease, and is not
expected to live from day to day.
Mrs. Harper, who has been visiting
her daughter, Mr. II. J. Miller of Char­
lotte for the past three weeks, and re­
turned home last Monday.
Mrs. Bowen has woven over 1000
yards of carpet, in the last twelve
months, which is a pretty, good year’s
work for odo woman, besides all of her
household duties.
Mr. James Bayles hM at* last found
water at a depth of 330 feet, after dig­
ging nea rly all winter, and lias .the
satisfaction of knowing that the water
is two hundred feet deep. Better go
on now Jim. and make an artesian well
out of it
Van.

BALTIMORE.
A gentle shower.
G. Bryant’s school closed this week.
James Phillip’s baby was buried last
Sunday.
J. K. Endsely is building an addition
to his house.
If mother earth i» sound, why does
siie heave so this winter.
Mr. Wilcox has closed his winter
term at the McOniber district
Daniel Wright has engaged to work
for S. F. Hull, for the season,
A. P. Warren, of Johnstown has
moved on the premises of J. Ltchty.
Rosa Bostwick closed her winter’s
term of school the 24th, at Barney’s
mills.
Your scribe mov^d his goods and
chatties on the premises of J, Endsleys
Tuesday last.
Perry Henry started tbe plow the 3rd
His hogs have successfully figured out
the square root of his door yard^*
G. D. Babcock has gone into tbe
grocery business, in Hastings, w here he
intends moving if the business suits
him.
The dance a Mr. Green’s wm a suc­
cess.
About twenty numbers were
sold, and all seemed to enjoy x them­
selves.
Hired girls are scarce, but if you
would like to engage one for life, they
are plenty enough, labor is getting to
be a disgrace.
Stone for the foundation wall for the
new U. B. church are on the ground.
Tbe location u a good one. The job
willbelettoBurill from .the founda­
tion. It is not yet decided whether it
will be brick or wood.
Doxt.

BIBMARK.

Froze up at this writing.
The political pot begins to bubble.
Grimes’ mill is in motion- this week.
Dan Hullette finds lots of work fur
his feed mill.
W. Preston and family have gone
cast to reside.
T. Hun ter fondles a girl baby, a last
The St. John saw mill is doing good
work, and lots of ft
W. Fremire crippled himself with an
ax while out skunking.
Farmers are harvesting the first crop
of the season: maple sugar.
Rant Loomis of Charlotte, is in our
neighborhood for a four weeks stay.
Julius Hall reports a sow with seven­
teen pigs. Now come on with yom big
stories.
Hired men are taking their respect­
ive places where they will kill time by
the month.
'
Mr. Prince will not go back to Ann
Arbor as Dr. Hunt is trying hie skill
and expects to help him.
Elmer Hammond has bought the
Walch block; on Water 8L, and will

Pat McCarty, uf Peto-key, Geo.
title* of a teacher.
We had quite a fall of anow a few
»ys since, and although »t did uftt last
daring the day with singing and pio- I but a few days, there were a largen&lt;vrstories, which, withplr«*Jint Con- • number of sleigh* out, and the Ang­
vernation and visit in g, made .the time • ling of bribe sounded mcnly upon lhe
In December last, State S*lt Inspec­
paw in a Very agreeable manner.
; wintery air.
Among thoae present m Gvorgo Ar­
A. C. Wait, or better known to the tor Hill ar.bouDoed that no winter made
nold of Rochester, ,N. Y. who, fiffy readers of The News as tbe Chief Jus­ salt would be packed out and put on
the market until ifareh 1, the object
years ago officiating as groomsman at tice of coffin varnish fame, ia carrying
the wedding of the now veocntble on
■ a large bushiese in the boot and shoe being to secure a standard grade for all
seasons
of die year. '
couple. The aidrat person present was j line, while D. Murthland, our post
TImb two factions in the church dif­
William Knapp, of Byron* Michigan, . muster, takes the lead in groceries,
ficulty
at
Holland have been very pro­
a brother of the groom, who ia eighty- tin ware and dothipg.
Neuralgia-, Saiaf’ca, Lanttiagn, '
two ypant of age. Tbe youngest was ; The old grist mill has started up perly designated m “afelwarto” aud
half-breeds.
”
The “half breeds at Backache, Saraoe:: of the l.&lt; ■:
toe tniant sod oi Mr. rrnna huhih o&lt; once more and is doing a large busi­
Gout, Quinry, Sore Throat. Zuc,!~
Johnstown. The following is a list of ness. We expect soon to bid adieu to present are out in the cold but are
mgs and attains, Burns and
confident of final victory.
*
present*:
the old water mill, and welcome the
Scalds, General Bodily
A terrific explosion occurred at the
Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Ellis, $5 gold large steam mill, which Dr. H. F. Peck­
Pains,
piece; J. M. Knapp, gold band China ham is erecting in this progressive vil­ uicro-glycerino factory, situated near
tea set (seventy pieces;) tbe neigh­ lage. He has bis help engaged to start Marquette, March, fl, blowing four men Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frc-te
to ntomo. and completely destroying
Feet and Ears, and all other
bors, gold mounted ebony cane for some time the coming season.
th® building and everything near it.
Pains agd Aches.
groom. i.nd gold bowed glassee in case
Dick.
Loss of property, about $5,000.
for bride; Mr. nnd Mrs. R. Jones and
Tbe
examination
of
Otis
E.„
Snyder,
A. J. Kent, gnld lined cake basket;
EATOS COUNTY.
of Mt. Morris, chai god by his former
Mr. and Mrs. D. Stumpf, pair vases,
Prosecuting Attorney P. F. Dodds, of wife with trying to kill her with poison
cup and saucer; Mr. Gideon GiblM of
Dowagiac, gold thimbh-; Mrs Gibbs, Isabella county, ia attending college at in a dish of oystein, Hom the effect of FOLD BT ALL DWGOItT- AID DEALUL8
which she nearly died, will take p'aco
gold collar button;
Mr. And Mr. Olivet.
nr ked’ci?;e.
Joseph Pitnnerer of Spencerport, N.Y’.,
VOGIXER
CO.,
President Arthur has renominated March 20. Snyder u out on $500 bail.
shaving cup and ehoping bag; Mr. and Phillip T.'Van*Zile of Charlotto, for
Tbe weather during the past month
Mrs. Samuel Convis of Banfleld, chair district attorney of Utah.
has been a bonaza to the railroad com­
El/RV ATOM,
tidy; Geo. Knapp and wife of Byron.
The Charlotte Leader shows a mark­ panies in the lumber regions. One day
MiclL, photographs of themselves, end ed improvement in ita local department it snowed, and all tbe men hurried to
frames for same; Mary C. Brown of underita new management.
the camps. Tho next day it thawed,
Byron, Mich., chair tidy; Mr. and Mrs.
Dan Hayden, formerly of- Charlotte, aud they all came bock again, ami so
Frank Bullis of Johnstown, photo­ was arrested at Eaton Rapida,Tbursdny for tho whole moiitli.
graphs of tli&lt; niselves and frames for by officer Green, arraigned before
A crowd of Climax sports secretly
same; J. B. Knapp and wife of Cold- Justice Boughuisn Friday, and plead­ gathered at Mrs. Cook's barn to wit­
wate, gold mantle ornaments, old oak­ ed guilty to the larceny of a suit of ness nn awful combat between a cood
en bucket aud calender holder; Mr. clothes. He was sentenced to ninety* n tiW a cat, and retired in disgust lie­
and Mrs. Lnlddl and Mr/ and Mrs. days at Junin.
cause the brutes that were to do tbe
Spier of Battle ('reek, gbld lined cake
J. K. Taylor will erect a temporary fighting put the other brutes to shhmc
basket; Mr. nnd Mn?. Myron Chapman building on L. B. Morgan’s lot, at by refusing to quarrel.
The Adrian people who live iu the
and Mr. and Mr-. Chas. S. Marr, gold Bellevue, adjacent to where tho old
Constantly «^n Hand.
napkin rings Mr. and Mrs. T. P. Steb­ Taylor House stood, for an office, etc., neighborhood of the masonic temple
bins, gold lined salt dishes; Mr. and and will build a branch hotel on the are mi mad becauso the post office is to JOSEPH COLE,
Mrs. A. S. Quick of Staple Grove, pair old site/as soon os the weather is fa­ be moved to South Main street tlrat
vases; Mr. and Mrs. Dr. Luscomb of vorable.
they threaten to start an opposition
Marshall, pair vase*;
Mr. and Mrs.
J. Emmerson Barber and Miss Jennie shop at the old stand aud sell three
Wm. Knupp uf Byron, and Mrs. Julia Barber, the two cousins who were mar-. cent stamp* for two cents.
Altoft of Hastings, five dollar gold ri-*d ut the Methodist parsonage at
“Now I’ve got you,” cried a burly
pieces; M. A. Dexter and w ife of Burr Charlotte, Thursday evening, and for highwayman aa he grabbed Henry De­
Oak.phtograph aud frame of the bride’s whom friends have been looking ever Gowan by the throat in the woods be­
••inter; #Mr. George Arnold of Roches­ since, have not yet been heard from. tween Duncan City and Cheboygan.
ter, photograph of hinnu-lt and guilt It transpires that Barber has a wife But he changed his mind after Deframe. A fine piece of poetry arranged and one child at Onondaga, and the. Gor.an and knocked him down-three
forth© occasion, was read by Mrs. Kate friends of the girl,
say that she times and given him a vigorous kickKnapp of Coldwater.
must have known the fact
Jolin Corrigan laughed until hi* sides
Observer.
Fire broke out in tbe residence of ached while pulling up the grade stakes
W. D. McMillen, nt Grand Ledge, on od the line of tho Lake Shore, between
COUATY.
Saturday night at 10 o’clock, and be­ Adrian and Hudson, aud thinking of
fore the fire department could reach the annoyance it would cause the sur­
Arthur Smith of Thornapple and the spot the building 'was in flames. veyors. Ho was given 13 months at
Miss Ettie E. Johnson of Irving, were O»nng to the .lack ot water supply the the Ionia house of correction to medi­
married on the 7th lost.
house wns nearly consumed, but by the tate upon the dull-wittedni-M of man­
Rev. A. Hunsburger of Middleville, good work of fire engine No 1 tho resi­ kind in general,
was the recipient of n donation a few dence of James Long, which was only
Fred Gage, a young married man. at
days ago, which netted him.$45.
Stoney Creek, near Rochester, came
fifteen feet to the north, was saved.
At her charter election ou Monday
Miu Rose Mikesell, daughter of the home in an intoxicated condition,
last Middleville elected the following Ute Geo. Mikesell, and niece of Jerrie abused his wife, nnd violently assault­
ticket* President, G. W. Searles, Re­ Mikesell, an ex-alderman and influent­ ed hia fatbor-ln-law, Peter Tice. Tho
corder, G. W. Matteson: TrenxtiB-r, W. ial citizen of Charlotte, 1ms acknowled- latter tried to escape from Gage, and
HrSeveraiicc; Assessor. J.H.McKrvitct; that the child, recently left on the cars failing therein seized a gun and shot
Councilman, I. N. Keeler, W. R. Young near Grand Rapid , was hers, and that him dead. Tice immediately notified a
and J. B. Kesler.
she was the “veiled Indy” reported from justice pf the peace and surrendered
A dance took place at a Mr. Teeples Hastings. Shu accused Myron South­ himself.
in Irving, a few evening since. Henn. worth, a young and wealthy fanner
Walter Lepper, of Big Rapids, has
Benton and Tom. Mitchell quarreled near Charlotte, of being the father of been arrested at Denver Ebd is on bis
about a girl. The quarrel terminated tbe child. South worth has promised way home for stealing $200 and a gold
in a fight in which Benton got badly to marry the lady, and support her and watch from Miss Maria Brown. The
pounded. Now he wants $100 to settle the baby, if it can bo found. r Sylvanos
mean whelp permitted his wife, who
the matter or will rnaort to law.
Mikesell, brother of the girl, is now in was employed by Miss Brown, to be
Grand Rapids, endeavoring to find the arrested for tho crime, nnd shielded
How she Won IL
infant.
■
her husband by admitting the tliieft.
On Wednesday of last week Sheriff When Lepper deserted the over-faith­
“Let another Man Pralae
The other day while we were circum­
Lazell was forcibly put off tbe train at ful woman the truth came out.
ambulating around one of tbe famous
Delta for refusing to pav his fare the
Those persons who have attained to Thee, and not Thlno own
copper mines of Lake Superior, we fell
second I ime.’ The day before he bought eminence in any vocation of life have Mouth; a Stranger and not
into a pleasent conversation with one
n round trip ticket at Lansing for Ionia followed a uniform course, that of
of the rude mi flera, who, in his circum­
earnest work and unwearied applica­ Thine own Llp«.”
locutory way, told us the following which was'taken inp on the return trip.
Owing to a smash up near Iqgersoll, tion. None ore truly happy but those
amusing incident, Concerning the early
that are busy; for the ouly real happi­
Sec the Crown at Kocher Bros.
history of the mine: “At tbe time of the train was delayed at this station,
and being informed that the train ness lies in useful work of some kind,
which I speak,” says he, the location
could not get away before morning, either of the hand or tbe head, so long
wm inhabited by perhaps 150 people,
as over-exertion is avoided. It should
and the captain of the mine, who, by tbe sheriff came over to the hotel and
the way, is a very loyal man nnd has went to bed, and attemoted to com­ be the aim of every one to be employ­
plete
his
journey
on
the
next
train,
with
ed. If all men and women were kept QBO. W. FBAM LS
a heart that is constantly beating to
the time of Jim Fisk, advertised to the result above mentioned.- We .un­ at some useful employment there
------ DEALER IJ«----derstand that he will institute pro­ would be loss sorrow nnd wickedness
present 40 acres of land to the first
ceedings against tbe road for damages. in the world.
Fancy and Staple
woman at the location, married or sing­

K,

HIGHEST MARKET :PRIC8
--- For kin-l- &lt;,*—-

GRAIN ANO PRODUCE.

LUMBER, LA Hl, &amp;C-

MEAT MARKET!
Fresh, Salt aud Smoked '

Live and Let Lire,

THE CU0WN

SEWING MACHINE

E. R. WHITE, Agtv

le,* who would after a certain date, pro­
duce an infant child and stake her
reputation that she wm the mother.
You can have no idea what a stagna­
tion there wm in business at this ’ere
mine when that fact wm made public;
such a strife amome the daughter* of
eve. for 40 acres of land, you never
her’n tell on, sine* the tumble of man.
They fed their husbands on eggs and
ham, and what gits me, says the witminded ©buff—“tbe United States laws
and by laws were all laid aside and
the young and unmarried people all
took and active part, and labored just
as hard and were just m energetic a»
those having a diploma. Do you see
taat little moss-chinked cabin (point­
ing hia index-finger just to the right of
the shaft, there ia where tbe poor un
fortunate woman lived that wou the

C3F* Having throughly examined tbe cabinet
work of the Crown Sewing Machine, I tnual
nay it b the moat perfect work, and made of
Um best material I have seen tn a tewing mach­
The total number of convicts in the ine. I would recomcud it to all parties dealrcstate prison nt Jackson od the 1st inst, Ing a first daaa Machine. David Dswailat.

M1CH1GAI NEWS.

GROCERIE
CONfllSTISaii: FABT OF

SUGARS.TEAS.
“BUCHUPAIBA."
COFFEES, 8PTCF.S,
Samuel McLane, foreman of bridge
SYRUPS, MOLASSES,
New, quick, complete cure 4 *l*.T*i urinary
builders on tho Lake Shore road, drop­ affections, fmartin*,frequent or difficult urina­
“T^acn. SOAP.
ped dead on the street at, Sturgis one tion, kidnev dbcaitc*. 31. at druggists. Midi.
CRACKERS. CH
Depot, JAMKS X. DAVIS * CO., Detroit, BEST NICKLE SOAP IN 1
day last week.
SALMON.
Geo. Wcuderolt, a young man aged
WHITE FISH,
37 years, the son of wealthy parents in
TROUT.
MAMMOTH PEARL POTATO.
MACKEREL.
Chicago committed, suicide at the Bat­
Thb Potato originated ia Ohio, and was mHALIBUT,
•cted
aa
tbe
beat
freru
twentv-Bvo
hundred
tle Creek sanitarium March 6.
von Fj!
At a meeting of the Adrian council,

Recorder Frank Stanton wm removed ally rcondteh. It is an excrllant nnoitl Pik*- STEAM COOKED OAT
qualitlea, it rauka with Um paacbCROCKERY,
from office, and govenor wm petition­ to. In Ttabic
I...-. .
a I. _ -1
...
GLASS WARK.
ed to remove Mayor Tom Navin.
•
The circuit court at Adrian hM 31.00.
Oro. O. Dbjut.
awarded Mrs. Knight $1,1500 damages
J for au assault upon her with a hatchet
OHIO
ELEGANCE AND PIDUTT.
by Hany Whitney, in a dispute about
TOBAi
on the foUnwiD day they bnried her a line fence.
article aoU
■
nai color, beauty ami IsjSe.
TRY
administered by herself in a fit of

;

�tbe pity that ।

,Y - . march n. lees.
THE OLD FIREPLACE.

to inaull.

I wto more gay, more bril-

terined it, perfectly satisfied him, with
on air so absurd, so complacent and
friendly, that it was impolite for him to
rewtefB his former manner, or to remon­
strate. against this literal interpretation
"■at irmunrea held the ashen
of his wishes with persistency or natu­
where the corn popped lorth so white }
Or the cb’-Mn-.it -i bur-l th. r j.t kot*
ralness.
With crackling* of delight.
He left me at last, a little bewildered.
I could see, both at me and himtolf, and
the outer door closed at once upon his
retreating form, and opened to the in­
With iu akclas of hand-spun gold.
coming figure of Theo, Into whose arms
Twas there the red -cheeked apples
Lulu lightly sprang from the stairs,
F * inly
routed and oputtered. down which she had hastened on seeing
him come up the-walk.
“Ha, ha, little wife,” ho laughed,
Then the lead In tho shore 1 melted
.
Conkl furm-hcheap-made toys.
kissing her heartily, “ one would think
To draw forth youthful fancies;
I had been a long journey.
Has the
Ht&gt;w dear the homely Joys 1
child got his teeth? Dues he walk or
IrAhn red and crumbling embers
talk yet?”
Who onnld dl-eern a fa» «.
“
For
shame,
Theo,
”
remonstrated
Or trace out bridges, castle*.
In tltsir. ever-changing grace;
Lulu. “ 1 have a mind to punish you
for laughing at me by not allowing you
’ Or list to stories of fairies,
’ That came from ■ lively brain,
to see baby till to-morrow morning.”
TUI the little circa before us
“ And that would make twenty-four
hours elapse without my seeing, the
' Talk of your stoves and ranges 1
wonder of the nineteenth century. Mon­
Tbe children know not now
strous woman! cruel tyrant’” mocked
To watch tho firelight's changes
Theo, “ it is thus I set you nt defiance-.,”
And the silhouette shadow show.
And then I heard a little scrambling
Oh. the Joys ol times departed
rush across the hall, a playful struggle,
Were not tbe present Joyal
Tkea the good and simple-hearted
aud Theo's firm step went up the stairs,
Long time went girls and boys I
and to the nursery door, a trifle more
slowly and heavily than urual for Lulu's
Now the &lt;&lt;awd of youthful fgrea
Wear men'raud women'eairs!
weight.
And theresy. alMji^ss-greccs
A sudden impulse made me follow. As
1
Have vanished unawares.
I opened the door I beheld Theo’s great,
Now tbe costly playthings furnish
lion head bent close above a little pink
Scarce n thrill of the old dellxht
mite of humanity that lay in the swing­
That ahonc on tho red choeka' burnish
ing cradle, while, on tbe other side,
In the ruddy wood-fire’s light.
Lulu stood looking down on both, with
Blest are the simple pleasures
an expression of infinite satisfaction and
For the child, and for the man
content.
Whfwo sue ran prix® the treasures
For w hich i*l» chihkhood ran.
“ Why did you marry Lulu, Theo?”
—Motion Transcript.
I asked, suddenly.
“Because I loved her,” ho said,
MY OWN RIVAL.
promptly, taking at once the mite's
Perfection isolates. I had known this mite of a hand and Lulu's into his own
- long before, and cared nothing, but the broad palm.
“ But why did you love herP” I pur­
day that saw Louis Rimaux at my feci I
comprehended the desolation of mag­ sued. “Not for her beauty," I said, a
nificence, the curse of a beauty so ex­ little ironically, perhaps, “ but Lulu
treme as my own.
You think he was doesn’t mind her lack, al least not since
my lover.
No, a thousand removes she has Theo."
“ Not at all,” said Theo, getting up
from that.
1 never had a lover, noU
withstanding lhe fact that there had and making me a grand how. “If lov«
been many at my fret before him: but I were for beauty, I should be your slave
repeat, I never cared till this day, till I 1 suppose, instead of Lulu's husband."
“ And not for her voice," I Said, “for
found out, listening to this man who
begged no love of me, but only tnat he you don't know a sharp from b flat;
might make of me an idol unto himself, nnd, of all the world, you are tho one
that I had a heart; then how could I be who listens least when she sings.”
“ No, not for her voice," he said,
an idol, for what idol ever had a heart,
stealing his arm round Lulu's waist.
or efired for its worshiper?
“ What for, then?" 1 questioned.
.
He was more than eloquent,but, alas!
“ Because I did, because I do. That’s
I remembered certain outbursts of his
The best rea­
before Murillo’s pictures in tbe art gal­ all, and that’s enough.
The
leries of Rome, and recognized tbe par­ son in all the world for loving.
allel. He was on his knees before me. j only reason that neither time nor cirOh, that he had risen to the level of my cumstancc’can change. Kiss me. Lulu. ’’
My hand was on the door. I felt that
heart instead, that he had taken me in
My eyes were strangely
his arms, that his smooth, flowing I must fly.
dim, and something choked in my
speech had tripped upon his tongue!
throat,
for,
at
every word Theo uttered,
The nursery door must have been a
. bit ajar. Anything serves Lulu for a 11 realized anew the mockery of a mar­
pradle song.
Bending, happy as any riage founded on lhe feelings with which
saint in Heaven, above her sleeping my beautiful flesh had inspired Rimaux,
babe, she will yet sing so one might the immeasurable distance between love
fancy her heart’was Breaking, if one did and admiration, be it ever so enthusias­
not know that singers still less than tic. But how bitter is conviction against
poets feel what they sing.
At this mo­ desire! How despairingly, ravishingly
ment there floated down the stairs, sweet love seems in others when to us
denied I I could no longer contemplate it.
‘•Thou art so near, and yet so far.”
“ Mv soul has posscs.-ed her voice," I I tied away to solitude, and the first
-thought, looking down on Rimaux,whom remembered team which I had ever
I niigt? have laid my hand upon as I shed. Happy Lulu! who, having noth­
sat— Rimaux, between whom and me ing, yet had all! Miserable me! a queen
who despised her kingdom, who would
stretched immensity.
Still I wad tempted sore. Is not half have given all the jewels in her sceptre
a loaf better than no bread? Yet bow is for love’s rose.
Rimaux was a Frenchman, versatile
hunger helped by a stone? if I dared
risk circumstance, disease, tho pall of and imaginative. When he came, on
possession, yet waited for me Time, the the morrow, to give me my first sitting,
iconoclast, from whom one may escape I could see that my idea had taken strong
only by death’s door. Ruin is less kind hold of his fancy, that the anticipated
to loveliness in nature than in art—it me whom he should paint already rivaled
denies it even the picturesque. The ug­ my living self in his artist soul. A
liest old women one secs have always strange jealousy stirred in my heart. I
been young beauties, I remembered, would have retracted my offer, only that
and tho thought stung me to cry out, a I feared that any inconsistency of mine
little sharply perhaps, the words with might possibly suggest tn him Ila cause,
which I had dallied so long, the words so timid does oue become who has aught
for which 1 knew bis heart held but one to conceal.
But I had condemned myself to slow
answer:
“Wait,” I said, interrupting him in torture, to exquisite torment, as 1 sat
tbe midst of his rapid tide of words. before the man whom I loved with all
my soul, to give to him my soulless im­
“Do you love me?”
“1 adore you,” be answered, looking age, seeing, day after day, the beautiful,
up in my beautiful face, seeing that on­ insensate thing upon his canvass absorb
and satisfy him more completely. Un­
ly, thinking of that only, os he spoke.
His tones, his words, clashed hollow recognized, unwoood, the woman
and alien in my ears with a little Scotch watched, while he painted the goddess,
lullaby, simple and homely and sweet, listening, even as one might to a rival’s
p-niscs, to the raptures over form and
which Lulu now sung.
“ Do you love me?’’ I said again, with coloring in which he indulged as his
an emphasis so marked and bitter that work progressed, my breathing lips
it roused him to comprehension of me thirsty for the kisses of a lover while his
and himself. lie did not speak directly, brash lingered about the smiling mouth
and, watching his face, I knew I hod of the portrait, as if loth to leave it.
At last it was completed, nnd before
judged him aright—he might be cruel,
it Rimaux stood, with exactly the ex­
but he could not be untrue.
“ It is not for you, Regina," he said pression upon his face that I remem­
at last. “ You do not need it. Love, bered it hod worn on the day of his
tho common love which man gives wom­ declaration to me. Ah, me! how well,
an, embrace: tenderness, and tenderness bow cruelly, tauntingly well, had. this
implies.pity, though it be latent and un­ substitution sufficed him!
“To-morrow,” he-said, more to him­
developed. Look," he said, leading me
before one of the mirrors with wnich self than to me, never turning hi- eym
the room wm lined, “you are a god­ from the picture, “to-morrow I shall
dess, you are perfection!
Do you then come to take it away, to take it with
demand tenderness, do you inspire mo, for I can never, never leave it be­
pity? No; love clasps at its own level, hind.”
“What!” I said, rising, and invol­
heart to heart, but it is thus for you,
Regina,” throwing himself again at my untarily reaching out my hand, os if to
feet, and again pouring out Tknow not stay him, “you are going away, Mon­
sieur Rimaux? Where, then?”
what wild ravings of my beauty.
* Rise, Monsieur Rimaux,” I. said,
“ Yes,” he said, dreamily, still ab­
smiling a little, “it is not worth so sorbed in contemplating my image,
much supplication, this favor which it “ we are going away, over seas, some­
seems to me I can grant you at small where. I hardly know where we shall
cost to myself.
Every one concedes make port. My bride," laying hia hand
your skill as an artist. ’Come, I will sit caressingly upon the canvas, nnd smil­
to you, and you shall have the portrait ing a little, “will not be difficult to
for your own. Perfection, as a woman,
must noon decay; u a portrait, yon
I slipped away and left him there be­
may possess and preserve unscathed fore the picture, only too sure that be
for a lifetime that which you admire in would never miss me, then, or in the fu­
ture, when he should be “overseas;”
“Ah, but,” he said, a little confused for all of me for which he cared hi*
at the tarn I had given the affair, “did brush had obtained for him. But even
I not say you were a goddess rather than in the bitter agony that surged over me
a woman?”
at the thought that I should behold him
“Then I may not wed a mortal,” I no more, I did not regret that my beauty
answered. “L’mutt wait for my Olym- was to accompany him without my soul,
for if 1 had learned more certainly any
lesson in those hours while Rimaux

(As we mute on tlw things departed)
the ruddy, sparkling blase 1

nait.tbal

that stirred his lips now and than.
a hen night came, night which b friend-1 Somebody Um said that there is in
iy only to the hnppv, whose shadows woman’s love always something of the
darken still more deeply sh ul.med maternal. I felt it m I looked in this
heart*. Sleep w»i lour coming, but 1 nAmeut upon Rimaux. I laid nay hand
fell finally into the heavy slumber of ex­ softly upon his forehead, and then bent
and Kissed his lips.
haustion.
Philosophers tell us that all estirna“ What I Who is it?” he said, turning
ton of time iu dreams, by the feelings his bandaged eyes toward mo.
“ It is I, Regina Maym »nt,” I Mid.
or events taking place therein, ia impos­
sible, bat surely U was hours that a “ I love you, Run aux, love you ao well
mobntein lay on my breast, that amon- thflit now you need ma I no longer core
.•tcr’s choking hand clutched at my to hide it'from you, do longer am afraid
because it wai my beauty alone that
throat.
Bat I gasped and straggled Into waking won you.
Do not send mo away, Ri­
and reality at last.
The room was full maux. Hod nothing happened I could
of smoke, danse and blinding, and with­ have let you g.- with the picture, and
out its doors I heard a rush and crack­ dmd in silence; bit now. It is not to ba
ling as of flurnos. I felt my way dlzdly to loved, but to kiva, that I ask.”
the do'&gt;r, that upenvl into tbe hall, but
“ Popr child!” he said, . taking my
already tho stairsrays front and back,,. hand iu bh his. Ah, how much sweeter
were on tire, cutting off m v o*c mml My this simple word sounded in iny ears
room comnniiiicatod srith that in which than **goddess.”
“I never dreamed
Rimaux had vet up his easel, andthithar that you cared for-me. • But I can not
I now went, and onnehed down by the let you sa“rificey&lt;Min»elf so. I am help­
side of my picture, a* *J that could give less aud blind, perhaps for always. I
me some companionship in death, can not let you throw yourself away on
for It needed but a few ’ moments me. who can no longer look upon you
after my awakening for me to compre­ or glory in your perfection.” '
Is deceit ever pardonable? ’ do not
hend that the house wm on fire, that I
hat! been forgotten, and that there was knqw, I did not stop to con»ide- It then
nothing left for me but to wait the com­ even. I felt nt once that he would be
ing of the fierce, red-tongued fiend that inexorable, aud that-1 could not would
writhed itself at every moment nearer not, leave him.
the door of tho apartment in which I
“ My perfection!” I sold, raising his
wm. The smoke had nearly suffocated head to my, shrouded forehe.*4 and
me iu my sleep. I suppose, for all my cheeks, and passing- it over mv shorn
senses seemed dulled and stupefied, and hair. “Qf what account is a tning so
I did not even think to go to a window, perishable that a breath of tire may de­
and try to attract attention,if. perchance, stroy, the accident of an hour o»»Htet»
help might be rendered me in any way ate?”
from without.
•
Well. I triumphs! at last, as I never
“Ah, mo,"I murmured to my un­ should if I hod not led him to supnose
conscious double, “ wo shall perish that tha flames had taken from me much
together, but you, at least, be will ro- of that beauty which tt seemed to him
would have rendered mo more of a sac­
gretl"
Oh, sad is death, when it takes one rifice to fits slightlcai life. I insisted on
from love’s reach, but bitter and deso­ an immediate marriage, feeling that his
late indeed it seems to look forward to need of my c.tre mode that proper which
a grave that shall be watered by no tear. would have b-»en unmoideniy under oth­
A grave? Should I have a gnvo even, er circaimtances. I wore the bandages
or would tho four winds of heaven scat­ about my face mu -h longer than was
realty net-&lt;lful, and I' forbade all who
ter my ashe.4 whither they listed?
to him to undeceive him a-1
A horror of death, of such swift, con
con-­ had
uaa access
acc
.. extent
of my injuries.
I nursed
•’
suming, annihilating death,
' . of' nothing
. _ to tau
--.....
_____
iddan.
...... seize
»r.... upon
unon
w™ I him ten ...Th.p. all th- in .re tenness so
utter
and....
sudden,
me at this thpughl. 1 groveled in agony ' uerb’ bfcnus- 1 was never thinking of
and despair upon the fl «or behind the |
l°vu for in . but. only ;tn«l always
picture, my head buried in a pillow, to u,y । ,v‘-‘ * 'r h n&gt; • a,,&lt;*
hi' gratiipde
deaden as much as I might the ev«_ '
nil the old rapture
louder roar of Lhe approaching flatue
Suddenly I became coascioii-s of a nob
within lhe room.
Before I could raise
my hea«l or speak, a hand snat :hed the
picture from tn« wi*el, and turned to )
fly.
It was Rimaux. come nt the peril
of his life, to save my portrait, while 1,
forgotten and uncared-for, was left to
perish. Nature, against my will, against
my pride, uttered the cry that bur-t
from my lips as he turned to the
window, unheeding me.
“Great Heavens!” he cried at thr
ctRl, “are you then here, Regina?
Come, ttiere is not an instant to bo lost!
To tha ladder; you first!”
I staggered up to my feet, but, even
in lhe moment that 1 had delayed him,
the flames burst through tho walls of
the apartment from the bunting hall
within, and, at lhe same instant, a red
flag of fire flaunted in at lhe window
from without“ Como! come!” he said, almost sav- [
agcly, throngh bis set teeth, seizing nte,
and th rusting me out from certain death
behind to little less than certain death
before, for already the ladder was on
fire.
Down, down, mo first, and after
mo Rimaux. a fow brief moments in re­
ality, an age in seeming. Now a barbed
tongue darted out from the streaming
wind »ws below, and almost licked my
check as [ paawd, now fiery fingers
reached and snatebod at my hair, while
blasts of hot air camo at every breath­
ing, and the rounds of the ladder were
blistering hot to my feet and hands.
. “ God forgive me that I forgot for a
little all save Lulu and the child!” I
heard Theo murmur, as he received me
at tho ladder’s
enveteping me
close income woolen garment to crash
out the fire which had sets -d upon me.
I must have fainted last then, for I
remember no more till I found myself
lying upon a bed at the house of a neigh­
bor, while over mo was bending good
old Doctor Leyton.
“ Never fear,” he said, as I opened
my eyes, ‘*youc good looks are all safe,
Regina. There won’t be a scar, and
J'our hair will soon repair damages for
teclf.” •
I turned my face wearily away, for the
allusion to my beauty recalled how it
happened that Rimaux bad saved me.
But how had it fared with him? for he
had been behind me, and every moment
had told in that flight from fire.
At this moment. Lulu, standing in the
door, and dismissing the doctor with
some words which 1 was not heeding,
sighed softly—
“ Poor Rimaux!”
“ Lulu!” I called. “Lulu, come hero!
What of Monsieur Rimaux?”
“ He went back,” she said, hesitat­
ingly ; “went bock for something after
he was half way down. It was inad-

with me, a hope

insider a certaintj
gave me a!! the h ipp':i&lt;f» that my heart
could.
I thought Rimaux would see
again, his eyes would be entirely re­
stored. There had been little hope ol
this at. first, grave doubts for a long
time, then faint and flucluaiing encourment, so that it had been deemed best
to k&lt; ep it all from Rimaux, who had
made up his mind to the worst from the
beginning, for fear of final and yet more
bitter &lt;lisappointinent.
“You must tell him this happy news,
Madame Rimaux," said the good doc­
tor, “and to-morrow I will tell him that
he owes it more than half to your nurs­
ing.”
i rarely left Rimaixx ’ong alone, for I
feared that he would brood unhappily
over his condition if left much in soli­
tude. Now, as I entered his room again
after a short absence, he cried, with a
ghul accent that thrilled me :
“ It is you, Regina! I am so glad al- i
ways when you come hack "
I could nut keep back for a moment
the happy tidings. I threw juysclt on
mv knees besides his chai.-, and, seizing
hi^hands, I cried.
“ Louts, Oh, Louis, you are going to
have your eyes again, you are goinx to
see!
Do you hear?
Tbe doctor says
it."
“Thank God!" Rimaux murmured.
Aud then— Oh, what was it, all this
ioy, this beatitude? Who knows when
his cup is ftill either of happiness or
grief? A moment before I had felt that
J asked no more, but now, lying on my
husband’s breast, close,' close within his
clasping arms, listening, not to admira­
tion, not to gratitude even, but to love,
love for me, myself, my beauty, its loss
or presence alike forgotten, I tasted
Heaven.
He had learned to love me when he
thought my beauty gone forever, with
the love which knows no possibility of
unloving, lhe lore which is from within
to within, and if, as tha years go by,
my portrait, which Rimaux has restored,
and which now hangs upon our cham­
ber wall, shall suggest to me change and
fading in myself, 1 shall not tremble lest
Riin iux mc it too, and love mo less.—
Dallou's

How to Roast a Turkey.
The secret in having a good roost turker is to stuff it palatably, to baste it
often, and to cook it long enough. A
small turkey of seven or eight pounds
should be roasted or baked three hours
st loa«it. A very large turkey should be
cooked an hour longer.
After the tur­
key is dressed, season it well, sprinkling
pepper and salt ou the inside; sluff it
and tie it well in shape; cither lard the
top or lay slices of bacon over it; wet
the skin, and upriukle it well with pep­
per, salt and flour.
It is well to allow
a turkey to remain some time stuffed
before cooking.
Pour a little boiling
water into the bottom of the dripping­
pan. Just before taking it out of the
oven put on more melted butter, and
sprinkle over more flour; this will make
tho skin more crisp and brown. While
the turkey is cooking boil the giblets
well; chop them fine and mash the liver.
When the turkey is done, put it on a
hot platter. Put tho baking-pan on the
। fire, dredge iu a little flour, and when
cooked sur in a little boflrng water or
stock; strain it, skim off every particle
of fat, add the giblets; season with salt
and pepper.

For something? For that accursed
picture! I grasped her arm so fiercely
that she uttered a little cry of pain.
“ He is not dead?" I said. “He is not
dead?”
“No; but his eyes. The doctor
doubts if he will ever nee again; and
the ladder had burned so that it snapped
while Rimaux was yet far from the
ground, and he has broken a limb.”
I said no more, but lay as quietly as I
cou’&lt;l, waiting for the morning, and
when it was day I went ou-, despite tho
remonstrances of Lulu, closely veiled,
and with the bandages still about my
forehead and face. Rimaux had not a
relative in America, not a woman soul
nearer than his landlady on this side of
the ocean. Once he hail asked me to
be his wife, and I had refused, trem­
bling all the while lest be should guess
that I loved him. Now I was going to
tell him that I loved him, to beg, on my
—The Empress Eugenie has received
bended knees, if need be, to be his wife, a severe chock to the system through
eo that I might care for him. He had falling down stairs at her residence,
need of me now, need of woman’s love Prinoe’s-gate, Hvde Park. The Queeo
and tenderness. I could give now, and has inquired daily as to her healthauk not back, all ray pride swalluwed up
- _ _ - ----- -- .
■in the flood
piW
rwsheds into
&lt;——LwuL -luxUy - huLLenormous
e-jul ol thou.fit of bim.h-dp!e*s and sxrf- i am mut of real estate iu ^ngL’ind and is
(Y«.kig. oil itj: felre of not beip* loved j aoMtantly adding to it.

(

Found only at C. L.
Glasgow's
Big Hardware Store
SAP BUCKETS,

Where yon can save
ten per .cent
by purchasing your

(Tin or Wood,)

SAP PAKS, EVAPORATORS

And all »ug»r makci*’ made from the beat, material, and by a Tinner of twenty ycara
'
Experience. A!»u the be»t place* In the alate to buy

CUTTERS AND BOBS AT COST!!
Only two pair of those Hastings Chfllcd Shoe Bote left. It will pwy you
To buy them for next rear. Wogun* I

HASTINGS OTO JACKSON LUMBER. WAGONS
Warranted In every respect, for cash qr on time. Also

Nuah. l&gt;&lt;M&gt;ra. Blinds. Glass. Oil Colors. IVhHr nnd Cotored Ecad
• Jrin-rson nulls, Moves and Runges. Cntlcry. Nilvcr
Ware, Pumps. (Wood and Iron,) Lend Pipe.
In fact, everything found In a first class Hardware 8ta| k. Headquartere for all kinds
' of Die latest and moat Improved Farm Mal:hinaryl from the

Wheelbarrow ton Champion Slower or Mammoth Cord Hinder
P* H. Paper Rugs. Old Slubber aud Old Iron Wanted.

•

C. L. GLASGOW.

TRUTH !S MIGHTY!
JN making the following statement, wo utter the truth, and can verify it.

THE LARGEST STORK OF GROCERIES
In the city, at bottom prices, fair and square weight and Pleasure.
we advertise the most complete Stock ot

A v 'V xvvi

9

When

V A 1CLOO VV

E»c.. in Bmn and Eaton counties, we are telling the people a fact that can­
not 1h- successfully aud tititlifully denied. It consists of a large variety of ata-

ENGLISH DECORATED CHTMA

mv—if t

l"-

Best’s Patent Sap Spouts,

In 1 va Sett*. U nter Setts, Cup*. S;uh«tn, Pitchers, Etc.
Ti.iU.r FL.,,...
v,..

An eildlesA variety
J

Too numerous to mention, aud so cheap that all can afford to buy.

rery style, color and design. When you are ready to buy, I am ready
All kinds of Produce taken in exchange for Goods.

C. W. SMITH

50 Wagons
FOR SALE!
OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE

WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH

THREE INCH TIRE.
AS OUR ROADS DEMANQ SOMETHING

BETTE R THAN COMMON TIRE
We believe the Three inch Tire is destined to come
into general use. Call and see them.

Sold by C. L. Glasgow, Nashville, Mich.

BENTLEY BROS. &amp; WILKINSHastings, Mich., Sept. 15th, 1881.

We are Ready
New Furniture
Parlor Suits, Bedroom Suits, Gents’ Easy Chairs,
Ladies’ Rockers, Camp Chairs, Fine
Couches, Extension Tables, Center
Tables, What-nots, PictureJ^rames,
Bureaus, and in fact-Everything
Else Needed to Furnish a House.

UNDERTAKING a Specialty.
Don’t buy until you see our Goods and get our prices,

KELLOGG, BELL &amp; CO.

�Protect’on act, 469,000
wallaby dogs have been

t-promise suit
fixed his afleo-

tbOl, ^rrtnmdKlbr nwonula.. u&gt;d l»« i U&gt;« raplor &lt;&lt;
Hiding IWlroMl
NO, SIB!
■
MtddUunt from l^ke Mwwui uid i Compmir
mid being »
»he Pwfdo Owa. Th. morn renurk^ :
*Wub*r &gt;bi,&lt; “”&lt;i “''I*1
A Scotch minister once aaid no woman could JJLACR A BOM,
ble building in the city is the Cathedral ' hundred dollars. Having no particular
of St. Peter, which fronts on the grand i o* fc»r the money he. when thirty-seven fact U generally tbe ptber way. Mm. Edward
of one he committed nuicide.
plasa.
In building it a small army of years of age, resolved to indulge in the
slaves were engaged thirty-seven year*. I fuxury
I
~ of
** a wife, but “not twin* familiar
the removal of her hand by omj.auwar at 1812, and 102 years bld. haa twit
the habits and customs, or. as-he eraUonof
‘
It was-completed in 1743 ; is composed with
i
become an inmate of the Veteran Sol­
expresses
it, “ tl*e goings on”, of the 1
of
cut
stone,
cost
$5,000,000,
and
is
of
&lt;
diers’ Home in Dayton, O., hoping to
clc,
or uttering a groan. Dr. Kennedy, also of
gentler
sex.
made
no
progress
in
his
*
pans the remainder of hb days there. such prodigious strength that troops 1hunt for a companion until he fell in Readout,
W. I., who performed tbe operatkA,
1
have repeatedly used it as a fortress, 1
a Milesian named Madigan, of 1said be never saw auch heroism. The lady's
—The long dry spell caused bees mounting batteries on ita immense roof., with
1
pROOKS A MARSHALL
he
asked
assistance.
Mr.
Madi&lt;
to tap thd grape. They extracted the Its mate altar is composed of solid sil- whom
1
is a fiddler, aqd is reputed to know, i
juice ao thoroughly in some vineyards ver. A more interesting religious edi- gun
|
PERUBE THESE LIBERAL AD. RATES.
merits and demerits of every mar- I
about Thomaston, Md.,-.that nothing fice could scarcely be found in America, the
’
woman between Reading and
was left but the skin and seeds.
although its-more precious decorations rUgeablo
i
A New York teacher of tbe art ot swimming
‘
’
(
~|A»I •X00I6 8J0
—Three Philadelphia girls, ranging have been nearly all,carried away by Conshohocken.
says that women lean) quicker than a man.
In his hour of despondency Michael ]
_
5
00|
“
8.Wr~IA®
successive
hordes
of
revolutionists.
from
eleven
to
thirteen
years
of
age,
Winches.
T hey are natural kicker*.
unbosomed
liimself
to
Madigan,
who
Grrain and Produce.
From its roof nine volcanoes and the 1
7.001 Uk00| 80®
for the. small fee of ten dollars
QUICK AND SURE,
Pacific Ocean are plainly visible. Sep- agreed
।
itoebea^.
' find a bouncing girl willing to become
and drank iu A policeman soon after- iarated from it by a paved alley is the to
Many miserable people drag themselves
’s palace, a capacious, but not Mrs. Lycet. Madigan got the fee, about with falling strength, feeling that they Seeds, Feed, Lime, Sait, Plaster. Stucward found them lying insensible in the Bishop
'
re, Hair. Pine Lamber, Latk
very pretentious establishment. I once Iand three days later introduced his em- iare steadily sinking into their graves, when by
street
the Bishop, who appeared to be of ployer to one Miss Dolan, but Michael using Parkers Gipgcr Tonic they would find a
| and Shingles,
. -r-The Sioux have a fashion of nam- saw
i
cure commencing with the Oral dose, and vital
ing children in the order in which they Castilian descent; but the priests were objected to certain peculiarities of her 1ityand straugth quickly and surely coming AT THB L0WE8T UVING PRICES.
visual
organs.
Madigan
said
Lycci.
all Indians, and seemed to be well-fed,
back U&gt; them.
*
are
born.
So
the
roll
has
many
such
:
oxu*o strong,
and contented saviors of wm too particular, and demanded an
names as Winona, Hapon, Hepi. Wa- good-natured
;
It takes a Chinaman 1,000 years jto learn to
noke, Hake, etc., which mean first­ souls. Divine servioo is. celebrated ia additional fee of ten dollars before he
born, second-born, third-born, fourth- the churches with stringed instruments, went in search of a Venus that would
horns, excellent choirs and a clamor of .meet the approval of-his patron. After
Comer of Pennsylvania Avenue aud
born, fifth-born, and so on
THE HIGHEST RANK.
inspecting-three nymphs unearthed by
Sixth Street,
•
—Tho identical table used by Thomas bells. When military,mass takes place
the indefatigable fiddler, -Michael found
from harmless material*, aod adapted
Jefferson for tea service at Monticello at the Cathedral front a brass band adds in a Miss Degan all the perfections of to Made
the needs of fading and falling hair, Parkrrt Washington, D-Cto
the
dignity
of
the
occasion,
and
every
is
in
the
possession
of
W.
N.
Ruffin,
of
fLLAGB OFFICERS.
her adorable sex, and made love to her Hair Balsam baa taken the highest rank aa an
Danville. Va., one of his lineal descend­ man who crosses any portion of the in orthodox style. He gave her two elegant and reliable tudr restorative.
F. TF.NNET A 00., Prop*.
-------- ------------------ants. The table is neatly made ot hard plaza must remove his hat, or take a dresses, a cloak, a bracelet, an umbrel­
Frank E Bob*.
bayonet thrust from an enraged senti­
“There’s music In the heir,’’ aorrowfnlly ex­
oak,
about
six
feet
long
and
four
feet
Awwxw .Inbn E [tarry
nel. The natives kneel, and foreigners la, and 'a tin-type of his own counte­ claimed tbe young husband, as be reached for BENCH IND SDIG1UL SMITMIUL
wide, with two email folding leaves.
Mar»halt-Wm H. Iteryws.
nance.
On
the
strength
of
the
grace
Tru.u-vo-E
vY 1&lt;r!
—In « ten minutes’ “cane rush” be­ were formerly required co do *o; with-whiqh she received the last-named the paregoric bottle.
1. A. Barber. H. SUD-sklmm
tween Union College sophomores and but so many personal difficulties token of his affection he offered her the
RHEUMATIC DISEASES.
concerning
this
regulation
freshmen, at Schenectady, N. Y., the arose
original, but she declined the honor,
These ailments follow from torpid liver and.
a«irtU«.
other day, most of the contestants were that the removal of the hat, was finally and two weeks later cut him dead. eoattvc bowels: the skin, bowels nnd kldneyjr
decided
upon
as
a
compromise
measure.
shirtless. After tho tight bits of tat­
falling tn their proper A-ork. an acrid poison 'ii
APTISVdaURCR. Bev. E. B Moody, PsMor. tered clothing Uttered the ground. The I was not aware of even this custom, With a broken heart and crushed spirit farmed In tbe blood, which la the occasion or
he sought pastures new in Nicctown,
Seniors erciy Hundy at icpoa m.,- Sabbath
—14
and Tescuor* tnwttnr faculty were unable to stop the fracas, and on returning from a bath one morn­ where ho found employment last fall, these acute diseases. Kidney Wort produces
healthy action of all secretive organs, and
ing
I
cut
across
one
corner
of
tho
plaza
and will hereafter make expulsion the
in blissful ignorance of what was ex­ and two weeks. later met a Miss Casey throws off the rheumatic poia ni. Equally rfpenalty for such exhib’tiohs.
pected. A barefooted sentinel camo at a raffle given by. a mutual friend, flefen in Liquid or dry form—Inter Ocean.
' Sabbath at )0£
—The farmers of Maine ought to put rushing.at me with leveled bayonet, Michael followed his old policy of court­
When the landlord presents a bill for extras
up a monument in honor of the cater­ sputtering a broodsjde of Spanish, and ship, nnd soon Mias Casey burst upon
pillars which devastated their apple­ in another moment would have spitted tho-public wilh a green silk dress, a pair be. claims lim it Is not xmly fare but above
board.
. • 4
.
VY LODGE NO. 37, K. of P., meets al Its orchards a few years ago; for since that me, had not an officer shouted at him of eight dollar'gaiters, a gorgeous bt)nnqt, white kid gloves, and other highly
Cutie Hall, NartviUe, Michigan, every time the trees have regularly borne in from the veranda of the cuarM.
GRATEFUL TO INVALIDS.
'
FrJa\ evening, for the enrovrapunent ami what are elsewhere “off years.” This
tinted plumage, all of which were pur­
Flomatonc'a Cologne is grateful to Invalids,
When I was there, despite its largo chased by “bur Mike,” as Mr. Lycet
enp,^'rt of aij worthy, true, i&gt;teadfu»t and hon­ year’s crop in Maine is enormous, the
because It Is refreshing without me sickening
orable Brother KnignU.
population, Leon had no free schools,
L. F I-extz, K.IL 8. Osxo Stroxg.C. C. quality is superb and the farmers are and few private ones; no theater, pub­ bitterly avers she calls him. It finally effect of moat perfuniw.
getting three dollars a barrel at their
dawned upon Michael that his courtship
A man who wants his wife to love and reown doors, owing to the scarcity every­ lic hall, public library, merchants’ ex­ was frightfully expensive, and that
WnTAERDL BiUl* Cm*. £m.
.'rli.’tcclluurotis &lt; tarda.
change, bank, water work■% livery.stable
where else.
week after week went by without his sj'eclbiin, will never make this mistake of put­
or restaurant.
Money command'd being any nenrer matrimony than he was ting his feet Into her slippers. Years of devo­
—Apple peels and apple cores are
n. YOUNG, M. D. Office caat side of
twenty-five per cent, per annum.
At before he left Burks County.
tion
will
not
wipeout
the
Insult
• Maln.SU, Nartvtlle. Office hours from now shipped from Chicago by the bar­ times tho air was filled with dust, but
Not long after this Miss Casey jilted
rel to makers of apple butter. When a
SKINNY MEN.
no public street sprinkler went its daily him.
'’Wells’ Health Renewer. Absolute cure for
shipper asked tho freight clerk what
restreshing rounds.
A few of tho
H. GRISWOLD. M. D.,------- ^..thle
In time—and by the way an exceed­ nervous debility aud weakness of the genera­
rate he would charge on them, the clerk,
• Phrnlctan and Surgeon. Office ami re»- thinking tho customer was joking wealthier families manufactured their ingly brief period it was—the victim’s tive functions. $1. at druggists. Mich. Dc|&gt;ot
Utnca oppcwlte the Wolcotr House. Prompt him, asked: “Do you want a separate owu ice with machines, but no ice could wounded heart healed, arjd his atten­ JAMES E. DAVIS A CO., Detroit, Mich.
.---- .&gt;-^^11. .1...
v.lr.l.t
be purchased for love or money.
Tho
rate for stems and seeds?” He was business men had a clubhouse nnd bil­ tion was attracted by Maggie Moran, CHICAGO, ILL.
. .. s . .i.i.uiij; Stciijax Hair Ml So. Clark St.
the daughter of his'boanling mi-tr. ss.
A. FOOTE PHYSICIAN * SURGEON very much astonished to learn that
k’.vsrv.q Is n sclent irtc combination
• SuceaMW to Dr. Wickham. Office and cores and skins are a regular article of liard hall, with a small library attached. His interest in thoyoung lady increased
•
-i
of
tho
inoM
powerful
restaraThree
Spanish
newspapers
kept
tho
diseases.
Gonorrhea.
Glczt
of
lung stutidlnr. tttrrcresidence at Dr. Wickham's, late office. merchandise.
daily, mid to Magistrate Krickbutim he
public mind sufficiently inflamed for yesterday gave h» experience with her. I
•
&lt; i;i the vegetable kingdom. lure. Orthttls. Rapture. diseases of tho *k»u and
Prompt attention to calls night or day.
bone*, mercurial sore throat etc. safely sat! jiriva’w
—No one can contemplate the statis­ political purposes.
I had not been After dwelling on her hair, her eyes and
.
gr/y ludr to its original I* treated. SPESUATORUBtEA. H, xual UrtHt?
R. a W. GOUCHER, Electic PhyalcUn and tics whibh reveal the wholesale slaugh­ Ihere forty-eight hours when a revolu­ her build, he said: “Furst she axed for
- . Il make* the scalp white aud
Surgeon, is prepared to answer all ealla ter of railroad brakemen, while they are tion broke out, bat it proved to be an a silk dhress. Doyezmoind that? Sez
■ j- cures dnniirnff am! humor*. et, producing pimples on the face, rush trfhl.xiJ io
that may be made fur Ms aervU.es. Office aud engaged in the duty of coupling cars insignificant affair.
A now President
Ute bead, conludun of Idea*. hrvUchO,
de,fecit*-'
.nA. t m.rUnt
--- . &gt; .... - - -'. -LA. 1 ..u
; I f :'l:ng-ouL of lhe liair. It liiniislics ______&gt;___ ... ......I
without being shocked into tho convic­ was being inaugurated at Managua, I, ‘Will ye marry me?’ ‘It’s hasty yo
are.’ sez she. ‘Margaret,” sez I, ‘It’s
....
• ;r.:trtlivc principle by which the • IUU iu.d-'V.'ij.
TYTM-PARMENTER, M D. Office over tion that some means for preventing It whereupon sixty or eighty armed mal­ no silk dhress ye’ll have from me til!
lh&gt;n. general debility aud Indices'lost. rendering
VV Hull'a Drug store, Vcrmontrule, Mich. ought to be enforced.
A law compel­ contents mounted their mustangs and
it- l&lt; wUtrf^IwI and supported. It
ling the use of safety couplers was in­ laid siege to Ixson. For a day or two yo promise ’ ‘Very well,’ sez she, wid
••kes the h dr moist.’sort and glossy, cure* la AU Cave «c nnclcnauv. t o new «&gt;
One flay looser. Under onr treatment lhebody 1*
a smile on her; ‘I’ll be Mrs. Lycet on
HAS. H. BRADY, Lewver, Circuit Court troduced in the Connecticut Legisla­
nd
-itu-surpassetl as a hair dressing.
they fired from Oe jungles at every­ Christmas-Day.’ When she iiad tho
CommtMioner, Real EnUte and Insurance
la. the m &gt;-t economical preparation
Agt. Prompt attention given to all business ture during the last session and laid body who attempted to leave tho dity, dress made she wanted a cloak. Twen­
o.-run ano scrira iaicK»»xiiu •
entrusted to my core. Conveyancing a special­ over for a year to afford tho Railroad and then scampered off to Honduras,
■.
•
otr-Tixl
to
the
public,
ns
its
cffbctK
time
econfidcntlal. FnU direcuons sent with the
ty. Office opposite Uniou House.
Commissioner* of the State time to con­ not having received the popular sup- ty dollars fur a cloak. ‘Ye’U hays no ;■ :uia a long time, making only an
cloak from me,’ sez I. ‘Then I'll not
jJfeBHAUBER, Merehan’. Tailor nnd deob sider the subject.
j&gt;ort they had been led to ex­ marry,’ sez she. So pwhat could I do occasional application necessary. It is
—A Cincinnati boy brought home pect.
Eveiy Thursday and Sunday but do pwhat she wanted? Then- she
c couimraded and used by eminent
• er in Ready Made Clothing. Bee me
before you purrtaae clothing. Fite guar- some caps and fulminating powder from evening a military brass band discoursed borreed fifty dollars out uv the money in
dical 'men, and officially endorsed by
the fireworks factory in which he was tolerable music on the plaza, and gangs the bank to buy things for the weddin’.
A curejmaranieed.
antecd.
_________________________
■ i.? State Asraycr of Massachusetts,
employed, aud put them’under his bed. of natives gathered on the surrounding
"Seal. ‘Margaret, go aisy wid tho
•Rf 188 M. JEFFREY, Practical Milliner, nod
rhe popularity of Hall's Hair Renewcr
His
mother
struck
them
with
a
broom
verandas to listen and smoke cigars and money.’ *Oh, it’s savin I’ll be,’ aez
IV1 dealer in Millinery aud Fancy Goods. Dress
a apeetdc for hysteria. &lt;lir«lt&gt;i«
it's
increased
with
the
test
of
many
aaking, tn all Ui branches, done with neatness while sweeping, and caused an explos­ cigarettes. Everybody smokes in Nica­ she, but spint eveiy bliasid cint uv it
v-irs, both in this country and in
and dUqutcb. Salesroom cast side Main street, ion which almost killed her. The* lad ragua—old, young, nch, poor, male, that very day in shoes, and ribbons,
opposite Nbws office.
: &gt;r.-|gn lands, and It is now known and
did not let. this mishap hinder his di­ female, saint and sinner.
Tobacco and sleppcrs, and fobde-rols. ‘The
RNO STRONG, plain and fancy Job Printer. version. He brought home' a much thrives by cultivation, and grows wild day Iwfore Christmas,’ sez I, • it’s mar­ n KI in all the civilized countries of
The best facilities for doing work of any larger quantity of the explosives, and without it. Tho cigars are bad—ex­ ried in tho mornin’ we’ll be.’ • Phwat the world.
printing office in Barry county, when In need kept them in a box on the roof of tho tremely so. I found tho nights remark­
For sale by all dealers.
Ifwlribl of any description, whatever, see me house. A few days ago a roofer picked ably cool, so much so that two blankets morn in?’ sez she, openin’ her oyes and
storin’ in me face. ‘Christmas morn­
up the box, rubbe'd the powder between wore positively necessary. Our daily in.’ sez I. ‘It’s New-Year’s I sed,’ sez
A. C.
his fingers, and was blown into frag­ custom was to rise at five o'clock, take she. as bould as brass.
I wur
ments.
a cup of coffee, ride several miles into bihj’ mad, but she stud like a cow’ in
tbariied
for tbeviltac* » f Nashville. JOHN
tbe Tillage.
—Jemima Burke, of Fleming, Ky., the country on half-wild mustangs, the mud and cud nayther be druv or
C. WEST * CO.,Sola Proprleiore. UH and IM W
iram r. dickinson, manufacturer of was visited simultaneously by two suit­ bathe, gallop back by seven o’clock,
blarneyed. So I waited, an’ to put her
and dealer in Hard Wood Lumber. BuQd- ors, Royce ‘ and Rogers. Neither was smoke and chat till ten, sthou take into ahpirits I gov her a thirty-seven
inclined to retire and leave the other breakfast, dine at four, have a cup of
Is now nicely located
dqllar goold ring. On New-Year’s Day
alone with the girl, because both knew tea in the evenings and smoke till bed­ she wint off wid young Tom Monahan
,
In his new building,
that they had alike come to pop the time—an indefinite hour in the tropics, to a raffle and sint me a litther she’d
AMES FLEMING.
Watch-maker. Cl
question. After two hours of: obstinate for the nights are beautiful, and the best not marry me if I wuz made of goold.
hn* added a stock of
sitting, Rogers remarked that a man portion of the twenty-four hours. During Mind that, now. She sint me an oiffd
was selling moonshine whisky In a one evening I hod tho novel pleasure of
CROJiS-CUT a CIRCUL1R SAWS.
Inir done tn a workmanlike manner.
ring worth twenty sints an’ vowed it
lonely place half a mile away, and in­ witnessing a volcanic eruption. Mount wux the weddin’ ring I gave hur. I
TACOB O8MUN. Liveryman, barn near Wol- viced Royce to go and drink some. They
O colt House. First claim turnouts at reason­ went together and got the whisky. TelicaT'twanty miles distant, became ac­ want a warrant fer her and she’ll be
tive. Masses of fire streamed from ita put in jail, so she will, fer her de­
able rate*, special rate* to commercial men.
I*riccB on Saw Work.
Funeral aud wedlug parties furnished with car Rogers then said he guessed ho would summit, forming t» spectacle of great cayin’ thrick.”
return to Jemima, as he wished to see magnificence. This outbreak finally
riawon abort m &gt;&amp;
Yesterday an officer recovered the Circle raw gumming nnd hammering all saws
her alone. Royce replied that he had subsided, after which two parallel fis­
up to 40 tncbM, 10 cents per Inch.
ring
from
Miss
Casey,
and
later
in
the
TZ’-ELLOGG &amp; BELL, proprietors Planing a precisely similar intention.
40 Inch, Gummed, 82.00
Hammered, 83.00
That sures, stretching almost from the base
Jj- Mill. Planing and Matching. Rcaawtng
day the unhappy Lycet brought suit 50 o
” . KOO
’
4.00
*pd Moulding a specialty. Scroll Sawing, made Rogers desperate, and he shot to the crest of the mountain, poured against her for breach ot promise.— t50 ”
”
4.00
”
8.00
Bracketa, Window and Door Frames made to Royce to death.
forth steady sheets of flamo for more Philadelphia Cor. Chicago Tribune.
Gumming and Hammering x-cuteawa,
75c.
enter. Wood Turning tn all its branches.
Regular Filing,
50c.
—Queen Ranavalomanjka, of Mada­ than an hour. These then widened un­
Hammering
crooked
saws,
50c.
pHAS. W. DEMARAY, Dealer tn Watches, gascar, has always been a strong tem­ til lhey formed an immense fiery heart.
(Jueer Ideas of Curative Oils.
Prompt
attention
given
to
circular
saw
work
Clocks, fine Jewelry and Silverware. Being perance woman and a rigid advocate of When'I retired the brilliancy of the dis­
A.C.BLXTO.W
s practical Jeweler, patrons can depend upon prohibitory laws. In Imerina, her cen­- play continued unabated, though I was
Some people still hold to curious old
•MUh^Trtun1*‘)K d&lt;me ri*ht’
door* tral province, a new prohibitory law' surprised to observe that fow persons superstitions concerning the curative
• has fust been promulgated, which, if' save myself paid the slightest attention properties of the oik of certain animals; pURXITURE DEPOT.
w. N1SKERN, Altonwy and Cou’i^Uor she snail be able to enforce it, ought to to it. Within a radius of a hundred ana to hear the druggists tell of the
• at Law, practice!. In all Slate Courts. Colfeettoas promptly attended to. Office over; result in the strictest sobriety. Under miles of Leon there are fourteen volca- strange articles called for by some of
penalty of a ffue of ten oxen aud teni uoes, all more or less active, and as their customers is to be reminded of tbe
. dollars, it prohibits the manufacture' many as sixty earthquake shocks have vagaries indulged, in by the aboriginal
J_J A. BARBER, M. D.,
“ aud sale of intoxicating beverages, and been known to occur in that city in medicine man in his native wigwam.
Manufacturers, and dealers In
punishes with lighter penalties those• twenty-four hours. It is not to be won­ For instance, there are persons who pin
’ HOMOEOPATHIC
19 Recommended by
found drunk or carrying the liquor,. dered at that a harmless volcanic illum- great faith still to the virtues of rattlowhoever may have^ent them. If one' ination scarcely excited a passing com- snaiko-oil. and who believe it is a specific
for rheumatic affections. A traveling
• convicted be unable to pay the fine, he» menL— Cor. Ban Francisco Chronicle.
j must suffer imprisonment, one day bequack, who announced that bis cnro-ai!
i ing regarded as equivalent to a six­
was partly compounded of rattlesnake,
Fugitive Inks.
State Street*. Hartville, Mich.
'
reaped a big harvest of silver coin from
pence of the fine.
2^2-.1•J"#*
__ _ ’
—An Italian law court has just had to
The aniline violet pencils now exten­ crowds on the square not long ago.
-^yoRCOTT HOUSE,
decide a ease of great interest to fowls. sively need in this country, as well as There is a frequent demand for pickerel­
For tbe fall trade, onr
The Duca di Lavello and his brother, inks made of the same colering matter, oil, which is said to be a cure fdr deaf­
WawiivlUe Mlohligan.
lhe Marchese di San Marco, had pat­ most
r.uu .v ...... ......... ------be understood tn
produce ness, arid which is fried from the livers
’
A. S. Footy., Proprietor.
ented an instrument called tbe “me­ writing of a very fugitive charac­ of pickerel. Mudteirtle-oli is also fre­
chanical stuffer,” for feeding and fat- ter; well enought perhaps, for amatory quently called for Dy puppl* who have
And
trill
be
sold
so
low
th»£
stiff
joints.
It
has
been
but
two
or
j tening fowls against their will. The correspondence, which, in order to be
Administrator’! ftale.
&gt;- Italian Society for the Prevention of in character with the feeling that three years since all these oils were
la the matter of the «taU of
Cruelty to Animals prosecuted the two prompts it, is possibly better to be of a staple articles in drug-stores. Pickerel­
NATHAN WKaKA.4«mmA
oil
sold
for
fifty
cents
an
ounce.and
turtle
­
‘ noblemen before the tribunal of Naples, somewhat transient kind. It is, how­
A. BUSH,
and they were sentenced to a fine, the ever, different with most writing, and oil one dollar a pint. These oils are
rarely found to-day, and probably from
Judge
remarking
that
he
thought
it
I.WE
ALSO
CARRY
‘
“THB BOSBthis very reason are accredited the more
was certainly cruel to make fowls eat
when they were not hungry and to fat- hare aaid, this quality doe® not belong wonderful qualities by tbe oracles.— A FULLpLIWE
I ten them grossly for th- mere deleuta- to inks of the aniline violet series.
A. Lca-ksfos (Me.) Journal.
‘
------ OF•—
druggist whom we know found out thia
XA1MTIUJL MICH.
—Butter Scotch Candy; One pound
and Marquiss
to hia cost. He labeled some of his botot butbut­
U« with pnrpl. ink ol a mow lolling ot crushed sugar, three ounces of
ter.
put
In
a
rt«w-pan
or
kettle,
Mui
andsdr
stir
court. while r
often to prevent burning. Try a little
KinuiRJkWfc
In waler; if brittle it is done. Pour out
i anUTna, un-thr top-trf-e-tetta ‘
U in wjunre*. The^
you buy. A little ।
Uprcrcea the flavor.

believed that a thoroughly acquired ap­
petite for rum was incurable, and thero-

American tnd Fortign Iirtk,

Nashville Elevator!

NATIONAL HOTEL

lirtdonj.

B

Al

I

W

W

Dispensary.

L

D

NERVOUS DEBILITY

O

H

BUXTON

J

ATTENTION! SAW MILL MEN!

TflSttiasrfS

KO COOL NO Pill

WILSON’S COUGH MIXTURE I

HALL’S

P

J, LENTZ 4 SONS,

(Jatarrh

Physician and Surgeon.

FURMITUEE!

StOOHTAME

. Iff Every Style &amp; Variety

STOCK IS COMPLETE,
PRICES WILL ASTDIIJISH YOU

BOOT AND SHOE MAKER,

UNDERTAKERS’ GOODS,

^S?^^Uu"!8!aKiSS

�OF-

3OOTS AND SHOES
Pkhsidhnt Arthur «m lbs 6th nominated

Ess

to * proksn.'TOd and spirited debate,
r
: -i mm on tho bill an ad-

v*. Lobrrttnn. Mr.. Horr reported a bill to
jM-ev'-nt Shipping adulterated food and drugs
tot» the Un t-d Ktite*. The Consular and
ivlpl.-rimto Appro: r.'rttion bill was completed

Jn the Senate oa too cth Mr. Ingalls reported
*r.iugb'Ut th; Un t»l State*, embodying

tom," cxniferv nv juriadtylou upon District
6- • m tco Coxm-.ttse. reported favorably,
Eh &gt; m-ndin-iiu. a bill to Incorporate tho
t mt'-Mialc 8*i p Railway, and Mr. Teller ro­
- &gt;o t favorably the House bill to pension
M a. Gum-Id. With an amendment including
l'r-. P Ik anl Mm. Tyler, the amounts
th • Donor fr

In tn- llonr the Cutreular and Diplomatlo Ap&gt;r inri.’ tinn btib wm passed. Mr. Belford loto1:— &lt;1 a resolution reciting tbe miseries

tty. ttn Czar, the friendly assurpeople '■( tbe United States, and

•U- t . num-a dr np*d foe participation In
H* vrtreliton. A debate took plaoe on the bill
&gt; p rrn't produoert of leaf tobacco to sell tho
uno w thout Joeuire, after which a motion to
i-p-ad
;u:d■ -pass
bill wmt..lost
a
.~ui tbe
— mint---. -. - tbo
*—
.....—
Domeatla.
The will of Char es A. Reade; ot Newton.
1Ms*l. after bequeathing &gt;100,000 to his faml-

. dbom each gift to lie used in giving picnic* to
dren, scientific lectures and relief to poor
- widowij He al*o left &gt;50,000 to the United
Went of the National debt.
' Tur Secretary of the Illinois Slate Board of
health reports a general vaccination of school
ehiklreu throughout tbe Slate and a very doeflded diminution of small-pox. The u unber
A Mxrrixo of the Western Distiller*’ Aa*o&lt;st on waa -held iu Cincinnati on the 2d,
M which it was resolved to reduce the
Aggregate amount of bushels msahed 5,000

lake Champ'aln Railroad ran Into a waah-out

L»wt:.ian mine at lahpemlng. Mich., on the
M. killed two men and wounded a third.
The throe Indian senute -Dead-Shot, Dandy

people were seeking refuge In
flood. In Arkansas tbe White,
Arkansas rfrtsi were reported
It tbe gloomy reports of death

■wd seriously injnred throe other*.
Tmt Haverhill (Mass.) Relief Committee on

i muruiT of three brotbea

153 btulMM failure in the

ForMgn.
tbc fiulah.
Qtrrn Victor'! ..as shot at on tho 2d by
Braeolltetonof apaatengsrand freight train
near Earlville, N. Y., on tbe 4th Engineer Collins a man i.amo.1 Roderick McLean, said lo be
a dork, ag«d twenty-seven year*, and * native
kiUei The w-cldeut was due to a mislnter- of London. Her Majesty had just entered'
her carriage’at the Windsor railway station,
prctatlu-n of orders.
on
her wsy to Windsor CasUe, when the man
A flood at Bangor, Me., ou tbe 5th swept
raised a pistol and fired directly at her. For­
tunately bls alm was bad, and tbe Queen es­
Croix i Penobscot Railroad.
caped unhurt. Tbe would-be assassin Was l omedialely captured, and it wm onlj with
great difficulty that ha was rescued from tbe
evening of the 4th. Loa*. &gt;50,000. • ’
Tn« steamer James D. Parker wm wrecked hands of ths people. McJxan said hunger
prompted the dee.L During Queen Victoria’s
then set on fire by the overturn lag of a stove. reign of forty-four years this is the seventh
personal stuck made upon her.
MacLban, who fired upon Queen Victoria,
ued at &gt;100,1)00 wm lost.
A Ltfile Bock (Ark.) dispatch of
Ath was examined on the 3J by the Windsor Bor­
states that 12,OX) people had been left desti­ ough Justice1). On hly person waa found a let­
tute by tiifl floods tn the State, and that 20,000 ter written before the sliootlng. In which ho
•aid he wm compelled to commit crime against
The Mysenberg Store Company of BL the blooded rxistocnscy because of the Insuf­
Louis, which had been working about one ficient relief offered him. Policemen testified
hundred convicts tn tbe Missouri Peniten­ that hr alined straight at the royal carriage,
tiary, suspended payment on the 4th, with which wm thirty paces distant The discovery
Was made that MacLean was discharge J from
liabattles of SM.000.
Aucs Wright, tbe soubrette of a theatri­ tlie Wells Asylum last September, and had
cal troupe, having been demented by typhoid until recently been an Inmate of the asylum
fever, leaped from a fourth-etory window of a at Westoo-tiupCT-Maro.
Tur. members of tho London Stock Ex­
hotel lu Cleveland on tha 4th, and was in­
change opened their session ou the 3d by
stantly killed.
A kscent letter to the National House of singing the National anthem: “GodSave tho
Rc;&gt;rc»eutatlves from the Director of the Mint , 'China Is preparing for trouble with Japan
states tiiat from March, '1578, to December, about Loochoo. The arsenal is active and the
1881, tbe average monthly cost of silver bull­ Government la ordering arras.
ion purchased by the Treasury wm &gt;2,017,805,
Tur. Canadian town of Fort Erie Is over­
and the average amount of coinage $2,230,S9L run with thieves from the American side, the
A mektino In eld *of the Hennepin Canal ring-leader being one of the party who recent­
scheme was held In Washington on the even­ ly broke jail at Rochester,*N. Y. Tbe defects
ing of the 4th. Speeches were made by David in the extradition system hare cauM-J the
people to discuss the propriety of loading a
resolved to organize a committee to take scow with the gang and towing them across
charge of the subject.
to Buffalo.
A PACKiNG-nocsz of the Lake Superior
8i*»ci*L prayers were offend and thanksgiv­
Powder Company, located three miles from ing services were held on the 5th in nearly all
Marquette, Mich., exploded on tbe Oth, wip­ tbe churches of England, on account of tho
ing away every vestige of the building tod Queen's escape from assassination.
blowing four men to fragments.
Warrs Bhotukhs, wine merchants of Lon­
Navigation on the Hudson River wm re­ don. failed on the 4th for £120,000.
sumed on the Clh.
Fortt miners are said to have lost their
A BMssH-tT on the Northwestern Road, lives on tbe olh by the falling of the shaft of
within the limits of Chicago, on the 6th in­ a mine In Teplltx, Austria.
jured Engineer Walter Titt and Postal Clerk
Ax Algiers cablegram reports a battle be­
F. Sutton, besides burning a considerable tween s battalion of French troops and a
quantity of mall matter destined for Iowa.
party of fifteen hundred insurgents, in which
Thirteen houses at Riverton, MIm., were the former lost twelve meg and tbe latter one
swept from their foundations on the 6th by hundred.
the overflow of the Mississippi River, and six
Colonbl Bum, of the British Royal Engi­
lives were lost Reports from other inundated neers, attempted on tbe 4th to cross the chan­
sections state that the destruction of life and nel tn a balloon with a man named Simmons,
property had been great, and ft wu feared but they fell into the sea at Dover and were
that the horrors of famine would be added to drowned.
the list before help could reach the unfortu­
Sk&gt;.hbtaxv FORmni on the 4th declined to
nate yieople.
giro evidence before the committee charged
Wiluam Rcttee A Co., morocco man ufact­ with inquiring into the Land act. On hia ro­
turn to Dublin a large crowd hooted him at
abilities, &gt;175,000.
tbe depot, and a man named Hazel was ar­
Mrs. J. W. Dickinson and Mrs. Charles rested for connection with the demonstration
Sturgis, two ladies of Battle Creek, Mk-h.,
By a vote of 257 to 243 tbe British House of
were struck by lightning on the dth and fatal­ Commons on tho Oth refused to allow Mr.
ly injured.
Bradlaagh to aflirm.
The statistics tabulated by the Census
Princb Milan wm proclaimed King of
Bureau show that, of the 50,000,000 of popu­ Servla on the 0th.
lation pf the various States aud Territorice,
Ths Mexican town of Nacovl wm recently
90,000 are insane, 75,000 Idiotic, 50,000 blind, attacked by Apaches. Several personz were
33,WO deaf and dumb and 2^0,000 pauper* ami killed on each side.
prisoners.
A rsw dsyc ago Dr. -Williford, of Mem­
phis, mistook for a burglar a colored nurse in
bls employ, and fatally injured her by firing nometer registered twenty-firs degrees be*
through a window.
Srvkral of tbe leading retailers In New
■uckhtabt Lincoln on tbe 7th ordered to
cruelty in not providing their female clerks Mound Cit/, I1L, sixteen thousand rations
with seats. After a hearing tn which the for tbe sufferers by the overflow of tho Ohio
women expressed a willingness to testify tn Bitar.
behalf of their employers tho Utter were dis­
Ths farre-house of John Taylor, near
charged.
’
Meadow les, Manitoba, took fire on the 7th
On the 5th the levee on Bayou Lafourche, and was destroyed daring a blizzard, and his
La., broke in two
*•-- — • — •
•
wife and throe daughters were frozen to
one being at Thibodeaux. Unless speedily death on the bleak prairie.
closed, a Urge section of rich sugar land
Customs officer* at Moscow found on tha
would be iumxiated.
7th dynamite in cues of taste remaining un­
The banking house of Chsrles A. Sweat A claimed. A secret press wm discovered at
Odessa, and several Nihilists were arrested.
It wm announced on the 7th that at least
40,(XX) persons had been rendered destitute in
A call has been Issued fer a State Repub the States of Arkansas, Mississippi and Ten­
llcan Nominating Convention, to be bold at nessee by the overflow of the rivers.
In Boston early on the morning of the 7th a
Nashville, Tenn., on tbe 37th of April, and for
well-dressed man walked up behind Mrs. Har­
a Cr-nsUtutlonal Convention tn AugustIna Iowa House of Representatives, by a riet Bell, ac she was walking on ths street,
vote of SO to Lhaa paaaod a bill appropriating and cut her throat. She lived but two minutes.
SI50 for the purchase of a gold medal fer
ment of Supreme Judge­
Katc Shelley, the Boone herotne.
Governor Ccllom on the 7th Issued bls
P1UBUDKXT Arthvf. ou the 3d nominated
John M. Wtlsoo, of Ohio, as Consul at Bro­ proclamation for tire extra session of the Illi­
nois Legislature. fixing the day of meeting on
Tm following dispatch wm on the M sent Thursday, March 23d. The Governor specifies
by the Secretary of State at Waahtogton to as subjects of action the apportionment of
Minlater Lowell: “ The President and people
of tbe United States conzratolatc her Majes­ transfer of the Illinois A Michigan Canal to
ty us having been providentially protected the Federal Government, tbe revision of the
from the assassin. Remeuiberiwg tbe sym- Criminal Code, and the appropriation of funds
j&gt;athy of her Majesty and tbe Br.Uah people for the Normal University.
David Navahro, who wm twenty-one yean
in our recent National bereavement, tbe foot­
ing art Indignation and thankfulness for the of age and weighed TOO pounds, died in Pitts­
Queen's safety is deep and universal.—Fxn- burgh. Pa., of traxH-pox on the 7th.
In the United States Senate on tbe 7th Mr.
Ex-Smmxjor Miltox a. Latham, President Sherman reported a bill for the redemption or
of tho New York Mining sad Stock Exchange, conversion of outstanding &gt;10 refunding cer­
and Governor of California tn 1BEO, died In tificates. Mr. McDiD prevented a memorial
from tl*e Iowa Legislature asking fur &gt;7,000,New jork on the 4th.
Tun Oregon Democratic CqnveaUon will 000 for the Improvement of the Missouri Rlv.’
meet at Portland on tbe Sth of April, and tbe er. Mr. Bock made a favorable report ou the
bill to punish tbe unlawful certification of
IlcirabJmu on April 30.
hank iliecks, and Mr. Daves reported favor­
A Wash: sotos dispatch of tbe «h states
that Mr. SeoriHe had ended hia connection ably tbe act to ratify tbe agreement
between the Crow Indians an-1 tbe
vttlLthe Gu.tcau cw, and would ret ;rn to
Chicago- Oaect .Um assassin’* relative* in Northern Paeilk Road. A joint reso­
lution was passed to authorize the Secretary
jridonce regarding the lunuiity of tbe ccm of War to use hospital tents for the sufferers
in the South i-y overflow. When the Chinese
bill came, up, tbe Pacific Coast Benstors
called attention to the recent meetings In op­
position to tbe Celestials. Mcsr.-, Dawes
and Edmunds retaliated by giving theta-

VOU WILL FIND UNDER. ONE ROOF IN BAHRY COUNTY AND WE

&gt;

INTEND TO MAKE

PRICES THAT WILL SECURE A LARGE SALE AT ONCE.
WE HAVE JUST OPENED

300 SUITS!
------------------ OF------------------

Men’s, Boys’ and Children’s Clothing
THAT WERE B0U6HT CHEAP I CHEAP FOR CASH
AND WE INTEND TO SELL

O. A. T&amp;UMAN &amp;.SON

First to the front!
A Full Stock of Goods
--------- 1 AM NOW RECEIVIOG---------

Of Goods suitable for the Spring trade.

Also the Largest and best Stok of

Ready Made Clothing, for Men, Boys, and Youths,
Ever brought to Nashville, and ranging in price from

------------------------ IN-------------------------

Ladies, Misees, Gents &amp; Children’s Fine Shoes
I KEEP THE CELEBRATED ROBHESTER MAKE, STYLISH, DURABLE AND CHEAP.

IiiuMa/ts and Caps I have the lat­
est styles and. can fit all parties.
I always keep a Full Stock of CHOICE FAMILY GROCERIES
at prices that defy competition.
You can always rely upon getting the lowest prices on Goods
ind the highest prices for your produce at my store. Call and get
prices before you buy.
Probate Order.

HL LTDU L Hiau, OF LTU USS.,

WITHOUT A RIVAL!

CLKJJHNTeMITH.

LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S
TE53TA3LB COMPOTOD.

The most popular machine in tire world.

o. L GLASGOW.
yyiLLIAM JONES.

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                  <text>Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun.
VOLUME IX.

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, MARCH 18, 1882.

(TERMS; 81.50pehYba®
(

Credit Sgbscrxptiox* $1.75.

NUMBER 26.

The audience daring the contest
The Hastings Banner goes into ecVILLAGE ELECTION.
WOODLAND.
P. M. Harwood, of Bellevue, spent
acemed to be equally divided in regard stacies over a groceryman in Hastings,
Sunday in town.
The selection of candidates for the to the contestants, bat when Strank who it claims lids already abought 5,000'
Hay is cheap.
'
Fishermen are reaping a harvest on
—Small boys and marbles have been। village officers was &amp;n closely contested failed to come to time after hurting lbs. of maple sugar. C. W. Smith hasi
Bod weather.
the flats, where the water has gone
in caucus, as it was at the polls on Mon­ his knee, public opinion was freely ex­ purchased this year, over 10,000 lbs. of'
rolling oD-the walk this week.
OurDakotians will start soqu. |
down, leasing the fish in shallow
Mrs. Susie Hood has returned from a water.
—Farm help is not very plenty this day. The citizens’ caucus was largely pressed that Strank had lost his wind maple sugar, end does not think be■
spring, and wages are trifle better than attended on Friday evening, at the and was only too glad for an excuse to has been doing much of a business at; visit to Bay City.
Wo are under obligations to our
draw
the
match.
it,
either.
We
acknowledge
however
Billy Barrel and Justice Rising startlost yeai, ranging $18 to $23 per month, I town ball, and a fair representation
brethren of| the State press, for the
It was announced from the stage that that the transaction is a big one for ed west on Tuesday.
, was present at the union caucus, held
—A hand engine or a hook and ladder
kind
expressions.of esteem we have
at W. S. Power’s office on Saturday Peter V. Dacona of Charlotte had Hastings.
Geo. Sin ith has a man at work for
truck will probably be provided for the' pVening. Ohly two tickets were in
received from them during the past
challenged E. M. Everts for a collar
him in the shop and they say he is a
protection of property against fire, at
two
months.
’ the field, and the contest seemed to be and elbow match, best three in five, to
good shoer.
CEDAR CREEK.
an early day.
principally upon the candidates for take place at the opera house, Friday
S, Haight has just returned from
LOCAL MATTERS.
—Jake Habersaat has traded his1 President, Marshal, Street Commis­ evening, March 24th, for $10 aside, and
Grand Rapids with a fine stock of un­
Mr. Thomas is quite sick.
farm just west of the village, to W. E. sioner and Trustees, the candidates door money, and that the challnge had
dertakers goods, the finest he has ever
Dakota
fever
is
raging
here.
Duel, for thib-house and lot in Brook­ for Assessor and Treasurer, John E. been accepted.
.
By taking advantage of the present
bought.
School closed here last Friday.
lyn, that Mr. B.^purcliaaefl of A. W. Barry and Frauk C. Boise, being the
Thtuleus Rogers and Andrew J,; opportunity, having decided to manu­
facture for, the wholesale trade ex­
Farm help is scarce in this place.
same on both tickets.
LOCAL GIBBLE-GABBLE
have repainted and K«t their meat mar­ clusively. we will close out our entire
A. J. Tolles is teaming for Charley
—Among the professional sports who
Considerable electioneering was did
ket in running orderthey propose to stock of furniture at actual cost. This
Murphy.
attended the wrestling match here at the polls on Monday, but the utmost
keep, a neat market and deal in good sale willtbe for cash, and for cash only
Frank has his house nearly ready to
will be closed out during the next
Thursday night were H. A. Brink of' quiet and universal order prevailed.
Butter is high and cows in good &lt;labeef. Their first slaughter was last and
thirity days. We also notify all who
move into.
.
Chicago,and Lester L. Barton of Eaton
Quite a sensation was created about mand.
Saturnay.
are indebted to n... that all notes and
Andrew
Doud
once
more
presides
at
Rapids.
ten o’clock, wjien the members of the
The roller skating rink project 11.18
A Sunday School Institute will bo accounts, either for furniture or mill
the village forge.
—A. G. Murray has purchased a proposed fire company organized in fizzled.
held at the M. E. church on the even­ Mork, not paid by April 15th will be put
Henry Vandenburg lias sold his farm
G. A. Truman was in Grand Rapids,
ings of March 21st and 23ud. To com­ tn the hands of an officer for immedihouse and lot of E. Chipman, known as front of C. L. Glasgow’s hardware,
toKrp]lection, without further notice.
to his brother-in law, C.Kider of string
tho Furniss property, for $850 and will and marched to the polls and voted in Wednesday.
mence nt 7 o’clok p. m. Program:
Nashville, March, 15 th \
-Chas. Hazelett, of Charlotte, was in town. He is going with his brother to 1st singing, 2nd devotional exercises
bcccme a resident of Nashville about a solid body for the trustees they had
Kellogg, Bell di Co.
Dakota.
selected
as
the
proper
ones
to
support,
town
on
Wednesday.
I April 1st.
3rd singing, 4th what relation does the
IXPOKTAMT TO TRAVELERS,
Wo
had
quite
a
full
of
snow
last
Sat
­
A variety of weather predominated
S. S. sustain to the church ? by Mrs. J.’
,J —Mrs. Jacobs, a widow lady living in the advancement of their interests.
.Special Inducement* are offered vouby the
urday night, and tho way the logs came
It would have been impossible during tha past week.
F. Ol wick : music, 5th what qualifica- Burlington Route, It will pay vou to read tbetr
about two miles southwest of Nash­
a
poor corps
Frank Chipman is quite sick, the re­ into the new mill yard since, is a cau­ tious are necessary to successful S. S. advertisement* to be found elsewhere In this
ville, has woven 1344 yards of carpet, to have elected
Issue.
_______________________
tion
to
cats.
'teaching T by B. S. Holly; 6th select
within the last twelve months, besides of officers from among the- men sult of a severe cold.
HOUSE AND LOT FOR SALE.
Isaac Van Arman, tho great fiat mon­ reading, by I.
Coughs, colds and croup are causing
nominated to fill the positions, and the
Harter; 7th class rec­
doing her house work.
Desirably
located on Main St, just north of
ey man has got tiled of working in a itations, by Mrs. Lana Holly’s' class;
■
I village has an efficient council to con- consternation among children.
Wolcott House. 25 27 Apply to C. H. Brady.
—Reciprocation in home industry is
Dean Fhiming ana wife, of Jackson village blacksmith shop, and he Is now
l duct her a flairs for the next year, and
Sth black board exercises Jewish Tab­
the life of business; no merchant goes i' may rest assured that all matters of in­ made a short visit liero Monday.
MONEY!
MONEY!
seeking a job where ho can enjoy city ernacle, by Rev. Bridenstine.—Second
abroad to get produce for his susten­
Money to loan on good notes at reasonable
A. L. Rasey, Dr. Griswold and Alex. life.
terest to
Session.—1st singing, 2nd devotional rare* of Interest, or to invest in “gilt edge” pa­
ance, and no farmer should go abroaib jerest
w the
inc public, will be properly
The Big Medicine Man has a new' exercises, 3rd singing, 4th discussion, per. Apply soon to
Blair were at Grand Rapids Tuesday.
.
...
• .
,JZ7 looked after,
Okno Stroxo.
to get his merchandise.
•—
__
Wm. Fleming, of Mason was visiting suit of clothes and he reminds us of a what relation does the pastor sustain
The vote polled was not so large by
I jY" A few ga Ions of Syrup Wanted ut Tus
—On Thursday, tho old Marshal was 23 ballots as lastyear, there being only his uncle, James and family, Thurs­ little child running around on the
to to the S. 8.! opened by J. F. Orwick, News office, upon subscription.
busily engaged in cleaning off tho cross 250, of which only 10 were straight cit­ day.
streets and inquiring of the business followed by J. W Stiuchcomb ; music;
TO BE GIVEN AWAY,
walks, and was closely followed by tho izens, and 34 straight union.
F. M. Potter led the van when the men of the village how his clothes Sth what coustitues a good S. S. pro­
A Chin* Tea Sett of 44 pieces, For particlars
new Marshal, who seemed to be watch­
wrestlers ect. camo into town, Thurs­ fit.
The full vote is as follows.
C. W. Smitil
gram ! by C. A. Hough ; music; Oth call in and see me.
ing as though he was bound to learn
KAMES.
VOTE.
day.
Our horse jockey catuc out little be­ block board lesson concluded, Jewish
fire’ WIND AND WATER.
President,
how to do tho job. as soon as properly
He went Tabernacle, by Rev. Bridenstine ; mu­
W. A. Biown of Bellevue, has been hind on his last bargain.
Ellhu
E.
Chipman,
160
Fire
will
not
burn
—
Wind
will
not Mow over
commissioned.
.
visiting his brother, H. A. the past down into Barry a few days since, to sic. Those having been present at one —Water will not rot oat—a Barb Wire Fence
Stephen 3. Ingerson.
81
Recorder,
—Grant 5c Warner of Woodland,
week*
make his fortune out of an old horse ne of those institutes pronounce it grand. made of Kelly’* Steel Barb Wire. Glaagow ban
Frank McDcrbv,
IM
bold all be ha*, and ba* ordered more. Cal! at
had a t wino binder come to this station
II. Gordon and wife of Alto, who bad it all slicked up to the best of bis Please give them a full house especially hl*
Geo. W. Francis.
store and get a book free, which will tell *11
Assessor,
billed to them, but by mistake, hauled
about iL
have been visiting here, returned home ability, and after giving it a few cracks S. S. scholars.
John E. Barry.
home a McCormick binder belonging
on
Thursday.
of
the
whale-bone,
and
drawing
a
tight
Treasurer,
Nell.
Nichols’ store.
to L. O. .Crocker. A big day’s, work
Frank C. Boise.
Mrs. • Lena Wnlrath was quite ill line he braced up in his buggy with |all
Marshal,
.
with n four horse team straightened the
the fore part of this week, but is fast the dignity of a lord, and thought his
MAPLE GROVE.
BUILDINGS MOVED.
James L. Gregory,
business up and returned the machine.
convalescing.
nag got up Io perfection. At Inst be
Wm. E. Griggs.
I am ready to move buildings in good shape
Street Commissioner,
and at reasonable rate*. Give me a call.
G. A Truman &amp; Son have shipped struck his victim, and a bargain was
—Barry Evarts A Co.- have purcluu- j, James L. Gregory,
Ed. Mosey was home Sunday.
25-27. Tom. Nujol
200 barrels of dried apples to Grand soon made and he started home full of
Win. E. Griggs.
cd eighteen feet front, of C. L. GiasWill. Eno, has returned from the
Constable,
A new supply of goods on the 5 and ID
Rapids this week,
conceit. To have beard him talk, you north.
gow, just north of his hardware, and
Jacob Osmun,
cent counter*,
at Add* Nichols’ store.
Thus. E. Niles.
Arthur Ainsworth of Grand Rapids, -would have thought he had made his
will join with G. W. Francis in build­
Fred Quicks’ children has the'whoop*
Trustees,
srf- For Sale—Heavy work horse perfectly
fortune. He offered to bet $5 that his ing cough.
was
visiting
his
parcuts
here
tho
fare
ing a brick block, forty feet front by
Benjamin F. Reynolds,
sound, 7 yre, old, inquire of
beast
could
draw
a
heavier
load
up
the
part of this week.
Charles Lentz,
Elsy Shoup is at Battle Creek trying
sixty or seventy feet deep. Work on
C. Ainsworth.
. 91
Herbert M. Ixe,
88
Country schools have nearly all clos­ Cedar Creek hill, than the team known ,to sell his colts.
the same grill be commenced as soon
Freeland T. Boise,
Harneta repaired and ullcd in cxchang*
123
No body dis­
ed, and teachers are looking for sum­ os the Newton team.
as possible.
Mr. King is hauling logs to the mill for wood.
Thomas Turkey,
Wm. Clare.”
puted it, but they had their doubts for a new Kitchen.
John B. Marshall.
mer engagements.
—Conductors say that F. M.Pottcr, of
LUMBER! LUMBER!
In the evening, the member^ of the
G. W. Francis has rented Capt. about it, and their doubts were all
Mr. Lapham has nearly all the ma­
the Hawk, rides more on his pass than
Custom Sawing and Building Material fuxproposed flro company .came out and Boise’s house, and will move his family made clear the other day when they terial on the ground for a new barn.
any other editor on the line. As Pot­
nished on short notice, at our new mill in Ma­
saw him coming down Main St., ac­
Mr. and Mrs. Boltz, Mr. and Mrs. ple Grove.
James 8. Ferry.
ter’s avordupois weight is double that paraded the streets with torch lights, there as soon as Mr. Boise vacates.
companied
by
three
other
gentlemen
in honor of their victory, and waited
Allie Durkee was considerably sur­
Anderson spent Saturday and Sunday
of any other editor's on the line, the
RE PL’ B LICAN CAUCUS.
upon each of the successful candidates, prised last Friday evening, by a visit two ot them pushing on the buggy, and in Hope.
wear and tear on M. C. R. IL rolling
A Caucas of tbc Rcnubliean Electors of the
the other playing the whole bone,
The school in the Norton district townahip of Castleton, will beheld in tbc band­
stock is considerable, and the car shops giving them three cheers, after which from about 25 of bis young friends.
responses were made by the officers
Henry Lathrop of Morgan starts for while the owner of the beast pulled on will close this week, and as far as we ing south of town hall, in Naahville, on Satur­
are taxed to their utmost capacity.
day,
April l*i, 1882, at 2 p. m., for the purthe
halter
strap
and
tried
to
make
him
elect.
the yellowstone Valley, Montana next
know, Miss Beadle has given good sat­ poec of nominating a ticket to be supported at
—Several of our business men are
go. Their efforts were all in vain, the isfaction.
the ensuing town meeting.
Never in the history of Nashville, has week, to make that section his home.
Br Order Of Com.
awaking to the fact that the only way an evening after election passed off ’ Rev. J. M«Aikin called here, Monday beast only shook his head and refused
There was a surprise parry at Ad.
to do a sound business is on the ready more quietly and orderly, or’ been as evening, while on his way to Tekonsha to go, and formed such a blockade in Wolfs, one night last week. A good
MONEY WANTED!
pay system, and are making their ar­ doroid of rowdyism as wns last Monday on a visit, and preached at the M. E. street that they unhooked - the traces, time was enjoyed except going home
Yoa are owing roe. and 1 must have the
money to pay my bill*. If not paid *oon tout
rangements accordingly. This is as it evening.
led the beast away, and drawed the in the rain.
:
_ ______
church.
x
account will be placed In a collector'* band*.
should be and The News bids every
buggy out of the village. Try again
G W. Demaray.
Tho
Christian
Sunday
school
are
West
Kalamo
is
excuseable
for
men
­
WRESTLING MATCH.
business man who has the back-bone
making arrangements for a concert to sport, you might have done worse.
tioning Bill. Feighner’S’barn, ns far as
to stand to those terms. God speed.
Dick.
begiven
on
the
20th
inst.
We
look
for
we
are
concerned,
but
East
Maple
shop.
Thursday night the match was re­
. •
Grove may object.
—The oar factory employs ten mo «, sumed at the opera house by Hat. Bos­ a good one.
FARMERS
Kellogg, Bell A Co., are going out of COMMON COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS
and is turning out about 1,000 feet of worth of Roxand, and Clark Strank of
Frances Covell started for Md., Wed­ Take advantage of the low prices and buy yunr
oars per day. Every thing about the Eaton Rapids. Both men were prompt­ the retail trade, and will manufacture
nesday. He intends to settle on the hanie** of (.’lark who will give you No. 1 stock
for
the
wholesale
trade
only,
in
a
few
Wm. Clark.
factory was running as calm as usual ly on hand, and the opera house was
cast shore of the Chesapeake Bay, and reliable work.
Covkcil Booms,
I
on Thursday, when the cat head of the crowded to its utmost, the gallery be­ weeks,
where he will soon lie enjoying the
•
NstovBle, Mor. 14, 1883. f
A CARD.
Mrs. Goodnough and Mrs. Bcrone, of
lathe suddenly collapsed and was so ing principally with ladies.
balmy breezes of the Bay, and gatherAll person* having book account with me are
Regular meeting.
.
respectfully requested to call, at your earliest
badly shattered as to stop the turning
Present, Young, President; Barber, Dickfn iug up the shells from the sea shore.
Time was called at half past eight, Montague, who have been visiting
convenience and settle the same, either by pay­
ttutil repairs can be made, which will and the trial of muscle commenced. friends here for the past few days, re­ non, and Demaray, trustees.
Wl&lt; had an occasion to visit south ment or note, as I wish to close nil book ac­
turned
home
on
Thursday.
No
quorum
being
Dresent
council
adjourned
count*.
1 earnestly solicit the continuance of
take about a week.
.
west Maple Grove last week, and found
Strank evidently felt that if he throw
Br patronage, and will save you from *5 to
F. M. Potter is working up his sena­ til Thursday, March, 16,1882.
buisnes* lively. Among other things,
a year according to the amount of goods
—One of the teachers in the union his man, he must do it in the early part torial boom for all there is in it, and
F.
McDbrbt,
W.
H.
Youso,
John Hill was hauling lumber for a you purchase under the ready pay system.
school undertook to correct Will. of the evening, as he bad found by claims to have the inside track of all
Clerk
President,
.
L.J. Wheelbm.
new house, Lyman Hoag was busy
Moore, a pupil on Wednesday, when former experience that Bosworth’s
aspirants for that honorable position.
in his blacksmith shop, and tho Shoup
REGISTRATION NOTICE.
the boy ran out of the school room fol­ wind was the best, and he could not
Benj. Meiser is in the northern por­
C
ouncil Rooms.
I
boys
were
sawing
out
the
lumber
in
The
board
of
registration
of
the towuablp of
lowed by the teacher, but Will, made expect to tire his antagonist out and
Nashville, Mar. Id,1883. f
tion of the state, looking for a location
Castleton, will meet at the office of the towotheir saw mill.
his escape. Thorough disipline is then throw him, consequently he rath­
Council met pursuant to adjournment,
■hip clerk in the tillage of Nashville in aald
for a home. If he does not succeed in
Bog. E. Rve.
township on Saturday April 1st. All legal to&lt;much needed in our school, and tho er endeavored to crowd a grapple,
Present, Barber, Pre*, pro tem; Boe Um,
finding one he likes, he will move back
Dickinson, Demaray and Reynolds trustees,
sooner we have it, the sooner we will which, if not favorable .to Bosworth
tojnd.
EAST MAPLE GROVE.
Absent, Young, President; Cook, trustee.
tion are requested to come forward on that
get value received tor our money paid was easily broken, the contestants lab­ ' 0ne hundred and forty-five visitors
day and register their nz ues.
Minute* read and approved,
ored dilligently for an hour and four­
to teachers.
Dated Nashville, March, 17.1382.
arc recorded as having visited tho pri­
The mud makes the going extremely
The following account* were presented and
Fkxxe MuDerbt,
—The News makes no pretension of teen minutes, when Bosworth succeed mary department of the school during on motion allowed;
bad.
telling big stories, but will venture just in throwing his man to the floor, and the administration of Miss Allen, five W. H. Burges*,
|22.«
The farmers are securing their hired
W. 8. Powers,
one fish story, as this is the season for rolling him fairly and squaerly on bis terms.
11.00 help for the coming summer.
ELECTION NOTICE.
Thou. Niles,
5.88
The annual election of officer* fur the town­
catching that kind of game. It is stated
Jesse Guy has bought H. Blocksom’s F. McDerby,
21.74
Those whom we mentioned last week ship of CaitUeton Barry Co., Mich., wta be hcM
An intermission of twenty minutes
that au innumerable shoal of fish come
H. A. Barber.
4.50
farm
two
miles
south-west
of
this
vil
­
at Wheeler's old store one door *outb of town
Boston,
3.00 as being sick, are now on the gain.
hall, in the village of Nashville, in said tnwn4&gt;ut of the pond every day and feed on was then taken for the wrestlers to re­ lage, and Mr B. will1 dispose of fals Wm.
D. Demaray.
3.00
The minds of the people in this sec­ «i ou April 3rd 1S-52, The offierra to be elee­
Parkey’s wheat, on the north shore of cuperate their strength. When they stock and personal property at auctiou,
1 50
arc a*follow*: one Supervisor, one Clerk.
Bosworth
3.00 tion are pondering over the life of Sile.
the pond, and thus fall an easy prey to again took their places,
E. Cook,
1.50 Doty.
seemed to have the best wind, and war. next Saturday, March 25th.
the boys who pick them up by the
The
Christian
church
social
was
en
­
The
•*looni«l
bond
of
W.
E.
Boel
was
pre
­
equally anxious to grapple, which he
During the latter part ot this winter
bushel. If this is too fishy, charge it
did in a short time, and ran Strank to tertained last Wednesday evening by ।sented with C.M. Putnam and Theo. C. Down- there has been more‘sickness in thia
&gt;ur Constable*. Pall* will beopewd ■
to the account of Ad. Stanton.
'
the back part of the stage. When Mr. and Mrs, Ingerson. A pleasant ia* aurttlea.
clock a. m. and cloa* at 4 o’clock p. m.
vicinity than ever before.
Motion by Reynold* that the bond by tabled
Dated, NaabvUle, March 17, 1882.
—There are about sixteen citizens of Strank had his back to the wall, it was time was enjoyed by about fifty parti­
Andy Ruse of Shiloh, O.. who has
Fbaxk McDehst,
until
next
meeting.
Carried
by
aye*
and
nay*
cipants,
and
five
dollars
collected.
,
this Village who have invested a dollar impossible to push him over, and bis
been
visiting
xt
his
parents
in
this
vic
­
Mrs. Jeffery8 Sunday school class will 1a* follows:
each in pictures of Garfield which were arms being free, he placed one around
inity, departed for his home on Tues­
LAST ACT QKTiJB TRAGEDY.
to be delivered as soon as the lady ven­ Bosworth’s back, and the other on his entertain the social at Rev. A. D. New- ,nold*. Nay*, Boston.
day.
der could send to Grand Rapids and chin, and with a quick, powerful move, ton’s on Tuesday evening next. Re­
After reading the Hutment of the inspector*
A couple of laborers on the borders
redeem them, a* they had been seized forced Bosworth to the floor.
freshments will be served with pop &lt;,of election.
_____ the following
__ _ ___
_ were declared of James-town got into a squabble the u»o*t remarkable In criminal juiiapru&amp;nm.
per*ouii
Dr. Radpatb, wbo*e ‘ Lire and Work of Garby the officials for nonpayment of
After another rest of twenty minutes, corn and apples. A house full is look- elected to tbeKveral office*:
other day in which a paper collar was
lieesae. Those sixteen citizens will they again renewed the contest, but ed for and desired.
~
" • -xPresident,
Ellbu- Chipman;
Clerk, Frank Mc- utterly demolished. Loss: two sense
doubtless 1m‘ pleased tolaarn that the after a few minutes work, Strank was
The social of the Baptist society will
forced to hi* knee*, and one of them be entertained by Mr. and Mrs. W. G.
Oar farmers have improved their
T»nd«ur ud gkry &lt;rf
considerable bruised. He claimed that Aylsvorth’s,
Wednesday
evening, JacobOsmun; Trustee*. FrueUnd T. Btete, time daring the winter, cutting and
be was »o badly injured that be could March 22d. As they are soon to leave
preparing their stove wood and now
Nashville, they wish very much to see,
have a good supply for their summsn
On motion council adjourned.
ew decided to call it * draw, giving the house filled. All are cordially inF. McDrxbt,
H. A. Bajuikk,
vitbd to attend.
.
Clerk.
Pre* j&gt;ro ten
Fetch.

LIFE IF NASHVILLE,
And Hmr EnvironB.

�« Lbe etvwption of the few
I the middle of Juu*n, it is
that the mercury will go far

onnd only at C. L
Glasgow’s
lig Hardware Store
BUCKETS,

LONGEST DAY 15 THE YEAR.
I about it. but Dan said it was the
jest, and Dan was certainly the one
» nmietrstood the matter best.
, began’nretty much like other days,
r that mere ’ wan a heavy fog, and
i knew that it was bad weather for
Ing. and tip-top for fishing. He
le up his mind to go fishlug. Per­
il. if his mind had not been already
le up, he would not have minded so
•h when bis father said at the break­
table:
•• We must get the scyt
order. so’s to take a fair
lower meadow to-morrow,
__
.
Don’t let
bunting after
me have fo/Wo time
tiniu h
wm, Daniel, ' ' 1‘ m . ready t o go si11"
itite was gone at once.
Daniel' s/a
HaMVtHklnteL.__। turn
._________
that heavy
„______
creaking
o
old .grindstone.’ and how sure his father
W»e to find a dozen.things to do first,
and keep him waiting all the morning!
He went around by the sink drain, and
dug bis bait; he examined his fishing­
pole: he put up Lis lunch; he even tried
a worm on the book; and then he wan­
dered disconsolately around, wishing
grindstones had never been invented.,
.
He went to the cud of tbc garden, and
leaned sulkily over the low stone wall,
eating the half-ripe harvest apples, aud
throwing tho cores spitefully awav.
Down the road a few rods lay the rnillpond, and in the middle of the road
near by stood Deacon Skinner’s hotse
and chaise.
Old Whitey had his nose down, and
one leg crooked in a meditative fashion.
The Deacon was over in |he field, mak­
ing a hargnip with SoloiAon Murray for
some young cattle. Whfct fun it would
be to start the old horse up. and set him
trotting home! Dan could almost hit
him with an apple cure.-. He tried two
or three, just to sec. and then he picked
a smooth round stone from the wall,
and Klint it singing through the air. .
Old Whitey brought up his nose with
a jerk, straightened his fore-leg, and
started ofi at a brisk trot, the chaise top
tilting and pitching back and forth.
Dan laughed—at least the laugh be­
gan to grow, when he caught one
. glimpse of a frightened little-face at tho
chaise window, aud knew that Nanny
. J&gt;anr, the Deacon's little lamo grand­
child, was in the chaise.
It was only a glimpse, and then the
bank of gray fog swallowed Whitey and
the chase, and it seemed to Dan that
they had gone straight into tho mill­
pond.
“Daniel! Daniel! Come on, now, and
be spry about it!" called his father, as
he moved toward the grindstone; and
Dau obevad. though he felt as if his feet
had all at once turned to lead.
Round and round and round; his
tough little hands were blistered on the
handle, but he did not know it; his
mouth and throat were ai dry as the
stone, but he did n«t think of it. “Crrrcrrr-crrr,” rang the rough, wearisome
noise, until his ears were so deafened
he did not even hear it. For he was
perfectly sure be had killed little Nanny
Dane. ’What would people say? What
would they do to him? Hang him, of
course; and Dan felt in his heart that he
deserved it, and that it would be almost
a satisfaction.
“There." said his father at last, “1
reckon that'll do, Daniel. You’ve been
faithful and stiddy at your work, and
now you may go fishing."
Dan never knew how he got to Long
Pond, or how he passed the slow hours
of that dismal day. The misery seemed

no longer. He would go home and tell
his father,’he would tell everybody.
They might hang him, they might do
earthing they pleased.
’
Tramping desperately home with his
- empty basket in his hand, he heard the
sound of wheels behind him. dragging
that was the Sheriff coming to arrest
him. Don’s heart beat harder, but he
diil not look around. The wheels came
nearer; they stepped, and some one
•• Hullo, Daniel! been fishin’? Fish­
erman's luck, hey? Well, jump in here,
and 1’11 give ye a lift.”
Before Dan knew it he was over the
wheel and sitting beside Deacon Skinner
in the old chaiw, with Whiter switch­
ing his tail right and left m he plodded

“{Jet up, Whitey.” urged the Dea-

ta&gt; be. but he’s amazin' smart. This
roomin' I left little Nanny in the shzy
while J was making a dicker with SolrwnMn XT,,—M,.. 1'....)^..

Inking rank with the Chinese ax one of
words into her heart, and they have
made work the pleasure of her Hie. All I the social problems ot the day.
chief want
iho careless people who ■ watch her cry
out at the trouble she takes with every­ it need hardly be said, that France
thing she does: but they are very apt lacked nothing so much as citizeus
to say, after all is through: “You have trained by good women—mothers who
such an easy way of turning off things, knew thrir duty and did it- Nor can
and things always stay done for you." such training l»egin too early.
Of course they do. Thorough is the
An eminent divine was once asked by
Saxon for through, and anything that a mother when she should begin the. ed­
is thoroughly done is through with. It ucation of her four-year-old boy. “ Madis a queer paradox that if you try to do :uu.” was his answer, “'if you have not
things easily, to shirk su'd slur thorn
already begun, you have lost those four
over, you will always find it hard to get years. From the first smile which
along; while if you put all sorts of pains . beams upon an infant’s cheeks your op­
into your work, and never think now eas-'
portunity begins.”
ily it can be done, but how well it can
Nor are such influences less powerful
be, you find it growing easier day by physically than mentally and morally.
day.— WJdeAweAe.
»
".r&lt;v medical authorities affirm that the
. ..SKlation of the health or ill-health of
U.CC*. Adults is laid in lhe.nursery. Late
Tricks of Magicians.
hours, irregular meals, improper food,
There are a great many regular and other carelessness on the part of
magicians traveling about, and, while those who have charge of them in •child­
business is'not what it used to be, many hood. are the primary causes of many
of them make a great deal of money. of the nervous dh«nwcs so frequent
** wa
“ ‘ iind
a especiallv
The Troy Opera-House is owned by a among Amer’ i-;'
women.
For -this
magician who says he made all his among '• •••
^y responsible.- Much,
money cut of nine tricks. A magician mothers
:ids on the material itof considerable celebrity out West, it is true.
most—exjwrt
work-1
................
r— --------Prof. M. Williams, is a deaf mute. One self. NoYev the
• ... ..
*
would think it would be the last busi­ man cou fashion a Sevres - vase from
ness in die world for a man to under­ common clay. Yet his it is to choose
take who cannot talk or hear, but he the form into which he will mold his
has a man to talk for him while he does lump of clay. And none the less is he
the tricks. Tho last I heard bf him he bound to do his best, that some unforwas at Leadville. The tricks shown scen chance may possibly mar the work
now are mostly mechanical. as the finer to which he has' given his utmost care.
slelght-of-hand tricks which demand
How many women live in history of
tho greatest skill are not showy. The whom the world would have known
prices of tricks are low in comparison nothing but for their children! Those
with what the}* have been. Tho timo who worthily wear the.crown of mother­
has been when as much as $500 would hood arc ever those who prize it most,
be charged to teach a man tho Indian and none save such'as havj wept in its
box trick, and now the price of it is darkness know how black a shadow a
only five dollars. Mechanical tricks are child's coffin may cast over a house­
generally variations of a few pieces of hold.
Children have their rights, which old­
mechanism.
The professor showed a small wooden er persons are unhappily prone to ig­
nore,
and chief among these is the right
box, of a size convenient to hold in the
hand. To all appearance it was an or­ to be children. Men and women in
dinary box. closing with a lock. Ono miniature, copying the airs and graces
way in which it is often used is for the of their elders; flirting and gossippin"
magician to borrow a watch, have one dancing at parties when they should be
Krson put the watch in the box and sound asleep in their cribs; is this what
:k it, taking tho key. Tho magician the fashionable world has to offer us in
hands it to another person Jo hold. exchange for the natural, light-hearted,
“ Do you hear the watch ticking?” the healthy boys and girls of half a century
.
magician will ask, and the person hold­ ago?
Hot-house fruits and vegetables may
ing the box will hear it distinctly by
putting his ear to the lid.
Finally, tho be most costly, and ripen earliest, but
watch appears around a pigeon’s neck, flo they not lack the nch, full flavor of
or hanging to a chair-bacx, after a pistol their congeners grown in the open air.
has been fired, or one of many ways, with the sunshine glowing in their
according to the fancy of the magician. cheeks and the freshness of earth's
One end of the little box swings out on dews in their juices.
Therefore, do not dress the little folks
pivots when relieved from its catch by
a sharp pressure at one end of the bot­ in garments too costly for the wearer to
tom. It* can readily be manipulated play in. nor impose unnecessary re­
with one hand, so that in the interval strictions upon them.
Try to make their childhood as hap­
between the de positing of the watch
and the handing of the box to some one py as possible—a season of which they
to hold, the watch slips out into the may tell their children in days to come,
magician's hand, and a watch move­ when perhaps the grass will be growing
ment hidden in the lid of the box keeps over pjur grave.
Let yourself down to their lere! now
up the deceptive ticking. Such a box
and then; it will do you no harm, and
sells for twelve dollars. The Indian box trick, which is a fa­ give them pleasant memories of you
vorite trick with magicians, is just as hereafter. The father who never romps
simple. In this a big, rough box is with his boy will find it difficult to se­
brought on the stage, and several gen­ cure the confidence of his grown-up son;
tlemen are invited to examine it. They the mother who has no sympathy for
the baby crying over a broken doll may
find an empty box. as roughlyhnade as
a packing-case. The nails seem to run live to see her daughter turn to others
through the corners, the ends clinched for comfort.
whp w ould win the confidence
in the wood. The magician’s assistant of Those
their children must begin the work
is put into a bag. Its end is tied up
in
their
babyhood; never deceiving
and sealed. Trie box is tied round and
round with rope, as well as locked. The them, and remembering always that
bagged-up man is laid on the tied-up “ example is more powerful than pre­
box, and a screen is drawn in front for cept.” It is useless to tell a child not
a short time When, the screen is drawn to do a thing which he sees you do
back, the empty bag is seen with un­ daily, and every xarent is more or less
broken seal lying on the box, which, the model on which the character of the
when its cords are untied and the lock child is formed.
The claim of parental infallibility is
is opened, is found to contain the man.
The only difficulty is the bag part. also a dangerous one to assert. It may
There must be two bags, one within an­ be a little mortifying, yet it is better to
other. The junction of their mouths is acknowledge—“ Mother didn’t know”
com. Jed by the magician, who, with “ Father was mistaken"—than to insist
great show of zeal, ties the mouths you are right when your child knows
with his handkerchief at that portion, you are wrong.
Humanity is fallible, and H is to be
and then invites the committee to tij
and seal the protruding ends of a bag doubted if the most conscientious
which is really alongside of his assist­ mother does her whole duty toward her
ant inside another bag, confined sim­ children. True, I have known a com­
ply by the handkerchief. The nails of placent old lady fold her soft hands and
the box are shams at one end. being contentedly affirm that she had always
simply heads and points which do not done her duty by hers, and that if they
meet The end swings in like a* trap­ turned out badly she should bold her­
door when properly manipulated. The self in no sense responsible. But such
assistant lays the sealed-up bag on top aelf-satufaction is rare, and the best of
of the box, creeps in the end, easily w have cause to mourn over sins of
pushing past the rope, and then re­ omission and commission every day of
turns the end to its place. Thus the our lives.
Tet those who strive prayerfully and
lid oflhe box on which the committee
expended their exertions remains undis­ earnestly to “ train up tneir children in
the way in which they should go," tak­
turbed.
acare to walk themselves also in it
“ Spiritual tricks,” the professor said,
ore them, have God's promise that
“are taking well this season. They
vjeir labor shall not be in vain.—Oor.
are worked by means of mechanical pad­
Christum Union.
locks, and require very little skill.”
The reporter was shown.some of these
The Prophetic Goose-Bone.
pail locks. They seem to be just like or­

dinary padlocks in make, but in some a
touch on a particular rivet throws them
open, and others have clockwork In
such a manner that they open of their
own accord iu a fixed time. Bound by
such padlocks, it is an easv thing for
nay one to show spirit hands or faces
’’ bunrt out
through the bole of a cabinet as soon

to nsn away as Whitey,
thing mint scart him; but
I off home an Middy « if
ng, and waited at the door

The readings of the goose-bone indk
-ate a motley winter. There will be a
go-Ml deal of snow and a few cold days,
but no protracted cold weather. In the
month of December there will be no
very cold weather. During the last of
the month there wHl be a few days
when good fires will be cheerful and
overcoats comfortable. It will be an
exceedingly disagreeable month for out­
door work. with snow or rain every day

bone him never been mistaken in the
weather.
To read correctly the winter of any
year, take the breast-bone of a goose
'Hatched during the • preceding -spring.
The bone is translucent, and it will IM
found to be colored and spotted. The
dark color and .heavy spota indicate
cold. If the spota are* of a light shade
and transparent, wet weather, rain or
snow may be looked for.
There are a good many people all
over the country wh6 pin their faith to
the goose-bone. Of all the weather
prophets it is the most honored. The
little ground-hog disgraced himself long
ago, and now very few people ever
watch Candlemas Day, and hogs’ melts

ago. when Tice and all human weather­
prophet predicted the most severe
winter ever known, the goose-bone told
of a mild winter. The future unrolled
just as the bone said it wduld, and poor
old Tice had to change his predictions
every day. The goose-bone never
changes, and never falls.
Hie 1’cwCrvporter has examined throe
bones, one from Southeastern Kentucky,
one from Jefferson County, and one
from Laporte, Ind. They are identical
to one another, and the reading hero
given will be found the same on the
breast-bone of any goose hatched last
spring.
Cut this out, lav it aside for reference,
and as you crowd up close to the fire on
the l$tfi of January, you will be con­
vinced ot the great power of the goose­
bone.—Louisville (Ay.) Post.
The Value of Experience.

Where yon can saw
ten per cent
by purchasing yonr

(Tin or Wood,)

SUP PAMS, EVAPORATORS

AND BOBS AT COST!!

AND JACKSON LUMBER WAGONS
WurranUxl In every rrspert, for cadi or on time. AIm

ah, lAoora. It'litda. UUum, OU Colon, White and Colored Ixaul
JrHbnon naila. Move* und Rnngea^, Callery, Silver
Ware, Puntpa, (Wood and Iron,) I.eud Pipe,
Iu fart, everything fonr.d In n flr&gt;t daw Hardware Stock. Headquartcra for all kind*
a tlie latent am! mort Improved Farm Machinery, from tbe

heelbarrow to a Champion Mower or Mammoth Cord Binder
P. N. Paper Haga, Old Rubber and Old Iron w anted.

C. L. GLASGOW.

m

IS MIGHTY!

JN making the following statement, we utter the truth, and can verify it.

THE LARGEST STORK OF GROCERIES

Tn the city, at bottom prices, fair and infrtare weight and measure. When
we advertise the most complete Stock ot
'

Crockery, Glassware,
Etc., in Batry and Eaton counties, we are telling the people a fact that can­
not be successfully and truthfully denied. It consists of a large variety of atat»lc goods and a largo assortment of

Majolica Ware and French CJhina,

How sadly settles down upon the hu­
man heart the sorrowful truth that the
In various designs and sty les, also n well selected Stock of
brightest and best of existence has fled.
Those dear, delightful years before we
trod the rough and rugged road of ex­
perience and bit off more than we could
In Tea Setts, Water Setts, Cups, Saucers, Pitchers, Etc. An endless variety
masticate. One by one we cdunt tho
priceless bits of knowledge we have of Vases, Toilet Setts, Flower Setts, Etc. in
gained and look over the store as the
miser reckons his treasure.
We call to mind how the cold, clam­
Too numerous tomention, and so cheap that all can afford to buy.
my truth was repealed to us at one time
that, in .gathering the full-blown roses
of life, too oft we gather also the fever­
Of every style, color and design. When you are ready to buy, I am ready
ish and irritable humble-bee nestling in
sell. All kinds of Produce taken in exchange for Goods.
its petals.
How freshly now comes back to us the
memory of that bright autumnal day
w-hen the sky was one vast sea of gold­
en billows and the spicy aroma of de­
caying vegetation pervaded everything;
that day when we made some scientific
experiments with what is called threecare monte and went home without our
overcoat
That was a long time ago, but bow
fresh it is in our memory and how fresh
"it seemed to our parents when we un­
folded the account of oar scientific ex­
periments.
Yes, we are not so frolicsome now as
we were forty or fifty years ago, but
OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE
we know more. It is true we cannot go
in swimming all day with impunity, or
walk around a billiard table all day and
then glide through the Bias Danube
waltz all night as we once could, but we
have acquired some high-priced experi­
ence and put it where we can get at it.
We were making an estimate last
evening of the value of a few items of
WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH
experience which we have now on hand,
and among the more valuable ones we
will name the following:
Cost of experiments with mixed
drinks, $2,000.
Expense of calling a large, healthy
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING
man a liar, $50.
Experiments in going without under­
clothes, $5,750.
Experience with ostensibly disabled
hornets, $375.
Cost of winning the love and confi­
We believe the
is destined to come
dence of an orphan mule, $500. *
Call and see them.
Little lessons in investigating differ­ into general use.
ent games of chance, with a view to
making them a business, $2,500.
Experiments
with
watermelons,
guarded by irritable bull-dogs, $525.
Cost of unavailing efforts to prevent
baldness. $783.20.
/
Hastings,' Mich., Sept. 15th, 1881.
Expense of personal investigation of
lotteries, $935.26.
Actual cost of obtaining $13 worth of
\DVICE TO BU YEHS
fame, which is now for sale at the above
price and still in good working order,
--------------- OF--------------though slightly tarnished. $17,380.
There are other expensive little nug­
gets and gobs of ripe experience that
we have on band, and we cannot look
on them without a pardonable pride.
’Tis true that what we have learned
•‘A Nickle Saved.
is not very valuable to others, but it isa
Is better than five cento earned.'’
good thing to have, and we can use it
right along in our business. We will
try to work it off on our oldest son when We are Opening a fine line of NEW GOODS and will
he gets here, but he will not use it.
Offer Some
He would rather go and buy it the
way we did. Information that don’t
cost $2,000 a hunk is no good. Itoomes
high, but we have to have it.—Bill Nyt.

ENGLISH DECORATED CHINA

IANGIAG At STAND LYMFS

|&lt;EEP VOI

EYE OTV THIS.

50 Wagons
FOR SALE!
THREE INCH TIRE,

BETTER THAN COMMON TIRE.
Three inch Tire

Sold by C. L. Glasgow, Nashville, Mich.

BENTLEY BROS. &amp;. WILKINS.

DRY

—The men employed in the tunnel
now being constructed under the bed of
the Hudson River have of late become
subject to a peculiar and painful ail­
ment that is thought to result from the
compressed air, by the aid of which the
tunue! is being constructed. The com­
plaint is a sort of curvature of the spine,
and those attacked with it are bent up
like a half-open jacknife, and suffer ex­
cruciating pain.
—Who is this Creature with Long
Hair and a Wild Eve? He is a Poet.
He writes Poems on Spring and Women’s
Eyes and Strange, unreal Things of that

Kill

GOODS.

SPX ENDID BARGAINS
Bargains you can’t Afford to Paas.

We do not use our Competitors Advertised Priee Last
to make prices,
cr

DREES GOODS AND

DRESS

TRIMMINGS

------ InJEndless Variety—;—

BOOTS AND SHOES
That we Warrant in Every particular
We aim to keep Only Good Goods and .are satisfied with
Small Profits.
Remember the

T7J0HER 1

�pt-opl.- are entirely too fnrtidioon.
Would the lady have Hia Majerty
Ai- mMUM

A quarrri broke out in a party of five |

deatf^for so long a time attracted con­
IF PAID IN ADVANCE.

siderable attention and. munh more
comment since, it being verified. The
b Advertisers:
ootTnapondent called on Gen­
eral Massey here to-day and obtained
, Uuui anr otticr paper circul*lf:.g there
I our ratcJof adrertUliqr »rr lower than from him some partioulare of the pre­
Mr first daaa country weekly in the «Ute. diction- He MJd: “The Previuent
never told me that he thought he would
die on the 1'Jth, an has been printed in
«. arv lUbk to beconw your patrons______
some papers. Marahal Henry, a par­
ticular fnend of hi*, however, told me
TkhUBE THESE I.1HERAL AD. RATER.
that the President told, him that he
thought he would die on' the 19th of
November of last year, his forty-ninth
General Garfield was never
iitn i ao.oo birthday.
ilncb—.
in any way what might be called super­
stitious, though ho was a great believer
80.00 in dates, sequences and coincidences.
The New England stock which peopled
the West are like him in that respect.
Local NoUcea, ten cent* a line for first Inacr- Garfield's mind was analytical, and he
gave such matters more attention than
most people do. I will give you an in­
ORNO STRONG,
Editor and Proprietor. cident illustrating what I mean. On
the 19th.of June of the present year
the Army of the Cumberland (of which
General Garfield was a distinguished
and honored and I an humble member)
had a grand reunion. Not one eff the
VILLAGE OFFICERS.
party thought about the date until
Judge Devens, of Massachusetts, in re­
sponding to the toast, “The Ladies,”
aociden tally referred to it, adding that
John U. Harry
-WByfl. Bonce**.
the selection of the date of the dinner
..... X.B r Reynold*, Wm. Boatun,
was a happy one, in view of the fact
fl. A. Barber, H. R- I&gt;ekin&gt;nn, DavM Ifemaray.
that it was the anniversary as far as
the date, but not the month, was con­
Pocitiitfi.
cerned. of one of the largest battles of
the Army of the Cumberland.
XPTWCHURCH. JUv. E. B. Moody, ?*&gt;t»r.
“ A few minuti** afterward, in speak­
.‘fcrrit** firtj SuB'Uy at 10-30* m . febbaii.
at
II.: Pr.-rr and TtirMn’ n»xUl&gt;c ing to the President, I asked if he had
noticed the similarity of his nomination
with that of Lincoln. He said he had.
\ . krauuisT w,&lt;opai. chi iu h-a. d. su­
it! T-iw. !•» nr, x-rvlcr* eve-v K.bbsth at 101* And I, without thinking of-it^ said Prov­
a. m. tu4? r&gt; f». H*bb«tb *ebo d at 11 m. Prayer idence may have the same destiny for
meettag ««M7 Thursday •vaalbg.
you. He did not answer for awhile,
remaining silent and thoughtful. Then
VT LODGE NO. 37, K. of P.. meets at IU he oaid: • The first Western man elected
Castle llall. NaMtriUc, Michigan, every
Friday evening, for the encouragement andto the Presidency was Harrison, of In­
Support of all worthy, true, »tcadfa*t and hon­ diana. Lincoln was elected in I860, and
orable Brother Knighl*.
I was elected in 1880.’ Thinking that
L. E. Lextx, K. R. B. Ohxo Stkoxo,C.-C. we had not noticed the jumps of tweuty
years he said*’40, ’GO and’80. what does
Ylisccllauroux Cards.
that me.-in? Then again,’ said the Pres­
ident, * look at the part Indiana has
ATT IL YOUNG. M. D. Office cast *ul* of plaved in it. Besides having the honor
1V • Main St., Kaahrillc. Office hours from its, If in Harrison’s case it was Indiana
that turned the scales and made Lincoln
H. GRISWOLD, M. IX, ..
. , rt»e the Republican nominee and President.
• Phynlcian and Surgeon-OlBrc und n?» It was Indiana by Ben. Harrison, a
Wear* opposite the Wolcott Huii»e. iTotnpl grandson of President Harrison, that
attention £iren to calls day or nlahL
cast the vote of Indiana that made me
the nominee and President.’ Then,
A. FOOTE PHYSICIAN A SURGEON
• Sucessor to Dr. Wiekham. Office and tapping his finger on the back of his
rtMldencc al Dr. Wickluun'a late office. hand, he repeated 1810. I860, 18S0.”
“Did he continue the sequence?” “O,
Prompt MtcoUon to call* night or day.
yes. Said he, • Harrison died while he
R. C. W. GOUCHER, Electlo Pbyaldan and was President and in the White House;
Burgeon, ia prepared to answer all call* Lincoln was assassinated while he was
that may be made for hl* service*. Office and President; what will become of me?’
realdeuce opposita Roe's meat marketOf course, this put us all. or at least the
L PARMENTER, M. D. Office over littje group that sat around him. think­
Hull’s Drug iloro, Vermontville, Mich. ing of dblncidences, and I asked the
HA8. H. BRADY, Uwyer, Circuit Court President if he had noticed a Shakes­
Commlaaioxier, Rea! Ertate and Inranuiee pearean quotation on Marcus Ward’s
Agt Prompt attention given ‘to all butliie**business calendar of the date ho was
cntnutnl to my care. Conveyancing a «pecial nominated for President. He said he
ty. Office oppodta Union House.
had received nt least fifty «f them from
LIEBHAU8ER, Merrhan’. Tailor and deal- different persons, all of whom called his
• er in ’Ready Made Clothing. See me attention to the peculiarity of the quo­
before you . purchase clothing. Fit* guar tation. It was from Julius Cicsar: *O
anteed._______________________ _
that a man might know the end of this
MISS M. Jl^TREY, Practical Milliner, and day’s business ere it comes.’ In view of
dealer In Millinery and Fancy Good*. Die»» all the circumstances this was a remark­
Baking. In all tts branchea, done with neatnea* able incident, and it had considerable
and dispatch. Salesroom cast aide Main *trcet, effect on the President. While&gt;,he did
oppoalt* New* office.
not believo in special acts of Providence,
f\RNO STRONG, plain and fancy Job Printer. he liked to talk of such things aud rea­
Vz The best facilities for doing work of any son out conclusions. Tho incident fol­
printing office in Barry county, when in need lowing his nomination was in the same
ef printing of any description, whatever, see na
line. I published it during the cam­
before you buy.
paign after securing the President’s per­
TONAH B. RASEY, Ezprros *ad Drayman- mission. though I then stated Jt was
o^GBa^aod Baggage carried to soy place in on information furnished by General
Swaim. It was furnished by Swaim
TTIRA1I R. DICKINSON, manufacturer of first and by the President afterward.
JLk and dealer tn Hard Wood Lumber. Butld- While on his way to the building in
SMaterial especially. Caah paid for log*. Mill which the Convention was held, a man
yard on Bbcrman Be., al IL C. R.R. croastag.
handed him on the street a circular or
TAME8t FL»dNG. waetieal Jeweler and
dodger of some kimL He says he first
U Watch-maker. Clocfca Watebe*, Silver and supposed it was a railroad advertise­
Plated Ware, Jewelry and Optical Good*. Rock­ ment He was about throwing it away
ford Watches a specialty. Rep&lt;iriBgaudEngravwhen he noticed that it had extracts
from the Scriptures on it. Not having
TACOB OSMUN. Livemnan, barn near WolO cot t House. First class turnout* at reason­ time to read it then, he crushed it up
able rate*, Special rates to conimcrcjal men. and put it into his pocket. On the close
Funeral and wedfng parties furnished with car of that day he was nominated, and be­
riages on short notice.
fore he left the Convention he had re­
ceived hundreds of telegrams extending
TZELLOGG A BELL,
Planing
AX MOI. Planing and
Reeawtng congratulations. Going to his room, he
emptiG,. hi* pocket* on a table, telling
Swaim to save those that should be
cr&lt;ar. Wood Turning tn all tt* branches.
saved and destroy those that should be
. DEMARAT, Dealer tn Wrtcbea, destroyed. General Swaim w*j doing
Clockf',fic* Je”f!ry and Silverware. Being this when he saw the crumpled paper.
Opening it he read it, and was so struck
with the quotation* that he saved It un­
til General Garfield returned, when he
W. NI8KERN, Attorney and Counsellor read It. Garfield told me it mM* the
• at Law, practices in all Slate Court*. Colteetkm* promptly attended to. Office over hair of his bead almost stand on end.
There were two quotations. The first
Spaulding'* rtare, Harttag* Mich.
wm this: ‘The stone which the build­
JJ A. BARBEIt, Fl. !&gt;..
er* rejected, the same is become the
head of the corner.’ The other wm:
HOMCEOPATfflC
‘Neither is there salvation in any other:
For there is none other name under
heaven, given among men. whereby we
must be saved.’ The connection of tho
near residence on corner of Was
two Quotations lay in the fact that Gar­
8tau Streets N'Mbrilk, MfclL
field had never been spoken of m a can­
didate before the Convention, and that
house.
he wm about the only man who could
bring the factions of the party as exist­
ed then together and march through to
A. S. Foote, Proprietor.
victory. He combined the party as
hardly another man could. The 19th
wm an important date in his life. It
wm the day of his birth, of his greatest
triumphs, and finally it wm the date of
his death.”

JlMhrille gtrrrtanj.

B

I

W
L

D

W
C

S

P

Physician and Surgeon.

TjyouooTT

g i. BUSH,

“THE BOBS

BOOT AND SHOE MAKER,
MIIKIIUI.

.

MICH.

r&gt; atubim noun

Getting Fat oa One Veal a Day.
Dr. C. E. Page sends to the Journal
of Chemistry an account of experiments
mads to show that one meal a day is
enough for a man:
,**S’.N- 8- twenty-eight yeans old. re#o“*d10 *dopt the one meal system,
and did mo, leaving off meat and all condimentw, as salt aad pepper, and eating
ehlefl V wheat meal bread and froifc. the
bread made from unsifted meal and
mix*dwlU_water only, &gt;w **k i-,f

last winter, for tho purpose of testing
the sufficiency of one meal ot pure food !
for the most trying labor, he worked in
an iron foundry for three months, and ■
notwithstanding the extreme and fre­
quent changes of temperature incident
to the work, on cold mornings with the '
mercury below zero and in in the after- !
noon 120 degrees above, and all' hands
sweating like rain, he had not a ‘cold’
for the winter, and was the only em­
ploye thus exempt. He liad formerly
been subject to freauont attacks of the
above disease, ills daily ration con I
sista of six ounces to nine ounces (ac-cording to labor) of Graham flour, bo- t
sides fruit sufficient to supply all the
liquids necessary—half a dozen apples
or their equivalent In other fruit. He
is rarely thirsty, but sometimes. If too
little fruit is taken at meal time, he
takes a small draught of water in the
course of the day. This meal is taken
at night, after entire recovery from
fatigue, usually at about seven o’clock.
During tho month of May, 1881, just
passed, he gained sixty hours, or six
full days, working extra hours at his
bench.sometimes working right through
to midnight, and taking his ‘breakfast’
after a short rest, before retiring. No
man in his employ had gained so much
time. He has occasionally made a trial
of bolted flour bread, but has invaria­
bly experienced a loss of weight and
strength.
“My own experience goes far' to
prove the efficiency of the above regi­
men for either the brain or muscle
worker. I am now taking but one meal
a day, and tind myself perfectly nour­
ished, weight and strength maintained,
on about fourteen ounces of unleavened
wheat-meal bread, to tho mastication of
which I devote an hour or more. I
find .that six cold gems, weighing about
fourteen ounces, without even butter or
milk, chewed deliberately and thor­
oughly dissolved by the juices of the
mouth, will sustain me much better
than when eaten warm with butter or
milk, or both together added, and eaten
as fast as one naturally cats hot rolls
and butter of broad and milk. Consid­
ering the manner In which people in
general lx&gt;lt their food, it is not strange
that a largo proj&gt;ortion of it fails of di­
gestion. Starck foods cannot be trans­
formed into pure blood entire, except
so far as the change is 'begun in tho
mouth.
“Until a few months ago I took my
food in the morning, but I find the
evening a better time. During the day
the brain and muscles can have every­
thing their own way, without interfer­
ing cr hindering digestion, and at even­
ing. after a sufficient rest, there is per­
fect tranquility of body and mind and
•leisure to digest.’ I hod never been a
‘good sleeper’ until I adopted this sys­
tem of diet. People who eat several
meals a da}' do well to take the last
one early, and the lighter they make it
the better, but dyspeptics may rest as­
sured that, of itself considered, the
evening meal is not the cause of their
wakefulness or troubled dreams. When
I ate three meals of a mixed diet, I
could not mako tho last one simple
enough to give me complete rest at
night, but now, when rested from my
day’s labor, I can eat my full vegeta­
rian meal and sleep like a well-fed babe.
I could give quite a number of exam­
ples like the foregoing, of one-mealers,
did space permit, all tending to prove
the superiority of vegetable over ani­
mal diet, and of the entire wheat aver
the most scientifically impoverished
article.”

Caring a Somnambulist.
In a small village across the bay re­
sides a well-known clergyman and his
family, which is composed of numerous
sons and daughters, his wife and him­
self. One of the sons, who is just ap­
proaching manhood, has been in the
habit since infancy of walking in hi*
sleep. Every effort has been made to
break him of his somnambulistic tenden­
cies, but without aYUl. He would arise
from his couch at all hours of the night,
wander from one part of the building to
another, wend his way to the porches
and piazzas, and was sometimes found
perched upon the roof of the houoe. A
short time ago Tt was decided by the
head of the house that the somnambulist
should occupy the same couch with his
elder brother, and the latter was in­
structed, in case the boy indulged in
any of his former antics, to adn.inister
a severe punishment in the shape of a
forcible application of the sole of a
slipper upon his body. The elder son
gratefully accepted the task and prom­
ised to carry out his instructions to the
letter. In order to show that he was
not neglectful of the duty imposed upon
him it is only necessary to relate the
following incident: One night a short
time ago, when both of the brothers
were wrapped in the deep slumbers of
early morn their paterfamilias imagined
that he heard sounds of disturbance in
the chicken-yard at the rear of the
house, and. feanng that his hen-roost
might be despoiled, entered the room
where the boys were sleeping, and,
opening the window, peered out into
the darkness to ascertain whether his
apprehensions were correct. The elder
son, who was sleeping on the outside of
ihe bed, thought the figure at the
window was that of his brother, and.
forgetting, in his zeal, to ascertain if
his bed-Fellow was quietly reposing or
not, leaped fron his couch. Mixed the
ever-ready slipper, aud administered a
•erere castigation upon the party iu
undress at the window.
Before the
astonished father conld turn he had re­
ceived some four or five heavy and
stinging blows, aud was so surprised
and astonished that for a few moments
he could hardly speak a word. 'The
son, when he realized the situation was
almost paralyzed, and the scene waridiculous in the extreme. When the
circumstances were explained, however,
the clergyman fully appreciated the
joke, and narrates it with great gusto

M tbl
and 914 on ths Muocceding
day. making a total of nearly 600 death*
in three day*. Aa Turkish figure* eel­
don err on' the side ot exa^genttiou ia
maltars which concern the reputation
of Tnrki-sh authorities, it may be reason­
ably aiaumt-1 that the actual mortality
has been greater than the death rate rel»orted from Jeddah. The dirt of tMec­
ca mocks the maxim which put* cleaulines* uext to god lines*, llundrcd* of
thousands of Mahometan pilgrims
crowd into it annually from all parte of
the Islamite world—from the remote
steppes of the Kirghitx to the almost
unknown corner* of the Empire of Mo­
rocco. These zealots as a rule are
poor and half civilized persons who.
provided they can gaze upon the
shrines dedicated to Mahomet, are con­
tented with filthy food and villainous
aocommodationa in streets which reek
in the hot suoahine with masses ot
indescribable garbage.
The appear­
ance of disease in Mecca in regular in­
tervals ia therefore a matter of course.
Pilgrims dying there die happy, as death
ip the immediate vicinity of the tomb
of the Prophet assures them a glorioas
joftrney across the razor bridge of “Al
Sirat" into tho luxurious realms of
paradise. But the rest of the world has
a direct interest in seeing' the Turkish
authorities compelled to reform the san­
itary condition of their sacred cities.
Cholera is a traveling and an in­
vading curse. On several occasion*
during the last half Century it has set
&lt;W from Hlndootan. and after wander­
ing fitfully through Central Asia and
Persia, has suddenly burst forth in
Europe, and grossed ths Atlantic to
America. Ono of the most extraordi­
nary illustrations of its occasional viru­
lence and lightning like rapidity of
movement occurred in the nortnwest
provinces of India four years ago. A
train left Cawnnore for Lucknow (a
comparatively short journey) full of
Hindoos. When it arrived ut ite desti­
nation- it was found to ho full
of
people
who
had
died
or
were dying from an attack of cholera
which had burst forth in one corjpartiuent of the train and spread in­
stantaneously to all the other compart­
ments. The Turkish authorities appear
to have got the idea that the Mecca
epidemic must be confined to Mecca,
for they show signs of a disposition to
prevent caravans of pilgrims frytn en­
tering the Arabian town and district of
Ei Wadi. They ought, however, to be
required by Europe to take active as
well as passive measures to prevent the
epidemic from traveling on a radius be­
yond the limits of Mecca, for cholera,
like a stone thrown in waler, makes ever
widening circles if it is not energetically
encountered at tho outeeL — Acto York
World.
New Jersey Witlings.

One of the most cunning and polite
little fellows in the State of New Jersey
spent the day al a kind neighbor’s
house recently while hte mamma was
away on a visit. His iunchliour at home
was eleven, and attbc usual time he be­
gan to feel very hungry. But the family
did not lunch till noon, and as there
were no signs of preparations, Harry
(wo will cml him) was filled with the
gravest apprehensions. What to do he
didn’t know. Good manners forbade
that he should ask for anything, and yet
he couldn't wait another minute. Fi­
nally nature asserted her superiority to
all mere conventionalities, and he
yielded. How considerately he did it
will appear.
••Mrs. Thompson,” said ho, very
earnestly, but very tenderly, “if you
please—will you be so very kind—as to
give me something to eat? I mean if
it isn’t too mu&gt;*h trouble.’’
“Why, certainly, my dear,” she re­
plied. “What would you like to have?”
“O, anything will do, ma’am—any­
thing,” he responded with nervous
eagerness, “if it isn’t too expensive.”
It is needless to say that he got it
immediately.
.
A very different kind of a boy was
Johnny D-—, who was also visiting a
neighbor, bnt not in New Jersey. Ho
was offered a piece of bread and butter,
which he accepted, but not with any
great degree of enthusiasm.
•What do you say, Johnny?” said
the lady, expecting him to say, “Thank
spouse;

__________________

Two Sorts of French.

Carolina, la*t week, between two mm
only: but when One umr. kilkxl the utb,er by thrbwtai* as axe at him, hr loet
his fmiing iu tLq effort, frll and broke
hi* neck, and the others were *o ex-

1
■
O1*AEI4 A
: -0
:

-

and ’W
NATURE'S BEST ASSISTANT.
Iron Bitter* wtU.cerfatoly do you pixl by **- XARQOKM A MARSHALL
rirtlntr tuitare la rtrenKtbrnltiE every p^rt of I)
the body. TbU remedy i« southing and re- ,
Pronrictora
fre»hli&gt;K and auiaol pomihly do the nu*t deli- ,

------

Nashville Elevator!

“Father,” *aid an inquiatltlve boy, wixat t*
. ,
.
meant by close relath,n*f” “Ck&gt;*e relation*, ;
bigiH^iinarkrt price far all ktodsof
my *on,” replied the father, “are relation* who I &lt;jr rain and F’fXXlllCe,
uevergtve you a writ.” I
---------- ---------------------

| Seeds, Feed, Lime,-Salt, Plxatcr. Stuc­
THAT’S A FACT.
co, Hair.-piac Lumber, Lath
A man can’t work unless be feel* well. The i
bard time* have ma&gt;)e plenty of people sick
and Shintrles,
by worrying them aluxmt out of their wit* AT THE LOWEST LIVING PRICES. .
about money ami busitaers. Trouble of mind*
ba* brought on trouble of body. There I* indi­
gestion, lie*vines* iu the head and all that.
Are you afflicted in this way 1 Go and in- eat
Corner of Penuavlrania Avenue and
one dollar for a bottle of Dr. David Kennedy's
Sixth Street,
"FavorHe Remedy,” and it will make a new
man of you. It takes the bile out of the blood

NA rIONAL HOTEL

doctor* home—on foot. If you cannot get It
more easily. First botrever, *ee if you druggist
ba*n't got it.

F. TKSNkY &amp; CO., Praps.

MKD1C1L AND SURGICAL SANITABIUfc

Full many an ache of soreness deep and
keen, the waking* of a night’* carousal !&gt;car;
full many a man,, who with “the boys” hath
been, feel* in the mom hl* wife'* hands in hi*
hair.

Thfai ImUtattMk

In the street car. Blonde—“Tiiey say Carrie
l»engaged,” Brunette—“Engaged! Why abe
was married a month ago ami ha* Jo&gt;t sued
tor a divorce.” Blonde—“Howromantic! Isn’t
it splendid!”
THE HIGHEST JL
Made from harmless*materia’*, ami adapted
u&gt; the need* of furling and falling hair, Parker*
Jl.Jtr lial-am bo* taken the liighwt rank a* an
elegant uud reliable Lair roturative.

The blush of a maiden is cauted by nature,
sending out a signal of warning. The blush of ;
an editor i* catn-ed by sending out a pitcher for

GRATEFUL TO INVALIDS.
FloriMtoue* Cologne Is grateful to invalid*,
because It ta refn-Mbiug wldioul llic sickening
effect of ntuet perfuntca.,

Oscar wears knee breeches because be don’t
like pants, and so do hi*----RHEUMATIC DISEASES.
These ailments follow from torpid liver and
rxMittve bowels: tb&lt;*«|i|n, bowel* aud kidneys
failingin their proper work, an acrid poison is
formed in the blood, which is tin- ix caslon of
these acute disease*. Kidney Wort produces
healthy action ot all secretive organs, and
throw* off the rheumatic ptsrou. Equally efticicn in Liquid or dry form—Inter Ocean.

“Closed for rejialra,” said the prixe-flgbtcr,
as he raised a mansard on his opponent's left
reaper.

Dispensary
f01 So.Clark SL

CHIC’AU , ILL.

Ths IstMt and most scleaUSc ta* iiutton fa ths
United Stales, lor the Carr of Cnr-aic aod I'RvaiB
dlseaiMs, Gouorriuea. Gleet of long .t^udlse. Sin©’
tare, OrehUb, Rupture. &lt;1 *&lt;■»*«■.-X tUu »L.l and
bones, msrcurlal.ore throat etc. safely *n&lt;t p*t vat»
ly treated. bPElDUTORURiKA. sraaat IfebUity
es. producing pimples on the face, rt:«U uf biuodto
tbc bead, conluduB Of ideas. h.-3 Isrhe. de.'ocdya
memory, loss ot ecmal power, night 1 uses, «&lt;»►
Sion to society. *loeple»*ur«». ncroua prtxtrw
Gun. general debility and Indlgssitoo, rend ring

One Pay longer. Under our treatment the body is
enabled to take on flesh, the aprtito la Inownsod

and tho whole system is nourl-brrt cau.ing Um
’ Wells’ Health Reucwcr. Absolute cure for brain and nerves to retfiin their vigor. Corr».pos».
nervous debility and tveidcneM of the genera­ dene ecoufidcntlal. Full direction* seal with the
tive function*.'?! at druguUt*. .Mich. Depot
JAMES E. DAVIS &amp; CO., Detroit, Mich.

It is said that iu ten year* nearly all the girls
wfll play on the violin. Some of them already
have beaus.

In the Whole History of
Medicine

NERVOUS
DEBILITY
A cure guaranteed.
a speeitJe for byateria, dlsxinca, oauvulOurw. aervOtu hiidacl.r, mrntkJ drptvaaJon, kns of tn&lt; uwrfb
sveriaatortbuia, impotency, luraluntery ev.iii.taHE

*No preparation lias ever performed such premature old age, esuaed by nver-esertlon,
marvellous cures, or maintained so
wide a reputation, as Ayer’s Cherry
Pectoral, which is recognized as the
world’s remedy for all diseases of the
throat and lungs. Its long-continued
series of wonderful curias in all cli­
mates has made it universally known fed a cons. Guarantee* iaaurd by F. T. Rolw, aathorlred agetit for th* village cf Nashville. JOHM
a* a sale aud reliable agent to employ. C-WEhT a CO^M* Proprietor*. U*1 and IM W.
Against ordinary colds, which arc the
forerunners of more serious disorders,
it acts speedily and surely, always re­
lieving suffering, and often saving life.
Tho protection it affords, by Its timely
use In throat and chest disorders,
makes it an invaluable remedy to be
kept always on hand In every home.
No person can afford to be without it, and those who have once used it never
will. From their knowledge of its
composition and operation, physicians
use the Cherry Pectoral extensively
in their practice, and clergymen recom­
mend it- It is absolutely certain In
its healing effects, and will always
cure where cures are possible.
For sale by all druggists.

rmsaF.s^.v^'J',

10 CURE. 10 PH!

A very amusing if not significant in­
cident happened to the State Depart­
A »our divpouitlon lx wont tbm Bk-kncaa in •
ment guides who were showing tho family.
French guests through the Treasury
Department.
The gentlemen were ptRNfTURE DEPOT.
treating the Frenchman to very puz­
zling explanations of things in the Ca­
nadian French of the Maine pineries.
At length the parties reached the great
vaults where the securities of the Na­
tional bunks are kept These are in
Manufacturers, and dealers in
charge of Mr. W. H. Plankett. When
the French guests were shown he at
once began to talk with them most
fluently in some language, which the
State Department crowd did not under­
stand, bat which
—■*
’----the Frenchmen
I put them
—,
-------------------- The State
Department gentlemen did not appear
Fut the fall trade, our
to like the situation. They evidently
thought Mr. Plunkett was taking the
occasion to play a joke on the French­
men by a vivacious use of the Irish
And will be sold so low that;
tongue, as he is a well educated and
lively Irish gentleman. But when the
French gentlemen remained, and were
found to be earnestly conversing with
Mr. Plunkett, it became known to the
State Department guides by inquiry
£WE ALSO CARRY
that Mr. Plunkett had lived ten years
in Paris, and fluently spoke a kind of
French which it wm a great relief to
the honored gvesta to bear.—Ondiutati

J. LENTZ I SONS,

FURNITURE!

WILSON’S COUGH MIXTURE I

HALL'S
IJatarrhQu
la Rucoenmendud by

SIOOCTAMfi

In Every Style &amp; Variety

STOCK IS COMPLETE,

PRICES WILL ASTONI8I8H YOU

tdminiatrator’a
&lt;rl ORGH GILLI

-A. FULT. ,‘LTTVE

—A St. Louis man who dreamod that
he was being sealped by Indiana awoke
to find that his wife, who had dreamed
that she wm supenntendent of an or­
phan Mylum. wm drawing him out of
■bed by
hair.------------------------------------

UNDERTAKERS’ GOODS,
J. LENTZ 4 SONS.

IKlbr U»

�SIXTY DAYS

st woke every day a lyt should be seen and felt

with Hquoura
itolihOnis for the anffcrern by rose nt a quarter to 11. Hours for virittxte in .Pulwki County. Done ing and evening parties are gradually
coir foIm enough pork and grain growing later and later.
The Presi­
dept rarely site down to dinner before
eh enough to care for her unfortunate eight, even when be has no specially
invited company. The invitations he
has issued for dinner named half past
Bommer was 30. his wife 42 and his
•oven as the hour, instead of seven,
wife’s daughter 1C. They lived in St.
the fashionable time for formal dinners
Lotti*- It was not long after his margiven here for some years. The guests
riojw that Bommer became sorry that
have not assembled at many evening
W b*il not married tl»e daughter inparties thif year until after ten o’clock
•tead of the mother. No way of rect­
and it has been eleven before the rooms
i tying the mistake occurred to him, and
were well filled. Many ladies have
in his despondency he committe suitold their visiting acquaintances that
t hey would not be ready to see-visitors
The Rev. Ezra Window of Boston, before five o’clock, and might bo found
-who* forgeries aud flight made a great at home alomst any day at that hour.
ntir several years ago is still living in This greatly limits the visiting hours,
Buenos Ayres. Relived there awhile already short enough, for those who
ahidentitled, under the name of Low, haye long Hate. It is scarcely possible
and became superintendent of a Sunday to make more than two calls betwefcli
■ohool; but the church turned him out five o’clock and dinner time, since the
on learning who andwhat he was. He ladies naming that hour for receiving,
married a wealthy woman, became n do not live near to together. * Where­
successful politician, and is now living fore it follows that, now as many have
taken that hour for receiving, that one
aumptuoi
can make only about a dozen calls per
The La jviow\OrEgon) Herald says week, excluding Sunday, though it is
that the | nnanta of the Modoc Indians not a matter of course that it should be
that were transferred from the lava counted out, certain ladies having tak­
beds to the Indian territory are now
en that day for receiving their friends
among the quietest most peaceable and
in the afternoon or evening.
industrious in the country, There are
The confidential letter written by
only 100 left, blit they cultivate 400
Gen. Garfield to Secretary Chase when
acres of land, have established schools, the former was chief of staff of the
and are thriving generally. Scarfaced Army of the Cumberland, which found,
Charley one of the heroes of the Modoc
its way into print yesterday, create a
wm, is now a respectable farmer.
good deal'of a sensation, audit is like­
Guiteau’s real punishment has proba­ ly to make a good deal wore before the
bly already begun. He finds himself matter is finally disposed of. It is not
beyond the notice of the public, and known how tho document became pub­
the contrast will seem all the greater lic, but with those best qualified to
after the tremendous excitement of tho judge on that point there is no doubt of
Neither will its
trial, in which his daily exhibitions to its authententicity.
enormous throngs in the court- were contents surprise those familiar with
supplemented by constant visits and and who still remember the events of
lionizings iu his cell. After some which it treats. The letter shows that
months of neglect, public attention will Mr. Blaine was not\without authority
once more be concentrated on the fated when he alluded in his eulogy upon Mr.
wretch as the day draws near for his Garfield to the complications which af­
fected the efficiencv of the Army of the
execution.
Cumberland when the latter assumed
Potato flour, or the dried pulp of tho his responsible connection with it. Its
potato, is attaining considerable im­ publication will also probably bring to
portance in the arts so much so, in fact, light other interesting documents from
that in Lancashire, England, some various quarters, and it is safe to os­
90,000 tons of it are sold annually, and seine that before the discussion closes
its market value is stated to be much the public will know n good deal more
greater than that of wheat flour. The about the Tennessee campaigns than it
article is extensively used for sizing ever knew before. It is os true of the
aud other manufactariug purposes, and history of this country' as of any other
on being precipitated with acid, is con­ that the private correspondence of par­
verted into starch. After having been ticipants throws more real light on im­
calcined it is used with advantage as a portant events than tho more studied
dressing for silk.
'
documents which treat of them in an of­
The telegraph work of England has ficial and formal manner.
Senator Miller’s bill to enforce treaty
now been veay largely confided to wo­
men, audit is calculated that there can­ stipulations relating to Chinese, passtul
not be less than 700 employed at tho the Senate yesterday. The last .treaty
Central Otjtee. The staff of tho Tele­ with China contained acinus providing
graph Clegrtng-hoawe Check Branch, that if Chinese laborers should be ex­
which supervises the whole telegraph cluded from the United States the
work of the Kingdom and acta as a Chinese government should have the
eheck upon all the clerks in the depart­ privilege of examining into the reason-,
ment, isexclusvely composed of women ableness of the ground on which it was
to whom is also intrusted the entire done. 'Ratherstraining this unimpor­
financial buinneaa. Certain branches tant feature of the treaty, the bill
of the Saving Bank Department are which lias just passed proposes to proalso in their hands, as well as the Dead hibittbe coming of Chinese laborers,
Letter office. The number who apply skilledor unskilled, to’thia country for
whenever a vacancy occui s is enormous. twenty years, and forbids any court,
None of the more important offices have state or-national to amita Chinaman to
yet been filled by wotaen, who, it is naturalization within that time. The
thought, are better officered by thor bill met with sturdy opposition from
Mr. Edmnadsaud others,on the ground
(Highly oompc tent men.
of violatios of the constitution and the
treaty with China. It was held also to
OUR WASHINGTON LETTER.
be contrary to the democratic spirit
and traditional policy of this country.
August.

Washington, D. C„ Mar. 1, 1883.

A Boys Luck.
s
The Norristown (Pa.) Herald in a re­
cent issue referred among others, to the
following case of special interest. They
are their own commentary. Mr. Sam­
uel C. Nyce, resides at 306 Marshall
street, and holds the responsible posi­
tion of journal clerk in the Pennsylva­
nia Legislature, at Harrisburg. While
Mr. Nyce and family were in the coun­
try recently, his boy, aged three years,
feH aud broke his leg. He recovered,
but a very troublesome stiffness set in
aud he could scarcely use the leg. The
injured limb was rubbed several times
with St. Jacobs OiL and the stiffness
was sc much reduced that the boy was
able to use his leg freely. Dr. Knipe
said it was the use of St. Jacobs OH
that cured the stiffness. Mr. Nyce him­
self used the Great German Remedy
for toothache with good effect, and also
for a sprain and pains of rheumatic
nature, and always with good effect.
Mrs. Nyce says site thinks the Oil is a
snleudid thing, and she alwas keeps it
on hand. .
_____ _________

The dinner at the White House last
night was what tbc President wished it
to be—an occasion of pleasant reunion
and social intercourse.
The private
dining room is very homelike; its tone
being warm and rich, without tie som­
breness that usually results from the
•o-culled aesthetic wall paper and col­
oring. The walls are lighted with
heavily gilt patterns—Japanese flowers
aad bizarre designs—and capped by a
frieze of velvet paper, relieved on each
aide with a narrow beading of gold.
The curtains are of plush, and hang m
full folds from rods and rings of bur­
nished brass, and the mirrors and chandilit rs are of such a size as to add to
t&amp;e effect of light and color. Last
night an abundance of sinilax trailed
Ma delicate iieanty over aud about the
two last, and azaleas in full bloom

QT T»F. ‘ CROWN” TREADLE Ifi HUNG
LOW, which causes less fatigue to the oper­
ator by making it possible for the weight of the
body to aaata greatly, tn giving the jxnvrr
needful to run the machine, aud thus relieving
the strain on the muades. ER. White, Ag't.

■itraltbrzy placed against the walls.
The table was laid with twenty covers
and ornamented with flowers, lights the
Hiawatha l«oat. The four flowei pieces
were an improvement nn the set
“green hot! sc luwket,” for they nodded
from h,ag stems, and fell into the

- “BUCHL'PAlBA."
New, quick, complete cure 4 darn, urinary
Section*, smarting,frequent or difficult urina--------- ■**
*«ta. Mich.
Detroit,
Mich._________________
KT THE “CROWN” 18 WARRANTED
FIVE YEARS, audail that the barer haatodo
iu owe it fail* to do tiw work properly, ia to

colored and white.

aacoud dive and brought forth

----- 1 SHALL OFFER FOR SALE----- -

J JEXBY BOE,

PXOFXIXTOX

from bts waistcoat pocket a rtump of pen-fl,
through * farm of words. Inaudible above the

tbough triumphant voice: “I4 tender that

the corner where be stood deposited it beside
the book. These were some manifestations
of contempt aud aversion, but the prevailing

IT COST OR UNDER COST MEAT MARKET,
TIRE STOCK OF GOODS------

$10,000 Worth!

Fresh and Salt Jfeats,
Snisiei Ham ait Sitalian,
IN TH KIR BEASON,

Lardby the lb. or barrel,

peal upon ;&gt;eal of laughter. Then the SpcakBradlaugh to withdraw below the bar.
Nothing loath, that person only stayed to re­
mark that bo would obey, but that, having
Thereupon he backed toward the door,
bowed low io the Chair, and presently facing
about ran up the steps o’, the gangway
which divides that part of the chamber from

seat within the body of tbc House. Cries of
“Ordarl. ordwr!” rose from tho opposition,
but the Government and their supporters
remained imperturbable. Mr. Speaker, how-

riad oat my instruct one, which were that ba
should withdraw below the bar."
Mr. Brad laugh, no longer disconcerted, re­
plied, as it seemed somewhat rudely: “ I did
obey yoar instructions and went bslow the
bar, and have now taken my seat in pursuance
of law, having taken the oath prescribed by
law." Supported by shouts of “ShameI
Shame!" the Speaker as Instantly resented
the nnaceustomed rudeness, and Insisted that
Mr. Bradlaugh should go below the bar and
remain there. Which ho accordingly did. Ou
a question of privilege Lord Randolph
Churchill, asked the House to affirm that tho
seat for Northampton was vacant, as If Mr.
Bradlaugh “were dead.0 Sir Henry James,
on the other hand, suggested a more cautious
procedure. As the case now stood tt should,
he thought, be settled in a court of law, an
opinion in which Mr. Labouchere fully con­
curred. Not so Lord Randolph Churchill.
How, he Inquired, were they to know that
Mr. Bradlaugh's book was a New Testa­
meat and not a copy of the “Fruits of Phi­
losophy!” It was insanity on his part to
suppose that such a pretense of complying
with a most sacred and solemn form would
be accepted ia that place. It was a deliberate
insult to the'House. Matters had by this
time come to such a pass that Mr. Gladstone
found ft advisable to interpose. He suggested
that the question was one for calm delibera­
tion and ur impassioned discussion and proLyons reiterated the charge of scandal and
outrage, and proposed as an amendment to
the Premier’s motion: “That Charles Brad­
laugh, in tendering himself to take an oath
which he declared to hare no binding effect
upon his conscience, ia guilty of profana­
tion, that he hereby is declared Incapable of
sitting in this Parliament, end that he bo
forthwith discharged from further attend
motion and the temperate speech of Sir Staf­
ford Northcote, counseling moderation and
calling on the Government to take some step
io vindicate the “outrage inlicted on the
dignity of the House,” Lord Randolph
Churchill walked up to the table,. wh&gt;Nice he
removed the piece of paper from which Mr.
Bradlaugh had read the words of the oath.
Returning to his place he examined the docu­
ment. and afterward it was passed from hand
to hand for Inspection until It reached Mr.
James Lowther, who flung it back upon the
table. Meanwhile Mr. Gladstone took poasesslon of Mr. Bradlaugh's little book, which

Woodstock had suggested, but a copy o. U&gt;a
‘‘Revised VersKm." In spite of Mr. O'Don­
nell's counsel that neither “the book" nor
“the piece of paper" should bo taken pos­
session of by the responsible officer । of .ths
Hoose, lest some further legal quibble should
arise, Mr. Bradlaogb's “Revised Version” did,
as a matter of fact, mysteriously disappear
from its conspicuous position near the mace.
The motion for the adjournment of the de-

This is no dodge, hurt is a bona fide offer. The time and
opportunity to make mouny is by saving from 25 to 5o per
cent on your purchases. In Dress Goods we quote:
Wool Cashmeres, .80 worth 51.
Wool Chshmeres, .60 worth .80
Half wool do. .25 worth .85.
Plain SaitingR, .25 worth J5
Plaid Suitings, Gi.
Printi
Printa. A .6 .7
Wool dress Flannel, .40 worth .65’ Wai
Waterproofs, .75 worth Si ■
Wateroroofa, $1 worth «1.25
XT
Wool
Tweeds .50 worth .75
Half wool Tweeds, 8s worth 4s.
Cottonade, .16 to 20
Farmers &amp;. Mechanics .20 to .25
Lin. Table Cloth, .18 worth 35
Lin. TableCloth, 8s worth 4s.
Lin. Table Cloth, .50 worth 75
Cotton Goods, .6 .7 .8
Bleached Goods, .6.7^.9 .10
White Goods cheap.
White Goods Cheap.
Table Oil Cloth, .25 worth .85
Floor Oil Cloth, .85w’th .50
_
,
Horse Blankets .00 worth 0s..
Overalls .40
Overalls .60
Overalls 25.
.
Trim’ug Silk .75 worth $1
Silk Ribbons at cost.
Trim’ng Satin,$1 worth JI.50
Ladies Stockings.
Children's Stocking.
Gloves &amp;. Mittens.

CARPETS!
Ingrain Carpets, .25 worth .35
Ingrain Carpets, .35 worth .50
•
Ingrain'Carpets, .60 worth .80
Ingrain Carpets, .70 worthSl

Men’s Suits, $5 worth 8.
Men’s Suita, $10 worth 15
Men’s Suits, $15.worth 20. Boys Suits $3 worth 5.
Boys Suits 5 doll, worth 8. Overcoats 2.50 to 10 dolls.

Mens Stoga Kip Boot s, 2 dolls, worth 2.5o
Mens Stoga Kip Boots, 2.50 worth 3.50
Mens Fine Calf Boots. 2 dolls, wothr 1
Mens Fine Calf Boots 2.50 worth 2.

WOMEN’S SHOES
Kid’Button Shoes 1 doll, worth 1.50
Fine Kid Button, 2 dolls worth 2.50
Tampico Goat 2.25 worth 3 dollars
Childrens Shoes 50 cts. to 1 dollar.

Fresh Goods, Full Weights and
Satisfaction Guaranteed.
HEXRY ROE
£JEE A DI KKEE,

REAL ESTATE AGENTS,
CosvnMrisc. Md Writs both Lift
sad Fire tannate.

Office on second floor of Buxton's new brick
NASHVILLE, MICH.

bin in 1 lew if «rBupiisia tai fcUle:
T 80 acres In Msple Grove, 45 cleared, 22 acres
"in J^beat, good Orchard, very fair buildings,
good spring near bouse. Bribe 3,000. Payments
easy.40 acres, 8 miles from Nashville. Fair .house
and barn, Nearly all Improved. Price 81,000.
40 acres, 3X miles from’Nashville. If sold
soon will take 61,150.
‘
25 acres, in the village of Nashville. Must
be sold for whit tt will bring on account of
poor health of present owner.
50 acres, 4 miles from Nashville; nearly all
improved; fair buildings and in all a good bar­
gain. Price fl,000; part down.
House and Lot, on Phillipa street; the best
bargains in town. Price S3B0.
iouse and Lot, on State street Price 1250,
f down down.
Good House and four acres of Land on Fran­
ces Street I’rice f45O.
House and lot on State St, bouse new: good
cellar and nientv of good water. For sale at
1700 or will exchange for farm property near
Nashville or Hastings.
80 acre*. 1W milr.i from Nashville on the best
road leaving the village; all improved except 8
acres; tbc remaining 8 acres good timber; is
well watered by a never-failing spring. Good,
young orcbard; buildings fair; 18 acres of
wheat on the. ground; present owner engaged
In otiier business and will sell for 82,000,
000 down, balance on long time.
Vacant lot on Philips St Price 8120 if sold
soon.
LEE A DURKEE.

K

JJ

K. DICKINSO.%' &amp; CO.,

--- new---

CUSTOM FLOURING HILL
READY YOB BUSINESS
Every day in die year—Sundays excepted.

Tea, 35 worth 5oc. Tea 45c worth 60c. Coffee 13 worth 17
Coffee 16c worth 20c. Brown Coffee 17c. Molasses, blk.
Strap, 30c worth 40c, Common Syrup. 30c worth 40
N. 0. molasses best in the market 50c worth 70.
Maple flavor 50c. worth 70, Sugar Granlatejd 10 Standard A. 10 Brown 7 8.
The prices quoted are suffient to indicate what bargains are
offered, all of which will be strictly adhered to.

CUSTOM GRINDING!
Of every dereription, done in a superior
manner, at the drop of the bat; and
Satisfaction guaranteed.

FLOUR. MEAL AND MILL FFED
Kept constantly on hand.

The highest market price will be paid fsr Butter, Eggs,
Potatoes, Beans, Lard, Dried Apples &amp;c.

Our Graham Flour

w,On all sums of $25 and over, six months’ credit will be giv­
en on approved notes bearing 7 percent interest.
Come early! these goods will not last long at prices given.

la concccded to be the best. Try it.

mlnated.
The Chinese Immigration Bill Of 11
Fused the Senate.

By a strict attention to business, and square
dealing with all our customers, we hope to mer­
it a liberal patronage from the farmers of this
vicinity.

Mills on railroad,—east of depot.

Washington, March 8.
The Chinese Immigration bill, as passed,
provides that from and after the expfration of -Q.EO. W. FRA.X IH,
ninety days after the passage of the act, and
until the expiration of twenty years after its
-------- DEALER IN------passage, the coming of Chinese laborers to tae
United States shall be sus;&gt;endcd, and pre­
Fancy and Staple
scribes the penalty of imprisonment not ez1500 against the master of any vessel who
brings any Chinese laborer to this country
during that period. It further provides that
the classes of Chinese excepted by treaty from
such prohibition, such as merchants, teach-

CT* ThelHigheat Market Price paid
for Hides, Pelts, itc.

H. B. DICJMIXSO.W A CO.

THE CROWN

Slade of
The Best, and most

CONSISTING IN PART OF

Thoroughly Seasoned Material
Ofany in Barry Co.,

•{tenia,

CEO. W. FRANCIS.

WAGONS
WAGONS

GROCERIES!

COFFTES, SPICES,
Chlnesc
laborers
who
SYRUPS, MOLASSES,
United States on the ■
STARCH, SOAP,
17th of November, 1880, shall be re­
CRACKERS, CHEESE,
quired as a condition for their admission to BEST NICKLE SOAP IN TOWN.
produce passixirts from the Government of
SALMON,
China personally Identifying them and show­
WHITE FISH,
ing they individually belong to one of tho
TROUT,
permitted claaacs, which passports must be
MACKEREL,
Indorsed by the diplomatic representative of
HALIBUT,
the United States iu China, or by the United
COD FISH.
HERRING.
Btatee Consul at the point of departure. It
STEAM COOKED OAT MEAL.
CROCKERY.
lag out the purposes of the act, and addition­
GLASS WARE,
al sections prohibit the admission of Chinese
LAMPS.
to dtlaenship by the United States or State
FLOWERPOTS,
courts, and construes the words “Chinese
laborers " to mean both skilled and unskilled
OHIO STONE WARE,
laborers, and Chinese employed in mining.
TOBACCOS,
—Old Mr. Hazlett, of Oregon, thought
CIGARS,
he was going to die, anti, in order that
PI P F S
his heirs should have nothing to quarrel TBY^OUH FIFTY-CENT TEA!
over, he burned 922,000 in greenbacks.
He didn't die, after all; anif now when
the heirs see him sawing wood to earn
his bread, they naturally foe! that they
are ahead of him.—Itilcr Oman.
CCS, but Mill all goods as low’ as the
loweaMlquality con&gt;ideml).
PX Where is the best place to

^yAGONS.

Ire now

FOR SALE!
THE CROWN SEWING MACHINE.

The “Crown" cmnet into the market
the Itut of all the machines, hut lias .prang to
front rank at once from the fact that ft has ta­
ken the good features in al) other machine,
and put Them tn one grand combination, mak­
ing thia the Haodioincrt, Largest, Moat Silent
and LigbtertRtmqlng machine yet offered. All
the “pointe” that the exwerircc of twenty years
tn all kinds of family and light manufacturing
work has proved to try absolute! v c&lt;xmI are to be
found only in tbc “Crown.” Other machines
may have one, two or three of these “potuta”
Imt none hut the “Crown" has them ail.
Every derire that u really desirable In other
machines will b* found In the "Urowb.” AOr

BLACKSMITHING!
BLACKSMITHIN61
BLACtpMITHINBI
---- DOJOW—

EC. BENNETT,

BU68V &amp; WAGON REPAIRING
!&gt;&lt;hic

vctitenl. ntnl the “Crown” Is ।

&lt;&gt;n demand.

�Q&lt;*um take.

found dead in a barn in Walker

UM taM week.

bring it on a level with the rest of the
building.
The Presbyterian social will be en­
tertained at the residence of Mrs. L. A.
Holbrook, Friday evening. Tea from
6 to 7.
Mrs. Stewart died very suddenly last
Sunday, her remains were taken to
Grand Rapids. She was* adaughter of
M. H. Clark.
.
Henry Goodell and Andrew Young,
Horace Stocking aud wife return to
started for Dakota, Thursday. Judge
Shiawassee county thia week.
Smith has so far recovered that he is
If “Silver Star” will put in a few
words the column will be full.
A couplet of fingers were badly diuar-AH. J. Stocking started orr Monday anged down at the factory ot Bently
for Grand Rapids and vicinity on a Bro’s. A Wilkins John Whiteisgiving
visit.
them special attention.
Growing wheat is looking very prom­
The crescent literary society will
ising, but it will take the harvest to give an entertainment, March 28th, at
decide its quantity.
Union hall, for the benefit of the libra­
“Tho oldest inhabitant” never -saw ry fund. The objects is certainly a
the ice stick to the trees and “tilings” good one, and the entertainment will

E. E. Tiech is recovering from his
seven* attack of lung fever.
Mrs. Syrns 81osson is again confined
to iler bed with sickness.
Mrs. Chas. Stater is recreating among
ou the ground is ail sound friends at Little Traverse.
The roadb are in a very bad condi­
Saturdays mail brought us the re tion, on account of the freshet.
Mm. 8. A. Shepard was taken very
are busy waiting for better suddenly ill last Saturday.
Fred Turner sold 6 Jcows for $228.50
last Saturday.
The post office war has not termina­
ted at this date.
J. C. Downing made a flying trip to
Jackson, Monday.
Egg* are inclined downward, that is
natural you know.
If we expect a good thorough tan,
we must have more sun.
The exodus west, will be light in
theee parts this spring.
Last Sunday the ground was car­
Miss John Andrews haa been suffer­
peted with fleecy whiteness.
ing for a long time with ill health, but
sent 'in before
WedAM
"
~
'
is now, it is hoped, somewhat better.
attheir
cash
needay
Marshman Wilcox has had a severe
attack of “pink eye” or some other bad
Dr. Hunt has bought a bouse and lot
ailment, but is now thought to be out
on Sebewa SL, and will soon make It a
of danger.
pleasant home.
Orra, son of A. R. Williams started
Mr. Clem has sold his ranch, and will
on Tuesday for Valparaiso, Nebraska,
go back to Ind,, to reside among this
to visit hie mother and sister, and also
Hoosier friends.
make that state his future home.
Wanted: good fresh sweet locals.
It don’t make a bit of difference how
We prefer mooleys, well broke to lead
the West Kalamoitea begin the week,
and no kickers.
they are sure to make a big stir along
Dr. Hunts house passed over the road
towards last, vis R. IL Club and Ly­
to its new location on Tuesday. Mr. J.
ceum.
Davis did the job.
James Andrews who hod the sad af­
Mrs. Craymcr is expected to occupy
fliction to lose his only daughter a
her own farm this spring, after an ab­
week ago by diphtheria, is now again
sence of two years.
afflicted by his only remaining child,
There is in the Bismark school dis­
a son of six years, Wing now suffering
trict 25 persons that have passed their
with that fatal malady.
three score years and 15.
Miss Lure Crowell wa« married laat
Chas. Phillips is happy over his suc­
cess in capturing a boy this week. w eek to Chauncey Sackett, both .par­
ties
residing in Bellevue township.
Good enough Charley.
Tuesday noon. The buu, favored Miss Crowell is the daughter of George
Crowell,
who, a year or two ago was o
with good air, has succeeded in reliev­
resident of West Kalamo. Here’s our
ing the trees of their icy embrace.
I should write more news this week best wishes. Miss Lure.
The very unfavorable spring for the
if could catch any. I am watching the
nest and shall be ready at hatching manufacture of Maple sugar, causes
West
Kalamoans to long for “sugar
time.
John Squicr was parading our streets maker’s made from the best- material,
last Saturday. His mission we have and by a tinner Of twenty years exper
not learned, but was happy that he ience,” as advertised by a wide awake
hardware dealer not a thousand miles
gave us the go-by,
Readers, if you want any more news off
A. former citizen of this town, think­
from this empire, one of ye jist cum
over and buy my farm, so ye can see ing that he would do a thriving busi­
ness in some growing, wieje-a-wake
yer doings in print
Bintnark harbor doted with icebergs. village farther north, made diligent
A fearful collision may occur if the P. inquiries by letter of the most promin­
M. G. don’t clear the “Dardineilfl-” of ent and influential citizens of a few
new towns in the lumber reigens. Fix­
America at an early date.
Last Thursday a sleet storm clothed ing on one of the most promising, so
fences and trees with a man- farasname, location and ‘-‘puff” con­
and rendered footing dan­ cerned, he mounted the car- aud start­
gerous the storm was bad on stock,‘and ed for that modern Eldohtdo. After
may resnlt in injury to fruit Fnday getting within a “good way off,” he was
and Saturday the weather was too cold obliged to train in the usital manner of
tourist. An'd here is a ’ small part of
to unrobe nature of her icy jewelry.
Some years ago a young convert at bis story: “At every brush heap we
Bismark was exhorting bis unconvert­ would have to switch off and wait for
ed associates to rdpent of their sins a log train to pass, and after toiling all
and began to picture to them the ter­ day in the effort to reach the wonder­
ror of hell. He said, “sinners think full “city,” along towardsriark we ran
on’t, drinking down hot lead.” Laugh­ up to a building which was denomin
ter was restrained in various ways bit­ ated “depot.” 1 jumped of the train,
ing of lip* violent coughing, etc. looked around for the town, and at
Since that date the lad has been known last my eyes fell upon a purely redshirted lumberman leaning carelessly
by the nmr of “Hot Lead.”
Being in debt, and wind and tide against the depot. Begining to think
agarast, me I will sell or trade for a I should need a place to lodge for the
cheaper home. 30 acres-of land in a night, I hailed this only visible citizen
good state of cultivation, bouse large of an invisible city and asked him if he
and new, small barn, good fruit, good could tell, me where I could stay for
location, i mile from school and church the night, and received the consoling
i mile to saw mill, stere and cheese reply that I could stay any where, but
factory neighborhood among the best as I already knew that, it was no news
Jaid farm is on the east line of sectios to me and replied I supposed so. Af23 in Sunfiold 5 miles * north of Ver­ t?r looking me over the 0. 8. remarked
montville, Price $3,000 a small dis “you be a tenderfoot, ain’t you? And
count for cash down. Inquire of Milo if so be you’ll fare hard among the
boys. But I’ll git you a bully nest to
DentT
Your West Sunfield reporter last to crawl into, an’ don’t you forget it”
My
burley good natured friend march­
week said that Mrs. Stuck was better.
But Mrs, Stuck as is not unusual re­ ed along towing me after him and
shooting
off volly after volly of lum­
vived as she got a faint glimpse of the
sun bright dime, and -pecaefully berman’s slang, until ho reached wliat
breathed her life out last Wednesday. ho called “a tip top place.” We en­
She was no better only as she was near­ tered the building which proved to be
ing the other shore. She leaves a com­ a saloon, reasturant, boarding house
panion several years her senior, whose and—well, it don’t make any difference
vital forces are weakened with age and I stayed there all night The next
I was out of bed as soon as the
disease. She also leaves several chil­ morning
ci i emustances would permit, and after
dren to the care of strange hands aufl bidding my loving bed-fellows a partadvice of other lips and with them the incr adieu, and glad that my blood was
sympathy of a Christian neighborhood taken from me in small ■ quantities at
n tj01®* I reached for my grip sack,
The family circle must be broktta here rushed for the "office” paid mj bill,
untilthe great reunion. Her funeral and the next minute I wok in the street.
wm held at the Hunter church on I t took me about fifteen minutes to “do”
the city, which I found consisted of
Thrnday,
about twenty-five buildings, including
Writibt.
stables, shtMls. hog pens. etc. Of the
twenty-lve buildings, eight were sa­
loons, ten were----- , well, lumbermen’s
KALAMO.
retreats, and the rest were used for
etc. Being the county seat of the
Alice McCory has Mapped ofl' the cou.n.t7« 1 fxptwted to find court house
andjnil,
and poMibly a couple of the
platform of single life. Into that of
young edifices seen near the center
married.
tbc buildings. Well, af­
Mr. Chas. Rarrick bought a horse of ter deciding that, they were too much
'J ll,at I certainly wasn “ten­
his brother Frank, to replace the one £°r ?.e&gt;
der foot, I gave a tightening grip ou
that died.
mj sack, jiuileil my hat down o«er my
At the election of officers at the ®y®-j and struck a bee line for the rail
t .an&lt;‘ *.»®ver stopped running un­
rill I brought up against the straits of
Maciksnaw. After getting cooled off
I turned mv face south ward, and here
I am. and. don’t you forget- it. I vrfll
in business in.11 ma­

doubtless be first class.
The Red Ribbon Club have secured
Hon. George Woodford to give five
lectures on’ temperance, commencing
Thursday evening, tho 16th. He is a
very able man, and all should hear
what he has to say, and profit by it
Hans.

NORTH CASTLETON
A JIage r and family have gone north.
Penty of mud in this ‘ part of the
town.
The protracted effort at the North
Castleton church, was a success.
Geo. Wellman’s straw stack tipped
over, killing two sheep, last week.
A. Dilleubeck bos has returned from
tho North woods with money to loan.
H. Perkins has bad a largo dowry
fall to him from the north: father,
mother and all their property. Harve.
is lucky.
Hibbard is married again, this time
to his second wife’s daughter. He has
enough of old women and the boys
will not bell him this time, it would bo
a disgrace them.
Who is the man that sold his farm to
an Ohio man three different times, and
still owns the same? Be sure you
want to sell, before you advertise and
de not flunk three times after getting
your price.
A man not far from here whois call­
ed Deacon got a joke played on him by
some sharpers in Woodland. They
were to let him have one thousand dol­
lars, as we understand it at five per
cent for live years, the said deacon to
let them have fifty dollars, to pay their
ex pence b while they went off with a car
load of cattle. Good bye fifty, they
have not returned.
First.

BALTIMORE.
Slush.
Snow.
Sleet.
Froze up.
Sun Shine.
Wire pulling has commenced, caucus
season you know.
Report says that tho dance at M.
Sage’s was a grand fizzle.
Elmer M. Slocum is at his uncles in
Maple Grove, making maple sugar.
J. Ensley’s brother, wife, and neph­
ew, made him a visit Satordey last.
James K. Endsley has purchased the
north half of G. Arnold’s ten acre farm.
Mrs. David Roush has recovered
from internal injuries received by fall­
ing down stairs.
Deputy Shei iff Babcock will sell Mrs.
E. L. Erb's stock of millinery goods at
Hastings the 18th.
Miss Rosa Bostwick is engaged to
teach the spring term of school iu the
Durfee district.
.
Human flesh was bought at the red
ribbon social, at Dowling, the evenihg
of the 10th, for one-forth cent per lb.
One young lady bought 45} cents worth.
George Arnold has traded again.
He is getting to be a land merchant, j
He traded his horse, baggy ana harnous, for ten acres of land of his fatli- j
er, adjoining his own.
Doxy.
EATON COUNTY.

A company-of about 15 Indians have
been in camp near Bellevue the past
few weeks.
It is estimated that one hundred
slung shots, or billies, are carried by
residents of Charlotte.
A Nolte Pronegui was entered by the
Justice in the Daniells-Westland libel
ease, and new papers have been issued.
The trial is now set for tho 37th.
A. L. Hamilton, for the last fifteen
mouths editor aud manager of the
Bellevue Gazette, has severed his con­
nection with that paper and accepted a
position on the Telegraph. Kenosha,

Tbc business men of Eaton Rapids
have formed a Protetive Association
for mutual protection against dead
beats, and to encourage the establish
ment of manufacturing enterprises in
the place.

is »2 years old, but die starts for Fargo,
Dakota this week to grow up with the
country.
The north half of St Ignace has
been incorporated as a village to be
hereafter known as the village of 8f.
Ignatius.
Mrs. Hart Norton, a well-known lady
of Pokagon, was taken ill while start­
home from Jfiles, and died a few mo­
menta afterward.
Oscar Bugbee of Ransom, Hillsdale
county, aged 20 years, was chocked to
death by a piece" of dried beef while
eating his supper,
A Battle Creek lady, who was assaultod on the street by a villain,
smashed bis face with a stone and
escaped uninjured.
Michigan wheat is not yet beyond all
danger from cold weather, but present
prospects are excellent, the crop look­
ing fine all over the state.
P. H. McCracken, who suddenly left
Ionia county with $1,000 belonging to
the township of Bradford, has been ar­
rested and in jail at Petersburg, Va.
A Jackson man supports his father
and mother, who are both old, infirm
and divorced. The son has two wings
to his house, and keeps a parent in each
wing.
Frank’Dusenberry, a brakeman on
the Fort Wayne fit Jackson railroad,
tried to get on the rear end ot his train
while it was backing, slipped and was
run over andiustuntly killed at Horton,
March 13th.
Elmer Van Riper, aged 18 orlOyears,
lives at Hudson, and if he keeps on
living there or elsewhere until he is of
age may be quite a man. At present
he is 6 feet 7f inches long aud growing
al! the time.
There are eight Jewish exiles from
Russia in Grand Rapids and more are
expected. Four of them are of one
family, and the man was manufactur­
ing goldsmith with a large property
which was plundered from him.
S. D. Bycraft attempted to shoot
Miss Fannie Habson at Ann Arbor be­
cause she pretexted the company of
another fellow instead of his own. The
revolver ball grazed her temple. By­
craft is under $1,000 bail.
A man named Cavanaugh, near
Chesaning, is reported to have ruptur­
ed one of his bowels, from which bis
death followed 86 hours later, while
bearing heavily against the head of a
bitstock with which he was boring.
The Detroit clothing dealer who ad­
vertised “punts down again” has been
outdone by a rural dealer whose com­
petitor sold at "I off.” Then they got
to running each other down until one
is now advertising “clothing all off.—
Evening News.
An Adrian lady was unpleasantly
surprised recently to find that her best
silk dresses were being worn to balls
by her servant girl, and another mode
the startling discovery that her best
necklace was always out when tho
hired girl was. The Times thinks that
“some redress” is necessary.
Mr. John A. Dice, Sheriff of St.
Joseph county, has captured Ciiaa. W.
Fonda, the; embezzling clerk of the
Farmers' National bank of Constan­
tine, in San Francisco, Col. Sherifi
Dice is on his way home with the pris­
oner, who will be taken before tho
United States court.
&lt;
Jobs Van Slyke, a wealthy and prom­
inent farmer near Ionia, died Sunday
after 16 hours illness. Before dying ho
said he bad been poiseued, and foul
play is suspseted. A post mortem and
inquest was held to learn the facta.
The family relations of deceased are
said to have been unpleasant for some
time.
A Clinton lass gave a young chap the
mitten, and wouldn’t let him “see her
home.” Spooney thereupon followed
her, and this being the second occasion*
she was prepared for it, and suddenly
turning u jor. him dashed a charge of
pepper into the face and eyes of die
love-sick swain. He followed no furth-

The proficiency of -drill exhibited by
Adrian young lassie&amp;of the broom brig­
ade aroused the jealousy of one of the
thorougb-breds of the crack light
guard, who eneeringly remarked that
a woman couid’nt take the first posi­
tion ot a soldier, which was to “stand
erect and let the arms hang naturally
by the side, with the little finger touch­
ing the seam of the trousers.
A Jackson young woman, wishing to
elope with a handsomer man than her
husband, got a free pass over the rail
road from the poor commissioner by
representing herself a stranger in dis­
tress. The next day she reappeared,
and said she had lost her ticket and
wanted another. Investigation.show­
ed that she wanted tho other ticket for
her young man, aud that her husband
wanted her to stay at hoflje. There
was a family tablean when the hus­
band learned the facts.
Sometime last fall a farmer named
Cressman, living near Mt. Vernon,
missed a fine flock of 55 sheep, and a
neighbor a sufficient number to make
the aggregate loss of the two, 75sheep.
Recently, information was obtained
which, upon being pur&amp;igtf, led to the

The mode is something like this: Aman '
opens a so-called sales stable in some I
some large city, and another goes out I
ioto U.e &lt;x.ontr, u w„t.. H»
to 1
the owner of a fine animal and says: j
Mr. how much for that horse T”- Two i
hundred dollars.” "Tell you what PH
do.” says the agent. Mr. Jones has a
sale stable in such a place, and an'or­
der for just such a hone us yours. I’ll
take the animal in, sell him for consid­
erable more than $200, and divide up
all over the latter sum between as.”
The farmer bite^ his pronerty is sold,
and the principal and agent pocket the
.proceeds.
BLOOD-STAINED TREASURE.

immediately around
and liL !&gt; *s. Imve ;
having lw-&lt;-n bun&gt;r&lt;

Wlirved l.v rite reri.L_____ ____ ...
and vtelnity.—Cinriuii^ti Enquire.'.

lts Equal I- Unknuirn.
A Lowell (Muss.) paper, so we nb- '
serve, cites the cit-c of Mr. P. H. Short,
proprietor of-the Brlruont Hotel, that
city, who suffered with rln-mustiiMn for
seventeen yean* without finding relief .
from any of the utiinerons remedies
ernploved, until he applied St. Jacobs
Oil, "I never found uin no-divine tint
produced sm-h remarkable and install,
tan eon « effect ns it did,” sai s Mr. 8Ia»1 t
—LyonrlPct.i Mirror.

IRELAND OF TO-DAY :TbeCau«csand Aims
of Irinh Agitation. IHwaratad. By_M. F.
Suliiranl with an introduction by TbomM
Power O Conner. M. P, J. C. McUnrdv dt
Co., Publisher*, Philadelphia; Cindnnitl, O,
Chicago III.! St. Louis, Mo.
In the side of a ravine near the village
To
the great body of the people of the United
of Mount Nebo, ten miles southeast of
vim reading about the Irish .qneatiou
this city, is a cave which is an object of Btatas.
ha* been almost nrees-arily confined to pub­
Dorror to the superstitious and of pe­ lication.. written front the English point of view
culiar interest to the adventurously and who know Ireland only as thus renrescutinclined.
ed or rather minrepfeaented, wc especially com­
One night twenty years ago, so the mend this work.
We wish ft could be br&gt;&gt;ogbt to the attention
story goes, two men sought shelter in
the cave from a blinding snow storm, of every one, who ii Indifferent upon the Irish
one was a simnle-ininded old peddler question, or haa taken up tbc idea that it is an
agitation
cauaelers. or baaed only Dpou scntiwho for years had supplied the farm­ incntal greivaucea.
house iu the vicinity with his wares,
They would find in tills book no rhetorical
which he carried in a pock upon his generalities or descriptions drawn from imag­
back. The other was a friend whom ination, but facts gathered from scources of
be had loug known and whom he had unquestionable rcJabiiltr, and statemeata by
met an hour before belated like him­ persons of nntmpeanhable. veracity. . .
self and seeking shelter from tbf.' Entirely disconnected from tlie Irish Land
movement, revealing the true nature and ef­
storm.
fects of Irish knidloniUtii. its grindingoppeesfoa
Once in the cave a blazing lite war •W-cxliorbltant exactions, aud the depths of
soon started which effectually shut out aqualid. hopeless poverty lind misery to which
Hie cold blasts of wind and snow, aud it reduces Irish tenants, which require no apthe two men prepared to pass the peala to feeling to fill every human mind with
night as comfortable as possible. Thu dete*latii&gt;n of the the Irish liuul system, and
peddler drew from his pocket a hand- cotiuniseratlou for those upon whom it has been
imposed. The Publishers want Agents every­
tul of money, and after counting it where.
slipped it into a money-belt which he

Which tthosta are Said to (Jaard-Ths Story at a

wove about bis waist. He made no
CST THE “CROWN” DRIVE- WHEEL
effort to conceal the fact that the belt JOURNAL Isrrty Jong, and it lams inttobearwas heavy with gold, and talked as ings. Instead of the wheel revolving oa it To
simply aud unsuspectingly as a child avoid nil “aide pull the wheel is pat on tbeaatot the time, soon coming, when he aide and the pitinau ou Uh- Inside of tbc stand
could forsake his pack forever, and leg, and the noise, “rattle.** “wobbling,”
with the money he had saved, end his “thumping” and hard running incident to
E. R. White, Agent.
days iu peace and comfort. After read­ other machines
justing the belt obout his waist he
ELEGANCE AND PURITY. ,
laid down and was soon fast asleep,
'
Ladies
who
appreciate
elugsuer and purity
his pack serving him for a pillow.
are using Parkers Hair B&amp;lftain, It is the best
His companion, whom the sight of article sold for restoring gray hair to it* origi.
nal
color,
beautv
and
lustre.
the gold had' excited to desperation,
feigned sleep, until the breathing of
the peddler assured him of hiscomplete
MAMMOTH PEARL POTATO.
unconsciousness. Satisfied of this, the
This Potato originated in Ohio, and was aeman, his eyes glittering fiercly in the lected as the best from twenty-fivi: bundrod
firelight, drew from his pocket a settling*. It is immensely prolific, eyes few,
large chisp-Knif, opened the band aud shallow skin and flesh white* In shape, gener­
drove it, with devilish precision into ally roandish. It is an excellent market Pota­
to. In tabic qualities, Il ranks with the peach­
the deeper’s hart
blow. I hare a few bushels of the above PotaIt was all over in a moment. The to« which I will sell at my reskienee in Maple
dark blood gushed from Hie wound Grove at 60 cfots per peck, and halt bushel
inn thick stream, there was a nervous 41.00.
25-2S
.Gko.O.DxaN.
twitching of the bands, the eye-lids
half opened, aud the eyes turned in­
wardly. the neck stiffened and drew
the head back, and all was rigid aud
still again.
The murderer groped for the belt
and drew it out, wet and slimy with
blood. He hastily pouted the gold out
aud looked at it, and ran it Htrongh his
bauds. In the fascination of the gold
he forgot all else, and only remembered
the crime and the- victim when a
stream of blood trickled down from
Hie corpse’s breast and formed a pool
where the gold lay. Then a conscious­
ness of his position dashed upon him,
and tossed the body into the darkness
iu die back part ot the cave, aud with
the bloody clasp-knife dug a hole and
bulled the gold for which he bad paid
so terrible a price.
He would not remain in the cave with
the body of his murdered friend, aud
lie rushed out into the snow, intending
to return Mime tikie aud recover the
fortune—for there were some thousands
of dollars iu the peddler's hoard. The
clasp-knife he still retained, aud with
it he “blazed” treea along his path so
that he might bo able to find his way to
the cave mure easily on his return.
A month later be was lying iua hospit­
al at Cleveland, helpless. He had been
found in Hie snow miles away from the
scene of his crime, so badly frozen that
amputation of his hands and feet was
Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago,
performed in a desperate effort to save
his life. Pitying Samartns had cared Backache, Soreness of the Chest,
for him, little suspecting that the ob­
Govt, Quinsy, Sore Throat, S sell­
ject of their sympathy wan a mur­
ings and Sprains, Bums and
derer.
Scalds, General Bodily
He lingered ia the hospitl for months,
and then they told him be must die.
Pains,
Tlie reinemUrSnee of the crime which Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted
he was expiating so terribly became too
Feet and Ears, and all other
much for him to bear. He sent for his
niece to whom he told the story, and
Pains and Aches.
died.
Scarcely waiting to see the maimed
body of the murderer consigned to Hie
grave, she and her husband hastened
to Mount Nebo and made inquiries
concerning the disappearance of Hie
jieddter. By meant* of the blazed SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AMD DEALERS
trees which the murderer had described
IK MEDIOINL.
they found the cave, only to dtacuver
A. VOGELER &lt;fc COW
that its walls and rock had fallen in
and barred up the entrance. The
husband set to work, assisted by farm
ELEVATOR.
hands who lived in the vicinity, to
remove the rocks. After they had ।
progressed a few feet they were startled
by unearthly voices aud lights that i
sounded and gleamed through fissures
In die rocks from the darkness in the
ioterior
the careni. The eiplorieg
party immediately abandoned the work HIGHEST MARKET PRICE
and a moment later the rocks again fell
——For all kind- of---- in, filling up anew the space which had
been excavated.
Since then many unsuccessful at­
tempts have been made to open the
cave. One was by Mr. Conrad iJittmar,
A full stock of

5WOBS01I

RHEUMATISM,

FOWLER &amp; INGERON
GRAIN AND PRODUCE.

is undoubtedly haunted, and ttaHfied

LUMBER, LATH, &amp;C

&lt; onalantly on Hund.
and lights which frightened tho first
exploring party.
A parly ot font men llrin, near
Mount Nebo attempted to open t!&gt;o
entrance, and had the temerity toeamp
out over night at Um mouth ot the
cave. AfterdMrk, while viltiugaround
d,’r dutiactly «atr Sew, Able, KelUhie, Highly
the ghtmily figure ot a man aUnding
A.t0*- itmt from them, lipon being
addrefued the flgnre faded awa, n.m

^SSeii^^v^f

�.

-

' DETROIT STOVE -WORKS’

MARCH IB. IBM.

Druggists

•A gaSKBVD BBt 13.

HoMn.ti-to-your-’ittno youiijr
OLDER THAN THE FLOOD.

The spade of the explorer has onoe
more been busy amid the mounds and
ruins, of Assyria and Babylonia, and a
rich harvest of antiquities has resulted
from the work. The explorations carriod out during eighteen months by Mr.
Hormuzd Ritosam, though affording no
such grande trouvaille as tho bronze
gales from Bnllawat, have, nevertheless, been rich^n discoveries which will
be welcomed by-ail students qf'history
and philologn Tm^rfifiaxery of the
library of .tcm-cotta tablets from the
palaces of Sfnuacherib and Assurbanipa! has restored to ns a vast mass of literalnre, and supplied long-lost chapten in the history,. mythology and
science of the world.
It has also
proved to us that,, valuable as these
records are. wo have iu them but nog­
end and third editions of works first
compiled by the scribes in tho library
cities of Babylonia. Tho discovery of
fragments led Assyriologisis to hope
that the explorer would bis able to re­
cover from the ruins of tho cities of
Chaldea tho older versions of tho As­
Syrian texts, and the expedition ot 1830
-81. whirit Mr. Bas-stuu lutz justcon- eluded, has so far mot their wishes in
that from the ruins cf tho temples and
palaces of Babylon, Borsipps, Sippra
and Cutha he brings record* and copies
of religious texts, someiof which will, no
doiibt, furnish tho required Chaldean
versions.
■
From the chriiesl days of Mesopotamian travel tho spade of tho explorer
has been applied to tho ruins of BabyIon. Strange as it may spom. although
for more ttuin three centuries tho ruins
have been known and visited, and for
centuries the Arab brick merchants
have been digging amid its ruins for
bricks, it is only within tho last few
years that records of imixirtanni have
been recovered. With the exception of
thousands of bricks bearing the names
and titles of Nebuchrnlnezzar, and cylindent inscribed with tho records of
temples and palaces built or restored by
the builder-king and his successors, no
record of historical or scient'Kic importance’has been recovered from amitl tho
ruins. But the year 1874 began a now
era in Babylonian explorations, for from
that time on there nas been a continuous flow of inscriptions and records
from the treasure-house of the city; and
wo now know much more of the popular life of Babylon and its people than
after jears of study we have been able
td ascertaisgrcgardihgNineveh from tho
monuments" and records. The tablots
found by tho Arabs in 1874-’7(1 were
purchased by tho late George Smith for
iheTrustees of tho British Museum, and
the subsequent finds mado by Mr. Bassam have added sonto hundreds to this
branch of the collection, so that of this
class of tablets there are now more
than 3,000 examples in the British
'Museum. Those tablots show that for
a long period, probably several centuriea, the family of the Beni Egibi were
the leading commercial flrm of BabvIon, and to them was confided all the
business of the Babylonian Ministry of
Finance. The building whose ruins are
marked by the m.und of Jumjuma was
the chancellerie of the firm, and from
its ruins come the records of every
class of monetary transactions. The
documents, being all most carefully
dated and compiled, are of great value
to the chronologist and historian;
while to the student of Babylonian civilization they are of the highest importance. From the tax receipts we
learn how the revenue was raised by
duties levied on land, on crops of dates
and oom. on cattle, by imposts for the
use of the irrigation canals and the use
of the public roads. It is almost imPOM,ble to estimate too highly tho importance of such a series of documents
as these, dealing with every phase of
social life, and coming tons from a city
from within whose walls were gathered
representatives of every “nation, poopie aud tongue.”
The inscriptions which Mr. Rassam
has recovered are not confined to docu­
ments of this class only. It was long
feared by Assvriologists that Babylo­
nian history was irretrievably lost, as
no historical records were recovered;
but from the ruins of the palaces of the
Kings of Babylon Mr. Rassam has
brought fragments of historical descriptions of Nebuchadnezzar, a valuableprecis of the history of the last days
of the Babylonian Empire, exlending
from the seventh year of Nabonidus to
the fall of the city before the hosts ot
Cyrus, a royal record of tho Persian
conqueror, and. lastly, an inscribed
record of the last great victor who en­
tered Babylon, Alexander of Macedon.
The scarcity of stone in Babylonia, and
the extensive use of bricks, rendered
the ruins of Babylonian palaces not
fruitful fields for the explorer in search
of uehitectural remains. In the ruins
of tie Kaur or “palace” mound, Mr.
Rassam has found chambers and corridors which formed part of Ute royal
residence of the Kings of Babylon.
The use of plaster and painted bricks
as decoration in those chambers af­
fords strong support to the statements
of the Greek writers as to the mode ot
4eooraLing the royal residences of
Babyh n. On the extreme north of the
Uns of Babylon, and partly without

oovery ot a small inscribed tablst,
which clearly proves the fondness of
the Babylonian Kings -for
- -----------horticulture.
that beneath these ruins were the ro­
to oije of tho palaeo mains of the temples and palaces-of the
or temple libraries of Babylon has trans­ City of Cuthk. one of the great theolog­
mitted to us a list of the gardens or ical centers of Babylonia. In the south­
paradises of the Babylonian Monarch, ern portion of the larger of the two
Mcrodaclibaladap. the contemporary of mounds al Hubl fbrahecin, Mr. BnsSargon, - Sennacherib and Hezekiah. sam found extensive remains of build­
This monarch appears to have been a ings, ch * mbera and corridors, and
lavish patron of horticulture., for the the inscribed bricks and tablets recov­
iUt furnishes the names of more than ered point to these edifices as being tho
sixty gardens and parks in and about remains of the groat Temple of Nergal
Babylon constructed by the royal order. and his consort Laz, which was re­
Leaving Babylon, we now cross tho stored by the great temple-builder,
Euphrates and pass south west to glance Nebuchadnezzar.
To the Biblical
at the work which has been carried out scholar tho discoveries of these pities,
on the rules of the Bini Ninroud, the Sepharvaim and Cutha,' is a great gain,
traditional site of the Tower of Babel, for from them were brought the men of
but really the ruins of the seven-staged Sepharvaim and Jhe men of Cutha. who
Ziggurat, or observatory tower of the were placed in Samaria by tho Assyrian
Eiat Temple of Nebo, at Borsippa. conqueror Sagon (SKings/xviL, 21-31).
cavations in the Bin have brought The doacendants of these worshipers of
to light several chambers of the ancient Adrammelech and Anammelecn, and
temple,- and also afforded much infor­ Nergal, the god of Cutha, are now to bo
mation regarding the construction of found in the small white-robed congre­
,
the stage tower. From this site Mr. gation who gather round the high priest
Rassam has brought some fragments Yakub in the Synagogue at Nabius. ’The
from tbc great mass of vitrified brick, traveler who visits these lost remains of
which has so long been a puzzle to the seed M Israel may carry h'ts thoughts
travelers, and it is to be hoped that far back beyond the days of the Cap­
some student of science may explain tivity, into the axure-of the past, to the
the cause of this vitrifaction. Babylon days when the ancestors of these men
.
may
claim to be the mother of Nioevah made the courts of Bit-Parra echo with
and tho cities of Assyria, yet among hymns of praise to tho Sun, tho “lord
the cities of its own land there are of light and golden rays." ' The above
those which could lay claim to far more is the recoril of an explorer’s short
ancient traditions, and even to being campaign amid the buried cities of
'the ancestors of Babylon itself. All Chaldea, and its results are snch 'as
]
students
of • history and antiquity will lead us to hope for richer discoveries
.welcome tho discovery made by Mr. in the future from the land where cen­
Rassam of the sites of two of these an­ ter all the traditions of the history and
,
cient
cities, whose records and tradi­ religion of Western Asia.—London
'
tions carry us (ar ba k to the days Times.
when, perchance, Babylon was yet “ a
A Plea for Occupations for Men.
little village.” While in the neigh­
borhood of Bagdad, Mr. Rassam
We have heard enough of woman's
heard
from
tho
4rabs
of
“sphere” and its enlargement. Wom­
some ruins, on tho bank of a half-dry
en’s “rights” have ceased to bo dwelt
canal, called by the Arabs Yusuflleh,
upon with so much force since they
where plenty of “written stones wore
have quietly stepped forward and taken
to bo found.” The mounds to which
them. Several cases have come to my
his attentions was directed wore called
knowledge of late where men have
Deyr, and were situated on the north
trained their wives into a knowledge
bank of tho canal about thirty miles
of their business. One of them, who
southwest of Bagdad. Tho test trenches
icut iu the mounds did not bring to had been a soldier and came home with
light any very important remains, only broken health, made this provision for
a number of 'inscribed bricks of tho his family in case of his death, and ho
itime of Nebuchadnezzar, and no in­ ^as died, ns much a hero anti a martyr
at if ho had perished on the battio-tiefd.
formation was afforded os to the site
| re presented by the ruins.. But if tho •His wife is now able to carry on his
ii mounds ot Deyr were drawn blank, a business and to support herself and her
I more fruitful spot was awaiting the family reputably and comfortably. Wo
;; touch of the explorer’s wand to burst have boon driven to such things by
It may bo
forth into a rich harvest of discoveries. stress of circumstances.
While working at Deyr Mr. Rassam contrary to all our ol«l notions; we may
paid a visit to the mounds called by tho still think it wiser for women to marry
Arabs Toll Abu Hubba, where his test for a homo, however she may shrink
trenches soon rewarded him for the dis­ from it, than to support herself inde­
.
appointment
of Deyr. Tho mounds of pendently, bui they won't do it.
Tho fact is, there is no absolute rule
Abu Hubba are very extensive, cover­
ing an area over two miles in circum­ to regulate the work or the relations of
.
ference,
and the position of the walls men and women. It is a matter of cus­
,
and
citadel are clearly marked by tom, and customs niav change if it bo
;mounds and embankments ot debris. expedient. Now, ns our customs are
Lika most Babylonian edifices, tho 1 changing, why should not men learn
buildings-nt Abu Hubba are built with I certain things which would give them
' something to do and make them hnpthe angles to tho cardinal points.
The citadel occupies the southern ' Dier? Why may not men knit, or sew,
portion of the enceinte, and its highest dr crochet? (ft course, it sounds very
:
point
was on the southwest face, which odd; indeed, I do not know that I
was once on the banks of a broad canal should have pluck enough to be found
&lt; a branch of the Euphrates, the bod engaged in any of these or kindred oc­
or
But why not? Why sit
(
of
which is now represented by cupations.
।tho dry* channel of the Ruthwaniyoh idfe? I am not always tired; I do not
i
Canal.
In tho interior of tho edifice always want to read; 1 get tired of
■
an
interesting pair of rooms were twirling my thumbs-. I can’t play on
&lt;discovered and cleared of debris any musical instrument, and if I could
I
by
the fortunate explorer, and it | that is noisy. Why can’t a man have
i from records found in these cham- some trani|u*d occupation? I have seen
is
1
bora
that we have been able to ascertain |i Mrs. Smith sit down with tho uredlu
i
the
name of the city aud Che nature of ' and work off a lit of impatience, in n
to great
I
i
the
edifice whose ruins are buried be- ‘ time of. waiting,
------- L
CT"profit.
j
" '
.........................JT
’ O .1d_.'va__
■
tieUb
lh« mound, of Ata. Hubba. In I 1
«
excavating
a trench following a wall in bitten my nails, and only grown more
i
the
central jxirtion of tho mound, a restless. .
Bovs ought to learn. Why should
&lt;
doorway
was found lending into a large
gallery
or chamber one hundredYeot &gt;n they leave all their things about for
]length and about thirty-five feet in others to take care of—for the weary
&lt;
width.
In this chamber were the re­ mother, if there be notservants enough?
imains of a large briSlq altar nearly thirty Why shouldn’^ a boy. If he is off ou a
:
feet
square, and evidently the great tramp, be able to sew on a button or
।
sacrificial
altar of the temple. In tho mcna a bole in his stocking properly ?
■wall of this chamber a door was found They sometimes manage to do it, but
!
leading
into a smaller room, which, from how? And now, when it is a sort-.of
■ construction and position, Mr. Ras­ fashion to have a ranch in Colorado, or
its
।sam considered to bo tho record cham­ somewhere where no woman may ven­
ber of the edifice. In his explorations ture, I don't see any way but for the
;at Bsliawat, which we fully described boys to learn these things. Let them
।some time since, Mr. Rassam found the knit their stockings instead of plaving
;
memorial
records of tho builder of the cards. I believe in interchange. Why
;
great
temple of the Assyrian war god may women enter into so many of our
'placed in a stone cist and buried near occupations and we be excluded from
'
tho
altar. The scarcity of stone in theirs? “Effeminate,” is it? Not of
Babylonia caused the builders of the necessity. Why is it any more so, save
temples at Abu Hubba ter inclose tho from custom, than writing or any other
•
records
in a cist made of terra-cotta, quiet, sedentary work? There are
:
and
to bury this beneath the floor ofthe trades where men sew, as we know,
.
chamber.
The shaft sunk by the ex­ and in many a business a boy has to
,
cavators
employed by Mr. Rassam learn some rudimentary practice of tho
brought these precious records to light, art. The doctor, as a surgeon, must
।and from them wo arc able to ascertain thread a needle, sew bandages, to say
the name uf the city and temple whose nothing of other artistic stitches. You
ruins have been discovered. The first see my plan only carries matters a trifle
three lines of the largest of the founda­ farther, and would teach, as an art,
tion records brings our speculative that which is now but rudely done.
My friend Prof. X. can hem a towel
thoughts to » focus and center our
minds on the traditions of ono of the or a handkerchief with the best of them.
most ancient cities of Chaldea: “To the He is none the leas manly, and once
Sun-god, the great lord, dwelling in saved his own life by having strong
Bit-Parr*, which is within the city of muscles and weightv fists. Things are
Sippara.” Here, then, wte have re­ rather mixed, but if women poach on
stored
to as the ruins ana records of a our manor let us be even with them if
i
'
city
whose traditions go back to the we may gain by it.—dor. N. F. Post.
days
before the flood, when pious Xis1
—A man attempted to cross Caddo
uthrus, by order of his God. “buried
: the city of Sippan of the Sun the Lake. Texas, in a skiff containing a
in
history of tho beginning, progress, and quarter of beef, when he was hotly pur­
the end of nil things” antediluvian. sued by a school of alligators. Eight
And now we recover, twenty-seven cen­ of them tried to upset the boat, but oy
turies aft^r they were buried, the rec­ hard rowing tho boatman reached a
ords of the pions restorers of this an­ cypress tree, seized it and abandoned
cient tempta. Such a discovery as this the skiff The next day two fishermen
almost inakes us inclined to dig on in who were crossing the lake heard his
hooes of finding the most ancient rec­ cries and went to his assistance. The
ords buried there by the Chaldean alligators attacked the rescuers, but by
Noah.
a dexterous use of their oars and a
There arc many points of history double-barreled shot-gun they succeed­
raised by this inscription, but it wifi ed in keeping the enemy at bay until
.
suffice
to say that from the earliest days the unfortunate mao, more dead than
of Babylonian history the city of “ Sip­ alive, could be gotten out of the tree
para vi the Sun” was a prominent cen­ and rowed safely to shore.
ter of social and religious life. The ex­
cavations, therefore, at Abu Hubba
—The first steamship ever built in
have restored to us the ruins of the Holland reached Baltimore on Septem­
great
,
temple of the sun-god, “ the ber 12 from Rotterdam, after a twelve
a.yi' voj-Bge.

B
aB

AND

Physicians

Sash, Doors, Blinds, Jefferson Nails. Glass, Putty, Paints,
Oils, Varnishes, Colon-, Brushes, Etc. Castor, Sperm, Golden,
Black, Linseed and Kerosene Oils.
Shovels, Spades, Forks, Hoes. Snaths, Apple Parers, Farm
Bells, Fence Wire, Well and Cistern Pumps. Wood and Iron,
ripe, Points, Cylinders. Lead Pipe, Sinks, &amp;c.
'----------- AGENT FOR-------—

Have Signed orEnddned the
Following Remarkable
Document:

Ess2i2a^t£sss£iBs “ •“

DOMESTIC SEWING MACHINE

The Lightest Running aud most Durable Machine in use.* .
I shall aim to keep none but first class goods, and sell them
at a small profit. Call and see me *rheu needing hardware.

FRANK C. BOISE.

Benson’s Cooetan Pteutter is a rcnulne

physician* and drucsists.

.fTlIJI

CHICAGO, ROCK ISLAND &amp; PACIFIC R’Y
Is Tho Groat Connecting Link between the East and tho West I
-

tt. main Hoe ran* from Chlea«o u&gt; Council SlwjHng Car* tor sleeping purpoBea. and
-■'• • -••— &gt;•-------- ptntna Car*foreatinr purpo»r»only. On* other
great feature of oar I'aUce Car* u a SMOK1 MO .
SALOON jrhere jnu can enjoy your •• Havana**

Tmachlnat in Atacrg’’**^1
tea, and at present

right nftha sama. Bend far car hoc circular.
United State* MonTz Co, Washington. D. Q

F»rnHn|fton.
idrnL Eldon.

fA!,n.

tfiSOO Reword!
WE will paf th* ttove reward for any ca»e o.
liver complaint. dy.pcp.ia, eirfk hredaehc. Udlgenlion, coo.tlpaliuii or toBilfcnw* we cannot euro
with Wwi’« Vruvfabte t.lvcr Pin*, when the dlreeti.na an-Btrleilv compiled with; They are purely

St. L A I1C-. and Ctoll. and Q. ILRd*.
At KKOKDK, with ToL. l*o- A War.; Wnb...SL
Lx?.. 1. A IIu-JmxI St. L. Keo * N. W. IL ltd*.
ACCAMKItnX. with if. St J. ILRAt A-rcKioox. wita Atcti_Topoka4 SantaFe;
AUh. A Setu and On. Hr. U. V. R lid*.
At LratkNwortu. with Union Rae. and Kan.
Cent IL ltd*.
■ AC Kas.«a» CtTT. with all line* Tor the West
and Southwest

addrwaa.

JEB. MT. JOHN,
°~rJ
r-3Fci&amp;J.

I

RUPTURE
inflict by Pr. J. A. Sherman's Method. Ofltee
Hro-dwar New York. Hui book with PI olograph,
ic IlkeneM of bad c**c* before and after cure, mail-

NO PATENT NO PAY.

PIMPLES.
I
I
।

WEST* CO.. Th* Plii Mak«r*." JS1 and
Madtaon HL, Chicago. Free trial package
mall prepared on receipt ot a 1 eent atamp.

I win mall (Free) lire recipe for a .imple Vegtable Italm that will remov-Tan. Freckle. Pimple* AD.l Blutche., leaving ibe akio .oft. clear and
tHwuittul, ateo iintroetloni lor producing a luxuri­
ant growth of hair aa a bald bred orireooth fare
Addreaa inel&lt;nlt&gt;,3c, »la:i&gt;n, BFN. VANDELF A

TO CONSUMPTIVES.
that dread dloeaac, ConanmpC'on. by a «hnpte rentewill send a copy of lite prescription ueod, free' ot
charge, wiih the direction for preparing and using
the rente, whieh they will find a sure Cure for
CoufW, Cold*. Ccntutnptien. Asthma. Brooch 111 a,
! Ac P.rtl-« Wfabing the Preacrlptlon will pleoae
' »ddrare, Rev.E.A.WILSON: IM Penn Kt. Williams

ft | T t* || T A oijtaloed for mechanical devie11 1 I L ■ I \
medical, or other eunipounte
r R I I II I 1 ornun-auU
d&lt;»ltfn*.
tnWa
I M I L 11 I U „jart* .od Ub-l*.
Interfcranee*. Infrinyw

lb*
«r&lt;! are sbte to tnak* cLom
•xnmtoottea*. «.•- mt&lt;om Patent! root! sn-mray
and wUh
■&lt;..! i-ih-t claim*, than tboM Me
ore remote fn-t» W,.hiniftun.

Uiom of oar rvlialHr avrnev.
We refer to Official* In the Patent Office, and l
Investor* of ev.ry Slate of lb. Unto. A ddreta
LOUIS BAO4KR * CO,

ERRORS OF YOUTH
rou* dcVUltj

WM. SIMPSON &amp; SONS*
MOURNING, SECOND MOURNING
SOLID BLACKS.

Eddystone
FANCY DRESS PRINTS

U-lyr,

JOHN B. OGbKN, 43 Cedar St.. N. T.

THE SURGEONS KNIFE
Wonderful sandcal Operatic. Itemeia) of Urloar

Mr. bimon •ftetoell, of Sanzcrttea, N Y..hid been

The EDDYSTONE PRINT WORKS is
one of the largest and moat complete estab­
lishments in the country.

THE EXPERIENCE OF HALF A
CENTURY
has enabled them to attain such perfection
that they can with confidence ask you to test
the quality of their work. They carefully

rlth tho

PainUar. beMtaUns. Ac . lor IWi^ntety
lUeataWue addr—.. .-.rl.^nc
3

BUXTON
I

4

la now nicely located

b» MM .rtnek a
CBOSS-CCT A CIBCULIB SAWS.

ATTENTION! SAW MILL MENI
1-rirr, on Bnw Work.
CM*.
up w W
10 -■*»« perliu h.

«&gt; Inch, auounod, *3.00
Huunowl.
50 ”
”
3D0
’’
®
”
4.00
”
_
. and
- &lt;TT
-------- reU—1
Gumming
Hat
White ••Favorite Remedy" teaapocUte* In all kid­ Regular Fib ng,
noy and bladder diMaara, It 1* r^ually valuable In Hammering cn»X
caera of blUoa* dteordera, Co MU pU I on of the bow
Prompt atteottou

cn,which are thoroughly washed in hot water
and soap, thereby removing anything which
would stain underclothing.
Dr. Ihtvid Kennedy. Itondout, N . Y. Ths doctor
Those who buy and wear their prints will, would have it understood chat while hel» -nratr:!
they feel confident, find them superior in dur­ In Ibe Introduction ot hi* wodHnc.-Favorite R»
m«iy,"bv still continues the proclira of bi* proability, artistic ttyle and finish. Be sure and
ask for their goods, and sec that their m.arks
and tickets are on them.

Books on buildii

1

3.1.00
4.00
&amp;0?
75g.
BOC.
GOc.

yyiLLlAM JONES,

DENTISTS,

owa tb*, ocjy lagj

�y*m grind it.” “How long dn you think
youronH.dnit^my lad!” qnoith
roijkr. •Till I ittarVbd to dratb/anaarred
the boy.

»*re yourself if

HkK«nto*-ti. M&lt;!..

—Spio^d Fish.—Cold frwh fish may
be used iu thb way. Remove all bones,
bite of skin; lay in &lt;Jeep dish, barely cover
with hot vinegar, in which a few cloves
and all-wpioe have been boiled. Ready
for use as soon as cold.
—Lamp shades are fashionable and
useful. First get the shape, which should
GRAND
bo cut and re-cilt in paper until it fits the
glass. Then you may trace comic de­
signs on silk musin, or you may paint on
STATIONS.
satin, with fringe for border, or you may
arrange ferns or dried flowers on sila
with thin gum Arabic. This latter work
is pretty and novel.
Mhldl.rlllc.
—Scrambled eggs.—Have a spider hot
and buttered; break the egg* into a dish,
being careful not to break the yelks;
fete
slip them into the spider, add a very lit­
tle salt, with butter the size of a nutmeg
for half a dozen eggs, or three tablespoonfuls of rich cream. When the
eggs begin to whiten, stir carefully from
■WJCSTWARD.
the bottom, until cooked to suit
—A pudding, which we call “Kate’s
Brown Bettie” is for a simple and easily
made dish eminently sucoossful.
Put
alternate layers of grated bread crumb*
or chopped apples in a pudding dish,
season each layer with sugar, cinnamon.
Vi-rm^rtvllb .
»a little lump of butter. Fora dish hold­
MasbvUl*.-----ing a quart and a half you need two tea­
Mlddliriite.-...
cupful* of hot water. Bake an hoar and
Hammond.----Grand Raplda,.
a half. Have the top brown; serve with
plenty of sweet cream.
Through Coacbe* »nd Slrcplus U*ra to and from
—Professor A. J. Cook gave result* of
Grand Bapida and iMdroit. All trains counsel Iu
experiments showing the value of car­
urn- depot at Detroit with Great VVedteru, Grand
Trunk and Canada Sonttrern Railway*.
bolic acid as a remedy against inscets;
K. U. riROWK,
IL B. LEOTARD.
'Aaa*t G«n'l Bapt'Jackaop. Gen’l 8up'l Detroit he also inferred that the electric light
promise* much in this direction. The
HsibtC- Wasvwoava.
Gaa’lPaaaaudTlekat Aeent.Chleaso.
corn worm fHchothi* armigera) was de­
scribed, and ite great and exceptional
raid in the Northern States referred to
during tho past year. The renmdir-s rec­
ommended were fall plowing.Wrapping
anti ,_daer Expelled—Long suffering of one by use of sweet liquids, at&lt;l attracting
f n’T'8 0&lt;4t Peple—A lucky man.
and burning with bright ligh(4

STONEs 1« THE KlDnEY

It is by no means a strange thing that Dr.
Kennedy nhould have received the followinr
letter. By reading It you will see in one minutc why James •Andrew* was tankful:
Troy, N. Y. April K, 18B0.
Dr. D. Kennedy, Rondout, N. Y.
Dear Sir:—Until within a recent dale 1 had
for rovcrnl years fcuITcred greatly from gravel,
called by the doctors the Brick dust eedimciA
For aboutayear past thia sediment has not
passed off in the usual manner, but lias accu­
mulated, causing me untold pain. Having
heard ot "Kennedy’s Favorite.Remedy" I tried
It in my case, and after using about &lt;mc and a
half bottle, 1 voided u stone from the bladder,
of an oval shape, 8-16 of an nch long, aud
rough on Ite surface. I scud you the largest
piece that you may See of what it is composed
Since then I hare felt no pain. 1 now consider
myself cured, aud cannot express mr thank­
fulness and gratitude for so signal a Jellveranc
from a terrible disease. You have my consent
to use this letter, should you wish to do so, for
benefit of other sufferers. '
Your trulv, Jame* Andrews.
No. 19 Marshal Sr., Ida HUI.
When we consider that the medicine which
did this service for Mr. Andrews cost only a
dul ar a bottle, it would teem thatJpenKms uf
fileted In like fashion can affom tbc expense of
testing it* virtue*. Get it of tout druggist- or
addreM Dr. David Kcunedv, Rondout, N. Y.
"Dr. Kennedy’s Favorite Remedy" for sale bv
all druggist*.

THE ONLY MEDICINE
IJ KITHKB LIQUID OR DRY FORM

I

\murn, THB BOWXLS,
aid rn xwnrs.
WHY ARE WE SICK?

KIDNEY-WORT \
WILL SURELY CURE

k KIDNEY DISEASES,

LIVER COMPLAINTS,
rXLES, OOXITII’ATIM, VBXMARV

|Why frighimred or*rdtaar**red Kidney*.*
Z2NXUDNKT-W&lt;mTmufrxM&lt;*i"AM&gt;7-. J.i
Utepmspla Bry Thrall. r«a, tatt=K
«msm»padta«Bof •kMaata six quart*
C
■rodhte* alsotaUwaMVansvaryCmeaa-f.
tratoA tor thaaafhal ranwd raUfly prep-re u. J

PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM.
ESSS

' JlwtsUa Ctkpe.

GINGERTONIC

—Pigs are often lost for want of proper
attention. A sow that farrows in a lot
with a drove of other hogs is almost sure
to lose her offspring before a &lt;lav old,
. especially if the weather is cold and many
gather to bed in one place. When a sow
save* only one or two pigs it i* often
better to take them away, as it does not
pay to suffer her to nurse so small a litter.
The mother should be fed liberally on
slops and grain when her pigs are young,
as it is all-important that their growth
should be pushed forward.

|

।

R*]&gt;id Movement In Beef.

So long as our surplus beef is sent
.
abroad for market, European competi­
tion will fix a limit to tno upward ten­
dency of price. As population presses
upon pasturage, and odds to the value of
corn, the cost of beef-making will in­
crease. Thus the margin for breeder
aud feetier is gradually narrowing. Will
it render' unprofitable’the production of
beef? Not at all. It will shari&gt;en the
wits of those engaged in the business,
induce study of animal physiology and
teach a multitude of economies in the
practice of feeding aud management
There are instances of success &gt;n feed­
ing on the sterile soils of New England,
and at the same time failures in the
country of broad prairies and cheap corn
west of the Mississippi. There is quite
as much in the man a* in the land. It
is a question whether the range of ca­
pacity for this business is not -equal to
the whole breadth of .physical and
economic differences that modify it*
profits.
Whatever else may contribute to profit,
a* the margin lessens, early maturity
will be very
prominent
Great
Britain
was
the first to^ learn
this practical lesson. The Shorthorn
is a result of it in English breeding, and
it is enforced and emphasized in En­
glish feeding. American feeders are al­
ready learning it. They are finding out
that good flesh can be taken on, not by
spasmodic generosity of ration, but by
continuous abundance. The flush suc­
culence of summer diet doe* not har­
monize well with an excess of harsh
straw and coarse stover in winter. Good
hay and sound grain may compensate for
loss of vital heat in a pitiless storm, while
it may not lay on an ounce of flesh. It
has long since been learned that the cov­
eted mixture of fat and fibre, the
••marbling” of beef, is not obtained by
alternate stuffing and starving. The
loss in this country from periodica) ce.ssation of growth, in summer's drouth or
winter's cold, is enormous.
There is another reason for early ma­
turity. The cost of a pound of flesh is
always greater during the second year
than in the first; greater in increasing
ratio the third, the fourth. This m«y
be generally known but is seldom fully
realized. The Fat Stock Show in Chi­
cago illustrated forcibly the fact. There
were nine young animal* exhibited, not
Shorthorns but Hereford*, from 193 to
days old, none of which had gained
less than two pounds per day from birth,
weighing from 400 to 880 pounds, and
averaging 6&lt;)3 pounds. Their average
daily gain was two and fifty-seven onehun'dreth pounds. Then there were nine
grade Shorthorns about two yeani old,
or from 620 to 960 day*, all of which
gained above two pounds daily, aveng­
ing scarcely two and one-tenth nouncla.
These were the only beef animals in the
exhibition that came up to two-ponnd
gain daily or were les* than two years
old. though there were 133 all told,
some of which had made less than a
pound per day. One had lived 2.900
days, making but ninety-two one-hundreth pound per day. Another at 2,760
days showed a gain of one and fifteen
one-hundreths daily.
As a rule, the
longer kept the smaller rate of gain.
One grade Shorthorn, only 679 dav* old,
bred by H. C. Nelson, weighed 1,525
pounds, and J. D. GUett’s ‘^Wild BUI”
was tame enough to put on a weight of
1,935 pounds in 872 dav*. It h quite
certain that these animals were fed at a

re of all vitality,
lunga, liver, kkl
shirts as button behind Pd bin a goaer.
One of the great difficulties of life is What’s the style o’ yours, my son?”
They rose up as ’one, locked armv
mands trained locultias and much and passed into the cabin, and the big
strength of character. Is It reasonable, man looked after them and whistled:
then, to expect of voting men and wom­
•‘ May-be they hain’t used to travel­
en that they shall be prudent and judi­ ing fast-class and being polite to
cious in expenditure, when as boys and strangers! But I’ll forgive vem- Lands!
girls they had do incoruo and no prac­ bat won't the starch begin to peel off
tice? It is the theory of most parents as soon as we slide around the pint and
that their children have ail that tbev git to feel the sea! Yam! yum! But it
should reasonably desire, since* it is all will be too enthusiastically billowy for
that the paternal purse can afford; lib­ anyth ing!” —Del roil Free Brut.
eral comforts, many luxuries; and that
Hygiene -of the FeeL
to give them money which they would
of course waste is an unjustifiable in­
Handsome feet are necessary to the
dulgence and extravagance.
entirety in physical beaaty, which we
educating power of responsibility, or defend far more ’han any picture—the
the wisdom of laying the necessity of work of the hands of man. To be hand­
choice and decision upoti children from some, the first requisite is that the feet
should be neither too large nor too
the very beginning of their power of
choice and decision. Of course they small, but in proportion to the size of
will make mistakes, and these very the person to whom they belong. The
mistake* teach them as no admonition accepted idea in handsome feet Inclines
or example can do. Every intelligent to slenderness about the toes, a high
child of six or seveh vear* of age, being instep, a round rather than a high heel,
and a deep curve or hollow in the sole.
given Ahe control of his spending mon­
that feet of
ey, whether it be a penny a week or a Anatomists tell
shilling, will at first buy what he does this shape are possessed of musculax
not want,.and bewail the absence of the strength and power in walking saperioi
to those that are flat and hard. Too
thing, he did desire. But presently his
blunders will have tonght him a, bal­ small feet are to be deplored rather
ancing of claims, a deliberation of than admired, as being opposed to the
choice, of which he could not otherwise eternal fitness of things.
The care 'of the feet should begin
Lave seen the necessity. Ho will be­
gin to save hi* pennies,'because he see* with babies, when hard, long sbee*
that shillings buy something better should be selected. These will give the
toes a chance to grow natarally and
worth having. Aud the little headlong straight, and no matter if the shoes do
prodigal will have started on the road look too large, you will bo well paid for
to thrift and prosperity almost before this annoyance when the child grows
ho know* the meaning of the word*.
up with a symmetrical foot— and one of
But that this sense of ownership may a proper size to support, tho body—
do it* work it is essential that the al­ which it can put to tho ground fearless­
lowance should be fixed, the limit with­ ly and without pain. There i* no oc­
in which it may bo spent clearly under­ casion to fear that tho foot will be too
stood, and good advSce withheld except largo if left alone, and you may be sure
when it is asked for. And a* the chil­ you” will never make it smaller iby
dren grow older, the tam alotted them crowding it into a small shoe, for the
should be increased, till it covers all more it is pinched and tortured the less
their per^dnal expenditure. Ethel at beautiful and symmetrica! it will be­
fifteen should bo as competent to buy come.
her stockings, gloves, ribbons, under­
The present fashionable shoo is an
clothes, even. her dresses, so far as instrument of torture, and should be
quality aud price are concerned, a* her | frowned Jo..n by allI sensible women,
mother. And she will be, if she began rhe fashion-makers don t seem to .care
purchasing her toys and pencils at sec. a fig whether it is made according to
But she must be rigorously held to the physiological
■ ’ ' ’ principle*
■ • ■
—
—’
or ---not, and
logic of her mistakes. If she buy taste­ wo’aien blindly adopt them despite the
less and flimsy things, she mast pay tne fact that all case and grace must be lost
penalty of wearing them or going with­ in tho effort required to keep balanced
out. Next time her chastened choice on tho point* ot tho toe* ami a two and
will not betray her. Or, if Jack buy a a half inch heel. Every lady should
worthless j%ck-knifo, or a mongrel cultivate the beauty of her walk with
puppy, or a' shoddy coat, and must as much care as she would the beauty
abide ,by his bargain, he has bought ot her face and form, and properly
with them an experience which maxes made shoes are an absolute necessity to
it cheap.
a graceful carriage. They should be
But precept and practice will go for long and wide enough to accommodate
nothing unless tho law is absolute that the foot, with the heels never more than
there shall be no parental alms-giving. an inch high and placed directly under
It will be so hard tot mamma to see the the heel, and not the hollow of the foot.
girls in shabby gloves and soiled hair­ There is no portion of the human form
ribbons, because they have inconsider­ which is the seat of more ills than the
ately apportioned their month’s inherit­ feet; and they can only be avoided by
ance, that dainty parcels will be apt to a strict adherence to a neatly-fitting,
find their way to the bureau drawers, common-sense shoe, which is neither
or small advances to offer themselves too large nor too small.
from their kindly purse. Or it will
We all accept the old Greek statues
seem s'ueh a creditable taste in the as the tinest models of the highest types
boys to want that microscope, and to bo of physical beauty, and in not one of
so eager to study entomology, although them do we find evidence of the com­
they nave spent the price ot tho micro­ pression of the feet. The toes set well
scope in a bicycle, that tho fascinating apart, there is never to be found on
instrument is very likely to appear in them signs of corn or callosity, and the
their room. And by this tender and instep rises with graceful, poetic arch,
cruel generosity all tha force of their surmounted by a slender ankle. We
experience will bo wasted. Unless ef­ do not find this classic and elegant con­
fect is to follow cause, what discipline formation in one pair of feet out of a
can there bo? The law bears hard thousand in the present day, and it is
only on those who infringe it, and to to be accounted for. first, by the im­
the end that they may not again trans­ prudence and vanity of the mother, and
gress.
afterwards by tho children themselves,
Besides the prudence which this sense when they are free to follow the bent of
of ownership develops it begets a ^elf- their own inclinations.
Corns are produced by pressure or
respect a* wffil. The habit of teasing
for money or for gifts is a form of beg­ friction, and are simply a protective
gary, and, like all beggary, degrading. growth thrown out for the-purpose ot
The child feels, although he docs not preventing the tissues being injured.
reason, that he has a right to certain They are sufficiently painful at all
possession* at the hands of hl* parents. times, but are tho most unbearable
They are to him, source* of unlimited when an accumulation of pus takes
supply, and if hi* demand is refused he place beneath them. Tho escape of
is apt to feel resentful and defrauded. this drop of pus is prevented by the
But if he is told that just such a sum hardened Or thickened cuticle, which
and no more can be afforded for his lit­ must be soaked in warm water, then
tle pleasure*, and that he may choose removed by a sharp pointed knife.
himself what that shall buy, he will be Avoid tho use of caustic in the treat­
rich with half the money which would ment of corns, but great relief will be
by tho application of carbolio
have seemed niggardly had it been obtained
1
spent for him. There is a sweet res- ।acid. Hard corns may bo treated as
sonableness about
children.
and follows: Take a thick piece of soft
leather or felt, cut a hole in the center
of it, spread the leather or felt with ad­
And of all forms of trust none is so hesive plaster, and apply it so that the
flattering as that which confides the summit of the corn will rest in the hole
use of money, for it implies in the re­ in tho center. Upon going to bed at
ceiver judgment, prudence, honesty night fill the hole in tho center of the
leather with a P**te made of sod* and
and honor.—Harpers Bator.
soap; wash it ou in the morning. Re­
peat the same process lor several nights
d-Atbeticfi oo the Billows.
and the corn will be removed.
Bunions are such serious and painful
Cksy were an utter—too utter— diseases of the foot that it is always
oiowd, and right back of them sat a best to consult an experienced chiropo­
nig, flat-footed chap on hi* way to the dist iu their treatment, but great relief
ftunber camps.
will be experienced by the application
T think thia lake breeze quite too of a slice of lemon bound on and worn
exhilarating for anything.” observed a until the inflammation subaid?*.
young man who ate dinner with a pair
To relieve the feet when they are
of green kid* on.
sore and raw. balho in salt water night
••!’▼• got something that beat* it all aad morning, and wear plantain leaves
holler.” chipped in । the big mam wrapped round the feet inside the stock­
‘•They filled the bottle right up for a ings for a month.
quarter. I don’t want to buck agin
Perspiration of the feet is very annoy­
the saloon on board, but if you say ing, but can be cured by using ammonia
you’ve got cramps you shall have a puli in the foot bath.
at it”
When the feet are sore, as from long
If green kids had ’em he wouldn’t walking, take a tablespooufu! of epsom
own It, and to cover his embarassment salts, five or six drops of tincture of cap­
another of the party with eye-glasses sicum, and put it In a shallow basin of
and a white ueck-Ue remarked:
water —just enough to cover the sold*
"Roll on, thou troubled waters, of the feet—and soak them for twenty
roll”
minutes. You will be surprised at the
” Oh. you’ll git roll enough before relief it will give you.
It will cure
yon git across Saginaw Bay?’ replied
burning of the fe«t that so many are
the bi*r man.
ime this breeze has troubled with in the summer.—Oor. Dtbeen blowing an hour you’ll feel like an
old dish-rag hung up to scare the crows
--Johann Strauss celebrates present­
“’Sil. neck-tie gave him a killing
ly the fiftieth anniversary of nis first
stare, but it glanced off, and one of the waltz, which was written when be was
ladies said:
’
at the age of six. He has written since
then three hundred and ninety-eight
waltses, polkas and quadrilles, and has

my vain effort* io find relief. Mr. .W»B», in
M&lt;&gt;rri»' drug More, told.me iu trj-Browif* Iron |
Bitter*. Two U&lt; I '&lt;•* have nude inc feel like a !
new perron, and J believe I am pcnuonenlly I
cored ca all my dtatreM, I weigh twrnty-tour
pound* more now than J did a tuontli ago.”

A fox that liad Joel hi* tell iu a claie; asM*
be had a .little “bruab** with the dog*.

Lnita E. I'inkhama Vegetable Compound revivea the drooping spirit*: inrigorau-* and barmouizes tbc organic function*; give* efawUcUy
audflrmneMlo the step, restore* the natural
lustre to the eve, aud plan'* on Hie pale check
of beaaty tbc ireah ro»c*v&gt;f life’s spring &lt;nd
early nunimcr time.

PRINCIPAL* LINE

f
|
’
!

chi o^a.ca-0
Iu,“,c !'“ no •“P’TW lor Albert

One hundred odd seventy-five new doctors
were hatched out of a tingle Chicago college I
last week at* setting "Quack, quack."
I
A' CAPITAL SUBSTITUTE.
We can't be boys or girls again. Age and In­
firmity arc sure to come, but God did not or­
dain sickness. That is our fault. There ia no
Fountain of Youth, but there U a Fountain of
Health, and its other name la Dr. David Ken­
nedy'* “Favorite Remedy.” it comes from na­
ture—from the Helds aud and flowers, and like
them is “wry good." Try it for all complaints
of women, blood troubles, and pains anil aches
everywhere. If you can’t get it at the store,
send one dollar for a lottle to the doctor, at
Rondout, N. Y.
*

IT WAS THE RIGHT THING TO DO.
One of our prominent druggists in speaking
of proprietory medicine* said if all proprietory
medicines was a* good as Rineharts Liver Fibs
he could take pleasure In telling them.

'

law of tnivfl. ______ _^**2S**^C

KANSAS CITY
counectloai
I* B***

Through

Cfvy'abvut
Fare, bl

T. J POTTEfi,
PEHCEVAL LOWEU,
• - — ——— - —— ■ -o—r,
Gea. Tte**. dfft,
Chicago, I1-.
Chicago, IK

“Blest be the tie that binds” Gulteau to tbc
necks twirled.

QUICK AND SURE,
Many miserable people drag themselves
about with failing strength, feeling that they
are steadily sinking into their graves, when by
using Parlier* Ginger Tonic they would find u
cure commencing wmi
With tirenrsi
flratuo*c,
dose,anu
and vnai
vital
vure
(n-and Hlnmgtb quicklv aud surely coming
i&gt;Lck to them,
Clothes arc the beat poiuporta atnuug «tran*
era—character among acquaintance*.

Ptbaoe;

A FOOLISH MISTAKE,
|
Don't
make the mistake
confonndiug
j remedy
ma
,
10«Kof nwoieino.
of merit with ,quack
medicines. Vwe I
j *|&gt;eak from experience when weaay that Par­
i kcra Ginger Toole l» a *u-.-lin4 health re»torj stive which will do all tint U cUim. d h-r it.
We have .ureti it oqrselres with the happleu
results for rhcunuii*qj and when worn out by
overwork. See adv.— rimes,
'
A Baptist clergyman in Tennessee, famous
for his immersions, is called tbc Great Dipper.
The symptoms of Itching Piles are moisture
like prcKpiration, Intense itching, most at night
seems as if pin *unn» were crawling in or
about the rectum. The more you scratch the
worse they itch, very distressing. The private
parts are often affected. Dr. Swayne’s Oint­
ment Is the most effective remedy extant for
this tormenting com plain L Give* rest at night
without that desire to scratch. Also has on
equal tn quickly eradicating Tetter, Itch, Salt
Rheume, Erysipelas. Barbers' Itch; Pimples,
all Scaly. Crusty, itchy Skin Eruptions. Here
is the proof, “Certuiniv the best remedy ever
used tn my practice," I)r. Cotton. Woodstock,
Vt.. "troubled with Itching Piles for over twen­
ty years, it cured me completely," L. 8. Messer
Enfield, Me. Sent for 50 ct* (in 3 ct stamps)
3 boxes, SI.25, By Dr. Swayne &amp; Son. Philad'a
Pa. Sold by all druggist*.

BITTERS
r.noXV'VS IRON RITTERS am
a certain cur« fbr all disease*
requiring; a complete tonic; espe­
cially Indigestion. Dyspepsia, Inter­
mittent Fevers, Want or Appetite,
Ixnw of Strength, Lack of Encrsty,
etc. Enriches the blood, strength­
en* tho muM'lw, and gives new
lift* to the nerves. Act* like a
charm on the digestive organs,
removing nil dyspeptic symptoms,
rnch a* tasting the food, Belching,
Heat in the Stomach, Heartburn,
etc. The only Iron Preparation
that will not blacken tho teeth or
give headache. Sold by all Drug­
gists at $1.00 a bottle.
BROWN CHEMICAL OO. .
•
•
Baltimore, Md.

How can man and wife be one, when the
woman is one herselfI

There Is a general complaint among drug­
* N'TED, Af-ot&gt;—Startling m ths [«&lt;«■ of
gists that they cannot get enough of “Dr.
romance- from the lowca «!rt4hi of atavarr
Sykes' Bure Cure for Catarrh" to supply the
to a poalttan an eng the firnt in tbc land. •"Lite
demand- if thus disappointed write direct to
and Timaa" of
the Doctor, 100 Madison St., Chicago,

W

If a man really wants to know of how little
Importance he is. let him go with his wile to
the dressmaker's.__
“ROUGH ON RATS."
Tbc thing desired found aUhut. AskDnig---- B
gist for "Rough du Rate.” It dear* out rats'
mice, roaches, flea, bed-bugs. 15c. boxes.
There is a prevailing superstitious terror of
of the number thirteen. That’s probaldy the
reasou that folks don't admire the Chicago girls
■hoc.

“MY TORMENTED BACK,"
Is the exclamation of more than one poor han!
working man and woman. Do you know why
it aches I It is because your kidneys are over
tasked and need Mrengthcuing.and your system
needs to be cleansed of bad humors. Kidney
Wort is tbc mediclue you need. “It acts like a
charm," says a well known physician. “1 never
knew it to fail.” Liquid or dry sold by drug­
gists.—Boston Post

Virtue is a comparative term, tbc meaning of
which is unknown to those who have never been
tempted. It is the motive, not the deed, that
couhte.

F. T. BOISE,
DUGS,
BOOKS,
JEWELRY,
WALL PAPER,
WIAMW SHADES,
DlKSTl’FFs,
PROPRIETARY MEDICINES,

PKESCR1PT1 SIX'S,
RECEIPTS.
And every article kept tn a (tH-clu« drug etore

PAINT AND BRUSH
DEPARTUi; T

0(1(1

(111(1

F.T. BOISE-

FREDERICK DOUCLASS
written by hlmaclf; IS full pare llluitratloea; briaa
F2.4O Ouulralt -Uncle Ton&gt;'» Uablti" la TbrllHag
*nd roniantlc tnterwl, with ttw add-1 ckarm that
crery word l» true. A marvelotta ttory taoai graph­
ically tolil and ot great btrtnriea! value. Thb roV
umn wID be eagerly &gt;ou*ht far by the ba nd red* at
tbonaaad* who have waicbed the rvmarkabla ca
reer and have been thrilled by the vleqnenae of
thia wonderful man. The work fire* &gt;i&gt; account
of many Interview* with prominent mm and nar­
rate* many anecdote* concerning them unknown to
the general public Itaboonda In many grarefal
toucPee both of ^lt and eloquence.
-Ur teaneb a remarkable mau that people Ilka
to read about him. aud no wonder.''— Boatou Coagrasa&lt;ionali,t.
■ It t* a*Ji.*|&gt;lrlngaa apoent.” -Woinaa'* Joantl
"No »tr*n&lt;vr etory Kat been, or ever will W,
tuid."—Roatri. Advertlrer.
"It 1* a more aueorbitig tale than any creation ot
fiction."—Troy (N Y.JTfmoa.
-JtreUoed to * wide *ale."—Harford Couraat.
•The whole »tory I* exceedingly well toW,M—
It&lt;x:li»at«r bemoeral.
AddrraaJ.S. GOODMAN O. OO, Chicago 10.

VOL. V., 1883.

The Sanitary Engineer.
The recognized authority on all matters re­
lating to Public Health, Food and Drug Adji­
teration, Drainage and Water 8appJy, Beam
and hot water heating, plumbing and ga» frtting, gaa and electric lighting, .treating and
ventilation.
Querttona on any of theae subject* will be
anaw cred in the columna of Tux Sanftarv Esuixbkr, free of charge.
Tbc opinion of this journal upon all teehoi-

�«* tw nth
&gt; hwl mad*

from Latest Dispatches.

&lt; .ucpn-tlnn,

Nixa companies of the State mil!!!* and
eight cotnpanle* of Untied Ktaies troop* ar­
rived at Omaha, Neb,, ou the 11th, in the lu-

. Jng.il!.-. v,-,n

himself.

Mr.

MU appropriating-*7,500 to aid tbc Society of
ten Army of the Cumberland to erect a statue
to General Garfield.

the British Government of Daniel McSwoeney,
dvut ot California. Mr. Sawyer offered a reaolirtion
was adopted, instructing the Seo—*/&gt;f constructriacoosln, with
bill for n

its wore agreed to—directing
---------- Jtan throe of tho flvo members
of tho commission shall bo of tbe same politlo
al party, and that not more than three shall
bo Prohibitionists, tho vote on
tiro
latter anu-ndm-nt belnr3Sto la. Amendment*
to tbnCblneae Immigration till! were nrn-ctl
to—errtiulniiiiu’ tin- wonts “Chinese Inlxir.-rs."

■nd unskilled laborer* and Chinese employed
in mining—25 to 25—and providing that no Ce­
lestial shill be naturalised within the United
parted frorq Committee of the Whole, when
Mi. Ingwlla* motion to limlf tbc suspension of
tbe coming of Chinese laborers to ten years
wm again defeated—3) tn 2L The bill wm
then pasae-1—28 to 15....Bills wen- reported
' In the II&lt;iu*e and referred tn Committee
of tho Whole—for tho admission Into
tbe Utjlon a* a State of the Territory of Wash­
ington, und dinx-tlng that all public buildings
shall tie constrpctcd of material found in tho
State wh-re-ter- buildings ore to be erected.
TbeAgricultural Appropriation bill camcup
InCommlttce of the Whole, and amendments
were adopted—for statistics in regard to tho
manufaeturo and exportation of oleotnsr. garino; for statements of freight charges by rail
and .river; to appropriate $35,000 for experi­
ment* in making sugar from sorghum, and to
increase ths allowance forinvestigating 'ore*try.. Tbe bill wm then reported to tho House
■nd pareed.
ARESOLunoNwa* reported in the Senate
on the 10th requesting tho President to ar­
range with Nicaragua for the settlement of
^public and private claims. A resolution di­
recting tho use of Government vessels in dtatril-uting supplies to tho sufferer* along tho
Mtastedppt and its tributaries was adopted.
Aft-r d-liato the bill for the creation of a
commission on tho liquor traffic, to bo com­
peted -f aerra p -rson.*. was pmuuMl-ayte.
usys. IL A motion to take up the Japanese
indemnity Fund bill wtw nogarivt-d bv a vote
of 14 to 3L Am adjournment to tho Lltb was
taken ...In the House a minority report
was presented, doetartng U. D. Ball entitled to
a oca: us Delcg.ito from Alaskx Four m&lt;~
mortals from Utah, with over fifty thousand
r.gn &gt;tures. were preaented. asking u stupen, aion of action on bills relating to that Terrt*f*F*nl
appointmetu of un ■ unpreju­
diced" commission to determine the state of
th- flood In tho MlMlanlprt wm
A joint
resolution for the use of Governmcntsteanicrs
In distributing food'to tho sufferer* ,in tho
Bouth by overflow wm adopted. The private
CsJ trlar was th 'n taken up. An evening *csalon wm hcM toconslder Pension bill*, at which
■eventy-seven of tho bills were passed. Ad­
journed tt the 13th.
A number of petitions were presented and
uawuu
nr 'nerreferredthe Senate
an wcixn.
the 13th. Mr.
Sher­
re^huinn
of tbc Cincinnati
man presented a resolution
t—
of
Chamber of Commerce
u«klng Congress toreto re­
aeree asking
lieve tbe sufferers by overflow along the Ml.*-

struct on of timber. Tho Tariff-Commission
bfilsvu taken up. and Mr. Slater urged tho
adoption of a tree-trade policy... In tbe
H um the Speaker announced the Select
" Committee on Women Suffrage a* fol[tows: M«*ts. Camp, White. Shwwin.
•
Hepburn. Springer, Vance, Muldrow
and Shackleford. A nn-mortal was pnxp-ntiM
from the Ls-g sintlve Assembly of Utah asking
Suspension of a lion on tbe affairs of that
■T. rr t &gt;ry until a thorough investigation could
mode by a committee. The Senaf AntiTolygntny bill c-mo up. tbe pending question
l&gt;: ng nn a po nt of order raised by Sir.Con. vers • (Oh o) that h" bill must receive It* flirt
oonsidernin n in Committee ot the Whole, ns
• .it pvov.dod for an appropriation. After
•a runn ng d bate tho Speaker over­
ruled th&lt;.- point of order. i»nd Mr.
Converse appealed from the decision, which
appeal was laid ou the table—IW to HO. Mr.
Haskell then demmrled the prevl .u* question,
and tho vote whs 118 to 4—th- Democrat* nfrafning from voting, thus raising the point of
no cionntm A
n ’t
*&gt;...11.......
ineffectual attempt to effect a compromise wm
ma-ta. the Democrat* insisting unon beingp-tmftte Ito offer utn-irJmeuta, and Mr. Haskell
M•trentmisly insisting ujxm th- poM^tgcof
tbe MH without «m. n huent*. A moUan to ri­
fts V bill to tbc Judiciary Committee wa*
1&lt;*-* ’&lt; to S6-Mud tbe matter was finally
p.rlidtM to go over. Tbe
Aruiv
Appr-ipr'atloa a bill
(«27.43l,ira«)
wm
ordeo-t printed and recommitted. Bills were
tatreduc’d: By Mr, Dunn, to authorize f&lt;mal a mooter public lands;
bj
Mr.
Robertson,
i.
__ ■_
prot-eti &gt;n «&gt;f life
and property endnnbr ft avia nf the Miaris&lt; ppi River; by
lukan appropriating $800.0)0 for the re­
' sufferer* by the overflowing of the
ippl Hirer; \rr Mr: HazcUim*. to make
not * legal tender for customs:

g

a certain denomination.

Domestic.

Ths Receiver of the Mechanics' National
Ute am i.: of Director 8. H. Condict on a civil
suit, claiming that be bad knowledge of and
profited by the defalcation of Cashier
Baldwin. Tbe defendant gave ball la $2 jQiO'JO.
lx reply to a telegram from Washington
«t»w in LoOislaua, the Chief State Engineeroo
the Wth says: ’‘Tbe overflow In Louisiana
coaaidershie arras in Weal Care &gt;11, Moorhouse,
Btcbiand, Ouachita, Caldwell. Franklin and
CatanuUta. A lar.’e territory L? now being orerflowwd in Point Coppee, A wyeUea, Si. Landry,
West Baton Booge and Lafourche. The
overflow nl tbe parNbe* below the mouth of

sd is tally 300.QQObatea.
Tbe outlook is ax­

BOOTS AND SHOES

he wm found asleep with U»e corpse ot tbe

tho 18th, tn which G. P. Armstrong, a ma­
chinist, wm fatally wounded and one or two
others were injured by the military.
WillUM Crambe, ot Cleveland, wm in­
stantly killed ou the 11th by touching both
poles of an electric light machines
Seciiefart Kibewood on the It th ordered
Agent Armstrong to send one hundred Indian
children from the Crow agency Id Moatana to
certain-farmers in Ohio, to be developed in
mind and muscle.
Tub National Board of Heald on tbe 11th
sent out the gratifying report that small-pox
was decreasing in all parts of the country.
Captain J. M. Lee, of the United States
army, who wm ordered to Mississippi to
report on the necessit'cs of tbc sufferers by
overflow, returned to Memphis on the lltb.
lie said. the destitution had not been half
stated. The levee between Memphis and
Arkansas City wm broken in forty places,
and at some points the Mississippi wm fifty
miles wide.
At Bloomingdale, a suburb cf Paterson, N.
J.', 1,700 hands employed at the rubber works
went out on a strike on the 11th.
■
SnERtrr HEALEV,«&gt;f Montana, has been re­
leased by tho half-breed bell igvrents, and Iim
returned to Fort Benton.
The annual report of the Canal Auditor of
New York show* that the railroad war caused
a Iom of $523,029 tn tolls for 188L
S F. Delavan, of Philadelphia, who for
eight yckrs has suffered from a stroke of j-aralysis, and ha* unquestfonably been cured, at­
tributes his recovery to prayer.
Orders arc again being received in Wall
street to purchase Confederate bonds. One
investor wants *100,020 with coupons of July,
18®.
Mrs. Sarah E. Howe, the President of the
so-called Woman's Bank in Boston, has been
sentenced to three years’ imprisonment.
Duhino the week ended on the lllh the
circulation of silver dollars aggregated *144,500, against $200,490 for the corresponding
Two of the hotel* at Biddeford, Me., a
well-known watering-place, were destroyed by
fire on tbe morning of tho 13th. Loss, *100,000.
Navigation on the Illinois A Michigan Ca­
nal opened on the 13th.
Delta, La., was.ou the 13th abandoned to
the flood, the people fleeing by every possible
means.
The Duncannon Rolling-mill at New Bloom­
field, Pa., wm burned on the 13th. Los*,
$75,000. Three hundred men were thrown out
of employment.
James M. Davis, Deputy Revenue Collector
at Nashville, was waylaid and shot dead by a
gang of twenty moonshiners, xcar McMinn­
ville, Tenn., on the 18th. He is said to have
arrested fully three thousand men for illicit
distilling.
A train on the Gulf Road, fifty mile* south
of Fort Worth, running at the rate of twentyfive miles an hour, on the 13th lca]&gt;cd over the
space of a rail which had been removed by
wreckers, and went swiftly on.

mttted by null to the Chairman.
Jonathan H. Cobb, the founder of the silk
business in the United States, died at his
home in Dedham, Maas., a few darn ago.
JcDOR Samuel Blatcbford, of New York,
wm on tbe 13th nominated for Associate
Justice of the Supreme Court of tho United
State*.

INTEND TO MAKE,

'

nominated by tbe President as United States
Minister to China.
.
A Washixotox dispatch of the 13tb states
that Gulteau wm more taciturn and was only
Interested tn tbe sale of his photographs, etc.
He wm actively engaged in correcting tbe
proofs for the new edition of “Truth.”

PRICES THAT WILL SECURE A LARGE SALE AT ONCE

Forclim.

300 SUITS!

MacLeax, the would-be Msasstu' of Queen
Victoria, lias been Indieted for high .treason,
an offense punishable with death.
Thibtt Jews, with an aggregate capital of
38,000 rubles, hare left Russia to become farm­
ers in Palestine.
.
An American company at Constantinople,
tweked by Minister Wallace, isendearoring to
secure a concession for a railroad in tbe prov­
ince of Bagdad.
A raw days ago Leroy Gordon, who wm
superintending tbe construction, of tbe Red
River bridge at Winnipeg, fell from a bracket
to the ice, thirty feet below, aud was instant­
ly killed.
By the explosion on-the 10th of a large
amount of powder in one of the Canadian Pa.
clfic tunnels in British Columbia, one man
was killed, and three wounded.
Tna French Senate on tbe 11th, by a vote of
167 to 123, rejected an amendment to tbe
Primary Education bill requiring schoolmas­
ters tq teach their pupils their duty towards
God and tbe country.
Pendle A Waite, woolen merchants of
London and New York, fallel Iu the former
city on tbe 11th for $250,(KX).
The editor of a journal tn Guatemala rccently printed an article which gave offense
to United States Minister Logan. The latter
complained to.Prcsldcnt Barrios, who at once
arrested the offending journalist and suspend­
ed the publication of his paper.
The legislature of the Orange Free State
would not permit President Brand to accept
the Grand Cross of St. Michael tendered by
Great Britain for his services In the settle,
ment of the Transvaal difficulty.
Dr. Thomas Evans, the American dentist
of Paris, wm recently robbed of $120,000 ire
an employe, who fled to Brussels, where ho

A huge meteorite recently fell with a great
shock at s point fifty miles southeast of Fort
Asslnabolne, causing consternation at Fort
Benton, nearly one hundred miles southward.
At a recent council of the Austro-Hunga­
rian Cabinet, the Minister of War announced
the complete occupation of Crivoscfe, in Her­
zegovina. '
United States Minister Adams writes to
a member of Congress that official dispatches
to him from Washington and private letters
from bls wife are constantly opened by the
Chilian authorities.
An appalling earthquake recently occurred
in Costa Rica, Central America. Four towns
were swallowed up and several thousand per.
sous perished.
A fire at Winnopcg, Manitoba, on the 13th
Personal and Political.
The vote In ths United States “cnatc on the destroyed eleven business places. Los*;
final passage of the Chinese Immigration bill *100,000.
A ~cablegram from
Dublin—on —
the 18th
wMasxouowe:
"
, -------Bock,an. Ora,™ I
u“‘
In
wen, tapra.lns,
(Wtaj. Cxskrell, (&gt;)kn. Fair, Farley. Garland, I and tenant* Were availing thcnuclve* largely
‘Ht.nre,Cronnnn.
Hill (CbLj
(Col.). JackJoIlM J(1UCHale,
, (X,.Harris.
V , M1Her
M1|Jer I d tllc Laud act- _________
(N.Y.),Morgun. Pugh. Itan.sotu, Sawyer. Slater. 1
, .
Teller. Vance, Vest, voortteea, Wglker—~J.
Teller,
LATER NEWS.
Nays
ats — Mrsara.
MrMr*. Aldrich, Allison. Blair,
Tna
The Cincinnati Gazette
GasetU of
ot the *4th
,4th propro­
Brown. Conger, lmvi*(lil.)f Dawes, Edmunta, nounces the alleged Garficld-ChMe-Rosccraus
Frye.-Hoar. IngnLU, Lupham, McDill, MoMllletter a forgery.
Inn. Merrill—15.
Tho pairs worn announced of Camden,
Mb. Calhoun, the President of the Fourth
Davta (W. Vn.i, Grover. Hampton, Butler. Mo- National Bank, of New York City, who was
Fherson. Johnrfton, Jones (Fla.) and Pcndhton, in favnr of tho MH, with Anthony, Win­ prostrated by the recent discovery that the
dom. Van Wyck. Mitchell, Hawley, Sewell, bank's old and trusted loan clerk was an em­
Platt, ItolUos and Sherman, ogulnst 1L
bezzler, died on the morning of the 14th.
The bill passed by tbe United States Senate
Secbetaht Lincoln on the 14th received
on tbe 10th for a commission on the alcohol
an urgent appeal from Louisiana forriditlonliquor traffic provides for the appointment by
al rations fat 11,000 sufferers in the flooded
the President and confirmation by tbe Senate
of a commission of seven persons, not more parishes, and ordered tbe purchase of 100,000
rations at New Orleans for that purpose.
than four of whom shall be of tbe same politi­
James Ptett, an American civil engineer,
cal party, or be advocates of prohibition, to
hold office not exceeding two years, who shall while on a hand-car on the 14th on the Mexi­
can
National Road, accompanied by three
investigate the alcoholic liquor traffic, its re­
Mexicans, met with an accident at a bridge,
lations to revenue and taxation, and Its gen­
aud all were killed.
eral economic, criminal, moral and scientific
Rohiiebs fired the house of Josiah Hodges,
aspects in connection with pauperism, crime,
social rice, public health and general welfare, near Llano, Tex., on the 14th, and Mrs. Ben­
son and two grandchildren were burned to
and who shall inquire m to the principal re­ death.
sults of license and prohibitory legislation.
Dir. Lamson, prindf.il of a boys' wtninary
Tbc Commissioners are to serve without sal­
near Ixindon, Eng., after several days’ trial
ary, and report within eighteen months after
for the murder by poison of hU relative, Per­
*10,000 is made for their c.x|&gt;c:uca The vote cy John, wm found guilty on tho 14th by the
jury and sentenced to death.
on the passage of the bill wm os follows:
Disi’ATcmu on the 14th from the flooded re­
Yea.»—Aldrich, Allison, Blair, Coke, Conger,
Du vis (Ill.), Dawrai. Edmund*. Ferry, Frye.Gar- gions of the South report that the rivers were
tend. George, Groomc, Hale, Harrison. Haw­ falling, and it wm believed that tbe worst ot
ley. HfU (tail.). Hoar. Lapham. McDill. Mc­
Millan. Maboue. Maxey, Miller (CaL&gt;, Mitchell, tbcMeluge wm over.
MurrilL PtatL Plumb, Kolltns, Sawyer, Sewell,
Pathick McCoffin, an insane citizen of
Sherman. Teller. Walker—34.
Na yd-Bayard. Beck. Hampton. Harris, Waterbury, Vt., killed his wife and mother­
in-law with an ax on the 14th and hid their
bodies in the cellar.
ear*. Kellogg. Jon7« (Nev.), Windom, I
Judge Blatchfokd on the 14th fostnally
(Wis.) and Teller, in favor of tbe
notified President Arthur of his acceptance
of the nomination for Associate-Justice of tho
Supreme Court.
hknrt Chews, a young gentleman of Dub­
In tbc county court-room at Dalias, Tex.,
lin, Ireland, who with hi* brother was making on tbe 14th ex-M*yor J. M. Thurmond during
an extensive tour of the United States, died a quarrel wm shot dead by Robert E. Cowart,
suddenly of pneumonia, in Chicago, ou the a prominent attorney. Tbe Coroner's Jury
12th.
found a verdict of self-defense.
Par«iDENT Arthur on the 11th approved
the act authorising tbc u»c of naval vessel* in ployc* of the Pacific Mill corporation on tbe
aid of sufferers from the Mississippi Cools, 14th stopped 04,000 spindles.
and the act making an appropriation for the
proposed Garfield monument.
for *15,000,000 continued six-pcr ceuL ■ bonds
on the 14th.
Sergeant Mason Tor shooting at Gul teas wm
Ik tbe United States Senate ou tbe 14th ■
calved tt with'apparent indifference. Already memorial from the Legislature ot Wisconsin
numerous petitions from various parts of tbe was received, favoring the Improvement of
the MiasiMippl River in connection with the
great lakes. Mr. Harrison, from the Military
•.bur asking him to panion Mason.
Committee, reported that 50,000 persons were
tacbe of tbe British Embassy at Washington,
died ou the 12th. of diphtheria, alter an illness the Miaaissippl, and presented a joint resolatloti appropriating $100,008 addition* for the
sufferers, which was passed. Th- Postal
Convention in St, Louis the following
Executive Committee vui chosen: Alaforuia, Alfred Moore; Colorado, F. C. Beck­
with; Connectleal, A. J. Morton; I etaware,
A B Flatter- Florida. Jamre H. Wentworth;
Gwrffi.-----; Illinois, Dr. H. J. Parker; In-

YOU WILL FIND UNDER ONE ROOF IN BARRY COUNTY AND WE

House tbe Senate AnM-Polypuny bill, after

WE HAVE JUST OPENED

-------------- —OF------------------

Men’s, Boys’ and Children’s Clothing
THAT WERE BOUGHT CHEAP I CHEAP FOR CASH
:• AND WE INTEND TO SELL

G. A. TRUMAN &amp; SON

First to the front!
I AM NOW RECETVIOG-

A Full Stock of Goods
Of Goods suitable for the Spring trade.

Also the Largest and best Stok of

Ready Made Clothing, for Men, Boys, and Youths,
Ever brought to Nashville, and ranging in price from

Ladies, Misees, Gents &amp; Children’s Fine Shoes
I KEEP THE CELEBRATED ROBHESTER MAKE, STYLISH, DURABLE AND CHEAP.

estSstyles and. can fit all parties
I always keep a Full Stock of CHOICE FAMILY GROCERIES
at prices that defy competition.
You can always rely upon getting the lowest prices on Goods
and the highest prices for your produce at my store. Call and get
prices before you buy
MS. LTDUi

L

I'robutc Order

PimiUI, OF Will, USS., I J0SEP“
AT THE NEW

MEAT MARKET!

E

------ KEEPS------

Fresh, Salt and Smoked

i
.5
-------- OF EVERY DESCRIPTION,----- All at prices'that will

IAve and Let Live.

E
E

i

County of Harry, I — *
Ala session of the Probate Court for tbe County
of Barry, holder, at the Probt
Hasting*, Iu said county on
of February, In the year on.
drtsl and cifi-.ty-tvo.
Hn&gt;Hh. Judge of Probslc.
be estate ot HENRY TBOYEB

On reading and filing tho pstltlen,' duly verified,
of Them** S. Brice, administrator of said estate
praying that bi* Aral account thia day filed with
• 1.1.
&lt;v. ■■&gt;■ «■ I..
anA
I.k II.
Thereupon It J» onkrt-d that

clock in t he forenoon, be aaalcncd for
aaid petition, and that the heirs at

Probate Notice,
alto* caoae. It any there be, why
petitioner should not bo muted.
r, noiorn at vic rrotuun iraav
‘
ng* in said Coan ty on Wednesday

E

£

PrsMat, dsment Smith. J twigs of Probate.
In the matter of tba sstate at 1
DUBKB£,dao«*s*d.

LYDIA E. PINKHAM
■VEGETABLE COMPOUND.

CLEMENT SMITH
ing that setae suftable pe
mtnlatrator of the estate

Probate Order

the bearing of eaid petition,
law oi said dceeated. and all

tounly and

N an bvlllc Marketa.
Corn’, per
Apptas.ps-----Potatoes, new,

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                  <text>ORNO STRONG, !
Editok awd Proprietor.

)

VOLUME IX.
And Her Enrironih

NUMBER 27.
=

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, MARCH 25, 1882

—The burning out of a chimney at
the depot on Saturday evening, caused
the alarm of "fire” to echo' and re-echo
—Fred Barry of North Castleton, along our busy streets, magnificent
gathered eighteen buckets of sap from avenues and useful alleys; the church
one tree btat Sunday. That’s the kind bells to ring; the tin-pail brigade to
turn out; many citizens to turn pale;
of a maple to tap.
v
neither limbs to rapidly perambulate
—M. R. Taylor, while teaming a few
southw-arda, and general excitement.
days since, got caught between his
Not much was said but in ten minutes
wagon and fence-post, and “squoae"
after the cheat was discovered.a bloody
so badly that a right rib wm fractured.
fight occurred, as did also a change in
—On Thursday T. N. Kettle well was the weather. Should the thing happen
arrested at the instance of W. H. Bur­ again we fear the consequences.
gess upon a charge of assault and bat­
—The exodus for Dakota has com­
tery. The trial has been set down for
menced. Capt. Boiaie aud family are
Monday at 2 p. m., before Esq. Potter.
loading a car and will start to-uight
—Benj. Benedict living on the state forth© land of "blizzards” und big
road, east of HoamCr’s corners, has sold “farms. J. F. Holbrook is also loading
bis farm.to arj/Ohio man - ■ Those Ohio
a car, and will follow on Monday. W.
farmersseeMi to have a hankering af­ G. Aylsworth will accompany Mr. H.
ter this part of fair Michigan, and the and family, on a tour of farm-hunting.
way they are snapping up the good Others will probably go in a few
farms in these parts, is a caution.
weeks. Our population, however, ia
—Freem. Rathburn’s household fur­ not decreasing, for hardly a day pass­
niture was sold on Monday to satisfy es without bringing one or more fami­
the demands of a chattie mortgage, lies from Ohio, Indiana, or Pennsyl­
which A. R. Wolcott held on the same; vania, who have come here to stay.
but as Freem. and his "frow” disolved
—The Olds’ residence- is now the
partnership some weeks ago, the things property of H. M. Lee. ho having, on
were useless and no one mourned.
.Thursday, completed a trade with W.
—Lightning struck a tree in Georgv E. Bucl, which makes him lawful own­
Franck’s, sugar bush last Saturday, er of the same, aud Buel the owner of
busted a sap pail and scared his team Lee’s residence on State street. -The
so that they ran some distance through .i consideration for the Olds place was
the woods, making it lively for the Atp only $4,500, although it is conceded to
on the sled to which they were attach­ bo the finest residence in the county.
ed. No serious damage was done.
Each of the contracting parties will
—Flay Feighner can take the cake assume practical possession of their re­
on making maple sugar. He has a spected premisses inimediaUly, and it
bush of only 234 trees, yet has made over is exspected that Herb will call us into
900 pounds of sugar from two runs; but strawberries and cream as soon os the
the biggest thing of all is the fact, that, first invoice arrives, from the south.
on Sunday last, he “sugared off” four
—The sacchariferous prospect is con­
times an average of 90 pounds, each siderably more encouraging this week,
time, and would have the fifth had not than at any previous time during the
night come on just then.
s
season. Nashville is located in the cen­
—Hattie Kellogg, aged 18, oldest ter of on© of the greatest sugar-produdaughter of 1. N. Kellogg, was taken cing sections of the State, and our su­
with a chill last Sunday, which was gar makers' experience and facilities
rapidly followed by typhoid pneumonia. for making a firat-class article are sec­
A council of doctors was called on ond to none. Many have from two to
\yednesday night, and again on Thurs­ four thousand trees tapped, and their
day morning, but medical aid proved aparatus for converting sap into sugar
of no arail, and she expired about 8 is of the latest improved and most con­
o’clock p. m. Funeral services will bo venient kind. A visit to some of th©
held to-day at a. m.
\
most extensive of these manufactories,
—Last Thursday Dick Elliston’s lit­ by one who has never seen the modus
tle girl, aged five years, was playing operandi of making this staple export,
with her brother, a few years her sen­ would result in astonishment and
ior, who had a little ax, when in some wondrous admiration. Some have
way the li#le boy missed his aim and comfortable houses located in the
cutrher right hand so badly that Dr. midst of a dense forest of maples, and
Goucher wm needed to amputate her with their families, reside in them, han­
third aud fourth fingers. This is the dy to their work, during the, season.
same little girl that was run over by a Nashville sugar has gained a reputa­
tion in nearly every state in the Union,
wagon a few month'; ago.
—An item recently appeared in and orders are received from cities,
villages
and hamlets all over the coun­
the Grand Rapids aud Detroit papers,
stating that a helpless, old lady, 97 try, from the Atlantic to the Pacific.
—During a rain storm on Saturday,
years old, was put on the evening train
here one night last week, a ticket be­ a bolt of lightning struck thb chimney
ing given the conductor to take her on the upright of Mrs. M. E. Hinmarch’s
to Saugatuck. An investigation shows house, and knocked it into as many
tbat no such person was put on the pieces as there were bricks in the chim­
train here last w'.ek, and no ticket for ney, Jake Habersaat was passing thehouse at the time, and was so surprisedSaugatuck purchased by any one.
—Our new Marshal seems to have the by the shock that for a moment, he
best, wishes of the peace-loving citizens didn’t know whether he was a foot or
of the village, and as an encourage­ horse-back, but he soon rallied aud
ment to perform his duty faithfully, informed the inmates of the house—
has been presented with a formidable who up to this time were unaware of
club,—a cross between a policeman’s the calamity that bud befallen them—
club ard a potato-masher, bearing the that their domicile was struck by light­
following inscription: "Presented to ning. Investigation showed that the
plasUr bad been nearly all knocked off
James L. Gregory, by the law-abiding
the upper ceilings, a portion of the
citizens of Nashville, and don’t you
cornice tore off and siding started
forget it."
from the north side of the upright, and
—We had the opportunity of looking the wake of the bolt marked by tornover E. Cook’s patent carriage painters- up shingle, as it took its course to the
jack this week. It is a neat affair and cistern. The building was insured in
will fill a want long felt. By means of it the “Home.” of New York, the policy
carriage bodies, cutters and wheels can containing a clause, insuring against
be manipulated in any attitude desir­
damage by lightning, whether fire en­
ed, and with mors dispatch than by the
sues or not, consequently Mrs. H. will
old and tedious way. A. C. Buxton ■
be reimberaed for the damage.
is man factoring twelve samples. ’Gene
—On Saturday evening last, at the
thinks the prospects ot introducing and
selling his patent are flattering.
. Unionjflouse, a clash of arms occurred
between Bill Bartley, well known in
—The mutabilty our of weather is so (sporting circles, and John Horum, a
iparked that even old weather prophets ।son of the Emerald Isle and a late ac­
have thrown np the sponge, quit '
prophesying and bon’t know whether 'quisition to the village. It seems that
Bill’s mission to the establishment was
to doff un/Urahirts or add an overcoat to pay a wash bill that an employee
Saturday we were visiting with spring
owed Mrs. Fleyharty. Serenty-five
/ showers; Sundays aunwMM bright and '
genial m a June day’a, but on Monday 'cents lawful currency was the sum
a "blizzard” enveloped uatbat furished of
' the bill, but Bill said nay,—only fifty
and declared he would pay no more.
Horum declared in favor of high tariff,
aflicted with this winter. Yesterday
and the calamity could not be averted;
but before any great amount of valu­
able furniture was destroyed, our new
marshal suddenly appeared upon the
scene of action and acquitted himself
in such a worthy manner that he had
Ml held both gore-seekers in his power tafore
Thurs- they could quit striking each other.
Hubaequently they were brought be­
fore Esq. Potter, who prescribed a fine
of five dollars and costs &lt;rf proceedings

LIFE IM NASHVILLE

j TERMS; $130per Yeam
( Credit Scbschiptioms $1.78-

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun.

LOCAL 0IBBLE-6ABBLE
Aad Personal Chit-Chat.

W. A. Aylsworth is ip town. ■ ■
H J. Martin of Vt Ville called on The
News Thursday.
The scan dal-mongers are in their
element this week.
Jerry Woolcutt has concluded to
migrate to Dakota.
M. B. Brooks starts for Texas and
mustangs on Monday.
Ed. Wright of Colorado, is yiuting
his uncle, N. P. Frink.
G. A. Truman has been in Detroit
this week, buying new goods.
The bad condition of our roads is discuraging to live business men.
Miss Busby, of Hastings, visited MIrh
Ida Woolcutt over the Sabbath.
The' “blizzard” of this week put a
sudden stop to building improvements.
L. 0. Crocker has stocked the Loomis
building with a fine show of reapers,
mowers and buggies.
,
Charley McMore returned Saturday
night from Detroit where he has been
at work for the past six weeks.
H. Spitxler, the purchaser of James
Gregory’s farm, arrived here with fam­
ily aud furniture on Wednesday.
T. S. Brice as administrator of the
Troyer estate has performed his duties
iu a quick aud satisfactory manner.
T. N. Kettle well and wife were nt
Marengo the fore part of this week,
renting their farm aud visiting friends.
■H. A. Brown and family with a car
loAd of stock, started on M inday for
their future northern home near Cross
Village.
The fire company talk of renting the
second story of the post office building
to store that new steam engine in,
when it arrive®.
Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Flint will enter­
tain the M. M. social Wednesday eve­
ning, March 29th. Refreshments will
beserved. All are invited.
J. J. England, from Chippewa Lake,
Ohio, moved here this week, and will
take possession of bls farm in Wood­
land, purchased of R. Christain.
C. L. Glasgow has rented J. Habersaat’s house on Francis street, and with
Mrs. G. will take the initiatory degree
of housekeeping, about April one.
The fire company held a meeting
Wednesday night, and hod the pleas­
ure of puffing some fragrant election
Havanas, a present from Frank ^lcDerby.
J. H. Buckingham an ex-resident of
Maple Grove, but now sojourning in
the Yellowstone valley, sends us a sam­
ple copy of the Miles City (M. T.)
Journal.
Notice ofa National Greenback cau­
cus to be held at Maple Grove to-day,
was received last week, but uninten­
tionally mislaid until too late for pub­
lication.
The Baptist social was entertained by
Mr*, and Mr. W. G. Aylsworth last
Wednesday gyeniug. The house was
well filled and a first-class entertain­
ment enjoyed.
A new press and several fonts ofJifte
and stylish type have been added to
our job department this week. Give
us a, trial on any line of printing and
we will guarantee satisfaction.
Ed. Reese will move bis stock of
goods to Sebewa, about April 1st, aud
the building be now occupies will then
be occupied by A. D. Vannocker.
Reese engages in business with Mr.
Deterrick.
The feelings of a man who has run
half a mile to be in at a fire, when he
discovers that said fireisoplv a chim­
ney burningout, can be better imagin­
ed than explained, but we have noticed
that he usually takes the alley home.
Our choicest blessings are usually
few and and far between; however this
is not always applicable in the matter
of babies, yet Mr. and Mra.Geo. Squires
after a lapse of twenty years, now re­
joice in the advent of a fine baby son.
The Christian Sunday school will
hold a concert at the Christian church
Sunday evening. The school was nev­
er in a more prosperous condition, and
extensive preparations have been made
to make this entertainment a grand
success, and the house‘will undoubted­

tales, sketch*, essays, wit, wisdom and
humor from the pens of the most fas­
cinating writers of the present day, and
is sent to regular subscribers at the low
rate of two dollars per year. One sin­
gle feature of the work, Lexiconic Or­
thography, is worth many times -the
subscription price to every student of
the English language.
C. C. Wolcott has forwarded us a
plat of the future city of Larimore,
and we can. cheerfully state that the
same looks very fine—on paper. Ho
has also forwarded copies of the Lari­
more Pioneer, from which we learn
that C. C.s new bank building is nearly
completed; that the proprietors of the
town have given him full control of the
sale of lots, and that he i*,as usual, is a
leading advertiser. The town is plat­
ted after the munnerof St. Louis, Mo..
quo of the avenues being named in hon­
or of C. C. •
A council of Congregational church­
es will meet at the Christian church in
this place, on ’Tuesday, Mar. 28th, for
the purpose of examining and ordain­
ing Rev. F. A. Bissell to the gospel
ministry. The exercises are appointed
at one o’clock, p. m. The afternoon
will be taken up mainly In' examining
the candidate. In the evening at 7
o’clock there will be an ordination
x-rtnon, a cbonni to Ui« candidate,
givingot the right hand nf fellewahlp.
and other eaerciaea. uaualon »neh occasion*; A cordial invitation is ex­
tended to all who would like to attend.

-8T0P MY PAPER”
The above ominoas challenge has
been shouted at us quite numerously
during the post two weeks. The reas­
on is this: The editor sickness, taken
with the dullness of money affairs of
the season caused a stringency, in our
money mattera/and, accordingly, bills
were sent to all subscribers in arrears.
A large number came in and paid up,
handsomely, while others treated the
matter as an insult and stopped their
paper,—a few oven going so far as to
order their postmaster to stop it before
they had paid arrearages, which the
courts have decided is a prima facia
evidence of fraud.
We receive similar statements to the
one wo sent to our subscribers, from
firms whom we buy paper, ink, type
aud other materials of, every 30 days
and it has never made our ebenezer
rfte, although we have paid and contin­
ued to deal with them. In fact we
never bought an article in onr life for
which cash was not paid or payment
agreed at a certain time, bnt what wo
expected to pay for it, at least when
called upon if not sooner.
So do all other business men, and
they look upon these matters as busi­
ness; but evidently the average sub­
scriber to tli*1 country paper is more
aesthetic than the business man, and
often gets so mad over a little newspa­
per bill as to make himself appear ri­
diculous.
Last summer a chap wanted to lick
us because wo asked him for our pay,
aud wo never want to suffer th© re­
mora© of’concienco again that we
have for wounding bis feelings; con­
sequently delinquents who ore disatis­
fied from-receiving statements, wil ‘
please call at head-quartera, when
their indebtedness will be wiped out
and each given a check for $10 on the
Hastings National Bank. We desire
peace at any sacrifice.
P. S.—It is expected that satisfied
patrons will continue to send in their
*
remittances.

EAST MAPLE GROVE.
Marshman Wilcox is convelesant.
Mrs. Crane is quite sick with the
lung fever.
James Lading has sold his farm to
B. W. Mapes.
The sugar makers were busy, the
fore part of the week.
Ellen Lamb of Springport has been
stopping with her relatives in this
section for the past few days.
J. Butler who has been at work at
Springport, returned home again on
Wednesday of last week.
It is claimed by physicans that the
cause of the grea^ amount of sickness
we have been afflicted with this winter,
is owing to the warm weather.
If some one would now and then
give us an item, we might have some­
thing to write about, but if they won’t
we will have to write them as we can
catch them, and catch them as we can
write them.
Mr. and Mrs. James Andrews, who,
but a few days ago, lost their little
girl
from
that terrible disease,
diphtheria again on Monday, were call­
ed upon to bury their other child, a
boy of about six years who died from

ly be filled.
We have received from Congressman
Lacey a copy of the committee’s report
on his postal savings depository bill,
and also other valuable statistics in re­
gard to postal savings banks of the
world and the public debt of the U. S.
The committee reported favorably on
the bill, and the prospects of its be­
coming a law, we learn, are favorable.
The News has received the March
number of The Oriental Casket, pub­
lished at 912 Arch Street, Philadelphia,
Pa., and edited by the popular and
widely known author, Emerson Ben­
net The Casket is a monthly repoei- have the

committee.

sympathies of the entire
Peter.

HASTINGS.

VINDICATION.

The Dakota fever is raging high.
Steve Sbnntz started for Dakota last
Monday.
Chas. Warner has turned up at Fort
Dodge, Iowa.
Fred Main is visiting his brother,
Frank, of (bis ciXy.
Preston it, Hicks have added a new
clerk—Charley Houghtalin. •
The new room-in the high school
building has been supplied with new
seats?
Bishop Gillespie administered the
holyri/rht of conformation at the Epis­
copal church last Sunday.
P. T. Colgrove has purchased a lot
on WestState street ot Judge Smith
and will erect a house upon it in the
spring.
The M. E. social will tie entertained
by the young people of the church on
Wednesday evening of next week at
Red Ribbon Hall.
Sells Bros., will visit us in the near
future. The average small boy is al­
ready becoming quite penurious and
during his spare moments will be
found in the back yard with his forked
end upwards.
Hon. Geo. Woodford delivered his
last lecture oi the course at the M. E.
cbureli last Sunday evening.
The
The
church wa« tilled to overflowing betore the leeturecommencad. Mr. Woodford spoke an hour and fifty minutes
holding the attention of bis audience
to the last.
Dr. Woodbum the conductor of the
Choral Society has decided to “go west”
and make his fortune. The doctor
wasalso chorister of the M. E. Sunday
School. His services were free for both
the Society and Sunday school; and in
token of their appreciation they have
decided to give him a benefit concert.
A young lady in Rutland wa® full of
great expectations last Sunday. She
was all ready. There was a young
couple waiting to stand up with them.
The friends kept looking out of the
window and up at the clock. The
hour approached.
The bridegroom
tarried. A large brother of the young
lady went over to ascertain the whys
and wherefores. The bridegroom had
gone up north the day before.
He
went around by the minister’s and told
him that he had concluded to postpone
"that are bizness."

Hans.

VERMONTVILLE.
W. C. Vaughn has betaken himself
to the Indian Territory.
Fred Knapp has declared an immen­
se dividend in the siiapc oL au
lb
girl.
E. Hanford has secured a sit in the
Jackson Furniture Co.’s establishment,.
and gone thence.
The ladies of the* different benevo­
lent societies have raise a fund of $182,
which will be laid out iu repairs on the
roof aud upper story of the chapel
building.
*
For three years Mrs. Porter,a worthy"
woman, has supported herself and bed
ridden husband by taking iu washings;
but of late patronage in that line has
been dull and she has actually suffered
for the necesities of life. Remember
the poor.
The railroad meeting was well atten­
ded. quite a delegation from Marshall
being present. The stock holders are
anxious tbat the work should go on,
and a number of outside parties ex­
press themselves willing to take stock
if something is done towards complet­
ing the road.
L. C.and D. W. Hickman, brothers,
are advertising their respective wives,
who are also sisteraas having left their
bed and board. Just what the provo­
cation for their doing so, is not stated,
although from perusal of the Hawk, an
uninterested observer might imagine
that’twm becnase brother resembled
brother so -nearly, and sister, sister,
that a little unwholesome mixing wm
inadvertently indulged in.
Editor Potter is working up that sen­
atorship for all it is worth, and if work
counts, heisM good as elected before
the canvass has commenced. Listen
to the report: "Visited 11 townships;
dined with nine supervisors; traveled
72 miles in eaeh; bribed seven editors;
been introduced to 1,700 republicans
and 400 democrats ; halted 700 men on
the road, and inquired their names and
politics; made speeches iul8 school
housee in favor of toe new court house;
written 310 letters to tattling republi­
cans in two counties; collected over
$30 in subscriptions; bought 900 cigars
pud apologized to 68 men whom he
never before recognised; spent two
daysat Lansing; shook hands with the
legislators; and' prevailed upon the
Governor to sign the pledge.'’

Ascertain rumors which arc utterly devoid

a serious reflection upon the character of my
wife, I make the following statement, which

On Thursday, March 2nd, 1 was tn the barincluding William Burgess, were Bitting around
the room. 1 wm asked by the proprietor where
I was going, and replied that 1 going to H**night. It acr happened that I did not go to
Hastings, but was home at aa early hour that

were getting ready to retire for the night, my
wife heard a rap at the back door. I listened

tb rough the back room taking no light. Aa I
opened the door, Mr. Burgess stood before it.

tiling about her being “lonesome" while I wm
away, but he did not finish the sentence, aa I
knocked him down and told him I should re­
port bls conduct to his wife. What be told

id places that myself and wife took particular
»tni to Inveigle him into coming there that
nighb^JIc has also stated to tome here in the
village that his bruited face was the result of a
kick from a colt; which statements are false
and ungrounded.
I have lived with my companion over four-'
teen years, and have never had any reason to
doubt her virtue, nor does thia occurence falAll reports contrary to the above statements
I hereby declare to be false, and I stand ready
to prrove lu
T. N. Kettlewell.
I hereBy certify that the above statements
Sworn anti subscribed to before me this 21st
day &lt;&gt;t March, a. u 1882.
Walter 8. Powkjw,
Notary Public.

A CARD.
All persons having book account with me are
res|&gt;ect£ully .equcslcu to call, at your curliest
convenience and settle the same, either by pay­
ment or note, as I wish to close all book ac­
counts. I earnestly solicit the continuance of
your patronage, and will save you from S5 to
125 a year according to the amount of goods
you purchase under the rcadvjray system.

tSTBesl Barrel Salt for &lt;1,25 at the Elevator
of Brooks, Marthall, * Co,
SHOES!! SHOES!!
Don’t buy a pair until you see
large and elegant stock—the finest ci
to Nashville—just in at
Giu

ATTENTION PATRONS.
Hiving been called upon to make an unex­
pected payinenL April 1st, I will be very much
obliged to my friends and patrons if they will
pay their account or so much of it as they can
before that date. Jerry Woolcott who has been
with me for the past three and a half years,
starts for Dakota at that time, and I wish to
par hlu wbnt I owe him.
Yours Reap., C. W. Smith.

niture and the closing out sale of

Kellogg, Bell &amp; Co.

For Sale : Three voung brood Mares witL
foal. One Stranger Colt, one rear old, one side
bar Bruster top Carriage, and single Harness.
Inquire at
W. A. A TLBWORTH'S.
IMPORTANT TO TRAVELKR.H,

Special inducements are offered you by the
Burlington Route, It will payyou U. read their
advertisements to be found elsewhere In thia
HOUSE AND LOT FOR SALE.
Desirably located on Main 8U, just north of
Wolcott House. 25 27 Apply to C. H. Brady.
TO BE GIVEN AWAY.
A China Tea Sett of 44 pieces, For particlara
call in and see me.
C. W. Smith.
aound, 7 yra, old, inquire of

FIRE, WIND AND WATER.
Fire will not burn—Wind will not blow over
—Water will not rot out—a Barb Wire Fence
made of Kelly’s Steel Barb Wire. Glasgowhas
sold all be has, and has ordered more. Cali at
his store and get a book free, which will tell all
about It.
•
'
’

BUILDINGS MOVED.
Tom. Niles.
tar Hamers repaired and oiled in exchange
LUMBER! LUMBER!
Custom Sawing and Building Material fur­
pl- Grove.

Jamas f
MONEY WANTED!

C. W. Dxmaray.

Wm. Class,

FARMERS
Take advantage of the low prices and buy yunr
harness of Clark who will give you No. Istocfr
and reliable work.
Wm. Clark.
your furniture for cash at
kxixooo, Bell * Co-

TAKE NOTICE.

sssorasg

tall not pay it.
Naahvifk March 9Dta, 1®

�SATURDAY.

- - MARCH 25, IM-

of divorce and our toleration of the noeialevil we are. doing more to corrupt
heart than Mormonism,

r»pW

not as an article of food, bat

.MICHIGANSTOVE CO.’S STOVES AND RANGES

bating, powder; flavor with vanilla.
j oom
—The^Nalional Eive Slock Journal I ®eal-•
.
---------- ecrete an increased quantity ot PAINT, WALL, KALSOMINE AND VARNISH BRUSHES
warns farmers against overfeeding their 1 bY pawing trains or single
loaded
Digestion - only takes
ARE a GRAND SIGHT.
cows with hay.
The quantity of hay j
°5 ^bns, knock- gastric juioe.
- The Uticst man is on a western paper. glnn
mot’ nz&lt;uw&gt;d
exceed what
wlut tier
pi*
‘XT
• —when
’hen the sides
"'dos of
ot the stomach seWhite
» T « n
A A
,
~*-------,boold
*---- ’’-------the” J'’«d ln *tl“ b'"
* 1 bJ ‘lb, pick of“ mm rig- a liquid having the quality of di*-*
1 .
n d -Linseed Oil
He spells photograph . “4togrnph.” will mt up clean and twice * dar Is of- 1 0'00' workman. unseen and naming, Crete
creto a liquid haring th, qi
'fig
food.
Owing
to
tins
well-to-do
_
„
v
•
’
^
of
Pyrc^ grade fully warranted; obo
ten
Moagh
to
givs
time
tor
proper
nt“
■
the
gloom,
or
by
.
Mm.
geslingtood.
Owlngtolhf.
There have been only three worse than
take after a.nnm.
dinner •a cup of coffee Tarqentlne, tarnishes, Pure Paint, Yellow Obhre, Besiae, Venetian Bed, Red
v -s^
1 ‘ ■
। irom the urched roof, loosened by an people «*&gt;*•*&lt;*»•
be. One lived out in Kansas aud dated ruinating.
' '
savnliWtirsn
— ­ jn
, order to promote digestion. It is beexplosion rxf
of dynamite «m
in the floor I.
be
*
Lead, Whiting,
bit letters “11 worth,” another Rpelled
—Mr. James J. II. Gregory’s plan for
low—such are the necessary experi­ cause at night the power of digesting Green for window blinds and sdosen different kinds of pstnt tn small Colors dry and in ofl
Tennessee “10ac” and the other wrote excluding frost from his large cellar dur­ ences to be gone through by any indi­
“
“
i*
M
‘
,
•
e
“
'
d
beD0
•
ing a sudden spell of Arctic weather is vidual desirous of obtaining a thorough
Wyandotte “YA..”
.
to light a kerosene lamp of six burners, knowledge of the present condition of thing difficult to digest, and beew*. BAXTER &amp;(BELLS CELEBRATED READYjlMIXED PAINTS
“You told me, sir, tbat thJ horse was which in a short time raises the temper­ this most gigantic enterprise.
Che .tum^h U rel*x.d *nd tauet.ve. Fell, w^euxl. Th. ao« eertue. e«. Bed . color u&gt;~«. It e«-u^cuer ^d
™,
entirely. without fault, and yet ho is atu re ten degrees. This in a convenient,
tented money refunded; also
On arriving in the Alpine village of that a cup of coffee in the morning recheap and very easy way of repelling
A
—, , , . ,
, . .
.
.
Goschenen the traveler who has visited freshes and stimulates the coats ot the
blind.” The dealer looked blandly into
cold on such brief but critical occasions.
the Western frontier districts of America
the instated countenance of the loser
—A good glue for wood-work is mkde will be struck*with the resemblance of vigor and activity.' It*is a common ob'
’
by the traiuuiction, and said, with char­ by dissolving one pound of good brown
.
AT Ulv™r FIGGLKEB
this place to the settlements in the Mrru oo, tbu more .ppetlre I, felt
ming innocence: I do not regard blind- or white varnish (according to the ob­ Western wilds which are just beginning altar coffee than before iu bo much fAKKONE.VI^ LAIIlt, GOLIIEX AXD BLACK OILS ou Ixand.
ntw* as a fault, sir. It is a misfortune. ject), in one pint of water; place within to assume the garb of civilization. lor th* imporuoo. ot coffee u a ,|.lo*
Hemy s«ko’ Pocket u&gt;d Table Cutlery
a second vessel filled with boiling water. Regularly-built stone houses and hotels Very justly wo ascribe to coffee also a
,,
vuuBiy.
The majority of the inhabitants of When entirely dissolved and while cool­ are surrounded by wooden shanties of medicinal influence; we consider it a
C*U and »ee hu Pocket Knife «bow, examine his
Castile N. Y. were opposed to the ing add thrn ounces of nitric add, and simple, unplaned board construction, medicine for our mental activity, and
.
Bench vVrinjjer and SS.Oo Cput&gt; Wringer,
sale of liquor, but because they put on when cold bottle and keep closely with
the
interiors
fitted
with for the activity of the nerves.
^nown diat at night coffee
And then, with hta full and clean gtock of General merchandl«e, including the WHITE
rough tables, benches and sleep­ au6 1*
tbeir ballots. “For ExciseCommuwio- corked.
^-Children’s stockings grow thin and ing
bunks
for
the
accommo­ .tJ^g
ra.T b. b.u°“.°d
MAC"1OT- 8Uli“‘"“■a* “d
■**&gt;•. you emmotl»tb.Pl«-«l to
ners” instead of “For Commissioners
wear out first at the knees, as every dation of . the workmen in the
of Excise.” the minority, with closer
,lta
Ttorer. Sellrek ma S^remu. Henry vtuffl thm. &lt;kll uxlre, them,
mother knows to her sorrow. If before Swiss end of the . tunnel The engi­ are%lu»?nwuiku.\1oll”°'kl-l|b»'^esh?
attention to the require of the law, wera this happens pieces of soft flannel are neer’s office of the tunnel division is a
declared successful, and for the coming laid under those places and fastened small, barren-looking room, in which I invigorating impulse after the enjov- 2-.......
--------------------- -------------------- -—-------- 1 ■■■'
.
year the. Caatfiuips can drink freely.
with fine stiches the result will be a found Monsieur Zollinger, in charge of
great saving of labor and expense. this portion of the line( who not only
to
Fal
'sebure for The stockings will la't as long again as readily acceded to my request to visit
' If.
the tunnel, but volunteered to take me
to of the' World’s Fair they would without the lining.
herself the
we meet elderly ladtei in soctety, and * * W X XX
KJ
XTXX M 11 X X I
’ —The farmer who has two cows and with him on his tour . of inspection,
i is proposing, the flow of
which Can WW
which he repeats four times per week. notice them sitting quietly and talking
no
shelter
for
either
needs
the
nerve
to
hackman to that Mecca of the Jehus
but in monosyllables, we need not be _kT
.
.
:----------- 7Al
two
p.
m
I
was
shown
into
a
grimy
would almost resembleacruisadc. With sell one, if necessary, and buy lumber to room containing n bench, rough w.isb- surprised; they have had no coffee yet! I “ oinking the following statement, we utter the truth, and can verify it.
protect the other from storms. Or he
the ordinary attraction of the Falls en- needs the grit to cull out the poorest stand and a grating, behind which a But when, after a little, ' conversation *
hanced by that of a fair, their milieu- j
half of his nerd, and make more of the stock of dingy clothing was hanging.
oi&amp;l days would worn to have eoiue.
]
rest.
He needs always to feed well This was the “dressing-room.” where
young stock of all kinds, and work off necessary preparations are made before
i„ tbi-yity. at bottom pricek fair anti Vware weight aud ntcaattre. When
Duringt'he late slippery time, a coup- jthe old surplus at once in order to hus­ entering the yawning mouth of the has looreuoi not only the longuuk but
le were overh eard to remark as follows band
]
his resources.' A bushel of corn tunuoL I had put on my long war more, the looks, the bauds, nay the wc advertise the most complete Stock ot
whole body und the whole soul. Al_
Said one fellow to another: ’-‘If 1 iwill make more pounds of pig pork than boots, and with a waterproof coat con­
sidered myself capitally equipped
was apdpt-footed as you arc, 1 would &lt;oi old pork. Work off the old hogs if for any subterranean exploration. To
not be afraid of slipping on the side- 1feed is short. If you have plenty of my surprise M. Zollinger directed me of stimulating our nervous system with
.
you can hold and be sure of win­
M cup of coilee, preparing, as it were,
,
,n
nr“* Eaton counties, we are telling the people a fact thatcadwalk.” “Yes.” was the rcAponee, “some corn
'
ning, but there is risk if you arc short. to doff my waterproof as well as my our mind for the dayS work. A mod- “P*,Hr
ni“l truthfully denied. It consists of a large variety of stacoat, felt hat and tie, M. Zollinger
peo[&gt;!e arc flat on one end, some on
&lt;•’
—As to the manurial value of differ­ himself donned a rough garb, and then urn natumlwt, aagenial M ho b learned. Ak’ K00'1'- ou,‘ “
another. ” The first chap looked (ent cattle foods, it is found that the oil
needed his spectacles to even faintly MoiorehotLa^ri^the^.lvb.ureared Mfljoliffl Wil IO tlltd French Cllina,
thoughtful and went down the struct (cakes yield the richest manure, ns they distinguish him from, any ordinary consumption of coffee to the greater
contain the largest amount of nitrogen
In various designs and styles, also a well selected Stock of
Major Hicks, a Kentucky negro,-/vas j ,and phosphoric acid, with a considera­ “navvy. With a greasy cap and well- degree of meutal activity, which Hie iu
oiled and tarred blue linen blouse, I former times did uol require to such a
sentenced to be hung at Covington, | ble
l
amount of potash. Next these beans mounted the little locomotive, which high extent as our present age.
but ns he is down with the small-pox i tand pea?, malt dust and bran. Clover was to transport our train to the po;nt
Wc have now Buffi ienlly explained
he haa been Respited until Feb. 24th. Jhay yields a richer manure than oats, where the compressed air locomotive the need of co.’leu drinking and we
...
_____Sett.%
;.... . Water
....... ..............
. Cups, Saucers, Pitchers, Etc. An endless variety
In Ten
Setts,
barley or corn, while meadow would relievo iu As wc scrambled into must confess that all we have skid here &lt;»f Vows, Toilet Sette, Flower Setts. Etc. in
He can console himself during his 111- wheat,
*
bay stands before the cereal grains. The the corners of the dirty machine. I does not in the least affect our convio» -| 1 ~r\'q • ~i_. 1
i~k /rne«s with the reflection that if tlie various grains and the roots, like tur­
could not help contrasting M. Zollin­
fttuall-pox don’t get away with him the nips, carrots and Swedes, contain about ger's equipment and means of making
boBevtaj?‘liiU wlm °*. Men'Xw'olS
T&lt;10
'» mention, and w cbenp tbat all can afford to buy.
liaugiuan will.
the same proportion of nitrogen in their his rounds
of
inspection with
dry substance; the roots, however, sup­ tho-te which an American engineer PfeX^Wen1^‘or'^.
In Pompeii, recently,n very beautifu’ ply much more potash. Potatoes stand would
have sported
in
like
fountain was found among the ruins. below the roots in manurial value. circumstances. The latter would have, fee.
The objection raised that it
Of every style, color nnd design. When you arc ready to buy, I am ready
It is said 10 surpass iu beauty [any of Straw takes the lowest place as a ma­ invented a natty dress, suitable for the should be better for these persons to to sell. All kinds of Produce taken in exchange for Goods.
the fountains hitherto dug up there. nure yielding food, bean and pea straw work, jet readily distinguishable from take the nitrogen contained in coffee in
being
more
valuable
for
this
purpose
the
workmen
’
s
garb;
then
he
would
the
form
of
meat,
is
correct,
but,
on
the
Venus is represented as rising on a
than the straw of the cereals.
have had n light steel hand-car, with other hand.wu must stop to ask whether
shell,with Cupid in her arms. Other
cushioned seats for three persons and meat wcuid be good, lor the stomach
epirtx of love arc seen here and there iu
Keep Plenty of Fruit.
cranks for two men to work the ma­ at all such times as a cup of coffee is?
the waves, while in the background ap­
chine behind him. This car could bo Th s would certainly not be the case
When prices for fruit, or anything easily lifted off and on the track when
pears a nereid, or water nymph, near a
early in the morning; and if in the cof­
else, are high, there is a strong tempta­
EJEJP YOU EYE OIY
dolphin, with her arm thrown around tion to sell off closely, and much incon­ trains were encountered, and the engi­ fee wo enjoy a beverage which gives us
the neck of a ciipid. In the foreground venience and discomfort is often the re­ neer would have made his rounds in nutriment, strengthens' the stomach
one-auoner the time
and with one-tenth and at the same time stimulates our
-----------------------------------on the shore, are two draped women sult. The first duty which we owe to the physical wear
s
r and
"2 tz_
2 ! mind, we have good reasons to revertear of the St.
looking nt the merrv group in the ourselves is to provide from our store an Gothard member of the fraternity.
________________
_______
"h?------------- i ence
the instinct of
man__________
which raises
abundance for homo consumption. If
The tunnel is perfectly straight from ' coffee
to^®e to an essential means of subsiaVsubsistW«ater.
,
there is anything left after that wo may
end to end. and the engineers met each 1 ence»
discovered its beneficial an­
- The South permitted the Ryan-Sul­ sell it, and should do so. But while it other so accurately that their center pflueace long before it wns done by
is
not
right
to
sell
off
any
of
our
pro
­
livan prize light dut it was a Northern
science.—JJenulein'a Jopular Science.
ducts too closely, perhaps that is’not so lines were within a hand's breadth of
ufiair.as v#nved by. the Louisville'Cour- much trua with respect to anything an exact coincidence. As the hen lings
OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE
Detroit’s Mysterious Man.
icr-Joumal: “The brutal mill was raised on the farm os it is with fruit. It approached each other, the explosions
of
dynamite
were
distinctly
audible
fought by two cxponentsfrf the superior is true that wo may get along better
He is a man with a light beaver over­
culture of the North,one of them rep­ without fruit than we can without some through nearly 400 meters (1.325 feet) coat on. He drives a white horse und
of intervening rock. The total length
resenting the Empire State and the oth­ other things; but while wo may subsist is fifteen kilometers (nine audone-third a top buggy, and all of a sudden he
stops in the middle of the street aud
er the Bay State. Nearly all the money on flour, potatoes and pork, and can not miles). The grade ascends uniformly looks fixedly at his horse.
in two
do so on fruit, it is a very poor wav of
at sake came from the North,as did ne­ living. Fruit is not only a luxury which trora Goschcncn to the uummit of the minutes fifty people line the curbstone.
arly all the rouglis who constituted the the farmer’s family should enjoy as ful­ tunnel, which is 1,154 meters above the
“What’s the matter?”
son
level,
and
forty-five
meters
(148}
“Balky.”
spectators. The Southern States have- ly as circumstances will admit of, but in
WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH
icel) above Goschencn; while it is only
A man steps out to seize the bridle
not been accustomed to such (esthetic a certain sense it is a nocessity.\ It may
nine meters above the mouth at Airolo.
entertainment,and had therefore failed be fairly questioned if the human sys­ The ascent from Goschenen to the sum­ and start the horse, but the driver r
shakes his head and motions him away.
to enact laws prohibiting’prize Cght.’’ tem can be kept in as perfectly a healthy mit is 5.82 per cent, while the di scent
“1’11 bet he’s an ugly brute.” •
condition without fruit as it can with; to Airolo is 4.25 per cent. The summit
A young friend in'Califorinaj writes:
'*Of course he is.
Look at that
and if it can not, fniit becomes a neces- of the tunnel is 300 motors (800 feet)
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING
•‘My little brother having heard the I sity. There can be no doubt that the
wicked eye of his!"
below the surface at Andermatt. and
.barren, spot tn the fields called‘alkali majority of us live too constantly upofi
2,000 meters (6,600 feet) beneath the by'” fifty,' and several vehicles have I
spots, ’came to mother one day. while a too hearty diet, especially in winter peak of Kastelhorn, of the St Gothard
stopped.
■
an old bald-headed man was visiting time, when we have less physical exer­ group.
This
tunnel
summit
ia
“Anybbdy hurt?”
----------- ;—T---------------her,and said, in a loud whisper,‘Mama, cise. We become accustomed to eating 1.154
motors,
the
Mont
Cenis
meat two or three titnes a day, and we Tunnel summit is 1,338 meters, and
“whv'dXTUmo o*. whUperM
We believe the
is destined to come
that man has an alkali spot on his
think wo can not do without it. The the Pacific Railway summit is 2,513
head.”
into general use. Call and see them.
consumption of hearty food in large meters above the sea level There are his ear?” ,
Four
men
stepped
out
to
give
advice,
r&gt;iii
1
m
&gt;■
i
«ii
t_
quantities becomes a habit with us. It no air shafts in the St Gothard Tunnel,
The convict camps of Kentucky have is really surprising how far our eating is the two entrapcos being the only open­ but they are hastily motioned back, and
a
livery-stable
man
in
the
crowd
obJ
o
»
.
a
habit.
The
great
majority
of
people
been described as places of barbarous
ings. When the mechanical operations
torture. A committe of the Legislature eat much more than they need and cease inside, and the many existing ob­
“If that horse doesn’t kill two or
much
more
than
is
good
for
structions to a free passage of air, such
is making an investigation.. the^teoti simply because they have os scaffoldings, heaps of debris and un­ lb.« m.u here t .b^l be much mmmony thus far taken seems to bear out them
got into the habit of doing so. finished parts near the center, are done
"the worst of the charges. In one camp
Three minutes more and the crowd______________ ________ _____________ _________________________________________
Under
such
circumstances
our away with, there will be nothing un­
"...................................... 5
only thirteen out of fifty convicts sur­ aim should be to introduce into our diet pleasant in the passage through this numbers 2U0. The man with the gray - - - : :
horse looks up and down the street,
A
TO 13TJ
vived a year of excessive labor at him- as much of palatable lighter food as we tremendous tunnel, which is 2,700
braces his feet, takes a firm grip on the
Bering, insufficient food, scant clothing, conveniently can. Fruit is of this char­ meters (one and five-eighths of a mile) lines, and softly says:
---------------------- 0 F--------------and entire absenceof medical attention. acter. It is palatable, nourishing, and longer than that through Mont Cenis.
“Come, Peter.”
'
medicinal; and tho apple—the standard
The engineers assert that the tunnel
Suicides have been common among the
And Peter drops his head, dangles1 |
&lt; V"
I
fruit of the farm—is so easily kept and will be ready for teaffle by the 1st of
prisoners, and deliberate murders by handled that if we have a sufficient January next, although the whole line
the keepers, under the peal ot enforcing supply on hand for the wants of the from Lucerne to Biases 'will not be
“What wu it?" calls * m*o who has
V
**"■* *
discipline, have come to light. In a family, we should steadily resist the opened until next July. Although this
nmfoof block, sod is puffing Uk. a
„A Nickle8aTKi.
coal-mining camp, when the men pro­ temptation of selling them, even if we great enterprise is successfully ap­
proaching completion, and that is the
Bat there Is no one to answer him.
I* better than Ove cent* earned."
tested against going into a dangerous can get a large price.
Fruit too, is an element of sodabilitv best evidence of good management,
tunnel, the keeper drove them in at the
We are Opening a fine line of NEW GOODS and will
in the-farm home, and that should be there is room for some improvement in iSoUn^^.^io,^^
mouth of a pistol. Three hours after­ carefully cultivated at all times. The what may be called the niceties of con­
*
"
Offer Some
ward, a fall of earth killed eleven of children are great lovers of apples
struction. The means of access to the very mysterious, and the crowd doesn’t
enjoy the climax at alL—Delroil Frca
them. The lash and the thumbscrew Whoever saw a boy or girl that did not tunnel could be advantageously im­
love apples? There may occasionally proved. There is too much delay in
be one,, but the eases are exceedingly getting the shifts of men to their work,
A Rebuke From a Boston Waiter.
Honorxofall sorts are crowding upon exceptional. A dish of apples on the much valuable time being lost at the
Boston is the center of so much in­
New York. It haa long boon the biggest table on a winter’s evening means a points where they have to change trains.
Another thing struck me as being desir­ telligence and knowledge of the oroseason
ot
real
enjoyment.
For
the
time
and the richest city in the New World,
_
.
m
the children forget their cares, and lose able. There was certain absence of prietorsand exactness of speech that
and is charged, with being the dirtiest their desire to be in “town,” where clearing lip the completed portions of even the hotel waiters talk ilka so
Bargains you can t Afiord to rasa.
It doubtless contains the tallest build­ there is more excitement. But if they the tunnel, and this, of course, neces­ ZuaMXnt’S."
ra- We •!&lt;&gt;
«»&lt;• mu- Competitor. Advertteed Price Un
ings of any American city. It claims appreciate these delicacies so much, how sitates needless expense in sending
orthoepy. An evidently foreign gen- to makQ price*,
the Iwst Fire Department. It contains great must be the want of them! Those
tieman was at breakfast in one of om
gr We don’t have them kind orgoodx.
more churches even than Brooklyn. It of us who have not had time to grow
nothing to prevent ballasting being leading caravansaries the other mornt v' Our goods are all Fresh and Desirable and we never had
has the greatest number of jails, places orchards to supply us with fruits, know finished wherever the tunnel is com- ing. and seeing salmon on the bill ot R Larger Stock to select from.
very well what light and what cheer a
of amnuement. liquor store*, boatland- lack of fruit deprives the house of. Those {•Icted, and the temporary track, trans­
inds. parks, hospitals, and vdacatinal of us who have no fruit know very well
erred to this improved surface, would quoin ted with the correct pronunci*iustitutions. 11 doubtless bos by far the now to appreciate it, and those of us be much safer, and fewer accidents, ^“■briuTS;
------ In Endless Variety—
greatest number of municipal officers, who have plenty, or any, should know. with consequent loss of life, and money,
Therefore we' say, keep the apple?. would occur. There in also an absence
and there is no doubt that It pays them
of
scientific
methods
of
lighting
the
great
the biggeei salaries. It bos the biggest Give the family all they want to eat, if passage. Money would have been saved
German population of any city in Auie- we have enough to supply them. It will by a more general system of illumina­ soon recovered himself enough to say&gt;
.
.
pay belter in
’ riaas, (lie most Irish men and woman,
tion. In fact, the general impression “Salmon, sir! Sammon, sir; sammon.
That we Warrant in Ev jry particular
made upon a foreign professional mind
and the greatest number of Italians.
w.y
tJib/klicbe^'k.rtag'th*We
aim
to
keep
Only
Good
Goods
and
.are
satisfied with
is that of •• main strength and awkward­
L*»&lt;r year it consumed nearly three
ness” to a greater extent than one
Small
Profits.
Remember
the
would expect to find in this hlgiily inbruj'wpliw*. nod h »» ••hrird will* Auralvehtive aud •inggexttve ag-. 'rbara la

TDTTTIT

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�of former day»‘ we have now light,
graceful and convenient wigs that are a
Attorney * Counsellor,
wild boar; while we have, almost exter­ very close imitation of the natural heir.
minated the bustard, the weal and the Formerly the fact that a man wore a
white cattle of Chillingham. and have wig was known at a glance. Now the
livaded
lately reintroduced by artificial means imitation is soclose that I have lenbwp
jgI*.4&lt;’K A SOM,
A FOOLISH MISTAKE,
the long locally extinct capercailzie. it to bstfle examination. Tho other day
Don’t mskc the mistake of confounding a
The red deer survives only by careful a young man who wears a blonde wig
'■mctlrrif nn.rit with
..v —...t:..:......
.-v..
preservation-,
the
fallow
deer
is
doubt
­
came
to
have
it
repaired.
I
found
that
pointe in regard '
To Advertisers:
to its culture and uses upon which er- I fully indigenous; the pheasant is an uo- a large lock had been cut out of it. I kcra Ginger Tonic ip a aterliog health reatarstive which will do all that to claimed for it.
roneous ideware current. In the first I climalized alien. So, in New-Zealand, asked him how it happened, and he told We have u*edit ouncivea with the happiest
tn any other j-tpw circulating tLero place, there needs to be »_thicker seed­ the Alaories had deslroycd the moa be­ me that a lady had inked him for a look remits for.rheumatism and when worn out by
Monuments, TnmhrtcuM, Mantles, Ac.,
rsuinf
Ing than is usual, when the crop is ' fore white men reached the island; in of his hair, and that ho had allowed her overwork. Set adv.—Time*.
grown for grain, and the poorer the j Mauritius the dodo only just lived on to make her own selection. He confessed
W’hen a father spends more money to red&amp;en
long
enough
to
be
inaccurately
de
­
to
a
little
trepidation
when
she
took
soil the thicker should be tne seeding
pROOKS A MARSHALL
up to four or five bushels per acre. 1 scribed; in Behring Strait the peculiar hold of the lock to cut it off. but she was
bta children, betbouk! not expect to be
have sown all the way from two-and- marine mammal allied to the manatee gentle.with him and cutof the lock close
PERUSE THESE LIBERAL AD. RATES.
happy Id bto old age.___________
was
killed
off
by
the
earliest
European
to
the
head
without
discovering
that
he
a-halfto five bushels to tho acre, and
three-and-one-half or four, have given explorers. The walrus and the seal wore a wig. The work of restoration
THAT8 A FACT.
■•loo' "aibo the best yield of tho best fodder, which even now threaten to beeume extinct; was artistic. It would not do to replace
1 loch.
A man can't work unte&lt;4 he feels well, The . P»y the highest marketprice for all kinds of
I-840 _iaoo is all the better the finer it b. - Thioli the European seas are getting fished a lock of full Length at once. We began
hard
times
have
made plenty of people afck Grain and Produce,
20.00 seeding gives a thin, slender, tall, out; the bison and the peccary will soon with short pieces, imitating tho natural
ji°o
SlDcbM^
leafy growth which is the best for both bo driven out of Anierica; the wapita growth of the hair. The lady never by worrying them almost .out of their wits
------- —And sell---------’,
80.00 fodder aud hay. With three-and-one- is even now becoming scarcer every Found out the deception until after they about money and bu*ine*«. Trouble ot mind
half bushels of seed and 300 pounds ol year. In short, man is and has always wore married, when she happened to baa brought on trouble of body. There to indi­ Seeds, Fred, Lime, Salt, Plaster, Stuc­
gestion, hcavtoeaa In the head and all tbat.
co, Hair. Pine Lumber. Lath
a “complete” concentrated fertilizer, been exterminating all the larger ani­ handle his hairless tenderly.
“ Thore is an old gentleman with a Arc you afflicted In thia way! Go and In eat
1 have grown a crop which cut, lit mals everywhere, and we may even
and Shingles,
pounds of green fodder to tho squar* question how considerable a part ho gray beard for whom I have made wigs one dollai for a bottle of Dr. David Kennedy’s at the Lowest living prices.
may have borne in the destruction ot since his hair was black. As his beard ••Favorite Remedy,” and it will make a new
rod,
or
more
than
eight
and
tnreeOKNO STRONG,
some
among
the
great
extinct
creatures
began
to
grow
gray
the
contrast
between
man
of
you.
It
takes
the
bile
out
of
the
blood
Editor and Proprietor. fourth tons to the acre early in May. of the quatenary period. He has al­
that and the hair of his head was too and is worth a trip to Readout, N. Y.,—the
This is quite equal to the maximum' 'ex­
pectation of the yield of soiling crops, most certainly kuled off the reindeer in marked. We began by making him a doctors home—on foot, if you cannot get it
which is, that the produce of a square its wild form, and he may have as­ wig with a few gray hairs sprinkled in. more eaaily. First however, arc if you druggist
sisted
the
glacial
epoch
in
killing
off
Gradually the immbejof gray hairs was hasn't gut It.
rod should support a cow for* one day,
and an Ayrshire or Jersey «ow will not i tho mammoth, tho cave bear, and tho increased until now he buys three white
“In wliat condition was the potriarcb Job at
consume more than sixty pounds ol j! woolly rhinoceros. Wherever man an- wigsMtyeAr. Black wigs last longer
1
pears,
the
large
beasts
and
birds
begin
than white. Tho latter turn yellow with the end of bis life!” asking a Sunday school
|I green ryeMn
ryajjn one day,
day, when she is pro-!
vided with four or five
vidod
th
quarts of meal I to disappear. It is only against smal1 wear, and we have found no way of teacher of a quiet looking boy at the foot ot the
creatures that he is helpless, in exact cleaning the white hair without destroy­ class. "Dead,” calpJy replied the quiet look­
with it.
The most disappointing mistake in '1 proportion to their smallness. He can ing the workmanship of the wig. Where ing boy.
■IEDIC1L HD SUBGIC1L
regard to this crop is that it can be cut do little against the sugar cane rat or a wig covers the entire head it is easy
THE HIGHEST RANK.
several times in the season.
This u the ordinary mouse-, still less against to make it fit tight with most heads
tho
army-worm
or
the
seven
teen-year
Made
from
bannicsa
materials,
and
adapted
without the use of auy adhesive sub­
altogether out of the Question.
The
tiic need* of fading and falling hair, Parkers
habit of growth nf rye is to throw out' locust, and almost nothing, it would stance. Hut, where the wig covers only to
Hair Balaam has taken the highest rank as an
a bunch of radiole leaves, or imperfect ■ eoem against the phylloxera or the CoL a part of the head, or where toupees or elegant nod reliable hair restorative.
orado
beetle.
And
when
he
comes
to
patches are u.ied it is necessary to stick
stocks with spreading leaves, in the
The season* are getting to iiadiy mixed
fall. If the season is warm and long-1i deal .with tho microscopic organ Ums on the false hair with mucilage or adhe­
it will soon be necessary to label them as, for
continued, the roots spread by throw­ which invade his very veins as Yellow sive wax.
*• Wigs cost all tho way up from f 10 Instance, "Tbla to winter,” “Thte la spring.”
ing out new sets of similar leaves until Jack or tlphoid fever, it appears that
X 1 srwwtST Ei' ACOPA.L.cm'i:cii—a. i&gt;. jc»»
his best chance lies in actually intro­ to $10J. according to the fineness of the
TOW, Pm tot. Wrerirew srery KsbUatb at 10R the ground is completely covered as ducing a small colony of the enemy in
GRATEFUL TO INVALIDS.
hair and the excellence of the workman­
with a sod; if the seed hat been sown
riorwtones Cologne is grateful to Invalids,'
early and the warm weather continues attenuated and comparatively innocuous ship. The most costly wigs are made becau*c
it Is refre*bing without ttie sickening
formfl
into his own system. On the oh a foundation of hair lace. Each hair
the stocks may throw up from the ceneffeet
of
most perfume*.
VY LODGE NO. 87, K. of P., meets at IU j ter of each an ear-bearing stem, the other band, it does not'follow that uni­ is carefully selected and knotted to a
Castle Hall, Nashville, Michigan, every
versal civilization or tho general estab­
Clergymen tn Chicago want the cries of the
kind is called
Friday evening, for the encouragement ana ear of which may or may not emerge lishment of the highest existing typo ot mesh of the lace. This*.«tho ventilated wig. You ___
can part it newsboy* on Sunday morulng sanpreMcJ.
In cither case, to
support of all worthy, true, steadfast and hon­ from the sheath.
orable Brother Knlxhu. ♦
cut this or permit it to be grazed off. man over the whole world will neces­ anywhere, like natural hair, aud the I They want to make all the notoe on that day
destroys the ear, and the plant must sarily lead to the total extinction of all appearance of tho parting will be like I tbemselvc*,
tho
larger
birds
and
mammals.
There
that of the natural scalp. The flesh :
throw up new off-shoots from the roots
RHEUMATIC DISEASES.
Jli.«iceUnnroufl t'anlx.
or the cron of grain is destroyed, so can be little doubt that many must go shows through the meshes of tho lace | These ailment* follow from torpkl liver and
that a very vigorous crop ijecds to be —tho lions, tigers, pumas and jaguars, with great naturalness. That is the costive bowels: the skin, bowels and kidneys
which
indeed
are
already
disappearing:
T V H. YOUNG, M. D. Office east side of pastured down in tho fall not so much
kind of wig the blonde yoang man wore. failing 11&gt; tl.elr pn&gt;|&gt;cr work, nn acrid poison is
li. Main Bl., Nashville. Ofllce hours from to prevent smothering iu the winter, the hippopotamus, the rhinoceros, the Cheaper wigs arc made by fastening torn...I in the blood, which is the occasion of
bison and perhaps even the whale, hair to long threads and sowing strips tbe*n acute disease*. Kidney Wort produces
as some think, but to check its lux­
I calthy action of all M.*crv’tlve organs, and
which
are
not
likely
to
be
artificiaily
H. GRISWOLD, _M. D., ____ ,.Ahic uriance and succulence, which en­ preserved. But many have been anil of it on a foundation less costly than throw* off the rheumatic poison. Equally cf• Physician ami surgeon. Oilice and res­ courages the growth of seed stalks in will be spared, because here again the hair lace. Even thoao cannot bo de­ fleh-n in Liquid &lt;&gt;.* dry form—Inter Ocean.
tected
by
the
ordinary
observer,
al
­
ident-* oppoaiia the WolcoU Hourc. Prompt Che fall and which cause it to succumb
A Vcnni.nt minister bus been disciplined for
aitantion given to call* day or ulghu
to the frost, or to rot under the close action of man differs widely from that though when you know that a man
covering of a deep, wet snow. In the of tho lower animals. Alone among wears such a wig you will be sure to using newspaper editorials as sermon*. He is
A. FOOTE PHYSICIAN A SURGEON spring the plants do not tiller so much carnivorous creatures, he has intelli­ notice it. Very often, however, toupees evidently a man of good Jnilgmt aL
toi So. Clark St.
CHICAGO, ILL.
• Suceobur to Dr. Wickham. Ofllce and
gence enough to preserve some ol each
re*ldeuce at Dr. Wickhain'a lata office. as in the falL unless when very for­ useful kin&lt;f for breeding; not quite are put on with so much’skill, by mix­
ing the ends with tho natural hair, that
ward and vigorous they are pastured
Prompt aiumuon to call* uigut or day.
diseases. Gonorrbwa, Glcct-of tang slasdh.-. 8tr.fr
alone
among
herbivorous
and
frugivor
­
Wells'
Health
llcDi-wer.
Absolute
cure
for
—
the
art
is
not
perceptible.
1
think
tho
down and checked somewhat; nut they
nervous debility and weakness of the genera- I
R. a W. GOUCHER, Electlc Physician and •oon throw up the ear shoot. If the ous species, ho keeps a little of each edi­ tendency now is to conceal baldness live iunctlous. &gt;1. at druggists. Mich. Depot
Surgeon, to prepared to answer nil calls crop is cut, this must bo done before ble plant for seed. It seems probable rather than to let it be seen. True, iu JAMES E. DAVIS A CO.. Detroit, Mich.
that may be made for tils services. Office andthe sheath has come into range of that certain highly specialized early the summer, some of our young men do
oasa. caused by imprudence, sei
residence opposite R/w'* meat market
types, such as the sabre-toothed lions, get their beads clipped like State prison
“Trust &gt;.ur cashier," said a bank d.rector, ea, producing pimples on the fa
_ _______ the scythe, otherwise the embryo ear
~~ M. PARMENTER, M. D. Office
C"L- over
— | is cut ofi and the crop is confined to have become extinct through the too convicts or the buys in a poor house, ••why, I've absolute confidence in him. He the head, &lt; onfuslon of Ideas, h
ol sexual power, i
Hull'* Drug store, Vermontville,
Mich.’. those stalks which have so far been de­ absolute perfection of their carnivorous but I think the fashion is less favored does not belong the church, doesn’t teach a •mcmury.loa*
i-'ll- &gt;!'■:»
Ion to social*, sleeplessness
They
were
peculiarly than formerly.”
Sunday M-bou) class. Isn’t even a temperance Uou. general debility and ludl
’____ ' laved in their growth by the vigor of structure.
HAS. H BRADY. Lawyer, Circuit Court
adapted for killing the large mammals
man. There's a enabler you can rely on. He’s
Commissioner, R-al Estate aud Insurance the leading ones. At any rate, then nf their own period; and when they had
Under our treat :iejt th- brul? It
Effect Upon Europe ot the Discovery a man who likes above all things to go fishing,
AgL Prompt altenUon given to al) ousti.eMthe cutting must necessarily be done
outrusted to my care. Conveyancing a special
while the nerbage is small aud before succeeded in killing off the whole race,
of America.
and Sunday you’ll find him -[anting out with SU'ilUC
— ........
ty. Ofllce opposite Union House.
’
the main shoots nave grown to a length they died out themselves for want cj
his |Kilcaud a bottle uf whisky, aud he vents bralu and nerve* to regain their
food, because they were too specialized
Tho voyage of Columbus in 1492 was
dene ec»utidential. Fad dirvcUt
LIEBHAL’SER, Merchant Tailor and de-al- of three inches, else the second growth in their enormous sabre-like teeth and in many respects tho greatest event his propensity for wickedness by lying about
The first cutting
what he catches."
• er In Ready Made Clotiitng. See me will be very light.
heavy heads to compete with other
before you ..purchase clothing. Fit* guar­ of rve. in fact, will be so light as to be and lighter types of cats such as tho which had occurred in the world since
1 tho birth of Christ. Politically and so­
anteed.^
'' hardly worth taking end, if it is worth
Lvdla E. Piukliam* Vegetable Compound re­
ordinary lions and tigers, in the pursuit cially it was the beginning of an entire­ vive* tbedrooping •plrlt*: invigorates ami barTkflSS M. JEFFREY, Prartlea! Milliner, and it the second growth will be very of smaller prey like deer and antelopes. ly new chapter in human history, and inonizea the organic functions; give* elasticity
111 dealer iu Millinery and Fancy Goods. Drew light. I have grown rye for soiling,
A cure guaranteed.
flrtiwiw to the step, restores the natural
making. In all Its branches, done with oeatneM more or less lor fifteen vyears, and But when man has once reached the it wrought effects upon men’s specula­ aud
hixtre to the eve, and plants on tlic psilc cheek
and diiqiateh. Salesroom east aide Main street, have never yet found it to yield a pastoral stage, ho does not eat up all tive thinking which, though perhaps of
beauty
tile
fresh
roses
of
life's
spring
and
•p[x&gt;*iu Nxws office.
tho animals which he can get; he do­ less conspicuous, were not less real or early summer time.
double cutting worthThe labor, if the
mesticates some of them, and only kills remarkable. In much more than tho
___ z______
_
first is good tor anything, the second
/"ARNO STRONG , plain and fancy
Job Printer.
Nothing Short of Unmistakable
V The liest facilities for doing
of any I is next to worthless, aud if the second those superfluous ones which he does mere geographical sense was, is
Jlug work Of
printing ofllce In Barry county.r. When
.V«u Id need one is to be good, the first must tie not need for breeding purposes. It is tho discovery of the New World. It
Benefits
ft printing of any description, whatever, see me
this stage which really marks the dif­ was the first in a complicated series of
taken ~so
early
little value.
before you
rou huy.
out.
. ™,
-------..as . to be of ••••»«
• .»•&gt;-«.. ference between what we call natural eveuts which four centuries hare not Conferred upon tens of thousands of ooinr I i»u, or til uoxes rur me urniarw. »'-d py
[ There ts very little growth in rye besufferers could originate and maintain tnall prepaid on receipt of r&gt;rire. W« yuanmiee eia
to cure any care. With eaeh order rr&lt; eh*4
.T&lt;£rAF B‘ F^ET’ ExI’reM aod Drayman- I fore April, and as rye often’Hihows earn and artificial selection. Man, tho -vet fully rounded into a period: The
the reputation whl^h Ayek’s Sailsa- boxes
by us for tlx boxea,accom|&gt;3a!ed with
dolrarv,
IL
“*ow
P1“« u in April It must be very clear that hunter, scarcely differs much from other foaodatioD of a new Europe in Ameri­
pajuixa enjoys. It’ls a compound of wo will (end the purchi srr our written guarrnl**
animals in his influence upon the gen­
return the money If the treat meet'does no* at—.---------------------- .
there cannot be much time to make a eral fauap, except in so far as tie picks ca, in Africa, in Australia and in the
the best vegetable alteratives, with the to
feet a cure. Guarantees Issaled br F. T. fcoh*. an
, islands of tho Pacific; the rise of the
iram r. dickinson, m*nuT*ciurer of first cutting and.yot get a second use.
Iodides
of
Potassium
aud
Iron,
—
all,
thortzed agent for the village &lt; f Nashville. JOHN
uxi dealer in Hard Wood Lumber. Build­ In fact, one may. under favorable cir­ off the very best and largest-of each English race to political and commer­
powerful, blood-tnakiug, blood-cleansing CWEbT * CO., Sole Proprietors. 1B1 and IM W.
kind; with pastoral and agricultural
ing Material a •peeialty. Ca*b paid for log*. MUI
Madison HU Ch'cajo, Ill.
1I )
cumstances, turn a few calves on to the man we rise to a new level, where the cial supremacy, and the. ad rance of tho
aud ilfe-sustainiug—and is the most
and yardouSbennan bt-.at M.C. B.R. crowing.
English language toward what may borye in the fail or spring, but not cows,
effectual
of
all
remedies
for
scrofu
­
useful kinds are definitely and con­ oomo universal dominion; tho reorgani­
AMES FLEMING, practical Jeweler and excepting under special and rare cirlous, mercurial, or blood disordj tj.
Wateh-tnaker. Clock*. Watches, 8il»er and cum-itances. and then merely to save sciously selected and favored, instead zation of government upon a higher
Uniformly successful and certain, it
of being ruthlessly destroyed. Hence­ piano than tho Middle Ages had ever
Flaletl Ware, Jewelry and Optical Good*. Rock­
rye, rather than to feed the oowa a
produces rapid and complete cures of
ford Watclie* a specialty. Repaid ng and Engrav- the
forth animals and plants survive, not been able to forshadow; the renovation
full
meal
tnv done In a workmanlike manner.
Scrofttla, Sores, Boils, Humors, Pim­
because they are inedible, but because of society iu the old Europe through
When the heads appear the cutting they are edible.—Pall Mall Gazelle.
ples, Eruptions, Skin Diseases aud all
ACOB OSMUN, Liveryman, barn near Woicountless subtle influences; the perma­
disordera-tarlsing from impurity of the
eott House. First class turnout* at reason­ of rye may begin and may last until it
nent
triumph of the industrial over the
blood. By its invigorating effects It
able rates. Special rates to commercial men. is in fall blossom, when it should be
predatory
spirit;
the
successful
asser
­
always relieves aud often enres Liver
Weldjns Nickel With Iron.
Funeral and wedlug parties f urnisiicd with car cut and made into hay. At this time,
DIOW THTSaF.HJKWii
tion of individual freedom against tho
riages on abort notice.
Complaints, Female Weaknesses anil
which will be in June, the clover and
irregularities, and Is a potent reuewer
The great value of nickel m a coating paralyzing absolutism inherited from
4 BELL, proprietor* Planing early grass will be ready for cutting
the
Roman
Empire;
the
overthrow
ot
of
waning
vitality.
For
purifying
the
Mill. Planing and Sfatchlng, Reaawing aad the rye will be getting hard end for iron has led to experiments to see if
blood It has no equal. It tones up the
n*1 ?Lou,«!ng * apedaity. Scroll Sawing, woody. Rve haa often disappointed it could be applied to tho surface of sacerdotalism aud tho Christian :zation
It would probably be
system, restores and preserves the
w indow and Door Frame* made to those who have grown it for soiling, sheet and wire iron by some mechanical of the world.
too much to assert that some of these
health, and imports vigor and energy.
wood Turning In all it* braoehu.
adult* I*
because it has been ent too late; for as means, in place of the usual electro­
desirable results might not have been For forty years it has been iu extensive
plating
process.
The
experiments
ap
­
soon
as
it
gets
tough
and
hard,
it
is
a
D*aler
***hea,
use. and is to-day the most available
attained,
so
far
as
the
old
Europe
is
pear
to
be
so
far
successful
that
both
. ^***^*&gt; ®He J«*eiry and Silvenrare. Being poor milk-producing food; but when it
medicine
for
the
sufibrlng
sick.
concerned,
even
if
the
lands
beyond
the
a pracUcal jeweler, petrous can depend upon is young it is different.
As soon as niokel and cobalt have been welded to
For sale by all druggists.
aea had n?ver been explored'and col­
eoutll Oi Trtima.,..rinR
,. .&lt;JoD° riSbL Two doors the blossoms appear it should be eut iron, and the united metals have been onized. It is unquestionable, however,
and not loft a day longer.
afterward stamped and rolled into vari­
pcJBL\*rruRE depot.
that
the
progress
would
have
been
much
L&gt; W. NltfKERN, Attorney aud Counsellor
When there is ample store of fodder, ous shapes, such as plates, kettles and slower and much more subject to inter­
iL.H^lL&lt;*’l)C^tlcca I” State Court*. Colkitchen utensils, ana drawn into wire
£TO'“,X1J JU4-,“lrd “*• or er the rye cannot bo put to a better use
ruption. The part performed by England,
bpauldlng'* ktorc, HisGqrb Mich.
than to plow it under as a green ma- having an iron core covered by a nickel for example, in the work of European civ­
nnre for corn. This can be done with or cobalt skin. Alloys of nickel also ilization since the age uf Elizabeth has
J | A. BAKBEIC, n. IK,
ease, when it is five or six feet tall, by have been made, and 'these alloys have been so immense and ho complicated
means of a drag chain and the stalks been used to weld with iron. Cobalt that no elaborateness of analytic de­
Manufacturers, and dealer* in
I1OM&lt;J2OI»A.TIXIC
completely covered, the surface should alloyed with zinc also has been welded scription can do it justice. Yet En­
then be rolled, and harrowed only with to iron. In all these experiments it ap­ gland in Elizabeth’s time was hardly a
pears
to
be
essential
that,
during
the
a slopiog-tooth harrow, bo that the ry
flrut-clasa power, and but for the col­
Ig Recommended by Physician^!
Office firet door east of Opera House, and is not torn up. This course pursued for welding under tho hammer or rolls, the
near residence on eomo- of Waahtnaton and a few years, with rye and, corn alter­ air must be excluded.
This has been onization of America in the seventeenth
century it is diflicult to see in what way
Bute Streets NMhviUe, Mich.
immwi
done
by
wrapping
the
iron
and
nickel
nately, and the rye sown again on the
she would so surely or so soon have
■y^OlZ'OTTlioUMi
oorn. stnbble, will make a light soil as before welding, in thin sheets of iron. gained the commercial supremacy
HJarantee that it will cure any
rich as a garden. If this is done or The iron skin was welded on at the same which gave her in the eighteenth the
4taa« *»i *« «u&gt; for.-rii the abovs amount
■
NiiNlivIlle Michigan.
proposed to be done, there ehonid be time, but was removed afterward by dis­ dominion of the ocean, and thus secured
*
For the fall trade, our
i,;.
A. 8. PoOTK. Profirictor. '
twice as much rve sown as will be ent, solving the outer skin of iron in acids, the her the foremost position in tho world.
nickel surface under it not being af­
and
then
one-half
can
be
plowed
in,
in
Tot* fx.nrw Hole', rvnirailj- J-whed, well kept.
Another method To those—and there are manv such in
alternate years. In cutting tho rye it fected by the acids.
America
—
who
are
in
the
habit
of
re
­
should ndt be forgotten to leave a used to exclude the air during welding garding American history as a dry and
And Will be sold so low that;
immediately. Price, 75 rears par butile.
sufficient quantity to the lost, and put Is to heat the iron and nickel in an at­ uninteresting study, it may be a profita­
F. L CHENEY t CO., iOlM. 0M».
It in sheaves and dry it for making mosphere of carbonic oxide or carbu­ ble matter of reflection that since the
bands for binding the fodder corn in reted hydrogen. It was also found that beginning of the seventeenth century
BUSH,
sheaves. This is the most convenient pnre nickel could be welded over a core it is impossible to follow intelligently
of an alloy of nickel and eopmanner for putting up fodder corn, and composed
llfl. Tkn r.______ ____ ...
1 the affairs of the old Europe through a
“THE BOSS"
rve straw is the best material for I per. The experiment* were conducted single generation without constant ref­
;WE ALSO "CARRY
public
biniling— Henry Stetoart, in Rural I by Dr. Theodor Fleilmann. of Iserlohn. erence to the New World__John FMce,
i Germany, and are regarded as opening
Aew J crier.
is
Harper'a
Magazine.
j a wide held for commercial enterprise
1VAAHVILLE,
MICH.
। in the manufacture of nickel-plated
Cornstarch Bread.—Set a sponge in ' stamped ware and nickel-covered wire. | —Alatthcw Tracy, of Frederick Counly, Maryland, who died recently aired
the usual niinner with flour, and let it
JQATH1MJN HOLMS,
eighty-four, hod policies for about • JOQ,rise; then add sufficient water to raaka
—Wild geese ••swarm like bees” OJU issued on his life in var.uus Penn- |
the amount uf dou^b required, adding
A. B. ANTI8DEL, Paoratirrox.
a pinch &lt;&gt;i salt; make the douirh the re« around Washoe Lake, Nevada. The I s\ IvRuia and Maryland companies. As ;
arc-prepared to plw our time andetteuquired stilYneM by adding an equal SipokesLack of a passenger engine, the ' the amount to be paid to the holders of |
tlou to fverythlngtpertalnlugto the
quantity of flour and oomstareh. Pro­ other evening, knocked three fat old 1 the policies depends upon the payment
;uudmtaking line.
ceed an all raspects as fOT ordiaarr ganders out of a flock that •vas flying of assessments, it Is too aooa to osU1 -mate profits.
•
I
breadUm1PM&lt;

the grain i&lt; formed, makes exoelloil
hay. It will Inake a good crop of fod*d$r upon poor eoil and on thia account
is eipfecially adapted for the beginning
of a oourso of improvement of a poor I

American and Foreign Marble,

Nashville Elevator!

NATIONAL HOTEL

^aashviUr girtrtonj.

I

W

Dispensary.

L

D

W
C

S

NERVOUS DEBILITY:

H

J

J

NO CURE, NO PH!

WILSON’S C0U6H MIXTURE I

J. LENTZ &amp; SONS,

■ Physician and Surgeon.

FURflITURE!
In Every Style &amp; Variety

STOCK IS COMPLETE,

PRICES WILL ASTOMIISH YOU

BOOT AND SHOE »A&lt;EB,

UNDERTAKERS’ GOODS,

c

J. LENTZ &amp; SONS.

HALUS

gatarrhgure

sioo

�.-MARCH 25.

FOR TJSLE

TRUMAN’S Mare.

tWWh-

ficnaLateat Diipitota.
A naxlu the Madison (Wia) post-office an
the 17lh destroyed 1,600 letters, many of
drafts, ole .
Swow-sudcs on the 17th blocked the Cen­
tral I aclflc Road al Emigrant Gap and Tam

the army.
Ida bill to

any package containing only printed or
written matter
.In the House Mr.
McLane. ruing
k.
u queatton of
a no rl«: lit

Thr Calvary Baptist Church at New Haven,
Conn., waa deetroyed by fire on the 17th. Loea,
875,000; Insurance, 850.000
Small-fox wm eprcodlng through Lehigh
and Berks' Countiea tn Pennaylvania on tbe
Ibth, and there were two hundred caaea aS
South BcUilehcm.
safe at Needham, Moss., robbers on tbe 18th
aet threat buildings on fire, destroying prop­
erty valued at 890,000.
F. A. Palmer, lata Auditor of Newark, N.
for twenty years, for forging warrants on the
TreMury.
A Washington dispatch of the 18th states
Congressmen that It would take 81,000,000 to
feed the sufferers In the Mississippi Valley
during the next sixty days.
of Pond’s Extract Company, in Brooklyn,
N. T., valued st 8100,000.
The round-house of tho O’l City Road at

Hatted States and Nicaragua

public lands to

country states that about twenty thousand
square miles of territory wm under water, the
depth ranging from one to thirty feet. Whole
villages were situated ta the midst of an inland

.... In the House the Senate bin extending the

In the House tho entire day wai devoted to do-

Guenther and Brumm speaking In favor of,
and Mi-Hti Speer, Moore (Tenn.), Flower and

Diplomatic and the Military Academy bills
’were reported, with amendments, as was also
Jk-ck und Morrill made speeches on the TuriffCotnmMoa bllL A resolution was passed al­
lowing Senators Butler and Kellogg 83,500 and

ton preoemiMl * memorial of tbe National To­
bacco Asooctaxion protesting agnlnrt the post­
age of a Pr.-e-Leaf bdl a-xl osklngthe abolition
of export stamps.... In the Houiic a message
lion, the Governor of Nebraska,
request. wm given authority to

on his
employ

bell, to abolish all taxes &lt;m banking and tho
stunp tax on matches nod Dcrfumciyq by Mr.
King. «|&gt;oropriating fl&amp;JO.UXJ lar the relief of
sufforent from the overflow of the MlMissIppI

their floating away, and steamers going by
bad to proceed slowly, so as not to produce
orer. Entire villages had been swept away,
and many towns were practically deserted.
The destruction of stock was tremendous, and
the loss of human life was appalling. Gov­
ernment relief boats were doing all that wm
possible to relieve tbe sufferers.
An evening journal of New York slated on
thcl8th thattheMutual Union Telegraph Com­
pany had informally agreed to transfer its
wires to the Western Union, and that the
Baltimore &lt;t Ohio line would also be handed
over to the monster enterprise.
At Wheeling, W. Va., on tbe 19th a youth
named Milligan, while intoxicated, shot and
killed Frank Daria, aged eighteen.
Am. along the line of the Union Pacific
Railroad a furious snow-storm was raging on
the 19th, which had stopped trains and
threatened much damage hereafter in the
shape of floods. At Genoa, Nev., a great
avalanche of mow lud buried three whites
and fifteen Indiana.
Tub strike at the Pacific mills, at Lawrence,

drawn! of four hundred weavers.
About om thousand boraes In Boston were
on the 19th suffering from a disease similar to
the black scratches, which was believed to
have arisen from the use of brine on the street

Taa thief who was recently seised in the
Bank of Minneapolis by President Wilson,
jtrnvi- of Thomas Jrffcrson: by Mr. I teach,
while attempting a robbery, was on the 18th
Mpproortsthig 810.000 for n memorial shaft at discovered to be William Burke, who stole
Washington's bead-qvnrthni ,at Newburgh, N.
T. Uader call of the Statpe 157 bills and reso­ money from the Bank ot Cohoes, N. Y., for
lution* were Introduced. mosUy of u private whose arrest a reward of 82,000 had been
character.
___
’
offered.
The region south of Memphis was on the
Domestic.
19th swarming with buffalo-guata, who were
The bank of Ralston. McQuade
Oo., at
killing what little slock was saved from
Petrolia, Pa, closed its doors on tho 15th,
drowning.
with HatUltLes supposed to be £300,000.
An Englishman, named C. D. Owens, nearly
A diifatce from Little Koek, Ark., of the
15th says the Mission School in Indian Terri­ killed a young lady of Tampa, Fla., recently,
tory had been destroyed by fire, and four chil­ with a knife. The citizens took him from
jail, and lynched him In fullx view of the
dren were burned to death.
•
The exportsof provision*, tallow and -dairy United States Court.
On the 18th one .hundred laborers at the
products durine Ja’-aary and February -ggreHorn Silver mine at Franklyn, Utah, struck
gated 823,447,776.
The f/nzpUeaays the shrinkage in the New for shorter hours, seized tbe works, and held
York Block Exchange value* during the last them under guard.
A raw days ago a party of masked citizens
twelve mouths is estimated to liave been 8500.­
of Rawlins, W. T., took three xsafe-robbers
000,000.
The unusual phenomenon of a thunder- from jail and lynched two of them, tbe other
making his escape.
Thb receipts of tbe American Tract Society
morning of the Iflth,
There were slaughtered and salted by Chi- for 1881 were 8376,950; expenditures, 8375,135.
Seventy Apache scouts are reported to be
&lt;ago packers, during the twelve months ended
February 28, 1133, 5,100,184 hogs, against on the war-path- Several white men have
.5,752,191 during ths twelve rnonthn previous.
At Dallas, Oregon. on the 20th Tuaeon
The New York Stock Exchange has ouaLangdon sad a man named Harrison, charged
with murder, were lynched by masked men
uul;:cd in a fight on the floor.
and killed.
Canals has agreed on an appropriation of 81,­
Each of the fifty-eight oyster pirates capt­
-000,000 for the Hennepin Canal.
ured by the Governor of Virginia were on the
Hoiu.cE Hammili^ defaulting Secretary of 20th given one year In the penitentiary, aud
the Newton Building Association ef ‘ Camden the fleet of asvtn vessels wm confiscated.
Naw Orlkxnb dispatches of the 20th re­
ten yeara at hard labor in State Prison.
port that the breaking of the levee at Ship’s
Firs lads at 8L Jeaeph, Mo., excavated a Bayou had submerged most of the planta­
tions in Tensas Parish, La. The water was
twenty feet deep.

Columbia, O., made aa aaalgnuM
26th to cover liabnitlea of 8150,000.

injuring twelve.

Mates that the taking schooner Belieropbon

Railroad collided near Downlngtou, Pa., on
the 30th. Eighteen ears were thrown over

lunatic

killed, and William Filley, engineer, faLtll)

Heaven and Gulteau.
Iflth deatroyed five houses. No Uvea were lost.

lie valley of tbe Mississippi, for a distance of
130 miles. Tbe greatest suffering wm appar­
ent between Vicksburg and Mempbla. Tbe

Cheater Cunningham stepped forward with a
knife sad killed her, from jealousy.
Two bcxdred employes of the starch-works
at Glen Cove, L. L, struck on the 20th for an
strike.

from starvation at every mile of the overflow.

worse and worse. The levees above Millikan's

arc 85,000 people is tlic submerged district

Personal and PoIftlcaL

liana ot 8106,000, ot which 875,000 wm raiaed

the cum to 8250,000.

In length, fanned a cylinder one foot in
diameter and had 120,000 signatures.
Mu. Boovilijs stated on the Ibth that ho
could get no counsel to attend to GultcaiPs

SIXTY DAYS

A. H. WIJVN.

I SHALL OFFER FOR SALE------

HE»«T B«E. P^,„rro.

ST COST OB UNDER GOST MEAT MARKET.
Fresh and Salt Meats,

Ing" the continent, return to tbe United
States to lecture. Scoville thought it would
be better for the cranks of the future that
Gulteau should be hanged.
Tun Governor of Nebraska lias decided to
Hxnry O. Rogers, who was Minister to
Sardinia under President Van Buren, died in

Foreigm.

rested is contradicted.
I:, tbe belief that the Nihilist^ will cease
their attempts at assassination, it was
stated on the iflth that- the Czar of Russia
shows a total population of 45,234.061, an in­
crease of 2,506,689 during the last live years.

Bouncing the late political trials.
Fifty Liberal members of the British House
Secretary Forster baa announced that the daily
period of solitary confinement wdl be short­
ened ninety mlnutea
Alfred Damon, who stole money letters
from the post-office In Montreal, was on the

It is announced from Berlin that Austria
has finally determined to annex Bosnia and
Herzegovina and that Bismarck Is urging tbe
Porte toaequiesce.
The towns of Bao Jom, Macahe. Paraly and
Plrahy, In Brazil, were almost entirely de­
stroyed on the 18th by a flood, and many
persons were drowned.
In tbe British Parliament on the 18th Mr.
Gladstone was denounced as an unspeakable
tyrant and despot.
*
Several Nihilists are reported to have re­
cently escaped from Siberia.
A child I'clongitig to one of the highest
Bernese families has been kidnaped from Can­
tonal College. A ransom of 50,000 francs is
demanded for the return of the child, on tbe
pain of Its death.
.
*
Berlin dispatches say the appointment of
Mr.'Borgent as United States Minister to Ger­
many was severely criticised by the German
Sebiocs disturbances have occurred on the
southwestern border of Transvaal, between
tbe settlers and the bordering native tribea
The Austrian Government has formally
contradicted the statement that It Intended
to annex Bosnia and Herzegovina.
The crews of the fleet lockeo In the Ice off
St. Johns, N. B-, on the 20th numbered eleven
hundred men.
v
Libutbnant Habdekreached Krasnojarska,
Bllteria, on the 18th, and notified the Navy
Department that he would there await t^ic ar­
rival of Lieutenant Danenhauer.
On tho 30th a rate-collector named
ford, in County Meath, Ireland, and a jwllce
inspector named Doherty, In County Sligo,
were shot and fatally wounded.

LATER NEWS.
At Dublin on the 21«t a canntster of gur&gt;-

Tub Ways and Means Committee at Wash­
ington on the 21st instructed the sub-commit­
tec to report a bill abolishing nearly -Il Inter­
nal Reveuqa taxes except those on liquors,
manufactured tobacco, and bank circulation.
A terrible railroad accident occurred on
the Slst at Sweet Briar, on the Northern Pa­
cific Railroad, forty miles west of Bismarck,
D. T. A construction train broke through
the bridge, and was followed by a west-bound
passenger train. Thirty persons are sold to
have been killed, and many more injured.
A riitr near Northampton, England, on the

Hungary, 350 buildings were burned aud nine
Jacob R. Shifhzud appeared before the
House Committee on Foreign Affairs tn Waahdomed to Preaident Garfield and Secretary
Blaine, in May, copies of the prospectus of
the Peruvian Company. In New York, on
May 80, he had a prolonged Interview
with Minister Hurtbut, who was as­
sured by Mr. Shlphcrd that It would
result advantageously to him If he
made no opposition. Shipherd had two ex­
tended conveutiions with Blaine at the end of
July last, and asked that both Chili and Peru
be officially notified of the right to the guano­
fields asserted by Americans. In a letter to
Hurlbut Ehlpherd stated tbat 8350.000 of
pool stock in the Peruvian Company had been
reserved for tbe Minister and his friends.
This storm on tbe 21st raised the Ohio River

•OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF GOOD!

Smotei Hams ui Shnlien,

$10,000 Worth!
This is no dodge, but is a Bona fide offer. The time and
opportunity to make moony is by saving from 25 to 5o per
cent on your purchases. In Dress Goods we quote:

Lard, by the lb. or barrel,
GF The Highest Market Price paid
for Hides, Pelte, &amp;c.

Fresh Goods, Full Weight* and

HFARY BOR

Wool Caabmeree, .80 worth $1.
Wool Caehmcree, .60 worth .80
J KE A DL RKEE,
Half wool do. .35 worth .85.
Plain Suitings, .25 worth .35*'
Plaid Suitings, 6|.
Prints, .5 .8 .7
Wool drew Flannel. .40 worth .65 Waterproofs, .75 worth $1
Wntenjroofs,
Wateniroofs, Sl
$1 worth $1.25
Wool Tweeds .50 worth .75
..
. -----------Cottonade, .16 to 20
Half
wool. a.
Tweeds,
8s worth 4a.
Farmer* &amp; Mechauica .20 to .25
Lin. Table Cloth, .18 worth 25
Lin. TableCloth, 8a worth 4a.
Lin. Table Cloth. .50 worth 75
,
Cotton Goods, .8 ’.7 .8
Bleached Goods, .0.7.8.0.10
Office on second flour of Buxton's
White
Goods
cheap.
.
------White Goods Cheap.
NASH^LLE, MICH.
Table Oil Cloth, .25 worth .85
Floor Oil Cloth, .85 w’th .50
Horse Blankets .90 worth 9s.
Overalls .40
Overalls .60
Overalls 25.
Trim’iig Silk .75 worth $1
Silk Ribbons at cost.
Trim’ng Satin, $1 worth $1.50
Ladies Stockings.
of Wheat, good Orchard, very fair buildings,
Children’s Stockings.
Gloves A Mittens. good spring near house. Price 3,000. Payments

REAL ESTATE AGENTS,

40 acres, 3 miles from Nashville. Fair house
and born, Nearly all Improved. Price 81,600.
40 acres,
miles from Nashville. If sold,
soon will take 81,150.
25 acres, iu the village of Nashville. Must
be sold for wfcat It will bring on account of
poor health of present owner.
50 acres, 4 mUea from Nashville; nearly all
improved; fair buildings and ta all a good bar­
gain. Price 81,000; part down.
House and Lot, on Phillipa street; the best
bargains ta town. Price 8350.
House and Lot, on State street Price 8250,
half down down.
,
Good House and four aaes of Land on Fran­
ce* Street. Price 8450.
House and lot on State BL, bouse new: good
cellar and plenty of good water. For sale at
8700 or Trill exchange for farm property near
Nashville or Hastings.
80 acres, 1J^ miles from Nashville on the best
road leavtagtne village; all Improved except 8
acres; the remaining 8 acres good timber ; la
well watered by a never-falling spring. Good,
young orchard; buildings fair; 18 acres ox
wheat on the ground; present owner engaged,
ta other business and will sell for 82,600, &gt;i,000 down, balance on long time.
Vacant lot on Philips Sl Price 1120 If sold
soon.
LEE &lt;fc DURKEE.

Ingrain Carpets, ,25 worth .35Ingrain Carpets, .35 worth .50
Ingrain Carpets, .60 worth .80
Ingrain Carpets, .70 worth$l

Men’s Suits, $5 worth 8.
Men’s Suits, $10 worth 15
Men’s Suits, $15.worth 20. Boys Suits (3 worth 5.
Boys Suits 5 doll, worth 8. Overcoats 2.50 to 10 dolls.

Mens Stoga Kip Boot s, 2 dolls, worth 2.5o
Mens Stoga Kip Boots, 2.50 worth 3.50
Mens Fine Calf Boots. 2 dolls, wothr 4
Mens Fine Calf Boots 2.50 worth 2.

It. DICKINSON A CO.

Kid Button Shoes 1 doll, worth 1.50
Fine Kid Button, 2 dolls worth 2.50
Tampico Goat 2.25 worth 3 dollars
Childrens Shoes 50 cts. to 1 dollar.

-----NEW-----

CUSTOM FLOURING NHL
READY FOR BUSINESS

Tea,735 worth 5oc. Tea 45c worth 60c. Coffee 13 worth 17
Coffee 16c worth 20c. Brown Coffee 17c. Molasses, blk.
Strap, 30c worth 40c. Common Syrup. 30c worth 40
N. 0. molasses best in the market 50c worth 70.
Mh 1 le flavor 50c. worth 70, Sugar Granlate|d 10 Standard^ A. 10 Brown 7,8.

CUSTOM GRINDING!
Of every dereriptlon, done in a rupcrior
manner, at the drop of the hat; and
Satlsfaction guaranteed.

FLOUR. MEAL AND MILL FEED

The prices quoted are suffient to indicate what bargains are
offered, all of whieh_will£be*strictly adhered to.

Kept constantly on hand.

iBThe highest market price will be paid fsr Butter, Eggs,
Potatoes, Beans, Lard« Dried Apples &amp;c.

Graham Flour

Our

j^On all sums ol $25 and over, six months’ credit will be giv­
en on€approved notes^buaring 7 percent interest.
Come early! these goods will not last long at prices given.

By a strict attention to burineM, and square
dealing with all our customers, wc hope to mer­
it a liberal patronage from the farmers of thia
vicinity.

II. R. DICKINSON A CO.

Q.EO. W. l^tANCIM,

THE CROWN

^yAGONS
WAGONS.

Fancy and Staple

WAGONS.

GROCERIES!

Hade or

CONSISTING IN PAET OF

SUGARRTEA8,
COFFEES. SPICES,
8YRUP8. MOLASSES,
"TARCH. SOAP,
CRACKERS, CHEESE,
BEST NICKLE SOAP IN TOWN.
SALMON,
WHITE FISH.
TROUT.
MACKEREL.
'lx the United States Senate on the 21st Mr.
HALIBUT,
Hale offered a protest against the admission
COD rtBH.
HERRING.
charge of repudiation in Yankton County.
STEAM COOKED OAT MEAL.
Amendments to the Life-Saving bill were
the crown sewing machine.
CROCKERY,
adopted by which a pension roll Is created for
GLASS WARE.
disabled surfmen. The Military Academy Ap­
«- The “Crown" comes into the market
LAMPS.
propriation bill was passed, as were also bills
FLOWERPOTS, ♦be last of all the machines, but has -prune to
front rank at once from the fact that it has tato bridge the Mississippi between Minnesota
and Wisconsin, to abolish tLa reservation dHIO$ STONE
WARE,

nun in Southern Indiana, Ohio, Kentucky and
West Virginia.
Ur to the 21st 82,000 had been collected for
Mrs. Sergeant Maaoe and the baby, and It *aa
estimated that the fund would reach 825,000,

READY FOR SALE!

52413944

Campaign Committer

the IfiU

were overflowed and deaerted.

tentiary while a petition for a writ of habeas
corpus wm pending. Secretary Lincoln has
The Illinois State Board of Railroad «ad

JltmmiCoxoo thelTUt was arangod with

the OU&gt;c and Missouri rctervattanu Mr. TOBACCOS,
Pendleton Introduced a Constitutional Amend­
ICIGAR8,
•
PIPES,
ment for the election of Marshals, DistrictTEA
Attoraeya, and PosUnoatera. In the House a TRY ■■ OUR t- FIFTY-CENT
resolution was adopted to make tbe Genera
Award bill the special order for April IL Mr.
Glheou submitted a telegram from New Onleans stating that the vuppriea distributed by TEF Remember we get, do fancy pri
ces, but atll all gooda hr low an the
iu do- loweeU.tQiudby couBidrredj*
Respectfully,

CKO. W. FRANCIS.

BLACKSMITHIN6!
BtJtCKSMITHIRG!
---- BONK BY----

BENNETT
work has proved t
found only in the
Every device that is really desirable fa other
machines will be found in the “Crown.” Ad-

BUBBV &amp; WABON REPAIRIIB
Job.

M. WOOI&gt;

�bowthe &gt; yoke of
Mod font U

r ol onr famen hnve bollt now

Mr. Stanley wiU build • bun thU
H. MWrerwo la boildinl » ■•condi­

tion- io hi* hon*n.
Mr*. B*rkrr b** » brother from Cnnad* vhdtlna her.
Curtin Webster ot Snmnnc Tiaitod
friend, in town laat week.
Mr*. A. Bunnell hl* * brolher-ta-l*w
from Mtaoe*ot* uulitng her.
A niter P*rty occurred at W. Hum­

phrey* Un week. Oh!l***o*l
The A**yri* Tempemco Dr*ra»tic
■ Society *buwed nt BeUerue. Thnrndny

night.
Some of our young folks took in the
dance last week at the grange hall in
Penfield.
Frank Wallace cut a grand splurge
{day riding out with another

man’s
•e HartoTu has bought Smith’s
in the store and will run it on
inte_
his own hook.
Joseph Smith baa trade&lt;l his store
building in Nashville for 80 acres of
land in Assyria.
Mr*. P. Abby basin a full stock of
spring and 'summer goods which she
will sell cheap.
Mrs. H. Bristow had a brother and
sister from south of Battle Creek visit­
ing her last week.
Wm. Campbell gave bis foot a bad
gash last week. Dr. Baker fixed up
the same and it is doing finely.
E. Wadsworth mill took fire one night
last qjeek and got a good scorching
before tbe fire waa extinguished.
Our schools are ncarly“all closed.
The Eagle closed with an exhibition,
at which over two hundred persons
were present.
Mra. Sylvester is very low. She has
has been sick all winter and if not help­
ed soon it is feafed there will be do
helping her.
Tbe sale at Levi Stanton’s, Wednes­
day, went off finely, everything sold
for a good price. The Stanton’s will
soon start for Kansas.
Mra. James Driscoll of Carlisle, came
to her mother’s on a visit a few days
since. Her child waa taken seriously
ill soon after, but it had the best of care
and will recover.
Tbe board of school inspectors of
Assyria, Bellevue. Maple Grove and
Kalamo meet at the Center, Thursday,
the 33rd, to *et some parties into the
Austin district.
,
’Twas John Talbert that promised
the gal he loved a silk dresa, if she
would marry him. She said "No,” and
Ittaoke John’s heart. John, don’t got
discouraged but try again.
The Greenback union caucus will be
held at the town hall, Monday, March
the 97th, at two o’clock to choose their
candidates for office. Tbe Republicans
will hold their caucus at the town hall
on Friday March the 31st.
The M. E. church organized a Sun­
day school last Sunday, with Mrs. F.
Clark os superintendent; W. Clark,
assistant; C. Nickerson, Secretary;
and Mra. G. Grabern, treasurer. Forty
dollars was raised, of which $35 was
appropriated to buy a library.
II. H.

CEDAR CREEK.
A thunder storm Friday night
David Bowker is preparing to build
a house the coming summer.
Bert Peas had the misfortune to lose
a work horse last Saturday night
Real estate is high in this place. J.
Corwin has an acre to sell that he hold*
at $950.
H. Newman will sell tbe most of his
personal property at public auction on
Friday.
D Newton has purchased a new 18
home power self-propelling engine of
Nichols, Shephard &amp; Co., Battle Creek.
May tbe good people of this place ton
der their sympathies to the Widow
Rein*. She is left without relatives
Geo. Abram has started his saw mfl
once more and the boys call it a tri­
weekly mill. They say the saw goes
■p one week and tries to come down
tbenext.
A protracted effort is being held in
the U. B. church and a much needed
work is being accomplished, as many
professional back sliders are cnce more
coming to the fold.
John Place a well-to-do old bachelor
of the town of Barry, and who has ar­
rived at the age of about 45, has for tbs
first time, placed his affections upon a
loving girl of about 15 years of age, and
it is thought he will soon enter upon
the wild and uncertain seas of matn-

rhuse labor^u a physi­
nce and hereabouts

U&gt;. hone, in

Elmer Hammond moved into our
burg Monday.
Most all the sugar shanties were in
full blast Sunday.
We have had a year of excellent
health hereaboata.
The priee of land-has "riz” since the
late railroad talk began.
Don’t bet too high on F. M. P.’s nom­
ination as State Senator.
Hired help is mostly at their respect
ive ixxta, ready for action. .
The night of the R. R. meeting was
too bad for Bismarkers to attend.
Saturday and Sunday tbe maple
yielded their sweetness copiously.
. Uncle Hay of Ohio, is here to tarty
He bought Benny Benedicts farmA good view of Bismark and tho
new R. R. can be had from my farm.
Chas. Sackett is draining his farm
and fitting it up ror farming purposes.
Sunday seemed like spring and
woodland songsters ventured a feustrains.
This locality is not being visited
with flood, famine, earthquake, or any
thing to temfy the people.
Any man that gives his pocket book
the preference to honor, is a man to be
shunned, as one would a viper.
This reporter has not called a doctor
but twice in four yean and one of the
calls waa a high priced one at that
.
‘ Tuesday freezing; high winds and
some snow . every body shivering.
I
“provisy” rough weather the rest of
this mon tli.
Any one seeking happiness can come
and buy my farm and write -locals for
Thu News the balance of my year, or
till pumpkin planting.
The wet weather of last fall and win
ter has succeeded in squatting out
turnpikes so, that ditches are.about as
high as the pikes.
Augustus Roberts who has been at
work in camp near McBrides. Was
among relatives the tore part of the
week. He reports a good deal of ague
in camp.
The first case of diphtheria beard of
in these parts for a longtime, made a
demonstration last Friday in the fam­
ily of David Prescott. Dr. Hunt was
called and is treating the case success­
fully.
The first seed corn I planted in Sun­
field I brought from the town of Convis, CalahouD Co., on my back, and aded a plow point to my load at Bellevue.
A man at Kalamo, after viewing my
cargo, said: "Why in h-------- 1 didn’t
you let me know you was goingout. I
wanted to send for 10 or 13 bushels ot
potatoes.”
WuiTIST.

FRICHARDVILLE.
Items are covered with mud.
Our school class next Saturday.
The roads are nearly impossible.
David Tyrrell of Diamondale, made
his father-in-law a short visit last

Mr. aud Mra. H. Wooton have adopt­
ed a real bright littlo giYl, seven years
of age.
Wm. Merahon is home to stay after
teaching a very successful school in
Rutland
Samuel Weeks went to Jackson Co.
last week, to visit among his relatives
and acquaintances.
The youngest daughter of Mrs. and
Mr. J. R. Daily, is sick, but we can not
say whether seriously or not.
Miss Lloyd of Devereaux, Jackson
Co., who has been visiting at hex uncle’s,
Mr. Weeks, returned home Saturday.
R. H. Dickson has left our land of
mud and is now sojourning in the mire
of Cedar Creek, where he is running
the grist mill.
8. D. McKee, our pastor, is holding
revival meetings at the school boose,
and in spite of the bad roads be has a
good attendance.
Some of tbe teachers around here are
attending Prof. Hillas teachers cIbm
at Hastings. It is a good thing and is
well patronized.
Ernest Hayneewill dose his school
next Friday. He will then get ready
for his western trip, and expects to sec
tbe Pacific Coast in a few weeks.
Mr. Frank Whitworth and Miss
Redin E. Fisher were united in mar­
riage, a few days since. This scribe
unites with their many friends in wish­
ing them much joy, and may then­
pathway from now on, be a smooth one,
and their cares be light and few, nnd
may they live for that one noble end,
to have a home in the mansion above.
We neglected to write last week, but
had we written, wc should certainly
have said that George Prichasd was
the happiest man in the town. Those
who noticed him, say that his face was
covered with smiles. His once broken

Center school thia summer.
Joseph Hilbert went to Chicago,
business, one day last week.
The church social will be held at H.
J. Stowell's next Friday evening.
C. Cook is very low and has not eat­
en anything for about two weeks.
Elias Bower lost a horse last Satur­
day with inflamation of the bowels.
Mr.Lipecomb near tho Odessa-Wood­
land line lust a child from diphtheria.
Rev. Bridenstine preached at the M.
E. church, Sunday evening, March 96,
R. Christian, Frank Hilbert and
Frank Warner started Tuesday for Da­
kota.
■
■
Mrs. Amelia Snuggs is home on a vis­
it and will return to her home next
week at Kalamazoo.
The Sunday School institute has
been postponed for an indeflnate time
on account of diphtheria.
David P. Leda bought 0. Grant out
in tbe agricultural works, and the firm
will, be known hereafter as Warner &amp;

The roads were sc bad that the U. S,
mail was obliged to stay over night on
Tuesday the horses were completely
tired out
W. H.
sold two calves for $46
ten months old they were some of
Stq well’s Durham stock. It pays to
keep good stock.
N. Brown talks some of moving to
the upper peninsula, to work at tbe
harness trade. There is no bosses up
there, Nick. All oxen.
A party of young folks had a turkey
roost and a fine time at W. Risings last
week Thursday. After dinner Chas.
Lee and G. A. Weed took six young
ladies out for a pleasure ride and visit
the sugar camps. Charley was driver
and in fun drove over a log, upsetting
wagon, girls and all. No one was hurt
but some of the girls haven’t got their
backs down yet
While peacefully engaged in the
lawful pursuits of life, and as the sun
was sinking in the bright west, about
tho hour of six, the glad news reached
our sanctum that Washington Rowlador and Miss Susie Hood were twist­
ed together by that matrimonal tie.
While we were all surprised we could
not help but say : “A good match,” and
wish the happy couple all the joys im­
aginable.

sugar, all without disturbing any one.
L*t’s have another “Grand(!) Ring
Hunt.”
Gossip continues ao float, yet, not
withstanding the propensity to float,
but a meager quanity gets afoul ot the
snags abreast the landing of your hum­
ble scribe. A steady watch of h!1 the
shrubs iu the great stream- tattludom ;
sentinels posted at every available
point with hook aud line, grappling
machines and closely woven nets, the
gossip either sails quite majestically by
or sinks into utter nothingness, and
leaves our harbor free from dirt.
________ .
T.8.O.C.

MAPLE GROVE.
Walt Dnnham has returned frjui
Kansas.
Sugar making and mud is the order
of the day.
Ira Cummins has gone to Battle
Creek to work.
Will Pbinsey has gone to Clare} via,
horse-back power.
Will Blowers has gone to Newaygo
Co , to see his brother.
T. Pbinsey and wife and Mrs. Cora
Fast are guests at Wm. Phinsey’s,
The Grangers are out every calm
morning scatting the tiny grass seed.
Mrs. Gordiner of Nashville, is visit­
ing at her daughter’s, JMra. John Wolf.
Last Saturday night was the best sap
day that sugar makers have Lad this

Uncle Reuben Norton fell off a log
sled. A skined nose. is the conse­
quence.
There was a surprise party at Jlr.
Nortons, and .a dance at John Wolfs
last week.
Am’ou was riding out Sunday with a
straw hat on. Guess he was crowding
the season a little.
F. Covell’s wife decided to accom­
pany him to the sunny south, conse­
quently he postponed going one week.
Last Monday was the day set for the
sun to cross the line. It had barely
got over the line when the line
storm came gently paltering down.
It was amusing to see two couple
start through the mud afoot to the
dauce last Friday night, and then after
getting part way back out and have
to borrow a lantern to get home with.
We made mention of a five cent quilt
Nell.
a few weeks ago, but pro most earnestly
Rue it, for a lady of high social, moral
NORTH CASTLETON.
and religious standing, has made some
Mr. Marse has sold his home to Al- sarcastic remarks in regard to the sintax of that little item. Our ardor as a
leu Carr.
Mr. Warner has moved on ‘Dan scribe has been dampened about five
cent’s worth.
Evert’s farm.
Bog E Rce.
Dr. Wad. Everts says he received his
diaploma from Doctress Turnbull.

Mrs. Vanzilda from Adison Steuben
Co., N.Y.,has come to see her daughter.
Mrs. Geo. Dillenbeck.
Zeb. Sparks says ho didn’t trade
horses last Sunday. He traded very
late Saturday night, or very early
Monday morning.
Ifyouwantto see how many Ohio
men has recently settled in these porta,
just go to a public auction, somewhere
in Woodland.
W.tl. Strickland is disgusted with
his son-in-laws and will not coun­
tenances tho last one at all. He says
they get no better fast
We expect that "Nell,” Wood
land correspondent, will now be
somewhat relieved from duty as
"Van” has moved over in that town.
One of our brethren had to boil sap
all day Sunday in order to make a few
pounds of sugar to keep up his church
expenses. Another church trial is on
the program.
This neighborhood don’t intend to
be behind in the matter of improve­
ments, O.L. Wellman ispuctinga base­
ment under one of bis barns; Lew.
Wellman is buildingap addition to his
brick dwelling; Geo. V^inllman has all
the material on the ground for a new
house, and H. Perkins intends to com­
mence his house ar soon as the weather
is suitable.
B.X.C.E.

Floating Gossip From West Kalamo.
—;— /
Quite a brisk snow storm on Tuesday
Zimn Brooks has fnoved to Brandi
Co., to reside.
.
Mrs. Louisa Townsend is reported as
dangerously sick.
Mrs. Cyrus Blosson is slowly recoV­
ing from her recent illness.
.-s
S. P. Robart of Sunfield, -will soon be
z resident of this section.
Sugaring broke out again last week
and filled our land with steam.
A brother of Mrs. James Addrewslies
very low with diphtheria at tbe home
of the former.
John Ehret lost a large batch of syr­
up, a few nights since by its burning to
ashes during tbe night.
Real estate transactions: E.D. Wil­
liams to 8. P. Robart, parcel on sect ion18. T. Gregg to Mr. Carl parcel on
section 4.
John Mast left for the great “home
for the homeltm” region on Monday,

EATON COUNTY.

Tbe Dew Masohic hall of Charlotte,
was dedicated last week Friday.
Mr. J. S. Northrop, of Kalamo, had
the misfortune to break his arm while
felling trees.
A prohibition ticket will be in die
field at the coming township election,
in the townshship ot Delta.
It itt reported that Henry Stevens of
Grand Ledge was shot at Ft. Reno,
I. T., last Sunday by horse thieves.
Wanted, at Cheater, the thimble fin­
ger from the right hand of Mrs. M.
Young, which was lost last Monday,
among the teeth of a revolving buzz
Charlotte sports seem to be out of
the ring, as they lost heavily on a foot
racea short lime ago, and again were
let down several hundred by Burton,
the wrestler.
A teachers institute will be held at
Charlotte, commencing next week
Monday, and the local committee pre
sparing no pains to make the gather­
ing of teachers, entertaining and prof­
itable.
The Grange hall at Shaytown wan
struck by lightning last Friday night
aud so badly shattered that the goat es­
caped, and has not been found. Nub­
bins were also strewed all over the
township.
Tbe famous case of Oscar Crampton,
vs the Eaton and Barry Insurance Co.,
which has been tried*twice in the cir­
cuit court and once in the supreme
court, has been settled at last by the
company paying Crampton $9,300.
Henry Covev, an old man aged 63
yetis died at Eaton Rapids, hwt week
Tuesday night. He waa not thought
to have much ready money, but in one
his trunks a nice hide deposit of $10.­
000 was found, which goes to his poor
brothers and sisters.
A suit will be commenced in tbe
April term, of court wherein Joseph
Morgan of Chester demands $10,000
damage* of Jeremiah Deihl of 8nnfield for enticing his wife away from
him. Delhi is &amp; son-in-law of tlie
Morgans. aud contrary to the usual j
custom, seems to hke to see his moth­
er-in-law Aonnd.

guilty of many irrrgularitiea and small
frauds on the Treasury, snch ae sub­
stituting one article on the vouchers
for another far different from the one
purchased. These cafa*do not aggre­
gate very much probably not, above.
$1,000 and would not ordinarily receive
any public attention, but, tngn 'the
fact tbat Senator Sherman, who was
the Secretary of the Treasury had • sdisesaea. fl atdrugruti
tabliahed a Campaign Committee to tloeAkl^uev
Depol JaWIM E. DA VW &amp; (ft?
advance bis oandidaxy at Chicago, was Midi.
________________
the beneficiary jof the greater part of,
aw THE “CROWN".IS WARR
the transactions.
Pitney evidently FIVE YEARS, and all that tbr Unrr
In
n.-. ui. &lt;*
(I.......
... .-I- ... ..
wanted to do something for Sherman
and knew from experience the feasibilitv of covering up stationary and and kept •*&gt; free of all
labor, parte o' anytbit
other supplies needed by a campaign
committee by a puchasing of ordinary
supplies for'the Department such as
file holders, cha"de)ier8, Ac. About
$000 cove fa this official malfeasance
TkSCw.il1? •’CROWN" DRIVE- WHEEL
aud,the testimony conclusively proves JOURNAL
is very lone, and ilturns hi Its bear­
•that Pitney’s superior officers were en­ ings, inotrad of the wheel revolving on tL To
tirely ignorant of the frauds, although avoid all “side puli the.wheel U put on tbeoatbe and his accountant L. L. Norton
made every effort to connect them with
their peculations. Among the officers
ELEGANCE AND PURITY.
of the Treasury whose names have
Lodlfe who appreciate elegance and trortw
been freely used in the public press,
■re using Parker# Hair Balaam, It lathe beat
as being cognizant of the frauds if not article sold for restoring gray hair tolls orlgL
countenancing them isthatof the pres­ nal color, beautrapd iuatre.
ent Chief Clerk, Major Powers, who
MAMMOTH PEARL POTATO.
comes out of the investigation without, Thia Potato originated in Ohio, and waa aethe supervision of wrong. This officer lectcd a# the beet from twentv-Ove hundred
was the one Secretary Wiudom intrust­
ed with the designation of the Com­ ally roundish. it U on eStr11ent market Pota­
mittee of investigation who first re­ to. In table qualities, it ranks with tbe peach­
blow. I bare a few bushels of tbe above Pota­
ported his suspicians of irrregularity to# which I will sell at my residence tn Maple
and Secretary Windom in his testi­ Grove at 60 cents per peck, and half bushel
25-38
Geo. O. Dass.
mony being asked as to his confidence •1.00.

smog.

in his Chief Clerk replied thnt this ex­
amination did not in the least detract
from his confidence but rather strength­
ened it; that he found him ready and
willing to give him a&gt;l the assistance
he could in the matter of the investi­
gation and so far as be could see he was
most thorough in bis efforts to arrest
any abuses.
There is a scheme on a certain set of
Stalwarts here to help history out a
little in finding her Jflvel. One of the
gentlemen told me the other day, in
connection relative to the recent lettdr
in the New York Sun anent “old Rosv,”
that ,would see letters cropping out
here and there a good deal more dam­
aging to Garfield than tbat. He recon­
sidered it damaging and said it was
printed for that purpose. The Sun
article is reported here to have come
from high Stalwart sources. The ef­
fect of this upon tbe Republican party
will not be underestimated by shrewd
politicians. There is visible resent­
ment here and this resentment is likely
to widen tbe breach already existing.
The friends of Mr. Blaine are disposed
Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago,
to welcome any diversion which is cal­
culated to injure his enemies before Backache, Soreness of the Chest,
Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Stroll­
the people.
ings and Sprains, Burns and
Yesterday, after the application for
Scalds, Genera! Bodily
the writ of habeas corpus in tbe case
Pains,
'
of Sergeant Mason, sentenced to eight
Tooth,
Bar and Headache, Frosted
years in the Albany penetentiary, had
Feet and Ears, and all other
Iwen refused by Judge Wylie. Mr.
Pains and Aches.
Bigelow (Mason’s council) asked leave
to w:thdraw tbe petition without pre­
judice to making the application to the
General Term,* which request was
granted by the court. The fact that
Mason "was at that hour, 8:15 o’clock, SOLD BY ALL DRUGGIBT8 AED DEALEP3
15 MEDIOIEEon his way, under-guard, thronght Bal­
timore to tha Albany penetentiary was
A. VOGELER It CO..
unknown at the court house. The
prisoner’s removal from t|iis jurisdic­ MS. LTDU E. HUHS, OF UH, Utt.
tion, of course, stops any further pro­
ceedings here. The action of the au­
thorities in sending Mason away where
it was known that the application was
being made is tbe subject of much
comment to-day about the court hous*.,
and there are some people of the op­
inion tbat it was done to defeat the
prisoner’s being produced if the writ
had been issued. It is stated that al­
most immediately after the counsel and
notary left the Wa. hington barracks
yesterday, preparations were made to
send tbe prisoner off, and the impres­
sion among tbe soldiers there, was that
be had been sent to the Washington
jail at the request of the counsel. There
is very little doubt hut that an appli­
cation for a writ will be made in New
York, and Mason’s release a«ked for.
Petitions for Mason’s pardon are pour­
ing in from all sections of the conatry.
The President has nominated Judge lydi
b pihkhartb
Blstchford, of New York, to be an As
VZCTTAffla! cmgOTOD.
sociate Justice of tbe Supreme Court.
The nomination finds great favor here
among judges and members of tbe Bar,
who .regard Judge Blatchford as a very
able man. a sound and b;-oad lawyer,
and one who, an said an eminent mem­
bers of the Supreme Court Bar to your
correspondent this afternoon, will add
strength to tbe Court, and particularly
because of his large experience and em­
inence in admirality business.

CErmwremedY

RHEUMATISM,

A

________ ____

Adqpc.

Andrew GoeM,a young man living
in Taornspple, went to Caledonia aud
got drunk recently. When lie drove
hack home he tied his horse, nnd hid
down in the fence corner to sleep. and
waa found in the morning nearly frown
stiff. Prompt measures for ilia re­
suscitation were immediately resorted
to but death resultedin a few hours. A
coroner's jury found that deceased
“came to Ins death from the use o'
intoxicating liquors and exposure—
Tlrerenidrtic* of Mr. 8. s. P*rk burnt
;.f Mlddldrlll.. n.

.

-

�putoo. His heart is stirred within
at the sight He ears in a low voi&lt;
-Your father—”
, “Died three weeks ago.”
^TMaAha answers, not uncovering her ;
I
He says, after another pause:
“And removed here afterward P”
“No. Long, long ago. When , first
we left the dear old home. The room
in there wm his; he wm never able to
leave it after I first brought him here,
until he left it for his grave.”
umr apron
In boendir'A*

sun sinks under toe hlll-topa,
im sbodows laoxtiien acroM toe floor:
। birds chirp aonly thnt good-niaht carol.
ie ckli-trvn pause nt Uic dark'nlnw «Rxfr;

—ChrUllan Union

SHADOWS ON THE WALL.
•‘Come in.”
She gives the permission to enter, in
a low, harried voice, looking up from
her open writing-desk upon the table,
across which her arm,is laid. There is
a newspaper laid there, too—the folded
page blistered as with tear*. •• Died, at
weary eyes that lift themselves from
that blotted line, aud tuny wistfully
upon the opening door.
“ You have a letter for me, Nancy?”
••Please. Miss Gray, it’s some one------■
”
But the slip-shod little maid-of-allwork is cut short in her speech by that
some one from, behind putting her
gently aside from the door and shutting
U upon her. as he entered. Some one—
a man. who has removed bis hat in com­
ing forward, and on whose face the
lamplight falls, as be stands on the
hearth-rug opposite Miss Gray.
•• Bessy ------ -’
His face is full ot eager life, but she
is looking up at him m if she saw a
ghost. Her hand shakes so, resting ou
the paper, that the rustling draws his
eyes to it. He comes a step nearer and
Eats his hand down firmly on hers, as
e glances at the lines just above.
“ • Died at Summerfield’ —Bessy, do
you take rpe for a ghost?”
•
She cannot speak. The color is steal­
ing back into her lips, and they tremble
apart, but no words come. He says,
trying to speak lightly, for her face
alarms him:
■
“ You did not know that there were
two of the name. My father’s house at
Summerfield seemed to fix it on me. It
was my cousin. John Hesketh. Poor
fellow, death was such a happy n#ease
to him from his wearisome illness, that
he would not grudge its having brought
me some good. It was your letter of
condolence to Mrs. Hesketh. Bessy,
which showed me where to find yon,
after all these weary years.”
* The color has died ont of her face as
suddenly as it flashed into iu The flut­
tering hand under his is drawn away,
and folds itself with the other, tightly,
on the edge of the desk.
“ You left Mrs. Hesketh very well, I
hope.”
'
*• Well, that is hardly to be expected
of a young widow, Bessy.”
.
■“ I—I do not understand------ ”
••'n»4 you were as mistaken in the
marriage as in the death. How could
you be, Bessy?”
She is quivering from head to foot,
flushing and quivering, as she says,
brokenly:
“• How should i not be? Some one
sent me a. paper long ago, with the
marriage at Summerfield marked in it.
How could 1 know? And when I read
the name in the paper .-.gain, last
week------ ”
“You wrote your little letter to that
imaginary wife of mine, telling her that
you had known me years ago, and that,
seeing tbe name, you were so grieved
for her, and conld not refrain, though a
stranger to her, from telling her so. It
wm a sweet little letter; she. poor little
widow, showed it to mi?, aud was not
quite Dimmed with mo that I took it
away from her. I have it here. Bessy,
if I read between the lines----- ”
She catches her breath.
“1 wrote nothing she might not have
read if she had been your wife.”
"Between the lines. I said, Bessy.
From them she would never have
guessed what the old friendship meant.
But 1 remember it was no friendship; it
' waa love."
He says the word with his touch upon
her hands again. But she shakes it off;
she has risen to her feet, her grasp
upon tbe back of her chair, steadying
her.
.
“If it were,” she says, hurriedly,
••you never said it so plainly then, that
you need repeat it now.”
“Yon cannot doubt I mean it. You
knew I was coming back. And in the
meantime, your father aud. you both
suddenly removed, leaving no trace—
Bessy,” with a quick light breaking
upon him, “it was in that same sum­
mer that my cousin John Hesketh mar­
ried; could that have had anything to
do with------”
“My hiding myself?” she supplies,
quietly. “Nothing.”
•
Hesketh’s face changes, as he looks
searcki ugly at her. But he can
see hers no longer. She has sunk
down again in. her chair, her elbows
on the table,' her' head bent in her
hands. He waits a moment for her to
•peak, to move; when the does not, he
draws bark a little, and resting his arm
on the mantel, glances round him.
It ia a poor place enough; the lodg­
ing-house exterior, nnd the slip-shod
mald-uf-all work on the mairs. had not
Jed him to expect much. But yet he
had pot looked for such bare poverty
M this—the uncarpeted floor, tbe stnafl
table, the twoujr three hard chain.
slightly for a fuller view, ho
glimjise through a half-open
n inner room, comfortably alitill plainly ‘furnished. He
breath of relief. That inner
is a strong contrast to tbe beauti(pinc which had once seemed so

lie looks up
—_________ ___________ _
‘What mat­
ters? He never knew what it wm
like; and could cushions and carpets
and sofM make life any easier to me?’
“My love could have made it easier—
can make it, if you will have it".
Sha Lm tried to interrupt him with a
hurried gesture; but he will not be in­
terrapled. The be adds:
“I came to-night to say it 1 would
have said it years ago if you had not
lost yourself to me,"'
“Lost—yes; but not L John Hes­
keth. vou do not know------ There, why
should 1 say more? It is so long ago
'since I wm lost to you, you cannot care
much now.
So wo will part to­
night----- ”
\ “We will not, Bessy.” He says it
resolutely, drawing her hands away
now, holding tbem^Mt in his own. tor
he cannot be mistaken; there is a look
in her eyes that tells him how hard to
her would be the parting— m hard,
perhaps, as to himself. “We will not
part.’f
She yields to him in bo far that she
does not free herself when he draws her
to him. But then she turns her sad eyes
on him.
“John, will yoa make it harder, for
mo? Let me go in silence—I have kept
it all these years.”
“You should not, if I had known
where to find you, my darling.”
“I do not know. I think I should
have kept it, even if I had not heard of
your marriage just before.”
“Keep silence still then, Bessv. You
are speaking in riddles; bpt it is not
their answers I have come for. I have
come for the answer to just one ques­
tion: Bessy, do you love me?”
A faint smile crosses her face, but
does not lighten its sadness. She says,
softly:
“If you care to hear it—yes. Stay—”
her sudden movement disengages her
frfim him. “1 love you, and I will not
marry yoa. I would rather you would
not ask me why.”
“You require too much of me,” bo
interrupts her hoarsely. “You tell me
that you mean to spoil my life and
yours, andahat I am to take it on faith
that you arc right. I wilt not take it
on faith. I tell you plainly, you must
prove to me that you ore right, or I
will never give you up.”
Again that wan smile crosses her
lips, but does not touch the shadow in
her eyes.
“1 will prove it to you. then. It is
easily done now. If you had come a
month ago I might not have spoken.
But now, that he rests in the grave, I
may tell vou that I am Richard Lestre.
the swindler’s daughter. It has been
u long time since he was convicted,
and served out his term of punishment;
but. perhaps, not so long, that in your
boyhood you havenotheard his namp?'
He has; she sees it in his face. She
goes on: “I heard it for tho first time
when tho paralytic stroke came, which
impaired his memory; so that he went
back to tho years before he came to this
country, under the name you know him
by. when I heard it, you will under­
stand my one aim and end in life was
to pay back the people he bad ruined
in the old life—to pay them back out of
tho fortune he had amassed in tho now;
I know ho meant to do iL So much I
have gathered from his rambling speech
from time to time. Tho sum is nearly
cleared off now, and mv poor father—
but I will not speak of him; I cannot
expect vou to feel with me there.”
••Do I not?” Ho has come to her—
he has drawn both her hands in his.
••And this is what you would have part
us, Bessy? I cannot bqar your burden?
—you must suffer alone?”
She raises her head quickly.
.
“I do not refuse your pity, John; I
take it gratefully. But I will not have
it in the stead of love. And that you
should lnvc my father’s daughter----- ”
“1, who loved your father, Bessy?"
“John—John----- ”
Ho draws the sobbing woman closer
to him.
*• We will not make light of tbe sin,
my dear one, but neither will wo of the
repentance.
And, Bessy, remember
this; if you withhold yourself from mo
voa withhold the one thing I have
looked for and longed nnd waited for
every day of all these years since we
two parted.”
•
•
•
•.
•
■
I am still sitting in my window.where
my opposite neighbor in that low room
next tho roof of the lodging-house across
the street, comes to her window and
drawdown the blind. And I see no
more shadows hovering about upon tho
walk They are only shadows, after all,
that I have seen, out of which I have
been weaving the story of my pale little
opposite neighbor. I often see hers
thrown upon the wall there, for an
evening hour when she has forgotten to
draw down her blind—thrown quite
alone there, until to-night. Have my
shadows any substance alter all? 1 only
know that the paralytic old man about
whom seemed to hang a mystery, wm
carried oat in his coffin not long ago.
and I hope—I hope the pretty, mourn­
ful face over the way Is not to dwell in
shadows all its life.—Godey's Lady Book.

—A line man. putting up a telephone
wire in Meriden, Conn., a few days
since, and when at tho top of a tali
pole, wm seised with a fit, and fell oyer
backward. The spur on bis boot was
fixed firmly inlhe polo, and he'd him
fort, although a heavy man, from fall­
ing on a sharp picket fence.
Ho hung
head downward until his companions
who were uearlr jpralysed nt the
frightful siHictaclmj-ot a rope with

&lt;s&gt;

Hf STOVfr^ORi
M
DI

UJ

on this plantation? " In the majority
of places, according to the njoobinirt’l
description, each laborer is given a
room about sue by eight feet to lodge
in. and this apartment has to answer
all the requirements of single or mar­
ried life. Iu many cases the machinist
saw a family of» six white people living
iu one small room, with a ahameless
disregard for all the decencies of life.
At six o’clock the hands are escorted
to the field to work. Tho overseer of
each gang is ou his mottle to detect any
negligence or tardiness, knpwing well
that tho value of his "services is
rated by the amount which ho can de­
duct from the wages of the slaves. If
an unhappy bondman is seen shirking
his work he is deprived of tbe wages for
that day. If ho resent tho imposition
be is dragged before the native officer
of tbe law, who is a hail follow well met
with the planter, and is fined. The
system of fine* is in fact tbe most ad­
vantageous to the flinty-hearted over­
seer, for by judiciously using tbe ma­
chinery of the law he can koop tbe
bondman more securely in his power.
The law prevents them from leaving the
service of tbe planter while they are in­
debted to him, and the imposition of a
few heavy fines prolongs their slavery
for years.
The food given to the bondmen is not
•o'bad in quality as disgusting in the
manner in which it is cooked and served.
The Chinamen and the South Sen
Islanders do their own cooking. The
white slaves depend on a Chinese cook,
who is tbe servant of the plantation,
and endeavors to express through his
pots and pans the sinister disregard of
the overseer and the planter. The ma­
chinist described the food furnished
him and other artisans at various plan­
tations as disgusting: “ It doesn't take
the poor fellows iong to become demor­
alized. and then they are booked for
good. The sale of liquors is forbidden
on tho islands, but the odd dollars the
poor slaves get soon go in drink. That’s
how the Chinese grow rich by selling
rice brandy. The drink and tbe slavery
make them all one—negroes, Chinamen.
South Sea Islanders, Kanakas and
whites. If ever there was a hell on
earth it’s on some of these plantations
I’ve seen."—San Francisco Chronicle.

3
fc»

H
r aK

AND

Physicians
Have Signed or Endorsed the

B uilders

,

Sash, Doors, Blinds, Jefferson Nails. Glass, Putty, Paints,
Oils, Varnishes, Colors, Brushes, Etc. Castor, Sperm, Golden,
Black, Linseed and Kerosene Oik.
Shovels, Spades, Forks, Hoes. Snaths, Apple Parers, Farm
Bells, Fence Wire, Well and Cistern Pumps: Wood and Iron,
Pipe, Points, Cylinders. Lead Pipe, Sink^ &amp;c.
•
------------ AGENT FOR------------ ‘
.

Following Remarkable
Document:

r.e, JOT/. Cpei— Fo.™. y.X— U «a

DOMESTIC SEWING MACHINE

The Lightest Running and most Durable Machine in use.
I shall aim to keep none but first class goods, and sell them
at a small profit: Call and see me when needing hardware.

BeUSgp'.Capctae FUrtAr

a rrnato

FRANK 0. BOISE.
(fl
COUNTRY,

WHO IS

H

&lt;W B!0H ELOnDi

,rXc50jN

L rtinw* J'urr.niire i'tN. n. . ... “ ..-

-

i pm

H
wiikck

s

An Unfaithful Shepherd.

i-.

W!

s

H. F. Galen’s sheep herder deserts
This KUIac Sai
his camp and flock, leaving the sheep
among the wolves of the mountains for
two weeks without a shepherd, steals
his employer's fine herd horse and sheep
Is Tho Great Connecting Link between tho East and the Westlj
dog nnd runs away. The news of this
KSj
infamous outrage reaches us to-day by
toning Cart for eatlnr purpooexonly. On*oU&gt;«r iW
eraol fratura of cur pakce C*r» li a SMOKING
I'
Mr.'Galen, who comes to the city to. Liberty, JowaClt&gt;.Maren«n.Brooklj-n.Orinuell. SALOON
where you eaa enjoy Jour “Havana" U4
rlfhtofthsMma Brod for our frea circular.
j' 1
lira Moiiiei (the capital ot lowai. Htoart, Allan- mall boon of thr day.
find a herder to take the place of the
rianiinreut Iron Hrtdrea nnan the MlailMlppI Tj
tlr. anti Arora: with brandies trom Bureau
wretch, who has no doubt joined his
Junction to Peoria; Wilton Junction to Miuo and Mluoiirl rlvrraatall polnta ernaaed by thia t—1
tlue. Waaiilnitton. Falrlidil F.ldan. Belknap. line, and transfer* are avoided at Council ulutts. L
band of horse thieves, which is said to
U&lt; ntrrvine. Princeton. Trenton. Gallatin. Came- Kansas CUT. Leavenworth and Aleiilaou. ooo- SM
extend from Utah to tho Yellowstone
and the Northwest Territory. The horse
vlllej Keokuk to rannif-CTon. Uonaparte. Ilenfor the
looiport. Independent, Eldon. Ottumwa. E&lt;ldythief, who came in the guise of a sheep
vlllc.oakahxwa. Pella, Monroe, and D« Molnea;
herder, is James Orton, and was hired
«■_ Zion to Keouuqua; Norton io Monroe: Dei
Mninci to Indianola and Wlnterart; AUantie to
this fall by Mr. Galen at Bozeman. He
moved out to the range camp driving
with him 1.500 sheep, well supplied with
a good horse, tent, rations, dug, bed­
At Rock llUUD, with -Milwaukee nnd Rock
ding, etc.
Island Short Line,•‘and Rock Isl’« A Fro. Rds.
At IiavraroKT. with tbe Davenport Division
It appears from indications that Or­
r£.TE?l*
$500 ItewitrdI
ton slept only one ni^ht at the camp,
kre and Kai»ai City, via tbe ■
Itoek Iiland Short IJne."
and next day stole off taking a valua­
Thr “Orrat llock Kland"
ble herd horse and equipments and a
valuable shepherd dog. The num bad
H
left tbe camp about two weeks, and it
was not known until last Monday, when
Mr. Galen had occasion to send out
some supplies and it was discovered
0
that the camp was abandoned aud th«
(and tbe lotaenM* pusenKer business
(fl
sheep scattered all over tbe bills, sur­
of thia line warranting Hi. we are pleased to an­
*
nounce that this Company runs Pullman Paine* ■nd SouthwML,
rounded by ravenous wolves. Mr. Galen
I'ULJ.MAN FALACK CARS nro ran
went at once to the range and succeed­ COUNCIL
IH.UFFS. KASSAS CITY. Al
4a
Uiii
ed in gathering some eight or nine
hundred of his flock and bringing them
to his ranch—tho Willow Springs. It
ia.br
(fl
is believed that there never was - uch a
wanton desertion practiced in Montana
before, and as it is tbe first instance of
such betrayal the guilty miscreant
should be punished by tbe first tn an
I Wil! mall (Free) thn recipe for a almple Vm»
that could halt him with “stop thief."
tablo Balm that will remorxTan, Fra. kle».
&gt;1&lt; ■i^Ql.
Poss his name around and inspect care­
[ Ira and Tilolchea, leaving tho »kiu aoft. dear and
fully any man riding a fine bay horse
beautiful, al»u Inatroctiona lor producing a mxuri1 ant ctowih o' hair on a bald head or araootb face
and" having with him a black and white
■ Ad^rras. inrl.alu. Sc. alamo, BFN. VASDELF A
shepherd dog with tan-colored eye­
brows.—Helena (Mon.) Herald.

CHICAGO, BOCK ISLAND &amp; PACIFIC BY ,

0

PIMPLES.

TO CONSUMPTIVES

A Terrible Tarantula.
Oliver C. Waddell, who Recently re­
removed to. this State from Texas,
settling along Stone River, in tfconu
County, wm bitten a few days ago by a
tarantula. He was on a hunting expe­
dition in tho mountains, and hud
camped under a laige pine tree. Some
time during the night the insect
crawled in between tbe blankets which
enveloped him as he lay before the tire,
and bit him twice, once ou tho linger
and again on the arm near tho elbow.
Ho was awakened by a tingling sensa­
tion in that part of his body, and arous­
ing himself discovered tho cause, and
succeeded in killing the tarantula It
was os large as the hand of an ordinary
man. Waddell's hand and arm began
to swell rapidly, aud before ho could
Set to the nearest house, some four or
ve miles away, the poison had spread
apparently to all parts of his body. It
was Mm?, time before he oould obtain
medical skill, and when the physician
arrived Waddell wm found to be beJond hope.
He lingered some time,
owever, dying in the afteflnoon. ;'
case is a singular one, from the fact
that it proves that ihe tarantula Is Capa­
ble of inflicting a death wound.—Louis­
ville Courier-Journal..
.
—A French newspaper informs ita
readers that' a veterinary surgeon, re­
siding at Cbarloville, has 'suo^eiMled i
amputating the gangrened leg of a now,
and replacing it by a wooden one. The
i and w-'ks easily upon the art
i limb.
* ________

I —Three Httle girls, at GoM Hili,
I Nev., were playing at^doctofr_____
j and patient, and it aetuved on one tc
i take the pills prescribed by the yosthfal

~
.-n.i wuu o csiro il, nr
wl 1 Mind a copy &lt;rf ilw prescription u»«d. rice of
charge. wl‘h II.e direction for preparing and ualna
thrum,, which ll.,-y will find a avre Cura for
&lt; ougi-y. Cold*. C-’n»uinptl»n. A«lhma Brourhltl..
dra RirtlM wi.hing th* prracrlptlon will pi,,
addrvM, Rev Ji.A. WILSON: IM Peno Si. Wlllia

ERRORS OF YOUTH.
of routhfal India
feriaf humanity,

WM. SIMPSON &amp; SONS'
MOURNING. SECOND MOURNING
SOLID .BLACKS,

Eddystone

ln» In perfect confldcnev,
W-lyr. JOHN «. OGDEN, AxCedar 8t„ K. Y.

THE SURGEONS KNIFE.
Mr. SimonlrfetMll. ufHiturenii

'71‘uwij.W. ywho
rr's*
?r- &lt;*•«K *u_“" •£
nf Itoniloot
found hi. t

THE EXPERIENCE OF HALF A
CENTURY
has enabled them to allain such perfection
that they can with confidence ask you to test,
the quality of their work. They carefully
avoid all poisonous drags, make only fast colors.which are thoroughly washed in hot water
and soap, thereby removing anything which
would stain underclothing.
These who buy and wear their prints will,
they feel confident, find them superior in durntilily, artistic style and finish. Be sure, a nd
ask foi their goods, and see that their marks
and tickets arc on them.

Bocks

IHVEfinOhS

4706
an examination, fora ci
•Large, and adrtw »uU uflts paUmtaMlln. All ra&gt;
reapondence atrleth confidential. Pricee as low al

LOUIS EmSS

BUXTON
I* DOW ntcvly located
In hla new building,

has added a stock of
CROSS-CUT M CIKCUUR SAWS.

FANCY DRESS PRINTS
The EDDYSTONE PRINT WORKS is
one of the largest and most complete estab­
lishments in the country.

NO PATENT NO PAY
PiHITS

ATTENTION! SAW MILL MEN!
Prices on Mstw Work.
Circle naw gumming and ‘hammering, all mvi
up to 4I&gt; iuebea, 10' cent* per tiieh. 40 JdcIi, Gummed, &lt;2.00
lioniniered, &lt;3.00
SO ”
”
A00
’’
4.00
”
4-00
00 »’
Gutnmiug and Jluniim-ring
Regular Filing,
Hammering ervoked mwr.
Prompt aUeation giveiw,

IU ILLIAM JONE 5,

dlaaa.r. of a chrunic &lt;*Lar.
Uw minor aud capital oper-

II j , rKr.Mnv'nr-KFH'-BMi k,
fSsasi^s.

on building, HIK t

�win be

of generating tbe force are
J .u-Y- .L-u —.LL-L _ — ___
employed.
It is Uttli
world ia 1
KI&lt;JM

GRAND RAPIDS DIVISION.
KAHTWAKl .

_

stations.

_____

T Ej x7p. *

ch*---

WESTWARD.
OR.

t&gt; Railways.
H. fl. LEDYARD.

STONEs I” THE KIDnEY
ana

^»rr Expelled—Long aaffcring of one
toy’* Beat Pcplc—A lucky mtn.

It it by no mean*a strange tiling that Dr.
Kennedy should have received tbe' fol io jr Ing
letter. By reading it you will see in one min­
ute wbv James Andrews was tankful:
Trvy. N. Y. April S, 1880.
Dr. D. Kennedy, Rondout, N. ¥,
Dear Stu:—UuUl within a recent date i bad
for several years suffered greatly from (pavci,
called by the doctor* the Brick dust sediment
For about a year p**l this sediment has not
parM-xl off In the usual manner, but ha* accu­
mulated, causing me 'untold pain. Haring
heard of “Kennedy's Favorite Remedy” I tried
It in my case, aud after using about one and a
half bottle, I voided a stone from the bladder,
of an oval shape, 8-16 of an nch long, and
rough ou Ita surface. I send you tbe largest
piece that you may see of what it ia composed.
Since then I hare felt no pain. I no* consider
myself cured, aud cannot express my thank­
fulness and gratitude for so signal a uelivemnc
from a terrible diseaw. You have my consent
lo use this letter, should you wish U) do so, for
benefit of other sufferers.
Your trulv, James Andrews.
No. 19 Marshal Sr., Ida Bill.
.
When we consider that the medicine which
did Uli* service tor Mr. Andrews cost only a
do! ar a bot'ic. It would secin that jmtkhui af
fileled In like fashion caji offorn the expense of
testing its virtues. Get il of vour druggist, or
address Dr. David Kennedy, Bondout, N. Y.
"Dr. Kennedy's Favorite Remedy" fur sale by
all druggist*.

[THE ONLY MEDICINE

I

THX Ctm, TSS BOVXLS,
in rm sionrs.
WHY ARE WE SICK?
ntrttw ire allow l\fM great orgar.i to

iwronu clogged or torpid, and pouunouc
Aamoraurv ll-.ereforv jorced. into the blood

that thoaUbt apelled natooBg.

KIDNEY-WORTi
WILL SURELY CURE

A

KIDNEY DISEASES,
LIVER COMPLAINTS,

Why eaffer Bllloa* pale* aad achoe!
I
Why tormeated with Hiea, Constipation!
I Why frightened over dtaordered Kidneys! ]
Why coder* aervoa* ar rick headeeheel
CkaKIDXKT-WORT«utrxM«HA/ai/A

PARKER S HAIR BALSAM.

PARKER’S

GINGERTONIC

egraphic transmission are complete.
The electric light is not perfect by any
means in its operation or in its color or
illumiaating power, but it burns, it has
been subdivided, and it has been
brought into partial use for domestic
purpose, and into more general use for
streets, targe stores, depots and facto­
ries, and it promises to be of .value in
mines, where such a light is great!v
needed, and upon the seas, where u
may become an important factor in en­
hancing the safety of human life.
At

ous, in the direction of force, though it
performed no remarkable feats, and
none that steam will not accomplish
with vastly more power and energy,
while steam itself has to be relied upon
as the generator of the lesser force. By
its use a man was propelled through
Paris in a tricycle, sewing-machines
were operated, rocks were bored, little
boats were driven, and the Siemens
coaches or “trams”
transported
passengers.
We also know its value
as a physical invigorator and remedial
agent in diseases, its importance in cer­
tain chemical processes, and its subtle
influence* upon the growth of vegeta­
tion. Observing the great variety of
usee to which it can be applied, i£a uni­
versality as a force, and its marvelous
results, when controlled, for use upon
land wires and ocean cables, where it
has no competitor and never can have
one, it is no wonder that the popular
imagination knows no bounds in pictur­
ing its future accomplishments when,
allot hor forces thrown aside as crude
and old-fashioned, electricity will be the
only agency in use, easily accomplishnig
all tbat can now be done with, water, air
and fire.
The London Spectator, in discussing
the question how much addition elec­
tricity will make to the sum of human
happiness, throws out a hint which is
not often considered by the electrical
enthusiasts. It says:
“ The public, however, is tireless upon
electricity. It has one big fact to go
upon, the electric telegraph (the one
thing, perhaps, which Fnar Bacon, if he
could come back for a week, and talk to
the luminaries of science, would admit
to surpass his reveries) and in spite of
the doubts of the scientific, who, ex­
cited, too, see their way to many things
but do not yet see their way to a lot of
electric force cheap, the public persist!
in believing that steam is played out,
and that the world is about to have a
greater, less cumbrous, and more uni­
versally applicable force placed at its
disposal.’’
In another place the Spectator refers
to the worry in scientific minds *rwherc
this cheap lot ot force is to come from,
unless they can previously accomplish
the t.ask of controlling Niagara, or pass­
ing the Atlantic tide through a stop­
cock, or utilizing the earth's' rotation.”
[t may be that in the future some cheap
nethod of generating electricity may be
liscovered, some power greater and
cheaper than steam, so that the agency
nay be applied to heavy work as easily
tna as readily as it is now applied to
ight work, but until sudh Lime—and
;hat will not be at once, for the process
that will take the place of tho methods
&gt;f steam can not be invented, but must
ivait some lucky chance like the discov:ry of steam itself—the limits of steam
nust fix the limits of electricity also.
Steam must be used to generate cleoricity, but tho use of steam is costly.
It represents but one-fourth the energy
&gt;f the fuel that produces it, and in trona­
erring its electric force to light it suffers
i still further loss of energy in friction
md other ways. If we would increase that
sner^y the cost must be increased, and
halts the despair of the situation. But
it is said falling water in governable
nasses is the great cheap generating
power that is wanted, but In these days
when the savants inform us that water
is rapidly disappearing, where is it to be
attained unless Niagara is penned up
and utilized? But even then the area of
its use must be a restricted one. In
connection with the uncertainty of dis­
covering the cheap generator of elec­
tricity, it must be taken into aoount that
the electric force iteelf after it is gener­
ated is no exception to other forces, but
slackens in its energy according to the
distance it has to travel. The most that
can be said with confidence, therefore.
Is, that it has been found that electricity
can accomplish the heavier tasks of thb
world, provided only the cheap force to
generate it can be discovered. Until
such time its possibilities are confined
within certain limits, and all beyond
that is ideal.—Chicago Tribune.
—Says a Mexican paper: “A lake in
o rear of Manzanillo, Mexico, burst
i confines last month and poured its
iters into the sea. The lake was full
alligators and the harbor of sharks,
hen the monsters met a water battle
unediately began and it was waged for
veral days in the presence of moet of
e people ot Manzanillo. For a long
ne victory trembled in the balance,
it the sharks finally prevailed acd took
nner on tho last of tho routed in­

was only a grand officer ot the army be­
fore; he required that ambassadors, on
introduction, should make him the three
customary bows, as to a sovereign, and
be expected tbat all the honors paid to
teimseh- should be rendered to aia wife
likewise. But then M. Thiers, when he
was giving audiences in the morning,
kept rushing out of his study every
quarter of an flour to espy who were
waiting to see him in the ante-rooms.
He shook hands with some, scolded
others, made straight for any newspafer editor who might be present, giving
im precedence over dukes or arch­
bishops, and talking with him pretty
audily in that shrill falsetto of his about
the views' which he desired the editor
lo promulgate. When he gave dinners,
again, M. Thiers could not be prevailed
upon to sit whilst his guests were go­
ing through the customary series of
courses. His own Invariable menu was
a cut off of a joint, with some vegeta­
bles and a few spoonfuls of jam; and
when he had dispatched this fare,
which he did in ten minutes, be either
frisked about tho room or retired into
thapext one to take a nap. If he lin­
gered longer than usual at the table it
was to start some political discussion
which made his guests uncomfortable;
and all this was very grievous to tbe
master of the ceremonies. Marshal
McMahon had served an apprenticeship
in court pomps during his Governor­
Generalship of Algeria, and under the
auspices of the Duchesse de Magenta
tbe etiquette or the Elysee was modeled
on that of the Tuileries during the Em{lire. The servants wore the McMahon
ivories of gray, scarlet and silver, with
aiglpts and powder. There was always
an aide-de-camp in full uniform aud an
officer of tbe palace guard to attend in
tbe Marshal's ante-room; and tbe Duch­
esse herself was constantly attended by
one or two ladies-in-waiting. When
the President and Duchesse went to the
races they and their suits occupied two,
sometimes three, carriages, with four
horses, which were preceded arid fol­
lowed by outriders; and when they
traveled they used the saloon carriages
which bad been built for the Emperor.
President Grevy neither, keeps -so
much state as the Marshal nor trans­
gresses the minor laws of etiquette so
cavalierly as M. Thiers. Before coming
to Elysee be has inhabited apartments
in the Palace of Versailles, by virtue of
his position as President of the Cham­
ber of Deputies; but his style of living
was of the simplest, and his attire was
that of a country gentleman. He never
wore a high bat or gloves. He had a
“ property" hat, which was kept under
his desk in tbe Chamber ready to hand,
in case it became necessary to “cover
himself,” and thereby to suspend a tu­
multuous sitting abruptly; but in tbe
streets he wore a wide-awake. He was
very fond of strolling about the boule­
vards for hours at a time, looking into
the shop windows; and he waa passion­
ately fond of billiards, nor did be care
whom he played with. One of bis fav­
orite opponents at this game was M.
Paul de Cassagnac, with whom he has
not an idea in common; but the editor
of the Payt and he never exchanged
political views while making carroms.
Sport, agricultural and music are the
topics on which M. Grevy converses
with most pleasure; but he is a silent
man, who talks no more than is neces­
sary to make the time pass, and he nev­
er lets conversation run into argument.
When he became President M. Grevy
had to give tip his wide-awakes and his
boulevard strolls, and to moderate his
ardor for billiards. His most frequent
companion at this game has been of late
M. Wilson, who is goihg to be his son­
in-law. M. Grevy, os President, also
had to don the broad ribbon of the Le­
gion of Honor, but he did n»t do this
until afjnr much hesitation.
.
M. Grevy’B salary is £32,000, and he
probably lives within k. Marshal MacMahon, on the contrary, spent a great
deal more than his salary; for, besides
keeping up a large establishment of
servants and many horses and carriages,
he entertained a good deal. He used
te give at least a couple of dinners a
week, whereas M. Grevy scarcely gives
one a month. M. Grevy has as many
servants as the Elysee requires, but not
one over.* They dress in black, like tho
hotel waiters. Tbe Piosident’s coach­
man also wears black.without a cockade;
and tbe carriages he drives are small,
plain broughams, black, and with dark­
blue wheels, and no cre-t on the pan­
els; they are drawn by a couple of bays.
When the President has to attend a
great open-air pageant, as when he dis­
tributed new flags to the army last year,
he has a barouche with four horses, but
he has no outriders. His cook, too. is
no grand artist, receiving the salary of
a Prefect, like the famous M. Trompette, who lords it over M. Gambetta’s
saucepans at the Palais Bourbon. All
the housekeeping arrangements at the
Elysee are under the control of Mdllo.
Grevy, and will remain so after her
marriage, for she and her husband arc
going to reside in the Presidential pal­
ace.—Si. Jama Gazette.

About Money Orders.
•’Had you come a little earlier you
might have witriessod an incident, or
rather a coincidence, which could not
but convince the most skeptical that we
are living in a progressive age.” This

the veteran pay-clerk in the money­
—One of the
order department of the Baltimore post­
; certain office the other day, as the reporter
children •topped at his desk to ask if there was
“anything new.” The reporter vent­
ured to ask for a further explanation.
“Well,” continued Mr. Dougherty. “I
was in the act of cashing two moneywater over their faces.
orders, presented respectively by aGcrman. who had received his from the
eastern section of Prussia, and a son of
valuable clerk in a bank at Winshea­ Enn. who had received his from Bel­
fast At the same moment my atten­
tion was called to the fact that a China­
man .was at the receiving deak, imme­
diately oppomta. applying for a money
order which he intended sending to San
Francisco. Here was money being sent

sition of the order.
As an instance, a
German came in here one day, and, ap­
proaching me very angrily, said. that
this was a fine way of doing businew. earda atone stUtag |1,000,000.
He had gotten a money order some five
days previously, made out in favor o!
his wife, who was in Philadelphia, and wc never lost 11,000,000. Tbe Irakr must hate
who desired to come home. This money had a bole ta bis trouser* priAet.
was to pay her fare. She bad, however,
never received it. and was compelled W
OH, WHAT A COUGH!
borrow from her friends enough to coms Will you bred the warning. The signal, per
home with.
I thought this rather ha|&gt;* of the sure approach of that mure te*rifflstrange, and, noticing mv doubting di*ea*e coosumptiou. Ask younelf if you can
look, he suddenly plunged bis hand afford for tbe rake of saving 50 cla to run the
and do nothing for it. We know from ex­
Into a capacious pocket, saying that he risk
perience that Shilohta Cure will cure your
oould prove his assertion by showing cough. It never falls. This explains why
his receipt, and lo, and behold, ho drew more than a million bottles were sold last year.
out the money order. Of course, I then It relieve* Croup, and whooping cough, at once
knew where tho trouble waa. aud when Mother* do not be yritbout it. For lame t»ck, ■
side or chest use Shiloh’* Porous Piasters.
I explained to him that be should have Sold by F. T. Boise.
sent tbe order to his wife, ho seemed
DfSPEPSlA A LIVER COMPLAINT.
dazed at first, then bis face broke into
Valver«u?
a broad grin, and. with the remark, *1 free youraef of every symptom of those dtatre*aiug
if you think so call at our
always thought I waa a fool, now I storecomplaint*,
and get a bottle of Shiloh's Vltailxer, lUilKMd tn tbe Vend for***
know it,’ slowly walked out of the of­ every bottle has a priutod guarantee on It, use Sil etaMM qt USYcL
fice. I could tell you half a dozen such aceonilnglyjuy! if II doc* vou do good it will
cost you nothing. Sold by F. T. Boise.
incidents.”
We have a. speedv ami positive cure for
“ According to recent statements,”
•aid the reporter, “ there appears to bo C.ntarrah, Diphtheria, Canker mouth and
ill cotuMcttoM made
S
Ache, iu SHILOH’S CATARRH REM­
a large amount of money accumulated Head
.
ta Ualua
EDY, A nasal injector free with each bottle.
in the Sub-treasury at New York.’’.
JJse il if you dewire health and sweet breath.
“ Before you go any farther,” said Price 50 cents. Sold by F. T. Boise.
i^T
and yen *13
Mr. Dougherty, ** I want to say that
When a man or woman cannot add to the
there is some misunderstanding regard­
fiad tnTeltas a
ing thia money. Many suppose that it happiness at borne by staying there, they sbuuld
taxiffy, ftsad
was collected in Now York alone. In go out aud let happiness occupy the place they
this, however. 1 think they are mistaken. vacated.
trt
It is money accumulated from invalid
bout juu» ot
A CAPITAL SUBSTITUTE.
money.orders from all over tho coun­
». Sleepiae Cara. &gt;5%^
beerfuity ylrea ay
try aud some of tho orders date back to k * We cap’t be boys or girls again. Age and in­
tho time of the organization of the money firmity are sure to come, but God did not orT. J POTTER.
PERCEVAL LOWELL
ordfcr department, now about seventeen dalo sickness. That Is our fault. There is no
Chicago. Hl.
years. You see. Now York is tho for­ Fountain of Youth, but there is a Fountain oL
eign as well as the domestic exchange, Health, and its qtber name 1* Dr. David Ken­
and all surplus is sent to the Postmaster nedy** “Favorite Remedy." It comes from
at New York, who in turn deposits the ture—from tl&gt;e fields and and flowers, and like
moneys in the bub-treasury nt that city. them ta “very good." Try it for all complaints
Tbe money orders Which become in­ of women, blood troubles, and pains and aches (
valid, one year alter date are sent to tho everywhere. If vou can’t get it at tbe store, I
department at Washington, where they send one dollar for a bottle to ti»c doctor, at
are placed on filo. In the meantime, RnndouL N. Y.
should tho payer present himself nt tho
office after tbat timo we make applica­
There Is nothing that ao takes the starch out
tion on his behalf to the department at of a young man who has been wedded about*
Washington, which then authorizes us year u to have to go to a store where there ia
to make the payment.”
a girl clerk that lie used to keep company with,
** You say that you send all surplus and Inquire for those large safety pins.
funds to New York; how do you man­
QUICK AND SURE,
age when you run short?”
•• That is somothijg we never allow
Many miserable people drag themselves
to occur, aud in fact irom tho systemat­ about with Ia:litig strength, feeling that they
ic manner in which everything is ar­ are steadily sinking Into their graves, when by
using Parker* Ginger Tonic they would find a
ranged such a thing can not occur. The cure
commencing with tlte first dose, and vital
money-order system is nothing more tty and strength quickly aud surely coming
nor less than an immense banking con­ back to them.
cern, in which there is no capital in­
There ta an article going Tbe round* of the
BROWN’S IRON BITTERS ore
vested and none necessary. I have al­
a t-ertain euro for all disease*
ready told you that New York is the papers beaded. "Why Blaine Told tbe Truth.”
requiring a complete tonic; c«i&gt;cWe
do not sec what could have induced him to
exchange. Tho smaller offices send
clally
Indigestion. Dyspepsia, Inter­
their surplus to the nearest main office, do so’ unless he bas retired from politics.
mittent Fcvera, Want of Appetite,
whence in turn tho entire amount is
Tbe symptrxiM of Itching Piles are moisture
xmw
of
Htrength, Imck of Energy,
I
remitted to New York. Atthesame time like preapiratlou, intense Itching, most at night
ct&lt;L Enriches the blood, Btrciqfthevery office, large and small, has an ac­ s-.i-ni* as if piu worm* were crawling iu or
cna the muaclca, and gives new
count with tho Postmaster at New atxitil the rectum. The more y&lt;ui scratch the
life to the nerves. Acta like a
they itch. Very distressing. The private
York.* and is credited with a certain worse
part* arc often affected. Dr. Swayne’s Oint­
charm on the digestive organa,
amount, which it can draw when nec­ ment is the most effective remedy extant for
removing all dyspeptic symptoms#
essary. When that amount is exhausted this IvnncnUng ctmpIaluL Gives rest at night
sneli as tasting tho fopd. BclcWng,
without
that
di»;re
to
scratch.
Also
has
on
a renewal of tho account is necessary.
Heat in the Stomach, Heartburn,
Now our limit is SIU.OOO. and L draw &lt;-&gt;|u*l iu quickly eradicating Tetter, lu ll, Sait
r.l.eumc, Erysipelas, Barbers’ Itch, Pimples,
etc. The only Iron I*reparation
for ft&amp;OOO at n timo ns I need it. When ail Scaly, Crusty, Itchy Skin Eruptions. Here
that will not blacken the teeth or
Chi/amount is exhausted 1 make appli­ is the pnxif, “Certain)v the best remedy ever
give headache. Sold by all Drugcation to have the account renewed. In u-i-d in my practice," Dr. Cotton, Woodstock,
this way we are always kept supplied. VL. “troubled with Itching Piles for over twen­
years, Il cured me completely," L. S. Messer
BROWN CHEMICAL CO.
During the great panic in 1873, when ty
Enfield, Me. Sent (or M cb fin 3 cL stamps)
Baltimore, Mcl.
the bunks Were not considered safe, wo H lx&gt;Xf.», f 1.25, By Dr. Swayne &lt;fc Sou. Pliitad *
transmitted an immense sum of money. Pa. Sold by all druggist«.
In tho month of September alone I paid
"There I" triumpluuitly exclaimed a Dead­
out at- this office. $125,000. This is
what is termed a paying office; in other wood editor, as a bullet came through tbe win­
words, wo pay out about -five times os dow ami shattered the inkstand “I knew tbat *
to a po*lllot&gt; an vt&gt;&lt; the first In lbs land. "Life
much as we receive. During the last new ‘Pcreonal’ column would be a success.
and Tlmre" of
year wo cashed 90,918 orders, amount­
There is a general complaint among drug­
FREDERICK DOUGLASS
ing to $1,515,307.45. anil we issued 28,­ gists tbat they cannot get enough of "Dr.
245 orders for $425,116.10. As the busi­ Sykes! Sure Cure for Catarrh" to supply the written by himself; 19 full patte Ijlmtratiofu; prier
ness is continunjly increasing, these demand. 1/ thus &lt;itMpp&gt;tinted write direct to VIM Outittal* "Uncle Toin’» Cabtn’’ la Thniba.amount^ will be swelled considerably tli? Docu»r, 109 Madi.win SL, Chicago,
by the close of the present year.”
t By doing good with bls money,' a man, as it
"Have you many invalid order* on were stamps tbe image of God upon It, and '
band at present?”
makes il pass cur-rent fortlie merchandtae
“Only a few, and tbeso will be sent of Hoaven.
to Wasbington in a day or two. I have
“ROUGH ON RATS.”
about $1,600 worth, however, that are
The tiling desired found at last. Ask Drug­ touci re iolh of wit and rloqoence.
unclaimed—that is to s^y, they have gist
lor “Rough ou Rata.” It clear* out rats*
been lying here for a long timo. Here mice, roadies, fie&gt;, bed-bugs. 15c. boxes.
*(rvjtati&lt;M‘*J&lt;-t.
is a lot, all belonging to one man. and
■ It I* reli.BpirlngM* a;«x&gt;m.” -Wiimaa'* Jooroff
Barnum has lived seventy-two years, and
bore is another, belonging to a single
**Xo slraniccr story bas b»en, or ever will W.
—Bost&lt;-t Advertiser
individual. They are merchants, well- want* to lire seventy year* longer. Tbe fact told,"
• Il is a mors »'-soH&gt;ln&lt; tale than any creation pf
that
there
will
be
no
circuses
in
tbe
next
world
known here, hut do not seem to be in a
fietfc®."—_Troy*(N Y.j'rtnica.
"iNntlned tu a wide sale.”—HaAnd Cottraa*.
hurry'to get their money. One of these appears to have discouraged tbe veteran show­
'The whole story ta ^raodingly well told,"—
allowed a couple of orders to remain man..
Roctn-sler Ix-nxe.-ral.
longer ti^n one year, and thinking that
AddrcM^.S. GOODMAN A CO., ChicMO, DI.
"MY TORMENTED BACK,"
his money was lost, he gave bls orders Is the exclamation ot more tbau one poor hard
—one for fifty dollars aud apother for working man and woman. Do you know why
VOL. V., 1882.
it
ache*
fit
ia
ixwause
your
kidnevs
are
over
five dollars—to his wife, telling her
iocularly to make use of them. Tbe tasked and need strengthening,and your sytt- m
needs to be cleansed ot bad humors. Kidney
lady came here and askeij whether Wort ta the medicineyou need. “It acta like a
The recognlxed authority on all matter* re­
these orders were of any account. Upon charm," says a well known physician. “1 never lating to Public Health, Food ami Drug Adul­
being informed that they were, she knew it to laiL" Liquid or dry sold by drug- teration, Drainage and Water Supply, Beam
thought this an excellent joke on her gista.—Boston Post.
and bol water beating, plumbing and gaa fit
busband. I made application for her,
ting, gaa and electric lighting, twating and
and in two days she had her money.”—
ventilation.
.
.*
lialtimore American.
Question* ou any of tbe*e subject* will b*&gt;
Reconciled Before*the
Was Dry*
answered in the columns of Tub Saxitabt Ex-

PRINGIPAL+LINE

KANSAS CITY

IRON

BITTERS

The Sanitary Engineer.'

DKTJG^S!

A very unusual scene was witnessed
in tbe Shelbyville, Ind., court room the
other day. A suit for divorce, the
plaintiff being a Mr. Sandufer, was on
trial. The defendant made no defense,
save for the custody of a child. The
divorce was granted. Almost immedi­
ately Sandufer and the womaa ‘ro»c
from their seats and withdrew to ■
corner'of the court room, where they
engaged in earnest conversation. Very
soon the officials aud spectators noticed
the couple Were greatly moved by what
had happened, for tears rolled down
their cheeks. Soon tho pair embraced,
then kifoed each other, then repeated it
oVer and over, clinging to one another
with all the tenacity ofyouthful lovers.
Men tittered, women cried, and tbe
Judge grew indignant. Rising from his
aeut. the Court declared that a couple
capable of such demonstrations as th*’
one just made could live together, and
taking up his pen, he drew it across the
docket, Erasing the decree, thus making
them man ami wife once more. They
left the room in a happy state of minif.
and no doubt are now living over their
pleasant days again.—Cor. Cincinnati
Commercial.

------- CALLON-------

F. T. BOISE,
------- for--------

DL'GN,
BOOMS.
JEWELRY,
WALLPAPER,
WINDOW SHADED,
DYESTIFFS,
PK0PKIETABY MEDICINES,

PRESCKIPTIOW9,
RECEIPTS.
And »v«ry article kept ia a firei-ctasa drug etonr
---------- MT

PAINT AND BRUSH
DEPART!E T
Are kept complete, to meet t!-,- domaada of tho
J«ople.

—The experiment tried at Grantham.

in stopping the spread oi the disease.

Call and Examine!
F. T. BOISE.

Tbe opinion of tbta journal upon all teahni
cal subject* arc cither prepared or revised bv
apecialirt*.
‘________ _____
OPINIONS OF THE PtESS.

�HAVK-OTENED THE
of Srpro-nl Mmod.

London who

-

■

‘

boat roalaittlug the survlvorn which
fn this brief fetter tbe hero of the

There is really no call
a MinUter So look after
interest* at the metrojiolis.
I appears to be perfectly able

other* with him as having perished, and indl-

Twogrqat theatre firem have juat been
milled to the dhuMtera ot thii» kind iu

wlthput hope of finding his comrades

the other at Marseilles—both ocurring
while the bunding* were decupled,
though fortunately with little or no
Iom of life. The lessons of the Vienna
diaaoter do not seem to have euok very
Despite the details given daily of the
distrees among the Mississippi suffer­
ers, it ui not easy for peoole at a dis­
tance to fully appreciate the ravages of
•h« floods. When, however tbe pas­
aengera of a steamer which has j ust ar­
rived at St. Louis from New Orleans
aay that the river han an average
width of forty miles all the way from
Cairo down, a vivid picture is (urnish-

Tbo
the noted
. nlder of Teirttesaee moonhhinerH, wan
deliberate anu cowardly, and wna made
the occasion of a jollification by the
Minrrlvrere. Davin had been bold qnd
efficient on a Government agent, and
the proprietors of illicit whiskey dis­
tilleries in the moutaina concluded
that he must die or they must go out
busineaa. They chose the f ormer alter­
native. About twenty of them got
some oysters, crackers, and other food
for n meal, took along plenty of whis­
key, und-enmped on a road which they
kfiew Davis would take that night.
Concealing themselves behind a pile
of logs, nnd lyaing out their rifles in
Teadincsa, they diverted themselves
with eating and drinking until Davis
came along. Then they riddled his bo­
dy with bullets.

The universal expression of sympath
for the Queen of England in the peril
to which she waa recently exposed by
the shot of a man, who seems to be in­
sane, wo* all the stronger in thiscountry because of her own warmly express­
ed feeling for Mrs. Garfield last au­
tumn. There has beenjal ways, indeed,
in this country, a feeling of sincere re­
gard for the Qceeu as a most exemplary
wife and mother, and a dilligent nnd
faithful head of the government. The
life &lt;(f Prince Albert gives glimpses of
Unroyal household iu which the Queen
is a very womanly and attractive fig­
ure, anu the sorrow of her bereavement
has appealed very strongly to all who
knew the true affection of the Prince
Consort and his wife. After the long
Georgian epocn, covenngimore than a
century, aud at uo point illustrious or
admirable in the monarch himself, the
progressive Feign and the stainless
*eourt of Victoria fill achapter of British
history which will be always a proud
recollection to Englishmen. Hail the
ehot of the other day been as fatally
true as that of the 3d.of July in Wash
ington, the Borrow of this country
would have been only less than that of.
England. There is a demagogue’s trick
«f appeal to a traditional American
hostility to England. But the blood of
a common ancestry is thicker than the
water of the ocean. It is tho English
tradition that has most radically mould­
er! our civilization. It is England that
gave us the grate monuments of liber-

Shoot Him on the Spo*.
Sergeant Mafion, the soldier who fired
atGuitea in jail, has been tried and
aentenced to lie dishonorably discharg­
ed from Hie army with Iona of pay, and
io serve eightyearain the Albany prison
»t hard labor. If it was ever right to
s&lt;hoot on lhe spot any man who hauled
dqwn the American flag, it wrm not
wrong for a aoldier to abuot nt tlie
wretell who osaaMinated the Preaident.
"Weoxt for Mason's pardon, nnd risk
all editora to unite in this reqneat that
itmaygonpto the President now in
1&gt;ower ns the voice of people.— Denver
Great Wat.

ISThf. Go verm ent of the United States
ia not willing that thoughtful, human
phvaicians *hond prescribe medicine ro
prevet conception, but is willing Hint
poverty-atneken offering which ought
not to have Iwen brought into the world
81&gt;*n grow up in crime, sin nnd degrad­
ation, and fitonlly die by suicide. Here
in some th mg to think of. but n.»«r many
wiH dare throk of itT—Great
ELECTION NOTICE.

one Scboed Iti»pt* tor, Jong term two years, one
Drain CMumiestooer. one Justice of toe Peace,
four Courts bleu. Polls win te opmod at 8
Fkakk McDbmky,

house st Bay Ctty, on the 21rt.
Martin Bauler of Detroit, while temporarily

•hips and adventures they bad left behind

tlng bi* throat from ear to ear with a jack­
knife.
On March 21st Wm. V. Warmingtou, a
wealthy citizen of Augusta, committed suicide
by shooting himself through the bead with a

A aisterof Mrs. Andrew Coyle of Three Riv­
ers was found dead in bed. the other morning

celved from Lieutenant John Danenhauer,
there has been a hopeful tone concerning the
possibility of Do Long’s safety; but in such

last and most Important communication from
Dauenhauer, received at Paris February S,
from Irkutsk, be gives entire the latest record
of De Long found by Melville, st one of those
polar milestones, such as ah Arctic explorers
havc-ereeted along their way. On thia De
Long wrote: “Fourteen of the officers and

Wednesday, September 28, and, hsv.ng been

proceeding to cross to the west side this
morning, on their journey to reach some
settlement on the Lena River. I hive two
days’ provisions, but, having been fortunate
enough thus far to get game in onr pressing
needs, we had no fear for the future. Our
party are all well except Han* Eriksen, whose
toes have been amputated in consequence
of frost-bite. Otter records will l&gt;c found
in several huts on tbe east side of tbe river
along which we have come from tbe mouth.”
After qnoting thia, Danentauer tfays: “Three
other records were found,” but he gives noth­
ing of their content* further than to aay:
“Eriksen died October 7." Thp party was in
great distress for want of food. Norm and
Winde man, two of De Long's companions,
were sent ahead for relief on. October 9.
They marched south for fifteen days, and wero
found tn a starring condition on October 24,
by three natives, who took them to a settle­
ment.
Evidently there was some reason for not
giving the other records entire. Nine days
after, the party of fourteen had lost two days’
provisions, and'after Eriksen's toes hid been
amputate 1, they were in great distress for
want of food, and then Eriksen and two men,
probably the only two who were able to walk,
went ahead and reached a settlement in a
starving condition. Exactly five months have
passed since De Long and twelve men (the
thirteenth having juat died) were in great
distress for want of food, nnd no tidings of
them to give a ray of hope have been received
in that time. In that condition, they were
about five thousand miles from 8t. Peters­
burg, In a region where there is scarcely any
game, juat at the beginning of a most rigor­
ous winter, when everyone, even the hardiest
natives, flee hundreds of miles Inland, and do
not return until «Mareh or April Under such
circumstances Melville’s letter to his wife ta
consistent with all the known facta. Since be
was chosen by tbe autnoritle* at Washington,
out of all the competent men in the navy, to
accompany the Jeannette expedition juat four
yeira ago, and set sal) from San Francisco in
July, 1878, a few months after receiving hb
order, Melville has had no opportunity to
communicate with his family. The anxious
mother and the three little girls have been
awaiting “a letter from papa.” In their se­
cluded little cottage al Sharon Hill. Ln-Dela­
ware County, the fond mother and childish
trio have looked out dally from the window
adorned with an anchor as an emblem of hope
of the father’s safe return, snd wandered
again and again, with (be smoke and whistle of
every mall train, if their long-looked -tor mes­
sage waa coming. At last, when three yeara had
passed, little Meta—who was a babe just bom
when he went away on a dark, stormy night,
and, having kissed it and the lips that were
above it, said: “Wife, it is possible I will
never know these joys again"—washable to
talk, and she expressed the thoughts of all four
when one day she said: “Mamma, I think
papa must be dead;" but they never took
down from tbe nail the hat which be hung np
when he changed It -for his naval cap, and his
favorite cup and saucer were never stirred
Xrom their place in the cupboard. There was
joy in the household when some friend sent
the newspaper containing the telegram signed
with her husband's name, giving the
first new* of the safe arrival of himself
by reading after the name “in command"
Every telegram since signed
“Mel­
ville" has been meat and drink to the newsfamished little household, snd although the
mother kept telling the children continually
“ that it was duty, and duty lo God and coun­
try must always go ahead of duty to family,”
the little folks could not understand “ why
papa did not send some messages home.”
Yesterday, Maud, a beautiful child about
fifteen years of age, went, as she has thouofflee. to know if there was a letter. Mra.
Melville wm seated at home sewing listless­
ly, and the other two little' girls were
playing with their dolls. Suddenly one of the
little ones said: “ Why, ma, something’s the
matter with Maud. I actually believe there la a
letter from papa." Maud’s feet did not appear

0F-

Jobn Noonan. a Frenchman of about thirty

Wm. Firth, a salesman at Grand Rapids, has
been arrested on a charge of bigamy and adult­
ery preferred by a young woman with a sad face
and a baby.
A young man named Will Reynold* ravished
tbe twelve years old daughter of Edward Austin
at Rockford, Thursday nlght,aud has since fled
tbe country.
Mra. E. McHugh has secured a judgment of
? 1,525 against the city of Marshall for injuries
suBtained by falling cown on one of her defec
Uve sidewalks.
.
Wm. 8uleyof East Saginaw, dropped off
suddenly on tbe 18th. Two physician* held a
port mortem examination over his remains and
found corrosive polsao.
*
A party of young men were out boating on
Detroit river, off Detroit, on Bunday, wjben
their boat capsized and two, John Vogel and
John Dlederich, were drowned.
The Knights of Pythias band at Jackson I*
making vigorous preparations for for the baud
tournament to be held Juno 7 and 8. Nearly
thirty band* have already been entered.
Tbe authorities the other day discovered an
illicit distillery of 20 gallon capacity, two miles
out of East Saginaw, in full blast and swooped
down upon it capturing one moonshiner.
Jenny Perry, daughter of Edward Hebard, of
L’Anse. » as drowned, while drtv.ng across the
bay with two other ladles, Sunday. The boric
went through the Ice, and she followed over
the dashboard.
Lust fall a man named W. S. Gardner mys­
teriously disappeared from Ludington. Satur­
day bl* body was found in Pcrie Marquette lake
and bore evldene* of his having been foully
murdered.
Thomas Conn of Bay City, while drunk on the
evening of tbe 17th, lay down on tbe street car
track to take a nap, but It was his last one,
for a street car ran over him inflicting injuries
that soon resulted in death.
Daniel Millan, who came to Grand Rapid*
from Chicago a few days ago and imbibed too
freely of Rapids whiskey,- was arrested, fined
and sent to jail. On Sunday morning he was
found dead In his cell. Delcrium tremens is
said to be the cause.
‘.»
Stephen Barry, aged 19, of East Saginaw,
killed by tbe cars at Midland, Monday evening.
He probably stole a ride on a log train, and In
some way •ras crushed between the logs, ^ad
then dropped beside the track.
Mrs. H. Randall, of Wright township, Otta­
wa Co., called for pulverized rhubarb at a drug
store in Grand Rapids the other day. The
clerk by mistake gave her opium and the dose
was fatal, death occurring at an early hour tlfit
next morning,
Recent developments show that Tom Navin,
Adrian's precious mayor, was not only a bad
man generally, but a professional fofger also.
Over 9100,000 worth of forged paper has already
turned up and more is expected to be heard
from daily.
Samufl. 8. VanEtten, treasurer of a school
district, started for Grand Haven the other day
ostensibly to deposit some school money. He
baa not been beard of since, and whether it is
a murder, accidental drowning or a runaway
remains a mystery.
A Polander named Andrew Levey, about 25
years old,was run over and instantly killed by a
’ freight train at Bay City on the 20th. He was
intoxicated and wa* shoved on the track five or
six rod*. The cars were thrown from tbe track
and a brakeman Injured.
On the farm of Ira Knapp, of Pipestone, Berin diameter. Repeated soundings have failed to
reach bottom, and tlsh of a large size are often
caught in tbe waters. The question arises, is
not the spring connected by some underground
river with Lake Michigan.
The notorious Sophie Lyons of Detroit, is no
more at large to prey upon unsuspecting man,
she having recently been sentenced to fliur yrs.
and eleven months imprisonment at tbe House
of Correction at Detroit. Certain iflnucntlal
men in Jackson and Detroit con now rest easy
from fear of the occasional “Come down sir."
The five story warerooms and finishing de­
partment of tbe New England Furniture Co.,
at Grand Rapids, burned Monday evening.
Tbe loss on building is 19,000, on stock,includ­
ing 700 chamber suits 110,000. Insurance &gt;8.500
Tbe origin of the fire is supposed to be fonndroom. .
A trio of boys were playing railroad on a aid-

17th. Tbe siding Inclined and by loosening the
brakes the^boys had started a car. Charley
Schinks , aged 14, was intent ou coupling the

BOOTS AND
YOU WILL FIND UNDER ONE ROOF IN BARRY COUNTY AND WE

INTEND TO MAKE

PIRGES THAT WILL SECURE A URGE SALE AT OHGE
WE HAVE JOST OPENED

300
SUITS!
—---------- - ----- ------ :
of

Hen’s, Boys’, and Children’s Clothing
THAT WERE B0U6HT CHEAP I CHEAP FOR CASH
AND WE INTEND TO SELL

G. A. TRUMAN &amp; SON

The First to the Front!
T am"now receiving a full stocwof goods suitable for the spring trade, including
L the Largest and Best Stock of

Ready Made Clothing, for Men, Boys, and Youths,
•

Ever brongbt to Nashville, and ranging in price from three to thirty dollars per amt.

I keep the celebrated Rochester make, Stylish, Durable anc Cheap.

I have the latest styles and can fit all parties.

At prices that defy competion.

In

I always keep a full stock of

Cash paid for Batter and Eggs.

ELEVATOR
Secretary of State have been that the wheat time to allow those going to Northern Minne­
crop of last season aggregated something over sota, Dakota or Manitoba, to obtain their
18.000,000 bushels. This would leave between breakfast and make the connection for all
7,000,000 and 8,000,000 for export, after reserv­ points North or Northwest.
This train is run especially to connect with
ing the home requirements for seed and food
8o large a proportion of that amount has al­ the new express trains which the Northern
ready been sent out the state that it is believed Pacific, and St. Paul, Mlnneopolis and Manit-1 HIGHEST MARKET PRICE
----- For oil kinds of----that the aggregate production for 1881 must oba railroads (the latter connecting with the i
have been from 3,000,000 to 4,000,000 more than Canadian Pacific at BL Vincent) have just put I
upon their lines.
the state deportment’s figures show.
Tbe regular evening express train from
There is great excitement at Grand Rapid*.
A full stock of
Touaaant Yenorc arrived there on Monday Chicago, will be run as heretofore, and make
from Muskegon, suffering from a severs attack the evening connections from Minneapolis for
of small-pox. He was unable to obtain lodging all points in the territory named above.
It is important, and travelers should bear it
and wandered about the streets all night, meet­
&lt; 'oiutAntly on Hand.
ing and conrcrsing with many persons. Finally in mind, there are no carriage transfers by the
Probate Order,
he brought up at the pert house the next morn­ “Albert Lea Route,” passengers being landed
ing. 11 is feared Hurt many have contracted the tn Union depots at Minneapolis and 8t- Paul.
This is the route to travel over for sure con­
disease.
E. A. Cranson, ot Springport, who jumped nections, and Is tbe pleasantest and most com­
from an express traln'runnlng ncarly forty miles fortable line to the Northwest.
The trains of the “Albert Lea Route” leave
an hour, near Marengo, about. six weeks ago,
In tho mailer of tbe Mtateot HENRY TROYER
while being taken to the Insane Asylum at Chicago from depot of the GREAT ROCK
Kalamazoo, and who miraculously escaped in­ ISLAND, the old favorite with travelers des­ deceased.
On reeding and filing tbs petition, duly verified,
stant death from tht frantic act, has entirely tined for Kansas, Colorado, New Mexico,. Ari­ of Thomas 8. Bries, administrator of u.d estate
praying that bis final account this day filed with
recovered, both mentally and physically. Tbe zona and the Pacific Coast.
this court may be beard and allowed and he dis­
Send your sddr&amp;s to E. St- John, General charged from bls raid trust.
shock seemed to have expelled all Insanity as
Ticket and Passenger Agent, Chicago, and
alncc then he has been perfectly sane.
Gus Burlett of Port Huron, was married last obtain our new illustrated Western Trail.
Monday and on Saturday morning, the 18th, he
RATHER ENTHUSIASTIC.
bung himself at Marysville, St. Clare Co. He
The Wilmington (Del.) Dally Republican
waa doing work about the farm of Barney
lately
contained the following
Item of ,popular
Mil
s.
and
it
was
m
nis
uam
luai
nc
•
,
, , __ ;
. ...
Mills,
tn his tarn that he was found.
.bleb
Dr-J. K8&gt;«k.’boUB»«eUd«U,
tbou
.
k
..........
. •_______ t.tbeMUmington
the Wilmington Every Evening, sneaks
apeak* rather
rathex petitioner
1 — I. I. &lt;&gt;..
said: “You will find me in hay mow. I do thia
eutiituisstically of St. Jacob* Oil. Dr. Speck
states that he uses tbe Oil in his family as a
•uning a copy oi mu orccr io do pai&gt;
clkn. HU.Ue, wh»wu.SUryrtU«rlH, I"
household remedy, a sort of universal panacea
N'xdTiLkz Kr*B,aDew*p*p«rprintad
at work in Port Huron.
for all aches and palm, and ba* always found It
The first murder that has been committed In to act mort happily. His attention was called
to It by the many testlmonialain its favor, and
be one day used it upon himself for sore throat
riarch 15 by tbe discovery of the body of Wm. Two
applications were sufficient to effect a cure
Mftchle, a prominent citizen of Fraser town­ He also used it on his little girl for sore throat
Probate Notice,
ship. Saturday he had been to Pinconning on with graUfyiug succssa. Tbe same child had
business and waa met by some section hands scarlet fever this winter which left the tendons
of the railroad on which he was walking but a
of Barry, boI«J«-n
of Hastings in *a&gt;&lt;
short distance from where he was murdered.
His wounds show that be waa struck several appUcatlons of Bl. Jacobs OU restored ber limb
to
its
normal
condition
and
she
has
not
experi­
blows on the bead with a fish bar and then was enced any trouble since. Dr. Speck Mates that
In the matter of th* Estate * of LKWI8
dragged into the woods where he was found. be ba* also sesn the OU act charmingly in DURKKE,
decesaed.
His housekeeper, J. D. Parrent and a man toothache. He thinks Bu Jacob* Oil is a Mernamed Neville have been arrested upon bus ling remedy, and do** not hesitate to recom­
mend it for rheumattom, etc-

FOWLER &amp; INGERON
GRAIN AND PRODUCE.

LUMBER,LATH, &amp;C

REPUBLICAN CAUCUS.

knowledge that just now be himself, with tbe

turn of the husband and father. Written on

ship, Jackson Co., died very suddenly Thurs- justly entitled to all of the success and pros­ NATIONAL GREENBACK CAUCUS.
perity they are receiving.

and up to going to bed last night, the children
were doing nothing else but reading over
papa's letter. With tbe intelligence that it

In

Ladies, Misees, Gents &amp; Children’s Fine Shoes

Tbe month of March is conceded to be a dull
projeettag deadwoods, which caught bls bead month (or medical institutions, yet the Battle
Creek Sanitarium is overflowing with patients,
crushing H to a pulp.
Jahn B. Campbell of Superior, Washtenaw
Co., was out riding last Sunday with bl* wife
building- Eleven cottages have.
and daughter, when the wagon tongue dropped
to accommodate tbe rush of pat­
and struck lhe ground, the carriage was thrown
over forward and tte occupant* hurled out, Mr.
months. Good physicians, sensible treatment
most instant death. The wife and daughter and kindness is what tells in seasons of sick­
ness and trouble. The Sanitarium and its cm-

herself at her mother's feet, dropping the

1

township of Maple Grove, will be held at Map­
le Grove eenter, on Thursday, March 30th, 1H®,

Uto, . ItetoCU br.

tnam

'

BV OfUCl OX VOX.

A DEMOCRAT CAUCUS.
For tbe purpose of making nomination for
officers in the township of Castleton, will be
MW at Nashville, tn the building on Main BL,
two doors South of town hall, &lt;m Sotortay,
April 1st, at 3 p m.
By order of Com.

of laid Court. Itu nto be boMM at »o rvsooiw
Office, In the city of Hastings. InaaM eo»»y **J
•bow eauM. if but there be. why the prayer or

of Barry onee

tetter rend a* follows:
“ laxocrzK, Russian Siberia^ |
“Daa* Hkttie: After many trials and
tribulations I arrived here yesterday. We can
master but thirteen people al! told out oi the

DISSOLUTION NOTICE.
winter, according as .
the Navy Deportraen

There arc already booked for passage to
By onler otCox.
widower with no children, the matter is making
so much stir that Coroner Bedford is looking lion people, and II is estimated that 800,000
REGISTRATION NOTICE.
will emigrate from Europe and Canada to the
The board of registration of the township of Mew. Akte? ReUeSAJliirkij
Castleton, will meet at tbe office of the torn.
Tiie Detroit Post lias obtained advices on the West and Northwest.
»bip clerk in U»e village of Nashville In said

IRELA

ALBERT LEA ROUTE,” (Chicago, Rock

falthf-j-iy.

Gzozes W. Mklviujl”

-Mr. Btaotatock. ol J.tooa, Ga.,

day and register their Dames.
Dated Nashvflle. March. 17.

fTO-D AY

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                  <text>PAP
ORNO STRONG, 1
EpTTOX AMV PBOFBTJtTOR.

LIFE IN NASHVILLE

LOOAL QIBBLE-GABBLE

And Her, Environs.

—Don’t got fooled to-day.
—Tom Niles has sold his span of colts
toH. Eldridge, of Maple Grove, for
$200.
;
.
—T. H. Brooks will start next week
for Kansas, with two ear loads of pota­
toes for tbn western market.
—J. C. Andrews living one mile east
of Lew. Emorys corners, has sold his
farm of 50 acres, to J. H. Norris, of
. Assyria for $1,400.
—Geo. Gfeenfield has purchased the
Week's
abject to the dower and
hom
'
widow, and
L as mb
on to the premises.
—We
this week a supplement
containing all tbe laws passed at tbe
recent session of the legislature^ Tbe
same should be preserved for future
reference.
—The steamboat “Golden City," wn*
destroyed by fire at Memphis ou the
80th ult. Thirty lives were lost, includ­
ing that of a brother ol Mrs. Rathbun
' of this Village.
—Ground will bo broke for the in w
bricks of Geo. W. Francis and the Bank
about'the middle of the month. Wood’s
foundry has already cast the columns
to be used in the front of the same. ■
—F. T. Harrison of Grand Rapi Is, i'
has opened a photograph gallery in tbe I

—The new council is .working into
the harness in good shape, and don’t
propose to be bull-dozed or intimidat­
ed in the least, but ore bound to know
they are right, and then go ahead. The
reins of the government have certainly
fallen fcjto good hands.
—John J. Potter is busily engaged in
analyzing the feelings of this commun­
ity in the endeavor to discover whether
it can stand the pressure of another
paper or not. ’Tis a mystery, John,
that cannot be solved until put to a
practial test The harvest is ripe and
laborers few, always, to a man ambi­
tious to reap the high honors and nebes of a second newspaper in a country
town.
—E. Chipman and S. J. Prindle have
formed a co-partnership, rented A. C.
Buxton’s brick store and will imme­
diately stock the same with dry goods,
clothing, groceries andproviaions. Mr.
Chipman is well known, having been
identified with Nashville’s interests
every since ito infancy, while Mr. Prindie is also well known by many he having been one the town’s first business
men. We wish the new firm sue—Last week Wednesday, the house
• of A.P. and B.W. King, of Johnstown,
was the scene of a double silver wed­
ding, in honor of the 35th anniversary
of the weddings of Mr. and Mrs. B. W.
King of Johnstown, and Mr. and Mrs.
R, D. Gregory of Augusta. The fes­
tivities of the occasion were too much
for one day; and the guests remained
over until tire next day noon. The
event is one long to be remembered by
all present.

—It is stated that a certain party
drove np to the Wolcott House one day

•table, and was to take him to Ver­
montville. He succeeded in delading
the drummer until his horses began to
go through a series of antics which so
frightened the drummer that he loudly
protested against being carried farther

mjaeioii to this village, wa« to close up
bin buaineas here. Tuesday and Wed­
nesday, much of his stock of general
nterchaudiae wan sold at auction and
the balance will be offered at private

NUMBER 28.

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, APRIL 1, 1882

VOLUME IX.

second story of R. 8. Brady’s building
on south Main St From the specimens
of work he is turning out, we should
Judge that be will succeed.
—A petition to the - President for the
pardon of Sergt. Mason is receiving
hundreds of signers at the post office.
Read the article: “To the rescue of
Sergt. Mason,” in another column, and
than go and sign tbe petition.
—A certain young man received a
letter from a sweetheart living at a
distance, and with whom he has been
corresponding, stating that she had
been married some time. Doutless
' some other young men here may re­
ceive the same intelligence soon.

I TERMS; $1.50per Yeab
I Credit Subscriptions $1.7B.

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun.

)

Township election next Monday.*
A. D. VannockeFs store is clos-

Note the change in C. W.Smith’a new
ad.
'
A few farmers have started &lt;th«plow.
I
Gardening will commence in a few
day«.
Tho sugar season is drawing to' a

COLLAR AND ELBOW.

CHRTHTTAN 8. &amp; OOHOEBT.

Tho collar and elbow contest be­
tween Etniqet Everts, of this village
and Peter V. Daoons of Charlotte, was
witnessed by a small audience at tho
&lt;-pera house, last Friday evening.
"Dacons has wrestled in several matches
and is in good practice, while Everts
had never wrestled in a match, was en­
tirely out of practice, and has but re­
cently recovered from a severe fit of
sickness, consequently was in no way
fitted to enter the match.
This match was more of atrial of
science than of muscle, and a fair and
honest contest The first round lasted
twenty-six minutes, and resulted in a
fall for Docons. The next round was
completedin four and a half minutes,
and was won by Everts. At this point
iu ths contest it became evident to the
audience that what Everts lacked in
practice and agility, was fully balanced
by his strength, and that the contest­
ants were about evenly matched. Cop­
pers were bet quite freely i and a few
dimes changed hands upon the result
of the second fall, but no one seemed
willing to stake dollarson either wrest­
ler. The third round was of only elev­
en minutes duration, and ended with
Dacono lying squarely on his back and
Everts again victorious. The next
round was of the same duration as the
third, but ended exactly the reverse.
Each contestant had won two falls and
each seemed confident of winning the
last, winch should decide tho contest.
The last round was the most closely
contested fall of the evening and both
men exhibited some fine maneuvres in
the art and were loudly applauded by
the audience. At the end of the tenth
minute, and also at the end of the 22nd
min ate after commencing the last
round, Everts was thrown, but suc­
ceeded in falling on his side in such
a manner as to be declared “no fall.”
In the last of these attempts, he sprain­
ed one of his knees, so that when he
undertook to make a trip with that
limb, he found that :t failed him and
in three minutes more was on his back,
coming out second best at the close of
the match.

Tho concert at the Chriotain church
Sunday evening was a fine affair, and
reflected credit not only on the worthy
superintendent, Mrs. Truman, but up­
on all who took part in it. The weath­
er was inauspicious for the event, a
brisk rain storm oecarring, but; not­
withstanding, the church was filled.
Below we give the program as render­
ed:
.

Lumber is on tho ground for several
new cross walks.
H. M. Lee moved into iris new pur­
chase on Tuesday.
Look for the Maxwells about tho
middle nf tho month.
Will Stillwell is visiting friends and
relatives in this Vicinity.
The roads ore daily growing better
and business is booming.
A new walk has been built in front
of C. Ainsworth’s store.
Tlje roads have improved amazingly
during the last three days.
.
Real estate transfers are lively,—
more so than they have been for years.
Geo. R. Fleming of .Detroit, visited
Nashville and old friends over Sunday.
Charley Halbert has been visiting
among his numerous friends here this
week.
Mrs. Orno Strong is at Battle Creek
enjoying the luxuries of tho Sanita­
rium.
Miss Helen Allen has been visiting
friends at Charlotte, during vacation,
this week.
Mrs. I. D. McCutchion of Charlotte,
is visiting friends in Nashville and vi­
cinity th ;s week.
A. D. Hayner, of Chicago, visited
his brother-in-in-law, Frank McDerby,
over Sunday.
T. C. Downing was at Detroit, Wed­
nesday selecting safe and fixtures for
the new bank.
Frank Chipman has so far recovered
from his late sickness as to able to be
(out on the street*.
t.
Barney Brooks has moved his L*uit
(evaporator to his lot farther east on
ISherman St,
'
.
The schools are closed this week for
ORDINATION CEREMONIES.
the spring vacation. The spring term
will commence next Monday.
Agreeably to announcements pre­
J. F. Holbrook and wife, and Ed.
iHolbrook and wife started last Monday viously made a council of Congrega­
tional church, called by the Congre­
night for their new Dakota home.
S. S. Ingerson has purchased Benj. gational churches of VL Ville, for die
Meiaer’s residence, across Quaker purpose of ordaining Mr. F. A. Bissell
Brook; consideration $1600100cash. . to the gospel ministry.'convened in this
An addition of about 25 to 80 young village at the Christian church, at
beginners is expected in the primary three o'clock p. m„ Tuesday. Churches
were represented as follows:
-,
'department of tho school next term.
Eaton Rapids—Rev. D. P. Breed and Ken­
Mr. and Mra.Wm. Young,and daugh­ dall
Klttridge.
ter Clara, of Tekonsha, have been
Charlotte—Rev. 0. H. Spoor.
Vermontville— Rev. IL IL Williams.
visiting at C. N. Young’s thi^ week.
Johnstown—Rev. Wood.
The Blue Ribbon society holds its re­
gular
monthly
meeting
at
the
M.
E.
uncM of the
'
church
next Sunday afternoon at two
’
The
council
organized
by
the
election
*o’clock.
Pete Stacy has traded his farm west of Rev. 0. H. Spoor ns moderator and
Rev.
D.
P.
Breed
as
scribe.
After
stat­
of
’ this village for the house and lot ing the object of the council and read­
formerly owifed by W. A. Aylsworth,
.
ing
the
letters
missive
which
convened
across Quaker brook.
‘
A. T. Boise of Lafayette, Ohio, ar­ it, the council proceeded to the exam­
rived
in time to say good bye and God­ ination of the candidate, which consist­
'
speed to his brother Capt before the ed of first, n statement of his commis­
j
sion, second, his belief, and third, an­
latter left for Dakota.
swers to interrogations from members
Dr. F. R. Timmerman of Hastings,
of the council. The exar-ination last­
was m the village Wednesday. He was
ed
about two hours, and was very sat­
re^ntly elected K. of R. A S. of Barry
isfactory to the council, and highly
Lodge, No. 13, K. of P.
gratifying
to the friends of Mr. Bissell,
Mrs. Dr. VanOstrand and daughter,
present. The examination was sus­
of Albion returned home on Tuesday,
tained by the council and the ordina­
from a visit to Mrs. W. P. Eddy, a sis­
tion Ceremonies deferred nutil evening.
ter of Mrs. VanOstrand.
The church was reasonably filled in
K. Kittridge, editor of the Eaton
the evening, and beautifully and taste­
Rapids Journal gave us a pleasant call
fully decorated with flowers in the vi­
on Tusday, while in tbe village attend­ cinity of the pulpit, the handwork of
ing the ordination services.
the young ladies of the society. The
The W. C. T. U. will serve a 10 cent following program was carried out:
lanch, hot coffee included, Monday,
Anthem—By the choir, “Mighty Jehovah.0
April 3d, at F. C. Boise’s building, one
Wood; Hymn, “Go preach my gospel; Ordi­
door south of his hardware.
nation sermon by Rev. EL M. Bissell from tho
Herb. Walrath has bought out W. G. text, "A great doer is opened and effectual, and
there arc many adversaries;" Ordination
Edwards harness stock and will contin­ prayer,
by Rev. H M. BiMeil; Laying on of
ue the business. Mr. Edwards lias bands by Bev’s., Wood and Breed; Onllnagone to Dakota to look for a location.
C. L. Glasgow will have to be seen to
’
by the autborites for putting so many Benediction. Bev. F. A. BIwell.
The ceremonies id the evening were
stoves on to the’ sidewalk. Last week
of
a
very
solemn
and
impressive
char
­
be sat oat eight cook stoves for differ­
acter, and the parts taken by each ably
ent customers.
and
fittingly
filled.
The
sermon
was
Mrs. W. 'H. Young extends a cordial
invitation to every lady over fifty years an able one and exactly adapted to t he
of age, living within the corporation of occasion, the ordination prayer a most
thia village, to spend the afternoon, feeling and touching one rendered, per­
haps more so from the fact that the
Monday, April 8d. at Ur residence.
C. B. Wood of Bellevue, Gen. agt. of venerable divine who delivered it is
aa uncle to the candidate. The charge
the
Home
Ina
Co.,
was
in
the
village
o*TmX, .nd Lu
,2? u
„ T W^cellwt. wropriue n.d in timn

Bible words about singing—a responsive ex­
ercise by the school.
Recitation, "Think and Do," by Eddie Mai •

Recitation, “Little Beggar Boy’s button-hole
Boquct,” by Agusta Liebhauscr.
Juvenile recitation, by Frankie Lentz.
Singing. “Music everywhere,” by Ettie Wol­
cott undid* Cook.
'
Recitation, “He Glrllh His Beloved Steep,"
by Edith Fleming.
Recitation- “Little Duckie Bird," by Perh
V an NockerJ
Tempentoce recitation, by Lena Griswold.
Duett, “Beautiful Sometime,” by Gertie In­
gerson Nellie Truman.
RecRaUon*, “BeThankful," bv Caddie Molam Persuaded,” by Claud and
Minnie potter.
Recitation, “Look always on the Sunny Side,"
by Winnie Bush.
Recitation. 'T am my Mother’s Little Maid,”
by Bernice Niles.
__
’Solo: br Ml*« Graven of Oitomo.
Recitation, “A Little Bird Telia," by Edna
Truman,.
Song, “I am waiting," by Grace and Markle
foot. •

A collection amounting to $4.50 Was*k
taken at the close of the exiscs.
—The assault and battery case of the
people vs T. N. Kettle well, was tried
last Monday, before Esq. Potter. L. E.
Knappen appearing for the people, and
A. M. Flint for the respondent. A
jury wasempanneled, and ofter hear­
ing evidence the rendered a verdict of
simple assault. The justice imposed a
tine of $5 and costs, amounting in all
to about thirteen dollars.
COMMON

COUNCIL

PROCEEDINGS.

Cocsol Rooms,
&gt;
Nashville, Mar. 28, 1882. f
Regular meeting.
Present, Chipman, President; Barber, Boise,
Dickinson, Lee and Ixntz, Trustees. Absent
Demaray, trustee.
Minutes read and approved.
The Marshal bond of James L. Gregory
with John E. Barry and Henrv Hoe, as sureties
wu presented and on motion accepted ai*l ap­
proved by ayes and nays as follows:
Ayes, Barber, Boise, Dickinson, Lee and
Lentz. Nays, none.
The Street Commissioners bond of James L.

and approved by aye* and nays aa follows:
Lentz. Nays, none.
The Constable bond of Jacob Osmun with
James L. Gregory and 8. 8. lugerson as sure­
ties was presented and on motion accepted and
approved by ayea and nays as follows:
Ayes, Barber, Boise, Dickinson, Lee and
Lentz. Nays, none.
Motion bjr Barber that tho regular meeting
of the council be held on the second and fourth
Mondays in each month. Motion carried by
ares and nays as follows:
' Ayes, Boise, Barber, Dickinson, Lee and

On motion council adjourned.
F. McDbhbt,
E
Clerk.

RUNNING THE ELECTION.
WdKRxas, The KnlgbU of Pythias are cbarg-

most suitable term to use—with "running the
late village election. 1 desire to state, as an of­
ficer of Ivy lodge, that the charge is uncalled
for, as ft is without foundation iu every partie-

lodge held a meeting on the night of the cau­
cus, and pledged its aid and support to only
Knight*. ’Tie true that the lodge bel l a meet­
ing that night, but it was because ’two* ragu-

that couldn’t well lie put off. For the benefit
of the uninitiated and skeptical, I will stale
that questions of the like, charged, are never
dUcuased in a Knights of Pythias convention;

tai. The idea is a' ridiculous one and only eminatre from a diaeaaed mind, green-eyed Jeal

TOUNG-OQLK.-At the residence of thbride's parents in Maple Grove, by Rev. A.
D. Newton, on Wednesday, March 39th, Mr.
Ed. Young of Charlotte, to Miss Cora A.
Cole of Maple Grove.

lowing list of presents:
Sett silver table spoons, Mr. and Mr*. Orin
Cole; Family Bible, Mr.and Mr*. Wm. Young;
Gold lined individual salts, Mr. and Mra Frank
Btr ester; BcxA stand, Mr. and Mra. KA Warbert- .n; fiRrer napkin rings, Mr. and Mrs.C- N.
Young; Book stand, M1m Cara Young; Large

I be .flipped to Big Rapid.. This is »®. MS
&lt;*?«“»■ I b, |Mt wh«t nwht to l,.,e bnnnMid.
Clark; R2.0O, Mr. and Mra Munger of Booth
flawn; Butter knife, Mira Emma Mayo.
wiod-np of Mr. Aylaworth’s buaiV*. w. Aylsworth starts for Dakota j
-------- - „ w &lt;________
*- ■ - —
will hereafter next Monday, to prospect for » new
It has been ascertained that the help­
CARD UF THANKS.
home. Wai. has many warm friends I less old lady spoken of last week, rebere, and Tux Nxws joins with them ported to have been put on the train
in wishing hjm -unlimited success, here March 15th. was put on at Verwberever be goes.
‘ montville.

LOCALMATTERS.

HASTINGS.

HE DID NOT MINCE‘ MATTEL

Political gossip takes the load.
A representative of the Lynn (M***) Item,
School closed oq Thursday. Vaca­ ta a talc ramble througiwut that city, gathered.
tion for ono week.
The young peoples M; E. social took the following: Tbe flrat ptace visited by Ute re­
in $19, Wednesday night.
.
porter waa the fruit store of Mr, Lertstt, No. 7S
The thermometers have been very Market ctrcci, in rwponre to a ram-jr that tbe
proprietor had teen cured at the rheumatism by
much agitated hare for the past week.
। The-Presbyterian social will be en­ tbe great remedy. Mr. Levttt not being in,
the reporter bad a talk with bi* »ou. Mr. Lov­
tertained by Mrs. Young Friday even­
ett stated that hi* father had been cured of an
ing.
exceedingly bad attack of rbctimatUm by the
Dr.Miller started for the west Thur* - St. Jacobs Oil. He bad tbe disease in hi*
day. .He expects to locate near St. right arm and shoulder, which became per­
Paul.
fectly hclplco* after being affected a few hours
Ed, Dewey of the Owosso Times has His pain wo* h.- great that he could rest ta
been visiting in this city. He returned comfort or attend to bu»inca* with any degree
home on Tuesday.
■
of satisfaction. After enduring Uds sort of
for some time, bepurchaaeda bottle of
Chris VanArman came back from thing
the Great German Remedy and tegau to apply
Ann Arbor Wednp«doy, and brought a it. He did not mince matter* at all. but just
used
the
OU for all It was worth. After par­
University diploma with him.
suing till* inode of treatment for three days
The Cresent Society gave an enter­ the pain was banished and his father wanin a
perfectly
healthy condition.
He ,bas never
tainment Tuesday night. It was well
attended and the society did them selves since felt any rheumatic pain.
credit.
HTBret Barrel Salt for M.25 al the Elevator
Last Sunday there was quite an ex-| of Brooks, Marshall, A Co.
citement in the 3d ward. Au old man,' **£TER MONDAY, APRIL THIRD,
the father of Mrs. Earl Brown, who We promise no more good* at coat, but do
to give purchasers from 5 to 20 per cent
just mmei
moved w
to mis
this city
city,, Hiariea
started out
out promise
*has jum
more goods for les* money under the ready pay
for a walk.

rhe family became alarm -

cd, us be did not return, and began to
Hcarch for him, at last just at night,
they found him about four miles out
in the country. Ho had got lost and
was trying
_ . to find his way
_ home.
_
^.1
" —tor
Thurmlay, C'
C. Ct
G. 11
Holbrook
.tartml
Huron, Dakota. Mr. Holbrook was an
old resident and has been for many]
years a prominent member of the bar
in this city. Last Saturday evening
the members of the bar met to bid him
farewell and tender their good wishes.
Resolutions were presooted and re­
marks made by tho several members.
Mr. Holbrook responded with a great
deal of feeling, after which all partook
of a bounteous supper at tbe Hastings
bonse.
Wednesday evening tbe Republicans
nominated John Q. Creasy for Mayor,
P. T. Colgrove for recorder, Henry C.
Lewis for treasurer, Auson Maynard
for Marshal, A. Block and Charles
Bauer for justices, 0. Crook for school
Inspector and Baker Shriner and T.
Philips for supervisors. The Demo­
crats nominated W. D. Hayes for may­
or, Henry Ford for recorder, Chas.
Brown for treasurer, James Tomlinson
marshal, W. S. Goodyear and D. R.
McElwain justices, David Goodyear
school inspector, Fred Sweet and Bar­
low supervisors,
«
Hans.

MAPLE GROVE.

Tho schools are al’, closed for 90 days
or leas.
Mary Phinsey lias gone to Battle
Creek.
P. Anderson and family started home
Tuesday.
'
Politics is lively and mud and rain­
water arc plenty.
John Shoup is going south of Battle
Creek to work.
Miss McConnell of Hillsdale, is visit­
ing at E. Shafer’s.
Protracted meeting is in progress at
the Hyde school house.
Mrs.McCutcheon of Charlotte,is visit
ing at Mr. McOmber’s.
Geo. McCartney had a cake of sugar
stolen from his sugar bash.
It is rain, snow, freeze and thaw.
Mercury runs freely from 20 to flO de­
grees.
Gill Buck has returned from the
north. He reports having killed five
deer and one bear during the hunting

system than cau be bought where credit is ghreu
Giro uss trial.
L. J. WHEELER.

IM I’ORTANT TO TB* V ELEILS,
8pecl*l inducement* are offered yon by tbe
Burlington Route, It Will p*y vou to rc*d tbeir
advertisement* to be found elsewhere In this
issue.
___ ______________________
rorc-nhr eo,t
ol Pur

nlture and the closing out rale of •
FohSm.e: Three young brood Marcs with
fool, One Stranger Cott, one veer old, one aide

SHOES!! SHOES!!
Don't buy a pair until you sec that new,
targe and elegant stock—tbe finest ever brought
to NaabviUe—just iu at
Gfuxozs's.
ttr For Sale—Heavy work bone perfectly
sound, 7 yrs, old, Inquire of
C- Arxiiworm.

NEW! NEW!
I bare purchased the stock in trade of W. G.
Edwards.have bought more new gtxxls and will
fit you out with a first class barucMat tx&gt;ttom
figures. Cal) and see me and get prices.

•&lt;* N. B. I will only grind Monday* and
Thursday*. ’J7-3O .
N. C. H*nz*MAX.

SPRING AND SUMMER “OPENING.
Thanking tbe ladle* of Na*bville and vicinity
for past favor*, 1 Invite tbeir attention to a very
fine assortment of Spring Millinery Goods,
which 1 have just purcb**ed at the lowest mar­
ket price- A careful inspection i* solicited. I
wiil not be undersold.
Yoor*. Ac..
M. JEFFREY.

YOU ARE INVITED
Tq call In and see what I can sell you a harnei
for.
HERB. WALRATH.

from the first, it Is not a one man Machine as
most others arc, but is made up of tried cud
C&gt;ved points from the whole range of the
wing Machine world and combined into one
grand triumph of this field of Industry. In
this day and age of progreMStoa, the line of
"OLD STAND BY8" and “OLD RELIA­
BLES" are too old for our wlde-a-wake deoplc,
who are bound to have the test Machine ex;&gt;crience money can produce.

ATTENTION PATRONS.
Having been called upon to make an unex­
pected payment. April 1st, I will be very much
obliged U» my friends and petrous If they will
pay their account or so much of it as they can
beii &gt;re that date. Jenv Wuolcott who has been
with me for the past three iu&gt;&lt;] a half years,
starts for Dakota at that time and 1 wish to
pay him what I owe binYours Resp., C. W. Smith.

LUMBER! LUMBER!
Custotn Sawing and Building Material fur­
nished on abort notice, at our new mill in Ma­
ple Grove.
James 8. Perry•«- You can nave money by purchasing
your furniture for cash at

TO BE GIVEN AWAY.

REGISTRATION NOTICE.
Sam Cotton was hired to drive an
other man’s team to Nashville, after
getting there the other man drove
home and left Sam to hoof it through
the rood. Gollie wasn't ho mad.
It seems that tliere are some people
living in the vicinity of the Quail Trap
school bouse, who make it a business to
mind other peoples business more than
tbeir own. Now we would rather that
our neighlwr would give us five dollars
or even the itch than to try to beat us
out of tbaf which we have.
A few copies of an Oakland, Cal.,
paper were dropped in our midst the
other day which caused a sharp discus­
sion in regard to the first or seventh
day as the day of rest, lii course of the
discussion it was hinted that congress
would eventually settle the matterjin
the mean rime the small boy will keep
right on shooting squirrels and wading
1,T« the
fl... creek after suckers on
r. »1...
up
the Sab­
bath.
R&lt;m&gt; E Rue.
When falls the soulful moonbeam

The board of registration of the township of
Castleton. will mw» *t tire nrtVr
town­
ship clerk ta the village of NaahvOlein said
towwhip on Saturday April 1st All legal vuL
era wboae names are not regtatered uudwho.
day end register their name*. __
Dated NaahriUe, March. 17. IMS. ~
Fkjlxk MuDcriit,

ELECTION NOTICE.
The annual election (4 officer* for I

Tbe officers to-te clnc-

Dated, Nashville, March 17. &gt;®W.
Fbsmm McDkkkx,

DISSOLUTION NOTICE.

_____
firm paying all debt* and ctatartinz alt ar
roonnta. Dated thia eighteenth day oi March,

And beautiful feline ebertater*,

WATCH OUT.
The wffertag -atbeU..
Hurt* madly through tbe mMnlgbt air

D. R. Grate with hie fine bay ffp
i tin- barn, known aaPraU’s, Qi

�LIT TBBM BtrsTMT DKIP.

thins for my sake, i
Item bury me deep!

Near co my own M v&lt;.u .mi
Il J could look up aud hear you.
Into soar rfrm* I would oropp;
’
I&gt;-t me Mimntlmeo nctelie near you—
Don't let tliem bury mo deep!

thomLJoct

These words of his .wife.oat Jonoe
Tra^inartll more deeply than if they had
been hafshar, and she had directly oomplained oFhis increasing infirmity. He
thought of taking a vow of total absti­
nence, but he could not see how he was
to keep it. It had not been his habit to.
keep ardent spirits in his house, and it
was only when he went from home that
he took it. Whatever was his condition
when in town, he had been always sure
to return by nightfall; and it would be
amusing as well as touching to observe
his efforts to disguise his inebriety,
sometimes with a seriousness entirely
foreign, to his nature when‘sober, at oth­
ers by an atfectionaleness so gushing
that ho could but believe it sufficient to
win and keep won the heart of a woman
even far less responsive than his wife.
Jonoe understood this and other occa­
sional remarks of his wife to contain a
tacit proposal that if ho would become
more temperate and more attentive to
the farm, she would reoognixe thodimin-

jonoe took his hat and walking-cane,
and sallied forth from the back door.
the dinner things were put away, be
heard it, and the strokes seemed to be
made by a person who knew what she
wm about.
For the first time in his.
married life; Jonce Trammell did some,
creeping. This brought him to the shed
room, where—oh, faithless wife!—from
her fair bands the weaver's shuttle was
enacting tho swiftness so expressive in
the mouths of the holy prophets, while
Susan was standing by, looking on with
wonder and delight. Ashamed, but (as
be afterward admitted) more for him­
self than his wjfe, Jonce crept away;
but he had gotten only a few Steps
when his wife, who had risen from the
loom, observed him. Her impulse was
first to call to him, but this she resisted.
She went into her own room, sat down,
and then Mrs. Trammell on her part
did some ruminating. In a few minutes
Jonoe, who had saddled his horse at the
lot, rode up by the house, opened the
gate, and turned toward town.
“ Why, I thought you were going to
the low grounds, Jonce,” culled his
wife.
“Yes,” answered Jonce, “but,
Meely, you see you was mistakened."

to her loom. He was right; and when,
after remaining at homo two weeks,
he found
that
she
was
far
more temperate, and, farther, more
cheerful, he was almost sorry for the
occurrence of an apparent necessity one
afternoon that he should go to town on
— ITill Corleton.
some farm business. Mrs. Trammell,
Jthough not urgently, suggested that
THE JONCE; TRAWELL C0MFB0- their son Tommy, ten years old, might
go in his stead. But Jonce, upon re­
/ JfilSE.
Jonce Trammell had never, during
flection, thought he would go himself. any of bis drinking frolics, staid from
“ Isha’nt be gone long, Meely,” said home at night.
But now it seemed as
he, as he rode off.
if he was daitiued to illustrate the truth
“The difficulty about tho drinkin’ of
His businesi; was at the blacksmith’s, of old Mr. Spivey’s saying about tho
sperrita,” said old Mr. Spivey, “when
oust a man git to knockin’ of it too at tho near end of tho village. After making up for lost time in such cases.
his plow-sharpened, it occurred Tho grief of his wife was extreme, as
jttrong and reg’lar, is about this, that getting
him that there was a little matter at, alternately she sat up and walked
when he one time lays off, ef he don’t to
Bland
’
s
store that ho ought to attend to. the floor' the night long.
When
lay off for good, when ho do git back, it Ho scarcely
looked into Fann’s grocery the morning came, she adjusted
always seem u ef he wanted to make
up for lost time, and so he go to knock­ as ho wont up; but on his return, seeing her- hair, redressed herself, and
Fann
ip
tho
door
(for
Fann,
though
a
in’ of it stronger’!! before—that is, pro­ more grocery keeper, was a right good tried to look bright before her husband.
vidin’ that you can’t git him to com- fellow), ho paused for a little civil and But no Jonce, neither to breakfast nor
at dinner-time. She know he was at
penniso. I’ve saw it freckwent in my
time, and I’m sixty-eight year old, harmless chat. Among other things Fannjs, for old Mr. Spivey hud told ifer
a-goin’ on to my sixty-nine, and which said by Fann was this:
so the evening before, and he had told
“ I knowed you was oneasy ’bout her further that in imswer to his request
it nave been ten year ago, and which
there were Jonce Trammell, and which, your wife, Jonce, and I wants her to try to Jonce to come on home with him,
upon my w.ord, as to Jonce Tram­ my cherry-bounce that I've seasoned Jonce hud refused peremptorily, and
with cinnamon, ’specially for weak said he did not know when he would.
mell—”
But I conclude to give my own ac­ brasses. It’s mv own nriperation, and
“Jonce were mad, Meely; but he
count of Mr. Trammell, as Mr. Spivey, I tell you now, Jonco, that I were study­ were drunkcr’ri mad. I hope he’ll git
’ ’bout your wife when the idee struck over it fry mornin’, and come on home.
especially after he bad taken his own in
me.
”
sweetened dram, was rather given to
Don’t be oneasy. Jim Fann ’ll give
Anybody who knew Jonce Trammell him a bed.”
extended narrations, even without al­
would have known to what such as that
lowance of rests therein.
The old man was uncle to Jonce. Rid­
would
lead.
Some
time
after
dark
ho
Johnson Trammell bad-married, some
ing from his own home, half a mile fur­
fifteen years before, with Miss Amelia reached home, and ashamed, remorse­ ther down the load, about two o’clock
Jones. It was considered a fair match. ful, and inadequate for either tho digni­ in the afternoon, he came up to Jon«e’s
Both were good-looking—Meely, indeed, fied or tho affectionate, feeling that he house, and was surprised and distressed
quite pretty. She was better educated could not endure the sight of tho pain that Jonco yet lingered in town.
than Jonce, but Jonce did not care for his conduct was inflicting; dismounting
“Time sich as that were put a stop to
*4at, and felt himself competent to make from his horse, he tottered around to the in some ways or some wapj else. I’m
tip for it. They were very fond of each kitchen, wherein, drawing his hat over a-goin’ in to Fann’s, Meely. Ef I ain’t
other, even after two matters, small in his eyes, he took a chair and sat down back in two hours, you better como
.
the beginning, had grown into serious by the fire.
’Toin’t worth while to bo
“ Lor’, Marsc Jonce,” said old Aunt yourself.
importance in their conjugal life.
’ ’bout Jonce no longer.”
the cook, “ kitchen no place for mcaly-mouthin
They resided a mile southeast of the Dilcy,
He rode on into town. Tho old gen­
white
folks
to
set
down
in.
Whint
you
tqwn, near the hill called Pimple TIill,
tleman never had been to tho grocery
go
’
long
in
de
big
'ouso
’
long
o*
Miss
on the Augusta road. In spite of a stiff, | Meely?”
except on such or similar business, for
rocky soil, Jonce made good crops, whose
he habitually took hh one sweet­
m so mean. Aunt Dilcy, so that I though
ened draw a day, always, as he express­
proceeds and those of his wife’s loom ain“’tI’fittin
’
to
go
into
your
Miss
Meely
’
s
were judiciously investeil. Of late, un­ house. You go tell her I said so.”
ed it, “of a mornin’ like,” few held
fortunately, Jonce had become addicted
“Miss Meely weavin’.
I hain’t drunkenness in deeper disgust.
to intemperate drinking, and the hiLsiJonce, though not deeply intoxicated,
her to weave before of a night,
ness of the farm began to suffer from the knowed
not in two weeks. My po’ mistiss guin’ yet was in sad plight. In answer to the
subtraction of his attention. Having kill
old man’s entreaties to return home, he
herself
wid
dat
loom.
”
been brought up to work, always a hard
“My God A'mighty!” exclaimed went many times over the case of his
worker, My. Trammell now worked the
rising. At tho kitchen door ho wife, the judgment of tho doctor, hi«
harder. Jonce remarked her increased Jonce,
met
his wife, and without a word from own repeated remonstration, and dwelt
devotion to household duties, and he re­
either,
suffered
her to load him into tho on the piteousness of how it was going
marked farther, and with alarm, a
to be when she, in spite even of her sol­
.
growing sadness upon her face, a house.
“
Look
here,
Meely,
” said Jonce, the emn pledge—such was the uncontrolla­
stooping in her figure, and a general next morning, “ killin
bility of her passion for the loom--should
’
s
killin
’
,
makes
oldening.
.
succeed In murdering herself in secret.
The work that she was best at, that no odds whether it’s done with a whis­ His uncle, smothering his wrath, pitied
ky
bottle
or
a
shicklo.
If
you
’
ll
quit
she liked the best, that seemed most im­
Jonce—oh, very sweetly—but could not
portant to her family, was weaving. Al­ weavin’ for good and all, I’ll not take got Jonce’s mind upon the subject of a
most all the clothing worn by the fami­ another drink till tho last day I’m a- return to his home; Jonce continued to
livin
’
on
top
o
’
the
ground,
anq
I
’
m
aly, Sundays as well as week-days, was
x
woven by herself. Then she made meanin’ what I’m a-sayin’.”
She had in her loom a woof that she
counterpanes and stripes that were fa­
was
taking
great
pains
with.
It
was a pathetics, Mrs. Trammell, leading .her
mous, and that brought in many a nice
little son Tommy, entered the room.
little sum, not only from neighbors, stripe for frocks for herself and her The presence of such a fine woman
and a neighbor who had expressed
but from persons miles away, even girls,
made the door place seem suddenly and
admiration
for
it.
She
regarded
it
as
across the Ogeccboe. It would not be
her masterpiece. She looked longingly unendurably disgusting to tho men who
going too far to say that Mrs. Trammell, at
tho loom, its fair handiwork awaiting were therein, and they slunk out of'-it;
at least in her younger and more cheer­
even Fann himself crept into his back
fol, not to say ambitious, time, had and inviting to completion.
“You are in earnest, are you, room.
been proud of this talent. Jonce was
When Jonce saw his wife, al first he
always avowedly so, until at last he came Jonce?”
“I am,” said Jonce, firmly, even abl- thought he must be in a dream.
to the conclusion that die was carrying
“Jonce,” she said, trembling, “land
emnly.
it too far.
Tommy have come for you.”
“ Then let it be so."
“ There’s warious kinds of intemperHer eyes were red with unrest and
Sho
rose,
cut
the
cloth
from
the
unfin
­
*hce, Meely,” said Jonce one night, as,
weeping; but they exhibited no anger,
after the supper things were put away, ished woof, folded it, and laid it away. or other passion than affection and sor­
she resumed her seat on the loom Each drew a long breath, for each felt row.
«
that faithful observance of the mutual
bench.
“I know you are ashamed of me,
• “I didn’t suppose there was but pledges was to be at dear cost. '
Jonce, for coming into this place. But
one,” she answered, letting the shuttle
I could not live at home without you.
flyOh, my husband, I wish I had called
The loom was removed into a shed you back yesterday. I started to do it,
“ Oh, yes; a body can be intempert
in eatin’ as well as drinkin’, and Dr. room, and Susan, a bright negro girl, but I thought may be you might not like
Lewis say there’s more people dies whom her mistress had been instructing it to find out that I knew you had been
from that than t’other; and yon know in the art, was brought in to its continu­ watching me. If 1 had, I don't think
he’s tbe smartest doctor in all this ous work. Dr. Lewis was right. What you’d have left me as you did, because
country."
with the suspension of exhausting labor, I could have explained everything. Not
Jonce knew tho strength of that au­ and the thought that her husband was that I blame you, my dearest Jonce, for
thority; for this physician, who had saved from rein, the form of Mrs. Tram­ watching me. That was my husband’s
tended his wife in more than one spell mell straightened and filled, and the right”
of dangerous illness, wu regarded bv bloom came buck to her cheek.
Old Mr. Spivey, famous peace-maker
Hard as was her struggle, that of
her with intense admiration and grati­
Jonce jwas harder. ButTie loved hia though he was, c&amp;me near pouring forth
tude.
“Dr. Lewis, I suppose, ought to wife dearly, and he struggled like a true an indignant dissent from this proposi­
know, Jonce; but anyhow that kind of man Jonce thought sometimes that it tion. Bat fastening his jaws together,
intemperance don't bring tho distress might have been as well to modify the he looked with hypocritical fondness
that the other does, and I can’t see how compact from ono of total abstinence to upon Jonce, who bowed his head with
a man can get his consent to kill himself moderate indulgence, but he was s name.
“■Poor Jonce! poor fellow I ” said Mr.
with either one, or with any kind of in- ashamed to say so.
ttmperance.”
So matters went on. Of late Jonoe Spivey, compassionating Jonoe, it was
had rather persuaded himself that there not clear for what.
“How about women, Meely?”
“ When I agreed with you, Jonoe, not
“Or women either; but I don’t sup­ was a suspicion somewhere in his mind
pose that Dr. Lewis ever knew of such —a suspicion which gave him less pain, to do any more weaving, I didn’t think
however, thaw it ought. “ Susan,” said you’d count what little I did in showing
Jonce. to himself—“ Susan’s a smart Susan. The whole of it, as God is ruy
in’?” Baked Jonce, with tho look of one njgg«r» I know, that is, fur a nigger; judge, I don’t believe would have made
wbo w» going to the main point with but Susan’s a-learnin’ of weavin’ pow­ a single yard.”
“My! my! Jonoe Trammell,” said
erful peert, that is, for a nigger. I’m
a-speakin’ o’ Susan a-bein’, and as be­ Mr. Spivey; “I thoaght from your talk
What are you talkfrig about?”
in’ of a nigger, and I say that she’s a- that Meely was a-kflfin’ o’ herself.”
“ And so she were,” said Jonoe, dog­
“ Meely,” said her husband, now with leamin’ o' weavin’ powerful peert.
painful tierionanew, “I’m n talkin’ She’s a-oomin’ o’ the stripes, here lately, gedly: “the doctor stud bo.” Jonoe
about of a woman’s killin’ of herself by I bee. Susan’s a-gittin’ to be of a wallhie looked m if he had been wounded in his
a-weavin’ of herself to death, and which
Dr. Lewis has told you pretty much the
So Jonce began to ruminate in his
“ Ah, Uncle Adam,” said Mrs. Tram­
tame thing, and he told me pine-blank mind, and to prowl about the house mell, “that was three months ago, and
then I quit that work, although every­
body knows how necessary is work for
instead of tbe front door. But he tbe
while kept ftober as a Judge—more »o
und than tome Judges.
dolignt in
Xxxik! who has come for mo now. lather,
Standins no near to tny bed?
Some one u klsMtig my brow, father—
Mamma, I thought you worn dead!
Bee! aho !■» icmillng so brinbt to you,
■'leekona for you not to weep;
•Tia notbut
to yon—

m/o’Ma-i
s, footin',; but
-.mxll hid ’em.
I come nigh of a-tellin Jonoe Trammell
that he were the trlfiin’est, low-flungest,
suck-eggest honnd that ever wsi best
out of s hen-’ou»e ; but I hilt in, because
I
after a compermUe.”
t ...__
__ ___ ..
.... t _
..
Let
u&gt; bear
what -i
the. old
hj

he pretended, his nose, with his great
bandana.
,
“ Oh, now, now, Meely! They is two
sides of every question.”
'
Jonoe turned his eyes appealingly to
the old man.
“And which now, Meely, if it’s a
question of killin’of yourselves—jes’ so,
Meely—ahem!—and which I has do idee
that nary one of you’a desires is to do
that, leastways out o’ spite ag’in one
another. But kilHn’s killin’, Meely,
as Jonce say, and I’m o’bleegcd to agree
with Jonce thar, Meely; and ef Jonce
’spicions that your intentions is to run
ag’in both him and Dr. Lewis, right in­
to the jaws o’ death, why, you see,
Meely,-Jonoe mout, as a ’fectionate hus­
band, try to git in before you,, as it
were, and not a-wishin’and a-desirin’of
a-bein’ of a widderer, as it were—”
Here Jonce broke into loud lamenta­
tion.
“ Ah, now,” said the old man, with
profoundest sympathy, “you see how
’dieted the poor fellow air. In oo’se
he’s a-goin’ ’long homo with us, and I’m
a-goin’ to git you and him to compermise this case, for it’s a case that can’t
be settled ’ithoiit a compermise. So
you go on homo, Moely. and Jonce and
mo'll come on amegiantly. I see from
his looks that he’s a-goin’, and which if
ho don’t, why, in co’so you can come
back and-put ap here at Fann's, and see
Jonce through, and which in co'se it
would bo a pity for Jonce to die in a
grocery (though I got nothin’ to ssy
ag’in Fann), and not have his wife to
smooth his dyin’ piller, and ketoh his
partin' words, and see him breathe of
nis life out sweetly thar, as it were.”
She went out with her son. Jonce
was sobered enough by what had trans­
pired to be made to listen to reason.
He rose, washed his face and hands in a
basin in the back room of tho grocery—
Fann the while aiding and expediting
eagerly—brushed himself, and came
forth with nis uncle. When Mrs. Tram­
mell saw them fairly out, and not be­
fore, she mounted her horse, took up
her son behind, and rode alowly on.
On the way, Mr. Spivey’s talk, the
smoothest he could invent In tho begin­
ning, roughened gradually as they ap­
proached Jonco's residence, and he.felt
that he could let out some of his viol
upon him.
“And I am glad to hear you say,
Jonce,” he continued, uninterruptedly,
after constant previous discourse—“I
am glad to hoar you acknowledge that
r)u nave a fair jeweld of a wife”—Jonce,
observe parenthetically, had not open­
ed his mouth, not, indeed, having had
the opportunity—“which go to show
that you ain’t the fool and the scoundrel
Jou would be if you didn’t acknowledge
and Jonce”—the house was now
fairly in view—“jes* to come down to
the bottom, Jonce, I’m not a-talkin’ of
your gittin’ of drunk, but that yistiday
business; I'm a powerful ’shamed of it,
Jonce, as your own blessed uncle; and I
never knowed a feller, make no odds
how bad he wanted of a drink o’ sperrits,
to grabble lower to git it; that is, Jonce,
a-providin' that were your objec’.”
“It weren’t. Uncle Adam,” said
Jonce, humbly; “I did want a drink,
but I were mad because I thought Meely
were a-foolin’ of me.”
“Yes, and you found that you was
a-foolin’ o’ yourself. Jonce Trammell,
you are a child o’ my own sister that’s
dead and goned, and I want to tell you
this: when a man have to go to grab­
blin’ in the dirt—for that’s what I can’t
but name it—makes no odds what kind
o’ wife, test Specially with rich a wife
as you've got, when he have to sneak
about and peep through winder-shetter
cracks to watch her, and ’specially when
she’s a-workin’ for him and his children,
it’s a pity somebody weren’t thar to
poke a p’mted stick through that crack,
and punch at least one of his eyes out;
and then ef—providin’ he want to die,
and which wouldn’t be a onreason’ble
wish in them circum’ances—to lead up
to him, and to back on him, a mule, and
let him kick him to death. Now as for
tho drinkin' o’ sperr’ts—I’m a-talkin’
now, Jonce Trammell, of one drink a
day, and which I means a sweetened
dram of a mornin’ like, and which it
ain’t a-goin’ to kill nobody; and ef he’ll
confind hisself to that, he’ll never feel
like a-prevlin’ of around his own house,
like a suex-egg dog around of hen-nesses,
and git liable to have his hide walloped,
and a few o’ his bones broke with a bar’!
stave or a bean pole. And furthermore,
But they hail now reached tho horse­
block, where Mrs. Trammell had just
alighted, and tho artful, aged peace­
maker felt that ho must change tbe tune
of his remarks in the hearing of tho other
party. Without a moment’s pause he
continued:. * ‘And furthennoresomeover,
Jonce, I agree with you intirdy, Jonoe,
that when s feller git oneasy when the
doctor have expressed his ’pinions about

m-d Pn
would -.
th5v ba»
wfaic11' *
party of the first part, the follerin’ ques­
tion,
t!on' jes
J®* ’ for the fillin’ of the blanks o’
this’ compermise. as it war, and which
thu
it
it i«_
is, hm
how much, or about how much,
more or less, now nigh as you can come
at it, Meely, a woman to work not too
rapid, but reasonable—hew much weav­
in’ ought she to do before breakfast of
a mornin’ like?”
The old gentleman made at this point
his first pause, rather, it la probable, for
a momentary rest than to await Mrs.
Trammell's answer. She could but smile
at a question, understanding as she did
its purport.
“Ah ha!” said the good man, tri­
umphantly- “There it Is. You see,
Jonoe, and which I fmderstaud Meely
to say, about half k yard; not over half
anexides, and fetch you down to a half
a yard a day; and. which, as Jonoe
Trammell’s unde, I say to him, it’s a
far and a reaaon’ble oornsideration for
the party of the first part, and which I
hain’t the first idee that he won’t say
so; and which now for the said party o’
the second part, and which I know that,
as a general thing, females don’t come
in, not as quick as men, I mean, and
understan' compermises, yil, as in co’se
they have got to be a cornsiderztion in
every compermise, I hain’t the least
idee but that Meely Trammell, the said
party o’ the first part, will agree that
the said Jonce Trammell, of the second
part, and which I would say, one dram
a day; and as both the parties knows
that a compermise have to have stated
words, and not leave no loop-holes, I
Eut it—ahem!—to one sweetened dram,
i a modert-size tumbler, and of.a
mornin’ like—”
“But, Uncle Adam,” interrupted Mrs.
Trammell, “I don’t think a wife has any
right to limit her—”
“Cert’nly not,” Mr. Spivey broke in,
with, for him, surprising quickness—
“cert’nly not, Meciy; it’s your husband
a-^imitin’ of himself. I understand you,
Jonce Trammel], to say that it air the
said party o’ the second part that’s alimitin’ of hisself to one sweetened
dram of a mornin’ like. And now”—
rising, and taking slyly, but with tri­
umphant smiles, a bottle, ’which he set
upon tho sill of the window—“I’ve
fotch this bottle along, and I puts it on
the winder-shelf hero, for Meely to make
tho first toddy with her own captiwatin’
hands, and, as it war, open the ball and
cap tho climax o’the oompermise, arfter
both o’ the parties has had a good
night’s sleep; and I will say that I’m
sixty-eight years old, a-goin’ on my
sixty-nine, arid I’vo been witness
when people has. made many a compermise; but I will say I never were wit­
ness to ono that was farror for both par­
ties than what Jonce Trammell and
Meely Trammell has now called on mo
to witness, and I never hoard two people
talk farror or more reasonable than both
the said parties, and—”
“But, Uncle Adam,” tried to urge
Jonce, who had not been able to get in
a word, though constantly so desirous
and repeatedly endeavoring—“but, Un­
cle Adam#
“ I understand you, Jonoe, perfect­
ly,” persistently refusing to be inter­
rupted, the old gentleman continued,
“ and I -land by what you say, that a
comnermise couldn’t bo farrer for both
parties; and I’m sixty-eight year old,
a-goin’ on to my sixty-nine, and both
the parties will say so a long arfter I’m
in my grave.”
Without another word from any of
the three, Mr. Spivey loft tho house,
mounted his horse, and rode away.
When ho had gone, Mrs. Trammoll
rose and walked to where her husband
sat, with his hands covering his eyes.
“Jonce, I don’t want you to consider
yourself bound by anything that has
been said by Uncle Adam. I have no
right, and Uncle Adam had no right—”
Jonce arose with passion, and looked
upon her Whom he loved better than his
own liftk.
“Meely," said he, “I do! and may
Godamighty strike mo dead if I—” ’
She placed her hand upon his lips,
Et herself in his arms, and wept upon
i breast.
For full forty years Jonce Trammoll
kept his part. The only deception his
wife ever practiced upon him afterward
was when she saw hi^ abstaining from
his morning dram, knowing the reason
why, to make a show of working at her
loom. She died first. From the first day
of her sickness until her own death, a
year after, he oould never be induced to
take spirits of any sort.
The great peace-mAer, as long ae he
lived, regarded the Trammell Compro­
mise his masterpiece of work in this his
favorite line.
“You safe,” he would often say,
“when two things has got to be /oteh
together in a oompermise that’s as fur
apart as weavin’ and the drinkin’ o’
sperrits, and which one is a wertu in a
female person, and the tother a wice—
I’m not a-speakin’ of one sweetened
dram of a -mornin’ like, but rich as
Jonce Trammell’s drinkin' when he got
fa’rly sot in, and which is a wioe in a
male person—it take a man o’ exper’enoe
and observation to do it. You see,
1 never let nary one of ’em talk. I done
the talkin’, and afore they scarcely
knowed it, I had the papers signded, as
it war, and which I had drawed ’em so
close and particular that nary one of ’em
couldn’t never find a place to pick a
hole in ’em.”—Harper's Mayatine.

got, and which everybody know that
weavin’ a-bein’ of a leanin’-over kind o’
work, and be liable to pejuce bres com­
plaints ; and so as you’ve got back home
once more, I’m a-goin' to stop, may be
git a bitfl o’ sapper with you and Meely,
and compermise this Miublesome busi­
ness ; and it won’t take but a very few
words, a-providin’ that a man have exper’enco to know how and whar to put costs are being taken in Cyprus. Upto
'em; and which, upon my soul, Jonoe. the end of October, 880 ttons of their
you and Meely both looks a hundred eggs had been destroyed, of which 270
tons were gathered in that month alone,
and four or live months still remain for
VI.
the collection. The rewards paid have
been raised to £18 the ton; and the
Mr Spivev had not paused a single ruo Government, having already spent
mont in his talk. Like an experienced £6,000 this year on the eggs, is prepar­
lawyer who will brook no interreption ing to expend £23,000, as soon aa tho
by fib client, he went on in his deliber­ insects are hatched in April and May/in
ate way, as if, alter due submisaion of screened inclosures and pit traps, to be
managed by 2,000 men.

CATARRH OF THE BLADDER,
iging. smarting, irritation of the urinary

tug home late from tire club.
Faded color restored.
Faded or gray hair gradually recovers its
youthful color and lustre by the use of Park­
er’s Hair Balsam, au elegant dressing, admir­
ed for Its purity and rich perfume.

•tore*. When a rhinoceros is gontcr be kild
yon must always go up to him from twfore, no
cz bc’H know somethin’ of It in? try an’ make
a place for a bulll t to fit la. HNdomU got a
an* If a boy should dt down on It he’d better •
May plugged upRtth the tooth, ’rels he’ll be all
one pore. I’d rather be a pollhrog tf I was a
rhlnoxenu, tho’ I s'poee if I was I wouldn't.
1IA Je TOV EVEIL
Known any person to be seriously ill without a
weak stomach or inactive liver or kidneys I
And when these organs are In gtKxl condition
do you not find tbeir possessor enjoying good
health I Parker's Ginger Tonic regulates these
Important organs, makes tbe blood rich and
Ki, and strengthens'every part of the system.
other column.
“Fortune knocks once at every man’s door,”
but misfortune stajkc In many times without
knocking.

Can Catarrh b? cured! Yes, certainly, “Dr.
Sykes Bure Cure” will cure It.

When the members of the Troy Common
Council draw pistols at each other no one
moyj’g, but when some one picks up an inksteNd every head In range prepares to duck.

Various Causey—
Advancing years, care, sickness, disap­
pointment, and hereditary predisposi­
tion—nil operate to turn the hair gray,
and either of them Inclines It to shed
prematurely. Ayer’s Hair Vigor will
restore faded or gray, light or red hair
to a rich brown or deep black, as may
be desired. It softens and cleanses the
scalp, giving it a healthy action. It
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By its use falling hair Is checked, and
a new growth will be produced in all
cases where the follicles are not de­
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effects are beautifblly shown on brashy,
weak, or sickly hair, on which a few
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in its results, it Is incomparable as
a dressing, and Is especially valued
for the soft lustre and richness of tone
it imparts.
Ayer’s Hair Vigor Is colorless;
contains neither oil nor dye: and will
not soil or color white cambric; yet
it lasts long on the hair, and keeps
it fresh and vigorous, Imparting on
-agreeable perftime.
For sale by all druggists.
The coming corn 1j» a serious movement ou
foot.

The symptomd of Itching Pile* are moisture
Hkeprcnplratioii, IuIcum- Itching, uwsl at night
seenis as If pin worms were crawling in or
about the rectum. The more you scratch the
worse they itch, very diotre.-siiur- The private
parts arc often affected. Dr. Swayne’s Oint­
ment la the .moat effective remedy extant for
thia tormenting complaint. Give# rest al night
I yrhbout that desire to scratch. Also has on
Sum! in quickly eradicating Tetter, Itch, Salt
leume, Erysipelas, Barbers’ Itch, Pimples,
all Scaly, Crusty, Itchy Skin Eruptions. Here
isthc proof, “Certainly the best remedy ever
used In my practice,” Dr. Cotton, Woodstock,
Vu. “troubled with Itching Piles for over twen­
ty years, it cured rpe completely,” L. 8. Messer
Enfield, Me. Bent fnr 50 cla (In 3 cL stamps)
3 boxes, f 1.25, By Dr. Swayne Ac Sou. PhlUd'a
Pa. Sold by all druggists.
To Lydia Pinkham—Dear girt,. that sweet
smile haunts us still.
/

WHAT IB BEHIND IT.

Dr. David Kennedy of Rrmdout, N. Y., pro­
prietor of the great Medlcine.called “Favorite
Remedy," would have but little confidence to
recommend the public to buy and u»e ft if bla
own name were Dot behind it. But the fact
that he has stoked his reputation upon bought
■ to be, and is- better than a thousand cheap
certificates—In the opinion of the people.
If
you are sick with any complaint of tbe blood,
kidneys, or liver, in veal a one dollar In the
“Favorite Remedy’’ and it will sj&gt;cak for It­
self.

A (Irst-claKB printing office, like a motion to
adjourn, is always In order.

IRON
ms

'^ET^
BROWN'S IRON BITTERS are
a certain cure ftor all diseases
requiring a complete tonic; espe-

Acta like .

Much M tooting the food, Belching,
Heat in tho. Stomach, Heartburn,
etc. The only Iron Prepa’-atluu
that will not blacken the teeth or
HROWN CHEMICAL CO.
Baltimore, Md.
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.

�MAIN LINE.

co

tn

tri
3 E

5

GRAND

RAPIDS

DIVISION.,
De't Evcnta*

STATIONS.
rj;i
Ills
1:15

Middleville.

I8M
itw

11.4 &gt;

Detroit..

kill
•aa
■M
M&gt;
1LAO

2.12

w kut W-A-RIX

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STATIONS.
Detroit..

w
1.10
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Physicians

s »
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B uilclei*®’

IT ardware,

DOMESTIC SEWING MACHINE

FRANK C. BOISE.

1230
1XAS

■i

Druggists

DETROII’ 8TO¥fr-WORK8:

Wito the material progress brought about
by the intrndnetion of naoihinery and the
construction of important public works
there was also a marked moral prognwa.
AND
Constant intercourse with Europtians
could not fail to influence toe mind of
the Egyptians more or lee?, and there
gradually grew up a feeling that all was
have.preferred the route over Mnnt Cenia, not
t
as iCshould be, and a considerable
•nd thooe from Bavaria and Austria that amount
t
of grumbling and discontent
over ihe Brenner, both very good to far manifested
,
itself, which, however, found
M those countries are concerned, but not no
, vent until after toe downfall of Ismail
Have Signed or Endorsed the
so convenient for th&lt; Rhineland and Pasha.
]
When Ismail Pasha, finding
SwiUcrland itself aa the St. Gothard, that
,
toe generous persons who had Ad­
Following Remarkable
which falls almost in a straight line vanced
,
him money expected their inter­
Document:
drawn from Frankfort-on-the-Main, est,
(
and began to complain of his meth­
through Zurich to Milan. Tho Brvnner ods
(
of administering the country, he
Sash, Doors, Blinds, Jefferson Nails, Glass, Putty, Paints,
line, by Ingpruck to Verona, haa not put nake
,
d some of the European governments
Switzerland into any closer commtiDica- to
। supply him with oompetent person) to Oils, Varnishes, Colors, Brushes, Etc. Castor, Sperm, Golden,
tlon with the Mediterranean; nor otn the assist
,
nim in toe work of administering
route by Mont Cenia t&gt;e aaid to hare as- the
।
various departments of state. These Black, Linseed and Kerosene. Oils.
Shovels, Spades. Forks, Hoes. Snaths, zXpple Parers, Farm
silted the Central European Republic in (administrators, who in Lnrn were suc­
anyway. Hence the desire fora genuine ceeded
(
by a host of commissioners, di- Bells, Fence - Wire, Well and Cistern Pumps. Wood and Iron,
Swiss railway, like the St. Gothard, which trectors-general and comptrollers, and
is expected to be in working order next most
,
ot whom were absolutely ignorant Pipe, Points, Cylinders Lead Pipe, Sinks, &amp;c.
July. Even now that it is neartv finished, of
, the language of the country, dismissed
------ ;----- AGENT FOR—-------there is seriotu talk of rival fines over (from the various departments tlrcy con­
the Simplon, Napoleon’s great military trolled
।
the old-established Arab and
road, by piercing the mountain pass be- Coptic
(
clerks, who. though perhaps
external um.
tween Brieg and Domo d’Ossola: and venal,
&gt;
obstructive and scheming, were
The Lightest Running and most Durable Machine in use.
another, suggested in France, by making in
। many cases capable. These nar
I
shall
aim
to
keep
none
but
first
class
goods,
and
sell
them
'a mon • direct route from Geneva to tive
।
officials were replaced by their
Turin by burrowing under the “mohArch only
,
. possible successors—a crowd at a small profit. Call and see me when needing hardware.
of mountains," Mont Blanc itself. The of
( Syrian Christians, speaking Arabic
Simplon scheme favored by Western ]and French, or Italian. The dismissed
Switzerland has apparently only one ,officials, many of whom were men of
drawback, the necessity for an Alpine ,considerable influence, and in many cases
tunnel eleven miles long. It was there- ,considerable land owners, left Cairo and
fore thought by the governments of Ger­ Alexandria, and settled in the villages.
many, Switzerland and Italy, that the The
1
Syrians imported into the adminis­
St. Gothard scheme was most deserving trations lost no time in averting them­
of encouragement, and they contributed selves, and endeavoring in all possible
UNACOUAINTKD WITH
WITH THK
THE CEOCRAPHY OF THl» COUNTRY, |Z*
MURK RKMEUY AT :LA NT. Pricetfcel*.
WHO 18 UNACOUAINTKD
large sums toward its completion. The ways to discredit the Egyptians by great
MEAD'S Mediate CORM and BUNION fLASH*.
wilL skk BY KXAMININO
line, however, is not a government one, activity and by making themselves al­
but the work of an ordinary company most indispensable to their European
meapolii
subsidised to a large proportion of the patrons. Their chief competitors were
£6,800,000, which it is estimated the line the Copts, who, on account of their apti­
.N
will coat The first chief engineer was tude for accounts, were not easily dis­
M. Gervig, who was succeeded by M. placed. Still, continuous inisrcprescnlsirji»
Hellwag, now of Vienna, whose jnist the tion did ita work, and every one who has
tt l»O will f!
present chief engineer, Mr. Bride), occu­ lived in Egypt is familiar with the depre­
pies. The greatest height above the sea ciating shake of the head when the fitness
of the rails in the great tunnel from of a Copt for a vacant post is being dis­
Goachenen to Airolo-is 3.788 feet, being cussed. Tho result of this great Syrian.,
about 610 lower than the highest point influx was that rapidly they occupied all
.VAHTEOr
in the Mont Cents tunnel. Its length is the subordinate posts in the departments,
nine miles 468 yards, about one and and the Egyptians found themselves
three-fourths miles longer than the Mont ousted from nearly all the positions of
Cenia tunnel. Ita width varies from trust and importance in the country.
twenty-six feet three inches to twentyThis state of things went on for some
four feet eleven inches, and ita height to time, and the natura’ result followed.
the crown of the arch is nineteen feet The young Egyptians who found them­
eight inches, above which rises the selves debarred from advancement in the
mountain peak known as the Kastle- service because they were Egyptians, the
horn.
dismissed officials, the sheiks, and other
The approach to the tunnel from country personages, who not unfreqnentthe Italian side is at first gradual, . iy found themselves treated with rude­
S
lying along the eastern side of ness and disrespect by the young Euro­
toe Valley of tht, Ticino. Subsequent pean employes of the eada«tre, domains
steep assents are overcome by the agency and Daira sJonieh, joined together, and
of spirals. Below the village Giornico' formed themselves into what was at first
is a fine lattice-girder bridge over the known as the young Egypt party, but Is The Great Connecting Link between the East and the West! |
_Its main
. ..
VI—
tnr sleeping
aleenlnir purpose*,
nnrnoaaa and Palatt
Palace i
Ticino, with two spans of 160 feet each. which to-day has just claims to the more
Cart for
line runs .from Chicago to Council SlrepiM
Din.na Car. fur caUng purpo^wi only. OnetMber
IlluSa passing through Jotlel. Oa*wa. &gt;&gt; (?AJle; rrvatfeatut*
rfgMtnfthsmn*. Hradtarcarfree circular.
About a mile to the north is the spiral dignified title of the National party. The
of our Halace Cart to a BMOKINQ
Moline. Itock Island. Davenport. West
_ .. - ~ - .* — - — ■
T"
LOON where yc
you
can enjoy your “Havana" H-l
---------------------tunnel of Travi, passing through hard National party once having been formed, &lt;;rn««i.
Liberty. lowaCity. Marenjro.Brooktyn.Grtoae«, RALCMJN
JI boon
honrvof
of the
tbe day.
__
. . r• -- ....I-—
nrlnva, Hiusrt. Allan- at all
granite, and 1,6 j8yards long near which afte- much intercnanging of ideas and
lacnlficcnt Iron Br'.drei ipan tbe Mlrtlulrpl Fi
tic. and Avoca: with branches from Bureau
liimourl rirer»at all point* eroaaed by thia F"|
Peoria; Wilton Junction to Musca­
a second spiral, that of Piano Tondo, serious discussion, decided, on a pro­ ..■uncUobio
b
.
and
transfer*
are
avoided
at
Council
BloSa.
L.
Washington, Fairfield Eldon. Belknap.
2:_ natlatln CameUy. Leavenworth and AlehU
nearly as long. These spiral tunnels— gramme, which may be said to embrace ..tine.
xlag made In Union Depot*.
which, as Mr. C. G. Ethels ton pointe out’ the following articles: 1. Independence
vlllc, Keokak toFarmitynon. Bonspsrte.
in his valuable “ Notes of a Visit to the' of Egypt from Turkey. 2. The forma­
IteUNTY.
Independent. EWon. Uttutuws. 1
St. Gothard Railway,” are to an Alpine’ tion of a Chamber of Representatives to lonsport.
vllle. oskslonea. Pella. Monroe, stwl Des M&lt;
1LXWOOD.
Railway a-s locks to a canal—present an1 be elected by the people. 3. The'direct Molue* to Indianola and Winterset; Atlantic to
C. K. rial
apparently unexampled and most re­ administration of the country with or
£TE£t’
markable feature in engineering science. without the control. 4. The dismissal
When on account of a sudden change in1 of the highly paid foreign officials, whose
from Cblc
the levels of the valley a considerable' presence is unnecessary if the control lie
Island Short Line." and RoUt IsPd A Peo. Kda.
S5OO Reward!
lift is required, the line is run into the’ effective. 6. The employment of EgypAt DavsxrokT. with tbe Davenport Division
WE will pay the t hove reward for any case e«
side of the mountain, and the tunnel be­j tians in all departmente where foreigners
Over complaint, dyspepsia, elek heedaehe, Udlg».
and Kania* City, via tbe “ Milwaukee and
ing constructed with aslmrp curve and1 are not absolutely necessary. The pro- kre
Uon, constipation or costlreneoe we ran not cure
KiH-k Island Short Line."
_ 1.V nr
r’_—---VI. 1 I--.
IX—
The "Ureal Knck Island" is murnlScently
a steep gradient, the line, at a much1 gramme, as originally drawn up nearly equipped.
Al Council. BLCrra. wkh Union Paclftc R.B.
roadbed Is simply perfect, and Ila
At OMAHA, with B. A Mo. K. IL IL (In Neb.)
higher level, crosses its former course, two years ago, was a reasonable one, but track is laUItswith
steel rails.
At COLBMBUS JOCTlOM.Wtth B.C.ILA N.ILK.
WbatwllT
please
most will
be —
the pleasure
like those corkscrew staircases which1 it was just ono of those programmes
_« -..... L—
. ...Iyou
l. —
.....I..
At OTTUMWA, with Central Iowa E. IL; W,
Mr. Bumand happily thought were in­‘ which require strong measures to
vented by/’ inebriated architects.” Be­: push them through. If it be acknowlyond Faido is another spiral tunnel, and1 edged that the programme was reason­
again at Freggio, the next stations to’ able, it is difficult to see how anything
Appreciating
which arc Ambri and Airolo. At the lat­’ could have been done without calling peojde prefer or
. ,... I
ter the line enters the grand tunnel, the’ into plav a force capable of making itself VI Lull line " •* INU.IIIK l.fc tuna Pullman
Palace
contractor for which. M. Favre, was one5 felt. The army was naturally the force tiounce that lb la Company
lCE CARS are run through to PEORIA. BE
KANSAS CITY. ATCHISON. and LKAVKNWOI
of the victims to this important work,' most easily utilized, and had proved its
b
.Ine. ktMiwu aa the * Great Kock Island Route,
having did of apoplexy ni the tunnel it­’ own power, having been utilized by
tho United States and Canada.
self in July, 1879. Commenced in the* Ismail Pasha to rid himself of his two
Klyr.
middle of November, 1872, the nine miles’ foreign ministers, Messrs. Wilson And
'^ScisiSu. U]
and a little more than a quarter have’ Blignieres. Under Colonel Ahmet Bey
taken nine years to complete, the rock,’ Arabi, who. by his character for integthrough which it was necessary to bon-,' rity, his eloquence, and force of characbeing composed mainly of a hani granite* ter, had gained the confidence of both
S 1 T I* IITft oblaJnwi for Mechauleal d*rfc
U I T L ■ I \ •*. medical, or oilier compound*
gneiss. Between the Goschenen end of, the National party and the soldiers, the
I will mall (Free) the rccipe for a »lmpte Veg* rllinlo=ss?^t** —
the St. Gothard tunnel and Altdorf there’ army, after showing their power in a
table Balm that will rtiuoveTan, Firtklc*, Pimp­
le* and Blotehe*. IcavlDX tho ikla »att, clear and Carrat*. A—'.jnmen!*, Interfertne**, Infringe­
are three spiral tunnels in various parte’ number of small ways, overthrew the
beauUfal, alia Instruction* lor producing * luxuri­ ment* Mil all otbrr milter* relating to Jiatri.1*.
of the valley of the Reuss, much resemb­ Riaz ministry.
ant rrowlh a* )&gt;alr on a bald bead or *raoo&lt;h face promnUr attended to.
ling those in the Valley of toe Ticino.
Adifrea*. Incloaln*3c, (Uiat&gt;, BFN. VANDELF *
The demonstrations of February and
At Ixiggeetien the aspect of the railway
is remarkable. For nearly a mile are seen October have startled many people, and
a
great
deal
of
nonsense
has
been
writ
­
three almost parallel railways at different
elevations and apparently unconnected, ten; but it is greatly to be doubted if in
but in reality joined by toe spiral tunnels any other country but Egypt what really
are remote from Washington.
of Wattingen and Leggeatein. The line amounts to a great revolution oould have
takes these parallel runs in order to en­ been effected without bloodshed, and it
able it to rise to a sufficient height to en­ certainly speaks volumes for the prog­
the sama which they will And a sure Cure for
ter the great tunnel two and a half miles ress of a nation when s&amp;ch a revolution
Cougi-e. Colds, CeneutnpUen, Asthma. Bronchitis,
farther south. Lower down the valley can be carried through quietly and rea­
x&gt;._r.ui— ,l- .» — —it, - i Mee of any rellaMe ageaejr.
We refer to Official* in tbe Patent Office, omd
is the Pfaffensprung tunnel, bored sonably. The whole programme was
iTenlon of every Sute of the Union. AtUnw*
well
thought
out
and
executed;
no
ex
­
through the hardest granite, and after
LOOTS BAOeKKdb CD.
passing Amsteg the works are of less cesses have been committed nor are any
Opposite Patent Office, Waehlncwa. D.ffi
grandiose character down toFluelen.but likely to be. No greater mistake can be
mode
than
to
accept
the
assertion
that
between that place and Brunnen are
numerous tunnels. Toward Immensee the movement is confined to the towns
roeeSsMlity, Pr*matu&gt;r dec
the work is -lighter again, and the ex­ of Cairo and Alexandria. I have had
of Toothful indherttlon. win for tbe aakeof •ut­
tremity of the St. Gothanl Railway, prop­ occasion during the last eighteen months
tering humanity, eend trw U&gt; *11 who need it the
recipe and direction for making tbe tlmple remedy
erly so-called, is reached. Switzerland to visit many of the villages, and I may
by which he »u cured. Softmera wiahing to proflt
say
with
absolute
certainty
that
all
the
may well be congratulated on the suc­
!'y the advertiser*experience can doe*by adareeeleading
men,
the
shieks.
the
mudirs
(if
cess of a great national work. It is true
Ing in perfect waSdeuca.
M-lyr. JOHN B. OGDEN, 43 Cadar 81, N.Y.
that tho Governments of Germany and not Turks), the various muflettisbes—
MOURNING. SECOND MOURNING
in
fact,
all
the
people
who
influence
the
Italy contributed to the cost, but this they
SOLID .BLACKS,
masses
—
are
warin
supportersof
the
Na
­
could well afford to do tn order to be
ha* added a stock of ■
brought into close connection. At times tional party. Tbe fellah certainly knows
some opposition has been made to the very little about matters political, but his
CROSS-CUT * CIBCTL1R SAWS,
experience
of
Turkish
ami
Euroiwan
in
­
Wsnderftil Bergieal Operation Bemoval of Vriaar
work. It was urged that a through train
from Zurich or from Germany to Milan terference with his affairs mokes him
would have the effect of taking travelers view such interference as not an un­
The EDDYSTONE PRINT WORKS is
through Switzerland instead into it, and mixed blessing. The Turk, by means
Prices on Naw Work.
thus injure the inhabitants; but this odd­ of tbe Kurbach, extorted from him the
Circle «aw gumming and hammering all wora
last
piastre
possible;
the
Greek
and
Ital
­
ly selfish view was quickly set aside and
va—.1U pa-iJk.
ian
money-lender
does
the
same
by
the superb works pushed rapidly on to
40 tach, Gummed, 12.00
THE EXPERIENCE OF HALF A
Haminercd, S3.00
means of the mixed tribunals. Who can
50. ”
•'
3.UO
completion.—London Teltgraph.
’• 4.00
CENTURY
'
wonder at his supporting the sheik of
80 ”
”
4.00
”
S.00
his
village,
and
through
him
the
National
The National Party In Egypt
party?— Cairo (.Egypt) Cor. Pall Mall
the quality of their work- They carefully
Some years' residence in the country, GtutUc.
Riven to circular a*W work
e**e* of Mllou* diaordara. C
much of which lias been spent in visiting
eh, aed all the Hum ofili.
A.C. BUXTO.V
—The fact that New York has only ers,which axe thoroughly washed in hot waler
toe various villages under exceptionally
advantageous conditions for arriving at one acre in public parks to every L371 and soap, thereby removing anything which
yyiLLIAM
JONES,
inhabitanta,
while
Chicago
has
one
acre
would stain underclothing.
the true state of the feelings of the peo­
ple. enables me I hope, to throw some to eveiy 252, Philadelphia one to every
Those who buy and wear their prints will.
light on toe causes which have led to and 282, and San Francisco one to every 133
which justify the National niovenumt, on inhabitanta baa net aomo of our citizens ability,artistic style and finish. Be sure and
the aims and ambition* which actuate to thinking. They have formed “Tha ask for tbeir goods, and sec that their marks
New York Park Aaeodation,” and pro­
pose to aee New York's lack in this re­
“Miarr- spect rectified. We give the movement
hsidaraWe detour#
rail. Of the greater
pa. the Mont Ceuis,

Mi IK
1DW
!0J» jU-JO

rank and Canada Southern Ril1-»v*.
L U. SHOWN,
H. B. LKDYARD.
Aaa't Gea'I Hupt-Jackaon. Gen'l S*p’t Detroit

A PLEASANT LETTER.
Mr. William W. Chadwick, of Hatchrille,
Conn., writes under date of June 14,1880, to
Dr. Kennedy, to aay that tbe u»e of “Kennedy*
Favorite Remedy” has cured htm of Gall
Stone, from which he had experienced every­
thing but comfort for a long time, Mr. Chad­
wick felt wholly cared when he wrote, and
aaysl “1 have had no pain for six months, and
have alao regained my heah and can (Hand a
fair day’s work. I recommend ‘Kennedy's
Favorite Remedy’ to any one suffering from a
deranged liver.” Grateful patients are com­
mon. Dr. Kennedy is dally in receipt o! letters
from them, expreaaing similar sentiments
These letters arc spontaueona and put In all
varieties of plaraseolgy, but tavaribly setting
forth one thing—the value of “Kennedy's
Favorite Remedy” for manv forms of disease.
It may be just the thing yon have been looking
for. la your liver disordered I Have you de­
rangement of the Kidneys or Bladder, associa­
ted with Coosumption of the Bowels! If so, you
want “Kennedy's Favorite Remedy.’’
Dr.
Kennedy practices Medicine and Surgery In
al! their branches, Write and state your case
franklr. Lrttem proumly answered. Address
Dr, David Kennedy, Rondout. N. Y. “Dr.
Kennedy's Favorite Remedy" for sale by all
druQ^ats.

A

1AMAH g

ssr

CD

6

CHICAGO, ROCK ISLAND &amp; PACIFIC RY ।

ia,PENS:8NS.TTT:

.0

H

A

0

(D

KIDNEY-WORT
WILL SURELY CURE

A KIDNEY DISEASES,

LIVER COMPLAINTS,

I 000.000 Acre=

PIMPLES.

RUPTURE

NO PATENT NO PAY.

CONSUMPTIVES.

Why frightened over disordered Kidney*!

Cm IUD XCT-WORTmutrck** in Aea/M I

IRURT0RSB

ERRORS OF YOUTH.

I

PARKER'S 31

BUXTON

WM. SIMPSON&amp; SONS9

to Bzsxzn

' BmstM Wipe.

GINGERTONIC

Eddystone

FAPfCY DRESS PRINTS

—

THE SURGEONS KNIFE

ATTENTION! SAW MILL MEN!

�NKW DENTAL PARLOR.
- APRIL 1. 188’.

FOR TJBtE

NEXT

THE NEWS.
Compiltd from Latert Diapatohw,
,
blown down, and Frank
McDonald, John Houser and William Shade

onal.

Juhub-AdVocath Gexbral SwaJM on the

Jurad.
pocted a bill to make the Agricultural Depart-.’
went an executive one. A btO was introduced

bill. With

took fire before dzvllrht on the 27th, and
James and ElUot Bassett were burned td
death..
Tub granulating house of the Vulcan Pow­
der Company, near Suu Franctaeo, was blown
to pieces on the 27th, killing five whiles and
■ix Chinamen and Injuring three other*.
The steamer 'fboma* Cornell, from Ron-

offered an amend-

roeka south of Newburg on tho 27th. Tbe

1411

xrtis.

nd Mr. Uutt&gt;Tv. orth
— ■I,., । — .
- -__ gear-limit, both of
. which were iost—the former by a vote of 100
yw to Ml nays, and the latter without a call

boat over 8200,000.
h.t Troy, N. Y., on tho 27th John McNulty
and William McClure were killed by the fall
of an elevator.
’

Personal and Political.

Ij» tbe United States Senate on the 24th tho

MslaU are resigning their Mata, and uioaog-

SIXTY DAYS
------- 1 SHALL OFFER FOR SALE-------

War, tn which Im claim* that tfte finding of

Fordgro.

tfoned at Galway, Ireland, and are said to be

teued, teeth extracted witbout pain:
one-half detected when artificial w&lt;j
All work warranted, advice to rega
free call and sec me.

-

'

‘

A. H. WWW

J^ENBY ROE,

Pbopbiitok

/----- OLD RELIABLE-----

eon was Invalid, and that therefore the imprls-

Ox condition that tbe favor be never cited
as a precedent, the Turkish Government ou
the 25th granted permiMion for A Roeslau
transport with convicts and troops to pass
through tbe Bosporus.
In de Dance of the laws, a Benedictine com­
munity waa quietly relnstltuted at Sakumra,
France, but ou the 25th the troops and police
evicted tbe monks.

■miU, loud on, O. A. TRCMAS-S non.
.01 Unto &lt;f DXXTAL WORK
from lb.

AT COST OR UNDER COST MEAT MARKET
Fresh and Salt Meats,
------ OUR. ENTIRE STOCK OF GOODS-------

$10,000 Worth!

Smokei Ham and SMiert,
IN THEIR SEASON,

Lard, by the lb. or barrel.

pointed United States Marshal for New Mcx-

Tariir-Oom30,000 copies of Mr.

Robin-

Rm ,(N. Y.)
n citteens11 In G
upon by the

Thb. wife of Sergeant Mason baa appealed
for" aid for herself and her children.
Tub death of Rear-Admiral James H.
Spotts, of tho United States Navy, was an­
nounced on the 23d.
*
.

York by Mayor Grace and other leading men,
to be held April 3, to voice public sentiment
in regard to the imprisonment of Amzrlcan
citizens by foreign Governments without trial.
The Illinois Legislature met in extra ses­
sion on the 23d.
In the Peruvian investigation at Washing­
ton on the 23d Jacob R Sldpherd stated that

ported npproprlntiiiK W.H81000 for the im­
provement of tbe MuaiMippi Bi ver. In Com­
mittee of the Whole tbe claim of the captors of
the nun Albemarle ■ wm discuaaed for two

luded in hte testimony wm Henry W. Blair,
of New Hampahlre. Collector Robertson waa
Interviewed tn regard to receiving pay for a
legal opinion on the claims of the Peruvian
of private pension bills worn passed. Ad­ Company, and admitted that he bad done so.
journed to the 27th.
Th* vote in the National House of Repre­
ruptcy bill waa presented In tho benate on ths sentatives oa tbe passage of the Senate Chi­
STtlx. A Mil Was passed to grunt pensions to nese Immigration bill waa aa follows:
Yra»—Aiken, Aldrich, Armfleld. Atkina,
the wklaws of Presidents Garfield, Tyl&lt;*r and ,
Bayne. Belford. Belmont. Berry, Blnjrham,
Polk. Tito Agricultural ApproprlaUon bill lUackburn. Blanchard. Bllia, Blount. Brewer.
waa reported tack, with axxjcndtnents. ..In Bru turn, Buckner. Burrows (Mo.). Butter-,
.the House the Post-office Appropriation bill worth, Cabell. Caldwell. Calkin*. CampbrU.
wav rofcmvl to tbe Comtnftt&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt; of tho Wbolu. Cannon. Cassidy, CuwdL Chalmcra, ChaoBiUawcru Introduced: By Mr. HnskclL nit- man, Cinrk, Clemente, Cobb. Convcrac, Cook,
Thprixiug the Department of Justice to altdit
the claims of the mcdicnl exports nt tbo Cravens, Culberson. Curtin. Darrell, DavldGulteau trial at «&gt;&lt;&lt; over
for each dav of son. Davis (HLk Davis (Mo.). De Motte.
actual attendance: by Mr. King, for n Joint Booster,
DcsCudorf.
DibtHe,
Dlbrell,
ootnnilttce to proceed to the overflowed Dowd,
Durto,
ErmentruuU
Errctt,
■cetiini «&gt;C tho Mississippi and report what Farwell
(lit).
Finley,
Flower.
Fond,
measures on: necessary to prevent a recue- I'orney, Fulkcnran, Gamson, Geddes, Guorjre,
reaev of the flotMa; by Mr. Caswell, for the &gt;s- Gibson, Guenther, Gunter, Hammond (Go.),
•ue of f25.OKJ,u0l) In fractional currency In cx- Hunly, Harmer, Harris (N. J.), naadtinc.
ctuuuro for legal tenders; by Mr. Pbelpo, for a
Hatch, Hazelton, Hellman. Herndon, Hewitt
Department of Industry: by Mr. Harris, to (X.Y.i. Hill, Hlscock, HoblltxeU, Hore. Hol-,
provide for an Assistant Secretary of tho
man, Horr, Houk, House, Hubbell, Hubtin.
Hutchina, Jones (Tex.), Jones (Ark.), Jorgen­
sen, Kenuu. King, Klotz. Knott. Ladd, Leedom,
Lewis, Marsh. Martin. Matson, McClure,
®S4^81AX! for survivors of Indian campaigns McCook. McKenzie, McKinley, MoLana,
prior io 15WA
McMillin. Miller, Mills (Tex.), Money,
Morey, Moulton. Mureh, Mutch lor, O’NcLU,
Pacheco, Page, Paul. Payson. I’oclle. Phelps.
Domestic.
Pbtater. Pound, Randall, Bi-ngan, Rice (Mo.),
Tnc thermometer registered twentv-two deRichardson, Robertson. Itobins-on. ItoaecnuLS,
greea below zero at Manitoba on tbe morning , Scranton. Shallcnbcrgvr, Sherwin, Simonton.
Singleton (Mias.), Smith (Pa.), Smith (HL),
of toe 24 th.
Smith (N. x.), Spsrka, Spalding. Speer, SpringA F* UM Eli’s boy signaled a Wabash pas- cr, BtockSlagOT, Slratt. Talbot. Thonuu,T£om j&gt;
son (Ky.), Tilman. Townsend (O.), Townshend
■enger train on toe 24th, near Wabash, Ind.,
(Hl.), Tucker, Turner (Ga-&gt;, Turner (Ky.), Up­
just In time to prevent ita strikings slick of degraff (O.\ Upson. Valentine, Vance. Van
timber fastened Into a bridge by wreckers.
Horn. Warner. Washburn, Webber, Wellborn,
Williams (Ala.), WUlla, Wllllta,
*I%1*was the third desperate attempt of mis­ Whlttbonw.
Wilson. Wise (Pa.), Wise (Va.). W. A/Wood (N.
creants in tost region within a few weeks.
Y.)—ltJ7.
A'au»
—
Anderson.
Barr.
Bragg- Btfggs,
Xdcbxb W. Qlad was arrested in Phila­
Browne. Buck. Camp, Candler, Carpenter,
delphia oq the21th In the set of mutilating Chast*. Craiio, 4'ullcn, Dawes, Deering, Ding­
gold coin with a lathe. He Imd become an ex­ ley. Dunnell, Dwight. Earwell (la.). Grant,
Hull. Hunimon&lt;! (N. V.), Hnrdcnbergb, Harris
pert In removing half the value of a pleoe and .(Moss.),
Haskell, Hawk, Henderson, Hep­
fllHng the cavity with platinum.
burn. Hooker, Humphreys, Joao tn, Jones
CU tKi^s T. Lanku, a eounterfeltcr who, ta (N. J.i, Joyce. Kasson. Ketcham. Lord, MoMorse, Norcross, Orth. Parker. Ranney,
toe past six years, hail been an Inmate of six­ Ooid,
Rice (O.L Klee (Maas.), lUch, IBchunlson (N.
teen Southern jails, was &lt;-a[rtured at Nash­ Y.i, Ritchie. Robinson (Mana). Russell, 'Ryan,
Schultz.. Skinner. Spooner, Stone, Taylor,
ville, Tenn., At; the 24th.
Thompson. (lai Tyler. Updegraff (la). Umer,
A Nbw Okixans dispatch of the 34th states Wadsworth. Walt. Walker, Ward, Watson.
that the news from East Carroll and Madison
Parishes waa distressing, many lives having
Thb President has approved the -Anti-Po­
been lost by the overflow. Nothing but water lygamy bill passed by Congress..
was visible for many miles. Advices from
J. W. SnucxBRs, once private secretary to
| Helena, Ark., etate that- the situation ta the Salmon P. Chase, announces that he gave a
■ interior was beyond the power of description. copy of tho Garfleld-Roseerans letter to tbe
JThe people were everywhere dependent upon
the Government for aid, and would starve if know he possessed any letter from General
they did not receive It.
Three students were arrested on tbe 24th had been tn his jxMscAsion for
at Worcester, Mas*., for an attempt to burn
■ the Highland Literary Academy.
ALXXaXDmt H. &amp;rEpn*jf« announces that
Chow Doo, toe Indian chief who killed on tbe expiration of his term In Congress he
Spotted Tail, waa on the 24th convicted in tl» will positively retire from public life.
Federal Court at Deadwood of murder.
Jvdok Nboaon, tit Brooklyn, N. Y., on the
Thb residence of cx-Governor Proctor, of 24th decided that, suitable schools having
Vermont, at Sutherland Falls, with Ita liters- been established for colored pupils, tbe latter
cannot at tent! the public schools provided for
white children.
on the 25th.
The Now York Assembly baa adopted tbe
Thb distressing condition of affaire in tl»e
Southwest has caused the abandonment of the Free 4’annl resolutions—74 to 44.
llENnv WAD3WOMTO Lonqfbllow, Ameri­
project to celebrate tbe anniversary of Lu
Solle'c discovery at tbe mouth of tbe Missis- ca's distinguished poet, died at Ids home at
Cambridge, Maas., on the afternoon of tbe
Mb, Peele, a tabling engineer nt Chorles- 124th, from the effects of a chill received on the
‘ Saturday previous. His five children—Edith,
Anna, .* Bee, Ernest and Charles—were with
A. V. Fryer. who was Captain &lt;d a New ' him at the end. Mr. Ixingfcllow was born in
York battery in tbe late war. committed sulRejut Admiral Scott, on the navy retired
Hst, died to New York City on the evening o£
poverty.
toe 23d.
lirzn nearly beheaded his wife with a roar,
brother, whose aversion to Scoville increases.
Dispatcher from this flooded country on

The bill of

Cadet Whittaker from the Military Academy,
district. At Goodrich toe people had been
driven from their homes, several persons had
been drowned, and many horses and cattle had
perished. Advices from other overflowed eeettos were of a very gloomy nature.

In the United States Supreme Court at
Washington on the 24th Mr. Leddy, counsel
for Sergeant Mason, filed a request for leave
to file a petition for a writ of habeas corpus

tnembers of the other regiment, and several

Bbcretzky Hl-xt on the 25&lt;h received a
cable message from Lieutenant Harber, of
the Jeannette search expedition, announcing
tbe arrival of himself and Master Schentza at
Irkoutsk in good health.
Wallenstein, an American horse, on the 25th
won the LI terpen! Spring cap.
At Havre, France, on tbe 36th, a life-boat,
while attempting to rescue the crew of a ship
to distress, waa capetaed, and her crew of nine
men were drowned. ■
Thb London Glebe of tbe25th ways: “The
death of Henry W. Longfellow la a national
loss to England. A general and true appre­
ciation was accorded him here, even at a time
when America was anything but popular."
There Ure rumors of an approaching war
between China and Japan.
A ■H1EMENPOV3 Btiow-slorm visited New­
foundland on the 25th and 26th. The srrerwdrlfta were ten feet deep, and all roads were
obliterated.
Gckkin, the ex-Mayor of Northampton,
England, has commenced suit against Bra 1laugh, to compel hlrn to perform his parlia­
mentary duties.
A few days ago an armed party brutally
beat Postmaster Heffcrmin, of New Pallas,
Ireland, for having paid hU rent.
At Rathdowney, Ireland, a few- days since
Rev. Mr. Feebaa was arraigned for using sedi­
tious language, and, refusing tn give bail, was
borough prison. Tradesmen nt the latter
place showed their sentiment by closing tbeir
shops on market day.
Tub Dominion Government has decided to
Increase the northwest mounted police force
from 300 to 500 men. Fort Walsh, the present
headquarters, will be abandoned, as being too
near the frontier, and some point on the Can­
ada Pacific Road selected.
A PesVu, Hungary, dispatch states that
fifty out-bulldlngs at Balszenta and 348 bouses
at Paks wort destroyed by fire on the 27th.
Several hundred families were rendered homoless.
A DcblIN cablegram of the 27th states that
the residence of the agent of Lord Clonbrook,
in County Galway, was wrecked by dynamite.
A shell was thrown into a house near Letterkenny, destroying two rooms. A candi­
date for an office in opposition to a Land
Leaguer had his nose cut off by a disguised
band of patriots.
Seven cardinals were created at Rome on
the 27th, among those promoted being Arch­
bishop McCabe, of Dublin.
Br the wreck of the steamer Pelton la tho
British Channel on the 27th eighteen pereons
were drowned.

LATER NEWS.
A DlSARTHOfs tornado visited portions of
Louisiana on the 27th. Many bouses and
other property on plantations at Monroe and
vicinity were demolished.
A Washington dispatch of the 28th says
General Butler has finally declined to have
anything to do with the Gulteau case.
Th* village of Grundy, Buchanan County,
Va., was swept away by fire on the 27th.
Fortt new ftscs of small-pox and five
deaths wore reported In Cincinnati on the
25 th.
Ayocrrn attempt to wreck a Wabash
train in tho vicinity of Wabash, Ind., was
made on the 3^ th. but the engineer stopped as
the pilot touched the ties.
Ovbk 4,000 immigrants arrived at Castle
Garden, New York, on the 28 th.
Jvdoe-Aiivocate-Gbneral 8waim, in his
report on tbe 2bth to the Secretary of War on
the Sergeant Mason case, holds that ‘‘is GuL
tcau was lying In his cot at the »lme Mason
fired the shot, and a substantial brick wall in­
tervened, the ability of Mason to commit tbe
assault charged was both apparently and
really wanting, and he U of opinion there It
material variance between tbe allegations and
proofs, and conviction ought not to be sus­
tained.”
News from the submerge! South on the
28th was still of a distressing character.
Steamboats were sailing over what were once
wagon roads; plantations were covered with
water, and thousands of families were entire­
ly dependent on Government rationsA London dispatch of the 25th reports the

Senator Bra Hnx had another operation
performed upon his tongue at Philadelphia on

Tcntrax prisoners escaped from jail in
letrult oa toe 25to by cutting three bora of

Brady, at Washington, on tbe 25th, their
menu.

served the 250th anulveniary of the first relig­
ious society in that city.

in cotton future-.

lx the United States Senate on the 28th tbe
bill to fadl!&lt;Ate the payment of dividends to
creditors of the Freedman’s Savings Bank was
rcsolutl&amp;n to retire Colonel Crittenden as a
B. Igadfer-GcDeraL Several hours were spent
In debate on tbe Tariff-Commission bill. Fire

General James A. Williamson, of lows,
13 to deliver the annua! address at the fifand a lad named Lowell perished in the flames.

Kattata, an Alaska Indian, was executed
J. C- Early, an attorney and politician
of Leadville, killed Policeman Samuel Town-

ll&gt;e Tennessee, which will be held in Bi. Louis
May 10.
e.
Tna contributions toward tbe Garfield Me-

ertared of Ute that General

REAL ESTATE AGENTS,

Ingrain Carpets, .25 worth .35
Ingrain Carpets, .35 worth .50
Ingrain Carpets, .60 worth .80
Ingrain Cr pets, .70 worth$l

Men’s Suits, $5 worth 8.
Men’s Suits, S10 worth 15
Men’s Suits, $15.worth 20. Boys Suits S3 worth 5.
Boys Suits 5 doll, worth 8. Overcoats
'
2.50 to 10 dolls.

Mens Stoga Kipa Boot s, 2 dolls, worth 2.5o
Mens Stoga Kip Boots, 2.50 worth 3.50
Mens Fine Calf Boots. -2 dolls, wothr 4
Mens Fine Calf Boots 2.50 worth 2.

■40 acres, 3 miles from Nashville. Fair house
and barn, Nearly all improved. Price &lt;1,000.
40 acres, 3^ miles from. Nashville. If sold
soon will take $1,150.
25 acres, In tho village of Nashville- Must
be sold for what It will bring on account of
poor health of present owner.
50 acres, 4 miles from Nashville; nearly all
improved; fair buildings and in all a good bar­
gain. Price $1,600; part down.
House and Lot, on Phillips street; tbe best
bargains in town. Price $350.
House and Lot, on State street. Price $250,
half down down.
Good House and four acres of Land on Fran­
ces Street. Price $450.
House and lot on State St., bouse new:
cellar and plentvof good water. For M
$7U0 or will exchange for farm property near
Nashville or Hastings.
.
80'acrcs, 1’f miles from Nashville on the best
road leaving the village; all Improved except 8
acres: the remaining 8 acres good timber; ta
well watered bv a never-falling, spring. Good,
young orchard; buildings fair; 18 acres of
wheat on the ground; present owner engaged
In other business and will sell for $2,600, IL000 down, balance otf long time.
Vacant lot on Philips St. Price $120 if sold
soon.
LEE &lt;fc DURKEE.

It. IIK K1XSOX X CO

kick Button Shoes 1 doll, worth 1.50
Fine Kid Button, 2 dolls worth 2.50
TampicoJGoat 2.25 worth 3 dollars
Childrens Shoes 50 cts. to 1 dollar.

----- XEW------

CUSTOM FLOURING MILL
READY FOR BUSINESS

Every day

Tea,*35 worth 5oc. Tea 45c wortLJ60c. Coffee 13 worth 17
Coffee 16c worth 20c. Brown Coffee 17c. Molasses, blk.
Strap, 30c worth 40c. Common Syrup. 30c worth 40
N. 0. molasses best in the market 50c worth 70.
Maple flavor 50c. worth 70, Sugar Granlnte|d 10 Standard! A. 10 Brown 7 8.
*^The pricesfquotedjare suffient to indicate what bargains are
offered, all of whichtwill^bejstrilctly adhered £o.

®The highest’ market price will be paid ’fsr Butter, Eggs,
Potatoes, Beans,)Lard^Dried Apples &amp;c.
kfrOn’all sums of $25 and over, six months’ credit will be giv­
en onjjapproved nbiestbearing^7 percent interest.
Come early! these goods will not last long at prices given.

In the year—Sundays excepted.

CUSTOM GRINDING!
Of every dcrcriptkm, done in a superior
manner, at the drop of the hat; and
Satisfaction guaranteed.

FLOUR. MEAL AND MILL FEED
Kept constantly on Laud.

Otir

Graham Flour

Is concecdcd to be the best.

Try it

By a strict attention to business, and square
dealing with all our customers, we hope to mer­
it a liberal patronage from the fanners of this
vicinity.

Mills on railroad,—cast of depot.

II. R. DICKINSOX A CO.
EO. W. FRANCIN,
nSISBBB------- DEALER1IN-------

THE CROWN

(Fancy and Staple

^yAGONS

WAGONS
WAGONS
Made of

[CONBI8TING|Ui£PAKTlOF

Tbe Bewt, ar d ma»i

SUGARS. TEAS.WF'
COFFEES, SPICES."
SYRUPS. MOLA8SE8,
°TARCH. SOAP,
CRACKERS. CHEESE,
BEST NICKLE SOAP IN TOWN.
SALMON,
WHITE FISH,
TROUT,
MACKEREL.
HALIBUT,
COD FISH.
HERRING.
STEAM COOKED OAT MEAL.
CROCKERY,
THE CROWN SEWING MACHINE.
GLASS WARE,
«rThe “Crown-' cornea into the market

i good features 1 u all other machines
! OHIO*? STONE WAI|E,
; them In one grand combination, makmlttee on' Pensions reported a bin fix- 1TOBACCOS,
tog tbe rate for total disability at 872I
CIGARS,
per month. In the House lengthy speecbca
PIPES,
FIFTY-CENT TEA. work has proved to be absolutely good are to he
were made by Meara. Carlisle and Kasson ou। 1TRYfl OUR
found only In tbe “Crown." Other machines
Envoy Treseott was submitted. In'response

Market Price paid

Wool Cashmeres, .80 worth $1.
Wool Cashmeres, .00 worth .80
J KK a dibkKb,
Half wool do. .35 worth .83.
Plain Suitings, .25 worth .35
Plaid Suitings, 6|.
............
Prints,............
JI .0 .7
Wool dress Flannel. .40 worth .65 Waterproofs, .73 worth $1
Wateroroof*. $1 worth $1.25
Wool Tweeds .50 worth .75
HalfwoolTweeda, 8s worth 4s.
““20 .
Cottonade,««.16 to
.Fanners A Mechanics .20 to .25
Lin. Table Cloth, .18 worth 25
Coaveyaaetag, an J Write both Ute
Lin. TableCloth, 8a worth 4s.
Lin. Table Cloth. .50 worth 75
Cotton Goods, .6 .7.8.
Bleached Goods. .6.7.8.9 .10
Office on second floor of Buxton's new brick
&gt;
White Goods cheap.
White Goods Cheap.
NASHVILLE, MICH.
Table Oil Cloth, .25 worth
“ .85
Floor Oil Cloth, .35w’th .50
Horse Blankets .00 worth 9a.
Overalls .40
Overalls .60
Overalls 25.
Trim’ng Silk .75 werth $1 r
Silk Ribbons at cost.
Trini’ug Satin, $1 worth £l..r&gt;0
Ladies Stockings.
of Wheat, good Orchard, very fcsir buildings,
Children’s Stockings.
Gloves &amp;. Mittens. good spring near house. Price 3,000. Payments

SB
Alabama on the 26th. Advices from Eufaula
state 'hat in that vicinity many houses wen
destroyed and twelve persona were killed.

Shropshire during a quarrel killed a father

A freight train on the Chesapeake &lt;fc Ohio
Rood broke through a bridge near Clifton
Forge, Va., on the 25th, killing the engineer

, ^T.P10

This is no dodgo, but is a bona fide offer. The time and for Biden, Pelts. &amp;c.
opportunity to make monny is by saving from 25 to 5o per Fresh Goods, Full Weight* and
cent on your purchases. In Dress Goods we quote:
HENRY ROE.

Every device that Is really desirable in other

Remember we get no fancy pri machines will be found Id the “Crown." Ad­
eta, l&gt;nt bell all goods an low M the vantage has been taken of the experiments and
!oweat,;(quality considered).
Respectfully,

Of any In Barry Co.,

READY FOR SALE!

BLACKSMITHING I
BLACKSNITHINGI
BLAMSMITHING!
-IiONEBY----

II. BENNETT

BUG6V &amp; WAGON REPAIRING
Jos. M. WOOD

�property is tn tranrtl to arena pis*
Btate. it shall M asraMKt to snob

glashrille

tbe ati division of a day of Owobcrof
lir.r»«Uw

said Baard of Control ehaU be allowed lb««xschool, Mj

exoentore or

This sot is ordered to take nmnedtale effect
Approved March 13, 1882.

cribed

Approv'd March 18, 18HX
AN ACT
under the oenirol
t Im- courtructl-x: of train railways.”
.
Hacnuxi.
pan enact, That MwUon two thousand four hun­
dred and eighty-two of the compiled Jaws of
etgbtMm hundred and seventy-one, being suc-

and

pe aled.
This act i« ordered to take immediate effect.
- Approved March 18, 1882.

act nwrbcr one hundred and forty-eight of tbe
Sr,-, ?. Th
authorized U
sand dollars,
thousand ci;

State tax for/thn year one
idred and sighty-two. and
MbrzABBUo the credit bf

Bzcnoz L TAc people of the Slate of Michi-

Uio general Tumi.
Ordsreddu take immediate effort.
hundred am! eighty-one, being act No. two
hundred and twenty-nine of public acts of
eigbteau hundred and cighty-ouc, ba and the
asms are berobv amended so aa to read as fol­
lows:

nt balkUngs

uy spi&gt;ruiM»wa
i.... r,—*.—
—Statu trea»nry fw the year eighteen hundred
and eighu-twu for lhe folk&gt;wing-nam« d pur­
poses lor 'tts Michig-iu School tor tot&gt; Bnud.
to-wit: Fuwrtoous-nd three hundred dollars
for thu cotnptetmtiof building* already erected;
eight bundr.-d doll ire for tho construction of *
rreurvoir; three thousand revon hundred dollar*
fur gracing .trecix and gruunds. . drainage,
graveling driveways, planting trees, etc.; two
tliotuaud five hundred doUsra for fibrery
ai.paratus: J’rwided, That if any oqe of toe
amount* specUted ai»*ll not *H bo required for
the purpu.4; for which it is asked, any snch
boiauce lumaiuiug unexpended may be used fur
ettotr uf thu oUn-r pnrpuees mculloncd in this
act, under the direction of tbe Board of
OoulruL
»

hundred and righta-two the amount appropri­
ated by sectiou one of tfiia act. which amount,
when collected, shall ho placed to tho cred.t of
the general fund to reim curve said fund for tho
amount hereby appropriated
Ordered to take immediate effect.
Approved March 9, IbaA

bZCWO.x 1. The people of the Stale of Michuian enact, That tue Board of btate Fi-h Commwaiouera. appointed aud organized under aud

prisUou therefor.” approved April 19, 1873,
and tbe acts amendatory thereof, or of any act
of tho Legislature of this State whicu may
hereafter ixi (&gt;a*»ed, ahidl constitute a body

name

Ordered to take immediate efftxM.
Approved March 9, 18o2.

(N^4.1

itanoii I- The people of the Stair cf AAchioan enact, Tliat Ukre sU*U be, and hereby in,
approiwuted out uf the Slate treasury the sum
of two hundred and fifty thousand dollars, or
»u much thereof as may be necessary, to be ex-

counties affec-ud th* reby.
age. 1 T lure shall be, and is hereby, np]&gt;ropriated out of tho Bute treasury the sum of
fifteen thousand dollars, or so much tHereof as

tricu so rebuilding

rewpecuvo districts,
_ ___ ____ _____
■* snail place to tbe
Acdit of tho building fund of their roepecUvu

of tfix unsold Btate tax lands now held by tho
Btate at any lime after the eleventh day of
Marell, eighteen hundred and cighty-two, and
before the first day of October tn too same year,
on api&gt;ticatiou at tbe Auditor General’s office
and on payment to the State Treasurer, on the
certificate of tbe Auditcr General, of tho total
amount of tbe or ginal taxevi levied on such
land for all the yean for which tbe said lana
waa sold to tuo State, with interest at seven
per cent, from the date of the several returns
thereof and without other charge: Provided,
That these pr -virions shall not apply »o any
claim uf the State for taxes upon any Mich
laud or to the land* returned do inqumt for
Uxcs of tho year &gt;4ghteeu hundred and cigbty,
or any sale there! or.
Szc. 3. On tho find day of October, eighteen
hundred and clghty-twn, end for four montiis
thereafter, any j&gt;er»ori may purchase any par­
cel of aaid unsold Btate tax land tlx n held by
lhe Blate upon application therefor at thu office
of the Auditor General, and upon payment as
aforesaid of the total amount of such original
taxes thereon tar all such years, riot in­
cluding said rear eighteen hundred and
••igbtv, witboat interest or other charge, on tbe
first diy of February, eighteen hundred and
eighty-three, and for four months thereafter
•any jx-reon may |&gt;urehase such lands on such
applicaiion on payment aa a lores aid of threefourths of the amount last above-mentioned.
On tbe first day of June, eighteen hundred
and eighty-three, and for four months there­
after, any person may make such purchase on
such application on payment as aforesaid of onehalf of such amount; on tbe firatday of October,
eighteen hundred aud eighty-three, and al any
time thereafter and before the commencement

public auction aa hereinafter provided, any per­
son may make such purchase on such applica­
tion and un payment aa aforesaid of.one-iourth
of such amount. The lands bid off by the
btate at the tax sales of eighteen hundred and
eigfaty-one. and not redeemed, shall be subject
to safe bv the Auditor General until October
first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, on
payment of the original bid and interest at the

to be raised for county puruoMa. and
cription by which they mar be anoww.
—ro. ...___ . /T71- 1, .1___
hfevodh, It shall tx&gt; sufficient to dreeribo the
real projxrty assMsed upon any roll and in all to the State among tbe several township* la the
... u**&gt; — - - • --*** in *1.* M.*
For the purpose of taxation, real
shall include all lands within tho
1 all buildings and fixtures tberoou

wiU-in thu State, all ships, I meta aud rebels
belonging to inhabitants of this State, whether
at homo or atxiad, and their apuartenanocs ;
all goods, chattels and effects belonging to mhal.itzutH of this State, situate without Urn
State, exoopt that property actually and
peanantutly invested in busincis in
State shall uot bo included; all indebtodncss duo to inhabitants of this State above
tho amounts respectively owed by them, wheth­
er sucn indebtedness is duo from individuals or
from corpontiona, public or private, and
whether such debtors reside within or without
thu Slate : all shares in corporaliotM Organized
under the taws of tins State, when the prop­
ertv of such corporation is not exempt or is not
taxable to itself; all shares in banks or.-anlzrd
tn this State under any law of tbe United States,
but in estimating thu value of snob Khoren, de­
duction shall be made of the value of all real
estate taxod to tho bank ; all share* In foreign
eorpuraliuiut (except national bantu) owned by
inhatalknia of this State; all moneys ; ail an­
nuities aud rovaltxs; ail micre«ta owned by
.individuals in lands, the fee of which is in tms
Btate or tho United State*, except *s herein­
after provided. Property exempt from taxa­
tion bv tho lalsa of tho Umtod Slates ohal! uot
ixi included. Shares in corporations, the prop­
erty of which is taxable to itself, shall not be
*MK.-»»od to tho hharoholdcr.
8zc 3. Tho following property shall oe ex­
empt from taxation:
• First, All public proicrty belonging to the
Umtod State*, to thu State, or to any county,
city, village, townHhip dr school district withintliid State, nave land* l urchased at tax sales
and rtiJl held by the State.
Second, Tbe ptreouai propertv of all library,
benevolent, chariiablu and »cicntitle in-titutiou» Incorporated under the laws of thi-i St ate,
and "Ucti real estate as shall bo occupied by
them fcr tho pur|M»&lt;s fur which they were in­
con crated.
Tleird, All houses of cul lie worship, with the
land un which they stand, the furniture there­
in. and all rights "in tho pews : aud also aay
panmnago osned by auy religious society uf
this State, and occupied as such.
Fourtle, AU lands used uxclu-ivelv as burial
grounds, and the rights of burial therein, and
the tombs and monuments therein, while to
UM^for that.purpose : Protridrxf. That the stock
of any corporation owning each ground shall
not be exempt: Provideel further. That tombs
or vault-i built within any burying grounds and
kept for rent, iu whole or in part, shall bo as-

of one hundrod aud fifty dollars, tho personal
wearing apparel of every individual, and all
family pictures.
Sixth,- Furniture and utensils in use in any
dwelling bouse, of the value of two hundred
dollars : musical instruments not exceeding in
value one hundred and fifty dollars, and other
personal property owned and u«d by any
householder In connection with his house ‘or

persons who. in the opinion of the Hupemsor,
are, by reason of poverty, unable to contribute
towards public charge*. ■
not sold prior to the tax sale of eighteen hun­
Szc. 4. All corporate projxrty, except where
dred and eighty-four, shall be sold like other some other jiruvuion is made by law, shall bo
Btate tax laud* under the provisions of this act. aasesMtd to the corporation us to a natural
As soon as practicable the Auditor General
rhall cause Itats of tho - lands subject to sale
s.tuatod shall be deemed ita residence. Tbe
property of corporations paying s|mw:11c taxes
ceasivc weeks, v. hicb shall lie comitruod to mean snail be exempt, as to the propwly covered by
four publication*, one tn each week. The lists such taxation except when otherwise provided
Khali show tbe year, taxes for which each parcel by law. Ail other property of such corporation
is held by tbe State, and shall be published in a
all be taxed under this act. In cumputiug
newspaper published in the epunty in which
tho lands He, if one there be therein; if none,
then in one published in an adjoining county.
The cost of publication shall not exceed forty pays taxes shall be deduc ed from Us net assets
cents a deacnpiion. and ahall be paid from the above hyrihucs, aa determlm-d and shown by
the last report of tho Commissioner of Insur­
ance, and tbe remainder shah l»e tbe amuunt of
factory to hitu that tbe publication has been |MT»onal property for which the company shall
properly made.
Ret. 2. Thst there bo added to said act No.
Sxc. 6. For tbe purposes of sseesatug property
two hundred aud twenty-nine, four now seo- and collecting taxis, a copartnership shall be
treated as an individual, and whenever the
name of the owner or occupant of property is
Szc. 4. Tnc Auditor General shall cause required to be entered upon the as»«-i«ment
roll, if such property is owned or occupied by a
copartnership, tbe firm name shall be used. A
copartnership shall be deemed to reside in lhe
township where ita business is principally ear­
Ktatu tax lands, that al! lands included within ned on. Each partner shall he liablu for the

t &gt; the highest bidder by tho County Treasurers
of tbe several counties where such lands are known; if uot then io tbe occupant if any, and
situated, at the place appointed for tbe general if tluuv to no occupant, then as unknown. Au
executor, administrator, gut-dum cr trustee,
tax sales above-mentioned.
havu-g control of real property, may be treated
aa ita owner.
r-zc. 7. Tnorealpro]&gt;crty which belonged to a
made by
bmrs cr duvteoew jointly without naming them,
until they shall have given notice of tbeir re-

bcen heretofore given bv County Treasurers to
purchaser* of State tax land*.
Szc. 6. On presentation of such certificates
to the Auditor General and on all sale* made
by the Auditor General he shall execute to the
..n.'.vMrtn,.- all
(1,1.

such tdat be recorded or not.
bcti two or more parcels of land
■ occupied together, they may be as-

determined by than lor that yoar.'whfcUdre
. -.&lt;( ar,-.,..*-,........ .L.,l ...
property to whfc
i applied sbajl be
denoes. For this purpose be may require every at lh&lt;&gt; time of
being tbe price
person of fuU age and sound mind, and tho
erefor at private
proper offiot r of every corporation, to make in
writing a full and detailed statement, signed by
the person making it. of all the taxable property and cn or before the first Monday of May iu
each year, tho Township Board shall appoint
two reliable tax-paying i-lcctors of the township
to servo m membeni of the Board of Review for
poratlou to furn'sh such statement when so re­ that ysar, who shell take the can«tituti&lt;&gt;nil
quested. Thb Auditor General is required to o.-.tb of office. The Supervisor and the two
prepare and distribute to tho County Treasur­ eh ctors ho unpointed shall constitute the Board
ers blanks for vueb statemMlts. These blanks of Review for sueb townahip. The Township
Board may fl!! any vacancy which shall occur in
the Sn perrigors, aiid each Bupervuor ta au­ tbe membcrthip of Said Board of Review. A
thorized to add to Ruch blank any questions he majority of said Board of Review shall conztitute.a quorum for the transaction of businaM,
but a teas number may adjourn from day to
&lt;lay. and a majtnty vote of those present shall
decide all question*. On the Tuesday next fol­
paedty it is held. Tney shall show the indebt­ lowing tbe third Monday of May, the Board of
edness of any person so far as he wishes a de­ Review of each township shall meet at the office
duction from his credits on account of such in- of the Bopcrvisur; at which time the Supervisor
dubtedoMM. The cashier of every bank shall. ■liall submit to said Ixnird tbe aasessmtni roll
for the current year, as prepared by him, and the
•aid board shall proceed to examine and review
county where the bank G located, a state­ th* name, aud during that seek, said board, of
ment of all real estate held by tbe bank its own motion, or ou sufficient cause being
aud its value, a lut of the names of the stock­ shown by any person, shall add to sa d roll thio
holders, the umonnU of stock la id by each, names or persona, tho value of par«onal prop­
and their respective residences. Tbe statement erty, and the description and value of real
aforesa'd shell show the facts aa they exist ou property liable to assessment in said township,
the second Mo day of Apnl of the year when omitted from, such aaseaunont roll; they shall
made. Imiuediatelv after tb&lt;&gt; filing of suol» correct all errors in tbe names of peraons, in
Statement, thu County Clerk shall notify the the description of property upon such roll, and
Sujwrvuor of each townsnip of tho name &lt;-t in the assessment and valuation of prup-rty
tac-i person (if auy) residing in his towuahip tliereon, and they Khali eau-o to bo done what­
bolding snarew of stock in auy such bank, and ever else may' be necessary to make said rod
of the amount thereof, as ahowu by inch » atc- comply w.th ’the provisions of this act. Tho
Uicnl. All property snail bo asseeaed as of the l&gt;oard shall pass upon each valuation, and enter
secund Monday of April.
the valuation as fixed by it in a separate col­
bzc. 13. Every person required by thia act umn. The roll as prepared by tho Supervisor
to make or deliver such statement shall eel shall s-and as approved and adopted as thu act
lortn an accouut of tbe property held or owned of tho Board of Review, except as changed by
by him, ae lohows:
a vote m herein provided. If for any c.use a
quorum Joes not t*»eniuie during the week
Real Property.
.ku accurate dc&amp;criplion &lt;.f each pare*! of land uuove znenUuuod,; the roll as prepared by the
with the number of acres, stid tho number of Supervisor shall stand as if approved by tue
scro improved and the number and kind of Bo«rd of Review.
buildings thereon.
Sec. 19. Said Board of Review nhall also meet
at the office of tbe Supervisor ou the fourth
J’ertonal Property— Credit*.
(
Monday in May at nine o clock in tho forenoon,
Firxt, All annuities *ca royaltica.
S,rond, All Inmds, iiote-i, mortgages, ac­ und contiuno in session during tho day and tne
counts, demauds, claims and other in- dry following and as much longer oh may be
debtodness owing to such person, whether such
indebtedness is due from individuals or from
corporations, public or private, and whether board atiul! continue in seciuon at least six
such debtors reaide within or without this
Btate, including all deposits in Ixinka or w.th
his agent, and ou sufficient cause being shown
other corporations or individuals.
Third, All bona fide Indebtedness owing by shall correct tbe assteament as to such property
snch person, giving an itemized statement in iu such maimer as in tbeir judgrn-ut will
detail and to whom owing, aud tho residence make the valuation thereof relatively just and
of such creditora,and tbe au'OUUl due each, pro­ equal. To that end said board may examine
vided be doures to have lhe muc deducted on oalh the person making such application or
any other person touching tho matter. Any
from his credits.
member of said board may administer such
Pertonal Property-ChatteU.
Firft. All shores in banka organized Ln this oath. Alter said board shall complete the reBtate under any law of this State or of the v&lt;ew of said roll, a majority of said board shall
Umtod States, and tbeir value after deducting indurvfc lheruon and sign a statement to the ef­
fect that die same U the aucMment roll for
said township for the rear in which it has been
prepared and spproveJ by the Board of Benew.
Said st&amp;tem' Ut may be m the following form.
ganized under the laws of thia Btate, when the
" Assessment roll of tho township of-------- —,
for too year 18—, as approved by the Board of
Review.
------------------,
Fifth, The value of all gold and silver plate,
“ Dated-------------------------,
watches, diamonds aud jewelry.
Sixth, Tho value of all household furniture
*• Jtoarri of RiTiew."
and musical instrument* over aud above ex­ Upou tbe completion of said roll, and :u in­
dorsement in mvuinr aforesaid, uie same shall
emption*.
Seventh, All patent rights and their value.
Eujhth. The number and kinds of domostic
animals, and then- value.
.VinZA, All wagons carriages and sleighs. omuaioii of such Lndersemunt shall not affect
toe validity of such roll.
quorum shall
Tenth, Ali mechanical and agricoltoral imple­
ments and tools, aud their value.
*
Eleventh, Ail machinery . nut affixed to real
property, and its value.
Twelfth, AU ships, boats and vessels, whether
to attend st oiw, and it ahull ba the duly of
Thirtn-nlh, AU mcrehaDthae and stock in Uio member so notified to aUeud without delay.
If from auy cause tho second meeting of aueb
Board of Iteview, herein provided fur, is not
Laid at tlw time fixed therefor, then and in
soual property not heretofore specifically mentioued, aud their value, except property speci­
fically exempt from taxation.
Sirhcnth, All g.-ods and chattels which are
exempt from taxation.
or refuse to make out and doh ver a
state-mt nt of hu property to the Bupcrvisor, aa
required tor this act, or if the Buperviaor shall
be satisfied that any statement so made U in­
correct, said Hupemsor is hereby authorized to
examine on oatu tho person to neglecting or
refUMUg, and any other person or persons
d« gleet

records
”------- — — . .. ..... ... -*.w. — H.lllf*
highway sod town-hip purposes. They
bear aud duly comuder all obJecUom ni*.
i
iboard that any certificate, rlatcniaut, paper or
i
।
&gt;

perfect aud such certificate, stetemeur, paper,
■record or proceeding can then be cunected.
।supplied or had, such board may authorize aud
;require such defects or cmis«ioui&gt; to be cor­
rected, supplied or bad. They may refer any
or all such certificates, statements, papers,

.
'money proposed to t»e raised for townahip,
kcuooi and highway purposes an shall be
‘
TtM&amp;L-rizixl
by law, be spread upon the assess-

end - direction

in toll upon

visors shall, immediately alter the said apport unmeut, make out two certificates showing
ihe amounts apportioned to cacti township for
tttate, county, and the varioni township purs
poses, each tax being ■ kept distinct, ono of
which he shall deliver to the Cutmly Treasurer
and tho other to the Supervisor of the proper
township : J^rociehei, Tll«t if th" County Cieik
tail to make ancn oerUticate. the Supervisor
-ball take official notice of all tbe cstrtiAcataa,
the County Clerk relating to the levy ol taxes
in his tosuship, and of the action of the Board
of BuiM-rvisoni lheivou.
Bzc. 26. Each Supervisor shall proceed to
assess tbe taxes apportioned to hi* township,
aecordnig ?_ml in proportion to tbe Valuations

property ahxll be footed up and carried out I

come at once a debt to the township from tbe
persons to whom they are assessed, and the
amounts assessed on any real property shall, oa
the firal day of December, become a hen ou
such roal property, and tho hen for such
amounts, aud for all interest and charges there­
on, shall continue until j-ayment thereof. Be­
fore tbe Supervisor shall dt-bver such roll to the

to the Township Clerk of his township a stalonu ut thereof, and such Township Clerk shall

Bzc. 27. The

i nanding the Township Treasurer to collect the

count

Treasurer

county purposed, on or before the first d
February then next; and tea said warrant

g-.rcntbo Townahip Treasurer. Tbe copy at
U&gt;o roti, with Um warrant annexed, shall be

held a» hercibhe! ore provided.

era! * townships, aud ascertain whether tho
relative valuation of the reel property in tbe

Treasurer

portioned to his township, and such Treasurer,
ua&lt; qusl, they shall equalize the same bv adding
to oi deducting from too valuation ol the tax­
able property ui any township or townshi;s State and county taxes, with sufficient sureties,
•och an amount as m their judgment will to bo approved by the Huperviaor of the lownproduce relatively an equal and uniform valm.- shipand the County Treasurer, cocdtiioued that

penonso

duly and taithiuliy perform all the other dutouu&gt;hip in their county
them. Tlie board shidl aliu
holding a jwirt-paiil certificate for the purchase
of anv State lauds shall be assessed separate

safely keep such

all the

anch receipt, and on or before ’ too fin-.l dav of
December, shall deliver to tbeTowusulpTreas...»
*..11
i»t* •»****».••.
lembfctla aaub year, tbe Auditor General shall

Bzc. 8L On receiving snch tax roll, th* Town
ship Treasurer shall proceed to collect such
I**..* It,. *U*11 ..m.ln ... I....
..

that year referring to the las on which each

such lauds for the several ysare for wldoh tho
goods and chattels situated iu some

therein as de-

Auditor General u

cuixx-tKrn at
and chattels.

All taxes shaU be eollactad before
of anv townahin or tba Common Council of aay

rtyiu

real property

�fm:

property.
subject
levied

nnal sates as heriubeforo provided : ■/‘rotvfad,
That rueh deed shall uot be executed until the
purchaser shafi pay all ’delinquent taxes on such
lands returned to Lao offioo of lhe Auditor GenOf ^Wwxhtoen
hundred and clghty-twu-.

whereupon he could fevy the
ship Treasurer shall also t

priqx-rty
the perse
amount a
shall set !

Ho shall give a receipt fur every tax
ihall tutor the fact of payment and
thereof upon his tax roll. In case of
any tex awMiMod upon ths ahane of the espital
■took of any bank be shall call upon tho caahter

t-&gt;

incut ah’sil by verified by the affidavit of such

paper in general circulation and wmeh waa es­
tablished two month* at ioaet before the first

meat as uncollected remain umild ; tha
not, upon diligent inquiry, been able ta &lt;
any goods or chattela belongiug to tlie
liable to pay such sums whereupon
ath&lt; asme ; and that tlie amount of
uted by him upon auoh taxroll
stated lhercm.
Src. 45. Tbe County Treasurer shall im­
mediately compare snch statementa with the

tifleate showing that be has examined aud
compand such statements with the said tax roll
and found them correct, and shall file snefi

Court, and if appeal
■hall be transmitted'

tho proprietor of
notices, tbe Auditor General may select

though the amount involved there­
in one hundred dollars.

apjxiint •orno competent person to take charge
of and prowvutc tbe same, who ■hail be paid by
the county, Tbe Board of Buperrisors may

--- — ™
u*mi
u»vu* ujc
•ame reseutlals aud pa Wished in an adjoining
county, shall be chosen. If there be uo such

ie decree upon which
not have been paid.
and shall ----------------------(sundays and other legal holidays
until so much ot each parcel -*■
shall be sufficient to pay inch
parcel described to tbe deert

Board of

■ball be tbe duty of snob Audl,d TrooHurer to carefully examine
the notices published and see that they arc
anv tax upon any Isuds which shall have been
correct. Any person familiar with thu facta townahip.
twice MM^ed, iw upon any parcel which shall tho publication of tho notires herein required
may make an affidavit as to the publication re­
bo so erroneously or defectively described that shall bo filed before any final order is made.
in the decree and quired The Auditor General aliail not pay for
ofr
Bzc. 67. Any person desiring to contest tlie
adjourned from time to Umo if be shall deem it cannot be aacortainod.
any nuch publication until Batudled that it Las
Szc. 4C. Th? County Treasurer shall give to validity of any tax, shall file in writing hia ob­
tbe same neoeMary. If it becomes necessary to
•ell personal property which bnngt more than the Township Treasurer a receipt, stating the jections thereto with the Clerk of tbe county, in anv parcel shall be sold than U sufficient to
par the amount charged thereto. If no person turned as delinquent for non-payment of taxes
■hip Treasurer, tor which the township ahall
will offer to pay tbe amount charged against thereon upon which no sate Las been made, tached from such county subsequent to the
receive a credit on the books of the County lowed to make anv objection not therein spici- any parcel of land and take a conveyance of ahall be »olii under tho provisions of thu act, time when such taxes were aaieascd, and the
a_ J_____ r,__ ,i...'.i__
Treasurer, and be shall also give such Town­ &lt;l..,l T/
less than tho entire thereof, then the whole in the ■amo mariner aud with like effect as if Auditor General shall thereupon credit to such
ship Treasurer a statement of all taxes rejected
parcel ahall be sold. Tbe sate snail be at tbe assooicd and returned as herein provided, and connty the amount which no may have k&gt;
by him, the amount of delinquent tax*- re­
oouutv seat, and at such convenient placx- as tbe umo presumptions of regularity and legal­ charged back, and charge the same to tbe
couuty hi which such lands may be then situ­
aa unpaid.' Tho turned, aud thn apiount of unpaid taxes on ttmt auy person has been prevented* from hl tag may tie •elected by tho County Treasurer, and ity shall apply.thereto.
.
Township
to pcr&amp;onal property, which receipt and statement Objections to any tax, without fault ou hia port, ■ball’be subject to the taxes aaarssed subse­ or accovirrs awn tuz hzm.EMEjrr thshkox. ated . 1‘rtiridtd, Buch taxM shall not have
such further tiniu may be granted for that pur­ quent to taxes included in tho decree. Tbe
may sue the
Bxc. 71. Tbe accounts between the State,
pose as may seem proper, not exceeding uro County Treasurer may. in his discretion, require the county and each township shall be ad­
urere for the amounts specified therein.
8xo. 47. Tho County Treaauror shall there­ days. Tbu court shall give precedence to thi immediate pavmcnt of any prtwonto whom any justed on the basis of crediting and paying to laud returned to the Auditor General for un■ the townahip.
upon Indorse tbe fact of such settlement on toe bearing ot such pctiticn over all other basinets, parcel of snch land shall be rtruck off ; and. in uach tlie taxes oollosted for each, with iuterest
bond of tbe Township Treasurer, which in­ ■hall examine, consider and determine tbu all casaa where payment u not made m twenty- thereon. Tbe Oounty Treasurer ahall, on tho of petition for sale, file with tho Auditor Gen­
dorsement shall opewate as a discharge of the matters therein stated and objections made in four hours, he shall declare tbe bid canceled first days of January. April, July and October eral a petition asking that the taxes aroowed to
Treasurer and his sureties from the obligation a summary manner without other pleadings, and sell the land again ; and any person to in cadi*year, make a statement of the accounts said lands be rejected aa illegal. The petition
thereof, unless [that] the return of such Treas­ aud make final decree thereon as thu right or whom any parcel of land ahall be so struck off, between his county and the State, us they ap- shall fully act forth tho grounds of such Ille­
and shall bo verified. The Auditor Gon­
urer is incorrect, in which case such bond ahall tho case may be. Tno taxes specified in the nogfacllng for twenty-four hours after the close j&gt;ear from tbe books and vouchers in his office. gality,
— -- ----- ..ijp fcDy ueoejulM-, bU.p to
twenty-fivu cents otjt and above tho tax, aa hia continue in force, aud such Treasurer and his petition shall bo presumed legal and a decree of such sale to pay to the County Treasurer
the matters stated in snch petition.
foes for making such sale, which fore aud j&gt;er- sureties shall he liable thereon for all damage* be made limn-fur uuloss tho contrary fa proved. tho amount of snch bid, ah»ll forfeit to the At tho name time he shall pay over to the Btate and
a case where tho tax was paid, or
Evidence shall 'bo taken in open court. Ail Btate five times I be amount ot such bid, which Treasurer all moneys in lhe county treasury
centage hereinbefore provided shall be in full occasion'd by such incorrect returns; and toe oral
textimouy ahull, at toe request ol any per­ ■mount may be recovered, in the name ot the collected tor State taxes aascssed in th*.- several ---------------- m assessed and once pxid, or theTownship lYcasurer shall immediately deposit
his tax roll with the County Trvasprvr, who son UiteresUMl. be written down and filed. Tho people of the State of Michigan, in an action of township* of his county. Tbe County Treas­ land not liabTe to asaessuu-nt, reject ^he same.
Bxc. 84. No tax assessed upon any property.
shall file and preserve the same hi bis office, court may maze such orders from Ume to time debt, in any court of competent Jurisdiction ; urer, at the time of rendering his accounts to
and which said roll, or a duly certified copy
any subsequent old of such ;&gt;eraon made at the the Au liter General, shall also make a state­ or ealc therefor, eball be bell invalid on acthereof,
shall, for all purposes, in all courte. lugs, and ahall decide all questions as to the ■aw may be disregarded by the Treasurer. If ment of the accounts between tbe county and
require the payment of one dollar and twentyadmissibility
of
uvidauce,
and
the
decision
ho
■ults,
and
proceedings,
be
taken,
bold,
aud
used
each of the townships therein respectively, and
five cents as bis foe for making such disLre.H,
having been made or {wucecding had within
and to enforce payment of the same, it need as evidence, in the same manner and with like made shall be final and not subject to review or interest and charges, such parcel shall be
tbe time required by law, or on account of the
be, by making the* sale notwithstanding the tax effect as the original roll. The County Treas­ appeal. If the lands of two or more pervous passed over, for the umo being, and shall on of tho proper township. At the same property having been assessed without the
urer shall giro toe Townahip Treasurer a state­ have been ass*a&gt;sod together, the court may, if the succeeding day, or before too dose of the time hr anal! pay over to the Townahip Treas­
shall have been paid.
name of the owner, or in the name of any
ment of all the personal taxes which remain |cacticablc, separate the same and apportion to ■ale, be reoffend ; and, if on such second offer,
Bzc. 37. Executions fanned upon Judgments uncollected, taken from the return of tbe latter, each jiarccl ita Just proportion of the taxes, or during such sale, lhe same cannot be sclu urer the amount of all moneys m the coun'y person other than tbe owner, or on account
treasury belonging to •uch township, and no­
rendered for any tax may be le.ied upon anv. with a warrant authorizing him or Lis succes­ interest and charges. If any tax shall be found
of any other irregularity, informality, or omb property, without exemption, tho samo n’&gt; sor to collect them according to law, and there­ illegal. It ■hall be rejected, if a part of any tax nn-r sludl bid off tlie same iu tbe nunc tify the Township Clerk tbcre&lt;^. The Auditor ■ion, or want of any matter of form or sub­
though seized for tale under warrants issued after tho TownahipTreasurer, or hi* succcwror, •hall t&gt;o found illegal, such i&gt;art shall be set of the Btate for the use of the
stance in any proceeding that docs not ; reju­
--------- i— &gt;
. ■■
_i
for the collection of taxes by township {super­ shall have the same power to collect such taxes
State, county and town m proportion to statement of the account between the State dice tho rights of the perron whose property is
visors, and collected in the same manner, m all oh under hi» original warrant
taxes, interest, and charges dun each. Tbe ■nd each county respectively, and render the taxed ; and all proceedings in amcssiug and
levying taxes, and in tho sale and convevanoc
Sxc. 4.8. When any County Treasurer shall
Couuty Treasurer shall enter in the proper col­
faction ot judgments.
receive from a Township Treasurer a statement by the register of “
too
-------court
- ---------opposite
“ each
1 parcel
——1 umns of such ti*x record the interest in lands county, aud draw bis warrant oa too State therefor, shall be presumed to bo legal until the
Szc. 38. Whenever a surplus arising from of unpaid taxes, together with a list of tto of laud in tbe col
column
___________________________
of said record under tho । sold, the uamo aud postofficc address of uach TroaNiircr payable to the Couuty Treasurer for contrary is affirmatively shown. All records.
IK. — I.
_____ J.-,_____..
■omit decreed
&lt;1&gt;creed against
axrainat said lands."
lands " purchaser opposite each parcel of land sold, and all moneys m the Btate treasury rollicted for
lands on which the same are delinquent, vert- Leading, " Amount
fled according to law, •uch Connty Treasurer If the coart shall make any order setting aside the word “ Btate " opposite each parcel bid off couuty, township, school and highway pur­
■hall enter th*- samo at length o:&gt; the book* iu
in tbe name of tho Btate.' Oruficates shall be poses tor the Mireral townships of such county,
the
umismon of
any
his office provided for the purjXisc, and ho shall
given to each purchaser of thu lauds and inter­ aud also all other moneys in the State treasury prooueding, or
mak« a tran-enpt of nil tbe descriptions of laud
ests bid off by him, stating that lie will be en­ belonging to such county, and transmit such mention in any record of any vote
proceeding,
or
of
mention
of
other, aa for money bad and received, and iu returned as delinquent for unji&amp;kl taxes, except try of such order shall be made upon said record titled to deed ou confirmation, and that if sale warrant to lhe County Treasurer with toe state­ or
■uch action tho righta of the parties to aucti such as msy have been rejected by him, which opposite such land or tax, which shall be signed is not confirmed the money will be returned. men*. aforesaid, aud notify the County Clerk auy matter in auy statement or certificate that
ithiiuld arqx-ar therein unuer tlie provision* of
surplus shall be determined. For the purpose transcript shall be compared bv* the County by lhe Judge of lhe court, either by hia lull All lands bid off in tho name of tbe Btate shall , thereof.
any
law
of
this
Slate,
shall
not
affect
the
valid
­
Clerk with tbu statement of the Township name or mitialr, and such entry shall have tho continue
liable---------------------------------------------to be taxed iu tho same manner, ( Bxc. 72. Tho Auditor General shall once in
—-——------Treasurer, and, if he finds It to be a true tran­
as if they were not the property of the Btate. । rub mouth transmit to the Trcasmer uf each ity of any proceeding, tax. or title depending
thereon, provided the fact that such vote or
of lhe Township TYeainrer, and, u]xm tbe script thereof, he shall add to it a certificate the final decide. At least ten days prior to the If
any can*o “
the
’* from
‘
“ 1lands
■*" or any parc«&gt;l* 'county lists of laiids therein upon wmeh thetax&lt;« proceeding was had or tax authorize fa sbowc
presentation to such Trcasmer of a certified that he has found it co-rocL
time
fixed ’ for the
sale
of
such thereof, advertised for sale by thu Auditor have ixien paid to the State Treasurer, and also
copy of the final judgment rendered in »u&lt;-h
Sxc. 49. Buch transcript, so made, compared lands, liu* court shall make a final General, shall i..*C be sold as 'advertbed, it list of the lands bid in lhe name uf the Btate.
and certified, shall be forwarded by the County decree in favor of
the
Btate
of shall bu the duty of tho Auditor General to which have been sold dunug the preceding made evidence- by the terms of this act or
recovering such judgment ; and no Township Treasurer to tbe Auditor General, by the limt Michigan for such taxes, interest and charges cause sale to bo made at such other time aa ho month, and upon recuiviog such lists the any other law ot tins Btate. No tax, or sale of
Treasurer shall be liable to any claimant of day of March next after the return of such aa shall be valid, and determine the total ! may fix for that purpooe, of which notice shall County Treasurer ■hall make the proper en­ property for any tax. shall be rendered
* ' a, tbe right to which is contested as
Htatemeut; but such transcript shall be re­ amount thereof chargeable against each parcel be published at least three weeks pnor to such tries showing such payment or sale. Where or held invalid by showing that any record,
this act. until be shall have refused ceivable at anv ume during said month of of laud, and shall order and decree that such day, and such notice ahall contain a description n sale has been made by the Auditor General ■tatemant, certificate, affidavit, paper or return
. _
such surplus, iqxm tho jiroducUon March.
several pain-ls of land, or ao much Of each as of the lands and the amount claimed thireuo. the Couuty Treasurer ahall note the fact upon cannot l&gt;c found in the propix office ; and.
uni ret* the contrary i» affirmatively shown, tbe
of a certified copy of a judgment as aforesaid.
Bxc. 50. After the return of lauds for unpaid may be ueccMary to satisiy the amount fixed by The sale aud all proceedings thereon shall be tho tax record.
In any action brought pursnant to thi* suction taxes the County Treasurer is authorized to re­ such decree shall severally lx- sold as tbe law tho same as if made on tnu day first fixed
Hze. 73. To all taxes unpaid ou the first day presumption shall be that such record »ia.
do other cause of action shall bo- joined nor ceive tho amounts dne. and thn Board of Super-' directs. Buch decree shall be considered as a therefor.
I of February next after their assckament there made and such certificate, statement, affidavit,
paper or return was duly made and tiled.
■kail any set-off be allowed ; and if an execu­ visors iu each county may authorize notices to several decree in favor of the State of Michi­
■ball
ho
added
interest
at
tbu
rate
of
one
per
Bae. 64. As soon as possible after the eon------------------ ------ ------------- ---------------Where any statement, certificate or record fa
tion issue on a judgment ro rendered, it shall
gan against each [tarcol of laud for each tax cluston of any sate, and within twenty days 1 &lt;*»«•
—rt. to
’~r »w»y owuth
““th or
~r part
"" of
“f a mouth icqtnrcd
to be made or signed by a school dis­
direct tho costa only of such action to oc levied
included therein. Tbe court msy decree such after tho day named in tho notice for too com- during which "~
such
’K taxes rental a unjiaid. aud to
by virtue thereof. '
Bar. 5L The County Treasurer shall issue costa against a jierson contesting any tax as luencomeut thereof, tho Couuty Treasurer shall all taxes returned to the County Ireasurar trict board or a township board, such state­
ment,
certificate or record may be made and
Hoc. 39. In caeo any Township Treasurer duplicate receipts for all taxes received l^ him, may be equitable, if the tax or any pai t thcriof
there shall also lie added a collection fee of
signed
by
the mjuubcrs of such boards, or a
aliali neglect to give either of the bonds re­ which shall l*e countersigned bv the County which remains unpaid is adjudged valid.
four per cent. Buch interest aud collection fee
quired, or shall die, or resign, or remove out of Clerk, and one of said dnphcai.es shall lie le ft
Bae. 58. Buch final decree »hall be entered in
■ball bo collected with Mich taxes and (aid to majority thereof, and it shall nut be nocessary
toe township, or become unable to discharge with Much Clerk who shall make an entry of the the chancery record for recording &lt;lt—ro&lt;* of record for the particulars thereof. All Bale* the State, county, aud township iu proportion that other members bo pru«&lt; nt when each idgn's
shall
stand
confirmed
uufavs
objections
thereto
the duties of his feffice, the Township Board
to their several rights therein. No other charg­ the ssme. Tbe provisions of this section shsll
ahall forthwith appoint a new Treasurer, who, with the name of tho jienion paying such tax, and shall be subsiautiaUy tn the following form : are filed within eight days alter the time limit- es ahall be added to auy taxes voluntarily paid not lie construed to authorize sny showing im­
id for tiling such report without the entry of
peaching the validity of any deed executed by
on giving thu required bonds, shall execute too in a book to be provided for that purpose, and
order or further notice. Tbe practice with either to the Township Treasurer, lhe County tlie Auditor General under the provisions of
dutsca of the office for the remainder of tbe •hall on the firet Monday of each mouth, for­
Mirhiijan fur thr noir of errtatn taruia fur any
retcrenre to setting aside snch sale shall be the Treasurer, or the Btate Treasurer, except cqjU this act, but such deeds shall be held absolute
year. Tbe Township Clerk ahall immediately ward ah such receipts to the Auditor General
name no far as applicable m in a sale in equity of judicial proccediugs hereinafter men luncd: and conclusive as herein provided.
notify thu County Treasurer of such sppomt- in such manner as he may direct.
"The said petition aud the matters therein , ou the foreclosure of mortgages : /’roridrd. No Prvridrd, That when Ly the provisions of the
mont
or THZ HOLZ *&gt;r I-lXt*3. jLSD mXVETsXCK stated (and the objections tiled to certain taxes sale shall be set aside for inadequacy ot price,
THxxxor.
Sxo. 40. In case the Township Treasurer shall
therein claimed, if any such objections arc except upun payment of amount bid upon such
neglect or refuse to file his bond with the
Bxc. 52. Any lands, upon which tvxcs shall filed), came on to be heard, and proof of the sale with interests and costa : And prvri‘lrd fur- such addition shall be made thereto as shall illegal only for one of tbe following reasons :
Firat, That no law authorizes such a tax.
Tl... .... -_l„
I__ _ • ...J. make
__ __ the collection fee four per cunt.
County Treasurer, m the mituur and within remain unpaid for more than one vear from due publication of notice of hearing of such
the first day of July next after their 'return to petition having been made anil filed ; and after
to decide whether a tax shall be raised under a
Board shall fail to appoint a Treasurer wuo the Auditor General as delinquent therefor, hearing all parties interested therein: It is
given law have acted without Jurisdiction, or
■ball give such bond and deliver a receipt for shall lx- subject to sale in the manner Lcrtvn- ordered, adjudged and decreed that tho amount
■nd
in
the
return
uf
delinquent
taxes
to
the
the owner of such land*
tbe oamo to tho Bupcmsor by the tenth day of aftes mentioned.
County Treasurer, except ices cyilected by have not imposed tho tax in question.
of taxes, miertwt and charges set down iu the
Third, That the person or property assnased
December, tho {Supervisor ahall deliver tbe tax
Township 1'reasurcrs on their tax rolls, shall
8xc. 53. As socu as practicable after the first column hcadc-d, •Amount decreed against
roll with a warrant directed to the Sheriff of day of July Jn each year, tbe Auditor General lands.' in the taxresord of wnich such petition
be paid by toe township. All compensation of was exempt from taxation in question, or was
shall prepare and file in the office of the County forms a part, are valiA, and decree is made in xpou such term- as may bo just: Procidril, county officers and expense incurred by them
Fourth, That tbe tax has been paid.
tax roll, execute aud debver like bonds required Clerk of each connty tn which lands are to t»o favor of tbe State of Michigan therefor again.it iuo, That no sale shall be set aside after lhe under tho provisions of this act shall be paid
Fifth, That tho Supervisor or Board of Re­
of the Townahip Treasurer, aud make like col
by tho county, and tbe compensation ol all
■old under the provisions .of this act. a petition each parcel ot said land tot the amount set
lections and returns, and shall be entitled to ■ddroeood to the Circuit Court for said county down iu said column opposite to such parcel
State officers and expenses bv them incurred or view, in asoesring a person or property for tax­
ation,
or in tho apportionment of the tax to
toe
same
compensation
allowed
to
tho
Township
paid
shall
be
paid
by
the
Btate,
expetiseH
made
It
is
further
ordered,
adjudged
and
decreed
,If a sale is act aside, lhe County Treasurer
in chancery, stating therein, by apt reference
m----- - --_&gt;i
__________
the |M'DK&gt;n or property in question, acted fraud­
to lute or scheduli-s annexed thereto, a descrip­ that said sevural parcels of land, or ■uch shall refund to tho purchaser the'amount of by the Btate officers shall be audited by the ulently.
Auditor
General and paid out of the genera!
as
may
be
ntxrs- hut bid with interest at seven per cent.
-—
—tion of all lands in nuch county upon wh eh interewl therein
to
satisfr
the
amount
herein
If any such illegality, omission, or fraud af­
Bxc. 65. As noon as sales are confirmed, tlie I tuP~
taxes have remained unpaid for mom than one sary
ers conferred upon tho Townahip Treasurer, year from the first day of July after their re­ decried against the same, shall bo severally County Treasurer dial! make full reports of
Hk‘'
fects the amount of the tax only, tho tax shall
and suit may bo brought, un such Sheriff s turn to tho Auditor General, and the total ■o.d as ff&gt;i&gt; Uw directs. It fa further adjudged lhe same to the Auditor General, giving a de­ the default of auy townahip officer iu the dis­ bo Kustainod so far a« the name fa just and
bond, under tho same circumittaiiciM as on amount of snch taxes witu interest computed ami decreed that the several special orders made scription uf the properly sold, the amounts fur charge of any duty imposed by thu act, shall legal.
thereon to the tune fixed for the sale thereof by this court, and cuterod ou such tax record, which the same was rold, and tho uames of the tie chargeable to nuch towndilp. All losse* by
Bzc. 86. In the prosecution or defense of anv
Sxc. 41. In com lhe Township treasurer shall extended separately against • ach parcel of land, arc made a part hereof, with the same effect aa purchasers, and thereupon the Auditor General default of any county officer shall be charge­
not collect lhe full amount of taxes required and he shall include with and add to such to- if enured herein.'' If cuffs are adjudged shall rxicute deeds to the purchasers, iu such able to such county, and al! looses by default of action or proceeding by any person bolding or
claiming land uhder.auy deed or deeds of lands
by bis warrant to be paid into the township
any
Blate
officer
shall
be
chargeable
to
the
Btate.
form as alull bu determined by him. No subtreasury, such portion thereof as be shall col­ the cos: of advertising and other expenses oi
MUCKixaxxura l-UnVlSlONH.
lect shall bo retained by bun, and paid out for •ole. Buch petition ■hall pray a decree in favor awarded. Tbe decree shall be sig**! by the edgmi nt ahall be ncocesxry to any.such deed,
Bsc. 76. The Commudoncr of tbe Btate
the following purposes aud m the following of tho Slate c' Michigan agaui.it said land tor Judge and oounternignod by lhe Clerk.
and it shall be entitled to record in tbe office of Land Office shall, during tbe month of March
ardor, viz:
.
bzc. 59. Immediately after the entry of such tbu Itegiitcr of Deeds of tbe proper county in tn each year, furnish to the several County
the jiayinent ot the several amounts so specified
Firtl, The amount raised for school purposes, therein, and in default thereof that such lands decree, tho County Cfarx shall make a certified the same manner and with hki- effect as other Treasurer* a list of all part-paid State lands, more
to
iwid nn thn nrvtar nV IKbe ■old. It shall be signed by the Auditor copy thereof, aud annex thu same to the tax deeds duly witnessed, acknowledged and cer­ aud also of alt lictnied botnestead lands of such purchases as aforesaid, which he may
General and nocd not If otherwise verified, and rtxord. He shall thereupon deliver such tax tified. Buch deeds »nall convey an absolute
st any tune have received, and may claim tltte
record to the County Treasurer, in wbo.-u- office title to the laud sold, and be concfuxive evidence and over, and upon which patents have not under any or all of them.
ahall be deemed equivalent to a bill in chau
.
township purposes, to be paid on the order of
cue «amo shall remain excejit as needed in tho of title in fee in the grantee, subject, however,
Bac. 87. Il shall be the dutv of the Prose­
the Tufrnship Board :
office of the County Clerk.
to all taxes aaMwaed and levied on such lands
cuting Attorney of each county to give bin
Third, Tbe amount of tbe highway taxes, to
counties
respectively,
and
such
Ires
surers
8xo. CO. If from any cause the hearing on •ubsc.|ucnt to the taxes fur which tbe aamc was
cutmae. and advice to the County Trca-urre.
■aid petition is UJt bad ou the day fixed in lhe bid off, and tho deed shall so state. Tbe court ■ball, on or before the 10th day of April next tho Townahip Treasurers, and the Supervisor*
name of tho State and thus held, shall not be notico theiofor, the same shall stand continued may, on application, put the purdiaaer in pos­ thereafter, cause to be delivered to the Super­ of the coanly, whenever they or anv of them
visor uf each township affectod thereby an ac­
included in such petition.
from day to day during thu term without tbe session of the promises by writs of assistance.
Bsc. 54. Tbe petition shall be a subrtantial entry of any order of continuance, until dis­
Bar. 66. All lands that may hereafter be bid curate description of all snch lands in his
towm&gt;hi|&gt;, with tho nrmtw of tbe persons lioldrecord book, witn the lists of lands and taxes posed of. and if it shall for any reason bu found
ship Treasurer, specifying a. the tune, in srrit- annexed following th. same therein. Much nnpracticable to hear aud dittermiue tbe obrecord shall bo ruled with appropriate columns, Jecuoustoall of thu taxca specified in such ■ate, shall bo again offered at snch annual kata.
Bar. 77. Every Counlv Treasurer shall, be- taxes, if thn purchaser or his aligns ahall die
ono containing a description of the lands, with petition witlun the time herein fixed for that Tha Auditor Gum ral ahall' furnish to each fore entering upon thn dulms of his office, ex­ before a deed shall be executodon such sale,
purpoHi-, then aud in that caae the court shall, County Treasurer a statement of all such land* i cento to tho Auditor General a bond, in such the deed may be executed by the Auditor Genwithin the lime herein named, make a final de- in bis county. Buch statement shall exhibit the t sum u tho Auditor General shall direct, with ersl, to and In the name of thu deocased per­
son, if such decuoMxl perron b&lt; log still almwith headlug,
been filed, and al*o tuoso to whicu objections
would bo entitled to a deed ; which deed shall
month from tor time the I County Clerk of the 'prop,-r sonnty, or auy two vret the title iu the 'leirs or devisees of •uch
hart: been filed, which the court has then beard
i roe dav fixed for U&gt;*. &gt;■&gt;. of them and the Auditor General, conditioned deceased perron, in the same manner liable to
and pasted upon. Such decree shall bo signed
•on owning an undivided share, er other part
that
such
Treasurer,
Lis
deputy,
and
ail
per
­
and recorded as hereinbefore provided, lhe
like cl«jm» of creditors and other persons as if
or parcel, of real property
hpecial ordon;
auoth
court ahall proceed with the coaMdcration of be offered. The Auditor General shall cause sons employed in fata office, shall render a just
b parcel sold
anoihoi
and true account of all moneys received bv person immediately previous to his death, or
the remaining taxoi embraced in inch jxrtitioo.
paying an amount ha'
of purchaser;" anotbar, ‘'Addn-s
him or them belonging, to the State, and that the executor or admiuirtratur may asrigu the
and objection* thereto, and an soon as tnacUca*k. ..... I—
_ __________
to the whole tax as the
he or they shall faithfully and promptly pay to
chaser ;" another, “ Number of certificate ;" Kl.
a:.o her, ■■Itemaiks." The Auditor General
the Btate Treasurer all snch moutrys rcct-ivwi as
may add such other columns a» he may find
aforreaid according to taw. which bond shall be have heretofore occurred, the same rule shall
aocossary, Tho word petition shall be con­
filed in the office of the Auditor General.
strued to include thu Ifata aan- xed thereto. describe tlie lands aud specify the total amount
Whenever tho Auditor General shall deem
Baid record •hall be called tax record. Parts of
shall not describe the lands or state the amount
daroriptious of lands upon which taxes are thereof. Tbe County Ctesk ahall inmxsUtely
thereto shall have Idee
paid beforeaalo Or which are withtald horn sale, thereafter deliver to tbe County Treasurer a
Bar. 67. At the time designated iu tbe notice, approved as aforesaid,
toe timonut paid on taxes liefon* sale, the oertallud copy of such decree, to’ be kept aud aucti County Treasurer shall offer the lands
Brc. 89 Tbe Cownty Treasurer shall at tlie
amount ot taxes, iutcrest, and ■:barges decreed used x« bereiubeforu provided. Such copy of cmbraexd in such Htatcment for sale to the -*■*-* ■
-------------- —----- . ” --- *'04*“**** same limn when be makes his return of deimdecree shall be annexed to Um» tax record and highest bidder; but no bid ahall bo accepted shall not cxs-nte such bond within ten days qnent lands to the Atdttor General msku a
..._ 11____ ____
V__ &gt;
- If
shall thereby become a part thereof. If irom
days previous

purchase money.
thereby

provided.

.

f ^q,y foUowtt« MUrh

to the btate Trea-urer tho taxes a*.

per ecru liw rscii iuuuiu
pan ui a m
1 Leeds shall be executed by tbe Auditor

�wnprcwacauitaan worth. «od shall have ■ h'-n
wares* lauds tbwwtiw. and may enforce tbu
some by tall in equity wbsrr no other pruvi*Mm

s&lt;m*,&gt; *Wrcvad Msy 1c, 1M1.
BectioxL Thepeopieof the Sta^afMicNjan mart. That section three of act So. one
undred and tiftr-nino of the sa*Mou taw* of
igbtorn buDdr no and righty-one, untitled. “ An
cl to amend sections three, six, ssven and tan
f cliaplcr fifty-three, being oosopilcr's sections
ne tbuuund nine hundred and alxty-two,
du thousand utoe hundred and sixty-five,
no thousand nine hundred and sixty-ssx aud

ftac. VX tn ’ereo uf tbe orgaffixation of a
new county after tbe Bum fur oahtig the a*.aMMSMmi roll, and poor to tbe rmurn of the
Township Treasurer, such :»w organization
ahall in do way affect the assessment, collec­
tion or return of taxes for that year, or any
laud* attaebud to tbe new couuty. No division
of a town-hip after tbu time lor making tbe
sMs—nr-* roll, and prior to the return of the
Township Trrerater. snail in any way affect
thu aaw-smeati coUectim. snd reuirn of such
mass: but such taxes ahall be assoeeed, col*
Isatadaad retans made m though there had

main bniidiug, or a portion of tbu main build­
ing, for said institution.
Skc. 4. The sixm appropriated by section oez
of this act shall be placed to tbe credit of the
Iteform School, and paid upon the order of the
Board of Oeatrol, in thu manner provided by

to the Township Ck-rk of each township five
copies, to be distributed by hfaji to the officer*
entitled thcruto.
This act is ordered to take immediate effect
Approved March 14, 1882.

in*, is.)
&gt; ite (aoo'that it is a scc_ ____ _&gt;e executed to tho same
__ the first and *ba)l recite the loss
or dealroction of tbe farmer deed and its date
if poariule. Buch deed ahall inure to the bene­
fit of tho grantee iu tbe first deed, bis heir* or
asrigus, as the case may lx-, and shall have the
same forco and effect as said first deed, be­
fore the execution of such deed tbe party ap­
plying tnerefor shall pay to tho Btate Treasurer
the sum of fifty cents.
Sec. 94. Tbe taxes on any lands returned a*
delinquent may lie pa'ri te tbe County Trca~vrw at anytime prior to tho day of sale, or to
the State Treasurer at auy time before tho t»otition for sate thereof ahall be sent to tho

such petition u filed with tbe Register payment
at part of the texes therein specified shall not
stay.proceedings thereon to enforce payment of
such taxes aa arc not paid. After decree and
before sale, tbe total amount as fixed by such
decree may be paid, but a teas sum shall not be
Bec. 95. This act shall bo applicable to all
cities and villages where not inconsistent with
th«dr respective charters. With such exception
tbe provisions herein as te Supervisors, Town­
ship Trea.vin.TH, and Boards of Review ahall ioboards whose duty it is io review any assess
ment roll. The word townahip may include
dty, ward or village. When, t&gt;y the charter of
any city or .village, delinquent taxes or assess­
ments ar.’ returned with other taxtw
to the County
Trosaurer, snch city
— -m— -ujjj no€
entitled to
or credit for the some
--------------------- - has been received, notwith­
standing anything in their respective charter*
to tbe contrary : Prondtd, That tn any incor­
porated city, the charter of which does not
provide for a Board of Review, such board
ahall consist of the several Supervisor* or other
officer* makimt the assessment, tbe City Attor­
ney, and additional member* to be appointed
by the Common Council (who snail not be
Aldermen), equaling the number of Buperviaon
or asaessing officer*. The Mwrion of said Board
of Review shall be held at tbe Council-room on
Um- same days aa designated for the meeting of
the Tuwnxhip Board of .Review, and the pro­
ceeding* thereof conducted as war ej may be
m the same manner. Naid board shall elect u
Oiairman and Clerk, who shall certi/v to the
correctne** of the aeveraJ assessment rolls when
completed, substantially ta the form prescribed
m section nineteen of the act. The appointed
member* of said Board of Renew shall take the
constitutional oath of office, which ahall bo
filed tn iRe office of tho City Recorder or Clerk.
Brc. 96. The authorities of any dty or vil­
lage, tho charter of which does not so provide,
may provide by ordinance for the return of all
unpaid taxes un real propertv to the County
Treasurer iu thu same manner and with like
effect as returua bv Townahip Treasurers.
The taxes thus ret-nied shall do coRctedin

Sec. 97. Tbe authorities of any city cr vil­
lage winch, by it* charter, han tho nght to aril
taixl* for unpaid taxes or n'ejymcuU may
provide for indicia] sale ot *wh tends. 8octi
■ale shall bo made on petition« tiled in behalf of
the city or ullage id interest. and ahall conform,
as Dear aa practicunlc, to tbe provision* a* to
■ale in thia act.
8k. 98. When an officer i* authorized to do
any act. hia deputy shall bare the same author­
ity, and such officer ahall lx: responsible for the

acts of biadepo'y.

AN ACT to amend sertkxx* four, five, and eight, of

Bktion 1. The people of the Stair of Michr
gan enact, That sections four, five, aud eight
of chapter two, Bi-cUotui four and seven of
chapter three, section three of chapter four,
aections five and thirteen of chapter eleven,
aud that there be added a new section to chap­
ter twelve to stand as auction fourteen thereof,
of Act Na two hundred and forty-throe of thu
session laws of ono thousand eight hundred
and cighty-ona entitled “Au act to revise and
consolidate tho law* relating to th«&gt; establish­
ment, c[M.-niug, improvement, aud maintenance
of highway* and private road*, aud the build­
ing. repairing, and prewrvatiou of bridge*
wtteln this btate "—appioved June eight, one
thouson'l eight hundred and eighty-one—be
and the same arc hereby severally amended so
aa to read as follows:____
CHAPTER IL
Brc. 4. In case the elecion present st auy
[MK It.)
annual township mooting shall neglect or ref un­
to vote any rate of highway labor to be m- AN ACT to rej«-al wctlon No. I13H ol tbe CoiuplJwt
Laa* of 1*71, being au act approved March 'JI,
■eesed, as by the first subdiviaon of the last
1MB,
enUOd
“
An
act to provide for aaaeralug
preceding section provided, tbe Comnwu oner,
property ta certain c**ea at auy time between the
tn making his aaMsamcnL may assess not ex­
lint day* of May and Ck-tolwr In each year, and for
ceeding out-half day's labor upon each one
the more »peedy cx»U&lt;«Uoii of taxni in certain
hundred dollar* of valuation ; and in case such
___ _
___ ______ __ ______
8ec.
elrotor* ahall neglect or refuse to vote a money
of 1871. being an act »pprwod Ajwili, IMS, rn- '
tax. as by the second subdivision of tho pre­
utted “Ar art to provide lor the jtsyment of taxes
ceding Metlon provided, tho Township Buaid
levied and sssesi rd upon taed* purchased and bold j
far uon-yaymsot of taxa*;" and act Na ifl?
the |
may ordor^to bo luvwd such sum, within the
Neaslau 1 a«a a' is.J, approved April 25. 1*73, eu- I
limit herein above provided, as they may deem
necuaaary, for the imiirovement of roads and
■tosd'tawa of the Unltou Htalm to pay taxes after ■
bridges ; and a certified copy of.tlie record of
realdi-boo of OveyoarH;" and act No. ISO of the
the proceeding* of tho township meeting,
tawi of 1*73, spprovnd April 2U, 1*73, raUtled “ An »ct rotative to licensed hoBMWtrid tends,
Township Board and Highway Commiariooer
aud to provide for taxing tbe same tn certain
reapccting tbe aasewaxxseut of such highwav
cssss ;** aud act No. 37 of tbe Kcaslon Laws of 1874,
labor and highway tax shall be delivered by the
approved March 22, IKJJI, entithxl “ An set rotative
Townahip Clerk to tbeSupervisor of hia town­
to the pa&gt;ment of taxes;" and act No. 118 of the
ship, on or before the first day of Oc­
Session Laws of 1874, approved April 18, 1873, entober iu each year. The amount of such
tiUrd - An act retailte to granUng injunction* iu
labor, ewUmaUng tbu same at tbu rate of one
ocrtxln r»sr*aud art No. 6 of the Kssalou Law*
of
1874, approved March M. 1874, enUtJnl “An act
dollar for each day. and also the other high­
relative to taxationand acctlun No. 1136 of “w
way taxes shall be levied and assessed by toe
CoSnpiM Law* of 1*71 aa tunemk-d br act No. KI
Bujxirviaor upon the township asaceamont roll
■
&gt;f
ti-e HeMloa I-»w. of HT.\ entitled “ Aa act U»
for thu current year, anti shall be collected m
provide for the return aud a-tUetucut of Ux salea
thu aamu manner as moneys appropriated for
•il County Treasurer*and arctiona Na SM7 to
general townahip p.uvo*KM, The taxes so lev­
Na X133, both inclmlve, of the Complied Lew* of
ied shall be carried out in tbe aaieaament roi'
1K71, the same being act No. 1® of tbe Heaalon
lawn of IMS), approved April 6, 1H6B. rnUUed “An
act U&gt; provide lor a uniform
inn ent of proper-

iist* for each district shall be
filed
by such Clerk in his office, and toe
other shall be forthwith delivered by the CommiMdoiwr to ths overseer of highways ot thu
proper district, with hi* warrant a* (Commis­
sioner annexed-thereto, eomutanding the over­
seer of highways to warn tho persons therein
■ Messed to work on the highways, and to mak&gt;return of his doings in the premises to such
Commisstoner as the tew directa. No omission
to enter or umm property for bi’hwav tabor
upon such lists, or other error or defect tn such
list or in the warranto attached thereto, shall
in any way affect nr invalidate toe asmsament
of property tn the township aasMament roll

Bjcc. 99. Supervisors shall be allowed, for
their services in assessing property, making tax
rolls and for extending taxes thereon. at the
rate of two dollars for each day actual iv and
necessarily spent in making tbe sama tbe
member* of toe Board of Review thall be paid
at the same rate per day tor each day actually
aud necessarily spent tn the attendance) utxm
tho board, the accounts for such services shall
be verified, audited, and paid as other town­
CHAPTER HL
ship 'expense*. County officers shall bu paid
Sac. 4. Every person liable to work on toe
for services under tens' act bv salary or other­
wise a* tho Board of 8upirvL-&gt;ors atiall deter­ liiguwsya shall work tbe whole numta-r of days
foi
-*-hich
he
ahall
have been as*esa«d unloes ,
mine.: Provided, Tuat tbe city of Detroit shall
be exempted from tbe provisions of tbe last be shall elret to commute for the same or some
clatiMi ot this section, aud the Common Conn­ part thereof, and shall, within the time in
ed shall have power to fix and determine the which be i« required to appear aud work, par
tbe cimmutaiion money, at toe rate of one
dollar for each day assessed, to the overseer of
tbe district m which too tabor is required to
be performed, and tho commutation shall uot
be cotidderedMoaEajdete until —tfattcoey be
paid. Tbe overseer Khali give to evety pei*on
performing highway tabor assessed upon real
amount paid far socii service* shall not exceed or pcrHOual property described upon hi* lut, or
commuting ttwsufar, a receipt signed by him.
ti.fi sum of ous thousand dollar* per annum.
Bk. KM). Tbe Township Treseurer, with the
eoMuol of the Township Board, may appoint a
deputy, who shall pw*wss all the powers sod
may perform all tbe duties of the Treasurer.
Bach Township Treasurer and hi*, bondsmen
shall be Itebte far thu acts and defaults of snob
Deputy Treasurer. Hucn deputy siudl It |*dd
8k. 1DL If at any time it shall be discovered

that tbsTrci«nsr of any township has reeeivod
tbe tex a sasses ri upon property which be ba*
returned dsiinqnent, tbe Bopsrvisor shall hare
power, and he m hereby required, to collect Un­
same. m tbe name of his township, from such

subdiVirion of sstd section with the Townahip
Clorit, and al tho same time he ehall dc[&gt;otit
wuh such Clerk tho anginal liatand warrant reenved from thu Commiunaner. Srid Clerk
shall file und keep the some in bin office.
Sec. 13. Every such overseer shall, immedi­
ately upon the rendering of «uch account, pay
over te the Township Treasurer al] moneys ooltected by him for judgments and commutations
r.nd remaining unexpended in his hands. But
no error or emission of duty on the part of the
overseer of highways ahall invalidate tbe high­
way tex aMhMsed by the Bupcrvisor on lhe
township awnasment roll.
CHAPTER XIL
8k. 14. Tbe Township Treasurer and other
officers authorized to reooive-psyment for texes
assessed in any township, shall accept tho re­
ceipt of the overseer of highwavx given for
labor or commutation money, and credit tho
same ou account of highway taxoa assessed
during the year in which the labor was per­
formed or commutation padd against the prop­
erty therein daseribod an cash, estimating - the
labor at the rate of one dollar per day. Such
Township Treasurer or other officer ahall
give receipt therefor and mark tlie same |&gt;aid
upon hia tax roll or delinquent tax bat, kb in
the raise ot the payment of taxes in money,
lhe receipt so received by the Township Treas­
urer of other officer shall bo credited and al­
lowed to him as money ; bu*. thu officer to whom
such highway tax is so paid shall receive bo
fee or percentage thereon.
This act it ordered to take immediate effect.
Approved March 14,1882.

Hection 1. The people of the Sl-lc of Mich­
igan enact, That section Jia eleven hundred
and thirty-eight of the Compiled Laws of
eighteen hundred and seventy-one, being an
act approved March twenty-first, eighteen nnndred and sixty-five, entitled, “ An ad to pro­
vide for aasewmug jroporty in certain cases at
any time between the first days of May and
October in each year, and for the more t'poedy
collection of taxes in certain cases ; ’’ also, sec­
tion eleven hundred and forty-one of tho Com­
pil'd Laws of eighteen hundred am* seventyone, bvin^pu ad approved April fifth, eighteen
hundred and sixty-nme, entitled, ** An act to
provide for the payment of taxes levied and
assested upon lauds purchased and hold for
non-payment of taxes ; ” also, act Na one hun­
dred and sixty-nine of the srsudou laws of
eighteen hundred and seventy-three. approved
April twenty-fifth, eighteen hundred and

Sec, 5. The Auditor General shall incorpo­
rate in, and add to, tbe Statu tax for the year
one thousand eight hundred aud eighty-two the
amount appropriated by auction one of this act,
which amooni, when collected, shall be placed
to the credit of the general fund, to rehnburee
said fund for the amount hereby appropriated
thurefrom.
This act is ordered to take .'mmediatc effect.
Approved March 14, 1882.
•

(Mw. 13.]

■tlou* In ibr 8taU&gt; of Michigan, for tbe purpose of

Sicnosr L The people of the State of Michi­
gan itiarf, Ttiat any five or more persoim donrous to organize an association for the pur­
pose ot preserving and protecting bodies of de­
ceased por»oti» before burial, m«y execute un­
der their'hands and acknowledge before some
person authorized to take the acknowledgment
of deeds, toe duplicate articles of agreement, aa
herc.mafter specified, one copy whereof ahall
filed and recorded in too office of tho Secre­
tary of Btate, and one copy whereof shall be
filed in the Clerk's ofli.-c of the county where
said association is located, and upon the execu­
tion aud ack nowleg ment of such aruclea and
the filing thereof, the signer* thereof, and thoie
who may hereafter ijucomo associated with
them, shall become a Ixxiy politic and corporate
for the purpose set forth in said article*.
Bec. 2. The articles of association shall «entain:
Firet, Tho full names of too jiersous as­
sociating in the first instance, aud toe place of
rerideuce of such per»ot».
Second, The name of such corporation and
the place where its office for toe transaction of
bus•ucsa is located, and toe period for which it
is incorporated, not exceeding thirty years.
Third, Tbe object foe which it la organized.
Fourth, Tbe number aud Hames of its
trustee*, if auy, and regular officer*, and the
time and place- of holding its annual meeting.
Fifth, Tho terms and condition* of member­
ship liicruin.
Sirth, Amount of capital stock, number of
■hares, by whom taken, value of such shares
and amount paid in on each share.
8. Baid association may purchase or
take by devise or gift, bold and convey, real
estate not exceeding three acres of land, and
may erect thoron a vault and such other suitatie buildings nocesaary to carry out too objects
of
,tv,n

8ec. 33. it shall be competent for any rail­
road company organized under the laws of this
Stale in the vicinity of any city or village
for suburban buonuss to eunsolidate its stock,
Sand effects with any company orundcr this act, upon such terms aa may
toy agreed upon by tbe unanimous con•ent of all stockholders of both companies, and
such consolidated companies shall be liable for
all lhe obligations and entitled to all the
privileges of either company. And it shall bo
competent and lawful for any oompanv organ­
ized under this act to aid such sut&gt;urban rail­
road company to construct its railroad either
by taking stock therein or guaranteeing its
bonds, or in anv other form which lhe two
companies may agree upon and to secure such
loans of credit or money or other advance of
means, and mav enter into agreement to work
ami operate such suburban railroads, cr take a
lease of tbe same upon such terms as may be
mutually agn-d upon, and any such contract
for connoli-latiun, lea»e or other form of secu­
rity made between the said . companies, when
filed with thu Bocretary of Btate for record,
shall be prima facie evidence of such con»olidution, lease or contract, and of all the state­
ment* therein contained.
Ordered to take immediate effect.
Approved March 14, 1882.
[SfeTh-J

Btate* to pay taxes after a residence of five
yean;" and act No. one hundred and righty of AN ACT to amvud section eighteen cd au art entitled
•• An act for the imxirjiorallon of manufacturing
the sessioa laws of eighteen hundred and
seventy-three, approved April twenty-omth,
eighteen hundred anil sevcuti three, entitled.
“Au act relative to uceiued bomesti-td lauds
and to provide for taxing tho aam» m certain
csbm ; '* and act Na thirty-seven of the session
taw* of eighteen hundred sod seventy-three,
approved March twenty-second, eighteen hun­
dred and sevwuty-three, entitlud/'An act rela­
tive to the payment of taxes," and act Na one
Sac. IB. Every such corporation may amend
hundred and eighteen of tbe session taws of its articles of association by thu adoption of a
eighteen hundred and seventy-three, approved now name for meh corporation, or by tbe
April eighteenth, eighteen hundred and seven­ specification of any other lawful bmuneui by it
ty-three, entitled “An art relative to granting to l«e carried t n, by the vote of not Jc*n than
injunctions in certain caws;" also set Na six two-thirds in interest of all Its stockholder*;
of tho sewion laws of eighteen hundred snd but before it shall commence any business un­
seventy-four, approved March twenty-fourth. der it* amended articles, other than such aa
was distinctly and definitely specified in its
original aniciiw, the said corporation shall
cause auy such amendment or amendments,
subscribed by at leant two-totrds in interest of
all its stockholders and eert bed by its Pres­
ident, to be recorded in lhe same manner as is
provided for in original articles of incorpora­
provide for tbe return and settlement of tax tion, and whun so re corded such amendments
sole* of Connty Treasurers;" also sections No. shall become a pert of the articles of incorpo­
nine hundred and wxiy-M- veo to on&lt; thousand ration of such company.
one hundred aud thirty-three, both inclitaivc,
Ordered to take immediate effect.
of to»‘ Compiled Laws of eighteen hundred aud
Approved March 14, 188X
►eventy-oue, the *ame being act Na one hun­
dred and Rixty-nino of toe session laws of
[«•. 1«.J
eighteen hundred and s.xty-nine, approved
April st*, esgbteen hundred and sixty-nine, en­
titled “ An act to provxfe for a uniform aasees-

vuled by law, and for the protection at all
rights gained thereunder; aud oouveyance of
land heretofore sold or that may hereafter bo
sold, and all actics* oioHMMed and now pend-

of ■ Jackson, Calhoun. Branch. Bony
approved May twentieth, eighteen hundred and counties
and Eaton. .
eighty-one, bo and the same is hereby amended
Fourth, Tbe Fourth District shall consist of
tbe coumtes of Bsrrtaa, Cana. ftt. Jcsspb, Kal­
of such sureties amazoo and Van Burma
being found tbe Justice shall make up, sign
fifth, Tbe Fifth Divtriet shall consist off tbe
and filo in the County Clerk's office a record cd counties bf Allegan. Kent, Ottawa and lama.
conviction of. such offender as a disorderly per­
Sirih, the Sixth District shall consist of Use
son, specifying gem-rally the nature and ctr- counties of Clinton, Ingham. Izviugstoa, Go»enmstanres .of tbs offense, and shall by warrant &lt; ■ r.ud (MmB&amp;
under his hand commit such offender te the
common jail of tho county or te thu State House the counties of Macomb, St Clair, Lapeer,
of Correcdou and Reformatory at louia. or to Banilac and Huron.
Abe Detroit House of Oomctioa at Detroit,
fighl^ Tbe Eighth Dtetrict ahall consist of
there to remain until such sureties bu found or toe counties of Bniawasaee, Bagimiw. Gratiot,
such offender be discharged according to law: Montcalm. Isabella aud Midland.
Provided, That no person so convicted shall
Ninth, The Ninth District shall ecnsist ot
IM MOfakMfl or
to Uiv 1&gt;« truit Pou--.- tbe counties of Muskegon, Ocesna, Newaygo,
of Correction unless the Board of Supervisors
of tho county where such conviction Is had
shall have made an agrocm -mt with tbe Com­
mon Council OT the city of Detroit, or its
anthorized agent or officer, to receive and keep
in Baid House of Correction any person or per­
sons who may be so sentenced or committed:
Prxrcided further. No female person shall be
nenteaoed to be confined at said Blate House of
Correction and Buf ormatory at Ionia.
.
Approved March 14.1882.
(
bo m to read aa follows:
(19C1 8k. X In default

[Mw. 1S.J

V-.
Ontonagoa
Approved March 14, 188X

laws providing for tbe incorporation of railroad
companies, am! to regulate the running aud
management and to tlx the duties and liabilities
of all railroad and other enrjoratious owning
or operating auy railroad in this Btate,''ap­
proved May first, eighteen hundred and sev­
enty-three, be amended so aa to read aa
follow*:
Bic. 17. Id esse anv railroad company is un­
able to agree for the purchase of anv real
estate, property, or franchise rvunired for the
purpose of ita incocporation, it shall have lhe
nght to acquire title to tbu same in the manner
aud by the special proceeding* preecribed in
this act, but there shall tx&gt; do power, except for
eroMsing, to take tbe track or nght of way of
any other railroad company, except when any
road-bed x.r part thereof has for five years re­
mained, or nhall hereafter for five years remain
tu an unfinished condition and without having
the tics and iron placed aud continued thereon,
np to the time meaaurca arc instituted to ap­
propriate thn same as hereinafter authorized,
auy other railroad corporation shall have the
right to acquire title to the name aud to the
real cutatu and casements held by such com­
pany fur u*c in counecti.m therewith, in the
manner preecribed for obtaining other property
or francmw* required for it* use, ana in such
case proceedings may be iiutilutud in a court
of record of any county wherein a part of such
road-lied sonzht to U acquired may be situate,
ami all of such road-bed and property afore*am
within thia Btate, or only a part thereof [at
the election of the applicant), may bo in­
cluded in one proceeding. Notice of the
application shall be given toe company or cor­
poration owning or claiming au interest in the
road-bed and property mentioned, when cre­
ated under the laws of this State, by serving a
copy of the petition and notice, licn-imift.r
mentioned, personally upon ite ITesidcut, any
Vice President, Bupcruxtcudcnt, Bocretary.
Treasurer, General Manager or General Coun­
sel, if either of them reside in this Btate, ten
days or more prior to the presentation of the
same to the court, but if they do not, their ser­
vice may be made by publication as required
by section eighteen of this act. except in snch
case a description of tho property, aa In thin
section provided, ahall be sufficient, and if such
company or corporation was not created under
toe taws of thia Btate it may be served by de­
livering such copy of too petition and notice
to either of said officer* personally at least
thirty days previous to presenting such petition
to the court, or by publication, as required m said
section eighteen, except it shall be sufficient to
describe toe property to be taken aa provided
in this section. It shall bo sufficient'in such
petition to describe tho property sought to be
appropriated as the hne is designated in the
articles of asaociatioii or articles amendatory
thereof, and by which it was established, and
further designating it as the road-bed and
property connected therewith pt thn company
or corporation then owning cr (.burning it,
whose title is sought to be acquired.
Ordered to take immediate effect
Approved March 14,1882.

2XJ
AN ACT to amend aa ad, No. two hundred aixl
■txty-eevsn, caUUrd “An ad to provide for tw»
addltlonal Circuit Judges for tbs Thud Judicial
Circuit," approved June 10, 1881.
The people of the Slate of Michigan '-wacf.
That an act entitled “ An act to provide- for two
addiUunal Circuit Judges tor the Third Judicial
Uircud," approved June 10, 1881, be amended

Bacnoai
That after the first day of Jan­
uary, A. D. 1882, there shall be two additional
Circuit Judges fur the Third Judicial Circuit
m niu. b tin.- city uf Deuut is muated. 'Xue
tuibu Judge* of said orcuit ..ball have equal,
and coordinate powers and duties, but wncsx
sitting togeteer, a concumncc of two mall tie
■uffioeat. One of said Judges shall couatitnte
a quorum for toe transaction of business, and
they sball have power by au order to be entered,
upon lhe court journal, in general terms »peo
ininp or ctass-Jying lhe bukiuess assigned, U.
apportion among tncmselves the buamewi to ts
ta-ii*acted, a* they may from Umo to time or­
der and direct. They shall, from term to term,
designate ono of their number to act as pre­
siding Judge of tho.court with power, unless
otherwise ordered by tbe court, to assign and
apportion the ba*iuc«s as aforreaid among said
Judge*. In case of the absence, UImm or inabtiity from other cause of such presiding
Judge to act, the oilier Judge* ahall designate
ly order, io be entered un toe journal, one of
their number to act aa prehi ding Judge until
tbe disability is removed.
Sec. X Vi benever auy cause, matter, or pnceeomg, or any motion, application or ouwr
business shall bo assigned to unu of said Judges,
* journal entry toereot shall be made by the
Clerk of the Court, and lhe said Judge shall
proceed to ix*r, try and dispose of tbe basinera
*o assigned to bun, with the saute force and.,
effect, a* if bo was lhe only Judge of *z.id cir­
cuit, and subject to, and with the power and
authority conferred by all toe rules uf practice
and of taw applicable to Circuit Court* having
only one Judge, and there upon said Judge may
proceed with toe tnal or hearing or other busi­
ness so assigned to him, in the princ ipal court­
room, or iu a separate room, attended by too
Cler k or one of his deputies, and by the tiuenff
or one ot hi* deputies, and by jurymen uot en­
gaged in tlie tnal of other causes, if it be *.
cause to be tnsd by a jury, and such Judge
while so sitting for toe transaction of
shall have all tbe powere of any Circuit Judge
sitting in any Circuit Court in this Btate, andtbe proceedings shall bo regarded as proceedHags of too Utrcuii Court had in open court,
aud at a session of the said Circuit Court. If
a sufficient number of jurymen shall Dot be id.
attendance upon the court, aud uot engaged wi
toe trial of other cause*, said Judge may direct

siguaturu uf tbe Jndgc of the court shall be
required to any bill of exoqitions, order, decree
or other evMleuce of any proceeding, or for tbeapproval or verification of any act, lhe signa­
ture of tbe Judge or Judge* be!ore whom the
proceedings were had nhall be diemed safuctent. No stay of proceedings shall be
directed or ordered by any of the Cixcuil
Judge*
in any cause or proceeding excoptinf;
(Nw. IB.]
AN ACT making »d&lt;Utlonri appropriation fur build When the order or decree under winch toe pro­
ceeding* are stayed shall have been made by
tag* st the Michigan Htatr Prtsorc
Buenos L The people of the Slate of Michi­ such Judge, untaM the order staying pioceedgan enact, That tbu sum of seventeen thou­ ings be entered to open- court, or with the
sand uulloni be appropriated from toe Statu concurrence of at least ono other Judge id s*kd.
treasury to be expended for improvements to court, aud uo order, excepting orders made *1
too Btate prison at Jackson, as follows: Thir­ chambers, and that only by tbe Judge making
teen thousand dollars additional to and for tho
purpose, and as provided by section two, of act
number t* o hundred and sixty-four of the ses­
sion law* ot eighteen hundred and eighty-one ;
four toouund dollar* additional to and for the
purpose, and as provided by section throe of
said act, number two hundred and sixty-four,
of thu acarion laws of eighti— u—‘
eighty-one.

Bxa 2. If toe lowest rw. . ...... .........
either of the build mgs named in said set should
etgUiy-two, or until thuir *ocbo for a 1cm amount than the sum appropriated
IroUd and qualified, aud at
far the same, then the balance of said appro­
id offices shall be regularly
priation may be used if Decennary, for tbe erec­
ek-ctxm. by the ttostosi
tion of the other building therein named, in
I in toe same mauuM
addition to tlie amount hart in specially appro­
---- - ----------------- in the office of Orcutt
priated for the same.
Judge are now filled under the existing laws.
Ordered to take unmodiato effect
Tbe sU nograpber uf toe court shall navu tee
Approved March 14, 1882.
pow&lt;r. subjuct to IM approval of toe court, so
employ one ur more awdstauti), a* shah in Umjudgment of the court be nfewaary, to a*d
Dim in th* discharge of hi* duties; the cttapsDsat.ou of said aMiatanta, who ahall dulymmlify
May 22, 1B77, axneuded i-y Mt No. IU) at the under Uftlh. iffioll be fixed by thn Hoard of A»FuLbc Arts cf 1879.
‘tM-ndM 1. The people of the State of Muhigan nuict, That •uction tae.ve ofwiactenUtisd ‘ An act to regulate and govern thu Btate
Home of Correction aud Retonnalorv al
lenia," approved May twenty-seven, eightreu
hundred and servenXy-«evea as amended tir act
No. oou hundred and ten of tbe public art* of

�n-pi*.
• That augurs well for the prosperity
of the salesman,” remarked tbe re­
porter. glancing at a bill nf farv whose
prices would not give any particular

property takra and pay
icnUtted thereto, acuordkspt by him for that pnrpwe. •
Fourth, The U.-and Cuunohr, the Grand

fund xu the treamrv of tbe etty ar village and
repay or refund the —m« from the
evidauce. tio help you God (or under thtrpaiDS benefit *—*ed and apportioned by Urn jury, cujning the Offictal JXXtKHJK above named iu
and penalties of jicrjury). The jury ahall hear if any, when culh-ctcd, or oUi«rwi»e s* said Grand Conned ; that Um resolution, a copy
the proof and allegation# of tbe parties aud tbe
arguments of oouiisel, and, if so entered by tbo
court, shall go to tbe place of the mtondod

in,o and. upon private property
raowd to ocrtwlroet a sowar, and
tv fur tmvg such private projicrty for a sower
««d to locate tbo same, and for any pucti en­
ter do action shall be maintainable. But tbe
Ooaamou Council or Board of TrwUx&gt;« before
H—tranting a sew- m private property shall

r provided by
conflict with

Approved March 15,188X

of JMmAbar one hundred'and ft

Registration of any township or ward, after
the year one thousand eight hundred andflfiy—1
44 -1 11 V— 41.— •_ —»*._ if.4

come to their knowledge thatanv person whose
name Ear been ic-gutered has died, or has re­
stored therefrom and ceased to reside therein,
they ahall place the letter "D " aganut the

removed. with tbe date of ■ the entry and the

'tberoafter such name'shall be considered and
-treated aa no l inger in the hat, and shall bo
&lt;xritted in tbe copes above provided for; but
If it shall happen that such cnb7 was
■ erroocowily made, end such pcnwti ahall there­
after appear at any ck-ct on and claim tbo right
terms : He shall, upon hia oath or sflhmaXioti,
which anv member of the Board of inspectoror the Board of Itogi-tretion may administer,
declare tii&amp;t bv has not removed from, but is
still a resident of tbe townahip or ward, and i«
a qualified elector and entitled to vote ; and on
txi rwiswreu in wo luauwr sieve ucacnucu,
cither by the Board of Registration or tho
Board of Inspectors; and if such applicant
nin 44 VMUJ —*4*44 *■" . I
bU—»&gt;ciotmly, and without credible information, the
member o' •*-- 1----- * —“— “
u'
—*
r"!... of
entitled

and the record of tho defendant's conviction
of tho cnrftinal offense, duly authenticated,
shall be
prima facie
evMleqoc
of
hia
liability :
Prmridrd, That at tho

Sat. 3. Upon receiving from tbo City or Vil­
lage Cfirk a copy of such reaolutions, certified
ordinary civil &lt;
under seal, it shall bo tho duty of snch Attor­
iting and be arij
ney to prepare and file, in tho name of tho cty
or village, in tho court having jurisdiction
■bill
del
ermine
in tbeir verthereof, a petition signed by him in his official
character, and duly verified by him or oy some
person havmg knowledge of the facts ; to which j&lt;o}M!rty for th® use or bsoefit
petition a certified com of the resolutions of
tbo Common Counol or Board of Trustees
[■ball bo annexed, which certified copy ahall be
ocwnpnn—lion therefor aa
prinui fane evidence of the action taken by the
Common Council or Board of Trustees, and of

in tho Ucasury aud
thn Common Council

move til
buildings,
obstructions therefrom.

propooed improvement or any part thereof, the
jury ahall sasc—and apportion tbe compensa­
tion to bo paid for tbe jitivale ‘ property taken,
art, to acquire the right to take private proper­ upon tbo taxable, lota and pareuls aud sub­
ty for the use or
benefit
of the divisions of real estate within tbe aa—ssmeul
tion*aforesaid is actually in tho IroMUiy. ready
Gbilc, without coo—nt of tbe owners, district (if
to be paid to tho#o entitled thereto, the Com­
r a pubic improvement, designating
mon Council or Board of Jnuteca, by the City
it, for a just compen—tion to bo made.
y bo, to the benefits they will receive, or orVdlagc Attorney, may apply to ilu&gt; court
A description of the!property proposed to be
and apportion in like manner the portion and shall bo entitled, on making a sufficient
taken shall be given, and generally the nature
or extent of tho use thereof that will be re­
possession of the property.
quired in malung and maintaining tbe improveSec. 17. Officer*, jurors and witneMo* in any
muit shall bo stated ; and also tho names of portioned, If auy such private projxirty shall
proceedings under this act shall lie entitled to
the owners and olhcra interested in the prop­
other
lion,
estate,
or
inti
rest,
they
shall
appor
­
receive from tbe city or village instituting tbo
erty, so far as can be a*certaincd, including
tion and award to the parties in interest such precluding*, the samo fees and compensation as
rxirtiou of the compensation as they shall deem are provided by law for similar services in an
ordinary action at law in tho Circuit Courts of
or Board of Tiustces has d&lt; dared said public lust.
Src. 9. To assist tbe jury in arriving at their this State.
improvement to be necessary, aud that thoy
Sec. 18. Tho practice and proooodings of the
deem it ncctwaary to take tbo private nropnriy verdict, the court may allow the jury, when
described in that behalf, for such improvc- they retire, to take with (hem the petition* Itecordur's Court of tbe city of Delroit under
uwnt, for tbo uac or benefit of the public. In died in iho ca»e and maps showing the pro­ this act, relating "to the summoning *nd ex­
posed
improvement.
»nd
tbo
assessment
dis
­
cusing
of such jurors aud talesmen and to im­
cities and villages where a special tax is to be
Ai-MMMd upon property benefited bv tlie im­ trict (if auy), and the Px-ation of each and all posing penalties on them lor uon-atlemteuce,
provement tbe |&gt;eUtM&gt;u shall give ths taxing tbo paioel* of property to be taken or asstsHed : •hall bu the same as tho practioe and proceed­
iliatrtct as fixed and dreenbed tn thu resolution and may also »ubmit to them a blank verdict, ings of said court relativu to petit jurors for
tho trial of criminal caaaa.
of the Common Council or Board of Trustees, winch may be as follow* ;
Src. ID. Ail tho expenres aud costs of
PART L
*ud-stata tho names of the own* rs or occupant*
Wo find that It 1»...................... nacwary to
tho proceedings to take and use private
of thu taxable property embraced therein. Tbe
petition shall a»k that a jury bo atimmom d take and use tho private property d«&gt;«cnb«d in propirty under thi* act, incurred by tuo
tho
petition
in
this
cause
for
the
public
u*e
(or
muuidpal.ty,
shall be raised by a gcuand impaneled to ascertain and determine
• ral tax, to be levied and collected in
whether It is necessary to take snch private benefit) as a (.............................. ).
such city or village according io tho provisions
'
’
PART IL
property, as it is proposed to take, for the use
of
its
charter
or
act of incorporation.
And the just compensation to be paid for snch
or hem til of tbo public, and to awcrtain and
Hac. 20. The cities and villages ol thia State,
determmo the just compenaation to bo madr private propertv we have ascertained and &lt;!•antiiunxed to take cr hold land property out­
therefor ; and if lhe Common Council or Board U-rm nod and hereby award aa follows:
side of their corporate limits for obtaining and
of Trustees Khali hare fixed a special district to
iH.-curiog a supply of water to tb&lt;&gt; municipaliiy
bo assessed for such compensation, and the lX*acripUoi&gt; vf Otreera, Oct»cb of the cupaat*.
or for any other pnbbc purpose, mav take । njury shall find that it Js necessary to take the
Severe! P*r- ■nd
vate property therefor, provided it is for the
Gorupen**To
whom
other*
l&gt;nvatc property for the um&lt; or benefit of the
&lt;■»•!• of Frl- Inlereetal
use or benefit of lhe public. . The proceedings
tfob.
Payable.
public, to a&gt;M—aud apportion upon the taxable
v «tr Proper­ Ln Each
in all such cases shall comply, as near as may
real estate within such district, according to tho
ty to be tak­ &gt;*aroaL
be, to the proceedings prescribed by this act,
benefit to be derived from tbo itnpcovemeu',
en.
but shall be instituted in tbo Circuit Court of
tuo amount of tho compenaation awarded by
* ■"
Iho connty, and the jury shall be composed of
tne jury, or such portion thereof a* tlie law
disinterested freeholders of the county, not re­
governing tbe case shall require; the petition
siding or owning prof'erty within thu corporate
may state any other pertinent matter or things,
limits of such ci.y or village, and shall bu imand may pray for any other or further relief, to
pineled as follows : Tbe Sheriff of the county
which tbo municipality may bo *-nfi(l»d, withm
tbe object of this act. '
And aaacM and apportion tbe cowpenaation ahall make a list of twnnty-fonr disinterested
freeholders of tbo several townships of said
'Bxc. 4. Upon receiving such petition it shall to bo paid for said private property upon tbo county, and the City Attorney and tbe respon­
taxable real estate witnin the areosament dis­
trict, described in tbe petition, in proportion to dents ahall each have the right to strike six
names
from said list, and the twelve persons
such petition, stating briefly tbe object of said the benefits anch property will receive by the left thereon shall compose the jury, and shall be
petition, aud commanding them in the name of improvement, as follows: .
rummonod to attend by a rrnirc tasned by the
tbe people of the State of Michigan to appear
Clerk of said court, and to bo served by said
before said court, at a time and place to b&lt;j
Sheriff. If the respondents refuse to strike six
nor more than forty day* from the date of the
same, and show cause, if any they bare, why
the prayer of said petition ahould not be

sununoned uhali not attend, or shall l&gt;o
excuMd for canse on a peremptory challenge
or otherwise, talMmen poucaaing tbe neccwtary qualification* ahall be aummoned by aaid
Sheriff.

■ in ths Bute, excepting iu the county of Wayne

Tcgistretion of qualified electors in townships
after the yesr eighteen hundred and flfty-nme.
After the making of*each of said new regmtra-

by tbo jury m actually in tho treasury to tbo
credit of tbo private property taken iu tlie cue,
giving tbo t.th&gt; ot the case; he shall cause ono
of theceruflcate* to
filed Hi the office- of tho
Clerk of tho court in which tbo proceedings
were had, and tbo other to be filed wtthtKe
City Clerk ; whichIU.
certlflcatcN
-------- . ahall
.&lt; .... I be prima
J

Sheriff, under Sheriff or Deputy Sheriff, of the
county, or some other person, at least five day*
before the return thereof, upon ail the respon­
dents found within the county, by exhibiting

thereof at bis

The different desenptiou* of property aud
the names of tbe occupants, owner* and others
interested therein, may be inserted in said blank
verdict (under tbe direction of the court), be­
fore it u submitted to tho jury.
Bsc. 10. The verdict of the jury may be
sot aside by th? court and a new tnal ordered,
in the same manner and on tbe same grounds
as in ordinary civil actions tn tbo Circuit
Courts of thi* Hist®; and amendments, either
in form or substance, of lb® petition, process,

proocedtngs under thia act after the rendition
d th® verdict of the jury, but they may direct
the City or Village Attorney to move for a Dow
tnal, or to arrttat tlie proceedings, or to take an

4 was kycally orgaulxed and
com.btr.tion duly approved
laws ot tbo State of Now York
Kxc. 1 When ail tbe foregoing requirements
ace complied with tbe Grand Council ot tbe
Royal Templars of Temperance Of tho State of
Michigan whall be a body corjxirate end politic

full powvr and authority to transact the buaiuesa of
said ~'t—ociatinn pursuant to
the edicts of tho Supremo Council of the
constitntion. law* and by-iawa legally adopted;
certified and filed in tbe office ot tbe Becnoary
of Stale, of tbi* aasoctation, and affidavit duly
certified by the Secretary of State, ahall be
prima facie evidence in ail the court a of this
Slate ol tbccxUtence and incorporation of «*k1
Grand Council of the Royal Templars of Tern
perancc.
Bzc. 3. Thu Gram! Council of the Royal
Templantof Temperance of tho Btate of Michi­
gan be and they are hereby authorized to
amend their artlclea of aasociation, oonstitntiiin, laws and by-lawa, at any regular inettiug
of tho Grand Council after it* iiuwqxjratiun,
aueb amendment* uot being inconsistent with tbe
constitution, law» and by-laws of the Supremo
Connell, which amended constitution, laws or
by-laws *bal! lie in force, afti r a dnlv attested
copy thereof with the dste of its adoption by
the Grand Council shall be filed in the office of
the Secretary of State, accompanied by a cer­
tificate of the Supreme Council, attested by
tbeBuprem’cBecreiJiry of the Bni*remo Coun­
cil, that Said, amended conatitution has been
approved by the Supreme Council as ita consti­
tution and lawa r« quire.
Sec. L Whenevi r auy Select Council ahall ta»
chartered by the Grand Council of the Rural
Temptan* of Temperance of Michigan, or ha*
heretofore been chartered by the Grand or Su­
preme C uncil, tbo said Select Council may be­
come incorporated by paa-ing a like n aotuliou
*• provided in aection one of thia act, executing
the articled of association under tlie hand* of
ita Select Councilor, Recording Secretary,
iruateea and seal of such Bekx l Council con­
taining like statements aa to its constitution,
laws and by-laws aa those requu-ol in the
artidea of association of the Grund Council of
tlie Royal Templar- of Temperance of Mich­
igan, with a like affidavit annexed, execut-d bj
the oflicw-ni named above in thia section, and
fifing tbe tame with tho County Clerk of the
county in which traen cori-jraUnu shall bo
farmikl, and causing the same with lhe
affidavit* annexed to be Hoarded by such Clerk
in a book to bo kept by him for that purpoe,
and a copy thereof certified by him shall have
tbe hum effect aa evidence, as provided for in

Bxc. 5. Every corpxiration formed pursuant to
this act may take and hold personal and real prop­
erty, so tar as may be necc—ary for lhe proper
purpout* of I ho organization, not exceeding fifty
tuonaand dollars in amount, and convey, di»| poee of, and deal with tbe same as it may un• der it* constitution, laws and by-laws from
time to time determine, by a majority vote of
tbe members present and voting then on.
Sac. 6. Tbe management, direction and
control of the property and buames* of such
corporation* shall be vested in such of its offi­
cers — tbe constitution and laws of tho Su­
preme or Grand Council may direct, but when
no special rule exists then as a majority of the
member* present and acting thereon shall from
time to time determine.
Approved March 15, 1882.

(Ne. L)
of like JJIJfT HKHOtiVTlOM to ratify tha actio® at the

- and filed with the Townahip Clerk, respectively,
and ahall net ic-mke opened except upon the
-erder of a court o Atom potent jmi* dicUon, the no guardian lhe court may appoint some dis­
Swamp Lands did on the twenty-seventh day of
Legulature, cr a’ duly authonaod com­ creet aud proper person to be guardian for
Octolier, in the year eighteen hundred and
mittee
of
one
or
both
of tho such person in such proceedings, and there­ may bo adopted and promulgated by the Su­
bouses
thereof.
Notice
ahxU
be upon aneb guardian shall have authority to premo Court of this Bute.
Sec. 11. Motions for a new trial or to arrest
tbe proceedings shall be made within two days
bo tho same as u&gt; other cases is provided by tbe after tho rendition of the verdict, unless further
statute. If it shall at,pear on tho return day lime is allowed by the court, and if no such
the principal streams and culverts on tho line
of the summons that any respondent cannot
townahip at least twenty days
of Btate roads within tho counties of Huron.
be found in tbe county, and that such reapoosc—inn of the board at which the
verdict of the jury ; aud such judgment of con­ also bo pruna facie evidence as to ownership Tuscola and Hamlac, which have been destroyed
firm* ;ion. unless reversed by the Supreme and persons having an interest in any such by lire, and
Whxueah. Under said appropriaL'(&gt;ti, couCourt, shall bo final and conclusive as to all property and the extent and nature of each
t racis have been made and entered into with
persons interested therein. The compensation
vinous parties for the building of several
bridges, therefore,
Jhsoforxl. Ry the Senate and Honte of Eipr,.uch confirmation until paid and utiafled.
may require
rentatiot. That the said action of the Biard of
amcaut produced bv tho sale nhall belong and Control of State Swamp Lauds be, and tho
of the bo paid to the fund for paying tho compt'iui- same ia, hereby ratified and confirmed ; and tbo
Thia sot is ordered to take immediate effect time named in tho order for appearnneu ;
tion awarded for tho property taken, and tho •add board u&gt; hereby authorized to make any
or tho court may make snch order for ing in writing with tbe Cicrk of said court a Common Council or Board of Trustees shall further contracte necessary to carry out the
purposes of said appropriation.
appearance aud require, aa to any or all such notice of snob appeal within five days after the
coufirmation, and serving within tho same time
Thia resolution u ordered to take immediate
effect.
a cojrr thereof on the City or Village Attorney,
and fflimt a bond in said court, to be approved
Appsroved March 8, 1881

GerniAn Military Schools.

published wiibin tbe inunidpabty, if tbeie be

county, tl
daysbaft

of appeals as above it ahall
Clerk of tbe Court without
Bacnox L 2Ar propfr o/ (hr Slate of Michi­
gan enact. That auy number oi owners or op­
erators of flour ng-milfs or grist-mills or fred«aOk, and resideni* of tins Stale, not less than

this act.

And thia act shall not

dand

ol

shall be returned by the Cicrk

■•Thcy must have ulruoat aa much

prietor.

“ lt&gt; mighty little of ft they

“And whi hbould the general expense
K-oooal Burfer lor » «»l«&gt;m4u’4 dr-ipio
tiona?”
.
„
“Becaaiw it make* bnmne**. Tbe
salestui u who. spends money here are
thiint! who entertain country customers.
I have them here at all time*. Some­
times they’ll corns in for hreakfant after
a night's spree. Then-ft’s champagne
cocktail* to begin with, and brandy and
mkIe as a settler.
I got up » breakfast
for a saleeman and two aentiemen from
the West this morning* that coat him
&lt;25. Lauchen and dinners that run
from $25 to $50 ate common, and I have
them bi avier, too. Champagne ia the
pet drink of all tbe country merchants
who come to Philadelphia. They think
no one hero with any preientiotw to
fashion drinks anything else, *fid if
they are good buyers, the salesmen sup­
plies them without stint. It is the cus­
tom to treat all customers, big and
little, hospitably, but the salesmen never
waste money.”
The dealer who has s bill cl a few
hundreds of dollars gets a good dinner
or two with a bottle or no of wine, but
none of the gilt-edged banquets and
cobwebbed IffJttltrs come his way. The
jieople whdi get them pay for them in­
directly, yoh-ejny be bound. However
big the* Kaieemau*8 expense account n^ns,
it is always wt*H wiihin Hie profits of
tbe department in whose interest it is
built uji.
Tbe system by which the restaura­
teur profits so much is one which has
become it fixed feature of the commercial
system of the city. Nowadays tlie visit
of a heavy buyer to Philadelphia always
muxns a spree to him, if his tastes are
at ali convival. If they are not, the aocommodating salesman will take him on
nice quiet drives, with nlcelittlo lunches
and dinners at each end of them, and n
swell church to drop in on Sundays, and
weave business with pleasure all the
while until tho buyer’s whole trip has
been quite as ecstatic a drcam to liia
taste as that of another rural trader is
who has anatomized the elephant from
tusks to tall, and who comes home with
him a head which is as heavy as bis bill
—a dream from which he, poaiibly,
swuk«s when the invoices begin to come
in out in Greentown, and cold common
sense demands the auditing of bills. Of
course, the buyers bpend something on
their own accounts, but the salesmen
spend more, and spend it with a dash
that makes it show for double its actual
amount. It is the saleman’s business to
impress the customer withan idea of the
lavish generosity of the great house be
denis with. That impression in ninety
cases out of a hundred, means a bigger
bill than the impressed party would ever
dream of contracting if it were pot for
the delirious recklessness into which his
princely entertainment transport hinj.
Cowboys.

“In Arizona, Texas, and Colorado
I learn from other -wuroea, several
thousand people are engaged in herding
cattle. They an* a distinct class of peo­
so hardened aa to join with each other
in the commiaaion of miadeeda. They
ore employed to keep the cattle from
dividing or straying from the herds, and
for mouths at a time see no one bat the
person who supplies them with provis­
ions from the nearest town. Hut when
they get tbeir pay and go to town there
in no limit to their outrageous conduct
They get drunk, gamble, fight, and shoot
recklessly at friend or foe. A long ping
of black tobaccOj a couple of revolvers
and a heavy kuife are sure accompani­
ments of a cowboy. They are coarse
and cowardly and utterly despised by
every decent person. To have killed his
man elevates the cowboy in the estima­
tion of his associates, so that friendship
or kindred ties are no barriers to tho
cowardly bullet They meet in saloons,
and a word from an outsider may be the
Kignal for his death.”
The above was written by a guileless

one and don’t know yet whether the
cowboy is a female or nut .
Every little while some white-livered

The German military anthoritira seek
to establish a school in Alaaoe-Lorraine getting his breakfast begins to write up
the country. The letters written by
some such fugitives from justice who
First, that which appears on tho face of come here, write up the wild West and
the proposition; the second, the secur­
ing of a supply of non-comminrioned of­ reliable aa perdition would be in the ca­
ficers for service in war, and in the stand­ pacity of a powder-house.
We have no doubt in the world that
ing army; secondly, the further sub­
jugation and Gennaniration of the old men in Wyoming worth from &lt;200,000
French district. Two similar schools to half a million dollars, clothed, how­
have already been established in differ- ever, in brown canvas and leather chap-

suite.

Thus far

despemte and dangerous men. There

money for tbe new academy. Even Von
Moltke, who has entered heartily into
the project, hac not been able to prevail
ibtro-

and shall

■elected and impaneled
iff, urnkr Mwfif.ort

pled with their cowponiee, Mexican
there ia littk doubt that
make room for four hundred boya, who rado of this heatiien land.
will be taken of any age al&gt;ove eleven,
We are beginning to i&gt;e«oaK weary of
given their clothing and food, and edu- this thing. Not that we have nut some
hard cases in the Weat Of r-.urae, there

men in law and jomxudixm, and even in
tbe pnlpit; but when the cowboys aro
all lumped off an a cruaa between a oovWe sdiould like to tee tbe man who
wrote the above having u picnic amonir
about twenty active WwMsni aowbovau

�Child’s horse* arc

affittsMtha Advent church. Sunday
night. by the Elder and some of toe

enact don’t go, down some of them.
One clause of tbe covenant, is, that all
persons talking in their church, must
talk a* the Advent* believe, or keep
sHent in church, or be dealt with ac­
cording to certain provisions laid down
and that don’t go down some who like
Monday morning, and hurt her back to talk aa they feel. t
JJ.H.
quite badly.
Mrs. Olds wiU soon ,uovc w the
Ledge, to work at her trade, cloak and
BISBARK.
dress making.
Deacon Holmes has bought N. Browu
A blizzard Saturday.
Big sugar day Monday.
out, and will come to the Center to live
Next week will be newsy.
about the first of May.
All quiet ou theSebewa.
*If Van ialiving in our comunity, and
will call on me be can receive the ap-. Vinegwr-daysniustbe neat.
pointment as scribe, and tbe $5,000
Republican caucus Thursday.
Mr. 8. Wright is better at thu date.
I. N. Miller will aeon move to Caw
Mr. Fay failed to get tho number of
'
scholar* he anticipated getting, so he Co.
Sugar is turning out a big yield this
gave ap riu. school. Mr. Fay also tells
ushiswi
Has “Van” woodbined or Wood__ ___________ ibrother has bought
Dr. Catreiiter’s house and lot, and will landed !
Diphtheria is making no farther ad­
move to this place soon. We under­
stand be is a good workman as a har­ vances here.
Civil .service reform is the topic,
ness maker, and will work at his trade
hereabouts.
in Brown’s shop.
Wheat shows toe effect of the late
The M.E.sockuty will hold their qunrterlv meeting the 15th and 16th of .April freezing and thawing.
A
few petty thefts are reported such
at the John Fuller church. Presiding
Elder Bsrnheart will be present- He .as raising pork, bams, eto.
Lay
in your stock' of rain water
is ono of the finest speakers in the con­
for spring and summer use.
ference.
Mr. Halstead and family intend to
Wo forgot to tell but week how the
marriage, of Washington Rawinder go north, to reside for a season.
We made a mistake in mention of
passed off, Rev. Bridenstine of­
ficiating. After the ceremony was Miller’s sale; should have add Tues­
performed the company all joined in day.
Johnathan Wright is under toe doc­
singing “What Will the Harvest be.”
N. Brown and family will move to tor* care, being afflicted with rheuma­
Mancelona, soon. Mr. Brown has a tism.
Estelle Grinnell of Ypsilanti, is at
good reputation as a harness maker,
and he aud his wife will be mi-sed in home again for a short stay with- her
x
.
the community. They were both act­ mother.
A. V. Morton may be counted among
ive workers in the.church and we can
disponding
ones.
Hebasbeen
driven
recommend them to the people where
to the wall by pirates.
they will move.
Mr. Kidder who is in the employ of
E. P. has again come up for Supervi­
sor. He has been on the retired list for the Singer Co., at Ann Arbor made his
old
home a short call this week.
some time. He made a good supervi­
Last Saturday $11.00, the property
sor, and so 1ms Mr. J. Wewill not
of
Mr.
Burlingeourt, mysteriously dis­
elect but one, and the other two will go
as retired vetrans. in the cottage by the appeared. Foul play was evident.
sea,butuot to receive $12,700 as that
Mr. Clem went to Indiana. Wednes­
day, to make arrangements fora borne
noble chieftain, U. S. Grant.
. Mr. Charles Cook died on Monday. there. Michignu has no charm* for
Mr. Cook’s health has been quite bad him.
J. C. Downing and Jas, Phillips are
for nearly a year, a,nd he bos been con­
They seem
fined to hu bed about two months. our successful fisherman.
to
cast their net on tbe right side of
Mr. C. has been a resident of this town
about 30 years, and has had some nar­ the toip.
Dr. Snyder was called from the sale,
row escapes from death, once by be­
ing caught in a threshing machine. Tuesday, to go to a raising, somewhere
He has made warm friends and has in town, to set a broken leg for a man.
been An honest, upright citizen, and Tbe circumstances we have not learn­
he died in triumphs of living faith of ed.
Tbe sad inteligeuce has reached me
going to that bright home above. He
leaves a wife and two children, and n that Mr*. Amos Down ’’is no more | a
resident
of time having departed this
large circle of friends and neighbour to
mourn bis loss. The funeral services life March 38tb. A few weeks ago she
thought
to bo nearing the Golden
took place at tbe M. E. church, on
Wednesday, conducted by the Rev. J. Short, she however rallied and began
to mend and hopes of final recovery
F. Orwick.
were entertained, until about two
Nell.
weeks ago when she began to fail.
ASSYRIA.
Since that time her light has been fad­
ing. She is now dead and yet she lives
Elder Riley is in town once more.
having lived a devoted Christian life
A dance -t Samuel Youngs,Thursday and delighted in the law of tbe Lord.
night
Her loss will be felt by her companion
A dance at Henry Sylvester’s Friday and children. Tbe church has lost a
night.
____
w__
r_______________
_ will be
strong
helper
and a vacancy
Geo. Holton of Saginaw, is visiting felt whenever she has wont to be. Tbe
in town.
Lord has called her home to sing
Lon Parks has a sister from low* sweeter songs than those of earth.
visiting him.
She has gone from tbe land of prayer
Henry Wretengburg has the frame to that of praise. Her funeral was held
up for hi* house.
at the house the 29th.
George Spaulding has sold his farm
WlUTIST.
to F. Elliott, for $730.
CARLTON.
A blizzard Saturday, rain Bunday,
wind and rain Monday.
Geo. Mighell is suffering from bright*
Report says that the R. S. Brigg’*
disease of kidneys, and it is doubtful
farm has been sold to an Ohio man.
Will Gage had tbe misfortune to cut whether be will ever recover.
Mr. J. B. Carpenter has returned
his foot Thursday with a grub ax. He
from Canada, with of the finest stock
There is much need of a first class horses in the state. Success to Jim.
Mrs. M. P. Fuller is suffering with
blacksmith, at tbe Center and some
parties are bound to have one.
rheumatism at present It is hoped
that she will soon be able to be around.
'•&amp;&gt;, on a visit He took his cat toot _ Tbe condition ot Miles Rodgers is
with him so he could care for it.
somewhat favorable since his return
There waa a sugar party at George from Chicago, although' he is very
feeble yqt
Since Mr*. Fetterly has left town,
gxkwiping is ou the gain. It appears
While Albert Mills was driving his that toe left rather suddenly, aud to
mustangs, the other day, tbe draw bolt the discomfiture of Rufe, toe leaving
came out letting them run away. No without paying in full fora poor little
calf and jumping the judgement.
A man in Assyria has taken The
The political parties are wheeling
News most three years, aud by watch- into line of battle, each one disaatitoed
with their course of eonduct in the
Charite Baker has
he bought of Joseph

bcuahta farm.
Andrew Kilpatrick started for Dako­
ta last week to look land and will re­
main alx&gt;ut three weeks.
The houne known aa tbe “Furgeraon
■ house/ which was recently vacated by
theGilHson family will be occupied by
Jamea'Bunnet April 1st J
.
Mrs. M. A. Eay is again very low
from bleeding at the lungs, but it is
hoped that with the approach of warm
weather she will regain her usual
health.
»
We understand that a soil boat will
be run ou Babble luike next summer
for toe accomodation of passengers who
way wish to ride on its gentle waters.
Success to the proprietors of the enter­
prise say we.
We have been requested to state that
tlie missionary society of toe U. B.
church will hold its last meeting for
tbe year od Thursday, April-6th, at the
chutch audit is bope£that every mem­
ber will be present as business of im­
portance will come before thb society
at that date let there be full attendance
We notice that “Wnttet” is advertis­
ing his farm for sale, also for a corres­
pondent to take his position in gather­
ing locals for The News. If our tres­
passing upon bis territory tbe past three
months has been the cause of his antipatingsueb a rash act we will with­
draw from the field and seek our glory
in other parts. So "Writist” do not
leave the country on our account.
Van.

LAUE Y.

Mud plenty.
Wheat bids fair.
Hy. Munger has painted bis new
wagon.
Bill Munger's folks have moved back
from the north.
Jin, Evert Ims moved on his place
one and one half miles north of Nash­
ville.
Lacey! oh-h-h! Lacey! beware of
hurricanes ! can’t you hear the storms
blow.
.Ashake-you-feotis coming, iu honor
of Bill’s return at Al. Durfee’s, iu the
near future.
R.'Burk has returned for his family
His future residence will be Sherman,
in Allegan Co,
N. E. Clark’s family have 'been^iaving a very serious time with sore
throat, not exactly the diphtherio. .
Mr. Cardart has been very sick with
infiumation of the lungs. Dr. Van­
Horn atteued him, and he is on Mie
gain.
Will Bristol moves in wnen R. Burk
moves out. It is expected be will learn
tbe blacksmith trade the coming sum­
mer. Success to you. Will.
People living in glass houses should
not throw stones. When parents turn
agaiust children, what is expected of
others! Advice unasked for, and self­
appointed instructor*, makes business
sometimes that bolds for years, where
friendship in families should always
exist.
Walla Walla. '
EATOS COUNTY.

A man in Eaton Rapids drove 4,250
lbs, of nails last season.
.
A. L. Winters, a well knowji resident
of Charlotte, died last week, after a
long and painful illness.
The post office at Olivet Station has
been christened “Ainger,” iu honor of
D. B. Ainger, post master at Wash­
ington.
The State Holiness association will
hold a convention at Charlotte, April
4, 5,6, and free entertainment will be
furnished nil those whe attend.
Nirie hundred and twenty-one lbs
of female flesh, encased in only four
dresses, and shaped by only four small
bonnets, was poised on one pair of
scales at Charlotte, one day last week.
Eaton Rapids seems to have had some
fear that toe might be attacked by the
“slung-sbot” brigade from Charlotte,
and the council have passed an ordin­
ance forbidding the use of these weap
ons within tbe city limits.
Hon. L D. McCutcheon uf Charlotte,
has been nom inated for secretary of the
territory of Montana, Mr. McCutcheon
Is a prominent lawyer of that city, an
ex-judge of probate, chairman of tbe
congressional district republican com­
mittee, aud a member of toe state cen­
tral committee. Ho is a good citizeft,
and during bis long residence in tbe
county has taken an active part in pol­
itics.
OUR WASHINGTON LETTER.

the act will act thseal of fate ou ibis institution. It is
claimed by toe advocates of toe bill
that Utah Territory will soon be
tied by Geutilsa enough to constil
the political dhalrilitiM imposed
tbe professor* of Mormonism will,
others from joining, aud thus' pri
its spreading further.
. .
Enough jin* occurred during the pre­
sent week toSndicate clearly to the
country the character of the Forty­
seventh Congress and the scope of na­
tional legislation. • Tbe majority Jparty
baa formally announced that it will op­
pose the reduction on internal taxes on
tobacco and whisky- the two principle
sources of revenue. It in quite imma­
terial wfiat stand is taken with regard
to bank checks, matches, proprietory
articles, etc., as altogether the revenue
derived thetafrom ’amounts to but
about $11,000,000. The tax upon all
these is more of an annoyance than
anything else.’ The Commissioner of
Internal Revenues recommended tbe
abolition of this tax two years ago,
and tbe reasons given apply with great
force now. It may bo considered cer­
tain tbat this annoyance will be swept
away. .The Senate has added a couple
of millions on the post office appropria­
tion, bill,.reported favorably on a grand
ocean steamship subsidy scheme, offer­
ed to guarantee $50,000,000 to Captain
Eads, restored the franking privilege,
projected au extensive steel clad navy
and raised certain closse, of pensions.
There ia no deception about this. If
there was any doubt as to the reckless
character of this Congress, it should be
silenced in the 40 to 15 vote on tho re­
storation of the trunking privilege, .sjt
carries us back to the halcyon days of
the Credit Mobilier period when the
public revenues were divided up be­
tween sherry and champagne.
It is understood tbat it cost some
thing over $8,0u0 to carry the Congres­
sional mourners from Washington to
Cleveland and back, on the occasion of
thn Garfield funeral. This is about
$130 a piece. Considering ' that the
railway company furnished transporta­
tion free, the sum named must be sup­
posed to represent what it coat to fur­
nish food, beverages, carriage hire and
other light refreshments suitable for a
season of niourniug. It seems like a
liberal allowance, to say the least, and
ought to cover a good many nice ex­
tras.
Advocates of the franking privilege
say that “the postal service is intended
for tlie public.” and tbat therefore
“there is neither sense nor reason in
compelling members of Congress to
pay postage on thousands of letters to
their constituents in answer to in­
quiries.” The answer to this is that
it is as much the business of a member
of Congress to answer the inquiries' of
his constituents as it is that of r mer­
chant to send out circulars qnd ans­
wer tlie letters of his correspondents.
It is all in the line of business, and if
one has the right to send his mail mat­
ter free the other is equally entitled to
tlie privilege. Tbe talk about one be­
ing a public and the other a private inr
terest is all bosh. Running for Con­
gress is ti business occupation as much
as practicing law, carrying on a store,
or running* factory, and should be put
upon precisely the same footing as
those pursuits.
Ex-Senator Chaffee appeared on the
tkxfr of tbe Senate this afternoon, and
it was observed tbat he was engaged in
earnest conversation, for some time,
with Senator Logan aud Senator Tel­
ler, and it waa supposed that they were
discussing (ho subject of Teller’s ap­
pointment It was apparently believ­
ed at tbo Capitol to-day, that the ap­
pointment of Mr. Teller only awaits
information from Governor Pitldn^nd
that if be agrees to appoint Mr. Chaffee
to succeed. Teller, tbe latter will be
nominated for the Secretaryship of the
Interior.
AUGUST.

I

In

ioned men an

Lwh»vn

aick one woman
de day* gone by if I fell sick
would run iu wid catuip, aaoder wid
horseradish leaves, auoder wid a bowl
o’ grael, an’ tears would be a’
kind wordopokeD, an’ one cm
Nek to save him. In does good
de IraHknrdrra* an’ white

MAMMOTH PEARL POTATO.

The bill

RHEUMATISM,

paralyzed, but lhe oU cured him.—PbUadelphi-

yean will make a good record.

will mat

SWfll

Tbe iron has entered the soul of Orno
Strong, of the Nashville News. Now
Orno publishes one of the best countv
newspapers in the state aud does not
print it for furf, either, but for $150 per
year. In an unguarded moment he had
the temerity toas^ someof his delinqu­
ent subscribers for money, for which
be has been cursed, reviled, charged
THE LIME-KILN CLUB.
with being an insultr, etc., aud one men
who knows Orno is sick and jnst out of
tbe hospital, really wants to whip him.
“What I am longing arter,’’ said
Cheer up, Orno, there are no deiiquent Brother Gardner as Trustee Pullback
siAscribers in heaven, most Likely.-— cessed coughing and Samuel Shin fina­
Detroit Evening News.
lly got a rest for his feet—“what I am
longin’ arter rnn a sight of a good, nldfashiuned man or woman—aich iu* we
DeleweCo., Republican, Che«ter, Pa,, wa„ could tldn in ebery house thirty v’ars
ago, l&gt;ut rich as cannot be found new
curodbyBL Jacob* OU of very severe tojurien
iu a week’s hunL It make* me tonerolling fnxn a fait Hb ann appeared to be------------------------U-1M
some when I%alixe dat our „
old-fato-

ter. We hope that whoever hold's the

President Arthur yesterday attached

tr of guarding and
in ligated villain hr look
placed in liw- most de 'r
vhip in l^ecMUM*
.pubtisbed in &lt;te
id been used to fighting tor eie- down of aneve-,‘
ober it make*
jurt how wmke
uHsaAsin who had shot down his com­ deviltry daff «
mander and the president of his. coun­ but if either1
try. The degradation of toe situation wickedue**. f
was wo muciffor toe poor Maiu&gt;u, who Detroit. Chic*
was morbidly sensitive, and whose t'ity in &lt;Hh ken
mind, a* has been conclusively toown. awful liign.”—:
was off its balance, and. as he reflected
uon+ rails &gt;hkiiuCIii.
upon toe loathsome duty ass&gt;gued to
hint and was stirred by impulses tbat
were felt by millions of others, he tired
rather blindly at toe miserable villain,
and unfortunately missed him.
PlifOLnTION NOTICE.
He inflicted do injury upon Gulteatt.
Aud now compare toe treatment of the
two men os prisoners. Gutieau was a»signed to comfortable quarters aud woe dlMofved by mutu*! coramut. Calvin SnitU) re­
lionized. He was provided with every tiring, the nt«r firm, paying all bill* and collect­
thing that could minister to his wants, ing all KccountRaud what was needed for his luxury
Duted Assyria, March 48. A- D. 1882.
was furnished by sickly, sentimental
Ojeo. B. Haktom,
''
CxLvur Smith.
woman who brought delicacies and
flowers to the cell of the -boirible mis­
creant. He was kept ,busy providing
his sympathizers with his autographs
and photographs. He waa allowed to
end out his insolent and blasphemous
utterances to the people. He was per­
mitted a freedom iu court never before
allowed ‘to a prisoner. The widest
latitude was given him for abuse aud
iusult until he succeeded in degading
the country in the eyes of other nations,
aud brought law and justice into con^
tempt. And this villain ia not hangea
yet, though six montlis have claimed
duee he cuminited his brutal crime in
opuu day iu presence of scores of people!
Not a hair 01 bib head bus been touched,
.«:.&lt;! in- is piepaiii.g the way f&lt;mn new
trial upon legal quibbles and techuiulities, aud. believes tout he will escape
punishment though the efforts of .un­
scrupulous lawyers desirous of notone­
tv. He murdered tbe president of toe
United States in cold blood. Sergt.
Mason fired wildly at the wretch mid
missed him. He is hurried into a loath­
some dungeon, half-starved for mon­
ths, cut oil from all contact with the
world, and separated from his kind as
effectually aa if he had been secretly
strangled or were iu a Siberian mine.
No letters o£ sympathy are allowed to
come to him. No woman bearing del­
icacies are allowed to visit and condole
with him. A West Point court-martial
site upon bis case. He is not permitted
neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago,
to browbeat witnesses, orinsult a court, Backache, Soreness of the Chest,
or send broad-cast appeals to the peo­
Gout, Quinsy, Sore- Throat, Swell­
ple. or delay hi* trial for month* upon
miserable quibbles, or when convicted,
ings and Sprains, Burns and
to cherish the hope that lie will escape
Scalds, Genera! Bodily
through another trial. The blow fulls
Pains,
upon him quick and sharp. Military
vengeance, uot justice, foil weshim into Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted
his loathsome cell, drives him from toe
Feet and Ears, and al! other
urmy in disgrace, though be had been
Pains and Aches.
a valient old mriuier who had exposed
his life for his country,Strips him of
his pay and allowances, and then orders
him to Iw imprisoned for eight years at
hard labor, side by side with murderers
thieves, burglars, and felons of every
degree, in a pvnitentiary. Such a pen­ SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DLALEP.3
alty as thia, inflicted upon a man whose
.
IN MEDICINE.
*
mind was unhinged and who thought
2k. VOCkBLKR. &amp;&gt; co..
he was doing lite country good service
in avenging the mnnlerof his com­
mander, te harsh and brutal to the ex­
tremity of torture. To an honorable MBS. LTDU L PIHBU, OF LY1M, lifc^
soldier it is worse than death; and Sergt.
Mason or any other gallant soldier
would have infinitely perferred that the
court-martial should have ordered him
to be taken out and shot by his com­
rades.
This court-martial will have no dif­
ficulty in leaning the sentiment of the
American peoole, whose blood is at the
boiliug point as they contemplate the
brutal severity of this senteuce. If
they had the opportunity they would
court-martial every member ofghis bar­
barous court-martial and drive them
out of the service as u? fit. by reason
.of their coarse and unjust, natures, to
command soldiers.
Gen. Hancock
himself, who so promptly and without
auy consideration, approved this out­
rageous sentence, will also foci tbe pop­
ular retribution if the opportunity ever
comes of expressing it. It places him
in aznost unenviable position. He was
the competitor of Gen. Gaifleld for the
presidency, and was defeated by the
latter’s superior popularity. There ia
a question that he waa wounded in his LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S
feelings, and, whatever he may say to
VEGETABLE COMPOUNDthe contrary, that he hated Garfield on
account of his defeat. A man who oc­
cupies such a position should have been
slow in approving such vindictive sen­
( tence, one out of all proportion to the
offense, lest people might say that he
was not displeased at the act. of Guiteau. It will be a long while before
the soldiers of toe regular army who
Kympatize with their comarade, it will
lie a Jong while before the ex-soldiers
of the greater volunteer anny.wqo
lovedGarfield, will forget this shocking
sentence, the men who pronounced it,
or the general who so promptly approv­ •CM ml 0MBW
ed iu—Chicago Tribune.

wimin am Do mo’.

UJ cnnrt by

�of tbs lad-

MICHIGAN STOVE CO.’S- STOVES AND RANGES,
PAIIJT, WALL, KALSOMINE AND VARNISH BRUSHES

branch did light.

to fright

&gt; quite
_
■
For Mujujin*ain’t ta yuur "due!”
Kmooev matter* are all right!
Printer"* paid up-honor bright!”
Thereat tbe Owl withdrew
Aud Muggins mizzled, too;
But there are other chapa who might
Be caught out late wxnedtanal night
Who bav'Q’Utaid what's dur,

[Free Pre**.

Down iu Colfax, La, the people were
resolved to set aside all their winnings
at poker to buy an organ fur tlie Sun­
day school.

__________

young women read
with ill
at a Kansas
widow bp6 just got back from tbe fun­
* ' r sixth husband.
eralof

A New Jersey sheriff got hold of an
old offender and a case of small-pox un­
der the same coat, and dropped both so
quick that the .victim broke his leg.
Two young women of Illinois are
making a tour of Texas on bicycles.
They intend to crow to Florida, and
come up the Atlantic coast later in tho
An up-country man bought a Roman
candle and lighted it to go to bed by.
Hesavsyou can bet your sweet life
he’ll lick the man that loaded it, if he
can find him out.

This is the season when the Florida
man, desiring to make a trip North,
puts two strawberries in his trunk and
on arriving here sells them for enough
to pay all expenses.

It has cost tlie country $22,000,000 in
the last ten years for keeping troops
in the Indian country. So it will be
aeen that onr little pet injuns are worth
something after all.

A Massachusetts num has put a spit­
toon on castors and asks for a patent
on the idea. But we don’t see what
good they are, A spittoon is hurled,
Dot rolled, at a head.
Two woman at Youngstown ,0., drew
revolvers to shoot each other, bat fear
overcame anger and each threw her
weapon away and ran for homo to get
the poker or rolling-pin.
From some places wo have reports
of “Highwaymen at work.” and from
others “Hymen at work.” In either
where these high affairs get in tbeir
work, somebody is going to come out
short.

The tax on whisky and tobacco ia to
be reduced $68,000,000. That is good.
It will be a great relief to the poor.
For whisky and ooverty generally go
together, so far as tbe consumer is con­
cerned.

When you see o man weeping over
his mother-in-law’s grave, you may
bet on it that be is sorrowing that he
didn’tbavea chance of watering that
grave with bis tears before his wife
was born.
■___________
It is proposed to remove three small
inlands from tbe narrowest part of Beh­
ring's Strait, and let enough of the Jap­
anese current through to “melt the ice
in the polar seas, and reclaim a vast
empire for civilisation.

Bill dialect, wanted to show me aotne
verts to their faith, as tbe result of two strange "keen!*” that he got in Chica­
weeks’ preaching.
go.
. .
.
“What were yon doing tip there F I
A complete file of tlie'Banner of Light naked, . knowing be waa a tbree-eard
the Spritualist was some time ago adv­ monte man and feeling an interest
hia modes.
ertised for sale by ex-judge, P. P. Good in “Me
and pap,’’ he said, "took up
of New Jersey, who now informstbe. some hogs. We took up a pile of ’em,
editor tbat tlie purcluuwr was an agent an’ made a heap; but pap he got swind­
of the Inta Czar of Rnudauind that tho led by a three keerd monte man. G&lt;it
near ruined. But I grabbed the keerds
volumes sre now in tlie royal library in and
PH show yon how thev done it."
St.Peten»burg. Tbe collection of Spirit­
“Never utind. boy, I said; I know all
ualist l»ooks and periodicals left Jiy the about it. I know tho whole racket.
Czar is said to lie the largest in tbe Now I'll kbep quiet, mind my own
business and let you-try your monte­
world.
_______
game business on some one a little
Tbe duties of the gejaine dyed-in- more freab.”
Thu inonte-boy saw at once that 1
tbe-wool, simon-pure editor are multi­ was posted, and oon turned his at­
farious and multitudinous. His work tention to a good-looking, jolly, young
and
innocent clergyman iu the depot.
is not only to “do a little writin’,” as is
u few moments I saw that the in­
sometimes supposed, bat to cull, to In
nocent clergyman had become deeply
"glean, to select, to discriminate, to do- interested. His interest grew as he
side, to foresee, to observe, to grasp, to watched the cards. There were three
explain, to elucidate, to inflate, • to ordinary business cards.
“I believe 1 can tell which card has
boil down, “to be. to do and io suffer,” Willoughby
&amp; Hill on ft,” said the in­
and several hundred other verbs, with nocent clergyman.
“All right—but try it,”said -thd monte
a large number of districts yet to hear
man,
flopping
them about.
from.
■
.
“There, that one,” said the clergy­
,
There ia a lucky train on tlie Gulf, man, smiling.
Sure enough he was right
Colorado and Santa Fr Railroad. On
“I don’t see how your poor father
Monday evening a rail hail been re­ could lose all his money at such a sim­
moved on a high bank, down which ple game aathat” said tlie clergyman.
the wreckers expected the train to “Why your eyes can see the card all
time.”
plunge, but-tlio wheels kept a straight the
“Suppose you bet $5 that you can
course and caught the track again, so tell,” suggested the inoute-raan.
“All-right; I’ll risk it,” said the
tliat the passengers escaped with a se­
vere jolting. Texas railroads are ex­ elegy man, "'though I don’t like to win
■ money that way.”
poked to special risks'just now, as nn
Tbe cards weie turned, and of course
organized band of train wreckers are the poor, unsuspecting clergyman lost
Again he tried it hoping to get his $5
nt work.
' t
back, but lost again. Then be put up
. Tbe owner of the largest poach or his last dollar and lost that Then
chard in the world has already been seeming to realize his situation, he put
heard from this season, and hia utter­ his hand to his head aud walked out of
the depot
ance is noteworthy as being tbo first
"To think,” be said, that I, a clergy­
hopeful prediction ever known to have man, should get caught at this game.
been made concerning a growing peach Why, 1 might have known it was three
crop by its owner. He says, “I reckon card monte. I’ye no respect for mvselt
and he wiped hi* ryes in acute condem­
this is my year,” He has fifty thousand nation.
bearing trees near Griffiin, Georgia;
“Why don’t you complain of the
and lest some one should claim to have scoundrelT’ I sahl.
"I would, but I’m a clergyman, and if
a larger orchard than be, ho will set they
should hear of my sin and foolishoat two hundred muro in the fall.
neM in Peoria, I would be relieved. My
poor family would suffer for my
One of tlie most singular of the many sins.”
“Then I’d keep quiet about it” I said
pistol accidents was that by which a
woman wns killed at Georgetown, Col. “but letitbe a lesson to you never to
think you know more than other peo­
Her brother was explaining how a ple/*
friend had been shot with a weapon
“But they’ve got my last dollar, and
supposed to be unloaded. He illus­ I want to go to Peoria. I must go there
trated the account by taking a revolver to preach on Sunday,” said the inno­
cent suffering man.
from his pocket. “But,” he aaid, “I
“Can’t you borrow of some one!’I
won’t be foolish enough to point it at asked.
"No one knows me, and I don’t like
any body.” Then he turned round,
tell my name here after this occurand as he did so it went off, the bullet to
encc,” said the poor man, half crying.
striking hia sister. lie declares that be
"Very well,” I said, “hand mo your
had nnt cocked it, and did not touch 1 card, and 1 will let you have $5, and
you can send it to me at tlie Palmer
tbe trigger.
House, Chicago, when you get to Pworia,” and I handed tlie poor man the
The action of the Massachusetts money.
Legislature in again voting down
A moment afterward I spoke to the
woman snfferage is taken greatly to agent at the depot about the wicked­
heart by tbe promoters of tbe move­ ness of these monte-men, aud told him
how I had to lend (ho poor clergyman
ment. The defeated bill was to pro­ $5 to get home.
vide only for the extension 4&gt;f the bal­
“And you lent him $5F
“Yes, I lent tlie poor man toe mon­
lot to women in municipal elections,
and' its success was quite confidently ey.“”Well, by the great guns!” and then
expected. On the same day an amend­ he slung bis bat aud yelled to the operment striking the word “male” out of
“BU1, you know that ministerialtbe State Constitution was passed by
mau around here F
the Iowa Legislature, preparatory to a looking
“You mean tbe capper for three caifl
vote by die people. Wyoming has bad monte men don’t you f Bill Keyes—
Missouri Bill F
.
woman suffrage twelve years.
The Governor uf New Hampshire
seems to be in some respects a man of
foresight. He has appointed April 7tii
as tho annual fast day for tliat State.
That is Good Friday; and it is thus evi­
dent that, since many people keep Good
Friday as a strict day of penance in
any case, the Governor now aids them
to club the State fast with it, hitting
two birds with one stone. Perhaps
this arrangement, too, will secure a
larger attendance at churches and s
smaller nt base ball matches and cock
fights than is usual an a State day of
fasting and prayer.

A young man who was not invited to
surprise party in Cleveland took tbe
young lady who wm to be surprised to
theatre, and when he returned with her
A license is required for marriage in
after the play and luncheon, there was IlBoois. A young man’s wedding day
surprise all around except in his own drew near, and the road to Galena, the
nearest licensing place, was in such a
Lightning has already commenced condition tbat a horse could Dot be
|i*ed
od it. Tbe distance wss seven­
its performances for the season. A
Georgia dog Lad all ia teeth knocked teen miles. After trying to hire someliody
to make the journey on foot; and
out by a flash the other day, and an
Alabama woman who wns throwing failing to find a pedestrian at the price
he
could
afford to pay, be set out himdubs at a goat was knocked senselesw
selfon the morning of the appointed
for two hours.
.
day. It was a hard job, and he return­
Services were disturbed by a drunk­ ed covered with mud, almost exhaust­
en man in the Lutheran church nt ed, and ■ barefooted, his boots having
Black River, Wk The minister walk­ been mired and abandoned, but he
ed cooly down from the platform, seiz­ brought the license, and the ceremony
ed the offender, threw him out door*, was performed in the evening.
and resumed his sermon as though
A woman got mad at her husband the
nothing bail happened.
other dav, and inwardly vowed that she
“Ah,” he'exclaimed, as he pressed wouldn’t apeak to him again; no never!
her tenderly to him at parting, ’'shall I And how that man &lt;Jh enjoy himself.
hold you in these arms again to-mor­ A restful calm settled nil ovet*him; he
row, and paint our future with the put his feet on the window-sill, smoki-d
bright pigments of the hnsginationT” his cigar in tbe parlor, went out early
**** ” she said calmly, “not to-niorrow and came home very late, ate with his
knife, brought friends home to dinner
unexpectedly, stayed in bed until the fire
KTet that the sweet-eyed poet­ was kindled, and inhaled mure true joy
loves to wander where the titan he hafl ever dreamed tlie married
state afforded. And that .roman was
till at last she broke out. and the
battle with

it. Got it ImmL t—
She tnnied, knew her papa, shrieked
once, twice, again, and once more for
tbe boys, and fainted away.
“I never worried aliout it a minute,”
the heartless old mau told his neigh­
bors the next day, “though I knowed
well enough what was goiu’ on all the
time. I’ve been married twice, an* I’ve
married off four daughters and two
sons, an’ if I don’t know what baggage
a woman carries when she travels, by
this time, I’m too old to learn.”
And Erasmus Ruggleaon! Tlie Jury
brought in a verdict tbat he came to
his death by, habitual drunkenness,
the temperance 'papers didn’t talk
about anything else for the next six
weeks.

Erasmus T. Ruggleaon, a yctang man
of Saxaoo lineage, wrought on a farm
wny out in* Yellow springs Township.
He was not rich, bathe was industri­
ous, and just too pretty tor anything.
So was the daughter of tbe fanner for
whom be wrought She waa wealthier
than Erasmus, bat she was not prond.
When the chorea were done in the win­
ter evenings, she went with him to the
singing-school, aud ahe walked by bis
side to cbarch. She loved him; she hkd
rather sit at her casement in tbe gloam­
ing and hear him boiler “poo-oo-ey!”
in long-drawn, mellow cadences, at the
hour of the feeding of tbe swine, than
hear Campanini sing “Maccaroni del
Vennicela." from “Hhndorgzhan in
Nenzaela.” And he—be was clean
gone on her. Mashed past all surgery.
When they foolishly^et the oldman in­
to their plans for each other’s happi­
ness and half tlq* farm, the wrathful
agriculturist saia if heard one more
word of such Donceuse—just another
word—he would lay tlmt farm waste
with physical havoc, ana blight its wfnt
er wheat with the salt tears of bis only
child, and that wa* tbe kind of a father­
in-law he was inclined to lie. •
Naturally, tbe young people dete#
mined to fly. Their plans were laid;
the night was set. So waa t)je ladder.
Atita foot waited the anient EraauJiu
Ruggleaon, gazing at tlie wondow for
theanprarance of his love. Presently
the window opened softly, and a face he
loved appeared.
“’Rasmus!”
“Florence!”
“Yes, desrest. Shall I drop my
thingarMit down?”

"P* 1bvh, I will catch them. Let
the bundle fall.”
The glittering starlight of tbe clear
March night fell on Erasmus's glad
and npturned face. So did a trank.
andabouteight fretIcmi
travel

Of purest grades and fully warranted; also

Turpentine, VarnkhM, Fare Paint. Yellow Ochre. Rmda, Venetian Red, Red
Lead, Whiting,
Green for Window BUnda and a dosen different kind* of paint ta small can*. Colors tej and
in oil, and above all" fourteen different shades of

BAXTER &amp; BELLS
Fully warranted.

We soon ahall hear tbe robin'* not e.
And feel the ahad-bonea !n our throat,
And pawn our win ter overcoat.

Who’ll eat them on the bill remote.
Thousand* of ladle* have found sudden re­
lief from all their woes by the use of Lydia E.
Pinkham'* Vegetable Compound, the great re­
medy for diseases neruitra to females. Send to
MnCLrdta E. Pinkham 233 Western Avenue,
Lynn, Maas., for pampblets.

Ba/num gave tbe keeper of his elephant tl,000 when be learned tbat “mother aud child
were doing well.” A* the-keeper is uot ob­
liged to get out of bed at midnight to dose lhe
baby with paregoric, to keep it quiet, bls posi­
tion will be envied by fathers whose income la
less than S400 a year.

celebrated

READY MIXED PAINTS

The most coriooa can find a color to suit. If not satisfactory and aa repre­
sented money refunded; alao

'

AT LOWEST FIGURES.

KEBOME5E, I*AII1», GOLDE.V ASD BLACK OILS Ml band.
Henry Sears’ Pocket and Table Cutlery.

AN HONEST PREPARATION.
Tbe world is ao crammed with awtadles that
a realy honest man or honest thing is almost a*
scarce as robin* ta January. Yet Mr. J. H.
Northrop, of LatMtagburg, N. Y., formerly
Captain of the Troy Police, say* Dr. David
Kennedy's "Favorite Remedy” is “in honest
preparation." And the Captain ought to know
for tlie medicine cured him of Liver Complaint.

Call and see hl* Pocket Knife show-.examine hia

Bench Wringer and

Tub "W ringer,

And then, wttfi hta fall and dean Stock of General M—, landiae,
w
including th# WHITE
SEWING MACHINE, jStflleat, moat durable and easiest made, you cannot but be pleased tn
Ill* excellent Tinner, Belleck and Rakwnan, Henry are still there. Call and see them

TRUTH IS MIGHT!!
JN making the following statement, we utter the truth, and can verify it.

THE LARGEST STOCK OF GROCERIES
In the city, at bottom prices, fair and square weight and measure. When
we advertise the most complete Stock

Crockery, Glassware,
Etc., in Bairv and Eaton connties, we are telling the people a fact that can­
not be successfully and truthfully denied. It consists of a large variety of sta­
ple good**, and a large assortment of

EXPERIENCE THE BE8T GUIDE.
Tho reason why women everywhere use
Parker's Ginger Tonic la, because they have

Majolica VV n re and I ’reneh China,

thU excel Lent medicine overcomes despondency
periodical headache,, indigestion, pain in the
back and kidneys, and other trouble of the

ENGLISH DECORATED CHINA

Two centuries ago not oue In hundred wore
stockings. Fifty years ago not one boy ta a
thousand was allowed to run at large al night.
Fifty years ago not one girl ta a thousand made
a waiting maid of her mother. Wonderful
improvemcnta. in this age.
LADIES, WE INTRODUCE TO YOU
Dr, Pcngelly, of Kalamzoo, Mich.
HU cre­
dentials allow him to be a graduated ph vatclan, and to have been very successful, for
inanr -ears, tn treating diseases of Women.
Zoa Piiora U tbe result of bU long experience.

"Heir are you and your wife earning out”
aakcu a Galveston man of a colored man.
“She’s run me off, boas.” “What’s tbe matter 1”
"1 is to blame, boa*. I gave her a splendid
white silk dres* and den ahe got ao proud she
to match de dress.”
Mr. Alexander Grunnel! of Albany,- N. Y.,
says: “I had been for year* troubled with great
weakness of my digestive organs, which seem­
ed tobc always out of fix. Most usually I
suffered from constipation, and st other timt*
a severe running off at tbe bowels would set
In. No remedy I ever tried would regulate
this function until I tried Brann's Iron Bitters
It really benefited me from tbe first day I used
it. My habits are now perfectly regular, and
aa strengtbener of tbe digestive organs I think
Brown’s Iron Bitters worth iu weight in dia­
monds."
A younj^ lady who graduated from a high
school last July Is teaching school up ta New
Hampshire- A bashful young gentleman visit­
ed the achrr&gt;l the other day anil waa asked by
tiie teacher to say a few wools to the pupils.
This was hia speech: "Scholars, I hope you
will always love your school ami your teacher
aa much aa 1 do." Tableau—giggling boys
and girls aud a blushing school ma’am.

“Well,*by the great guns, he’s the
beat man in the whole gang; he’s lust
struck old EH Perkins for $5. It does
Kidncv Wort seetns intended bv nature for
beat me what blankety blankety fools
cure of all dl*ea*c ot tbe kidneys caused by
them darned newspaper men are.”— tbe
weakness and itebUity. Iu great tonic powers
Jb'li Perkina.
,
are especially directed to tlie removal of this
Lost In The Fog.

ARK A GRAND SIGHT.

•

class of disease. We know of persons that
have suffered for thirty years that have been
permanently cured by taking Kidney Wort a
short time. Try it eiluer liquid or dry.—Sun.
A large wholesale liquor firm ha* Just failed
for 180,000 in New York, and they lay their
downfall to the dullneaa of tbe whisky market.”
Who would ever have auapccted that the whte-

'

In various designs and styles, also a well selected Stock of

In Tea Setts, Water Setts, Cups, Saucers, Pitchers, Etc. An endless variety
of Vases, Toilet Setts, Flower Setts. Etc. in

ZFTISTZE IBOIHZZEZLZEIA-Iisr GI.ASS
Too numerous to mention, and so cheap that all can afford to buy.

HANGIN G At STAND LAMPS
Of every style, color and design. Whan yon are ready to buy, I am ready
to sell. AU kinds of Produce taken in exchange for Goods.

0 W. SMITH.
J£EEP YOU EYE OY THIS.

50 Wagons
FOR SALE!
OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE

WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH

.

THREE INCH TIRE,
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING

BETTE R, THAN COMMON TIRE.
We believe the Three inch Tire is destined to come
into general use. Call and see them.

Sold by C. L. Glasgow, Nashville, Mich.

BENTLEY BROS. &amp; WILKINS.
Hastings, Mich., Sept 15th, 1881.

When you a;had catarrh long enough Just

send 15c. to Dr. C. K. Svkca, 150 Madison 8L,
Chicago, for his “True Theory ot Catarrh.
’ "Alas! we must part!” thecoat-tail*said
when the street-car passenger took bi* seat.
“But well meet again I” aa the coat-tails said
when three fat women got aboard. "United
we stand I” u the coat-tail* said for the rest
of the ride.;________________________

PERMIT NO SUBSTITUTION.
Floreston Cologne. It
orta permanence and

In to wed ao aoon after tlie death of her first
husband. “Oh, la,” aaid she, “I do it to pre­
vent fretting myaelf to death on account of
dear Tom."

SHILOH’S CONSUMPTION CURE.

^DVICE TO BUYERS
0 F---------------- -

DRY

GOODS.

“A Nickle Saved,
Is better than five cento earned.”

We are

Opening a fine line of NEW GOODS and will
Offer Some

SPLENDID BARGAINS

Otijrh

Bargains you can’t Afford to Pass.

tsr

lei Ln the hUmry of ninilcnc. Since It* first

Price lOrta, 50uU, aud «life It year lung* are
wire. Cheat, or Back Lame, and Shiloh'*
Portal* Plaster. 8ohl by F. T. Boise.
ANSWER THIS QUESTION.
Wh, do
many people we
around us
__ . ...
W*.. U ...I I ... .... .1 — I.-’ - VI..

We de "o( nse our Competlton Adver«l»ed Price Uat
te nndic price.,
tar We d&lt;&gt;i&gt;*&lt; have then, kind ofEoodi*.
tarouraond, are all Fre»h end ISedrable and we uctvr had
a lauxer Htoek Io .elect from.

DREES GOODS AND

DRESS .TRIMMINGS

------- In Endless Variety------

'

BOOTS AND SHOES
Bot».

That we Warrant in Every particular
We aim to keep Only Good Goods and .are satisfied with
Small Profits.

Remember the

KOCHER BROS.

�gucaxiM.
&amp; tutor, and occasionally ba is called

’ will mat together.
.
Aside from this, no other tMe than m
a filler of mattresses and the upholstery
of furniture can be found for curled
PERUSE THESE LIBERAL AD. RATES.
hair. So wo must conclude that hair
a. 18 not.| 13 toot
will continue to hold its supremacy and
»IT 5.00 |_iTbo
be looked upon m a luxury when cheap­
er articles crowd their way into the
market. South America supplies En­
TO5gland, Franco aud America with tho
greatei proportion of the curled hair
’.hat they use. Tho four ports of Buenos
Ayres, Montevideo, Rio Grande and
San Rosario export 12,000,000 pounds
of hone hair, and of thb fully one-third
comes to America. Great droves of
OXUNO HTRONG,
Editor sod Proprieidt wild horses roam about tbe plains in
the central portion of South America.
■ Many of these are killed for their hides
and grease as well as hair, but the great
proportion of hair is taken from live
horses that are corraled, shorn of their
manes and tails and allowed, to go free
again to raise another crop of hair. The
manes and tails are thrown into piles,
and afterward baled up into packages
weighing 1,000 pounds each, and
shipped. The manufacturer receives
these bales, and the first process is to
sort the hair by colors. It is then
hackled, or made straight, and all loose
foreign substances and dirt removed.
1&gt;APT1ST CHURCH. Rot. E. B. Moody. Tutor. The value of tho hair depends upon its
AJ8«rricu e'tlj HuedaJ al 1050 a.m.. Sabbath
length, and the next step is to make au
assortment into the different lengths.
Thia is done in a picker. Tho longer
Sabbath at 10i* hairs are used iu making haircloth, the
middle lengths go to. tho brush makers
Thuraday
and tho short hairs are curled. Having
obtained all the short hairs, the work­
Y LODGE NO. 87, K. of P.. meets at its men braid them into .ropes about the
Castle Hall, Nashville, Michigan, rverv
Friday evening, for the encouragement and size of one’s finger. Thp hair is then
boiled to get out all tho animal matter
and baked to set tho “kink.” Tho
Okxo Stsoxg.C. C. ropes of hair are now ready to bo coiled,
and they arc made into bundles weigh­
ing forty pounds each. The best hair
sells for forty cents a pound. Cheaner
H. YOUNG, M. D. Office eaat aide of grades of hair are made by mixing pfgs’
• Main St-, Nashville. ^Office houra from
hair with the horse hair. Pigs’ nair is
worth about six cents a pound. Cat­
tie hair is not used to any great ex­
tent for mattresses. The animal smell
Hence opposite tlie Wolcott House. Prompt cannot be altogether taken away from
attention given to call* day or nichu
it, and the warmth of the body will soon
make a mattress offensive if it is used.
A. FOOTE PHYSICIAN A SURGEON Cattie hair is used for carriage uphol­
• Bucuator to Dr. Wickham. Office and
reaidcDcc at Dr. Wickham’s laic office. stering and serves the purpose wclL
Before it is used tho hair must be un­
Prompt allcution to calls night or day.
braided and picked apart. This is done
bv hand, and many women find em­
ployment at this work. Among the
many articles that have been brought
forward for the filling of mattresses,
M/ D.
Office over the article called “excelsior” is the
VonnontTlUe, Mich. cheapest and the one most generally
used. This is made of poplar wood,
which is torn into shreds by machinery.
Aft. Prompt attention given to all buaineu A great deal of this comes from Maine
entrusted to my care. Gonreyandnf a special­ and New Hampshire, and it? sells for
ty. Office opposite Union House.
from twenty dollars to twenty-five dol­
lars a ton- A great many “soft top”
LIEBHAU8ER, Merchant Tailor And deaL
. cr in Beady Made Clothlug. Bee tue mattresses are used. These arc filled
before you jjiurcbase cloUdng.
Fits guar­ nearly full with the excelsior, and an
anteed.________________ _ ___
upper layer of jute, tow or cotton is put
Af ISS M. JEFFREY, Practical Milliner, and in to give the mattress a soft top. Husks
1YL Maier tn Millinery and Fancy Goods. Drew are also largely used. Thu inner husks
making. In all its brancher ---------- - —— of com are strippedzand dried, and
■Ide Main tin
and dhpateh. flalaarootn
sometimes braided into* great ropes,
but more often they are baled up after
/ARNO STRONG, plain and fancy Job Printer. the stripping. A greatx many husks
VJ Tba best facilities for doing work of any come from Connecticut and Maryland.
printing office in Barry county. Wbez tn need Wool mattresses are filled with shoddy
ef nrlntlng of any drecriptlon, whatever, bm me wool that lias been made by picking
rags into shreds in a picker. This is
worth from five te eight cents a pound.
Palm-lea! waste from the hat shops has
been a very popular filling for many
IRAM IL DICKINSON, manufacturer of years. It is braided into great ropes,
and dealer In Hani Wood Lumber. Btffid- and m it is verv tough it does not break
tag Malarial a .peeler. Cash paid forlogx. Mill
up, as many other vegetable substances
do. A very good filling is made from
AMES FLEMING, tnrdad Jeweler and the husk of the cocoanut, which is tom
Watrb-nuucer. Clockn. Watehes, BIIvct and into shreds and dyed black. It is very
Haled Ware, Jewelry and Optical Goods. Rock­ •lean aud free from foreign substances.
ford Watches a •peeiaity. Repairing and EngrwvI— *
.... .
The moss that grows upon tbo tiefca in
the swampy regions at the south is
TACOB O8MUN. Liveryman, bant near Wol- gathered by the negroes, buried in the
O cott House. First class turnouts nt reason­
able rates. Special rates to commercial men. earth to give it color, and then sold for
Funeral and wedtng parties f urulsbcd with car filling. Of this there are four grades,
riages on short notice.
the most costly of which is the cleanest
A filling called the “close fibre” is
TZELLOGG A BELL, proprietors Planing
A-k Mill. Planing and Matching, Resawing made from the underbrush which grows
*nd Moulding a specialty. Scroll Sawing, under the pine trees at the South. The
Brackets. Window and Door Frames made to l-.avcs are split and run through corru­
order. Wood Turning in all its branches.
gated rollers, to.give them a kink, and
fNHAS. W. DEMARAT, Dealer in Watchea, then baled up.—American CulUnaior.

J^ashrillt f irtrtmj.

F

W

L

S

H

J

kJ Oocku, fine Jewelry and Silverware. Being

W. NIBKERN, Attorney and Counsellor
• at Law, practices in all Stale Courts. Col­
lections promptly attended to. Office over

P

IIOMIEOPATHIC

Physician and Surgeon.
Slate Streets, Nsehrtlk, Mich.

OECOTT HOUSE,
Nawhvlllo Mlchliynn.

A. 8. Foorr, Proprietor.

g A. BU8H,
’
-THB BOBS’

.

BOOT AND SHOE IIAKER,

Harried Dinners.
It is a mistake to eat quickly. Mmtication performed in haste must be imSrfect even with the best of teeth, and
e admixture ot the salivary secretion
with the food cannot take place. When
a crude mass of inadequately crushed
muscular fibre, or undivided solid ma­
terial of any description, is thrown into
the stomach, it acts as a mechanical ir­
ritant, and sets up a condition in the
mucous membrane lining that organ
which greatly impedes, if it does not
altogether prevent, the process of di­
gestion. When the practice of eating
quickly and filling the stomach with un­
prepared food is habitual, the digestive
organ is rendered incapable of per­
forming its proper functions. Either a
much larger quantity of food than
would oe necessary under natural oonditions is reffuired, or the system sufferz for lack of nourishment. Those
an Imais which were intended to feed
hurriedly were either gifted with the
power of rumination or provided with
gizzards. Man is not so forniahed, and
it is fair to assume that ho wm in­
tended to eat slowly. The matter may
seem a small one, but it is not so. Just

insists upon the rule of one. So you
see his understanding is out of all pro­
portion to nis rule.
Although the schoolmaster is a ruler
erf boys, he has his own ruler. If he
be no stick himself, his ruler always is.
The school master is a viry inquisi­
tive person.
He is always asking
questions. His is a question-able caU1’be schoolmaster can be found in all
classes. He is also given to classifying
knowledge. I sometimes think I would
bo in his classify could.
Tho schoolmaster is good at figure/.
He would cut a pretty figure if he wore
not. He is the figure-head of the
school, or should be; but sometimes a
boy gets ahead of him.
'
Ho ia also good at spelling. He can
stand a long spell in a good situation
without flinching.
He is always correcting the errors of
his pupils, and consequently has but
little time tp attend to his own.
The schoolmaster is not a man of
War, but be often employs _ monitor.
He would be all at sen without his mon­
itor. He gets the monitor to see in his
place.
O shun misbehaving, 'children, or the
see of the monitor Bhidl overwhelm you.
The schodlmaster teaches the A B
C, but he cannot make a bee see.
Ev;cry sort ot ology is taught bv the
schoolmaster, but tautology is no better
coming from him than from anybody
else.
In a school of young rascals tho
schoolmaster is always the principal.
Some schoolmasters arc actuated en­
tirely by tbe law of love—love for their
situations.
Some entirely by hate­
hate to give them up.
The schoolmaster loves to have call­
ers at his school; but habit has so pos­
sessed him. that he not only collars his
scholars, but also scholarship callers.
I used to wonder at the schoolmaster
during my school days, but my school
daze will never return.—Boston TranA Poetical Proclamation.

Governor Long, of Massachusetts, la­
med the following somewhat unique
Thanksgiving proclamation:
Whkqeas, It is » common and an­
cient custom to set apart after the har­
vest a day of public thanksgiving and
Gayer to Almighty God, now, therere, I, John D. Long, Governor, by
and with tho advice and consent of the
Council, appoint therefor Thursday,
the twenty-fourth day of November
next.
“Unto Thee, O God, do we give
thanks! Thou visitest the earth and
waterest it Thou blessest the spring­
ing thereof. Thou crownest the year
with Thy goodness. Tbe pastures are
clothed with flocks; the valleys aiso
are covered over with corn; they shout
for joy; they also sing.”
“Blessed is he that coniidereth the
poor.”
.
“Come unto me all ye that labor and
are heavy laden, and I will give you
rest.’’
l»o deMjrn.
humble hands of ours
work of Thine!

“Our toll Is sweet with thankfulness,
Our burden is our boon;
Tho curse of Earth's gray m-.Titag 1
Ttfh blessing of its noon.

Tho good fa always beautiful— '
Tho beautiful ia goodl"
'

The Bitar Bitter.
Gettiugup a “corner” in pork, wheat
or corn is not a modern device. Years
ago, when tho thriving City of Milwau­
kee was but a territorial town, with
only one thousand five hundred inhab­
itants, a speculator thought that he
could make a large amount of money if
he should buy and thus control all the
salt there was in town. So he bought
every barrel he could fli.d and stored it.
Having, as he thought, a comer, he put
the price up to ten dollars per barrel.
Unfortunately for the speculator's prof­
its, another citizen heard of the specu­
lator’s purpose, and saw "
chance to make tn honest i
He
despatched a schooner to Cl---- o-------load of salt The Winds were propi­
tious, and the schooner with her load
was soon at the good citizen’s dock.
One morning a fanner came into town
for a barrel of salt. Going to the spec­
ulator’s he was asked ten dollars a
barrel. “ Salt has riz,” was the only
reply vouchsafed to the fanner’s pro­
test. He, however, would not pay that
price, and soon discovered that there
was a schooner-load of salt for sale at
the doek at twenty shillings a barret
Having purchased a barrel he returned
to the speculator and telling him of bis
purchase, denounced him. as a swindler.
“ You must have stolen the salt,”
rdd the speculator, “ for there ain’t any
salt in Milwaukee except what 1 have.”
•*’O, there ain'*l O nol Let me tell
you there’s a schooner load of it at
Swett’s dock.”
“ Then Fm ruined!” exclaimed the
speculator, as he rushed out to verify
the statement—and he deserved to bo.

forehead, and falls uooonfined upon her
shoulders. From under the dark thatch-

INCIPAL+U!

All about tho room won* pictures.
Miss Marion’s handiwork. She ia an
artist. Asa little child*she delighted
with brush and colors to daub* on bits
of tin or cardboard her earliest “ imprnstions.” Her father, who was a
man of mesas, gratified her taste, aud
under the guidance of a governess and
teacher the young gjri made progress.
A few years later Mr. Foster failed in
business, and Chea, tbe elder brother,
who had undertaken to care for hui
father and his sisters, died, and left ddl ClMM* Of tt*TCt. t
them all quite without means. Miss
Morion sought work at a milliner’s and
with the little fortune thu saved, a
matter of S50 or $60, .she went to Cin­
°kValoa
cinnati to put to practical use those
gifts as an artist which she had culti­
vated purely for pleasure.
To gain a livelihood in a large city Tkketl T t* thlrs^f
and T°
wu a hard task for the unknown young
girl. But. seated in her little carriage
she painted well and bravely, and soon
found friends. She painted many por­
traits in dil, and did much decorative
work in oil aud water colors, according
as there was demand.
Miit Foster remained thus seven
T. J POTTER.
,
PERCEVAL LOWELL.
years in Cincinnati working with her ■f Hex JfrWrA Gort-JfeMuer, CM. Jhm.
Chlcaso. Xll.
Chtaso.Ul
brush. Among other friends whom she
won while there were Emma Abbott,
the singer ( who wm attracted to Miss
Marion by her musical voice and taste
for music) and Fanny Davenport the
actress. For then* she painted flowers
FREDERICK DOUCLASS
upon their silk and satin stage dresses.
Last April she came to New York,
at the solicitation of Fanny Davenport,
to consult Dr. Sayre. He has since
been treating her for her spinal trouble
wale bod tec rcuzarkabkf ca
and has given her some hope that per­
haps she may yet be well and strong.
Indeed, she wm able nt one time last
summer to stand upon her feet and tafce
a step forward.
But a most unfor­
Ilka
tunate accident in moving her in bed un­
did all that the doctor had done, and
left her paralyzed.
Miss Foster hopes now to rrnnain in
New York, and to establish herself told."—Boston Advertiser.
here, where a larger field is offered for
her work. Tho walls of her little por•'The whole »tory U exceedingly well toid,"—
lor are hung with pictures and satin- toctweter Democrat.
*
Address J. 8. GOODMAN A CO, Chicago. 111.
painted screens and banners, all of
them pretty and tasteful, and showing
abundant evidence of skill.
Across a
chair 1mI night lay a cream colored
silk dress. It wm made by Worth for
Miss Fanny Davenport in '“Camille,”
and across the front and sides of the
skirt Miss Foster has painted red
camolias. A large fan has been dec­
orated to match. Miss Foster has
painteii several other dresses aud fans
for Miss Davenport, which will be worn
for the first time daring Miss Daven­
port’s New York engagement this
season.
DLGN,
Miss Foster is alone in New York but
BOOKS,
for the fnends whom she has already
JEWELRY,
made through Dr. Sayre and others
WALL PAPER,
who have called upon her. She desires
to be better known, to the end that in
WIYDGW SHADES,
making a name for herself she may also DYESTUFFS,
make means &lt;rf sapport.—N. Y. Sun.

KANSAS CITY

F. T. BOISE,

PROPRIETARY MEDICINES,

Horse Lore.

PRESURIPTIOA'S,
RECEIPTS.

JgROOKS A MARSHALL

Nashville Elevator!
Grain and Produce,
Seeds, Feed, Lime, Salt, Plaster, Htaeco, Hair, Pine Lumber, Lath
.
uni SLiarire, ।
*
AT THE LOWEST LIVING PRICES.

NATIONAL HOTEL
Washington, D. C&lt;
P. TENNEY A CO., Props.

■Him no soigicil surumnt

CAST?ixnx. 3ttti* Cnu.

Dispensary.
tOl So. Clark SL

CHICAGO, ILL.

The Iatan and moat adeatifle ininlindcm In the
Unit'd SUtea tor the Corr of Chronic and Private
diseases, Oonorrboa. Glwtof long ■landing, SM*tare, Orcbitla, Itaptarc. dUeaacs of tbo »ku&gt; and
•------------------ --------- .W—. etc
and
)r treated. SFE1UUTU UOU. Hcxnal Debility
RpMdliy earrd. Yoanx

■Ion to’socioty. ilecpleainw, nervooa prostrw
Uon, General debility and IndJgeaiton, rendering

NERVOUS
DEBILITY:
A cure guaranteed.

Tbo horse has the smallest stomach
in proportion to his size of any animal. And every article kept In a firxi-claxs druc store
Fifteen or sixteen quarts is its utmost
agr. eau*«i by ..ver eacrtfcm,
-------- MT-------indulgence, which Irada to ml
capacity. This space is completely
filled by four quarts of oats and the
saliva that goes into tho stomach with
them. Horses are generally overfed,
and not fed often enough. For a horse
I the puriliz hcr cur written tmarnrtM
DEPABTWE T
with moderate work, six or eight quart*
o money It tbe irrettnent doe* not rf
of braised oats and ten pounds of fine
Qmrantcea iuned by F. T. ItoH*. m
1.1 for the vlllejre «,f NaebviHe. JOBS
hay a day is sufficient. This should be
CO.,Sole Proprietor*. 1SI «t«l US W
fed in at least three meals, and is bettei
if fed in four.
A horse's digestion is very rapid, and
therefore he gets hungry sooner than a
man. When he is hungry be is ineffect­
ive and wears out very rapidly. Watei
fills the stomach, lowers tho temoerature and dilutes the gastric juice; there­
F. T. BOISE.
fore a horse should not drink immedi­
ately before eating. Neither should he
t&gt;e watered immediately after eating, pUJRXITUttE DEPOT.
because he will drink too much, and
force some of the contents of the stom­
ach into the large intestines, which will
cause scouring. Scouring is also caused
The l«t Cough Medicine for O-ildren or
by too rapid eating, which- can be pre­
vented by putting naif a dozen pebbles
half the size of the fist into the manger
with the oats. Give only a moderate
drink of water to a horse. A large
drink of cold water before being driven
will have a very quieting effect on a
nervous horse. A race horse always
runs on an empty stomach. Digesting
progresses moderately during exercise,
if the exercise is not so violent as to ex­
haust the powers of the horse.
I consider bruised oats worth twenty
per cent, more than whole. They are
more completely digested. I prefer
oats to any other grain for horses.
Cracked corn is very good under some
And will be sold ar-&gt; low that
circumstances, but wouldn’t use meal
or shorts. The disease called big head
is cqpsed by feeding corn. When a
horse comes in hot I would give a mod­
erate feed immediately. Lt the horse
is too tired to eat, would take his feed
|WE ALSO CARRY
away. A heated horse is a reason against
watering and for feeding, for tho sys­
tem is then just in the condition to be­
gin digestion. A horse will not founder
If fed moderately when hot. I prefer
dry feed unless a horse has some dis­
AdmlntatntU»r*a M«ie.
ease of the throat or lungs. Do not
«• tiuMW &lt;/ lb* IXlw!consider it worth while to cut hay. 1
tiKOROE GILMM.
always feed hav from tbe floor, then
rr J* bwtwkjt Kivw
at piiblti
the horses do not get particles in their

PAINT AND BRUSH

Call and Examine!

J. LENTZ &amp; SONS, NO CORE, NO PHI

WILSON’S COUGH MIXTURE I

FURNITURE!
In Every Style &amp; Variety

STOCK IS COMPLETE,
PRICES WILL ASTOHISISH YOU

UNDERTAKERS’ GOODS,

—Youth's Companion

ually lire

Amerieu ud Foreign Iirth,

—The scarcity of cheap wines at Paris
has made bee r-drin lang fashionable.
There are 25,000 beer-houses of all

J. LENTZ &amp; SONS.

HALL’S
gatarrhgure

�HAYS-QPENED

our

BOOTS AND SHOES

rlwt rtergytnau who hud
tea congregation that
iar his preaching, &gt;ald
ndic-ulod Utomaelvea.
- .Jived friends, if, 1 could
meh well d&lt;» you think I would have
mu ment out here to minister to a lot
lanklrendewl itrnnvamuaes like you!”

A Louisville tsn »tola hia Daotber’a
mocking, bird and M»ld it to*a man wbn
bad
lost one. taking tl&gt;e dead bird
in exahsngo.
The. good lady wm
t'vvrwhelmed at tbe death-of her pet
and gave him it tearful burial, at which
bw son, the money jingling tn hia
pocket,
with gryb solemnity.

while trying to pct a collar on a pet bear the
other day.
od charged with rending ubeceoe matter
through tbe mollr.
Jackson chicken thieve*' can take tbe palm

&lt;
1
’

ore put, re rert rertk

flock, of a widow in that ctjr, one uigbl recently.

&lt;

The president qf Ann Arbor University is
enlightening Michigan audience* upon the
Chinese question, as seen by him in the Ceb
estlal land.
Tbe farmers near Battle Creek looe ao many
sheep by dogs that some of them have declared
[heir intention of not raising sheep at all. Why
not quit raising dogs'.
Ralph Jewell and Francis Stanton, of Adrian,

It is runrtSml that President Arthur
rece ives more dainty souvenirs than
any unmarried clergyman in the land.
Hi* testhetic blue bedroom at the Exeentire Mansion shows numberleM handkejchltf ca-ca. glove-boxes, pin-cushioaa.ssentebadges, clothbruah holders,
waII-p&lt;M:kete and the like, mostly labcled, •‘Hem^mbmnce.” “Token of FrieodBhip, and "Forgct-nie not,” or bearing
similar Biiggestive legend*.

!
(

At a aiging school at Three Spring*.
Me., the other night, a young man was
braghig about the strength ot his lung.*
and invited a giil in the company^ to
hit him in the bieast. She said she
was left-handed, had been washing all
day, wg« tired, didn’t feel very active,
but at hl. urgent request let go at him.
When his fnenda picked him up he
■aid he thought he would die easier lying
down. He hud lost every recollection
Of ever havingany lungs, but the young
woman conaoled.him by admitting that
Jhe dipn’thit him as hard as she might
have done, because she rather liked
him.

I
।

।

A foreman, deacribedas “cross-eyed,”
recently mixed up the account of a
concert by young ladies with Lhe dcaenption of a short-horn herd, in the
following startling manner: “Thecon^rt given last evening by sixteen of
otonn Eak&amp;s most beautiful and in­
teresung young ladies was highly apPreciatexl. They were elegantly dressed
and sang m a moat charming manner,
winning the plaudits of tbe entire aud­
ience, who pronowcoAhSZ'thrfiSSt
wort-horns in tbe country. A few of
them are o^a rich brown color, but the
majority are spotted brown and white.
Several of the heifer, were fino-lxHlh-d.
tfcbt-bmlwd enlnralrq »re C„&lt;H| n,iU;ere
“d I’™.'”'"prove good property.’’
Aorordwg to Peek'. Soo, the yooo r
editor ia now wandering on tbe face of
Ue earth to get away from an infuriatea female populace.

I
I
।

!

southwest to Usterd*.
Move tbe de;e’. to Bueoff and search all the
coaat-lino from Bueoff southeast to Biehl of
the Day. Two portle/to go east from Bueoff

can be accomplished before ta* saow-floods
set in. 11 will be necessary to await tho melt­
leg of tbe ice of the river before attempting
to work along the coast tn a boat toward laal
IUFrom lhe position of tbe three boate before

°p".?"*

•

• **“«&gt;Ublo'ph» Ot
life in Sew 1 ork city hnre been affordby th.. tri«l whichhMjnetendeil in
tbo wutenrlng of young MoGIoin to
u^.VllO'',■ H'’“
years old.
With companions „f nt!miy.tho «.n„.
nge. ho went in tho night to plunder
Wewme idropof the old Frenchm.n,
Bnnrer. They found „„ mtne^ „Dd
‘
d,,ri,!« ‘h«r
went Wk after
oig.ra, Thc
proprietor of tbe store honrd them, and
1d'’w'"1 from tbo floor above;
McGIoin drew a revolver arid shot him
dead. Afterwards, speaking of that
night, work, the ninetoen-year-old
■Uudereruud to a companion | "You
mn t tough now, you know, bll you’re
bid yonr man," meaning that thoyouth
who would be admired by those of his
^m-muateornjiiit mOTT’lit—,^77,
* Pfdiremau entered a bar-room''and
pWednearMcOloin’. bead .
J*®?1?* * "•’-'d for the arrow ofHin7
l*TS*l°»derer—a doteotire meanwhile

J

apparently nnconcemad, and after
the pojieerean had gone he enjovod the
• oomptlmentury remark, of hi. admiriegeempanious concerning hr. ■■nerre."
Oetbeda, of hi. conviction, when he
b*«k from tbeeourt-roorn te
“n-Cily PrUou, it
rtown |hBt
(tiers’ woreyounKlwomen of his clrnw
z»l&gt;«bed 'nwlr him their hero; and a.
Be ps-srd them ou hi. way to the cell,
flerewarad tbeir admiring interret in
him by taking twogaudy handkerchief,
from hra twwkots. and giving them to
**
These
D&lt;.iG»htM ofiunl the barest glimiMx-s
luto lhe 11.0 led liy one claws of tbo pop.

•

WE HAVE JUST OPENED

whether thi&lt;clasa ia
rapidly—wbwUrr. tadved.

300 SUITS!
--------------------- OF-

Men’s, Boys’ ana Children’s Clothing
THAT WERE BOUGHT CHEAP I CHEAP FOR CASH
AND WE INTEND TO SELL

tion closing Tuesday morning.
The charge
is conspiracy.
The* store of Wm. Roeser at Freelands, was
entered by burglare Monday night, and about
1700 worth of goods, postage stamps and money
1 secured. Itocwcr was postmaster of the village.
Mrs. Henry Jennfng of St. Joseph, was vac­
|
. cinated some time ago, and a case of blood
poisoning ensued, from the effects of which she
died last Friday. She Jcaves three young
children. '
A scandal of huge dimcntlons, has broken
our in a prominent Bay City church, aud tbe
Detroit News refuses to give It away, but adviaea the brethren and sisters not to do so any

separation, only fifty miles northeast of Bar­
kis. and tbe gale coming from tho northeast,
it seems impoeslbl* for tbe second cutter to
be dr.ven to the sa*tward of tbo lane.
By tbe advice and coneent of General
Tcheniroff I have hired Bnkoboff for 100
ruble* per month, and the Cossack Sergeant,
Peter Kolenkln, at fifty rubles per month;
also to supply them with food and clothing
during our absence. I have telegraphed to
Mr Wberikoff. owner of tbe steamer Lena, to
detail Captain Guenbeck. of the Lena, to ao
______ tA aaalat in
UM eearcu.
The three traveling parties will be arranged
aa follows: Passed-Asaistant-F.agineer Mel­
ville and Captain Guenbreck, with a Yakut
dog-sled and driver; second party. William
C. F. Ninderman and Bukoboft, with a Yacut
doe-sled and driver; third party, James HBartlett, first-class fireman and Cossack, Ser
reant Kolenkln, with a Yakut dog-sled and
driver.
Reindeer flesh snd fish can be procured
during tbe summer st the Lena delta.
I will be at Belnn by February 15, and tho
search is to commence by March 1, or as soon
as lhe spring utor.ns will permit.
*
General Tcheniroff has guaranteed to have
oil the supplies at Belun by February 15. My
party wU leave as soon as possible, sad live ou
such food as the country affords I have tho
honor to be, etc.,
Gao. W. MsLvttxj. ’

Terrible Railroad Disaster.

;

PRICES THAT WILL SECURE A LARGE SALE AT ONGE

tempting to kill his wife aud child last October.

untoward Upper Balun; tbe third party to

1

INTEND TO MAKE

'
-m b.
The enrtng-toocb harrow works at Albion,
moved to (-*th (k’Dleric, between Blxteranke
ei J vliioeejponvto follow tbe southern were destroyed by, fire Monday morning, tocuri“
ing a loss of 12,30(1, &gt;ut will be rebuilt immedi­
*
'
ately.
•
‘

“Anything taken place to-dayV nak- work from Upper Belun. on the northwest
«1 Mr. FrrHnghayaen. m heZwalked in ieoast southwest to meet the second party.
TO. wiU complete tbs ?*rch far Identanaots
and ekvatwl bit boot, totbe top of tbe
Cabinet table. “Nothing,” relied Mr.
depot *1
Arthur, without lookiuR up from the
tautafizingpagea of the Patent Office
report. ‘There were lots of fellows
here who wanted to take one, however.” both returning across tbe country to the ProThus doth tbeomus of innocent mirth T*Moto tbe depot to Provarnla No. 18, one
lighten up the ba^eu waste vd official
life.
j
---- 7

।

• YOU WILL FIND UNDER ONE ROOF IN BARRY COUNTY AND WE

A Miss Woolcot, of Jackson, has made a
flve-yeare' engagement with tbe managers of
the Madison Square theatre, st New York, and
is to make her debut in Bronson Howard's
Dew play soon.
An incendiary Are destroyed a large new
three-story bouse owned by George Rodgers at
Battle Creek, Monday. Loss, 11,500; insured
for *730. No clue. This is the third incen­
diary fire in a week.
Herman Hurtenbury, a German in tbe em­
| ploy of P. B. Richardson de Bon on their stock
farm near the village of Tuscola, was found
gored to death by tbe Holstein bull “Roscoe"
on Tuesday afternoon.
John Henderson, was killed at Grand Rapids
last Bunday nlgfit by W. A, Clark at a bouse of
111 repute, kept by Maggie Cousins, daughter
ofllendireon. All parties are colored, and
were drunk at tbe time of th? affray.
A Muskegon man went to bed one night re­
cently so oblivious to care that he put bls
lighted pipe under tbe pillow. In a short
time his landlady and the boarders had to pull
him out and extinguish the Are the best they
could.
a
At Grand Rapids, Tuesday, Mary Ryan bang­
ed a Deputy Sheriff over tbe head with her par­

A special from Mandan to tbe Bismarck
Tritems gives tbe ditails of the railway disas­
ter as follows:
Your correspondent accompanied Division
Superintendent Taylor to tbe scene ot tbe
wreck this morning, and the Coroner from
Mandan was also on board. The unlucky spot
b abcut nineteen miles west of Bismarck, at
what U known as Soapatons'Cut, w» Sweet
Brier Creek, and two miles east ot Sweet Brier
Station. About 7:30 last evening the snow­
plow. the work or boarding trains, and the pas­
senger left Sweet Brier ia tho order named.
The snow-plow passed safely over lhe ten-bent
bridge which spans Sweet Brier Creek, but the
work-train, which was composed of flat cars
next to tLe engine, followed by two sleepingcars for thirty men each, a dining-car, a kltcb*

had not been properly vindicated In tbe court
of Justice.
An effort will be made by the whisky men
to elect a township board favorable to liquor
license In Kalkaska, which has not bad a licen­
sed liquor bouse tn several yearn,and the temp­
erance men will make a strong pull to p. event
itfor another year to come.
8. 8. Bailey, United States revenue collector,
Grand Rapids, would like to know bow a drug-

AN &amp; SON

G- A. TR

The First to the'Front!
NOW RECEIVING A FULL STOCK OF
I AM
the Largest and Best Stock of

GOODS SUITABLE FOR THE SPRING TRADE. INCLUDING

Ready Made Clothing, for Men, Roys, and Youths
Ever brought to Nashville, and ranging in price from three to thirty dollars per suit. In

Ladies, Misees, Gents &amp; Children’s Fine Shoes
I keep tho celebrated Rochester make, Stylish, Durable anc Cheap. In

I have the latest style* and can fit all parties. I always keep a fall stock of

At prices that defy com petion. Cash paid for Batter and Eggs.

DAKOTA

volvers and a sealskin sacque, in all worth &gt;400. bis boys, there’ll be a row in tbe crowd. ■
They about on eight. Keep your eye
From the bouse of Mrs. Cooley they went
peeled, and if you see and signs of a
to that of tbe widow of Andre# Wilson, on row. ask tbe whole crowd out to annk.
Cooper street, and robbed her of &gt;1,000 worth
"Yea, bat-—.”
I of valuables. In both cases they treated tbe
“Look out for dog fights. If one
women kindly, but were determined to get all UiKCri-piscc
takes place you CSHTV
can’t mnu
hold the
v..e boys a •
iff ...... ........
nn litre I'onini
they had of value. The alarm was given to the minute. Keep your eye on the canines.
If
you see a yaller parp begin to beas­
police promptly after tbe thieves left, but no
tie up oak tlie crowd to sten over and
efije baa yet been obtained.
moisten."
At East Tawas, March 28lh, a man claim­
"Yes, but by that time the whole
ing to be P. W. Goodwin, of Maple Ridge, ac­ crowd will be drunk,” protested the
companied by Dr. Flynn, presented at the bank agent.
"Sartin it will, and that's what yon
of B. Richards a draft for &gt;1,900 on New York,
payable to his order, drawn by tbe Citixcns want, of course. Tbat will give yoa a 1
Bank of Petersburg, Ind., on which he received chance to skip oat and take vour life
।
along
with you, and if you make a stop
&gt;530 and a certificate of deposit for tbe remain­ i any where within a hundred miles I’ll
der. The draft is a forgery. Officers art now j send the windmill by freight—provided

May be the place to

BUY A FARM’ BUT

THE PLACE TO BUY

in search of Goodwin.
there’s anything left to send! Nothing
The senior class of Hillsdale college, last like knowing ho.w to handle a Tennes­ GROCERIES,
week made a remonstrance to .the faculty al­ see crowd, my friend. Did yoa ask mo
leging that Clinton Durgin, son of tbe presi­ out to take santhin’T’
PRO VISIOMS
and t»rt wine all out of oue jug, and bow a dent of tbe college, had been granted privileges
druggist can sell five bottles of whisky to one denied to others in being admitted contrary to
The editor was sitting ip his revolv­
poor sick fellow at one time, and he a minor. tbe rules enforced upon other*; and the class. ing, cane-bottomed chair, says the Salt CROCKERY,
Thirteen prisoners escaped from the old. jail
' Lake Tribune, when Tornado Tom, tbe
at Detroit last Saturday night, some of whom
traveling terror of Texas, came in and
GLASSWARE
are the most desperate criminals in the county
demanded retraction of the statement
Tbe turnkey immediately resigned. Four of'
was promptly corrected.
that he had swindled an orphan oat of
Tbe first indication of something wrong was
the number have been recaptured, and re- ! A terrible tragedy occurred at Crawford set­
four dollars. "It’s a lie clear through,” HANGING LAMPS,
a sound like a broken wheel. The train was
going at about ten to fifteen miles per hour, wards of &gt;106 each arc offered for the remain­ tlement, about eight miles south of Farwell, said tbe Terror, striking the table with
March, 20th, In which a man named Jacob his fist. "I’m aa good a man as smells
and the engineer, bearing tbe jar, Immediate- der of the party.
Judd. B. Granger, book keeper for John Smith, aged about 86 years, waa killed iu a the ntmoephere in this section.” "Per­
Barth of Grand Rapids, was caught in the act moot brutal manner by a man named Joseph haps you are better,” said the editor, And everything kept In a am elree at«k of
souls were landed into eternity. It seems of purloining money from his employer’s safe. Bucher. Smith went to Bucher's with Mrs. meekly- “My recorti’ll compar’ fav­
orable with yoarn,” said the Terror,
that a wheel on tbe head truck of tbe flat-car It is estimated that be has taken in the aggre­ Bucher, who has been divorced from her hus­
with a sneer; "perhaps there are little
thb kind. U st
gate about 12,000, but whether he has a Bun- band,, to get her children. Bucher refused to back rackets in yoar life, sir, that
give them up, and Smith turned to leave, wouldn’t bear a microscopic investiga­
Stated.
whereupon Bucher struck him with bis fist aud tion.” "Oh,sir,”aaid the editor, visible
reached the strain upon
A two-year-old girl was burned to death followed it up by a blow with a wooden mallet, agitated, “don’t recall the past: don’t
near Rogen City, Presque Isle county, a few crushing bis victim's skull and killing him on recall tbememoiesof the tomb; I know
days ago. Her parents were away and when tbe spot. Bucher’s son who Is a lad of 13, says I’ve led a hard life—I don’t deny itthey came home they found her char rd body his father subsequently burned tbe mallet and have atoned for them a thoosod times
Probate Notice
I killed Shorty Barnes, the Bowery boy
port, the sleeping-car was Immediately pre- in tbe door yard. It Is supposed that shu luto
cleaned up the bloody evidences of hia guilt in of New York. I blew n man’s head off Statm or Micwteas, I
dpltated into tbe river, thirty feet below, !
striking on its side. This waa followed by I been playing around tbe stove, and her clothes tbe dooryard. Bucher has been taken to Far­ at a log-roll in Kentucky, and bitterly cowtv or B*«nr, 1
sleeping-car No. 2, which careened over, taking fire she ran out of doors for assistance. well and jailed. Bucher is about 45 years old, have I repented of my tolly. I slew a
and Anally assumed a similar position al'
lot of inoffensive citizens of OmT
An Adrian teamster named McLaughlin let
No. 1. Tbe dining-car followed, crushing into
over a paltry foar dollar pot, simi
both ths other*. After tbli was tbe kitchen­ a horse get so poor that in trying to draw a
because I got^excit^d. Ohl could I I
ear, which remained upright against tbe din- load from tbe country tbe brute dropped down Uasld, while Smith nt quiet sod resettle.
cheat the tomb of the men I placed
iag-car. Ths office and store-car was but par- on tbe road exhausted, where the inhuman
its maw I would be happy! But it vi
driver left it to freeze In the mud last week Sage Adflee to a Michigan WtodmiU mH owing to my high temper and ray
Thursday night. Tbe poor beast was killed
lack of early training. I know that I
- that some auitebU person my be appointed elfifty mea oa tbe train at tho time of lhe acci- tlie next morning and McClaugblln jailed.
have been wayward, wicked, and you
ntatraloe of the relate of eaM
deat. aud tbe escape of even one seems
Thereupon It U ordered, U»-l
A Michigan man who has a patent have A right to come here and recall
Tbe United Blates Supreme Court has de
mfraculou* after viewing the wreck.
Ln sleeper Na 1 were about twenty-four elded that Ypollant shall pay a New York cap­ windmill went flown to Teooerac. Utt those unhappy memories: but it s mean
men. Baste wcrtjrtng in their bunks asleep, italist named Taylor &gt;50,000 and eight years fall to see what bv could do among tbe for all tliat- Don’t leave, stranger.
He went to a I’ll tell you all. I sawed a man’s head
others smoking ana reading, and acme play­ interest at eight per cent, to ^atlafly tbe de­ farmer, ot that State.
dealer in agncultuial implements and off with an old anny sabre just for—"
ing cards. As noon as tbe car overturned, the
bedding caught Arc. the mea fled, and tbs mands of a bond given by tbe city in aid of stated his desire to erect his machine Tbe Texas Terror was down stairs,
dying wm roosted almost bsyoad recognition.
and half way around the corner, while ।
and call attention to it
The only deaths were atneog those iu thia car.
"Well, it can be done, I guess, ’ was tbe editor, taking a fresh chew of rat-j
Those who escaped immediately grappled such
tiesnake twist continued his peaceful
John Mower, in Coldwater, found concealed
buckets aS they could find and worked like
vocation quietly as a law-abiding dtfrw had I best proceed!*’
heroet to extinguish the flames, but tbe straw
"Well, you can put her up on the' cn- #
bedding, blankets and other combustible ma­
, - i-r________
hill thar. I don’t know who owns the
terial made it impossible. It is supposed that
Annie Murray, a noted f^ncy woman
seven of the r^ht tn«n killed were killed in­ everybody else in Coldwater is searching his ground, but if you treat the crowd I
l.tl’nrirand.O. IhuiMd iMiMiUj-kiUstantly, before being burned, as but the votes bam in tbe hope of finding a hat store, grocery, guess no one will object.
of one man ervinr “heln!” waa heard. He national bark, or wmt other bonanza unde"Very well.”
, rfHMrfC.Prtaig.lrer ore, on th. 8d
"NextTuesday is market day, and i. in«i bresuse ho
the hay-mow; but no far, without Mosscrs’s
be wm
was a
a ilittle too mucn-----m

C. W. SMITH’S

a

Tbe scene beggar. deeeripUoa. Beattsred
here aud there peumlseuouslv among tbe
burned blankets, valtoea. clothing, braksa
car-wbeels, and iron rods, were the charred

'‘luck.
Edward Fairbank, a lad about 12 years old,

there’ll liehe»p.ot folketn town. Yon
luichirum.
incUned w Besctenss:- .........
Bather ttiau
Wta&gt;t tn be around rarljMd treat th. (have
him amuse another woman, she
•. ..1 jj
..enry
---- -—
o come, so
crowd.
up far all time »to
i*Se?*the old thing going and »k th. Ur
tar - that
“*“* little gmoewrec
e—-------- concerned,
and then «hot herself, showing to what
boy* over to drink something.
I desperation her aftectionate nature had
"Ju*t oo.”
' been driven.
"You want to .tend on a barrel and
Bui

BRAIN AND NERVE.

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                  <text>VOLUME IX.
LIFE IN NASHVILLE

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, APRIL 8, 1882

dred maples.
—Last Thursday little Levi Everts
was standing in the barn where Jerry
Vanuocker was fixing up a stall and a
nail which he was driving flew from
under the hammer and struck '
' in
'
the eye. It is feared thathis I
destroyed.
)
"
—A little feur-year-old son of Jacob
Heckathorn, on Saturday last, while
playing on his father’s porch, fell off,
breaking one of his arms just below
the elbow. Dr. Barber was summoned
who repaired damages nnd made the
little fellow as comfortable as possible.
—A bargain between the Catholics
and C. C. Peavey of Battle Creek, has
been consumated, by which the former
come into possession of the Baptist
church on the 35th last. The consider­
ation fort|)e property is $1,400. and $50
forfeit money has already been paid by

the Catholics.

—It isn’t every auctioneer that can
sell one old school report for a copy-of
“Robinson Crusoe” three times, but
“Happy George” did it at Aylsworth’s
auction last wAek. but as we endeavo.to contemplate the feeling* of the last

NUMBER 29.
■

OALAMITOOT OTOLOIE.

THE ELEOTIOJS.

And Her Environs.
—We are glad to note the universal
sentiment exhibited in regard to set­
ting out shade trees throughout the
village this spring.
John Andrews,
alone, has delivered and set out a hun­

TERMS; 8150 per Ybar
Credit SuBsenimoMs $1.75.

of the Best Party under the Sun.

ORNO STRONG,!J

EOrtOl AWD PBOFMIBTOR.

Another cyclone swept over northern
Assyria and southern Kalamo last
Thursday night about six o’clock.
Henry Ellis’ new brick house was
blown down, to the cellar ‘wall, except
the kitchen where the family happened
to be at the time and escaped uninjured
His barn was blown down, and his val­
uable horses probably killed.
*
.
C. G. Baker’s house and barn was un­
roofed; Ores Mapes had 20 acres of
timber destroyed.
Walter Mapes’
barn was leveled, and windmills were
torn from their moorings at nearly
every farm along the line of the storm.
Silas Reynold* attempted to escape
from the storm by flight, but was over­
taken and killed. His wife and two
children escaped considerably injured.
His buildings and orchard were des­
troyed.
Levi Kenyon was seriously injured,
and his buildings entirely destroyed.
It is also reported that a Mr. Mead hod
two children killed and another seri­
ously injured.
It is impossible to get full particulars
before going to press, but enough has
been heard to show that this is probab­
ly the most destructive to life aud prop­
erty of any storm Mer known in this

MAPLE GROVE.
In this township, considerable ex­
citement prevailed, the Republicans
and Green backers alone
crossing
swords, the Democrat* choosing rather
to act as backing for tho G. B’s. than
enter the conflict openly. The Green backer* won the palm. There wpre 360
votes polled, 186 being straight Green­
back and 70 staight Republican. The
following is the score:

Leander Lapham, R
Clerk—
Adam Wolf, G.
George Spencer, R.
Treasurer—
Nathan 8. Barnes, G.
Elbridge G. Potter, R.
Highway Com.—
Oliver F. Long, G.
Benjamin Pierce, In­
justice. full,term—
Josiah Conley, G.
I. M. B. Glllasple, R

wxna
isyior. u1.
159
Calvin J. Bassett, R
101
School Inspector, abort termJoseph M. Shoop, G.
150
Close R Palmer, IL
School Inspector, long term—
WiliiamFeighner, G.
John McKee, R.
Drain Com.—
Charles W. Taylor, G.
Johnson McKcley, R.
Constables—

section.
Albert Ostroth, G.
Assyria certainly seems to be doomed
' Amon Wolf. IL
to receive several chastizements in the
Frank Quick, G.
Jesse D. Guy, R.
form of cyclones, as this is the third
Floyd Watkins, G.
The path of this
Henry Mead, IL t
down to read the thrilling story of within two years.
W,~»ODLAND.
“Crusoe” to his family, we have our storm lies between tho other two, and
is of about the same width,—80 to 50
Three tickets were iu tho field and
doubts about the “squareness” of the
rods.
596 votes cast. Straights are as follows :
transaction.
Republican 106. Democratic 53, Green­
CASTLETON'S ELECTION.
—A couple of grangers from Wood­
back 18. The Republicans elected
land came in town with a thousand
Monday’s election passed off very their entire ticket by msjorities rang­
pounds of maple sugar on Tuesday.
quietly, only two tickets being in the ing from 18 to 76. Bqlow we give the
After securing the prides of our deal­
name* of the lucky candidates with
er they expressed dissatisfaction at the field, and no particular effort was made
upon cither ticket to elect it as a whole. their majorities: Elijah P. Barnum,
Nashville
market and drove to VL
The bulk of electioneering being con­ Supervisor, 18; Wesley Myers, Clerk,
Ville. In about two hours they return­
fined to Supervisor, Treasurer and ono 75; John W. Holmes, Treasurer. 75;
ed, with horses badly bespattered with
Constable, which resulted in the elec­ John Kilpatrick, Justice, 57; Eugene
eweat and mud, and wanted to know of
tion of bemocrats to these offices.
Davenport, School
Inspector,
76;
a principal dealer if ho would stick to
The total poll was light, as compar­ David W. Leedy, School Inspector, 64 ;
his offer. Being a square toed fellow
ed with last years vote, only 513 ballots James W. Sawdy, Highway Com., 31;
he replied “Yea,” aod the sugar was
being cast, of which 89 were straight. John Hynes, Drain Com., 69; Consta­
unloaded.
Republican, and 117 straight Demo­ bles, Daniel A. Miller, 58; Hiram
—A Musical Convention, under the
cratic. The Greenback element es­ Walts, 71; Edward Schautz, 71; John
direction of Prof. C. E. Leslie, a music
poused the Democratic caucus, and
publisher or considerable note, of Chi­
wojked as assiduously for the election
cago, is in progress at the M. E. church.
of Supervisor, as though he were one
The election was very spirited and
The convention was organized last
of their own kin in politics. *^he Re­ resulted in the election of the entire
Thursday evening, at the close of a publican ticket was elected with the
Greenback ticket, except one School
very fine and pleasing concert, given exception of Supervisor, Treasurer and
Inspector. W. W. Cole is Supervisor
by Leslie, assisted by his wife, Miss
one Constable. The general result be­ by 15 majority; Geo. S. FI ar tom, Clerk,
Minnie McLaughlin and E. 8. Burwell,
ing the same as last year, with the ex­ 80 majority ; A. G. Kent, Treasurer,
with fifty-two scholars and commenced
ception of the one Constable added to 15 majority; W. W. Latty, Justice;
yesterday morning.
The convention
the Democrats.
C. H. Russell, Highway Com; Geo.
will continue five days. It will be a
Below we give the complete vote and Kent, Drain Com ; C. S. Clark, School
grand thing and the price of tuition is
majorities of each lucky candidate, Inspector, and Calvin Smith, E. P.
so low that no one can afford to stay
Republican nominees *being
*
marked Hayes, P. WaJker, and G. Cummings,
at home.
R. and Democratic D.
Constables.
—Tuesday forenoon Hank Feighner
HASTINGS.
and a big umbrella strode on to the Supervisor—
Hastings city has planked down an
Nnthon F. Sheiden, R.
river pike just as old man J. M. Ward
entire Greenback list of officers, as
did the other. They met where the
shown by the following:
Frank McDerb^R.
pike was about eight feet above the surGeorge Francis, D.
KAMES.
VOTETreasurer—
Msycr,
Jacob 8. Harder, R
Robert J. Grant, G.
312
five feet above it* bed. Theoldman got
William E. Martin, D.
John Q. Cressy, R.
391
Lightened at Hank’s umbrella and JusticeWilliam D. Hayea, D.
backed down this embankment He
11»
Cliarles Welasert G.
’
was fished out in dne season, without Highway Com.—
Phillip T. Colgrove, R
Miner Mead, R
Henry F. Ford, J).
loss of anything but his wind and tem­
George Dillinbeck, D.
Treasurer,
.
per, but the umbrella received a shock Drain Com.—
Alonzo Wooley, G.
Miner McjuI R.
AenrvC- Ixswio, R.
Which, it is feared, will prove fatal.
♦ George Dillcubeck, D
Later.—Perhaps a wagon and span of School Inspector, 1 yeorHarshal,
John J. Potter, R
horses ought to be incorporated in
James A. Nima, G.
William E- Martin, D.
Anaon D. Maynard, R
this item, but the dispatchers come in so
Charles MlUer, D.
uncertain and the devil’s cry for “copy”
Justice, full term,
Franklin C. Campbell, 0.
is so certain that the item will have
347
to go into type as writen.
Justice, to All vacancy,
Edwin C. Clifford, 6.
Alvin Cole, R
—Alva Armitage, whose parents re­
Isaac Swarthont, R
Asbury Black, R
side at Mosherville, N. Y„ committed
Buchanan B. Downta
William L. Ralph, D.
suicide by hanging, at the barn of
Daniel P. Bollngen I
School Inspector.
Hcrae* W. ntaV».
George 8. Tomlinson, G.
Elias Cole, in Kalamo township, on
316
Albert Hilton, D.
the Bellevue town line. Young Ar­
— ELECTION ECHOS.
Supervisor, 1st A 4th v
mitage was a month hand at work for
Supervisor John, again, at our pleaaCharles H- Hicks, G.
Mr. Cole, and fell in love with his pret­
Traverse Phillipa, R
ty niece. Miss Lettie Wilson, who also
Fred Sweet, D.
Hort. went in "by the skin of his Buperviaor, 2d A 3d war
boarded at the same place. On the day
George W. Abbr, G.
mentioned Alva and Lettie walked out teeth.”
Baker Shrtoer, ft.
“Cruel heert,” cease thy wild throb­
Fred EL Barlow, D.
ter avowing his passion and proposing bing*—the conflict is o’or.
Both saloons were closed, but num­
The election in Kalamo was about
matrimony fur the forty-fifth time,
as exciting as usual, notwithstanding
finally declared that unless Lettie erous pint bottles were not
Frank was the best elected man on the fact that no Greenback ticket was
run. The Republicans elected their
hiuM*lf until dead, dead, dead. But the job; Billy Martin was the next
The Republican candidate for Super­ ticket, with the exception of Supervis­
Lettie aaid "Nay,” and went off leaving
or and Justice of the Peace, which go to
the Democrats.
Reuben Gridley is
age waaseen Le was hanging by the candidate for Treasurer, was Harder.
About two more year* and the Dem­ Supervisor; Warren Ackley Clerk ;
Up.
of it Lettie upbraided ocrat* will carry the town if the Re­ Wm. Jordan, Treasurer; Isael DilJ. A.
publicans don’t wake up and “get to lie. Highway Commissioner;
gitting.”
Grunt, Justice of the Peace; C. D.
John M. Roe made the cleanest ran Spaffqrd and A. B. Swift, School In­
spectors; and Horace Sherman, Drain
* lucky
Kiri for not
scratched only onre,—Judge Killen CotnmiMinner.
being charged with the offence.
THE COUNTY.
Returns from the various towns show
the G reeellackers to be steadily gain­
ing ground. Hasting* township, Irv­
ing, Rutland, Thornapple, and Orange­
ville, each elect entire Greenback tick­

et. Johnstown and Yankee Springe go
Republican. Barry goes Republican,
except Supervisor, as does Praneville,
except Highway Com., which are
Greenback. Hope goes Greenback,
with the exception of Highway Com.
and one School Inspector, which are
Republican.
Thu .board of Supervisors for the en­
suing year stand twelve Greenbackers,
five Republicans, and one Democrat.
Below is the list.
Barry, Charles A. Polley, G,
•
Carlton, James N. Covert. IL
Hasting*. William H. Merrick, G.
Hope, Duncan Campell, G.
Irving, Augustus J. Gott G,
Tboraapple, Wfiliam Cridler, G.
Johnstown, Edgar F. Nye, R.
Maple Grove, OraonSwift, G.
Orangeville, Lemuel W. Wlng.Q.
Prariville, Ainos C. Towne, IL
Rutland. John Dawson, 0.
Woodland, Elijah P. Barnum, R
Yankee Springs? Samuel C. Richie, R.
Hastings city, Charles Hicks. G.
••
“
George W. Abbey, G.
Castleton, John Barry, D.
•

LOCAL GIBBLE-GABBLE
Mrs. Chas. Lentz is quite ill.
The depot platform has been fenced
in. ,
Cort. Wilkinson is clerking for C. W.
Smith.
G. A. Truman A. Son have erected a
new awning.
April has done the hadsome thing
by us, thus far.
John Furniss lias rented and moved
into 8. W. Walratli’s house.
W. E. Buell has taken possession of
tho Lee property, on State St.
Al. Rogers is running a peddling wa­
gon, getting his supplies of G. A. Tru­
man A Son.
Henn. Haver has moved to Battle
Creek, where he intends working at the
carpenter’s trade.
Rev. Newton will talk temperance at
the Morgan Red Ribbon ball on Friday
evening, April 14th.
Judge Killin tried four time*, and
spoiled four matches, trying to light a
pipe full of saw dust April 1st
W. A. Ayliprorth has packed up the
balance'of his stock of goods, and mov­

ed them to bis store at Big Rapids.
The member* of the W. C. T. U. will
bold a meeting at Mr*. Jas. Fleming’s
next Thursday, promptly at 2:30 p. m.
The fine shower on Tuesday, gave
grass an immense boost, aud caused
buds to burst from every shrub and
* Miss
Addie Reed and Miss Stella
Wheeler of Hastings were in Nashville
over Sunday.—guests of Miss Bell
Truman.
F.T.Boisa has affixed to the front of
his drug store a fine sign, composed of
raised letters,—the handiwork of Her­
man Blair.
Pearly Butler and wife started for
Haft, where Pearly will leave his
“frow” and start for Dakota on a pros­
pecting trip.
Seventeen old ladies visited Mrs.
W. H. Young, last Monday, the oldest
of whom was 78, and the youngest 51
years of age.
.
Rev. Bissell and sister, Mis* Emily,
hsVe secured rooms with Dr. Foote,
iu the Clever residence, and gone to
housekeeping.
Rev. J. M. Aikin ex-pastor of the
M. E. society here, was in the village
and preached m the new church Tusday evening.
Mrs. C. W. Smith was called to La­
peer on Monday to attend the funeral
of an old schoolmate.
She returned
last evening.
The Ogosso Times has been enlarged
and materially impoved. It presents a
creditable appearance and deserves a
liberal patronage.
The Ladies Mite Society of Maple
Grove will meet at Mr. and Mrs. Wm.
Biven’sThuisday evening April 15th.
All are cordially invited.
Frank and Jerry Woolcut started for
Dakota Tuesday afternoon.
At Vt.
Ville they joined a large party also
bound for the great north west.
The first invoice of goods for the new
firm of Chipman &amp; Prindle arrived on
Thursday. The firm will be ready tor
busines, the fore part of next week.
A. J, Beebe has sold his right and
title in the building three doors south of
Boise’s hardware to Dr. Foote, who has
taken possession of the same for an of­
fice.
‘
W. G. Aylsworth left on Monday
evening'for Dakota, and his family
started the following morning, to spend
a few weeks with relatives at Eaat
Clarence. N, Y.
The Euierpean Society is in a flour­
ing condition having now over 80 member*._ They have recently ordered new

books, and under the efficient leader­
ship of Mr. Bissell are progressing and
improving finely.
While at Charlotte, one May last

from the platform of the car missed her
footing in consequence of the train
starting, and fell to the ground, injur
ing one of her legs so that she has been
unable to use it aince.
Those who attended the Christian
social at P. Deller’s Wednesday even­
ing—and the/ jverenota few by any
means—report an excellent time. Ma-,
pie sugar and other refreshments were
were served and $5.50 taken up.
Od Tuesday W. A. Aylsworth recei­
ved a telegram from East Clarence, N.
Y., which conveyed the intelligence
that his mother was not expected to
live, and he took the two o’clock ex­
press for tho eaat the same afternoon.
J. Lentz dr. Son’s have bought Kel­
logg, Bell &amp; Co’* hearse, undertaker*
goods and good will in trade, and will
re-furnish and improve the former and
bo better prepared to attend to this
branch of business than ever before.
That new stock of spring good* just
in at G. A. Truman A Son’s is ono of
the largest, finest nnd best selected ever
brought to Nashville, and anxious cus­
tomers are simply thronging the long
brick to secure the bargains that are
being offered. See new jidvt.
John M. Roe of the Nashville Mills is
aboriginal and ingenious fellow ard is
generally to be found at the front. He
secured the right to put an advt. of
“Linseed Meal”—the same as will be
found in our advertising columns—on
the back of the town tickets, conse­
quently "Linseed Meal” has become a
staple article and is selling like hot
cakes.
The Blue Ribbon meeting was held
at the M. E. church. Sunday afternoon,
and, notwithstanding some bitch in re­
gard to President, the exercises were
very entertaining. Mr*. G. A. Truman
was elected President to fill that vac­
ancy caused by the removal from town
of Miss Meiser.
It is confidently ex­
pected that under the experienced
leadership of Mrs. Truman the society
will soon regain ita former high stand­
ing. An interesting program will lie
earned out at the next meeting, which
will be at the Christian church on the
7tlr of May. Let everybody that cares
for the well-faro of their children be
sure and attend.
MAPLE CROYE.

Sam. Shaffer has a sick horse.
Mike Manscy has a new harness.
Nett Whitcomb is on th? sick list.
W. Nicewander’s baby is seriously
ill.
Mr. Nicewandcr is building a new

LOCAL M ATTBItS,
TQ WHOM IT MAY CONCERN.

cldedly happy, and that we have never heard
single remark or hint, or known of any occa
•too for such, derogatory to tfee character o
hia wife, Sarah Keitiewell.
Wc willingly ano unreservedly aigu thia teoiimonal in behalf of one so worthy as we believe
Mrs. Kettlewell to have been daring her resi­
dence in Marengo.
Mr*. Eooa Houck,
H. N. McOcrasfct,
Ida M. Houck,
Boon Houck,
Milo Bowie,
Edith L. Lusk.
Mr*. C. B. Lusk,
A. 8. Poulson.
Emm* D. Lusk.
Albert Graham,
btephen Power,
Mr*. IL Kennedy,
Mra. A J. Lusk,
Mrs. J. Ward,
Mra. J. C. Glldcnrtey,
Mrs. 8. OUdereley,
E. Hoskins,
Mn. E. Hoskins,
D. D Lewis,
Clara Power,
Mrs. R. Power,
------G.
A.. Newtou,
Mary E. Newton.
BABCOCK—Mrs. Emma E. Babcock.- March
31».t, aged 32 years, wife of Robert Babcock
ofitbe town of Benton, Eaton county. Cause
ofosalb, hemorrhage of the stomach. Funer­
al services were held on tbr Ixirjl's day in the
very nlcaaantly arranged M. K. church of
Potterville, which has-a seating capacity ot
500 was filled to ita utmoat. The officers and
choirare competent to render due honors to
their calling. Funeral services were con­
ducted by Elder P. Holler.

rar Best Barrel Salt for SI,25 at the Elevator
of Brooks, Marshall, A Co.
FOR RENT.
A desirable office, ground floor, on west side
Main 8L Apply to,. Mas. Mixa Wickham.

IIPOUTANTTOTBAVELERN,
.
Special inducements are offered you by th*
Burlington Route, It will pay you to read their
advertisements to be found elsewbcrcin thia
issue.
__________________________
PT Full line of Wall Paper at
F. T. Boisrs.

WANTED.
A gxxid wide-awake young man to sell one of
tiie best Sewing Machines in the west.
L- J. Whselks.
Don’t forget the cost cash sale of Fur
□Iture and the closing out sale of
.
Katxooa, Bell &amp; Co.
SHOES!! SHOES!!
Don't buy s pair until you see that new,
large aod elegant slock—the flnest ever brought
to Nashville—just in at
Graxou’s.

NEW! NEW!
Edwards.havc bought more new goods and will
flt you out with a first claas harness at bottom
figures. Call and see me and gt-l prices.
'
HERB. WAL1LATH.

W N. B. I will only grind Mondays and
Thursdays- 27-30
N. C. Haoexma*.

SPRING AND. SUMMER OPENING.
Thanking the Indies of Nashville and ridnttv
for past favor*, I invite their attention to a verr
flue assortment of Spring Millinery Goods,
which 1 have Just purchased wt the lowest mar­
Louse.
ket price. A careful Inspection is solicited. 1
Your*. Ac.,
Arnold Gordinerhas gone to keeping will not be undersold.
M. JEFFREY.
house.
The Norton school will begin again
your furniture for c**b st
next week.
p
Kzllooo, Bkll A Co.
John Wolf has moved in Andrew
Eno’s house.
NEW PHOTOGRAPH
GALLERYHenry Spencer and family have mov­
Brady's building to
ed to Potterville.
prepared to do pbcl
Sugat making and mnd have disap­ lion. Copying sod ।
ncr. Havin- ’—‘ peared all of a sudden.'
mm I can guarantee naUafat
photograph
Mr. Wilcox has bought Mr. Cooper’s tion. Give i
triaL
F. T. Momkison.
farm -, consideration $1,500.
YOU ARE INVITED
Miss Carne Plum of Nashville, was
To call In and see what I can sell you* harness
visiting friends here last week.
for.
HERB. WALRATH.
“East Maple Qrove” has oar sympa­
a*- The CROWN is and hxs been a «ucce*~
thies in his trouble*—not finding items

plenty.
Whooping cough is running at large
among the children, seeking whom it

proved points from the whole range of tin
Sewing Machine world anil combined into o»
grand triumph of thia field of industry. h&gt;
this day and are of prt^reMloo, ll&gt;e line oi
“OLD STAND BY8” and “OLD RELIA­
BLES” are too old for our wide-*-wake deophwho arc bound to have the beat Machine ev

devour.
We are most ashamed to mention it
but we got fooled two, three, four
time* the first day of April.
Townshio election passed off quietly.
LUMBER! LUMBER!
The Greenbacker* coming victorious
Custom 8*wing and Building Material fur
with majortie* ranging from 51 to 71.
” Geo. Dean was circulating petition pic Grove.
for the pardon of Sergeant Mason. He
AUCTION.
received over a hundred names on
town meeting day.
The revival at the Hyde school house
closed last Sunday night with a Urge
DISSOLUTION NOTICE.
crowd, so much so that the boys that
could not get insfde were improving
the time out side playing eucher. A
bad thing boys.
It seem* that there have been some
L. D. Wanxxn.
bodies taken up from the old grave
O. 8. Gmaxt.
yard on Sec. 96 and the graves were not
DISSOLUTION NOTICE.
filled np afterwards. We do not like,
to find fault but this looks rather dis­
respectful to the friends of the re­
diMutvcd by mutual eonaent Calvin Soritbrc
maining dead.
Grangers have been improving the
Aisyria, March IS,
nice weather for the last few days in
slicking np their farms. Among other
things Mr. Covill and Mr. Pierce have
new board fence* in front of their res­
idence ana Ad. Wolf ba* been grading
around hi* place of abode.
liQG E- Kvk.
We frequently hear a lady exclaim:
“O, dear! I wish I was a man!” but we
do not remember ever hearing a man
wish himself a woman. No! man Deveu
high •

He is content to admire rather

*

�BOLD.

fool get* by. The chances
alligator with a rifle are abq
did

rock diet woufd

boys did not lay the
wrung before Genera!

Nobody. huM.
to h.™ &lt;bo
lout .jupicton who b« rally &lt;ra. -Tbey’d
•nebor notch him wTt dt&gt;m know.

Srtfisfc
he was ’Bout. When dar was mince-pies
’round, and stuffed chicken, an heaps ou
For t&lt;.ti itnd.itft-f are r&lt;&gt;nr&lt;*te.
good things, jes’ lebc him alone.v
And life i» a heavenly thluy.
“But,” as the old saying has it, “them
The music end-t, and I shiver.
is many a slip ’ twixt the cup and the lip,”
For nfy M.U1 ha* returned to
Before supper-time could draw near,
»K.&gt; ,ll...n. &lt;mI1. KVr, u »?&gt;•
there was a little catastrophe awaiting
Seph that he had not counted on.
It arose from the fact that there was a
A COMPLICATED
PREDICAMENT. meeting at the church thatevening which
the Deacon and Mr*. Potter attended,
Josephus Jones was his name in full,. their way lying directly past the school­
but. he was called Seph by familiar ac­
house. Who ever could have supposed
quaintances, aud usually designated as
that curiosity would have prompted tho
“Potter’scolored boy.” In his stock­ two good old people to look in and see
ings he stood about four feet five, was
what the young folks were about,even
black as qbony, and had an inclination
though thev did not approve of such go­
to grin inoR^ur less. When in full cos­
ings on?
.
tame he UoreWsemplflyfer’fl discarded
But in the meantime Seph enjoyed
: ’cowhldejboota. tT'EIuc flannel shirt, a himself
amazingly.
He watched the
froct-qdat ornamented with brass buttons
table longingly; he listened to the Addle,
ami a faded felt hat that had a ragged
aud danced until he was out of breath;
vent-hole in the crown. Trouble usu­
he played chase the squirrel, and had
ally slipped from his mind and memory
capital fun for an hour or more; then the
like water from n duck’s back; but at the
end was at hand,
time about to be mentioned ho was con­
While standing in the middle of the
siderably disturbed because ho was not
floor, hesitating what to take part in
white “like dthdr folk*.”
next, he happened to notice a face out­
Tho white boys and girls in the Potter
side one of tho windows, and it did not
Deighliorhood had been planning several
take him more than the thousandth part
weeks to have a masquerade party in the
of a second to recognize the Deacon
okl red school house,' and Seph desired
looking straight at him. It was a tre­
above all t hings to have a share in tho
mendous moment, and Seph could al­
fun and eatables of tho occasion. His
most feel the wool on the top of his head
color and scanty wardrobe, however,
uncurl and risejight up under his hat.
were likely to debar him the privilege.
His first impulse was to make a rush
“ It don’t makeno-dif rence, nohow,”
for the door. When he crossed the en­
he said to himself, after mature deliber­
try door-sill, however, he stubbed one
ation. “Ts gwinc to hob a show in dat
foot and fell, and the Deacon’s hand was
party one way or nudder.”
on him before ho oould recover himself.
Vi hen the expected day at last arrived
Ho led Soph down the road, Mrs. Pot­
he watched the preparations anxiously
ter following close behind and pleading
all the morning and afternoon. The in­
side of the school-house was first abund­ for mercy, as mothers do.
But in a moment the mask fell off, and
antly trimmed with evergreen, then a
the Deacon, amazed, let go his hold.
stage was erected in one comer for a
“What-1”
fiddler, and next a long "table was ar­
Seph did not wait to hear anything
ranged at the back of the room for the
more, but ran into tho bushes, then
refreshments, which were brought in
leaped over a fence, and ran at his best
basket* by several of the boys and girls
speed across an acre or two of plowed
from time to time. Finally the table­
cloths were spread, and the girls drew ground.
“ By golly!” ho gasped, dropping
from the mysterious baskets frosted
down at last exhausted. “ I reckon I’s
cakes wrapped in tissue-paper, great
bloated pies, nuts and raisins, oranges glad I’m black dis yere time, anyhow!”
Sorely disappointed, however,
ho
and big bunches of grapes, paper bags
skulked back to the barn, and there
filled with candy, ana, in fact, a quantity
of good things that made Soph’s mouth another misfortune overtook him—his
own clothes had disappeared.
water while he looked in through one of
For a moment or two this startling dis­
' the Windows.
covery was too much for his intellect to
At home, late in the afternoon. Job
w Potter secretly led him up to an unfin­ grasp. He searched here and there des­
ished room over the wood-shed, and perately, overturned the hay, upset a
showed him his mask and outfit, which barrel of oats, frightened the hens from
their roosts, and got tho horse to
. were hidden away in a barrel. He made
neighing. Then, scared and bewildered,
Seph try on tho mask, the old beaver
he rushed outside, undecided what to do.
hat and the ooat, just to see how they
Surprise, however, awaited him here
were going .to look.
again. In a moment he saw himself—or
“Esther is mighty sot on not lettin’
at least somebody with a bitick face and
me
saidJob, “ but I’m a-goin’ now,
lus clothes on—steal out from the wood­
you setter believe. Don’t say anything,
shed near by, and hurry down to the
though. Mum’s the word”
Seph said that he would take care. road.
If he •’wasn’t himself, who in de world
But an hour afterward, when he saw the
was he? dot’s what-he’d like to know.”
Deacon, as Job’s father was familiarly
But in about three minutes, when he
called, come down from the shed cham­
saw the mysterious personage and the
ber, and carry Job’s mask and costume
to a hiding-nlace in the barn, he had to Deacon meet unexpectedly near a great
tree that stood in the yard, he was never
lie ddwn Ixjhind the wood-pile, and bold
so glad in his life to be in some other fel­
both hands over hi* mouth to keep his low's clothes.
\
laughter from being heard.
Seph ran over to the wood-shed,
At the supper table Deacon Potter an­
nounced to the .whole family that he did climbed up the ladder to the chamber
not approve of masquerade parties any­ above, and began to disrobe himself of
way, and certainly not for young people. Job’s clothes m a hurry. He had got
Job must just make up his mind to stay them all off, when that personage came
scrambling up the ladder also, and the
at home. '
Seph was bringing in the kindling­ two confronted each other in the strag­
wood for the morning and heard the gling moonbeams that found their way
Deacon’s command. A few minutes later through a cobwebbed window.
“What yer gwipe to dowid myclothec
a great thought took complete possession
of him. If Job couldn’t go why shouldn’t on. Job Potter?” Seph asked, wrathfuiiyhe go in his place?
“Nothin’. Pa’s spoilt it all! He fust
“ Dar’s no reason in de world why I
habn’t jes’ an good a right to go as hc thought that you was me, and then that
hab, an’ 1’igwme to, sure’s my name's I was you. There’s no goin’ to the par­
ty, anyway.”
Josephus.”
Seph drooped down on tho floor, and
He hurried through all the choree,
swallowed his supper hastily and took let out the laugh that had been tickling
advantage of the first opportunity to slip him several times during the evening.
“It am all on account ob de Deacon
away to the barn. After hunting all
•ver the haymow and in every hole and bein’ so onreasonable,” he said. “We’* s
corner he could think of for the’ concealed had a perdicament for sartin.”- _F. B.
articles, be found them under a basket Stanford, in Harper's Young People.

in the corn crib.
Luckily the moon waa just coming up
and the cracks in the barn admitted
glimmer enough for him to see where it
was nnd what he was doing. He, very
soon exchanged his own garment* piece■
by piece for Job’s Sunday suit, which,
with the exception of the pantaloons,
fitted him very well.
While his teeth chattered and his whole
body trembled with nervous excitement,
be put on the mask and beaver hat.
These, together with the coat collar
।

pocket of the cont there happened to bo

be found out that he. wasn't Job, Seph
knew very well what his fate would be,

”
fy covered before he ventured forth.
In a very short tin* be arrived in sight
of the school-hoHM* lights, and heard the
fiddle already under way. I’ ’'
bobbing post the windows in
uucan though all were d:
the sound* of mrrtb and row
floated out toward him gave

Jelly from Ivory.

Tho lost sale of ivory at Liverpool
was the largest which has taken place
for a long time. Manufacturers who
were present tell tie that the prices real­
ized *uow an advance of from 20a. to 80s.
jper cwt. All the lota wen sold. There
were buyers not only from the English
towns, but from America and the con­
tinent. Ivory is very largely used in the
Sheffield trades, more especially for halt­
ing cutlery of all kinds. The demand
for billiard and bagatelle balls. as well
a* for piano keys, has greatly increased
of late years. One leading cutlery house
made a calculation wome time ago, suggesled by a question put by a visitor.
They estimated that to supply themselves
with the ivory they needed for the
handles of their cutlery, etc., they reauired 1,280 elephants every year,’ and
dial even on the basis that each tusk
weighed 28} pounds. In a magazine the
question was recently put, ••What be-

M, and placed it

It thia statement there will be at ante
property poiziug the rock with her
on exnmMsifln at inerednlitv. and utir re- ; h»n&lt;h, made s short run, then spnnglDg
X
piy wuiuuJ"!
uu suowuuiwaiiy H
in»*
wern
i
*10r
nfter the fashion of a
1.** ..*^5
hi
onra which It U . pity «hoold raining nun. diiwhirged the pooderoo*
continue to Ijc perpetrated with the mjmj-•
tion of *o manv dwlinffutahed name* - !
Thorn m thattheSmM «m not on !
tho Common; that II wu not dmttoyed
bribe Brituh mldlon; tho boy. did not
cill on Genral Ge«e «t the Prorlnee
bow; nd ho did not know ot tho mWter tmlll told of It.
^1 wu orer, by
tho officer on whom they did mH.
Thl., if correct, would eeem to le.ro
ray little of the .tmy, «n&lt;l yet there i&gt;
a subtractum of truth in it, and the corroot story i* fully a* rood a* that which
bm beehm often n^iod Incorrectly.

ro®*8,10

Bor. Dr. Hole. whoTet the dinner of
the Latin school association in 1877,
firat pointed out the inaccuracy of the
picture, told the story as it had been
told to him thirty years before by one of
the boys.
I
The coast.was from near the corner nf '
Beacdn aud Somerset street, down tho
Hill to the foot .of School Street.
Tho
boys of tho Latin school used* to bring 1
their sledi to school, and after sebodi
coast down the street.
In a house op-1
poeite tho school, near the present site
of tho city hall, lived the British General
Haldimand, the Colonel of Gage’s own
regiment His servant spread ashes on
the coast and tho boys of tho Latin
school appointed a committee from the !
first class to see tho General and oomplain of the servant He received them
kindly, said he had trouble enough with
the Boston men. and would not have any
with tho boys and sent a servant out to
brush off the coast
Afterwards he
mentioned tho visit to General Gage,
who made in reply a remark sufficiently
resembling that which he is reported to '
have made to the boys to render it pos­
sible that it was the foundation of the
1
common tale.—Boston Transcript.

.nd dlKb»rg« the greet rock.
Being
but
anil slender, when tho heavy
™ek fefther head all ballast to gone
■heVpun around in the air some
four or A™ Umes, finally coming down
°n her feet and all right The result of
her effort was, however, somewhat di*nstrous to ono of her assistants.
Tho
8tick was fnirly struck and broken, but
tho "PPoe end of it flew back and struck
’he largest and fattest squaw squarely
&gt;n the stomach, stretching her upon the
ground as one dead.
A great outcry
was raised by all the squaws and papowes. d lot of buck* came tearing down
the railroad track from the neighborhood
of the lumber-yards, and for a time
there was a great commotion.
A few
handful!* of snow finally brought tho
injured squaw to her legs, and when
"he got up she gazed’wildly about as
though wondering to see that no one
injured by the explosion.— I »r'7,n,a Enterprise.

The Second-Hand Book.

A week or two ago a bright and
chatty young woman called at a house
on Cass Avenue and endeavored to
make the sale of a book entitled “ Home
and Mother.” The ladies of the house
received her in the usual ten degrees
below fashion and. utterly refusing to
look at the book,, she said:
*• I haven’t any money, and I know
that my husband wouldn’t pay for it.”
“ It is a book highly spoken of by the
press.”
"Yoi, I know, but my husband is
queer/’
“And you see the superior style of
binding.”
“ I know, but my husband would call
it bosh and trash.”
.
“ Shan’t I call when he is at homo?”
• * That would be’ useless. He wouldn’t
even look at it, and he bates female Lxjk
•gents.”
“ Does he?”
“ Yes, he abhors them.
I knew he
doesn’t even treat them civilly when
they call at his office.”
“Is that so?” mused the girl, and
when she left the house she for some
reason or other started righ' down town.
The lady of tho house might have
forgotten the incident in five or six years
but for a sort of climax.
When her
husband camo home to dinner he
handed her a copy of “Home and
Mother,” with the remark,
“Happened to see it as I passed a
second-hand book store, and thought
perhaps you’d like it.”
“ ifs—an—but, Henry, a girl was
here trying to sell me this very book
not over two hours ago!” stammered
the wife,
“Was, eh? Well, she probably got
discouraged, sold out to the second­
hand dealer, and ha* skipped the city.
Is dinner ready?"
Dinner was ready, but somehow the
wife had no appetite, and since that she
has fits of abstraction, glances suspi­
ciously ^around at times, and has been
seen going in and coming out of second­
hand.book stores.—Detroit Free Press.

...
,
i»er aim.

—,
.
The rock, after
*«« ta
with nerah trama the bowldot
«W»Me of the «lok ol wood.
She «•* ortdenUy .good deri ohjC!”''1« «•» W™ »&gt; ,«&lt;- «■*,
« ken the rock »•» «pd» P»l««l
her howl, .he wwlked off
thuly
feet, .nd when rite dm«d forwmd. ft
w“ P^'J to be eeen tlmt. ehe meut
mwchief.
Running forward some twenty feet
«he euddenly bounded high in the er

The Rabbit Plague in Australia, s.
We have lately been told by an Anti­
podean contemporary that a desperate
struggle is now going on in South
Australia between man and rabbit “for
the survial of the fittest.” Every device
has been tentatively employed by tho
farmer to get the better of his destruc­
tive and ubiquitous little enemy, but
“Providence”—as Napoleon was want
to say—“favors big battalions,” and the
victory remains hitherto with tho swarm­
ing armies of the aggressive rodent.
Ferret*, stoats and weasels have been
imported from England and turned down
among the rabbit-infested districts; but
the extraordinary and unnatural result
has been that, after a short time, the
mustelidm or weasel tribes began to
fraternize with the “nimble, skipping
little animals," as Lord Granville once
called rabbits in the House of Lords.
For a while it was hoped that poison, in
the form of steeped wheat or of phosphorized oats, would keep the rabbits
down; but hitherto they have triumphed
over the punv onslaughts of their human
assailants. It has been suggested—and
by no one more forcibly than by Lord
Fleho—that wire-netting should be
thrown around tho Australian wheat­
fields to keep the rabbit* out; but the ex­
pense is great, for the rabbit is a great
jumper, and can easily clear an obstacle
which is less than, four feet in height
Lord Elcho gave a hint in these columns
to Australian agriculturists how to plant
their wire-netting so that the rabbits
could not burrow under it, his advice be­
ing that tho bottom of the netting should
beiburied underground, with an elbow
turned up two or three inches below the
surface, and running outward at right
angles to the .upright stand. The rabbit,
when he begins to burrow, soon lights
upon the buric-d obstruction, and gives
up the attempt to scratch his way under
the upright wire-netting which protects
tho crop from its hungry teeth.—London
Telegraph.

and in

act like the goose. She was a vyry stub­
Nurse—“Come, Willie, didn't you bear your
born old hen. I had tried to break her mother tell you to come right into the house f”
up. We’d tied her off tho neat, ducked Willie—“Stop minding me of it. I’a trying to
her in the water, and done everything to forget iL” ______________________
stop her setting; but she would pet. So
I put ten ’enters’ eggs under her in the Will you heed the warning. The signal per
haps of the sure approach of that more ternblsand, and let her go at ft. I thought dlacase consumption. Ask yourself if you can
she’d get tired; but she sat five week* on afford for the sake of saving 50 eta to 'run the
those eggs, and finally they hatched out risk and do nothing for it. We know from ex­
six as lively little ’gators as you ever saw. perience that Shflob’s Cure will cure your
The little fellows, you know, are quite cough. It never fails. This explains why
more than a million bottles were sold last year.
frolicky. I *aw by the looks of the old It relieves Croup, and whooping cough, at once
hen, tho morning that the ’gators hatched Mothers do not be without iu T«r lame back,
out, that something was up. The old aide or cli^t use Shiloh’s Porous Plasters.
hen clucked in a slow, motherly way, as Sold by F.T. Boise.
DYSPEPSIA A LIVER COMPLAINT.
if she was very proud. I don’t think
Is it not worth the small price of 75 cents to
she’d seen the ’gators, though. Well, free yoursef of every symptom of those distres­
the second day I threw some corn around sing complaints, ff you think so call at our
the old ben, and she came off to eat. I store and set a botoc of Shiloh's Vltaltar.
every boule has a printed guarantee on ft, use
knew she wouldn't go back again if she accordingly and if it does you do good it will
AT-Ar aanr fl,a mtnAi- hnt T
OAA cost you nothing. Sold by F. T. Boise.
We have a . speedy and positive cure for.
Catarrah, Diphtheria. Canker mouth and
Head Ache, in SHILOH’S CATARRH REM­
EDY, A naaaJ injector free with each'bottle.
Use it if you desire health and sweet breath.
Price 50 eeuta. Sold by F. T. Bota e

""""!=,!!3.! !! "

Space and Electricity.

How far we have annihilated space
and time by means of electricity lei the
following incident, related by the Times
of India, show:
“ During the repairs
of the telegraph cable near Bombay, the
steamers ChiItem and Great Northern
were about half a mile apart, the for­
mer having hold of a shore cable, and so
was in telegraphic communication with
A Clergyman’s Canary.
Bombay; the latter having hold of a sea
The Rev. Dr. Day is fond of canaries, end, and so was in telegraphic commu­
The Chiltcrn de­
and the bay window in his library is oc­ nication with Aden.
cupied by a large number of these favo­ sired the Great Northern to splice on to
rite songsters, to some of which are given the cable end held by the latter, and
the freedom of the entire room at tunes. pay out three-quarters of a mile of cable,
One of these is very much interested in anti this was communicated by wire
penmanship, and will watch Dr. Day from the test-room of the Chiltern passWrite by the hour.. The black line left a through all the coils of cables in her
d and on to Bombay, whence it was
by the pen in its travels is tho greatest of
mysteries to the bird, and he will follow sent on to Aden, and "back from Aden
it as it spins out across the page, and to the Great Northern. Thus, as a
make frequent examinations, first with speedy means of sending a message half
one eye and then with the other, but can a mile, it was forwarded by a route be­
never quite understand it all, and after tween three and four thousand miles
scratching his head with his claw he will long. The following morning, when the
follow the line across again. This he will two vessels were within a quarter of a
keep up by the hour, and it would be in­ mile of each other Ytommnnications
teresting to know bis thoughts on die passed between them constantly in the
It is quite evident that as
subject—if
canaries ever do
have same way.”
railway and steamboat traveling and
thoughts.—Til^uvillc (Penn.) Herald.
telegraphing progress we shall have io
adopt some other nhtans of measuring
—literary house then* should be a
distances than those we now poses*.
’
little nook in which a few simple reme­
dies are kept. Among them should be
—Tlic fact that kaleidoscopes are more
extract of ginger, Dover’s powder, pep­ than mere toys will l&gt;e a surprise to many
permint, chlorate of potash, bicarbonate people. But they are sold here in New
of soda, sweet oil, paregoric, camphor, York by opticians at a high price and
arnica, a bottle of pure whisky, cotton, made with expensive lenses. These ex­
old muslin for bandages, some sticking pensive ones are —J
------ * ‘~
plaster, a box of ground mustard and dustrial drawing
ArchL
some ready-made mustard plasters. Al­ . tect* sometimes_________ _______
ways strike a light when you go to get for architectural ornaments, and carpetany of these in the dark, and be sure you
haW the right one.
L

ft TO

no chance at all. His throat and the lit­
tle tender upot under his fore leg*, are
always well covered. The' bone of the
I'orertT b the only Inmten «hk± grows heatalligator* head—that is. hi* long skull—
is at least on inch thick. Nothing but
the boll from a field-battery would dis­
AN HONEST PREPARATION.
turb him at all'. Buclubot would be noth­
ing but mosquito-bites to an old alliga­
The world h ao crammed with nrtndka that
tor. Alligators lav their eggs in the
sand, In a sunny plncc where the tem­
perature is sure to be warm enough to
sustain animal growth. If a cold snap
Captain of the Troy Police, says Dr. David
oomes, it kills tire life of the egg, just the
Kennedy’s “Favorite Remedy” U “an boneat
same as the chicken* die in anen's egg
•when the old hen stop* off too long. In ■preparation.” And the Captain ought to know
the case of the alligator the warm sand
i* the neat, and the nun is the old hen.
The sun sits on the heat all day, and gets
Want of care does us more damage tlian
it so warm that it continues to keep warm want of knowledge.
during the night. The ostrich is a lazy
Thousands of ladies have found sudden re­
bird, and like the alligator it shirks the
“setting” business off on the sub. In lief from all their woes by the use of Lydia JE.
PiukluMn’a’Vegetable Compound, the great re­
fact, there is no need of any bird “set­ medy for dl.*cascs peculln* to females. Send to
ting” on its eggs in the Tropical regions. Mrs. Lrdia E. Pinkham 233 Western Avenue,
Captain Larkin tells me that he has Lynn, Maas., for pamphlets.
hatched goose-eggs and hen’ s-eggs in the
Be who can plant courage in the human soul
warm sand.
Is the best pbyaicUm .
“I place them just as the alligator
EXPERIENCE THE BEST GUIDE.
does,” said the Captain, “where they
are continually warm,-with the small
end of the egg up and just sticking
learuyd
by, experience—the best ^guld'e—ll»t
through the sand. I spread a blanket
over them at night, and at the end of periodical headache, indigestion, pain in the
throe weeks the chicken* jump out and back and kidney s, and oilier trouble of the
nex.—Home Journal
commence eating the muaquitocs.”
"Did you ever, vice versa, hatch
To enjoy the pleaeurers of wealth, thou
alligator’s eggs under a hen, Captain?”
Hhoaldest first ex,x-rience the fatigue of labor.
I asked.
•
“No; but Mr. Pratt, the editor of thc“
LADIES, WE INTRODUCE TO YOU
Palatka Herald, and Colonel Hart, wlib Dr, Pengeily, of Kalamzoo, Mich.
Hla crchas the big orange-grove over the river&gt; ■4entiata show him to be a graduated physi­
have done so, and it was a very curious cian, aud to have been jery successful, for
many veam, in treating
of Women.
experiment, too.”
Zoa rfiora is the result of hta long experience.
A moment afterwards the Captain in­
Genuine cheerfulness is an almost certain
troduced me to Mr. Pratt. “He is a very
careful and truthful man, etc.” said the index or a happy mind aud a pure, good heart.
Captain, "and the best authority we have
Kidney Wort seems intended bv nature for
on alligators.”
the cure of all disease of the kidneys caused by"
“What was it about you and Colonel weakness and debility. Its great tonic powers
Hart hatching alligator’s eggs under a are especially directed to the removal of this
class of disease. Wc know of persons that
hen. Mr. Pratt?” 1 asked.
“Why, yes, we triad it. Wo hatched have suffered for thirty years that have been
permanently.cured by taking Kidney Wort a
out two litters—one under a goose, and short time. Try it eltuer liquid or dry.—Son.
the other under an old hen.
The goose
Disfranchise every man who attends dog fights
staid around the nest after the . young
’gators came, for some time. She was chicken fights, bull fights, and man fights,
very much puzzled. She couldn’t give and it might be always possible to elect res
up the idea that they were her goslings, pectable man to office.
but still she didn’t want to claim them.
When you. have bad catarrh long enough just
So she’d go to the nest and look in very
send 15c. to Dr. C. IL Sykes, 159 MadlsouBU,
mournfully, as men look at the re­ Chicago, for his “True Theory of Catarrh.
mains at a funeral, and then go away
and think."
Our admiration of a famous man lessens up­
“Who fed the little alligators?”
on our nearer acquaintance with him and we
“O, little ’gators don’t eat anything. seldom bear of a celebrated person without a
They will live for weeks on absolutely catalogue of some notorious weakness and in­
nothing. Tve kept ’gators till they were firmities. _______ ’__________________
a foot long, and never given them any­
PERMIT NO SUBSTITUTION.
thing to eat. They simply lie still and
grow. They live on air.”
"What did the old hen do?”
delicacy of fragrance.
“Well, she was different She didn’t

Organs

27 Stopst 10 Sat» Rwdft, 890

But the greatest

WORTH 8KNDINC FOR.
to women:

®cso«se

�at horssm
ra a wzwu

tjrt*a*mg »» vet j ungv. rr v **v»w vtvtt w
T' tn^A A™1 ®°‘l
wu practically
rrtriB^d lot yew by the blundering of the
mall who wu trying to teach it the ways
of “ horse civilisation.*’ but who did not
PRICE: 11.50, IF PAID IN ADVANCE
^7”

To

Advertisers:
Tks Nnvrs has doable the number of readers
tn tbe First BepreMmatlve D^trict of Barry

more than the colt did. if he did as much.
Just through clear stupidity that animal
was converted into a kiakcr of the moert
vicious kind, and honeto-dejr. It, there­
fore, b very important that if we have
doIu at all. wo should know how to man­
flf MOD bonaflde sutMeribert, who, for the aakage t»H?m. to the end that they may be
tag, are liable to become JW patrooa
developed into.M perfect hones aa pimaiPERUSE THESE LIBERAL AD. RATES.
ble.
. ■ ,
‘
In order to accomplish this kindness
• MR I • MO I | MO will not do it all, but it will go a very
Itoch..^
MO
J"
“ long waya, and withoiit kindness noth­
14.00
llnches.
ing can be accotpplbhed. You cannot
itocbt.:
25 00 beat and swear a colt into a good horse.
This course has been pursued ever
iH
80.00
TfiT
3OF
BtacM*.
since the first few colts were foiled and
the universal verdict is that it b a la­
mentable failure. ’ Even they who whip
tion and eight cents for each subsequent inser- the hardest, and swear the loudest will
agree to that verdict. The Arab, as is
UOD'
ORNO 8TR&lt;&gt;NO,
well known brings the horse to such
Edftor aad Propriettr.
marvelous perfection as characterizes
Arabian horses, through the excercbe of
unvarying kindness from the time the
colt is'foiled until the home dies. The
family and the *colt occupy the same
apartments frequently, and the animal
AGE OFFICERS.
is at all times perfectly familiar with the
voice and touch of those about him.
He fears nothing, for there is nothing to
Fr^nkC- Boise.
fear. He learns from the very begin­
Marvaaii—,
— ... ning that man is his friend and pro­
Tn»tew-H. A. Barber, F. T. Boise. H. W.
Demaray, H. R- Dtcktaion, IL M. Lee and tector. The idea of master, which ob­
tains among us. is never entertained in
Chas. Lentz. ’
Arabia, wmle in truth the Arabian is
£orirtixM.
_________ * more truly and perfectly tho master
than we are. We are apparently satis­
fied with the name, and with what sat­
aptist church. R*»- e. b.Mwiy.Paator.
ServIcM e»«iy Bunday at 1030 »-tn., Habbetti isfaction comes from acting the role of
tho tyrant, while, the Arab seeks the
reality, anti doee not aspire to be tyranical.
aZBlHuiiWT UTM.VPAI. CHURCH-A. D.
1V1 n&gt;«. faster, t- rvlc-s svery Ssbbstb si
As soon as we learn the important
a. m. and 7 p. tu. Sabbath school at XI m. F
lesson which Arabian horsemanship
mseUng s»ery Thun.4*y svetjiug.
teaches wo shall have more good horses
VY LODGE NO. 87, K.ofP., meet* at its and -shall be better satisfied with our­
Castle Hall, Naahvlile, Michigan, every selves. We shall then find the colt
Friday evening, for the encouragement and broken at the time we now usually be­
BUjKxirt of all worthy, true, ateadfast and hon­
gin to break it for from tho very com­
orable Brother Kntebt*.
L- E. Lextz, K. IL A Oaxo Sraoxo.C. C. mencement of its existence, we shall
accustom it to being handled, and
gradually accustom it tn trappings
MiarcUaneous &lt; ardt.
which will resemble the harness, until
W H. YOUNG. M. D. Office east side of the time comes for turning the play into
Yv • Main St., NaAvilla Office hours from reality, the work will hare all been
7 to 9 a. m., aud 4 to 7 p- m.
done-' This should be the aim of every
horse-breeder. The confidence of the
H. GRISWOLD, M. D , Jhte
colt should be early won. and it can bo
Physician sou
and oui^tvu.
Surgeon. Office .....
and res» » • rursicuui
.■
I won much earlier’ in colthood than it
Ueaco opposite the Wolcott House. Prompt
------- ---------- - —-— — --------------- —-r-----given
■— »to
—
m- day or night। can
when the time has arrived at
altenUon
calls
:I wh.at we now call the breaking time.
A. FOOTE PHYSICIAN &lt;fc SURGEON I
The age nt which a colt should be put
. Suceaeor to Dr. Wickham. Office and to work should be when it has substanreakleucc at Dr. Wickham’s late office, ^j].. obtained ita growth, or rather when
MMMf l. **11* Ulgb. or d.,
lthibMol„p«&amp;sUyd,„loped. The

Nashville girertorg.

B

I

W

L

&gt;ut‘
&gt;fta —
—
yo^e:'s^
TS

uiisuiu^ hilsi coucat.
fcwo k’ muuji
tub of coW boiled hominy,' one eno of
c
sweet milk, four table-fipoonfuls of flour
a little Mbit, knd one egg; beat vigorous­
ly and drop with a spoon into hot lard;
fry until brown. Rice fritters can be
made in exactly the same wny by substi­
tuting boiled rice for hominy.
ly purchaatM in OMo by parties living in
New York. It is of Norman breed, of
iron-gniy color, and weighs 2,045 pounds,
being heavier by several hundred pounds
than Barnum's’big horse. The animal
is but three years old, amj instead of be­
ing clumpy and 01&gt;ned. as would
naturally be supp
, la of perfect form
and syy bullL

—Napkin rings to dress the table, and
especially to please the children of the
household, are made of soft unbleached
twine. Make a chain the required size,
then crochet round and nmnd until the
ring is wide enough, finish with a small
scallop, then-starch them off very stiff,
slip them over a bottle to dry and smooth,
out all the wrinkles. When dry run a
different-colored ribbon in each ring, and
tie in A tiny bow.
—Some young housekeepers, and all
servants, need to be cautioned once in
awhile in regard to their manner of
using spoons in cooking. The best solid
silver ones (which almost invariably
suggest the wedding-day) are certainly
unsuitable to scrape kettles and sauce­
pans with. The plated ones are no bet­
ter fitted for the purpose, and who but a
chemist can tell how certain acids will
act on the metal, and subsequently on
the family ? A liberal supply of cooking­
spoons, which can be bought at any firstcI/ms hardware store, should be provided.
Two or three of the old-fashioned light
spoons, made.of wood, are useful au«»
foraome kinds of stirring and beating.
—Stewed Celery—Prepare one head
of celery, two ounces of butler, one ounce
of flour, three gills of milk, one-half lea*r
Bjxxmfiil of pepper, one teaspoonful of
salt Wash the celery thoroughly, cut
it into inch-lengths, when it should be
nut-into a saucepan, covered with boil­
ing water, and cooked until tender, the
length of time for which depends en­
tirely upon the age and quality of the
celery. When tender the water must be
poured off. tho milk and floor mixed to­
gether in a bowl, which season with the
pepper and salt, and pouring it over the
celery, return the saucepan to the lire,
stirring all until the milk boils, when the
butter must fie added and the stew served
hot.
&lt;,

Value of the ilaj Crop.
There are few, who have not given the
t xbjeci especial attention,. who appreciI ateti-.e value of the hav crop to the peoI pl, of .11 th. SUUs. lathe year 1880.

PLNGEU-Y H WOX4kK'.S FRIEND..
from the time of ita nraond introduetkm,
5,000,000 pounds of sugar was the an­
nual yield of the orriony, which had now
some fifty or sixty thousand iu habitants, t
Tho income from the culture of sugar i
-.rat about twenty-five per cent.
Pon?
T.ADY CLEBKS,
talba reports ot she province about this TEACHEBS.
time that “the facility with which man
• HOUSEWIVES,
can supply his wante is such that two
bouys of daily labor are sufficient to
procure him all the means of existence.’*
One may judge from this statement the
value Of the slave system to the planter
of that day. The average Southern ne­
gro, in his prosent condition of citisenship sod individual responsibility, is the
Headache*.
La*»itu&lt;ilaziest of mortal*, and will work no
Pale or Motby Complexion,
longer than is • necessary to assure to
him the gratification of to-day’s wants. Sleeplessness,
Palpitation,
How much this state of things would
Numbness, Nausea, Dizziness,
have been aggravated in early Louisiana
we can form soma estimate; but we Dry Cough, Nervous Irritation.
cannot grasp the extant to which it
Weak and Lame Back,
would have interfered with the brilliant
career of the colony.
As it was, the and pains in'Various parts of Um body,*
prosperity of Louisiana was marvelous
despite the troubles existing between
the colonists and the people of the Unit­
ed States, who looked upon the prov­
ince with greedy eyes, and to whom the.
TESTXMONIALS I barn tn ahundanco te.-tr
possession of it was only a matter of a penona Ln
beat society. who prefar that Utt
few years at most.’ Life on the planta­ tridence I* givenprivately to tboae Mklng it
tions trod in velvet-soled slippers, and
^-MOTHERS, are yocr pAUGHTEKS ail-.n
the harshest winds were tenqiered with
balmy warmth and the perennial fra­
Itequ-sts for test!
grance of millions of wild flowers
over which they were compelled to celvo my careful ntt
R. PENGELLY, M. D.,
pass’. Domestic ennui and their own
Xs1aass»&gt;, Mich.
strange combinations of character fos­ Sold tv
tered in the fair sex the softer elements
of romance, which were instrumental in
imparting the knightly tone to the socie­ ' V romance- from the lowes dcutb* of
to a noalUon anoog U&gt;c first in the land,
ty of tho day.
and Times” of
When the United State* acquired pos­
FREDERICK DOUCLA
session of Louisiana, and fur many years
written by himself; It full page Illustrations; price
thereafter, New Orleans was tho most 13.10 Outrivals-Unde Tom's Cabin” In Thrilling
luxurious city on the new continent.
During the first half of this century a IcalJy told.snd of great historical vilue. Tills *cP
style of living was kept up in Louisana nm- will l&gt;c ••sgrriy sought for b» tl.. hundreds ol
which, in an attempt to picture it, O ousan-is who haw watebni the remarkable ca
becomes
simply
indescribable, and
which if described would not be believ­
ed. The bc&lt;t wines of Europe flowed rites many anecdote* concerning tl&gt;«m unknown to
irrocral public. It abound* lt&lt; many graceful
more freely than beer does to-day. The the
toucr c« both of wit and eloquence.
bat -----people Wk.
■ lie la »uch a remarks lie man that
equipages wore the finest the world
’■— 'Burton Cot,read about him. and no wonder.''
c mid produce.
The jewelers of New to
grvtrallonallat.
_
_
Orleans grew rich in a year on their
comnjwsions, while New York agenta
ransacked Europe for novelties in plate
and artistic jewelry.
Tho fine arts Itrtkin."—Troy (N. Y.JTImva.
“IteeUncd Io a wide aalr.”—Harford Courant.
I were largely
patronized, although
tho
~’-------- u
i
”
"The whole atory la exceedingly well toW."
■ effect of
ci the
2._ atmosphere of slavery
~'"z— was
)&gt;r*trr ix-*n&lt;KT&gt;:.
i to encourage tastes not oohsUtent
consistent with | Addr«*«j.tf. goopmax'* CO,, chk-ago. Hl.
i a high degree of admiration for pure
। art. There is a massive senice of gold
■ in the safe of tho St. Charlo* Hotel at
| New Orleans which recalls tho splendor
1 of ante-bellum I^juisiana.
Yet in all
this luxurioy display very little money
was handled? Immense bills were paid I
ALLON-------at a time, but the transactions which '
look place on credit were enormous and
went on for years in some cases without i
involving the Introduction of a dollar. I
Old business men of Now Orleans have
I assured mo of repeated instances ot this,
-------- FOR--------*. and of the utter carelessness of these i |&gt;( &lt;;
------------------— ■-----------------A.. I
hooks,
wealthy
patrons
in ordering
on credit.
But when the accounts of the tradesman I
JEWELRY,
or merchant were finally presented, this |

For Women,

PRINCIPAL-UN

A Prevention and Cure

•UdoMSy

m

KANSAS CITY
TKkrta ria
Celebrate Line
aaJeatailoffleestn

End ,tr»rr:i8&lt; a

I POTT ER,
PERCEVAL LOWELL
tics
A&lt;
■. cat. rnn. Agl, .
CtiicaKO.111.
Chicago, Ill

American and foreign Marble,
MonuBertA, Thinhrtcnes, Mantles, fas..

J&gt; KOOKS A MARSHALL

j

!

Nashville Elevator!
Pay the highest market price fora!! kinds of

And »cy ————.

Seeds, Feed. I.!me. Nall, Pl.t-ter. Sluevo. Hair. Pine Lumlicr, Lath
and SWndes.
PRICES.

t'nrort

FMituwivnnta Avenue nnd
Sixth Street,

to ---work
1* too
*— '' as we 'learn ‘from the Bureau of Agricul.. i
—
turu ftl Washington, the value of the
I’ropK,
that may be made for hit eerrlcea. Office and | rapidly. We seem to forget that an four most imjKirtant crops of the coud­
residence opposite Roe’a meat market
overgrown colt is like an overgrown boy I try was estimated as follows. Corn,
T^M.
Office orer —has the
^ul ,lot th® strength. $679,714,499; wheat. $474,301,850; hav.
MEDICAL iND SURGICAL SABITASIDR
YXTM. PARMENTER,
PARMENTER, M.
M. D.
D.
VV
Mich. Strength, which is only another tenn for $371,811,084 and cotton, $280,266,242.
V V Hull'*
Hull’s Dnij
Drug ajore,
spire, VennontvUle,
Veruu
. . -■■■— ------------------------ - -------- —-------- - I complete physical development, must
The value of the hay crop of New York
| BWTA~
■&lt;.&lt; in cte- uxCHAS. H. BRADY, Lawyer, Circuit Court eonie with time as a rule, and if we pul •lone was $80,261,928; that of Pennsyl­
.CoS?‘^OD?.ra colt to work before ita development
vania, $44,728,704, and that of the^little
I kCiUtlra *
Agt- Prompt attention given to all business
!
has
been
secured,
we
shall
injure
it
just
State
of
Vermont,
whose
entire
agricul
­
entrusted to my care. Cotirey anciog a special­
carelessness* was even exceeded by tho ।
in proportion as we work it beyond its tural product was only $18,022,847,
ty. Office opposite Union House.
W1MHHV SHADES, 1
indifference with, which the creditor met ।
strength. The laws of nature cannot be amounted to the astonishing sum of the gigantic total and paid tho debt.
Q JJBBHAVSKR, Hatten*. Tailor anil drab violated with impunity. It may be said $12,293,112: In Missouri the hay crop
The earliest plantations were situated
OAcr in Ready Made Clothing. bee me that our colts are usually broken from
PROPKIETAHYIMEDIOINES,
was worth $10,605,395. In the South- . along the Mississippi south of the city,bcfiNV you purchase clothtug. Fits guar­
one to three years sooner than they ern States this crop is strangely neglect­
anteed. ’
*■
and many of them bear the names they
PRESCRIPTIONS,
should be.,
ed. This is not because gruw does not received from tfio original French and
ONAH B. RASEY, Expreu and Dra»man
RECEIPTS.
In horse breeding and horse rearing, grow well in that quarter of the Union, Spanish owners, as Conception, Magno­
Goods aod BacE*C&gt; carried to any place in
nor
that
it
does
not
remunerate
the
we
are
like,
as
wo.are
in
most
everything
lia, St. Andrew’s, etc.
in many cases
the vlltaf*.
_________ •_______ •__________
IRAM R. DICKINSCA, manufacturer of else, a little careless. This country ought farmer. The yield in Vermont was only tho planters’ houses wore massive struet*-------- MY--------to breed and rear the best horses in the 1.08 tons per acre, worth $10.40 per ton.
ures, constructed on no particular ar­
and dealer in Hard Wood Lumber. Build
tnp Material a apeeialty. Ca*b paid lor logo. Mill world, as is evidenced in our success in while in every Southern State the yield chitectural principle, with little attempt,
aod yard on Sherman 8l, at M. C. R-R. cruaalng. trotting stock. If America continues to was greater and the product worth more at finish or ornament, built of wood
out-strip the Eurojiean horse upon the per ton. The highest yield of hsy per scarcely redeemed from ita natural
AMES FLEMING, prrctical Jeweler and European race-course, tV time will come acre m the United States was in Texas,
state of timber, but providing the am­
Watch-maker. Clock#. Watches, Silver and
DEP4RTME T
and the yield in every Southern State
plest room for all household purposes.
lunm.TX. Sattis Crvas. a—
Plated Ware, Jewelry aud Optica! Goods. Roek-. when the trotter of the Eurrqiean will
Few of them, indeed, there were which
forxfcA'atches a specialty. Repairing and Engrav- " come from America. But that style of was above the average, and tho value
people.
horses is the most useless of any, ami we of tly rop per acre much above .the did not suggest tho idea of space suffi­
tnr done Id a workmanlike manner.
should endedvor to breed up our general value of the same crop in the North and
cient to meet all the requiremeuls of the
RNO STRONG, plain and fancy Jon muter. puqiose and draft horses, until we can West The greatest value per acre of feudal baron, who .sheltered under his
Tbs best facilities for dolngwork of any export instead of being under tho neces­ the hay crop in any State was in Geor­ castle roof an army of knights and vas­
bouse in Dairy or Eaton counties,
gia,
where
it
was
worth
$30.
In
Mis
­
sity of importing. Wo can do it, too, if
sals. The old Southern planter’s notion
souri it was worth $12.94 per acre, while of a comfortable home was a house with
we are careful.—Western RuraL
wheat was worth $11.93 and corn only plenty of “ elbow-room" in ft.
Other
$10.22. Of course there is a limit tothu
ACOB OSMAN. Liver,man, barn near WqJA Good Word for Paninlps.
mansions were built of stone or brick,
eott House. First clase turnouts at reason­
demand for hay, but it is plain that it is
801 So.Clark St.
CU1CXGO, ILL.
able rates. Special rates to commercial men. The climate for most parts of this not reached in the West or South. It is brought up or down the Mississippi, in
The latest and most scientific lna&gt;i&gt;«tuui tn the
a square, antique style of architecture,
Funeral and wedlng parties furnished with car
United States, tor the Cure of Chronic »rd Private
country is poorly adapted to the growth therefore a little curious that a crop so with great varandas, and massive Ro­
dlsesses.
Gounrrbiea.
Gleet
or
long st ntiding. Sir«&lt;&gt;
of turnips and other vegetables that pleasant to handle and so profitable is
I RMTI RE DEPOT.
tors. Orchitis, Rapture, diseases of the skir. =nd
man pillars—the outside ot theirtrucUiro
TZELLOGG &lt;fc BELL, proprietors Planing grow near the surface of the ground or not giten a more prominent place in the being stuccoed nnd more or leas orna­
bones, mercurial sore throat etc. safely andp'i»t»
ly treated. WERMATCRKHtEi.-St xual Gvbiita
A. MOL Planing and Malching. Resawing project above it in part. If a drought catalogue of agricull oral products.—SI.
mented.
Beautiful flower gardens, in
occurs they are likely to be hard and Louis Republican.
which were cultivated every variety of
stringy. Carrots and par&amp;xips, however,
blooming plant obtainable, graced tho
are less likely to be injured in this way,
Drinking in Cold Weather.
front view of these great houses; and
HAB. W. DEMARAY, Dealer in Watches, as they grow entirely underground. The
■ion to society, *leepte»o&gt;e««. unr.ou*
sometimes statuary might be seen taste­ CS3E2 Manufactures, and dealers tnB
Clocks, flna Jewelry and Silverware. Being extremity of their roots penetrate tho
Uon. gaoeral dabillty ami iudlxeaiioa. rvite«rt«S
When a sudden cold snap follows a
fully scattered about, and visible
a practical Jeweler, patrons can depend upon
marriase Improper, aafelr curve. Wv xuar
soil to a long distance anil obtain mois­ warm spell, animals of all kind are apt through the glistening spray of perpetual
t". Allwv ututertak., ao
• &gt;• *■»
Ob« Day lonwr. Usder ouz treatmoot tMtax.* H
ture even in a dry time. Their leaves, to drink much less than they need, un­
fountains.
The style and situation of
enable! to take on BeaU, ll»e
laf'ro
which are near the surface, shade the less water is where they can ret it with­ the planter's bouse has not changed
and tbe whole eyaiem ta nouri-hed raurln.- tha
W. NISKERN, Attorney and Counsellor soil and help to keep It moist Parsnips out exposure to tho cold.
__ ■ —■ - ___ — in th.ir
C&lt;irra&gt;nn»
Perhaps they much in a century, and a visitor to the
• at Law. practices In al! State Courts. Col- are very productive and have no insect need less at such times; but often they
sugar plantations in Ix&gt;aisiana to-day
pnwpU,
om.e over
•nemies. They can be harvested late in suffer from thirst before going out in will see in this respect what he wouH
SpauMing’sstore,IlaatinfcsMich.
the fall and preserved in pits for winter the cold to drink. Thrifty condition at have seen in the early part of the cen­
such times is promoted by careful wat­ tury.
um or allowed to remain in the ground
JJ A. BAHIMER, M. !&gt;..
It is needless to say he will find
all winter. Parsnips are improved in­ ering more than by high feeding. This changes ip the social atmosphere and
For the fall trade.toer
UONKEOPATHIC'
stead of injured by the process of freezing, is especially true of poultry and milch
methods of life so contrasted. There is
A cure guaranteed
which changes the starch they contain cows.
Meal or cut feed is better for
nothing left of the old days now, save in
into sugar. Children who do not like cows at other times, but when they are the memory of a few venerable lingerers
most lands of vegetables are veiy fond in danger of getting two little water, on the soene-—International Review.
OfficeTflrst door east of Opera House, and
of parsnips. To be prepared for the after they have been put up for the
table as they should be they should be night, I gave a pail of thin slop, JK&gt; thin
A Man Killed by Electricity.
. And will be sold so low that
first boiled and then fried till the surfaces that it will be drunk rather than eaten.
At Hatfield House, on Monday, Wil­
-^y-OUCOTT HOUSE,
are brown. Many use parsnips only in For fowls I give a light feed of com
the spring, but by digging them in the just after daylight every mornirg, a liam Dimmock, a laborer, was assisting­
TWmIxvllle Michigan. w
fall aod preserving them where they will feed of bran and mill feed, mixed with in laying a telephone wire when he
rju mt mi •
A. 8. Foote, Proprietor.
innied with flw
•ot be in danger of constant freezing and warm water, at noon, and at night as slipped from a wall, and in falling took
|WE ALSO CARRY
thawing, they are in excellent condition much com as they will eat greedily, to hold of--a wire used in connection with
This is a new note!.centrally located, wsil kept.
the
Brufih
lights
which
are
in
operation
Of course,
to use at any time during cold weather. protect them from the cold.
at Hatfield House. He wm immediate­
j
In the island of Jersey parsnijis are ex­ water is kept in the ben house constant­
tensively raised for milch cows. In ly but It cannot be al wavs warm nnd ly killed by the electrio current. The
Madison Su. Chicago, HL
sometimes
the
surface
wifi
have
a thin medical evidence showed that death
France they are employed for feeding
arose from shock to the system, causing
fowls at all’seasons of the year. When film of ioe over it.
By feeding warm,
gA. BUSH'
paralysis of the heart. At the inquest
Admintatrafor'a Muir
fed to fowls that are to be fattened they soft food once a day, I insure their tak­
the jury returned a verdict that the deare first boiled and then fried in cheap ing some moisture with their food.
fat It is necessary to thin parsnips by When tho weather turns warmer I give
And arc prepared to give our time and Mien
hand and to weed them once in the same the oom only at night, the bran and
tion to ererythlng^ierlalnliig to the
Safurda
way, but moat of the work of cultivation mill feed mixed with warm water in the meudation that there should be a fixed
can be perforated by a home cultivator. morning, and a few wheat screenings time for working tho current, and that
fuDdertaklngploc.
After the leaves cover most of the ground at noon. It is not worth while to throw notice should be given of it to ail per­
no labor is required except to pail up the away wheat screenings in the coldest sons engaged near the wires. It was
large Weeds that apjwa.- between tiie weather, when the most the fowls eat stated that, to avoid similar accidents
pATHBUK HOUSE.
rows.—Chicago Tunes.
roes u&gt; rapjx&gt;rt animal heat. Com will in tho future, the wires would all be
MteMeau. all of Um
do this better than anything else for
••irp«»n™«r&lt;o v
GaeeOe. unan gpn ami d
—A farmer at, lV.ther.aeld. Cone.. old fowls, and at thisseason there is little
danger that com will make the liens run
too mnch to fat and tonlittie to egg productiou.— Cor. Country GcfOUman.

F. T. BOISE.

?&gt;*sm

J

PAINT AND BRUSH

O
J

F. T. BOISE

Dispensary.

J.iLENiTZ A SONS,

O

P

FURJNITUBE!
In Every Style &amp; Variety

Physician and Surgeon.

STOCK IS COMPLETE,
PRICES WILL ASTONISISH YOU
FTTUT-

U1TVE

UNDERTAKERS’ GOODS,

BOOT AND SHOE MAKER,

J. LENTZ &amp; SONS.

NERVOUS DEBILITY:

�FEED FOR STOCK.
ARS NOW RECEIVING OUR STOCK OF
llabtlttlw of $W,3SS,$7L

from Latest Dispatches.

'BbMkD Stat uler captured five cattle-thieves
and hung them.
lx excavating for a drain in a collar co (W

kntadJasMJaMs In a bonds ta Chat city,
MurtSaudlwocHMreii.

GOODS FOB THE SPRING TRADE

At th, Oomrt

---------AND ARE ^SELLING THEM-

the dead man was
houac was for many years occupied by Mont­ filled all hearts with fdar and terror.
SxcxxTART Hurt on the 3d sent a dispatch
gomery Blair.
The KUanova Spring Hotel; a handsoAa to Lieutenant Harber, at Yakutsk, Siberia,
frame buildlug at Haysvflle, Pa., valued at
$138,000, was swept away by an incendiary fire
on the tat.
Ix the overflowed portion of Arkansas on'
Foreign.
the tat csttle were still dying of hunger and
The Roman Catholic Archbishop of Meath

Point buzzards could be seen by thousands.
Committee to inqui
ly fly Ont of the way .of boats.
Thxxx young sons of Lewis Rowland, a

b&lt;&gt; Army Appropriation bill
ink. While in Committee of
the Tariff-Commission bill

Committee of the House of Lords appointed
to inquire Into the workings of the Land set.
A serious strike hau occurred tn Barcelona
and other Spanish towns opposed to the re-

mills have been dosed.
tunneled.
Br the burning of the Territorial Insane

A gals at Reading, Po., on the 2d over­
turned the wall of the reservoir, killing three
persons and injuring three others.

la Barcelona there

tee on Ways and Mean* to report within thirty
day*. cr at an esutier date if It be practicable,
abfll placing-*Ui raw materials and waste
stud! be substituted for ad valorem duties tut
far aa poaaible. and that .in any ease tho rate of

imported. The Senate bill reducing license
A joint kxsolctiox was adopted in tho
Senate on the 31st ulL appropriating $100,000
addltlAal for the relief of sufferers by
overflow. Mr. McMillan reported a bill to
incorporate the Garfield Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Hill (Ga.1 wits granted indefinite leave
of absence. The Indian Appropriation bill
was taken up nnd
was set aside
for the education of young savages. Tho

priation of $100,000 was passed for tho distri­
bution of rations In tte Southwest, in Com­
mittee of the Whole on the Army Appropria­
tion bUl, Mr. Butterworth stated that the
clause for eotapulsorr retirement at tho age
of sixty-two would take 119 officer* from the
army within six years. A prolonged debate
engued.
•
Tua Senate wm not in session on the 1st ..
In the House the Senate bill to facilitate the
payment of dividends to the creditors of the
Fmdiiiin'a Savings and Trust Company was
paused. Bills were reported—for an additional
member of the present House from Nebraska,
and for an appropriation of fLVi.iUi for work
on the Washington Monument. Tho Army
Appropriation bill was taken up in Committee
an

passed appropriating $10,000 for a monument
over thograre ot Thomas Jefferson at Mond­
tion declaring that the conduct of the State
Department In relation to the arrest and Im­
prisonment of Daniel MoSwecney and other
American citixonahy the British authortttea Is
la violation of Ambrioao law, 1 neons stent with
the value of American citizenship, and deroga­
tory jto the honor of the United Statue.
The "-csokitlon was temporarily tabled al
Mr.
Voorhees'
request,
subject
to
hSscalL Mr. Garland report&lt;«i a bill to securo
the safe keeping of money paid Into the Fed­
eral Courts. Tho President transmitted a let­
ter from the Secretary of the Interior asking
provision for the payment of Commissioners
and election officers under the Anti-Polygamy
law, and roeom'nended that tho salaries of
the Commissioners be fixed at $A.tM) per
annum. The MU authorising the redemption
erf outstanding $10 refunding certificates nt
or Mr. Crape IMass.) to suspend the rule* and
adapt a resolution making th" bill to extend
the corporate existence of National Banking
assort-ri"-r a continuing special order for

Gribler upon the charge of bribing a juror
some months before, Jesse Bhlpberd, one of
the jurors trying the case, was charged with
having been bribed, and was locked wp for
trial.
Tua National AssociaticA of Amateur Oars­
men will hold a regatta al Detroit during the

William P. Tuttle &lt;£ Co., stock-brokers, ot
New York, suspended payment on the 3d, with
liabilities of about $100,000.
DisraTcnxa on the 3d from the flooded
country show an improving condition In the
overflowed districts in nearly all directions.
At Okmulgee, Indian Territory, two mur­
derers named Lilly and Hany were shot dead

THE CAREFUL MAN IS EVER ON THE ALERT
to take advantage of favorable opportunities.

No matter how disguised, that prompt .paying customers
must make good to the dealers who sell on credit all losses
from poor debts, long time accounts, sickness, failing crops,
loss of property, or dishonesty of other customers.

situ
Tn ATiwtamlA Grafory contains a protest
against the proposed British Channel tunnel,
signed by Lord Lytton, Cardinal Manning,
Alfred Tennyson, Professors Huxley and
Goidwin’ Smith, General Simmons, General
Havelock, the editors of the Spsetater, the
JTorwtap Post and Ht.
GaartU, aod other

bill prohibiting the i®-

opposlto Tarrytown, in honor of Major Andre,
the British spy whom Washington hung. A
few nights agu the atone was partially de­
stroyed by an explosion of dynamite which
had been placed al ita foot.
Tux public-debt statement issued on the tai
makes the foUo.ving exhibit: Total debt (in­
cluding interest of $13,671,829), $1,979,558,­
183. Cash , in Treasury, $253,291,76L Debt,
less amount in Treasury, $1,726,206,4111. De­
crease during March, $16,462,946. Decrease
since June 30, 1881, $114^32,382.

Clear

volve England In ifiilttary dangers and lia­
bilities from which aa an island she has hith-

AxTurx Hxebxxt, an active Land-leaguer,
1aland, Ireland.
The authorities of Brussels on the 30th ult.

4^ That the merchant who sell on credit must take into ac­
count all the probabilities above mentioned when he offers his
merchandise for sale. And these losses amount in the aggre­
gate to a fair yearly income—a loss which he could not long
sustain were there no remedy, but there is a remedy and that
remedy is in the PROMPT PAYING CUSTOMERS.

NO BETTER INVESTMENT

Can be made, if necessary, than to hire money and pay
for your merchandise as you purchase it.

-—.----------- "WE! SELL-----------------The Czar of Russia ha* commuted the death
sentences of all but one of the recently-tried
Nihilists to an indefinite term of fiard larbor

The murder of Arthur Herbert, on Irish
by the stabbing of eleven lambs on hta prop­
erty. A stater of Thomas Power O'Connor
had been sent to jail for advising tenants in
Roecommon Dot to pay rente
Two steamships, one Spanish, the other
Brazilian, collided off Cape Ftntaterrc on the
2d and both sank. A passing steamer rescued
clgfaty-four persons. Thirty passengers were
lost.
The International Art Exhibitional Vienna
was opened on the 1st by the Emperor.
Tux University boat race at London on the
tat was won by the Oxfords, by six lengths, in
twenty mlnntcs and twelve second*.

forty other red men.

A sianacTDO mother killed two of her
children and then drowned herself and her in­
fant child, tn Liaocds County, Ark., a few
nights ago.
Deputy-Sheriff
which two men were killed and three seriously

building were drowned.

$350,000; insurance, $72,000.

Turkey Red Table Linen 50 to 55 cts.
Table Oil Cloth 28. Floor, best, 42 cts.
Bootw and Shoe's.
HatH and Caps,
,
*0.1 Clothing.
111 JJJ-.
G-eneral

Tn Governor of Maryland cm the SOth ulL
signed a Ml which fixes the punishment of
wife-beaters at forty lashes.

out question the most concentrated feed in use,
and ba« been so demonstrated by the most dis-

It ta without doubt the best aod cheapest
feed in the market. For sale at

THE NASHVILLE MILLS.

Office on second floor of Buxton's neW brick
NASHVILLE, MICH.
'

Belov ire a ft* of oar Barpiis in Real Isiaie:
I *O acres in Maple Grove, 45 cleared, 32 acres
, of Wheat, good Orchard, very fair buildings,

’

We are thankful for the liberal patronage given us in the
past under the old credit system and solicit its continuance
under the Ready Pay. We know we can be more serviceable
to you in the futile than we cotild possibly be in the past.

COME AND SEE FOR YO URSELF.

L. J. Wheeler
G'

groceries!

Fresh and Salt Meats,

Smoked Hams and SMta,

pile of a fortnight was on the tat granted to

don of murder.
Gnniv has sold to a circus manager the
Garfield.

the 30th ulL Between thirty and forty per­
son* lost their 11ves.
A dispatch erf the 30th ulL states that

erf Oats,
of Whes
______
For b&lt; cattle It has fattening properties
which cannot be found tn any other feed, the
beef being not only more tender and juicy, and
of a much finer quality than when fattened on
other feed, buttbey are more quickly prepared
fur market. The excellence and superiority of
the English Beef and Mutton, as well as tho
floe appearance of their horaes, 1s mainly due

Mexico, a woman and four children were re­
cently butchered for money.
Personal aud Political.
The loMea of the brokers and financier* of
IX Washington on the 29th the following Paris by the late panic are estimated at 130,­
Democratic Congressional Executive Commit­ 000,000 franca.
Bring lour Butter!
tee was appointed: Congressmen Rosecrari*
Tnx French Senate and Chamber of Depu­
Bring lour
(California), Flower (New York), Randall ties have adjourned until the 2d of May.
(Pennsylvania), Le Fevre (Ohio), Cobb (In­
Nixx director* of the Servian Bank, which
diana), Thompson (Kentucky) and Jones failed eight year* ago in Belgrade, were re­
(Arkansas). The Senate Committee, consists cently arrested for fraud, aud were released on
of Senators Davis (West Virginia), Chair­ surrendering their entire fortune*.
man; Morgan, Gorman, Coke, Harris and
Smtthx, a rich landlord of West Meath,
Grover.
Ireland, was fired upon while driving home
Ladies in Washington on the 29th organ­ from church ou the 2d, and a lady accompany­
J JEWRY ROE, PxoFktBTOB
ized a Ladles' Aid Society for the purpose of ing Uhn received the iinllct. A package of
raising funds for the Garfield Memorial Hos­ dynamite wa* exploded on the window sill of
------ OLD RELIABLE-----pital Mrs. Windom, wife of the Senator from the police barracks at Limerick, destroying
the adjacent warehouse.
ety, and Mrs. Whitney, Secretary. A large
At a petty session on the 3d In County Galnumber of subscriptions were received.
wav, Ireland, a Roman Catholic priest was
Tua lifpMican, the Administration organ committed for trial on a charge ot inciting to
at Washington, advises Kentucky Republicans
murder.
not to unite with the Independents until as­
The snow was two feet deep at Quebec on
CONSISTING IN PART OF
sured of their strength.
the evening of the 2d, and it was still snowing.
Tux Prohibitory Liquor bill has been de­
SUGARS. TEAS,
Tile rowing match between Hen Ian sad
COFFEES, SPICES,
feated in the Massacliuse!ta House of Repre­ Boyd at New Castle, Eng., on the 3d resulted'
SYRUPS, MOLASSES,
sentatives by the refusal of the Speaker to in a victory for the former.
°TARCH, SOAP,
give the tabling vote. IN THKIR 8EA8O'
CRACKERS. CHEESE,
William Wiixiams, of Indiana, has been
LATER NEWS.
BEST NICKLE SOAP IN TOWN.
nominated Charge d’ Affaires of the United
Jonx J. Piatt, the Ohio poet, ha* been Lard, by the lb. or barret,
SALMON.
States to Paraguay and Uruguay.
nominated United States Consul at the City
WHITE FISH,
E. T. Hemrick has been appointed counsel of Cork. Ireland.
TROUT.
In tire prosecution of the Star-route cases,
A Ooxflagratiox at Hopkinton, Mass., on
EF" The Highest Market Price paid '
MACKEREL.
via Cook, resigned.
\
for
Hides,
Pelts.
Ac.
the morning of the 4th destroyed property val­
HALIBUT,
The State Democratic Convention of Ala­ ued at $350,600.
COD FISH,
Fresh
Goods,
Full
Weights
and
bama will be held at Montgomery on June 7.
The President vetoed the Anti &lt;4&gt;lnc«c bfll
HERRING.
Satisfaction Guaranteed.
Secretaxr Huxt on the lOth ult_ Instructed x&gt;n the h «n the alleged ground that It cop.
I STEAM
COOKED
OAT
MEAL.
Lieutenant Harber, at Irkutsk, Siberia, to Dieted with the treaty obligations with that
sware
power.
LAMPS.
missing explorers, as the owners of the
Gladstone mills, at A*bton-uudcr-Tyne,
4..U. L.DiA E FUKUI, Dr LYKH, KiSt
FLOWER POTS,
steamer Lena wanted too high a price.
England, containing 100,000 spindles, were
James Pattok, Judge of the Supreme Court destroyed by fire on the 4th, the loss being
of Appeals ot West Virginia, died of heart £100,000.
OHIO STONE WARE.
disease In Wheeling oa the 30th nit.
Tnx miscreants in Missouri who made the
TOBACCOS,
Tnx bill of exceptions tn the Gultean case snurderoiui career of Jesse James possible
CIGARS,
would fill two quarto volumes of oae thousand now propose to avenge bls death. Governor
PIPES,
Crittenden on the 4lh gave orders to the mili­
TRY|| OUR
FIFTY-CENT
TEA.
the 30th ulttia to protect the Ford brother* who did the
THE CROWN SEWING MACHINE.
At a recent meeting of the Iowa Democrat­ akootlng*
ic Central Committee it was decided to bold
A Waehixotox dtapctc.' of the 4lh states
«a*The “Crown’’ comes into the market
the next State Convention on the 16th of Au- that in the case of Sergeant Mxaoa the Preai­
■H7 Remember we get no fancy pri
•he test of all the machines, but has sprung to
ce«, bat adl all goods as low as the front rank alonce from the fact that it has ta­
dent will do*, act until the Supreme Court
lowest,,(quality considered).
ken the good features ta all other machines
decides on the legality of the sentence. The
and put them in one grand combination, makBr neglect of the Legislature of Colorado,
Respectfully,
a thia the Handsome*!, Largest, Most Silent
that State was left from March to Jone of
Lightest Running machine yet offered. AU
last year without any taw covering larcenies ccedlngs of the court-marttal.
CEO. W. FRANCIS.
the ‘ poUita" that the cxpcriecc of twenty years
or felonies. This ta the dectalon of the. Blate
tn all kinds of family and light manufacturing
^yAGONS
Supreme Court, and it would release one hunwork baa proved to be absolutely good are to ba
found only In the “Crown.” Other machines
subtacrglng a number of sugar plantations.
Ix the Superior Court at New Haven, Conn.,
WAGONS
on the 4th the Malley boys and Blanche
Every device that is really desirable in other
mac blue# will be found tn the “Crown.”
AdDouglass were arraigned for the murder of
WA-GONS.
Jennie Cramer, aod all pleaded not guilty.
on the 3d by shooting himself, and died al six
Sajlaji Bxuxuardt and a Greek gentleman
mt«l, MKltbe “Crown" teipniKt rmbodlnamed Damalya were married In an Episcopal
Hxde of
suiting from chroalc epilepsy, ta believed te church in Wells, England, on the 4th.
E. R. WHITE.
The Beat, and moat
Ix the United States Senate on the 4th Mr.
c
compound
MIUer reported favorably the bill to incorpo­
3d of the death at Lima on the
ult-trf rate the Maritime Canal Company of Nicanr
Stephen A. Hurlbut, United States Minister
OTany In Barry Co.,
to Peru. Heart disease was the cause.
Chine.se bill was received and laid on the
NEW!DENTAL PARLOR.

George Scoville proposes to get up

sought to extinguish the flames he

Twa steamer Golden Ctty, an rent* from

ricultural

EjtC. I R'M"1*PrtnK nearhou»c Price3,000. Payments
' I easy.
\() acres, 3 tulles from Nashville. Fair bouse
and l&gt;arn. Nearly all improved. Price $1,600.
40 acres. 3U miles Yrom Nashville. If sold
Mxm will take $1,150.
'
25 acres, in the village of Nashville. Must
be sold for what It will bring on account of
poor health of present owner.
50 -errs, 4 miles from Nashville; nearly all
improved; fair building* and in all a good bar­
gain. Price $1,000; part down.
Eggs!
House and Lot, on Phillips street; the best
Bring l our Cush! bargains tn town. Price $350.
House and Lot, on State street. Price $250,
half down down.
Good House and four acres of Land on Fran­
ce* Street. Price $450.
House and lot on State Su, bouse new: good
cellar and plenty of guod water. For sale at
KO. W. FRAXCIM,
$700 or will exchange for farm pro|&gt;erty near
Nashville or Hastings.
80 acres. 1W miles from Nashville on the beat
------- DEALER] IN-------road leaving the village; all Unproved except 8
acres; the remaining h acres good timber; Is
Fancy and Staple
well watered bv a never-falling spring. Good,
young orchard; buildings fair; 18 acres ot
wheat on the ground; preseut owner engaged
tn other business and will sell for $2,600, $1,OlXldown, balance on long time.
■.
Vacant lot on Philips 8i. Price $120 If sold
soon.
LEE A DURKEE.

__________

i

Tnx net receipts of the Union Pacific Rail­
road Company for 1881 were 113,111.158.
Thx net income of the Chicago. Burlington
* Quincy Railroad during 1881 was $10,257,-

Mineral Matter (Ash.).
Total,.

Prints for 6 cts. yard. J KK &amp; DURKEE,
Gringliams 8 to 11 cts. ' REAL ESTATE AGENTS,

■MWwxaoR |

hare not heretofore ixx-n readjusted under the
terms of Hee. A, act of June IX. 1H86; to amend
the laws rotating to Internal revenue; for the
ereotton of public buUdlngr in several localL

-

AXALTSIS.

The rumor of the approaching marriage of
the daughter ot Mr. Mackey, the California
millionaire, with a Bourbon Prince ta autboriTnx Governor of South Carolina has or-

eral Courts.

THE CROWN

CR0CS

.

E. PINKHAM’8
‘ L’ ETAKLE
.

mother in Illinois, who Is dangeroualy Hl. On
the bill to grant right of way to the St. Louis
A Ban FrancUeo Road, Mr. Ingalls moved to

OBSERVE, COIP_ARE,REFLECT, ACT!

RSADT FOR SALE!

Choctaws and the Chickasana- The bill adnsttting free of duty articles ftr the Colorado
Exposition was paaaed. In the House Mr.
Chalmers introduced a bill to amend the Ap-

BLACKSMITHING!
BUCKSMITHINBI
BLACKSMiTHIMB!

mittee of the Whole the Army Appropriation
bill was taken up. Mr. Henderson moved to

_________________ A. H. WINN.
TOKETldCOti,

has served thirty-five years he may apply

MEAT MARKET!

rttaaairou* condition was reported, fully

shall be retired. An amendment was adopted
providing that any nupe-numcrarj' officer may

Fresh, Salt and Smoked

BUBGV &amp; WABOI REPAIRING

Tlie CoomlUtt then rose, when a communi-

tine as attorneys.

NaahvUteabd vicinity that I have purchased
neotly located over G. A. TRUMAN’8 store.
All kinds of DENTAL WORK done, from the
simplest operation to tbfl, most difficult,—Arti­
ficial Palate*. Irregular natural teeth »tr*igbteoed, teeth extracted without pain for 50 eta;

prisuocu In Ireland.

BEATTTN pBQANew

''WSUSI Job. M.

WOOI».

Live and Let Live.

�xx*x*s

VIpIIITT LOCALS
BIBMARK.
improvingr roots are high,
is beauty everywhere.

relieved last Monday.
There ta a riffle on the religious wa­

ters, at Huntertown.
Miss Nichols will teach the young

Btamarkers this summer.
The grassy side of earth will soon be

subjected to a turning process.
Mud slinging, was quite liberally indnlged in by Church and State last
Monday.
You do not have to look through
green goggles now to make the grass
look green.
Rant Loomis has moved from Char­
lotte, and wiU live among ♦his people

for a season.
Aunt Pheobe (Bird) has returned
from the south and began her modus
operand) for the season.
Dr. Hunt ta doing a good business,
every thing considered. He has a wee
boarder's!.bis domicil. /
In the town of.Sunfield the Republi­
cans carird the election by a good ma­
jority We have the oldest supervisor
in the United States, he having served
44 consecutive years.
Monday morning—We have the hon­
or of being called Esquire; we fully ap­
preciate the honors for one day only, as
to-morrow P. C. Grimes will assume
the Esq. Monday night—We won it.
Esq. Writist I ba! ha!
Lounging has been su pc receded by
labor, the rusty plow comes forth; the
whistle of tho plow man is heard ; the
rattle of business salutes the ear. The
dreamy spell is broken and old Sol is
performing his office nobly in favor of
the soil.
Adam Shaffer’s house went up in
smoke Sunday afternoon. The family
were away except two children.No help
could reach the scene in time to sate
the house, or but a small amount of
goods.
Town meeting day $85 was
raised to set Mr.. Shaffer on bis feet
again. The family will be in a new
house by the time this issue is in the
hands of the readers, if the weather
permits.
I read of fearful innundations south
and the consequent suffering there
from;tbe prevalence of disease in other
places; the outrages of Russia ; the
troubles of Ireland ; the talked of Eu­
ropean war; the treachery of our own
government leaders; also the pre­
mature petition for the pardon of Ser­
geant Mason, together with unnumbered crimes, and then at home to see the
^'7
tng tor a wu cent
office seems to be an outrage of no

The Union Greenback National Dem­
ocrats elected their ticket in full, ex­

Philo Granger is pa- and -Daird is
. R. Nickerson has the addition to hta
Louse-done, it takes in the well and grandpa. It’s a girl.
Isaac Powell has the timber on the
ground for a hew barn.
Last week C. Baker swapped a pair
Frank Stanton has returned borne
of steen to M. Shephard for a oow; was
from the north woods, wbefe he bat*
to change the next day,but in the morn­
spent the winter.
ing found one steer dead.
Sugar season isover anti the carex
Bert Heron has moved his household
and perplexities of the farm are in­
goods in Chas. Baker’s bain.
His
creasing daily.
wife has gone to Kalamazoo on a vtait.
Albert Manson aud Miss Ida Sage
Baker will build a house this week for
committed matrimony, Mar. 80. They
Bert,
both have our beat wishes.
.•
Saturday night, just before dark,, a
M.-G. Heayaling of Ohio, made his
large black cloud was seen rising in the
daughter, the wife of D. Ednaley, a
west; it came to a stand still. Soon il
happy surprise, April 1st.
began to ligbtning, increasing rapidly
Nathmal Clemeuse has 135 cords of
until the whole heavens were one sheet
stove wood in one pile. He will make
of flame, but it thundered moderately
U warm for some one next winter.
and only at iong intervals. Rain and
While the Republicans are feeling
hail fell, the storm lasting an hour.
When the storm ceased a bright fire •ore over the election, Greenbackers
could oe seen in the south west. It are singing ‘’Good-bye old parties,
Sroved to be the Willi’s boys barn in good-bye.”
Monday was election day and owing
ohnxtown, which had been strupk by
ligbtning; barn and contents was burn­ to the fine wether a light vote was
cast.
Out of 344 votes polled, Charles
ed. Insured in Barry and Eaton.
A
barn was burnt for the same parties D. Pierce, Greenback, rec. 138, giving
him
a
majority
of 12. The Greenback
two years ago.
1 H. H.
highway Com., Justice of the Peace,
VERMONTVILLE.
and one Constable were elected by ma­
jorities from 4 to 73. It was the most
Isaac Tracytaat home fora short
quiet election for a number of years.
vacation from Olivet.
Every body seemed to have his mind
Mrs. D. W. Purchta, Mrs. Jacob Sny­
mode up and voted accordingly while
der, Mrs. A. Townsend aud a few oth­
the result was a surprise to Greenbackers are ou the sick list
era; it was more so to Republicans.
Flora Squire, only daughter of M. L.
The town has heretofore gone from 30
Squire starts next Tuesday with a
1 to 46 Republican.
Doxy.
party “for the land of Dakota.”
Dan. Hildreth, known to most of your
CARLTON.
citizens as “Death,” died very sudden­
Jacob Odell has had the misfortune
last Monday morning of typhoid pneu­
to
loose
one
of
his horses.
monia
Arch Emory of Woodland has moved
The village election occurs next

Monday with an addition of two mem­
bers to the council as per amended
charter.
The whisky saloon, run the last year
by Henry Gass, has gone “where the
woodbine twineth.”
The building is
now occupied by Fred Elmo of Char­
lotte. as a depot for agricultural tools
and carriages.
Another place of amusement of
doubtful (!) character kept by Chas.
Rouse, would better look a “leedle
oud,” for some persons who have boys,
they would like to have come home
nights, are not entirelv satisfied with
the place.
The township election resulted in the
election of the entire Republican tick­
et by majorities ranging from two to
ninety. It is supposed that tho signing
of the liquor bonds by John H. Sqaier
i had sontething to do with his small mu• jority of two over Moses Cross.
, The Dakota fever has been very fatal
here of late. It UIBO
has appeared as an «pepI ««»*« oad bweamrioff.TamUr'of
I
our best citizens. Grave tears are en­
small mien.
tertained of several others.
Benj.
Twenty seven years ago this morn­ Stevens, Ed. Stevens, Geo. Dwight, jr.,
ing,April 5tb. 1 became a tax payer in Arthur Allen, Mr. Ficus, Geo. and
thtatown. Since that time I have been Samuel Bale, Charles Cook, Edward
a resident of thia neighborhood and a Price, Daniel Allen and wife, Oscar
struggler for a living. The wilderness Church and family, John Young and
of my first life here has stepped aside wife, and othera“too numerous to men­
and verdant taken ita place. Many early tion” are gone or going.
Occasional.
resident? have long since tried the eter­
nity aide, while I am left to battle
WOODLAND.
with tht/contending elements of time.
Boon the new will lie completed aud I
Sugar making ta drawing to a hokus
receive a check to quit the old and poka.
dwell in the new.
8. Height has the Erysipelas in his
Neighbors may bite an devour one
another all the year except one week at
election time, and during this short
space sclasp each other to thejr bosom
as tenderly as a mother her infant.
Previous issues are all forgotten, they
drink from the* same fount, blow the
some trumpet, and look through the
same political goggles. The week end­
ed io sweet communion, they separate
to order war anew, having replenished
their amnnition and repaired their fort
the boom of slang ta soon heard to
echo.
Wrilibt.

ASSYRIA.
A.Potter has returned from N. Y.
C. Baker has bought a new wagon.

Ed. Nyes children are Retting better.
8. Ashley baa returned from Allegan
Cal. Smith baa moral la Wm. Soigtr

8. Mayo has moved in J. W. Abby’s
house.
Chas. Servin has bought a new top
C. Baker and F. Wrigbt have built a

Horace Bristow cut his foot last week
by stepping on an ax.
8. Davis has moved on the farm he
fought of C. Baker.
Hwsry Uretiogburg has got his house
enclosed, and mov*d in.
Cummins last Friday night.
Hartotu has sold his drugs to Dr.
Bakrr who will start a drug store.
The McCall farm has been sold to
•ome parties math of Bellevue.
J. T. Wdcher has sold bis interest in
a piece of land in New York to A. DelJacob Hartoni’s hired man left for
parts nnfinown, getting the start, of
Hartom $8.10.

Moaquetoea are around trying to
palm off bad bills.
Our post master G. C. Rice will erect

face.
High Waltz reports a fine boy at his
house.
Mrs. A. P. Holly started Bay City on
Friday.
Some of our farmers have already
sown oats.
Next Sunday is Easter and we must
eat a dozen.
8. Haight ta going to putting up some
barb wire fence this spring.
The Republican ticket was elected to
a man, and by a large majority.
Mrs. J. F. Orwick has gone to Kal­
amazoo to visit hta mother who has
very pqor health.
Mrs. William Wood ta very low. She
has been sick about two years.—Later,
Mrs. Wood died on Wednesday.
R. P. Holmes has moved into hta
fathers bouse, and Mr. Fox has moved
into the house vacated by R. P.
Frank Hilbert will soon be at home.
He writes be has bought a lot in one of
Dakota’s fair cities. R. Christian
will buy a farm there.
' Some of our brethren most remem­
ber we mist help one another, and
care for the widow, and not refuse to
split a little wood.
Some of our boys that went to Dako­
ta, writes back good news aud like the
country so well that they have gone in­
to business there.
The horns of our brass band arrived
on Friday, They were tested by Mr. Wil­
son ef Sunfield and pronounced them
a good lot of born a Mr. Wilson will
act as teacher, so we soon can boast of
a good brass band.
, One Jackson Crites moved toour villogelast spring, and had his assess­
ment taken in our town. He moved
from here north of Ionia and when tax
time came, did not respond. Hta taxes
amounted to nearlv $32, and thought
he would play sharp aod not pay them,
and the matter was dropped for a time.
On Satarday last. Jackson drove a
horse into town, left it st Mr. Curtta’
and went to look up seme business.
Sheriff Runyon got wind of it and
ou Monday he capt tired the horst*, and
now the horse ta advtrttaed for sale, to
pay said taxes.
Null.

From oar roguter eorroopcnxWiO.)
Washington, D. C., Apm. 1. 1882.
Mover has a sreater crowd been seen
public receotion than assembled there
Tuesday evening.
More ■caunot .be
said, since on other similar occasions
such as the first, or last reception of a
P-mident or hta wife, tbe building has
been taxed to its utmost capacity.
Tho facts that Presidet Arthur has had
no public reception hitherto, save the
one on New Year’s day, and that it was
known that General and Mrs. Grant
would be with him on thta occasion, of
course added somewhat to the interest
felt in the levee and increased the anx­
iety to attend it. The crowd began
assembling even.beforo 8 o’clock, tbe
hour for the reception to begin, and
promptly at that hour President Arthur
and Colonel Rockwell, who made the
presentations, entered the Blue Parlor
and took their stand near the door lead­
ing to the Red Room, facing tbe corri­
dor. The ladies invited to assist in re­
ceiving soon joined them, except Mrs.
Grant, who came with ber husband
shortly after the reception began, and
took her place beside Mrs. Freliughuysen, who stood next to the President.
The decorations o the halls sod par­
lore were not elaborate, as a great
crowd was expected, but they were
very tasteful. In tbe Blue Parlor dif­
ferent colored azaleas in full bloom
were arranged, and also smaller plants
on tbe mantels there and in the East
Room. * In tho corridor were potted

In tbta country, as the temperance
people have long found out, U js one
tbiugtopaasa law and quite another
to-enforce it. This observation refer*
to the Anti-Polygamy law.
The French pilgrimage of expiation,
which will leave Paris at the end of
April for Jeramlem, ta likely to be far
more numerous limn we expected. Tbe
royalist provincial "noblessee will be
larely expreteuted.
.

Two detected burglars at Dayton,
Ohio, leaped from athird-siory window
eighteen feet to a shed, and then six­
teen feet more to the ground, dashed
through the crowd which bad counted
on capturing them and escaped.
'

A 4-year-old boy went into a saloon
atDaltaaCitj, Ill-, tossed a five-cent
piece od the bar, and called for a glass
of beer, as he had seen hta father do.
Being refused tbe drink, lie wept out
aud smashed a window with a stone.
Many years ago the corporation of
Edinburgh gave to their then Lord
.Provost a piece of land forming part of
the waste called the borough moor, aud
then of little value. Hta descendant,
Sir. George Warrender, realized from
it an income of nearly $500,000 a year.

arrmted. ch
During the i
which em
your frj
------------ ------- —
actually steal tbe hamaT’
Tbe colonel replied: “Yas. sab; eos
did; soli. He stole’em sah?”
“Then how do you expect him to
get off!”
"On insanity, •ah."
“But what proof have you that be
was insane!”
"He alien did steal hams, sah. an
his uncles and his daddy befo’ him
stole hams, sail. Hit runs in de fam’ly,
sah.
Way back in de blood, ssh.
Doan you think you can clear him,
Kahl"
The amused disciple of Blackstone
said that in the light of late events ha
thought he could, and the “Coions!"
went away carrying a deep canyon
of smile, happy in the glafl tidings
which he would be enabled to convey
to hta friend of hereditary and convent
lent insanity, who was that moroeugazing at tbe outside world through a
plaid frame.

■

national* hosmopelitiahe Polyglottt
Central Zdtu'ng von Wein,” which la
alioat to he produced in Vienna. Thia
title ta td be in twelve languages and
dialectsand t$e vender may take bis
choice.
a

CAUTION!

It ta evident that Sergeant Mason
will have to be tried again for hta mur­
derous assault upon Guiteau.
The
Judge Advocate-General of the army
Ims pronounced the proceedings of the
plants placed on stands. The Marine court martial by which he was tried
band played in the outer hall all the irregular and informal that the
evening. The usual arrangements for fence against him cannot
airing for tbe cloaks and bats were
Eighteen years of incessant headache
made, and considering die crush, quite
successfully carried out. Owing to the were endured by Andrew J. Miller of
Rel«*ue No. 0,060 of Jan. 20th, 1880, to Goo.
presence of the crowd many amusing Wurreo, Ky. Surgeons lately raised N. Palmer.
__
Reissue No. 9,181 of April 37th, 1*», to Geo­
incidents occurred, but all present port of hta skull, aud thus relieved the
into Geo. Brandon’s house.
N.
Palmer.
D. D. Smith is making preparations seemed to unite in preserving decoram. pressure which bad caused the trouble.
We believe these patent* corer every Spring
He was wanted to stay quietly indoors
and all were m good humor.
to manufacture barrel hoops.
Tooth Harrow that U U»-day found u[xm the
fur a month, but he was too jubilant
The decision of the Judge-Advocate
Malon Center and a Mr. Burton have
market. AB except those made by ua, ort»y our
over
bis
freedom
from
suffering
to
gdbe to Dakota to taken look.
authority, are infringement* of our pateuu.
General of the Army on the case of
De wit Murdock hat. moved over to Sergeant Mason has l»een considered obey, and went on a spree, which caus­
rected other? to be commenced. ThU i* U&gt; for­
the center and boards with Mr. Covert. by tbe Cabinet. Tbe Judge-Advocate- ed bis death.
bid lhe making, selling, or u*h»g ui any Spring­
George Miles ta no better. His most General, holds that Mason is improp. rA wagon load of misery excited pity Toot. Harrow that Infringes any of Uw above
intimate friends have but little hope !y confined by reason of serious defect? at Ottawa, Kansas. It wus a handcuff­
patent*. A very little examination WiU con­
in the proceeding of the court-martial. ed thief, uh Iris way to prison ; his in­ vince any bonext farmer or dealer that tbe Har­
of his recovery.
Alvin Carpenter has bought a store One of tbe principal points in the de­ sane wife, who wits being taken to an row* of tbl* cIom now in o*e, are infringemento .
building in Freeport, and intends to cision ta that tbe charge on Which Ma­ asylum; two children, going to the of our patents, except lUc—e mule by ourselves
go into the grocery business.
son was tried—assault with intent to pour house, and a dead baby, bound or our agent*.
To save expen»c and trouble, those who de»Jeral Henney still carries his arm. kill—was not sustained by the evidence tor a graveyard. The object in taking
before the court-martial. them all iu one vehicle was to manage Ire Spring-Tooth Harrow* iiad better purchase
which was broken some time since by adduced
a kick from one of bis borses, in a sling. The Jud*ge-Advocate-General, admits the woman easily, as she refused to be only of those who have a right to sell
them. In Bubmittl*^ to our attorneys, M. D.
• The township* meeting passed off that a serious offense was committed parted train the rest.
Leggett A Ca, of Cleveland, Ohio, an addlquietly, the Republicans electing J. N. but does not consider that tl.e proper
Uoiial list of names against whom to cotumece
In bis opinion the
Buffalo Bill may never Ire seen again suits, they have written as folto”* •
Covert for Supeivisor, the balance of charge was filed
prisoner should have been arraigned on tire dramatic stage. The descendants
ticket went Greenback.
Law Office of M. D. Legoctt A Co., 1
Some body has been saving some for riotous conduct to the great pre­ o( Philip Cody, Bill's father, have laid Counsellors at Law tn Patent Cauae* and bol- I
icitors of Patents, City Hall, Cleveland, Ohio, |
naughty things to some body, conse­ judice of military discipline. The dan­ claim to about fifty acres of ground on July 12,18*).
e
' J
quently a law suit ta the order of busi­ ger to be feared from Mason’s act iu Euclid avenue, right iu tbe centre of Mettn. I). C. &lt;k H. C. Retd &lt;f- (Jo.
v-.—.v. ..
If their claims
Kalamazoo, Mich.:
ness. We wait future devolelopments. discharging his weapon at Guiteauand the city of Cleveland.
8uu»We received the list &lt; I names with
using seditious language was that it i ja allowed, the family will be a million
Wheat was considerably damaged by
jour Instructions to commence suits against all
might have incited hta comrades to dollars the richer, and then the hero of Epson* who make or sell or use Spnug-Tooth
the freezing nnd thawing, through the
arrow* which infringe any ot you pair
further acts of violence, such ns the the “Scouts ot the Prairie” will retire
month of March, but the recent rains
lynching of tho prisoner they were de­ from the boards, perhaps to leappear cut*.
We have already commenced several suits
have made a wonderful change in its
tailed to guard and protect. The de­ iu Congress.
against makers aim dealer*, and will immed­
appearance and prospects are fair for
iately commence against the ;&gt;er*on« who have
cision of the Judge-Advocate-General
a good crop.
T. Rkvoc. '
bought
and are using tbe in in aging Harrows,
A singular instance of the operation if you positively
if approved 'oy'the President, ta final,
direct us to du aa If a fanner
and dispose of the case, so far as the of circumstances upon legislation ta know* that be m buying an infringing device,
CEDAR CREEK.
and takes ft because be can get it a little cheap­
military court. The civil authorities the Senate’s amendment to the bill er, we liavo no pity for him, .but »c presume
might possibly take cognizance of bis granting u penniun of $5,000 a year to many have purenased without having bad any
Good roads.
Lucretia R. Garfield, by adding similar notice Uat they would thereby make Uiemsclvea
offense.
April showers.
Ln (ringers.
Thus far the House has passed 314 provisions for Sarah C. Polk abd Julia
Warm weather.
We notice that one of the infringing man­
G. Taylor. The House having accept­ ufacturers advertises in Kalmaxoo paper that
Town meeting passed ofl'quietly.
bills and joint resolutions. That num
Isaac VanOrman is moving to Hick­ ber exceeds (he total for last session, ed this amendment, two persons be­
but they are nearly all of a private come beueticiars of the Government article* tn the tree use of the Mine.”
ory Corners.
Now the firm which »o advertises, ought to
Farmers begin to plow for oats and character. Ou the appropriation bills who would not bare dreamed of this a
only tbe immediate deficiency bill has year ago, though* the ground of their
make garden.
Wbgat looks well and bids fair for become a law. The army bill bos pass­ pensions bad then existed a long time.
a rich harvest.
Mrs. E. 8. Mowry is building quite
an addition to his banf.
Dakota fever still rages here, but no
case has yet proved fatal.
A protracted effort is being made by
theP. M. society at the Bunnell ap­
pointment.
Henry Newman and the great me­
chanical financier and the grist mil)
man have had a falling out.
If any of the readers of this paper
are going to buy an engine, or have
any machinery to set up, they will do
well to call on Mr. 8. Hull, for in bis
own estimation be has no equal a# a
machinest.
Jim.
EATON COUNTY.

Mrs. Joseph Teter of Eaton Rapids,
fell and broke her leg near the thigh,
one day last week.
Burglars entered Evans Hunsicker A
Co’s store at Bellevue last week one
night, but did not succeed in getting
into the safe.
The Bellevue Gazette has been purch­
ased by Geo. W. Perry of Lansing,
who takes hold of the publication as
though he meant business.
W. C. Westland, editor of the Grand

Ledge Independent was sentenced to
pay a fine of $100 without cost, for al­
leged libel, but has appealed the ease
to the circa it court.
Eaten Rapids was visited last Tues­
day night by burglars, who blew open
the safe of Hamilton Bros, securing
$350 in money, and $150 in postage
stamps. It it thought that the perpe­
trators were experienced cracksmen, as
tiie job was so neatly executed that the
night watchman heard nothing of the

ed the Senate and House, but has been
recommitted.
The -fortification, post
office, consular and military academy
bills have passed both brauebes of Con­
gress, but having been handicapped
with amendments, an now in the hands
of conference committees. The Indian
and agricultural bills have passed the

The Rev. George H. Austin, who for­
ged a note at Madtaun, ind., aud es­
caped with the money, says that ire re­
solved never to preach again, because
he deemed hta crime a sufficient reason
for quitiug the pulpit. He went to
Texas, and engaged in school teaching,
under aa assumed name. After sever­
House, but are now pending in the
al months, however, be was offered a
Senate.
job at lecturing, and from that he went
District Attorney Corkhill, Mr. Geo.
into preaching again, which led to hta
Scoville and Mr. Davidge were occupi­
identification.
ed until a late hour this afternoon in
eonferer.ee upon the bills of exemption
A minister ta assigned every year by
from the decision of Judge Cox in the tbe Conference to the Methodist church
Guiteau trial. The work was complet­ at Troy, Ohio, and ta invariably locked
ed, and the agreed bills will be signed out by the trustees. This ta tbe result
and sealed by Judge Cox, who will hold of an old disagreement, in which the
a session of the December term of the edifice was, by order of a court, left in
Criminal Court this week for that pur­ the trustees’ lianda 'The last appoin
pose. Tbe March term of the Criminal tee, the Rev. George Edgar, announced
Court is now being conducted by that he would break thj doorand hold
Wylie, but Judge Cox has kept open services.
The trustees put on new
tbe December term also, in order to locks aud bars to prevent an entrance.
complete the Guiteau case by the al­ While they were at work the pastor
lowance of these bills of exceptions. appeared on the ssene. An altercation
When they are signed and sealed he! ensued. Trustee James brandished a
will adjourn the December term tine' hatchet and the clergyman drew a pis­
dit.
tol, for which act he was arrested aud
The prosecution in the star-route1 put under bonds.
coses have been strengthened by thei
___ _
• — *
Of the growing importance of French
appointment of Hod. R. T. Merrick, of'
thtadty, and W. W. Ker, of Philadel­ oyster breeding an estimate may be
phia, additional
special attorneys. formed from tbe recent report ot the
Both qualified here to-day for this duty London agent of ous of the breeding
Mr. Merrick jby taking the oath of at districts. Itta therein stated that in
special attorney of the United State-, tbe months of January and February
and Mr. Ker by becoming a member of’ alone, seven millions of young French
oysters in good condition were laid
the district in Genexal Term.
down in the English beds. This oper­
August.
ation will continue during March and
From so extensive me of 8u Jacoba Oil ta April. Thepe seven million of oyster*
coat, perhaps, £7,000; and supposing
only two-thirds of them live to be re­
articls' retailed eighteen months hence at two

matter until die gang had fled.

friendly to the brain! Ito you desire good fiejb
aud healthy bkxidf Then use Brown's Iron
Bitters. It will »ult)xur case exactly.

DON’T DIE IN THE HOURE.
diugglsta for “Rough oa Rate.”

buys and u«ca a patented article can be mode
to answer in » anil of infringement the hum as

Tbe false statement has undoubtedly misled
very many nurchMem. We would sdvise you
therefore to issue a circular jiuaiUvely denying
the exiucnce of any such law, an staling that
you will hold uscni and sellers responsible, as
well m makers. This will make tnem Inquire
and upon inouiry, they will find that no such
law exista, and that the manufacturers referred
to have deceived them. We have no doubt
whatever about tbe validity of your petento,
and that you will be able to recover for every
practical Bpring-Toolh Harrrow In um to this
country that ta made without your permtastou.

'“’SM&amp;rrr.aca
We hope ta the interest of peace and t ooeety^
that this notice may be sufficient to secure our righto. We have paid a large amount of money
for tbe above cited Patents, and have expended
total public ths Bprtag Teeth Harrow.
We
have the asms right to control these Harrows

we shall enforce our right*

all lufring-

D. C-A H. C. REED A CO.

tending purchaacra ol Harrow*. Don't c«found till* Harrow with other and Inferior har-

_____ C. L. CLA8COW.
BR.UN AND NERVE.

Well*’ Health Rencwvr, greatest remedy &lt;
earth for impotence, leannem, acxnai dsMM
Ac.,81. Bldragxteto. MfchrDepot,JAJCHJ:
0AV1B A COTDctroit Mich.

0LEMEMT SMITH,

shilling* the docen, the margin of gain
to be shared by all concerned will be
about £82,000, or 800 per cent per an- I
Affnrnow A.
It
num—an illustration of the profitable Wlu
character of the industry.
I tkaa*,*■&lt;yeMOimta ।

�EMPTY YWB8E.

Haow.aatbeywfU
nUre.suxk of pierc goods
ipoa a cloth to his taele.

T In foolish mirth.
। full wer* better by half.*

THE STORY OF AN OLD COAT.

tni Dew. We shall go further back even than

money in a warm garment of excellent quality,
wherewith to protect his lean carcass from tbe
chills of December. It wa* December in CribCurzon Street. Mavfair. W. Around the man­
sion* of the wealthy and refined, the cruel,
■now-laden blast bowltV In impotent fury, be­
cause it could not shake thc masdve doors or
make the heavy, tightly-fitting windows rattle.
■When it discovered a stray chink, and contri ved to sneak through insidiously, thick cur­
tains barred ita way, rich “—— -*—*—* ••
• blazing fires warmed it, an
i temperature
, ab^jrbcsTRSJhe bitter bei
a hard winter
------ u&gt;
had
—
dontcnKiuclfjEllh__ __________ Ing vtaiously
. outside! “I’m DerSaud I won’t go away. I’ll
not leave you for months—for mouths. I'll
briosy bronchitis, and inflammation, and
death to some of you yet. You shan't es­
cape me, withall your tricks. Whoof! Puff!"
- Then the wealthy and refined smiled confi­
dently iu their eotoforubleapartmenta. They
Were pre;iured for tbe siege.
Far otherwise was It wirh tbe poor and vul­
gar. They shrank and shivered at tbe fearful
menace, for the* knew It was no idle threat.
The wind-fiend Is their savage enemy. He re­
joices at their defenceless condition, their tnls• enddo dwellings, their meagre food, their
■canty fuel, their insufficient clothing. He
tomes tb kill; be tell* them so, as he whistles
through their chattering teeth. Aud he never
jokes.
The two rows ot rickety tenements known
as Cribble Street, Mile End, were let out to the
poor nnd vulgar, in suites, generally eompriting one toom and a cupboard for each family.
‘ irrespective of size. At No. 12, a certain back
chaintx-r—without a cupboard—w*s occupied
by a man, a wife and a very wee morsel of humanlty. Tbe man was young—only three-and
twenty. Ills name was Mark Tioper. Tbe
woman was also young—some nineteen years,
perhaps—and she was called Pattic. Tbe we*
morsel wm still younger, being but three days
. old, and'having no name yet decided upon.
But they thought of calling'her Pattie also—at
■ least Mark did?
Mark Roper's misfortunes may be sumthed
up with terrible simplicity. He was out of
work, and had been so for the past six months,
in consequence of a strike, which be had no
hand in originating, and with which he totally
disagreed. During that time, tbe neat little
cottage at ftratford had iwtn given up; thn
furniture liad disappeared bit by bit, thc pawn­
shop bad swallowed up tlielr blankets and
counterpanes aud warn^clothing. At present,
tbe room in Cribble Street, whither they had
fled as the cheapest refuge upon earth, except
the workhouse, contained only two chairs, a
tablc.teomc articles of crockery, and a mattress
xm the floor, upon which the young wife lay
with her first-born folded lovingly in her arm*.
Thc parish doctor had attended her; tbe parish
dispensary had provided medicine: the parish
' overseer had anowed a little oatmeal and u
little port wine-7-qnitc as a favor—to help to
get up her strength.. So she ought to have
been gra'.efuL poor thing! Well, and so she
was—grateful to God that her husband loved
her, and that her child lived.
,
“Mark! I can’t eat any mure now. Finish
up this basin of gruel for me whlta H’s hot.
„Do, dear,” she said, coaxingly.
“Not I. 1 can't abide it—I hate it!" he
. replied, trying to look nauseated by thc very
W®*- fl
BhcTalsrd herself upon one elbow. “You
.have bad nothing but a saveloy all dav, Mark;
and It vou don’t swallow this. I'll not'tastcan. other drop you make for me-there!”
“ But, dearr I don’t like IL”
“It’sa story. You do. You shall. Flubh
it at, once, or you’ll make me 111 talking about
U. Goon now.” .
. He took a few spoonfuls, and pretended to
drain tbe basin; but bls wife was too sharp­
eyed. She watched him closely, and never relaxed^her vigilance, unlil tbe whole was con-

“Now I’m mlslted.” she said, sinking back
upon the bolster. “Where is uncle's letterf
What time did he say he would cotte! Six
“It s nearly that now—don’t you think so!
Unde wBl do something for us. I'm sure he
will, when he sees baby. Look at her. Isn't
Mie an angel! Buch targe brown eyes, Just like
yours! She’s the image of you, Mark."
“Your undo may help you, but not me,"
returned Mark, gloomily.
“He can’t help me without you, love—that's
one comfort.”
“ He’ll try it on, though. I know he’ll try
it cm,” muttered Mark, as he walked to thc •
stove and placed four small knobs of coal,
with great care, between the bars. But Pattie
did not catch the words, because she was lis­
tening to a footstep on thc landing outsideThen the door was opened abruptly, aud her
unde, James Geisworthy, walked into the

here’s a a pigsty! Hope you're
satisfied, girt!” was tbe old man’s greeting to

1 took her to first,"
broke In Mark, with a flash ot indignation.
lou abut up, Mark Roper. You're a foot
and you’ll never be anything else,” said GelsS2r“y’’ w*’tng him awav, contemptuously.
“You married Pattie in state of me. You ran
away with her, and thought you were mighty
clever, no doubt. But you shan’t have mucho’f
my money—you shan't?’
“Lnctel dca? uncle!" exclaimed Pattie, “you
must help us—you really must, if only foe
anriira at you alrcadr.”
“O! yes. She's sft right. I don’t mind ber,
nor I don’t mind you; and 1’11 act straight by
the jwlr of you. if you do what I want."
“what te that!”
■
look here, Pattie. Youmnsl Just bring
your kid, and come back to live with me like
you used to, before you took up with that pennBeas scamp against my will. ”
.
• And what is he to do!"

to Canady! Anywhere, so Jong xs be keeps out
topukhfm1
tmlnd B’*umPin""Pthccola
”Trawant—to—seporate^-me—and—Mark!"
*iowly’
her eyes sternly

“ Marie”’ cried Pattie, sitting bolt upright
upon the ms.ttresa. as aburaingfinsh mounted
to her thin cheeks, and ber tremblmg finger
pointed to Use door—“Mark! Turn that man
Gebworihv, ta

ItwaaaMavy,
drab-oolored MU.
, .....
lar to that wbrn by grooms in Uvery in firstwlaas'estabhkhnMmu. Then he gave minute
Instructions u to Hie shape, thestae, tbe pocketa, the buttons, ail according to hta own no­
tions of what a coat ought to be, without any
regard to .the "prevailing fashions,", which
the tailor vainly sought to bring under his no­
tice.
When the coat was finished »nd sent home,
he took it back to hare an Ip tier lining stltehra
in, because it was not warm enough; an-i after­
ward he took it baek again to get suolbsr lin­
ing added, because tlx first was aot strong
enough. ”I'm not a-going to pay fo&lt; a con­
cern that'll wear out In a month,” bo ex­
plained
By this time, the tajlor and his Journeymen
were thoroughly sick of that coat, anJ dis­
tinctly refused to make any further additions
or alterations whatever. ■
James Gelsworthy was extremely proud of
this new Item to his limited wardrobe. He
wore It on every -possible opportunity, lie
turned it to account by knock.nn- off fires In
February, and keeping It on in the bouse, for
the sake of Its more economical warmth. He
.used it as a second counterpane thrown over,
hta bed at night. Thia last fact was discov­
ered in March by his landlady, who, not hav­
ing seen anything of him fortwo days, became
atannod ou the third, and caused the door of
,h!s room to be burst open. .They found him
lying upon his bed, still and peaceful and cold,
with tbe favorite coat resting across his limbs.
James Geisworthy was dead.
Over tbe mantelshelf was a bit of paper, fas­
tened with pins: and upon it a Jew words writ­
ten ta a shaky but legible band: “In case of
my death, tbe furniture and other things be­
longing to me in mv two rooms, I give to my
niece, Pattia Roper, 13 Cribble Etreet, Mlle
End. There ain’t no money, only Just enough
to bury me. I drawed it all out and disposed
of it months ago. Signed by me, James Geis­
worthy."

The “furniture and things” were a real god"
send to Mark and Pattie.
“I’ll tell you what we’ll do,” said the hus­
band. “Well sell the lot. I'll give overlook­
ing: after odd jobs, and we’ll get an assisted
passage to Melbourne. I've heard as bow
there's heaps more chance for a poor man in
Australy.”
“I’m willing toga anywhere." answered
Pattic, “ so long as we can only manage to
stick together."
Tbe real and personal estate of old Geis­
worthy produced about twenty-five pounds in
cash—truly a blessing to the extremely impe
cunlous, as any one will know who ever had
the bad fortune to stand In urgent want of a
similar amount, and the good fortune to coins
into it unexjiectedly Just In the hour of need.
Tbe last thing disposed of was the heavy drab
overcoat, by private treaty with Mr. Isaac
Solomons, dealer in anything.
“Well, what do you want for it!” Inquired
Mr. Solomons, after having turned it over sev­
eral times and regarded It suspiciously, as
though it were an infected garment'
“Suppose we say thirty bob!" suggested
Mark, tentatively.
"There’s n &gt; harm In saying thirty quid, so
long as nobody parts with the coin. No, my
man; that there coat ain't no use to me—It’s
too ugly ; and my customers is mostly fashion­
able Inclined.”
“But It's worth something. Look at the
quality!’’
"Quality! What's quality nowadays I Noth­
ing. It’s cut that's wanted; and there ain’t no
cut alust that there ; not a baporth."
“What will you give! Come!" .
“If I were to spectate fifteen bob on It I
should lose. Shtrlke me1 should lose. No;
'pon mv honor, I can't dolt!"
“Well, fork over. It’s no good to me—it
don’t fit.”
“Il ain’t much good to anybody, as I can
see," grumble I the Jew. But for ail that he
“forkedover" the fifteen nhlHIugs immediately;
and the coat became the property of Mr. Solo­
mons.

If you had watched Mr. Solomons transact­
ing business In his own shop, vou would have
wondered how, in the name of all tho common
laws of finance, be contrived to keep clear of
the bankruptcy court. Continually to be sell­
ing gixKjs without a profit is generally suppos­
ed to bring about very unsatisfactory results.
But to part with them at ou appalling loss-—to
have them literally wrenched from you by a
greedy public, heartlessly taking advantage of
the perpetual slackness of trade—ought to cul­
minate In disaster, speedy andvomplete. And
yet Mr. Solomons was not submerged He con­
trived in some fashion to keep hta head above
water, and bls shoulders, too, in spite of the
terrible sacrifices he solemnly professed to make
every hour of the day. Perhaps it was but a
grim Joke, a melancholy satire, when he tick­
eted the coat acquired from Mark for fifteen
•hillings as a “tremendous bargain—onlv two
pound* ten ahlUlngs.”
v
’
“Cost nio three pounds—s'heip me! If I
never speak another word!” he exclaimed to
thc pale and pat lent-faced young woman who
stopped to Inspect it.
"It would just fit father nicely," she said,
more to herself than to tbe Jew. “And very
warm and comfortable; but rather a funny
shape, isn’t It.”’
"Funny shape! "Why, Il’s one of Poole’s
latest styles, made ex’presaly for a Markka,
who only wore it three times, and then got tired
Of It."
'' “What is the lowest vou will take!'.'
“Lowest! Well, if I’ll touch a farden less
than two-ten; not if th1? Prince of Wales was
to go down on his bended knees! Ten bob is
enough to drop over one article—rather!':
“I stn unable to spare more than twopounds;
In fact, I have no more with me. It you can­
not accept that, I must go without.”
“Lose a pound! lose a whole pound! O,
aiitrike me, I can't, I can't. What with one
and another of vou, I shall be driven to the
workhouse," cried Mr. Solomons, palhetlcal-

...
I’m not hud to j

ing words at the door. ,:The weather la very
rough, and you are not yet strong enough to
stay out late. Do come back to tea."
“Of qouroc, of course.' How far do you think
I can
w^ sixpence—a paltry sixpence I"
Between two and three o’clock lulhe morn­
ing, be staggered home drenched tafth rain,
and, alas I tatoxicated.
Madge wm accustomed to the spectacle. In
silence and without reproach she led him to
his room. Suddenly she mtased hta coat. It
was thc old story. He bad pawned it. She
asked him for the ticket, and found that it also
was sold for a mere song. The coot she had
worked so hard' to pay for.!
The poor grief-stricken girl, in the retire­
ment of her own room, threw herself by her
bedside and wept ta anguish to that oilier
Father who has promised how,- one dav. He
will surely wipe away all tears from the eves of
those that mourn.

The Individual who bought thc “duplicate”
from the drunken old man, probably tost or
forgot it altogether, as the coat remained un­
disturbed in die store-room of Messrs. Bate A
(I rind well, pawnbrokers, for over the statutory
twelve months. It then became an "unre­
deemed pledge," and as such was labeled, hung
up, and dangled before the public as a remark­
able proof of the manner in .which the disin­
terested vendore were prepared to forego all
personal profit for the general.wcal. The coal
was fingered and thumbed and twitched, and
tried on, and turned over bv some dozens of
persons before one Phortmfics, a cabman, took
a fancy to it and eventually became Its owner.
And now it began to see service. He wore it
hard, did Bhorttniles. What with snow, and
rain, aud frost, and sunshine, its original color
grew many shades deeper. Beer stained it,
tobacco smoke Impregnated it. cold pork
greased it. Il saw a great deal of outdoor
life in London, and acquired an impudent, reck­
less appearance. Itq big bone buttons seemed
to sure In awful astonishment at those mean
persons who presumed to offer iu master le*»
than double bls legal fare. When bbortralies
tossed a coin in the palm of his hand, uul in­
quired of a victim: "What d'yer call tillsi
what's this fort" the big bone buttons seemed
ready to burst from their places with surprise,
indignation and reproach. Tbe victim could
Imagine them saying: "Ay, whatdoyercall it I
What is It for! That’s what wo want to know,
Yah—shabby!”
it happened one day thatShortmiles, feeling '
himself insulted by the remarks of a rival cab­
man aneut the symmetry aud attractiveness
of hl* features individually aud collectively,
including a definite ojiinlon respecting thc
lowest market value of hta face if put up to
afiction by a cheap Jack in the neighborhood'
of thc New Cut, leaped from his vehicle nnd
challenged his tormentor to personal eombat.‘
The gauntlet was at once picked up and thc
battle began.
How furiously it raged—how women
screamed. "Bhame! why don’t you part
'em!" and men replied: " Get out! why don't ■
you leave 'em alone!”—how a stately police ,
nun, with slow and measured step, approflebed
the scene, forced his way through the crowd. I
aud said: ’ Now then, slogthi* 'ere; show us
Gur badges both on yer’1—how tbe two eomtants were summoned before the magistrate
and fined—and how they ultimately shiok
hand* and swore eternal friendship—are not
nil these things matters of trifling concern,
in comparison with the following fact I When
.Hhortmlles was preparing for the duel he took
off his coat, folded it earefullj, and placci'it
under the box-scat of his cab. Of this he was
certain. After the struggle, when he returned
to hl* post the coat was gone. Of this he was
also positive, aud he never set his eyes on it
again.

A certain loathsome lodging-house, situated
in a back slum, whither we must now repair,
was nothing else but a nest of thieves—wretch­
ed, ill-clad, hungry thieves; outcasts from the
more sturdy and bolder ranks of crime; de­
spised by the clever burglar who took his fifty
or hundred pounds worth of “ swag” at a
haul; Ignored and disowned bv the dashing
awell-mobaman or the accompltshc-'. pickpock­
et. These pour creature*.were onlv staU-liIt­
ers and area-sneaks—men, women and chil­
dren who were willing to risk the terrible pun­
ishments of thc law for sixpence. ,A num­
ber of them were assembled in .an under­
ground back kitchen, discussing tho good and
bad luck of Ute day. They separated them­
selves into little groups of twos and threes,
ana established tem;&gt;orary partnership on thc
basis of uniting their pilfering* and “going
whacks" in the profit.
Presently the door opened, and a man with
a detestably cunning expression of face. ar.d
having a stumpy horsewhip ta hta baud, en­
tered the rwom.
“ Well, my lads and lasses, bow are you all
getting along!” he said, “i was Just driving
round this way, so I thought I’d 'give you a
look m. Got anything Ig my line to-day I” He
walked round, and rapidly inspected tbe vari­
ous little piles of articles presided over by ths
respective “ firms.”
,r You’re a-plcking," grumbled one lean and
“Well, then, good day, sir. I rrhist try aud tattered chevalier a'lndustrie; “and it ain’U
find something that wifi do elsewhere."
fair.”
“Don’t go. Bay two-five—make it as light as
“I alius piek, and pays extra for It—yer
you can for me—say two-five!" be pleaded,
seizing her by the hem of her mantle.
boots and clothes—nothing else ain't no good
“Impossible! I tell you 1 have only two to
me, not at a gift.”
pounds."
Having selected sundiy odds aud ends, and
Bolomona groaned, as In anguish of spirit. having
paid for them, alter considerable hag­
“Give us your money!" he said, desperately. gling, ont
of a big bag of silver and copper,
•• I fnnsr t.rv in
—__ 1
he stuffed hta purchases pell-mell into a canbo the young woman carried away her “ tre­ tfiu sack and carried them off. At thc top of
thc street he mounted a clumsy cart, drawn
mendous bargain.”
3 a melancholy pony ta a decline- A drive
about an hour and a half took him to tbe
other end of London, where hta destination
— — ........ .
.... ... —« w.
try wuo was a dingy shop with the announcement—
fire, smoking a too-highly seasoned brier-root “Marine Btorea-Wardrobes bought and sold."
pipe. Tbe daughter sat ata small table by
W ith the assistance of his “ old woman ” and
the window, coloring photographs. The fath­ hta “two gals,” the contents of tbe cam s* sack
er’s face was of that shrunken, bloated type, were re-examined and appraised. Amot-gother
frequently observable in drunkards when their things, it contained thc coat that Bhortmilea
usual supply of alcohol has for some reason or had lost a few hours before.
other been cut off. Hla eye* were heavy, ex­
N&gt;mc days later, a stout and eomfortablspressionless and leaden; his lower Up was looldng old gentleman, with benevolent blue
pendulcftu; his chin was unshaven; his hands
were dirty. The daughter was graceful and
pretty. Her features were delicate; ber com­ thin nun, whose more than shabby, exterior
plexion pale; her expression sweet, sad and
patient. M hat did it matter to ber gin-swill­
ing patent that she worked tor him, tended his
wants, nursed him when he was HL was rubbed
by him when be wju well—struggled, labored, topcoat!” inquired the stout genl
fought to save him, both soul and body! Was
“A topeoat?” said tin dealer, i
u.??1 b*rdalT’ H« washer father! What
did it matter to him that ber young life was
wrecked, her future rendered hopeless, the one
love of per girlhood crashed and blighted by
his miserable being! That was a simple ne- coat that win lit this man here. Anything
rassltr. He had brought Ber up to the Idea to that’s warm and tidy will suit.”
hold fata over and above ail earthly cons idera-

Up from u. child,

would never be

father?
"That’s a wretched

CATARRH OF THE BLADDER.

death this
for more than a week,
short allowance long ent
“Bal sm how ill yuu
know toe doc tor said you anything."
•’•Confoued Hie doctor I What dore he know
about it! Breldre, I’m well again now—well
as ever. I real I v must run out and ret throe
peu’orth. Lend us sixpence, Madge." He
always said “ lend. ” By no chance did he ever
emptor tbe word “give” ta pecuniary nego­
tiations.
.
'
After many promfera and murh wtdntng and
-nersuaatoii. be wormed tbn coveted sixpence
from his dangbter's slender puree. She knew
be ha-i no other money, and that ft would be
impossible for him to hurt himself on that
amount
\
“I’ll try this overcoat for the first time?’ he

lent whose adventures it &amp; our ImstaMS to
race.
.
In tin end, tho stout gentleman paid for it.

that ever gave t
my head. I shall

motaUy under tire gos-tanp. “ And took here,
Reeve*; if ever you get better off, aod come
aero** a poof man in want of k little bitip, yoa
help him, Reeves, tTyo «ee—you help, him
The blessing which the good Samaritan had
invoked upon thc man be bad saved from dis­

thn firm." He felt strange!v ashamed of hl*
ancestor, dev! and gone. There ta a mighty
difference, thought he, betwxwn walking abdut
to pick Una .few «bai&gt;by garment* here and
there, and buying them wholesale by hundred*
and thon*an&lt;ta, to be packed in heavy bale*,
"marked and numbered a* per margin,” and
ahipped to tbe uttermost cnat of ;lre earth 1

“No,” said tbe prominent mcmlxr of,

durn it. I’ve cheated him on a horse trade mv•elf.

FADED COLOR RESTORED.
We arc now going acrom tire rea, on the ’ F«ded or gray hair gradually recover. Ito
lightning wing* ot lancv. We want to look youthful color and luatrc by tbe u*e of Parkup some old friend* of our* and find out bow er'» Hair Balsam, an elegant drewlug, admir­
they arc getting on. It will be reeoil-xtW that ed for It* purity and rich perfume.
Mark Roper, with hl* wife Pattic and their
baby, emigrated to Australia, there to court
Little grain* of M tadoni,
that better fortune which had peralstenly re­ .
Little gem* of wit,
.
to amilo upon them In the laud of their
May make your life more useful
bir: h. Three years have passed since they flrat
•et foot upon thc ahorc* ot tire new country,
And cheer you up a bit.
with a capita] constating of a very small
amount of money and a very large amount of
HAVE YOU EVER
pluck. Tbe latter ha* stood them in good
•lead, as it will anybody who onlv make* up K nown any person to be scriousl v Q1 without a
hta mind to rely upon it ateallly. Pluck ta one weak stomach or inactive liver or kidneys!
■of the beat substitute* fhr more substantial And wijpn thlse organs are in good condition
property that a man can poises*. Mark found do you not find their possessor enjoying good
it to. At flrat he had a very rough uphill bat­ health I Parker's Ginger Tonic regulate* these
tle to fight. Circumstance* let him liave one important organs, makes the bloo.1 rich and
'or two powerful alaps “straight from the pure, and strengthen* every part ot thq system.
।shoulder, Juat to try what metal he waif'made See otbe^ column.
■ot He always gave forth Ute true ring and
The Little Rock papers mitigate the crime of
came up smiling. Then circumstances turned
round in a friendly manner, patted him ap­ a man who com m it to 1 suicide there last week
provingly on the back and raid: “ You’ll do I” by raying it was hts first offence. Very likely
And he did do aa well as he could wish, and
far better than he expected. Ha its* thrown he had not been long in the state, or he would
1over hta original trade long ago, and ta part have made the attempt sooner.
o’rner of a small sheep-ruu “up-country."
Can Catarrh be cured! Yes. certainly, “Dr.
Hta home—surrounded by a large and wellcultivated garden—ta a cottage built of logs Sykes' Sure Cure" will cure It.
aud corrugated zinc, rather rough to look at
outside, but exceedingly bright and cozy, if
An exchange says, complainingly: “A sucwe give a peep at the interior, a* we shall take ccMfu) fool receives more praise than an un
the liberty of do^g.
Pattie is there, busllv preparing a supper of successful man of brains.” There is nothing
unusual abundance, fihe expects her husband wrong about this. The fool deserves’ it when
!honte to-night, after an absence of six days. he succeeds where a man credited with brains
He ha* been to Melbourne, where he will en­
■’
।deavor to pick up two or three steady young toils. '
fellows to work on the “ran" as their stock ta
■ A Vegetable Product*
:incneaalng and more helpi* required. Very dif­
Only used In Ayer’s Ague Cure, hhs
:ferent docs tbe young wife look now, compand
with when we saw her stretched upon tho mlproven Itself a Dever failing and rapid
'let in Cribble Street, Mile End, sipping tnh&lt;j.^curc for every form of Malarial Dis­
iEarish gruel. She has changed into a comely, f order, Fever and Ague, or Chills and
looming woman, with a glow of health and enn- I Fever. No injury follows its use, and
।tentment upon her facemoat pleasant to behold.
It rouses
“Baby" Pattie sits on a high chair at the table, | its effects are permanent.
the system to a condition of vigorous
'watchlug her mother’s culinary operations with
health, cleanses the blood of malarial
। great inteutness. and trying to dip her little
1
nngera
into everything within her reach. In
poison, nnd imparts a fefllng of com­
।
the
corner is a cradle where a pretty tiov of
fort and security most desirable ln&gt;
itwelve months repow* quietly, with'hls great
Ague districts. It is an excellent tonic
1blue eye* wide open, staring nt the ceiling,
iand exhibiting a perfectly philosophic In­ and preventative, as well os cure, of
all complaints peculiar to malarious,
&lt;difference to tbe rattle of plate«, pot* and
jpane, mingled with the incessant emitter of hta
marshy and miasmatic regions. The
■is
i ter.
great superiority of Ayer’s Agvk Cure
By and by tho wife'*attentive ey caught the
over any other compound Is that it
i•oimd ot wheel*. Kh - flew to the door, and saw
।a wagon, drawn by apolr of strong horses, rap­ contains no Quinine, Arsenic* or min­
iidly approaching. Directly sire appeared tliag eral; consequently it produces no
quinism or injurious effects whajever
iman who was driving gave the reins In charge
&lt;of another, leaped to die ground and ran to
upon the constilntlon. Those cured
imeet her. It wa* Mark Roper. He caught
by it are left as healthy as if they bad
her
I
in his arms and kissed her. To see till*
never had the disease.
Ihappy pair, yoi&amp;woul: have thought they had
The direct action of Ayer’s Ague
Ibeen parted for years instead of for day*. They
Cure upon the Liver and Digestive
Iloved each other as fervently as ever.
'
Organs makes it a superior remedy
Wl»cq the wagon drew up near tbe door.
Mark introduced thc two voung men he hud
for Liver Complaints, producing many
&lt;
engaged
at Melbourne; and then th-vproceedremarkable cures, where other medi­
&lt;ed to unpack ami carry into the dwelling a
cines have failed.
inumlrer of tools, implements, bundles and
For sale by all druggists.
|parcel*—the last named containing household
&lt;comfort* and necessaries, such a* people sup­
A clergyman, k-cturing one actcrnooii to his
Iply themselves with in quantities, when they
Ilive nearly two hundred miles away from tile female parishioner*, said, "Be not proud that
]principal town, to which they can only pay our Lord paid your sex the distinguished honor
'
of appearing ilret to a female after the resur- ’
;

day; hl* children became plump and rQ*yebeeked, and hta wife bright-eyed and happy,
Butin all bis new-born prosperity, the grate­
ful mechanic, never forgot his true friend's
parting injunction to be tender to other* in
dtatres*. It will only be necessary to mention
one occasion upon which he succeeded in imh
tating. very closely the sublime example of
magnanimous charity that had been hta 'own
salvation.
Reeve* was returning from work. It wa*
rather late; and what few people were about
were hurrying out of the bUwdlng sleet and
piercing blast a* fast a* their legs could carry
them, and that was et no remarkable speed, ou
account of the atmospheric opposition they en­
countered. At one moment the wind sudden­
ly increased to the fury of a hurricane, and
compelled Reeve* io seek temporary shelter in
a friendly doorway. He was not alone there.
Some one else bad adopted the principle of
“any port in a storm." It was a man—gaunt,
hollow-cheeked, ill-clad, shivering and miser­
able.
“What a fearful night—ain’t it!” observed
Reeve* In a gentle voice.
“S’poae Ria; I don’t care; it’s all the same
to me." returned thc man, hoarsely.
“I don’t want to be rude,” continued Reeves,
in the same tone* of sympathy, “but you seem
to be hard up I’ve been in the same case my­
self, and I can pity you. I’m only a workingmin, anti I know wnat hard times mean."
“It ain’t that alone what’s Hie matter with
me, mate; although yotl’re right, so far. It
would puzzle anvbody to be wuss off than I am
Just now. But ft's sorrcr that a a-killlng me.
more than want. I'm s-dyiug, male, that's
what I am.”
"Come, come, don't talk like that; you’ll feel
better after a good «upper and a comfortable
night's rest. And I’ve got a bob or two *s
. will pay for them. ’ ’
“1 oti’re a man—a true brick! It does * chap
good to speak to thc like of you. I thought
the breed had died out. But it ain’t stipoer*
and nights’ rests what’ll give tuo back iny wife.
l want mv wife I I’ve been hunting for her
high and low all over Loudon, from one end to
Uin other, for tbe lost »ix mouths. And I can’t
find her. I can't come across her no how. O,
Mary, Mary! why did you run away from
us—why did you learc me
and thc
children when we were *o fond of you! You
know we was! Wbyd dyou go!” , He leant
hl» forehead against tbe rough brick* and
wailed forth Hie agony of hi* breaking heart,
unconsciously. Presently be drew him*e f up
and shook hta emaciated fist in fierce rage.
“Curses!" he cried, "a million black, bitter
curse* on the man m 'tlecd her way from me!
If I had him by the throat now—so, like that—
I'd tear bin, limb from limbi”
For some time Reeve* said nothing. He felt
he wa* hi thc presence of a trouble which no
word* of his could assuage. But by a d by,
when the poor fellow'* paasiou had spent itself, he ventured: "Look'e here, friend. You'll
find your wife one day, cither on eartit or In
heaven. God pardons such weak, misguided
creatures as she; and if you should never meet
her here you rill there, depend ou it. You
don't know bow she has suffered; you don't
know how she has repented; you don't know
how ber fault, may liave been blotted out and
her sins forgiven. Mate, I shan’t say anything iand Murk and iii&lt;
more about
•• »help
—'------—
mt it
it, because ’
I can't
youJ-In•»that
down for a quirt chat upon affair* in general.
matter. But
E .I ,can
. do so in another. When I I part cutarly tbrlrown.
WHAT IS BEHIND IT
get home’ ’1 shall find a bright, cheerful fire, ■I ** What a lot of clothes you have brought!''
plenty to eat and drink, and a warm change said
।
Pattic. a* she examined a motley heap of
of clothe*. You won't have such luck as that, garmi-ut*
i
before her.
prtatoraf the great Medicine, railed "Favorite
'Iho togs you’ve got on now wouldn't be much
" Ye*," &lt;&gt;l&gt;*crred Mark. “ Wc shall want Remedy," would have but little confidence to
use to you in summer, let alone such a night them
'
all. The fresh hand* have plenty of rough
recommend the public to buy and tun- it if his
m this. I'm going to leave you my overcoat
owiruame were not behind it.
But the fact
—that's what I’m going to do. It ain't ele- 1
gaut; but it will stand a thundering lot of
” Here ta a gr.-at ugtv heavy coal. Whom that be haVklaked bln reputation ujun it ought
wear yet; and it’s warm and water proof: '
Here, catch hold of it," continued Reeves^ di­
vesting himself of the garment, and throwing
it over the man’s shoulder*. "Uon't mind me. seaMin."
’
t.
I can bur another to-morrow, thank God.
•The lining wants coming out; it ta all kidney*. &lt;ir liver, invest u one &lt;|ul!ar In the
You’ll find throe or four bob In tbe left side- ,going to pirce*,” she remarked, taking up her
pocket; get yoiupelf a gtaa*of something hot, scissors
।
and nnlpplngaway at some loose rag*. &lt; "Favorite Remedy” and st will rypak for It­
a jolly good supper aud a clean shake down. “Hull.! What's this!"
self.
No thanks, old chan; I'm not used to’em.
“What’s what!” inquired Mark, over tho *
Good-bye, and good luck to you. 1’moff!” tankard
'
he wm lifting to bls lip*.
'
Bulling ttia action to the word Reeves darted
“This! Tixire taanotherliuinz underneath, , ing something—that each adult person carries
out of tbe doorway and quickly disappeared and
।
tomething stitched in ride it. ”
enough phosphorus in hta bodyio make 4&amp;.000
from view down an adjoining street.
k»... nJ
.»
A quarter of an hour later the recipient of
Pattie drew forth, a thin oil-skin envel- ' ,nake » match of two peopld will begin to lose
the generous mechanic's bounty was recruit- ment
i
lug hta exhausted frame with half a pork pic &lt;ope and laid it on theTable.
I- tiic|r faith in ■dentists.
and a pint of hot ale, strongly flavored with
“ What's ii that, I wonder!" cried Mark, |------------------------- ginger. While he wa* disposing of this, to holding
1
it up to thc light. 'Paper of some' The symptoms of Itching P’let are moiqtare
him, delicious fare, htaeye* rested upon a ten- kind,
’
1 can see. Slit it open gently with.a | like prespiration, intense itching, most atirfght
days-old newspaper, that chanced to lie on tbe knif
:
e, girl. Don't tear anything. Be Care- seem* as if pin worm* were crawling in or
bar of the public house In which be stood. All
u t
' about the rectum. The more you scratch-tho
at once a gray, a*hy hue overspread hta face;
“ It’* bank-notes!” exclaimed Pattie, pale worse they Itch, very distrrMing. The private
the knife slipped from hl* trembling grasp; ’with excitement. “Look! One, two, three, part* are often affected. Dr. Swayne's Oint­
with shaking fingers be seized tbe pa;&gt;er and :four, five.”
ment is thc most effective remedy extant for
gazed at one short paragraph with such an ex­
“By Jove I so they are. Five Bank of En­ this tormenting complaint. Gives rcrt at night
pression of horror aud despair that the barman igland note* for—for— Why. Pattie, they're without that desire to scratch. Also lis* on
on the other side was startled, and said: :for a thousand pounds apiece I” The rustling equal iu quickly eradicating Tetter, Itch, Salt
“ What’s the matter! Areyerfll?”
wealth shook in hta trembling hand as he Rbeume, Enrripclas, Barbers’ Itch, Pimples,
"Re:ul that for me," replied the man, wiidlv. ।■poke.
all Scaly, Crusty, ItehvSkln Eruptions. Here
“I can’t see—I feel as if 1 were going blind.' । “ And here ta something else. Mark—a bit ta the proof, "Certainly the brat remedy ever
Read that.”
of paper, with writing upon it. What doe* it used In my practice,” Dr. Cotton, Woodstock,
Tho barman took the journal and read at the ।all mean!”
I Vt.. "troubled with Itebing Piles for over tyrenplace indicated: “Found Drowned—The body
“ Bead It,” aald her husband.
tv years, it cured me completely,” L. 8. Mesaer
of a woman, aged about thirty, and evidently
Thus it ran:'“Whoever finds this money- Enfield,
cte (In
F...UV4O, Me. Sent
wv* for
—• SO
—- —
(in 3 cU
ct. stamp*)
stamps)
belonging to the poorer classes, was yerterdav 1five thousand pounds—may keep it. I give it 8 boxes. Fl.25. By Dr. Swayne * Bon. PhUad’a
taken out of the Thames, near Woolwich. She to them freclv. It'* all mine, and got hon­ Pa. Sold by ail druggists.
had on an old cloth Jacket, much wont, a com- ■estly. (Signed)
J SMBS Gzlswobtht.”
mon black alpaca drea*. Jean petticoat, colored
“ Unde’* money!" cried Pattie, gaspin*
stockings and buttoned boot*, rather dilapida­ with astonishment.
ted. Is marked with a small scar over tbe right
"And your uncle's coat!” added Mark, In
eyebrow. In tbe pocket were found a leather the same tone. “ 1 remember it well now,
nurse containing fourpence in coppers and a tom and dirty aa it is. I might have known
bit of card that had evidently been written Iit by the buttons. To think—only to think
upon, although the words ‘Joe5 and ‘forgive’ 'that it should have come back to u* again,
were alone legible. The body had suffered when I soldtha whole concern more than three
fromdon* immersion. It wa* taken to the 'year* ago for fifteen shilling* I ’’—Lardon So,
mortuary.”
&lt;
"Thank you,” said ths man, mechanically,
A Georgia Negro’s Trained Dogs.
passing hta hand over hta clammy brow.
“It don’t mean treble to you, I hope!”
A night or two ago one of our most
asked the barman, feelingly.
“I’m Joe," replied the other, as ha staggered ■prominentcitizens was aroused by a ter­
TRACE 2to tbe door aud left tbe bouse.
rible fluttering among the ducks out in
He walked on and on, quite heedless of tbe ;
the
yard.
He
bad
thirteen
ducks
in
the
mingled rain and snow, that blew In gusty tor­
rents from every point of tbe cotnposa. other &lt;drove, and the unusual commotion at
pedestrians might grumble bitterly, or swear (such an hour in the night caused him to
savagely, at finding themselves out in such un- get
,
up and sec what wm thc cause of the
charitable weather. This man could scarcely 1
have told whether it was midsummer or mid- 1disturbance. Imagine his consternation
winter. He didn't eare. AU weathers were 'when he found seven of his ducks lying
ths same to him how. It wm late when be idead in the yard, and four others in the
found himself on Westminster Bridge ; and it hands of a negro thief. There is not
wm quite deserted! Deliberately he climbed '
much strange about tills, but the manner
one of tbe centre buttresses and stood outside ;
the parapet, gazing into the dark abyss beneath. in
1 which the theft was committed is the
• BROWN'S IRON BITTERS are
Then be took off the eoat which Re-ves had isingular part. The negro had two dogs
a certain cure for all diseases
given him a few hours before, folded it up —
. one » large white one. These dogs he
requiring a complete tonic; cej&gt;ctightly, and flung it back on to the bridge. “I
sent
into
the
yard
to
catch
tho
ducks,
Wiin't
that ” &gt;ut
I
which they did. and would then carry
mi'tent Fevers, Want of Appetite,
them ont into the street and give them
Xxma of Strength, Lack of .Energy,
to the rascal. Tbe dogs were seen each
her now; but It Isn’t here." He with a duck, carrying them out to their
m, and then suddenly sprang forrtoom swallowed him pp. The
life to tho iirtKrs. Acta like a
charm Oir'tfiuO digestive organs,
—A saloon near Tombstone, Arizona,
removing all dysixiptic symptoms,
wm robbed of $750 the other evening,
such as taming the food. Belching,
fust as the place was about to be closed
Heat ta the Stomach, Heartburn,
for tbe night, and while several citizens
trade. "* Within a week, it became tbe prop- were in the saloon, two men entered
that will not blacken the teeth’or

in

•n-’r —

IRON

BITTERS

and the boas was told to open tha safe ;
and be lively. The money waa than {

give headache. Sold by all Drug.
at $1.00 a bottle.
BHOWN CHEMICAL CO. ,

�UeMMa

Ache

Frwnk time; and the Turta, to be exact,
Before we left we were shown the
must have their watches changed every ।bridal bed. The bedxtexl wm profusely
'k&amp;e were • party of eight—all ladies; j
______ fcMp.m. AtriT. D.tro&gt;ta« P »
mas^.- 4X» p.oi. ArrlvelHt rotteaop®
■x... JtrtS A- m. Arrlte Det roll XX' *. ui
tpr»*_ X&lt;y&gt;*m, Atrb« Detroit fcdO». »

lanUe tad P*e!fte Exjwwm ran d.lly;
dally exwptSundAjr.
_

GRAND RAPIDS DIVISION.
STATIONS.

Hammond .
Middleville-

i:w
12.40

Detroit-

STATIONS.

Detroit,.

Paw'gcr-

1- ::n
1- M

Charlotte,.

2:1 S

H.m

Rapid.,.

s-.oo
8:27
s

0:40
'10:10
Ml 10-.80
tom ,.1-W8
----IOJO 11J0

Grand ItawHs and DotrolL All trains connect In
«am« depot at Detroit with Great Western, Grand
Trunk and Camda Southern BsUwsv*.

K. &lt;j. BROWS,

H. B- L'EDTAltD.

Ass’lGen’l tJupt-Jackson. Uen'l Sup t Detroit

A PLEASANT LETTER.
- Mr. William W. Chadwick, of Hstcbville,
Conn., writes under date of June 14,1S8D, to
Dr. Kennedy, to say that thc uac of ‘penned)*
Favorite Remedy” ba« cured him &lt;&gt;fj,Gall
Stont, from which he tyU experienced every­
thing but comfort lor a long lime. Mr. Chad­
wick felt wholly cured when he wrote, and
mts I “I hare bad no pain for six mouths, and
have also regained my flesh and can stand a
fair day’s work.
I recommend. 'Kennedy's
Favorite Remedy’ to any ope suffering from a
deranged liver.” Grateful patients arc com­
mon. Dr. Kennedy is daily In receipt of letters
from them, expressing similar sentiments.
These letters arc spontaneous and put iu all
Varieties of phraseolgy, but invaribly setting
forth one thing—thc value of •'Kennedy’s
Favorite Remedy” for manv forms of disease.
It may be just tbe thing you have l&gt;een looking
for. Is your liver disordered i Have you de­
rangement of tbe Kldnevs or Bladder, adooclated with Consumption of the Bowels 1 If so; you
want -'Kennedy's Favorite Remedy."
Dr.
Kennedy practices Medicine and Surgery *n
all thetr branches. Write and state your case
frankly. Letters promnly answered. Address
Dr, David Kennedy, Itondout, N. Y“Dr.
Kennedy’s Favorite Kemt-dy" for sale by al)
dra^ists.

KIDNEY-WORT
DOES
ll/UV Q
WONDERFUL nJl 1 J
CURES!

■- IL Goodeta. an editor In ChirSo:
bo wm not exported to lire, belnr
ou boiler, bat Kidney - Wort et red h

KIDNEY-WORT
MtKMANKRTLY CUKES
KIDNEY DISEASES,

LIVER COMPLAINTS,
Constipation
and Piles.
I
L-~ - —---- .-.I- T., — I

WELLS, BlCtUUDM!' A Co.. Frop'i

PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM.
. InuiiiUnlBtn

ftnieCApt

PARKER’S

GINGERTONIC

Hrnoare

'nogentlemen 'must be been in thc harem- linen,
i
hemstitched and embroidered with
fiJt, though this reception was at the 1vine* of silver. There were two yorshans
house of the bridegroom. Thu sous take ,
their bNdas to the father’s house, and if .
. it b^bomes crowded additional rooms are ,
built
We found the gates of the • outer wall
thrown wide open. A man servant stood .
inside to see that all left the overshoes
in the court To those of us who had
not worn shoes that could be removed he
made a deprecatory salaam, as if to say:
‘•Your pardon, ma'am,” and wiped our
shoes with a dump sponge, (how much
time and patience—yes, and money—our
housewives would be saved-if a like
cleanly custom existed in America, for I
fancy this is one secret of the Turkish
carpets lasting for generations; that no
dirt from the streets is ever brought in on
to them.)
.
■ •
We were then motioned to go up the
stairs and were first taken to the mother
of the bridegroom, who wm seated on a
high divan, and received us with many
salaams, but did not rise. She had a
quilted sacque, of delicate lemon-colored
satin, lined and trimmed with fur, thrown
over her shoulders (the morning had
been rainy and jt was still cool;) and her
other garments were made of rich Orien­
tal stuffs; her head handkerchief was
plain, but decorated in front with dia­
monds.
‘ ■
A young lady dressed in drab silk,
made in the latest' Parisian fashion, with
feathers and diamond ornaments in her
hair, received us standing, asked us to
be seated and ordered coffee to be brought
to us. • We sat upon low divans which
were built next to the walls ot the room,
and are piled with cushions covered with
beautiful embroidery in silk and- gold
thread. Tho coffee'wae brought by three
servants, one bearing the silver tray with
tho tiny china cups and xarfs (holders)
of filigree silver, sot with gems; another
the coffee-pot, which was silver, and was
carried in an elaborate dish hung by long
silver chains, resembling an incense
burner, and the third handed us the cups.
After a time •' sweatmeats” were
brought and served with great elegance.
The water was In gold goblets, the
spoonholders of Bohemian glass, set in
surer frames, and the jars for, the
•• sweets” equally rich and elegant. But
partaking of the tall! is not easy if not to
the "manner born.” I had fortunately
had previous lessons and could do it
native fashion. A goblet of water is pro­
vided for each guest; two spoonholaers,
one for the sjxxms before they are used
and one for soiled spoons. You take a
spoon, fill it with tail! (which is always
something very sweet and delicious,
cither made of oranges, citron, currants^
with the seeds all picked out with a nee­
dle, rose petals, or what is most delicious,
a sugar paste flavored with flowers, vio­
lets, acacia, lavender, etc.), take it«all
into the mouth, place tho spoon in the
proper holder, take a glass of water and
drink until tho talli is entirely washed
down the throat. This must l&gt;e done as
speedily as possible, however much you
may wish to have thc "sweetness long
drawn out.”
We remained in this room some time,
those who knew Turkish, carrying on
the conversation.
Thc elderly ladies
seemed to be assembled • here. Many of
them were dressed ip broosa gauzes and
silks, made in quafht, simple fashion,
but wearing rich jewels—one wore the
handsomest emerald ring I have ever
seen. While the visiting was at its
height a lady spread her prayer carpet
in a corner of the room, with her face
toward Mecca, threw a light shawl over
her head, and went through with her de­
votions, often bowing her head to the
floor. No one seernotj to mind it at. all,
nnd when she arose she immediately
joined again in the conversation.
From this room we were conducted
to the room where the bride was to sit
in state.
At one end of the room was a very
high divan, so high as to require a step
to climb on to it, covered with satin of
bright colors, and over it were branches
of artificial flowers and tinsel ornaments,
forming quite a canopy. The room was
handsomely furnished—chairs and sofas
covered with damask silk, window dra­
peries of the same material 'and carpet
to match in color. The ceiling was
beautifully frescoed in nrabesnuc pat­
terns. The seats were gradually filled
with elegantly dressed ladies—silks and
satins with long trains, feathers and
diamond ornaments in the hair. One
dress of lemon-colored satin elaborately
trimmed with white lace and estooned
with flowers, was especially rich and
beautiful.
The bride was led in by two elderly
women very simply dressed except for
thc diamonds flashing on their turbans,
and followed by a little girl bearing her
train. She walked very deliberately
through the long room and climbed to
her place under the canopy of flowers.
The women took seats on either side of
her and the little girl took a seat on the
step in front of the divan.
The dress of the bride was of blue silk
corared with embroidery in gold thread
and seed pearls. Tho veil was blue
gauze, to match the dress, and fell to
the floor; over this was gold tinsel in fine
threads, hanging in masses as long as
the veil. These were fastened with a
tiara of diamond ornaments, sprays of
flowers and leaves, and diamonds were
stack ujmmi her forehead, each cheek and
the chin, and she wore several rings out­
ride of herglovM.
We had no scruples about gazing at
her, for she was there to be tookeil at.
She could not move a muscle of her face,
as you can imagine, with all those orna­
ments upon it. She &lt;Iid not appear
young or beautiful, which wa* not
strange with such disfigurements.
In an outer room the “imbiddeh”
. guests assemble. On such occasions the
house is open for every one to come,into
the hall in the centre of the house, and
the bride was led out for the common
people to get a look at her magnificence.
There was a crowd of village women

WAGONS ONLY $60.00.

POSITIVELY CURED

A COMPLETE LINE OF

^29629^42833417856781^1714518
Buggies, Carriages, Wheel Harrows aud. Benson’s Capcine

Cultivators, Mounted Seeders,
and 4 kinds of Plows.

Porous Plasters.

REED’S GENUINE SPRING TOOTH HARROW
ROAD SCRAPERS, SQUARE DRAGS, GRIND STONES,

o&lt;--«ant»M&gt;iacPan
.od thereto th*:

Common, and bung ready for use.

SEWING MAOHI^ES.
PLOW POINTS for the Oliver Chilled. Wiard, Three Riv­
ers, Bryan, Cale, Curtis, Dodge, Robinson
And many other Plows.
In fact, we keep a full and complete stock of first class Hardware and Farming Tools. Call
and ace them before buying.

FiflM.

v luutarily

EEP YOU EYE OIK THIS

.223011’8 Capcine Pom PW
SEABURY t JOHNSON, -

Mannfactermg Chemists, Mew Tort;. '

a miIkb Remedy at last. .m*mo*.
P. HEAD'S Bstafed CORt and BUNION PLASTER.

OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE

FOR SALE! NEW HIGH BLOOPJ
TD h»1. and will completely changa the blood In

WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH

THREE INCH TIRE.
f

AKKT3 WANTED

AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING

BETTE R THAN COMMON TIRE
We believe the Three inch Tire in destined to come
into general use. Call and see them.

Clcnrymen

Sold by C. L. Glasgow, Nashville, Mich.

BENTLEY BROS. &amp; WILKINS.

1

Hastings/Mich., Sept. 15th, 1881.

rtchtnf timing. Scad for our Into circular.

tD
COUNTRY,

«vu.
■ rk bo

(nnenpohtl

J N-

cJCIn

S5OO Reward!

¥

Don, constipation or coellvencaa we cannot cure
_ &gt;.u. ■ t... rxn.
i\* aua*.

Fl
H

RUPTURE
Cored without an eperation or the injarr trusses
inflict by Dr. J. A. She:man's Method. Office 2#1
.____ v-._ x-. .i. ri..
.1,1.

(0

IMyr.

NO PATENT NO PAY.

s

H | ▼ [* II *V* n C'Ulnrd for uwchsalcal dsvte
D I I L ■ | I &lt;». n&gt;«li«d.oroilH-r .-uuipr&gt;Mn,i»

CHICAGO, ROCK ISLAND &amp; PACIFIC BY H

r a 11 n io

sssfbk.f**

Ufnnue

Is The Groat Connecting Link between tho East and the West! p-]
It. Clilil
tniln line rum trom
to Council
IU
uvui Cb»e*co
v.............
muffs, psaslnc tlirourb Joliet, Ottawa. LaSalle.
lietrtMo. Moline, Roek Island. Davenport. WM
,
ru..
. llr.u-.Hrn rtrlnnell.

tic, and Avoca: with branches from Bureau
Junction to Peoria; Wilton Junction to Muaeailnn. WMhlntton. Falrfleld Eldon. Belknap,
Centreville. Princeton. Trenton, QaUaUiL Came­
ron. Leavenworth. Atchl*on,Aad Kanaas CUyt
Waablncton toSlaourney. Oskaloosa, and Knoxvinet Keokuk to FanntoKton. Bonaparte. Benlomport. Independent, iddon. Ottumwa, EddyML Zion to neooanqun; vw.uu w
Mnines to Indianola and Wlnteraet; Atlantic to
Griswold aud Audubon; and Avoca to Hartan
....,
tm. I. fwuliieelr the oulv Kall-

-----—,-------------replnff purpose*, and Polare , ।
SlwpinffCar*
for ateepInRpurpo*LJ

SALOON where you can enjoy your " Havana" l-H
a: all hour* of tbe day.
...... . rMacnlflcent Iron Brldjpsisnan tbeMississippi Fj
and Missouri H vers at ail l*&gt;inu crossed t.y this
]
Hue. and transfer* are avoided at Council Bluffs. L.
nrction* t&gt;«iM maoe in union

INYERUOhS
’■iiniuiu.

_

At Chicago, vilb *H dJTerfflng line* for tho LU
Fau and Sooth.
* 1
Al EHGLKWOop. with the L.S. a M.8.. xndF,
^At'wASKZHOTOH'Hnam, With P., C.A8X. L-

iHVEHTORS

W,; IIL Mia.: and T. F. a W. Rd*.

LOU1S BAGtiHR A CO.

i.ta.WlfA'iSfJffBVrRi'K

At Davkhport. with the Davenport Dlvlal
'■fats, IjnitETT. with the B. C. R. A N.B.

AtORixxetL with Ontral Iowa R. IL

niuipped. Its road bed la sin
track la laid with steel rails.

BUXTON
in his new building,

ion Fac. and Kan. rn
ms tor the West UJ

has added a stock of

CROSS-CUT A CIRCCL1R SAWS.
B,” are sold by i

JE. ST. JOHN,
c™”v“"‘~3ircX'ux. CD

ERRORS OF YOUTH

PIMPLES

ATTENUOH! SAW MILL MINI
Prices on Saw Work.
40 inch, Gummed, $2.00
Hammered, $3.00
fiO ”
”
8.00
”
4.00
60 ”
”
4.00
”
WW
Gumming and Hammering x-cut saws,
?5c.
Regular Filing,
We.
Hammering crooked saws,
50c.
Prompt attentiou given jo circular saw work

&lt;
24-lyr.

JOBS A OGDEN,

CONSUMPTIVES.

ima

Hranrhllb,

A.c.Bivm,

WILLIAM JONB8,

DENTIST

�—

SATURDAY.

APRIL 8,1888.

Geu. Grant hju irone south.

He did
by a street oar at Bay City, Bunday and fatally

rleaident Arthur will not let the

“boys* run iu on him, slap him on the
shoulder, or playfully kick him astern
—till after busintas hours.

Mr*. Thompson, with a “p,” is hostmistrv»M at Louisville, Kentucky, aud
Ibe Preaident says ahe shall hold the
fort daring Ids incumbency.
The majority of tbe new caaea of
small pox in Chicago are tramps. One
would think at first that aucn people
were to bury to catch anything.

A Wisconsin doctor wears a pair of
boots made from a negroes’ bide. No
darkey ever got such a hiding place as
that in the “palmiest” days of slavery.
Says the Albany Argua—“Great
truths are often in the fewest words.
Do you mean the remark of tbe Indian,
who, on sitting upon a wasp's neat
arose and remarked: • “Heap hell!”

A editor in Washington has a briliant id^T~'''iIe wants to tax all the
orothelaI for tiiw-beneflt of the acad-

•&lt;mieBy/He has evolved thia idea while
-ontemplating the beauties of the
‘whisky education bill.
The Erie Railway company now
gives its employes cheeks in payment
for services, -which are cashed at banks
and by station agents who have funds,
and wbo return such chneka to the
company with tbeir reports oa cash.
Good idea.

Mrs. Ballard, of Lincoln county, Ark.,
qn&amp;rreled with her husband and then
wont and broke the necks of two of
her children and jumped into a lake
and drowned herself and the baby.
That very effectually stopped all the
family misunderstandings.
Kaiiicr William fell tho other day
and skirfoed hin elbow aud jarred his
funny-bone ridiculously, but later re­
port* aay that ho is still able to get out
aud pick up a basket of chip, occasionand bring in a little jag of fire-wood.
But the old man ut getting shaky. He
baa quit tthaking for the beer, how­
ever.

While a funeral service wa« being
held in a St Louis church the body ot
a murdered infant waa laid within the
doorway by aome unknown person. It
iasurmified that tbo mother, fearful of
detection, yet desiring a religioua rite
for her baby, accomplished her wish aa
nearly aa poaaible by having the re­
mains placed where they were found.
Henry Ward Beecher told Bob Bur­
dette tbe other day chat, old as lie in,
be cannot overcome his stage fright for
a few moments when be first goes on
the platform. We don’t blame Hank
for feeling a little shy when be appears
in public. If wc hadcstablised tbe rep­
utation lie baa. we would go on the
stage disguised as a rainwater barrel or
a wooden Indian.
“la Brigham Young alive F Thia
queation ia now going tbe regular
rounds of the Dress. We rather think
he is not. There have been several
importations of young Mormou women
*into Utah during the past two years,

and it is not likely that Brigham
would long remain buried, in tbe face
of this fact, if he would help bimvelf.
We rather think he is still defunct.

The rod-garmented sporting women
of San Francisco pooled in and raised
$10,00o to keep tbe anli-Chinese bill
through the Government mill, in or­
der to keep Chinese prostitutes out of
California, and thus prevent their low
priced competition. The anti-Chincse
law is what they needed in their busi­
ness. and they come to the front in tie
great effort to keep sinners out of re­
ligious America.
Palm Sunday was celebrated in vari­
ous part* of the country, by the fatal
stabbing of James Mulligan in a Denver
theater; the shooting of John N. Massey
in San Francisco; the outraging of a
child of tbrte years in Komoko, Ind.,
the mutual killing of officer McEwen
and home thief Thompeou a Shelby­
ville. Tenn.; the murder of hie wife by
A. C. Patrick at Seward. Neb.; fatal
•tabbing of Charles Fisher in Missouri;
and tbe suicide of Cornelius J. Vanderbilt, brother of the great railroad mag­
nate, in New York.____________

California

*

Orwgoo

(aow

tbe

Orogow

ciflc Railroad Company of California (adn
line). the Oregon Centre! Railroad Company,

Bota*. * Vicksburg (now the New Orioaae Pa-

orfvwd two week* ago.
Frank A. Cahill, formerly of Lansing, wm
killed last week by falling from a moving train
near Fort Worth, Texas.
■•

county, died while silting in hla chair.
Mrs. Jerome B. Halstead, one of th. pionesr
ladles of Rome, Lenawee Co., died Thur sday
night, having lived in tbe township since 1883.
At Vassar, April 4th, Alexander Dingmond
subbed Wil) Allen twice with a dirk knife, o'vcr
John C. Coll Lina, has been arrested at Mar
shall on a charge of pounding * woman named

grant* of land ww» mad. d.rect.
hla weapon.
There wm064 prisoner* at tbe state prison,
Jackson, Mar. 31st. Two dioL during tbe
month, 16 were received, and 27 went out by
expiration ot sentence.
An arrest wm made at Jackson, March 31th,
Th! railroad companies receiving the benefit
of Cbarl-a Park*, of Milan, for alleged crimin­
are; TM Guif * Ship Island; tbs Tuscaloosa al Intimacy 1th an insane girl at that place.
* Mobile; tho Mobile * New Orleans; tbe kt m- Parks wm taken to Milan.
pbls * Charleston; tbe Mobile* Gerard; tbe
An unknown tnan at a small station on the
Detroit, Mackinac A Marquette, wbo lived with
Beard's Bluff*; tbe Atlantic. Gulf h West In­ a prostitute called Tennessee, a bo. and killed
dia Transit Company; thi Pen wools A her and then took his own life.
Georgia (from Lake City to Pcntaoobu: tho
At Brighton, April 3d, a young man taking
Florida, Atlantic* Guif O-ntrairfrom Jack. part in a cbirav*rl party, was shot in the sbaoavtUs to Lak* City); th, North Louisiana *
Texas; tbe Little Bock * Fort Smith: tbe domcn inflicting serious. If not fatal injuries.
Iron Mountain: the St. Louis, Iron Mount­ A law salt will undoubtedly follow.
L Blmaneau brought suit against Wood A
ain * Southern; the Detroit * Mllw ukee; tbe
Port Hum h Milwaukee; tbe Jackson, Lan­ Reynold* at East Saginaw for damage* result­
sing * Saginaw, th. Northern Central; the ing from the death of B. Petell, who wm killed
at a trailer explosion. He claimed 810,000 and
the Marquette, Houghton * Ontonagon; the
•
Ontonagon * State Line; the Sioux City * SL wa* awarded 8000.
At East Saginaw, April 1, a little son ot
Paul; tbe West Wisconsin; the North W.soonsin; thc Wisconsin Central; th’ BL Paul, Min­ Robert Wilson, while playing with *ome paper
neapolis * Manitoba; the Western dallroad which he had lighted from tbe stove, act fire to
Company (formerly the Ilraln-r 'ranch ot hi* clothing and wm terribly burned, thc flesh
tho SL Paul * Pacific'; the Southern Minn -so­
ts Railroad Extension; tbe Lake Superior * dropping off tbe Lones.
Oceola county Is greatly agitated over the
mysterious death of Mrs. Woolworth, an old
thirty-two oomp- n e*.
I lady aged 80 year*, who died under very *u»plUou* circumstance!, shortly after quarreling
with her husband, and he ha* been arrested,
proposed to bo built by the th rty-two com­
panies was 4.312; completed within he time charged with her murder.
Tbe latest social novelty for drawing (hckel*
required for ccmplet on o* the en tire amount.
into tlie church treasury al Romeo 1* *n “egg
land grants wa* 21.WX349 \cree; p 'tcot?d to social.” There wa* an egg social held In that
eompanle*. 1,002.Wacrea. Tbe grand totals of place a few years ago in which tbe quality of
all the companies Involved m the land grants

Structed. 11,00; cou»tructod at tbe .ime the
completion of the entire amount w.«s re­
quired, 3,130; aegregaU amount uf land
grants, 137,*'1,I67 sere*; patented to com pa-

The Southern Flood.
The following Inc'dcntz of the groat flood In
correspondence (March ST) of tho SL Louis

At tho mouth Of lied River the swollen cur-

Father of Wau-ra, and tbo scene wm such a ono
m might bave greeted Noah when he opened

Dr. J. W. Hopkins, lately of Whitehall, has
been charged with n serious offense by Miss
Lottie Johnson, who says that while she was
in bi* office for medical treatment she was
shamefully imposed upon twice.
Tbe exploit of a Grand Rapid* dog was to
run up one aisle of a church during services,
upset the contribution box, run down the other
aisle, go up stairs into the gallery, look over
the railing, fall over with a yelp into the con
gregatiou below, and then get kicked out.
The citizens of Tekonsha are greatly exercis­
ed at the second removal of John M. Wheeler

er was discharged as cured from the asylum
and within sight a freshly-broken levee wm some monthi ago, and although not considered
passed, over a gradually-widening part of
entirely straight mentally, has not appeared to
which thc water wm pouring with conaldernjlo fall and volume. On the deserted portion be violent or dangerous. Hi* relations arc op­
yet Intact could be seen about twenty wheel­ enly charged by him with cruelty and fraud,
barrows and u long parapet of sandbags, which and some prominent business men and citizens
told the story of the desperate but unequal will probably petition the Probate Judge to
appoint another guardian for him.
planter’s family, with a number of hastily-im­
Tbe Gratiot Journal has tbe following
provised burdliw, were brought.on board In a
skiff. Thc entire plantation wa» already under '•Another swindle is reported. against which
water, but aa yet to nothing like the depth farmer* and others are warned. An alleged
threatened by the ere raise in front At thia speculator in country produce calls on a farm­
point tho Chickasaw Bluffs come within two or er, purchases fit) or * 15 worth of eggs, butter
three miles of the river on-thr MiasiMlppI or poultry, aaya he wants a receip to show the
abort', and consequently limit tbe flood to that
extent. Upon the Louisiana snore it is a dead firm that be paid tbe money, breaks the point
level to the Gulf of Mexico, through the minor of his pencil before the signature is reached,
river* and bayous of which tho deluge will then take* from hi* pocket a pountain pen,
eventually drain away.
and the fanner uses it signing his name. Tbe
The country in this neighborhood ia thickly (iwindier then goes to town, sells the produce,
erase* the body of the receipt, writes In its
plantat ont and marks the commencement of
tho far-fame! sugar-reistng district of IxjuLs- stead a promissory note for 850 or 8 100, and
ha* It discounted at tbe bank.”
CapL JJeine, keeper at tbe Jackson priso.i,
Gulf of Mexico. Heretofore th!* vicinity has
baa recently received hi* old sword which be
tlrply, the land being comparatively high and gave up to the colonel of the rebel regiment
weUdcvoed. Yesterday morning it was first
which took him prisoner at the battle of Baton
threatened by tho water rising to within two
Rouge, La. After the « ar the colonel died of
men were at once set to work, who continued yellow fever, and his wife preserved the sword
their labors until four o'clock in tbe morning, among other effect* of her husband, but recent­
ly ahe wrote to ascertain tbe whereabout* of
At this point, both abort, of tho river being Captain Heine, and a correspondence ensued
which resulted in the restoration of the sword
extending from the Opelouaaa bill* upon one
to Its owner. The sword, which wa* a beauti­
aide to tbe hill* at Feliciana upon thc other.
The stories related about tho effect of the ful! one, which wa* presented to the Captain
flood upon wild an mala border upon tho in­ by the citizens of Marshall In 1861, at Camp
credible. but are probably warranted by facta. Douglas, Kalamazoo, and tbe inscription upon
'. merchant living at Now Texas Landing told it told tbe story.

nearly 1.000 coon-pelts within tho past three

A RAILROAD OFFICAL INTERVIEWED.

upon au islaud opposite hla rreidcnce. upon
which tbe water is only a few inches deep.

SPRING GOODS
SECOND TO NONE IN BAHRY COUNTY, i

Notions, Domestics, \
Clothing for men and Boys,
Dress Goods,
;
Hats and Caps,
Trunks and Sachets,
■
Carpet and. Oil Cloth.,
Boots and Shoes,
,
Grroceries Htc. Etc.
UR SALES THE PAST YEAR HAVE BEEN FULL 30 PER CENT IN EXCESS OF
every previous season and we tender our hearty thanks for there liberal support in our
efforts to bring the prices of all lines of goods down to reasonable profits. This year we wish
to increase our sales 50 per cent and have placed on our counters one of

The Most Attractive Stock Ever Opened' In Nashville
As we have in the past so we shall try and make it in the future.
all high prices.

G. A. TRUMAN &amp; SON

The First to the Front!
I AM NOW RECEIVING A FULL STOCK OF GOODS SUITABLE FOR THE SPRING TRADE. INCLUDING
1 the Largest and Best Stock of ■*

Ready Made Clothing, for Men, Boys, and Youths,
Ever brought to Nashville, and ranging in price from three to thirty dollars per suit.

The Louisville Conrier-Joarnars
although th;lr slaughter
Washington correspondent tells of a
young woman in high life whose nurse
from infancy still acta as her devoted
waiting-maid, aita np for ber mistress
night after night, and on ber return
from a ball undresaos her, sponges her
down and rubs ber—well, as her (min­
er would rub Maud 8., perhaps—and
then, after administering a cup of hot
beaf tea, tucks her up in bed to sleep
till noon; for it is only by this careful
treatment that she is&gt;ablo to stand the '
ravages which the gay season make* i
npon her delicate organization. Her 1
mother, with a degree of pride, furth- ;
er informed the correspondent that ,
"notiling was expected of her daughter |
I ml to enjoy Iwtwelf grid rest whenj

body,) Mr. Stacey Hill, of the Mount Auburn
Inclined Plane Railroad Co., called to sec me:
he epoke very blghlv of St. Jacob. Oil, and re

I laughed at tbe idea of using a proprietary
niedJcioe, and yet thc party recomending it.
(Mr. fitacey Hill, remember,) being a man of
sound Judgment, set me to thinking tbe matter
over. The next day, when the physician* call­
ed I dismissed them, aud said to mvself that I
would Jet nature take iu course.
That reso­
lution laatedjuri a day. On the following
morning I, to a flt of desperation, sent a »ervent for a boule of BL Jacobs Oil. I applied
that wonderful mnedr, and It penetrated me
so that 1 thought my foot was about to fail off
tiut tt did not; tn fart tt did Just tbe opposite.
Tira next morning the pain had entirely toft my
brat, tbe swelling wm reduced, and really tbe
appearance wa* so different altogether from Ura
dav before, that tt acUad surprised me. I sp­
nnd atx.ul 1 ricit- oiled more of tbe St. JaSbb* OU, and that after­
noon I walkrtl down here to tbe office, and wm
able to attend to
duties and
WUImW ~
—Pro'ane men in New Jt«*
in lh« fnyetira while the
_ proMcubni
w &gt;»&amp;D Uelt’d.

In

Ladies, Misees, Gents &amp; Children’s Fine Shoes
I keep the celebrated Rochester make, Slyliab, Durable one Cheap.

I have tbe latest styles and can fit all parties.

At prices that defy competion.

In

I always keep a full stock of

Cash paid for Better and Eggs.

Probate Order.

yJACDBson
May be the place U&gt;

BUY A FARM’ BUT

, County uf Barry, I
1 At * seoslen erf tbe Probate Court for the CouMg
i of Barry, bolder; at tbe Probate Offie* in tbe City of
Hasting!, lo said county, on Saturday, tbe 1st day
of April, In tbs year one tbuuaaad eight bundeed and elgl.ty-teo.

I Bl ZBR. deceased.
On.readiog and thing tbe petition, duly vertfled,
of William ► . Blaer, eon of said deceased, praying

Thereupon Illi ordered that

THE PLACE TO BUY
GROCERIES,

ordered. that aaM petit
r*o»* InterMUd la mM •

•PROVISIONS,

CEBlffiEOt

RHEUMATISM,

Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago,
Backache, Soreness of the Chest,
Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Spell­
ings and Sprains, Burns and
Scalds, Genera! Bddily
Pains,
.
Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted
Feet and Ears, and all other
Pains and Aches.

Not every one so cheerfully communicate*,
bis knowledge aiul opinion* m recently did E.
L. Loweree, Esq., chashier of the Cincinnati
hunters’
Southern Railway, that splendid out let to the
South from Ohio. Our repreaentaUvc waited
upon Mr. Loweree, and in ’reply to certain SOIJ) BY ALL DRUGGISTS AKD DEALERS
plentiful in that locality a* to form a staple questions the latter gentleman observed: “I
U MEDIUIffE.
was suffering from a rpry severe stuck of rheu­
matism tn my right foot; tt wm tn a terrible
condition; tbe pain wm almost intolerable: our
family physician watted on me without success
the twain cjuld do nothing for me; I could not
get down, here to tbe office to attend to my
dutlea ; in fact I could not put my foot under

We shall put the knife tO

CROCKERY,

CLKMENT SMITH,
Jnd*e of Probate.

GLASSWARE,

HANGING LAMPS,

and eighty-l

this kind, is st

On readier and filing the petition duly verified. of
riltfoa H. Feigr iwr admlntatrator ot said «uio

C. W. SMITH’S
JJ R. DICK INSOW A CO.
----- NEW------

CUSTaMFLOURIHfiMILL

HALL’S

READY FOP- BUSINESS

QatarrhQure CUSTOM
sioo mMm

of Harry, holden «t the Probate Ofiler. In tbe City ot

And everything kept in a first clans stock of

A. VOGELER * CO.,

la Mteomtnended by PhyldantJ

Probate Order.

f the petitioner ibouki BM be graatrd.
And it la further ordered, that said petltiooer gii
oUce u&gt; th* person, .atereetsd In said ertate, of tt

Probate Notice,

GRINDING!

Of every dercripUt®. done in a superior
manner, at the drop of thc hat; and
Satlzfaction guaranteed.

Wamannfwtura andaelllt vilhapoaithfe
guarantee ttwtlt will cure any

of Harry,
of Hasui

rel aad eighty t»o.
Present. dsaerM 8*

m&amp;Mratov

FLOUR. MEAL AND MILL FFED
Kept constantly on hand.

Our

CLKMKhT SMITH,
Jade, of Probe**

(» M)

Graham Flour

PAYNE’S PARI ENGINES.
it a liberal patronage from the farmers of thi*
ridnity

II. R. DICKINSON A CO.

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                  <text>ORNO STRONG, |

Editor

amv Pbopkibtor.

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, APRIL 15, 1882.

VOLUME IX.

“BOTTIFIOATIOI.”

LIFE IK IA8HVILLE
And Bar Bnvircn».
—NaahviU* is the best newspaper
town in the state. Now you can ex­
pect to sec two or three more newspa­
pers started.
—The report comes from Hastings
that one of Nashville’s would-be news­
paper publishers was badly • taken in,
the other day, by buying a lot of old
worn out type.
"Experience,” it is
. said, "is a hard school master,” but
verdant© cam learn in no other way.
—When l^sTlieard from_ .Mie excite-,
ment of the woul&lt;Fbe~editors was

.

quietly subsiding, and one had gone to
tinking upon old press down at Wood’s
foundry and the .’other had just pur­
chased a piece of an old billiard table
for an imposing stone.
Gentlemen,
vidently you mean business.

—The editor of the VL Ville Hawk
exercises exceedingly bad taste, in en­
deavoring-to mix humor into his ac­
count of the cyclone. Any disaster
which is marked by death, sorrow and
financial distress, should be a matter of
appeal to our sober humanity, instead
of our humor. But the editor of the
Hawk is a festive cuss, and a candidate
for Senator, and it is urobably perfect­
ly natural for him to be humorous oven
at a funeral.
—The Maxwell Theatre Co., will visit
Nashville and render the popular arid
highly interesting drama of "Two
Orphans,” on Saturday evening, April
22d. The play is the finest, probably,
that has ever been given in Nashville,
which taken with the fact of Mr. Max­
well** popularity here, ought to insure
a good house. Don’t miss it or you
will miss a good treat. General ad­
mission 85 cts. Dates said 35, but it is
an error, as this play cannot be given
anywhere for that money. Reserved
seats 50 cts. for sale at F. T. Boise’s

drug store.
*—A tramp blacksmith arrived from
the direction of Woodland, Sunday
nigliL The next morning he went to
work in J. M. Wood's shop, took nine
drinks in fifteen minutes, got bounced,
as he also did from C. H. Brady’s barn,
which he later took possession of. Fi­
nally be fell into the bands of Marshal
Gregory, wjio put him into the cooler to
eool off, and in the afternoon took him
off d&gt;wn towards the railroad track,
'telling him that this was a hard town
on tramps; he would probably get three
months in the work house, and musn’t
move until be could find a justice, and
left him. A white streak simply mark­
ed the tramp’s course as he "legged it.”
down the track towards Vt Ville.

—Prof. C. E. Lester, the gentleman
who organized the musical convention
here, last week, was formerly a resi­
dent of Southern Kentucky at the
breaking out of the rebellion, his father
and three brothers joined the rebel
army and Charles was given his choice
of going with them or being cast off
and driven from home by his rebel
parents, but the grand and noble
nt
of loyalty in the brave heart of the
young man, made him willing to leave
his native land aud trust his fortune
among strangers, rather that to prove
a traitor to the dear old flag, that had
protected him during all bis younger
days. He left his boy-hood homo, came
north joined the northern a;my, and
for four years served his country faith­
fully as a defender of the Union. , He
has never seen his father since he was
driven from home. Since the war he
has been actively engaged in his pres­
ent occupation and his musical pro­
ductions are fast gaining universal
popularity. As a convention organizer
he has not a superior, and probably
not an equal in the United States.

TERMS; 8150per Year
Chkdit Subscript!o« il.TO.

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun,

)

__
The village has been considerable
excited during the past two weeks
over-a threat said to have origin with
our farmer friends—those who are so
fortunate as to have farms located
within the corporation, and. conseqaen'tly, their value greatly iahanced

by their close juxaporition to graded
schools, church privileges, markets,
etc.,—to the effect that the village was
illegally incorporated and liable to
“bustification.” We have even heard
that these parties have pledged .their
names for a large amount to “bust up”
the corporation, which, it is asserted,
will be done, before they will pay any
more taxes.
.
In order to give our readers the
grounds upon, which the threatened
prosecution is baaed, we must resort
to a little history. The village of
Nashville was
incorporated -by n
special act of th© legislature of 1869.
and her boundaries fixed by compul­
sory and direct legislative action.
Again in 1878, she was re-incorporated
under Act. No. 179, to be found on page
368 of session laws of 1878. By turning
to the index of the session laws of 1881,
on page 174, referring to incorporation
of villages, we find that act. No. 179,
has been declared unconstitutional,
according to a case cited in 29 Mich.,
page 451. “The case cited is the people
on the relation of Nathan Shumway
and others vs. Davis D. Bennett,” heard
in the Supreme Court. May 13, 1874,
and decided July 8th, of the same year.
The text of the decision is as follows :
Tbc general village incorporation act of 1873
(acss. L. 1873, page 368) ia held unconstitution­
al, for the reason that it, in effect, delegates to
private citizens the legislative function of fix­
ing boundariee and compelling the Incorpor­
ation of acnaratc villages and Intervening
farming lands, against conaent and without
any opportunity for hearing: the legislature
cannot abdicate IU functions, or subject citiz­
ens and their interests to the interference of
any but lawful public agencies.
The case in question was upon the
incorporation of the village of Fair­
field, ia Lenawee Co., under Act-No.
179. The incorporation although em­
bracing less than two square mile*
took in two hamlets, and dissatisfact­
ion arising, a suit was commenced with
the above result.
The question is
somewhat different from that fcvhich
threatens Nashville, as we were incor
porated and our boundaries fixed by a
directact of the legislature of 1879, besimply re-incorporated in 1878, under
the act in question, while the village
of Fairfield was originally incorporated
nnder 1L From this stand-point ex­
village attorney Powers argues that
the act is not unconstitutional m our
case. Lawyers Flint and Bradyj how­

ever, disagree with this desision and
hold that when an act is unconstitu­
tional it is no good, and cannot be
made iirany case. Then, if the latter
opinion bo true the question resolves
itself into this fact: We hold our right
of incorporation under our original in­
corporation bj the legislature, and to
“bust ud" the incorporation of the vilIago of Nashville, the dissatisfied ones
must “bust up” the original character.
But if this be the case—which should
be definately ascertained without de­
lay—the conncil have no right to do
business according to Act No. 179, but
should do it according to the provirions
of our original charter.

WHO’SATRAID?

THE OYOMHE.

A few “cranks” have, consumed con­
siderable time this week, trying to carry
idea that we are more afraid of others
DEATH AHO DESTRUCTION.
engaging in the newspaper business
here, than we are of death. But thpn
The terrible cyclone that swept ov­
these same chaps tried to propagate
that idea in 1879, when Ed. E. Smith er Assyria and Kalamo and so on cast,
'started a newspaper here, but with last Thursday evening,, was the most
disastrous results as every News read­ severe that has ever visited the section,
er knows. John is a very bright young and it is stated by old residents that no
man. knows a little something about i less than sc vef hare visited the section
everything, and will continue to learn during their recollection.
Thu appearance of the cyclone is re­
more, but we believe half a dozen men
could be found'whom we would fear ported as similar to the one of last
more, should they start a paper here, summer, being funnel-shaped, and
than we do John. To make the idea heralded by a terrible roaring. When
plainer, wc will proceed to illustrate : first noticed it would occasionally draw
Suppose one of these “cranks” is in up into the'heavens, sucking op a con­
the drug trade. He is not only a good glomeration of articles, but soon drop
druggist, but an experienced apothe­ dow*n again 'to sweep, like a broom,
cary nod his assortment of drugs are everything in its course. Those who
fresh an&lt;j serond to none in the country. saw the coming danger seemed to be
His'patronagc is immense and every­ Ktiddvnly imbibed with a common in­
thing is Invely^antil the report is cir­ stinct to seek refuge in their cellars,
culated that he is to have "competi­ and this act, undoubtedly, saved many
tion;” that a man, utterly ine.xpe rienc- lives.
The general course of the cyclone was
edas a druggist and apothecary, has
bought a one-liorse stock of dried-up from south-west to south-ease, it en­
drugs, and is going to set up shop and tering the county at the south-west cor­
nin him out. Then bis soul is filled ner of Barry, nassing through Hickory
with terror, hia knees smite together Corners, but doing no serious damage,
like Belshnzzer’sof old. aud he imme­ further than starting a portion of F.
Detterick's house from its foundation,
diately stocks up another drug store
wrecking a couple of wind-mills and I
and puts in an experienced apothecary
in order to save himself from the poor­ numerous rail fences. A mile from the
east line of the town, however, serious
house fate.
Or suppose another
damage was done—the house of a Mr.
"crank” is a lawyer. Hu is a graduate
Rorabeck being turned over, Mrs. R.
of thel aw school, has been in success­
being hurried in the ruins under s
ful practice for years an&lt;J stands at the
eookfetovc. She is quite badly bruised
head of his profession; yet the mo­
and burned, but will recover. Mr. R.’«
ment a school-buy fledgling broaches
barn was unroofed, out-buildings gen­
the idea of hanging out his shingle in
erally wrecked, a new carriage, thresh­
his town aa lawyer, he take* sudden
ing machine and otherimplements des­
fright and immediately resorts to all
troyed. M. Bellinger, on the Barrymanner of schemes to save himself
Johnstown town line, lost his house
from poverty.
and barn roof. Mrs. B. and child were'
We might go on and illustrate until
in a portion of the houae which was
supper time, but we won’t, for our la­
whirled quite a distance from its foun­
bor might oe without avail, as it is
dation, but escaped with little injury.
imposible for some men to reason, no
The cyclone seemed to pass over
matter how clear cut your logic may
Johnstown after a sort of hop, skip and
lie. We have an idea that such
jump fashion, the principal damage in
men are bereft of reason—maybe they
t-l’is town being sustained bv John Mc­
were born so. and can’t help it—and an
Kenzie, whose bouse was unroofed,
original idea might prove fatal to them.
badly racked, and orchard destroyed.
But wc presume
these
traducens
J. Miller’s corn enb, orchard and fences
must talk and if The News ia a thorn
in their side, wb are glad of it. Their were leveled, and a portiqn of Mr. Ce­
dar t’s house badly twisted.
patronage, however, to any paper
Again the cyclone seemed to sort of
won’t amount to a flip of the finger,
break up or draw up into the air
and their opinion will hare about as
and did not descend until Leroy Cum­
mush weight with a level-headed man
mings was readied, about 3j miles in­
as can be found in a feather.
to Assyria, whose barn was unroofed,
I
wind-mill blown down,orchard tore up
OLABK N. YOUBQ.
and windows knocked out, and chim­
The above highly-intelligent, accom­ neys from, his house. Theodore Pack­
plished and ambitious young school- er with wife and little son, were driv­
marm, was "bounced” from our employ ing along the highway and whipped up
last week Saturday morning. We do to reach Cummings' before it struck
not know that we are under obligations them, but the wiad lifted all but the
to give all the reasons as to why he was little boy right out of wagon, but, for­
"bounced." Perhaps if we were some­ tunately, not injuring them.
body’s weak-minded protege, or de­
Henry Ellis’ new brick house, just
pendent upon somebody’s whim fur our completed last fall,was ail blown down
bread and butter, we might be per­ to the first story, and the east wall tak­
suaded to enter into particulars; but en entirely put. A frame kitchen on
as we are not, never have been caught tbo east side was Utterly demolished,
in any dirty trick, and believe we are as was also bis large barn, wind-mill,
just as capable-of managing our own etc. The barn contained three horses
business, as any oue else is for us, we and cattle, but, strange to say, pone
shan’t humble -dnrsclf, by going into were hurt Mr. E’s. people saw the
particulars.
Suffice it to say that storm approaching and ran into the
Young has graduated so fast as an ed­ cellar and escaped, unhurt. The father
itor and pointer, as to be of no pract­ had just time to rescue one child from
ical use as an employee. This asser­ an out-house before it was blown to
tion is liacked up by the fact, that he atoms. Some arficlee belonging to the
is hardly out of the office before he Eilis’ were picked op on the road, a
goes to hob-nobbing—if he hadn’t done mile west. They were, probably, the
it before—with certain of our dearly- greatest sufferers in a pecuniary sense,
beloved(f) friends about starting a pa­ than any others an. the route of the
per here. A few days later and a bill is cyclone in Assyria.
scattered uroad-cast, to the effect that
C. G.Bakei’a house was partial!^ un­
about May 1st, he will begin the publi­ roofed and much valuable timber des­
cation of "The Nashville Olio." and troyed. John Wertz wind mill was
offers it nt 35 eta. a year—pardon us ; demolished ns was also fifteen acres of
three months, wo should say—and ad­ timber for O. Mapes.
vertising at your own price. Young
Levi Kenyon, located in the north­
has evidently struck his forte. Gen­ east corner of Assyria was the greatest
tlemen stand aside and give him full sufferer. His family, composed of him­
swing, but keep your noses closed.
self and wife, two children and father-

—A quondam fruit tree© agent by
the name of W. H. Smith was taken
in, in a state of beastly intoxication,
Friday afternoon by Marshal Gregory.
Squire Potter interposed a fine of five
dollars and costa, or five days in the
County jail. Smith those the latter.
The Marshal took him down to Hast­
ings Saturday and when they came in
right of the jail Smith arid: “I’ll be a
'—Quite a lively discussion ensued at dead man before I enter that institu­
the conncil rooms on Monday evening, tion.” Jim. said, “I guess not; you
over the amount that ths saloon bonds havn’t got anything you can kill your­
should be fixed at; some advocating self with have you.” Smith replied
the idea that as liquor would be sold thatbe had a big jack-knife*- “Well,”
says Jim. “you are going right into
by at least one saloon, the bonds should
that institution, and alive, too. Now
—At the meeting of the Common
be fixed at so low a figure that others
&lt; might secure bonds, and therefore the moay right on ahead and if I see you Council on Monday evening, a commit­
put your hand in your pocket I will tee composed of H. A. Barber, H. Dick­
the town would get A greater revenue,
and the liquor traffic would Dot be knock you down*” and Smith "mosed" inson and H. M. Lee, were appointed
•»
to negotiate with J. W. Newkirk, agent
made a monopoly, and as they consider­ right along into the jail.
—Owing to the musical convention for C. G. Carlton &amp; Co., of Chicago, for
ed two or th roe-saloons no more than
one, were in favor of the bonds being that closed on Wednesday evening the n fire engine. As Mr. N. was in town
placed at th©lowest figure the law al­ Euterpean society was postponed un­ the committee discharged their duties
lowed. Others of the council thought till next week, when it will meet at the satisfactorily on the following morning,
differently and agreed that the traffic Methodist church at the usual time. It by purchasing a No. 1. Piano style,
is earnestly hoped that many that have Rumsey fire engine of 30 men capacity
it. wits cornered up me wcictr, been attending the convention and The engine throws a double stream,
that it was not for the council to take have become interested in vocal music | inch each, 140 feet, and with Lose
into consideration whether Mr. B. or Mr.
will now avail themselves of the ad­ and one dozen leather buckets—cost
Mr. Newkirk
vantages of tills society. Rev. Mr. $1150, delivered here.
Bissell is a first class conductor as well also agrees to organize and drill the
as a fine singer, aud is taking unusual fire company soil put everything into
HitereStin the devdopensent and c«il- -pHme'Wbfknj^drifar. Th order th or-’
tare of vocal music. Those wishing to ganixe said fire company, a meeting
will be hvl&lt;! at the town hall on Friday
evening, May 5tit. Let everybody in­
terested in the matter attend.
'

in-law,Silas Reynolds were about to set
down to supper, when they heard the
roar of the coming cyclone, Mr. K.,
thought it wouldn’t amount 'to much
and commenced eating, but hia wife
thought different and stood at therioor
watching it. A startled exclamation
brought her husband to the door, and
one look at the monster was enough
for him, and snatching up a child,
he darted from the house, telling his
wifennd Mr. Reynolds to take the oth­
er and follow to another house he own­
ed! across the road in Bellevue. But
they tarried to put out the fire and
bolt the doors and were hardly out of
the house before the cyclone was upon

NUMBER 30.

lust act of kindness, as a flying rail
struck him in tbo head, crushing his

when it blossomed out in a suitable
and stylish dress. May good luck at­
tend it and its enterprising publisher.
Mr. and Mrs. A. Selleck will entesr
tmn^theM. E. social on Wedneadag
evening April 1M».
"
" ’ meats
Refresh

skull and breaking in the cheek-bone.
He only survived about twenty minu­
tes. Mrs. Kenyon was also consider­
ably bruised. MiKenyons house, and
barn were completely destroyed.
His
loss is estitmted" at &lt;1,350to $1,500.
A portion of Wolter Mapes’ barn was
unroofed, and Selah Mapes! winif mill

served. A boose fuE
is desired.
.

AU nature rejoices. If you doubt theassertion, hie to the wild wood, note
blown down, barn doors wrenched the swelling bads, big leaks and adder­
from their hinges,and orchard destroy­ tongues, and listen to the warble of
ed, Here fence posts were broken off. the robir. and black-bird.
T. Garety had his barn wrecked and
’Gene Cook, the popular buggy-mak­
a portion of his bouse.
Hdnrry Worts, er, is ^vitb us again with s column advt.
a barn, Daniel Mead hia house, barn The reader can gain something of an
and granary, wrecked, and a cow killed. opinion as to what he is doing, but bis
His family escaped by flying to the cel­ work must be seen to be appreciated.
The quarterly report of the M. E.
lar. Rtiins of his buildings were scat­
tered half a mile, ihs loss is estimat- Sunday
;
school, shows an average
ed st
Mr. Perry’s bare was weekly attendance during the year
wrecked.
«ending March 36th, of 116; making a
attendance for the quarter of 1508.
Horace Sherman, .-rad mother, each, t£tnl
i
'i^nfinvin’s Famioufr TcnnaBseeans
had a house wrecked. The inmates of
the former's house were carried a dis­ will give one ov their grea&gt; coixerts in
Opera House, Nashville,on Monday
tance of fifty rods in the house and let the
i
down in a' swamp, arunug legs* and night,
i
April 24th.
Thio is the oldest
concert company on the road,
stumps. Nin Sherman, a demented colored
&lt;
girl, was killed instantly. Mrs. Sher- this
i
being their ninth annual tour.
have just finisln-d singing tfiirtyman, the mother, had aeverul bones They
'
consecutive nights in the- city
broken, and was badly bruised and it 8ovcn
i
and are now filling Sheir
rssaid cannot survive. Mrs. S. has a Chicago^,
l
broken jaw and is badly injured inter- Michigan
I
engagements.
Prof. Vine who han juRtelosedoae of
nally. A little girl, Nettie, is also badmost sncceasfiil nn&lt;T instrrctfve
ly injured ana is in danger of losing (be
I
her eye sight, from having sand and ,imusical conventions ever .Sold iu this
wiN go from here ti&gt; Leslie,, to
Aklen Swift’a- large bank barn was place;
j
charge of another eonveottou
blown into Lncoy's lake aud a horse take
1
Prof. Vine and’his rjccomphohkilled. G. Perry’s barn wrecked and there.
I
wife have won many warm and true
Henry Wertz blacksmith sbop and ed
&lt;
during their short stay umotiff
barn leveled, the anvil from the form- friends
i
and the best witdies of b'is entire
er, being carried four rods.
Hero the es,
i
rood is tilled with&gt;apple trees rod tim- &lt;cfaaaand tl»e community gvrvrailv.-go
him to his new field of labor.
bers and the loss for a mile is estimated with
’
:

at $19,000.
The aggregate damage in
Assyria and Kalama is estimated at
$21,000.
Where the stocm crossed Lacey's
fake it scooped oi^ a path, which those
who saw it, say caused them to think
of the one the Lord , scooped through
the Red Sea to allow the Israelite© to
cross over,

LOCAL MATTERS.
OBITUARY.
Man- Ann Evans, departed this life in lre.-5B
year, at the home- of her son-in thia village on
■April 5th. The remain* weretaken to BeHevue
'for Interment on Friday. buSthe froeral srchureb In this village,
Mrs. Evans ww torn In Bbomusg, Broom
Co., N. Y-, March 2nd, 1815, and came with her
father to Mich.,la Jan. &lt;837, when It *m a tor-.
itory, ctopgingln the town rf Bellevue, there
be’ngat the time but one fatally betweenjjcllevue and Hasting. Indians were
nearest uaigbbc.r». 8ba participated Imall.tlw trials of a
pMietrlifa, yet living a Christian llfoaod- h*v-

looAl GIBBLE-GABBLE
Frog operas are pepnlar.
The fire company beys are hanpy.
N. P. Frink. W. E.. Martin and Gee.
Coate are quite sick.
Arthur Lewis became "daddy” to a
74 llxgirl, Friday night.
Geo. W. Francis bran rented and' mov­
ed into CapL L. C. Boise's houaa on
State street.
Mrs. lx C. Boise, and babies, started
for Dakota, to join, her busband, Satur­
day morning.
•’
(

Workmen commenced removing tbo
Imikiinesfrom the site of the new block
yesterday.
•
Quarterly meeting! at the M.E. church
to-day and to-morrow. Presiding Elder
Hall will conduct tbo services.
Ike Pnrkey has i»champion colt,'not
2-yearaold, that weighs 1,100, and is
broke to do all kinta of work.
“To be or not to be” is the fate that
several misguided pilgrims seem, tfe
think hovers over Nashville.
Old papers fifty-eents per hundred at
this office.
Juet -let another pnpsr
start and well put them down t&amp;35.
Maxwell is coating, and ouroew dev­
il says itJs reported that Tax News
office is to have a "confidential” ticket.
Monday'morning Mrs. G. A. Truman
started for a two weeks visit with
friends at Jackson, Albion and Marshal.
Judge Robinson of Hastings, accom*
panied by Mrs. Spring of Topeka,
Kan., visited H. G. Hate’s family on
Tuesday.
/
„
Rev. D. H. Shelly of Charlotte, ex­
pastor ot this circuit, will preach at the
first U.. B. church of Maple Grove, Mon­
day evening, April 17th.
A good restaurant would pay in thia
town about these days. House-clean­
ing lime and cross woman,—but you
know how ’tis your self.
Our milliners are putting in more
magnificent stocks of ladies stupeudnous spring hate than ever before.
Bud weather can be expected.
The ringing class which hta been
conducted during the past week, under
the instrnouon of Prof. Vine, had an
average attendance of eighty pupils.
The bluest-looking people on Sunday
and Monday, were those who bad fay­
ed aside their winter clothing. The
cold snap is what occasioned the "blueneaa.”
The. new seats for the Clixiatiao
church are completed aud tcing pnt
into position. They Iuuk comfortable,
they feel comfortable, they are com-

her^
The St. Johns Republican, under tho
’ guiding hand of Otis Fuller, has im­
beside her, taking the tide from which proved every issue, but the greatest
the storm was coming. Hut it was bis

sided ia the town ol Bellevue 35 yean anA in
Eston Co., until Dee. 1881. when
casnc
to NaatoUla
,

.

'THANKS.

I am authorized to tender thank*- tn our
kind frtends and neigh bora fortheir xsrietaoce
■ at the Mckueaa aud death of our mother.
No patient required to catch the rheuraatUm.

Oil.—Chicago Inter-Ocean.
FOR RENT.
A desirable office, ground floor, on west side
Main St. Apply to, Mos. Mika Wickwam.

FARMERS LISTEN.
L.L. Caocker • Honest Pertilizer’s Ammoniat­
ed Bone, Super Pho«pb«u aud. Pura Ground
Bone nuuurfactcred at Buffalo N. Y., aud for
•ale at tbc elrrator of
3032.
Baoozs. Maasiixu-A Co,
IIPOBTAST TO TEA VELKBM,

Special inducements are offered yon by th*
Burlinrton Route, ItwlD payyou to read tbeb
advertisements to be found eteewberein thi&gt;
issue.
__________________________
GT Full line of Wall Pape- at
F. T. BOISE’S.

WANTED.
A good wide-awake young man to toll one of
tla.- best Sewing Machines in the « &lt;

(3T Mr. Tbo. W. Plilnisey will toll bls
soon! property at public auction, on Thun
April 30th, at 1x1* residence 2% tafiea nort
WoodlandHappy Jinx, auction®

AMERICAN EXPRESS.

allure *i&gt;&lt;1 the dosing out sale of
Keixogo, Bell A Va.

SHOES!! SHOES!!
to Nashville—just la at.

Gsa son's.

SPRING AND 8UMMER OPRN1NG.
, Thanking the ladtea of Nashville and vicinltx
for past favors, I invite their attention to a ven
fine assortment of Spring Millinery Good*.

Kmjxjoo. Bri l * Oo.

NEW
:

PHOTOGRAPH

GALLERY

Havingrtmtad od4 fitted up rocMo* over K. f*.
Brady's building fw a j&gt;lMiv&gt;grnph grilerv. 1 ant
prepared to do pbGUxnqdntig of every Awcrij. tlon. CopTjng and cniargfog iu a suw-rior raai.

LUMBER’ LUMBER!

�•And did v.ou go through?” cried the

riment, though I dm not feel • bi
"Tua bombazine humbug!”
claimed. "What does he take me for?”

with her head and hand.*.
old copy of a Fhmch newspaper. Hfo lette.
1
,_______ 1 iiupos-tibleto jfo through
“That is evident
it. It in nt'firiy
with *a.ud or fine
was a umall man with a bald head, a
“Worse than that,” I
When all was quiet, and I Wm sure that shining, animated fane, and a rusty coat ius read on.
vartli. nnd tliia niitsi. Ui dug out before
the fort had been closed for tfhi night, I of bombazine. We were duly introduced,
one can •enter it”
It was impossible. Monsieur Simon
L’fVuilJTirg OF 1381W hat do you intend to do about it?” lighted a couple of candles,wbfah Istuck and after a few preliminaries and injuno- &lt;continued to allow anyone person, and
ITS ACTIO? 18 SURE AND SAFE.
Mia* Mallette, her eye* sparkling in a little mound of sand upon the lions I told him my plans and desires. As &lt;especially a person like myself, who had
with excitement. “ And where do you
I spoke the eyes of Monsieur .Simon 1had no active part in the enterprise, to
! .uiMiri*.'
sparkled, and when I finished he sprang &lt;enjoy all the advantages of such a dis­
think it l«ad«.U&gt;P”
I »u &gt; thro’ uijrht air, f
‘
&lt;covery. He hnd taken steps, therefore, ly prepare iL It. will be found very ■
“ I feel confident,” I replied, “that it lighted myself through the rooms into to h« feet.
at tw some repair,
IduSl -rttw, wreiunlng, sooty. leads-to some chamber in the southeast the courtyard, went up on the barbette,
“Archwolo-gie, my friend, is that ito secure to himself something more ed and will art with equal efficicue
bastion, and 1 intend to dig through and and drew up my tools, made my way to which jmltscssch me. It fills me up. It lthan the mere glory of the affair. The case. Ik- *ure ami read tliv new .u
the chamber, where I had left one candle floats me into thin air abuf the miseries imovable things, such as the coin, the uient for.particuiars.—South aud W«t
aee what is beyond.”
.
“If I were a man?’ naid the lady, “ I burning, took off my coat, and sjicedily of life.” He spoke better English than imedals and the jar, the manuscripts, and,
should like nothing better than to do set to work.
his aunt, merely peppering bis sentences 1the ring from the finger of the skeleton,
she didn’t mind—aud we have since found out
bu &gt;w.nif but * Aliurlc spark;
had taken from the dungeon, and
My theory was that beyond th® inner With French accents and peculiarities he
I
that. Bui are you sure that you have
that «be didn't.
■
1. kr glowworm «&gt;r firefly.
really ducovered this thing? Perhajis wall of this chamber, distant only a few sufficiently to give them a foreign flavor, ithey were now in his possesribn. ' He
Orator twinkling tn theater,
.
Mr*. Lydia E. Pinkham. 288 WeMern Ave­
•
8 uti lLtM nil hi« work will ua,
there, is »ome uno who can tell you all feet, was the wall of the dungeon in tha “I follow in my soul those great leaders Ihail replaced the stones in the hole he
nue, Lynn, Maia., la rapidly acquiring an en­
l*--1
Belzoni.
Layard.
and
even
that
execrahad
I
’
made
and
had
piled
sand
against
Mrafiheaat
bastion
Which
I
ww
looking
about it."
viable reputation for the *urpriaing cure* wbkh
'• I thought of that," I said, “ and I for. The spaoe between the walls was ble Schliemann. Gif me the money and ithem. , He had also thrown sand into the dally reault from the use of her Vegetable
asked tHe old sergeant. If anybody probably filled with sand in order to mis­ the men, sir-----hole of
the
wall
in
the
dark Compound in all female di*ea*e*. Send to her
IS THE SOUTHEAST BASTIOS.
for pamphlet*.
knows anything about the fort, he does. lead and deter any one who should at­
I hastened to stop him at tills point, &lt;chamber, so m to give it as much u pos­
I was- standing in the inner court When I told him I had fotind thifi hole tempt to. penetrate through the wall of endeavoring. to make him understand isible its appearance when I discovered
If the Mormon doctrine had been Mt loose in
In the sand, he took occasion to
i
of the old fortn ** of San Marco, in St. he looked' amazed, and expressed a groat the room I was, in, and this had stopped my real intentions. I had no money—at it.
the
Garden of Eden Adam would not have had
the
work
of
the
prisoners
who
had
tried
least none of any importance—and imention, he had placed two dynamite
Augustine. I bail made, or thought I deal stwprise at my exploring the dark
rib* enough to go round.
hud made a discovery. Ever sineel had chamber. I found he did not want to to escape, it was certainly ridiculous to wanted no men. I intended to make no ।cartridges, with wnich he had provided
I merely 'himself in cash the inner wail should
• first visited it I had taken the greatest in­ talk aliout the matter at all; but as 1 rath­ suppose that the whole iuterior of the archaeological researches.
' CATARRH OF THE BLADDER.
terest in this ancient pile, begtui 300 years er pressed him-with* questions about the great bastion was cither solid stone or wished to dig into a comparatively ;prove too hard for his chisels. ■
Stinging, smarting, Irritation of the urinary
modern structure, not ouite three hun­
“The outrageous impostor,” exclaimed paaaage*^ diseased discharges, cured by Bucbuago bv the Spaniards, and 1he older! edi- j hole In the wall he told me briefly that filled with sand.
I dug, and Idug, and I dug; I shovel­ dred years old. 1 told him in fact I was :Miss Mallette,
,
fict) of the kind in our country. I'was it had been made by some prisoners who
afraid
I
had
made
a
mistake.
I
did
not
“
You"don
’
t
believe
he
buried
any
dy
­
They had ed and hoed a vast mass of sand from
thoroughly acquainted with its demi­ were in tliat apartment.
lunes, its barbican, its tenv-plbfti, its thought to get out by cutting .through the hole into the room in which'I stood, wish a man of. science. I was merely :namite in the sand?” I said.
There ere enough miles of milrcwuls in the
“Not a bit of it,” she answered
portcullis, its moat, its dungeons, and that wall: but when they made the hole but still it came down from above. I looking tor a trustworthy person who
world to go ten time* around the globe, and of
•verj thing known and seen by the’ gen­ it instantly filled up with sand which knew, however, that there must be a could dig. Monsieur Simon looked dis­ promptly.
these the United States own* nearly half.
eral "public. But now I hoped-I knew came from the other side. I asked him limit to this continual caving in, and that appointed; then his face sparkle*! again. '’ Monsieur Simon then proceeded to
FADED COLOR RESTORED.
“I will be that man. I will work for isay that he had gone with his valuables
very if I shovelled and hoed Bng enough, I
and should see something unknown and who the prisoners were, but h®
Faded‘or gray hair gradually recover* tte
unL-t-n by the general public.
~
- short about it. ‘I wasu’tone of ’wn,’ he must eventually make a passage through your-for—for—for three dollars a day. to Tallahassee, from which place he
d’heyiiung nrairwho assisted the old satd; ‘nayther did Iput ’em thdte. I the sand.
And when the discoveries are made, I ishould immediately proceed to a spot youthful color and lustre by the use of Parker'fi Hair Balsam, an elegant dressing, admir­
he knew of where ire could remain en­ ed for ita parity and rich perfume.
MugeautWtdnn^b of the fort approached* just tell the tale as it was told to me.’ ■. Although strong, I yas unused to such shall share with you the glory.”
I told him that after I hail entered and tirely unobserved for any length of time,
mb. "Il is time to shut up, sir,” he And off he walked. From what he said labor as this, find before long I liecamo
"Always pay as you go,” said an old man to
I lay down to rest upon a examined the chamber in the southeast and where he would have ample oppor­
I am sure that nothing has been discov­ very tired.
his tMphew. "But, Unde, suppose 1 have nothIt wits true. Tl&gt;c sun was setting. I ered beyond that hole, but I am afraid I small rubber blanket I had brought, and bastion, ho might have three-quarters of tunity to c&amp;ssify and describe the coins,
ihg to pay withf "Then don't jjo.”
walked through tlrt* great entrance nail, have made him suspicious of me., and I in a few minutes I was fast asleep. I did the glory, or all of it if he chose. As for .and to decipher the manuscripts.
“Decipher the manuscripts!” I ex­
casting a longing look leftward as 1 did must be very careful in what 1 intend to not awake until the next morning. My the three dollars a day, I thought it pret­
TO KEEP. THE BLOOD PURE
candles had burned out. and I could see ty high pay for a man who -had not the claimed, in contempt. “Any one who
so, erowsed the drawbridge and went do.” '
I* tliu pr(uctpfil ®nd of invention* and discover­
“ Can’t you get permission from some­ toe distant daylight through the door of" strength and ability of a regular laborer; knows old Spanish could read them.”
into the town. I had not walked a dozen
ies in medicine. To thisqbject|&gt;rol&gt;ably do one
“Old Spanish!” laughed Miss Mal­
yards on the bioad sea-wall which skirts body «&lt;• explore the place?" asked Miss the room. I found mvself no worse for but I felt sure the work could not con­
the water front of the old c*. when I Mallette,
, my sleep, for the air of the place was dry. tinue very Idfig, and I agreed to pay it lette. “1 believe you really thin^ there lias contributed mm algnally than Dr. David
“Ono!" I exclaimed. “ If the au-' I did not dare to go out of the room un­ After all. the element of1 intelligence are such manuscripts."
Kennedy, of Runduut, N. Y., in the production
I
saw riding toward me on the road a lady
“I forgot,” I said. “I was only of a medkioe which baa become famous under
on a sorrel horse. She rode directly up thorities did anyU&gt;&gt;ng at all in the mat­ til I heard the sound of voices and visitors, should not lie disregarded. Monsieur Si­
ter they would’ take it up them&amp;lvev, for it would not be prudent (or me to mon was therefore engaged for the work thinking what a humbug he is.”
the title of tlic "‘FiAorite Remedy." It removes
to the wall, and we both stopped.
“His story has had an effect upon your । all impurities of the blood,.regulates the disor­
"Good evening.” liaid she. with a and*nB"the fun of tlie discovery would"make my appearance before any one had of exploration. I gave him full explana­
entered the fort.
tions anti directions, Miss Mallette occa­ imagination,” she said; “but let us go dered Liver and Kidneys, cures constipaticn,
rlflasant smile. “Just from San Marco, be lost to me."
I had waited alx&gt;ut an hour—perhaps I sionally adding a shrewd suggestion, and
•• I hen what are your plans?” she
suppose. Have you found anything
dyspepsia, and all disease* and weaknesses pe­
The rest was purely practical. Mon­ culiar to females. Sold by your druggist. Fl.had taken another little dos?—when I Madame Tonnin wagging her head in
now?"
asked.
“ Here comes young Norton," I an­ heard some one approaching. In a few continual atlirniation. lie agreed with me sieur Simon said that if I would send a iKJttie.
This seemed to me a curious question
.
z
to come at such a time. I was wildly swered. “and I can't tell you now. But moments I saw Miss Mallette at the open in my hypothesis of the interval between $100 to his address in Tallahassee a
Short courting: "Rachel, the Lord hath sent
anxious to tell some oi\-» of what I had if you will walk with me to-morrow, to door. Before I couldspeakshehad &lt; :dl&lt; d the two walls being filled in with sand, friend would receive it for him and take
me to marry thee,” said the suitor. "Tnc Lord’s
discovered, and whv should 1 not tell the fort 1 shall have worked out my to me in a low tone, which had some­ and was certain he could soon dig away it to him in his secure retreat. He then
Miss Mallette? This young lady was plans, and will tell yon all about them. thing of anxiety in it. I instantly an­ enough to leave a passage to the inner would send me thirty of the coins and will be done, was the submissive reply.
the daughter of one of our great wqjjt- We will go in the middle of the day when swered and went to her. As soon as I wall: but he differed with me in regard two of the manuscripts, in order that I
entered the other room she cordially to the means of making an entrance might assure myself of the truth of his
ern farmers, and was my most intimate there are few people there."
After this we could make Known any person to be serinualyUl without a
friend in the town. We had walked to­
The next day 1 took her to the fort and shook me by the hand and said, laughing, through this inner wall. I had provided statements.
weak wtoniAeh or inactive liver or kidneys!
gether on moonlight nights on the sea­ told her all I intended to do. I would "I really am glad to find you alive; I did some large chisels anti a mallet, which I further arrangements with regard to our And when Ibesc organ* are in good condition
do yon not tlnd tbeir |w*w!**or enjoying good
wall, we had sailed together on the come there late in the evening, go un­ not know what might have happened to hnd left with the other tools in the dark mutual advantage.
health I barker's Ginger Tonic regulates these
you
in
this
dreadful
place.
”
“
The
clearest
case
of
attempted
broail waters of the Matanzas, we had observed into the dark chamber and be
chamber, but he thought it would be
important organs, makes the blood rich and
rambled over the old fort, had danced shut up in the fort for the night. I ' “Nothing happened,” I answered, better-to make use of some of the mod­ swindling,” I said.
pure, anti strengthen* every part of the system.
“I don’t believe be dug into the hole
&gt; together at the hops, and had taken would take some candles and tools with “and I did not find the place at all dread­ ern inventions. With one or two car­
See other column.
at
all.
”
said
Miss
Mallette.
“
I
sup*
tridges of dynamite he said we could
many
a ride ......
along
the —
shell road .......
and.. me aud dig out the sand from the hole, ful."
——j .6 L™.
The Prodigal Son was a vast deal better man
fch
—? beautiful“rose
“ -—
'
' of
” tlie ' In the morning I could slip out unob­
“Well, I hope you got through with blow-a hole through the wall in an in­ jose he found some comfortable place
into the
gardens
than pc.,pie are willing to admit, for he could
suburbs. She had told me of the 10.- served. I would do this every night un­ your work,” stie 'said. “What did you stant, whereas it would take hours to and slept all night.”
“I shall go and see if he really made have salified III.* hunger at any time with roast
000-acre fields of wheat upon her father's til 1 hnd penetrated into the chamber I discover?"
cut one with chisel and mallet. But this
pig and »n too conscientious to do it.
"I have discovered nothing yet, and I I absolutely forbade. I wanted no ex­ any excavations,” I said.
farm, and of the long gallojx she took was looking for.
“ I think that is dreadful," said Miss have only begun my work.”
"Don’t you do it!” Miss Mallette ex­
and the strange life she led upon that
plosions to wake up the people in the vi­
Can Catarrh b cured! Yes, certainly, “Dr.
“You are mistaken there,” she said, cinity, and to blow, perhaps, my French­ claimed, nutting her hand on my arm.
vast domain. I in turn had told her Mallette. "You will take your death of
Sykes’ Sure Cure” will cure it.
“You’ll get yourself blown up with
everything about myself I thought she cold in that damp place; the sand will very decidedly. “Your work in that man into atoms. Monsieur Simon in­
was likely to know; and why should I cave in on you and bury you, and you’ll *dark hole is finished. If you did not do sisted that as the dwelling of the old ser­ that dynamite.”
Though Adam's dress was a nude design.
I had been for some time sitting on a
not tell her this thing, in which she have to sleep all dayt&gt;whkh will give you last night all that you wanted to, you will geant was some little distance outside
He often would sadly grieve.
would feel more interest than in any­ no time for riding or anything else. Be­ have to leave the rest* undone. I have the fortress, he would not hear a slight bench in the court-yard of the fort on
Ami sit on the limb of a tree and whine,
thing I had spoken of before?
sides. how are you going to get shovels made up my mind that you shall n6t pass explosion; but I remained firm in my the next day after the receipt of Monsieur
'Cause he couldn't laugh In ble sleeve.
‘Tbelieve,” I said, “1 have found out and such thing* into the fort without another night in that place. I could hard­ prohibition of dynamite, and he con­ Simon's letter, when Miss Mallette
The symptoms of Itching Piles are moisture
ly sleep last night for thinking of it; and sented to break through the wall ia the walked into the yard.
something new.”
tbeir seeing you?”
*
like prespliation. Intense itching, most al night
“I thought I should find you here,”
“O, delightful!?’ she cried. “Just
" I shall want but a few tdols,” I said, when I came here this morning I did not way I desired.
seems a* if pin worms were crawling iu or
— j—------—tell
-—me" and
stand where
youare,—
^nd
all I have thought of a vjhy to get
know but that I should have to go back
Operations were to begin immediately, she said. “You haven’t been poking about the rectum. The more you scratch Ahe
about it. Your
Yi ’r head is
2 so high
L!
*' ‘ I’ them in. Late this afternoon ’l am go- for people to dig you out from
that
pile of and that evening Monsieur Simon and I around in that hole in the wall, have worse they itch, very distressing. The private
.i„«.» _a bit. What ing to lower arope from some northern fallen sand.”
don’t have.
to iw,«.i
bend down,
parts are often affected. Dr. Swayne's Oint­
went to the fort, and seizing a favorable you ?’ ’.
have you found?"
"But I must go on with the work,” 1 opportunity, I conducted him into the ’ "No; I promised you I would not do ment is lb® most effective remwlv extant for
point on the harliette, where few people
tills tonnentlug complaint. Gives rest at night
t“You remember the dungeon in the ever go. down to the rnoaL II won’t be said. “You don't know how I long to dark chamber. 1 took him by the hand, that.”
•
without tliat desire to scratch. Also has on
“I know you promised, but I was equal in quickly eradicating Tetter, Itch, Salt
Inortbeast bastion?” I said. .
noticed; and then to-tnorwv I’ll bring get into the or ter chamber which I know aud cautiously led him to the inner wall.
" "Where the skeletons and the iron some tools in a boat, lie them to the is in this bastion-.”
Rbeutne, Erysipelas, Barbers' Itch. Pimples,
1 made him feel with his hands the hole afraid the attraction would be too strong.
cages were found ? O yes, of course I lower end of the rope, and cover them
“All that does not matter nt all," she I hnd discovered, led him to the corner 1 am glad you are so good. Don’t you all Scaly, Crust}-. Itchy Skin Eruptions. Here
is tlie proof, ‘•C'ertainlv the best remedy ever
remember it; and when’l visit Washing­ over with bnisbwoixl. Then, after I said. “If you stay in here to-night I am where I- had placed the tools, and left want to go out on the water-batten- ? I
used in mv practice.” Dr. Cotton, Woodstock,
going
to
tell
the
sergvnnL"
haven't
had
any
real
sea-breeze
to-day.
”
ton I am going to see if one of those, have been shut up to-morrow night PH
him supplied with matches, candles and
Vt.. •■troubled with Itching Piles for over twen­
skeletons really is in the Sinitlisonian haul them up?’
She said this with a laugh, but I knew food, and a little bottle of wine.
I hesitated a moment. “If you don’t ty years, Il cured rue complete) v,” I.. 8. Messer
En'fleld, Me- Sent for 50 cts (in 3 cL stamps)
Institution. I don't belitve the people v "To-morrow night!” she exclaimed. she meant it. “That is pretty hard on
mind,
”
1
said,
"I
prefer
going
up
on
the
For two nights Monsieur Simon
3
boxes, $ 1.25, By Dr. Swayne &amp; Son. Pbilad'a
here know anything about it.”
me,” I remarked.
"So soon os that?1
worked at his explorations. Each morn­ barbette. I have made a discovery, and i’a. Sold by all druggi.-!-.
“Not bard at all," she said, lightly, ing I visited him at his house, and re­ I want to tell you about it.”
"Well,” I continued, "I have always • "Yes," J said; if the thing is to be
During a deal^of news in a Western news­
“
Another
discovery!
”
she
said
with
a
touching
my
arm
with
the
point
of
her
considered tliat in the southeast bastion done, it might as well be done at once.”
ceived a report. No one had noticed
there must be something of the same
The next day, despite a good deal of parasol. “You can get somebody to do irs ingoings or outoojnings, he said, and laugh. "You are one of the greatest paper office, the office cat was Jammed in the
kind, for it is not to be supposed tliat disemn^gement frAn Miss Mallette, I the work for you; some one who is better on the second day he reported that he discoverers of the age. Is it another Job press, and the editor immediately set up
the Spaniards would have built a bastion carried out my plan. Late in the after­ able to dig aud to stay in a place like this had made a passage which extended mummy in agnor?”
the following bead-lines.
I said nothing to this, and wo walked'1
which for more than fifty feet from its noon she went with me to the fort. than you are: some one who will come in some feet- All the sand which hail
DRKAorvL AcxinzKT.
outer corner should be of solid masonry.” There were a good many visitors about, h^re at night and work just as you in­ fallen from above he had removed and up the stone incline that led to the up­
Nin Lives Lost |
tended
to,
and
who
can
easily
be
per
­
per
portions
of
the
fort.
Miss
Mallette
scattered over the floor of the dark
“Yes, I remember that we talked and it was some time before I had an
ZOA-PHORA!
ZOA-PHORA;
about that. But you don’t suppose they opportunity to slip into the dark cham­ suaded to keep the thing quiet till the chamber, and he confidently expected did not show the same interest in the
all diseases of woman 1
work is done. After you have made the in two or three nightw more to reach the matter that she had done before. She Cures
1
put skeletons in e'verv corner?’’
ber. I took leave of her at the door.
discovery,
of
course
you
’
will
want
every
­
stopped
when
we
reached
the
wide
stone
inner wall. I then strictly enjoined him,
" O no.” I said, “I have no reason to
"It’s a perfectly horrid placer’ said
Insults are like counterfeit money. Wc can­
body to know. Anu now let me drive as I had done before, that when he had surface of the barbette.
suppose there are any more skeletons, she, looking in. "and I wish yon would
not prevent their being offered but we arc not
yon home.”
"If you really have made any discov­
reached this wall he was not to make
but I feel sure there is a room or dun­ give up ilia whole thing this minute.”
obliged
to take them.
We
went
out
together,
met
nobody,
eries,
”
she
said,
“
you
ought
to
tell
the
'
the hole through it, as I intended to be
geon within that bastion.”
“1 wkdfyou took more interest in it,”
SHILOH'S CONSUMPTION- CURE.
jy k
lodgings. That .I present
present when
when that was done. I wished people at the barracks. They would be
“Wc have supposed all that before,” I said. “But 1 must not keep you here anil she drove me to my
afternoon,
when
I
called
ed
upon
Miss
MissM...Mai,
|
Jt!
t
|i
C
f
)rst
This
is
beyond question the most aucceMfnl
able
to
investigate
the
matter
properly."
I
to
be
the
first
to
make
the
discoveries
in
said Miss Mallette, “but what have you anv longer. Good night.”
lette. I found her billed with an idea.
“I dbn’t want anybody to investigate Cough Medicine ue have ever sold, a few doses
this hidden chamber.
Thus virtually dismissed-. Miss Mal­
found out?”
fI
in variably cure the worst eases of Cough, croup
•‘You know Madame Tonnin, the little 1!
On the morning of the third day I my discoveries but myself,” I said.
"That is what I am going to tell lette walked quietly away, while I slow­
aud Bronchitis, white tts wonderful success u
“Then why do you tell me?” she In the cure of consumption is without a paral­
1 want to the house of Madame Tonnin.
you.” I replied. “You remember two ly groped inch by inch to the interior of French teacher?” said she.
lel in the history of mcdfcne. Since it* first
1 knew Madame Tonnin very well. She : She was not in. and neither was Mon- asked.
rooms which ojien to the right as you go the sombre cavern, where I felt for a
“O, you are different. I hoped you discovery It ha* been sold on a guanitee, atest
into the entrance hall of the fort?1’
comer, in which I deposited the candles cafne every day to give French lessons to |j sieur Simon. A girl Minded me a letter
which do other medicine can stand. If you
Would
take
some
interest
in
the
matter.
”
my
landlady's
little
boy.
|
from
the
latter
personage.
I
opened
it
have a Cough we earnestly ask you to try it"Certainly," said she. “Oneof them and other necessary articles 1 hail
“Well,” she said, with a little air of Price.lOcts, fitteta. and f!,(«) If your lunes arc
“If anybody can tell who will be a 1 and read it in the little parlor. Then,
was the kitchen of the Indian prisoners brought in my pockets. 1 had not been
sore, Chest, or Back laime, and Shiloh’s
where that horrid murderous squaw pre­ here long before 1 heard the sound of good person to do yburwork for you, she (i with the open letter in my hand. I submissive endurance, and seating her­ Porous Plaster. Sold by F. T. Boras.
self
on
the
broken
edge
of
one
of
the
can,
”
said
Miss
Mallette.
“
She
know?
i
walked,
or
rather
ran.
to
the
cottage
of
approaching voices, and *in a few
aided.”
ANSUF.P, THIS QUESTION.
' the Majlcttcs.
ramparts.
"Well, then,” I said, "you remember moments a group of tourist.visitors made all about the Minorcans and other white
Why do so many ;&gt;eople wc see around us,
j
Miss Mallette was sitting on the front
I stood before her, and began. "I seem to prefer to suffer and be made miserable
there is a third room, completely dark, their appearance at .the open door. To people of the place—of course you don’t
want a blundering negro—and she her- II porch. She ran down the steps to meet have made a discovery which to me is by IndlgMlteu, constipation, dizziness, Iom of
my
amazement.
Miss
Mallette
was
one
beyond these?”
self is. the very person to keep a secret jI me. “What’s the matter?” she said.
appetite, coming up of the Food, yellow skin,
very important”
"O yes. I’ve often stood at the open of them. At first I thought she had be­
“I want you to read this letter with
Let us walk around to her house and ';
The countenance of Miss Mallette when foriScts, wewtll sell them ^hilbh’s Vitadoor and tried to look into it with trayed me. aud had brought these people tell her about it. You know you have | me,” I answered; “I can scarcely un­
guaranted to cure them. Sold by F. T.
looked a little disturbed, and then she lizer.
Boir-i:.
lighted matches and papers; but I could to laugh at me. But I soon perceived
aol to tell somebody, or the thing can’t i derstand it.”
said: “I don’t think you ought to tell
SHILOH'SCATTARRH REMEDY, A mar­
never see more than a fpw feet, it was that my suspicions were unworthy ones.
me your important discoveries. You velous cure for Catarrh, Diphtheria, Canker
bo done."
And
so
we
sat
down
on
the
steps
of
The
ladies
aud
gentlemen
peered
so pitchy black inside. The old sergeant
I did not wish to give up my original j the porch and read the letter together. I know I can’t help you the least bit Do mouth, and Head Ache. With each bottle
never takes, anylxxly in there, does he?” through the - door, exclaiming at the
idea, but at last I consented. I had be-1 shall not give the words of Monsietir you know it is nearly lunch time?" she here is an ingenious nasal injector for the
"No,” I replied; “forsome reason or drearmess of the place. Then one of
more successful treatment of these complaints
oome
convinced I could notdothencccs- . Simon's epistle. It was long, and was added, taking out her watch.
theih
lighted
a
paper,
as
many
a
visitor
without extra charge. Price 50ct*. Sold by
othertie never investigates this room.
“You can help me,” I said, firmly, F- T-Boisz.
He always says there is nothing in it, had done before, aud tried to peer into sary digging, and if the matter was to be ! written in English considerably worse
the interior.. The flame lighted up tbeir carried on at all, I must get somebody to than that which he used when speaking. "and I must toll you.”
and passes on.”
Guiteau hasn't broken down yet, but be has
"You discovered it here?” she asked,
This
is
the
purport
of
itThe
night
be
­
faces,
ajid
I
could
see
that
that
of
Miss
help
me.
“I should like ever so much to go in
commenced asking folk* how It feels to be
We put on our hats and started fortlie ! fore he had penetrated into the chamber quickly.
Mallette was filled with a painful anx­
there,” said Mias Mallette.
hung. So far so good.
•« Yes," I said. " in this fort.”
“I’ve been in,” I answered, “find iety lest I should Im* discovered. But I house of Madame Tonnin. Before we hail ■ in th» southeast bastion. He had unex­
Her face turned hard and a little pale.*
knew this could not be, and it amused gone half way we met her. In St. Angus- j pectedly reached the wall of the cham­
have gone all over the room."
By Universal Accord,
“How on earth did you do that?” ahe me to stand there and look at them, feel­ tine you meet everybody every time you : ber, anil had been unable to resist the -“-There are some things people think
Ayer's Cathartic Pills are the best
go out We took the little lady to a re­ temptation of cutting a hole through it,-- they discover, when there is really nothexclaimed. “I should have been afraid ing certain they could not see me.
of all purgatives for family use. They
ingto
discover,
”
she
said.
“
It
was
the
tired
seat
iu
the
Plaza,
and
there
I
told
j
Then,
with
a
candle
tn
his
hand
he
had
“What a perfectly horrible hole!” said
of wells and pitfalls. Please tell me all
are the product of long, laborious, and
about it. But are you not tired of stand­ one of the ladies. “Not a window or her my plans. I did hot exactly desire entered the hidden dungeon. The won­ same way with that other tiling. I must
successful chemical investigation, and
place for any light to come in! And this to communicate these to the French lady, ders of the place were more than he। really go now." And she slipped down
ing?”
their extensive use, by physicians in
from
the
rampart.
but
Miss
Mallette
had
talked
with
such
could
describe.
Against
the
northern
•• Not a bit," I answered. “ I have outqf room is so dim there is no spare
their practice, and by all civilized na­
practical force on the subject that I really wall were three iron cages, each con­
"Miss Mallette,” I said, quickly, “you
long wished to explore this room, be­ light to go in at the door.”
tions. proves them the best and most
"What could it have been used for?” had no arguments with which to answer taining a skeleton; on the outstretched. really ought not to go until I tell you
cause beyond it lies1 the unknown fifty
effectual purgative Fill tliat medical
her.
If
she
had
been
a
man,
I
shotaid
not
hands of one of these was a massive ring. what I have to say. I have discovered
feet of the southeast bastion. I was asked one.
science can devise. Being purely veg­
atraid to take a lantern into the room, _■ "It must have been a prison." a gentle­ have allowed her to take command in Against the eastern wall stood two skel­ that I love you."
etable uo harm can arise from their
At
these
words
she
looked
up
at
me,
etons,
chained
in
an
upright
position.
man
answered.
for if thy old sergeant or any one else saw
use. and-beinp sugar-coated, they are
Madame Tonnin listened with great in­ On a square stone in the center of the and another change passed over her
"Impossible,” said another. "Noone
me groping alxrut there, he would inter­
pleasant to take.
In intrinsic value
fere with my investigations, which could live in it a day. Thu very dark­ terest, wagging her little head in affirma­ the room was a bronzo jar partly filledI feature* If I could read what was possand curative power* no other Pills
with
ancient
coins
and
medals.
By
the
1
i
ng
in
her
mind.
It
seemed
lobe
adeness
would
drive
a
person
crazy."
”
•
tion
at
every
sentence.
‘
'Ze
ex-plor-as-M
I wished to keep to myself; so I deter­
can be compared with them; and every
The anxiety on Miss Mallette’s face now own, ’ve ex-cav-as-ze-own, zat w right, I side of the jar was a roll of manuscripts। lightful feeling of relief. Her face turned
mined to go in aud cautiously feel my
person, knowing their virtues will
rosy, her eyes sparkled and then she
way about the place. I tapped the gtyw deeper, and I wished 1 could assure ’are se man. He is my nephew, Mon­ tied together with leathern thongs.
employ them, when needed.
They
I could
At this point in the letter Miss Mal­• looked down and said nothing.
ground before me with a cane as I walked her that the darkness would not drive sieur Seemon. He is at my house at zis
_
keep the system in perfect order, and
me cfazy. The burning papers soon- , time. Ho is an excavateur par excellence. lette looked at me without saying ak not understand her.
..
... I maintain in healthy action the whole
“ Did you think that this was the 1dismachinery of life. Mild, searching and
After I had been in there ten or fifteen went out, and I wished the people would Zat is se dream of his soul. You will find word. I looked at her, and we wanton.
dirwtlv.
I effectual, they are especially adapted
go away, for I was obliged to remain he is ze man for whom you search. H«
There were other objects in the roomi covery I had made?” I said, directly.
“ No,” she answered, looking up foi
perfectly motionless and still.
If 1
for j to the needs of the digestive apparatus,
is like ze rocks, ze stonns, ze”—looking which the writer had not time to exam­In’’t (U.mnf'pmentH &lt;»f wliielt itwav
groaned or-3.p»ta‘n; i~'bciwvc T—ehottid- • around for furtherJlloUes—“ze bench of ine; but in the southwest corner, to the! a moment “I thought—and I didn
Eave frightened some of them into co’pvalsions. Atiss Mallette waa the last to
lade a discovery.” .
wm it’" cried Mil* M*l-। leave.
tall mummy, completely clad in armor. I
-------------------------Evidently sht? did not know the
-Yoi. wthnl."
the little Wr.wiU
•‘A mummy io armor!” exclaimed I
—Deacon: What is a proved
party, and hud only joined them when
Miss Mallette.* with a buret of laughter. | thing to aliug at another man.
sue »*w them aj.proacbing *ne lark a wag of her head.
For sale by all druggists.

- APP’J. in

�■

ONLY $60.00.
xconrutTEUNK or
But all

•Wck. H^bkdjounwywirtout

foci light. On muurr approach h, &gt;&gt;•
that there wm * k,*n &lt;*1
nnimnle.
rimilnr » the pridrte dog o&lt; thli country.
They had mounds all around the green
spot and seemed to be very numerous.
Whan he rode up among them they all
scampered into their holes, but soon
came out again and became quite tame.
He rode up to the spring or well and
found it to be an excellent quality of
. water.
After quenching his thirst he began to
look around ana investigate the new
camp. The strangest thing that his at­
tention was called to was the similarity
of the hole from which the water flowed
to the holes made by the &lt;logv Tho
springs flowed from the entranre of a
moundTust. the same,as that in which
the dogs liveiL-Lut—it was muchlyger
and ofi top was a large basin. Noticing
this/fact and knowing that water was-a
great distance off, he began an investi­
gation. and came to the conclusion that
the little dogs had borodthe well. Acting
upon this decision he captured two of
them and started for his ranch. On ar­
riving there a pen was made in a dry
place and the little fellows pul in it. In
a few days the work began. They worked
very rapidly and soon had a hole fifty or
Sixty feet deep. They seemed to be aide
to penetrate the hardest kind of soil, as
they kept right on, stopping for nothing.
One would work «n the bottom of the
hole while the other brought the dirt to
Hie top. On the fifth day they seemed
to be exhausted, and he gave them some
water. This stopped work .for several
days, but they soon got thirsty and went
to work as hard as ever. On the morn­
ing of the eighteenth day they both came
up with a rush, followed by a stream of
water. How deep they had gone it was
impossible to tell, as the hole was not
straight.
•• What kind of looking animals are
they?” asked the-reporter.
•• Very similar to the common prairie
dog in size and color, only they nave a
bony snout, and the claws are much
longer and larger. They soon became
tame and make nice pets. But I will
have several of them down here in a few
days, and vou can take a look at them.”
•* What do you propose doing?”
“ 1 think there is a large country south
■ of here that can be utilized .with the as­
sistance of my pet dogs. I feel sure that
every part of Southern California and
- Arizopa can be cultivated where the land
is rich enough to raise grain. 'These an­
imals will find wyter if it is within four
'
thousand feet of the -surface. 1 know it
bMNRMft I have tried them.”
•• How is II that, nothing haCs been said
about this discovery ?”
■ “ O. that's all n-ht. I have kept it
to myself, and shou.d have done so now,
but. ruy friend here hail given it away
before I saw you, and I thought I would
tell you the whole story, anu ask you to
say nothing about it, for several reasons.
I don’t want it known until 1 am sure
that it will work in this country. If it
will work, I intend to import a number
to this country aud Arizona.”
If this animal will do what Captain
Liftchild says it will. Southern California
will be A flourishing country within a
few yeaja.—Lot Angeles (Cal-} Times.

Draw Poker os n Disease.
Draw poker is a must fasdaating yet
deceiving game. Ono of the peculiari­
ties of the game is that the beginner, as
sooq as he finds out that one certain
kind of a hand beats another, aud that a
bluC if successful, beats any hand,
thinks he can play th'- game better than
any man. If he holds a poor hand once,
and beta big on it, and scares out an old
veteran, when he rakes in the money he
cocks his hat on one side and thinks how
rich he might have been if he had learned

play poker and gel

on playing,
he wins his hat is
cocked on oi .
he wean it straight At first it is on
one ride most of the time, then he gets
to wearing it straight pretty frequent,
until finally he loses every dollar he has
got and goes oat and clubs himseliCountninea who think they can play a
pretty good game of poker, find them­
selves m large cities, and they are not
contented till they get into a
a game,
game, antT
anef
nine times in tea they get so everlast­
ingly scooped that they can’t tell their
own names till they look at it pasted on
the inride of their hats. However good
a . man plays there is always somebody
that plays better, and they are always
laying for the fellow that can’t play aS
well as they can. while the countryman
is always laying for some one that can
play better. There is no game better
calculated to take the conceit out of a

seem to know half a« much as we did.
A uiJiu has to have the conceit taken
out of him about eleven times before it
will stay out, but after he has once got it

Ills

lire alligator tour tevi long in * pia«
where nt? one would ever expand, to find
such a “varmint.”
About eighteen
months ago the zoological garden loaned
to tlie exposition a young alligator two
feet long to adorn the cascade in Horti- •
cultural Hall and give an appeartnee of
wildness to the artificial scene by the
presence of animal life of a. repulsive
kind. The alligator behaved very well
for some time, and satiated his appetite
with bugs, flies and mosquitoes.
But
one night he disappeared, and he was
mourned for lost or stolen, although the
commissioners thought that there was no
man in Cincinnati mean enough to carry
away an alligator. In a few months the
absence of tiw loathsome creature was
forgotten, and it was believed that be
wandered off and died,
On Friday Mr. Tom Wise sent for Mr.
P. J. Hogan to connect the street gas
with tbo Music Half building. It will be
remembered tliat* the Elm Street front of
Horticultural Hall is about three feet
above the level of the part used for the.
cascade and exhibit of plants. Into this
raised portion Mr. Hogan went boldly
with a wrench and lantern, but he had
scarcely disappeared from view when *
most unearthly yell was heard, and the
poor plumber without lantern, hat or
tools, rushed out to where the astonished
Wise and his assistants stood. Hogan’s
hair stood up like bristles on the fretful
porcupine, and his eyes rolled with such
on expression of terror that the other
men shrank from him.
Mr. Wise, thinking the. man frightened
without cause, undertook to explore the
cavern and beard the monster in his den,
but be was only absent a few seconds,
and made quicker time in reaching day­
light than Ilogan. He staid long enough,
however, to find out that the reptile was
an alligator, and at a rapidglance seemed
to measure four feet iu length. Here
then, was the alligator which was supiiosed. to be lost, and Hogan had found
him. It had probably crawled into this
retreat and hail hibernated in the moist
marshy ground. The food which Mr.
Alligator hnd indulged in probably con­
sisted of nits aud small bugs and insects.
At any rate he is still alive and has in­
creased his length during his mysterious
absence about two feet. But there seems
to l»e a dis|KMition to let him severely
alone, as the gas has not yet been con­
nected. Wise and II&lt;&gt;gan declare they
are satisfied to let him stay. The inge­
nuity of man will probably capture him
at last, and with the help of one hun­
dred men. with clubs and a derrick, it
is probable-the festive alligator will be
sixin a gay corpse. Mr, Wise will take
up the floor to-day, and, with ropes M ill
remove his alligatorslaip. • The reptile
should be taken back to the home of his
younger days at the Zoological garden,
and preserved for having ahistory more
romantic than any of h!s species.—Cin­
cinnati Enquirer.

B

f ien. Carriages, Wheel Harrows and

02010001020202020201020102021006240200000001020200020002020201350302020002020001000101022
Porous
Cultivators, Mounted Seeders,

and 4 kinds of Plows.

;

REED'S GENUINE SPRING TOOTH HARR W
ROAD SCRAPERS, SQUARE DRA8S, GRIND STORES,
.

.

Common, and hung ready for use. ,

.

MEW ING- MAOHINES.
PLOW POINTS for the Oliver Chilled. Wiard, Three Riv­
ers, Bryan, Cale, Curtis, Dodge, Robinson
And many other Plows.
In fact, wc keep a full and complete Block of first cla»» Hardware and Farming Tool«. Call
and see them txdore buying.
.
H-c«c»c otct taWujjsl.;
: usax»rt}y umtaed tfc.t

50 Wagons
FOR SALE! NEWJICi

Im’s Capcine Porer
SEABURY&amp;JOE

-

.

Msnafactamg Cbwnte.
NUKE KKM£tfv«T~i.As-.
t-EAtrS teaM GP*—"'—

OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE

WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH

THREE INCH TIRE,

fStrSWAMTEL

AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING

BETTER THAN COMMONJTIRE.
We believe the Three inch Tire is destined to come
into general use. Call and see them.

Ulis m«nng Saw Machine L:

Sold by 0. L Glasgow, Nashville, Mich.

BENTLEY BROS. &amp; WILKINSHastings, Mich., Sept. 15th, 1881.
rirttt of the sama. Send for our free ctocc r.

rAjror^.;..
I .map* f«r^Jv««

.
8500 Itenni
WE will pay the »boc« — • •
fiver complaint. dyepepsin
Uon, conellpaUOn or oof « •&lt;.—
with Wert’s Ver-table Li. • JU
tl m are ttrieilv eotnplt'-- •

Bismarck as a Patient.

It may be interesting to man/’of our
readers, says the Berliner Tagblatt, Co
take a look -at tlie most powerful states­
man of the age, the “iron” Chancellor,
on his weak side, namely, as a patient
The Prince’s chief trouble, as is well
known, is a painful nervous affection,
which the physicians call “sciatica,” and
which they greatly dread on account of
its obstinacy, beside this, the Chancellor
suffers at times from an inflammatory
swelling of the veins in the feet, and like
all other mortals, occasionally from light­
er indispositions, colds and indigestion.
It seems'that the patient is as inconsist­
ent regarding the methods of his treat­
ment as he is in other matters. With the
same feeling of absolute indifference
which, according to his own words, he
manifests in certain political tomes, he
also deals with theexigencics of the medi­
cal science. Homeopathy or allopathy—
it is all one to him, as long as tie believes
one or the other will cure him. It has
even happened that he allowed himself
to be treated by an allopathic physician,
and soon afterby a homeopathist. When
at Friedrichsruh, ho sends for Privy San­
itary Councilor Dr. Dohn, of Hamburg,
who is an allopath. At Varzin. when
medical attendance is needed, the physi­
cian, also an allopath. in tho adjacent
town of Schlawe is applied to. When at
Kissengen, the Prince consults the wellknown Dr. Diruf, also an adherent of the
old achooL During his stay at Berlin,
however, he inclines to the homeopathic
treatment.
Since 1870 tho Oiancellor, aa well as
the whole of his family, are regular!y at­
tended by Sanitary Councilor Dr. Zwin­
genberg, one of the most noted repre­
sentaiives
of
---------f homeopathy
in Berlin. Xevertholew (at all events before 1870), the
Chancellor also frequently consulted the
present Director of the Imperial Sanitary
Bureau, Dr. Struck, (allopath). At pres­
ent Dr. Zwingenberg seems to be the
Chancellor’s only medical adviser, who
visits the patient twice a day, and has
frequently been sent for from Varzin as
well as from Friedrichsruh. Previously
Prince Bismarck had put himself in the
hands of the late Dr. Vehwmcyer, and
before him in those of Dr. Kleinschmidt,
occasionally, also. Dr. Mertens, all of
them bcmeopattusta.
The Prince has
frequently expressed the opinion tuat he
is less coiicernt*d about the mode of treat­
ment than about the result of the snm.’.
At times he goes so far us to insist upon
being restored to health and activity
within a specified time; if tlie physician

»e veffttafeb &lt;

RU P
Ct-rts! without m opendoi, • r tS
Inflict by Dr. J. A. Hh»tnv&lt;n-- M- 1
Bni-owny New York. H-i-’lw! •
1c IlkeneM of bad tun bel i&gt;- »Mi*a
ed for 10 eenln.

NO-PATEN I

CHICAGO, KOCK ISLAND &amp; PACIFIC KT
The Qreat Connecting Link between tho East and the West!
IU main line runs from Chicago - *------- "
Bluff*. paa«ln* through Joiiot. Otiaw
G-nesea, MoUoe. Boglalaad^ Dsyw
1.1 berty, Iowa City. Marengo. Brookly:
Ims Maine* itbo capital ot lowax Stu

— «—

—

irentnsg Unes toTt "e

MLS. A M.S., and P,
ifwAMiuerov*HxwiTr, with P-. a A St.

Fining
munnoiis
uniw

charts, nod tdrlse ;&gt;•« «
respondent* Stricth eon!
thorn of any rvltablr see

CE06S-CUT A Cl

ATTENTIOI! SA
Prices on *

ERRORS OF YOUTH.

PIMPLES.

A (JentlrHian who sulfercd tar jeon from N&lt;r.
1 wIH mail tFrart tea rreipetbr a simple V»®»’
out debility. Premature decay, and ail the eCi-cts
fyouthful 'ndlacnih*. will lor the take of Mil table Balm that wifi rrnior-T*r&gt;. Freckles, Plmp•ring humanity,
frro U&gt; all who need it Uw Im and Bioicbra. leavlnit the skin soft. clear and
_ । .11. ...... &lt;_____ ____________.... . _
teeautffnl. ale-, instructions lor prndqclne • luxnrk
ant growth of hair on a IwM I:-*-! «■ so uoth .ihee
Addrcm. Incloaiiw&gt;.. wainn, BPS. VASDKLP *
CO., If Barclay 8t.. X. Y.

CONSUMPTIVES.

Circle saw guuimteg ai
up to W teehee, H
40 teeh, Gtuumcd, &lt;£.(■

�RECEIVING OUR STOCK OF

GOODS FOB THE SPRING TRADfl
--------- AND ARE ^SELLING THEM---------

Clear Down!

tteMth.

•S0.vm.Sl having boon matte good.

tervst in his owe ottered by General Grant.

THE CAREFUL MAN IS EVER ON THE ALERT
to take advantage of favorable opportunities.

Fogg Of &lt;70,000.

Personal and Political.
the United States Senate on the Uh provides
that the Presidential Electors of each Bute
shall meet and give their votes the second
Monday in January next following their Bp­
reported to pint
be Choctaw Natiot

fee u counsel for the Company was estab­
lished.
Ths Constitutional Convention of Utah asPreaident Joseph F. Smith.
.Court of Rhode Island, died on the 10th, la
Providence.

pursuant to its lava existing on the day fixed

relieving from the

evidence of their
lawful • title,
aud
shall govern in the count by ’Congress', that

slandering Bismarck.
Iris announce*^that the Dalmatian taw
ruction tn CrivoStto has been quieted,
.
D* Lssssrs authorises a contradiction -\&gt;f

from which but one return has bean received
to dtoebanre.

icncral'H, In the Com­
ln the Third Auditor’s
OlhinJ submitted a

ful

tribunal

of

shall

of such fltate tribunals is Che lawful tribunal,
tho vole of the Electors apjxolnted by that

Melsturc,-----

No matter how disguised, that prompt paying customers
must make good to the dealers »who sell on credit all losses
from poor debts, long time accounts, sickness, failing crops,
loss of property, or dishonesty of other customers.
’ sZ-That the merchant who sell on credit must take into ac­
count all the probabilities above mentioned when he offers his
merchandise for sale. And these losses amount in the aggre­
gate to a fair yearly income—aJoss which he could not long
sustain were there no remedy, but there is a remedy and that
remedy is in the PROMPT PAYING CUSTOMERS.

NO BETTER INVESTMENT

A
Axono* dynamite mine was discovered ou
the 7th beneath the Nicholas Railway at the
fourth station from Moscow.

7th were about to throw a torpedo Into tho

character.

Can be made, if necessary, than to hire money and pay
for your merchandise as you purchase it.

• W JhO S-l±iZE-iZCj

°n.....------ substance, 1
Mineral Muter (Ash.)

ricultural
100 Ib». of

the nutriment ol

beef being not qply more tender and juicy,’and
of a much finer quality than when fattened ou
other feed, but they are more &lt;
for market The excellence a
the English Beef and Mutton,

tingulshcd agricultural chemist*,—one pound
of thl* McaPbdng equal to over 3 lb*. of oata
45 core, 5 lbs. of Eby. 8 lbs. of wheat barn, 3)
IK* nt
_Z
____ ■ -

THE NASHVILLE MILLS.

Prints for 6 cts. yard.

JNO. H. ROE.

| J HK Jt DURKEE,

and wounded eight.
rately, shall decide to ba the authorized one.

termined contest between two or more seta

bin to

Indian

Hut­
to tbc cattle trade

on

Mr. Mackey, tho
n traduced *tiU - to

Domestic.
was rendered insane by being thrpwn out of
‘ employment; on the.7th killed his son at the
DmrATCHBSon the “th from the flooded
country state that.considerable suffering still
•Elated, but the water waa gradually falling.

.

gnats were destroying large numljcrs of
borncsand cattle.
Adam M. Dun doh h, late County Treasurer
at Bsadlng, Pa-, was oa the 7th discovered to
be a defender to the amount of &gt;30,000.
Tmx Ogrrtral Bonk af Indianapolis, with a
capital stock of &gt;100,000, dosed its doors on
tbo 8tb on account of a defalcation of &gt;35,QUO

Mr*. Cynthia Winsmcwe, aged fifty-eight, and
Mnr. Elizai«th Smith, aged fifty-six, three
aauie half .hour, at Philadelphia ou the 9th.
A TORNAbo at Fort Riley, Kan., on the 8th
unroofed nearly all the buildings, injured two

counted which the two bouseo, acting sepa­
rately, shall decide to be the lawful Electoral
votes. The bill aho provides that if the
counting of votes shall not have been com­
pleted before the fifth calendar day next After
the first joint meeting of the two houses, no
recess shall bo afterward taken by cither
bouse until the counting is finished.
Th* Peru-Chill inquiry was continued at
Washington on the 7th. Mr. Shiphrrd testi­
fied that the prospectuses of the Peruvian
Company were chiefly sent to Senators. Being
further pressed about sending copies to mem­
bers of Congress, Sill pherd at first declined to
give names, but finally stated that the only
member of tho House whom he recollected of
sending a copy to was Mr. Hewitt, of New
York. Seven letters from Mr. Hurlbut were
read, and Shipherd stated that they were all
the letters be had received from General Hurlbut, and he never saw him but once in rolaGenxkal Jack WnairroN, United State*
Marshal at New Orlean*, died of apoplexy on
the 7th in the office of Surveyor Finchback.
Gkmzhal W. L. Bvkt, the Boston railroad
man, wa* *trieken with paralysis at 8araion’a
Springs on th* 7th.
Senator Logan, of Illinois, has been com­
pelled to sojourn for a season at Hot Springs,
Ark., to seek relief from rheumatism. He
left for that locality on the moralngof the 7th.
Judge J. J. Lyon, editor of the Gilmer (Tex.)
Jtew Tune, wn» found shot dead in hi*-office a
fow morning* ago.
Chables Francts Adams, of Boston, whose
wealth is variously estimated at from &gt;4,000,000 to &gt;5,000,an, was recently swindled by
two bunko men out of &gt;17,500. The money
ha* been recovered and one of the swindlers
Indicted. Mr. Adam* has lately suffered a
great decline it his mental powers.
The New Yoek House af Representatives has
passed a bill providing for a Railway Cumml*-

•th by two thousand persons It teu cento each-

The Texas Legislature met on the Cth. A
MH has been introduced In the lower House
for the appointment of a Board of Railroad
Cotruntealoners to regulate passenger and
freight rates and provide against unjust dtocrimlnatiotL
Tire. Maine State Democratic Convention

The deaths from BmaB-i&gt;ox In Cincinnati

27th of June.
Tn* Tennessee Legislature convened, in ex-

rhlch

and the c**c? under trenj^nt were two hun-

tbo amount of &gt;100,000, bearing four per cent,
interest, were on tbo 8th offered to a broker in

। James Irving and

A wskkant was eworn out in Washington

for tampering with "the malls. She explains
that she opened a letter addressed to her
landlady fey mistake.
Rolan* Wokthinuton, editor of the Bos­
ton Traveler, has been nominated Collector
o' Custom* at Bostos.

petiltatoe, Mo., passed resolutions thanking

successfully laid by the * team rr Faraday.
•
A i'akty of 4*&gt; Italians at work on the West

law for the extirpation of polygamy.
Th* bill of exceptions k&gt; the ease of Chariea
J. Guiteau ww signed by Judge Cox at Wash­
ington ou the Sth. The blH mokes a pamphlet
at thirty-nine page*. There are thirty-two

oted iu the

states that attacks upon the Jews in Southern
Rusal* had recommenced, thirty shops and

British Columbia was visited by a tornado
on the 8th, which did considerable damage on
were drownedCablegrams on the fttb announced the de­
cease of Dennis Florence McCarthy, the poet,
at London, and of Charles Alfred Bcrtimld,
the French writer on legal xubjecta.
The appeal of President Arthur In behalf of
Lomson, the convicted murderer, of London,
is denounced by several German journals as
meddlesome, especially in a country uphold­
ing the Monroe doctrineThe President of the Austrian Council has
issued orde.s forbidding anti-Semitic 'meet­
ing*, and declaring it to be the duty of the
Government to protect the rights of every
subject, regardless of politics or religion.
Accordxxo to a Vienna dls;&gt;atch of the
10th bitter cold weather was experienced in
that region, killing the fruit crops and Injur­
ing the growing grain.
•
GoHTHCHAKOxr, the Russian Prime Minis­
ter, has been relieved of all cares of State.
Mahoottz, the merchant who abocondcd
from Montreal, after perpetrating swindle* tc
the amount of &gt;250,000, is to be permitted tc
return thither from Chicago and escape prose­
cution by making a complete confession. *
A St. PrTEiisnvRO paper on the 9th pub­
lished a special announcing that some whalers
hod seen a boat at Herald Island with several
dead bodies, and loose object* with the name
of “Jeannette” upoa tbem. .

visit hl* sister whose child has died in Paris.
Lord Macdonald undertook on the 10th tc
evict twenty tenants on theTsle of Skye, but

*pmmoa*e* were burned.

LATER NEWS.
Bbfoke the Peruvian Investigating Com­
mittee in Washington on tite 11th Mr. Ship­
herd positively declined to say under oath
Cocbet upon which he founded the Peruvian
Company. He also refused to tell who was
tbo author of the scaled letter sent by him to
Arizona, under cover to Minister .iuribut,
and to be delivered by the latter. Finally, In
answer to a question whether his client* had
received an injury from the Peruvian Govern­
ment, Shipherd said: "My clients did not
understand that they had received an injury
from the Peruvian Government.” The ex­
amination then closed for the day.
S. P. Rocndh wm on the 11th confirmed as
Public Printer by the United States Senate.
Cashier Ruth, of the Savings Bank at
Washington, Pa., was on the lltb discovered
to be a defaulter to the amount of &gt;60,000.
Ckaiuxs Moukib, after raising about &gt;70,-

Gringliams 8 to 11 cts.

Turkey Red Table Linen 50 to 55 cts.
Table Oil Cloth 28. Floor, best, 42 cts.
BootH and Shoes,
Hats and Caps,
Crenernl Clothing,
Groceries, Etc,
We are thankful for the liberal patronage given us in the
past under the old credit system and solicit its continuance
under the Ready Pay. We know we can be more serviceable
to you in the futuie than we could possibly be in the past.

COME AND SEE FOR YOURSELF.
Bring Your Butter!

}JE*RY ROE,

MEAT MARKET.

—r-PRALER.IN--------

Fancy and Staple

iQ-ROCERIES!

Fresh and Salt Meats. ■

NASHVILLE, MICH.

Btltw in i far if Hrhrpiuh fail fatale:
80 acres In Maple Grove, 45 cleared, 23 acre*
of Wheat, good Orchard, very fair buildings,
good spring near house. Price3,000. Payments
40 acres, 3 miles from Nashville. Fair house
and barn. Nearly all improved. Price fl ,U00.
40 ocrea, 3X miles from. Nashville. If sold
soon will take &gt;1,150.
25 acres, jn the village of Nashville. Must
be sold for what it will bring on account of
poo&lt; health of present owner.

Bring Your Cush! bargains In town. Price 1350.

QEO. W. FRANCIS,

PkopBigTOB

Office on second floor of Buxton's new brick

gain. Price &gt;1,600; part down.
House and Lot, on PhUJips street; the best

Bring Your Eggs!

------ OLD RELIABLE------

REAL ESTAT&amp; AGENTS,

CONSISTING IN PART OF

Smoiei Hams and Shotilden,

i SUGARS, TEAS,
COFFEES, SPICES,
SYRUPS, MOLASSES,
•’TARCH, SOAP,
IM THEIR 8EA8O?
CRACKERS. CHEESE,
BEST NICKLE SOAP IN TOWN.
SALMON.
WHITE FISH,
TROUT,
The Highest Market Price paid
MACKEREL,
for Hide*, Pelta. dtc.
HALIBUT,
r COD FISH.
Fresh Goods, Full Weights and
HERRING.
Satisfaction Guaranteed.
STEAM
COOKED
OAT
MEAL.
CROCKERY,
IIEMIY ROE.
GLASS WARE,
LAMPS.
FLOWER POTS,

House and Ixit, on State street. Price &gt;250,
half down down.
Goad House and four acre* of Land on Fran­
ces Street I*rice &gt;450.
House and lot on State St, bouse new: good
cellar and plenty of good water. For qgto at
&gt;700 or will exchange for farm property wear
Nashville cr Hasting*.
80 acres, IU miles from Nashville on the best
road leaving the village; all Improved except 8
acres; the remaining 8 acres good timber; la
well w*tere&lt;] by a never-falling spring. Good,
young orchard; buildings fair; 18 acres of
wheat on the ground; present owner engaged
in ocher business and will sell for S2,CjOU, &gt;!,0Q0 dofru, Imlance on tong time.
Vacant lot on Philips Bl Price &gt;190 if sold
soon.
LEE A DURKEE.

THE CROWN

Lard, by the lb. or barrel,

uds £. raatm Lra*.

OHIO

STONE

WARE.

TOBACCOS,
CIGARS,

TRYII OUR

PIPES,
FIFTY-CENT
TEA.
THE CROWN SEWING MACHINE.

IFEF* Remember we get no fancy pri
cts, but sell all goods as low aa the
lowest,.(quality considered).
Respectfully,

and raising money for sufferers of all kinds,
disappeared oa the 11th, leaving a wife and
&amp;lld behind.
Mas. Ida Gxkexjtt Smith, the eldest daugh­
ter of Horace Greeley, died «f diphtheria on
the 11th at Chappaqua, N. T., after an iUneu

CEO. W. FRANCIS.

yyA.ooNs&lt;

youngest being but one mouth old.
cAorado ou the 11th ap-

. KrTbe “Crown” come* Into the market
'he tart of all the nioc-lnes, but ha* aprung to
front rank at once from the fact tliat it ha* ta­
ken the pxxl feature* in all other machine*
and put them in one grand combination, maka thia the Handromeat, Largest, Most Silent
Lightest Running machine yet offered. All
the ‘-point*’’ that the cxperiecc of twenty year*
in all kind* of family and light manufacturing
work has proved to be absolutely good arc to be
found only In the “Crown.” Otter r

WAGONS,

exceptions also to the rulings of the Court de­
nying him a new trial, and overruling the mo-

WAGONS

Every device that la really desirable |
machines will be found in the “Crown.

Mlatoter of War was on the 11th discovered

.EA £. PINKHAM’S

fee was found dead in a ncigttoring field, havtug slain MmneL'with a knife

Made or

E. R. WHITE.

. .y,STABLE COKPOUHD.

OBSERVE, COIP ARE, REFLECT, ACT!

can and European merchant* oct of 84,000,000

Jmre been about &lt;1.000.

rery JuUy with Mr, BlMoe about Minister
Hurlbut'* relation to the enterprise, and
about Hurlbut'* imving sold out to tte Credit
iDdusirieL Witness said that Mr. Blaine
sent the following dispatch to Mr. Hnrlbut:

ft iMjurtrieh You must stop it.” Shipberd’s
testimony tended to show that Mr. Blaine hud
'» claim. I Witney said that Scnatoi
, of New Hampshire, told Mm that Mr.

NEW I DENTAL PARLOR.

Mbs. Francks Scoviliji, the Bister of GuiChicago, for the appointment of

ground of his insanity. On Ae 11th Guiteau
published a card in which he denounced Mr*.
Scoville and her husband as “nuisance*.”

bill was passed to restore Captain Corbin to

Vest

introduced a

general

bridge

lection to uavlgatioc. Mr. Cameron (Win.)

REABT FOR SALE!

BLACKSMITHING!
BLACKSMITHING!
BLACKSMITHIN81
BENNETT.

Nashville and vicinity that I have purchased

nentiy located over G. A. TRUMAN’S More.
.Ml kinds of DENTAL WORK done, from the
timplest operation tn tho moot difficult,—Arti­
ficial Palates. Irregular natural teeth *tra!ghteuod, teeth extracted without pain tor
eta;
one-half deducted when artificial work U made
AH wot k warranted, advice In regard to teeth
free call indree me.

JOSEPH COLE,

MEAT MARKET!
Freeh, Salt and Smoxed

&amp; WAGON REPAIRING
Li re and Let Live.

'

�dty, James Sterling, D.; Hamlin, Schuyler

think kindly of the Aoatm.

PhilFmin.

WEST BUN FIELD.

“* F-““&gt;

Warren, R.; Windsor,
D. Carleton,
f . G.
Total, 8 Republican*. 0 Democrat* and fbur

AN EX-CONSUL’S 8TORY.
To the Editor of the Brooklyn:
A late United Blates Consul at one of the
English Island ports, who is now a private
•Wheal looks
resident of New York, relate* the following
interesting story- He objects, for private
are daily fleeing to the woods, with a pipe iu
reasons, to having his name published, but
tended the examination at Charlotte last week
authorized the writer to substantiate his state­
tnuuuaj
"jment, if necessary, to refer to him, tn his pri*Wc are baring most beautiful moonlight
evening* now, and one can hear plenty of muidc
nice. Deferring to bja wishes, I hereby presBeu Coalbaugfa'a little boy of whom we
Boo E Res.
bouse cleaning.
VegltaUon b starting up nicely.

T*. amono “*

few nights ago a Wolf was seen skulking
around the country seeking whom he might
better take care of it, if not, fanners had better

otl*enri#e trying to
and in­
timidate. It would seem from D. C.
■hr H. C. Reed h Co’a circular that they
shriak from hooeet competition wich Is
always the life of trade, and, by a sys­
tem of bnll-donng trying to compr]
farmers to purchase their interior har­
rows. Onr Patent Improved Adjust­
able Spring Tooth Harrow, la a clean
cut, independent patent bv jtaelf and
an infringement ou no .other patent
whatever. We have given notice, and
hereby give notice that we shall bold
the above partie* tbeir co-eonspiratoni
and all who circulate said circulars ac­
countable to us to tlie Jn-.t extremity
for all damages «nd injury we may
sustain by reason of. such publication
and circulation. As to our responsi­
bility we respectful!v refer to any bank
or bmunem flnu in Kalamazoo, R. G.
Dan Al Or.. Bradstreets, or any other
commercial report.
CHASE, TAYLOR &amp;CO.,
. ■
Manufactures, Kalamazoo.

GRAND

RAPIDS

DI

STATION'S.

MiddWvtDf
Charlotte

BTATIONB.

1 HUrtt,.—

Charlotte,
Vermoett
Kuh rllta,

occupied by Mr. Burk.
condition is now able to be around the bouse

Now that election 1* aver, hand-shaking i*’

BISMARK.

tlie Presbyterian church, Rev. Bridenstin
otao popular as formcriv.
A sudden change of the weather oa Sunday preached, which made his the third sermon
for that day.
stiffened things wonderfully.
sowed hereabout* this spring.
Albassan Mix ha a very sick child, luflama- ■tarted out tlie buds so rapidly that the sap
’Th said Romeo King makes a tip top land-

to be located near Sable lake and operated by

“On my last voyage home from England,
some three years ago, in one of the Cunard
Emerson Kinn le displays a fine wire fence.
steamers, I noticed one morning, after a few
It days out of port, a ytfixng man bobbling about
on the upper deck, supported by crutches and
Mrs. Bowen returned from a visit among her seeming to move with extreme difficulty and
children, Monday.
not little pain. He was well dressed and of
Elma Hsmmond, will man I palate Fred Turn­ exceedingly handsome countenance, but his
limbs were somewhat emaciated and his face
er’ b farm this year.
Under-draining ia indulged in, quite exten­
sively thl* spring.

this week has killed the small fruits.
Cattle and swine can run the road unmoleal-

from VL Ville baa attended bis patients.
be the sentiment of a majority of the legal
derly election held in this town than the last % voters as represented last Monday.
School tn the Matteson dist. will begin on
this place to Wyoming Teritory last Saturday
H«xU,
ink. Ml» S. B.
J. c. Andrews removed from this town on
Tuesday, and carried with him the best wish­
The sawmill owned by Joel 8L John, located
es of his friends.
*
on the farm of Janies Bayles, has been moved
havoc In rosils and fields, washing gullies and over into the town of Woodland, on tlie farm
of Mr. Davenport, it having completed its
flooding low lands.
.
■'
« Subscription papers ere being circulated and work iu this place. (
While the inhabitants of Manitoba are shiv­
considerable being raised for the sufferers by
ering around with the tbennomerters twenty
the terrible cyclone.
Your correspondent being off on business
the gentle zephyrs of spring with the ther­
mometer from 60 to 86 above zero, thus jaw­
•entatlon in your columns.
A poor demented man bung himself in E. ing that be who resides in Michigan ought to
be content to let good enough alone.
some disease and despondency the cause.
The road across E. D. Williams’ land is clos­
WOODLAND.
ed lo the public, and unless the town build* a
road the east and wett *1*1 have to find other
Cold winds on Monday.
lines o communication.
L. Faul has an increase in hardware stock.
While the terrible cyclone was passing
Arch Emery moved to Carlton Center lost
through the southern part of this town the

“

rending a* steady and powerful a* tlwngh be-,
lug poured from the cloud*.
Give rae the hat. While on my way from
Marshall a few days ago, I met a gentleman I
had not seen for thirty years and recognized
him at first sightjsnd I didn’t owe him a debt,

C. Priest bad a cow killed by lightning last
Our new lisrncsa maker will be on band this
5. B-Anway was visiting* Lis many friends

Our dressmaker has gone.
Now who shall
nor did he owe me either.
we talk about next.
The other day Mr. Robart'c boy* were aiding
Mis* Hattie Carpenter returned home on
a dog to capture a woodchuck, nud »hilc chop­
Monday, from Bay City, ,
ping off a root the dog ran under the decend­
George Banleu has become a resident of our
ing axe. receiving the full
in the back,
village, be has bogbhtAustin, Stowell's house
which nearly cut the animal tn twain.

the truth is to listen hr a cough.

If a .ebok-

the truth, if not -‘rice verea.” The above is
the latest improvement* here, (not patented.)
At the beginfag of April, Dr. Adams had
among his pstlents in this town, four pcrwn»
who had bruked limbs. One a Mr. Northrup,
mere child who had a very- severe fracture of
account*.

Manitobian breese, Monday, with sufficient
freezing to endanger the peach crop.
Mr. Cicm. has returned from Ind., without

Beautiful cards may be seen, at J. ,C. Down­
ings, illustrating the condition of defeated can­
didates and tbeir constltutanta after town
meeting.
When mosquitoes stop praying can they be
called backsliders. They will soon be acting
the hypoerit, for while they are preying they
will be back-blUng.
8. J. Carrier who lies been our guest the past
week and looking up a home, left Monday for
his home In northern Gratiot Co., without ef­
fecting a purchase here.
A Miller boy found that powder was too soon
for him. Ho attended to Jwur the powder out
of the horn on a coal of fire. Well, you know

fug a big scare, but, happily, got out very well,
everything considered.
Whjtibt.

ASSYRIA.
Cold and rainy.
Jenny Mills has a badly scalded foot.
W. Reynolds of Allegan, Is in town.
A party at H. Bristow’s Saturday night.
Alex. Campbell is building a new house.
School commenced at the Center Monday.
Ed- Wadsworth has moved back to the mill.
Henry Mayo has commenced bls new Louse.
mill.
John Parks has built an addition to hh
bouse.
Mrs. Styles has gone to Climax to make

The Tompkin* boy* have bought a new top
Jeff Houghtcn says if those girls come into buggy.
The new sheds are nearly done at the M. E.
girt, he will expose them.
&lt;
church.
Those fellows that went into Mr. Whistler’s
The staging school has dosed at the Briggs
bouse one night last week, done some tall ron- chimb.
Wm. Lewis has laailt a stone culvert over the
. George Smith's jour left du Bunday. He did ditch north of R. Nickerson’s.
not like anv place where he could not get hot
School commenced at the Briggs school h use
dr.&gt;;« to take the enb-srebs out of bis throat
Monday, under the instruction of Helen Mills.
Mr. Whistler went away from bis home a
John Talbert gave r revolver, 78 cts., and a
short time since, and has not returned yet, and pack of cards fora watch and then sold the
bts creditors have taken tlie most of bls goods.
Our Germans mode some cake# on Good
Dail Shepard and wife have parted. Dad has
Friday, and the name is in German. and you moved bis goods to bls daughter's, Mrs. G.,
can't understand what they are until you Barn- Frecwins, his wife having fold her farm to her

father, J. Bloomer,
pretty thoroughly “soaked.”

PRICHARD VILLE.
Lottie Seovilk b better.

Mr. Pardon died from erysipelas on Tuesday
wrutng. He has been a resident of this town

erty, but some family difficulty and other mis­
fortunes had reduced him, financially, pretty

•.

HASTINGS.

who has moved into the

Saturday while John Mills was dr. ring bls
mustangs, the tugs came lose which »cared the

taking John over the dash, breaking the ton­
gue and dashboard and hurting Jobu .osdly.

coming summer.
Dana Bolyen has moved into tire house vaca­
ted by J. F. Winters.

About 180 wm raised for Rev. 8. D. McKee
at the donation at Mr. George Prichard*.
Oliver Lloyd Las returned to hU borne in

No certainty about spring yet.

in May.
Dr. Timmerman has bought Dr. Dover’s

his fortune--

The only child of Em. Busby died quite sod-

Thirteeuof the 86 applicants for eertfleatee
failed at the examination held lo this city.
Slwriff lloughtaUa went to Indiana last
little.
■
The Maxwell* will visit this city April 24th

companion, be at once attraced mv sympathies,
and I went yip to him as be leaned against the
taffrail looking out on the foaming track which
the steamer was making.
“ ‘Excuse me, my young friend,’ I said,
touching him gently on the shoulder, ‘you ap­
pear to Be an invalid and hardly able or strong
enough to trust youraclve unattended on an
ocean Voyage; but if you require any asalstanoe
I um a robust and healthy man and shall be
glad to help yoa?
“ ‘You are very kind,’ he replied, in a weak
voice, ‘but I require no present aid beyond my
crutches, which enable me to pass from my
stateroom up here to get the benefit of the sun­
shine end the sea breeze.'
“ ‘You have been a great sufferer, no doubt,*
I said, ‘and 1 Judge that you have been afflicted
with that moat troublesome disease—rheuma­
tism, whose prevalence and intensity seem to
tie on an alarming Increase tiolb in England
and America.’
.
“ ‘Youare right,’ be answered; *1 have been
its victim for more than a year, and after foilato find relief from medical skill have lately
d the Springs of Carlsbad and Vichy. But
they have done me no good, and 1 am now on
my return home to Missouri to die, I suppose.
I shall be content if life!* spared to me to reach
my motber'Sjprwiencc. She is a widow and I
am her only child.’
"There was a pathe* in this speech which af­
fected me profoundly aud awakened in me a
deeper sympathy than I had felt before.
I
had no word* to answer him, and stood silenU
ly beside him watching the snowy wake of the
ship. While thus standing my thoughts re­
verted to a child—a old year old boy—of a
neighbor of mine residing near my consulate
residence, who had been cured of n stubborn case
of rhsomatism by the use of 8u Jacob* Oil, and
1 remember that the steward of the ship bad
told me the day before that be bad cured him­
self of a ■ cry severe attaced of the gout in New
York just before his last voyage br the use of
the same remedy. I at once left my young
friend and went below to find tbo steward.
I
only found him off duty, but discovered that
he bad a bottle of the Otl In his kicker, which
he ha&lt;i carried across tlie ocean In case of an­
other attack. He readly parted with it on my
representation, and hurrying up again, 1 soon
persuaded the young man to allow me to take
him to l&gt;ia berth and apply the remedy. After .
doing so I covered him up snugly tn bed arid
requested him not to get up until I should sec
him again. That evening I returned to his
etaetroom and found him sleeping peacefully
and breathing gently.
I roused him and in­
quired bow be felt. ‘Like a new man,' he an­
swer with a grateful smile. I feel no pain and
am able to stretch mr limb* without difficulty.
1 think4’11 get up.’ ‘No, don’t get up to-night,
I said, ‘but let me rub you again with the oil,
and in the mortiingyou will be able logo above.
•All right,’ he said, laughing. I then applied
the Oil again, robbing bls knees, ankl cs and
arms thoroughly, until he said be felt as if he
had a mustard poultice ail over his bodv. I
then left him. The next morning when 1
went upon deck for a breezy promenade, accord
- ------------ my patient waiting
for me with a smiling face, and without bls
crutches, although he limped in his movements
but without pain. I don't think I ever felt *o
happy in my life. To make a long story abort,
I attended him closely during the rest of the
voyage. *ome four day*—applying the Oil every

slstance, to mount the hotel omnibus, and go
to the Astor House. I called on him two davs
later, and found him actually
tag bls Jrunk, {trvparatory to

The letter of M. D. Leggett &amp; Co.,
is rather old dated, Joly 12th, 1880.
(as printed by D. C. &amp; H. C. Reed &amp;
Co., in former issue this paper.) In
reply thereto we give the following
from the Grand Rapids Daily Leader,
Tuesday, March 22,1881 :
xkpoktaxt

Malon Center has returned from Dakota.
Two of Geo. Girkcys children hastbedipbth-

Throws CoMbss»n«l fflrepia* Can to
Grand Rapids and Detroit. All trains)

ufjvscrrox dknizd.

Eggleston A Co., defendants,
hearing before Judge With) r. in the U. 8.
Court, at Grand Rapids. Mic
two days, on motion by Reed
-----------junctiqn to restrain the defendants from man­
ufacturing and selling Spring Tooth Harrows,
ants to file security for coat* in all cases within
ten days. The decision was based upon the
ground that complalnaate made no cxee that
entitled them to an injunction. Leggett A
Leggett; of Cleveland, and G. H. Mason, of
Kalamazoo, appeared for the complainants.
Cobum A Thacbcr, of Chicago, Hughes,
O'Brien A Smiley, of Grand Rapids, and N. H.

Whenever yon need the beet grades
of Agricultural Implements, Hardware,
Stoves and Sewing Machines.
Call
and see me.
.

FRANK C. BOISE.

DAKOTA
May be the place to

BUY A FARM’ BUI

THE PLACE TO BUY

CErkBeot.

RHEUMATISM,

Meuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago,
Backache, Soreness of the Chest,
Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Spell­
ings and Sprains, Bums and
Scalds, General Bodily
Pains,
Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted
Feet and Ears, and all other
Pains and Aches.

GROCERIES,
PROVISIONS,

GOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AKD DEALERS
IN MEDICINE.

VOG.HI j

CROCKERY,

HANGING LAMPS,

CO.,
, P- Sjz

______________

3ROWMS

GLASSWARE,

IRON

And everything kept in a first class stock of

C. W. SMITH’S
R. DICKINSON A €O
----- NEW------

dog beaded them off and drove them back to
the buggy.
.
H. H.

CARLTON.
Mr. and Mrs. F- Willtworth have moved to

1680 Third avenue. New York.

Cold, colder, coldest.

BROWS IRON BITTERS are
pajier. which stood upon the table,
‘My good friend,
what that tai'

CUSTOM FLOORING MILL

just purchased

requiring n complete tonic; esycdally Ind igcKtlon, I&gt;y spepsia, IntermitXent Fever*. Want of Appetite,

READ i FOR BUSINESS

Mr. Crawford cut hh foot with an ax quite

er what has saved her 390'8 life and restored
him, to her tn health. And with it I would like
Samnal Albright is giving instructions tn to cam’ you along also, to show her the face of
him, without whom, I should probably never
have tried it. If you should ever visit the litWm. Mathews and Joos Hall has sold their tie village of Sedalia, in Missoyri, Charley
Tow send and his mother will welcome you to
farms to Jake Bogers.
tbeir little home, with hearts full of gratitude,
Harrison Carpenter has moved Into the old and they will show vcm a bottle of St. Jacobs
Oil enshrined in a silver and gold casket, which
Rumor says that Ruf as Vester attempted to

charm on

CUSTOM GRINDING

that will not blacken the teeth or
giro hcsMlaohe. Sold by al! Drxiggiats at $J.oo a Untie.
BROWN CHEMICAL CO.

razor was taken out of Lis hands by bls dough-

tlie north part of oar township for quite a num*

with mutaal good-will and eateesri, and a few
weeks afterwards I recicved a tetter from him
telling me be was Id perfect health and coctataing many graceful ex preMkiM af his affecUonDON’T DIE IN THE HOUSE.

EATON COUNTY.

FLOUR. MEAL AID MILL FFED
BKWJMtK OF IMIYADOM.

Our

Charlotte ba* a new fire taU.

Rapid*.

M uisl n.r.i.uig upcnn uir rvi-.l
as their interest. If thia Ge ti

DISSOLUTION NOTICE.

the digestive organa.

irachns

rictatty.

Graham Flour

THAT MUSICAL WONDBI

�to rimplity-the year’s
—A Western editor received a tetter ! .‘‘I**’
h?f brJn dr?
from a subscriber asking him to publish •
™ ™ b“I? ieIY *
boen
for^oute
reS
’ lnX
1x11
a cure f&lt;
----------___tree
_____w&lt;5ini
_ ___
” but de beoute say ^&gt;7
dey
no.___
...oa
rr™. . rnr- u»Ul M
’“‘J»
* ft™*
that he to..ukl
______
____ _______ ,
__
,hu ailed
xil«l the
&lt;h. wonM-.V.
wunw-.V. T.
r. ftrt.
HM. —T ™
d’m 100,1“k" iito
* dr*
knew what
7—
—A woman recently walked with an
infant child from Philadelphia to Chica- all ofer de bants, you know?

“MART SMITH."

“A lecture, ehF’ said Deacon Hobson,
chancing the tobacco leisurely from one
cheek to the other, as he stood en­
tranced before tho bulletin board of
the Stub Mountain Lyceum. ‘‘And
upon tho ‘ Bights of Women?” Well. I
swan! Mis' Hobson, she'll be a-wantm'
to hear it,* an’ I shouldn’t wonder If
Jemtmy Ann set up her dander, she’d
go into the bargain. Gals is always
racin’arter every new idee. And p’raps
it’s a good thing to stir us country folks
up—a rousin’ good lecture once in a
while. Tickets twenty-five cents. Wai.
I’ll think about iu”
. •
••A lecture?” said Dr. Briggs, the
newly-fiedgtd M.D., who had just hung
out his guttering blue-and-gold sign;
“and respecting women’s rights? 1
cannot say that 1 'approve of the subjeetphut^a new comer/like myself must
show himself in_pijbiic, and* there are
so few opportunities in Stub Mountain.
Unen the whole, 1 think that I will take
‘•Women’i rights?” said old Mrs.
___ _____
.J always tormenting the
Selectmen for the privilege of franchise
on election-day, ami who went out to
gather her owu hay in harvest-lime,
with a man’s boots and rather more
than a man’s strength. “I’m powerful
glad on'L The subject needs agitation
iu a place like this, where there's was
than Egyptian darkness. 1*11 go, if it
costs
me a whole week’s butter
, money.”
And thus, in various stylos and from
.various motives, tho Stub Mountaineers
commented on and approved of tho lec­
ture which was to be delivered at the
lyceum on that Wednesday evening.
’Squire Dodley stroked his long beard
as he checked his gray pony before the
the village store.
“I suppose my girls will insist on
going,” said he; "but there are so few
things going on at Stub Mountain that
it seems a pity to deny them a little re­
creation.”
’
And the landlord of the Stub Mount­
ain Hotel chuckled.
“It was an ill wind that blew good
to nobody,” he said. “ and any jmpular
' sensation was good for business.”
This was on Tuesday. Upon tho
Wednesday morning, a stout gentle­
man. in a chaise, drew up to the hotel
and strutted-up to the bur, with a very
rubicund face and little, fiery eyes.
“ Mary Smith lectures here to-night?”
said he.'
“1.guess you’re about right there,
’Squire,” said tho landlord, feeling in
his pocket for the bundle of tickets
which tho lyceum proprietor had au­
thorized him to salt. “A pop’lar subjeck, too. You can read all spout it on
the bulletin-board out there, aud------ ’’
“ I forbid it!” said the stout gentle­
man, growing redder and more a[x&gt;pleclic with every moment.
£' Land o’ Goshen!” said tho land-

“ She is my wife,” said tho stranger.
“ My name is Smith—Zerubbabel Smith
—aud 1 won’t be disgraced by any of
this public-lecturing business!”
* “ Yes, Lknow.”- said the landlord;
“ but I don’t b’liove the law will up­
hold ye in it, ’Squire, arter the tickets
are sold and------ ”
“Hang tho law!” shouted Mr. Zerub­
babel Smith, bringing his closed list
down among the glasses with a bang.
“ I don’t care two straws for the law!
My wife is my wife, and I won’t have
her making a Merry-Andrew of herself
here or anywhere else! When do you
expect bar?”
“The room was engaged from twelve
o’clock.” faltered the landlord; "but

“ Very well,” roared the red-faced
man. "PH just go and stroll around
the village, and you let me know when
she arrives—d’ye hear?”
Mr. Zefabbabel Smith had hardly be­
taken himself to the shadow of the old
elms on the village green, when an eld­
erly woman of a starched appearance
came in, with a striped carpet-bag on
one arm and carrying a gingham um­
brella in the other hand.
“ Is this the Stub Mountain Lyoeum?" said ahe, primly.
" No, marm!” said tho laudlord.
“ This ’era’s the tavern. The lyceum
ain’t open till eight o’clock. Want to
bqy tickets for the lecture?”
. *• Certainly not!” said the elderly fe­
male.
"Props you’d like to engage a room.”
said the landlord, with a glance al the
earpel-bag.
“ Nothing of the sort!” said the lady.
The fount of the landlord's imagiua^
tion was hopelessly droned dry by this
time. He said nothing more, but stared
hard st the starched female.
“ I wish to see Miss Smith,” said she,
abruptly.
.
“ Eh’” said the landlord.
"Tho lecturer on—Women’s Kights,”
with a little grimance nt tho words, as
if they had a bitter taste.
“ She ain’t arriv’ yet,”'said the land­
lord
“ I do not intend, to allow this out­
rage on public taste!” said the lady, ve­
hemently.
“ Marm?* said the landlord.
“lam Miso Smith's motherl”
“ Be you?” gasped mine host.
•• And here I set until she presents
heraelf.” raid Mr*. Smith, depositing
beraeh on the nearest chair and clasp­
ing both hands firmly over the umbrella­
handle.
*
The landlord looked feebly at her.

TO ACCOMODATE THE PUBLIC
much profit from each acre through either
-the whole ’Tarsal ‘world aree?
Miss
of thew modes oh though the farm were
Smith ain’t here, nor Mary Smith ain’t,
divided up and represented a variety of
nor Mrs. Smith, nor none of the Smith*,
farm industries; butte accomplish this
u I know of!"
latter with sueceM, a number of head*
“Landlord.” said tho curly lady,
will bo required, and very like]ly an in­
•crewing up her thin lips, ••you are in ; go. Am there were no outstanding beta
crease of force. So the large fanner or
the conspiracy against moF’
' on her, and no gate money, she had to
dey vas damaged ? My gr-r-aciou«, Her­
stock raiser takes a position similar to
The landlord uttered a groan.
I
•
man, de longer you vas in de pisneu de
that occupied by the commander of a
“I wish to goodness I’d never heard
more you don't learn nodding. Vy, ven
Horae and Fann.
of the whole thing,'' said ho.
—Fat men are always the very essence a man comesun de adore und dells me seventy-four gun ship, a* compared With
the officer who controls a cruising sloop;
"But if there’s law aud justice in the of good nature. Nine out of ten will
Said the old lady, with solemn truthfuhMM^
land. I’ll)have ray rights!” screamed only laugh when you accidentally poks dot dose bant# vas damaged I dells him or the man who safely conducts a vessel “If ire could once see our Ilves as God sees’em
tho excited, lady,
“rll telegraph to them in the stomach with your umbrella, he vas misdaken, und X asks him if he
it
would
rkeer u* 'most to death."
sengers, m compared to the man who
Boston to a lawyer. I’ll have up the add the tenth will beg your pardon lot know a biece uf quadruple, vox finish,
needle point, hand dwisted vool from a runs a ferry. On the Same principle, one
EXPERIENCE THE BX8T GUIDE.
constable. I’ll-----being so big.—Rochester Exprea.
biece
vat
vas
von
ply,
cotton
stitched
Tba reason why women everywhere use
The landlord was vainly .considering
man is enabled to conduct a manufactur­
—Bismarck is a great man, but when und mitk beveled edge. Ven I ask him ing industry reoulring several hundred Parker'* Ginger Tonic ia, because they have
in his own mind whether it was best to
an English paiwr charges him with hav­ dot,he don’ t can say noding. Den I dell hands, provided the enterprise devotes learned by experience—the beat guide—Chat
under the counter, escape by the
ing a nose like a turnip dug out of the him dot de bants vas not damaged, und itself to one lino of work, whether this
back window or seize his grandfather’s
ground after a long winter, he feels the dot dcy vm made uf vot ves called in de
ick and kldncjs, wid other trouble of4be
rusty musket from the iron hook where
be the casting Of car-wheels or stoves,
x—Home Journal.
. '
it hung above tho chimney piece, and hit just as much as if his salary was only old world Spanish spot vool. de best the making of boots and shoes, or form
-------------------------- -- —
’A
defy too whole'party then and there, seven dollars a week.—Detroit Free ardicle made dere. In a gouple of min­
wagons.
,
The ruler of Smyrna Jiiaa captured aixty twfg* t
utes afder I daik to de gustomcr he buys
when a merciful Providence interfered
But all cannot obtain the control of largo
xl»b»lLhin
the
last
three
montha.
If
you
don't
—President Arthur was first led to de bants, und I half sell’nine baits in dot industries, even if adapted to- it, which
in his behalf. The de^othack rumbled
EUeVe It be can ihow you the bead*. ■
up to the door and out stepped a tall, fed the Importance of women having vay.”
ths majority of men are not. Not everv
larger
and
fairer
opportunities
by
the
Hoffenstein
had
scarcely
finished
one can obtain a large farm, even though
pretty young woman, with deep bine
THOSE
TERRIBLE
HEADACHES.
eyes and bronxe-brown' hair, a French sympathy he felt for a sister whose s;leaking when a negro with a bundle iu competent to manage it, and turn off a
gray traveling dress and a marvelously health was quite broken down through his hand and considerable excited en­ hundred steers annually, or take charge
long years of struggling ns a school tered the store.
.
composed manner.
.
of a wheat farm requiring twenty reap­ beadachea I spoke about, and it baa entirely
“Veil* my front, vat can I do for ers in use during each harvest. One ad­
“Mary Smith?’ said she to the land­ teacher for a woman’s pay and man's
you??’
said
Hoffenstein. advancing vantage; to the man who manages one chooac, among tboae who to tnxly teatify to the
lord. ••Are my rooms ready? I lect­
ure here to-night in the lyceum.
—Proverbial philosophy: It is never toward him and smiling pleasantly.
farm industry on a large scale ia that he value of your medicine. I owe the restoring of
“You can't’do anything fur me,” re­ has but one routine scale of duties to ac­ e y wonted good health to“Kennedy'a Favorite
"Never was so glad to see nobody in too late to mend—aud to mate. A stitch
my born days,” croaked tho landlord. in time is economy prime. "The law’s plied the negro angrily, ‘•but I wantysr custom himself to. and his men, falling ,Remedy." Sarah J. Woodruff, Newburgh, KI
“Yes, tho rooms is ready; but your hus­ delay” is the lawyer’s chief pay. Therc'a to gib back my money what I paid fur into set habits, familiarize themselves Y. The above ia one of manv letters of tho
band, he’s out on the green, and your many a slip after many a "nip.” ’Tis des hyar shoes or Tee gwine to take de with these daily duties; hence become, kind received by Dr. David Kennedy, at Boodto a degree, experts in performing them.
mother’s here a-waltin’ to forbid the an ill “wind” that stabs one behind. matter fore de law. I gib four dollars
Having the prospective income depend­
banseii. and your pardner a-vowin’ and Fortune favors the bravo—and the knave. for dem shoes, an’ I nebber wore dem
A Boston young man attended a prayer
swearin’ she’s been swindled, and------- •” Evil communications divide close rela­ . but ,six days fore de soles drapped off, ent upon one staple, the proprietor is
meeting and beard so many confession^ of
an' when Pzamincd dem dar warn’t a
“It&gt; some mistake.” said Miss Smith, tions.
stile, discounting for possible contingen­
crime
that be concluded ft was no place for
in her clear, incisive voice. "I have no
—Mrs. Daniel Webster has sent this blessed ting dar but paper. I’se been cies to estimate with tolerable exactness him. He felt aa though he needed better
husoand. My mother has been dead little letter to a New Haven school which cheated, an* when a man thinks he can what the income for the year wfill be.
_ ____________________
seven years, and a partner is a luxury celebrated her husband's birthday: “New come miratin’ around me an’ I ain’t And. what is sometimes an im]&gt;bctanC society.
When you have had catarrh long enough lust
in which I have neyer indulged myself.” Rochelle, Feb. 4, 1882. Please accept gwine to say nuffin’ he’s apt to find hia- factor in his success, the prospective
clip from five hundred or more head of send 15c. to Dr. C. R. Svkea, 15» Madboa St-,
“This ain’t niy daughter?’ said'the my thanks for your gratifying remem­ self in de nine hole.”
Chicago, for his "True theory of Catarrh.
starched female. “My Mary Smith has brance of my late husband on the 100th ^“My front.” said Hoffenstein, quietly, ■heep, the crop from five hundred acres
of wheat, or the cash for a hundred steers,
red hair, and she stutters.”
Sin and aomiw in- inseparable.
anniversary of his birth; also for your ••did you find anyding in de soles uf
“Quite a different sort of person from kindly greeting to myself. My kind re­ dem shoes?”
in either case, form a basis upon which
The idlneaa of the poor man ia crime.
the banker is quite willing to discount
my partner,” said the lady with a red gards to all your scholars. Yours, very
“No, sab,” replied de negro.
PERMIT NO SUBSTITUTION. ,
shawl.
“Veil, dot vas a piece uf hari luck, his paper.
sincerely, Caroline LeRoy Webster.”
But while these things are all true and ' Insist upon obtaining Florreton Cologne. It
“And my wife weighs two hundred
—‘Mary Washington, the mother of my frenL De shoes vat vou buy vaa de
Louisiana brize shoe, und ven you daks have applications as stated, still, the is pre-eminently superior in permanence and
pounds,* and she wears the bloomer cos­
Washington, was buried at Fredericks­
delicacy of fragrance.
tume,” unwillingly confessed tho stout
great bulk of men who till the soil as a
burg, Xta. In T831 a wealthy NewTork a pair of dem you vas liable at any mo­
penion. who had by this time come in man. Mr. Burrows, prupoeed to erect a ment to find a dwenty dollar gold bices business pursuit, are debarred from tak­
from the green, and was standing star­
in de soles uf dem. * If de soles uf de ing hold of an large enterprise, and ore
monument over the grave at his own ex­
ing in the doorway.
compelled to attend the practical work­
pense, and Andrew Jackson helped to brize shoes' was made of hard ledder,
The landlord heaved a mighty sigh of
dey vouldn’t wear out, and de gonse- ings of a small form, talcing a position
lay the corner-stone, but. as Mr. Burrows
relief.
failed in business, work was stopped half ciuence vould be you don't can find de before consumers the same.treiatively.
“Wai,” said he. “I don’t see but that
(twenty dollar biece, und dot vas ds as is occupied by the retail grocer or dry
way. The people of Fredericksburg now
the lectur* may go on, arter all.”
ask’ Congress to have the monument fin­ reason de soles vas made of baper so dot goods merchant, aiming to furnish in de­
The throe discontented spirits van­
dey vill vear oud soon, und let de beopla tail, as near everything that consumers
ished
ished. Miss Smith retreated to her
wont as it will pay them to produce.
know if dey get a brize, you know.
—A Troy (N. Y.) bell-founder has re­
room, and the landlord breathed freely
“Is dose hyar shoes de regerler prize The Ixjne of the agriculture of Europe
ceived an order for a bell from Delhi, shoes?’’ inquired the negro, greatly in­ lies largely in the system of landowner­
Is Rsocmmended by PhyalclansJ
again.
’
Iowa,
upon
which
the
following
inscrip
­
But in tho afternoon train from Baaship. The lines are drawn too taut be­
terested.
S1OO EETOfiWfflSgf
tori, a young man. in tho undress uni­ tions are to be cask On one side: “A
"Veil, my front, if yc see a man rat tween the owners of tlie land and those
Wc manufwiura and aril it vltha positive
form of a naval officer, came unexpect­ voice has gone before every great good come in de odcr day und show me a who merely till it for a pittance, paying
guarantee that It will cure any
edly upon the scene.
• that has ever been achieved in this gouple uf dwendy dollar bieces vot ho much of this pittance as rent, living the
case. *'“1 we Will forfeit ibe above amount
wor’d.” The above words were taken got oud uf dem shoes, you vould say dey
“Is this the place where Marv Smith
while under a roof not their own.
The
if itTali* in a single Instance.
,
lift unlike *ny other Catarrh remedy,aa
lecturesto-nignt?” he asked of tho land­ from President Garfield’s la#public ad­ vas a gold mine.”
same tendency exists *in our, own coun­
dress- On the other wide of the bell will
lord.
“If de shoes is de regerier prize shoes, try, and a few more panics may con­
“I believe so.” said that worthy, se- i be oast: "In memory of a servant ol I’ll take 'er nudderpair.”
diitrearint diacaae.aak yourPniggiti tor it. and
tribute to a (xincentration not in keeping
aocarr xo imetatios ob irarrntTi. If b*&gt;.
cretly wondering if there were any Jesus Christ, our loved President, James
“Certainly, my front. Herman, wrap with our status iu this regard, as gener­
ba&gt; not koi ft, aead to ui and »• will forward
A. Garfield. 1881.”
more 'relations to object. “Ef you
immediately. Price, 75 cents per boule.
de shentleman up a bair uf dose Ix&gt;uisi- ally understood, especially in other coun­
want to siMJik to her. there she is out
—Ou the death of Chief Justice Mar­ sna brize shoes, and dake dose vot you tries.
F. J. CHENEY &amp;. CO., Toledo. Ohio.
.
in the bock garding, reodin’ poetry un­ shall. nearly fifty years ago, the lawyers dink de money vas in.”
Il is upon the accession of a money
der the pear trees.
of Philadelphia moved for a monument.
crisis tliat the farmer who grows pretty
When the shoes nod been paid for and
“ Polly?’ said the young officer, lean­
The project failed at the time, as is often the negro bad gone, Hoffenstein said:
much everything wanted on liis family
ing over the pretty. French-gray shoul­ tho case, and only
was
contributed.
. jKi.tMX)
- ---------r ------“Horman, diu vou see how I vork ofl table. i.4 able to realize how independent
der.
The matter was soon forgotten by almost 1 4OSO o|j gtjy- brogans?”
he is of the oqjside world, and upon
" I hear you,” said Mis&lt; Smith, turn­ everybody.
• i- The
-1 . last surviving trustee of
"Yes. Misder Hoffenstein.”
what a sure basis he stands. Modern
ing over a lanf and protending not to the fund died a few days ago. aud
"Veil, ven cfer a gustomer comes in modes have too much broken in upon
be aware of the pink Qtfsh which was among his papery was found a careful de sdore, recgulleck dot dey vas de some of the habits learned in other coun­
overspreading her chcqk.
account of the money, showing that by Louisiana brize shoo mil a dwenty dollar tries, through which those who were not
“Are you really determined to go on investment it had grown to $20,000. The gold biece in de sole uf dem. I think I able to own farms of considerable size,
with this public lecturing tour!” he monument will now be erected.
vil learn you something about de busi­ were, nevertheless, quite able to earn
asked quietly.
K
\
good livings on farms of moderate pre­
—Several young men —ent from a St. ness yet”—.V. 0. Timet.
“Whyahouldn’A I?” cross-questioned [ Louis ballroom to get drinks at an ndjoin­
tensions. This applies, perhaps, more
Miss Smith.
ing saloon. All took whisky, and when
especially to the French than to any other
Recovers With His Brain Penetrated.
" Because ^don’tliko it, Polly.”
people, as on their farms of fifteen to
it was down they looked at one another
“You quarreled with me,” said Marv.
Valentine Hemmcrer, a man now em­ forty acres, they are enabled to earn a
with disgust depicted in their faces. It
“I begpardoh,” said the young olfi- , was the very worst whisky they hnd ever ployed at Frackville, Schuylkill County, better living, and have more of a saving
cer, “you quarreled with me!"
tasted. John Mackev. w’ho had invited Fa. has apparently recovered from un in cash to invest in Government securi­
“Do you really caa?” said Mary
the party out, refused to pay for the stuff. injury of the brain that has excited much ties than the average farmer in some of
A Pera falsify KstfidM that JitverWcxitatix.
Smith, melting into softness.
More than that he whipped tlie bartender Interest among tlie medical fraternity. tho States we ronlu name, who culti­
“ I care more than you will ever for retaliation, and undcry&gt;ok to empty While working in New York last sum­ vates, or protends to cultivate, farms of
know.” be answered, fervently. "Lit­ the pottle on the floor. A policeman, was mer ho was stabbed in the head, tlie four or five times th© size. The capa­
tle Polly, I love you! And as for wom­ called in. who killed Mackey during the point of a knife breaking off and pene­ bilities of small farmers have been too
, nimutr «li
en's rights, you shall have every right fight that ensued.
trating the brain. Since his recovery he often demonstrated to leave any doubt
vou wish, if only you'll give up this
—The miracle phase of the Rev. George relates how he wandered about in the as to their capacity to keep stock and
lecturing business and marry me!”
O. Barnes’ Louisville revival has been neighborhood of New York unable to raise hay, grain, truck, and fruits, be­
She smiled—hesitated—visibly yield­
speak and with his memory Impaired; yond the ex|M.*ctation of such as have not
investigated by the Courier-Journal.
dtianicrofthciiinn iinrnacn
lie finally got on a train which carried seen the system fully tested. This has
ed. ■
Among those who had been anointed
you caa Lc cured by Pamuci
“ But I’ve made the engagement.”
with oil in tlie meetings were found indi­ him to Reading, Po. The railroad offi­ not been done in this country to any con­
“ Break it, then,” said the officer.
viduals who firmly believed that they cials, in striving to find hi* home, actual­ siderable extent; yet the system, if put
into practice, as’ in some portions of
“ The clergyman lives just across the
ly
carried
him
twice
past
the
place
where
had been cured respectively of sunstroke,.
igreen—I had his house pointed out to neuralgia, dyspepeia. headache, rheuma- liis familv lived, at Five Points, near Europe, would afford relief to thousands,
me. Let's go there this very minute
Port Carbon. At last bo met a conduc­ who now swell the population of our
tism.jironchitis’, malaria fever and kidney
and get married?’
disease. One num who had been ill for tor who knew where he lived, and cities, living in tlie most precarious man­
Mary Smith laughed and blushed,
ten years, and was barely able to get to he was conveyed home. After lying in ner. A thrifty housewife has often been
and burst into tears, and finally put her
the chureh, wont away at a brisk pace, a comatose condition he -was visited by able, through her butter product, with
hand into that of the naval officer.
Dr. Birch, who, after a prolonged inves­ poultiy, eggs and surplus truck and
apparently in perfect health.
“Have it your own way, said she.
tigation, discovered tlie wound in hit fruit, to meet a large portion of the living
—If the laws of hereditary hold good,
“But I don’t know what the public will
head, which had healed up. The skull expenses of tho familv. There is an in­
and the theories of some people don’t
say.”
■
.
was trepanned, and a small piece re­ dependence in this self-dependent mode
“Henceforward.” said Captain Lacy, fall through, the manufacture of dis­ moved. with the point of the knife stick­ of living, which should draw away much
"J am to be your public. And my ver­ tilled liquors is doomed. They, the the­ ing ia it Gradually the powerof articu­ of the city population, thereby warding
orists, maintain that a child may Inborn lation was recovered, and with his re­
dict is entiraly in your favor.”
off pauperism, and placing the younger
So there was no lecture in the Stub in such a condition as to have through gained memory he was able to tell about members of the family under influences
Mountain Lyceum that night And the all its life fits of periodical intoxication, the wound and his wanderings while un­ favoring future usefulness, in placa of
stout man went home, where he found without having tasted strong liquors. able to speak. He says tliat he must holding them in a crowded city, where
his wife and mother-in-law in a great Nobody is going Xo spend money for have crossed the ferry between New York the tendencies are toward poverty and
rage, the starch female proceeded to the intoxicating liquor, when he can harve and Jersey City at least twenty times, crime.—National Live Block JournaL
nearest camp-meeting, and the curly the periods just as intoxicating, and just not having the power to ask where he
ballad singer composed a new song, aa often, without—Lowell Journal.
Cnlooked For Defects.
was or to tell where he wanted to go. The
called “Love’s Triumph.” founded on
—A young Brooklyn woman who has hole in his head occasioned by the opera­
Many horses go through a fair train­
the incident from real life which had Just been in the habit of reading a separata tion has become healed, and to all out­
transpired.
novel evrty day in the year, went Into a ward appearances he is himself again. ing as colts, bidding fair to become so
tooghened as to be proof against injury
“After all,” said the bride. “Smith w paint shop the other day, came homo and
The only effect of the wound now is that
an awkward name. And Pei glad I've sat down to sing and play on the piano a after a hard day’s work his left side ap­ by any amount of road or track work,
when suddenly, after having arrived at
changed it to Lacy. —Saturday Night.
•ong called " I m so lonely.” Suddenly
pears more fatigued than his right. Hi»
she stopped, and, wheeling round toward recovery from such a wound is considered a useful nge. a damaging defect ap­
pears, entirely without warning, and
In a Genteel Manner.
her mother, casually remarked: “I may
most remarkable.—Baltimore American. the'ftn'imal. thenceforward, is entirely
The elderly couple were sitting by as well tell you I have taken Paris green,
worthless for hard driving of any kind.
just as I said I would. I wouldn’t take
the table reading by the drop light, the
How Babbles Burst.
Whatever the defect may have been, if
the trouble to save me, for I will kill my­
reflection of which just served to bring
all tho bearings could be got at, it
self some other time.” The doctor gave
M.
Plateau
has
studied
the
phenomena
out the silver sheen that had gathered
her antidotes but they did not save her. of the bursting of bubbles. When a bub­ would generally be found that there
on their heads with the passing years.
was an hereditary tendency to that par­ 27Stoj
Since
receiving
a
severe
blow
in
the
ble
bursts
it
disappears
almo-t
instanta(0 Sets Reeds, $90
Dropping her eye glasses for a moment,
I neously, leaving behind it a multitude of ticular trouble, cither through pecu­
she said some what suddenly: “ You are head a year ago she has often wished and
• small liquid drops. The bubble begins liarity of the anatomical structure of
quite sure that George will like his situ­ tried to put an end to herself.
the
)»art,
or
through
certain
tendencies
—Olive Ixigan writes from London to ! to burst at one point, the film rolling
ation, are you not?1 *
which cannot be seen or felt, but which,
“Ought to like it. Absolutely noth- the Philadelphia Tima: “ At a tea­ ; away in a circle around the opening and nevertheless, exist. Those show them­
drinking with agnostics the other day, I ' its edge becoming a rapidly enlarging
selves in the peculiar .gait of animals,
&gt;
liquid
ring.
This
ring
draws
itself
towas
told
that
the
stone
bench
in
Batter
­
tached,” replied the old gentleman.
which by no mode of reasoning can be
sea Park, upon which George Eliot and 1 gtriher into segment si portions, which
“O. that is so nice. (Jeorge alw
explained by peculiarities of formation.
G. H. Lewes weue wont u» sit in the j ultimately become small spherules. Al
did nothing in such a genteel mam
The habit of pawing, when in the
early days of their heart-yearnings, be­ the same time the contraction of the rest
« the*
w ouu&gt;»
bubble causes a rush «
of su
air Roll or oul rf It, ol puttioR th, bntplacen^ly rocked in her chair aa she fore they cast the world's diet urn at de­ of
ttrouRb tbe.puture. nod blow, off IM ding out at th» rear of the .tail, lying
fiance and went and sal comfortably on
thought of the good results of h»r len­
qd.er.de. into the air with a ktod oi
“J
‘*hfr. &gt;T.“'
chairs
and
sofas
in
a
mutual
ownership
der bringing up cl the youth.-tJYoo
Juall explosion. The phenomena an H»rin&lt;» that
endr. y nnexplmi^bl
Hoven Hcgutiv.
b«d. obeerrwl by Idowikg n bobbin oi “
an t~Mo.ittod.-AxnAo.un-.
transmitted.—Ezotonpe.

HALL’S

^atarrli Pure

PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM.

PASJKEiFS

GINGERTONIC

chss9o

-Ex-i’resident Enoch Pood, ut ths

glycerine notation upon on
.ring, and then bursting it at
touching It with a Ap.-dt“wl
hu been dipped in off.—Nalu

BAUBLE

rize of fifty dollars was given to
Tai end hoy far ntfehtg Dm bent
crop of com in n compel
‘ bushels on one-eighth of

�Mr.W01ta.W.

cximf till June 74a the year 8004, or 122 j

Advertisers:

yean hence.
It is well-known that the last throe of
the four transits, which are all that are

“creation.” have beeta regarded as very
valuable for the furnishing of. data-for
determining the distance of the earth
from the gun, which is the unit employed
in our measures of distance of planets,

us with successfully nearing the approxdoubts have been raiser! with regard to
the relative value of the results obtained
from the transit of 1874. There is, how­
ever. do room for doubt that the impor­
tance of the problem warrants the em­
ployment of all tho means at our com­
mand in the effort to obtain a still closer
approximation to tho truth than we now

timatcly bound up with tlie computa.tions of the lunar motion which are ao
much depended upon by those whp/'go
down to the sea in shlpa” Tha science j
of navigation will never be perfected till
we know the mean distance of the earth
from the sun a little morrf closely than ,
we now know it. and are thus enabled
GB OFB/CEBS.
to calculate more accurately the ever­
varying pertubations in the apparent
irer—Frank C.
movement of the moon among the slant. The problem is, in effect, to find the
Tntaieea—H. A. Barber, F. T. Boise. H. W. difference between - tho apparent posi­
Demarey, H. R. Dickinson, H. M. Lee and tions of the planet on the sun os seen at
Chan. Lentz.
.
tlie samit instant of time at two widely- 1
sundered points on the earth's surface.
The line joining those two points is the j
SuirtiM.
base of a monster triangle, tho other '
aptist church. n«». e. b. Moody, Pa*u»r. sides of which meet nt the surface of
Service, eveiy Buudiy »t 10.30 a. I#., habbath Venus, and pass beyond her to form an­
Bbool al 12 m; Prayer and Teacnor*’ meeting
other monster triangle, tho base of which
is on the sun. Then, a subsequent cal­
a IKlHUDim- J^AOOPAL CHI7BCU-A. D. K«
culation gives the lengths of those lines ,
1 row. I'»At«&gt;r. Service# every Sabbath at IDJi
from tho earth to the sun. The diffi- I
cully lies in obtaining the measures free |
from error. That is practically impos­
VY LODGE NO. S7, K. of P., meets at Ita sible; but tlie magnitude of tho unavoid- ,
Castle Hall, Nashville, Michigan, every able error is gradually being narrowed
Friday evening, lor the encouragement aud
BUp|K.-rt ot all worthy, true, steadfast aud hon­ down by the increasing perfection of the
instruments employed and skill in using
orable' Brother Knights.
L. E. Lextx, Ki R. 8. Ouno-Sthoxo.C. C. them.
Tho ’ motion of the planet with refer­
Nlixcellaneous Cards.
ence to the earth during the coming
transit will be such as to furnish three
H. YOUNG, M.D. Office east side of available base lines, all of them termi­
• Main 8l, Nashville. Office hours from nating in tho United States. Tho other
7 to 9 a. m., and 4 to 7 p. tn.
extremities lie respectively in the neigh­
borhood of Madagascar and the Cape of
W GRISWOLD. M. D.,--------,uUile
• Physician and Surgeou. Office and re.»- Good Hope, near Cape Horn, and New
Wence opposite th# Wolcott Rouse. Prompt Zealand to Australia. The first of these
will bo available for measures at the be­
attantion given to calls day or night
ginning
of
tho
transit,
the last
for
measures of tlie end
A. FOOTE PHYSICIAN «fc SURGEON named
• Suceseor to Dr. Wickham. Office and of the transit; while
tho
middle
residence at Dr. Wickham's late office. one will furnish simultaneous measures,
Prompt attention to calls night or day.
for the whole phenomenon. Tho line
from Chicago to Cape Hom is the best,
T\R c. w. GOUCHER, Electio Phyaician and
XJ Burgeon, is prepared to answer all call* and would be tho only one calling for at­
that may be mac# for his services. Office and tention but for the notoriously uncer­
resld#ne# oppoalt# Roe’s meat market
tain character of December weather at
YUM PARMENTER, M. D.
Offic# over its southern terminus. The last-named
consideration may render it advisable to
VV Holl’s Drag atore, Vermontville, Mich.
provide for observations at the other two
HAS. R. BRADY, Lawyer, Circuit Court southern stations—viz.: tho Cape of
Commissioner, Real Estate and Insurance Good Hope and New. Zealand, or near
Agt Prompt attention given to all buslneas
antrustod to my care. Conveyancing a special­ those places.
Of course plenty of observations will
ty- Office opposite Union House.
be made in the United States, weather
Q LIEB HA USER, Merchant Tailor and deal­ permitting, but they will be valueless
er iu Ready Made Clothing. See me without comparison moa&amp;ures at the other
before you purchase clothing.
Fits guar­
extremities of the base lines referred to.
anteed.
American astronomers naturally feel an
ONAH B. RASEY, Express and Drayman­ interest in the solution of the whole prob­
Good* and Baggage carried to any place in lem. and are already' bestirring them­
th# village.
selves to make -the necessary arrange­
IRAM K. DICKINSON, ma..ufacturer of ments for observing iu the Southern hem
and dealer in Hard Wood Lumber. Build­ isphere. It is interesting to note that
ing Material a specialty. Cash paid for log*. Mill
they will probably have "a fnonopoly”
and yard on bbennan fit, at M. C- R-R. croaatng.
of the photographic method. It is not
TIMES FLEMING, practical Jeweler and provided for in the arrangements of the
Watch-maker. Clocks. Watches, Silver and European astronomers, the results ob­
Plated Ware, Jewelry and Optical Goods. Rock­ tained by it having been regarded as
ford Watcbeaaapechuty. RepalringandEngravvery doubtful. But a recent comparison
*ar done in a workmanlike manner.
of the photographs taken here during the
transit of Mercury in May, 1878, snows
RNO STRONG, plain and tkney.
tknt with fine weather during the whole
Th- best facilltle* for dclngy
transit the results of the photographic
work will be much more trustworthy than
those obtained by the observation of con­
ACOB OSMUN. Liveryman, bare near Wol­ tacts. There is certainly reason to ex­
cott House. First ciao turnouts at reason­ pect that the experience of seven years
able rates. Special rate# to commercial men.ago will be of great service in the work
Funeral and wcdlng parties furnUhed with ear: of eleven months hence. It is, therefore,
riages on short notice.
highly desirable tliat the work should.tie
TTELLOGO &amp; BELL, proprietors Planing done, and in tho best manner possible.
-tx. Mill. Planing and Matching. Resawing As a prominent American astronomer
and Moulding a specialty. Scroll Sawing, has remarked, even if tlie result should
Bracket#, Window and Door Frames made to not be all that could be hojied for, the
order. Wood Turning in all its branches.
astronomers of the next century but one
plHAB. W. DZMARAT, Dealer tn Watches, would scarcely forgive those of to-day if
Vj Clocks, fine Jewelry and Silverware. Being tho opportunity bo neglected.—Chicago
a practical Jeweler, patrons can depend upon
Tribune.
having their repairing done right Two doors
•oath af Truman's store.
The Rise in Prices.
W. NIBKERN, Attorney and Counsellor
• at Law, practices in all Stale Courts. Col­
The New York Public, which makes a
lections promptly attended to. Office over
careful study of prices, compiles a table
Spaulding'* store, Hastings Midi.
c&lt; comparisons in prices for various dates
between January 1, 1860, and December
JJ A. BARBER, M.
1, 1881. It has taken commendable pains
* IIOMCEOI’/VniIC
to make sure that it is comparing the
prices of merchandise of the aame quali­
ty, standing and importance. The dare
when prices were tlie lowest in this in­
Office'first door east of Opera House,* and terval was November 1, 1878, and the
near residence on comer of ‘Washington and
following are quotations of a few of the
State Streets, Nashville, Mich.
most representative staples on thelst of
November in the following years:
/OTT HOUSE,

ORNO STHOiVG,

Editor and Proprietor.

ilashrillr gittcturg.

B

I

W

W
L

C

J
H

O

J

P

Physician and Surgeon.

NaMlxvHlc Micni«axi.
A. s.Foote, Proprietor.

Wheat, 8 red Winter.
Wheat, s Spring
Corn—
Oats
Besna............................
Rutter.

g A. BUSH,
‘
“THB BOSS"

BOOT AMD SHOE MAKER,
HAIHVILLB,

-

Mica.

gATHBUW HOUSE,

Pute'tosSt. bri...
Ca’jb:ure«. c*t.
Apples...............
FuK.tr................ .
Coffee, Ria
Tea
CntUWi...............

It ta worth n
•redibdW

pa—Otieago Herald.

—In feeding, fanners should rememMU» •
Jr that the measnrv of the value of a
food is in a great degree determined by lair day’# work. I recommend ‘Kennedy'a
its price. If hay is worth ten dollars per Favorite Remedy’ to any one. suffering fr'*n ’»
iral and so indispensable that it re a sign
&lt;n(] carn
^^0 price, feed Isrge- deranged liter." Grateful patient# are comof
a jlpoor
farmer
if• hi.
lacks them
&lt;rfw»u,
^)rn.,»ing
u^ngonly
onlvhay
hayenough
enoughto
todis—g
■ - —
—•—- —
—table
r-—
........ i »jJy«*
n. .nv season
uoHWVn of
rtf the
•&gt;.« year.
i-mtr
Tlinm b
iu no
Hn - und
'
■ the stomadu of
Z.t
.
V
ataay
There
the animaU
land on the most productive farm in the i •
.
...
country which pays one-third as well as I
~In
bak}n£-P«*‘J*r b«jure not
a well laid out vegetable garden, propuse too much. B«Wes bring utt­
erly planted and’cultivated. AsWd I beaUnfal. H snoih tbe dehcate flavor of
labor is costly, it is both wise
and ecof”1 have furnished
b
»««I&gt;comets
and stars. “They
nomical to dispense with it whenever I talton toput in a little more than that
_C—•-------- ,--------- &gt;—
■ given in a recipe to make sure of tho deimatlbus to thte truth, though
rnir. some
j sirwl lightness, but it ought to bo resist­
den truck can lie grown and cultivated ed. If you are not your own cake-maker
all their branches, Write and state your cx«c
by a man or boy, with a one-horse single impress this fact upon your cook.
frankly. Let torn protnply answered. Address
shovel cultivator far more successfully
—Hangin g Baskets—What looks more Dr, David Kennedy, Kondout, N. ■ Y.. uDr.
and at far less expense of time and wages lovely than' a plant suspended from a Kennedy's Favorite Remedy” for sale by all
than by. tlie employment of any three small rustic basket in the centre of th?? druggist#.
good men with hoes. A garden for veg­ upper part of the window? It interferes
etables should have no bushes, trees or with nothing and nothing interferes.yrith
perennial plants in it, but should be con­ it. There's an clement of beauty in that
venient for the plow and teams at all simple fact. . Plants which liare slender
times. It should be long, to save time branches, which naturally hang down,
-CALLON-------in turning, and wide enough to supply the are at home in tliis situation.
The
family demand. It should be covered mothcr-of-tbousaods, the wandering
with good, old well-rotted manure six £w. withits pretty marked leaves; the
inch'es-deep plowed under twelve inches,
belias and some of tlie trailing cam­
then it should be covered again with panulas or bell-flowers; the well-named
manure three inches deep, and this last rat-tailed cactus, and the so-called ice%
coat should be first buried out of plants nre'niorv at'bome when suspended
-------- F01
sight. Tbo ground should then be har­ than when grown iu any other position. Itl’GB,
rowed and crossMiarrowed till fine,
BOOKN,
t
—Remedies for chilblains and (cold
marked in rows twenty-eight inches
JEWELRY.
feet-Slice raw potatoes with the skins
apart, and left to stand three days l&gt;eforc
W ALL PAPER,
on and sprinkle over then* a lea-spoonful
Slanting. I never plant for a succession;
of line salt, and as soon as a liquid is
WINDOW Nil A DEN,
ut plant early sorts for early use, modi,
drawn from them rub it upon the cliil- DYESTIFFS,
urn sorts for later use, und late sorts for
bliuns with a bit of cotton wool. Some­
fall use and for storing away for winter.
PROPRIETARY MEDICINES,
This gives a variety for use 'through the times one application will heal them if
file skin is not broken; if it is, make a
^■a»oii, and we do not have the monotony
PRENUIIIPTIONN,
salve of equal parts of mutton and beef
of the same flavor throughout the season.
RECEIPT*.
tallow and of grated carrot, simmered
I plant as early as the soil will permit—
hardy sorts in March or April; tender together an hour with a bit of camphor
ones’in May; but I get everything as gum and of borax dissolved in it. Take
a piece the size of n walnut to half a
early ns possible. I am particular in
pound of tallow. ■ Rub this salve on a
» r-t r-. r-.
~ nn
having-pure, true, fresh seeds; this is an linen cloth and apply nightly until healed. P A ITJ T AWT} B rv TT S Ti
absolute necessity, and if a farmer is not It will heal chapped lips and hands and *****’* ***’ *
*w V W A*
a judge, he must avoid “box seeds.” and
can be-used every night with advantage.
buy iurcct from some house of estab­
DEPARTIE T
lished character, if it costs five times ns A table-spoonful of alcohol can be added
to it while soft, but nearly cold, tjc^keep
Arc kept complete, io meet the demand# of the
much. Never let a poor crop be laid to
it sweet through tlie summer. Every
people.
bad seed, because that is a sure- sign, of
night when going to bed put a little cold
a bad gardener.’
water into a bowl and dip the feet into it
The time to plant seeds is, as a rule,
and then rub them briskly with a bath­
when apple tree leaves are as big as a
house In Barry or Eaton counlit*.
ing towel. Do it several times oud rub
mouse’s ear. The depth to plant is as a
rule, about three times as deep as the the towel under the foot and across the
heel, so as to start the circulation, and
size of the seed. As soon as they are
your feet will be warm and chilblains
planted walk alon^r the rows flat-footed,
will not annoy you.
treading in the seed quite hard, then draw
tho rake over tho row to break up what
Borrowing Farmers.
would become a hard crust after a few
heavy dews or a light shower. Cabbages
A writer in tlrc Country Gentleman
and tomatoes are, m the hands of most says:
A good thing may be carried to
fnrn»‘T-. l&gt;est planted st once in tho a 'bad extreme, and a little useful ac­
ground where they are to grow, as house- commodation among neighbors may run
grown plants are usually so badly grown, into excessive annoyance. It is an old.
so long-legged, as to be unable to stand, saying that * he that goes a borrowing
tho change to hot days and cool nights, goes a sorrowing.' but I find the inverse
so that they do not recover till the sea­ more emphaticiuly true: ‘He that pops a
son is half over, and Dever are so fruit­ lending goes asoiruwing.’ A neighbor
(THE HEALTH BKINGF.IL)
ful.
who keeps an unusually complete sup­
LOXG KNOWN AS
Having got thus far. and the plants ply of tools (or who attempts to keep
all showing above ground, pay no more them), has informed me that several PENGELLY-S
OMAN’S FRIEND
attention to them for the season, but have entirely disappeared, through the
attack the weeds with all possible vigor; agency of borrowers, beyond the possi­ Every mother of daughters ohould
don’t allow one to grow a ouarter of an bility of his tracing them, and these
know about it—because it brings
inch high, and if tho .seed was put in tools cost him many aollara- Some years
health
properly the crops will not ev«u need ago my several poorer neighbors seeroeil
thinning. But every plant must have to think thatas'I was well supplied, it
room to grow, both roots and tops. Ono was rav duty to lend them whenever they
Who, at thn acci
horse to a cultivator may be run between wanted. The question which they asked
the rows as often as every four to six was. • Are you going to use your wagon o Witm to I’cJnful,
days to advantage, and in pothering tho to-day?’ And if tho answer was nega­
vegetables always pick the finest; this tive I had no further voice in the mat­
will allow the smallest to grow. It will ter; the wagon was to l&gt;e taken, of
surprise novices to find how this simple course. Some of them even went so far
mode of managing a vegetable garden as to regard my right to any of the tools
will produce the finest, earliest and most us second to theizs, and one ef them pos­
succulent products.
The faster the itively refused to return a machine till
growth is made, the better they are. he had done with it, although I was in or Bearing Down, with its attendant Ulceration
Never let the ground bake, and if heavy equal need. I lent a tool costing twenty
rains beat the soil down hard, run the &lt;i&lt;/.lars to a neighbor, which he kept
cultivator through as soon as the storm several months antil I hnd forgotten who
is over, to let the roots have air, or the took it. After inquiring for many miles
plants will stand still as t»growth.—Cbr. I tracetl- it out. The borrower was mor­
Who suffer from Rot Flushes, either before er
Pffral A’cw Yorker.
■
tified; he told his hired man to return it,
instead of which be had pul it in an out- tending tbo Critical Period. Bloating. Numb­
Sowing Seeds.
of-the-way placet but it would probably ness. 5Vakefuln«». Palpitation. Etc.
The time will soon arrive for general have come home sooner if drawing
plaints, U#B*Ily r-ttributed to other causes, but
seed-sowing, and a hint or two in regard twenty-five cents a day all this time. 1 really peculiar to tho *ox, WILL CEETAINLY
to it may not be out of place. Much have succeeded in partly breaking up
this
borrowing
and
lending,
and
I
be
­
that is sown never appcanC and tlie
LEUCORRHfEA KUINS THE FINEST
seedsman is charged with selling old or lieve my neighbors like me all the better
poor seeds. Sometimes this may be so, for it. I bt-giui with the harrow, which aud restores tbo latter.
had
l&gt;cen
lent
to
so
many
that
several
but ven often it is the sower’s own
Abundant testimonial* I have, from tho boat
fuujt. There is much more art in'sew­ teeth were missing. AVhra I discovered
ing seeds successfully than people sup­ this loss. I told the next applicant that
each
borrower
must
add
a
tooth.
Some
pose, and yet it is very simple when un­
IL PENGELLY, M. D.
derstood. Many seetls are sown too । complied, and others would not take it
I am aware that pourer neighbors may
deep, and yet if not deep enough they
will dry up and not grow at ail. The think hard of richer ones who will not
depth must be determined by the size lend everything, but he who would please
of the scetl and tho character of the all will find nolimit to the yearly widen­
soil. If tlie soil be light and sandy, ing circle of Ixjrrowers- Accommodate
there is not so much danger of tlie where be reasonably can. and there stop.
seeds rotting from deep sowing as if the They will like him' none the less in the
end. Fixed prices for hiring out would
soil be stiff; and even if stiff soil the
depth will have to be determined by the be an excellent remedy.
condition of the soil. Suppose we' are
IX K1TBEU LIQUID OB DRY FOBS
Some Uses of Gas Tar.
to sow a piece of data, in land that is
liable to become dotty, and this is the
The value of gas tar for many purposes
distinction between light and heavy
land. If we can roll the land after sow­ is not •generally appreciated. Its odor is
ing it would not matter much about disagreeable to many and it is not of a [
sowing deep: but tlie seed would have to lively color. As a paint for the interior j
WHY ABE WE SICK?
be harrowed in pretty well if left in a of poultry houses it can hhrdly bo ex­
dotty condition unrolled.
Indeed, if celled; its odor is so permanent that it
the seed were sown on ground simply does not require to be renewed frequent­
first harrowed and then rolled, in such ly. In stables it is said to bo no less effica­
hind as we have described, many more cious. as flies will not congregate - ------- seeds would do well than if harrowed on surfaces that have been paintt
before rolling. In other words, shallow it. It is to bo hoped that gastor will
WILL SURELY CURE
sowing, if tho ground is well pulverized have a thorough trial as an insecticide
and pressed firm, is more favorable than the coming season, for it is not only a
KIDNEY DISEASES,
deep planting with a rough surface. safe remedy but a very cheap one. iKr.
LIVER COMPLAINTS,
Finely pulverized soil, with a well- R. S. Hart, Brigbton.'N. Y., has tested
pressed surface, is indeed the veiy Iwtst for two years the efficacy of gas tar water
conditions for success with all seeds; for potato beetles with the most satisfac­
and the shallowest kind of sowing, so tory results. His method is to pat two
Ay eaurir.y/rrc actio*
Uwf wjara cm']
\rutorif^ Ikcirpower lothrotrcffdiHcue.
|
that the seeds be firmly imbedded in the quarts of tar into a three-gallon pail, fill
soil, is the essence of good seed-growing. with water, stir well, allow to settle,
Why carer Billon. pain. aad arii##J
then sprinkle the beetles with the water.
—Germantown Telegraph,
Why tormented with Pile*. CewslipaUeal
This amount of tar will serve for a sea­
lffhyfrlchUnedo.rrdiM.HerW Kidney.:
—The Atlanta (Go.) Coimtitution thinks son provided the jtotato patch is not too
Why nndore ■•r»on» ar sfck hrnd.rheij
ZteKinNEY.WOWr&lt;nu.'r^&gt;i»taAMUA.|
that, under an inexorable-pressure that burnt It is only necessary to refill the
is beyond the reach of influence or argu­ pail with water as often as emptied and
ment, the plantations will split into stir and settle as at first. The point is
____ ii r________ ...I&gt;1 &gt;.L„

.HH
8.00
£K

.OTM
.U-*

PRINCIPAL+L
Tire BHOBTWT.

Ud VC rial
lT conceded

be the |&gt;e»t e«ialpi»«j^'"i
Itanrwd ta ue World

KANSAS GIT
toctlamnuHte^^jL

&gt;^-

F. T. BOISE,

60&gt;&lt;

•XX/7X.

tad tram
luxury, t

R*ie. clVTfA
r-rplng
fnlty Civen l.y X/V
T. J POTTER.

PERCEVAL LOWELL
r-

J^EAC’K &lt;k SO.V

American and Foreign Marble,
MoQumflntA, Tom^rrones, Mantles,

.

.

Wnxtlnc". Micku
JgrOOKS A MARSHALL

----------- Proprietor#------------

&lt;

*

Nashville Elevator!
Pay the highest market price for all kinds af

Grrain and Produce.

Call and Examine!
F T. BOISE.

Sooth, Feed, Limo, Salt, Plaster. StarSeeds,
co, Hair. Pine Lumber, Lath
'j
and Shingles.

AT THE LOWEST LIVING PRICES.

NATIONAL HOTEL
"W ashington
F. TENNEY Jt CO.,

■1DIC1L 1XD SU1GIC1L SiWTTiiniM-

TO GIRLS

TO YOUNG LADIES

TO OVER-WORKED WOMEN

To Women Advanced in Life

rmim, munu,

un

tbx tnnn.

KIDNEY-WORT

LIT

St
&amp;£rr±

to have somethinx besides salt .pork and
potatoes on his table, and a variety is
more economical than mw4, wheat flour.

s

injure the foliage.

Mr. Hart has tried

Uie gas tar water on currant bushes infttj»u»&lt;i with womw with equally good

Dispensary,
toi So. Clark BL
CHICAGO, ILL
Th# l*lMt aad mon #ci«atita lu* katlon in ilUnltod State#, for the Cnr» of Chronic and Prirau
di»c#i&gt;e». Gonorrha-x, Glert ot lon?£ *taadlntf, Stn.
tare, Orthltl*. Itnptaro. dlgexae* of the *klu #n
bones, merenri *1 nore throat etc. aafely and prt vat
ly treated. SPKRMATCBUHIEA. Scxnal DvbUttC
Speedily eared. Toaai Baa »uSrriD" tram we#L
nna. caused by tmnradencc. secret habile, cxevee*. producing pimple# on the face. ru.h of blood &gt;
the head, confu.ion of idea*, headache, detaeilv
memory, ioa# of acxual power, night Kmaea. aw&gt;.
aloa to society, »lecpfe»«ue»«. nervous prosit
tlon. general debility and indigestion, rtmdvrtn
marriage improper, aafelr ented. Ws gasr

NERVOUS
DEBILITY
A ♦ lire pnaranierd.
Da- K. C..W«»r‘* Nsava *i» Bmi» Tkh.twu«
• epecifle for by-Meria, UUxInrM. rohvabloa*. mt*
ou»b&lt;ndachc, mental dcpmaatoo. km* of rnenurr
suemaior.btta, Itnjx.tenry, luvaluotary amteUane
premxtare nrf are, c»;a«l by ..rer-exentaa. mU
abuie, or over (udu)renoe, which kad# to mtaary
decay and dvalh. One fox will cure rtrvnt caan&gt;
Each box contain, one month-, trralmctit. &gt;&gt;».
do]far a box, or alx boxet for fire dollar*; »-n&lt; by
m.H prepaid ua receipt afj.riw. We ru.ni&gt;^»i
box#* to cure any ca-e. With each outer rrcatve-

Administrator's Male.
In Ite malur ot the lUtato of
GEORGE OIbblAdao&gt;«M&lt;J.
Not lew ia hereby given tliat J rhalt »ell nt

•

J

�tentative from tho Pacific slope say
the aim “Spring Poets’ EnI then tied a male at the

the Virginia legislature. last week,
of the re»4jMte»» undertook to
juat each other, and had a fight
De floor of the bonne. Both were
ited, both apologised to tbo houae,
i were forgiven and reconciled, and
i cemented friendship's holy bond
drink at the neighboring bar.
Kansan and Iowa., and other parte of
were tlie prey of the fierce
storm of wind and rain that visited this
section on Thursday night Tidings of
’ nan and women killed, and towns
wrecked, come from many sources. In
Kanaaaaix per«ons are spoken of oa
killed or fatally injured by the hurri­
cane, and few of the inhabitanta of ?ne
little town wholly escaped injury, moet
of them being now homeless.

■

Wlum.Gencral Garfield’s nomination
was mikedsof^Mra- Garfeld asked GovernopJeweinfit would pay to leave
the4&gt;leasant home in Mentor, and re­
ceived iu reply: “Yes; in a year your
L
busband will be President of thiscountry and hold the highest office on the
whole globe.”
On the funeral trxin
Mrs. Garfield sent for Governor Jewell
and asked him: “Governor, has it
.... paid!” Again be replied: “Yea; for
.that man is the best loved man on tlie
- the globe.”

h

“•

‘

MICHIGAN NEWS.

Tai ford, Goodrich &amp; Co’s soop factory
at Gra
Rapids was burned Wednes­
day morning. Loss * 12,000.
Tuesdays man named Ed. Swift,
whose borne somewhere in the southern
part of the state, was killed by a rolling

-

• 41
"

i

■

•

/

.

k

:
'

Si

log in a camp near Mecosta.
An old man named John Burk, who
has for some time been a county charge
at Ann Arbor, was killed by a train
near that city Monday.
. Alonzo Steve, alias Geo. Bell, was
arrested at Ferry’s seed house, in De­
troit, upon charge of having killed his
affianced by abortion, and taken to
Muskingum Co.
At Adrian a verdict of guilty has
be^| rendered-in the case of the Peopie vs.
Charles Colbath, who was
Obajfced with assault with intent to
murder Charles Cannon.
April 8tb James Welch, of South Hud­
son, was robbed of *175 cash and certificates of deposit to the amount *500.
The hired man, Wm. Riley, is suspect-

of the theft, and officers are in pursuit
of him.
An old man named John Burkey was
killed near the depot at Ann Arbor
Moiylay afternoon by the Chicago ex­
press west.
He was walking on the
track and apparently did not hear the
feg*-*'. appoarching train.
Qb.
A large shed containing00,000 bushels
H of charcoal, owned by the Spring Lake
Hjpr * Iron Co., at Fruitport, was fired by a
R
•&lt; *
.
■
■
'

spark April 8. The burneu property is
"
worth about *9,000 aud there is no in­
- surance upon it.
r •’■ •iSL'
The house of Ira Case, a merchant
-£* of Brighton, was robbed by burglars
™ April 10, and *200 was taken from the

I
|

I

•

pockets of Mr. Case’s trousers in his
bedroom. Suspicion is fastened upon
some parties from Detroit.
A man named .Jack Warren was fro­
zen to death in the vicinity ot Newago
one night recently.
He had such a
heavy load of whiskey aboard that ho
■topped by the way to rest with the
above result.
Vicksburgites are considerable ex­
cited about the burial’ of Mrs. Rebecca
Smith, some claiming that she was
buried alive, as several singular incidants occurred to give grave suspicions

that such was the case.
At Monroe April 7, F. Gentner, formcly
an employee and section boss on tlie
Lake Shore &amp;. Michigan Southern Rail­
way, but who has been out of employ­
ment for a short time, commited suicide
by deliberately shooting himself in the
mouth with an old musket.
Augustus Noland, an
unmarried
man, 22 years of age. fell oua buzz-saw
at Howard's Mill, seven mi'.es north of
Paw Paw, Wenseday evening, nnd
Dearly severed hh left leg just above
the knee. The limb was amputated, but
he had lost so much blood that he did
not survive the shock, and died ThuntTwo schooner*, tlie Clayton Bell
and Tho*. Parsons, collided on Lake
Huron, a short distance above Pott
Huron, early Wednesday morning, the
former bring sunk with four of her crew
as follows: Capt. F. A. Colin of Oswe­
go, N. Y; First Mate N. Brotherton’and
D. Brotherton, of Battle Creek; and

-•twin Werford counSheriff

that the Democrats • will now se­
cure
all
of
the Pacific states.
The republicans generally, however,
do not take the veto to heart.
One
quite prominent, probably voiced the
sentiments of many in a statement he
made as follows: ‘'1 voted for the bill,
but I did it with a mental reservation.
I believe that had tha vote on the bill
been taken by secret ballot it would
not have received fifty votes in its fa­
vor. The republicans voted for it aaa
party expediency and not because they
believed the bill to be right.” Senator
Miller, of California, soon after the
Senate was called to order to-day, in­
troduced another anti-Chinese bill.

It was precisely the same as the vetoed
bill, except that it suspended Chinese
immigration for ten years instead of

teacher.
Mr. Kidder has sold his span of
horses to Porter Burton of Hastings
township,
Thomas Crawley.has taken unto him­
self, a companion, and removed to his
farm in Hastings township.
James Endsley has sold tbe five acres
recently purchased of G. Arnold to
Frank Wilcox, price *1,4500.
If Greenbackers are lunatics and they
keep on increasing, me-thinks Barry
Co. will be turned inti), an insane asy­
lum next fall.
Reports say that Charley Abby, the
famou.i dry goods and grocery peddler
of Maple Grove,* has won the affections
of another woman and skipped out.
.
•
Doxr.

FOIL PROCEEDINGS.
Council Rooms,
i
Nashville, Apr. 10, 1882. f

tweuty.
The report of the Secretary of War
upon tlie Mason case was a subject of
discussion at the Cabinent at its last
meeting. All the petitions for the par­
don of Sergean* Mason and other pap­
ers in the case were refered to the Seer
rotary of War by tlie President for bis
consideration. The Secretary of War
referred the matter to Judge Advocate
General Swain for an opinion.
The
latter’s report to the Secretary of War,
as already published, takes the ground
that Mason was illegally sentenced,
The details of the Secretary’s report
are not known yet,',but it can be stated
that it does not sustain Judge Advocate
General Swain’s opinion of illegal con­
victions.
President Arthur intends having sev­
eral receptions on sucession Tuesday
evenings, but whether the others will
be absolutely public or noi has not yet
been decided. Possibly tho uhxt one
will be only for tha army and navy, as
it has been customary for -ach Presi­
dent always to give soon after bis in­
auguration a special evening recepetion
to those two branches of the ser­
vice. The President will probably try
to devise some way of preventing an­
other crash as that of Tuesday, which
caused discomfort to so many as well as
great fatigue to himself. Unfortunate­
ly not a few people appear to think
that it is necessary to express cordiali­
ty on such on occasion by giving the
extended hand of the host a firm grip.
When this is done oy several hundred
muscular visitors it becomes actually
painful., A friend of President Arthur
tells me that on New Year’s day the
right hand of the latter gentleman was
literally cut to bone by the sharp edges
of a ring he wore being driven in by
such continuous pressure for several
hours. He bore it like a martyr with a
smile, and only mentioned it privately
after all was over.
■
The President yesterday nominated
Senator Teller, of Colorado, to bo Sec­
retary of the Interior; Wm. E. Chand­
ler, of New Hampshire,' Secretary of
the Navy , Wm. H.'Hunt.now Secretary
of the Navy, United States Minister to
Russia; John J. Knox, of Minnesota,
comptroller of currency, and Roland
Worthington collector or customs for
the district of Boston and Charleston,
Mass. The Senate immediately con­
firmed Teller and Chandler, and the
other nominations were referred to
committees in regular Coarse of proce­
dure.
Various reports were sent out last
week seeking to cast reflection upon
General Grant.for visiting the Senate.
His friends, who know what his busi
neas in Washington really was, and
fully cognizant of the disinteresteu
purpose that took him to the Senate,
were incensed at the scurrilous misre­
presentation. He. however, was not in
ihe least disturbed, but kept on as us­
ual in the even pursuit of his purpose.
There were reasons why, at tlie time, it
was thought best to say nothing, be­
cause a discussion of the matter would
it was feared, stir up a lot of pretended
claimants to emharass the passage of
the measure io the interest of which
the General came to Washington,
which is a bill to return tho Japanese
Indemity Fund. All the talk about his
lobying for Fitz John Porter, who Los
do bill before Congress, by the way,
and other equally ridiculous stories are
dissipated by the truth which is that
General Grant comes here on tue only
business which be said two years ago
would bring him to the Capitol.
Yesterday I spent a couple of hours
nt the Agricultural Department which
has become a very attractive place.
There are about thirty five acres in the
grounds, and the extensive green
house*, i1m&gt; graperies, orangery, de­
partment of economic plants, the prop­
agating bouses etc., furnish entertain­
ment all times. Dr. Loring, the commiwtioncr. is a fine looking man, aad a
great improvement on tbe retired Mr.
LcDouc, who was do more fit to be
Commissioner of Agriculture than is a
ufAogny bedstead. We had raagni-

SECOND TO NONE IN BABBY COUNTY.

TsTotions, Domestics,
Clothing for men and boys,
Dress Goods,
Hats and Caps,
Trunks and Sachels,
Carpet and Oil Cloth,
Boots and Shoes,
(Groceries Etc. Etc.
UR SALES THE PAST YEAR HAVE BEEN FULL 30 PER CENT IN EXCESS OF

every previous season and we tender our hearty thanks for there liberal support in our
Oefforts
to bring the prices of all lines of goods down to reasonable profits. This year we wish
to increase our sales 50 per cent and have placed on our counters one of

Trustee Barber, Cbslrmsu of the committee
cclye proposals for furnishing tbe Jriilagc
with a suitable fire engine, reported that be had

had received their proposal* After reading tbe
proposals to the council the report was on mo­
tion accepted and tbe committee dlschargod.
Motion by Barber, that the President appoint
a committee ot three to negotiate with C. G.
Cfriton &amp; Co., for their engine and to make
such changes in the number of feet of hose and
number of buckets as the committee think ad­
visable. Motion carried by ayes and nays aa
follows:
Ayes, Barber, Boise, Demaray, Dickinson aud
Lee. Nays, none.
The President appointed Barber, Dickinson
and Lee as such committee.
On motion trustee Barber was appointed
President pro tern by ayes and nays as follows:
Ayes, Boise, Demaray, Dickinson and Lee.
Nays, none.
■
On motion the President appointed the fol­
lowing trustees for the several standing com­
mittees.
Finance—Lentz, Lee and Boise.
Streets—Barber, Demaray and Dickinson.
License—Lee and Boise.
On motion A. J. Harder was elected cemetery
trustee for three years by ayes and nays aa
follows:
Ayes, Barber, Boise, Demaray and Dickinson.
Nays, Lee.
t On motion David Irland was appointed
pound master for tho ensuing year, by ayes and
nays aa follows:
Ayes, Barber, Boise, Demaray, Dickinson

Motion by Boise that the of village attorney
be declared vacant, and the President be in­
structed tc employ counsel whenever he shall
dectri ft advisable. Motion carried by ayes and
nays as follows:
Ayes, Barber, Boise, Demaray Dickinson and
Lee. t Nays, none.
Motion by Baber that the saloon bonds for
the ensuing year, be fixed at 95 000. Motion
carried by ayes and naya os follows.
Ayes, Barber, Boise and Demaray.
Nays,
Dickinson and Lee.
Motion by Boise that the druggists bond for
the ensuing year be fixed at 93,000. Motion
carried by ayes and nays as follows:
Ayes, Barber, Boise, Demaray, Dickinson and
On motion the salaries of tho officers for the
ensuing year was fixed as follows to-wit:
Marshal 1125. Street Commissioner 12X eta.
per hour. Clerk ISO. Treasurer £3.
A petition signed by H. Larkins, Geo. Gal­
latin, R. M. Graham, Margaret Hr-t and L. A.
Brown, yaking tbe Council to construct a side
walk on tho west side of Middle 8L, from the
north line of Washington St., totbe south line
of Reed St., was presented.
Motion by Lee
that the prayer of the petitioners be granted
and that the street committee see that the
walk be constructed in a reasonable length of
time. Motion carried by ayes and nays aa fol

Ayes, Barber, Boise, Demaray, Dickinson and
Lee. Nays, none.
The folkiwing accounts were presented and
on motion allowed.
Levi Evarts,
9 1.00
6.00
John Andras,
10.67
ftaW Greg.jrv,
Orr.o Strong,
27.20
John J. Potter,
2-50
On motion council adjourned.
F. McDojut,
E. CuiMuK.
Clerk.
President.
BRAIN AND NERVE.

&amp;C..91. atdrnggiata. Midi.!
DAVIS A CO TDctrolt Mich.
asr N. B. I will only grind Mondays and
Thnrsdays. 27-30
N. C. Hsokmman. •

Hie Most Attractive Stock Ever Opened In Nashville
Ar we have in the past so we shall try apjl make it in ths future.
all high prices.

We, shall put the knife. tO

The First to the Front!
I

AM NOW RECEIVING A FULL STOCK OF GOODS SUITABLE FOR THE SPRING TRADE. INCLUDING
the Largest and Best Stock of
z

Ready Made Clothing, for Men, Boys, and Youths,
Ever brought to Nashville, and ranging in price from three to thirty dollars per suit.

In

Ladies, Misees, Gents &amp; Children’s Fine Shoes
I keep the celebrated Rochester make, Stylish, Durable anc Cheap.

I have the latent Btylee and can fit all parties.

At prices that defy competion.

In

I always keep a full stock of

Cash paid for Butter and Eggs.

HEPT. WE ABE A&amp;AIK!
■WITH A FULL STOCK OF-

County of Barry, i
At • MMlnn of th« Probate Court for the CmnRr
cf Barry, bolden al Che Probale Office in the CftyoT
HaaUoge. n eald county, on Saturday, the let day
of Apo), In the yeat one thousand eight hun­
dred and elglty-tvo.
Present. &lt; loment Smith. Judge of Probate.
th.
X71III1U v

Wagons:
OUR LINE BUGGIES
--------- E MBEACE S--------

Timkins,
.
Dexters,
.
Phaetons.

ProtaU Order.
Ai &gt;KMlunofihe Prebate Coart for IbaCosaiy
of Barry, hokien the Probate Oflfc*. tn tbe City of
Ha»Un|f»,ln
county on Thursday the Sth day of
April in the year one tbocaaoJ rishi bandrad
and^e&gt;(hiy two. Preaent, Clement Smith, Jasgs ot

in the matter of tbs estate of NATHAM
WK A K 5, dsceaaed.
&lt; iu reeding and till ng tbe petition d aly verified, of
Willis,. H. Fawner administrator of said estate
preying that his dual account tin. day filed may be

White Cbappel and Coal Boies, hung with Elliptic Springs.
Two and Three Spring Democrats.
UR WORK IS ALL DONE UPON HONOR. BUGGIES

made from Second Growth Hickory.
OOurbeing
Tops are lined with All-Wool Indigo-Dyed Goods and

Warranted not to Fade. W. H. Atkinron, a painter whose
work has never went back on him, hna charge of our paint de­
partment, and can be relied on. Bolts, Dash Feet, Body Loups
and Stays are made from Norway Iron and the entire buggy
ironed in a desirable and superior manner and warranted.

TAKEN UP.
Came into my enclosure about the middle of
[arch, last, a Nack sow with a few white
and take her away.
Castleton, April 10th, 1882.
30-82
O» P. Wmllmak.

DISSOLUTION NOTICE.
land, Barry Co., Mich., is this day dissolved by
mntnd consent, O. 8. Grant retiring, tbe new

Until you have thoroughly examined mine. Spokes made
from Second Growth Stock and the wagon is made to stand
the wear and tare of our roads.
«-I HAVE IN STOCK A NUMBER OF*®t

VndniUe markets.

Fur-at. Ac Bradley’.

tiiiiiD non, on uni no coniiiioss
Which I will Sell at Cost to Clese out.

I take it fora fati that

. '

sent, Lents, Trustee.

Attom^r a Councilor,

kw-CIVEH AWAY.
ZimmsnM.Fr.it Dryer
Mew sURr'hsakAlb..
Z1MMCBMAN FRUIT qjfYER CO.. Cincinnati, Q.

OPiUMSTiii®
WORTH MNDINC FOR.

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                  <text>orno strong,
aid PxontixrOB.

Editor

।
&gt; _________ __ •

... -

Devoted to the Interests
of the Best Party under
the Sun.
,___________________________________ &lt;
______________ ■.......

_____________ _____ _____________

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, APRIL 22, 1882.

VOLUME IX.

If

................................

~

Credit huhbchiptioxb 11.75

NUMBER 31.

leave for more extensive fields of labor.
LOCAL GIBBLE-G ABBLE
. HASTINGS.
LOCAL MATTERS.
The society will be fortunate if they
Hawk.
MAHRTED.
The Dakota
succeed in securing the services of Mr.
Well try not to. In fact we don’t
DAW80N—JONES—Mr. George E. Dawaoo,
Sour weather.
Bissell, for he is a man in every respect
—There «re n few caaea of diphtheria&gt; believe we could if we wanted to.
Of
Frwnk
Wheeler
of
Cadillac.
Rather a dull week, all aronnd.
qualified for the position.
reported in tli? northweat portion of course the horse is a great curiosity,
The Presbyterians have been addlug a supply
Mrs. F. T. Boise is on the sick list
We notice that a large number of the
the townahip.
but why not be more implicit in regard
Potatoes have taken a fall of twenty employees of A. D. Jarrard’s road­
to
sex.
Is
it
Indian
bread,
graham
—Sam Nicewaoder of Maple Grove,
KELLOGG—McEEI.VET—At the base erf
percent.
train have returned to the acenes and । Tuesday from abroad to receive instruction*.
tbc bride Id Msnle Grove. Apr. 29th. by Rev.
lost a aix months old child from whoop­ bread, rve bread, brown bread, yeast
A D. Newt«»rSr. I. N. Kellogg ot Ns«bvflte
Now adorn your homes; make them ways of their childhood—Nashville. ।
Hasting* is now numbered In the glass-ball
bread or salt-rising bread T or is it
ing cough on Tuesday night ImL
beautiful.
Evidently they “struck” or “bushed.” shooter^’ circuit, and our sportsmen arc happy.
—NaahviUe ought to celebrate the, simply a statement of an. editor so
The "Two Orphans” at the Opera
LJ.
Wheeler,
on
Tuesday,.started
gtorioua Fourth of July, thin year, and dough-beaded that he can’t write a House to-night, April 22nd. See it.
________
____ ,
Dakuta-wards,
to take a look at that troops traveling will be In Hastings, Apr. 20th.
single two-line itetn aud have it free
SUrer cal
now ia the time to begin to talk it up.
NaahviUe contributed liberally to the far-famed
land.
He
may
locates a sol­
—
—
_ —
_—
„---------from blunders f
auuram. -i. sncacivey;
—It ia a question whether piety and
relief of the Kalamo cyclone sufferers diers claim before he returns. Mrs. W. on a mortgage last Thursday,for I.T2B.00, to the nry auu earns, .rum
pickle castor, from Mf. and Mrs. C. Demarsy:
—It was a young woman yitli as
frowy butter can live Jong in the same
Cretie Stevens celebrated her fifth and Ota accompanied him as far os bigbest bidder.
and S3, from Mrs. Sktah McKelvey,
’
many
white
flounces
around
her
as
the
house without aomobody getting hurt.
birth day, on Tuesday, by giving a Parma.
engaged raising the roof of her bouse. She ex­
planet Saturn has rings. Site gave the party.
A PICTURE WORTH BEHpLDING.
—In the trtat£erxof frutb and veracity
Ingenious Dick Graham lias secured perts to add about five feet more to the height.
•
music
stool
a
whirl
or
two,
and
fluffed
Hanging
between
two
small
windows,
and
F.C. Curtis and wife of Battle Creek, the neceaaary paraphenalia for the
thia week’s $anne^-ir-up~to ite uauaf
Quarterly services were held last Sunday at catching the light from a larger owe opposite,
down in it like a twirl of soap suds in were guests at the Wolcutt Hoi/qe this
Btandard.bjn it isn’t to be wondered at,
“chimney sweep” trade, and will make the M. E. church. Rcvr H. M. Joy, the Presid­
a hand liaain. Then she pushed up her
after selling John that old, worn-out
liia debut aa a fully-pledged, “sweep ing Elder, delivered a very fine sermon In the at 39 Broadway, New York—the . office occu­
cuffs aa if she was going to fight for the
Postmaster Parady has the material chimney, oh,” as soon as the weather evening.
type.
pied by Mr. W. H. Hall, bead of the delivery
champion’s belt. Then she Worked her on the ground for an addition to his moderates.
I Marshall Cook
________
Has_______________
returned from_______
Denver,_ department—la a plainly flubbed, but neatly
—Another edition of winter act in wrists and hands to limber ’em, we sup*
C. J. -Whitney, the popular mukic
It Is rumored that be baa purchased hl» framed chromo about, 2% by 8 feet In size,
residence.
Wednesday night,and on Thursday the pom*, and spread out her ringers until
John Furniss is the posessor of anew publisher of Detroit, has our thanks I partner's, Bower’s, Interest In the Banner, and wblfh la looked upon by hundreds at people
air was full of fiytng snow flakes Dear­ they looked as though they would pret­
.
dj.Hr. on many Of whom it has a wonderful and
and nobby horse—a three-year-old for late piano music. Mr. Whitney |
ly the whole day, while the thermome­ ty much* cover the key board, from
The junor partner In the firm -•
of »
Roberta de
keeps everything in the mtuic line
«- M(utary effect. It represents a flight of half a
blood bay colt.
ter indicated 83 degrees above zero.
Hotchkiss, has purcbsgad the senior partner’s doxrlhougb stone* steps leading from the
the growling end down to the little
I. M. Strong and son, Walter, of that any dealer does, and those order­
interest,
and
will
hereafter
continue
the
bual—Frank Winchell exhibited a beati- squeaky one. Then these two haud« Charlotte, were in the village, Thurs­ ing of him can be certain of satisfaction.
swarded bank of Cplacid lake u&gt; a little rustle
------------- - —.r —_----------------------------------- । temple set in the rugged side of the mountain
ful blue crane on the streets, yesterday of hen made n jump at the keys as if day, on business.
W. H. Brearley, manager of the De­
Chris. Van Arman, having gradusUd from L whteh riica ln srup^dous proportions In the
morning, which bo caught nn Sippio they were a couple of tigers coming
Mrs. M. J. Timmermrman is about to troit Evening News excursions from the law school at Ann Arbor, with high honors, background all covered with a rank luxuriant
pond, in n steal trap, the day previously. down upon a flock of black and white
move to Hastings to keep house for Detroit to the sea, has our thanks for ha* concluded to practice bi* profession in | growth Of foliage In brurii and tree. In the
The bird mesured 0 feet, 3 inches from sheep, and tiiepiauo gave a great howl
photographs of the White Mountain Hastings; and has secured rooms in the bank opcn d(XJrof tbl* Huie templb Hands a half con-^
her son—the doctor.
tip to tip of its wings.
aa if ite tail had been trod on.
Dead
H. C. Wolcutt starts for Petoskey, scenery. For particulars in regard to
; cealed figure, wito an arm and hand extended,
—The chemical works has passed stop—so still yon cou d hear your hair next week, to work at carpentering the next excursion see advt. in another
Dr. Miller who .tartedafew days since to boldtag forth a small, dimly defined package,
tn-----------------------------------------on |be twanl at tbe tax of tb,
locate In Northern
Minn.,
now turns-up
at I wh(le
from the possession of its former own­ growing. Then another howl aa if the during the summer.
column of this issue.
ers and ite new proprietors, who .were cat had two tails, aud you had trodden
Those who have seen the Maxwell’s, Otsego. There seems to be apu l-back in the rte-p*. an aged pilgrim, barefooted, lame and
Mrs. Orno Strong has returned from
direction
of
Hastings,
that
overcomes
every
­
dm
rrpid.
iM-ars
a fcSaff iu one band, and in ti»e
in the Tillage on Tuesday, stated that on both of ’em at once, and then a grand the Battle Creek Sanitarium, improved in the affecting and highly interesting
other bolds before bis dim eyes a small bottle,
thing.
the works would bo set running od clatter and scramble and string of in health and looks.
drama: “Two Orphans,” say they fill
whose label be eagerly scans. This label bores
. The city is afflicted with a gang of hoodlums the words “St. Jacob* Oil the Great German
something—probably "Excelsior”—as jumps, up and down back a forward,Al. Rasey is building an addition to their respective parts to a T. Of course who Insult young ladles, “asm” older ones, Remedy.” Simple as this little ebromo appears
one hand over the other, like a stamp­ his premises, to bo used for a dining you will want to take in the piny, so
soon as possible.
teardown signa, aud “cut op cane” gener­ .hi it* im'Hieiitatlon jXMltlou, It lum au iuflueuicc
don’t foiget the date—April 22nd, this ally, and yet nothing la done to arrest them or which it would be difficult to estimate. “It ta
—Good clothes make more difference ede of rata and mice, more than any­ room and kitchen.
to that picture and the persuasion* of Mr. Hal I,”
pm a stop to their depredations.
with the world’s opinion than a good thing we call inuxic.
H. A. Brooks has just completed evening.
said Mr. Edward J. Dougia*&gt;i, a gentleman con­
The celebrated stallion, “Golddnst,”
—Near Freeport is a ch urch the pro­ the painting of his residence and new
A 3-year old son of Geo. Hartman of this nected with Mr. Hall'sdepurtmcut, “that I owe
many people are willing to admit. How
accompanied by “Clyde B. Weather­ township, on Friday, ventured too near a horn­
do you suppose Senator Potter would prietorship of which two rival Chris­ barn, inside and out.
look climbing the heights of fame with tian societies—the Wesley a ns and ConR. W, Sbriner of Charlotte, an ex­ wax,” of Messehger strain, will be at ing hruab-pUe, when his clothing took fire, rheumatism, and hour by hour I grew worse,
gregationuliste—are having a lively Woodland boy, has been appointed U. -the Wolcott House barn, every Wed­ which resulted in the little fellow’s being bad­ aud nothing my family or the doctor could do
a patch on bis pantaloons f
gave me any relief. I began to think in a few
war about. The following account of S. Commissioner for this district.
nesday, during the season. Both Stal­ ly, if not fatally, burned before succor came.
days that my case
bopcles* and that I waa
—The Vt Ville Hawk rushes to the
T. W. Stewart, a Bowens Mills man, cele­
the last tassel appeared iu this week’s
*Tis Stated that Hort Flint has secur­ lions are beanties and must be seen to brated his visit to the county scat on Tuesday, doomed to be an invalid and helpleM cripple Sar
rescue of his little brother in his usual
life. Bur at la*l I thought of that picture which
bo appreciated.
Hastiug Journal;
ed a job as traveling gasman for a De­
1 had s&gt;&gt; often looked at with but little IntcrqsL
gallant manner. If the “Bugle” should
by
getting
so
beastly
drunk
that
a
dray
was
Geo. R. Fleming of Detroit, arrived
Wolf* Conicn, April 10th, 1882.
and then Mr. Hail eame to my bedside. «aa.
troit gents fnruirhing good bouse.
fail to secure patronage purely from a
Ed. Homs Joukkad—Please print the follow­
Thursday afternoon, on a flying trip to utilized to convey him to the lock-up. On the telling me bow 8l Jacoba OU ha cured hlmJ. H. Dennis of the Hastings Home
We (our church)
following morning, by pawning bis watch he of a wor-c and longer rtandiug ca»e than mine,
sympathetic point of view, great Heav­ ing for our Ju*ttflc*tlon.
were bolding meeting* attbe wolf church every Journal, was in the village Tuesday, nee his mother, butthat night was tak­ was able to pay bls fine and atart homeward*. urged me te nse I be nune remedy. I did so
ens, what a blast it would blow.
alternate Sunday, .and the other church didn’t
en with a severe attack of congestion
’Tls Stated that the title of the real estate, that very uigbt, directing my wife not to spare
—We are assured that a company for like it. and locked us out, and we broke in at a and Dr. Timmerman Wednesday.
of the lungs, and will tarry’ with us now occupied by the M. C. R. R. depot build­ it but to apjrfv.it throughly according to the
window and wor*hlped. Tlien they wa* mad.
directions; this she did with a large piece
New cross and sidewalks continue to
the^Tfianufacture of cheap bedsteads in but we kept on worshiping until they took out
much longer than he first anticipitt- ings, will remain with the company in the flanuel cloth saturated with the Oil, and then
Nashville, is almost a certain fact. pulpit, seats, window* and doors, and nailed up go down, The one just laid in front of
bound the ciote to the affected partr. Tbc
event
of
a
removal
of
the
buildings.
Conse
­
the church with board* and nail*, and made a
Drs. Young of this village :ind Par- quently, it is expected, that the latter wiU soon next morning X was tree from pain, and dressed
Such an enterprise, well organized, well high roll fence around it Tbeu we appointed the elevator is probably the boss of the
myself, and the next day resumed my duties in
“heeled” and well conducted, would a meeting to go in and worship, and went. But job.
rjenter of Vermontville, are moving in be mo*ed to their new site, near the Hastings the office as sound as a dollar. Here I am now
•
Mrs. A Sawyer of Edgewood, Ill., and the matter of forming a medical as­ bouse.
in full health and Bin-ugtb, having bad no tow*
simply b&lt; “great wealth” to this village they had got there first, and shut four wolves,
one bear and lot of tkunlu In the church to de­ Miss Mary Kocher of Parkville, Mich.,
of rtieumalUni or oilier pain since. Whenever
Our music-loving people are making great I sec Our Of our driver* or any other person who
and we are glad to bear such favorable fend it We had hamers and cold chisels with
sociation of the physicians of of Barry
news.
us. Brother 8. led the assault aud we all got are visiting tbier brothers—the Koeber and Eaton counties, and have called, preparations for the choral concert, which la to abow* any symptoms of lameness o»- stiffness,
I point him to Hie picture in Mr. Hail's office,
*
—We a|D credibly informed that inride the fence. Brother Polley made a flank boys.
for this purpose, a convention to be be given Friday evening, April 3t th, under the and then direct him to go for St. Jacoba Oil at
movement ami t re the board* from a window,
From twelve to sixteen traveling held in this village, on Thursday after­ direction of Dr. Woodburn. Mias Louise Skin- once."—Ji. Y. Evening Telegram.
since the' Dapons-Everts wrestling but feel back with some pounded knuckles.
Meanwhile
tbeakuuks
Inside
bad
,
climbed
up
men have been registered at the Wol­ noon, April 27th.
match, wrestling matches have become
Into the steeple and succeeded in outraging El­
present, and the choruses will be rendered by RTOCK-BREEDERS
AT I’ENTION.
so popular in Nashville that even der Cairn*, and Brother Polly’s son-irillaw, and cott Hoeso every day, thus far. this
Ed. Slater and Bake Mix accused of
forty voicesMv two celebrated rteiBons “Highland Gk4dyoung ladies and gentlemen have en­ sacrillgionsly called It baptism. We then fell
stealing wheat had their examination
On Wednesday J. Houfatetter cocked his du*t ’ aud "Clyde B- Weatherwax?’ will make
bock. Brother M (of their church) was very
If the proprietor, or proprietors, of before Esq. Grant of Kalamo, on
the
*ea*&lt;m
of 1W3 as follows: Monday* and
gaged in the muscuHr sport, and th »t abusive. Elder B. called him an old skunk,
little target gun to shoot at a sparrow In the Tuoaays at my fann
mUea east of Vt.
jn a contest, of this description, the aud Brother M. called Brother C. a liar. the Bugle, fulfil their first promise, it Thursday. After the hearing of the street, but the ball struck a stone, instead of Ville
depot; VVediiojav* at the Wolcott Hcmim .
Elder should blow its first toot this (Friday)
other evening, a certain gent won two Brother C. ca led Brother M. a liar.
evidence cn behalf of the people they the sparrow, aud glanced, taking effect on the bare. N ishrllle, and TnurMlavt, Friday* and
Calms asked Brother M. to prav.
Brother M
Saturdav* atPenno k &amp;, Gilman's stable. Hute
falls iffthree. ■
waived further examination, and gave nose of a Mr. Lighter’s son, creating a flesh lmr»; cxi-eptimr C.yde B. Weatherwax.’’ who
said, you old hypocrite. I won't pray with you. press day.
E. Roscoe, having purchased the a joint bond of $300 for their appear- wound and a sensation that resulted in the ar­ will xtand at Woodland from Thursday tioon to
—Apropos to the newspaper question ■ Brothers, said ft be was Imide there would be
a bl«»od atonement in there. Brdttier Jenney
J*
Friday noon. L y&gt;u wiah lo improve year
all we have got to say u: That the way would like to go in. but a bloody fight would buildings on the site for the new block, ence at the July term of the circuit rest of Houfatetter.
Hams.
to edit is to edit That is all there is of disgrace
;
him. They fought ua from porta tn ithey were removed so bis vacant lo* on court.
The latest frauds on the agricultural
it If* man can’t edit, why, he can’t, the windows and doors, and from tiie latite ,north State street this week.
work In the steeple and ■ we had to withdraw, '
WEST SUNFIELD.
FAR ET* LB TEN.
and that is the end of it.
His paper
W. H. Smith has been released from community are fellows who go from
L. L Crocker • Roni-Jt PerUllser’s Ammoniat­
We suggest that the supervisor of the durance vile, and is busily engaged place to place pretending to be buyers
and enterprise must sink.
No man
Look out for the broom »tlck.
ed Bone. Super PhiMprate and Pure Ground
Bone inaiiuisctetrti at Buffalo, N. Y., and for
theae days can float a paper successful- 1town take posaessiou of the church and in delivering fruit trees in his usual of cattle, arriving at a farm house at
Plowing has commenced in earnest.
**)e pt Hit*elcvBio* u.
supper time. They are invited to re­
it into a dance house, it would olwequious manner.
ly, either in a money point of view, or convert
1
James Boy lea la building a new granary.
30-3J
Brooks, Marshall &amp; Co.
James BayI cs 1» building an addition to hta
in the sense of making a good paper, Im* u decided improvement on the use
Johnnie Braun lias seceded from the main. After supper they price cattle
it t* rraw put to by the presumed fol­ employ of Frank Baker, and started until dark, when they are asked to stay bouse.
without some fitnes*&gt;for the place.
Special Inducements arc offered you by the
Jake Fast is in Ohio, tlic present, week on
—Ed. Slater and Bake Mix of Kala- lowers of the meek and lowly Jesus.
business on his own hook, in F. C. ail night In the morning after break­
Burlington Route it will pay you to read tbeir
s
fast they leave, promising to return for business.
xno, well known to the young fast men
advertJsrment* tribe found elsewhere In this
—‘Sonic curious incidents are related Boise’s building.
Charley Child* is happy over the advent of
the
cattle,
but
are
never
heaid
from
of thia district, were arrested on Fri­ of tiie destructive cyclone which swept
The April number of the “Oriental
an eight ponnd boy.
(3T Full Hue of Wall Paper at .
day of last week, charged w th stealing I hrough the country a short time ago, Casket,” published at, Philadelphia and again.
Andrew Kilpatrick has returned from hi*
F. T. BOISE’S.
Donavin's Tennesseeans which are
wheat from a neighbor.Joseph Tomlin. ,carrying death and devastation in ite edited by Emerson Bennett, is up to
Dakota trip, where be has been to locate a
billed for Nashville on Monday fere.,
the night previous.
The evidence i* track. ’Tie said that when it appeared its usual excellence.
u ' S I El».
next are probably as fine a group of
Mr. Clara J. Miller and daughter of Charlotte,
conclusive, as the thieves were tracked near Levi Kenyon's, they were about
The Knights of Pythias have invent­
singers as are on the road anywhere. have been visiting relatives and friends In Sun- the heat Sewing Martines in the west.
to the barn of Mrs. Mix (Bake’s moth­ ready to ait down to supper, and seeing ed in a lamp, which may '&lt;e seen
They are the original Tennesaeeaas
er,) where the wheat, 18 bags full, was ithe fearful storm approaching
ran trimmed and burning in front of their
Wells ilsistsod will soon g&lt;&gt; to Fetosky to
and delight and captivate audiences
found. Not being able to furnish re­ from the hotiMi, and when the cyclone Castle Hall, every Friday evening.
everywhere, and as this is their first reside, as he has bought a farm there. He baa
The new firm of Prindle &amp; Chipman
Kr.t.i.&lt;&gt;oo. Bull &amp; Co.
quisite, bail, on Saturday Ute boys were istruck the building it carried away and
apoerarence here, they should be greet­ rented his place here to John Bushier.
They
taken to the Charlotte jail to board an
&lt;destroyed the building and contents, began business on Monday.
BRACE UP.
The officer* have finally succeeded In obtafned with a full house. In speaking of
til the next Utting of the court.
&lt;except a few articles in the kitchen, start out well and will, undoubtedly do
White
and
Fancy
Shirt*,
latest styles, i
them the Cincinnati Enquirer says:
—Leon F. Cole, a Grand Ledge iand leaving the table spread aa left by a successful business. See new advt.
“Donavin’s Famous Company, “The fully for eboht three month*, and to aeUle the
stave man, who has been contracting the
i
Mr. and Mr. A. S. Foote, will tn tain
family.
Also Mr. Kenyon's barn
SHOES!’ SHOES!!*
Tennesseeans,” sang in St. Paul's
for stave bolts in thia vicinity during 1was completely demolished to the tlie C. C. social Wednesday evening,
church, last evening. They sung as
Some of the Inhabitant* of Wert Sunfield large and
the past winter, waa arrested by his Ifloor, yet leaving a sp-'.o of horses April 36th, Sapper served at seven
sweetly as of yore, and no better comto
NaahvH
“backing,” Wm. Smith, last Friday, to sU
i
-ding unharmed in their stalls, ex­ o'clock. A cordial invitation iaextendpanp of colored vocalists ever traveled,
.ng rails and other obstacles along the public SPRING AND SUMMER OPENING.
answer to the charge of embezzlement. &lt;cept, when the st &lt;rm came they were ed to all.
At a meeting of the Euterpean society
John Bell has .the cella? excavated
The matter was satisfactorily adjusted istanding with their heads to the north,
on Tuesday evening last, it was decid­
on Saturday, by Cule turning over to and
i
after the storm they were found for his new house, and stone work will
. right to tire choice of
ed to organize an elementary class of
fimrtb ail the staves he had in stock, &lt;quietly standing with their heads begin as soon as work lets up with our
simrers for the benefit of children and
readr far shipment, but now a number isouth, having l&gt;een turned, with the masons enough so that one may be pro­
others, that wish to improve in the ru­
will not tie undersold.
•f our fanners who got out stoves have barn
’
floor, half way round.
)Vaher cured.
diments of music. There will be a
The prospects for an immense wheat
repieried them,elaiming that they have :Mapes'-.barn was torn down, but his
meeting of those wishing to join such
never seeeived pay therefor. Evident- granary
।
cold your furniture for cash st
standing directly in the track, crop are now more encouraging and
a society on Tuesday evening next, at
Kkixooo, Bbi l dt Cm
lytbe«od of Cole’s troables i» not yeL &lt;of the storm escaped.
Selah Mapes Battering than has been the caw, at
7 o'clock sharp, at the M. E. church, for
stood in an exaetjiue of the cyc­ this time of the season, for three years
—The Mag term of the circuit court house
1
NEW I'HOi'UGRAPH
GALLERY.
the
purpose
of
completing
the
organi
­
lone but It escarped, wutie bis wind-mill
Raving rented and fitted up nnmi over R. 8,
Town Treasurer Martin was taken zation. The expense will be so trifling
reat on Monday, May Iw. The foliow- between his houae ami barn was
that
no
one;
young
or
old,
need
fail
to
wrecked, and his south barn doors worse Friday night, and at this writ­
improve this opportunity on account what should attract hta attention, but the stern
wrenched from the building and flung ing is in a precarious condition. Con­
of financial inability. On account of
to the breete, after which freak the sumption has fastened its fatal fangs
the repairs that the Christian church
upon
him.
Monn went around the east end of the
Whitney, Daniel Wol­ burn, and coming arnnud on the north
Frank Wolcutt has returned from is undergoing, the Euterpean society
will also meet at. the M. E. church on
CuMotti SawtiKf
Dakota,
having
seen
enough
of
it
in
side stove in one end «»f a lean-to.
It
the above named evening.
i)i«ht-&lt;l &lt;»■ «lM&gt;rt mi
ope week io satisfy himself that it can­
pie Grow.
Some on? propOMB rMabliahinx auyou’e farm won found in Carmel, over not Ix-giu to compare with Michigan
cther newspaper at Nashville. Barry
nine miles a way? Wh**tli.-r tint deed and Nashville.
county. Thin may be wise, but the
Dr. Timmerman of Hastings, was in man who make* a better newspaper
ff hui wuwl
TAKE .IM*.
town on Wednesday, for the purpose there than the Nash rille New* nut »tSome
of sacs ring the services of Rev. Bisaell, ternd very closely co business.
folk* secure the News editor of being
“too freah,” but no one can deny that
he makes one of the beat rur&amp;Upapera

LIFE IN NASHVILLE
And Her Environs.

.4 ,

�1F’

To

“Tou

ralisu hare
oto the ant,
habits, an-

1 taonrUt were true.

U&gt;&lt;r wn« *o cmUq. utun seemiKl to stiuu

•sUom sinks Ms none.

TOw&gt;n cmci" tb" nth-r wbrnn I little ebertahed,

ft- tirr.mrbt &lt;n«
and. reek
-Sumua IF. Dujwd. &lt;«
Companion.

THE FOSSIL SEA-SERPENT.

The Renouncement thatbones of some
5lonin&lt;&gt;uth County (N. J.) marl pit is
never a *&gt;rtljng' one. Thia is classic
ground for i the ]wilic&lt;wt£&gt;logi*l. and an
' active inanjwitliaffi^veris never certain
fh-.ii h- i-j/t -dwturbing the remains of
luonster who once made the old
erelaemms wa boil like a not These
marl beds are deposits of that ancient
wn which rolled over 1*0 much of this
'continent, sweeping from New Jersey
to Texas and up the Red River Valley
to the flanks of' the Rocky Mountains.
Tiie nrnrl derives its value as a fertilizer
mainly from th&lt;- one, two or three per
cent fit pho® Kiric acfd which' it con­
tains, and the phosnhorU* is manifestly
derived from the phosphate of lime in
jhe bones which were Buried in this
spacious cemetery. The New Jersey
end ofAhis graveyard has been worked
I*ger than any other area..and the re­
mains ot the various reptiles found here
are constantly referred to for compari­
son in works'on palieontology. Exten­
sive discoveries in the West have been
more recently made, but these old settlera of Monmouth County were able to
bold their own against any "dragon of
the prime” in this age when the race of
reptiles reached its culmination. The
different orders of these saurians have
been pretty thoroughly studied and
. classified, but there is always a possibil­
ity of exhuming some now specicr., and
therefore when it was announced last
•week that a - sea-serpent with an equip­
ment Of tusks had been discovered in
.Marlboro, a representative of the Tribune
-called upon Prof. Samuel Lockwood, of
Freehold, to ascertain what the find

Prof. Lockwood,' who is a fellow of
half a dozen learned societies, and a
‘recognized authority in matters of this
•ort, alluded with some disrespect to the
amateur scientist who decorated the old
serpent with tusks, a kind of furniture
which only belonged to mammals of the
more advanced tync and of a more re­
cent age. Nevertheless, this Marlboro
reptile was an interesting object to get
away from when alive and squirming.
He was between seventy and eighty feet
in length about one-third of hu longi­
tude being a broad, flattish tail con­
structed of chevron-shaped bones, so as
to make it a valuable engine ofpropul■km when used as a scull. The data
furnished by the relics would imply that
between the tip of his muzzle nnd the
back of his head was a distance of four
or five feet. It is possible that the spec­
imen belongs to some undesenbed
species, but perhaps the remains are too
imperfect to decide this. It is certain,
however, that it belongs to the genus
■ Clidastes, many species.of which have
’ been determined, afid which have been
abundantly found in the West Clidostes was an own cousin to the Mosasaunu. or the great lizard of the River
Menee, described by Cuvier. The Eu­
ropean reptile, however, was of a more
chunky build, with shorte” head and
neck and stronger jaw*. Both belonged
to . the order of Pythonomorpbs, or
snakclike saurians, which were the gen­
uine sea-aerpents of the period.
The most wonderful fact in connec­
tion with these Monmouth marls is that
they contain representatives of so many
distinct orders of animal life which are
now, with all the countless species they
embraced, absolutely extinct This waj
the age of the glorious Ammonites, not
one « which has survived, and of the
Nautili, of which but two species are
found in modern seas. Of the six great
onier* of Reptilians, representatives of
but twb survive, so destructive to animal
life was the emergence of continents
and the change of climate- at the close
of the cretifceosu era. Of the reptiles,
the order occupying the highest rank
was the Dinosaurs, who well deserved
’ the epithet “terrible.” Prof. Lockwood
himseH discovered the remains of a co­
lossal specimen of the order in a clay
bank by Raritan Bay. This monster
walked about without a cane, on his
hind tegs, which were thirteen teet

trieh. Next in rank were the Pterosauria. or flying lizards, the expanded
wings of aume of these pleasant creat­
ures measuring twenty-five feet from
tip to tip. Below these canw? the Crocodilia, resembling our alligators, and
cuinuwd with Irony plate*. According
to modern rfaskification. another order,
the Ssuroptcrygia. eume before the
TeMudinoia, or turtle*, with which the
Jena y water* and shores were populous.

it without

mble-jpinted jaw of this
dent and modern w
l”
“Impossible!”
••Listen.
n-n. Again, after a snake ica- It abounded oa the northern shores
use of the globes from that wretched
I left
my
parents
they
living prey, it would be of Europe and the coast of Iceland and ' little insect. By implication we have all
BE TEMPERATE.
**• Greedlaud,
■ for him to ope
open “
hia mouth
Greedland, frequenting the islands of ' been assured that we ore far inferior by
re comprehensive hold, for I Jan Meyen and Spilzbergnn in incredi- ‘ nature than the ant, and that we can and secondly, that I would marry nons
a disobliging i___
animal
_ would
_ *■■■.■ etake
? i advan-------------------------------[ ble number*.—Now it iuw deserted Spitz-- &gt;; never become valuable citizens unless we but an American------ "If I were to be­
tagv of the opportunity to retire. To bergen and the north of Europe, it is be- ' imitate ante.
.After a few thousand come au American ?' ’ said Mr. X "Then Mdy’a/'Faroctte Remedy” aud deanse the sysguard against such an accident, the ooniing
rare
on
the
coasts
of years thia aort of thing has become pain­ I should be free to dispose of my heart
snake Is equipped with a smaller super- | Greenland, nnd seems
to be re- &gt; fully tiresome. Undoubtedly the.ant has
as I pleased.” Two aavs afterward Mr. their foundation In Unpurc blood.
Dr. Ken­
pumerary jaW inside his upper one, pring
farther
into
the
unpen- i ite virtues, but after all it is an immense­ X. returned.
"I shall leave for th* nedy’s “Favorite Remedy” attacks these st
which he drops on his prey to detain It . etrable recesses of the Polar Sea. Whale- I ly overrated in wot.
It works industri­ United States to-morrow. I hope, with
the fountain's bead and tnakw tiie stream of
while he takes a fresh hitch. Our Mon- men are not agreed os to whether the ■ ously. but it also works unnecessarily
the credit I have, to get promptly nat­ life pure. One dollar per boule. Dr. David
mouth serpent was furnished with this animals ore actually diminishing ia num- ~ and in circumstances which prove that uralized an American citizen. Go to
extr* grairoel jaw to aid. him in the ben. Some believe that they are still aa
it lacks good judgment It keeps oowa, Paris, for it is there 1 shall come to ask Kennedy, Proprietor, Roednat, N. T.
process of ingestion, so that his general numerous a* they were at the beginning j or insects to that effect, and supplies it­
you to realize your promise; for you
Charles H. Miller of Chfcaco went to Denyer
maxillary make-up plainly shows what of die century; others predict that the self with pure curr
currant-bosh country promise, do you not. to be my wife?0
he took for dinner, and how he took time of their total extinction is approach- milk,
’s duty
milk but
hnt unlead
nnlots it to
is every
nvnrv man
man's
dntv •T promise you," replied Mia® Thuraby. In female disguise, acted as servant ftrl fora
it. A thick,
fleshy tongue tvould jug. They are still sometimes seen in lo keep his own cow, of what value is Mr. X., adds Figaro is now in America. year, fell in love with a young hou»ekeej»er,
confessed bis love and his fraud, sod she torhardly be tolerated in a mouth where enormous numbers.
Whales exceeding | the example of the ant in this respect P
Eivlng both offenses, will marry him next ’
spaciousness was a prime necessity, and. forty-seven
GL Jubu Lubbock
LubLwvk assures us that *the
v*
forty-seven and
andforty-eight
forty -eightfeet
feetin
inlength
length ’ j SirJohu
Mining iff Ancient Time*.
mouth.
.
rcaspuing from analogy, we may assume are.
reasoning
are. caught
caught every
every year.
year. Captain
Captain DenDen- : : anta
anta have
have a
a religion,
religion, and
and that
that they wor­
that,
ship a
a black
black beetle.
beetle.
Surely, no v
that this member was slender,
-slender, aa it to
is chars,
chars, of
q! the
the Dundee
Dundee .fleet,
fleet, two
two years
years ]j ship
Surely,
worse
The methods in vogue among the an­
ITS ACTION 18 SURE AND SAFE.
in true snakes, and capable of being ago
’_ a.'whale
’ • sixty-five»feet long, the example oould be set
:r*. before Christian cient® for the development of mines were
ago toc
took
The
celetiratid
remedy
Kidney-Wort
can
dow
neatly tucked away in a cavity of "bone” of which measured twelve feet (teople than is afforded by the grow pagiu many respeett far different from those be obtained lii'the usual dn vegetable form,
the lower jaw. When Prof. Lockwood i ten
iinches,
—
„
.._
and ' which
gave ; anism
of the ante. So weary has the in use at the present time.
In the or in liquor form. It ts put in the latter way
pictures tiie reptile, therefore, be repret-. twenty-four
being •unceremoniously country to the south of us the descent for the.convenieuce of those who cab not readi­
, ' _x
tons
of
pure
oil ] public become of being-unceremoniously
sente him as plowing through the sea Tlje largest whale ever
erer caught.in
caught in Davis ■! &lt;ent
•°nt tn
nnw a
« grow&lt;rmw- and ascent of shafts were made by ly prepare IU h will t»e found very cooecntest­
to the ant G»«r
that «li*m
there i«
is now
ed and will act With c&lt;(ual efficiency In either
with his head lifted high above the strait, in 1849, bad ~a " bone” 'fourteen
----- *----ing disposition to refuse to have anything means of notched logs.
These were
waves and brandishing* vicious-looking feet)long, and yielded twenty-seven tons I to &lt;to with ants, and to regard them as froth twenty to thirty feet long, extend­
bifurcated and cord-like tongtie.
He ! of oil. The destruction of "suckers,” ' little better tlian crawling nuisances.
ing from level to level. The logs or lad­
was probably not highly intellectual, as ' or baby whales, which to considerable, ;
If one can't tie wholly good he ought to be aa
The coral -insect has also been upheld der* were climbed-by the sure-footed
his brain-case was comparatively small, may have something to do with theprez- as a model of industry, - and boys, who miners, the Aztecs, and more recently good aa be can be without too great inconven­
and the epithet "soft-pated” could bo ent decadence of the fishery. Whalemen
have shown a tendency to shirk their by the Indians, who were engaged in the ience. “I stnled your money,” wrote a thief
literallv applied to him, for the forward think that no animal should be killed studies have been required to take no­ dislodgment of the precious mineral. to hl* employer) "Remorse, uaw* my coushpart of his head was not ossified. His whose "bone” to not more than six feet tice that the coral insect can build anenWhen re­
The ore was placedin rawhide bags con­ ence and I send some of it back.
impelling force, mainly furnished by th® long. Whales may live to a very great,
tire island by working at it for a few taining about half a bushel, this same
tail, was increased by four paddles, the but no one knows to how great, an age.
million years, and that this thrillingfact being rested upon the baok while it waa
upper bones of which were short and of Although dead ones are often found ought to make lx&gt;vs willing to study a held in position by straps extending
CATARRH OF THE BLADDER.
immense strength, and perhaps con­ floating on the water, none are ever disparticularly, hard lesson for at least fr,000 across the shoulders, united1 in front
~
‘
irritation
Iron! ana
and I SUnnlns.
rewnlW.
Irtudonof
. the urinary
cured by Buchucealed in his side, leaving exposed only covered that have died from natural or 4,000 years before they become disfastened through its own wei
'
'*
Mghtuoontbo
----- —S Depot, JAB.
the long hands and feet. The ankles causes. Whales are monogamous.' and couraged* and inform the teachers that
forehead. “If a mine were5 overflowing
„
CO~ Detroit, Mkh.
Mich.
DAVIS d&lt;fct CO..
and waste, however, had no- rotary are mu^h attached to their consorts. | the lesson to too hard. The coral insect with water the troublesome fluid was re­
movement, so that the paddles could Th® correspondent who furnishes these has also been lugged into literature and
moved in these bags in the same manner '&lt;Q&gt;e following notice by a Virginia blacksmith
move only in one plane. Undoubtedly facta tells of an animal which came back sermons to an extent that Is simply mod- as the ore by the miners, who tediously Indicates readjuster scntimei^ on the part of
ho had basking habita, and when glutted ■*
*
'for a jM
- ■-»-*««-great
------ - ‘ lening. and that creates a thirst for climbed the notched poles, and whose Mose’s partner. ••Nolls: De co-partnership
every day
fortnight
through
with his prey ne would retire to some peril from the fleet to the place where its
blood tn the man who reads for the ten notches answered the place of wider heretofore resisting betwixt me aud Mose Skin­
shallow lagoon and snooze in the warm mate had been taken, regularly going
thousandth time of the infinitesimal ma- steps. The ore was removed in a man­ ner is hereby resolved. Dem what owe the Arm
water with his head turned to one side over the course followed by her in her
wiT of the Pacific reefs. Moreover, the ner almost as tedious. Fires were built will settle wid me, aud dem what what the Ann
and his tail affectionately encircling it, flight, looking for her. The animals
coral insect has lent his assistance to against tiie walk of the mine, and as owe will settle wld Moses.”
It is said that Prof. Cook, of Rutgers sleep on the surface of the water, enjoy
overthrow Usher’s chronology, and to, .their surface became calcined the incin­
College, has secured the refusal of this fine weather and sunshine, and are often
continually appeided to by geolopsts erated portions were dislodged by
FADED COLOR RESTORED.
specimen.
The serpent will, require ■sen at play on bright days. When they
who. wish’ to prove that it must nave
Faded or gray hair gradually recover* its
stone hammers. The melting
was
much reconstruction and restoration if are together in large numbers the water
taken 7,000,000 years for the coral in­ equally as cumbersome, bein" effected youthful color and lustre by the u*e of Park­
he is to make anything like a creditable becomes covered wjth an oily exudation
er's Hair Balsam, an elegant dressing, admirsects of Florida to build a reef over the with charcoal and bellow,.
bellows. Yet mining
r"’"’L"g
exhibition of himself, for his remains are from their bodies, which has a
sickly
j
remains of an India rubber boot or other was profitable
---------prolitable under these crude methmeth­
very incomplete and fragmentary. If smell andattr*ct.s flocks of “molly
ly” pstpet­ ■ undoubted relic of primeval man. Oa ods. It is not surprising, therefore, that
It was a mean editor who plced over
properly •• restored,” a roomy cabinet rels. They can live only on the
।----------most1 ( t^e wbolc, the coral insect, if possibly wonderful reports continue to reach us ' a side door the Mgn “Spring Poets’ Enwould be needed to contain him.—N. Y. minute marine animals, far, though a
less tiresome than the ant, is more in­ of the richness of the abandoned old trance” and then tied a mule at the
Tribune.
' whale’s mouth "would hold a. whale­
jurious which,
to tiie peace
happimines
with
the
introof tiie stairs.
mines of
of Sonora,
Sonora,
which,
with of
themind
introand
­ h^ad
boat, with all its crew, its gullet would
n«sss of mankind.
duction of modern machinery, worked
HAVE YOU EVER.
Queer Chinese Roads.
be choked by a herring. When feeding.
be
Efforts have been
made from time to bv energetic and -'xperienccd Americans,
I it swims through the water with its ,j time by designing moralists to nlevate will soon astonish the world with their Known sny person to be seriously ill without a
The place were we visited
ed the
the wall
wall mouth**wide
mouth wide op&lt;K
open, a constant stream the bee to a level with the coral insect rich production.” In the early days of weak stomach or, inactive liver or kidneys!
And when these organs are in good condition
was Nankow,
on the which
great possiag
to c" thin at th® front, through thesupr
and the ant. Dr. Watts admirably asks
»
the Comstock we. have seen these do you not rind llielr possessor enjoying good
overland road to Mongolia,l, Siberia and right whal®bon®
whaleban® plates at the sides, and | "
*• how doth the little busy bee,” and cxnotched poles in use in the Mexican mine health I Parker’* Ginger Tonic regulate* these
Russia. In fact, the way was so filled Out again al the back. The small animals
pccts his reader* to answer in terms of in this city; also the rawhide sacks. important organs, make* the blood rich and
with trains of camels laden with tea and [ which form its food are entangled in the
high commendation of that insect; while However, they used picks and shovels, pure, and strengthens every pari of the system.
Bee other column.
silk going on toward Europe, that wo iong’hair» which fringe th® internal
naturalists are never tired of telling us and blasted out the ore instead of burn­
often haa to turn out for them. Every edges of the plates, and from time to that the hexagonal cell of the bee ls a
It only costs us about $25,000,000 per
ing it out. The ore was worked in arasseven camels are in charge of a man ’ timei M jjey become collected in sufflmarvel of mechanical skill. They never tras, and by the patio process—indeed year to lie to und rob th® Indian aud
who marches sleepily ahead of the train ; cient numbers, the whal® clo®es its mouth,
seem to notice that the bee is utterly in­ the patio process was in use here for then kill him for asking an explan­
holding a leather rope, which to passed raises its tongue, and swallows the
ation. __________________________
capable of inventing even the simnlest
through the n,ose of the foremost animal, mass.” Its favorite food is a black hive, and has to depend upon man both some years, and not alone by Mexicans.
Can Catarrh b* cured I Yes, certainly, “Dr.
Horses were used for treading these
Then each camel to fastened in the same ptcrtrpodous mollusk, resembling a hum­ for hives and for the introduction of
patios to stir up the pulp, and in a short Sykes’ Bure Cure” will cure ft.
manner to the one ahead of him, and ble-bee, and. after this, jelly-fish, of honey into the market. As for Dr. Watts,
time the poor beasts presented a pitiable
the one in the rear, the last of the team, which it takes millinn* to make a meal,
The symptoms of Itching Piles arc moisture
if a bee had only stung him on his ven­ appearance. The bluestpue in the pulp
like prespiration, intense itching, mift ut night
has a large bell swung about his neck Fortunately for the whale, these crea- erable nose he would nave had an en­
took all the hair off their legs and cov­ seem* a* if pin worm* were crawling in or
as big os a small stove and hot unlike it ^ure, gO closely massed together in shoals tirely different opinion of what is proba­
ered them with sores, while the quick­ about the rectum. The mure you scratch the
eh.n.
T was
wn. some
.nmn time
Hm. studying
o+nAvinn. mjuly square mil®® in extent After bly one of the most vicious, violent and
in shape.
I
silver salivated and poisoned them. It worse they itch, very distressing. The private
out the reason for putting the bell on man, the whale’s worst enemy to the objectionable insects every patronized
parts are often affected. Dr. Swayne’* Oint­
was said that the horses became so ment Is the most effective remedy extant for
the hindmost camel instead of on the grampus, whioL attacks it savagely, and by mistaken and tedious moralists.
charged with mercury that it oozed from this torihcntlng complaint- Gives rest at night
leader. At last it’ came to me. The w
QW
uui
U
.a
W
*
is very destructive to the specie®. Its
Whatever obligations we may owe to their eyes.—Arizona Star.
without that desire U_&gt; scratch. Also ha* on
man who walks ahead of all does not protection
from
i
. ...
—vboth
.i enemies
-------- *-®totheioe;
Charles Darwin as *n ingenious and en­
equal in quickly eradicating Tetter, Itch, Salt
have to look back to see if his train to and it jM&lt; consequently, nowr ifound al- tertaining naturalist, he has forfeited
Rueume, Erysipelas, Barbers' itch. Pimples,
following, but can be told by the sound mort exclusively in the neighb.
Novel
Treatment
of
Drunkards,
al) Scaly, Crusty, Itchy Skin Eruption*. Here
iborbood of them all by his late attempt to provide
hi the proof, “Certainly the best remedy ever
of the bell. But for this plan a cunning ice.—Popular Science MontJUy.
us with a new pattern of perfection in
Dr. Jurie, a prominent physician of used in my practice,'' Dr. Cotton, Woodstock,
robber might steal part of the' train ana
■ t *
the shape of the earth-worm.
He has
of Vt. “troubled with Itching Piles for over twen­
run away with it while the sleepy
written a whole volume in praise of that Vienna, tells of two complete cures
ty years, it cured me completely,” L. 8. Messer
Giants
in
These
Days.
driver would be moping along holding
hitherto despised animal. According to dipsomania effected by him in an extra­ Enfield, Me. Sent for 50 eta (in 3 ct. stamps)
only the line of the leading camel. If I i
ordinary-manner. One of the cases wa* 3 boxes, f 1.25. By Dr. Swayne A Son. Philad'a
were asked what to the most pressing
Captain Martin \ an Buren Bates, who Mr. Darwin, the earth-worm is far more that of an habitual drunkard, who was Pa. Sold by all druggists.
want ot China Z this moment I woulS | bro* on • farm nnr Senile, OMo. u industrious and intelligent than the ant, picked up out of the gutter by the polio®
eavroad... Not rallroada, hot wagon ee.en feet elerea anj a hall inehei high, the coral insect and the bee; nnd hence­ and was handed over to the Doctor’®
If you only had an it on jaw you could
forth moralists will constantly be send­
road,. The Ute ot the pnbBo wajt ot “d ""e11* 47* pound,.
Mm. Bate,
treatment in the Correction Hospital for get $45 per week traveling with a cftcus
that oounuy toe immeaauule ages with«« d*’“
““i ing us to the earth-worm. It appears a period of fourteen d&gt;ys. The Doctor ttys season.
that
tiie
earth-worm,
who
bores
his
way
out repair hM brought them to rach a ’"£h* 4,3 P™n&lt;U. It. difficult mat.
at once ordered that every article of food
OH I WHAT A COUGH.''
pass that wheel rehicle. are .imply an
“ ““"I on adequate idea ot fl.e pro- through the ground by swallowing the or drink given him should receive a lib­
earth In his path, was the original in­
,WD! you heed the warning. The signal per
imposniiility.
In Japan, when the portion* &lt;« «ueh a dwaUmg as the one
ventor of the system of propelling ves­ eral addition of whisky of a not over-re­ haps of the *urc approach of that more ternblloreigners camo there alter Commodore oecuflw
U&gt;" °M&lt;&gt;
A «°°r
fined quality. Water, milk, troup, meat
sels
by
pumping
in
water
at
the
bow
consumption. Ask yourself if you can
Peny’BVi.it, there were no wheeled that » «u lent six inohe. high is a largeand vegetables were all treated in this diseose
afford for the take of saving SO cts to run the
and pumping it out again at the stern.
vehicles in use. but the roads, which '‘“A opening,™ th. tide ot a hou«oway. and whisky was even infused into risk and do nothing for it. We know from ex­
wero very narrow, were level and paved
1*. adwellmg-booM. not acothedral. The amount of work done by the worms the air that he breathed, through satura­ perience that Shiloh’* Cure will cure your
in excavating the earth is enormous, but tion of the walls, floors and bedding. At cough. It never fail*. This explain* why
with stone. The consequence wan that, gnt the doors in the domidl ot the
their favorite occupation is burying
when the “jin-ridmliaw’' wu intro- Bate, giant, are ten teel high, and the
first the man proclaimed himself highly more tlian a million bottle* were sold la*i year.
It relieve* Croup, and whooping cough, at once
ruined cities. It has always been a mys­
dated, it spread rapidly over the ooua- I
ar.B nearly as high as the reportsatisfied with his treatment, and said he Mother* do not be without It- For lame back,
tery how the remains
of Roman
try. and now there are thousands and I erXhe, •
,
,
. .
and Grecian cities have been buried seem- would always like to have such a sensi­ aide or cheat use Shiloh'* Porous Plaster*.
thousands ot there little baby carriages . The bouse wss buUt by CspUln BMre
ble physician. The second day, how­ Sold by F. T. Boise.
jn । ingly without attracting the attention of
DYSPEPSIA &amp; LIVER COMPLAINT.
In Japan, and travelers can hare them •
1876, wdis elegantly furnished. Iever, he began to feel nausea, the third
I* it not worth the small price of 75 cents to
at a mount's notice to go to any port
main bonding on the ground floor man, Mr. Darwin shows that the earth- day he vomited immediately after eating,
free youreef of every symptom of those distres­
worn has been the sexton of archaeology.
are,
besides
the
spacious
’
all.
the
bed
­
and
thereafter
not
a
meal
was
taken
that
sing complaints, if you think so call at our
of the island. It to doubtful if the railWhen the worms find a large stone, a
roa 'i in Europe and America are any chamber of. the giants, a sitting-room, fallen column, or an abandoned iron pot was not followed by vomiting. From •tore and get a bottle of Shiloh's Vltalfxcr,
every bottle iia* a printed guarantee on it, use
greater improvement over the system in and a parlor. The couch upon which lying in a field, they proceed to under­ day to day he experienced increasing accordingly and if It does you no good it will
the
big
couple
sleep
was
made
especially
torment, and finally begged piteously for cost you nothing. Sold by F. T. Boise.
use before them tlian arc the "jin-rick­
mine it by digging away the earth under­
shaws” of Japan over the old palanquins for them, and it is a curiosity .to look at. neath it, while at the same time they relief. The result was that at the end ot
We have a speedy and positive cure for
which they have superseded. But the It is extensive enough to give the great bring imnfense quantities of earth to the two weeks, though much reduced in Catarrah, Diphtheria, Canker mouth and
badness of Chinese roads renders such a people room to stretch in. and it looks as surface and deposit it near the edge of the flesh, he was filled with such repugnance Head Ache, in SHILOH’S CATARRH REM­
th.UaJ.pM!
taj^rible.
for strong drink that he was never after­ EDY, A nasal injector free with each bottle.
revolution aa tT
*
•-■ Hg- utoniinuTBMd floor.
la —
an be nwd &amp; Chloe &gt;1
!«&gt;*. wrfe ta proportion ud object to be buried. As a consequence, ward able to indulge in it again. Th® Use it If you desire health and sweet breath.
Before wheels
Price 50 cents. Sold by F. T. Bol sc
'
—
about
a
bed. the object sinks slowly into the ground, other case mentioned by Dr. Jurie was
roads must be constructed.
The age nf
of j ■ JJP
0*11 twice
twlo?z, as
“ high
m,Fn as
"________
B common
and
is
covered
by
the
earth
brought
to
i.
.1-„
travel over the same thoroughfares, i
magnificent dressing
of a similar character, and was treated
Administrator's Male.
huge
affair, with a_
a glass upon it nearly the surface by the worms, so that after a by him in the same way and with equal
taken with the winds and storms, have I‘ hu
Ke waxr,
time it totally disappears. This is the
cut them down till now a road through as big a* the side of a house. In the sit- way in which the ruins of antiquity have success.—Vienna Letter.
ting-roam ia n piano of ordinary size
a level country to simply a deep gully,
■i.llnn tn
&gt;,!»!&lt;»! l.I.V^w
been buried, and although the process of
ten to fifty feet deep. The first notice itself. but it ia mounted on blocks two burying is such a alow one that we do not
Proflta on Bntteriae.
you have of a road is seeing at a dis­ feet high, so that the instrument is aw%y notice 1L Our houses are at this moment
A.
D.
tl
tance the beads of men and beasts mov­ up in the air, out of the reach of com­ being buried by the earth worms.
Some ide, ol the profll* which th®,
ing along upon a level with the ground mon folks. There are two rockingIt can be easdy foreseen that the earth­ manufacturers of butterine derivj from
in a most mysterious and at first unac­ ctiaira in this room that are so big that worm, combining, as he does, the pesti­ their unholy trade can be seen from a
countable manner. On coming nearer the reporter had to climb up into on® of lent industry of the ant with the fond­ simple calculation. A few days ago a
it proves to be the people traveling them the same as au infant would clam­ ness for burying things and forming new gentleman purchased from a grocer six
ber into a “high chair.”
It is very ex­
pounds of what purported to be fresh
pensive for tne giants to live, os they strata characteristic of the coral insect, dairy butter, which he said he got from
have to pay such an exorbitant price for will become more tiresome than either of an alleged “Mi diigan farmer.” who was
everything they wear. For instance, it the latter, and that Mr. Darwin, as his perambulating the streets with a full ■Ixty-lbn* |8X]
cost* the Captain &lt;80 tor a pair of boot*. inventor, will earn the lasting disappro­ stock "fresh from his own farm.” Six
fHtrU, March
bation of mankind.—F. Y. Timez.
(SMl&gt;
HC
It to a----------------------------------------------------We do not fear much for the future across the two giants out for a drive.
as to Sunday, for the reaction has begun City folks who have seen the ponderous A Komaatie Story Abont Miss Thorsby.
eight
cents,
one
pound
ol
cheap
butter
on this side of the Atlantic, also. Al­ wagons with wheels reaching to the sec­
Figaro tells a queer story about Miss (bought in large lots), worth twenty-four
ready thousands arc unceasingly work­ ond story of a bouse, used to hani stones
Emma Thursby.
At Stockholm one ccuta. and one cent’s worth of salt and
ing in our cities, where a few years ago wclcnII
weigning tons and tons, can form an
only hundreds were so employed. They j(i(J5of
night after a concert, as she was waiting coloring matter, making the total cost of
idea of the vehicle used. It is pulled by
doit under protest, nnd their voices six stout Norman horsM, and is enough for a carriage in the rain, a footman in the six pounds seventy-three cents, or
will soon be heard in unison with the to make a man think he has got ’ rm elegant livary came np and said that his twelve and one-sixth cent* per pound for
other opponents of never-ending toil. sure to suddenly meet such a spectacle master hod ordered him to place his car­ butterine, which sells from twenty-eight Blood, ami •«
“Who is your to thirty cents per pound. This would ititicaUrchr.i
Religious doctrine, genuine
humani
­ on the road out in tiie countrv. Paae- riage at her disposal.
"
r~ &lt;
master?” "I nave orders not to reveal give a profit on the six pounds of from
tarianism, and perwi
for . itish capital aQj ^nve into tiie adjoining fields anti! bis name, hut to insist upon your mok- ninetv-iivc cents to $1.13. At this rate
mg use of his carriage.” In short. Miss the “Michigan farmer” will soon become
Tnursby. with one of the parsons who the poNMssor of all the available grazing
aooompaniod her. entered the carriage lands in Michigan, and secure a monop­
oly of th® dairy* interests in the Wes*.
Good butter cannot be bought much un­
uiwn in NwoIbu and Nonray where ahe ci, r the ruling market rate*, and pur­
went, Mis* Thumby found the carriage chasers UwuM look with the gravest

MimwmfBEEi

it. but the owner

■

�-r
doctor's bill, and per-suftsring. If youhfcva
DpLe ailment. Hilbrt-

Grain and Produce.
«, Hilr. Pin, U-Wr, I^tk

mute.—Mix one coffecctipful
ue coffeecupful of sweet milk,
x&gt;dIuI» baking powder, two
egga. two teaspoonfuis of melted lanl,

■liiUL HI SD1GIC1L SlMITlllBt

one teiurpoouful of salt, spice to taste
and flour to roll.
- —Charred com is an excellent .agent
io correcting acidity in the stomach of
the hog, particularly if tiie corn is re­
duced to charcoal. A handful gi ven oorationally to the pigs will aid uigeetiou
and stimulate their appetites.

—XSraliam Gems.—One coffee cup
Graham flour, one cup sweet milk, two
eggs well beaten, two tablespoons mo­
lasses. one-third teaspoon soda dissolved
in milk; pour in hot, .well-buttered gempaii ana bake in hot OTen.
—Too much attention cannot be paid
to the cleanliness and ventilation of sta­
bles and pens. To insure the health
and comfort of animate they must - be
kept dry and warm and have plenty of
light as well as pure air anid pure water.

VP et —*—OXTCOIT

“2Se3»ac«^0
riGURsioms
FroifTBbtrolt to tne'Sea,

—Spanish Cream.—Bent the yelks of
three eggs with half a enp of granu­
lated sugar; he#t half an ounce of ising­
lass in threu pinta of milk; *yhen it is
dissolved, and the milk risen to boiling
point, stir them slowly into the yelks:
boil once more and then stir in the
frothed whites. Pour into moulds and
set away to cool. This is very good the
second day after it is made.
—It is said that If linseed oil is applied
to sore teats for a few times, both before
and after milking, it will effectually cure
any case of the kind. Many cows arc
kickers until their teats are so treated,
when they become a# uuiet as lambs,
and seem to delight in being milked.
Teata may appear smooth, but still are ten­
der, and only need a- little oil to make
the cow perfectly willing to be milked.

jgLACK A HO.1,
r

Dealer ia

American and Foreign Marble,
Monmnenta, Temhrtroues, Mantles, Ac.,
LTuntingw, Mioh.

yyiLUAM JONES, ~~

NERVOUS DEBILITY:
A curs*guaranteed.

«

Du. K. C. W«rv'» Nbutb «■» Ilut»TmiT»in
• jprHZe fot hy»t«ri*.
cot:rul*lon«. nrrr
®u« !• »Jaclir,. tbttitki dr-pwtlon, lo»i ol tn&lt;*&gt;;&gt;»i*
■wri.aturrliaa, Inipnienrv. Invaluntary eratalnni
prrniatuir o.&lt;l »f«-. raiiM-d by •&gt;Trr-cxertlon, wH
lUm. or o»rr
whirb had* to mlwry
*p'* J* »H«. One boij»,ll vtire rerrnl a&gt;«-«
*fcirb bus cnatalni one
tri-jtm-nt. '.n&gt;
&lt;k&gt;INr ■ lox. or six loxr* for live rlollxn; »--n bj
n«i|
on rvteijit at prfre. W« «uxraa:«* all
bom Kicurexny ca-r. With rod. order’n*Hr—
bj u» fur «lx U.Xe».Brr&lt;wujn&gt;nltd With H»e dob ar,
w» will ».ui! Lh&gt;-poielr- r our written Kaarn.tr&gt;
to return the tn«.ne&gt; If the Irratm.-nt doer not
fr.1 a ever. &lt;jurr»ntrr» laauerf bj F. T. Bo!«e. ar.
tboriai-! avei.t for the tiUatre • f Saabeilta. JOHh
C WE-MA CO. sole PoprlelOrt. 181 and 1F3 U
Ma-I'w.r.
Cli'rago. Ill
II*'

HALL’S

gatarrhfjure
fa Rocommendod by Phy«lclant»*
si 60 tmWAMi
Wms»tiuf*«tur« and aell It rttha ^oaltlVO
.mxarantee that it will cure any
case,u*4 WO Will forfeit the aboeoaxnouut

di&gt;uwaahiK diaeaxe,
y &lt;^r DhictUi for IL md
Accxrr ko larraTioir oa arasTrnmL If ho
hax not got ft, rend to us a-..&lt;! we will fcnraid
Immadlatalr. Price, T$ ctaiepe^ bottle.
F. 1 CHENEY L CO., Toledo, Ohla.

PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM.
'fcraTsifeDtrai

be youthful rx-krto grey

Fhrestn Cdapii

PARKER’S

GINGERTONIC

—Pork SaiL^ages.—Have two thirds
lean and one-third fat' pork, and chop
very fine. Season with three ounces of
ealt and one ounce and a half of pepper
to every ten pounds of meat, with pow­
dered sage to suit the taste. Warm the
meal so that you can mix it well with
rour hands. Mix it well, and pack in
jars. When used, do it up in email
cakes, and fry in butter or alone. It
should be kept where it is cool, but not
damp.
Sausages made iu this way are
very nice for brvakfa.su

•ad mineral* which sometimes leave
their lasting ill effect#, m I, too, well
know to my sorrow. I give below doscriptiooi or b few medicinal her!* which,
if properly saved and used, will be found
valuable:
BoncM-t,
Eupaloriurn perfo'Mum.
grows along the borders of marshes,
ditches, and in Inw lands, and is often
made into tea for on emetic, tonic, or
cathartic. It is very .useful in coughs,
compounded with other herbs, useful
also in colds aud fevers. May weed,
Maruta cofu/a,'a native of Europe, often
grows in farm yards and wa^tc places,and when once it te trooted it bi hard to
exterminate, although not apt to spread
&gt;xr be troublesome in cultivated lands.
This plant, when made into tea, is also
aseful in colds; mixed with boneset and
steeped, it alleviates stiffness and sore­
ness of bone and muscle.
May weed is
often used as a substitute for chamomile.
»nd I believe is more effective in its

Bloodroot, Sanguinaria canadensis,
olooms early, with a pale, pretty flower,
growing on a crooked stem. like the vio­
let, being often used by children to
••tight rootaenT’ with, as they term the
operation of hooking the flowers together,
and pulling them until one breaks off
and leaves the other victorious “rooster.’ ’
This plant is called bloodroot, because,
when the stem or root is broken, there
exudes freely a blood-rod juice possessing
an acrid, pungent taste It is used as an
expectorant and sedative in coughs and
colds, and as an emetic and expectorant
.in croup. The root is the only useful
part, and may be gathered the latter part
of summer or iu earty fall. A tincture is
made from tiie root with proof spirite.and
the drjed root is also used, in the form of
powder.
In gathering herbs, where the foliage
is the useful part, thev should be pluckeii
while in flower and dried in the shade.
They are kept belter if pressed into boxes
or papers, when dry enough so that they
will not crumble, and when laid away,
they are then always clean and ready for
use.
I mention just one other which almost
every boy and girl is fond of, and is
used otherwise than as medicine. I refer
to sweet flag. Acortu calamns. Most
country school boys keep posted on
where "this grows, and the time to gather
it, ami how aromatic it tastes, often caus­
ing the eyes to shine as if they would like
to shed tears, only they do not like to
have it seen. The’ dried root is offered
for sale al nearly all candy stands, either
nicely scraped, or made into confection­
ery. The root makes a pleasant correc­
tor of the breath, and a very good car­
minative - in flatulency and indigestion,
when any medicinal substance is not objcrtionable.—IF. H. -. White, in Country
CenUcman.

The Champion Machines.

mEhsaway, we had in it a.geological
engine of transcendent power. If the
present tides be three feet, and if the
earlier tides be 216 times their present
amount, then it is plain that the ancient
tides must have been 648 feet.
A COMPLETE USE OF
There can. be no-doubt" that in ancient
limes tides of this amoui.t pnd even
tides very much larger must have occur­
red. I ask the geologists to take account
of these facta, and to consider the effect
—a tidal rise and fall of 648 feet twice
every day. ‘Dwell for one moment on the
sublime spectacle of a tide 648 foot high,
and see what an agent it would be for
the performance of geological work! We
are now standing. 1 suppose, some 500
feet above the level of the sea. The sea
'
.
Common, and hung ready for uac.
•
•
is a good many miles from Birmingham,
yet if the rise and fall nt the coasts were
648 feet, Birmingham might be as great
a seaport as Liverpool. Three-quarters
SElWITSiG MAOHINE8.
Ude would bring tie sea into the streets
of Birmingham.. At high tide there PLOW POINTS for the Oliver Chilled. Wiard, Three Riv­
would be about 150 feet of blue water
ers, .Bryan, Cale, .Curtis, Dodge, Robinson
over our heads. EJvery hoiAc would
And many other Plows.
be covered, and the tops of a few chim
neys would alone indicate the site of the
In fact, wc keep a full and complete stock of first cImas Hardware and Farmlrg Tools. Call
and ace them before buying.
town.
In a few hours more the whole of this
vast flood would have retreated. Not
only would it leave England high and
dry, but probably the Straits of Dover
would be drained. and perhaps even Ire­
land would in a literal sense become a
member of the United Kingdom. A few
hours pass, and the whole of England iu
again injindated, %ut only again to be
abandoned.
These mighty tides ore the gift which
OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE :
astrofiomefs have now made to the work­
ing machinery of the geologist. They
constitute an engine of terrific power to
aid in the great work of geology. What
would the puny efforts of water in other
ways accomplish when compared with
these majestic tides and the great cur­
rents they produce?
Jn the great primeval tides will proba­
bly --------------be found the explanation
what - has
-----------of------WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH
long been a reproach to geology. The
__
.

Buggies, Carriages, Wheel Harrows and
Cultivators, Mounted Seeders,
and 4 kinds of Plows.

carry palawzoic rocks form a stupendous
mass of occan-mafle beds, which, accord- I
ingto Professor Williamson, are twenty
lunes thick up to the top of the silurian
beds. It has long been a difficulty to
conceive how such a gigantic quantity
of material could have been ground up
and deposited at the bottom of the sea.
The geologists said: *• The rivers and
other agents of the present day will do
—The culture of osier willows is a
It if you give them time enough.” But,
specialty that pays only under favorable
unfortunately, the mathematicians and
circumstances, such as a suitable location
the natural philosophers would not give
and soil and a steady market for them.
them time enough, and they ordered the
The demand is unsteady and very limit­
geologists to “ hurry up their phenome­
ed. and the soil suitable is low, moist,
na." The mathematicians had other
wet ground. They can be raised mo*t
reasons for believing that tin- ea.-th could
profitably on tiie edges of ditches made
not have been so old as the geologists
to drain swamps; the cuttings are plant­
demanded. Now, however, the mathe­
ed along the ditches on the soil or muck
maticians have discovered the new and
thrown out and may be ready for gath­
«tup&lt;*ndous tidal grindinc-engine. With
Care of the Teeth.
ering. the third year, when tbc route
♦ids powerful aid the geologists can get
throw up a large number of shoots. The
through 'their work iu a reasonable
kind of willow grown is a slirnb and not
Dr. George W. Brush, in the Annals period of time, and the geologists-and
a tree, and throws up a cluster of thin of Anatomy and Surgery, gives some ex­ the mathematicians may Ihj reconciled.
stems, which grows to a height of six to cellent hints with regard to the preven­ —Lecture by Professor Hall, of England.
ten fecL These willows make'excellent tion of disease to the teeth. He remarks:
Observations, extending over the last
bands for binding corn-stalks. ‘
A Sad Warning.
—Few persons know how closely re­ twelve years have taught me that many
jawe; of facial neuralgia may be trac«il
A rather unusual arrest for drunken­
lated to the potato are many other well
to
the
mouth
and
teeth,
neglect
of
these
ness was made last evening by the offi­
known plants. Botamsts know them
all as solan aceous plants, and under the ■or unskilled operations upon them being cers of the Fifth Precinct. A young aud
the primary cause. The family phy­ attractive girl about eighteen years of
more familiar name as “night-shades.”
sician
is
supposed
to
bo
interested
in
all
age, dressed in quiet but elegant style,
In this class of plants are to be found
the potato, the tomato, egg plant, pep­ matters which pertain to the welfare and was discovered in the early hours of
per and tobacco plant. Then among functions of the different organs,of the the evening in the $milhsouiau grounds
bodv,
aud
will
be
called
upon
to
advise
surrounded by a gang of roughs. They
the poisonous plants are tlu&gt; lielladunna
and the jims&lt;Mi weed'u the beautiful pe­ in tnis as well as in other rases, and hod found her in the streets under the
tunia also belongs to it- A large por­ should not underrate the importance of influence of liquor, and had decoyed her
giving careful and explicit directions in to a lonely spof to rob her of the jewel­
tion of the plants of this solnnaceous
order to obtain for his patients the high­ ry which" she wore in profusion, and
family are pervaded by a narcotic prin­
ciple’ rendering -4.be leaves and fruit est of all considerations in medicine or perhaps with other designs. They‘were
surgery—that of prevention of disease.
poisonous. Al the same time some af­ In the "mouth this maybe done: First, by interrupted by the arrival of the officers
and took to their heels. The young
ford nutricious food, not ^because free
cleanliness; second, by preventing over­ Indy was taken in charge and conveyed
from the narcotic principle, out because
.the latter i.s oxiielled iu the process of crowding of the’ teeth—a most fruitful to the station. It was found that she
source of decay and consequent trouble Won no common character, and her face,
ripening or cooking, as in the ease of
and exprase of filling or plugging. It of more than ordinary beauty, showed
‘ the potato and tomato.
is te-Ucr to sacrifice one or two sound no traces o£ a fast life.
The handsome
—There are many sores on catr'.e teeth at the right time, to relieve this
fur-lined circular which she wore was
which if kept constantly washed clean condition of things, tlian that they should
stained with the mud of the streets,
with cold water and kept free from din remain and jeopardize the tfhole set.
where she bad fallen in her staggering
would heal of themselves. A very care­ Third, early attention to any cavities
progress. A costly hat of the latest de­
ful herdsman says his practice of curing
which may require filling, instead of sign was crushed and buttered almost
hoof rot is to thoroughly cleanse the af­ waiting until the cavities have assumed
beyond recognition. Her dress, which
fected parts with warm water and soap, su&gt;h projxirtions as to render the opera­
was of a lovely shade of empress cloth
and then apply warm tar between the tion extremely painful and the result
and her well-selqcled jewelry and the
hoof. In very bail cases there will be a* somewhat doubtful. Frequent examina­
largo core to come out; remove it care­ tions should be made—at least once in other details of her toilet evinced a re­
fined and well-bred taste. From what
fully with the thumb and finger, cleanse
six monthi—especially from the sixth
the cavity as above with soap and water, year, the time of the eruption of the first could be gathered from her incoherent
end then fill with warm tar.
Keep the permanent molars, until adult life, and and disjointed talk it was eyident that
parts thoroughly covered with tar, oven any imperf.-ctions remedied as far as she was a person of education and ac­
if it is necessary to use a bandage. Keep possible. It is too often the custom to customed to good society. When she
realized her situation she' began to cry
tiie animal In a clean, dry pasture. It
wait until some note &lt;A warning is bitterly and call for her mother. It was
is no more liable to afiect the whole sys­ sounded, in the shape of a sleepless night,
ascertained that she had left bar home
tem than any other ulcer. When once before consultation is had upon the sub­
cured there te no danger of ite appear­ ject, and then what might have been a in the upper part of the city (the West
End)
early in the day to make a call at
ing again unless from the same cause.
simple thing has become a formidable the house of a friend. While there she
one; and, if the patient is a child, a lunched and partook rather freely of
dread is established which It is not easy
Christmas egg-nogg. The liquor did not
Salt for Wheat FieMa.
to overcome, and thus, other teeth are begin to have its full effect until she
Salt is used as a fertilizer, and usually neglected and lost It is safe to say started for her home early in the even­
with beneficial effect on crops.
It is that over oue-half of the troubles and ing.
She staggered along the streets,
known, however, that a too liberal ap- suffering which children endure, even and while in this condition and almost
Elication. of it will destroy vegetation. It with their deciduous teeth, might be unconscious she fell into the hands of
applied sometimes on the growing avoided by promptly filling with some the roughs, with the results above men­
form of plastic material. It is a com­ tioned. Her parents in their elegant
crop in spring, but usually on the field
and wrted into the soil previous to mon impression that once the nerve of home were ignorant of the terrible fate
seeding. A much larger quantity may a tooth is dead, that tooth cannot trouble which bad befallen their loved daughter.
be used when worked into the sou than any more; that this is an error has been This incident is a striking illustration of
wheA applied directly to the crop; 300or before stated in effect. It is then that some phases of sdcial life in this city.—
400 pounds per acre may be wwn broad­ alveolar absoesses begin.
Washington (D. C.) Ilcpublican.
cast on the crop, though one barrel of
280 pounds is about the usual quantity
—“If I drink anything strong of an
A ProfUabfe Huntlag Venture.
used, and three or four times that quan­
evening, I can’t work next day,’’ re­
tity may be worked into the soil with
marked Gus
Smith to
J. F. Rogers, a farmer near this city,------------—r- -De
— ---------— Guhooly.
-— ----- jsafety. Used in this way it is beneficial engaged four years ago far a-period of I “Drinking at night never interferes with
in destroying insects aad worms iu the six weeks in the novel pursuit of hunt------------my working
next
responded
1
‘ day,"
” --------- ri:i Gilsoil, as well as to promote growth and
ing opossum aud other small varmints hooly. “1 suppose you get your head in
early maturity of the crop. It is not Mien plentiful in this vicinity. This pur­ working order by drinking some soda
claimed that ndt h a direct fertilizer, for
suit was engaged in both as a measure water.,r “No, I don't use any soda
sodium is not found to bo on clement vt
of sport and profit, and, notwithstanding water. I iinve'a much simpler remedy?*
plant food to any great extent in the he was constantly laughed st by his “How do you manage so that your work­
cereal crops, but a mechanical effect is
friends, he boldly declared his intention ing next day is not interfered with by
somehow produced which is beneficial to to make the proceeds of that six weeks’ your previous conviviality?" “I simply
vegetation to a limited extent; Last sea- opossum hutft net him $1,000 in .less ii don
don’’t"work
t work any
any next day." This is a
than ten. yean. Now far the result. I valuable hint to ;
n... meat
........ '....,
L_* hunt were 1 vivinntv rim-inn
Texas
The
andI pelts ,.r
of &lt;that
carefully sold, nnd when brought to- Sifting!
proved; tiie

over thirty bushels

r yean- fn-m the flr-t
kUt$tfe«A. nraki
W-UAl.-AW

I'M

WAGONS ONLY $60.00.

■

REED'S GENUINE SPRING TOOTH HARROW
ROAD SCRAPERS, SQUARE DRAGS, GRIND STONES,

EEP YOE EYE O3X THIS.

FOR SALE!
THREE INCH TIRE,
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING

BETTE ft THAN COMMON;TIRE
We believe the Three inch Tire
into general use. Call and see them.

deetined

u&gt; come
. •

Sold by 0. L. Glasgow, Nashville, Mich.

BENTLEY BROS. &amp; WILKINSHastings, Mich., Sept. 15th, 1881.

.

1AMAM..

j

Hl

!'.v;

•l£?&lt;so&gt;

I CHICAGO, ROCK ISLAND &amp; PACIFIC RY
Wwt!
Ii Is The Great Connecting Link between the Eastt and the West
■ i w • ..y

L,

CD
rf
.

1

SierpOv Care tr»
for sieoelnv
sleeping nurnoaaa.and
purposes. and Puaa
Innina Care tor caUng purposes only. One other
cn-M feature uf oar Palace cars la a 8MOK1 NO

______ _____

■'
ton. Lwcuwvrth. Atchison. Mid MmoCW

S! sirn If: c e n 11 ron It rid res span the M latMl pg
aad HlMoarl rfveraat afi iwtnu crosaed by thU
line, and transfer*aroavofdedatCouncil Htn«.
Koans oqr. Umswott and AUklaa^coaiicctlQM bclnR madojn I nlon Depots.
AtCatcaoo, w
East and South.

Ji Ml iton tn Krouuqua: N’rwton to Monroe: Dea

ii fci&amp;rwre e'SA’ivir.
1
r* laiaad Short
III -:Th.
n_

s^y^mnoUxodTowx iTona^rf

“r r^dta say"Sravclaas b$eL
Ml peo’TJ^
W ggfi

with all linos for U:r.

“cTft.
FA «-•For
information
not
(JJ
It"
CAI5°LE.

•j

gs

K. HT. JOHN,
Q—tVUW-SIS—{

Vtrt h«ii!ilnil

ERRORS OF YOUTH,

f

. den Urman who' mfferrd for years from Xrr. ■
a diibIHty. Premature decay and nil the vSt-cla

PIMPLES
CON!

�CQ.P..J wm
tr, are o» U» IM.
Loa*,- $125.1X10; insurance, $WJ,O»- Fire hun­
dred men were employed.
The United Btetaa Bui
dded that B. F.'Allen’a f*____ ____ „ _
over hi* property In Iowa la not good, but that
the proceeds of the estate must go to the gen.

Ox the 17th the worst snow and wind storm
of the season wa* reported In the Black Mill*.
Tbe snow wa# two feel deep on a level.
Govkexok Jbbomb, of Michigan, has ap­
pointed Thursday, April 27, as Arbor Day,
and invites the people to engage on that day
in the planting of shade and ornamental trees.
Tex conductor* on the Cincinnati, Hamil­
ton A Dayton Road and five on the Dayton &amp;
Michigan. most of whom had seen long years
of service, were peremptorily discharged on
tbe 17th.
Having been Indicted for the murder of
Jesse James, Robert aud Charjes Ford were
on tbe 17th arraigned in court at SL Joseph,
Mo., and pleaded guilty.
Judge Sbertnac
then sentenced each to be hanged on May 19,
remarking that it remained for ether* to say
whether the decree should be carried out.
Dispatcher from Jefferson City state that
Governor Crittenden had already issued par­
don* to the brothers.
The Providence Tool Company, of Rhode
Island, employing 1,000 men, on the 17th called
a meeting of its creditors.
At Emjxirium, Pa., on the 17th Preston
Gowen, while drunk, killed his broth'er-lnlaw, Clarence Ltndsley, returned home and
killed his wife, and then killed himself.

PERSONAL AND POLITICAL.
The mother of Dy. 8. A. Boynton, a sister
of the elder Mrs. Garfield, died at Hiram, O.,

unrlng tbe oonnal. BUI* were
to appropriate
— r— ™2 2LJtribvtlon of
Heed cane; by Mr. Bland, to retire the clrculatton of National Banks; by Mr. Morse, to pun­
ish by fine and imprisonment tbe unlawfulcer-

DOMESTIC.
The Turf, Fitid and Farm Newspaper
Company has sued the owners of the World
building In New York, to recover $50,000 dam­
ages unstained by the recent destruction of
the building by fire, claiming that the fire was
directly traceable to the owner's negligence.
The export* of docncstic breadstuff* for the
nine mouths ended March 31, 1882, were
$147,781,357; for the same period .In 1881,
$201,7*1,787.
Foe the murder of J. B. Weiaingcr, Bill
Ludlow and Al Welslnger were recently exe­
cuted al Selma, Ala., although *troDgly a*sertlngfi their innocence. A few day* ago
Henry Ivy voluntarily confessed that be did
tbe killing, and wa* aided by his brother and
Sim Acoff and the ones who suffered hanging.
Ivy aud Acoff were arrested and placed under
guard at a school-house, from which they
•were taken by forty masked men and lynched.
A German steamer 1 inded 1.700 immigrant*
al Baltimore on the morning of the 14th.
In the libel suit ot Rev. Mr. Hinman against
BUbop Hare, of the Episcopal Church. lately
on trial tn New York City, the jury have ren­
dered a verdict in favor of plaintiff, assessing
tbe damages at $10,000.
The New York A**embly has adopted the
resolutions for free canal* as amended by the
Senate.
Ovkb 135 grrve-yard insurance companies
have been proceeded against by tbe Attorney­
General of .Pennsylvania for violation of the
Insurance laws.
Hemet Gallagher, of Allentown, Pa., has
a daughter suffering from BL Vitus’dance.
Dougan can but will not cure her. Bo be
■Eluted tee pastor with two shots from* re­
volver, both of which rafssed.
The Secretary of War on tbe 14th directed
the issue of 200,000 mare ration* at New Of­
ten* tor tuffcrers by tbe overflow.
A fire at Titusville, Pa., on tbe 14th de­
stroyed tbe Hotel Brunswick, tbe Parshall

Befomb the Peruvian Investigating Com­
mittee in Washington on the 14th Mr. Ship­
herd sold the subject of a war with Chili was
never discussed with either Messrs. Blaine or
Blair. . He was not aware that General Grant
ever wrote a letter to Washington saying it
was time the United States should step in. In
answer to the question how It occurred that
Mr. Blaine. sent a dispatch on the 17th
Indicating that the Peruvian Company
was a bubble; that witnesses' interview
with the President took place on the
18th and on the 19th, and that Mr. Blaine
sent another dispatch which wa* entirely
different from the one of the 17th, Mr.
Shlpberd declined to give an explanation.
He said he had accepted a retainer from the
Peruvian Company. The witness added: “I
desire to say here in regard to the published
statements that I had certain correspondence
with Secretary Blaine, and that there arc certain
letters which Mr. Blaine would not like to have
published, there is nothing in it. - The stateIsa card Issued to the public on tbe 15th
Gultean, the assassin, says: “ Nearly every
day I notice *otncthlng In the newspaper* from
the Scovilles’ cranked brains, and. In self­
defense, I hereby notify the public that they
have nothing whatever to do with me. I nev­
er employed Scoville, and never intended that
he should have anything to do with my case,
as he is not my kind of a man, and he baa been
a nuisance ever since he crawled on to the
case in October. Had my case been well
tried there would have been no conviction. I
am to enraged at Scoville for hl* way of doing
things that I would not take anJmprison meat
if It came through him. Within thirty^dsys I
have paid Scoville $275,' besides something
during the trial, which 1* more than hi* al­
leged services are worth. I hereby notify the
public and tbe Scovilles that if I had $1,000,­
000 in bank the Scovilles could not get $1 of
it. I take no stock in my relatives anyway.
Had they all died twenty ycars'ago it would
have been a godsend to me.”
Ex-President ’ HAYEs#on the 15th seat
$250 to the Garfield Monument Committee.
At a meeting of tbe Cabinet In Washington
on the 15th Attorney-General Brewster deliv­
ered an opinion to the effect that, the sen­
tence of Fits John Porter having been ap­
proved by President Lincoln and carried into
effect, no one has j»ower to set aside the find­
ings of tbe Court-martial. By'direction of
President Arthur, tbe Secretary of War In­
formed General Porter that his request to be
restored to his rank in the army could not be
Rev. J. T. Feaxkum, of Erie, Pa, dropped
dead of heart-disease on the 15th.
It a conference of members of the Repub­
lican National Committee, held in Washing­
ton on tbe 15th, It was decided to call a meet­
ing of the National Committee, to be held In
Washington on tbe fourth Wednesday in Jan­
uary. ISA.

pocket, was oo the 14th eesrtencod to Are years
in the New Turk Prison.
Twa Illinois Senate on the 14th passed the
MU to cede the Hlinol* A Michigan Canal to
*be United atate*.
-United State* during the seten days ended on
tbe 18th.
.
Tas First Natieoftl Bank of Buffalo, N. T.,

lEthe Peruvian investigation *1 Washing­
ton an tbe 15th a letter was read from James
G. Blaine, asking to t&gt;e heard at the pleasure
of tbe Committee. The examinaUen of Mr.
Shlpberd wa* postponed, because of hl* refussl to answer questions having a special
bearing on the case.
Tn* seventeenth anniversary of tbe death
of Abraham Lincoln waa observed at tbe mon
umcat at Springfield, HL,on Uie 15th, tbe vast

Was*, WatetofelvMi
(Aia-j, Willi*, Willits.

‘

has stationed several companies of Infantry
opposite Laredo, and Americans are not al­
lowed to cross.
Tub Canadian Senate on the 14th passed a
bill legalizing marriage with a deceased wife’s
sister. lucpponcnts gave notice that they
would appeal to the Governor-General far a
veto or to the Queen to disallow the bill.
Tns Lord Mayor of London on the 14th
asked for Mbtcriptlons ot £6,000 or more to
send to Canada 200 families of unemployed
poor. Oliphant, who represents the commit­
tee to aid Russian Jews, has arranged for the
emigration of 12,000 to America.
A VIENNA dispatch of the 15th states that
eighty workmen employed on the Unpanski
Cathedral had been arrested in consequence
of the discovery of a mine under that edifice,
in which it was intended the ceremony of the
coronation of the Czar should take place.
Queen Victoria returned to Windsor on
the 15th.
Five thousand Iron wortmen In Paris
struck on tbe 15th against a proposition to
tax their wages for the payment of insurance
against accidents.
Spain lx haring a severe drouth, causing
great distress among the poorer classes.
Michael Hannan, Archbishop of Halifax,
died on tl*£ 17th. He was born in KQmallnck,
Ireland, in 182L
An iron safe tn the post-office at Paris was
forced by burglars on the 17th, and robbed of
180 letters, tbe value of their contents being
estimated at 1.300,000 franca.
A Dublin dispatch of tbe 17th states that
the American suspects were again offered lib­
erty on condition that they leave tbe coun­
try, but they refused it, and Minister Lowell
had demanded their trial or release. Four
Irish offenders were tamed out of Naas JalL
Paenell left Paris on tbe 17th for his pris­
on In Ireland, his one week's leave of absence
having expired.
The steamer Alaska arrived at Panama ontba 17th with the family and remains of MinLamson, the British prisoner sentenced to
death for murder, lias been respited until the
28th, in order to enable his friends ia this
country to forward documentary evidence Ln
his behalf.

LATER NEWS.
A bailiff In the service of the Emergency
Committee was killed on the 18th while going
from Limerick to Killcaly. Forty tenants on
the estate ot Lord Clancarry, in County Lim­
erick. Ireland, bad been evicted.
The pardons issued by Governor Crittenden
to Robert and Charles Ford reached St. Jo­
seph, Mo., at noon on the 18th, and' the boys
passed ouf&lt;if jail. At the door, Sheriff Trigg,
of Ray County, arrested Robert for tbe mur­
der of Wood Hite, near Richmond.
President Arthur, in a message to Con­
gress on the 18th, gave notice that invita­
tion* had been issued to “all the indepen­
dent countries of North and South America
to participate In a general congress, to be
held In the City of Washington, Nov. 22, tor
the purpose of considering and discowing a
method of preventing war between the Na­
tions of America."
Before the Peruvian Investigating Com­
mittee in Washington on the 18th, J. R.
Shlphered testified that he approached Walker
Blaine as an attorney tn order to learn the
workings of hi* father’s mind In regard^
to the Company’s schemes. Representative
Deus ter, after stating that Shipherd had
evaded every question of weight, moved that
he be dismissed, but it wa* resolved to set
him aside until next week.
Brownsville, Saline County, Mo., was
visited by a cyclone on tbe 18th which, altbovgh lasting but two minutes, destroyed
twenty buildings, killed seven people and in­
jured twenty or thirty more.
8. W. Doeset on the 13th made hi* appear­
ance In tbe Criminal Court at Washington, in
the Star-route cases, and tbe forfeiture of hl*
recognizance was erased from tbe record. He
entered a plea of not guilty.

Tee newly-appoteted Secretaries of the In­
terior and Nary enured eDon their positions
oo the 17th. Mr. ChUcott, the new Colorado
Senator, took his seat a* Mr. Teller’s suc-

offered their stocks and mill* for site.
A Ubkvsk dispatch of the 14th Blates that
Marly 11.000,000 tn drafts and money had
been state from tee malls ta Colorado aince
Tmb aurora boreali* was very brilliant
tiirougbeat the country on the evening of the
Mth. and the atmorptere was so deeply
eharied with electricity that telegraph wires

wing* of tbe Democratic party ta Tennessee
have tatted a joint call for a State CouvenUou to bo held in Nasbvtle on the ®th of
Jane, to nominate a candidate for Governor.
The next Ohio State Republ.can ConvenUon
Win be held at Columbus on tbe 7th of Jane.
Tee Ohio Legislature adjourned on the 17th,

Tn trial of tbe caaas at the men indicted
in Son th Carolina for intimidation at tbe polls
and for a false count at the election of 1880,
wa. concluded 0a the 17th, tbe accused being
found guilty of the latter chargeTu vote ca tee psi wan of tbe An*KMmn

of Wheal1-.™.
.
_
For beef cattle 'It has fattening properties
which cannot be found tn any other feed, the
beef being not only more tender and juicy, and
of a much finer quality than when fattened on
other feed, but they are more qulcldv prepared
for market Tbe excellence and superiority of
the English Betf and Mutton, as well a* the
fine appearance of tbeirborM**, I* mainly due
to tbe liberal use of Linseed Meal. It is with­
out question the most concentratod feed in use,
and has been *o demonstrated by tbe most dis­
tinguished agricultural chemist*,—one pound
of this Meal being equal to over 3 Ibe. of oats
or corn, 5 lb*, of bar. 8 lbs. of wheat barn, 20
ib*. of potatoes, or dOlbs. of turnips or carrots.
It U without doubt tbe best and cheapest
feed in the market. For sale at

FOREIGN.

Jewels valued at $100,000 have been recent­
ly stolen from the ladles of the Imperial fam­
ily ot Brazil.
Moodt and Banket, ths American evan­
gelists, have declined the invitation to labor
in London during the ensuing twelve months.

been burned and suuk, irod that Lieutenant
Berry and hi* offleerr. and crew, numbering
thirty-six, were near Cape Berdge.
In tbe Hotted Stale* Senate on tbe 18tb the
Oalr submitted a message from the Presi­
dent, recoin mending an appropriation of 12,05»,000 for dosing the g*p± in the levees of
the Mississippi- Mr. Garland, from the Ju­
diciary Committee, reported, in answer to a
resolution of inquiry, that a retired army of­
ficer can lawfully bold civU position*. A resolaMon was adopted c-U!ng for inquiry in regsrtto citizen* of the United mates con-

THE NASHVILLE MILLS.

BUY A FARM* BUT
DCGM,
BOOKS,
JEWELRY,
WALL PAPER,
WINDOW SHADES,
DYESTUFFS,

THE PLACE TO BUY

REAL ESTATE AGENTS,

GROCERIES,

PBOPBIETABY MEDIOIHEB,

Btl&gt;» in &gt; fci if w tvpia ii tai Idite:

PRESCRIPTIONS,

PROVISIONS,

CROCKERY,
GLASSWARE,

PAINT AND BRUSH

HANGING LAMPS,

DEPAKTME T

ISO. M. MOE.

Pioneer Store
E ARE NOW RECEIVING OUR STOCK OF

80 acres in Maple Grove, 45 cleared, 22 acres
of Wheat, gcyxi Orchard, very fair buildings,
good spring near bouse. Price 3,000. Payments
40 acre*, 3 miire from Nashville. Fair bouse
and barn, Nearly all improved. Price $1,000.
40 acre*,
mile* from Nashville. If sold
soon will take $1,150.
25 acres, in the village of Nashville. Most
be sold for what it will bring on account ot
poor health of present owner.
50 acres 4 mile* from Nashville; nearly all
Improved; fair building* and In all a good barg«in. Price $1,000; part down.
House and Lot, on Phillip* street; the best
bargains In town. Price $350.
House and Lot, on State street. Price $250,
half down down.
Good House and four acres of Land on Fran­
ce* Street. Price $450.
House and lot on State 8l, bouse new: gtxxl
cellar and plenty of good water. For sale at
$700 or will exchange for farm property near
Nashville or Hastings.
80 acres, 1W miles from Nashville on tbe best
road leaving the village; all improved except 8
acres; the remaining 8 acre* good timber; i*
well watered by a never-failing spring. Good,
young orchard; buildings fair; 18 acres of
wheat on the ground; present owner engaged
in ottyrr business and will sell for $2,600, $!,000 down, balance on long time.
Vacant lot on Pliflifa 8t. Price $120 if sold
soon.
LEE A DURKEE.

GOODS FOR THE SPRING TRADE
AND [ARE [SELLING THEM

THE CAREFUL MAN IS EVER ON THE ALERT
to take advantage of favorable opportunities.

IT IS A FACT.
No matter how disguised, that prompt paying customers
must make good to the dealers who sell on credit all losses
from poor debts, long time accounts, sickness, failing crops,
loss of property, or dishonesty of other customers.
THE CROWN SEWING MACHINE.

IT IS A FACT.
That the merchant who sell on credit must take into ac­
count all the probabilities above mentioned when he offers his
merchandise for sale. And these losses amount in the aggre­
gate to a fair yearly income—a loss which he could not long
sustain were there no remedy, but there is a remedy and that
remedy is in the PROMPT PAYING CUSTOMERS.

NO BETTER INVESTMENT
Can be made, if necessary, than to hire money and pay
for your merchandise as you purchase it.

Prints for 6 cts. yard.
Gringliams 8 to 11 cts.
Turkey Red Table Linen 50 t° &amp;&amp; cts.
Table Oil Cloth 28. Floor, best, 42 cts.
Boot* and Shoes.
Hats and Capa.
Genernl Clothing.
GrocerieH, Hte.

। sar-The “Crown” come* Into the market
‘be tast of all tbe machines, but ba* sprung to
front rank al once from the fact that it ba* ta­
ken the g&lt;Mxi feature* in all other machines
and put them hi one grand combination, mak­
ing this the Handsomest Largest, Most Silent
and Ligiitcst Running machine yet offered. AR
tbe ’-potnu" that tbe cxperlece of twenty years
In all kinds of family and light manufacturing
work has proved to t&gt;cabsolutely good are to be
found only in the “Crown." Other machines
may have one, two or three of three ‘ points’’
but now but tbe "Crown” has them all.
Every device that is really desirable tn other
machine* will be found ta tbe “Crown.” Ad­
vantage ha* been taken of the experiments and
experience with al) kinds of machines ever in­
vented, and the “Crown” is a perfect embodi­
ment of cveryting go &gt;d in them.

E. R. WHITE.

Eiterieiccd, Reliable, and Responsible.

A. H. WINN, Dentist.
BEST SET BUN TEETH $10.00

. We are thankful for the liberal patronage given us in the
past under the old credit system and solicit its continuance
under the Ready Pay. We know we can be more serviceable
to you in the future than we could possibly be in tbe past

MEAT MARKET.’

COME AND SEE FOR YOURSELF.

Freeh, Salt and Smoked

-*•»-«•**«

lour

’

Bnnr iMarCaah:

AT THE NEW

----- KEEPS------

�APRIL M. 1MB.

VICINITY Lac AL 8.
MAPLE GROVE.

dire to enumerate.

Suckers are now running up Shanty Brook
quite lively, aud many are being, caught there-

Mn. Hum o( Suh.Ok, I. vUlUBg McaU
John was vary quietly sitting astride toe lung­
I* • fhonMort dnllaea better off- Its eared brute, cither a gun was fired or a tag suck­
er flew by and one bound of bis mulcahip left
boy.
’
Bill Phtoeser hM rttunwd from hi* vialt up John floundering In deep water with Abe end of
the halter tightly woqud about his baud. John
,r»ok Wraddl of Mwkqtoo, U vUIUog was dragged about the channel of the brook
until a happy thought struck him. vis: that
Wolf Bro’s baa commended framing Mr. drawing for suckers was unlawful The mule
seemed to catch the thought al once and snak­
Mr. Areber to building a wood house, also a ed John to terra firm*, where each aurted for
their respective abodes, the mu e feeling
Ad. Wolf baa new potatoea. He found them ‘‘bully” but John decidedly wet
Thursday eveuing of last week as Joseph
a rib tost Tomlin’s family were seated around their fire
Rob. EUteton took
with a few evening callers, Mrs. Tomlin heard
Jerry Elliott ia filling the air with the mclo- an unusual noise at the barn. She immediate­
ly apprised her family of tbe fact, but an in­
terval of alienee at the bant caused Mr. Tomlin
and a. broken wagon waa
but on reaching the barn it waa plain to be
'thia goes into print Bog E. Hue will seen that tome person had helped tbemaclres
to a loud of wheat from the granary.
In the
morning parties started on the trail of tiie thief
which brought up at neighbor’s barn. Learoknown, and furtbermoec Mias MeCuturic baa
and'put ta tbe hands of Deputy Sheriff Colton,
present knowing any reason why thia should who soon found a qufintity of wheat in bags,
of tbe same quality, kind, and of about the
•ame quantity taken. Tbe wheat was secured
after bold their peace.
Mim IfcCvauaic.
and a lively time is looked for, and possibly
some will find but little time to read politics—
For the last twenty years old Dick Leggett
for a abort time—ta the near future.
ing, clearing up land, doing' odd jobs for thi*
one and tliaL carrying borne sacks of flour,
little nick nack*,bottles of medicine, tea, sugar,
all for a little son that waa a little sick and a
good deal Jazy. He worked as long as his
feeble legs would carry him. and then, right in

BALTIMORE.

E. Warner will build a barn.
John Smitt. ha* returned froth the north
woods.
Frank Webster goes west tills week, land
the county bouse. His slay there wa* short, seeking.
Darwin McOmlief is building a wagon and
for last Saturday night a man arrived from
that place, who told the son that his father wa* tool bouse.
Mr. Seeley occupy’* tbe vacant boure, of O.
deed, and that be could have hl* body if he
wanted It, or else it . would go to Ann Arbor, D. Babcock’s.
Mi** Mary Madson to instructing tl&gt;c young
but the inhuman son didn’t even •go to take a
last look. We think it to about time that She­ in the Bryant dial.
Jacob Johnson starts Thursday (or the north,
bang waa not supported by the town.
Mrs. Sarah Baker moved from her old home to occupy the farm be lut» there.
Irish Icmmons are plenty, and potato bugs
last Tuesday, where she ha* toiled for so many
years, where her children have grown to be are sitting on the fence, offering *I SO for the
same.
A night-esp social at tbe Grange Hall, tbe
go for a jolly time, where there wa* plenty
enough for them as long as they would live.
Twoor three of the neighbor* teams went to What next.
Charley Endsley while hacking on a
more her household goods, and a* she went
away to her youngest daughter's there seemed stump with an ax. let it glance upward*, cut­
to be s great rejoicing, which exhibited Itself ting a gash over hi* eye.
it K. Stanton’s latiier has sold bl* farm and
ta such demonstrations as ringing the dinner
tjcll, and as oo. In one of the tennant bouses, will go to Nebraska, but Frank hasn't
oo the old farm, they fired off pistols, hung out decided whether he will go north or wot, or
shirt flaps, and red rags, scaring one of the
Those wishing a quantity of young pigs
Now Mm Baker may col be jierfect, but it abould Inquire of G. R. Durfee. His pig pen
lookaaa if there migtit be two side* to the story. fell down and be haseu't only about filly left
with more to follow.

ASSYRIA.

George Tompkins has a new wind-mill.
W. Reynolds has,gone back to Allegan.
&gt; Henry Mayo ha* hi* new bouse enclosed.
HenryTasker has moved in witii Ed. Fox.
We hg*e examined our fruit and found it all

mill on the prcmiaca of Perry Henry , to cut

the other 4Ox(5O.
Willis Irvin. Cyrus Altman^ Eugene Howe,
thought they would go fishing. «»«&gt;ff tiiey went
to Brian 4 Lake and embarked In a i&gt;oat with
great anticipations. Every thing went merry

Nearly aU-qf the schools have cotamenced
bu*ince*&gt;^&gt;, .
-.
awlining along. Irvin mndc a pa*» al him with
from Allcgar, Ik in town on
bustaeAi. ■
•
Horace Holton of Saginaw, is in timu visit­
ing reh tin-*.
readied tbe shore
They seerpled ‘•fisher­
Those Ohio folks, have moved on ■ tbe H. S. man's luck” and rode about four miles, reach­
ing home half froteii. half mad aud very glud
L. Hyde ho iwugbt the cider mill at the Cen­
that thing* were m&gt; worse.
ter and moved tabome.
Quarterly meeting at the Bell school house
Apr.athowdSOtti. •
BISMARK.
J. B- Norris and wife went to CasUeton aud
Vcrmontril le lastjfeek on a visit
Mr. Pnnee is fafltng.
Last Sunday wa* a lovely day.
.
Waroo the Bascom.—The l aid Eagle *o*m
Foliage ia quite feeble for iu age.
high.—WoIvm ta *bee;&gt;s clothtag.
Between hay and grass, bwt mostly hay.
Ail of those in this part of town wbnwere
A. CanipeH’a bouse Is progreMring finely.
damaged by the wind are repairing damages.
Muaquitos have withdrawn their Irills.
A quilting at Mrs. E. Packer's Wednesday,
Wheal has suffered loss the paat few days.
and a sugar party la tbe evening. A fine time
Monday morning plows were brought forth.
wm had.
Wm. A. Welle will soon display a new bank
Tompkins A Tasker are preparing to make

We are well slocked with home jockies hereD. Babcock of Hastings, arrested Wm. For abouta.
and brother oo Saturday, for an aaaault on
Jessie James to showing good taste ta fixing
Caleb Tompaea pt Maple Grove. Trial Friday up bis loL
John Rhodes will occupy hl* new dwelling
H. H.
this week.
Farmer* are breathing unusually fast, tbrw
WEST KALAMO.
bright days.
Myron Stevens la at work for Billy Potter by
tbe month.
Old Miss Banter to quite feeble an* will not
long tarry in time.
Ride your dogs, the supervisor!* around.
-Thia country appears to be well seeded with
black birds tbto spring.
A* I bhal Mill for Muit to morrow, 7shall not
be able to take In tbe ballancc of till* week*
happenings.
Plows are rusty at this time of writing, but
win be brightened during the week. If Manltorecrut cold scsp.
bla lets up a little.
Report* eomes to us that John Fe*ler. a foraround tbeir ground*.
Co. laet fall, ha* been drowned. - .
No stock to allowed to run tn the highways of
Sunfield except borTradcattle; I suppose that
any stoek can legally only run oo their owner’s

Mr*. I. M. Vandyke baa been under tbe doc-

Mrn Sherman, mother at Horace Sherman,

J am about toatarta dally paper in NaahvlUe,
providing others will furnish the capital and

trimming fruit trees, and pk-kmg uprubbtA, to
tbe order of tbe time*. House cleaning to also
In vogue, and clever wives are tanml •carce.
WUITWT.

Mom* How, Esq., of Haverhill, Ma**., siroeg-

Tlie proprietor of a canning factory
at Gaiueaville, Ga., waa much annoyed
at the conatant ringing of tbe bell of
a church directly oppoaite. He proteaUtl without avail. Finally be em­
ployed a traveling preacher tofhold
Sunday, is- wcut again, Mid &lt;ui Monday brought aervicea in bis factory twice every Stmdny, and to nummon an audience bad
tier boinc m Mrs. Durfee
&gt;
Walla Walla.
bia ateam-whifllle blown for four houra
on a alretch. On the third Sunday tbe
EATON COUNTY.
church capitulated.

Our story-kMpor, bu. fine Mworuneut ot
pnute: also grocertcr^ few drug*, a tittle bardwan- and other thing* to numerous tomcutioe.
Lacey to tbe pl*cv for bu-ineM Our Alder­
man on Wednesday, want la see* lady—a

Mr*. L. C Taylor, wife of tiie editor of the
Charlotte Republican, in at Indlanopolia visit­
ing parent*
.Mr* Georgina Armstrong, died suddenly at
the residence of her stepson, Henry Baughman
at Charlotte on tiie ISth. Thia lady iiad reachcd the remarkable age of $5 years.
Tt»e recent addition to din Charlotte Rcpobil-

equipped printing offices in the state.
At the moctlng of tbe Bellevue Fire Com­
pany, Wednesday night, John G. Duel was de­
eded Chief Engineer. Tbe company will com­
mence drilling a* soon a* tbeengtae arrives,
which will be about May I.
• A

Paint and Uchot.

Tuesday afternoon a terrible tornado
Mr*. C. 6. Barrett of Charlotte, was out rid­
struck Brownaville. aitutedoD the Mis­
ing Thursday afternoon, and apparently In as
souri Pacific Railroad in Missouri, de­
molishing over fifty houses in the heart
of the town, including the City Hotel
cause of her sudden taking-off.
Harry Pteraou, aged 17 years, waa seriously and main business houses. The foi­
wounded In tbe hand Tuesday afternoon. lwing persons are known tn have been
While be waa showing a new revolver In Dr. killed. -Claud Meyer, merchant. James
Miller,"John Scruggs, Mr. Arthur and
en tally discharged, the ball passing through hl* Wiliiames of Pittsburg, Pa., Richard
left band.
Ferguson and City Marsha! Con White.
At the Council meeting atCbarloote on Tues­
day evening, a dead-lock waa developed in the Over a hundred others are reported
choice of Street Commissioner and City Mar- □lore or less injured, many of them
fatally. Tbe cyclone did not laet over
Officer. She baa held tbe fxssition for several a minute.

The loss occasioned by the burning of the
“Ladies Ball” of the Olivet College, last week,
has t&gt;een estimated at *34,000. Tbe fire orig­
inated in the kitchen. from a defective stove
pipe, at&gt;d spread rapidly, but by vigorous ef­
forts everything iu the first and second stories
wm saved.' Tbeloss on contents of thin] and
fourth stories, aloor, to *5,000. The building
was insured for *10.000
Tbe little daughter ot Theron E. Clark bad a
narrow escape from death, last Saturday,
Win c playing upon the banking, next to thcr
bouse, it suddenly caved away and tbe pucker­
ing strings on the beck of her bonnet catching
upon tiie latch of the blinds, left her suspended
by tiie neck and but fur the giving away of tiie
string.she would have been strangled to death,
nea tiie marks of her painful experiment yet.—
Charlotte Republican.

Keaolntionn.

Ata meeting of the class after the Hawk
came f rom ltie press, tiie following preamble
and resolution* were adopted:
WbcrrM, an article spiteami in tbe editor­
ial column of the last issue &lt;if ti&lt; Vermontville
Hawk.deragalort to the gentleman I v character,
atnl musical ability of Prof. A. P. W ilkins, who
Ims U-cii with us for the f**t week and who hM
bad t barge of tiie musical convention, which
clo-c» thi* evening, and
Wtieresa, we a* a clan* dlM-laim any author­
ship. or *vmpalhy with said article, and repudi­
ate the disgraceful, and disparaging allusions
therein made against trim Magentlemau and
musical leader, therefore
Rk(w&gt;lvki&gt;,' that w«consider etreelve* fully
competent to make our own estimate of his
merit independent of foreign aid- And respectlully. netting aside tbe opinion of the learned
• C'-unlry Singing School Teacher” we do here­
by declare, that we ha?c found in Prof Wilkin*
a gentleman, and musicaJ leader of superior
ability
RixM.vtn, that we desire Prof. Wilkina,.
Prof Jacob* and Mi** Haeck, a* they go from
u*. to curry with them our beat wishes, and we
:cel that we have derived permanent benefit
from ttri^ourention.
Signed by tiie Claaa.

Havltig been called u|«n m tbe representa­
tive in congress from tite third congressional
iltsirict of Michigan, to nominate a cadet of
the Untied Slates military academy at West
Point, I have determined to select the nominee
i»y competitive examination, and have asked
the following named gentlemen to conduct the
sante, to wit: Hiram F. Hatch, Esq., of Jack­
son. Mich, f Phil’p Leonard. Esq., of Eaton Rap­
ids. Mich.: JohnCarvetb, Em., of Middleville,
Mich.; Dr. D. C. Powera,of Coldwater, Mich.,
sod Prof, fiamue! Dickie, of Albion, * ich.
Candidate* must i&gt;e tartwren 17 and 22 rears
of age, al least five feet ta height, free from
any Infectious or immoral disorder, and. gen­
eral I v. from any deformity, disease or taflewly,
which ma render them unfit for military ser­
vice. They must be well versed In reading, ta
writing, including orthography, and in arith­
metic. and have a knowledge of the element* of
Enclteh grammar.of descriptive geography,nerticutorly of oar own country, and or tbe ntotorv of the United Slate*.

fide niidoBt of thia dlrtriet for the peal two
year*, ia tavfted to appear before the abna
named committee at tbe Common Council

All newspaper ta tbe district are respectfully
asked to copy.
EawairoS. Lacnr.
Waahlngtoo, D. C-, April 4th, 188*.

gives the "newly-acquired” the follow­
ing send-off in his paper, the Denver,
Colo., Ortat Wetts
M. M. Pomkrot :
“A daughter! WelLwell, bow could you t A
man of your agw and experience, too! I* she
a little ABrick!” You wouldn't take green­
back* for bsr would you f She’s solid gold.
May she grow up to pull your hair—after it
grows!
Don’t let so little a thing make you proud;
be careful. It may happen again you know.
Meet It with Sjartsn firmness. Be a man.
The report is that father and child are doing
will. But let’s is- serious. Kindly present
my congratulations to Mr*. Pomeroy. May
she aooo be among us again, with tiie wee bit
of humanity, where we we may al) see it. fond­
ly It, caress it, hope for it, laugh with tt, and
return from the carea of business to the time
when we were children, innocent, better tlian
we are now perhaps, and more like the little
one who is to be taught to call tbe solid old
••Brick,” papa. Just think of it. Get a young­
ster to go out in the yard with you and practice
tbe souud. Oo you think vou could handle it
without breakingl Don't try on your own
baby. Begin with some other fellows! Wish­
ing'vou and your dear wife and the blessed baby
all the happineM of which you can dream, I am
youre sincerely.
' Jss. J. Bskclst.
' If our talented friend will give the
nld man a clinnce—that ia, not aak too
many questions nt once, weMI r?ply,and
answer, "Here, at your service.
Of
course we will take greenbacks for lierAll you wish to give her. And will inc
vest the same for her in Atlantic-PacifiTuntn-I stock, that else may draw div.
idends instead os drawing our hair.
She is good at drawing. We are not
proud, nor stuck up, tltoiigh it is not
every man that knows when he is the
father of a good-tiatured girl baby—
one that we hope will grow to loving
womanhood and add to the happiness of
others.
But we are glad she is not a boy! Our
boy niight be hung for treason, or shot
as a n-ln-1! He certainly would be lied
If he should have brains, and use
them, he would be accused of lunacy.
He would probably have mind of his
own, and would be unpopular. In time,
when wanted about the bouse, be would
be away, chasing the girls. Our cor­
respondent knows how it is with his
own self. But this is a girl, and girls
are at a premium. One boy in the fam­
ily is enough, and we are the boy. In
a few years the door-yard will be full
of boys! They will hang on the front
gate like a swarm uf bees in July.
They will mske the old man presents
of melons, ice cream, beech nuts, life
insurance polices, etc. They will be
there to see our girl.
We will ask
them to do chores, cut wood, water the
garden, ran of errands, etc., and they
will all doit You catch the ideal If
so, send your boy along with tbe rest,
and if he is like nis father he won't be
content with swinging on the gate. He
will get into the parlor, plead his caaei
and probably win.
If our girl were a
boy, i.e would in a few years be rein­
ing all over town, and hte father after
him, looking for girls, and then who
would do the cboresT
Meanwhile “go tbou and do likewise.

DONT DIE IN THE HOUSE.

Wiard Plows,
South Bend Chilled Plows,
Gale Plows,
(Buy Genuine Factory Point.)
They arc much cheaper and better.

Strayer’s GRAIN DRILL,
REAPERS &amp; MOWERS

SOLD BT ALL DEUG0I8T8 ABD DEALERS
II MEDIOISE.

Lightest and Strongest Made,

A. VOGELEK A CO.,

HUBBARD

Gleaner &amp; Binder
lmprove&lt;^1889.

Sash, Doors and Blinds,
Paints, Oil*, Varnishes,
BUILDERS HARDWAKE.

DETROIT STOVE CO’S. STOVES
Domestic &amp; New Home

SEWING MACHINES
When in need of the Best

E. "i'KHAIVI'S
. jcLu ccyjotnra.

Grades of Hardware and Ma­

chinery.

Call and see me.

FRANK C. BOISE.
QEO. W. FKANCIB,
-------- DBALEB D«^-

Fancy and Staple

GROCERIES!
CONBIBTING IN PART OF

t.vuia

J_J

r_ rixKuam vegetable oow-

R. DICKINSON &amp; CO.
----- NEW------

CUSTOM FLOURING NHL
READY FOR BUSINESS

CUSTOM GRINDING!
Of every derertptkm, done In a superior
inanner, at tbe drop ot the bat; and
Satisfaction guaranteed.

SUGARS, TEAS,
COFFEES, SPICES,
SYRUPS, MOLASSES
"TARCH, SOAP,
,
CRACKERS. CHEESE,
BEST NICKLE SOAP IN TOWN.
SALMON,
WHITE FISH,
TROUT,
MACKEREL.
HALIBUT,
•
COD FISH,
HERRING.
STEAM
COOKED
OAT
MEAL.
CROCKERY,
GLASS WARE,
.
LAMPS.
FLOWER POTS,

OHIO

STONE

WARE.

TOBACCOS,
CIGARS,
, PIPES,
TRYHOUR
FIFTY-CENT
TEA.

SB-’ temember we get do fancy pri
ces, bat sell all goods as low as the
loweet,.(qo*lity considered).
Respectfully,

GEO. W. FRANCIS.

yy\A.GFOivs.

FLOUR. MEAL AID MILL FFED

WAGONS
WAGONS,

Our Gra/iam Flour

vicinity.

READY FOR SALE!
UK. DICKINSON A CO.

MEAT MARKET.
Fresh and Salt Meats,

Sfflotei Ham flOlraltoi,
D. 1882.

IS THKIR 8EABO*

Lard, by the lb. or barrel,
of our M

Spring-2th Harrow

RAWSON’S

About a Baby.
Tho celebrated Mark M. Pomeroy has
Ireen bleaaed with a girl-baby, The
News being apprised of the event
through the receipt of neatly-printed,
gilt-edge, complimentariea. “Brie k’’

BRAIN AND NERVE.
Wells' Health Kenewer, greatest remedy oa
earth for impotence, leanneat, sexual debility,
Ac..»l. stdrngrtoto Mich?Depot, JAMES L
matter of tbe Bbcrwfo-Williams Palnta-ao ap- DAVB At CO Tlietrolt Mich.
ureciste public Ims decided that they are what
they are claimed to be—far better titan any be­
fore offered ta tbe market
For sale by r. T.
|-£ENRY ROE. Pkofkiktok
Boiaa.

DISSOLUTION NOTICE.
Tbe ro-partnerehip heretofore existing
tween Geo. S Hartom and Calvin Smith

CEmuNtliEDY.
RHEUMATISM,

Tliree maaked men entered tiie house
of Nicbolaa, Bovee, near Plymouth,
April 13, bound, gagged, and blindfold­
ed him, wife, two daughters, and hired
man, and then tore tbe house al! up for
Vvuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago,.
$000, which they though Bovee had;
Backache, Soroncto of the Chert,
but after breaking up furniture, tearing
Gout, Quintf, Sore Throat, Saellup floors, ettL, they only found $34 be­
ingt and Seraint, Burnt and
longing to Bovee, and a silver watch
Scaidt, General Bodily
'
belonging to the hired man. They left
Paint,
the family bound, but Mrs. Bovee man­
Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frorted
aged after a time to get free aud re­
,
Feet and Eart, and all other
leased tbe others.

BEATTTS organs

BUCKSMITHING!
BUCKSMITHII8I
taei

�world.

:

nro jouhkxts.

htawife had banged the door behind
her she tore off her bonnet and throw
herself 6n a sofa, and called for Jane
to bring the ammonia, and her husband
to drop the shades, and Maria to take
ths children where she could col hear
them, for her head was splitting with
pain, as any one’s would be, treated as
she was. And she would not go up­
stairs to bed. aud Mr. Templeton's Sun­
day romp with the children was abro­
gated, and his dinner was made au act
of silent and solitary.penance; and if.
he told his wife he was going to after­
noon service, and did go over to his
cousin Hetty’s, she, at least, htyl no
right to blame him.
But woe for Mr. Templeton when he
came home that evening! Mr*. Tem­
D1AM0MD EAR-RINGS.
pleton had been removed to her own
If there was one person in the world room, which reeked with steam of cam­
more than another that Mrs. Temple­ phor and alcohol; she lay there in her
ton gazed at with eyes of curious re­ white night-gown, with her black hair
gard. it was her husband’s oouain. Mrs. streaming over the pillow, with her
Morris; and if she had one ambition great black, eyes rolled up and fixed on
eclipsing another, it was to eclipse Mrs. a remote point ot the ceiling, and wilhMorris in every direction. If Mrs. Mor­ the foam standing on her dips—ghastly,
ris set np a wall-basket, Mrs. Templeton stiff, and immovable. It made no odds
compassed a hanging cabinet. If Mrs. to Mr. Simpleton—I mean Templeton—
Morris had a new ivy-pot, Mrs. Tem­ that he had seen her so fifty times be­
pleton would have nothing less than a fore; in fact, always when she wanted
window girdeu. A single vase on Mrs. something she could not have. • Cold
Morris* piiaza caused Mrs. Tiempletoms terror struck to his soul lest he should
premizes Ao break out with urns nnti’i lose his torment; all her virtue* swelled
they looked like a stone-cutter’s yard. into the hosts of heaven, all her faults
If Mrs. Morris gave a high tea, Mrs. were wiped, out as with a sponge. He
Templeton had a dinner party out of was down on his knees beside her in a
hand; if Mrs. Morris bad a luncheon, moment "Oh try darling! my Juliet!
Mrs. Templeton had a ball, or what my love! speak to me! Tell me you
answered for one in the limited round know ms?' he cried.
of pleasures of their place of abode;
" Run for the doctor, Jane. Where
and if Mrs. Morris indulged herself is Dr. Harvey? Why haven't you had
with a newsilk. Mrs. Templeton always him here already? Gal him at once.
counted her flounces, and made her Give mo the brandy. Heat those soap­
own phylacteries broader.
stones. Where are the hot-water bogs?”
When one day, then, Mrs. Morris ap­ And he was bathing her lips and rubbing
peared at church—the usual place m her hands. and kissing her forehead,
the town of Carloon for ladies to ex­ aud adjuring her to give any sign of
hibit their toilettes—with a preUy little life. But it was not till the doctor'*
pair of diamonds sparkling in her ears, step waa heard that Mr*. Templeton
you can imagine the state of disgust vouchsafed the least indication, and
and wrath in which Mrs. Templeton then her breast began to heave, her
walked home, and the very disagreea­ hands to tremble, her long supple body,
ble time that Mr. Templeton had of it that had been stiffly resting ou it* head
as he walked beside her, endeavoring and heels only, began to sway and sub­
to look like the happiest domestic man side, her feet to twitch, nnd presently
in Carleoo. The sermon was criticised, thoec feet wore beating a tattoo on the
tbe minister made out a time-server, footboard, and the lips parted in shrieks
the pariah denounced •collectively and and the shrieks turned to sobs, and the
personally, his own peculiar friends doctor was pouring chloral between the
among the rest. and.-finally his cousin teeth, and the sobs sank away into
Hetty was reached, and her habits, her sleep and the hysteric* were over.
manners, and her dress were made the
•• What could have excited you so, my
text on which to bang anathema dearest, and thrown you into such a
maranatba of worldliness, affectation, terrible convulsion?” Mr. Templeton
bad taste, low moral sense, irreligion. was saying next morning. (••Hyster­
and last of all. extravagance—his dear
ics” was a forbidden word. Mrs. Tem­
little harmless Cousin Hetty, whose red
pleton would have had another attack
curls lighted such a frank, child-like
nt the sound of it-) " It must have
countenance, and whose two diamonds,
been tbe heat of the church; it wa*
he had been guilty of thinking, during
overpowering.
Thurlow has never
the "Te Denm.” Just matched the
learned to regulate that furnace.”
limpid sparkle cf the clear dew-drops of
•• The heat.” sighed Mrs. Templeton,
her gray eyes. But Mr. Templeton had 1
far too much experience to say anything faintly, "and the glisten of those dia­
of the sort.
• ‘James Morris could not monds They kept dancing so before
pay hie debts if he were sold out to-day.’’ my eyes with their bright spot* that they
said his wife. "And look at bis wife’s dazzled the brain. O. I'm afraid I was
dress!—Maria, how many time* must very cross yesterday, Jairus. I didn't
I tell you to keep those children inside know what I was saying. O. 1 never
the curbstone?—his wife’s dross just want to see any diamond* again.”
•• You shall have a pair o! your own
one glitter of satin and’ jet. And I de­
clare it was impossible for me to fix my before I am a week older,” exclaimed
eyes ot&amp;hc lecturu for the way in which the feeble husband.
•• O. no, no. no! I should be so
she kept those diamonds twinkling be­
fore me, with her head on the perpetu­ ashamed. I don’t deserve them. 1—I
al dance.- A pretty place for diamonds couldn't think of it. Indeed, indeed,
I wouldn’t have you. Jurius^darling; 1
—church!. 1 know a woman who wore
them to het father’s ffinerat; I suppose should feel just ai if I "had begged for
she would.'- I should think, at afiy rate, • them.” But when Mr. Templeton re­
she could have controlled her tuclina- turned from the city that night, a* pret­
tions and wai’ed till next Sabbath—dia­ ty a pair of solitaire ear rings as lie
monds on Palm-Sunday! But it’s high .could buy with the bond he sold glittered
timeof !day, 1 must say,” warming up in a velvet cased marked with her name.
A* he opened the Vase an J* held it be­
vyttli-hor husband’s silence, "when A am
without a single diamond to my name, fore her, Mrs. Templeton shuddered,
and there is James Morris’ wife—James and turned her glance away from the
Morris who owes you &gt;5,000 borrowed beautiful white sparkle, and said Choy
looked at her with two great eyes of
money------ ”
.
It was very weak in Mr. Templeton reproach, and she ought not to have
to interfere;* but one can not be always them, nnd they were as heavenly as
on one’s guard. "1 understand. Juliet, twin liters. And prwently. they were
my love, said he. "that Hetty’s Uncle glittering in her cars, and all the.' faint­
ness acd languor were gone, and «he
Roberts sent her those earrings.”
‘•Uncle Roberta, indeed! I should was running to the glass and holding
like to see Uncle Roberts for once, if he her head ou thi* side and on that, and
is not a mythical personage altogether,” admiring herself and turning to her hnscried his wife, with the air of expecting. b:ind for admiration, looking, with her
Mr.-Templeton to produce the alleged large liquid dark eye*, her pale face,
Uwcle Roberts immediately.
"Uncle her perfect features, her dazzling smile,
Roberts! Uncle Roberts! It is always- all illumined by the shining drops, as
be? *i ti f al as the most beautiful Juliet
Uncle Roberta. And you •nnderstand,’
forsooth! Why didn’t I understand? that was ever loved. And her husband
Whv were the eat rings concealed from felt twice aud a hundred times repaid
me? For all I know you gave them to for tbe sacrifice of his little savings in
her yourself. Perhaps you are this Un­ the only bond he had yet been able to
cle Kc'ucrte who is always brought to bay and lay by for the future by the
the front at every pet piece of extrava­ vutioa of her and by the delighted kiss­
gance. For my part, 1 wish I bad even es she showered upon hi* lip* and the
n husband. not to speak of an Uncle warm embraces of the long white arm*.
It was not once but twenty times that
Roberta, who would not see me trodden
under foot by any little minx who Mr*. Templeton looked at the flaehmf
Chooses to toM her head above mo------- " her new splendor* in the mirror, took
"My dear! ray dear! just remember them out of her ear* and put them bock
where you are; just remember the chil­ again, tangled her hair in them so that
dren.” murmured
Mr. Templeton, her husband might loosen them and b&lt;j
struck afresh, as he did so, with ths
floundering ia a little farther.
“Where I am! I suppose you don't palt^pink seashell of the ear. the curve
want all Carleon to hear how I am out- of the throat, the exquisite oval of tite
cheek; and she went at last to the win­
Tow'd like to have me endure in si­ dow and shielded the pane with her
lence. Qf course you don’t waqt the hands while looking out and up at the
"1 declare,” she said, “the
ehKdren to bear their mother tell the star*.
plain story of your neglect, your out- glistening of Orion’s belt is no more
splendid than my diamond*. I never
thought -1 should have
diamonds,
•ad made a. low bow with »glittering Jairus.”
Nor did sha have diamonds after that
one evening of erejasy. The little bor­
“What in the world is the matter ough. of Carteon wa* no better than
other places, and while she stood at the
window, comparing - her. gems
with
Orion’s a piur of enterprising burglars.
atood fall of lightning*.”
’•Hetty Morris’ carrings, I guesa.”
was tbe answer. "She has probably
■sen them at church to-day. Poor Mr? their opportunities, and they went
Templeton! What a life that vixen throagh the home that night, and the
diamond* went through their fingers
'
t know about that. Heiatre- the next day.
Alas lor Mrs. Templeton! It would
have been Idle far her to have another

And »o the mother of t

chUdrcu. the worst imp* ever born of
hysteric* and temper! Now if it had
been our children. Louis!”
“I think you had better tell her,
though, that your diamond* are only
Alaska ervstaf*,” said Louis. “Pretty
bit* of glM*. but only genuine glasa,
that Uncle Roberta tent for mischief."
“Weil. I don’t know but I wilt But
I think Til lend them^o her to wear tp
church on Easter ilr*t, tor I do want
Clara Bowman to win her ear-rings—
they'll be the only genuine diamond*
among (u all. And she brought him
money enough for Mr. Bowman to af­
ford her whatever she wants; and I
heard her lay tbe wager with him my­
self that Mrs. Templeton would wear a
pair of solitaires to church on Easter."
—Harper’s Basar.

Hlrlng Children to be Good.
Mr*. Holmes and her sister were sit­
ting before the cheerful grate fire sew­
ing. while their tongue* flew almost a*
nimbly as their finger*, as various mat­
ters from the forming of the President's
Cabinet down to the shade of blue used
in knitting the baby's sock* had been
discussed. Finally the subject of hir­
ing children to be'good was broached.
“Well." said Mrs. Holmw, I am tired
of trying to coax or beg Albert to do
anything, and I think he 1* too large
a boy to coerce into right doing. So I
am going to hire him to do any little
task I may hereafter require of him.”
"Mark my words, Ellen, you'll be sorry
if you do," replied her sister, "how
soon, think you, will his judgment m to
terms differ from yours? I saw that
course tried by George Edward’* moth­
er last summer.
She needed some
cherries for making pie*, and offered
him six cents a Quart to pick them. He
answered, impudently enough: ’Who’B
pick cherries for six cents a quart? 1
wont.' And only yesterday, in coming
from church, I overheard Mr*. Moody
offering her boy five cents to learn the
books of the Old Testament before
evening.*’
“Well, he probably learned them."
“He more likely did not, or if he did
he can’t repeat them to-day. I will find
out how good his memory to next Sun­
day morning, as he is in my Sabbath
school class. Hiring children to learn
anything, to do anything which they
should do for ite own sake', or to be any­
thing, I have never found yet to work
well."
“Well, what can be done?”
“Done! Why tell a child to do a
taing aud .see that he does it, to b*
sure. The very ground-work of order
in families is obedience. 1 have always
told you that you would have trouble
with Albert if you appealed so constant­
ly to his wishes in little matter*. A
parent ought to know what is for a
child’* good belter than tbe child does,
aud without unrighteously provoking*
child to wrath or thwarting it unneces­
sarily. Unquestioning obemence should
be the rulu. This has always been my
Clan with my children, as you well
now."
" 1 have always thought you much toostrict with vour little ones. What does
a child of Sina's age know about obe­
dience?
You utterly spoil all the little
cunning ways of your piers babies,”
" Bettor to get along without a selfwilled pel than to tolerate a wilf-willed
boy.”
•• But you do give your children re- I
ward* for being good. What is that
but hiring them?"
“ My children know that obedience
is expected of them; that to do good
aud be good is to be the rule of their
lives, buttbey have evil aud temptation
to contend against, a* well as ail other
children. If the hope of gaining some
little gift, is added to the consc^ ntioos
rightfuinetfs of the matter. Laotuolimos
think it helps some in overcoming tiie
natural desire* for wrong-doing."
" Thea why do you tell me I shall be
sorry if 1 hire Albert to do right?"
•• Simply because he well know* ii
you do not hire him he will not have
to perform tiie required task, and in
thi* way yon are putting yourself at hi*
mercy.
You make
the gift the
sole reason for his doing it, and as
1 say, hi* &gt;ideas of value aud your*
will soon differ. With ray children,
if
I
wish
anything
done
they
understand' fully they must do it,
whether I give them any little extra
pleasure for it or not. A regular barter
of *o much given fur such a service
rendered I seldom make with them.
Whenever I do, it is about some little

by their owa lat&gt;or. I hired WiMie tc
pick some berries for me during th«
summer, yet. had I wished him to de
so, he wopld have picked them for m«
witboal pay. I wished to teach him th«
valae of hislabor.”
“WelL 1 most confeas, I can’t set
the difference between your method ol
hiring and mine.”
“WelL there ia a difference. You
admit being tired coaxing and begging
Albert to do anything, aud therefor*
propose hiring him, and I tell you it will
fail as signally as coaxing and beggini
have done. I never iniportnne my chil
dten to do anything which I hare not a
right to command them to do, as you
well know. Therefore, a gift'from mt
ia extraneous, a reward of tfbil-doing.
yet But a make-shift to enforce a com
maud, which without it would be of nc
effect. And would you commence this
very day, late as it i», and demand a
prompt, quick obedience from Albert,
In a short tyne you woobl hare no occxsion to ooax or beg. and the reward*
of welHoing ban then be kept foi

“Well, sister, your success with youi
bov* ba* i*o far certainly !&gt;een remark­
able. If I onlv cotfid—
••You can it you will. You are a

find him. Many years ago Henry Quig,
a shipping merchant oF thb city, died
aii; : m g:&gt;u you to cone: erwa
lnlttltjite
In those day* Philadelphia
the Clam, m he chugbt sight at th* ; ....
wm the commercial metropolis of ths
about. Hop
Fanner.
.
United States, and Mr. Quig’* estate, at
“And so am If’ added tbe Jackal.
the time of his death, had accumulated
“And why this fierce struggle?" asked to a considerable extent . His widow,
tbe Fortner, m he sat' down on a stone Jemima Quig, a woman of strong char­
between them.
acter nnd mental firmness, conceived the
The straighter the whiskey tb.. uyjn. crootai
•Til tell you in a very few words," idea that tht; propertv became her* aa
the walk. This U a reel tact.
.
said the Clam. “This JackaT went out *oon as her husband died.
She had
of hi* way to ridicule my speech. Now, therefore collected tbe rents, built
TO ACCOMODATE THE PUBLIC.
I do not want to brag, but I claim to twe houses sod made investments, and
good grammar in my talk, and I’ll leave her management of the affairs con­
cl*lm«nf tbe public which ba*
1 berahy j«tit to you if I don’t?'1
tinued for some time after the demise of rouized them, have prepared a liquid -preparer
••■flint wasn’t what raised the Row,"
her busband. Mrs. Quig excluded her tkm of that remedy for *;wial awouw^latK u of
»protested tbe Jackal. “I waa. walking children, some of whom were of full age, ti&gt;ofc- who from any rcaaou di*like to prepare
along the Sand wficn this Clam made from any control whatever or right in itfor thetnaelve*. It i* very concentrated and
fan of my Gait I don’t chum to be os the projyerty, although two-third* of it a* the dr*M! I* amall, it I* more eaally taken by
many. It ha* tbe *ame effectual action in all
prnceful a* a Cow, but the Clam had no was lawfully thetrs,
Litigation sprung
of the kldne’*, iver or bowel*.—
business to say that my Walk reminded up between the mother and children, &lt;U*ea*e*
Home and Farm.
him of a milk-stixfi running away with w hich continued for many years, until
Learn
to
take life as it cornea, bat be sure to
n Barn-yard."
finally, in 1860, nearly all of the property
“My friends,” replied the Farmer, as. was sold by order of the Orphans' Court make tbe best of it before it goe*.
a Hornet settled down on the back ot his and distributed according to law among
WHAT THEY LEAD TO?
neck, “vou are both wrong. In the first those to whom it belonged. Tbe only
Kidney trouble* and Liver trouble*,
place, if the Jackal had kept to the thing which escaped the sale was the
checked In (time by Dr. David Kennedy'*
woods the Clam would nevef have no­ residence of Mrs. Quig and her husband,
ticed his awkward Gait In the second situated at the corner of Twelfth and “Favorite Relnepy,” will end in Con.tipatioa
place, if the Clam had kept his Mouth Spring Garden Streets, which is now di­ Pilei, Rbeumatiam and Gravel. Tbe latter are
shut the Jackal could have found no vided into the Centra^ Hotel and four or ailment* ot very teriod* character. •‘Favorite
fault with his Grammar.”
five stores. Thi* remaining property Remedy” act* upon the disordered Kidneys and
belonged to Jemima Quig, subject to the Liver with quickness and certainty. It is na­
WHttL
“In the^hird place," added the Hor­ claim of her children. The latter were tures own device for this purpoae. Ask for it
net as he carefully lifted the Farmer over of a wandering disposition, one became
th«* nearest brush, "if you had kept to - a sex captain, and is now residing in doctor, at Rondout N. Y.
your field no Hornet would have con­ Brooklyn; another died in South Amer­
jTbe lilies of the field “toll not, neither do
structed an Orphan Asylum on the back ica, and a third, William Quig, after they •pin," but they hare their blow .out just
serving in the army at a cavalryman, tbe **me.
of your neck."
,
went
West
and
settled
in
Kansas.
Hi*
AMXEX.
•
We are ctrongly deposed to regard that
The time to quote philosophy is after friends and relative* in the East beard peraoti a* the beat physician who doc* ino*t to
the brickbat* have done flying.—Detroit very little of him. It was said he had alleviate human suffering. . Judged from thia
married and had one child; who is standard. Mr*. Lvdk. £. Ylnkham 283 Western
John
* ”
"News
came Avenue, Lvnn, Ma**., i* entitled to tbe front
Leslie
Quig.
William
Quig
- rl,U&lt;l
died. ,-«nk, for her Vegetable Compound U daily
that
Dime Novels.
Jemima
the working wonderful cum In female diseases.
mother
Hi*
_and
&lt;Srnd forclrcular to the above addrys*A young murderess in St Louis con­ other relatival made repeated efforts to
fesses to have committed her dreadful discover the whereabouts of the widow
The man who docs his JcWtl beat to act on
crime under the inspiration of the vicious and child, but no information could be the square will generally be round when hi*
literature found in dime novels. She gleaned of thl'm. Jemima Quig died in neighbor need* assistance.
was poor but respectable.
Her life be- 1875, and her grandson, John Leslie, be­
USELESS FRIGHT.
caftie insupportable when contrasted came entitled to the major portion of her
To worry about anv Liver, Kidney or Urinary
ven---------yean* rolled
All
with the gooo times which was ascribed property.
r.„—Sr
------------- ---by. —
to girls who ran away from home and, the letters aud advertisement*
advertisements which had Trouble, especially Ilriciit’s Disease or Dia­
betes,
a*
Hop
Bittera never fall* of a cure where
lived in tiie gilded palaces of siu whiclp u
— —
uu.u.a t_
t—1:»- of
_• .i
— a cure is ]M&gt;Mible.
been
published
in .u_
the locality
the
We know this.
the . unfortunate imagine are asy­ minor's residence when last heard from
Guitcau, the comedian, will make his final
lums of refuge.
This is a strange having met tilth no response, the Phila­
confession for a young woman to make, delphia relatives made application to the appcrance ar a Rrcat benefit for tbe United
but'there is reason to believe it is liter­ oourt through William C. Wrigley, Esq., States on June SO.
ally true. The country is flooded with their attorney, to have at. udministra-'
EXPERIENCE THE BEST GUIDE.
vile publications calculated to lure from tion taken out upon the estate. Tbe ad­
TT..i reason why women everywhere use
respectable paths the young and unsus- ministrator continued the inquiry in Parker's
Ginger Tonic la, becaosc they .have
peeting.
The glamour of romance Kansas and Iowa, and, although .several learned by experience—the best guide—that
which they throw around youthful esca­ bogus claimants for tiie estate apjieared, this excellent medicine overcomes derpotidency
[x-riodicai
headache. Indigestion, pain in the
none
could
establish
the
identity
of
the
pades rol* tiie inconsiderate lawlessness
lost boy, and, giving up the search as luck and kidt-eys, nnd other trouble of the
of youth ot all ite repulsive feature*.
M X.—Home Journal.
hopeless, the administrator prepared to
The effect they have had upon boys,
Mr. Swings*}* “that a novel Is the world’s
nearly every parent fully appreciates. file an account and make distribution of
But until the case of the young St. Louis the property among the Philadelphia truth, with a beautiful wotnah walking through
relatives os nearest of kin to Jemima it.” Generally we may add, with a man after
woman was brought to light few sup­
Quig:
but
suddenly
in
September
last,
posed the corrupting influences of the
her.
'
alleged romances were undermining the while the money was still in nis hands,
The most reliable stimulant for the growth
he was informed by Messrs. Rand and
restraints and decencies of gin-life.
of Infants and chlldrcu. and the one most gen­
Patten,
lawveis
of
thi*
city,
that
they
Hundreds of boys have been brought to
tle iu Its southing effect, i» Brown's Iron Bit­
_ ___________ ;______
shame by them. The young lives that had found the long-lost heir, and that ters.
have met with premature eclipse by the they claimed tic property.
During 1B81 Great Britain and Ireland ex­
poison which the dime novel supplies
A commission to take testimony was pended over tAlo.OOO.UOU for Intoxicating llqare innumerable. Perhaps they will go directed to Avonx, Pottawattamie Counuurs.- VODFUIIIII
ConMimplion of beer ww nearly twice
,
,
. ,
. .
nil| ulln
on multiplying to the end of time, unless ‘f. I°»«.
...'doMC ol ibe allegc-1
Ull.
llqujoriu
.
the United bfartes.
parental influence can meet the evil aud John Iteshe Qui^, and opened by Judge
supply an antidote. There U apparent­
Hanna, ot the ‘ &gt;rphan’s Court, of tiiis
NEEDED BY
ly no other way of counteracting the city.
Mrs. Dorcas Cuppy, mother of , At certaip
tn lite Zoa-Pbur*, to
John Leslie Quig. testified that the boy | MrenEtbeu mid regulate the system,
disease.
There is law for tiie assassin
and the common slabber, but none fur was
____________________
. . I Ice-cream H n*»w served Id mold* to resemble
lx&gt;rn in Mcrris______
County, ________
Kansas, on
tin* moral murderer, who spreads with; a homestead taken up by the father, who a?paruxii". Thi* won’t do. The only way that
invisible poison the spotless whiteness of died just one yeanafter *the
’
birth of* »»hi* . will » can tiie girls against it I* to make it resem­
young lives.cven before they have grown son. Mrs. Cuppy subsequently married j
ble onions. ____
out of infancy,—Omaha Herald.
her present husband, Isaac Cuppy. She
When you have had catarrh lonst ei.ou^h just
admits having seen advertisements in.

;
’
,
J
,

tl,v papers and baring received k-Uc-ra ;
Hiring a Substitute to Serve out a Senher uumu
child,, but
tCilCV.
I concerning
euuwiunq; uct
uul states that
him she
nuv i■
. .. no notice
... of
&gt; .i
_ and
—Jiu
------j t&lt;xik
them,
hid -i.
the boy I
An extraordinary ca.*w was developed ; for these reasons.
Shortly after her
iu the office of Ghicf Clerk Sparks, of , husband’s death Jemima Quig and her
the Court of General Sessions. In Sep- I sister Catherine visited the widow and
tember, 1880, Sherman Reed was sen- took
’ a great‘ fancy to John,
’ v~ v
her
- infant
Mrs. Quig wanted to take the
tenced by Judge Cowin to the I’cniten- child.
boy away. She promised to leave him
tiary for three months for-selling lottery­
policy slip*.
Reed was sent to tiie a large amount of niofley in her will, but
Island, but in a day or two wqs brought being refu.*ed her request she left in
down on a writ ol habeas corpus, and anger. The widow suWquentiy heard
pending an appeal wa* admitted to bull that Mrs. Quig had offered anyboby •
In 83,(JU0. llis bondsman was Oliver 8.500 if they would steal John Ixjslie and
Blaber, a printer, of No. 112 William bring hhu to her. For that reason the
Street, who qualified on real nnd per­ mother says she feared that all these let­
ters and notices in'the papers, which she
sonal estate to the amount of 820,VOO.
The decision was afterward confirmed, afterward saw, were merely sent for the
and the District Attorney informed the I puqjoee of finding out where her boy j
bondsman that tbe accused man must be was, so that Mrs. Quig might take him
surrendered. The surrender was made away from ,her. The facta testified to
on a Monday morning. Officer Isaac by Mrs. Cuppy are coincided with by the
Smith, of the Court of General Sessions,
testimony of children of hers before the
marriage’ to William Qulgg, by her pres­
brought a man-into Chief Clerk Sparks’
office, and said that it was Reed, and, ent husband, Cuppy, anuby children of
after the usual routine the mail was pr- Cuppy by a former marriage.—Philadel­
dered back to the custody of tiie Sheriff phia Press.
by Judge Gildersleeve, and he was taken
to the Penitentiary. Chief Clerk Sparks
Sayings of Eminent Men.
this morning received word from the ■
Sheriff
that too
had ...
confessed
--------- ---— —man
—
------------- — to. | I have found more benefit from an inch
Deputy-Warden Osborn that he wa* not advertisement in the column* of the loSherman Reed, but James McGinnis, of cal paper than from all the adulation
281 Mulberry Street.
McGinnis wa* that is afforded to the shrine of imperial
taken befote Judge Gildersleeve without power.—Napoleon Bonaparte.
delay. He said Uiat he had been impor­
A weU-writtcn and well-displayed ad­
tuned by Blaber and other friends of vertisement, kept constantly before the
Reed to personate Reed and serve out
public eye, will bring more trade to a
Ids imprisonment. He had finally con­ merchant than a million hand bills—
tented to do *o on receipt of &lt;150. .Th*
Last words of Henry IF-. oj France.
money was dropped into his pocket by a
When Charles the First wm about to
“ man with a red mustache,” whose
name he did not knolr, as he was being lay his heat! on the block, he sighed,
taken across the City Park to the Sher­ and murmured: "This comes of not adiff’s office. McGinnis was committed to vertisii ' in the local paper.”—English
r
the Tomb* on a charge of conspiracy, History.
nnd proceedings will be taken against
the other men implicated.—-Neto
Nwr York
v—*• l
—Halt a'bentury ago the average age
Special to Cincinnati Commercial.
I of a Minister in a French Cabinet was
------- i sixty-five. Twenty-five years ago it fell
—The New England Protective Asso- to sixty. The new Cabinet Is the young­
cistion of Hotel, Boarding House and I est that ha* been known in France. Its
Renton rant Keeper* had a convention in 1 oldest member is only sixty-two, it*
Boston to discus* the "dead-beat” and I ybungeSt thirty-five. M. Garabetta, ite
devise moans of exterminating him. chief, i* only forty-throe. The twelve
A report of tiie proceedings says: "Sad-I Minister* count between them six hunfaced women remarked that there • was dred and twelve aud a half years, giving
noplace here or hereafter bad enough tn average of little over
vmm.
for the beat—forgetting
boarding | far each Minister,
house* evidently; and irate men claimed ;
that the wrong* inflicted on them by I
beats were harder to bear than tiie »ul- | Fjery,
fering* of the Pondas.’’
Legislation : bicyclht.
j and trust*
on the subject was demanded.

—A cattle dn&gt;wr tt II* &lt; f an old Ccnedian farmer who keeps'hi* money vol* d
anxind a bro
The
t dnjr
when he bought sunw* oat;ki»im he

™-“• ;"■£
ciurrb.”
' ’
-----------------------------»
-----------—
m.
--------- Kan.,
tr—f Herald earn*!* on al­
The »».
Fiurvuce,
arm in
word*: No jourual&lt;Je«i»t&lt;« the
•»** following »
cd to temperance cau live with white paper at 11
cent* a pound and whiaky ffl a gallon.
.'

PERMIT NO BUbSTITUTION.
Insist upon obtaining Florc»u&gt;ii C^ugne. It
U ure-euuurntiy *upenur In permaDeucc and
delicacy of trjgiancc.
A fsnnertn Barley Co., Ark., .•aught *’ wolf
by tbe tall a* the animal crept through a fence,
and then! he brace aud hollered and bung ou
and dag In his toes for a long hour, u hca a
neighbor arrived and ended tbe contest.

THE BAD AND W0THLE8B
are never imitated or cvatrrtelled. Tills is
especially true of a family medicine, and II ia
positive proof that the retnedy Imitated is of
highest value. As soon as It had been tc*Ud
and pruvsd by the whole world that Hop Bit­
ters waa the purest, best and most ratable fam­
ily medicine on earth many Imitation* sprung
up and began to steal the noticca in which tiie
I rets and people of the country had expert ed
tbe merits ol IL B-, nnd in evwr way trying to
Induce suffering invalids to oae their stuff In­
stead, expecting to make money on the credit
and goix! name of H. B. Many oUwrs «i«r cd
nostrums put up in simitar style to ii. B., with
variousiv devised names iu which tbe word
“Hop" or "Hop*" were used in a way to induce
people to believe they were Um same as Hop
Bitters. All such pretended remedies or cures,
uo matu r wbatUieir style or name is, and - etpectally those with tbe word "Hop” or "Hop*”
In their name, are imitations or counterfeit*.
Beware of them. Tuoch none ot tlirm. Use
nothing but genuine Hop Bitter*, with a bunch
or cluster of green Hops on tbe white label.
Trust nothing else. ’iruggUta and dealers ar*
warned against dealing In imitations or coun­
terfeit*.
.

H.itx'K VKOCTAni.r. Siciuax Hair
SrccKWg* • 1* a m k-ntlfle combination
o! cine of tbe most powerftil Testoraagent* in the vt-gitiihk* kjngiloni.
■*« rcrtdres gray hair to It* original
color. It mokes the scalp white and
&lt;_i -.'i. ft’cur-s dandruff anti humor*.
■.. ; f.’.Uiug-otft uT tbehau*.. It fapiWic*
th nutritive principle by whirlj too
Irtlr I • !UNtrir4&gt;ed and', supported. It
wah'** the half inoht, wort r.ml g'.wwy,
nnd b iii.-*urpa.wMxl a- a hair drtatetag.
It ;. tike moil ceoiKimlval preparation
■ -r tiff/rvii to
as* Its rCbcta
temiin qzlfrag time, nuikias only an
(x t.-iri'iuiJ i'.nfdU'Hti'Mi necessary. It Is
mviamwiMlcd amt used by cmlirent
rneditu.1 men. nn l ofikdaHy endorsed by
the State Amayer of Masaxchuvetts.
The popularity of Hail's Hair Renewer
h.-.s increased with tbe teat of many
year*, both in this country aud in
ibrrign lande, and it I* now known and
i u*ed m all the civilized countries of

dolcare for Jewel*!”

Fur sale by all denier*.

�Bptrtot fpncb uy, thu .he’s the first
puroon singular prraent indicative of tbs

EJwa*M Jvm «. 1708; diod

17—.

AWother printer, under the impres­
sion that "the art preservative of arts”
could furnish still better material out of
which to oompoAo an epitaph for one

PKICt; Fl-30,
IF PAID IN
_____________
ruccE.

To Advertisers
Ascription:

The following epitaph of a watch­
maker makes exhaustive use of trade

PERUSE THESE LIBERAL AD. RATES..
LTO

□Too
| 14.00
I 20.00
nfcoo
| 30.00

Hern Iles ia horizontal position tbe outside
case of George Routleigh, watchmaker. whose
abilities in that line were au honor to his pro­
fession; integrity was the maln-»prins and

treaa; so nicely regulated were all hl* move­
ment* that ho never went wrong except when
net a-going by j&gt;eoplc who did not know hl*
key; even then be waa easily Mt aright again;
be Um! the art of disposing of bls time so wed
that his boon gilded away in on* continual
■round of pleasure and delight, till an unlucky
ORNO HTRONG,
movement putw period U&gt; his existence;-he
Editor and Proprietor. departed ibis life November 14, 1502, aged 57,
Bound up, in hope* of being taken in hand bv
a Maker, and of being thoroughly cleaned,
retired and Mt a-gofng in the world to come.
Here w an epitaph of an earlier date
on a carjienter at Oakham, named John
Spong (ob. 1736):
Pre*ideot/-Ellbu Chipman.
Who man r a sturdy oak has laid along,
Reronlty^Fronk McDerby.
Felled by Death's «irer hatebet, here lies
Treasurer—Frank C. Boue.
Hnong,
Asm*«ot—John E. Barry.
Post* oh lie made, yet ne’er a place could get,
Mareball—Janie* L- Gresorv.
And lived by railing, though lie was no wit;
Tnutere-H. A. Barber, F. T. Boise. H. W. Qld saw* be bad, although no antiquarian.
Demaray, IL 11. Dickinson, n. M. Lee and And »trie* corrected, yet was no grammarian.
Cha*. Lent*.
Long liv’d he Oakham’s premier architect;

HashviUr girertoni.

JlariftUM.

Who*-* pole* *»&lt;1 gulc* weie for eternity.
Bo here ho rest* From *11 life’s toll* *nd fol-

Ohl &gt;p*re, kind heaven, hl* fcllovr-Ub-rcr
Hollies.
The following from Berkeley churchfrard on Thomas Pierce (ob. 1655), re­
ntes to a self-made man. who was skilled
in more than one branch of workman­
ship. and who was not without honor in
VY LODGE NO. 37, K. of P.. meets ct II* his life from his fellow-townsmen:
Cutie H*U, N*»Ii vllle, MIcIiIrmi, every Here Heth Thomas Pierc*, whom no man
Friday eveoing, for the encouragement and
taught.
support of nil worthy, true, Bteadfast and hon­ Yet he In Iron, Hra»* and Silver wrought,
orable Brother Knight*.
। He Jacks and dock* and Watches (with art)
L. E..Lx3tx, K. K. 8. Oaxo Btboxg.C. C.
made.
And mended too when other’* work did f*dc.
Of Berkeley five times Mayor this artist wa*;
JllK^ellnntMHM Curds.
And yet this Mayor, thi* artist, wa* but ara*»e.
When his own watch ran downe on the last
IL YOUNG. M. D. Office east side ot
d»F.
.
. Main St., Nashville. Office hours from He that
made watches hail not ma ’e a key
7 to 9 a- m., and 4 to 7 p. tn.
To wind It up, but useless it must lie
Until he ri e again no more to die.
H. GRISWOLD. M- D.,-------- ^tolc
The shoemaker's trade, with such
• Physician aud Surgeon. Office and re»- words as “awl,” “sole” and “last” to
Wen&lt;-* opposite tbe Wolcott House. Prompt
play upon, has furnished some good epi­
taphs of this class; and the following
A. FOOTE PHYSICIAN &lt;fc BURGEON blacksmith's epitaph has been thought
. Buceseor to Dr. Wickham. Office and so appropriate that it may be found in
residence at Dr. ■Wickham’s late office.
American and colonial as well as in En­
Prompt attention to calls night or day.
glish churchyards:
My le&lt;lire and Hammer lie reclined,
Mr bellows, too, hare lost their wind;
P. C W. GOUCHER. Electlo Physician and
My Fire’* extinguished; Forge decayed;
Surgeon, b prepared to answer all calls
And tn th* Du»t my Vicelaid;
Oral may be made lor pl* service.'.. Office and
My Coal la spent; my Iron'* irone;
reaidewca opposite Roe's meal market.
The last Nail’s driven, my work is done.
Vmt PARMENTER, M. D. Office over
An
example of this epitaph may be
VV Hall’s Drug store, VermontvilU, Mich.
found in Low Moor churchyard, on the
HAS H. BRADY, Lawyer, Circuit Court tombstone of Christopher Barlow (1824).
CommUaloner, Real uUU&gt; and Imuranc* The earliest example is said to be found
in Lincoln churchyard, where it is in­
scribed to the memory of David Fletcher,
ty. Office opposite Union Hou**.
smith to this church (ob. 1744). AsimUES HAUSER, Merchant Tailor and de*L ilar epitaph at St Albans has the follow­
■ er in Ready Made Clothing. Bee me ing additional lines, which are by no
before you purchase clothing.
Fits guar­■ means an improvement:
anteed.
_______________ ________ _
My Ore-dry corpse lie* here a^ rest,
My soul, tunoke-Ukc, ascending to be bloat,
"TOMAH B- RASKY, Express aud Drayman-

TterwUy evening.

I

W

W

L

D

C

S

iRAM R. DICKINSON, manufacturer of!
aud dealei ia Hard Wood Lumber. Bulld-'

H

AME8 FLEMING.
Cl

J WaU-b-maker.

1

ZXRNO STRONG plain one
The best facilities for

•

While another at Chipping Sodhnry, in
Gloucestershire, is put Into the third per­
son and concludes:
HM body here, clutched In tho dust,
'Tis hoped hl* soul 1* with the just.

&gt;

There is a curious epitapbial blunder
on a tombstone at Monknewton, near
Drogheda, erected by one Patrick Kelly,
“in memory of his posterity!” There is
an epitaph at St. Andrew's, Plymouth,
on “the only surviving son” of Admiral
Vnrnon. The following is from Llanymynech church-yard, Montgomeryshire:

Here lies John Thomas
And hl* children dear;
Two burled at Oswestry,
An one here.
ACOB OSMUN, Livemnan, tern near Wol­
More ludicrous than anyof these is the
cott House- Find class turnout* at rcaaon- inscription on a stone at Keel, in Mont­
oble rate*. Special rate* to commercial men.
Funeral and woding parties furnished with car- gomeryshire:
rtages on short notice.
He: j He the remains of Thoma* Nicols, who
died in Philadelphia, March. 1753.
Had he
RLLOGG A BELL. proprtetora Plantag lived he would have been buried here.
Mill. Planing and Matching. Remwing
A companion blander to that at Monk­
and Moulding * specialty. Scroll Sawing,
Bracket*. Window and Door Frame* made to newton is found in the church-yard at
Montrose, where lie the bodies of'George
enter. Wood Turning ta *11 Ito branch**.
" HAS. W. DEMARAY, Dteter ta Watches, Young and Isabel Guthrie, “and all their
Cicek*, fin* Jewelry and Silverware. Being posterity for more than fifty years backwork!”—New York Home Journal.

J

C

of the $100,000 which wu* to be raised
to secure Mr. Seney’s lost promise of
$100,000; and Mr. Iseney now promises
Another $100,000 if au equal sum is se­
cured.
‘
:
—Rev. George C. Miln, pastor of the
Unity Unitarian Church, Chicago, of
which Rev. Robert Collyer waa pastor
for so many years, recently offered his
resignation. The reasons given are 111heaUh. and the conviction that ho is not
sufficiently “orthodox” to suit th«
church.- He speaks of himself as "apSing more and more what would
trued as scientific exactness and
ty in~religious matters.”
—Not long ago Mr. Beecher’s doop
boll was rung by a bright-faced boy,
who seemed to be in breathless haste ns
he asked to see the clergyman. Ho was
admitted, and at once explained that
two gentlemen down the street were
holding a debate over the proper spell­
ing ot a word, and had sent him for
Webster’s Unabridged to settle the ques­
tion. The quarto was obligingly handed
to the messenger, who hurried off.with
it. Mr. Beecher has never learned how
the orthographic difficulty was adjusted,
but he is aware that his library is minus
one dictionary. The zealous young col­
lector is probably ambitious to establish
a'book store, as be has been beard from
in other parts of Brooklyn prosecuting
the same industry with local variations.
—An English tutor pays n tribute to
the value of his own instruction by
publishing the answers of some of his
pupils at their annual examination
S’ewton shot the apple off his son’s
head-. Achilles was kiiled.by Hannibal,
for which the eyes of the latter were
put out by Queen Ophthalmia. An hy­
pothesis is an instrument for drnwiirg
up water, pr it is a thing which hap­
pens to people after death. The letters
of tiie alphabet are of two kinds, viz.,
gisitive, comparative and superlative.
ae pupil ” supposed ” that Adam was
tho first person singular; another that
the difference between singular and
plural is that one is masculine, the
other feminine. On the tutor’s rending
that “ Holland is cut up into a net­
work of canals in which numerous
wind-mills are continually pumping
water,” one pupil asked, " What is the
use of pumping water into networks?”
Thought in a Dog and a Wasp.

A small-sized but fleet-running dog
chased a largo raccoon from a wheatceld. and overtook him on the bank of a
creek, about a rod from tho water. The
raccoon faced tho dog aud sat upon his
hatmehes for battle. Tho dog seized
him just below tho fore legs in front and
tried to shako him. but could not, for he
was iieavier than the dog. The animal
Immediately set his long, sharp teeth in
the side of the dog’s head and clasped
him in his claws. The dog, whining
with pain, tried to pull away and shake
off the raccoon, but was held fast, when
he turned to the creek and dragged the
raccoon, which still dung to him. into
tiie creek, where he held him und&lt;?r
water, adroitly keeping his own nose
out, till the raccoon became so exhaust­
ed that the dog shook him off, and then
seized him by the throat and mastered
him. The occupant of a room with the
door open into the street was startled
ane day by the entrance, with a buzzing
noise, of n large bluish wasp of the kind
which captures spiders to place in their
nests for their growing wasps to feed
upon. After flying around the wasp
went to a corner of the room where a
large house spider bad made a broad
web near the ceiling, with a long, close
hiding-place extending down in tiie
corner. The wasp flew under the web
and examined this hiding-place closely,
apparently to see if the spider wns at
home, and then, as if satisfied ol thai
fact, flew out into the room, and, re­
turning, dropped down on the center of
the web. buzzing and fluttering like a
caught fly. Thereupon the old spider
rushed out in great nasto to capture his
prey, and as soon as he came within
reaclr the wasp picked him up and flew
away with him. Was it reason or in­
stinct that caused tiie action of these
two animals under the circumstances?
Whately Mays “instinct is a blind ten­
dency to some mode of action independ­
ent of any consideration on the part of
tho agent of the end to which tiie action
leads. ’ Did these animals have no
’•consideration” or expectation of tbe
“ end or object to which their actions
XedP'—Rochester (N. K) DemocraL

a philosopher whose head has been tested
by a spirit level
-—Poor men give away money as if
they were rich. Rich men hang on to a
nickel u if they might be poor.—New
Orleans Picayune.
—There are 300 styles of bicycles, but
they’ve never invented one that can

nal machine.
—“The truth always pays in the end”
is an old saying, ahd that is the reason,
proljably. why there is so little of it told
at the beginning of any business transac­
tion.— Somerville Journal.
—A lot of New York maidens recently
got up a fair for the poor, and as quite a
number now wear engagement rings,
the enterprise is spoken of as a brilliant
success.—Philadelphia News
. —A girl of Coultersville, N. C., was
locked in a rdbm by her father, who
chained a savage bull dog under her
window, but her lover poisoned the dog,
pried open her window and carried her
off.
•
—A Boston lady, who has a gymnaritun for girls, cures curvature of the
•pine by piling bean bags on the heads
»f the patients and having the latter
walk around the room so straight as not
io drop them.
—A cattle drover tells ot an old Canaiian fanner who keeps his money rolled
iround a broomstick.
Tiie other day
when he ‘bought some cattle of him he
had nearly $3,000 in five dollar bilb thus
preserved.
—People of Lewiston, Idaho, tell with
»ome emotion the story of Eagle, an old
Nez Parcel Indian, who, having the
imall-pox, and being' deserted by his
aibe. calmly dug his own grave, lay
down in it. nnd died. *
.
—St. Louis chums to have the largest
xn$l most complete factory for the pro­
duction of coQins and caskets in th*
United States. But Chicago beats it all
io smithereens on big funerals.—N. Y.
Commercial Advertiser.
—A writer in London Truth says that
the distinction between a doctor and oth­
er people is that ha views pain object­
ively, while ottiere
others view it sunjecuveiy.
subjectively.
ivciy,
••Habit make, the doctor accept suffer. “ „‘
, Jr’ ,
w
mg as tho lot of humanity.
—An Illinois man, with a foresight
worthy of a better cause, popped the
Suestion on a railroad train, and now
je maiden is at a loss to decide as to
Which county she had better commenoa
proceedings in for breach of promise.

Riding a Stag to Death.

Mail.......
I rveoniroebd ‘Kennedy’*

deranged liver." Grateful patient* ire com­
other run uatiy except Bumiay.
mon. Dr. Kennedy ia daily In receipt of letter*
from them, expressing similar sentiment*.
GRAND RAPIDS
These letters are ■ rionunrous and put in ah
Varieties of nhnucolgy, butinvaribiv sett’ms
forth one thing—tbe value of •‘Kknnedy’r
It may be Jun the thing you have Iwen looking
...myum over d.noroerodl l»zc you de•■. rrn-n' o’ t.'»c Kidnevs or Bladder, associa­
ted with Consumption of the Bowels! If so, you
want -‘Kennedy's Favorite Remedy.”
Dr
ku.&gt;uai« pracucea Medicine and Surgery it
rll their branches, Write and state your ca*&lt;
rankly. Letters promply answered. • Addretn
Or, David Kennedy, Kondout, N. Y.
“Dr
Tetinedy’s Favorite Rcpcdy” for sale by al
tnidiaU-

DIVISION.

lu&gt;n&gt;ot&gt;4 —

•JS®:-:
Vanoatnvill*
•Uarlotu___

Jackson.

STATIONS.

(THE

For Women,

i' 1 .

4*5
F -,0
7:12
tM
s-oo
B.27
W
*07

SdH
4«&gt;
400
m

PEXGEIXTS WOMAN’S FRIEND.

TEAOIEBS,
LADY CLERKS,
HOUSEWIVES,

a. ffu.

P’JSO
ir.M
I: XS
1:44
2:14
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0:30
। ■।

I biouuo &lt;
SleeptUK Car* lo*nd fro**
Gr»nd'lt*pi4* *nd DelrolS- AH train* codnrrt la
depot at Detroit with Great U cstern. Graad
Trunk and &lt; .rod. SoaUxro tell-.v*.
’
f &lt; rtltOWH.
H. B. J.1DYARP.

AmT o&lt;'n''Hupt’J«ck»on. U«a’l Sop’t Detroit
' H*,*T°G^”pwiuil&lt;f,neU» Ao*ni.Cblci**o '

Break lug down under cin** confinement and
lag continually ou Ulrir Icet, will End Zaa 1’Oa

A Prevention and Cure
Headaches,
Lassitude,
Pale or .llothy Complexion,
Sleeplessness,
Palpitation,
Numbness. Nausea, Dizziness,
Dry Cough, Nervous Irritation,
Weak and Lamo Back,
]

—A man named Meyer, who robbed
his wife’s grave in searcli of iewelry and
money, and took from her skeleton fin­
ger the ring she had worn more than
thirty years, was recently taken out near
Tazcurabia, Ala., by certain parties and
marcileaaly flogged.
—••Twenty years’ confinement for the
offense” is what a writer in the Hartford
Post demands in ease of burglary. When
the poor man get* out wc fear he will
have forgotten all he has learned, and

—A Baltimore eleven-year-old boydreamed that some men were Uyiag to
kill him iumI attempted to get away from
them. His father, awakened bv the
noise, entered the boy’s room and found

TRADE

'
■»amt»t»'"rta.r..--,e&lt;ti!.
Zoo-Phom U not a Curtail. It apjffies to ttsls
Hem I’ I* tlmaal

BITTERS

TKHTIMOXLALS I havo fu abandsnea from

BROWN’S IRON BITTERS ire
fy-MOTHEIW, are your DAUGHTERS oiUn-r?

R. PENOELLY, M. D.,
Sold by DrugffUlsJ
Kxlxsixxoo, Mice.

IEY-WORT
DOES
wnv1?
WONDERFUL Hui I
I
CURES I
■*■***:
Errante it acts an th* LITER, BOWELS I
I 7 ^4 X1D5EYS at th* tame tlwe.

not in favor of using his influence to pat
young men of spirit and euterorisc into
places where they must depend upon the
Government for support. He believes
that there are several different ways of
making a living in the various States.
—A jury in the United States Circuit
Court, at SL Louis, baa awarded Jere­
miah A. Gravelie $S,500 damages against
the Minneapolis A St Louis Railway
Compar v for the loss of two Gagers and
a thumb in attempting to couple a
swiftly-moving engine and a freight car.
He sued for $15.O&amp;0.
—The Memphis (Tenn.,) Appeal ad­
vises tbe London Confederate States
Bondholders’ Committee to disperse, and
says: "They are losing both time and
money in a wild-goose cnsse. They are
pursuing an ignis fatuus that may lead
many ignorant but confiding Englishmen,
to their ruin.’’
—■piese are the sort of "ads” the Beno
papers publish for five cents a^ line:
“Luce A Markham’s Headqu Barter’s
saloon is now provided with all the popu­
lar games—keio, high ball, faro, twentyone, etc. Every game run on tbe dead
square. Fortunes won in an hoar. Go
in, and see.”—Detroit Free Press.

IRON

a certain cure for all diseases
requiring a complete tonic; espe­
cially Indigestion. Dyspepsia, Inter­
mittent Fevers, Want of Appetite,
Ixms of Strength. Lack of Energy,,
etc. Enriches the blood, strength­
ens tbe muscles, and gives now
life to the nerves. Acts like a
charm on the digestive organs,
removing all dyspeptic symptoms,
such os tasting tho food. Belching,
Beat in the Stomach, Heartburn,
etc. The only Iron Preparation
that will not blacken the teeth or
give headache. Sold by all Drug­
gists at $1.00 a boule.
BROWN CIIEMJPAD CO.
Baltimore, Md.
F ^*ut d Traa Blum m wda »7 Baon Ca—ria
'I bar* carar* r«* UaM aa* Uadraurt •* ar***ar.
BEWARE OF iMITATlOMS. _

Cm

Back
Ache
POSITIVELY CURED
BY

KIDNEY-WORT
PUMANKMTLY CURAS

KIDNEY DISEASES,
I
LIVER COMPLAINTS,
IConstipation and Piles.

Benson’s Capcine
Porous Plasters.

WELLS. mCHABDSOX A Co.. Prop'*.

Lighthouse Terrors.
W. NIBKERN, AUorney and Counsellor

If those on shore are awed by the ter­
at Law, practices in all Stale Court*. Col­ rible violence of ths winds and waves
P.lections
promptly attended to. Office over
8{*al&lt;Ung’s store, Hastings Mich.

-

TT A. BARBER, M. D..
HOMCEOPATHIC

Physician and Surgeon.
near residence ou comer of W
State Street*. Nashville, Mich.

-yyOLTOTT HOUSE,

during » tempest what must be the ex-

ocean breakers? When we look at a
lighthouse in calm weather, it is almost
impossible to realize that the sea some­
times breaks over the lantern. Such is,
however, frequently the case, and an in­
stance of this occurred not long after the
completion of the Bishop’s Rock Light,
which is erected on a rook beyond the
Scilly Islands, far out in the Atlantic.

JsuHiivllle Michigan.
A.-S. ^’ootk. Proprietor.
bn this rock were in

agility.

The

seat,
tbe stag,
stimulated anew to
flight by the cry of the fast-approaching
hounds, resumed its course, but it soon
broke down under tbe weight of its
unaccustomed burden and gave up the

|£ A. Bt*B.
’

to death the wildest Tartar steed of his
period, few such surpassing feats of
horsemanship have been roconled in the
pages of history or romance as that to
which publicity has been recently given
by the majority of our Hungarian con­
temporaries. Perhaps horsemanship is
scarcely ths correct term to apply to this
extraordinary performance; ilecrmanship would probably be the most appro­
priate word. The other day, while a
noble stag of ten was being hotly
chased by tbe
KaposzUuunegyerer
hounds—a subscription pack—one Karl
Poros, a discharged hussar, managed
to bring the terrified animal to a stand­
still in some close cover through which

-THE BOB*’

BOOT AND SHOE RAKER,
I Kgtorn.

in tho scond story. He rescued him with
difficulty.
—A young man is giving himself up
to the agreeable occupation of ridiculing
his uncle. “Confound it! what does the
old guy dye his hair in that prepnsten
oua faj&gt;ion for?” is his remark, just as
his uncle enters the room. “Sir/’ says
the uncle, in a voice conveying the idea
of codicils and alterations' of wills, “if
men of my age are compelled to dye, it
is because men of your age, sir, have no
respect for gray hairs.”
—Four students of a Wisconsin college
who stole a fanner’s gale “for fun?’

. .,

Bsdsod's Cape Poroas Plastsr?
SEABURY &amp; JOHNSON, *

A MEAD'S Iterate COItWwrf RfWION Fl

going such punishment m the farmer
might inflict. They choee the latter, and
the fanner condemned them to chop
four cords of his wood and deliver it to a
poor widow. They did it to the music
of a band and the plaudits of a crowd
that watched the operation.
ried tho widow Foard, at D
Tenn. The widow has two &lt;1
and when the Professor wearied of curs­
ing the whole family he worked a change
in tbe programme by throwing hut tea
in the girfi’ faces. He gave au extra

to kill!

Muontt-Ww Trig

Uxmae overCOM phyMctesanddreggtato tew
i -.iunurUr testified that they arc anperior to til
. .h.-r plaster* or raediciace fur external cae.
Sixth.
Lcesaa* the maunfacturem have received tho

NO PATENT NO PM.

HninssraBs

�Jfrwf.
APRIL 33, 1888.

OUR WASHINGTON LBTTER.
Wajihisotom, D. C., Apr. 15,1882.
The Nation Land-League Conventfoteht'rr ia attracting very much attennBi. .There, ia a general imprvteion
that Um- aaaemblage will in future time
be conawierrd one of tbe moat impor­
tant in tbe interest of the Iriah race
that haa ever aaaemhled ainoe the clos­
ing. It ia a meeting of representative
men of the Irish race on thia aide of tbe
Atian tic who have the entire confidence
of the Iriah land-league leaders on tbe
other side of the ocean. The proceed­
ings are marked with earneatneM and
ability, and there can be no doubt that
they will exercise great influence in be­
half of Ireland. The report of tbe
Secretary ahowa that there are 140
branches in existence fn thia country,
and that the total amount of receipt*
since tbe Buffalo convention, includ*
ing $26,623.87 from the treasurer of the
Chicago convention fund, haa been
$378,810.60.
Strong reaolutiun»~were
adopted with regard to the grievances
and aufferingH ot the Iriah people under
British rale, exhorting them to stand
fast in their attitude of passive reaistenoe to English oppression, expreMing a dctivniinrrthm-lo-db all cousilt• tent w'th American citizenship to place
Ireland 'among the nations, and de­
manding the immediate trial or uncon
ditional release of American citizens
confined iu foreign prisons.
Tiie California atatetmen havo de­
cided to take a more rational view of
the Chinese matter and are getting
right to work to have another bill pass­
ed Messrs. Miller and Page have been
in consultation with President several
times within a week and tho result is
that they are confident that they can
frame a bill which_u ill moot tho Presi­
dent’s approval and still bo perfectly
satisfactory and effective.__ The pro­
gramme is to have it brought up first iu
the House aud the committee on edu­
cation and labor have to be able to
agree upon a new bill to-morrow." Tfion
Mr. Page will try next Monday to re­
ceive its passage under suspension of
the rules, when Mr. Miller will at once
cal* it up in tho Senate. Mr. Miller is ।
odhfident he can get it through without
much delay, and if the House will bubpend the rulesand jmias it ho thinks he
will have it once more before the Preai­
dent before the close of next week.
Now that the House haa disagreed to
the Senate's prop oition to restore the
ffanking privilege, there is a change
for the iiaitaage of a measure providing
cheaper postage fur tho people, and
‘ such a bill ought to become a law be­
fore tbe adjournment of the present
session. And the way to furnish cheap­
er postage is co reduce tho charge for
carrying a half ounce letter through
the mails anywhere in (Jie United
States to two cents. Tho proposition
to carry a heavter letter for three cents
than is now carried for that sum doe*
not me^ the case. That change would
be in Ute interest of the few, and doc
for the benefit of the many, whose let­
ters do not, as a rule, exceed half an
ounce in weight, Tho objection that a
two-cent rate for a half ounce letter
might create a deficit in die postal deKrtmeut, is not worth considering.
the Unit place, there is no certainty
that it would do bo. On the other
hand, experience haa shown that a re­
duction of rates al ways popularizes the
service adopting them and increases
ite profit*. Mott likely tho latter re­
sult would follow in this case; the first
certainly would. But, suppose there
should be a deficit for the first year or
two, what of It! Why should the post­
al service be made self-supporting, or
a source of profit, any more than the
other departments of tho government *
Cheap postage is of vaaUy more impor­
tance to the people of thu country than
that there should be a balance on the
credit side of the post office books, and
if Congress is wise it will provide it at
once^ Let the votbe of the people be
•

It h stated that tbe immigration to
northern Michigan thia spring ia great­
er than ever before.
On Handily C, B. Raymond, a mer­
chant of Forestvile, dropped dead on
tbe steamer wharf at that place.
M. R. Carpenter of Ionia, dropped
dead from heart disease, in the office of
Globe House, on Friday oven*

A Battle Creek woman has done
washing for four families beaides her
own. and kept IB boarders at the same

_ Nathaniel* Brink dropped dead in a
Grow Lake saloon, the other day, while
in the act of lifting a glass of liquor to
his lipa.
An $80,000saw mill, located at Chase,
Lake Co., and belonging to Herbert
Thomas, waa destroyed by fire Friday
morning.

bUlforttekWiif

SPRING GOODS
SECOND TO NONE IN BAHRY COUNTY.

•trunvth. Wtea drunk ate was Tiolunt, faao-

oourt, maklur such

UtUa daugtotar with an iron poter. “ I fett

Notions, Domestics,
■
Clothing for men an d boys,
Dress Goods,
' ’
•
Plats and Caps,
Trunks and Sachels,
Carpet and Oil Cloth,
, Boots and Shoes,
Groceries Etc. Etc.

The family of Mr. Ansoa d
.
Creek has loat five children fre it
btheria within six weeks. IL
•
only one child left.
A four-years old daughter of George
H. Marks, of Qnincy, waa knocked
down and run over by a horse, on Fri­
bar*, and they unbound ter.
day, reci ring fatal injuries.
- Mrs. Mary Garrity waa found dead
in bed at Hancock on the 16th, having day, shunning his acquaintance*, trying-to 7NUR SALES THE PAST YEAR HAVE BEEN FULL 30 PER CENT IN EXCESS OF
taken a dose of rat pciaon.
She was straighten himself up. “ I could not be still In V_z every previous season and we tender our hearty thanks for there liberal support in our
any place,” he said. “ I could neither stand
bf intemperate habits.
t
if " ts to bring the prices ol all lines of goods down to reasonable profits. This year we ws
Geo. Rentx,an Employee of one of the
Grand Rapids factories, dropped dead ished bls work and gene for the night. Hlc to increase our sales 50 per cent and have placed on our counters one of
on Sunday while visiting At the house wife came through tbe kitchon and went down
cellar—as bo supposed to get whisky; “she
of a friend. Heart disease.
often bld a bottle down there." When
It has now been definitely ascertained *bo came up be spoke of going downthat the late frost did not injure any­
As we have in the past so we shall try nnd make it in the future. We shall put the knife tO
thing in tbe great fruit belt Now that for you, and you shan't leave thi* bouse I”
He tried the door: It was locked. Ho turned
all high prices.
the peach crop iu assured, wo feel re­
around; bls wife was right in front of him.
lieved.
her band pressed to her hip. "ril kill you,
I'II kill you!" she screamed. In a frenzy of
Last Saturday night Mrs. John Meechutter nervousness and terror bo caught up
ei, of Duplain Township, Clinton Co.,
something—it waa a kitchen chair—and
commited suicido by drowning herself struck her. He saw her lying at bls feet.
in Maple River, while laboring under Then bs found himself out In the street—be
temporary insanity.
looking up At tho dr.rk windows of hl* neigh­
Rhey Thayer was killed Monday near
bor's bouse and deciding not to wake him up.
Then all Is blank again' tn bls mind unU! a
Rensy's Mills, in Chapin, Saginaw Co.,
while chopping a tree,which split in
the Sheriff and uttering tho words: "I have
half and fell on him, breaking bis Deck,
I AM NOW RECEIVING A FULL STOCK (»F GOODS .SUITABLE FOR THE SPRING TRADE. INCLUDING
killed my wife.”
f
1 thi' Largent anil BeM Stuck of
x
The Jury wcro out twenty minute*, "'ben
arms and legs.
they camo back It was with a verdict of "Not
James Burley, aud his eons, Jacob
guilty."—Hartford Courant:
and Benny, were drowned Friday night,
while spearing fish in Chubb Lake,
Lon CM low’s “Excelsjor.”
n *ar Howard City. Thoro bodies were
Ever brought to Nashville. and ranging in price from three to thirty dollars per suit. Iu
Tte following letter to C. K. Tuckerman,
subsequently recovered.
A boy uaiued Williams, aged 14, was for tbe Onl time by the London TVegraph:
badly, if not fatally, hurt, Tuesday, in
Grand Rapids, by the tall of an elevator |
I keep the celebrated Rochester make. Slylish, Durable nnc Cheap. In
very willingly give you my intention In wrttin the Kent furniture factory, through
| ing IL This was no more than to display, in
the breaking of its cable.
xonlua, reaming all temptations, laying aside
At Lexington on the 18th, Charley
I have the latest styles and cun tit all parties. I always keep a full stock jf
Pierce, aged 15, was riding a horses
Ing right on to accomplish his purpose. His
when the animal became unmanage;
motto is oxoelslor—'higher.'
He passes
able, reared up and fell over back­
through tbe Alpine rtllagw—through the
At prices that defy compctinn. Cash paid for Rutter and Eggs.
wards, falling on tbe boy aud killing
him instantly.
Frank Slialz, an employee of the I’enHe disregards tho happiness of domestic
peace, and sees the giaclcrs-bls fate—before
nusular car works, at Detroit, on Thurs­
him. He disregards tho warning of tbe old
day, stepped one side to avoid a mov­
Probate Order.
man's wisdom and the fascinations of woman's
ing car, when he became wedged beSti
twenitanda door and wj&gt;
t
ot religious forms and ceremonies, and with
| of Barry, bolder at the Probate Office In the City of
crushed to death.
thetr oft-repeated prayer mlnglee the sound of
Blnslie Walscheae and Jao
his voice, telling them there ia something
higher
than
forms
and
ceremonies.
FllleC
zik, two Poland-.ni of Bay Jit,
I'reeent. &lt; loment Smith. Judge of Probate
with these aspirations, be porUhcs without
ly engaged in a fight andtholi
d
In the mailer of tbe eelale ut WILLIAM f.
having reached the perfection bo longed for;
BI7.EH. deceaaed
tris skull cracked. He subsequently
On read*eg and flung the petition, duly verified,
of William F Him;. »on of said deceaaed, praying
died and Walscheae will have to an­
that Lawrence Hilbert or some other suitable per
'IUperceive that 'excelsior.' an adject!vg of
swer to a charge of murder.
•on may bo appointed adminlitrator of tbe estate of
eald deceased
A conflagration occurred nt Harrison,
Thereupon II Is ordered that
Clare Co, on Friday morning, which
main, very truly yours.
swept away the buildings od the south
next, st ten &lt;&gt; clock In tbe forenoon, beaaaixoed for
the hearing of eald petition, and that the heir* at
side of main street, which includes tbe
law of said deceased and all other person* Intereel
John Potts’ Reward.
post office, two hotels, printing office,
Thirty years ago yesterday a poor girl '
and ten dwellings.
Loss upwards of
named
Carrie
Roper,
In
garments
tattered
and
I
$50,000.
torn, wandered to tho home of John Potts, a I
Myrou Parka of White Oak, who was village blacksmith. In what Is now known as
killed by the terrible tornado which
Potts took the girt tn. and iiuggeated tn hl*
th&gt; reef, by eauilog a eopv of Ihl* order to be pub­
panaed over Ingham county, was a
lished In the NaaaviLLS N s wa, a oewvn* per printed
wife that they adopt her. they havin'’ no chil­
large man, weighing over 200 pounds.
and circulated In mid County of Barry, core In
dren of tbclr own. Mrs. Potts objected, feeP
His body was earned more than 40 rods ing It her duty to take one of four of hey sis­
and waa found lifeless among a pile of ter's daughter*, If It was deemed expedient to
CLEMENT SMITH.
Judge of frobate.
adopt a daughter. Mr. Potts would not listen
debris.
tn bis wife's suggestions, and determined to
Probate Order.
A promising young lady pupil in
support tho girt He sent her to a school tn
tho Adrian high school, recently died Bucks County, whore she took up tho study of
of blood poisoning, and as other pupils* music with her academic course, and grad­
At aacMlon of the Probato Court fur Ihr Count)
uated with high honors. Two years after
of Barry, hotden al tte Probata OlAcu, In tbs City of
have had the same symptoms, there is rhv gradustod
—.
failed to
learn
Potts
Ha*linc*,lu said county on Thursday the 6lh day of
April
id tbs year on» thousand slain hundred
a startling theory that tbe pupils of of her whereabouts. ___
__
B
_____
Hi.* Inquiries did
and etshty-tvo. Preosnt,Cteatrot Smith, Jusse of
“ ’ girt, end
the school have been drinking water not bring any tidings of * the
Pro bale.
lb tbe mailer of tbe estate ef Ji ATHAN
poisoned by infiltration from tbeschool he gave her up as dead. His wife died_____
WEARS, rise—sd.
spring of MW. and be lived alone. He stlU
.!h“l eT®nin»? rumors were privies.
Oo reading and tlllnc tbs psUUondulf venflsd, of
continued his buslneas as blacksmith, though
William H. Feiei.ner administrator of aaM r*tals
thick at Uie hot-Is and other public
Julius Conlon, a young German t'anil
unable to save anything from bls earnings with
praying that bis fins) account thia day filed tauy bo
place*, that (.apt. Howgate had escap­
which to pay off a few ro rtgagre on hl*
bean! and allowed, and be discharg'd from hl* aaM
laborer, waa found dead in a deserted property. Two weeks ago a strange ladr aped. inqur y made in the proper quarttru»t
Tbcrespnn it is ordered, that
era noon confirmed the truth of the house near Mt. Clemens, Monday even­ duced hnwlfa* Mr*. JamM Rutledge, of Pitts­
ramora- As will be remembered CapL ing by some children on their way home burgh, wife &lt;&gt;f a millionaire. Kb Inquired for
Howgau- iia* been m confinement tor from school. He had hanged himself John Potts, and was eeoortad to hl* borne. Tho
old
gentleman
recognised
ter
at
sight,
and
was
•ome mouths, &lt;&gt;Q the charge of ex­
tensive embezzling of the funds of the with a bit of wool-twine, and so far as overcome with Joy at her appearance. Tbe
lady had come to take Potts io teHsome, wtero
“5“« Mmce bureau during die period can be ascertained, must have been
that he was disbursing officer? Since dead since last Thursday.
UR WORK IS ALL DONE UPON HONOR. BUGGIES
bu confinement he waa upon four dif­
Some time ago M. Wheeler, of Bliss­
being made from Second Giowih Hickory.
ferent occasions committed by order of
dcred. that said petitioner gb
field,
caused
the
arrest
of
Charles
F.
.ataventod la saM estate, ofU
whh°a^^ w*\*"8t*lo’ne ‘D company
Our T&lt;ps ate lined m itl All-Wiol Indigo-Djeil Goodsand
Wileox. of Tecumseh, on a' charge dt
ba*
ocaaion until
Warranted not to Fade. W. H. Atkinron, a painter whose
r^000 ^®lnK,dunng tho Christ- failure to support her, she claiming to
uwh *P be vTaA flowed to be his wife. But it has just been ascer­
work has never went back on him ho* charge of our paint de­
L liUr’ghL Vory •®Tcr® criticism
A Decperate Race for Life.
partment, and can be reli-d on. B th-, D i*h Feet, Body Loops [A*true oopyA
wae looked for m consraoeoM of the ex- tained that they were never married,
CLEMENT SMITH.
teuMen of audi uommU privileges, and aud .both have been bound over for
and Stays are made from N'TWux lr*«n and the entire buggy (« _________JadsMQfPrteato
2 M generally understood that then- trial for lewd and lascivious cohabita­
0LBMOT
SMITH,
would be no recurrence of it Up to
ironed in a desirable nnd supeiim manner and warranted.
tion.
D?‘nnu
h**0 beard of
Two freight trains collided on a bridge i
SS'
Hen,T ^IngraDhed tbe
Attorney at Law
chief PoHoo of over tbe Rogue river on theGd. Rapids j
all Of the large cities, with a diecription &amp; Indiana R. R., a short distance north ।
Tb* ‘ ,ren«r&gt;l fiuppoeitioo
Ik rtL*t«S&lt;,Wgal* IM secreted somewhere of Grand Rapids, on Friday. One en­
C’ty’
W|11 await * favorable gine and five can went into tbe river. needed, tte ship rusted
«Portnurty.to escape. Tbe police are 1 At Flint, on tbe same day, one Grand
©f the opinion tbaftU wUl be recaptur- Trank train ran into another and the
Until you have thoroughly examined m ne. Spokes made
1th? de5el°D“®nl* th©
Attorney a Counsellor,
*■•**“*
is tliat Uio escape ia tbb engine, caboose and one passenger car
from Second Growth StocK and the witgun is made to stand
rteultof a deeply laid plan, of which were wrecked. In either
one
die family and friends of Howgate were was seriously hurt.
the wear and tare of our road*.
Meuasut, alrtiough some du not hold
Tbe accidents resulting fcare
to this view, aud some of tho officials
mv they beU™ Howgate will return. less handling of side-ana*
Zimmerma* Fruit Dryer
_____
ItiA mentioned te a significant fact ous this week. While Mr
€3FI HAVE IN STOCK A NUMBER ()F&lt;®t
Staid
that tiir woman with whom Howgate’* of Maple Rapids, was expimuiug the
name Im* b*wn connected, has l&gt;een mysteries of a revolver to her children,
reeo Mtwind the jail very frequently of
it wen toff, sending a ball through the
****••_________ - -r Ar'GUBT.
lungs ot a daughter. Mrs. F. S. Wil­
OW Scutch geaueman muinr in a son of Tecamseh. was doing about the
Twreutocaf--a young lady entera. and
a rush for rhe topmost seat. same thing, when she lodged a bullet
WURTH HNDIHC FOR.
The rrir utMrte rather Midilenly, the in tbe shoulder of her cousin, Magvenog lady land* od tbe old gentleman’i* Etc Craig.
Sumner Wheeler of Big
kiM--. Wusliing, and exclaiming: “Ohl RapiiU has been seriously maimed.aud
l&gt;-tr i &lt;*»ir pardon.B Old G.—Dinoa m&lt;n - '
M-vrral ntiur accidents are reported.
Ti-*n p. • jm4v. I’d i.iU*r** hnv y„ nittin’ j
.
th® carelcte lisodhug of
uu *»_• Kikau *uwu’tao:i«-er»Mtt4t.*j. । tuc twuivf p*»'.ui.
I saed by Um Port-office Departmeat.

The Most Attractive Stock Ever Opened In Nashville
G- A. TRUMAN &amp; SON

The First to the Front!
’eady Made Clothing, for Men, Boys, and Youths,

Ladies, Misees, Gents &amp; Children’s Fine Shoes

HERE WE ARE AGAIN!
WITH A FULL STOCK OF

Buggies
Wagons
OUR LINE BUGGIES
E M B R A C E S-------

Dexters,
Phaetons

White Chappel and Coal Boies, hung with Elliptic Springs.
Two and Three Spring Democrats.

O

CIVEN AWAY

Ac Bradley’^

ciiiLio non, on sins no cmrinross,
Whi. h 1 will S.1I

C ri

Oloee out.

E. COOK

opiiimw^

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                  <text>ORNO STRONG, |
Editor and Proprietor.

' L

I

Credit SvncxrmoNfl &gt;1.75-

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, APRIL 29, 1882.

VOLUME IX.
'

(TERMS; $150 per Yk*jc

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun.

)

•—

LOQAL GIBBLE-GABBLE

structions to over 100 different pupils
here, aud at present has a class of 90,
A*4 PtrMMl Ckll-CkBL
And Her Environs.
Tiie term of many of them not being
Spring again.
completed siro will return on Saturday
—Spring! etberal, beautiful inviting
Only 188 lakes in Barry Co.
of each week duriug the coming sea­
spring is wM
®*»in.
w« wel­
Hurrah ! for a street sprinkler.
son. A limited number of new pupils
come you. shake! How good And noble
G. A- Truman &amp; Sod have new door will be received if application is made
it is to see. the green grass and bear tbe signa.
in a short time.
bird* aing again.
G. W. Gallatin is painting his resi­
Mrs. Goucher sued John Laramy for
non-payment of rent, before Esq. Pot­
—Oaring to the diphtheria scare in dence.
.
John
wasn’t you in something of a ter on Wednesday, but theevidence was
West Castleton, the school has been
not conclusive enough for tbe jury to
closed in the Martin district. As yet hurry?
Tom. Purkey has become father to a bring io an affirmative verdict, and it
only two or three cases have been re­
fine boy.
disagreed.
Tbe case wili be tned
ported, which were of a mild form.
Farmer C. Kill has just completed a again on Monday.
—On Wednesday onr attention was
new stylish bone barn.
Mias Hattie Peckham returned, Sat­
called tothaJact, that we bad bad a
Al. Fonda, of Athens, visited friends urday evening, from a two month-’
freeze every oigljLin- April; also &lt;hat
in the village this week.
trip, with friends, through the sunny
an eastywind had prevailed for ten days,
Many strange faces are to be seen up­ south, visiting St. Louis, Nety Orleans,
quite mngular occurrences for this time
on our streets, now-a-days.
Jacksonville, etc.
She tells wondrous
of the year.
R. L. Underhill and wife of Hastings stories of big strawberries, oranges and
visited
at'B.
F
Reynolds
this
week.
banana*
that
she
made
the acquain­
—The M. E. church bell not proving
Old age is telling on Jacob Fianck tance of during her trip.
satisfactory in every respect, the com­
pany have furnished a new one, which and he is now in a precariom condition.
"POT, P0TTER*P0TTEBE8T."
Fisherman are on the river, bpearing
arrived on Tuesday, and is now being
hung in position. Tbe new one is larg­ fish every night, and report some
Jake Potter, editor of the Vt. Ville
er and of a better grade than the old heavy hauls.
Hawk, is—i* simply a giant of brass on
Tom. Brady has again become a resk
one.
legs of clay. zVs as 2itor he is the
—Several cases of sheep-killing by dent of Nashville, occupying his bouse greatest blunder in the state, and re­
dogs, in the proximity, have occurred. on Middle St.
lies entirely on cheek to carry him
Eh Evans is to be seen quite frequent­
We hear that Sam Hobart last three
through. Last week he got off an as­
and-Mm. Durkee one and another in­ ly upon our streets again. Glad to set­ tounding story about Yate’s “oread’’
jured. In both cases dsmages were hi m recovering.
horse and this week consumes a column
Mrs. J. W. Nichols of Alagansee,
appraised which will be paid out of the
to say that The News “hadn.t orto”
Mich., was in the
village, visiting
dog tax.
use the word “implicithut we rise to
friends the past week.
explain that according to our diction­
—The arrival of a t45 Racine canoe,
Hattie, a two-year-old child of W.
ary
the word implicit means “fairly to
mode of birch, on Monday, attracted
E. Shields is dangerously i l with inbe understood.’’ But then this is noth­
tbe attention of numerous sportsmen.
Hamation of the lungs.
ing.
for from what we can learn of the
It proved to be the property of W. E.
Supervisor Barry is making his an­
history of Potter, he has fritted away
Buel who will use it to skiin the placid
nual tour of the town, and real estate is
his whole life in letting down empty
waters of the Thoruapple in quest of
rapidly diminishing in value.
buckets into empty wells, only to draw
duck or piscatorial pleasures.
Judge Smith and family of Hastings,
them up again. If he were standing
—The Baptist Sunday School Society passed Thursday afternoon and night
between a donkev aud a poodle dog.
are trying to rent a room for the pur­ with parents near this vill.tge. ‘
and should ask "when shall we three
pose of keeping their school in work­
The News boys have been smoking
meet again,” he would be incontincnting order, as they do not intend their cigars this week on that bright boy ba­
ly, kicked an J bitten by his two insult­
organization shall go down.
Their by that arrived at H. S. Darier’s, Fri
ed comrades.
school will meet next Sunday at the day.
usual hour in the west room of tbe
Wm. Martin is improving in health
SURPRISE PARTY.
school house.
though yet unable to sit up, still he is
The 60th birthday anniversary of
considered
to
be
out
of
immediate
dan
­
—Every business man of Nashville,
Mrs. Hosmer was celebrated at her
interested in cleans stocks, clean at­ ger.
home in Castleton, April 21st.
It was
J. L. Gregory has purchased H. M.
mosphere aud clean streets, is asked to
an occasion long to be rememberer! by
meet at tbe town hall. Monday eve., Lee’s one-third interest in the store her nnd those that were present. A few
and
real
estate,
corner
Main
and
Wash
­
to take into consideration the matter
days notice was given to friends that
of srpiLkling Main St., during the hot ington Sta.
they were to meet for a surprise «to
Geo. R. Fleming so far n-coved from
dusty days of summer. Let a full del­
her, os one of the old trottlesof this part
his sudden illness that he was able to
egation be present.
of tbe township and to have an old
return to tbe resume of his duties on
fashioned visit. About 9 o’clock tbe old
—Jqjiu J. Potter has received the Sunday evening.
and young commenced coming with
appointment of railroad rente agent.
H. J. Martin and wife, F. M. Patter
It is a position John has been longing and wife, and quite a number other baskets, pails, and other dinhes tilled
for, some time, and through the ener­ Vcrmontville-its nttendeik the Tennes­ with provisions of different kinds.
And they kept coming until late in the
getic and persistent efforts of his Re­ seeans concert on Monday eve.
afternoon when the round number of
publican friends, be is now able to
Dr. Knight and daughter. Veve, and
epjoy its perquisites and tbe luxuries Mr. Bradley of Eaton Rapids were 60 was in attendance. Many were the
congiatulatious and good wishes to
they bring. John, you wiil acccpt-Jbf guests of Mr. &amp;. Mrs. G. A. Trutnnn
make her feel that she was held in
coorse,our congratulations.
Thursdny afternoon and night.
greatful
remembrance
by
them.
D. M. Gow bos sold his, forty acre
—It h quite refreshing to see the ed­
Every body seemed to feel very much
itor of such a high-sounding papef as farm, four milea north of the village to at home and spared no pains to make
the “Olio” crying an auction, yet our Wilbur Austin, and Imught another in the place pleasant for all, especially the
citiMpa were favored with the sight on Sunfield and hqa moved thence.
old lady?
•The C. 0. social at Mr. and Mrs.
Saturday. If Young proves as adept
The good things that were brought,
at newspaper publishing as he does nt Foote’son Wednesday evening was n in tiro shape of eatables, were spread
auctioneering, we might just as well pleasant affair and well attended. out upon the long tables. Their sum
shut up shop now, as to continue on Over Aevetpen dollars realized.
wu* seventeen kinds of cake, nine
John FiimiM wanted more farm and
and run into a state of beggary.
kinds of pies, several pans of cookies,
has bought John Wiaea’ eighty ailjoin­
and other things to numerous to men­
—Perhaps but few people are aware
ing, which makes him about as nice a
tion. Tbe last, but not least, was a
that such an intsitution as the “Central
100 as there is out door, in these parts.
a large pyramid cake that was pre­
Union Telegraph Co., of Nashville,
E. W. Murray, who lately arrived
Mich.,” is in existence, but such is the
sented to,the hostess, bearing herinlfrom Ohio, where he has been study­
tial* and her age. To say the least of
fact Tbe company has been in dist­
ing medicine, is about to enter tbe of­
it, it waagn imposing sigh.
ance under the superintending of Ard.
fice of Dr. Barber to continue his
The day wa* pleasant which added
Stanton with Richard Drake as general
studies.
I
,
greatly to tiro enjoyment of all. aa the
manager, for some time, but has lately
The Baptist social will be entertain­
house wa* filled with v.omen, and
been reorganized, and its lines changed
ed by Mr. and Mrs. Hubbard, Wednes­
tbe men could only visit in the open air.
and extended. On‘ Saturday tbe usw
day evening May 3rd.
Refreshment*
A few appropriate remarks were made
line was laid from the depot to tbe post
will be served; all are cordially invited
by H. W. He wee who referred to her
office, and on Tuesday extended to Geo.
to attend.
immigrating from Vermont state to
W. Francis’ store. The central office
Mr*. Cha*. Glennie of Saginaw, has
York state and also her coming to
lain charge of Richard Drake; tiro
been in the village a portion of this
Michigan and living a number of years
south end in charge of Tom. Kettle­
week, and while- here sold her honae
inLsJuawee Co., from ihenee to Hills­
well, and the northern, terminal in
and lot to Mrs. Sarah Baker for *6S0
dale Co., when they were both now and
charge of Ard. Stanton. Tbe stock­
spot cash.
wild, her coming into Barry Co., about
holders feel flattered over the prospects
Lsicey post office is soon to be taken
SO year* ago where she now lives, when
of a rash of business, everything is
in tbe mail route from Nashville to
it was nearly an unbroken forest. Here
lovely aud tbe goose hangs high.
Assyria, instead of from Hastings to
•iro ha* raised quite a large family of
—Olio! Olio! sakes alive, what a slick Bedford, a* at present. The change is
children,and referring to her hardships
name. Who but a country school ma’am a desirable one.
in life; the loMof aaon that she laid up­
would have thought of such a really
G. E. Ferguson, an employee of J.
on the altar of her country and other*
pretty, high-toned and fine-haired ti­ Lentz it Sons, being engaged in their
ot her family that have passed away,
tle for a country paper! The darling finishing room, has some elaborate
and to her losing of her eye *ight,made
was born in fine swaddling clothes on specimens of bis handiwork with tbe
the occasion impremve.
Friday of last week* but whether it will pen; in various public places'.
When she wa* presented with several
survive tiro cruel uncerranties of a sec­
Miss Hattie Austin was in the vil­
nice present* of different kinds, which
ond paper in a country town, remains lage Sunday and Monday. From what
were a great surprise to her. Received
yet to be proven.
Its publisher throws we can bear Mis* Hattie b*s become a
them with a good deal of emotion,
considerable emphasis upon the fact valuable acquisition, as saleswoman,
and was so mnea everoomo that she
of having received his instructions and in the large crockery store of H. Leon­
could only with tear*, which are always
experience id Thk Nkws office, but we ard 4c Son at Grand Rapid*.
more eloquent tnan words, tender her
The Euterpean society hi in excel Im t
believe that tbe efforts of a "bounced”
sincere thanks to tiro donors of the
employee to build up a reputation and working order and is receiving new
gift* that were presented.
burinee* at the expense of our good members at nearly every meeting. At
Then came the most pleasant part of
name, will “prove boomerangs which tbe meeting on Tuesday la*t an elemen­
the affair. The tables were arraigned
■haU pieroe him io his own face.”
tary class of over &gt;0 pupils was organ­
and sixty or more took supper and
Sinee the above was put in type the ized with J. J. P.iUcr ox leader.
enough was left for a large number
“third" has pat in an appearence. Tbe
A* Mrs. M. J. Timmerman ia aboutSo
more. Many &lt;net that had not seen
new aspirant “promise*’’ well, among remove to Hasting* »he wishes to reeach other fora good many yean and
which is one to inaugurate a new way tnnr sincere thanks to friends in Nash­
perhaps will not ever meet again.
of pubiisbiag a paper—a want long felt. ville and ricinty for the lilror*! p*tronThen came ibe got»d bye and all went
Both prqpmucaa have a happy life and agebtatowed upon her during her rrei- h&lt;&gt;nro natisfied th st it had Iroen one of
keoce in this place. She has given in­ tiro p lesson tret visit* for many years.
a green grave for ati we oare.

LIFE IN NASHVILLE,

NUMBER 32.

00MM01 COUNCIL PROOEEDISGB. Springs, Ark. He ia going to visit Memphis, these part*, bat now of Nebraska, exiled oa
where baa an unde, aod atoo New Orleans.
He take* Ibe trip for hi* health which ha* been
very poor for aome tlme.
•
Tbebouaeof Frank Parker caught Are oo
the roof Friday morning. ’ It wa* discovered by
Mr. Carpenter who wa* passing and who, with
tbe aaetotanceot some ladies, pat it oat before
much damagw was done.
A *aw-du*t apfo-box came very near being
Couxcil Rooms.
i
tbe cause ot a- fire on Jeffemon 8L,‘ Friday
Nashville, Apr. 27,1888. (
night, in By. Dickinson’s saloon. Tbe »piU
Council met pursuant to adjournment.
box wa* consumed and a hole burned through
Present Chipman, president: Barber, Botoc,
tljc floor before it ”a* discovered and put out.
Dickinson, Dcmaray, I^c and Lentx.
Tbe Hastings sportsman came hoove from
Minutes read approved.
the shooting tournament at Grand Rapid* with
Tbe committee appointed to negotiate with
smiling face*. They brought away the cham­
C. G. Carlton A Co., for a fire ngine reported
pion ship prize and several smaller ones. Tbe
that they had purchased a Rumsey ire engine
next contest will be at Hastings May 30th, 31st.
and 400 feet of hose *t a cost of 81.ISO to be
The city “dada” have fixed tbe saloon bonds
ddlrered on or before the 20th of May, !Ss2.
at &lt;4.0011, for the awning year and hare decided
On motion the report of the committee dtoto allow them to bold open an hour later so that
chargtil.
the blood-suckers of humanity will have a little
Tbe rczignatlon of F. C. BoUc was presented
more time to drain the last cent from some
aud on motion accepted.
jMvor wretch, before be goes borne to bi* family.
On motXm the president appointed Barlwr
All for tiie rocmI of the city of courseand Lee a* a committee to settle with the
Thursday evening tbe friend* of Mr. and*
treasurer.
Mrs. Jas. Dunning gathered at tbeir residence
On motion L. J. Wbeeler wa* appointed Til­
to congratulate and recall the memories of 5
lage trrauser for tbe ensuing year by aye* and
fifty ycare ago, when as a blushing girl and a
day* a* follow*:
•lasbful groom they promised tn walk down
Ayea, Barber, Boise, Dickinson, Detnaray,
life’s rugged path together. Many present*
and a plcaaenl time was reported.
Tuesday night an effort wa* made to brake
Ing held April 10th is&amp;i,fixlng Uie saloon bond*
inu&gt; the bouse of Mr*. Kentleld. through a
for the ensuing year at to.0UO be re rinded.
place that had not been made secure by the
Motion carried by aye* and uaya a* follow*:
carpenters who were at work on tbe building.
Ayra, Dickin«o», Lee and L«utz.
Nay*,
“Hike'' heard a noise and marched to tiie
Barber, Boise and Dcmaray.
front. There was a loud report, one rafter
There being a tic the president voted aye. •
wa* rent in twain and three bricks were di*
Motion by Lee that the udoon bond* for tbe
lodged aud fell in fragments. Nothing more
rUMiing year be fixed at B&gt;3,000, motion carried
has been beard of tbe burglars. Not even the
midnight cat whispers now
Aye*, Dickinson, Lee am! Lent*.
Nays.
Barber, Botw,Dcmaray.
There being a tie the president voted aye.
WOODLAND.
The druggUt bond of F. T. Boise with F. C.
Boise and Henry Roc a* sureties was presented
Everything to booming.
and on motion accepted and approved by aye*
We have a boss barnc** maker uow.
and nay* ** follow*:
Mr. Dealer ba* a new summc.- kitchen.
Ayes, Barber, Boise, Dickinaon, Ik-maray,
Rev. Bridenstine has a new horse tiara.
Lee and Lentz. Nay*, none.
Woodland took a rest on jurymen, in tbe
The druggist bond of H. G. Hale with D. H.
Ma panel.
Jackson Palmerton ba* built .in addition to
rented and on motion accepted and a;»provetl
bi* barn.
by aye* and nay* a* follow*;
John Holmes and Frank Hilbert each have
Ayes, Barber, Boise, Dickinson, ih’tnaray,
new gtxxls.
Supervisor Barnum has the assessment near­
Tbe following account* were presented and
un motion allowed by aye* and nays aa follow* -. ly taken.
W. H. Durkee ha* hl* barn up it was raised
Aye*, Barber. Boise, Dickinson. D-tnaray,
last Saturday.
The
bras* band is improving Andy under in­
A. C Stanton,
struction of Mr. Wilson.
J. L iiregarj-,
F. McDert*,
John Holme* ha* moved bi* «aw mill south of
H. HoughLalin.
Fowler A Ingerson.
38 S3 where it stood one mile.
IjuU Saturday was examination day and
Tbe following rnaolution* presented by th*
fire cun pan v at * ;reriou« meeting were taken quite a delegation was present
Woodland was represented at the district
from the table aud on motion accepted and
missionary meeting held at Lyons, this week.
adopted by aye* and nay* a* follows:
Quite* number of Woodlanders visited Nash­
Aye*, Barber, Boise, Dickinson, Dcmaray.
ville on Monday night and heard the Tennes­
seeans.
To the Honorable council of the village of
Wm. Wunderlich I.* building the wall for his
Nashville.
Whereas we arc citizen* of Nashville, deem
new house, and the carpenters will soon eoming il ncsccsnarj to procure some mean* of tncncc work on the same.
firotection against the ravages of fire which to
Ira Stowell Ira* the finest Durham bull in the
fable to visit our village at any time, we there­
Bounty. He weighs nearly 2,900 lbs, and to a
fore submit to you the following resolution*:
RasoLran, That we the undersigned do fine, healthy looking feiiow.
hereby propone and agree to organize ourselves
Tbe I. O. of O. F. of Hastings i'xlge gave a
into a fire company.
free dinner on Wednesday, and quite a number
volentccr company to tbe village of Nashville, of our members attended the meeting.
under the following conditions:
Mr*. McArthur *ay* it would be a great ac­
That they procure for our use the necessary commodation to Iter if the one that took bcr
apparatus fo extinguishing fires, and that
they, at the expense of the town, furnish a canned fruit would bring back the cans.
•ui atrfe building or room for bousing tbe same.
We read in the Larimore (Da.) Pioneer that
We as acornjrany would submit U&gt; you for Rising A Barrel are doing a fine business in tbe
consideraton our opinion as to the most effi­
cient apparatus for working a fire In our vil­ meat market trade, and we can, asfriends, wtoh
lage, via shook and ladder truck with all it* the boys success.
sppunanres and appliances.
D. Sprague, near Coat* Grova, met with
Signed by J. D. McCartney, and forty-nine
quite a lots last Saturday night. About four
On motion council adk/umeduntil Saturday, o’clock the house caught fire from aome aawduat that had been put between the
alls.
April 29tb, 1883.
*
Nearly everything was raved below, bat Mr.
F. McDbkbt.
E- CHiniAN.
Sprague's
mother
had
some
bedding
up
stain,
Clerk.
President.
and about 1100 was the loss, beside* the build­
ing, and that was not much, but it was a home
HASTINGS.
just the same. No insurance.
Nell.

Covmcil Rook*.
f
NashytUc. Apr. 34, 1883. f
Regular meeting.
No quorum being prewent conned adjourned
until Thursday April 27th.
E. CHintza,
F. McDzmbt,
Preairlvnt.
Clerk.

Coart open* Moobay
There totn be * calico hop st Union Hail,
May 4lh.
Tbto to * very backward aeaeoo tor lemonade

Peach bods m* sD right in, these part* so

Scene of tbe Dakota-stricken fellows have ro-

Mto* Alice Kenedy,to teaching in the Madge

some of her old friend* here-lh« other day.
What ha* become of—Uerntrer," we don’t
hear anything from him *iridr~l»«..gol to be
grandpa. Wake up, liemixer, and pre u* the
news from that part of the city.
Henry Lathrop is slid in the weal waking hto
way toward Montana.
We will wager two
cookie* that If he meet* one of those Dakota
bllzxard* he wiD be baid-beaded whew be re­
turn*.
I
The R. K. cM&gt; at Morgan propose to try tbeir
hand at a de bate next Saturday ewsnfng. The
question tor debate to: Resolved that th* hu­
man family to retrograding. The affirmative
will try and prove that the Antediluvian* ahd
North Anaericaerfaxlias* were poeaeeadd ot all
cardinal virtuce, while tbe negative will try end
prove that the man and woman
of
to-day are Jam aa good as they ew
were, or a littl v nurtr an.

Garren.

LOCAL MATTERS.
DER1AR—EIJ.RTON—Mr. WWU F- Deriar
of this village to Mis* lUrtmra J. El-rton of
Castleton at the residence of Elder- Holler,
Apr. 22nd.

Hark! Hark r. tbe dogs &lt;k&gt; bark
The people cm coming for tea.
Borne in Wapms. some In boggier,
And some w fool you see:
Thev march a ong with joyous soag
’Til they come to Atasworth's store
Then wheel about and march right in
And call for a pound or more.
_

.

if Plvmoulb Rock egg* for hatching. par­
pose* at Mk-ts for 13. W. J. Paaxr.K.
miles east Vt. Ville depot.
33 84.
BEHOLD A BARGAIN.
Covered Butters lOcta apiece at Aiwswt
QT Full line of Wall Fsjwr at

FARMERS LISTEN.
L.L. Crocke rs Honest Pertihzrr’s Ammociati-d Bone, bujicr Phosphate and Pure Ground
Bone mauufactered st Buffalo, N. Y-, and for
sale at the elr-ator of
3033.
Bitoox*. MansnaLL A Co»SPRING AND SUMMER OPENING.
Thanking the ladies of Nashville and vicinsly
tor past favors, I in vile their attention to every
fine assortment of Spring Millinery Good)*,
which I hare just purchased at the lowest mar­
ket price. A careful inspection to solicited. I
will not be undersold.
Yours, Ac.,
M. JEFFREY.

FOR SALE.
Some nice Canada Seed Pea* Just the thing
to feed your Porker* next July, tn lime for the
rariv market, which is usual! the best tlm»tu
—I.
(' U' SmOL

BUTTER AND EGGS.
1 pay cash for salted or unraltod nutter, eggs
and other produceC- AlEavroBTB. ■

11 POSTA XT TO TB* VELEUA,
Special inducements are offered yon by the
Burlington Route, It w.U pay you to read Utaht-dvertUemeuUi to be found elsewhere in this
issue.
_______________
A good wide-awak* young man to seiluaeof
the tx*t Sewing Machines in the west.
L J. Wnaawnu

Ejf" Don’t forget the cost cash sale of FUr
nlture and the cloahig out sale of
Kklxogo, Bku. AjGcx

BRACE UP.
White and Fancy Shirts, latest style*,**
A. L. Raskt'k Barberdbop.
SHOES!! SHOES!!
Don’t buy a pair until you sec that new,
large and elcganistock— the finest everbrought
to Nashville—juat in at
Gkakom’s.
FISH ! FISH ! “
White Fish for six cents per pound al-

STOCK-BREEDERS
ATTENTION.
My two celebrated stallion* “Highland Goiddurt’’ and “Clyde B. Wentherwax/* will stake
the season of 1883 aa follows: Mondays and
Tuesdays at tny farm
tnile* caabof VL
Ville depot: Wednesdays at the Wolcott-House
barn. Nashville, and Thuradav*,. Fridays and
Saturday* at Pennock &amp; Gilman’s stable, llrat-

BARRYVILLE.

your furniture for cash at

Km

Mtoa Nettie Holmee from White Hall, is
visiting friend* In the city.
A lire alligator from Florida to ojoornlng
at Ed. Brown* barnc** shop.
Mayor Grant wa* called to. Fort Dodge,
Tuesday to vtett a sick brother.

NEW

PHOTOGRAPH

Having rented and fitted up room* over R, 8.
Brady’* building to.- a photograph gaihsry, 1 aza

under thsirbalL
Albert Corwin baa * brother visiting him
from Grand Rapid*.

£5°^

Tbe crweeBt society to in a flourishing eoodltioo. Il meet* every Bonaday night.

FAIR WARNING.

all person* are warned Mainat I
aa Mr. Straw baa bee.. uotthed i

'

any o:»e can open tbeir mouth and talk plain
Eugltobon the street* without mlatlcatlng an
The M. P. church folk* have teen plastering
Mr. Rose of tbto city to going to build

Mg dMlKAtkm.
of our citizen* think of making that locality
Vine, AwtoUnt; Lola Hyde BcovUry.

Where to ofir board of health

gUMMtea aattofaeF.T. Moo wow.

LUMBER? LUMBER!
Custom Sawing and Paiktiag Material fur-

-rille.
Justice Clifford has rented the office former­
ly occupied by C. G. Holbrook, and 1* prepared

th* Bastings Gun Lake ■ssoeistton.

GALLERY.

Dr. Hull to visiting st hi*old home in Battle
Creek.

H

ui

Ham-hett’i

�sow chakli*

was fooled.

TWM LT JEl.

Ma. brimful of hl* fun
rtaMMlfrayly oriMi:

“Hallo!

■air ju—the atovu—you know!"
,«raamy atarartMnk*Grandpa. Then;

MY BEARJIUNT.

It wasn’t a regular bear hunt; that is,
I didn't do nearly as much hunting as
tbe bear did. I did not start out intend­
ing to hpnL He did. I went to get the
buttet'.whun— But I ant getting ahead
of my story’ . l£was_when 1 was xlx&gt;ut
thirteen yearxolff that my father took
my bother and myself camping with
him in tiie Adirondack*. We pitched
our tent at the head of Little Tupper
Lake. There was a spring of fine cold
water not far bock in the woods. So.
after making our beds out of pine
boughs, building a fire and setting np
the table, we went down to tbe spring
and put our butter—which was in a tin
!»“?tted with a water-tight cover—in
it to keep cool.
All went well for the first few days.
Father and brother Will (who was fif­
teen) shot a deer so that we had plenty
of venison. The guide caught a quan­
tity of trout, and we were enjoying our­
selves so thoroughly that we began to
dread the time when we should have to
return home.
‘•Can’t wo stay longer than two
weeks?” I asked father one morning.
•’We’ll stay until die butter gives
out,” he replied, laughing.
Tbe nearest place to get butter was
twenty miles away, and as it was disap­
pearing rapidly, owing to the appetite*
of growing boys. faXher had already
warned us of the necessity of economy
in that direction. We were, after that,
very sparing in our use of butter, and it
seemed to bid fair to last longer than
the promised two weeks. As the guide
was preparing supper one evening,
father said; “ Will, I wish you would
go down to the spring and get some
water; and, Charlie, you go, too, and
bring up some butter.” It was a sim­
ple request, but thereby bangs the tale
of my first and only bear hunt.
We started off, and soon came to the
spring. The path led around it into a
thicket of huckleberry bushes. Will
proposed that we should pick some for
supper. We plunged into the thicket,
and were soon busy picking the deli­
cious fruit. Wo had not been occupied
in this manner very long when we
heard a ^rashing in the bushes near the
spriqg, and as we looked back we saw
a great black bear. He was not fifty
feet away from us, and was gazing into
the spring with a complacent air.
•• He's looking at himself,”
said
Will
“Seehim grin,” I replied, divided
between fear and curiosity.
“Thinks he's handsome,” whispered
Will.
Bruin looked over in our direction
with an annoyed expression, ord we
decided to suspend our remarks as to
his personal appearance until some mon1
convenient time—when he was further
away, in fact. He continued to peer in­
tently into the spring, and we were be­
ginning to get impatient, when, to our
horror, be slowly extended his paw,
and without much trouble fished up our
butter pail. He calmly seated himself
on the ground, and taking the pail be­
tween his hind-paws, regarded it re­
flectively for a few moments.
He
seemed lost in thought.
Then he
smiled blandly, and slowly passed one
of his strong fore-daws around the rim
of tiie paiL He repeated the operation,
while Will and I looked on in despair.
“May be he can’t get the top off,"
whispered Will
He had hardly spoken when, with a
slight rattle, the cover fell to the
ground.
Will groaned.
The bear
paused, looked puzzled, smelled the
butter suspiciously, and sat looking at
it with the air of a scientific investi-

As uuick ns he could, he pulled up a
hanaful of grass and held it out to the
bull.
.
The bull was feeling very uglv, for
the men who put him in the liefd had
beaten him, and choked him with the
rope around his neck. But when be
saw Charley standing there so bravely,
he knew the little boy did not want to
hurt him. He stopped, looked at Char­
ley a moment, and then quietly ate the
grass from his hand.
Charley pulled some more grass and
gave him. and then some more, and
more, until the bull .had enough. Char­
ley walked away, with the ,b£l follow­
ing him to the fence.
The next evening he pulled some tur­
nips and carried them to the bull. He
liked them very much. Every day after
that Charley carried something good to
his big friend.
But one day Charley’s father pasaed
by the field. He was terribly fright­
ened to see hh little buy on the bull’s
back, riding around tbe lot. He shout­
ed to him. out turned pale when he saw
Charley take hold of the horns and let
himself down over the bull's bead. He
expected to see the animal toss the lit­
tle fellow in the air; but he only rubbed
his black nose against Charley and let
him run to his papa.
The next day the bull was taken
away, for Charley’s papa did not want
him to have such a dangerous friend.—
Our LUUe Ones.
The Sun.
“ 1 am told,” said a Bishop in a Lon­
don drawing-room to a Parse© lady.
that your people actually worship the
sun.”
The Eastern dame replied:
“They do. my lord; and so would you
if you had ever seen him.” It is indeed
true that we do not know what the sun
is in his strength in these northern and
cloudy
latitudes.
Occasionally,
no
doubt, we catch sight, even in winter
and spring, of a pale golden sphere,
mildly brilliant, which makes for tu
tender dawns of primrose and pink and
soft evening effects of saffron, violet and
sea-green.
More commonly in th©
summer and autumn we behold an un­
vailed solar sphere, which ia bright
and
splendid
according
to
the
ideas of our latitude, and which
imparts
&amp;
certain
sensation
of
radiance and heat. This, however, is
not the sun of the East and of the South
—the real King of Day. The true mon­
arch of our system comes up from the
Indian or African horizon without a
cloud to dim his majesty; burns himself
a path of glory over the sea and across
the sky; sweety aloft in fiery fierceness
of light, which makes living creatures
dread as well aa adore him, and sinks
into the Western world with crimson and
purple flames dyeing the sky, and nil
animated nature silently glad to be quit
of his glorious buj terrible presence.
Hiding at noonday from the rays of an
orb like thia, the Hindoo ortho Equatori­
al African would appreciate better than
ourselves the figures given by astrono­
mers.
How big does the sun appear? Chil­
dren answer to this in various terms,
some saying •• as big as a golden crown
piece,” some “ as large as a plate.”
Yet how many grown persons realize
that, it we take a billiard-ball to repre­
sent lhe earth, the visible sun's sphere
could not be packed inside the billiard
room if it were less than twenty-six feet
in length, height and breadth? Jupiter,
the giant of our system, would be about
os large as a wine cask; Saturn of a but­
ter firkin; while Uranus and Neptune
might be symbolized by foot-balls. The
central lord of those Utile globules which
we call planets outweighs them all put
together seven hundred and forty times.
As we behold his glowing nucleus it is
ooout eight hundred and sixty thousand
miles in diameter. An Armstrongshell, as
it travel* with its initial velocity, would
take thirteen years to reach him. A
word spoken here, as sound passes
through our air, would occupy six
months in being heard by the Angel of
the Sun. If one could reach so far as
to plunge the hand into his burning
corona, the rate at which sensation
throbs along a nerve would make it
seventy or eighty years before the man
would feel the scorch. Light itself—
the swiftest of all messengers, except
perhaps electricity and gravitation, con­
sumes nine minatee in traversing the
distance which divides us from our sun,
and yet from him come all our light,
beat and life; as weU as, in all proba­
bility, the very substance and form of
the planet we inhabit. —London Tele-

“ He tliinks that it is oleomargarine,”
whispered Will
But no, If Bruin did for a moment
doubt the integrity of our butter, his
doubts had vanished; for with one sweep
of his great tongue he transferred about
two pounds of it into his mouth. Will
groaned. Bruin paused, and to our ex­
-cited imaginations looked in our direc­
tion, as ilthe would hare liked some boy
to eat with Ids butter.
We remained perfectly quiet, while he
finished the contents of the pail. He
■eked out die last particle, and then
—The recent performance of a six­
earefully turned the pail over and licked teen-year-old girl in Manchester, Eng.,
off the bottom and soles. After he had
deserves mention among the eccentrici­
satisfied himself that then- was no more,
ties of juvenile crime. She stole two
ita rose and looked into the spring. Hb
coaU belonging to her brother, pawned
seemed discontented for a moment, but
them for a guinea, bought a pair of
the recollection of his supper brightened
boots and redeemed an ulster with the
kin up, and casting a loving glance at
proceeds, and. finding that she had a
the empW pail, he trotted off, •• the best
small balance, treated herself to a cab
greased b’ar in the north woods,” as
drive to the Alexandra Park.
eor guide afterward remarked.
When be had gone a aafe distance.
—Citried hair used for maUresses is
Win aifd 1 sadly picked up the pail and
walked back to camp. Father was get- brought chiefly from South America. It
the
form of- a cable —
an ------inch
fing unea«y. and ha&gt;Hurted to meet us. is
- twisted
- —; - in
,;
-------------When we told him our adventure he ran or
»» dmmeter. and is picked out
back to esmp, and getting the guide, 1 bJ’ upholsterers who pay tiie pickers so
4og» and hi* rifle, started in pursuit of! mueh * Pouad ior lheir workthe ihief.
1
,
••
-----A little inter we beard a shot, and be-1
—A thousand tea-plants, many of
fore bmg father returned, bringing the j them six feethigh and of thrifty foliage,
t-ax M
&gt; sad -nnu) choice piece* of have been raised by Dr. Foster, ot
gfr
f- r oujrper ,1.M-k ui lnttter_ (lecyytown. 8. C.. wnieh M-em to bear
&lt;o • ;-i us . to break up ranip uert /tac^cHhiate adtHTrireiy-------------------------------

yy E AKE NOW RECEIVING OUR STOCK QF

thougnt perhaps you might thi
it worth while to let the public know
socha simple remedy.—A. Neild, Charl-

Obartey. who was aot afraid of t=7
»nything. He would pick up frogs or bugs,.
or walk up to a dog or goat and pat him
[bar as if he was an old friend. But he
wad a good buy. and never hurt any
creature. He drove the cows home
every evening. Charley loved the oowa
that gave him such good milk, and he
used to talk to them as ho drove them
along.
One day Charley thought he would
cut acroM a lot that was fenced in. He
had only walked a littie way when he
saw a big bull trotting towards him. Do
you think Charley was frightened? Not

i
'

i
I
I
।
|

i

—Though the droughtshrunk the crons
In Kansas last summer very greatly, the
farmers' products of the State footed up
&gt;122,946,490 for the year, forty percent,
more than the value of the abundant
yield of the year before.
—Probably the largest bogin the Unit­
ed States wav lately exhibited at Junction
City, Kansas. His length is seven feet;
girth of neck, six and one-half feet; girth
of chest, seven and one-half feet; girth
of center, eight feet; width across-the
..
------- r.
^ght, 1,632
pounds.
—Baked fish is apt to be dry, and can
be improved by basting it with a little
good fat or olive oil, or oy laying a slice
of salt pork over it, or strips of pork In
slashes cutin its upper surface. Blue
fish, bass, shad, carp, red snappers and
other fish from three to six pounds in
weight are good for baking. Brown
gravy or sauce should be served with
naked1 fish, and a highly-seasoned bread
stuffing increases their palatablencss.
—In warm, properly-ventilated stables
it is doubtful, whether horses ought to
be blanketed, but in cold stables there is
no doubt that they should be; also in all
ca«es when stopped in cold weather on
the road.. It b better, when the horse
comes in worm and sweaty, to rub him
dry before feeding and watering. Horses
are much like human beings; they take
cold by exposure, as a man will. They
should be carefully treated, and never
be allowed to stand long in cold weather
in a sweaty condition without being
blanketed. Many horses are ruined by
exposure and drinking cold water when
warm and sweaty,
—For meat fritters sift a teacupful of
flour and half a teaspoonful of salt into a
bowl; mix it into a smooth batter with
the yelks of two eggs, a tablespoonful of
salad oil. or melted outter, and tepid wa­
ter enough to make a batter a little thicker
than for griddle cakes. Set this aside
for two hours or better still for twentyfour. When it is to be used, whip the
whites of two eggs to a stiff froth, first
adding a pinch or salt; stir them lightly

And linger •twfxt Cordelia's now

Baa&gt;rr’a Diskass of the Kidneys, Diabetes
and other Di*es*e« of the Kidney* and liver,
which you are being so frightened about, Hop
bitten fa the only thing that will surely and per-

yuu many time* worse.
Beware, oh, beware of tbe mother of a man
WHAT THEY LEAD TO.

eikcckod In time by Dr. David Kennedy’*
“Favorite Bemepy,” will end in Constipation
Pile*, Rheumatism and Gravel. The latter are
ailment* of very aedoua character. “Favorite
Remedy" acta upon tbe disordered Kidneys and
Liver with quickness and certainty. It is n»tnres own device for thia purpose. Ask for it

doctor, at Rond&gt;ul N. Y.

Wounds of the bean are tbe only ones that
are healed by opening.

GOODS FOB THE SPRING TRADE
’--------- AND ARE SELLING ’THEM-____

Clear Down!
THE CAREFUL MAN IS EVER ON THE ALERT
to take advantage of favorable opportunities

No matter how disguised, that prompt paying customers
must make good to the dealers who sell on credit nil loses
from poor debts, long time accounts, sickness, failing crops,
loss of property, or dishonesty of other customers.

We are strongly disposed to regard that
person »S tbe be«t physician who does mo*l to
Mleviate human aufferiog. Judged from this
•tendard, Mr*. Lydia £. Pinkham 233 Western
Avenue, Lynn; Miu. t* entitled to tbe front
rank, for her Vegetable Compound is dally
working wonderful cures in femato dtteaae*.
Send for circular to the above addresa.

That the merchant who sell on credit must take into ac­
count all the probabilities above mentioned when he offer* his
merchandise for sale. /
’
*losees ___
'
'in thengg»e~
And' these
amount
gate to a fair yearly income—a loss which....be could’
l“»g
sustain were there no remedy, but there is,a remedt
that
remedy is in the PROMPT PAYING CUSTOMERS

KImcs by people who no longer love each
other are merely collated yawns.

NO BETTER INVESTMENT

EXPERIENCE THE BEST GL IDE.
Tba - ri'iuou why wumeu everywhere use
Parker'* Ginger Tonic te. because they have
■earned by experience—the best guide— that
Hila cxreilenl medicine overcome* despondency
l&gt;vriodical headache, indigestion, pain tn the
luck and kidi.ejf, and other trouble of the
•ex.— Hume Journal.

In love women go to the length of folly and
men to the extreme of silliness.

PERMIT NO SUBSTITUTION.
Insist upon obtaining Floreston Cologne. It
preeminently superior in pcrmanctKc and
delicacy uf fragrance.
THE BAD AND WOTHLE8S
»
are never imitated or couterteited. Thi* 1*
especially true of a family medicine, and it is
positive proof that the remedy imitated i* of
«igbe*t value. As soon aa it had been tested
arid proved by the whole world that Hop Bitirr* wa* the purest, best and moat valablefamly mediciuc unearth many imitation* sprung
up and brgan to steal the notice* in which tbe
,irea» and people uf tbe country bad expre* cd
t'.e merits of H. B.. and in everv way trying to
induce suffering invalid* to use tbeir stuff in­
stead. expecting to make money on tbe credit
and good name of U. B. Many other* star rd
noatrum* put up in similar style to H. B., with
variously devised names in which tbe word
“Hop" or “Hops" were used in a way to induce
people to believe they were the same aa Hop
Bitter*. All such pretended remedies or cures,
no matter whattbeir style or name ia, and es­
pecially those with the word "Hop” or "Hop*"
in their natn&lt;. are imitations or counterfeit*.
Beware of them. Touch none of them. Use
uniig nut genuine Hop Bitter*, with a bunch
&gt;r cluster of green Hop* on the while label
Trust nothing else. Druggist* and dealers are
sarued against dealing In imitations or couu-

* Can be made, if necessary, than to hire mo ev
for your merchandise as you purchase it.

pay

Prints for Q cts. ya rd.
Ginghams 8 to 11 d ?
Turkey Red Table Linen 50 to 55 cis
Table Oil Cloth 28. Floor. In si -i:

&lt;■

Boots and Shoes,

7232858930193658^46935126074161823^52257

In the Whole History of
Medicine
No preparation lias ever performed such
marvellous cures, or maintained so
wide a reputation, as Aykrs Cherry
Pkctorau which is recognized as the
world's remedy for all diseases of the
throat and lungs. Its loug-continucd
scries of wonderful cures in all cli­
mates has made it universally known
a* a safe and reliable agent to employ.
Against ordinary colds, which are the
forerunner* of more serious disorders,
it acts speedily aud surely, always Fe­
ttering suffering, and often saving life.
The protection It affords, by its timely
use iu throat and chest disorders,
makes It an invaluable remedy to be
kept always ou hand Ln every home.
No person can afford to be without It,
and thoac who have once used It never
will. From their knowledge of Its
composition and operation, physicians
use the Cherry Pectoral extensively
In their practice, aud clergymen recom­
mend It. It is absolutely certain in
its healing effects, aud will always
cure where cures are possible.
For sale by all druggists.

Great

We are thankful for the liberal patronage given n i thpant under the old credit system and solicit its c iiimif ce
under the Ready Pay. We know we can be more
\i .hie
to you in the futuie than we could possibly be in rhe pu- .

COM£ A ND SEE FOR YOURSELF.
Bring Your Butter!

Bring l our Kggii!

Bring 1 our « .&lt;ah I

L. J. Wheeler.
HERE WE ARE A&amp;AIN!
—WITH A FULL STOCK OF-------

Buggies
Wagons
OUR LINE BUGGIES
EMBRACES ——

Burlington
jRouteO

Pheetoii

White Chappel and Coal Boies, hong with Elliptic bp.L.

PR1NGIPAL+UNE
rue SHORTEST, QUICKEST and

Two and Three Spring Democrats.

UR WORK IS ALL DONE UPON HONOR. BUGGIES
being made from Second Growth Hickory.
Our Tops are lined with All-Wool Indigo-Djeri G&lt; ode mid
Warranted not to Fade. W. H. Atkinron, a painte* wh&gt;me
work has never went back on him, has charge of our paint de­
partment, and can be relied on. BoI tn, Daah Feet, Body Loup*
and.Stays are made from Norway Iron and the entiie buggy
ironed in a desirable and superior manner and warranted

5 e t-ra» Is*. M I—ou ri.
DoU**. G *1 *•». S«w Mexico, Arixoa*. Miufrs^^fo^^VCTtoa,

Until you have thoroughly examined mine. SpokvH iiiirte
from Second Growth Stock and the wagon ia made to sand
the wear and tare of our roads.

KANSAS CITY
tS~l HAVE IN STOCK A NUMBfcR. OF-®Jt
[
!
]
:

ntrcmtb
Ticket* vta i
CelrtwoirJ Moe
.ale « Hl office.

Furnt Ac Bradley’H
Mid travvUns *
luxury, ia»u^»J

CHILLED PLOWS, HH RiKIS AND CULTIUTOSS
Which I will Sell at Cost to Close out.

;

T I roTTER.

*BCtV#L LOtreU.

E. COOK.

�BMAM .".re pr:i lionin"
rs who have served ten

Conn., write* under date of June 14,1WO, to
is valued at $500,' Dr. Kennedy, to aay that the uae of “Kennedy*
Favorite Remedy'* tum cured him of Gall
more convenient,
be wall worked'
thing but comfort for a loug time. . Mr. Chadrich and so light that
Hit1 tbe
I surface wfl]
’r*Unot
“ot sylvania have their seats-free, or fifty1
riiw tour
&lt;«.. inches
Inch- apart, in
m which
which
_ByaM^£lolCvutaJoimBroota.
Make drills
in Washii
law school
sow seeds four inches distant from each
of Bridgeport, Conn., the Firet Presby­ aud aden
other.
This will admit of vigorous
—The Roman Catholics are making fair day's work. I recommend * Kennedy* ■
terian Church of that place has fallen
PRICE; DI AD, IF PAID IN ADVANCX
growth, which is very important, as the
heir to the greater part of his $150,000 determined efforts to convert the people
plants will be in better condition for
of Centi al Africa to their faith. Already 1deranged jircr." Grateful patient* are, com­
fortune.
To Advertisers:
planting when one year old- than ever
—The Tabernacle Baptist Church at more than fifty missionaries have gone mon. Dr. Kennedy ia dally !u receipt of letter*
after.
Cover about one inch deep.
from Algeria to Equatorial Africa, and
•WU.U.
J*rr drouLUiug U.&lt;~ An ounce of seed should give about a Nottingham, England, revise their list
the Pope is urging greater efforts.
hi. *.*i &lt;«r n.to,.rf .drmkltig ire
thousand plants.
Hoe and cultivate of members every three months, and
varieties of
—Harriet Beecher Stowe’s son Charles
well, and keep all weeds down. Trans­ members who have been absent for that
for tbe ask- plant in the spring to the beds where time without reason lose their member­ was ordained and installed pastor of the It may lie Juiit tbe thing you ha'
Saco
(Me.)
Congregational
Church,
the
ship.
.
*
they are to remain. Good strong one
for.Is your liver disordered! d
-»-A professor of French in an Albany. other dav, though four of tbe five dea­ rengmeut of the Kidneys or Bladder, associa­
year, or if the seed was sown in the fall,
PEHt’HE THESE LIBERAL AD. RATES.
(N. Y.,) school recently asked a pupil cons ana thirty-three members protested ted with Consumption of tbe Bowels 1 If so, you
eighteen months old. plants are better
that
he
lacked
piety
and
was
theological
­
want •‘Kennedy's Favorite Remedy."
Dr.
for setting than older ones, bqt those of what was the gender of academy. 1 ne
Kennedy practice* Medicine and- Surgery-in
liixb..... I • 1.18 j » AID IJ KOO ~ 18.00 two or even three years old may be used
unusually brigtit pupil responded that it ly loose. •
all tbeir branches, Write and state your case
”■ 14.00 if others are not readily obtainable.
—The total receipts of the American frankly. Letters promply answered. Addrens
depended on whether it was a male or
Board for tiie last financial year were Dr, David Kennedy, KondouL N. Y. "Dr.
20.00 . A light sandy or alluvial soil is far female academy.
—A professor in the college at Lewis­ $691,246. Of this sum $257,907 . was Kennedy’s Favorite Remedy’’ for sale by all
preferable to any other for asparagus; a
druggists.
80.00 cold clay soil, however rich, is seldom burg, ra.. held his place tweuty-seven expended for the four missions in Turkey;
satisfactory. But’whstever its nature it years and was then discharged by the $108,781 for three missions in India;
must be made very deep and rich, and trustees. He claimed that ne was an $89,642 for the two missions in China;'
the materials used for fertilizing applied officer of the institution‘for life, remova­ $46,624 for Japan and $51,276 for three
in the most liberal manner. Il the soil ble only by judicial proceedings, and missions in Africa.
is naturally cold and hca»y. muck, sand therefore sued for continued salary. The
—The South Congretational Sunday
ORNO STRONG,
or the sediments of ponds or creeks may Supreme Court has decided against him. School of New Britain. Conn., pays its
Editor and Proprietor.
be added in sufficient quantities to lighten
—The entire teaching staff of the Col­ Superintendent a regular salary, and he
as well as to make it rich^ "The richer lege of the City of New York consists of devotes his whole time to the intcreste
the better” is an old and good rule in a president, salary $7,600; twelve pro­ of the school, visiting families, looking
It is the
making asparagus beds.
fessors, at $4,600 each, and one other at after absent scholars, etc.
Depth of soil is also imjx&gt;rtant, be­ $3,000; nine tutors, at $2,376 each; tire largest Protestant Sunday School in the
(TIIE HEALTH BBINGEB.)
i VIL i^rBll 'FFIOERS.'
cause warmth, proper drainage, and the others at $1,600 each; two others at $1,­ State, and numbers about 1,000 mem­
retention of just enough moisture to 200 each; one at $2,000, and,one at $800. bers.
Prudent—Ellbu Chipman.
keep the plants growing and the roots Thirty-two professors and tutors, at an
Recorder—Frank McDerby.
—The ordinary country school-house is PENGELLT’S WOMAN’S FRIEND
healthy cannot be secured in a shallow aggregate.annual salary of $99,575.
as ill-adapted for the use to which it is
soil, however nearly perfect it may be
—Bev. John Kerr, of Belfast, now in Eut to aa anything could be. The Super- Every mother of daughters should
in all ether respects. The bed should
itendcnt of Public Instruction in Wis­
know about it—because it brings
Trustee*-II. A. Barber, F. T. Boiae. H. W.
this country, says there are 240 Metho­
be
thoroughly
worked
with
a
spade
or
Dcmaray, H. R. Dickinson, H. M. Lee and
health
dist ministers in Ireland who are living consin has done a good service for his
trench plow to a depth of at least eigh­
Cha* Lent*.
State
in preparing and sendingout a cir­
teen inches, while two or even two and on the smallest possible sum, and who cular containing designs for buildings,
report 2,000 conversions among the re­
*orirtU«.
a half feet is usually considered better
sults of their last year’s work. The Meth­ of various prices, with practical sugges­
by the most successful gardeners. On
tions as to ventilation, lighting, etc.
odists have two colleges on the island,
APTIST CHURCH. Rev. E. B Moody, Pwtor. light soils, naturally well underdrained
—As the result of his last year’s work
one of which is burdened with a debt of
Service rvriy Hun Jay tflOlAta., Nabbalh by a porus subsoil, a less depth will an­
•chuol al 12 tn; Prayer Anu Teacnor*' meeting
$20,000. Mr. Kerr speaks very highly in China, Dr. Nevins counts one hundred
swer if surface applications are in­
of the work of other Protestant denomi­ villages which have become centres of I
creased. The usual practice in small
Christian
work, and in these are thirty |
OPAL CHITiCH—J
gardens is to set the planta in beds and nations in Ireland.
churches. His parish extends over some |
—From Nebraska a new missionary of
quite close together.
This method
300
miles
of
country, in which he is the
should be entirely abandoned; for to ob­ the American Sunday-School Union re­
only evangelist employed bv the bbard,
tain large asparagus the plants must ports to a lady and her class in Canan­ i although the number of conversions have
daigua,
N.
Y..the
distribution
of
their
VY LODGE NO. 37, K. of P., meets at its have plenty of rdom for full and perfect
Castle Hall, Nashville, Mi^igan, every development of both roots and tops.
donation of ten dollars; a part to Creigh­ increased twenty percent in the last few
Friday evening, for the encouragement and
ton Union Sunday-School, which is doing ■ years. There are still whole provinces,
Hupport of al) worthy, true, steadfast and hon­ For garden culture, the roots should be
conf ining an average of about 2,000,000
I three feet apart and the plants not less all it can in a new rallroazl town to pre­
orable Brother Knights.
iuhacitants unentered by missionaries.
L- E. Lkxtz, K. R. “
than eighteen inches apart in the rows; vent the sale of liquor (which may have
—During 1881 the missionaries of the
caused
the
Superintendent's
house
to
be
and for field culture, the rows must be
American Sunday-School Union in the Who »t:Ser from Hot Flushca, either before or
set
on
fire,
Dec,
18th)
;
a
part
to
Emerick
IliMCelllllMMHIN CurdN.
four feet and plants two feet from each
Union Sunday-School, organized in a Northwest established 647 new Sundayother. When plenty of space is allowed,
settlement where he found only one schools. mostly in pioneer settlements, tcndlnu tho Critical Period, Bloatlnc Tfiunb\V II YOUNG, M. D. Office east side of . tiie roots have room to spread, the
M«», Wnkcfulnon. I'nlpltaUon. Etc.
IT. Main SL, NWhvtllc. Office hours from I crowns increase in size without crowd- Christian family, but sixty children, be­ aided 1,041 old schools—1,591 in all, hav­
All Uiotio, and many other dl«tro»«ins com­
I ing, and the yield will be much greater sides young people and adults; a part to ing 5,766 teachers and 49,874 scholars. plaint*. unuallr attributed to other cauac*. but
Bethlehem Union Sunday-School, organ­ They placed in these settlements pure really peculiar to the aex. WILL CERTAINLY
. than when close planting is practised.
TV ti UKisitol.n m. d., ____ ,JLhlc I It is a common saying among market ized on Christmas dav in a very destitute and healthful literature, valued at $8.261;
’ ’ • PhyeH iau «i»l Surgeon. Office aud re»LEVCORKHODl KUINS THE FINEST
gardeners that " giant asparagus is only community, seven miles from any place distributed 5.142 Bibles and Testaments,
Idenc* uppoaile Uie Wolcott House. Prompt
SUeutkin given to call* day or nlxliL
obtained by giant culture," and allow­ of worship; and a part to Battle Creek visited 9,188 families, conducted 2,185
ing abundance of ro°m f°r Lhe plants is Sunday-School, in a settlement ten years religious services.organized and attended
•old, but which never had a Sunday- 112 conventions for the instruction of
A FOO I E PHYSICIAN A SURGEON an important step in this direction.
rblcb.
teachen, and traveled 119,144 miles.
• &amp;urcM* to Dr. Wickham. Office and
After the land has been put in proper School before.
rvaidetM'c al Dr. Wickham'* laic office. condition bv manuring and working to
I
—The final abandonment by Dr. TalPi&lt;»upi attention to call* night or day.
the required depth, trenches from tour
PUNGENT PARAGRAPHS.
madge, of Brooklyn, of the so-called
It. PENG ELLY, M. D.,
to six inches deep should be opened
free-pew system, and tiie substitution of
ugffUU.)
KALAMAZOO. MICH.
—It takes a bold man to roll his own
R ( W mil CHER. Electic Physician and
with a plow. If the roots are large,
the plan of selling the choice of seals at
Surge'll!. '» prr)*rai to answer al) calls
ideas into the world.
two
furrows
should
be
run
for
each
a
fixed
rental
at
auction,
first
introduced,
that may
made fur tils services. Office and
—
An
old
lady
wants
to
know
what
is
trench, throwing the soil out on both
we believe, by Plymouth Church, must
re.Ktou&lt;-r opiamite Roe’a meat market
sides, leaving the bottom of the trench meant by “mean time." Our watch be regarded as a significant testimony
TVM PARMENTER, M- D. Offlos over
broad enough to admit of spreading out keeps it,—A’. Y. Evening Post.
; against the experiment of maintaining
v v Hull'* Drug .tore, Vermontviiie, Mich.
—Why is the money you are in the a free seat ehurch by the contributions of I ’■1 ——
tho roots to their full length without
roB
crowding against the sides. Set the habit of giving to the poor like a,new- attendants. The method has long since
roots at proper distances along Ilia born babe ? Because its precious little. been abandoned by the Roman Catholic I
trench and haul the soil over them with
—The latest tvsthetic slang ihe ladies metropolitan churches, whose pew doors I
etitru.led to tn» rare. ConvcyanciDg a »peclalhoes, or it may be thrown back with a use when reproving their admiring gen­ open only to renters by year or the day; I
ty. Orth* opptmitr Union Houne.
LIVER ANO DOWELS.
plow; after which run a harrow over the tlemen friends is, "You flatter too aw­ it is generally going out of vogue with
the Methodists.—Cnridian Union.
LIEBllAU&amp;ER, Mcrcban*. Tailor aud deal- surface to moke it suwoth and level. If fully perfectly much.”
• er hi Heudy Made Clothtug.
See me the crowns of tho plants are covered
—It has got so now that the daily
betore you |&gt;urcha*c clothing.
Fit* guar- fullv four inches after the soil is well paper is gradually usurping tiie place of
THOUSANDS OF CASES
PUNGENT PARAGRAPHS.
settled above them it is sufficient, al­ the sewing circle as a disseminator of
—“Ah me,” sighed a pawnbroker's
iiNAli B RASET. ExprtM and Draynuw- though some set*them much deeper,
news.—Lowell Citizen.
PERFECTLY CURED.
(j&lt;K&gt;l» am! B&lt;iU[a&lt;e carried to uQy place In which is not only entirely unnecessary,
wife, "what a loan-sum life we lead.”
—What is the difference between an
tbr Tillajje.
but in cold soils rather injurious than old tramp and a feather bed ? There is
—“I don’t like that cat; it’s gotsplinIKaM R DICKINSON, manuftwturer of otherwise, as the plants will not start so a material difference. One is hard up tersin its feet!" was the excuse of a tour- !
an.) denier In Hard Wood Lumticr. Build- early nor come forward so rapidly as and the other is soft down.—Norristown year-old for throwing the kitten away.— !
||IK Malrnat « apn-laltv Ca»!i paid for loga. Mill
when set near the surface.
Yonkers GuztUc.
Herald.
arid yard.hi Ritrnnao Su.at M. C. HR cro*alng.
An asparagus plant at first consists of a
—Silver dollars witli Holes in them are
—A book-keeper for a Philadelphia
V.MEj* FLEMING, practical Jeweler and crown or centre bud. from which tho plumber rendered a bill for.Sl 10 instead painfully numerous, but they are not half
Wji. 1,-niaker Clocka, WaUhca. Silver and roots grow out laterally in all directions
so painfully numerous as holes without
Plaint " ,n- .IrOlrj and Optical (»&lt;a*la Rock­nearly horizontally, seldom going deep of $L&gt;16, and the debtor came in and said
font n ,i.-Ur-a .iwn-iuliy. llcjmlritigaod Eugrar- into the earth. Neither do the crowns ho would take his solemn officiary that any silver dollars around them.
—It may be mortifying young man,
grow upwanl or downward as the plants the work wasn't worth a cent over $60.
—“ Colonel." said a’man who wanted but that moss agate slab you are wear- 1
iLeayate®.
become old. but as the first bud or stalk
ing for a sleeve button is not the proper i
to
make
out
a
genealogical
tree,
•
‘
Col
­
rises to the surface and above, if left un­
O'‘tw
onel, how can I become thoroughly ac­ thing. Have it made over into a center i
disturbed. another bud is formed at its
quainted with my family historv ? ” table, and then buy a small, fashionable '
base, and then another, and so on during
"Simply by running for Congress,’’ an­ cuff button.—Nitrriatoum Herald.
the entire life of the plant, the old crowns
—Here is a popular eastern actress.
swered the Colonel.
,
becoming large masses of dead and liv­
TACOB O3MUN, Liveryman, barn near Wol- ing buds on nearly the same plane. We
—When a man’s hair stands on end, She has $75.000in diamonds and $50,000
o SPRING MEDICINE.
•&gt; cott House First class turnout* at reason­ i are thus particular in describing the
an ordinary person says his hair stands; in dresses. Her salary is forty dollars a
,!«n rtire* MMOUSWV3.T. cOOTTITAable rate*. Special rates to commercial men.
but you can’t get a doctor to talk it in week. She boards al home and makes
Funeral and wedlM parties furnished with car ‘ habit of asparagus roots, because thous­
ands have made asparagus beiis with that way. The doctor calls it horripila­ her mother do the work. Economy is
—------------------------------------------—— solid stone bottoms, believing itnecessa- tion. This makes the hair stick up worse the road to wealth.—Ball Lake Tribune.
,ELL; ETStor*DP’“il* ry
prevent the roota from going deep than ever, but it gives the family confi­
—A surgeon has removed a patient’s
into
earth and "Pending the ffree of
dence in the doctor.
leg above the knee. The subject laments
as? rror rom nnuocisr. micE.ei.oe
Brarkeu. Window
'D&lt;w Frames made
I the P?"*1 in
direction instead of
uUELLS. UICIURDSOX X Co.. Prop’a,
the loss of —
his ------limb. "Come,
come,. ”
—While an Idaho girl was sitting un- -------------------------- -----------order. Wood Turalug tn all It* braachc*.
j throwing up its succulent and much der a tree waiting for her lover a grizzly «)•« the man of science cheerily, "you
Z'hab w Drn.iuT~n^L
•boot';
IU&gt;'1 many hare
loots; and
have been d»de- bear came along, and, approachingfmm mustn’t take on so. It’s all for the best
C tk-iu.«?.
,br. th»
behind, began to hug her. But she —see, you were going to have a corn on
ipposed neoessity
a practical Jeweler, patron* can depend upon supposed
necessity of stone foundations
foundations.
thought it was Tom, and ahe leaned back your little toe.” .
It is frequently asserted that asparagus and enjoyed it heartily, and murmured
—Gus Singsadly is deaf aa a post.
roots go do wn until they strike some hard
**—’-------b of
the'cold
recentlyw a_
" tighter," and it broke the bear all up. During
one
________
___ days
__ w_________
substance, when they are turned and come and he went away and hid in tbe forest friend told him ho would freeze his ears
W. N18KERN, Attorney sod Counsellor through the surface as stalks. Where
i if he did not protect them in some way.
• st Law, practices in all State Court*. Col­ such an absurd idea originated may be for three days to get over his shame.
-A young noHemu In . frightful . ".S«PP»".“&gt;«/ *&gt;
Stoglections prompUy attended u&gt;. Office over
as difficult to determine as ia the origin
Spaulding'* *U»re, Hastings Midi.
rallwnj
raiaod hl* nlqt On.
do- •‘“X re
of hundreds of others equally absurd that of the guard* came up to him and *aid.- ■*&gt; good.”—HochaUr Exprui.
have both in theory and practice found
"My Lord* we have found your servant, 1
—"Friends," once saida clergyman
J_£ A. BAKBEIt, SI. !»..
their way into both ancient and modern
but be is cut in two.” "Aw; is he?” to a number of people who had entered
gardening.
1IO &gt;1 CEO I’A-Tirxc
said the young mafi, with a Dundrearv his church for the purpose of getting out
After cultivation consists mainly in
drawl, but vrith a trace of anxiety de- of the rain, "I have often heard of the
top dressing and working in fertilizers
picted on his countenance, " will you be church being used as a cloak for one’s
from time to time to keep up a vigorous
OIflee Bret door eaat of Opera House, and growth of the plants. When they are good enough to see in which half he has sin8’ hut this is the first time I ever
, beard of its being used as an umbrella.”
near residence on corner of Washington and set in wide rows it is easy to run a shal­ got the key of my carpet beg?”
State Street*, Naahville, Mich.
—When Farmer Budge read that a
—Recently at Los Angeles a married
low furrow alongside, fill it with manure,
bull pointed by Rosa Bonhcur sold for woman eloped witli her coachman, in
and
then
throw
the
soil
back
with
the
yy&lt;»LC4»TT HOLME,
•
plow. Fertilizers of almost any kind $5,000, he remarked to his wife that be consequence of which her husband shot
may be spread over the surface and didn't see how a coat of paint oould so himself. The next day his daughter,
worked in when weeding or otherwise greatly enhance the value of the animal, i who was also in love with tbe coachman,
A. S. Foote, Proprietor.
cultivating the plants. Salt has long nut if Rosa wouldn’t chaige more than went insane, while tho servant-girl, who
ten dollars he would get her to paint his was in turn gone on the defunct husI,..* 4&lt;h* . -t airallr located, well kept. been considered a special fertilizer for
asparagus, probably because the plant bull in the spring. And his economical band, tried to drown herself three time...
is found wild in salt meadows and sands wife replied that she thought he might We shall get out an extra as soon as we
I near the sea, and while it may not be paint it himself and save hta ten dollars, learn of the course taken by the housez?® .indications are now that the bull dog in the matter.—Derrick Dodd.
, .
n.,
' necessary for the production of large and
“ —Here we have a poet. He writes
L 4. Bl Nil,
fine-flavored asparagus, it is, asiawel)- Will be painted.
wanes a*
known, a most excellent fertilizer for a
—How beautiful is the exhibition of for tbe country newspaper. The paper 27 8to
TKE 19088
: great variety of plants, and may be humanity in the voung. A little boy does not pay him anything for writing.
found a poor half-frozen wasp in the He writes for glory. See how pale and
liberal quantities that obnoxious weeds garret and placed it upon a chair before thin he ia Perhaps glory does not agree
I will be .killed ouL Consequently it is the parlor fire to thaw out Whip sister with hhn. At nighthe walks without a
IIOH*
| often a cheap method of weeding a plan­ Mary’s beau called that evening he hat to let the starlight soak into his brain.
glanced at the chair and searing himself He never gets fRi. Nobody ever asks
tation and enriching it at the same time,
bcrides destroying the larvrc of noxious
to. He was not bora a genius. At a
* HOCHE,
how thoughtful ahe is rf my comfort!” very early age he fell out of the garret
insects that infest the buds and plants,.
V V c___
r
Two minutes later there was as much window, and when they picked him up
L ANTI HD EL. PaorareroB.
noiae and racket in the parlor as if it had he was a poet Poets are therefore
..... flats „
w
are
—Itiastaind that the Standard Oil Com- been turned into a den of demons. The made, not born. Thftl is why
any paid seven million dollars in tbe wasp had tfutw&lt;*cl out; that is why Mary • built eight and ten Ktories high. -Brookisn't married yet.
| Lgn Eagle.
*■ six months for barrel stave*.

iUshrillr girretonj.

»

. Arrive

GRAND RAPIDS DIVISION.
KA.STWA.R1
STATIONS.

&gt;»
II fl

Middlevilit

5S5R::
Vcrmotiivi
Cbarlotto

I

WESTWARD.

STATIONS.
Di trail L-

Cbariotu,...

aSBte;:
Hatnmonii,___
Grand Rapid.,

। IS
Railway*.

u.

h

Leotard.

TO GIRLS

B

TO YOUNG LADIES

' TO OVER-WORKED WODEN

IRON

I

To Women Advanced In Life

L
n

WlDNEY-WORT

J

THE GREAT CURE
RHEUMATISM

S

J

H

(IDNEY-WOR~U|

J

II

KIDNEY-WORT

P

Physician and Surgeon.

BOOT AND SHOE MAKER,

BITTERS
BROTWS IRON BITTERS ore
a eertain cure fur all diseases
re&lt;]uiriuK a complete tonic; espe­
cially Indigestion, Dyspepsia. Inter­
mittent Fevers, "Want of Appetite,
Loss of Strength, Lack of Energy,
etc. Enriches the blood, strength­
ens the muscles, and gives new
lire to the nerves. Acts Tike a
charm on die digestive organs,
removing all dyspeptic symptoms,
such as tasting the food. Belching,
Heat in the Stomach, Heartbum,
etc. The only Iron Preparation
that will not blacken the teeth or
give headache. Sold by nil Draggists at $1.00 a bottle.
BROWN CHEMICAL CO.
Baltimore, Md.
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.

Back
Ache
POSITIVELY CURED

Benson’s Capcine
Porous Plasters.
Firet.

■ I.lion thereto I

dlac'oTerrtl powerful and

f®

Because over OOOOpkyai
voluntarily InutHtarl that

Bauson’s Cajoe Porous Plastu’
SEABURY t JOHNSON,
■EAgS Raft

COM md BUWOWPU

NO PATENT NO PA!
Wo-dfor mechanical davk

lerfnrencee.

Infnt.vt

�Gentw Furnishing 1 Goodw

Delation.

As

state to the ex-Secretary that Minister Huribui had been offered 8230,090 in tbe slock &lt;d
the Peruvian Company. Mr Blaine at one
time exprsSMxl the opinion that Shipberd
should be scut iw.fore tbe Grand Jury tor l*r'
JUT
_
.

TECZE G-BEAT SECRET
IK TO BUY-------------

------------- FN

FOREIGN.
-Ho© would be illegal.

FUR THE LEAST MONEY.
Ftrat National Book «f Buffalo, N. Y.,-are ‘
Uhtaoa received oa tbe 21stof the death ot
lo«.
WSl«M ImBlw Cnxlluit, w01 re- i MtaUtm- Hurlb«!
Lk« &lt;» M.n-h ST, u
0*nUwi «nr-«r. Hr cn&gt;L
,b« inm l» hl.
tool be.lUi. tat

Garland made a favorable report

some time he could not

Nashville, Apr. 20,1882.

adopted for
ports that during the month of March there
arrived at the customs district* of Baltimore,

whom 85,234 were Immigrants. Of thia total
number of ImraigrauU, there arrived from
England and Write* 4.486. Ireland 5,221, 8cotlaad 1,301, Austria 1,437, Belgium 130, Den­
mark 1,867, France Ml, Germany 23,251, Hun­
gary 1.071, Italy 4,213, Netherlands
Nor­
folk 807, Poland 880, Russia G00, Sweden R,080,
BwlUerland 1.116, Dominion of Canada 10,5V7, China 3,722, and from all other countries
107.

Wla., o© tbeMb destroyed sixty-three build­
ings, causing a lose of over 8200,010.
Ma G eoboe introduced a bill tn Oo Senate

encourage
closer
com1 with South America, In-

Itigton for
DQtwnnd expend it in Improving tbo Mis&lt;i&gt;
■tnM. MlMouriand Okie lUrer*. A Mil for a
©nlfonr. *jr*tem of bankruptcy was reported

DOMESTIC.
Tax Government proposes to sell tbe navy­
yard at Charlestown, Maa*., lor 88,000,000.
A few days ago s furniture repairer was
sent to the residence o» Samuel C. Holmes,
Deputy Collector of City. Revenue tn New
York, where be rilled the safe and left with
bonds valued at 85,150.
TWta were 125 business failures tn tbe
United Slates during ibe seven day* ended on
asmtotoAL '»
'

Topeka A Santa Fe Railroad was ditched a
few days ago by a band of armed robbers, who
ma&lt;lc an ineffectual attempt to rob the ex­
pre** car of 8300,000 in stiver. Tbe fireman
was killed, the engineer and messenger were
injured, but the robber* were beaten off.
Lx tbe Criminal Court at Chicago on the 21st

tbe penitentiary. Palmer, who had disclosed
the plan of operations, was dlacharged.
Berks

xliug 840.000, surrendere! blmself on the 21st

follows: William Sindram, in New York City;
Bent Taylor, at Corning, Ark.; W. W. Bay,

Taxor end others on the 21st sold tl&gt;e RenFren-h aud English capitalists for »1,300,000.
The Governor of Maasacbusetta on the 21st
•ent to tlw House of Correcttanht Dedham on
a charge uf vagrancy. Grief at tbe death of
his wife made him a tramp.
‘ *
Arscnu st Clifton, New Mexico, killed five

the Detroit Copper Mining Company.
Tbb creditors of the Providence (R. I.) Tool
Company were ad vised ou tl»e 22d that the lia­
bilities of tbe concern were 81,000,501 and tbe
*aete4’.O*J,44&lt;
Judge G ABT. in tbe Criminal Court of Chi- !

fences aud trees for a length of twelve miles.
Fire persona were killedlx a fight with Apaches on the 33d at Horieaboe Canyon three soldiers and four Indian
scouts were killed. Twenty whites bad been
butchered along the Gila River.
■troyed by-firc oa the morning of the 24th.
Ix tbe suit brought at Washington toy
Hallett Kilbourne against 8ergcauL-at-Arm*
Tbompaou, for damage* for false imprison­
ment, the jury ha* rendered a verdict for
8100,090.
The steamer City of Sandford was burned in
tbe river near Jacksonville, Fla., on tbe 24th.
Nine persons perished. O. M. Gauretv wu» taken from tbe &gt;11 at
Greensburg, Ind., on the 24th by a mob and
hanged. Garrett had been tried and acquitted
of murder, and was awaiting trial on a charge

exclaim that lie was dying. In twenty min­
utes from tbe attack life was extinct. Wild
rumor* os to the'cause of tbe Ministers death
forced tbe authorities to insist upon a poetmortem examination, which developed aneur-

F. T. BOISE,

w«* sent by Emperor William to President
Arthur, who replied with aa exprear.lou of

(
|
■

Belts ire a few if nr Birniis in Rral litiie:

PRBSCKIPTIONS,
RECEIPT8,

Spring-2tlrHarrow

And every article kepi in a fl rat-cl*** drug store

I

Wiard Plows,
PAINT AND BRUSH South Bend Chilled Plows,
DEPART.HE T
Gale Plows,
(Buy Genuine Factory Points)

LATER NEWS.

They arc much cheaper and better.

Call and Examine! \ Strayer's GRAIN DRILL,

F. T. BOISE.
i

Lightest gnd Strongcat Made,

May be the place to

HUBBARD

BUY A FARM’ BUT

Gleaner &amp; Binder
ImpnAed 1882.

THE PLACE TO BUY Sash,

Dllnote.
Tmr Oregon Republican State Convention
met on tire 3)th and nominate 1 the following

nor, F. R. Moody; Secretary of State. R. E.
Earturt; Treasurer, E. G. Harsch; Superin­
tendent of Public Instruction. E. M- McElroy;
Supreme Judge, W. P. Lord; State Printer,
W. U. Byers. The platform adopted contains

The Belgian Consul in New York, in the
name of Leopold IL, haa obtained an attach­
ment for 1340,003 against Leon Bernard, who
is accused of robbing an Archbishop ot bonds
and Jewels valued at 81,200,00a

HANGING LAMPS,

tbe Chinese Mil os unwise and unjust, and
condemning the policy which prompted it aa
opposed to the principles of the Republican

proposition from tbe holders of State bonds to
compromise the debt at sixty per cent., with
graded interest of four, fire and six per cent.

And everything kept In

Natiunal Rej:-blican Convention.
Tmb Governor of Maine has nominated Nathan Cleaves for Justice of
in place of Artemus Libby.

was surrounded by-150 hostile I nd ian* on the
25th, aud three whites bsd been Filled and
one wounded. Captain Madden, twelve miles

cavalry in tbe. vicinity.
Gbobob A. (Jovxts, Chief of Police of Llt-

RAWSON’S

DAKOTA . REAPERS &amp; MOWERS

week ended April 21 aggregated 10,505.
The remains of ex-Unlted States Minister
Hnribut reached New York from Peru on the
morning of the 26th.
The Pope Ik reported to be seriously Indis­
posed and bls physician* insist that be shall
leave tbe Vatican.
The widow and daughter of John Brown are
•aid to be in dcaytu'.e circumstances at Sara-

&lt;126,000.

PROVISIONS'

CROCKERY,
GLASSWARE,]

DETROIT STOVE CO’S. STOVES
Domestic * New Home

SEWING MACHINES
j

When in need of the Best

I Grades of Hardware and Machinery. Call and see me.

this kind, is at

0. W. SMITH’S FRANK C. BOISE.
WA-GONS.

CUSTOM FLOURING MILL

THE CROWN SEWING MACHINE.

, XTTh* “Crown” come* into the market
he test of all tbe maentnes, but has sprung to
front rank alonce from Die fact that It has ta­
ken the gtx»d feature* in all other machine*
and put them in one grand combination, mak-

the • -points" that tbe exncriece of twenty years
tn all kinds of family arxl light manufacturing
work has proved to be absolute! &lt; good are to be
found only in tbe “Crown.” Other machinea
may have one, two or three of tbc*c ‘-points”
but none but the “Crown” has them alL
Every device that U really desirable In other
machines will be found In the “Crown." Ad-

WAGONS,

E. R. WHITE.

gg^V^READT for business

EiueriEnced, Reliable, mi Responsible.
Ofray ha Barry Co.,

five white people were killed.

A. H. WINN, Dentist.

CUSTOM GRINDING!

saved the

sujierior
Ix the United Staten Senate on tbe 25th tbe
Mirer Improvement bOi, giving 85,000,000 for
the MiMtostppi and 81.000,(113 for tbe Mis-

teeatb section, prohibiting tbe naturalization

THE CROWN

BI II.DEU IIARDM 4BE,

It to Mtt that she intends to prepare

of occupation are d»wc with fever at Liana.

40 acres, 3 mile* from Nashville. Fair bouse
and barn. Nearly all improved. Price 81,800.
40 acres, 8^ mile* from. Nashville. If sold
soon will take 81,150.
25 acres, in tbe village of Nashville. Must
be sold for what it will bring ou account of
poor health of present owner.
50 acres, 4 mile# from Nashville; nearly all
improved; fair buildings and tn all a good bar­
gain. Price 81,600; part down.
House and Lot, on Fbillin* street; tbe beat
bargains in town. Price 8350.
House and Lot, ou State street. Price 8230,
half down down.
G&lt;xxl House and four acres of Land on Fran­
ces Street Price 8450.
House and lot on State St, house new: good
cellar and plenty of good water. For sale at
87UO or will exchange for farm pronerty near
Nashville or Hastings.
80 acre*, 1U miles from Nash rille on the best
road leaving the village; all improved except 8
acre*; the remaining 8 acres, good Umber; is
well watered by a never-falling spring. Good,
young orchard; buildings fair; 18 acres of
wheat on the ground; present owner engaged
in other business and will sell for 82,600, |f,000 down, balance on long time.
Vacant lot on Philips 8t Price 8120 If sold
soon.
LEE A DURKEE.

Paints, Oils, Varnishes,

GROCERIES,

Mty ha*, while asleep.
The HBaoto Canal Commissioners, in re­
sponse to s resdhitloe at tbe House, on the

The account* of Governor Churchill, of
J If* iisbs, while aerving as Blate Treasu rcr,

80 acres in Maple Grove, 45 cleared, 23 acres
of Wheat, jftfcd Orchard, very fair building*,
good spring near bouse.' Price 3,000. Payments

Doors and Blinds,

££ K. DICKINSON &amp; CO.

Gexwbau WiUUM L. Burt, the President

23d.

NASHVILLE, MICH.

PEOPRIETABJ MEDICINE?,

Tub International Sanitary Commission la

plague, which has broken out in Persian Kur­
distan. e
•
Tnx Connecticut Prohibitionists met in
Qsmax Pa*Ha Rxrxi, formerly Egyptian
State Convention on the l»th and nominated Minuter of War, has been errcated on the
a State ticket beaded by tbe names of George charge of contplracy to procure the restora­
P. Rogers for Governor and William 8. Will­ tion of tbe cx-Kbedlvc Ismail Pasha.
iam* for Lieutenant-Governor.
Retxolo*, one of the party who robbed
The wife, of Lieutenant-Governor Tabor, the Hatton Garden poat-offie* tn London, 1s a
of Colorado, ha. Died a bill agaln»l him tor a native of Chicago.
separate maintenance, alleging immorality
loXATtarr has rcaigned a* Russian Minister
and desertion. She claims that he is worth of the Interior.
•
80,000,000.
A St. Phtxbsbcbo dispatch of tbe 34th
state* titat Lieutenant Danenhower arrived at
Presbyterian Boird of Foreign Mission* al Troitsk on the 15th Inst., and left there again
Minneapolis. Mrs. A. H. Hoge, of Chicago, on tbe 16th. He was hourly expected at Oren­
was elected Preaident; Mb* E. A. Blaikie, burg, the extreme terminus of the European
Secretary, and Mrs. Jesse Whitehead, Treas­ railrooda, distant some three days from Moaurer.
The Treasurer reported collection*
Pabxell arrived at Dublin on tbe 34th and
amounting to 843,500 during the last year.
Tus Rhode Island Legislature has elected drove direct to Kilmalnluun Jail.

the Sid, leaving four children ill with the tame

J SO. M. ROE.
T EE A DI RKLE,

DUGS,
BOOKS,
JEWEJLRY,
A number of prominent persons, ex-CubtWALL PAPER,
net-Mlnlsler* and army officers, were arrested
at Cairo on tbe 23d In connection with the plot j
WINDOW SHADES,
to assassinate Arab! Bey, the Egyptian Minis­
ter of War.
j DYB STUFFS,
A Loxnox newspaper stated on the 2jd
that the Irish-American “ »uspect*” would be
allowed to return to the United State* within
a week.
The German authorities have refused to
recogubto John J. Flinn, ot Chicago, lately
appointed United States Consul at CbemniU,
because of hl* intemperate habit*.
After a thorough InvestigatiGB of tbe toll
of Florida, a sugar-planter in Cob* announce*
his intention to rcnirwe to that Stale and ernploy five hundred hand*.
ALgxsxDru FiatiBB, Manager of the On­
tario Bank at Toronto, who committed sui­
cide recently, prove* to be a defaulter for
833,(100, all ot wfalrh wa* a/lvsnced to friends

er com, 5 Iba. uf hay. 8 iba. of wheat barn, 90
lb«. of potatoes, orflOIba. of turnips or carrots.
It is without doubt the beat and cheapest
feed in tbe market. For sale at

THE NASHVILLE MILLS.

In the Dominion House of Commons ou tbe
23d Mr. Blake's resolution that Canada should

PERSONAL AND POLITICAL.

George M. Carpenter Judge of the Supreme
Court to fill the vacancy caused by the death
of Judge Potter.
“
Tbb Sanitary Council of tbe Mississippi
Valley met l:i Cairo on the 20th and elected
the following officer* for the ensuing year:
Preaident, Dr G. Dem:., ot New Orleans;
Vice-President,' Dr. D. B. HiUto. of Iowa;

Spring1

The cable cor.acting Emden, Germany,
with tb* old system st Valentla was opened

riculiuml Cbrmtot estimates tbe nutriment of
100 lb*. of Lln*e*d Meal as equal to 800 iba.
of Oats, or toSIB Iba. of Cora, or to 7B7 lb*,
of Wheat Bras.
¥or beet rattle It ha* fattening pronertia*
wbfcb cannot be found tn any other feed, tbe
“ konlf more tender and jniry. and
icr Duality than when fattened on
ut tl&gt;ey are more quickly prepared
—..Tbr excellence and ■nperiorfiy of
tbe English Beef and Mutton, aa well as the
fine appearance of tbeir boraes, 1* mainly due
to tbe liberal uae at Linseed Meal. It U with­

FLOUR. MEAL ARD MILL FFED

The fifteenth section, relating to skU ted to bur-

Our

GraJiani Elour

READY FOR SALE.!

BEST SET BUM TEETH $10.00

BLACKSMITHING!

Offloe Open Day a Evening.

BLACKSMITHIM61
BLACKSMITHIiei

J OSEPH COLE,
°
AT THI JMCW

—poxasr—

TmUi Eltrae4e*

WUio«l P«l».

A. H. WINN.

MEAT MARKET!
Fresh, Salt and Smoked

C.C.,

BUGGY A WAGOI REPAiRIIB

MEATS!

�SATURDAY - -

ly so; even toen the head ’.s withdrawn
ou the slightest alarm aud the position
i* by no means favorable to ita Ua&amp;der-

- - APRIL 3». 18®J.

VICIHITY LOCALS
BI8MARK.
Bon* throata pbmty.

Shafer appreciated thta fact

.

We have In our neighborhood a mother and
child on whom public monpy la drawn fur
■cbool purpose , the mother being under tweut-

M-y.

is there another such an Instancel
'
A meeting of young folks waa held la»t Fri­
day evening at tbe residence of James Hunter
for tbe purpose of organizing a lltcrarv society.
‘ J. C. Downing baa the finest atoekof goods The meeting passed off very pleasantly and ail
seemed to enjoy themselves. At the election of
ever displayed In a country store.
J. C. Downing put In * night, in a tost con­ officars Mr. Wm. Witberrl was elected president
dition on tbe billowy deep, not long ago.
and il »&gt;• decided to l»uld tbe next meeting In
We shall not be able to do tbe square thing four weeks at tbe residence of Mr. Magden.
before tbe first of July, when we shall add tbe
Tuesday.

PRICHARDVILLE.
John Benrelid is building a horse and car­
riage bare. Thoe. Harper, of Harper*, Is
School will begin next Monday.
bollder.
Joseph Delano has a new buggy.
Dave Hunter has sold hl* farm, if bi* buyer
connects, and h** bought another near Ham­
bouse raised.
mond etatton.
“Tater*,’ are coming down, but they drop .. H. Priehard returned te his home Id Fulton
sparingly from the band. That la they are be­ Co.. Ohio, last Tuesday.
MIm Marilla Arichtrd Is daugtroufJo sick,
ing planted.
1 have got a large type—a letter “d,” which and the doctors her recovery I* doubtful.
Horace E. Hall retuaued frodi tbe east,
I captured from a rebel printing office at Port
Hudson. And I’ve a notion of yiarttog a pa. Wednesday, where he has been attending
—.* . —,£5y kupeold faahloptd cheese press school tbe past winter.
J. T. Hinchman shipped hta flock consisting
nye Editor tkEln 1 niake it pay. •*
What
of nearly 400 sheep last week. He sheared
/Mrs. Hunter, of whom we spoke
them before shipping.
last week as being feeble, died last week
Mrs. Mary E. Bernard and her daughter
, She was a native of Scotland, and
Tuesday.
Myrtle, return^ home Tuesday after making a
come to America many year* ago and for a
short stay with Mn. Bernards' mother They
Umc I Irrel near Rochester N. Y. She came to
reside at Jockfon.
thi* town some 25 year* ago to reside with her
eon* James aqd Thomas Hunter. She lived to
a good old age of usefulness and has now gone
to her reward. Funeral services at Hunter
The great coaunotion In Assyria wa* on
ehureb on Wednesday.
Warrirr.
Monday tnatea ot Tuesday, and Mr*. Sarali
Baker did not move to bcr daughter*, as wa*
reported.for tbla said daughter waa the one that
rang tbe Im-11 when bcr muther'a thing* were
A. Kreller Is quite sick.
being moved away from her old borne, where
Mr*. Simmons haa moved to Nashville.
*be had lolled for many year* to bring tier
Andrew BalLx is running a grocery wagon.
children Up,
up. and
and *l«xl
Hood over
over them
them through
through *leksickw _ ___ ...
....
.uv Ii children
W m. Covell and twoof hl* chlldnn are hick. ,
-...I
Mr.
*»e.U. mMl.er mild Cor
. her children, and now of these same children,
paint.
। hare helped to turn their mother out of tier old
home lu her old age.
The conduct of bcr
spouts.
2 171
I daughter* Olive and Martha McGraw, on
the
Mr. Wilson of Charlotte, wa* visiting at Mr.
*
day that ahe moved wa» eliaincful.
/»•—
Wilcox's last week.
.
ringing the bell at home, they both went over'
to Frank Window* to finish up their meannea*,
No damage.
hanging out old shirt* and firing of gun*.fright
Deputy County Surveyor Pratt surveyed Sec.
cuing the team that bore the mother away.

MAPLE GROVE.

J. McKelvey baa Deen putting new shelving
IxkiUK her th lug* away .abusing bcr every sham&lt;^
and counters in bis store.
fully, after turning her out of doors like a d&lt;»c
The (rood Templars will bold a weight social
..... •crti a great deal of „„
iBhe ba*
trouble In her day.
at Mr C. 6- Dunham’s, Tucaday evening. May for Baker ba* been a twastiy drunkanl, aud t»
veL and hewitl.ee the time when ha will think
Tbe boys put up s job ou Jerry and his girl a Ijlb^tltUat.: ....I tb.™ I. b« ..air ».a.
few nights ago. by tying a rope across the gate
enough to injure hufor them to fall over when they returned from Charley, wbo can't
meeting but Jerry out-willed them by going mother. Il will all come back to them y-t.
through the ban

EAST MAPLE GROVE.
I
I
I
Tim Brooks l&gt;aa given op the Ide* of going ,
west this spring.
Milon Andrews has just purchased a new
George Bpireahaa gut his net

spring tooth harrow.
Gcorgf Andrews has the carpenters at work
repairing* and building an addition to his bouse.
Mr*. Hall, wbo baa been alck for the past
three month’s, still remain* under the doctor’s

family. She te now living in one of lane
Mayn't house*. She lived injbcr horn.- 3s year,
----------and worked Indoors
and. out in tbe Arid, *_
tn ordcr to help buildup a l&gt;onie and now aw what
be hta done

EATON COUNTY.

T. T. I'olhomu* of Charlotte, received S8(X)
hark |M*n»lon tiie other day.
Potterville ha» loxximc aa Incorporated vUUpr. It boKD’t a Mdoon &lt;r place where iutoxlTbe masons are now at work laying the callpg liquor* are wild. '
Tbe ladica ballot the Olivet CoBegt recently
foundation far the uew farm house 01 Cap
destroyed by Are b to be rebuilt iKitneduitely,
Bowen.
The fanners are quite busy making garden, and upon a larger and mere elegant »cale.
Eaton Raphl* t«ved Alii) by hiritg a cheaper
plowing and prejiaring their ground for spring
principal for the rnnuiug year. She thould
crops, and jjoing all kinds of spring work.
Tbe sneken. are about done running up Mill have &gt;avcd at leart &lt;200-or all. Par*liuoi&gt;y U
Creek for this season, and now boys will have ■ot economy.
One night last week, about midnight, Cha*.
Sr-r.., Cl.ark.Ur, -a, .Uark^l b, two U»On Wednesday last a stranger man was rid­
ing along but a short distance from tbe county known men and tiadly pummelled. The object
line, overtook a |iale-faced lad and inquired if of the ruffians is unknown.
be bad arrived to the flidstitng up of Michigan.
-cook who, with bcr brother, had been saving
Iwr hard earned money that site might scud for
CEDAR CREEK.
her aged mother living tn England. Tbeir
saving ha*] reached nearly FJOOand this waa all
Will Vandenbnrgh has gone to Dakota.
Fanners are preparing for corn planting.
The residence of Otadlah Ilorrich. tire miles
south of Charlotte, was burned early Monday
village residence.
Tbe big M.M. has bought the place formerly Lom 91,000; Insured ta the 'North British A
M« csnUle for &lt;1,0X1. The couteute were il*o
It la generally believed that Dr. Peckham will partially insured in tbe same company.
Robert Blllingkley aval wife, of Charlotte,
added another chapter la their very unsavory
have beard him sing hta old worn-out song that record Wednesday nfitfa. Billingsley tecenUy
tbe carpenters would be ou hand Monday nxrti- refused to live with htawife,charging her with
vary grave offence*. Wcndcsday night Mra
Bllliogaley came to her husband’s house while
for hi* family ta* would to the realm* of bikA,

dlsg-jsting fight enaued, -during which the wo

Jecua,Christ tad. sit upon tbe throne and ataf L usband, wbo immediately went for officers
praiaca evermore, but be says bls family binds to have bcr arrested. When be returned be
bimlo earth andall its trials. We think It a pity found bia bouse tn a aad condition, bls wife
having occupied tbe time in hta absence by
breaking the furniture, dishes, mirror*, pictgo what would hta little vine do.

Quite a difficulty arose between Mr. R. Dick-

Naaliville in to have two new paper*,
and it M not settled whether the town,
hta beautiful yards with his mudfly feet Dick­ or the new papers will die.—Middleville
Republican.
croon did not yield but quietly informed tbe
NashviN is to have two new papets—
fashionable Dr. that be would when be got
making three in all, er one paper to
every four hundred inhabitaate. Some­
body will tie poorer bat wiaec. shortly.
Charlotte ReptMica*.

DlCV.

WEST SUNFIELD.

There i« a prospect that another new
Daperwill be started in Naehviiie soon.
Any chan wba is ambitions to croud in
toa field so oowipietely filled by Strong,
°‘ JTi,e
«'*•,,a!* more sand than sense.
—Grvad Ledge independent.

CARD OF THANKS.
We tender ovr heartfelt thank* to tbe kind
MgWtnreaajlfrtanda through the tackn-s aed

death of our Bota baby
Ma. axd Mas. Ntcswaynsa.
BRAIN AND NKRVE.
Wells'Health Renewer, grewtost

dMrictvm b

plan ia to put the bottle uncorked into
the box and let toe snake crawl out al
it! leisure, first “ chocking off” the bot­
tle with a wedge of paper or wood, lest
it abouid roll over on the reptile, and
listening a string to it in order that it
may be removed without difficulty at the
earliest possible opportunity. •
One of the most poiaonous snakes I
ever possessed wm brought to me in a
brandy-bottle, and after twisting, and
shaking, and tapping It for an hour with­
out avail, I grew impatient The tail
lust then happened to protrude about
half aa inch, so I seixed it with my fin*gere, and, rapidly drawing* the body
through the other hand. b&gt;d the reptile
safely in my grip behind his death-deal­

“Why,

you

coafoshded old

fool.

Finding it wm up HU work, he walked
i the other end of the bencli and tried
&gt; quiet his bones again by saying:
Whoa boy,
whoa,
boy!”
etc.

internet of the occasion. About onehalf of tbf. men were from Rmokrtawn
and the reat^from Germantown, both
dartiea having gone there avowedly tm
a fight, which waa begun without de ,
lay. The owner of tbe hall entered with
« gnn to force a peace, but wan quickly
disarmed and thrown out through a
window. Then the door .wm lockrnnd fighting resumed. Severn! of thi
musician* in order to aato tbeir in­
struments, dropped from the window*
ten feet to the ground, but the others
were compelled, to play lively airauntil

niunieation from D. C. A U.C. Bred
&amp; Co., in regard tai certain aqito uu~
decided
a* yet in the court*, icgkrdmg
asked them to help him lift the car on
the oak- aud use of Spring Tooth
the track. ' When they failed to Respond
he ffitid: “ You are the meanest set of
HKrrow*. and with tit® above heading.
street-car passengers I ever hauled.”
I had the game poblialied in The News
M What is tho number of your car?’’
for the benefit nf thoae intf tiding to
chipped in a bystander who stood near the battle waa dver,
buy a Spring Tooth Harrow, thia, or in
tbe back, holding his sides aa he laughed.
coming
seasons. They claim to on
“The number of mv car,” replied the
Poverty ia an admirable and ter
mH the existing paten to and jury made,
perspiring somnambulist “ is 47.”
riide trial, from which the weak come
At this point &lt;d the proceedings a
•old or used. I nm informed, i* an in­
forth in famous nnd the strong nub­
policeman appeared on the Acene and
fringement on tbe original which tiiry
It it the crucible into which
dashed the contents of a glass filled with lime,
own, and any person welling or using
destiny
throws
a
man
whenever
'it
water Id the face of the sleep-walker.
an infringement is liable to proaecaThis awoke him and brought him to *wi«lies to have ajscoundrel or a demi­
tion. In the following week a editioa
ing jaws,
flow
distended
with anger.
his senses forthwith*.
When
he saw
the god.
But the slide of my anake-box was shut
of The News a letter appeared con­
crowd standing arpund him laughing and
over, and I could not draw it back with slapping each other on tho back his as­
tradicting tiie statement I made, lmt
DON
’
T
DIE
IN
THE
HOUSE.
one hand; so I was obliged to let him tonishment was of course very great—
A*k druggist* for “Rough on Rat*.’’ It
slip beck in the bottle again. Having Si. Louie Republican.
clears out rata, mlee,bed-buga, roaches, vermin in a letter under date of Apr. 17th.ful^y
set the box all in order for the new-com­
end &gt;rses my publication aud it* con­
er’s reception, I once more essayed to
■other Shipton’s Successor.
tents in thi strongest term*,leaving the
lay hold of him by the tail; but now
DISSOLUTION notice.
most provokingly, no amount of maneqNo sooner is Mrs. Shipton, with her
mutter beyond doubt that purchaser!
Tbe co-psrtoerehip heretofore existing be
vering would bring that useful member fatal year, laid away fo rest than another tween Geo. 8. Hartotn and Calvin Buitth of of other harrows must look oiil WclL
to the topu Another half hour’s unsuc­ prophetess arises in the American Israel, Assyria center, Barry Co., Mich., is this day regarding the validity of the above
dissolved
by
mutual
consent
Calvin
Hmitb
re
­
cessful angling Converted my patience who foretells that at the dose of the year
clnitu I have to say that coming hem
into desperation, and at length, when I 1882 the millennium is to be ushered in tiring, tbe new firm, paying all bills and collect­
ing all accounts.
au entire stranger. I sold over throe
saw the tail rhout two inches from the and Satan be caught by the heels. The
Dated Assyria, March 18. A. D. 1882.
times as many lutzrowa last fall as all
mouth of theuxittle, I stuck my forefin­ new soothsayer is the estimable Mrs.
.
Geo. 8. IIaktom,
others in this town combined, and wot
Calvim Smith.
Elizabeth Gould, of Brooklyn, who is
ger in recklessly to try to secure it
That was hopeless, as I might have now tottering on the verge of eighty
one returned or a word ot Guilt Isaud,
The ready relief given to azthm* ami sum­
know; but it certainly did oool my spine years, and to whose words that respect mer colda by Brown's Iron Bitters Is so satis­ and this spring have with kittie effort,.
a little when I discovered, on attempt­ is due, which, in spite of ourselves, wo factory that many speak of It as a complete sold eight thus far, and no cwpplaiuta.
ing to withdraw it, that my finger was instinctively pay to old age. According cure.
Let others report Again if a mart be­
joined! I pulled, wrenched, twisted it to Mrs. Goulu the following things will
“8. W. P.” stands for tbe Sherwln-Willams
with all my might, for the brute was come to pass within the J.000 years which Pains, a higher grade than has hitherto N-en comes thoroughly acquainted wjtb a
raising
itsat head,
and
are
to begin
the close
of its
the flickering
present foutxl In the market ready for use.—Soul bv tool and alter rsing tiie other kinds
renders Iris opinion
in favor of
F. T. Boise.
tongue was rapidly approaching the un- year of grace.
the one kept, after a thorough trial
■ happy digit that involuntarily corked up
All distinctively American humorists
it seems to me that to any sune •
its prison. I gave a final, ttig, the vio- are to receive appointments as foreign
’sjriud. who has his own intereata at
. fence ot which nearly dislocated all my consuls, which they shall hold until they
i.take the following renutrks frpm’snaie
phalangas; but
but il
il was
wua no
no use,
uae. and
and with
, phalanges;
with die. Poets shall be made ministers to
of &lt;»nr best and must reliable farmers
a yell I raised the bottle high in the air,
air. foreign courts and there abstain from
would be sufficient:
intending to smash il on tiie head of my their usual work.
•
FARMERS.
j bunk. I distinctly felt the snake, mo_When a person wants a pin or a ten
V, e the timkTMgued having u»cd and veeii in
meWarily inverted, fall on the end of my dollar note it shall appear at once to him
use the “REED" Spring Tuutb Harrow, inanufinger, but as I flung my hand np the bot- floating in the air.
.
lactOn'tl by D. C. A H. C. Re®&lt;i A Co., of
tie slipped ou
off aim
and iro
fi ll on
on u&gt;e
the urea
deck behind
KalanmXrx), and sold by C. L- Glaagow, do
Nobody who hires a man to work foe
uc
mo fortunately
fnrtzmatdv without
without breaking.
lireskintr
tesrtllv unite in the following statement, that
By two dollars a week shall expect from
| me,
we believe it t&lt;» l«e far superior in sintugth,
'
. ,;k&lt;‘d rit Jip the snake was
P*
..
him work worth ten dollars for tiie same
danlidltyuul work toanv other Siring Tootti
half
way
out.
hissing
furiously
with
rage
period.
I
Harrow yet made, and tbl*i*whjr:
। an&lt;‘
and 1 had but just time to
Nobody shall expect anybody else to I
1st. BecatiM: tbe C atiajie ot the tooth rvndem
I
It much Irssluble to break and aavea expenae
i thrust it into the box. If 1 had not been keep his promise, but each |x*rson shall I
of uv» ones
flurried. 1 should probably have been lie “himself by himself alone, one ever- 1
”
1
2nd. Tbe touch coming from the under
1
to extricate my finger with but very lastingly and single.”
carries it over obstructs■u- easily, where oO.vin
’• little difficulty. It is oj the utmost imPeople shall not quarrel or bicker about ] *
would eateh aud strait) both te*:u and tuunriW, .
।। portance never u» lose presence &lt;&gt;f mind questions of art or politics, but all shall I
aud have to be lifted.
3rd. Tiie teeth being fastened to under .ade
in dealing with these tilings.—Loudon mind their own business from the least 1
give
more ulantrcty and »|»rtng to tbe kMl. and
I Field.
even unto the greatest In fact, there ', S,
saves wear of frame.
'
■.hall lie no art or politics, the samelbeing
o
4th. By reason of shape &lt;»f to*M» U never
ish
reI
Winter Life in Holland.
inevitablv connected witli the foolish re- 1
dug*.
. ,
.
|
5th The iron band around the fntaae tn-vkes
lations of a world gone by.
In Holland the fun of winter life take!
। it much stronger and keeps ends of drag woods
1
Nobody Khali ask another about any
from catching on slub*, stones, Ac.
many fortn*. and winter faciiitatcwlocomatter which that other wishes to con­
ftth By reason of it* shape and general canlno,li1on'1
highway* of Mimmer
structloQ It positively dries giMsl work on new
ceal. and as the reverse side of this no­
' w'-Jilabk. J.,r trek-sc rail.
lh» Iwat
ground when oilier harrows have failed,
body shall have any private affairs, and
I &lt;&gt;lt
thoroughfare^ for tiiosc who akate. In
7th. In reality we think it tim only Spring
T«»»th Harrow that will stand tbe test and
this way. directly the ice bears, vWtx we shall all know as we w known.
|
Newspapers shall Cease to blackguard
Svc the purchaser satL*fact»oa» We have
are miule and distances traveled which
nrougbly tested it’on the roughest ground
! cannot be done in summer; and, in-&gt;tead each other aliout facts uf editors’ lives in
and and under most unfavorable cin umstaneea
which the public has no legitimate in­
I of going round ami round as we do here
and it
It stands
ateudstne
tne test, aud
and we woul&lt;kadvise
woulAadrUe any
nn
Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago,
1 on a small confined space, the Dutch terest No newspaper writers who have
. I one desiring a good tool to purchasenq other.1
Backache, Soreness of the Chest,
souls alxive buttons shall describe society
'• | it is the best aud only reliable one hi them*
I luako up a partv
p;A. a v
Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Spell­
neighboring town or village.
A bright life.
Wm. W. Matteson,
Fredrick Soore,
winter'g morning is always exhilarating.
Correct taste shall take the place ol I
ings and Sprains, Burns and
John Morgan.
J acob Shoup,
I especially Lo those whose nal particles current popularity and availability, ami
Scalds, General Bodily
T. 8 Brice.
cabbage
which
can
be
boiled
and
eaten
PhiUp
Franck,
' are doing their work Batixfiiclarily; how
Pains,
Wm.
Winslow,
Anthony Ostroth,
' much more so when ciwn rful company. shall by universal acclaim be looked upon
________
Fiaviun Feighner,
Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted
Geo,____
J. Kunz,
I free exercise, variety of charactor and ns belter than a dish of lilies set l»elore
.
N. F. Sheldon.
Feet and Ears, and al! other
starving
perplr.
In
the
quest
fur
excite
­
I constant change of scene all lend to mark
Now then, gentlemen, I have done
Pains and Aches.
the day as a red-letter one; indie crown ment the public sh al! not make an egre­
with this published coutroveray. aa Iall comes the ploasant sensation uf feel­ gious ass of itself.
hnndle a tool that is self-auatainiagand
Poets wbo have nothing lo say shall
ing deservedly tired, with a night’s rest
need* no bolstering &lt;■! continued ad­
well earned.
Should the frost be suffi­ cease saying it, and io the cessation ol
vertising acid you only need to try it to
ciently severe, a river is mo?’ interesl­ their clamor the world.ever avid of poetry,
be convinced.
In reality I endeavor
to handle just such gooda and at um low
ing. being on a large scale and partak­ shall have opportunity to liMen to rhvming more &lt;rf the character of a fair, which sters wbo have really said Komethiug,
30LD BY ALL DRU0GIBT8 AND DEALERS a price an honeat good* car. Icaold, and
they are nil sold on their moritaand if
is the case, for instance, on tiie Maas, at nnd thus people shall be informed and
IN MEDICINE.
not in all respect* satiMitctory. reiurn
Itottcrdain
This is very well pictured inwardly built up into the stature of
A.. VOGELER &lt;fc CO.,
them.
Also in regard to mowers,
’
in some rd the old Dutch engraving* thinking and feeling beings.
reapers and binder*. 1 am ffot making
one particularly gives an adruiruble idea
Nobody shall under any pretext find J
a venture with anme new machine in
I of the whole thing, showing sledges, iee- fault witii anybody, since finding fault is j
17DII E,
OF
NUSS., this market and if mv saint are uot no
boat-s, stalls, L»x&gt;ths, Now. the freezing but tbe expression of an odious individ­
to my anticipations, leave‘bd|e aud *ell
1 of the Maas ia most unecrtal”; while uality and selfishness.
elsewhere *nme other ReaMMfi leaving
,,
[
...
v
.
' other witaere are frozen hard, the Hotter-•
Krtiee tn whom I may hue?sold, to
Nobody shall prophesy about the
| dMOOT .till ”
ial’.
&gt;k after tbeir own repairs orlotte the
weather or the end of the world.
Like­
NLuus runs very strongly, and the diffi­ wise there shall be no new theories in re­
use of tbe machine by uot lieingable to
get them ; neither am I going into this,
culty is for the first coating of ice to gard to the aurora borealis or the nature
so if not exactly saristicri with my sales
form. When a severe front catcho the of comeLa. — AT. F. Grajthic.
next year 1 shall drop machine* and not
ztill water during the night, then “once
sell any more ur keep repair* either. I
begun, soon done,” and the cretw,. who
have a good building and only for that
American Care Lighted by America!
turn their berths at night, wake -up in
purpose nnd I n&gt;n*t use it. and 1 keep a
Electric Lamps in England.
the morning to find thiuuselveu .frozen
machine that is universally used nnd
in. The canals naturally soon -freeze
it is housed and clean, and I will al­
A regular train of Pullman care is now
over, and tbe trek-schuit traffic ja su[&gt;ways be here to furnish any repairs,
planted by baggage-sledges, large and run up&lt;m the London, Brighton &amp;. South
ana the machine is the CHAMPION
■email. Near dwelling-houses are seen Coazt Railway, England. Tiie train in­
and don’t you forget it. For ligbtnea&lt;
the little box-sledges for the children. clude* a imrlor car. a drawing-room car,
of draught, durability and go&lt;xl work
it ia etill ahead and is warranted to do
Those are precisely the same as the sev­ with ladies' boudour, and dressing room,
as good work as any machine made.
enteenth century ocatrivaaces; the child a restaurant car aud a smoking car,
Ask those who uae one and be convinc­
sits with just room for iU feet, nnd. with while a compartment at each end of the
ed that it is always reliable. Tiie Har­
stick in each baud, pushes astern and train next to the luggage compartment
vester has the Appleby binder saii»e aa
is
provided
for
servants.
The
care
are
propels itself ahead. The adult sledges
the.M&lt;-Connick.
are in some cases simply gorgeous, as kept at an equable temperature by
C. L. GLASGOW.
the opportunity affords great latitude for means &lt;rf hot water pipes. There is
form, great scope tor variety of gear, electric communication between the
harness and trappings. They-are gen­ parlor, drawing-room and smoking­
"7iA
erally rather of the swan outline, the cars and the restaurant car, and in many
•“aleigiiers’’ sitting in the body, the ways tne comfort of passengers is pro­
'
coMPotnro.
driver .perched at the back, as on the vided for. Tbe most important and
IFancy and Stapled
tail, the sweeping-irons followiag the novel feature of the train is, however,
that
it
is
lighted
throughout
by
electriocurve of the swan's neck; over these
run theireins. One horse generally con­ ity.
The iampe u«cd are Edison’s incan­
stitutes the team, but in an old-engrav­
COK8IBTJKO IN PART OF
ing three horses in single file are shown descent lamps, twenty-nine being used.
drawing a sledge da Ituce.—Good Worth On the veiy successful trial trip the elec­
SUGARS, TEAR
tricity was supplied by Faure accumula­
COFFEES.
8PICES,
tors, of which eighty were carried. Mr.
He Had a Terrible Time.
SYRUPS, MOLASSES,
W. Lachlan, the engineer, representing
‘ TARCH, SOAP,
A gentleman, posse wing a -rather the Societe la Force et la Lumiere, who
CRACKERS. CHEESE,
rough appearance, a native of Kansas was in charge of the batteries, reported
BEST NICKLE SOAP IN TOWN.
City, and who receives his letters and that but thirty were brought into use ou
SALMON,
bills addressed through the mails to one
WHITE FISH,
William King, strolled into the Union
TROUT,
Depot last evening just drunk enough to pended. On the up journey these and
,
MACKEREL.
*
HALIBUT,
look fired and sleepy. He threw himself four fresh boxes were brought into operCJ)D FISH.
upon out! of the wooden benches in tbe tion. For the present tbe accumulators
HERRING.
gentleman’s waiting room and was soon will be charged each evening at tho so­
»U It FIXEUAX*! VEGETABLE COBSTEAM ^COOKED
OAT
MEALl
asleep and snoring.
In a few minutes ciety’s depot. Charing Cross, but as soon
CROCKERY.
passengers in the waiting-room at the the necessary arrangements can be made
GLASS
WARE,
time wepe startled at the capers be be­ it is intended that the recharging shall
LAMPS.
gan to
He was evidently a chronic be at Victoria with a dynamo machine,

5»|

tElAM

RHEUMATISM,

LYNN.

E. PINKHAM’S

mCERIESI

cul

somnambulist and imagined in his sleep worked by a small »tati&lt;mary engine. It
that he was driving a street car, and is not improbable, however, that before
endeavoring to manage a very wild
team of horses.
He stood up on the
bench and yelled: “ Whoa! whoa!” as
be leaned forward and held out his of force arming, the London Tima **y*.
hanck, m though be were attempting to from the unavoidable alterations in the
culty in the way of charging the accum­
ulators in this way winch the ingenuity
of tbe electrical engineers will no doubt
soon overcome.—WseriMn.

FLOWERPOTS,

OHIO

STONE

WA1E.

TOBACCOS,
CIGARS,
TRY

OUR

PIPES.
FIFTY-CENT TK&gt;

up Karebalfatay

ry Remember we
pes, but sell all good.

�. -

APRIL*. 1882.

confident that he had
money, at least $5,000,

in which I had

his wealth bwdwath he had b’en Heenan

who replied, while
t-bfcalrlca.1 perfoniKH.re
y it U manifestly wlto a body much like that of tbe •Sgie, [
absurd, to
ir York and New
had not. to my recollection, thought of
Jerflby** ?---------- Btatea,” or of Ohio,
Dr. Quinn ud Mnk Quinn durtnj hl,
lodi&amp;ha'and Illinois as parts of the
tbe htman hand, sharp-pointed and uhieaa that he hail more than enough tho Moreuaa for years before. It ia very
A Ixw^viile bill collector called upon “Wert.”
Mr. Henry Gannett, tbe
^Fge M money to supply all his needs and amjfly difficult to understand, when two or three
a debtors ire says, SM times before
geographer of the tenth census, 'has
&lt;bem for thnlr Krri£?. are met together under given circumho got his mony. Perseverance will proposed a plan of grouping which is
°
When Vs died a search wm
was made
made for
for the
the
being adopted by the Census Bureau,
•aw a tree down with a hair pin.
treasure. The room he had occupied
and will probably come into-general
Mdy’« “Favorite Remedy" attacks theae at
Mim Wedjle, of Prussia, is 16 years use, as it appears to be natural*charac­ the air. But the eye of the hornbillis was thoroughly overhauled, but the
Married,
the foun-taln’a bead and tnaku tbe auwatn &lt;»f
old, eight feet, and weighs 280 pounds. teristic and well-balanced. The scheme quicker, and he catches them every one amount found was less than a dollar. In
life pure. One dollar per bottic. Dr. David •
Cowper,
in
•
humorous
poem,
entitled
the
room
where
he
had
lodged
previ
­
What a motber-in law thta girl will divides the country in its three great in his bill, now depressing it, now rais­ ously was found sixty or seventy dollars “Parting lime anticipated,” tads young
geographical divisions—the Atlantic, ing it in air. and again turning it tide­
make when (the gains experience.
Ohio also claim* the bearlctt women in the
the Great Valley and tho CordiUeran way* according to the angle at which in gold, but nothing was seen of the
largcY sum sought after. It was knovfti
wcrid. She weighs 491 pounds.
A St. Louis street car driver went j regions. The first of these Mr. Gannett the graiM! is delivered to him; and when that be had not been in tbe habit of con­
But proper Umn to marry.”
names the Atlantic section, toe second half a dozen grapes are shot atu him in
home and ponnded his wife when he the Central, ind the third the Western
Years ago, in New Hampshire, a young WOMEN WHO ARE OUT OF HEALTH
fiding his money to the savings banks,
Should white to R. Pengelly. M. D., Kala­
heard that be had fallen heir to $50,000. section. The Atlantic and the Central succession as rapidly as the keeper can but the banks in this city were visited. lady and her lover were placed in a ludic­
do it, the bird usually misses but one.
mazoo, Mich., for Treatise an Dlwstara of Wo­
In none of them bad he deposita. After rous position by not heeding his advice.
There are various ways of betraying sections are sub-divided—the former on
If a grape were only a base-ball, tho Adams’ death Dr. Quinn visited a lawyer It was the custom in those days to choose men axxl Testimonial.* concerning Zoa-Pbora,
Mason and .Dixon’s line, the latter on I hornbill could give points to the best of
the bcalth-briuger for women.
deep emotion.
•
and made some inquiries looking toward all town officers nt the annual March
the Ohio River and the southern boun­ our professional first basemen.
The
It is estimated that 100,000 immigrants will
The Chinaman who thought lie was dary of Missouri and Kansas.
Tho fol­ hornbill and toucan (which also has a some plan for protecting himself legally meeting. After a batch had been chosen,
they were marched off to a justice of toe come to the United States during the month &lt;rf
Americanized enough to squeeze a Tex­ lowing then are toe States making up huge bill, sometimes ten inches long) in case then; should be a suspicion of
'
foul play. This circumstance, with oth­ peace and sworn into office.
the
five,
divisions
severally
:
as girl’s hand on tbe sly, has departed
have k funny way of feeding from the
Squire Chase, the father of the late
er things, led to much gossip, the Coro­
CATARRH OF THE BLADDER.
ground. They pick up toe food in the
for some quiet place in the hills where
ner held an inquest. There was little Chief Justice Chase, being a prominent
Stinging,
smarting,
irritation
of the urinary
extremities of their bills; then, with a
he cap pick sixty bird-shot out of his
or nothing to indicate anything but death Justice of Cornish, usually did this work passages, discaseil db&gt;chargcs. cunt! by Buchutoss of toe head, open the mouth, and
from natural causes, and the inquest, for that town. As the officers were numer­ pabia. 11, atdrumeteta.. Micb. Depot, JAS.
the food describes ttie arc of a circle fall­ although nominally to ascertain the cause ous, the task kept him busy from morn­
AVIS
A
CO..
Detroit,
Mich.
.
land? District of Columbia, Virginia. W j« Vir­
A man wbo detected a piece of bark ginia. North Carolina, South Carolina. Geor­ ing into the gullet with absolute of death, was really to trace the missing ing till night. Ono dav, when the town
That'• right; takedown your atove and put
certainty.
Some years ago
under
in his sausage visited the "butcher shop gia, Florida—Total, fl.
meeting
had
tired
the
Squire
out,
he
re
­
Maarggaa CarraaL STATaa.—Obto, Indiana. the hornbiil’e perch was found what money. The closest search, however,
on your thin flannel* thia month. Glv e tbe
to know what had become of the rest
by Coroner, jury, detectives and report­ turned home, threw himself into an easy poor undertaker a chance.
.
looked like a ng enclosing a mass of
chair and wa* soon in a sound sleep. An
ers proved fruitless.
A
of the dog. The butcher was so affected
•lightly digested grapes and other food.
After
the
funeral
letter?
of
adminis
­
anxious
couple,
who
had
been
impatient
­
FADED COLOR RESTORED.
thathe could give him only a part of the alMlnpl, LoulBlana. Texas, Indian Territory, It was supposed for a time that tho bird
Arlrsn—■, Tenne—ne, Kentucky—Total. K
tration were issued by the Probate Court. ly waiting toe Squire’s return, that he
Faded or gray hair gradually recover* Its
tale.
f
WwTtnx State*.—Montana. Idaho, Wwhnad disgorged ita own stomach. The There were few effect* to administer might marry them, again called at the yodthfu) cole.’and lustre by the ure of Park­
A Vermont qian ""who^et~a~trap to ington. Oregon. Wromlnr, Colorado, New fig-liks mass was passed ever to the disMrs. Chase, being somewhat er'* Hair Balaam, ,aa elegant dressing, admir­
Mexico, Arlrina, Utah, Nut ad a, CnlUoraia—
upon—too sixty or seventy dollars, a house.
ed
for IU purity and rich perfume.
•ectcr of the Zoological Society, and Mr.
TotoLU.
agitated, led them immediately before
catch a rpiffk has already captured
Hornbill was watched carefully for any gold watch and Adams’ clothes oom­ the sleeping Justice.
The areas and populations of these
Sonie of the Mlaaouri people bitterly condemn
•eventeen polecats, a coon and his own
ill effects. Presently the birt, which prising about all that was known. It
•‘Mr. Chase,” she should, shaking
groups, vrith the exception of the last,
was announced in the evening papers to­
the ‘cowardly” abooung of Jeaae James.
dog in it, and still pei sista in bis designs are not very dissimilar, one from an­ meantime had kept as well as usual, day that the watch and clothes would be him by the shoulder, “wake up; here’s*
What desperado taste.
threw up ita “stomach” again, and ere
upon the mink. Some men don’t know other.
sold at auction to-morrow night. The couple come to be married.”
HAVE YOU EVER.
Half waked, the Justice rubbed his
when they’er licked.
The propriety of this grouping, from long the dissecter reported that what clothes were collected this morning and
seemed
a
stomach
was
only
an
inner
lin
­
• purely geographical point of view, ia
taken to the Blair undertaking rooms, eyes, and supposed he saw In the Known any perron to be acriouily ill without
As ing formed by a thick secretion, the dis­
where the appraisers and Coroner Boll­ couple two persons waiting to be sworn wexk stomach or Inactive liver or kidneys!
That Connecticut woman who was too apparent to need argument.
Ar-;l when these organs are in good condition
gorging of which was a natural function
paragraphed as having carried a piece was stated above, tbe throe primary of the bird. Soon after it was found that man met to figure upon their value. An into office. “Hold up your hands.” he do
And their poaneaaor enjoying good
groups correspond with the three great
overcoat was thought to be worth about •aid.
healta I Parker's Ginger Tonic rtgulatcs iheae
of glass in her foot for thirty-eight
A* they hod never seen the marriage Important organs, makes the blood rich and
topographical features of the country. In other birds in the “Zoo” had the same two dollars and a half. It was being
years, arises to explain that it was only respect of temperature and rainfall, the curious habit. It seems that the horn­
folded up to be laid one side when some­ ceremony performed in that stylo, they pure, and strengthens every part of the sy*tcm.
bee other column.
half a light of 14x28. She doesn’t want North Atlantic and Northern Central bill, of which there are altogether some thing rolled out of one of the pockets. hesitated.
the matter exaggerated.
States differ eharacteristicaliy from the tix species living in Africa, Hindustan It was a dirty white woolen bag about
“Hold up your hands!” exclaimed the
Weakness is the egotism of goodneaa. When
South A-Jantic and Southern Central and Burmah, have a singular way of six inches long and three inches wide, Squire, more peremptorily, and they one iiopc departs the other hopes gather more
" An lowa-man crowded a turnip into States, while the West possesses an arid nesting, of which the habit above describ­ with short straps at the side. Mr. Blair obeyed.
closely together to hide the gap it has
ed
is
an
incident.
The
male
takes
the
hiamouth to show what sleight-of-hand climate, a light rainfall, with the ac­
''“You severally, solemnly swear." he | left.
opened it and found within the rubber
female to a hollow tree. There the
lining a green, greasy cartridge shell, continued, "that you will faithfully per- 1
could do, and a doctor cut at it for companying great extremes of tempera­
,
mother-bird builds a nest of her own
9BO,9^ar^. b .,cu,^, ^c4,’ ccrtaln,Jr« “DrThese divisions have a meaning,
such as are used in sporting rifles and form the duties of your offices respectivetwo hour* show to what surgery could ture.
?*
'
feathers
and
lays
her
eggs.
Then
the
ly
.oardmg to your bet skill u&gt;d judg- | 8)k“ s“"'
ll'
too, from an historical point of view. I
• accomplish. That chap will keep his auozxM-uMw o—Ka, wmu uuw vuo CA- j Inail builds up the hole with clay, and are manufactured nt Winchester’a There
The Atlantic States, with but one ex- I
so help
-----—r you
- God!"
------I The trunk roads of tbe west are bcarlly )qo&lt;Iwas nothing attractive about the object, ment,
mouth shut for two weeks to come.
ccption, that of Florida, consists of the ; keep® bis mate a close prisoner until the
The couple looked at each other and ed these days with emigrants from al) parts
and Mr. Blair handed it over to William
original thirteen and those formed from eggs arc hatched. In the clay is left a
-. ,i
o ..
..«rn._.i
ii except&gt;­ ।
Europe ixjuud for homes tn tbe western
the Squire.
"That
’s all.
H. Augur, one of his employes, to throw then at
Uncle Ike says he has beep swindled them, viz:
Maine, Vermont, and snrnll bole, through which the female
away. Mr. Augur took it one side and ing the fee—one dollar,” he added, world.
so long and so much that he don’t West Virginia. They mav fairly be said protrudes bcr bill, and the male bird
had the curiosity to pull off the cap. In­ soothingly. It was dropped into the ex­
USELESS FRIGHT.
know whereto look for honesty or char­ to represent the first colonial stage of keeps her well provided with dainties, side was a roll of green paper, about tended hand, nnd they went out, doubl­
To worry about any Liver, Kidney or Urinary
acter. If the dear old soul had applied our history. The central section, which gathering them in his stomach find then
large enough to fill the insicle of a lady’s ing if the Squire hod tied the knot a* it Trouble, especially Bright's DiM-asc ot !)&gt;*has developed
developed during
durincr our
our progress
progress as
as an
an . disgorging U&gt;em
them in the pouch mentioned
ha*
tons we could tell him; come to think
thimble. Pulling out the substance, Mr. should be done. After a little conversa­ bctea,ns Hop Bittern never fails of a cure where
independent nation, may be said to rep- i above. If the female breaks down the Augur jumped with surprise in spite of tion, they concluded that if they lived up a cure la possible. Wc know this.
•
of it we will tell him anyway. Look in resent ths second stage, extending to | ,clayey
—
barrier
— the
-— ------male-------------------------instantly kills
to the oath they would be much better ,
Webster’s Unabridged, that’s the only the present time, while the great unde- 1 “er- During the period of incubatton his sixty years. The roll when unfolded married than most of their friends. and4
Bold Jesse James' spirit soared
was found to consist of five bills, one of
plnse you will find it for sure.
Beyond
the
vale
of
pain
;
veloped territory ot the West represents 1 1116 labors of the male make him so weak
81.000, one of $500 and three of $100. so the matter rested.— Youth's Coinpan­
He's gone to sec what he can do
the development of tbe future.
i and sicklv that he often yields to any
,
It appears that when the undertakers re­ ion.
A five year-old negro boy, ot Wood­
In the forms of local government, the sudden j-hange of weather nnd dies. But
To stop the heavenly train.
moved the clothes from Adams' body
lawn, Texas, has a mania for putting first and third of the above divisions dif- I tile female waxes fat a* s Thanksgiving
Comstock Salamanders.
the bag was found strapped about the
2____
1 The BympUrais uf Itctiini; Pile* «rr motBturt:
out eyes. He depriveil several chick­ ter radically from the second and fourth j turkey on her lord's devotion, and the waist. Some one cut open the bag and
U there are to be found anywhere in , hke prvipjrotion, InietiBc iu-bing. ommi it uigut
In | natives often seek her out when on her
■the world a rot ol bunton rafarn’and-ra we
ens nnd cats of vision, and flu ally —i. e., th« North from toe South.
discovered the cartridge shell. It was
the former, with the exception of No- nest and kill her as a great delicacy.—
stealing a baby while its mother was
covered with verdigris, and Dr. Quinn may claim the credit of having them here ; worse they itch, very dlBtrrMing. Tin- pr»-&gt;braaka, Dakota, and a few counties in London Cor. N. Y. Post.
cautioned those in the room not to on the Comstock. What would scorch a port* «re ofieu affected. Dr. Swayue'K Oimabsent, killed it by tbursting sharp
Southern Illinois, the township or town
handle it carelessly, for fear of getting man who lives wholly on the surface | nicnt Is the meet effective rrtnedv extaut tor
■ticks into its eyes.
form of government is universal, while ।
poisoned. It was suspected that Adam.* cbilb a miner mured to -be heated the I
ti.X'
The Advantages of UtterLsm.
south of the line separating these divis- ,
had worn it for a charm or to ward off lower levels. A
who has&gt;-een
beenlor
for I
*miner
--------- -1-1...
njirai, cn«lk»tl..g Teller, lub. Salt
An Ohio exenange says of the new ions, the county form of government |
rheumatism, or something else, and so some month* past working in one of
The
notion
that
grew
up
about
six
g. —
........
.
...
the
j
Rucutne,
Erysijielaa,
Barls-r*
Iteb.
Plmpiex,
prevails
exclusively
—
toe
so-called
j
liquor law iu that Mate, which it is
*H Scaly,
Scal‘- Cn
Crusty. Itchy Skin Eruption*
years ago that every one ought to be it was thrust into the b:ig again, and hottest section* of the Comstock, a day i all
claimed will tax out of existence the “townships" of Arkansas and the Caro- ,
the proof, ••Certainly tiic_ brat reiimh
l"thc
(esthetic, and that every one who fol­ placed in the coaUpocket. It Is supposed or two since, gave an Enterprise report- I*
I
used
In
my
practice.
”
Dr
Cotton,
linos
bearing
no
resemblance
whatever
lovf doggerie- and give tho gilded
lowed certain recipes could be so, and Adams has no heirs, and if none come er his experience of the heat which min- [ Vt_. ‘ troubled wiUillching Plicate
There is also a t
places a monopoly of the business, that to those of the North.
vital point of difference between these ' Kin healthy enjoyment of art by merely forward after five years the Probate era are often called upon to encounter. ty years. It cured me completely," !
the policy of tho state seems to say:
ing in a certain atmosphere, was one Court will turn the money over to the Ho saj’s that in working at points where
sections in the element* of the popula­
“If yon are ^etermind to go tothedev- tion, the two northern sections contain­ that would scarcely have needed refuta­ State Treasury, and if in thirty years the thermometer mark.* a temperature | plxi Boid by al) druggists.
more no one establishes a right to it it of 115 to 120 degrees great thirst is ex- ' 1
fl, we’ll compel you to take a first-class ing not less than eighty-six per cent, of tion hod it not been the genuine expres­
perienced. No ice water is too cold to ! N,„_
_
tion, though in an exaggerated form, of will become the property of too State.— perienecd.
therurpeur
foreign element
pf the country.while
cabin passage.*'
.n
u&gt; we co,urea
«««;« u.. ,
&lt;*&gt; fbilbUni™ ot tbe New Haven Cor. Chicago Tribune.
o to enjoy *itying t» a phjMeliro who go.-* bunt.ng
be swallowed with a relish. Men. go
in respect to the colored element the i
the
water barrel in which huge chunks i and get* no game: “Why didn't ynu takr
.
A poor laborer, near Wabash, Ind., reverse i, the caw, the two northern rwlwr p^rt ol the venlnr,-. Al th hot­
of ice are floating about, and will take your medicine ehest Instead of a gun f”
------------ ---------------------------- .
tom of the sham sentiment and fashion­
A Real Ghost.
whose wife and children had been two sections containing more than ninety
able foolishness, which, as it were,
their picks and chop up the ice in order
In respect of in­
days without food, went to a mill in per cent of the total.
If I were to tell you that I have seen that die water may be rendered colder
SHILOH’S CONSUMPTION CURE.
armor-plated the ivsthetic movement,
ibe neijfborcood and asked credit for n dustries, the North Atlantic section is ' there wqs a real desire for a little more
and analyzed the waters of a river which by being filled with tine fragments.
This is toeymid quration Ute moot »ui-cewJ«l
the region of manufactures, containing
“ ,c~ uva“”?u* ’ “‘S’ *u*’rY
runs two degrees north of the Equator, Often this does not satisfy them, and Cough Medicine w e have ever Bold, a few d&gt;«*u*
•mall sack $f corn meal. This was re­ not leu than 68 410 percent of the total
,Q
»urrounding8 of hfe, and
invariably cure the worat aue* of Cough, croup
?ho Northern
Northern I P^P*
P?rhap»4 «
even
. wi«b Mr ’*
a &gt;««
I™, material
mntonnl and found in those waters eleven per they chew and swallow Limps of ice.
The
‘cn *
fused.
He grabbed the
bag and of toe United Stated
। and Bronchitis, while tt* wonderful sneuew
The natural temperature
temperatiireof
of the
C human
*
। in the cure of eoiuumption is wiihoutw jnr-i.
1
theweekett cent, of sulphuric acid nnd one and oneran. On Arriving at home, he hastily Central is distinguished a* ttho
^,1 riiion ot I IS*,”'
half per cent, of hydrochloric, I might body—of the bhxxl—is abdtit ninety-eight : M in the history of mcdicne. Since it* tli.-i
•tnphnj;
who
j&gt;oure&lt;l
over
a
lily
in
&gt;
mixed some of the raw meal with wat­ cereals, raising in 1879 71 per cent of i
drakes Fahr.uh. lt; therefore, when a
bS'.'
•P“re,re. »i.
wbolo cere,! crop ol tbe country. 1I glass &lt;of
” water wa* as estimable a ^ec- cause some surprise, but little or no in­
=
.
.
I.,
t
i
which no other medicine can Bland.
It rou
er, gnd the family ate it uncooked, the
credulity. even if I were to add the lit­ man
The two routhern Motion, raite nearly | SLTS.“.|1^.. io"^'““2"j“r2PS.
remains in a hot place for an hour, haVL
have. aa Coogb
Cough Wf
we. ^,^0*
earnestly a&lt;
ask vou to try it.
“r.—'r?
knowing^hat there wns no time to be i ne two sontnern section, raise nearly i r-;----- ; .— ,~7'
tle-known fact that in that region of the or even half an hour, his blooti. his whole j Price
Sl.ro If
If your hint* arc
the whole cotton crop and aU the suyar- I bc,"8 h1a‘"u'&lt;l ln1u&gt; h“ Inovpremhle, by
?ri; = ’lOcts,
.Ccir, 50cU, -ami
r.! ;!,"_•
world
there
is
thrown
away.in
twentyI
sore,
Chest,
or
Back
Lame,
and
fjbtloli
*
. lost. They had barely satisfied their cane and rice. U tho West the char- “W • ,l“cn
““I1
body, becomes heated to a temperature
hunger before a constable came in nnd aotorirtio and leading industry is the waved |w»cock fans slowly in the dim four hours more of those two acids than of 115 or 12U degrees, or whatever may !■ Porous Plaster. Sold by F. T. Boise.
ANSWER THIS QUESTION
is artificially produced in Eurojie in a be the temperature of the place in which '
mining
ot
tho
procioSs
metals:
This
•■gbtot.agwgnwD
&lt;lnwmg-n&gt;.m,
would
attested the thief.
Why do so many people we see around u».
discussion might bo a continued almost I h?™ &lt;”mF»rt-d favorably m all but oom- year. But if I tell you that I once saw, he is at work. It is then that the miners seem to prefer to suffer and be made miserable
»“h tlnnr prototypes ot the Re­ outside my fancy, a woman who was began to pour down ice water and eat by Indlgcstinu, constipation, dizziness, loss uf
The other night Mm. Mary O’Brien, n indeSnitely aid result In pointing ont .
new features characteristic ol the differ- I 5°‘“T A1
b0111 tl,e t"1'' »n,J two thousand miles off at the time, I ice. The strangest thing about the busi­ appetite, coming up of tbe Food, yellow «kln,
40-year-old tramp, was locked up at
ent sections, but enough has been tug- I ‘'•;miUo !''»th«Uo hail some tmnl noUon ohall not only be generally disbelieved, ness is that it (iocs not hurt any of tiie when for Tikis, we will sell them Shiloh's VitaBrooklyn for drunkencss.
Later in
grated, it is hoped, to .bow the pro- I »&lt; •" tdeal-not wholly solbsh. nor but laughed al as well. I have often men. Often they swallow such quanti­ lizcr, guaranted to cure them. Sold by F T.
the evening Mr. Edward O’Brien, also priety and Hloess ot the scheme, ot I wholl&gt;' ba»e-and though the ideal was told tho story in private life, but not till ties of ice water that their stomachs will Boise.
SHILOH’S CATTARRH REMEDY, A mar­
a tramp, was locked up in the same which, by the way, our school atla, “
the atmosphere ot the now have I told it in print Twenty- not retain it, and in vomiting it up it will velous cure fur Catarrh, Diphtheria, Canker
station for the same offense. In the jus- makers have long lelt the need.—N Y. I bondmra.it was suffienmt to nrevent their three years ago. m I was looking out of feel cold in their mouths 'and against mouth, and Head Ache. With each lx&gt;ttle
the window of General Torico’s rancho their teeth. All they do on such occa­ here is an ingenious nasal injector for tile
Burning
Put.
be
“
«
wholly
contemptible.
Unlike
Aice’a court next morning, Mr. Edward
morn successful treatment ot these complaints
,,,
j Kingley 8 maiden, they did no “noble at Chorillos, ten miles south of Lima, sions is to swallow more of toe same without extra charge. Price Meta. Sold by
O’Brien and Mrs. Mary O’Brien fell in­
How False Teeth are Hade.
I ‘““B?,- ' but dreamed "tfam all day Peru, there passed by several ladies and water, but more cautiously.
F- T.Boibe.
to pack other’s arms, nnd emotionized
and. though tbeir dreams were gentlemen on horseback. A lady whom
1 long;
lone-;’” and
When men are working in extremely
by joy and gin, wept copiously. They
irritating to others—at least, when they I will call Mrs. Morena (the Spanish hot places the temperature of the place
[ JENRY ROE, pROPRtETOB
A reporter of the Star recently visited
were man and wife, and neither had
issued in action—they in the end worked rendering of a common English name), to which they come to cool off—the
a factonr in this city where false teeth
seen nor heard of the other since 1867, are made by the million. In the process a considerable change. It would be was one of the gay cavalcade. She was oooling-off station—is probably 100 de­
------ OLD RELIABLE
so
beautiful
that
I
have
remembered
her
grees. This temperature—which would
when the man had kissed his wife of manufacture tho silex and feldspar in difficult now for any one, even buying
face with the ease with which I am able almost roast a surface man—appears
on the dock at Cork, and left for Amer- their crude state ore submitted to a red furniture ordomestic utensils of any sort,
to recall the Victoria Regina, or the yel­ cool to a man who has come from a place
to
avoid
becoming
possessed
of
a
con
­
heat, and then suddenly thrown into cold
low convolvulus, or the blue orchia, as where the thermometer marks 110 to 115
water, tho effect being to render them siderable number of objects which were
when I first saw these beautiful flowers degrees. In a place where tho tempera­
Krvjia eonsuntly on hand a big stock of
Three skeletons were found on more easily pulverised. Having been really good in form and- color, and the
importation of really beautiful fabrics in their native lands. I had never spok­ ture is ninety degrees the man wilj feel
an island near South Australia, and ground very fine in water, and toe water and embroideries from the East has in­ en with Mrs. Morena or her husband,
so cold as to shiver. Often at the coolingevaporated,
tho
two
materials
mentioned
by them a loaded revolver and a load­
are dried and sifted. The kaolin is creased enormously. It is almost as com­ wbo accompanied her, and who was off station, where the temperature is 100
then on his way to Jauja from the Unit­ degrees, toe perspiration will cease, and
ed gun. A diary found near showed
washed free fr^&gt;m impurities.
These mon to see a bit of Rhodian embroidery
that they wpre the remains of a wo­ materials, with feldspar, sponge, platina in a drawing-room now as it was to see ed States, to get healed from consump- the man will begin to feel very uncom­
fortable. On leaving and going back to
man, her babe and a Chinaman, who and flux in proper proportion lor the a piece of Berlin wool-work a dozen
Three years ago, a* one morning I where the temperature is from 115 to
had been driven from their fishery on enamel, are mixed with water, and Cirs ago. and the houses arc few and
IB THEIR BEA8Or
between, in London at least, which lay musing in my bunk in a Cunard 120, os the perspiration begins to start,
a neighboring island by the Queensland worked into masses resembling putty.
This done, the unbaked porcelain mvees have not a bit of Japanese art, whether steamer crossing the Atlantic in full day­ there is for a minute or two an intolera­
savages. Her husband was absent, but
it be on paper, lacquer, bronze, or silk, light, and, having my eyes wide open, ble itching over th° whole body. As each
she and the faithful Chinaman defend­
lighting up some odd comer. And good, Mrs. Morena came into my cabin, and closed pore reopens it produces a tinging
ed themselves as bravely as possible, of brass, one-half of the teeth or sections too, has been done to painting, indi­ to my sorrow went out of it as onickly sensation. However. a&lt; soon as there is
ty The Highest Market Price paid
Thereupon I rose, a free flow of perspiration all this trouble for Hides, Pelts. fee.
finally escaping in an iron tank and being on either aide. The coloring ma­ rectly, by making artiste feel that the as she came in.
bathed, dressed and went up to break­
/landing on a distant group, where, un­ terials are first placed in the exact posi­ sympathy of a considerable mass of the fast It wat late, the saloon was nearly de­ ceases and the man feels quite comfort­ Fresh Goods, Full Weights and
able
and
so
remains
until
bu
whole
body
public
is
with
them,
and
bo encouraging
tion
and
quantity
required,
and
the
body
able to obtain any water, they died of
Satiafaction Guaranteed..
of the tooth and the gum is inserted in them to take heart of grace to work serted. and I found only two fellow-pas­ —blood, flesh and bones—again reaches
thirst.
lumps corresponding to the she of the steadily in their own way.—London Spec- sengers. talking together and eating a temperature of from 110 to 120, when
IIK.YKY R&lt;»;
ham and eggs. I had never seen either. he becomes wild for ice water and ice.
teeth.
The
molds
are
then
closed,
aud
The transit of venus on the 6th of
The common name of Morena was-men- It is not a little strange—when we con­
Deccm her will Im- observed onliehalf
tioned between the two, and I, being full sider that ninety-eight degrees is tiie
perfectly dry they are taken out and
—Temperance people frequently place
of the French Government by eight ex­ ■ant to the trimmer’s room. The trimof my vision, remarked at a venture to natural temperature of tho blood—that
-hot bottle” to their feet when in bed.
him who sat next to me: “Mrs. Morena serious results do not follow exposure to
peditions a| the following points: The
is more plump than she was twenty a degree of heat almost sufficient toeopk
French antilies, the coast nf Florida, them in traj
years ago? ’ My neighbor turned on me the blood in the veins.—Virginia Enterwhere,
having
remained
for
twenty
minto
place
hot
bottles
to
their
feet
instead
and the coast of Mexico. The stations
a quiet look of inquiring stiqirise
PuU
•elected ore situated nearly on the same utes, they are complete.—Wilmington of placing them to their lips they would ting his hand into tho breast-pocket of
(Del.) Star.
experience much less difficulty in standmeridian, and permit complete obser­ f
his coat, he drew out one of those excel­
—In his Christmas sermon at the
and will coiuplrfcly ehni
1
• " * *•*"
■
, ingon their feet—Norristown Herald.
vation of the entire phenomenon. As
lent photographs for which some Amer­ Chapel Royal, St. Jarntw’ Palace. Lon­ :&gt;r.-&lt; -Hrciw-i«-dx in Ibn-c &lt;•»&gt;&lt;
—A Philadelphian deserted hie wife to
----------- — -----------who wlU taXe ! pHt '-i-hnlplitfrom
ican photographers arc so celebrated, don. the Rev. John Davies, in alluding ri
tawDomera anticipate that the occasion
n-1M}r«Mior&lt;-&lt;1
vj*—vl w-ijltx if
p&gt;o««fthuoUHr«omu..Aftm- bring
-Three men oiled U th. boiu« of .
—Three men called at the bouse of a la that the lady you mean?” he gently to tho appearance of the Revised Edition
will enable them to determine with an io’re’oXS: iSd’Xm
“•
I" Wtaoomdn mtd demtutded demanded, and I answered: “ Certain­ of the New Testament among the events
accuracy never before attained the dis­ was repentant, ana would return u as- -------mi.
.» x*.
she is rather stouter.” of the year, said: "The greataeMof the
money. Tbe man was away, and thus ly, and you
tance of the earth from tbe sun. The •ured of a welcome. The wife replied:
the wife felt called upon to pitch one “When did you see her last?" was the future of nations belongs to the Repub­
members of the several expeditions are
•ver the stove, break one arm for tho next question, and I answered, “Thia lic of tho United States, and it is there
now preparing for their work nt the
•econd and scalp tbe third with a stick morning.” The gentleman Mkh the where toe work was awaited with tbe
Observatory in Paris,
photograph was Mr. Morena, the bus- most universal impatience.”
wood.
•
‘'iMithurik toouxhta.''
It la unvoted
vtjtca tost make half the mischief in
ponuitt.

MEAT MARKE1

Fresh and Salt Meats,

Smatei Ham aid Shoulders,

Lard, by the lb. or barret.,

HK5

MZKJ3 VtAXTED aaSSSLk

�Church of Ded­
al it

50,000.

AT THE LOWEST LIVING PRICES.

net a hint is thrown out thattho

orchard that contains aa many varieties
aa it does trees. Such an orchard is
never profitable, for the reason that it
i* nM productive. Only a small pro-

era.

uxirirax t»*u»

cmm.

*&amp;».

EXCURSIONS

B
icrican and Foreign Marble.
Mo'iuraerta, Tnuihrtones, Mantle*, 4c.,

\yiIXlAM JONES,

5NTISTS

NERVOUS
DEBILITY
A cure guaranteed.
Indulgence, whirl
ih. One boi will

• Untied by F. T. Eohe. ao
tillage . f NnehetHe. JOH1

‘HALL’S
gatarrhflure
S1OO
Is gsoommended by PhyalclansJ

OTAMhU WSl

‘"TicgEWY-acT.'^oiu

PftRKER’S HAIRTbe BALSAM.
Rew.

OaaMMand

&gt;i saint.

ins nils io Reston

be youthful cr.lor to erry
■air. jocaad$t aoesat

PARKER’S

GINGERTONIC
Vt FnMy Mdm tkaBmr iatadcita.

9600 Kew Mr* I

T»- ««:«!»» ma«uf»c&lt;ured
J- &lt;
-Tbe PHI MeAera.” I® and I» W

iJPTURE

take .of herrings in the North Sea at
8,000,000,000.
—There was more oleomargarine than
butter exported from the United States
in 1881, the figure* standing at 26,000,000
and 21,000,000 of pounds, respectively.
—Chicago Tribune.
—The Presbyterian synods now con­
form to State lines. That of Pennsyl­
vania heads the list with 131,054 com­
municants; that of New York has
180,374; Ohio has 68,826; New Jersey,
45,957; Illinois, 42,286; Indiana, 27,678;
Iowa, 20,812.
—During 1880 Connecticut had 13,829
births, 4,745 marriages, and 10,408
deaths. These were an increase of 1,014
in deaths and ot 365 ia marriages, and
a decrease of 122 in bi^hs. There were
322 .divorces. ’ The ratio of divorces in
proportion to marriages was 1cm in 1880
than in any previous ye&amp;x ot which there
is record.
• —There are in the Connellsville (Pa.)
coke region 8,091 coke ovens now in
operation. Each oven has capacity for
8} tons a week, making a total yield of
68,733 tons a week, or 8,576,000 tons a
year. Reduced to bushelfl the amount
aggregates 178,800,000, which is the
estimate for tho output of the region
for this year.—Chicago Times.

Commercial orchardist*

—John Wentworth aava that tbe first
Protestant in Chicago was a Baptist, the
first book there published was written
by a Baptist, and tbe first Protestant
sermon was printed by a Baptist.
—Prof. W. W. Goodwin, of Harvard.

but

tinue in the business the more they are
inclined to reduce the number of varie- "
ties they cultivate. Experience and oo- c
serration show the kind of trees that
are profitable. Few person* can afford c
to support a horticultural museum. ,
They want an orchard that will produce, t
fruit. Nurserymen keep a large num- t
bcr of fruit trees on their list* chiefly i
for show. They are glad to sell varie- f
ties that are not in favor with pro­
fessional orchardist* as there is little t
demand for .them, li their opinion is j
asked, however, they will, if they are
conscientious, reoommend the planting (
of but few varieties. The owner of the ,
largest orchard in this State recom- t
mends but three varieties for general .
cultivation. He finds that no kinds ol
trees are profitable that are not in tbe '
highest degree hardy and productive. ,
The most • extensive pear-raiser in the (
country now limits the varieties to six. (
though he commenced with sixty. In
mostlocalities two varieties of cherries
and two of plums are as many as will '
prove to be profitable.'
What is true of the orchard is also !
true of the vineyard and the, plant*- 1
lion of small fruit A few good vari- ।
flics are preferable to a Inrg" number 1
of doubtful character. In this latitude
—Somebody has discovered some tall only a few varieties of grapes are hardy '
and heavy boys in the town of Rossie. enough to live without winter protec- 1
St. Lawrence County, N. Y. Briefly tion, orproductive enough to be profit- 1
described, they are: D. J ill on 14 years, able. Two varieties of currants, goose­
berries, raspberries and blackberries
b feet 2} inches in his stockings; E.
Kelley, 22 years, 6 feet 5} inches, and are enough to afford a change, nnd as
James Hunter Jr., 6 feet 6 inches. many as will be foqnd highly profitable.
Jason Lamb, of the same town, has a One "may raise several kinds of straw­
son 15 years old who weighs 384 pounds. berries for homo consumption, but only
—The great hotel at Rockaway, L. I., a few varieties of grapes and berries.
Only an amateur who has plenty of '
is ordered sold. The hotel was opened
in part late last summer, and sunk $30.­ time and money can afford to experi­
000. It is costing $2,500 a month to ment with a large nqmber of varieties
care for the property. There is a first of doubtful character. The more vari- ।
eties a person undertakes to cultivate I
or ground mortgage of $72,000, and a
the more time, trouble and expense will I
second or construction mortgage of
$700,000.
Outside of these liabilities be required to take care of them. Ex- I
perience gained in cultivating one kind |
there are debts, represented by certifi­
will be of little service in tho manage­
cates, aggregating over $600,000. t ,
ment of another. Each has different
—President Isaac Kline, of the Win­
habits and modes of growth. One re­
dow Glass Makers’ Association, says
quires much pruning, another little and
there was never a greater demand for
a third none at all. The like is true in ,
American window glass, and the trade
regard to protection and the applica- i
was never in bettercondition. He esti­ tion of fertilizers. A person who raises I
mates the manufacturing capacity of the
but a few varieties can become an ex­
factories in the United States at about pert in the management, but constant 1
2,000,000 boxes, and expects the de­
care and study are required to manage
mand this year will reach 3,000,000. a a great many" varieties. Persons who
large amount of which will be exported.
are engaged in general farming can not
rataic what are classed as "fancy fruits"
WIT AND WISDOM.
without neglecting thoir field-crops,
which they cannot aflord to do. They
—The women who do fancy-work
should content themselves with a few
don’t fancy work.
varieties, and these should be the most
—Water reddens &lt;* rose, whisky the
hardy and productive. The lists fur­
nose, and tight boots the toes.
nished by State and local horticultural
—If you should have just what you societies should serve as guides to per­
really deserve—no more, no less—would sons of little or no experience. Persons ।
who have had experience in other local­
you be as happy as you are now?
—Lasting reputations are of slow ities would also do well to consult them. |
A large variety of com. small grains. ।
growth; the man who wakes up famous
some morning is very apt to go to bed potatoes and garden vegetables is gen­
erally undesirable and unprofitable. It ,
some night and sleep it off.—Billings.
is better to raise one kind of field corn
—A lecturer is telling "How We
than several.
If different kinds are |
Hear.” It is easily told. Somebody
planted on the same farm they will mix
tells a friend of ours, and tells him not and the crop will not bring as high a ;
to tell; that’s the way we hear.— Mara­ price as could be obtained for corn of
thon Independent.
&gt;
any one variety. Indeed, it i better to ’
—••Woman.” says Mr. Eastman, "is have all the corn planted in one neigh­
ra problem.” So she is: and though a borhood of the same variety, as it will
Eroblem we can never hope to solve, it be likely to be stored in the same ele­
one we shall never, never be willing vator and shipped in the same cars.
to give up.— Boston Transcript.
Fence* between farms will not prevent
—He was sitting in the parlor with the pollen ot corn from passing from
her, when a rooster crowed in the yard, one farm to another. If corn is to be
and. leaning over, he said, "Chanti­ saved for seed it is essential that it be
cleer.” “I wish you would,” she re­ pure. Every farmer needs r&gt;l*e both
plied; ‘Tm sleepy as I can be." He early anddate potatoes, but one variety •
of each will generally be found more
cleared.
profitable than several. Potatoes will
—Cause of the recent earthquake: It not mix in the hill, as many persons be- '
is now understood that the reported
Here they will, but they will get mixed
earthquake in the South was caused by
in the bin and reouiro labor to sort them
a St. Louis girl thoughtlessly jumping
for planting or the market. A mixed
from a buggy to the sidewalk.—Chicago
lot of potatoes will sell no better than a
Tribune.
similar lol of corn. One variety of
—"What is a junction, nurse?” asked wheat, oats, rye, barley and buckwheat
a seventeeu-year-old fairy the other day is easier managed than several, aud
at a railway platform. "A junction, my generally jfive* better satisfaction. I:
dear, -mswered the nurse, with the air is very aimcult to raise several varieties
of a very superior person indeed, "why. of melons, pumpkins, squash and cu­
it’s a place where two roads separate.” cumbers otj the same farm without hav­
—This hard one is sent by an inquir­ ing them mix so that the seed will pro­
ing correspondent
to . the
Boston duce fruit of mongrel character. One
Journal:
early and one late variety bt cucumber
Mr. Editor: Tell me why colonel
and squash can be raised with advan­
Is spelled In a style ao Infoloncl?
tage without much danger of mixing,
Shod one ray of 1 Igbt
aa the time of blossoming is diflerent.
Wbo fcr years ha* subscribed for the Joionei.
The like is true of a late and early vari­
—Better a thousand times to grow old
ety of cabbage. It is desirable to raise
over the spinning-wheel and the ashes
several varieties of beans, peas, radish­
of the cooking-stove than to become
es and lettuce, as the season for any one
gray with artificial flowers in the hair,
of them last* but a short time, ana the
on the benches of the ball-room, or the
seed of pure stock can be obtained for a
seat of the supper room, smiling over
small sum.—Chicago Times.
ths world which smiles on
—Fried Cabbag^:* Wash and slice a
—Indiana Slate Journal.

The Champion Machines.
WAGONS ONLY $60.00.
•

.

A COMPLETE LINE OF

13943794672501712277804702779582450161207375
Baggies, Carriage*, Wheel Harrows and

Cultivators, Mounted Seeder*,
and 4 kinds of Plows.

REED’S GENUINE SPRING TOOTH HARROW
ROAD SCRAPERS, SQUARE DRABS, GRIND STONES,
SEWING MAOHENES.

.

PLOW POINTS for the Oliver Chilled. Wiard. Three Riv­
ers, Bryan, Cale, Curtis, Dodge, Robinson
And.many other Plows.
•
In fact, we keep a full and complete stock of first class Haldwan* and Farming Tool*. Call
and see them before buying.

•

■

i jreSep you'eye otv THIS.

50 Wagons
FOR SALE!
OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE

WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH

THREE INCH TIRE.
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING

BETTE R THAN COMMONJTIRE
Web lirve the Three inch Tire is destined to come
i general use. Call and see them.

Sold by C. L. Glasgow, Nashville, Mich.

BENTLEY BROS. &amp; WILKINSi-iit. s Mich., Sept. 15th, 18bl.

CHICAGO, ROCK ISLAND &amp; PACIFIC RT
I.

The Great Connecting Unk between th._ Em&lt;

" Ita mln line runt from Cblo«o to ConncU

tie. anti AToea: with branches from Bureau
Junction io Peoria; WUtaayi
"
'*
*
Una. WaaktaatMU VairSakl
■ ■ ...__

iwajdaliy
ui crrr.

j

ipathizing
The world ha* been syrnj
...
_ with ,
rs. and pitying
pitying
Job for two thousand years,
his suffering* and tribulations, but bardlv a thought seems to have been takun
of Mrs. Job and her trials, which must
medium-sized white cabbage and lay it have been of no ordinary nature. True,
in cold salted water for an hour. "Put ahe didn’t have any boils, her hus­
Validity of Printed Wills.
two heaping teaspoonfuls of lard in a band, with true masculine selfishness,
In making his will, the late Augustus large frying-pan, and when the lard is appropriating thflm ail to himself, but
C. Rand saved some labor in writing by melted take the cabbage from the water, she had to wait on him aud listen to his
using one of the printed blanks c®Pe‘ put it into tho frying-pan with the lard, complainings day and night. It would
have tried the patience of a saint to
cially prepared for that purpose. The and a palatable seasoning of salt and
have been compelled to live in the same
prospect now is that the saving will pepper; put a cover on the frying-pan
and place it on the stove where the cab­ house with a man burdened with such a
bage will cook slowly without burning; wealth of afflictions as Job was, and it
is hardly to be wondered at that, goaded
testator adopted the printed matter in stir and turn it occasionally so that all
to desperation, his wife one dav ad vised
the blank as his handwriting. If he narta of the cabbage may cook equally.
could and did. the will stands: if he When the cabbage is quite tender pour him to throw up tiie game, and pass in
could not, or did not. it will be set aside, in two tablespoonfuls of vinegar and it his checks. Almost any woman would
and the law will divide an estate valued will be ready to serve. Young, tender have done the same thing under the cir­
at 982,032.25. The law provides that cabbage will cook tender in from twen­ cumstances. There seems to have been
a constant stream of people coming to
any will in the handwriting of the tes­ ty to thirty mi nutes. —N. Y. Times.
see Job, to condole with him. Not only
tator is an olographic wilt The will in
did the neighbors drop in continually to
question was in the handwriting of the
testator, except the portions which opening them in cold water. This ha* see how hefwas getting along. &lt; ach one
were printed. But there were no wit­ a tendency to harden and thicken tbe with a different remedy lor boils, but
nesses. and the printed words interject delicate covering of the eye. Nothing relatives came from long distances, and
themselves into the body of the will in stronger than lukewarm water should of course they had to be entertained
a way to afford a technical objection to ever be applied to the eye, and thi* only and fed. This made a great deal of
tiie will being considered ia tbe testa­ when the eye is closed.' The lukewarm work for Mrs. Job. who. on account of
tor's handwriting. The printed blank water is soothing, and cools more rapid­ her husband’s extraordinarv losses,
couldn't afford to keep a hired girt
saved tbe testator some labor, but his ly than cold water.—A. Y. Examiner.
Had she But been a remarkab c woman,
heirs will be fortunate if they do not
— Butter was used by tiie early Ro­ site never could have goiiu ihro igh w;,b
have to pay a round price for the saving.
mans m medicine, never as food.
it.—Cincinnati tiaturuu^i'i'J

I Knek Iatan
Roek liland" la macnlBcanUy
*1 n^ned?.Ureat
Ita ruad l&gt;«l li aliuply perfect, and 111
with ataai roil*. ’
_
£iaid
III pleaae yocmoat will betiie pleaanre
»K jour meal., while
over tbe
i rairleaol Illinois and Iowa. In one ot
USeani thijjy Cara that aeecenpany all
innmii. g^prvaa
meal. Minxwi *• Uservad In my firu-ctaal hotel.
lar •evanty-Ave eentr
Appreciating the fi
M0**l prefer aeparal
pnrpoeaa (and iba In
ot thteUna warrantii
nonitca that an Cow

ERRORS OF YOUTH.

is

PIMPLES
CONSUMPTIVES.

idYsurrSiTiwi^r'

�■ICHKHX MBIT*.

Circuit Court. More Judge Mac­
Arthur. Tbe suit has ita origin in the
cougreasioiial invr*tigatiou of tbe real
estate pool undertaken in 187tJ. With
Willi* Swift, aVaassr boy, ate wild the,yibw toahow that certain mem tiers
aranipa nnd died from their poisonous of Congress and high officials of tbe
government had united in a plan for
W. Fxfh•■.•ti, a young man of Ann baying real estate at low rates and then
tom, and bung perhaps fifty yards above tbe
Arbor, enmmited suicide via laudanum, causing ita alvance in price by large earth. When It reached tbe western part of
ee Sunday.
government expenditure, faits vicinity town It &lt;!roppe&lt;l &lt;lown almost to the ground.
D. 8. Hania of Cleveland, while in a
The committee of the House of Repre­
fit of despondency, commited suicide
sentatives called Mr. Kilbown whose
by drowning himself in the river at
firm were agent, for real estate trans­
Detroit on Saturday.
actions, and asked him to divulge the
Ro«a Smith, a break man on the Chi­
names and transactions of certain of lev ruina. Frame dwellings war* carried
cago &amp;. Grand Trunk railroad, fell from
his customers who were engaged in
a moving train, at Imlay City on the
what was termed "the real estate pool.”.
Nth. and was instantly killed.
He declined to do so; was summoned
Grorire Miller of Plain well, was killed
to the bar of the House Of Representa­
April 90, at Gobles, Van Buren county,
tives. ordered into the custody of its
earth, and would rebound eoeee distance Into
hy the timbers of a stump-pulling ma­
sergesnt-at-anna. He remained incus­
chine falling on him, infaring his
tody for some time, makings consider­
able bill for dinners and suppers;
Big Prairie township, Newaygo Co.,
of time about twenty Imilnoai bouse* and
which has already formed the subject
is bairl to be terribly affl it t &lt;d with small
mptter of one suit For this imprison- storm came up so suddenly that tbe people
pox.. It ia abated that in one family
bad no time for preparation, and In fact
mentbe claims &gt;130,000
•even deaths have occarod from thia
scarcely any one knew what wm coming until
The 'action -of the Honse yesterday,
kxrthnome diaeshe.
the storm was upon them. Tbe people In tbe
in ddclaring that neither Cannon nor
Mrs. Shipman of Corunna, aged 80
Campbell were entitled to the seat of
years, wiia thrown from a wagon by a
delegate from Utah, of course (sends bruised almost beyopd recognition, while
runaway team, April 95, ard fatally in­
those in tbe building* were burled by the fallthe matter listk to tho people of the
jured. The a^mn team ran over a coal
Territory for another election. There
miner, breakunr-fas arm.
.was no question of Cannon’s msjonty. I people who were uninjured were so terribly
». At a chari viri gh\iLB-newly married
excited that nothing couta be done. When
CMple at- Muskegon on tho 9Sth, three but he was nnt admitted because of th-y at last recovered from tbeir consterna­
of the screnfulers were shot, and one of polygamous belief and practices. The tion search for tbe dead and wounded wm
commenced.
It wm at first supposed that at
them, a German, received wounds election to fill vacancy thus created leant fifty persons bad been killed, but a thor­
which will probably prove fatal.
| will lie held under the anti-polygamy ough search revealed that only seven were
Mra. John Nor-is, of Norrisville, has law, recently passed by Congress, but. killed outright, fourteen mortally wounded,
given birth to another pair of twins. notwithstanding this, it is said that Y r. and sixteen seriously injured. Those killed
were: J. 8. Scruggs, a farmer; Claude Moy­
We Bay another . because thin is the I (,'annon will again be the candidate of ers. dry-good« merchant; T. K. Arthur, clerk;
fourth time, and the whole crowd arc I hfa people, who hold him in great es­ W. M. Willlama, clerk; Con Whlto.Clty Mar­
teem. He is, undoubtedly, a man of shal: J. 8. Payne, minister; James Miller,
alive and kicking.
clerk.
Burglars vial ted Flushing Saturday fine abilities.
Tbe storm's path wm about 150 yards wide,
The committee on expenses attend­
night and blew open the safes of A. N.
and every bouse, tree, or shrub in that path
wm leveled to tbo ground.
Niles &amp;. Cn. The houl from the former ing tbe illness of the late President
Garfield, have, after careful considera­
After leaving Brownsville tbe funnel pur­
amounted to over $5,000. nnd the Inter
tion of the services rendered, reportiui j sued a northeasterly direction, and wm next
fas'. &lt;8,000. The tn eves Jwere trucked
heard of near Marshall, where several farm­
a
bill
fixing
the
compensation
of
the
as far as lonn.
houses were destroyed. All the telegraph
On the night of OctoberSl, last. John stirgeonsaud nuraesand allowing to the lines leading out of Brownsville were broken,
aud only one lias been repaired.
Goheen. a Canadian, of East Saginaw, employees of the Executive Mansion
diappeared. His bodyj was found in certain extra pay for their services.
St. Louis, April 19.
tho river at the lower end of Carrollton The allowance made is very liberal in I The RepuLUean'i correspondent, writing
Bar on Tuesday badly decomuosed nnd some instances, but it must be remem­ I' from Brownsville, the Ill-fated town which wm
nearly
&lt;b-&lt;troyrel
yesterday
afternoon by a
bered that the surgeons and nurses gave
bra skull fractured.
cyclone, givo further particulars of tbe terri­
Last Thursday Frank Webster, of up everything else, and devoted their ble storm. He says: Tho wildest confusion
Kent Co., was thrown from his buggy entire time and attention to the case.
rith people from tbo surrounding country,
by the sudden turning of his horse, and Nothin; less than this would have sat­
rbo docked In to nee tbe devastation wrought
isfied the public. It does not lessen the
fell upon Ilia head. The fall produced
value
of
the
services,
either,
that
those
the dobrla wm commenced after tbe storm
concussion of the brain, from which lie
who attended tbe bedside of the suf­ pawned, and ban been kept up inceeeantly ever
died Saturday afternoon.
&lt;
since, but It wllbrequlre several day* to thor­
Tbe Muskegeon will strike continues, fering President nnd ministered to his oughly overhauMbe ruins. Two more dead
several broils between employers mid wants, did so without giving thought bodice were exhumed, and it la thought there
men having occurvd during the week. to the matter of pecuniary responsibil­ an- still a woman and child beneath the ruin*.
Tbe mills are all shut'down and if the ity. No bills have ever lieen made
out; no compensation is claimed. The j two •toren-clouds united and made their terrimatter isn’t adjusted soon many of the
I blc rush for tbe town. Ho stood directly in
committed have apparently, taken all Ithe
______________
_ _
li u ur
________
laborers will want for bread.
line of tbe funnet-sbaped
cloud,
and
thlnk| the circumstances and conditions into ' in* to *ct nut nt Ito way. be •tarte.i to run, but
A Detroit policeman picked up Pat.
haJ not proceeded more than a dosen yards
consideration,
and
it
would
be
most
KCi-gan in a state of beastly intoxieatiou
when be was enveloped, drawn up set oral foot
aud put him in tlio station house on unaeemingly tor Congress to raise a abovu the ground, and hurled against a brick
building, but escaped without even a bruise,
Tuesday. Keegan never recovered from l dispute over this matter.
There is considerable interest felt lie says while be wm up in the air, and within
bis drunk, for when looked at, a short
tho whirling vortex of the cloud, be beard n
time afterwards be was found stone herein political circles regarding the terrible cracking round, and rem hl see myriads
nomination of Congressman at Large of sparks Dying around, evidently electrical.
dead.
William Carrier, was seriously injur­ for the state of Pennsylvania, under
the
new apportionrpent.
A
good
ed while sawing timbers in the furin. touebed wm a perfect wmU-.
ture munufi^tory nt Jackson. A piece many nam«*s are mentioned in connec­ J Tbe first place the atom tuucbrel wm the
tion
therewith,
but
Colonel
Samuel
B. twoftoty Imck bulldin*
&lt;he curuer of Main
flew baek and struck him in the abdo­
I and Bprin* streets, occupied by Myers k
men* knocking him senseless.
tho inside truck. It is stated that he i llurnain*. dry *ixxl«; Ttwrau Andrews,
red the injury will prove
clothin*: A. Heises. *ruccr1ee: and A. 8. Rclnfaled his county ticket by some 225 votes,
bort, all of which were lifted from their
।
The colored man Clark, in jail at Gd and in addition he appears to be quite foundations and hurled Into tbo middle of tho
street. Several persons Into each store were
a
favorite
among
the
Keystone
legisla
­
, Jtapids for the murder of Henderson,
buried by tho debris, and throe persona killed
'another colored man, declares that the tors in Washington. He is regarded ns outright. From this point ft continued north­
ghost of his victim appears to him a man of high character aud great per­ east, demolishing a number of dwellings on
tbe way to the brick block on Lexington ave­
every night, and be keeps th- other sonal attainments.
The President sent the following nue, known as “tbe new town" hire. Tho
prisoners awake by bis groans and
work of destruction was most terrible both to
nominations to the Senate yesterday : life and property. Seven two-story brick
cries of terror.
.
The mutilated 'body of a man, ap­ Alfonso Taft, of Ohio, to be envoy ex­ buildings were totally destroyed and throe
others badly dKrnage-L Tbe Brownsville
parently 45 years of age, mtn lotind traordinary and minister plenipotenti­ Hotel, a large twoetnry frame, was complete­
Tuesday morning on the railroad three ary of the United States to Austria; ly carried away nnd the Umbers scattered for
miles purest of Marnball. Tho body bus Wm. L. Dayton, of New Jersey, to be 100 yards around.
been identified m that of G. F. Widman. minister resident of the United States
In this block, and two others are missing, sup­
an insane man, and he csiue* to bis to thcNetheilands; Nicholas Fish of posed to be buried, and at least twenty-five
death by being ran over by the, New York, to be minister resident to others mure or leas injured. The Star Mill,
Belgium: John M. Francis, of New halt a block northeast. wobalf destroyed.
Persinger A Beatty's nnd UusadFa livery sta­
Mrs. John Meacber, of Elby, Gratiot York, to be charge d’affaires to Port­ bles wore leveled to tbe earth; stock unin­
Co., arose faoiu her bed Sunday morn­ ugal; J. P. Wickcrsliam, of Penusylvn- jured. Tbe brick public-school building was
ing last, before any of the family were dia. to be charge d’affaires to Denmark; cut down to tbe tojxof the first windows. Ths
school had been dismissed about fifteen min­
awake, and wrapping a shawl around Adam Badeau, ol New York, to be con­ utes prior to tho storm. Tbe Christian
her shoulders she crowed the road to sul general at Havana; Harry L. Church wm also entirely demolished. About
a pond, where she hung her shawl on Slaight, of New York, to be United twenty frame and several brick dwellings
were d-strayed. Tbe aggregate loss la at least
a post and deliberately laid down in the States consul at Prescott.
»L'u,an
The terms of 96 U. S. senators will
water and drowned.
Th" force of tbe wind was so great that heavy
expire
on
the
3rd
of
next
March
—
14
brick buildings were lifted clean off their foun­
A8-years-old son of A. Acton, living
sear Saline, met with a painful accident democrats, 11 republicans, and one in­ dations, and frame buildings were picked up
bodily and crushed and twisted into splinters.
dependent
—
as
follows:
Messrs.
Mor
­
playing in the barn. He fell from a
Bectlona of sidewalk were carried through tbo
pole, which was suspended bv chains, gan, Gorlaudrrftaulshury, Hill, (Go.,) air over 100 yards. Carpets and furniture in
dwellings were carried entirely out of town
and as he fell was caught in tbe mouth Buck, Lamear, McPherson, Ransom, ai.il lodged in tbe tree-tops, and timbers from
by a book on one of tho chains, rip­ Grover. Butler, Harris, Coke, Johns­ tbe lumber-yards scattered all ovy tbe oounping open the face from the mouth to ton and Davis, of West Virginia, dem­
ocrat.;
Messrs. Chilcott,
McDill,
A borw WM picked up and carried about
the right temple.
fifty feet and burled to a oath arn-'nit a brick
At Mount Morris, Sunday, Eugene Plumb, Kellogg, Frye, Hoar, Ferry, building, and two talks tn tbe country a feoo*Windom,
Saanders,
Rollins
aud
An
­
Root and John Harrigan got in to a fight,
Tbe home nbvmctaiM barn been relieved by
about a line fence and while so engaged, thony, republicans, and Davis, of III.,
then from bedalia end other adjacent towns,
Martin Hanigau, a sou of John, came independent. Of these, Messrs. Beck
and
Lamar
have
already
been
chosen
up behind Root and struck him in the
head with an ax. crashfag bis skull, so as their own succexsotu; Mr. Gibaon,
there is no hopes of his recovery. The ] democrat, has been elected to succeed loat moot heavily declare their Intention of re­
Kellogg,
republican; Riddleberger,
boy has beeu arrested.
readjuster, has been elected to succeed
Cluu. B. Crandall was arrested at
Hta, or MsroMeM, April
k OoephyteJohnston, democrat, and Wilson, re­ dan reports having set e!,
broken limbs
Grand Rapids on Saturday, charged
publican, has been elected to succeed
with comwitting an outrage on the
McDil, republican.
purmw of Mlw Martin, daughter of the
The post Lenten society sca.^jn Irtta
late Lewis Martis. Tbe girl is of weak
auspiciouMy begun and bids fair to con­
—A New York letter tells of a swell
mind and io poor bodily health, and
tinue until ^ho weather grows too warm young English singer named Braham,
Crandall used force and violence to ac­
tor visiting or evening parties to be en­ wbo came over for a professional tour,
complish bis heinous perpoaes, accord­
joyed. The President intends receiv­ but took s dislike to the country before
ing to the story of the gni.
he had been in it five minutes, and or­
ing every Tuesday evening for a time.
dered the hackman to drive him hack to
Hu reception this week was emiaently a departing steamer. KeBp a lookout
The elementary singing class is ex­
successful fa attractiig together a dis- now for Braham’s book on Americaported Io meet promptly nt the ringing tinguised
company without over­
—The Marquis of Lome's latest
af this first bell, fifteen minutes before crowding the ropm* as to interfere
The army and navy “pome” describes Canada as the " Fit
seven, ns the exercise, of the regular with uleasure.
home for many a hardy race, where
were especially honored guests of the
aoclrtr commences at 7^0 o’clock, । eveniU|fi n|ld Wt,re respectively invited liberty has broadest base." The hus­
While the ChristiM e-burah is under- through the Adjutant General of the band of the Princess Louise will henoaforth take a position among American
•rang repaint the meeting will contipne ’ Array and the Secretary o&lt; the Narr.
Chaa. Hartman, of Porter township,

Aft &gt;— ludil »r tlw M_ F- nl»Ar»-lt

SPRING GOODS
SECOND TO NONE IN BAKJ&amp;Y COUNTY

IXTotions, Domestics,
Clothing for men and boys,
Dress Goods,
Hats and Caps
Trunks and Sachels
Carpet and Oil Cloth
Boots and Shoes,
•
Grroeeries Etc. Etc.

UR SALES THE PAST YfcAR HAVE’ BEEN FULL 30 PER CENT IN EXCESS OF
every previous season and we tender our hearty thanks for there liberal support in our
t orts to bring the prices of all lines of goods down to reasonable profits. This year we wiah
to increase our sales 50 per cent and, have placed oh our counters one of

The Most Attractive Stock Ever Opened In Nashville
As we have in the past so we shall try ftitl make it in the future.
all high prices.

We shall put the knife tO

G. A. TRUMAN &amp; SON

The First to the Front!
I
1

AM NOW RECEIVING A FULL STOCK OF GOODS SUITABLE FOR THE SPRING TRADE. INCLUDING
the Largest and Best Stock of

Ready Made Clothing, for Men, Boys, and Youths,
Ever brought to Nashville, and ranging in price from three to thirty dollars per suit.

Id

Ladies, Misees, Gents &amp; Children’s Fine Shoes
I k**&lt;*p the celebrated Rochester make, Stylish, hurable anc Cheap.

I have the latest styles and can fit all parties.

At prices that defy competion.

In

I 'always keep a full stock of

Cash paid for Butter and Eggs.

Probate Order.

Sarah Wasen*t There.

Chai lie Shaw, of the ______
of Harry, hofden ai the Probair Office In the Off of
House, was grinning at the window of
HaMlnce, &lt;a eaid roehly. on Saturday tbe tat day
Tiie lYaiion
rhe box-office the other day, when ini
of April. In the yeai one thousand eight hun­
walked a chan with an agricultural
dred and elgt.ty-tva.
Since
Ito
conxolidsUon
with
the
New
York
bronxe on his race and asked :
Preeent. &lt; lemeul Krnlth. Judge of Probate
Evening PcmI, ho* inercaxed Ito facilities In- ■■&gt;»■&lt;»»«&gt;,
In the mallei «.
of the
•uu »»»
eelate «n
ot WILLIAM r.
V
“Does any one perform here T1
;
depuune.1,
Iu
u&gt; iw.My I “!f‘iJuTZd a.to, &gt;h. rU&gt;U», d.l. «HIUd.
-Oh, yes.
"This afternoon f”
four pages, and added many able writers u&gt; Ito | of William r . H*sei.
‘ ‘' deo-aavd. prayiug
previous HaL It is now pronounced by many
other loltable pet"How much to see ’em T"
“Well, I can give vou a scut for half
fore.
a dollar, nnd you cau bold your girl on
Established In 1S65, tbe naUun wm a pioneer
your lap.”
iu IU. jukuuvii, ur .....nn, ;
In this country, m a weekly journal of literary
“Wouldn’t anyliody laflT’
oflaid pallUon, and that tbs hrira
political criticism of the highest order, cuo"Not much!
We don’t allow any
laughing in this house.’’
ducted free from tbe control of party or inte­
"Well, may be we’ll come. Has thin rest of any sort. Despite a precarious support
theater ever burned upf”
during the first few years it Um held Io Ito origi *
"Never.”
ual alm. and has long been a recogniud autho­
"Any danger of tire on the stage F
Io
peranna unarrai
rity at borne and abroad Ito editoral manage- &lt;
"Not a bit.”
paodancy of mid petition.
tnent baa been unchanged from tbe first, and 1
C, by caitsln* a copy of IhU
।
“Any pick-pocket, around F
Ito projectors Intend that, with Uwur present '
' "None.”
facillUes, tbe Nation shall become move than
ever before the medium of the shiest thought of '
"Does anybody peddle lemonade F
tbe time.
"No."
,
Tne form and style of tbe paper are chose i
CLEMENT RMITH.
"Any prize packages given outF
with a view to the most suitable shape for bind­
Judge of Probate.
"No.”
ing. and s set of tbe Nation preserved, bound,
"Take a half dollar with a hole in itF and indexed, maker the most complete and
Probate Order.
"Yes."
readable record of curetit erento of Importance
"What kind of a play is it F
in tiie po itieal and liters y world available for
tbe A .ueretail public.
"It’s tragedy.”
of Harry. ho Id tn at tba Probate Office, in the CUy ol
"Tragedy ? Then that lavs meoutli The sutneripiiuo price haa been.
Sarah was to a circus last year when
some one hit a feller who crawled un­
Specimen copies sent on request Address tbe
der the canvas with a neck-yoke, and
she fainted so dead away that they hail Publisher, 910 Broadway, New York.
to unhitch her cornet and jerk off her
Probate Notice
uhoe*. Let her ace a play where fellers
are jabbing with pitch-forks, knock­
ing down witli crow bars and slicing
each other up with swords, and she’d of Barry.
tumble kerplunk
and
stop the ut ilaaUr
show dead still. I hope you’ll do well
and all that, but I don t bring no Sarah
to see no tragedv, aud don’t yon forget
it I She fainted on me once, and ray
hair turned gray at the rate of a bushel
came. u any i
a minute \n—Frie Pitta.
lipnrr atioiild

Reduced to $3 pr Annum.

WELL INDORSED BY OUR OWN CITI­
ZENS.

No matter bow useful anything may ba In
Itoslf, good iodoraeniento aeem to Increase Ito
usefnlneM greately by insuring a wider field
for tbe display of Ito apecial merit*. We
were tbua ixnpreaaed in view of tbe following
atotemeuto recieved by one of our represen­
tatives from leading lodvldluas connected

CLKMXNT SMITH,

^JiXUNT SMITH,

Attorney at Law,

midst. Among others whose testimony was
freely given was W. H. Stevens, Eeq., Master
Mechanic of tbe Conn. River Railroad, raaid-

fit. Jacoba OU haa had remarkable effect

ASEJTSr^ifli^K.FRANK &amp;

of BL Jacobs OU Was greatly benefited,

JESSE JAMES.

um

Attorney a Counsellor

GIVEN AWAY.

Zimmennaa Freit Dryer

DMMEU^p^"D*rKFcntaZriaMiL a

Nashville Harkeu
Wbssl.psr Ml

even time. one pronoutxieu it tin
*bc bad ever tried for the trouble.
W&lt;wtm&gt;. 45 Greenwood street. 8upt

WORTH SENDING FOR.

reporter; *’ian»ooc m-------------who have hadt the lfx*l lurk to bear of that
wonderful remedy. 8L Jacobs OH. I hs.1 rheu­
matism in tbe shouMar severely and could find
no relief until 1 nsed t lie Oil. 1 applied It

I am almost wdl and •

Hay. pn.
Be a. dr.

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                  <text>ORNO STRPNG.l
Editor axd Proprietor.

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun,

)

VOLUME IX.

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, MAY 6, 1882

—Physicians of Barry and Eaton coun­
LOCAL BIBBLS-OABBLB
LIFE IH NASHVILLE,, ties,
to the number at thirteen, attend­
And Her Environs.
ed the first meeting of the new medical
aaaociation at the Wolcott House, last
The much-need rain came on Thurs­
—Barney Brooks and three car-loads
week and an organization was duly ef­ day.
.
• of mustangs camo m yesterday, fresh
fected, with the followingrofticers: Pres­
Note J. M. Woods new add this
from Texas.
ident, Wm. Parmenter, of VtViUe; Vice week.
—John Furniss has ‘sold the farm President, Amos Knight of Eaton Rap­
Hope is the sugar-coating on the pill
lately bought of Jphn Wines to Solo­ ids; Secretary, W.H.Young, Nashvillp.
of life.
- ’
mon Troxell.
The society will hold its next meet­
Only qne saloon, ns yet, is entitled to
—The prosecuting attorney has nolle ing in this village some time in July.
do business in Nashville.
protequied the Powers-Hardy bribery
A. W. Olds and daughter Edna were
—The council having accepted the
case. A perfectly proper move.
Services of the fire-company, the boys in the village over Sunday.
The festive musqtiito will soon make
—Now that spring hats have put in
he folIds “hum” Dy the Thornapple.
an appearance wouldn’t it be in order
The wages of A D Jarram’ train men
to announce a grand opening in pocket
Foreman-^. D. McCartnev/
have been raised to 81.35 per day.
First
atetstant
—
Dan
SmltA
books.
W. H. Kocher is at Chicago, where he
Second-assistant—G. B. Smith.
. —Charley Feighner was handling his
President—Clark N. Young.
wtill tarry two weeks, buying new goods
ax in rather a reckless manner, one day
Vice President—C. N. Dunham.
for the firm. '
last week, when he nearly sevared a
Secretary—Frank Woolcott.
L. J. Wheeler returned from Dakota,
big toe.
Treasurer—Henry Zusehntit
Monday evening. He located'^ quarter­
—The question whether our streets
Trustees—C. W. Granger, F. T. Boise and
section in Brown county.
arc to be sprinkled or not the coming
Charles Fowler and John Marshall,
summer, is still numbered among the
—Hastings has circus to-day, Battle on Monday, started on a ten day’s visit
Creek
had
one
’
yesterday,
Eaton
Rapids
uncertainties of th(| future.
to friends in Southern Iowa.
—The man who edited the saying: will have one Monday and Charlotte,
The first move that John made after
“Hurry is the mark of a weak mind,” another on Wednesday. -4n fact three receiving that appointment was to in­
never edited a country paper the day distinct, united, grand mighty, masto­ vest in a still'hat.
before press day, and six columns of lo­ don, "noth’ng like it since the creation,”
Frank Parker and Henry Woolcott
aggregations are right in this vicinity
cals to be got up.
and every one has given Nashville the started for Free Soil last Monday, Henry
—Mention was qjade in last week’s. go-by. But
to work at his trade and Frank to seek
bis fortune.
News of the case of Mrs. Susan Goucher
Tell u* Dot with painted pictures
Tlio Blue Ribbon meeting will be held
vs John Laramy. The case was re-tried
Circuses are what they seem,
at
the M. E. Church Sunday next, at
on Monday iiefore Esq. Killen, when
For the soul sees through such mixtures.
three oelock p. m.
And ciicus bill, are Inn a dream.
the jury rendered a verdict of no cause
Dr. Young is making pcrliminnry ar­
of action, which throws $10 costs on
—The boys tell a good story on Tom
Mrs. Goucher.
• Purkey. The other day'Tom wanting rangements for the erections of a res­
—On Sunday last M. H. Clark of the some dirt to fill into his yard, informed idence on his vacant lots.
The township board has appointed H.
Barry County Democrat was married Alf Buxton, who is excavating for a
to Miss Lida E. Conner at the residence large cistern, that he wonld pay for u A. Brooks and David Smith reviewers
of
the new assessment roll.
.of the bride’s mother at Hastings. Bro. half day’s work of two jeams and their
Cigars on that 01 lb Deriar baby,
Clark is a good, straight-forward man, drivers for the dirt they would haul up­
found
their way clear over to the Inde­
has /secured a fine lady for his wife, and on his yard. Of course this was all sat­
The News extends compliments, and isfactory to AIL, and the teams went to pendent office, Grand Ledge.
Walt
Stillwell and Du. Dickinson arc
wishes the new couple abundant hap­ work, but Tom surprise, when he re­
piness and financial prosperity.
turned home at night and found his new engaged in hying the brick for a new
made garden buried under eighteen house for a Vt.Ville man—E. Spragne.
—L. 0. Crocker is busy early and late,
Henry Roe is after improvements. He
inches of unproductive sand, can be
pushing the sale of the McCormick and
is building an addition to bis house on
bette0magined then described.
Manny reapers and mowers, and is
Maple st., and a new cooler for his mar­
meeting with success. The McCormick
—Jacob Franck, mentioned in last ket.
twine binder is a perfect piece of ma- ■week’s News, as being seriously ill,
Hugget &amp;, Smith, Charlotteattorneys,
cbifiery, and Is fully illustrated iu an­ died last Monday night at the advanc­ were ii^ the village on Thursday, in
other column. Lu. has also in ptock ed age of seventy years. The deceased the interest of the corporation nullicarriages, platform buggies and wag- wasboni in Germany and emigrated flers.
bns, which wilt be sold at way-down from that country at an early period of
Lewis Clark has just finished the wall
his age to Crawford Co. Ohio, where he
prices.
for a new bank barn for farmer John
lived thirteen yearn; ttft-n moved with
Wotring, living north. The same is
—Probably the oldest horse in Barry
his family to Michigan on the farm
38x53.
county is “Old Gorge,” owned by .Phil­
which he hasevcrsince occupied, up to
The W. C. T. U. library has quarters
lip Holler. This horse has been in the
his death. The funeral services were
at the Wolcott Hous*', where ft will be
service of Mr. Holler ever since his
conducted at the house on Wednesday
open to patrons every Saturday afte'rbirth just 80 years of age last Thursday,
by Rev. L. Brumm, and the remains
nooD.
and still quite lively, and can be seen
deposited in the Barryvillo cemetry.
Mrs. Boothe of Battle Creek, widow
upon our streets before the carriage or
Lovers
liavlng
an
eye
to
economy
take
of the late Lee Boothe, was in the vil­
mill wagon almost any day. He is
notice. The Nashville Olio prumifcs rix
considered by Mr. H’s people “one the months' aubscriptiui to ;iartir.&lt; who will be lage, this week, the guest of Mrs. Susan
Goucher.
family,” and money couldn't buy married in that office.—Bellevue Gazette.
Probably Young realizes that he is
A sword cactus with a blossom in full
him.
,
x
—A short time since the firm of Bar­ liable to be placed iu the same condi­ bloom, and another promising bud, or­
tion
of
the
drunkard
’
s
child,
who
while
naments
the window of C. Ainsworth's
ry, Everts &amp; Co. brought suit against
the Grand Rapids Chemical Co., for imploring her father to “come home,” place of business
The
Editor
of the “Olio” is immense
said:
Father
we
have
no
bread,
”
to
debt and received ajudgement of $114.­
40 and $49.40 costs. On Monday the which the tipsy father replied: “Eat He can knock down a building with a
single
blow
of
the hammer—the auct
cake,
then.
”
There
is
apt
to
be
a
scar
­
firta Aforesaid mentioned attacched the
real estate and wood of the company, city of bread in the'family of an editor ioneeFs hammer.
A man who depends upon his mouth
at their works in this village, to secure of a second newspaper in a small town,
their pay, which brought the company and undoubtedly Young has inaugu­ and sympathy for capital to do busi­
to time and the matter was satisfactor­ rated the above scheme to bring in ness upon, can only run about so long,
and don’t you forget it.
ily adjusted on Thursday.
Twu cnples—H.A. Durkee and Miss
—The brick yard commenced busi­
Hattie Foote, and David Fitzgerald and
two
ness for the season on Thursday last,
and Miss Stella
ilsou— spent the Sab­
with a full compliment of hands. The
The N**hrille Bugle Iwuctl Ila first number bath Avith friends at Battle Creek.
first kiln will contain 300,000. Mr. Bos­ last Thursday, and In local new* it is tar ubeau
of any paper ever Irsucd in NaaLvdle.—Ver­
T.
N.
Kettiewell,
oagga^eman at the
ton has as tine and complete machinery montville Hawk.
depot, has 4&gt;een promoted to
sta­
for manufacturing brick and tile as can
The Naobvllle Bugle has tooted at last The
be found in the codntry anywhere. He first issue appeared last Thursday. The locaJ tion agent,and will soon go to his new
deportment is creditable, but the gvncraly ap­
•will enter more extensively into the pearance of the paper typographically, Is far field of labors, somewhere on the main
.
manufacture of tile than ever before, benind the New* or Olio.—Hastings Democrat. line.
WaptMome Dr. Barber is pretty suc­
and, in faet, his season’s business will
The first item was written by egostisnot figure little among the industries of tic Jake Potter, own brother of the ed­ cessful is curing chills. In factwesaw
him treating a customer that had the
Nashville.
itor of the Bugle ; the other by a news“shakes” a few days since. It was a
—C. N. Yoang.in his Tuesday “Olio’’, 1 taper man of large experience, yet n
carpet
intimates that we hare interfered with strong business opponent of The
Cbristain church ser /ices were held
his credit, and thus prevented getting News. Comment is unnecessary.
in the opera house on Sunday last as
his printing material a* he excepted.
they will also be to-morrow, on ac­
Th© first number of the Nashville
We do not, propose to enter into a
count of repairs being made on the
lengthy discussion of this, or any other Olio is on our excliauge fable. It is a
seven-coluinu folio, and starts in with church.
insinuation
Mr. Young might hav£ a small advertising pationage and a
Workmen are engaged in excavating
made, but we do wish to say that w© will lively local department. The Nash­
for the Francis and Bank block, the dirt
willingly forfeit one hundred dollars to ville Bugle vrijl next appear, which,
being taken out at the expense of the
with.the
News,
will
mako
three
papers
to Mr. Young, if he will show when or
in Nashville—one to each 400 popula­ village and utilized to raise South
where wo ever tried to hurt his credit tion. The law of the "survival of the Main St.
wo have never yet found it necessary to fiittest” will doubtless enforce itself in
Lt* Booth, formerly the leader of the
the future, and do it very 8trong-ly,
do buMneas in that way.
Nashville Band, defunct departed this
—Yes, those «taIlionH that were par­
He was
Notwithstanding two newspapers life at Battle Creek April 23.
aded up and down Main Sc., Satur­ have been started in Nashville, the a victim of that fell-destroyer, con­
day, by their handlers, were fine-look­ News comes out just the same ns tho’ sumption.
ing animahkand th© parade would have nothing had happened. Newspaper
The News’ advertising patronage is
adventures will do well to remember
been eminoaMy proper under different that it requires money, brains and
bracing right up. Oarcolumns are aim eircuinstauteo and ata different season tact to run a newspaper successfully,
ply teeming with the ads of live busi­
of rheyearbuti but conducted, as it and therein consists the success of Orno
Strong, and his lire, spicy, local jour­ ness men, ana several crowded out this
was, upon the main thoroughfare of a nal.— Hartings lienwerat.
week for want of space.
village with streets filled with teams,
The people of Nashville trill have n
J. M. Shoup advertises tlie celebrat­
and sidewalks with with women t.nd
hard tune of it support ing three local
children, and at this season of the year, P«!&gt;erM. If ScrungJioldN ountbymcally, ed -‘Triumph” reaper and mower in
it was anything but creditable to the we have no fears hut what be will stay. this »-ue. Peruse the ad- carefully
and see Mr. Shoup before purchasing
owners of the beasts or the town, and Chaviolit Lender.
your harvest machinery.

opnnoui?.

Mmb.1 mu » rtop u Uh. diwtncefal

| TERMS; Si.50per Year
I ■ Credit Si Bsorrrioxs S1.T3.

NUMBER 33.

oration by P. T. Colgrove, a steamer ago. But perhaps second-hand bash is better tltlon for an office to be located In thi* part of
and anil boat# on the lake, free refresh­ than nothing.
•
.
town sub known a* “Went Sunfield*. P.O&lt;
The big ditch-is progressing finely, also sev­
ments, bowery dances and fireworks.
Sleknera continue* to fncreafec, and It I* han!
to find a family in which there i* not one or
The News has been favored with an eral smaller one*.
Alex. Campbell has taken to himself a trow. more under the Dpetnri* care. .
:
honorary badge.
*
The Prrabytcrian Society Lave ►ccurcd the
Ed Young and wffe of Charlotte are She was a Boto.
Ad. Russel bad an acre of potatoes freeze by services of a minister who will commence Ma
in the village visiting friends. Ed. has
planting In the winter.
pastoral duties alxrnt the fint of June.
..
just been appointed agent of Wheatfield
Cha*. 8crvinc is repairing bis barn and put­
Monday May 1 rt m«&gt;at of the summer sebaote on the main line, and will immediately ting new sills under it
opened and there was a general scattering a­
assume the duties of his new position.
C. Bakar has moved to his new min and will mong school ma’am* to respective stations.
Yesterday morning Elaa Shoup of be ready to saw in a few days.
Bld Brown tort a good terne one night last’
Maple Grove, started for Detroit to en­
John Talbert has dug a hole in the ground to week. It got loose in the stable and it l» sup­
ter tlio employ of the general agent for crawl into when the next cyclone comes along, posed that It was kick©! to death by the other
Mr. Ford dut bi* hand very badly with a haqA bones.
Morgan’s harvesting machinery, and
Two or more yonng men fn»rn this place
will traverse the country, setting up saw, while getting over a fence, by the rail
weuton a fishing cxcurafon a short time ago*
breaking.
the Triumph reaper.
Town board met Saturday and appointed W. and getlng lost spent all night oo tbe'lake en­
After thirteen years faithful service
Latty and W. Jewell as tax receivers and Dr. dcavering to find tbc stere.
Ed. Mallory has been dethroned from Baker as health officer.
The’ Post -office difficulty has been set^ed by
the position of route agent in the U. S.
W«». Campbell bad hi* house broken into by appointing J C Downing, BbstmAter, with tbe
M. service,because he was so unwise as some unknown persons a short time siuce.it i&gt;e- Blsmark office at bls store, while the name of
the place where the old Posl-offlee was has b«-en
to engage in a controversy with the ing the second time this winter. 4
John Wilkinson and your correspondent had changed to Elwell, Loomis, P. M
head clerk at Detroit.
Vax.
Again has the. property, north-east a fine chat over old Fan getting married at bls
corner Main and Washington Sts., house. John says It was a put up job on him.
LOCAL MATTERS.
TTie quarterly meeting at the Bell school
changed hands, J. L. Gregory dispos­
bouse was well represented. Elder Ferguson
Schbol Reports.
ing othis no wly-'acquired interest to the
of Ionia Co., Elder Cox of Jacksori, W. L.occupant, C. W. Smith, and John
Star Scholars in Nashville Union School for
Griffin of Albion college, ahd Elder Tanner of
Smith buying E. Chipman’s interest.
the Assyria charge and Mrs. Rev. Jordan of the mouth ending April 28th.
INTEKMEIHATE nF.FAETMEXT.
Olivet, were present. Mrs, Jordan delivered a
Number enrolled 110.
COMMON COUNCIL PBOOEEDINGS. a most able discourse. In the afternoon there
Average dally atteiwlance24.
Stars.
—
Willie .Cole. Willi© Kellogv. Johnnie
was a gathering of different Sunday sdiobls
Woicutt, Neirtoh Kellogg. Edna Truman,
Cocxcil Rooms,
(
am! a fine time hud.
Aliev Evans, Allie Martin, Hattie. Kettiewell.
Nashville, Apr. 29, 1882. i
Mrs. Sarah'Baker received from her busband Homer Ra;*on, T. D. Deraaray, I)ri*ey Greg­
Council met pursuant to adjournment.
ory, Clvde Plum.
Present, Chipman, President; Boise. Dcmar- two thousand ahnouy money. I suppose that the
Matie Hixpmabch.
readers of Tub News fully understood that Mr.
ay, Dickinson, and Lee, trustees.
Baker had obtained a bill from his wife, and
1‘KIXAHY I1EPAHTUEXT.
•
Absent. Barber and Lentz.
she
had
the
privilege
of
stayingin
the
home
un
­
Whole
numlier
enrolled
55.
* '
The saloon bond of W. E- Buel with C. M.
Baker
Average dally attendance 4X85.
Putnam and Theo. C. Downing as sureties was til June, but did not choose so to do.
Stars, Irving'Boston, Frankie Beard. Cora
presented and on motion accepted and approv­ is one of the finest men in town. His son Kettiewell. Vcnll Roe, Harby Be!!. Charley
Charles is also as fine a man as you generally Stanton, Maurr Moore, Frankie Leutx. Bertha
ed by ayes and nays as follows:
The Moody, Aubrey Francis, Lewis Hanly, Vend
Ayes, Boise, Detnanty, Dickie "on and Lee. come acroM. Olive Is a fine woman.
children are well off. Mr. Baker has a farm Martin. Braddy Howthora, Perly VatiNocker.
Lcntx, Bernice Niles, Emma Pratt. Al­
worth $7,000. Did any one ever know a wo­ Fernie
On motion council adjourned.
lie Hardy, Libby Parady, Edla Nites, Tina
man to be lu wrong. Not much.
Simmons. Willie'Roe. Louis Marshall.
F. McDeupt,
E. Chipman,
H. n.
in order to be a star, the scholar must be
Clerk.
•
President.
neither absent nor tardy, and must not whisper
during Uic month.
MAPLE GROVE.
9
Helfs C. Aujtx.HAST4NGS.

Saturday was a busy day
W. Ji. Goodyear has a new clerk. •
Stauffer Saulsbury have a new clerk.
Dr. Russell was in the city last Monday.
There are only 19 boarders at the county jail.
There will be a short session of circuit court.
A. W. Olds froth Bear Like, was tn town
Monday.
The tuition from foreign scholars will amount
to*about $500.
William Goodyear is building a new fence
around his residence.
A new broom factory is in operation on the
corner of State and Brood streets.
The Jury injthc Imstardy case of Jules Flash­
ant brought in a verdict of guilty.
^ast Sunday morning the M. E. church
raised $225 for Imevolent purposes.
J. Grcble has Improved the appearance of
his residence with a new coat of paint.
Bentley Bros, and Wilkins are trucking in
some very tine ash and whitewood logs.
John Bc.Miner has been cltosen as Alderman
in the first ward to fill the vacancy made by the
resignation of Mr. Andrus.
Charles Pflug died Sunday night after a short
illness. He was a hard drink©.' which a a* un­
doubtedly the cause, directly or indirectly.
Justice Greenfield was called to Emmett Co.,
Saturday, by the death of his mother. He re­
turned Tuesday with the body for interment
at Riverside.
t
'
James Clark and Silas Stafford have funned a
co-partnership and rented the room formerly
occupied by the Choral Society,for an office anJ
head quarters for legal advice.
Bert Niskern passed the examination and
won the cadetship out of a claBBof fifteen, at
Jackson, last Tuesday. Bert la a good fellow
and here is hoping be will pass the final ordeal
nt Weal Point.
.
The Choral Concert Friday evening, was one
of the finest ever given by the society. The Hall
was irell filled with the music loving people of
city. Miss Louise Skinner of Detroit, captirated the audience, she was encored each time
with renewed enthusiasm. Her voice is very
pleasant and perfect in quality am) is under
excellent control. Floral tributes were pre­
sented to Dr. ‘Woodburn, Mis* Ida Knappen
and Mbs Skinner.
Monday morning a fire broke out in a dwell­
ing house just west of the park. It started from
a defective chimney spread rapidly and con­
sumed the entire building.
It was owned by
Milo Williams and occupied by two of his
daughter* and Mr. Beumer. Mr. William* lost
bis furniture, books and many valuable papers.
Mr. Bemuner succeeded In saving most of his
household gtxxls. The loss will lie about $1,500
with an Insurance of *1,000.
Harb.
ASSYRIA.

Cool again and frosty.

John Munger is on the sick Hit.
Henry Ellis has a new wind mill.

Geo. Mosey wa* home Sunday.
The ready relief given to asthma and sum­
mer colds by Brown’s Iron Bitters is so satis­
Elmer Shafer is breaking colts.
factory that many speak of it os a complete
Ira Cummings was home Sunday.
cure.
» '_________________
The dance at Emory's was a failure.
Hark I Hark! the dogs do bark
Uncle Wm. Jarrard is on the sick list.
The people are coming for too,
Farmers have nearly finished sowing oats.
Some in Wagons, shine in buggies.
And some on foot you sec:
L. Lapham raised Lis barn last Thursday.
They march a oug with joyous song '
Mary Phinisey was home Saturday and Sun­
'Til they come to Ainsworth’s store
day.
Then wheel alxnit and march right in
Mr. liurditig has the caller wall up for n new
And call for a pound or more.
.
house.
Tim Brooks and Lyman Spires had a fight
S3- Plymouth Rock egg* for hatching purpcwies at'50cta for 13, W. J. Pakkkr, IM
32-M.
Alice Brook* ha* commenced the wall for a inilea east Vt Ville depot.
GIRLS CATCH ON.
Jim Uhc*eman has bom digging a ditch for To those 25ccnt white Kid Glove#at.
,
C. W. Graxoek.
Uncle Norton.
Th'.Wolf brothers have Cap. Bowen’s barn
BEHOLD A BARGAIN.
nearly framed.
Covered Butters IticU apiece at AtuawouTHS.
One of Sam Shafer's horses slugged Itself
badly last week.
Charley Streeter has returned from—well we

SKINNY MEN.
Wells’ Health Rcnewcr. Absolute cure for
nervous debility and weakness of the genera­
tive function*. $1. al druggists. Mich. Depot
JAMES E. DAVIS A CO., Detroit. Mich.

Ground Is being excavated for the founda­
tion of the new M. E- church.
MONEY TO LOAN,
The social at Mr. Dunham's was a success,
and a flbod time was enjoyed. Receipt* $7.h5. Ou Real Estate al low rate of interest of
Lrn/A Dtki
There will be a social at Job Wilcox’s on the
evening of May 10th. for the benefit of the M.
Full line of Wall Paper at
, „
F. T. BOISE’S.
E- church. Refreshment.* will be served.
'
I. (&gt;. of G. T. of Maple Grove elected the
CARD OF THANKS.
following officers, April 29th: W. C. T., Geo.
We tender our sincere thanks to t he many
Spencer: W. V. T., Cora Scarce; W. T., Ed. kind
neighbors and friend* who lent a wUlini
Mosey; W. T., Frank Baltx; W. I. G., NelHe band In the late illnes*, and death and burial
ThkCmilpbex.
Archer; W. O. G., Corti Eldridge: W. XL, R. of our father^
E. Swift: W. F. S., Emmie-Shafer.

CARLTON.

Anson Wood has moved Ids b*ru aud placed
it on a wall.
One of Abed Donley's children is very sick
with the croup.
M. P. Fuller has sold one pair of his black
horses to CapL Thomas.
Ed. Woodard la employed by a firm in Mar­
shall, selling furnace*.
•.
Thomas F. Young has sold his farm consist­
ing of forty acres to a Mr. Guile for 82,000.
Mr*. J. B. Carpenter returned from Muske­
gon, on Saturday, where she had been on a
visit
Albridge Hunt has sold forty acres of land to
Charles Young and taken as part payment z
pair of matched horses.
D. C. Kenyon ha* improved the looks of hh
premises by planting a new picket fence In
front of bis house.
Geoyge Miller Is no better, there I* no poeible chance for him to recover. How long be
will lire; to suffer with that terible disease,
(Bright/ time will only tell.
Dogshave l&gt;ecn making terrible “baroc”
aratxig sheep in this township. Oliver Cheney
had Hkliled and quite a number more wound­
ed. Gee. Helmer had his flock all killed or
woundedT. Rgvoc.

FOR SALE.

Some nice Cana&lt;!a Seed Peas Ju*t tbc thing
to feed your Porkers next July, .in time for the
early market, which ft niusll the lie
e tv
sell.
C. W. Emltb.

BUTTER AND EGGS.
1 ;»r c**b for salted er unraltcd butter, regr
and other pnffince.
C. Aixmwobtu.
lirOBTANT TO TUATIXEUS,

Special Inducements arc offered you by tlu
Burlington Route, It will payyou to read U-eU
ndvcrtisemeuta to be found elsewhere in thb
WC. W". Gjuxiiiiakcepua full lineof Pound
Calico, also the best line at Set Prints in town

WANTED.
A go&gt;»&gt;wide-awake voung rm
the best Sewing Machines in tit

A FEW THOUSAND DOLLARS
•To Loan on gcxxl Real Estate security.
Lbs A Ih kkuz.
BRACE UP^
:

White and Fahey Shirt*, latest rtvle*. st
A L Rasar’r Barber Shop.
FISM ! FISHI
White Fish for $fctoents per pound
z AlXSV
creamer* left just the thing.

FAIR WARNING.

WEST SUNFIELD.

Reuben Evan* has moved into C. G. Baker’*
house.
Leroy Cummings has got hi* wind mill re-

five doltera giver, me by Leonard
fall, and bearing even per cent and

Well Hoisted loot a very valualc cow lazt
Amos and Robert Dowd*have each invested

A dance at C. H. Russels and R. Bristows

Chas. Baker has a
acted! bouse.
Henry Winslow has moved iu the house Mrs.
SsrahBaker left
Burt
- Heron -ho* moved tn the teuseC. Baker
bunt at the mill.
A bare foot is a good tracks collector;
The Hastings Gun Lake Association
_____
__ ___
I
blowed
the “Bogie___________________
” and found it had____
cne
but the owner groan n as the iron enters are to give a celebration at Gun Lake key to many. Ttetti, iu Auorla item* ware
his sole.*
on July Oh. The attractions will be azt‘ -—r- - • - - — -- ------- ------------------

Schuyler Weeks, preparing to build

FARMERS ATTEN'

�well

!DAY

THU CONTXtrrgD COBBLER.

Min envied by little and tall,
ds world’s bteaainga alone U*J

home-life of the czab.

Notwithstanding the commencement
of the winter season and the reassembly
of the nobility in St. Petersburg, the
Czar remains concealed in the seclusion
of GatwhFno. This place is about forty
miles from St. Petersburg, with whieh it
is more or less directly connected by
three railways. It is thus quite a strate­
gical position^ and possibly this circum­
stance has ioffutruced its selection as an
.Imperial retieat. x^hojswitk’nee is sur­
rounded,by .a beautl/ul-park, with pic­
turesquely/undulating grounds,
the
graceful slopes being adorned with fine
old timlwr. The palace itself is un enor­
mous building, or block of buildings.
One huge square stone edifice occupies
the center, and from it branch out on
cither side circiilar wings which serve
as galleries to connect the main edifice,
and two smaller but substantial annexes
that face in the s:hiw direction as the
central portion, and form projections at
the ends of the general semi-circular
front. In the central block are the stale
and larger reception rooms. The wing
on the left is occupied by the imperial
family.', In that on the right are the
Apartments for members of the honschdhl. Visitors arriving are conducted
to the central entrance, and. except un­
der the most safe conduct and after
’ searching examination, no one is allowed
to aiNiroach that portion of the palace
iuhanited by, the Czar. Thus the general
arrangement of the buildings, besides
offering tke advantages of accommoda­
tion to be found in a large mansion, af­
fords special security-for the personal
safety of the Emperor, whose apartment*
arc completely isolated and. unapproach­
able except by narrow passages that are
strictly guarded. Thegallerics aL Gate­
china have long been frnned as contain­
ing magnificent artistic collections. One
Which lends to the Emperor's private
rooms is called the Japanese gallery,
and here are assembled a number of
curiosities of the highest value, which
have from time to time been presented
to the great White Czar by the rnlers of
China and Japan. The Japanese Min­
ister, who was lately presented at Gate­
china, ahd who is a great collector of
both European and Asiatic bric-a-brac,
stated that there was nothing in the East
to compare with this Russian collection,
and that it would be impossible to re­
place many of the ancient and extremely
valuable artistic objects that adorn the
imperial fallen*.
In addition to the
Asiatic curiosities^ trio lover of antiqui­
ties finds at Gateehina magnificent spec­
imens of the most highly-worked Louis
XVI. furniture. These- were presented
to Catherine the Great by the most un­
fortunate of French monarchs, and have
always been highly prized by the Russian
imperial family.
The ordinary sitting-room of the Ozar,
in which he transacts business, is situa­
ted on the first floor of the block inhab­
ited by the imperial family. It is a com­
fortably. but simply, furnished apart­
ment. The style somewhat betokens
the character of its occupant. A num­
ber of heavy German-fashioned and ca­
pacious ann'-ebnirs give it an air of j&gt;onderous solemnity. Little elegance or
ornament is noticeable, but a large
writing-table and other unmistakable
signs denote that many of the Emper­
or’s hours are hero passed in close appli­
cation to the endjess business that de­
volves on the autocratic head of a sys­
tem of bureaucratic centralization. The
Czar is an early riser, and the labors of
his dav vommencet at nine in the morn­
ing. ’Till one o’clock he is occupied in
his study receiving his Ministers, who
- present their weeny or dally reports,
and consulting with tliem over' affairs of
State. The reception of Ministers is fol■ lowed by the presentation of officials
who have recently received important
appointments, or with d-hom the Em­
peror, for some particular reason, de­
sires to converse. Occasionally a newly
appointed Ambassador or diplomatic
agent is introduced to present his cre­
dentials, and rarely a day passes without
one or more Russian deputations obtain­
ing an audience. It is specially signifi­
cant of the polfar of the present Czar
that while high officials have often a dif­
ficulty in obtaining an interview, his
Majesty is always accessible to provin­
cial deputations, which are sometimes
uumposed of wild Khirgiz. sometimes of
swarthy Kalmuks or skin-clad Samoyedes. and sometimes of illiterate Russian
peaaonte who desire to present a holy
picture to their great father and to ex­
press their loyalty and devotion to his
peracn. The Emperor receives one and
all with a stern dignity which, though
accompanied in most cases by a certain
kindoeM of manner, always leaves tbc
ion tlmt Alexander Hl. feeh him­
self an autocrat, and is determined to
yield none of his prerogatives, but to 1m-

Although stem and even overbearing
toward the majority of those who sur­
round him, Alexander III. has always
been a sympethMng and affectionate
husband and father. Atonc o’clock daily
heUqnches.with his wife and children,
and tlTtW* meal none ’out the closest in­
timates of his family are ever admitted.
After luncheon, if there are no further dep­
utations to receive or important business
to attend to, the Czar goes out walking
or driving in company with the Empress
or his eons. , At half past seven, which
in Russia is considered a late hour, the
Emperor and Empress dine; but at this
meal the children, who have already been
consigned for the night to the care of
their superintendents, do not appear. In
the evening there is often a little music,
of which the Empress is as fond as the
Emperor, and her majesty is a good
pianist. The Czar retires to bed early,
and by eleven o'clock all is silence in the
imperial apartments.
During the day-time the Empress oc­
cupies a room on the ground fjoor exact­
ly below the Czar's study, with which
it communicates directly by a small pri­
vate staircase. The Czarina’s . boudoir
is elegantly furnished, but in a simple
stylo,- and with no appearance of luxury
except such as is given by Use pre’cnce'
of certain handsome pieces pf.furniture
and objcti 'd'art which remain ’to testify
to the more extravagant tastes ok former
occupauts. The look out from the win­
dows over the park is charmingly pictur­
esque, but Use attention is some what dis­
tracted from the beauties of the scenery
by tha continued pacing immediately in
front of the windows of the many sen­
tries who closely surround Uie house.
The Empress w an admirable manager
lK&gt;th of ner time and of everything that
pertains to the household duties. Her
great intelligence and sweetness of man­
ner hive given her an extraordinary in­
fluence over her husband and all other
persons who are brought into contact
with her. The Anitchkine Palace,which
she occupied as Czarevna, was a model of
household management, and to her initia­
tive are due the commencement of sweep­
ing reforms in the administration of the
other overgrown palaces. She is patroness
and takes ae far as possible an active in­
terest in the management of half the
charitable institutions in Russia, and
particularly Utose that are connected
with the protection of women and
children.
Every morning, while the
Emperor is busy upstairs with his Min­
isters, the Empress receives the reports
of M. Delianoff, General Baumgarten,
and others, whom she intrusts with the
supervision of the various societies in
which she is interested. It is rare also
that any deputation or individual of im­
portance is presented to the Emprror
without being subsequently introduced
to the Empress.
But it ts not affairs
pertaining to her imperial position alone
that occupy the attention of this excel­
lent wife and mother. The Empress'
solicitude for the safety of her husband
is well known, and it has been observed
that she is never at ease when he ts
called sway from home. The education
and care of her children also engross
much of her thoughts.
The eldest son
the Czarevitch is in his fourteenth year,
and resembles his mother in features.
He is of an active and lively disposition,
and. for his years, is far advanced in his
studies. Russian is always the language
employed by the imperial family when
they are together, but whim the boys are
with their teachers they speak French
and English on alternate days. Six
hours a day are devoted to study by the
voung Princes, but their education is not
limited to sedentary- studies alune. They
are also practiced in ridiqg and shooting,
and the Czarevitch is&gt; it is said, already
a good shot and rides well.
The critical position of the country
and the pereonm danger of the Emperor
are the dread skeletons in the duplxiard
of this otherwise happy imperial family.
It is not my purpose to touch on politics
to-day, and therefore I must close this
letter without further allusion to the
grave anxieties that often cloud a face
which, from ita resemblance to our
moch-toved Princess of Wales, no Eng­
lishman can look upon without especial
y .
feelings of sympathy.—London
‘
*
graph.

—The profit!
for breeding good
blooded horaea in California are b&lt;K»m-

their attention especially to this indus­
try, reaping large rewards.
’

—The Bee-keeper*' Convention at
Utica, N. Y-, a few days since, appoint­
ed a detective committee to prowl
around among the been next summer.

ternity are guilty of mixing glucose
with their honey.

Brown’. Iron Bitter*.' WbJre theweakne*.
iaofan exhaustive or debilitating naturina,
it remove. aU iffckx* feehng atxfqutekly.
awaken* to new activity.—Haruxn

E ARE NOW RECEIVING

tb«4r tolber* Bible* 1* bcx-«u*e ttarir fathers had
none. They left euchre deck* behind them.

GOODS FOB TULE

A WOMANS AEPKARS WELL
Onljr when *he 1* well. Zoa-Phor* will make
moat woman well and *tn»g.

------ —AND ARE SELLING THEM

Tii- Indiana eoet ua &lt;23,000,000 last year, and
the peaky varminta wouldn't allow a cant
»0 acalpa they gobbled tm to.

Clear Dov

THE COST Of IT.
.
—John A. Phelps, of Connecticut, in­
It the total co*t of alekoea* ahnply In Ha bualculcates in his boys a love of country
neaa aspecta were reckoned op,lt would be found
life and the paternal acres by renting
them plots of ground for potatoes and
other crops, soiling them manure, and ‘doual debt. Tbc merchant ha* a headache, from
taking pay in labor,-teaching them to a fit of indigestion. and tnlssca a good bargain.
make their own sales, keep their own The lawyer doe* the Mnr with a cane. To
accounts, and -handle their own money. ray nothing of I&gt;x tor8 fees, etc., It donl pay to
tie even a tick. Dr David Kennedy's “favorite
—Floating Island: -Sweeten a pint
Remedy” Is a friend of the busine** man, for ft
of thick cream with white sugar, flavor
clean
ids brain. One Dollar a bottle. RondouL
with lemon and whip to a frota; pour &gt;

£int of thick cream into a glass dish,
iy sponge cake in thin slices over it
lightly, then a layer of some kind of
bright jelly, then pnt the whipped
cream on the top.
To whip cream
use on egg-beater, and as fast as the
froth rises take it off and lay it on a
solve, set over another bowl, then be­
fore you put the whipped cream on the
floating island, pour that which has
drained off into the bottom of the dish.
—An agricultural exchange says:
Every paper in the United States ought
occasionally to keep the fact before its
readers that burnt corn is a certain and
speedy cure for hog cholera. The best
way is to make a pile of corn on the
cobs, effectually scorch it, and then give
the affected hogs free access to it. This
remedy was discovered by E. E. Lock
at the time his distillery was burnt in
Lewistown, Ill., together with a large
lot of store corn, which was so much in­
jured as to bo unfit for use, and greedily
eaten by the hogs, several of which were
dying daily. After the second day not
s single hog was lost, and the diwase
entirely disappeared. The remedy has
been tried in a number of cases since,
and has never failed.

—If kerosene oil is added to sperm oil
it will prevent the latter from gumming.
Mix thoroughly one hundreu parts of
oil with four parts of chinride of lime
and twelve of water. Now add a small
quantity of the decoction of oak bark to
destroy all traces of gelatinous matter
still remaining, and allow the impurities
to settle. Next agitate the clear part
with a little sulphuric acid; settle onoe
more and remove the acid by washing,
and see to it that none of the acid re­
mains. If the oil shows any signs of
becoming rancid it ought to be boiled
with water and a little bicarbonate of
magnesia for about fifteen minutes,
when- it will likely lose the power to
redden litmus paper.
—Snow custard is a dainty dish, suit­
able for dessert or for tea.
Use half a
package of gelatine, three eggs, one
pint of sweet milk, twe cups of sugar,
and the juice of two good sized lemons.
Soak the gelatine in a teacup of cold
water; it will need to soak for an hour
at least; when it is entirely dissolved
add one pint of boiling water and twothirds of the sugar and lemon-juice; let
all come to a boil; then take from the
stove and pour in the dish in which it is
to be carried to the table, or put it in a
mold to cool.
Make a custard of the
milk, eggs and the rest of the sugar and
lemon juice. When the gelatine in the
mold is ready to serve, put the custard
J
around the base, or cover it -'lllively
with the custard.—Exchange.

No matter how dinguined, that prompt paying cuatomerB
must make good to the dealers who s^ll on credit all losses
■from poor debts, long time accounts, sickness, failing crops,
loss of property, or dishonesty of other customers.

They are having a dispute in Naples as to
whether Cleopatra was haodaome,or only fair
to medium. Michigan has 10,000 country girl*
who beat her all to smash.

That the merchant who sell on credit must take into ac­
count ail the probabilities above mentioned when he offers his
merchandise for sale. And these losses amount in the aggre­
gate to a fair yearly income—a loss which he could not long
sustain were there no remedy, but there is a remedy and thp-t
remedy is in the PROMFP PAYING CUSTOMERS.

HOW TO SAVE.
AU bard workers are subject to bilious attacks
which may end iu dangerous illncsr. Parker*
Ginger Tunic will keep the. kid^ry* and liver
active, and by-preventing the attack save much
sickness,
Umu and expense. Delay
al HUdi times means danger.—Detroit Pre**.
Hee other column.

NO BETTER INVESTMENT

These six—the peevish. the niggard, the dbsatlifled, the paMionaie, the Husplciou*. and
those who live upon other* mean*—are forever
unhappy.

Can be made, if necessary, than to hire money and pay
for your merchandise as you purchase it.

THE DISTINGUISHING CHARM.
A delightful fragrance of freshly flower*
and spice* is the duUnguiahlng rhann of Flor­
cstun Cologne.

An Indians wild-cat whijwd three dogs, claw­
ed the clothing off of two fanner, and chewed
up a yearling colt before the gulden cord wa*
soaped.

(Turkey Red Table Linen 50 to -55 cts.
Table Oil Cloth 28. Floor, best, 42 cts.

THE BAD AND WOTBI.ESS
arc never Imitated or coutcrfetlcd. This i» i'
especially true of a family medicine, and it is I
positive proof that the remedy Imitated I* of i
highest value. As anon m it had t&gt;re:i tested '
and proved by the whole world that Hop Bit- |
ter* wai the purest, best and moat ratable fam­
ily medicine on earth many imitations sprung
up and Iwgan to steal the notices in which the
press and people of the country had expres ed
the merit* of IL B., and in cvcrv way trying to
induce suffering invalids to use their stuff in­
stead. expecting to make money on the credit
and good nam&lt;- of H. B. Many other# stared
nostrums put up hi similar style to H- B., with
variously devised names In which the word
“Hop" or •‘Hops’’ were used in a way to induce
people to believe they were the same a. Hop Bring lour Butter!
Bitters. All such pretended remedies or cures,
tio matter what their style or uame is, and es­
pecially those with the word “Hop” or “Hops'’
in their name, are Imitation* or counterfeits.
Beware of them. Touch none of them. Use
nothing but genuine Hop Bitters, with a bunch
or cluster of green Hop* on tbc white label
Trust nothing else. Druggists and dealers arc
warned against dealing iu Imitations or coun­
terfeits.

Modes that Pay Best.

The profits arising from the several
I
products of Lhe farm are not usually es­
timated with such care as to enable the
farmer to say which particular source of
income has been the nest, on the, score
of net profit* Each day’s duties, wheth­
er on or off the farm, if paid for on. the
score of time, of course leave their own
I estimate when the day is ended. If the
tnxmev and breeder rested upon any
। such basis for getting ahead in the world,
• the balance sheet would make a ruinous
; showing at the end of the year. If his
Bragged.
i plans are not wisely laid, with a view to
! an indirect hourly gain to his purse,
Boys ore often as foolish braggarts i
, through the growth of crops, that, while
their elders. They love to‘•snow oft.
], he Ls asleep, reach down into the chemand will put themselves to trouble and
। ical laboratory beneath the surface—
pain in order to win admiration. The i which is his mine—bringing op the ele­
following anecdote, taken from the New ments of growth, and through the steady
York Ledger, displays a braggart whose growth of the young stock on the farm
folly brought ridicule upon himself:
—also a mine—then he locks tact in
"When I was at school,” says Colonel using his acres to advantage. The value
Tracey, late clerk to the Mayor, "there of a mine is not in the surface it covers,
was one boy with whom I was always but in the richness within a given space.
quarreling.
He was an Irish youth The practical value of a £iven field is
named Barney, and, like many of his not that it contains a specified number
countrymen, he had a fair share of of acres, but that the yield is large for
mother wiL I believe I disliked him the surface covered.
.
mainly because of his wit, which sooner
The profits in farming and stock grow­
or later made every boy in school the ing are not usually counted up with pre­
butt of some joke.
cision, so that it may be known whether
“Never shall I forget how I tried to there is or is not any profit in a given
get even with him, and how wofully he undertaking.
It is partially but, not
beat me with my own weapons. Laving entirely true that it is morq difficult to
my plan carefully beforehand I drew keep accounts on the farm from which
Barney into a controversy, in presence the same accurate conclusions may be
of most of the boys, upon the compara­ arrived at as is possible in ordinary lines
tive bravery of the Anglo-Saxon and of trade. If a certain enclosure in pas­
Celtic races.
After a warm discussion, ture grass causes a given number of
in which history was largely drawn steers to gain a specified number of"
upon, and much [wintering exchanged, I hundrrd pounds during the season, as
shown by the scales, then it is not diffi­
said:
“ ‘Look here. Barney, we can test the cult to show by the figures what the In­
thing right here.
You are an Irishman come will be from the gross gain. If
I am a Yankee.
Now I will engage to farmers would adopt the plan of doing
_________
___ _ ______
do something
here,this moment,__________
that youJ , this, many of them would see the mag- |
willaot dare to do.’
"
J
nimde of the mistake made in keeping •
•••Go »bnd'’ rttoraed bo
: oattto that bring only Ih™. or tear oral. (
and the boys crowded aronnd to Me the - pound.iu place of snob aa bring six

hm.
1
a large nil, from mr oo«
rad doliberMel/Srint it throng the
lobe of my ear. pulled It through ro tl» ■
bead rad then drew It out II hurt'
kindly master.
This speck* of aelf-as- dreadfully, but I never winced.
•■ 'There Barry.’ .aid I. handing bitu
aertitm was a trait in the character of
the pin, •! dare you to do that?
taMrvuted to tnume, and. when a boy, it
ireXTS
bUlh”r"
wa-* .sv.ggpfted that he might derive
quite equal to the oraaram.
pl-.--ore trr.ro taking a part m the mii»k-aL wrforroan!*--* of the palace orches­
tra. Th- tlu-n heir apparent was de- Itr-bnt I'm not srah a felulod fool.'
“What a shout the boys raised! 1 I
slunk away, fording &gt;rav silly. I bad a

THE CAREFUL MAN IS EVER ON THE ALERT
to take advantage of favorable opportunities.

We are thankful for the liberal patronage given uh in the
past under the old credit system and solicit its continuance
under the Ready Pay. We know we can be more serviceable
to you in the futme than we could possiblv be in the past.

COME AND SEE FOR YO URSELF.

*ore ear for many days, and firmly re- j fore, that a strict system of aoocmnta is
„ - ------------------- resolved never again to outbrag an Irish- , necessary on the farm.—National List
with which be ! man.”
Bloch Journal.

Bring lourCuth!

L. J. Wheeler.

Nothing Short of Unmistakable
Benefit*
mifferers could originate and maintain
the reputation which Avers SaiiaaI'.mulla enjoys. It Is a compound of
the best vegetable alteratives, with the
Iodides of Potassium aud Iron.—all
powerful, blood-making. blood-cleansing
and life-sustaining — and is the most
effectual of all* remedies for scrofu­
lous. mercurial, or blood disorder*.
Uniformly successful and certain, it
produces rapid and complete cures of
Scroftila, Sores. Bolls, Humors. Pim­
ples. Eruptions. Skin Diseases and all
disorders arising from impurity of the
Mood.
Jty its invigorating effects it
always relieves and often cures Liver
Complaints. Female Weaknesses and
Irregularities, awl Is a potent renewer
of waning vitality. For purifying the
blood it has no equal. Intones up the
system, restores and preserves the
health, anti imparts vigor and energy.
For forty years it has been In extensive
use, and is to-day the most available
medicine for the suffering sick.
For sile by all druggists.

HEKE WE ARE AG AIK!
------ WITH A FULL STOCK OF---------

Buggies
Wagons
OUR LINE BUGGIES
EMBRACE S---

l-’liaetons

White Chappel and Coal Boxes, hong with Elliptic Springs.
Two and Three Spring Democrats.
UR WORK IS ALL DONE UPON HONOR. BUGGIES
bcin^ uiu'le from bcooncl Growth Hickory.
Our Tops arc lined with All-Wool Indigo-Dyed Goods and
Warranted not to Fade. W. H. Atkisbon, a painter whose
work has never went back on him, has charge of our paint de­
partment, and can be relied on. Bolte, Daeh F*et, Body Loups
and Stays are made from Norway Iron and the entire buggy
ironed in a desirable and superior manner and warranted.

O

PRINCIPAU+LINE
.
’'«*r***MMJ*«rt,K*i&gt;“*•Sew M“,co-

ton. IMU**, Gal-

Nationally rrpulcC *■

to
brio* ta*t
moirawartnmi
—

——
------

AS CITY
A X

.The/noting, wrald rngger a^ ANS
"*&gt; &gt;“-« nerer tested the, difference J*.J*.**
&gt;&gt;J
”P th« outgo and Urn iraome
V AU cooavctloas ms4* ✓VI
&lt;&gt;»*}“‘V«!“««.«£»by rido.
*• ’S?L°,u‘be
equally apt illustraaon in darrying, aa I nmv,
nothing can be eastra than to charge np
,
^MiTra X%;Wte“^'tor''uS (
304 ,r*r*Un« •
amount of batter rad ohei? produred
..

Tterame |a Uwe of alt branches of 1
stock growing and farming, and the
/ouror-J repeJi what ,t Lu urged bo-

Bring 1 our Eggs !

^SCN/wrwrarMSjT^.
-

/.

T. J POTTER.

DOTV’T BUY A.

Until you have thoroughly examined mine. Spokes mu de
from Second Growth Stock and the wagon is made to stand
»k« aroar and ta-FC of OUT Toads.

£3TI HAVE IN STOCK A NUMBER OF^jgl
1?ui-mI

A Bradley’*

LID HOIS, III OHLS ilD CULTIUIOSS,
CIIILLID
Which I will Sell »t Cost to Close out.

�rtjr specimen gf Offit’s (king of

Ordinary people average in catmg
&gt;peat about once a day. While in China
Such instances of extreme avarice are
■hyaldianB were employed at different timra.
the natives subsieL upon vegetable food
very rare among native Americans. The
almost wholly, and the Scotch people Nation Is too weft-fed and well-clothed; From the time of Edward L the penny to *boui Mr. Beach paid hundreds of dollan
: $1.1», IF PAW IN ADVANCX
thrive ilpon oatmeal, tbc English, Ger­ the general habit of life is too prodigal; silver coinage underwent a stwly pro­ '■■r medical tateuhent, with only temporary
cess
at
degradation,
until
in
1797
copper
To Advertisers:
re &lt;rtf fncu bit: agony.
mane and Americans must have ’meat money comas too easily to foster even a
pennies, weighing one ounce avoirdu­
from the lowest to the highest, and the
By the urgent solicitations of hl* friends he
wise economy in the character of Ameri­ pois each, wire first issued by royal
“ I
w - induced to.try Dr.-David Kennedy's “Facirculating tlrfre Irish are endowed with a penalty if they can children.
.
authority.
The
derivation
of
the
name
■do not abstain from It on certain daya,
A certain Major 8—— was wen-known of “shilung is doubtful, but in madioval
as a penance exacted by'thoir church.
to the past generation in tbc Middle time* tha word was always Latinized as
.- luediciue:^. tbc UKh of September far
There is much in habit and in climatic
Stales ’ns a miser of land. He was tolidut, a Roman coin, which was orig­
influences, and though people would
VO iwla^wc as-large as cuuid l»e jms^d
not literally starve on a vegetable diet, •childless, and owned enormous tracts in inally of gold and about seventy grains th -ugh the uatunj channel.
!r &gt; Reach conclude* a long letter tn Dr.
Though the term was wellAD- RATES.
or might indeed become healthier and Pennsylvania, New York and Ohio, in weight.
USE THESE U
which he only improved sufllciently to known in Saxon times it was only in use Ke &gt;«iy by saying: “Il will always afford me
hardier'whcn accustomed to It, there is
Henry V1L, who was the pie «ure to recommend the • Favorite Remedy'
a strong desire among all civiliaed enable him to pay the taxe&gt; on them, in accounts.
to
&gt;'*e who mav be suffenng fn-tn diffieultie»
and to buy more land.
first to introduce the pound in gold, also of . &lt;tners and Bladder, or any -Iorders from
2-fiO |. AGO |
RAO 12*4.00 nations to eat the flesh of animals
His whole life was spent in traveling strack the first shilling in silver in 1504. itn •ire.Mate of the blend." The “Favortc
which are
raised
arid killed for
a.25 f 7.001 13.001 eO-OD
R
inedv
” sold hr a!’ jinir-&gt;sta. The Doctor’s
Gtocbea.
this very purpose. During the very on foot over his possession*, and it was Edward VI. was Cha first to introduce sil­ o' ly nddreaa Is Rondout, New York.
*4.00
his boast that he could walk from the ver crowns, half-crowns and sixpences,
Atochea.
80-00 hot days of summer it m wise to Hudson to the Miami, nnd sleep every and he also reformed the coinage of shil­
"ftOOi
eat lightly of animal food. Fruita, be­
ing then in season, offer a pleasant sub­ night on his own ground. On these lings, which his father had greatly de­
In 1316 the great reooiuage
stitute and the system is better to be journeys he begged his food from his based.
kept on a light diet; but the autumn, tenants, and wore the same suit of commenced, aud by 1819 upwards of
spring and winter Seasons demand it, clothes, until it literally dropped off of 60,000,000 shilling* and 30.0U0.000 six­
pences were struck. The pound weight
OIUNO HTRONG,
and it is much more provocative of good him. rotten with filth and age.
•
Editor and Proprietor.
Nothing could induce him to sell or a” silver originally corresponded with
health and digestion than sweets and
psatry, especially if cooked as meats ore give away a foot of land. - At last the the money pound of account, there be­
cooked in England, with all the juices old man waa missed, and after a couple ing in it 240 dwts. No gold currency
in them, a plain solid method which does of months his body was found in a for­ eusted in this country until nearly two
not find favor in the land of small fancy est on the Alleghany Mountains, where, centuries after , the Norman Conquest,
•
(THE HEALTH BRINGEK.}
roasts and dry broils. We hkve not in­ having been taken ill on one of his jour­ the first gold coin struck having been a
VILLAGE OFFICERS.
LONG KNOWN AS
vented a single name for any of our neys, he had crept to die. Six feet of gold penny, in the year 1259, which
meats either, but borrow from the Scotch ground was given to .him for a grave, Henry IH. ordered to be current for PENGELLPS WOMANS FRIEND
or English. The French are like our­ and that, by a strange chance, as if in twenty pence. In 1343 another attempt
selves in making up small, fussy dishes. derision of the old man's folly, belonged to introduce a gold coinage was made, Ever}- mother of daughters should
gold florins of six shillings, and half and
.
• ’
'
A family roast of beef as sold in our to another man.
know about it—because it brings
_______ H. A. Barber, F. T. Boise. H. W.
markete would give an Englishman a
The folly of these two men is evident acarter florins being then issued, but
health
Demaray, H. R. Dickinson, H. M. Lee and famine. Two whole sirloins roasted to the dullest of us. Their lives to the
jey were almost at once called in.
and brought to ’able . undivided used to very hour of death were spent in dis­ They were succeeded by the noble, and
be a common dish in England, where it comfort and want, that they might ac­ in the nugn of Edward IV the angel,
is called a bacon of beet It is still a cumulate riches which tiiey knew they each' being originally current for six
owing to i'aiofui. Scanty, or Profuse Periods.
shillings eight pence.
In 1489 the sov­
great festival dish. Charles IL is said must leave behind them.*
*PT1STCHURCR. Rrv. K R Moody. Putor. to have knighted a loin of beef he was
But are we any wiser? How many of ereign. eouivaient to twenty shillings,
feasted on. and history commemorates us are strivin" only togain the property, was coined, the name being derived from
it in this epigram:
■
fame or sociiu position which we must the representation on the obverse of the
“ Ouroecnnd Charles of fame facoto,
leave behind us? What goods have we sovereign seated. With various changes
Oti loin of meat did dliv;
in quality and value the sovereign or
Ai
to make comfortable and happy that
Ho held his sword pleased o’er tho moat—
Rise up thou famed Sir Loin."
life beyond the grave? Which of all pound remained in currency until after
That would seem a fair explanation the things we prize and hoard here, will the Restoration, when the piece obtained
of the value of the sirloin as well as of be of any more use to us nn hour after the name of guinea, from the gold of
rlUl itr. ottondeat Uleerution
VY-LODGE NO- 87, K. of P.. meets at It*
which they were made having been
Coptic Hal), -Nashville, Michigan, every the origin of its name. There is a say­ death, than were the gold or land to
Friday evening, for the encouragement and ing, “Livingoh short commons.” which these two dying misers?— Youth'a Com­ brought: from Guinea by the Africa!*
Company, and their value wad enhanced
support of ail worthy, true, steadfast mid hon­ had its being in the days when the col­ panion.
orable Brother KnigtiU.
to twenty-one shillings.
The present
lege boys had their meals furnished to
L. E. Lsstz, K. K. S. Oaxo Stmoso.C. C.
sovereign dates from July 1, 1817. when
them in the college halls; there were
Naming a Baby.
it was made by proclamation based upon
“boiling days.” and “roasting days”
oJU-r chongo, or front any of too tm-gulanUca at.
iriisccllaneowi &lt; arils.
There was a colored woman at the Act of Parliament, the sole standard
and the method of living was called “in
commons.” That all old dishes are.not Detroit &amp; Milwaukee Railwnv depot measure of value and legal tender for
TIT H. Y*OUNG, M. D. Office cast aide of
with
a
baby
about
one
year
olcl
in
her
-payment
without
*
any
limitation
of
All those, and many other dlstreielng ecmVV . Mum St., Nashville. Office hours from to be recommended might be inferred ,----------------_ and a smart Aleck who was waiU amount—London Post.
from the fact given us in history that I ____
arms,
the butter of the commons was so bad ing for a train lounged up to her and
BeheAded
for
Falling
In
Lore.
inquired:
H GRIRWOLD. M b............ ^Abir that the fanners would not' use it to
“Is tiiat your baby?”
• Ptivik-ixu outl Siirgr&lt;in. UlUce sail re»- grease their wagon wheels. Broiled nnd
Among the Chinese students who came
tdomv oppuaiu the W»l&lt;v&gt;u House. Prompt fried dishes were almost unknown in
“1 reckon’tie,” she answered.
to this country to obtain an education
•• Is it the only one you’ve got?”
olden days. Everything was cooked on
were two bright boys named Chin Chin
“Yes, sah.”
a spit, and a celebrated French lord had
Yatch and Chin Chin Chan, who came
A. FOOTS PHYSICIAN A BURGEON
“ Have you named it yet?”
• Suctasur to Dr. Wakluun. Office nnd a spit that turned 130 different roasts at
to this city. They were brothers, and
“Not ’zactly.”
na.denee al Dr. Wickham's late office­ once, so that as beef came down, veni­
• I never named a baby in my life," entered the Hopkins Grammar School,
Prompt attention to calls night or day.
son went up. and a leg of mutton chased
IL PENGELLY, M. D.,
where they made good progress in pre­
a fowl a la Flamande, and so on. A dog continued Aleck, "ami I wondcr if you
KALAMAZOO. MIC
paration for Yale College. While id this (.Soil try I'rugyuu.)
T\R C. W. GOUCHER. Electic Physician and was used to turn these spits, on the would’ ’. take a dollar and allow me to city tiiey boarded in the family of Mr.
A ’ Surgeon, is prepared to answer all caiis same principle that he now does the name this one?”
Vester, No. 69 Kensington Street When
that may lie made tor hie service*. Office and churning for families, nnd usually tho
•• I dunno. sail.”
•• Well. I’ll give you a dollar if you’ll the students in this country were recalled
piece of meat ho turned was several
by the orders of the Chinese Government
\VM PARMENTER, M D. Offlre over times his own wqighL To illustrate call him Beelzebub. What, do you say?”
last May the two brothers left for Hart­
1 couldn't ’member dutname ”
V ’ Hull'* Drug atore, Vermontville, Mich.
the difference between the French
—
FOB
•
ford. where they learned the telegraph
••
Well,
suppose
you
call
him
Nico
­
and English method of cooking, an
business, and later on returned to China.
HAR- H BRADY. Lawyer, Circuit Court
given
of
a
French demus?”
CotnmtMkmer, Beal E«ute and ins-irance anecdote is
During their residence on Kensington
••
De
ole
man
wouldn
’
t
like
dat,
I
officer
who
laid
a
wager
with
some
AfL Prompt attention given to al],business
Street Chan became interested in a young
entrusted to my care Conveyancing a special­ friends that a soldier of his company ’spects.”
LIVER AND BOWELS.
" Now I have it! Call him Satellite?’ lady named Sherman, living near by.
ty. Office opposite Union Home.
would eat a whole calf at one meal.
Tins fancy was strongly opposed on the
She shook her head.
The day and hour came and the service
part
of
Miss
Sherman
’
s
friends,
but
LIEBHAUSER, Mercban’ Tailor and dcal- was laid. The cook was an. artist, and
“ You know what a satellite is, don’t
Chan’s attentions were continued, and
• CL in Ready Made Clothing. See me
you?”
THOUSANDS OF CASES
before* you purehaae clothing. Fite guar­ •erred up the whole calf in various small ' “’Deed I do. sah.”
were only interrupted by the departure
highly -seasoned dishes of the most deli­
anteed.
of the young Celestial. The acuuaintcious’ flavors. The soldier ate with a
“Oh, you do. What is it?”
ONAH B- RAfiEY, Exprew and Drayman­ light hpart; dish after dish vanished and
“It am a man who checks his brains ance was kept alive, however, ana Chan
PERFECTLY CURED.
Quods and Baggage carried to any place In
he talked gaily while his bheker was de­ an’ carries his clotlies in hLs head when has corresponded with the lady ever
lighted, but when inorc than half the he trabbles on de railroad!” she re­ since. The principal reason for recall­
iram r dickinson, manufacturer of'
dishes were eaten, he laid his knife and plied. as she boosted the baby to her ing the Chinese students was the fear, on
the part of the authorities, that they were
and dealer tn Hard Wood Lumber. Build­ fork down to the dismay of the officer shoulder.
tag Materia] aapedaltv. Caab paid for log*. Mil)
It wasn’t three seconds before she had becoming thoroughly Americanized, and i
and yard on Sherman BL, al M. C. R.R crooalng. and the delight of the other party. But j
he soon routed his opponents. Smiling ! all that corner to herself, and she that they would marry American wives.
TAMES FLEMING, practical Jeweler and good humoredly he looked at the van- seemed greatly puzzled over the sudden They were hero at Government expense,
CT Watch-maker. Clock*. Watches, Silver ano
disappearance of the group.—Detroit the object being to have them return to
Plated Ware, Jewelry and Optica) Goods. Ruck­ ous dishes left and said: \“ Mon Capitheir native country with power to intro­
ford Watches a specialty. RcpalringandEngrav- tainc, I am still hungry, these entre- Free Press.
duce American civilization. Advices re­
mente are delicious, but if I eat any
tar done in a workmanlike manner.
ceived here state that Chan's persistence
more of these seductive dishes. I shall
*■
The Farm-Yard.
■
in his devotion to Miss Sherman coining
have no appetite for the calf.”
The
/\bNQ STRONG, plait
to the knowledge of the Chinese authori­
historian
adds:
“
In
England
the
un
­
As
the
frost
leaves
the
ground
in
the
VHfTIib beat facilities
fortunate man would have sat down to spring there is a special reason why in­ ties, the young man was condemned to
' the same Quantity in loins and fillets, telligent farmers should actively engage death, and, according to Chinese cus­
and would have either broken down be­ in cleaning up their premises. There is toms, was beheaded in Hong Kong.
Another instance, showing the narrow­
fore those mountains of solid flesh or always at this time of the year more or
SPRING MEDICINE.
ACOB O8MUN, Livervma.t, born near Wol­• died of indigestion.”
less decaying matter about the barns ness of the policy of the Chinese Govern­
•
cott House. First class turnouts at reason­
ment,
is the fact that a young Chinaman
and
out-houses
of
every
farm,
and
to
able rates. Special raU-s to commercial men. But the English get immense satis­
Funeral and weding parties furnished with car faction out of their “solid flesh” roasts, prevent malaria and disease in the fam­ nuw living in the family of the late Dr.
ily or among herds and flocks theue Bacon, having become converted to
riages on eLort notice.
with an accompaniment of good dish
■ gravy and browned potatoes, and they premises should be thoroughly cleaned Christianity, waa advised by the Chinese
would acorn the little “fist roasts6 pending the commencement of actual Commissioner at Hartford to remain in
GET XT OF TOOK DRUGGIST. PB1CE, fl.OS
The use uf disinfectants this country, as his return to his native
which go into an American family of field work.
. wills mciucosox .c..,rT.,s
rvrnis.-r.dtbB dry post-paid. 1 BraiXUHOS, VT.
?igirt or ten members for a dinner often prevents groat loss, for upon the country would be the signal for his death.
farm,
as
in
the
crowded
city,
there
is
He
therefore
remains
in
this
country
and
course. “Joints” are almost unknown
more or less necessity for their use. will study for the ministry. One of the
PHAM-W- DEMARAT, Dealer tn Watch**, here, but there they have a national The boys and girls can be busied in as­ latest labors of Dr. Bacon was in arrang­
Oocka, fine Jewelnr and 8llT«nrare. Being; reputation. It is the cooking that has
WHIT WILL THE WEATHER BE TO-MORROW T
I made tho roast beef and the London sisting in gathering and burning the ac­ ing for the young man’s education.—
&gt; chops famous, as well as the quality of cumulated rubbish of the winter, and Aew Zfacen Cor. N. Y. Tima.
Pool's SI6HIL SERVICE MBOIETKB
the highly-bred sheep and oxen of Dcv- there is no farmer, be he never so care­
ful,
who
will
not
find
more
or
less
of
- onshire and Yorkshire and Lancashire,
W. NIBKERN, Attorney and Counsellorr
this kind of work to do. Nothing more
Pork
is
not
a
classic
or
historic
dish,
.al Law, practices tn all State Court*. Col“Hog guessing” has boon regarded as
clearly indicates thrift and carefulness
although thejuxurious Greeks and Ro­
tecUoM promptly attended to. Office r over
than a farm where all the tools, machin­ an amusment of the borders of civiliza­
mans ate roasted pig which was stuffed
ery aud fences are systematically cared tion, or of those rude and primitive times
■ with spiced thrushes and swans' eggs.
for. The sight of a farm-yard strewn
The Scotch despised it until very re­
with pieces of board, broken crockery,
cently, but the Germans are foqd of iL
old tin cans and other rubbish, is at cnee among the most favorite of popular
HOMCEO PATIHC
The real pork eaten have a prejudice
pleasures. But that busy and bswilrepulsive and a sure sign of neglect*
against little sucking pigs for food, but
Jfc—*- -- ----------- 'illy if it is while a clean, tidy yard and surroundhe turns the musty files of the New York
:-**A young
papers of the . last Quarter of the nine­
moon old. to use the resources given him, and to
and tender
teenth century, will learn with curiosity
make his home pleasant and agreeable.
guiltless as yet of the sty, a weakling,
Cleanliness, it is said, is next to godli­ that among the incidents of the celebra­
a flower!” Roast pig has age to recom­
ness, and the truth of the axiom can be tion of Christmas was “guessing” at the
yyOLCOTT HOLME,
mend it in theory at least, and is thio
weight of a notable pig in a suburban
embalmed in the’ “Comedy of Errors:”
town; that the affair was not oantribuNaahvlUe Michigan.
ted for the entertainment of the ‘peaaA, 8. Footf., Prpprietor.-

t.buded
a8*yta&lt;.

’=
KA IJ D

G RAN D

pl VI MON.

EABTWAHl ~

’ •

~

STATIONS

Gr’d Rapid*.
Haratnotid
Middled.
Uas-.inrs,..
Nashville..
VMaroutvll
Charlotte .
Eaton Ran

Detroit.

ttSS?

WESTWARD.
STATIONS.

H1\m Junct^o
Eaton KapidkCharlotte..........
Vermontville,.

Hashvilk girrrtonj.

MWdleviile....
Hammond.......
Grand Raphia,

H. II. LEDYARD.

hkows

TO GIRLS

On*IPaoaoadTicket AcentXhlo«»

Ttf YOUNG LADIES

IRON

TO OVER-WORKED WOMEN

I

,

: ■

tea rape

To Woman Advanced in Life

W
L

KIDNEY-WORT

THE GREAT CURE
RHEUMATISM

C

.

|

BITTERS
BROWN'S IRON BITTERS aro

requiring a complete tonic; espe­
cially I ndlgestion. Dyspepsia, Inter­
mittent Fevers, Want of Appetite,
etc.. Knrichce the blood, strength­
ens the muscIcH, nnd gives new
life to the nerves. Acts Like a
charm on the digestive organs,
removing all.dyspeptic symptoms,
such as tasting the food, Belching,
Heat in the Stomach, Heartburn,
etc. The only Iron Preparation
flint will not blacken the teeth or
give headache. Sold by all Drug­
gists at $1.00 a bottle.
BROWN CHEMICAL CO.
Baltimore, Md.

S

J

KIDNEY-WORT

H

; KIDNEY-WOR

J

NEY-WORT

BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.

Benson ’$
Capcine
-AWARDED

6

Porous
Plaster.
-MEDALS.-

The Bert Known Remedyjbr

Backache or Lame Back.
Rheumatism or Lamo Joints.
Cramps or Sprains.,
’
Neuroltzla or Kidnoy Disoason.
Lumbago, Sevsrs Aches or Pnfris
Female Weakness.

P

Physician and Surgeon.

g *. BUSH,

BOOT AND SHOE IAIEK,
■AaariixB.

RATHBUN BBVBB,

—Like flakes of snow that foil unper­
ceived upon the earth, the seemingly
driven of fast horses, bankers and brokunimportant events of life succeed one
—Detroit Poti and Tribune.
' j--**—
-v---------------- -------------- -K m our hoblU lorSwxl. Noduri.
a P°bn° ^omUon;
flalrA that
»o “any persons who were no
flake
that ta
is aAHwi
added to the nlta
pile
Two lifers.
“gueMera,” and did not even sm the
a sensible change: no “*—
pig, were Interested in the sport that a
creates, however it may
report of it was thought to be worthy rd
as much sjmcc as is often given to aa was called at midnight to make a will
important measure of statesmanship.
We
net
what
—A tablet in memory of tha late Rev.
-.do
__ __
- know
.,
L “the future hi*,
Alexander H. Vinton. D. D., has been
torian” will make of it, because we do
hovel, without a tire,
his wife beside him.

.• ■6Ser ,JMd 0116 thousand five hundred
dollars in four small bags, and six hun­
dred dollars in gold in his pockets,
which he liad carried so long that they
were black and greasy. Gold was also
found secreted ia iron pots and tea-pots

to 1858.

a man fortunate who

her huebaad wm, wl her luMbaadww, H.
bi. wUl bw been oonU
out the «oor with Mm.
I Maoe be wedded Mn. Bafpka.

They P—lUvelyCwv.

aumosss^

p-ilm 'Jt Bens other pixsUr laving
wor
8 EAB URYAJOHNS
■ Mt/'KR kKM$!»Y AT I.AST.

A EFAD'S Mufatad CORN sod BUNION

NO PATENT NO PAY

Finns

mu

�FEED FOR STOCK.
He admitted

tba lives of William H. Vanderbilt and Cvn»
W. PW4.
---------through

•in and ou the Co

it to Mr. •topherd because of the probability
that the subject would come up for Coogree-

CONGRESSIONAL.

FOREIGN.

•c, probably, km of life was pr»-

Introduced a Mil in rhe Senate
Five hcxtiker White Mountain Apeches
had broken out from Ban Carina Haaervatlon,
on the 29th ult., and were headtx! for tile Gila
Blver.

20th ulL set aside the verdict of 8100,000 ren
dered in the case of Ballet Kilbourne, on the

r- 2S"V“£

mers entreated the House not to disregard the
decision ef the Hupreme Court of Mla«hah«pl.
A measagr from the President wM read, rvclt-

u also to reduce tho hospital tax to forty

■ ner

rm

Mil—

Wham

of saveral amendments, th* bill
•
—
Adjourned to
reaotatlon
ar furnish

ueu election case, Mcazra. Hooker and Tuck■upportod the claims of Mr. Chalmers, while
•. Robceon argued against the decision of
Supreme Court of Mississippi. Mr. Calkins
the previous question, but no vote

adopted for aendmg a subcommittee to Now
York to taka testimony in the Peruvian InveattEStion. In the Misaiaslppl contested
election case. Mr. Calkins closed the detiato by
wspeech of two hours. The vote on the mi­
nority resolution tn seat Mr. Chnlmrra st&lt;xal
MN to KS. On the resolution to seat Mr.
Lynch, the colored contestant, the vote stood—
■yea. LX; noca, W. Mr. Lynch wa&lt; escorted to
tWlxr by Mr. Calkins, and sworn in by the
Bpesdter.
Mr. Edmunds, from the Judiciary Commit­
tee, reported iu the Senate on the 1st that uo
additional legidatlon is necessary to empower
the President to suppress lawlessness in tho
Territories: that the President can warn the
cowboys of Arizona to disperse at once, nnd
then use the army to restore order. Mr.
Pendleton called attention tn the necessity
of conferring criminal jurisdiction upon our
Ministers and Consuls, to prevent outrages
on American citizens In the far RasL Mr.
Allison Introduced n bill to provide fnr
the construction ot the Illinois A Mis­
sissippi River Canal ...Dill* were intro­
duced In tbc House for -the appoint­
ment of a special cornmtadon to promote com­
mercial lutervouree with South America: for a
tward of three nrmy engineers to determine
UselM-et route for ship canals between the
lakes uttd thi- Mississippi, and from lbs- Atlantic
to the Gulf of Mexico, across Florida: and to
transfer the Indian lit treat* tn th&lt;&gt; War Depart­
ment. It was agreed that on May %the tnli to
extend the charters of National bonks should lc

DOMESTIC.
A torxado visited Naoeeburg, Ky., on the
. 27th, doing considerable damage. Near Mays­
ville a dozen houses were blown down and a
church unroofed.
A moi at Brookville, Ky.. on the 37lh took
WnKari cud Bradford Courts from jail and
hanged them to a limb of a tree, aide by side,
for shooting James Smith.
At Uvalde, Tex., as the result of a dispute
aliout the pre-emption of an eighty-acre tract,
John Mitchell was tied to a tree on the 27th
aud pipped nearly to death, while his two
aou« were shot dead tn his praacncc by two
nrighb-x-L
Mrs. Isxar Trommon, aged twenty-aevun,
died tn a dentist's chair at Omaha on the 27th
from j*ralyais of the heart, whUc under the
influence of chloroform.
Earlt on the morning of the 28th a tramp,
who had brutally maltreated a four-year-old
girl, was taken by a mob from the jail at Min­
neapolis, Minn., and hung to a tree In front of
the High School in thqt city.
Rix iiAtree (N. Y.) parties bare proposed a
scheme to use Niagara Falls as a generator of
electricity with which to light Chicago and
Two trains on the Boston, Concord A Mon­
treal Railroad collided and telescoped a few
days ago. One conductor was killed and a
brakeman was fatally Injured.
'
A Sax Txaxcisco dentist named E. A.
Wo&lt;xlward recenty fatally shot a woman for
refusing to become his wife, and then killed
himself.
Duiuxo the seven days ended on the 27th ult
there were 110 business failures la the United
States.
Th* boiler of the Dalton Pall Company, at
Elmira, N. Y., exploded ou Che 28th ult, kill­
ing Newell Olney and Frank Baker, proprie­
tors, and injuring several others.
A large body of Apache Indians were raid­
ing along the Glia River, in Arizona, on the
IKth ult Over fifty bodies of murdered whites
had been found and buried.

Michigan Southern Railroad, issued ou the
feth ulL, shows a deficiency of $412,000.
TnEiteemer Marion exploded her boiler
near Klngarille, 8, C, on the IXth ult. There
.were lostjaad four seriously Injured.
The wholesale tolmceo establishment of
J. St briber A Co., of Cleveland, valued at
$100,000, was awept away by fire st an early
T»oar on
28th ult.
Nokthkrx Texas was visited on the 28th
Ult- by a storm centering near Denison and
Sherman. Hall-stones as large aa goose eggs

side twenty days to make further motions.
The will of Miss Sarah Burr, of New York,
which bequeaths nearly $8,000,000 to charita­
ble institutions,' Is tone contested by ten sec­
ond cousins, on tbc ground that she was not
competent to mskc a will.
Ox the 29th ult. 8.979 immigrants landed st
Castle Garden, making a total of 70,000 dur­
ing the mouth. The number landed since Jan­
uary 1 is 136,846.
.
The Secretary of the Treasury issued a call
ou the 1st for the return aud cancellation of
the outstanding six per cents, of 1381, amount­
ing to $11,900,000.
The statement of the average condition of
•the New-York banks for the six days ended on
the 29th ult. *hows a surplus reserve of $10,­
890,000; increase of loans, $1,300,700 ; Increase
of specie, $1,854,9X1; Increase of legal-ten­
ders, $900,000; increase of deposits, $3,890,­
400; decrease of circulation, $424,300.
Ox the 30th' ulL the public parade of the
Brooklyn (N. Y.) Socialists was prevented by
the police of that city.
The Bible stolen from the Senate chamber
at Washington was mysteriously returned on
the evening of the 30th ult.
Ax advance guard of one hundred farmers
from Holland si rived in New York on the 1st,
and would settle on the Missouri River, iu
Dakota .
Tub public-debt statement issued on the 1st
makes the following exhibit: Total debt (in­
cluding Interest of $11,898,370), $1,957,435,­
179. Cash In Treasury, $345,574,580. • Debt,
less amount In Treasury, $1,711,850,399. De­
crease during April, $14,415,828. Decrease
since June 30, 1881, $138,748,218.
Jack, a noted chief of the Utes, was killed
at Fort Washakie on the 1st while attempting
to evade arrest. He had borrowed a gun at a
ranch and shot a Sergeant dead.

•hows that up to April
Stales.

Thia

which is exhibited as having occurred in the
Southern Suteo.

of ths_______
ou tbc 28th ulL, with liabilities of £300,000.
A Majueilles dispatch gt the 2dth u|L
states that a surveying expedition in South
Oran, North Africa, bad teen surprised by
bandits and forty persons had been killed
and forty wuunded.
Da. Lamsox, a nattrt of the United Blates,
and grandson of the Robert Schuyler who,
many years ago, over-issued a large amount
of New Haven Railroad stock, was banged in
London on the 28th ult. for the murder of his
brother-in-law. Up left a confession declar­
ing that be poisoned the young man for whose
murder be suffered.
Covxt Franz dm Champioxt, author, and
member, of the French Academy, died in Paris
on the 30th ulL

Ed, at Moscow, by, electricity was recently
•ubmlltsd to the authorities, who discovered
on tbc 30th ulL -that the Intention was to de­
stroy the structure during the coronation
■ ceremonies.
At Frankford, Ireland, on the 30th ulu a
number of persons whose crime consisted In
the payment of rent were fearfully l&gt;ealen by
a gang of jiatriota, thirty of whom were ar­
rested.
A Moscow dispatch of the 30th ult. states
that tbc Governor-General of that province
had prohibited the expulsion of the Jews.
Axn**r Yovxo, a railway employe at Doncaster, England, was arrested on the 29th ult
for threatening the life of Queen Victoria,
and would be' taken to London.
Nihilist mines were discovered on the 29th
ult. under the Moscow Railroad and beneath
the imperial pavilion at the Moscow exhibltlon building.
Fortt-threr of the Egyptians concerned
in the cqnsplracy against Arabi Bey were on
PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. the 29th ult- sentenced to exile. Several
others would be hanged.
Bom bouses of the Hltnola Legislature have
All the leading London papers on the 29th
passed the bill to cede the Illinois A Michigan
ulL published full biographies of Ralph Waldo
Canal to the General Government, subject to
Emerson, the artlclq^, without exception, ex­
a vote of the people In November next.
pressing sympathetic and affectionate admira­
Mr. Blaise opened his testimony before tion of hia sweetness and dignity of character.
the House Foreign Affairs Committee in
A rew days ago a famous Mexican brigand,
Washington on tbc 27th by sUting that -Mr. named Valentine Mancero, was enticed into
Belmont had made two absolute misquota­ Cclayo ami surrounded by troops. Twentytions. He said that bls examination had been six bullets were found in his corpse.
based upon the assumption that aa Secretary
of 8Ute he had insisted that tlicre should be threatened, Brazilians Laving been maltreat­
no definitive treaty of peace be tween Peru ed in Uruguay, and the Brazilian Govern­
and Chill except after an adjudication of the ment demands satisfaction under threats of
lAindreau claim, and that he (Blaine) invasion.
desired that Mr. Belmont should ctwJonx C. F. Zqellxek, tbc German astrono­
rect this before the investigation ended, mer and natural philosopher, is dead.
or he should not choose to consider
Edward Peters was recently hanged st
Mr. Belmont a gentleman. Mr. Belmont re­ Swcetsburg, Quebec, for torturing and starv­
plied that the construction he had put upon
ing to death an adopted child of seven years.
the dispatches was the correct one, and tqld
Haxlan, the Canadian oarsman, won the
Mr. Blaine that he was a bully and a coward,
$5,000 boat race on the River Thames, in
and he would deal with him In private. Mr.
London, on the 1st. Trickett, the Australian
Blaine said with deliberation •• This man has
athlete, was his opponent. Hanlon's ’ time
disgraced his place. He was put here to In-

moot's power to insult me He may say bully
and coward as much as he pleases. " The ex­
amination then dosed.
Ralph Waldo Emeksox, toe poet and phil­
osopher, died at his home in Concord, Mass.,
on the evening of the 27th, aged seventy-nine

At Nashville, Tenn., the State Republican
Convention met on the 27th, adopted a plat­
form, and renominated Alvin Hawkins for
Governor.
Dr. Haves, of Buffalo, the alleged inventor
of tbc vulcanized rubber used tn dentistry,
died a few days ago. aged seventy-eight years.
Prof. 8. I. Crana, of Chicago, ba* been
called to the chair of Hebrew literature in the
Andover Theological Seminary*
A DIVORCE lias been granted tq John B.
Clark, Jr., Member of Congress from Missouri,
for incouipaUblllty of temper.
A Stat* Convention will be held tn Topeka,
Kansas, on the 28th of June, to nominate a
Congreasman-at-Large from that State, the
lA'gislaturc not having been called together
to redlstrlct the Stale.
Refbesextativb liquor-dealers from ten
counties tn Ohio met ou tbc 28th nit- and
organized a 8Ute Protective Association.
Leading citizens of Cincinnati Lad taken
atepa to enforce the Pond and Smith lawn
Ax Anti-Chinese Convention in Son Franlooking to the speedy ejection of the Chinese
from tbc Pacific coast, peaceably or otherwise.
Mas. Scoville, the sister of Guitean, was
in New York on the 2Stb ult She stated that
the main object of her visit was to arrange
for a lecture tour, but the outlook wu a rath­
er gloomy one, and it was doubtful if she
would make the venture.

gradnaUng exercises of the artillery school at
Fortress Monrtta ou the 2blh UlL, and General
Hancock presented the diplomas.
Tn* United Stales Senate on *be 98th ult
passed the House AnM-Chiuese Immigratioa
bQl, with but alight amendments. The vote
te the Senate was as followa:

Grents .

character.

THEG ZRyLEJkT SECRET
■SC

-7----- !---- IN BUYING,

Hoar delivered a touching addresa sad Broo•08 Alcott tremblingly read a poem. At the
grave in Sleepy Hollww Cemetery, near that of
Nathaniel Hawthorne, the Enia opal acr-ice

ANALYSIS.
Moisture,.
A&amp;wriM______ B______ ____________

•ubstance,)

FOR THE LEAST MONEY.

BouMlngault, the
ricultural tbcaui " /’estimates the nutriment of
100 lbs. bf Ltnae Meal aa equal to 300 lbs.
of Oats, or to818
of Wheat Bran.
For beef cattle ft has fattening properties
»Z- All our purchases are made with the cash and by atriyt attention to «he wants of our which cazhiot be found in say other feed, the
liecfbcf nJ not only more tender and juicy, and
customers we expect to reap sucres-.
Nashville, Apr. 80,1S82.
of a much finer qualify ♦han when fat totied ou
other feed, but they are more quickly prepared
. Thc exceI,«“'e *nd superiority of
the English Beef and Mutton, aa well aa the
fine appearance of their boraea, is mainly due
to the liberal use of Linaeed Meal. It is with­
out Question the moat Concentrated feed in use,
and has been to demonstrated by the moat dis­
tinguished
- -------- .
of this Mea
or corn, &amp; Iba, of hay. 8 lbs. of wheat bam, 20
'ALL ON-------Iba. of potatoes, or 30 Iba. of turnips or carrots.
It is without doubt the lx«st and cheapest
*feed
-nt In
in th.
the market. For sale at
•,

Remember that we have no old, shop-worn and unseasonable goods, but that everything is

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN.

.882

F. T. BOISE,

THE NASHVILLE MILLS.
4X0. M. ROE.
J EE A I&gt;1 RKEE,

KALAMAZOO

FOR--------

DKJG8,
BOOKS,
|
JEWELRY,
’
WALL PAPER,
Wl.VDOW SHADES,
j
l Dl'BNTCFFN.

REAL ESTATE AGENTS,
Office on second floor of Buxton’s new brick
NASHVILLE, MICH.

PfiOPRIETARY MEDI0INE8,

Belo* are a frw of oar Bargain io Beal Estate:

PRESCRIPTION K.
RECEIPTS.

Spring-2th Harrow

PAINT AND BRUSH
DEPARTS

(3q Ip
UaiU

kept complete, to meet the demands uf the
people.

p AU/b
I IUYYO,

.

(Buy Genuine Factory Points)
They arc much cheaper anil !&gt;ctter.

■Itb any

Cail and Examine i

Strayer's GRAIN DRILL,

F.T. BOISE.

Lightcs: nnd Strongest Made,

HUBBARD

BUY A FARM’ BUT

80 acres in Maple Grove, 45 cleared, 22 acres
of Wheat, good Orchard, very fair buildings,
good spring near house. Price 3,000. Payments

40 seres, 3 miles from Nashville. Fair bouse
Wiard Plows,
I aud liaru. Nearly all improved. Price $1,000.
n
XU n
I rti Ml
I rvi
' 40 acres, 3^ miles from'Nashville. If sold
South Bend Chilled Plows,’ 25 acres. In the village of Nashville. „Must

-------- MY---------

Gleaner &amp; Binder
Improved 1882.

Pabxkll, DU ion and O’Kelly, the three
imprisoned Members of Parliament, were re­
leased frodi KUmalnbam Jail on the 2d.
|
A letter was received In Washington on I
DAriVIHrL1
the 2d from Captain Howgate, begging for vrttUUUlKLLb,

be eokl for what it will bring on account of
poor health of present owner.
50^^ 4 miles from Nashville; nearly all
; fair buildings and In all a good bar*Improvetl
mP
~in. Price $’ COO; part down.
House and Lot, on Phlllipe street; the best
bargains in town. Price $350.
House and Lot, on State gtrreL Price $250,
half down down.
Good House and four acres of Land ou Fran­
ces Street. Price $450.
House and lot on State Sl, house new:
cellar and plenty of gtxsl water. For m_
8TWFor will exchange for farm property near
Nashville or Hastings.
; 80 acre.*. 11. miles from NashvUic on th« best
road leaving the village; all improver!except 8
acres; the.remaining 8 acres good timber; Ir
well watered by n never-falling spring. Good,
young orchard; buildings fair; IS acres of
wheat on the ground; present owner engaged
In other business and will sell for $2,600, $1,­
000 down, balance ou long time.
Vacant lol on Philips St. Price $120 If sold
soon.
LEE A DURKEE.

THE CROWN

Doors and Blinds

Paints, Oils, Varnishes,
BI ILBERS II AKIIWAKF.,

a prisoner than when in the District Jail, and
that if a date for hia trial was fixed he would
be on hand to make a defense.
a
Tu* rqfcfreinent of the Right Hon. W. E.
Forster from the Irish Secretaryship was an­
nounce'1 tn Parliament on the 2d.
In the flrat prosecution under the Smith
Liquor law in Cincinnati, tho jury on the fid
rendered a verdict of guilty.
The Washington Street Baptist Church at

3d. Late In the afternoon five persons were
standing Inside the scorched walls when a
chimney and a mass of brick fell over to­
ward them, inflicting fatal injuries. The par­
ty comprised three married Indies, • man and

At St. Petersburg on the 2d four noblemen
found guilty of embezzling money In the Gov­
ernment Laud Office were degraded from their
rank and exiled.
T. P. O’Ooxxo*. M. P., left New York on
the fid for home, claiming that his meetings
in America had added $50,000 to the funds of
the Irish Land League.
ASa^ta Fe dispatch of the 2d states that
• column of Mexican troops, under command
of Colonel Garda, met the Indiana whom
Colonel Forsyth is in pursuit of and killed
seventy-eight of them, also taking thirtythree prisoners.

PROVISIONS,
| CROCKERY,

DETROIT STOVfe GO’S. STOVES
Domestic &amp; New Home

GLASSWARE,

HANGING LAMPS,
And everything kept In a first class stock of

SEWING MACHINES
When in need of the Best

Grades of Hardware and Ma­

this kind, is at

chinery.

Call and see me.

C. W. SMITH’S FRANK C. BOISE.
JJ

K. IMCKIXSON Jt CO.

^AGONS

WAGONS.

---- NEW----

Cin(IIRII)lllilllLw"o&lt;”'9'

THE CROWN SEWING MACHINE.

. *d~Thd “Crown” comes Into the market
he tast of all the machines, but has sprung to
front rank at once from the fact that It has ta­
ken the good features in all other machines
and put them in one grand combination, mak­
ing this the Handsomest, Largest, Most Silent
and Lightest Running machine yet offered. All
the ‘■points’’ that the expcriecc of twenty years

work has proved to be absolutely good are to be
found only In the “Crown.” Othcv machines
may have one, two or three of these ‘ roluU”
but ndne but the “Crown” has them all.
Every device that la really desirable tn other
machines will be found tn the “Crown.” Ad­
vantage has been taken of the experiments and
experience with all kinds of machine* ever In­
vented, and the “Crown" is* perfect embodi­
ment of everyting good in them

Made of

on the 1st. Chicago was defeated by Buffalo
by 7 to 5; lYovidcncu beat Troy by 9 to 8;
Wbreeetcr punished Boston by 5 to 4. and
Detroit vanquished deveiand by the same

Ralph Wsldn Emerson took pl4cc at Concord,
Mesa., on the 3Qth ult. At the house Rev.
Dr. Furaasa, of Philadelphia, made a few ro-

To BL Y'-------------

Mineral Matter (Ash.)....:----- : K87

READY FOR BUSINESS

Every day In the year—Sundays excepted.

--------

VSashixgvox dispatch of the 29th ult.
states that Guitean stillcoolly claimed that the
Lotti would take care of him. From the sale of
autographs and photographs be tiad given
Mr. Scoville $300, sad bad paid a like amount
for bm-inghls boMt printed.

Pennsylvania and Canada,
■ —•

'albumen, etc., remains. ’ By rw^Hnrl
following analysis with the analysis of Meal
un-sslmr. it wifi be found that nnr w..i *

Goods,

THE PLACE TO BUY Sash,

LATER NEWE.

wlr

D4aire to announce that they have rested A. C- Buxton s new and elegant bri-k store and are
“
atocking the iuuo with a complete Hue of
aa
'
-

A Loxixvx dispatch of the let states that
a battle had taken place between native*, of
New Calabar and followers of Oko Jumbo, in
South Africa, in which 2,000 persons were
slaughtered.
Heavt tnnw stonna and an earthquake
shock were reported from the Alpine regions
of Switzerland on the 1st.

sentatives, after investigating the question of
lapsed land grants, decided on the 3d that the
chart era of the Northern Pacific and the At­
lantic A Pacific were norognrlei table.

Tn*** negroes at GreenrUle, a C., con-

Tw* Deaver A NewOrteoas Road on tbo

A raw days ago five convicts in the Quebec
provincial penitentiary, while working out­
side the walls, tied the Warden and started
off. He released one hand and alarmed tho
guards with hia revolver, but he was fatally
shot in the struggle which ensued.
Tmk Grand Trunk Railroad aud tbo Great
Western Railroad, of Canada, have “been con­
solidated.

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN

lx the United States Senate on the 3d the
bill to give twelve condemned cannon to the
Morton Monumental Association of Indiana
Judiciary Committee the bill removing the
disqualification of ex-Confederates for army

CUSTOM GRINDING!

a
Ml
Amendment

proposing
prohibit-

A. H. WINN, Dentist.

----------

FLOUR. MEAL AND MILL FFED
.

Our Graham Flour
bam
introduced
• Confutations!

Eipenenced, Retable, and Responsible.

READY FOR SALE! BEST SET BUM TEETH $10.00

Satisfaction guaranteed.

Kept constantly on hand.

E. R. WHITE.

The Beat, and mo«t
Thoroughly Seasoned nateriat
or any In Barry Co.,
Are now

BLACKSMITHING!
BLACKSMITHII61
BUCKSMITHiNO!
*----- DOKKBT—
»

'

la eooceeded to be the best. Try it.

II. BENNETT

it a liberal patronage from the farmers at this

BU8GV &amp; WAGON REPAIRING

Teeth Extracted Wifhout Pain.

Office Open Day &amp; Evening.
a. n. wixx
JOSEPH COLE,

AT THE NEW

MEAT MARKET!
Fresh, Salt and Smoked

Hewitt (Ala) spoke In favor of the measure.

IfOls rw reflrmsd —ijgt pf depot.

H. K.DICKIM

* CO.

Done on demand.

Jos.

M. wooto

Live and Let Live.

�AN ACfi

D.S.
SATURDAY

-

■ -

Machinery

Orwon Dufibkm, formerly one of the
old land-marks of Maple Grove- bat

A few weeks ago I received a com
mnnieatioo from D/C. &amp; H.C. Reed
Ac Co., in regard to certain *uita un­
decided as yet in the court#, regtriling
Chicago A Northwestern, the Chicago, Milwau­
the sale and*.use of Spting Tooth
Tbeprospect* are good forfrnit with kee A St. Paul and several other lines of roads
The Common Council of Eaton Rapid* fixed
tbo»e that have fruit tree*, nnd have
Harrows, and with the above beading,
saloon keeper# bonds at 86.CO1, the highest 11mtaken care of them, which seems to J* have since pierced the Interior of the territory,
I had the same pabli*hrd in TRc Jm
a difficult task with mhry here. The and are leading,not following,as in the paat,the
for the benefit, of thox- intending to
Dead) bloom is past, apd almost every immigrant. But I am aware that my space in'
...
— —* - ■
■ -.***
.. .. 1 the history of the place, there is not a saloon
buy a Spring Tooth Harrow, thi#, dr in
little tree is loaded With the forming .«
fruit. Apples ale nearly out of bloom;
coming eenaonh.. They claim to own
cberriM are in full bloom, and seem to county and the towns lately visited.
Burglar* entered the hardware store of 8. B.
all the cxiiting patentoand any made,x
to. do well here. Pears and plums ore
Brown County lies In the northern part Granger A Co..Grand Ledge, Monday night,
sold dr used, I am informed, 1ft an in­
reliable for Uris
of the southern half- of the territory and and nude on unsuceCMful attempt to blow open
fringement on the original which they
said to do exceedingly
trees are short live* apple* are injur­ alxjut 100 miles west from the Minnesota stole one &lt;rf the aafea by drilling a hole through the'
own, and any person selling or using
ed in dry eeawins by three kinds of line. It Is SO miles from north to south and 3C top and filling It with powder. The isfe did not
an infrinitament i« liable t« prosecu­
borers, to wit; root, body, and twig miles from east to west. Il Is Uaversed by the open, but the explosion burned the book* barltion. In the following week a edition
bores. The Hr»t vems to be the com­
ly
and
scattered
the
filling
of
.the
walla
of
the
James river which expands into wo consider­
mon borer of Michigan; the second
oCTheNews a letter, appeared con­
safe. There were two aaf« in the rtore. The
•eema |o be a small many legged worm, able lakes and with a little expense can be
Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago,
tradicting the statement I made, but
other
was
wrapped
with
clothing
of
every
demade
navigable
for
about
miles
above
Col
­
which works mostly on the surface of
Backache, Soreness of the Chest, Messrs. D. C. 6c II. C- Reed de Co­
the body under the baric: the third, or umbia- Without doubt the James Rivef Val­ aerfption found in the store, but no attempt
Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Ssrellin a letter under date df Apr. 17th,fully
butt named, is a small spider and seems ley is among the richest sections of Dakota. was made to blow it, the Aral one being unsueings and Sprains, Bums and
to attack the new growth, just at its Tbc soli Is a rich vegetable mould,from 13 inch­ cMaful/ This is the second time within two
endorses my publication and its con­
commencement by entering into th e es to four feetdeepand for the &amp;o»t part a day years this store bos t&gt;eeu raided. ’
Scalds, General Bodily
tents iu the strongest ternnqleaving the
heart of the twig, then eating its way
A
good
joke
on
some
of
the
people
near
Pains,
matter beyond doubt that purrhnMrs
downward to
the
last
years subsoil. One year ago there were only about Hoytville: One evening last week there was to
Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted1 of other harrows must look out. Well,
growth. Many of my trees have been 100 population In tbc Co., but to-day It Is esti­
at tacked so so that nearly one half of mated dial there are a.500. There are 14 vH- be a show at the Grange ball and there was a
Feet and Ears, and all other
regarding the validity of the above
protracted
meeting
to
be
held
there
at
tire
same
the last years twig growth is dead, lages, all rapidly building, and some of them
Pains and Aches.
claim I have to say that coming here
otherwise the apple* are doing well, already putting on -airs” and rapidly assuming time. Ttie otiicr hail was the best place for a
an entire stranger, I sold over three
and making a fine show for fruit this the proportion of Michigan's big towns.
show and the Grange hall the best place tor
season. Winter wheat and rye is look­
times as many harrows hut fall as all
meetings,
so-tbey
changed
halls
and
tho
jfeoplc
Abbenleen is tbc principal town, being locaing well. 'Niat which has not been fed
i others in this town-combined, aud not
. off a way* did not know of the change, and
went
to
Grange
bail
to
sec
the
show'
and
took
one returned or a word ot fault found,
A St. P. raUrouds, and baa a population of
500, all having been built since November seats way back near the stage in order to see
aud this spring have with little effort,
last. The . principle hotel is the Sherman good, and did not know what was up until tire SOLD BY ALL DBUQG1BT3 AND DEALERS
sold eight thus far, and no complaints.
IN MEDICINE.
Houm, a large commodious, three-atory build­
above ground. We are in full blast ing, one that would do credit to many older minister got down to pray. They then left.
Let others report. &gt;Again if a man be­
planting corn at present. Spring wheat town*. A large number of stores, work shops, When be got to preaching there was another
comes thoroughly acquainted with a
wm injured badly by heavy- winds be­
a newspaper and a bank, ore in full blast, the load, went in and took seats and began to look
_ tool and after using the other kinds
fore tit© rain, bnt oats are getting a town is lively in equipping the prairie farmer pretty wild. Says the elder: “my young friends
renders his - opinion in favor of
with
the
necesltie*
for
the
cultivation
HBS.LYDUL
good start.
the one kept, after a .thorough trial
of his broad acres, and lie is moving, if it is tbe show you ore looking after you arc
; it seems to me that to any sane mans
nipldlv to take possession of his claim In tbc wrong ball,” and then they began to
i
mind, who has his own interests al
The t xtreme youth of thia country is especi­ go-—Charlotte Republican.
From Outoudgou.
; Make the following rejuarks from -some
ally manifest to the traveler. In addition to the
of our best and most reliable farmers
Imense unocupied laud that stretches on every
Vernie Andrews sends us a spicy ac­ hand, hr the absence of church building* aud
IT SEEMS
! wotild.be sufticient :
count of hia first experience at mining, school houses, the concotniiaiita of western civ­ a* If it should not require an argument to con­
FARMERS.
ilisation. A* well undertake to build up a town vince people that a second class needle will
which is barred out only ou account of without bread for the people a* a community
°
Wc the undereignt il haring uhi! an&lt;! *ccn in
cause more trouble and more loss of patience
® as# tbc “REED” Spring Tooth Harrow, manuits extreme length. We cannot refrain, without the gospel and the means of education. than any other thing of jta else In tbc world,
fuetur.il by D. C. A fj. C. lU-c.l A Co., of
But to-day there Is only due church build­ for, no matter how good a machine you may
however, from copying the portion ing In Brown Co., and that aL'alho(lc, and but
•j» NalamaziK). and sold by U. L- Glasgow, do
have, you cannot do good work with a poor
„ heartily unite In the following *tatejnent, that
that relates to his experience as cook of a single school house. Without doubt another needle. Therefore, before you condemn your
r- , we believe it to be far superior in strength,
year will find both wall under wav.
.
machine, trv the genuine cold swe-dged needle,
the camp:
•&gt; ^durability and work toany other Spring Tooth
’ Columbia, (be county ecat. Is situated on the kept only by E. R. WHITE, at Kocher BrothAmong the numerous letters that ar­ James River, at the mouth of the Elm, Is not a
J* Harrow yd made, and this i* why:
c
JsE Becaune the C *haj&gt;e of the tooth render*
rived was one that bore bad news, the rallrimd town as yet, but in natural advantages
tj I it much ieM liable to break and save*'expense
cook must leave immediately to attend Is jKMMibly superior to many other sister towns.
BRIGHTS DISEASE, DIABETES.
f of new one*.
the sick bedside of a friend, which There l» a good water jwwer here, the dam al­ Beware of the stuff that pretend* to cure theis
2nd- The tooth coming from the under ride,
caused the question to come up for ilis- ready built, and a flouring mill of ‘-W bbl* ca- disease or other serious Kidney, Urinary or
carries It over obstructions cosily, where others
ta'lng constructed. It is lo l« ready for Liver Diseases, as they only relclvc for a time
euasion : "who can cook.” Now we had pacitv
would catch and strain tx»tli team atn! harrow,
u»c by the first of August. The town has Ih-cii
never hail hny experience in that line regularly laid out, has two hotels, the Cole and make* you ten times worse afterwards, but
and have to tie lifted.
of business, bnt had taken pains to House and the Chicago House, one general rely solelv on Hop Bitters, the only remedy that
3rd. The teeth being fastonol to under iHe
will surcfy and permanently cure you. It des­
give more elasticty and spring to the tod ami
watch the movements of our cook and store and two more nearly completed. It is con­ troy* and removes the cause of disease so ef­
saves wear of frame.
felt sanguine that we could do as well fidently expected that the C- &lt;k N. W. railroad fectually that It never rcturn*4
4th. By reason of sliape of tooth it never
as he, nnd after makfaga few oft-hand­ coiuftany, will extend their line of road from
| dogs.
Chas. Dudky Warner remarked: “Although,
ed shots about cooking for a bakery in Onlwav’across the river to this point and con
5tii. The
1 lie iron
Iron band around the frame make*
i 5th.
Nashville, and the woman who could ncct with the N. P. at Fargo or Jamestown. there are scattered through the land many J&gt;crq E nr. ax U A ■ ■■*&gt; 111 H,Ucl* »tronger «&gt;»l
The N. I’. Co., arc surveying u branch, to be
beat iis making bread, must have known x- the Fergvs Fall* &lt;V Black Hills road sons, 1 am sorry to say, unable to pay tor a
a * Bl'IMirwIwl O from catching on etui
a pretty big wad of hair on the back of extending from Breckenridge and to the newspaper, I have never bean! of anybody un­
VESBTABLB
COMPOTOJ.
)
„
“
0
.S
™ S
her head, we succeeded.in getting Mi Bouri river,near the mouth of the Cheyenne
Is a Positive Cura
ground when other fiarrow « have futlud.
appointed chief cook nnd bottle wash crossing the C. &amp; N. W. nt this point. 11 these able to edit one.”
t
~ ““ROUGH ON IL\TS.'r
, „ .K
,
„
, , ,
.... .
I "lb. In nudity we think It the only Spring
there
er. When the men bad all departed calculations arc well founded, and —
v.» teems
Tooth Harrow that sill stand the test and
for the mine, then we cotnujenc-1 no gu«sl rrasou to doubt them. Columbia, mu*:
The thing desired found at last. Ask Drug­
ltv.«! cure entirely «Lo
tor^Z? Kunalc corn- P'-e the pUTCbaM-r satirfartton.
We have
ed operation
by filling an eight | tn theow tou»rc,be «uc of tbc most imismaut gist lor “Rough on Rats.”
It clears oat rats'
quart Settle, nearly full of.dried apples .
m*u who arc ideuputnt., all ovarian to«bk..toe&gt;ur.&gt;rJaik.a and LTerro■-hun.Ugbly tested it on the roUghe-t ground
mice. roa. lies, fles, bed-bugs. 15c. boxes.
tion. F-U'.ag sod Dtsptacraent., .ad u. cm^mt »»&lt;} and under most unfavorable circumstance*
and placed it ou the Move to sU«. also ।
w)a, the spirit aud growth of Columbia,
!L stands the test, and we would advise any
Yes, we think It would be a good plan Spir-jU WcitaKws, cad u i-.rttrri.HT adapted to the
I °ne desiring a good tool to puntbase no other.**
a kettle of beans. 1 be next in orucr . w|w imve mode large investment* here and arc to surprise your house with one or two coata chaas of
It -!U dl-Qlrs and expt! trmon from the error in | “ is tbc twat and only reliable one In the ntarwas the bread mixing, which was a . improving them, arc Mr. C. B. Peek, formerly ot the Sherwin-William* Paint. For {articu­
stunner. The idea of diving our hands j manager of the G. T. line iu Michigan. Dr. lar* inquire of F. T- Boise.
tuicarlv rta_r»cf dev.Jot mar.!. The u-&gt;«Jtacy to can....
....................
Fredrick Snore,
Wm. W, Matteson.
into the dogh head over heels, as we . Hones tire surgeon In chief of tiw N.P.nillroad.
Jacob Shoup,
John Morgan.
I.»A
XtlMilt illC .Vlttl'RelS.
had often annrt
ween nasty wnmain
women do. wnu
was ! Mr.
Mr. M.
M. DoUglaM
Dough iK the 1.1W tirt!) of DqilglaSS it !
T.
8.
Brice.
.
Jolin
Llnsina,
.......
.s
notary
public
and
surveyor
and
is
I
terrible to think of. We studied over *•,s,lpr *ho »
A. Wallers.
Philip Franck,
of
especial
H&gt;rv!t*e
to
the
iandPookcr,
Mr.
A.
|
Wheat.per
ba
------------------------1
the matter for a few moments aud N. Cole, Deputy Co. Treasurer from Greenville. I Oat*.per bu,..........----------------- -------Wm. tHnatow.
Anthony OstrolL.
jumped to the conclusion that we. Mich.. Mr. &gt; C Ibtige of Pontiac, Mich.. Mr. Corn.per ba.
Geo, J. Kunz,
Flactus rcigener,
would invent a long starring stick to Ball a prominent banker nf Jowa. Mr L. H. ' AMjk*.per ba. &lt;rero.
N. F. Shs-ieon.
use iu the place of our hands,—"that’s TowmmimI of the Miunratwlla Fl&lt;-iriur Mill Co.. '
Now then, gentlemen. I have done
what what we would,” and show the Mr. J. D. Lavin of the .lame* nnd Elm River Uulona,p«rb-i.,
with this published controversv, as I
women of the nineteenth century a I Navigation Co., and many other*. Il I* the buttct. |wr lb....
handle a tool thntis self-sustaining and
purpose of the Navigation Co., to phi a steam­ lard. p»r lb.
trick with a hole in it.
needs no bolstering of continued a&lt;l•
We soon had the desired article all boat upon ti&gt;e river this seasosi and make rc F-»k*. nr dot....
v'ertismg and you only need to try it to
g’llar trip* between Columbia and Grand Rapid*
trimmed and polished and commenced a distance of 65 mile*.
be convinced .
In reality I endeavor
pofTSDu
stirring the flour and humming "Don't
But possibly 1 niu already exceeding my new*to handle just such goods and at as low
cross the sea. Mollie^.to leave us alone J paper limit*. I would not forgeftaowever that
n price as honest goods can be sold, and
forlorn anMreasir—just then we no­ । at Columbia I met •evcral. Micingaq men, uot । toot, body
they are all sold on their merits and if
Mr. Etnniel Cole of
tice! that our apples were going over heretofore mentioned.
not in all respects satisfactory, return
TILE
on the stove, and wo hastily flew to the Lansing, Mr. Andrew Young of Hustings, Mr.
them.
Also in regard to mowers,
rescue, and proceeded to scrape up the Goodell of Carlton. O. B. Huger of Woodbind.
reapers and binders. I am not making
"out pat,n which was a heaping tin pan Mr. Jenny late of Ionia, who have all invested
a venture with some new machine in
In Dakotata bind*- By referring to my watcii
full.
.After setting things to right I find I am L0U0 mile* west of Nasbvuic, lack­
this market aud if my sales are uot up
again we returned to our bread, but ing two minute* of time, and hnveonly reach­
to my anticipations, leave here aud sell
soon had to do away with our former ed the “frontier settlements.'1
'
elsewhere some other Beasou, leaving
theory rolled up our sleeves and dove
Scarcelv HO days pas* after the Government
parties to whom I nifty have sold, to
Survey,
that
every
acre
withln.12
miles
of
the
in and eildvavored to go through with
look after their own repairs or lose the
tho same modus operand! as the nasty raUroad Is taken by decaration of ileutiun of
use of the machine by not being able to
women did.bqt it was just like putting settlement.
get them ; neither am I going into this,
The time is not Jar distant when this vast
our hands into a mortar bed. The more
so if not exactly satwtied with my sales
and harder re tried the worse our prairie wfldcrneb*, *o lately the undisturbed
Take notice that the tbr.e has come when the next year I shall drop machines and not
homes alike of the Sioux and the buffalo, will
.bandsgot stuck up. We endeavored “bud and blossom as the rose” at the bld of civSella the BEST BUGGY on-the GLOBE Narrow Tired Wagon is no longer sought after sell any more dr keep repairs either. I
to use oar right haod to rescue the kit. llxaUon. And yet with all tire natural advanta­
by experienced men. People are continually have a good building ana only for that
for
the
MONEY.
but the.'effort ‘ only.resulted iu both ges and inducement* to “go west.” none need
looking1 forward to better things and they have purpose and I must use it. nnd I keep a
Send for CATALOGUE and TESTI­ found It in the
getting in the same stickifldc condit­ despise “Michigan, my Michigan.”
machine that is universally used and
MONIALS of HUNDREDS of LIVERY­
L. J. Wheeler.
ion. Finally we added another small I 'x
it is housed and clean, antb I will al­
decoction of flour and succeeded.in
MEN who hare used them.
ways be here to furnish any repairs,
getting the "bulge” on it, but before
TONY PASTOR IN TROUBLE.
and the machine is the CHAMPION
we got it thoroughly “mixed.” our at­
and don’t yon forget it. For lightness
Tooy Pastor, of New York, who to now with
tention was again called to the apples
of draught, dnrabilip- and good work
and we got another pan full of increase. hisinitr'.table variety combination, makings maautootared t»y u*. for none are genuine unices
it is still fcbead and is warranted to do
After getting our bread into a suita­ tour of the principal cities of the Union, is reoIt has come Into use whenever It has been as good work as any machine made.
ble conditon and into the oven, we dis­ ofHrcd as tho leading diameter vocalist and var­
tried and tbc narrow tired •’•agon thrown one Ask those who use one and be convinc­
covered that the beans had burned and iety performer of the United States. He owns
side.
ed that it is always reliable. The Har­
heaved them over a large pine log. We and runs a flrot-claas theater on Broadway, New
vester has the Appleby binder same as
then proceeded to get the dishes on the York City, and has gathered about iii’m the
BUY A WIDE TIRE WAGON the McCormick.
the table for dinner and before, that best troupe of variety artists that ctmld be ob­
G- L. GLASGOW.
was accomplished, we got another pan tained. The cosppany has just completed a
Then, and be up with the age. It is easier to
brilliant engagement at the Walnut Street
full of apples, Which made three pans Tbrater,
Philadelphia, aud after the present Bugles, and cars abou.d be used to dullaguish handle with a load.
full more than we put into the kettle. tour they will reappear in Tooy Pastor's own between ■'Columbus Ito»-gies'' and ColumbusQEO. W. FKA.NCIM,
It was something remarkable how theater in New York City. Mr. Pastor is the
to 8fi
1 KEEP THEM
---------DEALER IN-------those apples die multiply. After get­ •riginator of hi* peculiar school of character Buggy Cv's BugriM.
ting the dishes all on the table we nro- e-iijRinir. anti has made himself immensely pop­
On hand for sale.
ular, having realized by his talents a large fortFancy and Staple
other market* in the country und Cliarkdu

newuMf his subscription thus speaks of
tb« &lt;&amp;&gt; pro«pect« in. bis locality:

SPECALTffiS

GREAT.

REAPER NO.

and CUPPER

RHEUMATISM,

Pertrcttm of Operate la. Ficli!
LitMtcss of DraR
Aflajtation to Eton Variety of
Facility of Managemert.
SunpUhty hi Durability
Houesi Wortmansinj

A. VOGEKER &amp; CO..

OFtntuss.

8

E

COLUMBUS IBUGGT
COMPANY,

COLUMBUS, (

Read the
Jacksox.Mjch.. Sep. &gt;Mth. 1881
Meuro. D, A Morgtn A Co.,
.
•
Brockport, fi.T.x.
Gknts—Your ngenu at Romeo, Syke* A Tay­
lor, sold, the past season, to my neighbor Mr.
Thurston, a Triumph Reaper .Nx&gt; 21 My oat
crop was in the mainTery heavy, but in parts
very UDcaven; some long and heavy, some very
short. My own reaper is of quite a celebrated
make and in good condition, but nelghboi
Thdroton was anxious 1 should try hi* machine.
} consented- He sent with it a little boy
(jcarcclr larg enough to drive tbc team
It is
flm4u*tlcc to *ay that I was very skeptical, and
hod gave doubt* about the ability of the Tri­
umph or any other machine's ociug able to do
perfect work In my field, but must confess that
I was filled with admiration am] wouderatthe
rcstilta- Macbtae and boy were entire tn astors
of the situation. Such quality of work with the
same caw, I never saw equalled before. InHtautly while In motion, the entire working ap­
paratus could be rabed or lowered, to gather
uny condition crop &lt; r meet any requirements
of surface. 1 consider thi* feature indispens­
able in a Reaper. The bent rake arms are anoth­
er Important feature. With trial i haul, I think
your nutcliliie eaves 25 ;&gt;er cent of tbc labor in
binding by the etndgbt sqnnre nnd compact
form of the gnvles. Tbc TI.lutnj.li ts of very
light draft, under perfect control of th,1 driver,
appears to be very simple in its construction,
and hence, very durable- In my judgment it is
very far inadvance of other machine* of its
rlaU, and 1 believe the Interest* of the farmers
of Michigan a ill be advanced by giving the
Triumph a trim) before purchasing.
Yqurj respectlfuily.
dEO. W. PHILLIPS,
President Michigan State Ag'l Society.

EVERYBODY

Wide Tire Wagon!

COLUMBUS BU66Y COMPANY,
COLUMBUS.'e.

For Salt ty Dealers EVERYWHERE.

io onr bread, which we fonnd burnud
------- ----------- -—r ..
u.cu VUl
meat burned. Juut then we looked
down the path and saw the men com­
ing to dinner. We were then in a tenblc plight, preapiration was runnin g
down onr wicked face, and we bounded
around from one thing to another,
without accomnliBhing anything. SVe
humbly beg to pass over the acene that
followed. Suffice it to nay that the men
faated and our cooking career was at
nn end. To every poor unfortunate
woman in the broad land, who has the
duty of cooking to perform, I can oay
from the bottom of my heart, God bless
•you.

ABOUT DAKOTA.

Tbe writer of tills article met Mr. Pastor
recently at the Bingham House, tn Philadelphia,
and found him as genial in nrivate as he is
amusing before the public. During &lt;&gt;ur converaation I inquired a&gt; to his physical health,
and he replied that, notwithstanding the strain
ofJprrifeMioual duties. It was excellent Hr had
Since 1U consolidation with the New York
occasionally severe pains, either the result of Evening Post, has Increased Ito facilities in
rheumatic attacks or colds, but any complaints
of that character never trouble him long, as he every department, enlarged iu size to twentyhad found out a remedy for all such aniioying four pages, and added many able writers to iu
affection*. I asked him what the remedy wm previous list. It is now prodbunced by many
and he replied, “St Jacobs OIL” I than learn­
ed from Mr. Pastor that be considered the
Great German Remedy an excellent peroration
Established In 1W55, ihe nation was a pioneer
for the cure or relief of riieumatUm, and that
it was about the only thing used among pro- in this country, u a weekly journal of literary
fBMiona! jjeoplc for tiiat d&amp;tresdng complaint.
He took bottles of ft with him whenever he and jxjliUcal criticism of the highest order, con­
we?A traveling, and would not be without ft, ducted free from, the control of party or inte­
was very popular with a num- rest ol any sort. Despite a precarious support
lucntiy with various n em- during the first few years it has held to Itaorigi
bMB of! he
mo revealed the fact that nal aim, and has long been a recognixed autho­
rity at home and abroad. Its editoral manage-

Tlie TVation.

Columbia, Brows Co., Dju, Ara., 25, ’82.
It is wonderful to what an extent emmigra- them of rheumatism. Nearly every artist in
tiooand immigration are pouring Into the the troup used ft, and was enth astatic in Its
Uer Pastor"‘was
"vforwd
40 iu
conclusion that?
Tony
certainly
lUCKin harm.
voUi.O.l.. ...
i-

Chicago, at the rate ot half a d .*eu a day, and

ever beftire the medium of the ablest thought of
the time.
'
The form and style of the paper aro chosen
wiU» a View to the most suitable shape for bind­
ing. and a set of the Nation preserved, Donna.

eonrfort to the

would KNO have to withdraw its long standing

BUY YOUR PLOW POINTS
Of me and you will get points that ore chilled.
One chilled rioint will last as long as two that
are not chilled. I will sell cheaper too. No
middle man has to make t profit lietween you
and me.
1 have succeeded in getting a

GROCERIES!
CONSISTING IN PAET OF

SL’GARS/TEAS,
COFFEES, SPICES,
SYRUPS, MOLASSES,
°TARCH, SOAP,
CRACKERS. CHEESE,
One that has worked at the trade seventeen
BEST
NICKLE SOAP IN TOWN.
years and shod.the best homes tn the state. If
SALMON.
other Blacksmiths have lamed your horses
bring them here and have them cured.
WHITE FISH,
/
TROUT,
MACKEREL,
HALIBUT.
COD FISH.
HERRING.
STEAM ^COOKED OAT
MEAL.
CROCKERY,
WOR.TH SENDING FOR.
GLASS WARE,
Dr. J. K. 3CHENCE.of PbfladalpMa. has Jurt pub­
LAMPS.
lished a book on “DISEASES OF THE LUNGS
FLOWERPOTS,
AMD HOW THEY CAN DE CUBED,” Which is

FIRST CLASS BLACKSMITH,

J. M. WOOD.

lhemaai vet UUcted with, or liable lo, any d west
the throat or tongs. Address DrJ.H- 8CHENC
BON. *00 Arab g, PMludripbU. Pu. P. a box!

OHIO

STOKE

Attorney at Law,
t'.ons * •psdalty. Ofirv *l
or er Julius Bcucil't stars.

J AMES A. SWEEZEY,

Attorney &amp; Counsellor!
Probate Notice.
State &lt;4 Mlchisan, County of Barry, •». Notice
is hereby riven that by »o order of the'Probrie

tbc rotate of

.
WILUAM F. BIZEE,
■
latent .aid county, deceased, and tho uudnr»ig:ied
baring bmen appointed by the Judjeof Probate for
uid C&lt;»~comn&gt;i»aloner« to bear and adjurt all claim

of flic said deceased io Woodland in- said County,
for examination and allowance, o; or before the
Unit day of Norcraber next, and that auch ehtltru
will 1&gt;C heard before said oomnslonenfoa the l»l day
. t &gt;____ i ... ■&gt;_ J..-t ar,——*—
Dated Mar lit.!SS2
FREDERIC WAGNER,
)
33 31 JACOB REISER,
}
CHRISTIAN 'BERKEU.YJ

C

Adiuiuistrator's $ale.
GEORGE GILL 18, deceased.
Notice la hereby elven that I shall soli st publie.
auction, to the hie best bidder, on

A. D. 18*2. al two o'clock, tn tho aflerooon, at /the
preaiiscs doarciibcd in thi* notlco, in tho village af
Nashville In tbo County cd Barr?, in tbc Stab* &lt;m
Michigan, parsuant to Itcrnse and satbority groatcd. to me on the 38:h day of Novambes A- D.
18X1. Uy tbc Probate Court of Barry County.
MMMgaa, all of ths •Mtata^ right, tlsie and

sad dcscrlbsd u follows to-wic. in the vlUags of
Na*hvllle; Ix&gt;t one hundred four [104) and lot
sUty-tbrto f&lt;H.]
Dated, March 8lh. A. D. IMS.

(0-31)

day.

BOtrr.B, GREGG. AdarinUtrator.

May 87th. 1 BBS.
G. Ad

Probate Notice,
At a MMloo ottbe Probate Court for the County

Sartlh, Judge of Probate.

- “*
WIAJX.U miMi.i

ths estate of ELMIRA

f John VriMB guardtau st said minor nriylng I
« may buheswd to aril rert.lt, real Ltalorf,

WARE,

TRY

OUR

P IP E 8,
FIFTY-CENT
TEA.

EF* Remember we get no fanc

ces, bnt sell all goods as low as the
lowest,^quality considered).
that ‘-Uncle

New York.

J. M. SHOUP.
J LEM ENT SMITH ,

TOBACCOS,
DIG ARS,

in the political and Literary world

r,

fV Don't buy u machine nntil you
examine the “TRIUMPH” north
E. Cook’a Wagon Shop Naahville. Mich.

CKO. W. FRANQI8.

�It to
IUIN IN gUMMXR.

besuUtut i* tbo rain!

ttciattere

tit

said, with a smllo that disclosed two
rows of jxwrls set in coral. “But your

iny name, perhapa?”
••I know nothing, serranita,’’ I re­
plied, *• except that you are divine.
Can theVace equal that perfect form?
Will you not lift tho shrouding mask for
one moment5’ But, qus importa, the
face must be beautiful, dr Nature would
have failed in harmony.”
■
••Ah. senor,” she said, with wmething of tenderness in her voice,
the
beautiful seldom wear a mask; they arc
too eager for conquest and triumph.
You, I aee, disdain to wear one. It is
only the consiousness of being bandsome con give one »uah courage.”
“Oracias,, gerranita; but have 1 no
higher claim to notice? You may have
heard toy name?”
“Ail the worfd,” she, answered, “has
heard tho name of the poet whose praise
Confers celebrity. May L too. hope for
I-----------.a A
.----. should .have
------ u...
■»
sonnet?
poet
butt OQ0

However, I t&gt;kc the consequences!
With that mouth, those eyes, that siren
sylphliko form—what more could- I
desire? Any woman simply with your
intellect and your eyes' must be
charming, irresistible, divine!
Un-

painted nose! •• 0, if tho earth could
only open and swallow me up!” I in
wardly ejaculated; for had I nut insult­
ed, yes, horribly insulted, the most
beautiful woman at the Court of Mad­
rid?
True, O true! For It was. indeed the
lovely, distinguished, and celebrated
Countess T— that now stood before me,
with a mocking sm^le playing over her
exquisite mouth.
I could have thrown toyself at her
feet, I oould have killed myself for rage
and despair and shame? but my remorse
and abject terror only seemed to
heighten heramusement; and. taking the
arm of her haughty cavalier with the
royal orders, the superb beauty saluted
me with a profound reverence and a
smilipg “Beso a usled la mano," and
swept on In the glitter of hdr raiment
and her jewels and her loveliness to join
the dancers.
Not hunger, but despair, now winged
my feet; as I fled along the corridor and
down the grand staircase, and nearly
overthrew Prince Carlo* as I passed
him in the whirlwind of my flight.
“Whither so fast, my friend?” he ex­
claimed. “Why, you are the envy of
the whole room! You have been talk­
ing to the loveliest woman in Spain for
the lasl half hour. And do you 'know
the news? The Queen herself has just
told me. It is all settled; the lovely
Countess is to wear a royal crown; and
right well she will grace’s throne. But
do not speak of it It is a State secret
as yet; though, of course,
we all
guessed the truth. Heavens! is she not
beautiful? I am to be the new ambas­
sador, and you shall have a high post iu
Vie embassy, I promise fou. But—
what is the matter? You are pale as
death."
“Peace!" I exclaimed, in
_ a voice
stifled with rage, dashing aw.iv his
hand that rested on my arm. •'Peace!

ence on a love as deep m mine!’ ’
“Rash man, you tempt a dreadful
fate!” she said gently, lapng her hand
on mine with a warning gesture.
“Away with fearaPi cried. “By
this little hand now held in mine, I
swear to love you now and forever­
pool:
forever! The homage of my whole life
is yours.”
“Well, then—alas, how weak we
women are?’ and her voice trembled.
• * Will love? indeed, survive the ordeal ?
Here, untie the mask yourself—my hand
trembles so, I cannot do it. It is the
theme—woman.” •
“ True, most lovely serrana; but in­ supreme moment of my life! Will you
IL- WblrlH-.K
spiration comes from love, and love still love me when the mask falls?”
“Angel of my life, can you doubt me?
from sight How can I sing of unseen
SloriesP Remove the mask, lentreatyou, O, fortune! O, felicity!* My own hand
int I may behold the divine object unbars the gates of paradise! Give me
IXko a leopard's tawny and spotted hid*.
which is to kindle admiration into the lyre, O Muses. lam Pindar! I am
Ktretrhe* the plain,
Apollo! Will this knot never untie? I
]XMit! poet! Crust to tho ideal. shall cut the string. O, rapture! Now,
I advise you.
Thn actual is always ’tis done! Beautiful —”
But the word died on my lipa, the
disappointing.
Alas! my poor face
mask fell from my hand, and I sank back
could hardly kindle the flame of genitw.
O,
Imagination will give you higher, in­ stunned, fainting, horror-struck.
what a nose! What a nolo! What a nose!
spiration."
“Imagination! Yes, we poets know No, never could I have imagined that
it well. A mere cloudland of frozen Nature was. capable of bringing to such
iciclea
But true poetry
requires a frightfid excess the pleonasm, the
passion; and passion only cofbes from hyperbole of noses. Quevedo's sonnet,
the actual, tho visible, an’d the glorious beginning • • There once was a man with
an awful nose,” would read tamo- and
reality of the beautiful.”
under the sheltering trees,
spiritless beside it. This was no human
••And if I lift my mask, senorpoet,
HiS psotarea. and hia field* ot
nose. It was a beet-root, a spear, a
will
you
find
the
glorious
reality
of
the
As they b_«nd their tops
To the numberless bunting dr
beautiful in ray face? Ah, do not dare promontory, a pyramid of Egypt.
Of tho Incossant rain.
Good heavens? and to talk of the
tho trial. Youf poet-soul would recoil
Ho counts it as ho sin
from the actual, and I—I should lose progress of humanity, of our social
That be seeti therein
’
stem being regenerated, when such
■ Only his own thrift and gain.
your homage’and your flatteries?’
uses are jiermitted to exist! If it bo Farewell!"
" Never!" I exclaimed impetuously. .
jL. I wise and just to repress tho teudoucy
And I sprang into my carriage, and
“ O enchantress of my soul, try moTbo poet sees!
He can behold
all towards tho vague and exaggerated in reached home with set teeth and
unmask.
1 shall worship; I shall
Aquarius old
। our political institutions, why is there no clenched hands, and fixed resolve to
adore.”
Walking the fenreleas fields of air;
•mured,
kw against the vagueness, the exag- start the following morning^or Cuba,
" Enough! enough!" she murmured.
' laying her fan upon my lips. •• Wor- I gyration of noses? Why is our idea of I or the interior of Africa, or ttie North
wvv-.i&gt;..-chu.:da
J Humanity to bedesecrated? Why should |-----------,,------------ -------------------- —
Polar Expedition;
anywhere----------that would
ship, adore! mere ,M.K.
idle H
poet-false
hi
Truly. Plato was right Poets should
Ml the finer sensibilities of my nature place a whole continent between me
As tbc farmer scatter* his grain.
be banished from every well-ordered
be so ruthlessly outraged? Why should and the bitter memory of the Carnival
Ho can bebobl
state.”
’
i a poet's divine sense of beauty— But Ball, and tho shadow of “the Carnival
Things munlfokl
“ And why, alma min
&gt; here I became conscious that the dre.id- Nose—that fatal promontory on which
Tbal nave uot yet been wholly told—
Have not been wholly *ung nor said.
“ Because you poets are all pagans I fM being at my side was staring at me. my • happiness
•
*hail’ *been wrecked for
,For b's thought, that never "tops.
nnd perjurers. You set up idols to wor- 1 Yes. staring full in my face, with grave, life. — Tinsley's Xlwiazine.
Follows the wat-relronu
Down t» tbc gruv&gt;-a of the (lend,
I ship, and you simulate false homage, j malignant intensity, as she sa:d:
Down through chasms and gulf* profound.
i Poets do not need to wear a mask; their i
“You know I warned you.
The
To the dreary fountain-beiil
Deafneif in Railway Officials.
Of lakes and.rivers uod ir ground;
whole life is a falsehood."
I features may be a little irregular, no
And so'-a them, when tho rain la done.
I
"So like women, then; but confess. I doubt, hut then there is the grace ofThe Lancet says that Prof. S- Moos,
On tho bridge of col &gt;rs seven
Poets, at least, know how to love, and 1 expression, a very lovely thing, you say. of Heidelberg, influenced, wc presume,
Climbing up onco mbro to heaven.
Opposite tho settin* sun.
•are worth loving. Lift the mask, and . Indeed, you prefer it to positive beauty, by the important results which have
' you will judge if I can lovfe."
I do you not? And the intellect—vou come from the attention of experts be­
•
“I cannot Sympathy and praise and worship intellect; you know that at ing directed to the color perception of
With vi*lon clear,
Sec* forma upp-mr nml disappear.
homage are enchanting to a woman. 1 least remains unchanged.
J.
Will you railway officials and others whose ac­
In tfac perpetual round of atrange,
Why should 1 risk losing these subtle not
"*** give
"•”** me your arm.
~ senor?
• 9 ’ Let
-* --us
­
tions are guided by colored signals, has
My«&lt;- nona change.
From b rth lo ifuath. from death to birth.
communicated to the Zeitschrift fur
flatteries, that make me believe I am proceed to supper."
From earth to heaven, from heaven to ear
"Pardon me, serranita," I slam- Ohrcnhcilkundr the results of his obser­
lovely enough to be loved? If I unmask,
Till glimpse* more aublimo
mered.
"I had forgotten a very vations and reading in regard to the
Of things, unseen before,
•
the words will freeze on your lips; tho
Unto hi* w—'-------------- •
I particular engagement—you will ex- causes and effects in deafness in rail­
poet will be turned to stone.”
The Untvc i, asSD'imiucaminible wheel
“ Impossible!
Your
conversation | euse me.” But tho words choked way offictob, to which, ho points riut,
Turning f&lt; verm ore
1 fc*1
the last throes of railway accident* may not unfrequentlyand rushing river of Timo.
charms me. What mind! what« .».vu-.intel­ I mebcautv
! strangulation, and would have dropped be attributed. Dr. Jacoby found tliat
lect!
Yes,
even
beyond
’
I
feel • down. I think, dead on the spot, if. hap- in tho course of ten years nnd a -half no
I
worship
intellect, and
THE.CARNIVAL BALL
■ange spiritual ! P*b’. th® nose-bulwarked serrana.' no less limn twenty out &lt;)f a total number of
drawn to you by a stranj
1. believe mo
doubt accurtomed to her own deformity. eighty engine-drivers applied to him
PHON THE SPANISH.
affinity, wholly mental,
had not laughed outright at my miser- for affections of the organ of hear­
A brilliant crowd of all the rank and I Beauty is a mere ephemeral adjunct
i able confusion.
ing; of these five had
unilateral
fashion of Madrid, from royalty down. । the true perfection is in the soul.”
This gave me courage to rise, and affections of the labyrinth, nnd fif­
.filled the splendid rooms. Jho women I
■‘This appreciation of intellect is, in- ,
closely masked; ’’tho men, generally, i deed, touching,” she said earnestly. I with a profound salute and a frigid " a teen lesions of the middle ear. Dr.
uadisguised, sarc by their fantastic “Yet—shall I confess it?—I would los pies de usted," I fled from the terri­ Hartman, again, has found that tho sur­
• and gorgeous costumes. Spme, howev- ' rather be thought beautiful, even fur a ble shadow of that stupendous nasal or­ rounding conditions have to be taken
•r, under the impenetrable mystery of I moment, than hear all your praises of gan.
into consideration, drivers having some­
Horror winged my feet, anger blinded times to work their way through violent
mask and domino, hovered about, and mV intellect. No; I cannot risk the '
me; I stumbled over chairs and tables stbrms of wind, over ground that in hard
—
t-u-----• -------&gt; •«-things
’------ trialwhispered
clever —
or------cruel
into The flame kindled by intellect
and*people.
Earth
did
uot
seem
wide
uuz.eu,
iuug luauuts,
frozen, and turvugn
through long
tunnels, ana
and
startled ears, seeming to know every would be soon extinguished by—must 1
enough u&gt; separate me from that terri- | that under these conditions hardness of
.one, with all the lines of social in- Bay the word?—a fatal ugliness.”
■"0, fear not. serranh! I deny and i ble headland, whence all my hopes had 1 hearing, which, however, is only transi• trigue, while they themselves remained
g
The
shadow
of
it
still
J
tory,
is
apt
to
be
established.'
Prof,
pnknown.
defy Uie ugliness. And where -could it I £ono
ni*”tic,.features may
------- i...
—.....1
M*em
seem '(I
-d tn
to da:
darken the ground around | Moos refers to the Canonbun' railway
.
My frieud Prince Carlos and I took exist? The
be irregular,
up a masterly position at the poor of the but there is the grace of expression—a me. and 1 would have rushed to my I accident, and to a singular case in
hotel,
regardless
of cloak or carriage, , which the engine and lender with a
grand salon, and .-.mused, ourselves by very lovely thing. Indeed. I prefer it
guesses and conjectures on the dazzling to positive beauty. And if the mind if another evil had not assailed me. : luggngc-van entered the station at
I was faint from exhaustion
and Provins, in France, alone, the train havcharms, the face, will also. I could
stream of humanity that floated by.
The nose &amp;emed to have ing been unfortunately omitted to be
.
Duly we appreciated the snow-white swear it. From long experience I have hunger.
arms glittering with jewels, the superb acquired-a certain instinct for the dis­ Abstracted all my vitality, and the coupled to the engine liefore starting,
hair, the soft, caressing, undulating cernment of moaks. No; I cannot be strongest impulse of my nature nt that indicating,'as Prof. Moos remarks, that
both engine-driver and stoker must have
I have too good a nose for moment was a savage voracity.
grace of Spanish movement; but the face । deceived.
deceiv
I flew to the suppersroom, took pos­ failed to miss tho rumble of tho ordinary
stiD remained a mystery, masked and that.’’
inscrutable.
"
'
My companion started slightly, and session of a table, quaffed a goblet of train, owing to some defect of hearing.
However, we hud faith in the invisi­ averted her head, as if offended by such champagne, and ordered plate after He records other cases, and ho thinks
plate with the wild eagerness of appe­ that tho hearing of drivers should be
ble from the beauty of the visible, and a vulgarism: but was soon herself again,
tested as carefully as their vision.
tite nnd rage.
were even quite prepared to fall in love and. extending her hand, assured me.
I was at my fifth, when, triste de mi!
on the evidence vouchsafed; for youth by tliis graceful gesture, that I was al­
Hiere, just fronting me. stood tho serhas infinite trust and hope, and a pas- ready forgiven.
Alcohol In Water.
skinate enthusiasm for the mystic nnd
“There is but one thing to regret if Ttnita—1 should rather say the noee,
The Paris correspondent of the Lon­
unknown.
you unmask." I continued, dasping the xusre lurid, more gigantic than ever, now
_
,__________________
__ , little
hand fervently. “I shall lose all
Ihat I behold it it the full glare of the don Lancet makes tho following an­
A magnificent
Circassian,, with _hair
i
nouncement He says: “M. Muntz,
~ the ground, and ’___
_ bound
*_____ 1 i th® delicious privileges of the Carnival •upper-room.
•weeping
brow
A masked gipsy was holding her director, of the Institute Agronomique,
—u—
s---------------I do not want to know your name
with an antique-fillet of gold
coins,
»uon baji
captivated
the susceptible hearj of and rank. 1 only want permission to •land at tho moment, to read her for­ has, by meaxxs of an apparatus of his
tune. and I heard him say, “ Queen of own invention, discovered the presence
Pnnce Carlos, an^ he was speedily led utter the one phrase—I love you?’
away a bond-slave to the haughty sul­
" You forget," she said; and the little beauty to-day, Queen of an empire to­ of alcohol in water. It is true the pro­
portion is almost infinitesimal, yet it »
tana.
hand wtt nervously withdrawn. "You morrow.”
■• Queen of beauty! ” I repeated scorn­ sufficiently appreciable for him to have
While I—but how can I describe the have not seen my face. If 1 unmask,
vision of beauty that dazed my senses you will scarcely wait to utter a frigid fully, and again I meditated flight But fixed it at one hundred-thousandth part
and slew my reason utterly?
a las pies de usted before you fly from the nose petrified me bv saying, with a and even less. In pushing his experi­
dolcezsa infemale, “Will not the gra­ ments further, he discovered the pres­
Through the dense crowd, which my side in horror."
• parted as she advanced, leaving a path­
••Never!"
I
exclaimed.
“The cious senor conduct mo to supper? I ence of alcohol in all the natural
way clear as if for some regal progress, idea is on insult to the holy instincts have been lingering for your return. waters —such as those of the river and
the sea—and even in rain-water and
came« masked lady, tall, slight ele­ of the poet's soul.
And grant even Why did vou leave me?”
I trembled like an aspen, and tho nose melted snow.
For instance, in- the
gant; gliding on with a balanced move­ that some unhappy accident
has
ment, as if she walked, to music. By marred your beauty, can that affect the laughed; but tho grave and haughty water ■ of the Seine and in rain­
her side was acavaljer, also masked; but, brilliancy of your conversation, the caballero, with the royal orders on his water the
proportion
of
alcohol
from the orders he wore, one could spe music of your voice, the seductive grace breast, did not laugh. This was doubly was about one-thousandth, or one
be was of royffl rank.
of your figure?
No, no! A woman irritating. 1 would have given worlds gramme to each cubic meter. The
The coatuina of the radiant being he with such gifts must be always fascinat­ fora pretext to run him through the proportion was about the same in’ the
sea-water, but a little greater in cold
•scorted seemed meant to represcut The ing. And if the face be, indeed, ugly, I body.
•‘ Senora!” I gasped forth.
Dmon. Over the long trailing robe of shall pardon the caskdt for the «Ue of
rain-water; a the proportion was also
“0 Senor!” she exclaimed quickly, sensibly greater in sewage water. Frorp
rose-colored satin embroidered in silver the jewel it contains.”
.fell a veil of silver gauze in soft, cloud­
She was evidently touched, and mur­ “perhaps a particular bngagement; or tho presence of alcohol In rain and
like, glittering folds, through which mured. as she scattered the petals of a has intellect lost its charm for yon? But river water, M. Muntz concludes that it
flashed, like rays and arrows of lire, a rose from her bouquet:
pray do not take any trouble; merely a must also exist in the air, and even in'
the interior of the earth; so that it maj
superb zone of rubies and diamonds.
“Yet—yet—to not ugliness the one
A diadem of the«ame gems, like points unpardonable sin in a woman? Do not more.”
-v
.
'be said to exist everywhere in nature,
And the nose seemed to twist and curl but ho is at a loss to explain its origin
of flame, encircled
her
brow, and the poets feel this? Do not you know
crowned Ijer,’ as the Goddess tA Morn­
with indignant contempt.
He, however, seta forth the hypothesis
Thi* cool audacity piqued me; and. that it to produced by the decomposi­
ing. with an aureole of splendor.
• “A calumny, serranita.
None but
My first impulse was to fall prostrate shallow minds hold such a creed—not with a malignant emphasis. I replied:
।
tion
of organic matter existing ou the
at her feet; but I fortunately resisted the natures like mine. Let me untie the
“Senorita, I present you trie bev- surface
i
ofthe globe, in tho depths of the
inclination to offer divine honors, and mask—where can be the risk? Do I not erage with pleasure; but will not isea. and in the different strata of th«*
and after its production, and u*
thought ft better u&gt; follow in her train, see this perfect form,’ and the glorious your noto be rather in the way of 8oil.
i
obedience
to tfio laws of tho tension of
and fill my soul with the loveliness of tho eyes that flash on me like stars of night, your enjoying the draught?
Un- &gt;
earthly form.
with those golden tresses falling on less you can abridge that very majestic vapors, it is diffused in tho atmosphere,
In a short time she glided to a sofa. a neck
:
which it is eliminated with the
whiter than the
pearls feature, I do not see how —from
•• Oraeias, aenor!” she said, interrupt- meteoric
1
waters.’’
that encircle it? And think you I
have not noticed the perfect form ing me. “Yon are most considerate.
-The Ct
; of your head and tho delicious smile at Bat I do not drink with my nose. How- . ------------------------ever, ft would be more convenient if ' jected a bill wf
back amidst the ciubione with the lax- that
_______
_ ___
that a man
rose
leaf________
mouth?’
I who did not si
vS*0*
»h”
“Ah. there may be still something abridged. Shall 1 try?”
••How1’ What? Can it lie?*’ T.itam- on his p~—”
TSBMt-------------------- --------------------- ------------ —l-aad tho
iray do not b&lt;
be alannud. seixor.’.’ ' t-.-U'lcr i
•• O. pray
that seductive
‘
“fhe oroce-ts is
ls*fp:
-cartain- sire sold, laughingly;
kttmdOy tide. t
river down tbo gutter:

S

will posh its roots a long distaace to get
water, and seems to delight, whenever
possible, in sending an extra foot down
a well.—Denyer Tribune.
—Ducklings are as liable to die of
chills aud cramps sb young turkeys, and
fur that reason must be kept from ex­
posure to cold rains and heavy dews and
away from the streams and ponds until
they are a mon^i or six weeks old,—In­
diana ‘State Journal. "
—Weeds are continually appearing on
our lawns and causing trouble, Many
disappear after a time, as the constant
cutting prevents seeding.t and event­
ually causes their destruction. A few,
like tho narrow-leaved plantain, it may
be necessary to dig out. This is-con­
veniently done with a narrow instru­
ment, something like a chisel. A pinch
of salt placed on a tenacious weed
causes rts death.
'
I
—Painted Floors: For kitchen end
pantry floors there is nothing betterth an
a coat of hard paint The cracks should
be tilled with putty before it is applied,
and the paint allowed to dry at least two
weeks before using; and then it is easily
kept clean by washing—riot scrubbing—
with milk and water. Soap should
□ever be allowed to touch it Red lead
and yellow ochre are good for coloring;
the - former makes a hard paint that
wears well.—The Household.
—Atuexperienced farmer writes con­
cerning the most suitable weather for
sowing grass seeds that a fine dav
should bo chosen, when the land is tol­
erably dry, but when there are indica­
tions of-approaching rain. ' Such condi­
tions are much more favorable for sow­
ing seeds than during rainy or showery
weather, for, in tho find, instance, tho
seeds are more likely to bo evenly cov­
ered, aud will be gradually absorbing
moisture from tho soil prevloup**’to the
next fall of ruin, which they w.ll be in a
condition to
receive with 'Sigpcfit.
Whereas, if sown after a shower, as is,
too frequently done, the above advanU*
ages are not obtained, but after-the
seeds have been saturated with moisture
tho dry weather returns, and they be­
come “ malted."

I r;: r. !!;-•

IF NEARLY D^AD
tcstlnwnUU. tura to Hop Blucr».«nd have
/*•* £
or L’rt»*n TruuWes,
r

the jury held that hia looks had been Iruprov•ng-

'

The highest hopes and interest of the race
rest on the purity, health and strength .of wo­
manhood. We take pleasure .In refering our
readers to the remarkable efilcucv of Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Fegetablc Compomid tn all that
claw of diseases from which women suffer ao
much.
.

" Many a man who think* himself a “ big gun”
is nothing but a great bore, and not a smooth
one, either.
I
“BUCHUFAIBA.”

New, quick, complete cure 4. davit, urinajy
affections, smarting,frequent or difficult urina­
tion, kidney diflcaac*. Si. at druggist*. Mich.
Depot, JAMES E. DAVIS A CQ., Detroit,.
A Pittsburg jnry bo* decided that speculating
in options is no’, gambling within the meaning
BEAUTIFUL REGAINED.
■The beauty and color of the hair mar be safely
regained by using Parker’s Hair Balsam, which
Is much admired tor iu perfume, cleanlineaa
and dandruff eradicating properties.

Tbc symptoms of Itching Piles are moisture
like preauiralion, intense itching, most at night
seem# aa if pin worms were crawling in or
about tbc rectum. Tbc more you scratch* the
worse they itch, very distressing. The private
parU are often affected. Dr. Swayne’s Oint­
ment is the most effective remedy extant for
this tormenting complaint. Gives rest al night
without that detnre to scratch. 'Also has on
equal In quickly eradicating Tetter, Itch, Salt
Rhcumc, ETjalpelas, Barbers’ Itch, Plmploa,
all Scaly, Crusty, Itchy Skin Eruptions. Hero
U the proof, “Certainly the best remedy ever
used tn my practice,” Dr. Cotton, W'uodstodt,
Vt. “troubled with Itching Piles for over twen­
ty years, it cured me completely," L. 8. Meuer
Enfleld, Me. Sent for 50 cU (tn 3 cu stamp*)
Weak Horses.
3 ixixes, |l-25, By Dr. Swayne A Bon. Phi lad'a
•■My horses do not seem to have their Pa. Sold by till druggists.
natural strength, and are unable to work
There Is in all thi* world no such fount of
hard without apparent exhaustion,1’
writes an Indiana correspondent. Thia deep, strong, deathless love as that within a
complaint can generally be ffiade with mother’s heart.
truthfulness. ns spring time approaches,
MONEY FOR A RAINY DAY,
and we usually take occasion to refer to
••For six year* toy daughter -v*s sick from
the matter about this time every year, kidney
and other dUordor*. We had used up
or n little later. The system of tho our saving* on doctors, when our domtne advi»horse like that of the man. is in low cd u. to try Parker’* Ginger Tonic. Four bot­
tles
effected
a cure, and as a dollar’s worth ba*
condition in the spring, owing to the
inlluonce of imperfect exercise during kept our family well over a year, we have been
able io lay by money again fur a rainy day."—
the winter months, and the sluggish­ A Poon Max's Wife.
ness of tho blood. During the winter
The authflr of “Excelsior" ha* been laid to
the majority of horses upon the farm
do but a small portion of the hard work rest; but he will live in memory forever.
which they are accustomed to do at
Don’t be Billy.
other seasons of the year. As a natu­
Don’t let a f- dish prejudice against popular
ral result tho muscles become soft, and
medicines
stand
between
you and the health of .
a little additional work produces wcariness End sometimes exhaustion. A man your wife, child, or baby. It la al way* right to *
_&gt;ho is but little accustomed to exercise advertise a blowing. Dr. Kennedy’s “Favorite
a blessing. It has saved umrauu*
thousands
can neither walk very far or labor very Remedy
••"•••™? ” la
«hard without becoming
exceedingly ' a,,&lt;1 11
help I°°- If jouartBfck irdmiacratired, while one who Is accustomed to I Me« we iulvlw: you to »pend One Dollar for thia
and then write to the Doctor, at Ron­
walk or labor scarcely knows what ex- medicine,
'
haustiun means, however severe the test dotit, N Y-,as to how you feel. Fortroubles of
may be to which his endurance is put: the Kidneys, liver, and Blood it has no equal.
In the one case the muscles are soft and
A character in “Oddities of Southern Life”
flabby, while in the other they are hard
and strong. This same thing is true of thus dccribeshlmacif t “I utn a fighter from
Bitter Creek; I’me a wolf, and this is my night
the home.
.
This lack of exercise and the general to bowl, I’ve three rows of front teeth, and nary
manner of living in the winter, also tooth alike. The folks ou Bitter Creek are bad;
thickens the blood, loads it with impuri­ tiie higher up you go tbc wusa they are, and I’m
ties and produces actual disease tq a from the head waterr.”
*
greater or less degree. The skin, which
OH I WHAT A COUGH.
M a very important excretory organ, but
imperfectly performs its office when the Will you heed the warning. The signal per
animal is £epl without considerable ex­ haps of the sure approach-of that more terriblercise. There is a vast deal of escape discase consumption. Ask yourself if you can
from it all .the time, it is true, but not afford for the aake of saving 50 eta to run the
risk and do nothing for it. We know from ex­
near bo much as there is when there is perience that BhiToh’s Cure will ’ftre your
free perspiration, tho usual result of cough. It never fails. This explains why
active exercise. Consequently the work more than a million bottle* were sold last year.
of removiu" from the system the effete It relieves Croup, and whooping cough, at once
Mothers do not be without it. For lame back,
matter, is thrown in a very much larger side or chest rise Shiloh’s Porous Rasters.
measure upon the Internal organs in Sold bv F. T. Boise..
wintex, and these grow weary under tho
DYSPEPSIA A LIVER COMPLAINT.
Is it not worth the small price of 75 cents to
additional bunlens, and very likely im­
perfectly do tho work. If so, there is free yoursef of every symptom of those distres­
sing complaints, if\you Xnlnk to call at our
effete matter remaining in the system, store and get a bottle of Shiloh’s VllalixW,
thickening and poisoning the ’blood, every boule has a printed guarantee on It, use
causing a sluggishness of circulation accordingly and if It does you no good it will
which produces something of a fever cost you nothing. Sold by F. T; Boise.
Wc have a »i&gt;eedy and positive cure for
and languor. The animal consequently
. is weak and is not fit to labor hard until CaUmb, Diphtheria, Canker mouth and
Head Ache, In SHILOH'S CATARRH REM­
some remedies have been given to re­ EDY, A nasal injector free with each bottle.
store the system to its normal condition, Use it If you desire health and sweet breath.
or until it has been restored to that con- Price 50 cents. Sold by F. T. Boise
ditiou by gradually increased exercise.
With ourselves, the treatment is likely
pjENRY ROE, Punnrox
to be ••spring medicine,” but it is
doubtful if that is better than judicious
exercise, and indeed it is doubtful if it is
■as good. Intelligent exercise and'intel­
ligent diet ore no doubt the best medicine;
and that is also true in our treatment
of
the
horse.
He
needs to’ be
worked gently at first, the bowels a lit­
tle loosened if he is costive, and he will
soon come out all right. Nothing can
be more reckless than to take a horse
out of his winter quarters and put him
at once to hard work. The result may
be very serious and under any circum­
IN THEIS KEABO5
'
stances it will be injurious, for we can­
not force nature without paying tho
penalty sooner or later. One of the
most difficult things for men to learn is
that if an animal is compelled to do
OT The Higbeet Market Price paid
more than it is abundantly able to do, it for Hides, PelU. lee.
must mortgage its future Strength and
Fresh
Goods, Full Weifc-iits aztd
life to do it. It may not show the illeffect at first, and when it does show it,
it may be so long after the happening of
HENRY ROEthecause that is forgotten by us. but it is
nevertheless a fact that the cause has
produced the effect. Nature keeps very
accurate accounts, and she will have her
“ pound of flash.” Thousands of horses
do not live as long as they would, if
this fact was remembered, and if we
realized how much pecuniary injury we
do ourselves in the course of a life time.

MEAT MARKET.
Fresh and Salt Meats,
Smohi Bail aii SktiHcn,

^ard, by the lb. or barrel,

our horses, WB would be astonished.
But WB do uot often realize it. Nature
'g sometimes so long in striking her
balance that we forget all about work’ig
the animal four or five spriags ago.
his strength, or driving it almost

foizet it, however. — Western Hural-

.&lt;• i pHl "**-h idrtitfn&lt;m 1 tn 12 week*
-re-l to a- •&gt;--! Wtk i f sucli a thing

iigarra Lasted saigaLej!

£a£a“5%'

�---------- TMIlllMlW

.

--.

Nashville Elevator!
Ox*a.in and ^Produce,
c®, Hair. Ptae Lumber, l*th
aadNhiairlM,
AT

LOWEST LIVING PRICES.

—Gnomical soiaaoa has reoeoUy raor
oaeded in extracting the coloring matter
IroiM bumau hair. Three coloring pig­
PalMitine!'*

The heart of the faithful

heavy burden of mail, but m he fell it
wm hurled many yards away, and. im­
mediately Mt upon by the famishing
wolvo*. Taking advantage of the mo­
ment, Henninghou&amp;o struck a light, and
whatever may be that of his co-religion­ drawing some papers from his pocket,
ist in Western countries, is to return to set fire to them, and the glare at the
Paleatine.” This is the observation of flame* frightened the wolves.
This
Mr. Laurence Oliphant, who is occupy­
ing himself in a colonisation scheme for
their relief. Not only the poor, who
might desire the 'return in order to
share in the charity which la dispensed
in Jerusalem, but the wealthy Jew also
thinks of inhabiting once more the land
of his forefathers. This is no longer a
dream of visionary Bible readers, but
an actual reality. Tho desert already
begins to rejoice and blossom as die
rose. More than one wealthy Jew is
farming ip Palestine, and about five
years ago a colony wm formed near
Lydda. This colony possesses a terri­
tory five miles long and one and a cjuarter wide, owned l?y eighty families.
In Moldavia there is an emigration so­
ciety of 1,000 persons, who have decided
to colonize
Palestine;
a
similar
society exists at Galatz, where many
families have subscribed the funds nec­
essary to buy ground and implements
in the Holy Land. There'are also col­
onization societies in Cucu and Bu­
charest of Rumauia. and the movement
is constantly extending in Russia.' Many
Jewish capitalists of Russia have re­
solved to erect factories at Jaffa, where
there is already an agricultural colony.
Old rabbis of the strictest orthodoxy
have recently said that “whoever puts his
hand to the working of the soil of tne Holy
Land acts more meritoriously than he
who passes his time, day and night, in
the study of the Beth Hamedmsh. The
English sympathizers with the emi­
grants will appoint an agent at Jerusa­
lem to protect them from the local au­
thorities and select place* for them.
There is an old law in Turkey by which
great privilege!} arc afforded to col­
onists, and the general laws affecting
tho tenure of land arc remarkably just.
There are large tract* of rich waste
land In certain parts of tho country to
which three years’ occupation givei a
prescriptive title.
Tho Turkish Gov­
ernment -is not unwilling to receive
Jewish emigrants provided they will
consider themselves subjects of the
existing Government. Two years ago
Mr.
Oliphant
proposed a scheme
of Jewish emigration to the Porte
which political complication* prevented
from being accomplished. Another ef­
fort recently made has resulted in the
purchase of land near Palestine. These
capitalists have a fund of two million
pounds sterling, and already have
agents in all the provinces of Turkey.
Tho Israelite Alliance is sending boys
from nine to fifteen years of age from
the persecuted districts of Russia to
Jaffa. Companies of these children
will be sent frequently from Odessa,
Kew and Elisavetgrad to learn agri­
culture in the Holy Land, and grew up
with the thoughts' and habits of the
country. The emigration of Jews to the
East begins to engage the attention of
the local press there. The principal
Greek journal publishes a long article
on the inconveniences and dangers
which would result from the settling of
large numbers of Jews in the provinces
of Turkey. The writer, after having
explained the habits of the Jews and
their peculiar tendencies, calls the at­
tention of the Government to the sub­
ject and exhorts it to prevent their emi­
gration. But, as the Ottoman Govern­
ment is no longer supremo in Turkey. ।
this warning will have little influence on J
the question, which now seems to be |
one that interests all nations.—Rome I
(Italy) Cor. N. 1”. Post.

black—■the various shades being produoed by mixture. It appears that in
pare golden hair there is only tho yellow
pigment; in rod hair the. red is mixed
with more or lass yellow; while m dark,
hair the black is always mixed with yel­
low and red—even the blackest hair
containing a* much red pigmeat as the

of hi* below! one* by the

nNS ONLY $60.
A COMPLET E LINE OF

^^^^^^./.+^/5+:/++:/+.:^+^++:+^++:464A
—The results of soundings

§ixth Season

EXCURSIONS
From'Detrolt to the Sea,
wargs

m

PAIiTLANJ
tHtrott;
tr- 330.00 for the round trip of over WBmUn.

tcUHt

for C

JgLACK X SOX,

American and Foreign Marble,
Monumenta, Tnmhrtones, Mantles, 4o.,

^yiLLIAM JONES,

DENTISTS
Xaabville. nieb.

NERVOUS
DEBILITY:
A cure guaranlcrd.
Dt KC W«rr'e Nbbts *Mt&gt; Biu«w Tsb«t*bbi
a Bpeelflc for hytlarU, dluinraa, conrul*iou«. n»rr
ona b. adjuhe, tnrnlt! drprr»*lon, )o«a of rarer
4Peraa*ti&gt;rrb&lt;sa. Impotcorr, lnr*JtiDt*ry 'eraiMinn*
prraiaiure okI
rauxU by nrer-exertlon. mIC
abuse, or over Indulgence, which leads to rat»erj
dr--*y and death. One bo* will cure recent c»»e»
Each bu* contain* one raonih'a lre«ltnenL "ni
doRar a box, or al* boxex for flee dollara; erni b&lt;
sial) prer«ld on receipt of price. We guarantee at,
boxee to cure any ca»e. With each order m cleiw
by oa for alx boiea.acc«n&gt;|ranled with ri’e debar*
we will aeud the (lurch, arr ou.- written genrrnre,
to return tbe money If the treatment dexe not a!
fe»i a euro. Guarantee* iMtied by F. T. Uol-» ao
thoriaeil agei.t fur the village . t NaabelUc. Jt'H?
C. WKt-T A CO., Soto Proprietor*. 1S1 and IM «
Mad'aoo ht^Cii‘cB*u. Ill
■'»

HALL’S

PatarrhPure
Is Recommondod by PhyelclaneJ

Chased by Wolves.

S1OO

Thursday afternoon George Henning___________ _______________
house, a short, thick German, who is
employed to carry the mail between
Mture and.Mll H »ltb* p^altiVO
&gt;e that it will cure any
Bullion and Hatley at tmeh times as the
vevtll forfeit the shore amount
road is impassable for teams, left Hailey
with a sack bf mail weighing about
seventy pounds for Bullion Camp, which
is seven miles almost due west of tills
city. As Henninghousc started down
Bullion street toward tho river, mounted
uaedteuly. Price, 75 wut» per bottle.
on snow-shoes and the sack of mail
F. 1. CHENEY t CO., Totwio. Ohio.
swung over his shoulder, he remarked:
•• A heavy snow-storm is approaching,
and I most make haste or Vll lose the
way.” The course taken from Hailey
to Bullion by snow-shoes is over the
mountain, and the well-worn trail is
Knti rsi’4 to Bson
easily followed except during or just
ithe youihkil adnrto grey
after a storm, when fresh snow obliter­
lliair. 50c and $t uxcaat
ates tho tracks made by the shoes. HenIdruggist*. ___________
ninghouso had gone as far as tho road
llrrcbi Mma
which turns off to the Warm Springs,
about two miles, when a blinding storm
set in. blowing almost a gale. All signs
of the road and trail were soon obliter­
ated, and-as the outlines of the mount­
ains were not distinguishable through
the descending snow and sleet, Hennioghouse was forced to go considerably
by guess. Miscalculating the distance
A Pure family Ktditfoc fatMevtr Intoxicates.
over which he had traversed, he turned
off the road too soon, ascended the
ovc-e’-l' or a mother tun down brfarady erbcKMObleak, wild mountains to the north, and
boU vtry
(Swat* Tome.
mus* have followed the precise course
If you are a lawyer, minister or buunau man e&lt;of the unfortunate Allen who perished
Laaetetl i*y roentJ mrain or anxxauv cam ci not
rate miuaicanng aGmuliuu, but me Pvauxa’a
on a similar trip a few weeks ago. Upon
reaching the highest point. no familiar
If you hive iMpcpua. Rbeuma&amp;a. IGdrey or
'andmark met his vision, and, not
Urinary Omnia inu, ogif you a-e tronUerl eiuvany
distirdcrohbelui'n.uoraach ho-.vea.Hoc-lorrTT-.-rt
Oaring to descend without being sure
you car Lc cured by Pamkui'x Gimgbk J woe.
|
of the way, he wandered about for
If'rjusre nmtrnf away from are. dnmpati-rn or '•
hours in search of some clew to his
aoydxaerncor weAne*aatul requ-m aaasMtlaat take j
whereabouts. Night set in cold and
GiNure Tox»C at orxe; it will mvi-orme andbur.d
vowupfrotn the firn dove bet wfJ never inlux teat?.
dreary, and as he was about to give up
Ithasuve-4 huuBred»of lives it may save yum*.
from exhaustion and lay down to rest
• :nccos a co. &gt;q whi»L» s*.. n— t«a. x*.
the dismal'howl of a wolf was borne to
O&gt;*X«lM&lt;sU&gt;nteW&lt;kW&amp;E».
.
his ear. Roused by this ominous sound,
fear lent strength to his weary musclA,
and he started along the ridge—he
knew not whither. Soon other wolvet.
were heard, and from tho distinctness
of the sounds he knew they must have
scented him and were on his trail. Now
thoroughly awakened to a sense of dan­
ger, he hurried forward, wildly peering
out in the darkness, hoping to see the
friendly light of some rnnrheris or
miner's cabin. Nearer came his pur­
sers. and. as no light appeared, ihe

PARKERWIR BALSAM.

PARKER’S

GINGERTONIC

RUPTURE
ing and the pat, pat, pat of their many
feet as they came swiftly over the frozen
snow. Wiili hi* eyes, staring wildly in-

'^’■‘'ators, Mounted Seeder
md 4 kinds of Plows.

otter the
bed of the Atlantic have made clear, it
is believed, the existence through the
m&gt;ddle of the ocean, extending from
north to south, of a sunken ridge, often
le*s than 1,000 fathoms from the sur­
face, while on cither aide the water has
a depth of from 8,000 to more than
3,450 fathoms; so that the elevation of
Common, and hung ready for oac.
the ocean’* bottom required to make
these depths dry land "would bring up
between them a mountain range from
9,000 to 15,000 feet in bright.
The
.
.
SEWING MAOHINES.
x
higher points of this sunken ridge now
form the islands of the Azores.
—The English journals, in discussing PLOW POINTS for the Oliver Chilled. Wiard. Three Riv­
ers, Bryan, Cale, Curtis, Dodge, Robinson
the question of dumeatio poisons, sug­
And many other Piow|s.
«
gest as a protection or remedy a law
prohibiting the use of arsenic in the
In fact, we keep a full and qomplete stock of flrat cl*M Hardware and Farming Tool*. Cal!
manufacture of any and'all fabrics far and set- them before buying. '
domestic purposes—that is, in all those
processes which leave the arsenic in the
finished goods.
It appears that tho
trade interest* involved in this practice
! have been subjected to scientific investa­
! ga’ion, and the alleged advantages in
। employment of arsenic for wall papers,
I etc., are «hown to be for tho most part
Imsgloaiy.
Among tho paper stainers
L the u&lt;e of arsenical pigments is being
abandoned,'and in other industries also
they are much less resorted to than for- |
merly. .Bat,, notwithstanding this, and .
the well-known fact that two or throe I
grains of the article will destroy life, I
the production of arsenic in Englund j Jgl
Bl
last year was nearly 5,000 ton*.
—A recent writer on the phenomena of
. friction assorts that a large portion of
the friction of engines is the result of
i tight cylinder packing, and that in setting'out packing it should be only tight
enough to keep tho steam from passing,
this being also best done by degrees,
setting out the rings a little, then block­
ing ths crosshead, and testing by allow1 ing steam in the cranlrend of the cylini der.
When no steam passes, the rings
1 are tight enough.
In cylinders that
i have run for some time it is impossible
I to make a piston tight without reboring.
Care is also requisite, in making a com­
. plete revolution of the engine by hand,
I after setting out the rings, to see that
I the packing does not stick in any of the
1 smaller portions of the cylinder. Again,
an engine that requires constant lubri| cation* in the cylinder to prevent aqueak| ing needs attention, as generally tho
j rings will be found too tight or thecylin. dor out of line.

REED’S GENUINE SPRING TOOTH HARROW
.

ROAD SCRAPERS, SQUARE DRAGS, 5

OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE

WE HAVE MADE A FEW WIJH

THREE INCH TIRE.
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING

BETTER THAN COMMON,TIRE

We believe the Three inch Tire is destined to come
into general use. Call and see them.

Sold ov C. L. Glasgow, Nashville, Mich.

BENTLEY BROS. &amp; WILKINS-

Hastings, Mich., Sept. 15th, 1881.

PITH AND POINT.
—Always judge a man by his depth,
instead of his length.—Detroit Free
Prcst.
I
—Many a man owes his success in life
to the hisses of his enemies, instead of
i tho plaudits of his friends. — Whitehall
I Timc-a.
—A young lady who was squeezed boI tween two freight cars says it felt just
Il like trying on a new pair of corsets.—
Philadelphia Chronicle-Herald.
—The msq who has all knowledge at
his finger*’ ends should not bite his
nails; he might bile off more than he
could conveniently chew.—Poston Tran­
script.
—“The truth always pays in the
end” is an old saying, and that is tho
reason, probably, why there is so little
of it told at the beginning of any busi­
ness transaction.—Somerville Journal.
I —A geatleman went intp a Pearl
j street dry-goods store yesterday, and
asked for ten yards ot “naked cam­
bric.”
The young lady blushed and
said: “I guess you mean undressed
cambric.”
“Oh, yes; that’s it.”—
Albany Argus.
■
—This Man is very Busy. He is pushed
for time. He looks ns if he Had More
’ on his hands than he could accomplish.
, We feel Sorry (or him. Ha has an irn, nortant Engagement to Keep, and he is
Hurrying up Matters to Meet iu He is
to 4&gt;e hung at Noon to-morrow.—Denver
\ Tribune Primer.
—A Brooklyn man owns thirty dogs.
We didn’t suppose that so much grind­
ing poverty could be centered in one
man in that City of Churches.
The in­
dividual yrho owns five dogs is generally
an object of charity. What must bo tho
destitution of the man who owns thirty P
—Norristown Herald.
—“Brutus, bay not mo!” remarked
Cassius, when Brutus, who was in tho
; genteel hair-dressing lino, was about to
anoint hi* customer’s face with the aro, matic bay rum.
This is important,
, rhowjng, as it does, that the barber of
classic days followed tho same course as
does his succoaso^ of the present time.—
New Haven Register.
'

CHICAGO, ROCK ISLAND &amp; PACIFIC R Y
Is The Croat Connecting Link between the East and the West!
..

__ _________ .____

™.I——•__ •-

WUSSSWi

k Typical American.

In a recent address before tho Chicago
Historical Society, Hon. Isaac N. Araold related the following characteristio
incident of tho late William B. Ogden:
I recall an incident which illustrates
O^dens’s energy, and is characteristio.
1 On one occasion, in conversation with a
' lady, who, born to affluence, was re1 duood to poverty, and who was asking
' his advice how her inexperienced sons
’ and daughters could earn a livelihood,
1 to the question: “What can they doP”
* be replied: “If I wm in the position of
1 your sons, if I could do nothing better, 1
’ would hire myself out to dig potatoes
' with my fingers, and when 1 had earned
' Hjough to buv a hoe I would'dig with it,
1 md so I would climb up.
If your sons
are heol*iiy and willing 4o work they
।
rill fiqd enough to do, and if they can
not begin at the top let them begin at
1
he bottom, and very likely they will be
di the better for it. I waa born close
j
&gt;y a Mwmill, was early left an orphan,
*
hristened iu a^mill pond, graduated at
’ i log school house, and, at fourteen,
■fancied I could do anything 1 tarnsd my
i»nd to, and nothing wa* im;xuuiible,
» -nd over since, madam, I. have been

—- *.ir -'-rnlnrr nnrnnar— —1 ralata

'
1
1

roue debllilj

effect*

Agents Wanted for Salli^au’a

IRELAND OF Tj-DIY
en&lt;mviDc»

�XIOUbAM NEWS.

Aflkin
A« was expected, hr flatly contradicted
many of Bhipherd’* qiost important

Rhe breaking of the rollway at alutnrcxiup near Superior a few days ago,*
M two men. named Harla and Mc- him as a liar and perjurer, an&lt;! suggest-,
ad that his case should be taken up by
3ody of Mt. Moi ria, n brakeman the Grand Jury. The great interview
Fere .Maniuctte IL R. which Shipherd has so elaborately de­
«|lai car on Tuesday, receiv- scribed aud reported dwindled to a 16­
minutes conversalion in Mr. Blaine’s to certain of tho Identity of tboiw about him..
rics that resulted in death.
!oon of Lyons, one of the oldest hands, and the assertion that the
•of that place aud greatly es- “wicked letter” to Hurlburt was quoted
was found dead-in bed at his to the Secretary at that time and tlmt
at Pewamo the morning of April he did not condemn it, wqs shown to be
, No nnngtr could, have visited
untrue. Mr. Blaine produced a letter
.mag White, a logger. w drown­ from Senator Blair, who waa present at
,tl|e
interview,
saying
that
he
did
not
ed in Lincoln Lake, near Ludington,
Sunday. He waa at work driving logs hear Shipherd tell the Secretary about Bclfhbora. Hen, women, and even little ohlL
and fell off into the lake nnd, not being the bribe, and toever heard that he had
made such an offer until Bhiphtrd tes­
John Evans, a breakman on Flint &amp; tified before the committee. Mr. Blaine Ralph Waldo, figured prominently in tho Invo­
I’m* Marquette log train, while coup­ had also asked cx-8eeretary Boutwell, lution; wm Chaplain of the Continental Oonling cars nt Midland on Friday, was ex-Senator Eaton, Collector Robertson,
taught bet ween two cars, and mash­ aud other prominent gentlemen about
Ralph was born in Boston. May 25. LW. At
ed so- badly that he died the next their knowledge of tills offer of $250,­ eight years of age bo entered the public gram­
mar school and soon after the Latin school.
000 jn stocks, and he read to the cttttiday.
Ho wm noted as “one who loved to trifle In
Pete Peterson, a Ludington boy, lost mittee their letters of denial. In an
a foot in Wnrd’s Mill op Saturday. He eloquent strain Mr. Blaine declares
was playing around the mill nnd enre- that the late President itad known
leesly goChh foot in front/of the slab nothing of Shipherd nnd his scheme.
saw nniLfcad ibcutcomp&gt;tely oft above He laid before the committee all of the
correspondence between hinpelf and
the ankw'joint.
Dariin McGraw, of Manlstee.snes the Mr. Hurlburt while the latter was at
Lake Shore and Michigan Southern rail­ Lima, nnd explained that the only rea­
road for neglect in the matter of for­ son why he had not kicked Shipherd
warding the dead body of his wife, a outof the State Department at the be­
neglect which epused several days de- ginning was that he was introduced by
layof her funeral
a Senator,ahd apparently supported by
At Stanton, oh Friday n lad named three ex-Senators, an ex-Secretary of
Earnest Wheeler was on a fence near the Treasury,and other prominent men.
the railroad track, and attempted to It begins to look as though the commit­
board a train of cars by jumping from tee has been imposed upon from the
the fence to the train.
Ho fell be­ first by a brazen fraud, and they do
neath the wheels nnd was crushed to not feel very pleasant over it.
Ship­
herd may not find it so smooth sailing
death.
Jans Pctersson, a Swede, 35 years of when he returns ns when he left.
Mr.
age, and unmarried, was run over by a Blaine’s testimony waa given in the
train on the Grand Rapids A Indiana nnptuoua manner which is his charac­
railroad, near Grand Rapids, Friday, teristic. Hie language was emphatic,
and goffered injuries which have proved and when it became necessary for him
fatal. He camo from Sweden only about to describe Shipherd’s character, or
find expressive adjective, to be applied
a week before.
Johtt Rom, of Melvin, Sanilac Co., , to Shipnenl’s false statement, the die
was instantly killed Friday while aid­ tionary was laid under contribution,
ing a neighbor to work a stump mach­ with very satisfactory results. A little
ine. Some of the rigging gave away, passage with Mr. Belmont, at the.
earning one of the timbers to swing end of the session, indicated that the
around, striking Mr. Ross on the head ex-Secretary has a desire to examine
and killing him instantly.
some members of the committee, and
Detroit saloon keepers held a secret that he may turn the tables on Mr.
meeting on Friday evening, nt which Belmont before the end of his bearing.
they denounced the increased liquor
The nearer we get to the end of this
tax as exorbitant and tyranical, and session o$ Congress the more accurate­
decided not to pay it until forced to. ly we can forecast its results.
There
They also raised a fund to protect sa- are two important schemes which may
ioopists convicted of violating tho be said to have fallen through, at least
for the present sessions, the navy and
George Rogers, aired 55 years, of De­ steamship subsidy,
Both .met with
troit, commitod suicide Thursday after­ signal reverses on Monday. The naval
noon, by jumping overboard from the schemes, which was to construct six
Steamer Idlewood, between Detroit and steel ships .......
______
of war ____________
nt a cost of _
$10,000,Marino City. It ia ouppoawl .that. a« I ooo eacli.luul boon crolrod train the

WUUam tn teacidnga school which waa bald
hi hia mother'! home. In March, IBS, ho was
ordalntxM minister of the Second Church In
Boston. Bronson Akntt, who hoard him preach
that ycanwu -struck “with the youth of thq»
preacher, tho beauty of his elo cution, and tho
direct and sincere manner Un which ho ad­
dressed his hearers." In h32 he resigned his
place and gradually withdrew from tho min­
istry.
ropo for the benefit of bls health. In England
ho formed the acquaintance of such 'men as
Coleridge, Wordsworth. Carlyle, Wolter Sav­
age Lawlor ahd other famous literati. Re­
turning to Boston tn the winter, he com­
menced a scries of lectures, and in 1834
preached for a time for tho Cnltarion Church
in New Bedford. In 1835 he delivered a scries
of biographical lectures in Boston. In ISM, at
tho laying ofthe cornerstone of a monument
commemorating the Concord fight, an ode
written by him was sung. It contains the im­
mortal lines:
" Here, once the embattled farmers stood.
And fired the shot heard round the world.”
publiabcd, which met with so alow a sale that
after twelve years only MO copies were sold.
In 1838 Mr. Emerson collected and published.
In three volumes, “ Carlyle's Essayii," having
previously edited tho American edition of
“Sartor Resartut." In that year be, with
Bronson Alcott, Maryaret Fuller, Parker,
Stetson, Clarke and others, formed tho Trans­
cendental Club, devoted to tbo discussion of
Idealistic feilgion. He resigned a position as
minister of East Lexington in 1S38, on account
of» his Increasing liberality of opinion. In
1K&amp;40 ho '.ectured tn Boston. In 1840 a quar­
terly magazize, called The Dial, ot which Mr.
Emerson was editor, being associated therein

INC GOODS,

SECOND TO NONE IN BAKRY COUNTY.

jVotions, Domestics,
Clothing for men and boys,
Dress Groocls,
Hats and Caps,
Trunks and Sachels,
Carpet and Oil Cloth,
' .
Boots and Shoes,
Grroeeries EZtc. Etc.
UR SALES THE PAST YEAR HAVE BEEN FULL 30 PER CENT IN EXCESS OF
every previous season and we tender our hearty thanks for there liberal support in our
ff orts to bring the prices of all lines of goods down to reasonable profits. This year we wish
to increase our sales 50 per cent and have placed on our counters one of

O

The Most Attractive Stock Ever Opened In Nashville
As we have in the past so we shall try and make it in the future.
all high prices.

G. A. TRJJMAN &amp; SON.

The First to the Front!
I

AM NOW RECEIVING A FULL.STOCK OF GOODS SUITABLE FOR THE SPRING TRADE. INCLUDING
the Largest and Best Stock of

Ready Made Clothing, for Men, Boys, and Youths,
.

Ever brought to Nashville, and ranging m price from three to thirty dollars persrut.

In

Ladies, Misees, Gents &amp; Children’s Fine Shoes
I 'keep the celebrated Rochester make, Stylish, Durable anc Cheap.

I have the- latest styles and can flt all parties.

At prices that defy competion.

In

I always keep a full stock of

Cash paid for Batter and Eggs.

published for four years, and for which ho
wrote much both of prose and poetry. In tho
Brook Farm scheme of 1S41 ho took much In­
terr t, but hi^kccn sense of tho ridiculous
prevented bis becoming a resident of “tbo
testhctlc village," as he styled it.
In 1847 be published a second »erica of essays
and a volume of poems. In the fail of that

Bo«o™ waaalHirtetl with drop., ot the fcrtile |,rain of ,|r Kobeaon and was for tho Mechanics' Institute, which hau some
heart,be took hi, lite, while inatlt ot 110 be carried out by Mr. Chandler. It time previously been organized by tho famous
These lectures were re­
despeftdency.
| any more suggestive combination to Lon) Brougham.
markably successful. He published another
The fore part of last week Mary Mill- i flj&gt;cnd $60,000,000 on naval construction volume of essays In 1848, and also published in
er, a 14-ycar old adopted daughter of I cou|(1 hv wentioned I can’t think of it book form some of his contributions to the
Dial. “Essays on Representative Men" ap­
Robert Irving, engaged in a playful just now.
peared In 1850, '• Memoirs of Margaret Fuller
wrestle with a girl companion, and she
The following statement shows the OmoII" in 1532. “ English Traits" In ISM, tho
fell, her comrmlc falling upon her in condition of appropriation bills con­
such n manner as to cause internal in­ sidered up to date.
The Immediate Other Poems " in 18'17. “ Society and Solitude'
juries, resulting in inflammation and Deficiency, a law ; II. R, 3308, Forti­ in W70.
death, on Saturday last.
fication bill, passed both Houses, with Boll party, and stumped for John Gorham Pal­
A lad living near Adrian found a amendments, nnd the Senkte has ask­ frey. who was u candidate for Gulicrnatnrtnl
* tramp sleeping in his father’s barn and ed a conference, bnt Speaker Keifer honors on that tickpt. In 1835 be lectured on
antl-slavcry in Boston and New York. HewM
‘ jabbed a pitchfork into him just to see has not had time to appoint one upon the frienij during life of John Brown, of Har­
if he was alive. He was, and yelled the part of the House; H. R, 3548, per’s Ferry, and bls apologist to the cod. In'
murder, where-upon the boy drew blood Post office Appropriation, passed both L&lt;MB ho composed bis Boston bymn to celebrate
again. Thea the tramp starte, to run, Houses, with amendments, is in con­ ! emancipation, and read it nt tbo irreat mecllnj
In Boston June 1 of that year. He delivered a
and got to the barn-yard just in time to ference, and will’probably l&gt;e reported graphic and beautiful address at the meeting
meet the boy’s father and a big hungry to-day ; H. R. 4323, Military Academy, In Concord which ww« held April 19, 1HB, to
bull-dog.
The farmer knocked him passed ‘noth Houses and is now before give expression to the public grief for tbo
death of Abraham Lincoln.
and the dog grabbed him by the throat. the House committee, with Senate am­
For the j-ast fifteen or twenty years ho ba.1
Then tho boy came out and explained, endments; II. R. 4185, Indian Depart­ continued to write and lecture, sometimes to
the dog was choked off, and and the ment, passed both Houses, with amend preach. Those who once criticised him faurd
family went i:i to prayers, while the ments, and is In conference; H. IL 4406 new faith in him as a poet, thinker and critic.
What once^Bocmcd faults were forgotten, tn
tramp emignilrd to the next county as Agricultural Department, passed both an admiring recognition of hia genius. From
* 4Mtno as heeohld.—livening Newn.
Houses, with amendments; confer­ fur and near bo has been honored. Tyndall
The.im'pn-s»iibTc Don C. Henderson ence asked by Senate nnd appointed ;
profoundly religious man. who is really and
i«in trouble with a wicked partner. H. R. 3559, Army bill, passed both entirely undaunted by tbc discoveries of
That is Don isone of the most stalwart Houses, with amendments, and con­ science, past, present and prospective.”
Mr. Emerson was twice married—In 18S&gt; to
ofatalwart Repai&gt;licans.in the state, ference committee appointed by the
Ellen Louisa Tucker, who died of coasumpwhile his partlwr has of late evidence Senate.
• '
tian in 1832, nnd in 1835 to Lydia Jackson, of
of a weakness’ for the Democratic re­
It is whispered pretty loudly that the Plymouth, who has been the beloved compooligon.
Don commenced proceedings President nnd General Grant have
the public welfare, and took an active port in
to annul to co-partnerahip but not auc- broken over the Beale matter.
When the literary organizations of Concord. By his
cceding as fast as expedient, and hav- General Grant was here be was besieg­ neighbors, those who knew him longest end
. ing been locked out, last Saturday night ed by many old friends for his inflnence moot intimately, be wm regarded with reverbroke into the office and pied rhe at the White House.
Before he came
forms,mailing galleys,etc. Consequet- he had already recommended rvarions
Singular Result of a Laughing Contest.
ty the publication of the Allegan Jour­ persons for minor positions. ’ The story
nal baa come to a stand still, for a time is-that while many persons received the
at last.______
_________
General’s approval he laid no particu­
apartment of a bouse on Spadlna arenue last
Do you feel heavy in the morning, lar stress upon anyone of them, except­ evening. Time huug henry on their barilla,
weary, uufresltcd, unrested languid, ing the case of General Beale. This and the suggestion of one that they relieve tbo
oppressive
ennui by laughing for the drinks
limp, utter, blase, faint-hearted un­ appointment of Beale to a Cabinent
equal to the battle of life, querulous, position Grant made a special request.
■narbid, disinclined
to exertion*— When this was done there existed a
diutual understanding between the
you’ve got it. 'The UMithetic craze is up­
President and the ex-President that the
on you; take a sunflower liver pill.
latter should name one of the Cabi­
A vitisen went into a hardware store
Ho laughed as If doncut. Grant had deferred doing thia
Che &lt;$hrr night and inquired:
“How
until after the Cnbinent was half made
imuch do yon ask for a bath-tub for a
up apd everything but the Interior,
child?”
“Three dolxrs and seventy­
Navy aud War Departments disp&amp;wd bursting; symptom? of apoplexy became apfire cent» ” wns the reply. “W.-h-e-w!”
of. From Grant's silence, the Presi­
whittled the cusromer. “Guess well
would die
dent probably inferred that he bad no
hove to go on washing tlie baby in the
desire to insist upon the promise ex­
coal-ahuttle till the price come-i down.
tracted from him on the grass-plot at
Abraham Lincoln was once called Elberon, and waa somewhat
taken
deBMAomeyouDg people. He aback wlifsu General Grant reminded
oua ch* piny of Uu»hin&lt;.—Tbrtmto (Canada)
i call, but said he would him of it by suggesting the names of
General Beale for the naval portfolio.
—Concerning the strongest New Eusnort rmou, The serAvgvst.
ftiRows: “Don’t awear.

We shall put the knife tO

.. । ins Americas
Popiilar Dictiosary*
$t09
^.rotate
auM &gt;aX »•—-

McCormick Twine-Binder!
American Pcp-

navqtAi ' -wia

anl»a jr ec».

' &gt;nt«r pu.'.Mwr*

I YarUMuzf
Our renders i&amp;ill Jind this
wonderful ' hook
thn
cheap. cd.
Ths
information -it contains aj toorth
many time', ‘.Lc af,zou'ii asked
for itf and &lt; •&gt; sfotdd Liin the
possessi'r.t of eve^tjbod; ,
With
this book in i.'te libraryfar refer­
ence, mavu
'•Midi more depc-.:.-’1
.:.:!can be dispensed •
wit.1:, and iffnorance of his
country. hisf'&gt;rMbuslnesst laws,
etc., is inexcusable in any man.
Jfoie the price. 91, post-paid.

I est Dictionc.i--j

HAS VALUABLE IMPROVEMENTS OVER ALL COMPETITORS

A SPRING DEFENCE!
Haw U&gt; Raaal Um AmmIU of Ill Haaltk—»r.

BE NOT DECEIVED

Somtthlnit fbr )O«.

By statements made by agents representing other machines
having a resemblance to the McCORMICK, claiming their
Binders are the same, for such claims are false, and suits for
infringements have been brought against imitations
CALL-

OIX

NORTH MAIN 8T„ NASHVILLE, M,

And examine it carefujly before maldng your choice for the
coining harvest.

JOl^T. ZP. IS^AJSnSTY’S

Independent Reapers
------ ALSO-----Platform, Side-Spring and Side-Bar Carriages,
and Wagons
A r. Rock Bottom Prioes
Youre Respectfully,

don’t ehew. don’t drink;

U. O. CK.OCKMK.

■haw where it can nmd«r joa ao ewotial amice.
Tho FAVOR1TK BMMEPY U almoM InatanUn-

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                  <text>ORNO STRONG, l
EDIYOB AMD PMOFMIXTOR.

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun.

)

| TERMS: $1.50 per Year
I Credit Sumcrii-hoxb $1.78.

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, MAY 13, 1882

VOLUME IX.

NUMBER 34.

to pay for the property, insurance one
LOCAL GIBBLE-G ABBLE
HASTINGS.
BI8MARK.
LOCAL MATTKM.
year and expenses to Battle Creek, aud
Ab4 Fsnsaal Chit-Chat.
- John Mate Is building a new bouse..
Help la scarce.
And Her Environs.
desire to thank the busineaa men of
TO THE FARMERS.
Tbe park 1* to be Improved *120 worth.
Naahyille who eutacribed to the pro­
J. M. Roe of the Nashville mills,
I am about to establlsb routes through tbe
Fifteen certificates were granted to teachers
—A car load of new good* arrived for
Old Solis getting in earnest.
country for the purpose of buying Butter and
ject. Catholic services will not be held has a new advL this week.
last Saturday.
Tbe hum of the saw mill is beard.
Eggs, believing it will be more convenient to
Kocher Bros, on Monday.
at the church for several weeks yet,
Bun! buzz! Look out fair lady!
tbe fanner, during tbe busy season, to sell his
Withdraw your flannel by degrees.
rear of the Gardner store.
—The rains of the past week have ana whether a priest will come to Tlwre’s a °b" in your bonnet
Foliage Is unusually slow to pat forth.
butter
The
Gun
Lake
Association
are
making
precaused fragrant blossoms to be-deck Nashvilletoliveor not, is also uncer­
John Braun, the now sheomaker,
■ Oats are sown, and coni planting Is next In
cherry, peach, plum and apple trees.
tain.
is having a fne run of custom. See
order. '
Tbe Presbyterian# made over *40 clear pro­
Ed. Rawson's barn has received Its covering
—Kellogg, Bell &amp; Co.have closed out card.
—C. W. Smith is making improve­
fit, Saturday, feeding tbe hungry.
of pine.
A fine baby recently made its ap­
ments to his store, which, when com­ theballance of their furniture stock to
Mrs. C. G. Holbrook will start next.week for
Elmer Hammond straps a new span of
pearance at the home of T. S. Brice, Huron, Dakota, to join her husband.
J.
Lentz
it.
Sons,
and
are
closing
up
pleted, will give him a salesroom 20x70.
horses.
them salt, time and 1abor, and they make a
their oid business preparatory to ap-. living south.
Several of oar people will. attend tbe educa­
The Bismark school ‘-tuek” up on Monday of gain in weight, as butter will not weigh a*
—Wm. Feighner, living two miles
Hon. E. S. Lacey has our thanks for tional convention nt Albion next week.
‘
plying themselves exclusively to man­
much after it U salted aud the brine a orfcud
south, raised a J0x40 bank barn, Thurs­
Nell Parker has improved the looks of tbe
ufacturing. They are making arrange­ late and valuable public documenta
Health is good, and children plenty—In out, as it does before ti&gt;e salt ia put In.
day.
Larkins &amp; Martin are the ments to manufacture cheap bedsteads, on the tariff question.
Hasting* House with a new coat of paint.
1 shall always be willing to pay casli fur
these parts.
butter and eggs, and will guarantee my prices
A little qpn of Ira.Hatch fell and broke bl*
builders.
F. Campbell has sold bis'farm in Vt.
for which there ia a great demand, and
Monday wm a good corn day, and reminded to compare favorably with , other markcu. 1
sbsll carry a choice’ stock of Groceries which
builtat^w picket are confident that they can workup a Ville township to E. S. Griffin, and collar bone on Bunday last. Doc- Upjohn one of spring.
—Tom.
mended it.
.
will be sold af cheap and at same price* as 1
s, and ia buaineM which will bring prosperity bought an eighty ni Bellevue.
Mason* and Dixon# line, according to the sell in my grocery. Farmers wishing to bave
Tbe services of Prof. Hall as principal of our
latest survey, Is established in Sunfield.
. this route established before their door, will
Track work on the M, C. IL IL is a
rial to tbe front for an up- to themselves and credit to the vil­
getting i
schools, lute been secured for another vear at
Geo. Hay adds ouc more to hl# family record. call immediately and • leave their name*at my
little dull just now, and A. D. Jarrard’s *1,000.
right to his house.
lage.
x
grocery or with Jacob Osniun.
the production of lastweek. A little gal.
road train has been declared off.
Nashville, Mav 13, 1889.
.
Fred and Chas. Hotchkiss are now proprie-.
—The reduction of the head of the
—W. A. Aylsworth was in the village
Tbe cheese factory is In full blast and the
Your* Truly,
Elder P, Holler has bills* out adver­ tore ot the pioueer drug irtore, J. P. Roberts
Vt. Ville paper was not caused by the on Wednesday. He had just returned
CALFIN AIN8WORTHnew editors at Nashville can soaktbelr beads I
tising a baskct‘meeting to be held at having retired.
diminution of its editor’s head iu the from Buffalo and Rochester, where, ho
J. R. Wickham and Annina Woodruff were !
the lake school house in Vermontville,
UBd.
«&gt;
w . XEW “RPETl ?!"«•
least. That ia as big as ever.
informs us, he purchased $17,000 worth
-thrift ™ U. &lt;TObW «. or wutaony by i d^^1,*
”" T' “Tt
“ i1
’
c have opened a Carpet Room over our
on Sunday May, 20th.
lb,.
4tb.
*ufc ““ 1,““'
“• •““*
toye, where customers cun find st all time*
—The suit of Carl Schnidcr vs of clothing for bis three stores, located
Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Dickinson will Rev. Bancroft on the 4tb.
burn. Mr. Carter is fearfully debiltated and
fw and late styles of Brassall*. Ingrain# and
The schools are in a very prosperous coo- II will not need u home here’long.
Stewart &amp; Holmes, as co-partners, was at Big Rapids, Cadillac and Naahville, entertain the Christian social Wed­
lemp Carpets, Malts, etc., also Trunks.
‘
Kocukk Bros.
called by Esq. Killin, Thursday.
W. and this village gets the best of tho nesday eve ; May 17th. Refreshments dltion which reflect* great credit on Prof. Hall, || My soul I# sick with the every day’s report of •
also hl* able corps of aAsi&amp;tant&lt;
S- Powers for plaintiff and A. M. stock. This is a mamiiioth stock and will be served. All cordially invited.
contending clement* and sectional strife over ' HarkHark I the dogs do bhrk
wilt
attract
attention.
A
stock
of
dry
Our
aboolists
have
received
’
a
large
sunpl
v
of
i
Flint for defendant. A Dies in abate­
The people are coming for too.
.
,
«»urpost
our post uiucc
office uuaira.
affairs. There
lucre are some wno
who
The Bapist Sunday school will hold
Some in Wagons, some in buggies,
ment was entered and tbe suit quoshod. goods, boots, shoes and groceries have its sessions in the west school! room,
3 have always harbored the hottest of hatred
And some on foot you see:
also been purchased which will l&gt;o open
n t t°ti r °&gt;
tn
i
lagafastourlHUeburg.aDdwhowuuJdwilllngTbcv march a ong with joyous song
of
the
union
school
building,
every
Sun
­
Hotchkis* Bros, have been making Improve.n Vl„
. ...
—A resident of State St.,saw what be for inspection and sale at tho old stand
Til they come to Ainsworth’s stere
, ., , ,
.
—,
"
.
1 ly commit suicide to kill Its busiueas, yet Bl»day, at the usual hour, until further tnente In their drug store. They have also sc-1
.
.
........
.
took to be a burglar in his room, the in a few days.
Theu
wheel about and march right In
.
• mark stays and hoists high its banner of In­
And call for a jtound or more.
cured a flrat class cleric, Fred Heath.
t
notice.
other night, and jumping out of bed
I noceuce.B-lth love to enemies ss well a* friends.
—One niaht last week a highly-re­
Not very much difference of opinion to be i
It is stated that Rev. J. M. Aikin, an
! The controversy is fl re-ride talk in every shanty
throttled with an iron grasp------ a new spected Queen St.,man,not feeling well
tnr Plymouth Rock egg# for hatching pur­
ex-pastor of tho Nashville M.E.church, settled by the lut term of court by Judge and waxes hot hi public gatherings, and a lack
hat and his wife’s waterproof that
asked his wife to stew
him some
poses nt 50cte for 13. W. J. ParKCS. 1J&lt;
Hooker, as it only took him one week.
is about, to move to this
village
of brotherly love Is displayed everywhere. miles east Vt. Ville depot.
hung on the knob of the bedroom
'
33*.
Charley Myers and Jim Rock bave relumed
herb tea, and in due time went to the
Everyone presents a garnished seenter, or a
to recuperate and gain new health and
dour.
%
.
from
the
far
West
and
are
*pcrfectly
sails
lied
kitchen to get it, but by mistake got on­
GIRLS CATCH ON.
well oiled untruth as if to conquer or kill eter­
vigor.
to live In Michigan, and more will follow suit.
—The wheelbarrow is the most use­ to the wrong dish and swallowed some­
To
those
25ccnt
white
Kid
Gloves
at.
nally. Many are like the parp In the stall,
Jncob Lentz it- Sons have now a larg­
C.«W. Guanqkk.
The adopted son of John Dennis, who has
ful and elegant appendage of a well re­ thing less than a quart of a decoction
who could not eat hay and would not let the
gulated back yard ; and one eoming in of "anti-washboard soap,” which the er stock of furniture of every descrip­ been confined in the asylum at Kalamazoo, es­ ox. Joseph's brethren, moved with envy, sold
THE NEW VICTOR NEW IN 1
tion,
then
ever
before,
and
their
stock
caped
aud
put
fa
an
appearance
he
re,
last
Tues
­
contact with one on a very dark night­ good wife shaved np and set to soak­
him In Egypt; Caln, moved with an evil spirit,
MACHINE.
has always been a credit to Nashville. day.
can not fail to be struck forcibly with ing for the week’s washing.
killed h&lt;* brother Abel; Guiteau, lusting for
Intending to go out of tbe trade of tbesame,
What
A roller skating rink is tube tbe next sensa­
prominence, removed our President. Vengence I will give the purcltaser the tteneflt of the
the truth of this remark. He’ll tumble followed is no laughing matter, for the See new ad.
tion.
Cushion
protection
and
encouragement
O. C. Ransom, attorney for.A Leitelt,
ia no part of Christianity and should be left for I&gt;rofit-&lt;. Onty a tew left. Call souq.
to it at once.
victim of tbe drink was a very sick
and C. H. D’Arens, Supt. of the Nash­ will be furnished to those who become seated God's own administration. My dear brethren,
—The case of Levi Brooks vs Lewis miyn all night, vomiting quite a quan­
disheartened,
do you know that while you may love unholy j
ville Excelsior Works, all of Grand
BEHOLD A BARGAIN.
Tbe co-partnership of Bowers A Cook, pub­
Wood and son, on a note of hand, was tity of blood.and at this writing has not
Rapuls. gave us a pleasant call and
strife, you are committing homicide spiritually j Covered Butters lOcls apiece at Aixsworm*.
lishers ofitbc Banner, having been dissolved.
called Wednesday , before Esq. Killin, gained his usual healthy color.
upon some of your neighbors. You are wev .
some bufdness on Wednesday.
m6sev to i.oasY
Bower*
returned
to
his
home
In
Washtenaw
A. M. Flint appearing for plaintiff and
blanketing many well disposed souls for whom |
—The stock-bolders of the Chemical J Judd Fleyharty, agent of the Pitts-1
Co., un Wednesday.
you had scat.to Heaven your fervent prayer for On
*■ Kcal Estate at low rate of Interest of
W. 8. Powers for defendant. Case ad­ Works have decided to put into the burg. Fort Wayne A Chicago Railroad
Win. P. Garrett, ouc of the farmers who bad
Lee A Durkek.
_________________________
journed until May 23nd on application builditijp anew engine and
- * machinery
”
at Bucyrus, 0., is in the village in at­ wheat stored In the Irving mills last year, when their deliverance from sin. Now wllfyou willing,
‘of defendant.
for the manufacture of "Excelalor,” tendance upon his father,P. Fleyharty, It was destroyed by fire, has recovered a 6200 ly lead them Into the cesspools of wickedngss! I CST" Full line of Wall.PapeFat
Why stir up the people over a matter of so
__________________f.-T. BOISE’S.
—C.-W. Corwin of Grand Rapids, has providing t:.ey can secure basawood who is so low with consumption that be Judgement against the proprietor* of tbe mill.
small account! Why embitter brother against
WHAT IS THE USE
icasea the
uie^wrovc
.-nuncun, ia
It looks like a crow between a cannon and a
leased
Grove oouseai
House at Morgan,
is enough to warrant the same, and C. H. is not expected to live.
brother, aud neighbor against neighbor I There
papering,‘painting and building an ad- D’Arcuahas been in the village- makof buyings now Mower or Reaper when you am
We publish this week a somewhat hay rake. The street commissioner* are going Is no God In it, because God te love.
get your old one made as good as new at
dition to the aame, clearing up the ing arrangements for die improvement lengthy poem, entitled; "Eastward­ to try it, and possibly it may prove to be just
2
Wbitist.
.Stevens A Coox’s.
tbe thing. They say it is a new tangled rood
grounds, building sidewalks and mak­ of the buildings, for that purpose, thia Bound,’’ by L. Adda Nichols.
The,
scraper.
MAPLE GROVE.
NEW KRICK STORE.
ing general preparation!! for a vigoroun week. They will pay $1.25 for 18 inch same we have published in pamphlet
J udge Robinson** house on his place north I
1
am
building
a
new
store and req&gt;-«t all
and $2.25 for 36 inch baasword bolts, form. We calculate it os fine a poem
Mr. Balta ha* a new garden fence.
summer campaign.
parties having accounts with me to call at once
of tbe city, burned last week Thursday night.
and settle either by note or cash, as I will need
—Our|Pbillip« street neighbor* are and farmers deairing’ to avail them­ ! as has been seen in many a day, and all It was occupied by David Wolcutt, who had , Cap Bowen raised hl* barn on Friday.
all
that
is
due
me.
Geo. W. Fhincib.
barely time to escajiewith tbelr Ilves from the' GUI 1-apliarn ba* returned from Kanaas.
bracing right up in tho matter of im­ selves of the opportunity of » selling made by .a Nashville lady, too,
Whuoping cough is still on the war path.
BUTTER AND EGGS.
W.G. Aylsworth having received a burning bnilding. Loss total. Insured, house J
provement*.
A sidewalk has been their basswood for spot cash, ahonld
Supervisor Swift has the assessment taken.
1 pay cash for salted or uasaltcd butt- ■. r»gs
built on east side of the street from see G. W. Francis or L. .1. Wheeler liberal proposition.from his brother to for *3U0; contents WOO.
occurred at Jim Perry
s last---------Friday* and other produce.
C. Ainswos TH.
without delay.
Under the auspices of tbe Emmanuel church nj‘A
?| dance-------------------------------'’------manage a store in this village, ^as giv­
Reed to Washington St, new fences
IIPOBTAST TO TKAVFLEiD-v
—Last Sunday night about 1 o’clock, en np the idea of trying the unI Tim Bruoka
H. I.C. bmB,
are b«!i&gt;g built, grading done, an '. 0.
Special
inducements
are
offered
ypu
A. Phillips is about to open up anothcr Al. Rasey and wife were atartled from icliabilities of Dakota, but will remain
;“*’ ,’1U■,
S”1*’ ““
Tl»O™iT«Wl.,. k«p&lt;b.lr iputlb M.. Burlington Route, It will nay voute re
iu Naahville, at the old place, which is
their peaceful .slumber* by a pistol
advertlM-ments to be found elsewhere
batch of lota.
rod sunflowers all of which will be too too-oo-o I
,
. ....
- Wilcox * house now.
and a mi mid of shattered | being stocked with a new stock of utterly utter
for an vthiug.
,
, ,,, , „
—Last Sunday George F. Truman report
...,
...
’
A. Tubbs formerly of Maple Grove, was here
general merchandise.
Old Mr. Mier who wandered off and got lost,
, ,
. .
i
started oat in one of those Cin cinnati ghiHs. Investigation aliowrd that a
. ,
, ,
.
„
. 7
,
on busluew lust week.
Calico. also the beat line ut 5et Print* fa town.
That
live
and
stirring
business
man,
No.
33
ball
had
entered
their
bedroom
Was
found
about
four
miles
south
of
Battle
,,
,
,
,
buggies, tbe property of Chas. Scbeidt,
„ _ . ,
..
.
,,
,
The Duniiatnscliooi commenced last Moixiay
Calvin Ainsworth, is establishing routes Creek by Homer Brown, the old gentleman,
.
w,
W ANTED!
with the intention, probably, of taking window, diagonally from the north­
v .
.
...
with Aggie Dean as tcadftr.
.
“L. .. , .. , , . , ...
,, ,
through the country for the pun hose of who is a little “off,1 has a passion for walking, I
east
and
imbeded
itself
iu
a
bureau.
asswood bolts, for Espcbiu?
Bowe young lady out riding, but the
___ u_________ ,___ ______ ...2
I 1 Amon Wolf cut bls fcxrt by letting a chisel
same to be IS Inches, or 36 Inches j.
butter :mi&lt;Tefcgs. His wagons will also
drop on It lost week.
first corner he turned "pied” the wheels Had the shot been fired from a point, a
glh.
Will
pav
for 18 Inch wood.with bar;
be supplied with a stock of groceries man to overtake. He la 75 years old but walk­
Mr. H. Demaray Is raising up. taking from' off. 61.25 per curd: for 3ft inch*3.25 p»of the buggy aforesaid,entailing a dam­ few feet further south, it would cer­
ed over 100 miles before they caught him.
to be free from shakes and knots. For
tainly have taken effect in the person j which will be sold at the same low prices
and adding to his bouse.
age of $12 for repairs.
ulars inquire of
Geo. W. FhanA hard bitted team, l&gt;elonglng to Geo. Wil­
Mr. aud Mrs. D. McOmber were guests at
of Mr. Rasey or his wife. This is the i. as at his grocery in this village. Tho
Nashvilie Excelsior W
liams of Rutland ran down Broadway in this
—The Young editor of the Olio, in an
second time that a pistol shot, has pene­ enterprise is one of great interest to tho city on Tuesday. 'The driver ran them Into Pliny McOmber* last Sunday.
A FEW THOUSAND DOM.
exti-aordmary brilliant article,
this
Coro
ground
ia
being
made
ready
for
plant
­
I
farmers,
and
those
who
desire
to
be
tak
­
trated the windows of Mr. Rasey’8
the premises of Mrs. Hams breaking down the
To Loan on good Real Estajc securitv.
week, claims that bia subscription list
ing as soon as tbe weather will penult.
- place—the former occasion being last en in the route, should leave their fence, small trees, etc., and it was reported in­
■ is increasing bo rapidly that he has no
Mr. Enloger has been improving tbe looks of
summer—and Al. has his suspicions UHoies with Mr. Ainsworth at once.
juring Mr*. IL, but the latter report turned out
bis
farm
by
cleaning
up
the
swamp*
along
the
,
BRACE UP.
fears of coming to want for cake or
incorrect, and owned Its origin to the fact that
that in both cases the shot was tired by
rood.
■
White and Fancy Shirts, latest styles,
bread either, "tto next thing we ex­
some reckless Vermontvi!liana, while COMMON OOVNOIL PROCEEDINGS. Mrs. H. fainted from fright.
A. L. Rabex’s Barber:
There
was
a
bee
at
Mr.
Caveli's
last
Wednes
­
pect to hear from this bombastic edi­
Han*.
turning the corner, homeward-bounds,
day to help get his corn ground ready; also one
Coumcil Rooms,
i
tor it that be has meat every day for
FISH ! FISH !
after ahalf night’s sproe, as a sort of
.
Nashville,
May
5,
1883.
f
VERM
ONTV
ILLE.
dinner.
White Fish for six cents per pound at
parting salute. Tbe matter ought to be
Farmera clean up your muskets and lay In
Special meeting called by the President.
AlMBWOW.:’*.
G. D. Pratt is erecting a house on tbe lot re­
—Some Vt Ville kids on Sanday last looked up, and the miscreants be com­
waittag a* we saw four lightning rodpeddltn
Present, Chipman, President; Boise, Demarcently purchased of Dr. Parmenter.
NEW GOODS!
were indulging in fast driving on onr pelled to pay the full penalty of the law
Fred Spellman aud*Eugcnc Morey have gone
NEW GOODS!
ctrecta, and the Marshal not being in snch cases made and provii^pd.
It must be bard for a sick brother to be klekto Janesville, Wls., to take lessons tn tcleNEW GO- i H!
The saloon bond of Chas. Scheldt with D. H.
handy, B. H. Hoag picked up a three—The interior of the Christian church Everts aud A. J. Hardy a* sureties, was pre­ r»p*&gt;F
taken to Nashville, by a neighbor, and there
The largest and i*o*t complete Mo - &gt;-er
corncrcd piece of tin, pinned it to his
The Congregational pulpit was filled by Rev.
receive a cold shoulder at the house of a sister. laid down in Nashville. All new ahd
coat aad informed the boys that they during the past three weeks, has been sented and on motion accepted and approved
able. Don’t take our word, bat come u
. a*
• It must have been amusing to have witness­ for yourself.
Kocher Bko .
mit ceaae fast driving on die street or undergoing decided improvements. by ayes aud nays a* follows:
last Bunday.
ed tbe manner iu which the teacher and sbolars
they would lay themselves liable to New and comfortable seats have been
The Hager &lt;fc Well* saw mill iu tbe north
amused themsclvee, at tbe Baker school, a
put in, the walls kalsomined, wood­
west corner of the township is completed and
On motion council adjourned.
work painted, grained and varnished,
ready for business.
C. Aixswuki
-Fowler &amp;. Ingeraon received an­
F. McDbrbt,
E. Chipman.
other with charcoal.
and new carpets put dpwu. The seats,
Isaac Norton has a team and hired man, he
________ MnaMcCuTPBic.
other car load of shingles Wednesday.
Clerk.
President.
FAIR WARNING.
claims, which plowed and harrowed eight acres
wainscouting, window and door casings
A couple of decades ago this would
The May number ot Good Hbaltu. just re­
bayp been grained a light oak, with
Council Rooms,
I
have been sufficient to spank all the
Geo. McCotter has returned from Dakota, ceived, presente an Interrstlng variety of valua- five dollars give rue by Leonard Stro .
black wainut trimmings; the pulpit is
Nashville, Maj 8,1883. f
boys in the State, but boys of to-day
but
will
move
to
Van
Baren
Co.,
where
be
has
grained in imitation of black walnut,
arc more unruly than they were twenagalMtbuying*.bought a farm. No place like Michigan.
with ebony mouldings and French burl
notified to par th- - ms
Frank Kelley and E. U. Stiles have invented leading health Journal in tl&gt;e country, and sterna
Wm.Tw»x; ;.l.
walnut panels, and the doors also have
a new self-acting, freight car coupler: hare
ed above, is hardly sufficient to fill tbe
man, President; Lae and Lents, Trustees.
burl walnut panels. In
this work,
demand of this vicinity.LUMBER! LUMBER!
Miuutesrcad and a;&gt;provod.
from the first coat of
nt to tho
ulna another of the series of illustrated artldct.
The
council
have
decided
to
levy
a
tax
-of
The following account* were presented and
Custom Sawing and Building Mater;
—A. F. Sweitzer of Upper Sandusky, finishing touches, is pronounced by
cn “Medical GyumasUca, or Swedish Move­ Dished un thort netke, at &lt;&gt;ur new
on motion allowed by ayes and Bay*as follows: one-fourth of one per cent oa village property
ments," illustrating the methods of administer­ pie Grove.
Jaw
0.. has bought, upou contract, tbe good judges, par cjxrJlcnte, and is the
for contingent oxpence* for the coining year.
ing
MasMge,
”
aud
tbe
value
of
ila
use.
“
What
building known as the old Wheeler handiwork of Geo. E. Ferguson. The
Tbe editor of the Hawk offered Ralph Stev­
ens the editorship of tbe Bugle,' but Ralph shall we do with President Arthur," by Mln Hoxxt—CaarBXTMJt—At the
store, which was the first business expense of the repairs is about $300,
Julia Coleman, is a criticism on the action of
bride’s parent* fa Woudlaod Mich.
building erected in Nashrille.
Con­ aud has been all borne by the ladies
18H3, ri Ito. 1 f Orwick, Mr.
Preaid*ntArthtrr in reinstating alcohol tn the
sideration $800. Tbe building will be society,—every
member of
which
Boll v of Bay City, and Mie* Hattie (
of
Woodland, rflcb
stocked with chain pumpc, Mr. 8. ex- isa worker, and combined are tbe life
for Hygtoe," “Oaone Fraud," aad various
of the church organisation.
A new
lob ■ tfJlBtorti
Nashvlllr NiarkrtM.
the wood work of the pumps!
Lev! Everts,
chapel organ is also to be purchased.
lical lntercx.1 of the journal. Published at Bat­
the l&amp;lb district. are not liable to take a lively tle Creek, Mich., at *1.00 a year.
—Tiro Catholics bare come into actu- Services will be held io tbe church at
W. Cramer,
you wish to a«e a seat church, attend,
La Douceur, clothfera, of Rig Rap:
baa just
and at the aune time you can Halen to
traded M0 acres of laiwl Iti Cbrutjui Co^ Mo.,
for tbe steamer Isaac Boli of Buffalo -Detroit
a nermon that will ref reah your spirit­
will probably resulted In the. coundPa taking
ual nature. TIhi Beating cap acity of the

LIFE IN NASHVILLE.,

“"“T “ F”l“ I“1-

«»-«•. nJUc.

B

church has been to inc-rt-aaad that it

r.MsDaun

E. Chifman,

MONEY TO LOAN.
aving gilt edged paper—Note* and
wo Inter-,
Ormobtrqxu.

�LONGPELL
IF NEARLY DwAD

cunning ways wo buried him among his
hidden treasurer
My brother made three or four more
attempts to keep another, bnt sooner or
later the white mouth—perhaps tie
diphtheria—carried them off.
Every
one lu^ows of their cunning, intelligent
and mischievous ways. A friend of
MBM 11vtn&lt; Un*:
mine had one that would go down a
well twenty feet on a chain to drink,
rather than make use of a brook hard
by. Notwithstanding he was so faatidious a-- to hurts'ate r, he could chew
nre ( ROW.
tobacco and swear like a trooper. He
In the common crow all the evil pro­ would at evening sit on the gate post
and
My:
‘•Co-bos—oo-bos—&lt;x&gt;-buu,”
pensities of his race, which includes
ravens, rooks, jackdaws, carrion crows, until the cows would come rushing
home, if they were a mile away. To
BMgplirr. blackbirds and blue jay, seem
united and augmented. No bird basso off-set this good service, however, ho
would sometimes call them in the mid­
nearly found Ms natural enemy in man,
dle ot the day, with the same result.
yet excepting when surprised ne is gen­
erally quite able to care for himself. He delighted in wading out in the duck
Constant persecution here has destroyed pond until he could siexe a young dack
Ms faith in man, and has made him ex­ by the neck, plunge his bead under
ceedingly cunning in detecting destruc­ water' and hold it there until the cow­ ‘
tive contrivances, He has learned the ard wm driven away by the mother
'
science of war, and always keeps a sen­ duck.
They are long lived and are models
tinel upon the watch, who never leaves
his post or tree-top unless relieved, and of conjugal fidelity. Lord Rolw once
who is the first to give the alarm and kept a pair under bis observation for
thirty years, and in all that time there
4UJas t to
___
his
pursuer is was never any jarring in their domestic
small boy '
harmless relations. Though cowardly enough
the revengeful farmer with when they have been into mischief, they
are bold as a lion when their rights are
___________ When two corn-planters,
to deceive him, enter a cover and then at stake. A crow has been seen to suc­
one retires, he knows full well that the cessfully defend a captured mouse
man with the gun remains behind in­ against a voracious vulture. _
But to return to our wild crows. He
tent upon his scalp. Although he shud­
ders at the sight of a dead comrade, ig­ knows that every one’s hand is against
nominiously hung by the heels in the him, ana he revenges himself as best he
fields, he soon learns to sneer at strings, may. He is cruelty itself. He will pick
to wink at flashing scraps of tin, and has out the eyes of new-born lambs, and
been known to perch upon the best will impatiently watch the clouding orbs
dressed scarecrow and flout him to his of dying animals, and if the vital spark
very face. Yet he is weak through his 1 tarries too long, vulture like, he sends
vices, and. like.his human enemy, often j in his bill. He will follow a wounded
falls a victim to his fondness for whisky; !1 deer all day, waiting until an attack
a quart of that delectable fluid absorbed 'I uixm him is fraught with no danger.
by a peck of com and carefully con-1I He has even been known to follow car­
cealed in the field will cause abundant nivorous animals, hoping their next
merriment to the experimenters. Even meal would afford him some morsels.
his virtues contribute to his destruction, Cattle don’t dislike him. for he often
for his clannishness and conjugal lights upon their backs and plucks out.
love forbid him
to
desert
Ins the grubs that sometimes infest them.
friends or partners in distress. The He will wage a fussy war with the
writer hereof while secluded in the mother hen until he entices her far
depth of the forest has often arrested enough away from her brood to enable
them in their flight overhead by an imi­ him to jump over her, seize a chicken
tation of their well-known cry. And. or two, ana bear them away to his own.
as they would remain circling over tbe He will fly up forty or fifty feet high
tree-tops answering the call, they fell with his list full of clams anddrop them
an easy prey to the Breech-loader.' But upon the rocks to get at their interiors.
are not these depraved or misguided be­ He will, when dangerously pursued,
lighten him
ings who so relentlessly, by force, trick, disgorge his food to
made in
and device, pursue pur sable friend, for his flight, which is
plainly-flying in the facCof nature? His so straight
a line as to become
only offense is that he pulls up and eata proverbial: "As the crow flies.” I have
the sprouting corn. 'A simple and ef­ (jeen them when preparing to emigrate,
fectual remedy, for this annoy once, is to holding their council, and discussing
mix in a vessel some tar. oil and a small . the matter with all the gravity and dt^quantity of slaked lime in powder. The 'coram of, a Legislature. They would
seed corn is then stirreu in until each form in a circle of perhaps one hundred
grain receives a thorough coating. This feet in diameter, several rows deep,
preparation, being somewhat impervious heads .inward; and after quiet was se­
to' moisture, wifi retard germination cured one would march into the center,
about three days, but it saves the crop. with stately tread and flapping wing,
The crows, after pulling up enough In ij and after a long chattering harangue lo
various places to satisfy themselves that attentive listeners, give place to others
It is unpalatable throughout, will leave until the subject was apparently fully
it forever in disgust. Don’t kill them. considered and decided upon.
It is said that there are white • crows
Arendt the unlovable characteristics of
the crow, find tho black mark of Cain as well as white negroes and white
upon him. unmistakable proofs that he deer. Albinos all; but T have never aeon
should be left unmolested to fulfill his a man with whom I dared trust my jack­
intended mission of keeping down the knife say that he had seen oneanm-' of mice, moles, snails, slugs,
The crow has evidently come to stay,
snaxes, lizzards. grubs, worms, booties 1so We may as well soak our corn and
There are many
and the like, which, but for him. would 'save our powder.
overshadow the land and destroy us al­ worse things than crows.—Uonesdab’
together? With a song like a mule; a (Pa.) Herald.
strut like a petty boss; too big for a pet;
Judge Blatckford’s Almanacs.
Meless for sport; unsavory for food;

With forked tongue, uncanny speech,
dusky wing and sulphurous smell; with
evil eye and chilling croak—he is plainly
•Dough marked as an outcast. Then
1st tho scavenger alone; he may save us
from a pestilence
Occasionally attempts have been made
to civilize him, but his bad moral nature
scams to develop with culture. He is
harder to take care of than a two-yearold baby, and is as treacherous'as a
tame Indian. Cunning as a fox. mis­
chievous as a monkey, ho is withal a
born thief.
Tbe raccoon is honesty
itself by the side of him. Ho steals for
tbe love of it, and will make away with
anything that is not tied down, no mat­
ter how useless it may be to him. A
younger brother of ours once had a
tame crow for some months about the
house, and he managed to keep the
neighborhood in «n uproar tho whole
time. One would conclude that Captain
Kidd had buried his treasures in our

spoons and the like which Richard, for
that wm his name, had purloined from
open doors and unguarded windows.
To do the bird justice I believe he was
innocent of half the crimes charged

I

Judge Blatchford is known to all the
second-hand book-stall keepers and
junk-deAlers in New York, not as the
richest and most industrious Judge on
anv bench, but ns the man who collects
old almanacs. This whimsical pursuit
is almost a mania with Judge Blatch­
ford. - He has now on hand the largest
and most varied lot of old almanacs in
the country, if not in the world. I
should not call it a very interesting col­
lection; to him it is amazingly interest­
ing. He has ransacked Nassau and
Ann streets for years with such indus­
try that it is a rare thing now for him
to find an almanac or calender not al­
ready in Ms collection. Several sum­
mers ago Judge Blatchford went to
Europe for a few weeks’ vacation. On
his return, when be landed at the.North
River pier, he staggered under tho
weight of a mysterious-looking cubical
package or bale, carefully strapped.
He would allow nobodv to touch iL It
might have contained a hundred thou
sand dollars' worth of lace or jewelry.
The custom-house inspectors looked
over the rest of his baggage, and then
approached the big bundle.
" What have you get there, sir?” he
asked.
Judge Blatchford faintly blushed, as
is his. habit when embarrassed, and

suffer for it. Once he was seen to steal
a small coin, and, by the extra pains he
took in hiding it, one would imagine he
knew its value. After his plunder was

cations.”
" But publications are dutiable,” sug­
gested the ofliour.
"Not when published more than
wrong, but the kleptomaniac kept one .twenty years," returned the Judge,
«y« upon his treasure all the same, and promptly, "and these are all older than
grow into a furious rage when his that” But he gave no sign of any in­
tention to open the package for exami­
nation.

crowd of boys around as the outside at a
circus tent Yet with alibis faults he he was speaking. “I guess
look into the bundle.” Al

Uncle Wall.”

time winking at a brother officer, as
much as to say; "There are some

uoalv."
....
T&amp;e Judge trotted

off

•
with

his

ahead of e
" What
“ Last Sunday the Chief was awa/,”
tbe ex-Alderman said. "In his absence
Assistant Chief Shay was driven down
town to the big cotton fire by Bates'
driver behind the Chief s hone- Later
they went up again to Fire Department
Headquarters, in Mercer Street, and
Shay and tho driver lumped out and
went Into the building, leaving the home
and wagon outside.
They had just
mounted the stairs when the big. gong in
the hall struck 225. The horse heard it
and starti-d on a dead run down Mercer
Street, without any driver, at his regu­
lar gait No. 223 is the alarm box on
the corner of Stanton' and Attorney
Streets, way over on the east side. The
horse rushed down Mercer Street to
Canal, swinging out of the way for
trucks and carts exactly as though
steered by his driver, and galloped along
Canal eastward to the Bowery. He
turned up the Bowery toward. Stan ton
'Street and cleared the vehicles until, in
swerving one side, he collided with a

depot, and the little red wagon was
caught The horse got frc€, however,
and went bounding along alone until he
had nearly reached Stanton Street, when
Battalion Chief Breslin came down the
Bowery and turned into Stanton Street
The Chiefs hone followed Breslin to the
fire, where he was known and taken
care of."
* - Had the horse been in that direction
to a fire that dav?”
“No; he had lust returned from down
town. He didn’t run away, and the only
solution is that he knew the location of
No. 225.”
*.* How long has the Chief had him?"
Two years. He has two horses. He
goes to all fires south of Fourteenth
Street, and all third alarms north, so it
requires lop* of work of the horses.
Horses learn their duties just as a boy
learns his trade, $ome years ago Thirty three engine had a horse named Buck­
skin. on account of his color, that had to
be sold because he was soft-footed. You
»ec. their feet can’t stand the terrific
work at the engine forever, and they're
sold at auction when thev’ve outlived
their usefulness on the engine, though
they’re perfectly good for other pur­
poses. Well. Buckskin was bought bv a
Sevunth Avenue feed store man. lie
found him a good horse and used him
well.
One day he was on Seventh
Avenue with a heavy load of feed, and
was justabove Twentieth Street when
there was an alarm of fire from Thirtyseventh Street
Twelve truck came
sweepipg out of Twentieth Street and
went bowling up the Avenue with her
gong ringing. Buckskin was alone; ne
had a big load, and he was out of prac­
tice; but ne went to that fire in first-class
style, jerking the load of feed up the
Avenue in a way that made people look.
After that they tied him when there was
any fire under way.
" That reminds me of Engine Thirty’s
old team. They were bought by a truck­
man. One day he was carting a heavy
load of goods from a North River steam­
er,' when he had occasion to pass the
team’I old engine house in Spring Street
When an engine team returns from a fire
the horses walk right up on the eidewalk,
are unhitched, ana the engine is backed
in. Wh&lt;»n Thirty’s old team came to
the house they walked right up, too. The
driver might as well have tried U jump
over a house as to stop them. There they
stood, waiting to be unhitched, and they
they wouldn't move. Finally one of the
firemen told the driver to get up to his
seat and get a good hold of tbe reins.
Then he went in and struck tbe alarm.
Tbe horses thought it was a fire, and
away they went like a shot, load and all.
The'trackman avoids Spring Street .-.ow.’
"Very irrtvlhgent.
" I should say so. It reminds me of
Thirty-three's tender horse Bill. You
know the horses have to be hitdipd up
many times a day without leaving the
house. Along the aide of the engine is
a rupe that the engineer nags the gong
with when going to a fire. tVhen they
have a hitch up at Thirty-three and don't
go out. Bill waits till he’s released from
the tender and then goes to the engine,
seizes the rope, and rings tbe gong like
a pirate. That's his idea of fun. He
learned the trick himself. They’ve same
good horses up inThiriy-three. They're
fed four times a day—at 8, 12, 5 and 8
o’clock, and exactly fifteen minutes be­
fore feeding time one of the engine
horses, Jim. begins to pound the Iron
column at the head of his stall with hi*
off forefoot That foot just falls there
with the force and regularity of a trip
hammer until Jim gets his feed."Talking about intelligent animals re­
minds me of Thirty-one’s Thomas-cat,
wliich goes to every fire. In pleasant
weather he jumps on the ooil of nose on
the tender, ana in chilly weather he
crawls into the ashpan oi the engine.
He never gets left, however cold it is.”
"Are the cate as intelligent as) the
horses?"
"I can’t my; but I just happen to
think of Truck No. 5. They had a dog

as a fireman. Once they came home
from a fire and missed Ginger. They
looked high and Igw, but got ho trace of
him till some people firing next door to
the house that was afire came to the
truck-house and said that there wjm a
dog on a section of the roof of the
burned building. The men got out their
truck, went around to the building, and

came down rung by rung.”
•■That wm a remarkable dog.”
"Yes; it reminds me of the. coach
Eight truck had. He’s dead now.
wm a sight to we that dbg run up and
down a ladder. The driver of Eight had
to feed his horses every morning at six
o'tdredr. and th« nlwht. wrar/ihman nsawi

dog would go up and wake Mm morn­
toe regularity of clockwork.

“No; they got rid of Mm because they
thought he made one of the horses balk.
The horse wouldn’t take the swinging
harneas. He. had lived in his hameu for
years, 5»d, though he wm a splendid ani­
mal, he would not take to the new ar­
rangement. He wm transferred** way up
town, where they still use the old style
of harness, and is very highly cpdfcen of.
That company snee bad a trick dog—one
of the heavily coated ones they have in
shows. One warm day they clipped him
and put on aa old Mother Hubbard bon­
net around Ms head. Just as they had
him nicely bedecked an alarm at fire
came in, and away they went up Sixth
Avenue, dog and ail. The dog looked ao
astonishing that the people chased him in
a perfect mob, aad it wm such a proces­
sion as is seldom seen. Captain, now
Chief, Breslin wm running along by the
engine, when the dog tried to ran be­
tween his legs. The dog got through all
right, but the Captain didn't. He got a
pretty lively fall, and the dog was relin­
quished after that. The Captain said he
wm a good dog, a stylish* dog, and a
handsome dog, but it took too much in­
tellect to run him and the department
too.”
’
Tho ex-Aiderman changed to a still
easier position, disposed12a legs anew,
and oootinued:
"It reminds me of a dog Eighteen en­
gine had, which would stand by the front
doors when there wm an alarm,^and as
soon as the driver yelled ‘Beady,’ that
dog would jump against the doors and
push them open.
Never failed. It’s
difficult to ten which has the greater in­
telligence, a dog or ahorse. Horses seem
to stick to their habits longer, and they
carry thorn out with more force. Chief
Breslin was telling me the other day of
an old horse that backed into their horn*.
No. 33, with a manure wagon. Nobody
knew he was an old fire horse until the
alarm struck, and the old plug started
out and nearly took the whole interior of
the house with him. He demolished the
staircase and made havoc of tho wagon,
but he was on time.”
“Such horses-need attention?"
"I should say so. I’ll never forget the
Jersey City milk dealer who drove over
hero one day with an old department
horse. An engine went along Greenwich
Street, and so did the milk dealer. He
didn't want his horse to go to that fire,
but tbe horse wanted to go. He went.
Tho milk was half butter when he got
there, but ho drew up behind tbe engine
on time.—N. Y. Sun.
Thoroughness.

Worcester’s definition of " thorough”
is "perfect, total, complete, entire,
finished, full.” Thoroughness, then, has
tho qualities indicated by each and all
these adjectives.
The effort of many men and of many
women is to reap the results that are won
only by "fidelity over the few things,"
and reap them with the least fidelity and
toil possible— reap them at half price.
Hence we have very few first-class work­
men in any field of labor. And hence
the few first-class workmen we do have
command, in whatever field they may be
found, high position and large remuner­
ation.
.
It is related of " BiUy’’ Gray, one of
Boston’s merchant princes sixty years
ago. that on one occasion, when reprov­
ing an employe who had known him in
early life, the latter, rather impudently,
reminded Mr. Gray of former days, when
the now millionaire was employed ** to
beat a drum." "Yes,” said Mr. Gray,
" but didn't I boat it weUT’ In th^t re­
ply was contained the secret that had
lifted the drummer-boy to the Senate of
his State, and had made him the largest
shipping merchant of his time. What­
ever be did, if it were only to beat a drum,
he did it " well,” thoroughly.
The foundations of thoroughness in any
sphere of activity, are a clear oomprehen­
sion of the requirements involvea, a ca­
pacity to meet those requiremente&gt;and a
consciousness th*t will not allow any re­
missness, any slighting, any neglect.

sram ■DIMM*, Dfcbete* or Liver Coamtaietit out of the fire often, for ft requires to TImwc dbaura cannot
_____
be carefully watched to get the proper
beat. If not hot enough, thrust it
quickly in again. The. proper degree of
heat is to be judged by the eye, and care
should be taken not to beat higher than
is absolutely necessary to effect the de­
sired purpose, and to usqMfew heals as
possible. Too frequent heating and over-1 nunbcod
heating steel abstracts the carbon, grad­
ually reducing it to the state of forged
iron. It is tbe opinion of a great many
that, so long as the steel does not fly to
Italian* in large number* are emigrating to
pieces when struck with tbe hammer, it
is not too hot; but it 1* an erroneous idea,
as is easily proved whemt comes to be
“BUCHUPAIBA.”
hardened, and particularly when it comes " New, quick,, complete eure 4 dsn, urinaiy
affections, stn*.
..—
-urina,TKrtiDg,freqoent „
or difficult
tion,
kldner
diseases.
41. at druggists. Mich.
An excellent composition for welding
cast steel is prepared by boiling together gspot JAMES E. DAVIS A &lt;55.. Detroit,
sixteen parte of borax and one of sal­
tea* papered hU houaa with
ammoniac over a slow fire for an hour,

When cold, grind it into a powder. Tbe
steel must then
made as hot as it will
conveniently bear, and the composition
used the same as sand.
Sted punches, or other small instru­
ments, particularly engraved dies, when,
S' accidental. exposure to too great heat
ey have beoome spoiled, or, as tbe
blacksmith says, burned, mav'be restored
by the following mixture: Two ounces
of bichromate ofpot*saa, one ounce pure
niter, one ounce gum aloes, one ounce
gum arable and two ounces of resin. The
whole having been well powdered and
mixed, the piece of steel is heated to a
low, red beat, and the powder sprinkled
over it It is then heated again to a low,
red heat and cooled. , Tins makes the
piece very hard again. Tbe amount of
niter may be doubled, and that of the
resin taken ten times greater to produce
a higher temper,
.
In tempering a tool for boring cylin­
ders, turning rolls, or any large pieces
of cast iron, let it be as hard as water
will make it, taking care not to heat it
there than to a cherry red. In the sec­
ond heating, after the tool is hardened,
the first perceptible tint is a light straw
color, which makes its appearance when
the heat reaches 430degreer Fahrenheit.
This gives the metal a maximum of hard­
ness, with a certain amount of elasticity,
fitting it for lancets, razors and surgical
instruments. At,470 degrees a full yel­
low is produced, which is the temper
employed for penknives, scalpels and
fine cuttlery. The temperature of 490
degrees gives a brownish-orange, suita­
ble for shears and chisels used for cutting
iron. At 510 degrees the brownish-yel­
low becomes flecked with purple, the
tint for pocket-knives. Five hundred and
twenty degrees gives a bluish purple, fit
for table cuttlery; while the different
shades of blue from 530 degrees to 570
degrees indicate a temper proper for
watchsprings, sword blades, saws and
instruments requiring great elasticity.
Beyond this temperature the metal be­
comes too soft to be used for cutting in­
struments.
The temper greatly depends on the
quantity of carbon that is in the steel.
This the practical mkn soon finds out, and
he tempers or draws down, the tool ac­
cordingly.
In Switzerland, razors, pocket-knives,
etc.* made from English cast steel, are
tempered by immersing the blades at a
dark cherry rod into a hath composed of
four parts of finely powdered yellow resin,
two parts of fish oil, to which is added,
in a very hot state, one part of melted
tallow, and allowing them to cool per­
fectly; after which tnev are heated with­
out wiping them, and hardened in water
in the orcunary way. The blades harden­
ed by this process are found to be more
uniformly tempered than by any other,
making ft possible to produce an exceed­
ingly fine cutting edge.—Prof. Boduntch,
in American Machinist.

Liveryman.

' They are telling this story about town
That man who has the idealty to grasp for a fact: One day recently, a young
the possibilities opened to him by his pro­ man while apparently heavy with tangle­
fession, occupation, trade, who has the foot, presented himself to a certain livery­
ability patiently to labor toward the reali­ man and asked for a team to take a ride.
zation of those possibilities, and the con­ "Never let teams to intoxicated parties,"
scientiousness tnat will not permit him was the stiff reply. This blunt rebuff
to alight any part of his work, cannot almost sobered the young man. It also
fail of attaining high position in his class. provoked Mm to anger, and He went off
Comparatively few comprehend the into a profane whirlwind in the Bomheights that may be attained in the qual­ bastes Furioso style, ending with shaking
ity of their work, in its extent, in its in- a plethoric wad of greenbacks in the face
quence, and of those who do comprehend of the astonished stable-keeper, and ofthis, comparatively few have the courage feriif); to buy the best single team in the
or the patience to attempt the possible, barns. “ Hitch up mighty quick, and
and still fewer are conscientious and 1’11 pay you now,” hesaid. "All right,”
thorough in the work which they doper­ wm the reply, and a 9300 team wm pre­
form.
. pared. the money paid over, and as the
In every department of human indua- man drove away the generous liveryman,
who wm dated over a good bargain.
“The rods aee everywhere."

men,
first-class
lawyers, first-class
preachers, writers, physicians, farmers,
engineers, brakemen, stenographers,
stonemasons, seamstresses, housemaids.

in the play. Three days after this, how­
ever. there came a climax. For then it
happened that the man returned with
the team and demanded that the stable­
keeper look it over carefully and see if
-11 J-kt

humble that it may not be lifted into
honor by conscientious fidelity in the dis­
charge of its duties, and no vocition that
may not be made a stepping stone to
something higher.
We have a great many skilled work­
men in all departments, but Nchat is
needed equally with skill is the moral
quality which will keep the skill always

power which compels
when infidelity to them

ST.

.-J

go. -Hold on.” shouted the other. -you
owe me twelve dollars for the use of tbe
tmv ” "I never pay other people for
using my own team? was the reply ot
the gay young man as he sauntered away
and never returned.—JFaterhssry Awwr*-

BEAUTIFUL REGAINED.
'
Tbo beauty and color oftbe hair may be safely
regained by using Parkers Hair Balsam, which
ia much admired for its perfume, risinlfhrss
and dandruff eradicating properties.
,

Secretary Teller received 500 applJotlon* for
office during bl* first week Id the Cabinet.
The symptoms of Itching Piles are moisture

the

-............. .
&gt; Illi, xm
U4s tOTDMDtin&lt;eonpl«4Dt. Gives mt *t Dtefat
without that desire to eeratch. Alw&gt; Um on
eqn-J in quickly eradicating Tetter, Itch, Salt
Ery.lpela^ Barber*' Itch, Pimplca,
jil Sealy, Crurty, Itchy Skin Eruption*. Here
UiArprtxjf, “Certainly tbe best remedy erer

ty year*, it cured me completely," L. 8. Messer
Enfield, Me. Sent for 50 eta (tn 8 ct. »tamp*)
3 boxe*. 41.25, By Dr. Swayne A Son. FhOad'a
Pa. Bold by all druggiivt*.
It in prophesied this will l&gt;e a great aeaaoti for

MONEY FOR A RAINY DAY.
"For six years my daughter was sick from
kidney and other disorders. We had used up
our saving* on doctor*. a ben our domine advis­
ed us to try Parker’s Ginger Tonic. Four bot­
tles effected a cure, and as a dollar's worth has
kept our family well over a year, we have been
able to lav by money again for a rainy day.”—

Gen. Hancock ri.-cji at 8 a. tn.

Rochester claims the oldest lawyer iu tbe
county. His name I* Abzlli Gibbs and his age
Invalids should prevent tbeir disease from
gaining ground by using Brown’s Iron Bitter*.
It stops decay, keeps tbe blooil warm, and
give* the emaciated form a Dew lease of life.
Grant was GO last Thursday

OH I WHAT A COUGH.
Will you heed tbe warning
Tbe signal per
haps of tbe sure approach of that more trrribldlseasc consumption. Ask yourself if you can
afford for the sake of saving 50 eta to run the
risk and do nothing for it We know from ex­
perience that Shiloh’s Cure will cure your
cough. It never falls. This explains why
more than a million twtllea were wild last year.
It relieves Croup, and wbootiingcough, at once
Mothers do not be without ft For lame back,
side or chest use Shiloh’s Porous Plasters.
Sold by F. T. Boise.
DYSPEPSIA A LIVER COMPLAINT.

slug complaints, if you think bo cal) at our
store and get a bottle of Shiloh's Vltallxcr,
every Ixrttle has a printed guarantee on it, use
accordingly and if it does you no good it will
cost you nothing. Sold by F. T. Boise.
We have a speedy and positive cure for
Catarrali, Diphtheria, Canker mouth and
Head Ache, in SHILOH’S CATARRH REM­
EDY, A nasal injector free with each bottle.
Use it if you desire health and sweet breath.
Price 50 cents. Sold by F. T. Boise

[pjfKT ROE. ProrniBTOB
----- OLD RELIABLE-----

MEAT MARKET.
f resh and Salt Meats,

Smotei Ham aii Men,
Lard, by the lb. or barrel,
nr Ths Hirhct Market Brio, paid
for Hides, Pelts, 4tc.
s

Fresh. Goods, Full Weight* and

WIRES
11

rwraac* bwrye. A^c jw druggtot, or

—Just imagine how a North Carolina

out from the heart cf a log which he was

ANTED .S',.:-.:
to oouKknUy

«

Don't be Silly.
Don't let a foolish prejudice against populsr
medicine* Maud 1*1 ween you and the health of
your wife, child, or baby. It is alwsy* tight to
advertise a blcMing. Dr. Kennedy ’* “Favorite
Remedy” f* a blessing. It baa aavetl tin uiand*
aud it will help you. If you are sick and misera­
ble, we adjjlM' vol to spend One Dollar for this
medicine, and then write to tbe Doctor, at Rondout, N Y..as to how you feel. For troubles of
live Kidneys, liver, and Blood It has no equaL
,

�NaAhviHe Elevator!

unknown.

Grain and Produce
ia frequently found in our streams,
growing upon sticks and stones. Il is
of a bright green, andwheh seco under
the water in a flood of sunlight it is
?do spicules of sponges grow in a

(Xirfrdup in IxffihMMSmpled h

Al^iE LOWE3T LIVING PRICES,

matu ib snow, swrufta

EXCURSIONS

nv«A Wwdanv jbrfhte •&amp;

g LACK* BOH,

American and Foreign Marble,
Monument*, Tomhrtcnss, Mantles, 4a,

yy ILLIAM JONES,

NERVOUS
DEBILITY
A cure guaranteed.
a specific for hyataria, dizziness, eonvnlilon*. nerv
ou» bradaebe, men tai depression, lost of memary
BDertaatorrbcea, Impotcncy, Invaibntary emlaiiooa
premature owl aye. caused by orsr-exertlon, salt
those, or over Indulgence. which kid* to misery

rritten gu*rrnts«
thorite! agent for the villas* « f KaahsiUe. ,Jt)H&gt;
C-WEsT A CO, Pole Proprietors. 1S1 and IM W

HALL’S

gatarrhgure
Is RecommendM by PhytlclanjU

SfOO tEWAMtedflSm
We manufacture and sell it rltha p»V&gt;itlVO

guarantee that It will curs any

fae *tt we will forfsil iho above amount

Tra^giaK

I]

PARKER'S HAIRD * BALSAM.nn
*

m

Rm Onneu

ins Tin; u tstsn

FlwtsUa Calape.

PARKER’S

GINGERTONIC
Kidr

variety of elegant shapes, but they are
visible only with a microscope. They
are composed of lime or flint, and are
generally sharp-pointed. They are im­
bedded m the flesh as well as In the
horby fibers, thus serving to protect tbe
helpfe-ss creatures from being devoured
by fish and other animals. In our fine
sponges, tho skeleton is almost desti­
tute of spicules, while in some others
J ack with'
tho flesh is supported wholly by spto-.
ules, giving them so loose a texture that
i rare, .
yellow hair, they are of no value for domestic pur­
poses.
Fine sponges are used by physicians
On, on they aped through the sllrrr sand
in surgical operations, ana are some­
Of tho beautiful Btrrota of tho Wonder-tar
They stopped In a cloud for a drink of dew.
times very expensive. Should you at
While the seashell runjr and tho whistle blc
any time take a fancy to a dainty little
They intthenxl blossoms that never die,
sponge in the druggist’s window, and
Thai grew In the land erf tbe “Byand-by
step in. thinking to buy it, you will
probably be surprised at tho price asked
for it. Our finest sponges come from
Tod.
the Mediterranean Sea and the Red
Sea. They are obtained by divers, who
search for them under rocks and cliffs,
ABOUT SPONGBS.*
and who remove them carefully with a
knife, that they may not be injured.
Sponges are so common and so famil­
The Turks, who carry on the trade,
iar that many of us have used them all
have between four and five thousand
our lives without stopping to admire
their curious and interesting structure, men employed in collecting sponges.
The value cf the sponges annually col­
or to inquire ifito the history of their
lected is estimated at ninety . thousand
past lives. We may. indeed* have no­
dollars. Coarse varieties are found in
ticed that they can be squeezed into a
the Gulf of Mexico and the Bahama
very small space, and that they will re­
Islands. They are scrajK'd off the rocks
turn to their natural shape when the
with forked Instruments, and conse­
pressure is removed. We have perhaps
noticed also that they are full of little quently they are often torn.
This demand for sponges has in­
holes or pores, and that they will ab­
creased so much during the last few
sorb an astonishing quantity tof water.
You know there has been a doubt years, that there is cause to fear tho sup­
whether sponges belong to tho animal ply will be exhausted, unlees seme way
or to the vegetable, kingdom. For a can be found to cultivate them by artifi­
long time naturalist* were in doubt about cial means. With this view, attempts
the matter, but it is now settled that have recently been made to raise
they are animals, living and growing on sponges in tne Adriatic Sea by taking
the'bottom of the ocean. The only part cuttings from full-grown ones, and
of the sponge that reaches us is the fastening them upon stones on the bot­
skeleton. The living sponge is a very tom of tne ocean until they attach them­
different object Shall we see what we selves. These experiments have been
successful^ but the operation is a deli­
can find out about it?
Upon namirg the word •• animal,’’ a cate one, requiring great care not to
picture comes before our minds of some bruise the soft flesh. It is necessary Co
creatures having a mouth to eat with, keep the sponge under sea water during
and eyes to see with, and possessing the process.
Some of tho glass sponges are ex­
feet or wings, or some other means of
beautiful.
The delicate
moving about; but the sponges are far ceedingly
from this. They are probably the low­ ••Venus’s flower-basket” grows in the
est animals with which you are ac­ deep sea near the Philippine Islands.
quainted. They have no nerves, no It looks like spun glass woven into a
heart, no lungs, no mouth and no stom­ beautiful pattern, and is so exquisite
that we can scarcely believe tliat it is
ach.
Live sponges consist of jelly-like the skeleton of a sponge. This sponge
bodies, united in a mass, and supported is composed of bands of spicules run­
by a frame-work of horny fibers, and ning lengthwise from end to end. with
needle-shaped objects called “spicules." cross bands at right angles. The cor­
This jelly-like flesh, covering all parts ners are filled with a pale-brown, corkyof the skeleton, is about as thick as the looking substance, reducing the spaces
white of act egg, but it decay* immedi­ to little tube-like holes, and rising into
ately after the death of the sponge. spirally-arranged ridges between them.
During life the flesh presents many The ridges, instead of having a contin­
bright cdlors; in some species it is of a uous glassy skeleton, have their soft
brilliant green, while in others it is or­ substance supported by a multitude of
delicate six-rayed spicules interspersed
ange, red, yellow, etc.
The frame-work varies in different with what, under the microscope, look
The
kinds of sponge. In those which are like little stars and rosettes.
Valuable for our use it consists of horny whole sponge is covered with fine hairs,
fibers interwoven in all directions until and the mouth is closed by a not-wqrk
•hey form a mass of lacy net-work. This of a jelly-like substance supported by
Vou can easily pee with the naked eye, sheaves of fine needles. The glass-rope
but by looking through a • microscope sponge roots itself in the mud of twisted
C»u will see Beauty you had not imag­ fibers.
The boring sponge spreads itself over
ed, and which but for this valuable
instrument would never have been the shells of oysters and mussels, boring
dreamed of. In our ordinary sponges them through and through, and dissolv­
these fibers are all.that remain of the ing the shell. It even bore.-, into solid
former living animal, the soft flesh hav­ marble, and will, in time, utterly de­
ing been Removed. It is found that the stroy it.
Flints are exceedingly hard sub­
homy fibers are composed of a substance
very similar to the silk of a silk-worm’s stances—so hard that when we wish t*
cocoon. They are exceedingly tough be emphatic, we sometimes say that a
and durable. Most of usjiavo discover­ thing is xs iiard ns flinL Yet all the
flints in tne
the worm
world are supposea
supposed io
Io nave
have
ed that a good sponge becomes like an limts
old and tried friend, and that unless it I been formed from soft sponges. By
is abused it seems as if it might nevei* -examining small pieces of fli’.t under a
wear out.
—
:------ -----------------------------------------microsdbpe
the texture-»of the
sponge,
In looking at any sponge you will in a fossil condition, is often clearly
notice large holes through it, with many seen, and tho spicules peculiar to
are
recognized.— Harper's
■mall jxires scattered ix^ween them. sponges
The living sponge is constantly drawing tounq People.
in water at the small pores. This water
passes through a set of branching canals,
and is thrown out from the large holes
on the surface. With a microscope little
fountains may be seen constantly play­
ing from the large holes of a' living
sponge. The circulation is kept up in
the canals by the movement of “ cilia,”
which are delicate threads waring gent­
ly but continually.
Tho word cilia
means •• eyelashes;” let txs remember it,
for this is a name we shall often want to
use. The stream of water thus passing
through the sponge brings to every part
of it small particles of food, and all the
air it deeds for breathing purposes.
Everything that lives must eat and
breathe, but how is the sponge to cat
without a mouth?
When the food
touches any part of ks body, the soft,
ielly-like flesh sinks 'in to form a little
bag; at the same time the surrounding
parts creep out over the morsel of foock
Until it is entirely covered and digested.
-After this the flesh returns to its original
position, and any shell or other refuse
that remains from the meal Is washed
Sponges have a curious manner of
producing their young. At certain sea­
sons very small oval massee of jelly are
formed on the inner surface of the ca-

the bottom, as we mi

SftOO Reward!
wilb Waal’s Vs*aUbU U«
M. m ah atriolir oo-pJlad

f

such

artists, which men have agreed to call
genius. We watch the feats of some
superb athlete, and all that ho does i*
impossible to us, far beyond our reach;
but we understand bow everything is
done, and what muscles are needed.

.

A COMMCT1 USB OT

Buggies, Carriages, Wheel Harrow* and
Cultivators, Mounted Seeders,
and 4 kinds of Plows.

of mental operations; Bis the,difference
between the mind of Shakespeare and
that of Pitt, a difference, not of degree,
but of kind. Webster belongs to th*
athletes. We can do nothing but ad­
mire achievements so far beyond our
grasp, and gaze with wonder upon a
development ho powerful, ho trained, bo
splendid. But we can understand it
*11, both tho mind and its operations.
Conftnon, and hung ready for use.
It is intellect raise* to any power you
please, but It is still an intellect, a form
and process with which we are familiar.
There is none &lt;V tbe baffling sleight of
SOWING MAOHIAES.
hand, the Inexplicable intuition^ of
genius. Webster has been accused of PLOW POINTS for the Oliver Chilled, Wlard, Three Riv­
appropriating the fruits of other men'*
ers, Bryan, 'Cale, Curtis, Dodge, Robinson
labors to his own uses and glory. This
.
And many other Pl?ws.
is perfectly idle criticism.
WebfllBJ
had the common quality of gr*^
In fact, we keep a full and complete stock of first class Hardware and FantAng Tools. (Ml
'
noss, a quick perception
of th* and see them before buying.'
value of suggestions and' thought*
put forth brother man, and the capac­
ity to detect thelf value and use them;
making them bear fruit instead of re­
maining sterile in the hands of the dis­
coverer. But after all is said, we come
back to tho simple statement that he was
a very great man; intellectually, one. of
the greatest men of his age. He is onaf
of the chief figures of our history, and
his fame as a lawyer, an orator and a
statesman is part of that history. There
OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE
he etarnls’ before us, grandly vividly,
with all his glories and all his failings.
The uppermost thought, as wo look at
him, is of his devotion to the Union,
and of the great worl^ which he did in
strengthening and building up tho na­
tional sentimenL That sentiment, the
I love of Webster's life, proved powerful
enough to save the Union in tho hour
WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH
of supreme trial There is no need, and
it would not be right, to overlook or to
forget his errors and failings, all tjie
more grievous because ho was so gifted.
Al! men. even those who censure him
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING
most severely, acknowledge his great­
ness. But it is not his fame which will
plead most strongly for him when his
faults are brought to the bar of history
to receive judgment. Il will be the
thought of a united country the ideal of
We believe the
is destined tn come
his hopes, the inspiration of the noblest
efforts of his intellect, which will lead into general use.
Call and see them.
men to say. even while they condemn;
“Forgive him. for he loved much.” —
Henry Cabot Lodge, in Atlantic Monthly.

REED’S GENUINE SPRING TOOTH HARROW
ROAD SCRAPERS, SQUARE DRABS, GRIND STONES,

KELLY’S BJLIdBEID WIRE.

i:kp you eye oik this.

FOR SALE!
THREE INCH TIRE.

BETTE R THAN COMMONJTIRE
Three inch Tire

Sold by C. L. Glasgow, Nashville, Mich.

BENTLEY BROS. &amp; WILEINS-

They Never Get Over It.

“ Do you know, my dear,” she sud­
denly said, as she looked up from her
piece-work—“do you know that next
week will be Che twentieth anniversary
of our wedding?”
■•Is that so? By George! how time
flies! Why, I had' no idea of it.”
•• Yes, we have been married almost
twenty long years.” she continued, with
' something of a sigh. “You have been
। a good husband to me. darling.’
•• And you have been a blessed little
wife to me, Susan. Come here till I
, kiss you. There!”
“ I was thinking to-day—I was think­
ing of—of—’’
“Of that sickly-faced baboon who used
to .go home with you from prayer-meet­
ing before I knew you?” he interrupted.
“ Who do you mean?”
“Why. that Brace fellow, of course.”
“ Why. George, he wasn’t such a bad
fellow.”
j
•• Wasn’t, eh? Well, I'd like to know
Iof a worse one.
He didn’t know
enough to chew putty, and there you
were as good as engaged to him.''
।
•• Yes, George, but you know you were
I kee'ping company at the same time with |
that Helen Perkins.’“That Helen Perkins? Wasn’t Miss
Perkins one of the loveliest and prettiest |
I young ladies in Liverpool?”
“No. she wasn't! She had teeth like
a horse!”
“She did, eh? How about thatstoop■bouklered. white-headed Brace?”
“And such big feet os she had! Why.
A Natural Ant-Trap.
George, she was the laughing stock of
Mr. J. Harris Stone describes in Nature the town.”
how he found in Norway one of ’he
“ Not much she wasn’t! She was a
catchflies busily trapping ants.
Last young Indy who would have made s
June he’ was staying at Husum, in the mode) wife.”
L®rdal Valley, Norway, where he ob­
•• Then why didn’t you marry her and
served on the almost precipitous sides all her moles and waits and mushroom
of the valley a number of the red Ger­ eyes?”
man catchfly (Lychnis viscaria). The
“Don’t talk that way to me! Her eye*
plants were growing luxuriantly some were as nice as yours! *
1,000 feet above the bed of the river, and
“They wan’tr’
were showing a gorgeous array of blos­
“They wm!
I believe you are sorry
soms. On plucking some of the flowers because you didn’t marry Bracer’
he became aware of a most unpleasant
“ And I know you are sorry because
stickiness around the stems: in some in­ yon didn’t marry that beautiful and ac­
stances the glutinous secretion being complished Miss Periuns!”
powerful enough to support the whole
“ I am. eh? I thought you said I had
weight of the stem when he inverted been a good husband to you?”
and opened his hand. On examining the
“ And didn't you call me your blessed
plants he was surprised at finding on little wife?”
quite ninety-five per cent, either the
Then ho plumped down and began to
dead bodies of a large species of ant, or read the mortgage sales aad advertise­
individuals in all stages of dying. Some ments in the paper, and she picked up
flowering stems had only one dead or her sewing and gave the oat a gentle
dying ant upon each; others had two; kick. These old things will come up
others three; while others again had *• now and then, and somehow neither side
many as seren or eight. Some ants ever gets entirely over them.—Detroit
had, as it were, simply lain down in the Free Press.
glutinous matter and succumbed with­
out further struggling.
The heads of
—Tho late President Garfield ia
others, firmly imbedded in the trcacher- quoted as saying one day.*1- “ When I
went into tho war I gave my life un­
reservedly to the Union. I said to my­
to violent and prolonged resistance self, ‘If any part of this surrender
Some ants again had the body arched shall not be required of me—if it is
up, as if to avoid contact with the stem, only a limb, or an eye, or a faculty, that
and the legs only were fatally caught. must be the sacrifice—I shall consider
The glutinous or sticky tract* lay around
the stem, directly beneath the nodes,
and were about half an inch or more in The belief that I

realities of life.
You will be interested to know that
while these jelly-like eggs were resting
in the canals of the parent sponge, deli­ stem.
cate cilia (which we learned about just
now) were forming at one end of the
egg- These cilia strike tbe water with rule that nothing is made in vain. Chick­
en croquettea are now made without the

WAGONS ONLY $60.00.

.

Hastings, Mich., Sept. 15th, 1881.

HL MAH

[Q

q

WHO IS UNACQUAINTED WITH THE CEOCRAFHY OF THIS COUNTRY,
u,., ?
nv rvAMIUluO -rule MAS TMAT THE

KI
0

'CSSp.-»J*U*

ctiai
J N-N-K^S:

C'

N

tE
hr

c

Tt£
s

CHICAGO, SOCK ISLAND &amp; PACIFIC RT

Is Tho Great Connecting Link between the East and the West!
..

... _________ •—

II

M..Une,
UUnU. I»TrnI«rt. W«.t
ty. lowzcitj. M»renjn&gt;,Mroo*:lyn.OrtnneU.
li&gt;lue*(Cbe capful ofIowa), SUurt. AlUo&gt;&lt;1 ATcx-a; with branches from Bureau
tlon io PcorU-. Wilton Junction to MuacAWasiilnston. FalrflclJ Ehlon. Belt nap.
ryllle. I’rtncoton. Tranton, Gallatin. CanwLca*enworth. Atchison, and Kansas CKy;
inatV’&gt;i°Sigourney.Oskaloosa, aud HndT-

In, mkvbi.m* r,nnw,l
V-U.IV.
-Halaa*
■ ■■
JMMao Car* lor cause purposes only. Oaf ejhwr
great feature of our Palace Can U a BMOI1M0
SALOON Where yon can enjoy your “Havana”

ami Carson.

I

At liATEXPorr with UM Darenpert Di
^At'wrrr UBtrrr. withthe B.C. K. A 1
iiss’jsKSimrtTfL

Jtock Island Short Line.”
The "Great Boek l*lai

AtCouxctL BLurrs. With Union J-aafl

ijortty of tho

CD R—
’ ERRORS OF YOUTH. I

At A-rcaiaoa. wtta AMOJiowaka J

JOHM,

PIMPLES.

in pvrivt. iA.vuu.ei-,
M-Urr, JOHN B. OGDEN. UCadar 8US.T.

uk

moat sanguine thoughts.”

—It is said Hindoo girls are taught to
dtmk of marriage almost as soon as they
can talk. That is much better than ths
civilised idea of talking of marriage as

Agents Wanted f*r Sullivan's

IRELAND OF Tb-0 IT.

CONSUMPTIVES.

I!atnxioctM« by Thus Power O'Coanoi, M. PJ

1

B JPTURB„
3

xSi

�Ml
RDaY - -

•

STOJ

pnng
1882

• MAY 13, 1888.
stated

THE^EWS.
tanpiled from Latest. Dispatches.

Congressional.

desperate character, and- bears a bad reputa­
tion. It wm said that at various times ba had
married and killed seven wives. Upon tbe
marks showing the number that be bail killed
body of hi* Ute victim »u found to be marked

&gt;
control k'glslaIntroducsd . s . bill
wMaentto tho Judid-

into-tbe expediency of
for the payment of. interest on
da....In the House tho considcrablli. in Cnmmltate on the Sth, and tho resolution wm adopted.

at Appeals,
Moeanu Garland
made arguments. A bill wm

eying and rejection
' the Tariff•Oommlsreaolution

ate a Department and Secretary of Agrtcuiv-

Xzuwm Introduced in the Senate on the

tired list with that rank. Messrs. Windom,
Hawley, Harrison, Cockrell and Pugh were
constituted a committee of investigation con. cernlng the allegation of corruption In connec­
tion with the Bonded Dlstilled-Spirits bill. A
bill wm reported appropriating tw.ooo to ex­
tend the. Executive mansion. Mr. Bayard
urged early action nn tho Tartff-CommlMion
bill, and Mr. Edmunds objected to any further
proceedings on the measure. Mr. Groome
presented a Joint resolution tendering the
thanks of Congress to. and conferring addition-

hsdod....Bills were introduced In the House:
By Mr. Townshend (I1L1, to place a tax on
salt used in curing pork and beef on the samn
basis M salt used in curing fish; by Mr.
Calkins, to aid in making farther Arctic ex­
ploration. and detailing Master Lucien Young
as Commander of the wxncdltion: by Mr.
Bragg (Wk), for the relief of Flu John Porter,
authorizing the PrcaldcnL "in order that
Justice may be done to said Flu John
Porter, to appoint the said Porter, late
MaCjor-Gcnoral United States Volunteers, Bre­
vet Brigadier-General and Colonel in the
army, to the potdtion of Colonel in the array of
the United States to the same grade and rank
held by him at the time of bis dismissal Qrotn

11st of the army na of that grade." Ou the bill
to enlanro the scope of the Department of
Agriculture, speeches were made by Messrs.
Carpenter. Geddes. Rich and Muldrow. The
Breaker called to the Chair for two days Mr.
liurrows. of Michigan.

DOMESTIC.

*

A. IL Red FORD, formerly Superintendent
of the Southern Methodist publishing house,
was on tbe 4th charged with irregularities to
tbe amount of 816,619.99.
Three young men were drowned Iu tbe St.
Lawrence at Ogdensburg, N. Y-, on the 5th,
by the capsizing of a row-boat.
A few days ago Mr. Works' team. Edwani
.and Dick Swivellcr trotted, to wagon, a mile
in 2:28X- ^The first half-mile was trotted in

Cnow Doo, tbe slayer of Spotted Tail, has
been respited by the President to June 7.
The Comptroller of the Currency has de­
clared a final dividend of ten per cent. Io the
creditors of the FlrstNational Bank of New­
ark, N. J., making in all dividends amounting
to 160 per cent, and interest.
A few mornings ago dynamite wm ex-

darville, Ohio, throwing the entire family out
of bed and blowing out one end of the buildbqr- An attempt wm made to blow up Cold­
wold’s drug store, but the charge failed to ex­
plode.
_ .
It ia announced that the experimental
efforts of ex-ComtulMiouer LeDucto cultivate
tea in the South, m a staple, are likely to
prove successful.
The business failures In die United States
during the seven days ended on the 5th aggre­
gated 101.
A Vein of copper and silver has been dis­
covered beneath ths Overland stage road, sev­
enteen miles southeast of Laramie City.
Tax bld of a syndicate of 82,800,000 for the
. Sprague properties in Rhode Island was with­
drawn on tbe 4th, and the sale wm postponed

ported st tbe Cincinnati Health-Office during
the seven days ended on the 5th. During the
same period there . were 320 cases treated
within tbe city limits.
Dr. H. R. Palmer's International Music
School begins June 26, at Meadville, Pa., and
continues four weeks.
At Greenville, Miss., on the 5th Dr. Preston
E. Buckner wm mistaken for s burglar by W.
J. Wentworth, and shot dead.
James Mooxxt, President of the Land-

tbe brethren in Ireland to

The Menominee Mining Company of MilCyclop* and Vulcan iron mine* to the Cam-

htgb

Iceberg

wm

caused tbe closing of thirty saloons in Colum-

KALAMAZOO

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN

Foreign.

they have rented A. C. Buxton's new and. elegant brick store and are
dow stocking tiie same with * complete line of

Great Beitaix on the 4tli offered to co­
operate with other Nations tn . establishing a
servatoricsin the pdUr regions. Tbe staAu
selected is Fort Rae, in the Northern British

A Loxdox dispatch of the 4th states .that
the appointment of Lord Frederick Cavendish
to the position lately occupied by the Right
Hou. W. E. Forster wm considered a great
blunder, and would, it wm believed; cause a
j
On the 7th f he police of Clnclnnatk found rupture of the Liberal Cabinet
A THAXX on the Canada Southern Road on
the 4th took a party composed of William H.
fire arrests were made for drunkenness.
The leaders of the Irish Land League at Vanderbilt and others 111 miles in 109 min­
Boston, Mass., hare telegraphed Parnell, au­ utes.
Reports from Mexico on the 4th were to
thorizing him. In their behalf, to offer a re­
ward of 85,000 for the arrest of the assassins tbe effect that Captain Tupper and his troops
of Lon! Cavendish and Under Secretary had a second encounter with the Indians
about forty-five miles south of Cloverdale,
Burket
killing forty Indians and recapturing about
Vanderbilt has secured the former cook of 200 head of stock.
Ax Alexandria (Egypt) dispatch of the 4th
tbe Baroness de Rothschild at a salary of
state* that another Insurrection had broken
87,400'peryeai.
out in Soudan. The false prophet Mandi had
There colored men in jail st Brookhaven, ‘
defeated tho Egyptian troops, captured the
Miss., fired the jail on tho 8th in order to es­
city of Scnnsar, and taken Mndlr prisoner.
cape, and perished in the flames.
By a collision on the Boston, Concord &amp;
plained to Parliament that the reason for his
Montreal Road on the 8th William IL Abel,
resignation was that ba would not agree to re­
inventor of the knitting-machine, and Hiram
lease the suspects unless they pledged them­
Jones, a Vermont drover, were killed. Both
selves not to oppose tbe execution of the law.
engines were smashed.
Be said that tbe Coercion act hod trdken up
.the Land League, or “put it anderpetti-

At a recent maes-mectlng in Deadwood res­
olutions were adopted favoring the opening
of the Sioux reservation to actual settlers,
and opposing Its being leased to stock-grow-

Spring-2th Harrow
IN BUTWG, IfeJ TO BUY

Wjard Plows,
South Bend Chilled Plows,
Gale Plows,

FOR THE LEAST MONEY.
Remember that we have no old, shop-worn and unseasonable goods, but tbat everything is

(Buy* Genuine Factory Points)
ar All our purchases arc made with the cash and by strict attention to the want* of our
■ customerywe expert to reapsuceeo.
Nashville, Apr. 30,1882.
/
__________

They are much cheaper and better.

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN.

Strayer’s GRAIN DRILL,

18821 SZF’ZR.ITTGr 11882

RAWSON’S

REAPERS &amp; MOWERS

PERSONAL AND POLITICAL.

Tux examination of Senator Blair wm re­
sumed by the Peruvian Investigating Com­
mittee in Washington ou the 5th. The wit­
ness refused to state the amount of stock
tendered him by Shipherd, and said: “Mr.
Blaine understood at the first i«eivicw that I
appeared there a* counsel. He knew I wm
desirous of aiding Bhlphcrd. I asked tho Sec­
retary if, from bls knowledge of the affair,
there could be any impropriety in my acting
a* counsel, and
be
said he could
sec noneI never regarded lhe scrip
offered me by Shipbenl of any value
unless the agreement with Peru bad been car­
ried out—that is to say, if tbe company had
been organized and money raised, it would have
been a wealthy and powerful company. ” Mr.
Blair said that as to General Grant be knew
nothing of his opinions in this relation tbat he
(Blair) did not consider highly honorable to
him.
Pkesidrxt Arthur on the 5th pardoned
Fitz John Porter. The effect of the pardon
is to relieve Mr. Porter from the continuing
part of his sentence. Since 1863 he Lm been
prohibited from holding any office of honor or
trust under the United States. Ho 1* now re­
lieved from that prohibition.
Secretary Chaxxiler on the night of the
5th received the following telegram from En­
gineer Melville :
•• Irkoutsk, May A
“Secretary of the Navy. Washington. D. C.:
" At Lena delta, March 24,1S82, we found De
L6ng and party, dead. Wu found all tho pa­
per* and txxika. Wo continue tho search for
Chipp.
MZI.VIl.LK-"
On tbe same day another dispatch from
Irkouuk says a telegram had just been re­
ceived there from Jackson. Herald correspon­
dent, on his way north to tbe mouth of the
Lena, dated "Forty Miles beyond Ken-Aracb,
April 12," and wonled as follows:
•• A Cossack cwtafcUc (a special express) has
Just arrived here with dispatches bringing
news that tho bodies of Captain De Long and
ten mon have tw-cn found all in one spot. He
takes sealed dispatches, which you will re­
ceive with this.
Jackson.’’
Mrs. Grorgr Scoville appeared before a

tn company with a child, and remarked that
family troubles compelled her to retire, after
giving them an opportunity to sec a sister of
funded to forty auditors. It wm understood
tbat Mrs- Scoville was to file a bill for divorce
at once. She was thought to have become
partially insane.
Tire examination of Senator Blair was re­
sumed by the Peruvian Investigating Com­
mittee in Washington on tbe 6th. The wit­
ness thought there could be no dokbt but En­
glish Influences predominated commercially
in South America, and that Chili holds com­
mercial relations almost exclusively with Eu­
ropean nations. Concerning correspondence.
Mr. Blair said that he bad no correspondence
with Shipbenl save such m wm strictly
private and confidential and growing
out of
their
relation' m
attorney
and client, and he must decline to produce it;
that he knew nothing of the loss of certain
State Department papers, nor of any .Gov­
ernment official Interested In affecting the
policy of this Government in the interest
of Mr. Shipherd’s claim of 8135,000,000, or of
any effort or expectation of securing the
armed intervention ot this Government, or of
any expectation or effort to prevent jeace
between Chili and Peru unless the claim
Ur to tbe 6th the number of Mils introduced
in the United States Senate wm R841; tbe
number of resolutions, 60; total, 1,901. Tbe
number of bills Introduced tn the House wm
6,104; the number of resolutions, 203; total,
6,307; the total bills and resolutions in both
bodies, 8.30K. The House committees had
submitted L208 report*; the Senate commit­
tees, 537 reports; total number of bills con­
sidered and reported upon in tlie two bodies,
1,745. Tbe number of bills which had been
examined and reported uj»n was greater than
ever hod been reported before in one session
in tho history of Congress.
Tint Governor of Texas refused to sign the
Apportionment bill lately passed by tie Leglalalun. but allowed it to become a law with­
out bis si.Toatnrc.
Tax United States Supreme Court, on the
8th denied tbe application for a writ of habeM

recently risible from

chusstts. A steamer which arrived at Boston
ou the 7th r^orted haring passed a field of
ice three hundred miles in length.

par value pt |100?000.

that James Emery, ninety years of age, resid­
ing In jiomy County, killed hi* wife by beat-

Department, has tendered hl* resignation.

At several potnta on tbe Pacific coasts**

signing of the Anti-Chlncse bill by tbe PresL

LighMst ud SlroDKct Mule,

A St. Petersbvro dispatch of tbe 6th states
that thirty lives were lost on tho steamer
Rodgers, which was wrecked while eearching
for the survivors of tho Jeannette in .the AreAlbert YotniG, who wm recently arrested
in London for threatening the life of Queen
Victoria, was on th'e 6th committed for trial.
A nu In a flour-mill at Cardiff, Wales, on
the 6th caused a loss of 8500,000.
Earl Sfrxcer, the new Lord-Lieutenant of
Ireland, wm•• received on the 6th by the cor­
poration of Dublin, and wm loudly cheered on
his way to the castle. Michael Davitt ’u
released from Portland Prison.
At Alexandria,.Russia, on the 6th a mob of
several hundred. persons wrecked the houses
of Jewish residents.
Ix Pbmnix Park, Dublin, on tbe afternoon
of the 6th Lord Frederick Cavendish, the new
Secretary for. Ireland, and Thoma* Henry
Burke, Under-Secretary, were MSMslnated by
persons unknown. The victims were strollIngin the park, half a.mile from the city gate,
and a quarter mile from the Chief Sec­
retary’s lodge. A cab containing four men
drove up, two of whom drew knives and
stabbed Cavendish
and Burke several
times In the throat and brcML
A
hsrd struggle for life wm evidently made, the
corpses being' found ten paces apart. Two
younc gentlemen riding bicycles discovered
the bo&amp;les and summoned the police. The
pockets of the victim* contained coin, notes
and watches, showing that robbery wm not
the purp°**
^e crime. No clew to the assassins had been obtained.
The City of Wlnncpeg. in Manitoba, was
submerged by the overflow of tbe Red River
on the «th, and there was great resulting dis-

HUBBARD

Improved 188^.

Wm. A. AYLSWORTH

No Deception Y Domestic &amp; New Home
’ SEWING'MACHINES.
WATCH OUT FOR NEXT WEEK’S AD
When in need of the Best

;

i
I
|
j
|
[

LATER NEWS.

dent of the National Temperance Society
at its annual meeting In New York on .-.e9th.
■George Seville on tbe 9th asked tbe aid
of the police of New York in finding his wife.
Tbe return of John W. Guitesu to the writ of
habeas corpus denies that Mrs. Scoville is in
his custody, or that she is illegally restrained
of her liberty. Mr. Scoville testified that bls
wife told him be had ceased to care for her.
Mrs. Scoville arrived in Chicago on the even­
ing of tbe 9th.
A scnooL-nousn near Lakefield, Minn., wm
lifted by a funnel-shaped cloud nn tbe 9th and i
scattered overyhe prairie. There were twelve
persons in the building, three of whom were I
terribly bruised.
A Loxdox dispatch of the 9th states that
the British Government would offer a reward
of 830,000 for Information within three months
which would lead to the conviction of tbe
assassins of Cavendish and Burke, aud would
grant pardon to any person but the prind-

out and the mills were shut down.
Ox the 8th 5,000 immigrants landed at Castle
Garden.
Ix the Guiteau case at Washington on the

Points, Oils, Varnishes,
III ILIIEIL1 I1ARVWAKJK. '

DETROIT STOVE CO’S. STOVES
!

Gxorge Otto Trrvxltax, nephew of the
late Lord Macaulay, formerly a prominent
Liberal Member of Parliament, hu been ap­
pointed Chief Secretary for Ireland.

McAu-istxb, a Texas mining settlement,
visited by a terrible cyclone on the 9th.
Seven persona were killed, and fifty were more
or less injured. Great damage wm done to
bouses and property.
'
Tub Government hospital at Fort Steele,
Wyoming, was burned on the 9th.
A mo strike wm inaugurated at the Cleve­
land (Ohlq) Rolling-Mill on the 9th. Tbe
amalgamated iron and steel workers asked
for an advance of from fourteen to twenty­
fire per cent, phlch the company refused to

Sash, Doors and Blinds,
j

Chajuxs Moore, who returned to Ireland ’
recently from the United States was on the ;
Sth arrested at Maynooth, on suspicion of be- I
Ing concerned in the assassination at Dublin.
When arrested be almost fainted.
A St. Pbtrbsbvrg dispatch ot tho flth
states that the Senate m a Court of Appeal
has decided the decree banishing the Jewish
apiilhecarics illegal.
The false prophet who appeared in Soudan,
Egypt, wm killed on the 8lh and his followers
dispersed.
_

wm

Gleaner &amp; Binder

----------BELONGS T&lt;

THE LARGEST STOCK OF

Grades of Hardware and Ma-

chinery.

CLOTHING! THE

Call and see me.

FRANK C. BOISE.

EVER PUT INTO NASHVILLE.

CROWN

50
LIGHT OVERCOATS
The Handsome Mlelton

The Tasty Cheviot.
THE CROWN SEWING MACHINE.

The Nobby Cawsimere

Boots, Shoes and Groceries in profusion.

W. A. AYLSWORTH.

AGAIN TO THE FRONT!
With the LARGEST and Kofi Coffiplete iloct of

FURNITURE
Ever laid down in any one store in Barry
or Eaton Counties.

, sa-Tbe “Crown" comes into the market
lhe ta«t of all the maciilnca, bat has sprung to
front rank at once from lhe fart that It bM ta­
ken the good features in all other machines
and put them in one grand combination, mak­
ing this the Handsomest, Largest, Most Silent
and Lightest Running machine yet offered. All
the ‘-pointe" that tbe expcriece of twenty years
tn all kinds of family and light manufacturing
work hM proved to be absolutely good are to be
found only tn tbe “Crown." Other machines
may have one, two or three of these -pointe
but none but the "Crewn ’ has them all.
Every device that ta really desirable in other
machines will be found tn the "Crown." Advented, and the “Crown” ia a perfect embodi­
ment of everytlng good In them.

E. R. WHITE.

EVERYBODY
Take notice that the time Hm come when the
Narrow Tired Wagon is no longer sought after
by experienced men. People are continually
looking forward to better things and they have

Wide Tire Wagon!
tried and the narrow tired * agon thrown one
side.

BUY A WIDE TIRE WAGON

his argument before tbe Supreme Court
sitting in banc were that the offense was not
indictable In the District of Columbia because
tbe President’s death occurred ia New Jersey,
and that the senUace is void because the day

Our mammoth two-story double store

Ix the United States Senate on tbe 9th all

Everything you need from the smallest Bracket to
a $125 Parlor Suit.

BUY YOUR PLOW POINTS

You can save money and have a better selection to choose
from, by dealing with us than any other dealer.

FIRST CLASS BLACKSMITH,

purposes

writ of habeas corpus be served on John WD-

Is full and running over.

Then, and be up with the age.
kindle with a load.

It is easier to

I KEEP THEM

Franeee M. 8eovfUe at the Chambers of tbe
Utfon eels forth that Frances M. fieoviUe is
illegally detained and restrained of her liber­
ty by her brother, John W. Gttiteax, and that
store the tete trial of her brother, Charles J.
Guftaau, in Wsahl^ton, Mrs. ficovffle has

Ing alleged that a notorious prisoner held
dally levees. Tbe bill to establish a Court
of Appeals wm discussed, without action.

Don’t Forget It.
John

* division of forestry, which wm also

J. LENTZ &amp; SONS.

•J. M. WOOD.

�A6EHT FOR

D. S. MORGAN &amp; Co’s
may it, isa-

tbe 12th, be­

About eeveaty tihbRsaah immigrants
laodod at Cattle Gardnen daring tbe
pact montji. Great a« i» thia number/
i^wttl be far kurpraaed by the present
during which probably a hun­
dred thousand of tiieae
reach New York.

Hr. Frank Jamea, brother
Mr. Jeoaio James, ia a marvel oT
ubiquity. The country aeem* full of
him. He ia aeen arid recognized in near­
ly every Western city, of importance
about tbe time he ia reported aa prom­
enading Broadway, and at the same
time ho step down into Georgia to write
a letter. Again, he ia farming in Texas
or managing a cattle herd on the plains.
There is evidently something too much

of Mr. Frank Janie*.__________
It i* perhaps a ^gloomy subject to

The flogging administered lhe other
day to a Louisana convict, who bad es­
caped from tho railroad, gang in which
he was working, and recaptured, so
terrified a negro comrade who had
assisted him, that the latter com mi ted
suicide through fear of receiving a
like punishment. It is said that the
laws of Louisina forbid convict labor
outside of the prison wall*; but people
who trade in such labor; and have it
performed under the lash, would not be
deterred by fear of the law.

Henry Shook, a guest at a Toronto
hotel, ordered corned beef at dinner,
and got a particularly tough piece.
Being 84 years old, and nearly toothless,
he explained to the waiter that, under
tho cireumstanes, something tender
ought to be served. But he could get
nothing bette r, and therefore under­
took to eat what was ou his plate. Sud­
denly he fell back in his chair, gasped
for breath, and chocked to death. A
chunk of beef which be had tried
to. swallow whole lodged in his throat.

Charles Alfter got a cable despatch
from Boou, Prusain. saying tbat he had
fallen heir to &gt;30,000 in money and
considerable real estate. He was work­
ing for a dollar a day, at Pern, Ind., anil
wasn’t able to reply by telegraph with
out borrowing. After his friends had
tnqde up the required sum, he hesitated
abo&amp;t investing fl, as lie surmised that,
the news was a hoax. But lie finally sent
the directions how to remit, and has re­
ceived money enough from a Boon
solicitor to take him across the water,
wheje he will get the property.
Susie Green plight have had her pick
from among the young men of Lexing­
ton, Ky., for she was handsome and
rich; but she perferred a gambler of the
flashiest kind. He was known to her
a month os a stock broker, and at the
endoY tixAtbrief cbtutahip'site married
him. They stopped at a Louisville hotel
ou rirefr bridal tour. -He brought her
lemoflln in her room, and she found it
bitter. He had put an npiate in it.
When she was unconscious he stole her
parse andl&gt;2,500 worth of diamonds,
and deserted her,

Crankism is spreading under the fos­
tering theory of emotional or irrespon­
sible insanity, and of the maudlin con­
duct of the public toward cranks in
general aud special cranks in particular,
whose crimes attract more than ord­
inary attention. Tbe attempt to kill
William H. Vanderbilt and Cyrus W.
Field by explosive packages through
tbe mails, came near proving a success.
Postmaster Pearson is determind to
hunt down the miscreants, and, if suc­
cessful, it is to be hoped that some­
thing like justice will be meted out to
them.
When a man can stand up in public
and say that life will be a burden too
grievous to be borne, if he cannot live
in a saloon seven days iu the week;
when a man is willing to admit that
the closing of a saloon four times a
month is going to destroy his moral
4mppiness and piece of mind; when he
confesses that every day he lives be
must spend a certain number of hours
in the*inspiring atmosphere and elevat­
ing society of a gin-mill; that man
ceases to be a correct moral guide, and
society should not listen to his siren
voice, pleading for free whisky, lots
of it, and all the time.
The smallest baby in the world wa*
recently born in a mining camp at Can­
delaria, Nevada. The father is a min­
erand weighs 190 pounds. The mother
is a stout, healthy woman, weighing
perhaps 960 pounds. The baby is a male
perfectly formed as any human being,
but upon its birth it only weighed
eight ounces. Its face is about the size
of a horse chestnut, and a ring worn
on the httle finger of its mother wm
easily slipped over its foot nearly np to
the knee. In the opinion of physicians

WAUL PAPER,
WINDOW MflAUBS,
DI E STUFFS.

these part*

troduc® measurer remedying tho adminlstra-

year* and for the last rtvo year* haa Buffered

Government's solo responsibility.

Battle Creek came Bunday’ when Kerney rcvtv-

if peace and security should U&gt; jeopardised
emment would consider it iu duty to propose
counteracting measures. He declared tho Gov­
ernment did not think tho Coercion act felled,
as It had served an important purpose ins

opening of tho session, except tho roaolution*

measure* which the Government would in-

rhlch was a question it might be right
Lon! Northcoto likened the Government to
pendulum swinging from one aldo back to

stone's remarks, said tho Government had
taken the first stop in a policy tbat would
crown Its administration with glory, and would
produce tie* of mutual interest between Ire­
land and England.
The Time* says: "The policy now to be tried

tion. pure and simple."
A Dublin dispatch say*: Parnell, Dillon and
O’Kelly have been released from tbe Ki 1 mainham JalL There was great excitement on tho
new* being received of tho resignation of
Forster. Crowds gathered on tho streets and

Bands paraded tho city, playlug national air*.
was quickly transmitted throughout tho coun­
try, and *oon Ore* wore blazing on the Wick­
low MU*. There were spontaneous rejoicing*
everywhere. At Limerick many people danced
with joy, shouting “ Forster Is gone; God save
Ireland?" Bands paraded nt Waterford. Il­
luminations were general.

Messrs. Parnell, Dillon and O’Kelly arrived
in London this morning. Only a few persons

Replying to a question by Mr. Joseph Cowen,
the Home Secretary said Michael Davltt had

those attached M hl* previous liberation.
Mr. Gladstone announced that tho charge*of
treasonable practices against Parnell would be
withdrawn.
flrawol from tho office of Secretary fur Ireland.

p«cta unletf be got frtim then a public proml**

BUipscta if Ireland bad been quiet, or if tho
Government had had full power*, but bo could
not agree to an unconditional surrender. He
admitted that the condition of Ireland was
bettor than in January, but It was still so bad
that bo wanted the Government to let the rule*
of procedure wait until a fresh act securing
punishment for outrages hurl been passed.

League, or put it under petticoats, and rents
were being better paid: but he feared that an

CEbimM

PRESC'BIPTIO.WS.
RECEIPTS,

i

in Ireland, emigrated to N. Y. 30 years ago,
where he was married, then moved to Assyria
where be has lived for 35 year*. He was a be­
loved husband and kind father. He leaves
three boys, two girls and wife, besides a large
circle of friends, to mourn hl* lose.
H. H.

Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, ■
Backache, Soreness of the Chest,
Gout, Quiasjr, Sore Throat, Sorollings and Sprains, Burns and
Scalds, Genera! Bodily
Pains,
Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted
Feet and Ears, and all other
Pains and Aches.

stld if all England could not govern ParneU,
greatest power In Ireland. But he believed

paying blackmail to
Mr. Gladstone warmly praised Mr. Forster
for not oompromlalng the Liberal principle*.

Adaptation Io Erery Variety oi
Facility of Manaiement,
Simplicity and Durability,
, Ca and Examine!
Honesi WorlmaMbip.
F. T. BOISE.

Read the Following Testimonial

BALT1MORE.

April has froze out and May froze in.
R. Traver has a new improved I. X. L. wind­
mill.
Miss Anna Johnston teaches tbe McOmber
school.
Ice froze half an inch thick in rain barrel
Monday night.
G. R. Durfee has a new horse and A. P.
Warner a wagon.
Darwin McOmber is slicking up along the
highway south of bls residence.
Mr. Geo. Reverting la 72 year* old, and !•
pruning G. R. Durfee's orchard.
H. Hammond has sold his horse, harness and
wagon, and will work by the day this aesson.
Mr. Treadwell who,owing poor health rented
farm last fall and with family moved to Ohio,
recently died. His wife returned to Ibis town
overflowing with grief.
Doxy.
Woodland, Mat 12th, ’82.
I arn authorized to state to tbe (hiusaa cor­
respondent of the Oho, tbat a special detective
is looking up facts In the charge of Nashville
citizens wandering in the streets of Odessa,
and appearing jovial, and wearing a torn glove;
and when full reports come in to bead-quarters,
we will give names and dates.

would be able to take such

SOLD BT ALL DBV00IBTB LSD DELLEBS
'
IM KBDItnSE.

A. VOGELER &amp; CO..

May be the .place to

of ini, utt

niLTEUE

s

BUY A FARM’ BUT

THE PLACE TO BUY
GROCERIES,

PROVISIONS,
CROCKERY,

GLASSWARE,

HANGING LAMPS,

E. PINKHAM’S

Jackson, Mich . Sep. 16th, 1681.
Messrs. D, 8. Morgan ® Co.,
'J
Brockport, N.Y.:
Gznt»—Your agent* at Romeo,Syke* A Tay­
lor, sold, tbe past season, to tuv neighbor Mr.
Thurston, a Triumph Reaper No 2. My oat
crop was in the main very heavy, but in part*
very uneaven; some Iqog aud heavy, some very
short. My own rcapems of quite a celebrated
make and in good condition, but neighbat
-Thurston was anxious I should try his machine.
1 consented. lie sent with it a little boy
scarcely larg enough to drive the team
It i
but justice to say that I was very skeptical, and
had gave doubt* about the abllityof the Tri­
umph or anv other machine’s being able to do
perfect work in my field, but must confess that
I was filled with admiration and wonder al the
results. Machine and boy were entire master*
of the situation. Such quality of work with the'
same ease, I never saw equalled before. In­
stantly while in motion, tbecntlre working ap­
paratus could l&gt;e raised or lowered, to gather
any condition crop or meet aiiy requirement*
of surface. I consider this feature indispens­
able in a Reaper. The bent rukc arms arc anoth­
er important feature. With trial I had, I think
tour machine save* 25 per cent of the labor in
binding by the straight sqnarc and conpact
form of the gavle*. The TNumph i». of very
light draft, under perfret control of the driver,
uptK-ars to be very simple in ita court-ruction,
and hence, very durable. Iu my judguieut it U
very far Inadvauce of other machines ot Ila
class, and I believe th&lt;’ interests of the farmer*
ol Michigan will be advanced by giving tbe
Triumph a trial before purcbadng.
Tou"
tt-’miLu™.

An&lt;l everything kepi iu u flrat dm* stuck of

EATON COUNTY.
tti* kind, is at
Tbe Universallata of Charlotte are raising a
110.000 fund to build a church.
Joseph Roger* of Bellevue, died laat week
Thursday at the advanced age of 82 yean.
F. B. Alnger, of the Charlotte Republican,
ha* bought n building site, and will immedi­
ately commence a residence.
C. H. Spencer of Charlotte, baa juat received
J 1,500 pension and |6 a month during bis life,
for some disease contracted in the army. ’
A lad nameed Stoddard,of Walton *&lt;ns kicked

C. W. SMITH’S
R. DK KIAMIV A CO.,

—An Oneida, N. Y., man drive* an
ox hitched to a buggy like a hone, aad
thw nnimal goes fimrate.

President Michigan State Ag'l Society.

ry Don’t buy u inachine until you
examine the “TRIUMPH” north
E. Cook’s Wagon Shop XnahviHc, Mich.

J. M. SHOUP.
QLEMENT SMITH.

Attorney at Law,

custom:
AME8 A. SWKEZEI,

hurt that is feared he will lose both of his eyes.
Mr*. A. Owen.a lady 45 years old,of Bellevue
was prostrated by a paralytic stroke one day
last week and at this writing I* not expected to
lire.
A large flock of sheep t&gt;elonging to Chas
A tills of Eaton Rapids, got on the railroad
track through the carelessness of the section
men. Shortly after a train came along and
killed 15 and Injured three.
Bill Dalyrymplc fooled with silver wash con­
taining principally nitric acid,which a drunken
peddler was selling at Charlotte Saturday, and
the stuJJ exploded,flylng into his lace and eye*.
The damage was slight, but be learned considable.

Pouring Mill

Attorney &amp; Counsellor,

READY FOR BUSINESS

Every day

in tbe year—Sunday* excepted.

I'robate Nottee.
State of Michigan, County of Barry

CUSTOM

GRINDING!

Of every dercriptiqn. done in a superior
manner, at the drop ot the bat; and
Satisfaction guaranteed.

WILLIAM F. B1ZKB,
■aid Co-commiaaioner* to be*’ *ud adjust all claim .
rzalc.it lhe estate of said dcorawd al! creditor* of
uf said tleceaw’l are rrqne»t«l to present their
claim* before i*‘d commission's at thrfiate reehlenca

FLOUR. MEAL AND MILL FFED

The St. Paul (Minn) Globe, ob*crve*: thing*
had gone wrong with him, and he wanted to dIFi
Kept constantly on band.
vet he had the whole hou»e darting around
Since its consolidation with the New York
mlgbtiy lively, *o we heard, bunting for the 8U
Jacob* Oil bottle, when the first twinge of rheu­ Evening 1‘ost, has increased its facilities in
every department, enlarged its size to twentymatism gathered him up.
“Life 1* short and time is fleeting,” and four pages, and added many able writer* to Its
painter* should not waste either in mixing un­ previous list. Il is now pronounce^ by many
I* conceeded to be the beat. Try it.
reliable materials fwhen they can get the Sher­ of its readers to be better than ever be­
win-Williams Paints. Bold by F. T. Bois a.
fore.
*
Established in 1865, tbe natian was a pioneer
.
1TJSEEM8
By a strict attention to business, and square
as if it should not require an argument to con­ tn this country, as a Weekly journal of literary dealing with all our customers, we hope to mer­
vince people that a second class needle will and political criticism of the highest order, con­
cause more trouble and more lose of patience ducted free from the control of party or into- it a liberal patronage from the farmer* of this
than any other thing of its Use in the world,
vicinity.
for, no matter how good a machine you may
Mill* on railroad,—east uf depot.
have, you cannot do good work with a poor during tbe flrsi few years it ba* held to its origi
needle. Therefore, before you -condemn your nal alm, and ha* long been a recognized autho­
II. K. DICKIXSOK A CO.
machine, try tbe genuine cold swedged needle, rity at home and abroad- U* editoral manage­
kept only by E. It WHITE, at Kocner Broth­ ment has been unchanged from the first, aud
it* projector* intend that, with their present
the
facilities, the Nation shall become more than
House to rent, inquire of
H. COE.
ever before the medium of the ablest thought, of
'
FOR SALE. ~
the time.
■ The form and style of the paper are chosen
Two brood sow* and 20 choice pig*.
with a view to the most suitable shape for blndH. COE.
aand a cet of the Nation preserved, bound.
indexed, make* the most complete and
BRIGHT’S DISEASE, DIABETES.
readable record of curent event* of importance
Beware of tbe stuff that pretend* to cure tbcis in the political and literary world available for
disease or other *eriou* Kidney, Urinary or the Amcrelan public.
Liver Diseases, a* they only relcivc for a time
The subscription price has been.
and make* you ten time* worse afterward*; but
rely solely on Hop Bitten, the only remedy tbat
Sells the BEST BUGGY on the GLOBE
Specimen copies sent on request- Address the
Publisher, 210 Broadway, New York.
for the MONEY.
fectually that tt never re turns

Reduced to 93 pr Annum.
Not Fail

“ROUGH ON RAT8.”
The thing desired found at last- Ask Drugist for “Rough on Raia.” It clear* out rafi’

F&gt;B«y.

Fieli!

people.

Graham Flour

COLUMBUS BUGGY
COMPANY,

It was Inteaded ।

CLIPPER M3WER

DEPARTMENT

Our

more dangerous than tbe individual incita-

REAPER NO. 2,
and

RHEUMATISM, PAINT AND BRUSH PerfrctitH-LiibUeis
06326968
of Draft.

was not willing to share

ministration of Justice in IreLnd deal* with
ths protection of life and propetty.
8peaking with reference to tho Coercion act.

SPECALTIES

PROPRIETARY MEDICINES,

man, his wife having left him and moved to
John Weichert*.
Peter Hartom baa bought a piece of land’ al
the Center with a house aud barn on it and is
repairing tho same.
Mlcbcal Keniev departed this life Tuesday.

rcstedon suspicion of haring been personally

—It you would patronize tbe arts,
many a woman who paint*.

inaciftt box.

DIGS,
BOOKS,
JEWELRY,

mustang* this week, on hit way to Noahrille.
There will be quarterly meeting at the M. P.
church the last Saturday and Sunday in May.

apeak of, but those who are expect ed to
know, claim tha£ tbe American race

is dying out for tbe following Teaaoua:
first, that they eat too much and too fast;
secondly, that they are intemperate in
drink; thirdly, they gamble furiously,
fourthly, that they live too much in
boarding houses and hotels; fifthly,
tbat thuy-aro the victims,of disapointed
ambition; sixthly, that they make mon­
ey the standftrdof sucoeM.

F. T. BOISE,

ing around the Center tor never*! day*.

The wife of Lieut-Gov. Tabor, the
wealthiest num in Colorado, is suing
for aeparate maintenance. She figures
bis property at &gt;8,000,000, and asks for
an allowance of &gt;50,000 a y»ar. He
is MidJ to have offered he &gt;1,000,000
outright if she will agree to a divorce,
which she refaseto do.

Dill objected to Hinkle as a suitor for
his daughter Henrietta, at West Mil­
ton, 0. A letter from Hinkle asking
the girt to meet him in the orchard fell
into Dill’s hands, and he substituted
himself for her, going to the tryiting
place in her clothe*. When the ardent
lover clasped the figure in the dark he
received the coatetnta o' a pistol in his

shoulder.

for
1882. Frtet
to any addresa upon ap­
plication. Contains de­
scription* of everything
required far Personal or Family use,
with over 1*900 illustrations. We sell
all goods at wholesale price* in
quantities to suit the purchaser. The
only institution in America who make
thL* their special ixistrusts. Address

MMTIOMaY WARD h CO.,

COI.UMBUS, O.,

Administrator's Sole.
OKORGK G!LLlfl,decraa*!.
hereby ciran that I shall sal! at public

sixty-three (&lt;H.J

NIsay s7»w. 1 m
Dalcc, Kaahvllie, April. 22. IMS,
• RORf,&amp;GRKUG. i

Probate 1%'otlce,

Send for CATALOGUE and TESTI­
MONIALS of HUNDREDS of LI VERY-

K.vyiAEX,* mloorj

COLUMBUS BU66Y COMPANY,
COLUMBUS, 0.

For Salt Or Dealers EVEBTWHEBE.
WORTH 8KNDINC FOR.

WUtMH.S.'S,

Dated May 1st, 18*2
FREDERIC WAGNER,
)
33 37 JACOB REISER5 Corn's.
CHRISTIAN IBBRKELuYj _______

AND HOW THEY CAN BK CURED.” which Is

o! u.k

�&lt;tabty-oM;

Tbo'sbe'*

RDAY.

-

MAY IS. iK
White all that compose this household, we

EABTWARP- BOUND.
Whatever path iu life we take,
BY U ADDA NICHOLS.

lighting up tbe close ot day,

For weeks we lingered thta side the lake,
'Ere we of friends our leave did take,

Their faith to strengthen, and be bleat
With foretaste of ths heavenly rest
SUU loth to go, I lingering strayed . ■

And lightly fanned by summer breeze,

Among tbe mountains of old Vermont.

In tbe church-yard near, where forms ore laid

Whom we had never seen before;
.And now their welcome missives bring

Grown dark with age and mo*e o’ergrown,

Glad memories that fondly ding

positive proof tbat the remedy Imitated is of
highest value. As soon a* 11 had been tested
and proved by the whole world that Hop BIG

ABE N0W RECEIVING oub stock of

GOODS FOB THE SPRING TRAPf.
----- —AND ARE SELLING THEM---------

Uy medicine on earth many imitations sprung

Clear Down!
THE CAREFUL MAN IS EVER ON THE ALERT
to take advantage of favorable opportunities.

Around the heart's most sacred shrine,

Wild famy at its will did stray,
While we to Eastward relied, away
Fart flying almost as the wind,
Home seems were quickly left behind.

Stewing* that make life brighter glow

With sunshine only they can know

But otbera claims to freely own,
And share with one great brotherhood,
Tbe common ill and common good.

And wonder if tbe angel* keep

That knows no distance and no time.

Their vigils sure thro’ ttortn and tide,
(5'er buried treasures scattered wide.

O Green Mountain State I so rich with all
'

Now when the morning sun arose

Niagara's

Thy marble quarries, great and small;

No satisfaction silence gives,

How much of wealth tbe earth yields thee,

While mystery in all things livea;

And yet 'tls shared from sea to sea;

Weak man can only trust and wait.
Until within the golden gate,

And sister state* thy wealth partake,
And in return send thee as great.

Immortal life shall be attained,
Aud mysteries shall be explained.

And thus are nature’s riches poured

With feeling* of awe I took my way,
From the “old meeting bouse" that cummer day

Pondering long on what bad been.

In-beauty o'er tha hill* and grove*,
.We looked with
and surprise 7

On nature's
That dwell

THE BAD AND WOTOLESS
are never Imitated or couterfcited. Thia ia

longings, arid Intent
To bear from out the holy wont

writ, of ootme, bo haa bad experience
•ndimprobably matured in hto jndjrmeut, and. baring glanced at the mar­
ried life of many people, conclude* to
jog along toward tbe bemeatretch iu
single harneaa.

pcclally those with tbe word “Hop" or "Hop*"
In their name, arc Imitation* or counterfeit*.
Beware of them. Touehuouc of them. Use
nothing but genuine Hop Bitter*, with a bunch
or clutter oi green Hope on the white label
Trust nothing else. Druggists and dealer* are
warned against dealing In imitations or coun­
terfeit*.

O'er all the earth, not all are stored
fly one or few; but common good
Thy mountain scenery rich and rare,

Wondering still if ever again

And beauty ot thy lakes I share;

How much intervene of hopes and fears;

Thy lovely forests of evergreen,
Thy mountain pines'of glowing sheen.

Ah, well it is we may not know
How much of pain, bow much of woo

Bright picture* make on memory's wall

.

Dr. Pkkgkllt:—• Three bottles of Woman’s
Friend [Zoa-Pbora] entirely cured me of se­
vere LeucorrixBa and Hemorrage of the
Bowels.
Mrs. H. M. D.,
March, 1880.
8t. John*,Mien.

With pencil colors inddible.

Shall meet us in tbe future ways,

Glorious music, grand, and sweet! '

To the year eighteen hundred elghty-onc,
Many strange event* have come;

The joy or sorrow of coming days;
But trusting when this life is past.

Mozart can uot with it compete;

Wonderful picture, made and planned

Among them we witnessed the dark day*

Without the aid of human band I

That all o'er New England held sway.

How often In the cool of day,

Tbe bln!*, Believing it was night.

Were we Inclined to stroll away,

Is seen the Master hand divine.
To grand Niagara we bld adieu*

Along the shady, lakeside road,
A half mile from our friends' abode,

And Eastward still our way pursue,
TIB Rocherter’s lofty heights sppear;
If thou eeqkest enterprise, behold It here I

•To a dear old farm-house, nestled there,

Wc enter now tn the twilight grey,

Tbe home of De Forrest; he the good

(Thinking of what the serfpturea say

And well-beloved of tbe neighborhood ;

The wonderful city of Syracuse;
Aud questiou if Lot’s wife passed this way,

Among green trees and Cower* rare,

Refused to sing and ceased their flight,
A strange weird light thro' darkness shone,

Strangely all thing* It reflected on.
The same phenomena iu leaser degree,

As the dark day of seventeen hundred eighty;
When Abraham Davenport, with form erect,

Arose in the legislature then met,

And Ln all the country 'round.
The influence of his life is found:

And to Connecticut's Law-giver* said:

Through long and weary years of pain,

If this be the time when tbe *ea yields it* dead,
Aud great Judgement day ot the Lord of Hosts,

A helpless sufferer he has lain;

She’d dare a command to disobey.
Schenectady ’* ancient way marks passed.

And many seek bis bedside there,

TdBaratog* we come st last;

His words of faith and trust to bear;

An Eden n&lt;-w, of beauties rare,

And thus in seeming solitude,

I propose for one, to be found at my port;
And aa the day assumes night's mien,

“I move you bring the candle* in.”

Thus saying to all: Do your best.

He preaches to the multitude.

Then faithfully wall and trust the rent.

A few hour* ride and we reach the lake.

An anient admirer of genius, be.

Of the crowded car our leave we take,
With the beautiful steamer “Vermont," in view,

In every art and Industry;

O, gracious wekotne, wc give to you,

Tbe peculiarities of each unfold;
And then with judgement true, descry

My way to St- Lawrence; and linger here

The value of each with critic’s eye;

And o’er Deer river our boat we glide

Thu*, when lhe third bright day hod passed.

In the realm of books be wander* free,

In tbe calm hour of eventide;

The hand of stranger friends we grasped:
But stranger* they not long remained,

A passionate lover of poetry;

And conntantly And something new

And oft to while away the time,

For restless feel and mind to do.

For kindred hearts will beat the same.

I said fur him some simple rhyme.

To the place of interest that loudly calls,

With tb-m we tarried, sweet real to gain

Like this I penned one Sabbath day,

In and around dear Brasher Falls,

By the calm, blue waters of Lake Champlain;

For bow could I help these word* to say

That brings us to our Journey's end.

With them we sought historic ground.

I touch the old-time battle place
Of ’’latuburgh; and from thence I trace

And can of writer* modern and old,

The Ticonderoga Fort Is seen,
Strong remjpdcr of wbat ha* been;
Now crumbling, njwaks of ancient war*.

O beautiful water* of Lake Champlain I
That I’ve so longed to sec.
For in the day* of long ago
My mother dwelt by thee.

I gladly hasten; and learn the wsyr„

I quench my thirst from out the spring
Whence they quenched theirs; the murmuring

Was ought disturbed by cannon’s roar:
In all this quiet plach around

And still I gaze upon thy face

Wear a calm, contented took;
And none would dream that 'ere before,
1 &gt;*

Nature smiles with peace profound- ’

O’er winding creek we crossed tbe bridge

\

Deeply shaded on either side

With cedars tall and branches wide.
And as we rode, my friend thuh spoke:

"Dost see that bare and ancient oak

In yonder field alonef be said,
Tls called "Put's Oak,'iof which.you’ve read;
The. monarch of-ok! Crown Point town.

* We almost Imagined we could see
’ Brave General Putnam; and then again.

For now at last. I’m homeward bound.

I'Ucheri*h these scenes within my heart,
And take them as 1 roam.
To the dearest spot in all the world.
To Michigan, my home.

A* the tender thoughts of home, sweet home.

I related Low one morning fine,

To “Camp Idylwllde” at Seven Mlle Point.
A picnic party, with dainties rare

All stowed away with wond’rotis care.

In quantity as if t’were sent

While fancy ha* the power to bring

To feed a hungry regiment

Tbe part to present on pinioned wing.

No pains were spared, but all was done
To make this day a happy one;
And for its pleasures we mainly owed

To one Evangelist, well beloved
Tbat Christ to men he might reveal.

He talked of life that is to be

Thro’ mist* and darkness burning bright.

As boundless as eternity;

'Theno’er tbe silvery waters rolled
And something of tbe boHday,
May «be beacon light from tbe other shore.

Boots and Shoes,
Hats and Caps,
General &lt;?lotiling-,
•
Groceries, Etc,
We are thankful for the liberal patronage given us in the
past under the old credit system and solicit its continuance
under the Ready Pay. We know we can be more serviceable
to you in the future than we could possibly be in the past.
Bring Your Eggs!

Bring Your Cash!

ADlES&amp;jUHITrnoOSE

DwOYLYMOK IlTZaklrjIlmrpaTd |

W EDITION. *«««2HyE7

Search we for treasurers 'ere so dear.

WITH A FULL STOCK OF-

BRADLEY &amp; CO.. Publishers,
60 North 4th St. PhUxdetohla. Pa.

TO LADIES ONLY I

n. will —d I 1U..1H.I Mlw-»ka&lt;v4 Haun- t.lf-, I

Wagfons

PRJQU1MQ
heart, evai. rb»ct3Ml»rx.rartcn«r veins. rtlM,dl«rrb&lt;r»
(rear Jwnus. Thoasands yetcntlttad. PvaUcncrsaa*
entitled to an INCEI ARK. Borwrr yet aa. tboaaand*.

OUR LINE BUGGIES
THROAT

LUNG DISEASE.

EMBRACES

From the transient one of our pilgrim stay,
We look for the home tbat fades not away.

Dexters,
Ph aa tons

•Sept. Gib, IttL

_______AN EDITOR’S OPINION.
An editorial friend obour, who haa grown en­
thusiastic over a certain remedy which ha*
cured him of dyspepsia, general debility and
nervousuesa, writes an editorial' aa follows:
“We believe that Brown's Iron Bitters are des­
tined to be THE Medicine of the world. They
Sve real health and Btrength to every part of
cbody, restore every lost or impaired] organic
function and give new life and new vigor to
every physiclal and mental faculty. Every
man and woman in ill-health should rejoce
that a real cure lies In Brown’s Iron Bittern.

White Chappel and Coal Boies, hang with Elliptic Springs.
Two and Three Spring Democrats.

■ nOUTE

A Philadelphia man can pick up 100 rata and
toss them into a barrel in thirty-four seconds.

cause be isn't rich.
Tin: COST OF ITIf the total cost of sickness simply In Its busi­
ness aspect* were reckoned up,ttwould be found
to be great enough In five years to pay the ra-

PRINCIPALLY

UR WORK IS ALL DONE UPON HONOR. BUGGIES
being made from Second Growth Hickory.
Our Tops are lined with All-Wool Indigo-Dyed Goods and
Warranted not to Fade. W. H. Atkinron, a painter whose
work haa never went back on him, has charge of our paint de­
partment, and can be relied on. Bolts, Dash beet, Body Loup,
and Stays are made from Norway Iron and the entire buggy
ironed in a desirable and superior manner and warranted.

O

fit of Indigestion, and misses a good bargain

I told De Forrest tn this way:

Kept brightly burning by an angel hand,

Turkey Red Table Linen 50 to 55 cts.
Table Oil Cloth 28. Floor, best, 42 cts.

FRANK
JAMES

For his constant toll and zeal,
Had udted thro' many a weary day

Prints for 6 'ots. yard.
Gringhianis 8 to ll'cts.

COMMAND SEE FOR YOURSELF.

Seek we for pleasures far or near.

Nothing so near the heart will come,

And thus In panoramic form

Atf ne'er to lie forgotten hour
We spent within tbe llght-houae tower,

Seem echoes from the unseen shore.
Now amply paid for all in quest,

The boats that glide upon thy waves
Have all a charm for me;
And the crumbling Fort of old Crown Point
Speak* volumes of history.

Release tbat came by the bold Frenchman;

. Thru' by-gone years the troops arc come.

Of the dear waters bubbling o'er,

Toward the glowing, golden west.
My thoughu,*my anxious thought* arc found,

A boating party numbering nine,
8aiieufrom Port Henry; lovely port!

Tbq Indians tying to that tree

And made the richness of tbe land

I tread the same old paths where trod
The loved ones, now gone home to God.

For tbe love of her who loved thee well
In life's brigiil momIng here.

That leads up to old "Indian ridge;”

Can be made, if necessary, than to hire money and pay
for your merchandise as you purchase it.

Now post three-score and twenty year* ,

The light* and shadows o’er thy brow
In fitful radiauc&amp;play;
So like the joy* nod grief* of life,
So like life’s fleeting day.

The cattle wading tn Ute brook.

NO BETTER INVESTMENT

Bring Your Butter!

Who pitched hl* tent In thia same place

Abundance yield to labor's band.

Tbe green field* yield their rich increase:

Various Causes—
Advancing years, care, sickness, disap­
pointment, and hereditary predisposi­
tion—al] operate to turn tbe hair gray,
and either of* them inclines It to shed
prematurely. Ayer’s Hair Vigor will
restore faded or gray, light or red hair
io a rich brown or deep black, as may
be desired. It softens and cleanses tho
scalp, giving It a healthy action. It
removes and cures dandruff and humors.
By its use filling hair Is checked, and
a new growth will be produced in all
cases where the follicles are. not de­
stroyed or the glands decayed. Ito
effects are beautifully shown on brashy,
weak, or sickly hair, on which a few
applications will produce the gloss and
freshness of youth. Harmless and sure
In its results, It to Incomparable as
a dressing, and is especially valued
for the soft lustre and richness of tone
It Imparts.
Ayer's Him Vigor is colorlerdt;
contains neither oil nor dye; and will
not soil or color white cambric; yet
it lasts long on the hair, and keeps
it fresh and vigorous, Imparting an
agreeable perftime.
For sale by all druggists.

That the merchant who sell on credit must take into ac­
count all the probabilities above mentioned when he offers his
merchandise for sale. And these losses amount in the aggre­
gate to a fair yearly income—a loss which he could not long
sustain were there no remedy, but there is a remedy and that
remedy is in the PROMPT PAYING CUSTOMERS.

From lhe lips of one of it* pioneers,

Olovely mountain*, that bound thy shore*.
In lofty grandeur rise;
Tliy summit* seem to almost reach
And kiss lhe -anlied skica.

Battles lost awl won and bloody scars;
But now Abe mountains smile In peace,

Cblcago~has awocnan dentist.

A few short days with kindred near.

And bear the tale* of early day*.

LAKE CHAMPLAIN.

And ever-vanlng pleasures found

No matter how disguised, that prompt paying customers
must make good to the dealers who sell on credit all losses
from poor debts, long time accounts, sickness, failing crops,
loss of property, or dishonesty of other customers.
«

No lecture agent ha* yet secured the widow
of Jeaae James for the platform.

Is given a common brotherhood.

I shall pass this way in tbe coming years;

nostrums put up in similar styte to H. B., with
variously devised names in which the wonl
"Hop” or "Hops” were used In a way to Induce
people to believe they were the same aa Hop

OOTV’T 13TTY -A.

my nothing of Doctors fee*, etc., it dont pay to
CAMP IDYLWILD6.

&lt;Ntbe "old white meeting bouse," loved so weU,

O, thou lovely and quiet retreat I
By nature richly blast;

Remedy" is a friend of tbe burtaesa man, for it
clears ?•!« brain. One Dollar a bottle. Readout.
N.T,
____ __
A subscriber writers to ask "what becomes of
all tbe sawdust 1” He probably never slept on

That’s with such hallowed

ries fraught

To bask beneath thy shade

0, stately rock*, that stretch their anna

HOWTO SAVE.
Al I bard workers are subject t.. bilious attack*
which may end la dangerous illness. Parkara
Ginrer Tonic will keep tbe kidnevs and liver

KANSAS CITY

Until[you have thoroughly examined mine. Spokes made
from ISecond Growth Stock and tbe wagon is made to stand
the wear and tare of our roads.
£3TI HAVE IN STOCK A NUMBER OF^g

ifui-st

O’er natures’* stairway winding down
TlckMavU

Bradley’w

Chilled! Plows, Hay Rakes and Cultivators,

are so polite tbat when a thtax robe

Which I will Sell at Cost to Close out
TH* DISTINGUISHING CHARM.
A delightful fragrance of freshly Soweia I
4 aptoM ia tbe dtottaguirtdug eharm of Flor- i

t. i. rorm.

�historical.

and like m;

To

Advertisers:

paint More for Devoe’s elwnizer, which of the framer’sSrill and ingenuity, rather
will cost twenty-five cent*, and stain it than the combined job of tho upholsterer
l carefully—two coate well .rubbed in will
and a book of directions.—Harper* •
give a fine polish. Now take silesia of
two contrasting colon, one for each aid*
dampen thoroughly, and stretch while

PERUSE THESE. LIBERAL AD. RATES.

aud mark off equal distance, say an inch
or an inch and a half apart, turning the
edge* in. and then tack with very small
can&gt;et-tack.«, which arc afterward cov-

menu
gummed on according to taste make a
very pretty and enduring remembrance
of mends. A friend prepared a charm­
ing fairy-tale screen for her nursey, in
three compartments, each telling various
fairy legends most graphically, as the
ORNO 8TBONG
pictures were cut from books, and ap­
propriately arranged.
Sister Anne was
m her tower looking out for the brothers,
whflehelow poor Fatima fell at the feet
of the furious spouse. Cinderella’s ca­
reer began in ashes‘and misery at tho
bottom, while tho happy Prince tried on
VILLAQBjOmCERS.
the bright slipper at the top, and Jack
really twined his bean stalk up and down
the last compartment, while Kate Green­
away’s quaint little maidens peeped in
Marshall—James L. Gregory.
and out What a pleasure it was tor the
darlings lying in their little brass crib*
to be soothed to sleep in such a fairy-like
manner!
An invalid was greatly gratified by a
jMrirtitff.
present of a screen on which her favorite
APTIST CHURCH. Rev. E. B Moody. Portor. flowers were grouped, they being in re­
8wvlc«3_&gt;Teiy^8ond*y »t ItfJOi. nr. Ha^“h ality frontispieces from old floral maga­
zines. Historical subjects with portraits
may be. used very effectively for large
folding screens. Take some well-known
\ S.IMJDirr KF-jtOOPAL CHCRCB-J
3 1 TOW. Pastor. K-rrirea every Babbsl
author, put his likeness in the center and
group around pictures ot his life or illus­
trations of his works; or take a poem and
f LODGE NO. 87, K. of P., meets st Ito illustrate it by collecting suitable pictures
Castle Holl, NaahrUle, Michigan, every from various sources from time to time.
Friday evening, for the encouragement and You will be surprised at the result.
pixirt of all worthy, true,-steadfast and honIn fastening on all these pictures for
aulc Brother Knight*.
L. E. J.ZNTZ, K. R. K Orno Btrono.C. C. screens to a foundation of cither silesia
or paper, be very careful to know just
whore the picture is to be put, because it
Miscellaneous Cards.
can not be moved afterward without
H. YOUNG, M. D. Office east ride of leaving a blur. Use fine flour paste, very
■ Main St-, Nariiville. Office hours from tmoolh and rather stiff Put the paste
. 7 U&gt;9 a. m., and 4 to 7 p.m.
on to the picture, then set it in it* place,
and pres* down gently with an old linen
H. GRISWOLD, M. D.,
.title napkin. Do so until all amgon, wh*a
• Physician and Surgeon. Office and rtsyour screen is finished, as fir nceds no
varnishing afterward.
These hint* are intended for inartistic
A. FOOTE PHYSICIAN &lt;fc SURGEON work-women, or rather for those who
• Succsaor to Dr. Wickham. Office and have the idea in their brains, but cannot
residence at Dr. Wickham'* late office.
make the hand obey. For an artist the
Promptsttentiou to calls night or day.
field is inexhaustible, and even for those
leas ambitious a background carefull}
R. G W. GOUCHER, Electic Physician and
lurreoa. ia nrenored to answer all call* put in, and then a single figurh or a
hi* service*. Office and lovely engraving from a portfolio, pro­
duces a surprising effect. Those from
—, — —
Office orer the illustrated papers are always avail­
able for such a purpose.
Drug itoro, Vermontville, Mich.
Some English screens are made of
BRADY, Lawyer, Circuit Court photographs on tinted paper.
At a
loner, Real EeUte and Insurance
a recent royal wedding such a screen
was named among the gifts made by one
ty. Office opposite Union House.
of the princesses. They are easily made.
The frame may bo either black or bright
LIEBHAU8ER, Merchant Tailor and deai- red stained wood; stretch over the mus­
_
• er in Ready Made Clothing. Sec lin
methat has been shrunk, or else have the
' before you purchase clothing. Fits guar
frame altogether of wood; cover this
anteed.
with the kind of paper used for the fly­
leaves of books—crimson for one side.
French gray the other, or China blue and
old gold. Slip your photographs from
tbe cards by floating them in water.
iram r. dickinson, manufacturer of
aud dealer In Hard Wood Lumber. BaOd- Then press them between old newspaper
with a warm iron. Arrange your pho­
tographs according to taste. It is best
AMES FLEMING, practical Jeweler and ftohave a large one in the centre, and
W*teh-maker. Ulock*. Waiehea, Silver and Eoup the others kround it You may
Plated Ware, Jewelry and Optical Goods. Rock­
ve fancy piece*, or else heads of cele­
ford Watehea* specialty. Repairing and Engrarbrities, or even likenesses of your friends.
These. photographs be must put on
the screen with starch boiled just as if to
starch clothes. When all are dried, put
on a thin coat of sizing, and afterward
varnish over all. A table screen for a
lamp is similarly mode. Cut out six
pieces of card-board in the shape of a
TACOB 06MUN, Liveryman, bam near Wol- Gothic window. Paste on one side only
•J cott House. First class tnrtioute at reason­ tho tinted paper.
When dry, fasten
able rates. Special rates to commercial men.
Funeral and weding parties furnished with can
riages on short notice.

Uashvilk Jiwctortj.

B

r

W

W
L

D

S

H

J

ood Turning In all it* branch**.

Urons can depend upon
dona right. Two doors

varieua* in one man," said

rative

Late Fashion Notes,
Scotch ginghams come in handsome
■olid colors.
Many new spring basque* are cut
double-breasted.
Very short polonaises, with Louis
Quinz* scarfs in the back, are in high
favor.
Wreaths of white ox-eyed daisies,
combined with crimson hedge roses, and
arranged to lie flat, are worn in the hair
Short velvet skirt*, with bodice and
panniers of some soft self-colored Eng­
lish woolen textile, with pelerine and
deep cuffs of velvet, will be r. fashion­
able spring walking costume.

oolored washing silk, embroidered all
over in tiny silk polka dote, and finished
with a five-inch ruffle of oriental lace,
are novel and dainty.
“Looking-glass” bead* are seen upon
some of Worth’s latest creations, both
infringes and embroideries, especially
on white toilets, lending that touch of
color or contrast rather that purely
white dresses are apt to lack.
Indian, Paisley, and. other handsome
shawls are being made into Portio and
Mother Hubbard cloaks and visiles for
spring wear. They are lined inside with
colored satin or surah silk, and finished
with a bordering , of chenille fringe In
deep oriental colors.
Lovers of soft, pretty lace who cannot
well afford to purchase the real, yet dis­
like the poorer qualities, are delighted
with the beautiful and effective oriental
pattemr which now come in various
widths, and arc generally conceded to be
the daintiest and most attractive of the
imitation laces.
A stylish model for a spring hat, in the
“Queen Mab” shape is made of amber­
colored straw, with cascade* of gold lace
veiling a wreath of mignonettes and che­
nille moss rose buds, of a deep crimson.
Inside, lhe hat is faced with crimson shir­
red satin, with a narrow band at the ex­
treme edge of amber beads.
A favorite French style of trimming a
round skirt is to place three tiny gath­
ered ruffles around the bottom of the
dress; then above them is set a flounce
about half a yard deep. This flounce is
then headed with three more narrow
ruffles matching those around the bottom
of the dress. The edge of the panniers
or tunic, and sometimes the bottom of
the basque is trimmed with little ruffles,
which are cut very small.
Wid* striped satin* in pale colors, al­
ternating with those of gold or silver
moire, are favorite materials for evening
dresses for young ladies. The dresses
thus composed are made without the ad­
mixture of any other fabrio; they have
short skirts, and arc bunched up very
full in the back and over the hip*, a WaU
teau style being aimed at in tne entire
costume, shepherdess boots of tinted kid
being worn with the dress, orasmented
with bow*, and silver and gold clasps
made in theshapeof shepherdess crook*.
One of the characteristic features of
fashion this spring will be the wearing
of large sashes, which in a measure will
take the place of the full dra;&gt;ed laurnura at the back; and another will bo the
adoption of wide collars which will be
worn with deep puffs to match. The
dress bodice will oe slightly open for
dressy occasions when this collar is worn,
or a fichu of mull can be used where the
collar is not becoming, which is to be
draped over the bosom quite in the
Charlotte Corday style. These fichus
kro trimmed round with double ruffles of
lace and arc long enou ~h iu front to reach
■th- be11.
•
Dressmakers have set their face* most
resolutely against Mother Hubbard
cloaks, Camisavel wraps, circulars, uls­
ters, or indeed any long mantle which
entirely envelopes the person. They say,
and very truly, that so long a* the out­
side wrap is costly and elegant, it mat­
ters but little how plain the dress beneath
is made. So in their interest, and possi­
bly at their suggestion, modified Hub­
bards, and visucj are becoming auite
Have six holes punched each side, and general. They are now made semi-long
fasten together with ribbon bows. This so that the dress skirt is well in view.
makes three folds to your screen. The
edges may be finished off with gold
the
paper, or ribbon glued on, if you prefer.
A transparent screen is very orna­
mental where there is an open fire, made
either of plain or ground glass, and one
Corner in Quills.
we have seen had impressions of ferns on
“There has been such a demand for
which seen through the firevaccine virus that some shrewd fellow

attract the attention of a bull-dog, if I
may so express ft."
Well, there's nothing peculiar about
that."
,
“ No; but Just listen.
When he put
on a *louch hat his character changed
entirely.
He became ruffianly and
desperate, and swaggered around like a

Slone iu tbe right Kidney. No tees than seven
physicians went employed at different times,
to whom Mr. Beach paid hutxlreds of dollars
for medical treatment, with only temporary
relief from his agony.
By tbe urgent aolieitationa of his friends he

job. His best friends were afraid of him
and he had only to put his sombretto on
to keep away the most energetic bill­
collector.” '
“ If l wqre like that. I’d have a felt
hat riveted to my be*d, said' the other
man."
“Then, when ho put on a cap with a
vizor, he became simply low. He used
to hang around bar-rooms, although ho
was a strict temperance man, and ho
consorted with car-conductors,
and
statesmen, and that class of people."
“ So long as be did not associate with
poet* it was alj right”
“He never got so low as that
But
you ought to have seen him when he put
a silk hat on. The moment he appeared
on the street with a beaver he used to
look so respectful that people used to
come up to him to accept the Chairman­
ships of mass-meetings, or to serve a* a
Director of charitable associations, and
on one occasion he was actually arrest­
ed on suspicion of being a bank Presi­
dent"
“How is it” inquired the other man,
doubtfully, "that we have neve? heard
of your grandfather?”
“Healed young.
The way it hap­
pened was this: He once went out in a
silk hat, and :s man came along who
mistook him for the receiver of a
savings bank who-had received all that
was left of the unfortunate depositors’
money after the smashup.' This man
struck him on the head and broke down
the hat It then resembled tha dis­
couraged-looking tile alwaysxworn by
inebriates on the stage.
True to his
peculiarity, my grandfather at once be­
came profoundedly intoxicated, although
as I have said he never drank a drop in
his life, and he diedin fifteen minute* of
deterium tremens.”
•• Let us ajourn to the nearest bakery.”
said the other man. " and 1 will purchase
, the establishment for you.”—Punch.

D*y Ezp»M
AtlknlU Kx

RAPID&amp;

GRAND

through the natural channel.
i Mr. Beach concludes a io

pleasure to recommend the ‘Favorite Remedy’
to those who may be Buffering from difficulties
of kidney* sod Bladder, or any disorders from
Impure elate of the blood." Tbe “Favorite
Remedy" sold bv al! dragstst*. Tbe Doctor's
only address Is Handout, New York.
‘

Are Marriage and the Family In Danger I
Certain magazines, croaking preachers,
and foreigners who look at American so­
ciety through telescopes leveled at Utah
and' Chicago, have sounded a cry of
alarm that the marriage institution end
the purity of the family are decaying in
the United States. Their assertions are
founded on the frequency with which
divorces are sought in some places where
the process is made particularly eeer.
Granting that divorces are too freely
given, and that the appetency for di­
vorce indicates that something is wrong
in the morals of the parties, have the
alarmist* ever stopped to inquire what
are the moral characters of tbe parties
aside from the fact of the divorce suit,
or whether their morals would probably
be any better if there were no possibility
of divorce? And have they ever re­
flected upon the preponderating num­
bers of American married people who
never think of applying for divorce, but
are striving with all their might to build
up and maintain a pure and healthful
family life, and would continue to do so
even if it were a* easy to get a divorce
as to buy a pair of boot*? The very
fact* the alarmist* cite show that there is
no relation whatever between facility of
divorce and moral laxity. In Maine,
divorce Is of the easiest—the court grant*
it at it* discretion—yet no man m hi*
senses will say that society in Maine is a
whit less pure than in New York, where
divorce is of the hardest to get. South
Carolina allows no divorces, while North
Carolina has a divorce law that is singu-i
larly lax, yet no difference can be per­
ceived in the morality of the two States.
Boston, where divorces are quite numer­
ous. is quite as moral, to say the least,
as Faria, where no divorce I* allowed.
An increase in the number of divorces
is not observed in the United States only,
but is receiving attention in countries
where laxity can not be predicated of
the law*. It Is the case “enormously,"
according to the confession of the rail
Mall Gazelle, in England. In France,
legal separations have gone up from
one to 570 marriages in 1840-50, to one
in 152 in 1860-70. In Belgium the ratio
of divorce* has risen from one in 676
couple* in 1840, to one in 200 in 1874.—
Popular Science Monthly.

DIVISION.

STATION*.

Middleville.
Vennontril
Charlotte ...
Eaton lUnld,

• STATIONS.
Detroit..

(THE HEALTH BRTNGEH.)

Charlotte....
Vcrmostv.llc,
Nashville,....

PENGELLTS WOMAN’S FRIEND
Grand Rapid*,

Every mother of daughters should
know about it—because it brings
health

TO GIRLS

H. B. LaDYAB.D.

X. &lt;j. rfROWN,

owias to Painful, Scanty, or Profuro Period*

TO YOUNB LADIB
Threatened with any of ths complaint* at. ‘.’•Mi,

IRON

TO OVER-WORKED WOMEN
Sufrring from or Anaientd
Prolap&lt;a» Fieri
or IlnarltuPown, with it* attendant Ulceration

To Women Advanced in Life
Who Buffer from Hot Flashes, either before or

plaint*, usually attributed to other causes, but
really peculiar to tho sex. WILL CEICTAXNLY

BITTERS
'%et^&gt;

&lt; LEtCORKIiaiA HUXNS THE

FINEST
COMPLEXION.-Zoa 1’bora cure* tho former
ian J. restores tho latter.

i
'
•Address

R. PENGELLY, M. D.

etc.

&lt;

I

BROWTCd IRON BITTERS arc
a certain core fbr all disease*
requiring a complete tonic; espe­
cially IndigciiUon, Dyspepsia, Inter­
mittent Fevers, Want of Appetite,

Enriches the blood, strength- .
the muscles, and gives new
life to the nerves. Act* like a

cm

KIDNEY WORT

THE GREAT CURE
RHEUMATISM

removing all dyspeptic symptoms,
such a* touting the food. Belching,
Heat in the Stomach, Heartburn,
etc. The only* Iron Preparation ,•
tiiat will not blacken the teeth or
give Iieadachc. Sold by all Drug­
gists at $1.00 a bottle.

BBOWN CHEMICAL CO.
Baltimore, Md.

THOUSANDS OF CASES

PERFECTLY CURED.
i
I

KIDNEY WORT

BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.

Benson’s
Capcine
-AWARDED-

KIDNEY-WOFT
SPRING

MEDICIME.

ya corm EHIQUtBrEB*, CONBTLFA-

6

Porous
Plaster.
-MEDALS.-

The Be»t Known Remedy for
Backacha or Lame Back.
Rheumatism or Lamo Joints.
WHIT WILL THE WEATHER BE TO-MORROW?

Neuralatla or Kidnoy Diseases.

Pod's SIGI AL SERVICE BAROMETER
Or STORM GLASS md THERMOMETER CaaiHasd,
WILL TELL YOU!

Female Weakness.

Court*. Col-

yj A. BARBER, M. D..
’

HOMOEOPATHIC

Physician and Surgeon.

thin muslin or tarlatan, or, better still,
white crape, stretched on a frame, then “Most of the quills used by physicians
water-color pictures are gummed on it, are Austrian quills. Those raised in this
arranged fantastically or tastefully, aa country are not generally large enough.
you like. Buch a screen was once seen, An ordinary quill will make four
according to tradition, in the stately * points,’ or slips. First the feather end
is cut off; next ths other end, leaving a
author*. The light shining front behind tube of the clear, hard, transparent,
thrown out all the mellow tintool the pic­ horny part of the quill.
This is too
ture very effectively, conveying the im- smooth to retain the virus, so it is

Yesterday forenoon a citizen who was
finned and angry entered a grocery store
on Antoine Street and called out to tho

The ends are then dipped, and the quill
is split into four slip*. They are sold at
$10 per hundred. Single slip* are sold
st twenty-five cento each. A* there have

“How much?"
“Well, it will cost as much as two dol­
lars to get it repaired. You’ll cither pay
it or rn have the dog shot."
“O. rn par dot,” said the grocer, and
be did, but the man was hardly out of

yyOLCOTT HOUSE,
Naahvllle MUoHliraxi.
A. 8. Foote, Proprietor.

J£ *. BVML

BOOT AID SHOE IAIER,

The frame of screens may be varied by
more than one device of handiwork. The
gilt cornices formerly used far windows
can be utilised by being tacked on with
brads to the wooden frame, then burlished up with bronze gold, which cost*

past six weeks than in the proceeding
ten years, the demand for quills ha*
raised the price from $11 to $12.50 per

“Why in blazes do you keep
around here to eat folks up?"
“Didt my dog eat you oop?" w
innoccat query in reply.
“Not quite, but ho tore my coat half
off my back, and you’ve got to pay for

“Dunder und blitzen, but I vhas dor
greatest shackass in America! Why, I
sells dot dog to my fader-in-law more as
six weeks ago!"—Detroit Free Preet.

a brush aooating of boiled linseed-oil;

will vaccinate two
—It is said that two Virginia girls
have been fighting a duel with shotguns.
They must have told on themselves, for

delphia JVcsgs

NO PATENT NO PAt

HURTS

Mrioii

�Moore lying on the floor, with a gtumtiy
■TURDAY

-

- - » MY, 18, 1888.
hand. Mr» Moor* i#

■1CH1UAX 9KWS.
We Michigander* can oil go trout
flaking uow. The Imo of the law expir­
ed aMMinigbU April ao.
A i»n%f Julius Leviaon, 8 yearn of

fcfe was drew bed whilq playing in the
river at Travcrae City.
:
John Pamons, a tanner of Petoskey,
fell dead of heart dlaeam last week,
while doing hia chores.
* *
Au infant child of the captain of the
Sand Beach life saving crew wa« drown­
ed Saturday ufteruoou on lake Huron.
Grand Rapids man named Benjamin
Clark was swindled out of S5G-5 by con­
fidence men in Chicago, a few days

Alex. Dinman, charged with assault
with intent to kill, at Vassar, has been
convicted, aud gets 10 yean impriaoD-

David Maboue, bud his loft band cut
off while managing an edging saw in
Browning's suw mill, three miles east
of .Niles.

lady, TO

A Mormon prophet, Samuel V. War­
ner, wgaqnite an attraction at a Grand
liap^d^ depot one day last week.
He ia a" want frofn the
Western
slope, and., has been passing some
two yean in Michigan lecturing on
Mormonism. Most of his time has been
passed in the northern part ot the State,
laboring hard to convince the people
whenever he got a hearing,' tbat the
Mormon faith was founded on inspira­
tion, and that all who embraced it
was sure of eternal happiness hereafter,
and any quantity of sublime pleasure
while sojourning in this wicked world.
His efforts resulted in one grand suc­
cess at least, in gettug a young, plump
and fair looking bride, to accompany
him to the land of the Saints. They
were married at McBride, Montcalm
county, and passed through the city en
route for Salt Lake City and the prom­
ised land.

OUR WANHIBGTON LETTER.

Mrs. Burna a deaf and dumb woman
of N des, wus killed on tbe 10th, by be­
Washington, I). C., Mat 6,1882.
ing tun over while walking on tbe
Tbe star-route cases came on for tri^l
track betwe^Lcrossings.
.,
before Judge Wylie this afternoon iu
It is expected 'Hmt tbe track layers. the Criminal Court. All tho defend­
outheMackiliac extension of the Graud ants were present except John W. Dor­
Rapids Alodiuna railroad, will reach sey, who did not answer when called.
the Straits about June 20th.
Mr. Bliss said that Dorsey’s counsel,
Mrs Grace Newell, of GrandRapids, Col. Ingcisol, has assurred him that his
died ffcom ex ha&lt;181 ion, at Kalamazoo client would lie preaent when wanted
. on tbe 8th, while being taken td the in­ and bad told him (Bliss) to give him­
sane asylum iu a carriage.
self no uneasiness on the subject. Mr.
Bogus silver dollars are in circula­ ’Bliss charged Col. Ingcraol with per­
tion at East Saginav.'this spring. There petrating a trick, and that gentleman
is also a great deal of money iu circu­ retorted with the offensive phrase,
lation there that is not bogus“You arf a liar.”
Judge Wylie repWilliam Crandell of East Saginaw, riid an cd both gentleman, and said
brakeman uu the Flint A Pcre Mar­ that if counsel made stipulations out­
quette railroad, had one of hi«_feet side of court they rested in their per­
crusbetl by the curs at Monroe on the sonal honor, and tbe coart could not
8th.
enforce them. Mr. Merrick called tho
■ A farm band of Amos Sago, of-Can­ court’s attention to the fact that Col.
non Township, Kent Co., named John Ingersoll had made substantially the
Ferry, was kicked by a horse Sunday same pledge with regard to Dorsey in
last, and died of his injury the next open court.
The coarse conduct of
day.
,
some of the counsel for the defense in
It is asserted that W. A. Blake, of the star-route cases is tending strongly
Galesburg, has a young lamb which bos to turn public sentiment against the
no wool od bis body, but is dressed in indicted persons. It is n matter of
loug coarse hair spotted with red and surprise that Judge Wylie haa permit­
white.
ted such a display of ruffianism, and if
Solomou Good II, bf Chesaning, Sur­ ho bad sent Mr. Ingersoll to jail to-day
veyor of Saginaw county, died on the for calling one of the opposing counsel
night of the 3rd of wounds, caused by a liar, he would have done what any
being thrown frofa a wagon by a run- Judge with a proper idea ot his own
a way team.
a
dignity and tbe respect- duo the tribu­
’ Eli Wooden, a hermit living in Cam­ nal over which ho was prosidieg ought
den Township, Hillsdale county, was to have done. The culpable leniency
found, dead iu a shanty on a neighbor’s of Judge Wylie towards Mr Ingersoll
kfarm, on the 7th. Too much morphine was made the more marked from the
was the cause.
fact that only an hour befoie ho had
It is claimed that the lowest rate of sent a poor ignorant man to jail for ten
sickness, inaiiy penal dr reformatory in­ days simply for clapping his hands in
stitution iothe United States, is that the court room.
of lhe Michigan State house of correc­
This has been comparatively a quiet
tion aud reformatory.
week in society and yet some notable
Kalkaska is now looking forward to dinners and evening parties hove been
the double prospect of another railroad given.
Victor Arthur Wellington
from the South,-and of being made a Drummond, Esq., who for four yAnt
’‘division" town on the Grand .Rapids has been First Secretary of tbe British
AI ml inn a railroad.
Legation here, and several times has
The bride at a Bay City wedding acted in the altsence of the Minister as
would submit to kisses only on condi- Charge d’AfFaires, 1ms brought his
tion'that they were paid for at $1 each. bride (recently Mias Lamson, of Now
They sold readily nt that price, and York,) here and many entertainments
$183 was realized for a charity.
have been given in their honor. Tho
Un the morning of the Oth, Henry handsomest of these occurred at tho
Whitford of Niles, was knocked from British Legation on Wednesday even­
a bridge by a steam derrick and fell in­ ing when tho Minister and .Miss West
to the river, and was drowned. He gave a dancing party to which guests
leaves a large family in a destitute were asked to-meet Mr. and Mrs.
condition.
Drummond. Quite a notable company
The Michigan Central railroad com­ wore assembled aud tho dressing was
pany has recently sold for old paper, very beautiful. Of course, the Diplo­
the old freight receipts, papers, etc., matic Corps was largely represented
collected from their stations along tbe and many of our officials and their fam­
road, where they had accumuated, and ilies attended.
realized &gt;10,000.
Since the advent of S. P. Rounds in
The reaideuce of Father Buyse, at tbe Government Printing Office that
Jackson, was invaded by two masked institution has undergone a partial
buaglars, who struck him on the head overhauling and is to undergo a good
with a revolver for refusing to open deal more. Mr. Rounds tells mo there
hissafe. Two prists who ware iris guests arenowatwork there about twentywere robbed of their watches and mon- two hundred persons, male and female.
Nearly every one of these expects to
A yonng woman by the name of Mate hold his or her place, and there are ap­
Wood, attempted to commit suicide at parently twenty for each place on the
Ann Arbor, on Wednesday night, by outside clamoring to come in. In oth­
taking laudanum. By the prompt sum­ er words, there are about 10,000 prinmoning of the physician, her life was era applying for 1,000 “sits,” And twice
saved. About a week ago she made an tbat and three times the proportion
attempt on her life by frying to hang asking for the removal of those who
herself.
are in and appointments for them­
Samuel Shattuck, an old pioneer of selves. Mr. Rounds, after having been
Saginaw township, came to his death bedeviled on all sides for places, has
in a mysterious manner on the 6th. The concluded that the civil service reform,
day of his death he was in his usual good suggested by Pension Commissioner
health, visited Saginaw City, returned Dudley, is the best for his office.
He
home and laid down when be was sud­ will gradually work off his surplus help
denly taken with convulsions and soon from coutigious states and reduce his
After was dead.
\
force to a quota among tbe States,giv­
Oscar Olson, a break tn an on the De­ ing each State its fair share.
troit, Lansing &amp; Northern railroad,
President Arthur’s first general card
was killed at Fowlerville, Saturday if- reception occurred on Tuesday night at
ternoon. As be vrns attempting to set the executive Mansion. More than 800
the break on an empty coal car, the cards of invitation wero sent out to
break wheel was wrenched off, causing members of the Diplomatic Corps, Sen­
him to fall bead downward between ator* and Representatives, Judges of

vy and array, and to a few personal
The aggregate low to the city of friends of the prarident. The crowd at
Moahegon up to this date, in conse- tbe Manaion waa ao great that at 10 p.
foeuee of the strike, is upwards of m. many preaent had not had an op­
portunity to reach the President, who
» shingle null i-uoning on tbe redved hie, guests in the blue room,
day; tbe other 83 mills, with the All the reyn-sentatives of the army and
navy were in full drew uniform, and a
majority of the membera of the Diplo­
matic Corps appeared in the court
dress &lt;rf their tespeetive countries.
. --os&gt; milted suicide on the There was the usual beautiful display
fiotal decora!ions in the lower rooms

better man a more ardent patriot, or
mtaiooer of Internal Revenue he ■ has
been diligent, indefatigable, able, and
upright, and I would be pleased to see
him in Judge Davis’ shoes though, big
as they be.

SECOND TO NONE IN DARBY COUNTY.

Recure rooms in advance.

Notions, Domestics,
Clothing for men and boys,
Dress Goods,
;
• Hats and Caps,
Trunks and Sachels,
Carpet and. Oil Cloth,
Boots and. Shoes,
Grroceries E^tc. Etc.

Nashville is being newspapered to
death. Three there now and a few back
towns to hear from. When the new
candidates bent Orno Strong’s "News,”
let us know.—Loicell Journal.

UR SALES THE PAST YEAR HAVE BEEN FULL 30 PER CENT IN EXCESS OF
every previous season and we tender our hearty thanks for there liberal support in our
efforts to bring the prices of all linqp of goods down to reasonable profits. This year we wish
to increase our sales 50 per cent and have placed on our counters one of

Tbe Vermontville Hawk has a new
head, and it .is daily expected that
Strosg, of the Nashville News, will
put a head on theeditor thereof.—Grand
Ledge Independent.

The Most Attractive Stock Ever Opened In Nashville

August.

-

From Good Health, published at Bat­
tle Creek, we get the following infor­
mation in regard to the prosperous con­
dition of tbat creditable institution—
tbe Battle Creek Sanitarium;
Tbe managtra of tbe Sanitarium axe put to
tlicir wiu end alr'ost even- day to determine
bow to dlapose of the patients who are constant
arriving. Fourteen additions have been made
to the already great family of paUenta within
the last twenty-four boura. Notwithstanding
tbe seeming impossibility of accomodating
many more, the housekeeper, by numerous in­
genious de vices, manages to And room for still
more, ao that as yet doom is crowded; but we
fear that before the busiest season ia fairly here
wc shall have reached the full limit of our am-

Orno.of the Nashville News, was rid­
ing a high horse last week, and we
tremble for the Potter(y) under his feet.
Bellevue Gazette.
They tell of a man out west who
was putting a blast in a well, and it
went off prematurely and blew him
out into an apple tree about fifty feet
away.
In a moment he recovered
himself, and, remarking, "The Lord
knows letter that I do after all;
I
guess it is almost time to go pruning,”
took a large pruning knife from his
pocket and set to work.

Tbe Newark (N. J.) Sunday Call uys: One
of our Cincinnati exchanges cities tbe cases of
Mr. Haldemen of tbe Louisville Courier-Journal
who was cured of rheumatism by St. Jacobs
Oil. HU wife was cured of neuralgia by the
same article, and every member of hts family
of some pain or ake by the Great German
Remedy.
___
______

O

As we have in the past so we shall try and tnivke it in the future.
all high prices.

We shall put the knife tO

i-AJX Ac SON

The First to the Front!
T AM NOW RECEIVING A FULL STOCK OF GOODS SUITABLE FOR THE SPRING TRADE. INCLUDING
JL the Largest and Best Stock of

Ready Made Clothing, for Men, Boys, and Youths,
Ever brought to Nashville, and ranging in price from three to thirty dollars per suit.

Ladies, Misees, Gents &amp; Children’s Fine Shoes
I keep tbe celebrated Rochester make, Stylish, Durable anc Cheap.

SkFnNRMEN.
Wells’ Health Rcncwer. Absolute cure for
nervous debility and weakness of the genera­
tive functions, fl. at druggists. •Mich. Depot
JAMES E. DAVIS A CO., Detroit, Mich.
JOHN BRAUN, Shoemaker. Special atlcnV tlon given to fine and sewed boot*, also
repairing. All manufactured work made from
.best rtf stock and warranted. First door.soutb
Boise's hard v ire.

In

I have the latest styles and can tit all parties.

At prices that defy comiwtinn.

In

I always keep a toll stock of

Cash paid for Butter and Eggs.

Eiperienced, Reliable, aid Responsible.
Tht American PopnluTicttary. $1.00

A. H. WINN, Dentist.
BEST SET GUM TEETH $10.00
T^eth Extracted Wifhont Pain.

Office.Open Day &amp; Evening.

McCormick Twine-Binderl

— THAT------

NOT ONE

SSI»

Our readers Will find this
wonderful book tho cheap­
est IHcthmarv published. The
information it contains is worth
many times the amount asked
for It, and it should be in the
possession of everybody. JFith
this book in the library for refer­
ence, many other much more ex­
pensive works can be dispensed
with, and ignorance of his
country, history, business, laws,
etc., is inexcusable in any man.
Jiote the price, yi, post-paid.

Of mv Customers Complain

HAS VALUABLE IMPROVEMENTS 0 V ERL. J) IM TORS

-PROM

A SPRING DEFENCE!
How to Br*el lb*.

The Nashville Mill,
-

but-

BE NOT DECEIVED
By statements made by agents repn-vn tin other machines
having a resemblance to the MoCOKMICK, claiming their
Binders are tbe same, for such claim' • f.i ae, and uits for
infringementshave been brought ag tin-1 nitatinns
CALE

of III Hralth-Dr.

KraM0*B FATOBITK KU EDI Smm

M**&lt;&gt;n for taralida, sad particularly
either auffter, or liable to auger, from

ON

UNIVERSALLY SATISFIED.

ROE

6

Prob.tr Order.

NORTH MAIN ST., NASHVILLE, M„
And examine it carefully before making your choice for the
coming harvest.

'.BIT. Bl

Saia.JwUvsCProtete.
the eeuie of COBWIN T. *

Independent I? eapers.
—;—-also—

iGERT8^^.%!^FB4HK i

Platform, Side-Spring and Side-Bar Carriages,
and Wagons
Rock Bottom
In'u^KaSrH.e.iflt

Yours Benpectfiill*.

! *1-100

JESSE JAMES.
“ ..Ml b. m.H forty rmrta. 1

cry'l.'.b-

AWAY

■. &gt; ‘/ratai» Fruit Dryer

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                  <text>Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun.

ORNO STRONG,!
Editor a rd Froth iktob.

&gt;

,

And Her 'Environs.
—Only a littla longrr and every man
can have pet’s io &gt;•» family.
—The *ea’h
oh! man Nice wander
is hourly expected. Old age.
—Dr. Young ia putting a now &lt;9 liorau
power Victor water turbine into his
mill &lt;&gt;n the Sippio.

—The rustic whose , gingerbread ia
imnually stolen by the elephant was nt
the circus at Hastings, last week, and
this time when the appetizing comfort
was suddenly snatched from hia band,
he shook hia fist at the huge thief and
yelled, while die tears coursed down
hia cheeks, “Darn yer, ye double-tail­
ed fool, give dint back hero or I’ll
knock yer two front teeth down yer
oldthroat!”'

—Gardena are living scratched o /er
—A few days since throe childreo,
by tlieninldrioiiB hen wbohaa a yearn­ John McIntyre and Jennie and Lillie
ing for freah meat. .
Shoup, of Maple Grove, were playing
—Whereonr firn engine, when arriv­ in a sand pit,* when the bnnk*raved in
ed, i« to witcyjii! is die alj-nboorbing upon them. Two of the children were

problem &lt;&lt; the'hnnr1_^_xz .
%
‘ _Beelnita ph«*tograph car has been
folded. Kke'an Arab’s tent, and packed
off to do service at Vermontville.
—Stone is being shipped from this
point to Grand Trunk Junction to pave
the new ten acre'stock yards there.

—It is estimated that more building
is living done in the country adjacent
to Nashville, this spring,' than ever
•

—Levingston McKinnia. living two
miles south-eaAL hits commenced the
erection of a large brick-veneered
dwelHug.

—A careful Nkwb render thinks
we nre n little early* in our remarks
np*m Hie mosquito, but reader will
find that thulitdu ‘‘kus’’ will be along
on time.
—The M.C.R.R. pay car passed along
the G. R. line distributing its fnvors
Thursday afternoon. A largo nninlier
of Jarrnrd’s ex-mad train,employees
were paid off at thia station.
— Iola p rinti ng is right lively at The
News office just ti«w. We are proba­
bly liettrr equipped for doing printing
of a general character Hinn any other
printing office in the county. Try us
aud see.
.

buried entirely, but die third kept
her feet and was buried only up to
her arm pits. Her bands being free
she used them with a will nnd purpose,
uncovering the heads of the other two,
ao that these ccaid breath until help
arrived.
—Masons are. busily engaged upon
the foundation walls of Dr. Young’s
new house. We have been shown the
plans of tbe building, and calculate
that, the name when completed will be
as fine and convenient residence as any
in the county. It is to be built of brick,
two stories and an att*c high. Its ex­
treme length is45 feet aud width 32.
Three verandas, two porticos aud
other tasty embellishments will adorn
the edifice.

—4b&lt;d Simonds, a resident of Maple
Grove for thirty years past, departed
this life at the residence of his sou in
Big Rapids, on Wednesday morning
last. The corpse arrived here the same
evening, on the 7:80 train, and was
taken to Maple Grove, where the fun­
eral services were held yesterday.
About six weeks ago Mr. Simonds went
north to visit a son and dau'ghter. He
hud not been sick but a few days be­
fore his death, which is attributed to
heart disease.

—Tntiey St Hatch of Hostings, have
—A Mr. Broad rick, aged
about
leased tlm Rttisu building an I fitted
up Hie same for a confectionery thirty, belonging to the gang sawing
wood
ut
VeruAmtville
depot,
uas
in
store. They will carry a full line of
randies, nuts and fruits and manufact­ this village on Wednesday taking the
2 o'clock express for Vt. Ville. Arriv­
ure c*»rinrls drops, etc.
ing at that depot he kept on the train
—Ou Thnnoloy evening Mrs. G. A.
to ride to the crossing that leads to the
Tr.tinnn gave a select party in honor of
village, and when lie jumped from the
Miss Lon. Truman of Lansing, who
train missud^iis footing and fell upon
has been in th** village visiting f*»r a
aT rail, fraccing a leg and gashing
..week. A nice company attended and
his forehead in a bad manner. He was
a fine^cctnl time is reported.
tukeu to fiis boarding house where he
—A gnng of trypsin with four teams is cow lying quite ill.
and eight •’horses^ spent a couple hours
—Young man, when you see any­
on Main street Moiolay forenoon. They
thing you want, ask for like a man.

Ifyim want to borrow five dolines of a
num, or if you only want to marry his
daughter, don’t slide up to him and
—Onr aportAincn have organized a
hang on to your hut nnd talk politics
texin iiimI rhe heavy cniinoiiiulilig that
ami religion and weather and tell old.
stale jokes, whereof yourali’t remember
day i*wWnate* Hint they are practicing
the point, until you worry the old man
into a nervous irritation.
Go nt him
with n full.hcail (if-steain on aud your
SOvl^jiyl 81*t instaat.
bow ports open, like an iron-clad pull­
—Now is tJie s.*ns&gt;in of the year when ing for ashore battery. Snort and paw
tin* mnn who »ees the sign ’’FrAdi and shake ynrir bead if you feel like it
pnint.” wi’l walk up.t.i th-* door, leave do mutter if ltdoes make him look as­
the in trks nf hisdirty fingers on it, and tonished.
Better astonish him than
g*m«nv muttering to himself, “tlmt’s bore liini. Go into his heart- or his
tui." Thw proves Hint he is just almut pocket-book, or both, it amounts to the
as ••fresh*’ ns the paint is.
rame thing, like n Brindle bull with n
—At lasf the old Union House is tn lie curl in his forehead charging a merino
utilized, Mart Flint, *»f Bittle Creek, dress, eyes on fire, tail up aud the dust
and a former resident of this village, flying, he tuny fetch you.
But never
having pifrchn&lt;ed the same the first of muni; you'll accomplish something,
the week, nnd now has a gang of men and show you ain’t afraid to speak
making n big racket in the interior of what’s on your mind.
And that’s a
the same. The house ia to lie rvplnst- great deal more than you would ac­
ered, rapapered nnd repainted and complish by tbe other method.
You
reaily fur business by die first of June. Deedu’t be cheeky, but you ought to be
—We have received a lengthy enm- straight forward.
witli Al. Vnr.nicker tiu&lt;! shirted on his

nnnieatlnn from aw
which
rannonisesWalt Powers in x&lt;mm1 shape.
The anthor al*o threatens to furnish a
chapter from liip life for publication if
we will paliHsh this, but not wishing to
th-vow any impediment in tbe path of
this truly cmMHuus young man, we
respect fully consign the communica­
tion to the waste basket.
—D. W. Smith and H. A. Brooks, the
awwunent reviewers, inspected Super-

d ir. They mode a few changes jp it
and thru prom hi need it 0. K. Any tax­
payer differing in opinion with the snpervianr nr reviewers in regard to what
hols worth, ran have the privilege of
swearing npon the matter at the clerk’s
office next Monday ami Tuesday.
Tbe question la, tan two extra papers In
Nadi vibe iesKMi tbe market rulnc of tbe News!
—VrnxwntvJne Hawk.

We haven't mirieed any falling off,
am! we atill take snrar in our coffee,
but we had it thrnwed up io us on
Wednenday. that this week's (Hio brat
our lime week’s News, and greaier
-----------------------------------

Year
Credit ScsacRirnoxs tl.75.

NUMBER 35.

■"

LIFE IN NASHVILLE

before.

1

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, MAY 20, 1882.

VOLUME IX.
2=2""

| TERMS: $1.50 per

—The Reunion of the Army of the
Potomac at Detroit, July 14tl&gt; and 15th,
promisee to l»e one of the grandest af­
fairs ever held rn Michigan. The great
Prise Drill and Sham Battle will take
place at the fair grounds on the Iflth.
The following companies will compete
for the$1,500 in cash prizes: Detriot
Light Guards, Detroit City Grays,
Flint Union Blues, Adrian Light
Guards, Ypsilanti Guards, Port Huron
Guards, Toledo Cadets, Cleveland
Grays, Jackson Guards, Ana Arbor
Guards, Coldwater Guards, Buffalo
City Guards, Cleveland Light Guards,
Chicago Board of Trade
Guards.
Twenty military compauiea and two
Ixitteries of artillery will participate in
the great Sham Battle, and will be witnraeed by the foliqwing eminent men :
Gen. Grant, Gen. Sherman, Gen. Sher­
idan, Gm.
Hancock, ex-President
Hayes, Gov. Jerome and staff and prol&gt;ably President Arthur. The prize drill
..and sliam battle.ia under Hie manage­
:
ment
of C. J. Wbitnny nu t J. K. Tilloti • of Detroit 0. R. Fleming, Mr.
•n
Whit wys representative, baa billed our
town ami informs ua that only half
r*re
will
Ch»r«d on »ll rail-

OUTRAGEOUS PR0CEEMB08.
Wret Sunfield is in a state of intense
excitement, caused by the burning of
Albert E. Wellman’s house on Monday
evening. About noon'of the day men­
tioned, one Sidney Brown and the
Sheriff of Eaton County, armed wiIh
a writ of ejectment appeared upon the
premises and proceeded to eject Well­
man by moving his wife and household
goods to the highway, sixty rods dis­
tant While moving the stove it fell
and was niashedinto flinders. Having
performed his duty the sheriff and Ids
ansistants departed, nnd Mr. Wellman's
wife not being well, bo took a bed and
returned to the house,' also a skillett to
fry some meat and potatoes for their
supper. This coming to the .ears of
Brown and the Sheriff they returned tu
the acene of action, and the wife was
again turned out into tbe highway,
just ns night was coming on.
Well­
man refused to go. but with the sheriff,
jointly, held possession of the place un­
til uinc o’clock, when thti Sheriff de.parted and Wellman Aecreted himself a
short distance from tlnshonse to watch
proceedings.
About this time fire
young men joined Brown nndliis two
sons, who still “held the fort,” and a
mob that would do justice to Missouri,
was organized. They tore up the floor
carrying it to the wood pile where it
was burned, then a portion of the roof
was torn off and the house otherwise
mutilated. Not being contented with
those depredations the matirauders set
lire to the building and burned it to
the ground. A Dice lot of fruit' trees
near the house were scorched to death
and an early garden pulled up and
tramped as though a parcel of bogs had
been let loose upon it.
Tbe above are the particulars of this
disgraceful proceeding as we received
them from Mr. Wellman Thursday
morning. They were narrated to us
with a good deal of feeling and we
have no doubt but what they are cor­
rect in every particular.
Mr. Wellman is an old man, sixtynine years old, and his wife issixty-one
He came to Michigan in 1835 and voted :
at the election that brought Michigan
into the gallaxy of states.
Hu moved
to Woodland upon the place now oq^ied by Isaac Smith, in ’42, cutting his
own road from Vt. Ville.
Being something of a hunter and
fisherman, aud of a retiring disposition
of mind, years ago he discovered a spot
in West Sunfield that he thought would
make hitn’a good home.
P, was sort
of an island, being founded on the east
by Tamarack lake, west by Hobby lake
nnd north and south by marshes.
To be exact the piece lays upon the
soutli-eust fract ional quarter of sec. 18,
and the south west fractional quarter
of Sec. 17.
,
In 18G0 Mr. Wellman went .i Ionia to
set* the*laud agent about purchasing

this piece of land. TLc agent inform­
ed him that there was no land there
but ■what was covered with water.
Further investigations showed that
there was a piece that the government
surveyors couldn’t reach on account of
a "slough.” Then the agenC advised
Mr. W. to go on and occupy if thjie
was no qpe on the land, aud his title
would be as good as though it came
from the government direct. He did so
the aame year and has resided there
Hincu,clearednp and improved die land,
built bridges made ditches, etc., and
has now a fine meadow where once
was four feet of water, and a pretty
good farm of about sixty acres.
Sidney Brown, thirteen years ago,
bought 108 acres on the south west
fractional quarter of sec. 17. according
to tbe government survey, and latter
cAme into possession of about four acres
on die south-east corner of the south­
east fractional quarter of section 18.
Thia last piece lay between Wellman
and the highway, but Tamarack lake
lay between the balk of Wellman’s and
Brown’s property.
In 1880 Brown commenced suit to gain
possession of Wellman’s land and suc­
ceeded during the past winter in get­
ting a favorable declson,-which led to
tbe issuing of the ejectment papers.
The people of West Sunfield are very
indignant at the course taken by Brown
and offer to aid Wellman with their
means and sympathies to prosecute
him ro the fullest extent of the law.
Wellman remained undisturbed upon
the premises until Thursday morning
and stopped at this village while on Ins
way to Hastings to seek counsel and
advice in d;e matter.
G. A. Truman &amp; Son’s new advt in
this fame will attract your attention,
but it does notlwgioto loom up with
that new and eudksa variety of new
goods that can be seen at the long
brick.

HASTINGS.

LOCAL GIBBLE-0 ABBI.E
Bright, ahiney wcrather.
Now vegetHtkiu boometh.
B. H. Hoag has painted his hnnae.
Yea, gentle spi lnghna come at la*t.
Mrs. H. R. nickinwn is in poor health
A. R. Wolcott has re-sl)inglrd bis
residence.
Mart Stevens is building a cellar un­
der Ida cooper shop.
A new up-right piano gracoa the
home of Dr. Barlwr.
Inside blinds and divers repaint are
being put on the Wolcott Homw.
Barefooted boys have IdoaAumud out,
to l&gt;eat all, during the past wtsek.
Mrs. Dr. Barber visited friends at
Lauaingthe fore part of the week.
Editor Powers’ cow trauHgrvKM d tjie
law and .got into the pound on Wed­
nesday.
Lncey is to be taken in the NnahvilleAssyria mail route for the firs; time
to-day.
Mrs. J. Cook presented Jimmie with
an eight aud a hulf pound son, Sunday
looming.
Mn*. Win. Cunningham ot Lansing,
in in the village visiti-g her brother.
Emory Parody.
The genial face of Geo. R. Fleming,
beamed upon Nashville, quite n ninety
Qtisly this week.
A telegram announcing the death of
his mother, called Horace Lirkins to
Cedar Falls, Ohio, on Sat unlay.
Rev. BirMM-ll preached a apicy sermon
on amusements Inst Sunday morning.
Upon the question the elder is illiberal.
Thu Christian social at J. Fleming"
was a pleasant affnirand well attended.
Something over three dollars was re­
alized.
Rev. Henry Hewes of Nasliville, will
preach at the Norton school house in
Maule Grove! at half p.ist two, ou next
Sunday.
J. M. Merrill of Grand Rirpi Is, is
about to open a grocery in. the bnihling formerly occupied by A. D. Van-

Nucker.
Mrs. John Jewett of Gram! Rapids,
visited her sistffR Mrs. Emma Austin,
and Nashville friends, the fore part of
the Week.
F. Applemnn’s family m«»v«*«| •&lt;» Bat­
tle Cr&lt; ek, this week, to ioin Fred- who
has been there working at his trade
fur some time.
Miss Maggie Jeffrey has decided to
sell her stock of millinery and fancy
goods at cost. The women folksshoultl
make n note of this.
Myron Gregorv, an employee &lt;&gt;f The
News for the past six week*, is a’
Homer, making his grand-parents u
protract***! visit.
Mr. Frank Miller visile*! relatives
and fjmdivillo over Souiluy. .Mi^. C.
L. Glasgow, a sister, retnrnud with

.Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Parrish rejnicw in
the advent nt their abode of their tinu
born. It occurredon-Smnlay. It is a
a daughter and weigh.-* tun puiuidx.
Thu fire company are to give a d.inc«
at the opera house, on Friday evening.
May 36th. They have engaged Humph­
rey &amp; Evans’ full orchestra Of Battle
Creek.
Miss Eva Hawthorn of Wheeler, Indarrived Tuesday evening ami will make
her hnme with her brother, the M. C.
R. R. agent, in thia village; during the
summer.
Rev. J. F. Ot wick of Woodland, will
fill the Methodist pulpit at t.slf pasi
ten, Sunday uexLand will also delivei
a temperance lecture in the evening ai
the same place.
The Christian church society will
give an msthetio social and concert nt
the opera house on Thursday evening,
May 25th. Ice cream, cake and lots of
fun can be expectedUncle Dave Smith presented Us with
a branch of a cactus, on Tuesday, that
contained three full blown handsome
flowers, and informs us that the plant,
itself, contains 150 blossoms.
Dre. Barber and Griswold attended
the meeting of Homeopathic Stme
Medical association—of which they are
memliers,—held at Grand Rapid* on
Tuesday. They report a big attend*
once twd a good time.

gwxlchances may be found, at present, amw*
“Pinkeye" Is after our horse flesh.
Miss May Roberta has returned from Indiana.
Horace Bishop’s baby aged one year, died on
Died: On Sunday May 2nd, 1883, after a
Bunday.
painful illness, Infanlson of Mr. and ‘ Mrs. 0.
The now depot is conspicuously scarce. Will
a. Child*, aged three weeks and two days. Con­
tbe M. &lt;!. R. R. please explalnl
gestion of tbe lungs was the difficulty.
Geo. Davis has purchased the interest of his
partner In the grocery business.
There arc certain bridges in BunfieM whieb it is
The High school literary society will soon
Actually dangcrouR U&gt; cross and abould any­
suspend their meetings until fall.
body happen I to get Injured, the question is:
Gea M. Deweyand family are moving to
who* wouki be respoasiblet
Owosso, where G M. has a newspaper.
Oro. K B 'wers goe* to Dakota to become a
boruy-haoded tiller of the soil there.
we should My, but then I: G might as well lead
John Ku u bas again donned the apron and
gone iulo tbe meat market business, haring
see is a eblp hat and linen suit behind said
purchased a half interest of Mr. Newton. .
borw.
,
N. T. Parker’s son Freddie, was kicked by a
horse, Sunday, causing* painful but not aerWesley Fay's last Thursday with a good at­
Ijus wound in the little fellow's cheek.
tendance, and all seemed to eojoy themselves
Grace Black has a,couplc ot badly scratched
finely. The next regular meeting wUl be held
hands, caused by a pair of gloves she had clean­
the first Thursday in June, at Mrs. Hannah
ed with benzine and tru drying by the fire,
Boyles’.
igniting.
Owing to clrcnmstanqe* wich calls us out of
If tbe boys keep on there will certainly be a
the state we are obliged to never our connection
rise in glaMware, but it is all right if they only
with TUB News as local corrrespondent thereof
succeed in breaking enough glass to hold that “afact which we deeply regret, as ft has been
quite a pleasure to us each week, for the past
Tbc reviewing board have been looking over’
iWw moot its, to chronicle the events of our
the aam-junent roll this week. They found one
neighborhood, n'g as coninh-n gowlp, but as
young man burdened with a 81.000 poll lax facts of sufficient news and importance to be of
He think* there is a monopoly at work some­
interest to the many readers of The News, and
where and favors a reduction.
especially so to thrxM- of this section. We have
A farmer living west of tae city, named Por- after a considerable hesitancy, finally conclud­
ed to take the advice of the la nested Horace
drunk, backed his team into the millinery es­ Greeley, and ere this reaches the eyes of Tua
tablishment of Brown A Beadle, and landed in News patrons our feet will tread the fertile
the lock-up, where be slept off Ills drunk.
prairies of Iowa. To our friends who have so
The wife of Hou. B. C. Priodie died at Grand kindly given u* Items from time to time, we
Rapids, where she was vial Ung on Saturday. extend our thanks, as also to the Editor, whose
She was one of the oldest residents of the bdslncM relation with, us baa been of the
country. Her remains were brought to this
pleasantest character.
city on Monday, and were deposited In the
Rutland cemetery.
A singularly interesting case was lately re­
Elaborate arrangements are being* made for
the glass ball shooting loumrmeut to be held ferred to by the Brooklyn Eagle. It was told by
in thia city on the 30tb and'3lst Inst. The Mr. W. A. Davenport, connected with tbchouse
prUM offered aggregate |3X). Four shoots of Messrs. Butler, Pilken A Co., 476 Broadway,
will be given the first day aud five the second. New York, and concerned the marvelous cure

A special prize* of a silver cap dortbcbettgen­
eral average, 8J for the second best, and (3 for
the poorest average will also be awarded.
Sunday afternoon one borae in Al. Keiths

er pevuhur manner. The muscules would puff
up on the shoulders aod hips and become so
liard that it
almost impossible to deut them
with LUu lingers. The animals suffered great
pain at nitcrvals but finally all recovered-Bome
think It la pluk eye left as a souvenir by the last
Great Mastodunic Zoological flxxle, that visited

MONEY TO LOAN,
She wua Inisnccpuxl st Jackson, a couple of
law suit* wc.c Uireatcoed. but the matter has On Real Estate at low rate of interest of
Lee A Dvbub
been Mlisfactorilly adjusted bj the mother of
tiiec.iildgiv.iig a non J tint it. shall Im given
[ST Full line of Wall Paper at
F. T. BOISE'S.
iulo the charge of Ila fati.er June find.
Hans.
WHAT IS THE UbE •

WEST SUNFIELD.
R&gt;vl&lt; are in ex*c&lt;iC3t coa iition.
Sickncut is *.»mewhat on the decline.
Mr. Va.-iBuren lost a horse lost week.
James Subtly lust a child last week by spinal
James Backet of Mason, is here, visiting his
brother, Cha i ll x
.Mr. Teaman is contemplating a new house
the coming summer.
The outlook for heavy crops at all kinds Is
, good at prescu u
Charlie Bdunett is quite sick, so that be is
couflncJ to the house.
James Boyles has erected a windmill lately
over hia 900 foot well.
Harper &amp; Wlthrrel, carpenters, have dissolv­
ed partnership by mutual consent.
Rev. Brideostlne will preach every Sunday s'
the Kilpatrick church until fu. ther notice.
Mr. Trosty has been improving his place by
erecting a couple of neyr buildings thereon.
At this writing nearly all of the schools of
Sunfield have began for the spring or summer
terma
Mrs. 8. Green returned from Kalamo last
Saturday, where she has been visiting relatives

Isaac Griswold baa sold hl* 60-acre farm ju

of buying a new Mower or Reaper when you™
get your uld one made as ga.xl as now at
'
Btevsxs A Cook’s.

1

NEW BRICH STORE.

I am building a new store and reqest al'
parties having accounts with me tn call at ono
and settle cither by uoteor cash, a* I will nee*,
all that Is due me.
Geo. w. FmaXCUS.
I ■ WHIT AST TO TJU V ELEKH,
Special Inducement* arc offers*! you by th*
Burlington Route, It will pay you to nUdtber
Advertlbenicnts to be found elsewhere In thb
issue..
®TC. W. U ka nose keeps a full line of Poun..
Calico, also die best line at 5ct Prints in town

WANTED!
asswood bolts,

for RxeeWor.

ib*

18 Inches, or X inches in Jen
Bgth.sameWilllobe
pay tor 18 tach wood, with b*rk taken

off, 81.25 per cord: tor 36 inch 82.25 pcrcord:
to be free frotn (.hake* Mid knots. For partic­
ular* inquire of
Gj*o. W. Fkajwmb,
•
Nsrtvtne BxreWor Works.

A FEW THOUSAND DOLLARS

BRACE UP.

NEW GOODo!
\
NEW GOODS!
NEW GOODS”

nual rounds.

Tue large*: and most cosnpteto.start «w&gt;
laid down Ln Nashville. AU new axd eak»ot&gt;
able. Ikwi’t take our word, bnt come and Mt
LUMBER! LUMBER!

ly cultivated this season.
Warren Barry, who is attending tbs Agrfcui-

pie Gtots.

™

JsmI

MONEY TO LOAN.

parents in this vicinity.

Partiaa haring aiHadmd ropy*-]
tbe*e parts, as James Hunter recently tavwCed

ell’s residence.
Mrs. Lorina Smith departed this life on Moc-

LOCAL MATTERS.
NEW CARPET ROOM.
We bare opened a Carpet Room over our
store, where custonaire can find at nil tlmo
new and late style* of Bruswll*. Ingrains aou
Hemp CarpetA, Matts, etc., also Trunks.
Kocmeb Bkos.

Frank Beamer of the Beamer grocery firm,
' GIRLS CATCH ON.
parted from tua wife s year ago, and a few days
To those 25cent white Kid Glove*at.
since went over Us-MuldleviUe to gain posses­
C. W. Granobil
sion of a little eon, which was liv.ng al bis ex­
THE NEW VICTOR SEWING
wife’s mother’s. A squabble ensued but
MACHINE.
Frank held poa*es»ion of the child, leaving It in
Intending to go out of the trade of the same.
charge of hi* faUter In Irving. H.s inotherMnl.iw went to Irving and again secured posses- ■1 will give the purchaser the benefit of the
profits. Only a few left. Call soon.
8 0 10. lb • Cli.ld an.I started with it for Detroit,

VERMONTVILLE.
Art Smith is seriously ill.

of a terrible case of rheumatism, which other
remedies bad failed even to alleviate. He was
on his way to a hospital when Mr. Davenport
meet him and Induced alm to try BL J scobs
OU, with the result named.—Cleveland (O.)
Pratica) Fanner.

John Week’s, formerly of thia place bat now

Charlotte.

urul then skip the country.

To those who ara

�BHB

NOW

GOODS FOB THE SPRING TRADE
AND ARE SELLING THEM—-----'1

up«y-

ryDE­

...

tu 'U r "‘51 hi mi*
bound to follow—

'■ daughterr
NEW YORK OPIUM DESS.

I wa* ont to see some of the American
opium smokers, of whom Dr. Kane, in
hw recent i»ook. says there are at least
three hundred in the city. One of them
had made an ap|x&gt;intment to take me
about As wc stood for a moment in the
■belter of th? doorway of a public house
two women passed' us. They had just
turned out of Chatham Square. They

■ad fashionably made. Their shoulders
were protected’by deep fur cajies. Their
head* and faces were pfotty effectively
wrapjwd up, and a tilted silk umbrella
eonoealed them stHl further. They passed
a few yards beyond », and than turned
Mad disappeared down a cellar-way.
••We shall see them again later on,” my
companion said, and ne led the way • to
the tirat place of our investigation, which
just below Mott Street in Chatham
Square. It looked like a deserted barneks. The moist fog from outside had
invaded it.
Its bunks. Or 'platforms,
built all around the walls, were unoccuA young Chinaman stood -in the
middle of the room, smoking a tobacco
pipe with a long stem andabowl the size
of a child’s thimble.
“Halloo!’’ exclaimed my companion,
•where arc the smokers?’’
“For week, no,” returned the China­
man, smiling gloomily, and shaking his

lead.
“What; no American smokers?”
••For week, no."
, •’Why F Did they steal all your pipes P”
♦•Yah. steal some.”
The fact was. as my companion ex­
plained to me afterward, that American
smokers had cleared out of this place be­
cause it was not kept clean. It* is ttue
that tin* American smokera are occasion­
ally nimble-fingered gentlemen, who are
aol averse to appropriating without pay
a really good pipe when they find it, but
they we neat tn their personal habits and
cannot stand vermin.
Our second visit was to an opium cel­
lar. or “joint,” in Mott Street. It is one
of thc.few which are favored by Ameri­
can smoker.*, and they frequent it for.
the reason that Its tidiness is measurable,
that its pipe* are good, and that the
opium supplied is U ytm. or of the No. 1
grade. The eellarway leading to it is
Mke mwt of the others In Mott Street.
A citizen who did not know what was
on the other side of the door would hesi­
tate about descending into it. It was
about three o’clock in the afternoon
when we went in. As the door closed
behind (H n'l the dismal suggestion of
the !&lt;yg and tbe rain was shutout. I had
a half sense that I had got into some
small heathen temple by mistake. It
was warm aad-dingy, and a peculiar
aromatic - fragrance filled the air. A
Chinaman with round silver spectacles
Ixiirl v glowed in an illuminated cubby
bole, lie was bnsily engaged in the
manipulation of some mystic trinkets.
A husky voic* from somewhere called:
“
*
quarter's worth.”
mbbed out of night,
Through
tminated cubby bole
pile of polished metallic wedges, curi-1
ewiy inscribed, and I was told afterward
that” this was.gambling paraphernalia.
Between the two cubby holes lay a dark
passage, which we passed through! fetch­
ing up against what I stwpect was cither
a shrine or a Chinese toilet table. It
wa* laden whh pots and brushes and
saucers, and lots of other matters wdlh
unknown outlines and inconceivable
Wes. A bunch of punk-colored jons
■ticks on pink standard.-' smouldered
upon it somewhere, and off to one aide,
linking H tike a bastion, towered a gray
■nd massive jar of tea.
a
In a nwm behind all this we came’
■non the smokers. There were eight,
all men. Only one was a Chinaman;
ke was tightly rolled up in a horse blanket
■nd fast aNlecjk Two only wen-smoking

ccwd so admirably in smoking i
pipe. I think it wa* about the
tile effort that I ever made. It seemed
m if I were sucking at all outdoors, and
in a moment the pill took to flaming
arid sputtering in a most alarming way,
and my companion adjured me to ** hold
on.” He proceeded to inform pw that
H was impossible to circumvent an opium
pipe in that infantile manner, and. over­
come with chagrin
my failure, I per­
mitted myself to be betrayed from the
■hrewd standpoint which I had taken,
and promised him that I would positive­
ly “fetch tbe thing at the next trial'.”- I
did succeed with it in three trialfl. I felt
a smooth and oily warmth sliding, as it
seemed to m®. into the ven recesses of
my being, and when the pill had quite
disappvanAl I lay and enjoyed the pride
consequent upon having n^steted (he
technique of a vide that Ts to odd.
We Uy for two hour*. I wndked four
pills, And my companion smoked fifty
cents' worth. I do not know that the
S.ium produced In me any cither effect
an a somewhat surprising bat cer­
tainly- very willing ai'quiescnce in my
surroundings. I felt wolf pleased. Tray
after tray was borne in by Wing, untilnearly everybody was smoking. The
rnnoke Uy- in thick strata. Its odor,
though heavy, was sweet and pleasing.
Under it, as under the moonlight, ob­
jects seemed shorn of their ungainly fea­
tures, and appeared pott and charming..
We went to another branch in Mott
Street. The rain was still falling, and
darkness had set in. .Opium seems al­
ways to be smoked in cellars, and it was
info a cellar that we went. Tbe smoke
was so thick that for several minutes I
could not'see my hands as I held them
at my waist. At length I became aware
of a room about twenty fret square. My
head, as I stood, came- within an inch o'f
tbe ceiling. A platform, raised a foot
and a half from the floor, extended about
three sides of the apartment. lu a 'cor­
ner behind a stove, a pot of tea and a
small counter, lay Poppy, the proprietor.
A dozen of the little peanut oil lamps
glowed round about like fire flies in a
log. The place was packed with smokers,
and they were all Americans. I doubt
h, engaged at any other occupation, so
many could be contained comfortably in
so small an area. They Uy as I have
already described, with their heads
against the walls and supported upon
crickets, and now, moreover, each group
contained a third person, who reposed
transversely with the other two, making
a pillow of one of them. Five women
were among tha smokers. Two of these
were the same as I have mentioned as
passing me in the afternoon. My com­
panion got a place, after a while, at a
tray. I sat on a stool at his feet, and
leaned uj&gt;on him. Everybody was chat­
ting save the Chinese proprietor. Poppy.
He was.busy in supplying opium. Tlie
familiar cry of “ Poppy, gimme a quar­
ter’s worth,” came nt oriel intervals, and
from all aides. He tried behind his coun­
ter and his jars of tea to smoke a pipe
himself, but he had only indifferent suc­
cess. The two young wo^ien who had
passed me in -the afternoon, with the
ulsters and the fur capes, were reposing
close by hte. They iky facing each other,
the -little flame of peanut oil between
them clearly illuminating the faces of
both. They had a companion, a young
man. They talked in a languid fashion
among themselves, and with others in
the rooni.
The women were good
looking, twenty-five vears of age, per­
haps. They had made themselves quite
comfortable.
Their hats :qid wraps
were laid aside.
One of 'them atattended to the “chying” or cooking of
the opium, and the pipe was passed
about ainong thc trio in turn. She was
vexy deft at the work. The slender
iteedle of steel was twirled in her fingers
more rapidly than the eye could follow
it, the while she lazily chatted and smiled.
The young man was a listener. He lay
with his eyes half closed, and smoked a
cigar between hi* pipes of opium. When
fresh opium was called for, as it was repoatedlyv an evenly divided pool was
made up among tbe” three to pay for it.
Vne of the young women had just re­
turned to f fie cltv from a trui through a
country where she could get no opium,
Sht described her yearnings for the drug,
arid her enthusiastic delimit at this first
taste of it after her forced abstinence.
She had escaped great suffering by the
All the smokers were- acquainted and
they atlled one another by their first
names.
Two of the women were
variety actresses, and a third per­
forms in a dime museum the trick
wljereby
the
head
of
a
living
woman is made to seem to exist without
any appendage of trunk. The smokers
chatted about all sorts of thingifk.sna nar­
rated their experieneOT with opium with­
out the slightest restraint Tncre was a
man from Chicago wjio had'been travel­
ing in Pennsylvania, and who carried a

mme clothes *im1 what resemldrd a dia­
mond pin In his scarf. I Isarned that he
was a akiHed }4okpocket and thief.
______ ____________
Shortly
afterward_1__
experinncccl aalight
feeling of naumeau, which increased mo—
-•*’------•* perspiration
. ..
&gt;
mentlv,
until
a cold
broke
out ail over my body, and my hand
trembled so that it wa* difficult to hold
the cigar that I was smoking. My com­
panion advised me to take a cun of tea.
which he said would' sicken ana relieve
lukewarm, and I wonder that it did not
produce the effect promised.
But it
did not, and, my distress continuing, I
made a break for the open air. This al­
most immediately restored me. The rain
was still falling, and the pavements were
shining in the light of tbe gas lamps.
The illuminated windows of Mott Street
were blinking vaguely through the fog.
Chinamen popped out of doorways and
uttered queer little songs, such as bar­
baric cujkdue might emit, in. token that
the gambling games Were opened. Other
Chinamen momently popped in. and the
street, under the darkness and the rain
•nd the fog, wnaalive with a bewildering
heathen life. And then I turned into
Chatham Square, amid the bounding
horse cars and the great square hacks of
Christian civilization.—N. Y. Bun.

The Manufacture of Tiles.
Tiles, beipg a thinner ware than bricks,
have to be made of a purer and stronger
clay. Thor also require more careful
treatment, but the process of manufacture
is not essentially different. There are
many varieties of tiles, but for practical
jMirposes they may be reduced to three,
namely, paving Hies, roofing tiles and
drain tiles. In weathering, tho clav is
spread, in layers of about two inches
thickness during winter, and each layer
is allowed the benefit of at least one
night’s frost before the succeeding layer
is nut upon it.
Sometimes the process is effected by
sunshine. The comminuted clay is next
placed in pits and allowed to mellow or
ripen under water. Then it is passed
through the pug mill, and the tempered
product cut in thin slices with a piece of
wire fixed to two handles, in order to
detect any stones, nnd then passed
through the pug mill agaip. after which
it is generally ready for moulding. To
take the case of pan tiles (hand moulded),
thft moulder turns the tile out of the
flat mould on the washing-off frame, on
the covered surface of which, with very
wet hands, he washes it into a curved
shape. Then he strikes it with a semi-1
cylindrical instrument called the splayer
and conveys it on thii0 to the flat back,
where he ’deposits it, with the convex
side uppermost, and removing tbe splay­
er, leaves the tile to dry. The tile Is
afterwards beaten on the thwacking
frame, to correct any warping that may.
have occurred, and trimmed with the,
thwacking knife. In the kiln, widch is
constructed with arched furnaces at the
base of a conical erection called the dome,
the tiles are closely stacked in upright
position, on a bottom of vitrified .bricks.
The fuel used is coal, and the burning
continues usually about six days. In
making pipe drain tiles, the clay ia first
moulded to a proper length, width and
thickness, then wrapped around a drum,
the edges are closed together, and the
tile Is carefully shaped bv the operator’s
hand, sometimes assisted by a wooden
tool. Tiles as well as bricks can be made
by machinery; with suitable dies almost
any form of tile may l&gt;e thus hid, which
is produmbie by the advance of a given,
section of clay parallel to itself. In other
machines pressure is exerted on the clay
in a mould.—Scientific American;
Morning and Evening Wnter-Drinking.

A certain amount of water is neces­
sary to carry on the functions of the
aoknal economy. During the season of
active perspiration, the quantity is ooasiderable.
When Atal! this water bo taken into
the system? It may be introduced dur­
ing the d«r, when thirst requires; but it
is a capital practice to introduce aquan
tity on first rising in the morning, and
on going to bed at night. Thousands of ;
dyspeptics have derived signal relief by |
drinking-one, two, or three tumblen of.
water on rising in the morning, and on|
going to bed at night. I have sometimes
thought, on heanng the testimony of)
these dyspeptics in regard to the influ­
ence of cold water thus taken into the
stomach, that, perhaps,' of all baths, this
is best
The numlx.T of persons suffering from
heart-burn or water-bra«h is very large.
In a ladies’ seminary I asked how many
suffered more or less with heart-barn,
and more than half the hands went up.
It » a very common affection, and is the
introduction to graver forms of indiges­
tion. It should not l&gt;e treated with cither
indifference or alkalies, but by the observ­
ance of the following suggestions. Avoid
soups; drink nothing at your meals; say
“No, thank you,’’ to the pie and cake,
nnd go without youf* supper.—Dr. Dio
Lcwu, m (Wffl Bttk.

Thi* bow! ot the opium pipe is caller! modatioas in bis wanderings, and as a
■» only by courtesy. U is tbe site and substitute for opium he had taken mor­
which he exhib­
■nariy the shape of a door knob, made phine pills, a handful
—•♦♦*
~
—lit! save for a ited. They constituted a part of bis nec- covered in the office of Kirtland, Humph­
bv a knitting
rey St Co., St. Louis cotton brokers. The
clerks were at once brought under sus­
picion, but before any of them had been
arrested, word came that the son of the
senior partner was eating in a restaurant
with a handsome young woman, and that
the j»air looked as though rrsdy for a
journey. The culprit was caught at tbt
railmaid fdation.
He had stolen the

' Clear Down!

HOW TO SAVE.

iug ibc attack aave much
e aud expenae. Delay
alBueii time* tm.au danger.—Detroit Pre**.
Sec other cuiuotu, '
tbe narawtr with Henry Ward Beecher al hi*
villa upon Ute Huttoon, and tbe remainder with
Julian Hawthorn.

THE CAREFUL MAN IS EVER ON THE ALERT
to take advantage of favorable opportan i ties.

No matter how disguised, that prompt paying customer!
I .must make good to the dealers who sell on credit all loasei
from poor debt*?, long time account*, sickness, failing crops,
loss of property, or dishonesty of other customers.

$200.00 REWARD.
Will be.paid for tbe detection and conviction
of any peraoii telling or dealing in any bogus
counterfeit or ImlUtlou’Hop Bitten*, especially
Bitter* or preparation* with the word Hop dr
Hop* In their name ot connected therewith,
। bat I* Intended To mislead and cheat tbe pub­
lic, or for any pretention put in any form, pre­
tending to be tbe *ame a* Hop Bitter*. The
S^unine have clu»ter of Green Hup* (notice
thl») printed on tbe white label, and are tin
purest and be*t medicine on earth, especially

focKidiwy. Liver and Nentlou* Di*ea*e. So
Deware of all others, and of all pretended for­
mula* or ntcelpl* of Hop Bitter* published In

paper* or for »ale, b j they are fraud* and swin­
dle*. Wboever deals In any but the genuine
will be proeecured. Hop Bitteks Mfu. Co.,
•

Rochester, N. Y.

That.the merchant who sell on credit must take into ac
count all the probabilities above mentioned-when he offers hi
merchandise for .sale. And these losses amount in the aggre­
gate to a fair yearly income—-a loss which he could not long
sustain were there no remedy, bnt there is a remedy and that
remedy is in the PROMPT PAYING CUSTOMERS

NO BETTER INVESTMENT

Can be made, if necessary, than to hire money and pay
foryour merchandise as you purchase it.

------ —---- —WE SELL

Prints for €
&gt; Gringhanh

XI ots.

The Arab* are *o polite that when a thief rob*
a man he not only ajolagizes, but hopes the
victim will find some oue to try bl* hand an.

Turkey Red Table Linen 50 to 55 cts.
'
Table Oil Cloth 28. Floor, best, 42 cts.

THE DISTINGUISHING CHARM, .&gt;»
A deUgbtfal fragrance of freshly flower*
and spice* i* the di*iiugui»hlng charm of Flore*ton Cologne.

Boots and Shoes,
Hats and Caps.
General Clotliing-.

BUI
k ull la having an good a time a* If he
were In the hippy bunting ground*. He board*
ala $5 a day bouse and sella hi* photograph*
LINKED TOGETHER.
Complaint* go in troop*. They arc amoclatcd
&lt;»y natqre. Get oue diteaae and you will have
other*. Dr. David Kuoedy'• “Favorte Remedy"
.trike* at the rout of al! dl*ca*e. You cannot
lake It ami**, no mailer what your particular
trouble may be. For all ailment* of the Kid­
ney*, Liter. Stomach, Bowel*, it I* worth more
than it* wegtat Ingold. A ullver dollar will
buy ft, whether you go to your drug (tore, or
addreoatbe Proprietor, D. K., at Roundoub

A* &gt;iur. c» *:«• u*ing Pari* green very liberal
the hoUMWtie w ant* to see that her new po­
les* re well . n-tred. .

By Universal Accord.
tvr.it‘s Uatiiaiitic Pills are the best
if ull purgatives for family use. They
•re the product of long, laborious, nnd
ucccssftll chemical investigation, aud
heir extensive use. by physicians In
heir practice, and by all civilized un­
ion*. prove s them the best apt! most
fleett::;! |»urnative Pill that medical
icuce ran devise. Being purely veg­
table. uo harm can arise from their
sc. nnd br ing sugar-coated. they are
tn Lake.
In intrinsic value
the powcre no other I’ilLs
mpnrrtl with them: nnd every
!. ..owing their virtues will
hem. when needed.
They
y.sjem- in perfect onicr. and
. &gt;: r.lthy action the whole
of life’. Mikl, bcarchiutr and
thwy are specially adapted
tie of the digestive apparatus.
. - of which they prevent
timely tajeeu.
They are
’. 4 » tft-jrt physic to employ
n r.mi weakened constltu,&lt; .••• ?. tnild but effectual
- required.
by .11 druggists.

Great .

Burlington
iftOUTE-

”

1

PRINCIPAL* LINE
lae SUOKTKST. QUICKEST and

We are thankful for the liberal patronage given us in the
past under the old credit system and solicit its continuance
under the Ready Pay. We know we can he more serviceable
to you in the futuie than we could possibh be in the past.

CJOME AND SEE FOR YOURSELF.
Bring Your Buller!

Bring Y'our Uggs!

HERE WE ARE AftAU!
WITH A FULL STOCK OF---------

Buggies
Wagons.
OUR LINE BUGGIES
-EM BRA CES--------

Dexters,
Pi n e tons.
White Chappel and Coal Boxes, hong with Elliptic Sp .
Two and Three Spring Democrats.
UR WORK IS ALL DONE UPON HONOR. BUGGIES
being made from Second Growth Hickory.
Our Tops are lined with All-Wool Indigo-Djeo 0&lt;&lt;o- end
Warranted not to Fade. W. H. Atkinkon, a paimet wli-se
work has never went back on him, has charge of our paint de­
partment, and can be relied on. BoltK,Daeh Feet, B dy Loops
and Stays are made from Norway Iron and the viitue boggy
ironed in a desirable and superior manner and warr nted.

O

Until you have thoroughly examined mine. Sp'ke mude
-r
i
------- .U a*.—
Bild
SI from Second
Growth
Stock -----and1 *U_
the wagon &gt;a
ia ntarlM
made U,
u
the wear and tare of our roads.

NMtaMUy rvputfld

KANSAS CITY

t3TI HAVE IN STOCK A NUMBER OF-SS

.

I'ui-Ht A Brndley’s

Chilled Plows, Hay Rales and Cnltmors,
Which I will Sell at Coat to Close out.

T. J rOTTKM,
oilk Journal

�MR. JOS

ia &lt;ntM *&gt;

trtraeojx!, by which it is possible to il­
luminate the interior of tbe stomach,
and two the condition of its lining mem­
brane. Lt ia an ingenious, delicate, and
probably very costly instrument, and is
more interesting at showing what can

PRICE: »L®, IT PAID LN ADVANCE.

To

Advertisers:

cfrvalaUnx tbcre
world-wide adoption are the cotton gin,
tbe planting machine, the telegraph, the
AU ««. ID l UB
K-vw
—------ , I
of leoo lumaflde Mihacr.ben, Pte, for the ssk- mower and reaper, the rotary pnnting---------------.
.
.
. press, steam navigation, the hot air en-

rausx TOTXUBmALAD RifteT I
xcjwb*

-------- — rubber industry, the machine manufacm=nre=rr.-^! u-™
--------- r
th. amd

wmi

ior

I 3.251 » a.oo |t a.00
2.30 __ _______________ 14-()0
7 «&gt;l 19.001 90.00

carving, the gauge lathe, the grain elev...
*tor,
ice making
on a
a large
largo
—artificial
--------------------------------g on
scale,
“‘
‘P“ ­
scale, the
the electric
electric magnet,
magnet, r~
aud’ 4V
the
tele
«JI»cbce._.
phone.
—Another car-brake has been invent­
90.00
ed, designed for braking all the cars of
a train at the same time by a single op­
eration, this object being accomplished
by the application of the device to a
common form of brake at present is use,
OBNO 8TBONG,
which brakes cars independently of the
Edl lor and Proprietor.
other.
Tho mechanisms consists in a
number of extensible connecting rods
attached to each car, which themselves
uotuatc pulleys upon each car and winddp chains which govern the brakes. By
'ILLAGEUFFICERS.
this form - of construction, the ordinary
form of brake attachment is not inter­
fered with, so that cither can be applied
Recorder—Frank
at will.
The arrangement is such that
it can be operated by the engineer or a
Trustees—H. A. Barber, F. T. Bolte. H. W. man in *he rear ear, aud, by drawing
upon the rods on different sides, both
can operate it at once.
—The impression that the Northeast­
#orirtiM.
ern coast of tho American continent is
slowly rising—the estimate of tho rate
T) KETlrTCHURCH. Rev.
of emergence in progress being over.a
I) tvrvkws avnr Sunday
..v—।
... —,.
.
foot, and perhaps as much M three foot
in a century—has recently been contro­
verted by eminent scientific authorities,
• i BnUHlOT EFSW.U CHl'ItcK-,
among these being Dr. Mitchall of the
31 Tt&gt;«; Pastor. fw-r»(■•«•• every Sabba
Coast Survey, who states that Ute salt
marshes are still, as they were in the
time of the early explorers, at ordinary
T VY LODGE NO. 37, K. of P., meets at Jta high water level, and that the rocks oq
A Cootie Hall, Nashville, Michigan, every
our coast, long notorious as dangerous
Friday evening, for the encouragement anil
gupjxirt of al) worthy, true, steadfast and hon­ to navigation, have not risen since they
were awcovered.
Ancient maps and
orable Brother Knlghta.
.
L. E. Lents, K. k. 8. Oaxo Braoxa.C. C. documents are cited, and the conditions
of the various rocks are considered in
JlfacrltanrouM &lt; 'urdn.
detail, with the result just named. But
eastward of longitude 64 deg. 13 min.',
TU n. YOUNG. M D. Office eaat tide of and especially in Newfoundland, great
v » • Main 8L, Nashville. Office hours rfom changes present themselves in the oom­
parison of charts, the depth appearing
to be at some points less and at other
H. GRISWOLD, M. D„ .. . ...tMc
• Physician and Surgeon. LMBce and res­ points greater now thau formerly.
idence opposite tbe Wolcott Houae. Prompt
Attention given to calls day oi nigbu
PITH AMD POINT.

too

Hashriilt Jirrrtonj.

1

W

—The palmy days of a boy’s life are
those in which he gets properly spanked
by his mother.
—Brains can not be measure* by tho
size of the head, nor eloquence by tho
R. C. .W. GOUCHER, Esctic Pbyaidan and extent of the mouth.
■ Surgeon, is prepared to answer all calls
—Down East heroism—“Ever do any­
^101} be made for liia services. Office and
euee opposite Rt*’* meat market.
thing heroic?” said the Vermont man.
L PARMENTER, M. D.
Offira over “I reckon I did. I onco went bail for a
neighbor o’ mine who wasn’t worth two
Hull’. Drug .tore, Vermontville, Mich.
cents.”—Boston Post.
/~'1HA8. H. BRADY, lawyer, Circuit Court
—Sweet revenge: “ When J was an
Conirni«*loner, Rea) E.Ule and Insurance
Agt. Prompt attention given to ell btulneM infant,” said Fogg, “tho women were
ealrurted to my rare. Conveyancing a .peclal- forever kissing me. And,” ho added,
ly. Office oppodte Union Houm.
“I have done what I could to get square
with them since I have grown to years
LIEBH A USER, Mcrchon*. Tailor and dcal- of discretion.”
• er in Ready Made Clothing. See me
—He wasn’t eaying anything. “Man
before you purchase clothing. Fits guarand wife are all one, are they?” “Yes;
what of it?” said he, suspiciously. “Why,
TON AH B. RASET, Express aud Drayman- in that cose,” said hto wife, “I came
V Good* and Baggage carried to any place in
homo awfully tipsy last night and fee!
the villageterribly ashamed of myself this morn­
iram r. dickinson, manufacturer of
ing.” He never said a word.—Texas
and dealer in Hard Wood Lumber. Build­
Siftings.
.
ing Material aapeclaltr. Ca«b paid for logs. Mill
—Fritz has been hunting up the ped­
and yard on Sherman 8L, at M. C. R.R. croailng.
igree of Dr. Tanner, tho celebrated hun­
AMES FLEMING, uractlrri Jeweler ad J
Watch-maker, Clock.. Watcbw, Sliver and gry man, and finds he is of very ancient
Platexl Ware, Jewelry and Optica) Goods. Rock­lineage. The forty-third verso of chap­
ford U'atebc. a .pedal ty. Repairing and Eugrav- ter 9., Acta of too Apostles, reads—
Inr dose in a worknualiko manner.
“And it came to pass that ho tarried
many days with one Simeon A. Tan­
RNO STRONG, plain and fancy J on rnnier. ner.”—Burlington Hautkeye.
Tbe beat facilftlca for doing work of any
—Babies are not an article of com­
printing office In Barry county. When tn need
merce, but they are nevertheless related
to dollars and cents, and strange it to
that this is not more understood.
One
TACOB O8MUN. Liveryman, barn nbar Wol- family there was that did not lose sight
They caused to be inscribed on
tr cott House. First claw turnouts at reason­ of it.
able rates. Special rates to commercial men. the tombstone ot their dear departed the
Funend and weding parties furnished with car following touching and instructive lines:
riages on short notice.
A. FOOTE PHYSICIAN &amp; SURGEON
• Succsrer td Dr. Wickham. Office and
residence at Dr. Wickhana'a late office.
Prompt attention to calls nigly, or dpy,

L

D

W

S

H

J

O

C^£vW'?E?ARAY’ De*1CT ,n Watches,
\yClocka, Cue Jewelry and Silverware. Being

°“« —

JJ A. BAKBKR, M.
"

HOMmorATiuc

Physician and Surgeon.
Office first door cart of Opera, Houac. aad
near residence on comer of Waabinjrlon and
Mate Strceta, Nashville, Mich.

yyOIAMFTT HOCHE,
vlllc Mien lira ii.
A. S. Foote, Proprietor.

]M. BUSH,
"
“TS1 BOBB”

BOOT AND SHOE MAIER,

=-

—The advantages of the American
baggage system in tracing and recover­
ing fort package. WM strikingly HIbw

Howard-Street footbridge for tombod,
with a baggage check attached to hk
line by way of a sinker, when, feeling a
tug at hb hook, he pulled up and found
a valise securely fastened to his line.
This extraordinary luck has induced a
number of down-towners to go fishing
for the key.—New London Day.
Suffering

From Swallowing; a Snake.

While out in the fields last summer
Mrs. David Schnsuffer, of Sandlake,
took a drink of water from a brook flow­
ing through a meadow back of the vil­
lage, and when she returned home she
declared that she had swallowed a snake.
Her family used every endeavor to con-

experienced, Mrs. Scbnauffcr admitted
that perhaps she. did not swallow the
reptile. Several weeks ago, however,

ill. She then renewed the aaeertion that
inure was » snake in her stomach, and
to tho doctors who have since attended
W ohe described the terrible sufferings

la* year, win ahortly lx
be‘ Maea.
added, ny
by an
aS
•Mr; . Wl.ll,P
who
^J^Sed his intention of
*
. bnt«i«g over severel horse,
whl,:h.
. the£
“ark m
tu
Lhe new-comer, should fail to efoulate
achievements of Iroquois and Foxb*U’ lhe forthcoming aeaaon to not
aaiikriy
wlUltai« m^T an American
’rtolo»y ln tb®
; - for while th.
borees just mentioned are heavily
engaged in the prises open to four-yearol,u, there
there to
la at
at least
leaM one
one Ithh»-voar-&gt;ld
©Ids,
who(ie proBpect4 oI winn
Two
Thousand Guineas and —----- judged by hto performances last autumn.
very
promising.
What
may
be
tho
very promising.
What
quality of the animals which
whic have within
- weeks
the -last six
taken
i___ _ __ _____
year-olds it is, ot course, impossible to
gtieas; but there can be no doubt that,
whether because of the “blue grass” of
Ke ntucky or of the discrimination shown
in breeding, the American race-horses
—A horse that has a voracious appe­ are much improved since specimens of
tite and is yet thin, whose legs swell them were first brought over to this
nnd which turns up his lips and licks country bv Mr. Ten Broeck, in the days
and gnaws the stall, is not in good con­ when bo little was thought of foreigndition. The stocking of' the legs indi­ bred stock that any animal bred out of
cate. disorder of the kidneys, and the England was allowed seven pounds in
weekly dose of saltpeter given to the every race not a handicap.
The success of the American horses,
horse may cause this trouble. Diuretics
should never be given to a horse except last season was certainly very remarka­
as a needed remedy for some disorder, ble ; foe though only two stables were
and then should be given very cautlou.- represented, the five and twenty or
ly. Give the horse a dose of 17 ounces thirty animals brought over by Mr.
' of epeom salts; give no saltpeter, but LoriUard and Mr. Keene won twenty
twice a week one dram each of gentian racesofa total value of £25,031. Mr.
Lorillord did best, so far as regards the
and copperas powdered fine.
number and value of tho races secured,
—Almoet the only means of ventilat­
for he won nine, worth—inclusive of
ing ordinary clothes-presses or closets is
several, small sums for second—£18,316.
by opening the door, and this should ba With Iroquois, a son of Leamington and
done daily. It is well also occasionally,
Maggie B. B., he won the Newmarket
as need requires, to remove wearing ap­
Slakes of £275, the Barwell Stakes of
parel from the closet and hang it where
£180, the Derby of £5,925, the Prince of
the air may circulate free’y through it
Wales Stakes of £2,800, and the St.
and tho sun shine on it.
Coats and
James’s Palace Stakes of. £1,500 at Asovercoats and garments that can not be oot; the Doncaster St. Leger of £5,450,
washed with water can be cleaned only
and the Newmarket Derby of £675. The
by this process. Removing spots and
dust from the surface is well, but the' only two defeats which Iroauois sustained
were in the Two Thousand Guineas, for
cleansing sbould.be deeper than that.
The delightful feeling of new clothes is which he ran second to Peregrine, and
largelv owing to the absence from them in the champion stake at Newmaiket,
of all bodily emanations, -,md this feel­ when he finished third to Bend Or and
Scobell.
Mr. LoriHard was also tho
ing can be restored to a worn garment
owner of a very promising two-year-old
in large measure by letting the fresh air
named Gerald, by Saxon—Girl of the
blow through it.
All woolen goxls are
ready absorbents of whatever impurities Period, who rim very well in the United
the air about them or the bodies they States in the summer, but who had a
cover may contain, and a» readily part, • rough passage across the Atlantic in
under favorable circuuutances, with September. Despite that, ho ran a very
good race with two of the crack fillies of
what they pbsorb.—5T. F. Tribune.
the season, and soon after that finished
second to lx»rd Rosebnry’s Kermesse in
Queer Food.
Middlb Park, beating some of the high­
est priced yearlings of the previous sea­
Tho Germans of New York have stores son. After this he was allowed to walk
in which specially Teutonic delicacies over the course for a rich sweepstakes;
are vended.' Dried, or rather smoked,
his winnings, inclusive of what he re­
•goose is an odd feature of these. Smoked ceived for running second in the MiddA
geese come from Pomerania, where Park plate, amounting to about £600.
their living originals are raised in large But what is of still more importance, he
flocks. . They are pluoked for their
down, and then killed, cut in sections, is virtually first favorite for this year’s
Derby, and is so sound and apparently
very slightly salted and smoked. Pome­
so capable of improvement that he is
ranian goose, however, eosts twenty-five
better entitled to consideration than
cents a pound, and is esteemed a great
most favorites are. The most disap­
dainty among German epicures.
pointing of Mr. Izirillord’s horses was
There are a couple of stores here
tho four-year-old Mistake, by Waverly
where Spanish edibles are dealt in.
—Misfortune; for he began the season
These consist chiefly in nuts and dried
by running second for the Lincolnshire
fruits. Dried goatmeat forms a favorite
Handicap and the Newmarket Handi­
feature. It is prepared very much as
cap, and, though he won the Interna­
our dried beef is. Tho Spaniards seem
tional Handicap of £708 at Newmarket
to rely more on their pecular methods
two days afterward, he afterward took
of cooking what they eat than on any
part without success in most of the big
peculiarity of the food itself.
handicaps. Passaic, a three-year-bld by
The peculiaritiea of the French feed­
Ixmgfellow—Jury, having been weeded
stores are beyond comparison.
The
oat of Mr. Lorillard’s stable, won two
question with regard to them Is not
races—of £194 at Sandown Park, and of
what they do but what they do not
£155
at
Manchester;
Wallenstein
sell. There is probably nothing from a
secured the Great Shropshire Handicap
section of boiler-iron or a cobble-stone
of £912 at Shrewsbuiy, and another
down to a bent pin or a broken horse­
animal discarded by him, Dakota, won
shoe nail that a Frenchman cannot pro­
a hrrdle-race worth about £100 in
vide a dressing for to make it appetiz­
France.—St. James' Gazette.
ing.
An odd feature of the French
shops to an American is thn horse-meat
The Gentiles In Utah.
department- They all deal in horse­
flesh, both fresh, dried and salted/
From the fact that the Gentiles gave
Horse-flesh sausages, made, or supposed Campbell less than 1,400 votes in 1880
to be made, in Lyons and called Lyons has sprung tho idea in many quarters
sausages, are very popular. Sausages that they are in an exceeding small
made of a compound of asses' flesh, minority in Utah, and that it is extreme­
pork and veal also have an extensive ly cheeky in them to ask Congress to
sale.
supersede the Mormon Legislature by a
Sharks’ fins, dried, are sold in every Gentile governing or legislative com­
Chinese shop in New York. They are mission.
Comparison of the Mormon
imported from China. There are three Conference returns of their population
kinds, of which the best are the fins of in April, 1880, with those of the census
the wifite shark. These are worth *3.50 in June following, shows that there were
a pound. The poo. est kind, which is 32,000 souls in the Territory not claimed
known as black shark fins, is sold for as Mormons. Were these people in thd
half as much and even less. Sharks’ habit of political activity they ought to
fin is a popular dainty among China­ cast, on tne ordinary voting basis, 6,000
men. It is salted and dried for export, votes. It will bo seen that the propor­
and looks like a section of whalebone, tion of Gentiles to Mormons in Utah, ac­
when raw, but boiled in water, a gela­ cording to perfectly reliable statistics
tinous substance is extracted which is (tbe population in Utah having been, in
esteemed very savory. A species of rouna numbers, 144,000 in June, 1880),
stew made of sharks’ fin. dried oysters, is as 1 to 3 1-2. They are nearly onerice ai»d peppers Is a champion Chinese fourth, in other words.
dish.
Dnea oysters are ordinary
It may seem Invidious to compare
bivalves, extracted from the shell, them in respect of their intelligence,
dipped Ji salt aud strung on strings to । but it is due to truth to say that it is a
dry in the sun. They come from China, case of
zt —
intelligence
’zz'^zz.zd against brute force.
and look for all the world like figs. There are some intelligent Mormons,
John Chinaman infinitely prefers them but the mass are
21 not ’i ' ’
' and very
to the freshest oi fresh oysters be can
buy here. Mussels, conks and clams
thau ono-half of the taxable property of
are preserved by him in the same way.
Tho famous bird’s nest is also a feature Utah, including mines aud railroads,
of any respectable shop in Mott street. belonm to Gentilea. -There are some
It to queer stuff to look at, for it rather eight hundred miles of railroad, chiefly
resembles gravel than anything rata­ owned by Gentiles, worth at least *10,ble or animalj and tastes a little like 000,000;’ there is Gentile money invest­
gum nrabic.
Tho nests, it seem*, are ed in trade, in stock, in merchandise,
dried and rubbed into these fragments and in rejridenecs, equal, probably, to
in the hand, when they are packed for *10,000,000; the mines have turned out
transportation.
Bird’s nest is worth an average of *0,000,000 a year for ten
from *10 ifjr the commoner variety to years, which is six per cent, en *100,*25 a pound for the best. It to ewn
000,000, as any one can see.
Tho Gen­
tially a luxury, for a pound of it will tiles have invested, and procured to be
only make soup for at most forty peo­ invested, in churches, schools, hospitals,
ple, so that it rates higher than turtle and public and private charitable asso­
soup in the dearest season.
Another ciations, within one decade, *500,OdO in
dainty,which Ah Sin bos to have import­
ed all the w^y from China, is dried cabstreet potatoes to wood ashoe. H noma
superphosphate could Ire addwL all the
bolter, aud if a little guano were added
it would be etlll better ^weet potatoes
do not want heavy manuring, or the.
run too much to vine.
V
- o ..
v,
I
—In some parte of Southern Europe a ,
.frO^plT*tnUtm,’rhlC._,.18
said not only to be cheaper, but folly
T*1
LWh.*? floar JbreBd’ In .*°Tne 1
place* wheat flour and corn meal are i
e^relv mioeroeded by this product, ,
which
t, very
rorj nounamng,
noari.hlng, anil
and can
c»i&gt; m
b. ।,
vnicn is
preserved two year, longer without in- ,
lu,7i
—Flour is like butter in this respect: i
It absorbs smells readily, j It should not j
be kept in a place where there are on- |
Ions, fl.h, vegetable, or nthor odorous
substance, nor in a damp room or cel­
lar, but it should be kept in a cool, dry,
airy room, where not exposed to a freez­
ing temperature, nor to any above 70
deg., and always sift before using.

French

number.

It is no ooutem]

ria.
The
be partic-

&gt; bronse

BUCH.

MAIN LINE.

■ ok- o; me
rcmanceiHe ca*-* :n«i na«i (
ever brought to notkr of the public fa» -that of Im? i
Mr. J. 8. Beach, uPBume Bridge, Ul.tcr Ca,
*

18tb, 11174, from the presence of Cakulua or
Slone in the right Kidney. No lea* than revet,
pbvalcians were employed r. different times,
to wiuKa Mr. Beach paid hundred* of dollar*
for medical. trattiu&lt;m« with only temporary
relief from bls agony.
By tbe urgent solHUtton* of his frietkb he

Gdna' KMt »*'
UtaMlr K

GRAND RAPIDS DIVISION.
KA.9TWA.R1 .
tbamedictnet on the iRcfe of Scptemtwr he
voldwl a stone aa large a* eouM 1*
tbrcogb the natural channel.
t- Mr. Beach conclude* a long letter to Dr.
Kennedy by saying: “Il xill always afford me
pleasure torwxHiuncnd tin ‘Favoriu- Remedy'
to teore who ma/be suffering from- iilfficulUc*
of kidneys and Bidder, or any
fn&gt;ui
Impure atete of the blood.” Tbe “Favorite
Remedy” sold by all druggtota. The Doctor’s
only address to RoDdout, New York.

iMfl lEv.
Nap ,K.

8TATIONS.
ITti
11&lt;&lt;

diddteriRe.

[ ■WESTWARD.
STATIONS.
Dilro’t.

S.lo

Ealou Rapid*,,.
'Charlotte_____
Kwhvilk....
But tor,......
Mi-Wleville..
Haamond...
Grand Rapi !

(THE HEALTH BIUNGER-&gt;
PEXGELLY'S WOMAN'S FRIEND.

For Women,

TEACHEBS,
LADY CLERKS,
HOUSEWIVES,
,

'

4.00
4;I3
4JS

Trunk and Canada Southern Hallway*.
E. C. JB0W!-'.
H
LEI V ABD.

BreaMne down under cloee cnnAc-mr-nt •.•HVir.g couUn nolly ou their fret, -'ill find Zoa. Pbora -

A Prevention and Cure
symptorr.a. via;
Headaches,

Lassitude.

Pule or j .

■.uir’cxi?".

Slecplessncs

0ROW$

IRON

Faipitu^

Numbness.'
•&gt;ry Cough,
Weak an

Lame Hack

BITIERE

Zoa-Phora 1b no*.
UKlpJT.Il-J" SUU

^£1^'

TESTIMONIALS I h-v

WSIOTHERS, are your, DAUGHTERS .M.
Bequests for testimonials nnd advice n

R. PENGELLY, M. D.,
Sold by Druggittai
KoIieaxoo, M::h.

KIDNEY-WORT

THE GREAT CURE
RHEUMATISM
LIVER AND BOWELS.

DROWVS IRON RITTERS are
a certain cure for nil diwancs
requiring a complete tonic; ntpoclally Intligcstfon. Dyspepsia, 1 nt ermitterit Fevers, Want ot* Ap;&gt;etlrc,
Jams of Strength, Lack of EneF^y,
etc. Enriches the blood, strengthcns the muscles, and gives new
life to the nerves. Acts like a
charm on the digestive organs,
removing all dyspeptic symptoms,
such us tasting the foot!. Belching,
Heat in the Stomach, llenrtbum.
etc. The only Iron Preparation
that will not blacken the teeth or
give headache. Sold by nil Drug.gists nt $1.00 n bottle.

BROWN CHEMICAL CO.
Baltimore, Md.

THOUSANDS OF CASES

BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.

PERFECTLY CURED.

fKIDNEY-WORT

Benson's
Capcine
Q
Porous
Plaster.
-AWaRDED-

IN ITS ACTION,'Siut harmlua In oil caace.

Rswvlaraove freely and healthfully. In thia

: KIDNEY-WORT.
SPRING

MEDICINE.___ _

rn eurea BILIOUSNESS, CONSHPA-

GET ITOFTOCIt DRUC0IST. PBICX, .1.0.
WELLS. RICHARDSON A Ce.; Prop’s,

SIDNEY-WORT
WHAT WILL THE WEATHER BE TO-MORROW?

Pool’s SIGNAL SERVICE BAfiOKTER
Or STORM GLASS and THERMOMETER Cembteed,
WILL TELL YOU:

. •Q

■

-MEDALS.-

The Best Known Remedy for
Backache or Lama Back.
Rheumatism or Lamo Joints.

Neuralgia or Kidney Dlsoaaow.

Lumbago, Severe Aches or Patna
Female Weakness.

WadWaW^toy|a

!S
They Poeltively (?cr«.

iBURY A JOHI

I a-H Rill

HO PATENT Hu

’

(

�■11

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN

KALAMAZOO

tbe White River on tbe 14ih bad

Gents ITiiroifliliiiigr G-oodis
A Hot Brausoe (Ark.) dispatch of tbe 1Mb

property and rendered one hundred families
boaateM. Eight people were kilted and many
other* wounded. Hundreds of sheep, bogs.

Sultan praSsing bls conduct anddeefcring that

THE G-BEAT SECRET
TIN BUYING, IH TO BUY

Kellogg was shot dead ou tho 13th by a play-

Thumb men went into tbe old Bowkley

courts, or;
latter dreu it,

tain some facta for use in a pending suit, and
lost their lives 1&gt;t fire-damp.
A raw days ago tbe Chief of Police of BL
IxjuLh received a letter offering Important ln-

Roods, but that everything ia

handsome reward be paid the writer.

ver dollars.

Twelve persons were drowned at Pullman,
HL, on the evening of the llth, on Calumet
Lake, by tbe upsetting of a pleasure boat.

Lynch Intn-duced

unted article or device when It shall appear &lt; &gt;n
trial that defendant purchased such art clc for

into the propriety of pur­
in which Proaident Lincoln

northern part of Georgia on tbe night of tho
14 th.
A'Fokt 8mitb dispatch of tbe Ifith says
that the total of the killed and wounded by
tbe recent cyclone at McAllister, Indian Ter­
ritory. foota up 120.
A dovbui tragedy occurred In Fayette
County, Ala., on tbe 15thl Andrew Allen,
separated from his wife for several months
past, visited her at her mother's bouse and
deliberately ahot and kilted ber. A brother
of the woman entered the house a tew mo­
ments later, and, seeing hia sister lying dead

the aide of his wife.

PERSONAL AND POLITICAL.

DOMESTIC.
A few night* ago three men made a burg­
larious entrance into a smoke-house near Ha-

by the proprietor, and tbe other two, in at­
tempting tu escape, knocked out the lever,
which caused the opening they luul made to
close just as they were about half way out
They were frightfully crushed and died In
about thirty minute*.
Tbb Chicago, Milwaukee A St. Paul RaUvoid Company has lasucd an order forbidding
the Bale al liquor to ite employes, and prohib­
iting propt 1c tore of eating-houses on their Hues
Lo sall liquors or keep a bar on their premises.
Smvb.’j National Banka hare failed in New
York and Brooklyn during the operation-of
the National Banking system. The total lose

winding them up was eight per cent, of tbe
total sun collected.
Obdkbs ba^J been leaned for the abandonwent of Forts Fetterman and Sanden tn

Tki final dividend of the Freedman's Bank,
about to be made, will bring the pay meats of
creditors up to sixty per cent
Tuf Illinois Board cf Agriculture cn the
llth reported an improvemeut In tbe condi­
tion of winter wheat in all sections of tbe
State. Tbe yield promised to be three to five
Ar Ossian, Ind., oa the llth the saloon of
WfUlam Boden was entirely destroyed by a

itecUmi tie

Tub Keystone Rubber- Works, at William*-

THZ United State* FW» Commission has
just shipped 4,003,000 young shad and herring
for the river* of Virginia, South Carolina aud

.On tbe 11th 4,055 Immigrant* arrived at tbe

salted for New York.
Russian troops were on tbe 14th ordered to

Lightest and Strongest Made,

HUBBARD

The dangers of the journey will be

Gleaner &amp; Binder

aiderable distance be win be borne ou men’s
■boulders along narrow trails on tbe moun-

Tub Dublin police issued a dlscriptlon oc
the 13th of four men supposed to be the assas­
sins of Messrs. Cavendish and Burke. Two of
them are described as being about thirty
years of age, with sandy hair; one of about
thirty five years, of stout build and dark com­
plexion, with a hollow bridge on his nose, and
tbe other about twenty years, with a small
black mustache.
Fittt Turkish soldiers were drowned on
die 14th by tbe beaching of a transport in the
Bosphorus.
.
Tub Austrian physician who visited the
Jews’ hospital at Odessa stated ou the 14th
that there were IX horribly mutilated per­
sons there, the Russians having poured pe­
troleum into their wounds.
Firrr Austrians were kilted on the 14th by
insurgents in ambush near Nevlsinje.
Tub Catholic Bishop of Hexham and New­
castle, Ireland, is dead.
It is announced that a joint British and
French naval fleet is on roai* for Alexandria,
^tonb Pasua, formerly an American army

546,121.
fund

-Strayer’s GRAIN DRILL,
REAPERS* MOWERS

English Church.
Exvov Txbsoott os tbe 14th started into

were kilted and a number seriously wounded.

of Gaitean s last chance far life.

PRINDLE &lt;fc CHIPMAN.

RAWSON’S'

Arthur, Haguer and James held consultation*

was a bullet through hl* heart
MatobCkacz presided over a meeting of.

__________

tbe deata of Sir John Rose Cormack, tbe U

Tub Nebraska State Legislature met at Lin­
coln on the 10th for the purpore of redlstricting the StateAij, the remaining election cases on thj
docket at Charleston, &amp; C., have been contin­
ued to the November term.
officer and lately an officer in tho Egyptian
Mrs. Scoville, In an Interview tn Chicago army, baa resigned, because of his unwilling­
on the llth, announced ber Intention of tee-' ness to violate bls oath of allegiance to the
luring tai she secured 100,010 signatures tea Khedive.
petition for tbe commutation of Gulteau’*
The village of Danville, tu tbe province of
sentence from banging to imprisonment. She Quebec, Canada, was tbe scene of a disastrous
■aid she proposed to apply for a divorce from cooflagradon on the 14th. About forty boasea
ber busband.
end store, wcry destroyed. Loss, &lt;150.000.
Tub wife of Sergeant Mason on tbe llth
Six bundxbd Jews left Berlin on the 15th
made a strong appeal to President Arthur In for tho United States, and 150 Russian refu­
behalf of her husband. The President said be gees reached Montreat
had great sympathy for ber, and that the peti­
Tub Sultan on tbe 15lh telegraphed tho
tions for tbe pardon of her husband would be Egyptian Chambej- of Notables that ha would
laid before tbe Cabinet
hold them severely responsible for acts of inTbb argument for the prosecution in the aubordlnatlon against his and the Khedive’s
Gulteau case was commenced in Washington authority.
on the llth by District-Attorney Corkhill. He
Jackson A Gxabam, an upholstery firm ta
, dwelt at great length on the absurdity of the London, failed on the 15th for £300,000.
claim that because President Garfield died at
The city of Cork, Ireland, has offered a re­
Long Branch tbe court at Washington lacked ward of &lt;25,000 for the arrest of tbe Dublin
jurisdiction.
The Society of the Army of the Tennessee
LATER NEWS.
will hold its next reunion at Cleveland, Oo
Ox the evening of the 15th, after an angry
tober 3 and 4, 1683 Bishop Fallows, of Chi­
cago, ha* been selected as orator on that oc- debate, the Young Men’s Democratic Club, of
casioti, and General Sherman re-elected Prcsl- New York, tallied a resolution favoring the
nomfnatlau of S. J. Tilden far Govcrndr.
Tax trial of tbe Star-route conspirators has
It is announced that tbe House Committee
on Elections has decided to report in favor of
Da. H. H. KvnnaHn, Surgeon-General of
seating Lowe, the Alabama Grcenbaqker, and
ousting Wheeler, tbe sitting Democratic n»a&gt; tbe Confederate army, died In San Francisco
on tbe 15th.
Tun Illinois State Republican Convention
has been called to meet-at Springfield on tho on tbe 16th stkled that It was his intention to
vigorously root out treason in Ireland.
28th of June. .
Jambs Vick, tbe famous seedsman of
closed in the District Supreme Court at Wash­ Rochester, N. T., who was a playmate of
ington on tbe 12th. Mr. Davidge finishing for Charier Dickens an set type beside Horace
the Government. Tbe care was taken under Greeley, died on the 18th of pneumonia.
advisement, tbe court adjourning until tbe
Anton Biebek, of Houghton, Mich., ren­
dered almost Insane by jealousy, killed bls
15th.
E. W. Qxixtkk. United States District Judge wife In bed on tbe Ifith and then Instally took
his own life.
Thibtt-sbvxx buildings at Stewartsville,
softening at tbe brain.
Tbb United States Senate Select Commit- Mo., including every business house, wm
burned on tbe morning of the 16th.
to recommend for adoption a joint resolution
Tnz Methodist Bishops elected al the Nash­
provide g that tbe right of citizen* of the Ville (Tenn.) Conference ou tbe 16th are Rev.
United States to vote shall not be denied or Alpheus W. Wilson, of Baltimore; Dr. C.
abridged su seqount of sex. The vote in Cranberry, of Vanderbilt University; Dr. A.
G. Haygood, of Georgia; Rev. R. K. Hargrove,
Blair and Jackson—3; Noee—George and Fair
Loaistana.
.
NbaK Spiritwood, Dakota, a Northern Pa-

753,708. For tbe nine mouths ended March
31 the value was &lt;36,307,357.

____ _____

rages upon German land-ownera.

Montero.

Wiard Plows,
South Bend Chilled Plows,
Gale Plows,
(Buy Genuine Factory Poiutx)

gulsbed. The box was believed to be full of
gunpowder.
Nashville, Apr. 90,1882.

Treasurer of tbe Provident Savings InsUtutfonof Jersey City, shot himself fatally, in
the Trustees’ room.
Tbkbb was a strike for higher wages by the
tanners of Chicago ou ths Ifith.
Nxaxi T 7,000 immigrants arrived in New
York on tbe 15th.
A Limb number of fraudulent United States
certificate* of deposit purporting to have
been issued by the Assistant Treasurer at
Santa Fe, N. M., were discovered on the 15th.

Spnng-2th Harrow

of &lt;8,543, raised by the Philadelphia

14th, aged aixtj

Improved 1883.

Wm. A. AYLSWORTH
No ITuinbuo-J

Sash', Doors and 'Blinds,
Paints, Oils, Varnishes,
BUILDERS HARDWARE,

DETROIT STOVE CO'S. STOYES
Domestic &amp; New Home

WATCH OUT FOR NEXT WEEK’S AD

SEWING MACHINtS
When in need

THE LARGEST STOCK OF

gF

the Best

Grades of Hardware and Ma­
chinery.

CLOTHING! THE

Call and see me.

FRANK C. BOISE

EVER PUT INTO NASHVILLE.

CROWN

50
LIGHT OVERCOATS
The HandHome Melton
The Tasty Cheviot.
THE CROWN SEWING MACHINE.

The Nobby Casurimere

Boots, Shoes and Groceries in profusion.

&lt; W.

AYLS WORTH.

AGAIN TO THE FRONT!

wTue “C-own” comes into tbe market
front rank at once from the f»ct that it ba* ta­
ken Uic good feature* In all other machines
and put them in on&lt; grand combination, m k­
Ing this the HandaomesL Largest, Most Silent
and Lightest Running machine yet offered. All
tbe ••points” that the experiece oi twenty yeans
In aB kinds of family and light manufacturing
work has proved tone&gt; boolutrlv good arv to be
found only in the “Crown.” Other machines
may -have one, two or three of these '-potato”
but none but tbe “Crown" hs* them all.
Every device that ia really desirable in other
machines wIM be found In the “Crown." Ad­
vantage has been taken of the experiments and
experience with all kind* of machines ever -to-,
vented, and tbe “Crown” is a perfect embodi­
ment of everytlng go d In them.
'

F. R. WHITE.

EVERYBODY

fit) the LARGEST.’aid lest Complete Stock of

FURNITURE
Ever laid down in any one store in Barry
or Eaton Counties

Wide Tire Wagon!

Our mammoth two-story double store

BUY A WIDE TIRE WAGON

bama District, died in Washington on tbe 12th
Cambridge,

forty-eight boon.
Otto Gebacr, George Oswald and

MewTartt eotbe 12tlb

The

George

Wolf Lake, near Sheffield, Ind., on the 14th.

Forty-eighth Congress.
Majoa-Grr zbal Baknabb,

White Bear Lake. Minn.

Is full and running over.

I KEEP THEM

Everything yon need from the smallest Bracket to
a $125 Parlor Suit.

BUY YOUR FLOW POINTS

You can save money and have a better selection to choose
from, by dealing with us thau any'other dealer.

FIRST CLASS BLACKSMITH,

OoUector

Court tn Indian Territory, and Mr. Plumb ex-

Don’t ITora-et It-

J. LENTZ &amp; SONS.

J. M. WOOD.

�-CALLON-

MAY 80. IBM.

VICIHITY LOCALS;

Our Broth ira of tta*

PBtCHARDVILLE.

the t - L*-.
fc,PD -1J .
* ■
—tor
Bn.wn, »l» Mted-rtM
... . ...__
wa.
tl

;Mia In 9ivw Tor

Mrs. H. Venter went. Monday:f«
Jams Wllktaa of Hastings, fcaa been buying and tbe •milling groom was beard to remark aa

aiatioM.lbaeprt'hto some member
of the family had ta land tbskr aatatanev; theI&gt;4&lt; thrived, till it was three week old. when the
family tired of tbe pains kill'd. Now they ar*
tarry, aa some one told them that Barnum
would bar* gave them a thousand dollars for it

Irwta Mann, a young farmer living with bls
father cm the Kalaxuo-Carmel town line, was
married oo LbaTlb instead ought to have been
a happy man but evidently he was not, for
three days afterward* be committed suicide by

MORGAN.
tend the funeral of bf»Kran&lt;lfa:).er.
Mrs Riabridgqr, of Battle Creek, made the
family of a Frichsrd a short vtatt last wetk.
Mm. John Harwortb from Ohio, ta making
her r-arcnta. Mr. and Mr* Fry, a visit of three

OH Mr. Hull at Baltimore la visiting bta son
H. H. of Morgan.
Tlie Sunday school at Morgan averages
.
G. Prichard has at last dosed the bargain about 75 acholare.
The M. P. church folk* will scat their ehurch
and received the deed for the store building
about the first of June.
formerly owned by G. Rlsbridger.
Thomaa Holme* and W. N. DeVIne each
Not long since we attended a party at Banshipped a carload of lumber the 17th.
Mr. and Mr*. Mudge have been visiting
ladles In that vicinity were lap-lander*.
Tbe ladies M. K. Society ot Wert Baltimore, friends ta the South part of tlie State.
Mrs. W. N. DeVIne and mother started for
met at Mr*. Fishers, last Thursday afternoon.
Grand Rapid* to day to visit friends.
"
The offleera for tbe aeaaoo were elected.
Mrs. Marsh of Byron, and Mr*. Chase of
Charlotte, arc visiting their mother, Mr* Sarah
front of bta bouse, UiHt 1
farm In Feaglea, this week.
arcana tite same aol imj
Potato* arc a legal tender this Springs, with
other way*.
‘
out tbe Govermen t stamp, and the currency
den the baartof ye editor by a half column
Tbe social st Morgan, last Wednesday night
poem about the beautiful spring that put in an
was attended by About 70 and all report a pleasappirarauce last Sunday.
nt time and a goad sapper. Proceeds W-50.
planted this spring; nearly every farmer will
being fitted up for the season. C. Corwin at
the Morgan ground* I* enlarging and adding
Our school ta ta full blast and we doubt If a new building*. L. P. Cole’* new steamer I*
rttcr school ta to be found tn the town. One said to ran very nice and will add a gixjd deal
to the pleasure at the Lake thia summer.
lleniy Lathrop, who went west some time
sgo, returned sick nearly two weeks ago, but
While some men from Hastings were drawing we are glad to say, is rapidly recovering from
his severe sickues*. He seems to have return­
m|rcd and could not get out.
Tbe men then ed disaatlafied with Montana and the blixxards
bitched a rope around it* neck and drawed it of Dakota, and hia love for old Michigan
about eight rods to solid foundation.
strengthened.
,

An author any a: ‘‘It may be regarded
;it an established fact that upolea will
keep-bert’r in molat or damp cellar*
than in dry ones.” But that depends
altogether on how many boys there
are in the family. It isn't so much in
i he humidity of the cellar a* in tbe gor­
geability of the boy.

upon tbe lives and l.b-'rt m of his

1’UU.PHIN.

BISMARK.

CARLTON.

Wbevt is booming.
Corn planting is being pushedMr. Prince is falling quite fast.
Apple tree* are preparing to display their
beauty.
J. C. Dowlug has just received his new fire

E. Wood Is teaching at Freeport.
Not-atewof our best farmer* are buying
potatoes for their own use.
T. Parker will teach the young idea who to
•boot at the Center thta summer, for *25 per
month—of course.
Isaac Raymond found a palr&lt;^ colta, which
belonged to him, ta the the care of Geo. My­
ers. Ten dollars paid the damage and the road
ta free from ope pair of colts at least.

Garden aaas is springing forth and will soon
be seen ou the table.
Chas Hammond continue* to wear crutches
in memory of hi* last winter’s fall.
We shall goto Gratiot Co., tbe last of thta
week, and hope to find some loose new*.
The earth returned from Ita water impttam
last Sabbath morning; the sun dispensed with
tta cloudy veil, and all nature fed uu greener
fields
It ia rutnonxl that Jame* Wheeler, is married
expects to be, ought to be, or rame such thing,
and farther thia reporter ta silent. If be is. It,
would look well in Tn&gt; N«wa, you bet.
Tbe day’s work done, we rake open the em­
ber* where we stored our thoughts while ta tbe
Mehl. Intending to put them on paper; but they
are gone, thcreft&amp;e we must manufacture such
as a weary brain can bring to the surface, even

dreams Ohl bow ire would love’to make
The Nkws a power in the earth, oo the side of
unaduiteratel right The •Tiritta willing but
the flesh ta weak.
Memorial service* were held last Sunday
eventag. the church was decorated with plaht*
and Bower* srrauged by the Ladies Aid"Society
and a gpod display of genius was manifested.
The bouse w*a filial at an early hour.
Music
from Vermontville was furnished for the oc­
casion. Exercises opened by ringtag, followed

Aid Society oxer the departure of their beloved
James Young. A brief history of Sister Downs
from birth to death wan read by Slater Hallett.
Word* entitled ‘‘A Voice From Heaver.,'' was
read by Mrs. E. Benedict. An address was de­
livered by Brother Olds, bls subject being •’The
Mother's Work.” Many excellent truths were
art forth proving that mothers arc the great

be would go up stairs and lay down. After a
while became down and *a'.d be would go to
tbe ham and feed tbe tears. . After be bad
returning, his father followed to the statle end
found him banging by the neck, dead. He was
well-fixed, financially, well-known through this
community, a great social favorite, and tbe

a Mtaa Elix*
8b*Ueriy, of
Bellevue,
ta nearly erased by the terrible affair and grave
fear* arc felt for her mental welfare.

School Report*.
Tbe following is tbe per cent of the standlnc
ta the given studies of the pupils ta District
No- 3, Assyria, at the close of examination, end­
ing with first month of spring term:
Arithmetic, das* A.—Mattie Hartom 100,
Minnie Frost 100, Nettie Tuckerman 100, Belle
Tompkins DO. Victor Sprague 100.
Class B.--Lyman Wfloux 100, Milton Harina
100, Johnny Tompkins 100, Willie S^ger 100. •
Class C -Willie Hall BO, Katie Tompkins 60,
Arthur Dean 80, Nettie Spaulding 70, Johnny
Servan 70. Minnie Munger 70, Laura Ogden 80,
Alice Ogden 70. Marv McDerby 100.
Class D —Minnie Baker 80. Elvira Hartom
80, Jennie Baker 80, Grace Munger 70, Sammy
May 80.
U. H History—Minnie Frost 100 Nettie
Tuckerman 100. Mattie Hartom 100, Victor
Sprague 100, Belle Tompkins 100.
Grammar Class A.—Minnie Frost 00, Mattie
Hartom fiO, Belle Tompkins 86, Nettie Tucker­
man 05, Victor Sprague 83.
Class B.—Katie Tompkins 00, Johnny Tomp­
kins 0&amp;
Geography Class A.—Willie Seger 85. Mary
McDerby 90, MUton Hartom 80, Lyman Wilcox
80 Katie Tompkins 80.
Class B.—Johnny Tompkins $0, Willie Hsli
90, Johnny Servan 70, Laura Ogden 75, Altax
Ogdon 80.
.
Class Q—Minnie Baker 85, Jennie Baker 80,
Elvira Hartom 80, Arthur Dean 90, Minnie
Munger 00, Robert Spaulding 90.
Mart E. Wiloox, teacher.

There seems to be a spirit developing
among ourcltisena, that Vermontville ought
to grow whether we get another railroad or
Vermontville should aol be as large as Nash­
ville ; certainly we are surrounded by a richer
country.—Hawk.
It can’t be done. Vermontville may
grow ns fust us fehe can mid Niuhvllltwill always be nwny ahead of her. In
fact there can be no comparison be­
tween the two places.

terday to attend tbe funeral of hia mother, who
died at ber daughter's, Mr*. John Fleming,
According to the report of tl&gt;e super­
Monday, at the advanced age of 75 year*.
John D. Lewis, who- a few year* since pro­ visor of Maule Grove, there huve been
cured for blmaclf considerable notoriety by fre­ 23 births mid 8deatbs in that township
quently parting, making up and finally procur­ during tlie year. The tuuiibhip aho
ing a divorce from bta former wife. Minds, I* support* 100 dugs.—(Aw.
having trouble with wife No. 2, who, by the
Ah Omaha man repulsed a highway
way, I* thirteen year* of age. John think* *be
play* with the children' to much for a married robber by
throwing a bunch ot
woman.
shingles at him. Hud it been where
be could have grabbed hold of a
saw log the criminal would certainly
EATON COUNTY.
bave been badly injuied.
Four death* occurred in Brookfield last
week.
The fiery element entirely destroyed H. Barley's bouse, near Kalamo village, Monday
night.
During the performance by the ‘‘Great
Hasten) Circus” at Charlotte last week, rob
tier* entered tbe residence of Jeremiah Mike­
sell and stole *30 and a revolver.
A post.mortem examination of the body of
Mr*. Kadle of Eaton, who recently died sud­
denly, revealed the feet that an abcesa under
the liver had broken, causing instant death.
A little son of Ed. Brackett of Charlotte,
while running about tbe house with a table
fork In his hand, fell and thrust the tinea
through hia cheek, causing a painful wound.
K. Kittrldge of the Eaton Rapids Journal,
posaesarth, it ta claimed, a pocket map of Mis­
souri, which was the property of tbe noted out-

If half the money that has i&gt;een made in this

The terrible explosion of Qre damp
in a Prusainu tuiue, where the bodies
of fifty-six victims have already been
fouud.itddsanother lo is long list of dis­
asters from b source with which both
Great Brituiu and America are familiar.
Many treatise* liavu been written aud
inventions made for lessening the cala­
mities from cause but the slaughters
go on.
•&gt;
Tbe victims of tbecyclone in Indian
Territory ala single point number four­
teen aud at uuotber point oue peradu
was killed and six were severely injured
No*rey tbe whole area of tbe United
States east of the Rocky
Moun­
tains baa been tbe prey here and
thereof tempests and hurricanes this
spring, and terribk have been the loss­
es of life and property.

factories, .□atead of seeking other fields, Ver­
MAPLE GROVE.
Tbe uses of dynamite io life are mul­
montville to-day would blossom like the rose.—
Hawk.
tiplying with staUing rapidity. Anoth­
D. P. WolTs children are sick.
Charlotte A Mermen have inspected one of er saloon has just been blown up by
house those new-fangled Griffin road-making ma- tbii substance at a place somewhat
metaphorically called Ocean, fifteen
Mr. and Mrs. Harding are happy again. Ito a one has been purchased tor the Improvement of miles from FortWayne. The expldaive
At Charlotte ou circus day. Marshall Pollock was thrown down the chimney,and the
Unde Norton has hia poat driver in working
building was wrecked. It was only a
Mr. J. Letting baa bought Pete Peodell's farm ehrtal of Brookfield, violently assaulted him, day or two ago that another kaloon at
the
west fell a prey to the same destroy­
and
Las
been
bound
over
to
the
circuit
court
Conaidcretiau 01JB0.
er and the number of liquor saloon al­
the social at Mr. for trial for assaulting an officer of the law.
ready treated in this way has some­
Grace Potter was somewhat surprised, last
times led to tbe suspicion that it may
at Cleveland Monday night, where be grappled
be employed by extremists ss a Dew
with another alleged champion and got tumbl­
temperance agent io place of moral sua­
ed about the floor to the most approved fashion
sion. But it would Dot be safe to draw
thought BQ1 Archer
a general inference of that nature.
going through
war of 1812, through the zealous effort* of CooIT SEEM 8 .
Don't go to Florida yet: we are going to
He has lost his
tve rammer, after while: the dandelion -and aaxiunting to over *2.000.
second class needle will
rawherries are tn blossom sad the small boy eye-alght, became poor aid blind, and tbe
amount is a God-send to him.
Warren Shaul, of Charlotte, recently saved a
There is a certain neighborhood in M*f»le
Grove in which a family row ta of frequent oc­ I&gt;a»cnger train on tbe Chicago «t Grand Trank
currence.
Thta is had.
Better’ bury tbe Railway from a collIrion with a big tree, which

When you have had Catarrh long enough
just send 10c. to Dr. C. R. Bykaa, ft# Madl-

bunted alive;

Shaul with

Mias MoCcnuc.
THECOUNTY

Republican county
Hawk.

comxnlUae.—Vt. • VUle
•

We doubt tba aassrtiow but not tbe fart that

for the porftiou.

have, you cannot
work with a poor
needle. Therefore, before you condemn your
machine, try the genuine cold swedged needle,
kept only by E. R. WHITE, at Koeber Broth-

bl* friend*.
“ If England really wished to deal fairly by

Can cntontTbs cared 1 Tea certainly Dr. 8yke
Sure Care wffl eare IL

BOOKS,
JEWELKY,
WALLPAPER.
WINDOW MllADtt,

dtBsTuffm,
PB0PRIETARY KEDIOira,

PRiMCBIPTIOW, '
• KFX'FIPTS.

'

PAINT AND BRUSH
DEPAKTMEKT

Call* and Examine I
F. T. BOISE.

5WH Cost,

Cost,
Cost!

era, and of what avail will It b • to Ireland If

come* thorouchly loyal to Bagland i

the brave and honorable pxjplo driven to dowomen torn open by tho bayonet* of English

Shot down In the highways, while our walls of
anguish are stifled tn blood. Wo are convinced
no true prosperity oan exist In Ireland so long
as England possesses her oustotn-bYu.es there,
allowing her manufactures to pass Into Ireland
duty free, thereby leaving our Irisb tn 'chanlcs
unemployed, and an en &gt;rmom wi.r-tnbutc ex­
acted by En jland taking away the produce of
the land, thereby forcing tbo Irish people to
starve.
“Now. furthermore, wo call Upon all our
brothers in Amor.ca. partculariy Advanced
Nationalists. to aid by every m-an« within their

cution. sn&lt;! we hereby furl bar declare that they
deserve well of their country.
“ By order of tbe Executive of tbe Irish Re­
publican Brotherhood. ”

Text of the Tariff-Commltelon BUL
The Tariff-Commission blU recently passed
by Congress provides aa follows:
Be it snorted. sta, Thai a Comm Inal on ia
hereby created to be cal lei tho "Tariff Commiasion," to consist of nine member*.
Sac. - That the I’resldont of the United

Intenaioi to ehame my mmer
of toilless,

CErmanremedY
RHEUMATISM,

Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago,
Backache, Sorenest of the Chest,
Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Snell,ings and Sprains, Burns and
Scalds, General Bodily
Pains,
Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted
Feet and Ears, and all other
Pains and Aches.

s day when engaged in active duty, and actual
traveling end other necessary cxpcuMW. Tho
Commission aball have power to employ a

Treasury out of any moneys tn tho Treasury
not otherwise appropriated.
SBC. 1 That it shall bo the digy of said Oommlosicn to take into consideration and to thor­
oughly investigate all tho various questions re­
lating to the agricultural, commercial, mercan­
tile, manufacturing, mining aud Industrial iotertwts of the United States so far aa the same
may be necessary to tbo establishment of a Ju­
dicious tariff, or a revision of the existing
tariff upon a scale of justice to all interests;
and. for the purpose of fully examining tho
matters which may come before ft, said Commtrelon. In tbo prosecution of Its Inquiries, ta
empowered to visit such different portions and
sections of the country aa It may deem ad via*-

I Shall Sell
My Entire Stock of

MILLINERY!
; AND FANCY GOODS

sent of tbe Senate, appoint nine Oommtasloners from civil Ufa. one of whom, tbe fl rat
niiru'd, shall bo President of tbo Com mi**Ion.
•OLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS ARD DEALERS
DI KEDIOIME.

A. VOGELER &lt;fc CO.,

ATiICbST,

DAKOTA

Or Under,
------ COMMENCING ON------

------ MAY BE-

THE PLACE TO BUY A FARM!

Saturday, May 20.

------ BOT-------

TVo-w^Im the Time

8BC. 4. That the Commission «hall make Con.
grros a final report of tbe results of ’ta tavestl
gallon* and the to«tln»ony taken In the course

THE PLACE TO BUY

For those injneed to ehare

and distributed to members of Congress by the
Pubtie Printer, and shall also cause to be
printed for tbe use of Oongree* £.000 copies at

GROCERIES,
f
PROVISIONS,
CROCKERY, a*:-)

A Plucky Giri.

from New Orleans, white lytnr at Gretna, a
few miles above the latter city, loading a largo

the profits and luiy at

wholesale prices.
Naahville, May 1®, 1883.

,

M. JEFFREY.

.... GLASSWARE,
HANGING LAMPS,

B. DICKINSON A CO.

YllOMkLr*v\
And everything kept in a first &lt;

CUSTOM

thia kind, la at

Fouring Mill

C. W, SMITH’S

READY FOR BUSINESS

Tho accident

Emerienced, Beliaiile, ant Eesponsitile.

CUSTOM

GRINDING I

A. H. WINN, Dentist.
Sattaf*

BEST SET SUM TEETH $10.00 FLOUR. NEAL AID MILL FFEI
—In Pennsylvania, &gt; man jumped off
at * station while a train wa* moving,
because it did not stop when it should,
and had his foot crushed. Tbe Supreme
Court of the State has decided that be

feat i|i* right against the railroad.
—Mrs. Sarah Poet’s will, recorded at
Fair York recently. bequeathed ber goM
neotactea to the htfteet bidder for
lUm in the famlfo f
—Florida ahippara received six doU
v* » orate
ttair frat eoouoh^B.

•ccapytaC

Detroit seem a a queer place ot rendexvoua for the approaching annual reun­
ion of the Army ot the Potomac.
Yet
there were Michigan and Wisconsin
nnd Minnesota regiment* in the Army
of the Potomac.aa there were Massach­
usetts and Connecticut regiments in
the Army of the Cumberland it ia for­
tunate that the great armiea of the
East aud West were not wholly aeo
tional in composition, since their mem­
ories are now cherished by survivors
and the children of survivor* over the
whole continent from ocean to ocean

dugb.

persecuted people of the onmforia of religion
by turning our altars Into political platform*.

of Catarrh”.
•‘BOUGH ON RATB.”

F. T. Bi

Wooden shoes are worn in the Weut,
and enough of them are sold to keep a
large manufactory going at Green 3«y.
They are ent out wf green baaawood,
•inokrd and dried like liams,ar.d sold
nt thirty-five centaa pair.

that calcites tbe worm.”—Banner.

John Delong ia ot the sick list
Mr. Delong lately purchased a new organ.
Tbe Bugle has biown its last for a number tn

br»udy in Germany in tbe J sat fright
yws at 1.800,000,000, of which 1.000,000
went fnrberr. '

Teeth Extracted Wifheut Pal*.

Office Open Day &amp; Evening.
A. EL WINN.

Our

Grahaln Etour

�B.
Mexico for ynitre

AGEST FOR

ran!, n whe and

D. S. MORGAN &amp; Co’s

MEZAHUALCOYOTL.

Boys are scarce now-a-days. In ths
oXvsjof Methuselah, male human beings
name, ia ith were still boys when nearly a century
old; twenty-five years ago boys were
still such until wcl’l out of tneir 'teerm;” *
now the interval between infancy aud
proved himself, as he jjrvw Older., to Ims1 thtf age at which the boy becomes a
one of the bravest Princes and brightest . young man is so brief that ’boyhood is
boys nf whom history tells—as an Amer­ almost a thing of ths past The happy
ican Prince should be.
period of care-free, joyous innosence
Great Kings, although they have
which formerly intervened between
beautiful palace* to live in, and every­ childhood and early manhood. is now
thing to make them happy, endure almost unobservable. Boys''grow old
heavy cares of government wWch at too fast They learn to imitate the
timi^ make them gloomy aud sail; yet
vices and the manners of their seniors
one would imagino that a boy Prince,
before they reach their teens, and are
too young to assume responsibilities, impatient to be counted a-i men, no
would have no other caru than to do matter how great may be thdir defiright, and be happy. But poor Nexa- ciencics, their unfitness’for the Impor­
hualcoyotl bad more cares than you im­ tant duties and responsibilities. of life.
agine. ' .
The oonsequence of • this inordinate
A few years before this story opens haste and impatience to b$ old is pre­
his father* had been killed in a terrible
mature decay. Unfortunately the gen­
battle, and, soon after, a wicked unde eral tendency of the young members of
named Moxtla was crowned King, al­ the rising generation is to copy tlie
though he knew that Nezahualcoyotl vices of their elders, rather than tlie
was rightfully the ruler. And when’the.
virtues oi true manliness. A string
boy's friends advised him to hide from evidence of this fact, if there were no
Moxtla. 'who, of course, ♦jealously other, is the unnaturally old-looting
watched his movements, the lad sold: faces which so many of our boys pre­
“ Why, surely, he will not be unkind to sent. At the present time the average
me!"
boy of twelve knows more of vice and
80, ooLihe coronation/ day, when
everybody whs gayly dressed, an&lt;J a sin than the youth of twenty of the past
generation.
great banquet \rsjTlo~bo held at the
It is not so much for these human
palace. Nezahualcoyotl dressed himself
in his ifcst and went bravely to the now mushrooms, which may not Inaptly be
King's dwelling to offer his contratula- compared to toadstools which grow up
in a single night and almost as speedily
tions.
decay, pint we write, but for the oldBut when the crowd stepped aside to
let him approach his uncle, and when fashioned boys, a few such there may
he knelt down and said: “Unde, I be, those who have not yet learned to
hope you will be happy,” and handed love sin, those whose minds are still
him a bouquet of ifowers, his undo pure and uncontaminated. Those who
turned ruddy away and began talking nave already begun a course of vice and
wickedness we have- little hope of re­
with his officers. By this Nezahualcoyotl knew that his uncle was unfriendly forming; but we are -anxious to offer a
to him, and he hurried, as friends ad­ few words of counsel and warning
may possibly help to save, as
vised him. to a palace in a distant part | which
brands plucked from’ a blazing lire,
of tlie country.
those
whose
moral sense is yet alive,
Oue bright morning, soon after, the i
,e who have quick
nnd
tender conPrince was playing ball in the palace
who aspire to be truly noble
(j !j sciences,
court-yard, and as he was laughing and
.
i
~xaL
tossing tho plaything against the wall. I aIlw-P’J’
aa attendant came running up, and I —■■
"aat
1111 are boys for? This question was
| answered with exact truthfulness by a
said:
“ Oh, sir, there are some rirmed men |• little boy. who. when contemptuously
, accosted by a man with the "remark:
coming from the King!" Ami after
What are you good for?” replied:
pausing to catch his breath, he said: | “
“Men arc made of such us we." Boys
“Oh. hide, or they will kill you!—
| arc the beginnings of men. They sus­
quick!”
men ‘that
the
The Prince turned very pale at this, | tain the same relation to —
““XT"'
but, quieting hi, frim.d. an'l aiu-ndanw. '
10 iuH-Wowo
They
he showed item how foolish it would .
llkB lh» •m’11 green »|e
bo to show his fright al this time, aud Pl«» which first uppesr when tho bl,.,,
urged them to suud be him.
&lt;lr"P ,ru.’“ the branches, compared
In s few minutes up cmno the armed w,,h th« *!»• "«»“• fruit which in
men. with tbe feutiers on their head, autumn bcn
J» the
lh'. henrT.|aden
bends
hcavv-lnden boughs
, nodding lu tho wind, and tbev were all i almost
almM- to
to, breaking.
breaking. Often,
Often, like
hits the
the
ready £ kill the Prince, although hc .'oung apples. Imy. are green; but this
I
is
only
natural,
'and
shouldbebe
epnsidhad done no harm.
■
'• onb’ natural, arm should
epnsrdBut he stepped forwanl to greet them. 'I cred
l'™'i no disgrace
tlissraoj to the boys.
boys, If
if they
the,
will -ripen
and weleomeu them to bis palace, and grow up
"" naturally they -»
------ with
invited them to dine with him. Being age. like tho fruit, developing at each
»
treated so .courteously, they walked in, successive stage of life additional attrac­
tions and excellent qualities.
and'wore soon seated at the table.
A Nation’s most valuable property Is
Now. among the Mexicans (or Az­
tecs) of those days, it was a mark of re­ its bov«. A . Nation which has poor,
spect to burn incense When gi eat men weekly, viejons boys will have still
aud untrust­
'were visiting at a house; so. before weaker, more vicious
long, tbe in cerise began to send' up its worthy mon. A country with noble,
wor- ! v*rluous’ rigorous boys is equflllv sure
curling wreaths of smoke in the ,doorivhile
°t
faring
noble,
pious,
brave
and ener.
way leading to the next room, v” ’
eo his
mcn- Whatever debases, eontamNexahualcoyotl ■ politely entertaineL
uu&gt; 1&gt;
mates
or
in
any
way
injures
the
boys of
•
cruel auckstM.
as nr yaiKvu picawuitiy »...1
Asm Jalkod pleasantly with them,1I » “"“try, M1&gt;. and undennines the very
and thev were enjoying the meal, ho : I',andation of tho Nation s strength and
Excuse me a '
b*ve the boys from vice and
quietly rose, and saying:
moment," passed into ' ’ the next room. crime, give them good trailing, phys­
■•The doors were Wide open, so that his ically, mentally and jnorolly, ami the
enemies did not. suspect anything at his prosperity of the Nation is assured.
When a skillful artist perfects a work
departure.
.
But. as the servants fed the fire of the of art, a painting, a drawing, a statue or
incense, the clouds of smoke became some other wjirk requiring great talent
denser nnd denser, and completely hid and exceeding all his other efforts, it is
Nezahualooyotl from
the
fensters. called his masterpiece. So man is tho
Glancing back through the wavering noblest work of God. the masterpiece of
elouds of incense nt his enemies, he the Almighty. Numerous anecdotes are
saw them dreamily watching the curl­ told of the sagacity of dogs, horses, ele­
ing smoke, and evidently not thinking phants and other animals, of their in­
of
his movements. So he quietly telligence and ingenious devices in over­
opened a doer, and there close by it lay coming obstacles, avoiding difficulties,
-a lung pipe, through which water for­ etc. Our admiration ana wonder are
merly had been brought to tbe palace, । often excited by the scarcely less than
but which had been lor some time un­ human wisdom shown by these lowly
brothers of the human race. We call
used. Softly closing the door behind
him. he quickly dropped into the long them noble animals, but they are only
dark pipe, and ’lay there safely hidden noble brutes, at best. Compared with
until night-fall, when he came out. and man. oven in his most humble fonn. as
with some faithful followers hurried far seen ia the wild savage that hunts and
devours his prey like a wild beast, a lion
away from his persecutors.
or a tiger, they are immeasurably in­
Now, just think how angry Moxtla
ferior. And in his highest development,
must have been when he heard of this
niaQ, civilized, cultivated. Christianizvd.
—and bow severely he would punish the
generous,
pious, certainly
•
n?en he had sent to kill the Prince Ne- learned,
stands at tho head of all created things.
sabualcoyotl. He immediately pro­
Boys, do you love what is noble, what
claimed that an enormous prize would
is pure, what is grand, what is good P
be given to any one who would bring
You may each, if you will, become such
the Prince to him. dead or alive.
yourselves. Let us consider for a mo­
Therefore poor Nexahualcoyotl was
compelled, with a small band of friends, ment how a noble character is ruined.
A noble character is formed by the
to wander about in the night over high
development of the good qualities of an
mountains, and across lonely plains;,
aqd seldom in day-time could he safely ■’ individual. A ^ad character is formed
by the developflbnt of bad traits or evil
venture out, for. as he know, many per­
propensities. In other words, sin is the
sons in all parts of the country were
cause of the demoralization of character,
vigilantly watching to capture him.
. Poor »oy! He continually* urged his the debasing of the mind, the loss of no­
’ faithful followers to leave him. lest they bility of which we see so much around
usTn the world. Sin is the transgression
should endanger their own lives. But
they refused, for they loved hita; and.
sins : those which ore transgressions of
indeed, even the cruel soldiers of bis
the moral law, And those which are
uncle thought of the little Prince with
transgressions of the physical law. Bothtenderness.
.
*
classes of sins are followed by penalties.
.And* this was a fortunate thing for
him. For, on^ day, aa be lay concealed If a person violates the laws of health
he is just as certain to suffer as though
in some busheg, he heard the tramp of
he tells a falsehood, steals, murders, or
many feet, and saw the soldiers in the
commits any other crime.
Perfect
distance.
obedience to all of nature's laws, in­
Nearer and nearer they came, until
cluding. of course, all moral laws, is
.
about sunset they pitched their tents
necessary to perfect health and perfect
.
close to the hidden Prince, and ended
nobleness of character.
the day by a lively dance. The keen
Bv obeying all tlie laws which relate
glance of oue of the sol diets spied the
poor Prince trying to hide among the to the healthy action of the body and the
bushes near by. Quick as a flash the mind, a noble character and a healthy
kind-hearted fellow picked him up and body may be formed. Any deviation
put him into the great drum, and while from right will be sure to be followed \n
the other soldiers in a ring around tlie suffering. A boy who carefully heeds
eamp-fire were noisily singing, they tbe advice of good and wise parents,
Httle knew how snugly the long-deaireil who avoids bad company, who never in­
wire, for which they had traveled so dulges in bad habits of-anj sort, who
cultivates purity, honesty and manli*
ness, is certain, to grow up into a no­
ble, lovely youth, and to become an
intelligent, respected and virtuous mau.
—Good Health. .
—When wp consider that seven httodred and fifty umbrellas were left ia tef
Railway aw

room should receive the first a'.tcntitm
at&gt;d should always have about it an air
of cleahUnaM; nay, evary thing in the
room should have a dataty look.
Il really does not need a very large
outlay of money to accomplish thia— w
fstH we can become our own furniture
manufacturers! I have in my mind's
eve now a bedroom I saw some time
since, in the country, the furnishings of
which were a mere nothing, in the
taoney point of view. I never saw any­
thing sweeter or more inviting. First
of all,.the paint was white,, the walls
were a delicate blue.
Painted walls
ore much the best, aa they can bo washed
with soap and water, and made to look
as frosh, every fall apd spring, aa if the
painter had jurt paid them a visit. The
painting may cost a little more than
calcimining in the first outlay,tut those
who Uy it will find it cheaper in the
end.
.
Well, to return to my pattern bed­
room. The carpet was of what is known
aa rag, but so ingeniously was it woven
that not one person in a hundred could
have told it.
The colors were of blue
and one of the many beautiful shades
known as wood.
Tho carpet did not
oover more than the center of the floor,
leaving about three feet all 'round the
room with only stained boards. This I
consider a good idea, as dust always
collects under furniture—■draughts of
air sweep it into oorners. ■ Tho boards
being without covering allow of its be­
ing easily taken up with a duster. Then,
too, tho carpet being simply laid down,
there was no difficulty in the way of its
being often shaken—ho tacks to be taken
out, and no heavy furniture to move.
The bedstead, which wm of painted
wood, blue, and a shade something the
same as the carpet. There was also a
sweet little sewing table and a fancy
stool, which I learned answered the
purpose of both stool and wood or coal
box. This was simply a small box with
a bingod top.
The top was wadded to
form a cushion, and tho whole was cov­
ered with cretonne, tho shades of which
were in keeping with tho uniform colors
of the room.
Tho sewing table was
made of two circular pieces of planed
pine, and a round pole of the same
wood.
Tbe circular pieces were nailed
or screwed to each end of the pole, one
end answering for the top, tho other for
tho bottom.
This had on it four cast­
ers, in order to move tho table with care.
It was then covered all over with some
light-blue cambric, and tied, in the cen­
ter of tbe pole, so as to form a table the
shape of an hour-glass.
After this a
cover ot plain or dotted Swiss was put
on, and it was finished with a plaiting
of parrow blue ribbon around tho top,
and with small bows.
There was a chair, looking the very
embodiment of comfort, which, I was
told, was made of a flour barrel. Take
a nice sound barrel and saw off about
four inches of one end of it clear
through, then attach casters to tholower, or head end. About midway, or at
the height you wish your-sent, begin
nnd saw through five or six staves, or as
many as is necessary to compass tho
width desired, thus forming a cresceht
of the upoer part, and six or eight inches
higher up saw through about four
staves on each side and you have the
arms, and the remaining long staves af­
ford the back. Now, to make the seat,
begin at a point a little below tho first
sawed phtce and perforate tho barrel
around its whole circumference with
gimlet or small auger holes, then with
stout twine or cord, interlaced like a
bed-cord. Gut more closely, weave your
seat from sido lit ride, in akernote holes,
until the whole is compact and strong.
In trimming use heavy, unbleached do­
mestic or ordinary ticking to oover the
whole, and over this a covering of cre­
tonne, to harmonize with tho carpet. A
cushion «f some soft stuff may be used,'
and the space left for arms and tho
back should be padded, both being en­
veloped with the same covering’as tho
other parts.
Tho dressing table, which was a little
jewel, wu made of a dry goods box set
on end, being* about three and a half
feet high. This was covered neatly
with cambric, the same shade as that on
the sewing table. Over this was put a
dotted Swiss cover,and around the upper
edges was a plaiting or nuilting ot nar­
row blue ribbon. The mirror was sus­
pended from a nail in the wall nt a
proper height above tbe top of tho table.
To the same nail was fastened three
yards of tho same Swiss with which tho
table was covered,
k was finished at
the ends with some cheap, pretty lace,
about an eighth of an inch wide, and was
caught in the center with a piece of blue
ribbdn of the width known as No. 12.
The same ribbon, tied in a full bow,
held it fast to tho naiL The ends de­
pended from each side of the nail down
to tju&gt; outer corners of the table, to
which thev were attached with ribbon
bows, and were stretched back to the
junction of the wall and table, thus
forming a background and half caaopy.
Upon the table was placed a pretty
toilet set in light blue glass, a set of
toilet mats worked with oue of the wood
shades upon pale blue Java canvas, and
that all-important article, a pin-cushion,
which had a cover, to matdb tbe mats.
The windows were ornamented with
simple Swiss curtains, caught back with
blue bows.
Now, just such a pretty
bedroom can one and all our readers
have with little expense and some taste.

Strawberries ia Wiater.
Ever sinoe^ho middle of January the
shop windows of dealers in tropica! aud
hot-honsef ruita have bloomed with straw­
berries of fine size and appearance. A
reporter of tho Post who had seme curi­
osity m to who buys these winter straw­
berries, what quantities of them are sold,
and at what prices, ventured to ask
__________ ”^ns of one of the most prom­
in the business, and elicited
__ _ —-----------iafocMtion.,
Hot-house strawberries have been sold
in this city for many yean, bat the bus­
iness never attained any importance,
owl ng to the uncertainty cf the crop and

rgmttnl Hl health atMlchruoweek being disposed of. Eariy in Jan­
• tialmuuary, digestive, «nll
uary begins the Florida trade, which KTBioallr
It is ml»d, yet .-sore in Ito
■prang up In 1877 and has been gradu­
ally increasing.
Last year one’firm,
which doe, most of the wholesale busi­ life. It* actlou is so very mild that there Is no
ness of this kind, brought 40,000 quarts room left for reaction and relapse, neither will
its discrftithmancr bring on a craving for in­
of strawberries to this dty. The berries use or renewal of past disorder*.
'
are grown in the open air all along the
The south Is rapidly wheeling Into ItM
St. John's River, ana are sent when
nearly ripe to Jacksonville, where they j tn favor of protecting American Industry.
tro packed in huge refrigerators on
“BUCHUPAIBA?7wheels with alternate compartments for
। New, quick, complet. cure 4 days, urhuuy
ice and strawberries. The strawberries affectiona, amaA!ng,fraqu&lt; Dt or difficult urinaare in transit four days, and the ice in
the refrigerators has to be renebred
three times ddtbig tbe journey. A spa­ Mlm.
Tlie Qianadiau fostofflee authorities have is­
cial messenger travels with each car­
load of fruit In order to insure great sued a new jwwtal card which confonns in size
care in the handling and the replenish­ and style to those used tn this eountiy.
ing of ice, and the fruit is in very fair ■
They otdy can appreciate health who have
condition when if arrives here. The •suffered from long continued Hlneas. Brown's
first berries which arrived in’January iron Bitters gives health and strength, aud
'
were sold wholesale at fff a quart. The ,tbia baa made very many happy.
price begins declining as they arrive In
August McDonald, *bose rap was shot off
greater quantities, until by the last of his bead at tbe battle of Waterloo, (Bed In
February it is twenty-five cents to SL a.
Montreal tbe other day, at tbe age of 100
quart at wholesale and about $1.25 at
retail. Two invoices of Florida strawberries arrive every week. Last Satur­
Feeble women should write to K. Penadly,
day 2,500 quarts arrived in excellent M. !&gt;., Kalanutzoo, Mich., Treatise on Diseases
condition and found a ready sale at an of-Women nnd Testimonials concerning Zoarbora.
average price of $1 a quart, wholesale.

By the beginning of April the price falls
to thirty or forty cents a quart, at which
price it is mo longer a profitable busi­
ness.—A’. F. Evening Pott.

' If you go to Canad picnicking take your
bread with you. The Montreal bakers bare
increase! their price two cents on tbe loaf.

IF NEARLY D^AD
after taking some highly puffed up stuff, with
long teatinioniala, turn to Hop BIUera.and have
222^
*n-r K*dn«7 w Urinary Trouble,
Bright a Disease, Diabete* or Idver Complaint.
Tbrae diseases cannot realsl tbe curative power
of Hop Bitten; besides it la Die beat family
mcdlccne on eprtli.

Now Wool Goods.
The fancy in the newest wool goods is
to have-them plumctis, that is, to appear
to be hand-embroidered, though tbe
polka dots, moons, stars, blocks and
parulel logrums strewn upon them with­
out stint are brocaded by machine, and
the selvedges for trimming is all done
by machineiy. These figures are done
on nuns’ veiling and in contrasting col­
ors, such m red on blue, sky blue on
dark blue, salmon on bronze, white on
blue, salmon on navy blue and white on
white. There are also Cheviots plunietu,the grounds being of grave colors with
gay figures. The varieties of nuns’
veiling are great; thus there are brocad­
ed nuns’ cloth of new colors; embroid­
ered nuns’ veiling in lichen, beige, elec­
tric blue and brown shades, with open­
work on both edges of different widths
for trimming: nuns’ veiling with lace­
like designs all over it, and another very
elegant kind with velvet 'tiolka dots
strewn upon it; a new imitation of Vonitian lace forms the pretty designs of
embroidery on tbe selvedges of black
and colored veiling, while brocade*!
satin figures are entirely confined to
black veiling; great raised roses with
plush-like pile are seen on other varie­
ties, and old-fMhioned Breton laces are
copied in white embroidery on this
favorite wool goods. The Cheviots of
plaip grounds, or with dashes or check*,
are mixed colors, illuminations, and
mustard yellows strewn with Cheyenne
Sr red. Twills of plain colors are
_ y import*.d, and many of these
have embroidered selvedges. The now
Melbourne cloths are plain surfaces like
smooth bunting, and there are many
buntings, albatros fabrics and Virginie
cloths that are offered under the popular
name of nuns’ veiling—a name .which
really belongs to a transparent fine wool
fabric known by its inch-wide selvedges.
Satin soldi is a wool goods with brilliant
satin-like luster.
New de beges are
shown in the illuminated mixtures that
are now liked in Cheviots, and in plain
green, metalcolors also, such as lichen ’g
.rater's _____
Bazar.
lie blues, brown, etc.—Harper'.
_

Harvesting
Machinery!
SPECALTIES
REAPER N0..2,
and

Perfrctiun of Operation io tie FieM'
lUiita of Draft!
MaplaDoa to Every Variety of Wort,
Facility of lanaeement.
Simplicity aai Domlity,
Honesi Workmanship.

Read the Following Testimonial:

Jxcksox; Mich., Sep. 16lh, 1881.
Mesar*. D, 8. Morrau &amp; Co.,
Brockpan, N.Y.:
Cincinnati editors adopted the “cste*‘xned
Gext*—Your agents at Rome«&gt;. Syke* A Tay­
contemporary" style for a time In tbe carb' lor, aoM, theT&gt;ast leiiaou. to my neighlK&gt;r Mr.
spring, but with Ute Approach of hot weatbiL TbunUin. a Triumph Reaper No 2. My oat
wan (n tbe main very heavy, but tn parts
they got down U&gt; business again and call each •qyp
very uneaven: some long jtnd heavy, some very
other liars and borootliieves as usual.
ihort. My own reaper u of quite a celebrated
make and in good condition, but neighbor
•
BEAUTIFUL REGAINED.
Tburaton waa nnxlou* 1 should try his machine.
Tbe beauty andeolor oftbe hairmav beaafely I consented. He sent with It a little boy
regained by using Harker's Hair Balsam, which scarcely largcuougtr to drive tbe team
It is
is much admiral for its |&gt;crfun&gt;e, cleanliness butjuatice to uy that I was very skeptical, and
arid dandruff eradicating propertfe.’.
had gave doubt* about the ability of the Tri­
umph or anv other machine’s being able to do
twnret work in my field, but mustconfesS that
1 was tlHed with admiration and wander «t the
placed side by shir in a direct line they would resulta. Machiue and boy were entire master*
extend a distance of 45 miles.
of the situatloo. Such quality of work with tbe
same ease, I never raw equalled before. In­
Tbe symptoms of Itching PU&amp; are moisture stantly while In motion, the entire working ap­
like prespUation, Intense Itcfilng, most at night paratus could be raised or lowered, to gather
seems as If pin worms were crawling in or any condition crop or meet any requirement*
at",ut the rectum. The more you scratch -ths of surface. 1 Consider thia feature indispens­
worse they itch, very distressing. The private able lira Reaper. The bent rak« arm* are anoth­
purts are often affected. Dr. Swayne's Oint­ er lm;x&gt;rtant feature. With trial I had, I think
ment to the most effective remedy extant for vour machine saves ‘X&gt; j&gt;er cent of the labor in
thto tormenting complaint. Gives rest at night binding bv tlie straight square and co ipoct
without that daffrc to scratch. Also has on form of tlie guv les. The Thiumph ia of very
equal in quickly eradicating Tetter, Itch, Salt light draft. u*der perfect control of tbe driver,
Rticume, Erysipelas, Barbers' Itch, Pimples, appears to be ven simple in its construction,
all Scaly, Crusty. Itchy Skin Eruptions. Here and hence, very durable. In my judgment it Is
is the proof, “Certainly tlie bc«t remedy ever very far Inadvance of other machine* ot its
used lu my aractice,” Dr. Cotton, Wotxbtock. class, and I believe the interests of the farmers
\ t.. “troubled with Itching Piles for over twen­ of Michigan will lx- advanced by giving the
ty years. It cured me complete! v,” L. S. Mr.wr Triumph a trial l&gt;efore purcBasing.
Yours rcspectifnllv.
Enrteld. Me. Sent for 50 cts fin 3 eu stamps)
GEO. W. PHILLIPS,
3 boxes, ei.25. By Dr. Styayne A Son. ITitlad a
ITcrident Michigan State Ag'l 8&lt;xdety.
ra. Sold by ail druggists.

-Man la very much like an

r?" Don’t buy a machine until you

examine 'the “TRIUMPH” north
E. Cook's Wagon Shop Nashville, Mich.

breonw banlcnetl.

J. M. SHOUP.
In some manner. When the slelcneM is serious QLEMENT SMITH,
the chtMn-ii'n lausliter mu»t be huidwd. f&lt;xXr
Attorney at
steps must be soitcticd, all goes auBy and I
wrung. Dr. David Kennedy's'‘Favorite Reni:
.
•

»cottael«.n duty, and for Ids
ran vouch. Ask your
w wri,e to Che Doctor, nt Readout,

To guard agnimit chills and colds, sinall aud depraved brother as though he were
with tho loss of time, expense and risk bls dearest friend.
of unsound wind which often follows,
MONEY FOR A RAINY DAY,
horse owners require to be on tho alert,
"For six years inr-dMgbu-r u a* tick from
especially at this season of tho year. kidney am! other dlrordorx We -had u»cd up
Horses alternately sharplv worked and our aavings on doctor*, whcnotir domhieadvirwhen hot allowed to staua in the open cd u» to try Parker's Ginger Tonic. Four bot­
air until nearly cool should have warm tle* effected a cure, and aa a dollar'* worth ha's
our family well over a rear, we have l»een
covering, waterproof on one ride, for Lent
able to lay by money again for a rainy &lt;ter.”—
their back and loins. Farm as well as A Poon Max's Wife.
town horses often catch cold while their
A Chicago reporter lias gut after three cftlthirsty drivers are leisurely refreshing
in the public house, and the mischief is xen» of that town who are “degraded and blist­
sometimes aggravated by the extra ered acaba on the wart-fK&gt;llatcd branches of
spurt which is afterward put on to life."
make up lost time. Many horses, es­
SHILOH' S CONSUMPTION CURE.
pecially if they have been allowed to lay
Till* i* tievond quratiou the most successful
out during the later autumn nights,have Coagh
Medicine we have ever sold, a few dosea
already grown a long, thick winter coat invariably curt* the worst rases «f Cough, croup
which’causes ready perspiration; it is and Bronchitis, while tt* wonderful succesa la
in
tbe
cure
uf consumption is wiihout a paral­
almost impossible to get them properly
dry; they stand chilled throughout the lel in tbe history of mcdfcnc. Since Its first
discovery it baa been sold on a guarntee, a test
greater part of the night, and hence which no other medicine can stand.
If you
ttirive indifferently, and are especially have a Cough we earnestly ask you to try It.
liable to colds. Whether of the light or Price llk-ts, 50cts, and 41.00 If your lung* are
heavier breeds, all
horses which, sore. Chest, or Back loune, and Shiloh's
Porous Plaster. Sold by F. T. BotM.
from habit or previous management,
ANSWER THIS QUESTION.
g^ow these long, heavy coats, should be
Why do so many people we sec around us,
singed or clipped entirely or partially. H-cin to prefer to suffer aud be made miserable
Trimming ori singeing the long hairs by ludigvstieu.constijwtion. dizziness, loss of
along the chest or nelly, and down the appetite, coming up of tbe Food, yellow skin,
legs to tlie knees and hocks, usually suf­ when for 75cts, we will sell them Shiloh's VltaUzer, gtiarauted to cure them. Sold by F. T.
fices for farm horses. Where hard or B-iIm:.
fast work is required, the Irish plan of
SHILOH’S CATTARRH REMEDY, A mar­
clipping the hair from the chest, belly, velous care for Catarrh, Diphtheria, Cankcr
arms and thighs proves a great comfort moutb, and Head Ache. With each bottle
here is aa ingenious nasal injectcr for the
to tho horse, and often saves half a more successful treatment of these complaints
bushel of corn a week. If they are to without extrs charge. Price 5Octs. Sold by
do their work cheerfully and wulLhorses F- T.Botsa.
changing their coats require for some
weeks a little extra corn or some other
J JENRY ROE. Pmwuxtm
good food. Homes recently brought in­
to full work require more consideration
,&lt;_OLD RELIABLE-----than they receive. It is apt to be for­
gotten that condition is acquired slowly,
as a result of good feeding and properly
regulated exercise or work.—Boston
Transcript.

MEAT MARKET

J AMES A. 8WEEZET,

Attorney &amp; Counsellor,

Fresh and

Meats.

Smoied Hams and Shouliers,

I’robntc .V oiler.
I. ho reby given that by an ord.r o&lt; lk« Probate
&lt; loon for tb« Conwy of Barry «oado on the X»t «l«y
of May. )83X«*z momhs from that date wen-al­
lowed for creditor* to prrozut I batt*Safas against
tbe eatato of
.
.
WILLIAM F. BI7.1CR,
’ late ot raid county, deceased, and the nnder&gt;igiwd

claim, before xa'd
at U&gt;r,laU- rv-ldmea
of
dr&lt;-«as-sl in Woodland In said County,
for examination and allowance, on or before lb«

latsd May lai. 1st!
UtEl'l l:l&lt;- W40NRR,
,
33 37 JACOB IUEIBKR.
I C
CHRIST1AX IMCBKKLuYJ

AdiiiiMixtrntor’N Nnle.
GEOROKGJL&gt;.l8,d«raMd.
_
Nntiea is hercb, vlren that J shall aell at ]a&gt;bllc
auctloo, to tho hittie*: bidder, on
L. D. 1MH.1

mean. Known
the Vlllacc of
[104] and tot
Dated, March Sth A. D. 1881.
(SASI)
ROBT.B. GREGG, Administrator.

day

Way «7th, last.

Datec, NaahriP*. AuriL 22. 18*0,
ROB1. B. ORJCUO. Ad

Probate Xotice.
8tat« er Micmoas, (
Covbty of Btawr.i •
_
Al a Marion «rf th. Prohalf Court for th.County
nl Barry, boiden at the Probate
!**
of Hastings I. Mid County on r~—»—•»- **•»■
day of April. In thefyrar one tbm
a*PmMrt,cCMMtain&gt;.
— __ —■■■•_ - ---- XLM1RA
gftamaiM aM«Hns the. petitUn. duly vt rifled,
of John Wta* snardlau sf arid minor praying that
bo may be licensed to -’ll certain real curtate of .aid
minor for lament therein, art forth.
Thereupon II te ordered, that

.Tlonday. the^TOtts day •( May,
in MldeeUte. are .rouirtd to appear al a sraalon

1* THEDt SEASON

■Lard, by the lb. or barrel,
ar Tbe Higheat Market Price
for IHdcK, Pelts, &amp;c.

llreOtoUhoktea at tbo Probate
SsaidOourt,
Office, la the city of RastUca, In said county and
•bow cense. If any there be, why the prayer of
the pKliWB-r should not he granted.
And it i* further ordered that .aid petitioner five
notice to tbe j« raon* IntereMed In aaid estate

Fresh Goods, Fxtil Woi«hta and

ia the country
1879 our crop a^
and last year it
to spank of

Law,

Until * •irtcialty. Office al
»t»r Juliua RB*acU** »t*ro.

.

English Notions About the Care of
One of tbe sa&lt;blcst sights In tar work! is to
Hones.
we ■ yonng nun trying to treat hHswcetbeart's

—A eheap curtain, and quite a pretty
one, is a width of cheese doth, trimmed
at tbe top and down one side with one
row, or three, two narrow and one wide,
as oert suits the taste of the maker, of
red oil calico.
Such a curtain is to be
furnished with large rings at the top to
be run over a rod, A broom handle
stained with burnt umber makes a vary
pretty rod. When the curtain is drawn
to one side and tied with a scarlet rib­
bon it makes a very pretty drapery.—
BbuteJeeeper.
: ■

CLiPPHR MSWEft

3UX

�Grain and Produce
fae became impressed with tho similarity
co, Hair. Fisc LumWr, UU
sad Shingtek,

that &gt;e had found gold QB hl-1 farm, and
AT THE LOWEST LIVING PRICEEr -'wbuu he awoke In the morning so pow­
erfully did his dream affect’him that he
could not rest until ho had sold out in
California and rtarted for home.’ On Ids
return home ho prospected his neigh­
borhood, and, jiure, enough, found gold
in sm»H quantics. He reported the die■SrewtM—
oovery te the Colonial Government, and
wm rewarded by being made Commis­
sioner of Crt&gt;wn Lands to explore for
gold.
He found-but little, however,
and the excitement incident to the first
discovery was fart dying out when one
day a shepherd, while tending hi*
master’s sheep, found a large mass of
gold weighing 100 pounds. The boy,
who had amused himself by’exploring
the country adjacent to hu master’s
land, had his attention called to some
bright specks on the face ot a rock. He
. broke off a portion, and found that the
glittering stuff was gold.
His first care
was to run home and tell hit master.
The master, Dr. W. J. Kcw, as may be
surmised, lost no time In repairing to
'the lucky spot, and there, sure enough,
he saw a sight that made his eyes fairly
start out of his head. In lees than an
hour the Doctor and his man had taken
out a hundredweight ot gold. The rock
seemed charged with untold wealth, and
tvaauuirTaxva, ms saa smo*ji at tho three blocks extracted by the Doctor
ifLAMOCUka. am-a&amp;soa i Umm Uek to were about a foot in diameter, and
if«L MA QaeBcc. Mae*T» FaDo *&gt;d BoSaJo,
weighed seventy-five pounds gross. Out
H leave Detroit July S, »O A ST.
'•$30.00 tot u« retina trip ol oTtrKOUDBiUei. of the largest block the Doctor took sixty
pounds of pure gold. The gold was in­
cased in the rock in thick veins, and
easily separated from tho quartz. Tho
r.
I three pieces weighed about 250 pounds,
an'-l pre rented a most beautiful appearsag&gt;r IhU
,B,&lt;O
1 anoeheaviest of tho three was
,n oil punting, In
X?j&gt;&lt;vof°ov«r, I honeycombed, and ono looked - like a
^uU. asdre—- i gponge.
When the lumps wore broken
W.lt UUAIHJCY,OfiMlMronSr«alAcS«**. | up Uio gold tumbled out in ehunks
I weighing from two to three pounds
। each.

AkmAL msmnsmitwoi

Sixth Sm Mn “{uso
EXCURSIONS

When the- news of this discovery
reached Victoria the excitement became
, intense, and tho whole population start­
ed for Bathurst to seek the precious
Monumerta, TrnnbriCEes. Mantles, 4c..
stuff.
Tho distance from Victoria to
!’• ithurst is some 400 miles, and hardly
i.iid the great crowd got fairly on th*e
yyiLLIAM JONES,
road when it was reported that gold had
been discovered near Melbourne, and
almost at their own door.
Many re­
turned, but the majority kept ■ on to
Bathurst. Oct. 10, 1851, Got. Latrobe
- sent official information to Earl Grey
that untold wealth in gold had been dis­
covered at Ballarat. The excited Gov­
ernor said: “I can not better give your
Lordship an idea of the value of this de­
posit than bv stating what I witnessed
during a visit to the mines.
Two Un
dishes filled with clay were washed, nnd
the earth in them yielded no less than
A cure guaranteed.
eight pounds weight in gold. I have
seen two, or st most three, cubic inches
of the same earth yield four ounces of
pure gold. One party Is known to have
raised in the early part of a day sixteen
iUw or over iurlulg-nce. vrhieh k’aci
pounds weight in gold, and to have se­
cured thirty-one pounds weight for his
full day’s work, valued at £1,300. Many
parties of four men have shared day
after day ten ounces per man, or about
£30 each. I can personally testify to
the fact of ten pounds weight—value
about £400 or £440—being the produce
of a single working during one of the
days of my viant, and 1 have no reason
to believe that this case was an isolated
one.”
When this report from so reliable a
source reached England and the Conti­
nent the excitement became intense,
and all the world wanted to go to Aus­
tralia to sock gold. The Towns of Mel­
bourne and Geelong were almost de­
serted, and everybody rushed to the
13 Rocornrn6nc;od.by physiciAn^* mines. . The Governor waited three
weeks, and knowing well the anxiety
magywi that would exist to near from the mines,
again wrote: “I will hero only say brief­
ly that tho gold raised on Mount Alex­
guarantee that It will cure any
case, sod we will forfeit the abovo kduuiit
ander alone is calculated by hundred­
UnUi is in • single Instance.
weights and arrives in the cities by Gov­
ItiA unlike «hy ••t*.. r Catarrh r-mcdy.M
ernment escort or private conveyance at
the rate of probably two tons per week.”
dirtceesinc disease, uk your Druggist Cor it, and
No pen can describe the excitement into
aocrrv so imitation ot n-snmvL If be
has not got it, send to us aud we will forward
which the population of all countries
tsunadlately. Price, 73 cswuj»er bottle.
was thrown by those announcettmnts.
F. 1 CHENEY A CO., Toleilo. Otto.
As is well known now, gold in Cali­
fornia was first discovered in a mill­
race. Capt. Sutter was one afternoon
silting in his room writing, when sud­
denly Mr. Marshall, his foreman, rushed
in with such excitement in his face that
his friend cast an anxious eye at his
Istj
io Emri
ihe yootliihl color to grey
rifle. Sutter thought him mad when he
cried out he had made a discovery
which would add mi’dions of wealth to
the world.
While widenin'' the millraoe Mr. Marshall hat! noticed some
glittering stuff in tho sand.
He picked
up what no thought was an opal, a clear
transparent stone, common enough in
California, but found it a nugget of
gold. -His first thought was that some
Indians had buried it there, but on ex­
amining further be found the whole
earth filled with flakes of gold. Grasp­
ing up a handful, he rushed into Capt.
Salter’s quarters and flung them on his
table, shouting “Gold!”
Sutter exam­
ined them and saw they were virgin
flakes of gold, and himself became ex­
cited.
Ho asked Marshall whore ho
had got them, and, on being told, tbo
UoodornrevM
two agreed to keep the discovery a se­
cret.
Proceeding to the spot, Capt.
Sutter with a smaU knife extracted from
a little hollow in a rock an ounce and a
half of gold. An artful Kentuckian, a
laborer, saw the anxious looks of the
two men, and, irtutating them, was
hr.EAT SAVING CUTINU 1-OLLA3 SIZE
soon picking up pieces of gold.
The
news spread, and aa the would-be mo­
nopolists returned to the mill they met
flUHHS Itrssitrsf!
several men holding out handfuls of
gold and shouting for joy.
Mr.
Marshall sought to deceive them and
made light of their pretended gold, but
an Indian who had long woriced in a
mine no sooner raw the yellow etuff
than he called out, “Oro! Oro!”
i “Gold!” “Gold!” and the cry was
taken up by the white mon far and wide.
A large body of immigrant*, mostly
i Mormons, had just entered CalifnrnE*,
I and they immediately encamped near
,; Sutter’s min. Within a few days twelve
। I hmidrtd men were at work with buc.kete.

The serranta at a Han' Francisco hotel |
struck for higher wages, and refused to
work for leas than tlb per day. One
ship from the Sandwich Islands was left
with no one but the Captain on board;
another shin was tied up, and Captain
and crew all started for the gold-nelds.
The Star and Californian suspended
publication, and tbe editors and staff,
even to the errand-boy, started out to
dig gold.
Ono of the workers was At­
torney-General to the King of tho Sand­
wich Islands.
The roads wore filled
with anxious crowds, all beading for the
gold-flelds, and whole towns were, loft
with scarcely any other inhabitants but
the women and children.
Hundreds
died on the way of thirst, hunger and
exhaustion while trying to force their
way over the Kocky Mountains from the
States tn.California. “ On to the Gold­
en Coast” was the cry throughout the1
Nation, and men became Insane with
desire and excitement.—Montana "
Ciicayo Tnbune.

Or.

Dynamite.

The Champion Machines.
A COMPLETE LINE OF

Buggies, Carriages, Wheel Harrows and
Cultivators, Mounted Seeders,
e
and 4 kinds of Plows.

REED’S GENUINE SPRING TOOTH HARROW
ROAD SCRAPERS, SQUARE DRAGS, GRIND STONES,

NERVOUS DEBILITY

sioo

sewing maohines.
PLOW POINTS for tho Oliver Chilled Wiard, Three Riv­
ers, Bryan, Calo, Curtis, Dodge, Robinson
And many other Plows.
In fact, we keep a full and complete stock of first class Hardware and Fanning Tools. Call
and see them before buying.

K

OF OUK OWN MANUFACTURE

FOR SALE!
WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH

THREE INCH TIRE
.AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING

We believe the Three inch Tire is destined to come

Sold by C. L. Glasgow, Nashville, Mich.

BENTLEY BROS. &amp;, WILKINS.

.

Hastings, Mich., Sept 15th, 18b 1.

(Di
WHO IS UNACQUAINTED WITH THE GEOGRAPHY OF THIS COUNTRY,

Q
0

■. v
i. s

£

*

Reduced to $3 pr Annum.
THE

N

COLUMBUS BUGGY
COMPANY,
Soli* the BEST Bl'GGY on the GLOBE
for tM MONET.
Send for CATALOGUE and TESTIWCtlALS of HUNDREDS of LIVERY­
MEN who have used them.

c
$

lie utn. Iwf re

LL-’''O.'

A

CHICAGO, ROCK ISLAND &amp; PACIFIC RT

cc

leg. &lt;(&gt; vzamin* tbe Name

8 S.Q U

COLUMNS BUGGY COMPANY
GGIUMBUS, 0.

Is Tho Croat Connecting Link between the East and tbe West I
Tt« insin Mna runa from Ctitraco to Connell
eatinr purpoae* only. iftirnU st
HJuBa. luudns through Joliet, Ottawa. U SallI oar I'aUce Can ia a SMOKINGBuzjr—
Kureit.'
III nimr, mi
w,
MngnlOcent Iron Hrldrcs span theBlasla«M&gt;l
tic. and Avoca: with branchn from Bureau
Cutty
» lbtw‘. -I'cirtlon «o Peoria; Wl!t.m Jnnrtian to Musea- and Mtsaoun rivers at all points ey«M&gt;4 by Hl,u
Uuc. WasblhRlon. Fairrtehl F.blon. Belknap. line, and tn«n«rer» are avoided at Cootieil Bluff».
Centreville, prmeeton.Treaton. GallAtin. Came­
ron. Leavenworth. Atcblann, snd Kansas'city;
r.’*»hir&gt;rton t..nitrourn-y.&lt;»skaU.faA. and Knos- thta grint Thruuch Lin.
' BEATTY’b ’l,^G VPlv
vlllet Keokufc to Farmington. Bun*pane. BeaAt Cute ago. with alldivei
to.ianon. Independent. ETdeti. ottniuws, Eddy­
ville. • n*»J&lt;w&gt;«a. FellA. Monroe, and lies Moines; Eaat and South.
At Ejiulkwood. with tbe I
ML Ziot: to Ke.naiM;ua; Newton U. Monroe; l»es
Moines to IndianeUand Wlnt-rsct: Atlantic to
Uriswid'l mid AudqUon; knd A voc* to Hartau
and Carson This is .positively IM only Rail­
i La Salla with HI- CntB, B
road. which owns, and operaree a through Une

i.liwiiah

t*»

Ft Sab. vs realm RVmWHEBE.

I«:

H
B
I—J
III
J
'
1 I
nil
XI
“f
. I

Bland Short l ine." and Back UIM
lire and Katnaa City, vti
Huck l»Und Short Llnr.'
IV -Oraat Ibw-k la:.

K" FRANK
JAMES

What will i&gt;Is«m you inoc will b
af enlMYkag ,onr meals, wh.lir pas
iM^uhlul ijairi-si.f lllinoi«and 1&lt;
&gt;Hir mataifierut Pwinr cars'hal;
Ttirouga Express TTaim. You i
meal »&lt;&lt;&lt;n&lt;1aaia*.Tvail many dr
ior»e*sin&gt;-avscenta
Appreciating the fart that a feu
t-ouU nn ter awpAMle spartmenn

e.,-neine WG..r. Cr.tMa
wISTKAL CtaraUn Ina.

I IKES,

CQiR' ’V
'
IrrohTofToutk’ I

n

ft rxiuEH r

if utted for • tjiBran’H

IRELAND OF i »JAY.

TO LADIES ONLY I

PIMPLES

ped-cay ai&gt;--. -li’be electa
a, pill lot: the -ah.—f m.

ii&amp;ro
tr--'

JE. 8T. JOHN,

ti.

at

H
-.uMo.BFN. VANDELF*

C0N8UMPTr.cS,

” O’ R E

V

E*tat»ll»lied in Ife®. the nation was a pioneer
l;i thi« cuuntrv, as u weekly journal of literary
at.*l political trilicisui of the highest onler, con­
ducted trer from the control of parly or Inte­
rest of any sort. Despite a precarious support
during the first few years it has held to its origt
nal alm. and lias long been a recognized autlioritv at home add abroad. Its cdiUintl munage•nvnt has been unchanged from the first, and
its projectors intend that, with their present
facilltiea, the Nation siiall tjecome more than
ever Im fore the medium of the ablest thought of
the time.
The form and style of the paper are chosen
with a view to lhem&lt;&gt;*t suitable shape for bind­
ing. rud a set of the Nation preserved, bound,
and indexed, makes tbe most complete and
readable record of curent events of importance
In tbe political and literu y world available fur
tue Auxrrciau public.
The subscription price has been.
.
Specimen rtipleaaent on request- Addreas tbe
Publisher, 210 Broadway, New York.

yjncapoic

v^.^’swsra
W

Since its consolidation with the New York
Evening Poat. has increased its facilities in
every department, enlarged Its site to tweutyfour pages, and added tnany able writers to its
previous lirt. It is now pronounced by many

COLUMBUS, O.,

FMci Mept.

GINGERTONIC

It run j

020202010001000000000000010201020101000200010202020102000201014689530001000000

PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM.

PARKEK’S

LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S
vegetable compound.

HALL’S

^atarrh Qure

5
S

Common, aud bung ready (pr use.

’

.

American and Foreign Marb!:

1

h

WAGONS ONLY $60.00.

Oi Wlft.Mk

�rrtntDAY ■ UCHHIAI iniws.

government had Incurred. It

wm

.

Mtally Injured.

yridetotly th® cause of hir. death.
John W. Spencer, Onondaga, was out
hunting recently, when bis gun acci­
dently went n.ff killing him instantly.
On May 171 b at Whitney feRemick’s
Intnbrt* rump, near Harrison Junction,
Betel Dion, of Clare, was instantly
killed by u falling tree.
A Hollander named Hecnenneayboer,
working nt Baldwin^ brick yard, at
Grand Rapids, was killed Monday by
therjtving of n large section of a clay
Imnk near the yard.
'
A Imy named Cross, accidently shot
and killed Eddie Smythe while they
wete hnnting on the marshes north of
Kalamazoo village. Smyth was about

Fred Oimliirr, a night sritebman at
tlw M. C. R. R. yards In Niles, was run
over by a switch engine, on Tuesday,
and one «&gt;f hia legs cat off near tbe hfp.

He cannot live.
Jumt-x D. Purrent, who has been oo
trial at Bny City for tho past week on
clmrgv(«bkjlliiig Wm Michie near Pincniiiiing in M^jclUa*tz''fouDd guRty of

nmnler in the firstdegree.
Tuesday nightHenry Fromby.of Mid-

dlehury townnliip, jRhiawassee county,
was thrown from a wagon during a
ruimway and ntruck against a tree re­
ceiving fatal iiJunes.
Mik Edward White of Big Prairie,
New^igo county, dropped dead Tuesday
morning.'She had done her work as
iijunil Mid n-niHi ked that she felt better
then common when she expired.
Wm.H. Wlight, a Grand Rapids in-

wm then
hk time to to reading and writing, to
&gt;2,756,431,571. Since that time we keep him*continually in oneell (which
hare paid over &gt;1,900,000,000 of prinei- by tbe way, la bald by 8 feet) give* him
but little room fur a table for his IwMiks
It is no fault of tliejail oBcials that he
much of it at tho rate of 7 8 10per cent. has had so many visitors heretofore,
The annual interest in 1865 was over for tlie most of them have been Admit­

&gt;180,000,000; this year it will be 1cm
then &gt;70,000,000, The debt per capita
has been cut down from &gt;78.25 to &gt;25,
and the annual interesLper capita from
&gt;4.29 to &gt;1.40. We are now paying ut
the rats of nearly &gt;15.000,000 per month,
or &gt;180.000,009 per year, at which rate,
even without any assistance from the
steady reduction of interest, the debt
will be nearly obliterated by 1890. But
revenues are steadily increasing in ennseqa^moe of tlie expansion of the busi­
ness ot tbe country, and there has been
recently shown an ability to redqce
government expenses. Congress re­
fuses to reduce taxation, though many
millions of relief could be afforded to
the people without injury to the credit
of the government. But tlie people
will pay cheerfully if they can he as­
sured of honest management. We are
very proud of our ability to pay, and
like to contrast our debt With t’int of
England, which is now &gt;,843,518,460 —
as much larger then ouraat the la-gining of the war as ours is smaller now.
Or to state it differently—if. instead of
reducing our debt, we had added to it
exactly as much ns we have paid, we
should now owe ns much as England.
Thatconn try does not worry about her
debt, but-lias come to regar i it ns a
permanent investment, her bonds be­
ing in the hands of her own people and
her anunal interest payments only ser­
ving to increase thesourccs.of her rev­
enue. But our people prefer exemp­
tion from debt obligation, and so long

suraiice ng« nt, was found dead in bed
■t,a liolt-1 in Uedar Springs on Friday. aa the money is faithfully applied, they
He wan subject to asthma, which is will pay the taxes which make up the
revenue without much grunibling.
supposed to linve caused bis den th.
Alfred Belfry, employed in Whitney
OUR W4SHI5GT05 LETTER.
&amp; Batchelors saw mill at East Saginaw
bn May 16.Ui, was struck by a boarp
thrown out by the edger, cutting his
Washington, D. C., Mat 18, 1883.
tin oat nnd killingbim almost instantly.
The State Department and the Gov­
A white women mimed Brown, em­ ernment of Mexico are in correspon­
ployed nt the Antisdel house at De dence looking to an arrangement to
troit, married a colored barber, and all prevent successful Indian outbrvnkson
. the femule help in the l»otel“kicked” the border. The Government of Mexi­
•o vigotohKly that the landlady dis­ co seems disposed to grant tho privi­
charged the miscenegated bride.
lege of crossing into Mexican territory
The |x‘ople up in Clare county arc in pursuit of the hostile* practically us
’ kicking becaiiM: the body of a man who was done under the famous “Onl or­
died of siuiillpcix in East Saginaw, was der” but they want the right asked for
rent up tliery -for burial. Detroit also through diplomatic channels and grain­
kirks Iw-ciiUM* Port Huron sends ita ed in due form aud not taken by force.
smallpox piitirnta to the metropolis to Tlie correspondence now in progress
also looks to tho establishment of a
die oi get well, astbe case may be.
S. E. Call is an unfortunate farmer mutual ' arrangement by which the
living a shoit distance from Green­ Mexican troops may also follow host­
ville. A few days rince his wife left him ile* into the territory of toe United
fnrn“h.'in&lt;lMiiuer man,”then be sold hia States.
Conscious of wrong to the farmer in
farm for &gt;500 cash, took it Greenville
whrie ho was robbed of the whole a- devising and passing n tariff comission
bill to defer inoefinitely a reduction of
niunnt.
Ou Siitnrday. Charles Hollace, who hitt burden of tariff nnd internal rev­
wm4*mployed in Hannah. Lay &amp;. Co.’s 1enue taxes, the House rf ' Representa­
' shingle mill nt Traverse City, attempted tive*, by a vote of 172 to 8, seeks to
amends by pga ing a bill to
to spring past a dragsaw while it was make
'
au executive department of ag­
in motion, but slipped and fell ntidri create
1
riculture,
whose clycf aball-be a mem­
it. Hi« Irfi leg was fearfully manber of the cabinent and “n practical
glHl, und hnd lobe amputated.
agriculturist.” The new depurtnn-ut
Among the victims of the acc
nt
is to embrace three bureaus, the genus
on Calumet Like, near Pullman, III, by
of which exist in the present depart­
whivh several mon were drowned,
were (j. F. Pierce and P. T Moo re, of ment of agriculture- The first of these
ist he bureau of agricultural products,
Bitfield, in this state,where the dis­
which is to include botany, chemistry
patches soy each leaves a family. They
and entomology. It will expand tinw ere carpenters and hail been at work '
volume of dreary literature on topics
at'Pnlhimn.
unintelligiblennd useless to the ordin­
On Muy 16th at Houghton, Anton Biary farmer, which has so long eminatehetv , a German brewer arose aud af
ed
from the government press. Besides
ter dtcreiug allot bis still sleeping wife, '
the bureau of which mention has been
fortuerly EmmaBougbbackof Hancock, ,
made, thereis to be a bureau of animal
and then himself. Tbo parties were .
industry, in charge of a veterinary sur­
married last summer and haved lived '
which will busy itself in compil­
a mt and dog life since Cause jeal- geon,
1
ing reports upon the number, condi­
pasty.
tion and value of domestic animals in
Monday n orning Jyptha Fleming,a
farmer of Cambridge, Lenawee Co., 'tbecoantiy, provide for their protec­
tion from diseases, and cillect and dis­
t&lt;H&gt;k two pails from the bon^e, aud
information relative to breed­
started for the barn to do the milking. seminate
1
At hieukfast time he did not return, 1ing, importation aud improvement of
stock.
The
bureau of land and statis­
nnd Mrs Fleming, going out to caU '
tics is to report tbe resources and cap­
him. found bis lifeless body hanging
abilities of lauds suitable for stock­
raising, collect labor and agricultural
Mendon, S (.Joseph county, has tbe statistics and crop reports, gather in­
queen of *the divorce courts,—* wo­ formation and statistics relative to
man of whom it is stated that she can forestry, and add to th8 sum of human
name eight different men now living knowledge of the demand and supply
within a radius of eight miles from of timber.
her. to whom she has been married
It is understood that Charles H.
aud from whom she has been divorced. Reed, Guiteau’a counsel, will fight it
Her children, 14 in number, all live out to the end. If tbe Supreme Court
with ber.
of tbe District, in General Term,
' At East Saginaw, on the 16th, a plan­ now hearing the arguments upon the
ing mill owned by Jesse Hoyt of New bill of exceptions, shall refuse to set
York, took fire and in an hour the en­ aside tbe verdict, lie will apply for a
tice mubHohment including mill, dry writ of habeas corpus in the Supreme
kiln foil of dry lumber .shed* aad two Court of the United States.
He will
Freight ram loaded with lumber, were carry the question of jurisdiction and
destroyed. About 300,000 feet of lum­ the alleged illegal date of the excution
ber WM burned. Thi loss aggregates •0 the highest tribunal in the country
tw.ot» wuh no insurance. Sixty men ror final adjudication.
Lawyers are
are thrown out of.rm ploy meat.
looking with special interest for the
Mm. Annie Prosser, r widow of Battle decision of the Court in banc on tbe
Creek, cmnmrtted aairids Friday night question of jurisdiction of a coot, try­
by drowning herself in the Kalamazoo ing a criminal for an offense commit­
ted in one State which culminated in
another, aa in the esse
Guiteau.
It
looks as though tbe disposition of
Guiteau might be still soma distance in

ted on letters from officers in authority
and niosrof them have been stnuigem
here. Indeed among the visitors every
country and every clime Ims been re­
presented. The statements, too, that
Guiteuu has been fed on the fat of the
land, cnnuotbe borne out, fur with the
exception of of the extras he took at
the court Iioiim*, during the trial,'bh
diet has been from tbe first good, sub­
stantial, plain food.
The convention of the United Str ten
Brewers’ Association concluded its
aefwieiis for 1882 to-day.
ResuintioiiH
calling upon the government tn en­
courage the production of lighter
drinks, because they are less harmful
than heavier beverages, by reh-uoiiig
manufactures from illiberal restriction*
were passed. The resolutionsu!m» de­
clare tlmt while (he associ .tiou is ad­
verse to mingling politics with buaim-oa
its members pledge themselves to over­
look party affiliations and act togeth­
er in defeating the -candidates of any
party that panders to fauaticirtn by
supporting prohibitory laws.
August.

KANSAS PRAISING IT.

“While I was tn Topeka last winter, aald tbe
lion. Arthur Eeglogion, ‘I had a pretty ro.igh
time of it. I got a bad cold, and, then that nut
being sufficiently severe, I wm also mucked
with rhcumati«m. Tbe pain waa in my left
shoulder. At times I almost writbed In agony.
I tell you sir, that tlie pain could not have been
greater had my ahouider been screwed up in a
vise. I was utterly bdplcM, and felt like I
was destined to remain in that xxmditiou in­
definitely. .My friends and a physician acre
generous in their prescription and my room
soon became a inmialune apotifecary abop.
But nothing did me any good. One day sotne
one toid me I was enduring a great deal ot
needless pain when 1 could invest fifty ccnu
in a bottle of St- Jacobs 04 and be cured
I
invested in a b It e of the Oil, rubied it on my
shoulder twice, and to two days forgot that !
ever had rheumatism. Yes. there U a great
remedy, and no mistake. They can’t say too
much In favor of its healing power.**
Tbe above was uttered by Mr. Edlvgton
wliOedtUng in the porch or the La Gouda
House, at Columbus, tbe other evening, and
was overheard by an escaped reporter, who
is traveling over the country incog. Inquiry
developed th tact that Mr. Edington is one of
tbe moot widely known men In Kansas, figur­
ing prom I tien Gy In politics, and acting aa the
responsible agent of lite Bradstreet Commer­
cial Aoc'ney. Upon subsequently making Mr
Edington’s acquaintance tbe reporter was aswred that al) he had beard was true, and be
was at liberty to use it in tbe paper*.—Oswego
(Kan.) Democrat.

KEEP US BUSY
A LARGE LINE, OF

Our Large Sales still Keep up ou
VKall Paper and Qarpets

G. A. TRUMAN&lt;fc SON
The First to the Front I
I

AM NOW RECEIVING A FULL STOCK OF GOODS SUITABLE FOR THE SPRING TRADE. INCLUDING
the LirrgvMt and Beat Stock of

Ready Made Clothing, for Men, Boys, and Youths,
Ever brought to Nashville, and ranging m price from three to thirty dollars per suit.

Ladies, Misees, Gents &amp; Children’s Fine Shoes
I k»*cp the celebrated Rochester make, Slylish, Durable anc Cheap.

T S
I have the latest stylns and can fit all parties.

At prices that defy competion.

In

O
I always keep a full stock of

Cash paid for BnC:«r aud^gga.

The Americas Popular Dldtary, $1.CO

SKINNY MEN.
Wells’ Health Rcnewer. Absolute cure for
nervous deuility and weakness of tbe genera­
tive function a &gt;1. at drugiriats. Mich. Depot
JAMES E. DAVI3 4C0.. Detroit, Mich.
BRIGHT’S DISEASE, DIABETES.
Beware of .the -tuff that pretends tn cure Chela
disease or other serious Kidney, Urinary or
Liver Diseases, aa they only relcfvc for u aitne
and makes you ten times worse afterward*, but
rely aolelv on Hop Bitters the only ien&gt;ed&lt; Gist
will surely aud permanently cure you. It dentroya and removes the cause of disease so ef­
fectually that it never returns.

In

McCormick Twine-Binder!

— THAT------

NOT ONE

World Maaototcrin* Oe., 120 WmomSk.

Tet

Our readers will find thia
wonderful book the cheap­
cat Dictionary published. The
information it contains &lt;6 worth
many times tho amount asked
for it, &lt;md it should bo in the
possession of everybody. With
thisbookinthe library for refer-

Ofmj Cnstomers Complain •’
------- OP THE--------,

country. history. business, laws,
etc., is inexcusable in any man.
Jiote the price, 91, post-paid.
------ FROM------

The Nashville Mill,
------- BUT-------

HAS VALUABLE IMPROVEMENTS OVER ALL COMPETITORS

A SPRING DtFENCE!

BE NOT DECEIVED
By statements made by agents representing other machines
having a resemblance to the McCORMICK, claiming their
Binders are the same, for such claims are false, and suits for
infringements have been brought against imitations
CALL OIV

UNIVERSALLY SATISFIED

JNO. M. ROE
Coaniy *f

ANNA L&gt; GARDNER, »!&gt;»».

H0RTH MAIN 8T„ NASHVILLE, M.,

And examine it carefully before making your choice for
eoming harvest.

In.depeHl&lt;leirt Reapers.
--------- ALSO---------

Platform, Side-Spring and Side-Bar Carriages,
and Wagons
_A-t Rock Bottom Price*

Much Iim been aaid as to “privileges”

Your* Re»pectfuUy,

- -- slM MW AY
,p»r Fruit Dryer

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strong, i
Devoted
Zorro* ixu PaoFUlXTOK. )__________ :______________ ___________ __________________

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, MAY 27, 1882.

VOLUME IX.
LltE IN NASHVILLE,
I

•

And Her Environ,.

-Rum blossom# make a toper’s nose
ville.
—The potato bugs boat us last year,
but this year we have beaten them. We
have planted no potatoes.

—Frost three nights this week. Fruit
trees are getting; discouraged, and
won’t bold on much longer.
—The Greenback organ across the
street is liable to again change its coat.
Then wouldn’t it be proper to call it -a
pull-back T J
'
- ''

—Henry Clever,« farmer living just
■south of the corporation, was in his
woods chopping on Tuesday, and was
about to fall a tree, when a detached
limb hit him upon the head, knocking
him down and rendering him uncon­
scious. His boys were at work with
him at the time,and picked him up and
carried him to the house.
A physi­
cian was called who found quite an in­
denture in the top of his skull.
Mr.
Clever remained unconscious from the
time of the accident, about 9 p. m., un­
til nine in the Evening when he spoke,
but did not fully recover consciousness
until the next morning. He is now doingns well as could be expected.

—Monday night Bill Bartley returned
from a ramble with D. R. Perry, some­
what the worse for cider, and when he
wife upbiaided him in regard to his
condition, he heaped vile epithets upon
“Well,” said
dominion of wife No. 3, and gone to her defenseless head.
Dakota to grow up with the country she, "this is the last time you will come
home drunk and abuse me.”
“Why
and get acquainted with wife No. 4.
so,” intern gated Bill. •‘Because,” she
—W. H, Goodyear of Hastings, is not replied, “I am going to drown myself.”
familiar with science of navigation, “Pooh,” said Bill, “you wouldn’t ro
aud fall from a row boat into the bil­ near water; PH warrant you haven’t
lowy waves at Thornapple on Sunday. washed yAr feet for six months.’1
His comrades rescued him from a wat­ But she waTsoon missed and Perry re­
ery grare.
membering what she had said, went

—The Evening 'News intimates that
the Vt, Vine Hawk man’s spelling is
too utterly utter all original. Better
get ft patent on it, Potter.
—Bill Troxell has seceded from the

—The young man whose fancy light­
ly turned to thouy hts of love, about a
month ago, had better begin to buckle
down to business, and provide a jink­
ing fund against the advent of the ice
cream season.

to' the '_Interests
of the Best
Party7 under
the
Sun..
_______ _________
' ■
■
?
'.

*

—Complaint-us being made about
card playing being allowed in our
school. While there may be no partic­
ular harm in a social game of “eucher”
or “seven up,” still it would hardly
seem that the school room is just the
place for it.

forth to search for her. He found her
opposite the old mill in the river up to
her middle, and evidently hesitating to
proceed farther. Perry dashed gal­
lantly to the rescue and brought the
shivering woman safely to dry land.
She caught a tremenduous cold and has
since been confined to her home.

LOCAL GABBLE-GABBLE
And Perwaal Chit-Chat.

. Green grow the onions, oh!
A change in Aylsworth’s ad.
—At a gloss ball shoot on the flats
How is the buck of your head T
Saturday, a number of crack shots and
See Naples aud die. Eat beefsteak
high-priced guns were iu attendance,
and bunt.
but Charley Raymond with an old four
Only 13 saloons are doing business
dollar shot-gun stepped forward and in Barry* county.
took the cake by smashing every ball
Geo. Howe has retired from the firm
in a score of ten.
of Wilton teHowc.
—A Sunday School has been organ­
Barney Brooks has gone northward
ized at the Feighner. school house, with his drove of mustangs.
‘
north, with II. W. Hewes as superin­
Kocher Bros, have a new ndvt. of
tendent, and a good compliment of special interest to the ladies.
capable officers. The school starts out
Matt Howell is erecting a dwelling in
with thirty-five scholars, and indica­ the east part of the corporation.
tions of success.
M.L.Cook.editor of the Hastings Ban­
—The Aesthetic social was quite ner, peeked id upon us Saturday.
Mrs. H. S. Babcock of Chicago, is
largely attended, notwithstanding the
inclemency of the weather. The pro­ visiting her cousin, Mrs. T. Brady.
Miss Emma Keith, of Greenville, is
gramme was pronounced very aesthetic,
especially that "part rendered by the visiting her sister, Mrs. H.G.Halc.
Old Mr. Liklin thinks a free lunch
Oscar Wilde quartette. The receipts
counter would do well in Nashville.
of the evening were $17.60.
Mr. Leslie Reynolds of Grand Rapids
—The establishment of the Excelsior
visited friends in this village over Sun­
Works here will be a good thing for
day.
\
Nashville and vicinity, and justas socn
On Thursday J. Fleming returned
as our farmers make a few more re­
from a week’s visit to relatives at Al­
ports on bass wood bolts the wheels of
bion.
.
industry will beset in motion.
Bring
Mrs. N. S.Bcotho of KalamS, is at Dr.
along the wood and get your cash
Goucher* being treated for cancer in
therefon
the breast.
—Frankie Lentz, while returning
Humphrey Atckinson has had bis
from school on Monday noon last, fell blacksmith shop pulled back ten feet
over a stick of wood in front of H. from the street.
Atchinson’s and broke both bones of
New awnings have blossomed out
his left arm, between the elbow and over Johnnie Braun’s shoe shop and
wrist. Thu is the second time Frankie John Barry’s residuncohas broken bis arm io the same place,
Neighbor H. A. Dickinson done the
the former accident occurring m Sep­ boss job on tree triming for tts the
tember hut, by him falling from a other day. Thanks.
swing.
By means of paint and paper, Dr.
—Peter Nicewander, mentioned in Foote has rendered his “sbothecary
last week’s News as being seriously ill, hop,’’ very attractive indeed.
Miss Delia Rising and Miss Dora
died at J. Allerton’s on Tuesday morn­
ing last, aged 73 years, 5 months and Height of Woodland visited S. 8. In5 days.
His married life extended geraon’s people during the week.
We have receireda late copy of the
over a period of 69 years and ten chil­
dren blessed the union. A wife, three St. Paul Pioneer Press, containing a
full
page advertisement of Larimore,
sons and one daughter now mourn their
loss. Rev. Spitzler pleached the fn-'
Mr.. C. M. HemiogUnm arid daojthneral sermon at the East Castleton U.
ter Mor .nd Mm. E.P. Tuttle and «&gt;n
B. church, Wednesday afternoon.
Cori, oil of Lapeer, are visiting at C.
—Walt. Powers imagines that he is W. Smitl.V
getting in his work big for a nomina­
Him Stella Wiladn. having secured a
tion at die hands of the Greenback teacher’s certificate, will commence
party thu fall, but those wbo claim to teaching in the Hocmer district next
know, say that Walt, lias been a curse
Monday.
to the party and must take a bock seat
Have you sect
in the next campaign. As Walt is an matched blnckst They are beauties
inveterate office seeker he would hard­ and Brit aeta up a little straighter
ly sorvive such an event, and is entit- while driving them.
ed sympathy.
Too bad; too bad!
Win. Martin who ba* been confined
Boys stop the press while we weep.
to bis room for a long time with dis-

—On Saturday morning last, Mrs. cmm! of tlte lungs and stomach is again
Geo. Ci am er, an old lady aged 00, of able to be around.
West Castleton, started for this village
J. Stonc of the Laingsburg News was
in a two-seated buggy, accompained by in the village Saturday, and from ap­
son and Mrs. Bprigelmyre.
The two pearances we should judge Laingsburg
ladies occupied .the back seat. When treats her editor well.
oppooitb H. W. Hewes, a mile aud a
Our family is increasing, and we’re
half north, the wheels ’of tbe vehicle building our house bigger, consequentsuddenly fell into a !*rut," aud the two
ladies were percipitated out bank wards, bat tarry on PhillipS street.

injr In attend the funeral of her father.

Tbe ladies of tte

society will

serve ice cream next Saturday after­
noon and evening. May 27th/in Yates’

block. AU are cordially invited.
Al HuU of -Vt Ville, might have been
seen in a stylish riding suit astride of
one of those firey muetangs in this vil­
lage, about onep. m. last Sunday.
The fire company boys have decorat­
ed the opera house with evergreens and
flags, and are looking for a fine time at
their dance this press (Friday) evening.
' Rev. J. F. Orwick of Woodland, gave
n very interesting temperance address
to a large and appreciative audience at
the M. E. church, lost Sunday evening.
Through mistake the notice of the
reunion of the army of the Potomac in
last week’s News, read Detroit, July
14th and 15th, when it should • have
been June 14th and 15th.
'
The whole thing smacks of a joke, when two
greenback organa attempt to inflict their booh
on to a good natured public like Nashville and
its environs.—VL Ville Hawk.
Yes, that’s the way to talk it,now that
Walt. Power* has “nigged” in regard to
his contract.
.

The “Oriental Casket” for May is up­
on our table. Its poetry, tales, sketch­
es, wit and humor are interesting as
can be. PubUshed at Philadelphia, Pa.,
by J. Lum Smith and edited by Emer­
son Bennett.

Pneumonia took off Thomas McPharlin,aged 29,at his home in Rutland,
on Sunday. Orangeville is seriously af­
fected with ccarlet fever and three
deaths occured in that town in one day
last week.

Agent Hawthorn has been instructed
by the M. C. R. R. Co., to seU excur­
sion tickets on June 0, 7 and 8, from
this place to Jackson for $2 for the
round trip. This is done to give our
people a chance to attend the State
Fand Tournament.

We have received a copy of Hon. E.
S. Lacey’s speech on the bill to enlarge
the powers and duties of the depart­
ment of tigricukure.
It’s a good one
and reads as though Mr. L. was once a
tiller of the soil, and knew what he
was talking about.
Mrs. M. J. Timmerman removed to
Hustings on Tuesday last, where she
will live with her son, the doctor. Mrs
Timmerman has been n resident of this
village for the past 12 years, and dur-'
ing that time bos gained many true and
valuable friends, who will heartily re­
gret that circumstances made it best
and expedient for her to make the
change. By her removal the M. E.
church, of which she was a respected
member, has lost one of its most faith­
ful workers and one whose place will
be difficult to fill by another. She has
been church organist during the entire
time other residence in this place and
also an earnest worker in the Sunday
School. She has devoted a large
share of her life to the study and teachjpg of music and has, since she came to
this village, hod all she could do tn that
line. We understand she intends con&gt;
tinuing giving instructions in instru­
mental music and we can cheerfully
and heartily recommend her to any one
wishing to secure the services of a com­
petent and experienced teacher.

0HIZKIHG8.

COMMON OOUJOIL

PBOOEEDIHGB.

Couxcn. Rooms.
i
NaabvIIJe, May 22, 1882. f
Present, Chipman, President; Barber, Boise,
Dickinson,'Demaray, Loe and Lentz, trusteea

Minutes of but meeting read ami approved.
The following accounts were presented and on
motion allowed by ayes and nays as .follows:
Barber, Boise, Dickinson, Demaray, Lee and
Lentz. Nays, none.
H. R. Dickin Homer Blair

BALTIMORE.
Corn planting is o’er.
G. R. Durfee has visitors.
Fine weather after the flood.
Mr. Waldruff is giving music lessons through
this section again this spring.
G. R. Durgcc baa sold to Royal Bryant the
40 seres of timber land ho purchased recently
of Hany Hammond's. Price &lt;700.00.

I

Ckioit ScBScairrioxi tl.TO.
NUMBER 36.
EATON COUNTY.

A byciclo dub is about to be form*! at Cnar
'Grand Ledge aaloonlsU pay a total tax of
•MOO.
Charlotte. The Charlotte Leader is soon to be

Charlotte has ftfteen*«aloonn this yt
Mrs. Sidney Hull, while visiting his son's she
bad nineteen lastat Morgan, was taken very suddenly ill, but is
The
Barry &amp; Eaton Insurance Co., carries in­
better now. Mrs. Hull has been sick a good
deal for the past 2 year*, and soon must adoth- surance on *ix millions of property.
Mrs. Charity Austin of Grand Ledge, died of
er of Baltimore’s old land marks pass away.
Nelaoo Murray,..
Mrs. G. R Durfee and adopted daughter paralysis last week, aged 08 years. _
The Free Will lUptisre of Grand Ledge, wip­
Wm. Clark,..........
went to Dowllng-the other day to do sonte trad­
ed out a church indebtedness of »3,400 last
Mart Cooper.....
ing, and while there the latter named received
Joel Koeber,........
a shock of paralysis that caused her to faint Bunday.
John II.-, katboro.
Mrs. Ester Owen of Bellevue, died of paraly­
Jam* Gregory,..
away. One half of her face, bodv and limbs
preacntcd and. are paralysed. At the present writing she sis last week., This was her third paralytic
shock.
on motion accepted and approved by ayes aixl is a little better.
&gt;
__
A. Hook, a farmer living near Bellevue, was
nays as follows: &lt;
/
M. M. Slocum, while on his return home
Kyeo, Barber, Boise, Dickinson, Demaray from town, Thursday, stopped to open the kicked so severely by a horse last week that the
doctors says he must dieand Lentz. Nays, none.
bars at the end of the lane. When he started
J. V. Johnson, forrwrly editor- of the Char­
Be it-resolred. By the common council of the
Village of Nashville that Ordinance No. 30 and tiirongh the bars the fore wheels of the wagon lotte Leader, is about to start a democratic puall of Ordluacc No. 1, that is not amended by dropping into a rut, throwing out bls wife and . per al Bt. Louis, Gratiot Co.
Ordinance No. 30, be aud is now repealed.
babe on to the hard ground. They were toth
v Ward &amp;. Dolson, proprietors of the extensive
Dated this 23d day of May.1882.
severely jarred, but neither sustaining any
carriage shops at Charlotte, are enlarging their
The following ordinance was presented and on serious Injury.
facilities for turning out worts.'
motion accepted and approved by ayes and
The bum of the buz saw and the ring of the
At Charlotte a man named Sprague has taen
□ays as follows:
carpenters mallet is distinctly heard on the convicted for swearing st a merchant wbo din­
Ayes, Barber, Boise, Dickinson, Demaray
premises of Perry Henry's. Mr. How’s saw ned torn for payment of a bill alleged to be due.
and Lentz. Nays, none.
। mill is cutting the lumber and the carpenters
Olivet takes warning from past experience
Ordi.xaxcz No. 35.
have the frame of the two large barns well on and has purchased two chemical fire engines,
An ordinance relating to the restraining, im­
the way aud soon will be looming up the struct­ and is organizing a hook and. ladder com­
pounding and rescuing of animals.
ures of two large tarns that will be an. orna­ pany.
- .
• Bae. 1. The Common Council of the Village
of Nashville ordain, that it shall not be lawful ment to Baltimore.
Mrs. Jno. Conkling of Bellevue, wasattaekerf
for any horses, mules, asses, cattle, sheep,
with a severe hemorrhage of the lungs last
swine, geese or turkeys to run at large within
wee'k, but good Medical skIU and care pull*!
the limits of said village, and if they shall be
BISMARK.
found ronnlng at large within the limits of said
her through.
village it shall be lawful for auy person, and it
While ret arcing from church In Chariatie,
Jar es PhiHips Is dad.
shaiibe the duty of the pound master or of the
A. F. Ward is quite feeble.
Marshal to drive the same, or cause the same to
come frightened the buggy capsized and: Mrs
be driven, to the pound within said village
Mr. John Prince died last week.
and for driving the same to the ponnd
8. seriously Injured.
The golden grain Is coming forth.
as aforesaid
the
person or
persous
A fire broke out last Saturday afternoon la­
Peace reigns sup' cmc at Blsmark.
so driving
shall be entitled
to re­
Did ye bear something drop lost weekf Well, the foundry of M.P. Beach of Grand Dodge
ceive the sum of twenty-five cents per head for
all horses, asses, mules, aud cattle, and ten that was me.
and consumed both the foundry and an ad­
cents per head for all sheep and swinc.and five
Well, James Wheeler was married last week. joining wagon shop owned by A- J. Hoggart
cents per bead for aM all turkeys and geese, so
Loss about 110,000. no insurance.
driven to the pound. Bald fee to be advanced Success to you Jimmie.
Warren IL Palmer, the Eaton Co. man wtx&gt;
by the pound master.
,Il is said that one Prindle lielrf the fort
Bae. 2. It shall be the duty of the Common against mlghiy odjs, the other night, and went west sometime ago and reported blmsell
Council of the village of Nashville to provide a
suitable pound within said village, and it shall meeting folks were compelled to stay outside dead, has been arrested at Springfield,' Mo..
be the duty of the i&gt;ound master to feed and the school bouse, while Prindle alone was in and will be brought back to Charlotte, to an
safely keep thereto such animals as may be the catadcl.
d hren there by virtue of this or any other
The Congregational Church at Charlotte b
We are basining north, where the Hswk
ordinance, until such ordinance shall be com­
cometh not, and often turning our eyes to sec to have a new bell, and as soon ea possible, p
plied with.
Sac. 3. The pound master who.shall receive if Sunfield and Vermontille had turned up be pipe organ. To this end various ahurcb enter
and discharge any an Imais,as aforesaid shall be hind us. We encamped first night where the prises which are usually resorted to when .mon­
entitled to a fee of fifty cents per head for all
horses, asses, mules and cattle, and the sum Maple and Grand Itiirer mix their drink. ey is neetied arc quite frequent in that society
Ed. Simpson of Aurelius, tad a narrow e»
of fifteen cents per head for all sheep, swine, Next day took up our line of march across the
geeac or turkeys, and for the keeping and feed­ plains, making Hubbardston, Carson, St Louis cape from death last week.
Ho-was catting
ing the same the sum of twenty-five cents each
for each days keeping of horses, mules, asses and pitched on the tanks of the majestic Pine down a tree when it lodged on to another. H&lt;and cattle, and ten cents a day each for sheep River. Thoughts of home and the Hawk be ascended the trunk of the tree thout 4ft feet,
swine, geese and turkeys, which sum for driv­ ban to revive. Next day we proceeded to when it eame down with him. He was- badly
ing to pound,retaining and keeping,aud all oth­
jammed but escaped with hte life.
erlegal ex poises, shall be paid to the pound the jumping oft place where resolutions were
Jonathan Worthtagton omLwife, of Brook­
master, before said animals shall be released, made to return to battle the reserve forces of
and if said fees and all damages done by any life, love, and the Hawk, aud to-day noon field Tbwushlp, Eaton Co., wsre thrown fro&lt;:
animals being unlawfully at large shall not be (Monday) we arc al home where we shall oc­ their wagon on Saturday are lira critical condi­
paid within three days then said pound master
msy sell said animate at public auction- at said cupy thedabratory of domestic subjection, un­ tion. Mr. Worthington came to tins county
pound, after due notice thereof,an J from monies til the conte of editorial injustice, arc loosened from England nearly forty years OgO&gt; 'and ha.
arising from said
he may retain bls fees or forever severed. Were it an enemy that accvmulated a fine properly. The aged coup!*and charges aforesaid and ten per cent on ac­
returned last mouth from a vielt to their old
count of sale for selling and giving notice did the deed, wc would not comphdn, or had home in England.
thereof,and be shall return the surplus mouev we open sea, we would soon run that leviathan
if anv to the owner of said animals In case it Is down.
LOCAL MATTERS.
calletl for within one month; if not called for
within one month the pound master shall pay
Ata meeting of the!ad's* of - tbo Ckristiasaid surplus money to the village treasurer.tak­
RUTLAND.
ing his receipt therefor. If the owner of said
church and society, the cost of repairing tin
animals appear within five months from the
church was found to le gll)8.If.leaving ti&gt;&lt;
time of sale and make satisfactory proof of
Mrs. Van Sickles la sick.
society tn debt about FAr. The tallowtag reso­
bwnershlp to the common council said surplus
The coni planting rage is about over.
money shall be paid to him, but it be does
lutions were adopted:
.
Mrs. Trowbridge of Saranac, U home visiting
not apj&gt;car witirtb the time above specified said
.
surplus money shall belong to the Incidental friends.
fund of said village.
*
W. Lober's little daughter Manila is having the church, aud that a vptc at thanks be re
Bzc. 4. The pound master's notice of sale
turned to James Fleming for his faithful an&gt;
shall be given as follows: for the sale of sheep,
efficient serviced in repairing the church.
Mr. L. Whitmore is putting up his saw mill
swine, turkeys and geese, the- notice shall be
ported three days, one copy at the pound and on the farm of Mr&gt; Batea.
GIRL&amp;CATCtfcON.
one copy at the post office of the village;
Mr. Britmire 1» building a new house which To thosoiCecnt white Kid Gloreaat.
for the sale of horses,
oases, mules
C..W. G MAX OKB.
and cattle the notice shall contain a dls- adds materially to*his home.
I cription of the animal or animals to be sold and
Wheat in this section is looking well, but
THE NEW VICTOR SEWING
shall l»e posted as aforesaid, and twcuty-five grass is short on account of cold weather.
cento shall be added to the costa of sale for
achine
The cheese factory at Podunk started to
posting said notices. Every notice shall bear
Intending to gw outo{ tta trade of theaamr
the date of ito being pooled, and give the day operate again on Thureday of last week.
I wilkgive the uurcbasex the benefit of th
and hour of sale, and said pound master shall
Miss Ella Waters Is teaching our districr profits. Only afew left. Call soon.
school, and the word is we are having a good
LJ. Wukki^b.
idialldeem it proper so to do.
m
MONEY TO IA)AN,
Bbc. 5. Any person or persons who ahall
Mr. John Riley has started up his. coopering
rescue or attempt to rescue any animals be­
ing driven by an v person to said pound, or who more lively thia spring than ever, and la turn­
Lee &lt;fc Dcuksb
shall release or attempt to release any animal ing out butter tuba by the hundred
QT Full line of Wall l^per at
from said pound, wittout complying with the
Grandma Bradley fell as she WM coming in
"
V. T. BOIBFB.
provisions of thia ordinance, and contrary to

M

If beef goes much bight.-it will Dot
be difficult for the cow to jump over
the moon.
It is a poor compliment to say of n
man that he is as good ns his word,
when bis word isn’t good for anything.
“I want a little change,” said Mrs. B.
to her husband yesterday. “Well,” was
the heartless response,“just wait for it.
Time brings change to everybody.”

juries which confined her to her bed.
Union Grange No. 048 of thia place, is boom­
e to pay such fine and costs be im
ing. The feast they had at ttair ball on Tucatn the county Jail not more tha:. nincor both such fine and imprisonment in
toe insertwou
etion of
ur the
urv wuiu
court..
,
good *lme wan enjoyed.
8ac. &lt;J. The pound master shall keep a cor­
rect account of every an final driven to the
between the two.
found, and shall every three months report to
MAPLE GROVE.
’ “The bees are swarming, and there’s the common council the number of animals
no end to them,” said Farmer Jones impounded, the number and kind of animate
Frank Moacy baa a pet owl.
rold and the amount of money received there­
coming into the house. His little boy for.
•
Sac. 7. Any person whoahall let from their
George cams in a second afterwards,
owner's enclosure the animals of another, so
and said there was an end to one of ’em that they shall be unlawfully at large, or wbo
There wa* a dunce at Cap. Rowan's Thursshall designedly open any such enclosure, so
anyhow, and it was red-hot, too.
that such animate can go therefrom unlawfully
Nothing does so establish the mind al large, or with intent to have the same im­
No preaching
amid the railings and turbulence of pounded. or who shall drive or bring within the
firnlta of this village any animals, which this last Sunday.
present things, as both a look above
ordinace intends to restrain, with the intent to
and ft look beyond (hem—above them
to the steady and good hand by which
Neal Lamb wa* visiting
they are ruled and beyond them, to
fore part of the week.
the sweet and beautiful end to which suit, and on failure to pay such fine and costa
may bo Imprisoned in the county jail not more
by that hand they will be bought.
than thirty days.
Mrv Faaaett of Jackaou Co., la, voting C. ft.
We account a pure,beautiful and wellBsc.’8. This ordinuce shall take effect on
the
Uth day of Juns A. D. 1T“
bred woman the most attractive object
John PUlnlaey and wife and wife of Clare Co.
of vision and contemplation in the
F. McDimt,
Clerk.
world. As mother; sister and wife,
on.
On motion council
such a woman is an angel of grace
E. Cbifmxx,
F. McDxbbt,
and goodness and makes a heaven of
dot.
the home which his sanctified and glor­
ified by her preoence. As an element
of society, she invites into finest dem- onsirations all that is good in Hte heart
and shames into aecrecy and silence, all

* Genius is great thing, without doubt;
but if you have a capacity fer hard
work yon have so good a substitute for
genius that you can’t tell the difference

.

FINS BOOTS.
For fins Boots rtude to order from l&gt;ert stock.
»to
3M9
■ Jokm Baarx’a.
WHAT IS THE USE
of buvtag a new Mowar or Reaper when you« «
pct \our old o»e Duale os goodunewat
Stsvexh &lt;fc Conz’a.
NRW BRICK STORE.

parties having actounts with me to call at w
* .1 ..1- -A,? V...
.. f—&lt;11
.

uuents Ve offered youby tl v
te, It will psyToutoraodUe
to be found elsewhere in th

’.GmaXGKmI
LADIES HAVE YOU BEEN.

A FEW THOUSAND DOLLARS

BRACE
.Whits and Fancy Sttrta.

�D.S.WMAUCrt
bodily labor.

Bm MMM

Kr alhErute the ioedidn't fly so thiak,
Charley saw, just ahead, and hobbling
along m fast aa his two poor shaky legit
and his knotty cane would carry him.

CBkXLEJ OTIF RIDE.

Herrin was as deaf u the deafest kind

AB TOLD ST IH8 GRANDSON.
He is my grandfather now—Charley
Otis is - and he told my brother Hal and
me thia story. He’s a regular fine old

if I’d been there. I wasn't there. But
I can tell you what Charley did. and I
don’t believe anybody could have dofie
any better. His heart thumped » he
could almost hear it through all.ths
and be likes to see us boys have any noise of the bells. But, quick as a flash,
amount of fun. He isn't hard.on a fel­ he put all his strength on the right
low either, when he. gets into trouble rein, and pulled that horse with a flying
through some of hu mischief, though he jump into a big bank of snow drifted up
looked pretty sober when Hal and I and
against the road fence. And Charley
Uncle Timothy’s boys painted Squire
kept right along.
Dexter’s Chester Whiles one time, and
He picked himself .up in a.minute,
the.Squire caught us at it, and thrashed
t», aad made tether and Uncle Timothy and looked around. The horse was
doepin
the snow,standing quiet enough,
par ten dollars apiece to get out of hav­
but ttefobliug like a leaf Charley un­
ing a lawsuit.
h irnessed him and got him out of ths
“Don’t have any more of that sort of
snow, and turned the sleigh, and har­
fun, boys,” says grandfather.
“No, sir,” says we; and we don’t nessed up again, and led the home back
to where ho started from. Sam and
mean to, fonthere isn't any fun in it
Some folks /iH-story-books arc all the Steve were waiting bv the gate.
Charley hitched the horse, md just
. time preaching up_how-funny it is to
paint pigs, i It isn't. If it is, it is mean then another man drove -along, and
fun. ana I/uon't like that kind. For be­ stopped.
“It’s Lawyer Chadbourne," whis­
sides making M fellow feel cheap, there’s
almost always something not so nice to pered Sam.
“ Who left that horse there?” said the
top off withl
.
**Boys will be boys, Susan.” That’s man. in a deep-down, pie-crusty kind of
what grandfather says to mother time a voice.
“Mr. Nutt, air,” answered Charley;
and again.
.
“Well, they needn't be wild Indians," “ and he said he would run away. But
says mother. But she doesn’t tell father he don't look like he would."
“Well, I'm glad of it,” growled the
that time. You see, my grandfather
was a boy once himself, .ana he knows lawyer, and away he went And—
“ Hello?’-’ said grandfather, breaking
we can't keep bottled up all the time.
We Have to “Jet nature caper"—that’s off right here.
There was a thundering noise in ths
what grandfather calls it-^once in a
while, ur we would burst, Hal and I, hall, and the door flew open.
" It’s the Broomstick Brigade!” aried
and go off like two rockets maybe. I
hope when I grow up I’ll be just the ,grandfather; for there were the May
kind of a grandfather my grandfather is. boys and the Deny boys and Uzml’o
List Washington’s Birthday-we boys 'Timothy's boys, and each one of 'em
had planned to have no end of fun, 1carried a broom.
“Como along with you,” said Ben
skating on the pond, and snapping
crackers at folks, and playing shinney. May; “ we’re going to sweep the ice.
But when Hal and L got up in the morn­ It’s stopped snowing."
ing, everything was dull griy; and when
So it had, though we hadn't noticed.
breakfast was over, it was snowing as if | And so we took our skates and brooms,
the witches were emptying aM their iand went along. Hal and I; and grand­
-feather-beds at once up-in the sky.
' father took up bis paper again.—HarHal looked out of the window, and ;pePe Young People.
turnad away, and shut his lips. Then
I looked out, and—well. Pm not very
“Little by Little."
old, and small of my age—and I criea.

At that grandfather put down his
paper.
’
“Hoity-toity!” said he; “what’s all
this about?”
We told him.
“ Well,” said grandfather, “this snow
will make first-rate coasting, and while
von’re waiting for enough of it to come,
Til tell you a story.”
So here is the story. You ought to have
heard Grandfather Otis tell it, though,
with his funny twinkles and wrinkles to
set it off; but because you couldn't. I'm
going to tell it my own way, in regular
story-book style:
Early one Twenty -second of February.
more than fifty years ago, my grand• father and my two great-nncles, Steph?n andftSamuel, wpre out looking for
some thing to have.fun with. “Trouble
was," says grandfather, “there was ice
enough, but we hadn't a pair of skates
to our feet.” I’tetty soon, while they
were standing' around on the doorstep.
a man came along leading a horse and
sleigh, anti hitched it to the fence. The
man’s name waa Mr. Nutt
“Good morning,’J said the boys, won­
dering to. themselves wbat made him
walk and lead the horse, instead of
riding. Catch a boy doing it!
' “Mornin’,’’ said Mr. Nutt. “ Father
to home, boys?"
“Yes sir,’’ said they.
“ I'm going rfter the doctor,” said
Mr. Nutt, “ and that critter runs away
to’st I can’t do nothin’ with him. It’s,
Lawyer Chadbourne’s horse, down to’
Westport.’at-1 took for hiz keep, and
and that’s morc’n I’ll get out 'n himS’ pose I can get your father's team,
boys?”
“ Wouldn’t
wonder,”
said they.
“ Father’s chopping wood in the north
lot.’’
With that Mr. Nutt started off acros*
the field, and the boys walked down to
. the goto to look at the horse. He was
a red horse, with “three-whito-feeUanda-white-nofte—take-off-his-shoes-andgive-him-to-the-crows. ”
The boys walked around him, and
looked at him. and felt of the harness.
"Looks kind enough," said Steve.
“ Don’t believe he’ll run away,” said
Sam.
“The harness is stout,” said Charley.
Then they all looked at each other
and laughed.
“ S’pose we do,” said they; “ and be
spry about it.”
So Sam and pharley got into the
sleigh, and Steve unhitched the horae,
arrtl got on behind, with one foot on each
runner, and Charley took the reins, and
away they all went The horse didn’t
go so very fast at first, but ho kept go­
ing faster and faster and faster; and
pretty soon tht* sleigh hit ' his heels.
Then didn’t he go!
“ Stop him!” yelled Sam. "Whoa!”
Whoa!” sung out Steve, a-hanging
on totbe old sleigh-back for dear life.
“We’ve go-go-gone far enough;” .

that he’d

ridden about an long

When Charlie woke up one morning
and looked from the window, he saw
that the ground was deeply covered
with snow. The wind had blown It In
great drifts against tbe fence and th*
trees, Charlie's little sister Rosy said
it looked like hills and valleys. On the
side of the house nearest the kitchen
the snow was
piled higher than
Charlie’s head. Mamma said ihb did
not know how black Aunt Pateey oould
get through it to bring in the breakfast
'
“There must be a path cleared
through this snow,” said pspn.
“I
would
do It myself, if I had time. But
'
my office early this morn-’
:I must be
'ing.” Then he looked at Charlie. “Do
you
think you could do it, my son?”
■
, “I, papa! Why, it is higher than my
1head! How could a little troy like me
cut
a path through that deep spow?”
'
“ How? Why. by doing it little by
little. Suppose you try;'and if I find a
'
nice path cleared when I tome home to
'dinner, you shall have (he sled you
wished for.”
So Charlie got his wooden snow­
shovel and set to work. He threw up
first one shovelful, and then''another;
but it was slow work.
“ I don’t think I can do it, mamma,"
he said. “ A shovelful is so Ettle, and
these is such a heap of snow to be
cleared away!”
_
“Little by little, Charlie,” said his
momma. “That snow foil in tiny bits,
flake by flake, but you-see what a great
pile.it has made.” ■
“Yes, mamma; and if I throw It
away shovelful by ahoVelfuk it will all
be gone at last. So I will keep on try­
ing.”
Charlk soon bad a space cleared from
the snow, and as be worked on the path
grev- longer. By and Jay it reached
quite up to the kitchen door. It looked
like a little'street between snow-white
walls.
When papa came home to dinner, he
was pleased to see what his little boy
had aone. Next day he gave Charlie a
fine blue sled, and on It was painted its
name, in yellow letters, “ Little by Lit­
tle."
■
The boys all wanted to know how it
came to have such a name. And when
they leayned about it, I think it waa a
lesson to them as well as to Charlie.—
Our Little One&gt;.
—Just before tbe New Orleans light­
ning train pulled out from the depot at
Louisville, a few flays ago, a very hand­
somely-dressed and pleasant-featured
lady created a wild sensation by rush­
ing through the ladies’ coach, scream­
ing: “Save me.' Oh, help! For God’s
sake, save me!” Everybody in the
vicinity supposed somebody was trying
to murder her, and almost instantly a
crowd of gentlemen surrounded and pf-

and fireman wanted to kill her because
they knew she bad killed a negro at
Elizabethtown. Thia statement satis­
fied th© crowd that there wan something
wrong about the woman, and she was
conveyed to the City Hoapital. While

to elevate
of listeners that the fashions aod folliM tbo wor*
of this world
for woman’s skill and enterprise m this
There are many ladles who
ity, said ths preacher.
The good direction.
man can hardly be charged with pro­ devote their time in spring and summer
nouncing a paradox, nor can he be just­ to the cultivation of tioweni and ferns
ly said to be contradictory in the utter­ In the garden, and in winter taka a
ance of his sentiments. It will be hard great deal of interest in their conserva­
to name a good gift of Providence which tories or green-houae*, in directing and
may not be perverted to bad endi oi overseeing their gardens, or take all the
abused in the using. Tiro love of the charge themselves, and find great en­
beautiful in nature and art is on endow­ joyment, M well as health, in the occu­
This pursuit surely presents
ment, the absence of which would al­ pation.
most justify the cynic in calling thia many attracliotw to those who are forced
lovely world of ours a “ vale of tears.” ’to depend upon the work of their own
But the environments and conditions hands for a subsistence, and it would be
under which wc make up our estimate far more desirable than constant seden­
of the things of time and sense, includ­ tary employment, such as sewing.
There are many women who spend
ing our never-ending, never-tiring search
for the adorning of our persons, give their days in the dose atmosphere of a
added zest or provoke feelings of indif­ shop, who would be horrified at the
ference. as these conditions are favor*- thought of digging in the garden and
ble and inspiring or the contrary. Eu­ sowing seeds, planting, weeding and
genie, wielding the scepter of an Em­ raking. “ Oh, no! such an occupation
press, and leading her willing subjects a oould not be thought of for me; why,
wild dance of sensuous delighte along it would place me on a level with a day
the flowery pathways of her glitter­ laborer,” one exclaims.’ “ Not at all,”
ing court, attained the full measure I would reply, “but it would give you
of her desire as queen without a rival fresh air and healthful toil, aud brace
in the domain of fashion, and the arbi­ up your muscles and nerves, and take
ter of modes and manners in the social away the rag-baby look they now pos­
and society life in a kingdom in which sess.”
her nod or spoken word was supreme,
With the'flowers, early vegetables
and the same Eugenie, stricken with ap­ could also be raised and sold to advan­
palling grief over an irreparable loss, of tage. In the vicinity of dties and towns
which her somber weeds are the sad a market for such commodities can al­
token and touching stoty, illustrates the ways be found; the supply rarely ex­
chances and changes to which human­ ceeds the demancL It luu been said
ity are subject, ana serves as a silent that flowers will grow better under the
yet suggestive reminder that the things kindly care of women, and a lonely lady
which to-day occupy mind, and thought, with 'rsmall amount of money could
and heart, 'may, on the morrow, pall Invest a part of it in bedding out plants,
upon our senses, and become objects annuals, vegetables and small fruite,
of indifference or disgust. In the rich, and, with the assistance of a boy of all
riper glow of health and strength, mat­ work, make quite a tolerable support.
ron or maid may find the world oi Most women to whom such a life would
pleasure amid the blaze and brilliancy be agreeable and desirable
possess
of scenes where “ earth’s gay banner's enough strength to attend to the work
wave,” but when the darkening shad­ of superintending and directing mat­
ows of sickness or sorrow overcast the ters, and the boy could do the digging,
horizon of her life, ah! what a change weeding and watering. In England
comes o’er the spirit of her dream! there are already hundreds of women at
Winter points his frigid finger at laugh­ work in nurseries andgreen-houses, and
ing Spring, and says: “What care I they do all the grafting, budding and
for your azure skies, your buds and re-potting of plants, with quite as much
blossoms, your garniture of green fields, skill in the handling of them as the male
and your sunny meadows and wild, operatives possess.
waving woodlands? One breath of my
At the present time flowers are more
nostrils will wither and blast them alt" sought after than ever before, and if
And Spring, careless of Winter’s taunt, women would become skilled in flori­
moves on, scattering with generous culture. they would soon find a large
hand her garlands of roses and budi field for their labors; tbe gains of wom­
and flowers, and changes with magic en gardeners would be of more account
wand and noiseless step unsightly and than those of seamstresses and shop­
rigid forms into scenes of vernal life girls. Of course there is work in it; I
and beauty. There is a time and season have yet to see the occupation that
fcr all things, and fashion has her times pays which does not demand head or
and seasons.—AT. Y. Evening Poet.
hand labor. But the work can be so
arranged as to leave the hottest hours
of the day for rest and leisure.
Death Attends a Delusion.
It is really surprising that this branch
Michaei Kane, a saloon-keeper at of labor has not been adopted by wom­
Twentieth and Cuthbert Streets, who en for profit long ago, as so many ladies
began to rave deliriously on Saturday devote so much of their time to it for
last about the bites that his Scotch ter­ their own gratification. In Germany
, rier had inflicted on his cheek and finger and Switzerland women are now taught
over three weeks ago, was taken to St the culture of flowers as a profession,
Joseph’s Hospital on Tuesday morning. and many women are earning their liv­
Dr. Watson, of No. 201 North Twentieth ing as gardeners, not only al their own
street, had decided that it was a case of homes, but also in the employment of
mania a potu, resulting from an abrupt others.—Cor. Country Ocnlleman.
cessation of drinking, and aggravated
by the thought that hydrophobia would
Material for Egg Shells.
soon ensue. The belief tool^ complete
possession of Kane’s mind, and no per­
When birds are In their wild st«ue,
suasion or treatment could eradicate it.
they have no difficulty in procuring a
For five davs ho had refused to drink
supply of material for forming the shells
any kind of liquid, and it was only by a
of the eggs they lay. They have an un­
subterfuge that he was induced to dnnk
limited range, and can pick up particles
some milk, and then when whisky was
of lime-stone, portions of decomposed
suggested to him he swallowed a good,
bones, and other substances that can bo
stiff dram eagerly, insisting that it be
converted into the shells of eggs. Wild
“neat." He continually talked of the
birds lay nt most only as many eggfl as
dog^and hydrophobia, and his visiting
they can hatch at two sittings. Some
acquaintances also pcrxistently talked
. to him about the malady, which only kinds of birds hatch only one brood of
young in a season. Domesticated birds,
increased his uneasiness. At times he
especially fowls, produce a large num­
raved and was frequently violent, yet
ber of eggs in the course of a year.
. was conscimis, and on every subject ex­
S6me of the non-sitting varieties of hens
cept the dog was rational. Still there
lay as many as 150 eggs in a year. A
were no symptoms of hydrophobia, nor
anything like them. ’ His dread of largo amount of materials is required
to form the shells for all these eggs. It
water was only a phantom, as was is not contained in the grain and other
proven when he was induced on Mon­ kinds offood that are furnished fowls,
day morning to drink some. When the especially those kept in confinement
cup was handed to him he called to his As a consequence, they lay eggs that
attendants: “Ixrok out now for me have very thin shells, or no shells at all
when I jump!" The water slipped The eggs that have thin shells are liable
down his throat easily and he waited to break in the nests, or during removal
for the expected convulsions
and
from place to place* Fowls, whether
“jump." Ho didn’t jump, hut sat quiet­
allowed to run at large or kept in close
ly down on the side of his bed and beshould be supplied with mate­
J'an to talk. ' When he was taken to St. quarters,
rials for forming shells. Tbe best sub­
oseph’s Hospital he was violent and
stance for forming egg-shells is bone­
noisy.
The resident ph vsi cian. Dr.
Cruice, took him in hand and gave dust It should be prepared from fresh
bones. The next best material to en­
much the same treatment that he had
tire bones pulverized is made by burn­
received under Dr. Watson, both physi­
ing bones, and then reducing them to
cians agreeing In their diagnosis of the
powder or to small grains. Tne pulver­
case. Kane grew so troublesome that ized shells of oysters and clams are very
the authorities of the hospital refused
good, and a fair and cheap substitute
to keep him there, and yesterday they
lor either of them is found in marble­
sent him home, under the care of his
dust that can be obtained of the manu­
wife, in a hack. At four o’clock he
facturers of grave-stones and monu­
died from exhaustion or failure of the
ments. Air-slaked lime should be fur­
heart, the result, it is said, of mania a
nished fowls for forming egg-shells, if
no better material can be readily ob­
Kane was about thirty-five years old,
tained.— Chicago Times.
exceedingly vigorous and active, and
free from every malady except the
brief mental disturbance that* prostrated
—A very pretty way to cover an oldhim. HJ served fourteen years in th© fashioned square stand (and almost
nexy.-^-Philadelphia Time*.
every borne has at least one) is to put
over the top smuothy a fine piece of
scarlet or bine silesia, or cambnc; over
The Other Horn.
this put a cover of any pretty openwork
“Mister,” began a small boy, as ho lace or muslin. Then put a piece of the
entered a Woodward avenue grocery silesia about thirteen inches deep
yesterday, •• ma bought some mackerel around it; cover this also with the lace;
tbe effect is excellent, and In this way a
here latt night”
useful article of furniture is redeemed
-Yes.”
“And in making change you gave from positive ugliness and deformity.
If the legs are scratched or marred, a
“No, I didn’t! I haven't had a coat or two of varnish will make them
quarter with a bole in it for a month!" look all right.— N. Y. PoeL
“ But ma says you gave her a------- ”
“Don’t believe it—don’t believe it! I
—“ Pat,” said a gentleman Who waa
remember. now; I gave her a half-dol­ fond of using high-sounding phraseolo­
lar, a quarter and a nickel.”
gy to his man of all work. “I am go­
“ Ma says you gave her a gold-piece ing to town at ten o'clock, and shall
for a penny, and here it ta.”
weed out tbe cucumber bed in the in­
" Good gracious alive! but so I did— terim.”
“Interim’”
thought Pat.
so I did! I remember now that I gave “ That’s a mighty quare name for a
her a dollar bill and a lot of small
■-—»» “ Is Mr. Smith at
a visitor who called

somebody’s hall m * bat-rack.
AN8WERTBIS.
Can you find a cue ot Brtebt’s DiwaM of tbe
Kidneys, L'rtnaiy ar Liver Coaplaluta that is
curable, that Hop Bitters has not ar cannot cun ’
Aak your neigh bom if tl&gt;ey can.

Harvesting
Machinery!
SPECALTIES

•peaking at a defeated as ndidate a wag said:
‘■What WM HI” Inquired a friend. “It was a

The delicate, emaciated and infirm find icrfect health; sure strength and youthful buoy­
ancy In Brown’s Iron Bitten.
The potato-bug Is making preparations to

Why is a chnrvh-bell more affable than a

tolled, but tbe other will be “biowed “first.

“BUCHUPAIBA.”
New, quick, complete cure 4 days, urlnaxy
affectlotis, uniartlnx.frrquent or difficult urina­
tion, kidnev dUe**e«. fl. at dniiraista. Mich.
Depot, JAMES &amp; DAVIS A CO., Detroit,
Mich.
,
.
The first corner" tn corn waa when Jueeph
stored all the grain in Egypt.
,
' LIFE-LONG RESULTS.
Many » girl, by using Zoe-Phora at the open­
ing period of womanhood, might be saved
from life-long trouble and expense.
A famous race-horse is named” Little Brown
Jug.” He U always full of spirit.

can+obtit
Diabetes, Bright's Kidney, Urinary of Live
Complaints cannot be contracted by you or your
family if Hop Bitters are used, and if you al­
ready have any of these diseases Hop Bitters is
the tnrtv medicine that will positively cure you.
Don't forget this, and don't get some puffed up
stuff that wlU only harm you.
There never was a law in New England for­
bidding a man to kiss his wife on Sunday. It
probably never was needed.
BEAUTIFUL REGAINED.
The beauty and color of tbe U*l£ay be safely
regained by using Parker’s Hair *lsarn, whicu
Is mu-h admire.! for iu perfume, cleanlines s
•nd dandruff eradicating properties.
The sunflower season Is not far off. When It
arrives we shall be as limp as the most pro­
nounced esthete of them all.
The symptoms of Itching Piles are moisture
like prespiratlon, intense itching, most at night
seems as If pin worms were crawling In or
about the rectum. The more you scratch the
worse they itch, very distressing. The private
parts are Often affected. Dr. Swayne's Oint­
ment is the most effective remedy extant for
this tormenting cor. plainL Gives rest at night
without that desire to scratch. Also baa on
equal in quickly eradicating Tetter, Itch, Salt
Rheume, Erysipelas, Barbers' Itch, Pimples,
all Scaly, Crusty, Itchy Skin Eruptions. Here
is tbe proof, “Certainly the best remedy ever
used In my practice.” Dr. Cotton, Woodstock,
Vt.. “troubled with Itching Piles for over twen­
ty years, it cured me completely,” L. 8. Messer
Enfield, Me. Bent fot 50 eta (in 3 ch stamps)
8 boxes, f 1.25, By Dr. Swayne &amp; Son. Phllad'a
Pa. Sold by all druggists.
“People at the mint are working over time."
And yet we sec very little of the work.

KILLS THE PLEASURE.
Illness In the house affects the whole family
in some manner. When the sickness is serious
the children's laughter must be hushed, foot­
steps must he softened, al! goes sadly and
wrong. Dr. David Kennedy's “Favorite Rem­
edy” stands in your doorway aud says to sick­
ness : "keep out I" It will cost you only a Doi.
lar to put the sentinel on duty, aud for bis
faithfulness thousana can vouch. Ask your
Druggist, or write to tlie Doctor, at Ronduut,

Young man don't marry a “gilded butterfly.’’
Marry a good looking girt The butter will fly
fast enough when you get to house keeping.
MONEY FOR A RklNY DAY.

kidney and"other dlMirdora We had used up
our Mviugs on doctor*. *twn our domlne advis­
ed uto try Parker's Ginger Tonic. Fouf bot­
tles effectol * care, and as a dollar's worth has
kept our family well over a veitr, we hare been
able to lay Bv money again for a rainy day.”—
A Pooo Max’s Wife.

The sweetest thing tn life is the unclouded
welcome of a wife.

OH! WHAT A COUGH.

REAPER NO. 2,

CLIPPER MOWER
Perfrctiun of OperatHra in^he Fifi!

and

Ljlitws of Dreft!
Adaptatisn to Erery Variety of Wort,
Docility of MaBagement,
Simplicity aii Durability,
. Honest Worfmanstnj.

Read the Following Testimonial:
Jaczsox, Mick.. Sep. Ifllh, 1B81.

Messrs. D, 8. Morgan A Co.,
Brockport, N.Y.:
Gfxtw—Your scents at Romeo, Sykes A Tay­
lor, sold, the past season, to my neighbor Mr.
Thurston, a Triumph Reaper .No 2. My oat
crop waa In tbe main very heavy, but tn parts
very uoeaveu; some tong aud heavy, some very
shprt. My own reaper is of quite a celebrated
make and' In • good condition. but neighbor
(Thurston waa anxious I should try fits machine.
Ys^nsented. He sent with It a little boy
«-.rl&gt;)y largenough to drive the team. It la
but Justice to say that I wasrery skeptical, and
had gave doubts about th? ahkity of the Tri­
umph or any other machine's being able to do
perfect work in my Held, but mustconfeM that
1 was filled with Admiration aud wonder at the
results. Machine and boy were entire masters
of the situation. Such quality of work with tbe
same case. I never saw equalled before. In­
stantly while in motion, the entire working ap­
paratus could be raised or lowered, tn' ‘gather
any condition prop or meet any requirements
of'surface. I consider ttyls feature indispens­
able Ln a Reaper. Tbe bent rake arms are anoth­
er Important feature. With trial I had, I think
your machine saves 25 per cent of the labor in
bindisz by the straight saiiarc and coxpact
form of the gavlcs. The Tbiumph la of very
light draft, under perfect control of the driver,
appears to be very simple in its construction,
and hence, very durable. In my judgment it is
very far inadvance of other machines of its
clssa, snd I believe the interests of th* farmers
of Michigan will be advanced i&gt;y giving the
Triumph a trial before purchasing.
Yoora nsspectlfully.
(1EO. W. PHILLIPS,
President Michigan State Ag*l Society.

GT Don’t buy a machine until you
examine the “TRIUMPH” north.
E. Cook’s Wagon Shop Nashville, Mich.

J. M. SHOUP.
QLEMENT SMITH,

J AMES k. H WEEZE Y,

Attorney &amp; Counsellor,
Probate Vqtice.
Stale of Mlch'na. r'oonty of Barry,
i* hereby given that by an order of I
■ 'oart for Hie Cvuu,y of Harry mule on

day

- tVILtiAM F. BtZER. ‘
‘oanty.dee^aaH*. n*d.Mte undenigned

&gt;te»&lt;nc their
Latere* Id rnoe

rill he heard b-foresaid cotnl«a4om-nt&gt;9 t£e 1st day
bated May l«t,
FREDERIC WIGNER.
33 97 J Ab »B REISER,

) .
Corn's.

Will you heed tbe warning. The signal per
CHRISTIAN BKBKXI.i.Y.)_________
hap* of the sure approach of that more ternbldiacase consumption. Aak yourself if you can
Administrator'll .Sale.
afford for the lake of saving 50 eta to run the
In lie mat Ur of ths Eatatc of
risk and do nothing for It. Wc know from ex­
GKORGEGII.1 IS.ibcaaaed.
perience that Shltoh’a Cure will cure your
Notice b hereby «iv*a that J shall tell at publl e
cough. It never fails. Thia explains why
more than a million txitlles were sold last year.
It relieves Croup, and whooping cough, at once
Mothers do not be without IL Fur lame back,
side or cheat use Shiloh's Porous Plasters.
Sold bv F. T. Boise.
Michigan. pursuant to license and authority grant­
DYSPEPSIA A LIVER COMPLAINT.
ed to ms on the Mth 4sy of Norsmbsr A. D.
Is it not worth tbe small price of 75 cents to 1A8L by the Frol
free youraef of every symptom of those distres­ MlrMcan. all of
sing complaints, if you think ao cal! at our
store and get a bottle of Shiloh's Vitallxer,
every battle baa a printed guarantee ou it, use
accordingly and if it does you no good It will
cost you nothing. Sold by F. T- Boise.
DaUd. March 8th
We have a speedy and positive cure for
(2MI)
ROBT. B. GREGG, Administrator
Catarrah. Dlnbtbena, Canker mouth snd
Hnd Aete, tn SIlILOT'tt CATARRH REM­
EDY, A nasal Injector free with each bottle.
.^say mn, mar
Use It If you dartre health and sweet breath.
Datoc, NaaheUM. April, li. 1SB3.
Price 50 cents. Sold by F. T. Boisj
ROB I*. B. GREGG. Administrator.

[JENBl ROE. Pbopb.ito.

Probate it mice.

meat market
Fresh and Salt Meats,

Smatei Bam aii Sbaulien,
IK THEIR 8EABO*"

Lard, by th&amp; lb. or barrel,
for Hide*.

Fresh Goods, Full Weights and
HELVRY ROE

Tbervnpoo it to ordered, that

�W U» MglHMmrtetprto. ford kM.uI
Grain and Produce.
euHe-ju illuminating and heating, M
well as a motor, which might be accom­
plished by them if they were only util­
ised, and now comes an enterprising
AT THE LOWEST LIVING PBICES. American, backed by sufficient capital,
determined to see if the cataract will
perform what the savants say it will.
‘ The preliminary step has been the
Sse of the twelve acres known as
ct Park, adjacent to the falls,
substantially gives the purchaser
the control of the water power of the
entire American Falls, estimated at
2,000,000 horse-power, or ten times the
amount of steam horae-power in Chica­
go and all the rest of Cook County—a
Force equal to that of 12.000,000 men.
The control of this prodigious j»ower
baring been obtained, it is proposed to
erectimmense buildings and ponderous
machinery upon the brink of the falls,
where the water can lie easily reached,
•• to be returned after use.” After gen­
erating the electricity by this unlimited
hydraulic force, it is to be conducted
through properly insulated cases to sixtyfive prominent American cities and
towns for illuminating purposes, and is
also to be used for operating machinery
and ultimately for heating purposes.
• «M»N,
Altogether there will be 10,000 miles of
copper cables with machinery to corre-

HI SHGICH SHITHin.

American aadToreign Marble.
Monumenta, Tombytonaa, Mantlea, 4c.,
IZaatinoB, Mioh.

NERVOUS
DEBILITY:
A cure guaranteed.
Db. K. C. Wb»?*« Nbbtb xbd Bun Tkbxtnbbi
a Bpeclflc lor byittrla, dlxxlncsa, oonvuUlona. cert
• uibr*dache, mental deprcaalon, lore of menrerr
tpartxalorrbcra, Impotcney, involuntary erola«lon»
prraunre old ore, exited by oterexertlon, Hit
•bate, or &lt;ner ludulr-uee. which Icadt U mlaory
decay and death. Ono box will car* recent caaea
Kacli box eon:a!na one month's Ireatrecnv &lt;»n«
dollar a box, or tlx boxea (or five doUara; vni V’
mail prepaid on receipt of price. W» guarantee tt&gt;
XVill,

HALL’S

S1OO

itni«,uk yourDruggiat torlt,and

^The project at the first glance is saffioent to take away one’s breath, but it
is certain that any project proposing to
handle Niagara tails must be on the
same scale as the cataract itself. Niiurara-is not a force to drive a petty mill
or run a small grist
Its prodigious
force must be handled in a Titanic way
or else let alone. He would be a rash
man who should hasten to predict that
this colossal scheme, which looks so
well on paper, is going to succeed, or that,
Niagara is going to allow itnclf to be
harnessed to dynamo machines without
a most determined resistance, or that
numerous unforseen obstacles will not
turn up that will prove insurmountable
and convince puny man that Nature has
some agencies like mountains, oceans,
cyclones and cataracts which she will not
allow to be utilized for material p.ur----------- ind against which she may protest
&gt; reckless way that will send the
whole iroject to everlasting swash. The
lat caq be done now is to an­
_______ that an effort is to be made to
compel this vast 160 foot fall of
water,
which
has
been
running
wild so
long
and
benefiting no
one, except the falls hackmen, who
have mainly retired on fortunes after
their connivance with the cataract, to
do something for a living and to be of
some use in the world. If every brawl­
ing little mill-stream in the country has
to oe of some service there is no rtytsor
why thin overgrown and monstrous
precipitation of water should not also
contribute to the wants of men—if it
can be done. If skill, courage, enter­
prise and • money are of any avail, it
may not be long before the world will
behold Niagara no longer plunging over
its brink merely for the profit of hack­
men and tbe pleasure of sentimental
sight-seers and poets, but working with
its huge power for the comfort of people.
It was not long ago that an English
writer sneeringly declared thata Yankee
could not look at Niagara Falls without
calculating its capacity as a wnterpower.
The writer probably never
dreamed that a Yankee, not content
with the mere calculation, would actual­
ly attempt to put it in opbration.—Chi­
cago Tribune.
-

Shine ’Em for a Cent.

PARKER’S HAIRThe Beat.
BALSAM.
Cleanest and I

PARKER’S

GINGERTONIC
A Pure Fsally Mcfisfce thrt Never Iclcxicitn.
Tf ynu are a mrchacic or turner. wnrn out with
&lt; verworte or a mother run down by family or hourehoed duuc. try Pakiuu*s Gi.rcaa Toxic.
If you are a lawyer, minister or businew man ex!.suited by menial strain or anriou* cir-l do not
take iStazautj uoauluiu, but use PxaKak'a
GtXGEK Toxic.
If you have Drcpepua. Rheumathm. Kidney or
Urinary Comnl.unu. or if you are noubied with any
r ii iT 11 -r-i . 1---- « .
■ ..
Hrou are watting away from age. diwpatnn or
■uy dtreaaeor wcakuexa and require a uimulanl take
GtxGTJt TOXIC at Ooct; h.a invigorare and build
you up from : — S—• -4— u_. -in------Lt banned___
11I8COX A CO..

A ragged boot-block with a gloomy
face stood at the foot of the steps of the
Park Place Station of the elevated road
late last evening.
•• Shine yer boots?” ho said. “Shine
’m for a cent.”.
‘‘Why do vou ask only a cent?”
“ Because Tm hungry?’
He got a quarter for shining that pair
of boots.
“ Oh, he caught you. did hd?’ ’ said
the gateman. when the boot-black’s cus­
tomer had gone up-stairs and bought hb
ticket. “ He's been workin’ that racket
some time.”
The boot-black^ customer looked over
tbe raffing. The boot-black was waiting
for another tender-hearted man.—Dotton World.

JESSE JAMES.

—A girl came with her mother to a
physician to be vaccinated, and was ter­
ribly nervous about the matter. • Juat
m the doctor was going to start work
she threw her arms around die old
lady’s neck and sobbed: "One last kba,
mamma, before the opentioa!”—
cago Tribune.

:Gormxk Twine-Binder!
PRINCIPAL* LINE
SUOKTWT. ML-ILXXST

m.

—In Glasgow, Scotland, Moody and
Sankey are gathering enormous con­
gregations, sometimes estimated as high
as 15,000. Nearly all the meetings are
crowded an hour before it b time to
begin the service—Chicago Journal.

—The Boman Catholic children of
Cincinnati, to the number of 8,000. have
been removed from the public schools,
and will- henceforth receive their educa­
tion in parochial schools supervised by
the ecclesiastical authorities. — Detroit
Pod.
’
—In Mr. Spurgeon’s ehurch in Lon­
don the regular hearers absent them­
selves one Sunday evening every three
months, and the house is given up to
strangers.
But in many parishes in
this country, the same thing is done
every Sunday evening.—N. F. 'Pod.

—Dr. Kean ion. a street preacher in
New York, who has just entered upon
the seventh year of his work, makes a
practice of distributing bread and coffee
and soup at the conclusion of each serv’
is always keenly relished,
____________ _ie efficacy of his work.—
N. Y. Herald

—Remark by Rov. Dr. Hartzell, who
is on a Southern tour, on being told that
the Methodist Church South was the
original Methodist Episcopal Church :
•• rbelong to the Methodist Episcopal
Church of God, and if you want to call
yours the Methodist Episcopal Church
South of God. I have no objections.”
'

—The South Carolina Methodist Con­
ference is making arrangements to es­
tablish a religious summer resort near
Henderson, NTC. The desire is to make
it as much like Chautauqua as possible
in its literary and educational features,
and to present such attractions as will
make it the popular place of pilgrimage,
not only for Methodists, but for all oth­
er good people.—N. O. Picayune.
—Dr. Jewell, an authority on nervous
diseases, protests against confining chil­
dren Lietween the ages of eight and
twelve rigidly to the school-room. They
should be examined from time to time
bj- a competent physician for the pur­
pose of ascertaining how much brain
work at school they can sustain without
injury. But until something is done to
relieve the high pressure in the schools,
there is little use in. protesting.
'

KANSAS CITY
HAS VALUABLE IMPROVEMENTS OVER ALL COMPETITORS

BE NOT DECEIVED
By statements made by agents representing other machines
having a resemblance to the McCORMICK, claiming their
Binders are the same, for such claims are false, and suits for
infringements have been brought against imitations

NORTH MAIN ST., NASHVILLE, M„
And examine it carefully before making your choice for the
coming harvest.
x

ALSO

Platform, Side-Spring and Side-Bar Carriages,'
and Wagons

I druv um out often!”
‘•Pre frequently seen
Washington in which he i
sitting upon a white home.
---------------ride a white horse, or don’t you recall
the color of his horse?"
•* Why, bress vour soul; ’call de odor
ob de boss—’call de color ob it? Do you
see dish yer nigh boss dat I’m a (lovin’
now, right? Well, dat's de worry boss
Moms Gawge used to ride. Helaf’ it
to me in hb will”
J ust then we reached the station, and

World MiBBfsctwtag Ce., 120 H*«*a=S~. NavTcrk

Our readers will jiud this
wonderful book the cheap­
est Dictionary published. The
information it contains is Worth
many times the amount asked
for it, and it should be in the
possession of everybody. With
this book in the library for refer­
ence, many other much more ex­
pensive works can be dispensed
with, and ignorance of his
country, history, business, laws,
etc., is. inexcusable in any man,
Note the price, $1, post-paid.

•‘You say,” I remarked to the old
negro who drove the hack, "that you
were General Washington’s body serv­
ant?”
"Dat’s so! Dal’s ies so, mussa. 1
done waited on Washington sence he
was so high—no bigger’n a small chile.”
“You know the story, then, about the
cherry tree and the hatchet?”
"Know it? Why I was dar on de
spot I seen Mossa Gawgd climb da
tree after de cherries, and I seen him
fling de hatchet nt de boys who was
stonin’ him. I done chose dem boys ofl
do place myself.”
“ Do you remember his appearance as
a man? What he looked like?’’
“ Yes. indeedy. Ho was a kinder
short, chunkv man; sorter fat and
hearty lookin’. lie had chi;: whiskers
and rtTustache and spectacles.
Mos’
generally he wore a high hat; but I seed
him-in a fur cap wid ear warmers I”
"You were not with him .of course,
when he crossed the Delaware—when
he went across the Delaware River?”
“ Wid him? Yes, sir; I was right dar.
I was not more’n two feet offn’n him as
he druv across do bridge in hb buggy!
Dat’s a fac’. I walkea’long ride de ofl
hind wheel of dat buggy all do way.”
“You^saw him, then, when he fought
tho British at Trentonp”
“Sho’s your’o born I did! I hold
Mossa Gawge’s coat an’ hat while he
fought de British at dat wery place
Mossa Gawge clinched him, ana den
doy rassled and rasried, -and at first he
frew Mossa Gawge, and den Mossa
Gawge flung him, and set on him, and
done hammered him till he cried ’nuffl
Moraa Gawge won dat fight. I seed him
wid me own eyes! An’ I come homo wid

Ono of the applications of electricity
which has not as yet attracted general
attention is the magnificent effect which
It can produce when employed as a
means of personal decoration. A neck­
lace or a bracelet of diamonds of the
first water could not compare for brill­
iancy with the effect of a string of crys­
tals, each containing a tiny filament of
carbon heated to incandescence by an
electric current supplied from a small
•* Who wa’n’t wid him? I wa’n’tf I
Faure battery, which might easily be
concealed on the person. At the Crys­ was do only pusson dar ’ccptin’ one
tal Palace there is a diminutive breast-, white man. I loaded Mossa Gawge’s
uin which cau i&gt;c illuminated by a two- revolver an' han’ed it to him, an’
inch Faure battery carried in the pocket nicked up de apple an’ et it soon as he
knocked it off Nobody can’t tell dish
of the wearer.—Fail Mall Gaseite.
yer olo niggah nuffin ’bout dut circum­
stance.”
.—A poor woman of eighty could not
** You know ail the General’s rela­
pay her rent at East Brookfield. Mass.,
and the landlord removed the doors to tions, too. I suppose? Martin Luther
force her out of the house. When she and Peter the Hermit and the rest?”
•• Knowed um all. Many and many’s
hung up blankets for a shelter from the
de time I done waited on de table when
wind, he nulled them down. She was
already ill, and under this treatment Mossa Gawge had uni to dinner. I re­
soon died. But her imbecile daughter,
aged sixty, still remained. The land­
lord ejected her. Then a mob of women
broke open the replaced Jdoors with
axes, reinstated the daughter, and hoot­
ed the owner—2ft T. Herald.

A6EIT8^^ui‘=S?.FRAAK &amp;

cago. who has accepted a' call to Bos­
ton. was born in England in 1830. He
came k&gt; this country in 1873, at the invitotion of the Rev. Robert Collyer.
—The Jewish people of New York
have decided to establish free schools in
that city, where the rudimentary prin­
ciples of Hebrew history, literature and
religion will be taught.—New Haven
Register.
—Minister Lowell is quoted by his
biographer, Mr. Underwood, as say­
ing: ** If a man does anything good,
the world always finds it out sooner or
later; and if he doesn’t, why, the world
findi that outi too—and ought’1

COLUMBUS BUGGY
COLUMBUS,
Selb the BEST BUGGY on tho GLOBE
for the MONEY.
Send for CATALOGUE and TESTI­
MONIALS of HUNDREIAS of LIVERY­
MEN who have nsed them.
Bcaure. before baying, to examine the Name
Plata to be round ou lb&lt;- ra.r of every bi-m
manufactured by ua, for none are genuine unleaa
they bear tbe name of
.

COLUMBUS BUGGY COMPANY,
COLUMBUS, 0,
Mang inferior goods are offered aa Colunabos
Bugylea, and care ahou d be Hard to &lt;ll»tingul*b
Ixtween “Cnlumbua Boggiea" and Columbw
Buggy Co'a BeggiM.
&lt;° «

For Saib if Dealers EVERYWHERE.

w^M^?

JESSE
FRANK if
JAMESfe^
^nnSHSSS

TO LADIES ONLY!

PIMPLES
CONSUMPTIVES.

�1882
KALAMAZOO

In Nashville
. CONGRESSIONAL. .

□«

(House bill autborixing. tin- reetapt of federates and of the physician who
no Instigated
mswRaica ,i the
we ran.
In XYnhanu, r.-.r ume •uua.wt Ini.,................. ..
...
...be arrested.
. . I _
The survivors of the Jeannette expeditlop
bui
on hM issued aa»*d from Liverpool for the United State, on

spoke on the measure, which
bill wm passed tn tho House
renun-

tger offered a proposition that all charters
i esmirc twenty years from next January,
as CongrcM shall provide for an earlier

shots for the International contest at CrcedWnxiAM H. ’
city of Newark,

ty and the exigencies of fashion, more es­
pecially relating to tbe toilets of the fair &gt;fxTo lakewarm Catholics who pre inclined to
The Pceiflc National Bank of Boston, which view with disfavor the more ultramontane
recently resumed business after several doctrines of the church the mandate gives a
months’ suspension, Bm now finally resolved
to dose its doors and wind up his affaire.
entering too freely into the amenities of life
Bu arrivals of Immigrants at United States with Protestants, from' attending Protestant
porta during the month of April aggregated churches and Protestant marriages, fromset70,376, an increase of 9,100 over those of the
same month last year. The total arrivals
from January 1 to April 80 were 142,710,
On the 18th United States Minister Sargent
against 109,123 tor the same period in 183L
Rkforts from Delaware show a prospect of presented his credentials to Emperor William

A train on the Denver &amp; Rio Grande Road
recently thrown from the track to Mar-

wm

one thousand feet deep.

providing that

ury recently received a conscience contribu­
tion of $2,787 in an envelope postmarked St.

abolition of postage on papers and magazines.
He States that merchandise rated m fourth
ment is to ba taxed for transportation It should
Ax Indianapolis youth, aged seventeen
yearc, and his sweetheart, aged nineteen, grew
tired of life and wished to die. They hired a
bugCL drove to a suburb, and Imbibed lauda­
num, but without avail- Then they pur­
chased and ate another jolson, with fatal re­
sults to tbe youth. The girl returned to In­
dianapolis and narrated ths events.
division

the

1U to’ 1. lacking CT. of a’ quorum, j
of the House was ordered, and 214
on tho question of consideration resulted in
119 yeas to 2 nays. Mr. HlMxwk reported the
General Deficiency Appropriation bill (!&amp;,43S,8I&lt;). After another fruitless call of the
House, Mr. Calkins moved an adjournal‘.-tit.

lx the Senate on the 22d Mr. Miller Introluced a joint resolution to authorize the
Mr. Hoar spoke on the Geneva-Award bill.
A communication wm received from tbe
Segroury of War. asking for a special Ip.pcaprtatlon of fS.000 to dispatch a relief
E*86* w.*0
Franklin Bar..a In tho
House Mr. Calkins called up the South CaroUna contestoil election case. Mr. Randall
moved an adjournment tu the 24th, which
wm lost—IS to 112. He then raised a ques­
tion of const,*.'ration, the vote showing no
qwrum- A call of tho Honsc disclmwd tho
present;.' of S3 members. The doors were
c-los-d. and the Scrgeant-at-Arms wns ordered
. .. . ,, HI Mil! uui, an
, out hail refrained from answering to hls name.
1 W ben called upon to give an excuse for hte
absence. Mr. Van Voorhls prefaced his excuse
&gt;y some political reflections which created
great excitement on the Democratic side, and
for aame-Umc much obnfusion prevailed.
After another vote on conalderatlon and a
second call of the House, nn adjournment was
effected.
’

DOMESTIC.
The General Assembly of tho Southern Pres­
byterian Church met at Atlanta, Gx, on the
18th. Ihf IL H. Smoot, of Texas, was elected
Moderabr.
On tiie ISth Dr. Kendall, of Syracuse. N. Y..
wm found in a field adjoining tbe poor-house
crmrtcry, with a bullet-bole between hb eyes.
As a full oattit of resurrectionist's tools lay
near him, it wm tho-ight be wm shot while
robbing a grave.
. ,
At a late meeting in Milwaukee, at which
representatives from the various dairy asso­
ciations of tbe country were present, it was
resolved to hold a dairy fair in that city In
December next.
The New York Assembly has passed a bill
permitting call loans to lie mule at any rate
■ on which borrower and lender can agro-.
A JURY at Fort Madison, Iowa on the 19th
■foujid Polk Wells and Charles Cook guilty of
i tbe murder of a penitentiary guard, and fixed
&gt; their punishment at Imprisonment for life.
A gasoline Move in the bouse of John
Martinique, in Chicago, exploded on the 19th,
burning Mra. Martinique fatally and her son
and daughter in a frightful manner.
The next meeting of the Presbyterian GeoDukixg the seven days ended on the 18th
there were 128 buaiocM failure* in the United
States.
■
Awout daylight on the 19th flames broke
. oat on Chestnut street, Leadville, CoL, and
destroyed the Windsor Hotel, Academy of

Wm. A. AYLSWORTH

Ronuui Catholic Archbishop of Quebec, which

, ex-Treasurer of the

PERSONAL AND POLITICAL.
Bscbbn Chapman, ex-Governor of Ala­
bama, died at Huntsville a few days ago.
The Texas Greenback 8tate Convention Is
called to meet at Fort Worth June 20.
Tub funeral of ex-Governor C. C. Wash­
burn, of Wisconsin, took place at Iji Crosse
on the 18th, and was attended by a large num­
ber of distinguished persons.
The Democratic State Central Committee
of Indiana on the 18th issued a call for a Bute
Convention, to be held at Indianapolis,
August 2.
At tho recent session of the General Con­
ference of the Methodist Church South, held at
Nashville, Tenn., Revs. A. W. Wilson, D. D.,
Atticus G. Haygood, John C. Granberry, D.
D., Robert K. Hargrove and Linus Parker, D.
D., wore elected to vacant bishoprics.
Gctteau sent a letter to a Washington pa­
per on the 19th In which he drew a parallel
between bls coming execution and the cruci­
fixion of Christ, asserting that in the one case
m in the other the wrath of God would de­
scend upon the Nation. He also stated that
be wanted an unconditional pardon or noth­
ing.
The vole in tbe National House of Representallres on the passage by that body on the
19th of tho National-Bank Charter bill was as
follows:
You.—Aldrich. Barr. Bayne, Bench. Belmont,
Bingham, Blis*. Briggs, Buck, Bumiw-i (Mk-h.),
Butterworth, Calkins, Campbell, Candler, Can­
non. Carpenter. CMwell, Chase, Covington, Crapo, Cullen. Davin (HL), Dawes. Docrinjr, DeMoUe. DciMter. Dingier. Dunnell. Dwight, Er
mentrouL Ellis. Evtos, Farwell (lowa.i. Flower,
Garrison. George, Godsh.-ilk, Grout. Gunther,
Hail, Hammond (N. Y.k Hiuxicnbcrgh. Harris
(Mass.). Harris (N. J.). HMkeU, Hellman, Hen­
demon. Hiscock,HoblltxetL Houk. Humphrey,
Hutching Jacobs, Jadwin. Kelley, Klotz. Lew­
is, Lord. Lynch. Mason. McClure; McCold. MoCook, McKinley, Milos, Miller. Moore. Morey,
Mutchler, Now, Norcross. O'Neill, Orth. Par
ker. Payson. Peelle, Fierce.
Pettibone,
Phelps, Pound, Prescott. Runner. Ray,
Rice (Ohio), Rice (Maas.i. Rich. Richard­
son (N. Y.), Richardson (8. C.). Rltehle. Robosou. Robinson (Muss.). Roblns-m lOtoio), Ross,
Russell. Ryan, Shelley. Shulti. Banner. Smith
(Pa.), Smith (1 IL), Smith (N. Y.f. Spaulding.
Spooner, Stone, Strait. Thomas. Thompson
(la-kTilunon. Townsend (Ohio). Tyler, Updo
gruff (&lt;&gt;.&gt;, Updegraff (lowai. Umer, Van Acr
nam.
Want -Watson.
W,-liber.
Wort,
WLIfnWait,
UMIII.n.,
&gt; TV-Ill:,.
VI-....JI XI
’ .

Having just returned from the East with three immense
. stocks for Nashville, Big Rapids and Cadillac, which
gives us the advantage over small dealer?, who
purchase for one store only, we are offering

Over 500 Suits
At less than yon can buy the Cloth and Trimmings. ,

Tiot steamer ManitouHn, of the Great
Northern Transit Company, wm burned off
Shoal Poldt, Ont., on the 19th. A small boat
wm upset, drowning a man and a girt.
4 man named McCarthy, with stains on his

Spring-2th Harrow
Wiard Plows,
•
South Bend Chilled Plows,
।
Gale Plows,

(Buy Genuine Factory Points)
For $4 and $5, we are selling a very good every day
Suit, many styles to select from.
For $8 and $10, we are selling a very desirable diaginal
worsted, bound and made in sack and frock styles. Other
RAWSOW’B
stores get $12 for the same suits.
Our 12 00 and 14.00 Suits will surprise you.
For 15.00 we can give you a suit you need not be asham­ REAPERS &amp; MOWERS
Lighte&amp;t and Strongest Made,
ed to wear any place, and would cost $18 to $20 at any store.
Our 16.00 and 1800 Sults are well made and tflmHUBBARD
ed, and for
fit and wear can not be equaled.
lor nt
n&gt;
On*

Strayer's GRAIN DRILL,

rested at Glasgow on the 20th, for connection
with the as. aAs I nations in Dublin.
. 8omb one on tho 30th attarlied crape to the
door of the residency of Cardinal McCabe to
Dublin, and left on his doorstop a slip of pa­
per with a sketch of a coffin.
A f.eczxt conflagration at Boyadab, Asia
Minor, destroyed four hundred houses
8atPWKiCKKD seamen brought to to Quebec
on tbe 20th a report that on May 1 the ship
Western Belle was crushed by collision with
an Iceberg, the Captain and thirteen of the
crew losing their lives.
Tn« British Postmaster-General recently
stated to the House of Commons that tbe
Government .had no Intention of-purchasing
the telephone lines of the United Kingdom.
The Spanish Chamber of Deputies has re­
jected a proposition establishing trial by Jury.
Dtnuxa a disturbance at Limerick, Ireland,
on the 21st tbe police charged tbe mob with I
fixed bayonets, and seriously injured several
ficrsons.
I x Hie cable dispatches o! the Boston Hrrald
of tbe 2lst tbe assertion Is made that Glad­
stone and tbe Land-League members of
Parliament had agreed upon a plan of com­
promise whereby the Arrears act was to be
first passed, and then t^e bill for the repres­
sion of crime in Ireland was to be acted upon,
the Irish members to be allowed to Introduce
amendments materially modifying Its rigor­
ous provisions.
Reports from missionaries in Asia Minor
reveal the existence of a serious famine to that
region. Tht American Board of Foreign Mis­
sions have forwarded some aid and ask that
contributions be sent toTreMurer L. &amp;. Ward j
at TVxtnn
A recent conflagration in the Jewish quar­
ter of the city of Kovuo, in Russia, destroyed
106 houses.
Tnc anti-Austria revolt In Dalmatia is end­
ed, rad the insurgents have surrendered.

zbosts

Boixcoi gij its Meaner &amp; Binder

Our stock in this line is the largest, and finest we ever offered. All Goods from a substantial school suit to tbe finest
dress suit. We have in stock more boys and youth clothing
than the combined stock of.&lt;ny house in town. Our stock

Boots, Shoes And Groceries,

5

Is full up and PLENTY OF THEM. Ready pay purchasers
desired. WE OWN THE GOODS and about 70 cents on the
dollar. You can save money, and be comparatiqely happy by
buying your goods

improved 1882.

Sash, Doors and Blinds,
Paints, Oils, Varnishes,
BUILDERS HARDWARE,

DETROIT STOVE CO’S. STOVES
Domestic &amp; New Home

SEWING MACHINES

Cheap! Cheap! Cheap!

When in need of the Best
We want your BNTTER and EGGS and will allow you
PINE WOODS PRICES.
Grades of Hardware and Ma­
Respectfully
chinery. Call and see me.

W. ,1. AYLSWORTH.

nation of tbe Czar of Russia, which wm ap­
pointed to take place In August next, had
been postponed for the period of one year, a
deep conspiracy against the lives of the Cxa.;
and bis guests having been discovered.
Five men who recently attempted the doatructlon of a bridge on the Mexican Nation
Al Railroad were shot as soon m caught.
It was stated on the 22d that the Irish party
in tho British Parliament had determined to
strenuously oppose the Repression bilL Dillon,
Parnell and others were commissioned to
draft amendments to the measure.

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN

LATER NEWS.

Desire to announce that they hare rented A. C. Buxton’s new and elegant brick store and arc
now stocking tho same with a complete line of

YRAJtTK C. BOISE

THE CROWN

NEW FIRM!

Tnx Cabinet at Washlnirton held a pro­
tracted session on the 23d, devoted to
the $ubject of the formation of ths Tariff
Commission,
but
no
conclqsloti wm
reached.
The fact
was brought out
in the discussion that cx-8ecretary Kirkwood
wm not eligible to appointment, owing to bis
election as*Senator to ths Congress which
finally passed the bilL
THE CROWN SEWING MACHINE.
The National Committee of the Greenback­
Navt.—Aiken. Anderson, Atkins, Bultzboover. Bland. Blount, Brumm. Burrows (Mo.), Labor party met at St Louis on tbe 23d.
j *9*Tbc ’Crown" comes into the market
Cabell. Caldwell,Cassidy, Clardy. Cis-ke, Clem­ Jesse Harper, of Illinois, was elected Chair­
he tast of all the macElnen, bdt has sprung to
ents, Cobb, Colcrick. Converse, Cook. Cravens.
front rank at once from the fact that it baa ta­
Culberson. Cutta. Davis (Mo.j, Dunn. Finley. man. Weal Virginia wm the only State not
ken the good features in all other machJnca
Ford. Forney. Geddoa, Gunter, Hammond represented. A sub-committee wm appoint­
and put them in one grand combination, mak­
&lt;Ga.). H axeltine. Hutch. Hoge. Holman, ed to prepare an address to the people of tbe
House,
Jones
(Tex.), --Jones
(Ark-i.
ing tills the Handsomest, Largest, Most Silent
Keana, Knott, Ladd, Lefevre, Marsh. Matson. country.
and Lightest Running machine yet offered. AH
McKenzie, McMillan. Money, Morrison, Muld­
A Washixoton special says the Intelligence
the ■•points” that the experiece of twenty years
row, March. Randall, Reagan. Rloe (Mo.), of die decision of the Court In banc overrul­
tu all kinds of family and light manufacturing
FOR
THE
LEAST
MONEY.'
Scbackelford. Simonton, BIngleton, (Ill.),
ing his appeal .was conveyed to Gulteau a few Remember that we have no old, shop-worn and unseasonable goods, but that everything is work hM proved to be absolutely good are to be
found only in the “Crpwn.” Other machines
minutes after its announcement In court, and
may have one, two or three of these ‘-points”
• Ky.J, Vance, Warner, Wellborn. Whlttbome,
WM received by him with stolid indifference.
Williams (Ala.), Wilaon-CT.
but none but lire “Crown” has them all.
T*. -re wm a number of pairs announced, He said to the guard who gave him tbe Intel­
Every device that is really desirable In other
but no statement as to bow the members would ligence that he bad not anticipated anything
machines will be found tn the “Crown." Adbare voted. Among them were pairs: Howitt
*a~ All our purchases are made with the cash and by strict attentlonjto the wants of our vantage has been taken of Hie experiments and
and Ketchum, of New York, who would have else. “ My dependence lr now placed to Pres­
customers wc expect to rcapsucees*.
experience with all kinds of machines ever in­
voted in the ■fflrmaUre, with Willis and Buck- ident Arthur," be said. “ I made him what
Nashville, Apr. 20,1882.
vented, and the “Crown? Is a perfect embodi­
he la, aod be cannot afford to goback on'me.”
ment of everyting go,d in them.
Tbe Grand Jury at Washington on the 20tb Tbe prisoner wm reluctant to converse on the
E. R. WHITE.
retorted new presentments agaifist Brady, •abject any further, and wm soon left to his
own thoughts.
.
/
.piracy to defraud the United States on lUrlx a letter published on tbe 28d Tbomas M.
route contracts, xnd warrants were Issued.
Marshall declined the Republican nomination

Genth Furnishing Goods

7^1

TIEEZE G-ZREJLT SECRET

PRINDLE &amp;, CHIPMAN.

hachic, Tex., valued at $100,000, were .swept
away by fire on the 10th.

•elf into a cistern, and

wm

drowned.

States Treasurer GUAllan had received from
London and Parts contributions &gt;f $3,353 for
the Garfield Memorial Hospital at Waahlng-

Sexatos Logan arrived in Waahlngton on
the 21st, after bls sojourn of several weeks at
Hot Springs, Ark., and bo wm Mid to be to
excellent health.
Thf. Peruvian Minister recently ealjed upon
•Ignmeut to William F. Jones. Tbe liabilities

ter from Presldcat Montero, expressing the

Tub British House of Commons on the 23d
adopted the motion of Mr. Gladstone that the
Repression and Arrears of Rent bills should
have precedence over all other business until
the House otherwise ordered. The A nrare
of Rent bin passed to a second reading.
tbreatenlng revolt against, the Khedive and
bls English, French ana Turkish supporters.
Each of these Powers had war vessels In the
harbor of Alexandria.

AGAIN,TO THE FRONT! EVERYBODY
Witt the LABGESTfanil Most ComDlete Stock or

FURNITURE
Ever laid down in any one store in Barry
or Eaton Counties.

Take notice that the time hu come when the
Narrow Tired Wagon Is no longer sought after
by experienced men. People are continually
foSSf,W
“■&gt;
■»’«

Wide Tire Wagon!

death of Minister Huribut, to whom reference

The Governors of Wisconsin and Illinois
rentlon will be held at Columbus on the lat of
Anm.i

listed letter, declared himself In favor of tbe

rateable observance of Decoration Day.
Robkxt R. Hitt, ex-Auistazt Secretary of
SUte, appeared before tbe House Committee
on Foreign Affaire on tbe 23d, and testified
touching matters connected with the CtiiHan-

Our mammoth two-story double store
Is full and running 'over.

BUY A WIDE TIRE WAGON

I KEEP THEM

stitutlon.

Morton, Bites &amp; Co. and tbe Credit IndnsirtoL

Everything yon need from the smallest Bracket to
a $125 Parlor Suit

BUY YO|Ht PLOW POINTS
are chilled.

The Court (tn tame) of tbe District of Co-

You can nave money and hard a better eelection to choose
from, by dealing with os than any*other dealer

ISonftlTorsretlt.

FIRST CLASS BLACKSBITii

�laid her soft, white cheek on Plu। Riordan’*shtmidcr, and
him
t with her lustrous, dove-like eyes
baby with six ib*Mrmild make your hekd swim.
“laiuDot stey/ be replied, kissing
thti peachy rod lip* a* he spoke.
I
must go now, right away.’
song, "Hands all Round.”
But the girl placed her arm* around
hisjieck—aVrna, whose soft, rounded
Some people hntn n nit m bad as c(irv«a aud pink-tinted skin would have
made op anchorite throw up hi* Joo,
out of her seat in an instant. This sad pleaded with him Uv stay a little
longer,
“I cannot,” he again said,
variety i* probably the jumping rat. looking at her tenderly.
“Cannot ! ’ repeated the girl, a «hade
■ “There are often skeleton* hidden of anger tiugeing the tone in which the
behind marble front* andjacc curtain*, word was uttered.
“And pray, »&gt;r,
observes a Chicago contemporary; and what i* it thataoimperatively calls you
.
..
it may be added then when the spring­ hence t”
Bending over her with a careless
time pans out, a* it has this year, there grace that artfully concealed 019 tdigiiji
are numerous skeleton* partly hidden naggyoes* at the knee* of hi* pant*,
behind chest-protectors and porous Plutarch said in low, bitter, tones, that
were terrible in their intensifarj
plasters! T w -_________
“I have broken my suspenders.’
In writing down the names of heroes
In the sleeper.
do not forget to record those of the en­
gineer Stein and Markley, thr fireman
As the train was about to leave .the
of a Minnesota passenger, who, when Union Depot, for the East the oUier
they came rushing suddenly upon a ■night, a man with a satchel said hed
heard a heap about” them sieeping eare
broken rail, stood at their posts, re­ and he guessed he’d try one once; Mok
versed the engine, set the brakes, and ing the neccessary arrangements, he
the^ car and
saved every life upon the train except was admitted to
soon settled himself.into a scat. Before
their own,
•
reaching Trenton he was asleep feet on
A colorfcd^momsu in Alabama who the opposite cushion, and hi* satchel for
a pillow. The porter finally got ready to
attended)a circurTast fall and was make his bed and gave a shake to arou*
frightened by theftnimal*. is now ac­ him. “Wbo in blares be you!” growled
cording to a local record, the fortunate the man a* he opened hi* eyes. De por­
ted sab.” “You are, ehl Weil, now, you
mother of an alleged baby elephant.
look here! I never saw you before, and
It has "a thick, rough, scalp exterior never shall again, but I want you to un­
covered with thin hair, and a long derstand that I’m no chicken. I paid $2
pendent ear. Its cries are low and for the privilege of sleepingin this car,
just as I get into my first snooze a­
plaintive like an animal, not like a hu­ and
long you come and wake me up! If you
man being. One of our citizens has want a chaw of-tobacco or a match you
can
have it, but don’t break in on my
offered $1,000 for it.
dream* again if you want to be alive,
The foolish country editor prints the when ,we get to - Buffalo! When I buy
name of his candidate for Governor at certain rights I’m going to have ’em or
the top ofacolumn. write* double-lead­ bust. - •

SATURDAY.

MAY 17.18®.

ed leaders Betting forth hi* virtue*, and
i* called an organ grinder. The wise
country editor print* in an ob»:ure cor­
ner of hi* paper a small paragraph
stating that “ many shrewd politician*
are inclined to the belief” that hi* fav­
orite will be the nominee, a popular
movement is set on foot, and the editor
i* credited with being a far seeing po­
litical observer.

A modern Jonah, whom prosperous
communities woyld ilo well to avoid,
has just shaken the dust of Nevada
from hi* feet. Before starting thence
for Oregon be made this concise bnt
comprehensive statement of the illuck
which has hounded him: “I went to
Maine and the ico crop failed; L went
to Florida and the frost killed all the
gardens and orchards; I went to Miss­
issippi and they had a flood; I went to
California and the people began to die
of smallpox. Since I struck this State
thu.Qomstock mines have have never
paid ft dividend, and if I go to Oregon
I am willing to bet they will'have a
drouth.’

A certain boat coming up the Mis*issipptthe other day, lost her way and
bumped up against a frame house. She
hadn’t more then touched it before an
old darkey rammed his, head up
through a hole in the. roof where the
cLimney once came out and yelled
at the captain oh the roof: “Where de
bell is yer gwine wid dat boatl Can’t
yer see nufflnt Fust thing yer knows
yer gwine to turn di* house ober, spill
de old woman an’dechil’cn out in de
flood ml* drown em. Wat yer de’in out
here in de country wid yer dam boat,
anyhow! .Go.on back yander froo de
so’ngteld* and git back .into der ribber
where yer b’lougs. Ain’t got no busi­
ness sev’n miles out in de country fool­
in’ roun’ people’s house nohow!" and
she backed ont.
Great Britian has become so terribly
frightened over a prospective war ad­
vantage that France might obtain by
reason of tbe channel tunnel, if it were
completed, that work on it has been
stopped by order of the government.
This is one of the most silly perform­
ances recorded in history. The chan­
nel tunnel would furnish Great Brit­
ian as good an opportunity to invade
as it does for France to invade England.
But Great Bq tian i* in much fear that
France would rnn a lot of armed men
through the bole that she could not
catch as they came out of the ottier
end, and hence the work on the enter­
prise must stop. It would seem to tbe
ordinary mind that France could land
men on the British coast with far
greater rapidity by sending them over
in boats and vessels then she could by
sending them on foot through this
small hole under the channel, but it
appears different to the British cab­

inet.

-________ l ■ r

The Maine girl, tall end ruddy,
kisses as though she were taking
an impression in the chewing gum
of her native State. Tbe Masschuett* girt kisses in the Greek style,
flavored with brown bread. The New
York girl goes at it aa if she were
dabbling in&gt;Wall street speculation.
The kiss of the New Jersey girl is
fiery as a taste of apylrjack, better
known as Jeraey.
Little Delaware’*
grow there. A MwyUnd kiss is as
rich and juicy a* a terrapin Blew.
In the Old Dominion yon are met
with a genuine hospitality; the girl*
kiss an though they wanted you to

“Den” Newton has purchased the saw mill

Il is a girt. I

owning not^than two-thlrd* of tho capital

Section throe refers to the duty of tho Comp­
trailer of the Currency in tho premises, pro-:
vldJn* for special examination into tho affal rs

footin* In re.pret to jurisdiction

withdraw from said amtxMaUon, in
b® enxitlad to withdraw th®

imS® shall

extending

Cordoroy Corset.
This CORSET is made in «&gt;e newest French shape, T4 inches
long, elaborately embroidered. GORES CORDED CROSSWISE,
thus forming a perfect lust without the unsightly uxl in many
instances annoying cross!^nes; also removable Side Steele.
The main feature of this CORSET however, te the NEW
CORDOROY MATERIAL, used In place of the bone; this new
substitute for bone will not only issue

UNQUC BAN’S MEN.

Perfect Health.
Great Comfort aud
I’erfeotion in IT'it.

Uncle Bam’a letter carriers are a hard-work­
ing set of menand are liable tocontract rhea-

BUT 18 ALSO

health that is fast impairing.

which they are subjected. Galling at the post
office the reporter had a pleasant conversation
with Mr. J. P. Mattern, one of the most popu­
lar and clever letter carriers in Indlanapollx
Mr. Matter said that, while In the army during
the civil war, be s^pioed one of his ankles
which was always worse in tbe spring during
the period of the rapid changes in the weather.
He did not find much relief frota the several
remedies be applied. But two years ago he ttt
upon St. Jacobe OH, and experienced wonder
ful relief from it* use. Several appli-otions of
the Great German Remedy relieved him entire­
ly. Tbe reporter talked with others among the
letter carriers aud found that the Great German
Remedy was popular in the post office.
They
use it for sore feet, rheumatism, etc., and praise
it highly.—Indianapolis News.

WARRENTED NEVER TO BREAK!
810.00 REWARD,
will be paid to any lady, breaking the substitute for whalebone IN SIX MONTHS ORDINARY
WEAR • ANY dealer is authortxed to pay that amount, under our guarantee.

Retail Price, $1,00.
For Bale Only by

Dealer In Dry COods, Notions &amp; Fancy Coods
NAfiHVILLE, MICH.

R. DICKII\M&gt;.’V A ca.,
----- NEW------

Unltod States notes providing for a rodlstribo

The Tragic End of n Life of Toil.
All hi* life he hot! toiled and *aved
and scraped and pulled every string
thathnd a dollar at the end of it. And
now all his hard earned wealth wa*
gone, and a great hateful interest eat­
ing mortgage spread its black wing*
over all that he owned and loved on
earth. He sank into o chair, and, fold
ing In* anna upon the table before him,
bowed hi* gray head upon them and
groned great groan*. His heart seem­
ed breaking.
k
"Did you mongage the farm T” asked
his wife, noxiously, stealing softly-to
hi* side.
“Yes,” he growled, “both farms, and
*ol(l the wood lot over on Big island.’
“And did you have to mortgage the
town house, too !” slie asked with quiv
ering lip* and glistening eyes.
"Oh, ye* !” said the, in hollow tones,
“Oh, yes! and sold my stock in the
Northern and hypothecated what I hud
in the Sixth St.r bridge.”
"And was it enough T” she asked,
trembling with eagerness.
“Wa* it
enough f”
.
“Not quite,” he growled, and then,as
be saw the ghastly pallor of deathly
disappointment spread overlvr face, he
addeu, "but the milliner let mu have it
on ninety day*’ time for the balance at
8 per cent.”
“And you’ve brought my new hat
home, then,” she caroled jovonsly.
“Ob, Phillip, you dear old duck !”
"Well, no, not all of it,” he said. “I
brought the plume and one of the bows
down with inc in the express, but the
hat itself i* coming jdown from Chica­
go on a flat car.”
And the next week after that eleven
dark-brown
men who
sat behind.
Phillip's wife at the theater wayifiid
the wretched man on his way home,
hauled him off down Valley St., rolled
him up in a wad, and stepped up the
new sewer w ith him.—Uur/injifon Hawk­
eye.

village very much.
t
Charlie Murphy is talking of a brief sojourn

Is respectfully invited to our '

present sue* circulating notes for redemp-

are redeemed er lawful money deposited
therefor, as provided by law, such notes shall
bo do pot I ted. new circulating notea shall luuo
trailer ef tho Currency aa shall make them
rtadlly dictlngutehable from tbo circulating
notes heretofore Isauod, provided, however.

of preparirg tho plate or plates for such new
circulating notei a* shall bo Issued by It. and
such new circulating notes for old In addition
Beet on seven has reference to such banks aa

tends ths franchise ef aueb associations for
tho solo purpose of liquidating their affairs un­
til such affairs are finally closed.
‘National Banks now organized. or hereafter'
organized, haring a capital ef 1150,W0, or less.
LBU *

V.

UUV UUIWU

States bonds In excess of *10,000 aa security for
their clrculaUnr notes;and such of those banks
havinr on deposit bonds in excels of that

latisn by the deposit of lawful money as proSection ten provides that any Nstional-Banktnjr assoc atlon now organized. or hereafter
organized. desiring to withdraw Its circulsUn*
Treasurer of tho United Slates, as provided In

notes: providing for a redistribution of tho
National-Bank currency, and for other pur­
poses.” shall be required to rive nlnety-dayc*
intention to deporit lawful money and with­
draw its circulating notes, provided that not
deposited during any
calender month
for this purpose, and provided
fur-,
ther that the provisions ef this «octlon
shall not apply to bonds called for ’. jdemptlon

SKINNY MEN.
.
Wells’ Health Renewer. Absolute cure for
nervous debility snd weaknew of the genera­
tive function*. *1. at druggist*. Mich. Depot
JAMES S- DAVIS A CO., Detroit, Mich.

BRIGHT’S DISEASE, DIABETES.
Beware of the utuS that pretend* to cure tbeis
dieeaae or other reriou* Kidsey, Urinary or
Liver DiMSM*, a* they only releivc for a time
and make* you ten time* worac afterward*, but
relv Bolelv on Hop Bitter*, the only remedy that
will surely and permanently cure you. It des­
troy* and remove* tbe caunc of disease so ef­
fectually that ft never returns.
.
1TC8EEM8
as if It should not require on argument to con­
vince people that a second .class needle will
cause more trouble and more loaa of patience
than any othef thing of its sixe Id tbe world,
for, no matter bow go&lt;xl a machine you may
have, you cannot do good work with a poor
needle. Therefore, before you condemn your
machine, try the genuine cold rwedged needle,
kept only by E. R. WHITE, nt Kocher Broth-

When you have bad Catarrh long enough
just scud I(*c. to Dr. C. R. Sykes, lfl!i Madi­
son Street Chicago, for bls “True Theory
of Catarrh”.

“ROUGH ON 1L4TS.”
The thing desired found at )a»t- Ask Drug­
gist lor “Rough on Rate.”
It cleara out rata'
mice, n&gt;acbea, flea, bed-bugs. 15c. boxes.
Can catarrEbe cured T Yea certainly Dr. Syke
Sure Cure will cure it.
Before making i-Jioiee of paint for the decor
atlng of dwellings etc, buyers should inspect
“The Sherwin-Williams Painta.” Inquire of
F. T. 'Boise
A CARD OF THANKS.
Thanks tn the many kind friends that assist­
ed at the burrial of my husband, and also to
the Masonic brethren that lent a helping band
In the time of need.
.
Mhs. J. Bimoxds.
Miss Anna Dickinson ia spending tbe sum­
mer at Honesdale,fcPa., and preparing for her
winter's work!in theatricals.
There.’#] no disgrace in being poor. The thing
is to keepgqulct and not let your neighbors
know anytfiln&amp;about It.

5»Jll

CUSTOM

F. T. BOISE; Pouring Mill
READY FOR A'SINESS

DL’GM,
BOOKN,
JEWELR1,
WALL PAPER.
WINDOW MIIADEM,
DYEMTIFFM.

Every day In the year—Sundays 'excepted.

was at once looked upon as the Moses
the tribe. He readily rose to promi­
nence, and by his strict attention to the
dut iea of his offices made for himself a
name aa a warrior and » pie-biter at
which the would turned pale. This
should teaehthe importance of taking
the tide at it* flood, which leads on to
fortune, und to lay low when there is a
hen on, as Benjamin Franklin has *0
truly mid.
'OwOfS-JlULBBAUOH-JU Mm., M»J
1!Uh

u- rr_ &gt;_ u___/r

PB0PBIETABY MEDICINES,

PK1LMKIPTIOXN.
RECEIPTS.

FLOUR. MEAL AND MILL FFED
Kept constantly on hand.

Our

PAINT AND BRUSH

,

Graham Elour

, ..

DEPARTMENT
Are kept complete, to mwl the demands of the
people.

By a strict attention to business, and square
dealing with all our customers, we hope to mer­
it a liberal patronage front tbe farmers of this
vicinity.
Mills on railroad,—cast of depot

‘All io be sold at priceslo compete with any
houeo In Hairy or Eaton counties.

Call and Examine I

II. K. DICJKI.\M&gt;.V A &lt;X&gt;.

Experienced, Reliable. an^Respansiiile.

F. T. BOISE

Cost,
Cost,

A. H. WINN, Dentist
BEST SET GUM TEETH $10.00
Teeth Extracted Wifhvut Pain.

Office Open Day &amp; Evening.

ALBERT M. HARRIS,

|

VUb U!, Photographer's Supplies,
j FRAMES, VELVETS. MATS. GLASS,
AMERICAN
CO*S.
..........
a.— OPTICAL
_ ___________
__ itOXEA
Dry PUta uniflu |10,

In tending, to cbanze my manner
of taincss,
.

&gt;(1.00 a

1£&gt; Grrctncl River Ave.
DETROIT, nicn.

A SPRING DEFENCE!
to UmcI the laaaalta of ill Health—Pr.
Kcnard,'. FAVORITE BEIEDY Meau.

I Shall Sell

CEriBM.

My Entire Stock of

RHEUMATISM,

Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago,
Backache, Sorenott of the Chest,
Gout, Qaiusy, Sore Throat, Spell­
ings anh Sprains, Burns anti
Scalds, General Bodily
Pains,
Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted
Feet end Ears, and all other
Pains and Aches.

AND FANCY GOODS

AT COST

toaee. No lesa In respect of health Jhan of oulw
natural phenomena is thia true. Sorina la a try
scaaon for invallde. and particularly for thoee ’
either suffer, or liable to Buffer. from BHUouan
Kidney rompUluta and ConaUpallet, of the Dot
and for women who are chronically subject to
of the long cata&gt;o&lt;ue of puyaical aiunesU to wl
which their delicate sex U heir. ladleatiosi
disease in spring should be hooded at one®. A
tai attack may early roenk from neglect &lt;**dh
dered condition of tho bowria Tbe ounce of ;

or disordered Liver, want of anpotlte, roestlpaitoir
oratrv rlsh state ef tbe skin I If no.take
an hour's nnneceesaary delay Dr, Kennedy a FAV­
ORITE REMEDY. Ko medicine Into harmelme
and yet so quick and positive it. Its aoUon. ft ta
natures own idea, condens-d and made langiHe
bv human ski I Do not leave home when &lt;ohw
upon a Journey, witbo*.ta bottle of it your ▼*»*£
You cannot possih' &lt; put one dolls' In any other
ahap-i where It can render you ao essential eqwlro.
TheFAVORITE RsMEPY ia almost Im^anouus in Its action, but does not uorvou to pirera
with Its violence nor nauseate yon with djmusu I*
frees the liver from Hile and seta tho machiowy of

Or Under,
SOLD BY ALL D1UGGIBT8 AID DEALEM
IE MEDIOIUE.

Naafevllte HaAieca.

------ COMMENCING ON------

Saturday, May 20.

Wheat,per hu--------------- --------------------

Now is the Time
—Tbe experiment of decorating
rooms for a reception with wax flower*
was made the other day with disastrous
results to th® toilets present The heat

GRINDING!

Of every .dcrcriptlon, done in a superior
manner, at the drop of thr hat; and
Satisfaction guaranteed.

'

Anecdote of Spotted Tail.

; ths bonds are called for redemption the banks
boldlnr such called bonds shall surrender
During the early days of what is now Ij them within thirty dajrs after maturity at
tho great throbbing and ambitious West, ; their call.
a tribe of Utee camped near Fort Sedg­
wick. and Big Mouth, n chief of some
importance, used to go over to the post shall be entitled to receive from the Comp­
regularly for the purpose df fillins hi* troller of the Currency circulating notes equal
brindle hide full of Fort Sedgwick
“bloomof youth.” Asa consequence
of Big Mouth’s fatal yearning for liquid United States notes
damnation, ho generally got impudent,
aud openly announced on the parade
ground that he could lick the entire regttlar army. This used to ofiend some
some of the heroes who bad just arrived
from West Point, and in the heat of de­
AMsthsr • ‘Splurge” by Suites*.
bate they warmed the venerable war­
rior about two feet below his neck with
the flat fo their sabers. Tbi* waa a gross
insult to Big Mouth, and he went back
to the camp, wherb he found Spotted
Tail eating a piece of mule that hod
died with the iuflamatory rheumatism.
Spotted Tai] hud never won ranch dis­ matter of President Garfiald'* removal, and
tinction up to that time, except aaown­
er of an appetite in the presence of
which his tnbe stood in dumb and terri­
ble awe. Big Mouth tearfully told the
wily epicure the way be bad been treat- subject*. One of say subjects would be 1 Paul,
ep and asked for a council of war.
-Spot picked hia teeth with a tent pin,
and then told the defeated relic of a
mighty race if he would quit strong
drink be would be subjecteb to f ewe rd
insults. Big Mouth then got irritated,
and 8. Tail that he waa a rril. Spotted
Tail then took a butcher knife about
four feet long, and cut Mr. Big Mouth
plumb in two just between umbilicus
and watch-pocket. As the reader who
is familiar with anatomy has already
He WU1«W
surmised, gig Mouth died from the efl­
officials if :
eet of this wound, and Spotted Tail

CUSTOM

i

For those in need to share

the profits and buy at
wholesale prices.
NMbTille. Mv 16, tats.

i Ccort far tha Count,
JcOffie. in-huOf, of
lUMiap, "
CT«my, on Monday tbe Mb day
««•&gt;».
dr"d and eixt.tjr-tvo.
i’rrecn', Clement Smith. Jndye of Probate.
In the matter o* the relate of COBWi* T. *
ANNA V GARDNER, minor*.
On reading and flan* the petition, date verified,
of Turner Oardaetgmardlan of raid minora prep-

�=1=

ILLK
i MAY, S7,1883.

TWO LITTLE BIRDS.

her rosy ear with

pcrfui

him
Cold disced

uoti. —

s

.

Wild luring words that always leave mo

PIES.

Pinkio was

perverse Pinkie re-

on the toes of h or

and yellow apples, and a big, lusciously
golden pumpkin in the corner, and
stopped at the gate.
Pinkie Immediately hopped off her
perch and hid behind the barrel; but Tom,
coming up the walk with tho pumpkin,
saw the edge of her pink dress.
••Can’t fool me, Miss Pink Pendle­
ton,” said he, rolling the golden sphere
upqn the porch. “I can see through
more things than a barrel. There’s tho
first pumpkin of the season."
Pinkie scrambled up, shook out her
skirt knd surveyed the pumpkin, half
wonderingly from under the brim of her
cat, turning her back upon Tom, who,
however, only went off down the path
whistling carelessly, and drove off to
town with his apples.
Tom and Pinkie having indulged in a
neat little tiff tho week before had since
amused themselves with trying to freeze
each other, very unsuccessfully it would
seem, judging by tho warmth of temper
both could exhibit on .the smallest prov­
ocation. And this was the first time
Tom had called since the last “unpleas­
antness.”
“Did I ever!’’ said Pinkie, and she
glanced over her shoulder to see if Tom
was looking back, which, of course, ho
was, whereat Pinkie turned scarlet and
scowled, though Tom was too far off to
see that. •* If he’s trying to make up,"
she continued, “what does he be such
a stick about it for? Expects mo to go
two-thirds of the way, of course; men
always do. But he began tlie row, and
if he wants to make it up, iet him say
so, out and out. See through more than
a barrel! Just him—hlways insinuating
things." •
And Pinkie, thus foolishly fanning
her anger, sat down on the step and
kicked her toes against a peck measure.
The bone of contention which had
served Tom and Pinkie with excuses for
more ttan one squabble was a gentle- I
man from the city, who was spending
the summer at "the farm owned by
PiBkie's brother-in-law, a comfortable,
old-fashioned homestead, with clovercafpeled orchards, cooled with dense
shade, and haunted by the gingling
murmur of a brook and the slumberous
hum of -bees.
perhaps the boarder found an added
charm, thought possibly a fleeting one,
in Pinkie’s spirited brown eves and
piquant manhers.
And Pinkie—why
Pinkie would have been coquettish to
a mullen stalk and never thought
seriously of tho matter nt all.
Why shouldn’t she-walk to church
with Mr, Hatherton and pin a red rose­
bud in his coat? Why, then, should Tom
loom up like a cloud and cast cold water
on her innocent amusement? To be
sure, they had been the same as engaged
—Tom and Pinkie—sipce the days they
went nutting together and quarreled
over their grammar. But that was no
reason—so Pinkie thought—why she
should not look at .any one else.
To make matters a little worse, Tom
had a stylish young lady cousin visiting at
his house whose company, Pinkie had told
him, ho no doubt found an agreeable
substitute for hers, a supposed fact she
thoroughly relented, notwithstanding
the proverb says it b a poor rule that.
’
will not work both ways.
But hereon the porch lay Tom’s gift,
and (probable) peaoe-oflenng for having
been unusually bitter at their last tilt,
and perhaps— The scowl had departed
from Pinkie’3 forehead; her eyes were
growing tender.
Young Hatherton strolled around the
corner, with his straw hat tilted grace­
fully to one side and a handfull ofearly
wild purple aStcra, which he presented
to Pinkie.
.
fitting offering to beauty than is a
pumpkin.
,.
Ha pronounced Uio word scornfully;
he had witnessed Tom’s visit snd
now eyed his gift with much disdain,
winch unaccountably nettled Pinkie.
“They are prettier to look at.” «he
answered, "but I don’t suppose they
wculd do quite as well to cook.”
The young man shrugged his shoulders
and sauntered away indifferently; his

w” Kr°’ms
ceaTBieea mm mittL

the kitchen, and

organs by sympathy.
By the latter it
works upon the* sympathetic and eerebro-opinal nervous systems and through
them by reflex action upon the involun­
tary muscles and secreting organs.
In
this way exposure to cola ana w«t may
produce Inflammation of the bowels,
diarrhma, or dysentery.
Hence, it was
a wise provision which led a Charleston
regiment In tho late war to wear broad
flannel belts upon the abdomen. The

a man supposing he could find balm for
his wrong in pumpkin pie?”
. “I should say,” answered Flora, “ if
the man was Tom, you had better make
the pies, and make ’em as good as
possible.”
“Oh. you’re so awfully practical,”
said Pinkie, darting off, with her chest­
factions than did their more expored
nut mane flying.
But all the same, before next mor­ comrades. As mental and'moral im­
ning's sun had mounted very high in pressions may disturb digestion and
the heavens, a trim little lady, neatly modify the heart’s action, or terror
done up like a brown-paper parcel, in a cause tho pupil of the eye to dilate, so
very large linen apron, betook herself through this same reflex system ex­
to the kitchen and prbwled about in the trinsic cold may produce internal dis­
-pantry, seeking the sugar, the cinnamon, ease. In fact, cold employed externally
ginger and all the various ingredients or internally acts upon tbe system in a
necessary in the manufacture of pump­ similar manner. A slap upon the abdo­
kin pies.
'
men of a frog will often stop the beat­
A sound of wheels was heard in tho ing of the animal’s heart. By the same
lane, and Pinkie tripped out to the
porch, the nutmeg-grater, in her hand, water occasionalte produces sudden
as an elegant buggy rolled by, driven death, and a cold bath, when the bodv
by Tom Carroll, and—Pinkie dropped was heated, has more than once resulted
the grater suddenly and caught her fatally.
'
breath—there was the stylish cousin be­
Such facts as the above, are sufficient
side him, the plume in her hat fluttering to show that oold u a dangerous agent.
and a faint breath of rose drifting up to In the natural world it is useful in
the house.
destroying the germs of disease in win­
Pinkie went back to the kitchen and ter, and the bath in fevers is aerrioeable
shoved the pumpkin into a corner, and for the reduction of temperature; but
flung the nutmegs under the table and cold applications when the body is coolthe cinnamon after them, pulled off her ing from over-heating should be avoided.
apron and want into th^house.
The aged, Infirm, fatigued, and users of
Mr. Hatherton met her in the hall.
ardent spirits need to oe cautious about
••Shan't we take a ride, Mbs Pinkie?” the external and internal use of cold. In
he asked, Wondering a little at the them the powers of vitality are low and
sparkle in her eyes and the deep bloom they may easily fall victims to a slight
in her cheeks.
*
imprudence.
•
“ All right," said Pinkie, and dashed
Facts observed at water cures are of
up stairs for her habit.- '
value in showing the effects of cold.
The shadows were falling eastward There, many perrons are benefited and
from the trees on the lawn when Pinkie some are harmed. Tbe same mode of
again crossed it on her way to the house treatment has a good effect upon one
alter her ride, her habit gathered up in patient and bad upon another. The
her arms, and a cluster of scarlet trum­ reason of this is that many person;; are
pet-bells in her belt.
so debilitated as to have no reaction to
“Flora, who was on the step, be­ cold. For them a oold bath, douche or
stowed as dark a frown upon her as her shower is hurtful. Such treatment may
fair, placid countenance was capable of at any time cause cessation of tbe heart’s
getting up.
action and death. Drs. Dickinson and
“You’ve lost him now for good.”
Bence Jones actually puflicd the appli­
was her first remark.
cation of cold water to the skin far
“Lost whom?” quoth Pinkie, staring enough to arrest tho heart’s action; a
with wondering eyes at her sister.
fact which shows that for tho infirm cold
“Tom, of course! Didn't he stop in baths and shower &lt; are fraught, with
when he came back after taking his danger, and that persons without a
cousin down to catch the train, and sufficient reaction by taking these incur
foundyou gone off with Mr. Hatherton.”
an unwarrantably risk.
“And—and she’s gone
home?"
Of colds proper the symptoms are so
gasped Pinkie, feeling suddenly guilty.
well known os to renuer description
“ Of course, she’s gone home. She unnecessary. When limited to a slight
was engaged to the minister, anyway; coryza they are indeed a trivial matter.
and you’ve made a nice mess of it ail But.even then they are liable to beget a
now.’’
chronic catarrh and seriously affect or
Flora flounced away, looking in­ even destroy the organs of .sight and
dignant Pinkie followed her.
hearing. In all such cases there is a
“ Don’t you think he will ever come proneness or disposition of the inflam­
back?” she asked, meekly.
mation to extend through the p&lt;tstorior
“II’m!" said Flora. “He may come nares to the throat and bronchia? tubes.
to-morrow, but onlv to see John about It may thus result in quinsy, bronchitis,
the elder-mill, mind you!”
pneumonia, or possibly excite a latent
Pinkie had little appetite for dinner; tendency to consumption into fatal ac­
even Flora’s jam puffs had no charm for tivity. There is also good reason for
her; and her usual archness had so com­ believing that such affections as pleuri­
pletely disappeared that Mr. Hatherton sy, rheumatism, inflammation of the
felt called on to become injured, and
joints, erysipelas, and diseases of the
indulged in a fit of sulks.
spinal cord often originate from cold.
But the moderate bit of hope Flora The severity of some of these affections
had held out concerning Tom's possible and the frequent deaths resulting from
appearance on the next day comforted them are sufficient to show that the
Pinkie a little, and inspired her with a agent which predisposes toward or ex­
secret resolution.
cites them is a by no means insignificant
Long after tho dinner hour was past
affair.
the neat little figure, done up in tho big
The modes of taking cold are many.
brown cooking apron, again stood bo- Wet feet, or wet clothing, insufficient
side the long, ’white kitchen table, where
clothing or cold draughts of air when
a row of bright, scallojwd pie-pans were the body is cooling, dump beds, passing
shining. Spices perfumed the air. and from over-heated rooms to cold ones,
a dozen eggs were piled in a cako jmn.
sleeping in damp apartments, and
Tho sun had fairly gone down when
exposure by being in a dosed room or
Pinkie set her. last fragrant, golden- carriage with the windows open, are
complcxioncd pie in the windowsill to among tljp exciting causes. Getting wet
cool, and stood, looking down at it, does not give rise to a cold if the clothes
absorbed in her own reflections.
be immeoiately exchanged for dry ones.
“ Tho queen of hearts, shomade some
Nor is a person in a perspiration
tarts," chanted a voice behind her. and peculiarly liable to take cold. .Rather,
before she knew it She was whirled it is only when cooling from that heated
around, apron and all, in some one's and perspiring condition that the liability
aftns and Kissed. .
exists reraniration followed by chilling
'■’•They’re not tarts,” said Pinkie,
is quite likely to result in cold. Not tho
when she recovered her breath. “But
heated but the cooling stage is the one
oh, Tom. how did you happen to come
of danger. Then tho reaction of tho
back? I was afraid you wouldn't speak
system is less and the susceptibility to
to me any more.”
cold greatly increased.
“ Oh,” saidTom, “perhapsI wouldn’t
From the preceding facts it,must be
have come if I had not seen some one
evident that cold is a source of great
cc~e out on the steps this morning, to
danger. Especially is this true of colds
see who was going by, with her usual
on the chest." Winter cough, instead of
curiosity, and then bounce in like a
little enraged yellow-jacket! I bus- being a matter to be regarded with
pectcd which wav the wind blew, and I indifference, is often the precursor of a
serious disease. The consequences of a
knew Flora wpuld tell you the troth
when I came backt and when I saw cold range all the way from a slight
the pies just now I knew it was all neuralgia or insignificant coryza to an
affection of the spinal cord or a fatal
“ And now you’ll stay to supper, of pnenmonia. An epidemic of cholera,
diphtheria or small-pox often sweeps
course?" said Pinkie.
“Of course," said Tom. “It would over the country and- arouses public
Sanitary
measures
are
never do to let all those pies waste their attention.
invoked to stay the plague, yet it is
sweetness on -the desert air,"—N. Y.
probable that more deaths, in any given
Graphic.
, - ,
decade, result directly br indirectly from
colds neglected than from any of these
—A wealthy gentleman at Forest City,
in Iowa, being somewhat skeptical as dreaded diseases. Tho only difference
to the amount of labor which a minister is that with tho one we are familiar,and
when a death occurs take it as a thing
would be willing to do, offered to pav
such clergymen as would saw his wood to bo expected; with the other It is
for him at one dollar per hour for their unlooked for and startling. It is only
another exemplification of the old sayirg
services. He was considerably aston­
ished when nearly all the ministers in that “familiarity breeds contempt;” but
town came marching forward with saw this does not invalidate the fact that the
and buck prepared to accept his terms. direct and indirect effects of oold are
Some of them have been working right probably attended with a greater fatali­
along four to six hours per day, Sunday ty.—Sctenoe and Health.
excepted, ever since, and theur grit will
probably last as long as the skeptic's
—A queer suit has been decided in
New York.
A boy of twelve picked up
a revolver from an open drawer and
« , ,
playfully pointed it at a tutor, who gave
—A serviceable cover to throw over a him leaeons at his home.
The p'_stol
lounge or couch in the sitting-room is went off, the tutor was not dangerously
made by taking a broad, bright stripe hurt,but confined to his bed for a month.
oj cretonne, on each side of this put a The court hold hw father guilty of neg­
etripe of black or dark brown cloth (line ligence in leaving the pistol around
fooee. and a jury gave the plaintiff $500.

Mas*. Send to Mrs. Pinkham for jjamphleU.
A Texas man waa lynched for riding a mule

HOWTO BAUE.
All hard workers are subjffl to bilious attacks
which may end lu dangerous fllneaa. Parker*
Ginger Tonic will keep tits kidney* and liver
active, and by preventing the attack save much
rickneaa, loss of time and expense. Delay
al such times means danger.—Detroit Press.
Bee other column,
,_________ ___

Patients do more for the doctors than die
doctors do for patients. The patients enable
doctors to live.
■

WAGONS ONLY $60.00.
A COMPLETE LINE OF

.

Buggies, Carriages, Wheel Harrows and.
Cultivators, Mounted Seeders,
and 4 kinds of Plows.

REED’S GENUINE SPRING TOOTH HARROW
ROAD SCRAPERS, SQUARE DRABS, BRIND STONES,
.

Common, and hung ready for use.

$200.00 REWARD.
Will be paid for the detection and conviction
SEWING MAOHINEH.
&lt;of any person selling or dealing in any bogus,
&lt;counterfeit pr Imitation Hop Bitters, especially PLOW POINTS for the Oliver Chilled. Wlard. Throe
1Bitters or preparations with the word Hop or
era, Bryan, Cale, Curtis, Dodge, Robinson
]Hops in their name oi connected therewith,
' •
And many other Plows.
tthat Is intended to mislead aud cheat the pub­
]
lic,
or for any pretention put In any fonn, pre­
ttending to be the same aa-Hop Bitters. Tbe and wc them before buying.

Riv­

f
«this) printed on the white label,, and are the
j
.for Kidney, Liver and Ncrvioua Diacaac. So

beware
of all other*, and of all pretended tor1
।mulaa'or receipt* of Hop Bitter* published lu

-WITH A FULL STOCK OF-

dies. Whoever deala iij any but the genuine
‘
iwfll be prosecuted. HoP Bittxbs Mpg. Co.,

.. Rochester, N. Y.
It ia estimated that there are 3,000 pcraons in
1thisrnnntry engaged in making Illicit whisky
। ’3,000,000 others to drink.
for

Wagons

THE DISTINGUISHING CHARM.
A delightful frsgnmee of freshly flowers
,and Pplcca is the dlaUogulahlDg charm of Flor•
eston
Cologne.
The world is full of trouble-borrower*. Many
people suffer more from the anticipation of
।
trouble
than by the actua.’ infliction.
.
1

LINKED TOGETHER.
Complaint* go in troops. They are associated
, nature. Get one disease and you will have
by
other*. Dr. David Knnedy’«“Favorte Remedy"
strikes at the root of all disease. You cannot
1
'take it amiss, ho matter what your particular
trouble
m*j-be. For all all menu of the Kid­
'
ney*, Liver, Stomacli, Bowels, It ia worth more
1
1than Its weght in gold. A silver dollar will
buy
It, whether you go to your drug store, or
1
•address the Proprietor, D. K., at Koundout,

Iowa has a man with eyes so sharp I hilt he
can count tbe spots on cards 500 feet away.
'

OUR LINE BUGGIES
EJM BRACES-

Timkins.
-------

iii the vegetable kingdom,
gray hair tu its original

soft and glossy.

rt r uff-r t| to the public, as its effects
rein .its a long time, making only an
occasional application necessary- ft Is
■recnniiumdrtl and used by eminent
medical men, and officially endorsed by
iit£ State Assnyer of Massachusetts.
The popularity, of Hall's Hair Renewcr
b us Increased with the test' of many
vears, froth in this country and in
foreign lands, and It Is now known and
used in all the civilized countries of
the world.
For - sale by all dealers.____
Mashed strawberry will be the popular color
for thejnext two mouths.

MRS. LTDliLPUma OFLrn,USS.

—------- —

— —

— s

i

' Ph-getons.

White Chappel and Coal Boies, hung with Elliptic Springs.

f!KT.iin.K Sicilian Hair
» scicudtie combination

Two and Three Spring Democrats.
UR WORK IS ALL DONE UPON HONOR. BUGGIES
being made from Second Growth Hickory.
Our Tops are lined with All-Wool Indigo-Dyed Goods and
Warranted not to Fade. W. H. Atkinros, a painter whoa*
work has never went back on him, has charge of our paint de­
partment, and can be relied on. Bolte, Dash Feet, Body Loupe
and Stays are made from Norway Iron and the entire buggy
ironed in a desirable and superior manner and warranted.

O

Until you have thoroughly examined mine. Spokes mads
from Second Growth Stock and the wagon is made to* stand
the wear and tare of our roads.

ryi HAVE IN STOCK A NUMBER OF-S#

Furst Ac Bradley’s

Chilled Plows, Hay Rakes and Cultivators,
Which I will Sell at Cost to Close out.

E. COOK
EEP YOE EYE OIV THIS

OF OUR

LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S
VSG8TABU! COMPOUND.
Is a PosJUrn Cure

FOR
WE HAVE MADR A FEW WITH

THREE INCH .TIRE
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING

BETTER THRU COMMON TIRE

die ends may" be finished with fringe or
UaXthe tree and radical nmady tor
■rite oi manner, and morals In ooUega
la
all bolding the strident to his

'

■

Lysia K. raswr* vr.cET*r:x conitfeifcrwofpCh,

We believe the Three inch Tire is destined to come
into general use. Call and see them.

Sold by C. L Glasgow, Nashville, Mich.
Hastings, Mich.,

,1881.

�th. nhx o&lt; *31,000,Stone in tbe right Kidney;
HJO, IFYAJD IN ADVANCE-

To Advertisers:

-ta the state.

’ PERUSE THESE LIBERAL AD-RATBB.
EMO| EL00
“AMI
KOO

,11.75

14.to~25.00
TPg|K).to

ORNO STRONG,
Editor and Proprietor.

ilashvillf girertonj.
VIE

FA OFFICERS.

. President—1

Trustees—H. A. Barter, F. T. Boise. H. W.
Demaray, H. R. Dickinson, H. M. Lee and

&gt;orirti€*.
APTIST CHURCH. Rct. E. B Moody, Pastor.
SonriCM ereiy Bunday nt 10:30a. m.. Sabbath
aebool at IS m: Prayor and Teacuora' inoellng
Tbura'.ay aroultr;.
________________

B

ErncnisT ef^copal cnuKcu-A. d. &gt;«•
tom. Paator. Kerrli-ca avery Sabbath at

M

TVY LODGE NO. 37, K. of
meets at IU
JL. Castle Hall, Naabville, Michigan, every
Friday evening, for the encouragement aud
support of *U worthy, true, steadfast and hon­
orable Brother Knights.
L. E. Lkxtz, K. K. 8. Obxo Bvaoire.C. C.

.Hiacellaneous Cards.
IL YOUNG, M. D. Office cast side of
• Main 8L, Nashville. Office hours from

W

H. GRISWOLD. M. D.r-------- ^thlc

• Physician and Surgeon. Office and re*
W
yteace opposite lbs Wolcott House. Prompt

attention given to calls day or night

At on exhibition of electricity, lately,
machine wm shown in which there

smooth and beautiful, but really It had
a rough jagged edge, somewhat like a
circular bmt. You know that when »
circular saw is revolving, one cannot
see. the teeth.
A visitor carelessly
touched this revolving armature and
his.finger was torn to pieces.
At the same exhibition a gentleman
happened to tread upon a wire which
wm feeding a lamp with electricity, and
at the same moment ha took hold of the
lamp to examine it Immediately the
electricity flowed through his feet body
and hand, and it is one curious thing
that when electricity is passing through

son could not unclasp h
could be move his feet
afraid there would be an explosion.'
But a person who understood about
electricity camo by, and he immediately
lifted the sufferer’s feet off tfra wire.
This broke the current, aud saved the
man’s life
Even the wires which run in various
directions along streets and through
buildings to supply electric lights are
dangerous. They can sometimes give a
person a fearful shock if they are touched
In a particular wry; or can set firs ts
woodwork or curtains if they become dis­
arranged or tire insulating material cov­
ering them decays.and drops or is rubbed
off. Two or three persons have been
killed or dangerously shocked by med­
dling ignorantly with these wires. A
Giflomnn was once leaning against a
ustrado in a building where an elec­
tric apparatus was in operation, and his
gold watch chain was pressed against
two wires through which a current wm
flowing. The fluid immcduitely began
coursing through the chain, nested it red
hot ana burned a spot in his vest. He
wifi know hereafter that one should be
careful in leaning against electrical
things. On account of these dangers, and
for some other reasons, electricians are
now trying tho experiment of inclosing
the wires in a tube and burying them un­
der the ground. As long as they are al­
lowed to hang exposed, every one who
does not understand electricity thor­
oughly should remember to be careful
when he is near electrical apparatus or
wires.—Christian Union.

a sprinkler, twice
. will nearly double
your crop of Btrawberric.i.
It is ex­
cellent for other fruits and vegetables

quart of black beans and three quarts of
water.
WmH tho beans, then boil
them until they are tender; take from
the stove, turn off the water, and throw
it away; rub the beans through a
colander, put them .back in the soup
kettle, add one quart of fresh water and
some stock made the day before; add
pepper and salt, and any herbs you
choose for seasoning.
—Pea-nut Salad: Shell the nutfl,
which must be fresh and thoroughly
roasted, and remove the . brown skins-,
just before serving arrange them on a
bed of white ana tender eacarole, or
small white lettuce leaves; escarole is a
variety of chiocory which has large
tender leaf-stalks; dress the salad with
a plain French salad dressing-made by
mixing one part of vinegar with three
of oil and a palatable seasoning of salt
and pepper. The salad must be eaten
as soon M it ia dressed, or it will lose its
crispness and flavor.—H. Y. limes.
—.When hens lay thin-shelled eggs,
as the non-flitters are apt to do, or eggs
with no shells at all, it is not enough to
feed broken bones, oyster shells, and
other forms of phosphate of lime. They
must have nitrogeneous food, iu con­
nection with a considerable amount of
fat Ono of the best and cheapest foods
of this kind is tho common cracklings
left after pressing out lard. Without
flesh or fat, both tho limo and phos-

L

C

S
J

O

J

Physician and Surgeon.

JU1BVILLK,

-

■IICSL.

J^ATHBVN BOllSB.

M miles long, 18 by 90 feet in djametor
with two railMoad tracks, and the in­
come is expected to be &gt;8,000,000 an­
nually, from which, if tho eggs all
hatch, there will be &gt;3,660,000 in divi­
dends.
. —The average distance for the oldfaehioned railroad wheels to traverse
wm about 50,000 miles, but with tho
wheels with steel bands actually em­
ployed on passenger can 300,000 miles
have been frequently traversed, while
500,000 miles were traversed by two

be assimilated so a.; to increase the
thickness of the shells, but then there
is a visible improvement in a day or
two, and a very decided one in less than
a month. Of course cracklings most be
fed with moderation, else diarrhea fol­
lows, and undue increase of urea My
experience is that for tho non-sitters
apd tho production of eggs, there is no
food (the fowls having ample range)
equal to one-sixth com, one sixth crack­
lings, and two-thirds clean and sound
wheat screenings, witii gravel and
broken burned bones*ad libitum.—
Country Gentleman.
.
Protection of Sheep from Dogs.

Having recently received many let­
ters of inquiry: “How shall I protect
my flock from sheep-killing dogs,” and
a large majority of such inquiries com­
ing from subscribers to your valuable
paper, thought it advisable to answer
all in one short letter through its col­
umns. After much experimenting, the
following has proven the most beneficial
in protecting sheep from dogs. For a
flock of from twenty to one hundred
and one hundred ana fifty head, put on
from fourteen to sixteen bells of various
sizes pnd tone. The bells should vary
in size and tone from the common little
sheep bell up to the large cow bell. It
is the variety of tone and sound that ter­
rifies the sheep-killing dog. The flock
should always be so situated that they
can with ease approach the bouse of the
landlord through a lane gate or a gap in
the fence, ana if occasionally salted
near tho house will invariably approach
it at night to sleep, particularly if dis­
turbed hy dog oc person. L.o dog, I
care not how much practice ha may
have had in killing sheep, can be in­
duced. oven under the most trying con­
ditions, to attack a flock having from
fourteen to sixteen bells of different sizes
and tone. A dog severely pressed of
hunger, may be influenced to attack a
flock while laying down to rest, or
silently grazing; but the mon'-.’nt that
doleful round of sixteen bells of differ- •
ent size and tone reaches his ear. his
tail will be seen to tuck between his legs
pnd he is off for other quarterssid a mom»nt Not one dog in one hundred can
catch and hold a strong sheep in a run
of four hundred to six hunared yards,
hence, the advantage of having the
flock so situated that they can at all
times approach the house, which they
will invariably do when opportunity ad­
mits.
»
For over twenty years I have kept a
flock of from 135 to 200 head, ana al­
though there are many worthless sheep­
killing &lt;ioga all around me in tho Neigh­
borhood, I have not had one killed by
dogs. The tenants and hirelings resid­
ing on my farin, many within one hun­
dred yards of my residence, (who are
prone to be dear lovers of worthless
curs), often have from two to throe each.

A. FOOTE PHYSICIAN A SURGEON
• Suceaaor to Dr. Wickham. Office and
The Panie at Lyons.
residence at Dr. Wickham’s late office.
Prompt attention to calls night or day.
The aspect of the great City of Lyons,
crushed as it is by the great financial
T^R. C. W. GOUCHER, Elactio Physician and panic, is both lamentable and terrible.
XJ Burgeon, I* prepared to answer all eall*
that may be made tor hl» bcttIccs- Office aud Tho situation of things is so compli­
cated so chaotic, that after twenty-four
hours of close study I hardly know how
M. D. Offlc® over
to begin my story, so I am obliged to
V.nnontvllle, Mich.
put of until to-morrow the thousand
HA3. H. BRADY, Lawyer, Circuit Court details gathered about the catastrophe,
Commltsloner, Real Estate aud Insurance which has nearly ruined the second city
Aft. Prompt attention given to all buslnea*of France from top to bottom and from
entrusted to my care. Conveyancing a special
bottom to top. The exaggerated specu­
ty. Office opposite Union House.
lation into which the whole city ho&lt; been
LIEBHAU8ER, Mervhan’. Tailor and deal- dragged is such that the loss of the
• er ia Ready Made Clothing.
See me brokers is estimated at an enormous
before
purchase clothing. Fits guar­ figure.
For the present I prefer to
anteed.
___ __________ __
accept the sum which the Chamber ad­
ONAH B. RASEY, Express and Drayman­ mits, namely—36,000,000 of francs.
Goods and Baggage carried to any place in You must understand that these millions
the Tillage.
do not include the individual losses of
IRAM R. DICK’NSON, manufactu-er of each member on ’Change, as each one
and dealer Id Hard Wood Lumber. Build­ has been speculating on Els own account.
ing Material a speelaltr. Cash paid for logs. Mill To the contrary, mis only constitutes
ami yard on Sbenuan St., at M. C. R.R. crossing. what is owing to brokers from their
AMES FLEMING, practical Jeweler and customers, who had heavy margtas de­
Watch-maker. C1i&gt;ck«, Wak het, SDver and posited to their credit, but not heavy
Plated Ware. Jewelry and Optical Go&gt;xla Buck­ enough for this terrible break in the
ford Watches a specialty. Repairing and EngraT- market. The result is that until they
ta» done in a workmanlike manner.
can ward off total disaster the brokers
have suspended- payments. A heavy
RNO STRONG, plain aid fancy jon mntex.
The bast facilities for doing work of any cloud of sorrow hangs over the city like
a pall. As yet they dare not uncover
the ruins—the total failures, the posi­
tions of the most honorable men are so
fearfully compromised.
From the davACOB OSMUN, Liveryman, barn near Wol­ laborer to the millionaire, or rather the
cott House. First class turnouts at reason­
No
able rates. Sjxxial rates to commercial men. ex-millionaire, everybody has lost.
one
has
the
first
sou
toward
a settle­
Funeral and weding parties furnished wilb car
ment.
rttges on short notice.
A man who is above all suspicion of
' Repairing dishonesty came 'to see his agent, and
said: “ I have '500,000 francs; here it
is. Take it It’s all I can give you on
the 3,000,000 which I lose. Whatclo you
want me to do about the difference? If
pHAR W. DEMARAT, Dealer tn Watches.
VJ Clocks, fine Jewelry aud Silverware. Being I commit suicide will it change any­
a practical Jewaler, patron, can depend upon thing? I would willingly do that Dut
iS?Jte?xirri*tL
could they make gold or bank notes out
of my blood?”
One must recognize the fact that if
TOHN BRAUN, Shoemaker. Special attentJ lion given to fine and sewed boots, also all who can’t pay their differences for
repairing. All manufactured work mude from the end of the month commit suicide,
best of stock and warranted. Flrat door wutli this city,‘La Croix, Rousse and Brote
Botec’a hardware.
teau will become vast cemeteries. Bus­
iness is totally supended. The numerous
groups in the street talk only of
diSMter, and the women and children
HOMOEOPATHIC
weep without knowing the why or
wkerefor. The women themselves had
««taken a hand.”
Widows, shop-girls,
and the •• cabontines” of the cafe con­
certs
and
second-rate
theaters carried
Atete Btreete, NatavUle, Mkh.
their wages to the bourse and won.
Now they have lost, pay nothing.
^yOLCOTT HOUSE,
The bourse is open but there is no
business transacted. Not a quotation
A. S. Foot*, Proprietor.
wm made during the whole day. A
few of the terrified sold for CMh a few
It lag better U City of Paris bonds or shares of the
Credit Pontier hid the money and took
other hotel lu Many cou
the first train for Geneva. So far, a
pie Room* on fl nt # oor,
young man him suicided in a bath, and
an old officer gone crazy, and the wife
of a leading merchant has disappeared.
Unhappily we fear, these will not ba ths(
only cases of the kind. The old boursiers hare not lost all hope. Wo are ex- I

BOOT AID SHOE MAKER,

—Ohio last year made about 450,000

dissolved

an average, upon the farm, and many
of them known to bo notorious forsheep­
killing, though strange to say, yet true,
they-nave never killed one sheep known
to myself.
However, m often m opportunity
affords, I thin out the number by use of
strychnine and ahot-gun, eta Have
often, very often, witneased them attack
my flock when at a distance, and while
lying down, but in the instant they
catch tbe terrifying sound of sixteen
belle of different size and tone, they
quickly turned in the opposite direction
M fast m their feet could carry them,
and I have often seen the same dogs re­
peat the attack with invariably the tame
result, the scene being too frightful and
exciting to continue the chMe. Many
of my neighbors who have lost by dogv
from one-third to one-half of their flock
in a single night, have been influenced
to this experiment, and all. without ex-

Day Expr**" «SB p.m. Arrive Detroit i
Atlantic Xx...._1S:»m. m. Arrire Detroit 1
ter medical treattneut, with only tcmjK&gt;n*ry
relief from his agony.
other ran dally except Bunday.
By tbe urgent aolfcfUtioDs of bis friends be
*m Induced to try Dr. David Kennedy’s “Fa-

GRAND RAPIDS DIVISION.

The operation,

pan, efc, bul here

ST

STATIONS.
through tbe natural channel.
'
Mr. oeach concludes a long letter to Dr.
Kennedy by saying: “It will always afford me
pleasure to recommend the ‘Favorite Remedy’
to those who ruav be suffering from difficulties
of kidney* and Bladder, or any disorders from
impure state of tbe blood.’’ The “Favorite
Remedy” sold by all drugglsU. Tbe Doctor’s
only address is KoDdouCSew York.

—In New York last year there were
9,814 white males married, and 9,837
white females. Thirteen white women
therefore married colored men.. Of the
men married 4,477 were native born,
and of tbe women 5,336, so that more
than 8Q0 native born brides took foreign
born husbands. Of the births during
the same period ’6,886 were children of
native born paints, and 13,754 of duL

Journal.
—A few days ago tho application for
settlement of final account and distribu­
tion of the estate of the late William S.
O’Brien was granted in a modified
form by Judge Finn, of San Francisco.
Under.this order a total amount of &gt;6,328,652.79, less* &gt;1.143.750 to satisfy
future claims against the estate, will bo
distributed.
Of this amount Mrs.
Maria Coleman receives &gt;2,592.451.89:
Mrs. Kate Mary Mncdonough receives,
&gt;2,160.376.17; Joseph Macdonough re­
ceives &gt;432,075.20.
—Tho cost of a private wire from
New York to Philadelphia is $2,500 a
year, tho company furnishing nothing
but tho wire and tho instruments nt
both ends of tho line. To Boston it is'*
&gt;4.500 a year, and to Chicago $7,000 a
year. The expense of an operator at
each end adds about $1,500 a year to
tho total cost There is a saving of
money to concerns doing a large busi­
ness, but the chief advantage is in tho
saving of time, especially, to stock brok­
ers, as minutes on tho stock exchange
sometimes, represent fortunes.—Utica
(N. K) Herald.
—Tho wheat product of the Pacifio
coast for 1881 was 40,000.000 bushels,
and tho exports of wheat daring tho
year (including flour)
reached tho
enormous quantity of 38,936,290 bush­
els. Tho barley crop of 1881 was 2,­
600,000 centals, beet-root sugar, 1,410,­
000 pounds;
wool clip, 48,204,769
pounds, and wine product, 9,500,000
gallons. Imports of sugar in 1881 were
151,432,660 pounds, jA coffee 15,843,934
pounds, of nee 56,922.968 pounds, and
of tea 17,983,507 pounds.
Tho gold
and silver product for the year was
$77,000,000, and the coinage at San
Francisco reached $43,660,000. Value
of manufactures in San Francisco in
1881, &gt;90,000.000. —Chicago Tima.

—It is alleged of Melville that ho is
an inveterate punster, and that after
tho wreck of the Jeannette, m they
were trying to make their way through
a field of ice, one of his men remarked:
“That ice’frill surely oppose our
gross.” “ So ice suppose,” wm
ville’s rejoinder.
—Useful dentistry: “ You look cheer­
ful, Mr. Spiscr," said a friend who met
the old gentleman ambling down the
avenue. “Yes,” said the interrogated:
•‘I have just had a troublesome grinder
pulled,” and when the sympathising
gentleman asked him if it hurt him
much, Seth cheerfully responded: “Not
a bit; it was an organ-grinder, and a
policeman pulled him. "—Chicago Times.
—How &lt;5e«r to my heart la ths achool X at­
tended.

VarmotrtTllIe .

ChariottA........

Eiion Rapid.,

Pae'ic Maiv

STATIONS.
Detroit,.................
Jackson,—.—
Rite* J unit! on...
Eaton Rapid*,.—

,

(THE HEALTH BIONGER.)

Naahrtlle,-----MMdk!diie.'.'.7.

miQ-ELLTB WOMAN’S FRIEND.

Hani mood.-----Grand Rapid*,.

For Women,

TEACHERS.
LADY CLERKS,
HOUSEWIVES,

Tbrougb Coacbe* and Sleeping Car* to and fro»
Grand Rapids and Detroit. All train* connect ia
earn* dcjxit at Detroit with Great Wextern, Grax!
Trunk and Canada Southern Railwaye.
E. C. BROWN,
H. B. LEDYARD.

Breaking down under cloao confinement and be­
ing contlnnally on their foot, will find Zoa Phom

A Prevention and Cure

Headaches,
Lassitude,
Pale or Motliy Complexion,
Sleeplessness,
Palpitation,
Numbness, Nausea, Dizziness,
Dry Cough, Nervous Irritation,
Weak and Lamo. Back,
nppUpa to till*

perfect.

TESTIMONIALS I haro In abundance frcia
persons in tho best society, wbo prefer that their
evidence be given privately to thou aakinj; it
S^-MOTHERS. am your PAUGHTER8 nillnc?

Requests for toatlmcmials anti ndvico wffl, rv-

R. PENOELLY, M. D„
Bold by BruggistsS____

KIDNEY-WORT

THE GREAT CURE
YOB

RHEUMATISM
LIVER ANO BOWELS.

WIT AND WISDOM.

—Can a shepherd's crook bo termed
a ram-rod?
■
.
—’Til make a note of this,” as tho
sharper said when he got a fanner to
write his name on a slip of paper.
—Smiles is tho longest word in the
language. Between tho banning and
the end of it there is just a inile.
—Ex-Secretary Evarts, , who is in­
creasing the size of his Vermont farm,
•is the man who. when asked by a friend
for something from his pen, sent the
gentleman a line young porker.—Chi­
cago Tribune.
■
—Just as we expected.
Thomas
Hardy’s new novel Is called •'Two on a
Tower,” and already an intelligent
compositor has set it up “Two on a
Tare.” He’s been there himself with
more than two.—Burlington Hawkeye.
—Powder explosion: A. literary man,
who bad recently published a book,
was observed to be very downcast last
week. “What is the matter?’’ said a
friend; “you look all broken up.” “No
wonder,” was the answer, "rve just
been blown up by a magazine.”

THOUSANDS OF CASES

flROWN’s

IRON

BITTERS
BROWS IRON BITTERS ar©
a certain cure for all diseases
requiring u complete tonic; espe­
cially Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Inter­
mittent Fevers, Want of Appetite,
Loss of StrcnRtli, Lack of Energy,
etc. Enriches tho blood, strength­
ens the muscles, and RivcH new
lift lo the nerves. Acts like a
charm on Jhc digestive organs,
removing all dyspeptic symptoms,
such os tasting the food. Belching,
Heat in the Stomach, Heartburn.

that will not blacken the teeth or
give headache. Sold by all Drug­
gists at $1.00 a bottle.
BROWN CHEMICAL CO.
Baltimore, M&lt;L
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.

of ths wont forau of Udo terrible diMae
have boon quickly relieved, In o chart Umo

PERFECTLY CURED.

IDNEY WORT

Bensons
Capcine
-AWARDED-

filled. Ill* tai Id. but offloienU CF.UTAIX
IN XT* ACTION, l.u‘.birail~.lu*llo»&lt;».
’Tltcl»an*e«.Htrenrtb»** «•&lt;! «tve«Xew
IJfc Wall the Important orcins of tho body.
fTho natural action of the Kid nr ya U restored
Tim Uver 1* clcaxMOdjKaUdUcaao.and the
E-swcls move freely and healthfully. In this
waytha worwt diacaacs aro eradicated from
thesyatetn.
| Aa It baa boon prorod by thouaaada Urn

KIDNEY-WORT

6

Porous
Plaster.
-MEDALS.-

,

Tire Best Known Remedy for

fe!DNEY-WORT
WHIT WILL THE WEATHER BE TO-MORROW f

Pool's SIGHAL SERVICE BAROMETER
Or STORM GLASS and THERMOMETER Combined,

Backache or Lamo Back.
Rheumatism or Lame Joints.
Cramps or Sprains.
Neuralgia or Kidney Diseasen.
Lumbago, Severe Aches or Pains
Famala Weakness.

CAUTION.

When Bill gave a yell and sprang up with

IIIOIIMlTn

NO PATENT NO PA!

—A little Albany boy, aged eight
years, was greatly annoyed by tho de­
straction wrought upon his toys by Lin
two-year-old brother. The other night
he asked his father how to spell the
rarit Fxgaro.--------------------------------------------- । bells.”
Less than fourteen bells will ; word “dangerous." and the next mom­
-----I not accomplish the object, even though ing his mother was star tied al the warn—A gang of seven juvenile thieve* hM ' they be of different size and tone. It ing “ dangerous’’printed in big black
been broken up in Brooklyn, N. Y. Tb« would be more profitable to add to the letters across the top of the box. “Why,
leader is only sixteen years of age, but sixteen bells than to diminish the Tommy,” fluid aha, “why have you
M. piotare in Uh,

No less than aeves

ain't, ma- Jamie spoils all my things,
aad I put that on to bomb him, bo he li

HUIB
UIUITOBS

�KEEP US BUSY

There to some enriority expressed a*
of small pox developto tbe causes of tbe delay by the SenHaptdsoo Monday.
aU^pcciei committee to investigate the yet appeared.
Gerriab. one of the heaviest
A styitoh carriage dress is made of
whisky'ring in proceeding to work.
aeu io the State, died at Evart
dark green satin with a short ririte of
Fora week paat poisted; statements tbe same lined with gray silk and closed
have
daily
appeared
here
alleging
the
with silver buttons. Tne Buckingham
cases of small pox. imported
Chicago’ developed at Battle existence of a gigantic lobby to force tunic opens over a round undershirt
through the whisky extension bill and trimmed with satin plaitings, and to
Tremain fell into the canal at names and amounts paid have' been with a large bow of satin ribbon with
George neai Farwell, on the 23nd freely mentioned. Why Senator Win­ floating ends. The Vandyke hat of dark
dom does not call hto committe togeth­
and wm drowned.
green satin braid to trimmed with mow­
John McArthur, a well known attor­ er and begin the investigation no one green feather tips and a duster of blush
roses.
ney, of East Sarinsw. mystcrionsly bat himself knows.
The wide Tyrolese and Gainsborough
Judge Hagner had in his court at the
E disappeared Friday night last.
hau rival the London Witch and Queen
City
Hall
to-day
the
original
Wash
­
■
“A tvo-oldchihl of A. Wil far, of Bat■ tie Creek, was fatally scalded Saturday ington family bible containing the re­ close little cap bonnatn beloved by
cord of tbe birth and baptism of Gen. Frenchwomen are smaller, flatter, and
by falling intoa vessel of water.
The venerable more fashionable than ever. Among a
Emerson Choate, a well known far­ George Washington.
mer of Monroe township, Monroe Co., book to much time worn • and some­ number of pretty French bonnets to a
Gipsy shape made of Tuscan lace of an
was found dead in his barn Friday. what defaced. It was sent this city by
unusually yellow hue.
Outride is a
Joseph Miller, a liquor dealer of Mrs. Bassett, of New Kent Co., Vs., wreath of scarlet houcysucklM and a
East Saginaw, fell into the river near and is offared^to tbe government atf 10­ bunch of perfumed Isabella mess. The
Bridgeport on the 22nd and wasdrown- 000. If bought it is understood it will lace crown to covered with amber beads,
be placed at Mount Vernon.
Wasli- and the strings are of yellow net workAn old map named Cherry, of Peters­ uigton’sown Bible, presented to him by
tbe
Bishop
of
Sodar
and
Man,
is at
burg, Monroe Co, waa run ovty by a
Lake Shore railroad train on Friday Chrtots Church, Alexandria.
ingoostamea are those winch show a
It
is
understood
that
the
Justice
of
and instantly killed.
perfectly plain skirt formed of some rich
Joseph Di Parrent, convicted last the Supreme Coart of the District of material, gored in French fashion, thus
Colombia,
who
beard
the
argument
on
ring Winy'Michie at
' been sen- the bill of lexceptions in tbe Gaiteaa
Ffconning
_
full “rampant" outstanding ruche,which
teucedto
confinement in tbe case, are unanimous in overruling the
exceptions. Tbe decision will be an­ constitutes the only trimming. ‘Above
State*
for life.
this ia worn a short polonnaise with full
Ernest Webb of Battle Creek, was nounced, probably, by Chief Justice short poufs at the ride, or a pointed
This dispos­ bodice and tunic with panniers. To be
run over by a switch engine on the Carter on the 22nd inst.
G.T.R.R. at that place on Saturday. es of Guiteau’s last chance and affirms worn with thaw are handsome jackets
Later on,
One arm waa cut off, his head so bad­ the sentence of tbe lower court, that he or visiles to correspond.
shoulder capes—Incroyable, Vandyke,
to to be banged on tbe 80th of June.
ly bruised that he will die.
Mother, Hubbard, Quaker, and Carrack
After
the
many
diversions
of
last
Mias Lizzie Hugger of Howell, call­
—will take the place of these wraps.
, ed at H. D. Wilber’s drug store and week society baa been taking a rest and Pelerines of every description are to be
ealled for quinine, but the druggist there have been few social gatherings, more in, vogue than ever tho coming
put up morphine instead. Miss Hugger except at the informal day reeptions. season.
After tbe fatigues of the tea party in
Various shades of gray will be much
, took tbe dose ou Friday and died.
Steel gray
.
A lady in Jackson recently hid her the rotunda, on Saturday evening in worn the coming season
aid of the Garfield Memorial Hospital, will be adopted by elderly ladies, while T AM NOW RECEIVING A FULL STOCK OF GOODS SUITABLE FOR THE SPRING TRADE. INCLUDING
watch in tbe stove as a precaution
softer hues, showing a sheen of pearl or 1 the Largest and Best Stock of
thereat
was
needed.
Except
for
the
against burglars and the next morping
silver, will be used for youthful wearers.
her husband built a fire and tbe watch glamour about an entertainment in A very handsome dress, designed for a
Capitol, which, of course, attracts more stately matron in this city, is made of
was so badly injured as to be useless.
The body of a man named Murphy, people than an ordinary ball would, “winter sky" silk, with Louis XIV.
Ever brought to Nashville, and ranging in price from three to thirty dollars per suit. In
.
who disappeared from Cheboygan very and, moreover, costs nothing for rent, bodice of the same, and paaniers of rich
black lace. Over the shoulders is drape4
mysteriously about five months ago, it must be conceeded that the rotunda
a
large
bertha
of
the
same
lace.
A
sec
­
was found bn the lake shore about a is not tho best place for a tea party or ond dress is of the most delicate shade
mile from tbe above named place on dance. There waa something depres­ of silver gray, with a triple-plaited ruche
sing to me about having this special around the foot of the skirt.
I keep tbe celebrated Rochester make, Siylish, Durable anc Cheap. In
Saturday last.
The
On May 19 tbe mills and stores nt Wy­ one there because of tho associations of sharply peaked bodice is trimmed with
pearl beaded point applique lace. The
man’s station were burned, together tho Capital with Garfield, hto political
sleeves are very tight to the arm, and
with the depot and a number of cars career, his inauguration there as Pres­
I have the latest styles and can tit all. parties. I always keep a full stock of
over these are to be drawn a very long
belonging to the D. L. &amp; N. railroad ident with more pomp and display than pair of silver gray dressed kid-gloves,
compauy. 0. W. Avery and P. P. Wy­ has ever been witnessed at that of any which are to reach to just above tho
American President, and hto funeral elbow.—Y. Evening Fvet.
man are the heaviest losers.
At prices that defy competion. Cash paid for Batter and Eggs.
Stephen Warren’s shingle, mill, in in that very rotunda. Tho flqral bower
An Old, Old Story.
the township of Mayfield, eight miles with its gay decorations, an annex to
north of Lapeer, was burned about the New York tableaupplied with flow­
“ C-o-m-e in!
Well I declare, stran­
noon on Thursday, together
with ers by hto successor, stood where Gar­ ger, you gave me quite a tarn!
I—I
£35,000 shingles. The loss ou the mill field’s coffin rested last September and was kind of expectin’ somebody, and for
the
shields
of
the
several
States,
which
half a minute I thought mebba as ’two*
is f 12,000, with no insurance.
At Niles on Satuday Fred Merritt, had decorated the National Museum her, but she’d never stop to knock;
want a bite and a sup and a night’s
a workman in the wood pulp mill, was building for tbe inauguration half, were
— THAT-----lodgin’? Why of course; sit down, do.
caught by a belt and drawn upon a used at the tables as decorations. The I—a—most forgot to ask you, I was that
abaft revolving at the rate of 180 revo- spectacle was a very fine one and the I flustrated.
Poor soul! how tired and
lutious per minute. Both aukles were States made a very creditable display nt worn out you look I
I can make you
comfortable for the night and give you
their several tables.
erushed, and both arms broken.
E ARE NOW RECEIVING OPR STOCK OF ,
Senator Pendleton, on behalf of the a good meal of victual* and a shake­
The wife of a Hollander, named
down on the floor, but I would h-a-r-dNieuhaurf was found dead in bed at committee on ci ril service and retrench
1-y like to put you in Lizzie’s room—
her home near Grand Rapids, Saturday, nient, has presented to.the Senate a re­ she was that particular, and your clothes
port in advocacy of the passage of the are so wet and drabbled. Why,woman,
and foul play is suspected. Senous in
juries were found upon her person and bill “To regulate and improve- the civil what makes you shake so—ague7 Never
Guess
and her husband has been arrested os service of the United State*.” which heard tell of any in these parts.
■AND ARE SELLING THEM-------------- OF THE------was reported to the Senate on the 39th you must have brought it with you.
her murderer.
Well,
a
good
night
’
s
rest
will
sat
you
up
of
March
Last.
The
report
reviews
the
Sterling Franz, head sawyer in the
wonderfully, and you can Be right here
Grand HavenLumber Co’s, shingid mill growth of the goverment since its by the stove, and the fire a-smolderin’
was killed on Friday. A slab caught foundation and the effect of this growth will keep you warm, and the light will
in the head block aud struck uim on the on the civil service. Referring to what bo a-bum in’ till its broad day—broad
back. He feel un flio carriage and the to characterised as tbe “spoils system” day!
“ What do I keep the light a-b’indn’
■awpassed through his head cutting off and its effect upon the President, it
THE CAREFUL MAN IS EVER ON THE ALERT
------ PROM-----WelJ, now, when folks asXs me
about one third of it.
maintains that instead of devoting his for?
that, sometimes I tells them one thing
to take advantage of favorable opportunities.
Fancett’s lumber and shingle mill, time to great questions of statesman­
and sometimes I tells them another.
I
and Nelson’s extensive shingle sheds, ship he must spend most of it in weigh­ don’t know as I mind tcllin’ yon, be­
throe millc* from McBride’s on the D. ing in the balance the political consid- cause you’re such a poor, misfertunit
No
8Kuised, thi
No matter
matter how
how di
disguised,
that prompt paying Customers
L.
N. rajlroad, were burned on the eratiou“that shall determine the claim f creetar, and a stranger, and my heart
You see I
night of May 18. The railroad com- of friend or that political supporter to kind of goes out to such.
must
make
good
to
the
dealers who sell on credit all losses
:
-----BUT
------She’s been away
bauy had 13 cars burned, eight of which tho possession of some office of profit have a daughter.
from poor debts, long time accounts, sickness, failing crops,
these ten years, has Lizzie, aud they do
were loaded with lumber.
or honor under him.” The abuses un­
say as she's livin’ in grandeur in some
loss of property, or dishonesty of other customers^
R. F. Redman of Bay City boasts that der this system, the committee assert, fairin' place, and she’s had her head
be can drive a tack with a ballet at 15 have grown out of a system compara­ turned with it all, for she never lets her
rods every pap, but tbe other day when tively new in our government.
Ap­ poor old mother hear from her. and the
That the merchant who sell on credit must take into ac
he attempted to shoot a potatoe off the pointments because of special fitness fine people she’s with coaxed her off un­
top of another man’s bead, be cut into and . cmovals for cause were tbe rule beknownst to me, and I don’t miad tell­
count all the probabilities above mentioned wheh he offers hi
ing yon as it was a great shock to me,
the latters scalp, was threatened with in its early history.
The report after
merchandise
for sale. And these losses amount in the aggre­
and 1 ain’t the same woman since Liz­
a law suit and has quit bragging.
quoting from views heretofore exprta- zie went out one night, and when she
gate to a fair yearly income—a loss which he could not long
A Big Rapids family wbo have a sign by Presidents Grant, Hayes, Garfield kissed me said: ‘Leave a light in tho
sustain were there no remedy, but there is a remedy and that
for pvery day in the week and believe and Arthur in favor of regulating the' window, mother, till I come backand
remedy is in the PROMPT PAYING CUSTOMERS.
in witches, killed a cat and immedi­ civil service by law, closes by urging that was ten years ago, and I’ve never
seen
her
since,
but
I've
burned
a
light
ately wrapped its damp akin arbund a the passage of the bill.
in the window every night all these ten
Tbe committee investigating the
sick infant, believing that such treatyears, and shall till she comes home.
Can be made, if necessary, than to hire money and pay
Sttot would save the child's life. The stationary office of Treasury Depart­
“Yes, it's hard to be a mother and be
may be
MdfiMdid not survive the treatment
I ment has come across a French Clock, disappointed so. I allowed she was dead
for your merchandise as you purchase it.
tbe circuit court at Grand Rapids, -found in the ex-Custodian Pitney'* till folks, as seen her well and splendid,
TUrM the case of Eatella Marshall hands, which waa paid ont of public told me different, and I was sic* a long
time—that’s what made my hair so
against J. 8. H. Brown, a druggist for funds. This man Pitney has found it a
white—but I hope she never heard of
-seMing her a poisonous drug by mistake very convenient way of furnishing his it, ’twould have made her as miserable
own
house
with
various
luxuries
for
fig quinine, resuld In a verdict of $4,000 1
as I was, and her fine things wouldn’t
------ BUT-----for the plaintiff. This was tbe second which the payment was made in simi­ have been much comfort to her! Folks
trial of tbs case, at tbe firsttbe plaintiff ’lar manner. He made regular requiri- blame her terribly, but I’m her mother,
buingawanwd •1,600. Brown appealed ’tisos upon tbe proper authorities claim • and it just seems aa if I could see her;
so.pretty, with her long brown curia,
-and theauprcmie court ordered anew 'ing and stating that these things were and the smile ahe had, and her gentle
for tbe use of Treasury Department, ways, and I loving' her better than
- trial whicii readied a* above.
while in fact, and after they were de­ Heaven above me! This ia my punish­
livered to the Department he appro­ ment—to sit alone all day and never to
&lt;HTR WASHfKGTON LETTER.
GROCERIES, •
priated these things for his own pri- 1
vate use or for the use of tbe Sherman .
if I go ones, I go a dozen times to the
PROVISIONS,
Campaign Committe.
Thus through ;
WaBHIMGTOM, D. C., May 90, 1883.
door, and look up and down the lone­
।
Tbe National Joekey Club held its one man’s dishonesty the honor and some
road and call, ‘L-i-x-z-i-e! L-i-z- CROCKERY,
:
inaugural races yesterday at Ivy City. integrity of many well known gentle- ■4-n!
’ and there’s never any answer but
Tbe weather was bright aid clear, but man cc.anectod with tbe Treasury De
t1 Waight wind moaning in tbe tress!
We are thankful for the liberal patronage giwn ua in the
partment have suffered to a very great ■ “Well I didn’t mean to make yon feel
extent. It to a great misfortune ro bad; don’t cry, poor soul! You’ve had
past under tbe old credit system, and solicit its continuance
enough trouble of your own, 1 guess, by
Senator
Sherman
that
those
wbo
find
■
HANGING LAMPS,
distinruishrd visitors were Presiunder the Ready Pay. We know we can be more serviceable
out these things wor’t keep them to i
is white
to you in. the. futuie than we could poeaibly be in the put
themeelve*.

A LARGE LINE OF

PARASOLS!

Our

Sales still Keep up on
\V^all Paper and Carpets

G. A. TRUMAN &lt;fc SON.
The First to the Front!
Ready Made Clothing, ■ for Men, Boys, and Youths,

Ladies, Misees, Gents &amp; Children’s Fine Shoes

rN J

IT IS A FACT „ •

Pioneer Store.

NOT ONE w
Of my Customers Complain

GOODS FOB THE SPRING TRADE

Flour!Clear

Thp.
Mill IT 1
HID Nashvillp
liaolivillt; mill,

Down!

fact

UNIVERSALLY SATISFIED.

JNO. M. ROE

DAKOTA NO BETTER INVESTMENT
—

----

THE PLACE TO BUY A FARM!

----- - ----- ■ \AZ -Hi S JU L JLi-----------Prints for 6 cts. yard.
Gringh.ams 8 to 11 cts.

Red Table Linen 50 to 55 cts.
THE PLACE TO BUY Turkey
'Table Oil Cloth .28. Floor, best, 42 cts.
Boot* and Shoes,
•
Hats 'and Caps,
General Clothing’,
*
(xroccrieH, JtUto,

GLASSWARE,

COME AJTD SEE FOR YO UR8ELF.

August.

Brt», Vo-r Bouert

ti»n

ttb kind, to st

ho would rathbe President, bnt
-Detroit Fret

then either.

Av*.

’

_____

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                  <text>OR.NO STRONG,)
EdJTOB Alfll pROmiKTOH.

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun.

I

VOLUME IX.

(TERMS; 81.50peb Yun
(

• NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, JUNE 3, 1882.

NUMBER 37.

.HASTINGS.
WEST SUNFIELD.
LIFE IN NASHVILLE witboutinjiiring arvthing or anybody,
nud then collided with H. 0. Bowen’h
' The Odd Fellows took In 825 rt their nodi] . The Bugle blows for all to come aud partake
Charley Child* h greatly improving his
And Her Environs.
wagon in front of Bartley’s blacksmith
of the Cljo and read Tira Nsw*.
(No copy­ farm by a good diteh thereon.
—Not half of the funner* have their shop. Bowen’s waguu waa of the wideC. 0. Bentley took a trip north this week.
right-)
tire apeclea and stood the shock calmly,
corn planted yet Season backward.
The high school picniced at Tbornapple lake
The warm refreshing rain of last Saturday- this place, and is most' cordially welcomed
but Ehret’s was badly wrecked, and
—Masons are laying toe foundation
strung fiotn tills point clear across the
Bert Ntokern started for West Point, Wsd- grangtw.
HU) has bought the John Week’s farm;
wall* forG. W. Francis’and the'bank
rlrer bridge. The team ran a short
block.
distance further and were captured and
—Goo. Brumm, living a couple of returned to their owner, but Mr. E. did cuplod by the dty bakery.
than V. D. Andrew*.
miles north, ha* commenced work up­ not succeed In finding all of the pieces
George Simpson and Dick Doyle are running
Reform club, lyeeum, Sunday scbocl aw
a bowling alley on Jefferson street
on a Dew and large dwelling.
all rigid, and thinks he will soon be ready for
of l&gt;is.wagun.
that a pretty fair showing for a country school
—The old topers who were surprised
—’Tin a aad thing to conemplate ball shoot, Tuesday and Wednesday.
district!
upon finding the saloons dosed last that brethren of like ilk cannot agree,
When a country bnmpkiu comes in from a
Tuesday, had to be informed that it buteapecirtly sad when applied to grpen- sing, has returned to Hastings to live.
was Decoration day.
luick editors, who are supposed to be
—The mysterr—in connection/with leaders of reform and retrenchment. 1300, adorned John Beasmcrs window this week.
Bert Tinkler will go-to Grand Rapids, next
the bank Ann iHiiding.nJirii-k lihsineM Ts» illustrate, we copy below the opinion
place is explaintM.
Dan. Everts has of the editor of the Olio of the editor
Spring A Co.
retired from tfio firm.
of the Bools:
Arthur Haskins has gone west on account of
—Andrew Wright is right busy gath­
hia health. He thinks a Kansas breezes will
ering lames to ship to Buffalo, to be
help his asthma.
manufactured into super phosphates, st Orton Swift, John E Burry and other mem­
Saturday night the flume broke and let tile
ber* the txianj Walter would have drawn pay
for fertilising purposes.
on a duplicate charge Jor Justice fees on more water out of the old pond. The looks and
—Every citizen desiring that Nash-1 than one occasion. In fact it Itecame s com­
mon remark among the members when one of
Mrs.Kelly, the pleasant little clerk at E. G.
ville should
celebrate the glorious Power's bills esme lo: “Is this another dupli­
Hoglc’s, lias accepted a position in Dctroit,and
Fourth, is asked to meet at tlio town cate!” Powers yel craves the supportof these
men to help Into office. The public demsnda s started for that city Tuesday.
hall thh Saturday evening, promptly clearer record than thia, lu a candidate for pub­
Rev."Carnahan has been secured to fill the
at eight o’clock, for the purpose of dia­ lic office. We have been furnished with an appointment at the Presbyterian church and
abumlance of this kind of facto in resrard to
cawing the project and making nec-s- Walter, but do not wish to fill our entire paper baa become a resident of Hartings.
sary preparations. Turn out, every "Uh them so keep the rest as a reserve for fu­
Rev. Bancroft &lt;fc Messers. Robinson, Riker &amp;
ture use. P. S. Wc did not pay a dollar aline Vanorman went to Kalamazoo this week to at­
•nan.
'
for these facta either."
tend the annual convention of the Diocese of
—Tlie town is billed for n show from
western Michigan.
the Whitney family concert troupe, op
LOCAL GIBBLE-GABBLE
Ed. Masters and Miss Maggie Kelly launched
Wednesday evening. June 7th. If the
out on the restless sea of matrimony. Here’s
show is any sample of the printed mat­
hoping they will sail on, right side up with
Elder Harder i» building a barn.
care, for many year*.
ter they distribute it i a gotal one. The
Mondny was a brink bnnineiiB day.
The new clock In the post office is a very
company travelM in their own ctmveyA new porch on A.R. Wolcott’n house. roughly finished piece of work It must have
rnce and exhibit under a tent of 1.000
people seat ing capacity. Admission 25
Dr. Goucher has raised and repaired been put up by fourth-class wood butcher and
varnished with a second-hand mop.
hi* dwelling.
cents; children 15.
Last Friday the peaceful waters of the Tborn­
Dave Fitzgerald is nt Wayne visiting
—MartsFlint, the lessee of tho old
apple were agitated by an impromptu Immer­
hi" p.-t and ma.
sion, Justice Clifford officiating. Contrary to
■Union House arrived on the spot, nnd
Brick laying hns commenced on Dr. the usual custom, he spoke afterwards.
is p ashing repair* on the building. The
Yonnira residence.
George Smith was kicked in the abdomen by
old plaster baa been knocked off nnd
Window gratings are being put in a horse Monday night He was considerably
new spread on.
The house will Ite
the ImKement of tho Buxton block.
shook up, but as no dangerous symptoms have
thoroughly painted inside nnd our, a
C. W. Smith hna com pl ted hia store appeared yet, be will probably recover soon.
double balcony built the length of the
James Crowley Las purchased the Olmstead
extension and now bus a daisy business
entire front, a sample room built
property in tie 1st ward. We mistrusted,
place.
bock of the office and its name changed
Will. IlenderMon, formerly of the Ea­ sometime ago, that those eastern tripe would
from “Union” to “Nashville House.”
culminate In something of that sort, they
ton Riipida Journal, was in the village
—One of the pooular method* nur on Monday.
At the raising of a bam last week, for Harvey
jokers employ tfi fill in their spare rime
Ed. Masters, carriage maker in E. Spencer, three men were trying to place a tim­
and enjoy themselves, is to ci^tch some Cook’s establishment, married a Hast* ber in position when it slipped and fell. A Mr.
verdant youth and start him bn the Ings lassie on Saturday last.
Bump got a sc ere bump on the bead, cutting*
rounds after a "square auger,” “round
J. C. McLaughlin and wife of Port gash in the side of the same and knocking him
square,” ’ quivering stick.” “ci nokwl Huron, spent the Sabbath in Nashville, insensible. William Stone was also bruised
straight edge,” left-handed monkt-y guests of Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Tinman. some, and Geu. Altoft received slight Injuries.
wrench," or some other outlandish, unThe M. C. R. IL wHl sell half fare
heard of imjiement; but a protracted tickets for the reurfion of the army of follows: Shoot No. 1, sweepstakes, Watts of
search on Tuesday, discovered a fair
specimen of "white lump black."
For
farther particulars inquire of Al. Raney
or Theo. Downing.
—Con. McCarthy, formerly section
boss with headqu irters at thia village,
but now a bar tender at Ctmrloite, hits
grown from all accounts quite naughty
since he a|}upted the cocktail dispen­

ser’* tra ld. That is to say. owe ovening last week he employed the same
menns to reach his d til ifno, as as did a
Nashville youth, a short time «iucr, vis
a ladder reaching to her room, was
discovered by the girl’s employer, who
fired a pistol in the air. This caun-d
Cod. to imagine be bnd l&gt;een shot and
be went down the ladder so careleaaly
that he left most of bis clothing on the
rounds thereof.

—The fireman’s dance on Friday eve..
was probably as fine and well conduct­
ed a party as was ever held in the vil­
lage. -The company seemed to l»e well
selected many favoring the hall with
their presence, who do not make a
practice of attending public dances.
The opera house was tastily trimmed
with tamarack sprigs, and a ban­
ner hung across the stage proclaimed
that the party was under the auspices
and protection of “Engine and Hose
Co. No. 1.” Eighry-four numbers were
•old and thirty dollars netted which
will be laid upon the shelf as a fund to
buy nnifonns with.
—On Sunday atOsmun’s livery barn,
Deb. Green and the attaches of riie in­
stitution were endeavoring
saddle
the former’s mustang, having the puny
“strapped down"as a precaution agaiust
accidents. Johnnie Graves, a sun of
the celebrated Kajamo horse doctor,
stood by, and riie work not proceeding
to suit him, be proceeded to do it alone,
just to show the boys how it should l»e
done, but he. had hardly touched tlie
feedve beast Wore it dropped down
upon ite fore leg* aad gave Johnnie a
“whack” in the abdomen with both
hind feet, that caused him to go
through all ot the .contortions of a cir­

cs* acrobat

—Michael Ehret, a farmer bring
north, left bi* team unhitched in front
of Brooks, Mai shall
Co., elevator,

Credit Subscriftiomb *1.78.

the Potomac at Detroit on tho 14th
and 15th.
Byron Graham has ceased converting
the northern pinenes into lumber, and
lias returned to his own heaalbstono
in this village.
C. L.GIasgow went to Jouesville.Saturday, tarrying there until Monday,
when he returned with Mrs. G„ .and is
now as smiling as ever.

tin divided 2d, L. Crowell and Grant divided
3d and label! of Jackson 4th, Claw shoot No.
3—Watts l»t, Geer and Locke of Grand Rapids
divided 2d, 8- Crowell 3d and Sheldon 4th.
No. 3, e weepstakes—Bennett and Follett divid­
ed IbL Hayes, Geer and Wlddecomb divided
2d, Lang 3d and Melchor 4th. No. 4, double
team shoot—Horton and Follett took IbL New­
ell and Dixon 3d, and C. and L. Melchor 4tb.
Shoot 5— White and Follett divided 1st, Piereon and C. Melchor divided 3d, and Isbell 4th.
Shoot 5th--Gun and Follett divided J st,
Pierson 2d, Chamberlain 3daud Row 4th. No.
7, grand team aboot of all the dubs—Out of a
possible 75, Hastings broke 73, Grand Rapids
73, Grand Haven GJ aud Muskegan 07. Shoot
No. 8, for an English setter worth HO, wax
won by Horton. Horton and Gunn tied on the
best average, breaking 74 out of 75. Hayes,
Bennett and Watts tied, oo second bert avewage, breaking 72 out ot 74. John Goodyusr
won 52 by making the poorest average.
Hatts.

“Writist,” our Bismark correspond­
ent, wc rate as one of the spiciest on
the list, nil rebort* of the Hawk to the
contrary, notwithstanding.
The Lnrimore Pioneer of May 25th,
is a twelve pnge sheet, and contains a
mint of information about the rising
young city of Northern Dakota and the
Elk Valley. We note that our former
stiiring busineM brotlrer, C. C. Wol­
cott. continues to make hirotelf felt,
and is booming the home his adoption
WEST KALAMOdoption for all it
The Woodland correspondent of the
Please part the taters.
Hastings Banner, says:—“The Bugle
Too wet to cultivate corn.
blew a few blasts on the neutral scale,
and then commenced- blowing on tlie
Oats are badly discouraged and nec k eoaxgreenback scale, and the most of the ing.
Lots of corn planted and lots more to plant
neutral people in this place have stop­
ped taking it, so you sec it does not
Wheat not very promising for a big yield this
bay eyery time to changd from a good
tiling to something you don’t know
F. Showalter has been down after, water. He
about.’,
got 1L
**
.Dr. W. H. Griswold received a liberal
proposition to enter the employ of Dre.
Booth &amp;. Kensington of Muskegon,
Garden sass kecfis under the surface of the
ha*accepted the same, sold his practice earth.
to Dr. E W. Murray, and will start for
hi* new field of labors to-day.
Dr. Bradley.
Griswold by persistent effort has work­
ed up a large business here and we
hate to lose him, but his successor is a
young and stirring man, has had six
H. J. Stocking has been baiMing a “condi­
months practice in Ohio, will do Ma tion" to his horse barn.
'
best to hold Dr. G.’s business,
We
Sixty-one scholar* enrolled in Miss McMorc’*
wish both gentlemen success.
Star scholars in Naahvffle, Union School

is all killed around here.
providing weather is favorable.
E. E. Tiech is entertaining a brother on a

Newton Kellogg, Bert Niles.

weeks visit among relatives at Battle Creek.
T. Albertan of Bellevue Is finishing the
granary for his sou Chartea of this vicinity.
The ovenam al highways lhava received

would to ran for office.
Hasn't John W. Guiteau better play insane
before hto brother's neck-tie curial spoils the
family circle* This isn't a West Kalamo local,
but It smacks of—well, don't print it.
tertalnlng societies organized tn the country is
the association which assemble at the Matteson
echoo) bouse every Saturday evening. The ob-

at single blessedness and taken unto himself a
wife. We are not prepared to give particnlaro
Miss Hattie Fast teaches

school in HQ-

first* term, aad prophesied for her .a brOttrat
fuUtrwin Washing. Success to-you Hattie.
Da Parmenter and wife ot Vermontville
spent the Sabbath In this town with friends

We anderstand they bsvvtwo teacher* at the

lasf week that will not be soon forgotten.

One

Ho told her to take three drops at

medicine.

the Dr. did-sbel

Moral: follow directions.

MAPLE GROVEJohn Waifs onion patch is under water.

reek.
planted.

Charlie Whitcomb has a curtosity in the

tion and better order of society, and is com­
family have gvmsto Hillaposed ot both young and old people, anu bus well, but you drive rather fa*L‘
And now Mr*. Peter Weeks Is happy, her
an active membership of 90.
Its program gen­
erally consists of select reiding, declamations, parcnta, Mr. and. Mi*. John Paraeuter of Troy,
dialogues, short speeches, an association pa­ Ohio, are bore to spend the ewrosMcr, and she
stingert! so thought Enos
per, and singing. No person is prohibited projxrtrt to prove to them the truth eX tlie
from its membership by reason of “age, color, motto of our really delightful Michigan.
Mr.
John
Price
’
s
funeral
was
preoclieil
at
the
or previous conditions, etc."
lira..- don,"
ehurch. They have commenced* the brick
Presbyterian church of Sunfield,' last Friday.
ooufound this with the R. R. dub.
Rev? Okie of Vermootville Ailed the pulpit,
Peaches, some corn and others vegetable*,
text, John, chapter 14, three first, verses. H&lt;r were aotn-xsimt. injured by the heavy frusta last

CEDAR CREEK.

Another 8. 8. Institute at the Kilpatrick
Fred. Quick •mpporu’ a crutch, or rather a
church last Sabbath. The bouse wes crowded crutch supports-him- A sprahied ankle-ia the
toovertihwing and really excellent-time. That
A new fence graces the front cf tlie ijirabcc Ib the place * here-oue can go expecting to have
Some of- tiio farmers complain of having,
a good time and not be disappointed.
sheep killed by dog*. Wipe out yonr old nrasMr*. S.’Week'smother, (recently widowed ny
David Bawkcr is busy building a brick bouse,
ket anil ferwarri march I
rhich is to compare favorable with any Barry the death of Martin Fast, father of' J. Fast,)
A Sunday school is In progress it tho Quail
is here tor the purpose e&lt; spending the sum­
There is quite a number or cases of sickness mer and recruiting her health. She cam* from tntendenl aad quitea large attendance.
in thc neighborhood, and sumo of them arc re­ Troy, Ohio. Welcome Fast, we give you greet­
An Impromptu fight took place owe day last
ing.
ported to be quite serious.
week, In which Hiram Whitcomb and Levi
re chronicle the de- Goodrich wero th* principal actrwm In Burn­
W. II. Smith has graded off' bis front yard
and has the posts on the ground for a new
ing up thv-eontert was decided three tn one la
community. They were held in high esteem,
fence— a much needed improvement.
favor of H Irani.
Mr. Cox had quite a BtUe difficulty with a and wilt be greatly missed by their many
neighbor over the injury of a rteert shoulder,
alleged to have been caused by a stone thrown Fay's haailh, which has been very much im­
LOCAL MATTERS.
from the hand of aforesaid neighbor. The paired of late. She came here several mouths
WHEN?Y(M7BUY A MACHINE
landlady of the “bouse on the hill” was counsel ago, hoping-to find a climate congenial to her
for the plaintiff. She stems to have a natural health, but by the advice of several M- D’b. See if tha- machim is made for the company
bv some fsetory oo contract, or whether the
she seek* it else where.
affinity for Cox.
In the absence of ‘’Van” wc take up the pen company owns its &lt;&gt;vrn (artery aud makes it*
The “Bunnell" family, whose name is
legion (as the devil told our Saviour,/ held in behalf of Sunfield, not with the-axpectatiou own rnai-hlue*. au» does our*. Troableaof v*ritheir reunion last Saturday, that being the of filling his place; we could not do that In Tua customci* who buy a machine from.* company
which does-uoLown and control Ito own fac­
tory. Cukract work also to very apt to be tnover three score years ago. The attendance cation of Tab Nbws family, win would b»
was large as usual. Two ministers,members of sorely ihoapolnted at receiving Tub Kkxh, and
ftONEY TO LOAN,
the family, were on hand to say grace and sam­ no items from West Sunfield. So. Bczon BIzSpring weather is expected here in a few

ple the chickens, which, by the way, were not
half us tough as the stories for which thU fam- tbrusteor elbow us frxn the corpse of N*w»
ly have acquired such world wide celebrity.
corre*i»ndcnte. for we hail grief enough in get­
Oscar Campbel) and JL Freeman I wo of our ting the amMni of our wife upon thia point.
The young folks, literary society met at the
story,) met the other day and resolvsd to anni­ rerideta»&gt;of Mr. Mogden last, Friday evening,
hilate each other. Alter quarreling awhile to with a fall bouse, aud will meet at Mr Fetor
see who was entitled to the upper hill side, Week’s nett Friday evening. The society is
they struck at each other, missed their aim, yet in Uz-infancy, but great interest is mani­
clinched, rolled cverj tore clothing, etc. Tills fested by Hie members, who seemed drterminfinished the first round. After arranging their
toilet tbc second nxind began. The contest­
ants assumed a txjigerent attitude, put on a
blood and thunder look and exiled each other
aaroe*. 'til their ‘’honor” wa.- satisfied. The
whole affair was a fair illustration 6f the“sand’
of the average young man, who is eternally
wishing to find some oaewbods able to stand
before him.

and it certainly bids fair to bc^bc attraction of
tion.% srioct reading, essayb and music. Tbo«e

Last Saturday's rain waa much needed.
A. N. Marton iscomplstly driven to the, wall.
Sunfield may bo called a land of post offices
The bam of business la heard at the saw mill.
Wm. A. Wells has bought a new top buggy.

Fred Besworth is buaidiag a bam on his

Er r flue

made to ortfsr h»sa oert stock*

WHAT IS T3E.USK
BALTIMOREl

Rutlafid.
Daniel Warner is putting in considerable

Harry Hammonds is draining a swamp for

of buving a new Mower or Reaper when you &lt;
gctyuttreUoDemadeas good a* new at
bttumACort’i
IT SEk»f«

needle. Therefore, dOm yea condemi
machine, try the gemun«-caid swedged
kept only by E. IL WHITE, al Kocher

NEW BEfCK STORE.
parties having *ecc an to with me toexjfi at once
and settle cither by note or eaah. a« J wiU oearl
al) that Im due mt,
G»x W. llkuxcu.

nay wheat head*.

This country Is well seeded with woodchucks

than half a crop.
A visiting party from Johnstown called
A. P. Warner last Sunday.

Dan. Hnllette ha* bought a new threshing
madrine; also a horse..
A. F. Ward and wife intend to go to their
new abode at Ann Arbor this week.

tried iwuLproved points from ‘ie whole range
of the :■«K-ibgHxstehlDe world. &gt;nd combined m­
U&gt; the one graad triumph of thl» ttete of tn
durtryu_______ ;_________________
FINE BOOTS?

entertainments are respretfuUy invited.

Wash your sheep.
G. Arnold's wife to convahsing.
IL Traver** health Is very poor thia spring.
Stuak buyers are plenty o-ul fat caulc scarce.

BISMARK.

F. T. BOBTS.

IZN)L HERE’
HexarSTBOBH of Morgan has » kiln of
Tile JasUburnL Go and sec hlto.before buying.

IN BliyHCG A MACHINE.
See if the wearing ports which came In con­
tact with each other are of different metahl and
U different dsg»M of bantoeac. aa are Ito
“Crown.” Two hard or two soft metals run
Mr. Tanner docs the Jpb.
nlng together will wear out very much faster
John Young* and father arc laying the fuun- than when two metals of unlik* density aud .
datlous for P. Hennsya barnsga

succeeded in displaying their blossoms.

NEW ICE CREAM ROOMS.

ors of his last wrak’n items, and gar a tk to Phil
which will be ready for the coming crop.
S doors North of J. Louts
James Boyle* has sold hia stock of lumber to
Doxt.
the Potter Manufacturing Co. Mr. Davenport te«deouL"_ '
of Woodland, done likewise.
WOODLAND.
The late frosts must have done much injury
and c xne over to l*4icve that the Crown U the
Hi. and MaL have a new cab foe babies.
bert vt-t brought out, than wa* ever ■ known* la
fell thu Itistory of any olbar new machine..
We are .jr*wing lumber and writing locals. and Injured her collar.
LADIES HAVE YOU SEEN. '
All cull lumber is rejected withoat public
abuse. Locals should be treated likewise.
Thanks to Ths News.
Wm. Wunderlich'* new boas* is neany com­
plete, trad when finished will b« a fine residence

rail

aeveral of our villager* have improved their
places, by tearing town their old board fe.nrea.

dl has pur

xutisge of War

�D.S.IUUI

«km’t mesa to nay xon d
ouuMn’t help it. I tell

“And that's all you know?” cried
Mr*. Bird. “ Well, 1 would never have
nan M ve*'
thougt when I got married my wife would darn
—in.trouble, ve said
— I’d want him ter i and to learn how to assume it readily. erF’
wd4-f
s£5£“e
ru lire Dan i- i I -houid have liked to rfv. her t£e
“That’s just why we wanted your my sucks, and let me oIom ; tastead of that sue
leu
taj sodw akxw and darns bis."
I’ll t^Tver father a year. Sho! what: money
if you had seen her help,” said Arthur, looking at her de­
be ye doin’F’ Sophronia had caught you won d understand how it wm quite spairingly. “You would have known
ZOA-PHORA! ZOA-PHORA1
ippo-SbU to
to think
think of
of it
it for
for a
a moment
moment how to find out all about it, and you
one of his hands and kissed its brown impoerible
J assure
freckled back. He reee and walked over 1_
-------- Z you
- - ’ I would
“ quite
““ as soon offer would have been a friend to her.”
interA fuw days later Sophronia called on
Bo tar the United Stats guvernntout has giv­
to the window, then capie back and --------my P-----UI»® to a queen, j WM
scarce knowing why.
u in
lumtutuiuoi.
a*’re the v~_»—-. I . BiiMt confess, so carious, her aunt to’say good-by; her class wm en away to raffrouds Dearly 900,000,000 acres of
then jiau-ed
front of her. v
“ Ye
ir ’mother
when ishe was a gal. , that I said if she wm going upon the disbanded, at least for the predent, aud
picter o'yer
nntliAr when
...-------------I would gladly bear her rehearse she wm going home. In vain did Mrs.
n««i: Oounil
ac’ Dan’ 1 an'
me wareboys.' 1 suppose I
A DELIGHTFUL NOVELTY.
ye don't know ye cum mighty nigh to ; her part, thinking that this offer would Bird urge her to take a little rest, and
_ ; bring me.aome hmt of her purpose. But consent to bo her guest for at least
IxmMm prefer JTorrrtoo CoJogne bcraurc thej
bein’ my darter?"
ironl. had rten when
be did. I fbe might lu&gt;&lt;« here an oj.Ler, lor ur a week or two before returning. find tti» U»Uu£ combination of exqialle per
Sophrv^L;
.
fames a delightful novelty.
Her heart was full, and- -her. tongue was I information I could elicit She pleased Sophronia was firm, and at last con­
1 me so much that I took great pains io fessed with a sudden burst of tears that
The private claim before congress foot up in
no longer fluent
teach her bow to make henelf up as an she had been very homesick.
"I don't mind tellin’ on ye.” be-said,
the ncigtitiorbood of X800.000.0UO.
avwKiyut *•&gt; •fc.iu. •*» —— -- -----“ Go home, then, darling,” said Mrs.
fiaal «‘Ver rre» in sbnivr^ bower
a little huskily, “lor yc ain’t the gul to ! old woman, and f gave her a dress
The
symptoms of Itching Pllee are moisture
suited
to
her
purpose,
a
melange
from
B n ■nth Ux’ softest Skira.
Bird, tenderly. “But really, Sophronia,
go repeatin’ on't; yer mother wux the
preephstion, intense itching, most st night
my Meg Mernlies and other costumes. you are so very unflinching and obstin­ like
.—..I 1I ever
n..A— asked/o
Ar.
H T1me.
’
only gal
marry
an’
seeinsMifplD worms were crawling In or
kb nr. ray friend, my one dear f ri-ndl
It was a great success. She caught ate I don’t understand why I can not about the rectum. Tbc more you scratch the
I wus a soft-hearted lad in them day*.
©fir pl ««nt Bpnng-lime had an cud,
W/l&gt;-fttm&gt; f"lry waya.
She said no, and it sp’ilod things forme every suggestion of mine with the quick­ be angry with you. I never knew any­ worse they Itch, very distoessiug. Tue private
ness of an artist; and at the ImL imag­ thinglike yonr obetinacy, except Mlle. , parts art often affected. Dr. gwayne’s Oint­
a good deal ever senoe.”
ment is ttc most effective remedy ex tan t for
Ho walked away again, and stood ine my perplexity when she attempted Bland’s mysterious old lady.”.
thia tormenting complaint. Gives rest at night
to pay me, not for my kindness, she
“ Who is Mlle. Bland’s mysterious without that desire to sera tch. Also has on
some moments in the front doorway.
When he returned it was with his old said, but for the costume and the little old ladyF’ asked Sophronia, with some equal tn quickly eradicating Teller, Itch, Salt
Rheume, Erysipelas, Barbers' Itch, Pimples,
parcel of cosmetics. I had really to interest.
■ I all m* &lt;&gt;ow n today.
manner. He too had in his way been
My hxmrt ft tt-*turig with ttarp resret,
all Scaly, Crusty, Itchy Skin Eruptions. Here
proud, fbr he had refrained from'telling quarrel with her.”
Then her aunt gave a spirited account is the proof, “Certainly the best remedy ever
Breauic thy p.uh from mine is set
“Where
did she
come from?” of the affair. “ And the worst of it is,” used to my practice,” Dr. Cotton, Woodstock,
Sophronia that it was chiefly due to an
“What name did she give?” asked
ungenerous
action
on
her
father
’
s
part
she added, “ Mr. Arthur Lynd has com­ VL. “troubled with Itching Piles for over twen­
RuU-daar. my tears am aclfl
pletely lost his heart to this provoking ty years, it cured me completely,” L. S. Messer
MorHodhain bl wood tty i&gt;«
that her mother. when she wm pretty several of the guests together.
.With blaaslnss wide and &lt;1
“ Ah. that is the oddest of all" said incognita, and I wanted him to lose it Enflsid, Me. Sent for 50 eta (in 8 cL stamps)
Anna Green, had refused him, and
3 boxes, X 1.25, By Dr. Swayne A Suu. Piillad’a
Thy H tumtr camo at Fp-irq
Mlle.
Bland,
laughing.
“
She
didn
’
t
steeled
his
heart
once
and
for
all.
And for thy bluflM*lls jr-tvo ,
to yon.”
Pa. Bold by ail druggists.
“It’s a bargain," said he, “an I’ll give her name, and absolutely I couldn't
Ona day, about a month later, Arthur
stick to’t jest as if ye were my own dar­ ask it. I should know the costume Lynd received a letter, which he read
Perhaps the reason tbc foolltii virgin* had
Toa. Godi
anywhere; so if it appears on the stage with apparent annoyance.
ter an’ not my enemy's darter."
“Just like bo oil In their vessels was because they used it
This bit of humor and half retaliation herb, we may yet discover her.”
my crabbed old unde,” he muttered. all on tbelr bain
* -ghr
ed on, small sums
made it easier for Sophronia
‘
•
to thank
Fuji •oft1.- on lovx’a'gath-rvd aucavea,
“ As he particularly wishes it I suppose
to tho
peoWORTH REMEMBERING.
UUU,
nicy who
wuu had passod each oth- steadily
------ - way ------- old r
—
karand rp tot Winter-time.
him, auu
end they
I ought to_go to him; but I aha'n't stay
«r in tho TlUwe ways for all bortwentp P&gt;«the Noweomb farm. and Stophen long unless he has some reason."
FrW-nd, tf tn me when Sort mr-tlme died,
worth remembering that no one can enjoy the
yea™ as
aa strangere,
,t™&gt;geri, parted
parted —
now
u Billings had received nearly all hia
WCs given no glorious Summer-tide,
years
.. —
The “crabbed old uncle” did have pleasantest ourroundings if in bad health.
If naver happy May
friends, with an odd bond of secrecy in dues.
some reaseta, which he made known There arc hundreds of miserable people going
Succeeded Apr! *s shower and sun.
Sophronia had kept on steadfastly in very bluntly on the morning after his about to-day with disordered stomach, liver or
their alliance.- Stephen Billings had not
And, If, when bluebell time was dona,
kidnevs. when a bottle of Parker’s Giner Tonic
been the only direction in which So­ her chcaen course, and Mrs. Bird had nephew's arrival.
would do them more good than all medlcleuea
phronia had sought re’ief. She had an shown | er own fine tact and her genu­
“ I’ve found a wife for ye Arty,” said they have ever tried.
It evermore my heart doth miss
aunt living in Now York, the wife of ine regard for her niece in nothing so be, crossing his knife and fork on his
one of its wealthy merchants. Mrs. I much f* in her careful refraining from
The following ominous “Not!*" is posted In
plate, and shoving himself away from
If wanting Stan of earthly lore,
Bird was very fond of her niece, and any pre-jure which could make Sopro- the breakfast table.
a Texas taw-mill; “Donut monkey with the
I know one brighter shlnna above,
having no children of her own, would Bia fee- herself to be a source of puzzle
My friend, 1 am content I
“I’m in’no hurry," said the young buz saw when in moahun.”
long ago have adopted Sophronia if the or dissatisfaction to her aunt Sophro­ man; exerting some self-control.
latter could have been induced to leave nia low! her pupils, and they warmly
A V ALUABLE ADDITION.
“ But I be,” exclaimed his uncle.
A MODERN PURITAN.
her parents. As it was, Mrs. Bird had returnfr1 her love; but she never went •• Ef ye don’t step lively, ye won’t stan’
Because it is beneficial to the scalp and adds
insisted on securing to tho bright and to their homes, and never invited them no chance at all. She’s bright as a star, Jo personal beauty by restoring color and lurtre
Stephen Billings had finished his din­
U&gt;
gray
or
faded hair, is why Parker's Hair
to
hers
She
had
also,
in
the
first
in
­
pretty girl the advahtages of a full
as pooty as a posy, an’ good as the Balsam is such a popular drear Ing.
ner—a mesl eaten at noon by t)ic instance, explainod to her aunt that until
•Yabftants cf the thinly settled farming course at the Wilbraham Academy. To her plelge was redeemed she desired anjils.’’
Mrs. Bird, Sophronia- had written, re­
There
is
one good thing that can be said
The old man’s emotion wm inexpli­
town of Hillside—and wm shoving back
vealing the home situation under pledge retirement, and to avoid any introduc­ cable to his nephew, but itprevented his about the Chinese. None of them are Mor
his ehair, when he ’heard a rap at the
of secrecy, and begging her aunt to se­ tion to Mrs. Bird's multitude of fash­ making a light rejoinder, nnd piqued moos.
front- door. It stood open—for it wm
cure for her some young pupils for a ionable acquaintances. Therefore, she his curiosity. They walked oat togeth­
a warn day in the last week of May—
FEAR NOT.
forenoon class. Mrs. Bird in reply had been very seldom to Mrs. Bird's er, and the old man returned to the sub­
and framed a delightful view across
Fifth Avenue home, where she would
All Kidney and urinary complaint, especially
ject.
slope and valley, a view at this moment warmly expostulated with Sophronia, of­ have been so welcome.
Bright Disease, Diabcica and Liver truubira Hup.
fering
her
a
permanent
home,
and
pro
­
eclipsed by tho figure of a tall and hand­
“Ye hain’t ben here this dozen year, Bitters will surely and lantingly cure Ua*es ex­
At last the debt was paid, the last
some girl, who stood waiting at the posing an immediate loan. But So­
an' ef ye ever seed her. she wuz a chit actly like your u*n bare been cured in your
phronia was firm, declined all these kind farthing had been dispatched, the old ye wouldn’t remember. D'ye see that own neighborhood, and you can find reliable
threshold.
proof al home of what Hop Bitters haa aud can
homo was rnnsomed. and would be the
overtures,
and
pleaded
for
the
forenoon
lectio brown house yender jest by the
“Eh, Miss Sophrony!" said Mr. Bill­
class; and the very next day after her happy humble shelter of her parents’ turn o’ the road? Wa’al, she lives there. do.
fags, bowing bi* &gt;**ad to peer at her be­
interview with Stephen Billings she re­ closing davs.
Lemme
tell
ye
what
that
gal
done.
Ye
tween the sbofT'y gray tufts of his
Live within your Income. Il’s terrible hard
One night in spring, when the apple­
see. her folks got into trouble, an' I work to live without IL
knitted brows aud the upper rim of his ceived a letter from Mrs. Bird announc­
trees were beginning to blossom in the
silver-bowed spectacles. “Won’t ye ing, still with much tender protest, that orchards and sweeten the airs of Hill­ warn’t gootl frens with ’em; but sho
“WAIT A LITTLE LONGER.”
walk in? How s Mis’ Newcomb? Chil­ the class was arranged, and she could side,‘and the wealthier classes of New cum over here ter me as white an’
dren doin' web to school ? Hev a cheer, assume its direction at any moment
tremblin' ns a lamb, an’ yit as bold as
Bo wc are told sometimes. Things will
With this letter in her hand, Sophro­ York were beginning to plan and pre­ a lion, an’ she axed me ter lift the mor■ wou’tyc?—ye look real beat."
come
out
all right, people say, if wc will wait
pare for .he usual summer exodus, an
“ Mother is well, thank you,” said nia broke the matter to her parents, old woman who had become familiar to gige an’ make it easy for her father for awhile. That don’t do with discti&gt;c. The
Sophronia, hurriedly. “Can I see you who were not only surprised and loath the psssers on a certain beat ns the a year, an’ ef ho didn't pay it up by longer you wait the worse it is. Its no use to
to part with her, but urged that there
few moments alotjc, Mr. Billings? ’
bewrof a tray of excellent and al- then, she would, an’, by gracious, my plant corn In November. Do you fee) a Mttle
V Sartin yc can—what’s to header?” could be no necessity for it, now that waa fresh candies, which sold as fast as boy, the gal done it! She mode mo say
bad I Strike the trouble right away. Dr, David
end the vidbachelor, bluntly. “There’s “Old Grind,” as Mr. Newcomb dubbed she CTmld replenish her store, took her 1 would, an’ then she never cum near
Kennedy's “Favorite Remedy" La what you
Re gal in tlie kitchtm, busy mostly a­ his old school-mate rod creditor, had stand, with her last trayful for that me m ef she wuz afeerd I’d need a leetle
want. It will at once relieve the bowels, st I mu
Ireakin’ on the dishes. nnr she. won’t “shown such a soft Spot.” and granted
evening, near the sta&lt;re-rntrance of a remindin'—not sher but she jest posted
*ear; so speak right out. Miss Sophrony. hijin a "whole year on the pesky mort- theater. She had found that she could off to New York City, an’ took a late the liver and cool the skin. Take one dol­
lar in your hand and stop at your druggists, ur
git ria on’t, for I own I’m powerful ‘ iSvmtbolew Sophronia persisted in generally clear a tray to the players as school.”
«sris to know what’s brought yc!”
At this point Arthur stopped walk­ write to the doctor, at Rundoiit, N. Y.
out her plan. On arriving in they came out in a tired yet generous ing, and turned toward his uncle, who
The girl blushed; it was, in fact, the carrying
■
and
jesting
mood.
The artful dodger Is not always a politician
Mnt tuae she had ever been under New York, Sophronia amazed her aunt
stopped walking also, but hurried on and he just despises a man who can beat him
The occasion had been especially speaking:
Stephen Billings’roof. ‘Tvecometo .—who received her warmly, and made
her
at
once
the
mistress
cf
a
lovely
brilliant,
for
it
was
both
the
nrst
and
••ee you doout the mortgage on father's
“ An’ she paid the hull thing, cleared
room—by going out on the third day last appearance in months of the great
farm—”
'
off every cent o’ debt from the farm!
Lydia E- Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
The old man started, straightening up !and returning with tlie news that she popular favorite Mlle. Bland. The act­ An' when she cum back I see her one will at all times and under all circumstances,
had
found
and
taken
cheap
.but
repu
­
ors
began
to
come
out
Several
of
them
stiffly. “Ye jest go right straight back
day, an’ I scz to hcrl sudden, *Ye didn't act in harmony with tlie law* that govern the
lodgings in another partof the city, spoke to the old woman, and purchased
female system. Address Mrs Lydia E. Pink­
lum, an’ tell yer father not to send table
'
do all that by teaohin’,' you’d ortcr ham. 2Xf Western at venue, Lynn, Maas, !&lt;&gt;r
from her tray, which was attractive
aeneoV his ]&gt;etticoata to me. I don’t do with kitchen privileges.'
with a scattering of fresh-cut flowers? seen tho look she gin me. An’ then I
business wtth gala."
. " Kitchen privilegesf’ cried Mrs.
made her tell mo bow ’twas, arter she’d
The young man pn»;&gt;o».es, the old man dU•*D, Mr. Billings, father doesn’t know 1Bird, looking at her niece in real die­ AX last Mlle. Bland appeared. A tall made me promise—an’ she’s a master­
that I oune!” cnod the girt, quickly. 1may. “My dear Sophronia, what on and remarkably handsome young man hand to get a promise out of a man—I’d
can you want of kitchen privi­ pressed forward, with an air of privi­
M It is all my own doing; no one knows earth
!
never toll her parents on't Wa’al. how
■
lege. to hand her to her carriage.
SHILOH’ 8 CONSUMPTION CURE.
a word about It, and yon ihustn’t telL” leges?” do ye think she done it? She went to
“ Why, to board myself, of bourse. 1
This is beyond question tte most successful
In the same instant Mlle. Bland saw au actoress, n theater woman, and got a
“Mustn’t, hey?”
Cough Medicine we have rffrer sold, a few duaes
“Ko, you will not tell; you have must earn and save every cent I can,” the old woman. Breaking from her disguise that made her look like an old Invariably cure tbc worst cases of Cougb, croup
ao. right, for I have come to you 1said Sophronia, earnestly. UI have oompanion with an excited exclai&amp;ation, tyoman, an' she larnt how to make all and Bronchitis, while its wonderful success l»
in-confidence, and you are a gentle- 1given my word, and I will keep it. Mlle. Bland* grasped the old woman by ■Orts o’ candies, an’ went outer the in the cure of consumption is without a paral­
man.
and
can not betray
mo.” And can’t you see, dear aunt, there is tlie wrists. The latter stood transfixed; streets at night an’ sold it like hot cakes lel in the history of medicnc. Since its first
her tray fell to the pavement, and tho — Why, what ails you? Areyccrasy?” discovery it luts been sold ou aguarntce, steal
She was pale, snd trembled very much, but one way?”
which no other medicine can stand.
if you
“No. I can’t;” and Mrs. Bird folded scene being misunderstood, the was
but there wm no mistaking the resolu­
Arthur Lynd had seized the old man's have, a Cough we earnestly ask you to try it.
and
unfolded
her
hands
in
sincere
vexa
­
somewhat rudely handled before Mlle. hard brown hand in his supple white Price lOcta, fiOcU, and Xl.fiO If your luuita arr
tion in her voice and glance“I ain’ t no gentleman,” Stephen tion. “You do not need to be so Bland could prevent, and her hood and one, “an’ gin mo the toughest squeeze I sore. Chest, or Back Lame, and Shiloh's
Billings answered, after a pause; “ but proud. If this is what is meant by New wig falling back, the disguise was evi­ ever had in my life,” as the old man Porous Plaster. Sold by F. T. Bor-z.
ANSWER THIS QUESTION.
if ye reely cum by yeraelf, I ain’t called England pride, Fm sure it’s a very ugly dent to alL The wonder was rebuffed said afterwartL
Why do so many people we see around us,
upon, fur’s I know, to go a-givin’ on virtue. It was all very well for those and tho gathering crowd kept off by the
• ‘What is her nameF’ cried Arthur.
seem to prefer to suffer and be made miserable
ye away bvtattlin’. What is’tye want?” delicate women who had to come over quick-witted action of Mlle. Bland.
“She's niece to that city woman. Mis’ by indigestiau, coustl|&gt;ation. dixxinew, loss of
" Til tell you the truth, Mr. Billings, in the Mayflower, and be dumped on “Forgive me, my dear,” she said to the Bird. She’s Dan’l Newcomb’s darter, appetite, coming up oftbeFood, yellow skin,
Plymouth Ilock with nothing to eat or candy woman, so that all could hear it,
and i'll speak m . I would if you were
an’ blest if she ain’t too smart an’ good when for75eta, we will sell them Shiloh’s Vit»Itzer, guaranted to cure them. Bold by F. T.
my own father instead of my father's to wear, pour things, for they couldn’t and to the erowd. “ It’s all right,” and an’ harnsum to stay a Newcomb while
hurt themselves. I’ve never believed helped her into the carriage, the young there's any o’ Stephen Billings’ blood Boiseenemy.”'
SHILOH’S CATTARRH REMEDY, A mar­
The old man's face, changed sudden­ —for there’s no sense in it—that they man following, which rolled awv while in —”
velous cure for Catarrh, Diphtheria, Canker
ly, and he pressed his hand hard upon came of their own free-will, and chose the by-standers were still gaping. The
Arthur Lynd was yards off, on his way mouth, and Head Ache. With each bottle
here
is an ingenious nasal Injector for Hie
hard
times
and
everything
dirty
and
next
morning
Mrs.
Bird
received
an
lie arm of the hair-cloth sofa where lie
to Newcomb farm.
more successful treatment of three complaints
Sat; but tho girl went on. without pause disagreeable. But with you, Sophro­ early call from Arthur Lynd, the young
Stephen Billings crossed the New­ without extra charge. Price Abets. Sold by
or visible hesitation, m if life and death nia, It is very different and you might man in whom she was most interested comb threshold for the first time in &gt;'■ TJ1O1SE.
of all her large circle of acquaintance.
-were in the balance. “ I don’t under­ please me if you would.”
Sophronia
gently
---o
_— shook her head.
----------- J She admired his character, believed in twenty years on the day of Sophronia’s
stand business very well, but I do know
Dole*
let “
me
r do
’ as I feel I ought,
’without
-12___ : his future, and had of late begun to marriage to his nepbuw, which happy
that father can not pay up the mort­ “Do
JJENRY ROE, Profkibtob
’’ she plead- ( think in tlie secrecy of her soul that she event came off in the autumn of that
having to fee! that I vex you.”
gage, and that you have said that he ?2T13gtofee!that
ed; and then she kissed her aunt with could not.do
do a
a better
better tiling
thing than
than to
to bring
bring year. He announced then and there
must pay, or you must hare The farm. I
----- OLD RELIABLE-----that the bride, to whom he had given a
... acquaintance between him and
want you to grant him one year, and at so sweet a look of tenderness and inllcx- about an
handsome marriage portion, would lie
her lovely niece
But how to accom­
the end of it, if he can not pay you, Mr.. ibility that Mrs. Bird yielded.
his sole heir on one condition, which
The arrangement in no way interfered plish this with tlie intractable Sophronia.
Billings, I. will. I’ve come here to ask
would be found mentioned in his will.
“Well, what is it?” said Mrs. Bird, m
you to do this great kindness to me, Mr. with Sophronia’s management of her
And that same night he wrote, in bis
Billings—not to my father or my moth­ class, which she met daily in the vestry she received the voung man,
own cramped but plain and sturdy hand,,
“ She’s found!’’ he exclaimed in an
er, bot to me. And I ask you to deal) of a chapel which had been fitted and
at the ena of his will:
with me as you would wish to have a assigned to this purpose through Mrs. excited tone. aS he tossed his cap Mide.
“ The above is to bo carried out ek“ Who is found?”
man deal by your daughter, if she were i Bird’s representation and at her ex­
zackly m it is herein sot down, as bein’
pense. Sophronia enjoyed her work.
in such trouble as I am,”
The old woman—the young woman. my last will and testymunt, on tho solo
Toe sweet, passionately earnest voice i As she went to and fro she observed un­ I mean, that Mlle. Bland told us about oondlshun that Sophrony’s fust darter
ceased, and the speaker came forward i obtrusively but keenly the people and last fall. Don’t you remember? And shall be named Anna Green Lynd— FRESH FISH and FOXTLTZT.
and, sinking into the chair at the end ot | the incidents of the streets; the rich, as she is the most beautiful young girl I sorry it" can’t be Billings.—Harper's
T HXIR HKA8O
tbc sofa, laid her hand on the old man's i they walked or rode, the poor, and the ever saw in my life. , For all she was in
imu. She had proudly refrained from devices Io which they resorted—the an old dowdy brown dress, and her face
aUustou either to her mother's delicate . apple women, the candy stalls, the rag- stained, she had the air of a princess,
—Twenty-four young women of Ne­
&lt;£■&lt;*., &lt;f‘c.
the bouquet girls, and the news- and such noble features, and the most
health, or her father's age and ihrirf—t jiiekera.
vada Citv.'CaL, mocking the military
proud and modest eyes!”
CT* The Highest Market Price paid
ie dtoehiiit ie*. She would not perm?- ?
boys of Orc plane, organized a broom
for Hidea, Pelta, &amp;c.
“ Why. my dear Arthur, you have
iRem. .even through her, to vainly sup- fio’ns, part of her first tamings she eent
brigade. Their uniform couaizted of mus­
yirste this hard man. but herself she । home, and part she invested.
lost your head! Where is she, and who
Fresh Goods, Full Weights and
lin gowns trimmed with red calico,
iceely humbled for their dear sakes, j
One evening, when Sophronia had toaheP**
Satisfaction Guaranteed.
The Bewoomb farm was small, and the j been some four months in the city. Mrs
“That’s just it! Nobody knows where jaunty jackets ot similar fabrics and
blue caps. Each carried an ordinary
site is, nor who she is. It' • just as Mlle. broom, made fantastic with bits of red
marlgage ___________
bat a trifling
__ „ _nim.
"' d gave
if only
a reception
&gt; Bird
to the lovely and
II EX KI' KOKwcomb had not been fxxsr,
tragedienne Mlle. Biand, who Bland told us 1at fau; it isn’t possible
Danie! Newcomb
r&gt;oor. 1 popular
nonu
ribbou. Recently one of their number
disabled, and thnmgh the ; had opened the season early with what to Mk this young JqJj anything she
was married, ana the broom brigade es­
Mlle. Bland
t others in debt. On theoth- ; were enfhuaiascically pajcounced to be doesn’t voluntarily telL
lephen Billings area rich, at' the tineat imperMonaUMu which h?u’. pounced on her as she came out of the* corted tho bride from her fathers house
to the railway station, the bride’ abrooni,
a Hfllsider: i»ut he was - graced the New York stage for tuany theater, and her hood and wig fell off.
trimmed in mourning goods. l»eing car­
be a gwplug m well as a ' yeara At supper the gueuds, who had and it wasn’t an old candy woman at
ried reversed at the bead of the proces­
*11. but the loveliest—”
ALBERT M. HARRIS,
sion.— Chicago Herald.
“Where is she? What did you do
au al- douw and,
ths gaucral
------------»•&gt;«---------,___ . —,---------- ,,
--- -------------- s. Di*wi fcr ■ith her?"
and d^otion Mmaatimcs an-i
tb&lt;«
moat
curious
incident
which
site
—There are nearly 25,000,000 acres MLM0&amp; vj-i.vi:r.-. MMKfiLMBL
■Mlle. Bland whisked her out of the
an- I the dm curious incident which sl»e
I ......recall
m .. ..—in
ii connection with v
— invwii and into her carriage so quickly of this cotmtry devoted to winter wheat.
AMRRICAN OPTICAL WB. BOXES.
than the subtle*! wnrirflv i oouM
h*r
Tim Srmihrm
era beginning to Hrj Phk Outfits
cultivate wheat extenaivcly^-CAriafiBM Iff CwrauU River Ave.
i Billing» with".
f-fUT’M.
Wednesday, near U»&lt;

MEAT MARKET.

Fresh and Salt Meats,

Harvesting
Jachihery!
SPECA1TBS:
REAPER NO. 2.

M CUPPER MbWER
Parfretim of Operate ii
Field!
Liilita of Dra{l!
Adaptation to Every Variety of Wort,
Faciljly of lonaieneat,
Simplicity and Durability,
Honest Wortmanstuj.

Read tlie Following Testimonial:
Jacxsox, Mich., Sep. ifleh, 1M1.
Meura. D, 8. Morgan &amp;. Co.,
Brockport, N.Y.:Gzxra—Your agcuta at Romw. Sykes A T-vlor, told; the past season, to mv netgblior Mr.
Thuraton, a Triumph Reaper No £■ My. oat
crop waa io the main very heavy, but in parts
very uneaten; some ! &gt;tig aud heavy, some very
short. My owu reaper U ot quite a celebrated
make and-in gqod condition, blit, neighbor
Aliurston was anxloae'I should try hie machine.
Vennseutrd He sent wtth tt , a little boy
acaVwJy largenough tu drive the team
It u
but justice to say that I wasvtay skeptical, and
Uxi gave doubui about the ability of tlie Tri­
umph or any other machine’s being able to do
perfect work in my.fleld, but indstcuhfess that
I was filled with admiration and wubder it the
results. Machine aud boy were enure masters
of the situation. Buch quality of work with ths
Mine ease, I never saw equalled before. In­
stantly while hi motion, the entire working ap­
paratus could l&gt;e raised or lowered,' to gather
any condition crop or meet any requirements
of surface. I consider thia feature indispens­
able tn a Rea; er. The beut rake anna are anoth­
er important feature. With trial I bad, 1 think
your mach.nc saves 25 per cent of the labor In
Llndiug bv the straight square aud co .pact
form of the gavle*. The Thiumpb is of very
light draft, under perfect control of the driver,
appears to t« very aimpie to ita eouatructkm,
atxl ben^e. very durable. lu my judgment it Is
very far iuadvance of other maclilnea of Its
class, and 1 beheve the in terrata of the farmers
of Michigan will lie advanced by giving the
Tnmupb a trial before purchasing.
Yours rvspertlfully.
(lEO W. PHILLIPS,
President Michigan State Ag'l Society.
UP* Don’t buy a tnachine until you

examine tlie “TRIUMPH” north
E. Cook’s Wagon Shop Nltshville. Mich.

J. M. SHOUP.
ELEMENT SMITH,

JAMES A. SWEE7.EY,

Attorney &amp; Counsellor,
Probate Notice.
icirrau. • &lt;&gt;uniy of*Barry, »•. Jiotlea
rruitwi l.y «n ord. r of tta I'r bole
C’oan-j- of lUrrr tnsde &lt;&gt;n ilx- l»l day
of Msy.taK; s'X ruiMiths frnn. that dalr wan* al-

1VILUAMF. DIZKR.

Irfaimt til.

FKElnlllC WAGNER,
)
17 .i \' “1l
I C
GURUTLAN BERKEUi.Yj

Atlinhii.Mrnlor's Kale.
OfOKGKaiL

I'.

known

Kasfivilir ; !&gt;&gt;« one bun.!red four [IM]
(XVSII

ROBT.a. GREGG, Administrator.

way xiri,

HIRES

Photographer’s Supplies.
DETROIT, NK H.

ibhz.

Datre, Nsshvll'r. April S3. lx»2,
ROB i, B.GKKOG. ASadnlstiMoc

I'robate Notice,

Smoked Bam ail Shoulders,

Lard, by the lb. or barrel,
tte.,

m&lt;«1.

£. WlAES.s otinarj

�.

-------------AsdaeU-------------

co, Hair, Pine Lnwber, Lath
and ShlBjrlw.

"

AT THE LOWEST LIVING PRICES

■um m sniGiciL siiituigi

Acroas the plains endurable, nad they
are, either to become insensible before
you start out aud remain .sb, &lt;?r else to
have a lively party to accompany you.
Some of us tried to become insensible,

IPIINUTHKi
jniinuiun
ftOUTE-

McCormick Twine-Binder!

Grain and I?roclTice-

claimed that it was freight, and wanted
me to jmy extra express charges on it." 1
“ Florence, twenty minutes for sup­
per,” shouted the brakeman, and we |
all supped.—Denver Itder-Ocesm.

Eating a Womau.

■ MMhttUl r«ir»»s m .Hua^wuaa

---- ■

JgkAl’K Jk nox,

American and Foreign Marble
Ifonumer.tn, Tntnhrtonea Mantles, Ac.,

One of oar party discovered a feather
on tho porter’s coat while that indiviual
was making up a berth. He came back
in the smoking-room and reported
the find. We appointed a committee of.
three to question the porter as to where
the feather came from. The committee
reported that the colored individual had
said the feather evidently came from
one of the pillows. The committee also
seoured the feather. The fat man, who oc­
cupied two seats and traveled on a dead­
head ticket,-gavo it as his opinion that
the oompany had placed tho feather on
the porter’s coat for the purpose of
m«king the passengers believe there
were more feathers somewhere in tho
car—possibly in the pillows or mat­
tresses. Tlie lean man, who sat cn one
button of the porter’s seat in the wMhroom, said that it Was a shame to raise
the hopes of the passengers in that way.
Lots wore drawn for the possession of
the feather, and the California man won
the prise, and slept in downy beds of
ease that night. “Talkin’ about feath­
ers,” said the California man, “ Cahfor-

yyiLLIAM JONE 8,

“Ah! in what way?” asked the man in
the checked suit.
“ Why, you bm,” replied the CaHfornia man, “the fruit grown’ in my State
is no good if it is allowed to fall to the
ground. The fall bruises it, and makes
it unmarketable. The consequence is
that the fruit-growers have to have
feather-beds under all the trees for the
fruit to drop upon. I am going East
now to potent an electrical machine for
Kreventing tho fruit from falling when
, becomes ripe. I will run a wire to
the trunk of each tree, and the blamed
A cure cun ran I red.
fruit will have to bang on aa long M the
circuit is connected.
When the fruit is
almost ripe I will have men with baskets, lined with silk plush, stand under
the trees. I will then tura off the cur­
rent, and the fruit is bound to drop.”
“ A very nice arrangement,” we all
replied in chorus, for we wanted to en­
courage the California man.
“ Yea; bat then California is no place
for a poor man,” he continued, “nnd it
doesn’t pay to raise fruit. Fruit there
is worse than the Mississippi floods—it^
will get the best of you. I remember a
poor, economical pawnbroker, named
Abe Solomon, who thought ho would
manufacture a sign of the three golden
balls to hong out in front of his store.
He took three ot the smallest California
grapes he could find, covered them with
m
J gola-leaf, and hung them up over his
fifvn E! H11VZ
store door. He went home that night
I "QTSir 1 19 I
lirichuckling over the idea that he had got
a
- that
• ■
] -UlUl I II I - HI V
his sign so cheap;
bat•poor fallow,

NERVOUS DEBILITY

HALL’S

Qatarrhflure
U

Is Reco
~
mmendod_by
' ■*
Physician^
jruiOlsnTL. ■:
—
“ Well,
vtcii, aoe
Abe came aown
down tuo
the next morn0A8I IT
ing and found the street in front of his
TO ODBE
store blockaded and policeman guard­
ing his. premises. You see, the grapes
guarantee that it will cure any
had grown during the night and their
case.*nd we will forf-lt the above anwuu:
weight had pulled the front ot his store
nit fam in a single Instance.
,
out and completely demolished the
It Is unllko »&gt;•* «’«'• r Catanh remedy, m
building.”
“Is that possible?” asked the thin man.
Never spoke a truer word in my
nnotgot it, «end t&gt;u'
■ - will forward
life,” replied the California man; and
iSMyHately. Price, 75 w i- r ttottle. '
wo believed him.
F. 1. CHENEY t CO., T. -Jo. Ohio.
“ I don’t understand,” said the drum­
mer, looking out of the window, “why
the farmers allow young cattle to nibble
at tho tops of this winter wheat."
“ Why,” said the California man,
“it’s to make the roots strong.
Bat
they
Kiev cuiuua
couldn’it uu
do mnu
that in vmiunu».
California. iI
remember
Dick
nr™1::; poor
~~~~ I'
’-*' Smith. He ‘turned
—-J
htfl cattle out to graze
rr&amp;xe on the meadow
mu&amp;dow
his
which he had sown in winter wheat,
thinking it was growing too fast—and
it does grow powerfully fast there. The
next morning ho went out to round up
his cattle, but nary s cattle could ho
ncszroi;
find.”
“ They had all taken to their heels,
eh?” said the fat man.
'
“ No, no; bless you, no. There had
oome up a shower in the night that had
started Smith’s wheat to growing, and
the wheat had actually taken the cattle
up with It, and they were clean out of
sight next morning.”
AnWi-orstcj Rcflctsethat Mr ver IntwdaUJ
|
“ Why didn’t he cut the wheat down?”
■ asked the Plainville man.
I
“No use,” replied the California
man, “he couldn’t have sold it."
Tbs Bat sei Surat Conjb Care Ever UscA
;
“ Why not?”
;
“Because it would have tasted of
beef.”
I
“ Oranges must be very abundant in
your State,” humbly suggested the lean
man.
j
“ Abundant?
Well, you can gamble
on the fact that they are,” replied the
California man. “ Speaking of oranges
reminds me of Johnny Morton. Johnny
was a good kind of a boy, but he would
$500 Reward!
play with a bean-blower. He ran short
of beans one days, and had to fall back
on orange seeds.
Well, one day he
thought he would take a shy at his
father;
so \ he
hid
behind the
bam, and when the old gentleman camo
out, Johnny fired an orange seed at
him. That orange reed took old Morton
right in the ear, and it went so deep
.tbeyoouldn’tgeiitoutagin. Nextmorn­
ing the old gentleman was suffering
with a big head. The doctor examined
red without an operation orlbo Injury troastr him aud found. two little green leaves
Jia by Ds, t. A. Kb«B.n'i Method. O«ce SAt •ticking out of his ear.”
M Seed had taken root, eh?”
“Yes; and they couldn’t stop it,'
either.
They just had a nurse to sit by
Morton’s side and pull those leaves off
as soon m they appeared. But it was

3100

‘

‘

GEIGER TONIC

B. JPTURE

AOF.NWe^X^y-FBAHK I

JESSE JAMES.

PRINCIPAL *LINE

For more than a year past a mao-eat- |
ing tigress has been the terror and
scourge of a small tract of hill country
in Western Garhwal, which looks down |

of Rikhikesh.
huiHATl

borhood. Last year she became a pro­
claimed offender, and a reward erf 400
rupees wai sot upon her head. So widely
infamous did she become that it is some­
what surprising she did not obtain more
attention from tbc sporting manhood of
our cantonments, particularly when It is
considered that her haunts were within
two marches of so well-known and aooesfiiblc a place as Hurdw&amp;r.
Such
attempts, however, as were made to
circumvent her, whether on the part ot
forest hunters and others, or natives,
invariably failed.
Her wariness and
activity seemed to be altogether extraor­
dinary. From some spot on the hillside
she would watch a group at work in the
fields, and regularly stalk them by
careful and circuitous approaches; then.

(

down the side of one hill aad under
(©overt up another almost before hie com­
panions had time to look around. The
•sound of bamboo-cutting was so well
known to attract her that that industry
i
lor
the time entirely oeased within her I
■beat. Of course occasional failures are I
,recorded against her; one plucky fellow i
;
cudgeled her off the friend she seised by
his t&gt;ide with a lathi; and in another
j
instance she abandoned her prey owing
:to the lacky circumstance of a mouthful
(
of the bamboo bundle on his back fail­
;ing to please her taste. But these were [
'rare exceptions to the monotonous tale
'
'of slaughter. One of the very last cases
was a particularly painful one. A peas- ■
*ant’s wife objected to go to work in the !
fields,’ or rather cultivated terraces,
pleading her fear of this beast; the bus- j
band forced or persuaded her to go,
promising to accompany her and stay
near while she worked. She was carried
off before his eyes. People on the look­
out for thisAigrew with nre-arms could
never find her; cattle she never killed;
to elephants her haunts were inaccessibio, and it seemed clear that if she were
ever destroyed it would be off the eorpso
of a human being or the carcass of a
lanpir, Die only animal besides man on
which she was known to prey. And so
it turned out. About a fortnight ago
the Senior Assistant Commissioner of
Garhwal obtained the services of a dozen
Goorkhas from the regiment quartered
at Debra; these plucky little men had
only been a day or two across the river,
when, on the 9lh insL, the tigress killed
again another woman.
Tfcsy started
for the spot in the afternoon, four of
them going along the hillside in advance,
while the rest of the party kept along
the nullah; the tigress-startled by the
latter, broke in front of the former, and,
luekily having her back broken by the
first volley of the shot tired at her, suc­
cumbed without a -truggle. Not only
was tho tigress apparently killed off the
body, but some of the victim’s fingers
were found in her stomach.—AUabahad
Pioneer.

SAS CITY
HAS VALUABLE IMPROVEMENTS OVER ALL COMPETITORS.

BE NOT DECEIVED
By statements made by agents representine other machines
having a resemblance to the McCORMICK, claiming their
Binders are the same, for .‘uch claims are false, and suits for
infringements have been brought.against imitations
■HIT WK.L THE VEATHEB BE TO-HOHHOWf

Fool’s SIGHRSEMICE BAR0IETE8
Or STOSS C IASS aad THEBHOIIETEB Cw.a'jad,

NORTH MAIN ST., NASHVILLE, M.,

And examine it carefully before making your choice for the
coming harvest.

ALSO----

Platform, Side-Spring and Side-Bar Carriages,
and Wagons
Yours Respectfully,

UMAH ।

UNACQUAINTED WITH

THE

GEOGRAPHY OF THIS COUNTRY,

1

J

The High Price of Beef.
Inquiry as to the cause of tho present
abnormally high prices of beef has
elicited
from.p&amp;r.
, the following- points
r
— •
UM wbo Prof&lt;““
undersUnd-the matlcr:
.
1. Probably as many as fifteen per
cent, of the cattle on Che plains were
killed by the extraordinarily bitter
weather of the winter of 1880-’81. These
were chiefly the younger animals, they
being least able to bear and survive the
exposure, and the loss thus fell among
the very class of cattle which come into
the States in the fall.
It is reported
that *30 per head wu paid about a
month ago in Montana for two-year-olds
to be taken upon ranches where the
destruction had been the most severe.
Also, the largo immigration ot last year
caused a much larger demand for cattle
to stock new farms, which wm a far­
ther drain upon the available supply.
2. The scarcity of corn in many Mo­
tions, and its high price everywhere,
has prevented a great many cattle from
being fed into killing condition. There
were thus fewer to market, and those
that were marketed cost more to fit
them for the hands of the botcher. The
number of animals that were kept wait­
ing for grass-feed was sufficiently large
to make a decline in prices probable
when they come freely on the market a
few weeks hence.
3. From New Year’s Day to date our
receipts of cattle are larger than for the
corresponding time in 1881; but daring
the last three or four weeks this is re­
versed, and the smaller supply is met by
an increasing demand for export of ani­
mals and meat. Five to six thousand
animals dow leave oar shores weekly
for Europe. There is recently an in­
creased demand Io rapplv the manu­
facture of canned beef. Ywo new fac­
tories have sprung up in Chicago during
the past few months. The growing de­
mand for canned meat is possibly oennectod with the falling oft in the export
movement of pork products.
The following table shows the aver­
age prices ofthe leading grades at. the
union Stock Yards in this city the hurt,
week in April for three years:

COLUMBUS, O.,
’ Si-Ift {hr BEST BUGGYpn the GhOBE
! for 1hc MONEY.
Send for CATALOGUE un.l TESTI| MONIALS of HI S DEEDS of LI VIRY-

I MEN who hare nurd them.

CHICAGO, BOCK ISLAND 4 PACIFIC B Y
Is The Great Connecting Link between the East and the West I
..
, ,
f—y
’/J
rf-l,
.

aa

- --

&lt;1
to Council

Uenewo. Moline. RocM 11
Liberty. lowaCH). Marc
I&gt;ee Moinea (tho capital
tic and Avoea: with I
Junction to Feoria; Wil

------- Car,
"
---- ~ purpo*e«.
PalaCt and PaUct
(or »leeplnr
SAUmiN wb«rvyoacaa enjoy year “Havana"
ax all lioors of thrday.
MarniSeent Iron BrldreN «pan the MlMlMlppl
KMlaaoarl rivers at all no I nu crosae.l bv this
; and tranrferaarc avoided at Council BliUIn.

Washington u.Sigourney,
v 1 lie( Keokuk to Farmins

amain

line that he
1 California

cable*, pa

COLUMBUS BU66Y COMPANY,
COLUMBUS, 0.
Mad; Inferior good* are o&amp;re-J •&lt; Colueihaa
Bugy’.es, end ear* ahnu &lt;1 brtmsl to tiiriloiniMk
betwren "Cnlambo* Burjft»»” and c«&gt;lumbcaIlURjty Co’»
to *

For Salt bv Dealers EVERYWHERE.
'£^ltf?2yiK’SwRl,K

FRANK

ii'sji“ K.’T-rs.'MihS'a

» AtCOl.CWCTjCTCT1OM.WWbB.UR.aN.
auutui prairtrt.irillii
r tnacalioeat Dining &lt;
iryagfc Bwreee Trail

‘I’V’ctMnnv^wnk Vf.!

Crrr. with all Ums for Uo West

JEJ. ST. JOHN,

rill rwmo&lt;

inc in pericw cnunn&lt;'nc».
,
jM-lyr. JOBS R. WGUEN.JjCedar W„ X. I.

with the

COLUMBUS BUGGY
COMPANY,

Unl&gt; Waaiwi Tar

HEumpoFTii-niv

CONSUMPTIVES.

TO LADIES ONLY!

�McCormick Twine-Binder!

Ornin and Produce.
*(., Unlr. IIh Usher. LtU
-4 ■
..dShlnrtw,

AT THE MtWBST LIVING PRICES

■IUUL ill SD1G1C1L SlUTUIUl

Mero**' the plains endurable, and they
claimed'' that it wm freight, and wanted '
*
are, either to become inseiuiible before
r.&gt;u *tart out and rennin *o, &lt;?r ei*e u&gt; me to j»ay extra exp--------- u—*—
“Florence, twent
1 have a lively party to accompany you.
Some of us tried to become insensible,
all supped.—Denver Inter-Ocean.
os a very lively party before we reached
Eating a Woman.
Kan um City.
One of our party discovered a feather
For more than a year pad a man-cat- I
on the porters coat while that indiviual ing tigress has been the terror and
wm making up a berth. He came back
scourge of a small tract of hili country I
in the smoking-room and reported in Western Garhwal, which looks down .
the find. We appointed a committee of across rite Ganges upon the sacred shrfna |
three to question the porter m to where of Rikhikesh. From first to last she is I
tho feather came from. The committee said to have killed between fifty to sixty
reported that the colored individual had human beings. A considerably higher
said the feather evidently came from estimate, indeed, is current in the neigh­
one of the pillows. The committee also borhood. Last year she became a pro­
secured the feather. The fat man,who oc­ claimed offender, and a reward of 400
cupied two seats and traveled on a dead­ rupees was set upon her head. So widely j
head ticket, gave it as his opinion that infamous did she become that it is Some- |
the company "had placed the leather on what surprising she did not obtain more |
the porter’s coat for the purpose of attention from the sporting manhood of
cantonments, particularly when it to
were - more feathers somewhere in the ’our
considered that Lor haunts were within I
car—possibly in the pillows or mat- .two marches of so well-known and ae- :
tresM*. The lean man, who sat oo om &lt;oeseiblo a place as Hurdwar.
Such i
button of the porter’s scat in the wash­ attempts, however, as were made to I
room, said that it was a shafne to raise &lt;
circumvent her, whether on the part of ,
the hopes of the passengers in that way. .forest hunters and other*, or natives,
Lots were drawn for the possession of invariably
failed.
Her wariness and
ths feather, and the California man won activity seemed to be altogether extraor­
the prise, and slept in downy beds of dinary. From some spot on the hillride
ease that night. “ Talkin’ about feath­ she would watch a group at work in the
er*,” said the California man, ‘‘CaMfor- fields, and regularly stalk them by
nia uses a great many, a very great careful and circuitous approaches; then.
many.”
•• Ah! in what way?” asked the man in (
the checked, suit.
down the side of oae hill aad under
Why, you see,” replied the Caltfor- (oovert up another almost before hto oom­
nia man, ‘‘the fruit grown in my State ,panions had time to look around. Tho !
is no good if it to allowed to fall to the ‘sound of bamboo-oatting was so well :
ground. The fall bratoee it, and makes known to attract her that that induitry '
it unmarketable. Tho consequence is ,
that the fruit-growers have to have
NORTH MAIN ST., NASHVILLE, M„
feather-beds under all the tree* for the .recorded against her; one plucky fellow
a
fruit to drop upon, i am going East cudgeled
'
her off the friend she seized by I And examine itcarefullv before making your choice for the
now to patent an electrical machine tor his side with a lathi; and in another
•
Erevealing tho fruit from falling when :instance she abandoned her prey owing coining harvest
becomes ripe. I will run a wire to ;to the lucky circumstance of a mouthful \
the trunk of each tree, and tho blamed (
qi the bamboo bundle on his back failfruit will have to hang on as long as the
ing to please her taste. But these were
circuit is connected.
When the fruit is '
rare exceptions to the monotonous talo
almost ripe I will have men with bask- ,
ete, lined with silk plush, stand under 'of slaughter. One of the very last cases
wm a particularly painful one. A peas­
tho trees. I will then turn off the pur­
ant's wife objected to go to work in tho
rent, and the fruit is bound to drop.”
fields,’ or rather cultivated terrace*,
“ A very nice arrangement,” wo all
pleading her fear of this beast; the hasj XiS’O-------------------replied in chorus, for we wanted to en­ band forced or persuaded her to go,
'
courage the California man.
|
“ Yes; but then California is no place
. for a poor man,” be continnnd, “and it off before his eyes. People on She look- 1
*
°
' doesn’t pay to raise fruit. Fruit there out for thisXigress with fire-arms could
a Tin tA/SCTfWQ
I is worse than the Mississippi flood;!—it, never find her; cattie she never killed; I
VY
Ui‘kJ
will get the best of you.
I remember a to elephants her haunts were inaccessi- i
j poor, economical pawnbroker, named
j Abe Solomon, who thought he would ble, and it seemed clear that if she were
ever destroyed it would be off tho corpse .
I manufacture a si^n of the three golden of a human being or the carcass of a J
ball* to hang out in front of his store.
| He took three of tlie smallest California langur, tlie only animal besides man ou ‘
which she was Known to prey. And so 1
। grapes he could find, covered tham with it turned out. About a fortnight ago I
T
gold-leaf, and hung them up over his tho Senior Assistant Commissioner of I ----j store door. He went home that night
Garhwal
obtained
the
services
of
a
dozen
I
| chuckling over the idea that ho had got
Goorkfra* from tho regiment quartered | (JJ'
his sign so cheap; but poor fellow, that
atDehra; these plucky little men had —]'
! sign proved his ruin.”
only been a day or two across tho river, j Lj
i
“ How so?” wo asked.
when, on tho 9lh insL, thei tigress
—IUAINTED WITH THS CSOCRAPHV OF THIS CCUHTRV,
tigress killed
killed I •11• WKO (3 —
unacql
' “ Well, Abe came down tho next morn­
again another woman.
T
L
”*
They
started
HJ
will.
ing and found the street in front of his
nnnn tour
~
~
'for the spot in the afternoon,
four nf
of 22“
•tore blockaded and policeman, guard­
them going along the hillside in advance,
|
ing his premises
You see, the grapes
while the rest of the party kept along
had grown during tho night ’ and their the nullah; the tigress- startled by the
weight had pulled the front of his store
latter, broke in front of the former, and.
out and completely demolished tho
luekily having her back broken by the
building.”
firet volley of the shot fired at her, suc­
“Is that possible?” asked the thin man.
cumbed without a struggle. Not only
•‘ Never spoke a truer word in my was the tigress apparently killed off the
life,” replied tho California man; and body, but some of the victim’s finger*
we believed him.
were found in her stomach.—Allabahad
“ I don’t understand,” said tho drum­
Pioneer.
mer, looking out of the window, “why
the fanners allow young cattio to nibble
The High Price of Beef.
at tho tops of this winter wjieat.”
Inquiry as to the cause of the present
“Why,” said the California man,
“it's to make the roots strong.
But abnormally high prices of beef hag
elicited
the following points ..am par­
they couldn't do that in California. I
remember poor Dick Smith. He turned ties whef^rofess to understand the mat-'
ri
his cattle out to graze on the meadow ter:
V
1. Probably as many as fifteen per
which he had sown in winter wjieat,
I
cent,
of
the
cattle
on
the
plains
were
thinking it was growing too fast—and
it does grow powerfully fast there. The killed by the extraordinarily bitter
weather
of
the
winter
of
1880’
81.
next morning ho wont out to round up
his cattle, but nary a cattio could he were chiefly the younger animals, they
I being least able to bear and survive the
find.”
“ They had all taken to their heels, exposure, and the loss thus fell among
tho very class of cattle which come into
eh?” said the fat man.
It to reported
“ No, no; bless you, no. There had the States in the fall.
tween the East anti the West I
oomt up a shower In the night that had tint g30 per head was paid about a

Route
PRINCIPALS

RailTOBd

KANSAS CITY

HAS VALUABLE IMPROVEMENTS OVER ALL COMPETITORS

BE NOT DECEIVED

American and -Foreign Marbk

By statements made by agents representing other machines
having a resemblance to the McCORMICK, claiming their
Binders are the same, for *uch claims are false, and suits for
infringements have been brought against imitations

Monumerta, Tnmhtfones, Mantles, Ac.,

yyiLLIAM JONES,

&amp;?*mJ™ «

NERVOUS
DEBILITY
A curecuaraiBircd.
hidiilxruet, which l«&gt;&lt;:

Celebrated Un*
sals al all udlcs*

T. J POTTER.

—

PERCEVAL LOWELL.
— ■— . ——,-r.
Qen. Ptm.
Chicago. III.
Chicago, UL

WHAT WILL THE WEATHER BE TO-MORROW T

"Ml's SIGXAL SEHVICB.BAROSETEB
Or STORM GLASS aad THERMOMETER Cooblaad,
WILL TELL you:

o

Platform, Side-Spring and Sidelours Respectfully

HALL’S

flataniiflure
:
1

Is Recommendod_by Physicians.

S1OO ESTO kO
We manufMtcr* and sell It rltba y-vsltlvf’

guarantoo that It will cure any

ZanA, and we will tarf-Il the abuvoamMUU*.

miralbin a olnglo instance.
Ill* ynllko an?

r Catanb remedy, as

dutraaaing ui»ca*e,a%t yourI&gt;rug&lt;ht tor it. ana

lUIVUI*.' !. . * .
. ......... .. ...
F. 1 CHENEY &amp;. CO., T&lt; ledo. Ohio.

i PARKER'S I
J

HAIR

h

iHALSAM.I

COLOGNE.
PARKER’S

CKdCER TONIC

Aal-rl-wsl eg MedldM that Never Intcxiczltj
a...... .2___ i
_ -T
..

Thfl Eczl aid Esrtst Cflcgh Cort Ever Used.

8500 KewardI

VacwUhlr. and ne»»r fall

RJPTURE
AKITy^^^^FRAVK &amp;

Ilk MAH

Iliuiwr U&gt; ,TW)D
U. 8. I*c«l»n SU1

HlTvARE OFWORTMLK

Q
H

THE

COLUMBUS BUGGY
COMPANY,
; CO I .UM BUS, o.,
I ’ S.1R Ihe BEST BUGGY on the GhOBE
Nells the BEST
for the MOSEY.
Komi
Send far
for I'lTA
CATALOGUE and TEST1MON'IAI.S oflUlfiOKEDS of LIVERY­
These
MEN who hare nsed them.

313248482323534823 AND &amp; PACIFIC RY

started Smith’s wheat to growing, and
the wheat had actually taken the cattle
up with it, and they were clean oat of
sight next morning.”
“Why didn't he cut the wheat down F ’
asked the Plainville man.
“No use,” replied the California
man, “he couldn’t have sold it.”
“ Why not?"
“Because it would have tasted of
beef.”
“ Oranges must be very abundant in
your State,” humbly suggested tho lean

“ Abundant?
Well, you ean gamble
on the fact that they are,” replied the
California man. “ Speaking of oranges
reminds me of Johnny Morton. Johnny
waa a good kind of a boy, bat he would
play with a bean-blower. He ran short
of beans one days, and had to fail back
on orange seeds.
Well, one day be
thought he would take a shy at his
father;
so \ he
hid
behind
the
barn, and when the old gentleman came
oat, Johnny fired an orange seed at
him. That orange seed took old Morton
right in the ear, and it went so deep
they couldn’t get it out agin. Next morn­
ing the old gentleman waa suffering
with a big head. The doctor examinee
him aud found. two little green leaves
■ticking out of his ear.”
“ Seed had taken root, eh?”
“Yes; and they couldn’t stop it,
either.
They just had a nurse to nt by
Morton’s side and pull those leaves off
as soon as they appeared. But it was

JESSE JAMES
wm tired of
fruit.
They planted
cm «CM■UMttxm,
and in operable.”

month ago in Montana f°r two-year-olds
to be taken upon ranches where the
destruction had been the most severe.
Also, the largo immigration of last year
caused a much larger demand for cattle
to stock new farms, which was a far­
ther drain upon the available supply.
2. The scarcity of corn in many seotions, and its high price everywhere,
has prevented a great many cattio from
being fed into killing condition. There
were thus fewer to market, and those
that were marketed coat more to fit
them for the hands of the butcher. The
number of animals that were kept wait­
ing for grass-feed was sufficiently large
to make a decline in prices probable
when they come freely on the market a
few weeks hence.
3. From Now Year’s Day to date our
receipts of cattle are larger than for the
corresponding time in 1881; but during
the last three or four weeks this is re­
versed, and the smaller supply is met by
an increasing demand for export of ani­
mals and meat. Five to six thousand
animals now leave our shores weekly
for Europe. There is recently an in­
creased demand to supply the ma-nufacU*re of canned beef. Two new fac­
tories have sprung up in Chicago during
the past few months. The growing de­
mand for canned meat is possibly oannected with the falling off m the export­
movement of pork products.
Tho following table shows the aver­
age prices ofthe leading grades at tho
union Stock Yards in this city the last
week in April for three years:

si/rnnj c«r, for »lerpln&lt; purpow* and Ptlac,

SaUm»N wber* you c*c enjoy year “lUvanV
^Marnineent Iron Bridge*spaa theMIMImImU
ura—iilbythS
(Council Bluffs.

!&gt;
CD

COLUMBUS BU66Y COMPANY,
COLUMBUS, 0.
Bugsy Co’s Itagvtes.

H

&lt;o

For Saib hv Dealers EVERYWHERE.

with Use US.

At “*WlU* ““ DaTen,,on D1’“lon

Umbtt. with th. B. C. R. A N ILE.
«8K
jES-.w~Eei1t££bw.
Atomncu. r-»—&lt;«- ■» »
At W&amp;-

« Atoounun

tV

I'MT
mox?

Appreciating the tact that a majority of tho
peuple pre ter separate apartments tor different

H WL"SiS«^S

LJ

nouDC* ibu thli Com

TO LADIES ONLY
ERRORS OF YOUTH.

PIMPLES
CONSUMPTIVES.

ussnaoa
us*kn
JMBMJa

McCUKDY

�Wm. A. AYLSWORTH

A ttmksoo

quorum tbo

Thb Rochdale Wo. .lea Mills ’at Poughkeep­
sie, N. Y , were recently struck by lightning
awl destroyed. Lota *73,000.
It Is reported that thousands of adrentur-

A Bkuux dispatch of ".he 25th state* that

the Turtle Mountain district, including 8,-

thrown o;eo.
Rev. D. F. Barb, of 8u Louis, djed on the
S'.th from an overdose of morphtoe. He bad
been suspended from the ministry for drunk-

dred houses belonging to Jew* had recently
been burned at VaaUlahkL
WiluikA Hall, the Assistant Auditor

country after embcxxling 140,000, has been ar­
rested at Toronto, Canada. Extradition pro-

nent cllteen of Washlngtor Territory, during
a fit ol temporary Insanity fatally shot his

talking simultaneously. and on ed­
it waa finally secured by Mr. Calkins.

tian Ministry, a* their ultimatum, the rea'.gna-

slon at Springfield, HL, adjourned

the Oqmmittee on Agricu Iturv, reported favor-

dlr &lt;

William Strong were added to the Hat of del-

office* rtith the Khedira to obtain a general

of the Committee ou Sunday Observance,

Tbb Egyptian Ministry resigned on the26th,
after referring the demands of England and
France to the Sultan. In their note to the
Khedive they intimated that hia acceptance
of the ultimatum was an admission that the
foreign powers had a right to intervene, which,

adopteL
Owiko to targe arrivals of cattle at the Chi­
cago Stock-yards a decline of twenty to sixty
eent* per bundredtook place on the 29th, the
best sales being at *8.80.
Frank Lbo'Naxd, a fireman in New York,
mounted a rotten ladder the other day and
rescued three person*- from a burning tene­
ment-house in Suffolk street. He made them
leap six feet from a window into his arms, aa
them safely down to other*.

PEKSONAL AND POLITICAL,
debate of

the adjournment for the day.

DOMESTIC.
bill for a State Railroad CommiMiou, with an
amendment providing tliat the next Governor
ahsU makethe appointment*.

:teg Works atg^adville, Col., on the night of
the 2Mb, which started a fire that caused a loss
of *400.00'. .
la the opening prayer In the Presbyterian
General Assembly at Springfield, HL, on tho
’381b, Modu rater Johnson ap|&gt;eated for a reatoiwtlon ot fraternal feeling between the Nortbern and Southern tranche, of the Chnnh.
The majority teport of the Committee on Corgraph the ■Atlanta body tliat, “while receding
from no principle, wo do hereby declare our
regret for ml withdrawal of all- expresalon*
of oar Assembly whleii may be regarded as
reflection* upon or offensive to the General
Aaaerably of the Presbyterian Church of tbc
United btates, and wc renew the expressions

exchangedcJeg-^tcs forthwith.” Dr. Dickinson

the only «lgutr. concluding aa follow*: ‘'And

Lhc hour with gratitude au 1 delight when we
can look into tire faces of delegate* from their
exchange with them f raters il and affection­
ate greeting.” By a vote approaching unan­
imity the majority report waa adopted, with
a resolatkrn dUctainitng any reference to the
action at prcvkms aasemblie* regarding loyal­
ty and n-belHan, but only lo those regarding
schtam aod hewer and blasphemy.
Am* appointing Richmond. Va., as the
place for bohUcg the next General Oinfrr«mce of the Methodist Church South, the Con­
ference in aeastan kt NsshvQie, Tens, ad-

95th at «&amp;73 te «9.00-the highest price paid
«• sled er the 95th that hundreds of
" families lu the Old Town ragicn ef Arkansas

Tbe lnd"pendent Republican State Conven­
tion of Pennsylvania was held at Ph Hadciphis

candidate for Govereor, and nominated Judge
Daniel Agnew. Dr. Doane named State Sena­
tor John Stewart, who received 13D vote* to
02 lor Agnew. Levi B. Duff, of Allegheny,
waa nominated for Lieutenant-Governor;
George Junkta, of Philadelphia, for Supreme
Court Judge, and William McMichael for
Ci)ngre.'* iiao-at-Largc. The platform adopted
declares that “ the nomination and election of
James A. Garfield to the Presidency signified
to us tfe- triumph of true reform in the clvllMrvlce, and enlarged liberty of action for the
masses of the Republican party In the nomi­
nation of candidates and the conduct of their
party affaire; and we deplore the overwhelm-'
ing evidence presented to us in Pennsylvania
that the calamity of hia astassinstlon bas
been followed by the overthrow of these re­
form* in the band* of his successor;” denouuccq “the system which make* ‘patron­
age’ and ‘spoils' out of public offices, and
the practice of giving them to political man­
agers for use In advancing personal, political
ends:" condemns the removal of faithful and
competent officer* in the absence of public
meats and demanding contributions for party
use fr*m public official*. etc., etc., and de­
cdy the aliened existing evils" in the party.
Lbwis B. Fars, tlie champion bicycle rider

wh*el at Marlboro, Mata, ou the 25th, and
fatffily injured.
X
the 25th elected President of the Baptist Mis­
sionary Society, which wm celebrating its

Thb Greenback State Convention of Dela­
ware was held In Wilmington on the 25th.
John Jackxon was nominated for Governor.
The Republicans of tiy First Cungre.«&gt;lonal
District of Kun is* have renrunlnate 1 John
A. A nd erson for Congreat The nominee tor
the Third District is Thomas Ryan, the pres­
ent member.
Rbv. ArrtArs O. Haygood, recently elect­
ed one of the Bishop* of the Methodist Church
South, has decMaed the distinction.
Ex-Sbcketahy Htnrr, Unite 1 States Mlnis-

afternooa of the 25Ul
Jobs C. Wolcott, the best-known lawyer

Boston to rnajee him sober.
Govxkjcob CnrmtXDU, of Missouri, la

avenue, Philadelphia, on the evening of the
Sfith. shattered tire building and seriously
burned twenty pence*.
Faaxx Mttxcx. while robbing the residence

Carolina contested elecUon introduced In the
Untied States House of Representative* on
the 36th by Mr. Blackburn was the fruit of a

mittee.

The Khedira accepted the

Large numbers of Russian Jews, forward­
ed by the lx&gt;rd Mayor's Committee of London,
have recently arrived tn Montreal. Each one
brings fund* enough to start In Ilf-.
The Khedive on the 27th sssumed personal
command of the army of Egypt. The English
and French Consuls informed Arabi Bey that
they held him responsible for the maintenance
of order. The Commander at Alexandria tel­
egraphed a demand for the reinstatement of
Arabi Bey. and the notables nu&lt;lt a similar
request, but the Khedive positively declined
to yield. Ou the 28th the Turkish Govern­
ment telegraphed its disapproval of the posi­
tion of the military party. The British Con­
sul al Alexandria called a meeting of his
countrymen and assured them of protec­
tion by the iron-dads should embarkation
be necessary. In the afternoon the Cham­
ber of Notables and a body of native menthe Khedive to reinstate Arabi Bey as Minis­
ter of War, stating tbelr own danger from the
army. The request wm reluctantly acceded
to. A telegram from Constantinople on the
28th announces the departure of a Turkish
Commission for Cairo; that a council of Min­
isters was held at the palace, and that tbc
Turkish Iron-clad* Were preparing for sea.
With the exception of France, all the powers
agreed that if interveutioa became necessary
it should be made by the Sultan.
The police at Cairo, Egypt, were engaged
on the 2Kh in forcing the people to sign a pe&gt;
tition to the Sultan for the deposition 'of the
Khedive, the recall of tbc Con*uls-Gcneral
and the withdrawal of the ultimatum.
. One hukdud “moonlighter*” surpriaed
the tenant* on the Hewson estate in the Coun­
ty Kerry, Ireland, on the 29th, and compelled
them to swear that they would nut pay rents
unless a reduction of fifty per cent, were

LATER NEWS.
Tna Maine Straight Greenback Convention
met at Bangor on the 30th ult. and a&lt;lopted
resolution* in opposition to the NationalBanking system; recommending that no more
bond* t&gt;e Issued; that *11 public tends be held
m homestead* for the poo;Jc; that all money
should be issued by the Feders' Government
in »utficient quantitte* to meet the want* of
trade, and be a full legal tender for all debts;
that Imprisoument for debt should be *bok
iahed; that all corporation* and monopolies
should be controlled by law, and that the In­
discriminate sale of ’ intoxicating liquor*
should be prohibited; declaring unalterable
determination to oppose fusion with cither of
the old parties, and indorsing the action of
tbc National Committee at St. Louis. The
fallowing nominations were made: For Gov­
ernor, Solon Chase; Congressmen, William

son In the chair.

for *liJX&gt;l,000 eootfeard «’• of the eerie, of
March a, 18®. which Mature August L There
are about *47,000,000 te bond* of this issue

to tbatof Mr. Black bum, but debate waa cut
•ff. A resolution waa finally adopted to *ub-

Mr. Calklmi explained that

te be equally divided, when a motion would ba

Warut flailing in Lake BpoCord, near Chea-

Tub Ohio Supreme Court on the .TOth ult.
rendered Ito decision on the question of the

wife the custody of her three daughter* and
Ch .te.

and the proepecte

waa filed for probate on the 20th. Tbc prop-

Gale Plows,

(Bujl Genuine Factory Pointe)

For $4 and S5, we are selling a very good every day
Suit, many styles to select from.
For $8 and $10, we are-selling a very desirable diagonal Strayer’
DRILL,
worsted, bound and made in sack and frock styles. Other
RAWSON’S
stores get $12 for the same suits.
Our 12.00 and 14.00 Suita will surprise you.
For 15.00 we can give you a suit yob need not be asham­ REAPERS &amp; MOWERS
Lightest and Strongest Made,
ed to wear any place, and would cost $18 to $20 at any store.
. Qur 16.00 and 1800 Suita are well made and trlmHUBBARD
ed, and for fit and wear can not be equaled.

s GRAIN

Gleaner &amp; Binder

Our stock in this line is the largest and finest we ever of­
fered. All Goods from a substantial school suit to the finest
dress suit. We have in stock more boys’ and youths’ clothing
than the combined stock of any house in town. Our stock

Boots, Shoes And Groceries,

J

Ib full up and PLENTY OF THEM. Readv pay purchasers
desired. WE OWN THE GOODS at about 70 cents on the
dollar. You can save money, and be comparatively happy by
buying your goods
.

the Journal being approved, alleging that it

Improved 1882.

Sash, Doors and Blinds,
Paints, Oils, Varnishes,
BUI LOEBS IIA BOWAKE.

DETROIT STOYE GO’S. STOVES
Domestic &amp; New Home

SEWING MACHINES

Cheap! Cheap! Cheap!

When in need of the Best
We want your BUTTER and EGGS and will allow you
GHides of Hardware and Ma­
PINE WOODS PRICES.
Respectfully
chinery. Call and see me.

W. A. AYLSWORTH.
NEW STORE!

FRANK C. BOISE.

THE CROWN

NEW IR K M !

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN
Dcaire to announce that they have rented A. C-Buxton’s new and elegant brick store and are
now stocking the same with a complete line of

Oents U*ui*nislxing; Goods
THE CROWN SEWING MACHINE.

IN BUYING. IH TO BUY-------

FOR THE LEAST MONEY.
Remember that we have no old, shop-worn and unseasonable gt»oda, but that everything is

ISEEW AJSTID FBESH!

ken tlie good features In all other machines
and put them in out grand combination, mak­
ing this the Handsomest, Largest, Most Silent
and Ligtitest Running machine yet offered. AD
the ‘-point*’’ that the experiree of twenty year*
In *11 kind* of family and iteht manufacturing
work baa proved to be bsolutely good are to be
found only in the “Crown.” (Hl»cr machine*
may bare one, two or three of there ‘ points"
but none but tbc “Crown” has them all
Every device that I* really desirable in other
machine* will be found in the "Crown." Ad-

W All our purchases are made with the cash and by strict attention'to the wants of our
customer* we expect to reap success.
vented, and the “Crown" is a perfect embodi­
Nashville, Apr. 20,1882.
__________
ment ot everyting go d in them.

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN.

E. R. WHITE.

AGAIN TO THE FRONT! EVERYBODY
With We LAR&amp;ESTtand lost CcmpletB StocI oi

The Ohio Cwnstitutlcn prohibits the Been*tog

the Kellogg Concert Company, were drowned.
• Tbs Supreme Court of Rhode Island haa de-

sup;-—rd to be unlo -«rd.

Wiard Plows,

South Bend Chilled Plows,
Over
500
Suits
At less than yon can boy the Cloth and Trimmings.

obey the order. British clttzeni at Alexandria

Immediately Liter the adjournment

Marty brueaded wilKa scythe.

Spring-2th Harrow

Auikbt Touxo, who wrote a tetter threat-

Tub British Consul st Cairo on the 30th ult.
informed the Khedive that a Turkish Com-

term* poaaiUe.

Helena was under water

Sultan's righto.

Haying just returned from the East with three immense
stocks for Nashville, Big Rapids and Cadillac, which
gives us the advantage over small dealers, who
purchase for one store only, we are offering

FURNITURE
Ever laid down in any one stere in Barry
or Eaton Counties.

Narrow Tired Wagon is no longer sought after
by experienced men. People are continually
looking forward to better things and they have
found it in the

Wide Tire Wagon!

tie attention tbeseto he was informed th&gt;t the

a mistake In refusing to entertain a legitimate
fra Speaker directed the Clerk to read the rule

BUY A WIDE TIRE WAGOH

Our mammoth two-story double store

Th* Illinois btate Woman Suffrage Conven­
tion was recently bell at Moline.
Mrs.
Elisabeth Boynton Herbert was elected Preal-

Is full and running over.
rermger*

Everything yon need from the smallest Bracket to
a $125 Parlor Suit.
Vou can

and have a better election to choose
with m&gt; than »ny’other dealer.
Xforgret It.

Then, and be up wit
handle with a load.

I KEEP THEM
BUY YOUB PLOW POINTS
Of me andyou will get potato that are chilled.
Orecbllled poln. wfll last as long aa two that

FIRST CLASS BLACKSMITH,
. .

�Is respectfully invited to our
israrw

Cordoroy Corset

BRAIN AND NERVE.

Ac..9L atdrnggM*. Mich.
DAVI8 &amp; CO, Detect Mteh

Ma affldte.

Morneau!
U.a
penwiu or
driving
ra*y be entitled
tbc fcu;n of Lwrati-five
i.

This CORSET Is made In tbe newest French ahsre. 14 Incbra
tong, elaborately embroidered. GORES CORDED CRO6«WI8E,
thus forming a perfect bust -without the uprightly and in many
instauees annoying eroa*lxu»es; also removable BWe Steete.
The main feature of this CORSET ■ however, is tbe NEW
CX)RIX)ROY MATERIAL ustd in plrae a
kind will follow; or, if It does not, you will be substitute for bone will not only issue
aide to do without it.

Can catarrh be cuiedt Yes certainly Dr. Byke
Bure Cure will cure it.

A very elaborate wedflfog wm celebrated in

Inquiries.
While all this was happening on the upp-r
Smith formerly ofChartotte, who died leaving te
Urge property, pdndpel)y mill property, rit«*ted fo Charlotte and Bradner, O. Tbe pre­

ing. ilia brother. Thomas Cole, and his son

R. E W. MURRAY. Office over F. T.
Boise’s Drug Store. Residence Corner
Reed and Middle Sts.

D

5WPBS0II WARRENTED

NEVER TO BREAK!
Retail Price, $1,00.

For Sole Only by

anirtmls being unlawfully al large shall not be
naid within three days then said t

Dealer In Dry COods, Notions &amp; Fancy Coods

will recover with proper treatment in

NASHVILLE, MICH.

him &lt;luring tbe voyage, as tbe slightest thing
would make him frantic.
Lieutenant Danenbowe
inquiries concerning hia

u r uy to inc owner &lt;u saio nuimaiw m rase n is
called for. within one month; if not called for
within 6ne mouth thepound master shall jmv

R. DICKINBOX A CO
----- NEW------

thorough, noarchi ng examination.

CUSTOM

the Council would accept, until they coaid Im­
port two wealthy farmers whoownd property in
, the city.
In this department, last week, wc menUonc d
that J. V. Johnson, formerly editor of the

and an honorable ■gentleman, who suffered
with us. The attack on him waa unjust and
cowardly, particularly In bls absence. Mel­
ville did all in bls power, and did that well. I
rcfrrct exceedingly that anything touching his

8L Louis, but wc have received a letter from
Mr. Johnson denying the “ soft impeachment;
and the suggestion dial tbc report was put In
circulation by some person with whom the
“wish was father to the thought ' ’ Wc gained
our Information on the matters from a St
Louts dispatch to tbc Free Press.

myself. Walt till , the examination comes;
wait till Melville ct'tncs home and bus u chance
to sp\5uk for himself."
Dr. Newton Newcomb, who accompanied tbe
Jeannette expedition us naturalist, w-s very
indignant over the treatmi nt of Melville, and
term*-*! it cowardly, mean ami deserving the

ALLON--------

CErnaniiTmeDY. Touring Mill
READY FOR BUSINESS

RHEUMATISM, CUSTOM

--------- FO

DIGS,
BOOKS,
JEWELRY
WALL PAPER,
W1NMW SHADES,
DYE STUFFS,

Every day tn the .year—Sundays excepted.

Heuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago,
Backache, Bareness of the Chest,

GRINDING I

Of every dercriptlon, done in a stfpcrior
manner, at the drop of the hat; and
Satisfaction guaranteed.

Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Spell­
ings and Sprains, Burns and
Scalds, General Bodily
Pains,

PROPRIETARY MEDICINES,

Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted
*
Feet and Ears, and all other
■Pains and Aches.

PRESCRIPTION'S,
RECEIPTS,

FLOUR. MEAL AND MILL FFED
Kept constantly on hand.

Counly are filled with apprehension f&lt; r their
coming crops on account of the very cold wea­
ther. Especially is this the case in the northern
part of the country. In Oneida and Roxana
Townships potatoes have been planted four
weeks aud have not yet appeared above the
ground. OaU are being entirely used up, and
very many farmers have not yet planted their
coni, white those who have done so are only
awarded by tbc moat sickly display of spears
that has ever tx-en seen at this season of the
year. - Is Uiought wheat has not l&gt;een seriously.
Injured yet.
_:p»rtcllo has been enjoying a genuine sensa-

E. IL Sleeper with Mrs. £. J. Harris being the
cause. It seems that Sleeper used to carry tlie
mail but sold out to Mr. Harris and while tlie
latter wm away,the former cultivated the af­
fections of Mrs. Harris. This went on during
Ute past winter and culminated in an elope­
ment of tbe pair Friday,while the husband w os
away.on bta trip. The woman Is described aa
twenty -Are and good looking and Sleeper as
twenty three and rather a gaDus young fellow.
Tbe busband lias started after tbe truant

state.—Charlotte Republican.
Everybody# Going to Battle. Creek.

“I waa so Incense! when I read these l ave
charges against Melville that I was on (bo
point of inditing a letter to tbe press of Amer­
ica on the subject; but, on reflection, con-

charged against Melville is as untrue ns it is
cowardly. Why could not bis accusers wait t.U
bo reached borne and had a chance to defery)
himself? But to stab him in the back, to at­
tack him when be has no chance to defend
himself, u a most cowardly piece of buslneos.
•• If 1 thought'* continued tbe di-ctor. “that
I coulcMlnd one of tho poor fellows, who were
lost I would turn this minute and go back to
all that hardship and privation cheerfully—
yea, gladly—in order to save thim. This life
has no fascination for me. L simply go as a
matter of business, and if I am called upon to

SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS
IN MEDICINE.

Are kept complete, to meet the demaads of the
people.

HO!’ FOR BATTLE CREEK!!
TO BEE THE WONDERFUL

22 TRAINED
ELEPHANTS I
And "BOLIVAR,”

Largest Elepant

THE

World

Coming, and Eighteenth Annual Tour, and will
Exhibit at

Battle Creel*

TUESDAY, JUNE 13,
GREATEST OE ALL. THE

funny grin: "Yea, mebbe." He appeared tho
strongest of the entire four, ai d viewed with
an air of stoicism all
surroundings. On
tearing tbe steamer Lieutenant Danenbowcr
nnd party were firiven to tbo Fifth Avenue
Hotel, where rooms hud bNm engaged for
thorn, and where there wus a fnnrily breukfut.
When be spoke of Commander De Long bis
voice wm choked with emotion and bls eyes
moist.

By a strict attention to business, and square
dealing with all our customers, we hope to mer-

.

“x
AU io be sold at prires to compete with any
house in Dairy or Eaton counties,

it a liberal patronage from the formers of this
, , ..
*

ndnlty.
Miu. on

oi depot

।

F. T. BOISE.

EijerienceU, Reliable, and Responsible.

A. H. WINN, Dentist.

GREAT FOREPAUGH SHOW
l.ftOO WILD BEASTS

BEST SET GUM TEETH $10.00

----- COLOSSAL-----

CIRCUS IN 2 RINGS

Teeth Exiracted Wifhout Pain.

Office Open Day &amp; Evening.
IN HER WONDER MOVING ACT OT
^UVERSING THE HIGH WIRE HER FEE7
ENCASED IN BASKETS

A Cat’s Fatal Bite.

Probate Order.
VOvKTT or
,
At aecMlon ofthe Probate Court for tbeCounty
of Barry. holtlen *t the Probate Office, tn the City ol
HssUnge.il&gt; said county, on Wednesday (be SIM day
o! May. In the year one thousand claht hundred
and elghty-two. Prescbt, Clement Smith, Judge of

mule cat, which bad been with the Speyer fum-

at Battle Creek Tuesday, June 13th.
I In addition to a grandly great circus in two

her young to a closet In the cellar of the house.
The cat then abandoned tbe lltllo ones and

Great

Forepaugb

show

John M.

wild beasts, all transported by four great ndlProcession on the day Forepaugh exhibits thereEvery town in this county will be represented
in this Huge, highway holiday parade. In add­
ition to thia, tlie greatjiageants of “Cleopatra”
and “Lalla.Rookh” will be presented in the

and riling the petition duly verified, of
---- .-------------------- r—1A —me praying
rr*l enisle

In set forth.
' Thereupon it Is ordered, that

caught, ami In trying again to compel her to
stay with tbe kitten* Mr. Speyer waa bitten on
tbe thumb. He paid no attention to tbe bits.

an^ Examine !

II. K. DICRINHON * CO.

Philip Speyer, sixty-four years of age. of No.
10 East Eighth street, died on Friday from tho
exhibits

" The

AND BRUSH

DEPARTMENT

A. VOGELER Sc. CO.,

Lieutenant Danenbower raid of tbc loot

bly an oar or small portion of their boat might

-------- MT---------

Graham Flour \ PAINT

Our

8S Ferforwlsg ElrphasU, 1.000 Wild BraaU.
Precvmlon offadostry, at Battle Creek.

•

struggling with tho fate threatening him. lie

month Eaton Rapldq now contains, lwo,th e not. Ono (the left one) Is almost entirely blind,
Council having accepted the bonds of O. A. but tbe other appears to be at present all
Meacham and John A prill ata special meeting right." In answer to a question propounded
Monday evening. Pubiic sen Um ent waa so
ant Dam
strong against the business that the liquor

Cost,
Cost,
Cost!

Jcdro of Probate

illlLIIER!! HIRGANS^

1,000 MEN AND HOR8E8.
Coming with 2, 3, and of .en
FOUR GREAT RAILWAY TRAINS
All Europe’s Great riders,
SPECIAL CIRCUS FOR BOYS AND GIRLB
.
Tbe Grand

Or Under

PROOMION OF INDUSTRY
In which many of the leading Mechanics, Mer­
chants and Manufactures, will take part, and
THE COLLQSSAL ORIENTAL PAGEANTS
Illustrating tbe Beautiful Eartern Romance of
“LALLA ROOKH" Departing from Delhi.
Tbe Princes personated by tbe

■tywpaM MV

HANDSOMEST WOMAN

of the Bos­
_____
venture to as­
sert that one of the mo-tnovel wedding*
May 4. of Mr. &amp; Gentyle
County. to Miss Rachel

In the World, who gets Ten Thousand Dol­
ton for her Beauty aud appearing in this
Grand Parade, and tbe Grcauv Grand Egypt-

3

(GREAT

BANDS

3

WM Beasts Loom In tbe Streets. A Genuine Apytea,p
Baud of Southern Negro Camp Meeting Melodisui. Absolutely the Greatest, Grandest

FREE Street PROCESSION
while th.

^DHISHIOK . - ONIA’ Menu,
EXTRA TRAINS!

is oboct to print a

Tbereupon It Is ordered that

the beerier ofsaid petition, eu.i
kin ofaaid ward* and all other

the ground ; a fair young female slave- sits fan-

- ; spectacle. are acett Ute Guards of
tbc Grate hf dt-r Kahn, with Ibeir silver battlc-

Prolmte Order
County of Harry

ANNA L GARDNER, mluon.

tending to cbanye uy manner
of business,

AND FANCY GOODS

and kingly elephant, the largest on this cootin-

pottrete glittering totbe ran;

shall deem it proper so to do.
w
Sec. .J.* Any person or pen&gt;MU who shall
rescue or attempt to rescue any animals lwing driven by any person to said potmd. »&gt;r who
shall release or attempt to relearx; noy animal
from raid pound, without- eom|rfyUig with tine
provisions of tills onlinaucr, aud contrary to
the directions of Ute pound nwrtes, shall, on
conviction, be fined not iras than five, uur inure
than fitly dollars and costs of prosecution, sad
on failure to pay such fine nnd co*U be im
prisoned tn the county jail not more titan nloetv days, o” ixith such fine anil imprisonment to
the discretion of the court.
Bec. (k The pound master shall keep a wrect account of every anima) driven to the
pound, and shall every three months report to
the.common council the number of animate
impounded, the number and kind of animate
sold and tbc amount of money received there­
for. • .
Sec. 7. Any person who shall let from tta ir
owuer’s enclosure tbc animate o! am Aber, wi
that they shall be unlawfully et large, or who
shall designedly open any stli li rnckaaure, so
that such animals can go thcrefram unlawfully
al large, or with Intent to have tlie aanx* im­
pounded, or whoahalLdrive or bring witbin tbe
limits of this village any auitnals, which this
ordinace intends to restrain, with the intent hi
Imprison or to have tbc same Hafite -to be Im­
prisoned. shall for each offense upon conriet-oo
thereof, pav a fine of n &gt;t less than five nor
.more titan fifteen dollars, together with costs &lt;»(
suit, and on failure to My such fine and costs
may be imprisoned in the county jail not more
than thirty days.
(
Bkc. 8. This ordinye shall take effect .os
tbe 12th day of June A. D. 1862.
Approved Mny 23rd 18«2.
F. McDkbby,
E. CbifmsR.
Clerk.
.*
Pres.denV

CLEMENT KM (Th

Guardian i Stale.

Their ebi

criptfon of Uh- aulriud or animal* to be sold and
shall be posted m aforesaid, and tweutj-ftve
rants shall be added to tbe coats of vale for
posting said notices. Every notice shall Bear
the date of its being posted, and give the day
and hour of sale, and said pouml master sluul

My Entire Stock of

describe as “more beautiful than any of those a neighboring drug store, where be obtained a
lotion that temporarily relieved (be pain. Durberoineswbo embellish the songs of Persia
and Hindustan; more perfect than the diviuest could not sleep. nnd almost before day break
images of the House of Axor.” In thia georgc- started to work, fancying that in the bustle of
oua, glittering ortental pogent, Lal la Rookh

Mogul Lords follow, accompanied by Cavaliers

inghis receipt therefor. If U* owner of said .
animals appear within five months from the
time of sale and make satisfactory proof of
ownenbtp to the conunuu council said surpius
money shall be paid to him, but if be does
not appear within tbe time atxive specitted said
surplus money shall belong to the Incidcata! •
fund of said village.
'
Sec. 4. The pound master's notice of sate
shall be given as follows: for the sate of sheep,
swine, turkeys and gtese, tbc notice shall be
posted three days, one copy at tbe pound and
one copy al the post office of tbe village;
for the sole of bones,
uweo, muiea

I Shall Sell

The loveliest er tied hia thumb in a rag. thus stopping tbe
lady has been secured to personify the beauti-

thc lovidy troup of Tartarian and Cathmerean
maids of honor ride upon each aide at tbc Prin-

of fifteen cents per bead for ail riieep.
getae ex turkeys, and for tbe korptng^r
tug tbe «ome the sum of twenty-fiveecn

sri'l be paid to any lady, breaking the substitute for whalebone IN SLX MONTHS ORDINARY
WEAR. ANY dealer te authorised to pay that amount, under our guarantee.

mented father. Immediately after speaking

sured in the Hartford. The Pos tofllce was
kept In tbc same building and tbe entire mail

Council of tbe village of NuriirtUe
suitable pound within said village,
be tlse dutr of tbe pound master
safely keej' therein such animate

and discharge ary ar. Quais as aforesaid ahail ba
entitled to a feji'd fits’.cenu per head for ail

BUT IS ALSO

S10.00 REWARD,

condition of the Eaton Rapids Union school
building, the floors having settled and tbe walls

•ettieing of tbe floors wm due to tbc shrinking
of tbe Umber, and competent mechanics pronounpe it enUrely eafc.
The drug and grocery store of HoytAWasa m
by fire, with Us
o'clock Wednesday
struck by ‘lightning,
on store and contents about $3,500. insur-

Perfect Uoaltli
Great Comfort and
Perfection in T-’it.

KAittei

LOW

RATES!

------ COMMENCING ON-----JOHNWXAE8, guardian.

IMPORTANT TO TRAVELOS,

Route, Il will payyou to read their
-nta to l*e found elsewhere in this

Saturday, May 20
Now !• the Time
For those in need to share

the profits and buy at

wholesale prices.
Nubrillh Mar IS IS®.

*
.
1

‘

.

.

.

.

�the pleaaaot Baida

And ate would bear him say:.

f &lt;mlr tho flower* wrro really
GoMeu m they appear.
rwnra worth your while tn gat!
My little daughter cl carl

bright as a star.

faoc aa fresh an the day,
Hth a wmged cap und winged heels.
And cyea ooth wise and gay.
► have your wish. King Midaa,"

Of quilted

60 ft

And tip he «pnmg to try at o
Th-i touch on every thing.

Like a glowing muss of flame.

And morn Itself grew dim.
For his delicious bath.
And dipped hia hand in the surface smooth.

For the liquid, light and leaping.
So crystal-bright and clear,. ,
Grew a solid lake of heavy gold.
And tho Klug began to fear!
So froeh in tbe mornlnjc hour.
And n thousand bull in the balmy night
Had bunt into perfect flower.

chisels and hammers added to the bit
of wire that went in, until it came out a.
finished hook and ready to fish with,
though probably the most fastidious fish
wouldn’t touch it becauae it hadn’t yet
been polished.
,
'
The curious little machines would first
nip off bits of wire; another stroke of
the machine, and the bit of wire had a
little loop in one end. The next half
second the wire had a hack in it near
the other end.
Then came a little
hammer-stroke which flattened out tho
hacked end. Then a little chisel shared
this flattened end into a point Aud
last of all, it receives one crook, and
drops, a perfectly formed hook, into the
little bucket having been, only four
seconds before, nothing but an inch or
more of ■steel wire on a reel.
.
There are two ways of finishing these
hooks. Either they are “Japanned,’’
which gives them the black finish which
is the. most common one, or they are
finished with that fine blue that la fre­
quently put upon swords and cutlery.
It is done by heating them in a furnace
till tljey come to a “cherry-red" as the
workmen call it and then they ire
poured into a bucket of oil and left to
cooL
.
After finishing, they are taken up to
the defufingered girls, who rapidly
count them by hooking them over a
piece of coarse wire, and throwing out
at the same time the imperfect ones.
Then they pack them in neat boxes,
and they are stacked up ready for mar­
ket
‘
But I supiMwe this is only the tamest
Et of the history of these murderous
c objects. How many of them do
Jon suppose will ever hook a fish? May
e one in a hundred. Perhaps not one
in five hundred. How many of them
will slumber, the sport of the. fiahes, imbeded in some old log at the bottom of
some pool or river where they have stuck
and stuck, though tugged at and
twitched at by the luckless little boy
who hasn't caught anything yet, and
who hasn’t another to fasten ou in their
place! How many weary miles they
must go, some of them, with hungry,
wet, tired, little fellows (and perhaps
big fellows, too), innocent of any fish,
and in having no bites save from mosauitoes. But here and there one shall
mist point and barb into some fish who
with more appetite than discretion has
failed to sec tnc trap set for him, and
out and up into the air has rushed, “his
silver armor flashing useless in the sun,"
to make a supper for the lucky fisher­
man.— Wide Awake.

Twas a world of perfumr nnd color.
Of tender and delicate bloom.
But only tbc hideous thirst for wealth
In tho King's heart found room.

Esop’s Mission.

Sepnsaod like « spirit of autumn
Through that fnfr i&lt;paoe of bloom.

Back to the lofty palaeo
Went th ■ glad monarch then.
And aat at his sumptuous breakfast.
Moat fortunate 01 men!
'
He broke the line, white wbnntcn roll.
The light and wholesome bread.
Aad it turned to a lump of metal ritb—
It had u well been lead!
When—what we IhiM be heard?
Tbc voice ofJils l.ttlc dauahtor dear,
As sweet nia j^riovlna bird.
Bobbins «be stooAwfore him.
Add ti guidon ro»c held she,
Aqd'tbo tear* that brixnmod her blue, blue
eyes
Were pitiful to see.

‘Father! O Father deare.rtI
1hl» dreadful thin?—&gt;h, rec!
Oh. what hxs b.-.ppeued to all the Bowin?
1 Why should you cry. my daughter?

With splendor not to ba told?**
■ I bate them. O my father!

‘Como here." be cm J. “my darling,
And bent, her chock to k-a*.
To comfort her—when—Heavenly Powers!
What fearful thins
this?

rtatue of horrible gicnmmg gold.

chanx-. d

Majestic as before,
Buddy and young und glorious.
' Take tack your gift ao terrible!
No blessing, but a curve I
One loving heart more precious Is
Than tbe gold otfbo universe."

it
This being a game of mystery, „
of course, necessary that it should bo.
unknown to, at any rate, a few of tho
company—tho more tho better. One of
tho gentlemen well acquainted with tho
game undertakes to represent -E»op.
In order to do so more effectually, no
may put a cushion or pillow under his
coat to imitate a hump, provide.himself
with n stick for a crutch, make a false
nose and put a patch over one eye.
The rest of tlie company must then
each assume the name'of some subject
of the animal kingdom—a bird, beast,
or fish—and having done this, must
prepare themselves to listen to tho
won Is of their great master.
Limping into their midst, .Esop then
tells them that the wrath of the great
god Jupiter has been aroused, and as
the cause of a calamity so terrible muse
be that one or more of them have been
committing some crime or other, he is
anxious to discover withoqt farther de­
lay who are the guilty subjects. " I
shall, therefore/’ continues he, “ questioni you closely all round, and I shall
expect you. even* one io give me truth­
ful answers.’’ lie then fixes his mind
upon a certain letter—for instance, O—
and begins: Mr. Lion, as you are the
king of beasts, I sincerely hope you have
dono nothing derogatoiy to your high
position; still, as it is.alisolutely neces­
sary that vou should be examined with
the rest of your friends, will you please
tell me what food you have eaten late­
ly?” Should the lion have eaten a lamb, a
sheep, a tiger, a bear, or any other dainty
that is spelled without the letter O, ho is
acquitted as innocent; but should he
have eaten a leopard, a goose, a fox. or
any other creature in the name of which
the letter O occurs, he is pronounced
by AIsop to be deserving of punishment,
and is therefore sentenced to pay n
forfeit
The other animals, in turn, then un­
dergo a similar examination, during
winch each one muse remcml&gt;er that in
naming his prey ho must confine him­
self to such food as is suited to the species
he has adopted. The game may be
carried on for any length of time, or
until all have discovered the secret in it
There is no fear of the interest flag_•-------- .------- ----- ------- —1_-------- *
giag bo long as even only one of
company is still unable to solve the
mystery.—Harper's Young People.

Our Hnrw* In Ebffiud.
All you hnvo UarnicJ with the fatal Cot
You «teall oaaln restore.'*
Bo clasped fafai little duushter—

icon horses in England and France lost
season, are naturally directing tlie at­
tention of our countrymen to what may
happen during
the coming season.
Many foolitii Americans will lay large
wagexs of money upon the. American
horses of this year, because of the suc­
cess of two American horses last year.
Among the horses that will take part in
the races this year are Foxhall,'the win­
ner of the Grand Prix, Iroquois, the
winner of the Derby, Gerald, Bachem,
Arnza, Mirtake, Naereid, and of course
many others, these being. the most fa­
mous. American sporting men say that
our climate is better suited to the horse
than that of Great Britain. The horse

month aad swallowed with a rip of
tar..
.
'
. ... I of live stock it
—In the
Is safer and better to give water before
txtinK thw ^wr. % (be leuer cue
the feed is liable to be washed out of the
stomach prematurely, while in an imperfectly digested state, and thus occarion intestinal irritation and disease.—
Chicago Tinies.
—Probably the largest cow in tho
world is owned by Martin S. States, of
Grayville, White County, Lil.
She is
seven years old and weighs 3,000 pounds,
ia seventeen and a half hands high, ton
feet six inches long from tho nose to tho
end of the tail,- eight feet nine inches
around the girth, twenty-six inches
around the forearm and thirty-one inch­
es across the hips.
—Do you want an evergreen that
holds its deep green color better than
almost any other; that never grows to a
large size; that is, therefore, well suited
to both largo and small lawns; that
grows compactly and possesses an
Individuality most marked? It is the
broad-leaved hemlock—Abies Canaden­
sis macrophylla. Try it.—Rural New
Yorker.
—Sometimes after beating the yelks
of the eggs as usual the cook is annoyed
to find that they are not smooth and
light yellow, but are “stringy,” and

kwpfoe’K !
,h.c ’
,
n
t^ad hu rurt-d tbouaandv. See other column.— j
&gt; Tribune.
,
■
--------------------------

therouglily II). I could uwt walk across tbe
yard without fatigue. Nothing I ate agreed
with me. Doctors could do me no good I tried
Brown's Iron Bitters. Tliey have given me
perfect healUi and atrength.”

Tub-vrashetl wool is wool that ___
baa
been washed in the fleece after it has
left the sheep’s back. It is practiced to
some extent, but not very much in the
West. No machinery Is employed, so
far as wo have learned,except at woolen
mills. There, all wool is scoured, (how­
ever well it may have been washed pre­
viously,) faciiiuos being provided and
experts employed to perform the work
in the best possible manner.
When growing in its natural state,
wool is lubricated and preserved by na­
ture with a sticky substance generally
called “grease.” This grease forms a
very considerable part of the weight of
unwashed wool, the lowest proportion
being about 50 per oent., and the high­
est about 75 per cent. It oonsists of a
kind of fatty soap, composed largely dl
potash, no soda being present When
wool is washed, either on the sheep's
back or in a tub, a portion of this grease
is removed; and more, ot oour.se is
taken out whan tho washing is fairly
done in a tub than in a stream or tank,
and thus the wool should bring a higher
price.
But as a rule manufacturers prefer .to
bay wool not tub-washod, for reasons
that will presently appear. Before wool
can be used . for spinning, the grease
must be removed, and in order not to
injure the fiber, as well as to preserve
its natural bright color, methods are
employed with which people generally
are not familiar. Sometimes the deli­
cate fiber and fine luster of excellent
wool are destroyed by being washed
with soap utterly unadapted to tho pur­
pose, and by persons who are not in­
formed how the washing should be
done. Soda soap is unsuited to it, for
wool washed with it is inclined to be
harsh and brittle, with a yellow tinge or
oolor. A good potash soap is best
adapted to the purpose. Nature pointe
out what is best in preserving the wool
with a fatty potash substance; and in
such matters man finds that nature is
always correct. A suitable potash soap
most, therefore, be preferable to soda
r.oap for removing the natural Yre®crving substance.
Wc may reasonably
conclude, then,that a strong alkali, such
as soda ash, soda crystal, or still worse
than either of them, lime, should by no
means be used.
Seen under the microscope, wool is
found to be a most delicate fiber, each
hair or filament being composed of
concentric rings surrounding and over­
lapping each other similar to scales on
the back of a fish. A strong alkali, used
alone, removes everv trace of lubrica­
tion frorr beneath tlie covering of these
minute scales, completely destroying
the luster, besides unnecessarily dimin­
ishing the weight of the wooL
Bat the
. ffect of a neutral potash soap—a soap
containing neither a free or unoombineti alkali nor an excess of tallow—is
only to remove superfluous greasy mat­
ter from the woo! adhering to the out­
side of the fiber, while the internal
condition remains undisturbed.
This will explain why the mills

ROAD SCRAPERS, SQUARE DRAGS, GRIND STONES,
Common, and hung ready for use.

.

SEW 1 TNG MAOHI^EH.

PLOW POINTS for the Oliver Chilled. Wlard, Three Riv­
ers, Bryan, Cale, Curtis, Dodge, Robinson
'
And many other Plows.

less aa an Infant.
But 'Kennedy’s Favorite
Remedy cured her and she Is now able to do
In far.?, wc keep a full and complete stock of first class Hardware and Farming Tools. Call
her own work.’’ The above laquouted from a and sec them before buying.
letter from a gentleman in Elmira. N. Y. to
Dr. David Kennedy, of Readout, N. Y. You
need a bottle in tbe boose.

Nedur Judge by appearances.

A hcedy coat

Tlie man whe claimed tlie world owed him a
living Is slowly collecting tlie debt. He is a
trntnp.

HERE WE ARE AGAIN!
■WITH A FULL STOCK OF-

Wagons
OUR LINE BUGGIES
E;M BRACES

Timkins,
.
Dexters,
Dli setons,
White Chappel and Coal Boxes, hung with Elliptic Springs.
Two and Three Spring Democrats.

By Universal Accord,
Ayer's Cathartic Pills arc the* best
of all purgatives for family use. They
arc tlie product of long, laborious, said
successful chemical investigation, and
their extrusive use, by physicians In
their practice, and by all civilized na­
tions, proves them tlie best aud most
effectual purgative Pill that medical
science can devise. Being purely veg­
etable no linnn can arise from their
use. nnd being sugar-coated, they are
pleasant to take.
In intrinsic value
and curative powers no other Pills
can l»e compared with them: and every
person, knowing their virtues will
employ them, when needed.
They
keep the system In perfect order, ami
maintain in 1. -ulthy action the whole
machinery of life. Mild, searching nnd
effectual, they are especially, adapted
to the needs of the digestive apparatus,
derangements of which they prtvent
and cure. If timely taken.
They are
the best and s.*ffest physic to employ
for children aim weakened' constitu­
tions, where a mild but effectual
cathartic is required.
For sale'by all druggists.

MBS. HDU E PIUHU, OF UH, Utt

UR WORK IS ALL DONE UPON HONOR.

BUGGIES

made from Second Growth Hickory.
OOur being
T&lt;»ps are lined with All-Wool Indigo-Dyed Good? and

Warranted not to Fade. W. H. Atkijsron, a painter whose
work lias never went back on him, has charge of our paint de­
partment, and can be relied on. Bolts, Dash Feet, Body Loups
and Stays are made from Norway Iron and the enthe boggy
ironed in a desirable and superior manner nnd warranted.

Until you have thoroughly examined mine. Spokes made
from Second Growth Stock and the wagon is made to stand
the wear and tare of our roads.
£3Tl HAVE IN STOCK A NUMBER OF-=£3

Furst Ac Bradley’s

Chilled Plows, Hay Rakes and Cultivators,
Which I will Sell at Cost to Close out.

E. COOK
EEP YOU EYE OIN THIS

OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE

LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S
VEGETABLE COMPOUND.

WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH

THREE INCH TIRE
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING

BETTER THAN COMMON TIRE
LTHl E. FUIKH-OI-S VCCKTAEI3. CQ3S-

Etx bcthaR.ru.
a minimum

REED’S GENUINE SPRING TOOTH HARROW

HER OWN EXPERIENCE
“Tlie friend of ours wbo recommended your
‘Favorite Remedy’ had herself suffered a stroke
otparalysis, which rendered tier,.entire right

Rochester, N. Y.

WooL

A COMPLETE LINE OF

Gen. Butler, being asked if he had left poli-

through a very fine wire sieve this
trouble will be obviated, and only a vqry • A medicine that destroys the germ ot cause
of Bright’s Disease. Diabetes, Kidney nnd Liv­
little of the egg be wasted—not so much, er Complaint*, and ha* power to root them out
in fact, as if she tries to take it out with ' of tbc system, is above all price. Buch a med­
icine Is Hop Bitters, and positive proof of this
a fork or spoon.—H. Y. Post.
can be found by a trial, or bv asking your
—To purify muddy water, dilute each neighbors wbo have beep curec by IL
quart of water with an ounoe of phoaA man’s rices speak for themselves. His
Rhate of lime aud allow it to settle, and virtues must be talked up.
, will be found that most of the impuri­
ties are carried to the bottom. Tbe
$200.00 REWARD.
supernatant water is now filtered with­
out any trouble through absorbant cot­
ton. Ordinary cotton will answer as Will be paid for tbe dffoctlon and conviction
well, if previously moistened with alco­ of any person selling or dealing In any bogus,
hol and then washed with water. Of counterfeit or Imitation Hop Bitters, especially
course, either of them mnst be pressed Bitters orpreparatlona with tbe word Hop or
tightly into tho neck of the funnel. Hope In their name oi connected therewith,
Clear water can be obtained in about that in intended to mislead and cheat the pub­
five minutes.—Denver Tribune.
lic, or for any pretention put in any form, pre­
. —If the plentiful use of bells will not tending to be tbe same as Hop Bitten. Tbe
protect sheep from &lt;1
herding or genuine have cluster of Green Hops .(notice
yarding should be resorted to.
The thl») Printed on tbc white label, and are the
expense of erecting a rough • fence, say
seven feet high, and, of course, impene­ purest nnd best medicine on earth, especially
trable to dogs, from 100 to 150 feet for Kidney, Liver and Ncp lous Disease. So
square, is nothing to oomoare to the beware of all othera, and of all pretended for­
loss of sheep. A fence solidly built ot
rails, poles, etc., would last the best mulas or receipts of Hop Bitters published In
part of a score-of years, and there would papers or for sale, as they are frauds and swin­
be no trouble of gathering the sheep dles. Whoever deals in any but tbe genuine
into it when once accustomed to it.—
will be prosecuted. Hor Bittkhs Mro. Co.,
Germantown Telegraph.
•
Tub-Washed

WAGONS ONLY $60.00.

"* Buggies, Carriages. Wheel Harrows and
Mr. F.G.Delaney, of NarfofirTVn.. writes:
“
Cultivators, Mounted“ Seeders,
“It gives me great ptearare to experience now
more that gloriously good feeling of perfect
and
4
kinds
of
Plows.
health. I was buried in drepair, my bacif conrtanlly pained me, and from bead to foot I felt

' LIVER, KIDNEY AND BRIGHT’S DISEASE.

bence the superiority of tbe

na.Mi

WHAT EVERABODY WANTS.

! hvmatrfUaiprcJZ-mT

We believe the Three inch Tire u destined to come
into general use. Call and see them.

Sold by C. L Glasgow, Nashville, Mich.

BENTLEY BROS. &amp; WILKINS. _
Haatingr, Mich., Sept 15th, 1881.

�GimiL

SAD ACCIDENT.
OSCAR CKAIGG Blown an by a Prw m-

Nashville, Michigan

MAIN LINE.

ry—DESTRUCTION of au EYESuhoeqnent Removal by Surgica’
"
Operation.

WOO.OOO. Hu
•« lourtmn k*ou
u hoar on * oonuiiaplion ol *boul. * tho bandits for the particular purpose to
ion ot oo*l pu boar, bho U Uibted by which they applied H.
quarry at Rosendale. Ulster Co., N. Y. By an
ISO eootrio Uchu. *a&lt;l 1* fituxl iB »»
Tbs discovery of this rendezvous of
axpkMtoa one day he leal an eye-loat tttotalOrient*! «yh- Sb, U now *» qu»r*n- the bandits was made last November by which ho would have: "Ram, lamb, ly. I nder the impression that the matter waa
teas actions the local physician told Mr. Cralgg
Detective Bligh, of Ixiuiirills, Ky., who,
.tins.
that hta eye waa not lost wholly, but could be
—A'goat disturbed worship in a St. with a number ot Logan and Warren
saved by treatment. Tbe experiment was tried
habitants than twenty asm loaded
'Eotrffl church by trotting up the main County officials, tracked tho noted rob­ oould not refuse to make a selection, and failed. Wwve remained behind, for he Mall............ ...... aes &gt;.
with taedicitoe.—Old Baytag.
l&gt;»» Expr*a«.._ C05 p.
kle, minting the platform steps, and bers to the cave.
Colonel Alexander and tbe ruae has gone into history, and
Altaatla Ex...-IMO a.
HCE: ILW, iFpahTiN ADVANCE.
trying to eat the green fringe of the pul­ was duly notified of the state of affaire, to-day the same remarkable combina­
pit drapery. St. Louie always was a and believing his tenant to bo connected tion appears on the dinner table. There told him the Injured eye must be taken out to
To Advertisers:
pretty good goat pasture, but when the with the gang, gave him notice to leave if, a fiction that spring lamb exists; save the other. To thia Mr. Cralgg demurred,
Tbs Nbwb has double tbe number of readers animals are driven into the churches for
the premises January 1, at which time poets have written odes to the bleating and went back home In doubt. Ills local phy­
In Lhe First RepmetiiaUve District of Barry
This was a very im­ pastoral, and a succulent dish known as sician saidr “go to New York.” To New
countv, than any other paper circulating there­ food the grass must be pretty well tram­ his year was up.
GRAND RAPIDS DIVISION.
in, and our raire of advertising are lower than pled down in the
Chicago Inter­ prudent step on ths part of Colonel Iamb and green peas is said to have an York the jNtllcnt went, and one of tbc most
eminent oculists in tu» eountry, having looked
EA8TWAR1 .
any other first class country weekly In tbe state. Ocean.
Alexander, as it served to notify the
at the case said: “You hare lint one eye en­
An ad. ta Tbs Naws goes to the bearthsiooex
bo
a
stalwart
sheep
before
it
reaches
tirely; ro bad; and do what you can tn aave the
-nsm
— London workmen were busy re­ bandits that their rendezvous was dis­
of 1000 bonafide subscribers, wbo, for the askcently leveling one of the last fragments covered, and foiled ths detectives in ths dinner table, and no amount of mint other." Briefly, Dr. Kcandy removed the rulucd eye and treated Mr. CraigR with “Kennedy's
of the Kopian wall that now remains in their efforts to capture them, and an seasoning will kill off that strong woolly Favorite Remedy" to build up the system, and
PERUSE THESE LIBERAL AD. RATESflavor
that
gives
one
a
suggestion
of
a
attack
was
never
made
upon
the
ckVe,
that city.
The mortar was found to be
the mull waa succeMful.
Dr. Kennedy's great auccere as a surgeon Is M.ddlevli’,so hani and strong that the men with for reasons best known to the detectives. patriarch with horns. Of coarse there
I A00 I •too difficulty broke it up.
This wall was And now cornea the strangest part of are sheep and sheep, and some mutton due to the use of ‘‘Favorite Remedy” in the Uastiags,...
• 14*
NiabvlUe...
after treatment.
is
a
sweet
and
toothsome
morsel,
espe
­
Colonel Alexan­
8.501
14.00
~2-W
built long before the Norman conquest, tho whole thing;
Are you troubled with dyspepsia llvar com­
r.'.oo । 20 oo and ita splendid strength after a thous­ der, subeeancntly believing he was cially when it is well rubbed with sea­ plaint, constipation or derangement of the kid­ Charlotte..........
7.00
tenant’s
con­ soning, and served wjth sweet gravies neys and bladder? then use Dr. Kennedy's Eaton Rapid*. .
and yean may well be cited for the ben­ miataken snout his
It will not disappoint you Rite* Junction.
gang, wrote
to and yellow turnips mashed fine, with Favorite Remedy.
16.00 j 30.00 efit of ths "master” builders of the pres­ nection with the
• inches?
him
requesting
him to keep the green salad and fried apples to accom­ Dr. Kennedy’s “Favorite Remedy" tor sale by
Rata* for larger ad». given upon ippllcatlou, ent time.
farm on tho same terms as usual. pany it. Englishmen eat mutton chops all druggists.
BuaineM cores ot five tinea or less, *5 per yr.
—A few days ago, while workingmen
every day at lunch, or even for a soli­
WEST W A. RD.
Local Notice*, ten cents a line for first Inser­ were engaged in pulling down the walls The request was readily complied with,
and the farm was occupied until the tary dinner. But think of sitting down
tion and eight cents for each aubsequeut taserSTATIONS.
of the old city armory in Brooklyn,
killing of .lease Jamas was reported, with a sw^ct rusk and a cup of flavor­
ttan.
there fell from a cavity an hermetically
ORNO STRONG,
when Howard suddenly disappeared, as less tea to a mutton chop strong enough
Ditro|i,--------- Editor and Proprietor. sealed leaden box. It was found to have did also the old colored couple hereto­ to be used as a battering-ram in a naval
Jackson, _.....
come from tho enrner-stone of the Ap­
fore spoken of, also the household goods. war! The season is now approaching,
Rites Junction.
Erentices’ Library, built in 1825. In tbe
Eaton Rapids,..
On Saturday last Colonel Alexander however, when we may justly expect
ox was an account of the laying of the
Charituc,-------received a letter from Sedalia, ^d?., the slaughter of the innocents and look
Verraox tvlllc,..
corner-stone, as published ‘in the Long
for the little lambs that skip, to settle
which read as follows:
NashvUle,......
IslMld Slar.
Graeral IjJ.jeue h»d
Hastings.. ......
down into tender chops and cutlets and
MlddfovlI)......
charge of the ceremony.
OFFICERS.
Alexan&lt;lor,Gal!*tin. Tpnn.: Dear Sir: I have Elnts surrounded bv early potatoes
Hammond.......
—A writer in a Grrman pa^er states tortile many c&lt;»urv-a»«a exxenoea vu your
owned
gravy.
Other
meats can be
Grand Rapids,.
------in
-- 7-.
that it is a custom in offices in that coun­ my«terio*M tenant known aa Howard. Vbiii i salted at their maturity, and made a
Treaainrr—Frank C. Boise.
try to have a sliced potato on the desk the cave on your far™ and you win find I permanent article of diet, but mutton
PENG
ELLA'S
WOMAN
S
FRIEND.
ThroufbCoacbraaodSlaeplnvUar* loaod from
Asanaor—John E. Barry.
ah all
tho | *mu,t. ,be eaten
.
.fresh
. and
* thoroughly
__
*die I l*
tbeaven&lt;e
attempt.
Grand Itapia* and Detroit. All train* eooMd la
in commercial houses.
He does not somethin* toinu-roatyou.
Marshall—James L. Gregory.
aame depot »l Detroit with Great Weatarn, Grand
Trustees—H. A. Barber, F. T. Boise. H. W. state whether the esculent should be
reepect,
I cooked. The fine skin on the edge of
Trunk and Caniua Southern Railway*.
Demaray, H. R. Dickinson, H. M. Lee and raw or not, but the probability is that it
Howard.
!
muUon
chops
should
be
removed
carecare­
E. C. BROWN,
H. B. LEDYARD.
ofMM r. J. Howard, j; uiumuu vuops
is boiled. Tbe use of the potato is to
' fully when it is cooked, as that strong
The receipt of this letter greatly as­
clean steel pens, and genertejy act as a tonished Colonel Alexander, who called ■ flavor lies in it.
-------------LAJ)Y
Dr iJLS,; ta blot hi. Urt I TEACHERS.
Jlonrtin.
pen-wiper. It removes all ink crust, and
about him a select number of hia friends, ,
gives a peculiarly smooth flow to the to -bom be r.^ Urn
*'______ _ Mr*
**____Tb«le
___ : .“I dined
-ho *■?£«
, I
HOUSEWIVES,
aptist church. Rev. e. b. Moody, p»«u.r
,t Stratum on &gt; leg ot lamb boiled with I „t„
„„
ink. He also states that the Hamburg
Bresklnj; down uwlrr closo^confinement^and Ih&gt;Service* cvciy Sunday at i0-.30a.tn.. Sabbath
were equally astonished.
Keeping the
clerks pass now pens two or three times
iptnach, B plum pudding, beef tender- ; maconunualiy on their fovt, will find Zoa FDcsa
matter a secret, they left the same even­ • •
meats; ____ ___________
~ ‘
througn a gas flame, and then the ink
d"« enter- . u._nn&lt;^after
J OURthe
£ Lurkcy
ing for a visit to the cave, andrtranre"
enter- ;I wore dismissed,
A
Prevention
and
Cure
on tigs and grapes not
ETHODlh-r KTjK.'Ol’AL CUliRCH—A. D. Saw- | will flow freely.
ing the same with torches, a •
Tret the’ i quit®
ow’n" 10 the unfovorableneM
row. Faalor. S-rrlrea erera tUbbatb al 10*4 i
—A modern Jonah, whom prosperous weird sight met their view. First,
H
’ ,• of the season, and on princely apples
WOMEN Jtrnv v=hr.t theca
communities would do well to avoid, has skeletons of four horses, evidently
left j! that were not very mellow.” Swilled
just shaken the dust ot Nevada from his there by tho robbers on their last raid, j —
1 —••— ’b a dish which was
considered
«7’,k2
VY LODGE NO. 37, K. of P., meets at Ita feet. Before starting thence for Oregon, as they still emit an unpleasant odor. ] rau i?.
Headaches,
Lassitude,
(Jostle Hall, Nashville, Michigan, every he made this concise but comprehensive Btanklu .ml mutrewr. -ore «re«n ! “old Irish d.licwj .nd of lb. gre.tes
b “‘J
Friday evening, for the encouragement and statement of the ill-luck which has •bout nromi—moosly, toother -itb ।
Pale or Aiothy Complexion,
support ot all worthy, true, steadfast and hon­ hounded him: "I went to Maine and
cooking-utonrils. m3
pieere ot » .^D?er
orable Brother Knights.
swilled mutton was hailed as a relic of Sleeplessness,
L. E- Lxxtz, K. R. 8. Ohxo StBOMo.C. C. the ice crop failed; I went to Florida furniture. This portion of the care is '
und the frost killed all the gardens and perfectly dry, and afforded .
Numbness, Nan1
i ooratorta- I ta”'J Li“«- I'
orchards; I went to Mississippi and they
In a niche ' roasl°d whole, in tbe inside of which
ole abode for the bandits. I
niaccllMiiroua i'ardn.
found a half WM insinuated a lamb; the lamb was
bad a flood; I went to California and in one of the chambers was found
a half
again stuffed with a hare and rabbits.'
Weak and 2.an:e Back,
n. YOUNG, M. D. Office east^idc of the people began to die with small-pox. bushel measure, such as is used by far­
In the last century there was a famous
• Main tiu, Nashville. Office hours from I Since I struck this State the Comstock mers, and in it was found a miscellan­
mines have never paid a dividend, and eous assortment of valuables, evidently I organization called the Kit-Kat Club
T to 9 a. m., aud 4 to 7 p. m.
if J go to Oregon I am willing to bet placed there aad forgotten by the rob­ which met periodically for the laudable ' l|M-eial
H GRISWOLD M. D.._____ ^Jhie I they will hare a drought."
anti social purpose of discussing the r.&gt;f«-t.
bers.
• Physician aud Surgeon. Office and res- I
super-excellence of tho mutton pies |
—A girl nsmu-d Jennie O’Brien, de­
Among the assortment was found four
tdence oppoalts ths Wolcott House. Prompt
BP.OWVS IRON BITTETW or®
manufactured by Mr. Christopher Kat ।
attention given to calls dar or nlgbL
scribed as pretty and innocent-looking, diamond rings, two diamond necklaces,
I 'aged eighteen, who has been chamber- nine diamond pins (supposed to be dia­ of London.
requiring a complete tonic; espe­
English mutton sausages, a dish tm- ' •rideneo bn t'
A FOOTE PHYSICIAN A SURGEON I maid in the Sturtevant House, New monds). thirty gold watches, sixteen ,
cially Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Inter­
• buccMur to Dr. Wickham. Office and
They aro j WMOTHE
York, was arrested the other day for Idnin gold ring*, twelve silver-watches, known here, are delicious.
residence at Dr. Wickham’s late ulliet.
mittent I-’cvcra, Want of Appetite,
made of slices of cold mast mutton,
mllcity
alleged conn"
' ' in'* the robbery
*’
'of a~d many other articles too numerous to
PromptaUentioti to calls ulgbl or day.
Ixmw of Strength, Lack of lunergy,
•sea up rol'ed up with bread crumbs and egg
tne room of Willie
Edouin,
$3,000 from thv
...............
....... -' mention; all of which is now locked up
etc. Enriches the blood, strength­
Deposit h*Kh*y eeMoned, and fried in hot but­
TvR. C. w. GOUCHER, Electlo Physician and
ths actor
TVs girl was taken to tha :i the vault of tbe Sumner .I'.,1 .’ I ter.—Detroit Pott and Tribune.
ens the muscles, and gives now
X-J Surgeon, is prepared to answer all calls
station-bouse, and maniferted the great­ Bink, in Gallatin, for identification. A
life to the nerves. Acts like a
FL PENGELLY, M. D.,
that may be mads for bls services. Office and
est alarm al her arrest. Shs wsstorusl pnotograph of a young lady which was
charm on the digestive organs,
residence opposite Roe's meat market
Sold by Drt^Qittsj
Kaissuoo. Huh.
Manuring Cora in the Hill.
into a cell, and in tbe morning taken taken at Bardstown, Ky., was among ,
removing all dyspeptic symptoms,
”
M PARMENTER, M. D. Office over ' before tho court.
While waiting for the effects. Several of the watches have
such as tasting the l&lt;x&gt;d. Belching,
It seems scarcely credible that such a
Hull’s Drug store, Vennoutvllle, Mich.
arraignment she dropped dead. It was initials which may lead to their identifi- 1
good, old-fashioned custom os manuring
thought she was an accomplice of a gang cation ; one of them is engraved as fol­
The only Iron Preparation
HAS- H. BRADY, Lawyer, Circuit Court
corn in tbe hili should be called in
of the most expert hotel thieves now in lows: "From Hughes to Toney.”
Commissioner, Real Estate and Itsuraucs
question; but we sec that quite a lively
It is thought that more valuables may
Agt Prompt attention given to al) business Now York City.—N. Y. Sun.
Rive headache. Sold by all Drug­
discussion
occurred
recently,
and
there
1
""
FOR
entrusted to my care. Conveyundug a special­
gists at $1.00 a bottle.
—William Walton has started from bo stored away in the cave, and visitors wm a disposition to decide that it iras
ty. Office opposite Union House.
a e closely watched, and only allowed
BROWN' CHEMICAL CO.
Earlington, Ky., upon a tour of the
better to spread the manure all over the
to enter the place twice daily, accompaBaltimore, Md.
L1EBH AL'SElt. Merchant Tailor and deal- world which be has no idaa of complet­ niod by guides. Yet multitude* of our land equally, then plant the corn in the
hills and let it take care of itself. If one
• v In Ready Made Clothing. See me ing in eighty days, his object being very
people,
through
tho
courtesy
of
Colonel
before you purchaae clothing.
Fit* guar
different from that of Pbineas Fogg, lie
has a good supply of manure, and can
Alexander,
have
had
the
pleasure
of
anteed.
lx &gt;nds to unfurl in every capital the
I bleb
afford to give tne whole ground a thor­
seeing it all for themselves.—Gallatin
ough dressing, it may do very well to
ONAH B. RA8ET, Exprtw sod Drayman­ stars and stripes and to secure tbe auto­ fTenn.) Tenncsteran.
graph of every ruler who is able to
let the bills alone; but we are quite sure
Goods and ftafigage carried to any placd In
THOUSANDS OF CASES
write his own name- “When I have
that where the supply of manure is lim­
finished my trip,’’ ho says, “I shall be Divination by Mi ass of Sheep’s Bones. ited, it will be found far better to put a
IRAM R DTCKIN8ON, manuficturor of
PERFECTLY CURED.
part of it at least in the hili before drop­
atxl dealer In Hard Wood Lumber. Build­ the only man wbo ever went around the
M. G. Perrol speaks, in his “Memnires ping the com, and we have little doubt
world without winking," his evelids
ing Materia) a specially. Cash paid (or logs. Mill
-AWARDEDaad yard on Sherman St., at ML C. R-R. crusting
having been blown off by an explosion d’ Arche ilogie d’Epigraphie, et d’His- but that even when the whole surface is
torie,
”
of
divination
by
the
inspection
in a coal mine several years ago. Mr.
abundantly manured it would still pay
s«* had vsaAcrfal turecaa, ord an Inmcnae
AMES FLEMING, nnctlcal Jeweler and
ailo In eTer,. part of Ui« Cointry. In husWalton acknowledjrus lljst he is "on of -heep’s bones. This method of pen- in many cases to manure in the hill.
WaU-h-tuaker. Clocks. Watches, Silver and
drcds of caaoailhaacured where all clxe bad
Plated Ware. Jeweler and Optica) Goods. Bock­ eccentric coon,” and it is not imjxissible traling i he secrets of the future is largely
We noticed some limo ago the experi­
CiOid. Itl» mild. »ut •Sclent, CERTAIN
ford Watebeaa specialty. Repairing and Eugravthat he will accomplish bis purpose, for resorted to at the present time, and the ments made in one of the German
IX 1TB ACTION, but hanalrea In all caaca.
inv done In a workmanlike manner.
t TTt clean***. Klrenrlbee* aad «l»reX»w
he is possessed of much money and Greek peasant has coofider..3 in it us experimental farms on small and large
Life to all the Important arcana of tbe body.
absolute as that with which his ancestors
ineffable assurance.— Chicago Herald.
seeds. Small t&gt;ecds, like small potato
Tho natural acUon of the Kldneya H reAored
regarded the examination of the entrails
RNO STRONG,plain and fancy joo rnnter.
Tho Ideor la clennaeil of all dtacaae.and tbe
eyes, never produce as good crops as
Tbe best facilities for doing’work of any
of a sacrificial victim. This practice is,
Lowela more treoly and haalUrfully. In Itl*
Th® JameH Bayn in Tennessee.
large seed, although the ground in qual­
printing office in Barry county. When tn need
way tho wore* dlaeaaco are •radicated froo
however, no longer restricted.to diviners
af printing of any description, whatever, see me
ity may be c jually rich. If even the
•hnayatesn.
During the past few days great inter­ and sorcerers only; on solemn occasions
before you buy.
Aa it baa been proved by thouaanda the
mere size of a seed gives it an advan­
est has been taken by our citizens in each man may act as his own augur on
tage in its first start in life, how much
visiting
the
cave
on
tlie
farm
ot
Colonel
behalf
of
himself
und
his
family.
I
TACOB OSMUN, Llvervman, barn near WoL
more valuable must be a good stock of
James
Alexander,
the
well-known
ban
­
remember
once
when
I
was
returning
♦J cott House. First class turnouts at reason­
nutritious food ready to hand as soon as
ker of this place. Hu farm adjoins tbe from an excursion into Achaia, near
able rates. Special rates to commercial men.
—MEDALStho roung plant is in a condition to use
Funeral and wedlng j*rties furnished with car
Hite farm, of Logan County, Kentucky, Aigi*n, I was obliged to stop in the
it? It is inaced their first early start in
and is just over tbe State line, on the evening in the outskirts of Mourla, at a
SPRING MEDICINE.
life which make? all the difference be­
Tennessee side, and the cave spoken of [&gt;easant'&lt;» bouse, where I asked hospi­
TT'ELLOGG &amp; BELL, proprietors Planing
tween a good crop and a poor one. If
■“ MUL Planing and Matching, Resawing above has for years past been the ren­ tality for the night. He took me into a {Hants once get behind it is very hint
dezvous of the James Brothers’ gang of room where his wife and his four chil­
and Moulding a specialty. Scroll Sawing,
or them to pull up again.
There are
Brackets, Window and Door Frames made to
outlaws, and was a safe depository for dren were beginning their evening meal,
order. Wood Turning tn all its branches..
The Best Known Remedy for
valuables of all kinds that they secured of which he invited me to paytake. I but a few months of the growing time,
and a good start is a great gain.
GET IT OX TOUT. DRUGGIST. ITJCT. Sl.OO
on
their
numerous
raids.
In
this
cave
think
it
was
a
few
days
after
Easter,
and
'IHAS. W. DEMARAY, Dealer ta Watches,
Backache or Lamo Back.
WELLS, RICHADBSO.X A Co.. Prop’s,
For the same reason, it is au error to
J Clocks, fine Jewelry aud Silverware, being
the celebrated bandits have rested and the food set before us was mutton. Tho
(Will rend tb* dry port redd.) St ttl ISCTO-t. TT.
Rheumatism
or Lamo Joints.
bnry
manure
in
the
ground
at
anytime,
a practical Jeweler, patrons can depend upon
feasted after many a hot parsuit by the children had just begun to talk freely,
Cramps or Sprains.
having their repairing done right Two doors
officers of the law, and it is said that not and conversation was becoming ani­ when the crop is au annual one to be
Neuralgia or Kldnoy Diseases.
south of Truman's store.
sowed
in
tho
spring
and
taken
off
in
the
a few too inquisitive personshave lost mated, when all of a sudden my host
Lumbago, Sovoro Achosor Palna
fall.
And yet this is a very common
OHN BRAUN, Shoemaker. Special atten­ their lives while endeavoring to explore flung something violently on tbe ground, practice. Manure is spread on the sur­
Femulo Weaknoss.
tion given to flue and sewed boot*, also the wonders ot the cavern while the struck his forehead, and as I looked at
repairing. All manufactured work made from bandits were in possession of tho same. his wife, seeking in her eyes an explana­ face, plowed down and the seed sown
best of stock sod warranted. First door south The cave is located in an isolated spot tion, bhe burst into tears. A young girl on the surface with the manure several
Are Sapcrior to Liniment*.
Boise's hardware.
upon the farm, and is surrounded by a of twenty was lying on a nig at the'end inches away. It would be far better in
most cases’to plow the ground first, and
dense undergrowth, and the entrance to ot the room in tbe shade; I had not
JJ A. BARBER, JI. It.,
then
spread
the
manure
on
the
surface
it seems a mure sink hole, into which the observed her. She had recently fallen
and harrow It In before sowing the seed.
* HOMOEOPATHIC
water from the earth’s surface flows, ill. Her father, turning his eyes toward
Tbc month* ol March, April and Mar are the
They Strengthen.
It is probable that most persons are
t&gt;rw aiicceedve aret-en of a bridge which connect
forming in the cave a beautiful stream her, picked up the object he had thrown
They Sooth-:.
■of water aa clear as crystal. Tbe en down and handed it to me. It was th« aware of this, and would follow the
Eractice were it not for tho additional
tmotnrna thia tree. Surin&lt; la n trying
tranoe, however, is large enough to ad­ blade-bone of the sheep.
"You se&lt;
.bor involved.
By manuring in ad­
Office first door cast of Opera House, and mit the passage of a man on horseback, nothing, perhaps,” he said to mo
vance, tho hauling can be done when Kidney complaint* and l'«n»tln»Uoh of the Bowels
near residence on corner of Washington and and the bandits’ horses were frequently "nevertheless, it is written there thi,
BtateBuMU, Naihville, Mich.
we are not busy; Tn the other case it and for women who arv chronically *ch&gt;ei to any
oorrale&lt;l there for days and nights to­ my daughter is going to die; .she w&lt;
of the loncestaMeno of pr&gt;T&gt;lc*l slimeDta to which
gether, while their masters rolled them­ no’t recover.” 1 endeavored todissuaiA must be done at once, no matter how which their dollcate *ex I* heir. Indications to
yyOIAMkTT HOUSE,
selves up in ther blankets and enjoyed him from this idea, but in vain; all tile badly work may drive us before we can
such sweet and refreshing sleep as only family were plunged into despair, and sow the seed; and then it is so much
NMhville Itflchlimn,
a sense of perfect security could give gave way to the wildest grief. As fate easier to haul over solid ground than
A. 8. Fcotk, Proprietor.
them.
would have it, the girl actually did die a over ground newly plowed. It is there­
troubled tn spring
Tbe farm upon which the eave is few days afterward. During the war of fore good farming very often to sacri­ or disordered Liver,
Tta« la a nrxi Ratal. rantraUf Jocaiad. well kept,
pettta, eonstlpation:
•»d !:• patron* are alway* taro of niting batter arlocated has for tho last five years been Independence the same method was fice a little of whnt in some senses may
if so. take wit boot
nniM-cecMery dvfoy Dr, Kennedy’s FAV-rented by a party giving his name as F. employed for foretelling the issue of the be the best plan, for that greater prin­
•tbvr hotel In Barty county.
IBMEDY. No ewdiotne U so hsrmotcM
&gt;la Room* on find door.
J. Howard.
The rent was always paid struggle, and the famous CapL Kurais- ciple, economy of time, which is often of
ft ■ V r UT A obtained for ssrcbsulail dark
Dll L ■ I V ***■ "&gt;'dl&lt;-al &lt;&gt; r ether raw pount
in advance promptly, and no questions tratris was guided by tbe presage in far more importance in farm profits. So
were asked nun by Colonel Alexander, engaging in or deferring an action. with this discussion about manuring
J£A.BlSn,
Whether it b a good
who paid only an occasional visit to tho Certain conditions are indis[&gt;ensable to corn in the .hill.
place, as it waa located quite a distance the prediction of the future by the bone; policy to manure corn in tbe hill, is al­
Th. FAVORITK H.MEl
from Gallatin.
There was a log bouse the sheep must have been purchased by together a practical question; but as to
on the place containing four rooms, the person who eats it, and kept alive actual advantages of tbe practice in it­
which were neatly but plainly furnished. for three days in his house; otherwise self, we think there ought to be no dif­
Howard was absent the greater part of the presage applies to the person who ference of opinion whatever.—German­
the time, but where no one in the vicin­ has sold the animal. This superstition town Telegraph.
ity seemed to know—and the only per­
—The work on the Hudson River
J£ATHBUN HOUSE,
sons seen about the house generally were but it MI to be presumed that they found
BEATTVS organs ttm.
On the
an old colored woman ana her husband, some way of eluding in rcstricuve con­ tunnel is progressing rapidly.
Jersey shore, 165 men are employed.
who appeared to have charge of things ditions, for they are not in the habit of
The workmen are not allowed to enter
purchasing their sheep, and they have
aad attending the few bead of ^ttie no bouMt toSeep them fct—Afoely prohibitChe use of liquor is
that graced upon the farm. There wm Uatth (ksforyY. Herald.

SSashville girtrtonj.

For Women,

B

jjROWs

M

IRON

I

W

W

L

W
C

KIDNEY-WORT'

THE GREAT CURE
RHEUMATISM

S
J

H

KIDNEY-WORT^

J

O

Benson’s
Capcine
6

= KIDNEY-WORT

Porous
Plaster.

(

. KIDNEY-WORT

J

A SPRING DEFENCE!

Physician and Surgeon.

CAUTION.“X”®^

f

BOOT AND SHOE

NO PATENT NO PAY

�MrBrida..
■•
'

BATDBDAY

■

-

HAY. *t. 18SS.

.appMMl to be th. maltol ovu^dnnk
io, lotoikauio, 1U]»« &gt;» Uorinr born
. .
• . a tuo«t
. ... the.-1time
—- for the last
intoxicated
three week*. He leaves a wife and two
children in nearly destitute dream-

MICHIGAN NEWS.
A yoang man named McKay was
Ti-J. Ludlow of Adrian fell sudden­
killed Saturday, at the lumber mill of
ly dead, one day la«t week.
Oscar Rich, seven mile* east of McJohn Cannicliael, a brick mason st
Rridfcf. JIo waa handling logs and
Pontiac, wai kijled by the cars. May 98.
oneotthem rolled against a small tree
I£«i* Waits committed suicide via
Mud^uao at East Saginaw, last Fri- causing, it to strike McKay on tho head
and canting almost instant death..
Charles Meaner attempted the life of
A girl in Sturgis, is engaged to five
Horace Beckel, proprietor of the
different fellows and still she pines
Globe Hotel at Bay City, on Sunday
fur more victim*.
afternoon, by gring a revolver at him.
A (my named Brooks had bls head
A bystander knocked Meaner down
cut off by a circular saw in Quay's mill
with a chair before he could fire a se­
st Chelwiygau on Friday..
cond time, and the Chief of Police then
At Owosaa, Saturday afternoon, an
eld man named Christopher Haller was took him in charge. ,
A meeting of 40 mill-owners at Mus­
accident Iy drowned hi ft mil! race.
kegon, May 27, considered a proposi­
John Rittenhon**, nged 17 years,
tion of tbe mill hands to work 11 hours
wa* drowned nt Benton Harbor on
except Saturday; to quit at 5 and work
Friday, by the capsizing of a boat.
10 hours that day only, and make no
Fred Straight committed suicide nt
distinction between union and non-un­
Grund Rapid* on Friday, because the
ion men. The terms were ratified at a
object of his affections rejected his
meeting of the men in the evening, and
suit.
the mill* are all running this weak.
James Brooks was. fatally injured
by a aw while cutting blocks in D.
FROM THE UPPER PEW SULA.
L. Qnuy’s shingle mill at Cheboygan,

May »•
«
Fire got into a lumber pile at Spring
Lake last week, and destroyed nearly
f 9(0.WO worth before it,was extin­
guished.
%
, Calvin and WinrSfoss, colored, aged
&gt;8 and^ ’ years, respectively, were
drowned in tho river at Kalamazoo,
May 31*1.
Dr. Geo. Muellcrwei**, an old Ger­
man physicinn, of Saginaw City, com­
mitted suicide by hanging, while drank
on Saturday.
At Mann A Moore’s mill in Muskegon,
on the 81*t. n flying wedge struck Seth
E*t(s. nged 56, in thu bend, cutting it
nearly in two, and canning death.

wiU echopff, "Over Uh&gt; bids aad far
away,” and the pl*atk hood dfinduatry,
guided by wit sod wiodom, be sees ac- .
complhhint wonder* gtoaton the same
ground where to-day stands the forest
tree*, growing in bounty side by aide,
shading and beautifying suctTan enor­
mous track of land that we hear no one
Ray: "woodsman spare that tree, strike
net a single blow”.
Terily, the heroes of tbe Hsing gener­
ation, wbo will dear, till, sow, reap and
prosper, in the boundlew forests hero,
must undergo the same privations and
hardships as did bur fathers and fore­
fathers, or the early settlers around the
now beautiful Nashville, on Thornap­
ple river, in the days, fifty or u hun­
dred years ago, when they were pio­

KEEP US BUSY

neers.
We can see no reason why this coun­
try is not adorned with all the paraph-

crnlia for a fast, progressing country,,
when the ice gets fairly broke. What
it lacks in farming is more than made
up in its great mineral wealth. The
timlier and soil'in most places are good,
and judging from what wu have seen
for growing garden vegetables, it sur­
passes the southern portion of tlie
state. Raising corn, winter wheat, etc.,
cannot be successful which asci ibid to
the shortness of tbe season and the sev­

A LARGE LINE OF

PARASOLS!

erity of the winter.
We hear of one man who is doing r
little something in the way of farming,
who lias cultivated and raised four pair
oftwinsonhis place in the last six
Ontonagon, Mat, 34th, 1873.
years, all living and thrifty, and n wag
Du ar News Reapers.
informs ua that he is plowing the
Again we find a few leisure moments ground preparatory for reaping again,
to spend with you. We have exper­ when tho golden harvest comes.
ienced a cold, snug season. The snow
It is amusing to see how ignorant the
has averaged from two to five feet majority uf the people here are. in re­
deep, all winter, and tbe weather has gard to farming. A self-reaping and
been cold and severe. The season is self-binding machine in operation
very backward; not so much as a gard would be as great a sight to the major­
en ha* been plowed, and a heavy snow ity of this people a* the copper miue*
storm and cold north wind prevails to­ are to the people farther south. In
day. Men and boys are shivereng on .farming they are ignorant, but if you I
tbeatreeu, notwithstanding they are wish to know anything about drifts,
muffled up with scarfs, fur hat* and *.ddit* and fathums, they can tell you
overcoats, and our girU, bear with us all about them.
I AM NOW RECEIVING A FULL STOCK OF GOODS SUITABLE FOR THE SPRING TRADE. INCLUDING
for we must tell you how tliay are
Thia is a wonderful country for fish. 1 i he Largent and Beat Stock of
obliged to manage during the cold A few moments ago we were in con­

Battle Creek lost within tlie past few
day*, five citizens from that loathsome
disease—Mnall pox. She has one more
ease, but hope* to pull it through.
spell.
versation with a man who wascnguge i
T. A. Daucharme of Port Huron, and
For many years past the weather in hauling suckers from the Lake shore
a companion, were out boating on the during the winter season, has been so by the wagon load, and was using
St, Clair river on May Slot, when their exceedingly cold that it became dan­ them for manure on his garden. What
cigft-capsize d "nod the former was gerous for girls co venture out farther say you of that.you wade-up-the-creeks
drowned..
than the wood-shed, and in view of of Maple Grove. He also inform* u*
Chnuney Farr, aged 90 yearn, was ran this fact, a few of tbe enterprising and that last year he cultivated and raised
over and killed by a back at Flint, on energetic young men have introduced, 100 bushels of pototoes off from a chunk
Friday. He wa* an inmate of the in their behalf, a machine, called the of ground 200 feet in length by 100 feet j
county house’and hod been to sec Fore- "celebrated squeezer.’’ which is of in width, nhich be bad manured with
pangli’s show.
light capacity, convenient and handy, these slimy suckers. He told it for tbe
Joseph Moselt, of Newago county, aud fullfills all the requirements of die truth, with his hand on the edge of the
having been found guilty of raping the sex. They are "sold" at a small mar­ wagon box, and though some may
nine year old daughter of a farmer of gin, which enables the poor, a* well as think it a big fish story, nevertheless,
Unit county lias been sentenced to 25 the wealthy, to procure one, and now, as The News uufrequently indulges iu
years in States prison.
during the cold snap*, when the girl* | in
___ big tisl. storiu , we will
....... ...................
let it slide in
Chuk, die young colored man who wish to go to church or out on a U-te a- ( for
and
i,ave gol our baud
murdered an old tnun named Hender­ tete, they take their Rqueezera under in, will venture another, which wc can
son ut the house uf Henderson's way­ their arms and walk boldly out of the vouch for. On the last day of April,
ward daughter, a few week* ago, ba* house, and wheh the cold bleak wind*
while returning from the mountain*,
been sentenced to ten year* in (be from thu frigid zone strike* them, th ey we were obliged to cross a small river,
State* prison.
quickly coil it around their farthingale, and ns the river were badly overflowed
Last Saturday the anven year old and go tripping along: “Oh. Beulah with surface water we predicted a bard
son of E. J. Kelly of the Pontiac Bill land ! Sweet Beulah land I"
task in getting across, but we were
Poster, wa* knocked down arid ran
The usual cold weather that preval* happily &lt; isappointed, for we "skipped*
over by a lumber wagon, bis right i* attributed to the large quantities of across easily on suckers’ back*.
shoulder torn out cf place, and other ICC
ice in
the mitv
Artic Jjeas, which
III IUV
......... i* working
.. W.
We arc entertaining a hope that wc
Houth, and, according to German pa- | Will be able to sail over to thu Cana­
serious injuries inflicted.
The • body of John McArthur of per*, i* causing many marine disasters
dian shore next week aud salute the
Ea*t Saginaw,mentioned in last week’s and great lo** of life.
“Canucks.’’
News a* mysteriously disappeared,
Tbe remaining band ot Chipcwn In­
As Ever.
waa found floating in Saginaw river dians in Ontonagon Co., are'at present,
V’. D. Andrews.
on Saturday. Accidental
drowning mourning the loss of their respected
“Brick” Pomeroy i* making hi* eight'
is the verdict.
Chief, Wau-Sake-sic. Con de-gon, who
The penalty for committing murder expired at hi*home, at the banks of page paper—Pomeroy’* Great Weal—
is gradually growing less. Chas. V. Gil- Ontonagon river, April 351h, '82. having hotter, livelier, better and meaner than
liaro.agvd 18. who murdered hi* moth­ lieen Chief of the Ontonagon band ever. He ha* made a big hit with it in
Denver tire wonderful city of Colorado,
er at Port Huron, in September last, over thirty years, and succeeding hi*
waa on Monday last sentenced to ten father. He wm buried on the banks of and appear* to be spending much ot |
years imprisonment in thoSlates Pris­ the Sleeping river, 20 miles below On­ tho money he i* making out of hia
Hia Saturday
on.
tonagon. aud his own and neighboring mine* orf the paper.
Cyras Fuller, a married man nearly bafd* of Indians, believe be has gone Nicbt Chapters arc tho best Of it* great
60yearsold, who* home is near An­ to the happy hunting ground* of his features aud opens up new fields of
twerp, has been arrested and jailed at ancestors, never more to know trouble. thought. His Parson Pomeroy’s Ser­
Paw Paw,charged with seducing a gnl Wausakesic i* a compound Indian mons are red hot, and if published in
18 year* old. She became a mother when word, “Wau’sa” meaning light or book form would outsell Bunyan’s Pil­
only a few days past 13.
bright, Kesic, the sky. Hence the lit­ grim Progress, or the Innocents Abroad.
A gravel pit four miles northwest of eral interpretation of his name is "the How he dare publish such sermon* is a
my*tery, but he does. But little that
Kalamazoo, caved in, May 27, and bur­ bright sky.”
ied J. W. Pierce, a prominent fanner
Boats are now arriving daily, and is goingon cBcapes his attention. The
of that locality, and two of hia hired the visitors from other shores are great mining interests of Colorado receives
men named Hact and Koenig, killing in number, and the season bid* fair to extra attention, ns thi» great and profit­
able industry in that State'is so rapidly
all three. Tliey were in tbe pit at the become one of considerable interest.
time digging gravel.
Many wealthy eastern capitalists looming up. Pomeroy’s Great West is
A new 2,500 horse power Leavitt have invested large amounts of money worth more than the prlct, Sl.OO per
hoisting engine has recently peen put in the iron and copper lands of the year, and if you wi*h something origin­
into operation iii the Calumet &amp; Hecla country, and it is predicted that some al, independent and very interesting,
mine, in the upper peninsula, which is large developements will be made be­ send for it. Address, Mark M. Pomeroy,
the largest engine of its kind in opera­ fore another winter arrives. For years Denver, Colorado.
tion in tbe United States if not in the past, the want of a railroad, running
A young clergyman of Richmond,
world.
over tbe mineral ranges, seems to have Va., accepted an invitation to marry a
On Monday a Scotchman named been the greatest pull-back, and the
former sweetheart of his own to a
James Trale, was drowned at tbe Cin- railroads, which are now in vogue, and
more successful wooer.
Tbe ordeal
cintwai mill in Bay City, by falling those surveyed every portion of tbe
proved too severe for him, aud he fal­
from a lumber pile into the river. Hi* mineral belt, and this seems to be the
tered and swooned io tbe midst of tbe
body wa* soon recovered. Ho was 40 main spring to action.
ceromony, which therefore bad to be
years of age and a stevedore by occu­
It is plain.to see that the mining bus­ deferred several hours.
pation.
iness is a lottery. One man may work
Robert Graham, foreman of a lumber hard all tbe days of his life and go in
RAILROADERS’ RELIEF.
That most comfortable Ticket Office, 187
eamp near Cedar, Gladwin county, poverty and grey hair* to the grave,
was alipt and killed by John Anderson, while his next door neighbor, engaged Weat atreet, New York, is presided over by Mr.
May 34 The murderer is in jail at in the same avocation, may “stike it C. V. V. Ward, wbo thys addressed one of our
Midland, aa tbe men threatened to rich,” and live in luxury, peace and representative* recently: "Some months ago I
bad rheumatism in my right arm, and was un­
break open the Gladwin county jail plenty all tbe days of his life. It is
able to raise 1L I wa* advised by a friend to use
ami lynch hiin.
plain to see, too, that a man can ’lam. St. Jacobs OU. I did so, aud before tbc eecA company from London. Englane, and ’larn, and keep a learning all tbe ood bottle bad been exhausted my arm was per
buA purchased land in Portland, and days of his existence, und go to the fectly well.—Brooklyn Eagle.
will pnt up buildings for tlie manu­ grave a fool at last; but such is life,
Fame is no produce of terrestrial soil, but
facture of bone aad blood manure, and so it is to be, and so it will con ■ paint is, and the beat is manufactured by Sher
Eta, Wfflama A Oo. Sold by F.T. Botoe.
boot blocking, matches, stove polish in no to be, tboogbout all the intermin­
and calcine. They will give employ- able generations yet to come.
CATARRH OF THE BLADDER.
Stinging, smarting, irritation of tbc urinary
The suitable farming lands of the
pMsages, diseased discharges, cured by BuehuAt Jackson ou tlih sight of the 3rd forest are being entered and at some
the New York express atruek und in­ future day, thehx stroke ot the hardy
stantly trilled Michael Ryau. Ryan waa pioneer will be beard, hewing oat a
ou tbc track a few rod* from the atroet home in the wilderwesa—be it ever so
crowing aud wx* thrown with great humble, thriving towns and villages, of Catarrh”.
force again*} the switch house, break- will spring up, loeumetives and mil!
IN THE HOUSE.
whiatlca and the chime* of church bells,
A auddeu death •conrred Saturday great Hie ear, tlie tnelodfoua btfjclC ot
ai«ht at Black Bro* A. Mwey's lumber tlie farmer's wif«rat the noonday time.

Wall IPapQr and Carpets

G.A. TRUMAN &amp; SON

The First to the Front I
Ready Made Clothing, for Men, Boys, and Youths,
Ever brought to Nashville, aud ranging in price from three to thirty dollar* persuit.

In

Ladies, Misees, Gents &amp; Children’s Fine Shoes
I keep the celebrated Rochester make-, Siylish, Durable anc Cheap.

I have tbe latest style*. and can fit all parties.

At prices that defy competion.

In

I always keep a full stock of

Cash paid for Butter aud Eggs.

Pioneer Store

— THAT------

NOT ONE

E ARE NOW RECEIVING OUR STOCK OF

Of my Customers Complain

goods FOR THE SPRING TRADE
AND AKE SELLING THEM--------

------ OF TH]

Flour!Clear
I

------ FROM —

Down!

THE CAREFUL MAN IS EVER ON THE ALERT
to take advantage of favorable opportunities.

16817685
------ BUT-------

UNIVERSALLY SATISFIED

JNO. M. ROE

No matter • how disguised, that prompt paying customers
must make good to the dealers who sell on credit all losses
from poor debts, long time accounts, sickness, failing crops,
loss of property, or dishonesty of other customers.

That the merchant who aell on credit must take into ac
count all the probabilities above mentioned when he offers hi
merchandise for sale. And these losses amoqpt in the aggre­
gate to a fair yearly income—a loss which he could not long
sustain were there no remedy, but there is a remedy and that
remedy is in the PROMPT PAYING CUSTOMERS.

DAKOTA NO BETTER INVESTMENT
------ MAY BE-

Can be made, if necessary, than to hire money and pay
; for your merchandise as you purchase it.

THE PLACE TO BUY A FARM! ----------------- -WE SELL----------------------- B U T-------

Prints for 6 cts. yard.
Ginghams 8 to 11 cts*

Red Table Linen 50 to 55 cts.
THE PLACE TO BUY TurkeyTable
Oil Cloth 28. Floor, best, 42 cts.
GROCERIES,

PROVISIONS,
CROCKERY,

BootH and Shoes,
Hats and Caps.
General Clothing;,

Groceries, Etc,
GLASSWARE,

HANGING LAMPS,

We are thankful for the liberal patronage given us in the
past under the old credit system and solicit "Is continuance
under the Ready Pay. We know we can be more serviceable
to you in the futuie than we could possibly be in the past

COJIfE AND SEE FOE YOUBSELF.
thta kind, te at

Bria, tour Butter:

_________

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                  <text>T

ORNO STRONG. I
Editor

afd

Frofhiktor.

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun

J

VOLUME IX.
LIFE IN NASHVILLE,
And Her Environs.
—Beef IS cents; potatoes tl.40. This
is a hard time for editors.

—And again on Thursday the rain
came down just as though wo hadn’t
bad ft shower for six week®.
—Onr ci titans are watching with pe­
culiar interest the effort of ft Vermontviiiian io edit a paper in Nashville.
—Homer Blair has built a street
sprinkler &gt;qnd expect* to, commence
opera th
' * .thoroughfare
’ ' S
onanr*public
to-day.
•nt at th® Vt. Villn depot
must l»e Imrd-henrtod to refuse tn di­
vide his comtniaaon on western tickets
with the Hawk man.
.

—Bntter is high, but beef is higher
and we have abnnt decided that it- is
butter to bear the ills we hnve than to
• fly to others we know not ef.
—June 10th nnd the thud of the slap­
jack still resounds throughout the
land. But one old resident ever re­
members of such a backward spring.

—Children cultivate first cIom moral
characters, and then in after years
when you tell about this backward
spring, people will believe yon—per­
haps.
—Owing to the extreme high water
persons having cows pastured on
Brndj s flAt’a have been obliged topnt
sinkers on them to keep them down to
grass.
ttJ. W. Powlea’ carding and spinning
works have been put in shape to manufnctiire the entir ■ wool clip of this
section into rolls and yarn.
See advt.
in another column.
—A novel procession attracted not a
little attention on Tuesday. It was ten
huge loads of l:imlw*r, brought in by
the Rhnup brothers, who disposed of it
to Fowler &amp; Tngeraon.

—A. C. Buxton has received a nobby,
little tipright engine, mnnafactnred by
a Lansing firm, and is daily expecting
a Koil*hrtrben both Will Iu- placed in
his mnnnfacrnry for motive power.
—The Hastings Banner mvm ;'“When
you gn to Middleville stop at the John­
son House." A*that is the only hotel
there the inference is thnt some nne
hftji h&amp;n putting up nt the hay scales.

NASHVILLE. BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, JUNE 10, 1882.
at the Christain church. A good pro­
gram has Ixien prepared aud a full attendacc is desiretL
Mrs. Chas. Cummins and Mrs. Hib­
bard of Bellevue, visited their sister
Mrs. N. 8. Boothe at Mrs. Goucher's on
Tuesday.
Fourteen residents of this village and
vicinity, attended the state Imnd tour­
nament at Jackson this week to hear
the baas drum blow.
Ira Bacbellor.thinks the bottom bus
fell out of corn-fields. While investi­
gating his the other day lie went in
clear to his belly- band.
.
Special attention is called to the card
—Perry Flryharty, who has been low
of
L.
P.
Cole
of
Thorn^pple.
Lake in
with cousumption for sometime, died
early Saturday morning, aged 73 years. this issue. Mr. Colote better prepared
than
ever
to
furnish
a
pleasurable
day
The deceased came to the spot upon
which Nashville is now located, seven­ of recreation to the weary.
Will
Peck
of
Caledonia,
assisted
teen yeats ago, when her business in­
terests could be briefly summed up as a Richard to run the M. C. R. R. business
sawmill, store and boarding house. on Tuesday and -Wednesday, during
Mr. F. soon after bought out the latter the absence of the boss, who was off
paying *1,600 eash for-ft, but misfor­ helping to many his brother.
Mrs. N. S. Booth, mentioned in The
tune came upon hirnnud be died penni­
less. He leaves a wife, three sons and News as being treated for cancer at
Dr.
Goucher’s, has had the same re­
two daughters. The funeral sermon
was preached by Rev. A, D. Newton at moved, is recoving fast and will return
to
her
home in Kalaino to-day.
the M. E. church on Sunday morning.
If W. S. Powers, late of that defunct
—At the 4th of July meeting on Sat- Greenback organ, the Nashville Bugle,
uiday evening, the seuse of the •meet­
is no “dead beat,” he’s the worst
ing seemed to be “to celebrate,” pro­ “dead” green backer in the town of
viding a liberal sum could be raised for
Castleton.—Hastings Democrat.
expenses. A committee was appointed
Good cheer always prevails at the
to solicit contributions and the meeting
lieartlistone of Mr. and Mr*. G. A.
adjourned to Tuesday night.
The
Truman, consequently the Christian
committee then reported two hundred
social held there on Tuesday evening
dollars subscribed, and it was decided
was an enjoyable affair. Receipts •5to celebrate; the committee meantime
to continue work until die subscription
HASTINGS.
was doubled.
Efforts will be made to.
April ahoweni lutvc Anally come.
make this one of the most interesting
Wheat has commenced to head out and is
and successful celebrations ever hold in
Nashville. Let every man lend their looking finely.
F,000.000 Wall-eyed pike were deposited in
mental, physjcal and financial aid Hi
Gun Lake last Saturday.
this end.
Ml** Ella Williams ha* engaged as. clerk In
the store of E. (i. Hoglc.
LOOAL GIBBLE-G ABBLE
The Cheeney *l«tcr* will give a concert at
Uqion ball, June 15th.
Andrew and John Russ from New Mexico are
Nashville will celebrate;
visiting friend* Id Boating* they will return in
Della Oldfield is quite sick. a couple of weeks.
Transplant croquet hoopg.
Mr. Earl Brown ha* purchased the bakery
Blt-saed ®re the peas milkers.
stock of Mr. H. Lesher and took poseuion
Very fine rain on Thursday.
i last Wednesday.
Hurd to Itcat—the spring carpeL
Dr. Woodburn started for the west. Monday
, Judge Kiileu threatens (o quit smok­ morning. He left quite a number of anxious
friends in Hatting*,
'
ing.
—Ah we go to press we learn that the
4th of July celebration is an assured
fact. Below we give the presidents and
vice presidents: President uf Lbe day,
8. 8. Ingerson. Nashville; Vice PresidcnU W. S. Powers, Nashville; F.’ D.
Soules, Castleton; 0. P. Wellman, Cas­
tleton , 8. W. Mapes, Kalamo; Capt.
Squires, Vermontville; Jesse Jordan,
"Woodland; J. D. Loomis, Sunfield; A­
S. Kilpatrick, Woodland;
Thomas
Blinslon, Carlton; R. 8. Grant, Hast­
ing; Orson Swift, Maple Grove; Geo.
Mason, Maple Grove; W. W. Cole,
Assyria.

Billie Griffith has returned from Da­
—We understand thnt the Catholics .
kota.
will dedicate their lately acquired
Farmer Geo. Moigan ia in Illinois
hnnae of worship nn July 6th, and thnt
visiting. .■
»
Risbnp Borgea* of Detroit, assisted by
The Entcrpenn society is drilling for
Beys, J. G. Ehrenatrnann and McManus
a concert
.
of Grand Rapid*, will officiate.
Emmett Everts has returned to
—The village mdinance prohibiting ;Nashville’
cattle from running nt Inrge takes ef­
Frank Parker tbrcatensxto go abroad
fect next Wedne«dny.
The Marshal (
never to return.
and pound master hnve been' instruct­
The blow of Thursday leveled a num­
ed to enforce the Inw to the letter nnd ।ber »f fine maples.
all cattle fonnd in the streets after that
Geo. Gallatin is laid on the shelf with
day wH! h’ impounded.
.a big boil over the.eye.
Weknmc, season of string beans.
The paint brush is slicking up mahy
Lettuce, dandelfrn green*,
; Nashville residences.
Radlsbes and juicy beet*.
The eai ly bud catches the frost, tliis
New-laid eggs and fre*b-born meat*.
year, and no mistake.
Welcome, season of delfehta,
A new clerk at Aylsworth’s' store—
Btimy day* and brresy night*;
Fred. Gaylord of Vt Ville.
Welcome, hale and hearty chin*.
Engine and Hose Co. No. 1, long to
. Doctors’ physic, doctors' bllla
—Asoaking rain storm set in on Fri- 1to see thnt engine arrive.
Wtn. Jarrard, living ashort distance
day afternoon, continuing until Mnn. auth of the village, is serously ill.
dny morning, which caused the Thorn­
F. C. Buiae and Geo. Hubbard have
apple to rise about right feet and
painted their respective residences.
Brady’s flats to resmble an inlnnd sea. '
Work proceedeth apace on Dr.
But the storms have erased, the dnrk ,
Young’s and Juo. Bell’s residences.
clouds passed by, the bright sun again
Mrs. W. H. Packard of Charlotte,
shines forth in its splendor and the. riv­
visited Miss Bell Truman on Monday.
er ia fnat receding to its usual level.
The Young editor of the Olio has
—Elder Price and wife, livingnorth, gone over to Tekonsha to see his mn.
were driving into town Wednesday '
Mrs. Lee Reed of Hastings, .visited
evening, when n small l»oy came roar
frieuds in Nashville, one day last week.
ice dawn Rrrd SL, frightened t lieir In­
A. S. Winn of Knowersville, N. Y.,
dian nony nud Mr. and Mrs. Price were ia visiting bis brother, Dr. A. H. Winn.
tipped nnL
The latter was bruised _ A rainy day and a big crowd made
and shook np on bud that the services lota of business for our merchants Sat
of a physician were required and she
urday.
was oldigwl t«» inrry at Elder Holler’s
Hon. Wells R. Martin, Vl Ville,

WEST 8UNFIELD.

NUMBER

Oakland Co., celebrating the ninetieth birth
day of Mr. Cole’s mother.

EATON COUNTY.

Dkfst thou hear the rain on the roof!
Mrs. Thomas is under the doctor’s care.*

L*rn with new shingles.
Olivet college commencement exercises begin
The heavy rain* have filled lbe swamps and
Sunday. June 1A and ckwe June 33.
.
and poods to tho fullest txtent of the lav (of
nature.)
Mated with &amp; homed toad from Tela*.
A fine horse that belonged to Mr. Prince
Amon Wolf ha* been detained from work for
died suddqply. Wednesday.
a couple of week* with a back ache, aud light
out S.74O bedsteads Lstt m«xth.
Shall I leave it for Writitt to say that Mrs, attack of “infonfiatiou” on the lungs.
*
Roberts, has gone north J
The potato bog* of tbl* vicinity met ia a
Gorge Downs, familiarly known a* Sammy, couuccl of war, with all of their great medicine
is teaching in the Rulisou district
men present At this writing they had not de­
Miss Daisy Fay wlio leached In music, ha* cided whether to petition to the post office for
bole] In Bellevue,
lime during the *u*aone of those fine Whitney organs.
warmer weather or migrate to South America.
George Phillipa of Castleton, waa in town
girl*.
Herbert Child* has not been able to attend
school thia weeek, but Dr. Snyder tell* him to
keep quiet a few daya and be will be ready
for duty. '
Jim and John Walch went up to Westville
la*t Saturday, each with a load of provtelon*
for their atore, and returned Wednesday with
lumber for Jim’a barn, which must reach com­
pletion before haying.
We are chuck full, of news this week, but
with our wife constantly calling out “Do come
to bed,” and, “For Heaven’s rake, are you go­
ing to alt up all night!” we mutt omit many
item* of Intereat until ahc ia in better humor,
or gone a way from home.
The many friend* of Hon. Mrs. .Geo. Ferri*,
“nee” Julia Child*, will be glad to bear that
after 8cpt next, nbe intends to reside in Eaton
Rapid*, a* the climate of Wyoming la not con­
genial to her health. Her hunband will divide
hi* time between hl, “flock*” and Mich.
At the reorganization of the 8. S. at the
Presbyterian church, J. it Hunter wa* choacn
BupL The 8. 8. la In a flourishing condition,
as there ia an efficient corp* of teachers, and
Mi** E. Hunter furnishe* some excellent muatc,
occasionally oMltted by her brother Jimmy.
It would be entirely out of place for u* to
eloee our remarks and not chronicle the deep
dlaapolntment that prevaded this, place, upon
last Sabbath. It was a day that for month*,
had been looked forward to with interest, and
then to bear It rain, was too utterly to too
much. Just think of it. A new minister, a
new wife; the first sermon, and the congrega­
tion not there to *ec, te bear or to criticise.
Here ia something for “school maam’s in
delicate health. Mfr* Ella Hunter teaches in
the Hagar dlttrici,. a distance of five mile*
from borne. Owing to the poor health of her
mother she board* at home to assist at the
household labors, usually going on horseback,
thna giving her an opportunity to letter de­
velop her equettcrian ability. Ella I* deter­
mind to make her mark, and we say success
to you Ella.

WEST KALAMO.
Wet, wetter, wetti»L»bout now.
For a cure for that most provoking complaint
nojtralgla, read V. D. Andrews letters from the
Upper Peninsula.
L. McKinnis tuts the frame of his new bouse
up and nearly enclosed.
Feel of ’em again Mr. Bugle, there’s the
Democrat camp yet to hear from.
John Donaldson had a very severe congestive^
chill last week, from the effect* of which there
ate doubt*.of hi* recovery.
H. C. Goddard our former landlord, talks of
returning to bl* old Clinton Co home to work
at hi* trade—blacksmithing.
Al. Mix is bound to keep up with the spirit
of Improvement, a* he is building a board
fence where it will serve both a useful and
ornamental purpose.
Our friend, Levi Smith, blows hi* burincM
with a star wind will for which he is agent.
Of course Mr. Smith will set me up a young
wind mill for this puff.
One of our prominent farmers reports conilde able petty thieving from hl* bouse during
the absence of hl* family. Chiefly money ia
taken and the business has been carried on for
rome time.
Sheep washing ha* been about the only busi­
ness the farmers could find to do since the
heavy rains, for which buriniM they found
plenty of water and the sheep already soaked
for the bath.

WOODLAND.
The saw mill is to be moved to Vermontville,
within the next three weeks.
What makes Josh. DillenbeCk hold his bead
so much iligberl 1’t* a boy.
.
The children of Mr*. Reiser, whefjust arrived
from Germany, are rick with the mease)*.
Mrs. Amelia Snngg* is viriting her friends

catur next week.
W. Rowlader and Palmerton have each
purchased a Deering binder of Warner &lt;fc Lee­
BISMARK.
dy; they have afro sold carriages. The boy*
Hyde and Mr*. McIntire, June 14th, at the
rtwidcnce of the forma.
are doing a good business.
.
The waters are abating.
The Middleville baseball dub h**challenged
Mr. and Mra. Jake King started for Iowa
Small frults'nrc not killed here about*.
and Kansas last Wednesday, Mrs. King’s
the Hostings boys to play for the champion
Ed. Preston is traveling In the western slates. health is very poor, and her many friends hope
belt which has been held here for some time.
An Infant child of Geo. Hay’s was buried for her recovery.
The match will take place next Tburaday.
The assault and battery care last week prov­
Tuesday forenoon a fire broke out! in the thia week Tuesday.
A general war Is being waged against all ed a fizzle. The plaintiff thought that If the
house of Frank Campbell west of Ute fair
defeudent would pay the costa, he would say
ground*. The fire company put the fire out be­ corn pulling birds.
A horse died at Bismark, a part of the prop­ nothing about the choking.
fore the building wo* entirely consumed. The
Some of the orchard* in our vidnity look
furniture in the lower story
a11 removed, erty of the late John Prince.
In a few days more we shall don the official like a circus ground, from the number of tout
the building wa* insured.
Tucsd/y evening the board of education rolx*. and do business on the Esq.
caterpillar's nest* to l&gt;c seen there. Remember,
Al) quiet around SawbaFort. Wellman has farmer* that their presence shows very much
raised the teacher* wages for the ensuing year
to &gt;1100 for the Principal, »500; for the as­ been evacuated and General Brown ocupiesthe slackness in year* past, and w 11) dfrtroy the.
trees.
Z.
sistant and WOO for the others. The
Tie latest news from the nortb-west. Is to
following teachers were elected: C. B. Hall,
Principal; Miss Sarah Swift of Lansing, the effect that Wesley Fay has bought a new
BARRYVILLE
organ.
AwUtant; Mi» Phillips, 8th grade; Mis*
We arc trying to give earnest heed to all the
Beattie, 7tb; Min Eestea,6th ; Miss Wheeler,
Mr*. N. V. Whitlock 1* on the rick li*U
5th; Mis* Throop, 4ttv, Miss Havens, 3rd, M1m
time, we should let them slip.
Mias Bostwick; M Miss Butler, 1st; Mia* Hen­
day.
The rain of last Sunday caused an adjourn­
They had all of four to Sunday school, the
dershott let Ward and Miss Parrish 2d.
ment of the M. E. quarterly at Bismark, the other Sunday, up at the brick wiiat do you call
Haws.
time of the meeting is not fixed.
•
Friday, Saturday and Sunday,-there waa a
IXYMENIAU
better sight for a flood than a drouth. The
Ing machine,—a birth day present from her
At Mattawan, Mich., June 7th, O. E. Haw- wire laid in rain water for summer use.
father.
Corn is not all planted at this date, June 7th,
Mr. Ware has purchased a now organ. Miss
montvlllc. was Joined in matrimony with Mfr* while some fields 1* big enough to cultivate. Elsie is taking lessons, and says she likes it, as
H. May Jakwaya, the father of the bride being Milo Deuel ba* 6 acres ready for horse shade.
Wm. A Wells summoned help to' raise his
the officiating clergyman; L. 8^ Jakwaya of
Kenrington, acting as groomsman; Ml** Hat­ born frame last Saturday. But before help
came the wall fell in, necessitattng a delay in
tie Stevens of Coldwater, as bridesmaid.
new waiter is the attraction.
About twenty Invitations had been issued, seeing the frame up.
Where there U a will there la a way. That la
The Monarch of the Lakes is in receipt of a
to
which
letters -of
re-gret were
threshing letter. The writer witbeid his what the South teacher thought while walking
down to Morgan through the rain to take the
tborne,
Valparaiso,
Ind.; the bride's
train.
grandmother, Caraoppolta, Mich.; uncle El­ must make conciliation or shod blood.
The mall carrier took in Elwell P. O. last
mer Jakwaya, Benton Harbor’, Mich.; groom’s
fortunes have all returned home, with the exSaturday,
for
the
first
time.
The
Bismark
of
­
parents, Wheeler, Ind-; Mr. and Mrs. Parrish
and Mr. Monroe Morrow and wife of Stevens­ fice has more tiian doubled its business an Its
ville, Mkb.

driving from home to Vermontville, recently,
wa* thre xn from.Lcr buggy and badly injuredThe late frost* have injured ;&lt;eachra, plum*

pics are untouched, and the prospecte for a
large crop la good.
•
Mr*. Geo. W. Benson of Eaton township, at-

feared she will die.
The Charlotte Leader boa

donped that

The improvement is decided and should bring
lot* of new patrons.
The new fire engine has arrrved nt Bellevue,
but Is securely locked up in a freight car. The
village authorities refuse to unload it nntill an
agent arrives to set it np.
John and Charles York, af Bellevue, are ex­
cavating a cellar 58x66 feet, and will build s
brick store over iL This will be the first brick
building erected on the burnt district.
•
J. A. Birchard’s son, about 12 yoar» of age,

afternoon, when the horse bolted out of the
road jumped over a fence, throwing th# boy off '
and breaking one of his arras.
saulted 8Ua« Anson, a nun 83. years of age,
last Saturday night was on June fid. sentenced
by Justice Powers to pay a Cue of ISO or to be
confined thirty days in jail. He paid the fine.
Station agent Potter of Charlotte, dropped a
pocket book containing a hundred dollara, an&gt;
a barn yard clerk named F.W. ContyltUlMMtf
it up and went to spending the lucre as though
It were hi* lawful own. Hr now langpisbes to
jail until the next setting of the circuit enort

LOCAL MATTERS.
WHEN YOU BUY A MACHINE
Bee if the machine is madefor the eompon.

own machines, as docs ours. Trouble*
_ ____ ——. __ dealas and retail
customers who buy a machine from a compatn
which docs not own and control it* own fac

MONEY TO LOAN,
On Real Estate at low rata of interest of
Lee A Dvhkbb

ATTENTION KNIGHTS!
The annual election oflvy Lodge, No. 87.
Knfgbtaof Pythias, wiH occur atlts.Cast&gt;
Hall in Nashville, on Friday ev#niag&gt;Iana80U&gt;.
1 trust that every mcraber of the Kn»ghl.
Rank will make it convenient to attend.
Oaso Btroxo, C.C.
LOOK HERE!
Hbnbt Stbong of Morgan ha* s Idin o!
Tile just burnt. Go and see him Mtore buying

tried and proved pointe from tho whok nap
of the scwiag-tnaebln* world, and combined &amp;.

FINE BOOTS.
John ffuacu**.
WHAT 1STHSU8K

.

of burlng a new Mower or ffcapcr when you ca
get your old one made as good as new at
Buvkxs A Odox’k.

IT SEEMS
as If It should nat require an argument to cor.

fnr, nomattethowgwd a machine you mshave, vou cannot do gcod wont with a ;xk
needle. Therefore, befme you condema yw

NEW BRICK

STORE.

all that I* due me.

FN BUYING A MACHINE.

until the nrx: day.
gave The Nkwaabrief call Tueaday the groom plighting fidelity to the bride In *
L,.
reprpwnting Abramorning.
few short lines of poetry, to which the bride
*fc. WHJUmw"’ cigar roan nfActory
The F, &amp; A. M. and Eastern Star made an appropriate reply. The bride wore a town. The school district brought suit against
Irfcago. w*“ tlririne frnm V-t. Ville
Thomas PriaiUe. for preventing the school
lodaesare now-the joint possessor of a
villoe*. Tbnradav nfit-moon,
with white Spanish lace, white ki ‘ gloves and from being used for religious purposes, at n
n th** wiud Mid rain atonn struck
certain time. The counsel on both rides failed
slippers
and
wreath
of
Hilles
of
the
valley
in
Mim Edith Northrup and Miss Davie
He *** In nn opr^n rig and had
Ett Holmes, made our “devil” a call on .
ward for drlivery to etiatnmen*,
light cloth, white Teat, black coat anti kid
Wamsr.
Thursday last.
worth of cigar*, all of which were
F. P. Wells of Lansing was in the
*r no badly scattered nr wet by the
MAPLE QROVE.
village on bnaineM connected with the Jakway*, Benton Harbor. Mich.; Dr. Brigg*
oar factory yesterday.
L. Lajrham has hl* bam enclosed..
ThunMiay morning Mr. and Mr*. G.
Mr. Wagner lost a good bow the other day.
W. Howe started on a trip to Chicago, ton, Ill., B. D. Hawthorne and wife Nashville.
nod the former may co farther.
hOUM.
Cap. Dunham is making prep*. aUons many leautlful presents, notabk among
McIntyre.
nod m di^nt^re-ated listener iu the btUMuenl of F. T. Bow's buiid-

. etwiM raaily lift fmm »
pmimU imt a.

I TERMS; $1.50 ri
Credit SvRsanPTio

(

M.pl. Ghit. i.l .. m l»» of

frost J®

Sexhom.
THE COUNTY.

Mrs. Ella* Jones of Orangeville, U preambelating that town with a bible under her arm
1* doing Jeati*’ work. She la thought to be
insane.
Dr. MeLay of Prairieville wa* kicked, by his

Two children of Ed. Hubbard of Middtevifc,

ehlldrrn, a girl agwiHvr years. &lt;« .shot in lhe

“Crown." Two luwd or two so't
ningtosrether wijl wear n«4 very i
than when two meteb of unlikr.

NEW ICE CREAM ROOMS.

�*

F. yi P-

TBB NIUBT-Wnn).

“Well, how did you Hks Mr. Charles
Everard?” askad Aunt Remember,
^“Ttbink be is very nice," answered

Mollie, taking off her bonnet before ths
glass, and wishing her hair wasn’t red.
• you
.. - -----------------wtaddn-t)
"J BuppoHC
wouldn't
marry
a man-------- -----------

«tpk.M,lluI.Jm,UUr»Mb«p. *ta,r

, j J,

'

WHAT EVERABODY WANTS.
Is a reliable medicine that never docs any
harm and that prevents direrae by keenlnr the
stomach in order, the bowels regular, midthe
kidneys and liver active. Such a medicine is
Parker's Ginger Tonic. It relieves every dLw.
and has cured thousands Sei other column.'—
Tribune.

The Champion Machines.

remfcnod Aunt Remember.
old parlor, where we ape
“Yes,
Yes. I would—if it were Mr. Ever
Ever-­ that 1* leftine
to reuM&gt;mner
rcnwt
. ..re u
nun uy, tor J rent
ard, and- he wanted me to!" laughed back Lis rifts when I foolishly promised to
marry a rich man. I tried to be a good wife
Mollie, blushing.
After that, the quarterly sums of mon­
May parties with “low necks and short
ey were paid Mr. Everard monthly in­
A COMPLETE LINE OF
stead, and Mollio carricd the envelopes
containing them to the dingy little office
Ttw ahrili-v .need quarry flow.
HER OWN EXPERIENCE..
down in Bond Street.
Ifuinjr of this sofa, where they wilt be found—
■_J_ «__ _ ___
Mr. Everard told her, one day, that he orWIoh I fhlnir »«
“The friend of oura who recommended your
C«fO. UUJ A
wished it wasn’t so dingy—dor her sake:
•Favorite Remedy' bad beraelf Buffered a stroke
To wturj, 1
Breathlessly they ripped down tho of paralysis, which rcuden?d her entire right
and, another day,.tola her that be did
not like storing apd selling furniture, rusty linings, and what aright! The •Ide powerless, iud, iu * word, left Ker aa hdp11
but he had a mother and invalid slater old sofa was literally stuffed with bank­ leM as an Infant.
to1
But ‘Ksnnedy’a Favorite
sound and wall
dependent on him, and could not follow bills of the highest denominations. If Remedy cured bcr and abe te now able to do
the business he liked, which was archi­ the same amount of money had been her own wort.” The above la quouted from a
tecture, but must continue in his father’s concealed in gold in it, ten men could
letter from a gentleman in Elmira. N. Y. to
shop, at least for the present.
not have lifted it, Mollie thought
‘
■ Common, and bung ready for use.
A HATTER OF SENTIMENT.
Gratefully she accepted her legacy— Dr. David Kennedy, of Roodout, N. T. You
It seemed te Mollie that never was
such a pleasant spring, for in one way gratefully preserved the old furniture,
Aunt Rememlnir Mordaunt vna ‘ and another she came to see a great deal which will again become an heirloom to
The deepest truths are best read between the
‘ of Mr. Charles Everard. and his hazel the children she and .Charlie Everard Hues, for the most part, refuse to be written.
eyes mingled with her dreams very proudly call theirs; and this story will
niHe went oul aud mouth went in.” She'. pleasantly.
Wo understand death for the first time when PLOW POINTS for the Oliver Chilled! Wlard, Three Riv­
be handed down from generation to gen­
wasn't much larger than a girl eight
Opo day he told her that his deceased eration, little as the little woman’s favo­ be puts his band np?n one whom we love.
yuan old j and she hud fallen down col­
ers, Bryan, Cale, Curtla, Dodge, Robinson
father and Aunt Remember Lad been rite niece had suspected her of “ a mat­
LIVER, KIDNEY AND BRIGHT'8 DISEASE.
lar and broken her wrist, been thrown engaged to marry each other when they ter of sentiment”
And many other Plows.
A medicine that destroys the germ of cause
out of a oarringe and put her shoulder were very young.
To Marion, let me .add, a little
of Bright's Disease, Diabetes, Kidney and Liv­
In fact, we keep a full and complete stock of first class Hardware and Farming Tools. Call
out of joint, aud being as bald as a baby,
"Then you'know Aunt Remember?” daughter was given later in life, of whom er Complaints, and baa power to root them out ivudWc them before buying.
she wore the fuunieat of small "russet­ cried Mollie. .
she says:
of the system, ta above all price. Such a med­
fronts” undi^r IBUe “mob-caps,” so that
"She shall never marry for money. icine ts Hop Bitter*, and positive, proof of thia
"'No. I nevefr saw her but once—
it was no wutufor people looked at her twice. She engaged mo to store some I will warn her!"—Baluraay Night.
can be found by a trial, or by asking your
neighbors who have been eurec by it
and smiled, uicr'^rew&amp;lwihkling eye* furniture for her."
usually smiled bitotETAimt Remember
That woman wjio neglects her husbands
“What kind of furniture was it?”
A Cure for Unrequitted Love&lt;
cared JHUj/what people thought of her.
shin front, is no longer the wife of his bosom.
asked Mollie.
She was mucu more occupied tn deciding
A curious love episode had its culmi­
" A very old-fashioned, gray haircloth
what she thougut of them.
nation in court here to-day when Jennie
set. Have you ever seen ft?”
And let mu asiurt/ you she was no inBlank, a good-looking young woman of
"No,” answered Mollie.
WITH A FULL STOCK OF•igniticant person in her circle. No fairy
refined appearance, was found guilty of
*• It’s queer; ages out of style.”
Will be paid for the detection and conviction
gudmuther ever was more fearfully
maliciously breaking the windows of
"Why docs she keep it?”
of any person telling or dealing in any bogus,
looked up to—no, looked down to—than
“A matter of sentiment, probably. William H. Anderson’s house. Miss
Audi Remcmlxir. She was shrewd, she In value it’s worth a hundred dollars or Blank first met Mr. Anderson about nine counterfeit or imitation Hop Bitters, especially
Bitters or preparations with the word Hop or
was witty, she had a sharp tongue of her so, while she has already paid twice its years ago, and fell deeply in love with
Hops in their name oi connected therewith,
pwn—more, she was the riohest woman value over for storage.”
him, although he claims that he did not
in Pvachlands.
■
that is Intended to mislead and cheat the pub­
“ I never knew that Aunt Remember encourage her affection. He ceased to
lic, or for any pretention put in any form, pre­
She lived with her brother Paul and was sentimental," laughed Mollie.
visit her. and she then began to write
his wife, who hail three daughters. Peotending to be the tame as Hop Bitters. The
“ She doesn’t look so. that’s a fact him letters of the most touching charac­
Csaid Aunt Remember would leave But do you know I fancy the look of ter, but they failed to move him. On
genuine have cluster of Green Hops (notice
money to one of those daughters, those little bright eyes of new!”
the contrary, he wooed and won another
this) printed on the white label, and are the
and Aunt Remomoer said that she should,
It was an eventful summer, for Marion woman, whom he married nearly a year
"to the one who pleased her best." The and Mattie both
becama engaged. ago. But this only seemed to excite purest and best medicine on earth, especially
thing was to know how to please her. Marion to ’Squire Dillon’s eon; Mattie Miss Blank to frenzy, and she wrote him for Kidney, Liver and Nervlou* Disease. So
She found fault first with one, then' with to Rob Barney, the butcher’s nephew, so many letters that he sometimes re­
lx-ware of all others, and of all pretended for­
tlip other. Marion was self-willed. Mat­ a young fellow as roly-poly and os easy­ ceived five or six of them in one mail.
tie was lazy, and Mollie— well, Mollie
There was nothing offensiro in them; mulas or receipts of Hop Bitten published in
going as herself.
had rod hair. 1 do not think it a sin to
Regarding the prospects of the latter they spoke of hopeless love; but the sen­ papers cr for sale, as they are frauds and swin­
have red hai r, but Mollie thought it was, couple, Mattie and Rob had promptly timents were relined and the language
dles. Whoever deals in any but the genuine
. Hm! she not been reproached with it
contented themselves with tho thought well chosen. Mr. Anderson did not re­
since her tenderest years? To be sure, that Aunt Remember meant to leave ply to them, and some time after his will be prosecuted- Hop Bittebs Mfo. Co.,
it was soft ns silk, and an artist might
Mattio her money, and forthwith took marriage, ho said to-day on the witness
Rochester, N. Y.
have consi lured the burnished ripples
stand, somebody began to annoy him by
no thought loathe morrow.
very lovely, us they swept away from a
Lore ic a qufcr thing, and so is happiness
The other couple, thinking very sharp­ systematically breaking the windows of
complexion whose pink was prettier than ly of the morrow, hoped that she would bis house. One time a brick was thrown To enjoy either completely it has to be shared.
the lint of any sea-shell; but the color of leave it to Marion. Marion gave Dudley through his store window at three o'clock
Dr. Pcogelly:—My daughter suffered terribly
her hair was a sure subject with Mollie.
in the morning. On another occasion rvery mouth from the effect* of Measles.
Dillon every reason to suppose bo.
8he was never quite happy, unless she
Your Woman’s Friend (Zoa-Pbora) has entire
“ Be. has a fortune, being an only son. his enemy apparently made a miscalcu­
hai uliogucher forgotten the matter, and
iy
relieved her.
Mbs. S. A. C.
lation
anil
sent
a
stone
crushing
through
I shall be sure of that, anyway!” she
Aug. 10, ItflU
New Britton, Ind.
as Mollie v» u usually exceedingly busy,
the window of a Chinese laundry next
said to herj-.lf.
she generally hud a very good success at
door.
Mr.
Anderson
placed
himself
on
There is so much dirt in the Brooklyn etrecu
As soon as her bridal outfit could be
lurgeitmg.
watch for the miscreant about two weeks
Aianou was a brunette, very fond of prepared, she hastened the wedding, for ago, and discovered that it was his ad­ that the autborUes are thinking of renting them
ut as a cabbage garden.
stilish ilre-s an I very ambitious. Matri- Marion did not mean to be tive-and- mirer. He saw her take apiece of brick
mo iially, aue mid Uxed her goal very twenty until after her wedding-day. out of tissue paper, send it banging
Nothing Short of Unmistakable
Y&gt;igH- -S.ie iOteadel to marry a man, Tho next marriage—Mattie and Rob- against his shop window and walk com­
Benefits
handsome, di-tingiiished aud able to followed shortly.
He followed her to
•• How are you going to live?" asked placently away.
Conferred
upon tens of thousands of
s ipu'irt her in gjod style. No other
Fifth and Walnut Streets, when she
Aunt Remember of Marion.
sufferers could originate anti maintain
wo..id she look
'
UR WORK LS all DONE UPON HONOR. BUGGIES
“Dudley has means," replied hereld- turned upon him and said. “Why, Will,
the reputation which Aykks Sailsa“ Ah, my Iu Iy," Aunt Remember
is it you? I didn't suppose you had
er niece.
baiulla enjoys.
It Is a compound or
won &lt;1 say. “you will go through' the
turned spy.” Then he hod her arrested.
"How
are
you
going
to
live?
”
idle
w«&gt;r,.| and pic&lt; up a crooked stick!”
,
Mrs. Anderson could not testify as to ‘ tlie best vegetable alteratives, with the
Ma.ion, I i • eldest, was already twen­ aiked subsequently, of tho 'Bquire’s the breaking, but said: "I marriod the
Iodides of Potassium aud Iron.—all
Atkinron,
rather rakish son.
ty-four.
M.d.ie was twenty—pretty '
powerful, blood-making, blood-cleansing
man this woman wanted to marry. She
“
My
wife
will
have
means.
.1
sup
­
Iihn
.eno’igh. g»&gt;i enough; but Mattie*il
aud life-sustaining — nud Ls the most
is in love with my husband and I cannot
pose,
.
he
said,
with
a
rather
sharp
glance
never setuiiu river on fire," complained J
effectual of all remedies for scroAihelp
it
”
at Aunt Remember.
Aunt Retneinijcr.
lous. mercurial, or blood dbiunlers
The prisoner took the stand, and. it
1 t link mys df that the latter was fond . She volunteered no information on
Uniformly successful and certain, it
was only by a great deal of ingenious
of her iin.&gt; &gt;ri nce—careful to keep up the subject, and the wedding, which was
produces rapid and complete cures oi
questioning that the prosecution drew
tois uneer iiimy regirding her prefer- 'close at hand, took place.
Scrofula, Sores. Boils, Humors, Pirn
from her Lhp admission: “I raised my
a
“
When
are
you
and
Charley
Everard
pics, Eruptions. Skin Diseases ami ail
encit. for no m 1» could be certain re­
hand as I passed Mr. Anderson’s house
going
to
marry?"
asked
Aunt
Remember.
dLsordent arising from Impurity of tin
g ir i ng it. B il il Kept tho small house
and afterward heard the crash of the
blood.
By its Invigorating effects ii
i.t i-.-.i hLinil.i in a constant state of . _• “ Charlie can’t support two estab­ glass.” “ That is enough,” cried the
always relieves and often cures Livci
lishments at present; so we must wait,"
Complaints. Female Weaknesses and
answered Mollie, cheerfully, though the prosecuting officer, amid a roar of laugh­
1 lie house itTcIf belonged to Aunt Ro­
Irreguluritks, and is a potent renewet
limpid brown eyes had a regretful look ter, and Miss Blank, with a face wreathed
me..i xir. la » i' i -ii .• haa virtually given
with smiles, tripped over to a seat in
of waning vitality. For purifying thit to tier br »t.ier ten years before. After in them,
blood it has no equal. It tones up th" Then you don’t calculate that I in­ front of the dock, and immediately be­
her U.is iaii I s d.-oth—for Aunt Re­
system, restores and preserves tin
tend to leave you my money?" said Aunt came engaged in an animated conr rsamember li i-l hid a. husband—she had
Iwalth. nnd imparts vigor and energv.
tion with a sSrange young man charged
Remember, grimly. trail-ferred it to her brother, when he
For forty years it has been In extensive
with murder. The jurv, after remain­
“ No.” answered Mollie, quietly.
came Wb&lt;t v.iii hn young family.
use, and isf to-day the most available
ing out about an hour, found the woman
Marion was ho sooner married than
medicine
for the suffering sick.
The furniture also was given him. she learned that her busband hail had a guilty, but recommended her to the
For sale by all druggists.
• with tie-eicep ion ofa parlor suit, which
quarrel with his father, and could expect, mercy of the court. Judge Briggs'said
Aunt it •mem &lt;r wa« supposed to have nothing of him. She was too proud to that before passing sentence he would
»i.d —a suit ut ma i «giuiy and gray hair- let her family know this, and then com­ have the prison officers make an investi­
l+hu, which she mid owned—bequeathed
menced a desperate struggle to keep up gation as to the woman’s mental condi­ 2BS. LYDIA L PIMMIM, OF LYNN. NASS.
by bar. mother—When a girl.
tion.—Philadelphia Cor. N. Y. Timo.
apj&gt;Oaranoe.H.
.
I say «/&lt;n/xMrd, because Aunt Remem­
Her dignity and energy sliameA her
ber wns peculiarly reserved and secre­ unprincipled husband, and he boou be-'
The Jenrj Jacket sod Worth Mantle.
tive regarding her doings. She never gun to jDake better use of his talents;
a«ked council of her relatives, or of any but, as far as her expectations were con­
The wholesale stores are already busy
one else, but planned and performed ac­ cerned, Marion’s marriage was a failure.
with making - smaller wraps for the
cording to her pleasure.
She became a hard, bitter woman.
spriag in two shapes that have met with
She required her connections to someMattie and Rob went to live with Rob’s favor during tho winter. These are tho
'times execute commissions for her of unqle, the butcher, and though he was Jersey jacket and the shor' Worth
which they had not tho least understand­ poor and unsentimental, he was good- mantle. The Jersey jacket is a plain
ing—as, for instance, during the last natured, and suffered them to share with long cuirass made single-breasted, and
few years, since Aunt Remember had .the real.
wirii all tho seams of the back sewed
di«ioeated her shoulder, one of the girls
But tho old saying was true—tAt their entire length to make the garment
went quarterly to the office of C. Ever­ never a house was wide enough for two tit cloedy over the hips and teurnure.
ard, said office being attached to a furni­ families.
When Mattie’s tat, good- This garment follows every outline of
ture warehouse, and paid him some natured baby was born, Mattie became the figure as smoothly as a woven Jer­
money.
desperate to have a home of her own, sey waist would, and dispenses with the
He was a yonag man, very business­ and, tired of waiting for Aunt Remem­ outride pockets, the lapixits and buttons
like, but with pleasant, hazel eyes, which ber’ a money, and longing for independ­ at the back that were the marked feat­
Marion declared ,ljust splendid!” but ence, she infected Rob with her tardily- ures of the masculine English walking
curled her delicate nose at the sugges­ developed energy, and they went to work jackets. Small buttons, in a single row,
tion of Aunt Remember, that Afr. to make a home and a living for them- fasten this jacket down the entire front,
Charles Everard’s acquaintance might
and the other only trimming admiraahla
.
OF &lt;&gt;UR OWN MANUFACTURE
be worth cultivating.
They had hardly done so before Aunt upon it is tubular braid put on in mili­
“Nonsense* The idaa afmem&amp;ny- Remember, who had been silently ailing tary rows. The length depends upon
ing a man who keeps a littlo fumiture- for a long time, died. Mollie, who was the wearer, as it must be made as long
VEGETABLE COMPOUND.
,
shop down on Bond street!” she cried. no nearer marriage than she hod been as she can wear it without wrinkling
I« a I’orlttrr Cere
Who are you, miss? Your father is three years before, though a little graver, when she site, as its beauty depends upon
’ &lt;mfy a poor farmer.”
*
as well as sweeter—for patience and duty its smoothness. This design has been in
“ I don’t always intend to be poor, if well performed make people lovelier as favor as a part of tailor-made suite ail
/ father is. I shall marry for money,” re­ they grow older—Mollie tended her winter, and will be used in the spring in
turned Marion, “And not for money faithfully in her last illness.
Cheviot”, Englhh homespuns, coach­
WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH
only—I must have everything.”
" My win 'is in the cscritoir!” were men’s drab diagonal cloths, also alate
" Hump!” ejaculated Aunt Remem­ her last words.
gray or gray-blue, olive, brown and dark
ber; “ when Sir Perfection comes court­
When it was read what did they find? green cloth.
dllyly-Liiur.
. ing voir, let me know!"
The old estate legally secured to Paul
The short Worth mar.tles for dressy
But nobody took offense at Aunt Re- Mordaunt and his wife. To Marion, occasions are made of black satin or of
memlier’s sharp speedma.
• . ■ . one. thousand dollars; to Martie, one camel’s hair, trimmed with ruffles of
Mattie was requested to carry the next thousand dollars; another thousand to the material that are gathered, not
ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING
quarter s money to Mr. Charies Ever- fat little Bobby; but these were the only pleited, and with frills of Spanish lace
That tretina pf
*rd, but dawdled so loug at getting moneys mentioned, and, as I have told or the full ruches of chenille. Some un­
backache, b»
ready
Aunt
bade her you. Aunt twjuM-iuuuu
Remember unu
had always
always oceil
been drew mantles of Cheviots will also be
: . - that
....
-- ---- Remember
-------- —
toke
bonnet and
down, and considered the richest woman in Peach- made te wear with various dresses.
sent Mollie.
’lands.
■
What did it mean?Them) wraps have the loose mantilla
is destined to come
To Mollie she had left only the gray
hair, Mollie," ahe said; sod, with this haircloth parlor .set. '
Call and nee them
doubtful compliment ringing in her eats,
“ We can marry now, Mollie,’’ said
Charlie Everard, with a rather Sad smile. smoothly on the bouffant tournure, and
“ I want to «oe it,” said Mollie.
the garment is of even length all around.
So they went into the great storage
chamber, and took the wrappings off the
queer old furniture. Pinned upon the

•

WAGONS ONLY $60.00.

Buggies, Carriages, Wheel Harrows avid
Cultivators, Mounted Seeders,
and 4 kinds of Plows.

REED’S GfhOiNE SPRING TOOTH HARROW
ROAD SCRAPERS, SQUARE DRABS, GRIND STONES,
SMW

MAOHIA

HERE WE ARE AGATK!

$200.00 REWARD.

Wagons

OUR LINE BUGGIES
EMBRACES

Phaetons

White Chappel and Coal Boxes, hung with Elliptic Springs.
Two and Three Spring Democrats.

being imfe liniii &gt;&lt;•&lt;.-« md Growth Hickory.
Our Tops* ml* ln “«l « it All-Wool Indigo-D}ed Gocds nnd
Warranted not t Hid«. W. H.
a painter whose
vork
never went bm k on him. has &lt; barge oi our paint de■artment, and n lie r. li- d ««n. Bolin, Da.-h Feet, Body Loops
.nd Slays are in.iil. 1 r&lt; in Norway Iron and the entile buggy
ioned In a de-ii l»lv and superior manner and warranted.

Until you have ih&lt;u- ughlv examined mine, Spokes made
mtn Second Gr w li StocK and the wagon is made to stand
lie wear and tmv &lt;&gt;l &lt;&gt;in roads.

E3T1 HAVE IN STOCK A NUMBER 0F-S3

S

'hilled Flows. Hay

Rakes

and Cultivators,

li I will St 11 at Cost to Close out.

E. COOK

LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S

50 wagons
FOR SALE!

THREE INCH TIRE
AS OUR

iHmN common tire

We befievtt the
int iteiiernuuw. ,

‘I hree inch Tire

Sold by C. L. Glasgow, Nashville, Mich.

BENTLEY BROS. &amp; WILKINS.

Hatuingp, Mich., Sept, loth, 1881.

�Operation.

inieal sppl
only about ooo-tentb
Qofvxg What FrMall______ _ JA5 p
‘
The remaining nine-tenths
Voroc remained behind, for
Day Etpr-5. __ sxfi p -a
like a howl, a shriek, and an Indian yeU
■ of ioMtig tbc irtber alio, than
AtlsnUe
Es.—EtiO» n.
all combined.
Jfight Ex»rcs- fcCCam
“ Hist! I see him down by the .white
drop of water would seem to be utilized,
birch,” said the Captain.
“Beady,
there is a waste in transferring the pow­
Tne burdock »« plainly meant for me. ’
now! 'advance!”
er of about one-fifth. The nearest ap­
The order was obeyed in eflenoe,
proach toward tho absolute oonservatiou
GRAND RAI «
but before they had got within ride-shot
of force is made in the use of dynamo­ emiueut oculists in lbe eounlry, having looked
of the creature, he bounded away with
EAST
electric machines. With some of these at tbecase said: “You have lost.one eye eranother cry.
An ad. tn Twa Naw. goes to
about ninety-five per cent, of the power tirrly; go back and do what you can to save the
STATIONS.
of WOO bonafldc subscribed. wito. for the tak­
The more rapidly he fled, the more
generated by the machine .ia put upon other.*’ Briefly. Dr- Kenndy removed the ruin­
ing, are liable to become your pateona______
rapidly the courage of ,his pursuers
tho wire in tho form of electricity, and ed eye and treated Mr. Craigg with “Kennedy’s
Favorite Remedy” to build up the system, and
rose, which was but natural. And a
PERUSE THE1!; LIBERAL AD. RATES.
then by connecting wires with another the result was SUecaafaL
pretty race be led them—through bust
dynamo machine the electricity can be
Dr. Kennedy's great success as a surgeon is MMdl.vd|/
! a soon- 16 n» 13 roc*
and bramble, up hill and down dale.
-srte-osT-^ - ~ g 1(X|
due
tZf the use of ,**Fuvortte Remedy” tn the
reconverted
into
motion
with
a
loss
of
9 5.00
They came at last in sight of a small
•
only five per cent. In other words, the after treatment.
" 14.00
5.00
Are you troubled with dyspepsia livar com.
house into the yard of which the creat­
force applied to an electric-dynamo ma­ plidut, constipation or &lt;len&gt;ngemcut&lt;&gt;t the kid­
13.00
20.00
ure dashed, round the corner and out
chine can be transferred over a distance neys and bladder J then um: Dr. Kennedy 's
U-00
of sight As the party approached the of one or two miles, and then used with Favorite Remedy.
It will not dteapprttit you
bouse at a scarcely less furious pace, a
a loss of about ten per eent. of its vol­ Dr. Kennedy’s "Favorite Remedy” for sale by
night-capped head was thrust from a
ume. Such a dose adaptation of means all druggists.
window, and a shrill female voice cried
to ends is unparalleled in previous me­
out, in a tone of distress:
chanical construction.
It approaches
••Don’t shoot him! don’t shoot him!
nearly, in the conservation of force, to
What barm has tho poor critter done?”
ORNO STRONG,
the methods of nature.
••
Harm,
madam!
What
kind
of
an
Editor and Proprietor.
The success that has been met with in
animal do you call thalF' said the Cap
the construction of foroe^taving electric,
A STORY THAT GREW.
tain.
Esion llaplds, .
machines seems to have stimulated in­
t Umriotte,__ *• My stars!” ejaculated the woman.
quiry iu other directions. It is, indeed,
It was little Tom Dodger, the washer­
Verii M Ivllia,..
Then speaking to some . one within:
Nashville..........
an uncomfortable reflection on human
woman's boy, who saw it first
•• Mr. Stebbins, do get up! here’s some
U sal i nr*..........
ingenuity
to
be
compelled
to
admit
that
The whole neighborhood had been men going to shoot our donkey; they’ve
MtaBMie—
’JLLAGB OFFICERS.
nine-tenths of the value ef every pound
disturbed by fearful noises issuing from been drinking, I guess.”
nXmSE.
.
(THE HEALTH BKINGEK.)
of coal burned under a steam ooiler is
Chestnut Woods. The sound was vari­
A very brief space sufficed to bring
l3no known as
wasted. Certainly methods which are
ously described, but all agreed that it
the man Stebbins to the door, somewhat
attended with such an extravagant leakwas very terrible.
PENGELLY-8 WOMAN’S FRIEND
scantily dressed, followed by his wife,
age of force must sooner or later pass
Pretty Janet Dale heard it while
Marshall—James L. Gregory.
Trustee*-!!. A. Barber, F. T. Boise. H. W. standing before tho glass putting her done up ia a bed-blanket.
into disuse. In what way a change will Every mother of daughters should
•• Well, now, I call this queer do­
Demaray', H. R. Dickinson, H. M. Lee and hair in crimping pins one night, and
be made it would be impossible to say.
know about it—because it brings
ings.” said the man; “if my beast has
Chua Ij-ntx.
It may come by a better utilization of
was so frightened that she crept into done you any damage, I'm willing to
health
fuel or the substitution of some medium
bed and covered her head with the
pay for it: and 1 know he’s got a pair
Jhrirtia.
to take the place of steam, or by both
counter-pane, leaving one side of her
of light heels of his own—he’ll jump
of these combined.
There seems to be
hair undone, and this although the next anything but the top of the house—but
aptistCHuacn. jut. e. » Moody. Faster
Who. e.A tho nro cf Puberty, begin tz&gt; droop
Barview ev&gt;y Bunday al IMOa-m.. Sabbath day was Sunday and she sat in the you might have told me, and not come a growing belief thitt it is bettor to use owing to Painful, Scanty, or Profuse Periods.
coal for the manufacture of gas, aud
aehool at 19 tn: Prayer and Tvacuor» m&lt;etin« choir; so you can see what a state of mind
armed with your shooting-irons—and
Thursday evening
then use the gas for heat under a boiler,
she must have been Lme a stranger, too—I say ’taint neigh­
than it is to directly employ coal for tho
Mrs. Skinner heard it while standing
a « KniODMH* EFAAM'AL chukch-a. D. Na a
IV1 toi, Pastor. H-rvioos every Sabbath at U'H at her back door feeding the geese, ana borly!
latter purposp. What is known as water­ Threatened with any of tho complaints and weak.
“’Perhaps you never heard r donkey
a. nt. and T p. tn. Sabbath ecboui at IS tn. Prayer
gas, which is formed by passing super­
dropping her basin, ran back into the
mating ovary Tkanday avcning.
bray before,’' said the man. observing
heated steam over a bed of incandeJfc&lt;!nt
house crying that somebody was being
the looks which passed between the
VY LODGE NO. 37, K. of P., rnceu at iu murdered; but her husband, who heard Captain and his men. “ It does sound .coal, can be made at a very low price,
Caalle Hall, Naabtflle, Michigan, even the sound, too, declared it was the cry
under favorable circum’Uinoes at about
rather awful, that’s a fact.”
Friday evening, Tor the encouragement nnd of a catamount.
20 cents per 1,000 cubic feet.
The Shzfertng from or {AreaUntsi wUA Prolapsus Uteri
“ He guessed he
or Bearing Down, with Us aUondant Dl-enOlon
It was a crestfallen party which re­
aupport of al) worthy, true, alcadfaat and hon­
heating power of water-gas is some­
wasn’t born up in Vermont state, close
orable Brother Knight*.
turned to the village that night, but if
what less than that of ordinary street
to the Green Mountains, not to know a
L. E. Lkxtz, K. K. 8- Ohxo Smoxo.C. C
sadder, they were certainly wiser men.
gas,
but
the
difference
in
this
respect
is
catanioun* when he beard it.”
aud chose to observe a judicious silence
by no means so great as the variation in
Captain Marsh, on the contrary, was
.Vliscclluiieous &lt;’«r&lt;is.
as to their adventure.
price would apparently imply.
There
equally as sure il was the cry of a
It still remains as much a mystery as
panther.
“
He
had
hunted
in
Canada
nave been experiments yiadc which Whosuflcr from Hot Flashes, either before or
H. YOUNG, Jrf- D. Office east aide u.
ever what Tommy saw.—Ruth Chester
seem to indicate that a pound of coal niter change, or from any of tho irregularities at­
■ Main 8u, Nashville. Office hours Iron- when he was a boy. aud had shot a
Jield, in Youth's Companion.
7 to9 a. m., and 4 to 7 p. in.
converted into water-gas and then tending tho Critical I'nriod. Hioatlnc. Numb­
panther himself.”
Most persons were
ness. WakcfubMTSa. I'ldpitation. Etc.
burned under a boiler will produce
inclined to side with the valiant Captain,
All thc.io. and many oyicr distressing com­
H. GRISWOLD M. D., ...
r^thl.
Careless Tommy.
twice the amount of force that can .be plaints. usually attributed to other auxsrfc. but
because a panther is larger than a cata­
• Phytician and Surgeon. Office and rr»
obtained
by
the
direct
combustion
of
the
mount,
and
if
you
are
going
to
have
any
­
really peculiar to the fox. WILL CERTAINLY
tdenca oppoaita lha WolcoU Houae. Prompt
BROWNS Ht&lt;
Tommy Lee was a very careless little
coal.
But
there
would
be
another
gitin
atunUon given to caJla day or night.
thing marvelous, the more marvelous boy. His mother often told him that
in the fact that this gas to be used for I LEUCOKKHtE.
the better
*
requiring a borts,
,he roust not leave his playthings about
A; FOOTE PHYSICIAN &lt;fc SURGEON
heating purposes would, if its general
Thun there was Erastus Cummings, the room, but must put them away in
dally IndlffCHtlf,:• Suceaaor to Dr. Wickhatn. Office auu the Second Adventist, who be ml this
uie became desirable, be iurnL’hed by
miltcat I-'ctcfs.
the closet when he bad finished playing
residence at Dr. Wickham's late office
pipes from some central stations, and
cry. and thought the end of the world with them. But Tommy did not mind.
Prompt attention to calle night or day.
thus do away with the minor expenses society, which, with othrr information and odhad come.
.He would run off to play hi the yard,
etc. linrichcw ■
attendant upon a generating power
Yet while so many had heard the leaving
j
TAR. C. W. GOUCHER, FJectlo Physician ami
cna the xniuK.-l
bis toys on the floor or the table
JLr Surgeon, la prepared . to answer all eaU» sound, it was littlw Tom Dodger who bad for his mother or sister to pick up and from coal in thousands of different lo­
IHb to tb© no.
It. PENGELLY, M. !&gt;.,
that may be mads for his aeivlcea. Office and seen the animal first.
calities.
put away. Thus he caused his busy
residence opposite Roe’s meat market
Druff-jUU.)
KALAMAZOO,
MICH
Then the question arises, is the use of
His own account was this:
removing all &lt;!
mother and sister to waste much time.
VlTX PARMENTER, M. D. Office over
steam-ixiwer desirableP It is assert&lt;•&lt;!
He was pass ng through Chestnut
snich oh tasUn;:
•• We must cure Tommy of thisfauk,’’
by inventors beth here and iu England
Vv Hull's Drug etore, Vennoutvtlle, Mich.
Woods—taking the short cut home be­ said his mother, “but 1 do not know how
cause it was lute—and .mmrlhiny whisked ’to do it. He doesn't seem to mind be­ that it is not an economical method,
cto. Tho only
HAS. n. BRADY, Lawyer, Circuit Court
and that at no distant day steam station- ,
that will not L
Commissioner, heal Estate and Insurance by him; be couldn't exactly see what, ,ing punished in the least.”
v
ary’ engines will give place to caloric
Agt. Prompt attention given to al) bualneaabut its eve-balls glared like lire.
frivo headache.
Un his birthday Tommy’s father gave
—
—
for
entrusted to my care. Conveyancing a special
Tara’s a-count was not definite. and him a box of lead soldiers, with a little engines which can be depended upon to j
gl-stM at $1.00 r
ty. Office opposite Union Houae.
was apt to lake any size or shape ac­ cannon, and a bandful of small peas for do a given amount of work at 50 per
BROWN C
cent, the volume of heat required by tho
cording to the questions put tb him.
cannon balls. His . mother gave him n
So far this asset- [
UEBHAUSER, Mcrchon’ Tailor and d«un
in this respect il vfns like the Imiia- pretty silk ball, aud his sister gave him best steam engines.
• er In Ready Made Clothing, sec im
rubber figure in the pantomime, which a china rang with a wreath of flowers tion rests upon experimental tests, for
before you purchase clothing.
Fits gua&gt;
these lately aevised methods hare not yet j
no doubt some of you have seen. Now painted on it. . Tommy was very happy,
an teed.
as tall as a g ant. now sis short as Tom lie had a tine’time shooting down the been subjected to the trial of general ,
ONAH B. RASET, Exprese and Drayman
Results attained in an !
Thumb; now as flat as a flounder, now soldiers and bounding the ball, and he application.
THOUSANDS OF CASES
Goode and Baggage carried to any place in round as a porpoise. But one thing
inventor’s workshop often prove de- |
liked to drink out of his pretty mug. He
the village.
Tom stuck to th.ough thick and thin; kept it by his plate at every meal, and lusive when the attempt to .secure them
iram r dickinson, manufacturer ot
namely, the fiery eyes.
sad that his milk lusted sweeter than is made under different conditions.
PERFECTLY CURED.
There is, however, one gain in the use I
and dealer iu Hard Wood Lumber. Build
Aud Tom was a hero—of course he when he drank from a tin cup.
ing Material a specialty. Cash paid for logs. Mil:
was: wherever he went, all the little '
Al first be w^s very carelal to put hit of caloric engines which is of sufficient
and yard on Sherman dU,a! M. C. R.R crossing
boys followed him
of a kite, |i ncw toys awav as soon os ho grew tired importance to make one wish that their 1
im like
like the
me tail
inn.ui
nnimnl
Mr. Grant
Grout I
playing with them. But one day. employment might become general. '
AMES FLEMING, practical Jeweler and Tom had seen the animal.
Watch-maker. Ckx-ka Watches, Sliver ata. had seen it, too. w
The ex­
&gt;nn 4driving
nvinrr nn
out of the This is their relative safely.
when
an «&gt;xox- [I w|wn |)e [ia(j a|&lt; Jjy,
Plated Ware, Jewelry and Optical Goods. Rock
team through the road bordering the ‘
&gt;
box,*and
was shooting them down, n plosive power of steam is very well |
fort! WaU'iicaas{&gt;ecUlty. Repairing and Eugrav
known
by
the
numerous
disasters
which '
woods.
Ina done In a workmanlike manner.
I little boy came to ask him to help make
The creature must have been much । a snow man in the yard, and off ran it has occasioned. With a caloric boiler
on the rampage, for he. loo. hrel onlv a I( Tommy, leaving his soldiers on the an explosion is impossible.
The pres­
RNO STRONG, plain and tancy doo rnnici
Tbs best facilities for doing work of auj glimpse of il as it darted by, and all ho i1 table, his ball on the floor, and his pretty sure may be so great as to force it apart, i
just as a boiler is sometimes rent when I
could say was that it was large and ।
1 mug on a chair.
mouse-colored.
When he came back an hour later it subjected, for the purpose of trial, to a i
you buy.
Then there were two young men who, was almost dark, and the table was set cold-water pressure, but in one case,
if they had not seen the l»east itself, had
as in the other, the explosive force,
TACOB OSMUN, Livervman, barn near Wol­ Seen tracks in the road much larger for supper. Under the table lay Towscr.
the big dog, gnawing something that which in a steam boiler shatters the
cott House. First class turnouts at reason
than any dog’s, so they, too, considered
Have Signed c&gt;
ahle rates. Special rates to commercial men
had once been bright and pretty, bui iron and throws it with groat violenoe in
themselves entitled' to some humble
Funeral and wedlng parties furnished with car
all directions, is wholly wanting.
The
was now all in pieces aud very wet.
. Following 1
riagea on short notice.
share of Tommy’s fame.
SPRING MEDICINE.
“What have you there, Towser’” chamber of a twenty horse-power caloric
_ _____ _ wtt, mu'w i nrrnr
en^th Captain Marsh took the
At len«
engine
might
explode
in
the
basement
I asked Tommy, and he cratyied under
Docu.
TZELLOGG A BELL, proprietors Planing matter in hand, ----and--declared that some- ,•
Ak. Mill. Planing and Matching, Reaawi:.B
the table to see
He began to cry when of a building and those on the floor
and Moulding a specialty. Scroll Sawing, thing must be done.
, be saw that it was the silk ball which above be wholly unaware of the mishap,
“We can’t stand it no longer.” said
while
those
who
happened
to
be
emTowser had.
he. addressing a select audience of his
"Why didn’t somebody put my ball
fellow-citizens assembled in the village1 away?”’he asked.
GET IT OF TOOK DRUGGIST. PRICE, St-0e I
HM..W. nnuaiT, rw«
wuam.
bar-room.
“
Our
women
are
getting
WKLLS. RICHIRDSOX SiCj-j'
Jewelf7
Silverware. Being
I
“ That is something you must always an immense explosive power has never
nervous”------do for yourself.” said nis mother, who been satisfactorily solved. However, if
“Jes’ so,” interrupted one of hisJ was busy cutting the bread for supper. hot air is free frbm this defect its em­
hearers, “ Polly—that’s my wife—won’t
1 •• 1 have fto time to spend in picking up ployment as a motor might be advisable,
sleep with the second story window open1 your toys.”
even on the sup position that there was
.
TOHN BRAUN, Shoemaker Special attentl tlou given to fine and sewed ixxiU, also tor fear the panther *11 jump in.”
As Tommy came out from under the no great saving id the coat of running
“ And my wife waked me up the oth­
Ail manufactured work made frvm
the different engines.
Bat if it can be
beat of s—&gt;ek and
im
a____ —U er night,” said another, “ because she' table be stepped oh something hard. Il
! was a red-coated soldier. All the rest shown that by its use a saving in ex­
heard a noise in the chimbly, and' of the soldiers were on the floor, too, pense of 50 per cent, can be made, no How to Basel the Aaaaalta of 111 Health—Dr.
thought to be sure ’twas the panther.”, and all were broken exoept a Genera) other argument will bo necessary.
KcBMdj's FAVOBITE BENEDY Meaa*
U
] J A. BARBER, M. D..
“You see the truth of my statement,”
tho various methods referred to can be
■ on horsqback.
continued the Captain, “and I would1
HOMCEOPATHIC
“
“ You havo all been treading on my
add that our children can’t go through1 soldiers,” said Tommy, crying harder.
Chestnut Woods for fear of their lives.
“ I can’t ever play with them again.’ ’
Now, as I said, we can’t stand this no’
“ Lt is your own fault, Tommy,” said
longer, and I propose that we go out in1 his sister. •• We have often told you to
a body and bunt the animal.”
put your toys away. You are a big boy develop motive power at about one- Kidncj- coni|4alnts and Coosllpattob
JHreeU, Nashville, Mich.
To this all assented, and the Captain1 ’ now, and must not expect us to take quarter of the expense now required. It and for w amen who are chronically
was chosen to lead the devoted band, on
care of your things as if you were s oould then supply i| by wires to dynamo
y^OLCOTT HOUSE,
'
account of his military experience;—be
machines placed in hundreds of different
baby.”
had been Captain of a militia company,
Just then Tommy’s little
sistei workshops at a low of oaly about ton per
Naalivllle Allcmtr&amp;n.
and had once covered himself with glory crawled over to the chairun which lay
A. 8. Footk, Proprietor.
in a sham fight.
the mug. She grasped it with her baby
Ho accepted the honor with due mod­
mibtedln spring with Indigestion, f urn Id
hands, nnd before Tommy could spring
Ahartasd Liver, want of appetite, eoustlpal
esty, and named a time for the expedi­
to take it from her it fell to the floor, is a wide margin ior the display of econ­
■ a fov rish state c! the skint If so. take wbt
tion to start. At tho hour appointed,
and with a loud crash broke into twenty omy in the um &lt;rf the latest power of tael,
four o'clock of the next afternoon, a
and the present outlook is that in the
P»rty of twelve men mounted on their P Poor Tommy! He cried until he had Immediate future this undesirable waste
farm-horses set out for Chestnut Woods, no tears left to shed, and he felt toe
£ 4. BTJBH.
badly to eat his supper.
But he had
to the occar learned a good lesson, for he nevei
again left his toys about the room. He
Clowe at their heels came a rabble of was so careful to put them away,' that
r-fint Naw York DiMriat,

,* Ed

• In-Jrui tHrt*.

w

JiwrtOTS.

TO GIRLS

B

TO YOUNG LADIES

TO OVER-WORKED WOMEN

I

To Women Advanced in Life

W

W

L

KIDNEY-WORT

THE GREAT CURE

C

RHEUMATISM

S

Over

J

H

KIDNEY-WORT

J

O

KIDNEY-WORT

C

KIDNEY-WORT

A SPRING DEFENCE!

Physician and Surgeon.

NO PATEl

BOOT AId’sBOKIAHB,
XAMTHUI,

-

M1CM.
tho wooda.”
Arrived at the woods the Captain and

inlinoii

ocher box of soldiers. another ball and
another mug. Ana these he kept far »

BEATTTN
th’ th-S«7-,lod plunr&gt;d 601(117 toto

�j-xjL
In.

KALAMAZOO

asnvuie.
Nashville.
lx

POKEIGX

Wm. A. AYLSWORTH

an mvertigaUng board that forty-two persons were killed
And nine wounded during the recent Indian

discovered on

United Eui«w to strangle Fcnlanlsm at the

the 4tii at Baxter

A Ftnuot'B hailstorm on the 4th in Virginia
sod North Caro Ina wrecked boose*, leveled
Jn-n were killed by falling debris, nnd rail­
way travel wm retarded by the fallen timber.
A coxravcnuN train on the Madlsorf dP

rarely wounding fire other*.

UarfleM

wm

to tho widow of Minister Kilpatr ck.
Mr. Plumb offered a nwoiutlon of Inquiry as

any ou-.cer may nj&gt;piy for rvrtlrcment
wa* adopted. w»d. also a clau*" fixing
«txty-fuur y--«r* a* the agt' for compulsory rre
flEMnentr...ln tha House Mr. liolrortson introducvtl a bill to apply to tb&lt;- pcrmairont itnprovem. nt of thu Mb*!«4lpni River nn nmouut
...i——*.—.— ooUtCTvd In that re-

Spirits btli. Hr. Lynch introduced a bill to
guarantee the Interest on t&amp;-Xl&lt;MXOO bonds of
•projected railway on the kwes from N»w
Oriean* to Cairo.
DOMESTIC.
A Bbookltn (N. Y.J woman, wbd lately
■died leaving nn otste of 15,00.'. bequeathed
&lt;5 to each of her three son* and the residue to
tiro CaibnUc Cimrch to pay for masro* for the
repov'e ft.' her soul.
■ Thb pubUtHlrbt *tatcment issued on ttc 1st
make* the following exhibit: Total debt (In­
cluding interest of &lt;11,273,W1) &lt;L343,5?i.aiL
Cash ir\ Treasury. #242.103,781- Debt, less
amount in Treasury, i 1.7tfl.473,l5&amp; Decrease
during Mar, &lt;10,373,441.
Decrease since
June 3D, 1351, &lt;D»,123.O5L f
. The increase in lntcrn.il revenue receipt*
during May. compared with the same month
the ricveu muulhs ende.l Mar' III were &lt;133,7L-A"
The United States currency outstanding on
the 1*; aggregated KGC. IGiUSU

AUscked an outgoing train nu tho Chicago,
Alton ik St. I.puis Uallnnd st the outskirts of
Ctdearo. and ejected therefrom a number of

Shot*

, were Injured, one fatally. Judge Pillsbury,
a Judge of the Appellate Court, r.-eeivcd a
aeriou* abdcmii;i~ wVtnd.
a bole for a telegraph post In the street
at'Alamosa, (ML, struck a stratum uf gold-

been marked off into pkcer claim*.
The Illinois Episcopal DIocmm Convention,
•lately tn scMlon at Chicago, refused—'Jb to fc

■ A vlw d»ys apt a t&gt;o*6 containing two boys
and a d-»g w»« carried over the middle Gene­
see Falls st Rochester, N. Y. The boy* did
At Stockton, Kan., the other night Sarah
Carpenter poured kerosene oil upon *ome

inevitable explosion fallowed, end Mtes Car­
penter wua f. tally burned.
Owing tu the lUncss of a juror, the further
hearing of the Malley case, in New Haven,

Ths Cotnmbriouera of Emigration on the
an appropriation of 8200.Oft) to maintain Cas­
tle Garden.
• Sandy Matthew* (colored) wa* hanged at

of Eaatet Polk, aod Jatne|*E. White wm ex-

Artbur McMullin.
Nothing of importance frjnspircl

the

milk in the reduced demand for those article*.
fifteen eent* ;«r ton.

Busine** tutu in Pitt*-

dnrsticiL
.
During the seven day* ended on the l«t there’
were 183 business failures in the United
State.
’ FathbaXatmuiy. Vicar General

Denver.

te the body ot Dun Miguel Otero, tiro leading

us decide*’ that more legislation Is necessary
&gt;efore the Eigtit-Hunr law I* enforced at the
navy yard* and other Government work*.'
Tub Catholic Land-Leaguer* of ^Buffalo exCa* great iodigoatfon over the policy of
hop Gilmour, of CJevctend, with regard to

Manchester cup at the English races &lt;&gt;» the 1st
Twenty j ersou* perished In a burning poor­
house at Oc-thammer, Sweden, on the night

Bbkxxax, the imprisoned Secretary of the

custody on the morning of the 2dunauthorized emigration by cfmscript*.
lx South Quebec, on the evening of the 3d,
a loss of &lt;250,000 wm incurred by the burning
of the Grand Trunk station and sheds.
A DiBFATcn from Chihuahua, Mexico, of the
had suffered a crushing defeat near Bo»-

Tee propeller line* al Buffalo had up to the
d carried west rani one-fourth at all the coal

Jxmuxl from the High Bridge in

*

Spri ng-2th Harrow

Over
500 Suits
At less than yon can buy the Cloth and Trimmings.
For $4 and S5, we are Belling a very good every day
Suit, many styles to select from.
For $8 and $10, we are selling a very desirable diagonal
worsted,, bound and made in sack and frock styles. Other
stores get $12 for the same suits.
Our 12 00 and 14.00 Suits will surprise you.
For 15.00 we can give you a suit you need not be asham­
ed to wear any place, and would cost $18 to $20 at any store.
Our 16.00 and 18 00 Suits are well made and trlmed, and for fit and wear can not be equaled.

Mexican commander. Tblrty-seve-j Indians
were klfled, ten taken prisoner*, and their en­
tire camp outfit captured,
•
Arabi Bei bn the 2d showed tho Consul*
General nt Cairo a letter from the rfultan,
The six men who were supposed to have
warning him that be was held persnually re­
been drowned in tiro drill of the Alta (Nct.)
sponsible for the safety of European realmine were rescued on the 3d They had dend, and he expressed his sincere hitention
twisted the end of the compressed-air pipe
apirt snd thus bresthrd an atmcMpbere com­
captured Khartoum
paratively an vitiated. The day before two men
General Grcsarn Garibaldi, the Italian
tried to reach _ them In boats and were suffo­
patriot and liberator, died on the 3d at halfcated.
*
Patrick Mokax, of Brooklyn, N. Y., has
brought suit for &lt;30,000 against the officer* ot
al month* past the health of Garibaldi hod
the Auburn Penitentiary for torturing him
_l«cen most precarious, but it was not until the
while be wa* serving a term for passing
day of hl* death that his disease, bronchitis,
Our stock in this line is the largest and finest we ever of­
counterfeit money.
assumed an alarming form.
The Government ha* paid &lt;350,000 for tho
fered. All Goods from a substantial school suit to the finest
TitB Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer In
building of ■the Freedmen's Bank, and a fifteen
Ireland, opening the Dublin Commission on dress suit. We have in stock more boys’ and youths’ clothing
per cent, dividend ha* been, declared in favor
the 2d, said fifty-six per cent of the crime in
than the combined stock of any house in town. Our stock
of Che creditor* of the institution.
the city and sevccty-alx per cent in the couoA vifioca bull-dog belonging to Mr. Flan­
nery, of Dayton, Ohio, recently nearly ate up
murders, he understood there wan no chance
bi* five-yeLr-oJd son.
of bringing the pepetrators to justice.
At Orange County, Florida, on t lie 5th Mr.
Tub Prince** Louise arrived al Quebec on
Wsrhurton started tn s carriage with his wife
the 4th. She had a royal reception.
and twin children—the entire family—for
A CABLXGltaM of the 4th state* that AU
Lake Euitis. On the way he drove into a
Sadck. the Egyptian Minister of Finance, had Is full up and PLENTY OF THEM.
Readv pay .purchasers
lake to water the horse. The latter drew the become insane, owing to fear* of bodily liarm.
desired. WE OWN THE GOODS at about 70 cents on the
carriage Into deep water, and the whole family
Arabi Bet said to an interriewer on the 3d
were drowned. The four bodies were recovthat he can&lt; little for England's threats or dollar.
You can save money, and be comparatively happy by
promises, and European aggression would be
buying your goods
The Harmony Mills at Cohoe*. N. Y., were met with Li* whole strength.
opened on the 5th to such as chose to go to
Thirty-two men were employed on tbo 3d
work. One man aud bis two daughters ap­ to protect Clifford Lloyd, the special magis­
peared. A notice wa* then posted on the trate for Clare, Ireland, who had received ad­
d.MM-s that nothing would be done this sum­ ditional letters from the Unite/] State* threat___ ____________
_ We want your
BUTTER and EGGS and qrill allow you
mer.
%d“! “. o!
•PINE WOODS PRICES.
Three negroes who criminally assaulted a the duties of hi* boffice.
thlrtecn-year-old girl were taken from jail at
The will of Genera! Garibaldi, made public
Kespectfull y
Butlerville, Ark., on the 4th by a mob and on the 31 ordered the cremation of hte body
hanged to* tree.
.
and the preaervotion ot tiro a»he* In an urn
Tim: Cleveland (O.) rolling-mills started up near the tomb of hl* child at Caprera. In tiro
on the 5th with a force of about l,U)-» men.. Italian Chamber of Deputies a bill to place a
The strikers resorted to no act* of violence, monument at the grave and pay pensions of
but succeeded in Inducing many of the new li\0Xl lire to hi* widow aqd each of hi* fire
bauds to turn back.
children was paswd. The French Chamber of
Buhness during the week ended
the 3d Deputies adjourned as a tribute of respect.
took a stride forward, according to the exhibit
A Calcutta dispatch of the 5th say* the
of clesring-bouse exchange*, which aggre­ Khond*t an aboriginal tribe in the Central
gated &lt;6!0A’73,511. against &lt;6-S.oa5.075 lor the Provinces, hid captured Brahmapootra, loot-1
week ended May 27.
ed the Treasury and murdered 400 people.
Porn masked traln-robb.-ra boarded a train
A TWESTT-nvE pouxd orcccb- load Ing gun
on the Mlaaour: Pacific Rood, near Denton, recently exploded on the British iron-clad
Tex., on the 5th, but they were greeted with Swiftsure, off Madeira. One sailer .was killed
u volley of shot* from armed guards and one and four others fatally injured.
uf the niidere was killed. The other* escaped.
A commission, specially named by the. Sul­
A DO ct I.TOtl striking .bollerlmakers of New tan to compromise the Egyptian difficulties,
York resumed work on Uro Otte at the in­ sailed from C'lnr-tantinuplc on the 4tx
creased w„ge« demanded. .
Desire toannonnee that they have rented A. C. Buxton’s new and elegant brick store and arc
LATER NEWS.
now stocking the same with a complete line of
PERSONAL AND POLITICAL.
The election for Supreme Judge in the Fifth
Tac Ku.iaa Urrenhaek Suu CoamUou Illinois District on the 5th resulted in the re­
election of A. M. Craig
Reanlutlous were adopted declaring that the
interest* ot enterprise ami labor call for a dr- stroyed by tire on the ftth.
cnlating medium consisting of gold and silver
Five men were suffocated in a burning
and jxper, all full legal tender, controlled by mine al Leadville^ Col, or. the 6th.
the Government; In favor of a full end unre­
stricted coinage nf gold and silver; that the ed in a tunnel on the Galveston Road on the
Natlomd-Bank currency ahoula give place to 6lh. It blew out the works connecting the
sertioni, aud killed three men.
banner the following Just and equal principles
ChshlbsIL Reed ap(«ared before 'Judg-q
of our party: Equal rlghu, no monopolies, no Wylie on tiro fith, tn tho Criminal Court at
banks of issue, a safe currency, reform fn the Washington, and asked to have the record in
Civil Service, reform In the tariff system, elce- the Gultcau case corrected, especially the
tlonk by the people, no imprisonment for debt, allegation that President Garfield died In the
indc;&gt;cndcnre of the three co-ordinate branches Diitrict of Columbia. The motion was denied,
of the Guvernment, a non-partisan Judiciary, as the Judge had no personal knowledge of
FOR THE LEAST MONEY.
sud the right of the Executive to make suita­
Remember that we have do. old, shop-worn and unseasonable goods, but that everything La
ble nominations." Harris M. Plalsted- ws*
Oregon advice* of the 6th »bow that the
renominated for Governor. He responded in
entire -Republican State ticket wm elected
a brief address, accepting the nomination.
on tbe 5th by over 2,000 majority. Mr.
lx tlie Star-route case* at Washington on George. Republican, was re-clected to Con«ir All our purchases are made with the cash and by strict attention to the wants of our
the .1st a jury was secured. Judge Wylie
grerts, and the Republicans have a majority in
cuatomcrs we expect to reapsucecs*.
staled it was bis intention to bring the case* the Legislature.
Nashville. Apr. 20,1882.
to a close before July 4
Eionr Iron-mills near Pittsburgh, Ps., reThe Problbitiouirts ot Malhe on the 1st
nominated Wllliaus T. Eustis for Governor.
increasc ot wage* having been acceded to.
Exvot Trescott and Walker Blaine
President Arthur on tho 6th norrdsat-d
represent that country ** lying at the mercy George P. Pomeroy to be Consul-General at
Calm, E. T. Brulatour for Secretary of Lega­
Tua libel suit of Senator McPherson against tion at Paris, and E. G. Van Rifer Consul at
the N. Y. Herald resulted In a verdict of &lt;1,000 Moaouw.
A CABLBORAM of the 6th states that a re­
against the fatter.
Coiokel Amos Webster,.formerly a mem­ duction in rents was being generally granted
ber of General Grant's staff. »nume-l the du- in Intend, and tenants were paring up.
A London dispatch of the fl'th state* that
there were 306 oulrages perpetrated In Ireland

IBosrs Sclxcol S-uxits

J

Boots, Shoes And Groceries.

Cheap! Cheap! Cheap!

W. .7. AYLSWORTH.
NEW STORE!

Wiard Plows,
South Bend Chilled Plows,
,
Gal# Plows,
(Buy Genuine Factory Pointe)
They are much cheaper and better.

Strayer’s.GRAIN DRILL,
RAWHON’H

REAPERS &amp; MOWERS
Lightest and Strongest Made,

HUBBARD

Hleaner &amp; Binder
Improved 1&amp;J2.

Sash, Doors and Blinds,
Paints, Oils, Varnishes,
Bl'IkDEKS HARDWARE.

DETROIT STOVE CO’S. STOVES
Domestic &amp; New Home

SEWING MACHINES
When in. need of tho.Best

Grades of Hardware and Ma­

chinery.

Cali and see me.

FRANK C. BOISE.

THE CROWN

NEW FIRM!

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN
GentM Furnishing Good*

THE GREAT SECRET

PRENDLE de CHIPMAN.

Willi tiii LABQESTtand lost Complete Stool of

tra*»k of the Elevated Railway at West BrighThe American party of the Ottawa (Mich.)
lx the United States Senate on the 6th Mr.
District has Domlnutevi John Ik Goosen for
Cdngresk
Slater Introduced a bffi to prohibit the collec­
Commsxdeb Terry, of the United Bute* tion of party aasescnients'by Government emNavy, a brother ut General Tenry, died of coo- i

petition to th* Supreme Court of the District

rehtMifng of the our of hi* client.
The Iowa
Democratic Convention has
LMh of August.
Tin lureol, Suu. Orrentert CrerrecUm

THE CROWN SEWING MACHINE.

* wTbe "C own ’comes into tiro market
be taut uf all the mac. Ines, but baa sprung to
front rank aloncc from th* fact that it Uns ta­
ken the good features in all other machine*
and put them tn one grand combination, mak­
ing thia the Haodsomcst, Largest, Moat Silent
and Lightest Running machine yet offered. All
l the ••point*’’ lli»t the experieee ot Sweuty year*
in all kind* of family and light manufacturing
work has provr-d to tro&gt;-b*olutelr good are to be
found ouly-ln the “Crown." Other machines
may bsve'ooc, two or three of these ‘ pointe’*
but none but the “Crown” ha* them all.
Every device that i* really desirable tn other
machine* will be found in the "Crown.” Ad­
vantage ba* been taken of the experiments and
experience with all kinds of machines evrt to­
reoted, anti the “Crown" i* a perfect embodi­
ment of evcrytlng go d in them.

E. R. WHITE.

AGAIN TO THE EKONT! EVERYBODY
FURNITURE

The Democrats ot the Twelfth Indiana Di*.
triet hare neexinoted Robert Lowry, of Fort
Ox the eveoiog of the 3d a crowd of drunk­
en negroes »et fire to several building* In Epee,

rv
/I 4 ■' V.
'f... . ■ ■■» iT. .
Ij'__ X -__
11_
Having
just —returned
from the East
with
three _immense
stocks for Nashville, Big Rapids and Cadillac, which
gives us the advantage over small dealers, who
purchase for one store only, we are offering
1-4 0 1^1

oflered a resolution, which wa* adopted. for
an Inquiry Into the propriety of reducing let­
ter poAtage to two cents end on newspapers

Ever laid down in any one store in Barry
or Eaton Counties.

Take notice that the time ba* come wben the
Narrow Tired Wagon is no longer aoughf after
by experienced men. People are continually
found^hrtt^r110l,eUerVhiU8’ &lt;Dd lbcyb*™

Wide Tire Wagon!

BUY A WIDE TIRE WAGON

Our mammoth twu-story double store
Is full and running over.

I KEEP TIIKJtf

Everything you need from the smallest Bracket to
a $125 Parlor Suit.
You can rave money and have a better selection to
us than any’other dealer

cLoom

So hand for eale.

BUY YOUR PLOW POINTS

| FIRST CUSS BLACKSMITH,

�IsTETW

cUw by wring him for one third of bh
•180,000,______________________

Cordoroy Corset.

BRIGHTS DlBRAO, DIABETES.
Beware of the stuff that pretends to cure theis
disMse &lt;&lt; other serious Kidney, Urinary «
Liver Diseases, as they only reietvc for a time

Tin* CORSET is made to the newest French sh»ry.14 inches
rents per brad for all all turkey* aud
to*.?, cIslKX-atoiy embroidered. GORES CORDED CRDMW1SE,
ttou* forming a prrfsrt bust without the tmsighlly and in many
rely soh-ly on Hop Better* the only remedy that instance* annoying cruasbntM*: alxf removable Side Steel*.
will ssnriy snd iwmanewtly cure you. It deaThe main feature of this CORSET however, is the NEW
troy* and tcnmvtv the cause of disease so ef­ CORIXJROY MATERIAL, used in place of tha-bone; thl* new
Council of tbc ritlage ot Nashville to
fectually that it nevorreturns.
psxgii'a Great R»lir&lt;«J Www will apjvar upon intruder,
substitute for boue will not only usue
He employed ns, and as all other mean* had
CATARRH OF THE BLADDER.
Stinging. smartiuE. irritation of the urinary
failed, wc commenced an action of ejectment.
passages, disewsed discharge*, cured by Bucbunrdiuaace.
Mr. WoDrean employed E. A. Fqpte Esq., of nahia.
|1, at druggirt*. Mich. Depot, JAS plied with.
exceeds all this dty- Mr. Wellman was entitled to a Jury kDAVIfiAOO-Detroit,
Mich, x
___
trial, but he waived that right, and a trial was
rxhthltton in tho United Mates.
‘
bad before Judge Hooker, at.tbe April term,
The procroslon is led by the beautiful pageant 1880. Mr. Wellman was given every oppurtnmustrstino the departure of Lalla Rookh from
land* which he bad taken unlawful poasesalan
by the bandsoim^t womrji In American, sod of and made all the proofs he diwlred, and was
fully represented by hl* eoaiwel. Mr. Brown,
by hit attorncya,dealed lbe right of the general
sndaHotte
wPl be paid to any ladv, breaking the substitute for whalelxrac IN SIX MONTHS ORDINARY
WEAR. ANY dealer is authorized to pay that amount, under- our guarantee^
animal* -hall be relea-Bd, "
!a seen seated in a genuine East India Howdah,
and if said
and all damsg^i done bv un’r
(though no such thing had been attempted in
animal* being unlawfully at iarcr *imll n«x be
For Sale Only by
honor, servitors, and all the pomp and wealth this case.) Educated idiots, occupying the
]«id within three days then said pixind uuutar
may sell said animals at public «union- at -aid
pr.un.l.after due notice thcrcuf.aud from m-tuiea
instance-in different states, eau*ed survey* to
arising from sakl sale he may retain bU fee*
Dealer In Dry COods, Notions &amp; Fancy Coods
Another moat attractive and novel feature of be made of land* becoming dry and arable by
NASHVILLE, MICH.____________________________
in America
if auy to the owner of said animals In case It la
who have time tried to secure title, from the
called for within one mouth; if not called fur
pj R. DICHINHON A CO
within one month, the poaol master shall pay
beautiful queen U government to Such lands, been able U» sustain
said surplua mdney to the village treasurer.takseated In a magnificent barge their claims.
tug his receipt therefor. If th* owner uf said
----- NEW------ .
ablaxe with gold,and all the sarroudiugs arc in
All the facts were put in evidence In till* ease
animals appear within five months from th*
keeping with the account given by the most re­ and the counsel for both plaintiff and defend­
-GALLON-------owuerebfp to the common c-&gt;uik &gt;1 -aid -undue
Hable historians of this remarkable regal ant deeming the question of great Importance, i
money M»U be paid to him. but if be doe*
not only to many men iu Eaton Co., but I
Journey. Then follow
not appear within the time above epeeffted said
throughout the state generally, took time 1
TWMNTT-TWO HLOR BLIpnAXTS,
surplus money shall telong to the Incidental
fQkdof said village.
attached to chariots ablaxe with gold and glit­ and submitted to the coart elaborate written ar/ Sec. 4. The pound master’s Doltrw ot sal*
ter; two martial bands enliven the occasiou; gumcnl* (citing a great many authorities on
, ■
I-XJH
•
ihull be given as follows: for the sale of sheep,
READY FOR BUSINESS
the “Grand Itasliaw.” with bi* rstlnuc of slave* tbc principles of law Involved! and the Circuit
slTtag. turkeys and geese, the notice Shall be
-------- FOR--------cup bearers, sultans, etc., i* reprtseutaxed, Judge, after taking considerable lime therefor*
Every day In Ute year—Sundays excepted. DIGS,
one copy at the poat office of U&gt;c village;
riding upon white camel* and black drome­ rendered his decision in the case sustaining
BOOKS,
for the sale of l»onw*.
a*M-«, mules
daries; upon a colo*aal chariot, designated a* Mr. Brown's title to all land to question.
No
aud cattle the notice shall contain a dl»JEWELRY,
Meuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago,
the “Car of India,” a monster living lion is review was sought by Mr. Wellman, but he
cripUon of the animal or animal* to tx&gt; aokl Mild
Backache, Sorenees of tho Chest,
shall be posted as aforesaid, and twenty-five
WALL.
PAPER,
.
placed, and by bls side a youthful maiden, sun
■till KCpf'yanacng
kept “yanking” uia
bls fish
uwi pole
p»ic aud
u&gt;u broiling
cent* stiall be added to the eurt* of sale for
with her baud reeling upon the head of the
■
Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Spell­
WINDOW SHADES, ixwting said notice*. Every uoticc shall bear
savage brute. A monster cage with gla*» the .proceeds thereof with fuel from Brown’s
Of'every dercription, done in a superior s
ings and Sprains, Burns and
toe date of it* being posted, aud give the &lt;tav
•
sides and ends •» filled with anaconda* and woodland.
manner,
al
lhe
drop
of
the
bat;
and
and hour of sale, and said pound master shall .
Scalds, General Bodily
python*, and in the midst of this wriggling
DYESTLFFM,
have the right to adjourn said sale, not to exSatisfaction guaranteed.
mass of serpenta the spectators behold an Ea*t etnied be limjilv ecorued it and lx*»lcd bow
■
Pains,
| &lt;ecd four days.at any one time, wueuever ha
Indian Snaac Charmer dallying with the shin­
PEOPBIETA.BY MEDICIKE8,
। Birn’l deem it proper so to do.
he would take the taw into hie ow t hands, and Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted
ing. slimy monsters.
Sez- 5.
tL Any
Anr person
tierwin &lt;ir
&lt;&gt;r parvons
narxins who
Sec.
wlw&gt; shall
1&gt; RESCUI PTION'8,
kill any man who dared attempt to eject him.
Feet and Ears, and all other
rescue or attcmjA
rescue any animals be­
draw another chariot, followed by the “Car of There threats were usually coupled with such
RECEIPTS, ing driven by any person to said pound.
Pains and Aches.
the seasons'land the “Chariot of Olympus," terrible oaths that the small boys and nervpu*
shall release or attempt to release any nnlhUd'
which is embellished with representations of women of West Sunfield looked forward with
And every article kept In a fint-clas* drug store from said pound, without complying with the
the fates, furies, graces, sirens, nymphs. ■ gods,
provisions of this ordinance, and. contrary to
heroes and men. Next the 1-eo De Westes fear and trembling to a time when the strong
the directions &lt;&gt;f the pound matter, siiail &lt;m
Kept constantly on hand.
-------- MY--------Hanovarian Stud ot twenty-two performing arm of the law and that of Wellman should
conviction, be fined not lea* than live, nor more
stallions and ponies in elegant and elaborate clash, and the finale of these “Outrageous
than fifty dollar* and costa of pro«ecath&gt;u, and
trappings, followed by
.
on failure to pay^ueb fine and coSts be im
Proceedings” should be written In blood. SOLD BT ALL DRUGGISTS ABD DEALERS
prisoned in the county Jail not more than nineoraxitp den» or lion and tioeks
IK MEDICINE.
F.trbearance bad long ceased to be a virtue and
tv day*, or both such doe and impriaonment in
the discretion of the court.
DEPARTMENT
orebestriou mingles it* shrill notes with those Mr. Wellman was ejected by the Sheriff, who
Is conceeded to be the beat. Try it.
Sic. 6. The pound master shall keep a cor­
of the bands, and at intervals are to be seen proceeded Id every way legally and in such
rect account of every animal ■ driven to the
Are kept complete, to m&lt;-&lt;t the demand* of the
manUcra* masqucnidcrs in fanciful and mirth­ manner as to distress Mr. W. and his family
pound, aud shall every three month* re.xxrt to
people.
provoking costumes.
the common council tbc number of animal*
Just
as
Utile
as
possible.
By
a
strict
attention
to
business,
and
square
An instructive as weil as humorous feature
lmpouud&lt;-d, the number and kind of animate
FOR BATTLE CREEK!!
Mr. Brown 1» not a “border ruffian” but a HO’I
of the pageant is the appearance of a real tiavedealing with aH our customers, we hope to mcr-.
sold and tbc amount ot money received there­
TO SEE THE WONDERFUL
■inging band of old-time old plantation darkies. gentleman in every respect, and his only mis­
It a llliend patronage from the fanners of this
for.
All were formerly ■lares, not oue of them has
Sec. 7. Any person wbothall let from their
take
In
this
matter
was
in
submliing
to
the
vicinity.
ever bet-u away from tlic south, and. seated
owner’s enclosure lhe animals ol another,
upon cotton bales, in a genuine southern mule willful and malicious trespasses of till* man,
Mills on railroad,—east of depot
And “BOLIVAR,”
that they shall be unlawfully al tarj^. or who
team, thl* land of freedmen sing, a* the (iro- Wellman, for seven long years, instead of
-hall designedly open any ooeh i u«l&lt;&gt;*urr, so
ecsdoo moves, the camp-meeting n.t-kdlcs ami marching him and bis “sklUclt” off hl* pre­
II. K. DICRIXSO V A CO.
that Buch animalscan go therefrom un-.iwfully
at large, or with Intent to have the same tmmises at the business end of a doabled-barrelcd Coming, and Eighteenth Annual Tour, and will
t'uunded. or who shall drive or bring within the
shotgun,
and
that
on
double
quick
;aa
the
Edi
­
thuee cheat haxm or music
Exhibit at'
limits of thi* village any animal-. wfaaMi this
ordinare Intends to restrain, with the Intent U&gt;.
are In position along the line of the cavalcade; tor of The NeWb, or any other man of equal
imprison or to have the same liable tu be im­
droves of camels, dimln uti e ponies, ornate spirit and dctertniualiou would, if a villainous
prisoned. shall for each offense upon tonrf.’tioo
tableau car*, and nearly . a mlfe of ttatuary tramp should quarter himself In the parlor,
thereof, par a fine of not les* than lire nor
adorned and bcaut|fullr-«nibclli*hed animal
GREATEST OF ALL, THE
more than fifteen dollars, together with cost* of
cages, al! drawn by bundrcd* of plumed steeds, forage in the pantry, and, “being of a retiring
suit, atyl on failure to nay such fine ami c&lt;n4*
driven uniformed, constitute some of lhe at­ disposition of mind,” lay himself away in the
may be imprisoned tn the county Jail not more
tractive features of this princely pageant “■pare bed,” to the great terror of.oue’s wife
than tbtrtT days.
. ,
,
Our readers should reach Battle Creek i&gt;y nine
Sec. S. Thi* oniinace shall take effect on
in the fiA-tioon. in order to behold thl* grant! and children. The cases are exactly parallel.
1.500 WIM» DK4KTS
As to when Mr. U’. came to Michigan, or bow
the 12th day of June A- D. 1S&amp;2.
free-for-all holiday parade.
----- COLOSSAL----Approved Mfiy 23rd 18s2.
be voted upon the proposition to bring Michi­
F. McDEBxr,'
E. Chipman.
COMMUNICATEE.!
gan “into the galaxy of state*, ”^rhat particu­
Clerk.
Prcs.dent.
lar farm be moved upon in Wtxxlland, or what
Editor Nashville News:
road-be took from Vermontville to get there,
Probate Order.
Dusk Bnt:- -Mr. •'Sidney H. Brown oJ 8un- we are not ^formed,as Hr. Foute wholly failed
IN HER WONDER MOVING ACT OT
field has called our attention to an article in
to make any proof of these all Important facta,
-niAVERSINC THE HIGH WIRE H£R FEE’
your issue of May ttTth, entitled “Outrageous
on the trial of the case. The statement tn the
ENCASED IN BASKETS
Proceedings,” and desires us tti give you the
Sbcap-Shearing time is upon us and the
article referred to saying that “the above are
facta to the case as they actually exist and ap­
the particulars of this disgraceful proceeding,
pear of roenriJ in our Circuit Court. Koowin g
«s we received them from Mr. Wellman, Ttiurs
probale
that the columns of your paper are open to re­
In tin
day morning." was hardly Decenary, as any­
but* inalictou. falsehoods, as well as to reprove
F. B1ZE1
one who read the article and had any knowledge
of the facta,would see at once that no man but
place to the following brief statement of facts :
Wellman himself could “meander” so far from
Of the undersigned, I* prepared to make into ■
In It® Horst to J. Lawrence purchased of the
the truth, in giving a statement of the case. It
Thereupon it is ordered, that
ter of section 17 tn Sunfield. In Ibfifl Mr. is evident that you could not have had the
pleasured!a personal acquaintace with Mr.
-A sail* orCMrlMi,

I*erfeet Health, .
G-reat Comfort and
^Perfection in Fit.
BUT IS ALSO

WRRRENTED NEVER TO BREAK!
«l 0.00 REWARD,

Retail Price, $1,00.

■CUSTOM

CErMeoi. Pouring Mill F.

T. BOISE,

RHEUMATISM,

CUSTOM

GRINDING !

FLOUR. MEAL AND MILL FFED

Our Graham Flour

PAINT AND BRUSH

A. VOGEKER te CO.,

22 TRAINED

ELEPHANTS!

Call and Examine!

Largest Elepant i'ul. World I

F. T. BOISE.

WOOL

CARB Ilf G°OSt’
Cost,
ClriCUS IN 2 RiNGS AND SPINNING
Cost!

TUESDAY, JUNE 13,

GREAT FOREPAUGH SHOW

New Carding Mill

ROLLS, OR YARN ’

Lawrence and took immediate poaseaaion, and
baa Improved the same and made it a good farm
where be has and sttll doc* reside with bi*
family. Tbi* quarter teflon is made fraction­
al by the meander line on tbc east shore of Sawba Lake, and contain* 108 51-100 acres of laud,
outside of such meander line.
When the or­
iginal survey wa* made the land from which
Mr. Wellman claims he wa* fltegally ejected,
was et tiier covered with water or such low land

Ready for use, all the wool of this seclicn, with

have no doubt they are correct in every par­
ticular,” in speaking of the alleged circum­
stances. Mr. Wellman himself was the wrong
doer from the begining and he has do sympathy
from those who understand the facto in the
ease. We submit thia statement to yon for
publication, injustice to, and at the request of
Mr. Brown, who has good reason to and does
feel aggrieved at the publication of the article
referred to. It does great injustice to him, to
was so surveyed. In the course of time, and as the Sheriff of Eaton Co. and Indeed to our Cir­
cuit
Judge, for Wellman's ejectment was in
Michigan emerged from that swampy coodipursuance of, and under the writ issued by the
coibt, for the purpose of enforcing the orders
the state (Judging from the early surveyor*'
thereof against one who bail set the court, the
officers and the county al defiance.
Hally dry and arable.
Pxnximgtox A Dean.
About 1880 or 70 thia Wellman without par-

GOOD NEWS.
No more Chill* and Ague la this section.
Our Druggist I* selling an article called
1874, following fishing as a buaines* when “Anew Coxqcnoa.” It in about the only
Mti&gt;f«ctory prcj&gt;aration sold for the cure of
Fever and Ague, Dumb Cliiils. Intermittant or
In 1874 he took his Wife there with him and Biiiious Fevcra. The Proprietor ufthe Aona
•ought to enforce the doctrine of -‘squatter Coxqvuoa has used but little energy to make
sovereignty,” claiming that all lauds an Rawba this medicine known and vet its sale* are iniLake and the ten thousand oilier inland lakes
so effactually

For sale at lowest prices.
Stocking Yarn

or disappearing; belonged to the general gov-

thereon, and bay it ‘‘when it came into mar­
ket” Mr. Wellman did not stop to explain to

DON’T DIE IN THE HOUSE.
Ask druggists fur “Rough on Rate.”
elvw wm out rat*, mk-c, iwd-trtig*. roaches; ven

you in a moment.
Nashville, Mich., June 7,1882.

Kindness I* the gulden chain by which so­
ciety U bound together.

sra-g- —
1,000 MEN ANO HORSES.
Coming with 2. 3, and of.en
FOUR GREAT RAILWAY TRAINS
All Europe's Great riders,
SPECIAL CIRCUS FOR BOYS AND GIRLS
The Grand

CLEMENT SMITH.

8064

3

GREAT

BANDS

ELMTBA E W1AK8. wtoer

AND FANCY GOODS

IMPOBTAMTTOTBAVKLEgX, •
Special inducement* arc offered yon by the
Burlington Route, It will p*you to read their
advertisements to be found elsewhere in this
Issue. ________________
,
* ,
,

J^AKE HOLME,
Thornappl o Ixikc, Mich.

L. P. Cole, Proprietor.

Or Under,
•—COMMENCING ON------

chants and Manufactures, will take part,and
THE COLLOB8AL ORIENTAL PAGEANTS
Illustrating the Beautiful Eastern Romance of
“LALLA EOOKH” Departing from Delhi.

Saturday, May 20,

EVERY

Will get valuable Infoonaliun I REK by *s«a&lt;Hng

WbMVptr Hi----------

&gt;ow

LOW

KATES’

Enierienced, HeliaNe, and RespsnsiHs.

A. H. WINN, Dentist

ih

the Time BEST SET GUH TEETH RW.OQ

For those in need to share

wholesale prices.

EXTRA TRAINS!

-orth e»*l ns*rl*r of section t«mty-*rAru
li
town thrss'ai north of range *ev«n[7Jws**, Barr
County Michlon.
Dated, nwlns*. May ». A. D. l«.
•
&gt;7-43
JOHN WUKS, ttwanJU*.

the profits and buy at

FREE Street PROCESSION

K
“'R:
i

rebate uffic-.ia Htaliagaeounty of Barry , state ef
lieblgan. pureuaut te llrenw an-l .uthor.tr fiat
Home on th* s»*&gt; dar of May A. D. IS .. »«y

ONEmus i^

S

•of Brown's Iron Bitters will

We and ri
OCMS ■ ■

My Entire Stock of

Guardian'H Sale.

Nashville Market*.
but quietly drew hls fl*h from the
fuel from Brown’s Umber.

e

J. W. POWLES

lan fur her Bmutr and appearing in this
Grand Parade, and the Greatly Grand Kgypt-

of Catarrh”.

Tboec desiring'
'

To have their wool manufactured into it, as I ‘

HANDSOMEST WOMAN

wa* going to survey this nano* rim of land,

•

NEED NOT WAIT,

PROCMNION OF INDUSTRY
table preparation. Price, SO cento and |
per bottle. Two doses will stop the chill*.

___

SfOCKiNOTARNi1

in question and built a fitting shanty at which

and tbC i&lt;rsrnt shore line (such shore line bar­
tag receded from the original shore line, or the

Intending to change my manner
ol Omcss,

S-SOUtAM
--■f

N«*hviBe,May 18, 1882.

SCHOOL

�-num Buauso.

a

rin-'M.-----------•

•

JUNElO. I88B.

t. D.C, Mat S7,1883.
reported that the first Cabu
■
thin week would re*nH iu
ihearttlvuH-nr of a alate for the Tariff
CoffiRi{»"H&gt;&lt;i.
Unexpected difficullie*
pre«.rf I be m sei vex, however, ho tlial
ter uoiuinatbiira are again delayed.
There are an many names under conatdentthin. that it ia aim ply guesswork
to Attempt to aay who will be taken, tra
the•Pvoaidcnt himself dooes not know.
T..e nntneH cotraidered moot liable to lie
among the number are tho*e of Henry
W. Oliver, of PenriKVivnuitt. anil Rob­
ert P. Porter. It had been settled for
some time thatex-Secretary Kirkwood
would head the list, hnt it is barely
jKMsiltlc that some other name may lie
ch&lt;NM-n after all.
Am the now alate
now standh, Mr. Porter’s name is de
terminvtl upon na the one of the num­
ber. General Francis A. Walker has
been urged for the Chirmanship of the
Coni mission by Secretary Chandler,
bat the Secretary of the American
Iron and Steel AsHoeintion boa sent in
a vigorous pr »test on the ground that
he h a freeLin»der. It is .considered
doubtful it^tlie'l^residcut dill take ut
man distasteful to so powerful an in­
tereat, nUliough lie may have a place
on the Board.
.
The annual council of the regent and
vice regents of the Mount Vernon La­
dies’ Association began yesterday at
themanaion. There were present at
the opening arsKion nt 4 o’clock four­
teen members, Mnc John Scott Laugh­
ton, of Pennsylvania, the regent of the
association, presiding. The other la• dieanre : Mioa Emily Harper, of Mary*
land; Mra. Barry, of IlHuoia; Mrs.
Tn lee, of Florida ; Mioa Alice Ixingfellowr of MnasAchiiBetta; M rs. Eno. of
Georgia; Mrs. Sweat, of Maine; Mrs.
Governor Pickens, of South Carolina;
Mrs. Broadwell, of Ohio; Mrs. Hal­
stead, of New Jersey: Mrs. Howard
Townsend, of New York ; Mrs. Alexan­
der Ritchey, of Wisconsin; Mrs. Colo­
nel Washington, of Went Virginia, nnd
Mrs. Herbert, of Alabama. The latter
lady in the wife of Raqjreaentntive Her­
bert. nnd in present nt tlie council for
the first time being one of lhe latest ap­
pointees.
The S'nnte com mi He on finances has
jnat rnnde nn advrrae decision in n caw
of somewhat novel chirrncter. A com­
pany of militia in Chicago.cotnpo*ed of
young men of- Scotch descent, adopted
the - Highland nniform. and ordered
them from Scotland.
They then pe^titiouerj ConjrreaA to nntliorizr the re­
fain) of the duties paid, and the Houw
paawd n bill to that effect.
The ’Sen­
ate finance committee 'decides ad»’vnu»Iy, - IteraUM* of their opinion that if
would set a precedent under wltidb all
militia organizntiuna wonld ask for the
_refund of duties paid on ini|»orted uni­
forms.
A ftrtl&lt;length life-size portrait of
Pretudept Garfield hxs lately l»eeii purclutwd for the Ra)lery -at-the White
House, and was removed there IhM
week, but bus not yet la-en Imng, and
until a place m arhmtvd for it Ktands
against the wall in the Green Parlor,
where tiie mntniit of Mrs. Hayes Jk
similarly situated.
His portrait is l&gt;\
Mt^'E. F, Andrews, whq painted wverthe other portraits of Prraiduiita
dow there and also that of Martha
Washington. Thirfportrait Inis lajrti
highly commended by General Gur*^
field’s nearest friends nnd i the Same,
which linngin-.tlie -H&lt;&gt;nw of Represen­
tatives during the memorial wrvices-on
February 27. The collection at the
Executive Mansion of portraits of Pres­
idents now tacks only those of Hayes
and Arthur to be complete up to the
present time. During the Hayes admiuistration a numlier were addyd to
the collection, making it n full repre­
sentation up to hisacceasiou.
Guiteau appears to have lost some
flesh during the past three or four
weeks, aud the color he then hod is
fading from bis cheeks. Having with­
in a few weeks . allowed his taard to
grow, hia appearance is . somewhat
ct&gt;anged. Just now he seems to put his
entire dependendence on Mr. Seed, his
counsel, and he fleetns to be confident
that Mr. Reed will auc:eed in securing
a respite, and perhaps a commutation
of sentence, but like Mr. Reed, he is
reticent m to what the next move will
be- He never meat inns tiie name of
ScovtUe, nud seems to have dium'iaoed
his relatives from his mind. It would
aeeui that Id the case of Guiteau the
postal law agaipM sending scurrilous

mattec --through the mails Ims |»een
suspended by ccowmon consent. Daily
there are quantities of letters and pos­
tal canto of thia kind received for Him.

AGENT FOR

It to atoned
iroriding that
tbatactaaM
ray bedeposit&lt;10,000 worth
ia, and under
ed by a bank
it a bank might have &lt;160,000 circnladrjp&lt;i«itrd. Samo of the committee *1kQOrein/AVor nf allowing the withdraWwl of &lt;10,000,009 a month instead
&lt;&gt;t &lt;5,000,000.
AtXiUST. ■

D. S. MORGAN 4 Co’s
• ciH.tlnurd awl Inert

thedoatb ot

sees opposite him a msuu whom he never

oendentalism that made him so famous
and formed a school of enthusiastio fol­
lowers.
The system soon found an
organ in the Dial, a quarterly, in which

.
garet Fuller, Atoott, Channing, Bipby.
Young man, ^bat are you Hying for ! 1 heodore Parker, and others. It waa
Have you an object dear to you as Ufer Kblishod four years, and during the
and without the attaiuueutof which
t two years of the time Mr. Emerson
you feel that youi life will have been a was its editor. In 1841 and in 1844 two
wide, shoreless waste, peopled by the volumes of his “Essaye” wore published.
In 1846 bis first volume of poems was
spet*tors of dead ambitions T - You fan
issued. In 1847 he visited England and
take your choice Id the great buttle. of delivered a series of lectures, which
life, whether you will bristle, up.apd were very successful, and a part of this
win a deathless name, and owe- every­ succMs was'unquestionably due to the
body, or be satisfied with stabs and
mediocrity. Many uf theip w**° pnw
stand nt the head of the nation as
statesmen and logicians were once un- made frequent contributions to the At­
hoooredand unsung. Now they saw lantic Monthly, especially of poems, one
the air in the hulls ot Congress, and. of which, “Brahma” (“If the red slay­
their names.are plastered on the tem­ er,” etc.), wm an enigma to all readers
until tho key to it wm given.
As a
ple of fame.
You can win some laurels, too, if yon proee writer Emerson wm especially
characterized by his scale sense of
will brace up and secure them when
beauty, joined to an equally acute sense
they are ripe, Daniel WeiAter, and of truth. His broad, sweeping intellect
President Garfield nnd Dr. Tanner and embraced the realm of the ideal m well
George Elliott were all, nt one time
Ufa.
poor boys.
They struggled against
poverty and public opinion |bravely,
until they won a name in the annals of
history, and secured to their loved
ones palatial houses, with lightning
rods and mortgages on them. So may
you, if you jnake the effort.
All these are within your reach. Live
temperately on &lt;9 a month. That’s the
way we got our start. Burn the mid*
night oil if neccessary.* Get some true
noble minded young lady of your ac­
quaintance to assist yop. Tell her of
your troubles and she will tell you
what to do. She will gladly advise you
Then you can marry her, nnd she will
advise you homo more.
After thnt she
will lay aside her work" any time to ad­
vise you. You needn’t. be out of ad­
vice at al] unless you want to. She will
come to you frankly aud acknowledge
thnt you have made a jackass of your­
self.
As she gets mure acquainted with you
she will be more candid with you, and
in her unstudied girlish way she will
point out errors, and ixadually con,
vince you with an old chair-leg and
other arguments that you were in tinwrong, mid your past life will come up
liefore you like a panorama, and yon
A ill tell her so, aud site will let you up
again. Life is indeed a mighty strug­
gle. It is business.
We can’t all be
editors and lounge around a’l the time
and wear good clothes, and have yom
name in the papers, and draw a prince­
ly Hillary. Seine one must do the work
and drudgery of life or it won't be
done.

Eve did not ex|&gt;erience any of the
torture endured by rhe nioikm Indy of
fashion, nnd yet, like the hitter, she had
nothing to wear.
Fellow citizens, said n Wcstcrnmurderer to tiie crowd nruund thb gullows,
“this is the Maddest nidiurnt of my life.
It isn’t thnt 1 mind la-ing jerked out of
Dakota at the end of a rope, but I am
sorry to think, I shall never ace any of
you; turnin'. I feel I’ve got a through
ticket straight up.into Abraham’s bos­
om.
Bol» Jackson wqa missed from Win­
nipeg having-last been seen going
away from rt' barroom drunk. After
n week he waa found dead, with
his feet and ankles imbedded in froz­
en earth nnd his body leaning.agaiust
a fapce. He had stopped into deep
mud, aud. ton incapacitated by :rttm
to extricate himself, had stood there
until g cold snap fastened him.

Yes Raid the editor's wife “let us be
thankful there ia one above who can re­
store order and
save the country.
’’Miulam, returned her visitor, who bod
called.to depreciate the unsettled state
of affairs “Providence is all-powerful,
and- ” "Ob I didn’t mean that,” said

she I referred to my husband who i«
up-stairs preparing his leiuier for the
morning paper, and it will be a smash­
er, a regular country-saver, you bet.”
An eloping couple arived at Sommerset, Indiana, to find Hint the only per­
sons in olfical life there were the jus­
tice of the peace and the postmaster,
and that the former functionary was
absent from the village. Thereupon
they went to the postmaster, who
looked over his instructions, failed to
find any postal regulations prohibiting
him from preforming a marriage cer­
emony, and consented to act. His con­
cluding words were: "You are married,
airland madam, according to the post­
office laws of the United States of

bling-rooms. All kinds of games are;
pl»7«L
Th.™ an.
num, where »r«wold chap, rituvond
th. tabU an nigh* and tell Korle, btween the deals, risking just enough to
keep
very popu
• them
. awake.
.
. Another
_
ft ­
jg game is ten cent ante and two dollar
lar
limit. This is a snare and delusion, bow- j
ever, m the small Amount of the “limit”
would seem to indicate that not very 1
much could be lost, when in reality
&lt;100 can very .easily change hands durIng a sitting.
In the regular noker rooms there is
n.n.r-llr nn limiting Kara th*
generally no limit, and here the b^ _

played during the late convention at
which a well-known Louisville gentle­
men won &lt;1,900 and three gold watches.
He showed me one of the gold watches
a few days ago, and the name on the In­
side might create a flatter if published.
Last Tuesday night at 7:30 o'clock
five gentlemen, three of them legisla­
tors, sat down to the time-honored
round-table and began to play. Time
flew by so rapidly that at two o'clock

n, mikI. It never fail*
If o&gt;u cnutlnbe to

blame.—Courier.
. .,
„
-r-;---------~7T"

w

A DELIGHTFUL NOVELTY.
i
Ladie* prefer Fi«r*i&lt;&gt;i&gt; Cologne i«catrae they
find tmsix-nng ..«Hn&gt;t&gt;« of t-xql-iu- per
luiuea a delight i ut shvelty.
.

■»«•«.

Paandlltvodallaloue.”

REAPER RO. 2,

But

Toe »j&lt;n,)U. n* &gt; be en - Pile* ore nunature
like prvi.|&gt;ii■tio&lt;&gt;, lun-n-e itirliing, uxmI at nigtit
«««»’“* “IH" »•*“•'» *vre crawling iu or
U*r WtiHn. The tlMUC JOU KTatch the
wur&gt;e t4iej lU.h&gt;
Tbc private
lucnl to tor moH effective remedv extant for
tiito tormenting cuiuplumL Givee rest st ulgtit
without that d.-»&gt;re io xcratch. Also hu mi
equal in quk-kly .eradicating. TetU-r, lub,' Salt
itbeume, Ena pels-. Barbera* Itch, Pimples
all tk-aiy. Crusty. Hcliy Skin Eruption*. Here
to the proof, '•(.crhiiiilv tiie best remedy erer
uaed in my practice," "Hr. CoUnn, Woodstock.
Vt.. "troubled with Itching Piles for over twen­
ty vcora, Il eared me completely,” L. 8. Meaaer
Enfield, Me. Sent lor SO eta (in 3 cl. stamps)
8 boxes, *1.25, Uy Dr. 8wayne A Son. Phitod'a
Pa. Sold by all drutstota.

and

CLlPPcR MOWER

P.rtfctM of OperatioB ii the Fleli!
LitliUess of Draft!
Aflaptatiom io Eten Variety of Wort,
Facility of Maoatemeit,
Siaip icity and Durability,
Houesi Woriiauiip.

Read the Following Testimonial:

MEAT MARKET

Frexh and Salt Meat*.
Smoked Hann aia SMiers,

They crop out on almoat every page of
hit characteriiidc writings; are iterated

country as the population ootncfl to live
on the flesh of the warm-blooded ani­
mals. This is a point to which atten­
tion has not been adequately directed.
'Meat*—using that term in Us popular
sense—is highly stimulating, nnd sup­
plier proportionally more exciting than
actually nourishing pabulum to the ner-

GT The Highest Market Price paid
for Hides, Echo. &amp;r.

Fresh &amp;oods, Full Weights and

HKWRY ItOR

ALBERT M. HARRIS,

to Guiteau.

“TRiraPH”

J. M. SHOUP.

A little girl, 8 years old, was found
Wednesday afternoon sitting by the
dead body of her father in a canal-boat
at Buffalo, where she bad been ever
“DOP Saturday night, unaware of what
had happened. She said: ''Last Satur­
day night pa .was fixing his coat and
told mo I’d better go to bed. In tbc

tag. 1 built the fire and called pa to get
up, bat he wouldn't answer. I felt his
face and it was awful cold, so I put his
overcoat cn him. He u awful aMk, as

SFBCALTIBS:

k

a pere» .hu
™—— ------------ --------------

,
___ i» gone fnisver.
then: to a future wbk-ii i* *uli our own.

Harvesting
Machinery!

call &lt;25” and table stakes. Aoes were tbouaands of gtaid men arc (polled by tnarryworth &lt;100 and two pair anything under Ing the wrong wogiatu.
Jackbox, Mich., Bep. 10th, 1881.
WORTH REMEMBERING. '
&lt;500. Hour after hour passed, and the
Aleasrs. D, 8. Morgan A Co.,
oold, dull daylight began to peep in at
Now that gixxl t: me* are again upon ua, It ia
them through the closed shutters, and worth remembering that do onocau enjoy the
still they .played.
One member was pleaMuitcai Mirroundingg If in twd health.
arc bundled* of miserable people going
&lt;2,800 behind at five o’clock end an- There
«...' -o- —•—
a -*-marb,
hlhinA
W« “b,,ul. — j-----w,u
«1
■UMHsrb. liter or
other &lt;1,600 —
behind.
Breakfast was । KKinitya,
giduijys, when
» benaabtittleof
bottle of Parker
Parker's
Gim-r Tonic
Tonic
-—
— fmlnari
s Oiuer
Thn»
I* , and would
And do
I____________.
1 . than
.1 ’..
______ —__ very uncaven; some long and bsavy, aome very
mind wAb intuitive. He saw what oth­ ordered.
*___ t gulped
o I— it down,
T_____
They
them more good
all medlclenee
.•bort. My own reaper |a of quite a celebrated
1_ Ihaggard
------------ 3 afaces
------ gJkl
I (jjpy
ers reasoned up to, and he stated what again with --pale,
they
sat |iaVt) |,Vl.r
nioLe and iu good condition, but neigh bar
Thurston *aa anxioas 1 sixfold try his machine.
he saw, leaving others to climb up in a about the table. Twelve o’clock, high j
MaBMchurettca kills off iu judges with 111- I conaentcd. He sent with it a Huie boy
slower manner, and, m he never gave noon, and they were still at it. The air |
scarcely larg enough to drive the team
It to
veutUated
court
room*.
any steps or connections in his enuncia­ in the room was stifling, but they cared
but Justice to My that 1 was very skeptical, and
tions of truths, bis style is singularly not for that.
It was a beautiful day
had gave doubts about the ability of the Tri­
A VALUABLE ADDITION. terse and epigrammatic
His books without, the air balmy and warm, but
.........................
... th-ial ...
Ik-cau*c It i* i&lt;nt
to tbc scalp and adds umph or any other machine’s being able to do
may bo called collections of aphorism?, tho frightful fascination of the game 1 t&lt;&gt;;» romal beauty-- -----------------io i&lt;-»t&lt;&gt;riiigcolor
and ln»ire perfect work in my field, but mustconfeM that
Psrhcr’ra Hair
Jlxir 1 was filled with admiration and wonder at tho
rhy Parker
sometimes stated with bare emphasis, kept them there in tho close room undexj •“gray or fulled ini.r, I* why
results. Macbiae and boy were entire masters
----------------,
---------—
|
ttolwnn
i»
such
appy'arUn-tulng.
but more frequently clothed with the the poisonous gas jets, necessary be­
of the situation. Buch quality of work with tiie t
rich vesture of bis imagination. At such cause the windows must be kept cl&lt;»eil,
Catcwayo, tte ex-Zutu King, ba* abjured same ease, I never saw equalled before. In­
stantly while In motion, tbcentire working ap­
times, however, his sen.-te of beauty does turning the cards and betting the chips. poh gamy,
paratus could be. raised or lowered, to gather
not allow him to multiply words or Six o’clock came and one of the party
any condition crop or meet any requirements
FEAR NOT.
dwell upon the ideal.
His sense of was gone, utterly broken down.
He
of surface. I consider thto feature indispens­
beauty dominated everything he wrote, left &lt;2,000 in the hands of lhe Philis­
Al)'Kidney ut&gt;d urinary complaint, opeelally able tn a Reaper. Tbc bent rake arms arc anoth­
Urluiit
.
d
Liver
trouble
Hop
er Important feature. With trial I had, I think
but even the beautiful wa? only an­ tines, and staggered off to bed.
At
nounced, not elaborated.
Its principal eight o’clock there were only throe of nctly hkc y&lt;&gt;ui vui. i,.»e twrij t-urtsiUn your your machine saves 25 per cent of the labor in
baiding bv the straight square'and coined
office was to eliminate from his mind the party left, with feces ar white as ow n u«-giibor mm, noil v-u van rlniJ relfablu form of we gavles. The Tbiumph ia of very
everything that was unhealthy or mon­ ashes and nerves nil shattered by drinks priol at bbnie &lt;&gt; w i i.i Hop Butera Iu* and can light draft, under perfect control of the driver,
strous. In this rcspect-hc was in a Cer­ and the awful excitement of the game.
ap{tenrs to be very simple in Iu construction,
•ind hence, very durable. Iu my judgmeut It to
tain sense au aMthetic, not in the man­ Just at two o’clock Thursday m irning
very far inadvam e of other machines of Its
ner of lhe modern maudlin school, but the three men separated, after thirty-six
vlasa, and 1 lielleve the interests of the farmers
in a healthy, strong, nnd masterful way. hours of incessant play, and &gt;3,600 h id
of Michigan will be advanced by giving the
••wad a little longer."
Naturally, his active perceptions and been won and lost. One of the men was
Triumph a trial before purchasing.
Yours respectlfullv.
,
So we arc I &gt;«1 ~««i luceTumgs
epigrammatic stvleof enunciation, com­ sick for two days; another has not re­
f
GEO. W/'PHILLIPS,
bined with the ab-cncoof fluent smooth­ covered yet. It was a terrible experi­ .-vine out ml n.i.i.
,e ray, il »e ndl
President Michigan State Ag’i Society.
ness* of style, made his poems rough ence for all of them.
and strong, rather than musical nnd
A wry ridiculous story is told of a
IV Don’t buy a machine until you
flowing, notwithstanding his ideal ten­ certain member who does not live a
xnuiint* tin- “TRIUMPH” north
dencies, and sometimes mystical and thousand miles from Louisville. He was
Dr, DjVh,
E.
Cook’s Wagon Shop Naaliville. Mich.
obscure. The “Brahma,” for instance, playing with a little party, and opened
when it appeared, was as ob-cure to the a ‘'jack-pot” for &lt;2. Everybody staid
average render as the riddle of the out except one man. The member drew
sphinx.
It weighs also against his two oacds to throe tons, and failed to
ELEMENT SMITH,
poetry that he rarely indulged in senti­ better bis hand.
ment or followed any guide but the dic­
The other ‘’stood pat.’ The member
tate of the intellect. He is to poetry made a smell bet, and the other ran-d
whaa Wagner is to music. Both seek, him &gt;10. The member throw d &gt;wn hi
to express the actual life of the werld cards and then his opponent laid d ,wn
dominated by the intellectual.
The hifl “pat” hand, and, to the enexpre-«-umelody of ver«e to the one like tho ble di.-gmt of the member, it h uln*'
melody of music to the other is not a even a pair in it. “Sir,” said he, “I
| INES A. 8WEEZEY,
snccession of pleasant sound?, but the will play in no game' in which -ucti
64-mnco of life itself controlled by lhe trekeryis resorted to. Take your i’l
Attorney &amp; Counsellor)
head instead of gushing exuberantly gotton wealth.” And ho strode out.
from the heart.
Of course somebody must win.
A
Ileligiously he had no system. He has member of the Lower*H &gt;u-&gt;e is said to
been called atheist, pantheist, or deist, have won &lt;1,500 lb hues don. The sha k-»
Probate .V ofice.
according as people understood his have had a fine time this winter, for
Tbi- i» ten
writings, but ho had no creed or system there are any amount of Huie fishes Cough Mrau
in religion, for it wa? not in his nature here. Men nave been hero all winter
11 classify anything in details. Religion with no ostensible occupation, and they
camo to him like everything else in great aH pack money away with them. Lt i«
WIJ.LIAM F.BIZKK,
truths, which he tersely enunciated, a very low estimate to say that at least
leaving others to group them together &lt;30,&lt;M)0 has been won and lost this hcv
nnd try to jjnd out what manner ot man qon.—Frankfort (Ky.) Special to tJv
he was in religion. And yet his ideal Louuville Commercial.
•orv, ChvHt, nr i.u&lt;
lunic, and Shtlotib
piaMpi Ueir
nature kept him true to a first grett
P&lt;»n&gt;ira Piurtei n &lt;1 by F- T. Boi-e
s.h&lt;0*«Menco
cause, which in one of his essays ho
Cartyle’s Horses.
ANSWEB THIS QUESTION.
beautifully states:
“Unlovely,-, nay
Why d&lt;»
many |&gt;ruple we »cr around u».
Carlyle told tae a story of these two M-t-ni u&gt; prefer to -ntl.-r and be made miMiratdc
frightful, is the solitude of the soul
which is without God in the world.” horses, Illustrative of the sense of humor by indiKCHt.wtl.vnn t'iHitioi-. dizziness loo*. l&gt;
I can not date it either by appetite, com ne up »iil.v Iyellow skin,
And again: “This chill, houseless,- in animals.
when forTScI*. we w.b rell tUctn Sbiloli** Vitafatherless, aiiplese Cain, the man who day or year, and therefore I give it in a Itarr, guaranusl to cure Uiem. Sold by F. T.
FHEDKRIC W?GNER,
)
note.
They
had
a vicious old sow, who Bblr-E.
33 37 J AO *B KEISER. ■ ■
} &lt;
hears only the sound of his own footsteps
CHRISTIAN BERKELt.Y.)
wm the tyrant nnd the terror of the
SHILOH’S CATTARRH REMEDY, A mar­
In God’s resplendent creation.”
The great thinkers of our time are farmyard. One day Carlyle wm smok­ velous cure for Uularrli, D;pt&gt;tl&gt;eria. Canker
Admiuistrator
’
s
Male,
mouth, aud Head Ache. With each bottle
rapidly passing away. Ills no common ing his pipe outside his front door, when hereto an lum-uiou* ua*a) injector for the
OhXlRGK GILulB, deceased.
lox? that our own country ’im suffered he heard shrieks of rage and agony more, aucccsAlal treatment of there complaint*
herein given that I ehall Ml! at public
within a few weeks in the death of Long­ combined from the back of the- house. without extra charge. Pnce 50cU. Sold by
the hlsbeat bid/.er, on
fellow, who has so beautifully sang the He went around to sea what was the FT. Borax.
songs of the heart, and now in the death matter. A deep drain had been opened
A dozen or more lawyers are engaged iu the
of Emerson, the great aposti* of truth across the yard, the bottom of which
S3,(M10.000 Burr will run tot in New York. It’s
clothed with beauty. Who are to wear wm stiff clay. Into this by some un­
lucky curiosity the sow bad‘been tempt­ a big pile to tackle, but they can get away with
their mantles?
Mr. Whipple says the style of Emer­ ed to descend, and being there found a a good share of IL
The horoee
son “is in tiie nicest harmony with the difficulty in getting out.
character of his thought. It is condensed were loose. The pony saw the oppor­
almoHt to abruptness. Occasionally he tunity—the sow was struggling to ex­
{.JEWRY ROE. Pkiipbistob
•nd drecrihed M follow* to-rU: Jo the rUlaso at
The pony stood over
purchases comprehension at the expense tricate herself.
‘ (Ki °°* hao,lnd r°ur I104) “« l°t
of clearness, and hui merits a? a writer her, and at each effort cuffed her back
' oL’^Mawh 8th A. D. Mtt.
consist rather in a choice of words than again with a stroke of tho fore hoof.
tmn
ROBT.B. GREUO, Admlntolrktor.
The
sow
was
screaming
more
from
fury
in the connection of sentences, though
his diction is vitalized by the presence of thou pain. Larry (the horse) stood by
May IT th, 1
a powerful creative element The si»- watching the performance and smiling
Datce, Naahrllie. Aprf. 22.
gular beauty and intense significance of approval, nodding his head every time
ROBr.kGRK
hra language demonstrate that he not that the beast was knocked back Into
only hM something to say, but knows the clay, with (m Carlyle declared) the
exactly bow to say it. Fluency, how­ most obvious and exquisite perceotion
ever, is out of the question in a style of the nature of the situation.—From
which combines snob austere economy Froude's Life of Carlyle.
of words with the determination to load
Why Hervous Disease* Increase.
/ IM THKJR HEA6O’’
The London Lancet says: “Nervous
Lard, by the lb. or barrei.
of infinite
diseases and weaknesses increase ia a

Urelj *, pcaul card, ud about nine

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Photographer’s Supplies.
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Grain and Produce,
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JgLACIfc X MON,
Daoler la

American and Foreign Marble
Monument'., T/nnhrfcues, Mantles, 4c.,
MfaHingn. Mich.

yy ILL1AM JONES,

NERVOUS
DEBILITY:
A cure gruaranired.
Do. K. C. Win'i Ntm *bb Btxia Tiuniii
a ap*&lt;-ltlr tot byatarU, dlixiot-aa. eonvulalona n.ir’
out h- adache, mrolkl drpreaalon. laaa of meDier
an'riauiurrhoa, Itnpotrncy. InaaluDtary
pn r alurv o.d a&lt;v taitx-d by .••tt-rxertlOD. »elt
•tMtac or over ludulxrncx. whlrb I. a*ia u&gt; ml*eri
de aj and death. One box will cure rtcetii &lt;-»»&lt;•
taeh Su» contdna one mon’h'a Imlaeni •■adollar a baix. or alx boxe* for lira dollar,, az-n' b
n»&gt;i prr|«fr ria rvaelpi of nrle*. W, &lt;uar»n:ea al
bol.-a to cure III, rl-r With rarh order reveler
b) &lt;&gt;a for ala l«ijr» ae,-nni|nnlrd With rl»a dollar.
«• wtl| erud the |&gt;u&gt;cl&gt;. wr orir written (uarmte
Io return tbr rnnru-j ,f the irealnw ul doe* not te-1 a euro Ouaranie-ea laaui-d be F T Hol«e a.
th—’.-I axri.l ft., the Ullage f Ka.l.ril'e JOH '
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Maj kiu bl., Cb’cagu. Ill
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SWAM

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guarantee that It will cure any

case, »nd »ewill forf-li lhe above amuuut
Hit fails in Msingte Instance.
Ills unliKO *ov nt'' r tstatfl' remedy. S3

*•'---r-—

—oiiy, ncting upon

i »rf truubl.d wlib till’
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Idr
Ltainodlalelr

Price, 75 &lt;«•&amp;' iwr buttle

F. J. CHENEY &amp; co., Toledo. Ohio.

M5«H»

ICvm

WE will pay lb
i«m. .. CvrrwHtrp’alirl. dy |. |wi i.
bull «rrie|l|&gt;atlill. or eV-!
•■
With W~t’. Veirlal.r I...... • IIti rta nrv atnr .le «Hnfdir-.l « i
Vawrf&gt;.’ilr. and IM-Vvr fall ■■■ c
byF.-T W.rlae” H a.

W EHT A C »I “The IMt V " ' '■ M»r|la&lt;H&gt; Hl., I Iih-m" Fee. tr .
mall prr-|.,rrd on rwvlp" a X
■

R J P

U

C&lt;rcd without . ....................... &lt;
inflict by Or. I A. *hi«n.»n'» -i
Bru v«ay New York. H- '■
’
|C llk-nr—of l&gt;*zf ca»z~ l—f r . i&gt; 1 .
d for 10 rerrta

Afflux

JESSE

FOREIGN GOftSIF.

—The little son of the King of Greece
has been Christened “Andrew." Ha is
the only Prince in Europe who bears
that name.
—The total population of Paris is now
2 225.900, against l,9»8.800 In 1876 and
1.861,792 in 1872.
The increase U
greatest in outlying industrial quarters.
—It is said Queen Victoria is rapidly
rrowhjg old in appearance, and her
health tt-more infirm Xhan the royal
press of England cares to make known
to the world.
—Queen Sophie, of Naples, is as acoomplhhed a horsewoman as ber sister,
lbe Empress of Au-tria. She has spent
the winter at Paris in the eccentric pur­
suit of breaking horses aud ponies at
the Hippodrome.
—The go’den rose, which the Pope
b'esses on the fourth Sunday of Lent,
and sends as a mark of especial favor to
some Catholic Princess, was this year
sent to Stephanie of Belgium, bride of
Rudolf, Prince Imperial of Austria.
—The now Lord Wilton promises to
become the first man in the English
sporting world, Egorton Lodge with its
finestud of hunters having been left to
him by the late lord, while he has been
left an income of £70,01)0 to support it
with.
—An eminent Queen’s Counsel in
England, who has found time in the
mid-l of legal work to amass one of the
finest collections of postage stamps io
the country, has decided to part with it
to a French collector even more highly
esteemed in the postage stamp world.
The price given is $40,000—a truly mar­
velous sum for a batch of defaced post­
age token.
—Mr. Macdougall, the famous tartan
manufacturer of Inverness, died a few
days ago.
It was owing to him that
Lord Brougham always wore trousers of
shepherd’s plaid. His lordship sent an
order to Inverness for “two pieces" of
tho cloth, and this being interpreted in
a wholesale sense, Macdougall de­
spatched tiro large webs, which afford­
ed an ample supply of trousers for the
purchaser daring the last thirty years of
—Many of. the cedars of Lebanon have
come to an end through the utter careleseneM which has allowed the destruc­
tion of many historic trees, but they arc
in future to have the protection which
has heretofore been wanting
Rustcrr
Pasha, the (governor of tho mountain,
has inclosed the cedars with a wall, for­
bidden the erection of any huts within
its bounds, and also the kindling of fires
by tourists, who have made a picnic
ground of the spot.
—The ground in the Jura Mountains
is in a state of movement, as is shown
by some curious observations pointed
out by M. GirardoL Villages that were
invi-ible to each other at the beginning
of the present century, or even thirty or
forty years ago, are now visible. First
the roofs appeared, and then the upper
part of lhe walls. Such is the case with
the villages ot Doucier and Marigny,
near Idtka Cbalain. Important changes
have been noted even within ten years.
—The result of the great national
steeple-chase at Liverpool, which was
won by Lord Manners, riding himself
his own hotre, has oreau-d a stir in aris­
tocratic London. The steeple-chase was
over a coui&gt;e of 4 1-2 miles, and lx&gt;rd
Manners, after a severe competition,
brought his horse—Seaman—in first bv
a short head, winning an amount equal
to a whole year’s income ot the Arch­
bishop of Canterbury. The enormous
odd i of $75,000 to &gt;2,500 had been
taken.

The Duke of Albcny.
From his infancy upward Prince Leo­
pold has been sickly
Besides-assi mitaring all known and probable ailments,
he originated unclassified and grue&lt;ome I
diseaAes. He had mysterious falls, oc II
casioned by feeblenSM &lt;&lt;f bone. Sudden
and Arte-ian appearances of the royal
blood on lhe Nurlace were caused, it is
d • rkly hinted, by a paucity of cutaneous
tis-ue; out of the se»en skins allotted to
human beings, he *a&lt;one short. Hence,
colds, fevers, chills, secret and unspeci­
fied su-cepiibilitics, resulting in illness,
always translated into the chronic an­
nouncement: “Prince Leopold is again
confined to his room."
While still a
boy, and almost entirely a prisoner on
his couch, lhe Prioce-w Louise developed
such overweening fondness for him that
she insisted -on sharing with him the
teachings of bis tutor. The perceptions
of the rojal pupil were not so dulled by
bis state but that be noticed bow eagerly
his sister drank in the precepts of the
divine, how both united in smoothing
his nillow, and he began to be alarmed.
W itn rema table fore-ijfht he informed
the Queen that a communion so close
was unfit, if not dangerous, that it was
not necessary for a Princes? of Great
Britain to be trained to epistolary inter­
course, to the setting of love eongs to
music, and Lo be weaned by subtle and
potent spells from tho rigid observ­
ances of court etiquette. So the letters
were exacted, the songs destroyed, the
intercourse in study and sick room in­
terrupted, the boy praised for his dis­
crimination. the tutor presented with a
fat living, which by and by ripened into
a cauonry, and a uxa.se went forth that
from the unmarried sons of dakes a con­
sort should be chosen for the too im­
pressionable Princess.
Every one re­
members how this announcement was
the means of hurrying into sudden and
unexpected engagements more than one
of those ducal scions, who madly, wildly
proposed under lhe spur of that great
dre id to the very damosel who had long
and wearily tried to lure them on to
wedlock. About the time of the an­
nouncement of the Marquis of Lome’s
marriage, the future canon preached his
first sermon in his suburban parish. It
was evening, the lights were dim, aisle
and gallery were filled with sympathiz­
ing women, it was a “great attraction,"
and drew largely.
He discoursed on
“Disaopointed Affections.”
Looking
around I saw few dry eyes, and I heard
the next morning the house of the new
vicar wm besieged by fair parishioners
anxious to nrove that some hearts could
be true.
*
‘
P ince Leopold remained hia old tntor’s friend. The -ame uncompromising
•en-e of justice which would not let him
n-maln a paMdve accomplice to what ho

prix* and seen it wrencbetl from Ha
gnw&gt;p.
For a time the Daka d Albany leesed
and inhabited Boyton. This pretty and
rurel, if not exactly princely abode, wm
his favorite retreat, and he spent his
time there in comparative retirement.
When able to do eo, he did not' shrink
from occasionally meeting strangers;
and he courteously allowed any-stray
traveler passing the gates on a coaching
tour, a riding trip, or road yachting
j -urney to visit Boyton.
He amused
hliaeeif with house decorating, intro­
ducing the fashion of beamed, papered,
and Flembh-looking ceilings; and he
presided with gentle courtesy over a
simple refection of cake and wine of­
fered to such passing guests.
There is little doubt that, notwith­
standing the precarious state of his
health, the Prince's wedding might
have taken place earlier had it npt in­
terfered with the Queen's visit to Men­
tone. Her Majesty has not often been
known to alter any of her plans, since
she insisted on holding a review on
horseback, and being tola it was against
the rules, quietly decided, “No horse,
no review!’’—London Cor. If. Y. Sun.

ftoUTE.,©aa»*6Ton

_

PRINCIPAL*LINE

Nationally reputed M
be the best equipped
Hallroad In the Work

London Fogs by Night.

KANSAS CITY

To study by
night
a
London
fog in its deepest pitch one mart
during
its
prevalence
visit
tho
neighborhood of the parks of the city
where large bodies of water add their
exhalation to the ordinary mist.
Half
a mile from Regent's, or Hyde Park, it
may be that the fog is comparatively
thin. The aye can perhaps penetrate it
for fifty feet, and one can descry mov­
ing objects and avoid them.
But tho
moment one oUjps into the denser fog
area the ghastly change begins.
Tho
foot-passenger first notices that, as he
moves on, objects seem to fade without
new ones coming into view.
Then the
city lamps, though only perhaps a
hundred feet apart, die out one by one.
There is nd real black darkness, but, if
one may use the paradox, a darkness of

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/&lt;
1 n form at lon\fZ6fliX
bout luua ofAWM&gt;
■e. Bleeping Cars. XTOl
T. J POTTER.
PERCEVAL LOWELL
d Flex Prtft A Gen’l Kanagtr.
Qtei. Pau. AglChlcaso. 111.
Chicago, £&gt;L

COLUMBUS BUGGY
COMPANY,

NORTH MAIN ST., NASHVILLE, M„

And examine it carefully before making your choice foi the
coming harvest.

COLUMBUS, O.,

'
!
I

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Send for CATALOGUE and TESTI­
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।

A

|

fw. to

.

platform,’ Side-Spring
and Side- Bar Carnages,
*
O
w

held ot«. «o tb.
juried
moved to armlength, the digits bo-1
come spectral, then disolve.
The stillness of the streets, the general huah of
sounds of traffic, and a peculiar sense of
isolation and helplessness keep up the
illusion that one has for the moment
pasted from tho world of mortals into a
region of disembodied spirits.
Apart from iu? supernatural aspect a
dense London fog brings oat some queer 1
□ha«es of human life.
.The street boys
hold high jevel daring the mists. Buy- &gt;
Ing for small sums long pieces of hemp, I
stiffened with tar, they light the ends,
and a party of them earn a good stock
of sixpences by escorting homo lost
wayfarers.
At tho stations of the un­
derground railroads, and at centers of
c.tb traffic, gather dense crowds unable
to get their bearings and Utterly help­
less without aid.
The cabmen, who in
ordinary times know all the ins and outs
of London streets, are as helplem as tho
rest.
If they take passengers al all, it
Is for short trips and big prices, and
even then they venture only at a walk,
leading horses by the bridles.
Ou the
occasions of one of these fogs I remem­
'ber almost
‘most tumbling
tumbling over a prostrate
horse which had fallen
fall
across the footEavement on which his careless master
ad led him.
As a rule, passengers
caught in the denser mists leave cabs
and omnibuses, preferring foot travel
as equally fast and as a safer style of
locomotion.
Tho absolute belpleMaeM
of almost everybody, the blind leading
lhe blind, tho lost seeking their bearings
from the lost, and the universal confu­
sion and chaos fill in the details of a
carious picture oat of doors.
In d-»ors
there are scenes well-nigh as grotesque.
The smoky mist has a singular pene­
trating quality, and only needs a key­
hole to get in.
At the theaters the ao- tors all counterfeit the ghost in “Ham­
let;” at large in-door places, like lhe
reading-room ef the British Museum,
half the interior is entirely obreured.and
even in the smaller rooms of dwellings
objects appear dim and ghost-like. The
fog is usually accompanied by a chill in
tho air that cuts to the marrow, and the
smoke breathe in by sleepers is thrown
off from the lungs in the morning as a
black secretion of phlegm.
Another
quality of the London smoke-fogs is dis­
closed by tho singular fact that tho eieo- ।
trio light makes less impression on it ।
than a gas-tlamc of the samo candle-

During a London fog some five weeks
ago, which several residents said was
tho densest they had ever known, the
writer was at some pains to test the
thickness of the mist on Baker Street, a
thoroughfare, from curb to curb, about
as wide as Broadway, and opening on
Regent’s Park. From the middle of the
roadway the bright lights of the shop
windows were quite imperceptible,
Standing under a gas lamp one oould
barely see a foot passenger fifteen feet
away or a passing cab in the middle of
the street. At ten feet distant the gM
jet became completely separated from
its surrroundings. The lamp, with the

Celebrated Line fc

By statements made by agents representing other machines
having a resemblance to the McCORMLCK, claiming their
Binders are the same, for such claims are false, and suits for
infringements have been brought against imitations

,
a luminous cloud so solid that it can bo
handled, cut, and shaped.
The fog
.seems also to deaden all sound.
A
human figure—man, woman or boy—
suddenly materializes on the pavement
a few feet away. It glides by noiseless­
ly like a phantom,ana is gone. Ono feels
like a human apparition and among fellow-ghosta. Everything puts on tho same
unearthly aspect. The gas-jets becoms
little spurts of bluo flame banging in tb&lt;
air and barely perceptible thirty foot
away.
The solid pavement it felt be­
neath tho feet, but ia unseen. The hand

ns made ✓TJ,

Through

J TXfo rersne
cLUU VY 0,^0110
'

COLUMBUS BUGGY COMPANY,
COLUMBUS, 0.

Yours Respectfully,

Rtlggira. and rarv slioli &lt;1 hr u«r&lt;! to dlatlovuiah
iHTlwccn 1 •‘lumhui iluggln" nnd CoiumbnBlluggy &gt; u . Hux«l.-»
to 36

UlMAM
..-.

U)

For Sail, iiv Dealers EVERYWHERE.
irecr
JEOOE
I

nr/\nn.auv rvc Tula Ci

X... .

AND

W«*lM.aiuitr»« the killlai. lhe Boom,
Jeue
eftw deatbTti. wife, file

IU B3 A al 1/ IwochlWren lorn In CKilU-Tj.Ute FeeUe

ANA
J AM to

Tn
■ a ■ a
wIxTXU. ClrruUn free. Ourtu AWeta.
I * B* FA Thl. It Uw o.ly tew hivlory Beware of

tneapoiii

Q

■ADIESaUJHITE HOUSE
■ STcSuBOOK II Zuheklnd 11
EDITION.

wwpobd

BRADLEY &amp; CO.. Publlxhers,

0

pensions!^*

ulvi

to CHICAGO, ROCK ISLAND &amp; PACIFIC R’Y

* Is
ic Tho Croat
Crnet Connecting
Connnctlncr Link between tho
the East and the
tho West I
Its nuUn line runs troo Cblr*«o to Council

tltie, Wouhlnjrton.’Fairfield Eldon. Belknap.
....... ... -111.
T.—.fnt, Zl.11.tln i'.nii*-

Molnt

Audubon; and Avoca to Harlan
IliU U positively Ute only Rati­
_______ ___ -wna. and operates a through line
rom Chicago into the State of Kanaa*.
■ntrtnigliKxpreasPaBaenger Trains, with Pull­
___ .tr
vrv* mne&amp;rh wavdallv

Majpilfieent Iron Brldrea xpan theMInlMlnpl
and Mlixouri rivers at all points crossed by this
line, and tranxfersareavnfded at Council Bluffs.
Kinut City, Leavenworth and AlehU
neetlom being made In Union UepoU.

CAOO. Will
South.
I LX WOOD.
, C. R. Rdi

of enjoying yonr meal*,
beautiful prairies of lllu

and Southwert.

”

„

*

&gt;

v^

supporting iron post, disappeared, aud :

j

■

I ‘ LHhORti Uh Yuu l rt.

PIMPLES

air and hung on nothing. Once outside
the light of the street lamps the range
of vision became much more circum­ fering humanity. aen&gt;l tree u. all win neon n
|W WH1 Uh.lchee, leaving Ibfpiklu eott. cim
scribed. Large vehicles passed ten feot rcripe anddln-clUn for ranking the ximpl# remtwiy ’ iwMUtlhiiiBl»o inelrucliuna lur producing a &gt;i
by which be wm rured. Sufiercra wiahlng Io rirvfli ' KU1 grvi„ |h
oa „ tmld In-ad or anontl
away unseen and scarcely heard. Pass­
ers-by could be discerned at a dirtance
IX in irerivv, cvnuuvucv-,
_
aa-lyr.
JOHN
B.
OGbEN.dtCedar
Ht..
X.
Y.
of perhaps six feet, and then only the
upper parts of their bodies could be
made out, the legs andfeet being hidden
by a still denser stratum of mist, whinh
seemed to wrap the pavement. All dis­
tinction of color wm gone, and even op-,
po-ute a street lamp dark buildings, m
well m thoee of light hue, took on the

CONSUMPTIVES.

when dark and m-ybe not unmarited
McCURDY A CO, Chicago, HI.

1 ttcraoni affected. add m
Suit St.. Chicago. UU-

mANS

N.R.R.

Apprecuttog the fact that a majority ot tho
propio prefer Mparate apartments for din-reut
purpove* (and the Immense paaaeuger butlneM
of thu line warranting It u we are pleased to an­
nounce that this Company runx f^ullman Palace

THROAT^ LUNG DISEASES,

i lroOcuxveo.onor^SeUItnodB, Eight Slop».
-Ill,tin,*
ftzvaa. f)e am Cnnu!tr. Htoci.

Tho "Great Rock 1 aland" la magnificently
quipped, luroad t&gt;ed Is simply perfect, and IU

j
I
| । ,
j
I
i j— t
[J
\
J
i
I
1 rp.
| (Jji

ax&gt; alter-

Cl——.i—nine nnrnmM »(&gt;&lt;1 palace
ZMnino far, for eatimt mirpo^x

frxtureuf our PbIbxc Cara li a SMOKING
Srrxt
aUMi.n where you eaa eujoy your "tlavan*”
Mall hours of the day

�KEEP US BUSY

ro^sof shore undertbe high day banks
just'-Burtfi of the- harbor, nnd was
wrecked in plain sight of scores of cit-

to help her crew. The gale was one of.
the moot terrible ever experienced

We are Opening

Cap!. John King and his wn Edward,

, and $7,000 bi notes while
onsly given as Charles Davis and Ed.
Cullender. The Kings resided at St.
Joseph and owned the craft.
Capi.
King has bran a navigawr on the lakes

AtoUxmy Harvcr, of Grund Rapids ia
aa&gt;»inr, and foul play u feared.
He
w»S a man of industry and had some

for 40 years and is widely known.
Gladwin County is attaining an un­
A Norwegian baby, whose parents enviable reputation in the criminal
live Ko id i lea cm*t of Ionia, ate a whole line. On the S4Ui of May Robert Gra
box &lt;4 pill: a- tew days ago.
Result ham, of East Saginaw, was shot and
killed there by John Anderson, and an­
At Itecntnr. on June Sth, Mrs.J. Teed other shocking tragedy occurred in
an old r cable nt, was Strack aud killed Gladwin township on Saturday even­

by tiie cars, while attempting to cross ing, in which William Stevenson was
deliberately and willfully murdered by
the treck.
Domestic trouble caused Christian hfs wife. It appears that for some rea-‘
J &lt;ifau sou of Detroit, to seek relief and non. that Mr. S., who was on the verge
death via iaudaum; on Friday He of 60 years of age and, his wife, much
younger, hare not lived harmoniously
found both.
'
AKalamnfoo woman namqd Emma for some time, and frequenf quarrels
Barton has f&gt;cen xonvicted of encour-, -have resulted. On tbe Mth of May last
aging her 13years otfTg&amp;l to engage in they had a quarrel, and both arming
themselves with revolvers, one took re­
a. shamel'Jkute.
A man named Bye near Cass City fuge behind a stump and - the other be­
beats bis wife. The other night the hind an ash barrel, where they banged
neighbors took him to the woods, tied away at each other. It is said that tho
him to a tree, and gave him a severe wife was tbe best shot and boasted that
she plugged the ash barrel behind
hone-whipping.
At Decriot on Wednesday evening, which ncr better half was concealed
John Katun, a yoong married man, every time. This quarrel resulted in a
fooled with n loaded revolver when separtion, the woman reipainingat the
the tuing went off and Mr. K. was kill­ house and tbc husband* occupying a
shanty on the farm near by. Last Sat­
ed almost instantly.
A young lady by the name Daven­ urday Stevenson and his son-in-law,
port, liveing in Butler, Branch Co., Lakins, visited the county seat, and re­
committed suicide' Saturday night by turning early in the evening, reached
takiug poUon, dying in fifteen min­ the Stevenson abode about 8 o’clock.
utes after taking the dose.
It was raining hard and the weather
Mrs. Stevenson had the
Frank Foote, a fireman on the Sag* was cold.
inaw Bay &amp;. Northwestern Railway, door locked and while admitting Lawas fatally injured at Pinconning, Sat­ kins refused to let the husband in. • He
urday mornjng, by being drawn under argued the question from the outsidq
amLfinally told her be was wet and
a car.- He died in three hours.
On Sunday last as Eddie Ford, a 15- cold, and had us much right to share the
years-old son of Henry Ford, of Ronald dwelling as she and asked to be allow­
She refused.
He then
township, Ionia Co., was performing ed to enter.
upon a trapeze in a barn, he tell head mode an effort to enter through a win­
first a distance of SO feet, crushing bis dow, but she warned him away. Stev­
enson made another effort and pushed
brains out.
'
Mrs. Byer an old lady 78 years of age, the window, worked with a slide, back,
of Ovid township, Branch Co. was kill­ when the woman leveled n large navy
ed by a ram on the 8th. When she was revolver full at him and discharged the
found her skull was broken on both weapon. The bullet struck Stevenson
sides, both bones of one teg broken square in the forehead, going through
and her back and hips badly bruised.
his head nnd coming out at the
* Budd Fox, a yong nman, wqp killed back side. He fell dead in bis trucks
at Srx Lakes, near Edmore, on Friday' without moving a muscle.
The affair
white unloading logs. The stakes on create intense excitement in that, sec­
riie side of the car were'removed while tion and tiie woman is in custody.
be was on top of the load, and he was
The only persons who have found
carried on the railway with the logs
tbe month of May very merry have
and crushed.
Some folks say that the whisky bus­ been the doctors, whose trade is marvel­

iness don’t pay, but W. H. Haddrill’s
hquor sto^i in North Branch, Lapeer
Co., was robbed of $8,000 in money the
Bight of May 81. The robbers then stole
a horse and buggy of Thomas Melaiu
and escaped.
News from the S^ult river is to the
effect-that Louis Manickler, mate of
the tug E. M. Pock, and David Plant
fireinuD, were drowned in the river
the-1st, They saw a bear swimming
from sugar island and lowered a boat
to go for him, but the boat capsized
and they were lost.
Five new cases of small pox were
reported to the health authorities of
Grand Rapids on Tuesday.
All of the
cases are in large families where there
are several children and the further
spread of the disease is inevitable. A
patient named Stanley died in the pest
Mouse the same day.
Several months ago a woman named
Mary Fitzgibbon, of East Tawas, ex­
perienced a peculiar painat the upper
part of her spinal column when she
wa. trying to lift a boiler full of clothes
from tiiestove, nnd the trouble grad­
ually Increased to complete ^paralysis,
ending in death a few days ago.
On Friday Mrs. Henry Van Hesal of
Grand Rapids, met with her death un­
der peculiar circumstances. She was
an invalid, and had a rope hanging al»bve her bed, with a loop in the lower
•ad, which she used to assist^in turnW herseit in lied. In some manner she
g**t her head through the noose and
was strasigled, being dead when first
discovered. Whether it was an acci­
dent ar suicide is unknown.
The large shingle mill of the Grand
Haven lamber company, caught fire
about midnightTuesday night and was
totally destroyed. The loss on the mill
•M iu machinery is about $136,000,
•ad-it was insured for $38,000 in 34 comPan*«. The fire throws 240 men aud
buys
of employment, but the cob­

ously thriving.

r

.

An Ark 200 feet long ia being built
by nn Iowa man, who belives that n
second flood will take plac(\ in 1883.
He intends, however’ te. take passen­
gers at $5,000 each, .and expects to

moke a fortune.

A young man-in Iowa, recently re­
ceived a severe thrashing for interfer­
ing io a family quarrel between John
Goodenough nnd his wife. The unso­
phisticated youth will adopt the time
honored tnaxim and “let Goodenough
alone” in the future.”
EdwArd Rosner's wile deserted him
five days after the marriage at Far­
mington, Mo., drove him to suicide by
her heartless perfidy, and married his
rival one day after becoming a widow;
yet she claims his entire estate, and
will get it, there being no other heirs.

It would be a strange transposition
ofaff ’rain Europe, if Russia should
unite with Tarkey to maintain her au­
thority in Egypt, against the combined
powon of England, Germany, France.*
Austria and Italy. Such an event is
not impossible and may be near at
A Vermont girl corresponded with a
stranger in Co!., made a marriage en­
gagement and went across the continent
to get. as she supposed a young and
wealthy husband. She found intoead
a grey and ugly crank, whoso sole prop*
erty was a leaky hut in a lonely canon.
Hie neighbors offered to pay her fare
back home, but she declined it, and
has married him.

The willingness of the Scovilles to
take, charge of Guiteau and his estate,
reminds one of the Irishman who was
married before the war, to a rich southera widow, owning five hundred ne­
groes, aud belonging tooneof the first
families in Virginia. When the preach­
er asked: '* Doot thou take thia woman
to be thy wedded wife, to love her, to
cherish her,” etc. Paddy spokt/up: “I
do. and Ute txagurs. too."

Elder GsddtetJthe* ralureT Baptist
church of Louisville i* a rooaing ex-

fill.

A LARGE LINE OF
b*H Ui-re until tin-

6i:,-nal

PARASOLS!

i» believed that tbc oou’pfraloni hM tbetu-

switchman nnd Huffman nt too crussinff nay
they notluoc! no unusual number ot me i
around until not mon&gt; than five mlnut n l&gt;eforo the Dwight accommodation train, which
As the train camo lu sight ground lira curve,
the road-bed tn 'a moment swar.ni.-d with
rough-looking fellows, who, m the train halt-

Our Large Sales still Keep up on
"Wall Paper and Carpets

tho fireman and onlernd them to bring the
train ton dead halt. Others took position at
the possibility of the train running away from
them by drawing out the coupling-pin. Thu
obnoxious sciibs were known t&gt; be in the rear
car, which has been attache ! at Bridgeport
since th? striker* have been rcaortlng to vio­
lence. Into this car, by way of both doom, solected partle* of the mob poured, armed with
iron bars, stones and pistols. The workmen
were attacked and beaton without mosey.
Homo who endeavored to escape through tho
windows and doom were assailed by the strik-

extra. Stone* and club* were rained upon th-.m
as they ran the gauntlet around the cars, in
vain efforts to break through tho lines. How
any,of them passed through the ordeal Is tho
most wonderful part of iu jlurigo Pillsbury,
who bad g^no Into the car with a party of
friends, and wa* playing cuobet when the mob
entered, araae to w what tbo riot was alxxut,

heard the round of tbc pistol aud felt tho
bullet. Ills injury was so bewildering to him
and to his friends that they lost account of
what was going on inside tho car. remember­
ing only tho fierce yells of tho Infuriated as­
sailants, nnd the terrified or agonized shrieks
of the Msailnd nnd injured men. How lunz
tho asauult lasted no one could reasonably cor­
rectly estimate. By the time the passengers
In tho forwardrears had begun to realize what
the confusion outside meant the strikers hud
satirfi'#! their th I rut for revenge and scattered,
firing their pl.-tols in tho air by way of parting
Tho Urrritled workingmen could hardly bo
rallied after the- mob hud left. They hml scat­
tered among the gardens and houses of the
vicinity, hiding In abject terror. The serious­
ly wounded were hurt chiefly about the head,
three at least having their skulls laid bare by
tho vicious blows, if they had been white
men tbc strokes would undoubtedly bare
proved fatal. Tbc three seriously wounded
hnd tb-fr hurts washed nnd dressed ns well as
the rough surgery of the ne'ghborlngresidents
wns able U&gt; do. Judge Pillsbury was carried to
tho station nnd laid on a cot. He was much
prostrated by the shock nnd oomplAlni-d of
numbness tn his arm and leg on the Bid? In
which he was shot. Dr. Corcoran, of Albion,
N. Y.. happened to be on the train, nnd did all
far him thnt was possible under the circum­
stances. Conductor Cy Adams telegraphed to.
police hwul.juarters. nnd also to the offices of
his company. A freight train Just then ar­
rived. and tho caboose wni detached from tbo
train and the switch-engine on duty at tho
crueUng attached »o it. In this way Judge
Plllabury was brought to Cbicngo and placed
in tho Washington Hotel, at Madison and Can­
al streets.
It took tbo train hands forty minutes to got
all tho workmen together again and'p -?--ed
toward Joliet*. A few minutes after the train
resumed lu Journey Lieutenant Byrne and a
a-ngon-lond of Second Pn clnct polio! arrived,
but all they ooald do wm to take note of Aho
blood spots, with which tho sides of tbe t ack
wore liberally spattered, nnd of the other marks
of the conflict. Al! trace of tho rioters was !&lt;&gt;«.
ata! not a man of tho village of Brighton or of

G. A. TRUMAN &lt;fc SON
The First to the Front!
I

AM NOW RECEIVING A FULL STOCK OF GOODS SUITABLE FOR THE SPRING TRADE. INCLUDING
the Largest and Best Stock of

Ready Made Clothing, for Men, Boys, and Youths,
Ever brought to' Nashville, and ranging in price from three te thirty dollars per suit.

Ladies, Misees, Gents &amp; Children’s Fine Shoes
I keep the celebrated Rochester make, Slylish, Durable anc Cheap.

I have the latest styles and can fit al! parties.

At prices that defy competion.

— THAT------

peredoM.
Judge PUtobury. after being brought to the
Washington Hotel, received prompt medical
attendance.
Dr. Andrew*, who has tbo
woanded man In charge. Was firn seen.
“ 1 have probed uxuuoocssfully for th? ball."
to administer anesthetic*. a* furthr-r probing
would tw accompanied with great pain. Tho
wound is in the left blp. the ball entering
slightly in front and pawing Juat out?'de of the
pwlvlK Th? bono In not Injured and there wore

NOT

I always keep a full stock of

Cash paid for Butter and Eggs.

Pioneer Store.

ONEWe AR ENOW

RECEIVING OUR STOCK OF

Of my Customers Complain 'goods fob tele spring trade
------ OF THE-------

AND ARE SELLING THEM

Flour!Clear
------ t*ROM

The Nashville Mill,
UNIVERSALLY SATISFIED.

JNO. M. ROE

Down!

THE CAREFUL MAN IS EVER ON THE ALERT
to take advantage of favorable opportunities.

No matter how disguised, that prompt paying customers
must make good to the dealers who sell on credit all losses
from poor debts, long time accounts, sickness, failing crops,
loss of property, or dishonesty of other customers.
That the merchant who sell on credit muat take into ac
count all the probabilities above mentioned when he offers hi
merchandise for sale. And these losses amount in the aggre­
gate to a lair yearly income—a loss which he could not long
sustain were there no remedy, but there is a remedy and that
remedy is in the PROMPT PAYING CUSTOMERS.
'

DAKOTA NO BETTER INVESTMENT
------ MAY BE------

THE PLACE TO BUY A FARM!
—p n t—
bury'* room. where the J edge was found ratt­
ing quite cuinfortabiy. He said: “I was re­
turning home frsun Ottawa. I was in thn
•moking-ear. and noticed the dlsiurlMDCf, but

In

I

--- but---were total otrangT.ni to them. They gathered
unseen, and were Invisible as roc j uj they hrul
uccoinpflsnvd wfiat they camo for. The pipulaco therrabout manifested great prudence in
talking over tho matter, evidently having

In

Can be made, if necessary, than to hire money and pay
for your merchandise as you purchase it.

-WE SELL

Prints for 6 cts. yard
Gringliams 8 to 11 cts.

THE PLACE TO BUY Turkey Red Table Linen 50 to 55 cts.

Table Oil Cloth 28. Floor, best, 42 cts.

n bullae twMfl of me.

GROCERIES,

Boot* and Hhoe»,
PROVISIONS,

G-eiiei’iil do thing's

CROCKERY,

Groceries* Etc,
GLASSWARE,

HANGING* LAMPS,

We are thankful for the liberal patronage given as in the
past under the old credit ajatem and aoiicit its continuance
under the Ready Pay. We know we can be more serviceable
to vou in tbe futuie than we could possibly be in the past.

COJfE ANO SEE FOE YO URSELF.
. is •:

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                  <text>ORNO STRONG,)

Editor

amd

Pkopkietor.

I

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, JUNE 17, 1882.

VOLUME IX.
LIFE IN NASHVILLE
And Her Environ*.
—The public highways are receiving
the undivided attention of the path­
masters.

—Wm. Boston fired his first kiln of
■ brick Thursday evening. It contained
about 300,000.
—These warm, pleasant days remind
ua that summer has pooled its issues
and spring must go.
—Preparations for a glorious Fourth
of July celebration in Nashville, go on
■with up abated vigor. /
»

for the re-union of the army of the Po­
tomac.
—"Six into four, you can’t,”** a Nash­
ville clerk recently said to the lady
about to purchase a pair of shoes. She
off mad.
—The amount due the village district
for school purpose*, from the mill nnd
dog tax ia $413.42, and bar been placed
in the hands of the district treasurer.

—David Baker, who lost bis house
and contents by fire last week, i* a
stirring farmer, and iarapidly accumulatingxnaterial for a naw and larger
one.
—Horace Foater, the Bugle’s printer,
baa resigned. Such a variety of edi­
tors as the Bugle ia afflicted with is
even more than a crack printer can
stand.
—P*. H. Kenney, a miller of many

—We have beard of a woman so
homely that she would "bust the ma­
chine” while gening her picture taken,
but never of a man so heavy fhat be
wonld break the glare front of the
bnHding he waa getting weighed in,
yet old tnan Hurd accornplished the lat­
ter feat in Roe’s meat market od Wed­
nesday.
■ —Myron Southerland, a well-known
farmer, just this side of Morgan*, was
kicked in the back bv a fracnou* horse
nn Sunday sn severely that he has been
confined to his lied since. A lad named
Phillips was riding the steed on
tiie following day, when lie was thrown
off and hia face cut so severely that it,had to be sewed up.
—At a sereion of the school board, on
Friday evening, Mire Mattie Hind­
march was hired to teach the grnmmer
department at $30 per month; Mire
Mimi Brov/n the intermediate at $35,
ami Mire Helen Allen the primary at
$35. Several applications have been
received for the principnlshlp, but no
action has been taken upon them.
—The Barry and Eaton Insurance
Co., will hold a convention in thi* vil­
lage on July 3&lt;1, to take into consider­
ation the feasibility of amending its
charter so aa to provide for losses by
cyclones. The idea is a good one and
if incorporated into the company’* con­
stitution, will lie hulled with delight by
scores of fnrmers in Barry nnd Eaton
counties, who have been great •&gt; offer­
ers during the past twenty years, by
cyclones.

—Phillip Shaffer, aged almnt 60, of
years’experience has secured an inter­ Maple Grove, waa chopping with a
est in Pr. Young’s Scippio mills, and companion on Monday, when ilie inthereafter will have absolute supervis­ ter’s ax slipped mid took effect in the
ion of the work.
old man’s right leg ulmve tire ankle,
—Farmer Henry Clever, recently ser­ cutting the leg about half way around.
iously injured by a limb of a tree he Dr. Young was called, nnd'by the time
was. felling, falling upon hi* head, ia
able^to be out again, and iaon the high from losq of IiIihhI, flint it wns frnretl lie
road to recovery.
wouldn't’survive, but by prompt atten­
—The editor of the Vt. Ville Hawk tion and good care he is getting along
thinks we are envious of him. He also finely. '
thinks he will be senator. It is no un­
—Several members of onr firm com­
usual thing for the Hawk man to think pany were nt Bellevue on'Mniiiliiy to
impossible things.
inspect her hew fire engine. The l*»ys
—Harley P"go of Kalamo,'and also a say the Mine worked like a charm,
resident of Nash rille for about a year,
on June 1st, died from consumption nt building with raw, mid rliftt Prof.
Chiteniog Falls, N. Y.» where he had Newkirk informed ihrni flint nnr en­
gine would arrive by \Ve&lt;1u«-*il.-iv, if
gorfc for his health.
not be wonld willingly "art up” the
—Brooks, MarohnH Si Co., bought the cignr* for flu* n bo.f ,ci&gt;inpnny. A* I lie
first dip of wool offered in thia market. engine (did n't anirr ;nql hasn’t yrt, Mr.
It was brought in by a Mr. Englund N. is evidently stytek for ilia cigar*.
from the Sriilappi neighborhood, on
Th n rad ay of last week, and brought 85
cents per pound.
—Nnshville has ths best business
is ngiiin iiiifi'itiiiiuii-. It will !i«* remen, the biggest-hearted women, the
memlwrwl that lie ia -J &lt; united in the
prettiest girts, the cleverest Ixiys. the
purest.water, the healthiest climate, north-enat comer «»f A*«vrin, mid flint

and thWviggeat fish of any town of its
size in the north west.

—We cenldn’t resist the temptation
to be in at the re-union of the army of
the Potomac at Detroit, on Thursday,’
consequently if there are any local* in
this issue that are missed, m the Irish­
man would remark, don’t say anything
about it.
—Miss Edith Fleminghad an in-grow­
ing toe-nail which became so bad that
for several years past it has effected
her gait. Last week a portion of the
too was ampntated and now Mias Edith
is doing nicely and will overcome her
former defect,

was Inerted on un&lt;itl»&lt;*r pirrcl of land
hr owned just over the lilts- ill B&lt;lli-vile,
and which rmtnpnl the cyclone, on to
his farm in Anaytiu. and on Wednraday morning a lifting lever awiiug
around and struck him on the right
leg breaking it.

—On Thursday morning a telegranhio dispatch reached this village, from
Dnraud, stating that Mrs. Bob. Hen­
derson, formerly Mrs. Jno. Roberts,
had died the previous night, from
heart disease. Sim was one of the first
settler* of Nashville.
—C. A. Newton, a fanner living
north-east of the village, on Monday
night owned a valuable fborongh-bred
fox-hound, but on the following morn
ing he didn’t. Some rascal had poison­
ed it and thrown the body in a mud
puddle on the state road.
.

—A slixm Ivatil* occurred mi Middle
Sr. Tiieadav morning. The law hi re­
gard to iniixiniidiiig rattle went intn
effect on Munday, and on the following
morning two uni'dilutis Ind*, 1^-vi
Evert: and Kort. Flint, espying IV. H.
Burgras’, Widow D iwua’ and Torn.
Brady’s cows browait g in the streets,
started them for the |umnd.
The lattg ran receded in rescuing hia, luit the
other twn were ini|H&gt;nnded.
Widow
Downs and Mrs. Burgess s.m&gt;i&gt; heunl of
it and went over to Mrs. Evrrtt’a to
seek a acttlemrnt, but they had only
got wi far a* tn threaten to whip Levi I
when Mrs. Evertt’a byes fln*hed fi-r
and she charged upon the two women
with clinched fi*ta. T‘ ey instinctively
fled to wants their respective aluxlra.

—The weather during the past ten
—‘1 and Grant will be there,"mid the days has been bright, clieerful and
sunny, and the itniiren* is left upon
the train to take io the re-nnion. La­ Die face mid feelings of rvety man.
ter we notired ths vain-giorion* bird woman and child. Corn and potatoes
fcloeping as innocently aa an infant, 1are nearly all in the groputl, sheep
wool m being broo^.tfo mar­
hia left ear serving na a mattreaa and sheared,
1
hia right aa a protection from the chill ket and business in the agricultural
dwtrirt* a*-*nines new life mid prosper­
night wind.
ity. Wheat mid gm** were tievv-rlook—The News ha* hem favored with :
a copy of a beautiful illustrated, sixty
may bow wsfrly calculate on nn a Im rid
page pamphlet, issued by the passenger
harvfat of rwcli. July and August
deoartmrnt of Miehiran Central rail- nut
1
Mod not^aad. giving a graphic description of will OMtnrrcurii mid
withxtandinr
Hia ttun t’mt tlw« froit hna
MaekiBM Island, with its many nnriv- ।
all brwy killii! flvr «»r »ix time* within
attraction*, and also anmmnt '
tonrist’* rate* thereto, over their line
incmasetim with steam boat passage. 1abundant tipplr ykhl, and praclH-a
Hawk on Wednesday, aa he boarded

« M wn hmMifa), ke.lt),.

I TERMS; Sl^Ora

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun.

i

email frnir* urr pnmiiring wrll, anti in

LOCAL GIBBLE-G ABBLE
Prepare tn transpire.
■ The building boom keep* up.
Boys, engage yonr girls for the 4th.
Alex Blair is painting his residence.
The Cadi olio church has been fenced
in.
Mrs. L. A. Foote is at Bedford visitThe fire company driileth every eve­
ning. ’
.
Eighty-six in the shade as we go to

The Wolcott House has added inside
blinds.
Look for brisk competition in onr
wool market
•
Mrs. G. A. Truman has been in ill
health for several weeks.
Severn! Sunday School picnic
Thornapple Lake today.
D. S. Pearson, of Waterloo, N. Y.,
clerking at Wm. A. Aylswortb's.
,
Miss Delia Hudson of Battle Creek,
is visiting at Mrs. L. 0. Crocker’s.
H. M. Lee disposed of 27 head of cat­
tle to John Fiirniss.Monday evening,
T. H. Brooks of Bellevue, was in the
village in quest of live stock on Mon­
day,
.
Our Prichard ville correspondence
came in too late last week for publica­
tion.
Dean Fleming and wife of Jackson,
made Nashville a flying trip on Tues­
day.
Miss Hattie Austin is expected from
Grund Rapids to-day, to stay at home
over Sunday.
Mrs. Nettie Wilson and daughter Nel­
lie, of Lexington, 0., are in Nashville,
visiting old home friends.
Clarence Crocker, of this office, vis­
ited friends at.Bat tie Creek and took
,in Forepaugh’s tills week.
Tlivnka io Jay A. Hubbell for an elegiii't cuuiniemoruflou of the memorial
service &lt;»f Pivxident Garfield.
Mrs. A. D. Newton, returned from a
four week-’ visit with friends at Ypsil­
anti anil Detroit, on Tliursday.
Mia. Wm. Beadle, wife of a Nash­
ville ex-tavern keeper, but now of In­
dianapolis, Ind., is in the village.
Frank Martin and wife of Ypsi’^nti,
are visiting nt Mrs. Kate Ralston’s, Mrs.
M. Iteing Mrs.
youngest daughter.
The mail east on Wednesday and
Thursday mornings had three extra
coarhes to nrconiinodato excursioniata.
Mr*. Amelin Huston of Smith Bend,
mid Mrs. Emehno Broml’inrst of Do­
wagiac, are visiting their sister, Mrs.
P. Holler.
The "Shira” of Hastings and Nash­
ville are to meet nt Thornapple Lake
next Wedoesdiiy.for a union picnic. A
big time is anticipated.
A* tisuitl exccrslon tickets will be.
sold lM-fwcen all stations, Jaly 3d and
h, atone fare for the round trip.
Tickets &lt;o-return. July 5th.
IL S. Brady has re-shingled the old
lutkery huililing on South Main St.,
and also painting those occupied by the
post office mill Dr. Goucher.
Gru. liiihlairfl and John Lara my, two
master mechanics, are doing the work
on our residence. Lewis Clark is -resIHinsil^e for the mason work.
Almirr twenty members of our East­
ern Star Lodge went down to Hastings
on Saninday an I were handsomely entertaind by tho Hastings lodge.
A foil attendance is earnestly desir­
ed at the Eiitrrpean Society next Tues­
day evening, aa business of importance
foorrfnnisatiiiD will be brought up.
Fowler Si Inge I son hnve a new ad­
vertisement. They also have one of the
largest and most complete stocks of
finishing lumber 'ever brought into
Nashville.
The tt. R. Co., have the material on
the ground for a stock yard, just east
of the i|rp&lt;&gt;t. Several train loads of
gm v&lt;] will be put in and a good yard
built, nt once.
M ra. Burlier will entertain a Uwn so­
cial Tueetlay evening, June30th,for the
lienrfit oi the M. E. church. AH are
cordially invited, ice cream and cake
will l»c served.
Jno. Robinson and wife of San Pranciscu*, Cal., parents of 8. J. Robinson,
arrive,I in town on Monday, and will
make this section their home for the
benefit-of Mm. R’a. health.

Henry Roe and A. C. Buxton of the
vilUire; G^o. M. Davenport, P. If.
Wheeler, G. A. and John McCarthy,
Jan. Jordah and brother of Woodland;
Geo. Dean, E. G. Potter and Enoa
Wolf of Maple Grove;
.
The Michigan Exchange hotel at De­
troit, is now under the sole manage­
ment of Wm. J. Ferguson, and main­
tains its reputation as being the favor­
ite, papular hotel -of Detroit. Its bill
of fare is superb, rooms ample and airy
and clerks courteous and efficient. The
popularity of this.hotel is greatly en-'
banced by its retaining the services of
Mr. C. S. Eaton, ar a more eourtieous
/and hospital head clerk than Mr. E. is
bard to find.
While in Detroit on Thursday we
had the plcasui^e of shaking bands with
many friends, but none that gave us
more pleasure than that of Major G.
M. Anderson, well known to Barry Co.
people generally. He is the same bigbearted, earnest man as of yore, with
none of the vices sometimes character­
istic of such men, but with ail of their
virtues. Since leaving Barry county
be has built two railroads and is now
raising subscriptions for the extension,
of the Grand Trunk from Pontiac to
Jackson, with headquarters at xthe
latter place.

HASTINGS.

NUMBER 39.
MAPLE GROVE.

he will spend a couple of months.
.
Charley Phillips has secured a position st
Jackson, and started for that city lart Tuesday. in front of her old log house.
Victor Perry and Montie Matteson had
The prospect is now that we will get a new
railroad, before the Michigan Central give us

The following program has been de­
cided upon by the general committee
for the coming celebration, whereby
the different committees will under­
stand the work for which they were
appointed, and can receive neccereary
instructions from the general commit­
tee of which C. W. Granger « chair­
man. We hope and earnestly urge the
kind acceptance of all appointment*,
immediate and thorough work, where­
by a grand and successful celebration
can be had, and the several amounts
pledged be well and judiciously used,
ami we herein extended a cordial in­
vitation to all the neighboring towns
to join us again in celebrating the day, ।
which brought to American people |
their freedom and independence:
Morshal of the day—Cap. Squires, Vt. Ville;
lai AmU, J. J. Potter, Nashville: 2d Amu,
Jacob Oemun, Nashville.
Orator to be supplied.
Reader, Rev. F. A. Bissell,
Chaplain, Rev. A. D. Newton.
COMMITTKES.

The Cheney Sisters didn't have a large bouse
Thursday evening, but those who did attend
were well pleased.
Frank Littlefield, proprietor of the Hastings
House went to Detroit to take part In the sham
battle. He is Sergeant Major of the state
troops.
Birds, flowers and children was the order oi
the day at the M. E. church last Sunday,
There was a large crowd In attendance and
everything passed off nicely. The collection
amounted to nearly &gt;21.
Several of our young ladies indulged in a ‘jicn
party at Thornapple Lake lost Tuesday. TheYhad a splendid time rowing, wading, Ashing,
blistering their bauds, playing on the freight
cars, and each one brought home an extra
freckle on the larboard side of the olfactory
protrusion.
There seems to be a pretty fail prospect now
that Hastings will have her long sought com­
petition railroad. Roland Shaw A Co., of
Chicago, have made a proposition to take the
K. H. A, L. rood and finish it, which Is entire­
ly satisfactory to the dliectora of that pros­
pective road and they hare decided to accept
the terms.
The base ball game for the championship of
Barry Co., between the Middleville club and
the Hastings nine took place Tuesday after
noon. Notwithstanding the fact the Middle­
ville club secretly hired oho o!&gt;thc Hastings
nine to play with them,making it necessary for
the Hostings nine to draw a man from the
crowd to All out their number. Hastings won
by a score of 11 to 9 with an inIngs to spare.
During the play Jimmie Rock one of the
Hastings boys ran against the first baseman
from Middleville and In falling dislocated his
arm at the elbow, Dr. Timmerman set the arm.
The other fellow was considerably shook up
and has a sprained shoulder.

LOCAL MATTERS.
SODA WATER.
Ice cold and deliciously flavored, coo only be
obtained in NaabviUe, at Hals's Drug Bura.

GOOD JUDGES
Men's, Youth's -nd Boys. Clothing, and Gents
Furnishing Gooods ever laid down in Nashville, *
to on exhibition at Pxindlk A Cnirtfaa'a ,

TO THE CITIZENS OP NASHVILLE
AND THE SURROUNDING
VICINITY.
•
P. H. Kenny, lately from New Troy. Berrien
Co. Mich., has taken an interest tn Dr. W. H.
Youngs’ flour mill, known as Bdpio mill*, and
having 15 years ex perionce in custom grinding
and merchant milling at Niles, Bucliauan and
New Troy, Mich, would solicit a share ot the
public, patronage and make custom grinding
and merchant milling a specialty.
P R. Kbxxt,
3w
Nashville, Mich.

MONEY TO LOAN,
On Real Estate at low rate of interest of
t3T Fun lino of Wall Paper at
F.T. BOIBF8.

W- The builders of the “CROWN" machine
are among Uic pioncera In the manufacture of
Sewing Machines, and their experience ha*
been brought into play in perfecting the
•‘CROWN.’” Ills universally concedi*! that
they have aiware made a . achin&lt;- second to
none in point of workmanabfp. The Florence
Machine Co. have one of the most complete and
extensive factories in the country, and they
make the “CROWN." Their reputation for
twentv dve years past is enough to Kuarnntee
the Workmanship and durabieity of
flits new machineI haw a machine which I propose to WAR­
RANT nnd KEEP IN REPAIR FREi OF
COST TO THE BUYER FOR FIVE YEARS
FROM DATE OF PURCHASE.
The “CROWN” u^s a straight needle, and
large shuttle and makes the lork stitch, which
WEST KALAMO.
the experience of years has proved to be the
best for all classes' of work and workers. The
“Crown” runs easily with but very little nolae,
A few cherries left.
and is built for the comfort aud convenience of
V'bcat Is beaded out
the operator. Tbc form of the Machine gives
Potato bugs are lovely.
plenty of space under the arm an a large
L. Mack Um the frame up for a bam.
amount of table room where it to most needed.
The appearance of the head and stand is *aA few fanners have sheared their sheep.
perb. Tbc hear! is finely proportioned and
Mrs. Frank Cole is in very poor health.
lx&gt;tb It and the stand are made with gnicefid
Cultivating corn and potatoes goes on slowly. curves nnd corners. The finish t'.irougbout to
Much coru is being planted hereabouts this simplyyleganl; both head, stand aud wuod-

Whoa! Lo. Malte sou has bought a span of
horses.
Mrs Hurd of Manistee is visit I ng her brother­
in-law, John Hurd.
■ Many fanners are compelled by reason of the
late, cold and wet spring to replant their com.
Dr. F. Merritt of Charlotte has clothed hia
big bam on hUfanp.in this town in an entirely

While the machine to wonderfully simple, ft
accomplishes with ease the widest range of
work. Il to put on tbc market with the fine
belief that H e people will Hud it the beat M»I chine for general use yet offered.
E. R. Worn, AgL

ATTENTION KNIGHTS!
The annual election of Ivy Lodge. No. 87,
Knights of Pytlilas, will occur at Ito Castle
Hall tn Naahvilie, on Friday evening.June 30th.
I trust that every merntier oTthe Knigiit’a
H. C. Goddard and family departed last week Rank will make it convenient to attend.
Ouno Sthvxq, C. C.
for Clinton Co., to make their home among old
friends.
FINE BOOTS.
Several farmers who planted potatoes on low
For Ano Boots made to order from best stack,
t&gt; to
36-IS
Jons Bkzun’s.
land have the disapolntmcnt to And their labor

NOTICE.

To the members of the Formers Mutual Fire
ing, conveying the news that Mrs. Louisa Hen­ Insurance
Compaq* of Harry and Eaton Co’s.
derson, daughter of Mrs. Eliza Davis of this Mien.:
.
Notice la bercbv given that there wi 1 be t
special
meeting
of mH company, at the Opow
Report is, that Wm. Spire will soon start for House, Natt'.ivilie,
Mieh,.onJulv3dvat (o'clock
Englund to visit the home of his youth, and p. m. This meetiug to calk d for the purpose.
rusticate among the aristocracy of that laud of eonaWcring on uuicndinenl to our charter,
and ameodiug, it thought occsaMry,. that «r
of
lords
and
dukes.*
COMMON 00UNCH PROCEEDINGS,
may insure against cyclones and tornadoes;
A lively acene last week al a sheep washing. also to Insure &lt; liurvhe-s school! houses,!}ntugr
Couxcn. Rooms.
i
Whisky, water, men and a boy. Fun, earnest, India and njrriculujral lialla. Thia meeting if.
Nashville. June 12, 1883. f
great IraporUnee and should l&gt;e attended by
anger, atone, water, swearing, crying, and of
■ Il — — t. , U.I.K
-------- ' - — - . —
.1
Regular meeting.
Anally very bitter feelings engendered.
Hastings, May 37,18tQ.
Present, Chipman, President; Barber, Boise,
Deniaray, Dickinson, Loe and Lentz. Absent
Secretary.
that Orra, son of A. R. Williams of this town,
was bitten by a rattle snake, June 4th, and
WHAT IS THE USE
‘
before help could be summoned he came near
The following accounts were presented and
a new Mow it or Res per when you can
dying, and in fact at last accounts he was in a
on motion allowed by ayes and nays aa follow*:
hl one mads os good as new at
very precarious condition.
HxEVTtMs A Cook’s.

Fowler &amp; Ingereon,.
A. C. Btenton,.......
Joo. Gregory,.........
John Heckathom,
T. C. Downing, ...
Wm. Van Wagner,.
Homer Biair,......... .
Days as follows:

NEW BK1CK STOftE.

WOODLAND.
3 l.'i

local! al oner
James Black has returned frem his trip and arUle either by woteorcth, m I will mmt
all that to due -.ne.
Gab. W. Fkamoim.
Ujrough the watt.

FOURTH OP JULY A'TTHE G ROV1-.
HOUSE. THORN APPLE LAKE.
of the town was buried hut Saturday.
Mr. Spindler has built a wire fence in front

Lee and Lentz. Nays, none.
ORDINANCE No. 38.

RUNNING AND TROTTING RACESt
The Fourth of July will be celebrated aith. Grove House, Tboruspple Lake, Ay running
and truttiug recce, boating, an&lt;f a Bow«r?
Dance.
•00.00 tn Premiums aa follows: TroMMr
I--0^—1—. ■«*!

fire crackers, exploding torpedoes, or otb
plosive materials within the corporation.
Bee. 1. The Common Council of the i

we hope others will follow suit.

Old TnrttingRace-)
Boat Race—Pretn I on

«__ ~

am »IO, Free for all
Free all. Allot*.
Guodbalf-mttorw
to Ute it before the

Fourth.
G. Miller,
There, will be a fellowship meeting
num an addition to Mr. Ooleetoek’s hooM and
nt the Christian church, on Saturday
also to G. R. Trabert’*.
the 24th inat., at 2 o’clock, p. m. A full
attendance is desired aa importantqnes- said ordinance, shall upon. coaricUon thereof,
A.MW THOUSAND DOLLARS
be flood not leas than 11.00, nor more than
tiona will coroe up for decision.
K 00 together with coats of sulk and on failure
B. H. Hoag. E. Cork, A. Blair. J. to pay such fine tad costa, may be imprisoned
Osinun and A!. Van Nock er of this vil­ fa the County jail not more thee ten days, or
LUMBER! LUMREE!
The Woodland band played their Brat piece
lage, ernildn’t resist the temptation to
take in Forrpaugh’s show at Battle
Croek on Tuesday, and were there.
hatav,
Kusu Cxifmaw,
Quite a number of the people of thus
QM.
Prreldsr
vicinity attended the re-union at De-

Clerk.

'

Lemonade pants begin to brace up.
Wosl begins to'come In quite lively.
'
Dr. Miller from Otsego, spent Bunday in this
dty.
Frank Goodyear has returned from the
south.

FOURTH OF JULY CELEBRATION.

Reception—G A. Truman, D. C. Griffith.
C. M. Putnum. L. J. Wheeler and E. Chinman.
Music—Dr. Barber, F. T. Bptoe, Miss Belie
Truman and Mrs. C*. W’. Granger.
Representation of Blates—Mias Helen Allen,
Mtos Mattie Hlndmarch, MIm Cad Griffith and
Miss Fannie Blair.
Decoration—J. D. McCartney, E. R. White,
Al. Whitcomb and assistants. .
Grounds—Chas. Fowler, C. N. Dunham, L.
E. Lentz and N. Murry.
Printing—Geo. Francis, C. 8. Glassgow, F.
T.
Horae Race—John Funds*, J. Osmun and
George Eeln tosh.
Glass ball shoot—W. E. Buel, J. Austin and
J. D. Dickinson.
Fool race—T. D. Downing, Henry Roe and
John E. Barry.
Barrel Race—Dr. 8. A- Foote, H. Dickinson
and H. Dcricr.
Filibuster parade—H. W. Flint, Frank Baker
and C. N. Young.
Fore-paw race—Alex Blair, Chas. Dcmaray
and Taylor Walker.
Wheel-barrow race—Wm. Clark, Charles
8c beidt and Dick Graham.
Fire works—Chaa W. Smith, C. Ainsworth
anil L Wilson.
A find-class band will be in attendance.
Kee^your eyes open for pasters, and see

'

y4|-

Cunt StMclrmon Sl.W

�WHAT EVTRABODY WANTS.

JUNE. IT, 17H2
LITTLE MR8. WILLO,

EMEU.

. Brought HUIe
A»rt through the da«Ud flolds and lanee,

OrpUy beneath theoldeak-treM
With acorn dip* and dlib«i
ted did h cloud obscure the sky,

A

« W. -I.

.kin.

mae» again.
fas good-by*said forevwr.
fort many times la dreams X’ve heard
The crickets chirping shrilly.
While I have roamed " up hill, down dale,*
Mill.
WIIW.

a quarter of an hour's drive,” screamed
Mamie; “so yon needn’t hurry. I can’t
wait un«U she rows the boat out to you. under the
Good-by
before - Jamie oonld
make her understand that it would be
possible for them to let the boat drift
out to him on the ebb-tide, Marian ap- dripping form from the Scud, in which
he had sailed iq spite of all, and he was
rowed over to the beach in time to take
farewell went rattling off down the the same train back in which his father
wae returning from the city.
avenue.
“ An’ am dat you or yer ghost, Mas’r
•« Well, this is a pretty fix to be left
in!” thought Jamie, as he stood up on Jamie?” exclaimed the colored coach­
the deck of the Scud and looked out man, as they got into the carriage at
the station. “There
inure ’s yer
ver pore ma as
at
over the river in search of a crab boy, iwswuua.
home lookin’ no an’ down tbe ribber m
or any other sort of boy with a boat.
But as it was quite early in the after­ white as yerselL an’ Miss Marian. Mhe
noon, there was not a single one visible. am dot scared’bout yer dat”
“ But where wm ebe all' tbe time?”
Then, as it was so very warm, Jamie
decided to rest a while before going on eagerly interrupted the boy, m hiz father
with his work, so he crawled In under took the reina from Pomp, and started
the forward deck, where there was shade lhe h0TM&gt; u Ibeir UnUoit p&gt;M. “Why
and a strong smell of damp wood, and didn't .he or eomebody oome out efter
pillowing hts bead on a sand bag, lay
.
there listening oontenteflly to the regu­
** Why,” replied Pomp, M he feasted
lar lap, lap of the river against the hia eyes on Jamie, sitting there in flesh
Scud, wondering if each Mule. ripple and blood between himself and Mr.
wasn’t a sort of water-sprite hi disguise. Trenwlok. "yer eoo she went on du
Of course it was but a wave's breadth rld.widWc-M.tole,^' de, ™ ll«
from thinking about waler-sprites to goin’ to tarn roan’ an'oome home, when
dreaming about them, and as the de storm broke dber ’em. An’ Miss
weather was extremely sultry, and the Mamie’s pony he am powerful ’fraid o’
slight motion of the boat very soothing, thunder, so dey couldn’t jist do nothin’
u JI wid him,'oept drire into . ham
Jamie was soon seeing strange sights
First there were only the tiny wster- 'long de rowl, no’ wait tor eUr weather.
spriies that seemed to flit before him;
tnen these gradually grew into dwarfs lin’ 'boot yer all do time, altbouirh &gt;ho
with large heads, which they took off link of course you had seen de storm
and tossed back and forth like foot­ a oomiu’ an’ hollered to do gardener or
balls, until finally they themselves somebody roan’ dar (yer ma an’ me
changed into giants, while the heads bein’out wid de kerridge). An’ when
were transformed into immense cannon­ she come home an’ find dat de Soud
balls, which crashed into one another, wur gone an’ you in it, yer should hah
as they whizzed through the air, with a seen her an’ yer ma take on, like—
But yer can see 'em now, tank de Lord!”
terrible report.
Boom! bang! b-o-o-m! The noise added the good soul, as the team dashed
was so loud that it woke Jamie with a up to the piazza, and Jamie sprang into
start, and even then he heard it, for in his mother’s arms, with Marian sobbing
truth it was not all a dream, but a fierce for joy on his damp jacket.—Harper't
thunder-storra which had suddenly Young People.
swooped down upon the calm afternoon
A Mongellaa Funeral.
and churned the peaceful river into a

medicine L«

Tribune.

WAGONS ONLY $60.00.
HKROWN EXPERIENCE.
.“The friend of ours who recommended yoar
&lt;&gt;f paralysis, which rendered her entire right
side powerless, and, In a word, left her aa help­
lew
aa. an Infant.
Bat
’Kennedy
’s Favorite
„
. ,,
. . ;
y-------------Remedy cuml her and she la now able to do
her own work.” The above is quouted from a
letter from a gentleman in Elmira, /i. T. to
Dr. David Kennedy, of Rondout, N. Y. Ton
need a bottle in the boom.
—... .77— , .7

P»«.

!

I

to be .Horn

A COMPLETE LINE OF

Buggies. Carriages, Wheel Harrows and
Cultivators, Mounted Seeders,
and 4 kinds of Plows.

REED'S GENUINE SPRING TOOTH HtRR'W
ROM SCRAPERS, SQUARE BRASS, GRIM STORES,
,

Common, and bung ready for use.

IF TOU ARE RUINED
(n health from any cause, especially from the
SEW ING MAOHINES.
use of any of the thousand nostrums that prom}»« ao largely, with long fictitious teatlmouiala,
h*™ ■" &gt;'“•
10
•» owe. PLOW POINTS for the Oliver Chilled. Wlard, Three Riv­
**““« "*
ers, Bryan, Cale, Curtis, Dodge, Robinson
,--------- X— ---------------And many other Plows.
" e underataud death for the flrat time when
In fact, wy keep a full and complete stock of first class Hardware and Farming Tools, Cafl
h« PuU hu haDd nP°D one whom we love,
and see them before buying.
.
■v
DIDIOU KNOW 1TI

Keonle™, bj . Italy
Imn Bil­
ter.,. true mole, a perfect .tmrtocnrr.
1
---------------------------' That woman who neglect* her husbands
j, shirt front, la no longer tbc wife of his bosom.
’
REMEMBER THIS.
If you are sick Hop.Bltlers will surely aid
Nature lo making you well when all elae falla.
If vuu are coatlve or dyapeptlc, or are suffer­
ing from any other of the uumeroas diaeaaes of
the aiomacb or bowela, it la yoar own fault if
you remain ill, for Hop Bitters are a sovereign
remedy tn all aueb com plain la.
If you are wasting away with any form of
Kidney disease, stop tempting death thin mo­
ment, and tarn for a cure to flop Bitters.
If you arc sick with that terrible slckncw
Nervousness, you wlp find a “Balm in Gilead"
in tbe use of Bop Biltcra.
If you are a frequenter, or a resident of a
miasmatic district, barricade vour avstem
against the scourge of ail countries—malarial,
epidemic, biliousness, and intermittent feven—
by the aw- of Hop Bitters.
'If you have rough, pimply, er swallow akin,
ted breath, pains and aches, and feel miserable
generally, Hop Bitters will give you fair skin,
rich blood, aweeteat breath, health, and com­
fort.
■
In abort ibev cure ail diseases of the stom­
ach, Bowels, Blood, Liver, Nerves, kidneys,
Bright’s disease. &gt;500 will be f&gt;ald for n case
they will not cure or help.
That poor bedridden, invalid wife, sister,
mother or daughter, can be made the picture
of health, by a few bott’es of Hop Bitters, cost­
ing but a trffle. Will you let them suffer!

rasing sea.
The emaciated remains of Cha Afach,
Jamie quickly turned over and banked a middle-agM Chinaman, lay in a sim­
out of his retreat, to be at once soaked ple pine coffin yesterday at his home in
through by the driving rain.
Division street, and the friends of the
(Perchance It may be silly,
The Scud was rising and falling on dead man had assembled to pay the last
For ahe must be quite fifty-three)
I to my pr*' era add fervently:
the waves with mighty thuds, tugging tokens of respect to his memory and
• Bless HU Ip Mrs. Willie'”
at the cable like a spirited horse eager perform the mortuary rites of the Budd­
to be off, and even as tbe boy stoo&lt;l hist creed. Full twenty-five bare-headed
there, transfixed with amazement, the
HOW JAMIE
SAILED Ilf THE rope parted, and the liberated boat shot and tearful Mongols sat in the room io
strangely embroidered “sues,” black
“SCUD.”
swiftly down tho river with the wind and pantaloons and shoes of marvelous de­
tide.
sign. At the foot of the coffin a roasted
The Scad was a cat-rigged, clipperThen Jamie rushed to the stern, think­
built pleasure yacht, belonging to Mr. ing he m’ghtfoe able to steer the yacht pig savored the air, and all around it
'Trenwick, and now for sale.
It had in such a way that she W'*uld ap&lt;*e&lt;lily w«re H’rewn fragments of gold and sil­
sever been used very much, and now be blown ashore; but with a tlir 11 uf ver paper that reflected tbe flames of a
that Jamie was almost old enough to terror he discovered that there was no sc tre «f brigntly burning wax candles.
want to sail it himself, still sufficiently tiller on board, nor oven an oar or x&gt;a'- A few “Jo*-” sticks protruded from
young to run a good ch *nce of being hook to take its place, and thus the rud­ a non? tho flimsy emblems of temporal
drowned in the attempt, Mrs. Trenwick der was rendered practically n*eli:-*. riuhos, and bright strips of colored silk
declared that she would sleep much The next instant a zigzag flame lit up wm p.-n lvnl from the walls. In the
easier at night if “that boat" were the darkened heavens with its awfu mid «t &lt;»f all this lowly splendor lay tbe
, dead M Rngul, with ghastly, upturned
owned by somebody else.
light, followed by a succesiion of thun- |I lace an&lt;l folded arms.
Jamie was nearly eleven, and both he dur-claps, which «ent Jamie bank uud
silence
A fB’ minutes of complete
. ...t
/____ !
•nd his twin sister Marian knew how to lhe deck with' a he art that nearly f ailed I■
...
,------- ----,i
row, and in their pretty little boat would him as he realized bow helpless he was I' pa-sued, and three Chinamen entered lhe
r »«»m.
I'hny were aa-uming the duties
paddle about for noun in shallow wa­
The river was a broad one, and not-’
ter, so that It was considered perfectly particularly deep, except in the bin-,t bel n ring to the Buddhist priests, and
safe to allow Jamie to pump out the nel, al hough now that the tide h-ul inly .। ea&lt;*'i wore a soft black felt hat bound
! '■ i' h a -trin of white crape The central
Scad after a rain.
■ .ne of &lt;h- ihb-gan to chant a prayer
But as lime wont on and no purchaser not much hope of the So-nl cui-i &lt;i
in thn g literal Cantonese dialect, and
appeared, tbe yacht seemed to feel the aground anywhere ne tr home
l‘ i ’
it •■-••ry im* ho made his two assistneglect with which it was being treated, and faster she drifted, or rather » «
xitu oti-t'i-J a response.
Sometimes
and by tray of attracting more attention along, until Jamie, unable t«&gt; !•&gt; ' ■ '
. : iev r.’»oT.,nt|v kneeled, hnt they Ktood
to itself, »addeifiy began to leak.
I there in snApeiwr, came out fi . . i
“ Well, pump her out every day if refuge,, and, prep ved to fau&lt;« • ’»- w
strange
•^cesaary,
necessary, my son,” said Mr. Trcawick, ! gazed
gazed &lt;out upon the wild scene .*»•&lt;
when informed of the fact, for he wa&lt; ^iin.
'
:’hri tan city, hut never fur am.very busy at his office in the zrity just
d &lt;1 .&gt;■• prayerful voices flag, and
then, and was never at home during the lhe exception of a schooner run dog
• (.: t ii'onmt did the m turners
day except on Sundays.
down the river before the gale in 'be
ii.s.r qj’et from lhe face of their
The Scud was moored on the edge of direction of the sea. l'he mm.! ¥»• . it
•t.-d i-&gt;tn vde.
the channel, only a few yards from the jraaonly fi-q mile* off; and a. I . in •
•r H» prayers to Jom had been
outer end of the Treuwioks* dock, and recolh'cted the fact, it seeuird i• II
re nier.-d, and the prayer-«ticka
formerly a pretty blue and white buoy there rutzaf be nonietfiiig he
d i \ io
I ghu &lt;1, the c-ifiln was borne out :
had floated above the spot where the check his SWT ft, dishing couree t ■ nd
• । »n-e n od dopodted in a hoarse.
anchor lay ;*but this had been lost by it.
was a member of the
gome means, and now the cable was
But he wav qiite powerless, end the
in Tong,*or United Chinese
fastened directly to the bow of the boat. Scud went wMrhngon, now b&gt;v tl* ».
in the course of a week &lt;* so the how sidetvha. yet evpr moving o-&lt; &lt;»im&gt; of tho society at IS Mott
pump, loo, gave out, «o that the water
»L«n» a G-rman brais bind was
had to lie patiently taken out by means there nn'.v loorn -d up the draw l» &gt;d
on tin* sidewalk, and as the^
of pail, bailer and sponge, which Jamie
With
wi.k-open,
anxious -yei. j 1(l k ,rI( •jn filed into the Chinese oolfound to bj not nearly as interesting an Jamie gazed at the l itter as the -choon (&gt;
ti . tU'i-iCKitu plaved the Dead
occupation as pumping, which was Br »n«*i*d *sfely tlirougn^'wonderm ■' in'
''
; \1 ueh fr«ru ‘ Saul.”
Then lhe metnoertainlv more “ shipshape.”
a &lt;iaz--d sort oi wav if the keeper would be’M.if the L »ot&gt; Ye Tong walked two
“I don’t wonder .that nobody wants see h«m before he dosed the draw
and
two
from
the
club-roomt
and
to bay her,” he remarked to Marian
“ But how cm I be sure of nut miss­ f irsu-d in procession behind the hear.se.
one very hot afternoon, as she rowed him ing it, even if it is open 1 ’’
Each one was die-vd in native costume
. out to tne scene of his daily task. “Look
The question wa&lt; a momentous one, and wore a white silk apron, upon
out, now, and don’t let her bank,” he and, alas! hon difficult lo an-wvr! And
added, as his sister brought the boat up still onward »p-»d the Send, swiftly wh ch, in black velvet, was worked a
alongside the Scud with a swoop that nearing the sp -t ih it now seemed m »re s pare and compats—lhe symbol of the
threatened to considerably damage the terrible to Jamie than the ocean itself. order, fhe first Motion of the mourn­
ers carried n red serge flag, trimmed
paint of both, had not Jamie skillfully
The man had evidently seen him, for with white, which bore in white Chinese
warded off the blow.
the draw remained wide open, but al­
At tho same time there was a noise of ready the c Hine ot the b &gt;at was tend­ characters lhe name, age, time nf birth
Be­
wheels on the graveled driveway leading ing in such a way that a c dll-.ion with and time of dea'h of Cha Afuch.
to the house, and a handsome village the bridge appeared to be a'm »st inevi hind those came two blank banners, on
which
were
embossed
white
hieroglypl
eart was seen to stop at the front door. table. Jamie sprang to Che stem, and
“O, it’s Mamie Henley t” cried Mar­ made a desperate effort to turn the rud­ ic«, which freely translated wore, “Ilei
ian, clapping her hands. “ Hurry out, der-post with his hands,.bat all in vain. in Peace” and “We Mourn our Loss.
Tne body was preoe&lt;ied by a line of po­
Jamie; here’s your pail and things;”
The bridge-keeper had by this tims
and quickly catching up her oan again, perceived the full extent of the lad's licemen and the noisy brass band.
the little girl shoved off, and was nearly Eril, but be could do nothing to help When the march began there were fully
a thousand persons attracted to the
back at the docks before her brother
n—could only stand there on the scene, aud it was with difficulty that tho
could shout ader her:
draw with straining eyes fixed on the procession oonld make any progress
“ But how km I going to get ashore? Scud.
—
through the crowd. The remains were
Come on out here again and take me in;
Yet would the shock really be grdht taken to the Grand street ferry and here
enough to harm him? Jamie wondered: the police escort departed.
When tho
and for an instant or two he thought
with the pail, as if to add emphasis to that the bridge might be the means of funeral line was formed in Williamsburg
a number of rowdies created a disgrace­
his words.
’
saving him from a worse fate,' for per­ ful clamor, but some sensible citisaas
“Oh, I cant stop now,” Marian haps the boat would remain unhurt,
screamed in reply, as she nimbly slip­ and he could manage to clamber up by drove them away, and the hearse and
ped the painter over a post, and scram- the spiles. Tnen he noticed how rap­ its followers reached the Evergreen^
,hted out on the dock. “There’s Mamie idly ho was passing each landmark on Cemetery without further incident. The
beckoning to me now. I’ll run up and shore, and felt the full force of the gale coffin was then lowered into tho grave,
a handful of earth was thrown on the
•ee her first, and when I come back as he turned to faee it.
cover by each mourner, the mound was
you’ll be ail through;” and throwing
quickly
raised and sodded, the company
•St the last sentence a* nhe ran. Jamin'* oried aloud in his excitement. “She’s so
dispersed, and, with the three flags
old and leaky that at the first jar her floating over him and about twenty
Jamie himself took up his baile.- and timbers will give way, and I—”
prayer sticks at his head, Cha Afuca
But he was almost there now, and awaits the coming of Bnddha and ths
Jamie dosed hia eyes tor an instant, as resurrection. —N. T. Herald.
he fell to wondering vaguely whether
the bridge-keeper would ever find him,
—A cunning Spaniard named Kmaaor if he would be swept out to sea with uel Cortex, with many aliases, has al
[anas out riding with her old pony in the wreck. Then there came a sadden
la*v been hunted down in New York
b new cart.
shock, which threw him from Ms feet
*• Bat there's Jamie out there in the and caused him to pat ap hia hands «s
a criminal in America for twenty-flea
Bat nothing of the Wad occurred, and

The Champion Machines.

HEEE WE ARE A&amp;AIN!
-WITH A FULL STOCK OF-

Wagons
OUR LINE BUGGIES
EMBRACES

Timkins

Love la a queer thing, and ao ia happiness.
To enjoy either completely it has to be shared.

.Mother-nf ailing daughters, write toR. Pengelly, M. I).. Kabimazoo, Mich., for advice Co
mothers, and Testimonials concerning ZovThere i» so much dirt in the Brooklyn street*
lhlt 1,10 *uth..rtiee are thinking of renting them
nul M a cabbage garden.

Phaetons.
White Chappel and Coal Boxes, hung with Elliptic Springs.
Two and Three Spring Democrats.

By Universal Accord,
of all purgative* for family use. They
are tl»e product of long, ialxrrious. raid
MicccMKful chemical Investigation, nnd
their extensive use. by physicians in
their practice, and by all civilized na­
tions. proves them the best aud most
effectual purgative Pill that medical
science cau devise. Bring purely veg­
etable no barm can arise from their
use. aud being NUgnr-coatecl. they are
pleasant to take.
In Intrinsic value
and curative powers no other Pills
cau be compared with them: awl every
person, knowing »h&lt;tr virtues will
employ them, when needed. They
keep lhe system In perfect order, and
maintain- In healthy action the whole
machinery of lift*. Mild, searching and
effectual, they are especially adapted
to the needs of the digestive apparatus,
derangements of which they prevent
nnd cure. If timely taken.
They are
the best and safest physic to employ
for children uud weakened constitu­
tion*, where a mild but effectual
cathartic is required.
For sale by all druggists.

CAfU-' &gt;SAZrH OF WCMMf
iSYMPATHZSWtTH^TS THE HOPE Cf
1 S WOMAN

' lTHE RACflhj

UR WORK IS ALL DONE UPON HONOR.

BUGGIES

Our Tops are lined with All-Wool Indigo-Ln v&lt;l G&lt;odsnnd
; Warranted not to Fade. W. H. Atkinhhn, a painivt ulioee
wotk uhs never weut duck on unn, iih.- &lt; nmgv oi our |nmi
piirtinent,and can be relied on. Bohi-, D i.-h Feel, B&lt; dv L«
and Stays are made from Norway Ir&lt; n nnd die viiiiit I t
ironed in a desirable and superior manner nnd warrun

Until you have‘thoroughly examined ni ne. Spoke* made
from Second Growth Stock and lite wagon is made to stand
the wear and titre of our roads.
E3TI HAVE IN STOCK A NUMBER OF*^

Chilled Plows, Hay Rakes and Cultivators,
Which I will Sell at Cost to Close out.

E. COOK

Wagons
FOR SALE!
OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE

LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S
VEGETASLB COMPOUND.
A

Em f.r oil KMALS WEAK-

WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH
LAPSUH UTERI, Ae.

THREE INCH TIRE
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING
Find Great IlcUefinlCa Ina.

BETTER THAN COMMON TIRE
We believe the Th tar inch Tire &gt;■ dentined to come
into general use. Call and see them.

Sold by 0. L Glasgow, Nashville, Mich.

BENTLEY BROS. &amp; WILKINSHutingi, Mioh., Sept. 15th, 1881.

�iMBlr^BV.

I!

work, and tend Ing out on

little farther advanced than good grade
short-horns at a year younger. They
ter dustlog give full evidence of tbeir will weigh no more then, and by the
presence. The modern housekeeper has next fall the grades will beat them from
many
more
conveniences
than
her
one to three hundred pounds. A-fair
To Advertisers: '
Ths Nkws has double Ute niunbvr of reader* grandmother, but with them have come profit is sometimes made in handling
n
Fin* RcprwnteUve District of Ban? disadvantages * the grandmother never common cattle, but it is only when
MH—.H.M* — Ih-i&gt;I.tin Utolin knew.
they are purchased low, and tbe mar­
A moth in old times was an evidence ket is brisk at selling time. As a gen­
•of “shiftle&gt;isness” no good housekeeper eral tiling there is no money in feeding
would tolerate, and year after year them, and to a dead certainty they are
Ing. are liable to tMcutue juar patron»■
might pass with no signs of their insid­ unprofitable to breed.
The great
PERUSE THESE LIBKHAL .ID- BATES. ■ ious work. A moth. demands warmth stretch of prairie, which a few years
and comfort, and seeks it as persistent­ ago might "be used for1 pasture, is rap­
ly as any cat, and tho bouse of a hund­ idly disappearing, and on our highI I TS | •
I • »&lt;0 !_• A00 red years ago, knowing fires in only
priced land we.must keep less stock,
2.50
5-UOI
8J0 | 1LOO one or two of the rooms in daily use,
feed more intelligently and handle
~ 8.25
T.OO j IS.001 20.00 was protected by that fact
only such breeds as will," on account of
“
LOO
BOO
|
14.0dT~
25.00
■ The present system is infinitely their superior milk and beef producing
4 Iticbe*;
~kooj~~k&lt;M
|~&gt;Q.00 more comfortable, but we pay for our qualities and their early maturity, make
privileges in the increased necessity for tho best returns.—Zewa Homestead.
vigilance in the war against not only
Summer Treatment of Pigs.
moths but many another destructive
agency.
Every closet, drawer and
Tho warm, season is Nature’s time for
plcoe-bag or basket demands a ransack­
(MINO MTRONG,
vegetable growth, and no less, so for
Kdttor and Proprietor. ing and clearing up at least once a year, animal growth. But farmers seem to
and carpets, beds, curtains, everything
it aa a fortunately easy time to
that can catch or retain dust or afford regard
carry pigs on very small feed. Many
lodging for moths, must have at least
of them have the strange notion that
one annual, absolute purification.
the pig should be tided over the sum­
To the young housekeeper house­
mer upon a littlp pasture, and prepared
cleaning holds nothing but terror. to be fattened after the cold fall weath­
' There is a sense that every room must
er sets in. Grass promotes the health
bo turned out of doors, and peace and of pigs, and a proper amount of Jt is
President—Elihu Chlpmin.
Recorder—Frank McDvrby.
comfort vanish for an indefinite period.
highly beneficial; but profitable feeding
Treasurer—Frank C. Bolae.
Cold dinners or no dinners, damp floors requires that pigs should make tbeir
AwteAwir—John E. Barry.
and utter cheerlessness must reign.
MuiKhnll—Janies L. Gregory.
most rapid gain in lhe warm weather.
Truateea-H. A. Barber, F. T. Bolae. H. W. The master of the house grows wrath­ A hundred poundscan be put on pigs in
Demaray, H. R. Dickinson, H. M. Lee and ful at the very word, ana the mistress
summer as cheaply as fifty or sixty-five
Chas. Lente.
hears it with a despairing acceptance pounds in cold weather." We believe
of its necessity. And yet, though all this statement will bo indorsed by all
£arirtir8.
this is allowed by the majority to work
feeders who have tested the warm and
as it will, not the slightest real reason the cold seasons for feeding under or­
exists for such upheaval. To begin
with, the old custom of taking up all dinary circumstances. We admit that
the carpets at once was a custom and swine bouses may be built so as to
not a necessity. One room at a time maintain a mild temperature in winter,
VY LODGE NO. 37, K. of P., meet* at its should be done, and only one. If tho and then there would not bo ao great a
Castle Hal), Nashville, Michigan, every cleaning is to be done in tho spring, difference as we have noted. But those
Friday even tog. for Uic cltcourageincut and
who provide for a summer temperature
■UPp&gt;&gt;rt &lt;&gt;f ah worthy, true, steadfast and hull- before furnace Gres have been allowed in winter are thorough believers in full
to go out. begin at the top of the house ™
——»--- _
.
ora bl e Brother Knights.
?!.
“5
■ L. E. Lextz, K. K. 8. Oaxo Strong,C. U. and work down gradually. Clo.ru
eomo first, and need the moat careful need no admonition as to the economy
attention. Walls should first be wiped of full feeding in summer.
HIincfllaneoiiM &lt; 'lards.
is the
down, every drawer token out Ind , What
" h»l &gt;?
“•» appropriate
»PPr“J&gt;ri*1' grain
A™1" food
'»«*
WMhed thoroughly. nnd ever, crack oi °F P'^ •?
H&gt;»
TV H. YOUNG, M.D. Office east side of shelve, or woodwork wet either with. thl&gt; quMtion must depend upon the
v V • Main Sl, Nashville. Office hours front strong borax w.ter or. we«k solution I *P&gt; “d condition ot th. p«a f^s
..Jbnlto acid,
Mid. which is not onlv .
to ,,x
six monlhs old must nave
have
7 UtU a. in., and 4 to 7 p. m.
of carbolic
a from
fro“ two
tfwo5°
broteclion anta* molhl. bul an ix- •ach
" wl" Piy&lt;l““KT“wlb oi
TV H 'IKLStVoLD. M D.. „Jhic celiont di.iniectont
tnu.de nod bone-not Ink Indian vora
’ ’ • Phywelan and surgeon. Otllie and resIt to better lo derote n day or two to I «« !uch Pfc»
taoratom. * •»
ktnnev
Uiv Wulcvtl House. Prompt
cloeeu done. lor the work of taking ;'J1'
in
alteuUon given U&gt; calls dajr or clgbL
out and planning reatTangemenl ot the S-or°
mo8t tattooing rood, the
contontaot each one i* lJorn.rMigui.ig Jood to fill up lhe large, lank, inuacular
A. FOOTE PHYSICIAN &amp; SURGEON
than nnr other portion ot houto-Ilexo- Irame. to lav on clear tobd pork, but
J* nuceseor to Dr. li ickbain. Office aud
ing.
Let everything token out be th« Joung P'?
*!' ‘h,s
rcaideuct: Mt Dr- Wickham's late office­
thoroughly aired, and consider well to PVW. ““
,ood
prompt attention to calle uigbt or day.
whether it ia worthwhile to allow old aoapled to that end. A clover pasture
R C. W GOUCHER. ElBctlc Phyalctan and
clothes or shoes to accumulate tor the “ » K™”1 beginning, and Ibis should ba
Surgeon, is prepared to answer all calls
sake of some possible future use. Tho supplemented with nitrogenous and
dial may lw made tor bf» acrvli-ca. Office and
closets and sleeping-rooms should hold ■ phosphaUe food, such as oats, peas,
revMlem^ oftjaiaite Roe's meat ntarkeL
nothing that can vitiate the air, and if whe“t- “lddh"g’’ Unseed
or oolm Parmenter, m. d"
office over nn old garment is to bo kept. It may I ton-seed meal; or. best of all. several
liull'e Drug store, Vermontville, Mich.
belter be ripped and cleaned at once I of those mixed togelber. Lmseedmox 1.
Such direction is no slur upon tho hob- wbnth can bb had at S20 to fi-fi
HAS H BRADY, l-iwver. Circuit Court
its of the
many parts of lhe country,
tho owner, for no degree of neat- , Pvr
cr lon
ton
t'oiiHi'twioucr. Reul Estate and Insurance
Dessis
security ngnlust
against iuu
tho impurities
impurities i —
13 P®perhaps
food for
Act Prompt attention given to all business
Des*
is security
——r- ._the
—- best
------- extra
-entrusted lo tny care Cotivryaucivg a special­
to'
OinS. |! young pig,
Mnto. ol
ot even lhe
Urn datolieat
datotiest human^b
human being.
pigs in
m ,umraor.
summer, b«
because,
of in
its
ly Office opposite Union il&lt; u*e.
rv . must light for cleanliness
i .
iliiiit v tnntninrv
One
u for I e»y&lt;li&lt;n*«t
.Hgertiblllty.
soothing priori
etleclInion
upon
every
oilier
gord
thing,
the war- ' tb.o digestive organs, and Ila peculiar
___ , —
lier g&lt;
___ _____
o,and
_______
.....................
p
• ac­ adaptation to lhe growth of muscle
I" I.IEHHaUSER. .Mervliatr Tailor and dcal- fare
is a life-long
-ene. But quiet
&gt;
er tn IPudy Made Clothing. Sec nnand bone. Cotton-seed meal has much
ben-rv yoi# puivUa»c clothing. Fits guar ceptance of its necessity, and t£ resolu­ more oil, more nitrogepoue matter,
tion to make the battie a silent one,
takes away half the discomfort, cer­ and is rich in phosphates, but is not so
'tNAH B RASF.Y, Express and Drayman
tainly for others, and in the end for easily digested as linseed meal, and is
iand Baggage carried to any place in
one’s self. “Study to be quiet” is a constipating, while linseed meal is
U*»- village.
Wheat middlings,
little-heeded injunction, but nothing slightly laxative.
t II AM R DICKINSON, manufacturer ot
holds faller recompense than such which is purchasable in tho West, usu­
amt •lealer in Haiti Wood Luudier. Build
ally at 86 to 89 per ton, is also well
quietness.
IliK MptertaJ «»prtlalll C*»b patd for log*. Mill
To the tired woman whose head adapted to the growth ot frame and
and yard,in Siieruiati SL.al -M. C. R-H. crooking
aches, whose hands are bruised and muscle in pigs, and will produce this
Perhaps
I AMES FLEMING, practical Jeweler and
scratched with lhe unaccustomed hand­ growth at a low rate of cost.
t/ W a ten-maker Clia-Ko, lY.itrhr*, Silver ani.
ling of accumulations, and whp feels as lhe best combination of food would be
Platen.Waiv. ■irorlry and Opt Inti Graala. Rock
if she woio “ready to tly,” it will seem 100 lbs. of linseed meal, 200 lbs. of
find Watches a *|M.ciuilT. He; wiring and Engruv
an insult to ask, first for calmness, and wheat middlings and 100 lbs. of corn
Ina diMir in a wrakiuaullko 111*111 tier.
second that the family life should go on meal, mixed together. This woul ’ give
as usual. But, hard its it seems, it can a mixture of qualities leaving nothing
KNt&gt; el liO.Mi. plain and fancy Joo rnntrr.
Tbe'beet taci lit tea for doing work of any
be done, though never if too much is to be desired. The writer has used
pntiung office In B-rry county, when In need
attempted in one day. Be content to this combination with very great satis­
prtntmg u( any description, whatever, see me accomplish slowly. Annoyance is in­ faction. He has had lots of 50 pobud
before you buy.
evitable, but to give way either to pigs gain 9 pounds each per week,
peevishness or scolding, or the desire steadily, for 10 weeks in succession.
ACOB O8MUN. Liveryman, brrn near Wol­ to rush through with it all, is to lose At the’same time another lot equally
cott House First class tunmuta at reason­ double tbe amount of vital force that thrifty, on pasture alone, gained 3 lbs.
able rates. Special rates to commercial men.
each per week. The extra feed cost
Funeral aud weding parties furuisbed with car need be expended.—Helen Campbell, in 12 cents per week for each pig, while
Our Continent.
riagr* on sU.irt notice.
tl# extra gain was 6 pounds per week,
or 2 cts. per,pound. This same extra
ELLOGG A BELL, proprietor* Planing
When U Market Cattle.
Mill. Planing and Matching, Reaawing
feed given in cold weather would not
Mid Moulding a specialty. Scroll Sawing, It has been rightly claimed that a have produced half the gain. This
Bracket*. Window and Door Frame* made to web bred, matured animal will gener­ combination of food will keep the pigs
order. Wood Turning in all it* branches.
ally make better beef than an immature in prime health in the hot season, hav­
DEMARAY, Dealer tn Watchea, one, the flesh in the former case being ing no tendency to produce a feverish
jV eiocka, fine Jewelry and Silverware. Being
state ot the system. Peas, oats, or
a practical Jeweler, pjtrenl can depend upon of a rich, red color, asd full of juice, corn, ground together in equal propor­
haring their repairing done right. Two doors while in the latter it is pale, and lacks
the juiciness and flavor so much to be tions, also make an excellent combina­
atxith of Truman's store.
desired in a steak or roast. In a scrub, tion for summer pig food. We doubt
.TOHN BRAUN, Shoemaker. Special atten- however, naturally hard fleshed and if hog cholera would ever appear in
1/ tiexi g»veu to fine &gt;(11j ^wed boots, also coarse, the sooner killed the better for pigs thus reared. This disease is of
repairing. • AH manufactured work made from all concerned. But the quality of the very rare occurrence in the Eastern
best of stock and warranted. First door aouth
Boise’s hardware.
flesh is one that more nearly concerns States, and the cases there found are
the customer than the feeder, to whom mostly propagated by contact with
the question of profit is of vastly more western hogs. Western feeders would
importance than tbe excellence of the do well to provide a greater variety ot
meat. The poor encouragement which food for their pigs. Peas and oats grow
’
nOM&lt;EOl’ATUlC
the producer of poor beef receives of as naturally and as profitably in die
buyers in our Westerti markets is not West as corn. Use them all in tne
an incentive to pay much attention to growth of pigs, and diseases will be
Many breeders of blooded much less troublesome.—National Line
Office first door east of Opera Houae, and quality.
Mar reridence on corner of Washington and stock are comparatively indifferent on Block Journal.
•Ute Street*. Nashville, Mich.
*
this point, and the effect must be to In­
—The Cleveland minister who mar-’
jure the high quality of some of our
oia ott
most popular breeds. As the feeder ried Edward Marshall to Annie Hellan,
looks first to profit, the question as to was very nearsighted. Tha| was his
the best time for sending to market excuse for failing to see that the bride­
A. 8. Foote, Proprietor.
naturally arises.
A well-bred steer groom was a boy of fourteen, while the
can by judicious handling be made to bride was twenty-six. The latter is now
I lfng better *e. weigh from 1.300 to 1,500 pounds at under arrest on a charge of perjury, as
the tender age of thirty months. With she swore, in taking out the license,
a breed that matures easily, the flesh that Eddie was of age. Of about the
at this age, while it may not be quite same difference in years, were Andrew
equal to the flesh of the same animal Moffatt and the widow Stanton, ot Chi­
if kept a year later,yet it will be found cago; but in this case the woman de­
’
-THB BOSS’
et excellent qnality.
The average clined matrimony, and the youth shot
monthly gain in weight will at this time her and himself, though without fatal
be greater than it is possible to make results.—Detroit Post
•fterward.and the amount of food con­
■AAHTILLK,
MICH.
sumed by a young animal is less in
—It is made public in a Loudon news­
proportion to the amount of gain, than in paper that the Cobden club, since Jan­
. &gt;Wg4Me wM Mm—* *M M*|im.
an older animal. It is. therefore, prob­ uary, 1881. has circulated some 780,000
ably the best plan to turn off steers of publications, chiefly in support of its
J^ATUBUIV BOUSBe
.
gqod blood that have been properly fed tree trade principles, and since tho
A- *. AJmUJtL, PbOFBXvra*.
and grazed.daring the fall or early win- dub was founded. In 1866, the number
of documents Issued by it has reached
Oraand RapHa, BCleb.
tbe mark «t
toe it will hardly 1,300,000. Some of these were books,
the winter for tbe
If thtoto don. it uddmlv

■Nashville gittctonj.

I

I

D

W
C

I

n

G

J

K

Physician and Surgeon.

■yy

'

House,

BOOT AND SHOE MAKER,

a cement
Mall..
one day he luetan rye-loot ft totaiM
$ Pmier tbe huprendon that the matter was
m*nd. W hy do we learn to spellP JuM I htMaarioua tte local pbweUn told Mr. Craigs
for the physical exercise (for we admit t’««t11 - «ye vuimt Joat wholly, but could be
U to u exoriteul tang InUntag M
monlj tourht). or In ordvr to nre xb. I *“*
words thus learned ? If the latter, how
d Dr. Kenaedjr, «&gt;f ILmdoui. N. Y.,wh&lt;&gt;
can we use a thing when wo are ignor- ■
ant of tie mm? Children should take a ।
utilitarian view of this matter, ramember•btii Intck homo tn dutibi.
ing that words, like most other posses- !
&gt; raid: -gi&gt; to New Y
GRAND RAPIDri DIVISION.
_____ be
-u-_____
__ 1 tfor
__ .ul-i___ot» j1
■ions, should
acquired
the sake
the benefit to be derived from them. ; ’iiinri.t &lt;«ul'Ataln tbs ovntry, bariiix looked
i; •i.ecsM* Mid: “You have fuiitune eye etPupils, by knowing the meaning of; ■,'iei.v
: go Imu'Ic ami do what iou can lo nave lhe
words, can remember their orthography I
Jlricfly, Dr. Knhidy removed the mlnbetter.
The word suggests the idea, 1 —I rise aruf treated Mr. Craum with “Kennedy'*
«r«riie Remedy’’ tobni&gt;.! up the ayntem, aud
and the idea the word.
wMBUeee**fnl
Thia same deficiency is found in read­ I'-eVrsult
Dr. Kennedy'* gresa
as a surgeon l»
ing m well m spelling.
To read is not Inc ti» the me of ••Favorite Remedy" In the
simply to utter the words in a piece iftcr treatment­
.
. . in'cd with dyspepria liver comwith their proper order and pronuncia­
■arfoltv
.
.Xtpatfon or derangement of the kid­ C
tion. If that were true, then children
E ion Rapid*
.
niMkh-rl Hen u«c Dr. Kennedy** m
...
.
could be taught to reA Latin as soon m
ttrmedv. It will not disappoint you
English.
When pupils spell or read •
i-hfa "Favorite Remedy” tor sale by
words that convey to tbeir minds no
idea, these subjects grow tiresome, and
WESTWARD.
tbe interest is to some extent impaired.
HTATIONS. |
Imagine your reading, or hearing read
to you, extracts from eomo foreign
D« Unit.-----------tongue for several hodrs in the day. I
Jarkaon,---------Can children then be so intoreated in
Uh r» Junction,.
that of which they have very little idea?
Eatoe RaplSa^..
darirrtte........ —
If the object of reading be,
Rome
VcrtuortvUlr,...
one has said, to “bring but the aenaa’’
Ifa»h ville........ .
HaMiBo..—i...
of the piece read, could not pupiis do so
Middievllte,-----more intelligently by knowing what the
Hammond,-------“sense” wm? Pupus who read Intelli­
(THE HEALTH HRINGER.)
Grand Rapid*,..
gently, other things being equal, will be­
LONG KNOWN A8
come better readers than those who do
not; and so poor spelling might be PENOELLT’S WOMAN’S FRIEND Gr»nd HapMs and Drtrolt. All tre!B.OOTO«
depot at Detroit with Great Western, On
ameliorated by encouraging pupils to
Trank *nd Canada Southern Hallway a.
Every mother ot" daughters abouH E. C. rfROWN,
H. B. l.KDYABD.
spell knowingly.
know about it—because it brings
Sotne*have*a mistaken idea that long
health
words are hard ones, and therefore un­
Oen’l Paaaand Ticket Atent.Ohlea«e.
fit for children. But not so. A child
has as vivid an idea of the words rhi­
noceros, grandmother, and Elizabeth,
as of hare, aunt, or Guy. The diflloultneas of a word, with a child, lies in the
obscurity of the idea it conveys. We
admit some words are too hard for the
child’s mind to comprehend, and we arj
zxraaee, to which, even tho healthicat, nro aubjoct.
not in favor of introducing such words i
too soon and too freely. Some words
we use we do not fully understand our­
...... .
selves. But if such words must be Aiiffrtn7irotDori*rraiwui.to. . 1
C . MARK,
learned, will not a partial light as to or IScarlne Down, with its attendant Ul.-'ereUon I
their meaning be better than total dark­
backacbca end cxhauitlon.
ness?
To sum up, tbe advantages to be de­
rived from a study of the meaning of
the words are the following:
1. It causes more intelligent and cor­
rect reading.
nc-v,. Wukvfuincaa. Palpitation, Etc.
2. It helps to make better spellers.
All these, and many other dlrtrcetinc eotn3. It creates interest.
4. It encourages the investigating plainU. uaually. attributed to other caueee, but
really peculiar to the box. WILL CERTAINLY
DROWN'S IRON BITTERS aro
principle—an important step in gaining
an education.
I.EUCOKRHIEA Kt INS TI1K FINEST
We give below the views of an emi­ COMPLEXION.—Zou i hore cures tho forawr requiring a complete tonic; espe­
cially Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Inter­
nent teacher:
mittent Fevers, TV ant of Appetite,
“There is, doubtless, to-day more
Abundant t^atlmonlnls 1 have, from tho beat Ijosk of Strength, Imck of Encrgyt
time spent in trying to learn to read and
etc. Enriches the blood, strength­
spell tnan there is devoted to all other
ens the muscles, and gives new
branches in common schools.
life to the nerves. Acts like a
K. PENGELLY, BL D.
“ If pupils could understand the mean­
charm on the digestive organs,
ing of the words they use, words would
removing all dyspeptic symptoms,
then become to them ideas. Words
such os tasting the fbod. Belching,
should be considered aimplv as signs of |
Heat In the Stomach, Heartburn,
ideas, and ideas should be had first, ?nd
etc. The only Iron I •reparation
the words afterward. Then pupils could
that will not blacken the teeth ar
comprehend the word, and the idea 1
give headache. Sold by all Drug•suggesting it. The familiar object— I
lJus at $1.00 a bottle.
clock or horse, boot or hat—does not '
BROWN CHEMICAL CO.
require special thought to suggest the
Baltimore, Bld.
name. The thing imparts the idea, and ,
tho name then comes easily.
LIVER AND BOWELS.
“ We learn to spell thousands of j
uism IbB •yutem of tbo arrld pclroa
words, and the words . are as abstract ,
th* dreadful »iiffcrtny wbloh
and meaningless os the names of the j
Chinese people are to us. We remem- '
THOUSANDS OF CASES
ber when the word ichthyology was a
poser for spelling, and I do not know
how many years elapsed after I mas­
PERFECTLY CURED.
tered the spelling of the word with cer­
tainty before I learned its meaning.
The word phthisic, and a few more of
hu had w jaderfto I auereaa, aud an loacEK
aalo ia every pari of tbe Country. Ia bunthose meaningful words without any
dreda ot caaea ItUaaoored where all e'je had
meaning, were test words, but the
failed. Illa mild, but efficient. CEUTAIS
meaning of them was never vouchsafed.
IX ITS ACT1OX, bul hartals— in all oaaca.
t VI t rleaaaea, Klreafflheas aad &lt;lrea Now
We had in Webster’s spelling-book a few
LlTo to all the important orgaas of the body
pages of words which had a definition of
The natural action of tbe Eidneya £3 reatcred.
l’he User la cleamwd of all dlacaae. aud the
their meaning, commencing, “Ail, to be
Bawelamore-treel/and healthfully. In this
troubled; Ale, malt liquor;" and it was
way the wont dlaeaaea are eradicated from
to the pupils tha most interesting lesson
‘beayatem.
An it hae been proved by tbocaanda the
in the book. Thus pupils spend the
best part of their life in learning to spell
words, in great part, without learning
their meaning, and though our method
Have Signed or Endorsed the
of spelling in English is crooked and
difficult to the last degree, aud unfor­
Following Remafkable
SPRING
MEDICINE.
4
tunately without any law or analogy,
Always cur- BILIOUSNESS. COHtTHADocument:
UON. PILES and. all FKMtT.E Bilima.
eveh the English language oould bo
Is
pul
up
In
Dry
V.
r
table
Farm,
tn
tin
eans,
mastered if all tho words that could bo
□aa i*rka*a ot which make. IquarU madldna.
represented by a symbol could have
AIM U LM.M Tor-, very Cawee.tr.U4 tor
tho conrenteare &lt;rf tbooa wb* cannot r—dll.’ pre­
such symbol related to tho word itself.
pare U, Itact&gt;tcaht^ualefick»evin til^rfono.
If there could be a fish connected with
GET ITOFTOUB DRUGGIST. PRICE. SLOO
the word ichthyology, and that was un­
WELKS, BICH1KDSOX A Co., Prop’s,
(Win send U» dry pt—pMd.1 BrBMSOTOI. VT.
derstood to mean tne science of fishes,
there would be some sense in learning
to spell iL We would like to see a class
of pupils trained to spell the names of
articles when presented, tho name being BEATTY’S ORGANS S7&gt;luja 10 h-U Betd. oe
ly too rinnuo«!*.&amp;up. Rare bolld*
Kronouaced, and then let the pupil spell ■ ■■
itMiucentuu. Writeto
n B»hlngWt, -&gt; J,
by sound only, without having learned
week, *12 a day at borne really made. OmUjt external use.
tite letters.”—Kindergarten.
I

TO GIRLS

TO YOUNG LADIES

IRON

■TO OVER-WORKED WOMEN

To Women Advanced in Life

BITTERS

KIDNEY-WORT

THE GREAT CURE
RHEUMATISM

Over 5000

KIDNEY-WORT

Druggists
AND

Physicians

KIDNEY-WORT

^IDNEY-WORT

Capital Punishmeat la France.

An execution in France has become
•o rare since M. Grevy’s ascension to the
Presidency that A recent event of this
sort, which was the second only within

since the beginning of tbe century hu
been steadily decreasing both in Paris
and in the provinces. In the first quar­
ter of the century the average of the
whole of France wm about 120 a year;
and in the second half, during which

S3OKL
QLEXBm SMITH,

Attorney at Law,

ATLAMT.
I CORN Md BUNION PLASTER.

Attorney A Couneetlor,

a capital offense, only 999 persons were
executed out of 1,563 sentenced to
death, this being equivalent to aa aver­
age of rather less than 40 a year. Dur­ J^AKE HOLNE.
ing the ten yean from I860 to 1M0 there
Thomupple Lake,
wee a further deoreaae o&lt; 283 executions
out ot 502 capital sentences, or 28 per
annum; while between I860 and 1870
only 119 persons were executed, or only.
•P--11.1 a dny’a rccrrailnn.
A hew alremer ami
10 eaeh year. In the nine yean from abundance
of row boata ; abo fishlr- tarkk, halt.
1871 to 1879 inclusive there were 98 axe-

ALBERT M. HARRIS,
peraoee Union

BMtoOB-. Cxueto. Flitotor U -

Photographer’s Supplies.
FRAMES, VELVETS. MATS. GLASA
aMRKICAN’ OPTICAL CO’S. BOXES.
Dry Hate OmCte |ic, |is. Mn.30, M’.a&gt; • .pt-rtaJltr

NO PATENT NO PAT
wnm_ _ _ _
omamrstai

Ubvvm«. -AkHdiuRM-Bta, jntcrlrrancBa,

porii-

Hvtrvt IHUW, W«are

�In Nashville

FOREIGN.

SotiTHKXK llltonl* ia now harvtutlhg one oi

tty with imbecility.

Objectton was made to

&gt;» Km*

Catholic ehurch on tbe 11th by cutting bls
throat with a razor, because of remorse for

Having just returned from tbe East with three imxxnbk
stocks for Naehville, Big Rapids and Cadillac, which
gives us the advantage over small dealers, who
purchase for one store only, we are offering

soiled on lire hth by u atlug a noxiou* weed on
a farm Dear Montreal, and a large number

Ensland.

people

ere of the Eastern States have entered into
Thb total aliipaxent* of gold from New York

hia soldier escort were shot dead, ,near Audrahan. JreUnd..ou the 8th.
Tub remain* of Garibaldi were Interred at

Over 500 Suits

exercises, but thousands

gated *17,000,000. Tbe gold has mostly gone
to. Italy.

At less than yon can buy the Cloth and Trimmings.

Bounced by many notable persons, and salute#

and Judicial Appropriation
i by Mr. Burrows to equallro
by until tbe Mil

Louis on the 12th at fifty-five cents per bushel
in bulk.

Two Hvxdkep insurgents attacked an
Austrian tattaifon near Morinle on the Sib,
on the 12th in a railway coach while traveP

frnuKE* were begun on the '12th in the
Farmer, Little A Co., in New York, for an
-®K*»-1

divide Iowa Into two Judicial District*.

be Japanese lnd»muUy bill
amendment by Mr. Morrill

tny Appropriation

■ making

12tb In the Cleveland Kolliug.tniil, and suf­
fered no molestation. Flje weaver* eommencedduty In tbe Harmony Mills at Cohoc*, N. T., aud ware threatened with death
by three thousand strikers.
A Sahxtoo* (N. Y.) dispatch of the 12th
stale* that William Milliken, a Boston capi­
talist, was torn Co piece* by a bear while
bunting with a party at Lake Hscco, in tbe
Adirondack*. r
A ctKCt-LAB saw in a North 8L Loul* mill
off one side of a workman's skulk split open
his arm from shoulder to elbow, and finished
its operations by cutting his sboulder-l one tn

ruptcy.

.

DOMESTIC.

Avouxo desperado named John Tibbeta,,
who confessed to tbe recent murder of two

Minn., on the night of tbc t&gt;th and banged by
Titx raiders of tbe Brookfield (Mo.) bank'
were captured on the morning of tbe Sth.
Qutarxo Gaitan was executed at Browusville, Tex., on tbe 9th, for tbc murder of Luiz
Contreras; Armstead Gray (colored) was
hanged at Powhattan Court House, Va., for
killing bls son, and Daniel Lucky (colored)
Jambs McHax killed John Graves on tbe
was soon afterward hanged to the railroad

Tub failure* In tbe United Blates for the
crease of SB from those of tire previous seven
ihlgb eolllcry at Wilkeabarre, Pa., was oh tbe

gaged in fighting the flames.
There were two cases of prostration by
A Hot Speixos (Ark.) dispatch of the 9th
Matos tbit floods la Southern Arkansas had

rained, inflicting upon tbe people severe loss

returned *1,300 in gold stolen from the
■Brookfield Bank. A special Grand Jury found
indictments again* t the four robbers, charg­
ing them with robbery and assault to kilt
Thb Illinois Department of Agriculture on
the 9th reported the prospect favorable ft»r

At Titusville, Pa., on the 9th a little three,
year-old girl named Sontag was instantly
killed by the falling of a will, and her brother,
aged six, waslatally Injured.
Tub regular meeting of tbs Ladles' I-aad
1 herself under the ban of excommunication

wss folly a* large as usual. ^Tbc Bishop said
nothing now remained for him to do, and that

•

urer and J. II Rice for-Attorney General.
Resolutions were passed in opposition to the
monopoly of money through the National
banking system, sod in favor of tbe Govern­
ment Issuing all currency; favoring the un­
limited coinage of gold and silver, and tn op

ciao resolved “tbit we, the National Green­
back party, are in favor of using any and every
honorable means for tbe promotion of tem­
perance." .
•
Thb Alabama State Democratic Convention
E. A- O'Neal for Governor.
Tub Ohio Greenback State Convention met
at Col ambus on the 7 th and nominated George
L. Hafer for Secretary of Rtate; L.G. Tuttle
Member of the Board of Public Works.
wm adopted.
Tab Illinois

.
State Democratic Convention

7th of September.
Thb resignations were announced on the
Fred W. Nbwbvkqs. who secured *30,009 ftb of L. Bradford Prince, Chief-Justice of

' pleaded guilty

port duty on' silver coin and bullion, which
bps existed slnco the S[.unisb rule.
The following I* the census ruturns for
publication by tile General Register: Males.
18,423,274; females, 17,935,720; total, 35,356,-

Tubbs farmers in different section* of Ire­
land were on the 9th shot at and seriously
wounded by ambushed aMsSains, and Castle
Davla&lt; In County Cork, was burned.
Michael Davitt, before embarking for

A bill wu Introduced in the Spaaiah
Chamber of Deputies on the lOtli for lhe im­
A faixt improvement in general business mediate abolition of alavery in Cuba, with
was shown by the clearing-house returns tn civil right* for the emancipated.
Eastern cities for the seven days ended on the
. The !ii*h Bishops on tbe 11th laaued an ad12lh, but in the Weal the depression had ap­ dreaa offering rapport to tbe people in peace­
parently Increased.
. .
ful agitation, and a{«pea)ing to them to optxxc
secret aocictles aa hostile to religion and to
PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. freedom.
‘ A London dispatch of the 10th announce*
reived a letter from Mrs. Dun tut re, Gui- the death of John Scott RumcII. the famous
teau’a former wife, offering to second all ef­ English engineer.
forts he may make to save her ex-husband
Bloodx rioting occurred at Alexandria on the
.from the gallows
11th between the Egyptian* and European*.
At a meeting ot tbe State Prohibition Asso­ Many house* were wrecked, a number of
ciation nt Madison, Win., on tbe 7th a scries pcreon* mortally wounded, and twenty
of resolutions was adopted recommending lhe killed. The English Consul received a gun­
nomination of candidates for all offices in tbe shot wound, and the engineer of a British
gift of tbe people st lhe approaching fall eleo- man-of-war was killed.
Ti.c rioting con­
•on; advising the appointment of delegates tinued for five hour*, and tbe police for a
to the National Prohibition Convention to be time declined to interfere.
held In. Chicago on the 23d of August, west;
A LXTB Mexico dispatch declares that the
etc., etc. Delegates were nubsequcntly chosen. visit of tbe Preaident nt Guatemala to the
Thb Utah Territorial Convention for the United Slates la in tbc Interest of a plan to
adoption of a State Constitution, having bring about the confederation of tbe five Cen­
formulated such an instrument and nppointed tral American Republic*, with himself at the
a delegation of roonogamUts to present it to
Qmgrcss, has adjourned until October.
Ax Alexandria (Egypt) dispatch of the 12th
The Grccubackers of the Tblnl Kansas Dis­ says sixty-seven Europeans were killed dur­
trict have nominated Ik J. Cole for Congress ing the late riots. All tbe chops bad becii

R. B. F. Piaacx, Republican, was on the Sth
renominated for Congress from the Eighth
District of Indiana
The loss Greenback State Convention met
st Dea Moines on tbe 7th and organized by tbe
choice of General J. B- Weaver as President.

Tu Michigan Republican Stale Convention

August.
.
True Grecnbackcrs of the Eighth Indiana

ed ition of Texas adopted a resolution to

Importations.

usual prohibition resolutions were adopted.

perxtxw Union was formed and a fun board of

For $4 and. $5, WC are selling a very good every day
Suit, many styles to select from.
« For $8 and $10, we are selling a very desirable diagonal
worsted, bound and made in sack and frock styles. Other
stores get $12 for the same suits.
.
M Our 12.00 and 14.00 Suits will surprise you.
For 15.00 we can give you a suit you need not be asham­
ed to wear any place, and would cost $18 to $20 at any store.
Our 16.00 and 18-00 Suits are well made and trlmed, and for fit and wear can no|-be equaled.

nlncty-five killed, tbe insurgents having
twenty-six men killed or wounded.
Kbmxh's American horse Fuxhsll won tbe
Ascot gold cup st tbe English races on tbe hth.

to be won by justice, but not by a resort to
Wild revenge.
•
The wife ot an Ottawa lumberman, named
Richard, was burled into the Montmorency
River by a runaway horse on tbe 10&lt;b, and

Ixod the terrible situation tn which tbeir fnmlIs. report! aro coming In giving sickening d-

Sheep in the Unit'd Stites.
ntthed by tbc Superintendent of tbe Census
for tbc Information of Congrrsam'-n In srecent
debate:
Number m

....

WAM
TKXJ
.... M.757
... 4.1K4*
7*M«a
W.O1
aw*4
a.wff
M.ttl
saji s
n,.«
lJ).7,0Pi
LUJQAU
4jM£&gt;J
&lt;9'371
1JXBJJ83

Delaware.
Florida...
Georgia...
idabo.......
lUiooU...
Indiana...
Kentucky.
Louisiana

Maine.
Monbii'l

Michigan .
Minnesota..

1SM.4S3

Boots, Shoes And Groceries,
Is full up ard PLENTY OF THEM. Ready pay purchasers
desired. WE OWN THE GOODS at about 70 cents on the
dollar. You cun save money, and be comparatively happy by
but «ng your goods
- .

Cheap! Cheap! Cheap!
We want your BUTTER and EGGS and will allow you
PINE WOODS PRICES.
Respectful y

W. JL ^YLSWORTH.

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN
At Buxton's new trick, have full and complete lines tn

nijn
117.am
WWAH

. UU.UB

Genin VnrniHhing Good*
17X11
1I8JMU
*12,117
. S311.NH

LATER NEWS,

causing a loss estimate at *175,000.
Folk Arizona cow-boys, who bound and
robbed a store-keeper near Mesilla, New
Mexico, were overtaken by a posse on tbe 13th
and hanged.
The Greenbackcn of the Eleventh District
of Indians on the 13th nominated Evan

•ffi.918
ITUJtl
«T.W*
i,wju
•X7AM
MU4«

New Hwmpshlro

general policy of tbe party; deploy tbe un­
timely deatS of General Garfield; express con­
fidence in tbe administration of President
Arthur; support the policy of prohibition in
intoxicating liquors; oppose a reductton of the
Internal revenue tax on Intoxicants; protest
against the efforts of - free-traders to
grant American registry to foreign-built ships;
favor pensions and bounties for Union sol­
diers and sailor* ot the late war; denounce
tbc Greenback theory, and deprecate the
movements cnade&gt;to overthrow the present
National-banking system.
A fire broke out on tbc night of the 13th
at Montreal, destroying property valued at
about *1,500,000. The blaze originated in
Victoria Square.
A Little Rock (Ark.) dispatch of the 13th
states that flames which broke out In a store

Our stock in xhis line is the largest and finest we ever of­
fered. All Goods from a hubstantial school suit to the finest
dress suit. We have in stock more boys’ and youths’ clothing
than the combined stock of any house in town. Our stock

Special to Chicajo Tribune.

A DUASTHOVH flood occurred at Verscez,
Hungary, on the 11th. Several houses and
two bridges were destroyed,, and twelve chil­
dren and several adults were drowned.
Tom number of suspects imprisoned in
Ireland on the 12th was 363.

Tn Maine Republican State Convention
met al Portland on tbe 13th, and was presided
over by Senator Hale. Colonel Frederick
Roblc was nominated for Governor, and Thom­
as B. Reed, Nelson Dingley, Charles A. Boctelle and Seth D. Milliken were nominated for

*

Virginia

We»t Virginia.

Wleeooetn...^.

. UAH.
. MMB

CUFFS, COLLARS, TIES, HANKERCHIEFS, JEWELRY, ETC.

Swindling Parmen.

FOR THE LEAST MONEY.
Remember that we'have no old, shop-worn and unseasonable goods, but that everything ia
about signing orders for lightning-rods and ad­
vancing money for goods to bedidivorodJn the
future. In brief, they are beooming more luU-lligeut in all business matters.
Casos of
swindling arc occasionally report d. but when

Nashville, Apr. 20,1882.
cording to local reports, has been perpetrate-1

fully tooticcs the else, color nnd peculiar

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN.

AGAH TO THE FRONTI
WiH ike LABGEST and lost Camnlete Stock of

Ax Alexandria (Egypt) dispatch of tbe 12th
says a meeting of the military leaders had
been held at which it was resolved to demand
of the Khedive his abdication, warning that.

FURNITURE

Tbe British Admiral had been empowered to
land British sailors should be deem it necos-

Ever laid down in any one stere in Barry
or Eaton Counties.

Hbtvkt B. Axthoxt wm re elected United

Island Legislature on tl;c 13th.
.
Ix the United Lutes Senate on the 13th Mr.
Allison reported, with amcnlmenta, tbe

the 11th, doing tbou-

Haldeman; Delegate to tbe Labor Congress,

cumulated

bill

authority
ing *10,000, nnd also appropriating $13,000to

—“At a country touoc in Ireland,”
said Edmund Yates in tbe London
World, “where I was visiting a lew
years sinoe, a stately major dome, bear­
ing the name at McMahon, reigned pver
tbe cellar. 'Are you a rehuion of the
Marshal’s?' joktaily *a!d a friend who
wu With me. 'No, dr.’ wu the grave
reply; the French President is ot our

Our mammoth two-story double store
Is full and running over.

Everything you need from the smallest Bracket to
a $125 Parlor Suit.

of Clare!’ ”
for

You can save money and have a better selection to choose
from, by dealing with ub than any"other dealer.

Don’t l-'orget It.

�Hm

aATPBPAY.

Is respectfully invited to our
uia.MUrf SUMI, tt’tb. Yorktown
caleKntxn. Mr. Cobb, ot Indi»r,«.

viKlnTty locals
voter tbe rivar. if dark
r al the greet hUI»; end

BISMARK.

of crimson

Green currant* arc ripe.

Qtsm mast be a light erop.

Spring chick* will soot' be ready for use.

leading the general interest* of tbe church al ।
Hie quarterly meeting al Assyria Center.
I1

WEST SUNFIELD.

Mary Waalh Is si.home.
Last Sabbath wsa a beautiful day.
Geo. Downs will shear yOur sheep.
Whooping cough is going the rounds.
their corn.
Wm. A. Wells raised hl* barn frame last
Thuradsy.
■Rx sweet scented June clover bloasom wUl
ixa perfume the air.
Tbe prospects for corn from a mortal stand­
point at this date are not 'good.

West Bunfield was represented at Charlotte

The man with a smiling countenance, U be

Sterling Green sold a horse to Mr. Bassett,
nlng mil) to clean out all dirt.
of Vkvmoctvilta, and made a good’thing by tU
Mrs. Young has returned from TpallanU, Sterling la alive lo a good bargain.
visiting a
of Bobby, and those wishing to engage Ln the
funny sports, will find Mr. Parmenter very
obliging.
Mrs. Charlie Bockett has finally made a pur
sod. then at night Ury to put your eloquence on
Can tbe reporter ct West Bunfield inform me
where tbe Clarabell is 1 If not plane ask Billy
min
•
Tbe last rod of the A. N. Morton estate was'
sold without redemption the 10th of this

Charlie authorizes us to tell the news tn town
not louder than thunder, that hl* gates, doors,
and parse arc cloned to all agcuta, of any call­
ing, on and after thl* date.
Kjt.

Trucks are bringing In the products of the
forest at a rapid rate while Grimes puts ou tbe
finishing touch.

THECOUNTY.

, our bo kto Tbb Nbws every Wednesday al
just nine o'clock.
West 8unfield, we warn you against any
racroachment upon our territory, aa we are
well filed withold war weapons.
8. A Bowen accompanied by bls blind eon
Jimmy has been before tbe medical fraternity
at Ann Arbor, An examination was made of
tbe lad’s eyes with very unfavorable results.

doned st present
. Last Saturday Mrs. Grimes accompanied her
unfortunate slater, Mias Hay, to Ann Arbor,
where tbe slater will undergo tbe torture of tbc
amputation of a limb. Mrs. Grimes went aa a
Comforter aud nurse during tbe operation and
tbc neccaaary stay away from borne. Mocb
anxiety ia felt Id M1m Hay’s behalf.
WHI FIST.

BALTIMORE.
Toe road* are being worked

H. Hammond supports a new horse.
GTorgv Belsou will hereafter ride in a top
baggy.
David Rouch hs* sold bls farm to ■ Wm. H.
Bpencc fur &gt;1,200
G. Arnold has refurnished tbe house be sold
his father last winter.
•
Tbe ^ee to draw rand for the new U. B.
church,-wa* well attended.
Mr. Megrath has a cow which gave birth to
a pair of twins tbe other day.
N. Clemooda received a cut on tbe bead
from a falling brace al Isaac Powell’s ratalbg.
A T. Warner had visitors last week. also a
fiah.nx smack, lots of flab and a Jolly time all
around.
G. IL Durfee found a pocketbook; contents,
fourcent*. The owner can have the same by
eallingon h‘m.
McOmber's bill Is being sadly neglected, and
Balti mart is liable to have another condcmed
Lightning struck a tree near tbe Bryant
school bouse &lt;r. tbe Vth, shocking several of

Gilbert Buck is tn a dangerous condition

Otlce Altman requested me to state that the
person that stole hi* flab Hue and pole, will
save trouble by retu. nl ng tbe seme.
Baltimore la od tbe raise. lease Jewell raised
kls barn last Saturday, E. Warner raised Mon-

Irving, recently, was born July 17th, 1830, in
Roxbury, Delaware Co., New York, and was a
grandson of John Cranium, one of the early
Governors ot Rhode island. At bis request tbe
remains were taken to Livingston for inter­
ment. Mr. Cranston was a Democrat He held
tbe office of township treasurer for six consecutire years in Livingston county, and held other
offices in subsequent yean. He belonged to
the I. O. O. F. over thirty yean.
EATON COUNTY.
Billy O'Bryon ot Charlotte. Is lhe bsppy pos­
sessor of a bottled turkey with four legs.
Bellevue fireman gave an entertainment on
Friday and Saturday evenings, which cleared
them &gt;100 for uniforms.
Some wretch poisoned a fine pair uf bones,
Friday night, for Mr. Nutter, who Uvea be­
tween OU vet and Bellevue.
P. 8. DcGptff has been elected chairman of
tbc Republican county committee vide 1- D.
McCutcheon, who went to Montana to become
its secretary.
Miss Jessie Pixley Lacey,of Charlotte,daugbated with high honors from Mt. Vernon semi­
nary, one of tbe beat young Indies' institutes In
Washington, a here she ha* been a student tbe

Charlotte ia bound to get to tbe front.
Bile, dial, att’y. Utah: 1. D. McCutcheon, sec.
Montana; D. B A Inger, 1* M. Washington, D.
C; C. &amp; K Baxter, Pres. Sta'e Fireman's
Association; R C Junes, 1‘r-a. State Band
Association.—Republican. Yea, and there’s
Putter of the Vt. Vilfe Hawk, baa never bad
even as much aa the office of patbmaater given
him.
I Bellevue is greatly excited over an elope­
ment that occurred there on Friday night. It
teems that the wife of N. W. Eastman. who is
employed as night hand at Dyer dt Roller's
lime kiln, became enamored of a younger man
than ber busband, who has been working at
odd jobs around Bellevue for eight months
past, and cnibracod tbe favorable opportunity,
during tbc absence of her husband on tbe night
aforesaid, to put her eight children asleep, pack
ber “duds" aud leave, with all tbe tnooey tn
tbe bouse. Officers tracked the guilty pair aa
far aa Marshall.

the Allegheny River, and
island of trees and bushes,
apses of summer arbors bostands the old McWilliams
homestead, uruwu
brown with
the storms
nome«Mi*u.
wiki vuc
bu/iuw of
’
aJmoet forgotten
years. To the right,
in a little valley running straight back
Iran tbe rirer. nettle the cl uttered
buildings of another branch of ths
McWilliams, family. Beyond, and over
the brow of a small knoll the old-time
glory of the Lacy homestead stands as
an imposing barrier against tho en­
croachments of the spick-and-span
eastern aide of the town of Warren, a
mile below. Everywhere Is peace and
beauty. Nature was in her most pleas*
ing mood when that picture of water
and mountain and forest was made and
crowned with a monument of stone.
Since the day when the first settlers
chased tbe Indians from the broad and
fertile valley and played a lone game
against panthers, bean and wolves, the
great rocks harrf had few visitors. . Al-

liquor bill amounting to $6,600, for
liquor consumed on the trip down. Mr.
Dingley, of Maine, got up *ud had read
a newspaper extract, which bad char­
acterised the trip down as a grand
drunk, and he was opposed io paying
tbe bill. Mr. Springer of Illinois, re­
marked that it appeared by the bill
that $4,000 worth of champagne had
been drunk, and only $400 of whisky,
the balance of the whisky *being re­
turned. He characterized the trip as a
big drank. This remark brought Mr.
Martin of Delaware, to bis feet, who
denounced the statement of Mr- Spring
and said that he (Martin) was a mem­
ber of that commission that went down
the river, and that no onewasdrynk on
that occasion. Mr. Springer was ask­
ed it be was there, but he proved an
alibi by stating that he was in Califor­
nia at the time, and bad not an oppor
tunity to enjoy the blow out. Mr. Rob­
eson of New Jersey, advocated the
passage of the section, and was follow­
ed by Mr. Blount, of Georgia, who said
these articles had been furnished in
good faith by merchants, and that they
should be paid for. The amendement
to strike out the section was lost, and

TsILHW

'

Cordoroy Corset
Thl* CORSET is made Io the newrot French »b re, 14 inebM
tong, elaborately embroktered. GOKES CORDED CROSBWI8E,
thas forming a perfect bust wttbont tbe UDalgfatly and tn many
Instances annoying crixwl-ane*; also re movable Bide BteeU__
Tbe main feature of this CORSET bow—
CORDOROY MATERIAL, used io pla« of t
substitute for bone will'not only ferae

Perfect

.
Great Comfort aud
Perfection lit l-'it.
BUT IS ALSO

WARRENTED NEVER TO BREAK!
S10.00 REWARD,

wi'l be paid to any lady, breaking tbe substitute for whale boon IN BIX MONTHS ORDINARY
WEAR. ANY dealer I* authorized to pay that amount, under our guarantee.

T Retail Price, $1,00.

•
For Bale Only by

Dealer In Dry Goods, Notions a Fancy Goods
NASHVILLE, MICH.

R. DICKINSON A CO.

Quaker State, yet no photographer has
NEW----ever ahown the hardihood to plant a
camera on the extreme summit. The
CUSTOM
place bears a bad reputation. For miles believe there is such an expression as
around the rocks are synonymous with “giving ap,” intended to indicate the
almost everything that Is weird, ghost­
process of persona! replenishment from
ly and uncertain. Years ago some hu­
man bones were found at the entrance time to time with intoxicating liquors.
----- roi
to one of the unexplored crevices in When one recollects that of those seven
READY FOR BU8INE88
• BUGS,
the rocks, and it has only been a short thousand dollars nearly four thousand
BOOKS,
time since that other bones, partly hu­ were expended in champagne alone, Every day In the year—Bundays excepted.
JEWELRY.
man and partly Txnimal were found in that $340 was expended ic whisky, anti
the same place.
.
WALL PAPER.
'$225 in brandy, it will be seen that
To lend an additional abhorrence to neither entertainers nor entertained
W1YBOW SHADES,
the gloomy pile in the midst of tbe peo­
bad
any
foolish
.qualms
of
conscience,
ple, nature Infested the rocks with
DYESTUFFS,
Of every dereription, done in a superior
rattlesnakes. Hundreds upon hundreds whatever other qualms they may have
manner, at the drop of the hat; and
of the reptiles swarm about the holes had afterward. Three bartenders and
PROPRIETARY MEDICINES,
Satisfaction guaranteed.
and hollows of the somber monument, two boys were kept busy for five days
PKBSNItll’TIOXN,
multiplying year by year, until the supplying these little refreshments to
number is almost beyond conjecture.
BIXKIPTN.
jaded patriots. But whether the nerves
An effort was once made to destroy the
snakes by burning the leaves and brush or the patriotism required stimulation
across the mountain. A man who stood need not be explained. Perhaps a list
------- MY------on tbe top of tbe rocks to watch the of those who most enjoyed the fun
effect as tbe flames swept up toward would not be so very uninteresting.
Kept constantly ou hand.
the summit, said yesterday that even
Several important meetings of lead­
now. years after the occurrence, the
ing lawyers from various sections of
DEPAItTJIIftT
scene recurs to him in his dreams and
will waken him from tbe soundest sleep the country have recently been held at
with thrills of horror. As the firawu the offices of Louis Bagger &amp; Co., in
borne upward, hundreds of snakes, this city, the chief object of which has
driven from tbe bushes and shallow been to protest against bill 6,018,
holes by the smoke, rushed over the which has passed the House. The bill
By a strict attention to business, and square
ground to a hole which seemed to lead prov'des chat no action for damage or
dealing with all our customers, we hope to mer­
directly into the center of the largest
rock of the pile. The snakes, nearly proceeding in equity shall be sustain­ it a liberal patronage from the farmers of this
frantic from fright, darted into the hole ed, nor shall tbe party be Hable uAder vicinity.
one after another with remarkable ra­ sections 4.919 and 4,921 for tbe use of
Mills on railroad,—cast of depotpidity, the big ones forcing the others patented articles when it appears that
11. R. DICKINSON A CO.
anide and monopolising tbe means of this bill takes away almost tne entire
escape. As the fire drew nearer the protection gran tea by pulent U» prop­
rush of snakes became greater. It was erty, and in support legalize theft.
Probate Order,
a perfect stampede of reptiles. Tho The meetings, with slight alterations,
utmost confusion took possession of the approved of Senate bill 238, which pro­
escaping things: big snakes hissed deit- vides in suits for alleged use or in­
anee at lhe approaching llatnes, but did fringement in patent cases when it
not stop a mamenC; little snakes darted appears that tbe defendant purchase io
under small stones and pieces of fallen good faith for his private use or for a
logs, only to be driven out again by tbe Him engaged in tbe rale, they shall not
be held liable. The principals or man­
beat. One monstrous serpent, in trying ufacturers are to be held liable.
to crawl through the hole in the rocks,
•August.
etuck fast, half of his body banging out­
side'. The other snakes squirmed about
’ The man who finds something in a
the struggling victim ot his own size in newspaper that doesn’t suit him, and
Thereupon it la ordered, that
a frighttul way. striking the defenseless straightway concludes he will break
Shea [Shearing time Id upon us and the
tail and writhing together nearly a fool it down by withdrawing hia patronage,
deep as the lire crowded them against has had his attention called to the fol
tbe wall of stone. The fire swept up lowing bit ot philosophy, which is
to the summit with a rush, and as it floating about on journalistic high
came upon the living mass it seemed as seas: “There is nothing speculative
thongh a thousand snakes leaped high in well established newspaper proper­
in tbe air and struck tierody at the ty. A newspaper ia hard to build up.
Of tbe undesigned, te prepared to make Into
bursts et tlatne. only to fall, writhing but is proportionately difficult to pull
and helpless, into the fire. The sight down. It ia an agregntiou of atoms,
of the air full of snakes and fire proved and its anspreeaion, under tbe most
circumstance*, takes years.
too much for the lone spectator, and favorable
The fact that it depends on thousands
Ready for use. all tbe wool of Oils section, with
with a howl of terror he rushed down of customers for success is its protec­
CLEMKbT SMITH,
nealtieas aud dispatch,
,
tbe mountain in breathless haste.—PhiL- tion. No two groups of men think
adclphia 1‘rcst.
alike, and what displeases one set pleas­
es another. Where it losses in one di­
Giutrdian'B Sale.
Oscar Wild Paralyzed by a Yonngitar. rection it gains in anotner.”

GRINDING!

CUSTOM

FLOUR. MEAL AND MILL FFED

PAINT AND BRUSH

Our

Graham Flour

Call and Examine!
F. T BOISE.

WOOL

CARDINGAND SPINNING

NewC anting Mill

ROLLS, OR YARN!

A0^B

A FISHER CAUGHT.

A man who was on the same train
with Wilde coming from Reno to Ogden
Arthur Kleber of thia paper, .‘1 caught a very relates an smnaing experience. Wilde
bad cold which settled into a severe case of was lounging back in hu seal, dream­
ing of the asphodel, eta., when the
Joseph Megrath ia breaking his colt. Be
so 1 reaolvdl to purchase BL Jacobs OU for train-boy woke him up by punchifig
hind feet, and tbe other day while performing trial. Happy thought. I began applying lhe him in the side and shouting:
OJ, and In two weeks was aa well aa ever.— • “Hoecar Wilde's -poems for ten
centaF’
Toronto (Canada) Globe.
Dost.

BRIGHT’S DISEASE, DIABETES.
tion. with: “Great Gurod! Is it possible
Beware of tbe stuff that pretends to cure tbeis that my poems have reached such
disease or other serious Kidney, Urinary or beastly figures as that?”
Liver Diseases, aa they only releire fur a Ume
“Three for two bits,” continued the
aud make* you ten times worse aMtrwards, but
rely solely on Hup Bluer* tbconly remedy that boy.
will surely and permanently cure you. It deeHe offered tbe poet some copies of
Mending tbe highway ia tbe order of tbe day.
the Seaside Library edition in paper
Diphtheria has broken out in tbe neighbor­ fectuaUy that it sever return*.
covers.
hood north of here.
.
.
Wilde grabbed the book -and fixed
CATARRH OF THE BLADDER,
his big eye on the boy—
.
atfagtsg^ aaugta
* *' "
home in Bettsville, Ohio.
“Do you know, my dear sir, that you
_ ______ - ..._______ _ __ cured by Baehwpabia fit, al druggists. Micb. Depot, JAB. are lending your countenance to a hell­
tDAVLB A CO.. Detroit, Mich.
ish infringement on the right of an
F.ntrliah a.nthnrF’’
DON’T DIE IN THE HOUSE.
■’i. that boP” replied the boy, slowly.
Mrs. Holcomb went to Eaton Rapids on W«d“Do you ’spoee the feller that rit the
book carea a fyP Why, be won't know
her health.
IL”
.’
Ben Toby lamed one of his horses so badly

aux king Yarn

NEED NOT WAIT
To have their wool manufactured Info it, as I
Nashville, Mich., June 7,1882.
aertassst qeartsr of »rrtlm&gt;tw»Bty *e'«t. (S7| •
town three 13) north of r»n|i« sewt ■ [1J wist, Ban­
County Mfchhran.
Dated. Hastiags, May t«. A D IMS.
17-4]
JOHN WIAK8, guardian.

PRICHARDVILLE.

guiltv acta escape his cognizance?”
"His cognuxsence Onit anything to
me. It ain’t loaded, is MP”.
••I am the author of those poems.”

“You are wringing in for a commiah.
A timely use of Brown's Iron Bitters will ’Twon’t work, Cully.
Folks put up
jobs on me every day. Here, take a
wasted peanut and fill up. MI thought
Her brother who Is a reaident of tbe
such a looking chap as you rit them
tattoo.
lioos, d'ye suppose I'd peddle emF No,
BARRY VILLE.

Isavtag tbe country.

BOISE.

Pouring Mill -F*

Our Druggist J* selling an article called
“Aotig Conqubbor.” ' It is about the only d’ye see? Biarst my pictures if I don't
satisfactory p»eparatton sold for the cure of
Frver ami Ague, Dumb Chills, Interm!Vant or
Bllltoos Frvara Tkt Proprietor of tbe Aoob I
The crpwd roared, and Wildo Joined
OuNqUBMOU tern osrd but little energy to make I
After the boy
down oranges

11.00 |

SCHOOL
BOOKS,
SCHOOL
STATIONERY.

FOWlER&amp;INuERSuK
J. A. ROYB.
M Woodward avs..
DETROIT, - MICH

Nashville Narfaeu

CERIuSreMEDY

Ux Urgo.1 *ck
LVMBXR mr UM
down tn Naabville.

100,000

Pine Lumber
specialty

RHEUMATISM,

Finishing Lumber,
flwrag
frulbf, Jwt

Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago,
Backache, Sorenoee of tho Chert,
Gout, Quintj, Sore Throat, Swell-

Or any thing in tbe building material line, nee

Scaldt, General Bodfy
: MkMIe 8ta

Tooth, Tar and Headache, Frorted

J. W. POWLES

AUo Flour, s*H. abinsln, UUk.
and Hlark.alih', &lt; &lt;MU,

UP0KT1RT TO TRJl VKUOta

■Dte are offered you by tbe
It will payyou to read their
be found elsewhere Id this

gunboats.
Wells’ Health Rencwer, gn
rth for Impotence, leanaees.
Rc.,«l. atdrugnsta. Mich. J
DAVIE A

WOOL!

WOOL!

We are here to buy all the gxml cfleml for
•He andean

�1882
KALAMAZOO

condition in the
prompt!
each year as soon as planting time

8*y, “Ob, my wife h»d gone home to
look after the farin and
about the
early vcgetablca in tbe garden, or we
would haw had • poor allow foraomt*thiog to eat through the summer.”
Some of tb«te Indi a went away in
April aod other* in May, but owing to
the continued cool weather retarding
the the planting otlotrs of tiir-wi good
who made the first United States flag helpmates still linger here.
M adopted by the' commit tee of the
On Decoration day there was an Jsn- Continental Congress, is nn inmate of mense throng of visitors nt A&gt; lington,
the San Francisco poorhouse.
and the exercises were of peculiar in­
Tbe latest by Pacific mail is that tereat. At one o’clock the procession
they are also having a backward spring formed in front of the mansion, and
in Chin*, the weather having been so headed by the Masonic band marched
eold and rainy that it was impossible to the tomb of the unknown dead,
where a dirge was played.
The
to get a rebellion fairly started.
'
massive white marble structure of tlieProperly referred: Neighbor’s pret­ tomb was elaborately and beautifully
ty daughter—“How much is tnis a' decorated with national flags nnd bright
yard!” Drapers sou (desperate “spoons fresh flower*. The march was then
•n her&gt;—Only one kiss.” N. P. D— continued to tbe cemetery, when the
I will take three yards.
Grandma procession disbanded for the purpose
wiU pay.
■
* of decorating the graves. Upon thy
He is a ireat simpleton who imag­ conclusion of this service the services
at the amphitheatre were begun. The
ine* thatThe chief power of wealth is
space unide was already filled aud
to eupply wants. In 99 cases out of 100
it creates more wants than it supplies. crowds stood outside within hearing
Money and contentment do not always distance. The amphitheatre never
looked prettier. The pillers supporting
go hand in hand.
tbc frame work, were covered with
Bedsteads’ with looking-glasses over clustering ivy, while the floor was car­
head, are things of the past. If a man peted with turf of a lovely hue of green.
eannot tell when lie.wakes up without At the end rose the platform, with i&gt;s
looking in a glass to be sure of it, he is front one mass of green, except the
in a conditon that cannot be helped by white marble surface of the reading
furniture.
desk. Suspended above was a clnstei
of national flags aout the national
A citizen of Mobile baa bad 641 boil*
shield, and draping tbe sides all around
on different parts of bis body during
were fastened large nation lings. The
tbe last tiro years, and yet baa not adentire effect was striking and effective.
dreased odq unkind word to any ope a Tbe day dawned bright and beautiful,
round him. Just wait, however,'until
the tempornture being delightful. The
tbe tooth-ache hits upon him for ten
departments were dosed, and so many
minutes.
of the leading businetu* establislimenib
BufTblo papers say that there ere rea- suspended opprntions that the day wapractially
a public holiday. Pupulai
turaut keepers along the railroads io
interest of course centered iu the cere­
that state who make a practice of swin­
monies
at
tikis
place, where some 15,000
dling immigrants by over charges,
making wrong change, etc. A dollar of the brave boys sleep their last sleep.
The
boat
for
Mount Vernon, the Cor­
for a sandwich or n cup of coffee is a
coran, has carried large numbers &lt;&gt;t
not unusual charge.
visitors lately, tho weather having
The fact that a South Carolina wo­ been so flue this week. Since the ladier
man broke her neck by looking over have of this dear nnd historical place,
her shoulder at another woman’s and went there to stay, many of theii
bonnet, will be excused by the sex friends have gone to call upon them.
on the ground that it was. last At night tlie ladies sleep in the old
gearia bonnet trimmed over.
Washington Mansion, each occupying
the room fitted up by the State whose
A Southern newspaper bemoans the
vice regent she is. Of course, by Uh
plight of the common wealth in which
dim light of candles and lamps the
iV* printed, declaring that the State
Mount Vernon dwelling cannot be
“has certainly come to a nice pass very dieerful after night, and some
when a renegade preacher, four thirdIndies find it impossible to sleep during
rate lawyers, an editor of a weekly pa­ their stay there, sc nervous do they
pers, and a red-headed man meet in a
become after retiring to their lonely,
hotel and dictate to it what it shall do.’'
spacious room. No man is allowed to
sleep in the house while the ladies were
den wall” is essentially the young la­ there, so those who are married cannot
dies1 hat of tho-perioj. It has an enor­ take their husbands w.itji them. The
mous brinb to be tilted over the eyes superintendent/ Col. Hollingeworth,
and turned up at the back. It is dent- hns bis bedroom nnd office in n build­
•4 in at the crown and trimed round ing near by, and rarely isateent a night
with cascades of ficelle lace, n huge from the place nt any time of year.
cluster of unmounted crimson roses, There are nlso numerous n^en nnd
womeu servants constantly there, some
and two small sunflowers.
’
pf whom are direct descendants of
A Physician was called to the bed­ General Washington’s servants and
side of a youny man in Schoharie have Dever hired elsewhere than at
County, New York, and while he was Mount Vernon, a fact of which they
bending over the bed tbe unconscious are very proud. One of them is one of
patient (nddenly drew up his legs, and the best cooks imaginable, and while
placing them against the doctors stom­ the ladies are staying at Mount Vernon
ach, kicked out and sent the Doctor they Jive well.
flying.over chairs and other furniture
The conviction of General Curtis in
tothe oppoKice side of tbe room. He New York for collecting campaign
.was picked up uuconsioua, with three sinews from public officia’s hns uot
ribs broken, and when he recovered abated the evil. Even the Page boys in
eonscionsneM tbe young man was dead. Congress are to be taxed this year to
the extent of two per cent, of their
The deadliest foe to "a man’s longe­
compensation.
vity's an unnatural and unreasonable
The census office has issued a bul­
dxatement Every man is bom with
letin showing by the census of 1880 the
a certain stock of vitality, which can­
numbers of persons in the United
not be increased, but which may be
State* was 50,155,783; the area in square
bBsbanded or expended rapidly, as be
miles, 2,000.170; the number of families,
deems best within certain limite’Iie has
9.M5.916; the number of dwellings, 8,­
hiacisoice, to live fasfor slow, to live
955,812; the number of person* to a
ebatemiously or intensely; to draw his
square mile, 1729; the number of fami­
Uttle amount of life over a large space,
lies to a square mile, 8.48; the number
or to condenoe it into a narrow one,
dwellings to a square mile, 8.02; acres
but when his stock is expended he pan
to a person, 87.01. acre* to a family, 188,
persons to a dwelling, 5.80, and
persona
to a family, 5.04. Tho acres in
An excited individual road a bare­
back horse at breakneck speed into land surface, only exclusive of the In­
dian
Territory
and tracts of unorgan­
. Norwich Conn., one day last week and
dashed.up to the freight depot. He ized territory, aggregate 69,830 square
miles.
.
jumped off and went prowling about aLieutenant John D. Danevhower, one
«M&gt;ng the trunks and baggage, mutter­
of
the
officers
of
the
Arctic exploring
ing and swearing the while and acting
ao much like a lunatic that the agent steamer Jeanette, accompanied by his
father
and
mother,
arrived
here this
‘ overhauled - him, aud asked him his
evening from Philadelphia and was
wife had eloped and taken his furni­ met at the depot of the Baltimore and
ture and other earthly goods with her. Ohio railread by abonimittee of citi­
don’t want nothing of the woman, zens and escorted- to Wjilard’s Hotel.
but I do want my. beat pair of trousers, There certainly has Sever been a more
.enthusiastic,,cordial and appreciative
reception tendered any citizen than the
ter*wHle be found bis good* billed one to Lieutenant Danevhower to­
night Mary persons who come late
were unable to see him.
August.
nine-tenths
are totally igof every thing that pertains to
rn health or that of the health­
ring of an infant

It u Mid tint tbe UjiJ qoMtion i. *

—Every rural family that ha* a home
MoKendnck state* that the base of tb« should have a few hiv** of bee*. Noth­
tongue is m wt scaAitive to bitters and ing of no little cost will yield so large a
tbe tin of sweeli. A .tubstance must profit.
be soluble in the fluid of the m &gt;uth to
are only about half as much per acre as
been found between the chemical con­ in England is becaus* the British farmer
dition of bodies and their tAte.
employs sheep as grain growei's, while
—Numerous 'cases of fire from the with us sheep are only considered a*
spontaneous ignition of coal have been wool or mutton makers.
recorded. After considerable experi­
—If a small piece of sulphur is occa­
menting, Mr. W. W. WilliauH hw oon- sionally thown upon the fire for smok­
cluded -that spontaneous combustion ing bacon, it will effectually prevent
takes place in some degree in all cases skippers and bugs from making inroads
whore coal is exposed to the atmosphere, upon the meat, nor will it produce any
although the-comba«tion may proceed effect on it* flavor, save on the mere sur­
so slowly Chat lhe ri-c of temperature face or skin.
,
will amount to only a few degree*.
—Mr. Verry Aldrich weakens Can-,
—A Rochester man has invented an ada thistles somewhat by cutting them
elea|rical ballot-box for tue in societies. off close to the ground, and then kills
Tbc machine contains three knobs. them the following spring by scooping
The member who wishes to vote in out around each a hole large enough to
favor of a certain candidate touches a hold a pint or a quart, and filling it
white knob; if opposed he touche* a with Mlt. Even this trouble and ex­
black knob; if indifferent, a' knob be­ pense is much better than to permit a
tween the. two. At each touch a bell small patch to become a large one by
rings, thus making more than one vote neglect.
impossible without detection. The ma­
—Willow cuttings should be set out In
chine registers the result of tho balloting
the spring, eariy. They may be made
nbw by cutting the branches and twigs
into lengths of a foot, lying them in
salable gl*M u capable of far more ex­
bundle* and burying them in the earth.
tended application in the art* than has
In the spring set them out in the follow­
ebeen attempted. A oompact, maring manner: Push a spade into the soil,
dike stone ia formed when it 1* mixed
presi it forward so a* to open a spsoe,
with chalk and dried, similar stone.i be­ pres* in the cutting in a *lant:ng direc­
ing also formed by mixing tbe water tion, take out the spado and tread the
glass with bone ash, sine white and opening close.
magnesia. With olay, lime, sand, ce­
—It ha* been discovered that cab­
ment, etc., soluble glaae enters largely
into tho composition of many artificial bage* may be prevented from rotting
stones, tiles, slates, ete., and also of the after freezing simply by cutting them
common soaps, the detergent qualities open, or by making one or two incisions
of the gioxs making it on excellent in them with a knife. Af or freezing
the cabbages commence to decay in tho
scouring material.
.
coater, caused by the heating inside.
—Plans have boon drawn up for ■ u When opened sufficiently to let out the
electrical railway connecting the eastern
and western ends of Berlin with each heated gases atyi enable them to be­
come cold at the center they will not.
other. Tbc road will be placed above decay.— Canada Fanner.
the street on high columns, like the New
—The best of fried fish are thoso
York elevated road«, and stations will
be erected at LutzoW square, Madgo- cooked in oil; small fish should be rolled
iu
flour, seasoned with salt and cayenne,
burg square, Potsdam station, and Douhof square.
A curious point in lhe and quickly fried,; medium-sized or
plans is an arrangement for lowering sliced fish are good for frying when
the trains to the street level at stations, rolled in Indian meal or cracker dust,
thus allowing people to get out or in be­ seasoned with salt and pepper, and
fore &lt;he trains are raised again to the fried., The celebrated Philadelphia
level uf the track. Power supplied by method of frying oa'fish is to skin and
electricity will do the work oi raising split them, remove the backbone, wash
and dry the pieces, season them with
and lowering the trains.
salt and cayenne pepper, dredge them
with flour, and fry them brown in smok­
PITH AND POINT.
ing hot fat.
—Every farmer should have a supply
—There fs nothing that so goads a
spirited woman to madness as the real- of ice to u-»e during lhe hot months of
It is indispensable both on.
Izatioh that any man controls her hus­ summer.
the ground of comfort and of
band.
,—A Philadelphia man has a setter dog economy. The "Agriculturist" says:
food and
so intelligent that when he lies about “The preservation of
les&lt;
frequent
cooking
re­
the dog’s wonderful accomplishment* the
the dog actually blushes.—Pldladdphi» quired, and consequent saving of fuel,
will go far toward meeting the expen.se
Neurs.
of providing ice, if it does uot more than
—k club has been started for making
cover it." It is not a difficult matter
meat jelly for soups. The soup stock is
for every family in lhe country to have
to be made of bones, and we suppose
plenty of ice at small cost.
there will be a joint stock company.—
■ —One of the London medical jour­
N. Y. Herald.
' •
nals declares that the prevalence of
—Nine American colleges have adopt­
neuralgia—or what commonly goes by
ed lhe Oxford cap. This is well Here­
that name—&gt;hou!d bo regarded as a
tofore about the only thing that distin­ warning indicative of a low condition of
guished a college student from other
people has been the bad Spelling in his health, which mu-t necessarily render
its subject* peculiarly an-ceptibiC to the
letters home asking for money to “buy
invasion of diseases of an aggrewivo
books.”—Burdette.
type. It i* always essential that the
—Not to be caught was the womtn vital forces should be vigorous, and tho
called as a witness in tho Hinman-H vre nerve power, in especial, in full devel­
libel suit. She could not fix the age of opment; but neuralgia indicates a low
a certain woman accurately, and was or depreraed state of vitality—a poor
vsked: “ Did she look like Mother and weak state—and should be prompt­
G’»oseP”
Qaick came the answer: ly placed under treatment.
“Show me Mother Gooee, and I will tell
—The cheapest and one of the b-»st
you.”
means of ridding stock of Hoe consists
—A contemporary asks': “How shall
in the free appli nation of- wood ashes,
women carru their purees to frustrate frequent brushing, removal of old or
the thieves?” Why, carry them empty. dirty bedding, occasional applications
Nothing frustrates a thief m &gt;re than to of boiling hot water to the’ wood-work
snatch a woman’s purse, after following of stalls, sheds and stiles, or lime-wash­
her half a. mile, and then find that it ing of the some.
All loose hairs and
contains nothing but a recipe for spiced dirt removed from the bodies of ani­
peaches and a faded photograph of her mals by finishing, as well as old bed­
grandmother.—N. F. Pott.
ding, i-buuld bo collected in a heap and
—Le Figaro thinks the following burned. The presence of vermin on
“ferocious but authentic” story proves live stock' can not be successfully com­
that the heart is very near the stomach: bated by simply applying a certain
A little girl ofJive, while in the country, remedy to the bodvof the animals, and
had a present of a pretty white rabbit, not at the same time attending to the
to which she became frantically at­ general cleanliness of these, as well a*
tached. At the end of the season the , of their surroundings.
family prepared to return to Paris.
Ad Experiment in Soap-Making.
“What shall we do with bunny?” asked
the little one. “Mv dear, we can’t take
For a barrel of cold-made soft-soap,
him with us,” said tbe parent, not a
little troubled at grieving the child. take twelve pounds of potash, fourteen
“Really, can’t we take him?" said the pounds of grease and thirty-two gallons
of soft water. Procure a forty-gallon
infant; "then let’s eat him.”
cask, with soft wood staves and wooden
—An Irishman one dav came running hoops, and. place in it the potash, first
into a farm-yard, and hurriedly cried broken into pieoas the size of an egg;
for a spade. The fanner, ooming out, add twenty gallons of water, and stir
demanded what he wanted with it, with a wooacn plunger two or three
when Pat replied that his friend had time* a day until the potash is dissolved;
stack in a bog and he wanted to dig him then melt the grease in the remaining
out. “How tar is he in?” inquired the twelve gallon* of boiling water, .and
farmer. “Up to the ankles,” said Pat. pour into the cask, and stir two or throe
“Js that all?" raid the farmer. “Then times daily. If made in midsummer,
ho can pull himself out again. You’ll the oon version of the materials into soap
will be completed in a week or ten days,
but in cooler weather a longer time will
of grief, blurted oat: “Ooh, bul be be necessary, and at the freezing point
the chemical action would be nearly
suspended. Soft soap made according
to these directions resembles in oonsieA Diplomatic HslpmeeL
tencc a cold jelly more than anything
The wife of Senator Bingham used to else; its ooloron the smooth settled sur­
tell a pleasant story of the time when face being that of finished birfl’s-eyo
her husband was trying to get votes in maple, with the eye* plain to sight. It
the Pennsylvania Legiimtare. Ha gave will not taint in the hottest weather, or
a dinner party to a number of the separate, but a*main« fixed until con­
sumed. If thaie haring grease accu­
mulated, and are doubtful about the
strength of the lye resulting from the
roost fall into an agony which Mr*. wood ashes they have raved for the oc­
Bingham at once soothed by *ayinr. casion, will procure the true potash of
with a earale** air: “It I* gt no sort of commerce, they will find such a courso
the cheapest and the beat way. But s
word of caution—be sure it b the true

and will Dot do—the article referred
&gt;eing that quoted in the ’ commercial

funMM a delight*" novelty.

then: U a future which ia atlUoor own.

Tbe vymptoms of Itching Pits* are moisture
like pnupiration, hitenne itching, most at night
teem* •* If pin worm* xtre crawling in or
about.tbe rectum.’ Tbc more you scratch tbe
worse they iicli, very distreeMnr. Tbe private
part* are often affected. Dr. Swayne'* Oint­
mentJa tbe mort effective remedy extant for
thl* tormenting complaint. Give* rest at night
wlttioul that dertre to ncrateb. Also ha* on

Piles for over twen-

3 boxes, *1.23, By pr. 8w*yoe &amp; Son. Phllad'a
Pa. Bold by al) druggist*.
Tbc Texas Christian Advocate says that
thousands of good men are spoiled by marry­
ing the wrong woman.

WORTH REMEMBERING.
Now that good time* are again upon u*. It ia
woctb remembering that no one can enjoy tbc
^eaaanteat aarrouudlugn If In bad health.
There are hundred* of miserable people going
aliout to-day with disordered stomach, liter or
kidneys, when a bottle of Parker’* Giner Tonic
would do them more good than all mcdiclcnes
they hare ever triad.

Spring-2th Harrow
Wiard Plows,
South Bend Chilled Plows,
(
Gale Plows,
(Buy Genuine Factpry Pointe)

Strayer’s GRAIN DRILL,
ItJk.'VVSOTV’S

MaMachuteltc* kill* off It* judge* with 111vcutilated court room*.

REAPERS &amp; MOWERS

"A VALUABLE ADDHioN.

Lightest and Strongest Made,

Because it la beneficial to tbe scalp and add*
to personal beauty by restoring color and lustre
to gray or faded hair, I* why Parker’s Hair
Balaam la auch a popular dreaaing.

HUBBARD

Catewayo, tbe ex-Zulu King, baa abjured
polygamy,
________
BRIGHT’S DISEASE, DIABETES, KIDNEY,
LINER OR URINARY DISEASE.
Have no fear of any of those diseases if you
u«e Hop BiUera, aa they will prevent and cure
tbe worst cases, even when you haue been
made worse by some great puffed up pretended

Do Dot provoke a flgbt with andmtzker; re­
member, be la noted for laying people dat.

“WAIT A LITTLE LONGER.”
So we are told sometimes. Things will
come out all right, people say, if we will wait
awhile. That don’t do with disease. The
longer you wait tbe worse it is. 1U no use to
plant com in November. Do you feel a little
bad! Strike tbe trouble right away. Dr, David
Kennedy's “Favorite Remedy” Is wbat you
wauL It will at once relieve the bowels, stlmu
late the liver and cool lhe skin. Take one dol­
lar lu your band and stop at your ilruggista, or
write to the doctor, at Rondout, N. Y.
Did It ever occur to you that a swan’s up­
side side is never down.

Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
will' at all times and under all clrcumrtanrvs,
art in harmony with the laws thut govern the
female system. Address Mrs. Lydia E. Pink­
ham. 233' Western Avenue, Lynn, Mass, for
circular.
•
•
When ia a burse like a business man in
trouble I When he breaks.

Sleaner &amp; , Binder
Improved 1882.

Sash, Doors and Blinds,
Paints, Oils, Varnishes,
BUILDERS HARDWARE.

DETROIT STOVE-CO’S. STOVES
Domestic A Now Home

SEWING MftCHINtS
When in need of the Bert
Grades of Hardware and Ma­

chinery.

Call and eee me.

FRANK C. BOISE.

THE CROWN

SHILOH’S CONSUMPTION CURE.
This is beyond question lhe most successful
Cough Medicine we have ever wild, a few doses
invariably cure the worst cases of Cough, croup
and Bronchitis. while tts wonderful success is
tn the cure of consumption iswilbouta paral­
lel in tbc history of mcdicue. Since Its flrat
discovery it has been sold on agunmtee. ate*t
which no other medicine can stand. If you
have a Cough we earnestly ask you to try It;
Price lOcts, OOcta, and
If your lungs are
sore, Chest, or Back Lime’, and Shiloh's
Porous Plaster. Sold by F. T. Boras.
ANSWER THIS QUESTION.
Why do so many people we we around us,
HKin to prefer to suffer and be made miserable
by indlgestkiu, constipation, dizziness, loss of
appetite, coming up of the Food, yellow akin,
u hen for 75eta, we will sell t|icm Shiloh’s Vitalizcr, guarauted to cure tbeb. Sold by F. T.
Botas.
SHILOH’S CATTARBIf REMEDY, A mar­
velous cure for Catarrh, Diphtheria, Canker
mouth, and Head Ache. With each buttle THE CROWN SEWING MACHINE.
here is an ingenious nasal injector for the
more successful treatment of these complaints
“Crown” comes into tbe m^ket
without extra charge. Price SOcta. Sold by Jhe aarThe
tart of all tbe msc-tneS, but has sprung to
F- T.BOtas.
front rank at once from the fart tliat it bSs ta­
ken the good features in all other machines
A dozen or more lawyers are engaged in the and put them in one grand cnebtuaUou, &lt;auk*3,000,000 Burr will contest in New York. It’s Ing this the Handsomest, Largest, Moot Silent
and Lightest Running machine vet offered. All
a big pile to tackle, but they can get away with -the
‘•points” that tbe experiece of twenty rears
a good share of It.
in all kinds of family and light manufacturing
work has proved toberboolutely good are to be
found only hi the ‘‘Crown.” Other mocb|nea
may hare one, two'or three of these “pointe'’
J-JENRY ROE, Pkofbiktox bul none but tbe “Crown” lias them all.
Every device that ia really desirable in other
machines will be found in tbe “Crown." Ad­
vantage has been taken of ti&gt;c experiments aud
experience with all kind* of machines ever In­
vented, and the “Crown” is a perfect embodi­
ment of everytlng go.d in them.

MEAT MARKET.

Fresh and Salt Meats,

SIM Hams ail Shtralden,
IN THEIR BEABOr

E. R. WHITE.

EVERYBODY
Take notice that the time has come when the
harrow Tired Wagon is no longer sought after
by experienced men. People are continually
found ?tfintocd betUr UllDP‘
lbe7 h&gt;’e

Lard, by the lb. or barrel,
ry The Highest Market Prifc paid
for Hides, Pelts. Sec.

Fresh Goods. Fall Weights and
Satisfaction Guaranteed.
/
HENRY BOE.

UlRESsSESSsarS

Wide Tire Wagon!
BUY A WIDE TIRE WAGON

I KEEP THEM

Eiperienced, Relate, ani Resjimsilife.
BUY YOUR PLOW POINTS

A. H. WINN, Dentist.

Of tne and you wfflrrt points that are chilled.
One chillrd'note'. will Ism as long as two that
are nut chilled. 1 will sell cheaper too. No
middle man um to nek* a profit between you

BEST SET 8UH TEETH 110.00 FIRST CUISS BLACKSMITH,

for
TeeU&gt; Extracted WlftMl Pel..
talkaoloaxos ao

J. M. WOOD.

�siiruim.

JgLAC'K * SOM,

American ।

Foreign Marble,

Monuments,
HAstina* Mioh.

^yiLLIAMJ0NE8,~

DE1TTISTS.

NERVOUS
DEBILITY
A cure iruaranlrcd.

jrUid of the Mist will go out of com­
mission,
Buffalo wants all the water, and niuit suspect. Tbe courting of a young man
hare if She want* to whirl a million and young woman with tbe full knowl­
edge and aequiMoanoe of tbe old folks,
all around. Is one of tbe most pleasing
of episodes. You can always see the
drive looms that will make cloth for all ay pictured on the old man's coun­
creation; to run factories in every tenance as John Henry is adjusting his
known brarfch of human industry; to necktie preparatory to his visit to Ja£vo power for propel)ing cable-can on rusha. And Jenuha’s ma, “if the coast
e streets, for producing electrio light is clear,” involuntarily dusts the' parlor i
to accommodate five millions of people twice, and arranges the chair* in the [
in doors and out. for pumping water good old-fashioned #ay, you know, on
for public and private use, for bottling the evening John Henry is coming, .
up compressed air for the convenience even though Jerusha hasn’t said a word
of eveiybody, and. in short, for all uses about bis coming.
to which an inexhaustible mechanical
But it is how, and when, and where
force cau bo applied.
to poo tbe question we started out to
To be sure, Buffalo does not at pres­ consider. Just how or when is a matter
ent possess the spindles or looms or upon which no 'mortal man can give
manufacturing
establishments, and satisfactory advioo. In nine cases out
neither has she as yer a tenth part of of ten the question will just pop itself,
the' entire population of the country; like tbe boy that whistled in school
but all these things ar© to come in oon- Ten to one it will be asked and answer­
quence of the unrivaled water power ed and half
of . tbe preliminaries
which, it may also bo stated, she does arranged before you are really aware ol
not yet control.
it. As a matter of fact, the preacher's
But it is well known that the level of ipse dixit plays u very unimportant part
Lake Erie in front of Buffalo is about In the interesting drama; comedy, or
228 feet above the level of Niagara burlesque, as lhe case may be. He
River at the foot of the falls, and that brings up the rear, as it were, does the By statements made by agents representing other machines
from the lake down stream for twenty solemnizing, I believe they call it, Wish­
miles or so, till the rapids arc reached, es the happy oouple much joy, eats having a resemblance to the McCORMICK, ^claiming their
the fall Is very slight, amounting to only some of the • •witties,” pockets the fee, Binders are the sajne, for such claims are false, and suits for
about sixteen feet. It ia also known and silently steals away.
infringements have befen brought against imitations
that, underlying the river and the ad­
But, as before remarked, popping the
jacent country, there is a huge field of question is done in various ways. This
rook through which the constantly re­ must bo so in tbe very nature of things.
ceding falls have been plowing a deep One man,can take pills, or turpentine,
gorge for several thousand years. Now, or even castor-oil—for that matter,
if -an immense tunnel, such aa has been never make an ugly face—and go on
bored through Hoosao Mountain, or about his business; whereas another
even larger, were to be opened in the man with just as mucn courage and moi al
NORTH MAIN ST., NASHVILLE, M„
rocky side of the almost perpendicular heroism would rather die than take
wall just below the falls, and nearly either. One man can do a thing with
And
examine
it carefully before making your choice for the
down to tbe level of the water there, impunity, and another man will break
and extended in the direction of Buffa­ his neck in trying. Just so with pop­ coming harvest.
lo at about the same depth, with ping the question. With some it is mere­
branches running here and there, im­ ly a matter of moonshine, while with
mediately over which lines of manu­ others it is a most uncomfortable ordeal,
facturing establishments could be set­ and is like cutting eye teeth, as it were.
up, it is evident that by sinking a per- My sympathies always run out alter the
Cndicular shaft down from the sur- voung man who is timid on this all­
?e so as to intersect either the main, important question. It is agony itself.
tunnel or anv one of its branches, and He is always ou the very eve of asking,
then turning a stream of water through but never gets quite to tho scratch.
an ordinary flume or race from tne Like Moses of old, he gets just far
river so that it would fall into this enough to see the promised land, but, ,
shaft, there would be a miniature of hang, it all, be can't get over the lint |
the American Falls with a quantity of for the life of him. To tie a man almost, i
water that could easily be regulated but not quite, in tbe reach of plentv to i
and managed, and' what more clear eat and starve him to death is horribly |
than that a turbine wheel set at the bot­ excruciating.’ Bo it is with tbe bashful I
tom of this pit, with a Water-head of young man. He swears to himself he will i
say 150 feet, would furnish power ask her the next time sure and he'even
enough for tho largest cotton mill un­ rehearses in his own mind the set words
Yours Respectfully,
der tne sun?
he intends to use. His determination
Buch, in brief outline is the elaborate increases in a geometrical progression
plan set forth in that eminently ' pro- as the appointed time draws nigh. His |
ressive paper,, tho Btiffslo
Ezprut. premeditated angelic delight grows in
There would practically be no limit to anticipation of the expected “yes” like
these wheel-pits except the discharging soaked beans in a dinner-pot. When
capacity of the main tunnel, until the the appointed evening arrives ho
entire body of water in the river should marches forth in his bran new bib and
be used up. For the first year or two tucker, so to speak, with all the sang •
after the system goes in operation it is froid of a Napoleon before Waterloo.
not supposed that the river bed will be He knows she is his. and by the Eternal
laid bare, but before tbe end of the he intends to take that Gibraiter of bis
riresent centurj- it is confidently be- affections before morning or die, ,j
ieved that the fails will be run. like aud that’s
all
there
is of it. ;
the sawmills on a mountain stream, only He meets the ’young lady
in
in time of freshets, and that during the lhe
parlor
nt
the
appointed
greater part of each year' the thirsty hour. He feels and she sees he means
operatives from the thousandss of Buf­ business. There’s blood in his -ye, as
falo mills can walk over- the river-bed it were. He cautiously sends out his
and get a drink of Canada whisky dry­ skirmishers in the shape of a few little
ahoo.
pointed, glittering generalities, all inj
Since the openiug of the Erie canal tended to draw lhe fire of \he enemy,
more than fiity years ago there has and thus a full half hour is spent, and
been no such a boom for Buffalo as the nothing is accomplished worth speak­
one to be inaugurated by the great ing of. I say parenthetically that a bash­
Niagara tunnel. That town will become ful young man and a timid young wo­
the chief manufacturing center of the man can scoup up into a conglou'°irato
world, and tho Schliemann of the future hatch jwlch more little aapid giggles and
will not delve through the prairie mud nothings in an hour’s conversation than
of Illinois to find where Chicago stood, any other two living things, and es­
nor in the delta of the Mississippi to pecially so if they have really arrived
find tho only remaining relics of St. at that*point in the negotiations whcr»
Loftis and New Orleans that have been actual business should begin. But b;
washed down by the spring floods which and by tbe young man thinks of h«s
finally swept those cities away, nor meditations during tbe past week, and
through tho pasture lands of Manhattan resolves that he will get down to bush
island to teit tbe tradition of the loca­ Dess, though lhe heavens fall or the
tion of New York; but he will explore earth swallows him up. Ho launches
the network of tunnels that stretch out forth a “feelfr” or two in the direction
la The Groat Connecting Link between the East and the Weat!
under the site of ancient Buffalo, and of that all-important question, but
marvelat the magnitude of-the* under- ! bruabes these Bule pointeu arrow* to
urnSirMJrnk jSel 1»I*»X b.rm.W’rt. Wml nwxYejl-i*oT o«r
iCmi_l£if 8MOKINO
gronndsewers which were built by the one side,and they fall apparently inten­
curious inhabitants of the old world.— tionally unnoticed short of the mark.
Ullcenl Iron Bridge* *p*n tbeMlMi*»lpnt
__ ■
— ....
iMouri river* »t all point* crowed by thl*
Detroit Post and Tribune.
What is a fellow to do under such cir­
id transfersareavora«d at Council Bluff*,
cumstances? There is no such thing
Popping the Question.
as reinforcements. Is her strange
tlriii greut Through I-ln.
indifference
a
precurser
of
Ao?
. When in the course of human events
Ai Cuicaoo. wUh all divci
iHiumwntJUMyt and l&gt;w Moines: Kaat ami South.
it becomes necessary to “pop the ques- Does she mean to fight or sur­
F* Wt’a C?1R.&lt;XR?iartti&gt; 0,0 1
Fear of the former and
' tion,” an important era has arrived in render?
hope
of
the
latter
rack
his
mind
within
. the history of every young man. Most
through UM
' men have gone through the ordeal, or an inch of insanity. He can't back
expect to. To tho former we would out Dow, for he has gnno too far,«nd
w,; HL
ana i
not say aught, for their late is fixed. the bridges are all cut behind him. He
Some of them no doubt would fain go mechanically meditates upon the fate of
through that interesting ordeal again— that young man who read through the
lalaMJSbort
i just for the fun of it, you know—but whole sixteen volumes of the Encyclope­
the vast majority of them are satisfied. dia Americana and found do sucE word
i Wits' them the contract is signed, as “Give-it-up-Mr^-Brown.” What fro­
zen
streaks
of
chilled
lightning
shoot
r7n,,Tn^K while paMlnff over lhe
sealed and the goods delivered.
&gt;1 prairies &lt;rf Itliaoi* and luvrs. In one of
But it is to the latter class—those up and down hig spine! Not a word
ndncitnl Dining Cara that accompany all
h EiprcM Train*. Yon r.l an entire
1 who have never yet popped the ques­ has been spoken in ten minutes, and the
‘good*- tearrvedmany firot-claw hotel,
silence
ia
becoming
simply
awful.
In
tion—wq wish to say a few words. To
rmtlnff*the’fact that a majority.&lt;* th*
them it is the question of all questions, this fearful state of mind he gets up and
wafer teparata apartseata for &lt;1lfl&lt;*rent
_ / .-a - ■ . ------ r---and should require careful and prayer­ kicks an innocent, inoffensive old tabby
cat
that
sits
dozing
by
the
grate
clear
ful consideration. It is the tide which,
if taken at its ebbing, leads on to hap­ ‘into the middle of next week. He
; pineas, or to a sea full of breakers, or would have done an elephant the same.
words to that effect. Beit known, also, Standing on thia fearful precipice and
that you cannot pop the question indls- looking over the frightful chasm, he
'jc.jyr.-.joHrr,
| orimmately.
Ibere is no financial puckers bis lips for the dreadful leap.
ability displayed in trading jack-knives He looks Jerusnn straight in eye*, and
••sight unseen.” In such cases both she looks at him, wee vena. He seises
parties are usually most wofully cheat­ her by the band nnd in monosyllabic
ed. Young man," it is not safe to go ! tones he Bays: “Jerusha, wilt thou?"
about blindfolded, sticking your bead when straight away she wllta, and all
into every nooee that happens to be is calm and serene, gentle as a summer
hanging around. A nah that nibbles at breeaa.—Cor. Chioago Tribune.
AdZnaa, !t&gt;ch»in. 3c, ataion, BFK. V AHDELF a
everything that floats along displays
—Conductor Glenn fell from the rear
but little discretion, and is liable to be
IV., t« Barrlar w. S. T. .
___ ___
ir of his train, on the Pennsylvania
caught, sooner or later, on a book that
won’t let go. Itb no nickel-flipping

flatarrhQure
S1OO
fs Recommended by Physician?!

guarantee that It will cure any

caBOioed we will forfeit lhe sbovoamount

IfKr»lIlin a slnglo instance.

oth--r C*X*rrh remedy.M

.

F. J. CHENEY &amp;. C0M Toledo. Ohio.

[1 Great
HiiRLINGTON
ftOUTE-

AT COST
OrJUndef,
----- COMMENCING ON-----

Saturday, May 20.

------ — ALSO---------

For thpse in need to share

the profits and buy at
wholesale prices.
Nashviile, May 10, 1883.

PRINGIPAU+UINE
•oa.DslUi.OsJ-

city
TttB’
«ad ytm wtn
tad traveling a

7^/ Ikk, SJeeHar Cart.X
V«***«**lr*wk

‘
' ------------PKBCEVAL LOWELL,

c
I-

I

h

CHICAGO, BOCK ISLAND &amp; PACIFIC B’Y

“ERTraffsOh youth:

Pimples.

CONSUMPTIVES.

off on a siding, but

R J PTURE

M. JEFFREY.

&lt;&gt;. CROCKF.R

P

T.J POTTER.

AND FANCY GOODS "

&gt;ow its the Time

If.

'

5064

At Rock Bottom T*rioew.

HA LUS

Jansas

My Entire Stock of

Independent Reapers

Platform, Side-Spring and Side-Bar Carriages,
■ ’
.and Wagons

trnmadtstate. Price, 75 coati perbottla.

Shall Sell

BE NOT DECEIVED

*

IlU unlike

to change ay saner
of bmes,

ORE-

PARKER**
HAI«

BALSAM

FLOBZSTON

CQLOGHE.

GINGER TONIC

�JOKE.lT.lMa

HTCTKAY

■ K HIVAB Him.

iM* of —all pdx at Grand

found Jeune W. Burnett a habitual
Ciijw-lrt
Iterhnian, aged 6 years, drunkard m bed with Mrs Andrews,
frowned Ml Muakegou Saturday.
He made the man rise dress and leave,
Jaau-a Strvenoou waa killed by and arrested*the woman and compan­
Hghll&gt;h&gt;g in' Austin, Sanilac county. ion in vice. The next moraine Burnett
was found dead on tho rear stoop of
Firjlitu pirkinson, of Daggett, Lxac Brouthere aslooa, and a coroners
Menominee county, was killed hy a jury said bo came to bis death from
Biiffocatiau.
Jjtmee La L«»mle, n 14 year old Imy
On Monday an a tnan on the Mack­
of Ciielwiguh, fell into the hike nt inac division of die M. C. R-R- was ap­
Cbelxiygnii Siiiiirtlsy and was drowned. proaching Swan Creek, a man was
RixiImii
Shiirtx
of
Tecumseh, wm walking on the track. The usual
xih d June 10 of lockjaw, caused by an signal was given when he stepped off
arriih iilnl cut on the lip flniq the lanh from tin- rails and sat down on the end
•of n wliiti.
of a plank of the bribge crossing the
JntMrsThonifwnn, a deck hand em­ stream. Just before the train reached
ployed on the propeller Winslow, slip- the man he threw him self backward a
«iff tl»e hurricane deck at Hnucuck croMone of tho rails aud tho train pass­
on Friday, and was loot.
ed over him.taking his head complete­
Seymotii; Dye, formerly of.South Ha­ ly off, just below die ears. Tho head
ven, was killed by IiidlMns nt Tomb- fell through the bridge into the water.
•tone, Aiixoiis, Inst week. He was The remains were gathered up and an
shot while on n load »»f hay.
inquest held. It was ascertained thft
Mary Ki iu|s tlic^l in the East Sagi­ hia name was Cyrus Corri. that be
naw luck- up Junc/flth*^ She waa a U-g- was about 60 years old, bad resided in
80 Gratiot county for many years; owned
acrea of land in
.
county.
3&amp;0 acres of land iu that county, and
Jacob llrelrr 6f Sheridan, Cnlhcmn bad aevral children living. A verdict
• eotfiiry. hns Ih-c’« Jailed on the charge of of uieide was rendered.
cruelly b«-nllogins wife. Let him out,
On Juno 11 Peter C. Fredrickson
but first brat him seven tin es knrder whs shot by Wm. Smith at Swan River
then lie was'wont to his wifeBridge, Township of Belknap, PresInfiwmation Ims l»cen received at due Isle Co. Fredrickson had been at
Buy City flint Edward Washington of work for Smith, was on friendly terms
that place luia been murdered at Red with Mrs. 8. and Smith. On the day
Eye in Minnesota’- where he was look­ of tho shooting, Fredrickson was pre­
ing land lor Bay City parlies.
paring logo out with a surveying par­
Geoige. Van Houten of Saline is in ty, applied at Smith’s bouse and was
jml nt Ann Aibor on a charge of trying going to the house to get some cloth­
to kill Peter Wiciitt. He attempted to ing but was refused admission. Some
draw ii revolvei, but Wieutt knocked words ensued between Smith and Fred­
him daw i. w ith n nrckyoke.
rickson when the hitter pushed open
,A Detroit servant girl, mimed Anna (he door , stepped inside, and reached
Lederer, who listened to the voice of. (nr bis satchel which was close to the
flattery, threw the laxly of her newly door. As he was doing so, Smith fired
bojn iufmif iii a privy vault on Friday nt him, with a heavy revolver the shot
taking effect in Fredrickson’sabdomcn.
charge of child-murder.
After the shooting Smith surrendered
Rolwrt Stevenson, of Menominee, :o the authorities. Fredrickson’s sit­
representative in the state legislature, uation at present is very critical, and
» ns mi budb burned on Friday, while bis chances of living slight
-eiidvinniiiig to extinguish h tire in n
saw mill, of which he ana superinten­ None bat the Brave Degene lhe Fair.
dent that he died tile next day.
On June 13ib the laxly of Charles
His mime was Patrick H. O’ShaughMcChmk. y of Bay City, who bus been ut-Ksy, but he called himself P. Harry
missing a akin t time, has been found Clinnncey. Her’* was Mary Ann Mc­
near W»*t Branch.
His
throat Carty, but when it bulged forth on h
gilt edged rhiting card it was Mhj
.vns cut, rind as hr has tiern sngject to
Anna Carter. His father'was a retir­
attacks of insiiiiit-y, it is siip|H&gt;aed he ed niHMin'a clerk, but Harry allowed
the world to imagine he wan a retired
ciiniibittr d »iiiride.
I’luis. Stnika a young man, working builder. He wan. He fell off a ladder
with h “monkey of mortar” one day
and iliHlocated hh» body to such an ex­
tent that t.tierv waa crape on the door
the next day.
May Anna gave it ont that her fath­
er wax a dealer in paper stock. Those
front of lire d«i|Mit aftert|ie train puxoed who lived m bi* neighborhood called
and died mhiu nftei.
him n rag-man for short.
Harry received fen dollars a week
died icc« mly iicnr Birtt(r Cirek, aged and waHfouud. He was found sweep
ing out the en ry in a gws house from
6 iu ni. to 6 p. m. every day in the
ol 19 childivii u'Hain thclr.bil of walk­ nrekt He called himself an entry
ing h»nt miles n day up to within u clerk.
May Anna wiu» a “governess.” That
»&lt;«-k'or her(th-iniae, and that she died
i«, she useil to govern u frying-pan in
without a gray hair in her head.
the '•iihsequent basetuent of a French
Xhm. W. E. Robinson, wife of the Flat in Murray Hill.
They loved uot wisely, but for all it
prilieijKit of the union school of Dvwas worth.
t»«*»t, was Milject to hear: disease.
May Anna used to entertain him in
tbe previous basement of the maihdon
in which she drew her little nine dol­
imth uiihihi* water a little chilly.
lars u month.
He would tell her fairy stories of
how rich his father was, and she would
D. Lann ner,of Crdar Run. started give him funny Imainees about the for­
tune she was going to have when she
for Detroit, tnnltriid the reunion, Wed- was twenty-one.
ncMmy. At Kochralrrlie gnt off the cars,
She picturwl to hia mind how that
fell brill nth lire wheels nnd was killed. she could never marry a man unless he
Hr unan widower, «nly 38 yearn old, was brave and warlike. To be taken
to the arms and Iwxl and board of a
• ngngtil to Imt married again, nnd dcscruduiit: of the Carter’s, a man must
his uRlaitrrd wua to have met him nt Ixi no slotieh, aud must lie able to take
bis own part, nnd knock down and
Kot'lx ►til.
A big fiiir occurred nt West Bay City drag out his own weight in manhood.
Harry had a muscle like the wart on
Finlay itrtMrrii 900 Polsudern nnd Ir- tlir roof of a Sugar lx&gt;wl, but ho made
isbno n who arrived their ou tbeir way up his m’nd to do a deed uf valor in the
down fr&gt; m pome ’piner up north where prrreure of bis darling that would
they have Ix-rn nt work upon a mil way. make her head buzz like a bee-hive
umler a full brad of strain.
R volvrra mid knives were flourished
Hr knew a prize tighter who could
but not used, but there is n |Hiifusion knock him into a shower of flesh by
of bartered beads mid bruised IxMlies. winking at him.
Ht&gt; gave the “Fourth Ward Batter”
it is estimated that 60.000 strangers
sod thathing was fixed.
wen- in Detroit in attendance at ’ be reThe •‘Butter’ was to meet Harry and
■mien «1 thrmniy of Potomac Tliurw- May Anna ou the street and insult
•&lt;Uy. Nine companies engaged in the May Anna.
Then Hairy whs to haul off and
corn pct hi vc drill. TheTohdo Cadets knock the “Butter” all apart and chase
took (IwHm! ptireof 11.000, the Chic­ him around the corner.
The “Butter” showed Harry just
ago Boaitl of Trade’ Guards took the
srctmil of $300 and the Detroit Light where to hit him, so that it wouldn’t
hurt. Tbe place to put in the blow
GiiniiIh tlic third of $2u0.
whs on the chest and the “Butter” was
The Nr.w York express on »he Grand to fall, yell “Murder!” aud then get up
Rapids Branch struck a Iionm and car- and run for bis life.
They wet. Tbe “Batter made a re­
Yia«v, driven liy Lena thrphard and mark
aliout May Anna’s personal ap­
Kate Derby nt Jackson on Friday eve-' pearance.
Tiiug last, killing tbc Shephard girl nt
Harry walked up to him and asked
&lt;H&gt;ce. and injuring toe other badly him what he men t. May Anna scream­
ed and begged him not to risk his life
Shoirgti atm will,probnb!y live. It also v.-ith such an athlete.
frilled the horse and. demolished the
Harry couldn’t be pacified. Ho took
off his ocMtt, yelled that “be would
A drunken, ugly Dutch saloon keeper have the viitains life,” and made a pow­
erful! lunge nt the place indicated.
Just then the “Butte?’ alinped and Har­
ry landed one fair on h* nose. The
tt mooii got ns a taw and when his “Butter” was Minded for .an instant,
wife threatened to call tbe poller, he and then lie gralilxxl Harry by the back
of the neck, made * cigar lighter of
him, broke three or four telegraph poles
anti carried writ bis threat by aeuding with him.aad jaroed him through his
» rifle ball through the body of bh wife boots.
*
Horry has carried himself around in

enough treacle to mix the ingredients,
and a Rule sugar; the figs and suet to
be chopped fine, and the pudding well

KEEP US BUSY

—Tbe daily rations of Dexter, the
trotting horse, were two quarta of osta
at 6 o'clock in the morning, at 9 o’clock.

with hot water, and six pounds hay.
flour or meal, is gradually becoming
understood. It u preferred by many
to buckwheat and ccrn for batter cakes,
nnd will soon be used satisfactorily for
biscuit and raised bread.
—Sweet corn is a very desirable crop
to raise for cattle. The stalks are small
and the amount of foliage large. The
stalks and leaves contain almost as
large a proportion of sugar as the
grains. Most kinds of stock will eat
every portion of the plant above the
roota.—tAwniaL
—A disease called by horsemen ty­
phoid pneumonia, is troubling the
equine family in this vicinity, and has
caused a large number of deaths during
lhe past winter. Tho animals afflicted
refuse to eat, and are feverish. Their
throats become sore, and tho air pas­
sages fill up. The disease has prevailed
most extensively in the rural districts,
and has been quite fatal.—Troy (N. K)
Tima.
■ —Lemon butter or jelly, to fill tart­
lets, should be made in this proportion:
half a pound of pulverized sugar, the
whites of thrtee eggs and yolk of one,
the juice of two lemons and the grated
rind of - one; oook for about twenty
minutes, stirring constantly, as there
is great danger of its scorching. When
cool this will be like a rich thick cus­
tard.—Al Y. Poti.
—San Domingo ground-nut cakes.
Put half a cup of cold water in a sugar
boiler; add, two.pounds of light brown
sugar; Mt it over the fire and Doil it un­
til a little of it dropped in cold waler
becomes brittle. Meantime, shell roasted
pfea-nuta sufficient to make two quarts;
when the sugar reaches the point above
indicated, at once remove it from the
fire, stir in the nuts, antf drop by the
tablespoonful on an oiled or wet marble
slab, slightly flattening each cake with
the spoon. Cool and use.—N. Y. Tima.

A LARGE LINE OF

PARASOLS!
~Wall Paper and Carpets

G.A. TRUMAN&amp; SON.
The First to the Front!
T AM NOW RECEIVING A FULL STOCK. OF GOODS SUITABLE FOR THE SPRIMG TRADE. INCLUDING
JL the Largest and Best Stock of

Ready Made Clothing, for Men, Boys, and Youths,
Ever brought to Nashville, and ranging in price from three to thirty dollars per suit In

Ladies, Misees, Gents &amp; Children’s Fine Shoes
I keep the celebrated Rochester make, Slylish, Durable tine Cheap.

We Lave carefully compiled from a
late census bulletin and the census
reports of J870 a comparative table ot
farms under 20 acres occupied in S3
States in the years 1870 and 1880. In
parallel columns the increase or de­
crease in the number of these" farms
will also be found.
Northern
States.
Ca'lfani*. ...
Connecticut..
Illinoia.......
Indiana...........

Maine............
Michigan........
Nebraska.
N. Ham pthire
New Jcraey..

P.t; 'ti&lt;- MMBK

x«*r , lear
1870. 1 1880.

3.4651

MM

— THAT-----

81f

1417

5419
12,748

Items Kimball.
dW l» tlrtn.lt Mootby. Tire

toisir...

Cash paid for Butter and Eggs.

Pioneer Store

NOT ONEW

E ARE NOW RECEIVING OUR STOCK OF

M9 .

Of my Customers Complain

M.i.
121
646
11.0g

Clear Down!

ijH

4.091
6.
Mfl

From the foregoing table it will be
seen that the only considerable increase
in the number of small farms between
1870 and 1880 was in the States of Ohio
and Pennsylvania in the north and Ala­
bama, Maryland, North Carolina and
Virginia in the aouth. There was a
falling off of over 16,000 in the number
of small farms (20 acres and under) in
Missouri and of 19,748 in Michigan.
The greatest falling off was in these
two States.
Wisconsin, Indian** and
Kansas follow in order.
The census report is .incomplete in
this, that it does not indicate clearly
whether this is the result of extending
clearings or absorption of small hold­
ings. There is in all new counties a
first tendency to increase the acreage
of each farm, after that follows division
and cutting up into smaller holding.
Apparently both precesses are now go­
ing on simultaneously but the increased
number of land owners in the country
indicates the disappearance of small
farms in some States is not caused bv
freezing out the small holders.—Ddroil
P^tland Iribunc.

and smooths the skin. Itia splendid
for washing the hair, and will, without
{■jury, cleanse brushes and oombji in a

--- but----

No nutter h »w
that prompt paying customers
mu*t m ike -joixl to the dealers who sell on credit all losses
from poor debt-*, long time accounts, sickness, failing crops,
loss of property, or dishonesty of other customers.

IT IS A. FACT.
UNIVERSALLY SATISFIED.

JNO. M. ROE

■

That the merchant who sell on credit must take into ac
count all the probnbihtres above mentioned when he offers hi
merchandise for sale. And these losses amount in the aggre­
gate to a fair yearly income—a loss which he could not long
sustain were there no remedy, hut there is a remedy and that
remedy is in the PROMPT PAYING CUSTOMERS.

DAKOTA NO BEfTER INVESTMENT
----- MAY BE------

Can be made, if necessary, than to hire money and pay
for your merchandise hs you purchase it.

THE PLACE TO BUY A FARM! -------- ---------- -VCCE SELL-------------- —
----but----

Prints for &lt;3 cts. yard.
Ginghams 8 to 11 ots.

lied Table Linen 50 to 55 eta.
THE PLACE TO BUY TurkeyTable
Oil Cloth 28. Floor, best, 42 eta.
GROCERIES,
PROVISIONS,

CROCKERY,

GLASSWARE,
•cate texture without rubbing,. it being

THE CAREFUL MAN IS EVER ON THE ALERT
t-&gt; Like livuiti- j of liirorable opportunities.

05981623

Borax.

Lady readers who havp not tested tbe
maeio* properties of borax have been
losing a great help and comfort. If
once used, you will never be without a
bottle on vour toilet table. It remoras
stains snu dirt from the hitnds better

GOODS FOR THE SPRING TRADE
AND ARE SELLING THEM-

8310 ./.

----- FROM----fijm san
.9g»j IM71
1U92I 16.776

I always keep a full stock of

413

SSJfc::

N. Cerobna...
8. Oarohaa...
Virginia_____
W.Yirtinix..

At prices that defy coinperion.

Incrmac Decrear
•inoc
»ineo
187J. J 1870.

2.637
4.7 4 5.M2
1X824 12.A09x314 12372 •
10,i78 6 619
10.325 2,717 .
10.-15 f J7 319 .
1J0H
3.7t&gt;
6.f® 6.127 .
81.23 82.141
21.006
1.11 ।
J-. 197
1J»

Vmnonl.........
WUcoairo.......
Coutht rn
States.
Alabama......... 13 City 16.029

I have the latest styles and can fit all parties.

HANGING LAMPS
And everythin k«* in

itty every night in the Murray Hill

In

Small Fafnu.

Bootn and Shoes,
llatH and Capa. '*
General Clothing-,
Grocerieu, Etc,
We are thankful for lhe liberal patronage given ue in the
pa.t under tbe old credit Hyatem and rolieit its continuance
under the Ready Pay. We knuw we can be more serviceable
to \on in lhe fuiuie than we could pocihlv be *n the part.

COME AND SEE FOR YOURSELF.

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                  <text>ORNO STRONG,}
Editob awd Proprietor.

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun.

J

VOLUME IX.
rWB • y
And Her Environs.

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH. SATURDAY, JUNE 24, 1882

—

LIFE IN NASHVILLE
.

—A case or so of petty thieving is re­
ported. Spot the rascal on the snoot.
—We have a really good thing on the
on the Hawk, which the Vermontville
would give all their old shoes to see in
print
—The M. C. R. R. Co. will soon com­
mence the building of now and com­
modious stock yards, just east of the
depot.
*»
—The editor of-.two, papers goto an.
immense twist upon us when he talks
about us nCnning 800 behind [our ticket
for constable.
—Wm. Troxell’s better half baa ap­
pealed to the law to assist her in se­
curing a divorce and lota of alimony
from William.
—The vault doors, and jams for the
Dewbank arrived Thursday. They have
the disc five tumbler lock, and weigh
1400 lbs. The new safe is billed to
arrive Aug. 1st
—And occasionally a massasanga
stickes hishead above ground in this
country. On Friday Levi Smith bad a
cow bitten on the nose by one of these
“pisen” varments. •
—Abreak-down at Kellogg,Bell&amp;Co’s
stopped, businessthere a couple of days
this week, andnecssitated a trip to Gd.
Rapids on Wednesday; by the senior
member of the firm,for repairs.
—The editor of the Vt Ville Hawk
makes a great blow about having ad­
ded forty dollars worth of type to his
office. Foolish crow, he ought to have
blown it into his Senatorial boom.
—Frank Smith, employed upon A.
G. Murray’s farm, north of the village,
dropped a piece of wood in a mortar­
bed, when some of the flying mortar
struck his eyes, which swelled shut,
and Frank lived in darkneon for four
—W. C. Dunham and wife, of Maple
Grove, divorced, have been lowing each
other for eome time, in regard to the
custody bfit three-year-old son. The
case went to the Supreme Court, and
was decided in favor of the fat her on
Tuesday.
—Hon*E. P. Allen of Ypsilanti, who
baa been secured Jto deliver the 4th of
July oration in this village, bears the
reputation of being one of the finest
speakers in the state. No one within
ten miles of Nashville can afford to
miss CapL Allen's speech.
—Fourteen Finlanders landed in our
village, Monday night, fresh from their
native soil; They remained overnight
in .the passenger room and Tuesday
morning Jake Osmun conveyed eight
of them to Jacob Greenlands. Th? re­
mainder took passage for Menominee
Co. ,
—On the 16th inst William Harding
of Maple Grove, sheared id eight hours
time, 148 pounds of wool from nineteen
yearlings, belonging to H, T. Miller.
This is an average of over 7$ pounds
per head.
Ten of them have bad
lambs. He also sheared Miller &amp; Co’s
buck which dipped 22 lbs.
—Farmer John Heckathorn, living in
the north part of the corporation, was
driving past a pile of wood on his
place on Thursday, when one of his
horses ran against a protruding stick,
a wound ten inches deep waa made in
the flank of the home, and the animal
which is a valuable one, may die.
—Peter Penfold and Nathan Barnes,
two Maple Groveites, had a turn at
each other in Judge Killen’s court on
Wednesday. Penfold brought suit to
recover three dollars which he claimed
Barnes owed him for labor, but the
evidence was Dot eon dative enough to
convince all of the jury and it disa­
greed. The case was then adjourned
until Monday next.

J. Kuntz, a good farmer, living a abort
distance south-weatjindiecretely wand,
cred into the corporation and fell into
the bands of Iriaod P. M. on Tuesday,
Mr. K. appeared upon the scene, soon
after twilight and offered the pound
master the evening’s milking of the

inexorable in his demands for nothing

—A high wind prevailed on Sunday
from eleven until aix fo’clock.
Dark,
forbidding clouds c&gt; been rod the azure
arch and flying dust, leaves and rubbtwh filled tbe air
Many people
trembled for fear that a cyclone wonk!
•woop down upon fair Nashville, but
they were happily relieved from their

j TERMS; Si SO ran Ym
( Credit Subsoriptiomb $1.76.

NUMBER 40.
'■

—The Star Lodge picnic, held at
Thornapplo Lake,last Wednesday, Was
largely attended by members of the or­
der from this and Hastings. The-time
at the lake was pleasantly spent in row­
ing, Ashing, steamboat riding and last,
but not least, in doing ample justice to
one of tbc best picnic dinners. As do
accident occurred and everybody seem­
ed to be ^ood n atu red it was pronounc­
ed l»y competent judges to boa grand
Hueccaa.
—Who is the Maple Grover diat the
B. C. Journal hinting atT Listen: "A
fellow from Maplo Grove observed to
his girl, who was helping him eat five
cents worth of peanuts at the corner of
Main and Jefferson streets, circus-day,
that the leopard was an “awful pretty
varmint.” She said she thought it re­
sembled the cat,” “but, gracious” said
she, “did you ever sec such an orful
case of frecklest” Some of the boys
smilled, supposing she referred to the
leopard.”
—George Morgan, living four miles
north, had two son-in-laws from the
east with their families visiting him.
On Saturday the men were returning
from this village to Mr. Morgan’s and
when opposite the Hosmer schoolhouse
the tongue of their buggy dropperl
from the neckyoke, caught in the
ground and throwed men and vehicle
forward onto the horses. Both men
were bruised, one so badly about the
head that be remained unconscious six
hours. Ono of the gentleman’s name
was Edwin Parks, but the other we
failed to learn.
—One night last week Albert Hilton
was going homo from a meeting at tbe
school bouse in West Castleton, and
when opposite Cronk’s, Little Royal
asked him if he had made a certain
statement about him (Little Royal) and
receiving a reply in the affirmative pro­
ceeded to assault,with tbe assistance of
Big Royal, Chester and Frank Sheriff,
said Hilton in something of an outragous manner. Hilton, however, bad
them arrested, brought before Esq.
Burger and tried on monday, when tbe
boys paid $15 apiece and big Royal $10
for their exhibit of bad blood.

—Tbe engine arrived Tuesday with
the freight from the east, but had mov­
ed on toward Grand Rapids—it Was
drawing tbe freight—when a boy came
straggling to tbe depot to see it.
It is
wonderful what a variety of errands
there were to the depot oU'that day.
One came "tosee if the billiara tables,
ordered from Ecquador this morning,
bad come,” but asked about tLo en­
gine first Another came to send a
telegram to Thornapple, probably in­
tending to have that engine switched
off th ere, but concluded however, that
ho wonld defer the sending of his mes­
sage until a telegraph office should be
penod at Thornapple. 11:45 a. m.is tbe
time of day to go to the depot tc Bee
the engine that draws the way freight

LOCAL GIBBLE-GABBLE
Aad Psnsaai CkH-ChaU

Miiles’s colt, and between the Downing
marc and Charley Fu miss’ mustang.
Several other horses, which are conntby .their owners to be quite spry.areuexpectcd to be present and other matches
made.—Olio.
Children’s day was observed at the
M. E. church, last Bunday, in an ap­
propriate manner. The church was
nicely decorated with flowers and
evergreens.
Twelve canary birds
aided the children in singing and were
the principal attraction, especuiy with
the little folks, during the sermon.
Town Treasurer Wm.fi.Martin acorns
to be on the high road to recovery of
health. He visited friends at Hastings
for a week. On Wednesday evening
last while in the town the red ribbon
club of West Castleton, of which Mr.
M. was once Presidcnt,gave him a benfit social. A* good time and $13 was
realised.
The M. E. Social at Dk. Barbers pos­
ed off pleasantly, everybody appearantly enjoying themselves.
Ice cream,
nowover. was at a discount on account
of the heartleMness of the evening.
The attendance was good and the re­
ceipts were nearly $6. The ladies of
the society desire to express their thank
to Mr. Hatch for his kindness In assist­
ing them in making the ice cream.

DrJones has refitted bis dental rooms.
I. M. Flint of Bellevue, is in the vil­
lage thia week.
Hens’slaug—“I’ll lay for yon,” at 16
cents per dozen.
The boys are watching for the arrival
.of the fire engine.
Min Hattie Austin has returned to
Nashville to*live.
Brick laying commenced on the new
block on Tuesday.
,
If yon arc wise, and desire a line time
celebrate in Nashville. '
Clarence Barber baa mastered the
fiery untamed bycide.
O. A. Phillips has commenced the er­
ection of a new barn 80x48.
Mra. N. P. Frink was with friends
□ear Lansing fromSaturday toTuesday.
The street sprinkler keeps Main St..
dust down to its proper place in good
shape.
A Jonesville paper styles it "The
Babble.” This is the most unkind
cut of all.
Bert Kellogg has returned from a
week’s sojourn among relatives at To­
ledo, Ohio,
Mif*L. Addie Nichols was in Grand
Rapids purchasing millinery goods
on Tuesday.
FIGHTI5G FOB A FARMEditor Young is mnkieg a show of
prosperity by having the house he lives
Evidence in a suit which involves the
in replastered.
Mrs. J. H. Smith, who has been ill for title of 300 acres of valuable land in
more than four months, is thought to Maple Grove, a short distance south of
this village, was taken before circuit
be improving.
J. M. Cole of the Jackson Star was in court commissioner Brady on Thurs­
the village in the inteiesteof that paper day. The case is an in to rest) ng one of
twenty-one years standing, the proper­
on Wednesday.
S. W. Walratb is in the village on a ty in litigation is now valued at $15­
000,
and has been in possession of
two weeks’ furlough from duties at
Henry Feigbner or members of his famGrand Rapids.
ly,
for
twenty years, and thousands of
F. H. DeGolia cashier of the Eaton
Rapids national bank was in the village dollars will be spent before it will be
given up. The history of the case is
on business Tuesday,
H. W. Dickinson started for Kansas briefly thus:
On Juno 31, 1862, Henry Feighner
City, Tuesday, to visit a brother ho has
filled his bill to quiet title to 300 acres
not seen for 43 years.
He claimed
David Connelly, after a term or two of land in Maple Grove.
at the University, has resumed his stud­ the same by virtue of a deed from A.
| Wolf, executor of the estate of Thomas
ies with Dr. Yonng.
School closed yesterday. Teu weeks. Dillon, deceased, through license of the
Thomas
vacation will ensue before the new Probate .Court for Barry Co.
M. Dillon, the defendant, claimed by
school year will begin.
A. 8. Winn, has engaged to assist bis virtue of quit claim deeds from the
brother, tbe dentist, and, consequently, heirs at law of Thomas Dillon, deceas­
ed. In 1867 Dillon filled a cross bill,
will make Nashville hisfatnro home.
Mrs. A. 3. Foote and daughter, Hat­ alleging fraud between Feighner and
tie, attended tbe commences snt ex­ Wolf as to the probate sale.
Originally Brown &amp; Thomas of Bat­
ercises at Albion college on Wednes­
tie Creek, were the solicitors for Dil­
day.
The "Stars” who picnicod at Thorn­ ion, but sometime in 1871 Isaac A. Holapple, Wednesday, clubbed together biook of Hastings, and E. A. Foote of
and bought 30 tickets thereby securing Charlotte, were substituted in their
place. Holbrook dying in 1874 the case
excusion rates.
G. A. Truman A Son, in their space so far as Dillon was concerned, went
this week^announce seasonable speci­ into the bands of Wright fit Holbrook
alties. Sw their stock and make your and E. A. Foote. Mr Wright dying in
1877 and Holbrook moving to N. Y..
selections early.
At the M. P. church at Barryville Clement Smith was substituted in their
there will be an ice cream social next paleo and he and Mr. Foote are now
Tuesday evening. June 37th, tor the the solicitors for Mr. Dillon.
When Mr. Smith went into the case it
benefit of Elder Miller.
Wm. Kerr, a property bolder and ex­ was in a bad shape. None of the files
resident of this village,, but now of belonging to the attorneys for Dillon
Hastings, Neb., arrived Wednesday could be found. The cross bill and an­
afternoon. ,He looks well and is pros­ swer and some of the testimony was
filed with many other papers of im­
pering.
Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Lee will enter­ portance. but Dillon had been default­
tain a Lawn Social Wednesday eve; ed and Feighner seemed to have full
June28th. loe cream and cake will be' swing. After much patient search and
served and all are cordially invited to labor Mr. Smith succeeded in finding
some of the papers and procured certi­
attend.
The improvements upon C. W. fied copies of others to be filed for or­
Smith’s place of business are now en­ iginals. He obtained an order to ojJen
tirely completad, and Charley is happy proofsand the case is now proceeding
in the thought of being the possessor of and.without doubt, will be closed in sea­
so fine a place for business.
son. James A. Sweesy is the solicitor
A small company en)dyed the luxu­ for Feighner.
ries of Thorn&amp;pple Lake on Tuesday.
BALTIMORE.
Rev. Bissell and Miss Hattie Peckham
brought back as a tropyof there visit
a ten pound mnskalonge.
On Tuesday M. B. Brooks returned hole!
Corn that is up indicates that the yellow kind
from tbe north, having closed out his
drove of mustangs at an advantage, was planted.

—Tbe death of Mrs. Louisa Hender­
son, mentioned in last week’s News,
has been the subject of much discussion
on the streets this week. It is stated
that on tbe day she died, ahe prepared
the dinner and help get the supper.
While partaking of tbe latter she drank
a glass of water, and immediately
complained of being in distreas. At
nine o’clock she died. A resident phy­
sician pronounced her disease diphth­
eria, and nnder his orders at 3 a. m.,
she was burned in a field, back of the
barn, in the name clothes she died in,
her remains being dumped in a box.
Henderson claims that ahe died of con
gestion of tbe bowels, and on Thurs­
day her brothers, Bill and Jim Davis,
took the 1:25 a. m. train for Durand,
proposing to investigate the matter.
They had the body examined and a
post mortem examination made by
three good physicians, who stated that
ahe came to her death from acute
longitis. Her remains were too badly
decomposed to remove to this village, and contemplates starting for Texas for
chuck full of grass.
but were -auitaby clothed and given a another stock on Monday.
Christian burial.
Mbs Miriam HO! of Orangeport,N. Y.
Is visiting her brother C. Hill also a
“The Michigan Central railroad are
niece Mrs. Alice Button of Pawnee City, harvest is good, but help will be scarce.
about to commence suit
nst Orno
Neb. Both are on their way east Miss
Strong to recover a half
of coal
it, visited the schools Wad•pperi
Kill having been visiting in Nebwhich found its way into his month
throngh the open car window, on his
The ladies of tbe M. E. society, will
way from Detroit the other night.” —
furnish meals oo the coming fourth for
VinMitvilleHawk. Tbe same company
all who may desire. They have secur­
"are” not going to cut Potter’s free
ed the ground just south of Boise’s
rides down to fifteen, as it did that
hardware store, which will be fitted up
praiseworthy act thyee months ago.
In a convenient manner for that por­
In speaking of the meeting of the
Barry &amp; Eaton Insurance Co., the
Hone raring is occapymg the atten­
Nashville Bugle aayfc “This is a meet­
ing to provide against future cyclone.” tion of the local sports at present, and
lower the hill four feet, the dirt to be placed on
While we fully favor the meeting, and a considerable degree of speed is being
the Object to be aought, we protest attained by some of the nags. A match
npainst thia perversion of the meeting.
Bro. Potter the Barry &amp;. Eston had bet•tar tot
rury nf the

JmhmL

WEST KAEAMO.

"

•

LOCAL MATTERS.

Corn is growlng rapidly.
Frank Griffin la excavating for the

chine, tor all its leading jtolnta, &lt;gi which it
bases its claims for popular favor, have been
tested tn actual service of all kinds and for
' The AasoclsUon now numbers 105 member,, years, and tn the .“Crown" are only assembled
for the first time, a combination of all the ad­
and still they come.
vantages tn be found In the whole array of Ma
John York will start ere long for Nebraska to chines,
and without the defects of any of them.
prove up hte homestead.
ARtlivED AT LAST!
Great national ncck-tle party at Washington,
June 30th, open to all competitors.
T. A. Crandall has been lor a abort time paat
In Canada attending a tick brother.
Mrs, Bell Townsend ot North Muskegon, la Glasgow has sold quite a number of traggtes
already for tbc 4th, and he has sonic aa fine
visiting her mother Mra. I. M. Vandyke.
ones aa are in the state waroanted equal to any
Sheep shearing La nearly finished and the in finish and durability and bis orices are very
wool clip will be heavy and of good quality,
low. Don’t buy until] you sec them.
• GOOQ, JUDGES
ccutly done on the town line cast of Rapeon’s
Concede that the finest and largest stock of
Men's, Youth’s and Boys. Clothing, and Gents
Furnishing
Gooods ever laid down in Nashville,
Michigan against the world on changeable
weather. Last week roasting hot, and the fore is on exhibition at Pbimdlb &amp;. Chihsan'b.
part ot this week frigid.
TO THE CITIZENS OF NASHVILLE
The writer regrets to record another theft tn
AND THE SURROUNDING
thia vicinity, that of pork stolen a few nights
VICINITY.
'
ago from Wm. Mason’s cellar.
, l‘. IL Kenny, lately from New Troy, Berrien
A wind, rain and hall stortn greeted this sec­ Vo. Mid:., haa takenan Intereaxta Dr. W. H.
tion on Bunday last, hall stones falling as large 1 tapirs’ flour mill, known as 8clpto mills, and
baring 15 year* experience in cuatom grinding
a*—well, they were old boosters.
and mediant milling at Niles,' Buchanan and
John Fowler has made considerable im­ New Troy, Micb, would aolicit a share of the
provements on his lot In the village, and 'Us public, patronage and make custom grinding
and mesthont milling a apeeialty.
said will soon take possession thereof.
P. IL Kknkt,
C. G. Brandige sewed 617 worth of onion
2w
Nashville, Mich.
seed, and planted several baahels of potatoes,
MONEY TO LOAN,
Vblch were all destroyed by the recent flood.
On
Ileal
Estate
at
low
rate
of
interest ot
The remark of a Nebraska paper about west­
ern corn will apply also to Michigru, vis: “that
it is in fashion being of a stylish, biliotu. yel­
WILL DIE.
low."
Potato bugs will die If properly sprinkled
Well, yes, 'tls a good Idea Insuring property with Parts Green. A fine ground, pure article
At Glasgow's.
against tornadoes and cyclones, but bow about
onr charter. Will it permit the company to take
tar Foil line of Wall Paper at
F. T. BCHSE’B.
such a step without the sanction of the Legis­
lature! Better consult some good authority on
ATTENTION KNIGHTS!
the subject before g. Ing to far.
The annual election of Ivy Lodge, No. 87,
Farmers take courage. A few days ago a Knights of Pythias, will occur st 1U Castle
Weal Kalamo farmer dug Into the ground Hall In Nashville, on Friday evening,June 80th.
I trust that ever-- member of the Knight's
where he had planted potatoes, but which had Rank
will make it convenient to attend.
failed to send forth a shoot to greet the eye,
Ohno Stbomo, C. 0.
and which was supposed to be rotten, when,
SODA WATER.
lo I out rolled several bright new potatoes.
Ice cold and deliciously flavored, can only be
Clayton Brown living in Bellevue township, obtained Ln Nashville, at Haul's Drag Score.
about a mile south of .Kclarno line, is making
FOUND.
the keeping of bees quite remunerative. He
A acvthe Ural will atand and do good work,
has 79 old swarms, and be calculates that the
“The Wetmore," warranted, al Glasoow'h.

gregato enough to make about 125 swarms.
Mr. Brown says be finds bees more profitable
than wheat.
A Nebraska paper of last week, the Valpara­
iso Avalanche, gives to Tns Nasdyuxs Nbws
credit for a paragraph concerning that eight
ounce Nevada baby, saying that the Avalanche
learned the fact for the first time through Tub
Nbws, but, although the story Is strange, yet
’Us true. Verily, The N bwb finds its way most
everywhere, even to the office of that wide

with there is no cleaner, bettor edited or more
moral local paper in central Nebr uka.
Much indignation in this vicinity among the
relative and friends of th- late Mrs. Henderson
of Durand, over the manner in which her re­
mains were disposed of. It appears Mrs. Hen­
derson appeared in her usual fair health on
Tuesday, performing her domestic duties, and
not complaining of anything unusual being the
matter, but the next day a severe pain in the
stomach which increased to such a degree that
a doctor was called who pronounced it a bad
cold—pneumonia. Remedies were administer­
ed, but she grew rapidly worse until nine
o'clock In the evening when she died, even the
attending physician declaring that no conlagi-

ONE WHO KNOWS
Having thoroughly examined the Crown Bew
Ing Machine ana have no hesitancy in saying
that It la constructed of the best malarial ano
on tbe most scientific principal* and possesses
more real points of merit than any Bering Ma
chine I have yet seen.
FOR SALE OR TRADE.
One No. 4 Champion Mower, one Walter
- Wood single reaper; will trade one er both
S^- Tbe “Crown" treadle is bung low, which
causes less fatigue to the operator by making
it possible for the weight of the body to assls*.
greatly, Ln giving the power needful "to run the
machine, and thus relieving the strain on tbe
muscles. ___
HARVEST.
Harvest la coming and Cradles, Grain Rake*
etc., can be found at
Glasgow’s.

WH AT 18 THE USE
of buying a new Mower or Reaper when you can
get your old one made as good as new at
Htkvhns &lt;fc Cook's.
NEW BRICK STORE.
I um building Anew Btore sod re

WThe celebrated hand-made Palmer Grain
ing the night the doctor come tu the house and
preemtporily ordered tbe remains lobe immedi­
A FEW THOUSAND DOLLARS
ately interred, stating that Mrs. H. died from
tbe result of the worst case of diphtheria. To Loan on good Real Estate security.
Pleadings were in vain. A request that time
be granted for the mother and children of the
decewcd to arrive and take a last look at the re­

mains of one they loved, was refused; also that
a coffin might be purchased, for which they
rough coffin could be nailed together by a car­

LUMBER! LUMBER!
*
Custom Sawing and Building Material fur
pie Grove.

good for many more acres.

carl; on.

HowUthaU
J. M. Wood.

ATENTION!

Henry Thuston aged OBfyean died of dropsy,

motion to ttefo
been invented and la nx

ORDINANCE No. 36.
fanning.

them away; but after

She had driven a three year old cult from home

�are cajoled.

■rites :?-*From
wind
Governor Flaisted to
ber forward,----- ~------ —_
upon the brink of the little river that
ripple; so innocently and cheerily along
Queer's sunny sky. but whose waves sowq his wild oats in the United'Blates, Brown's Iron Bitters. Uhu made me feel betA COMPLETE LT*I OF
now are leaping and tossing their foam- contemplates a visit to America next
cresfc like mad things. The stepping­ autumn with Lady Bosebery., Perhaps
stones. which but yesterday were so with a view of showing her the crop.—
eadly cross** I, are before her. and Dora DetnUl^
to satisfy all that follow It
l'1-jinp, but not fat—
begins her ;-eri.ous journey.
—Isaac Ward, father of the Ward
“Come back!' Dor*. Dora, come brothers, the famous oarsmen, died at
WHAT BVKRABODT WA^Tfl.
back! ’ calls Eiuandirib’ji voice from tbc Cornwall, N. Y., recently, aged eifrhty- -* Is a reliable modfclne tbat Dever dose any
terrace above; butahe does not heed.
four years. He had been a Ndrth-Klver harm and that prevent* dfscue by keeping the
Steadily she goes onward, but oh. so fisherman all his life. He leaves four­ stomach in order, the bowela regular, and the
kidneys and liver active. Such a medicine in
slowly! oftentimes slipping, and on the teen children.—N. K Herald.
Parker's G loser Tonic. It relieve* event care,
very verge of falling into the treacher­
—LAbouehere. the English novelist, is and Iulb cured thousands.' Bee other column.—
ous water, whose inky blackness only
Tribune.
■
, Common, arid hung ready for use.
seem; the denser, when, for a few sec­ writing a satirical novel, based on the
onds, the glare cf the lightning shows Jnsane desire of about half of England
to marry its deceased wife’s sister. Mra. will never do anything.
her what progress she is making.
She has gained the center of the Craik. the author of “John Halifax,
HER OWN EXPERIENCE.
stream; her slight form is trembling Gentlemen.” wrote a story on tbe Same
SEWING M AOHINES. with th • combined effect of the cold subject years ago.
PLOW POINTS for the Olive Chilled I Wlard, Three Rlv—Rear Admiral John Rodgers, who
which strikes through her dripping gar­
‘Favorite Remedy’ had herself suffered a stroke
died
at
Washington
recently,
first
de-,
ment and the bodily exertions she has
er», Bryan, Cale, Curtis, Dodge, Robinson
of paralysis, which rendered her entire right
been eompc.&lt;^d to make to keep her monstrated the sea-going quality of the
And many other Plows.
side powerless, and, in a word, left her aa help­
fooling upon the slippery rocks. Will monitor class of vesself when. In 1863,
less
aa
an
infant.
But
‘
Kennedy's
Favorite
he
had
command-of
the
Weehawken
on
In
fact,
we keep a full and complete stock of first class Hardware and Fanning Tools. Call
she Ije able to reach the other side?
Remedy
cured
ber
.and
she
to
now
able
to
do
atidt»ce
them
before
buying.
Bravely she struggles on. ‘and at the Sputh Atlantic blockading squadron.
her own work." The aborcie quouted from a
length the goal is reached and her feet —Chicago InUr Ocean.
—“ Don has had many advantages,”
touch the other shore. "
A short while later the telegraph op­ said old.Simon Cameron, talking of his Dr. David Kennedy, of Rondout, N. T.
erator. leaning Idly back in his chair In son. the Pennsylvania Senator, the need a bottle in the house.
RUE HEROISM.
his warm cilice, is startled by the en­ other day; “but I had one that i.i worth
An obstl »te mon does not hold opinions;
trance of a small, dripping figure, look­ more to any man starting in life than
Eeanore Gray and Dora Alton were ing, with its disheveled hair and pallid^ all he ever had.” “ What is that Gcn- they bold hlin._________________
great friends: though two more dissim­ face, like a visitant from some ghostly eral?”
IP YOU AKE iiUINEL
• The advantage of starting
ilar in every way it would - be hard to
WITH A FULL STOCK OFpoor.”
sphere
‘n health from any esnre. especially from the
find. For.’ While Eeanore was tall,
—Henry James. Jr., the young man use of a'ny of the thousand nostrums that prom­
•• A tree has fallen across the track
dark and brilliantly colored. Dora was ; opposite Misstiray's cottage—telegraph who “ wegrete the thirkunutanoe that ise *o lamly, with long fictitious teatimauiali,
childishly slight; with a pale, lily-fair j for the seven o’clock express to stopl” he was born in America, but weally have no tear. Resort to Hop Bitten at. once,
■kin; and wh le Eleanor© was vivacious
Then, her. mission accomplished, the couldn’t he p it, you see, as ho wasn't and tn a abort time you will have the most ro­
and daring. Dora was thy and qutet. brave heart stops beating and Dora consulted about the matter, you know,” bust and blooming health.
And. strange to say. the one you would sinks unconscious to the floor.
Aaeaaeination has never changed the hlatory
i has rewritten . “Roderick Hudson,”
deem least fitted to cope with the^orld
Four weeks have gone by—weeks of which h&gt;d some merits he was always of the world.
’ •
wm the one whom taroti mslances had
the most intense anxiety—tor all that sorrv for and had doubtless cut out.—
DIDTOU KNOW IT!
compelled to do so from her earliest time Dora has lain between life and fl. K Star.
You can strengthen the digestive organs,
death. But at lost the shadow has lifted
—Miss Florence Toole, the fottrteen- prevent eoattvenesa, dlarrbcra, and all bowel
Tbe^acquaintanoe between the' two and out once more into health’s sun;
girls began at aehool, and when Eleo­ shine sho tins emerged, to the heart-felt year-old daughter of the comedian, is disorders, by a timely use of Brown’s Iron Bit­
ters, a true tonic, a perfect atrungtbencr.
s.
described
as
the
possessor
of
remarkable
nora graduated, and. leaving school- . ioy of the friends who have prayed for
Every man dealres to live long, but no man
days behind forever, came to her- beau- ' her recovery incessantly, even when literary ability, nnd it is thought that
tiful home, at her urgent solicitation. they feared their prayers would be of her father will presently be able to get would be old.
his pieces written for him at home.
Dora, whom she bad grown to love os
n» avail.
There’s nothing-like having the Tooles
REMEMBER THIS.
tenderly ns» sister, accompanied ber.
i ' It :s a bright, pleasant day. though
If you are sick Hop BtUcrs will surely aid
The first month of vacation has somewhat ch lly. and in Elcanore's cozy in the house when one wants to con­
Nature In making you well when all elre falls.
struct a play.
puMd. u.d Um, N«»d bu
«- . u.^-roomOn"
«»&lt;y-ch.ir nearllu
you are costive or dyspeptic, or are suffer­
.—At her first appearance since the ingIffrom
Un&gt;d upon.
Don,
„
Unak. bngbl wowLIlre, Dora I. &gt;~ud. Sb.
any other of the numerous diseases of
B RACES
h°a
1
'
.°7
1&lt;X ,.ry lovdl. for .1.. finogl ow has death of her husband, on the stage of tbe stomach or bowels, it ia your own fault If
Md tbl. drlarbHul eapwowe tha. b» ,
,d .
itor p,
pal„'ch«kfc Albert Hal), London, Mme. Nilsson was you remain ill, for Hop Bitters arc a sovereign
remedy
in
all such complaints.
qomo to bar l.k. u «.U a th. monoL
j
d„
,
,d Uo dressed in deepest mourning, and her
1
f
vou
are
wasting
awny
with
any
form
of
eMaxfewrtolhrr lU.wllba.emHfo.L short
,h,,„ „„„
h.lr lh,t ril.boat first notes betrayed her agitation by a Kidney dlreare, slop tcmpUng death thia mo­
waves of hair
that cluster about tremulous quiver. But she soon brave­
And yet the roses of pleasure have not her fair forehead.
ment, and tun for a cure to Hop Bitters.
ly conquered herself, and her full, strong
If you are sick with that terrible sickness
been'entirely without the thorns thatalThe ■ door gently opens and a voice voice rang through the hall with all its Nervquani'M, you wifi find a “Balm in Gilead"
wayn uccompanv them.
say fl:
old-time sweetness The audience ap­ in the use of Hop Bitters.
Five weeks do not constitute n great
If you are a frequenter, or a resident of a
“ May I como in?”
portion of time, but in them much may ■ It is Mr. Kidndge. and it is the first plauded rapturously, but she firmly de­ miasmatic district, barricade your system
happen, an I the ■- have sutficed to im­ time s net* her illnets that Dor* has font clined the encore.
auaiust the scourge of all countries—malarial,
plant in Dora's gentle heart a some- him. The delicate color deepens as she
—Jlobcit Browning has no apprecia­ cpidem'c, biliousness, and intermittent term—
use of Hop Bittern.
ih.aK as strung us she knows it is hope­ resigns her baud to his chisp ond an­ tion of bis own incomprehensibility. byIfthe
you have rough, pimply, er swallow skin,
Several years agohe informed an Amer­ bad breath, pains and aches, and feel miserable
less.
swers his words of greeting. They chat
By the terms of the deceased Mr.
ican publisher that he had written a generally. Hop Bitters will give you fair skin,
lor a while, and then to Dora's great
Gray’s wilk his friend Mark Eldridge, a . fliirprisc she .'earns what she 1ms not new poem that was very simple and rich blood, sweetest breath, health, and com­
man nteny years younger than himself,
clear—that everybodg could understand. fort.
among
In short thev cure all diseases of the stom­
but oar poMea ag Ki. auao.1 ooaii- kn .wn before,,,that
a™,
lue.rthose who to
her brave dee Is owed their safety from The pleased and excited publisher ach, Bowels, Blood, Liver, Nerves, kidneys,
begged * the poet to forward it Immedi­ Bright's disease. $500 will be paid for a case
dance, w.. le&gt;&lt;.
»• h» b»r&gt; umU1 „h„r (ril.n,|', guar.li.n.
UR WORK IS ALL DONE (TON HONOR. BUGGIES
fortune and guard.an to his aaugnler.
. . ....
*»....■&gt;
ately. When it came it turned out to they will not cure or help.
•• I tetked Eieahore not to tell you.”
That p&lt;K&gt;r bedridden, invalid wife, slater,
Him it is that the Grnv cottage frebe “ The Bed Cotton Night-Cap Coun­
being made from
mother or daughter, can be mndc the picture
qiiently sees Mr. Eldridge’s genial. ‘
\ ’. “for 1 wished to thank you
myself, and at the same time to ask you try ’’ — perhaps tbe most puzzling of afi of health, bv a lew bottle* of Hop Bitters, cost­
• Wit i huh;• -I -\&lt;»d GixmIh nnd
Our-Tups aie lined wit
handsome face: and thus it is *Im&gt; that,
'
'
a qu *sUon most momentous to me. It Browning’s mystic productions.—Chica­ ing but a trifle. Will you let them suffer!
in listening to his fluent conversation, i.Sjth s: Dorn, will vou make the life you go Tribune.
n painter whose
Warranted not tn Fndv.
Fortune docs not change men, it only un­
which opens before her broad vistas of have saved more-precious by laying that
&lt;• ot our paint deHUMOROUS.
knowlefi^e as well as of entertainment.
mask* them.
dear hand' in mine, nnd saying that you
Dorahabome to think that not in all
F^t,
Body Loops
—It is estimated that at least 4.000
____ SICK HEADACHE I NERVOUS HEAD­ partinent,and can beydi-d
wdl lie tny wife? Ah, little one. my
this world is another so wise anfl good—
Dliie buggy
heart went out to vou the. first time that acres are being planted with melons in
ACHE!
as worthy of a maiden’s love.
we met; but I little kne^lo .what a Scott County. Mo. The question now
Pnuiiptlv relieved and permanently cured by ironeti in a desirable and
i warranted.
But ni t a hint of the truth does she
strength my passion had grown until the is: How many ache-ahs "viU those Zoa I’bonC the Health brmevr for Women.
suffer to esc pe, for she imagines that
4.000 acres produce? — Leavenworth
ahe Iras read a secret, and she iv not dark hour ,camc wlten 1 feared that
'Times.
" '**'*.i death was about to snatch you from me.
surprised.
* —•• What made the mute kick you?”
Hysteria, nervuu* &lt;-iciul&gt;iliy, w attlnc of the
"‘"is
i*i| IJora- "hat is niy answer to be?”
■“Bhc’te so beautiful and bright, iit
” she i' ” Ani’ 1 afwilys. thought that It was they asked of a gentleman who had been tnuiu lr*. impurity of the iilooil, quickly re­
no wonder that he loves her.”
feelini? ' ^®an&lt;w’® vou ‘nrctl for-’' ^ora pays- ft,‘ seen Hying through the roof of a barn. lieved by urine Brawn'* Iron Bittcro.
muses, as she watches with a feelinj
«f min-ird »dr»iraUonTu-n&lt;lem— «n^
‘‘“f •“ f’’ ’«'&gt; »“pW
And he answered: “Do you think I was . Men ha-;.'right woman Insight.
p.rn.tfo K,.nli.n .nd Ha lovely ward. “d
1UU’ l'*l,a
vlfapedm her | fool enough to go back and inquire?”—
BRIGHT’S DISEASE, DIABETES.
" fci&lt;lo ere for Elo.n,.re-v&lt;.ry Couri-r^Joumal.
Spokes made
—A darkey, after falling fro": a two- Beware of the etuff that pretends to cure tbete Until you have tlitimugb*
[nude to stand
, ' ranch; bill it ia. Dora—inv heroic dar- story window, and striking his head dlH-are or other serious Kidney," Urinary or from Second Growth Stori-- a &lt;1
Liver
Diseases,
a*
tlicyonly
releive
for
a
time
Itbae been a .tunny aflcrnoon. and lm
lha. j wjah |or rav
lirat on the pavement, got up nnd said
and makes you ten Uinesworoe afterwards, but
with the gath -riasdwKncMtbe ihunder ;
t o,
to an alarmed speftator: “I cfar to rely solely on Hop Bi turn tbe only remedy that the wear and tare of &lt;‘&gt;tn i* tub.
bwn. to mutter nwaaomRly.
Lome." i, hi. amwer.
' goodness, if I fell 'anoder story'- I’d a will
surely and permanently cure you. It desbweel-linar Cotugo a, bloaaore .
I am m in) pl«Md than I can ex- broke dat stone.'”
trevs and removes tbc cause o'
*
-*
A
plomat homo U cHlod. .. eitualod t
.. ia Eleal,„re'. ..ntliueiiutic eida—An old lady in Texas wm taking feet nelly that H- ucver returns.
IN
NUMBER
apo. * ebfrht olevatton whom torn » niatinn. wil0
when ....................
th&amp; blissful secret■ ■is con- her lirst ride in the cars the other day.
washed by s narrow stream between &lt;■;*.„&lt;h
1_,,_ .
do not believe that in when the tpin ran off tbe track. “You
widch end terra nrm» nnu ll.J ra lnm.1. , _____ j „„i
ra
universe there is any one hobler fetch up ralher sudden, don’t ye?” sho
From thejr position
m the bow-vm- :! than In
------my guMdinn.
guardian, and Dora, darling, asked of a bystander, as sne brushed the
WOMAN CANW\H£A1TH OF W
dow, where they are
uro watching
vouching with
w,th ■ I_______________
or nobility
"l dirt from her garments.
wen mateJ.
mated, ,for
nobility and
fascinated eyes the cloud-phantasy of ’heroism are kindre 1 qualities, and after
SYMPATHIZE V/ITH ■-frt THE HOPE
—It having been found that the an­
gtooiu rent by lurid light which' the what has passe I you can never call
kTHE RACE
cient fish-like taste of Boston water is
Which 1 will b‘« 11 i C ‘-i I" Clw&lt;e out.
storm presents to their visiorl. the gills your.?clf a coward?’
due to lire decay of something with a
can mw the (rack up and down for some
Dora stopped her mouth with a kiss. very long anti intricate Latin name the
—
N.
K
Ledger.
■
Bostonians
now
drink
it
with
great
gushxiddeuly a tremendous crash startles
,to.—‘mindrJph^at
them to their feet, and st the same
i A Game of Brag Cat Short.
—Tthe bustlq Is about to assume pro­
.instant a lightning flash illumines t^e
“Well, there's one thing I’m thank- portions again, opt, min alive, vou
whole sky and surrounding objects.
Eteantiru’s tace grows very pate, as fnl for.” said Hannah Smiley, ns she inusn’t call it a bustle. The new-fan­
she graapt* her coni pan ion’s arm. and laid aside her work apron and'prepared gled idea is a “tournure." 1*. S.—It is
point* down upon the track.
• : to sit' down with her knitting for the made of newspapers, same as the old
“ Dora, the great elm at the foot of ertnM*. “We hadn’t to move this style. Send in your subscriptions now.
—-New Haven Register.,
the terrace has been struck. See, it
“That’s so. Hannah,” said Ichabod.
—A lecturer was onee in a dilemma
has fallen acro-M* the track. The seven
••It's a torn ble job to move, that's a which he will probably never forget.
lour. ■ Worn, they will be wrecked, for fact. Lein me see. We moved into this White talking, about art the ventured
the curve will prevent them seeing the house seventeen yean ago next first o' the assertion: “Art can never improve
-danger boforelt is to late. ”
May. didn't we?’*' - *
nature?'’ ’ At Zhal moment soma one
1* Nineteen years Ago, 1 think,” sug­ in the audience cried out in a gruff
gested Hannah.
voice: "Can’t he? Well, then, how
&gt;bhF’
OF &lt;’UR OWN M.JNFF.' CTUliE
•• Well. bte • mat ho* time does fly, do yqn think you would look without
to bo sure.. 1 gntM you’re right. Nine­ your wig?”
,
i(
is aerou lhe river, and there is no Other teen yean ago. Uhxldran- all living at i —Oscar Radingote was Adalbert Ma- LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S
home then. Jehial nor Mary wasn't hafly’s adopted son. Years ego. .when
for five mites.” ,
'
• . ,
VSGETABia COKPOTOD.
’•We created thh rivet-’ yta^rftay. either of ’em mame4,^n,’ no* some o’ Gwendolen was . but a baby, and the
Eteanore. Cauwe not dojt new? Tam their children are in the high-sohool.” proud father bad gone out pne evtining
going to try.”
, . “ $yi'W more advantages than their for another bucket; of soothing sirup to
fathers ana mothers had, 1'11 warrant.” . keep her from bowling the ‘ roof of tbe
| "Perhaps ao, pprhapeso; butspeakin*
•’bout nfovlng. Yt don’t seem as if I house or,"he had 'fqund. Oacar, then a
«
WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH
boy of sevehl trying to'rdb a blind man.
ever could move out’o’ lifts house. Why, He had taken the little waif home,
LAPSES CTEJU, AbI know every jog and plank and door brought him up as his own cfclld, and
jamb hi the house. I can go all over now.-at- twenty-five, Oscar w» on the
the place in theMNHl”
Boar* o&lt; Trade; He had rtwutned the
“I thought you went all over tne old business.—Chicago Tribune.
-would p*y the forfeit;”
bouse that night you got up to turn the
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING
—The following raerborandum was
cat «ut doors and fell your whole length
down too back Maim. r
Ute other day.
We give it verbatim:
father fetch from troy: ©tie box oil adtsil
mt try to dissuade me. Ele snore. I
grcecc; seven yards off yallnr caliker
he retaliated by suddenly growing surly lore libhle a &lt;f
and remaining quite gruff the rr- -* ‘u- sluf blew; one
We believe the Three inch Tire is destined to come
evening.—New Haven Hegitdcr.
Hooombs; ten

WAGONS ONLY $60.00

Buggies, Carriages, Wheel Harrows and
_ Cultivators, Mounted Seeders,
and 4 kinds f Plows.

REED’S GEKU.NE SPRING TOOTH HARROW
ROAD SCRAPERS, SQUARE DRABS, GRIND STORES,

HERE WE ARE A&amp;AIK!

Bug-g-ies
Wagons

OUR LINE BUGGIES
EM

- -----

Phaetons

White Chappel and Coal Box-s. hang with Elliptic Springs.
Two and Three Spiing Democrats.

£3CI HAVE

STOCK

Chilled Plows, Hay Lakes and Cultivators,

E. COOK

50 wagons
FOR SALE!

aha

THREE INCH TIRE,
BETTER TH«H C0M’13N TIRE.

into general use.. Call uud

I one and one-halt yarns dux noDin; one
I anti one-half yards blew the same kind;
tow tenths 8tov pipe; two nuttruqjgs;

one Pirn Gum Shoes for

lheni.

Sold by C. L Glasgow, Nashville, Mich.

.

BENTLEY BROS. &amp; WILKINStings, . Mich., SfepiL&amp;ih» ilit il.------------------------- ------- -—

�iavesttgaUon.

He

rard. The human some fourteen railways, to fifty postwks a^yoang man. and knew his wife
ward, -and every offioee, suite a number of large wage­
during their engagement.
v Und£r the :mpn-»dd down, every paying firms, and he received 1.092 re­
V*t Mr
—Wendell Phillips has lately taken a
bailt, facilitates turns. It waa found that gold coins Ira* aediMia pie local p:&gt; .
house in Boston as old-fashioned and and
_ iemsnt. The minted anterior to 1840 are now very
babttaute than twenty as-e* hauM
almost
as
retired
aathe
one
f^om
which
Mail—.
•
w.
enormous emigration scarce. The most important point es­ and failed. Worse remain
with uwdieine.-Old Saying.
the’ work ot city improvement baa which
wniCH is
„ now m
in progress, as well on tablished was that most of the gold now
•punpatbdlc iwfiamsf
driven him. after long years of quiet j the
M on
PRICE: Alto, IF PAID IN ADVAJKX
in circulation is more or loss light in ■*in*ulti'd Dr. Jictinr’li
pOM~«IOO.
_
.
f*il tt&gt; be both weight.. Upon the total number of V&gt;M him theinjuml eu
To Advertises
—Rochester claims the oldest, lawyer momentous and lasting.
Whole dis­ coins of each year since 1817 in cirtula- save the other. Toll,
in the country. Ilia name is Azgill tricts are losing more than half their tlon there is a weight deficiency of •ltd a cut buck Ik.me in
Gib ba. and bis age is about ninety-five. population. Last year alone 15,000 per­ 84.220,790 grains. The mean loss of •dclan raid: ‘‘go to
gran
rapid division
York the patient Rent
He waa admitted to the bar in 1817, sons emigrated from Wurtemburg, weight per coin through the wear of ■•niinr'ut
oculuo»hi tt-e
and engaged in active practice fifty-. equal to nine per thousand, or nearly J circulation is 0.4325 grains. Mr. Mar­
per cent, of the population.^ From the tin estimates the loss on light gold at
jdirr" Briefly, Dr. h—A London journal says that Mr. grand duchy of Baden the emigration
•d rv ind treated Mr.
and Mrs. J. W. Mackey, of California was eleven thousand, being rather more office finds it to be actually £12 10s. '
~PEBU8K~THX8K LIBERAL AD. RATES.
t»- Ra-medr” t&lt;. ■
bonanza fame,. have been so pestered than 1 per-oept. of the population. At On light half-soyerelgns the loss is
MlAdUviHby suitors for the hand of their daugh­ this rate, even if the exodus does not much greater, ranging in ai’tual ex­
iiMtln*....
9 1.7S | 6 S4» I » AO# I • 8-0) ter that they have announced thaj she increase, and it is increasing. Germany pense from £21 Cs. to £22 16s. on
NmI.vIIU.,
s.w|_aa)| «to|K I4.no
will lose one-tenth of the flower of its £1,000 worth.
will receive no marriage portion.
Thus the coin of the
Ai*
you
troubled
»&gt;
’
people during the next ten years. But realm is in fc very had way. Individuals
3JS I_T4» J • UOO | ■ • M.00
Itoches^
IsiiiLortMtlpatoli or 1
—Miss Lizzie Safgent, the younger this statement gives only an inadequate
~
4.00
I__
8.on
f
14.00
I
"
. ind bfeddrf I ••
4 Inches.
daughter of our Minister to Germany, idea of the significance of the move­ bear the loss and Dot the Nation at
.. . r lr Rt-meih
I
Koo |
0.00 I “16.00 r IJ0.0II
intends to pursue her medical studies at ment Tho emigrants are not drawn large, the only loss of the Nation being
a tierman university. She is already' a in equal measure from all parts of the £6,000 depreciation of. gold sus­
• rzgirti. _
qualified physician, having been grad- the country. There arc local causes tained by the post-office. ‘Hie brunt
wicarrw ard.
falls upon the bankers, who do their
DHled at tbe Pacific Medical College.
that tend to make the movement much utmost to avoid paying for the recoln—It is related that when Patti de­ brisker in certain districts than in oth­ age of sovereigns and half-sovereigns,
OIINO KTRONIL
manded 85,000 for each concert from ers. In a speech made a few days ago
and are heavily loaded with coin for
Kdluw and Proprieuw. Manager J. H. Haverly h3 remarked
bv Herr Pfiuger in the chamber of dep­
that it would be equivalent to $50,000 a uties, he said that, during the last three which they can find little use. Their
plan has been to send down large
month, and added, totio voce: “The years, two-thfrds of tbe populstion of
amounts of worn corn to provincial
President of the United States works a the Baden Oberiand had emigrated. At
centers of business, where thsy sell it
year for that amount." •‘Well," re- ■this rate, in two more yean the Baden
M».hvlHe_____
to local bankers against ten or fifteen
spunded the diva; promptly, “get the Oberiand will have lost the whole of its
days’ drafts on London. Tbe banksrs
Middleville*...
President to sing for yon."
population.
The emigration from put out the coin among their wage­
VILLAGE OFFIVE KE.
(THE HfcALTH BRINGEK.)
—Queen Victoria has now but one Switzerland, though less in proportion paying customers. The London banker
President—Elihu Chipman.
than
from
south
Germany,
is
still
on
an
Recorder—Frank MeDerby.
LONG KNOWX AS
more child unprovided with a matri­
loses bis fortnightly interest on the
monial partner. This is tbe Princess extensive scale. The number who left money rather than incur the loss of PENGELL1”S WOMAN’S FRIEND
Beatrice, a young lady whois fast near­ the confederation last year in the char­ sending'the coin into the Bank of Eng­
Marshall—James L. Gregory.
acter
of
emigrants,
reached
a
total
of
Trustees—If. A‘. Barber. F. T. Boise. H. W. ing the |M)rtals of that, to most women,
land to be clipped. Mr. Martin pro­ Every mother of daughters should
H H LEDYARD.
Dona.; ay, H. R- Dicklnaou, H. M. Loe and most dreaded state— ••Old-Maid-dom." 10,900, against 7,500 in 1880, and 4,450 poses that the State should undertake
know about it—because it brings s~
She was born April 14, 1857, and is con­ in 1879. If the increase should con­ the task and expense of putting the
health
tinue
at
this
rate
for
the
npxt
eight
sequently “going on^ 26.
gold currency upon its proper footing
years the emigrants of 1890 will num­ and of keeping it there. Tne first ex­
—Kind-hearted Mr. Henry Labonchere
&gt;snrties.
ber something like 200,000. But that is
save: “Mr Gordon Arthur Howell has hardly possible. Emigration is one of pense would be £360.000. The average
recently been cruel.ly hoaxed. Some those Udes in the affairs of men which life of a sovereign is 17.9 years, ot a
half-sovereign'11.6 years. Mr. Martin
malicious person inserted in the daily
ebb and flow, and it is now on the suggests that an allowance of one grain
papers an announcement that his wife
flow. It should be remembered on the on every sovereign of twenty years old
bad given birth to twins. Every one
other hand that, in tbe opinion of the
VY LODGE NO. .17, K.ofP.. meete at It* will sympathize with Mr. Howefi, and most competent observers, the flow is and of half a grain on every sovereign Thrcat*nr&lt;l with an v of tho oomplatnta and weak.
of ten years old should be made at the
Cattle flail, Nashville, Mlchlmn, every congratulate him on the fact that
Friday evening, for the riirour.icemetil and there is no foundation for the state­ far from having reached its height, and expense of tbe State on the light cur­
that either war ‘ or revolution, contin­ rency now in existence, leaving the in­
support &lt;&gt;f *11 worthy, tr— -•—• — •* ’....
ment”.
arable Brother Kuigbtgencies which are always on the cards, dividual to bear the loss on light coins
c
—Cheng Taro Ju. the present Chiwould vastly swell its volume. The
I nes&lt;i Ambassador to the United States. two last wars in which Germany was of later date. He also suggests the
_ I Spain and Peru, is a rather corpulent engaged were followed by a great in­ use of £1 notes.—London Telegraph.
backaches and exhaustion.
] m.in, of medium height, apparently crease in emigration. For the'present
m«cellnnr«»Uta Oirda.
Didn’t Like Cigars.
[ About fifty years old. and wears large exodus several reasons may be assigned;
1 spectacles. His cue, which reaches but tbe main causes are doubtless a de­
While
riding
down
town
in
a'smokOffice cast *1
" | almost to the ground, is slightly streaked sire on the part of those who emigrate ing-car of the Sixth avenue line, a re­ Who aufler from Hot Flu*hc*. either before or
. (Hike hour.
with gray, but his thin, drooping mns- to better their condition and escape porter of tho New York Star was a wit­ afur change. ct from any of tho irrcguluntic. at_ Lac he is as black as jeL
from the blood tax which. In Germany ness to on amusing occurrence. A port­
1&gt;
—A correspondent of the London especially, is exacted with such merci­ ly and well-dressed gentleman sat op­
All thcro, and many other &lt;II»tree,slnc com­
less severity. On this side of the At­ posite him. Ho was smoking a fragrant
plaint*. usually attributed »o other cau«e*. bu»!
\\ ales: ••The Americans are pushing lantic • there are hard work, and not cigar, which he. appeared to enjoy really
peculiar to th- trox. WILL CEItT.VIXLV
DIM&gt;XWS IRON niTTERS are
.heir trade here with great energy, and ,too much of it, little pay. scant freedom, hugely. AJ. Twenty-third street a per­
i certain cure fur all diseases
&gt;n some articles have ousted and in and tbe conscription, with the contin­ son in tho garb of a lady entered the
ML Hh
LEUCORRHCEA
equirlag a complete tonic; cepcJ., ethers are ousting British manufactures. gent liability of being called out for vehicle. She carried at least $500 worth
;..“y Indigestion, Dyspepsia* InterIl has al wavs been a puakle here why service in the field and maimed or of dry goods on ber person, not to speak
nlttcnt Fevers, Want of Appetite,
— I Br-ttsh dealers are elbowed out so con­ killed. On the other side of the Atlan­ of her rich jewelry and the beautiful
x»s of Strength, Ixick of Energy,
j teutedly, and why they do not take the tic. for all but tho idle, there are careers King Charles spaniel which she bore on
•io. Enriches tho blood, strength‘ j same ptiios as the Americans to study with untold possibilities, good wages, her arm. This striking vision attracted
•iis the muscles, nnd gives new
tn.- wants of their customers. The unrestricted freedom, no enforced mili­ the attention, if not the admiration of
It. PENG ELLY, M. I).,
ife to tho nerves. Acts like a
I answer given is that the trade is too tary service, and a chance of war so re­ every gentleman in tbe car, except the
■harm on the digestive organs,
•” ' small. The Americans believe that mote as to be hardly appreciable. The happy man referred to. He seemed to
«j7tu..j • KALAMAZOO, M»ril
Hull * Drug .uwc Vrn.
-cmcM'lng nil dyspeptic symptoms,
’■ small beginnings often have great end- wonder, after all. is less that so many be absorbed in his cigar and entirely
-ich as tasting the food. Belching,
lr1 lugs.”
tro to America as that so many oblivious to the charms which druggists
AS II BRAHV la.-»e»
Teat In the Stomach, Heartburn,
remain in Europe. If the United States and modistes dispense to the fair sex.
tc. Hhc only Iron Preparation
A LITTLE SOXSENSE.
continue prosperous it is hardly possi­
The lady gazed on this imperturable
bat will not blacken the teeth or
ble that emigration should not increase; man in astonishment. She coughed
(j. Ollii-r opposite L !&gt;»&gt;(■ Il—Uurresoondence that explains it­ for the destination of nine-tenths of
and sneezed gsntly. but he heeded her ,
“
FOB
self: “bear father, send mo an X— those who cross the ocean in search of
not. She arose, walked across the car ।
»-our son.” “Aly dear son. 1 am not fortune is the great republic of the
BROWN CHEMICAL CO.
and opened a window near the snioker.
tll Re.xl&gt;
so X-senii-rio—your father."
Baltimore, Md.
He would not take the hint, but smoked
Loaded to the muzzle: “What is
on.
She
could
stand
it
no
longer,
and.
aiilevd
LIVER
ANO
BOWELS.
Just Like Him.
I this mao charged wth?” asked the
again arising, she walked over to the
u&gt;«* the ■r’trtn ot the acrid pefeaa
I Judge. “With whisky, yer Honor,”
Ui* drtacfial auOcrliur which
Bljah brought out a little, fat. bald­ gentleman, deliberately drew the cigar
• replied the sententious policeman.
headed man, who rubbed his hands to­ from his lips, and threw it through
THOUSANDS OF CASES
— That is a bon-ton family, indeed, gether and smiled sweetly and waited the window into the street.
The man’s features never moved, and
I on Filth Avenue. New York, who calls for business to begin.
“What’s the name?” queried his he remained as quiet, statuesque and
the servant who washes and takes care
PERFECTLY CURED.
composed as before. Neither was the
of the dishes. “Our Minister to China.” Honor.
lady'Hurried.
She took her seat com­
“Verschillende bladen wijzen in den
— Yonkcru Gazctle.
posedly opposite the gentlemAn, and
laatsten
tijd
op
de
min
vriendelijke
— Ixird
whose popularity was not
verhoudiug tusschen l)i’’schland en patted her pretty spaniel as it lay in her
excessive in a certain Scotch town,
Rmffand,” blandly replied the prisoner. lap.
having refused an importunate beggar,
arau Ol C»x» 1 i uaa EHrwu w
— • «—
Bijah hurried into the corridor to
By this time Fourteenth street was
felled. Ill* mild, but •fflcient, CEUTAI5
she renewed her application: “Now.
reached, the car window was still open,
iuy Lord, if ye’d just gie mo nne little laugh.
Inc Clerk hung on to himself until and the gentleman showed signs of ac­
oaxpeuce. I could treat every friend ye
Life loan the important organ* of
tion. Qtflck as thought he seized the
he waa black in the face.
The natural action of the Kidney* I
have in the toon.”
His I lb nor looked a little nervous, spaniel and sent it yelping into the
—A recent writer says Indians are but braced up and Raid":
street through tho open window. The
“bard to impre a. Their powers of
“You are charged with being drunk lady screamed, dashed through the
ratiocination are lamentably feeble.” and disorderly. What have you got to door after the animal, and was seen no
ACOB OSMUN. Llvervman, Iwro hear Woi Their ••ginatory reserve,” however, is say?”
more.
cott House Flmt claw* turnout* at reason
“Gestort, naardien de regeering zelve,
“Served her right," was tho verdict
able rate* Special rule* to commercial men fullv equal to the supply at the agent’s
Funeral and wcllng parties furnished with car -tation. This may be counted on as o gruwel! rijpelijk heeft overwogen. dat of the passengers.
Have Signed or Endorsed the
an anthropological fact.
schending van den Sabbath in deze in
—Tho latest joke out about King dan heiiiging." was tbe reply.
A Horrible Tragedy.
Following Remarkable
- SPRING MEDICINE.
ELLOGG A BELL, proprietors Planing Kalakaua. of pie Sandwich Islands, is
The court,bent* over to look down
Alwoy* euro* BLLIOU0XESS, uOSSHPAA horrible domestic tragedy took
Mill Planing and Matching, Re*»whi«
orrr.
.11 VCViT.l nianaec*.
Document:
that tie cannot help being a good man. upon tbe prisoner, and the prisoner
The reason assigned is that his ances­ looked up with a smile which was con­ place the other night at Mount Ida,
about forty miles west of Hot Springs,
_
tors ate so much missionary in their fidence itself.
••What language is that?” finally' Ark., in which the wife of a farmer
tune that it worked into their systems
HAS W pF.MARAY. Dealer In Wau he*
named Charles Lard was instantly
asked tho court.
GET IT OF YOU?. DBUGG1ST. HUCE.tl.Oe
Clock*. fine Jewrlrt ami Silverware Bring and wait transmitted into their descend­
killed.
Mr. Lard and wife had been
“De Holland," was the answer.
ants. Missionaries who are eaten, are
WELLS B1CU1EIWOS
annoyed for several nights by a wild
“Can’t you speak English?”
after all not wasted, it would appear.
animal
of
«ome
kind,
supposed
to
be
a
“De Amerikanen geven in velezaken
—An Austin editor was writing at
panther. They had watched for it on
een
voorbeeld,
sells
bij
brandgevaar
in
TOHN BRAUN, Slioetnaker. Special alien-. home, when hia numerous children dis­ pablicke gebouwen," said the little the night of tbe tragedy until they j&gt;etf U&lt;&gt;:&lt; glvt-n to flue Uud mwd boots, al* turbed him. whereupon he howled to
cume sleepy, and retirefl. |Mrs. Lard BEATTYS (UiGAhS xiFUp-IOh-ii
repaintig. AU niauufacturvd work tnadc from। his wiie: “I’m busy writing an edito- man, with a grand bow.
“That may be English, bat it’s not arose soon after and went to the back ———I) |po I’j i&gt;e. el'.a up Rare hnltda
be^t of mum k and warranted. First door south1 rial, denouncing the infliction of cor­
room of the bouse, over the door of
Babe's imniwarr.
poral punishment on children in the the kind I speak. I guess I’ll suspend which was an open space of about six
Enblie schools of Texas, and if those sentence on you and let yon go. You’d inches.
Lard became aroused by a
better
go
home."
rats isterrupt me once more I’ll get
J_£ A. BAKBKIt. M. D..
“All geene bijzondere bepalingen noise in the adjoining room, made by
up and wear my cane out on them.—
over 'oengekomen sijn, komen daar- Mrs. Lard getting upon a table to look
’ IIOM&lt;KOI&gt;ATinc
Peuu fiii~tings.
doorde gemaakte gerechtskosten ten out into the yard. Her husband saw oulrt- t er. G W.ISIJRAIIAM A Co . ftoetun. Mm*
—The little fellow had discovered a lasto van den eischer," said tho pris­ her head, an4 being near sighted, fired
Physician and Surgeon.. bee crawling upon bis hand. Finally oner.
his gun, and then called to his wife to QLEMEMT SMITH,
as be bowed three times.
the bee stopped tor a moment, and
get up as there was something in the
“You can go."
Ottk c first door east of .Opera House, and! niter remaining stationary for an in­
house.
He called again but received
Attorney at Law,
near rt-l.lt-ix-c on corner of Washington and
The little man puton his hat, worked
stank stnng tbe little fellow. When op a sweeter smile, and bowed with a no answer. He then struck a match,
State Street*. NaahrUJe, Mich.
6
the cry of pain was over, tbe little child grand flourish, as he said:
when the awful truth was revealed to
said to its mamma that he didn’t care
''WOLCOTT HOLME,
“Een geleerde, sobrijft near aanleid- him, and his screams brought in the
fer the bee’s walking about on him. bat­ ing van de outheilen door het uitblaxen neighbors. The grief of the husband
he didn't like his sitting down on him.- van petroleumlampen het volgende?” and the dead wife willering In bergore
—Dagt^n Journal.
&lt;A. 8. Foote, Proprietor.
“I don’t want any more of ’em,” presented an appalling scene.
—“Woman’s worst enemy is a false sighed his Honor, as the prisoner passed
&amp; Counsellor)
—Angus McDonald, whose head waa
sentimentalism” said a recent writer. out
“Cail the next-’—DetroU Free
shot offhis cap at the battle of Water­
How many nights have we lain awake
loo—or whose cap was shot off the bat­
• thinking of this very same thing! It
—A Philadelphia smoker removed tle at the head of Waterloo—or whose
has been tho one disturbing element of
our life, this “fa^tc sentimentalism.” the cigar from his mouth on entering a wattle was shot off his Baterloo at the £AKB 11
We’ve thought of it and thought of it, horse car, but insisted on retaining it head of his cap—or whose cap—Well,
iJeykfe. AattamMttta. lu’erfpraarro. Isfrine*
and tried to banish it from our thoughts in hia hand. The conductor warned he’s dead, anyhow, at the age of 106
Colk, Proprietor.
but still it is with us disturbing our him to throw it away, as the amoke
from
it
was
offensive
to
the
women
waking hoars, roiling up oar dreams.
**»rr a rkrro.
plrtile
—A Boaton Justice discharged a man
But we can’t help it if women do suffer passengers, and finally ejected him by
■peM a day'* reeresUoa.
A 'new’ .1
from It 'Why don’t they go out and force. He sued the company for dam­ Silty of assaulting a woman in that •bandance of row boat. ; alto ffohfng
ages, but the verdict is against him, the
y,.on the ground that the assault was
court charging the jury that he was a committed at one o’clock at night, and
••worst enemy'1
nuisance that the conductor had a right a woman had no business to be out at
/faster.
ALBERT M. HARRI ,

!)

*

.

Koffl

UashrUlr gircctont.

TO GIRLS

TO YOUNG LADIES

I

TO OVER-WORKED WOMEN

To Women Advanced in Life

D1

KIDNEY-WORT

THE GREAT CURE
RHEUMATISM

j:E'

Over 5000

KIDNEY-WORT

Druggists
AND

O“?

Physicians

J

KIDNEY-WORT

K

KIDNEY-WORT

NO PATENT NO PAT.

£,*• ■&lt;**

BOOT AND SHOE MAKER,

Mifflins

4THBLN HOUSE,

------- a. »■ Arniaflt,i&gt;oFM»»g»L.

Dr. Tanner played with A lion cub id

Photographer’s Supplies.
FRAMES, VKLVFIS, MATB,*GLaM.

AMBJUQAJi OPTICAL CO« BOXES

and

Mt H.10M M.M.

DETROIT. RICH.

�——
•one per-

left standing. Tbe destruction of property
was estimated at IXAOCll

Jumna Bmaimjit. of tbe United States
Soprcnie Court, on tbc 19th dAriod tbe mo­
tion of Mr. tired, Galleaa’s cuunsel, for a writ
ilf kit&amp;M* Cur/HM.
Tax Atabamalteputalasn SUu Convention
wm on tbe 1*11. called to ttee: at Mtmtgomery on tbe 7th of Joly.

Tua etable of M. M. 8*wtn, at Cambridge,

FOREIGN.
Alexandria dispatch ot the 15tb states

thirteen bor»e« were burned to death.
fsclurlng chemical* in tbc United States,
which turn out products valued at $117,407,OW. '
.
James R Dotls. recently convicted in Chl-

riot at Alexandria on the Hth was believed’

condemned aa unpatriotic the persistent op­
position m church authority manifested by
certain ladies of tbe Parnell branch of the

uwed: To facilitate the trial
election ^suma; authorizing

pniiTMtlnt tfiie.OUG.UW tn pay pension*: levy­
ing au immigrant tax of fifty cent* per head
ou vessels bringing for; Ijraer* to our shore*,
ths nmwat to be paid to the Collectors of Cus•MUL The 1411 providing that Collectors of In­
ternal Kovenue shall be appointed for a term
ot four year* was defeated.
DOMESTIC.
Tub fourth well Ln the new oil-field in
Warren County, Pennsylvania, was struck on

ri barrels per day.
the Ht*.h in Two Mile Creek, near Winchester,
Ky^ by a flood carrying away a cabin fa which
they were sleeping.
#
John Nklsox, a dry-goods merchant of Re l

15th. In returning home tbe boat caught on
tbc ferry cable, and Mrs Nelson and Miss

Uith by vigCauta and riddled with bullet*, be-

Duaixn a fierce hall-storm which swept over
Kentucky on the evening of the lUh a disttttenr at Frankfort wa. act on tire bv iighcntag and totally destroyed, eau.tog n kMs of
$75,000. Two colored employes were fatally
. injured by falling walls.
'
On the 15th a party of sixty-two Rouma' nisns, accompanied by an interpreter, landed
i*. Castle Garden. They brought along nine

.

Tnsexporta of petroleum during the month
ot April were valued at &lt;4.186,055. For tbe ten

agatart $31,401,186 for tbe corre-

killed.
TMBtaainea* fallnre* in tbe United States

ccntiy resigned and returned home. Regret­
ting bls hMty action, be killed himself with
a revolver In his father’s bedroom on tbe 18th.
A Boston’ dispatch of the 19th states that
within a week hundreds of good imitations of
410 greenbacks of the issue of 1875 had been
put in circulation in Boston by. a gang of ex­
pert counterfeiters. The work was being done
systematically and on a large scale, and tbe of­
ficers thus far had been unsuccessful in their
efforts to trace the criminals The bad bill wm
well ealeulaUdto deceive. Among the nolnta'
of difference between good aud bad Is aSligkt
irregularity in the shape of the letters In the
line on the top at tbeface of the counterfeit:
•‘This note is a legal tender for leu dollars.”
On tbe counterfeit there is no space between
the words ••for" and ‘•ten." In the word
“printing.” just below the words "for ten."
tbe last four letters, "ting.” are iu italics.
On the back of tbe counterfeit the word
“Thia," In the inscription beginning: !‘Thls

"Advice* received on tbe 10th state that
tbe destruction by the wind-storm in Iowa
wm more widespread than at first reported.
Tbe storm traveled nearly three hundred
miles through the center of the State, every• where killing, maiming and destroying. Tbe
death list had been increased at Grinnell.
Malcom and other polnU. Governor tiberujbii had Issued a proclamation calling for
aid for needy sufferch, and already subscrip­
tions were pouring in. It wm thought that
over one hundred lives had been aacriflccd,
and tlie property loss would probably exceed
$1,000,000.
Duriso May there arrived at tbe porta of
the United States 141,035 Immigrant*.

PERSONAL AND POLITICAL.
Tna Arkansas Democratic btete^Conventlon assembled at Little Rock on the 15tb.
Judge James H. Berry wm nominated for
Governor by acclamation.
The platform
adopted favors educating tbe masse* by
means of free public schools; favor* immi­
gration, and recommend* to the lx-gtsialurc

and capital to tbe State; and reaffirm* and
approves tbc National Democratic platform
of 1880. A .resolution wm also adopted
thanking tbe Federal ’Government for Its
generous and timely aid to tbe sufferer* in
the Mississippi Valley by the late overflow.
noted lawyers of New Hampshire, died on
tbe 15th al Nashua, at tho age of seventy-

A CMkMUCSTOK (B. C.) dispatch ot the 15th
aay s that, during the registration of voters 'at
the northern boundary of the county, nine
colored men were arrested for Intimidating
tlwi Supervisor of Registration was arrested

Tins ^publicans of the Sixth Indiana Dis­
trict hare renominated General Thomas

COXVXXTIOX of colored Journalists will

Meuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago,
Battacho, Soreness of the Chest,
Govt, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swell-

Seeddt, Genera! Bodily
Paint,
.
Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted
Foot and Eart, and all other
Pains and Aches.
.

.French explorer,

rested at Dedham, Masi., for practicing
burglary us a profession.
A nw days ago the Ancient Order of Biber-

RHEUMATISM, Over 500 Suits
At less than yon can boy the Cloth aid Trimmings.

atantly washing sthore.
growing worse hourly.

have decided to continue operations at Castle

Having just returned from the East with three immense
stocks for Nashville, Big Rapids and Cadillac, which
gives us the advantage over small dealers, who
purchase for one store only, we are offering

centH murdered wnOe exploring the River.
Platt, in Bolivia.
’
•
An Alexandria dispatch of the 16th states
that the Khedive wm attempting to form a
mw Ministry. The Egyptian Government
wm supplying native Christiana with pass-

the European population throughout the land
was hourly increasing.
A raw On the 17th caused a damage of $75,­
000 to the publishing-house of Hunter, Rose
A Co.; of Toronto, Canada.
Tub Canadian fishing schooner La Byrenc,

SOLD BT ALL DBUGGIBT8 AND DEALEES

-

.XMJODSBMS'

-

A. VOGELEH St CO.,

huge fee-

Tux polite of London on tbe 17th found fa
a stable in Clerkeuwell 100,000 round* of
ammunition. 400 rifles with bayonets, and
twenty-five boxes of revolvers.
Thues sons of Duncan Taylor, of Brussel!*,
OnL. aged eight, six and four years, while
playtag in toe stable on tbe 17th, went into
tbe oat-bin, tin* IId of which closed on them.
All were found dead from *uffocatlna.
Up to tbe 17th tbe total number ot European
corses found at Alexandria, Egypt, was 340.
It was then estimated that the number of
Europeans killed in the riot of the preceding
Sunday was about 400.
Two laborer* were drowned at Pnspebiac,
near Quebec, the other day by the sinking of
a beat In which they wen- rowing. On tbe
same day the rising tide at Isle aux Grues
drowned two children, covering the island
open w£icb they were st play.
One Mieling, one of the chief navigators of

oepting » briber of 150,000 rabies to give the
Russian Government copie* of plans of all
defensive works on tbe German coast
Twmty-sbvsn Apache prisoners were shot
by tbe Mexican Authorities at Chihuahua on
tbe 10th. They had been captured in recent
figtit*, and met their doom in a defiant manner.
The only new events fa Egyptian affair* on
the 10th were that the Alexandria banka were
preparing for a siege, and Arabi Pasha wm
making efforts looking to the restoration cf
order. Bedouin Arab* were lurking in the
nelgbliorlHKHl of Ismail*, on the Suez Canal,
and the inhabitant* were alarmed.
A 8t. John’s (N. F.) dispatch of the 10th
states that the American sebooaer Maasasoit,
under full sail, had encountered «n ictb~rgofl
Newfoundland, and sank instantly, five of hei
crew being lost.

-

LATER NEWS.

The Arkanaas Greenback State Convention
met at Little Rock on the 39th. R. M. Garland
was nominated for Governor. Tbc platform re­
affirms the principle* of the ArkansM Demo­
cratic platform of 1878, whichtbcGreenbackers
chrim wu taken from them by the Democracy;
favors free schools; the bolding of the State
in order to insure a fair election and prevent
ticket clipping; declares against relief bills
for bondsmen of defaulting State officers, and
for a rigid prosecution of defaulting officials;
favors Immigration, and charges that the
Bourlxxi* hare so governed the State as to ex­
clude the Industrial classes.
A Washington dispatch of tbc 20th states
that Gniteau still claimed that he waa an agent of tbe Deity bat might have to suffer a human

F. T. BOISE,

Our stobk in this line is the largest and finest we ever of­
fered. All Goods from a substantial school suit to the finest
dress suit. We have in stock more boys’ and youths’ clothing
than the combined stock of any house in town. Our stock

BUM,

ROOKS,
JEWELRY,
WAX*!* PAPER,
Boots, Shoes And
WINDOW SHADES,
Is full up and PLENTY OF THEM.
»1K STUFFS,
PROPRIETARY MEDIOLNES,

PKESCKIPT1O.WS,
RECEIPTS,

PAINT AND BRUSH
DEPARTMENT

Groceries,

Ready pay purchasers
desired. WE OWN THE GOODS at about 70 cents on the
dollar. You can save money, and be comparatively happy by
buying your goods
.

Cheap! Cheap! Cheap!
We wont your BUTTER and EGGS and will allow yon
PINE WOODS PRICES.
Respectfuly

W. JL ilYLSWORTH.
Call and Examine!

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN

F. T. BOISE.

WOOL

Gent* l-’n

Goods.

CARDING
AND SPINNING

If you want something new. neat and nobby, just take a look at our stock of

CUFFS. COLLARS, TIES, HAHKERCHIEFS, JEWELRY, BTC.

NewC anting- Mill
FORTHK LEAST MOREY. „

ROLLS, OR YARN!

Remember that we [have no old, shop-worn and unseasonable goods, bat that everything la

all the wool of this section, with

ganl to bls future in paradise.
pentcr, of Pittsburgh, Pa, on tbe 30th killed
himself and hi* wife with a butcher-knife.
Tun Democrats of tbe Eleventh Indiana

For $4 and $5, we are selling a very good every day
Suit, many styles to select from.
For $8 and $10, we are selling a very desirable diagonal
worsted, bound and made in sack and frock styles. Other
stores get $12 for the same suits.
Our 12-00 and 14-00 Suits will surprise you.
For 15.00 we can give you a suit you need not be asham­
ed to wear any place, and would cost $18 to $20 at any store.
OUT 16.00 and 18-00 Sults are well made and trlmed. and for fit and wear can not b&lt; .-‘gualed.

STOCKING YARN

«*• All our purchases are made with tbc cash and by strict attention to the wants of our
customers we expect to reapsncecw.
Nashville, Apr. 30,1882.

______________

County.

Stocking Tarn
.

«O.OUll Colorado led the list, with California

Thebe arc •bontlXncw.papcrs fa the United
States edited by colored men, all of them
woeklfa* except the Galveston (Tex.) Apro-

NEED NOT WAIT

Washington, dosed iu labors on the 30th.
A St. Petbmbub® (Russia) telegram of
the 19th announces that Melville found the To have their woo! manufactured into it, as I
bodies of DeLong and his companions on the
They were all decently interred, and

Two boxes of records and

warrant for assault and battery.
Jonsson's Ha*vwm Worn, at Brock-

the!»th. Loss, «500,00a
The issue of standard stiver dollars for the
week ended June it wm W71.«8, sgalnst

Twenty-flrst Pcnnayhranta District.
Tmb Utah Commission, aa agree

J. W. POWLES
Probate priler. ■

AGAIN TO THE FRONT!
With the LARGEST iii lost Cenplete Stoct of

FURNITURE
Ever laid down in any one store in Barry
or Eaton Counties.

S. Paddock, of Nsteaaka; C. F.

Our mammoth two-story double store
Is full and running over.

a $125 Parlor Suit

�JOKE, M.MW.

Is reepectftillf invited to our
ITY LOCALS

jsmw

Cordoroy Corset
J. Bowne's cellar, but 'roused U»c family and
were frightened away. Broke into tbe house of
John (table, but only found two dollars and

p.*«u r wxi broken timber, burying ta-tv.-Mh'it

window and carried Charley Hoffman’s cloth-

m&gt; rooted. and a Ito* followed after completing

Perfect Health.
•
Great Comfort and
.
I*ei-fectioii, in P'it-

Mogul engine was lifted completely off tbe
track, and the train toppled on either aid? at

BUT IS ALSO

Mra. Gita Gaylord, of VermmtaUJa. vialVxl cento for their trouble.

low injured.

■Haxa.
J tall wars

MAPLE GROVE.
Bev. Mr. McMartln, of Saginaw, burnt dto-

Leonard and Cassie Uarrlngcr have returned

CUppily clip! so says tbc sheep shears.
The McOmber school cloyd Wife week.
Sam Shafer lost a good horse last week.
Ed. Maron Is learning the brick laying trade.
Charley Dunham is building a wall under his

tho building j&gt;t Prof. J.
up in saotious, and dumped In a disjointed

Unde Shafer is treating hia barn to a coat of

WMkiltoA The Howell Hotel, at Rosedale, a

tflllod. and Fred Howell had a leg broken. At

Woodland chap, bow you like tbe
; bow you eujoy your ride.

I^vl Brooks drives a new team, harness and
wagon. *
II. Donaray has the addition to bls house
and family rusticated in
last Sabbath. Charley thinks it's finished.
Elmer Shafer and family have returned from
Hillsdale.
Ing, to be at Nashville, July 3d. If you cannot

WARRENTED NEVER TO BREAK!
$10.00 REWARD,

.

around almost demented, carrying a lantern
iu which there was no gtasa or light, shaking

single Injury of magnl-

Dealer in Dry COods, Notions &amp; Fancy Goods
NASHVILLE, MICH.

_____ .

Lumber!
Lumber!

Hearing that ^ats are so numerous in
block
some parts of Florida that it is feared
they will wholly destroy the watermel-.
on crop, a Northern paper asks, "Where
this vicinity F. W. wnitams' bouse was un­ are thecat8Tr’ The cats, any one in Flor­
roofed. Prof. Herrick's and Mrs. Morris' two ida would be able to answer, were eat­
en up before the melons were attack^
\ Have the largest stock of LUMBER ever laid
ed.
.
Nashville.
down tn NuhriOe.
.
ot it that Li not scattered over tho adjoining
country la dumped Into the cellar. There

‘FOWLER &amp; INGERSON

Fred Quick and Charley Slade have the beat
looking corn in town.
.

100,000

EATON COUNTY.

very pleasant vtalt with friends and relatives
Frank Streeter and Sam Cotton are the hap­
pound. But little wool will go to V ermontville piest men in town. A girl at Frank‘&lt; and a boy
Mosquilos evidently take the people oP this
Mr. H. J. Miller, of Eaton, with his family,
as vtolling in Sunfield last week. They report vicinity for the House of Congress, as they are
that Mrs. Bennett waa so badly injured from a continually presenting their bills and lobbying
them through.__
I*.. E. Pas mt, J a.
“Wrills and Billy Hill, upon being severely
BI
SMAR
K.
interviewed concerning the Clarabell, replied:
“Tell feim V&gt; ‘Hold tbc fort, for I am coming,’
Com to very feeble.
and if he cannot wail, never mind good looks,
Wheat to beaded out
but tome on.”
“Let-us" and vinegar.
Wc are not the “feller" that did that fast
Haying time is at band.
riding In Boston recently. Wc are no relation,
A light frost Tuesday morning.
tn fact, do not approve of fast nd! ng; even the
Quiltings arc perfectly in order Dow.
speed of oar faithful borines sometimes makes
Sauer kraut plants arc being act ouL
us homesick and dizzy.
Tbe wool crop is well nigh harvested.
The ladies’ aid society met at Mrs. Peter
Potatoe bugs bld fair for a large crop.
Week's Jost Wednesday, afternoon, and will
Ed. Preston still tarries In tbe far west.
meet at the ATcabytcrian church next WednesThomas Walsh*displays a new carriage.
Carnot bushes have found a vile enemy.
Dr. Snyder of Bunfield, to plastering his
.
%
Mr. Robert Barry and John Kilpatrick, both dwelling.
On Monday Manllobfan Breezes fanned this
genial Scotchmen and well-to-do farmers, and
ho have tasted the sweets and bitters of fight- domlnkm.
Jennie Downing has gone east on visit
among friends.
torn I c.
A heavy rain fell tn the north part of the
Mr. Elmer Kilpatrick, from near Petoskey, state of Bunflcld last week.
who had the misfortune to break one of his
Sbsytown haa a Lemon news importer and
limbs while felling a tree last winter, passed A. Bark justieeof tbe peace.
'
through this place last Wednesday on his way
Dr. Hunt is one of the busiest mep in Amer­
to Woodjpnd, where be intends to cierk in Dr. ican and to bound to live.
Mr. Bark with an eye to a bountiful harvest,
This is a Vermontville item, but we must to building a place wherein to sto.-e his goods.
We took in Charlotte last Thursday; waa
tang. We tried to cheat him oat of it, but the made Esq. Friday, and bought court room
doctor to nearly as good a judge of tbc equine chain Saturday.
race m we are. Wc wantedit for that young
P. C. Grimes’saw mill went up tn smoke
early test Friday morning. Tbc fire when dis­
hired girl.
covered waa beyond control. No insurance.
No, "Writist," we promise not to poach on Tbc boiler and engine are not seriously injured
the rest to a total taa. P. C. G. wJH resume.
how you flred Grimes’ saw mill, got drunk and
•
Niurm.
ran horses, came home last Saturday night at a
qaestlonaWe boor and in a questionable man
WOODLAND.

Agnes Holly is just recovering from a severe
Last Sabbs tl&gt;

Retail Price, $1,00.

For Sale Only by

Is hardly a sign left ot IL In the vicinity stood

_________________

Who will help u* celebrate tbc “Glorious 4th."

watch that half-bushel potatoes.

°0B8*t torn.,, u U» NEW
CORDOUOr MATERIAL, UMdlQ nfaxof lha boot; Uil,
.utnUiuto for bone will noloeUy 1mu«

ruined. Dr. AL N. Scott's bouse- was turned
alrnovt completely around. C. W. Hobart's will be paid to any lady, breaking the aubstitate for whalebone IN HIX MONTHS ORDINARY
WEAR- ANY dealer is authorized to pay that amount, under our guarantee.

Will Witbcral Ua* sold his fine, young home

Mr*. Clark Foote, of Charlotte, waa mingling

This COHRET is matte in the newest French share, 14 inches
long, elaborately mbrcMmi. GOKE8 CORDED CROSS WWE,
U.rrrilr,,* »
,i...
. . a t-

Clark's bouse was blown off, also bls born.
Tbc home of Mr. Merrill, of Klmb--.il A Mcrrilt
was unroofed. Then followed rows of bc-nse*
in East RL Ixtuto than on this side of the river.
Nearly al! the southern part of that town was
Hooded with water," and some fifty houses occupiod by poor famllta wore more or leas In­
jured. and several blown down entirely or
twisted out of shape. Women and children
left their homes and wad&gt;.-d round in muddy
water for hours, seeking safe shelter from the
storm, filiinj the freight-cars and occupying
other places of refuge. Tho total Idas cannot
fall short of 330,010. and may be more.

Tbe blackest gloom is over Grinnell. It to a
lovely city of 2/&gt;» inhabitants twenty-five

all In a beautiful grove of maple and elm
trees. ’Tin fearful tornado of last night firit
struck Kelly, a station forty miles wvsL on the
Chicago 4 Northwestern Hood, and did mrch
damago already known before reaching Grinp. m. Tbe people saw it fully five minutes be­
fore it came, and were, almost panic-stricken.

northern sky was bung with conical down

Among them John Carhart's, Rufus Recker's
R. Schall's, editor of tho Signal: then Prof.
Buck's residence, and L. C. Phelps', and a
bouse belonging to Mr. Haves.
The hurricane took everything north of
President Magoun's homo, leaving that unlnjuord. At the northwest corner of the dty tbe
storm leveled tbe bouse of Wilson Ellis, as also
that of J. M. Roas- his wife was sl'ghtly In­
jured. and the bouse of Henry Spaulding was
leveled. Then the home of Mr. Kimball. of
Kimball 4 Merrill, dry-goo Is dealers. A. J.

foundation. The dwelling of Attorney Gunn
waa leveled: also. G. B. Grinnell's, dry-goods
merchant; also, tbe new boost of Graham, the
killed and her bouse demo!ishe t John Merrill's
bouse was blown a distance, apparently In tbe
teeth of Ute wind. Note alga is left of the bouse
of Madison Howard. The house of George Hamrains, Gearxe Jennings' new f&amp; OX) bouse is in
kindling wood and broken planter. Two
bouses bcloorlng to Mr. Batebam. and rente 1
by Mrosra. Ilwls and Dilts, were obliterated,
althouxh the houses of James Hanlon. Philip
Cb-ndcnntng, Henry Jamoo, Henry Pitman,
Marcus Wightman. William Cullboa. Deacon
K. Kelnfrod

completely demol shed.

nlth wag lurid, and brilliant, qpd unearthly.

filled one with HLdshnoS dread. Almost ere
tbe brilliant apparition tn tbe west had dis-

half a block, the fragments Jamming tbe cor­
ner of tho Jones House.

panted with a roaring like tbund&lt;

of their homes in a dazed sort ot way, replying
willingly to all questions asked and laughing
in such a pathetic manner at some ridiculous
in Mont, while some near and d^ar friend is

or per-

freight trains. Chimneys, trees ami boros
began tn fly like leaven. People took to

probably tho
Tbe wind and rain and
blinding lightning continued so furious for

their doont. but tbcdamr.go was done -i a very
explosive force, not Infrequently carrying
out one side or end of a bouse. Within the

The fanners have been busy replanting their । thrown Io the west and another to the east.
corn the'past week.
| Most of the buildings were crushed like egg­
I. N. Harte has gone to Albion to attend the . shells and reduced to splinters. All who had
cellars were

late graduate from
Remember tbc 8. 8. Institute at the M. E. loss of life waa where the people remained in
Princeton College, and we believe him to be
church on Sunday nighL They have a • their houses. It took a sweep about one
not only a scholar bat a gentleman.
good program, and an interesting time is ex ] thousand feet wide, and mowed everything to
i tbe ground, leavingAut a portion of half n
Quite» number of our citizens attended tbc
reunion at Detroit, and some slippery lingered
chan relieved J. Holmes of about *90 In money

Ex-Governor Blair will deliver tbc address at
at tbe reunion of the Eaton county pioneers to
be held at Charlotte, June 37.
Mike Bclger the Olivet man who sold whisky
to the students has been fined *40 and twenty
days in jail. .He appealed tbe ea-c to the
circuit court and has given bond?.
Two Ionia youths and two young ladies were
boat riding near Grand Ledge the other day,
when their boats capsized and all went under.
They were rescued allvetl but decidedly wot
Ed. T. Smith, a law student of Charlotte,
has commenced a suit in the circuit court
agalust Olivet college for &gt;10,000 damages,
wicb be claims to have sustained by the action
of the faculty in suspending htm from the
college on a false diargn. Smith claims that
the facallty undertook to extort money from
him Id settlement of a groundless charge, and
untsia&amp;eeding in that suspended him and he
waa obliged to leave tbe school. It la under
stood he will commence suite against two or
three members of thcfaculltypersonally unless
their further services shall be dispenaed with
by the board of trustees.
Sunday night some unknown persons entered
the bouse of John Evans of Bel!evue,by prying
open the woodshed door. They took Mr. Evans’
wardrobe from the closet Into tbe kitchen and
searched all the pockets and loft the garments
atrewed on the floor/ From the clothes they
obtained a small amount of change. They al­
so took Mrs. Evans* pocket-book, which con­
tained *3 or &gt;4 in money and a small twentytwo caliber revolver. The silver ware waa not
disturbed and nothing else is mtaing. After
helping themselves to what they wanted to eat
the burglars took their departure.Mr. and Mra.
Evans were away from home at tbe time, but
Will Wing and Frankie Nelson, mar and maid
servants, were in tbc house and beard nothing
of the afllalr. .

say. half In tenni and half iu liughtef, that she
CATARRH OF THE BLADDER.
room and was looking for some article* by
Stinging, sntaning, irritation of the urinary
which to know It. She stooped and picked up pasaagesj diseased ditchaTges, cured by Buchua photograph, and burst into t-.%m. It was pabia. *1, at druggists. Mich. Depot, JAB.
,
the picture of her llttte sister, who bad l&gt;een E. DAVIS dt CO’ Delroit, Mich
■kllltd.
Many of those who ware saved In tbe do
DON’T DIE IN THE HOUSE.
Ask druggists fur “Rough on Rato." It
moltohcd dwellings had fled to the cellars,
while tbe bouses were carried from .over their clears out rata, mice, bed-bugs, roaches, veruiin,
flies, ants, insects. 15c. per box.
and sa tbe funnel fury owning. He tried to
When you hare had Catarrh long enough
just send 10c. to Dr. C. R. Sykes, 16&amp; Madi­
son Street, Chicago, for his “True Theory
of Catarrh".
C. F. Craver, whose wife and throe children

and hired giri by seeking refuge in the cellar.

Feet kept constantly on hand.

Pine Lumber
A specialty

'Finishing Lumber,
fl»ni&gt; (Viliig. Stefur. Stulliig, J«4.
Of any thing in the building material line, see
our Stock, select what you want; and behaopy,
Also Flour. Salt, ShinglcN,
and Blacksrahh'x Coal,
For calc at lowest price*.

WOOL! WOOL I

Wc are here to bur all the wool offered for
sale and can guarantee the top of the market.
HIGHEST PRICE PAID FOR

WHEAT, OATS, CORN, ETC,

FOWLER &amp; INGERSON.
---- NEW-----

CUSTOM
,

Pouring Mill

,

READY FOR BUSINESS

Every day In the year—Sundays excepted.

CUSTOM

GRINDING!

Of every dcrcrtptton, done In a superior
manner, at the drop of tbc bat; and ■
Satisfaction guaranteed.

FLOUR. MEAL AND MILL FFED
Kept constantly on hand.

Our Graham Flow

Kindness Is the golden chain by which so-

the air tilled with Hying timber*. When they

through tbc wood work

duties that arc well and faithfully performed-

damage. It blpv the gable end off one bare
weekly prayer meeting and Sabbath service, to
them was left for

The Woodland

A timely use of Brown's Iron Bitters will
strengthen tbe nerves and muscles with new
By a strict attention Ur business, and square
life and vigor, and ward off many diseases that
otherwise are to encroach upon a weak consti­
tution.
U a liberal patronage from the fanners of this
vicinity.
No more Chills and Ague in thte section.
Oar Druggist Is selling an article called
“AorzCoxqubbob.’’ Ills about tbe only
n. R. DlCKUVSO rf Jt C0.
aattofactory preparation sold for the cure of

Billions Fevers. Tbe Proprietor of the Aar a
CoxQunox has used but little energy to make

Gunrdlan'H Sale.

HASTINGS.
festival wm be at tbe Town Hall.
Tuesday waa an unlucky day for the chBdMoras Nevins

thickly imbedded with broken timbers.
■OMaoM

Hunte

Bayer,

caped with alight Injuries.

father’s horse, which kicked and bruised his

Tbe Choral Society cleared 127.00 selling lee cape. While Ethlyn Cooper waa playing in
froot of the house ahe fell and broke both bones
eroam, Friday nighL

Mr. Striker and wife, Miss ficelle Wbecl-r

NOTICE.

tally wounded: Mia. Griswold. Mra. Totten,

istMhd oneHrth

Notice la

BARRY VILLE.
and amending, if thought necessary, that we
ConHe Bedrock is building a new house.

ftasbviite lUriieu.

al Tbornapple lake, last Saturday
Hastings, M«y», 18BB.

proving herself to ta a thorough-going
successful educator. '

. BOOBKo,

FOURTH OF JULY AT THE GROVE
HOUSE, THORN APPLE LAKE.

at work with a surveying psrty.
wreck north of QrtuwJ!;

tbe child ol

Bl’NNINO AMITTKOTTING KACB6:

�Of all the action*
innrrisge doe* least

pie.

1882

STOP AND CONSIDER.

inquiringly to-

GROWIEO OLD.

• our Tie*rt*« action enfeebled aud

KALAMAZOO

Bat We poor fdilow could not think o!

in her apron pocket*, was miking fun Hrmetnber, Brown'* Iron BltUra will care you
of him. Miles was pre-eminently a good and fully restore berth nrfnd and body, to their
young woman would but leave him to natured man, but he had a vague per­ part* affected
,
.
himself.
Perhaps the pretty school- ception that he wm in some way in a
rid'oulous position.
The bashfillneis
Tbc Hebert men are of teocat pnaaed for
which had hitherto m-ide him painfully
of one of
oonrenti mol, and not a little prmrma’.lA. DELIGHTFUL NOVELTY.
ter providing him with a book with
He arose with a grave dignity ■nd turn
which to follow the recitation, she went tion.
I say, Joe,” he cried, petulantly, on with the one which his entrance bad that quite %wed Miss Alden.
tunica a
’*1 have no intention of intruding
us be moving.”
‘
•
interrupted, as if ho had been, miles
** What’s your hurry, Fred?” re­ sway. Standing with her back to him. myselftipof you,” be said gently; “but
turned lua friend, with a lazy yawn. Miles oould yet see the proud poise of since you have twice sent for me for
“Why not enjoy your week here as else­ Lhe little head, and the warm, soft hue sympathy, I thought I had an undenia­
Ikr prrepiraUoD, intense Ifobing, meet at night
where? I have it.
By Jove! If you of her golden hair.
Sometimes, too, ble right to give it ' 1 am not very •eetM
a* if pin Sonus were crawling In or
aren’t hankering to get round to the the dear, firm sweep of the chin wm clever at leading a young girl to talk of 4buut
tbe rectum. Tbe more you scratch Ute
herself
;
perhaps
it
was
neither
wise
nor
little school ma’am!”
plainly discernible from where she sat,
“The little school
ma’am bo while there was ever before his eyes the in good taste for me to undertake it, but
hanged!” returned his companion, evi­ graceful movement of the body as it I did wish to help you, it I oould. You ■neuttatiM! moat affective remedy extant for
tonacatlnc cooiplainL Give* rest at night
dently driven to the verge of profanity swayed back nnd forth with the interest should have reapected my motive, even ttita
without that desire to *crateb. Also has on
by the distastefulnets of the suggestion. of her wort.
if you were not edified bv my conversa­ equal in quickly eradicating Tetter, Itch, Salt
Th? hearty laugh was here mingled
Rbenme, Erysipelas, Barbers’ Itch, PUnplea,
tion.”
with-the sound of dripping rain.
Miss Alden resisted a very strong all Scaly, Crusty, Itchy Skin Eruption*. Here
abashed but that there broke on hb
tbe proof, “Ceitulniy the best remedy ever
“ That’s not exactly the speech one troubled spirit an appreciation of the temptation u&gt; plump down in the ncar- in
•wed in tpy practice,” Dr. Cotftm, Woodstock,
would expect from an engaged man, charms of the beautiful woman. Though estfehair, in an amazed heap.
Her Vt.. “troubled with Itching File* for over twen­
Fred,” was the jocular remark that fol­ modest and' quiet, she seemed so sen- spirit rose at the rebuke, and, to tell the ty yeans it cared me completely," L. 8. Memcr
r.iilleliL Me. Sent for liO ct* (In 8 cl. stamp*)
lowed.
•
WHO MIDI THE HATCH.
contained, so clear-beaded, so capable truth, a real respect for tbe plain words
*1.25, By Dr. Swayne A Bon. PhUad’a
** I’m not engaged. Ill be blessed if of managing her affairs in a simple, she had beard made ber reply to them PI btxjxe*.
. Sold by all druggist*.
with
aa
equal
frankness.
*
I
—
am
!
Why,
a
fellow
can
’
t
took
at
a
straightforward way.
She wm too di­
Excitement
“I do not know what you mean by
girl in these days but the whole neigh­ rect and honest to send for him without
Turfite—Ye*, a blooded bone Is generally a
borhood settle ft at onbe for him.”
an object. What did she want? Bfilas my asking for your sympathy,”
good core.
“I should say there had been some­ waa one who liked to get at tb^ bottom said. “If 1 had needed commiseration,
tribut*b'.fl to the advent of aa awkward
[BERING.
thing more than looking in this in­ of everything at once, and he deter­ I certainly should not have sought it of
Now rfmt good times are again upon us, It is
stance,” was the quick reply.
“When mined that as soon as ahe was at liberty
north rcmcmtxrriiig that no one can enjoy the
a
fellow
is
constantly
with
one
giri
for
he would inquire what he oould do to
noxious and alarming than such noto­
pleasantest surrounding* if in bad health,
there are hundreds of miserable people going
riety ; for the good brother was singu­ yean, the neighborhood may naturally serve ber, and go about it with a will: manner which I
to-day with disordered stomach, liver or
larly modest by nature as well as by suppose there will be a wedding some for he liked tbe Little woman, and would daily your franknea», which permits aa about
x-ancy*. when a bottle of Parker's Groer Tonic
time.
Whew!
1
say
nothing;
only
have thought it no hardship to servo
grace.
mark my word for it, young man, ft her; but when ahe turned to him again equal candor from me.” And tbe young would do them more mxx! than all tuedicicncs
In the dart, humid jungles of Southgirl looked with a grave, child-like con­
.-x uera Africa, the finger ot disease had you don’t intend to marry the giri, all hl* codr““ • • •
fidence into the eyes of ber oompanion.
Th- World moves because it cannot pay rent.
been laid heavily upon him, forcing C’d belter break with her before your only wish
“ Do you moan that you never cent for
rty is compromised altogether.”
seemed Bp‘1___
„___________
him back, much against his inclination,
A VALUABLE ADDITION.
“ Perhaps you are personally inter­ to stand there toying with the small me?" ho returned, taking from his
to the health-giving hills of New Eng­
Because it I* tiencfldal tn the scalp and add*
bell, one single stroke of which would pocket two little notes, and laying them to personal beauty by restoring color and lustre
land. He took small credit to himself ested In the matter?”
defiantly
in
Mis*
Alden
’
s
open
palm.
Again the hearty laugh, which had send thoae giggling scholars out into the
for carrying the sacred mission to the
..gray or faded hair, ia why Parker’* Hair
The young girl regarded them a mo­ itaisam l» such a popular dreating.
heathen, though he had borne his life once before broken upon the storm, village to proclaim that they had left
him alone with the school-mistreu. ment with an air of bewildered uncer­
in his hand*the while, for, having little now filled the pause.
The Inhabitant* of Japan number 35,259,000
“ Never spoke to the girl but once in Miles rose, stammered something (he tainty; then a sudden light seemed to
taste for society, he freed himself from
atala.
Pretty little thing, though never could tell what), and tha next penetrate through her perplexities.
Its perplexities and complications with all my life.
“
Oh,
the
wretched
little
fiends!
”
she
—
one
of
the
clinging,
twining
sort
.
but
moment the school-room door closed
delight, to lead the untrammeled life of
HEIGHTS DISEASE, DIABETES, KIDNEY,
I don’t care about being the oak to that upon his troubles. He was only sure of cried fiercely; and selecting from among
tho wilderness.
•
. LINER OR URINARY DISEASE.
No, my young beggar; you’ll two things—that a roar of childish the heap of school exercises a oopy-bo &gt;*
&lt;What a narrow, tame existence ivy.
Have no fear of anv of lbo«e diseases If you
written
in a large, school-girl baud of
have
to
get
out
of
it
some
other
way.
”
laughter followed his exit, and that he
ihj Hup Bitters, a» they will prevent and cure
seemed before him! Those to whom he
one of her scholars, she opened it and In; worst cmnck, even when vou Imue been
“ Well, Joe, I’ll be blessed if I know had left his hat behind him.
complained of dullness suggested that
unde wor»c by tome great puffed up pretended
To go back for it was not to be laid the two notes in dose proximity.
he should take a parish, marry and set­ how,” returned the dejected man.
Poor Milev *aw it nH in a m imenL
tle down.
But to all such advice Miles “The truth is, the young girl is—well— thought of. He would sooner go bare­
Hartwell had but one answer. “It was uncommonly ■ fond of me, don’t you headed to the end of the world than run They'&amp;ust all have been penned in the
A landlord expect* two percent more rent
a farce,” he said, “this ministering to a know? and I haven’t tho heart to throw the risk of again making a fool of him­ same unpracticed hand. It was like a «licu tiie street ta called on avenue.
people who felt themselves perfect al­ the’poor little thing over. I’ve tried to self before so many spectators. What a sudden blow to him.
“ Sq I am hero without an invitation,
“WAIT A LITTLE LONGER.”
ready.
He had no heart for it; tbc break with her no end of times; but we hateful visit il was, to be sure! leaving
dart-hued prosdlyto* of other lands, are sort of cousins, you see, and, being a sting behind it which poor Milos could after all,” ho said. “Well, I am’ truly
So we are told Sometimes. Things will
Forty glad you had no need of me. I—I hope come out all right, people say, if we will wait
who had hung upon his words as if they quite alone, she clings to mo very te­ neither forget nor understand.
were life itself, had unfitted him for any naciously. A fellow sn*t to blanfte if a times a day- he told himself that the you may never lack for friends and i vlille. Tlial don’t do with dis?**c. The
- such pastorate. die did.not understand girl will make a fool of herself over poor child was in trouble, and needed a your cousin may prove to be the kind,
the need* of such a genteel and godlike him; though, of course I shall put a Helping hand. Had she been old and devoted lover which your sweet life de­ .■taut curu iu November. Do you feel a little
community; and, as for matrimony, stop to it some time; 1’11 be hqmged if ugly, none would have been extended mands.”
»ll Strike tl e trouble rittbl away. Dr, David
“My cousin a lover! Dear, dear, will
he had lived single so long that any wo­ I don’t! but I can’t hit a girl when more read'ly tha^ bis; but, somehow,
Kennedy’*' “Favorite Remedy” la what you
man of a suitable age for him would be she’s down already, and, they do say, Miles felt himself too awkward and un­ absurdities ever end! ” And Miss Alden
«uX It»11! at unit relieve tbc bowels, atlmu
old enough to know*better than to mar- since the smart French madams opened accustomed to the ways of the world to laughed such a genuine laugh that it
de the liver and c&lt;»»l thtLskiu. Take one do!fy him ;.nnd so the matter was dismissed an opposition establishment in town, it grapple with so delicate a trouble as cleared all doubL* that might have lin­
•ir hi your baud and ship at your druggist*. ur
goes uncommonly hard with the poor that ‘which be suspected was hanging gered in Miles’ mind.
from his mind.
“ Why, whd could have put such an . trite to the doctor, at RondouU N. Y.
But the loneliness of his small room girl to keep alive the little school upon over the pretty head of his young neigh­
.
bor, so ire shrank away from her more i odd idea-into your head? Tom is often
prcMied sorely upon him; he was al­ which her living depends.”
An evil *pcikrr dfwrra from an evil doerot“ Why, they’re talking of my neigh­ persistently than ever, though the posi­ here, because he is tho only relative I
ways happier in the open air, out wnero
H&gt;e br&gt;'ad, easy stretches of landscape bor, tbe little school-ma'am,” thought tion of his room offered &gt; post of ob­ have, and seems to stand with mein the
eive him a (4nt&gt;eof freedom and helped Miles, waking suddenly, as from an as­ servation which kept the little woman place of all that, are gone. Ho is a dear
LyiHn E. 1’ifiki.atn's Vegetable Compound
m to attune his heart in accord with tonishing dream, to the consciousness well under his surveillance. There were llfellow,'Tom is; self-complacent and
il ut si! liniro. abd uudrr ail circamelancca,
that he was performing the ignoble few, indeed, that trespasased upon her puffed up, asc illcgians are wont to bo;
■ the l»«» that (nvern the
its cheerfulness.
He felt his way in the solitude without hL4 knowledge.
hires* Mr* Lydia E. Pink. And yet the house he hadl selected for part of listener
Her but it never occurred even to hi, con­
darkness
to
a
more
distant
partof
tho
ceit,
I
know,
to
attribute
to
me
anything
his home Rented a fitting receptacle for
most frequent visitor was tho young man,
3 modest a soul. It stood a trifle out building, where the hum of human
her cousin, whose intentions toward her but the most cousinly affection."
Mile* certainly did not feel called up­
r crashed that man wb&lt; m
line with lhe row of trim dwellings voices was lost io the wild utterances of Miles so well understxxi. Ho saw them
ved not.
often enough together, as a parting on to disturb this’harmless &lt;?»nfi&lt;ienco
on either side, as if originally it had the storm.
So this was tho way in which a young chat was held in lhe hall or in the door­ in her cousin; 4ie jonly smiled rap'urbeen parallel with them, but had shrunk
ON b UM IT ION CUR IL
back, glad -to screen itself behind the man in this civilized community pro­ way. The look of the young girl on( ously, shook Miss Alden’s hand with a
tlon tbc mo-1
ful
vehemenev
which
that
surprised
young
big larches that £rew tall and gri.nd tected the dignity of a young girl who these occasions was different from that
UVC ever Mild, n b n
'near tbe gate. And ss for bustle and honored him with her preference. she wore at any other time; the weary, lady considered rather uncalled for, then
ir»t caecs ot Cough, croup
gayety, a whdlc savage tribe might feel Miles was singularly chivalrous and no­ jaded air was gone, and there was a reseated himself on tho lounge with tho
tin wonderful *ueceM i*
I* alihout u paraliteelf quite undone by the merriment ble himself, and perhaps had too little glow in the quiet face and a ring in her air of a man who had nothing farther to
&lt;il tucdienc. Since it* first
which souTetinjen emanates from the lit­ patience with a vanity that cnuld thus voice which jarred harshly upon Miles. ask for in this vale of tears.
8 &gt;, at least, thought a certain impi«h- ! -rovery if I&gt;un hern toBi on a gun rn tec, a test
H» impulse
tle front- yard i for a part of the house sacrifice another to itedtf.
Once they came and stood for a long
which no other medicine ran t-taud. If you
was occunied by a small private school, was to confront and upbraid the young time under the full glare of the hull lodking youngster who observed the in­
uve a Ctiugli wc earnestly a»k you to try it.
but he re­ lamp. The young man had a letter in teresting spectacle through the blind- T*rice lOcxs, nd* ta^and *LO*-lf your lungs arc
dominated over by Miss Alden, the prct- man for so mean a
membered that it was not for him to his hand, whi'-h ho was playfull, with­ lets window, his view being obstructed -..re. Chest, or Back luime, and Shiloh’s
ty.wbool mlstress.
,
’
uraas Plaster. Sold by F. T. Botsg.
al
times
by
a
head
of
brown
curls
which
It was,a warm summer afternoon that regulate the speech'of a Stranger; and, holding from her grasp, while she flut­
ANSWER THIS QUESTION.
'
Milos, after passing several hours of list­ moreover, that a rebuke would lose its tered coaxingly about him, lifting up was occasionally thrust between tbe
Whv do m&gt; many people wc’ see around us,
.
less apathy, prepared for his daily stroll. force from one who, it might be sup­ her small white hands with such a pret­ window nnd himtelf.
•••••in io prefer to suffer and lie made miserable
Well,
mi.ss,
who
’
s
likely
to
win
this
posed,
was
guilty
of
an
act
of
espial.
As he stepped out into the hall the
•v iikfigvsUwu. constipation, diuine**, lo*s of
ty air of persistency that it was at
While he was arguing tbc question length yielded to her grasp. Ho noted bet?" remarked the urchin to the little ippctite. coming up of tlie Food, yellow «kln,
scholars, accompanied by Miss Alden,
wl eu 'for “Sets, wc will sell them Abilob’s Vltawith himself, tho matter was decided how the light streamed off her golden maid at .hi* side.
were trooping by.
li&gt;rr, guarantedto cure them. 8ol&lt;| by F. T“
How
do
yon
know
old
Timbuctoo
for
him
by
.the
object
of
his
wrath
sud
­
“ Miss Alden, Miss Alden, that’s the
hair, and as she read it, her arm com­
IV-isa.
missionary,” whispered a small urchin denly shooting out from under the pro­ fortably locked in her cousin's the has proposed?” returned the child, re­
SHILOH’S CATTARRH REMEDY, A mar­
flectively.
velous cure for Catarrh, Diphtheria, Canker
so loud that it brought the conscious tection into the road beyond.
while.
“ Welk, if hp hasn't yet, he is a-going mouth, and Head Ache. With each bottle
The storm was indeed spent, only the
color to Miles’ bronzed face.
Miles viewed the tableau without any
i-ere
I* an ingenious naaal Injector for the
Miss Alden, thus addressed, gave the drops from the maples rained down up­ particular complacency. Indeed, it ir­ to,” observed the*wi*e youth. “He is iwire successful treatment of these complaint*
missionary a quick glance from under on the hjinaward path. They fell grate­ ritated him more than he cared to own. working up to it beautifully."
iritliont extra charge. Price tocla. Sold by
Subiequent
events
proved
the
justice
fully
on
his
hot,
upturned'face
as
he
F
T.Boise.
'
her broad-brimmed hat; then, dropping
He wondered if the girl e.-er suspected
of this assertion. •There was a wedding
her eyes, she, too, hung out the same walked leisurely toward the house. A the young man’s disloyalty.
The in­
candle, burning in the school-room win­ quiry presented itself to him with such in Scranton in zgood time, at which
bright signal of distress.
'
“ Dear, dear, what a pair they would dow, sent a ruddy ray of light down the troublesome frequency that it was a tfiese two young persons assisted with
| JEN RY ROE. PaoratBToa
make!” remarked an observing youth village street. Was it placed there to positive relief when an eve-t occurred equal complacency; for, if the youth bad
from the stairs to a demure little object guide the wayward steps of her delin­ which seemed to promise some definite won the wager, his companion, being
----- OLD RELIABLE----the
author
of
the
two
notes
to
which
we
with brown curls.
“What fun ’twould quent lover?
conclusion.
It was the question with which Miles
be to make the missionary, old, TinibucA note written in the same school­ have alluded, claimed lhe honor of hav­
dismissed ths subject from his mind, girl hand as the first one was thrust in- ing made the match.—E. L. Putnam,
too, propose to Miss Alden!”
“ It couldn't be done,” returned his for, after all, what to him were the love £his hand one day by Miss Alden’s in Putter's Magazine.
companion, shaking her brown curls to grievances of the mild-faoed young
rmer messenger. It hinted in almost
Emigration from Inland.
woman with whom he had never ax- child-like language of trouble, and re­
the breexe. ■
“ Did I say I could do it? 'Course I changed a greeting in his life?
quested him to call upon her in the eve­
A
Parliamentary
return issued recent­
It was brought to mind, however, the ning, when the absence of the school
didn't,” foroarked the resentful youth,
•following day on receiving a small, children would make a confidence posi- ly shows that the number of emigrants
who left Irish porta in 1881 was 78,719,
sweet-scented note written in a large
ble.
To Milos’ strained mood, there a decrease of 17,138 as compared with
He Bad passgj. the' larches now, and school-girl hand, requesting his presence seemed nothing unnatural or unusual in
was making foMho old mill seen, in per­ thatafternoon in the school-room. Poor this, and he lost no time in complying 1880. Of these 15,232 were emigrants
from Leinster, 21,752 from Munster, 24,,
IN THEIR SKABOr
spective from where tho youth stood. Miles was taken aback; and, if the truth with the request.
101 from Ulster, and 16,332 from Con­
must be told, gave voice to his annoy­
Though it wm early autumn, Miss naught, together with 302 persons be­ Lard; by the lb. or barrel,
ance in a phrase not strictly clerical. It
seemed rather to alarm the small youth Alden had lighted the odorous pines longing to other countries. The total
who stood fidgeting in the doorway heaped upon the hearth that evening, □umber of emigrints, natives of Ireland,
TV The Highest Market Price paid
for the sake of a little cheer, and had who left the Irish ports from the first of
am that had formerly awaiting an answer.
'
drawn up her small table by the oozy May, 1851, to the thirty-first of Decem­ 'or Hides, Pelta. Ate.
welbouiUN troughs now
“ Tell her I will come directly,” re­
course through this turned Miles, with a good-natured pat flame—a table covered with French dic­ ber, 1881, wm 2,715.604; 1.446,582 being F rosh Groods. Fall Weight* and
tations, English compositions,*and oth­ male* and 1,269,022 females. In the
Miles followed it4n- on the boy's plump shoulder.
er school exercises, all of which must decade from 1866 to 1876 the average
among the un­
But he was not as good as his word. be corrected before ahe slept that night. number was 74,667 and in the preceding
HENRY ROE.
ite air with It was certainly an hour before he could
decade N8.272; while from 1862 to 1866
•crew up hi* courage to tne point of de­
the
number
averaged
148,985
annually.
y.rnng
scending ti^the next floor. What could Miles, who stood at tho door wearing The number fluctuated from 190.322 In
tbe young woman want of him? and
such a took of determined resolution 1852 to 87.587 Ln 1876. the lumbers ot
bow horrible to visit her with the oor- that the little sohool-ma’am fell back as
Lhe last few yean having been 35.503 in
• ing about alone, and it wm Ute. indeed, eentrated stare of fifty eyas upon him!
she admitted him. He established him­ 1877. 41,124 In 1878, 47,065 in 1879, and
As he thought of it, his soul was shaken self upon the edge of the little chintz7M77 In 1880.
’
•
within him. A belle dressing for her
oovered lounge with-the air of a man
first ball could not have lingered longer
who had a task to perform, and was
Not over her toilette than did Mlles on this
about to go through with it at all haZyellow, inky black, and azure blue, have
again, as has been the case for several
springs pall, put in an appearance.
young divine, stoutly.
Where they come from and whither
thev go are questions wc are unable tc
in a way that sadly
They were fast young fellows, and their
talk was of the most trivial nature.
Hike waa glad that the dart nee* made

MEAT MARKET.

Fresh and Salt Meats,
Smokei Hanu nd Sboulierc,

Spnng-2th Harrow
Wiard Plows,
.
South Bend Chilled Plows,
I Gale Plows,
(Buy Genuine Factory Points)

Strayer’s GRAIN DRILL,
RAWSON’S
REAPERS &amp; MOWERS
Lightest and Strongest Made,

Z-

HUBBARD

Gleaner &amp; Binder
Improved 1888.

Sash, Doors and Blinds,
Paints, Oils, Varnishes,
BI ILDEIl* HARDWARE,

DETROIT STOYE-CO'S. STOYES
Domestic .&amp; New Home

SEWING MACHINES
When in need of.the Best

Grades of Hardware and Ma­

chinery.

Call and see me.

FRANK C. BOISE.

THE CROWN

THE CROWN SHWINtf MACHINE.

S»-Tbo “Oowu" comes Into the market
lhe tist of all the machines, but baa sprang to
front rank utonce from t^e fact (hat-it lints ta*
ken tbc gopd fentuna iu all other machine*
and put them in out grand combiBation. m kiug tblilhe Handaomeft, Largest, Most Silent
■nd Lighten Running machine yet offered. All
the ’-polrita” that the expertece ol twenty years
in al) kind* of famOv and light manufacturing
work ha* proved tobe*b*alutely good are to bo
found only in the “Crown.” Other machines
may have one, two or three of these “point*”
hut none but lhe “Crown” ha* them alL
Even- device that I* really desirable in other
machine* will be found in tbe “Ctuwb.“ Ad­
vantage has been taken of tire experiment* and
experience with all kinds of machine* ever in­
vented, and the “Crown” la n perfect emlxxlL
ment of creryting go d In them.

E. R. WHITE.

EVERYBODY
Tukc notice that tho time has enmo when the
Narrow 1 tred Wagon is no longer sought after
by experienced men. ?©—'------------- “---looking forirard to better
found it In the

Wide Tire Wagon!
BUY A WIDE TIRE WAGON

HI«ES

Eipenenced, Reliable, and Rexponsible.

A. H. WINN, Dentist.

I KEEP them:
BUY YOUR PLOW POINTS
Of UMJ aodyou Will get palate that are ‘cliilied.
One chi!Jed
w(U last as toug as two that

BEST SET SUM TEETH $10.00 FIRST CLASS BLACtSIITH,
■bate. If

Office Open Day A Evening.
A. M. WI.W.

�Cost,

Grain and Prodn

aMHUMU.,
TIUVHW MUCKS.

SUITHI51

tettssz:

G.

Un

of that titj, and that be died the follow*
tag day. Bta remains were buried st
Mt and. after an inventory of hi* ef­
fects had been taken, they were ti&lt;ud up.
•eWed, aud when tbe steamer reached
h jf dock, brought at onoe to The Public

or while a wav from theft* relative* would
often be treated a* wrecked ships are
among the people on coasts where law
does not fwevau, Such estates would
be venr speedily administered by neigh­
bors. friends, or even strangers. As it

-Iitaiiil to ckjue ny naur
of bosiBcs,

to a friend-or acquaintance: * Do this ot
“ Give me a dollar and let me go,” that with tay property. Give.this to
■aid ha.
So-and-so, and do this or that with tho
“How can I give you a dollar?”
re-t of my things.’ The friend, una­
•• Why, there’s plenty of money in ware of the law, promises to do a# he
that envelope," tho messenger replied, is b d. but the' boardiug-house keeper,
pointing
to
an
envelope
that
tho
purser
undertaker. Coroner, br-some one holds
aMicMfol
had put on the desk together with a tbe property and notifies us. The friend
collar box and a pocket-book. The as­ finds it necessary to go to tbe Surrogate,
sistant tore the envelope open and took who explains that after the relatives tbe
from it bills and gold pieces amounting PubHc Administrator is next inorder.”
to $150. He gave the messenger one
dollar. Then he ticked off the items in
Ills Teague Cut Out.
the purser’r .inventory: One hundred
gLACKASOM
and fifty dollars, gold watch, gold
No better illustration of the ferocity
chain, amethyst ring, diamond nng, of tho Russian mobs, in thoir attack* on
$1.40 in sols, three shirt studs, pocket­ harmless Jews, can be had than the
book. valises, etc. He gave toe purser case of John Natika, now at Castle Gar­
an itemised receipt, and the purser said den. where he arrived in company with
that Schneider’s brother lives in New thirteen of hi* oo-religionists on board
MwnummKMamlre. fan
York.
the steamer Greece last Saturday. Tiie By statements nnwi&amp; by agents representing other machines
“Now, what will the Public Adminis? unfortunate num is completely dumb,
trator do with those things?" the assist­ his tongue having been cut out at its having a resemblancfe’ to the McCORMICK, claiming their
M JONES,
ant was asked.
root* by a band of drunken marauders. Binders are the Same,lor. such claims are false, and suits for
“First, we will enter all tbe facts in He is a pitiable objedt to sec, especially
what we call oyr rough book, and next when he attempts to make himself un­ infringements have been brought against invitations
wc will put tbe valuables aud money in derstood by dull nasal sounds and ges­
the safe," said be, “and More the ticulations. Yesterday morning hrs un­
’ goods in the back room. When tho fortunate condition was brought to tho
brother has cualified as administrator attention of Captain Heintzman, who
we will turn toe estate over to him If requested him to make a written state­
there had been no brother or other rela­ ment of his terrible experience. In ac­
tive here we would have, sent tho jew­ cordance with this request, John Natika
NORTH MAIN ST., NASHVILLE, M,
elry to the safe deposit vault*, stored' wrote a story, four foolscap sheets long,
the valises in our store-room in Duane in Russian. Translated by an official
And
examine
it carefully before making your choice for the
street, and deposited the money in one interpreter, the same* read in part as
of the banks, which, under the law, the follows:
coming harvest.
Comptroller ipecitie* shall be used for
“My name is John Natika. I cannot
A rare guaranteed.
that purpose. After a certain time, if speak, because tnv tongue was cut out
we had not beard from the relatives or in Russia I lived in the neighborhood
friends of the dead man we should have of Kieff. .my business being that of a
sold hi* effects and turned tho proceeds' clothier. Last October the peasants be­
and the other money over to the City came very abusive to us Jews and many
rhleb l.ada to mlaer
Chamberlain, who would hold it in were brutally ill-treated. At first they
trust forever for the next of kin. We let me alone, but in December a band of
very often go through this, and our peasants burned down one of my out­
sales, which are by public auction aud houses. I complained to tho pristMv
are advertised, are attended each time (policecaptain), but noonew**arrested.
by about the same men and women. 1 accumulated a little money,* fact which
They are dealer* in second-hand mate­ thd moujiks soon learned. On Jan. 3
rials and are our regular customers, so I was arom^d by a*number of them
to speak."
breaking into my room. They dragged
“You had a right to pay that mes­ me out of bed, and beat and picked me
senger for bringing those things here?” badly. They wanted to get my mono"
Bottom
“Oh, ye*; just a* we should have had and asked-me for it. When I nleai—*
a right to brny Schneider and pay for 1
Yours Respectfully,
(he funord
hroagllt
here. If bis brother administer* on the and putting a rope around my neck, I
estate we will account to him, but if we hung ine up to the limb of a tree, r
administer upon it wo will act exactly When I was naif suffocated they let me
as if wo were a private party, paying down again and asked me if I would
j the debts of the deceased, collecting
tho place where the money ।
Id Recommended by PhyaiclanfJ | what was due him. and selling hi* prop­ disclose
was hidden. Again I refused, upon |
erty to the best advantage. A cousin which, without further ado, ono of the
uimhiiwi)
I could qualify as well, a* a brother, if he j men forced open my mouth, nnd, while ■
UNACOUA1MTEO WITH TM« CBOCBAPHV OF THIS COUNTRY,
was next of kin. The law is, firat the I the
fcUC UMMSt&gt;
,u mCt
Wo tnanufaatura and sell it villi* r^&gt;aittvo
others uw
held
me, cut OU1
out mv tongue |
WILL »*E RY KXAHWINO THIS MAF, THAT TH*
guarantee that it will cure any
wife,• next
h pair of shears.
shears,
— ■; the
..... children, third the fath— with a
Thev all
case, and ”o will forfeit the above aUunuit ।i cr.
nnrt
the
mnthi&gt;r.
thnn
ihn
hmthfirx
.1
__
___
_________
u-i_
&gt;
er. next
mother, then the brothers then ran away, while j Wmorf bled to
RiifeiLiin * Single Instance,
HU unllko any other Catarrh remedy.aa
or sisters or cousins, males of the near- deaUb j subsequently recovered to the
est degree of relationship being pre- hospital, and furnished the police with
diaUMun* alaeaao.aak yourDragght for it. and
ferrod to females. Tho 1 ublic Admin- | i|10 names and description of my assailACCEPT*O IKITATIOX ok srwtiTvrt. If he
Ulrator come, after tbe relalirra but ants. who worei however, releered on
haa notdot ft, aend to o« hr.d wo will forward
ahead of creditors, friends and all , y,e trial.”
•
•
tnUMdUtMy. Wca,75Oeartperbottle.
others. Wo have on hand the rare of I Here Nutikn’o nnrrntire enit. Some
F. L CHENEY 4. CO., Toledo. Ohio.
John D. Grady, who wad a receiver of of his companions furnished to a 'Truth
stolen goods. His ‘fence’ Was a sort of j reporter tbe remainder uf the harrow­
jewelry or pawnbroker’s shop in Sixth ing taie. jlMenM that according to the
avenue. He died, leaving relatives, but Russian criminal code, no person can be
they were not able to give security, and convicted of an assault unless the com­
aman named Haughton, who claim* plainant testifies to the facts in person
that Grady hail property that had been anii by word of mouth. In Natika’*
•toh-n from him, applied for letters of
there could naturally be no nuesadministration. u e applied also, and । tjon of verbal testimony, inasmuch as,
the Surrogate appointed us. We hold having lost his tongue.’the complainant
the estate and dispute Haughton’* was &lt;jumb. This quibble was immediclaim.”
atelv tal^jn bokl of by the lawyer for tho
“In the last annual report of the plaintiffs, and, to the surprise of every-'
Public Administrator are very many |lxxly. the President of the court ordered
names of persons clawified as *un- the priaonure—four in number-to be
known.’whose estates arc represented discharged. Hie day after this deci*by sum* ranging from $5.89 down to jon
place anoMHT Jew was mut'iten cents. What about them?"
| ]ated in a manner similar to Natika, in
“They are case* of those, who die at one of the suburbs of Kieff—N. Y.
sea—often sailors: vagrants who die in Truth.
.
•the streets and in the public institutions,
M&gt;eria Qverr ui With. MireucrsoiiM who die in hotels and boarding­
houses, and Coroner*’ cases of all sort*.
After all, the Czar is not to have it all
The master of every vessel upon which his own’way in Asia. While a dull
a death occurs must report and *ur- world has been imag'ni.ig that tbe En•::c
The BHORTEBT, QUICKEST and
-rnder the estate of the dead person to I| giisb Government was taking no steps
us. So must boarding-house aud hotel- ‘. to prevent that consummation, the whole
keeper?, and tho Coroners are also' edifice of the Russian Empire i*» it ap­
■ou.DBUM.Oalobliged to turn o,.r to .» Uie edooto ot i pears,
,, on
„„ the point of' collapse. With
AtTaicaoo. wfiE all atverglu* un« Cor tba
Uxw tout com. under their notioo, .
,„011nt ol ketenes, that does him
Sometime# five-cents, or even a cent, is J, every credit.
•’* Lord Ripon .has-•kept silent
CHICAGO all that is found belonging
to a,man or ’j on the matter, but the Caloufta Englisha
pertap. hl, c
m»v coraul of • nog. I m«n a Imi Uu the rat-or rather the
.look*, or. hrrart. bat thel»F make. ,
o( u,e lag. Three v. En­
SaJcwlty reputed m
do duUticUon benreen .ort eeUtee ud g|„d., dliM ta tbe^knd &lt;ort ot .toyt^beiwr the Great
iaau MM
those like that uf Theodore Gcntil. tho I
of Rumu
' ui aggression,
merchant, which we recently admin- . A{Lhan help might be tread^tous, not
Mrr
wit* the B. a R. a N.B.R.
istercd. Gentd was a wealthy New j
mentioh its costliness; Persian aid
York merchant who retired tram buri- ;
count for much; toe Chines
Des* and went to France^ He died £ou|d probably not appear in the fiel’
there, leaving to NewJ orkan! estate ;Wilatow yeararfter thoatnmgie hi.
r &lt;: S.mKs3.S«S
valued at over $150,000, partly in cash | terminated. All for the Turkomans,
.....ni.Muu.u-. .......
deposited in banks, and partly in w^at bribe have we to offer those predaHe bad second counn* in , cioug people compared to that blissful
Paris, who applied for the right to ad- | looting of jmiia which Ruasia could
lad travella*
rVWUMWII
minister tbe estate. Weatooapplied, and . dangle before their eyre? An ally had
(and tbe unm
were represented in the Pans'court by
to be looked for in some new
eounrel. The French law is Tike ours, । charter. ud almost without the looking
(oimu,
and when it was deyidod that his place
klnd fTl(,nd has already apof residence was New lorx, wc were l&gt;eared.
Our Calcutta contomporaertU, taiii'
repara
c„nntira» n&gt;yri«l.
R. IV CABLE,
■ h
11 b®mm® ^nowD
there
[ of Ind,,,, mtn, h,ve nude ibelr way to
T. l POTTEH.
. .ln« eoiuin In Herrt end to hoc w, । Kntheutem fkberi*-plnnderinj; (To----- ■tbe
’
sent
money, whidi must have aries-nnd destroying crop.
rever
____ _______
Of course none of
proved
a windfall
RR0R8 OF YUUIH.
they go. On .they march, relentless,
tho several second cousins got anything. remorseless, through Fcrrana, through
Had they been next of kin it would not Semiretcbauak, and right up to the’
have gone to tbe eldest, but would have shores of Lake Balkaacb. The affright­
been equally divided among aU.”
ed people know not what to do to stem
beautiful, al*o l^sirucUonaloi producing a .axnrl-.
“ Do you ever have cases in which the devastating deluge, and even the
act KTvwth n'hair on a bald head'or a north face
considerable . money is left and. no dauntless Ru-siau warriors turn pale
claimants appear?”
M-lyr. JOBM a OGbEN. 4xCodar 8t„ K.T.
when the cry goes forth: “Tbe mice are
“Sometime*. That of Eleanor Mary coming!” Rome was saved by geeae;
Kleenan is a case in point. She wa* a perhaps history will hereafter relate
nurse in the New York Institution tor
the Blind, and died leaving no relative*
f.ilow^nf
and $5,600 fa various savings banks.
ived by

I Shall Sell

HAS VALUABLE IMPROVEMENTS OVER ALL COMPETITORS.

American and Foreign Marble.

BE NOT DECEIVED

My Entire Brook of

MILLINERY!
AND FANCY GOODS 2

AT COST

NERVOUS DEBILITY

Irid.epend.eiit Reapers.
'-------- also--------

Platform, Side-Spring and Side-Bar Carriages,
and Wagons

HALL’S

----- COMMENCING ON-----

Saturday, May 20.
Now in the Time
For these in need to share
the profits and buy at

wholesale prices.
Nashville, May 16, 1683.

jVt Rock

PatarrhPure

tAMAH

U1

stop

OrJ Under,

M. JEFFREY,

ORGANS&gt;

CHICAGO, ROCK ISLAND &amp; PACIFIC B Y

PRINCIPAL-* UINE

PARKER'S

I

MAIB

BALSAM.

Hi issa*

KANSAS CITY

%

PIMPLES.

CONSUMPTIVES.

RE

EVERY ONE MViVc

I yyrcrCTny
COLOGNE.

�The month of roses is fart slipping
away but lhe uasaaaduable weather
makes one think it Is coy April rather
than leafy June, ami warm wraps are
Ira Beadle, of Fabius, St. Joseph by no means superfluous on these sveOs.. WM accidentally drowned in nings- Those who fled to the country
Pleasant Lake while fishing on Sunday at the first breath of summer have been

JUNEM.18W.

HK»!«O MEW5.

Wougargent was run over by the
qgrs anSpckron or Friday night aud e&lt;l by something of Artic temperature.
kilkd. Hit body wm badly mangled Shivering in a monntaiu hotel in June,
and scattered for rods along tho track. without a fraction of home comfort, is
Mra. Catherine McDonald, aged 49 the very unenviable state of some un■
of Detroit, on Tuesday, took a wisfe Washingtonians. Several of the
dose of opintn to quiet her nerve*, ladies who have been so closely as­
but the dose was to huge and death sociated during the present administra­
tion, and who have been most frequent­
followed.
Elijah Kinne, an old man of Texas. ly entertained at the White House and
Kalamazoo Co., was afflicted with poor elsewhere where the President has
health and sought relief by taking a been one of tbe company, will spend
dote of morphine. He-found it and is the summer at Nsragansett Pier. They
are Senator Don Cameron’s wife, and
now no more.
McIntyre, of Huron Co, employed Mies Curtis,Senator Cameron’s married
aa watchman on tho steam barge, E. daughter, Mrs.' Bradley, will accom­
Mrs. Craig Wads­
8. Hall, waa knocked overtaiard by pany this party.
the main boom, near Muskegon, on worth will pass the summer at her
country residence in France. About
Sunday and was drowned.
At Grand Haven on the 20th, a young the Slat of June there will sail for
man, named Andrew Calhoun, a fine- Europe from New York on the same
man on the City of Milwaukee, fell be­ steamer a party of ladies and gentle­
tween tbe steamer and a scow loaded men who have been very prominent in
with slabs into the river and waa Washington society. Among the num­
drowned.
ber will be the retiring French minis­
A span of lioraea belonging to F. ter, M. Outrey, and his American wife
‘ Finger ot Salmerbecame unmaaagable and theirchildern ; the Italian Minis­
while being driven by his 15 year old ter’s wife; thwBaronesa of Fava; Mrs.
daughter ono/dny last week, and threw Craig Wadsworth and the Russian
the girl interthe wheel of tbe wagon Minister, M. de Struve, and family.
They expect to return here next au­
■
killing ber instantly.
At Fife Lake, on the 17tb, the north­ tumn, as do all-the othera named as
bound freight train on the Grand Rap­ going on ttr.tsteamer, except M. Outids &amp; Indiana Railroad, ran over and rey and family. . He is not appointed to
killed, almost instantly, a little 9-year any other mission, but will live in
old daughter of Charles Lancaster. The Paris for tho present. His wife, who
body of the child was frightfully man­ was Miss Russell, of New York, is now
visiting relatives there.
Baron de
gled.
A son of Oliver Depne ot Galesburg, Fava, tho Italian Minister, accompan­
aged six years, was killed by the cars ied his wife to Now York this week and
June 15, as tbe train was passing the will remain there until she sails.
school hojise. Tbe child attempted to
Two weeks from yesterday Guiteau
cross the track, but seeing tbe train will be hanged. No theory excited by
close on him became confused, started- the amination has been more general­
ed down tbe track just out side tbe ly assented to than that which predicts
rail and wm hit by one corner of the a breakdown in the prisoner’s self-con­
baggage car.
fidence toward tbe close of his career.
On Monday a colored man named With those who have regarded bis
Dixon and a'white woman came to mania as assumed, the near approach
Jackson and searched for a house to of the gallows has been looked forward
rent, claiming to be husband and, wife, toascertain to unmask tbe cunning
but the ne xt day an order came from fiend And exhibit him in his true col­
Ann Arbor for their arrest, as tbe wo­ ors as a miserable, cowardly tramp aud
man was tbo wife of a man named deadbeat So far this theory appears
Sterley there. They were handcuffed likely to share tbe fate of that which
together and taken back to Ann Ar|&gt;or set him up as tbe tool of desperate pol­
tonight.'
itical conspirators. Not a whit of his
The Chicago&amp;Qrand Trunk railroad self-confidence has abated.
Mentally
depot ac Imlay City, was entered Mon­ he appears to be not different.from tbe
day night by two masked men, who by man who planned the murder and took
the display of revolvers, forced the such pains to be carried direct to jail
night operator to deliver up the mail in his own hired hack.
Physically, be
pdueh left by the train from tho west, is in improved flesh and health. He
also a small amount of change from eats and sleeps well, as be has always
the money drawer. The pouch was done, There is no raving, no special
found this"morning, with ita contents nervousness, no remorse.
All tbe
gone. This is the second mail robbery stories about dreadful dreams, appari­
at this place since the first of May.
tions, regrets, etc , are pare inventions.
A. D. Clark, a well known builder Were a new trial to be ordered, he
of Battle Creek, had a misfortune at would, io all probability, go into court
8L Mary’s .Lake, five miles north of to re-enact t^e acenes of egotism,
Battle Creek Sunday morning, where heart!essnesa, audacity and buffoonery
by he will lose his life. While fishing which marked his lata trial. Not for a
at tbe lake he thought best to carry a moment lias he varied from bis first
double barrelled shot gun in the boat. theory of the assassination, and not an
and npon landing he picked it up bv incident or a word can be pointed to as
tbe muxxle, the hammers caught and showing a loss of presence of mind, if
both charges were discharged into his the theory of shamming is to be adher­
right side.
ed to. Othello’s dictum that “guil ti ■
A good deal of excitement w*a crea­ new will apeak, though tongues were
ted in Richmond Township, Osceola out of use,” seems to be contradicted
Co, on Monday, by the suicide of Mra. in this case. He however perfectly
Andrew Peterson. Mra P. was an realises the near approach of tbe 80th
American and her husband wm a of June. Ho is willing to prepare him­
Swede. She bed lived unhappy for sev
self for death in case it must come, and
era! years, her husband treated her ve­ says that he has no reason to fear it
ry harshly. Peterson pounded the dri­ more than other human beings.
In
est aon Saturday, and Mra P. declared fact, be says, there is less reason fqr
that she would not enduro living* with him to dread death. His life has been
him any longer and took a tablespoon­ free, he says, from crime.
Nothing
full of Paris green. She leaves two worse can be charged against him than
children.
that he bad not al ways paid his debts.
Orf the 18th a cyclone struck just But this wm from poverty, not dishon­
south-cash of Bay city, sweeping fenc­ est. He has not chafed against tbe
es, trees and several buildings and role which hM secluded visitors since
• tilling stock. Mrs. Delos Goster wm the failure of the appeal for a rehear­
. . «dy cut by falling timbers and a girl ing. He has an earnest desire to have
*
ned Simpson was dashed 30 feet a personal interview with President
*****
' from where she'stood, striking Arthur. He does not expect the Presi­
'"****
v and injuring her so that she dent to visit him, but he will ask per­
—msc.
'small boy named John Carmission next week to go to the White
h u i
’,ia aku11
wil1 House to argue his appeal for a com­
\ whiIe Mrther m untot! on or a pardon with the Pres­
probably Ok
, another of the Carroll ident
daughter, m
hrnlted. They were
In legal circles here opinions as to the
boys were bud».
duration of the Star Route trials is that
all in tbe Joyc®
at the present rate the case will be pros­
ecuted far into the summer. It is not
'r of yellow fever thougbt~that the testimony will be con­
cluded before the expiration of several
will bo well weeks, and tbe argument of counsel
n —----- -7------- - --w------ —
'iseaae may will most likely occupy two or three
rtgh arttled wbetber the &lt;
or
be developed by local cone
t anoth- waa engaged in the beginning for the
ite germs must be brought frin.
The prosecution, and who is, of eourae,
er place where it already cxista
Tarnj। thoroughly acquainted with the theory
winter wm mild, and the spring
iey8i on which the government recta ita proaand Samp, and all the lower vak
i ecution is prophesying that there will
were inundated. If thcoe condrtie
,
&lt; be no convictions. In this connection
do not develop yellow fever, the expwU.
it is a somewhat remarkable coinci, say, the theory of local origin will be
’ence that shortly after Mr. Cook’s aergneatly weakened, if not wholly des- c
. e were dispensed with by the govern• troyed. In order that the germs of tbe i
this law partner wm retained as
dteeaae may not bo brought from ports i
'1 by tbe Star Route contractors.
where yellow fever is found the year &lt;
Mr Me* rick’who liM beea throwing
Mmnd, a rtirt quarantine against such 1
»to the prosecution with all his
pfareawill be maintained.
1
' “rr»y Md BbiUty’ “y*
.. fL- fO:u are ■ gathering around the
wm* ’** and he has no doubt
government in

children-iath* whole city, and a lamp-

tbe image of hia Divine Muter, ^npon
a fellow man, and on the returli trip
home we found the affair to bo upon
almost evaryede’s lip. As the parties
in the miserable matter
*interested
“*“
“ were
formerly residents of thia county, we
give tbe particulars in full.
,
,
Eugene Webster, a young married
man, living npon Hunt Marvin's farm
in Bedford, has * wife of whom he has
suspicion. The young man who had
canoed the jealousy of Eugene, wm his
“hired help.” Steven Tarbell, another
young married man. Tbe two families
were very intimate and it is affirmed
that Mra. Webster, after a series of
oetret observations, had been led to
believe that her husband was frequent­
ly and clandestinely indulging in a
series of improper relations with Mrs
Tarbell, and, resolving to have sweet
revenge, and at the same time afford
herself m much pleasure as possible,
made some advancements towards
Tarbell, which proving manual, were
soon carried to that extent that Web­
ster began to have sad misgivings as
to his wife’s chastity, which were too
truly confirmed by a sight that his own
eyes saw on Thursday of ImI week.
It appears that Webster had publicly
made the threat that if be ever caught
any man having adulterous intimacy
with his wife, he would, emasculate
him on the spot, and it seems bad laid
bis plans accordingly, and by purchas­
ing a revol ver and several feetof tarred
rope.
’8oon after making the discovery,
mentioned above he went home and
put an edge on bis jack-knife that was
almost as keen as a razor, and waited
for an opportunity to catch Trabell in
the barn. He saw saw his victim in
the barn, and putting bis revolver in
his pocket and walked out to tho bam.
Here be accused Trabell of being guilty
of criminal intercourse with his wife,
which Trabell acknowledged. Webster
immediately placed the revolver at his
forehead telling him that he was going
to take him to Battle Creek and deliver
him over to tbe officers there, and took
down the niece of tarred rope that
hung conveniently near, and tied Tar­
bell’s bands securely behind bis back,
be (Tnrbell) not realizing of course the
intention of tbe brute and being thor­
oughly frightened made no reistance.
After he had thus securely pinioned
him, be pushed him back upon a board,
probably being placed there intention­
ally, gagged him by putting his hand­
kerchief in bis mouth, put a girdle
around him to fasten him to tbe board,
put a wheat bag over his face and then
cooly committed tbe outrage upon his
bodv, th ro winging the parts to a dog
in the yard. He then released Tarbefi
asking him if he hurt him much to
which he replied that he did not suffer
much pain. Webster’then inquired if
ho should not hitch up and take him
home, to which Tarbell reblied “No, I
will walk,” and at the same time re­
quested that it be kept from his wife.
After the deed Tarbell walked nearly a
mile to the doctor’s, bleeding all the
way, when it was found the surgical
operation hud been performed in a
most brutal and careless manner.
Webster and his wife ware at Battle
Creek the nextday after this took place,
and while trading at one of the dry
goods stores there, ho took occasion to
tell the whole affair to one of the clerks,
with an air, and in a manner that wool !
go to infer that be had done a great
deed and one that would immortalize
hi in.
Webster and his wife were at Battle
Creek the nextday afterlhis took place
and while trading at one of the dry
goods stores, he took occasion to
tell tbe whole affair to one of the
clerks, with an air and in a manner
that would go to infer that he and
done a great deed and one that would
immortalize him.
Webster was arrested Saturday af­
ternoon and taken to Battle Creek, and
the examination being poeponed to
July 3d. nnd Webster not being able to
give bonds to the amount of $5,000, be
wns taken to tbe Marshall jail, Satur­
day night. Had bail been furnished,
or he not been removed, it would have
probably gone hand with him Ma large
n *im ber of Bed ford ites were at Battle
Creek on Saturday night and threats
of lyching were common, some even
suggested that he should be treated
tbe aame m he bad served Tarbell.
For days it was thought Tarbell
would die. but at last accounts he was
better and hopes are entertained that
he will survive. He is 25, a quiet fel­
low and says Mrs. Webeteraohcited tbe
criminal intercourse. Mra. Tarbell Iim
also made a sworn statement to this
effect.

ebold!
RING all the BELLS I
And call the people to

G. A. TRUMAN&amp;SON
To prepare for the 4th of July
Fans, Laces, Collars, Fringes, Embroidery, White Goods,
Parasols, Gloves, Corsets, Skirts, Dusters and&gt;Shawls.

Linen Coats Long and Short, Hats and Caps, Gloves*
Neckwear, Boots and Shoefe.
In Visiting- IXaHliville on the 4th Yon Are Invited to
IMEalfe our Store Your Headquarters.

CASH MID FOR EGGS AND BUTTER, SALTED AND UNSALTED

THCM AXA SON.

The First to the Front
T AM NOW RECEIVING A FULL STOCK OF GOODS SUITABLE FOB THE SPRING TRADE. INCLUDING
A tbe Largest and Beet stock of

Ready Made Clothing, for Men, Boys, and Youths,
Ever brought to Nashville, and ranging in price from three to thirty dollars per amt. In

Ladies, Misees, Gents &amp; Children’s Fine Shoes
I keep the celebrated Rochester make, Stylish, Datable ano Cheap.

I have the latest styles and can fit all parties.

Pioneer Store

— THAT-----

NOT ONEW

E ARE NOW RECEIVING OUR STOCK OF

Of my CnstomersComplain {goods

Clear Down!
THE CAREFUL MAN IS EVER ON THE ALERT
to take advantage of favorable opportunities.

----- FROM-----

The Nashville Mill,
----- BUT------

e
UNIVERSALLY SATISFIED

JNO. M. ROE.

No matter how disguised, that prompt paying customers
must make good to the dealers who sell on credit all losses
from poor debts, long time accounts, sickness, failing crops,
loss of property, or dishonesty.of other customers.

That the merchant who sell on credit must take into ac
count all the probabilities above mentioned when he offers hi
merchandise for sale. And these losses amount in the aggre­
gate to a fair yearly income—a loss which he could not long
sustain were there no remedy, but there is a remedy and that
remedy is in the PROMPT PAYING CUSTOMERS.

ALL READY NO BETTER INVESTMENT

Can be made, if necessary, than to hire money and pay
for your merchandise as you purchase it.

GROCEREIS Prints for 6 cts. yard.

-------------------------WE SELL-------------------------

CONSISTING OF

Gringliams 8 to 11 cts.

Sugars, Coffees, Teas, Tobaccos, Turkey Red Table Linen 50 to 55 cts.
Spices, Fish, Canned Goods,
Table Oil Cloth 28. Floor, best, 42 cts.
Provisions, Ac.,
IIooI and Shoes,,
.
h

A THE LOWEST PRICES
For Cash or Ready Pay.

Hat* and Caps,
General Clothing-,
Groceries, Btc,

We are thankful for the liberal patronage given, u« in the
past under the old credit system and solicit its continuance
under the Ready Pay. We know we car be more serviceable
TO BB8KKN IN BARRY CO. to you in the futuie than we oould possibly be in the past.

Crockery, Glassware, Lamps,
Stone Ware, &amp;c.,
I have flntabod repairing tny ata
you all, sad think I

England is growing ns nervous aa an
Old woman alone in a house at night.

for the spring trade
■AND ARE SELLING THEM-

An Indiana woman applied for a be clad to
divorce because her husband killed
a mad dog which was about to

August.

I always keep a full stock of

At prices that defy compction. Cash paid for Batter and Eggs.

Aa Appalling Thought.

During the second year of tho war a
grocer in an Ohio town scaled bis prices
by reports from the front One day a
defeat would cut the price of butter
four cents, the nextday a victory would
raise tbe price of eggs a penny a dozen
and victory or defeat was certain to hit
aven the jar of nutmegs on the top shelf
One day a farmer,who had some buttar
to sell entered, the store and asked the
going price. I’m paying sixteen to­
day,’’ waa the answer. “But only two
days ago you paid twenty.” Yes, but
you see Pope has been defeated since
that, and there is a back action. The
farmer sold out and wanted the most
of it in sugar, and tbe grocer remarked
as he made ready to weigh it; “Sugar
has advanced a cent a pound since
Monday,” “Mercy on me! now is that!”
“Because the rebels got licked in Tenn essee." The old man sat down on a nail
keg and thought it all over, and presetly looked up and Mid: “My friend, if
Federal defeat cheapens what you buy,
and a rebel victory enhances the value
of what you sell, what a bell of a fix
vou’d be in if there should happen to
be a drawn battle.”

In

COME AND SEE NOB YO UBSELE.

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                  <text>| TERMS; $1.50pmpY
( Credit Subsciiiptioxs $i.TO._ .

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun.

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, JULY 1, 1882

VOLUME IX
LIFE IN NASHVILLE.
'

And Hat Environs.

.

—Work began on the new stock yif tis

on Mood&amp;y.
,
—Wm, Kerr has bold his bouse aud
lot on Gregg Btreet to W. E. Griggs.

—The Bubble’s advertisers begin to
grow tired of holding the hank of yarn
for the “Bubble” to wind off.
—The Olio is authority for the intel­
ligence tfiat the Central Union Tele­
graph C4. ot)(aahytile Jtaa suspended.
—la the horse race on Saturday after­
noon, Chas. Furniss’ mustang beat T.
C. Downlugs by three rods, but Thdo.

will try again.
—M. R. Taylor and sons have pur­
chased an “Advance thresher,” and en­
gine, which will be here and ready for
business as soon as wheat is ready for
it. Business.
—A. Hopkins of Vt. Ville informs us
that on Friday eve., he drew from the
Thornapple a silver eel that measured
341-9 inobes leng and larger around
thar a tea cu j&gt;.
— Lots of good wool reaches tin? mar­
ket. Brooks Marshall &amp; Co. say the best
they have bought comes from Kalamo.
Fowler &amp; Ingerson the same of Maple
Grove and Andrew Hardy of Vt. Ville.
So we won’t grant the palm to any
town until further returns come in.

—Tt^pasumpsit case of Peter Pepfold vs. N. 8. Barnes, reheard on Mon­
day last, wasdecided in favor of Pen­
fold, the jury rendering a judgement
of $18JH for the plantiff. A. M. Flint,
attorney for Penfold and W. S. Powers
for Barnes. Score another victory for
labor.
—Those boys and beer had some­
what of a lou d time of it Saturday
night, but the former conquered the
latter about 8 a. m. the next morning,
and there was silence. Look out boys
desist from spell vile practices or next
time you tnay'find yourself in the
cooler.
—Mrs. W. E. Buel’s attention was
attracted by the barking of her dog,
Saturday night and proceeding to in­
vestigate she discovered a would be
burger climbing from the roof of ‘ the
kitchen into the chamber window. She
called for help and the burglar was
frightened away.

—When you notice a boy standing in
front of a fine display of firc works
with a far-away look in his eyes and
nervously moving lips, make up your
mind that, that boy is wrestling with
the conundrum: why did the village
dads set down on shootin’ off fire crack­
ers within the corporation f
—For the past month the hammer,
saw, trowel and paint brush has been
active at the Union house block, and
everyone has noted the improvement
as the work advanced. Tbe place has
been christened “the Nashville House.”
and will be opened for business to-day.'
We see no reason why it should nut
not prosper.
—Tbe Christian Sunday School held
its annul election last Sunday. Rev.
F. A. Bissell was elected Superintend­
ent ; Mrs. W. H. Yonng, Assistant; Jas,
Fleming, Secretaryp 6. S. Intfsreon,
Treasurer; A. R. Wblcott and Henry
Gokee, Librarians, and Miss Belle Tru­
man, Organist. The school is in a pros­
perous condition, has a good amount
of cash in the Treasury and a large at-

■ antlyoverto Barnes, calculating that keep Deb. shouting their praises for COMMON OOUBOIL PEOOEEDINGS.
’ he had vantage ground enough to win some time in order to dispose of tbe
ibe suit for the latter, but hi&amp; scheme mammoth stock.
The space between the Nashville
was exposed by the lawyeron the other
Present, Chipman, President; Boise, Demany,
side, and the suit lost. Penfold de­ House and Buel’s has been enclosed.
Dickinson and Lentz, Trustees; Absent, Bar­
clares that he. will prosecute Powers, It is an improvement.
H. C. Wolcqtt has returned from ber and Lee.
and should the latter be thrown ’‘oyer
Minutes of last meeting read and approved.
the bar” for malpractice he will be in Free Soil in order to celebrate the
The following accounts were presented, and
.
better shape to run for office tba^ nyer glorious Fourth at home.
on
motion allowed by ayes &lt;od nays, as follows:
8. C. Prindle has been to Adrian this
before.
Ayes; Boise, Dickinson,Dcmaray and Lentz.
—Wm. jlrrard of whose illness Men­ week to move bis family and household
Nays; none.
goods to their future home, Nashville.
Kocher Bros...,.'........ ........... .’......................45 00
tion has been made heretofore in The
SupL C. B. Bush of the M. • C. R. R., Isaac Purkey. .............
5 00
News, departed this life at six o’clock
was in the village on Tuesday giving Frank Parker........................................................1 88
Wednesday morning. A post mortem
John D. Wing................................................... 1 25
instructions in regard, to the new stock John Roberta............................ 1..................
1 88
examination under the direction of Dr.
Wm. Heckathocn.............................................. 1 25
Young, was held upon the remains yards.
Clark Rathbun................................................... 1 88
Miss Eevens, teacher of tbe interme­ Ed. Partello........................................
1 25
later in the day, when it was found
1 25
diate department of our school for the Mart Cooper................................................
that thedeeased’slungs, liver spleen, in
past year, has returned to her home at James L. Gregory....................................... ;... 2 75
fact his whole right side was badly in­
Motion by Detnaray that the order for fire­
inflamed. The funeral discourse w’as Almont.
.
A blind man and a littie girl, with an engine be countermanded.
preyhed by Rev. F. A. Bissell at the
Motion carried by ayea and nays as follows:
organette, perambulated our streets
Ayes: Boise, Dickinson, Demaray and Lentz.
house at 11 o’clock on Thursday. The
Tuesday, and gathered in many shin­
Nays; None.
diseased was born in Virginia in 1818,
ing nickles.
'
On motion council adjourned.
moved toOhio when a boy, and in 1853
Nearly every available spot from one
F. McDexbt,
t
Elihu Csintxx,
moved to present farm ii^ Maple Grovtr
Clerk. ’
.
President
end of Main street to the other has
where he has resided since. A man of
been secured for some sort of 4th of
integrity, genial, jorial, heartly and
WEST KALAMO.
July business.
kind, he bad the good will and respect
Mr. J. Kuuts says he didn’t offer
—Corn Is just booming.
of all who knew him, and not only his
Mr. Irland the milking of bis cows, and
—Haying begins this week.
.
family but many others will mourn that
that he was compelled to pay over five
—Heavy rain Sunday morning.
Wm. Jarrard is no more.
—Plenty wet enough for crops of ali kinds.
dollars dues on them.
—There isn’t a man in tbe state who
—Wheat that Is of rank growth is lodging
Sam Fowler»of Montague, visited
cuts so sorry a figure running a news­
Nashville last week, depositing $1.50 badly.
paper as Potter, of the Vt. Ville Hawk,
—Green peas arp what taste quite palatable
in The News bank before he departed
and any publisher who has an exchange
this week.
.
for his northern home.
—The most of the vx&gt;l dip is marketed or
with that sheet will corroberate this as­
Mrs. Henry Hyde of Newago, t ho contracted for.
*
sertion. Last week Potter’s duties as
haa been in attendance upon her fa­
—Mrs. Belle Townsend has returned to her
editor of “The Bubble,” were more ar­
ther, Wm. Jarrard,during his long ill­ home at North Muskegon.
duous than usual, consequently he
ness and death, returned home to-day.
—Mr. Allen doeedhis school in. tbe Barnes
“6oured”andsaid some things that were
The Blue Ribbnn meeting will, be district on Friday of last week.
very ridiculous, indeed. Among other
—Mr. Hartwell, of Washtenaw county. Is
held at the M. E. church next Sunday
things was a “big I and a little u” arti­
atap. m. A Jarge attendence is ex­ visiting his son Frank, of this town.
cle upon the re-union of the army of the
—About one full-grown potato to the family
pected as election of officers will take
Potomic, whiebbrought out the follow­
is the census of this town just now.
place.
ing remarks from two well-known aud
—Mrs. John Hurd’s parents, of Benton, were
Messrs. W. H. Young, F. C/B.’iie,
, the guests of Mr. and Mn. Hurd, Sunday.
reliable Detroit papers:
Levi S. Smith, James Fleming, C. D.
—Your correspondent will boast of haring
The zczmsd veteran who now fighte tbe bat­
tle for bread m editor of tbe Vermontville Cooley and W. S. Powers, attended •the best onions (from seed) of any one in this
Hawk, wades through about a column of mat­ the quadriennial meeting of the Sover-;
town.
ter thia week, the gist of which Is that he feels
—Anson Curtis and wife, of Mecoata county,
hurt because he came to the Detroit re-union eigu Sanctuary, E. M. R.of Bi., at Jackand had to pay for his meals and lodging.— sou on Tuesday.
* formerly of this town, spent Sunday amo ng
Evening News.
Mr. and Mrs H. M. Lee entertained friends hereabouts.
There 13 just one editor In Michigan who wu
—From a letter received from Orra Williams,
disgusted with the re-union In Detroit and be the Christian social at their elegant
devotee nearly a column of his paper, tbe Ver­ residence on Wednesday evening, in a of Nebraska, we learn he has fully recovered
montville Hawk, that heia a veteran, and yet,
। from tbe rattle-snake bite received a few weeks
had to pay for what he had and that the pub­ fine manner. A large number was
lic paid more respect to General Grant than present, and an enjoyable, social time
—Prospects are that harvest bands will be
they did to him. That’s too bod. Perhaps the and ice cream was indulged ia. Re­
scarce. The farmers have a badly mixed job
committee of arrangements did .not know who
ceipts $12.61
on bund, in haying, harvesting and corn-cutting

___

_____ _

----- ——

/

all coming together this year.
—An entertaining time Is anticipated at the
Association on this Saturday evening. A
splendid programme is being made up. The
society now numbers 112 and great Interest Is
Elaborate preparations have been made to
manifested.
‘celebrate the 100th anniversary of American
—Good, clean, newsy locals are solicited for
Independence in this village in &amp; manner be­
this column; dirty ones not wanted at any price.
coming the time-honored occasion, and from
If you wish to get even with any one through
tbe reporta thus far received we believe Nash­
tbe preui, do yourown writing, I can’t find time
ville will have more visitors on that day than
she ever did before.
Tbe work of preparing the grout •&gt;, buildings,
—A fow day» ago Fred Williams was fortu­
epeakert stand and beats, erecting arches and
nate enough to have a large zwann of bees light
decorating Main street will be begun to-day in
oa a aaudl sapling in tbe edge of tbe woods
order to be completed by Monday night. Bewhere he wm at wo^k. But a short time wm
*ow we give the programme for the day:
necessary to hive them, and then he wm
National salute at sunrise!
'
Tbe grand street parade will occur at l(f
—What I* pronounced In this vicinity as the.
o’clock a. tn. It will be divided into two sec­
tions, each led by a band of music. Tbe first
will form on Main street between Maple and fendant farmer to make a great ado about cat­
tle running tn tbe highway, when not' only his
Washington, heading south; the second on
Main street, south of Sherman, but heading own enjoy that privilege, but would find but
North. First division will march south to little satisfaction in ranging the few acres of
Sherman, east to State, Ljrth to Maple; (the scant pasture afforded by their owner.
—W. H. Pout has laid aside the '‘stick” and
se corn! division, led by its band, will follow tbe
first), thence west to Main, north to Washing- “column rule, "peacefully dropped hls‘*shodtlng
stick,” quietly and silently shelved hla “quota”
and' ‘quad,”ideclared be will “chaw” his “em”
no more, snd instead of being the victim of a
Music—Band.
(gal)ley rack be wGl not “impose" anymore,
Pray er—Rev. A. D. Newton, Chaplain.
but has hied himself away beyond Vt Ville to
Singtag—“My Country, Thee," Glee Club.
apply hi.' abilities to raising as monuments of
Reading of the Ddaratfon of Independent
by Rev. Bissell.
his skill, bare buildings for the hardy grangers.

THE FOURTH IB NASHVILLE.

LOCAL GIBBLE-GABBLE

Let the eagle Bcreatn.
Celebrate in Nashville.
No fire water on the 4th,
Another heavy rain storm yester­
dayEd. Sinter haa returned from Petos­
key.
Miss Ida Hardy has returned to Nash­
ville.
A lively thunder storm early Sunday

morning.
' W. H. Atkinson was in Lansing over

The Olio man

throwed himself on

local* this week.
New stain and sidewalk at C. W.
Smith’s grocery.
Mrs. Kate Altoff of Hastings, is visit­
ing Mrs. Al. Rasey.
Geo. Francis was at Grand Rapids,
Wednesday, on business.
Prof. Niles departed for Breedsville,
Van Buren Co,, yesterday.
R. E. Brackett of Charlotte, war in
the village on Wednesday.
Our therometers have scored 98 in
the shade already this season.
A. Coulter and wife of Chicago, are
in the village visiting friends.
Clement Smith aud family were in
tire tiillage visiting yesterday.

—Saturday night during tbe thunder
storm, lightning struck the telephone
wire connecting tbe Nashville mills
with tbe proprietor’s house. The fluid
followed the wire to the mil], despoiled
A. E. Gemberling of Jersey Shore,
a window and fired a pile of bags. -Pa., ia sticking type on The News.
Enough of tbe lively current followed
Miss Mattie Hindmarch has been
tbe wire in tbe other direction how- with friends at Ypsilanti, this week.
ewer, to attract John’s attention, and he
By the time this issue reaches its patlooked out, saw the fire at the mill and rpns it will be all over with Gaiteau.
wm there in time to extinguish it and
Beau camp de Vanocker have mov­
save valuable property.
•
ed their lively to the Nashrille House
barn.
—A short time since a certain house­
J. M. Freeman of N. Y„ aud Sidney
wife incautiously made use of a rotten
clothes line to dry her week’s washing Allen pt Charlotte are visiting N. P.
on, when a furious wind storm came .Frink.
Henry of tbe old reliable has reduced
up and she realized a sad disaster. All
the price of beef steak to 184 cts per
menu tugged furiowly at the line. pound.
W. E. Bud attended the races at
Grand Ranids yesterday and tbe day
before.
until the line
Bev. A. D. Newton attented the Pro­
wealth
hibition State Convention at Jackson
on Wednesday.
Mrs. H. R. Diekinsou starts for Man

WOODLAND.
Glass ball shooting, at 1:30, at the Club
Ground. Prizes will be announced ou. the day.
Com.—Wm. E. Bnd,J.K. Austin, J.D. Dick­
inson.

How the corn does boom.
Mr. Bolton was married to Miss Gales at tbe
M. E. parsonage, last Friday evening.
’
Mrs. Reber was married to a genu'.•man from
M OO; second, 82.00. Com.—T. C. Downing,
H. Roe and John Barry.
Freeport last Friday. If you wish to know the
Four Paw Race at 8 o’clock, from croeslngln particulars ask Baraby.
front of F. T. Boise’s to crossing front C. L.
The 6. 8. Institute was well attended Sunday
Glasgow's. First prize, 82-00; second, 8L00.
Com.—Alex Blair, T. Walker AC. Demarsy.
evening, and a good time was had. We under­
Barrel Race at 3:30 o’clock, from err wing stand they arc to be held every four weeks.
front Truman's to crossing front Al. Rasev'e.
Wheat stands on an average of five feet high,
First prize 82.00; second prize, 81.00. Com­
Dr. Foote, H. Dickinson and H. Derier.
front bottom. People wonder how the eelf-Mndere

81.00. Com—A. J. Hsnly, Auitta Brooks snfi
Chas. Fowler.
*
Huraerace at 4:80 on Phillips «
prize 81 a00; mcMnI prize fW;

PRICHARDVILLE.
All U quiet..
Oats are looking fine.
Corn la looking excellent.
Wheat blda fair for a good crop.
John Groats drives a new horse.
School has dosed for a two-wecks’ vacation.
The dip of the sheep shears has ceased to be

Mrs. H. Holcomb returned home from Eaton
county last Saturday.
Corn will be knee high by the 4th, and most
pieces well cultl rated.
Some friends from Kalamazoo county visited
at Mr. Fisher’s last Sunday.
George Sulsbaugh la building a wing on his
bouse; a needed improvement.
The M. E. social ywill be entertained by Mrs.
Edward Morory, Thursday afternoon next.
Mrs. Eva Dando and child are at Galesburg
visiting Mrs. Dando’s sister, Mrs. John Collister.
mers. The crop will be very light, and not of
the. beat quality.
J. W. Gibson, of West Campbell, Ionia Cd,
made bls old friends and acquaintances here It,
short visit last week.
Mrs. Mary Dazler, of Kansas City, Mo., will
spend the present summerhere with her pa rents
Mr. and Mm. John Shafi.
The time for holding the M. E. services at
the Weeks' school bouse has been changed from
one to two o'clock p. m., every alternate Sun­
day. Sunday school one hour earlier.
Robert Haync’s flock of 103 sheep sheared on
an average over eight pounds to tbe bead. He
has as good a flock of sheep os Is to be fou od
any where In the township of Baltimore.
Mr. and Mrs. Husaon, have sold their farm a
Bonfield and will live a part of the time .with
their daughter, Mrs. Groat, at this place, and
part of the time with a daughter at Banflcld.
We hare intended to celebrate the coming
4th, but as there is do celebration nearer than
Nashville, and they will not allow us to shoot
but we will have to give it up and stay at home.
Our Sunday school was organized into a mis
sionary society last Sunday. The following
offiicera were elected: President, Mrs. Delano;
Vice-President, Willie Marabou; Secretary,
Charlie D: Prichard; Treasurer, J. E. Delano.
I begin to breath easier and with less fear
than formerly, for It has been nearly three
whole weeks since any one has told me I would
suffer If I put their names in Tnz News. If 1
receive no more threats, perhaps I will muster
up courage enough to write Utile happenings
without being afraid that some big little chap
wCl pounce upon me and devour me without
any further ceremony. I will try and keep my
courage up and perhaps I can write of truer
than heretofore.
Phil Puts.

MAPLE GROVE.
Tbe Norton school closed this week.
One of F. Hoag's children Is quite sick.
Whitney Family at the Center June 80th.
The German school closed Thursday night.
Jake Shoup has built an addition to bls house.
Wm. King Is building an addition to hla
house.
Mrs. P. M. Hyde’s sister, of York State, Is
visiting here.
f
Mrs. Spear, of Waterloo, Ind., is visiting at
J. K. Wilcox's.
HM" A. Streeter has been taking good care of
a felon on her thumb.

Simon’s house at the Center.
M1m Mary Phinisey has returned from Battle

LOCAL MATTERS.
ARRIVED AT LAST’

Glasgow has sold quite a number of buggies
already for tbe 4th, and he haa some as fine
ones as are tn the state waruanted equal to any
In finish ant durability and his nrices are very
tow. Don’t buy until;you see them.
.
SODA WATER.
Good Judges concede that the beat soda water
In seven counties h« made by Hale, the DrugGOOD JUDGES
Concede that tbe finest and largest stock of
Men’s, Youth’s and Boys, Clothing, and Gents
FamishIng Gaxxte ever laid down in Nashville,
is on exhibition at Phimdlz A Cjmfmxx’*.
MONEY TO LOAN,
On Beal Estate at low rate of Arcst of
________ LflF &amp; DrnxCT

SHEEP TO LET.
A few sheep to let tn lota to suit. Enntdret
C. H. Brady, Nashville, or write or csll on n
at Hastings.
Clemzxt

WILL ME.
Potato buga will die If properly sprti
with Paris Green. A fine ground, pure a
At Glasooi
OF Full Hue of Wall Paper at
F. T. BOISE’S.

LOOK HERE!

great downfall In stock I will make Prices al
the old reliable marketas follows: Choice weDfatted Beef from 0 to 12W eta., per lb. Other
meats In proportion. Call and see the dis­
play.
H. Hol
A REWARD OF 125.00,
Will be given, to aiiy one who will produce the
author of those unfathomable lies which are
circulated about me.
Jemx D. Guy.
STRAYED
From my premises on tbe Woodland-Castleton
------ u— ---------- carlings—a red beiffer and a
iyone giving Information inthereabouts will be liberally
2w42
rewarded.
WJj CurrooD.
CIGARS.
The best 5 cent cigar is kept by Hale, the
Druggist.

FOUND..
A seethe that will stand and do good work,
“The Wetmore," warranted, at Glasgow's.

NEVY HOTEL.
The Nashville House, having been thoroughly
overhauled and Improved, ia now open for tbe
accommodation of the public. Located In the
center of buzlneaa.lt la thh hotel for commer­
cial men tn atop at. and con*nient tor fanners.
Prices reasonable.
J. M- Ftnrr &lt;t Sox, Phom. •
FOR SALE OR TRADE.
One No. 4 Champion Mower, one Walter
.. Wood tingle reaper; will trade one or both
jr a horse.
L. O. Cbooxbb.

HARVEST.
Harvest is coming and Cradles- Grain Rakes,
etc., can be foupd at
Glasgow's.

NEW BRICK STORE.
j
I am building a new store and reqart afl
parties having accounts with me to call at once
and settle cither br note or cash, as I will Dead
all that is due me.
Gao. W. Fbajtcis.
Cradle for sale at

J. M. Wood’s.

A FEW THOUSAND DOLLARS
To Loan on good Real Estate security.
L» A Dqbkrb.

Considerable wheat waa blown down during
the storm Saturday and Sunday nigbta.
Hard to beat.—Maple Grove haa a young lady
four acres, and he came here and got one six!
ting spent Saturday and Sunday in Potterville. he haa plowed twelve scree with it and It la
Claric Watkins fell Into the creek while fish­ good for meny more acres. How is that?
J. M. Wood.
ing the other day. Moral: Don’t leave school
to go Ashing.
FOR BALE,
.
Wm. Niles has tbe job of building the abut­ A first-class express wagnn; or will trade for «
A. C. Staxtox.
ments for the new bridge across Quaker brook good buggy. 40-43.
C. R. Palmer let: his hone unhitched, which

NEW GOODS.

Jerry Shoup is bound to have bls com worked
If It has to be done with an ox, his girl leading

On Monday Wm. Niles was called to Adrian
by a telegram, which convened the news that
his brother-in-law was drowned.
■

meeting hat.
,
Mrs. Tubbs, wife of A. Tubbs, of Boston,
Ionia cotfnty, a former resident of Maple Grove,

agneraJ
I «tM*a

FARMERS, LOOK HERE!
The Maple Grove mills are now ready to grind
or exchange your grisu. Storage free of charge.
We guarantee »ad«fa&lt;*tton evert time, we hav­
ing repaired the mill; and it Is now ready to do
business. We botx to have your patronage.
&gt; Youra Respectfully,
Geo. W. Gues.
ORDINANCE No. 88.

There are a couple of ladies living In this
town who are sadly disappointed. After trying
tor a long time to mate two male birds and
raUc some young ones, the troth finally dawned

CHICAGO TO DENVER.

Grand dteplay of Are works in the evening.

NUMBER 41

fire crackers, exploding torpedoes, or other ex­
plosive materials within the corporation.
Sec. 1. The Common Council of tbe village
of Nashville ordain, that It shall not be lawful

�Adjutant,

wnull led gentleman
xn or r t-n»fr Besrt would
nlX i -u’• nreVi£ srritn oil man
tb&lt;»,« H «l&lt;«j»4own beluw.

I

w-«b AH* w-we riHep tu bed.
ii I I were tik «■ *e»o—
»c bi b r dxnpiod «wt above,
on lar mox below.

Well!
irranny, smiling fa*e.
Thc Gkwtlnmim Dir-nw.

ABUCT DQG8.

parallel between the___________ ••Wolf____
reared Cipklrvn" of Oude, India, and
the New rwtHtreet Arab; and then ex­
plains the methods employed by the
New York Children’s Aid.Society, of
their eyes to detect the King and suite
whioh he is Secretary, In rescuing these
among so many paasMigerw, and as the
little waif* and sending them to homes
in the West. Tbe following extract
almws the experience of one boy in this
ity swept on and on. equestrians and
admirable institution:
Well, here comes one of the' wolf- pedestrians mixing like Indian jungle.
The military bands played the Hawai­
reared children to 'die office of tbe Chil­
ian anthem, and many an eye waa filled'
dren's Aid Sonet.', in Fourth .street.
with tears. His Majesty and suite were
New York. He b..s no cap, but his
now transferred to a smaller Steamer,
hair serve* as n covering for his bend;
and as we step)&gt;ed ashore 20,000 voices
bright and cunning eves look out from
shouted
their welcome. People lined
under the twis ed looks; his face is so
both side* of tbe street for two miles;
dirty and brown that you hardly. know
.
garlands,
ferns an&lt; wreaths of flowers
what the true color Is; be has no shirt,
adorned every male and female. Tbe
but wears a ragged coal, and trousers
streets were thickly
covered with
nut at the k»e&lt;% aud much too large for
greens and shrubs, flags were hoisted,
him; he is barefooted, of.conrse. lie is
and every window was graced with the
not at all q timid boy. small as he is,
bin ac s am if nothing' would ever upset Hawaiian flag, all church bells ringing
at once. Ilia Majesty and suite entered
his sclf-paw-osiou. whatever might hiq&gt;the state carriage, drawn by six spright­
iK’ti. Thu bemuolent Mr. Maev, who
lias been dealing w.th poor children for ly bays, and as he passed the lines of
spectators hurrah after hurrah rent. the
the iosf quartci oi' a century, meets him.
air; tbe military presenting arms, the
and iwks:
band playing the anthem, the different
. " Well. my boy. what do you want?"
Masonic
ana other lodges giving their
"A homo. pie isc, sir."
signs of welcome, all uncovered. The
"What is your name?"
children sang hymns, the public shouted
"Hain’t got no name, sir; the boys
“ Aloha." throwing their hats into the
calls ma Rickety.’’
air, and others discharged fire-works;
‘*WeIl/llckrty. where do you live?"
every street crossing was adorned with
"Don’t live nowhere, sir."
an arch' of triumph, covered with
" Bat where do yon stay?"
flowers, mottoes, frescoes, Chinese lan­
“ I don’t stay nowherus in .the,day­
terns. crowns and flags. Slowly only
time. bbl 1 sleeps in hay-barges, sir. am
could the carriage move.. The gates of
sometimes in dry-goods boxes. an&lt;
the palace gardens were most tastefully
down on the steam-gratings in winter,
and artificially decorated. Shields in all
till the M. P.’s (policemen) conic along,
different national colors, with the
nnd jist now a.covehas taken me in at
names of countries visited-. were sus­
the iron bridge nt Harlem."
pended from the old arcld All na­
“Iron bridge! What do you mean?"
“Why, them holler iron things what tional colors united in one bunch, with
tbe Hawaiian on the top facing each
holds the bridge up. He got it first, aud
column. His Majesty’s portrait, in life
be lets me In.
size being in the center. Thousands
" Pickety. who is yonr father?"
of persons followed slowly, steadily and
"Httinl got no father, sir; he died
orderly behind standard-bearers In na­
nforo I knew, and inc milher. she
tional costume. The military were in
drinked and bale me. and wc was put
their new German uniform, the school
out by tbe landlord. and she d'cd and
children .were dressed in white, with
the City Hall buried her!" Aud some­
red sashes, bearing mottoes and stand­
thing like a shadow camo over his cun­
ards. One had a representation of the
ning blue eyes.
two hemispheres on it, with " Kalaknua,
“ Pickety, did yon over hear of God?"
"Yes. air, I have beared the fellers our circumnavigator;" another, “Hail
to the Chief who in triumph advances;"
swear about Him, ami I know it's lucky
to say someth.ng to Him when you sleep another, "Lives there a man with soul
so dead. Who never to himself has said,
out in bad lights."
This is mv own, my native land.” At
“Did you ever go to school, Pickety,
last tbe King ascended the grand stair­
or to chureh?"
case of the palace, where his Queen and
“No. sir; 1 never went to no church
sister
awaited him. The whole palace
nor school. 1 should kind o’ like to
road, stops and veranda had been
learn somethin’ I"
“ Well. Pickety. we'll make a man ot strewn with roses, and works of love
done by the household servants greeted
you. it you will only try. You will, 1
h m everywhere.’ His Majesty kissed
sec!"
So Pickety is sent by Mr. Macv down his Queen,, and bis sister, and tears of
joy streamed down her royal cheeks—a
to a clean, beautiful “Ixxl'iug House."
sincerer, truer, heartier welcome can­
A kind, cxpcricncoil Superintcndt-iit.
not l&lt;e imagined. These Hawaiiana are
Mr. Calder, mccki him. ami a matron Mrs. Calder—takes him in hand. In a tender-hearted, loving people, and
his seer.! heart, little Pickety thinks vie with each other in their love for one
they must be a ven' soft-act. or else that who so richly deserves it as their King,
Kalakaua.—London Standard.
they want tx» make money out of him
by and by. but be takes their kindiies.-&lt;
very quietly. J’crliap.H. too. he « wnich­ General Sherman as a Presiding Officer.
ing for a chance to fioekct a handy little
I,lose who would learn how to run a
article or so, ur to blip oul-of-dourb with
political caucus had better take note of
something.
General
Sherman's style of presiding
And now. first, he is nut into a bath
nnd made clean, and Ills hair is cut and conducting the machine at the
short by a cutter such as those used for Army Reunion. Here it is:
"The meeting will come to order.
clipping horses. He feels much better
Ah, yes (nodding to an officer'about to
after all this, and quite enjoys a clean
rise). General Hickenlooper moves the
chock shirt given him: bit! he finds that
he must wear his ' old trousers agaiq. so appointment of a Committee on Creden­
tials (taking a paper from his left vest
his hastilv formed plan of slipp.ng nway
pocket). The Committee will consist
with a whole suit of new clothes is
&lt;rt General Hickenlooper, Colonel A.
nipped in the bud.
He then enjoys a plain, wholesome and Major B. We must be speedy,
supper tn company with other boys; gentlemen, in arranging these details."
“General Smith; did I see General
an I when he sees the sweet face of the
matron who is serving them, he finds Smith rise?" (A voice: He’s gone out
his feelings change a little, and he al­ for a moment.) “Well, never mind;
most thinks she is'too good for him to it’s all the same. General Smith moves
the appointment of a Committee oc
try to cheat her.
Presently he gnes up-willingly to a Resolutions, an (Lit will consist of (tak­
ing a list from his right vest pocket)
large, cheerful school-room.
This room is as dean as wax-work, General So and So (looks blank.) That’s
and Pickety is vary glad he has had that not the committee, either. That list I
just read is another committee, and it
thorough washing.
After lh;s came the lessons and for will be moved later. Hero’s the right
the first time he was inlroduoed to all one (reads it.) You sec, gentlemen,
the letters, though he had known we get our young staff officers who have
nothing else to do to fix up these things
enough before to tell one nawspapor
from another; and he was very glad to in advance."
A voice, “Move to adjourn." The
find that he learned them quickly-, and
that in counting nnd sums he was Chair: "O, no use putting that motion.
quicker than the others; of course, this, We must fix these preliminaries first.
was because he had sold papers and no I have three more committees prepared
here."
■­
had had to make change so oiten.
And so on, in cheerful disregard of
Little Pickety’8 greatest surprise,
ordinary
Parliamentary
practice, the
however, was when he wns takdn up to
the sleeping-room —a large, handsome, General announces the details fixed up
airy - dormitorv. clean as a ship’s deck,
with nice, springy wire-bc&lt;te arrangud ' nores impromptu motions, and “runs
e convention till it gets going," and
on iron frames, one over another, like
then allows other voices to be heard.
ships’ bnnks.
And
it is amusing to him thus to play
After his breakfast next morning, he
beard that some boys bad put their caucus chairman.
The General has a horror of secondmoney into the “saving»-l»snk" in the
audience-room; and other*had borrowud wind oratory. Upon tbe occasion of
from the fund for starting boys in busi­ one reunion, where a political orator
caught his seventh wind and occupied
ness, and others hail paid for their lodg­
ings and meals (five cents each), and lie two hours. General Sberman. who fol­
began to. feel he, too, must du some- lowed him, said: “I have listened with
intense patience to the eloquent gentle­
Pu kety at length ventured to speak man who has now sat down." This
Jm the Superintend nt, who kindly ex- equivocal compliment the General sub­
plained to him that each boy was ex- sequently desired to amend to “ intense
pcctcd to do all he could to pay his interest.*’—St Zorns Globe-Democrat.

Bruno is a snnerb St. Bcmnnl, nnd
lives in New Jersey. In spite of his
great size and strength. Btuno-bus the
most lovely of dispositions. Here is an
example. He h.is two other St. Ber­
nards as playmates in his kennel, much
younger dogs, bu^very lively, and huge
romps the three luwa^Not long since,
Grcteben, the smallest qf thlUttial mis­
behaved. Punir“
*
—'
____
Foor _Gretcbeix.y
_______ _w.,.AbI'nxg all over, was
held down bv her master, who leaned
----------over her with whip Upraised.
upraised. Just
at
that instant he^blt
he*lt a gentle nressarc
pressure
from •behind
'' ’ —
upon ‘"*1
his shoulder,
shoulder, and
and
tprncd to behold Bruno balancing him­
self on three legs, and holding out the
fourth paw cntreafingly. while with a
jno4 beseeching expression in hla brown
eyrs he thus was trying to “beg off"
his playmate from tbe. whipping. Don’t
you think that you would have thrown
the wfep to the other end of -the van!
after flint. and given Bruno a hug? That
is what bin master did, at any rate.
An English friend of mine told me
lately of a dog with whom I should be
proud to "shake hands," and whom 1
hope sumo day to meet His memo far
Captain, and he ts a young bull terrier,
very thickset and active. He is nccustomed to drive every afternoon with the
groom to the railroad station to meet bis
master. Not long since this groom hap­
pened to pike out a very freakhtb horse,
which, I6.’t alone al the depot with only
Captain io the trap; took fright aud ran
-'furiously down the road. Captain bold­
ly le.i|»fd from tbe vehicle, rolled over
in the dust, dashed up again, and dart­
. cd.nftcr the horse. The reim were drag­
ging on the ground. Setting them tn
his mouth. C.iptain hung on. in spite of
all further bdunelngs rfnd draggings,
until ho hod actually stopped thenorsc.
and that before any serious mischief had
been done. Was not that a courageous
act for even a plucky little English bull­
dog?
,
.
This same Captain, when be was much
younger? and required some whippings
in ouirse of bis training u-cd to hide
the whip wherewith the -stable-man
switched him. One day. while it wa«
being hunted for, somebody suggested:
•• Look In Captain's kennel.’
Away
ran the gartlcner’#boy. jnsl in time to
overtake Captain jumping out of his
k&gt;*nnel with the lost whip in his jaws.
He mu’t have lheard and quite under­
stood the direction given to search hi«
quarters, and thus tried to spoil the re­
sult. Ou being discovered, ho made no
at empt to hide his clever trick, but
dropped the whip guiltily, and look to
his heels.
Pampo was a small terrihr whom I
knew wry. well long ago. •• Go gel
yoor.oollar, Pampo;" “ Pampo, 1 feel a
door open somewhere up-stair«: go find
it and shut it," were commands ho en­
tirely midcrstuod and obeyed. At nine
o'clock every evening his master, an
old gentleman*with snow-white hair,
would turn tp his wife across the hearth
an&lt;l sav. very gently and without look­
ing at all in rumpo's direction n* the
little dog lay dozing beside them:
"Wife, 1 think it is high time for dogs
to go to bed." Pampo would, without
further orders, meekly rise and slink off
to his box in the hallway.
One of the • handsomest and bestbehaved mastiffs that ever 1 met was
JEnea.”. a Massachusetts gentle mm'3
particular pet. JEncas was, in spite of
his size.-a* frol'csome as a kitten, very
faithful and intelligent, but a so a great
lorerof good cheer. The number of
dinner* that he could digest in tbe day,
and the size, of those dinners, were
something marvelous. Small wonder,
indeed, that he grew fat. One day tbe
cook, with his breakfast, also gave him
a sound lecture on bis besetting weak­
ness. “Do you think this bouse can
afford to keep such a great greedy
beast m you? ’ I heard her saying.
" You do nothing bat eat, eat, eat the
whole day long. What do you do for
it?,k Imagine cook’s astonishment when,
later on m l|iat very morning. TEneas
marcbed up to her, bold.ng tenderly in
his jaws a poor dudk. alive but squawk­
ing
which-----------------------------he hod cncoun-_
„ vigorously,
----------------------tered in a nnghbofs yard, captured.
U^his'friend.
much
and now brought to,his
friend, as much
m to say: “See. I can do something for
my own support, after all. I have own wav. apd that some kind gentle­
it this
to be cooked for my man' had supplied money with which to
help boys who might wish to start in
BusincM.
Mr. Calder was ready to supply him
with a boot-blacking outfit, or to’ give
him checks which would entitle him to
in Ixis
so many copies of the Telegram or I) dhj
News, the boy to return the value of the
checks, after a few days, when he
should have made some mdnev.
Pickety chewe tbe newspaper chocks,
•nd cleared twenty-five cents, and then

Me. by keeping tbe
regular, and the
esesevoty case,
: other column.—

Tribune.

The Champion Machines.
WAGONS ONLY $60.00.

In tbe matter nf vaeclnaUnn it is Ute heifer

.

DID YOU KNOW IT I

Never cry over spilt milk. Tbe milk man h*«
already wasted enough water oh It.
'

A COMPLETE LINE OF

Buggies, Carriages, Wheel Harrows and
___ Cultivators, Mounted Seeders,
and 4 kinds f Plows.

REED’S GENUINE SPRING TOOTH HARROW

REMEMBER THiA
If you are sick. Hop Bitters will surely aid
Nature tn making you well wbeb all else falls.
Ifyou are costive or dyspeptic, or are suffer­
ing from any other of the numerous diseases of
.
Common, and bung retwly'for use.
the stomach or bowels, it is your own fault 1f
you remain 111, tor Hop Bitters are a aoverelgu
■remedy in all/uch complaluta.
■ If you are wasting away with any form of
Kiduey disease, stop tempting death thia mo
SKWIINCi MAOH^ES,
ment, and turn for scare to Hop Bitters. If you are sick with that terrible sickness
Nervousness you wi;l find a “Balm tn Gilead" PUQW POINTS for the Oliver Chilled. Wiard, Three Riv­
to tbe use of Hop Bitters.
•
ers, Bryan, Cale, Curtis, Dodge, Robinson
If you are a frequenter, or a resident of a
And many other Plows.
miasmatic district, barricade your system
against tbe scourge of all countries—malarial,
In fact, wc keep a full and complete slock of Bret clasa Hardware and Farming Toole. Call
epidemic, biliousness, and intermittent fevers—
and see them before buying.
.
»
■
bv tbe use of Hop Bitters. •
'
‘If you have rough,.pimply, er swallow akin,
bad breath, pains nud aches, and feel miserable
generally, Hop Bittern will give you fair akin,
rich blood, sweetest breath, health, and comfori.
In abort they cure all diseases of tbe stom­
ach, Bowels, Blood; Over, Nerve*, kidneys,
Bright's disease. *500 will be paid for a case
they will not cure or help.
That poor bedridden, invalid wife, sister,
mother or daughter, 4 can be made the picture
of health, by a few bottles of Hop Blttera, cost­
ing but a trifle. Wlil you let them suffer i

ROAD SCRAPERS, SQUARE DRA6S, GRIND STONES,

HERE WE AKE A&amp;AIH!
■WITH A FULL STOCK OF-

Classical: When Ajax defied the lightning
it was just after the infliction of a lightning-rod

BRIGHT'S DISEASE, DIABETES.
Beware of the stuff that pretends to cure thais
disease or other serious Kidney, Urinary or
Liver Diseases, as they only relclve for a time
and makes you ten times worse afterwards, but
rely solely on Hop Bitters, the only remedy that
will surely and permanently cure you. It des­
troys and removes the cause of disease ro ef­
fectually that it never returns. «
After marriage the question of who ahall be
speaker of the house is speedily settled.

Rev. M. P. Remington, Ithaca, N. Y.,
writes: “From too close application to my
calling, my health underwent a severe strain.
I felt a weakness in every part of my body.
My digestion especially failed mo, and my
nerves became nil unstrung.
Recreation did
not do me proper benefit. Finally, on tbe rec­
ommendation of a brother minister, I tried
Brown's Iron Bitters. .It baa made me feel bel­
ter and stronger than I ever before felt since 1
wan u young man."
WOMEN WHO BUFFER THOSE TERRIBLE
HEADACHES.
I used “Favorite Remedy" for those severe
Slck-beadaches I spoke about, and It has en­
tirely cured me. You may use my name, If
you please, among those who so freely testify
to the value of youV medicine. I owe the res­
toration of my wonted good health to Kennedy’s
“Favorite Remedy." Sarah J. Woodruff. New­
burg, N. Y. The above ia one of many letter*
of the kind received by Dr. David Kennedy, of
Rondout, N. X
"Variety is the spice of life," but there’s
such a thing as a variety show being too spicy.
Invalids suffering from slugishncsa of the
liver, feeble action of the heart, a feeling of
suffocation and debility arising from various
causes, find sure relief in Brown's Iron Bitters.

Who were the flnrt aatrologeral Thea tars;
because they first studded lite heavens.

Wagoiis
OUR LINE BUGGIES
■EMBRACES

Dexters,
.
Phaetons.
White Chappel and Coal Boies, hang with Elliptic Springs.
Two and Three Spring Democrats.
UR WORK IS ALL DONE UPON HONOR. BUGGIES
being made from Second Growth Hickory.
Our Tops are lined with All-Wool Indigo-Dyed Goods and
Warranted not to Fade. W. H. Atkinxon, a painter whose
work has never went back on him, lias charge of our paint de­
partment, and can be relied on. Bolin, Dabh Feet, Body Loupi
and Stays are made from Norway Irun nnd the entile buggy
ironed in a desirable and superior manner and warranted.

O

Elixir Vitae for Women.—Mrs. Lydia E. Pink­
ham, 283 Western Avenue, Lynn, Mm*., has
made tbe discovery 1 Her Vegetable ComKind
ia a positive cure for female complalnU. A
line addressed to tlda lady will elicit all neces
sary information.

.WOMAN CAN M

HEALTH OF WCM?

Until you have thoroughly examined mine. Spokes made
from Second Growth StocK and the wagon is made to stand
the wear and tare of our roads.

MPATHZE WTTH^ TJ THE HOPE

WOMAN.

HAVE IN STOCK A NUMBER OF-^J

Ac Bradley'n

Chilled Plows, Hay Rakes aud Cultivators,
Which I will Sell at Cost to Close out.

E. COOK

S

the advent of summer is generally
marked by the number of baby car­
riages. refrigerators and loafers on tbe
sidewalks. Relative to the latter the
Zki!/«ays: "There is nothing like them
in the heavens above, the earth beneath,
nor tbe waters under the earth. They
toil not, neither do they spin, and, as
the poet said of batan: ‘they most sure­
ly be allowed to exist for some reason
not clearly understood;’ but when, like
Casar's slaves on the Appian Way,
they come between" the wind and our
nobility, the law, in the «hai?e of a po­
liceman, might rid us of their pres-

EEP YOU EYE ON THIS
LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S
VXagTABLE COMPOUND.
A nm Cm r.r .11 FEMALK WEAK-

50

Wagons
OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE

’

th a Womb, XTomdlaa, PRO­
LAPSUS UTEK1, Arc.

WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH
Find Great Relief in Its

THREE INCH TIRE
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING

BETTER THUN COMMON TIRE
We believe the Three inch Tire i» destined to come
into general use. Call and see them.
SCHOOL

Sold by C. L Glasgow, Nashville, Mich.
Mich.,

�OX AMD AFTKBMAR 1

tte Mata U»e Rill pan* .

owup-nioa Id crime. Jsnwa Rice, suo- I
eceded in haring sentence in his cess
work as a drudge—as a huraan machine.
cent of deferred, in order that be might bring
TBiire are a vast number of these human
forward witnetaeA to prove his previous
niarRhww. attempting to run farm*, or
good character. Yesterday was the day
to tie employed by the month to aid in
cent of the allotted for the final hearing in his owe,running one. They arc. however, sad­ former
cent of the 1 and when Rice was brought into court MVnl bt tmUMtit. Ttw expwimett waa triad
Wllh inadk-iiM:.—Old BaytUfl.
ly deficient in Interest, intelligence nnd latter.
his wife and two children, one a bright
judgment. They can in no respect be
No mare perfect food thin wheat bran little boy of four years, and the other a aysmpaUMrf'r inflamailon. Iu this strait he
MUCK: fl1.SU, IF FaID IN ADVANOL
called ‘Skilled workmen as every farmer.
I babe aimont in arms, were present. At
Dr. Kennedy,, of RnndoUL N. Y .who
can be found for young animals as it
; or. every one who hire* out as a fanner.
To Advbbtjsers:
contains a .rat io of tbirtem to fifty or one a^ht* of his father the little fellow X-wd him Uie injured eye rtimt be taken out to
I ought to be. In other huahioM a hand
upped bis hands gleefully, and crying saw tlirnfkrr. To thia Mr. Crafgg demurred.
! has to serve a time for instruction brin- to three anti a half. For malurer ani­ I ” O papa!” ran to clasp him abotft the Bud went hack h.-rne lu Anuta. Hi* local phy| sight for which he receives limited mals oats are a jH-rfcrt food, containing I knees. He was so overjoyed to see hi*
a*-rat io of twelve to sixty or one to five.
wages. But a farm hand who has
By combining the richer with the poorer 1 papa once again that it was with diffi- eminent oculkta In the country, having looked,
strong arms, no matter how much he
| cutty the father could restrain his ca­ ■it the rasa said: “You have foal one eye ermay lack in the kno'«ledgo requisite to foods, we can have jast what we want resses. The wife and the babe, too, put rlreh gb lM&lt;k and d« what you can tn nave tlw
— Western UuraL
make him n sate and usbrul-man in the
"in so pitiful a plea for the culprit that, -titer.” Briefly. Dr. Kenmiy removed lhe ruinerf eve and trailed Mr. Cralgg with “Kennedy'*
care
of
stock,
teams
and
the
science
of
had the appearance been before a jury, Ravonte- Remedy” to build up the ayetem, and
PERUSE THEBE LIBERAL AD. RATES.
The Shearing Floor
crop fanning, be demands, tho highest
it would -have taken considerable evi­ the*V*Ult na* aucceaeful.
wages. Men also boldly cuter upon the
Dr. Kennedy's great
a* a enrpeon la
dence to overcome the sympatiiy which
Tho steady nniwial increase in weight would have gone cut to this unfortunate •Ine te the t:»e ot “Favorite Remedy” .Its. the
| L7S | « A® I fl MO I t Aon ownership and management of a fanu,
'2W|_5.«)r S-WQ 14.00 whh all of its iniricate business, with of ileocc that is noticeable each shearing
after trwilmi'UL
family group.
Are
you
trnulred
with
dyepepafa
liver com­
" 8.2T. |
7.00 I—12.00 I 20-00 lcs« strength than tho drihlge, and less lime, bears fitting testimony to the in­
The prisoner’s witness aa to charac­ plaint,*c&gt;in*tlpit'&lt;&lt;uf&gt;r derangimteitf of the kld4.00 | 8.00 [ 14.00 n^SOO intelligence ni to the pvohtablc manage­ telligence and liberaiiiy of American
4 turhc*..
ter. rcputable-l&gt;»oking enough in him­ .nrmand bladdi-r! then u-e Dr. Kennedy’*
breeders,
who
already
have
a
record
5.001 AQO] lA00[ 80.00 ment ot the farm, than -the noYiee. Of
Favorite.Brniedv.
It will not dleappoiui y.xi
self. took the stand and swore that Hice Dr.
Ken&gt; efly's “Favorite Remedy” for sale by
that will lose nothing in comparison
had always borne an excellent character all druggist*. .
rr *4*. given upon *|inllmtk&gt;n, course these are defects, disappoint­
with that of their most fortunate prede­
»uf flvt IIim m !e*». fl6 per yr. ments and disasters.
prior to leaving St. Louis a few months
cessors.
A
careful
study
of
the
shear
­
There is n great error committed
ago.
toward bright, intelligent farm hands, ing returns of the present year, and
Rice then took the stand in Ids own
who have a love tor aud take an interest their comparison with those inode a few
OHNO H I’HONG,
behalf. He was the foreman in a shop
years
ago,
.will
reveal
the
interesting
Editor on! I’mprirtnr. in Die business and prosperity of the fact that the increase in the aggregate in SL Louis, and was doing well when
farm. There is not a sufficient distinc­
Murry came to work in the same sitop.
tion made nor a proper social‘positi on production of wool in the United Staten Within six months they became chums.
given on the farm to the 'wortbv and u due, in a greater degree, to an aug­
Murry was wild and reckless,' and loM
intolllgent young man, above that of mented yield from each animal, than to
his situation: He then interested him­
the drmlgu who always intends to re­ the increase in. numbers of sheep. The
self in a criminal case in which he. Rice,
main in bis present position. Farmers average yield of wool from each sheep,
was a witness, and. partly by promises
who manage large or smaller farms do in 188I, was more than 50 per cent,
and partly by friendship, Murry suc­
(THE HEALTH BRINGEK.)
not make a diflurcneo sufficient in their above that of I860, or. about 5} pounds
Present—Eiihu Oilpcnxn.
ceeded in inducing him to quit work
LONG IXOWX AS
per
bead
In
the
former,
as
against
3}
Rocobter— Frank McDcrby.
monthly wages paid between lhe active,
and keep jn hiding, so that he aiightnot
skilled and faithful hand and the one pounds per head in the latter year.
be summoned to testify in tbe case. I’ESGELLVS WOMAN’S FRIEND
who docs not know anything and never These figures |x&gt;ssess great significance.
Marahall-Janie* L. Gregory- „ ,
„ _,
When he again showed up, his employ­
Traateeu-H. A. Barber. F. T. Bolan. H. W. wknls to if thn latter guts SIS per They demonstrate not only that more ers disTharped him for his action, 'and Every mother of daughters should
Domaray. IL R. Dic|duson, H. M. Lee and month, it is considered a sufficient re­ than 1} pbunds of wool is now growing
he found-himself unable to procure em­
know nbou^ it—because it brings
ward of merit to give lhe other $20 per where, with the same food and labor, ployment elsewhere, and with very little
♦ health
mouth. This pittance of reward to the but one, grew before, but that it is of cash on band. Murry, at this juncture,
bright young man who has a love for superior'quality—as the strength nnd came to Chicago, and in the course ot
jlsrirtixfi.
ami n pride in his work, nhd who is umfomuty of fiber is largely dependent
time coaxed him by glowing accounts of
worth twice or thrice Hint of lhe drudge upon the vigor and ateadine.'-s of its his success, to come on nnd join him. It
owtai-tofalixful, Scanty, o. I‘rofu*o Period*.
■bt'stb st'iO&lt;a in tho safety of lhe farm and its stock, growth. But the measure of improve­ was not until they met in this city. Rice
drives our brighlcst boys into other ment is Dot fully indicated by the shear­ said, that he became aware of Murry’s
business, ’ and their enterprise and ing record. The high physical develop­
•
nefarious
occupation.
He
was
in
.1
intelligence Ls forever lost to this ment necessary for securing a good'
— Threatened with any o? tho cnnipialnt* and weak,
desperate strait, and ...
Murrv, d d «...
not ...
find
f LODVE- NO. ST, K. of I'., meets at Its lirnucn ot industry.
The boy or ilecco record, insures an increased meat much difficulty in persuading h’m to gqs «»&gt;•«•, to which, even Uxo booithicBt. are subject.
Castle' Hall, Nashville. Michigan, every
’
’‘J ’ ,
1
‘
&gt;
Rreduction, which finds ready welcome r
Friday evening, for tbe encouragenicnt and man who can be trusted, who is faith­
into
a
business
where
the
.profits
were
1 the best markets on either side of the
■U|&gt;|x&gt;n of all *ortl»y. true, stcudfast and hon­ ful wherever placed, and who intends
sure'and quick. Rice then urged in his
.
orable Bmtlier Knight*.
to excel in Ims business, can at once get AtlanticL. E- Lextx, K. R. 8. Obxo StkoXu.C. C. . fJ5 to $45 per month in any place where
Tho relation that. the, shearing floor own behalf that he had never entered
bom or lArro/raAJ ic«4 Prolapaua Vtrri
any houses; Murry always did that, or Hearing Down, with Its sttauda’lt UlroraUon
sustains
to
the
breeding
pen
is
such
true integrity always is rewarded.
while he stood guard on "the outside.
Farming can afford to pay it as well as that the aspiring breeder can rarely af­ It was through him that the police
ford to study lhe one disassociated with
HiNr&lt;*lli*n«*«»uM Cnrds«
other branches ot imlusiry.
Bill the lack of farm fhanogers, or ; «»»«
Speculation os to tho shear- hail first been able to accumulate
evidence,
and
then
to re­
• fathom of noble son* to appreciate in- ] *"g qnahlies of lhe shepherd’s favorite,, the
cover nearly all the large amount of
JT. YOUNG. M. D. Office ea»t side of tegrily is driving the flower and intelli- n,ust tarr)’ at lhe threshold ot the barn,
• Mam 8L, Nashville. Officebuura fruin gen.c o( tho rural districts to other I wb‘,e ,heY are subjected to tho incx- proportv stolen. Ho had never been Who suffer from Hot Flushes, either before or
lic d.-s where genius, taicnls and integ- orable .tesl uf the shears and scale*. As arrested but twice before, once on a Undine the Critic*.! Period. IJIoalinx, Nuxubtrivial charge when a boy, and once
WakerulnvB*.
Etc.
A. FOOTE PHYSICIAN A SURGEON rily are appreciated. We regret thi, the glamour of distinguished ancattry. when he first went to SL Louis, where
AU there, and ntaay. oUinr dtstmalnff cemstale
of afloirs. but cannot shut our eves however much it may avail, must here
• Succh-ur In Dr. Uukliatu. Office m-u
rcaidet.ev
Dr. Wickimtii'»iittc
u.U&lt;-e.to lhe Jalal influence it is constantly
«glow under friction of tho era- tho police held him in confinement for piatnU, usually attributed so other cause*, but
really peculiar to tha nex. WU.L CERTAINLY
Pruin|&gt;t nCUnitiuii to call* mghior day.
having u^on the Intellectual nnd moral eiaI lo-'L the flock manager should spend three days while they were investigating
HR HEUEVIID by Zor. Photo.
standing of lhe agricultural c lass. The I m,,st of *&gt;'0 day on the shearing floor, his character.
R. E W. MURRAY. Office over F. T
LEUCOnitHfCA RUINS THE FINEST
The prisoner broke down completely
Boise's Drug bune. ReaiUi-iicv Luniei skilled farmer w not retained on the , »»oltag such animals as show a variation
on the stand, and the little son created an­ COMPLEXION.-Zou 1 bor.i CVrea tho farmer
Reed aud M.duie bi a.'
faim bvnoifuilv apprec ating Ills worth. /ron» lhc *ver»ge of the flock standard
ah J renter.« tho litter.
.
other
scene
by
running
to
his
father
and
There Is not a -uliL ient incentive held sothal’he better can bo retained, while
T\R C. W. GOUCHEIL Elertlr Fiiyak-ian ami out to tile young man to become pro- i *"he interior ones are relegated to the imploring him in an agonized tone,
J ' 8urxv**ti,» (&gt;rr|*am) to auMwri al) callr
“Don’t cry, papa.”
A bailiff, ruder
ticieui
as
n
fat
mer.
Nor
do
a
sufficient
shambles,
or
some
less
exacting
owner
­
.10",
will
juralsh
•,r."4VtRe'.y
to
pcraoas asking.
tlial may lar HMldr I'M Illa arSVirra. Office aud
number of young men on the farm wake »htp. Weight of fleece should not be than the rest, dragged away the child, AAt. PENGELLY, M. IK,
reairfriM-v
R,*'a meal market
up to all Of Hie pashibiliiics of their fu-1°nb' desideratum—though when who then turned to his mother and
'IITM’. PARMENTER. M D
Offi.e ove«
tun* life. T&lt;»o many nre content with | estimated with reference to the perccnt- seemed to implore her to go and aid tho
•MHfrr nrattrinrj
K.U^tMAZOO.MICH.
•» Hull s Drug aliire, .Vermontville, Mlib
•
.
the dull routine 01 the drudg'e or the '
of scoured wool it will yield, weight father.
. All were visibly affected, when Judge
HAS H BRADY. Ijiwyrr. Circuit fciurt
4olt.
I is
A
prime
consideration
in
a
Rogers, turning to Rice, said he was
CiNUiiilasioiiri, Ural E»t.itr and hifuraln-r
There is nn immense demand for flock designed
for wool growing,
br ght. faithful, skilled young men on j Uniformity
of
fiber,
as regard&gt; convinced, from all the evidence, that
the larm. and in all Ollier departments I both length and diameter throughout Murry was the greater criminal of the
tj. Office opposite Utlluu House.
ot industry- and science. Such men nre ■ the eniire fleece, enhances its marketa- two, and that Rim was not a bad tn.-iu.
——
FOB
thc rarest end scarcest article in
the j bio value. Thisvalue may bo still fur- They had together stolen about $10,000
LIEBHAUSER, Meruhuu*. Tailor and deal
inai ket. Wake up. voting men on the P*cr enhanced by securing uniformity worth of property, committing numerous
• er Tn Ready" Made Clothing.
See n&gt;i
burglaries, at all of which save twu
farm,
and
your
merits
and
usefulness
i
in
al
*
tl,e
fleece-s,
so
lh.it
tho
examinaheli ire you purehsac duelling. Flu guar
will not go unrewarded- There is an ’lion of a fcw wi|l enable tho buyer to Rice was present. It was Rim wlio
■ antccd.
LIVER AND BOWELS.
urgent demand for \ou in the world, j fonn a conclusion as to the entire loL confessed, and it was through his inand•—
you will us cciDunly
■
attain
v •
-to the
• . Thus, by a few years of intelligent over- teqxwition that about $7,000 worth of
the plunder had been recovered. Ha
«
vu.t
nuLci8
’
gbL
the
flock
owner
can
secure
a
repuportion which you diAerve as that water
Slate
{(&gt;r
wool ‘hat will insure him was disposed to be lenient, but he did
will seek itk level. —-luwu
i
.......... Register.
' '
THOUSANDS OF CASES
’ read)" sales at tliu highest ruling prices. not well see hnw he could inflict a less
While
his
lesscnrefulueighborsare
hold- punishment than two years in tho peni­
Cattle Feeding.
tentiary.
.
■ ing ami complaining nf unsatisfactory
PERFECTLY CURED.
Mrs. Rice burst Into tears and wept
The nitrogenous elements of food are I oflerings from relneinnt buyers. ComThe little boy sobbed as if
AMES /LEMING,
whaf ma ;e flesh, skin, h:bir. etc., and ! |»etitiou in the wool manufacture has piteously
nls
heart
would
break,
and
turned
in
the carbonaceous elements are used first forced buyers of raw material into a
for the production of heat, and what. more intelligent discrimination than vain from one parent to the other for
remains to produce fat. Nitrogenous | characterized their ttansactioils a few consolation. Even the babe joined in
food-t. or foods that arc rich in nitrogen years ago: and while there is not yet so •. the wail. Rim himself burst into
are flesh or- mu-cle formers and car- j broad u line between really meritorious tears, and as he proceeded in a choked
lie Lo4 tncllille* brt doing work of Bill
l onnccous foods, or foods tiiat are rich j clips aud those thrown upon the market voice to make yet . anohtcr plea
&gt;g office In Harr) eovnity. ^Vl*rn In nrre in carbon, are fat formers.. In addition in a slovenly or deceptive condition, for leniency by promising future good
lUng ut »UJ dcacripUua, whatever,*ce me
to
these, mineral elements are Deeded there is a yearly brightening prospect behavior and by pointing to his already
you buy.
to form bone and cartilages. It will be I for
something destitute and helpless family, there was
jor those
uiosc who
who strive to
10 secure
‘•cciircsoiu
«&lt;en also from this,, how necessary it is I more *than1"-- ---------reputation
:x~ -----for
-----------good1 -----work
” not a dry eye in the court-room. Not
TACOB OSMUN. Llvrrvman. bam near Wo!
to know the character of.the food which through 0 careful oversight of the shear­ a few who were unable to restrain their
tJ cott House First class turnout* at reason
emotion arose and left the room. Sobs
we
are
feeding
with
definite
purpose
in
ing
floor.
—
NalionaL
Live
Slock
Journal.
able rate* Special rates to commercial men
accompanying those of the stricken
view. The composit on of the most
Funeral and werflng parties furnished with car
family were heard from several quar­
common grains and foods is known, or
Raisinglhe Sunflower for Its Seed.
ters. Tears stood in tho eves of the
should be. nnd when anytliing is to be
la every uoumdoiu u •
State’s-Attorney and the Clerk, and
SPRING MEDICINE.
RLLOGO A BELL pri.prletnni Pltlllny fed whose chemical conqioMtion we are
For a year or two the subject of feed­ tears were slowly trickling down the
MUI Ptatiltqt •ml MaU-l&gt;l(&gt;K, ReMKinr ignorant of. a resort, should bo had to
»&gt;xt Monkllng * *|«c-ialty. Scroll Sawing, chemistry to determine just what it is ing the seed of sunflowers to fowls ho* face of Judge Rogers as he 'expressed
been referred to in jioultry journals, fre­ the deepest sympathy for the prisoner's
good for. |
Tho principal nitrogenous foods, or quently with approval, and we lave family, and called to mind that he hod
/THAU. W?DEMARAT. Dealer h&gt; W*teby*
flesh formers, are wheal, brans, oats, seen no word in opposition. Although a grandchild just above the age and
V&gt; L'Uteka, flue Jewelry and Silverware. Briny clover, linseed meal and oil cake. The this flower, if it can be so called, lias somewhat resembling the little fellow
GET rrOETOCT. DBCGGIST. TTJCT.*1.OO
a nra.^D.I T—
.1
...I .......
come into favor even among ladies and before him. Then, leaning over to the
I WELLS, RICBABDSOX A Co., Prop’*,
principal cuHwuhccous food*, or fat
some pantaloon creatures who are said Clerk, he ordered the sentence reduced
formers, arc corn, starch, sugar and oil.
to be of the male gender, it is by no to one year in the penitentiary. As the
Whpn the food contains much gum.
JA^SkiCfTAbo^ju,. 8p„4.i aUen- mucilage and albumen, it is rich in means an attractive floral attribute. It prisoner was ied away the wife and lit­
is something among flowers that the el­ tle ones sobbed londerthan ever. It was
tJ ■ tfcm given to Ooc aIMi onred boot*, *1»
nitrogen, nnd called an albuminoid.
ephant is among beasts, huge and un­ a scene never to be forgotten, and it had BEATTYS &lt;•» OAXB npi.
repairing. All manufactored work made fnm
bext of *tock aod warranted. First door *oyU. When a food is rich in sugar, standi or couth. Still, if it possesses the merit of its effect upon the subsequent proceed­
Boiie'i hardware.
gum. it is chiefly composed of carbon
producing wholesome food for the feath­ ings of court.
and hydrogen, and is called a carbo­
ered tribe, it is to that extent so much
Shortly before Lhe noon adjournment
hydrate.
beyond flowers in solid value.
Mr. Greeley, who was the attorney for
.With this understanding of the com­
H: A. HAltBKIt, n.
But it being proved that it is a plant the two burglars until ho found himself
petition of foods, iceding'"them becomes
of more or less value for ita seed, and enrolled as one of their victims, ap­
IIOMCEOPATinc
intelligent. What is the object sought?
being venr hardy in its nature, it substi­ proached State's-Attorney Mills, and, in
Is it a young animal? If so, the object
tutes usefulness for beauty; and as it a voice full of emotion, asked if there
is to mfljte flesh or muscle, and not fat,
will grow in every out-of-the-way cor­ was no further chance for the poor fel­ QLEJtEYT SMITH,
Office first dnor'sMt ot Oner* Bon*®, and and therefore that food which contains ner and place, where scarcely anything
low who had just been torn awav from
Attorney at Law,
Dear .re^hieuce on corner of Wa*hlu’gten and a large per cent, of albuminoids is nec­ else can be cultivated, it can be honest­ his family. He, as one of their victims,
BtsteBtraeU, NaahriUe, Mich.
essary. If fat is desired, tho percent­
ly recommended to tbe keeper of fowls was anxious to enter a plea in Rice's
age must be in favor of lhe carbo­
to
appropriate
sudh
plots
of
ground
to
behalf.
Mr.
Mills
advised
hhn
to
speak
-yyoMWTT noiMi^
hydrates. Real scientific feeding re­
the raising of it for its seed. It would to the Court, and then hurried away a
quires that the nitrogenous and carbon­
not require much sjiaco to produce from bailiff to bring in Rice. The old lawyer,
AUcJxIijnnaceous elements should hb in proper
A.-8. Footf., Proprietor.
proportion, and experiment has demon­ three to five bushels of seed, which choking down his tears, and with his
J AXES JL. 8WEEZEY,
would be a substantial addition to the hand across his mouth nearly half the
strated that tlie proper ratio of albumin­
time, made known his desire to the
oids to carbo hydrates is one to five for winter season's supply of chicken-food.
Attorney A Counsellor,
—(krmanlpicn Tcleyrapfi.
Court,
and
on
his
request,
the
State
’
sgrown animal*, and one to three for
Attorney consenting. Rice’s sentence
young animals. Hay generally contains
was
changed
to
one
year
in
the
County
about eight and a-halt percent, of albu­
—Lemon candy with which to cele­
minoids and fortv-three perqpnL of car­ brate the children’s birthday is made JaiL He will thus escape the ighaminy JAKE HO UN
J£ A. BUttH.
bo-hydrates, ana grass contains three of throe pounds of while sugar, lhe and hard work of a penitentiary sen­
Thomnpplc lake, &gt;Iloh.
percent of albuminoids and fi&lt;een per juice of otic lemon, the grated, peel of tence, and will be where his family can.
“TH8 BOSS’
. L. P. Cole, Proprietor.
cent of carbo-hydrates.
These are half Ute lemon, half a teaspoonfal of so­ flee him frequently. He can. moreover,
natural foods, aud staple. But as these da, and over a half cup cd water; do not by the favor of the jail-keepers, do a
hate to .be supplemented with other put rhe sugar and water on the stove to little trafficking in lhe jail, which will
foods, we give below the relative pro­ boil until the sugar is entirely dissolved, greatly aid his family dnrlug his inuarportion of albuminoids to carbo-hydrate* lb«n let it boil until it will harder, fn ceration.-— Chicago Tribune.
in a number of foo«ia: Linseed meal cold water, add the lemon then, and let
—Milwaukee is discussing the proper
it boil up once; after this is put in take length ef a lover's evening call. We
ALBERT M. HARRIS,
pATHBLK HOLIK,
■ ..
_____ ,
_ ____ ___ &gt;
should think he ought to remain m long
as the old man is Bkely to stay down £

MAU-..

Ma(i------------ _ s ic ।
l»ay Etpr.ea... &lt;;05 ।
AtfauUr Ex---- IfcWi

GRAND

—

STATIONS.

RAPID*

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Bar.

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vniuas orrioBttB.

Grand ttapUte aud Detroit. All tmiiw eoaner! ta
«n&gt;« &lt;lupot al IJrtroll with Grrai Western. Grab!
Trank aud' an-td* Southern R*ll«ay».
K. &lt;j. rfROWN,
U. II. LEPTABD.*
Aaa'i Grn’l Hupt‘Jac»*on Ura'I Sup't Petr*
J1b«bvC. Wbwtwom*.
.
.
..
0uu'iraaMad**«kei Kuant.Chtraru.

TO GIRLS

TO YOUNG LADIES

r

To Women Advanced in Life

W

L

D

C

KIDNEY-WORT

THE GREAT CURE

S

IRON

TO OVER-WORKED WOMEN

RHEUMATISM

KIDNEY-WORT

TRACE

BITTERS
&lt;^T^

DROWN'S IRON El l'l'lHLT arc
a certain cure for c31 Ciscartco
requiring a complete tonic; ca;&gt;ccially Indigestion, Dyspensln, Intcrrnittent Fevers. Wn*nt ofApbetite,
Loss of Strength, Lack of Energy,
etc. Enriches the blood, strcngthcnii tho muscles, nnd gives new
lift to the nerves. Acts Uko a
charm on tho dlgcatlvc organs,
removing all dyspeptic symptoms,
such os tasting the food, Bclcb.itig,
Heat In the Stomach, Heart burn,
etc. The only Iron I’rcparation
that will not blacken the tenth or
give headache. Sold by all Druggfata at $1.00 a bottle.
.
. DROWN CHB3I1CAL CO.
Baltimore, Md.
rfware of imitations.

Over 5000

Druggists
AND

Physicians

KIDNEY-WORT

K

KIDNEY-WORT

Have Signed or Endorsed the
Following Remarkable
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'

ing Ghemiste, 31 Platt St.,’ Now York 1

Cpcta. Kr,- PM--r to d
other*, We canaldar
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Physician and Surgeon.

BOOT AND SHOE MAKER,

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NO PATENT NO PAY.
pnmgg

�3C

In JN ashville
lu the Sixteenth Ohio District Wlkrled CT

sons in jail at Columbus, Ohio, dug through
Ums celling and affected their escape.
A raw nights ago a psrty-ot 130 dtixrns of
Akron, Ohio, cut lhe reservoir of the Hydrau­
lic Company and drained tbe water into the
decaying nutter.

Imm: to repeal
ao f»r m it afthu OommitUn

gta, committed suicide a few nights ago by
shooting himself through tho head.
B. F. Bigelow, Hereiviug Tidier ot tbe Na­
tional Bank of the Republic at Washington,

bis accounts.
Repeated attempts to arrest a gambler
named Menisci, at Raton. New Mexico, led
to hla killing three persons on the 2tttb, and
a Deputy Sheriff was al»o fatally shot. The
enraged cltlxens seised Mentxel aud hanged
him to a sign-over a bank.
• Go vek&lt;on Ludlow, of New Jersey, cm the
26lh issued a proclamation against riotous
acta by strikers, and announced that the mili­
tary power of the State would be promptly
used to aid tbe local autboritlc-.
Edward R. Pieace waa Indicted on the 20th
for robblag the mails at San Antonio, Tex.
It was understood that he would plead guilty
u. . Jol:.t resolution -wai to abstracting *800 from thirty registered
a final adjournment on July 10. letters.
to reduce Internal Revenue taxation
Ax Omaha (Neb.) dispatch of the 26th
states that the storm on the 25th did the
most damage in 8aunder* and Butler, two
of tbe richest anl most thickly settled coun­
Randall's propodtton
ignrs from nranai
ties in the State. Near Brainard a house was
demolished, and Mr Adrint^ a farmer, waa
fatally injured, his daughter, sixteen years
old, and a son, aged twelve, were killed out­
ported buck tho Lcgialative. Executive and right, and Mrs. Adrine’s arm was broken, while
Judicial Appropriation bill, with amendments her baby, which she was holding, escaped ud^
increnslug the amount Saas.ftM. The resolu­ hurt. Estimates of the damage to crops in
tion for bti I iv(utry into political aswcusmcnta tbe State were 1300,000.
came up. Mr. Beck asked jf officiate who
A freight train on the Missouri Pacific
tailed to contribute would bo allowed! to re­ Road was blown off the track, near Talmage,
tain tbeir positions. Mr. Alliaon stated that
but little more than ten per cent ot tbe Mo., in tbe storm of the 25th. Il struck a
Government employes (n l.ssv made eontribu- hand-car beneath which five section men bad
L-: ... : not one office-holdor was removed
taken refuge, crushing them to death.
NntB persons were injured at Manchester,
■
....-.'.LI
Ml .UC
bill to reduce internal Revenue taxes wn&lt; n»- N. IL, on tbe night of tbe 36th by leaping
MlMd. A doxen amendments were prop •sea from tbe windows of a burning boar.lingand voted down, and »|»-ccbc* denoiincing house.
political ns*«*&lt;smcnta were made bv Mewra.
Advices on the Bflth state that seventeen
Cox and Springer. The Committee then ruac.
persons lost their lives by the disaster on tbe
SL Paul, Minneapolis A Manitoba Kaliroad,
DOMESTIC.
The Italian laborers engaged to take the near Atwater, and five more were in a dying
condition.
.
place of strikers on lhe West Shore Itailroad,
Fakmkm In the region of Wichita, Kan.,
• near Albany, N. Y., have themselves struck
had on the 30th nearly finished harvesting,
for higher ; ay.
and they declared they had never seen such
Ox tbe 23d lightnlngdcmoUsbed the marble
statue on the Confederate monument al Co­ fine grain, the yield In many fields being thirty
to forty bushels per acre.
lumbia, 8. C., which.was chiseled in Italy ata
Tub strike in New York of the freight-hand­
cost of over fd.OUO.
The Kentucky Board of Agriculture esti­ lers continued on tbe 26lh, and the produce
mate, the wheat crop of that State m high as merchants were heavy sufferers through the
13,UK»,(xXi bushels.. Corn la in better condi­ failure of the railroads to deliver promptly
tion than foe years, and tbe acreage Is ten to lhe perishable freight in tbe depots.

atwnt, tu dpsirnato in writing a

A Chicago jury has given William J. Connetl 815,000 for being put off a Peunsylvanla
train last year because he had a coupon ticket
fasuei by tbe Wabash Railroad.
Focr cattlcthierei were recently lynched
in Ecntou County, Texas. •
PurHO-rxEUMOXiA has made Its appear­
ance at the Baltimore (Md.) stock-yatds.
All tbe anthracite coal companies ot Pennsylvanla on tbe 23d made a voluntary advance
of ten per cent, in tbe pay of minera.
- Sixty thocsaxo Chinese laborers who bad
•flni‘bcd&amp; contract In Cuba applied for per­
mission to go through the United States on
their way home. Secretary Folgcr placed tbe
matter before the Cabinet, which decided or.
the 23d that the request could not be granted,
and tho coolies would be compelled to return

Tna failures in tbe United Steles during the
•even days ended on tbe 23d were 95.

morning of lhe 23d. The water of tbe lake
suddenly nut eltren feet above the ordinary
level, doing considerable damage to the shlpptag and other property on the Lake shore.
The storehouse of tbe Pacific Mills al
Lawrence, Mau., took fire on the evening of
the 23d, the requit being the lorn of 81,000,000
cm the building and stock. Two men were
suffocate J.
George N. Woom was executed at Duran-

and tbe others for arson.'

34th Thomas Cahill was convicted of the tpurder of Officer O'Brien and e-ntenced to the
penitentiary for life.
A ntAKH-L tempest passed ever the North­
west oa tbe SSth. At Omaha, Neb., the
wind tore great trees lu pieces, unrooted
serial bouses, and killed one man.
On
Capitol Hill u large pond was completely
•mptted of water, all bsing blown ouL la
Butter, Saunters, Lancaster, Casa, Otoe and
Nemaha
i lhe hail beat down the com
-------------- small grain. Two residences
in Wahoo ware blown down, and a herd of 125
pontes waa wept eight mites over Melds and
Shtixo
of a turnpike aiar Felton, Cat, on tbe 24th,
killing three ladies and a gentleman from San
Franclaco and wounding three lioys.

lahed a number of houses and injured several
Paul Road. near Lc ALare, the depot, a hotel,

dwellings were blown dawn
ns were injured.

WHUain Bradley were instantly kilted.

Quite

PERSONAL AND POLITICAL.

Wm. A. AYLSWORTH

Mhs..ChbMtxaxct, Laring failed to fasten
the. charges I cruelty upon her husband, on
the 9tp.b withdrew her cross bill, which would
give the ex-Mlnistar a divorce.

FOREIGN.
22d tbe American horse Golden Gatf won the
first honors.
~
The French Secretary of Control* at Alex­
andria, Egypt, M. Hoedc, committed suicide
on tbe -zipt.
At the feceut election in Canada tor mem­
bers of Parliament the Government secured
a majority of from 55 to 60.
A Loxroox dispatch of the 22d states that
natives of Martin, an Island near Sierra
Leone, recently plundered a boat belonging
to Bunthe Island, where some British officials
were stationed, and the 3&lt;*rtton* fired on
police aent to arrest them. The Governor of
Sierra Leone, with a force of- marine*, went
to the island and killed 203 of the inhabitants.
Gwr depreulon prevailed in tbe silk
trade at Macclesfield, England, on the 29d,
and hundreds of weaver* had emigrated to

Having just returned from the East with three immense
stocks for Nashville, Big Rapids and Cadillac, which
gives us the advantage over small dealers, who
purchase for one store only, we are offering

RHEUMATISM, Over 500 Suits
Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, ;

Cuouka hae appeared in Japan and the
Looloo Islands.
. A&amp;CHBtsHof MaXaht, the Metropolitan ot
Moscow, died suddenly on the
The steamer Hope left Gravesend on the SOLD BT ALL DRUGGISTS AKD DEALERS
22d to assist in the search for Leigh Smith,
TI MEDI01BE.
the Arcuc explorer.
As Alexandria dispatch of the 22d says that
if France and England intei^ered actively in
Egypt, Arabi Pasha intended to blow up the
Suez Canal, cut tbe railway at Cairo, and op­
pose, the landing of European troops.
A cahleoram of the 2kl states that Irish
-CALLON-------noblemen and large landholder* bad formed a
company to work farms from which tenants
had been evicted, to defeat the influence of
the Land League.
At Armagh, Ireland, on the 34th several
-------- FOR--------hundred men marched through the streets in
military order,' singing disloyal songs and DIGS,
BOOKS.
cursing the Quecu.
While sitting in the kitchen of a farmer’s !
JEWELRY,
lodge in County Meath, Ireland, on the even- I
WALL PAPER.
ing of the 25th, a.Ccnstable was fatally shot I
WINDOW SHADES,
by disguised sustains.
.
Couxt ns Lbsseps has been officially ad- !
vised that tbe Suez Canal l» iu no danger.
; DI E STUFFS,
lx the British House of Commons the other
PROPRIETARY MEDICINES,
night John Bright said tbe condition of Ire­
PRESCRIPTIONS.
land wm made greatly wor»e by subscriptions
in America, and that those subject* of the
RECEIPTS,
Queeu who took part in the Chicago Conven­
And every article kept In a Cnt-class drug »tor»
tion were traitors to the Crown.
A Copexhaoex .telegram of the 25th says
'
---------- MY----------- *
the movement for ths severance of Norway I
from Sweden and for tbe establishment of a
Republic wax assuming large proportions.
The Khedive of Egypt ha* written a letter
to the President of the Egyptian Council de­
DEPAKTMKNT
manding that a searching Inquiry be made os
ire kept complete, to meet tbe detuandi of tho
to the cause aud leadership of the riots, in
people.
order that severe punishment may be inflicted.
The Russian Government ha* decided to
construct thirty gtroboats at a cost of 7,000,house In Barry or Eston counties.
(XX) rubles.
A cable dHpajch was received in New York
on the 25th from engineer Melville, from Ya­
kutsk, under date of April 10, ennouncing
that be had searched the coast from tbe River
Alanek to tbe River Lena, but had found do
trace uf tbe *econd cutter, or Lieutenant £_J R. DICKINSON A. &lt; O.
Chlpp's party.
Three Greek money-tenders were murdered
----- NEW-----in Cairo on. tbe 28ch. The Captain of tbe
United States steamer Galena bad notified all
American residents lu Egypt that he
ready to take them away. ■

James B. Wakefibld has been nominated
for Congressman l&gt;y the Republicans of the
Second Minnesota District.
The Michigan Democratic State Conven­
tion, for tho Nomination of State officers, has
been called to meet at Jackson on the 23d of
August.
The Republicans of the First District of
Vermont ou the 23d nominated for Congress
cx-Governor John W. Stewart.
Emaxcml Schultz was on tbe -23d renom­
inated for Congress by the Republicans of
the Third Ohio District.
The Greenbackera of the Tenth Indians
District on the 22d nominated^for Cougress
James N. Moaroe.
LATERNEWS.
Tile vote in tbe United States Senate on
tlte passage by that body of the bill recharte.-Thb Maine Democratic State Convention
ing National Banks was as follows;
•
Fros.-AMrteh. Allison, Blair, Call. ChllcotL met st Lewiston on tho 27th. Harris M.
Comrcr, Deris &lt;W. Va.). Dawes. Ferry, Frye. Plaistcd was renominated for Governor. Res­
olutions were adopted denouncing tho Tariff
MMIeAlCaLk Miller Commission; declaring that Congress has
(N. YJ. Monran. Morrill. Hansom. Rollins, power and Is bound to establiah and maintain
:B«Un4er«, Sawyer. Sowell, Hiu-nuXn, Van at all times a currency of general yedlt, al­
Wyck, Windom—Ul.
.Vara-Brown, Cockrell, Coke,
Farley, ways convertible into and equal in vAlue to
George, Grover, JoSws (Nov.). Maxey. Pugh, specie; favoring the abolition of imprison­
Vance, Voorhees. Walker, Wlillams-lX
ment for debt; exempting the wage* for
•wita «L£nteeerOn’ *noounw}d VF Senators personal labor from attachment, and making
The Republicans of the Eleventh Indiana ten hotiys a day’c labor in all branches of bus­
District on the 23d renominated George W. iness. The following were nominated for
Cougresa: First District, Samuel J. AmlerSteele for Congress.
Ll-kb Blackburx, Governor of Kentucky, son; Second District, Daniel H. Thing; Third
wus recently converted while attending upon District, George W. Ladd, renominated;
Fourth District, Thompson H. March, rctbe ministrations of Evangelist Barnes.
The Nebcajka State Anti-Monopoly Con­ •ominated. The. latter three are Green­
vention met at Lincoln on tbe 23d and adopt­ backers.
Tint erideace in the Malley boys’ trial at
ed resc’uUons declaring that corporations,
franchises and property and roadway should New Haven, Conn., was colluded on the
be rigidly taxed, and no more tand granted to 27tb, und Mr. Bush began lhe opening argu­
ment for the’ prosecution.
railroads; demanding a law making the ten­
The Republicans of the Fourteenth Dlinois
der of passes to any public officer a bribe and
punishable; favoring speedy revision of the District on the 27th nominated for Congress
Captain
Jonathan H. Rowell.
tariff, aud condemning employment of conAbadi Faska states that if the Porte aban­
tbe eight-hour law; demanding that tbe mil­ dons him he will publish correspondence prov­
itary should not be employed when civil ing that every step taken since the 7th of Sep­
process Is not obstructed, and calling upon tember last was instigated by tbe Porte.
Tbe people of Iowa voted on, the 27th on
voters to disregard party and vote for nntlMonopsllsta. A resolution wm also adopted tbe Prohibition amaudinept to the Constituto first try to control the present political
parties In tbeir conventions, failing which to meat would have 40,000 majority.
Patxjck Ebax, at Paris, telegraphs Patrick
bolt and rote for their own candidates.
Tub Iowa Republican State Convention has Ford that the landlords, through a company
with a huge capital, propose to banish the
. Irish tenantry, English and Scotch farmers to
take tbeir placet. This, the dispatch says,
Bated for Governor by the Democrat* of Cal­ means war to the death.
It is estimated that not less than 130 per­
ifornia. The platform adopted denounces the
son* were killed during the recent tornadoes
Chinese now iu that State m. an unmixed
in Kansas, Missouri. Iowa, Nebraska, Dakota
and Minnesota, and that tbe total amount of
ty. when it attains to podltakc
property destroyed exceeded three and a half
million dollars.
. 1
tn the
lx the United States Senate on the 27th a
resolution was passed to print additional
sition to-moneyed corporations and tuonopo- copies of Mr. Blaine’s eulogy on President
Garfield, for the use of the bereaved family
sumptuary logtolaUon and Jaws restraining and the orator. The Pension Committee retbe exercise of political and religious opinion,
and demands the repeal of those now exist­ of Major-Generals Custer and French. A bill
ing; demands material reduction of railroad
lands to States establishing agricultural
colleges.
In the House tbe Alabama
contested election
case
of
StroUch
Naahville and adopted
was granted leave to withdraw his papers;
Shelley, from

Mless 1118,1 J08 08,1 toy1116 cloth 8,14 Trimmings.

Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Svellings and Sprains, Burnt and
Scalds, General Bodily
' Paint,
Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted
■
Feet and Ears, and all other
Pains and Aches.

For $4 and $5, we are selling a very good every day
Suit, many styles to select from.
’ For $8 and $10, we are selling a very desirable diagonal
worsted, bound and made in sack and frock styles. . Other
stores get $12 for the same suits.
Our 12 00 and 14.00 Suits will surprise
For 15.00 we can give you a suit you need not be asham­
ed to wear any place, and would cost $18 to $20 at any store.
Our 16.00 and 18 00 Suits are well made and trlmed, and for fit and wear can nqtbe equaled.

A. VOGELER A, CO

Our stock in this line is the largest and finest we ever of­
fered. All Goods from a substantial school suit to the finest
dress suit. We have in stock more boys1 and youths’ clothing
than the combined stock of any house in town. Our stock

F. t. BOISE,

1
Boots, Shoes And Groceries,
Is full up and PLENTY OF THEM. Ready pay purchasers
1 desired. WE OWN THE GOODS at about 70 cents, on the
। dollar. You can save money, and be comparatively happy by ’
। buying your goods •

Cheap! Cheap! Cheap!

PAINT AND BRUSH I PINE
„ We want
your BUTTER
WOODS PRICES.

and EGGS and will allCw you

Respectfu ly

IF.

AYLSWORTH.

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN

Call and Examine!
F. T. BOISE.

At Buxton's new brick, have full,and complete lines In

Grentw 'ETurnisliixig’ Goods

Fouring Mill;
READY FOR BUSINESS

Every day in the year—Sundays excepted.

CUSTOM

If you want something new, neat and nobby, Just take a look at our stock of

CUFFS, COLLARS, TIES, HANKERCHIEFS, JEWELRY, ETC.

GRINDING!

Of every dcrcriptlon. done in a superior
manner, at pedrop of jhehat; and
Satisfaction guaranteed.

FLOUR. MEAL AND MILL FEED
. Kept constantly on hand.

Our

Graham Flour

;l* conceeded to be the best. Try it.

By a strict attention to business, and square
dealing with ail our customers, we hope to mer­
it a liberal patronage from the farmers of this
vicinity.
&gt;_ Mills, on railroad,—east of depot.

H. R. DICKINSON A CO.

WOOL

FOR THE LEAST MONEY.
Remember that wc 'have no old, shop-worn and unseasonable goods, but that everything ia

ISTE'W A.LTID FIRMEST! I
er AU our purchases are made with the cash and by strict attention to the wants, of OU
customers we cxjwct to reap success.
Nashville, Apr. 20,1882.1
&lt;
_________

PRINDLE &amp;, CH3FVLAJX.

A ft A TN TO THE FRONT!
With tbe LAB&amp;EST ait lost Complete Steel of

CARDING FURNITURE
AND SPINNING

Ever laid down in any one store in Barry
or Eaton Counties.

St cap-Shear! ng time is upon us and the

NewC arditgMill
Of tbe undersigned, is prepared to make into

ROLLS, OR YARN!
wool of this section, with

STOCKINGYARN

Our mammoth two-story double store
Is full and running over.

Everything yon need from the smallest Bracket to
a $125 Parlor Suit

Stocking Yarn

NEED NOT
To have tbeir wool
on in a munaat.
NashrHte, Mich., Ju»&lt;7,

WAIT

You can save ' money and have a better selection to choose z
from, by dealing with us than anylother dealer.

Don't JF'or’gret It

�&gt;RK.

ot .White n«k. committed .ntel*
Muiuiay
drowning herself in a band.

tottadckle.
. estei. on to any am thio

, reads: *11 to more blessed to

shipped bls machtaery to Hasting*

ort'agateM

!»&lt;•*&lt;* bofbo*

’

Emmet Benedict to. again going into-.the
threehUsg busint-s* with a new outfit.
It is not fully determined whether we shall

io their arm*.

Attfiui narnrd J. B. BobinMiu, aged
8) years, wm foaud dead in bed at the
Jackson House, the morning of Jane
ttth.
George, a little son of engineer Ed.
Lawrence, of the F. Ac P. M. R- R-. waa
drowix-d in a cistern at East Saginaw
Monday.
.'
John Copeland, Jr., of Detroit, com­
mitted snicide June 3*th bv jumping
into the Chocolay river about three
miles from Marquette.
Tbe body ot an unknown man wna
found in Lake Michigan oft Manistee,
on the 98th. It had evidently been in
tbe water two weeks.
•
While Mr*. J.. Olcott and child, of
Owosso, were out riding on Saturday,
lightning struck nnd instantly, killed
the horse before tbeir carriage. .
Two Saginaw women, attired only in
their nigbt-iihtrte, engaged in a free
light on one of tlw streets in East Sag­
inaw in broad daylight lost Friday.
T.ofal shipments of iron'ore from up­
per' peniuKula in the present.season qp
to 15th inst, 736.816 ton*, or nearly twice
os much as iu the same time last year.

bearing***
drowned in the rtverbelowDeerfield.
Hr. with otlivr* were Lathing, but not
ttdng «« expert switninrrwaa drowsed
in rm attempt to crow the river and retarn.
He had succeeded in crossing
and wax returning when hi* compan­
ion* heard him call for help. They
hastened to liis rescue, but he bod l»eedme Mrangled and partially drownedwhen they reached him. The drown­
ing man grappled hi* companion* con­
vulsively and all came near going down.
To save them selves 'they were obliged
to break hi* hold, and succeeded in
reaching the shore. Logan immediately
Muik and the body was not found ’till
one nnd one-half hour* later. The
young man waa the only child of a wid­
owed mother.

and silver plated harness. Go It while your
young boys.
’,
&lt; ,
Tbe late rains Just left us enoogh rain water.
We ■’'allowed it down with all the eagerness
of a West Sunfielder.
There was a lady from Nashrille in these
parts Saturttay and Sunday that was Just high
eoek-a-lonim. at any rate, for she crowed. We
will not call names this time, but watch out
A couple in Osbtemo have l»een mar­
ried three time* in thirteen years. The
bMt.
x
.
Wxmir.
last marriage occurred June 18. Date
of their next divorce not yet announced.

Mrs. Edj^fi Northrop to reported very sick.
Miss Kennedy closes her school on Friday of
Tbe Mila society fo£the church wfll be held
at Willis Lathrop's, Thursday afternoon. A
large attendance to expected.
Carrie Harley. « 7-year-old daughter of R. B.
Harley, formerly of Tboraapple, but now of
AJksnsas. to visiting her grand parents, Mr.

*•

DON’T DIE IN THE HOUSE.
net of th* ahan boktei* owiunr tso-thin'.s of
its stock, or untoas its Iran* hitacomeforfriu.-d by some Vtotati..n of taw.or tmleM tanafter modified or rep*-ale*l.

of Catarrh".

1&gt; r.~. :-.r» mm

•rtlire of a«ociatJ.&gt;n by tbe Gun pt roller, and
such amende 1 articles of aiwx-lstion shah not
bv *a!ld until tto«-to Mil !.
■Moclatton a oertlficate under hi* hand and
seal-that th- ass.elaUon has oompile*! whh
all t b&lt;- provisions required to ta com piled with.

sued taeariug a blgterr rate ot Interest than
thre*.- per cent., atxl which shall ta redremaWo at tbe pleasure of th? United Sotoa shall
ta outstanding and uncaltod. The tat of Mud
bonds originally tan-tl and tlir.r autatnutc*
shall »w lira called in. and this order of tatrm?nt shall ta followed until all ahal) have
been paid.
Sir. B. That tb- Secretary of tbe Treasury
is authorised and directed to receive itop&lt;*fM
of g* &gt;M tatn with the Treasurer or Asalstant-

1X PORTA ST TO TB 4 T KLKBS

taSUc.

CATARRH OF THE BLADDER.
•
Stinging, Imartlng. irritation «f th* urinary
P*»»«gts, diseased cfi« huig.-o. cured by Bochupsbla. Il, st druggist •• Mich. Depot, JAS.
E. DAVIS * OO/Detn.lt, Mich.

A BlMlMippi Pilot'll Story.
Tbe passenger who wm going down
the big.rivet Tor the first time in hi*
life, secured permission to climb up
besides the pilot, * grim, old gray back,
who-never told a lie-in hi* life.
“Many alligators in the ri verY" inquir­
ed the stranger, after ■ looking around.
“Notao many now, since they got to
shootin’ ’em fortheir hides and taller,”
was die reply.
.
“Use to Ge lota, ehY”
“I don’t want to tell you about ’em,
stranjrer,” replied the pilot, sighing

G. H. Shewy, of Hillsdale, deputy
collector of internal revenue, commit­
ted suicide by shouting, on tbe 96th.
Ilia mind had been affected for some
time.
On the 96th, while Dun Laporte, of
Hersey, wa* burglarizing a fellow towns
man’s store: the proprietor of the lat­
ter, H. F. Snvder, shot him *o badly
that he must die;
A servant girl at Lansing, who has
Sink eyes a stiff knee, and who wear*
o. 7 shoes, has parteda teamed couple
who had lived peacefully together for
18 years.—Free Press.
A young man named DavidHurst was
drowned in Coldwater Lake about IS
o’clock, June 38th. He hod been camp­
ing with a party of young meu-ou the
island, and while bathing is supposed
to have been taken with a cramp.
C. Lawrence, of Delhi, was killed at
Lansing on the 37th, by a Grand Trank
train. He was evidently intoxicated,
and was discovered by the engineer too
late for tbe train to be Mopped. The
victim was about 80 years ot age.
In a Grand Rapids family last week
the authorities fount! a dead small-pox
victim and two others very sick with
the disease. They had been without
medical treatment, were utterly desti­
tute aud bad almost nothing to wear.

The Ice cream social at the church was well
attended and a good, sociable time enjoyed by
all. Altoni eighty cooled themselves off with
ice cream. Proceeds of the evening. fS.OO.
The other night when Mr. Pickle’s folks
were away, some boyathrew stones and broke
out some of their windows. There is some
talk of '■Pickling” the boys lor a few month*
at the Reform School.
AU millers are fond of tbeir Towl, but the
one over at Hanchctt’s beats them all; for the
other daj, report sayt, be took the whole grist,
and when spoken to about it he said it was his
son-in-law, and tbe explanation was satisfac­
tory.
Harvey Towl looked Dakota all over last
cummer for a home, but this summer he has
fftuod one over at tbe mil). Harvey is some­
thing of a musician, and be was always singing
“Sweet Homo," but now be has changed tbe
Mrs. Catl Prager, of Grand Rapids,
old familiar lines and sings it, “sweet Maggie left her son, Louis, seventeen months
old, with friends in Niles. The child
Holmes.”
ate bread upon which arsenic hid been
G ASTER.
spriukled for rats. Antidotes were
promptly nnuiinistered, but tbe child
CARLTON.
died.
At Big Rapids, on tbe 34th, a party of
Ask JimCarp about that mouse trap.
, Geo. Miles still lingers with Bright's disease. young men were in swimingat the low­
Hue Fuller intends to buy a uew thresher er dam. and Augustus, son of M. Rosen
berg, merchant, and W. S. Carpenter,
this season.
clerk with Mr. Pressburg, were yurried
M. P. Fuller sheared IB pounds of wool from into the eddy and drowned, their com­
one of his bucks.
panions being nnable to assist them.
After a few days bust Walt Backet found his
An
attempt • was
mndr to burn
the
:r
............ »
....................... ■ i..
.
,
eow shut up In Jacob Shriber's yard.
village of Qnipryone uight last
-t weck&lt;
Dr. Wright is building a bee house, with cel­ by soaking with •kerosene a box of
shavings in a furniture store and set­
lar beneath, in which he win winter his bees.
Lafayette Know lea, while hewing timber for ting tire to them.* A Mr. Lennon dis­
E. J. KcrAner, cut his knee quite badly with a covered it and removed the box, burn­
ing himself very severely in tbe under­
broad-ax.
• '
taking.
E. Woodard, who Is employed by a firm Id
James Bell, fireman of the steam
Marshall selling furnaces, was home Sunday barge Rudolph, was assaulted on board
and Mondi}- last.
that boat while it wait Ivina at East
R. Vester caused tb- arrest of Herb. Chi *c on Saginaw, on the 36th, by Michael Ryan
tbe Xlh in»L, ior abducting sod marrying his and Wm. Dodd, twoother firemen, one
. of whom struck Bell with a monkey15-ycar-old daughter.
'« ' wrCucb severely, if not fatally, injurMrs. R. Hosmer to very sick at Mr
Mr. H
H.'s
‘
vL. I *UR him. AU hands had been drinking,
mother, in Castleton, at which she wasi attacked I
A brakeman, at Durand, ^Tuesday,
with lung difficulties while on a visit
The Whitney Family will give one of their caught bis foot in a frog and could not
get it out. A train was backing down
mammoth pavflliou entertain menu st tbe Cen­
on him, when his yells brought -ome
ter on Monday evening,'July fid.
men to his assistance. They could not
Mrs. Louisa Rogers waa not a little surprised stop the train, so tbeyjerked the man
on Bttunlay last when about 80 io number loose by main force. Hl ' shoe was torn
dme tn to inform her that she was 69 yean of to pieces, and the flesh pulled from the
boDea of his foot, so that he will be
lame a long time; but he waa glad
enough to get oft' so.
Louisa Reed, of Eckfoid, Calhoun
THE COUNTY.
county, wa* supposed to be sick, abd a
Charles Smith, of Barry, died from neural­ nurse’ was detailed to attend her. The
nurse
slept; Loaisa skipped out, and a
gia last week.
mill-pond was dragged iu expectancy
Mr*. Ezra Hall of Irving, died from puerpu- of finding her dead body. It wa* not
ral fever on Saturday.
there, however, but Louisa was after­
A nine-year-old son of E. Bright's, of Onmgv- wards found at Homer, wither die had
rillc, was thrown from a buggy last week and sped and been married to a young man
of that place. She is now said to be
Maron Citoe, of Middleville. fell from a load- rapidly getting better.
On Saturday. Anthony Madon, an em­
ploye of the Tawa* A Bay County rail­
the same ran over him. Injuring him badly.
David Mason, of Orangeville, receoUy re­ road, stepped into the mill of James
Mclvor, in the township of Sherman,
ceived a stroke of paralysis that affected hi* Iosco Co., for tbe purpose of grinding a
vocal organs so greatly that be ds unable to chisel. The lx-lt running the grind­
•Pg*stone came off and in trying to put it
Bursars have again made a raid on Middle- on again, tbe man was caught by the
VlBe. _LMt Thursday night tlroy tried to gain belt aud carried three times around tbe
driving puily. His legs were broken
twice, his knee dislocated, and be was
otherwise so badly injured that he died
on Monday.
Tbe Prohibitionists in convention
assembled at Jackson on the 28th, nom­
hours. At tbe Johnson House, the same ntahL
the burglar, had better success; as they u^dit inated tbe following State ticket: For
Governor
—Daniel P. Sagendorph, of
covered, emptied tbe grub cheat nf all iu con­
tent*, and tbe next morning tbe landlord work­ Eaton; Lieutenant-Governor, W m. G.
ed himself into a white heat over the blamed Brown, of Jackson; Secretary of State,
wastefulness of the kitehen girl*. The board­ A. H. Lownr, of Lenawee; State Treas­
, era had a fresh batch of ba«h that morning urer, E. L. Brewer, of Shiawassee; Com­
‘ Frdm fi A. Geer's tarn was also stolen a padr missioner of. State Land Office, E. C,
of pillows- They were certainly tbe hungriest Newell, of Saginaw; Attorney-General,
ethal ever did the place, and could not have J. H.Tatem. of Montcalm; Auditor-Gen­
acquainted with tbe charitable habits of
eral, J. H. Osborne, of Lenawee; Super­
intendent of Public Instruction, N. H.
term ot Dibble's It^hodter.-Mlddlevllk Re- Walbridge, of Newaygo; Mem be f of
State Board of Education, Isaac W. Mc­
pubiican.
Keever, of Allegan.
HASTINGS.
At Jackson, on the 97th, tbe boiler in
the Jackson Fire Clay company'* works
Frank Littlefield to to organize a military exploded, destroying tbe boiler house
company.*
and the south building, killing one man
Three gambling bells are in active operation and injuring several other*. Michael
Nugent, who wasoperatingtbemaebinIn this city.
,T*nrpf the boiler room, wna
Om hundred tikxuaadpotMAaaf wool has been ^ry.Iu.i
instantly killed. Lather Thompson,
brick molder, wa* scalded all over hi*
Frank Goodyear has returned from Arkan person and will die. The other* who
were injured were David Smith, theen•c*Med2 J. Davis, fire,
acalded.aml
Our Knlghu of*]
DfcUJ
tn uwdbuta
the property

know that '
taslwUte*.

to cat it

“Why!”
“Cause you’d think I was a-iyin to
you, and that’s sumthin’ I never do. I
can chpat at keerds, drink whiskey or
chew poor tobacker, but I can’t lie.”
“Then there use to be lots of them!’
inquired the passenger.
“I’m most afraid to tell ye, mister,
but Pve counted 1,100 allygatera to the
mile from Vicksburg cl’ar down to New
Orleans. That was years ago, afore a
shot was ever fired at ’em.”
"Well, I don’t doubt it,” replied the
stranger.
“Aud I’ve counted 3.459 of ’em on one
mind Imr,” continued the pilot. "It
looks big to tell, bat u government sur­
veyor was aboard, and he checked ’em
off as I called out.”
“1 haven’t tbe least doubt of it,” said
the passenger as he heaved a sigh.
“Pm glad o’ that, stranger; some fel­
lers would think I was a liar, when I’m
telling tbe solemn truth. TMs um to
be a paradise for alligators, and they
were so thick that the wheels of the
boat killed an average of forty-nine to
the mile.”
“Is that aoY"
"True as-gospel, stranger! I used to
almost feel sony for tbe cussed brutes,
'cause they’d cry out e’en most like a
human be;ng. Wo killed lots of ’em,
as I said, and we bun a pile more. I
sailed with one captain who alius car­
ried a thousand bottles of liniment to
throw over tbe wounded ones!”
“He did!”
“True ns you live, he did. I don’t
’spect PH ever see another such a kind
Christian man. Aud the alligators got
to know the Nancy Jane, and to know
Cspt. Tom, and they’d swim out atd
rub ‘their
against me
the uoau,
boat, nau
and,
1UU
•ocu tails
iniin ugaiuM
pUrr like cats, an’look up aud try to
smileP
’
“They wouldF
"Solemn truth, stranger! And once
when wo gropnded on a bar. withan
opposition boat right behind, the al li­
ghters gathered around, got under- her
stern, and jumped-her clean over the
bar by a grand push! It look* like a
big story, but I never told a lie yet, and
I never shall; I wouldn’t lie for all the
money you could put al»oard this boat”
There was a painful pause, and aftcrawhile the pilot continued :
“Our ingines gin out once, nnd a
crowd of alligators took n tow line and
hnnled us forty-five miles up stieam to
Vicksburg.”

"They didr

“And when the news got along the
over that Capt. Tom was dead, every
alligator on the river daubed his left
ear with mud ns a bage of mounting,
nnd lots of ’em pined and died.”
The passenger left the pilot house
with the remark that he didn’t doubt
the statement, and the old man gave
tbe wheel a turn, and replied:
“There.’* one thing I wont do for
love nor money, afid that’s make a liar
of myself. I was brought up by a good
mother, amLI’ll stick to tbe truth if this
boat don’t make a cent.”

Hac. 3. That, upon receipt of tbe application
and rertlllcate of nseoeiadem provided for In
the preceding section, tbe Comptroller of the
Currency shall cause a special examination to
ta made at tbe expeuM of Uro msociafion, to
determine it* oomfitton; and if, after •ueb ex­
to him that
'Condition,
vided form tbe precedin&lt; sectipa; or. h it ap­
pear* that tbe condition of aa&gt;d association is
not satisfactory, be Si»aM withhold such certtflc:ite of approval
fixe. I. That any association so extending tbe
period of iu «uccc*aion shall continue to enjoy
all the right*, and privileges, and immutdtle*
granted, nnd *hall continue to t&gt;&lt;&gt; subject to all
the dutica, liabilities and restrictions imposed,
by tbe Revised Statute* of the United Mutes
and other ac^ having reference KiNitfuost
Banking associations, and it shall continue to
ta In nil respects tbe identical a«M&gt;ciatton It
was before tiro extension of lu period of succeaslon; jwocidol, however, that Jurisdiction
for suit* trorv ifter brought by or against any
asxociaiInn established under any tow provid­
ing f.»r ntb.ual-1 tanking usootationa, except
suits between them and the I'ultcd State* and
lu officer* and agents, «h&lt;U Be the »ame a* and
not other than the jurisdiction for suits by or
against tanks not orxaxxlxod under any taw of
the_ United States which do &lt;«r might jto a
bonking business where such National-Bank­
ing as.* &gt;ciations may be doing bu-dtro*» when
such suits may be b&lt; gun. and nil bur* Sod
parts of laws of the Untied Hute* inoon«&gt; fent*&lt;
with this proviso be and tbe same are hereby
repealed: and prodded, further, that no at­
tachment. Injunction, or execution shall be
issued against such Nation ah Bank! ng aw*oclatiun or Its property before final judgment in
any suit, action, or proceeding In any Htate.
county, or municipal court.
Sac. a. That when any National-Bank I ng as­
soc at Ion has amende*! its articles of sa«oclation as provided lu this act, and the Comp­
troller ha* granted hl* certificate of approval,
any shnre-b &gt;lder not aa*cntlng to such amend­
ment may give notice in writing to the Direc­
tor* within thirty dava from the date of the
certificate or approval of his destre to with­
draw tr..m said a**&lt;x latlou. in whl&lt;*&gt; cam- he
shall be entitle*! to receive from said tanking
a«**x-lntP&gt;n the value of tbo shares so hcl&lt;i by
him. to be ascertained by appraisal mode by a
committee of three pervons. one to be selected
by such •hare-holder, one by a Director, and
the third by the first two; and in cnee tbe
value so fixed shall not ta* satisfactory to any
such shareholder, be may appeal to tbe Comp­
troller of tbe Currency, who shall cause * re­
appraisal u&gt; be made which shall be final and
binding, and if sold rr-appraisal shall sxceed
tho value fixed by said committee the bank
■hall pey the expenwwof said re-appraisal, and
otherwise th«&lt;. appellant sbajl pay said exJ&gt;erws: and tbe value *o ascertained and de­
termined shall be deemed to l&gt;e a debt due. and
be forth w. th paid tn said shareholder from Un­
said tank; and the shares so surrendered and
appraised shall, after due notice, be sold at
public sale within the thirty day* after final
appraisal provided tn this section; proeldrd.
that In the organisation of any tanking asso­
ciation intended to replace any existing bank­
ing association and retaining the name there­
of, th* bolder* of stock in the exptring asso­
ciation shall ta entitled to preference tn tbe
allotment of the share* of the new Maocfation
bi proportion to the number of share* held by
them respectively in tbe expiring association.
Ski . it. That the circulating notes of any as- .
soctaton so extending th? period nf ItssucuesSlc.n Which shall have l&gt;een issued to it prF&gt;r to
such ex tai* Ion shall ta redeemed at tbe Trcns«y of the United .-itate*». ns provided in Sec. 3
the net of June SO. I8T», entitled “An act
fixing the amount of United States notes, prre
riding for a rodiatribution of Natlonal-Baiik
currency, and for other purpooea, and such
note*, when redeemed, shall ta forwarded to
the Comptroller nf the Currency and destroyed
m now provided by law. At the end of three
yean* from the date of the extension of the
c*irporat&gt;« exhtenre of each tank, tho associntiqn so ex tn.del shall deposit lawful money
with the Treasurer of the United Plates wmci&lt;-nt to redeenpfh*'remainder of the ctreulalion which wan outstanding at tbe &lt;!ate of its
extension, a* provided for In Sec*. A.C, and
and \££5 of tbe Revised Stntuu k. and any
gain that may arise^n tn a failure to pn-*eiit
such ilretilaliiMr notes for rr-dempton shall
inure to tbe ticnefit of the United Stau-s, and
from time to time, ns such notes are re-

proved by the Secretary of tbe Treasury, as
stall m .ke them readily dMlngul*table from
tta cirrulnting nntes heretofore Moed: pnriftol, however, ttat each banking asaoctation
w ttich shall obtain the benefit of this net stall
reimburse to the Treasury the cost ot prepar­
ing lhe piste or plates for such new circulating
notes asshail ta issued to it.
BBC. 7. Tnat National-Banking associations
wtajse corporate existence ta* expired or stall
hereafter expire, and which doteot avail them­
selves of the provisions of this act, stall ta re­
quired to comply with tbe proviaions Y»f Been.
nf the BevMed Statutes in the
A Cincinnati woman was swinging in 5.2ft and
same manner as if tbe shareholders bml voted
a hammock in the seclusion of her back to go into liquidation, as provided in Sec. &amp;J30
thejRevised Statute*, and tbe orovtaion* of
yard, and her feet hung down.
A of
Sec*, a.221 and A2&amp; of the Revised Statutes
neighbor looked through the fence and shall also ta applicable to such association*,
except as modified by this act. and the frate
cried, “Shoot them feet!" He was •hire of such association ia heretiy extended
prosecuted, and, though he protested for the role purpose of liquidating their affairs
u ut 11 such affairs are finally closed.
.
that he meant no adverse criticism of
SMC. K That Natinu.il Itailks n&gt;&gt;w omnltetL
or hereafter organized, having a capital of
the feet* nor disrespect of the owner, 3101.0)0 or less*, stall nnt be required to keep
■
in
deposit
or
deposit
with
the
Treasurer
of
the
was fined $2.
Unltsd States United Stated bonds tn excsss of
one-third of their capital »ttxrk a* security
Do men realize what they do when for their circulating notes; and such
of those
tank* having
on
deposit
they dare assume to sell licenses ? Li­ bon«l« In excess ot that amount are
autbori«*d to reduce their circulation by tta
cense to make of man. the angel, into deposit
of lawful money as provided by law:
man the devil Y License to make of wo­ Jwvctdfd. that the amount ofI—such
— •.*. circulating
------- ■
man Hecate, and of children the wild­
eyed offspring of crime and fatuity Y as herein provided; prurlde*!. further, that all
National Banks which tball bcreaftre make
Can any man any, I have power to do dctoslts of lawful money for tbe retirement In
full of their circulation shall st tbe time of
thia thing Y
their &lt;lrposlt be BMcbscd lor the cost &lt;»r trans­
porting and redeeming their notes then out­
A Philadelphia congregation voted standing a stun equal to th- average cost of re­
demption of National-Bank notes during tbe
to give the pastor a two months vaca­
tion, bat he • wisely refused it? He
said it was a constant fight between
Satan and himself to keep what religion
be Lad in his charch.

Lets man overcome anger by lovej
let him overcome evil by good; let
him overcome tbe greedy by liberality,
the liar by truth !
It is conquer or die with good doctor,
but the patient is expected to do the
dying.

A timely oso &lt;4 Brown n Iron Bitters •
,
‘strengthen the nervetf and nmaciM with
life and vigor, and ward of! many disease* th . ;
otherwise arc to encroach upon a weak coast!
tutlon.

and »ucb certificate*. hr ai*o silvercertifioataa,
when b&lt; Id by any National-banking as*“cfa-

■enter of any cJearing-boUM In which such
certificate* studl not ta receivable In srithNo more Chills and Ague iu. tbi* ■erttoo.
ment of eleartne-hou*? balances: pmoxted Our Druggist to seliinc an article called
that the Seen tary of the Treasury *ha&gt;! sus­ “Aot’c Cowquraon.” It'ie atauf the only
pend the tesneof surtt certificates whenever
tbe amount of goM coin and gold bull.on in tbu satisfactory preparation sold f« the cure at
Fever aud Ague, Dumb (.hills. Intermittent or
Treasury reserved for tbe r»*Je
Riiiious'Fsvera. Tbe Proprietor of tbe Agcb
United States notes falls below *
and th? provisions of t»cc. 5JWT of tt
Conqvkxok tax used but little energy to make
Rt^tpOw ruXn.
----- _
to certificate* this medicine known and yet Its »al&lt;&gt; are im­
herein out-------------------- BL___
.
mense in Ague Dlstri. w. B purifies the blood
8rc_ tl That anr officer, clerk, or a&lt;«nt of
any National-Banking association wbo stall Liver and other 8ecrct&lt; ry organs so '•ffcctuaily
willfully violate th? provisions of tta act en­ JHki the Chills do not return even when j&gt;crtitled ‘ An act in reference to certifying [sons hare had them for years. Entirely vegre
checks by Nations! Banks," approved March ■&lt;.1 bl e preparation. Price. 50 centa and 81.00
3, 1»». being Section 5.IW of the Revised stat­ pebhotUe. Two doses will stop the chills.
utes. or wbo «hall resort to any device of ncciving a fictitious ot llgntlon. direct or cotlatNOTICE.
••rnj. In order to evade any provisions thereof,
or who stall certify checks before the amount
To the members of tin- Farmer. Mutual Fire
stall have been regularly entered to tbe credit Insurance Company of Barry aud Exton Co’a
of the dealer upon the nooks of the banking Mich.:
,
.
association, shall ta deemed guilty of a misde­
Notice is hereby given that there wi 1 be a
meanor, and stall on conviction thereof In any
Cirvult or District CVurt of tito United States special meeting of sakt cnuipauv. at the Opera
ta fined not more thsn fS.WM. or than be ine House, Nashville. Mich,, pn Jnlv Jd. at 1 o'dock
prisoned n*»t more than five yonr*. or both. In p. m. This meeting is calicl for tbe purpose
the discretion ot tbe Court.
of considering an amendment io our charter,
Het. IL That- Congrcs* may nt any time aud amending, if thought necessary* tl,at *e
amend, alter, or repeal this net. nnd tbe acts may injure against Cyclones and tornadoes;
of which this Is amendatory.
aleo to insure eburobe*. school! bouse*,Grange
lulls, and agrtt-iflturwi hall*. This meeting to
of great Importance at&gt;d r&amp;ould ■ •- ittendedby
The Remains of De Long and HI* Com­ all members who can convcDtoaUy Iw there.
Hastings, May 27, Insi.
panions.
D.W.RooEm,
Sicri-tary.
UOKDOX,
Judo 19.
cccnuuy.
Xz&gt;KDOx, June
W. n. Gilder, the New York Herald com—
•pondent with Rodger*, sends tho following FOURTH OF JULY AT THE GROVE
dup.t«a:
HOUSE, TH0BXA1TLE LAKE.
I.rVA
Anrtl IO
I—-iI
L
bna firm
Dklta, April
12. ««.
Melville
found the bodies of De Long's party I
AND
„
RUNNING A
VD TROTTING RACES!
hundml Sd ™7thZ^'Xh '£? S
Tie Fourth ot July will lx- celebrated at the
.x
' Grovc Hoiw, Thornapj-lc Lake, by running
n
°rfthi&lt; rm* Melv.Uo« search party a:ul trotting races, tasting. juid a Bowery
first started from the supply depot, (here Dance.
Dance.
.
',
ii•
two words are unintelligible), to fellow
860.00 Id Premium*
Liliows; Trotting
Ntndcrmnn'K route from Ustorday to Mal- Race— Premium 830, Free j« all. Running
Race—Premium 815. Free for all. Two Year
ward Usterday. (The following sentence Old TrottingRace— Premium |I0, Free f« all.
is again unintelligible.) Ho propped at a
place which Nindermnn and Noros passed to ta made by June 22&gt;xl . Good half-mile race
free to all who want to ttec It before the
the first day after they left Lieutenant De track
Fourth.
Long, feeling sure that the others bail not
Rcfreshmcnta on the gronndsgot much further. They found tbe wnxtfii
« W. CORWIN,
and following along tbe bank, they cam*
Thornapple, June 10,1883.
Manager.
up?n a ride barrel hung upon four sticks.
(Hero six words are unintelligible.) They set
Nashville Jlai-keUr.
native* t&gt; digging on each side of the sticks, Wool............... .............. ............... ta................. 34 toll
and they soon came upon two bodies under
eight feet of snow. While these men were
digging toward the cast. Melville went on
along the tank, twenty feet above tbe river, to

camp kettle and tbo remain* of u fire, about a
thousand yards from th- tent, and approaeboL
He ui ariy stumtded upon De Long's bend
■ticking out of tbo mow, about thirty fret
from tbe edge of the bank. Here, under about
a foot of snow, they found tbe bodies ot I»&gt;»
Long and Ambler, about tbre? feet apart. Ab
Soln lying at tbeir fret, all partially covered

Onlons.prrbu,

Timothy p-r bo.....
Clo* sr 9e«d. per bn,.
4 foot, body wood.

asiivilli:

All tbe other*, except Alexia, they found nt
tbe place wucre tbe tent wns p.tched. Lee and
Knock Were clows by in a d&lt; ft n tbu tank, to­
.
,ward the west Two b-.xA « f records with a
medicine chest nml a Hag on a suitr
were b&lt;-sido the tent
None of tb I
।dem! bad boots. Tbeir fwl were covered

not ;me,

I. M. Flint &amp; Sox. Props,
This house ho* beea thoroughly otctlwuled,

rooms. B*rn&lt;" carrisd fr-e,
welcome. Rates r.asouabls.

pl ees of burnt skin and of clothing. which
they had eaten. The bin It of all were more
or lr*» burnt, and It lo-ked aa If. when dying,
they bsd crawled Into tbe fire. Boyd waa ly­
ing over tbe fire, hit clothing being burnt
through to the akin, which wm hot bum-tl.
CoiUM* face wji covered with a doth. AII tho

Lumber!
FOWLER&amp;INGERSON

hundred feet high, about fifty vena* to tho
southwest from where they were found, and
there Interred in a maueol'-um oonstructa! of
wood from tbe scow, built in the form of u
pyramid, twenty-two fret k«g and seven feet
high, surmrmoted by a crosa twenty-two feet
high and * foot square hewn out ot driftwnq^
and cxusplcuou-i at a distance &lt;»f twenty versts.
Tbe mausoleum was covered wiih stone* and

Have the largest stock of LUMBER ever laid
down In Nashville.

100,000
Feet kept constantly on hand.

scrihod with the record and names of the

Pine Lumber
l

•

A specialty

rated to searctAbo delta far traces of Chlppw'
people. Melville went to tbe northwest part
River. Nitarrman took tbe renter and Bart­
lett the northeast. Ntnderman and Bartlett

Finishing Lumber,
Flarii; Maj, Miu, Staffiij, Jml
Or any thing la tbe building material line, see .

___
Verkhiuaugk before tbe ri ver* break up. If
mountain- with th- natives until the water
fall*. Tbe wboje of the delta is covered with

Also Floar. Salt,

WOOL! WOOL!
HIGHEST PRICE PAID FOR

WHEAT, OATS, CORN, ETC.
native*.

Bftcas &gt;n. a teaman, died October '

tarn ‘-wi.d&amp;ir* wtama bodta* Were discovered

now organized or hereafter
ing to withdraw its drculatli
posit of lawfULmoocy with

Kindness la the gnhivu chain by which «edety Is bound together.

ta(M&lt;d io tbe Treasury far the payment of t
Ktae on demand. tald certificate* -h ill be

FOWLER &amp; INGERSON.
GuardiRh* Sale.

Collins, Henry Knock. Adolf Dressier. Out
Gam, Waller Lee, Nell* luMsetf. G'-orge

for a redistrfbut
rency. aud for otb
lawful

were tbe occupants of th-

j

finallyparted
ing. Sna may

�AW JI VILLK.
iA Y JULY, j.gMK.

red persons
an on tho hand to
them in proper
“The levee has broken; save your­
selves at once, there is no time to Iom.”
TB* QtTXBJt OB TB* MA F.
There was an instant of awful silence; planter* near Georgetown. 8. C., bM
every breath ww hushed, and rosy planted his entire crop tills year by nitAfHt-^o* the two were* watching the cheeks were blanched with terror; chlnery. This is said to be perhaps the
sunset—one believing tbe san of her then the voice of .the despairing bride first instance in South Carol ns, if Dot prara, rake Hop BHtera. Hi* avatam will terejuveuated, hi» .twrvc* rtrcoglbctred, hla right
life had already set in clouds and dark­ rang out:
in tbe entire South, in which a whole beeonre clear, and tbe whole ronatituUoo Ims
“It liM come trie! It has oometruef’
ness. and the light wm fast failing for
rice.crop has been planted with xna- bout up to a higher working euodtUou.
tbe other; she turned in dismay and she cried, and m she fell into the arm*
chiDM.
dread from the life before her—he of her husband the guests fled ia every
—If our fruit raisers win in years of
when he had a troebtooms tooth extracted- .
longing and striving for the life that direction.
The gray-haired mothet
abundance turn their a'tention to con­
wm fast slipping from him.
sank upon her knees, and wa could see verting the surplus fresh fruits into,
A DELIGHTFUL NOVELTY.
A bunch of gray moss swung smartly her lipa move in prayer.
dried product*, a large market-for the
Ladles prefer Flon-stou Cologne berauw they
in my face and roused roe to the fact
Frank’s eyes wandered over the hur­
same may be devemped in Europe. flndUiulaXinK o&gt;mblnaUou of exqUito pjr
that the wind wm rising, for added to rying crowd an instant, in search of
Already mill ons of pounds ot dr ed ap­ lumes a deitgbUul treveRy.
and children six, and the muttering of the river wm the some one he evidently expected to tree.
ples are exported annually.—Chicago
When I* a'm*n like the woman of Samaria!
moaning of the pines- 1 walked hMti- Even in that terrible moment 1 could.
Journal
•
When bl* wife tells him “all thing* be ha* ever
ly to tbo levee. Everybody wm there, । not.
help thinking how
he
bravejand hand­
—Here is a hint for the careful house­
working or watching, for should a jet some
he waa. _ 1did
did not wonder that
_______
wife who wishes to make the most of
of water force its way through undis- Ruth had lost her heart
h
to him. At
everything. When, your red tablecloth
The »ymptom* of Irhina l&gt;i‘e8 are mouturr
was certain -----*&gt;d—dehi* eye rested
re*te&lt; on us. In an in­
covered a crevasse wm
length his
it'sun tbefl&lt;x.r,
’
is too mu -h worn in spo'.s to. u-e any like prr»pb•tton. iutaose itching, most atulgbt
sanction sure.
stant he wm beside us. He put his
I’m wry .are I riudl never 1
longer on the table, cut the gooti par s ..-rim as If pin worm* were crawling to or
There wm great danger that the arm about Ruth as if they had parted
trackman come to ths door.
AiMMil the rectum. Tbe mare you *cratcb tbe
And they m^ht^arry me and the bed a
in tbe shape of napkins, fringe them worse they itch, very distre»«lug. Tbe private
levee could not withstand the force of with kisses but yesterday, looked
“‘•Sl.V&amp;S'iL't’"- "°u“the water without the wind, but with a* quickly back and said, m his face out for about an inch, if inclined to parts are often affix ted. Dr. Swayne's Oint­
ravel easily overcast them, and it will ment Is tbe most effective remedY extant for
gale it seemed hopeless.
blanched and his lips shut dose:
Ixj many n long day before any member this tormctiting eomplatoL Gives rest at night
It was a yearly danger to which ev­
“Wo cjn only save ciuraelves. Come!”
without that lii-slrr to scratch. Also has on
of your family will dis over , that they equal in quickly eradicating Tetter, Itch, Sall
ery one had become accustomed, so
He swung Ruth lightly through the
I getting a fivs-oent shine, aad looking that no plans were changed, and all
are not regular ••bougbten*’ fruit nap­ Rlicume, EryiUpelaa, Barbers’ Itch, PUnples,
casement, chsped me by the arm, and
all Scaly, Cruatv. Itchy Skin Enipttons. Here
-amusements went on as gaily as if de­ we fled away from the house of feasting
kins.—AT. Y. Pott.
.
the proof, ‘•Certainly tbe best remedy erer
struction did not threaten every horde with the bride’s heart-rending shriek
—A safe and almost sure remedy for used to my practice,” Dr. Cotton, Woodstock,
for miles around.and our nearest neigh­ in our ears and the mother's blanched an int’amed eye is to bathe the afflicted Vt.. ••troubled with Itching Plies for over twen­
bors had invited us to attend a country face upturned in hopeless prayer ever
member in lukewarm waler, into which ty rears, It cured me completely,’’ L. 8. Messer
wedding with them that night Ruth before our eyes, as we dashed out into
a small quantity of common table salt EnBeid, Me. Sent for SO eta (In 8 cL stamps)
hesitated about leaving her invalid, but the night and joined in the wild scram­ has been dissolved. Ho.d tbe eves open 3 boxes, SI.25, By Dr. Swayne A Bon. PhUad’a
Pa. Sold by all druggists.
*
he urged her to go, assuring her there ble for life.
while bathing, and Immediately relief
wm no danger whatever; so when we
The blackness of the night, the roar­
will be experienced- Bathing the eyes
heard the call at the gate, “Oh, Miss ing of the wind and the IncreMing morning and night in cold water is an
probably wore tbe garter around bi» neck.
Mw.
Ruth, are you ready F” we threwonour thunder of the river were enough to excellent pract &lt;•© for those who aro
WORTHI&amp;EMEMBERI NG.
wraps and started, gloves in hand.
appall the stoutest heart- But we hur­ obliged to use their eyes to any extent.
We found after various apologies ried on, stumbling over roots and
Now that gnod time* are again upon ua, it ta
The water acts like a tome, and strength­
that the family carriage had strayed stumps, caught and torn by vines and
ens and brightens the eyes. The eyes worth remembering that no one can enjoy tbe
away during the late “unpleasantness” briers, dashed against trees by the rag­
should be kept open ns much as poitsible pleasantest surroundings If In bad health.
There are hundreds of miserable people going
and had failed to return and that tbe ing wind, spattered by the spray of the
during thtf process of bathing them.— about to-day with disordered stomach, liver or
conveyance provided for us wm a two- rising water, until we reached the place
kidneys, when a bottle of Parker's Giner Tonic
Jndianapolis Journal.
whetled cart. We were assured the where Frank had left his boat
—In gardens poisonous plants are few would do them more good than all medk-lenes.
straw on the bottom was clean and
The'river was full of floating trees,
in numb t, and of no great value fnr
begged to “Sit right .down; it’s all tho ruins of houses, and all the debris
decorative purposes. A very large pro­
Giris, like u)i|&gt;ortunlUcB, are all the more to
clean.” and alter much laughing and which the mad water had wrested from
portion of the flowers that are in highest you after being embraced.
crowding, we six—grandma and baby, its conauerors. Tho current was so
sldsarrepute for beauty, such as the rose,
tbe Fust, mother, to mother and
ONEMOMENT, PLEASE.
nnd sister, Ruth and I, with a
~ strong• it seemed certain death to trust
dadilia. I'clargoniitni.
begonia, ‘ wall­
When winter la pawing Into summer, and
_____ Ives to it, but it wm tho only
bundle of hay for the horse to eat,were ountelv
flower, stock, carnation anil primula,
neparkr mirror has got a craek, and ths Venus packed away and jolted along right chance.
We stepped in tho boat and
are altogether harmless, a'though for eumtucr into winter again, your health should
merrily. We drove beside the levee, each seized an oar.
Wo pushed out
the most part of no value whatever as lie especially looked to. Tbe humors which
but the angry rush of the river and and the fight for life began. Wo were
articles ot food. But as there are so lisve sccomulated tn your blood siiould. be
bum. and the rising wind seemed to occasion no driven against huge floating logs, again
many decorative plants that will not in­ cleansed away, and your »yrtem toned up to
and again almost overturned, caught
uneasiness in our companions.
jure. even if eaten, it is easy to exclude guard against Billions Fever, or other sickness
Tho house to which we were going in tho branches of some great tree that
tcom the garden a certain few that are peculiar to the change of searons. Dr. David
stood on a point of land which tfie river rushed down tho current and which in
noxious, ami tiiat have sometimes been Kennedy's “Favorite Remedy*' will do this for
And Bridget tlrall go with me early tomorrow
had encroached upon year after year the darkness wo could not see. Cries
associated with sad fatalities.
The you. Get a bottle now and begin uringtlat
until it was almost an island, and it of terror reached us now and then,
rooting out of the great blue aconite or once. A long fit of sicknew and a long doctor’s
seemed that soon the whole plantation but tho thunder of tbo liberated river
monkshood, the root of which contains
bill may be Hie penalty of neglect. II your
would be washed away. 1 could only filled tho air. It socmed tho triumph­
a virulent poison, and has yet b *cn
druggist hasn’t it. write to the Dr. at Rondout,
wonder at tho gayety of my compan­ ing of the river god as ho swallowed
many limes served on the table as horse­
ions. and to divert my mind from my his victims, the human sacrifice to his
radish, is therefore recommended.— N. Y. Price 11.00.
at work on the big front door, and own fears, asked:
power.
Denver Tribune.
Young man, learn to wait; If you undertake
ole place amelia uf paint
Wp were trying to force our way
••Has Miss Dora been long engaged F”
the plumber, aredawdbnground is
to ret a hen before she ia ready you will lose
“Yes. five year*. The wedding day through the crevasse up to higher
The Late Jewel Robbery at Rio Janeiro. your time, and confuse the hen besides.
has been fixed twice before; the guests ground, when suddenly a bonfire some
A VALUABLE ADDITION.
'fhe riddle of the recent robbery of I
t l-e First, mother, to invited, tho cake ready, and tho bridal one had lighted hours before blazed
Because it is ticnrtk-ial to tbe scalp and adds
veil waiting to be pul on. The first up, aud wc saw clinging in tho branches
the jewels of the imperial ladies nt
time Dora wm sick, so very sick it of ji tree rushing past us the bride
Rio Janeiro had a curious solution. Aft­ t&lt;&gt; |ierMHial Ixmuty by restoring color and lustre
seemed impossible that she could live clasped tightly in the arms of her hus­ er putting into prison three jiersons on 1.1 Cray or faded hair. Is why Barker's Hair
Haisam is such a popular drest Ing.
Was tho prophecy to be ful­
through tho day. but as soon as tho band.
suspicion, and complete failure to dis­
hour for tbe wedding was passed she filled, “never a wifif or a mother?”
Indians smoke the pipe of peace while white
cover any trace of the jewels, or light
they re. all bwm paci
Though the attempt was madness, we
began
to
improve.
The
next
time
the
on
anything
definite
In
regard
to
the
men smoke the piece of a pipe.
.
»n new find a a thir
Fortunately
•&lt; ifc-Firat &lt;4 May.
groom fell aud broke his le" an hour strove to roach thorn.
actor or actors in the thoft. the Chief ot
A pltyrician in Baltimore, Md., says: “I
or two before she could have been mar­ both Ruth and mjself were accom­
Police received an anonymous let:er de­ consider Brown’s Iron Bitters the truest and
plished oarswomen and accustomed to claring the writer the only author of the !&gt;c*t fiicdiclnat tonic for lost health and general
ried.”
■ tbe river. Frank stood up and called
theft, and saying that if tlicy w.-nt to a ■irtillity that can be ^impounded from our
•‘How strangeIV
.
certain spot near the house of the pris­ present knowledge of drugs."
••Well. Dora is the last one of an old. to them while we bent to our oars with
As brother Bob would pat it, there'll l&gt;e **tb«
old family. Sho had an old nurse who nil our strength. The bridegroom heard oner Pniva the jewels would be found in
It is runiorrd that Oscar Wilde will wed a
us
and
waved
his
hand
in
acknowledg
­
two tins interred in the ground ^Tho Boston girl. Tbe change from a diet of Ifliea
saw visions and foretold coming events,
Then Erank took tho oarst Chief and two police offlen-ni, all dis­
who told Dora that she never would be ment
to that of beans will probably extinguish him.
Ruth
tho
|&gt;ole
that
was
used
to
keep
us
guised.
s-1
out
for
SL
Chriitovam.
tak
­
a wife or mother, and she almost began
from colliding with tho floating masses,
ing the prisoner I’airn out of jail nn the
MHLoll 8 &lt; V.N&gt;1 Mi TlON CURB.
ii be tbo wildcat time of all the wild to believe.it. She says5f she fails this
nnd wo rowed down the current after way to show them the spot described in
time she will never try again?’
lhe" letter. 'Die spot was soon found,
•‘O.'berc we are! Back up ami dump the great tree with its living burden.
A
jutting
bluff
for
a
moment
ahut
out
and after some time spout in digging, a
your lo:ul.”
And amid much noise
large tin was unca.'tlied In w' ch all the
and chattering wo scrambled to the the view ot the boulire. When it shone
■Kalt ffiBarxi in Hana's ttasar.
jewels were found. After the jewels | |P| |„
ground and shook out our crumpled upon' the floating tree again, only tho
bare
__ _trunk
_____ ami
u Ulippiu^
dripping bramhes were
had been valued judicially, the Chief |
dresses.
z
.
to bo seen. Ruth uttered a moan of !
H hich no other medicine can aland.
If you
•
' “CREVASSE.n
We were received by a beautiful terror. Frank changed our course, nnd I t.o
to their imperial owners. who bad pre­ have a Cough we earnestly ask you to try IL
“Mia* Rath. Major says it’s ]€&gt;’ on white-haired old lady, who kissed us wo shot off into the darkness again. •
Price lOcts, Mh tH. and fl.&lt;’•) If your lungs are
Alter a After hours of desperate lighting for I viously come to the conclusion that they sore. Cheat, or Baek Dune, and Shiloh’s
ter syndowD, on’ .toic me to ax yu he all and made us welcome.
were completely lost. Tho value as­ Porous Plaster. Sold by F. T. Boisa.
glance at the bare hands about us we
ter’come out y^rcF’
our lives, the faint light of uawn came I signed by the experts was at least$400,ANSWER THIS QUESTION.
“Tell him I' ll come in. Cappie.” Cap slipped our gloves into pur pockets and to our aid, and at last we were able to
Why ds “» many people »e see around us,
" ’Tl. ■ re i! thief has not ;.et been
S'
around on her oa)\ tbes a few were ushenM into the parlof and joined
land.
discovered, but the three prisoners were *ecm to prefer to Miner and be made miserable
, then started slowly for the house, one of the two lines that sat facing each
bv indigeatlnn. conatlpatfnn. dizzinesa, loss of
As
soon
m
our
feet
were
on
firm
nt
oned
discharged
on
the
recovery
ot
appetite, coining up ot the Food, yellow akin,.
Kuril fiwnng idly in her hammock other for the ceremony to begin. The
tho jewels.
w hen for TScts, we will sell them Shiloh’s V ita|jj jhe shade of lie live oK..and I ex- white-haired old lady sat beude Ruth, ground again Ruth turned ,t • Frank
lizcr. guarantod to cure them. Sold by F. T.
who had evidently taken her fancy. I aud helcKnit botff her hands with tears
In
her
eyes
and
trembling
lips,
but
said
^bSlOH’B CATTARRH REMEDY, a mar­
A Contingent Fee.
“Ibink what yqu aro doing Ruth. could see that the sweet-faced matron no word.
Ho drew her to him and
velous
for Catarrh, Diphtheria, Canker
Ho m not happy a moment withoutyou. was telling my gentle girl the «tory of kisied her again and again.
A citizen had had occasion to consult mouth,cure
They
aud Head Ache. With each bottle’
her
own
daughter
’
s
misadventurou*
He-loves you t» that'the thought of not
were saved for each other, but 1 a lawyer regarding a suit which he con­ hens i« an Ingenious naxal Injector for the
being ablu to sail with ybtf brings on a love that was soon to be crowned with thought of Major Grant, with a sigh.
templated instituting, butof the definite more succeaaful treatment of them complaints
ipverturn, and rot* kndw he had a happv fruition. Had she divined that
We found him at the house of a triend outcome of which he wm in doubt. Ho without extra charge. Price OOcU. Bold by
hemorrhage tbeJast time -you went my luith was heart-sore and aick be­ a few mile* back from the river, where did not wish to pay a retaining fee. be­ F-T.Boisa.
riding -without him. His *Iifo is bound cause Of love? I think so.
)ly drop Into poetry,’'
Literary:
he had been borne for safety, but the muse he was uncertan of winning.
The
guests
waited
awkwardly
as
up in you!”
excitement and exertion had been too The Attorney said .he would accept a as the man said when be fell Into the editorial
“I know it. Aunty, so I shall go rid­ country people gathered from far and great for his strength, and ho was suf­ contingent fee. The party met Mr.
near are wont to do. The servants
ing and sailing do more.”
Burleigh some time al terward and asked
fering frqm a severe hemorrhage,
••But such devotion will surely de­ moved officiously about to save tho ap- which wm wMting hi* life-blood. Ruth him the definition of a contingent fee.
]&gt;carance of delay. At length the bostceive him.”
J JEXRY ROE, PRorafEToa
•• A contingent fee.” jocosely said Mr.
went at once to him, leading Frank by
e««.
with
the slightest flush
ot
Burleigh. U this: “ if a lawyer loses the
“When Ire came to us, with his doom
annoyance on her fair face, left tbo hand.'
—OLD RELIABLE-----plainly written m every feature, I Re­
Some hours after, as the san wm set­ case he gets nothing. If he wins you
to devote herself to
oth­
solved that if I could not nurse hyn Ruth
ting. we were all called to his room. get nothing.”
“ But,” said the pcrp’exed party,
back to the life he so much loves, his ers. Ruth came over where I was Ruth knelt on the floor at' his bedside
last days should be as happy as possi­ standing by an open window, and put­ with her face buried in her hands, and j^ratching his head, ••! can’t say that I
ting her hand on my. shoulder turned
exactly comprehend you.”
ble,”.
the Major's hand rested on her head.
K.-r)« ooDiUElly ou baud • big track of
her face from the light, and said:
*•1 thought 1 was’ipiite clear.” said
The dark curling hair lay in damp
“Suppose he dies deceived, believing
••Oh, Aunty, I am ao miserable. Why
that you loved' him—believing a lier’
rings on his white forehead, and the Mr. Burleigh, who repeated what he had
is it that every one aise may be happy
laige aad eyes were lifted as in prayer.
••Don’t you think when he sees no
•• Bat it seems that I Jon’t get any-*
His lips moved. “Ruth, dear,” he
more ‘through a glass darkly’ that he
• ••There, there,” I said soothingly. whispered. She raised her head. He thing in either event,” said the man.
will undersuufctfy
••But should he recover.do you think ••Do not be so weak.” And then I drew her to him with a yearning in hi* when his intellect had fully grasped the
FRESH FISH and POULTRY
he would thank you for his life if you added in a bantering tone, “No doubt eye* that would not be refused. Their situation.
** Well, thgt is about tho size of a
lipa met in one ImL long kiss. Then
IN THEfR 81U8Or
had taken all hope and brightness from Frank will couje back—”
••Too late,” she said. “I have prom­ he reached out and taking Frank’* hand contingent fee,” replied Mr. Burleigh,
it?”
put Ruth's into it, and blessed them terminating the convcrsatiJn.—Dclrvil
“I assure you that his happiness ised to marry Major Grant”
-••Why, Ruth !”
with a look of unutterable love till the Free Press. .
&lt;fc., xfcc., &lt;£r.
should be, then m now, my first and
light faded from his eyea forever. —Our
I had no time to say more.
only. Abject.”
rr* The Highest Market Price paid
Canals on tbe Planet Man,
Tbe minister appeared; then came Continent._______
••Ruth,’1 I exclaimed aghast, “you
for Hides, Pelt*, tc.
would uoL marry him with no lovp to the bridal party; the promises were
A curious discovery, made by Signor Fresh Gooda. Full Weightsusind
A Painful Absurdity.
give him—lowing another m yqu do!” made, hands were shaken, congratula­
Schiaparelli, IMrector of tho Royal ObSatiafaction Guaranteed.
She raised herself slowly on her el­ tions uttered, refreshments were qalen.
Tho “buffalo hunt” in which the two servutore at Milan, seems to start again
the fiddlers were called in and dancing sons of the Prince, of Wales were in­
bow. her beautiful brown eyes looking
that old and unanswerable question:
HEVKYROE
began.
dulged at Ceylon recently, wm a pain­ •“Are the planets inhabited?” This
Three bofirs had passed. The revel ful absurdity. It wm forbidden that
Italian astronomer is one of lhe most
i«FB®vwneeT8«Ei
. “My life u -oniething that I do nol WM at Its height. The fair bride, her the two burly boys should run any risk assiduous watchers of the planet Mara. ninrr
LI I K I" \
Pork«‘fr nrakrtiwll.
long-delfyed hopes fulfilled,the gioomy of injury, so a tome buffalo was turned It was he who. In 1877-8. first detected MlilLvlI l u. «bonto«»e.»p.fkllM tom
prophecy exploded, floated in and oat out, and, after being chased by dogs.
tbe many dusky bands which traverse
not? Whatever is for his in the mazes of the dance,the gayest of wm shot down by one of the Princes— and subdivide the ruddy portions of the
at shall I do. Now I’ll go the gay. Ruth, her fair face flushed, a most ignoble piece of butchery. This martial orb. Again, in 1879-80, when
seemed to have forgotten her sorrow reminds a London writer of a bear hunt the position of the planet was favorable,
xe Runset with him.”
inder the spreading branch­
which occurred in Sweden years ngo.
he reidentified these strange Hnbs; but
A royal Prince hadlo be entertained, during last January and February bn
at old oak-axid watched the
r which aeemed trying to see that she was adding much to the and ao a bear hunt wm got up for him. has been able to observe and map out
I enjoyment .of others.
The happy At last the animal wm circumvented.
in more than twenty instances duplica­
mother of the bride moved among the The prince raised his gun to fire; the tions of the dark streaks ** covering the
I wkohU, elder guests, dispensing smiles and bear twrgan to dance. .It wm a tame equatorial region of Mars with a mys­
bringing pleasure wherever she went. one, which had been bought of it* show- terious network, to which there ia noth­
Presently Ruth came and raid with a
ing remotely analogous on tbe earth.”
, The Italian astronomer has styled them
Dr. Tyng, when a theological1 • • canals,’’ for they (rear tire appearance
supplied a church in a ijeigh-

1882
KALAMAZOO

Spring-2th Harrow
Wiard Plows,

South Bend Chilled Plows,
Gale Plows,

(Buy Genuine Factory Points)
They are much cheaper and better.

Strayer’s GRAIN DRILL,
RAWSON’S

REAPERS &amp; MOWERS
Lightest and Strongest Made,

HUBBARD

Gleaner &amp; Binder
‘Improved N&lt;82.

Sash, Doors nd Blinds,

MEAT MARKET.

Paints, Oilfi, Varnishjes,
IH ILDERS HARDWARE,

DETROIT STOYE-CO’S. STOVES
Domestic &amp; New Home

SEWING MACHINES.
When in need of the Best

Grades of Hardware and Ma­
chinery.

Call and eee me.

THE CROWN

THE CROWN SEWING ^ACIH^E.

wTbc&gt;•Crown’’ comes into Um market
lhe tact ot all tbe maci.ineS, but ha^ sprung to
fryut rank at once from the fact that it ha* ta­
ken the good features in all other machines
and put them to one grand combinaUoo, mak­
ing this th* Handsomest, Largest, Vml Spent
and Lightest Running machine yet offered, AU
tbe -points'' that the expcri&lt;-&lt;x- of *rnty years
in all kinds of family and Itabt mauuf^rtiring
work has proved to be absolutely good are to be
foand Oltiyiu Um “Crown.”- Other rackin'*
may have one, two or three of these ‘point*”
imt none but the “Croyn” has them alL
Eterv device that is really desirable in other
machines will be found in the -Crown.” Ad­
vantage has been taken of the exjierimcnts and
expeneoce with all kinds of pachines ever in­
vented, and the “Crpwn” is a perfect embodi­
ment of everya ng go , d tn them.

E. R. WHITE.

Fresh and Salt Meats,

Smoted Ham aai SMiers,

Lard, by the lb. or barrel,

EijeriCEcei. Reliable, m Responsible,

Take notice that the time haa come when ths
Narrow Tired Wagon la no longer sought after
by experienced mon. Pcoplg are -continually
looking forward to better tilings and they bavs
found it In tbe

Wide Tire Wagon!
n uas evuir iuw
tried aud tbe narrow tind

BUY A WIDE TIRE WAGON
I KEEP them:
buy vour,plow points

A. H. WINN, Dentist.

BEST SET GUM TEETH $10.00 FIRST CUSS
Office Open Day &amp; Evening.

—-------agon thrown one

�acid Which Hid.

M, Rohr, fix Laster, UU

&gt;1 be the* finest farm in thia

Cost,
Cost!

McCormick Twine-Binder!

INO PRICER.

He does not take pride in making his
place pleasant and attractive as well M
productive. The fence* are almost use­
less, for so thick a crop of busbet baa
grown up along them that if they were
to be remove*! entirely but few cattle
would ever break through. Blackberry
and sumach bushes are entangled with
thistles and mulleins, and year by year
they encroach on the field. There is a
Eof at least ten feet between the
id land aud the fence, which might
ud if tho farmer would only set
about it and ent down the bushes. If
vou wilt take vour pencil and estimate
how much soil is thus given to those in­
traders on a farm of 160 acres, ia which
four fields, representing at least half
the-farm. are bordered in this way, you
will begin to understand how much this
man loses every year by allowing the
bushes to cumber lhe soil. And, in
addition to this loss of tbe use of tbe
soil, the slovenly appearancu of them,
JJVACK A SOK,
which detracts from the value of tho
plaoe, should be counted in. And it is
not only about the fences ajone that
these bushes are suffered to grow.
Every stump has a circle of shrubbery
about it, growing larger and more ag­
gressive yearly.
•
Xr«*tinipiTbiioh.
Why he does not cut them down I do
not know. He is a good farmer, in
many ways. Ho raises good crops and
is making money. But he does not
seem to care much about how his farm
looks. Whenever be builds anew fedoe
he sets the posts,and flails on the boards,
and that is the end of lu He never
takes the trouble to go over his work
with the saw and make the posts of uni­
form length. Some stick up a foot or
two above the top board and some do
not, and this ragged look is anything
but pleasing.
The labor of sawing
them off evenly is considerable, of
course, but by doing it the job has a
neat and finished appearance, and the
A cure guaranteed.
eye is not offended. If this is not done
you feel, every time you see it, that
something happened which prevented
tbe man's finishing his undertaking,
' and you wish he would find time to
complete it.
It is just as easy to make a neat-look­
ing shed as it is to make a botchylooking one. But some farmers seem
to thinx that a shed is a shed, no mat­
rrltUn fuarrnta*
ter how it looks, and it would be fool­
ish to attempt to make it look well. I
claim that every building on the farm
should be made to look as well as possi­
ble.
It is not necessary to expend
much money to secure this end. It re­
quires little' but good taste. If vou are
going to build a house, and don t know
how to build what you want, you toll
your carpenter or your architect what
Eour plans are in a general way, and
e attends to the details. You trust to
his good judgment and his sense of the
fitness of things. If vou are going to
have a barn or shed built, let nim ex­
ercise his taste on it. You can restrict
him in expense, if you see fit, but don't
luvtthspneithro think, until you have inquired into the
will cure’any matter, that a neat, attractive barn costs
so much more than one ot the old
square, box-like things we are accus­
tomed to seeing, for it doesn’t
It isn’t so much a matter of' expense
jESswjf^BsMes, ssk your Druqiettor it. and
as of taste. One woman will make a
dress and look like a guy in it, while
lauMdislsty. Fries. 73 cent* per bottle.
another will take the same material and
F. J. CHENEY k CO., Toledo, Ohio.
fashion one ont of it that will look fit
for the parlor. The reason of the dif­
ference is, one woman has taste, the
other has not.
1 believe in making
the farm a pleasant thing to look at.
This can only be done by keeping every
thing about It orderly and neat.—Parm­
er* t Tieview. ■
\

smnun

-

American and Foreign Marble,
JONES,

DEKTISTS,

NERVOUS DEBILITY

HALL’S
QatarrhQure

n Great t
IfdHLINGTON

What to Eat.

ftOUTE. AV'*1*’70*' rt

PRINCIPAU+UIN£

KANSAS CITY

consider well what has been the em­
ployments* of tbe guests. A party of
fox hunters or wood choppers or sur­
veyors would require an abundance of
meats ; but a collection of artists and
scholars would relish better a variety
of delicacies and novelties. A sleigh­
ing party will devour carbon ; but those
who have sweltered under a July sun,,
long for cooling fruits and the leanest
ot -meats
The time when a feast la
given should decide whether food easy
or difficult of digestion should appear
on a bill of (arc, though such consid­
eration for the health of guests is hard­
ly to be expected of the average host­
ess. Wishing a guest bon appetite aud
gcfod digestion under such ciroumstahces is like putting a traveler on a
leaky boat and wishing him bon voy­
age, or pulling a knife to a sheep's
throat and wishing it longlife.—Detroit
Poti and TrtLnnc.____________

. Inisiiiu to chafiie ay easier
of Im®,

Shall Sell

HAS VALUABLE IMPROVEMENTS OVER ALL COMPETITORS.

Why Jews Are BarbareAsly Treated
in Russia and Germany.

Tbe truth is. modern Jews suffer from
outbreaks from three causes, which are
permanent, and which, until they mix
with tbe population so as to lose tbeir
identity, are irremediable. In the first
place they are foreigners in Europe,
and foreigners who, as the popular instict, rather than any knowledge, tells
the people are foreigners from another
continent, and not another Stale. Cul­
tivated Jews, for some unintelligible
reason—for Asia has as much right to
exist as Europe, and has done perhaps
more for humanity, St. Paul, after all
being more useful than George Ste­
phenson—dislike to be reminded of
this, and have an idea that they can
lose themselves among people wbo dis­
cern the Jewish strain and family in
the fourth generation. The fact, ne rertheless, exists, and is tbe cardinal fact
of the situation.
The Jews every­
where are foreigners, and in Europe
Asiatic foreigners, separated from too
people by lines which, though some­
times indefinable, are inetfaceable.
Moreover, the majority of Jews take nd
pains to efface them, but remain, in
their marriage laws, tbeir ceremonial
laws, tbeir laws of diet, and in Russia
their dress, separate and Asiatic.
The European populace everywhere
dislike and distrust foreigners, and
especially foreigners widely distinct in
race, with an antipathy which is at
once unreasonable, and to Christians
immoral, but which is incurable so long
as the ground of offense exists. The
Americans, after a hundred years, re­
tain their antipathy to the negro, who
bolds tbe same faith as themselves;
and will not put up with tbe Chinese,
who has tbe attraction of entire free­
dom from prejudices, and extraor­
dinary efficiency in business.
The
common people do not hate the Jews
for
their creed, their
dress, or
their ceremonies, but for their foreignersbip,
Asiatic
foreignershin,
'which those things bring perpetually"
before tbeir eyes. Then these foreign­
ers, though not especially distinguished
for intellectual
power—the
Jews,
though often distinguished in literature,
are -•even militant, and have not in mod­
ern times originated, invented, *or dis­
covered much, in proportion to their
numbers—possess in a high degree
the faculty for accumulation—money­
getting. Every race has its useful pow­
er, or it could not survive; and this is
theirs everywhere outside of Palestine,
where they seem never to grow rich.
In our modern society this faculty has
suddenly become the one which confer*
power; and naturally, power in the
hands of foreigners not liked M them­
selves exdltes first burning jealousy,
aud then wrath. The populations feel
as if their wealth were being taken away
from them by intruders, and in one re­
spect they are right. The Jews do not
contribute their share to tbe general
reservoir of means. They rarely do
any useful work. No Jew produces
anything, farms, dr mines, or builds, or
adds to the general wealth of the world.
What he does is to distribute adroitl y
levying toll in the process and practic­
ing usury, and the worid, therefore,
seems no richer for him. A project has
been talked of this week for sending
half a million or so of Jews from Rus­
sia to America, there to colonize a set­
tlement. They would not remain a

BE NOT DECEIVED
By statements made by agents representing other machines
having a resemblance to the McCORMIC’K. claiming their
Binders ore the same, for such claims are false, and suits for
infringements have been brought against imitations •
CALL

•

,

ON

.

L. O. CHOCZZEE,
NORTH MAIN ST., NASHVILLE, M.,

AT COST,
,

OriUnder,
s
------ COMMENCING ON------

And examine it carefully before making your choice for the
coming harvest.
.

Saturday, May 20. -

crisro.

Independent Reapers.

Now is the Time

---- :---- ALSO------ —

For those in need, to sham

Platform, Side-Spring and Side-Bar Carriages,
and'Wagons

the profits and buy at
wholesale prices.
Nashville, May 16,1882.

.Rock Bottom Prices.

M.JEFFREY.

Yours Respectfully,

L. O. CROCKKR.

DRGANS:

FlvHOctBVM. ot&gt;« » &amp;&gt;ta Bewte.
Stepa,
tnclndlu*
Or'art
Biooi.
Book aad Music, U Solid Black Wslnua Cm*

01000200020201020100000002010000

They were husbandmen once—diggers,
plowen., vinedressers; but it took the
•tern Mosaic law to bind them to the
soil, and since the Dispersion they have
utterly lost their art. Granted a large
and visible tribe of Asiatic foreigners,
prospering in all distributing aopartmenta of Kfe, exempt from suffering by
bad harvests, and adding nothing appa­
rent to national wealth, and we have
explanation enough for the hatred of
ill-educated and jealous millions. The
situation is no justification of the hate
—there can. for Christiana, be no justi-

CHICAGO, ROCK ISLAND &amp; PACIFIC RY

ONLY $30

Is The Great Connecting Link between tho East and the West 1
-

..._.._________ .____ .

r ------- ■■miiiaaa and Palana

I

PARKER'S
MAIS

I

BALSAM.
A perfect
drew

ft iRteM " ta mMalSeeatly

YLOHZSTCli

W hat will please roanxNCwin bethsatsMW*

eur MayatSoeM Dtti*xOera tSat

EES

COLOGRE.

*UM*f*et that

PARKER’S
Drawing the Line.
A little while ago one of the leading
women of tbe Astor family, viewing
with alarm the increasing heterogenei­
ty of New York society, felt it her duty
to revise her visiting list. She took a
firm stand against new-oomers, not
from any snobbish instinct, or from
any sense of superiority to people who
were very worthy in their way, you
understand, but simply as a measure of
protection in the interest of the old
families. Jacob Astor, the furrier, liv­
ed before tbe flood. So this lady gave
a reception, or what not. and subjected
lhe customary schedule of invitations

CINCER TONIC

’ SUL ra~

PIMPLES *
CONSUMPTIVES.
Tbr adrertfee.-having bw&gt; puimaaotl* cat
UBtdrvMUlMM'Oxmnp* &lt;&gt;u. b&gt; aXmpfei

RJPTUBE
S» it

�iSrnlnr d."'pnjtie»l

« name .4 Guitraa will never be
a hut in a reproachful and toathv*y. It i« the universal opinion
world that if ever a man was fit

II. that man isGniteau.

•

:.Somewa»* of Young America are
startling, and u notable example of
them i« farnWird’ by the Iowa child­
ren who recently killed tbeir father in
Older tin*: they might have things their
own era* at home.
Tbe boy shot the
nwitannv pHU-iit. bntit waa arranged
that the »onnger girl ifiinuld acknowl­
edge tbe crime. on a plea of eelf-defeuw, so tbnl by her extreme youth
might savb her. The whole affair waa
arranged-and enn ied out with n cool­
ness worthy nf veteran criminals.
A mo*t rewohing affair Is reported

-

from Lynchburg, Va.\ A negro woman
named Belta IJpaco6Efcxdisc&lt;nering
that her child had smallpox tiirewTt in­
to a well snd fled iyterror.
She was
afterwards fonnd accreted In tho woods
ail’d &gt;laced under an eat. She bad con­
tractcd tbedisease, nnd had to be tak­

gerton, which is located in the ess
the tobacco region, and is the prfi
market and shipping point of Jbe
hundred acres, which can be worked«l There has been quite
’‘
profitably. Some twenty-nine or thirty tion tills season here of
sh aud
of the trt*ys and irirl*tire placed out with
the farmers of the neighborhood during Danes, who have located for fbe pur­
the summer vacation, because there is pose of learning- agriculture. Their
not enough for them to do op the plan is about as follows: At Madison
school farm. The institution needs there is an immigrant agent, and a far­
some more cows also, in the qpinion of mer in need* ot a hand writes him to
the Secretary.
He thinks the girls that effect, when a man is furnished,
should be taught to milk and make but­ who, upon a satisfatoQ' trial of one
ter. in order that when they return they mouth, pays the farmer one hundred
can show tbeir people tbit they cab dollars as a guarantee of good faith,
make other use of their herds than to whereupon the farmer agrees at the
kill them all for beef. The, Secretary end of tbe year to pay the hand eight
is hopeful that-Congress will take hold dollars per month and teach him tbe
of the matter. He has given close at­ art ot farming. Most of the above im­
migrants are single men, bnt there are
tention to it, as he does to all matters,
from a ptactical business point of view. cases where married men have! been
The Senate b«« passed the ljU for tile hired on the same plan with the under­
proposed ektension of the Hecutige' standing that the wife was to work for
her board. It has been urged by some
Mansion, and it waa proposed to erect that this plan will soon tend to cheapen
a building directly south of the present
one, simitar to it in its exterior, and tabor, but so far it has not affected it in
connected to it by a broad corridor, and *the least.
with accommodations for the egress of

...... ... . .. ........ .
an out-of-town residence or a "castle in
Spam" for the President, Mr. Morrill
recited the brief ad vantages of the pres­
ent site, and briefly sketched ita present
history. The $300,000 appropriated for
tbe work this'year would be expended
by a commission, consisting of the
en to a peet-hmisc.
President and the Secretaries of the
A Second Advent camp meeting is Treasury and Interior. ' Two yean* will
be required to complete the extenor,
being held nt Denton, Teri**, by peo­ and during its progress the occupancy
ple who believe thnt the second coming of the present building will not be in­
of Christ is at hand, and might be has­ terrupted.
. v
August.
tened by a proper demonstration o(
readineM to receive Him. They have
Scenes In a Canadian Forest.
gone so far as to prepare a tent for the
Saviour's occupancy, with a handsome,
bed aud other furniture.

.

The South is thia season purchasing
more farm machinery and improved
tools than in the last five years put to­
gether. Her people are walking right
along towards bully good times.
When a man £cta so laxy that starve
tion itself won’t drive him to work,
you will usually find him running for
office on a labor reform ticket.

OUR WASHINGTON LETTER,
Washington, D. C.,Jukb,27, 1888.
Washington neems always destined
to furnish more acenes and sensations
than any other city in the country, and
the bench ahd the bar never fail to
; contribute more than a doe prooortion.
In no city of the country bare such epi­
sodes between the ooart and counsel
and between opposing counsel occurred
as have marked their experience here.
A very few years ago, within a com para
lively brief period, two judges on the
bench sited copious tears of mortifica­
tion because of nitercations with coun­
sel. Another judge was tbe constant
subject of irony and ridicule by the bar
because of tbe display which his habits
led him into. A week or two ago, dur­
ing the progress of tbe Star-route trial,
one of the counsel called another of the
' opposing counsel a liar, and two or three
day* subsequently, an associate of the
first called an associate of tbe second a
pup. To-day habitues of the court­
house were treated to two acenes not
• down on the bill. Iu tbe criminal court
.room, Mr.* Robert Ingersoll, wbo has
* been overbearing and discourteous dur­
ing the entire progress of the star-route
trials, served notice, in characteristic
style and manner, on the counsel for the
proseention.that uoneuf them muetdaro
to speak to him. In tbe Equity Court
room, about the same time, the judge
presiding, became involved in a heated
controversy-with an attorney as to the
proper time in which a certain bill could
be filed, aud when tbe attorney laid the
papers on the desk before him, be
pidreu them up and threw them at the
attonwy with all his might, striking

be too long before the District

House of Reprerentatives for tbe dis-

RING
And call the people to

G. A. TRUMAN &amp; SON
To .prepare for the 4th of July
Fans, Laces, Collars, Fringes, Embroidery, White Goods,
Parasols, Gloves, Corsets, Skirts, Dusters and Shawls.

Linen Coats Long and Short, Hats and Caps, Gloves,
Neckwear, Boots and Shoes.

Supes in Theaters.

About the most laughable thing
around a theatre is the “supes.” How­
ever funny a play may be, the actions
of the sopes Is funnier than the come­
dians. Men may act as supee for forty
years, and they can never come on tbe
stage without appearing awkward and
falling all over themselves. The actors
tell them where to stand, and they get
in another place. They act as though
they expected to be stabbed, and they
cannot appear natural to save them.
Taken far Western scene, where they
want a lot of miners in a barroom to
take’a drink. One would think fellows
who are in a barroom a dozen times a
day would know bow to act, but they
While traveling through the wilds of
don’t. They all go up to the bar in a
AM NOW RECEIVING A FULL STOCK OF GOODS SUITABLE FOR THE SPRING TRADE. INCLUDING
Canada, one warm afternoon in leafy crowd, and fall around and then take
the Largest and Best Stock of
June, we found it neccessary to put up the tincups of alleged whiskey and stare
for the night at a rude dwelling, situa­ at vacancy, until told to sit down, and
then the/ all try to sit on the same
ted iu the center of a email clearing, chair. When they are wanted ftir a
surrounded by half a score of ragged scene In tbe Roman Jorum, they get on
children, fighting and quarrel!ug and the red nightgowns, and walk around,
Ever brought to Nashville, and ranging m price from three to thirty dollars per suit In
toeing in, and walking knock kneed,
rending the air with cries and yells
making the sickest lot of Roman citi­
tbe henaclucking, the ducks "quack­ zens that ever robbed a hen roost. In
ing,” the geese squeling, the dog bark­ a recent play here it was necessary to
ing, the cows bawling, the “boss” bring in the United States army at the
I keep the celebrated Rochester make, Slylish, Durable anc Cheap. In
’
swearing, the “bossee” scolding, the proper time, to crush out the hydra­
headed monster, Mormonism. Four
pigs squaling in tbeir sty (which would supes were provided with army over­
appropriately bear the motto, “excuse coats and muskets, and Just as the Mor­
I have the latest styles and can fit all parties. I always keep a full stock of
haste and a 'bad pen,’ ”) airpresenting mon elder was about to triumph over
tbe weak and virtuous, and crush them
a scene both annoying and amusing.
under his heel, the husband, who bad
But to tbe point; night came at last walked three thousand milee after the
prices that defy CGmpetion. Cash paid for Butter and Errs.
and just as we were about to fall away soldiers, called upon them, and the
into morpheua’ loving arms, we were spirit-stirring drum was heard, and the
four supee appeared with guns pointed
aroused by a feminine voice in the ad­ at the whole of Salt Lake city, and tbe
joining room spying : “Jackson ar’n’t Mormon leader, with bis forty thousand
vou goin’ out see what the difficulty is people surrendered, and virtue tri­
with them are hens t If you ar’n’t I am; umphed. One oould not help wonder­
ing why the government did not hire
so thar, now.” Thinking there might the four supes and discharge the regu­
be fun ahead, we disentangled the bed lar army. A supe always acts as though
— THAT-----clothes from our form and stationed he knew be waa being guyed by every­
body, and that he bad come on the
ourself at the chamber window, where,
stage under protest, and wanted to get
by the evening twilight, we could com­ off as quick as possible, if be had to fail
mand a good view of all that might off. It is a singular cbncidence that a
supe always has a black patch on tbe
transpire.
seat of a pair of gray Dants.
But a few momentshad elapsed when
Where in the world they all get gray
we discovered our heroine coming from pants, and why they don’t have gray
toward tbe stable, armed with a pitch patches on them is more than anybody
fork. The trouble in the heuery prov­ lias ever been able to find out. Let a
couple of supee come on the stage to
ed to be a large white pole cat, and remove a table, and they will have
with a mighty thrust oar heroine drove those patches sure, and they will ar­
her deadly weapon through the unfor­ range to stand with the patches to the
tunate animal's back and pinned him audience. They probably reason that
their faces are liable to betray emotion,
to the ground, she then beat a hasty or that they may blush, but that the
retreat, and circumstantial evidence patches can maintain a stern and digniproved conclusively that our heroine Med.demoanor under the most trying
had learned to her sorrow,that in fight­ circumstances of gtryiug and cat calls
from tbe galler? boys.
------ FROM-----ing pole cats there wasMows to receive
as well as to give. We had about mad**
A Cheap Oration.
up our mind that the battle waa over
when our heroine reappeared on the
There is yet living in Central Michi­
scene armed with a broom stick, and in gan a lawyer who, some fifteen or six
a voice which denoted anger she ex­ teen years ago was waited upon by a
•BUT.
claimed, “yon miserable, dastardly, committee from a small village for the
purpose of engaging him to deliver a
dod-gasterdly, infernel spalpeen yer; Fourth of July oration. When they
I’ll tarn yer ter hist yer flag agin Susan asked Ills price, be said he considered
Snyder,
Take that! and that! and $25 cheap enough.
"Mercy on me!” exclaimed the chair­
that!—there dans ye.” It was evident man. "but we can't pay no such a price
after tbe third round that tbe unfortu­ as that! That must be for a regular
nate animal hod met a premature doom. Henry Clay oration.”
"Well yea, I think it will compare
favorably with anything Henry got off.”
window she muttered, "you miserable
"Oh, but We can't stand it—we must
poltroon you” Whether she alluded have a cheap one.”
“How cheap?”
to Jackson, tbe pole cat or the writer
“Not over $5. We’ll give you $5, your
still remains a mystery.
dinner and all the lemonade you can
We took a tong look at the calm blue
drink for the cheapest oration in your
sky, and as our eye caught tbe glimmer bead.”
To ahow you a iargt and well •elected 8toek of
“I’ll do it,” replied the lawyer, and
of the northern star twinkling in angel
| the money was paid him on the spot.
n___ —
I...A. j ....
..I..1-.
’em,” bat receiving no reply we crept
cautionaly back to bed—"chuck fall of tbe grove, the orator took tbe stand and
was introduced, anil without any fool­
Canada.”
■
ing around be walked to tbe front aud

Tn "ViHiting’ Wsishville on the 4tli You Are Invited to
IMCake our Store Your Headquartere.

CASH PHD FOR EGGS IND BUTTER, SHIED IND UNSHTED
G-. A. TRUMAX &lt;fe SON.

The First to the Front I

I

Ready Made Clothing, for Men, Coys, and Youths,

Ladies, Misees, Gents &amp; Children’s Fine Shoes

IT IS .A. FACT

Pioneer Store

NOT ONEW

E ARE NOW RECEIVING OUR STOCK OF

Of my Customers Complain

GOODS FOR THE SPRING TRADE
--------- AND ARE SELLING THEM---------

Clear Dowa!

The Nashville Mill,
UNIVERSALLY SATISFIED

85

ALL READY

THE CAREFUL MAN IS EVER ON THE ALERT
' to take advantage of favorable opportunities.

No realtor how disguised, that prompt paying customers
must make good to the dealers who sell on credit all losses
from poor debts, long time accounts, sickness, failing crops,
loss of property, or dishonesty of other customers.

That the merchant Who sell on credit must take into ac
count all the probabilities above mentioned when he offers hi
merchandise for sale. And these losses amount in the aggre­
gate to a fair yearly income—a loss which he could not long
sustain were there no remedy, but there is a remedy and that
remedy is in the PROMPT PAYING CUSTOMERS.

NO BETTER INVESTMENT

Can be made, if necessary, than to hire money and pay
for your merchandise as you purchase it.

the District of
today.

GROCERIES J?rints for 6 cts. yard.

----------- ------- WE SELL------------------

CONSISTING OF
0«mo&gt;. Wn. Jtrn M ISM.
Borrow NasVyilms Siw»:
ThmUHttult&gt;OThM»*l&gt;rtet«Moripinm «t tta |»rtOt U» eoutry «“I te

until she

, to please tbe &lt;

Gringhams 8 to 11 cts.

Sugars, Coffees, Teas, Tobaccos, Turkey Red Table Linen 50 to 55 cts.
Spices,. Fish, Canned Goods,
Table Oil Cloth 28. Floor, best, 42 cts.
Provisions, to.,
Boots and Sh&lt;ies,
.
A THE LOWEST PRICES

had really
u wouldn’t
Hit a single
mb battle of

For Cash or Ready Pay.

Banker Hill f

Hats and Capa,
General dotliixijf,
I2tc,

Abo the Large** Stock of

Ot 7 or 8

I thankful for the liberal pAronage gi'
Crockery, Glasawi Lamps,ij^
I past under the old credit system and solicit it
I
under
the
Ready Pay. We know we can be m
Stone Ware, to,

-...................

L Myrtwamattas

™ if i TO BS •■■*• II* BARRY CO. to you in tbe futuie than we could

COME AW SEE FO

’

MM FOR PROMK.

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                  <text>Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun.
NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1882.

VOLUME IX.
LIFE IN NASHVILLE
And Her Environs.

THE GLORIOUS EOUETH.

The celebration on Tues y was a
success audit is believed that more peo­
ple were in the village on that day than
upon any other occasion in the history
of Nashville. At an early hour every
road loading to the village was throng­
ed with vehicles. Tho 7:30 train brought
in upwards of two hundred from Hast­
ings and intermediate points, and the
9:88 traintfirobglit more from Vt ViUe,
Chester shd ChArtoaST At 18 m. fully
5.000 peptic were within the limits of

the corporation.
Munday afternoon and night was de­
cidedly showery and it was feared that
the Fourth would be a rainy day, but
“Sol” rose bright and dear, and the day
was as suitable for a Fourth of July
celebration as we are usually blessed
withj DOt quite sujtry enough for lem­
onade and ice cream, bat just right for
an active, rural populace, who desires
to “dust around” and see the sights.
A couple of alight showers occurred in
the afternoon, but they proved too
slight to disturb the festivities of the
occasion.
Shortly after 10 o’clock the procession
was formed in the following manner.
Chester bond.
Orator, president of the day, Chaplain and
reader in carriages.
Goddess of Liberty car, finely decorated
with national emblems. Tbe Goddess of Lib­
erty occupied a central position, and around
her were grooped thirteen young girls repre­
senting the thirteen colonies. The repreaantationa were: Electa Furntos. Goddess of Ltlxrty; Della Reese, Virginia; Mary Collier,
Maryland; Minnie Williams, Massachusetts;
Minnie Rte, Pensylvanla; Emma VanNockcr,
New York; Alice Evans, Connecticut; Darly
Gross, New Hampshire; Edna Truman, Dela­
ware; Kittie Burgeas, New Jersey: Nellie
Aylswortb, Rhode Inland:
Ettlc Wolcott,
north Carolina; Ada Cook, Georgia.
Citizens In carriages.
Woodland Band.
Engine and Hoae Ucl, No. 1.
Feighner’s band—Martial music.
Cltbens in carriages and on foot.
The procession moved olong the
route given in last week’s News, to
the Christian church grounds which
bad been fitted up for tbe occasion.
Music by the Chester and Woodland bands
in union.
Prayer by Rev. A. D. Newton. Chaplain.
“My country, Thee,” a chorus by the Glee
club.
Reading of the Declaration of Independence
by Rev. r. A. Bissell.
“Let the Hills and Valleys Resound.” by
tbe Glee club.
Martial music bv Feigtncr s band.
Tbe Oration by Hon. E. P. Allen.
“American,” by Glee club and audience
The prayer hv Rev. Newton was
very appropriate and feeling. The
Dcclaraiiqpot Independence was read
in a strong, full voice and prepar
ed the hearts of the vast aud­
ience for the superb oration that fol­
lowed. Tbe universal expression was
to the effect that it was one if not tbe
best prepared and delivered orations A
Nashville audience ever bad the pleas­
ure to listen to. Below we give tbe
larger part of it:
TDK ORATION.

Fellow Oitisent:
No day in the calendar of churn or state is
more worthy to be observed than this. It Is
“The Sabbath of our Freedom, "the anniversary
of an event that has changed tbe destinies of
the world. The Declaration of Independence
was die first utterance of a challenge to the
powers that amotberel liberty, that had not
been overthrown. All previous attempts fur
national freedom had been drowned In the
blood of their author*, and they only caused the
bonds to lie mure securely fastened, that bound
tbe liberty ot tbe individual. The reasoea giv­
en for reaming tbe stamp act of Great Britlan
in 1765. and the more formal enunciation in the
immortal declaration of 1776, that there should
be “no taxation without representation," were
tbe Drat intelligent demands by an enlightened

suppores their Intelligence, virtue and lore of
justice, conditions that existed to any consider­
able extent in no nation until our own was
founded. Hence, tt naturally followed, that

Uught from childhood by precept and example
that "women were but the playthlnga of kings
and men, the proper food for censure,” jt was
m impoaalble for a republic like oum to rise
from such a foundation, as R would be now to
transform this government into an absolute
whfrh nb.h.

religious

UbertV.
for freedom.

!K‘52? ‘Sk'SS-

manhood, perwreranea and noMIKy in Chore
who undertook «o oast a teak- Therefore, the

and rights of a whole people and not, a dan.
Children were born who kne* not of oppression
except by tbe stories of1 their fathers. Thus
•teles were slowly but safely formed wherein
____111.—'Thia vraa InAMrl

•1st upon purity lr. official life. Thl* Is a nec­
essity in s representative government, sod cor­
ruption therein a standing menace to its stabil­
ity. The motto, “to the victors belong the

Tbe barrel race was also an interest­
ing affair. Flay Feighner, Dick Gra­
ham and Jim Davis started the the
barrels. Jim took the lead but be
kicked a little too-ha rd and his barrel
went to pieces, and the prizes went to
Flay and Dick.
There were eight entries in the run­
ning horse race. 0. and M. Goodenough
had good enough horses to take first
and second money, and S. K. Ames of
Chester third.
The filibuster parade occurred about
6 d. m. and was a comical affair. After­
wards Father Filibuster favored the fil­
ibusters and people .with a a few wellchosen remarks from the veranda of the
Union House, and the filibusters de­
parted amidst the cheers a a delighted
crowd.
The amusements closed with a bril­
liant display of fireworks in the even­
ing, a large audience staying to witness
them.

though justice would bo thwarted. Se­
curing Jonah’s dray and the services of
of Deputy Sheriff Lee, at the elevator,
the pursuit was continued with unabat­
ed vigor. Jonah became excited and
larruped Old Bill with a vengeuce, but
still Harrington held his own. When
opposite Lem Smiths place he left the
road and took to the woods. The of­
ficers did likewise and finally succeed­
ed in overhauling him.
Both prison­
ers were brought before |Esq. Parody
when they plead guilty and paid $4.2-5
fine and costs, each, for their disorder
ly conduct.

TERMS; $1.50 per Year
Credit Subscriptions tl.TB.

NUMBER 42.
retainer fee and took a -receipt therefor, and al­
so paid said A. M. Flint one dollar as a retain­
er fee who put it upon hla book. At the time

than all the good which Its author ever accom­
aald Powers or Flint was not there, but said
plished, can atone for. It h not a motto that
Flint made arrangements with I. M. Flint, his
themselves all that was.best and purest from the U true at any time tn politics, nor to be follow­
ed
anywhere
except
In
war.
when
to
destroy
the
nations of Europe.
enemy by bullets, despoil bls territory and ap­
then and there for him sod file the pleadings in
But the rigorogAjffes of such gooj
propriate bis--------- - ** ““
Implication in our
peace. But
ty has remained
the Revolution war their natural andinevita­
at ten a. m.. ana on or about the ISCU day ot
ble fruits. The colonies' In their domestic mat­
June, A. D 1 1882,’ I received the following let­
ters, had given to the citizens such righto and
privileges that the almost dead, and entirely ward men atone for mere political work in aater from W- 8. Powers, to-wlt:
dorment mass of humanity In Europe began to
Nashville, Mien., Job li, 1862.
more under its influence. The colonists were
Dear But:
ger, and brought untold misery upon the coun­
When you retained me 1c your suit against
try. To vote for a person unworthy, simply
Barnes
it
was agreed that you wcrefo pay me
because
be
Is
on
ypur
ticket,
is
a
grave
offence,
the king and parliament undertook, in accor- 1
for tbe trial before It was begun. The case has
dance with their Ideas, to tax the colonies with 1much more to it so to place men in office whose
—The special meeting of the Fann­ already been adjourned and vou have txx said
qualifications are to manipulate caucuses
out allowing them representation, they at once sole
i
anythlngabout
paying me. If you desire to re­
ran counter to this liberty of, which the people i
ers Mutual Insurance Company of tain me in the case you must bring or send the
had tasted, and a conflict began. Owing to the l
Barry and Eaton counties, held at the money to me by Friday night the IBtb.
If I
For twenty yean preceding the outbreak ot
rigorous opposition the tex was modified, aud,
rebellion the offices of the country were
opera house, was attended by about am not at home you can leave It with my wife.
finally, repealed in all except tbe tax upon tea. the
'
Bend flO, you* have already paid mo one. I shall
by men whoTly as a reward for party ser­
Thia tax the mother country sturdily refused to fllted
1
800
members
of
tho
company.
The
have to charge you ten dollars for tbe suit. If
repeal, “because,” said George the third, “there vices. The question of fitness was scarcely
of. Great national conventions chose
subject of amending tho charter so as It to not received by Friday night I shall not
should always be one tex, at least, to keep up thought
1
consider myself longer retained. Yours,Ac;
for the highest offices because of
the right of taring.” This to lust what the col- candidates
।
to insure against cyclones and torna­
W. 8. Pt»wxM.
their
availability,
and
the
eaae
with
which
they
on tots did not propose to admit, and the war
does was extensively discussed.
The
When I hired Powers to try the case and re­
and our national independence were the result could be “managed” by party leader*. The ob­
jective
point,
the
table
whereon
were
the
loaves
ultimate concluson Was that tho com­ tained him as above stated, he personally
of that opposition.
and
fishes,
was
ever
kept
in
view
by
the
party
We see by this hasty review, my friends, that
pany itself could do nothing iu the agreed to try the case for |5.00. And the ti
the government was formulated upon the prin­ managers. As a result office holders became
CELEBRATION ECHOES.
matter, but tbe sense of the meeting, 'retainer fee was to be deducted therefrom when
ciple that tbe people must not be subject to corrupt, the people were not allowed to go be­
laws that did not come from themselves through hind the scene, and when the time finally came
It is over.
was to petition tbe legislature to amend-, the trial was ended. I related the facts of my
representatives of their own choosing. From that the life of the nation was assailed, then
Arthur Ainsworth celebrated in Naah- the law so that the company could in­ 'i-iste to Powers at the time I retained him and
that day to this, for over, one hundred rears, those In high places, to whom the people looked
he said I had a good case 'knd said I would
this great republic has rested upon that found­ for their safety, became dumb in the presence yille.
sure against wind-storms and cyclones.
of the great peril, violated their oaths of office,
have no trouble to beat Mr. Barnes.
ation.
Toffy candy took immensely with the The meeting also passed a resolution
All power springs from the people, and they sunk their small remnant of patriotism, and
I have seen a lawyer from Charlotte, and a
must prosper or suffer according as they use the rushed madly Into rebellion and ruin. Incom­ country lassies.
to insure grange and agricultural halls lawyer from Liastlugs, and Intend to prosecute
petency and dishonesty reigned so long In pub­
trust they bold.
.
-The squeak of the fiddle was heard at churches and school bouses.
this case which I have with Powers for unpro­
To-day, then, while we rejoice and the world lic places that finally when the bubble broke it
was
found
that
our
national
credit
was
ruined,
four
bowery
dances.
rejoices at our freedom, we are to remember
—Ivy Lodge. No, 87, Knights of fessional practice, to .the full extent of tt'a-law.
that the factors which enter into the perpetuity the nation bankrupt, our means of defense scat­
Elder Holler erected his tent for tiro
I further swear that The Nashvillb Nbwt*
of the nation are in our own bands. These can­ tered to tbe four winds of Heaven, public prop­
Pythias, held its annual election on
stated the truth in regard to Powers bet did
not be spoken of too often nor taught to our erty stolen, and every department of the govern benefit of the weary.
Friday
evening last, with tbe following
ment, from the executive to the army, honey­
children too carefully.
not make it half as strong as I believe it to be.
Main street was lined with lemonade,
result:
e
Soberly as those into whose hands are entrust­ combed with treason. - Men stood aghast arid
Powers ought to know the law—be is supposed
ed civil liberty should we studytbose questions daxxled at the sight, and had it not been for that peanut and candy stands.
C. C.—Orno Strong.
I to as a citizen-ought to as as a lawyer.
One hundred and fifteen hied away
that make for the national peace. On this glad wonderful patriotism that lived, though unseen,
V. C.—Lewis E. Lentz.
Feteb Pbnfolb.
day, then, shall we Dot again repeat, for our in the breasts of tbe men who, at the plow and to Morgan on the 2:38 train.
own good and the good of our children, the les­ forge, In the office and shop, had lived lives of
F.—Ellhu Chipman.
Subscribed and sworn to before me, the iroThe effects of die Sowing bowl did
sons that must ever be repeated, if our nation peace and virtue, the death kneel of tbe repub­
K. of R. 8 —D. L. Smith.
I derstgned. tblsfith day of July, ,1382.
is to be perpetuatedi Patriotism, lore of coun­ lic would have sounded then aud there.
M. of E.-W. N. DeVinc.
noj "crop out” until the next day.
Herbert M. Lek,
g, can be kept alive only by the study of the
M. of F.—Frank McDerby.
Tom Niles dined fifty-one from the
Ignorance lira ever been, and will continue
nciples upon which the country to founded;
Notary Public in and for Barry Co., Mich.
M.at A.—H. R. Dickinson.
lr worth to us and to the world; and an in­ to be, the willing handmaid of despotism, in vicinity of the Eaton county poor
every
age,
and
almost
every
land,
the
oppres
­
telligent understanding of tbe dangers that be­
O. G.—W. G. Aylsworth.
t
LOCAL MATTERS.
set them. Had the generation that immediately sors of the people have looked, and not in vain, house.
Rep.--F. T. Boise.
preceded ns been more mindful of this, and less to Ignorance, stupidity and fanaticism, for sup­
Every town in the connty, save one,
Trustees—W. Fowler, H. R. Dickinson
A TELLING LAW.
engaged in a mad pursuit ot gain, the chapter port In the warfare they have ever waged and half of Eaton county was repre­ •nd F. T. Boise.
which closed In lines written in blood, might against knowledge and progrea*. Pope, priest
Mr.
Charles
Law, Jr., in conversation with
Although this lodge has been organ­
Invoked^their^dertllsh
nave been
oecn left out.
ouu Had oui
----------­ sented.
have
our n.uuo
fathers realized and despot have in turn ----------------one of our representatives, recently said: “I
that ‘‘righteousness exaltelh a natton. but that martyr's
power, and-by
their
aid sentthe
to purest
the prison,
;tbe
ized
less
than
a
year,
its
success
has
plle^nd
gallows,
and
best
have been a sufferer from rheumatism and neu­
The “wheels of fortune” establish­
... is
• _ arcproach
_____ i. ...
- —
—^..1- &gt;”’ and striven Tnart vr’&gt; n&lt;l&gt;* and irallnwa. the numtltMl best
sin
to ...
any
people,
been greater than the most enthusias­ ralgia for the past ten resrs, and tried a'I kinds
iy w
mux toe
manfully
to bring
the aauuu
nation up io
to mi.
this urcni
great of all ages and al) dimes. From the days of the ments did not have os big a run as
of remedies. Having heard so much about Sttic Pythian in the lodge dreamed of, Jacob’s (111, I tried a bottle, and found It truly
hen by the quiet wav
truth, then
way of peace would martyr Abel to the days of the martrr Lincoln formerly.
wrongs have
hare been righted ami
and the nation
Litlcn raved
xved the world has been struggling toward equality.
and scores have received the symbols wonderful.—Pottstown (Pa.) Ledger.
A
very
quiet
an
orderly
day.
But
.
.
.
liberty
aod
peace.
Every
step
has
been
marked
from the wrath of Almighty God.
of
Knighthood
since
its
foundation,and
MAKRIISD.
1 in rite vou then to the consideration tor a by blood; every point secured has been at tbe one slight disturbance occurred, and
brief hour," of those questions, the solution of cost of the most precious Urea, of the purest barring one inmate, who was barely in the outlook for the ensuing year is far OSBORN—ELLIS—Mr. Wm. Osborn, of Wal­
which will secure the weal or become the woe hearts. At all times bra Ignorance arrayed Its­
ton, Eaton Co., to Miss Emma Ellis, of Kai
brighter than the past has been.
elf upon the side of the oppressor, and been the one hoar, the cooler went empty.
of the.nation In the future.
amc,
Eaton
Co., at the residence of Elder P.
The first great Interest, lying beneath all oth­ willing executioner of those who would lift tbe
Eugene Brown was full of patriotism
Holler.
ers, to the unity of the entire nation. With a grierou' burdens from the nation. Ever has
A CRANK IN NASHVILLE.
and turned a corner so fast, that his
THANKS.
system so complex as ours, the question of the she sympathized and sided with oppression.
relative rights and duties of the states and gen­
buggy was tipped over, his wife con­
I would hereby tender my sincere thanks to
Ignorance Is the natural and deadly foe of a
eral government, will be for years ur open oue.
For sometime there has been an idea tile kind friends and neighbors for their assis­
siderably
bruised,
and
buggy
badly
de
­
republic,
and
the
natural
and
strongest
friend
The war settled some, and seemed to settle
tance and sympathy during tbe long illness and
prevalent in Nashville that we were
others. The unity of the government means to despotism. Our own terrible rebellion prey­ moralised.
death of my husband.
much. To the citizen it means equality; to the ed this. The men who had the most to gain
About 2 a. ru. the following morning harboring a crank in the person of that
State, safetv. When it to settled that In spite bv the destruction of slavery were tbe first to
little
apology
for
a
human
being,
en
­
of Ignorance, hate or prejudice, a citizen of any plunge Into rebellion to rave it,andon a thousand three Chester youths fell into the hands
GOOD JUDGES
state shall have equal rights and opportunities battle-fields, bravely fought, to rivet forever the of deputy police McMore and the cool­ titled Walter S. Powers.
There are
Concede that the finest and largest stock of
with those of any other slate where be may feet of their own children.
States where Ignorance brooded like tbe bbtek er, but were let out upon promise of certain reasons which gave rise tu this Men's, Youth's and Boys, Clothing, aud Gents
wish to abide, then bo much to gained for unity
Furnishing Gooods ever laid down In Nashville,
pall of night over the people, where the school­ good behaivor.
so far as he is concerned.
\ theory, among which are : Greediness is. on exhibition at Prindle A CnirMAirt.
Entire personal freedom with an equal chance, house was scarcely known, were the ones from
.for office; swearing out a complaint
is what every citizen is entitled to at the hands whom the republic received well nigh its death
MONEY TO LOAN,
ot the general government TiMa involves a blow.
&lt; —The dedication of the Catholic due day that leads to tbe arrest of his
Tbe rabble of almost every great city in tba?
On Real Estate at tow rate of interest of
definition of these terms by some authority that
church on Wednesday, was witnessed betters and then on examination day
shall be final, and strong enough to back it up. North, the ignorant ana the viscious, led on
swearing
in
coart
that
he
had
sworn
to
demagogues
and
traitors,
were
their
active
or
by a full house, many of whom had
This authority must of necessity be one that
SHEEP TO LET.
can speak with power to every citizen of the passive allies, while the benign government never viewed a Catholic service before. a lie; a fondness for calling respectable
A few sheep to let in lots to suit. Enquire of
republic. It must be uniform and general. It that had given to the world untold blessings,
people foul and degrading names and C. II. Brady, Nashville, or write or cUl on me
can rest in no single state, but must be the was the object of their moat intense hatred. Rev. J. A. Strosor of Grand Rapids,
then when threatened with gettinghis at Hastings.
common and equal creation of all the states. Then It was that the men ot the great free north, pei formed the ceremony.
The
church
It must speak then, not for any single state, but men who had been trained in childhood, in
mouth slapped, crawl out of the small
as an independent power to which ill states must school houses and churches, that were scattered was blessed inside and out by sprink­
WILL DIE.
bow. and when it thus speaks it must be obeyed, like leaves over the tree states, rushed to the ling upon it holy water, high mass ob­ hole that he wouldn't engage in street
Potato bugs will die If properly sprinkled
for it is the concentrated power of all the states. defense of the nation. The world U&gt;«k side by served and three infanta baptized.
'brawls ; making agreementsgnd vio­
pure article
This jx«wer, to my mind, is the sphere of the intuition, and aristocracy and oppression, dqglating them with impunity, and 'other^ with Paris Green. A fine ground,
potlsm
amrlgnorance
everywhere
drifted
natur&gt;
At Glasqow’a
general government. How far this idea is re­
—It was only a short time since that
low lived tricks too numerous too men'
moved from that which our fathers had 1b best ally to the side of secession, where everywhere,
men
who
believed
that
man
should
be
what
God
Walt
Powers
was
calling
the
editor
of
QT
Full
line
of
Wall
Paper
at
seen by comparison. Il to within tbe memory
tion. Last week The News felt it its
F. T. BOISE’S.
of men before me that It was once gravely as­ meant him to be, free, all these, the best, the the Olio all manner of mean names, yet
duty to publish tho fellowing item :
serted, and steadfastly believed by a large mi­ noblest and purest on earth were found upon
•P All persons who have had grinding domnority of tbe people that a state could nullify tbe side that followed the banner of the tuition it appears that bo has been forgiven
The Greenback editor of “the Bubble” is in sTCffe
Scciplo Mills since Patrick Hi tter.ny hat­
any act of tbe general government that It deem­ with its red and white and azure blue from Bull and taken to the bosom of the Young hot water. He is a lawyer by nrofessian and
ed inimical to its own interests, and later still It Run to Appomattox.
was retained by Peter Penfold in his suit run it are well satisfied.
I have thus endeavored to place before yon and unsophisticated quill-driver. Just against N. 8. Barnes. After securing Penfold's
was believed that a state, at anv time it deemed
LOOK HERE!
it wise or best, could secede from the union, for consideration a few of those principles and how this reconcilliation was'’brought testimony and dollar. Walter went gallantly
and no power eonM lawfully prevent It. This questions that require at the hands of the peo- about is a difficult problem/but proba­ over to Barnes, calculating that he bad vantage
On and after July 1st, 1882, owing to th&lt;
latter power was submitted to tbe arbltraymeot £&gt; attention. While we gladly celebrate this
ground enough to win the suit for tbe latter, great downfall in stock I will make Prices at
y, the thoughtful man knows tbe Importance bly through a promise of patronage. but his sebeme was exposed by the laweron the tbe old reliable marketas follows: Choice wellof the sword and a verdict rendered against tbe
state. Had tbe unity of the nation, as sover- of educating the youth especially, upon the That tbe Olio man is sadly in need of other ride, and the suit lost. Penfold declares fatted Beef from 6 to 1SW cte, par lb. Other
more serious Work of preserving our nation, that
be will prosecute Powers, and should the meals in proportion. Call and ace the dis
will so soon rest in their hand. The lines have the latter no one will gainsay, but we that
‘
H. Jtor.
latter be thrown “over the bar” for malprac­ play.
bell ion could have been possible. But It was indeed “fallen to ua in pleasant places, and we don’t believe there is a man in'the town tice he will be In better shape to to run for of­
not. und while our fathers grew rich in peace have a goodly heritage?’ When we look upon
STRAYED .
fice
than
ever
before.
who
would
venture
a
two
dollar
bill
on
and died believing that their lot would tie their the squalid misery of the old world, whole peo
This, as usual, caused Walt, to be­
children’s, yet the deadly doctrine of “state plea, without a ray of hope in their vision.— all tbe patronage Powers would gi re
rights” grew until it cast its baleful shadow and tee governments there armc-' to the teeth,
come like a certain river loud aud mud­ spoted steer. Anyone giving information in
over the land, and those very children, grown watching each other by day and by night, with him for the next ten years.
dy at the mouth, and he published an regard to their whereabout* will be liberally
to manhood's state, were called to hew it down scarcely a throne that is surouuded by tbe af­
‘
2w42
—Monday eve., John Day and Geo. article in the Olio which just bristles rewarded.
fections of its subjects—when we look upon all
Again: Unity in government means the regu­ these, well may we rejoice and give thanks to Houghtalin of Baltimore, had barely with such crankish words as “infamous
lation of the great interests that are employed Almighty God that be has brought us into so started homewards from this village,
FOUND.
lie,” “low in scale of society,” “degrad­
to carry on the vast enterprises and industries large a place, where, under his own vine and
evthe that will stand and do good work,
fig tree, each may rest secure, with none to mo­ when they met an experience in the
of the people.
ed,” “lowest strata,”*‘unfounded state­
Wetmore,” warranted, al Glasgow's.
Commerce to the living blood, that, coursing lest or make him afraid.
shape of a “hobbled” cow, which fright­ ments,” etc., concluding with “malice
These
fruitful
fields,
theae
bills
and
valleys
through every vein and artery of the body poli­
NEW HOTEL.
tic, carries health and prosperity everywhere. sprinkled over with golden grain, direct from ened the festive steed they were driv­ towards none and charity for all.”
Tbe Nashville House* haring been thoroughly
But its Cow must be uniform and recular, or dis- God's beneficent hand, these comfortable homes ing so badly that he became unmanag­
Evidently what Walt lacks in brains
and happy people, all are cause forJoy to-day.
such as no where else the tolling millions know. able, and turned tbe carriage complete­ be makes up in brass or he would nev­
Let us be worthy of our high heritage. Let ly over. Mr. Houghtalin landed on his
er have stolen the sentiment deliniated rial men
carried from Chicago to New York for five this “land, where our fathers died." be better head and shoulder and Mr. Day was
in the dosing lines of hie article from Prices re
cento, and next week for three or seven cento, for our having lived therein, and let us tnmsto a power over the general business of tbe n.lttooura unsOlled what they at so great price dragged several feet beneath tbe car­ Guiteau,- whom it will be remembered
transferred
to
us.
And
thus
may
this
glad
day
country that none should have, nor can long
riage, suffering severe braises.
Tbe cursed everybody around him from the
HARVEST.
come
and
.
go
for
a
timusand
years,
until
the
have without producing tbe most serious results.
horse broke loose from the buggy scal­ hangman to the President apd then
Harvest to causing and Cradles, Grain Rakes,
I would remedy all lids by insisting that Inter­
Glasgow's.
State commerce should be regulated by the
ed a couple of fences and took quite a prays in imitation of tbe prayers and etc., can be found at
genera) government, and so regulated as to be
run across fields before be was captur­ words of Christ at tbe Last Supper.The
A FEW THOUSAND DOLLARS
uniform and to be changed only after ample
notice nod preparation. As It is the wheat in pressed OTevery nation, and of every clime.
ed.
To
Loan
on
good
Real
Estate
security.
presu
mptious
vacity
of
this
fool
of
a
God save the commonwealthI God save
the farmers bin rises and falls tn value daily,
—Daniel Harrington and James Bel- third story will compare favorably with
State I
ger two Charlotte youths, celebrated in that of tbe assassin’s.
In regard co
FOR SALE,
country whore names attached to an agreement
The glass ball shoot came off at tbe Nashville and enjoyed it so well that those “unfounded statements” we offer A first-class express wagon; or will trade for
would affect the value of articles tn the bands
good buggy. 40-43.
A. C. Stanton.
dub grounds at 1:30, resulting in A. they stayed over until tbe next day. tbe following:
Black of Hastings securing first prize, The saloons being closed on the 4th they
NEW GOODS.
“A UAB NAILED.”
O.
M.
Tates
has
just
received
ulroct from the
Mr. Crowell of same place second, and became very thirsty and on rhe follow­
Who rays sot W. 8. Powers through tbe
Jesse Austin of this village third.
ing day indulged so extensively ip the Olio, July 4th. Who is this Powers! and what
sunflower novelties of the latest styles and cfeThere were four entrees in the foot flowing bowl as to become disorderly
the editor of Tbs Nbws a liar. Well, I, Peter slews ever brought 19 this market, and which
race. Jno. Rock of Hastings bore off and fell mto the hands of officer Flint.
Peafold, being duly sworn on oath say that I
first prize, Marcus Hohey well of Belle­ While taking them to the cooler Har­
am a resident of Barry Co., Mich.. and that I
battle- field vue second, and Vincent Stam of Hope rington broke loose and started south
am well acquainted with W. 8. Powers; that
at a lively gait. Resigning Belger to
third.
the
custody
of
Frank
McDerby,
Flint
The four-paw race was the most
amusing of all amusements. Three started in hot pursuit. Down Main 8t
fellows vohmteerea to get down on all went the twain, the observed of all ob­
republic.
fours and run for tho prize, but Charley servers. But Hamugton proved to be
and Flay Feighner distanced Charley ti.e fleetest on foot and Flint fell
behind bad, and it began to look as
I paid «aW Powers SI.
McMore and secured tho prize.

�■.

11

.... .......... 1 ”"L—
eJoee to 1-eward, ard Ute Faraa lighu j v. hi.* were

became visible, leaving no doubt an to
the imminent peri! of
It
vnin *«&lt;
nttem.
.
Jr
« was
WM in
1Q vnio
vn*K*w* ~
MJtY 8. 1882. gtortrophe byrannlng bet
SATURDAY
taUnckMod the Buunhnd ; the
■ j---------- —2? iatwer her helm, aad wm in
three
RKMIXIRCl
and tonr o’c-lodKL_____ _with
—. her
bow* foremost on the rock, which was
When* iny heart waa as fresh as ft now la1 thereto precipitous that a pdrso:
&gt;n ojuld_
Ana alas for the sntre* tn the old woodshed. scarce stand erect on it.
When 1 stood brother Johnny right up on his
A part of the crew now* lowered cue
of the quarter-boat* and left the ship,
having one of\hfljJM«engers with them,
who had contriv«*dfo throw him’-elf into
the boat; but two .other* in making the
When 1 n»pp&gt;*i|
same attempt perished.
The 'scene
wlrttancfc
which now presented itself was of a
most heartrending description. Several
For the on’* were orient »o Joni’ ago, -■
women were utteriqg cries of anguish
When J Crank spruvo Iw.er on the cocks of
and despair, and amidst them stood the.
’ ,,nr' ■
...
Flayed t. urtJittrom school through the Jong, bewildered master, whore wife, clinging
Iona dev..
. ..
to him, frantically besought the protec­
And licied tlie bo-- wbo’d th" dred betray
tion which he was unable to afford.
In tho tfiud old times of long »«’»•
Gon- an* tbeday ot Innfr ago-’ ;
.
• Very, soon after the first shock a heavy
Twmil'l be .;necr It they worent, but stiljl wave struck the vessel on the quarter,
•were fieri-;
ana. raising her off tbe rock,- allowed
Arid I weiea boy who hKoil spru-e beer.
her immediately after to fall, violently
upon it,'-when, a sharps ledge striking
her about amidships, she was fairly
broken into two pieces, and the after­
GRACE ItlRLI.VG.
part, containing the cabin and many
Who has not hoard of .Grace Darling, passengers,
;
wns instantly carried off by
the heroine of the Longrtono Light- a
i rapid current through the 1’ifa-gut,
hoitre? whow name*, associated with tho ■while the fore part remained on .the
wrtek of the Forfarshire steamer, will irock.
A portion of the passengers and crew
long- be remembered among the annals
of those who, although holding humble had
I
previously betaken them,cl res to
foremost part of tho vessel, confid­
stations in life, have.yet exhibited traits tho
i
it to be the safest place.
of natural greatness which would grace ing
i
In this dreadful situation, exposed
tho occupier of the loftiest position iu
society ?
j amidst darkness to the buffeting of the
There are prob. Ny few persons in wares,
’
and fearful lest each rising surge
sweep away into the deep the
this country who have not heard of her should
i
of the wreck on which they
and of .the act of daringfcaurage in the fragment
j
'stood, they waited in anxiqus expectancy
cause of suffering humanity'for which/i
her name ha-* become cMcbratedr' The the
t
breaking of the day.
In the fore­
account of the tranMctjon appeared cabin,
&lt;
also exposed to thc intrusion of
generally in the newspapers at tlie time tlie
t
sea, was a woman, thc wife of a
it occurred. As, however, a good and iweaver, with her two children, who,
great act will not lose its luster from be- when
i
relief at last came, was found yet
Tng oft-recited, and as a prominent ob- ialive, but her two chiklron lay stiffened
ject of the J.t/c Boat Journal (from corpses
c
in her arms.
which we take the narrative) is to en­
Such was their seemingly hopeless
courage and stir up others to the exhibi- position
।
when, soon after the day broke,
tion of such deeds, wo hold un to emu- the/
t
were descried from the Longstone
lation the intrepidity of one of that sex by
1 thc Darlings, nt nearly n mile’s diswhose virtues are commonly of a more anco.
:
A mist hovered over the island,
retiring nature, and who are neither and
:
though the wind had somewhat
morally nor physically so constituted abated
t
its violence, the sen was still
as to tit them for encountering such raging
t
fearfully, making any approach
perils.
■to the rugged pinnacles and sunken
Grace Darling was born in November, rocks which surround those islands a
1815, ar..l was the daughter of William work of extreme peril. Indeed, even nt ।
Darling, keeper of the Hght-hoi:«o on a later period of the day, a reward of
the Lohgstone, one of thc group of the £5, offered by the steward of Bambor- I

phnisure. Jhe continued to reside at
the fzingstone Light-hotire with her fa­
ther and mother, finding, in her limited
sphere of domeslic-dtrty, on that sea-girt
islet, a more honorable and more ra­
tio md enjoyraefit than tho crowded
haunts of tjiu mainland would have afforded her; and thus giving, by her
conduct, the heatproof that the liberality
of tbe public had not been unworthily
bestowed.
Grace Darling did not live long in tho
enjoyment of the honors that had been
showered on her. She died of consump­
tion on the 25th of October, 1842, at the
ag* of twenty-seven years, and four
years after the occurrence which has
made her name famous for all time.—
Sunday al Ihmt.
’

The River and Its Floods.

To form a proper conception of the
Lower Mlssi-sippl and the caures of its
overflow, imagine the mighty stream
flowing from the mbuth of the Ohio
River through a vast alluvial plain thirty
miles wide and gradually extending to a
width of 150 miles :il tho Gulfof Mexico.
Through the entire length of this plain
this turbid stream flows in'a zigzag and
constantly shifting channel a distance of
nearly a thoqtand miles to where it
empties through its several mouths-into
the gulf.' This plain, containing about
forty thousand square miles, has been
formed in the course of ages from mate­
rial brought down from the uplands of
the Ml-tsisrippi and its tributaries. Rich
in vegetable and organic matter, finclv
filtrated, it is consequently one of, if
not the most, fertile aud productive re­
gions in the United States, the richest
portion being found in '-’the bottom
lands” Immediately contiguous to the
river and its numerous tributaries. Both
sides are lined with plantations which
extend for miles back into the country,
all of which are more or les* under culti­
vation, while thriving towns and cities
dot its banks to thc Crescent City.
In the summer and when the river is
low its surface is depressed from twenty
to thirty feel below its banks, but when
the autumnal ruins set in, followed by
tho spring thaws, thc channel rapidly
fills, and wherever unchecked overflows
Its banks right and left, spreading for
many miles over tho great, wide, level
plain. To protect thc cultivated lands
from this yearly threatened inundation
they are guarded by artificial embankmenu thrown up in front of each plantation. These are called levees, and are
hundreds of miles in extent, almost lin­
ough Castle, could scarcely induce a
ing the entire course of the river. They
party of fishermen to venture off from vary in height from six to forty feet in
the mainland.
some places, and are proportionately
To have braved tho dangers of that
thick through at the base. As might be
expected, the cost of building and Keep­
highest honor even to the well-tried
ing
in repair these immense earth strucnerves of the stoutest of the male sex.
But what shall be said of the errand of lures is very heavy; in some instances
mercy being undertaken and accom­ it devolves upon the county, in others
plished mainly thiough the strength of upon the State, in many instances upon
the individual planters, and it is largely
a female heart and arm?
,2
.
‘
’ 7
£
. ’ -• - - -- l—
Through the dim m.,t. with tho aid ot &gt;?,h&lt;
,r“l’-Br’ ;,nd ; - hen- ।
a gias»,
gin... tne
the ngurcs
figoro, or
of tne
tbe sunerers
euBerer. were iI
. ’ 7. s-sl&lt;;7- ca
“l“m
«^°
w“
J:,
the p
wreck.
Hut who
cl m “*U&gt;'
",h , he
r din-in- to .,
.
. I1 conimr effectual.
eouM dare to tempi, the rasing
lh“
raging al.,-...
abv«s I|
that intervened in th. hopei of
ol succoring
^’coring II &lt;U*“U’r '.t’" £"
„
them? Mr. Darling, it i., .aid, .hrank „ « he".the Cannel ol tbe river I. foil
,
..
6 . —not
,• .so Lis daughter.
..
’1 its level
above that of the
fmm
the attempt
®TC ,is
13 many
man£J.feet
‘
At her solicitation the boat was launched, ( adjacent country,
countn. and within a few
” 11 inches,
with.the a«i,unce ot her mother—tbe
'""h" probably, ' of tho top of the levee,
d*n"er arising from its great pres­
father and daughter cnlcnnj 'it and '
’
I sure against these artificial banks from
each taking an oar.
In estimating tho danger which the a current of immense volume running at
the rate of seven miles an hour can be
heroic
neruic adventuress
auventurew encountered,
eucounierru, there
mere is
i। one circumstance which ought not to be ru»dl,y estimated.
IL.J it not ben,, ebb tide. th.
At '1uo’'
'"'"P1’ '',v° ,n ™n;
! b ."t could not horn pa«od between th- ”n"1 ,lr"‘“1 ol '““"'I*';"".■‘"J «™&lt;»n«d
;i-lands
ic.i.;: and they Vn.-«- that tbe tide 1 ul’on to ejoreuo tho koonasi viplanoc
would
’ ’ ’be doling on tbeir remrn. when I f’. Pra'“n! y«u.«n&gt;phe ^either money,
,, ih.tr united strength would bo utterly I '““"i n“r
“ ’I.'3"''1
’uehk '™"The
is
Ii i.iradlcienl to row the b..« back to the I goncies. Tk
- enure
--------- neighborhood ..
to action, all weak poinhi
light-house island; so that, hod they I summoned
“,l,nn,on
I arc nt once strengthened, new levees
not got the assistance of the survivors
I nre sometimes erected in the rear, like a
on their
tneir return, they
uno themselves
nwiusun«■» would
woum
.
.
. .
. .
.
.
bare boon eompellei to romain on tb- 1
, l,,»' »' ««iaeauon,; guard,

Faroe Islands, in which solitary abode
she constantly resided with her parents.
She is described as having been *• re­
markable fur a retiring and somewhat
reserved disposition—of a fair complex­
ion and comely countenance—with noth­
ing masculine in her appearance; but,
on tho contrary, gentle in aspect, and
with an expression of the greatest mild­
ness and benevolence:” which latter
qualities, we need scarcely remark, are
not uncommonly found associated with
gallant bearing and the most resolute
courage.
Previous to describing tho distin­
guished act of Grace Darling in pro­
ceeding with her father to the rescue of
the-sufferers on tho wreck of the For­
farshire, it will be desirable that we
should explain the nature of the dan­
gerous locality where it occurred.
The Farno Islands lie off the north­
eastern coast of England. They are a
group of barren and desolate rooks,
inhabited principally, by sea-fowl, and
their sides are in many parts extremely
precipitous.
*
’I'lirough thc channels between tinsmaller Fame Islands the sea rushc'
with great impetuosity, and doubtless
many a shipwreck of which there is no
record has occurred there in former
limes, when no beacon existed to guide
the mariner in his path through the
deep. Rather more than a century ago
th« ^‘nks?“J"‘Kht ’“rohi;
a Dutch -10 gun frigate, with all her rook, betide the wreck, until tho lid,. '
ebood.
| &gt;"g &lt;"r the k-a.t oak u the earth wall
crew, was lost among them; rad nu­ again
;ain eutieu.
.
. .
. ,
.
.
,, then only
. .be .by ..
.
,»rtho
It could
the exertion
?r thc fiiititi-st
&lt;*h‘’"st slonnino’loPP‘°5 over the
«»e ton.
top.
merous other wrecks are recorded to
irrent muscular rower. a# well a, nf (,,r woe
lhe ** ,o° lhat a’,.&lt;”r»
have happened between that time and of1 great
muscular power, as well as of
one
to
escape
notice.
Ln
a
verv
short
the present.
determined courage, that they could
time
the
b.ink
melts
before
it
like
dis­
Living on this lone spot, in the midst hope to reach the wreck; and when
of thc ocean, with the horrors of the there the danger would be much in­ solving sugar, aud the pressing wall of
water
cuts
its
way
through,
making
tho
tempest familiarized to her mind, Grace creased
creases from
iroui tho
mo liability
iiaoiuiy they
mey would
wouia .
. ,
2— A crevasse
crevnsse.or break
Darling was shut out as it were from the run of being dashed to pieces on those I dreaded
in the
the levee
levee once
once rmade iswarely closed,
"
‘
in
active scenes of life, and was principally rugged..
rocks.
occupied in assisting her mother in the
It must have seemed to them a for­ and only then under exceptional cir­
management of their little household; lorn hope; buttheir courage rose with cumstances ami with great difficulty.
and it is worthy of remark—iu order to the emergency—God's blessing accom­ A torrent of water several feel high
the better appreciation
nrcciation of
ot the magna
magno-­ I paniud
’ ‘ them—aud their efforts were pouring through an opening of crum­
nimity she exhibited on thus occasion
- - - ’ - —- i crovVned with success. The whole of bling earth walls is no easy thing to
that she was not habituated to the use the nine survivors were token into their check, and, in fact, rarely is checked.
of an oar, or the management of a boat, little bark, and conveyed in safety* to Unless there is existing, or has been
those offices having been performed by the light-house.
Here, owing to the erected, **a protection levee" in tbe rear
other members of the family.
violent seas which continued to prevail, it only takes a very few hours for the
She had received a good education for they were compelled to remain two sea of waters to spread over miles of
her station in life, and had reached her days, during which time they received tho level, cultivated valley^ destroying
twenty-second vear when the incident every kindness and comfort that the the crops, drowning stock and spread­
occurred which has rendered her name household could afford, and of which ing ruini and desolation broadcast.
Thc only method ever successful in
so famous, and which wo will now pro­ they were in so mu. h need.
stopping crevasses is by driving strong
ceed to relate.
The party who had left in the ship’s
piles
and filling up the interstices with
boat,
also
nine
in
number,
were
picked
On thc evening of thc 5th of Septem­
ber, 1838, thc Forfarshire, a steamer of up the next morning, by a Montrose sand bags; but this method is only
effective in minor instances, since once
about 3G0 tons burden, John Humble, sloop, and conveyed to Shields.
master, sailed from Hull for Dundee,
xne subsequent events of
oi Grace
urace Dari/ar- under headway nothing can withstand
The
having on board a valuable cargo, and, ling’s life are soon told. The deed she the force of the rushing waters.—Inas nearly as could be ascertained, sixty-1 had done may be said to have wafted dianajwlu Journal.
three persons—viz., the master end his J her name all over Europe. That lonely
wife, a crew of twenty men, ftnd forty-; light-house became speedily the center
one passengers. She was a new vessel, of attraction to curious ana sympathizbeing.only two years old, but herboilers ! ing thousands, including many of the
were, no doubt, in a culpable state of i wealthy and the great, who, in numer*di-repair. Previous to her leaving Hull ■ ous instances, testified by substantial
a small leak had been discovered in tokens tho feelings with"
with which they
them, and, for the moment, closed up; regarded
• - •tho young heroine.
Among
bat when off Fiamborough Head it tho number were thffDuke and Duchess
broke out afresh to such an extent as Io ot Northumberland, who invited her
put put two of the fires.
The boilers father and herself to Alnwick Castle,
were, however, partially repaired, and and presented her with a gold watch.
the
fires—
relighted;
and in this inefficient Grace and her father received thc sllvor
---------a--------- ,-----------------------------------g._.; _L_
___ _
_______
state ahe proceeded on her voyage, I medal of* the National Lifeboat (then
--------....
•*-- r-.----- .-- Institution, aud numerous
passing •' Fairway,” between
the.. Fame
j Shipwreck)
Islands and the mainland,
--------- —at
, . about G p.
r. ;i testimonials
testimonial* from other public bodies
mi. on the, 6th.
At about 8 p. m. she I, a°d’ admiring
* * "
strangers.
entered Berwick, Boy,,_.„
the sea running |I
A public subscription was also raised,
— the
— wind strong
high, with
strong"- from thu
the j with a view to reward her for her
north.
--------now increased to ' bravery and humanity, which is said to
Thu leakage
firemen could----------------------------------------------| have amounted to tabout—
$11,500.
To
rack a degree that .the
-----------------------------_
not keep the fires burning, and at about I such an extent, indeed, did the popular
10 p. m. she bore up for St. Abb’s Head,' enlhnriasm reach that portraits of her
the storm still raging with unabated ■ were eagerly sought for, and she was
fury.
The engines soon after became i even offered large sums by the proprieu.-eiess and would not work, when the ' tors of one or more of the metropolitan
sail« were hoisted fore and aft, and the | theaters on the condition that she should
vM.s&lt;*l tacked,»n order to keep her off the ■ merely sit in a boat for a brief space
land.
She, .however, soon became un- • during tho performance of apiece whose
mtnageble, atd tbe tk’.e .*euing strong i chief attraction she was to be. Alt such
to the south she was carried by it in offers however, were promptly and
that direction.
■ stoadilv refused; aud it is gratifying to
it rained heavily during the whole i know that amidst all this tumult of aptimt*. and the fog was too dense to enn- • ptaue Grace Darling never tor a moh’e‘h-’hr ooahioD of the vcisel to b- ’.n-nt forzot the modnst dignity of oon-a
fcMM*.ruu)UMi
duct which became hnr sex and station/

land chemM

prodttoe in

The Clever Diplomatist.
When Talleyrand's friend Narbonne,
the Minister who had incurred the
King’s displeasure, was once walking
arm-in-arm with him, and recitbig som-i
verses. Talleyrand, suddenly perceiving,
at a short distance from them, a man
who was vawning. interrupted his
friend, saying: “Nnrbonue, not so
loud;” and he pointed to the yawning
man. Relating one day some infamous
trait in tbe character of one of his
colleagues, his hearers interrupted him,
exclaiming: ” I’he man, who cuuld
commit an act of that kind is capable
of assassinating.” “AssasrinalingP no,"
said Talleyrand, calmly; “poisoning?
yes.’* Being asked on a certain oec.ttion to define his notion of an agreeable
man, the Bishop of Autun replied: “A
man who agrees with me.”* Lastly—
for these sioriw could be collected al­
most ad infinitum—when a troublesome
acquaintance, who
hod continually
pressed him for alms, thought he had
clinched his case la one instance by
remarking: “I must live, you know.’’
Talleyrand comolacentiy replied: •«!
do not see the necessity.”—London Hocidy.

—Gen. Hawley says: “Theoountiy
will not be safe until every American U
a politician.”
All right, general; ait
down. It’s safe.—Burlington JJawkcyt.

|
I
j

j

ed by a farmer to state ju*t what he
ahould do with land, or animals, in or­
der that profitable rwtlta may follow.
Thase request* are often not bo much a
call for information he they are an ex­
pressed desir* to obtain a rule, recipe,
or formula that shall be an infallible
guide to al! future operations. A trus­
tee of an agricultural college once said
to the professor of agriculture: “What
we wish to do is to tell us just wh*t we
jiiust ppt on our farms io order that wo
may get big crops.” meaning that there
must uc some way, known or unknown,
bv which all soils could be made'pro­
ductive to the desired extent
Many farmer* «eem to be living in
the expectation that a series of fact*
are to be discovered, and a code of
rides formulated that will constitute
their guide book, which will relieve
them of tho iucouvenionce of facing
difficult and disagreeable problems.
To bo sure, some pretend to distrust
science, anil say that the farmer must
depend ou himself alone; bat such dis­
trust arises in many cases from tho fact
that science has not helped diem out of
all tho hard places, so that they still
have difficulties.
This stationary condition of expectan­
cy, waiting for the scientist to dig out
the iummum-bonum ot agricultural
knowledge, which can bo used as tho
housewife uses a recipe for bread mak­
ing, has been of harm to tho progress
ot agriculture. It does not scorn prob­
able that agricultural practice will'ad­
mit of very many universally best
methods. At least, such is not the case
now, and fanners need to- be more
fully impressed with tbe fact. The
main operations of tho farm p»a only
by chance allow tho prolitabV use of
the same details of practice L V* cxso
that would be wise in B's, neither is it
tho 'business of Science, to provide a
creed of farm practice that shall con­
tain anything beyond great underlying
principles. Tho determination of al­
most all the rule* of, practice best
adapted to a farmer’s particular cir­
cumstances rests with tho farmer him­
self. We would, if possible, place the
matter in such a light as to more uharply doline the relation which the farm­
er’s own observation and knowledge.on
thc one hand, and the generalizations
of science on the other, bear to the !
•phere ot individual ufforu
I

Science tenches principles only. The
1
I rule for action is the outcome of the
I application of principles to the condiIIOM O! practice. ChumlMrv toacheb
that limo transform* and decomposes.
nod what its action is under particular
I circumstances, but it is left with each
individual to decide when and where to
apply lime in his farm practice. Chemistry tenches that superphosphates furnish plant food, but this is only show|
ing that they can be used wheu’necded.
I Ku every lurm may raanond proBtably
1

I

I
|

1
j

j

I
1

life. Xy guxradlau rubbed rue of the fortune
left me by my father, and at Ute ace at » 1
found myaeif poor In puree and peer in health.
I married a young girl whose hearth soon broke
doWn from over work and botuMbold carea.
Our aix ctaklren gave bur-great trouble, and
labot-

“Misery may
company,Way* * colored
philosopher,'' “but I'd raderhab de rheumatl*
in one leg den ter habit in bofe.”

A PEERLESS PERFUME
Brwna of Floreston Cologne,
and t$*lasting tragrance make ila petrlcm j*rfume tor tbe toilet.
•_
*
*

Charity covers a multitude of church krtterfea.
ZcA-PHORA (THE HEALTH' BRIN'GER)
Cures the cause of Headache, Backache.
Bearing-down, Palpitation, and many other
miseries known only to women.

The gold, miner gets hU beer by quartz.
Chronic coiisUpatiun, chronic dyspepsia
chronic diarrhoea, promptly uured by using
Brown s Iron liluers. It Un complete strengthcuer of tbe digestive organs.

The cigarette-consuming young man. U a
bore, and the -world U tired of aering him
around.
A TRAVELER’S STORY.
'After spetyiing inontlia at wltering placet
and consulting the l&gt;cat physicians without ben­
efit, 1 returned borne duheartened and expected
to die. A friend urged a trial of Porker » Gin­
ger Tonic. Three bottles and careful Lave
brought me excellent health and spirits, and I
5*my cz|«r.enor|may benefit similar euffviera.—Cincinnati lady. See other column.
A corn-dodger—A man who avoids wearing
tlpht boots.

Every man is fond ot striking the nail on the
bead; but when it happens to be the tinker-nail
The symptotns of Itrblnff Piles ore moisture
»ke preiplrntl.x„ Intense itching, most at night
J“ISt. “SL.
I"

w orse they iu-h. very di-tresaing. The private
pans are uftct^anectcd. Dr. Swayne's Oint­
ment is the most effective remedy extant for
this tnmieutluK complaint. Gives rent at nlgbt
i ulthout that desire Io &gt;-eruCch. Also has „„
on
&lt; equal
.—I iu
lu qulckb
quickly eradicating Tetter, Itch, Salt
berime. E
Erysipelas.
Itch. Pimples.
• Rlir~::.
—barlM-rs*
“ ■
------------------1 '* J—|- •'------- itchy Skin Eruptions Here
tninly thc best remedy ever
d ill my practice.” Dr. Cotton, Woodstock,
, .. .. “troubled with Itching Piles for over twen■ ty yearn,
ream. it
It cured me completely." L. S. Messn-r
&lt;1^1.1 VI..
' F.niield.
Me. ..... . . „rji ..... , &gt;. -&gt;—-------- ,.. .
1 1&lt;1-'. By
&gt;wa}ne «fc Sun. Phllad'a
|14 N’w ‘■I.”")™'?-'”
.

I

MEAT MARKET.

Fresh and Salt Meats,

The Adventure* of a Bank Note.

—k man intruded into an Irishman’*
shanty tlie other day. “What do you
want?” asked Pat.' ••Nothing.” wm
the visitor's reply. ‘’Then you'll find
it in the jug where ths whisky was.”

Bend Chilled Plows,
Gale Plows,
(Buy Genuine Factory Points)
They are much chcape| aud better.

Strayer’s GRAIN DRILL,
RAWSON’S

REAPERS &amp; MOWERS
Lightest and .Strongest Slade,

Skill is tiii: Workshop.—To do good work
the mechanic must have good health! if long
hours of confinement in close rooms bare en­
feebled hk - hand or dimmed lih sight, let him
ni once, and before some organic trouble ap­
pear*. take Hop Bitters, Hl»»r*icm will bercjuvi-uniedj Ids nerves urengthcnril, hU sight
become clear, and the whole constitution be
built up to a higher working condition.

to their use. Chemical analysis reWhy i» a fellow with a bad cold in the Lead
decides as to tho relative composition I like Niagara FalUI Because he's a catarrhand value of cottage-seed meal, but ' racked.
each dairyman is left to economically '
combine it with his other cattle foods, j
MOMENT, I LEASE,
although he may have certain estab- | WTicn winter in passing Into summer, and
lished principles to aid him in produc- I summer into winter again, your health should
ino’ such combinations.
I ***-' vsiw'dally looked tn. The humor, which
Ln every agricultural problem there ' I'"™ accumulated in your Mood should be
is the science side and the farmer side, | clcan»e&lt;l away, and your •ystetn toned up u,
thc latter being often the more diffl- I guard against Bllllous Fever, or other sickness
cult.
The farmer stands between peculiar to the change of aeasotu. Dr. David
principle* on the one hand, and the I Kennedy's “Favorite Remedy" will do tills for
conditions of his farming on the other,
Get a bottle now and begin using It at
ami ol tbe proper application ol prim
A ,' mg fit of sicknc*sand a lang doctor'c.ples to comlitiotie cornea tbe correct „m
u lhl.
Irf your
practice.
Other tbmgs bomK equal, ,ln,„„
,,
lo lbe Dr „ K„„,!o,lu
then, the farmer who has the l»est
knowledge of principles has the best •
practice in other words, tho educated
1 Tbe world Is iJI a fleetlug show, we say, but
educ:
farmer may be the best farmer. _
would be convenient if agricultural longer.
practice could be so simplified as to ■
render unnecessary anv special study
SHILOH 8 CONSUMPTION LUREor preparation on the part of the tillers i Tb,» ’* l*«’«'d question the moat auwMful
ol ,b, .oil. W.
.b.„ b.
.1 i
maximum good results, even from tho tttld Bronchitis, while tts wonderful sucres is
ignorant.
*. Farmers arc apt to boast of |in the cure of t-onsanrption lawithout a paralthe goodsense
o , and sterling qualities of Id in tlie history of inedlcne. Since its tirat
._ _ i l
r
-i .1 illKoverv it has twen snld on inunitH'. atest
their class, and they seem to think that
which uo other medicine can utaud.
If you
because of these things they deserve have n Cough We caniesliv ai&gt;k you to try it
success. But no matter how much we Price JOctA, fiOcls, and fl,60 If your lungs are
may admire the citizen and the man. sore. Cheat, or Hack Lame' and Shiloh's
if he docs not possess a certain kind of Porous Plaster. Sold bv F. T. Boise.
ANSWER THIS QUESTION.
knowledge especially adapted to hi*
Why do so many people we aec around us,
wants, ho will purely pay tho penalty seem to prefer to suffer and be made miserable
for such deficiency.
Men belabor by Indigestieu, constipation, dizziness, loss of
science for its mistakes and its inabil­ , appetite, coming up of the Food, yellow skin,
ity to do certain things, but they must when for "Sets, we will rell them ShUoh’a Vitaremember that neither now nor at any lizcr, guarantedto cure them. Sold by F. T.
Boisk.
other time con science stand in the
SHILOH’S CATTARRH REMEDY, A mar­
place which the farmer fails to occupy; velous cure for Catarrh, Diphtheria, Canker
nor can it secure the best results ex­ mouth, and Head Ache. With each bottle
here
Is an ingenious nasal injector for thc
cept through the medium of a mind fit­
more successful treatment of these complaints
ted to comprehend its teachings. This,
without extra charge. Price 60ets. Sold by
then, is equivalent to saying that farm­ F- T.BotVB.
ing is not an occupation especially for
Literary ‘1 occasionally drop Into poetry,”
the unlettered and those of low ca, acity; ami. moreover, that there are as the man said when he fell into the editorial
to-day tillers of tbe soil- who are but
bunglers, and for whom science has
IJENRY ROE, PaoraitToa
few benefits. Fertilizer formulas, or
anr formulas designed for the use of
----- OLD RELIABLE-----those who cannot find out their own
needs, arc out sorry makeshifts, and
are only the outcome of necessity, a
necessity based on ignorance.
The
farmer must discover and decide some
Keeps constantly on hand a bfg stock of
i
things for himself, or. in case of a fail­
ure to this, pay a costly penalty.—
Prof. W. H. Jordan.

A £25 Bank of England note has just
found its way bock to its original source
in a manner which irfdicates the effi­
cient management both of the bank
and of the post-office. It was lost as
far back as 1829, having been inclosed
in a letter. Tho postal authorities
made the usual investigations, but, a*
nothing was beard of it tho bank au­
thorities. after some years, made good
the loss to the post-office in tho belief
that the note must have found its way
back, but through some carelessness
tho fact had been overlooked. It was,
however, found in circulation only the
other day. It has been traced to a wo­
man in humble circumstances, who
found It accidentally among the paper*
of her grandfather, who acted a* guard
to one of the old mail coaches. There
is no evidence whatever that he stole
the note. The loss was probably the
result of the merest accident.—London
Globe.

KALAMAZOO

Smotei Harns and Shoulders,
FRESH FISH and FOTTLTR1
IS THEIR SEASOr

Lcird, by the lb. or barrel,

HUBBARD . .

Gleaner &amp; Binder
;bfH&gt;roved 18821

Sash, Doors nd Blinds,'
Paints, Oils, Varnishes,
BI IL.IIKICS HARDWARE,

। DETROIT STOVECO'S. STOVES
Domestic &amp; New Home

SEWING MACHINES.
When in need &lt;&gt;f the Best
Grades of Hardware and Ma­
I chinerv.
■

Call and see me.

FRANK C. BOISE.

THE CROWN

THE CROWN SEWING MACHINE.

*iJ-Tlic “Crown” cornea Into thc market
lhe tan of all the rnacuinc.H. but han i-pruug to
front rank at once from tbe fart that it tia» ta­
ken the good features In all other machine*
and put them in one grand combination, mak­
ing this tho Handsomest, Largest, Most Silent
and Lightest Running machine yet offered. All
the • potnta” that the expcriece of twenty yearn
in all kinds of familv and light manufacturing
work has proved tob«absolute!v good arc to be
found only In the “Crown." &lt;Hher machines
may have one. two or three of these ■ points"
but none but the “Crown" han thetn all.
Every device that i« really desirable in other
machines will be found in the “Crown.”
Ad­
vantage has twen taken of the experiments and
experience with nil klnd» ot machines ever in­
vented, aud the “Crown" is n perfect embodi­
ment of cveryllug gojd in lheui.

E. R. WHITE.

YOU CAN GET
------ A F1BST-CLASS-------

Reaper
--------- O R----------

JVEower
------ OF THE------

OSBORN MAKE!

dx., dx.. de.

WARRANTED

rV" The Highest Market Price paid
fur Hides, Pelt*. &amp;c.

AS G03D AS ANY MACHINE HADE,

Fresh Goods, Full Weights and
Satisfaction Guaranteed.

"Very Cheap
AT MY PI-BCE,

IIKMIT BOE

Experienced. Reliable, anil Responsible.

A. R. WINN, Dentist
BEST SET SUM TEETH $10.00
Teeth Extracted Without Pain.

fflee Open Day &amp; Evening
A. II. WINK.

Ai I have no Runner’* Charge*.

------ ALSO-------

THE CELEBRATED
max»-ma»ic

PALMER
Grain Cradle.
John Andrews says he bought two plow
point# at the hardware and they nlowed nearly
four acres, and he came here and got one and
be has plowed twelve acres with It apdttia
good for man v more acr a. How la that?
*
J. M. Wood.

J. M. WOOD.

�•s

nTEREST.

-rtitm nf Voacs Agency -is truly
I It h situated in a bend of the ' goes his rounds, altl
for h»
------- “4**~~
a Mnr -dro-s-m whose torto- ter has several a;
totit. rfc Hot. Halt, n»l«r, SineI
the Arkansas ea*i place.—New Eaveu.
1 t!w Insane asylum, or the Home for the
by she fringe ot tree*
—A respectable
i Feeble-Minded. There is a mystery as
co, HZr. I*iw Lnaber. Uth
r up tay its snake-lika path.
County. Virginia, h
to bow many ot three qarand Shields.
.
! tained a good soeial footting; but they I To e*
i s MXttn are the hills. View- ! to the lunatic asyim
’might! tog tt
i.-uweof blue iky, um&gt;b*tructed ! .jng become entirely ur*a«Hi uwr &gt;m&gt;
it, and
it undisp
£ UWJUTUV1W PBICB8. &lt;f have
bawit.
__ hold
________
,
r* ami by-ou
fhiMrs' cbimaey*, having the j developing mineral resources o( the
doings, but have only
---------- ----- of the beauties ol sunrise and j State.
- ------- - --------- — ■ •—— throe of the mort oon-ipieuow* c:i~-s. nunsei and surrounded bv the childrea
—An American Consul, about to j
*
*
’
' ' make
’ &gt; a Sel!!♦-« might
There is one man who plfltar htm«e&lt;f of Nature, onr •'
There i come home, writes: “The man who
l upon being the handsomest man in Naw
abroad in the service of hl# conn- j
-York—and he h inrioed a tine specimen
,of the psatitAomo. Hu not only i* hand­
some, am! knows that ’he is handsome,
, ., .
. . . ,
,
,
,
-but be says he is handsome. “I saw you questions. Happy wd it they pas* and I
—A black snake live feet long has alm
on Fifth Avenue, yesterday,?’ *al‘d a our sky remain* unctouded. Saturday
S*1“ST jy,J friend. “Yi**, res.” was thu drawling mornlng, bright *nd early, the road is ™*dy been killed Ln Chester County,
’
‘
With snake stories 'be­
mtgon* filled
ifilled with many a । Pennsylvania.
। response, “I was th-Srer bakl saidoai lined with wngons
walk—it i* so dMjrecsb'c haring people Mepliistdes on bi, wayto ration*. Four ginning so early, the crop of fiction of '
that character for this year promises to ;
turn about to Mare at rua.** “Tnerf'wmi. times a year a census is takuu of the
a great crowd at Mrs. Vandyke Brown’s tribe, and each family presen tad with a
—The heirs of Colonel Jacob Baker, ,
ball last night,” reWarkctl-im acquaint­ ticket 6n which can b» drawn weekly
a relic of the Revolution, are tracing i
ance to this elegant Turveydrop. “Yes; •.about tfen |xmods of beet for each indi­
up their relationship with a view to
it kept me moving througu the room all vidual, flour, boffee,. hard-tack, soda,
claiming fifteen acres of land -located
the tim?. to avoid making a group. I bean*, bacon and tobacco. Ths squaws
in tbe heart of Philadelphia and val­
stopped for a moment ip. the back draw­ reeviva in various dirty Uule bag* or the
ued nt $315,000,000. — Chicaqo Newt.
ing-room, and Uni place b^aamo. suffo­ corners of-their shawl* these provisions,
cating; peopleware pazkedlike wnlineM. and. having slung them across their
—We are delighted to learn that a
I have been so lung in New York that I back*, they are driven hutuewArd to oue
collected edition of the poems of Steingruud fhoreteinsou has been published
should think people would be ‘done grand feast and, perhaps, dance the
at Eeykavik. by K.' O. Jorgrimsson, un­
staring at me.This isoniy'self-oon- whole night through; Tne Indians are
not provident. Tfietr rations are.suffi­
j Orit.-b'ut it is colossal s-tf-coriesfit.
der the title of - “Ljodmoeli." A very
appropriate title, too, by the way.—
’ Rather a more pronounced case of cient. for them, yet Friday often finds
■Narrutown Eerald.
imbecility
told me the other day by them dinnerleas.
Thc scene oti Satunlay around Jhe
a distinguished English woman, who
—It is assorted that if all the oyster
Monumerix TnnMones. Manties, &amp;c.,'
with her family had been -pending the Commissary building is quite pictur­
lands belonging to tbe several towns
winter in New York, and has gone esque.' The porch Ju front is lined with
on the north, and south sides of Long
squaws
in
bright-colonnl
calico
skirts,
everywhere. One ereniug, at one of
Island were paying a proper rental, the
yy 1LLIAM J0NK5,
the best houaeshere, she Aras Approached wifhout gore* and untrimmed save by
revenue derived from them would be
by a toll and elegant gentU-mau. who, an ocoasional band of red or yellow,
sufficient' to4 maintain the public
bowing very low, ,said: “Madam, I with a shirt-like upper garment and a
schools.
! have danced with tW Print** of Wales, blanket of -bright-colored shawl, -with
—Hiram A. Deming, the oldest male
I taken the Dpches* of E&gt;tinboro' in to the inevitable baby upon the back, some­
resident in Syracuse, N. Y.. died, a
| dinner, have visited tho Countess of times sleeping pcnccfnlly, sometimes
few 4nvs since, at the age of eighty' Dudley, have chatted with Lady Lons­ yelling' vociferously for hard-tack or
two. In 1828 he held the lucky number
dale, and am personally acquainted sometiiing more palatable to his infant
in a lottery, which gave him an ample
with Mrs. Langtry." Having delivered fancy, llie maternal Instinct is de­
fortune in those days—$10,000. He was
veloped
early.
It
is
highly
amusing
to
himself of this speech he turned on his
known for years afterward as the rich­
heel and walked away. When the lady see' some girt of five or six tottering
est man in the neighborhood.
returned home she was met by her along under tho weight of n child al­
—A Louisville milkman lost two cows
most
her
size.
TM
dress
for
u
boy
up
! daughter who had been at another
the ether day, because being of vicious
i partv. "Mamma.” she said, “I’ve met to his fourth year is a little shirt only,
disposition and for a long time deter­
’ the mart extraordinary man; Mr.-------- . the slits up the side sometimes of alarm­
mined io fight, they accidentally had a
1
A cnt'csunranlrcd.
a ven' elegant person. He simply ing length. It therefore seems imperachance at one another and went at it.
walked upto me. and said: ‘Miss—j-, lively necessary that daring tho cold
Thc owner arrived too late.
One of
I have danced with thc Princess of weather he should be wrapped in some
tho animals died in half an hour, and
Wales, taken the Daehcss of Edinboro* one’s, blanket. The Indian police in
the
other
had
to
be
killed.
ia to dinner, have visited tho Countess dark "blue suits trimmed with ligMter
—Alice O’Neill, a former inmate of
of Dudley, have chatted with liady stripe* are ever at hand assisting in the
the Utica Insane Asylum, dropped dead
Lonsdale, and am personally acquainted issue. Leaping against a building or
recently at Crown Point, N. Y. The
with Mrs. Langt-ry.’ ” It seems that this fence my be seen some young men in
Superintendent of the Poor had called
man has but one ’speech for English ac- full Imlian toggery—perfectly, fitting
to remove her to Utica and informed
M j qtiaintances. and ne rehearses that to and bright-beaded moccasins, red leg­
her of bis intentions. With a stamp of
u:n*-ut
no' ,7 • every Englishman and Englishwoman gings, ••gee-strings” (an end of the
the foot she declared that she would
!•» F. T. Bus»».
I he meets. Ho dare not trust himself to breech-clout which is allowed to float
never go back, and fell dead.
1 talk, and so when he has finished his list behind) and so completely enveloped in
—About two months ago Arch Switz­
I of aristocratic acquaintances, he has their dark blankets that only tlie eyes
er, living near Holmesville, Holmes
are
visible.
The
blanket*
are
generally
I nothing, to do but to turn away. I am
County, 0., while driving a nail, struck
not sure that I have the li*t quite cor- ornamented with belts of beautiful bead
it a glancing lick, and a piece of it
reel; but if It is correct, one can’t but work a foot or so wide and extending
struck him in the eye, injuring it badly
’ pity tho Princess of Wales for having the width of the blanket. So much
but by the aid of a good physician, his
iiad to endure such a partner, the variety do they show in design that I
sight was restored.
Recently while
I Duchess of Edinboro’ for having hail have never seen the same pattern re­
driving another nail, a piece flew off.
I such a dinner companion, and the peated. Beside us stalks White Eagle,
striking the injured eye and dstroying
Countess of Dudley for having luul such the head chief of the Poncas, who is the
thc sight entirely. A physician remov­
a guest. This man has a very old name, handsomest red man I have seen.
ed the eyeball, and will insert an arti­
He is thc ideal Indian—of immense
a very elegant presence, goes every­
l« ttflcoffimertoed by Physician^ where, r.nd yet people tap their fore­ stature, straight as an arrow, and. above ficial one.—Chicago Times.
—A little three-year old boy named
heads when he stop* speaking, or mur­ all, as diguilted ns Lucifer was proud.
mur, with charitable considenitioir, “too The dark, forbklding-looHng face, the Joseph Wuliman,’ at Louisville. Ky.,
- Wo manufartara M3(j sell it viUia p*»»ltlvo
met with a probably fatal accident thu
much champagne.”
keen, black, watchful, almost distrustful
guarantee that It will cure any
other day in a curious manner. In the
Then there are ‘‘cranks’’ ampng the eye. the glossy black hair floating in the
' casO.*Rd we will forfeit the obovo amount
women. There isone hwly whose name wind, the magnificent form, enveloped center of the kitchen had been placed
UitldbiAt alngto instance.
,
It la unlike »«» ol*«-r Cstarrb remedy. u
appears in every list of fashionable in leggings and -a dark blanket brightly a large copper boiler, with very sharp
people. , It is a fine ohtname—but the ornamented with knots of colored rib­ edges. The boy was playing around
woman who bears it is so eccentric that bon, impress you wonderfully. Amid the floor, and in trying.to run past the
boiler, slipped and fell, his stomach
she would not be tolerated for An instant his undignified surroundings, which
It, wt»4 to ui and w« will forward
in places whcre slie is not known. She would detract from the grandeur of most coming across the sharp edge of the
r. Prioe, 7Se»3is_pertoiUa.
boiler, cutting a gash clear across hit
IENEY L CO., Toledo. Ohio.
dresses like a' guy, nud behaves worse men, he is always dignified and self­
l&gt;ody, extending tnlo tbe cavity.
than she dresses. It is said that she possessed. I have seen him -in council,
—It is stated that the Belgian Gov­
often goes to '.parties uninvited—and attired in a full suit of black broadcloth,
ernment is engaged upon a scheme for
coolly walking up to thu distressed his face lighted with intense purpose, hi*
great
form
seeming
to
swell
with
the
promoting street railways throughout
hostess, says: “I knew it was an over­
the country as feeders for tho railroads,
sight—and here I am.” Owe, when power of his own eloquence, his mag­
the work to bo done by the various
living abroad, she invited apairofyonng netic voice holding his hearers in that
Americans to be married at her hand­ spell which even the added powers of communes interested, either singly or
in combination, and assisted when nec­
some jipartmeno, instead of in the hotel, education and culture cannot htfig’..ten.
Seated
on
the
ground
in
groups
ot
three
essary by subventions from the State.
where they-had expected the ceremony
to take place. -Thu wedding was to be or four are many of the old men of the
—A touching scene is reported as
at ten in thc morning. Tlie party as­ tribo, with one pipe, which is parsed from
having taken place in the 'death cham­
mouth
to
mouth.
Thus
will
they
qit'for
sembled. but thu hostess had gone
ber of the Italian statesman. Lanza,
to
market
There wasan awk­ hours and leave each other without who died the ether day. King Hum­
ward delay. Presently the lady ap­ seeming to have interchanged an idea.
bert hail been admitted to pay him n
As tins is a gala day. all the prettiest
peared with her purchase in her hau ls,
last visit, andstood by his bedside some
oade the minister proceed, and while he costumes appear and we see a great minutes, sorrowfully contemplating the
was going on. she. still shawled and many dresses of a popular style, red
pallid face of his old friend, who was
bonneted, reached from the chair where woolen, ornamented around the bottom
plunged into a sort of lethargy, and ap­
peared unite unconscious.
Presently
alfe was kneeling, to lusnect the lace with with bull shaped buttons and having a
the King’took the dying man's hand io
which the other'kneeling guests had panel on tiie front breadth mode of
bright-colored
ribbons,
overlapping
each
-adorned themselves.
A distinguished
bis, pressed It gently and exclaimed.
Am ■rican calling on this same lady in a other and cut to form many and intricate
“Lanza, do you know me? lam Hum­
foreign city, received a message by the patterns. I saw one of red. green and
bert-Victor Emsnuel’s son.” Lanza
servant whodiad taken up hi* card, say­ blue ribbon so sewed as to form small
feebly opened his eyes, cast au affec­
ing thwtif he would step ontou theside- squares of different colors, ^vhtch to­
tionate look at the monarch, faintly
SHORTEST, AiDJCOBT anJ
walk she would be able to converse gether formed larger squares, tbe whole
ejaculated the words, “Mio Ro f’ (My
with him from her chamber window; beautifully symmetrical. One may see
King!) and relapsed into Insensibility.
wa.DsUM.1
that aha-oouldjf tcome down.because she any style of head-dress, a cap trimmed
A few minutes later he breathed his
was e&gt;i. diihabilc. So the coavoraation with bead*, the old bartered hat, a relio
last.
of
last
year's
annuity
goods;
a
brightoccurred, thejady’l head appearing in
—Sir Wilfrid Lawson, the . distin­
curl paper*, ata third-story window, and colored handkerchief, perched turban­
guished English member of Parliament
the gentleman standing on the sidewalk wise, or a cap made of otter skin, tho and temperance advocate, says that
tail
forming
a
streamer
.behind.
If
a
below. The same woman think* it quite
the newspapers of the liquor dealers
• proper to pat her feet up into a chair dirty, it is a picturesqc group, and some­
have bestowed the Lollowing nicknames
while makuog a calL And this woman, times a complaining one. The voices of upon him: That Old Cracked Tea Pot,
the
women
may
be
heard
talking
in
a
as I have eaid. goes everywhtro, and is
tbe Watery Jester, a Demented Creat­
aa wtll-kofiwn m the drawing-room as harsh, discordant tone and with an un- ure, the Washed-out Water Partv, tho
Driveling Idiot, the Brainless Fanatic,
centric to the last degree, but she has a ances are continued until they are driven
the Confiscatory Molly Coddle, tho
kind heart, isheredf a delightful hostess, away. Foot creatures! Civilization in
and nobody seems U mind her peculiar it* slow growth ha* done but little for ing rump Handle. the Tea-drinking
them as yet They are still hard toilers :
Twadler. the Pop-bottle Pump Orator,
to their masters. The Indian women ,
the Permissive Plautudinist, the Peri­
receive no instruction in fashioning their
patetic Agitator, tbe Utopian Dreamer,
garments,
yet
whilq
their
dresses
are
after and liked, in jpite of their ignor­
tho Maudlin Mountebank, the Crown­
ance, Mrs. Malaprep and Mr. Malapron
ing Clown, that Fool of Fools, the Wail*
have been abroad on Murray Hill this
ing Cant, the Arrant Humbug, the
suitable for the
EESt-Sgri?
Apostle of Slops.
the brain of ma
—Lizzie Marcellus, tho circus rider
Nur
who was lost with Stowe’s show on the
Buck
He told me that he had only taken a
..... —... .... "
■ ■—t a-., "i ■ &gt;&gt;
burned Mississippi steamer Golden City,
certain cottage at the seaside ••tempor­
T.J MTTU.
■ 'MMMfeKMlU.
wont off with D:tn Rico when only six
Another pet style is turkey red.
GrtCb^:’m ary,’.’ and hade me drop in “casual” calico.
Dan’s circus passed
with unnatural brown dogs and impossi­ years of age.
sometime when passing. This ia -the
through a rural town near Schenectady,
veritable., msa ripaa.' wm hi# friends ble black foliage hopelessly entangled. N. Y., and Lizzie rode a short distance
The Last bottle of coal oil ha* been tied
perpelu^c
many
“
eanortls,
”
and
a*
he
S5OO
with tbe clown in his buggy. She was
a remarkably pretty and bright child,
—r
he ..
is __________ a firxt-rate fel­
and on leaving her at her parents’ door
low. He has had no time to culti- in.
ho gave the family tickets for that
in It* annul* to Tu Saturday aftemooc evening's performance. Shu was infat.
uated with tho circus, and begged to
quiet.—CVr. Philadelphia Pras.
be taken along. Dan and hi* wife
offered to adopt her, and the parents
co
—Says tbe Baltimore American: “A.
&gt;y “bound novels" that lie
gave her up. She WM soon put into
knows ।
I Agree with him when he
training for horseback riding, at which
w trcuble that we have in
snnagement is due to tbe the street from a pistol ball wound in
i of these ’erescrewed poi- the' DortheasLexn suburbs. He is sup.
• far will I go with go*rip posed u&gt; have been murdered. ” Does «
establishment, six cages of wild animals,

Grain nn&lt;t Prodni

STTL

McGormick Twine-Binder!

“J*

oiAiumn: '
lailWLL SWITiilDE.

B1
American |id Foreign Marble

NERVOUS DEBILITY

HAS VALUABLE IMPROVEMENTS OVER ALL COMPETITORS

BE NOT DECEIVED
By statements niade by Agents representing other machines
having a resemblance to the McCOR-MICK. claiming their
Binders are the same,for such claim* are false, and auita for
infringements have been brought against imitations

NORTH MAIN ST., NASHVILLE, M.,
,-^nd examine it carefully before making your choice fur the
coming harvest.

ALSO

Platform, Side-Spring and Side-Bar Carriages,
and Wagons

HALL’S
flatarrhflure
sioo

Yours Respectfully,

L. O. &lt; -ROCKWR

c
s
[0
0
0
H

n Great t.

td

BURLINGTON
J^OUTE-

0

¥

m3

•rimy profeaML—

and $5,000 worth of dres: vs and dia­
monds —.V. f. Bun.

S UM ACQUAINTED WITH

THE

GEOGRAPHY OF THIS OCUMTSY,

rr

pidlN

H

F

s

CHICAGO, ROCK ISLAND &amp; PACIFIC R’Y

_
. Connecting
7 ____ .1___ ■ Link
a. between
___ __ _ tho East and .L
a t*Tae»
LJ Is __
Tho Croat
the
Weitl
Ita main line run*
ons from Chlraso
Chlmso to Council
t Bluffs patensIbroaab.Jottec,
rough Joliet. OCUwa,
Ottaw LaSalle.
Rock UUod. 1M&gt;«:

PRINCIPAU+UNI

CITY

IAMAN

U)

Slrrplng
Staptao;Cantor
Can tor rlwplnr
r.lwpInK purposes, and Palau
rM,far-.HnrmnMMMlr. naootber

SALOON where you can enjoy your “Havana"

*-4 tic. and Avoca: with braricheo from Bureau
, * Junction to Feorla; Wlltnn Junction to Muacak. ; tine. Waahliwion. Fairfield Eidon. Belknap,
.
etun. Trenton. Qapsttn. Came-

i &lt;1140.PW*. MonroeindD—Molwji

I ML Zion to Kroxauqua; Brwton loXonroe; D««
■ : Wm.bm rn li.rtlBnftl-, anrt Wln±»vw*« Atl*nKle*c&gt;

xlj rood, wfcWB OWM. *nd oimxmw a tbroagta UM
1 Ir^rou^xp^‘pS^^TretatwtUiP«in-

»Sft3S
‘S«T^g
»W UM Davanport
IMVUta.

H'

JSt.

I

»| eqatpasd. turowl bad It «ls&gt;ply perfect, sod Us
. traclclateld wltbiUMiraU*.
.

»■

“

01; “
'ERRORS OFYOUTH/

PIMPLES

MB BIMpMtr.
JOHSB. OGbEN. 4/Cod.r Sl„ K. Y.

CONSUMPTIVES.

,l*orttaaJ.M«

l» w TIHUU- of « urn.
MHH

WiH

�In
evenings

FORB1GM.
Ox the Wth the Duke of Edinburg, second

number had been running on the main line for
twenty year*.
The buataoM failure* in tbe United States

from drownins, while fishing near Baycae,

Having just returned from the East with three notust
stocks for Nashville, Big Rapids and Cadillac, which
gives us the advantage over small dealers, who .
purchase for one stere only, we are offering

fraudcd the Merchants' Bank of Montreal to
000,000. The failures for the first six months of
1881 were 2,882. with UahCltiea of 840,000.000.
Ox the 1st Third Assistant FoslmssterGeneral Hazen completed a statement of the

aggregate value, 840,977.953; Increase over

rr

r.

Manitou Springs, Col., on the fid.

Several

property was destroyedThe steamship Nevada landed at New York

were accompanied by thirty-three returning

providing for a Joint commltt

Caul Huffman, who obtained large rams

RHEUMATISM,

vlcted at Vienna and sentenced to seven years'

ackache, Soreness of the Chest,
Gout, Quinsy, Sort Throat, Sooil-

The Emperor of Germany baa accepted the
resignation of Bitter, Prussian Minister of
Finance.
There have been several recent murders of
native Egyptians.
Beklix advices of the 28th state that fresh

Scalds, General Bodily
Paint,
Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted
Foot and Eart, and ail other
Paint and Aches.

atBalta

MOXAn-BRvtm party of twenty-four
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS ABD DEALERS
IN MEDianiE.

A. VOGELER dt CO..

Coalville, Pa, oa tbe evening of tbe 1st Two

Count Wasnowbki, tbe Rumlan Minister
ntc adjourned

ashville

Wm. A. AYLSWORTH

that the majority for prohibition
*,W.
___ __

Michigan Central

jxj

Over 500 Suits
At less than yon can bay the Clotty and Trimmings.

For $4- and 85, we are selling a very good every day
Suit, many styles to select from.
For $8 and 810, we are selling a very desirable diagonal
worsted, bound and made in sack and frock styles. Other
stores get $12 for the same suits.
Our 12.00 and 14.00 Suits will surprise you
For 15.00 we can give you a suit you need not be asham­
ed to wear any place, and would cost $18 to $20 at any store.
Our 16.00 and 18-00 Suits are well made and trlmed, and for fit and wear can not be equaled.

health.

PERSONAL AND POLITICAL.

Committee

■a joint resolution * was passed authorixlnx

.committee rose. The Speaker presented n
meets** ftpm the I’realdent vetoing tbe bill

DOMESTIC.
Ix a communication to the Senate Commit­
tee an Post-offices the Postmaster-General
takes decided grounds against tho reduction
of letter postage from three to two cents, but
advocates the abolition of newspaper postage.
WaLUXOand Campbell, two Colorado pu­
gilists, fought thirty-one rounds In West Vir­
ginia on the 28th ult. The. latter was awarded
the victory, although both were badly pun-

vention met in Harrisburg on tbe 28th and
nominated Robert E. Pattison, of Philadel­
phia, for Governor. Resolutions were adopted
protesting against the so-called “boss sys­
tem;" denouncing thc spoils system; declar­
ing a» odious State or Federal repudiation,
and demanding an equitable apportionment
The Michigan Prohibition State Conven­
tion met at Jackson on the 3oth and nom­
inated Daniel P. Bsgendorph for Governor.
Tbe platform adopted reaffirms adherent e to
prohibition principles; thanks the members
of tbe Legislature who favored tbe Constitu­
tional amendment prohibiting tho manufact­
ure and sale of intoxicating liquors; expresscsJScarty sympathy with tbe State Tem­
perance Alliance, and demands the ballot for
woman.
The Democrats of Pennsylvania on the
29th ult. nominated Mortimer F. Elliott for
Congressman-at-Largv.
The Democrats of New Hampshire on thc
29th ult. issued a call for a State Convention,
to be held at Concord on the 13th of Beptem-

Annie Loffmt CaHT was married, In Port­
land. Me., on tbe morning of the 29th ult., at
and Boston markets, driving thc price to sev­
enteen cents p*T pound. Thc syndkste holds
In its. grasp all tbe cargoes to arrive upto
Otober.
Mrs. Louisa Mrtera, of New York City,
Attempted to lias ten the burning of her
kitchen fire the other morning by using kero­
sene. The usual result followed. The can

death, and her twelve-year-old son was fatally
injured.
A derailed passenger train from Long
Branch, gn thc Central New Jersey Railroad,
fell from a bridge across Shrewsbury River,
near Little Silver Station, on tbe morning of
the 29th ult. Tbe cars, filled with passengers,
landed on their sides In about four feet of
water.
About one hundred persona were
more or Jess injured, some fatally. General

chants and capitalists.
Two btocx-trxins on the Hannibal A St.
-Josqph Road collided near Laclede, Mo., on
•the 20th ult. Three men lost their lives, sev-

amount of fire-works in a store at Minne­
apolis, Minn., about which an immense crowd
.had gathered, nine pentons were more or leas
injured.
A FIRE at Larrimorc, Dakot% on the 29th

Raymond. of New York.
T?ix Republicans of the Eighth Iowa Dis­
trict on the 29th ulL renominated W. P. Hep­
burn for Congress.
Koheht M. A. Hawx, representing the
Fifth Illinois District In Congress, died of
appolexy on tho evening of thc 29th nlu. In
WashingtouThe Republicans of Kansas on the 29th ult.
nomiuated for Congressmen-at-Large Judge
8. R. Peter, E. N. Morrill, Louis Han back and
B. W. Porkins, representing widely different
sections of thc State.
The Vermont Democratic State Convention
met at Montpelier on the 29th ult and nomi-

tbe Mediterranean. The Conservatives held
a meeting, at which a resolution was passed
that the Government should stand to tbe
pledges given, and that precautions should be
taken for protecting life and property in

gland would not be assisted by France in the
pending struggle.
Ox the 29tb a steam-tug struck the rocks
outside the mouth of the Tyne. Eleven per­
sons were drowned in lowering the life-boat.
A Dublin dispatch of the 80th ult states
that a constable named Beatty was shot dead
in Kings County, and Phibbes, a large land­
owner of County Sligo, was fired at while sit­
ting in his house, but not Injured.
Dervislh Pasha on tbe 30th ult. Issued a
proclamation to the people ot Egypt, dwell­
ing upon the obedience due the Sultan.
Arabi Pasha would soon proceed to Constan­
tinople.
Ministers a levy cn masse of the population
0t Alexandri s for thc army. Work continued
on tbe fortifications, some of which were
armed with heavy guns directed upon the
harbor.
Ix tbe British House of Commons on the
1st Mr. Dillon defied the Government to levy
a blood tax on |xx&gt;r tenants without provok­
ing a renewal of disorders. It was announced
that obstruction bad been deliberately plan­
ned, and thc names of twenty-five Irish mem­
bers were called, who were charged with being
obstructionists, including Parnell and Biggar,
and they were suspended.

platform adopted favors a tariff for revenue;

LATER NEWS.

tbe people alike, gold and silver, or it* equiva­
The public-debt atatemeut Issued on the
lent; tbe strictest economy In expenditures of
tho State and Nation; denounces tbe polltlcal- 1st makes tbe following exhibit: Tola! debt
sssessment policy; favors a free and fair (Includinginterest). 81.933.208,981. Cash in
ballot, and believes that, with honest nnd Treasury, 82W.2SJ.519. Debt, less amount in
Decrcar-c during
efficient administration of the Post-office De­ Treasury. 81,688,914.462.
partment, tbe present rates of postage may June, 812,560,006. Decrease since June 30,
1881, 8151,684,361.
Icuabod-’Goodwin, the first war^Governor
WilLiam 8. Kurd, a Brigadier-General dur­
ing the war, subsequently Chief of tbe Money­ of New Hampshire, died at Portsmouth on

Order Department In the Boston Post-office,
died on the 29th ult.
Tux body of John McAullff, tbe noted 8o
ciallst and labor agitator, was found in his
room at Denver, CoL, on the 29th. He had
committed sukldo by shooting himself In the
of dccomp'sltlon, showing that McAullff had

A London cablegram of tbe 4th says that
England, when satisfied of the necessity of
armed intervention in Egypt, would call out
the army and militiareserve, comprising fifty
thousand trained men. It was stated that

30th ult. Charles J. Gulteau was banged in
the yard of tbe jail at Washington for tbe
mu.der of President Garfield. Mrs. Scoville
ftjmalned outside tbe jail until the hanging

mencement of hostilities.
Over 730 brfekmakere tn Deaver, CoL,

Tnr. bark Iris arrived at Pensacola on tbe
Island.

Rhine Valley on the 30tb ult Tbe shock ex­
tended Into Sweden.
The agent and steward of Lord Clanricsxdi,
an extensive Irish land-owner, were murdered
on tbj morning of the 29tb ult. near Lochrea,
Ireland.
England continues her warlike prepara­
tions with great vigor. Another large draft

CU was entered on the 30th ult. by unknown
persona, who emptied upon tbe floor liquors
valued at 8L80&amp;
.

Our stock in this line is the largest and finest we ever of­
fered. All Goods from a substantial school suit to the finest
dress suit. We have in stock more boys’ and youths’ clothing
■'* than the combined stock of any house in town. Our stock

F. T. BOISE,

DtGM,
BOOKS,
JEWELRY,
WALL PAPER,
WINDOW MH ADES,
DYEMTIFFH,
*

-------- MY---------

PAINT AND BRUSH
DEPARTMENT

Manx Booth, a negro girl fourteen yean

suffused »I th blood. The brain weighed forty-

Call and Examine!
F. T. BOISE.

and

William

MaMtngilL

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN
At Buxton's new brick, have full and complete lines tn

J_J It. DICli.IASO* A CO.
----- NEW------

custom:

(ientH Huriiiwiiiii^ Goodw

Pouring Mill
READY FOR BUSINESS

It yon want something new, neat and nobby, just take a look at our stock of

Eve-y day tn thc year—Sundays excepted.

CUFFS, COLLARS, TIES, HANKERCHIEFS, JEWELRY, ETC.
CUSTOM

GRINDING!

Of every dercriptlon, done tn a superior
manner, at the drop of (he hat; and
Satisfaction guaranteed.

FLOUR. MEAL AND MILL FEED

FOR THE LEAST MONEY

Kept constantly on band.

Our Graham Flour

it si Hbcral patronage from tbe fanners of this

H. K. DICKINSON A CO.

30th ult. the Harvard crew beat Yale by one

Edw^joj Fulrom was hanged st Fort Smith,

We want your BUTTER and EGGS and will allow you
PINE WOODS PRICES.
Respectfu ly

Nashville, Apr. 28,1882.

slctaua. including thc Surgeons General of tbe

Stewart

Cheap! Cheap! Cheap!
W. A AYLSWORTH.

and In some Instances afterwards burned, in

or lesion. Tbe lungs and heart were In their
normal condition, l«t there was a slight
ruffling of the aorta la tbe vicinity of the

Boots, Shoes And. Groceries

Is full up and PLENTY OF THEM. Ready pay purchasers
desired. WE OWN THE GOODS at about 70 cents on the
PRESCRIPTIONM,
dollar.
You can save money, and be comparatively happy by
RECEIPTS,
buying your goods

PROPRIETARY MEDICINES,

tats from Wellsville, West Va., collided with
the towboat John Lomas, opposite Mingo

WOOL

AGAIN TO THE FRONT!
Iilk ike LARGEST ani lost Complete Stock ot

CARDING FURNITURE

John
Medleal Museum, where tbe autopsy would
be continued on the 1st. ’
Tim: Republicans of the Fifth Illinois Dis-

surprised the citlxens by voting that no liquor

AND SPINNING

Tuk Texas State Greenback Convention

Ever laid down in any one store in Barry
or Eaton Counties.

The jury in the Crtmhu) Court at New
on tbe 30th ult., returned a verdict of not gull-

Governor.

candidate for
Tlie platform adopted Indorses

NewC aiding Mill

paid
Penslon Bureau

Our mammoth two-story double store
Is fall and running over.

ROLLS, OR YARN!
bonds at eigkty-fivnnMitaMdbQyta*tl

ter was granted to Robert Ge. eU and others,

STOCKINC YARN
Those dsetring

NEED NOT WAIT

Everything yon need from the smallest Bracket to
a $125 Parlor Suit.

■We
You can save' money and have a better selection to
from, by dealing with us than anytotber dealer.

J. LENTZ &amp; SONS.

�vrCIWITY LOCALS
LMuitohStB'sA BBIS
CATARRH OF THE BLADDER

MiM-Hfckn Allen aud mother start

Pahls. fll.at drumriaU. }
E. DA VIA A CO. .Detroit,

■Tbeu," said Ouitean.

Ders last Saturday.
came promptly, but either tbe fright or the fail

is visiting Mrs. L. O. Ciocker.
pocta'aaewtwetvw foot txrflcr a* fortbcomWm. Brice, living a short distant*
south, is building a new brick house.
1 Myer, ha* been north looking land with reA new ad. from L. J. Wheeler is un
avoidably put over to our next issue.
satlsflcd with Bonfield.
Mr. N. P. Frink is recovering from
a severe attack of congestion of the
Miss Addie Allen of Charlotte, ha*

claimed the big river our*.
Chas Sackett bad his door yard gate left

Our Druggist h selling an article called
“Aovz Cohqtuob." Ilia about the only
haitefacton preparation sold for tb&lt;« cure of
Fever uud Ague, Dumb Chill*. Intermtitan I «

night and moat of Ute following day.
COLORADO.

tbe following letter:

Just think of it I Colorado was admitted Into
the Unions* a Bute when tbeVnioc was 100

ver existed only tn imagination; now itapopo.
lalion exceeds 00,000. Twelve lines of railroad*

To the Rev. William W. Hick*:
“1. CharinsJ. Gnitoau, of tbe City of Washing­
ton. in tbe District. of Columbia. now under

about iu* mouth moved nervously,

much Btcsdl-

by with hi* coat partly off and wool a little
far ss Big Rapids.
Hally built city ot Ito size and year* there ia to
W. H. Atkinson, departed for Detroit
T!* Woodland saw mill is a* likely to go
Wednesday eve., to visit a sister, and somewhere else as to Vermontville. A bonus of Colorado entire, la dow a little more than
of tfiOO will only make It sure for that town.
be may remain t^iere.
900,000, and t* filling up kt the rate at abou1
Mias Hattie Austin has gone toNsah- The Potter woods near Nashville is a prospecttte”point, and farther thi* reporter i* rilent
viUe to spend the BunMperwHh frienda.
Charles Hammond is showing some skill as a
She will return io tbe fall—Grand
Rapids Democrat
farm work on account ot hi* last winter* fall,
E. L. Parrish of the U. 8. M. service
his honest “phis,” crutches and excellent book than &lt;25,000,000 worth of gold, diver and evpshould enable him to make a sale in every
Mich. Exchange at Detroit on Monday,
. profit to the miner* exceeding •15,000,000. In
discovered that bo had lost hie pocket
Wnm*T
book containing about sixty dollars.
population succeeded tn producing so much
Leas than half an hour before he had
wealth. The mining enterprise* of Colorado
MAPLE GROVE.
it in fat* poMMuon and whether be
lost it or was the victim of a pickpock-

L. D. Griffin ha* tbe ague.
Levi Goodrich is oo the sick list.
John Wolf ent his foot last week.
J. Kuntz ba* bu 111 an addition to hl*bouse.
Tbe McKelvey and Dunham school* closed

Gate promise a fair cropA. D.
A (light fro*t on low land* last Saturday
night
Rainy weather cause* cornfield* to look neg-

narked,

father.
Corn I* all the way from four inches to two
fact high.
Not much ripe • beat to be seen around here
July 4th this year.
A few are indulging in new potatoes, but

Willie, son of John Driacold died on Tuesday

Henry Barly Is erecting a house on the site
f tbe one recently burned.
Tbe prospects are favorable for a large crop

Joe Mix of Battle Creek, spent last Sunday
with bi* mother living in this town.
Mart Brundlge got his heel peeled tbe other

Wm. Hord of Manistee made a flying visit to
1* brother Johfi of thi* town on the 4th.
L. J. Wilson is having a wind mill erected a
Selah Mapes carries the palm on wool. He
add 100 fleece* for which be received over fl300.
West Kalamo shelled out spontaneously to

MICHIGAN NEWS.

live, consequently he will not meet hl* appoint­
ments next Sunday.
A row occurred at the little grdccry
fourth.
On the 4th of July, S3 year* ago, corn was of Peter Cevatia at JLansing on the
A letter from Hesperia bring* the new* that
night of June 80th,.in which the prop­
AaaMattcson has traded his grocery stock for killed by frost in many place* and other crops rietor deliberately shot and killed
damaged. There is no reason to complain thi*
a Xann near that village.
1- rank Haber and will have to answer
Tbe people are breathing freer now that they year. Wheat 1* not a* early a* usual but is to tlie charge of m Order.
unusually heavy.
C. H. Teatzer, a widower of Vi.
Last Friday Henn. Branch received a severe
fulfilment of hi* sentence
Clemens, dropped dead from heart dis­
blow in hl* face, from a stick be wa* turning, ease on tbe 1st.
not being securely fa*tcned iu thc lathe.
Hl*
hand* of Wm. Maaon. A. Welch received
At Muskegon on Joly 3rd Nellie Tat­
tle, a woman 40 years of age, was
pneaalon hl* wbole»hop was one big turning found dead in bed.
Her death is said
to have been caused by suffocation from
quantity,
Tbe marriage of El Kennedy and Helen Har- liqaor and a severe beating by her par­
amour, Jaa. Dixon.

Adam Aider, an employe of the 8L
Jobos manufacturing company, was
killed Jane 80th, by the bursting of an
and pleased to hear of it than Charle* Fowler* emery wheel. He leaves a wife and
four little children.
No one was prehired man.
■®ut• Rt the time of the accident and
ITKMlzaa.
the body was cold when found.
A yxwing man named Dewing CumHASTINGS.
m»ngs, teamster at Moon’s camp, near
Big Rapids, bad his head enisled so
’“Fond* 4th, that be
died in the hospital the same day.
Nearly everybody went away from home to
Wm. Glen, an old resident of Leoni,
oceesmy eseulent.
was found dead in his bare June 80th.
Cbariey Rarick met with a bad accident last
Fred Allen haa returned from Olivet college
He was 00 years old.
week.
While shearing a sheep tbe asdJerry Bissel, an ojd residentof East
mal kicked about hitting the shears which flew
wh“* """or
brick Mln last Masday.

noon was well attended. Judge Smith gave

behind

drop

were purblng and jostling through the door
leading from the rotunda to the corridor, at

r person* shall detbey can do it by

ASHVILLE IipESE,

Crunua J. Ocrraau.’

I. M. Flint 4. Ei&gt;x, Props,
propitiation for u*. Behold thi*. Thy M
wennmbly pray Thou wilt deliver mm

stood

dcvelopcment of her great industry, the same
being thc production of mineral or thc taking

Among those who have lately gonu to Colora­
do I* Mark M., more widely known a* “Brick”
Pomeroy, who went to Colorado about two
Mlsa Ida Cole of C akland Co., 1* visiting yean* ago, and who is now publishing hi* large
cigfat-page
paper, POMEROFB GREAT
relatives six! friend* here.
J. Endinger'* slater from Ohio, was visiting WEST, in Denver, which is sent out at &lt;3 per
him last week.
Unde Phillip Shafer spent the 4lh in Alien, formation concerning mince aud mining enter­
prise* of this young but wonderfully vigorou*
Hillsdale Co.
Mr. and Mr*. R. Norton have gone to Neb., and growing State. Since going to Colorado
for a three week* visit.
Ed. Slewart and wife of Six Lake* arc visit- mo*t valuable mining propertie* in the Bute,
snd from wme of them 1* now ukingout ore in
their respective pa's and ma’*.
W. II. Spencer and family of Potterville, art large quantities, ao that he bld* fair to become
one of the larp st wealth producer* in the West.
visiting at Wm. King*.
Person* wishing Information concerning Col­
B. O. Pearce and Ed. Ferman have gone to
orado and tier mining interest*, or wishing to
Jackson Co., to harvest.
BiU,Coveit ha* a new reaper. Sam Cotton invest some money in legitimate mining prop­
erties and mining cuterpriacs will do well to
and A. Qordiner have new second hand one*.
Mr. C- N. Parmenter and wife of Woodland subscribe for POMEROY’S GREAT WEBT, or
were guests at Allie Brooks’ tbe fore part ‘ of to send for sample copies of the paper, or to
write to the editor thereof, whose address is
Denver.
In thi* country are a great many person* who
BARRYVILLE.
do not like "Brick" Pomeroy, but certainly hl*
Charles Fowler’* folk* l idulged in new po energy and industry are commendable and be
I* doing so much to help develop* thc resources
tatoe* last Thursday.
That r-r-racket on tlie r-r-rolling drum, last of thi* country it I* presumed that he will in
Bunday p, m., south of Berryville, wa* a little time be fully forgiven for having positive idea*
and r. dUpositioo to explain them plainly.
The wife of Rev. MUte, pastor of Atoyria

Dacia

immediately

•m.th-i:

ciiioery to being put in place for tbe mining and
smelting of ores there this year. From all part*

Mrs. Wheaton of Leslie is visiting at Mr.
MeOmber*.
Hiram Whitcomb has a new top buggy and

man who bn» anything to do with this busings
God will curse. In the name of God Almighty

peared to be In excellent appetite, though
somewhat excited over tbe incident connected
with the visit of his relative*. At midnight
Guiteau received another visit from Dr. Hick*,
who succeeded in measurably calming hi* ex­
citement.
'
After midnight and until four o’clock on tbe
st a time. A'the last-named hour bo fell into
• sounder sleep from sheer exhaustion. Ho
into tbe cell Gultcau told him to bring bls din-

on religious subject* with him. At eight
o’clock Dr. Hick* mw tbe prisoner again,
when be made a request to have a bath, and
a*ke&lt;Hlcks to go out and examine tb* scaf­
fold. 1 Gul test । desired him to arrange with the

twelve o'clock a* possible. He also expressed
considerable anxiety lest some accident
should occur, and Insisted that Hick* should
were

“ Simplicity: or Religious Baby Talk." After
reading it be attempted to sing it, but broke

I don’t think," h

tne idea that God ln.«plrx-d me." He requested
Dr. Hick* to eliminate from hl* book* all
complimentary allusions to President Arthur.

dor and exercised for fifteen minutes. He
walked very briskly, making it rather difficult
o’clock Guitean expressed

with

chapter of Matthew, from twenty-eighth to
forty-first verve. Inclusive. He then read in a
clear, strong voice, and with good intonation,
showing 1 ttie if any nervousness. Dr. Hicks
then produced the manuscript which wa* pre-

held it before him while Gultcau read.
While Dr. Hicks was arranging tbe manu-

dyitUT prayer." He then read, in a loud tone
and with distinct and deliberative empbasl*.
tbe following:
“nv Dviao PRAraa ox th* callows.

EATON COUNTY.
Mat. Jarboe’* saw mill, near Dlamondaie

TbeBtatc Holli

When Middlerib went to Arizona and
was scared Dearly to death one night by
the yelling of a band of Iwdians, he
tned to laugh it off next morning in a
■•yinff he was only
wboep start. Then every body wished
tbi Indian* had kffled him.

vin»&lt;e diwgyman,
to impress upon the eotgregaUtrnAe great ironprta^je of tbe sonl’.
aalwatMMi, said: “Yoe way lose horses,
cattle, house, and laads. and
lx* regained; you rosy lone your wife,
yon cm get another; but if yon lo«e
yoar son!, good by, Joha!”
•

eat io his
crllsr. U1.H

ia August. Thejjr

FOWLER AINGERSOK
Have the largest stock of LUMBER ever laid
down in Nashville.

100,000

Pine Lumber
A specialty

-------- If you desire fine---------

Finishing Lumber,
Flwriat Ctilrlg. Sidi«g. Solllilf, Jtsl
didst inspire Garfield's removal, and only good
has come from it. Thi* la tbe beat evidence
that tbe inspiration came from Tbe*. and I

didst inspire tbe act for which I am
murder.-d. Thia Goverment and Nation,
by this art. 1
know will
incur Thy
eternal enmity, a* did the Jew* by killing Tby
man. my Savior. Thc retribution in that caac
came quick and sharp, and 1 know Thy Divine
law of retribution will strike thi* Nation and
my murderer* in tbe same way. Tbe diaboli­
cal spirit of this Nation. It* Government and
its newspapers toward tne will Justify Thee in
curs nsr beta, and I know that the Divine law
of retribution is inexorable. I therefore pre­
dict that this Nation will go down In blood, and
mr murderer*, from tbe Executive to the
hangman, will go tn bell. Tby laws are in­
exorable. O! 'Ibou Supreme Judge! Woe
unto men that violate Thy taws! Only
weeplug and gnashing of teeth await them.
Tbe American prtM hs* • large bill to settle
with Tne-. Right- otn Esther, for their vindictivenea* in this matter. Nothing but blood
will aatiaty lb* m. and now my blood be on
them and tbl« Nation and its officials Arthur,
tbe Pres dent, is a coward and an Ingrate. Hi*
Ingratitude to tbe man that made him and
saved his party from overthrow has no paral­
lel tn bi«tory: but ibou. Righteous Father, will
judge him. Father. Tbou k nowest me. but tbe
world bath known me, and now 1 go to Tbev
and tbe ttavior without the slightest ill will to­
ward a human being. Farewell, ye men of

to impart increa*e&gt;! emphasis to fa!* words by
tbe jieculiar facial cxpreMlou *o often ob»
was peculiarly notices We when be alluded to
Preaident Arthur, and when be declare*! that
this Nation would “go down In blood." When

and

Or any thing in the building material line, ’see
our etock, select what you want, and be happy.

Also Flour. Salt, Nbiitgles, I.atb,
unci ItknckNiuitirN Coal,
For talc at lowert ptjecs.

WOOL' WOOL!
We are here to buy ail the wool offered for
eaic and can guarantee the top of the market.

HIGHEST PRICE PAID FOR

WHEAT, OATS, CORN, ETC.,

FOWLER &amp; INGERSON.
Guardinn'ii Sale.

A. m. l-w ■&gt; iru uciw, in uw Uirrnr,™.
ww
probate office. In HMUngs.coualy of Barry, state of
Michigan. pursuant to license ami authority gnol-

ounty of Barry,
and described i

north east quarter
town threr 31 nor
County Michigan.

MJ1

Guard inn Nnle,
CORWIN UARl’NERaad ANNA G t RONKS,
was simply to obtain some employment which
might dintract bi* thoughts from the dread

effective.

• vide

it this morning about tea o’clock.’
i eiiv ef U*Miags,la tbe coealY
• oi Michigan, panaaat to 11-

taWelu^te^Glory hallelujah!
rope and critically inspecting all tbe fixture*

Mr. Seliuski, wife of a Hebrew, ped­
dler hving on Mother 8U Detroit, was
tyn stroke of lightning while
sitting in her door, June 80th. Several
other members of the family weresev-

«he G. R. &amp; I. nwd near Petoskey. July
IsL the engine and tender buned ia
tbe ditch and tbe express and smoking
care badly damaged. The engineer.
Ed. HuC was seriously scalded, ani
ptail agent Loxell bruised about the
head. No passengers were injnred.

Lumber!

Feet kept constantly on band­

looked over tbe sea of upturned faces. aud

1 tbe roadway outside the
tton *o tbe Jail guard, a

that I* tbe reason I am going to tbe Lordy.
Gtogr han^u^^Glory hJtelujahl
kte bead and broke into soba, but h* rallied
Uttia, and went on with his chant:

Sunday.

filled with feel-

-- ••--- ---VM. .Ml
■
table preparation.- Price, 50 cento and I
per bottle. Two doses will stop tbe chilis.

by give and grant you my body after Buck e
•cutIon; provided. however. It shad not

H. R. Dickinson accompanied bis
wife and son on their northern trip aa

WEST KALAMO.

otb r

*?*•

we* employed be appeared

tbe Scaffold,’

Hick*, and sobbed pltll ally. Still be went on:

was unable to
to finish hl* ditty:

Lordy Z
"
I”?** **mwt "rtendid thing*.

Glory hallelujah:

Dated. July 1st A. 1&gt; l»«
4S-48.
TURNER GARDNER. Gsardtaw

�The Champion Machines,

BK1OXDS.'
i*lo

Arab who

hi*

the floor
one dead, the life-bipod ; ^is own children, think thev arc doing ixAaaily- that Upaver mara*.
.
^^tveVwk-i^d
*:^» “or* than siB1Pl« dutJ - 'Their rude
Tbe difference tetwees a hungry m*u and a
c,,rr‘rd *“
; Mtorw hnr. nra mule them oMIrtoii. ;
1&gt;:
fodp
wi lb, ottirr r«r.
; Three Hundred, the Jrfohtiul rad»
J
-5 .1.1 _
t,. , to the Iwt U.M th. humMe hoa.l h.« »
d^n. to comfort, whether . wur« oil"”1"’'---------- ■--------------- ■------------Snot Were found to hate touched no vital
**
”\
WOMEN WHO SUFFER THOSE TERRIBLE
part: some were extracted; the girl* ^7, .
..
.
...
hot with the ann.r. the for.mo.1 i
_ H.EA‘’AC,.!“‘ ,
For s.*lrtott'w&gt;&lt;l Scarlett** Thred Hundred
ife wa* snored. She awoke st last after
•^Vot*
- profit
- ’; wd• "it
- ’ ta
• ”a
Fused •■Farorfte Remedy’’ for those-severe
‘“5
LSL'S*’Tra!^’±*2 “«“«
”■« ntio.1 Import^™ to

lX- I determine
just
Expenditure
drriy cured me. You may use my name. If
-•«— — ‘«it that the young msu nod
___ ..______
* the limit of '
______ *i»__
S.l
- in fi*ture» and care taking that will cn- you please, among those who ao freely testify
i-t™?
tS? ».-»/ hancn thia profit.
With the amateur to tbe value of your niedirfne. lowetberea15«^nli hut dld^n* “d fancier the keeping of swine may toraltou ot my wonted good health to Kennedy*•
be largely a matter of. sentiment and **F*rorite Remedy." Sarah J. Woodruff. Newwish him to shoot. His idiocy low­ fancy; but with the average farmer, as i burg, N. Y. Tbe *bwr* l* one of many letter*
ered him somewhat in the eye* ot . —.-a i. .----------------------- k
tbt n rerri rd b r
ennrd i tlf
her undcrstaniling, and her heirt fol11 &gt;•”*ln!r «5“tur of hmlnoM
Rondout, N. X.
n.Ml UJI LU-- U*'&lt;•_j?.
v**_.i .„i.
[ features iu tbe pig business tnat are not
Up tbe hill, up the hill, followed the Heavy sensible woman.
Her father took an j usually well euoughconsidered. Among
Brigade.
■
Did itever occur to you that a swan’s upper
unfavorable view of the young man's
these are the time spent by the pig iu
fitness to be the'husband of his daugh­
he trumpe t, the gnilop, the charge. nn&lt;! tho ter. The parties all lite in New Jersey— his nest, especially in winter, and the
Elixir Vitae for Women,—Mrs. Lydia E. Pink­
might af the light I
damaging effects ot overlying. The
barn, 233 Western Avenue. Lynn, M»», hai&gt;
Down the hill, slowly, thousands of Hu* as good a State for good men to live in
hog buries himself, head and ail. in his made the dbcovery! Her VejreuWe Compound
as there is—and the law took this shoot­
straw, breathes upon it, and this, with la a jmsitive cure for female coamlainta. A
ing-courtier by tbe collar, and bAuIed
the dampness which naturally accumu- line addrv»»c«l to this lady will elidt all ucces
him into another court to answer for
■ary Infortnation. .
this as
a ortmmm
criminal oocrac.
offense. 'The
in-;
u .
xn. m
, ahead, andfc/ dashed uu.
But Scarlett wi
Wade H amp ton positively dediDea to be a
,^°!*!,l,'bbodn,
.ndenureb uoht for continued nK. It
. up alone
Throughtho.
candidate for governor of South Carolina, and
cbarged him with intent to do bodily
ranrin?
o,r*,er werc to ■leeP °P°n a damp exprvaae* a dealre to retire from public life.
harm, and the second simply ehr
1*’— I’
I bed for one night pneumonia would‘ be
an assault.
- --------------- —
1 q«u®
to follow. The nig is sub­
laid no 1.
stress
\______
on the find, hut insisted ,
same influence*as his owner, HOP BITTERS ARE THE PUREST AND
BEST BITTERS EVER MADE.
nslV and rigorously
that, point- 1
° wiiucucw.*. uut uwucr,
righteously
'
iuffers from ilmilar ailment*.
Fought for their live* In the Darrow- gap they Inga gun at ant
They art compounded from hope, malt, Bunotlier
person,
was
an
—
r—
Overlying is worse than a merely wet ebu, mandrake and dandelion.—the oldest, be«t
assault, and punishable under tbe law.
nest.because the hog suffer* from over­ aud moat valuable medldnei in the world, and
So tho court ruled, and so the jury
t be hill
all tbe beet and most curative proper­
Gallop'd «h-^ jaHwnt Three Hundred, thc found, and the suitor and the shooter heating, a* well as from too much contain
moisture. , Hogs come out of a nest in ties of all other remedies, being the rreateat
found himself liable to State's prison which they have been crowded,' steam­ Blood puriffer, I.tver Regulator and Life and
Health Keatorer Agent on earth. No disease
and fine. He was brought- from jail
ing and coughing. A winter spent in or ill health can poMdbly long exist where these
last Monday morning, and placed at the
Bu;«t. like Wtbunderbolt,
.
thu manner is quite sufficient to fasten biuers are used, ao varied and perfect are their
Chi*b&lt; &lt;1. like a hurricane, '
bar of the court to receive bls sentence, a diseased state* upon a herd of swine operations.
Broke through the mas* from below.
which
I
shall
give
in
the
words
of
tho
They give new life and vigor to tbe egvd and
Drove through the midst ot thc foe,
so treated, for they are as liable to Infirm. To all wbo«c employment* cause irreg­
Judge:
i'iuAg' d up and down. U&gt; and fro,
lung disease and rheumatism ns a man. ularity bf tbe bowel* nr urinary organi, or iron
Ro-k- ffaahtn* blow upan blow.
••You have bc-en convicted on the Hogs contract disease through winter require an apetizer. Tonic and mild stimulant.
Bravo IkinfoklBen* and Greys.
Whirling their Kalx-rs in cirefsa of light.
second count of the indictment against exposures, in the way named ; wheeze Hop Bluer* are invaluable, being highly cure
And some of ua, all tn aniaxo,
you. Tho jury, in their verdict. Call and cough until warm weather, ami tlvc, loulc and stimulating, withoutIntoxicat­
KTho were bel ltor nwhlo from the fight.
.
your crime assault and batten", thc word then measurably recover. Yet. during ing.
And were only standuur at gnac.
.
No matter what your feelinga or symptom*
atrocious being left out. It *is difficult
When thc ilark-&lt;nuffl&lt;-dKuaKlau crowd
this period thev show no thrift, make are. what tbe disease or ailment ft, use Hop
Folded its wing* from tbe left and the right
for the Court to reconcile the terms of no growth, and hence are a source of Bitters. Don't wait untill you are sick, but if
Aud railed them around like a cloud. Oh.' mail for the charge and tho battle were this verdict with the . facts, k being loss continually. At the approach of you only feel bad or miserable, use Hop Bitters
wn
.
clearly laid down in the law that any the next fall season they are found to at once. It may save your life. Hundreds
When our own good rc&lt;Vco«ta sank from
have been saved by so doing. $500 will be paid
battery with a dangerous weapon, or take cold easily, and they require care­ for
sight.
a case thev will not cure or help.
Like drops of U&amp;o&gt;l in a -lark gray sen:
that causes blood to flow, is in its ven­ ful management to get them through
Do not surfer or let your friend* suffer, but
And we turned to each other, muttering nil nature atrocious. If this was not a case
in. nrwl nrm. rh—rn tn n... 11 of. Ritter,
to killing time. Upon being dressed an ure nnd urge them to we Hop Bitters.
atontayed.
Remember
Hop Bitters I* no vile, drugged,
“Lost are tbe gallant Three Hundred, tho of atrocious assault it is difficult to tell
ulcerated liver and bepatised lang tis­
Heavy Brigade!'*
.
what an atrocious assault is. Thc jury sue are often found. In fact, any ail­ drunken nostnim, but tbe purest and best med­
icine ever made; tbe“Invalid1* Friend and
seem to have found this verdict in the
ment which comes from disordered Hope,” aud no person or family should be with­
But they rode. Uko victors and lord*.
fear that the Court would impose too circulation may overtake tbe pig that is out them. Try the bitters to-day.
Through the forvwtu of lance* and •words;
severe a sentence if they found in ac­ inadequately sheltered, or is crowded
In the b-art of th*- Russian horde
The total length of fencing in the United
cordance with the facts. You have
in tlie uesl. even though in the best of
been convicted of assault aud battery
Dawn with the bridle-htnd drew
shelter.
Uniter favorable conditions States 1* upward* of six million mllles, and the
Thc foe from the saddle, and threw
by taking up n loaded pin in the pres­ tho pig will go to a distance from bis coat over $2,000,000,000.
Under f'-ot there In the fray;
ence of a human being, as it appears,
resting-place to deposit his droppings
Rang* d like n utorni, or shod like a rock
EIGHTY-FIVE DOLLARS LOST.
without any effort to aseertain its con­ but if overcrowded or chilled bo will
In thc wave of a stormy day;
“You do not tell me that your husband is up
TUI, suddenly, abock up -n sb&lt;* k.
dition. but with tbe most criminal leave his nert with reluctance and re­
snd entirely cured bv so simple a medicine a*
Htaagered the ma** from without:
recklessness,
and
handling
tbe
same
in
Fur our men (*Uopcd up with a cheer and a
lieve himself close at hand,again crowd­ Parker’* Ginger Tohk!” “Ye*, indeed I do,"
■bout.
such a way-that it was discharged and
said Mr*. Benjamin to her neighbor, “aud after
And the Rn.**lnna ■urged, and w avered^and the charge entered tho body ot the ing in among bis fellows in the hope of we had lost elgtity-flve dollars in doctors' bills
securing that sensation of warmth so ami prescription*. Now my husband feel* as
reclei
Up the ^111,-up tho Yaill, up the hilt out of thc voting lady who was tbe victim. You grateful to him.
liail no business to meddlowith the gun,
Keeping pigs in this way secures no
passing your hand over the hammers,
a igorous growth
gain worth the name, while by giving
the triggers, etc-, and are guilty of cheap, needed comfort for tbe farm or Of Hie hair it often promoted by u-dng Parker’s
Glory to each nnd to all, and thc ch.trg* that criminal negligence—that is the precise
they made!
. ———
village pig. he can be made to pay a Hair Balsam. It always restores the youthful
color and lustre to gray hair: gives it'new life
Glory to all the Three Hundred, thc Heavy term. The Court assumes that your
better profit than any other beast upon arel removes all irritation and dandruff.
Brigade;
•
character has been good, and although
the farm, when all the advantages are
•The three hundred of tho He*,. Briinid- a sentence of imprisonment for i wo considered, tbe small investment in
A brother of Wilbur F. Storey, of tbe Cbica
r./th.Scots* years,
fine of $509. or both, might
who made this famous charge w. ro
the Kent**
years, or a fir
each pig.provided he is bredoud reared go Times, is p*stor °f • Methodbt church at
Greys nnd thc second &gt;qua&lt;irou of tan Ennis-, 1...
. ..
'• io consideration oi your
kiHcna the ramatad ruf the Heavy Brigade I
unfvovcd.
by the farmer under economical condi­ Chester, 111.
KUbR-uucntiy wnaiiing up toi their *up;k,rt.
Mipitort. good &lt;
character,
‘....
your. ..
youth, and the
tions. and tho early age af which he
.
...
., . there
.i
. ..
The covering capacity of charity as applied to
I?"
».*
-«J-- 1i conviction
that
was
no •intention
can be matured for market, for he will, siu is said to be remarkable; so is that of the
camp, who hod been ridlugby hillside, urn! the
/•
trump?t&gt;?r. and ^h-’gog, thc orderly, who had i tslifttevur to injur-* an\ one, tilt- Court
if properly bred and fed. be ripe at any Sherwin-Wflltam* Paint- when applied to the
been dose bebin &gt; him,
•
will spare yon the disgraoc.of a M*rm in
age. The well-fed lamb approaches Interiors and exteriors of building. Sold by F.
rv»r*»’T&lt;rvf*wvrir i -rrw
State prison ntul impose a iuiv of
him in tho requisite of being tit for T. Boise. _____
tULKllAG wlTH A GUN.
*500 and
and costs
costs of
of the
prosecution, and
nnd to
to
S«500
the prosecution,
market at an early age- but when we
About $25,(»).0U0 art now given to foreign
be held until payment is made.”
see thc product of the ewe (a unit) oj&gt;- missiou* where but $1,000,000 waa given sixty
HtUillMg a Wife, and What Happened to
A civil suit for damages has been
pO'iLc thc brood sow with her seven to
Him in Another Court.
commenced against the young man. aud
ten pigs, it takes no complicated esti­
Over in the wild* of New Jersey, not he begins to get a realizing sqnse of tho mate to show the brood sow is thc most
far from the outskirts of one of ito most crime he has eo^nitled. 1 have Rented
profitable in enabling us to secure tlie
populous and prosperous cities, a wull- the subject too lightly perhaps; but
largest possible returns early from an
. WOMAN CAnV“ HEA’JH OF WOW
to-do farmer tills his acres, and raises I wished to exhibit the spirit in which
unpretentious outlay.—Ltre Stock Jour­
fine crops and a fin© family.
Ono the offense was nerpetratod^and to en­
MPATHZt V.niy?,?IS THE HOPE
nal.
daughter, just verging*on womanhood, force thc truth tnat carelessness in the
is tbe bcautv of thc farm, not to speak use of fire-arms is n sin and a crime
Tea-Growing in South California.
of thc handsome cattle, nor even the punishable by the statute. You may
lily and sunflower that adorn the fields. not put other people iu jeopardy, even
Thc humorous paragraphera of the
country hatfc nefe’r ceased to call at­
She is a comely maiden in the eyes of in sport, without guilt and peril. Aud
the young farmers, who offen met her almost every newspaper you
read tention to the failure of the Govern­
ment tea-orchard oluLlEheil in South
at the frolics and tlie feasts which tho mentions instances of fatal or of fear­
California by Mr. Lc Hue, the late
country so highly enjoys.
Innocent, fully sad examples of this foilv an J
Commissioner of. Agriculture. It is
amusing and verv ancient are the pas­ wickedness. Thousands of families arfe
times tha; rural life has cultivated with in mounting because of the death or
more than probable that Mr. l.e Duo's
ambition to elevate his office to the dig­
the soli in all n«.-s, as history, sacred dreadful wounds of loved ones by what
and profane, doth recortL
nity of a Cabinat position caused him
is called the accidental dischaigo of
Not these only. Her beauty had cap­ fire-arms, l^ist week a father was fined
to neglect his tea interest in the South.
tivated n youth’from a neighboring city, $500 for leaving a loaded gun where a
Certainly there was no other excuse for
tho failure, for'tea has been successful­
- who, income evil hour. h-H&lt;Lcro*#ed her child goi hold of it to hisinjury. Pistols
ly grown in Georgia apd South Caropath, and fell a vi. tiin toher uncon­ are mode Into toys, and ciiHiincnriay
scious charms.
More skilled in the one another with’ them. Parents who
1 ins during the past forty years.
Tlie
ways of the world than the less-cultured permit their children to hare such play­
Georgetown (S. C.) &amp;w]uinr, which
men who wor»hi]&gt;ed her at a distance, things deserve fine and imprisonment.
has some interesting facts in connection
he boldly marched to the siege and de­ Men carry concealed weapons which
with the subject, says that the failure
manded a auick surrender, fie pressed often kill those for whom thev are not
of tho government tea-farm at Sum­
his suit with ardor, and began to reckon intended. Tho law very wisely forbids
merville wm due to bad management.
himself already a conqueror. One day. the practice, but the law Is randy en­
Lc Due and his friends asserted that
while she was*sitting and enjoying his forced. Fire-arms hare their lawful a»e.
the climate was too rigorous, but, as
•mETABLE COMPOUND.
fun and folly, he seized a gun that was It is becoming mure and more neces­
tea has been grown in the sajue climate
standing in’tho corner, and pointed it sary to have their protection in our
for forty years. It is probable that Le
directlv toward the breast of his in­ house* in the city, and in some parts of
Due's lack of management was too vig­
tended bride. He did not know it was the country. There is no adequate pro­
orous.
loaded. He did not think of doing any tection of life and propertv in New
Dr. Forster, who live* near George­
harm. Probably he thought to frightcn York bythe civil authorities: and. while
town, has demonstrated that tea can be
l.JkMtCS UTEHI. Ao.
her, and then to have amusement over Svemment is the slave of politic*.
successfully grown in that climate, and
tbe ides of a. lover shooting the object
ere will be none. 'Therefore, self­
thc tea produced therefrom is pro­
of, his affection. A very coarse kind of protection requires a welMortifled cas­
nounced by a Baltimore firm of Import­
courting thh. of coune; but there is tle, and suitable weapons of defense.
ers to be equal iu strength aud delicacy
rxiuaxss vsrrr xm&gt; rntMBtrx n nnu.
nothing in life that is so silly as muety But such is not the purpose of this let­
of flavor to the best imported article.
that goes by the Dame of fun. We have ter. I am writing to parents and to
The Georgetown paper says that there
nil been there, and know bow it i* our­ young people to inculcate a deeper
are now 1,642 tea-plants, ait exhibiting
t* a* w*u.
selves. But of all the ways and means sense than now prevails of the sacred­
a splendid and vigorous development. | Kimnm w u thC3r*KIDNEY jHgFLAIXTa &lt;rfEither Sex
pleasing a maiden, this courting ness
af
humaa
life.
and
of Some of these plants, which have been ,
with a giro’ caps the climax of tbe cu­ the exceeding wickedness of trifling
Flu«I l»e«S Belief l« Its U*e.
allowed to grow without pruning,' are
rious. Tbe Wise nun in tire Book with iL
Ho^r many agonizing in­
six feet high, with a circumference of
of 1’ruvwb* wiid, 2,50c, years agy. stances of sudden deatii have we
ten or twelve feet- Even to on inex­
■'There Ire three things which ant too
perienced eye the most cursory obser­
wonderful for me, yea, four which 1 loaded, haa been pointed at a friend in
vation will reveal the fact that these
play; and, in an instant, a soul has been
plants, in their healthy and magnificent
buried into eternity. Weiay: “What growth, afford jncoctestable proof of
the way of a ship in the mid*. of the a fool to trifle with a deadly weapon!”
the ease and facility with whleh they
sea. and the way of a man with r. But there are thousand* of such fools in
may be cultivated onr
maid.*’ • But if Solomon had lived iu and out of New Jeraey. If they were
'The plant is an eve
all sent to prison the jails could not con­
hardy. 7 he coldeat
tain them. But they are worn than
winter, (severe as it
took. They are gn-at
conviction of the young mtn
courting with a gun is a
and right., for which the
largely indebted to
jHwecutor, who
should be upheld, and

wheal Into Hue J" and

-_«

,

W (]

T

TD

K

WAGONS ONLY $60.00.
A COMPLETE LINE OF

Buggies, Carriages, Wheel Harrows and
Cultivators, Mounted Seeders,
and 4 kinds f Plows.

REED’S GENUINE SPRING TOOTA HARROW
ROAD SCRAPERS, SQUARE DRAGS, GRIND STONES,

V

’V

LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S

SEWING MAOHINES.
PLOW POINTS for the Oliver Chilled, Wlard, Three Riv­
ers, Bryan, Cale, Curtis, Dodge, Robinson
'
And many other Plows.
before buying1 complcU ‘^ock of firet C,B“ Hardware and Fanning Tool.. Call

HERE WE ARE AGAH I
-WITH A FULL STOCK 0F-

Wagons
OUR LINE BUGGIES
■E MB R ACES

Timkins,
Dexters,
Phaetons
White Ghappel and Coal Boxes, hung with Elliptic Springs.
Two and Three Spring Democrats.
UR WORK IS ALL DONE UPON HONOR. BUGGIES

made from Second Growth Hickory.
OOur being
Tops are lined with All-Wool Indigo-Dyed Goods and

Warranted not to Fade. W. H. Atkinron, a painter whose
work has never went back on him, has charge of our paint de­
partment, and can be relied on. Bolts, Dash Feet, Body Loups
and Stays are made from Norway Iron and the entire buggy
ironed in a desirable and superior manner and warranted.

Until you have thoroughly examined mine. Spokes made
from Second Growth Stock and the wagon is made to stand
the wear and tare of our roads.
E3TI HAVE IN STOCK A NUMBER OF-gt

Fur«t Ac Bradley’w

Chilled Plows, Hay Rakes and Cultivators,
Which I will Sell at Cost to Close out.

I^KEP YOU EYE OTV THIS.

50 Wagons
FOR SALE!
OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE

WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH

THREE INCH TIRE,
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING

BETTER THAN COMMON TIRE.
We believe the Three inch Tire &gt;8 destined to come
into general use. Call and see them.

Sold by C. L Glasgow, Nashville, Mich.

BENTLEY BROS. &amp; WILENS- ■
Hastings, Mich., Sept. 15th, 1881.

�MAIN

Ural Pm

BM...1L1S b.RI
real snob is a fair

MmkMM

Mont* Cristo, ren­
dered so famous by Dumas’ novel, and

AND

jereoo tn the world. We **v he eatm—He
rather earrieil to tbe doctort otfae, for be

Physicians

ADVA1&lt;CB.
tbe tip.of the»oM tdtheend of tbetail.
and therein lies much of her strength as
market for Southwest stock.

TuiNawshaa

, bad all tbe urniptoma of-i
_
weletutw formation in the [
bladder. The usual iaslninicntal examination
revealed the prerence In the bladder &lt;»f a urio-

one

carets fino. a stunning fellow, and altogether lovely. Bia eyes are gems ia
pictures of gold. His hair is of gossamer fineness, and is plabod with mH the
precision, exactness, and eternal fltnass of things that was unapproachable
in the construction of Solomon’s temple.

itoeb*.:

HU boots shine as if made out of the
Editor and Proprietor. ■ skin .of Aaron’s golden calf. Hi* neck­
tie, that little tiebit of rainbow spangles
and kaleidoscopic hues, is tied in knot
too lovely for mundane eyes. His coat
is unique in design, and bears the im­
press of foreign lingers, and In the but­
tonhole of which is the inevitable blos­
L1H.OB Oa/aBBS.
som that for stunning brilliancy rival*
those that grew in original Paradise.
That ring on Iris finger Is composed of
many precious siouoe. His voice is like
the'gentle murmnrin" of thc brooks
commingling with the music of the
sphere*. Within his heart is a pent-up
Utica of sunshine And smiles that break
forth in the greatest exuberance on tho
slightest provocation. When he walks
ShtirW.
he walks with a pomposity that makes
* 1A1U0PJKT EKrtCUPAL CHURCH—A. D. Naw- vou think him monarch of all he sur­
Al Tn».«aa*or. ot oo wrj BabbaU. fa 10* veys. aud oxcitcs tiroamaU boys equal
to the street parade of an animal show.
He is supercilious in the extreme, and
has tho most profound contempt for
VY LODGE NO. 87, K- of P-. meets at ito
Castle Hall. Nashville, Michigan, every everything that has a tinge of common­
Fridkv evening, for thc encouragement aud ness about it Ho would sell his birth­
support ot all worthy, true, steadfast and lion- right for a miserable mess of aristo­
“l.
8- OrnoSntoNo.C,C. cratic pottage. Strip from this man his
mask nnd ho would flee to the Moun­
tains of Hepsldam. Take from him his
bolf-oonceit and he would be a misera­
Miscellaneous Cards.
ble waif on a shoreless sea, or a wreck
upon a desolate island, with no sail
from day to day.—Chicago Trbune.
H. YOUNG, M. D. Office east side of
. Main SV, Nashville. Office hours from
Encourage thc Boys.

OHNO STRONG.

djashrillt giurtury.

U I .

I

W

A. FOOTE PHYSICIAN &amp; SURGEON

Boys are, after all, only human, and

like to be encouraged u well as men.
Succssor to Dr. Wickham. Office and
L•residence
at Dr. Wickham'slaic
office.If a man never received a word of en­

. ,

H,v0 Signed or Endorsed the
Following Remarkable
Document:

—An outbreak of scarlet fever at

1 inch
ainebes

Per EtprMi— 4A5
Atfaatte

.

.. -.................. -

grand

..

rapids

_

division

milk bv vt “Kennedy’s Favorite Remedy.” together
"ber i k.’T
STATIONS,
« «Ll»v
nuAe him comfortable,
and leave him to live out all hi* days. Tbe Mn—rr.fflW
--------father a family outcome of this was that the patient enjoy*
.•
-- in* Chemteta, SI Flatt at., How York:
g&lt;xxl health to thia
this day.
was suffering from the disease.—G»- good
IM
eetlc. •
kK*3s
St
—-If
If some
s
fatality should strike from
t&lt;-n«ive!y
u*ed
by
oar
people
are
as
follow*
:
1
1
tOT
_
phyaiclaxuB
and
th*
Public
prefer
tho earth all professions, the mercan­
Is
a
combiuatiou
of
vegetable
niternative*.
It
_____
Charlotte .
tile, the madlcaJ, the legal aud the 1* pleasant to the taite, adapted to both rexe* .
a Oapcing Porcua Floater to all
■Raton Rapid*
dcrioal. society would survive them and ail*Ke^i* effective in afloniins initnedlntc
Rlrea Ju—•
Wacemaider them eno of the very
all.. But paralyze tho erm of tho farm­ relief in aU exue* of Kidney trouble. Liver Coin- others. Wo cona-ucr tnexn cao ox -nc e. &gt; Jackion.
er for one year—let the plow for one sea- plointe, Conadpallon of tiw Bo wets and deraugt- ft.w reliable houaehuld remedies worthy Detroit...
pcculir-rto women. At the same time _,-_.,*&gt;dence Thev arc superior to all
w, nui &gt;UU In the furrow, or th« bient*
punfie. the blood, thus giving tone and tircogth
coafldence. ine&gt; uro aupyior o
husbandman’s labor fail, and the loco­ to tho •votem debilitated by disease or age. other Porous Plasters or T.inlmonta for
motive would, rest du the rail, ships •*Dr. Kennedy's Favorite Remedy” forsalchy
,1a,.
STATIONS.
rot in the harbor, and famine would all druggist*.
. .
stalk through the land, and every house
Detroit..
toi
ti
be filled with mourning.—Illinois State
Register.
—To wash silk handkerchiefs, put a
Charlotte
physic
Vtrnioeivlll®,.
flat-iron on tho stove, and when It is
KMhvine.
hot, wash the handkerchiefs through a
When other rrmodino fall *et
SbWl’riiie','.*.*.
very warm soap-suds.
If they are
Haatnond.....
much soiled, pass them through two
Grand Rapid*,
.waters. Do not rub tho soap directly
on tho
handkerchief.
Then pass
Through Cparhrs and Sleepier Cars to and from
through another warm water without
Grand 1 tepid* and ]&gt;&lt;-troIi. All train* connect In
(THE HEALTH BKIN'GES.)
■uun* depot at Detroit with Great Western. Grand
soap, and . thoroughly rinse them;
HUkR
kSMBDY
AT
LAST.
Prien
Beta
Trank
and Canada Southern Railways.
LONG KNOWN AS
squeeze dry nnd iron immediately, to
MEAD'S Medicated CORN and BUNION PIASTER.
£. &lt;j; BBOWN,
H. B. LEDYARD.
prevent tho colors from running. A PENGELLY’S WOMAN'S FRIEND I----- SSriiTSSbit of muslin may be laid over tho
handkerchief to absorb tho excess of Every mother of daughters should
moisture when tho iron is first applied.
know about it—because it brings
For white handkerchiefs, blue tne last
health
rinse water. Thds washed, they will
boot oaa ilurdc. la Solid Black
look almost as good as new.

am

*-

Winr F"T *-----

X

ORGANS

TO GIRLS

—J. V. L. asks concerning "the rea­
son of long baby-clothes, •’ and wishes owing u&gt; Painful, Scanty, or Profuse Period*
to know ••Gow long they ought to be.’’
Tho only reason that baby-clothes-are
made long, in the interest of the baby,
is that its lower extremities may be Threatened with any of the complaint* and weak,
kept warm.
It follows, then, that noise*, to which, cron tho Leal thia* t, aro »ut?»oct,
during hot weather they are needless,
save to exhibit tho taste nnd pride of
tho mother in her child’s wardrobe.
Whenever they cease to subserve the or ncarlarDown. withits attendant Ulceration
ono object of keeping tho baby’s feet pains in various parts of the body, headaches
warm, they become a positive injury, backaches and exhaustion.
weighing down tho little limbs and
impeding their free movement. Skirts
a half yard in length for a new-born Who suffer from Hot Flushes, either before or
baby arn long enough to subserve tho
purposes of protection from cold ; as tending tho Critical i'crfcxl. Bloatlnc. Numbtbe child grows, socks and stockings De«». VVaacfalne**, Palpitation. Etc.
All there, and many other dl»tre«»Lnc eotnand shoes can be nsed to keep tho feet
warm, .and allow thorn free movement plainta, utoally attributed to otbrr caure*, but
without exposure to cold. There arc really peculiar to tho rex. WILL CERTAINLY
sensible mothers who discard long BE BEUEVED by Zoa Iffiora.
LEVCORRHCEA RUINS THE FINEST
clothe* entirely.
It is incomparably
easier to take cs.ro of a baby in short
clothes than ono in long, ns all mothers
Abundant te»timon!als I bare, from the best
know.—N. Y. Tribune.

glWWHS

IRON

TO YOUNG LADIES

TO OVER-WORKED WOMEN

BITTERS

To Women Advanced in Life

couragement from neighbors on tho
!
BROWN'S IRON BITTERS are
looks of his farm, the condition of his
j a certain cure Ibr all diseases
fences, or the good quality of his stock;
I requiring a complete tonic; espeif ho never received on approving "yes”
I daily Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Inter*
from his faithful wife as he relates the
1 mittent Fevers, Want of Appetite,
TA R. C. W. GOUCHER, Electlc Physician and prospects and his plans, he would he
Ixmm of Strength. Back of Energy,
JU Surgeca, is prepared to answer all calls lhe most miserable object of pity in the
I etc. Enriches tho blood, strengththat may be mads for his service*. OQlca.and world. Yet, there are lots of boys who
| ens tho muscles, and gives now
live at homo and work on thc farm till
. lilb to the nerves. Acts like a
YTTM. PARMENTER, M. D. Office over they aro of ago, and tho father thinks
I charm on the digestive organs,
rice, will furnish privately to persons asking.
V V Hull’s Drug store, Vennontvillo, Mich. because it is their duty they should not
| removing all dyspeptic symptoms,
Keep
Tools
in
Order,
complain. It is their duty, but it is also
Addroea.
PENGELLY, M. D.,
• such as tasting thc food. Belching,
tbe duty of the parent to prepare his
Whatever business or trade aman
____
txmwaiaeiODer, neat ttuw auu insurauca
: Heat in thc Stomach, Heartburn,
(S-Adbg
DruffgiM.)
KALAMAZOO,
MICH.
boys
to
earn
a
living
for
themselves
by
follows, tho first thing he should do is
27 Stops, 10 Sets Reeds, $90. ' etc. The only Iron Preparation
AgV Prompt attention given to all buslneas
Eooa to advance to SIS. Order now. Remit by
entrusted to my care. Conveyancing a special­ teaching them solf-depcndcnco. Give to keep his tools in order. No matter
that will not blacken thc teeth or
Bonk Draft. Fiat Othce Order, or Rectetered
ty. Office opposite Union House.
your boys an interest, be it ever so how deft a barber may bo in handling
JyUer. JJoxed and shipped without a Moment a I give headache. Sold by all Drug­
small, in your growing crops.
Make his razor, if ho has not tho capacity
Delay. Catalogue Free. Addreaa or call upon
gists at $1.00 a bottle.
them
feel'that
they are partners in a and tbe pride to kenp his razor iu order,
LIEB 11AUSER, Merchant Tailor and dealH j ▼ r || T ft obtained for tn-chreicjl derk
BROWN CHEMICAL CO.
Uli L 11 I 1 »*. medlcxl. orothrrrocapoumb
If he will never bo fit for a barber. And
• er in Ready Made Clothing. 8ee me a certain sense and not servants.
Baltimore, Md.
before you purchase clothing. Fits guar- they can manage to pick un a pig or two, tho samo rule can bo applied to all of
I A I L II I V m*rk°t»‘t»*1|»bH&lt;* ,r
QLEMENT SMITH,
let them fatten them for their own use, tho mechanic arts. Carpenters cannot
Caroalo. A*»f£tira.-nn. hslerferanre*.
and have the proceeds to spend as thoy. do good work nor half as much, with
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.
TOMAH B. RASEY, Express and Draj
Attorney at Law(
Goods and Baggage carried to any pu
choose. If you can afford it, give them dull or rough-edged tools. Blacksmiths
the village.
a colt apiece, or a calf, aud let them are always botches who do hot know
ALBERT M. HARRIS,
You will how to temper each tool fnr its special
•pedlhy. Ofica at Probate court room'
IRAM R. DICKINRON, manufacturer of raise them for themseltes.
(io*ltr h lUtesl Oilier, w
and dealer in Hard Wood Lumber. Build­ not miss tho price- of tho animals nor uses. But all of these rules are equally
I
FRAMES.
VELVETS. MATS. GLASS.
•xnmluailhii*.
and
»*ci&gt;re
tag Material a *,ecl*ltv. C**h paid ter log*. Mill
the food they consume. Besides, you applicable to farming. Successful farm­
Claim,, trit '
and yard on Sherman St, at M. C. R.R. crossing. will be gainer in the end.
AMERICAN OPTICAL CO’S. BOXES.
Tho boys ers have their tools in order.
JAMES A, 8WTEZET,
A ’Dian
will
feel
that
they
are
of
some
conse
­
cannot do half a day’s work with a rus­
AMES FLEMING, practical Jeweler and
Watch-maker. Ciocic*. W a tehee, Silver and quence. They will work with a better
ty hoe or plow, nor is tho work of any
Attorney &amp; Counsellor,
Pinttd Ware, Jewelry nnd Optical Good*. Rock­ will and take more interest in the farm. account when it is done. A man on a
DETROIT. MICH.
ford Watche*a specialty. Repalringand Engrav- They will begin to loam the use and
chargi, and ad'lM rnu of It* patentability. Alien:
farm who does not know how to har­
respoodencr irtfelk confidential. -Prices ■&gt; low s
lur done in a workmanlike manner.
value of money. They will begin to ness a horse or hitch it to a plow is not tho** of say rellai&gt;l«- agency.
AKE
HO I SE,
learn how to save and’ accumulate. If worth his board. But the novice would
RNO STRONG, plain and fancy jod rnnter. the boys want a small piece of ground
say any one has sense enough to put
The beat facilities for doing work of anv
LOU18 BAGGER
to plant.in something that will bring in the harness ou the horse. Not so. ft
L. I*. Cole, Proprietor.
a few dollars give it to them cheerfully takes practice and a nice discrimination
1 Siwrtemen. pleasure Mekers, o- picnic partlcand encourage them to do something to know7 how to applvtbo draft central­
;
wul
find
fhl*
place and home a ple««ant plaee t..
for themselves.
Furnish them with ly on a horse’s shwufders. ’ Frequently
Zimmerman Fruit Dryer
-J *t&gt;end x day’* rccrralloij.
A rew eteamer an
.low n»&lt;l tor Terma. Adder..
abundance of row boats : abo ft,bins tackle, bait.
TACOB O8MUN, Uvervman, bam near Wol- plenty of good.nubstantial reading mat­ with green hands or drudges, the upper
ZIMMERMAN FRUIT DRYER CO., Cincinnati, O.
colt House. First clas* turnouts at reason­ ter. Never under any circumstances strap to tho hames is too long and tho
able rate*. Special rates to commercial men. make a boy feel, that ho is under ever­ lower one too short, in. which case, in
Funeral and wedlng parties furnished with car &gt; lasting obligations for the bread he
a half day’s work thc skin is worn off
risges on abort notice.
eats and the clothes ho wears, for while the lower point of the horse’s shoulders
he works be is certainly entitled to and the horse rendered untit for urc for
I
■ W Suitable for the Parlor, Chapel, Lodge, Church or Sabbath School.
TT1LLOGO a BELL.
wear aud eat Encourage tho girls al- a week iix the busiest season of.the year.
-IX Mill. Planing and
sv, by giving them tho products of a Or the length of the straps may be re­
IlKIliF DEML’BIPTION.-----cow, or of a portion of the poultry, and versed. in which case the draft is up
in other ways. By thu* adopting such and the horse is choked for breath. Or
food Turning In all its branches.
a plan as we have intimated you will the ignorant and unthinking man may
/'I HAS. W. DEMARAY, Dealer tn Watches,
Vrcfoek*, Cna Jewelry and Silverware. Being find that there is a better feeling, more pay no regard to tho length of tugs, or
cheerfulness and happiness, mid much i In' proper regulation of the clevis,
Jess discontent than wo often see on the making the plow run on’ts nose, or re­
farm.—San Frassdsoo Chronicle.
quiring much physical exertion to keep
it in the ground. In cither ease It is
OHN BRAUN, Shoemaker. Special ■ atten­
—Douglas B. Slovens was to have as hard again for tho horses, the work
tion given U&gt; Am and sewed boots also
wedded,
a
few
evenings
ago,
Mrs.
M.
repairing. AH manufactured work, msue from
is badly done and the plow-maker is
beat of Mock and warranted. First door south M. Humes, a widow prominent iu so­ cursed all day.
.
Boise’s hardware.
cial circles in Ixigansport, Ind. At
It takes skill to run successfully a
the hour fixed for the ceremony, the harvester, a thrasher or a corn sheller.
To Whom it May Concern:
27 STOPS, as follows:
bride-elect was arrayed in her wedding We have soon whold seta of hands not
robes, the guests were assembled, and do a third at a day’s work, for thc rea­
tbe minister stood ready to pronounce son they did not know how to do what
UOMtEOPATIIIC
the ceremony, but the bridegroom they are at. They cannot keep their
failed to put in an appearance. Inves­
tools in order.
They do not know
tigation revealed his presence in a just how light to keep their belts, or
Office ftrat door east of Opera House! and down-town saloon, in a state ot intoxi­
if a machine throws its belt they do
near residence on corner &lt; &gt;f Washington and cation.
The marriage guests ad­ not know how to remedy the evil. They
State directs, NashrUie, Mich.
journed tine die, and the marriage will cannot comprehend how the slight
not take place.
_
change of a shaft or p’uliy will remedy
yyovcoTT house
—A curious proof of the prevalence the evil. If a journal heats or cuts,
Nasfe-vllle MK’lilfiran.
cf the English language throughout they would as likely pour in emery dust
A. S. Footf., Proprietor.
the globe is affbrded by a statement in as thev would apply the right kind of
the "Newspaper and Bank Directory of oiL There must be bnuM. experience
the Worhi/» that out of 3AJ74 newa- and coxAmon sense in keeping all kinds
naperaand periodicals which were pub­ of tools or implements in order; and a
other bote! in Bany county. Titre flnrt-el*** R*un- lished in 1880, no fewer than 16.500 man whokires oat to work, who bdin»o». which
.1
were printed in our own tongue. Near­ derstanda farming, is worth three who
TME BEETHOVEN ORGAN.
ly half the remainder were in German, are mere drudge*. And yet men claim
to
be
farmers
who
neither
know
nor
JjV
a Quarter in French, and tho greater
bulk of the rest in Spanish. Daily pa­ practice thc first principles of farming
pers numbered 4,0-20, and the gross —keeping tools, implements and ani­
27 Siczs, 18 Fall 8$ Gallei
Reeft.
circulation of lhe whole periodical mals in the proper condition to do tho
work intended. And three-fourths of
press is estimated at 10,595,000,000.
■FECIAL TEX DAT OFPEtt TO THI RKADEUS
all farmers will be failures until they
HABHTILXffi,
•
MICH.
learn and practice their profession.—
Iowa Statz Register.
form the young vagabonds that grow
J^ATHJBUN HOLIE,
up in that elty, Mnncheater and other
—A dying man startled the people of
N orthern towns. During the past year St. Albarn, Vt, by confessing various
DATED,
two men who were reformed and edti- crimes of which he had never been miscaVdfln board thia- teasel were appoint­
ed i|0 command targb merchant a hipa,
and ier so were made chief offleers.
•ividence that he told the truth.

Prompt attention to calls night or day.

R E W. MURRAY. Office over f. T.
Boise's Drug Store. Residence Corner
Reed aud Middle Bte.

D

NO PATENT NO PAY.

S

H

INVENTIONS
U-

J

INVERTORS

ONLY $30

Km 'faq.-?"

Photographer’s Supplies.

aww

O

«*- GIVEN AWAY.

nip AWV The Famous 27 Slop Beethoven Organs
S90.00

J

Physician and Surgeon.

,

ivixiarssfTw

A. BUSH,

BOOT AND SHOEMAKER,

•thi

Addre^rSl upon DANIELF? BEATTY, WASIUHTOI, REW

�ways occupy a conspieious place in his­
tory, and as the years rollon the anniSion of old Chicago, which will take fire
and bum with historical accuracy. history of
country. On that day
"Over 250 peragna,” says the manager’s Joined Abram &lt;3 auficld, tanptinh Presi­
glowing anuotfl^ment, "will take part dent of the United Staten, was idiot by
in the rep roseuution, as citizens, fire- ayile assassin, and received wounds
which resulted in bis death at Elberou,
horse, will battle with tbe blaze, boats N. Y., seventy-nine days afterward.
on the lake will take away the fleeing The world was horrified at tbe act.
popalance, railroad trains conveying To-day thc streets resound with cry of
engines from other cities will dash into “Extras” announcing the hanging of
the burning town, nnd every thing pos­ the murderer. The case of Chas. J,
sible will be done to give tbe event the Guiteau who has just expiated on tbe
air of reality.”
L
scaffold a crime far greater than that
of regicide, its swiftness has not kept
Tbe withdrawal of Mrs. Christiancy’s
pace perhaps with tlie impatient chaf­
answer to herbusband’s suit for divorce
ing of an outraged people for short,
ia presumably a surrender. If so, there
and decisive retribution : bat the work
is a probability that this protracted
of the excutioner was none thc less un­
scandal will soon disappear from the
erring and nufallible when tlie hour
public sight. Mr. Christiancy will doubtwhich had been named in tbe wisdom
and mercy of the court ot thecondemnnot surprising to any one, in view ol
man’s death toted ite arrival upon Jtho
the evidence latelv adduced. He was
dinlposte of the gallows. The country
an old man when he entered into these
should be satisfied as far as tbe accom­
bonds of matrimony, and be will be an
plishments of the immediate fact is
old and wiser man when loosed from
concerned. The atonement bos been
them. __________ ___ _ __________
swift and sure enough. •
Is that animal better that hath two TAt eight o’clock thia evening, Dr.
or three mountains
on, than a Hicks went in to nee the prisoner at
little bee that feeds bn de
bis request. At this time be asked Dr.
and lives on what
Jis every morning Hicks if he coaid secure Mr. Rasa’ con­
from the clouds,ztbe storehouse of sent to take a bath. Dr. Dr. Hicks said
Heaven! Can a man quench his thirst that Mr. Russ proposed that he take a
better oat of a river than oat of a full tub bath in tbe cell. He expressed his
cup, or drink better from the fountain thankfullneas for thia, and then asked
that is finely paved with marble, than Dr. Hicks to go out to the scaffold and
when it swells over the green turf!
see that it is all right and then ask the
warden to let the trap spring as soon
A California woman who, confessed
after 13 o’clock as possible. He.read
to her husband on her dying bed that
a poem, which he styles "Religious,
she loved another, was forgiven. Then
Baby Talk,” and undertook to sing it,
she got well, and he is now suing for a
bat hebroke down, saying “Ita no use ;
divorce. She pleads that he condoned
I am no musician.” The be said: "My
the offense, and he answers that it was
heart is tender, and I don’t think I can
only in conditions of her dying, and she
go through the ordeal without some!
broke the contract.
emotion. I presume that I will weep,
This,
however shows no weakness on!
The times are pretty hard, and ns tho

editor of the Boston Commercial Bulle­
tin looks over himself, he thinks that
"married men, this season, will have to
smoke five cent cigars and flirt with
their own wives.”

Postmaster-General Howe has in­
formed Senator Ferry that he does not
think the redaction of letter postage to
two cents to be advisable, bat he advis­
es the removal of all postage on news­
paper*._____,
A man is most anxious to learn that
which ho knows will make him most
unhappy. This made the poet say that
where ignorance is bliss it is folly to be

East Tanas Boys and their Pun.

,,
,,
A farmer, Mr. IL. who resides about
one and one-half miles from here, was
very desirous of becoming a Mazon, and
• . j .u e . *
,
oommumeted the feet towreral of tbe
young
this l&gt;l«ce.
place, nuiouc
among whom
roun« men of tbl,
an agreement was made to organize a
lodge oii their owl account, which they
immediately did? Perhaps no lodge
was ever more speedily formed and it
was astonishing to the gentleman to
find so great a number of young men
belonging. A hall was procured and
tlie next night, set for his initiation.
Dnnng the interval a fall programme
of exercises was gotten up, and cos­
tumed with masks and sheets, were
ready for preliminary business with
some delay and considerable ceremony.
Mr. H. was admitted into the ante-room
where, after a few mysterious rapping*
and groRiiings, a masked individual en­
tered tbe room accompanied by another,
who held in one hand a large, open
book and in tbe other a skull, almost
causing Mr. H. to beat a hasty retreat.
He was now requested to pay over the
initiation fee, nnd after so doing, his
name should be written ou the pages of
the book held by tbe recording secre­
tary; but must be done by his own
blood, taken from his own arm; accord­
ingly, bis eyes were bandaged, also his
arm Irnred and bandaged, a little cold
water poured on his arm. nt tbe same
time pricking it slightly with u needle.
While all of this was being gone through
with the recording secretary was en­
tering bis name with red ink in the
book. .After administeriug a slight
oath the two returned into the lodge
room. The application was now pre­
pared, "neither naked or clothed, bareluot uor shod,” and admitted into the
lodge room. Unable to see he was led
therein by two worthies; a most fearful
oath was then administered. After
having been tossed in a blanket, rolled
in a barrel, seated io a tub of water,
made to attemptclimbing greased poles,
seated on a hot gridiron, pieces of ice
run down his back, be was asked what
he most desired! vj want to go borne,”
he replied. He was soon enabled to
view the surroundings. Tbe room was
dark, phosphorus was used upon the
faces and bands of those present, tbe
effect causing iiim to give utterance to
a aeries of yells which a Pinte Indian
would have envied. Of course, these
were soon subdued. Light now borated
forth, everything
incarnate disap­
peared, and he was told tlie time of the
regular meeting of the Masons at their
ftxigc over Richards Brothers' hard­
ware store—where he . would hereafter
meet his brothers, at which time be
elwMikl see them face to face. He was
instructed in passwords, etc., also that
to teat him tl»ey would try to put him
mil. Accordin xly, lie presented him­
self in tbe hall at tbe next meeting,
which caused wonder among the fra­
ternity. and on bring asked what be
wanted there, lie replied: "Go thou to
the j
He

BING all the BELLS!

overthrow‘haa no partite! tn history. 1
But Thou, Righteous Father, willjudge '
him. Father Thou knoweet me, but
the world bath Dot known me; bat
uow I go to Thee aud the Saviour with­
out tho slightest ill feeling toward a
human being.
Farewell! ye men of earth!
Chaklu GurrxAU.
At 12:28 the benediction waa pro­
nounced. At 12:28 the noose was placed
around bis neck by Mr. Strong, one of
the guards, and tlie black cap was then
put on. At 15:40 the drop fell, aud
Gniteau’s last words, as spoken from
beneath thu cap, were "Glory! Glory!” •
Am soon as the trap fell tbe news waa
communicated to the crowd out side,
who cheered loudly. . The asBaaaiu
struggled bat slightly after the drop
nnd in a few moments he swayed to
and fro from hie weight. There was
scarcely a struggle after tlie body fell.
At 1:30 p. m. the cords were removed
from his arms and legs and at 1:23 the
rope was untied where it was fastened
to the scaffold aud the body lowered to
the coffin. Dr’s. Key burn, Hartigau,
Hall. McWilliams, Harrison, Cook and
Young, Marshall Henry,
Warden
Crocker, and several others stood about
os the body was gently lowered to thc
coffin, the black cap removed and the
hands folded. Tbe features wore ex­
pression of pain, bat were not distort­
ed. There was no discoloration eave a
d.irk red line across tbe neck, and the
deep lines running down between tho
eyes, which gave him a "sco.wling”
look in life, appeared to be drawn
deeper in death. The eyes which were
slightly open, were gently closed by
the hands of Dr. Beyburn, and tbe
coat urawn together close about the
neck to bide, ao far aa possible, the
mark of tho rope. Old Colonel Sam.
Strong, who has adjusted the noose
for fifteen or twenty murderers, says
that tlie execution of Guiteau was the
most complete affair in all its details
that he ever saw. "No man,” said he,
"with his mental faculties ever died so
game.” Other old jail officials say that
thev never saw a man die so easy.
Mabv outsiders say that no sane man
could have died so calmly. Dr. McDonal a says it was a wonderful death,
but it does not prove either bis sanity
the great question that J was inspired; or insanity.
At a late hour yesterday afternoon,
bat when a man is getting near tlie’ while tlie evening rations were being
heavenly world it is natural that one1 served to him, an opportunity was
should have fueling as the heavenly in­ given the waiter for a brief conversa­
fluence is pervading him.” He remark­ tion with the condemned man. He
ed that lie was satisfied that God in­ waa lying on his pallet dressed only in
spired him to do the act for which he a light gauze undershirt and cotton
was to suffer. As to his book, he ask­ drawers, fanning himself quite vigor­
ed that complimentary remarks in re­ ously as a proteotico against flies,
ference to the administration be eliwin- which seemed to be unusually thick
ated. He then disposed of his books, and troublesome. For a moment he
giving them to Dr. Hicks, and went kept the fan to his face peering from
over his letters, destroying the useless1 behind it to see who the visitor was,
ones and giving Dr. Hicks directions1 but on recognizing liim noded and sal­
as to getting them to bis family. He uted bim in a light tone of voice and
then discussed with Dr. Hicks the pro­ *nsy manner. In answer to the waiter’s
gram for the execution, stating that ho‘ stupid question ns to bow he felt, be
wished the doctor to offer prayer and replied, "a good dsal better than those
he would read bis favorite chapter, who are harrying me to my^ grave. . I
the 10th chapter of SL John, aud follow want you to remember, sir,” be said,
with a prayer and then read his poem.i calling the waiter by name,” that God
1 “Simplicity, or Religious Baby Talk,” will look after this quartettejsnd punish
’ and he wished the trap sprung just as' them as they deserve for injury they
he concluded.
are doing me.” What quartette do you
! At a few minutes past eleven consid- mean!” "1 mean the infamous quararable commotion was noticed aroundj tette—Corkhill, Crocker, Roas, and the
j the entrance to Guiteau’s cell and word man who refuses to listen to my petit­
j wh« immediately brought that he had ions.” “But neither of these men i
fainted dead away. There is no doub»
thal he b„ lm.n i„jer a verJ Krere could barm you if yon are as yon say |
1 preMurcot eelf-controt for tbe poet God’s man, and he is raking cure of
you.” Yes was tlie reply. "God per­
twenty-four hours and finally nature' mite a good many things to be done
asserted herself. Restoration of a sim­ nnd then punishes men fordoing them.
ple nature were quickly applied, aud I am God’s man ard God will take care
in a few minutes the fainting man was1 of me.but.tbat won’t help themen who
brought too. His recovery was follow­ are doing me this great wrong. By the
ed by a paroxvsm of sobbing. DK way, “he continued,” have you read
Hicks implored Inin to make au effort my poetry 7 “What poetry !” “Why
to ■‘•alm himself nnd meet his fate in a my poetry that was published in an
manly way, but the sobbing continncd evening paper this week.” The visitor
apparently involuntarily- At twenty confeasd that he had not. "Well, you
minutes past eleven Guiteau had re­ , should read it, it is good. I have writ­
covered sufficiently from bis fainting' tenn a lot more including a piece on
spell to hear the death warrant read,; “Fame,” "How can I get hold of it!”
and five minutes later Waiden Crocker' "1 passed it all over to Dr. Hicks. He’s
Eroceeded to his cell with the paper m1 my literary exccuter, and will see that
is hand. The Warden told the prison­ I am properly represented.” But very
er to stand up which he did and the’ little more was slid. Tbe prisoner
reading waa then commenced. The'■ talked without raising his head from
Warden said it was his painful duty, the pillow in a quererlous tone.
to see that tlie sentence wns carried
August.
out. Guiteau remained standing and„
listened with apparent composure,
shifting about uneasily at the last; At
the conclusion of the Warden’s re­
marks. which were: “The year which
in its begining had seen President Gar­
field wounded would in its ending see
the completion of the tragedy.” Guiteau
replied. "All right.” you will have to
settle the matter with your God.
On his way to tbe scaffold Guiteau
paused momentarily at the window ad­
joining the door which leads to the
ticnffold, and cast s tonging glance at
tbe beutiful acene spread before his vis­
ion—his last view of old Mother Earth.
Spreading away eastward from tlie jail
is a stretch of beautiful green verdure,
through which winds the narrow-like
Branch, extending past rustic cottages
and clusters of trees. Beyond is a high,
rolling background of green bills
brought into relief by the blue sky can­
opy a truly beautiful picture. The fol­
lowing jail officers officiated on the
scaffold: Old Robert Strong, Captain
Coleman. Captain Torrens, David
Jones, William Hudson; at the west
end enterancs door, W. C. McGill; at
the the inner grated door. Captain
Crocker.
HIS DTIKG PHATKR OK THI GALLOWS.

And call the people to

G. A.TRUMAN ASON
To prepare for the 4th of July

Fans, Laces, Collars, Fringes. Embroidery, White Goods,
Parasols, Gloves, Corsets, Skirts, Dusters and Shawls.

In ‘Visiting; ZXasliville on the 4tli You A re Invited to
MiaJke our Store Your Headquarters.
.

CASH PAID FOR EGGS AND BUTTER, SALTED AND UNSALTED

The First to the Front I
I

AM NOW RECEIVING A FULL STOCK OF GOODS SUITABLE FOR THE SPRING TRADE. INCLUDING
the Largest and Best Stock of

Ready Made Clothing, for Men, Boys, and Youths,
Ever brought to Nashville, and ranging in price from three to thirty dollars per suit.

It is asserted over and over that anx­
iety shortens life, but when a chap sees
another fellow feeding his girl sand­
wiches at a pic Die, is he going to sit
down and bid his tool be calm! Not by
a boot-jack!
"A rich man for lack and a poor man
for babies” is an old, old saying, bat it
ia just as trae for all that. Bat give as
the poor man’s babies, with all the
world of enjoyment that comes with
them, rather than the rich man’s lack
with all the curses that go with it.

steam boat took a landing. A traveler,
Fatiier, now I go to Thee and the anxious to go ahead, came to the unper­
Savior. I have finished the work Thou turbed manager of the wheel and asked
Svest me to Jo. and I am only too whv tbe boat stopped. “Too much fog;
ppy to go to Thee. The world does can’t see the river.” "But you can see
not. yet appreciate mt mission, but the stars overhead!” "Yeo,” replied the
Thou knoweat Thou didst inspire Gar- urbane pilot, "bat until tbe Idler burets
rield.s removal, and only good has we ain’t going that way? Tbe passen­
come from it. This is the best evidence ger went to bed satisfied.
that the inspiration camo from Thee,
She was such a gushing creature and
and I have aet forth in my book that so unused to metaphor in giving vent
all men may read and know that Thou to her thoughts and feelings. She and
Father, didst inspire tlie act for which Charlie were engaged, and had settled
I urn now inurdeied. Father, I trem­ right down to making a renous teable for tlie fate nf my murderer*. ntwi of courting. One night, when the
This Government aud this Nation, by gns was burning low. one of the ser­
thia act, I know will incur Thy eternal vants overheard her exclaim: "Oh,
enmity as did the Jews by killing Thy Charlie, I wonder if your mustache
smp. my Savior. The retribution in feels m nice to you aa it does to me! ”
?&gt;nt case came quick and sharp, and I
Mr. Ed. Trtrkrtt, tbe reletentad oarsmwi,
now Thy Divine spirit of retribution
w.___ .
z,___ f/w.nzl Q*
ill strike this Nation and my----

I keep the celebrated Rochester make, Stylish, Durable ano Cheap.

I have the latest styles and can fit all parties

At prices that defy competion.

In

I always keep a fall stock of

Cash paid for Better and Eggs.

Pioneer Store

— THAT------

NOT ONEIW
01 my Customers Complain

E ARE NOW RECEIVING OUR STOCK OF

GOODS FOR the spring trade
-AND ARE SELLING THEM

Clear Down!
THE CAREFUL MAN IS EVER ON THE ALERT
to take advantage of favorable opportunities.

------ FROM------

the Nashville Mill,
---- but-----

re
UNIVERSALLY SATISFIED

JNO. M. ROE.

No matter how disguised, that prompt paying customers
must make good to the dealers who sell on credit all losses
from poor debts, long time accounts, sickness, failing crops,
loss of property, or dishonesty of other customers.

That the merchant who sell on credit must take into ac
count all the probabilities above mentioned when he offers hi
merchandise for sale. And these losses amount in the aggre­
gate to a fair yearly income—a loss which he could not long
sustain were there no remedy, but there is a remedy and that
remedy is in the PROMPT PAYING CUSTOMERS.

ALL READY NO BETTER INVESTMENT

Toshow you a Urge and well selected Stock of

Can be made, if necessary, than to hire money and pay
for your merchandise as you purchase it.

GROCERIES Prints for 6 cts. yard.
-----------------------"W

CONSISTING OF

S

ZEj

Ginghams 8 to 11 cts.

Sugars, Coffees, Teas, Tobaccos, Turkey Red Table Linen 50 to 55 cts.
Spices, Fish, Canned Goods,
Table Oil Cloth 28. Floor, best, 42 cts.
Provisions, 4c.,
Boots and Shoes,
ATHE LOWEST PRICES
For Cash or Ready Pay.

Hats and Caps,
General Clothing;,
C-rocorien, Alite,

We are thankful for the liberal patronage given ub in the
past under the old credit system and solicit its continuance
under the Ready Pay. We know we can be more serviceable
io you in the future than we could possibly bean the past.
TO BESEEM IN BARRY CO.

Crockery, Glassware, Lamps,
Stone Ware, 4c.,

I have finished repairing my store and shall
be glad to see you all, and think I can sell you

from tlie

of this nation, its

In

Ladies, Misees, Gents &amp; Children’s Fine Shoes

It was a mother who eloped at Ben­
nett Springs, Nev., aud her eon and
daughter who pursued her, chastised
her companion, and carried her home.
New York claims a citizen who has
backed out of three different marriages
just as the minister was ready for tusi
neas. A shot-gun hasoften held a faint­
hearted chap up to tbe rack.

1

FOR JXZEEJIT

Linen Coats Long and Short, Hats and Caps, Gloves,
Neckwear, Boots and Shoes.

CASH PAID FOR PRODUCE.

C.W. SMITH.

COME JL2VD SEE FOR YO URSELF.

T. J. Wheeler

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                  <text>ORNO STRONG, |
Editok AMD Pxopeietor .

VOLUME IX.

)

,

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the'Sun.
NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, JULY 15, 1882.

day* bey ond the time of the con­
LIFE IN NASHVILLE some
tract in delivering the outfit, filled the
And Her Environs.
bill in every respect. The engine eepecially is a perfect little tiger, and has
—The harvester* have begun opera­
thrown water ten feet above the M.
tions.
E. church steeple, also a seven-eights
—The brick-layers are •'topping out" stream-130 feet on the level through
.the now block, a* we go to press.
400 feet of hose. Oar fire company is
—Each of our two hotel* are running’ now thoroughly organized and drilled
a free buss,and are making things live­ and ready to meet promptly, any em­
ergency needlug their services. Good
lier, as it were, around the depot
—Potter of the VtVille Hawk denies! luck to the boys.
—Probably the finest party ever held
. with emphasis the report that has
in this village came off at the Wolcott
withdrawn from senatorial contest.
—The M. C. R. R. stock yards are House Tuesday evening, in commem­
completed, anT several carloads of oration of the sixteenth anniversary of
stock have b&lt;xin shipped "th rough them. Miss Hattie Foote’s birthday. It was a
full-dress affair and the costumes of
—If those rival bass-drivera persist
the ladies were specially elegant.
in such earnestness in regard to their
Our reporter’s heart thumps loundly as
vocation, wefear we shall be called up­
he states "they were faries in golden
on to chronicle the shedding of blooa.
slipper*.” After the reception, came
—H.R. Dickinson’s busy saw mill has games, dancing and supper, the party
been idle for a few days, the boiler un­ breaking up at about one o’clock with
dergoing repair*. It will start up to- many good wishes to Miss Hattie and
her loving parents* who thus royally
—The biggest clip of wool bought in entertained them.
this market was brought in on Monday
—On Monday the party that went to
by Deacon Poole of Aasyna. Mr. P., Thornapple to enjoy the luxuries of the
received the neat little sum of $404.28 Lake, met with k thrilling experience.
from Brooks, Marshall A Co., in ex­ , The party embarks^ in three boats and
change for it.
rowed down to the lower end of the
—The attempt of the “Bubble” in re­ lake to fish. The flrat boat contained
cent issues to bring a quiet, respect­ Dr. Barber, wife and Mrs. G. W. Fran­
able law-abiding citizen of Maple cis; second, C. W. Granger, Mra. F. C.
into disrepute by falsehoods and in­ Boise and Miss Joe Downing; third,
sinuations, is not only looked upon Dr. F. R. Timmerman, mother and
with contempt by the wronged individ­ Mra. Granger. About six o’clock the
ual, but every person acquainted with party prepared to return to the land­
both parties.
ing. Dr. Barber was seated in one end
—O.E. Mapes,. G. O. Kent and Gnf. of the boat and the two ladies in the
Cummins of Maple Grove, sheared other. He arose and stepped to the
sheep for seven of their neighbors. row or center seat, when the boat dip­
The seven Hocks aggregated GOO head ped about four inches of water, righted
and sheared 5,000 lbs. of first quality and then sank. Fortunately Dr. Tim­
wool. Selah Mapes flock, however, merman’s boat was close at hand, Dr
took the palm, he securing from 101 Barber gallantly gave his wife bis arm
fleeces 200 lbs of wool.*
and Mra. Francis his shoulder, and
—In the rural ‘districts song birds reached the other doctors’ boat, to
have appeared in extraordinary num­ which they clung until Mr. Granger
bers. The woods particularly seem could row ashore, unload his cargo and
alive with them, and, from the sunrise come to the rescue. Although it was
song of the lark and thrash to the eve­ an exciting moment, the ladies were as
ning song of the robin, heard with the calm as an ice-berg, and fatal accid­
last ray of daylight, the air is contin­ ents were avoided. Had Dr. Timmer­
man's boat not been near; The News
ually filled with music.
—The Olio discharged its heavy bat­ might have be»*n called upon to give a
teries this week, and consequently was far different account of the affair.

LOCAL GIBBLE-G ABBLE

0. A. Phillips raised hi* new bart
Saturday.
Miss Bell Price is visiting friends at
Grand Rapids.
Mrs. J. L. Steyens is visiting her par­
ents at Lyons, N. Y.
Miss Clara Bullen of Parma, is visitingat Frank McDerby’s.
* Mrs. C. Holler, of South Bend, Ind*.,
is visitingat Elder Holler’s.
Fred. Appleman and family have re
turned from Battle Creek.
The firemen contemplate a picnic at
Thornapple Lake, Aug. 2nd.
Miss Eva Hawthorn returns tn her
home, Wheeler, Ind., to-day.
John Bell has his new house "out of
the wet,” and has moved in.
Mrs. D. Palmatier has gone to Mon­
tague on a prolonged visit to her son,
Sam. Fowler.
The Misses Marahal of Hickory Cor­
ners, visited their sister, Mra. A. J.
Beebe, this week.
The down town saloon has been chris­
tened “Charlie’s gold mine.” Very ap­
propriate name, too.
Miss Hattie Peckham departed for
Chicago, where she will tarry with her
mother for a few week*.
S. J. Prindie and family have gone to
housekeeping in the second story of
John Barry’s building.
M. L. Cook of the Hastings Banner
aud Chas. Brown of the Democrat,were
in the village Thursday.
"The Bubble” styles Calvin Ains­
worth, one of our most staid, steady
and upright citizens “a sport.”
Miss Vina Hoffman of Maple Grove,
exhibits a bed-quilt, her own handi
work, pieced from 36,960 blocks.
E. R. White occupies a liberal space
to enumerate some of the special claims
of the celebrated "Crown” sewing
machine.
Mr*. F. T. Boi»e iadaily growing better, and her many friend* wish that a
complete restoration of good health
may soon be her portion.
Sam Robinson has invested in a new
horse. Here's hoping that the steed
will not cause the ruin and turn out us
bad as his former one did,
W. J. Marble and wife of Augusta,
are guests at the Wolcott House. Miss
Katib
Graves and Mrs. Coulter of Bat­
in much demand.
From intimation*
—Middleville posse th a base ball
in a certain paragraph we should iudge club. So doeitChariotte. The Middle­ tle Creek, attended the party last Tues­
day
evening.
that John Potter had put him*elf in a ville nine played-.several games with
Rev. Bridenstinc will hold a conven­
glass house of such brittle qualities, scrub clubs; won.'^ecatne big-headed
J.bat it rduldn’t be safe forhimto throw and challenged the Charlotte nine to tion al the First U. B. church of Maple
play a match game. Charlotte accept­ Grove.on Sunday July 23rd.at half past
many slanderous atone*.
ed and the game was played at the lat­ two in the afternoon aud also iu the
—"The Bubble” gave Orson Swift,
evening.
1'
supervisor of Maple Grove, a bad deal, ter place on Monday. The Middleville
There will be a quarterly meeting at
club left home with banners flying and
which Mr. Swift characterized a* false
the Norton school nouse, July 15th and
.r
in this week’s Olio, and it* writer a* a loud huzzah*. Middleville was deeply
16th. Rev. II. Hughes will preach on
1
"willful, malicious, insolent falsifier, interested in the contest, and consider­
Saturday at 2:30 p. m. Love feast Sun’
one that is not legally responsible for able money was invested in telegrams.
dav morning at 9:30, preaching at 1 - .30.
anything he may say, and therefore In due time the wires conveyed the
Fred Lee."aged 10 years, arrived
thinks he can abuse and slander people startling intelligence that Middleville I Tuesday evening, journeying from St.
with impunity." As usual John gets had been beaten by a score of 44 to 4. Louis, where his parents reside, alone.
Then came a revulsion in sentimeul,
the worst of it
and where, but a few moments before, Tbc bright little fellow is a nephew of
—One of Nashville’s lively, quick­
pride was all-absorbing, hatred was H. M. Lee, and will tarry at his home
witted youths was passing a residence
several weeks.
pl the other evening when be observed written in characters not to be misunSaxton Diver of Sacramento, Cal., is
deratood. When the Grand Rapids ex­
. through the open window the young press, which bore the vanquished nine, visiting friends in this vicinity, from
i
i
lady of the house seated in a friendly arrived at Middleville,* startling scene­ which he went to the far-off Golden
I .
manner on the knee of her loverr when ; was presented to its occupants. A state 2! years ago. He has been pros­
] ✓ he began to whistle "Poll down the
large delegation of Middlevillo-ites perous and returns a rich man. Mr.
11
blind^,” in the key of E. It is not nec- were at the depot, waiting to welcome D. is an uncle of Wm. Bartley.
l ,
esasry to state that the injunction was
their dusty disciple* of the bat. They - Z. M. Lester and wife of Marshall,
-speedily obeyed.
had a coffin. Its cover was ornamen­ are visiting at G. A. Truman’s. Twen­
—A local in The News, two weeks ted with a wreath to the memory of ty-three years ago the latter a.ted in
ago, riled the "Babble” pool so badly, Rege French, captain of the nine, two the capacity of salesman for the form­
that we fee) called upon to produce it black flags, skull and cross-bones and er, who was then doing a heavy dry
a whisky bottle. This much was ob­ goods business at Marshall.
That enterprising merchant, L. J.
The Greenback editor of “the Bubble" la in served, when the hosrae'braying of a
mammoth horse fiddle smoto the still- Wheeler, has a new advt. in this issue.
.against N. 8. Barnes. After securing Penfold’s neas of the evening air, amidst a lively Mr. W’a. stock is always complete, and
accompanment of cow bells.oystcr cans, any article you ruay.deaire in the gen­
tin horns and fire crackers. Captain eral line, can always be had at the “old
French gave one wild look at the cof­ pioneer," for a small amount of cash.
The new officers of the Blue Ribbon
fin, then jumped from the off-side of
the train and escaped by swimming club are: Mias Emily Bissell, Presi­
the river. At last report* Middleville dent ; Mias Edith Fleming, Sec’y;
wa* somewhat calmed down, and her Miss Nellie Truman, Treasurer; Mias
—‘•The Babble" wa* an usually vene- dab bad lost itatrfg-headineM.
Bertha Wood, Organist; Mrs. Wheel­
mou* last week, and good, honest Re­
er and Dr. Barber, Leaders. The next
publicans are inquiring how ft is, that
We were pleased that circumstance* meeting is to be held at the Christian
a reputed Republican sheet, whose ed­ permitted us to attend the installation church the first Sundayiin August.
itor is holding a position at the hand* of officers for Barry Lodge No. 18, K.
C. N. Dunham’s new billiard room in
of the Republican party can be so ter­ of P. at Hastings on Monday evening the basement of F. T. Boise’s drag
ribly interested in a red-beaded, ran- 1**L The following is the list:
store has been fitted up iu good shape
tankerous, office-seeking Greenbackand opened to the public. It contains
•er, that he would by intimations and
two celebrated "Monarch” tables, cost­
liibeh upon honest people, lay hitnself
ing nearly &gt;700, and expecting to ran a
M. of E.—David Goodyear.
liable to libel suits. Look sharp "Bubt mpcrauce place, the proprietor de­
M.
of
F.-W.
8.
Bentley.
ble",.or you will loose your self-styled
sires none bat orderly customers.
reputation to clean morality, and then
Sanford Traman, aged 12, one of
Nash villa’s most enterprisiag youths,
—^Tie drilling of the fire department
The lodge is officered by clean, earn­ will make a good business man as a
by Mr. Newkirk was completed last est men, and we predict the coming fanner some day. Three years ago he
evening, and our people are generally year will prove the moat pnwperoua of came into possession of a lamb, and
Mtiafied with the step that the council any since ainee ita organisation.
resolved to become a wool-grower.
From this small beginning he has been
Ui* reported the Naabville Bugle very prosperous, now being the owner
blew a blast at a Greenbacker "in east of ten ewes and nine lambs. He has
Barry ’ the other day ana be wa* pickraised more, but for the paat two seas
P ” We don’t vouch ’for th© story.
on* they have been let on the “half
Haatinga Dmunrat.
the wool and half the increase" plan.

t

j TERMS; 81.60 rzx Yzam
I Credit Subscriptions &gt;1.78.

NUMBER 43.

speak, be can address himself directly to Rev.
WOODLAND.
Morrison, who we ieel confident, will be pleased
to enlighten him upon any Important subject,
Wc .bad the best temperance meeting of the
Cowen. Rooms,
i
Noahrille, Jfclyi 10, 1882. f
necessary for discussion during service.
Writlst, we arc not a professional coward,but
Mix Carrie Baitinger has come home to
Present,Cblptnsn, President; Boise, Barber, we confess to having shivered a little, when we
Demaray, Dickinson, Lee and Lentz, trustees. felt the earth tremble, and saw your majestic
Absent none.
form stalking around armed with that most Ing than Items, thia.
Minutes of last meeting read and approved. formidable weapon, your tongue, and we im­
M. Baitinger Is tearing down the old smith
Tbc following accounts were presented and mediately seized our pen to donate our X to.
,co motion allowrt!:
your paper, but oh 1 Writlst, you turned from Holmes’ brick
Oroo Strong.....
us 'ere you approached. Why did you, but we
H. R. Dickinson..
breathed easier when you had fled.
toes every day to see bow long before they will
Mart Cooper,.
Dick Graham.
be large enough to me. This must mean some­
HASTINGS;
H. Partellii,
thing.
.
.
N. Murray,.
While Mr. Schrey's people were at Nashville
Dr. Polbemus baa located at Freeport.
&amp; Balbban,
O. E. Gilman lost his stallion Saturday, It the Fourth some deviltry inclined person en­
Levi Everts.............................................
35 was worth 1500.
tered their b ase and rumag-?d through the
Chas. MeMore. ..
8 00
Rev. Carnahan gave a sermon on the life ot rooms but found nothing to their liking.
H. Flint,................................................ 3 00
Last Saturday evening three fellows who had
&gt;
W. 8. Powers,........................................ 6 00 Gnlteau last Sunday.
•' Motion by Barber that the vote taken at the
The croquet works resumed business Mon­ been taking too much cider, made it a point to
stop beside the road and scare every team which
meeting held June 2fith, 1882, countermanding day, with thirty hands.
came along. As Frank Dillenbeck andjhls moth­
order for fire engine, lx- rescinded.
er were driving along they scared his horse so
Ayes, Barber, Boise, Demaray, Dickinson, this place during the past season.
James Rock started for New Mexico last he nearly over turned the buggy. Buch rascals
Lee and Lentz. Nays, Done.
week Thursday. He says he Is going to stay should be looked after.
On motion council adjourned.
three years this time.
F. MoDekbt,
A sou of John Cole got his eye too close to a No. 3*^4. O. O. F., District Deputy Grand
Clerk.
President.
fire cracker and consequently had to carry his Master, A. J. Carpenter instaled \hefollowing
Council Rooms,
I
head In a allng for short time.
officers for the ensuing term: N. G., John VelNashville, July 12, 1882. f
It Is reported that J. I. Reel has purchased U;V. G., Hiram Waltz; R. 8., Henry Holme*
Special meeting called by the President.
a track of landon tbc north side of Gull Treasurer, Lewis Bs-rden; I. G., Robert Ban­
Present, Chipman, President; Barber, Boise, Lake and will fit It upfor a summer resort.
ner; O. G-, Tbadlus Rogers; R. 8. N. G., John
Dickinson, Dcmaray, Lee and Lentz, trustees.
The board of education elected Loyal E. Hines; L. 8, N. G-, John Wonderilch; R. 8.
Absent, none.
Knappen, president; C. H. Bauer, Secretary V. G., D. A. Miner; L- 8. VI G-, Ire Jordan;
Motion by Barber, that the fire engine be ac­ and G. H. Tomlinson, Treasurer, on Thursday
cepted conditionally. Said conditions be that
Rct. Knappen gave a temperance sermon
tire satisfaction, also locate water. Motion last Sunday morning. Tbc church was decor- |
WEST KALAMO.
carried by ayes and nays as follows:
ated with the Stars and Stripes, and in the |
Ayes, Barber, Boise. Dickinson, Demaray, evening services were held, befitting the | Harvest b-'glns this week, but next will bring
। the rush.
National holiday.
On motion council adjourned.
A few mornings \ since the people of ; Wesley Baker raised the body for a log house
i F. McDerut,
E. &lt;
Hastings were quite forcibly reminded of tbs I on Friday last.
"Where can 1 get some harvest belpl" Is the
Clerk.
President.
event which was to takcolace in Washington
on that day. Strung aerosh Main street from all absorbing question.
]
J. B. Hartwell and wife, of Potterville, paid
WEST SUNFIELD.
the bank to the Goodyear block was a rope of
।
which was attached tbc figure of a man bung a visit to We.t Kalamo last Saturday.
New potatoes.
An uncle an aunt from Ohio, has been visit­
by the neck and over It was the name of "GultI Harvest wages booming.
ing John and Charley Andrews tbc past week.
Hay is of excellent quality.
Frank Griffin has moved his barn on the
Our Odd Fellows have been quite bpsy of
Wm. Hill has a new ox team.
late. On Friday they held special sessions of basement recently erected. Tom Niles doing
D. Shafer has a bran new well.
tbc Grand Lodge and encampment, to confer
John Lundquist had the pleasure of greeting
| Amos Downs has the best com
those degrees. A degree lodge of the daughters
a niece, all the way from Sweden, who arrived
; Mra. IL Downs la quite poorly.
I Will Wltheral has a new horse.
members and the following list of oflicers:
BeautlfiA, bountiful grain growing rain.
The snake story in the Olio, from Kalamo
Norman Bailey, N. G.; Mrs. IL A. Bailey, V.
C. 8. Childs lost a young home last week.
G.; Mrs. Martha M. Cook. Financial See-;
I
Jim. Wai*h’a barn looms up In the distance. Mrs. Mary Murphy, Tress.; Mrs. Libbic Wil­ this town canxwoduce.
|
Mra. John IMnaldson who has been a con­
Scarlet rash In the family of William Beecb- liamson. Warden; Mrs. Esther A. Stanley.
stant sufferer fofto long time departed this life
I We “stayed out" to be all the more apprcla- Maynard, R. 8. to N. G.;
on Saturday mornrag last
Give to tbc goose all honor. It has been d!»
tel
•
Baptismal services st the Kilpatrick church Mrs. Ed. P Brown, L. to V. G.; Mrs. Gordon, •overcd that geese will keep the larvae or slug*
of the potatoe bug clean from the plant If giv­
Montgomery Bell and family of Vt. Ville
en the range of the potatoe patch.
•pent Bunday tn town.
Miss McMore closed ber school In the Mat­
MAPLE GROVE.
Special mention should be made of Rev. Mr.
te.»n district on Saturday last. It there Is a
MorriMiti'n missionary sermon. '
Johnny 8houp was bomeSaturday and Sun- practical and successful school teacher it la
Mn&gt;. J. King who is traveling for her health,
Miss McMore. She has taught four terms of
and now In Iowa, writes she Is much better.
Mlas kibble Burnham U visiting her brother school in this district, and the longer she
Dr. Green of Vermontville wax summoned ;
taught the better she was liked, and a host of
to the sick bed of Benjamin Gosa, Tuesday ot j DaQ Wolye uu)e boy fell off the step* and friend? regret that they are to loose ber valu
able services.
-------this week.
.
,| fr^ctur^i
fractured Bn
an *arr ,...
&lt;&gt; severely poisoned ।
Baltx, Flmcr Palmer and BUI Logan 1
with sumach, has under Dr.
&gt;r. Capenter’os treat- | have
•
retum.il from the
tbc north.
LOCAL MATTERS.
returned
ment nearly recovered.
Mia* Lettie Howland of Ne**gu Co., te rlait- ■
GOOD JUDGES
UWU
Thursday of last week was the anul versay of.■ Ing relatives and friends here.
Concede that the fln&lt;
jeakand largest stock of
the Woman's Missionary meeting which met at
Uncle Philip Shafer Ir going to take a ride. '। Men's,
Y'outh's sod Ba
Lpya/fiothlng, and Genta
We noticed he has a new top buggy.
rier laid down in Nashville,
Furnishing Gooods eve
At the approach of haying and harvesting,
""bindem A Chipman's.
Married, July 3rd, Mr. Johnny Hill and Miw is on exhibition * P
the 4ti&gt; commandment should be emblazoned Mary Phlnisey, alao Mr. James Checsman and
MOSEY TO’XOAN.
'
upon every hearthstone In large capitals.
MIm Libby Wagner.
On Real Estate at low ratoci Interest of
Miss Ika Hayes, of O., who is spending the
Douglas Slade had u runaway, up setting the
&lt; Dgs ds Dtmm
summer at Rev. Fast's, was the guest of Mrs. J. buggy and throwing him and his father ouL
Fast over Sunday, as wen- her cousins Hattie The old gentleman was hurt quite bail and the
‘‘ VI N
R’’
Pure Cider Vinegar bp&amp;e barrel or gallon,
and Dolph. .
top mashed off the buggy.
X- R. Died*sox.
\ftera short vacation, school has again beets
Two young men went a Fox hunting and by
resumed In the Hunter district. Favorable re­ the looks of them when they returned, they got
SHEEP 1
ports an- wafted to us of Miss Rawson's com­ to Sunday school Justin time to sec some one
A few •beep to let in 1
Enquire of
C- H. Brody, Naahville,
cdfon me
petency In teaching.
else riding off with the game.
at Hasting*.
. (
Henry Hunter and wife sojourned to Saranac
C. R. Palmer met with a run away last week,
Clkmzmt Smith.
last Saturday to visit their daughter Jennie, In which he was quite badly bruised. He has
WILL D)
(Mra. W. Hlkok) and returned on Monday no use of his right shoulder and it la feared
Potato bugs will die
ly sprinkled
much pleascdwith persons, place and things.
that the bone may be fractured. His wife and with Paris Green. A fii
, pure article
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas of Odessa, were visit­ child also received slight bruises.
AkGuasoow’s.
ing at their son’s, Mr. B. Thomas,the fore part
Excitement run high at a certain place place
HT Full Hoe of Wall
of the week, and expressed themselves sur­ last Sunday. It was thought at first that death
T. BOISE’S.
prised at the improvements made on his farm. or something worse had taken place, but on
Wm. Hill had a valuable horse spoiled last closer Investigation It was found that a newly
LOOK H
Wednesday by having Ito leg nearly cut off be­ married couple were out in the yard hugging
On and after Joly 1st,
low the knee by a corn cultivator. It was left one another while the old folk* were looking great downfall in stock I
the old reliable marketpi
&gt;: Choice weUstanding in the field and ran and jumped the on. Yum, yum.
fatted Beef from 6 U/12
fence.
Another bone whittled up by a corn cultiva­
play.
H. Ron.
EAST MAPLE QROVF.
tor. This time a fine mare belonging to 8. J.
FOU1
Green. Same old story left unhitched, became
cythe that will ata
Haying has commenced.
frightened, ran away, When will men learn
Wetmore,” warrai
K*i Glasgow's.
Cherries are getting ripe.
discretion.
NEW'HO^fcT’
Our exceslve modesty forbids us to announce
The
Noah
ville
Hoose,Yyfing
been thoroughly
Allie Brooks has enclosed his barn.
that we are very fond of strawberries and never
K veryone is barking after the whooping
refuse an Invitation to partake of them. We

COMMON COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS.

N. Downs is now nailing the shingle on bls

ranlagc to ourselves, and a possible fortune to Quail Trap on Friday of last week.
the purchaser. They are ata discount now,
John Bcechlcr spoiled this item for us. We
Intended last week to tell you that he had gone
to Ann Arbor to receive treatment for hernia, than It was last end wheat la about two weeks
but he only went to Charlotte, and is being
Andrew Ruse who has been boarding with
treated by Dr. Merritt of that place. John is a
spending a few day* visiting with bi*
parents.
The Fourth of July this year left the young
men of this vicinity under bad circumstances.

1 for farmers.

HARV1

i. Grain Bakes,
Glasgow's,
A FEW THOI

; or will trade for »
A. C. &amp;TAXTOM.

bow

John Walsh might remember the Sabbath day

himself and a hind, the wonder U that be could
find anyone willing to desecrate the Sabbath

If that young gentleman (!) who annoyed
others, m well as myseif last Sabbath, by his
wUl sit on the first seat hereafter. If be must

FARMERS,
The Maple Grown

IK MERE!

fug repaired the mill;

DON’T DIE

..

�-e. L.
Yesterday morning a mission ary man
canrt to our Sunday-school and told us
nil about the little heathen. They don't
have to be dressed up, dot learn the
oatechifm, nor aew patchwork; nor be­
have, nor do anything disagreeable.
And they don’t know the value of
money; they’d a great deal rather Eave
a bright button than a gold dollar.
In the afternoon, when we were ready
for church, mother gave us each a flveoent piece. °Thavi to put in the cor­
rection box,” says she. “Tho misltmary is going to. preach, and your father
and I want you to give him something
for the heathen.”
.
On the way to church Johnny said:
“It Isn’t tho least use to s'end five
centses to the heathen. They*d rather
bright, roguish
hare a bright button than a gold dollar,
-You1 m'^rjeav* off your looking, both Harry and of course they wouldn’t care about
Fo/^are m^ ri*****
five cents. And there’s no candy in,
heatbenland. so what do they want of
money, anyhow?"
MEDDLESOME MOLLIE.
Then I said: “If I only had my
button-string, we could each give a but­
Mollie never »aw anything in the way ton and spend the five ceutses fox can­
of closet, cupboard, box, bundle, par­ dy, akd so we’d be pleased all ’round.”
cel, package or letter, but what her pry­ Johnny said that was a good idea; and
ing eyes were at once concerned in. ••there's a button loose on my jacket
And it was well if ber mischievous fin­ this minute; and if I can twist off an­
gers we^e not very soon concerned in it, other before the correction box comes
’round Til give it to you, Kitty."
a very .good
Fthought it was a lovely plan, for
i» really surprising to Johnny’s buttons are just .'beauties. I
UttJe
___
—— fault* will spring heard mother tell sister Em that they
from a habit, which, perhap*, might not cost two dollars a dozen. They look
be called sinful in itself. Disobedience like gold. But when we got to church,
came of it, for. she was often led into they made me go into the pew first, and
meddling with things-her mother had father put Johnny beside him next the
forbidden her to touch. Then to hide door, so’* we couldn't talk.
what she had been doing, she would
The missionary talked a long time, and
sometimes bo tempted to tell a lie.
then they sang “Greenland’s Icy Mount­
Her mother often talked to her about ains." and then they went ’round with
the meanness of trying to spy into the
the correction boxes. Father takes one
aflhirs of other people. Mollie would of them, and they’re on long sticks
promise to give up this bad habit, but like a corn-popper, and deep, sirt other
forgot ■all her good resolutions at sight folks can’t see what you put in I had
of the first thing which seemed in any to drop in my five cents, and then
way to be hidden from her. She could mother and Em put in their money, and
net rest till it was found out, and ber last of all Johnny put in his button. He
mother began to fear it would take some held his hand close to the box when he
very severe lesson to cure her. And she did it, and then he looked at me behind
was not at all sorry when the little las­ the others, and nodded, so Fd know he
sie got herself into a scrape which was
had his five cents all safe.
so ridiculous and so mortifying that she
This morning we bought five lovely
began to think that the best work in the squares of taffy. We didn’t have time
world for little girls is minding their to eat it before school, and whpn we
own bhaincss.
were going home, Johnny said: •• Let
One Saturday morning her mother, us wait till after dinner, and then give
before going out, suggested to Mollie, oven- body a piece; and then I’ll tell
that, as she was going visiting in the father what the missionary said, and
afternoon, it would be well for her to may be after this he’ll give buttons,
do ber practicing and weed her little and it’ll save him a great deal of
garden m tho morning.
Miss Mollie money."
aid not feel in a mood for work, and
So we waited, and after dinner, just
wandered idly into her mother's room. ns we took out the candy to divide it,
She opened "the upper drawer of the
father puUed something bright out of
bureau. .
his pocket, and rolled it across the table
"Ah!” she exclaimed, in great to mother. She thought it was money,
pleasure, "that must be the new sash and said: “Just what I wanted!” But
mother promised me. I am to wear it wasn’t money; it was a brass button.
it this afternoon. What a beauty!”
••How did you come by this?" said
Sho looked with delight at tho lovelv she.
pale blue, with its delicate brocading of
'" I fotind it in the correction box. yes­
moss rosebuds.
Sho tried it on, mak­ terday afternoon,” said father. “Some
ing a veiy poor attempt at a big bow at little rascal put it in. I suppose, and
tho back, and tried to get a view of it spent his money for candy, and whoever
in the glass.
Not succeeding very he is. he ought to have a wholesome
well, sho laid the sash on the bureau, lesson, if he was my son------ ”
and turned her attention to a ca*e of
And then mother said: “Why, it is
perfumery.
Sho put some from each iust like Johnny’s buttons!’’ And sister
oottle on her handkerchief, and set Zm said; “Well, there’s one gone off
them loosely on the bureau, not troub­ his Sunday jacket I noticea it this
ling herself, to put them back in the morning, and meant to speak about it”
case.
Everybody looked at us.
Father
Then sho took up a bottle that stood asked what" we had in that paper, and
behind iho glass and, pulling out the '
। "John, is this your button?” And what
cork, took a good smell.
It almost 1 could we say but yes? They called ns
knocked her down, and made the tears ' unhappy children, and sent us upstairs.
run from her eyes, for it was the | Wc’vu both had n wholesome lesson.
•Uongoat »n.mnnU Hastily KtUng It
„„„ „0,
I I had one ’cause they said I put it into
?d ?
,r ,w° i. ,hC
? I’"’ Johnny'.,
head, For two weeks, father
r
’.bottle..
“5 t"ock
J"
F vcT
head.
u&gt;d
du
I thev
they broke on 1 Johnny
u
■ &gt; ’s...........
,
,
h
fume bottles,
and
alas!
•
U» marble .Id, »d ihe pertume ^^^^J"
^,,pluhed over, ud r» under the beMUJoh
b„
he „u ,
tul sasn.
....
.
heathen.—Ada Ncyl, in SL Nicholas.
She gazed in dismay as soon as she I
,,
.
could see anything,
fihe carried it to |
Jocko.
the window and hung it in the sun- ;
Jocko was a cunning little black
shine to dry—then tried to clean up
things on tho bureau.
While doing monkey. His mistress had more pets
thia she spied a bottle sh^ghad never than she knew what to. do with, before
she bought Jocko. She bought him be­
seen before.
“Hair-oil!” sbesaid to herself. “Now cause she had a kind heart, and pitied
I can nut some on my hair. Mamma the "poor boy who wished to sell bun to
never LttTas Eave any—now I’ll have her.
Shu was traveling when she bought
plenty.”
. —
She did take plenty. She was proud । Jocko. She took him with her Irom
to place. She went out one day
. of her hair. It wns long and wavy and ' place t&lt;
and
left mra
liim cmuneu
chained in uer
her room
at me
the
glossy She daubed and smeared the ■ on
J lefi
iwm m
oil ovet it without stint and nibbed it hotel. He did not like to be chained,
in welL It did not make her hair quite He wanted to go all over that room. He
so soft and shiny as she expected it I wondered if the chain was strong.
He
would, but she forgot this for a while pulled s^it;
He
i^it; yes. it was strong.
strong,
M she went to look if the sash were dry. pulled agkih.'it wj not strong enoi
the second pull broke it.
He was___
He went to
and blotches, where tho crimson and to go where he pleased.
green of the rosebuds had "run'’ into the bureau and tried the drawers: one
of them was not locked.
He pulled it
the pale blue ground.
She folded and laid it back in ber open and examined the contents; he did
mother’s drawer, then went to her own not put things back just as he found
room, for she did not feel like seeing ber them: be did not even shut the drawer.
Jocko next found the coal scuttle. It
just then
Dinner-time came. The bell rang and wn* full of coal. He picked the eval
rang again, but no Mollie appeared. out. a few pieces at a time, aud spread
Her mother sent a servant to her it about the room.' He pul coal all over
room to desire she would come down the clean white bed: he covered the car­
at once. And soon nt the dining-room­ pet and rugs with it; he put some in
.itu.u with
w»u» woeww the bureau drawer*. He jumped up on
door stood a forlorn figure
ful face and tear-swollen eyes, and— ! the bureau and -aw another monkey in
sweA hair.
.
I the glass.
He thought to himself:
•• Wha/M the matter with your hair, * “Ono monkey la enough around here;
my child?” cried her mother, in aaton- Pm going to kill that other one.” He
-bhment and alarm.
had a piece of coal &gt;n hi’ hand. He
••Gr-j-r-yicioiw!!” exclaimed berelder hammered away at that other monkey
^brother
• until there wm nothing left of the look'­
" Je whillikin*!!!” shouted her young- ing-glass but the crack.*.
er bro-Ber.
'
■
'Vnat mischief could Jocko do next?
No wonder. Her hair hung in stiff | He opened the toilet bottles on the
string and sticks, looking an If it were.] bureau and emptied them. He found
toade «d split shingles:
I his mistress’ powder jar and covered
“ What have you been doing to your- I hi« uglv black face with the white powself?” asked mamma.
I der. While he was doing this his mis•• I—1 oiled it with the hair-oil on ' tress came in.
your bn renu, niiunws’1
? How do you suppose she felt when
•• I have no hair-cl
nd bring «be opened the door and saw the whine
what you have beta t
She name 1 monkey, the black bod and the broken
and showed it—it
th&gt; you think she scolded or

GOW

WAGONS ONLY: $60.00
has not yet even got the upper
one of ■ the agents of nature with which
he came ih contact at the dawn of his
history—the rivers. In every age the
efforts of men to master tire rivers, along
whose courses they delight to live, have
formed a conspicuous feature of thia
struggle with nature. Hardly any other
thing has in an equal degree called into
play human ingenuity, , perseverance,
and mechanical skill. Yet the rivers arc
not mastered. The art of bridge build­
ing is on? of the oideat and one of the
most perfect of tho mechanical arts.
Some of the finest and most stupendous
structures that human hands have reared
are bridges spanning great rivers. Yet
as often as the season of floods returns
groat bridges are swept away aud dashed
to pieces. There arc few large rivers in
the civilized world that have not swal­
lowed up hundreds of thousands of dol­
lars’worth of such structures. Statistics
showing tho annual coat of repairing the
damage to bridges caused by overflowing
and ice-gorged rivers would undoubtedly
reveal a huge leak in the pocket of the
public. Even the small streams in the
country, that in the'hot days of July oontain barely enough water to wet a few
Ebblea in their beds, swell at this season
to torrents that cost the farmers many
days of labor lost on their fields in repair­
ing and rebuilding bridges. Every year
tho railroads are put to great incon­
venience. delay, and expense from this
cause.
But the damage to bridges b only ono
of tho losses caused by. the rivers. In
flat countries it is impossible, or it has
proved impossible so far. to keep rivers
confined within their banks. The most
elaborate system of levees and dykes
have failed to hold them. Tho Miasisaippi and its tributaries, along whose*
courses there are now so much distress
and loss caused by floods, arc in this re­
spect among the most refractory of riv­
ers. The Dutch have kept the ocean
out of Holland more successfully than
the Southern planters have kept the
Mississippi out of their fields. Every
time there is a great flood, not only flocks
and herds but men and women are
drowned. Probably there will always bo
lasses and disasters of this kind, but it
would seem that experience ought to
point out some better protection than
now exists. Whenever a flood occurs wn
hear of gangs of men working with al!
their might to strengthen the threatened
levees. Sometimes their efforts are suc­
cessful. but oftener the work is begun too
Jatc. We even see cities partly over­
flowed and whole villages swept away
by the great rivers. Some of these dis­
asters might be, and ought to be pre­
vented by forethought ami proper pre­
cautions: others, perhaps, would occur
in spite of human efforts.
Rivers and similar streams ahd cause
great damage at this season to roads and
highways. To a great extent this loss is
preventable, as it is often duo to careless­
ness and ill-placed economy on the part
of those whose business it is to construct
th? roads and keep thorn in order. There
are few regions in which may not be
seen roads running unnecessarily close
to the banks of riveni. and unprotected
by proper embankments. Almost every
year some of these roads are, partially
destroyed, and with singular want of
foresight are hastily and carelessly recon­
structed in the same place and without
any extra protection. Sone roads of this
kind are very picturesque, and excite the
admiration of summer visitors on that
account, but this is is a kind of romance
of heavy cost to the neighboring farm­
ers.
A great deal remains to be done in­
getting the control of the ri ers. Prob­
ably they will always succeed in break­
ing their confines once in a while, but it
is certain that with more intelligent anil
careful application of mechanical knowl­
edge, man can generally be their master.
-3f. r. Sun.

COMPLETE LINE OF

■The straighter the whisky, Uie more crooked
the walk.

Cultivators, Mounted Seeders,
and 4 kinds f Plows.

moires wtroeerra Wme tboublk
Blck-hmdacbc* I spoke alxrnt, and it hu en­
tirely cured me- You may use my name, U
you plcxsc, among those who *° *n*&gt;y tt*tl/y
to the value of your medicine. I owe the re»toration of my wonted good health to Kennedy’s
“Favorite Remedy.” 8arahJ. Woodruff. New­
burg, If. T. The above la one of many letters
of the kind received by Dr. David Kennedy, of

The use of character is to be a shield against
caltunny.

REED'S GENUINE SPRING TOOTH HARROW
mu Jewess, squme drubs, tmn stows,
Common, and hung ready for use.

SEWING MACHINES
PLOW POINTS for the Oliver Chilled. Wlard, Three RlverS, Bryan, Cale, Curtis, Dodge, Robinson
And many other Plows.

Zoa-Phora is the Health Brineor for women.
Dr. I’eogelly, Kalamaaoo, Mich., will send
In fact, we keep a full and complete stock of first class Hardware and Fanning Tools. Call
free to anv address his treatise on diseases of and see them before buying.
Our Celtic brethren object to rent*. So do
we. We don’t know of anything that looks
worse than a light pair of panU with a red flan­
nel shirt back ground._______
.’Wasmijigton, D. C. May 15lh, 1S80.
' Gkxiumkk—Having been a sufferer for a
lone time from nervos prostration and genera!
deblUtv, I was advised to tnr Hop Bitters. I
have taken one bottle, and I have t&gt;een rapidly
geiiing Drtter erer since, and I think ft the
best medicine I ercr used. I am now gaining
strength and appetite, which was all gone, and
I wa* Iti despair until I tried your bitters. I
am now well, able to go about and do my own
work. Before taking IL I was completely pros­
tratedMks. Mart Stuxst.

“At what ago were you married!” asked she,
inquisitively. But the other woman wa* equal
to the emergency, and quietly.responded. “At
the partonage,”
Nervous debility, melancholy, catarrh of the
bladder, leucurrbea, etc., are quickly cured by
Brown's Iron Bitters.

HOP BITTERS ARE THE PUREST AND
BEST BITTERS EVER MADE.
They arc compounded from hops, malt, Buchu, mandrake aud d-ndellon,—the oldest, best
and most valuable medicines tn the world, and
contain all tlic best and most curative proper­
tie* of nil other remedies, being the greatest
Blood puriffer, Liver Regulator and Life and
Health Restorer Agent on earth- No disease
or ill health can possibly long exist where these
bitters are used, so varied and perfect are their
operaliona.
They give new life and vigor to the aged and
infirm. To all whose employments cause Irreg­
ularity of the bowel* or urinary organs, or who
require an apetlxcr. Tonic and mild stimulant,
Hop Bitters are invaluable, being highly cura
th e, tonic and stimulating, without intoxicatNo matter what your feeling* or symptom*
are, what the disease or ailment is, u*e Hop
Bittern. Don’t wait, untlll you are sick, but if
vou only feel bad or miserable, use Hop Bitters
at once. It may save your life. Hundreds
have Nen saved by so doing. &gt;500 will be paid
for a rase they will not cure or help.
Do not suffer or let your friends suffer, but
use and urge them to use Hop Bitters.
Remember Hop Bitters is no vile, drugged,
drunken nostrum, but tbc purest and best med­
icine ever made; the “Invalid’s Friend and
Hope,” and no person or family should be with­
out them. Try the bitter* to-day.

The pig has sometime* been compared to a
musical Instrument. The corn et seems- to bit
A VIGOROUS GROWTH
Of the hair is often promoted by using Parker'*
Hair Balsam. It always restores the youthful
color and lustre to gray hair; gives it new life
and removes all irritation and dandruff.

HERE WE ARE A&amp;AIH!
■WITH A FULL STOCK OF-

Buggies
Wag-ons.
OUR LINE BUGGIES
EMBRACES

Timkins,
Dexters,
Eli setons
White Chappel and Coal Boxes, hung with Elliptic Springs.
Two and Three Spring Democrats.
UR WORK IS ALL DONE UPON HONOR. BUGGIES
being made from Second Growth Hickory.
Our Tops are lined with All-Wool Indigo-Dyed Goods and
Warranted not to Fade. W. H. Atkinron, a painter whose
work has never went back on him, has charge of our paint de­
partment, and can be relied on.
Bolts, Dash Feet, Body Loups
and Stays are made from Norway Iron and the entire buggy
ironed in a desirable aud superior manner and warranted.

O

tr
WOMAN CAN V” HEALTH OF W
V.'TTJ^pS THE H0PE

U. &lt;-5x-4?'£tHE

race

Until you ha,ye thoroughly examined mine. -Spokes made
from Second Growth Stock and the wagon is made to stand
the wear and tare of our roads.

HAVE IN STOCK A NUMBER OF-®1

Furst Ac Bradley’s

Bowing in Holland.
Everybody bows—nobody .nods, and
touching the hat is unknown. You bow
to everyone yon may have met when
calling»on a friend, for callers meeting
are introduced. You give an order to
a gardener or a workman, and he takes
off his hat with a bow which would not
bring discredit on a Duke. Every one
bows on passing a bopse where they
visit. I often used to amuse myself by
watching behind a curtain to see every
second man take off his hat to the win­
dow it being quite immaterial whether
any of the family are risible or not; and
every second lauy make a polite bow of
the whole body, not a mere inclination
of the head, a* our . ladies do.
Every­
body bows. Men take off their bats to
each other; tradesman do the same to all
their customers. A well-known lady is
bowed to by all hflr father’s husbands
or brother s friends, and any gentleman
knowing' a lady who is staying at a
bouse where he visits will bow to her.
I even hail a bowing acquaintance
with a student whom I never met and
did not know from Adam. I could not
intagine what made the boy bow ao
profoundedly, pntil I got some one to
ask if he knew me. 1 found I had once
met his father somewhere, and that was
the—shall I sav excuse? I should if he
had been English. Well, after an ab*enae of three years. I returned to the1
town where he lived, and there he wm,
grown into a man, bowing still.
For
•ome months we had quite a lively bow­
ing acquaintance, and there it ended, as
aforetime. I must, l^iwever, include
•• compliments’’ with bowing as tb«
Dutch idea of politeness. Every parcel
is sent home with the Mender’s comwa* calling:

bad ever

gkc

C tiled Plows, Hay Rakes and Cultivators.
WhichJI will Sell at Cost to Close out.

E. COOK.
EEP YOU EYE OIX THIS

LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S
VEGZTA'TJ COMPOTOD.
tU FEMAUC WBAK-

tier Woiub, TlMdUa** P«OLAPSVfl UTEKI, Ae.

OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE

.

WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH

THREE INCH TIRE
AS OUR HOADS DEMAND SOMETHING

BETTER TH A N COMMON TIRE
SCHOOL
BOOKS.

Jf. Y. Tribune.

8TA'

We believe the Three inch Tire *’ destined to come
Jhto general use. Call and see them.

Sold by C. L Glasgow, Nashville, Mich.

�OoinK XX
dry.

“I Will
more time

IF PAID IN ADVANCE-

“I k-k-oow It,” answered the otiwr,
“but can’t I f feel b-bad toof”

PERUSE THESE LIBERAL AD. RATES.
1.75 f • 8-t
iso

KOO

ORJVO STRONG,
Editor and Proprietor.

Nashville Jirrrtonj.
VILLAGE OFFICERS.

T UOfMR NO. St, K. of P.. meets at Ito
Castis Hall. Nash rille, Michigan, every
Friday evening, for the encouragement and
support at all worthr, true, steadfast and bon-

F

Oa»o Braono.C. C.

niNccllnueuuM Cards.
H. YOUNG. M. D. Office east aide of
• Main 8L, Nashville. Office hours from
7 tofl a. m., and 4 to 7 p. m.

W

FOOTE PHYSICIAN &amp; SURGEON
to Dr. Wickham. Office aud
L•A.SneeMor
realdence at Dr. Wickham’alatc office.

Prompt attention to call* night or day.
~ R. E W. MURRAY. Office over F. T.
BoIm’b Drag Store. Residence Corner
Reed and Middle Suu

D

T\R. G W. GOUCHER, Electto Physician and
JLz Burgeon, fa prepared to answer al) ealla
that may be made for hl a acrvlcea. Office and
XUTOPARMEMTER, M. ~D Offics over
Yv Hull's Drag stars, Vermontville, Mich.
vomtniMioner, r.eai uauite sun an»ur»uce
Agt Prompt attention given to all business
eotrasted to my care. ‘ Conveysnclng a special­
ty. Office opposite Union House.

LIEBHAUSER, Merchan' Tailor aad d’eal• er fa Ready Made Clothing. See me
before you purchase clothing. Fits guar­
anteed.
_____________
ONAH BfRASEY, Express and Drayman­
Goods and Baggage carried to any place fa

S
J

TTIMaM R. DICKINSON, manufacturer of
JDL and dealer in Hard Wood Lumber. Build­
ing Material a specialty. Cash paid for logs. Mill
and yard on Sherman St., al M. C. R.R. crossing.
TAMES FLEMING, practical Jeweler and
tl Watcb-maker. Clock*. Wstcbea, Oliver and
Plated Waps, Jewelry and Optical Gouda. Rock­
ford Watches a specialty. Repairing and Engrav-

RNO STRONG, plain aud fancy jod mnur.
Tbe best facilities fur doing work of any
printing office In Barry county. When In need

O

TAOOB OSMUN. Uvemaan, barn near Wol­
cott House. First class turnouts at reason­
able rates. Special rates to commercial men.
Funeral and woding parties furnished with car
riageo on gi-yrt notice.
T7ELL0GQ A BELL proprietors Planing
AX MUL Planing sod MAtChn^ Rreawtag

Boise’s hardware.

Physician and Surgeon.
near rssideoce on corner of WMlxlagtan’ and
Stet* Btrecu, Nashvflle, Mieh.

^ysix»TT nanAb,

&gt;

Naahvllle MleHlunn.
.
A- 8. Fotrut, Propfeietor.,
Tkta J-a

a

...,

Hold. r«tmnr to-w. J. .«i&gt; kept,

firat-cUr. Baa.

E.*
BOOT AND SHOE MAIER,
MOCIE.

by entailing the overworked debility on
their isKDr, which may beecdua he’reJltary, and be transmitted to future gener­
ations.
B

analogies to which may be found among
—Some farmers think that a co* must
some other people. Au important point eat all the tinfc when confined in the.
er, in i voice that nearly disturbed tho to be noted in the deed is the naming of stall. It is a poor economy which puts
fresh hay into a manger on top of older'
solemnities.
“Th-th-this a-i-nt u-n-one of your as a fact which, iu itself, demonstrates hay. A little towing of the hay left ,ln
the importance of the woman in tho tiie munger will dry it and make it seem
f-ffuneral!”
Upon one occasion when a very flow- family, and as a survival of tha time of renewed uiceness to cows or hordes.
ary pulpit orator was called upon* to when family names were derived, not —Denver Tribune.
make the final address at ths.burial Mt- from the father, but from the mother.
—Aprons which are very useful in the
vices of a lady who was highly esteem­ After 'accepting and establishing tho kitchen are made . of ticking; get one
ed, he'had forgotten his notes, in which woman as his -wife, the man, among yard; put a band on as' for any apron,
he had prepared* peroration somewhat other things, promised to pay certain then turn it up at tbe bottom for a quar*
after the style of Edmund Burke when damages if he should take another wife, ter of a yard, or even more, on the right
he wm describing Marie Antoinette. and rive the woman a kind of mortgage side; fasten each «nd securely, and in
Fixing his eye* on the bereaved partner on aUhis property. Thus, in another this pocket the clothes pin can be car­
of the deooMed, who wm buried in deed, one Petoupra assigned to his wife, ried or used with ease.—JF. Y. Poet.
Neshorpchrat, “notoniv'his house and
grief, the funeral orator began:
all his landed properly, present and fu­
—To improve potatoes of bad quality,
‘•When sho who now
Iles
m&gt;
peacefully before us first struck her hus­ ture, but likewise hh silver and copper by cooking, is, to peel them, and boll
.money,
his
titlo
deeds
and
documents
them
gently until nearly, done. Then
band—” here he paused sad frantically
concerning his property. ... He drain the water from them, and put them
plunged his hands into his coat-tail
pockets—“first strack her husband—” leave* himself'absolutely nothing:” and again upon the fire, submitting them to
“It is false! ahe never struck,ma,” the only clause in his favor was, that bis a dry heat; then mash them with a two
wife should provide for him while he pronged fork instead of a spoon. The
shouted the angered husband.
lived, and pav for his funeral litargies, fork breaks them into pieces, and allows
Bat the orator paid no attention to
Jtim; with glazed eye* and the perspira­ and for embalming his body when he the water to escape; thus very much Im­
This is not a singular instance. proving what arc called “ waxy pota­
tion rolling down his face ho continued died.
The Egyptian bridegroom, moreover, toes.”— Douse Treasure.
took hi* wife's jwnef and the sons, in­
—Ix»af Cake.—Take three cups ol
“First struck her husband-er-er”— stead of being called after their fathers,
sponge dough (like pancake batter,) one
then as . Ms memory returned he went were
designated
by the names cup of sugar; one cup of flour, throe *ggs
on joyfully: “First struck her husband’s of
their
mothers.
A
writer
beaten
separately,
teaspoonful
young and
romantic
fancy one-half
iu the early
in the “Saturday Review” regards
of soda dissolved in a little warm water;
this custom, in connection with animal one teacupful of raisins, nutmeg and
worship, as originating in tbe same prin­ cinnamon to taste. Beat sugar and bntinlerruption.
ciple. The worship of animals, while
For genuine wit as well as genuine nearly universal as a whole, wm local ter to a cream, make it m you do a cake
before you mix with the dough. Put in
good feeling the Irish surpass all other as to each sacred animal.
An animal
nations, and their funerals are both that was worshiped in one place was the raisins the last thing. Let it rise the
tearful and jolly, for it is almost impos­ hunted down in another, all over the lame as bread and bake an hour.—2.’.
sible for an Irishman to give an answer country. These animals were probably F. Triburse.
to a solemn question without his mother­ originally selected and mode peculiar
—If properly treated the wall-flowr:
wit getting the best of him, and his to distinguish the families and stocks of may become, 'without much trouble, a
manner is so indescribably droll it is im­
the people, like the. toteme of our Indi­ more valuable plant even than it is at
possible not to laugh at nim. A priest ans, and the corresponding customs present. How often do-we see whole
who was officiating at a funeral where
among the Australians and some Afri­ rows of unsightly scraggy plants disfig­
all present were strangers to him
can races. “There is scarcely a quarter' uring the whole'garden until they come
leaned forward and asked of a man of the globe where the tribes of contem­ into bloom, when with a very little care
near him if the deceased was a brother, porary savages are not ‘divided into we might have our houses full of their
not knowing the sex himself.
stocks, each of.wbich, like the Egypti­ fragrance a month sooner than we do.
“No, your rivireuce,” answered Pat.
A good plan is never to grow from seed,
“A sister, then,” said tho priest, and ans, reveres a sacred animal or plant, but to set apart two or three plants solely
from which, like tbe Egyptian towns, it
he was about to resume the services,
is named, and (as tbe Egyptians did) it for the purpose of propagating from, tf
when Pat leaned forward and whis­
refuses to eat that animal or plant the flowdr tops of these be pinched out
pered:
Further—and this Ls tho essential point they will soon form an abundance of
“Nayther, your rivirence; the corpse
of our explanation—among the tribes suitable growth for cuttings, which
was no relation to me at all at all.”
which act thus, the mother is the per­ should be dibbled in, in asahdy compost,
This was m particular m tho sexton
manent element in the family, and the pretty closely together under a hand­
v^ho called out, “The second cousins of children (as the Egyptians (fid) derive light
the corpse will please come forward and
their names, not from the father, but
take their places.” At another funeral
Adulteration of Tea.
Among
the person in power announced that from tho mother’s family.
I
“the lateral branches of the corpse will most of tho purest races the various
Tea Is sometimes adulturated with the
stocks which worship the different ani­
now join the procession.”
leaves
of
oilier
plants, m for instance,
A recent widower in this city, noted mals are scattered through all the local aloe, ash. hawthorn, etc., but by t. care­
for his fine personnel and suavity of tribes. But in China, the worshipers of ful microscopical examination these adul­
each
animal,
or
at
least
the
people
who
manners abroad and the display of
terations can be easily found ont. Genu­
“pure cussedness” and animosity at derive their name from him, aro gath­ ine lea leaves, when moistened with hot
homo, caused no end of trouble at his ered together, as in Egypt, into local water aud opened, aud then examined
aggregates.
Thus,
the
Egyptian
mar
­
wife’s funeral by his revelation of nat­
by the microscope, show a very* charac­
ural and acquired obstreperousness. riage customs and the Egyptian animal­ teristic venation; when once seen, this
The friends who had charge of the ser­ worship both seem susceptible of ex­ character will not be easily forgotten.
vice* at tho house had arranged tho planation as relics of savoury preserved Tea is adulterated in other ways besides
handsome parlors to their minds, when, into the midst of civilization by the ex­ tbe admixture of foreign leaves. 1. The
happening to leave them alone a few traordinary tenacity of Egyptian con­ leaves are often “faced” or artificially
moments, they returned to find the car­ servatism.—Popular Science Monthly.
colored with Prussian blue and turmeric,
pets covered with sheets, and were in­
or indigo and tale-powder. Black tea is
Styles in Canes.
formed by the disconsolate husband
often “faced” with plumbago. 2. Tho
“that he didn’t propose to have a mob
“ Styles in cancs ? Why, they change leaves are sometimes mixed with sand
of people destroying his property.” almost as often as the cut of womca’s and other mineral substances; all of
Having dressed for the funeral with elab­ dresses does.
I have been in this busi­ these bodies can be detected by micro­
orate care, he informed the friends at ness since it was established by mr fath­ scopical and chemical analysis jn the or­
tho last momoiu “that he wouldn’t step er in 1S41, and since that time 1 have dinary way. There is still another
out of his rooui if he didn't have a black- learned that new shapes in sticks must method in which this leaf is rendered
bordered handkerchief furnished. While be invented evety year.
A good cane not genuine; that is tbe practice of sell­
tho ceremony was in progress and the is an old man’s friend and a handsome ing tho tea more or less exhausted. A
minister was delivering a tearful tribute one is a young man’s pride. One might" pretty fair judgment ns to adulteration
to tho virtues of tho young wife lying in as well be out of the world as out of the of a sample of tea can be arrived at by a
her coffin, the bereaved man stepped up fashion, and the young man nowadays simple proress. Tbe process is based on
to a friend who was leaning against who doesn't carry a ‘ crook’ may as well the extraction of tht* theine contained in
tho marble mantel, aud whispered:
go to the nearest dock and throw’him­ tea. and ascertaining the percentage
“Don’t lean on so heavily,it will como self into the*river.
When I say crook, of theine extracted from a known
down if you do, and I can't afford to I mean the latest thing out in canes. It weight of tea. Tea contains from
have it smMhed.”
is in similar shape to the curved-haipile a
half
to
five
per - cent
of
At the grave he gave himself up to a stick, which has always been in vogue, theine. The way to proceed in this new
paroxysm of grief that was known to be but generally carried by old gentlemen.
process of extraction is to weigh out
for the benefit of the people present, There are two styles, the shepherd's about 180 grammes of the sample of tea,
and after returning to his desolate home crook, shaped like a fish hook, and the
and boil with two litres of distilled water
his first act wm to throw the funeral Zulu crook, a plain curved handle.
In a glass beaker; allow the infusion to
flowers out of tit* windows, declaring Both styles originated on the other side,
boil for five minutes; then add to the in­
they ruined the vases they were in and as do most of the fashions in canes. The
fusion a small Quantity of glass (reduced
littered up th* rooms.
Znlaisfrom Paris, and the shepherd to a fine powder) and magnesia oxide.
Of all things simulated grief S th* from Londo®.
They were’in troduoed Keep this 'mixture in strong ebullition
most absurd and the easiest detected. A
there last spring, and took ‘he plsoe of for about twentyor twenty-fire mluules,
man who insists upon being buried in tbe
the cratch, which was so popular last at the same time occasionally stirring
8am. grave with his wife and require*
year. These new styles are made from with a glass rod. Again, add 250 cc. of
two mon to support him, while a third
natural wood, with handles, and vet water, and boil for fifteen minutes long­
holds his hat on his. head, is auro to
there are a great many made with er. Th* aqueous extract is now to bo
marry again within’ a twelve-month, foi
chamois and buffalo-horn handles. evaporated very carefully to complete
such an emotional nature can not exWhen I was a young man a whalebone dryness. The residue left on evapora­
cane was the proper thing, and since tion is to be treated three or four times
with rectified ethylic ether by means of
The Later Foolishnesses of London.
Payen’s percolator. Three orfour treat­
The makers here ments with ether generally suffice to re­
Olive Logan writes from London to of different shapes.
the Philadelphia TWics that the greal get woods from all over the world, the move all the theine. The last portion of
social mania there u to have one’s hand most expensive being frem Malacca, the ethereal washings when evaporated
which oomes from the swamps in the should leave no residue. These ethereal
Straits of Malacca, ' and the leopard solutions are to be gently heated and
wood, olive and snake wood, from Afri­ then allowed to evaporate in a shallow
the (MB, that k is lr*Qifhfl*k anrt is not
distorted by fatigue. At the same time ca. America can supply the want* of dish of known weight The solid re­
the world for pretty barked wood. For maining is the pure alkaloid theine. The
hand* are full of character, and give
cauca, the ash plant, very popular dish and its contents are now weighed;
indication unmistakably of strength,
- ----------- ’-i-v ^-eeding, coarse avoca- among Englishmen, come* from Great the weight of the dish and the theine,
vhevsitis cultivated for cane minus the weight of the dish alone, give*
&gt;ersons, both men and ~ '
.
When used as a walking of course the weight of the theine. From
Ls made of their hands,
stick
never varnished, but used jusi this tbe percentage of theine tn the origeave with the glover,
a* it'
pulled. The fancy woods, such Inal weight of tea can be ascertained by
who makes
to fit each particular
means of simple proportion. If tbe per­
boos, are generally mounted in gold or centage is less than a half per cent., you
silver, with hamnwred heads, and often' may conclude that the sample has been
garments are fitted, to save the nuUai.cc cost a much as 930."—Cane Hcrchani- either adulterated with foreign leaves
?
' .
(which can easily be recognized by their
of “ trying On,” is becoming a universal inB.r.Wory.
botanical structures under the micropofwawion among men and women ol
—
A
scientific
exchange
assert
that
“
it
fashion.
These dummia* live with ths
has been ascertained by Prof. Buckland
that the most virulent poisons have no
effect on th* hedge-lM.” Thanks. We
a stra»
—Mr. J. M. Swank's statistics of tht
lor fear that some
formed in this dtr, called the ••’niirteen
Citxb.” It is limited to thirteen mem­
fS°^LuOa t?1
countryi*
bers, it meet* on the thirteenth of the
month in room thirteen of a certain ho­
tel, the letters of whose djudc are thirteen
its. We presum*
diversion is in

meal or shelled corn.
Il the horae can
not Imre time to'masticate a full feed of
unshelled corn, then it is best to feed
something else.
.
—A farmer who grows both wool aud
wheat largely and successfully says that
it is his opinion that the reason why the
yield of wheat per acre in the United
States is only half as much as that ol
England is because in England the sheep
are utilised in connection with grain­
growing, while here they are thought
of only as wool and mutton-makers.
—One of the best and safest remedice
for worms in pigs or horses is turpen­
tine. Tbe dose is two ounces for a
horse and from one dram to half an
ounce for a pig, according to its rise.
The medicine is best given in linseed­
oil, using eight times tbe quantity of the
turpentine. For worms in the lower
intestines the oil and turpentine may be
given as an injection. It should be re­
peated for three days, at intervals of
one week, for throe or four weeks.
—A farm can bfi stocked with sheep
cheaper than with any other animals.
Sheep will come nearer to utilizing ev­
erything which grow* on tbe farm. Less
laE»or will be required for getting feed
and stock together. Tbe returns will
come in sooner aud oftenar than with
any farm stock except hogs. Less money
is required for shelter ana fencing, and
less labor is required in herding when
outside pasturage is accessible and pre­
ferred. And, finally, a handsome income
on the investment can be bad without
the sale of the animals themselves.
—To Fry Salt Pork.—Cut the pork into
very thin slices, and soak it over night
in milk and water, for milk will freshen
the pork much sooner than water.
When ready to cook put it into a spider
and fry it to a light brown on en?h side.
Make a batter of one egg, a tablespoon­
fol of flour, and a little milk or water;
just enough flour to make a batter, as
for griddle cakes.
Dip in the hot
browned slices, covet; with batter on
each side, and fry in the pork fat. to a
light brown. If preferred, the slices of
pork can be baked in the oven, until all
the grease is out, and then dipped into
batter and fried.
—There is a recipe for fruit cake
which is also sometimes called wedding
or black cake. One pound each of flour,
butter aud brown sugar, three pounds
of currants, three pounds of raisins
(stoned and choppea),' one pound of
citron—cut this in thin slices—twelve
eggs, one cup of molases, one pint of
good brandy, one ounce of mace, one
ounce each of cinnamon and cloves, and
two grated nutmegs. This cake Should
be baked in a pan with a paper on tho
bottom. If the cake is not to be used nt
once do not frost it; the cake itself will
keep for months, and in fact time im­
proves it, but the frosting will become
discolored and uninviting.—Ex.
Tout.

Tea and toast is almost a national dish
in England. No American can have
any idea of the goodness of English toast
unless he was “brung up to it,” as the
darkey was to baked possum. In order
to make good toast you must first catch
your bread; there aro two kinds to make
toast of, the oven-baked home-made
bread and the baker’s loaf. The toast
is not made as with us by slapping it
over the coals on a hot wire toaster
where it browns hit or miss, nor is it
laid on the top of the cooking stove; no,
it is put on a toasting fork and held be­
fore a red-hot fire, and it browns quickly
without drying up the center. It is then
buttered on both sides, and as each
slice is toasted it is lai&lt;|. on tho other
until there is a pyramid of large
slices. Then the pile is cul through
twice and it is covered and k^it hot un­
til taken to table. The youngsters of
the family are usually helped to toe top
slices, the elders to the center pieces, M
they have no end crust, and ns the pile
diminishes each piece is found to be
richer and better, Jhe steam and melted
butter making it soft and tender, and
the flavor being indescribably good.
This is English buttered toast. The
next favorite is dry toast, which is cut
in thin slices, and is rather crisp. It is
buttered as it is eaten, _|tod dipped in
morning coffee is very palatable. An
English breakfast table is never without
toast and eggs. Buttered toast is a staple
dish for home teas, and taken in connecEnglish abominate canned fruits—just
moistened with cream, it is not bad.
Another tempting dish when well
made is milk toast. This is sometimes
called by courtesy cream toast, but it is
seldom that cream is used. A cup of
butter is added to the milk, and enough
flour to make it of the consistency of
cream, with a heaping tablespoonful of
pulverised sugar, will make a good
liquid for the purpose. The fault with
milk toast is that it is generally reduced
to sop, and fit only for infants or inva­
lids. The slices of toast should be firm
and whole when served, and if properly
made will be so.—Detroit Post and
Tribune.
■

GRAND

RAPJD&amp;

DIVISION.

EABTWari

Haamond ...
MUdtevUls...

SKEZ.::

Varans tv I lie
Charlotte

WICSTWA HP-

Charlotte,-------VsrmortvIUe,.
Naah rille......
Mfadlrrilfa”.'.
Han tn end........
Grand Rapids,.

&gt; r.«iiwiv».

B. R. LEDYARD.

IRON
BITTERS
BROWN’S DION BITTERS are

requiring a complete tonic; capemittcut Fevers, Want of Appetite,

etc. Enriches the blood, strengthrns the muscles, and gives new
life to the nerves. Acts like a
charm on the digestive organs,
removing all dyspeptic symptoms,
sneli as tasting tho fbod, Belching,
Heat in the Stomach, Heartburn,
etc. The only Iron Preparation
that will not blacken the teeth or
giro headache. Sold by all Drug­
gists at $1.00 a boule.
BROWN CHEMICAL CO.
Baltimore, MiL

&lt;•“ GIVEN AWAY.
Zimmerman Fruit Dryer
Haw and for Tcnma. Addrvwt
ZIMMERMAN FRUIT DRYER CO., Cincinnati, O.

VI|Xb IIOVME?

J. M. Flint A Sox, Props,
Thia hocse has been tharvugbly overhauled, re-

ers slwara welcome.- RaIm&gt; rcMonabX.
barn and livery Io eonaeetlun.

Feed

MR. WM.WESTFALL
Of Duchess Co., N. Y-, M yean* of age, Buffered
Continually for many yeam from Stone in
“*------RP
IT
Great age and painful dlaeaac are a nd com­
bination. Yet Mr. WilliamWMWl, to merly
of Rock City, Duchess Co., N.
now of Wash­
ington Hollow, to tha same county, came to the
office of Dr. David Kennedy, the eminent Phy­
sician and Surgeon, of lUaxtout, 5. Y., some
Hmc atoce, to a condition to excite the sympaUitoi the toostcold Neofled spff
person In the world. We say be emne—he W'j&gt; ,
Sher carried to th* (factor’s
hew**.

tention of Urine, aud had all tbc aymptucsaef
an aggravated case of calculus formation fa the
bladder. The usual Instrumental examination
revealed tbe presence in the bladder of a urin­
ary calculus of uncommon size. Dr. Kennedy
frinklv told Mr. Westfall that, owing to his
age and debility, an operation was out of the
question, but that be could, by the prescription
of “Kennedy’s Favorite Remedy,” together
with local treatment, make him comfortable,

health to this day.
THE BK4SOX8 WBT

tendvelv used by our people are u follows: It
is a combination of vc^eUblc alternative*. II
Is pleasant to tbe tastn, adapted to both sexes
and all agci, Is effective iu affording Immediate
relief in all cases of Kidney trouble. Liver Com-

purities the Wood, tiuu givlnp tone and siren*
to the system debilitated by diM-aw or aj
“Dr. Kennedy’s Favorite Remedy” for sale
wed with sheej
all druggists.
with fowls,F
is not wise to
too many together.
Ondman who has
had a trial of the keeping of sheep says
ALBERT M. HARRIS,
that out of a flock of 1,100 head that be
was interested in he lost in one winter
548 head, while his loss in flock* of from FRAMES, VELVETS. MATS, GLASS.
AMERICAN OH 1CAL CO’S- BOXES.
300 to 500 bead did not average two pet
»U.t* • •f-claiily
cent.
When sheep run iu targe flocks, Pry Plata OulOu |1C,
every sheep must travel over moQe
ground to obtrdn its food than when
small flocks are kept together, sad. m
___
that ground is usually traveled ovw r aK
daily, the leu the numbers are the bet- I
Si —.JU
----- H—
______________

Mot too Large Flecks.

Photographer’s Supplies.

�In Nashville

; from Utesl Di«p*tche«.

coNonrcssioNAL.

Wm. A. AYLSWORTH

Mru.t
town of Globe, Arizona. on the 10th, and were
repulsed in a fight which lasted half aa hour.

tn jswill from Fort Tbocou.

PERSONAL AND POLITICAL.
Edwin Cowles, of Cleveland, has insti­
tuted a libel suit for &lt;25,000 against Bishop
Gilmour, on account of a letter publish*! re­
ferring to the invalid daughter of tbe editor.
uro tilU subjecting duties on Imports to

July following.... In the

journalist end politician, has recently bcuome
totally blind. Mr. Weed is eigbty-flve years

LATER NEWS.

Knunlgia, Sciatica, Lumbago,
Backache, Soronan of tho Cheat,
Coat, Qeituf, Sere Throat, Saett-

House Mr.

tbe charter* of National Banks. The Sundry

i cutting

Lamb. Tbe report is couched In technical
and surgical terms, rendering It somewhatob-

and ww suspended at 0:50 p. m.

tain striking pecullaritie* noticed in the ap-

fectlve, tbe casualties in tbe British fleet con­
sisting of five men killed and twenty-seven
wounded.
The Democrats of Artxona on tbe 11 th re­
nominated Gmnviile IL Ouray as Delegate in
Congress. *

disease to justify the assertion of insanity.’

The IU ver and Hi
iro i
ou tbc bill to ।

Having just returned from tbe East with three iMurasr
stocks for Nashville, Big Rapids and Cadillac, which
'
gives us the advantage over small dealers, who
purchase for one store only, we are offering

EERiuBEOy
RHEUMATISM, Over 500 Suits

Irfl U»aly, uul U» KSMln W Kot Ua
family to his country palace. Arabi Fasha
declared that he would not yield an Ineh.
A Dublin dispatch of the 10th slate* that
from March to Juno tbe Irish Land League
received £19,740, most of which was rent from
the United State*.

e • report
National

Constitutional

James IL Madbix,

The Indians were on the 9th making trouble

vatloo, in Arizona. Killing scouts and cattle

FOREIGN.
The aut horities at St. Petersburg are dis­
playing great anxiety for the safety of the
fortress and cathedral, beneath which arc the

from attending public meetings.

.uD . lai, allu, luiiucu.aici v ukt iuc mscovery,
tbe Director of the Department committed
suicide.
The collapse of a temporary trestle on the
Canada Atlantic Railway, near Ottawa, on
tbe 7th killed three laborers and wrecked

General Bkobsleff, tbe famous Russian
General, died suddenly on the 7th at the Ho­
tel Dasaeaur, Moscow.
T* bxtt TWockaxo pounds was on tbe 7th
offered by tbe British Government for the

the Ohio River.

forSIQpOOO.

bill la &lt;20,217,13L15. Tbe

paper protesting

SOLD IT YLL DRUGGISTS AID DEALERS

sourl aud Nebraska on the 11th, doing con­
siderable damage.
Thk Democrats of the Fifth District of
Ohio ou the 11th nominated George Beney for
Congress.
The Irish Repression bill passed through
both houses of the British Parllanient on the
11th.
DLGN,
*
The State-Credit Democracy of Tennessee
BOOKS,
held a convention at Nashville on tbe 11th
JEWELRY,
and nomtiated J. H. Fussell for Governor.
Tbe platform adopted opposes the repudiation
i
WALL PAPES,
of State or National obligations; all class
WINDOW SHADES,
legislation and partial laws, favors a liberal
system of public schools; tbe establishment DYESTUFFS,
of a Railroad Commission to regulate freight* ,
and tariffs, and arraigns the Republican 1
PBOPHIETABY MEDIOINES,
party for its growing and increasing sdvarfee
PRESCRIPTIONS,
toward centralization.
Ex-REABJUBrzn Auettob John E. Massrt,
RECEIPTS.
of Virginia, has published a letter repudiating
Mat one aud his work a
lx tbe House of Lords on the 11th Mr.
Granville said .the bombardment of Alexan­
dria was directed against a military despot-

F. T. BOISE,

PAINT AND BRUSH

allied powers. A Vienna cablegram says it
was admitted In Governmentdrde* that Great
Britain wm justified In her vigorous action
against Arabi Pasha.
A dispatch to Lloyds from Port Bald on
tbe 11th stated that the British Consul there
bad stopped all ship* from entering tbe Suez
Capal.
lx tbc United States Senate an the 11th Mr.
Morrill made a favorable report on the bill to
repeal tbe export duty on tobacco, and Mr.
Groome reported an act to prevent the pay­
ment of double pension*. The Conference
report on the NatlonaUBank Charter bill
was agreed to. The River and Harbor bill
was completed in Guarantee of tbe
Whole, it* amount being $20,924,173. In tbe
House the day was occupied in working on ।
the Sundry Civil Appropriation bill in Com­
mittee of the Whole. .»u amendment was
adopted authorizing »!•■_ ct-labitabment of an
Industrial in lion "Si i. -ol ■
tbc Pawnee

BEPABTHENT

Call and. Examine!
F. T. BOISE.

and their father, while thabousehold duties
were looked alter by tbe Ml**e* Millie Owen
and Katie Park. Guy Stephen Smith, the
youngest son, who shot and killed his father,
was sent out st six o’clock yesterday morning
with his other brothers to do tbe milking.
Louis, It appears, took Guy’s tnllking-paU,
and when he found Louis with It out In the
cow-lot a quarrel ensued, wh-n Guy planted a

-----NEW-----

CUSTOM

standing at the porch-door, leveleda doubleSmith clapped hU hands to his right side, and

GRINDING!

Of every dercription, done in a superior
manner, at the drop of the bat; and
•
Batisfactioti guaranteed.

FLOUR. MEAL ARD MILL FFED
Kept constantly on hand.

Our

se.f for shootlag ao good a father, and, after

H. R. DICKINSON A CO.

WOOL

Thiktt pern

NewC aiding Mill
Ol the tmaerelsned, I, prepend to nOte Into

Ready for use. all the wool of thia section, with

NEED NOT WAIT
detohliou of

Boots, Shoes And Groceries,
Is full up and PLENTY OF THEM. Ready pay purchasers
desired. WE OWN THE GOODS at about 70 cents on the
dollar. You can save money, and be comparatively happy by
buying your goods

Cheap! Cheap! Cheap!
We want your BUTTER and EGGS and will allow you
PINE WOODS PRICES.
Respectfuly

AYLSWORTH.

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN
At Buxton's new brick, have full and complete lines In

G-ents Furnishing Goods

11 you want something new, neat and nobby, just take a look at our stock of

CUFFS, COLLARS, TIES, HANKERCHIEFS, JEWELRY, ETC.
THE G-ZRJSJLT SECRET
------------- IN BUYING.

TO BUY

FOR THE LEAST MONEY.
Remember that we [hare no old, shop-worn and unseasonable goods, but

*a- All our purchase* are made with tbe cash and by strict attention to the wants of ou
customers we expect to reap iucress.

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN.

AGAIN TO THE FRONT!
With the LARGEST and Most Complete Stock of

Ever laid down in any one store in Barry
or Eaton Counties.

Siieap-Sbearing time Is upon us and the

C88C

at New Haven. Conn., de-

Our stock in this line is the largieLand finest we ever of­

fered. All Goods from a substantial school suit to th'e finest
dress suit. We have in stock more boys’ and youths’ clothing
than the combined stock of any house in town. Our stock

CARDING FURNITURE

ROLLS, OR YARN!
Tbe fatal weapon was procured by tbe lad

OUT 16.00 and 18-00 Suits are well made and trlmed, and for fit and wear can not be equaled.

Nashville, Apr. 90,1882.

AND SPINNING

and 3,000 rille*. The prophet was marching
on'Blnnaar with 7,030 men.
-Is the British House of Commons on tho
7th Mr. Harcourt stated that bloodhounds

ed to wear any place, and would cost $18 to $20 at any store.

Graham Flour

P* conceeded to lx the best. Try It.

“Oh! Guy, you have shot your father!“
who then looked more like a young demon
than a human being. "I intended to kill

Our 12-00 and 14.00 Suits will surprise
For 15.00 we can give you a suit you need not be asham­

Pouring Mill

the house and told his father, who went out
and administered the rod to both lads, “Loa.”
&gt; XU. .' “O.
however, only getting a couple at stripes. it a liberal patronage from the farmers of,thi*
After that Mr. Smith walked back "cross vicinity.

near an open door washing for breakfast.
Miss Park was standing close to him prepar­

For $4- and $5, we are selling a verf good every day
Suit, many styles to select from. .
’
For $8 and $10, we are selling a very desirable diagonal
worsted, bound and made in sack and frock styles. Other
stores get $12 for the same suite.

pr R. DICKINSON A CO.

CUSTOM

ing three sous named Orrick, Louis and Gr?.
aged seventeen, fifteen and twelve years, re­
spectively. These three boys, bereft of ma­
ternal influences, made their home with

At less than yon can buy the Cloth and Trimmings.

W.

READY FOR BUSINESS
A Father Slain by His Twelve-YearOld Son.
j Every day In the year—Sundays excepted.
Bt. Louis, July A
Milton Smith, of Kirkwood, was killed yes­
terday morning by his twelve-year-old son.
From member* of the family It was learned

Burke.
Gexkbal Tumuf on the 7th led 3,000 Egypt-

murderers. Th^Repression bUl went to third
reading, but the Government suffered a d&lt;s

A.VOGELEHAOO.

The Republicans of the Eighteenth Dis­
trict of Illinois i.a the 11th nominated Gen­
eral William C. Kueffner for Congress.

MW ounces.
Cook defeated Miss Ida Rogers in a borscracingcootest for &lt;3,000, making ten miles in

Pains and Achat.

hence deserved hanging.” Another writer

Thb Dublin Frtemm't Journal of the fith
stated that ths Government intended to em­
ploy bloodhounds to track murderer*.
Thl Archbishops of Ireland on the Gth dl-

velght being &lt;2*^ ounces. Daniel Webster’*

ScaMt, S.innl Bodir
Paint,
Tooth, Ear and
frwM

11th arising out of tbe fro Igh t-bandlenT strike.
Italian workmen were assaulted by tbe strik­
ers, and retaliated with plate! shots, killing

cred about the brain of the assassin. The
dry Cvll Appropriation bill was then taken up weight of the brain, including the cerebrum,
in Committee of tbc Whole, aud a provision to cerebellum, pans and msdolla, and a portion
of tbe dura, wm 49X ounces.
The Incorporators of tbe Garfield Monu­
ment Association held a meeting at Cleveland
DOMESTIC.
Nine Mormon cowboys broke loose on the on the Oth and selected. a Beard of Trustees,
Oth at Bl John’s, Arizona, and brought on a who organized by electing Governor Foster
battle In which two men were killed. Two of Preaident, and ex-Presldent Hayes and Gov­
ernor Cornell Vice-Presidents. ’ The contribu­
tbe raiders were arrested.
tions up to date were &lt;120,000.
' The Alabama Republican State Convention
bury, a New York merchant, was on tbc Cth met at Montgomery on the Oth. • The Green­
declared by a jury never to hare been insane. back nominee lor Governor, J. L- Sheffield,
was Indorsed by the convention.
ano lie wa* leieaseo.
Emeky A. 8TORRS, of Chicago, has been | The Arkansas Republican Stite Conven­
■ent to Europe in the Interest of the Ameri­ tion met at Little Rock on the Oth and nomi­
can cattle trade, to submit fact* and argu­ nated Colonel D. W. Slack for Governor.
ments to the various European Government, Among tbe resolutions adopted was one de­
to convince them that their prejudice against nouncing the repudiation of the State bonds.
Nominations for Congressmen were made
American meals i* without good reason.
Ahhcbnt examination of the New York on the Oth as follows: Twentieth Ohio Dis­
Assay office showed that there was In that trict—A. S. McClure (Rep.), re nominated;
First Arkansas—J. B. Mlles (Rep.); Seventh
of that office, &lt;19.830,839 tn gold bullion, Iowa—John A. Kasson (Rep-), renominated;
&lt;848,899 in silver bullion, and &lt;7,012,‘555. SO in Fourth North Carolina—William It Cox
(Dem.), renominated: First Maine—Joseph
gold cotn.
The American Bankers' Association will Dane (Dem. and Greenbacker).
The Greenbackera of the Third Iowa Dis­
hold their convention this year at Saratoga
trict bare nominated Rev. Roewell Foster for
on the 16th and 17th of Angu..L
•
Three Arabs landed tn Castle Garden the Congress.
Tur. Republicans of the Fourteenth. Ohio
other day bearing a letter from tbe Arch­
bishop of Tripoli authorizing them to collect District on the 7tb nominated for Congress
State Senator Rollin A. Horr, a twtn brother
money for their church in Syria.
There were coined at the United State* of tbe Michigan Congressman, aud his counmint* during J uni 319,780 pieces of gold,
The work of readjusting tbe skeleton of
worth &lt;3,401,709; 2,301,400 silver pieces, worth
&lt;2,301,185, and 8,277,400 minor pieces, worth Guitcau was commenced on tbe Sth, one per­
&lt;75,432. The total coinage was &lt;5,778,417. son alone bplng detailed for the operation,
Tbc value of tbe coinage during tbe fiscal year which would probably consume nearly two
weeks. The bones were being carefully re­
was &lt;117,841,574.
.
A few dsys ago a woman and two children, stored to their relative positions, and fastened
living In a lonely locality tn the mountains of together by wire and brass rods to keep them
In
place. At tbe end of a fortnight tbe skele­
Arkansas, were found dead by persons whq
happened to pass the house. Il is believed ton would be placed on exhibition in the
the *onun fell sick, and, the children being Medical Museum at Washington, in a case
too young to aid her, al! perished miserably. which bad already been prepared.
When discovered one child was still alive and
Editor Cowles, of tbc Cleveland Leader,
In addition to. his suit for &lt;25.000 against
Bishop Gilmour for libel, has sued the Penny
Gut Smith, a boy of thirteen years, resid­ Preu, in which tbe Bishop'^ letter was pub- &lt;
ing at Kirkwood, Mo., shot and killed his lished, for n similar offense and a similar
father on the 7th because be got punished for sum. After the prelate had received' legal
fighting with his brother.
notice of the first libel suit, be republished
Thebe were 109 traoineas failures in tbe the letter In the Catholic Univent, and on tbe
United States during the seven days ended on 10th criminal suits for llbM were begun against
the Oth.
him and tbe publisher of the last-named
The Crow Indians iu Northern Wyoming paper, and warrants Issued for their arrest.
were on tbe 7th killing cattie and destroying
Thb Nebraska Republican State Conven­
the wheat fleld®. Fears of another Indian tion will be held at Omaha on the 20th of
war were expressed by the settlers.
September.
The Smith Sunday law was openly ignored
Mm-«h increase of &lt;13.574.70 over by tbe Columbus (Ohio) saloon* and beer
those of tbe corresponding month in 1881.
garden* on tbe 9th.
’
Bbcbetabt Tzllzh said on tbc 7tb that
Charles R. Jones, a Democratic journalist
Captain Payne would be summarily ejected of Raleigh, N. C., has announced himself aa
from the Indian Territory In the event of an­ aa Independent candidate for Congresa
other raid.
accident on tbc Ohio River state that the Jo**
of life by the sinking of the steamer Scioto
would certainly exceed one hundred. It was
also stated that whisky was the cause of the

Several

To have their wool manufactured into it, m I

Our mammoth two-story double store
Is full and running over.

Everything you need from the smallest Bracket to
a $125 Parlor Suit.
.
Yon can save' money and have a better selection to choose
from, by dealing with ua than anyjother dealer.

Don’t J-foi-jjet It.

�Hell* Good*

defends oleotnirgarine “because it keeps the price o!
butter within
reasonable
limits,”
“would allow anything, oven money, to
be counterfeited so as to make it* acqui­
“I will bring him to yon tomorrow; sition eavy."
—Harness. Golls:
A good way to
bat, oh! doctor, tbe separation will be
cruel.”
Next morning she appeared
with the boy. “Tell your master,” «be
■aid to tbe servant who opened the door. timc the horse is unharnessed b*the the
shoulder with cold water. White oak
bark boiled in water makes a good wash
to harden and toughen ths skin.
—Absence or prevalence of cock­
She then retired by a side entrance
which tho doctor had shown her and roaches in a*ho«MU a capital tert of the
had advised her to pass inorder to avoid cleanliness and neatness of those having
a mournful, and, perhaps, exciting fare­ charge of the sanitary management of
well with her sun. Quarter of an hour the dwelling. If any are seen, be *ure
that bread crumbs or other food refuse
room, and tho young man presented hi*
account “Quite right, my lad. I will not live on air/
settle it with you directly,” and he felt
—It is claimed that water heated to
the young man’* pulse.
“ Normal 130 deg. is fatal to all (psect* that Infect
pulse,” say* the man of scie..ce. “My plants, even though exposed to it but
account,” say* the young man. “ My tor an instant, while the immersion of a
master will be uneasy; please give me plant for aa instant in water of that
M.” Bat the doctor temperature does not injure the plant In
n, and tried to feel the least unless the leaves are rety tengo!” exclaimed the
lug into a passion,
xud don’t make a fool
—Mothers who were troubled—a*
of yourself.” “Violent attack,” Bays most mothers were—to keep the boys’
the doctor, calmly, and be palled his blouses in proper shape last year will
bell-rope rather violently. “The shower find that to make them long enough to
bath,” be explained to his two attend­ belt down is a great improvement.
ants; and in a twinkling the young man They look well, too.
Last year’s
was stripped and a stream of ioe-oold blouses can be cut off a trifle at the bot­
water pouring over him. He howled, tom, and have bands put on, and bat­
he kicked, but uselessly.
When the ton*, and they will take the place of
doctor came to see tho effect of the under-waist*.—N. Y. Pott.
operation he was much surprised to
—Rabbit Hash: Cut up and put into
find his patient madder than ever, vow­ a saucepan with a quart of thsir own
ing vengeance at oo* moment and tbe broth and an onion in quarter*. Let k.
next imploring his torturers to send to a boll half an hour; strain through a
jeweler in the Roe de la Paix and ask sieve. Mix two tablespoonful* of flour
him to come and release him.
When with the hot broth; boil upon the fire
the doctor heard the word “jeweler" a and strain again through a sieve.
Lay
light broke upon him. He dispatched the rabbits in the saucepan, pour the
an attendant to the Hue de la Paix, and
gravy on them, and let simmer gently
in a few minutes the jeweler appeared for a quarter of an hour.
Serve with
upon the scene. He turned somewhat stuffing and pieces of toast in slices.
pale when matter* were explained to
—Orange Pudding: Peel, seed and
him, for he saw himself robbed of 25,000
francs by a most ingenious chevaliere out in small pieces four good-sized
d’Industrie. She had chosen jewelry to orxnges; add a cupful of white sugar
Into a quart
that amount, but, not having the money and let it stand awhile.
with her, she had said: “Let your clerk of nearly boiling milk stir two tsblecome with me ; I live jn the Avenue spooufuls of corn starch, mixed with a
d’Eylau, and my husband will pay the little water and the yelks of three eggs
beaten light. When oookod to the con­
aooounu”—London Life.
sistency of thick custard, put away to
cool, after which mix with the orange
GENERAL.
and sugar. Make a frosting of the tear
—A cow with her calf, belonging to whites of. eggs and powdered sugar.
When
William Heath, of Columbus, Ga., stop­ Cook the pudding in pastry.
ped at a brook to drink. A large ram done, spread on the meringue and
that had been standing on the opposite brown slightly.—H. Y. Examiner.
bank walked up to the cow, gave her a
butt square in the forehead and killed
Bonp.
her instantly.
—A “quiet Mr. Brown,” of Nebraska,
Thfa is perhaps tho most common of
declares that if it were not for the “noble the diseases with which poultry are af­
effort* of our agricultural societies” flicted. It may be said to hold the same
the youth of that State would be likely rank m colds with human beings. The
to remain “ignorant as heathens of the causes are exposure to draughts, damp
fine art of driving fast bones and manip­ houses, and cold, wet weather; in short,
ulating the pool-box.”
the same exposure that would produce ?.
—Dogs that getdrunk are uncommon. cold in a man is very likely to give a
“Old Jack,” of Indianapolis, Ind., be­ hen the roup. The symtoms are the
longing to the firv department, regularly same also—sore throat, running at the
drank refuse beer from the empty keg* nose, swollen eyelids; and as some men
at the door of the saloon adjoining hfa take cold more easily than others, so
home, but getting drunk ths other day, some breeds of fowl* are more readily
just as an alarm of fire sounded, he fell affected. Those known as hard feather­
beneath the wheels of the machine and ed, the Hamburg*, Legnorns, Black
Spanish, etc., are more likely to have
was crashed to death
—A Cincinnati husband said that his the roup than those whose feathers are
wife should devote her afternoon* to the more aowny, as the Plymouth Rocks,
care of her children instead of going io Brahmas, Cochin Chinas, Shanghais,
matinee* at the theater*. Shedi*obej*d. etc. The former seem well protected;
He walked down the center aisle of a but lift a wing or part the feathers and
theater, took her by the ear,'and led her it will be seen that with tho exception of
oaL “Out of re*pect to the parties," the large feathers the bodies are nearly
save the account, “who are well con­ bare, while the bodies of the latter can
nected and generally well .thought of, scarcely fep seen, so thick fa the down or
their names are withheld from the pub­ small feathers.
The roup, like an ordinary oold,
lic."
shows itself in many forms, and conse­
—The delay of a telegram cost a life quently is liable to be misunderstood.
in Albany. Meyer Schreiber went into To guard against this, if any fowl in
a whisky speculation, and found himself damp, cold weather shows any symp­
in such a position that $1,500 was re­ toms of illness, look oat for roup, and
quired to save him from ruin. He tele­
proceed accordingly. We could fill the
graphed to a friend in Boston for the whole of thfa column with approved
money.
The message was three hours remedies for roup; and in this respect
on the way, and when it arrived the
again it resembles colds, for who ever
friend had closed his office for the day.
knew of a person without half a dozen
Getting no answer, Schreiber committed
infallable remedies for a void? We will
print a few, which are all highly recom­
- -A monkey belonging to George mended, and let our reader* take their
Brodie, of Pittsburgh, Pa., is credited choice.
But before applying any
with extraordinary sagacity. Tbe ani­ remedy, the first thing to do is to re­
mal is often told to bring one or the move all fowls that seem in acy way In­
other of two newspapers taken by tho disposed to a dry, warm place for a bo*family to Mr. Brodie’s aged mother. pital. A heroic remedy is to take a
One it printed with large type, and the ■mall fertber, dip the end in uitrio acid
other is very fine and not always clear and insert it in the nostril of the bird,
letters.
It fa said that whenever he giving it a twist while in. Thfa fa to be
reported two or three times a day, always
brings ber spectacle* also.
removing the burnt scab before repeat­
ing the operation.
A more humane treatment fa a table­

_________ a» the European*
dootor
ttMltbe, omM and. Arabi
,»riro»«p«iuon in th, inA| hi* army is being recruited

Alow • D. McCarthy, a young lawyer
of Decatur, Ind., bad great difficulty
io winUo, Mb. Kl,od« hr . bride.
8b. lorad
th*t bl*
habit of frequent intoxication would
marry him on hi* solemn promise of
tqdfrl ahatlnenes. On the day appoint­
ed for the wedding he committed sui­
cide. living letters to explain that he
could not keep his pledge, and would
die rather than break it.

The steady decline of export*, and

since the year began .are shown by the
statistics of tbe New York Cus­
tom House. In January the exports
dollars;
about two mil­
lions;
April by eight and a half millona; and in May by nearly twenty-one
millions. Thia is a vaat change within
two years. It is probable that tbe year
plus of imports over exports.

The Ohio Valley, between Stueben­
ville and Moundsville, is in mourning
over the terrible dieaater at Mingo
J auction through tbe collision of the
Scioto and the Loma*. But something
more than mourning fa called for. Tbe
case wa*clearly one of reckless sacri­
fice ef life. The testimony already
taken shows that tbe crash occurred
simply because both steamers were de­
termined to take the same tide of tbe
channel, and that each proceeded to do
so without wailing to observe whether
theotber had consented to sheer off.
Both pilots then timoltaneoutiy rever­
sed their engines; but It was too late,
and within three minutes tbe Scioto
had sunk. If there is law in that re­
gion to protect human life, it should be
invoked to punish ail who can in any
way be held responsible for thia slaughWhile Guiteau has suffered for his
crime, tbe trial of the Malley boys and
Blanche Douglass, in Connecticut, for
tho murder of Jennie Cramer, ba* re­
sulted iu a verdict of acquit*!. To
tlioee who have watched the trial tbc
latter developments in the case fore­
shadowed the result that has been
reached. While the case of the prose­
cation was strongly circumstantial, it
was not strong enough to secure con­
viction, although the public will never
cease to hold the prisoners morally
guilty If thecrimeof which they charg­

ed. The poor girl whose body was
found in the river will not have lived
and died in vain if tbe story of her sad
dentil shall teach parents that tbe as­
sociates of theii daughters is not a
tiung to be trusted to change or show
giddy girls that a pleasant acquaint­
ance may be a villian in whose smiles
lurk their ruin and destruction.

While these crimes are of great fre­
quency it is by no means evident that
tbe world is growin r worse or that civi1 ization is retrograding. The tri umph
at the better element in Iowa on the
27th over the great vice of the age, is
proof that tbe masses are right on all
great questions of morals aa well as
politics. On the 27th the people of
Iowa voted on the followin g amend­
ment of Che state constitution: "No
person shall manufacture for sale, or
sell or keep for sale as a beverage any
intoxicating liquors whatever, includ­
ing ate, wins, and
beer.
The
general assembly shall by law prescribe
prohibitiou herein contained, and shall
hereby provide suitable penalties for
the violation of tbe provisions thereof."

,1

jority of 40,009,
The proposal to «abmitaaehan amendment to tbe people
the state at their convention in 1079.
It at once nset with general favor, a*

politic*. There ha* been do partner­
ship in it* advocacy during the part
few month* in which it ha* bean before
the people, tbe leader* and newspaper*
of both political parties cordially ad-

friends of the measure.
As might
have been expected tbe majority comes
almost entirely from tbe rural portions
of tbe state, the cities excepting the
capitol voting strongly against it. It
was asquaie fight between morality
and immorality, between sobriety and
inebriety, between civilisation and re-

The reaalt bought to encourage the

CLOTHING!

ber various

way is ahead of yo*.
Seed out your
force for fall particulars—only one
family saved. Interview the old men.
His name is N(Mh.”-X K Iitdepend•nt.
—The delightful elimrte of California
Aim it* disadvaateges, and among these
one of the most serious is the strong and
chilling wind* that blow rrom the ocean
ax some points along the coast. What
makes this particularly important fa the
fact that the soil fa often cultivated I □

mashes and chopped vegetables for food.
Others wash the back with warm water.
Swab the throat with strong copperas
water every night, and give a teaspoonfdl of solution of chlorate of potash three
time* a day. For aggravated caics we
have the following: Sulphate of iron,
half a drachm; capsicum powder, one
drachm; extract of Uoonee, half an
ounce; make into thirty pills aud give
one at a time three times a day for three
or four day*. Then mix half an ounce
of sulphate of iron and one ounce cay­
enne pepper. Put a tea*poonhxl of thfa
with batter to make a paste; divide it
into ten parts, and give one every morn­
ing and night. Keep the bead, eyes.

Ib- pup ■ M

In order to make room for our
oure later «rxi notioM an appratranca
U4MVM»b fracture of tbc letukca.

Tbe right parietal bone »u •lightly flattened

Fall a«o Winter Goods,

right of tbe Inter-parietal then- wm a slight

waa obliterated.- the other* quite dUtinct.

-We are selling our—

A

At prices that requires no bannering to sell.
anterior portion

HERE ARE BARGAINS FOR YOU !
Summer Pants for 95c
THINK OF IT!

a lloittsd pqrtton of tbe tangttudteal fiMure.
in the vicinity of tbe pacchtoulan rmnuta­
ttoos. The dura wm Ulrhtly thickened alon*
the longitudinal sinus. It was also sltabtly
thicken'il aud opaque alou&lt; * port.on of tbe
line of the middle meninjrwal artery on each
side. The arachnoid of the upper convexity
of the brain presented, tn many placra where
it covered tho sulci, small patches of
thlckenlnr and
opacity: elsewhere
it

peared to be normal In *11 revpect*. Tbe orbltal [ilstc* were well arched, and profited
many conical eminences of lance size. There
wm no roughening anywhere of tbe inner sura
face of the skulL Tbe brain wa* flnn. Its
weight, including cerebrum, cerebellum, pons
and medulla, and a portion of tbe dura wm
forty-nine and one-half ounces. It wm slight­
ly flattened In tho region correspooling to tbe
flattening of tbe parietal bone above men­
tioned. On a •cctlin of tbe cerebrum, there
wm an appearance u of t alight thinning of
the gray cartex. Tho measurement* taken,
however, gave depths of one-sixteenth to oneeighth inch In close proxiplty to each other.
The white substance wm almost absolutely
•nrmic. The cerebellum and island of Kell
were both covered on each aide.
THS rtMURK*.
The fiarores generally presented considera­
ble depth—In many places, M In tbe right fis­
sure of Rolando, amounting to seven-eighths
of an inch. Tbe right fissure of Sylvius was
typical; the left wa» separated from the flrat
temporal fissure by a slight bridge, deeply
s.tuated. Tbc right Assure of Rolando did not
connect with tbc fissure of Sylvius; the left
wm snparatod only by * small bridge deeply
Situated; both were separated from the longi­
tudinal fissure. The flrat frontal fissure on tbe
right aldo wm not connectc«l with that of Ro-

brJdce hear its center. Tbc second and third
frontal flMuree presented nothin* remarkable.
There were numerous secondary fissure*.
Tbe pnrcentnd and retrocental ttasures on
each side were well defined, awl were uncon­
nected with tbe other fiaaures. Tbc inter­
parietal fissures on each
side tenninated in the transverse occiplpd, separated
only by a slight brid*c. Tbe panetixx-clpt tai
wm well marked on c«ch side. The transverse

side, but not confluent. Tbe calloao-manrinal
Assure was doable on each side, the upper of
the two being probably th* true one. On the
right the upper one extended back to the an­
terior margin of the paracentral lobule; on the
left not quite so far. The lower one extended
on the right aide to a line about half an inch
in front of the parietooccipital nsaure, from
which it wm separated by a small bridge; on
the left sidx, ato&lt;x by a bridge of larger site.

ORBITAL SUMraCK.
On tbe right side were seven fissures radiat­
ing from the circular Assure surrounding a
small isolated convolution. On tho left aide
shallow ilcpreeslon. Tbc left collateral flutin'
wm well defined, extending to tbe anterior ex-

at confluence anteriorly with the temporoooclpltal, a small bridge Intervening. The left
temponeocclpttartlasurv was well defined.
,
TH* COaVOLVTXOn.

Tbe following atone call for remark:
The Mccn.llng frontal wm well defined oo
each sMr. Tbc ascending parietal on the right
aide wa* well developed in Its tower threefourth*, but narrowed in the upper fourth.

For fall and winter trade are coinming in.
lent and cheap. Examine them.

They are excel­

Of the best quality and lowest in price. Try our 40c Tea.
Don’t buy poor eggs unless you prefer them. Our egg tester
tells you which are poor.

CASH PAID FOR BUTTER AND EGGS

NEW VICTOR SEWING MACHINE is VICTOROUS.
Ready pay secures for you all the advantages in trade.

CARLTON.

| while they were gone the story was circulated,
that they were both drowned. Universal sqr—

H. W. Hewes »pent tost Bunday in our town, we are able to find out, tbe sorrow wm divided
Frank Stood will harvest Geo. Miller’s wheat j M follows: A few were very sorry, when they
Clint Tsytor I* building a new barn for Mr. heard it and the rest when it -m contradicted.
Keen-buck.
।
Q.
Will Durkee sold hl* hone, old Rooy, to R. :
------------------------------------Pratt for 150.
Quite a package of good sheet music to re­
Mart Young has sold his three year old eolt
from
faniou, publishers, Oliver Ditto Mr. Peters for 8130.
•on A Co., Boston. First ou tbe pile appears a
John Hall bought a young horse of 8. H. patriotic song, "On the Shores of Tennessee”
Kenyon for 8106 cash.
&lt;30 eta.) which ha* on it* title a very ennvenCharley Young went to Lowell a few dayr iert lint of 80 patriotic songs. “Love that
since on important business.
Slumbers" (30 eta.) by Wellings, is a good
Geo. Goodell has 80 far recovered from hi* English song, and “Louelineas” (30 ria.) is a
late skknesa a* to be able to be out again.
•ad German one with English word*. “Trust
Mr. Rockwell ba* u cancer on bls neck that Her Not" (50 eta.) by Balfe, with Longfellow’s
in time, (If not cured) will no doubt end his portrait, and 'Three Fricndaof Mine" (83 eta)
d*5Si the wuru
words&gt; mbu
also uj
by Longfellow, have excellent
Anson Wood, who wu thrown from a load _____
rau*lc,___________
as ha* tbe Bjreet
Guitar song,
r__ _________
w “
■"I Love
of lumber while coming from lo.Ja, is able to ! my LoVC,” (40 eta.) “It Was a Dream" (80
be
l&gt;e around again.
/■
&lt; ta.) by Cowen has al»o a Guitar sccwnpaulHenry Bcrnum i» talking iboul a new steam tnent: “Let my Complaint Come before Thee’*
thresher. He Is one of tbe best threshers we (35 eta.) by Read, te a stately kotiieni. Tbewe have, having been fateresed in that direction
more than 20 years.
‘Highland Sebotttocbe" (35 eta.) .Strauss'
•Merry War Watts" (35 eta) and a Military
Dtx Txxx.
piece, a march, called “To the Front” (40 cis.)
by Cotaford Dick-.
CEDAR CREEK.

The weather U very warm and mosquitoes
are a full crop.
Haying baa commenced and the crop 1* much
heavier than wa* anticipated.

it No more Chills and Ague in this section.
Our Druggist i* selling an article called
“Aon* CoxquaaoM.” It to about tbe only
satisfactory preparation sold for tbe cure of
Fever and Ague, Dumb Chill*. Intermittent r .
BUltou* Fevers. The Proprietor of tbc Arz&lt;&gt;
CuXmvkXox lias used but fiUlc energy tor —
this medicine known and vet It* sale* ar e
menae fa Ape District*- Il purifies

Uncle Moeher w^s buried here .on tbe 6tb.
was on* of the O^aettlers and was unlver- that tbe Chills do---------------wuaB
srtly respected.
table preparation. l*rictjJ5O~ re^aST iSR
Tbe Whitney family gave an entertainment per bottle. Two doses will
n,r ri.ni.
here the evening of the 7tb, which was well

straight gyri. The
well marked on the

W hen you hare o*4 Catarrh
just send 10c. to Dr. C. R. Brio
sob Street, &lt;
of Catarrh”.
wav made hla pile and bidden shingles and
sawdust farewell. Report, farther says, the

throughout.

There were also old pleuritic ad-

blushing damsel, but was promptly bounced
by “Michael,” tbe aforesaid tn-showman and
“fadderobdat chile.”

*aaliville Market*.

public, but tack* tbe brain* to do a brilliant
deed or the natural Inclination to do good, and
apex of tbe left ventricle.
ventricle contained a little
forming a clot.. Tbe val vim

bSm^**w

Tbe right
blood. hist

Sr.^^al^L

young and shallow-brained member at the fair
h’xj far a abort time. Among tbe many dodge*
be has tried to bring himself into notice are the

r: a p iu&lt; mm

all night drunk, he carried his arm In a ding.

Wo approve the following -. Feed light­
ly on oatmeal, mixed with ale or beer,

When he aaw that thia would not take be left

thfaevil
Mbfaat

G. Tyhfa father.

tit

�KALAMAZOO

be,: *4rioe
gnwouA tale al wrong with the declara­
tion that be should immediately demand
damages in court—whether he had not
r damages enough already? For tWre If you must litigate go aa tc a battle, and
just difference enough in ordinary go only to win. To thia end give aa com­
pen to be
chmts between the damage* a plaintiff plete ait- ution to the preparation of your
mg wRfc
v will get in court and the damages he has &lt;eaee as if you were to try it alone, and a:
same time employ only the very beat genital organ* nt man and woman ever known
changed into the King of Siam, and be­ already suffered to leave room for a play the
1
fore they could get out of my way I bit on the words—and no mon-.
&lt;counsel you can reach. •• Cheap Jaw is fend for circular* to Lydia E. Ptukham, Lynn
three of their fingem off. Yov sbottid
3. Few litigants ever sit down to count &lt;the dearest of all purchases."—JT. K
have seen them scatter. Ha, ha, ha!"
’ - - the cost In advance—even the money !TWhune.
Tbe greater burry you’re in, tbe more Mabie
“ Good gracious!" I exclaimed. “Yon cost Let us be among the few prudent,
your aboestitaga are to cmdc untied.
Tbe Wonderful Witter ef 1881-»82.
and reckon up the costa of an ordinary
don’t mean it?’
mo, yw I do; but do not be alarm id.
case. Suppose Brown's oattie have bro­
The winter of AI81-’82 has, according
TRAVELER’S STORY.
I never am so dangerous uttleu I hap­ ken into Smith’s corn and destroyed corn .to the calendar of the Masons, given way
valued at, sav 8100. Smith demands a ,to spring, and, as is not often the casein
pen to assume that character."
Then he sal quiet, and I was thankful settlement Brown replies that the fence ,this latitude, spring has visited this uorthto die. A friend urged a trial of Parker’s Gin­
ne young girt.
for a little peace. On looking at my was poor, that Jones’s cattit got in of- ,
Tonic. Three lotties and careful bare
watch I found that we had yet another (erward and did most of the damage, genial season is upon us without meeting ger
broueht me excellent health and spirits, and 1
A rssaarka&amp;ly-Maroe young r'rl:
quarter of an hour before the train and that the real damage was not half po ’any lingering trace of winter.
hop -tiny experiSQoqtnay benefit aimtiar suffer^
would stop. How I wished the time great aa Smith claims. Here are issues
era.—CtnciuuaU lady. Hoc other column.
The
winter
just
closed
has
been
a
won
­
T&lt;»-u ttc r-tiarugon..
away! for I fully intended to change my for a fint-clas* suit If Brown were ,derful one, even in these days of tbe unkind-taat-blike young girt.
Honor la Hke an taland, rugged and without (Bny Genuine Factory Pointe)
carriage at the next stopping station. properly approached be would probably ,
a landing place; we can tievrer rnore re-enter
All at once, to my alarm, he said, quite pay 810—possibly 820—but Smith is sure (
be has lost 8100. and that Brown ought that in thia city the thermometer has not a ben we are once outside of It.
unconcernedly
:
A QUEER FELLOW TRAVELER.
it all. He decides to enforce bis .fallen below zero during the entire win­
“I feel it my solemn duty to inform
Tbc symptom* of Itching Piles
A True tttorj.
Tbe lawyer will begin a suit for 'ter, and that during the greater part of
vou that I am changing, and that in a
Some years ago I had occasion to take "few minutes I shaH be the King at
¥ben it is ready for trial he wants .tlio season from November 1 to March 1 like prespiration. Intense Itching,
815
more.
The clerk’s fee and the jury it
। has been above freezing point, and that
long journey to th* north—a
’ Instinctively I looked aroufid for ataa fees are, say, 86 more. The witness fees upon but one or two occasions, and then
hich would iuyolva mv trav
RAWSON’S
means of escape, at the same time are 84- Smith loses in all fourteen day’s for brief periods, has it fallen aa low. as
ment 1* the most effective remedy extant for
from a friend of grasping mv umbrella firm, resolved at time, worth 828. At the close of the ten degrees above zero.
this tormenting complaint. Give*rest at night
trial the lawyer wonts 825 more. Total
mine, who lived
Another remarkable instance in the witbout that deaire to scratch. Ateo baa On REAPERS &amp; MOWERS
disburecment 888. Tho estimated loss history of the winter just paired has been
shall I forge
Lightest and* Strongeet Made,
was 8100- To this add the costa of tbe the absence of snow. During the winter
Loom; an in
ness with whi— ,
—-------------, of 1880-‘81 snow, and deep snow, wjs
the train announcing our approach to the iMotion, and the total damage is 8188.
break in the monotony of the journey. next station. I eollected my things toNow, taking the average of eases of the rule. There was not only a frequent
HUBBARD
I resolved therefore to so arrange matters Cther near me. so as to be prepared this
kind. Smith will be fortunate if be repetition of heavy snow-storms, but the
'
as to arrive at his house in time for din­
■ a hasty exit, the more so as I noticed :recovers a verdict of 825. In such case snow remained pn the ground in such tj rears, it cured me coaMJetoly,’1 L. 8. Master
ner, and proceed to my destination next the feelings of his Majesty of Siam were his net loss will be 8163. or 863 more depths during at least three months as Enfield, Me. Sent for 60 eta (in 8 ct. stamps)
morning. When the day arrived I waa being worked up to a pitch of excite­ than it would have been if he had kept to seriously interfere with and obstruct 3- boxes, 01.23, By Dr. Swayne A Son. Pifilad'a
Pa. Sold by all druggists.
ment, and the way he showed his teeth 'out of court and let his “rights" go. If street travel. The horse-cars were re­
(
.Improved 1882.
Happy la the father whose children are so
would have terrified a far less nervous he had compromised with Brown and peatedly prevented for days from run­
off to Euston, where I arrived with just ]man than myself. As we neared the gotten
810
or
820.
that
would
have
been
young
that be can delude them into the belief
,
ning. and for weeks at a time had to emtwo minutes to spare, I asked for my station
,
the train slackened speed, and at dear gain; his victory in the court has p]ov double teams. One line of horsetrain, which the guard pointed out, add- jlast stopped. Just as I jumped out the been a clear loss, and a more disastrous
____ nuhvay Ruspcnded travel for three weeks,
I So mnjth
- * _______ 1
____
ONE MOMENT, PLEASE.
ing: “ If you don’t hurry up, air, maniac
,
much sn&lt;!a at
made a spring at me; but I for­ one than the original infliction.
the end of that time was— com
­
vou’ll lose it." 1 took his advice, and (tunately avoided him. and slammed the for the plaintiff*s aide.
When winter h pasaing into summer, am!
pelled to um the pick in order to uncover
Paints, Oils, Varnishes,
juniped into tbe nearest tirst-class com- (door in his face. I got into the next
Now let us see about the defendant the track from the accumulated ice and ■ummer
into
winter again, your health should
1
partment, the door of which stood open, (compartment, which was empty; and. He might compromise with his neighbor snow. Nor was the general railway be
I especially looked to. The humor* which
and in which there was* but one other ,as the guard closed the door. I called by paying say 850; but he will not. He traffic any more fortunate; come of the bar?
a;-cumulated in your blood ahouM be
BL'fLDEKS HAKBWARE,
1
occupant.
I settled myself for my (out: “Here, I say, guard, there is a will fight the suit at whatever cost Hia railways were unable to operate .their cleansed
&lt;
away, and your system toned up to
journey, and for the first time had leisure .madman in——But the whistle lawyer’s fees alone are 850; he loses trains, owing to the repeated deep falls guard
(
against Billlou* Fever, or other sicklier
to observe my' feliow-traveler. Now. I (drowned the rest of my sentence, and time, worth at least 825. and Jias 825 to of snow, except by the employment of ।
peculiar to the change of seasons. Dr. David
rather pride myaelf «m being a judge of ,the train moved off before I had time to pay at the end; the total is just twice the thousands of laborers, who excavated ;
Kennedy's “Favorite Remedy” will do thia for
physiognomy, and my first impressions ,complete it. I sat still in a horrible amount that the com might have been the drifts, piling it on flat-cars, by which ,
Domestic 4 New Home
. .
you. -Get a bottle now and begin uring It at
of him were the reverse of pleasant. .Mate of nervousness, expecting I hardly settled for. The original damage was it was hauled on. On several cr?-?!?"
occasions 'once. A long fit of sickness and a long doctor’s
He wm evidently a fidgety, nervous sort know what.
said to be $100. The two men spend 8188 the trains running into this cityr were
wnr. bus
ano-- j
...
bill may be the penalty of neglect. If your
of man; he had restless gray eyes,
in
“
lawing"
it,
and
of
this
only
825
goes
pended, and the week or more of tbe
At last the train stopped at the station
hasn't It, write to the Dr. at Rondout,
without much expression In them, while for which I was bound, and I jumped from one to the other; the other 816.1 is •• milk famine." when the milk-trains druggist
'
his hair and bean! were x&gt;f a reddish out. .As I passed the carriage I could dead loss, which must be added to the were cut off from the city, will be long N. Y. Price fl.00.
hue. He ws» dressed in a long ulster, see him sitting there quietly; and I went original 8100 to -how the real damage. remembered.
It la aaid that the laws of New York very
which 1 thought unite unnecessary ; for into the station master's room and told
4. These figures are furnished us by
When iu need of the Best
Compared with that rigorous winter closely resemble sausages. You have respect
Chough it was late in the year the
him shortly what had happened, advising authority which cannot be questioned, the one which has just now given wav to
weatoer was by no mcaas cold. There him to take some means of securing him. as very "fair average figures. We are spring seems all the more remarkable, for them until you know bow they are made. Grades of Hardware and Ma­
was on the seat beside him a small oaken He promised to telegraph, but saiditwas assured that tho relative actual results and will long be considered exceptional.
DID SHE DIE!
box, strongly bound with brass; and his no business of his; and with this assur­ of ordinary litigation will show a clear Except two or throe days, when the fall
“No; she lingered and suffered along, pining chinery.
Call and see me.
eyes were constantly glancing from this ance 1 had to be content
loss quite as startling as tills, and that a of snow did not exceed an inch at any away all tbc time for years, tbe ductors doing
.
box to me in a way that I did not at all
very large percentage of cat.-es show a one time, aud this disappeared in a few her no good; and at la*t was cured by this Hop
like. I began to have visions ot Fenian I I then went off to mv friend’s house, much larger-loss, especially when new hours. Chicago has had fairer and more BiUera the papers say so much about. Indeed I
plot*, infernal machines, and I do not where I arrived just in time for dinner
trials, appeals and collateral suite are in­ agreeable weather than often hanpeas in indeed! bow thankful wc should be for that
know what. After regarding me steadi- I suppose the traces of mv fright still volved. This column is regularly read ordinary springs. What had this extra­ medicine.”
remained, for no sooner did I enter the
Jv for ajew minutes, he said;
Trouble which to-day look* as big as a mill­
In at least 100 families in a rural neigh­ ordinary winter in store for man? The
' «Is Jt possible, sir, that you are not dining-room than my host exclaimed:
borhood in this State, where a litigation extreme rigor of the preceding winter stone may ere to-murruw'* sundown shrink to
••why. what is the matter, old man?
aware of this carriage being reserved for
that began about a few sheep has gone left a legacy of excessive drouth, which
you
’
ve
not
meta
ghost
on
the
road,
have
State officials?’’
on until the court costs alone, three years was followed in many sections of the
SHILOH’ S CONSUMPTION CURE.
I looked around, and seeing no indi­ you?” .
I told’ him I had seen somebody a ago, had amounted to over 8400, and. so West by a great loss of corn, and wheat,
This is beyond question tbe moat successful
cation of the fact, replied that:
far as we know, they are still rolling up. and oats, and potatoes. The wheat was Cough
good
deal
worse
than
a
ghost:
and.
dar
­
Medicine we hare ever sold, a few doses
“ I was not aware ot such being tbe .
5.
But
the
most
important
considera
­
su*h a failure that in some localities not invariably cure tbc worst cases of Cough, croup
ingdinner, I related my adventure, upon
case."
.
tions are yet to be mentioned, aud these enough was gathered for seed. In others and Bronchitis, while tte wonderful success is
which
they
all
congratulated
me
on
my
“ Then, sir," he replied, “I must beg
go to the uncertainty of the result. If the corn perished under the drouth. in the cure of consumption is wtibnut a paral­
erf yem instantly to vacate it, and leave lucky escape. After dinner I went oil the man who knew he had a right to re­ Many sections gathered no hay for many lel in tbe history of medicne. Since its first
early to bed. pleading fatigue and the
it has been sold on a guarntee, atest
m« here in soliton- silence.”
cover could* be even reasohably sure, his months, though in the fall there was a discovery
which no other medicine can stand. If you
next
day
’
s
business
as
my
excuse.
'Consideriug that the train was then
case would be comparatively an easy
a Cough we earnestly ask you to try it.
When I awoke in the morning. I found one. But nothing in this world of new and bounteous growth that sufficed to have
going at the rate of about forty miles an
Price
IQcta,
50cta, and tt.OO If your lung* are
make the pastures good far into the win­
hour, and would not stop until it reached my host ready for breakfast; and I joined uncertainties is more uncertain than the ter months. The winter of 1881-82 was sore. Chest, or Back Lame. und Shiloh’s
n small station half-way to my destina­ him at once, as my train left inan^hour’s result of a lawsuit. Nor is this because attended with sickness of great severity, Porous Plaatta- Sold by F. T. Boise.
ANSWER THIS QUESTION.
tion in about an hour's time, I could not time. As I shook liands with him at the judges and juries, and lawyers are worse
including the dreaded small-pox—im­
Why do so many people we see around us,
quite see bow I was to comply with his station, be rem anted he should like to than oilier men. Consider the contin­ ported here—which has been and is yet
seem to prefer to suffer and be made miserable
request, or rather command; and I frank­ hear of the man being caught.
gencies necessarily involved.
br ind'gestiau, constipation, dizziness. loss of
vet
almost
ar.
epidemic
in
certain
States;
I transacted my business; and. as I
ly told- him so, adding that “I bad as
(1.) The statement of the case. Not but the prevalence of diseases of other appetite, coming up of tbe Food, yellow skin,
much right there as he had. and did not had time to spare," I turned into the first one man in a hundred knows how to an&lt;l equally as fatal types was as great when for TScta. we will sell them Shiloh's Vltalixsr, guaranted to cure them. Sold by F. T.
hotel I came to, and walked up into the state his ease to his own lawyer in ite
intend moving."
.
billiard-room, where 1 met Fred Uharl- full strength. He has a strong conscious­ during the winder of lo80-'81, when the Boise
He replied with a most solemn air:
SHILOH’S CATTARRH REMEDY, A mar­
extreme weather intensified human suf­
. “Then your fate be on your own ton, an old schoolfellow of mine, who ness that qe ought to win, and he rests
velous cure fur Catarrh, Dintaheria, Canker
fering.
was playing billiards with three other chiefly on that.
head."
.
mouth, and Head Ache. With each bottle
The mildness of the past winter has here
is an ingenious nasal injector for the THE CROWN BEWIWWACHDiE
This began to frighten me, for tbe fellows. ’ He seemed surprised to see me.
(2.) The presentation of the case &lt;&gt;y
man's manner convicted me that be must and asked me how I got there. I told the lawer to the court and juty. Not on» not been limited to the Western States more successful treatment of these complaints . jwTbe‘•Crown’’comes ’uteUhe market
alone.
It
has
prevailed
generally
through
­
without
extra charge. Price tort*. Sold by *be test of all tbe macnlnes, I ut. tWprung to
be insane; and the prospect ot an hour's him I had come down there early that lawyer in a hundred can state a case iu
out the country and all over Europe,
front rank at once from tbe fact th »H ha*ta­
journey shut up in a first-class railway morning; aud I then proceeded to give ite full strength after it has been clearly
from St. Petersburg to Constantinojile
ken the good features in all oth* machines
carriage with a madman was not calcu­ him a sketch of my adventurous journey stated to hixp.
and put them in one grand can blurn on, nuk­
There, as well as at certain pointe in |_|EXRY ROE, Pbopmibtob
lated to raise my spirits. However, I of the night before. Fred smiled, and
ing this the Handsomest, Lai gest, M « Silent
(3.) The evidence is always uncertain. Canada and Nova Scotia, there* has
put abefld face on the matter, and affect­ said:
Old lawyers often remark that few things
“ Ah, ves, old man; I heard something are to difficult as to extract the simple been brief and exceptional cold weather,
ed to be engrossed with my newspaj&gt;er,
but
as
a
whole
the
season
has
been
one
about
it?
’
'hough in reality I was watching his
truth from a witness who know* it; and
“ You heard something?" I said. it must always be remembered that in of unusual inildueis. To the astrono­
every movement. He suddenly seized
fouud only In the
mer. and generally to the scientifio
hold of the wooden box and held it on “From whom?"
the nature of things witnesses seldom world, the two winters in such ex­
m»v have one, tw
his knees, mumbling some inarticulate
tint none bat Ibf .'tXSm' nss
“Well," he replied, ••TH tell you all know more than a fraction of what it is
contrast ought to furnish
Every device that 1» really desirable In Other
words, then suddenly replaced it beside about it, for the benefit of the company. desired to prove! And the risk of a ma­ traordinary
the materials for some additional in­
niachlnea wUl be found in th« “Ltowd.” Ad­
him. In doing so I caught a glimpse ot Old Harris, the diamond merchant, told terial witness being sick, or dead, or on
vantage ha* been taken uf the experiment* and
formation,
not
only
aa
to
the
csusei
re
­
the butt of a pistol sticking out of his me last, night that he had just »’oma down a journey at the .Very moment he Is need­
experience with *'■ kind* of machine* ever In­
sulting
in
such
opposite
temperatures,
vented, and the “Crown” U a perfect embodipocket Here was a pretty flltemma; from Luuuon. When he had taken his ed, is also considerable; thousands of
shut up in a railway carriage with a man seat in the carriage at Euston all alone, cases aro defeated by such miscarriages. but as to tbe efiect of these variations
upon
human
health
and
human
happi
­
who was decidedly insane, aud armed just as the train started, some fellow
E. R. WHITE.
(4.) Allowances must always be made ness. Can they from these phenomena
with a revolver or pistol; while I had rushed al the carriage and jumped in. for the incompetence of judges and jur­
Dr THEIR SEASOr
nothing more defensive than an umbrella Harris said he did not much like the ies. Verdicta flatly against evidence are discover anything as to the causes pro­
ducing
them?
Ur
can
they
pluck
from
and a roll of papers, which, in conse­ look of the fellow, and as he had about an everyday occurrence, and the gross­
quence ot their length, I was compelled eight thousand pounds’ worth of dia­ est ignorance of the law* on the bench these extremes following each other in
such succession such knowledge as will
----- A FIH8T-CLA8B----to carry in my hand. Presently he |je- monds with him in a small box. he began
is the perpetual disgust of the painstaken enable man to fortell what is probable in
gu again:
to feel uncomfortable. He said the attorney.
CT- The Hirteet Market Price paid
the future, or what effeel, if any, the se­
•* Have you studied the marvelous pow­ stranger was a strong active man. and
(A) Finally, perhaps the most treach­ verity ot the one or tbe mildness of tbe for Hides, Pelts, Ac.
er* erf electricity, may I ask?"
that if it had come to a struggle for the
erous feature of litigation is' the uncer­ othe? winter may have upon the human Fr«»H Good*, Full Wai«bt« *r»4
I replied in the negative.
duunends Harris would have had no
tainty erf the issue upon which the case family? Is either,.and which of these
Satisfaction Guaranteed.
“I have,” said he; “audhave arrived choice—for he evidently felt sure the will at last be disposed of. The plaintiff' winters, a forerunner of pestilence or
at such a pitch of perfection that, aided fellow meant robbery, so he determined and tbe defendant assume, of course,
famine, or of the opjxwite of these? The
by the contents of this box, I could blow to try aud frighten him out of the car- that the wliole *tory will come out. and
direct
effect
of
a
severe
winter
is
to
kill
by iiretending madness, whi&lt;jh he
this train, and everybody in it, into in­
that the final Judgment will show who. by freezing the beat in the ground, and 0LEKKMT SXITB,
says he did so effectually that the fellow,
finitesimal atoms."
upon all the facte, had tbe most right on the direct effect of drouth is to burn the
“ But,” I hazarded, “how about your- in sheer fright, bolted at the first stop­
Attorney st Low,
The experienced tawyer corn and the gnu in tbe field. But these
page and left him to finish his journey Ins side.
•elf?”
knows that such a trial is the exception have not been general; they have been
“ I should calmly mount into the air’ hexe alone. But we did not know that
and
not
the
rule.
A
dozen
or
a
score
of
confined
to
loeafilieF.
Can
the
man
of
and survey the scene without injury." • you were the hero, old man. said Fred,
WARRANTED
preliminary issues may arise, or may be science give a warning note as to the
as the whole four burst into such a shout
raised, between counnel prior to the trial; general effect of the mild winter of 1882
; of laughter as I never heard before.
questions
about
the
forndof
pleading
and
—
a
warning
that
will
enable
him
to
. “You must stay and be introduced to
J AXES £ SWZBZZI,
look to yourself."
methods of procedure, about the special profit by its promised blessings or to
Pleasant this, for me! However, I' him afresh, and be will be here to-night." rights of the parties in the prucuises.
avoid its pre-established blights and caI did not stop to hear anything more.
made nome remark which seemed toi
Attorney a Counsellor,
■ iamities? The ordinary •• weather man"
&gt; I rushed downstairs, thoroughly realiz- right to sue, about limitations and bare
i predict*, tat his predictions are so close
silence. I felt more than ever convinced1 ing that I had been made a fool, caught
and ertoppels.- on any one of which thei upon the time for their fulfillment aud
the
first
train
home,
and
have
not
shown
of his madness, thinking be had proba­
whole ca«e may be made to turn and to&gt; are so frequently di»apiK&gt;intmente that
bly escaped from some private asylum.. myself in that neighborhood since.
take iU final result. If all these perilsi they have small value. Can the man of
■re safely passed, and the forma! trial is; ncieDoe reason out what wili be the
:
—The Boston Gazette bears heavily reached, it may at any moment be dis­
. weather and ite concomitants during the
. upon the latest fashion of men's head­
covered that the principal witness is in­■ uuexpired Ma««oiw of 1882? Cao they
- gear. “ While merciless abuse," it says,
competent. or that written evidence re­• deduce from the past what will be ths
I then tried anotherr “ has been heaped upon woman's spreadlied on is inadmissible under rules of evi-. character of the winter
■
Is there anv
, weather and the
popular
hat
arise
and
attack
those
ridioburkv-

utm. ” I suppose I looked surprised. for
be went ou: "Ah. you look surprised,
but
'

Sp ring-2th Harrow

Wiard Plows,
South Bend Chilled Plows,
. Gale Plows,

Strayer’s GRAIN DRILL,

Gleaner &amp; Binder

Sash, Doors nd Blinds,

DETROIT STOVE-CO S. STOYES

SEWING MACHINES

FRANK C. BOISE

THE~CK0W

MEAT MARKET.

Fresh and Salt Meats,

Smoted Hams ail Shoulders,

Lard, by the lb. or barrel,

YOU CAN GET

Reaper

OSBORN MAKE!

A8 MOD A8AIYIACBIHE HADE,
Very Cheap

Enmrt. ReMie, aii ResjeulHe.

THE CELEBBA.TEH

A. H. WINN, Dentist.

Grain Cradle.

BEST SET BUM TEETH (10.00

J. M. WOOD

SVJohn Andrews **T» he
Cotter. Tbe ma*

�Awlcu ib4 Foreign larble,
Monuments, Tombstone®, Mantle®,Ao.,
_______
Mich.

WuxiAM iSSaST’'

'

Little is wasted in ' starting the fire.
cut at tbe procer tim®, generally over
When the fire is do longer wanted it
two tons of water, there need be no
surprise st the tardiness with which this
without1—
o ___ ___ that
_
remains. water is got"rid of during hay harvest
The wet charcoal will very
in average weather. When the atmos­
phere is damp, evaporation goes on very
t been moistened. Charcoal'Is sfowly. tf at all h&amp;ec it is well to con­
_
__ ivenient to use for cooking pur- sider whether, as a mere matter of conPWHJS, as it is so easy to ignite it and to venince, entirely outside of the question
refoflkte tbe spited of bnrning. . By
of the greater Table-of early-cut *»
meansofa slide in front of the space compared to late-cut h®y» it -is not tiie
where the air is admitted, to the stove or wiser plkn to cut grass before thertnnfurnace, which can be very small, the mcr showers set in. It is well known
burning can be regulated tut is desired. that prior to the excessive heat usually
present between the first day of July
‘and the middle of August we are qait®
ready to burn when the draft for air la r likely to hare .clear skies and fair good
opened. By placing the coal around a ;drying weather. Iris found infinitelypot or kettle the water it contains may easier to save early-ou, hay in such
be made to boil quickly by theconsump-. ,weather, though -containing over ’two
tion of a very small amount of fuel. A tons of water to the acre, than to save
“ he“ it fotfr ia fop season when showers ar®
As a*n^example take timothy, in a
For broiling steaks, chops, fish, fowl,'
or game there is nothing eqmti to a fire’ climate where it blossoms In June,' cat, mpd* of charcoal. It burns steadily,

in, it will be more easily made, and
the ehbstaaces that are cooked, and pro­
I infinitely better hay, than when
duces few ashes, which fall as tliey' are
rod to approach ripeness. Low, flat
produced. If desirable the articles to' lands, such as are frequently devoted to
bo cooked can be placed directly on.fofl timothy, ar^quite liable to hold water
' upon the surface after the summer rains
commence, greatly to the detriment of
of fuel that burn with more difficulty. the prospective hay crop. On all such
It 1® a very desirable substance to keen
about the house for the purpose of aid­ lands grass should be cut early, for the
ing in preserving articles of food that reasons above given, as well as for the
added reason that when low-lying
are likely to go into decomposition
meadows are flooded, a greater or less
rapidly. It is also very valuable for amount of sand and soil is incorporated
absorbing noxious gases. It will re­ with th® crop, greatly to ite detriment.
lieve the taint from meat, game, poul­
Ayhen grass is cut in the flowering
try, and fish alter they, hare begun to stage, the very large amount of water
five off a bad odor and have an unde­
contained therein holds .nutritive ele­
sirable taste. In hot weather it is well ments in solution. These remain in the
k&gt; place choice pieces of freshly-burned plant, though the water is evap­
eharcoal, or bags containing pulverized orated in the curing process.
Rules
tharooal, inside the carcass of sheep, that apply to the grasse®.apply equally
fowls and game birds and animals to aid to tho saving of wheat, and other small
in preserving them and to prevent the
grains, though we are held within a
nroductlon of disagreeable odor® and close limit as to the latter, being com­
flavors. Charcoal is also useful for pelled to cut when the grain is in the
purifying the air of rooms in a dwelling proper stage of ripeness.
With the
And for keeping the atmosphere of cel­ grasses there is more latitude within
lars in good condition. It is an excel­ which good hay may be made, yet we
lent substance to keep in a milk-room, give ourselves too great a range in this
or one in which articles of cooked food particular.—National Livo Slock Jouraro kept. All persons who have experi­
mented with it for that purpose declare
that charcoal is a very valuable food for
Painted fans.
hogs and fowls when they are being fat­
tened. It is especially beneficial when
A reporter of the N. Y. Star recently
fed in connection with soft foods. It is called on a well-known dealer in fans
a superior article to use as a fertilizer on Broadway and talked with him on
for dowers and small shrubbery. It the subject of fan-painting.
acts to absorb moisture and carbonic
“Fan-printing," said the dealer, “so
acid when they are plenty, and to give far as it is considered as a tine art, is
them off when they are scarce and about played out. A few years ago
wanted by plants.
there were a number of artists in this
Tbe preparation of charoo&amp;l in places city who made a business of painting1
where a supply of any kind of wood can fans. The average price paid was $3u
be obtained is comparatively an easy a dozen, and, as the work was quickly
matter. The best quality is obtained done, tbe artists could realize a large
from hard wood, but a very good article sum of money by their .brushes. The
can be made from tho soft woods. A | demand for printed fans steadily in­
wood as light and soft as willow will creased until it was utterly impossible
At this point
make a good kind of charcoal for light to supply the dealers.
cooking and disinfecting purposes.
It inferior work began to bo incroduced
will contain but little ash, and will kin­ and the prices ran down, until at the
dle very easily, while,being quite porous, present time fans are painted at a cost
it will absorb a large amount of gases. of $2 per dozen, a price that no artist
A kiln should not be made partly of can make a living at.”
“Do you sell many painted fans at
hard and partly of soft wood, the sticks
being placed indiscriminately; but two present?" inquired the reporter.
“In comparison with the sales of a
kinds of wood can be burned by placing
the hard wood in tbe center and the few years ago wo do not sell manysuch.
soft on the outside. Most persons have The truthjs that fans aro now'printed
had an opportunity of seeing kilns made by their fair owners.”
“Is much artistic merit displayed in
for the purpose of burning charcoal. In
nearly every
neighborhood
there these efforts?”
are persons who have had experience in
“I should say not. Most of these sobuilding kilns and in superintending called printings are mere daubs, and
the bunting of them, and instruction tempt one to ask, with Artemus Ward's
can bo obtained from them in relation inquirer: “Which is Daniel and which
to tbe method of conducting operations. is the lion?* The fair Julia takes her
Ono who has never seen a kiln for fan and paints oa iv-a landscape.in
making charcoal, or who can not obtain which the shrubbery seems to overtop
the service® of a----- —
the trees and tho animals seem to be of
can, however,
e-kifa and burn it a nondescript species. She shows this
by fol* *
’
these
simple directions:
painting to her gentlemen friends, who
din in the form of a hay- straightway, break out in admiration.
M become somewhat flat­ ‘Magnificent,’ ‘charming,’ ‘how truly
—.—----- uding some time. The site ratal,’ and other equally absurd expres­
for it should be level ground, from which sions are heard, and thus encouraged
the turf has been removed and the sur­ the lady goes on painting other fans,
face made smooth. Tbe sticks of wood each painting worse than tho former
must stand on end, and slant toward the one, because a more ambitious effort.”
.
.
any tricks

£

NERVOUS
DEBILITY
A c«reguaranteed.

by u» tor ilx boxet.accompanied wllh fl». dolian,
w* will aeod th. parchsacr our written &lt;uarn&gt;t*«
Io return tbe money If tb. treatment does not .1tkor&amp;Ss&amp;il
a WKST A CO^Soto Proprietor*, ttl and IBS W
Mad^oo 8u CU'catQ, HL
f» ]

HALL’S

M:{,i

L*UNE

I®8- Some years ago a fraud in
This will serve for a r
fan-printing came to the surface. A
well-executed painting, if original, was
1 quite expensive, aud taking advantage
running from tthis space to one side of of this some keen follows. adopted a
.. the wood for the admls- new plan. They took the silk before it
the kiln below
non of air. It can be a simple trench was placed on the body of the fan, and
*■------------ae. No sticks had a photograph taken on it. Then
nmde with * hoe
or
____ __
should be placed
in ___ kiln that arc they skillfully painted the photograph,
----------------- jfaes in diameter, aad th® \nd some of the best-posted dealers
largest of them should be put near the were taken in by these unscrupulous
center. Tbe piece® erf wood mar be dealers. It wenfon in this way for
from two to three feet long, hut those qrite £ While, bnth on® day a lady fiM
that comprise one layer should beerf the ou EightrentiMitreet, who h quite » col­
same length. The bottom layer being lector, purchased, one of these photocompleted* smother may be formed in । graphed fans, and discovered by acciI dent the method, adopted. She returned
the fan to the dealer, and thus put him
guard. £1 spite ot

kiln to the fop.

work executed that it requires the aid
of an expert to determine.6
“Why are not painted fans of this
description as valuable as if painted
ffrora an origin*!?”
“Why they bear the same relation to
an original as a chromo doe® to an oil­
painting. The former may have ail the

to them, and on one oocwioa, I belter®,
they had energy* enough to. count the
cash on hand, aad to satisfy themselves
that the balk of the balances was cor­
rect. But. ao far as making a thorough
. inspection is concerned, that wks too
great an effort for them altogether.
Really, it was quite amusing to watch
the utter helplessness of some of the old
gentlemen, who asked the most ridicu­
lous questions upon matter® which they
reallv didn' t know the first thing about."
“ liow many directors compose the
board of this bank?”
“ Nine; only five of whom are usually
present at the regular meeting—that
number forming a quorum."
“ What is their average age?”
. “ Some of then» are verging on. the
•eventies; few', if any, aro under sixty.”
*; What is the ordinary method of the
■weekly routine businaw?”
“ The cashier reads his weekly state­
ment ot loans effected, discounts'made,
and cash and securities on hand and on
deposit. Then the old fellows pa&amp;s it
to one another, look at it in a casual,
sort
way through tboir spectacles;
sometimes put In an objection to this or
that discount-, and take the cashier’s
worti for the rest."
“ Do they oounr the cash and check
the securities regularly?”
“Only when the Government In­
spector makes bis rounds, which he
generally does about opce a month;
but. whenever he intends doing so, he
usually notifies the directors that he- is
coming.”
■
“ la this notice communicated to the
President in confidence?”
“I should scarcely think it was, for

BENSON’S
CAPGINE
PIASTERS
HAVE BEEN IMITATED,

And their excellent reputation in­
jured by worthless imitations. The,
Public aro cautioned against buy-1
ing Plasters having similar sound­
ing names. Seo that tho word:
C-JL-F-C-I-H-E fa correctly spelled.

Benson’s Capcine
Porous Plasters
Are the only improvement over
mode in Plasters.
One is worth more than a dosen
of any other kind.
Will positively cure where other

’
Price 25 cent®.
Beware of cheap Plasters made
with lead poisons.
.

8EABURY A JOHNSON.
Msagfaetarln® CtxaniM*. N.w Totfc.

PARKER'S HAIRTheTlett.
BALSAM.
Cleanest .nd
rr.— t Ikocornical Hair

FT

seems to be a sort of tacit understand­
ing to that effect,” •
“Do the Government officers perform ,
their, duties thoroughly?”
•
“ Of late they have been more partic­
ular than formerly, but as to how long
this trill last I don't know These offi­
cers are supposed to coudt every dollar,
but the manner in which bank bills are
put up tenders counting a very tedious
process. It has frequently happened
that a $10,000 package of $100 bills has
been cursorily glanced at by the officer
simply passing his hand rapidly ovei*one end of the bundle, taking it for
granted that all the notes are there.
In this bank a Government officer takes
three days to make a complete inspec­
tion. In other banks it will take him

shortage in a bundle of notes?”
“Suppose, for instance, we receive
S20.00V from another bank. The bun­
dle is fastened with a strap upon which
the initials of the clerk who has counted
it are printed. Should the amount be
short, that bank is notified and the
initials given, and the clerk making up
th® package is,-of course, held respon­
sible. This, however, does not happen
very often, but when it does the bank
sending the package invariably makes
up the difference.
“What is the usual nature of the se­
curity accepted by the bank director®
from employes?”
“ Sometimes bj- expecting them to
take stock in the bank, sometimes in
the form of mortgage, sometimes by ac­
cepting a policy from a guaranty com-’
pany, and occasionally by taking no se­
curity whatever. It is a singular fact,
but the largest securities offered by
friends of banking employes are no; in­
frequently tendered on behalf of those
who make the most inefficient officers.
'And it is just here where family patron­
age steps in. Nearly everybody here is
a relative or a personal friend of a di­
rector, and I suppose it is much the
same with other concerns. It looks as
if banking positions were especially in­
stituted for the sake of fostering family
associations. In this respect this policy
is the reverse of that followed by large
wholesale firms, who take the'ir men
merely on their merits.’
“ Do you find that bankdirectors bor­
row .largely from their institutions^”
“X can &lt;5®y Speak of this particular
bank so far as this question applies: but
I venture to say that the nine directors
of tbc board borrow more money from
it in the course of the year than any
eighteen of its best customers, and the
same practice, I am told, exists largely
in other institutions. If all the transac­
tions were made public they would make
very lively reading. The bank direct­
or’s position being all powerful, it nec­
essarily has atelose connection with the
cashier’s department, and when this sys­
tem of borrowing degenerates into a
habit the cashier obtains a leverage,
which, if he be inclined to dishonesty,
he can easily control for his personal
benefit. I venture to say that many a
gigantic fraud has been germinated by
this means, through which the cashier
has eventually gained some advantage
over one or more of the directors."
“ What remedy would you suggest foe
this abuse?”
“Simply to have a clause in bank
Charters prohibiting- banking corpora­
tions from borrowing from their own
bank and enacting a heavy penalty fora
breach of the law. Even then, although
it might not quite abolish the system, it
would at any rate go a long way toward
checking lt.&lt; The reason I have spoken
fully upon the matter is on account of
the necessity of reaching public opinion
in \ ha war that some better system
be devised. The whole business is man­
on a wrong principle, and the
sooner the public knows it the better for
it and few banking men and employe®
generally.”—A’. F. Herald.
'

i^Hli • • - ■:
'

- •

'

'

PATENT NO PAY

':

PARKER’S
A Pvr» tally tiedidM that New Istoxlcatn.

6033
4

If ymi arc a ro-dumc or fanner, warn oat jrttl
overwork, or a tnoCter run «w» by family erhou^hoid duuet try Pamkkm's Cixcut Tox»C.
.
Ifyou are a lawyer, remitter or ImsuisM man exteurted by menu! (tram or aruinii, can-* do not
rote intuxicadnj »um:uanu, but uic Pa.xkx’i
Gi.sGcs Tokk.
If you have Dytpr;.*L». RluumBlUm. Kidney or
Urinary Complaint*, or if you are trwibtej with any
drwrderoflbcranEi.itorracii lie »ei«. Wool or nenes
you can be cured by Pa»KKX'* Gimgkx Toxic.

ig

PIMPLES

ERRORS OF YOUTH.

A OeMkwMSi «bu tuirrri tor y*»r» fmre JTer.
I *01 moil ■ Fit*&gt; «b- rreib* -»r a aimH* Va»
„-------- -------------- UM. Balm tW wlfl remor-Tan. tak-a. Fun.
u.axi.1 m-fa-tt—.Irariox ilu&gt;|ak&gt;a »nn. clear a*.
bvaalfTul.a!—• t&gt;r&lt;irvci-.o. i«r fwrvhirM^r.a maar*
■ til «rv*H&gt;
hrtti
Iw-wt &lt;w «tmsk fa.

'

consumptives:

�irg.

IIIW
On Saturday

XM-®
- JULY 15. 18M.

distinctly than

1*

ehold!

miles out from
drowned. He 1— __— drinking
.
_
heavily, and it 1* supposed, had been i
LACK WAX KEWb.
After muddling over the subject
suffering from delinum tremens when tion.
1
Thirty caass of small pox at Grand he made the fatal plunge. He was 1for half a year what is the result 7 Tbe
removal of a few petty stamp taxes on
such a confirmed dram drinker that 1patent medicine*; perfumery an&amp; the
Rapids at last reports.
Frank Mead.of AaBable, aged « yeara J the salooq keepers had been forbidden '
like, to which nobody objects juid 1
vaa killed by a shot from a toy pistol a ।to sell I Ain liquor.
which costa nothing to collect and the
/ afternoon a work train on
&gt;'
■
i Monday
.Rose, aged 7 years, ot De- I the Chlauro.de
Chieu
Grand Trank Railroad reduction of the tax on cigarettes, ,
which ought io be taxed .out of exist­
Iroit, Ml moths river on Monday, ran
)
intp a cow one-half mile west of
ence. That is the sum of reform. The
and-was drownded.
]Elba, ditching the engine and four cars.
whole costly machinery of tbe internal
Wm. Schneider, an old resident of J.
( Waugh, of Flint, clerk for J. Mar­
Marine City, fell from a load of hay (shall, roadmaster, was instantly killed, revenue service remains.
The House ofj Representatives was
Wednesday and was killed.
A. Lawaeon, foreman of the train,
yesterday again tbe scene of an en­
Harper Lucks, aged 18, was drowned Brakeman Stewart and conductor
counter of words, in which Messrs.
last Monday evening while bathing in Davis were eeverely hurt. Waugh had
Robeson, of New Jersey, and Whitmore
the mill pond at Manaheater.
•
$3,000 insurance on hi* life.
of Tenneessec, were the principals, and
Mr*. Margaret Bassett died at/.Grand .
Lute Thompson, another of the
and in which tbe amenities of debate
Rapids, on Wednesday, at the advanced' victims of the tile works explosion
were grossly violated. Mr. Robeson,in
«ge •« 100 years, 11 months and 21 day*. which occured at Jackson on the 20th
closing the debate pn the naval appro­
Mr*. Eastman and Sam' Jones, who ulL has died. At the time of the ex­
priation bill not content with a gener­
eloped from Bellevue some time ago plosion he was hurried beneath a pile
al defence of bis administration of the
have been overhauled and brought of hot bricks and literally baked. The
Navy Department, without mention­
jury in the cane of Nugent, another
back.
, ing any names, referred in the bitter­
Wilber Sawyer, aged 33, a Saginaw victim, has decided that the accident
cat terms to Mr. Whitmore, whom he
City street car driver, suicided Wed­ was caused by the incompetency of en-1
accost* of purloining the public school
nesday by shooting himself through1 gioeer David Smith.
. funds of his state,” and with bringing
the body.
A accident-occurred on theKawkaw■ his. brother from his Tennessee home
Wednesday a man named Wade, at1 lin river on Tuesday, near Judge Mar­
r to take a contract under an adminiswork upon a bridge between Northville! sion’s farm, resulting in the drowning
r tintion to which he was politically in­
aad Plymouth, fell 35 feet and was fat­‘ of Mary Rose, aged 16 years, daughter
imical. Goaded by the severalty of
of John Rose, a ship, carpenter, and i
ally injured.
Mr. Robeson’s language, Mr. Whit­
An East Saginaw woman celebrated Willie Campbell, aged 9, son of Alder- 1
more, seems to have lost his temper,
the 4th of July by getting drunk, and man Daniel Campbell of Bay City, i
for he quickly pronounced Mr. Rubeparading the streets with nothing but These two, in company with other 1
a chemise on. 15 took threepoliceman -bildren, were riding on a raft of their ison’s charge “a lie, whoever tells it or
and a band caiyio get her out of sight. own construction, when It broke up, whoever repeats it,” and concluded by
“branding on tbe forehead of Mr.
Tbe wood working shops of the Up­ lettiug its occupants into the water.
ton threshing maching company at All
'
were rescued except the two named. Robcoon the words ‘falsehood and pr-e
jury.
’” At this point the matter was
at Battle Creek burned Wed. morning.
Clarkston is excited because Miss
dropped, tbe participants having ex­
Tbe low Is $7,500, with $5,000insurance. Josie Clark, only daughter of M. H.
hausted
their abuse.
The body of Robert Smith was found Clark bas eloped with the notorious
My letter giving the items of expen­
in tbe river at Bay City, Saturday af­ Dr. Wm. R. Yuill. Tbe greatest sur­
se
of
the
Congressional spree to York­
ternoon. He disappeared Friday morn­ prize is expressed by all, as Miss Clark
ing, and it is believed he committed left a home where nothing reasonable town has made some of the Congress­
Tbe Cut sbowu tbc new stand, Just perfected and put on tbe market.
men
rather
sensitive. There is a prob­
suicide.
was ever denied her to marry this man
A Grand Rapids youth named Wil- whose past history in regard to the ability, however that we shall finally
‘ Damson is alleged to have eloped with death of his wife by poison at Ovid, know about tho disgraceful matter at­
the girl bis widower father wanted to and the arson case at Ithaca, were well tending Garfield’s funeral. The more
marry. She was young, buxom and known to ber. She was at tbe time en­ these things arc exposed the better will
i Have tbe largest stock of LUMBER ever laJ4
had $500 in cash.
gaged to a young Detroiter who visited be the chance of preventing any more
down Id Nashttile.
A man named Peats, who went from Clarkston a few days ago, only to find such exhibitions.
.
Upon
the
reateeuiblingof
the
Crim
­
Ionia by train Sunday to see a friend the bird flown. The parents favored
near Lyons, jumped off the train while the suit of the Detroit chap, aud hadn’t. inal Court this morning to continue the
it was in motion and was 'seriously, the least intimation that she was other­ star-route trials. Judge Wyle remarkFeet kept constantly on band.
perhaps fatally injured.
wise inclined, as the correspondence&gt; ed that he saw the case had been
The body of John Heath, aged-88, and meetings with Yuill were all clan­• going on in tho newspapers since the
adjournment of the court “I don’t
was found in a dock at West*Bay'City,
destine.
Wednesday. He probably fell intotlic
Frank Cobb of Texas township, Kai-■ know what progress the newspapers
▲ specialty
water in a fit, to which he was'subject, amazoo Co., caught his little brother have made,”he continued,“may be they
and was drowned.
Fred, aged 13, years, from behind as he have found a verdict” Mr. Merrick to­
^^jly Fpurth John W. Russell wast was sitting at the breakfast table, on day authorized a denial of the rumor of
drowned at Maple Rapids. He bad just Monday morning, drew him backwards I a disagreement among the counsel for
won the sack race and taken part in the towards him, and cut his throat with a I the government in tho star-route cases,
!
Httriij ftiliij. Mioj, Stuiliif, J«st
foot race and went into the water razor, nearly severing bis head from growing oftt of the alleged suppression ,
! Or any thing in the building material line, tee
-while heated, causing cramp.
the trunk. The act was committed in by Mr. Bliss of certain newly discover­
I
our
stock, .eject what you want, and be happy.
| John Welsh of Hint, was found un- the presence of their sister, a young ed evidence of tbe most important
conseious with bis skull fractured, one lady about 17 years old. Frank Cobb character. At a conference of govern­
O
Also
Flour, Kalt, Shingles, Lath,
■morning recently. He died the day run away from tbe Michigan agricul­ , ment counsel this morning it was
and Blacksmith's Coal.
following without being being able tural College about two years ago aud agreed that the grand jury should be
reconvened and another
t&gt; state who his murderer was.
went
in an ,I immediately
“ CUV to
l” California,
V/Ouium..., where he was
------ ----------______ __
Cora Colburn, aged 17, of Battle insane asylum about six months, and j setof indictments framed.
HIGHEST PRICE PAID FOR
Dr. Lamb's
Lamb’s official report of the an
an-­
Creek, having been jilted by her lover was brought home lost winter, since
on Friday, took two ounces of lauda- , which time he has been working on topsy made upon the body of Guiteau
---------nnh_ is pub­
the
execution
num with suicidal intent. Antidotes his father’s farm. Tbe reason be as- immediately after *«
G’
. As usual.
Jiavc been given and she is still alive.
t net is that he was
______
_ ____ lished to-day. It is tho opinion of the
signs for the
engaged
At PrMkport on SauinH,. Ttaddeu. I [nVbougbtn'oTgTent Tuiao to tbe «den- learned editor of the medical journal
VanLopn. 18 year. old. engaged in tifle world, and that hi. brother disturb- to which tbe report was first transmit­
Guardian Male.
bauling tan l*nk oat ot tbe wood., I
him in hi, thought, and rettued to ted for publication that it presents
in U&gt;e muter of Um estate of
Ml off the .agon under the wheel,. , w
iet_ aDli it Wae nectausary to kill nothing to indicate that assassin was of
COBWIN GABDKEB aad ANNA GARDNER.
-1 aewain ITT"
.
.
■
, . 1 .1
which paaaed
over him VUlanr.
killing I.
him
in- ’ ।him.*The story ia
Minora.
also circulatedythat unsound mind.
A A shows the hardened steel points on which the crank ehaft and dnve- Nodes I* hereby rl« teal IsbaDssllsl public
stantly.
,he killed him because ho .circulated
Augustwbeel *re hung and work. Tbi» is tbe lightest running bearing which can be made. There te
Tuesday, John Anderson, 45'years tstories around the neighborhood that
hardly an» friction. Pointe are adlmtabls to take up the wear and tbe crank ou whichthe pit­
One reason why the pursuit and cap- 1man, works is between the points, thus putting the strain direct and avoiding all aide pull.
old, was struck just below the lelt eye he had been guilty of a crime against
B B shows the hardened steel points on which the treadle is bung and works.
by a bolt from a saw in Davis’ mill at nature. Cobb was jailed at Kalamazoo turn of hostile Indians in Mexico is so 1
.
Muskegon. The bone of the left side I and a coroner's jury, returned deliber- much brisker than on this side of the They
are made adj-.’-table for taking up wear.
C
C shows the patent ball and socket joint connection* of the pitman
border may be that the Mexican Gov­
of bis face was crushed. He cannot | ate murder against him.
with the crank and treadle. By this patent arrangement the “thumping” beard irf other macbernment offers $300 for each scalp. । Ines Is prevented, and there is no possible chance for the pitman to hind at any point in the re­
recover.
There is a frank brutality in thns set volution of the crank, no matter bow uneven the floor may be or how far from parallel the
It is reported that two Cadillac boys,
OUR WASHINGTON LETTER.
ting a price on the heads of human be­ crank and treadle bearing for the pitman tnay be. There u always a free and easy action of
aged 12 and 8 years respectively, took ,
the pitman at every point in its stroke.
From our tsjulsr correspondent J
jings as if they were wolves, and imita­
six-year-old companion into tbe
1&gt; shows the belt-replacing device, by means of which any lady or child can
tlie barb..rous scalping practices of throw the belt on the^rive wheel instantly, and without moving from ber chair.
■woods, bound him to a log, beat him |
Washington, D. C., July 8th, 1882. ting
(
aborigines. On our western front­
The season of preparation for sum- the
t
E shows the enlarged nickel plated and polished drive-wheel. By mak­
-efwlly. and then burned him with
much the same sentiment exists, ing this wheel nearly four inches larger in diameter, and putting the weight mostly In the extreme
matches.
.
mer at the watering places has merged ier
j
TUBMKB Qa'rDNKB. GcArdSt
outside rim of it, we make it run easier and longer, when once started, as It has more momentum.
there is no Government bounty on
The examination of Websler, the into summer itself and groups of gay but
।
F F shows the oil cups on the treadle bar for preventing the oil from drop­
Bedford man, who emasculated Tar­ and happy tourists, dad In the richest Apache top-knots. Probably if there
ping on tbe carpet or floor.
the first result would be a gener­
GG G show the porcelain casters, one in each of four feet of the machine.
bell. on account of the inability of the and brigheat of colors, are to be seen were,
,
latter to be present waa put over by on every aide. In thia city the opening al
। slaughter of friendly Indians, and a
in
of
their
scalps
pretending
stipulation until July 18th. Tarbell is of July cause a general feminine flit- bringing
■
Hashvllle, Mich.
Moale,
-still very ill.
ting, the breaking up of many charm­ they were hostiles*.
At Benton Harbor, Wednesday, Capt. ing homes. With the departure of
At a fair of the Congregatianalist
Wm. Church, of St. Joseph, in step­ their families Senators and members
ping from the steamer Lora, fell over­ , took refuge in the hotels and now re- 1church at Palestine, Texas, forty young
women gave an exhibition drill with
board and was very severely if not fatal­ signedly await tbe dose of the session.
fans, showing how gracefully and bely injured by being crashed between a Dullness is settling down in every
— THAT—*
To show you « large and well selected Mock of
witchingly thoae articles can be used.
quarter where scenes of gayety prevail­
**
fender and a pile.
Parks, cor­ Then the fans were sold by auction,
A terrible affair occurred near Coop­ ed in tbe winter season.
the prices depending on th*,- populari­
ersville, Saturday night. The residence | ners, theatres, dub windows and hotel
ty of its contributor, the whole profit
of Mr. E. F. Lillie wm burned. Mr. । stepsare abandoned to strangers for
reaching $850.
and Mr*. Lillie escaped, but their two the next two months.
■children, one about 4 and the other 0, , The recent discussion on political
Probably theex-Kbedive, with noth­
osseaanients in both houses of Congress ing to do but to enjoy his harem and all
(perished in the flames.
Wednesday, as some workmen were Los excited general attention and,taken tbe luxury a splendid income can give,
CONSISTING OF
blasting stnmps near Hoyt’s mill at in connection with the Hubbell-Curtis congratulated himself as being well out
£a«t Saginaw by the use of Giant pow­ controversy over tbe assessment circu­ of the fray. Yet he ought to be the
der, &lt;apiece of stump which had been lars, will have a depressing effect on greatest sufferer. His vanity, ambition,
threwapfar up in the air, struck a man tbe financial scheme of the Congres­ and outrageous extravagance have
Political nssess- caused all the misery in Egypt to­
aauied Wirtz Meyer ns it fell, killing sional committee.
BHmt*, or assessments of Federal office
him rfhnost instantly.
day__
. m
On Saturday a small boat containing holders -for political purposes, will
At Dublin, Ga.. Mr. Stark Swinton
two sailor* belonging to the steam probably never become a national is­ was attacked by a mad :dog.
Having
barge HRton, named £ete Anderson sue from tbe fact that it has been the no weapon Mr. Swinton banded tbe dog
and Dense* Cogney, with three other*, custom of both political parties to levy his hat, which the rabid boast Mezed
----- FROM
and
ran
on.
Nothing
is
ever
Jost
by
tributes
of
this
nature.
But
this
fact
•apsined eaLake Michigan near M u*kcpoliteness.
gon, and all were drowaM. Anderson's cannot disguise the evil effects of the

RING all the BELLS!
And call the people to

.

G. A. TRUMAN &amp; SON
To prepare for the 4th of July

Fans, Laces, Collars, Fringes, Embroidery, White Goods
Parasols, Gloves, Corsets, Skirts, Dusters and Shawls.

Linen Coats Long and Short, Hats and Caps, Gloves,
Neckwear, Boots and Shoes.
.

3

In 'Visiting TXaisliville on the 4th You Are Invited to
]Make our Store Your Headquarters.

CASH MID FOR EGGS IND BUTTER. SILTED IND UNSILTED

THE CROWN SEWING MACHINE

FOWLER&amp;INGERSON

100,000

Pine Lumber
Finishing Lumber,

WHEAT, OATS, CORN, ETC.,

i

FOWLER &amp; INGERSON.

V-

- —-

E. R. WHITE, Agt., At Koeber Bro’s Store.

IT IS A. FACT

ALL READY

NOT ONE

GROCERIES

0! my Customers Complain

Sugars, Coffees, Teas, Tobaccos,
Spices, Fish, Canned Goods,
Proiisions, 4c.,
AT THE LOWEST PRICES
For hash or Ready Pay.

Rerewtiy iReAeaJMathias, of Col uniViR towndtip, JneksMi Co., went flailing
with his two ’boys. One of them fell
overboard and tbc father jumped in to
rrecoe him. The water was only nbont
six feat deep, bis fret atack in tbe mud
at the bottom and hr wn* drowned

Reports al Fourth ot July accidents,
continue to come in. and tbe festive
fire crackers and dsoinre gun that,
not go off until tlie small boy looked
intuit, are ir*poD&lt;t1tlr foe test nose*
••id fiiyrrn*, •&gt;-wned
crippled

system. It is the essentia! idea of the
DISAPPOINTED ENTIRELY.
spoils ay stem that the offices should be
Mr. W. F. Hetherington, editor of tbe fientlmade to support the party.
There are
clerks here to-day who are still paying be tried St. Jacoba Oil for rheumatism, and
ten per cent a month on what they bor­ found It all that eouldbe naked. Tbe remedy
rowed to pay their campaign assess­
ment. I mean voluntary contributions
—aud these now look with dismay on 1
BRAIN AND NERVE.
Wen.’Health lUmeww. greatest remedy ou
the prospect of the renewed levies.
11 irtb for ispoSraxM, leanness, sexnal dc«Hy
have seen clerks pay over the “woluijOjnigjd* M»eb. Depot, JAME8E,
tary coatributien” with team in their
eyes, knowing that it deprived their
ISm«TAlT TO T*A V KLMS,
childron of clothes lor school or that it

The Nashville Mill, Crockery,

AUo the U&gt;I~&gt; Buxk &lt;&gt;■

----- BUT------

Giassiare, Lamps,
Stone Wire, 4c.,

0J&amp;XI30
27 Stop., »

TO BKSEKN IB BARRY CO.
KILU.GB oriWXEB.

UHIVEBMLLY SATISFIED

J10. M. ROE,

aad toyowri
re. Call and

CASH PAID EBB PRODUCE.

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                  <text>VOLUME IX.
LIFE IN NASHVILLE,
And Her Environs.

—Verily Providence, in Bending the
pleaaant weather we are now enjoying,
emiles are upon our harvesters.
—A. J. Hardy%onght of A. G. Kent

of Assyria. 163 fleeces of fine delaine
wool. Weight 1268 lbs. which brought
the snug little sum of &gt;434.84.
—Wm. Herbst an enterprising drum­
mer followed a Charlotte merchant to
the Lake on Tuesday, and succeeded
in selling him ^&gt;500 bill of goods.
from Texas
-M. B.
Tuesday ev
r ___
— tow 73
will be taken to Flint
mustaugs.
and other northern points for disposal.
—Walt Stillwell has sold his farm
west of town to a York State man
named Geo. Gibson, has bargained for
the Hydelauff place across Quaker
Brook, and will mere to town.
—The Hawk still wears that bland,
candidatial smile. The last argument
in regard to his claims for senatorial
honors is that he is a better speller than
David Crockett or Sam. Huston.
—It is evident that when Jack Brady
went to Battle Creek to live, that he
took all of his devllishness with him,
for on Monday he was arraigned for
disorderly conduct, but staved the case
off one week.
—Miss Hortie, the bright little
daughter of Jacob Oscnun, fell from a
desk stool in her father's office, on Sat­
urday. Quite a gash over her right eye
was the tesult and physicians had to
be called to aew it up.
—The sidewalks along Main St,
from the street to the buildings, should
be under the control and laid according
to the directions of the street commis­
sioner. Then, and not till then, will
Nashville be certain of having uniform
sidewalks on Main St.

—District Deputy Grand Chancellor
J||k A. Sweezey installed the Knights'
new officers on Friday evening last
The list installed was as given in a
previous issue of The News, except
W. G. Aylsworth went in as I. G. and
G. F. Truman, 0- G.
'
—The Ohio pump men, Frank
Sweitzerand Isaac Kreglio, located in
the old Wheeler building, have dissolv­
ed co-partAtrship, divided the spoils
and gone to Woodland to work through
harvest. We understand, however,
that Sweitzer will return to continue
the business, as soon as the burden of
the harvest is passed.
—A- C. Buxton is building u brick
boiler house in the rear of his brick
building. The same is built over a 340
barrel cistern which will be kept full
of water and is so easy of access, that
in case of a fire in that locality, all the
firemen will have to do, will be to stick
the “Volunteer*’ suction pipe through
a section of tile and “man the breaks.”
—A. R. Wolcott has sold his harness
shop to Herb, Walratb and U now in­
voicing the stock preparatory to the
change. This is done on account of
Mr. Wolcott’s health.
Roselle has1
been in business in this village for the'
past nine years and by hard work and
cloee attention to business has built up'
a model trade. His many friends wish
that a change of business may bring’
him health and renewed vigor.
Her­'
bert Walrath is a live, enterprising’
young man and. tbe business will not’■
suffer in bis hands.

—On Sunday D. H. Everts turned his&gt;
i
i
part of the corporation. On Tuesday
morning the mare and two bead of cat­
tle were found dead or dying and the&gt;
others sick. Investigation showed
that they had been poisoned by Parlei
green, which some coward had mixedI
with wheat bran. Two more subse­
quently died. Evidently the deed wasi
the work of a cowardly enemy, for do
&gt;
none but a low-lived, daatardly wretchi
would think of wrecking his vengencc।
I
would be unnatural and giye do eatis-■
faetion to a mu.
—Bill Griffith ha* been in the employ.
of C. H. Berry, selling and delivering,
i
Omnaa’g taama.

On Saturday Iaal Bill

| TERMS; $1.50per Yeab

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the'Sun.

ORNO STRONG,!
Eorrai axu P,orxi.Tor.. f

I

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICELJSATURDAY, JULY 22, 1882
same parties stopped him by running
a load of bay across the track. The
team was taken to Vt. Ville, for care
and Bill went to sleep an alley. Mr.
Oamun was notified, went to VL Ville
finding his horses in a bad shape. On
Thursday he had Bill arrested for
cruelty to animals. He was arraigned
before Esq. Stevens of Vt Ville, forth­
with, when he plead guilty and paid a
a fine of &gt;20. Then 0»mun commenced
suit againsthim for damages, papers
being returnable in four days.
—Joseph Cole and James McGraw are
by the ears in regard to ru ice bouse.
Last winter Cole took McGraw’s ice
house off his hands agreeing to pay him
&gt;10 for what ice he had in and for rent
daring season. Cole proving delin­
quent in regard to forking over the
saw-buck, McGraw put a lock on the
ice house and forbid him molesting it
until he was paid. Yesterday morning
Cole pulled the staple from the door,
entered and filled up bis cooler. When
McGraw heard of it he charged down
on Cole and a war of words ensued,
Megraw going away with the threat
that he would “make it hot” tor him
(Cole) before night.

L0OAL GIBBLE-GABBLE
Aa4 Ptraeaal Cklt-Chfct.

a bowery dance during the day and
evening. The fire laddies from Hast­
ings, Charlotte and Bellevue, are ex­
pected to be present. Everybody U
invited to go, carry provisions, and
cnjo&gt; a jolly time.
.
There were no services at the Chris­
tian church last Sabbath, owing to the
pastor, Rev. F. A. Bissell, being at
Cleveland, O^attending the commence­
ment exercises of the Western Reserve
college, from which be graduated in

HASTINGS.
Dr. Miller spent Sunday in thia city.
State-street U undergoing Improvements.

Jim Elliston is breaking bis colt.

in
the city meat market.
Some of the little folks picniced in R. J.
Grant's grove Thursday.
Mrs. Holland and Miss Long of Chicago, are
visiting at Dr. Russell's.
The mayor has ordered all the gambling
rooms of the city closed.
Judge Smith and wife started' Wednesday for
Petoskey to spend a few weeks.
Mrs. Stem hjs returned from a visit to rela­
tives in LaCrosse and Milwaukee.
.
Harvesters arc very busy and the yield of
wheat will be above the average.
A stove bolt decended on the big toe of Chas.
Metlon. At present the toe is undergoing re
pairs.
*
Ed. Dc«i{y of the Owosso Times has been tn
the city for a abort stay. He left for home
Tuesday.
The M. E. Social will be entertained by Mrs.
John Hall, at her home on Wednesday evening

No more “Babbles.”
Potatoes still hold their own at &gt;2.
'
Hay fever is a sneezy thing to catch.
The city bakery is being underpin­
ned.
The new block has been covered ith
a gravel roof.
\
Will Griggs occupies his new bom&amp;
on Gregg street.
'
A son was born to Mr. and Mrs. Hosk­
ins Monday night.
Frank Fuller’s residence is entertain­
ing the paint brush.
Anew, attractive and well-filled show ,
case at C. W. Smith’s.
Darier &amp; Son will’, add n handle
lath to their oar factory.
A new threshing engine for H. L.
Biaii arrived yesterday.
H. F. Pennington, Esq., of Charlotte,
was in town, Thursday.
‘
Brooks, Marshall A-po. have repaired
their engine and .boiler.
The M. C. R. R. pay car dispensed
favors at this point Tuesday.
Miss Tina Stevens of Chicago, is
visiting her sister,Mrs. Frank Baker.
The mystery of boat No. 17, is what
troubled the Thornapple Lake party
on Tuesday.
&gt;
Bnck layers on Dr. Young’s residence
are approaching the place where the
eaves ought to be.
Rev. Bissell returns from Cleveland
to-day and services will be held at the
Christian church as usual.
x
Harvest is upon us and the editor of
the Olio, would gladly sacrifice himself
for his country, at &gt;3,50 per day.
Dr. Murray assists Cooley in carry­
ing on F. T. Boise’s drug business,
during the absence of the proprietor.
E. 0. Raul a lightning jeiker at
Union City, Snndayed witix
D.
Hawthorn, a brother oparator and old
friend.
Elder P. Holler and wife started for
Millbank, Da., Wednesday evening.
They expert to be absent about three
months.
W. H. Aylsworth, M. D., n graduate
of the University, was in the village
this week, looking the ground over
with a view to locating.
w
Alex. Blair and Jim. Clay went over
to Thornapple fishing on Monday and
were quite fortunate, bringing home
one that weighed 9* lbs.
Miss Bell Truman. Mr. and Mrs.
Foote, Goo. F. Truman, E. W. Peck­
ham, Dave Fitzgerald and Mr. Pearce,
picnieed with a Hastings party at
Thornapple on Tuesday.
Dell Durham and wife were called to
Rice Creek, near Marshal), on Satur­
day to attend the funeral of the latter’s
mother, Mrs. Mills, wife of the pastor
of the M. P. church, Assyria circuit.
We learn that Goo. Townsend and
Warren Daley have purchased one of
the latest improved vibrator threshing
machines of Lee &amp; Boise of this place, ■
and will be ready for business by the
35th.
Esq. Parody has fitted up a tidy
Justice office in his building, and can
always be found prepared to ballance
the scales of justice in accordance to deal printer. It is always left
some one with more brass than brains,
without fitness or money, like Ed.
LN. KeUsnr mV- en- Smith, John Potter or Walt Powers,
and tiie loss falls on somebody else, for

for hubread.

NUMBER’44.

MAPLE QROVE.

This is the way the Hastings Demo­
crat translates one of oar last week’s
items: “Miss Vina Hofhnan, a good­
looking marriageable young Indy of
Maple Grove, has pieced a bed quilt
containing 36,960 blocks. That yohng
lady will make some young man a
cplendid wife.”
F. T. Boise and wife departed north­
ward, Wednesday, on a trip of several
weeks duration to Petoskey and Mack­
inac. The trip is made for the benefit
H. W. Rolf of this city died Monday lastof Mrs. B.’a health and hero's hoping His remains were token to Chester on Tuesday
tbatthe invigorating breezes of Little for interment.
The ladies of the Presbyterian church will
Traverse bay and Straits will full re­
give an ice cream social at the Hastings House
store her. .
on Friday evening of this week.
-Will Bennett won foe the third time in the
THE “BUBBLE” BUSTED.
contest for the medal. If Will can win twice
more that will settle the question.
•‘Who knows himself a braggart.
Quite a large party went toThornapple lake
Let him fear this; for it will come to pass
last Friday for a plcnle, also a party of young
That every braggart shall be found an ass.” people visited the lake on Tuesday last. All
The Bugle is no more, it having report a pleasant time.
John. Rock is getting up an excursion to De­
ceased to exist after a laborious and
troit to see the league game l&gt;etwecn Detroit
checkered career of twelve weeks. and Chicago base ball clubs, July 28th. 13.00
The unsophisticated man who read the for round trip and tickets good for two days.
prospectus of the Bugle or lent a ready
Last Sunday, Messrs. Andrus and Sidnam
ear to the wibh-a-waaliy jargon of addressed the temperance meeting and It was
either of its three editors, would nat­ the universal verdict that their remarks were
urally suppose that the Bugle's demise good. Next Sunday the children have charge
would be looked upon as a catastrophe of the meeting.
It is a settled thing now that Hastings will
to be generally regretted by the good
people of Nashville and vicinity. Yet
with some new recruits have organized under
we see Bo red eyes nor hear no regrets,
the leadership of Charley Warner. It will un­
while we do note an expression of re­ doubtedly be hard on the rats for a abort time
lief upon the countenance of many bus­ but the real of us will try and Bland it in hopes
iness nun as they fiankly state that of a better “by an by."
sach a publication was not needed iu
On account ot the sudden but well earned
immortality of the Middleville base ball club,
Nashville.
The Bugle failed to attract but little the Interest In that direction has been roused
attention from The News, during its tn this city. A club has been orfpinlxed and
publication, but as it seemed to feel the boys are Itching for the fray. They say
their ambition does not soar to any 4 to 44
that its special mission was to buck
strikes, but that they will be perfectly satisfied
against this paper and its editor, we with a bmailer average.
feel called upon to calmly comment
Francis Graves the the quill driver of the
more lengthily in regard to it than we “Plalndealer,” la in trouble. He was arrested
should otherwise have done.
last Friday by Deputy U. 8. Marshal Vrooman
In the labor of starting and also dur­ for sending obscene literature through the
ing its publication, the editors of tlie mall. Two issues of his paper constitutes the
Bugle exhibited considerable cun­ evidence against him, perbafM more could
be found. Rather a poor recommend for a
ning.
They claimed that it should fill a “Home Gem," to say the least.
Haxs.
want long left, and in the face of this
sage remark our business men and
WEST SUNFIELD.
citizens, who are known far and wide
for their excellent qualities of liberality
You all know that wheat is good.
We hare a cow for sale; a good jumper.
benevolence and enterprise, suffered it
Bill Jones says his reaper “can’t be beat.”
to die an ignominious death.
Some one arise and tell us an exterminator
They claimed that it should be riean
in morals—i sort of a Sunday School for currant worms.
Wm. Hill is hard to be suited. Try an Arm­
affair for little children, we presume—
strong mower Billy.
yet it was only two weeks old before it
Wm. Walsh, Sr., Is home from Westville,
began to libel honest, upright people, since Monday to attend his harvest.
and kept it up to the last breath. Just
Mrs. Jake Fast spent a few days last week
how a trio so depraved and rotten in with her parents, at their home in Woodland.
morals as Walt Powers, John and Jake
Mr. Weeks rides bls own. reaper this year. A
Potter would proceed to conduct a pa­ spick span new Royce,which does tip top work.
per “clean in morals" was not Mated.
They claimed before one class that tack of typhoid pneumonia la now convelcaing.
The Gorham Bros, have added to their area
it would be anti-monopoly shoet, to an­
another good 40 acres, and Wm. Fuller pats
other that.it would be neutral. It run
his purse complacently, saying meantime.
a couple of weeks neutral, then be­
Pretty well sold, BUly.
came a Greenback sheet of the ranLanfew days
kerous, fiat money kind.
After three
or four week's experience in the Green­
back camp it turned into a Republican curved there Sunday night.
The Ladles AU Society which was entersheet and threatened to blow all the
Greenbackers out of Eastern Bony. It tolnedby Mrs. Matthews last Wednesday, was
singled out Onon Swift, an estimable not as largely attended as It would have been at
any other time, but harvest has a hold upon ye
citizen of Maple Grove^md commenced
ladles as well as we men.
the “blowing.” Ito blowing, however,
Weal Sunfield has a musical prodigy. It is
proved harmless at the muzzle and little MIm Marr Downs. Any one doubting
deadly at the breech, for Swift is still the truth of the above assertion, is at liberty to
in Barry, alive and kicking, while the contradict it if they can, after having heard her
Bugle has succeeded in effectually
This would do for an item, but wife says,
blowing itself ouL
These are but a few of the brag- ‘Now don’t be foolish and go and tell that we
adocia claims—we have charity for
the dead, and will not mention the in­
sinuations. falsehoods and libels em­
ployed to keep the sheet going—set
forth by the editors 6f the Bugle, but
they are sufficient to show bow the bus
incss was conducted.
Starting a newspaper in a rural town
having one solidly eatabished, is never regularly, never misting unless

probably the heaviest low fall* upon a

Credit ScBsciimoxi •1.7S.

Currant worms are doing their share of
deviltry.
The ground Is In fine condition for reapers or
self Linders.
Elmer Shafer sprained bls back pitching, hay
Ira Phillips is keeping the sewing machine
last week.
business hot.
Hay, James 4 Co., will man the new saw­
mill wbeh done. '
Frcd Shoup U getting the material together
sowing this fall.
Amon Wolf has a timothy bead 11 inches
long. Who can best fit
Quarterly meeting was quite largely attend­
Slgb for a lodge in some wilderness rather
ed last Saturday and Bunday.
thana lodge in wheat..
.
Bunday school at Norton's school house will
Have you tasted any BUmark cheese 1 They
be held at 10 o'clock next Bunday.
arc just old peaches.
Haying is over and everybody is busy har­
Wallace PreUon and wife have returned to
vesting. Wheat, as a general thing is good.
to their own sod again.
Nell McOmber has a ne-v self-binder of the
Large quantities of No. 1 hay has been se­
McCormick make, purchased ot L- O. Crocker cured within the last few days.
of your place.
It is reported that-chicken thieves are quite leg last week in Raymer Mw-mni.
numerous. Now somebody better look a leetle
The missionary collection taken at our church
out as we bare a big dog, a revolver and no last Bunday amounted co &lt;34.60.
chickens.
Ttie Arm-strong reaper will be brought into
Some young people arc in the habit of stop­ rcqajrition more or leca.thta year, rrgardlew of
ping at the Center, for their suppers, Bundays, slded-ift.
Wamsr.
It is getting to be rather thin; at least they on­
ly got fried cakes last Bunday.
LOCAL
MATTERS.
West Maple Grove has a show Ln fall run­
ning order. As we bad an opportunity to st- REPUBLICAN COUNTY CONVENTION.
tend it a few evenings ago wc will try and des­
A Republican County Convention to elect
cribe it. The tent was constructed of bed 12 delegate* to the Third. District Congression­
quhto, sheets, table cloths and various other al Convention, to be held at Jackson, on Wed­
articles. The performance was simply good; nesday, August 23d, 1883; 12 delegate# to the
the name of it we did not learn. Another show Stale Convention to be held at Ki la maano, on
will be given July 29th at the usual place. Wednesday, August 30, 1882; and foe the tran­
Doors open at 7 p. m.; performance begins at saction of other business, will be hdd at the
8 p. m. Admission
cts-, children under Court House in this City ot Hastings, on Wed­
six months half price. For farther particulars nesday August 16th, 1882, at 11 o'clock a. m.
see small bills.
■
L. E. Pnairr.
The several townships and wards are entitled
to the number of delegates following to wit:
BALTIMORE.
Assyria, 6; Baltimore, 6; Barry, 6; Cartton,
5; Castleton, 10; Hastings, 5; Hartings City,
Cold nights.
1st
ward. 2; Hastings City, 2d ward, 2; Halt­
Haying Is over half did.
ing* City, 3d ward, 3: Hastings City, 44h ward.
Dr. VanHorn bos bls barn up.
4;
Hope,
fl; Irving, 6; Johnstown. B; Maple
E. Herington has a self-binder.
Grove, 6; Orangeville. 5: Prairieville, 6; Rut­
String beans and new taters, oh I
Park. Wariner lias a new mowing machine. ■ land, 5; Thornapple, 10: Woodland, 7; Yankee
Wm. H. Powers, Cbainaaa.
The Whitney family visited Dowling and Spring, 4.
took lo«M».
GOOD JUDGES
James K. Endsley Is the first one to com­
Concede that the finest and largest stock of
mence harvesting. Wheat is heavy, help scarce Men’s, Youth's and Boys. Clothing, and Gents
and wages will be a little higher in conse- Furnishing Gooods ever laid down in Nashville,
i is on exhibition at Pkixdle &lt;t Chifmax’s.
Levy Goodrich la recovering from bls late. 111-

It is about time the political pot was bung
over and set to boiling with the fire of political
strife so that that the candidates will be prop­
erly cooked by November next.
The Good Templars of Baltimore have ar­
ranged to have a picnic at Clear Lake on
Thursday, Aug. 2d. John Enuu of Bellevue,
has been secured to furnish a speech on the
oceaasion.
When you see a man start out in the direc
lion of the pototoe patch with a tin ptn
under bls arm, a paddle iu bis hand and then
double up like a Jack-knife as be slipping his
pan under khe potato tops and applies his pad­
dle gently to the'tope as though afraid of do­
ing some damage and at the same time utter­
ing cuss words between his clenched teeth, It is
a sure sign be Is hunting potatoe bugs.
Mrs. Emily Green wife of Allen Green is no

“VINEGAR”

Pure Cider Vinegar br the barrel or gallon,
H. R. DtCKixsox.

SHEEP TO LET.

C. H. Brady, Nashville, or write or
at Hastings.
THINGS YOU OUGHT TO KNQW.

tng machine do, to save buying a new one.”
3rd. That it is the old “bard running" wore
out rattle trap machine tUat is doing more to
injure your health than all the sicknesa you may
have combined.
4th. That you can get one of tho*e elegant
with rheumatism, which finally settled on her improved Crown Sewing Machine whieh are
lungs, ending her days Friday monring, July tally warranted for five years in exchange for
14th, at the age of 66. The funeral obsequies
were performed by the pastor of the M. E.
church, Sunday at trn o’clock. Mm. G. has
NEW HOTEL.
been a resident of Baltimore for over 20 rears.
The Nashville House, having been tboroughl
Mr. Green arid three daughter*, are left to overhauled and Improved, is now open for th
accommodation of the public. Located In the
mourn her loss.
Doxy.

THE COUNTY.
J. M. Fuxt A. Box, Profs.
Cbaries Hickerson and Miss Mary Lkiy of
HARVEST.'
Carlton, were made one by Rev. Brotherton on
Harvest Is coming and Cradles, Groin Rakes,
the 15th.
Ic., can be found at
Glasgow’s.
The German M. E. church of Freeport, re­
cently cent SCO to aid the churches of their
A FEW THOUSAND DOLLARS
creed In Germany.
To Loan on good Real Estate securitr.
Lee Duaui.
Henry Vredenburg of Assyria was kicked in
the face by a vicious horse last week, the flesh
TO FARMERS.
Mr. Eacnblua and •‘frow" of Woodland, hare
brator” separator,
depoated WOO in the Hastings national bank mm July 27th. I

A few days since while mowing away bay, threshed with nee'
Abram Potter of Assyria fell from the main day promised.
&gt;
WILL DIE.
Potato bugs will die If properly sprinkled

while driving a horse rake last week, was run­
away with and- severely bruised. Ira Jordan’s
son fell from a load of bay and was run over,the

LOOK HERE!

it downfall In stock I will UM
okl reliable market as follow b :
MiddhwUte Republican. Sometime since a
fatted Beef from fl to WW
curioua freak of nature occurred oo the farm
meats in proj&gt;or»k&gt;n. Call
Play.

C

FOUND.

FARMERS, LOOK

BISMARK.

that the object m the pre-

MONEY TO LOAN,
On Real Estate at low rate of interest of

�-1882

“ I’U t«U you

RKDJfC

KALAMAZOO

this 1 did *g*»n Md a&lt;ain, till I %et»me
PEERLESS PERFUME.
tide bearing a like relation to each other
» bright idea. Hare wm 1,1
&lt;two-and-twentv, who idled the rope which bung orer my shoulder,
sway three months annually about this threaded it through the link, gave it a
fate «f poor Charite Cook. Ha had j .. .
-_ k
place ancL^st had never thought about turn or two round the chain, and sat I the
"T*'1 the.hat b °°*
of K'Ulng
down in the loop.
I looked below me, doabtte. sought refuge in tho osre, had . ,
creu
“ I don’t care if I do take a turn or could not see the bottom; but was quite b«ooro« ImprbOMdln IL. ud In trying
,
certain that I had mounted abodt twen­ to .Hum an wonj. hnd teUon down Imo
two with you.”
Hu tht great medHnc. for the cure of all female
Ho was highly delighted. After two ty feet. 1 looked aloft and fancied I the well-hole and been drowned.
the s?™;:
greatcet ™
Btrengtbcncr of the.
or throe voyages I became quite infatu­ could make out a kind ot landing ten or clothes had got entangled in the chain, remptafau, !s tbc
Tbecunrw &lt;»t tanooeat fun;
ated with the purwit of care-hunting. fifteen feet overhead. So, after resting and be had not been washed out by ths tack, stomach, nerves, kidneys, urinary and
tiU yenr. nltor. I .huddered when
kV°"
I tried to defend myself from myself by in the sling for a short time, I loosed it tide
I
redoetod thnt n limlLir or porbapn
t-drenMn luLydl. K. Hnkhun. Lynn,
saying, “ Caves in themselves are both and climbed upward with all my might.
wonderful and beautiful objects;” but Up and up I went, when just as my more dreadful end awaited myself—
No man is brafre at mid­
The Christian'warfare cunsirb* In watch­
then there lurked at bottom a sneaking strength was beginning to give way al­ starvation ,
desire for th? bidden treasure. Every- together I arrived at the landing, scram­ night, when alone. If I did not get out guarding and keeping the heart.
bled on to it and lay down, tor I was this morning, which entirely depended
WhSatbeUttJoono-* turned from tbetratudli
on
the
state
of
the
tide
and
wind,
I
quite
done
up.
A TRAVELER'S 8TORT.
ally develops into a mania. • I wrote my
In
ahuduof th» VlmtrtMl to l&gt;0'
After spending months at watering places
How my poor bones did ache! Every would not get out till fourteen days af­
friend the following note:
’
joint in my body felt as. if I had been ter (the next spring’ tide): perhaps a and consulting the bestpbyalriana without ben­
efit, 1 returned borne disheartenedand expected
•• 6otJrnj«D, Sd June, 1873.
on the rack. I noticed tbo moonlight month, two, three, in all likelihood nev­ to dfe&gt;. A friend urged a trial of Parker's Gin­
” near Tom—Please forward to me aa - soon
streaming through a loop-holo-like aper­ er. The bare possibility made me spffng ger Tonic. Three bottles and careful have
as you t&gt;OB«U&gt;ly can. per • Plover,* the follow­
up, cling to the chain and yell with fear. brought me excellent health and spirits, and I
ing articles: One policeman's lantern; 2 colture
about
seven
inches
wide
and
three
11.-.*- iL... ... .n..11 . . ....... I —1...- 1 a now.
feet high. I opened my dark lantern But I soon exhausted myself and calmed hop ttny cxperiencqjmay benefit similar suffer­
*
Once r total ou the brow of the hill.
and surveyed the cave. ’Sure enough I dotyn. I tied the money up in two bags, ers.—Cincinnati lady. See other column.
It Isn't the girl that is loaded wWb powder
was in the smugglers’ den, for there lay intending to carry it out with me, re­
I think I see Tom’s eyes opening when a row of small kegs ranged along the solving never to re-enter this cave. I who goes off the easiest.
he-reads this note, and hear him saying, wall, partially covered with old rotten found a can of oil among the stores and
T&lt;» Irani the urand wisdom of love;
The symptoms ot Itching Piles are moisture
“O! Jack, Jack, the crown of your' sacks and a tarpauling. I could sit still a spring of.water in an inner recess of
And aee lb* old dcwile-faeod teacher.
like presplratlon, intense itching, moat at night
A pupil bimw-lf. aa before.
bonnet has burst at last.”
no longer, sd up I got and overhauled tho cave, so I took heart, for with grog, seems as if pin worms were crawling In or
the place. It took me some'time to pry tobacco and light, I fancied I could ex­ about the rectum. The more yon scratch the
PART II.—TUB SWALLOW’S NtST.
into all tho nooks and crannies. I soon ist for a fortnight, or even a month, worse they itch, very distressing. The private
* What hfdent thou In thy treasured caves became exhausted again, so I sat ‘down I filled iby flask with grog, took, a good parts are often affected. Dr. Bwavne’s Oint­
ment U the most effective remedy extant for
and cells.
PS TALJL
TH1
and
made the following inventory of Full at it, and laid myself.down to steep. this tormenting complaint. Gives rest at night
Thou hollow sounding and mysterious
was afflicted with a horrible dream, without that desire to scratch. Also has on
main.”
IIJBT KR’S STOUT.
casks, different sizes; forty jars, large i fancied I was swimming in a sea ot equal In quickly eradicating Tetter, Itch, Salt
and small; two large boxes; ten * small liquid gold, and just as I was drowning Rbcume, Erysipelas, Barbers’ Itch, Pimples,
On Thursday, the 14th of July, we lay
I awoke. I took another long swig at all Scaly, Crusty, ItchwSkln Eruptions. Here
Is the proof, “Certainly the best remedy erer
off the black rocks. It was a beautiful do.; ropes, blocks, chains, baskets, my flask and soon fell fast asleep.
And I will tell thee many * tale
cans, lamps, etc; While sitting writing
used in my practice,” Dr. Colton, Woodstock,
summer night; the sun had set, the sea
When next I awoke my lamp had VL. “troubled with Itching Piles for over twenI got a great start by hearing a sort of
was smooth as glass, and not a breath
Sme
out
and
daylight
was
shining
•* Nino-and-twenty—it is now ninc- of wind was stirring. Having given up moaning sound quite close to me and
rougli thtf loop-hole into tho den.
and-twenty years since I brought the our fishing and pulled in along shore, seemingly inside the cave. I fancied When I got up and looked at my watch 3 boxes, *1 -25, By Dr. Swayne Son. PhUad’a
•Sea Swallow' from the coast of France wo now lay waiting for a chance shot at some unfortunate smuggler’s ghost had it was bnlf-paat seven. I sprang up and Pa. Sold by all druggist*.
to here Wo lay a night off the Isle of some bird.
I knew it was near low risen in judgment against me for plun­ looked out of tho window. O joy! the
The consciousness of duty performed gives
I looked anxiously
Maa and took in some cargo. Well, water, for the tide was slack. Presently dering his board.
sea was smooth, and the wind was as music at midnight.
you know, I did not belong to the the moon rose and shone gloriously on around me. My eye was attracted to
down. I jumped cheerfully down r.nd
♦Swallow,’ but was only engaged to the face of the cliff.
I scanned her the arrow-shot hole, and there sat the began to prepare for my departure. I
■ ONE MOMENT, PLEASE.
pilot her from Brest to the Southend. bright disc, and made out that she was great white owl with a pigeon in its
When winter is passing into summer, and
fastened a block and tackle to the chain;
You see, I was brought up to the sea a little beyound the full, m her western claws. I threw a stone at it, and hiss­
summer Into winter again, your health should
when I was young. Well, we lay off margin was somewhat flattened. While ing wickedly it flew away. 1 now heard then I turned oat some jars, and two or
throe of the smaller kegs, ready to be be especially lookrd to. The humors which
the Yellow port about nine o’clock; this I was making these observations, Du­ the water gurgling at the foot of the
well-hole and knew the tide must bo lowered down. Lastly, I made up two have accumulated fn your blood should be
wm in tho month of August, and it was gald, who had been gazing shoreward,
or three large packets of tobacco and Cleansed away, sod your system toned up to
dark. I recollect it was low water, for said: “ I never in all my life recollect rising in it. Then I heard Dugald
the *Swallow’ could not come in t6 the having seen the tide so far out; let us whistling to attract my attention. I got cigars. While so engaged I heard tho guard against Billions Fever, or other sickness
rocks, so Charlie Cook and I had to pull close in and survey the beach.” We up,' took a long string,- and tying a stone report of Dugald's gun, and on looking peculiar to the change of seasons. Dr. David
to one end ol it let it down the shaft. out I saw the little “Star of Argyle” Kennedy's “Favorite Remedy” will do this for
«oino ashore in a small boat. We left did so, and now lay about a hundred
John Shaw, Ronald Kerr, Duncan feet from the foot of the precipice. Tho When I drew it up I was considerably heaving in for the cliff. Never was star you. Get a bottle now and lx gin using It at
more welcome to mortal eye! In a few
M’Donnld and Rob Campbell aboard of scene was like one in fairy land; the astonished to find that the tide had risen
once. A long fit of sickncssond a long doctor's
ter; they alt belonged to the gang, and moonshine had apparently transformed about four feet since I came up, and moments he was lying beneath the rock. bill may be the penalty of neglect. If your
I lowered a note to him, for I was afraid
that
I
was
up
about
thirty-five
feet.
This
4uiew tho den.
the cliff into a wall of silver, studded
to shout lest I should be overheard by druggist hasn’t It, write to the Dr. at Roodout,
greatly
alarmed
me
at
first,
for
I
saw
“Next morning the ‘Swallow’ was with precious stones, which reflected all
anybody, saying—“Wade into the tun­
-taken by the ‘White Owl,' which had the colors of the rainbow. Tho salt in­ that my retreat was cut off, and that I
nel, whenever the tide will permit, and
The preacher and the teacher must posaem
been on the look out for her.
They crustations on the rocks below high- could not possibly effect my escape just
I will haul you up.” Exactly at ten the accent of conviction. _____ _
tnado a prize of the ship, and all the water mark glistened like frosted sil­ then. I calmed myself down, and after
o’clock I heard him shoaling st tho
hands were transported.
Well, poor ver; the rnoss and sea-weeds seemed a little reflection made up my. mind to
The commercial traveler ia called a drummer
I. cried—“Make fast!"
remain contentedly where I was all well-hole.
Charlie disappeared a day or two after, delicate fretwork.
Some wet stones
“Well, all right! hoist away!” I did because be ha* a mare heaff______
and nothing was heard tell of him for shone like diamonds; others glittered night, till next low water. So I took a so with a will, and in a few seconds ho
DID SHE DIET *
•even long years, when his skeleton was like pearls; and the water-line undu­ Eiece of paper and wrote on it, “Go stood beside mo. Never shall I forget
ome! Keep quiet! and como back
“No: she lingered and suffered along, pining
found on the shore.
lated like a fiery serpent. Dugald, who
the strange, startled look of wonder away all the time for years, the doctors doing
“ Now, I have been informed for cer­ had the eye of a hawk, directed my at­ again* to-morrow morning, at low wa­
her
no
good
;
and
at lul wu cured by this Hop ,
and astonishment that was depicted on
tain that tho ‘Swallow’ had run her car­ tention upward, where a white .owl ter”—tied it to the stone, got up into
Bitters the paper* *ay so much about. Indeed I i
his countenance on first looking around indeed!
bow thankful we ahould be foe that
go before she was captured by the skimmed along the edge of the cliff like the windew place and lowered it down
him; but ho became almost mad with medicine.”
on
the
outside.
The
arrow-slit
was
too
■♦Owl,’ for she wm empty when taken, a sheeted ghost. I instinctively cocked
delight when I showed him the hidden
^nd during the chase she threw nothing and presented my gun; but it was too narrow for me to get way into it. I
Holding for a rata*: Indian ecalps are worth
could not see the boat so close in to the store, and, chinking my money bags,
••verboard.
high up and oiit uf range.
told him what they contained.
He sat 310 each In Arizona, but there are few Bales at
While in this attitude I observed a foot of the cliff, but I heard the splash
“ The only other man who knew the
down on a box and looked quietly around that price, aa the owners are holding them for
den was Charlie Cook, and he was p-eat heavy heron coming flapping lazi­ of the oars, so I pulled the stone up and
down to attract attention, and soon had him for a short time; then be started
drowned, as I told you.
ly along the margin of the surf; it was
up, gave his teg a step with his hand
SHILOH’ 8 CONSUMPTION CURE.
“ Well, tho thing which has puzzled so close to tho rocks that its huge shad­ the satisfaction of feeling Dugald tug­
and exclaimed—“Gosh, man! what will
This is beyond question the most successful
me this last nine-and-twenty years back ow camo gliding, like a phantom at­ ging at it; when I hauled it in the paper
.my father say?” We were out of tho Cough Medicine we have ever sold, a few doses
was gone.
is, “where can they have stowed away tending it, along tho sea wall. It was
cave
ia
less
than
ten
minutes.
I
took
invariably
cure the worst cases of Cough, croup
I now commenced to take a more
that cargo?’
Now, I was born and about to settle on a stone. I presented,
half of the money home with me as my and Bronchi Ha while tta wonderful success is
brought up on this coast, and have fired, and it fell. The rocks around minute survey of the cave. It was pret­ share of the spoil, and true to my vow in tbe-curc of consumption Is without a paral­
ty
roomy;
widening
toward
the
back,
lel in the history of medicnc. Since its first
-come ancLgone among tho smugglers all echoed the report and a great flock of
I have never since entered that cave.— discovery it has been sold on aguarntee, a test'
xny life, But I hare never been able to crows and pigeons flew out of the in­ where it branched off into two short Kilmarnock Standard.
which no other medicine can stand. If you
mako out nor have I ever got the numerable crevices.
Dugald pulled wings. I directed the light of my bull’s.. hive a Cough we earnestly ask you to try 1L
evc
to
the
vaulted
roof,
which
was
from
slightest bint as to tho whereabouts of close in; but I could nowhere see my
Trice lOcta, SOcts, and &gt;1,00 If your lungs arc
Why The Failure I
i&amp;irteen to seventeen feet high, to see
this cave.
bird; I thought it bad perhaps fallen
It passed
Porous Plaster. Sold by F. T. Boise.
“ The Revenue officers made a strict through fright and got. away unseen, how the chained was fixed.
Thirtv years ago the Iowa farmer had
ANSWER THIS QUESTION.
•eafoh along the coast, but found noth­ bat he assured me that I had hit it. over the wheel of a large pulley, and no trouble in raising twenty bushels per
Why do so many people we see around us,
ing. Then, when all was quiet again, White poking about among tho great was fastened to a strong ring-bolt at the rcre of plump, heavy wheal.
The seem to prefer to suffer ud be made miserable
the fishermen and smugglers about the bowlders I thought I heard a squatter- farther end of the floor. I noticed that inquiry is made, what is ths cause of by indlgeatisu, couatipsUca, dbudMM, loss of
the
chain
had
been
well
painted
and
place began to search, but discovered ing noise issuing from a narrow tunnel,
the gradual failure of this crop? Has appetite, coming up of the Food, yellow skin,
nothing. This was done over and over which ran under the cliff. I finally be­ varnished, and was wonderfully sound the climate changed, or is the failure at­ when for 73ets. we will sell them Shiloh’s Vitaagain, but all to no purpose. Lastly, came certain of this, and ordered Du­ considering the length of time it must tributable to a deterioration of the lizcr, guaranted to cure them. Sold by F. T.
Boinn.
have
hang.
I
designed
to
fasten
a
after Charlie’e body was found, the gald to puf h the boat up into it as far as
SHILOH’S CATTARRHKEMEDY, A mar­
wheat? It is not either. It is the exhaus­
searching parties began anew; they ne possibly could. I then took an oar block and tackle to the chain to facili­ tion of the soil by cultivation and by the velous cure for Catarrh, Diphtheria, Canker
While running the
mouth, and Head Ache. With each jxittie
•ven went tho length of digging this and felt for the bottom; it was only tate my descent.
washing of rains.
For unnumbered here
light
over
Ute
roof
I
noticed
something
is an ingenious nasal Injector for the
time, but had do better luck than for­ about a foot deep, so I got out and
Upon inspecting it ages an annual coat of ashes had been more successful treatment of these complaints
merly. Now, I have always had a no­ waded cautiously in. I soon groped hanging from it.
deposited upon our prairies by the without extra charge. Price 50cta. Sold by
more
minutely
I
saw
that
it
was
a
very
tion that the cave lies among the black my way to the end of it, without finding
The alkali 6f these ashes F' T.Bctea.
small keg hoisted up to a small block. prairie fires.
rocks—it was under them that Charlie's the bird, and was just about to turn and
has been largely incorporated in the
body was found—and it has always been come out when I heard a splashing on The end ot the rope was made fast to soil. This is one of the important fac­ pJENRY ROE, PzoraiKTOB
my opinion that he fled to the den lor S right hand. I stooped down and an Iron staple stuck in the wall about tors in successful wheat growing. The
ten or twelve feet from the floor.
I
shelter, or to secure the plant; but then
.my way in that direction. The
exhaustion of this element in the soil,
----- OLD RELIABLE----there are scarcely any caves among tho tunnel branched off a short distance to raised a cask on end and placed a smal­ which is rapidly done by the cultivation
ler
one
on
the
top
of
it,
then
mounted
black rocks, and the few that are to be the right. Suddenly my head came
of the cereals, causes weak stalks,
on
the
top
of
them
and
began
to
un
­
found are very small. Many and many bump up against something, for I had
fasten the rope to lower down the little shriveled grains, blight, etc. But, says
a long summer night havo I spent along my arms spread out before me.
I felt
a farmer, when new prairie is now
those rocks looking for the cave; but the object with my hands. At first I keg. I had pareiy laid my hand on the broken up, it falls to raise such wheat
oich! oich! I never got anything but took it to be a piece of drift-wood cov­ rope when it broke, and down came the as it did twenty-five years ago. This is
sore bones, a sick heart, and an empty ered with sea-weeds, but then it swayed keg with a clash and a clang to the true.
But the improvement of the
floor where It was shivered into a thou­
stomach for my trouble.”
or bent when I pushed or pulled it. I
State has mainly put a stop to prairie
•
Such was Dan M’Alister’s oft-repeated soon stripped some of the tangle from it sand pieces. I fell from my perch with fires, and the annual deposit of ashes is
tale. He was now old and frail, and sat and bored my fingers into it. Imagine fright. While I lay sprawling on the not made on the unbroken prairie. The
on a stool before a little window which my surprise when I made out distinctly ground, my hands came in contact with alkali which was deposited in the soil
a commanded an excellent view of the sea, that it was a great heavy chain hanging some pieces of money. I sprang to my twenty years ago has evaporated or
!■ THXIK BEAM!
'cobbling old boots; but oftentimes the down a sort of well-hole. I swayed it feet and threw the light of the lamp on been carried off by the heavy rains, a
It was
boot slipped down between his feet, his to and fro with my full strength and the floor. I jumped for ioy!
little each year, and none being re­ Lard, by the lb. or barrel,
arms rested across hh knees, and ho hung all my weight upon it. It was literally covered with gold and silver tained, it is now nearly m devoid of this
I gathered them up hastily and
leant forward, gazing earnestly for fast, and appeared to run away up to a coins.
as carefully as I could into a heap, set essential element as the cultivated fields.
great height. I then fished up the end the lamp on a stone beside me, and sat So it may not be expected that, so far
LdF" The Highest Market Price paid
of it; some of the last links were very down to count them.
I had found not as small grain is concerned,our soil will for Hides, Pelts, dec.
then with a deep-drawn sigh he resumed much worn and broken as if they had
ever again produce profitable crops.
only
a
cave
but
a
mine
of
gold.
I
reck
­
Fresh
Soods, Full Weighta and
his labor.
toasad about for a long time.
Tho same causes are destined to make
oned 200 gold pieces and seventeen
Satietaction Guaranteed.
1 surprised him in this attitude one
Swift as an electric spark the thought pounds in nlver.
I then got up again the situation in the future far worse in
day, and s.nid:
flushed through my brain—this was the and searched the floor more closely for Minnesota and Dakota.
The alkali
“ You seem to take great pleasure in long-eought cave; I had at test discov­
deposited by the aatnmal fires in those
looking oat at the .ships?”
ered it.
1 felt quite giddy for a second
vast regions will soon bo exhausted by QLEMEMT MUTH,
“Goeh, nw»»M he replied, “I believe or so, but soon collected myself. I de­ ten. This was exciting work and I be­ constant crops of wheat. Reason and
Attorney at Law
I would not live three days if I could termined, like “Jack ana the bean came very thirsty, ho I took my knife the whole history of agriculture teaches
and extracted the bung out of a jar; it
not see the sea; it is my only delight.” stalk,” to ascend the chain, but first I proved to be line old whisky.
I took this. But when their soil is exhausted, CoaiuMloraod Solicitor in Ctayry, windrow*.
He wm very deaf, but cxeeedinglv must provide myself with a light. So I
two or three mouthfuls and felt greatly they have nothing to fall back on. It U&gt; all the ooarteaf the aais. Commercisl clW
’stooped down, grabbed the heron and refreshed. I then directed my attention is not a corn region. Grass may flour­
he wandered for whole days on the shore carried it out to the boat.
I asked Du­
ish there, and though grass may be
looking for no one knew what; he gald for the lights, as I intended going
king, yet gnus alone makes a poor
scarcely knew himself. I had spent my back to explore a passage in the rocks; examine its contents. Upon removing empire. To replenish these immense J AMES JL SWZEZET,
summer holidays for four or fire con- but Raid not a wore about the chain, m a quantity of silk stuffs and laces, I field* with commercial fertilizers is im­
came to a lot of cigar cases. I opened
Attorney A Counsellor,
It possible; hence, until science shall ena­
again and again have I heard him recite ■ had made certain that I was not mia- a box, took out a cigar, and lit It.
ble us to make drafts at will on the
hte mysterious story.
taken.
He lit and handed me the smoked very well, and I enjoyed it very
much, an I was hungry and tired.
I
Early one morning iu mid«ummer, lamps. I fastened the large ooe round
stowed the thing* back into the box and
m I strolted on the beach I noticed Du- ■ my waist, stuck the small one in the
pushed on the lid. The other large box abandoned iorerer for the rich product
gaid— I tan’a ■on, now a ah&amp;rp ted about , bock of my cap, coiled a short rope two
which’ is drawing the world into the
seventeen yesrs of age, with blackenriy i or three time* round me, and took a contained thru* or four great roll* of Northwest.—lou&gt;d State Register.
hair and bright black eyew—rigging out I short stick in my hand.
I then re1 now lay down and tried to compose
his little boat, “ The Star of Argyll,” as ; entered the cave’. I climbed a short
—Jelly Roll: Make sponge cake
if preparing for some seeret expedition. ! distance up the chain, but found it myself to sleep,but the drumming of the mixture, spread it thinly on a sheet of
Bo I walked close up tp him and said, ■ much harder work than I bsd antici- tide and the whistling of the night wind.
•• Htltoa! Dugald,
[ patixl. I slipped down again , took off
wm

MEAT MARKET.

Fresh and Salt Meats,
Smote* Hams aii Shoflldan,

EiDBriencei, Reliable, at! Responsible.

Spnng-2th Harrow
Wiard Plows,
South Bend Chilled Plows,
Gale Plows,
(Buy Genuine Factory Pointe)
They ore Jriuch cheaper anfibttter.

Strayer's GRAIN DRILL,
RAWSON’S

REAPERS* MOWERS
Lightest tend Strongest Made,

HUBBARD

Gleaner &amp; Binder
;lmproved 1888.

Sash, Doors nd'Blinds,
Paints, Oils, Varnishes,
BIILDEKK gUIDW ARE,

DETROIT STOVkcO’S. STOVES
Domestic &amp; New Home

SEWING MACHINES.
When in need of the Best
Grades of Hardware and Ma­
chinery.

Call and see me.

FRANK C. BOISE

THE CROWN

THE CROWN SEWING MACHINE.

1 avTbe “Crown" comes nU the market
he tast of nil the machines, 1 at I u sprung to
front rank atonec from the fact til t it has ta­
ken the good features In aD otitti machines
and put them In one grand cixnHuai on, maka this the Handsotneet, Laigeet, Mi tt Silent
Lightest Running machine
ohered. All
the “polnta" thar
in all kinds of fig
work baa proved tol
found only in the “i
may have one, two A
but none but the “Crown" baa them all.
Even* device that is really desirable fn other
machine* will be found in the “Crown." Ad-

E. R. WHITE.

YOU CAN GET
----- A FIRST-CLASS- -

OSBORN MAKE!
WARRANTED

AS GOOD AS ANY ■ACBINE IADE
Very Chea]&gt;
AT

MY

PERCE

---- AL8

THE CELEBRATED

A. H. WINN, Demist

tire imposribity; so I got up, lit a seo-

BEST SET BUM TEETH $10.00
Teeth Extracted Wiftawt Paia.

ffloeOpen Day A Eveni.ng.

Grain Cradle.

J. M. WOOD

�to

Turkish

cliumc

NG PRICES.

THE

suinm

i from

the flooded dis-

qmwio, M «o. lb-ir' probJSuy ■« t£&gt; rtMor. eurtog oo. Im*, ta
or MUiriin™,. Il WM »Mgh (w
. Umb o«r U» «*erS «■»! proeea&amp;agfc
rlrl^ tewlllgoM. ul«OT «i.d h»||^~&lt;^J*.wrfU&gt;ta«» Iron. , rer
b«» thought without Uttaking on U. I btoell ta«*u&gt;r ptoo. rf vug. “I «
m wobtSl. Bot I, i&lt; &gt; UlUe h»nl th.t I JW
&gt;“ Jrewlliil down
Md
lb. took, ol modorn Utne». Md vpw I
°° “ “V
i*llr cto wdi td our «.« dur. wLieh '' hT 1 '?&gt;“ “P °“e mornlug »r.4 kxmd
go ’mn-.-tau tod pral id utouy | dtoks todiog Moood mjr l»d tod tor.
Stople lit. «ilr nwnul impraxioos ttor l»&gt;‘
poreuol oo ih«mtoUdpt *.tpuffftoeive. should .too the
ot Ovid , ‘?K
t atto o, u n&gt;.d took.
wiUtoul thtor wit. or the Bltuidur. ot Vir- I Ho’
e™rt*°‘
gil
without
ttoirbrilliuocy.
"»«■
W&lt;J
b
gil without
their brilliancy.
^Th.
nt^Moi
tohtpSy who poiotto

[r

American’ and Foreign Marble,
Mon^meru, Tnnhrtanjs, Mantles, ta.,
I;I ww । &gt;
ich.
.

®LUAM

JONES.

the moral for detraction were never beard
in their own behalf, and mav have been
neither so fierce nor so frisky as the poets
delighted to draw them. Besides, the
offending dames of Homer, the halfsavage princewes of Thessaly, the slowwittod farmer*' wives of EpiruA, were
hardiv of the same humanity with the
h-.
tine-fi'bred womanhood of tkto/iwr
to-day.^ van
Shall,

।i
iI
I|

dead before the

NERVOUS
DEBILITY
.1 rttrr ciinraiHrtd.
,x

HALUS

Patarrh Pure
Is Recommended by PhysIclanC

sioo imliuwmi

’ "^Fe«MmN«Unviin7»dHiThbTpnsitive
guarantoe that It win cure any

cai6.iol *»*U! forfeit the abovesmouat
kTi?*i&amp;!u asingto instance.
HUainllke ai-» oti» r t-Urrh remedy, n

VhVra^nf^"tf5?’.«sMs%&lt;'SPar.

dbtraSns dieeaM, a*k your PniCTiet for ILan-i

r. Price. 73 &lt;*ni» per buttle.

lEXEY A CO., Toledo. Ohio.

ZGREflTi
lURUNGTON
iftOUTE-

What is there in the contact with ten­
der orphans to harden a woman’s heart
against them? If she have babies ot her
own, her love lor them, her longing to
lire for their sakes, teach her what bitter*
nste of parting, wtarf panga of appre­
hension. tho dead mother must have
known, and touch her spirit to unspeak­
able compassion (or the motherless chil­
dren given to her to rear. If she be child­
less, then that instinct of maternity which
lives In nearly evoiy woman’s heart, and
must be satisfied, reaches out naturally,
almost inevitably, toward her husband's
children, for his sake hardly more than
for theirs- In families where thechil.ten ot Hie tint wire are too young to
remember her with regret, when lite
step-mother com -s to them it is the rule,
ana not the exception, that they love their
new protector with a love that makes no
abatement, and are perhaps happier than
they would have been had their own
mother lived.
For we maintain that the popular im­
age of die step-mother is so far a phautom. a mere figment of the imagination.
that a man’s second wife is likelv to be a i
much higher type of woman than hir I
first
Ifeauty. grace of manner, an
idiotic fondness for himtelf. the most ,
perishable and accidental charms, en- '
... make
.mure him
,..u, the*
u.» ,
chant the bov-lover, and
girl-wife
husband. When his gii*
" 'becomes 1
Iren, folly
the mother of his childre_,
___ .. is not i
12 wisdom;
—■■ and
— । if
■{ 1
________
thereby translated
into
it of
of follies,
follies', Ihowever
pretty
she be compact
‘
- « •
----•
—
••• suffer
and well-behaved,
her
offspring
will
for that combination. Does anybody
donbt that Agnes would have made a far
better mother for Dora's’baby, hail it
lived, than that poor, sweet-face&lt;L loving.

"

! "!!!" "!"!"!!!"

i TEACHERS.
LADA C
HOUSEWIVES,

And their excellent rooutation injurod by worthless imitationa. The .
Public ure cautioned against buy- ;
ing Plasters having similar Bound­
Headaches,
Lwaaitud?,'
ing names,
Bee that tho word
Pale or Mothy Complexion,
CA-P-CIJTE is correctly spelled.
Sleeplessnrax,
Palpitation,

Benson’s Capcine
Porous Plasters

daya”
••Fifteen
days!” said the editor, in
.
•urpri*®••lYeX sir; fifteen days, and we
Ies’
couldn't get anything to cot for Ute last
five, except the mow that sprouted up
atween the shingles. Well, my wife got
awful thin like and so did the children,

b^tforthe
of her husband’s
,
Ixwt for the happiness
I
'
ta
children,
be dismayed by cheap jests. »di^&gt;r. gnmly.
stale two thousand years ago. ot by de**
t^.. whieh b«j.p^^55m«&gt;u |

~

BENSON'S
For
CAPCINE
PLASTERS , a Prevention and Cure
02000201010100000200010000000201020100000101000000020180000100010001
HAVE BEEN imitated.

Southern States. There will also be
considerable swamp land that will be
U’W.h-M for general agricultural purposes
■ until it b drained, and to drain it will
require the expenditure of iargu capital.
All thia land has been ‘pasted orer by
persons seeking homes. Much of it has

Are tho only improvement ever
made in Plasters.
Ono is worth more than a dozen
of any other kind.
Will positively euro where other
remedies will not even relievo.
Price 25 cents.
Bo ware of cheap. Plasters made

‘
? 5^Ardie ““
^ ootr'Mkto

the editor.
.
••There was the trouble." said the
visitor. “You sec there ain’t no plan­
tation nigh onto ten mile from ours, and
1 calculated that would be too much of
a pull for me. I reckon I’m a good
swimmer, but I didn’t care to tackle
that ten mile. Well, we’d got down to
our last shingle, and there wasn’t a
amitch o’ moss on that roof big ’nough j
to wad a shotgun with. Our youngest
had been given the last bit, and he set j
thereon the chimney chewing it up and
lookin' like a hand-organ monkey down
in his luck, when I nee a little do'tid way
across tin? the water. I didn't say nothin* I
for a moment, but knew pretty well I
— - r.. „
,;
t
.
.. 1^-7
_l 11 watehed it &lt;
like a nigger
Well, she
!«»*»'*
“' would a coon.
™
grew larger, and I made sure it were a
steamboat. Then I kinder whispered it
quiet like to the old woman. Well, she
took one look and then flopped over in i
a dead faint, and afore I could grab her ;
she rolled down the roof into the wat^r.
Well, that was the last of her.”
“You don’t mean to say you let her
drowu?
’ -------said the
-- ’„
-- editor.
- - -.. ,
, .
‘‘ WeD’ you
Joss, said the visitor,
1J" 80 yoak 1 knew "■ w“ oeath for
on &lt;»
u&gt; go after her, and to
matters
worse she pulled in our
®»ke r
—
__o~‘-' with her- I toll vou we we’re I
youngster
-*™&gt;K ton
tough times down dur way. At
having
IaM &lt;K«nebody on the steamboat saw us
ard they &lt;«« *» aboard, but I lost every­
thing, not to say nothin' about part of
Well, they took us up to
hew Orleans and I scraped ud cash
enough to come North, anil here I am.”
•• But what did you come North for?”
asked the editor.
•• Well, you see they put me on a Re­
lief Committee, and I'm on here to raise
funds.for the sufferers."
•• O, you are,” said the editor, edging
his chair back and looking sharp at the
visitor.
“ Yes, I tee you newspaper fellows
was throwin’ out lots of sympathy for
ns, and I just thought I'd tackle the
press first, and then work down through
the other professions.”
•• Very thoughtful in you.” said the
editor.
•• Yes. after I’ve gotyourcontributions
I'll just see whether the churches are
good for anything," said the visitor.
“ Wait , a moment,” said the editor,
walking over to the telephone, and then
he called the instrument •• Connect
Eagle with police headquarters,” but
the relief committee didn’t wait for; the
reply.—Brooklyn Engle.

MAnf»rtnri»c Cbcmteu. N«w Y
npitE REMEDY AT LART. Pricettctx.
CORN Bad BUNION PLASTER.

AMEAD'S Medotod

AU oMMttfoaeLato xSi

Tk-ktteviAthbKnr
Celebrated LUx

~7

r-u w
tfsv«&lt;ta&lt;

*«.

,

C’iUcasu. IU.

PEttEMI. LOWELL
Chica*u. IU

SSOO Hrw.rO (

WMOTHF.KH, Art your F&gt; WGHTERKaU.itc?

R. PENOELLY, M. D.,
Sold by Drug gilt*J
Ia’.rhaaoo , Mi:L

NO PATENT NO PAY

n ITr UTA ohutUd for awchautctl dsvi.
13 H I L ■ I V
»»edl«l.er.Al»&lt;-r.-««|«m&lt;

flirtstn CApie.
...... -

PARKER’S

GINGER TONIC
A Pure Family Mididnj that Never InUxicalri. I

IHU HIOBS
fvapo&lt;i4riir«

l^micd by

If you have r*y«pej&lt;hi. Raetitnalwtn, Kiiney crl
you can be cured by Pahut&gt; \ Gm»R 1OXK.
Ifvouare waiting away from »te. dwtipuim

UMAH

ID

q

WHO IS UNACQUAINTED WITH THS CEOCRAFHY OF THIS COUNTRY,
_____________ WILL BEE BY EXAMININO THIS MAF, THAT THE
.

OQ
Q

CJCXN

*h

0

A Tree of Iron.

B

CHICAGO, ROCK ISLAND &amp; PACIFIC RY

s The Croat Connocting Link between the East and the West
i HlUffA

Carolina. We had beard of this statue
in other places, but had never been able
to believe the stories of the flexible leaves
bending in the breeze, supposing this
phenomenon an optical delusion, but
such is really the case. The long, thin
leaves of iron, life-like even to the hair­
like fibers of the twigs and branches,
wave tremulously in every zephyr, and
the whole tree, painted artistically, has
so close a resemblance to the real tree as
to deceive the aepteet observer at the
distance of five rods.
Thf»e sad mementoes of a sadder past
cause all the glory of war and the petty
triumphs of victorious arms to sink into
pitiable insignificance; and only this
pathetic tribute to the memory of fallen
believers in the lost cause, whose faith
was sealed in their own blood, remains
to tell of the woe and heart-breaking

I
|

IM.

vute&lt; Keokuk to FarnUnpon, Bocapana, Beotn»jpon. S&amp;bmMk EMon. ottutpwa^j|eay1 • vlite.o»kaIooaa, I'ellA. Moaroo.Asd DMNStMe:
ML ZloawKecwxiu*; Nowton to Maoroe; IteU
Molne* to 1 udUooto aim! WlnUTMC; AUatHIc to
Ciriiwald and AudubOO; *M&gt; AmCRlo H»rl*a

H

tn»n PaisceCar* aUar b«rt. arc run each waj daily
IwHwren CHicano and Prom. KANSAS CCTT.
Council Blunts. Lmavksworth simLAtchi•om. Tbroosk ears an also nin b^cwswipBBBa.

iHUS

midnight darkness over all the South.—
a&gt;luv3na (S. C.) Oar. Syracuse Stand­
ard. ‘

about Hate* ar

perfect. .
Not a tea

PARKER’S HAIR

PRINCIPAUHJNS

HBAS city

Weak and TSatne Ba^k,

SEABURY Jt JOHNSON,

The Iron Palmetto is the greatest
work of art in the State House yard.
This is a casting wholly of iron, com­
memorating the death of many of Caro­
lina's slain, whose names are found in
raised letters on two brass tablets at the

.TwckAVet.

Numbness, ?'.::wteat Dizzineaa,
I&gt;ry Cough, yervous Irritation.

feiSsWffi-

pMOal lows K.

IO INKS,

—At &amp; rece® meeting of the French
Academy ot Science, the change which
«eems to bare occurred in tho French
climato daring the last few yean formed
one of the chief topic* of discussion. It
was remarked that the sardine fishery,
which regularly brought into the Breton
population tii.000.000 per annum, had
now become a thing of the past, the sar­
dine having completely disappeared from
the coast.
M. Blavier attributed the
mildness of the winter and the precocity
of the spring to the altered direction of
the Gulf stream, but no definite opinion
on this subject was pronounced.

■o»a bv

IT) It. It- CABLE,
\JJ
H Vta.

' ERWSTJF YOUTH

—:

�14U th* th* Ante

PERSONAL AN D POLITIC AL

Having just returned from the' East with three immense
stocks for Nashville, Big Rapid- and Cadillac, which
gives us the advantage over small dealers, who
purchase for one store only, we are offering

Conutaxtixopi.k dispatch of the 16th
says there were no indications that the Sultan
would dispatch troops to Egypt. Tl»e pro-

their report, which differ* from the Lamb rewith Dr. Lamb as to the state ot th® brain.
healthy condition, nothing abnormal being
visible.
The hill to extend the charters of National
Banks received the signature of President Ar­
thur an the 13 th.
Tua Republicans made the following nomi­
nations for Congress on the 13th: Minnesota,
Third District, Horace B. Strait, renominated;

Illinois, Fourteenth, J. G. Cannon, renomi­
nated; Mississippi, Third, E. Jeflerd*.
Bishop Levi Scott, senior Bishop of the
Methodist Episcopal Church, died al his home
near Odessa, Del., on the morning of the 13th,
nged eighty years.
Ox the 13ih the candidates on the Inde­
pendent Republican ticket io Pennsylvania
addressed a letter to tbe regular nominees,
urging the withdrawal of botii tickets, all the

on the nth.... The blH to provide additional in­
dustrial training schools for Indian youth was

DOMESTIC.
Secretary Folokk on the 13th issued to
holder* of continued bonds a circular an­
nouncing that on August 1 such securities
wil be received' in exchange for registered
three per cents bearing interest from that

While workmen on the North Shore Road
were blasting near jJilton, N. Y., on the 13th
a premature explosion killed three Italians
and seriously Injured eight others.
Pmsidext ARTHUR on the 13th issued an
order discontinuing the Military Department
of West Point, placing the academy in charge
of tbe General of the army, and appointing
Genera] Wesley Merritt Superintendent.
A colored man near Red C1»T« Go., afflicted
with small-pox, was shot &lt;iea-l on the 13th by
railroad bonds nod cremated In bis cabin.
The Tariff Commission lias issued a circu­
lar inviting correspondence from s!| associa­
tions, corporations and individual* upon ques­
tions bearing upon the agricultural, com­
mercial, mercantile, mining and Industrial in­
terest, of tbe United States.
The rye harvest in Southern Illinois show*
a yield and quality above the average, giving
promise that the Stele will produce oue-slxtn
Two

sneak

thieves were recently arrested

lug, when he stated that he and hfs compan­
ion seven years ago murdered a woman In
a theater at Stockholm, Sweden, for $500 of­
fered them by a man whom she had black­
mailed. The penitent thief said his accom­
plice bad ever since forced him to continue In
from him.
I
There wen 121 business failures In the
United States during the seven day* ended

Six business block* In Dayton, Washington
Territory, including every store, hotel and

losses aggregating $300,000.
JoilX GoODWlX. residing in Orange County,
The latter killed Goodwin and his brother-in­
law in return, but during the melee received
A Topeka (Kan.) dispatch ef the 14th

jured six persons, and darux.ged the .crops on
a belt four miles wide.
Frank Work’s double team, Dick Swlvelcr
and Edward, trotted a mile on the 13th in
2:1SX—toy four seconds the fastest time ever

held under the rule* of tbe recent conference.
The following nomination* for Congress
were made on tbe 14th.- BIIdoU, Eighteenth
District, John R. Thoma* (Rep.), renomi­
nated; Ohio. Eleventh, John W. McCormick
(Bep.); Indiana, Third, Strother M. Stockalager (Dem.), renominated; Pennsylvania,
Twenty-seventh, B. M. Brainard (Rap.).
J VAX B. Alvarado, who wa* Governor of
California from 1888 to 1S43, died oc. the 14th
at San Pablo.
The Central Committee of the Labor Union
of New York on the 15th Issued an address,
recommending the placing of a Labor candi­
date In nomination in each Assembly District
Mahtix P. Avert, the living skeleton, died
a few days ago in New York, of dyspepsia.
Bishop Gilmour and the Catholic Bishops
of Detroit and Cincinnati left New York City
for Rome on tbe 16th.
A Milwaukee dispatch of the 15th state*
that the report of the drowning of F. E. Pond,

the city. The fire continued, and incendiaries
werp shot daily. It was believed that whole
families of Europeans were thrown Into th*
flames. Admiral Seymour was organizing a
police force as rapidly as possible. The bom­
bardment wae said to have almoat extermi­
nated the Egyptian artillery corp*.

captured by marines -nd handed over to the
Khedive, who ordered them shot by loyal
troops. English sailors flogged ten Arabs'
as a spy. The grain market reopened, but
hundreds of people were starving and house­
less. Admiral Seymour forbade the firing of
the usual salutes and dally time guns by the
Egyptians. Arabi had been summoned to
Alexandria by the Khedive, who would treat
him as a rebel should he refuse to obey. The
British were said to have cut the Cairo rail-

Tur Commander of the Egyptian men-ofwar, who had Intended to take ids vessels

FOREIGN.

RHEUMATISM, Over 500 Suits
Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago,
Backache, Soreness of tho Chest,
Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Scroll­
ings and Sprains, Bums and
Scalds, GonoraJ Bodily
Pains,
Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted
Foot and Ears, and all other
Pains and Aches.

SOLD IT ALL DIUGGIFTB AID DEALERS

IB MEDIOUE.

F. T. BOISE,
------- FO]

DUOS,
BOOKS,
JEWELRY,
WALL PAPER,
*
WINDOW SHADES,
DI E STUFFS,
PROPRIETARY MEDI0IHE8,

PRESCRIPTIONS,
RECEIPTS,

PAINT AND BRUSH
DEPARTHEAT

At less than yon can buy the Cloth and Trimmings.

For $4 and. 85, we are selling a very good every day
Suit, many styles to select from.
For $8 and 810, we are selling a very desirable diagonal
worsted', bound and made in sack and frock styles. Other
stores get *12 for the same suits.
Our 12 00 and 14.00 Suits will surpris you
For 15.00 we can give you a suit you need not be asham­
ed to wear any place, and would cost *18 to *20 at any store.
Our 16.00 and 18.00 Suits are well made and trlmed, and for fit and wear can not be equaled.
Our stock in this line is the largest and fineet we evbr of­
fered. All Goode from a eubetantial Bchdbl suit to the finest
dress suit. We have in stock more boys’ and youths’ clothing
than the combined stock of any house in town. Our stock

7

Boots, Shoes And Groceries,
Is full up and PLENTY OF THEM. Ready pay purchasers
desired. WE OWN THE GOODS at about 70 cents on the
dollar. You can save money, and be comparatively happy by
buying your goods

Cheap! Clieap! Cheap!
We want your BUTTER and EGGS and will allow you
PINE WOODS PRICES.
Respectfuly

W. A. •1YLSWORTH.
Call and Examine!
F. T. BOISE.
J|

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN
At Buxton's new brick, hare full and complete lines In

II. niCKIXMOX A.CO

Two brothers named Flaherty, recent ar­ eighty Europeans was said to have occurred
----- SEW----rivals from America, were arrested in County • at MsUtah. Refugees from Cairo reported
Furnishing
Kerry, Ireland ou the 13th, charged with com­ that a holy war was being proclaimed, and an
CUSTOM
plicity in the assassination of Messrs. Caven­ outbreak among the native* of that city was
dish and Burke.
immlwi1A train with 217 person* ofi toard ran qff
the rails between Tcberny &gt;nd Bastljeur, In
LATER NEWS.
Russia, on the. 13th. ana 178 ;croon» were
Ox the 17lh the Khedive prepared a docu­
kilted. Those not killed were injured more or
READY FOR BUSINESS
ment dismissing Arabi Bey from the Minis­
If you want something new, neat and nobby, just lake a look at our stock of
Accordino to a Dublin telegram of the try, but could find nobody who would be the Every day In the year—Sundays excepted.
Nth thirteen counties bad been proclaimed
founded belief that the Pasha would order
A VOXDOM dispatch of the 14th states tbit him to be Instantly beheaded.
John Bright bad resigned from the Cabinet,
owing to his dissent from the Government’s Europeans in other Egyptian towns than
Alexandria—3» were prpurUd killed at KaflrOf every dercriptiou, done in a super
Egyptian policy.
.
manner, nt the drop of tbe hat; and
A fine at Owen Sound, Ont, on the 14th el-Dwar. It was reported that Arabi had
Satisfaction guaranteed.
lost
prestige
among
his
follower*
because
ot
destroyed nine stores, valued at $30,000.
Customs officer* at Montreal on the 15th hh exhibition of cowardice at Alexandria
seized teas Valued at $45,030, which bad been during the bombardment.
Ox the 18th Judge- Advocate-General Swaim,
FOR THE LEAST MONEY.
sent from New York under falsa entries, thus
evading a differential duty of ton per cent in a report to the Secretary of War on the pe­
tition for the release of Sergeant Mason, held
Remember that we [have no old, shop-worn and unseasonable goods, but that everything is
levied on indirect shipments. '
Kept constantly on band.
A District Gotemxor In Austria, while that the proceedings of the court-martial were

Gents

Goods

Pouring Mill

CUFFS, COLLARS, TIBS, BANKERCHIEFS, JEWELRY, BTC.

CUSTOM

GRINDING!

FLOUR. MEAL AND MILL FFED

surgeut chieftain, wbu massacred the entf re
party.

Missouri Hirer Bridge at Mandan, Dakota,

•86 were children afflicted with cholera JnJantum.
A hail-storm In the Black HOI* oa the 15th

troop*.
AN Alexandria dispatch ot the 16th states
that Arabi P»«hA wm at Kafridwar awaiting
reinforoeroenta from Cairo. Firing was heard
outside Alexandria on the night previous,
and ill the available sailors and marines were

British on the 16th not to lea/e until instruc­
tion* in regard to tbe matter had been
received from London. Torpedo boat* at
Dcvonport were sent out to patrol the canal.
Ox the 16lh the Khedive authorized the isaue of a proclamation that the Engl'sh Ad­
miral, being charged .by permission of the
Khedive with the duty of maintaining order
in Alexandria, orders that all persons, Euro­
peans or natives, caught flring house* shall be
shot, and all plunderer* arrested In the act
shall be punished for the flrat offense and shot
In the Flambeau River In Wisconsin, proves if caught repeating it.
k
Ox the night of the 10th a strong band of
Michael Davitt, the Irish agitator, tailed
Arab* entered Alexandria and killed a num­
ber of loyal Egyptian soldier*.
Mns. Lincoln, the widow ot Abraham
It was reported in Alexandria on tbe 17th
Lincoln, died at 8:15 on the evening of tbe that Arabi Bey was inarching on Port Said
16th, in Springfield, Ill., at tbe home ot her with'1,500 men, and that a large force of
sister, Mrs. N’inlan Edwards. Mr*. Lincoln Bedouins was apparently following them.
had been for a long time in poor health,
' American marines were the fl rot to land at
but within a few days she had grown Alexandria to aid in restoring order, and were
rapidly worse, and on the evening of the 15th
speedily followed by Germans, neither receiv­
she suffered a paralytic stroke, from which
ing instruction* from their Governments.
she never rallied, but lay in a comatose state
Before leaving Alexandria Arabi Pasha ap­
until she died. She waS iu her sixty-fourth
year. Secretary Lincoln is her only living propriated £25,000 from tho custom -house.
Ox the 16th the Khedive dismissed Arabi
child.
Pash* from the Ministry of War.
The official majority which tbe Prohibition
A
dmiral Sbtmour announced on tbe 17th
Amendment received in lows, a* announced
that he had undertaken, with the consent of
the Egyptian Government, the restoration of
order fn Alexandria. In the provinces an­

at the Mwrfl—n’s Driving Park, in New Tort

were precipitated from the top of the sixty-fire
feet trestle, falliagto the ground below, and
were instantly killed.

when the Khedive could demand a prolougatlon at the eoat of theEgyptlans, no European

on the 15th for taking a farm from which a
tenant had been evicted.
The French Cabinet on the 17th resolved to
accept the invitation to exercise a protector­
ate over the Suez Canal jointly with Great
BriUlu.
Alfred Duchesne, formerly a stockorokcr iu Brussels, was arrested te Montreal
on the 17tb for the embezzlement of 1,500,0)0

Tu« Republicans of the Sixth Illinois Dis­
trict on the 18th nominated Robert R. Hitt
for Congress.
The prosecution in the Star-route tri. ’. at
Washington rested their, case on the 18th.
The Prohibitionists of tha Fourteenth 1111Dols District on the 18th nominated D. H.
Harts for Congress.
Fifty Mexican rcvolutloubits captured tbs il * liberal patronage from tbe farmers of.tbls

Our Graham Flour

k Mills on railroad,—east of depot ~

H. B. DICKINSON A CO.
number had been killed and wounded.

wounded by fire and falling walls during the
of GaribaidL
Wallace R-mmjh the 17th accepted Haalan’*
Nkarut taalTc hundred feet of the Hwdson
■■ nxuy consecutive days for f1,000 each.

French Chamber of Deputies on the 18th on
the EgypBan queaUou, expressed the belief

gers injured fatally on the Prince Edward
Island RaUroad, near Charlottetown, ou the
18th.

ACtATIT TO THE FRONT!
With tie LAB&amp;E8T aii lost CoBwlete Stock if

CARDING FURNITURE
AND SPINNING

EGYPTIAN WAR NEWS.
Inflexible', eighty-tou guns. Fifteen hundred
Arabs were killedsnd two thousand wounded.
The Turkish Prime Minister, at a Cabinet
council held on the 14th denounced Arabi Bry
a* a rebel and declared that he must be treated

WOOL

o- All our purchases are made with the cash and try strict attention to the want* of ou
customer* we expect to respsuccess.
________

Nashville, Apr. 30,1882.

Ever laid down in any one store in Barry
or Eaton Counties.

Sbcap-fihearing time is upon us and the

NewG ardir^lkill

Our mammoth two-story double store
Is full and running over.

ROLLS, OR YARN!
alt the wool of Chis section, with

STOCII 11 'UN
NEED NOT WAIT

Everything you need from the smallest Bracket to
a $125 Parlor Suit
*
We
You can save money and have a better selection to choose

_________

�Pioneer Store
SATURDAY

- JULY n.l*.

failing to coax a girl to elope with and
marry him, lassoed her as die was go­
ing to church,* and was dragging her
a justice’s office when succor

Two Indiana farmers quarrelled
about a wrench, and went to law. Tbe
costa of court and counsel fee* have
reached 91.800, both litigants have
mortgaged their property to raise the
money, and the case is continued.
Members of Congress are calling
each other liars and thievs*. a pretty
sure sign that they areaboat to adjourn
When a Congrereman get* a hot box
and calls another one names, be should
be treated like a car wheel with a hot
box. Dash water in his month and
hear him “sisa,” and then pot in some
tallow and cotton waste.

The prediction of a western railroad
President, Mr. Ingalls, that tbe line
from the Southwest to Cincinnati, and
even the trunk line* to the Maboard,
will be chocked with grain, so heavy
is this year’s crop of wheat, is a pleas­
ant one. Sft&amp;e last year’s exports of
edibles fell toff from those_of 1880, goo&lt;J
crops now will heip'lo make up tbe
average, z •

It has transpired that the cause of
the terrible disaster on the Ohio, re­
sulting in the drowning of over 1U0
people, was whisky. The officers of
the Scioto were all drank, and in the
pilot house were a lot of young ladies
who gave the signal, and gave it wrong
the pilot being too drunk to take no­
tice of the mistake.
But for the
drunkenness of these officers that ac­
cident would not have occurred.
The thickest armor in the British
navy is that of the Inflexible, one of
the ships that bombarded Alexandria.
It varies in thickness, in different parts
of tbe ship, from 16 to 34 inches. The
Italian Government is building two
ships which.will have armor 36 inches
thick. Tbe Italian ship* Duilio and
Dandolo have armor 33 inches thick
throughout making them upon the
whole, more heavily armored than the
Inflexible. Their armament is also
heavier, ns they carry 100-ton guns,
against the Inflexible’s 81-ton guns.
Tbis is favorable weather for the
farmers, and in the broad wheat field*
of the West reapers are kept busy night
and day. Good reports come from the
wheat-raising districts, and .another
-.week of good weather will assure tbe
entire crop of whiter wheat. Every
day of thin weather adds greatly to the
value of the cereals, and the hearts of
the fanners are gladdened. In some
sections, especially in Kansas, wh^re it
is estimated the product will reach 35,­
000,090 bushels, tbe quality is unusually
good, the grains being largo and well
ripened. ^One blessing following the
cold rainy spring is a magnificient hny
crop. Expenenced fanners say that
tbe popular notion of the kind of
weather needed for big crops is wrong,
and that this yea; especially demon­
strate* that what is needed is plenty
of rain to fructify the earth, and then
plenty of heat later in the season to
ripen the products. The result of this
season’s work, with what has been
viewed as most unfavorable weather,
is likely to give some of our farmers a
setback in theories and predictions.
Tbe corn crop has had about rain
enough at present, and if the ballance
of July and August have moderate
temperature and rainfalls, and Sep­
tember has Bome very hot day* and drv
weather, our greatest crop is likely to
be our best. 8o much depends upon
the hand woikers far from these haunts
of men, that all may rqjoice in their
prospect of prosperity.

The first gleam of light is thrown up­
on tbe diplomatic rituatiou in Europe
reveals anything but concert. Eng­
land and France are drawing together
again, and are apparently resolved to
share the burdens and responsibilities
of the Egyptian situation.
But a*
France and England have become re­
conciled, there are signs of serious di­
vision* elsewhere. It is palpable that
the conference resolution-Turkish in­

ported by Bismarck.
If Germany,
Russia and Austria bad ordered the
sultan to interfere, be would do it iu
short order. That be has not done it is
conclusive evidence that he has re­
ceived assurances from some high
aoouree that he wasn’t expected to. Sir
Charles Dilke was compelled to explain
in parliament last night that bis pre­
vious statement that Germany approv­
ed England’s course was premature
Austria is in favor, it is said, of the
withdrawal of all European interveo-

-------------- Mellin CJoocis*-------------clb on
churaba. io
h,lp |lim_
•
—Tbe net profli ot tbe Sew York Book
■ Concern of the Methodist Episcopal
chuRlh
W90M

EXCEEDINGLY LOW!

ring the last year. This large property
trust is wisely administered
—Mie* Campbell, an English ksd»,
called the "Queen erf Corsica.'' has built
a church at Ajaccio, and rules her chap­
lain with almost feudal tyranny. * If the
sermon is too long a large watch is
drawn out of her pocket and held over
—President Henry Villard intends, it
ber head until a.conclusion Ts put to the
is said, to build "a warehouse elevator"
irksome discourse; to the amusement of
at each station along the Northern Pa­
the congregation and th*
cific Railway into which farmers can
tbe divine.
dump and hold their grain “instead of
—Teachers all ov&lt;y the country who
being compelled to place themselves at
have used the Longfellow Leaflet* and
the mercy of the local merchant* who
Holmes Leaflets, oompiled by Miss Jose­
buy wheat at prices fixed by themselves,
phine E. Hodgdon, will be glad to learn
simply because they control the storage
that a series of Whittier Leaflets is now
capacity of the road.”—N. Y. Tribune.
ready. The numerous call* for thorn
—Chamois skins may be thus cleansed:
which have already been received by the
Rub plenty of soft soap into the leather
KWishers indicate that they will be no
and put it to soak for two hours it a
* popular than their predecessors.—
weak solution of soda and warm water,
Chicago 'lYibune.
.
rob It well tlD it is clean and rinse it in
—Professor Blaikie, the eminent
warm water In which a little sod* and
Scotch theologian, wrote after the com­
soap have been dissolved. Wring it well
pletion of Moody and Sankey’s two
in a towel and dry quickly, then pull it
months In Edinburgh: “The very infi­
and brash it till it is perfectly soft.
del has had to own that Moody travels
—For Whitewash.—Slake one peck of
in the footsteps of his Master, and that
lime, and while hot and at the thickness
no other force in the world, least of all
of cream, add a pint of linseed oil and a
the force of scepticism, ever shows such
quarter pound of dissolved glue. Let it
a spirit or engages in such labors of
stand half a day before using. This, for
love.”
interior walls, is far superior to simple
—The following shows the number of
lime and water. It is also first-rate for
pupils enrolled last year in ten of our
out-door work, though expensive. For
leading cities, and the cost per capita
buildings, fences, etc., slake clean, white,
for th(i|r edacation: New York, 267,944
fresh lime under water; add a pound of
pupils, 910.85 cost per capita; Chicago,
sulphate of zinc to every peck of lime,
59,562, 918.57; Boston. 50,643, 928.16;
ana half a pound of salt. Tbe addition
St Louis, 47,030, 911.66; Cincinnati,
uf yellow ochre will make it a cream
35,760, $21.07; San Francisco, 40,137,
color, umber gives it a fawn color, and
918.45; Pittsburgh, 24.235, 913.76; Buf­
lampblack a gray shade. These color­
falo. 18,606,916.90; Washington, 26,419,
ing ingredients are not expensive. The
918.17; Newark, N. J., 19,806, 910.49;
lampblack should be dissolved in vinegar
Detroit, 15,719, 912.36.—H. Y. Herald.
before mixing in.—Indianapolis Journal.
—That was a pleasant way in which
a newly-settled Methodist minister dis­
Prairie Hay.
armed the criticism of the people in the
congregation to which he had been sent.
During the pioneer days of this county
Instead of getting angry about it or
many ofthe early settlers who still sur­
complaining that they h**I hurt his feel­
vive had ample opportunity of testing the
ings, he remarked from the pulpit, "I
superior qualities of prairie hay, as com­
hear that you say I am not much of a
pared with timothy, millet, Hungarian,
preacher; well, I know it; and I know
etc. Indeed, for several years wild
that if I could preach first rate ( wouldn't
grasses were the main dependence for
have been sent here to preach to such a
that universal and indispensable article,
lot of ignoramuses as you.”—Chicago
hay. In those days every man possessed
Herald.
of the slightest thrift or enterprise was
—Touching the decline of infant bap­
sure to have an abundant supply of up­
tism, the Journal and Mewnger states of
land or bottom grass, or perhaps both,
New York Presbyterian churches: " In
stacked about his premises, preparatory
Dr. John Hall'* church, with a member­
to passing through one of those terrific
ship of 1,730, there were but twenty-one
winters, which of lute years are at very
babies baptised last year. In Dr. How­
rare occurrence.
ard Crosby’s, with 1,384 members, there
The horses, cattle and sheep which fed
were onlv seventeen. Dr. Bevan’s Brick
on prairie hay were generally healthier
Church has 1,000 members, but only
and leas liable to diseases, considering
twenty-three infants were dedicated in
the many disadvantages existing in that
baptism. In Dr. Robinson's Memorial
day. than to stock that enjoy the devices
Church, 570 members could show only
and facilities of to-day for pampering and
eight In Mr. Talmage's church, num­
deceiving, even though they luxuriate
bering 2,471, onlv forty-nine infants
The Little Shoes Did IL
on the best of timothy, millet, Hungar­
were baptised.
Dr. Cuyler bapt’t'd
ian, or clover hay. Having seen the
A young man who had been reclaimed thirty-one infants in a memberslifo of
various good results produced by the ex­
from the vice of intemperance was called 1,761. Dr. Ludlow, with 378 memttere.
clusive use ofpraine hay, particularly upon to tell how ho was led to give up
upland or blue-stem, I do not hesitate in drinking. He arose, but looked for a reports six. Dr. Van Dyke, with 571,
report none.
pronouncing it far superior to any other monvnt very confused.
All he could
kind of prepared grasses. But especially
say was: “ 'rhe little shoes they did it?”
PUNGENT PARAGRAPHS.
do I recommend and favor the use of With a thick voice; as if his heart was in
prairie hay for horsee, inasmuch as it is, his throat he kept repeating this. There
—A little boy came to his mother re­
in one very important consideration, not was a stare of perplexity on every face, cently and said: "I should think that
the only one, but prominent among tne and at length some thoughtless young if I was made of dust I would getmuddy
many, namely: almost entirely free from people began to titter. The man. in all inside when I drink.” *
several species of fines, dost aud mold. I his embarrassment heard the sound, and
—“What did you say the conductor's
have seen as good timothy hay, millet hay. rallied at once. The light came into his name was?” "Glass—Mr. Glass” "O
Hungarian hay, clover hay, and clover eyes with"a flash; he drew himself up, no!”
"But it is.”
"Impossible--it
mixed with timothy, which is a very com­ and the choking went from his throat, can’t be,” "And why not, pray?”
mon thing here as elsewhere, per­ "Yes, friends, he said, in a voice that "Because, sir, Glass is a non-conductor.”
haps as good as is generally grown, and cut its way as clear as a deep-toned bell, [Deafening applause from tho scientific
I nave never yet seen a hundred pounds whatever you may think of it I’ve told passengers ]
of these named varieties but what were you the truth—the little shoes did it I
—Rose McWhortleberry beard her
more or less dusty, and not unfreqnently was a brute and a fool; strong drink had master remark that "Kismet” meant
musty or moldy. All who have the care made me both, and starved me i-to the "fate." and this is the reason why she so
and management at horses know how bargain, ^suffered—I deserved to suffer astonished her mistress by remarking
exceedingly obnoxious and injurious but i did not suffer alone—no man does the next day to Belinda, the chamber­
such hay is. and how its natural tenden­ who has a wife and children—for the maid: "O. Blindy, I can scarcely walk
cies to promote various peculiar diseases women get the worst shore. But I am wid the chilblains all over my two kis­
or ailments; and how the horse with the no speaker to enlarge on that; Til stick mets.”
orthodox suit wan ne and treatment of to the little shoes I saw one night when I
—A fashion writer nf the female sex
was all but done for—the saloon-keepers sayfl: “In dress we are nothing but
child holding out ber feet to look At her monkeys.” The writer may be nn ex­
atively unknown in the days of prairie fine, new shoes. It was a simple thing, ception; bat who ever saw a monkey
hay and pioneer acoommodationa
attired in a corset, a twenty-dollar hat,
The unnatural, yet at the same time but my friends, no fist ever struck me
such a blow as those little new shoes. so venteen-butt on gloves, a lot of false
very essential, condition of the surface
They kicked reason into me.
What hair, and several hundred dollars’ worth
of the sciL which is required to produce
reason had I to clothe other? with fineries of dry goods.—Horrutoton Herald.
the tame grasses, renders it wholly im—strive, endeavor. It proflta more
posrible to have hay that will compare and provide not even coarse clothing for
To n*ht and falL than on Time's dull *bar«
To «it oxi Idler ever;
favorably with wild hay. Prairie hay, my own, but let tiiem go bare? And
there
outside
was
my
shivering
wife,
and
For to him wt»o bare* bl* arm to tbe strife.
if properly harvested, will retain its orig­
Firm at hl* post In the bottle of Life,
inal purity and sweetness for a very blue chilled child, on a bitter cold
The victory talleth—oevor.
I took hold of my little
great length of time, and contains suflf- Christmas eve.
—An Austin teacher was instructing
die with a grip, and saw her feet! Men!
cient nutritive and life-sustaining qual­
fathers!
if
the little shoes smote me, his class in natural history. "To what
ities as to render it the hay for horses.—
how must die feet have smote me? I class of birds does the hawk belong,”
Cor. Qermantown Telegraph.
pat them cold as ice, to my breast, and he asked. “To the birds of prey." was
they pierced me through. Yes, the lit­ the reply. "And to what class doe*
A Hint to Hosaekeeper*.
tle feet walked right into my heart, and
away
walked my selfishness. I had a
A retail butcher in New York says:
"The New York public haveef t much trifle of money left; I bought a loaf of
boy at the foot
discrimination. I often laugh at the bread and then a pair of shoes. I never
foolish way in which people will rush for tasted anything but a bit of bread all the
—
A
man
entered
a
street-car
with a
next
day;
and
I
went
to
work
like
mad
the most expensive cute. Everybody I
half-consumed cigar in his hand and sat
want* to buy prime rib roast* and porter­ on Monday, and from that day I have down beside a gnm-visaged virgin con­
iroent no more money at the public bouse.
house and sirloin steaks, with plenty of
That’s all I have got to say—it was the siderably past the period of her youthful
bloom. After a time the cigar went out,
that the chuck roast of good beef, which tittle shoes that did it. ’ ’—Hartford Times.
and the incense arising from the cooling
J from five to eight cents a pound
—A servant girl of New York was stamp made the ancient spinster’s nose
than the prune out, is just as
arrested on s charge of stealing 98,000 heave like a Sandy Hook buoy. She
iting. Ana you couldn’t make
from Willie Edouin, the actor She was called the conductor to her and said
lieve if you took your affidavit
kept In a cell all night, and appeared to
to it. that while the tenderloin may be
be hystericaL When brought to the
tender, it is neither as nutritious nor m
Jefferson Market Police Court, she was “It is, eh? Look at this loafer." "I
placed in the prisoner’s pen and almost can’t help it, madame; his cigar isn’t
"Well, then." she shouted,
immediately died. She had denied the lighted.'
crime all along calling upon God to "for heaven’s sake make him light It”
in selling the other portions sf
witness her innocence, and seemed much Women are not always perfectly logical
which is lost as good, at half
impressed with the thought of the dis—A negro was standing in a street of
Porto Rico, where, as is well-known,
we have a lam stock to carry, we can
slavery still flourishes, when a storm
•caroelysellit. Beef is going to be still
—The State of Illinois is named from
higher, and if you’ll take ahint from Its principal river, the Illinois. The burst over the town, the rain descending
me you can save money by buying chuck river is named from tbe confederacy of in torrent*. Sambo hastily pulled off
wests of good beef which has been kept Indian tribe* called ths Illinois confed­ his hat, and did his bsst to protect it
from the downpour. The more terrific
£b davs In ths foe-boom, and steaks
eracy, which has its seat in the central
fwm the tender aid* of tbe round or from part of the State. Gallatin gives the def­
inition of the word Illinois, -real men,”
sponge.
"superior men,” from the Delaware

CLOTHING!

the b^trWellare of their children *1 bean
will see that no hired man is engaged
who use* profane or vulgar language.
—House Plants.—These sometimes, it
is said, cause malaria, the damp earth
in ths pots being the cause of unwhotesomeneM, but In a well ventilated room
one need apprehend no trouble from the

* m-n
Qouplod with
» »&gt;ll w rtrooj. ihu whM bad bwn a
“ ■&gt;»?«
*&lt;&gt;
obodieiico——an obsdmnoe bora of love
r~pe*^andiberrioretarmore oomiron hand could hare compelled, and
which, under the clear-headed guidance
of the teacher, resulted iu such an ad­
vancement in the path of knowledge u
that.school had never known.
With a prayerful conscientiousness the
young girl returned to her task -each
day, and there bent every energy to the
faithful performance of her duties, total­
ly forgetting herself in her work, and
doing it with only one thought—that of
earning a deserved "well done" from a
higher than any human court; and daily
the children toot her together from her
lips fresh lessons erf love and truth­
lessons taught as only the pure and true
can teach tiiem.
For once the childrens’ parents proved
to be not wholly indifferent; the enthusi­
asm of the school room was carried
home; a meeting of the Board of Di­
rectors was called, the condition of the
school thoroughly examined, and the
teacher—in her inexperience, trembling
for fear she had. left some duty unper­
formed—was notified that her salary
was increased by a half ! Well, did her
energy slacken, now that her probation
was past? Not in the least On the
contrary, while she worked no harder
than before, for that was impossible, yet
her work was better done on account
both of tbe experience gained and of tbe
steady and united support of ber
patrons; and when the term closed, the
tears of teacher and pupils were mingled
in that sorrow at separation which only
youth and childhood know.
But this term was not to "be the last
As the young girl grew into womanhood
she was repeatedly recalled to this coun­
try achooL and the children which bad
gathered round her as boys and girls of
ten and twelve, grew under her care to
the age and qualifications necessary for
their admittance to college, and today
those of that little band who are left—
for many, very many, have passed from
earth forever—look back upon those
school-days of childhood with the feel­
ing that the whole of life—aye, the
whole of eternity—has been sweetened
and purified by the unselfish labors of
that uoble woman. Ah, what would we
not give if we could assure to the little
ones who are now gathering around our
.hearth stones such loving care in the
school-room as we then received!
Teacher, parent, employer, will it not
be richly worth your while to so live and
act that the embryo men and women now
under your charge shall, in the future,
look back upon your labors of today
with similar feelings? But will they
thus look back if you treat this business
of school-teaching as simply so much
work to oe done in the easiest manner
for so much monev to be grudgingly
paid.— Louisville Irarm and Fircndc.

turn, which is practically the same a*
Austria’s proposition. Italy is opposed
to Anglo-French control, and tbe Czar’s
ambassador thinks the first meddling
of England and France in the finances
of Egy pt was wrong. This look* like a
concert in which France and England
are singing one time and all tho rest of
Europe is singing another.
Mean­
about ter. or
while Arabi holds hts own in Egypt,
P100*" «

°** «‘‘&lt;f-1
W
—hen they
nbs sometimes
j adopted an Indian word.—(Meago Newt.

kagtoSemboF’

In order to m^ke room for our

Fall a..o Wider Goods,
------ *----- We are selling our*---- '■------

FINEST STpCKS
At prices that requires no bantering to sei

HERE ARE BARGAINS FOR YOU!
Summer Pants for 95c.
THINK OF IT!

BOOTS an(l SHOES
For fall and wipter trade are comming in.
lent and cheap. Examine them.

They hire excel­

Of the best quality and lowest in price. Try our 40c Tea.
Don’t buy poor egga-unless you prefer them. Our egg tester
tells you which are poor.

18269154

AND EG6S.

NEW VICTOR SEWING MACHINE is VICTOROUS.
Ready pay secures for you all the advantages in trade.

L. J. Wheeler.
The Egyptian Question in Brief.

The present sovereign of Egypt, Mo
hammed Tewflk, is nominally the vice­
roy of tile Sultan of Turkey, of whom;
dominions Egypt is theoretically a part.
By various firmans or decrees he enjoys
the privileges of au independent he­
reditary monarch, with the PersianArabic title of Khidiv-el-Misr. or King
of Egypt, popularly rendered by “the
Khedive.” As such monarch he and
his predecessors have contracted vari­
ous public debts, a large portion of
which are held by British and French
subjects, nnd for the better securing
their payment Tewflk placed, in 1870
and 1880, the management of the
Egyptian tluonces in the hands ot two
Coniptrollera-Generalf* one appointed
by Great Britain and one by Fiance,
virtually constituting them his admin­
istrative officers. Against this man­
agement Arabi Bey, representing the
native political element of the country,
rebelled, nnd the Khedive has been un­
able to subdue him. The present mil­
itary proceedings have been taken by
Great Britain, therefore for the pur­
pose of overthrowing Arabi and re­
storing the power to the Khedive—
that is, to the English aud French of
ficinls to whom he has intrusted it.

and new school bouse Is to be built to sccomtnodatc tbe first ward.
A truck wagon, heavily loaded ran over tbe
bead of a email son of Mr. Rood's of MiilelU,
last week. The boy was picked up alive and
kicking and will recover.
E. J. Holland, deputy sheriff of Bellevue,
succeeded in finding tbe festive Sam Jones and
the wonfan with whom he eloped, at Mont­
pelier, Ohio. Monday he brunght them back to
Bellevue. They wanted the sweet solaee of
each other's society so badly that they walked
away , sleeping In a fence corner or any con­
venient place. Now they begin to see that the
way of the transgremor Is somewhat thorny.
Sam Uuguisbeth in default of |500 bail. Tbe
woman, Mrs. Eastman, is at Bellevue.—Char­
lotte Republican.
A JUDGE’S EXPERIENCE.
Judge J. T. Bossier, of St Tammany pariah.
La., and of the State Legislature, thus expres­
sed bls opinion to one of our rep.-eaentativea:
**] lisve found St. Jacoba Oil to be very ef­
ficacious In sprains and bruises. In my opiuion there U no oil or liniment equal to IV—
New Orleans (La.) Times-Democrat.
DON’T DIE IN THE HOUSE.
Ask druggists for “Rough ou Rats.” It
clears out rata, mice, bed-bugs, roaches, vermin,
flies, ants, insects. 15c. per box.
No more Chills and Ague tn this section.
Our Druggist Is selling an article called
“Aouf CoxquKBoa.” It Is about the only
satisfactory preparation sold for tbe cure of
Fever and Ague, Dumb Chills, Intermittant or
Billions Fevers. Tbe Proprietor ot tbe Ago
CoXQVBBOR has used but little energy to make
this medicine known and vet Its sales are im­
mense in Ague Districts. It purifies the blood
Liver and other Secretory organs so effectually
that tbe Chills do not return even when per­
sons have had them for years. Entirely rags­
table preparation. Price, SO cents and
per bottle. Two doses will stop the chills.

Tbe little town of Nashville, Barry county,
has three newspapers, and they are all wearing
themselves out in their efforts to sec which can
throw tbe roost mud. If they are not stopped
soon nothing but a canal will be left of the
Main street of that enterprising burg.—Eaton
Rapkls Journal.
Already one — the Potter-Powers
When you have bad Catarrh longewMiah
“Bubble’’ affair—has worn itself out,
just send 10c. to Dr. C. R. Sykes, 180 Mamand the demise of the other may be son Street, Chicago, for his “True Theory
of
Catarrh”.
looked for any week. The News is a
straightforward, moral newspaper; is
CATARRH OF THE BLADDER.
Stinging,
smarting, irritation of ths urinary
founded and conducted upon purely
diseased dkchargea, cured by Bucho^
business principle; is the result of years asaagvs.
ibis. 11, st druggist* Mlcb. Depot, JAS.
of persistent effort, and will continue . DAVIS A CO./Detroit, Mich.
to be published bo long as the san rise*
5 ash ville Market*.
and sets on Nashville.

Our Indian affairs: Army officers say there
hi no danger of a Crow war. Crows never wever go to war without caws.

EATON COUNTY.
Base ball waxeth warm at Charlotte.
Farmers near Charlotte are paying three
dol’irs per day for harvest help.
T. D. Bryan of Brookfield, raises timothy
that yields two tons of hay to the acre.
Supervisor Nelson and wife, of Belh-vuc, cel­
ebrated their silver wedding on tbe Ifith.
A little dally entitled tbe Express, has been
started at Charlotte by Howe A Barber.
Hon. E. 8. Lacey and family, hare returned
from Washington and are now “at borne” al
D. T. Vickery of Charlotte, la loosing his eye
sight aud feara are entertained that he will be­
come blind.
havdwwc buAsea* st Ctavtotte.
.•
It took 98,617.38 to ran tbeChariotte schools
past year. Tbe district embraces 817 scholars,

�of bonds and per cent n iw-u
the sariilrtfiing took him away half the
evening-, in the month, she despised him

WAGONS ONLY; $60.00.’
A COMPLETE LISE OF

Buggies, Carriages, Wheel Barrows and
Cultivators, Sfouii'ted Seeders,
’
and 4 kinds f Plows.

it drrgonc a marked change since his for•j. | mer rhit in 1829.—Boston Fort.
oxtoM
(i. t
EnurpHM
i&gt;- j woMExwHostTrEK thosk TKKsinix i________
leges: but “it was t-ueaking.make-be—-The
’-----------_..)
r-----—
Hero” she aahi to herself. And then to I menlstbe scatcity of marriageable womoome home and, if hk mother was there, cn in Idaho territory, and has decided to
says he wax “so sorry that peak)- tor- I vote a coh|mn to aid the bnehelora in
nienting business kvpt him away and p»ulna
getting wive*.
wives. It ozdbdra
solicits •drart&lt;*«m»ntM
advertisement* ur&amp;ly cured
i my name. If
left her at, home to prose over tbe mend- If
----- women
----- — ..everywhere
.. — --------from
who- ----------wish to yj(&gt;a
—pie**-,
,------ -। ——w
--------- f«*ly testify
ing and never have a good time!” The marry, and jtrontises to use its efforts to to the value of your medicine. I owe tbe re*soft lying was what she &lt;!id wish, be ! find them suitable husbands.
toration of my wonted good health to Kennedy's
could be broken of. It exasperated her
'
Common, and hung ready for use.
—Hortense Kittrell wm appointed a "Favorite Remedy." Sarah J. Woodruff. New­
so!
clerk in the Nevada Legislature. Henry burg, N. Y. The above is one of many letter*
Bnt, u I said, she never blasphemed H. Welch, the chief clerk, at first object­ of the kind received by Dr. David Kennedy, of
marriage because her own had found as ed to tbe presence of a woman fn the
Bre the erciifnx tun had declined.
many thorns a# r&lt;*e«. Site knew it was office. But bis objection has been over­ Rondont, N. X.
SEW ix; maohi es
Smoking la generally hurtful when tbe rtom
come during the present season. Mias
RIH they vptBteof the neigtibor*, tho crops nnd not the Slate but the people.
If Mr. and Mrs. Grey, over of the. Kittrell is now Mra Welch.—St Lotus ach U empty.
PLOW POINTS for the Oliver Chilled.IWIard, Three Rlv, ,. •
corner, believed. aath*y ieemed to, th.il Globe.
’
ere, Bryan, Cale, Curtis, Dodge, Robinson
Neithe r one couldapproach: •oaumuitcame on
wedlock on earth was inferno enough to . —Of a party of forty which left Canis­
*
WAinnsoTON, D. C May IBch, 1880.
*
And many other Plows.
preclude the need of any hereafter, that- teo. N. Y., four years ago, to work on a
Gkxtlemes—Having been a sufferer for a
was onlv one side of it. ’There was swdet
atime from nervoa proatratlon and general and
before buying * eO“plete ,tock of fl"t «***• Hardware and Farming Tools. Call
railroad in Brazil, the last one to return
itv, I w« adviaed to try Hop Bitter*. I
Mrs. Marahall who mode her home a
Is Charles Forbes, son of a doctor living
token one bottle, and I have be-n rapidly
paradise, and whose husband gro*v deep­ in Alfred. He describes every discour­ have
getling better ever aiucc. and 1 think it tbe
er in lore with her every day of his life agement as being encountered, and his heat medicine I ever uaed. I am now gaining
with an intense un.spcakaSlo loyalty;
one kncspXJtwwald happM attain;
strength and appetite, which was allI gone, and
experience
is
like
that
ot
most
northern
widow tku« hvieomd too Jflk-menl
there were Mr. and Mrs. Hall, who had workmen- who have gone to Brazil. He I waa tn despair until I tried your butcra. I
•total I
\ ___ —'
now well, able to go about and do my own
been married fifteen years and whose belietrcs there is only one man-of the «m
work. Before taking it. I wm completely pros­
Imneymoon was still in the first quarter.
trated.
-Mws. Mart Stuart.
•
dMiy WosiH-l; then mid: “Mr. 0- Mrs- Russell was too sensible to blame party left alive in Brazil.
■ sudden -1 never wouM rw*
—Tho fashion of wearing jeweled gar­
Man ought to have been made big enough to
the condition, if it did prmfe uncomforta­
-WITH A FULL STOCK OF
ters,
the
New
York
Sun
says,
is
spread
­
cat two watermelomi at once.
ble for her. Apd tbe discomfort went on.
Have my hnmi? O! most certainly—yes!"
He came home one noon and found her ing rapidly. All jewelers keep theui
MANY MORE WOMEN
. .
Mr. G. wm a&lt;tonl*bed on bmrin* this speech; roasting on every gridiron in her kitchen, and say the custom is 100 per cdht.
Still he felt th" mistake not aml«.
greater this year than last. The cheap­ Would ace hale happy old age, It, at the criti­
And gtadlv -uri.-ii li-rod—arc. rriwlny so bold in a stifling- aUno-phere, tired and est pair at one jeweler’s cost forty-six cal period of change, they would auataln them­
flushed, with an odor of soups and des­
selves with Dr. Peogelly’a Zoa-Pbora.
At bm conquest to seal with ■ kiM.
.
.____ _____
serts about her. Miss Delia was grace­ dollars, and the dearest G1,200, which
Power of‘ the
‘ kitchen
" i:; “I really believe my
fully swinging in a hntnmprk iu a con­ were made to order. Curiously enough
w
|fc thinks
wife
thinks I'm
I'm only ha
half baked," said tbe a*d
“Ils you* «fpce the woddtnjr—and yet they veniently near bay window, and it, was Uie cheap ones do not sell wclL
are «hi&gt;wn
.
faced man, “for she always gives me a warm­
too
good
an
occasion
to
be
lost.
So,
—
An
Ohio
suitor,
unable
to
make
the
A* the
matrimonial pair.
with his habitual company-gallantry and young woman say yes, threatened.to ing when 1 come home.”
-Detroit Free I'rut.
a few extra grains thrown in for spice, shoot himself in her presence. There­
upon she relented. But next day, hav­ HOP“ BITTERS ARE THE PUREST AND
he t«aid:
HOW HE WAS CURED.
BEST BITTERS EVER MADE.
“My darling, it’s a shame to hare you ing considered the matter carefully, she
They arc compounded from hop*, malt, BuIt was not aiiy medial prescriplion sweltering in this &gt;'&lt;-bucitatIni,z.ir's fur­ wrote to him that she would not keep ebu,
mandrake and dandelion.—tbe oldest, best
that did the work; his ditlicully was be­ nace on such .a fiendish day. getting din­ the promise made under coercion, and and most valuable tpdicinc* in the world, and
yond that. .It bad shown’itself in ner for us brutes. By Jove! I’d rather tha£ while she strongly advised him contain all the besMdnd most curative proper­
troublesome acute attacks from his boy­ come home every day and fl ml you sit­ against suicide, she should feel no rc- tie* of all other remedies, being the grcatcsl
hood up, and since marriage had settled ting in the big rocking chair with a palm* s|K»nsibilityb about him. He blew his Blood purifier, Liver Regulator and Life and
Health Restorer Agent on earth. XodtoMwe
down into a slow chronic annoyance; leaf fan. and eat a cold crust of bread, brains out.—Y,
Y. Sun.
or in
ill utwiw,
health ,*•••
can possibly long exist—where
•
ur
—— - ■ therf
■ —
but, as 1 said, he va* cured at last. The on my soul I had.” Ami he lifted a ket­
—Bostonians who arc bragging that tlui I bitters are used, *o varied and perfect are twit
bt^inning of the end happened in this tle for her bv way of emphasis, and left city possesses the deepest artesian well ■ "r-ratkHisEMBKACES
non
i - „
Tbcv give new life and vlfnr to the sg.daud
wife.
■a huge black mark on his clean white
the^WOrld (-.200 feet) labor under ^a , (nflroi‘ To all who*e employment* cause irreg­
Delia Gray and Mrs. Russell were hav­ rest After which mishap he betook great delusion. The’well on tbe ground# ularity of the Ixiwds or uririanr organ*, or who
ing just the coziest time possible one tiniself to Delia, -still protesting about of tho St. Louis Insane Asylum reached require an apcttxer. Tdnlc and mUd atlmulant,
—— irnrriamite,
iiv.iU.K*,' being
summer afternoon, one on the sofa read­ the cold crusl.
a depth ot 3,"j0 feet. tbo'only trouble Hop Bluer. —«e
tri« highly
McWy cura
tlvX tonic "and •Umuladug’ without'lnloxicat— tbe .......
ing aloud from Pickwick Papers, the
And Mrs. Benjamin said a pleasant about i.
it being .k
that
water ..a.i.i.
which Uve.lunlc »»d .Umitlatlirg, without intoi
other in on easy chair with her feet on a woid, flushed a little redder, and kept flowed from it w.n salt. Such a disap­ *" No matter what your feelings or symptom* I
divan, knitting and
chatting be­ up a prodigious thinking. Their guest pointment did the latter fact prove that are. what the JIm-juc or ailment is. use Hop
tween the lines; for they were old went away on the evening train. She ou
Don't wait unUllrou
until! you are etek.
sick, bat H
it j
oeerior
Bittern. Dou't
•
-j
St. ixmisianaiooKto
Louisianatook to beer
for consolation.
consolation.. Bitten.
shoolmntcs, and perfectly at home with came down radiant in ultramarine nsh
and nowihey^ nolxony that Uw woU :
each other. Mr. Benjamin Russell came ribbons and cheeks that glowed as nat­ was a fail ure.—Brooklyn. Eagie.
|iavc t&gt;cen mt«I l.v wdofna.
will be paid
•
7
in from the office and found them so, in­ ural a pink as if it all camo from
sisted that he must put a cushion under fresh emotions, and not from ten min­
each head to make t bein' the very picture utes’ application of fresh mullein leaves.
m
, —CS
•
Ti
»
of comfort, then seated himself ’between Mr. Russell went with her, of-course, to successful business at Gallipolis, Ohio. I K,.lncrnlxr Hop Bittera is no vile, drugRnl.
A WO clIlCl X JlTP.P. o’priUP’ JLr6IHOCFH vS.
.
them and treated them to a .basket see that Ac had a .scat, and to get her and a social favorite. Yet he committed j drunken nostrum, but tbe purest *n&lt;! best medwr nrade; the “Invalid’s Frtend and
■
»
•of cherries and an amusing account of some oranges ami magazines with which suicide because he discovered, as he behis'day’s adventures. He did his very to shorten the ride. Mrs. Russell slaved lierri. that ho waa lMinz hi, menu! I
He wrote: •* My mind has 1
.
■•
prettiest, and that was no small thing. at home to wash the dishes, as any duti­ faculties.
UR WORK IS ALL DONE UPON HONOR. BUGGIES
He might have written three volumes ful wife would, hut still kept up the boeomnah contused that I am not a&gt;pa- I
being made from Second GroAth Hickory.
,!&lt;■ ot tn.nsaeUn-myhtt.tiwM. and my
p,,,,.-. adi. , ctewuml pa•• On the Art of Pleasing,” added an ap­ prodigious thinking.
life
se&lt;-uis
to
lie
aburden
to
me,
and
iny
pendix equal to the original, nnd,still
Tho. next noon he came home to din­ memon- so afcted that I stareely know- Lp“- " '
* ““ “Kh* ”J
Our Tops are lined with All-Wool Indigo-Dyed Goods an’d
had a few facts too choice to waste on ner hungry as a bear, opened the dining
Warranted not to Fade. W. H. Atkinbon, a painter whose
. tho public left over for his own private room door, saw the chairs set up. tho what I have been doing for 'several j “ ,’c,U:r h*1 fcMer».
Free I rese.
| A perfectly wfe preparation ot Iron and vea-use.
.
dishes ns usual, and two crusts of cold months.”—Detroit
work has never went back on him, has charge of our paint de­
.
. .
,
. ('table tonic* that will not barm the most delAnd just now there was a particular bread the only edible thing in sight. lie
—That mystic organization, the Rosi- toie, u Browp'* Iron Bitter*, it give* health partment, and can be relied on.
Bolts, Dash Feet, Body Loops
'reason, ^fiss Delia had said “No"’ tn stared, in the greatest astonishment: not crucians, under whose auspices last De- I and rtn-ngth.
him once. Mrs. ’ Benjamin more than a hint of anything else. He opened the ccmlter’s charily ball was given, have 1
and Stays are made from Norway Iron and the entire buggy
----- —--------- —----- -- —-i
\ VIGOROUS GROWTH
half suspected the fact, Mr. Benjamin kitchen door; perfect order reigned just contributed another noteworthy |
ironed
in
a
desirable
and
sujferior
manner and warranted.
was still very much aware of It; ana now there, not 3 kettle in sight, iu&gt; odor of charity to tho people bl St. Imnia The 0,
lt„lun
P„k„.« ,
that blie and Jennie proved to !&gt;&lt;• old fresh meat, no sign of dinner!Ho was pit this timo takes the form of dunking &lt; ||gir Balaam. It alway« restores the youthful
friends, and she was at' hls.home for the getting angrv.. - “What is all this blast­ fountains, ten of which are soon to tc I color and hutra to antv hair; gives it new life |
first thrie, prettier and saucier thane, er, ed business .ilx&gt;ut? Jennie! Jcn-n-i-c!” placed in different localities in tho mops . and removes all Irritation nnd dandruff,
j
buy
it w$s policy in him to sljpw that scorn­ he called, but no answer came. J-e-n- thickly settled, parte of the city.
city Tiro ---- .. ---------------- -——
ful young damsel how much she had n-i-e!" in prolonged. indignation ms he fountains are simply inscribed: “Gift to
&gt;
.
« «
. missed.
twared the parlor. “J-a-n-e!” He was the thirsty, from the Bodcrucians.”— I
After the cherries were gone, and he very angry, or he would neverhave used Si. Louie Globe-Democrat.
,
CAN V" HEAUH OF wSuw \
had . duly apologized for interrupting that name.
—Last week, as a meat merchant from ।
I Until you have thoroughly examined mine. Spokes made
them (although he know they would ■ Then: in the coolness of the bay-win­ Wilmington was coming up the channel, i *£AsyMPATHZE
IS THt HOPE On
| from Second Growth Stock and the wagon ip made to stand
fifty times rather have his chat tfian their dow she sat in the easiest chair, wasting a baby seal about two feet long followed
&amp; WOMAN - -/^THE RACeVJ
reading) he betook himself to the back her time. No knitting or mending iu the boat aiffi set up a piteous cry for
"
-S’—&lt;
i the wear and tare of our roads.
.nd a newspaper. her hands, not even a novel, only an help. The little fellow got lost from its ,
X'iTx *
But jest as he was going he caught sight enormous fan that she was using as if ail mother, and was lonesome and hungry.
/
'O
of the blue yarn. '
the leisure of eternity wm at her dispo­ The boat was stopped, and the litt|o fel- ] iJn£3£-I HAVE IN STOCK A NUMBER OF*S®
— “Groot Jupiter! why you will tire your saL He was indignant, inarexy nen e. low climbed in ami nestled tlnum i;r&gt;(lnf , '■isd' .
ttz
*T?Le
finger- over that eoarwjstuff? I’d rather
“Confound it, Jane, wluU docs all this thc legs of the gentleman, who brought ’
,
wear ragged stockings to the day of my mean F’ he snid, sternly.
.
him to Wilmington and fed him with 1
Furst
Bradley's
death than to have you! t protest I
“Kthought you’d like to see me fol­ milk, of which he is very fond. He is
/
\ LZX
vf
had, dear.” and with that he was gone. lowing your advice, she answered. look­ perfectly tame, and is the pet of the '
r
ZwS The 'smile that tried to come into the ing lazily up.
town.—Loe Angelos (CaL) Commercial. '
~
“You’ idiot!"' he muttered. “Tm
wife'* face died away in the corners of
—More than forty skeletons of Indians
¥4
\ I
• her lip to a scornful curve. She did not hungry, and in a hurry, too.”
Which ! will Sell at Cost to Close out.
have
been disturbed by workmen digS^.
‘•‘V,
ntend it should, bnt she had heard a
“O. yes,” she answered sweetly,
Yt~.
Z~^ &gt;■
great deal of such trash—when other “the crusU are on the table waiting for ging up a hill in Oneida Village. Highteen of the skeletons were in sitting
people were listening. He never wasted you.’’
;
'
’ He answered her with swear words. posture, in a row, resting on bricks, the
tenacrne.ss on her at any other time.
•
“He’s just an angm!” Delia said, I do not need to go on. You have the feet of one to the back of tbe next.
Daniel
Schoondad,
present
cHcf
of
the
when he waa almost out of hearing.
picture before you. She sat there un­
/
/ • CD C*'
“On tin wheels,” her friend added moved, swaying her fan, until the speech Oncidas, says these are warrion; killed
.
jestingly; and they went on with the ot yesterday capi? freshly to his mind, in battle or the chase. He says he knew
there was a burying-placc there and that
X
reading. But one at least was not and she somehow made him feel as small
YOU
thinking of Pickwick.
and mean as a man of 170 pounds avoir­ there are others at Wampsville and
Oneida Castle. Under an old apple tree
""
Mrs. Russell had a great deal of gen­ dupois can comfortably feel. She let the
VZ8STA3LZ COMPOTOD.
uine wholesome common sense, not a new sensation do ite work awhile, then four women and two children were found
wrapj&gt;‘d in blankets.—Utica (JT. K) j /
particle of story book nonsense. She rose and brought from aome unknown
would not have wanted him to be an biding pl^ce in the kitchen the warm
angel, but no more did she want him to' dinner that was waiting. Bnt Mr. Rus­
Carries Iler Certificate.
be a sham one, and that wm the very sell bad so much grace deft in him as to
heart of her trouble. He was devotion prefer to do penance. He refused every­
Wo hatfu beard of that sort of heart- I
LAPSES tTiUtl. dbe. '
Itself to her in public. People said, thing save the cold crust.
.
OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE
pityingly, that she didn’t seem to appre­
Mrr. Benjamin never repeated the by their dying bods and in their pres- I
ciate his attention, “nnd he was so af­ lesson; her husband profited by the one. ence coolly plan their funeral arrange- •
fectionate!” They were afraid his mar­ Of course, once in a great while bls old ments, but the following is tho first tn- I
riage was not so happy as—raiding with habit returns, but he soon recollects him­ stance we remember of a poor patient ■
a ingh and a “poor feitow!” In private, self. He never said to her in so many rescntingsuch treatment by getting wall. '
words.that he should like to pull up Says an English paper:
stakes and begin over again, but he acted
A poor woman lay, very ill in her
it. She is not the woman ever to hint scantily furnished home in Sheffield.
FladGrrut Jlcltefialta V«e.
I would not have you think that Mr*. cold crusts to him. but all tho more his The doctor was sent for and came. He
Kwell complained. She accepted things conscience suems to do it. Her respect
WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH
an they were and made the best of them, for him grows. People say: “ Poor case, and that she had. as he thonght,
merely wondering to herself a little man! she did not encourage or appreci­ little caanco of recovery, even if she
•ometimea if he n-ally was a contempt- ate Us devotion. She was so cold he has could get the nourishment her illness
ble hypocrite, or if the springs of cour­ given up in despair.’’
required.
. r_ u_ v-.i .l.i___ '__ r _ i-i __
Shu sruilei softly to herself, and likes
As he was about to leave, the question '
the present aincerer way a great deal was put, “
"When
When shall
—— we send for j
you
— ■
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING
better.— Womtut's Journal.
again, doctor?”
“Well” was the reply, u he looked
New at the poor woman, and then at her
wretched surrohudingti, “I don’t think
did say
you need .*end for me again. She can-

......................

REED’S GENUINE SPRING TOOTH HARROW
ROAD SCRAPERS, SQUARE DRAGS, GRIND STONES,
^

.

.

HERE WE ARE AGAIN!

Wagons

OUR LINE BUGGIES

Timkins

i l l 06 tOIlS,

Wtlite C*1 and Coal Boxes&gt;

with EUiPUc sPriB^'

O

DO X’T

Ac

ChUed Plows, Hay Rakes and Cultivators

E. COOK

LYDIA E. PINKHAM 8

I&gt;1;|&gt;

EYE OTV THIS

50 Wagons
FOR SALE!
THREE INCH TIRE
BETTER THAN COMMO* TIRE

certificate for her burial."

And he did.

SCHOOL
BOOKS,
SCHOOL

We believe the Three inch Tire &gt;« destined to come
into general use. Call and see them.

Sold by C. L Glasgow, Nashville, Mich.
Hasting", Mieb , Sept. 15th, 1881.

�Nashville, Mlchiran.

to
larva of a small moth known to
scientific men a* Serioarfe mora. It to
often popularly characterised as the mnL
berry silk-worm. During the long ecn- j
tunes at cultivation it has undergone it
has acquired many useful peculiarities.
It haa, in fact, become a truly domesti­
cated animal. T!»o white color of the
spt-cics, m rttaninr want of all dozin to
escape as long m ft to kept supplied with
leaves and the lots of tbe power of
flight on the part of the moth are all un­
doubtedly the result of domestication.

. white tuft

MAIN LINE

years ago, and hli latest ventures were
from a-ktririftg^ba**. One cannot allo- '
not •ucoessful, but he nevertheless regether trust manufacturers advertiseMall'..
talnod to the last such a hold on the
menu on killing flies.. Fly-fishing for
without a too. A scheme occurring to popular imagination as probably no real
bass is yet in its experimental stage, and
To find a
him by which he proposed to replenish hero Hm ever had before
each angler ought to try his own hand at
his coffers, be repaired one evening to P»relhl to the way in which lie h*s fed
habitant* than twenty a**e* IradM
tying a fly. At all times and under ev­
Bfiuw’s private abode, and inquired of the fancy of our century one has to go
with nradicine.-Old Baying.
ery Kind of circumstances angling fa Mall------------- saip.m. Arriv* DataoltfcU » ■
His
the servant in attendance at what hour to fable rather than to history.
more a pursuit of nature and her charms p*r EtpreH.... talp.m. Arrlr*DeTrotlS^O
Mb tlJO, IF PAID IN ADVANCE.
muten
tfiust
be
looked
for
nm'ong
tbe
in the morning he could see his master.
than it fa a race after fish. Hearing a AiUallc K*. -UhW*. m. ArrH* iMtrellMSaTra
the Hound Table or the
“Not before ten o'clock,” wm the reply; K"1#1*
brook sing in the shady places of Rie
'To Advertisers:
“Monsieur h not an early riser.” “That T welve Peen of Charlemagne, rather
woods is charming enough, -quite apart
will be too late," answered the Count: than among tho warrior* or tea-rovers,
from any considerations of sport, and
“I am leaving by the first train, and generals or filibusters of real story. ties or races of tho silk-worm almost when the zest of now and then a
Hawkins. 3ual those of the domestic dog. Tho vigorous rise is added one gets
GRAND RAPIDS DIVISION.
must see him, as I have news for him Cortez, Pizarro, Drake,
c,iro» Napoleon, Lord
k-worm exists in four states—egg, the very essence of that recreation
which he will be glad to hear.
So, as khaSM
tbe matter presses,” bo continued, allp- Dundonald, all hail the resources of larva, chrysalis and adult, or imago. The for which
we
alt long.
Then
STATIONS.
j * t
*K,
iuue u&gt; become your p**™”- .
ptagOve louis which be had borrowed great states in some degree at their com­ egg of the silk-worm moth is called by there are the woody odors and the keen
Pobai THESE LIBERAL AD. RATES.
for the occasion into the valet's hand, mand when they made their contribu­ silk-raiscra “seed.’2 It is nearly round, perfumes, the wind-sounds and tho bird­
“I shall count upon your showing me tions to the history of adventure by-land slightly flattened. anTin size resembles voices. If one’s eyes are kept open it to
and Bea. Garibaldi had nothing but a a turnip-seed. 'Che tim&gt;- from hatching like resiling some wonderfully fresh and
into his bedroom when I come.”
This being agreed on after some hesi­ dauntless courage, a passionate love of to the spinning of tho cocoon may and original book with charming illustrations MlMtertil*—'
_____
tation on the servant’s part, the Count his country, ana absolute simplicity of dots vary all the way from thirty to forty hud illuminated nitials and tail-pieces. Uartlan,
StDche.:
NrehTlIle..... 1
7.00
12-00 I 30.00 withdrew, and as eight o’clock struck character.
With these for* hi« whole days, depending upon the race of the Nothing in nature is conventionalized— VarmouiTlil* .
™~iio5tzs£to
.....
ill)
on the following morning wm ushered equipment, he literally wont forth con­ vtorm. tho quality of .the food, mode of all. is a constant stream of fitting but Chariotl*
Eaton Rapid*,
into the luxuriously-furnished chamber quering and to oonquen, like tho White feeding, temperature. Tho color of tho clearly drawn sketches of ever-fresh
He found newly-hatched worm is black or dark ideas, flowing on like a wind or a river.
where M. Blano wm reposing. Care­ Horse in the Revelation.
fully closing tho door and bolting it, the when he reached man’s estate the prog­ gray. Different shades of dark gray will The angler, nappilv, is not intent on
Local Notices, ten cents a line for Oral inaer- Count advanced toward tho bed, tho ress of tho revolution which Was to however, bo found among worms hatch­ studying nature, fie sees all her beau­
tfco and eight cent* for each subsequent Inwr- occupant of which, aroused by his en­ finally transform Europe still checked ing from tho same batch of eggs.
ties anti kaleidoscopic changes with that
Mail.. I G.R.
It has been estimated that the worm in precious indirect vision which falls just
trance, started up in surprise, and, by tho weariness of the great wars
STATIONS.
; Ext.
Exp. PaM'ge
ORNO STRONG,
which closed at Waterloo, fri England its growth consumes its own weight of
1
|F
Editor and Proprietor. recognizing his visitor, asked what ho and in Franco Liberalism had mndc leaves every day ft feeds, but this is only short of philosophic reverie, while Jiis
« M
m
■. tn ' r. m
wanted.
direct vision is focused on the point where Detroit........... ........
OJtfc
4*4 4:00
some
headway,
and
effected
some
solid
an
approximation;
yet.
it
is
certain
that
“ My dear Blanc,” said E., Composed­
liis cast has landed his fly. Your true •lack.on................ :to
12J0 I
7 -30 •
Rl»e«
Inaction
.....
12:U
1
7:12
7:48
ly seating himself at tbe foot of the bed, gains, but over the rest of the Continent during the last few days before com­ angler does not envy tho fellow who,
6A5
Eaton Rapid*........ t*5
!;»
“I want ten thousand francs,'and natu­ there was still but little sign of tho mencing'to spin it consumes more than streating and dirty, fighting mosquitoes Charlotte.............. . ■so
‘1:44
S-AO
working of that how forco the advent of during the whole of its previous worm and mopping his face on his sleeve, goes Vcrn&gt;oBtvllh&gt;,
S:l*
:l»
8.-S7
rally come to you for them.” .
2
“ But," stammered the other, still which fioetho had seen and announced oxistenoc, and , it is a. curious fact that in for a catch at all liazards and wades H**tinip___ ____ !.
oe7 its
half asleep, “you arc aware, Count, that on tho neld of Valmy. As Lord Bea­ tiie color of tho worm at tills along in the broiling sun-light with a MMdterllle.......... ..
tn'.
VILl U0E OFFICERS.
Hammond........ .
con
&lt;r&lt;e. use
I am not at liberty to dispose of our consfield said at &amp; still .later period, in time corresponds with tho color minnow-bucket in one hand and a six­ Grand
Frc-i.l- ..t -i llhuOhlpman^
:10
Rapid*
.......
4-.30
113*
Having attained full teen foot rod in the other. ‘ There is no
funds without consulting my colleagues. his gaudy stylo, tho world was still ruled of tho silk.
Recorder—f ank McDfFbv.
a. m.
p. tn. p.m. p m.
TraUure^/ rukC. Boise.
by monarchs and statesmen and in full growth, the worm to ready to spin. such thing as recreation and rational en­
Wait till this evening, And-’’
It
shrinks
in
size,
.acquires
a
clear,
trans
­
somewhat
ostentatious
indifference
to
joyment in that sort of thing. It may
“ Not one hour,’’ interrupted the in­
Marshall—James L. Gregory
at Detroit irith Great Wreurn. OraaS
Trustees— H. A. Barter, F. T. Boise. H. W. truder; “you have Only to open your I tho tides of populcr feeling. Garibaldi’s lucent, often pinkish or amber-colored bo a good way to kill fish, but it is atoo'a um* 4*|»t
and Canada Soulberti Railway*.
Demaray, H. It Dickinson, H. M. Lee and safe and band me tho money. Wilfyou appearanca at Romo, in 1818, was part hue, becomes restless, ceases to cat, and good way to kill a man. Suffering for Trank
E. U. BROWN.
H. H. LEDYARD.
•hag. Lentz.
throws
out
silken
thread.
The
worm
t
of
the
resumption
of
tho
great
process
sport is at best a ludicrous paradox.
doit? Yesorno?" “Impossible!” “Very
Our smaller streams, such as may
good; then I must take my measures which was finally to cover the Continent usually consumes from three to five.days
with constitutions, and bring the ma­ in the construction of the cocoon, and properlv be called brooks, are tho best
accordingly.’’
He in three days more passes into the for really lino bass-angling, no matte*
With these word, ho rose from his I dijBral regime at last to a close.
ethodist et'acopal CHURCH—a. D. Xar
seat, drew frofta his pocket a strong was bqaten there, but his defeat by the chrysalis state. Tho cocoon consists of what sort of lure is used, and they are
TOW. Pastor. s-rvtce* av*ry Sabbath at lOt*
an outer lining of loose silk, known as especially suited to fly-fishing. Where «
।
French
was
really
n
help
to
his
cause.
nail and a hammer, and began to drive
*. tn. and 7 p. tn. Sabbath *ci&gt;ool *; 12 m. Prayer
the former into tho wall as if about to 1 It was for the French the first step on “floss," which is used for carding, and these brooks are bordered with willows, i
bang up a picture.
Blanc stared in I the downward road which ended at is spun by tho worm in first gctliog its or overshadowed by trees of greater I
VY LODGE NQ. 37, K. of P., meet* at ft* utter amazement.
“What are you do­ Sedan and made Italy really free nnd bearings. The inner cocoon is tough, growth, such ns maple, nnd planer
Castle Hall, Nashville, Michigan, every
independent. For an Italy created or strong and compact, composed of a con­ trees, fly-fishing is much more certain '
Fridav evening, for the encouragement anding?" he gasped, stretehing out his permitted by a strong, victorious, and tinuous thread often over 1,000 feet in than where tho streams flow through
hand
toward
tho
bell-rope.
“Take
support of all worth v, true, steadfast and hon­
exultant France would have at best but length. In form the cocoon is usually fields or prairies. The falling of natural
care,"
cried
E;
“
if
you
touch
the
bell,
orable Brother Knight*.
L- E. Lkntz, K. K. 8. Oaso Bnoire,C. C. as sure as yon are Iving there, I will a precarious and trying existence. The oval, and in color yellowish, but in both । beetles, moths, and other insects into the 1
strangle you before they have time to final overthrow in France of tho these features it varies greatly, bein^। water from the foliage tends, no doubt,
TRADE *
detestable reaction in Church and State cither pure silverv-white, cream or to keeping the fish watchful for such
break open the door.”
Blanc glanced at the tall and power­ to which the French Republic lent Itself carheous green, anil even vacate, ami is prey, wherefore tho gay-winged fly of l
JfiftcellMneou'i Cards.
fully-knit figure before him and shud- in 1819 was in reality necessary to es­ very often constricted in the middle. the angler is taken with greedy haste if ;
de red.
“I don't understand," bo । tablish Italian nationality on a sure and The chrysalis is a brown oval body, con­ properly delivered.
A bass is a wise fish and warily avoids
lasting foundation, and to this tho fall siderably less in size than the full-grown
H. YOUNG. M. D. Office east side «.f murmured.
a
TI . Main bl., Nashville. Office hours from
any mysterious lure. The thing offered
“ Don’t you?" ironically rclAed tho of Rome did more than its retention by worm.
7 to9.a. m., and 4 to 7 p. m।
The
chrysalis
state
continues
for
from
him
must be artistic, if not natural—no |
Garibaldi,
Mazzini,and
their
subsequent
Count. “You see this nailVeil, I
two to three weeks, when the skin bursts bungling counterfeit will deceive him. .
A. FOOTE PHYSICIAN &amp; SURGEON have a rope in my pocket, and I am political experimentation could have and the moth or butterfly emerges. With
In tying your flies you need follow no
• tiuceasor to Dr. Wickham. Office and going to hang you. Now, will you give done.
residence at Dr. Wicktiam'alatc office.
For Garibaldi's fame his fights and no jaws, and confined within tho narrow man’s model, but you must make a fair i
me the money? No? very good:’’ and
Prompt attention to calls night or day.
he went on hammering until the nail wanderings after the triumph of the space of the cocoon, the moth finds some impression of some natural insect. I
Thon French and Austrains did everything. difficulty in escaping. For this purpose have found that a large gni-hopper with
rew. Murray, office over f. t. was firmly fixed in its place.
BROWN’S IRON BETTERS are
Boise’* Drug Store. Residence Comer turning toward his victim, who was They increased his hold on the popular it is provided in the two glands near the his gay wings spread is at limes quile I a certain cure for all discaaee
Reed and Middle Sts.
His ' adventures in mis­ obsolete mouth with a strongly alkaline killing in shallow streams either skittered i requiring a complete Conic; espe­
sitting upright in the bed, trembling in imagination.
every limb, he coolly remarked tail fortune proved that he had tho real liquid secretion, with which it moistens or used as a sunken bait. A successful
cially Indigestion. Dyspepsia, Inter­
I. C. W. GOUCHER, ElecUo Physician and before proceeding to extremities% ho stuff of the hero in him, which success the ea^of the cocoon and dissolves the imitation of this lure would not bo hard I
mittent Fevers, Want of Appetite,
Surgeon, li prepared to sniwer all calli
They hard, gummy lining. Then, by a for­ to tic. Some of our smaller butterflies, ' IxmH of Strength, Lack of Energy,
that may ba tn*4* for hl* service*. Ofllca and would give him one more chance. in fight does not always do.
ward and backwant motion, the prisoner, loo, are greedily taken by bass in mid- I
Blanc, perceiving that matters began to spread his glory beyond Italy, and satis­
etc. Enriches the blood, strength­
residence opposite Roa's meat market
with
cramped
and
damp
wings,
gradu
­
summer.
fied
the
workingmen
of
every
country
look serious, thought it best to comply
ens the muscles, and gives new
TVM PARMENTER, M. D. Offics over with the audacious demand; and, open­ that he was something more than an ally forces iia way out, and when once
After all we may catch no boss, for ot
life to the nerves. Acts like a
V v Huh'* Drag *tore, Vtrujontvllle, Mich.
ing the safe, extracted from it a roll of Italian, that he was tho champion of all , out the wings soon expand afid dry. all uncertain things fly-fishing is tho ex- j charm on the digestive organs,
The
silken
threads
arc
simply
pushed
treme.
Promising
pools
and
inviting
,
who
was
desolate
and
oppressed,
no
HAS. H. BRADY, Lawyer, Circuit Court bank-notes, which he handed to the
removing all dyHjxrptic symptom*,
aside,
but
enough
arc
broken
in
tho
rapids often seem to twinkle with ina- i such a* tasting the food. Belching.
CommlMloner, Ileal Estate and Insurance Count, warning him at the same time matter under what flag they were born
Agt. Prompt attention given to all buslnea*
or in what tongue they spoke.
He process to render the cocoon from which licious delight as they observe the tinentrusted to my care. Conveyancing a special­ that if he remained another hour at showed, too, that a modern working­ the moth escape useless for reeling, and faltering fiuth of the angler. Tho little | Heat in the Stomach, Heartburn,
Homburg it would be at his peril.
etc. The only Iron Preparation
ty- Office opposite Union House.
“ You may be perfectly easy upon man could display all the qualities until recent years was thrown away, but eddies nnd whirlpools make wry faces
that will not blacken the teeth or
that score," replied E., who had already which history had from time immemo­ it is now used for carding, and its value and comic grimaces at one as cast after
giro headache. Sold by all DrugQ LIEBHAL'SER, Merchant Tailor and deal- pocketed the notesand wm on tbe point rial reserved for the conventional ge^- varies from seventy-five cents to one dol­ cast results in failure. The stream has ■
O. er in Ready Made Clothing. See me
a
hundred,
nay.
a
counticM
multitude
|
lar
ner
pound.
To
make
the
cocoon
val
­
Nobody ever denied that
BROWN CHEMICAL CO.
before you purchase clothing. Fit* guar, of quitting the room. “Now that our tieman.
little affair is settled, I have nothing to Garibaldi wtu a gentleman from head uable for reeling, and worth from two of jeering and chuckling and taunting i
Baltimore. Md.
an teed.
___________________
None of the mediaeval chroni­ to three dollars per pound, the moth voices. But tho patient angler gives no
detain me here.
Adieu, Papa Blanc; to foot.
ONAH B. RASEY, Exprc** and Drayman­
should
not
be
allowed
to
cut
out,
but
heed to all this. The next cost, or the |
clers had anything to tell of their millGood* and Baggags carried to any place iu when the 9 o’clock train starts I go with
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.
tarv- heroes which something in his should be smothered or stifled. In most next, or next, is to be the lucky one.
it," and so ho did.
the vfllaga.
Somehow or other the story oozed character or career would not parallel. ■ilk-producing countries the parties who Ho lives on hope—immediate and urgent I
iram r. dickinson, manufacturer of out, and Blanc was terribly chafed by Bayard, and Du Geesclin, and Sydney raise the cocoons sell them to the reeling hope, hope on tip-toe, preposterously
and dealer in Hard Wood Lumber. Build­
his colleagues.
“ I could have recon­ were not braver, or gentler ot more establishments before suffocation is nec­ acoontuated and inconsistent hope. But I
Zimmerman Fruit Dryer
ing Material a specialty. Cash raid for logs. Mill
essary, as these establishments have bet­
II.W
fo, Trraa. A i*^r.
and yard on Sherman Bt.at M.C. ILR. crossing. ciled myself to the loss of the money," uncomplaining, or more unselfish, or ter facilities for doing this work than arc he falters with the faltering day. nnd
goes homo through the twilight'full of &gt; 2IMUERMAN FRUIT DRYER CO.. Cincinnati,O.
he said long afterward; “but I can not readier to show, in the hours which try
AMES FLEMING, practical Jeweler and and never shall get over the nail in the men’s souls, how to live and how to dio. to bo found in private families. Domes­ ozone and fresh ideas. Here, nt last, is I
Watch-maker. Clock*. Watches, Silver and
tication
has
had
the
cfleet
of
producing
tho
value
of
bass
angling.
It
is
near
to
'
The
result
was
that
when
in
1859
the
Plated Ware, Jewelry and Optical Good*. Rock­wall."—Lotulon Society.
supreme moment came,he was all ready numerous varieties of silk-worm, every our doors. It requires no great prepara- .
ford Watches a apecidty. Repairing and Engravfor that most marvelous of his exploits, different climate into which it has been tion, no Ipng journey, no extended ab­
Detected by Tobacco.
tnr done in a workmanlike manner.
the overthrow of tho Neapolitan mon­ carried having produced either some sence from home and affairs, no extrav­
change in tho quality of tho silk or the agant expenditure qf money, and yet it ’
Henry Sutton, a resident of Cape
RNO STRONG, plain and fancy J on rnntar. May, after seeing the city elephant on archy and the annexation of tho Two shape or color of the cocoons, or else
1 fulfills the best purposes of out-door
Sicilies to Italy. His &gt;ubsequr.nt career
Tbe be*t facilities for doing work of anv
Friday night, fell among the Philistines illustrated his restlessness, and his. altered the habits of the worm.
sport, and brings one at once into the G&lt;*xl **ni|&gt;lr riMMii*.
; of uy dmcrlpUoa, whatavw, *M ma about Seventeenth and Market streets, patriotism and humanity, and also, it
Some varieties produce but one brood1 presence nnd under the influence of
In conn*eflon.
and lost $C, a lot of papers and a must be added, his want' of judgment, in a year, no matter how the eggs are। nature in her charmingest moods. To
brand-new plug of tobacco
He was but added nothing to his fame. But his manipulated; such are known as annu­ pluck a moccasin flower in the wild
taken to the Twentieth District Fo'ice very errors served to endear him still al*. Others, known as bivoltins, hatchi woods of Indiana is quite ns enjoyable as
ACOB OSMVN, Liveryman, barn near WolNear daybreak yesterday more to his countrymen and to the peo­ twice in the course of a year. The trev- to pick a cyclamen in Europe. To catch
eott House. First clam turnouts at reason­ Station.
able rate*. Special rates to comtncrrlal men.Thomas Cairns and Michael Kelly were ple everywhere. He became the spoiled oltins produce three annual generations. n two-pound bass in n brook of Illinois is Of DucbcM Co., N. Y.. 60 year*of age. »utlen&lt;
Funeral and weding parties furnished with car.’ arrested tor drunken and disorderly child not only of the, now Italian king­ There are also quadrivollins, and in. just ns rare sport as to kill a fingerling
Coutinually for many year* from Stone tn
riages on short notice.
&gt;*&lt; conduct near the scene of Sutton's spoli­
dom, but of the European democracy. Bengal, a variety known osdacev, which। trout in a mountain brook of Pennsyl- ;
the Bladder.
ation. They were placed in a cell ad­ Everything was forgiven to him in con­ prmluce eight generations in the course। vania. or to blister one’s hands hauling ,
TTELLOGG A BELL, proprietor* Planing joining that which contained Sutton. sideration of his past services.
Great uge and painful dloeaw are a ead cotr
of a year. Experience, taking into con­' in n blue-fish off the Jersey coast.
His
Il Mill Planing and Matching. Resaving When the latter sobered up he felt con­
Bass-anglers usually carry rods much bination. Yet Mr. William Wcatfall, to tncrl
and Moulding a specialty. Scroll Sawing, sumed by thirst, and to start tbe saliv­ follies evqr had an indiscribablo charm sideration the quality of the silk, size of'
of Rock Citv, Ducheaa Co.. N. Y.. now of Waal,
—the charm ot heroism of the antique the cocoon, time occupied, etc., hasi too heavy. A good strong bamboo or inglou Hollow, tn the **me county, came to th.
Bracket*. Window and Door Frames mads to
ary glands into action, begged a chew I type,'the simple type which Plutarch proved the annuals to be more profitable1 cheaper fly-rod will be found quite suited office of Dr. David Kennedy, tbe eminent Ph?
■order. Wood Turning In all its tranche*.
cf the weed from his next cell neigh bora. has painted, but the production of which than any of the polyroltins, althoughi to our smaller streams, where bass of *lclan and Surgeon, of Rondout, N. Y., *otr.
r'lHAS. W. DEMARAT, Dealer In Watches, When a brand-new plug was handed to
time (Ince, In a condition to excite tbe *yn&gt;pa
V-&gt; Clock*, Bn* Jtwelry and 811 v*rw*ra. Being him through the bars his eyes dilated as in our time tho qpwspapers are making bivoltins' are successfully reared in Cali­■ more than two pounds are rarely killed. thy of the moot cold-blooded and hard-beartre
less and less passible, because its larg­ fornia.—S. A. Lanier, in Industrial Rc-• A hundred feet of line will usually be person in the world. We *ay be came— be wabe recognized the familiar slab, nnd at est eloment was its unconsciousness, view.
more than is needed. Indeed. I have raiher carried to the doctor'* office, for be waonce he realized where his cash h:ui and the modem hero finds it difficult
rarelv found fifty feet necessary.—Mau­ totally bclplea*. and tore the • eight of eight
gone. lie informed the turnkey of his to bo unconscious.
yeara'bcrtde*. He had mffmd long from Hr
rice ^Thompton, in Chicago Timet.
Bass Fishing.
OHN BRAUN, Shoemaker. Special atten­ suspicidns.
'tention of Urine, and had ai! the *ymptoma oWhen the party were
This
age
certainly
will
not
look
upon
tion given to fine and eewed bool*, also
an aggravated ca*c of caleuiu* formation in ttBass-fishing, after tbe best approved
The Summit of the Earth.
repairing. Ail manufactured work made from brought before Magistrate Lennon, Sut­ Garibaldi’s like again. Indeed, the cir­
bladder. Tbe usual inMrumenta) rxamtaatio.
methods
of
angling,
is
about
the
ouly
best of stock and warranted. Flrat door south ton told his story, and Cairn’s and cumstances which prodfleed him wore
revealed the pre*cnce In tbe bladder of a urit
, Boise’s hardware.
Thompson's effects were searched and peculiar, and have wholly passed away. available piscatorial sport left for the
Adolphus Schlagiutweit, the immortal ary calculus of uncommon *lxc. Dr. Kenned*
all of Sutton's possessions were recov­ He wm the product of conditions which Western disciple of Walton, unless he though unpronounceable explorer of frankly told Mr. WmUbII that, owing to hi
ered. Thea the prisoners, instead of exist no longer, and was bora to over­ have unlimited leisure and means. Bass-1 central Asia, calls the highlands of age and debilltv. an operation wa* out of tt&gt;
but t bat be could, by the preaeripticH
getting off with a drunken fine, were come enemies with whom our society fishing ought to mean fly-fishing. The Pamir “die Welt Zinno"—the roof of the que*Uon,
of “Kennedy'• Favorite Remedy.” togetbe.
held for highway robbery, much to Sut­ will never have to contend again. Tho time w pa*t when impaling a live min­ world. On tbe road from Punjaub to with local treatment, make him comfortabk
'
nOM&lt;EOPATHIC
now
on
a
hook
can
be
called
a
legitimate
ton’s satisfaction.—PhUadrtphia Timet. old King and the old priest are gone,
Yarkand four passes have to be crossed and leave him to live out ail hi* day*. Tb&lt;
outcome of thi* wa* that the jxtleut enjoj'
and will never return. What will take means of enlightened sport. Il would ' that are higher than 17,500 feet, and for good health to thia day.
PntULturo Joy.
their place as hindrances to human hap­ seem to any ordinary mind not precisely a distance of 280 miles the halting
TH a »AM)!CB WHT
humane
to
capture
a
little
shiner
or
spot
­
Sound is not below Pike’s Peak. On
Jim Hudson is known as one of the piness, who can foresee? But that Italy tail and deliberately thrust a barbed
e eastern plateau of the Beloor-Dagh Dr. Kennedy'* “Favorite Remedy” i* being ex
worst bores in Austin, and he is always should have produced Buch a champion hook through its body in such a manner there b a shelter house near a cliff from I icndvely u*&lt;ed by our people are a* follow*: ]
. State SUWU, NadwilJe, Mteh.
in a combination of vegetable alternative*. 1
trying to borrow money from his friends. to combat them as Garibaldi was one of as to make it suffer the longest possible
whose summit the main chain of the Is pleasant to the taste, adapted to both sex&gt;«A'few dap ago. he appeared at the tbe innumerable proofs her soil has afx agony, for the sake of attracting and
HimalayM with all its view from the and all ages, is effective in affording Immediate
counting-room dpor of a well-known forded of its inexhaustible fruitfufnws. killing a good, heavy bass.
relief In all cases of Kidney trouble, Liver Coan
highland!
uf
Lassa
to
the
sources
of
the
Austin merchant, and wm told that the The Italian race Iim In every age of its
plsints, Con*tip«tion of the Bowels and derangv
N'*«h vllle AtlotiljZMn.
Of course angling means killing fish Indus,'while in tho west the head-waters meats peculiar to women. Al the same Um.
proprietor was ia tbe backoffice and too history, and every stage of ita greatness
of the Oxus and Jaxartcs can be traced purifle* the blood, thus giving tone and strengtl
A. 8. Footk, Proprietor.
for
sport
primarily,
and
for
the
table
ot
its
degradation,
managed
to
produce
busy to see anybody.
to
the
borders
of
Cabool,
where
the
to the system debilitated by disease or agr
secondarily;
but
torturing
a
minnow
and
“ Just toll him I am going away ton great men, and just tho kind of great
Th l» I* a neW Hots!, renlrally located, veil kept,
killing a fish are not necessarily one and peaks of the Hindoo-Koosh lift their “Dr.Kennedy's Favorite Remedy” for sale b­
cd Its ratron* are always sure of getting better ae- Austin, and m I am never coming back, men the epoch seemed to call for, and
Ute same thing. Nor can the argument crests of everlasting snow. In spring all druggist*.
on
this
mysterious
fertility
no
length
or
I would like to bid him good-bye.’’
tliat live bait i» better and more killing the echo of the avalanches resembles the
“ In that case, exclaimed the candid depth of political or social misfortune
than the fl v quite satisfy the healthy con­ boom of continuous thunder, and in mid­
ALBERT M. HARRIS,
clerk, “ho will be delighted to see you,’’ or decay seems to have had much effect. science. however, a sermon on tubing winter, when the storm winds sweeps
That
a
country
which
had
lived
so
long
and he called the proprietor, who ex­
morals might well be postponed till after the table land, whirling pillars of snow
£ A. BUSH,
pressed great joy at bidding Jim Hud- under the worst type of princetet and
prelate should have brought forth at tbe bass season is over. Nodoubtlf the fly scud along the ridges, and often seen) to FRAMES. VELVETS. MATS. GLASS.
“THE BOSS'
' fail us we shall try the minnow, even if dance together like specter* in their flut­
AMERICA OPTICAL CO S. BOXE*
“ When do you leave, never to come the right time the generation which the latter do not 2hanoe to be our Grat tering winding sheets. Our “Land nf
Dry Viale OuiPla VC.'rekZtate.
• »pod*ll»
back?’’ asked the delighted merchant. achieved Italian unity, and should have
the Sky" in the southern Alleghenies
“ Not until I can make a raise. Lend contributed to the last tableau in tbe that have been stowed away all winter must be a mere piazza compared with 1C* Gri-ancL River Ave.
story
a
figure
in
all
ways
bo
resplendent
■ICH.
me twenty dollars until I see you again.”
i&gt;ETit&lt;»n&gt;ni4ii.
and picturesque as the gallant old man in a dark oomer. Let us ba determined that top roof of tbe earth.—Popular
— Texas Riftings.
who has just gone to his rest, is surely a to experiment with flies this aeason in SciMM Monthly.
J AKE HOUBhC,
order
to
reducing
bass-angling
to
a
pret
­
marvelous
evidence
of
the
way
in
which,
—A Cincinnati woman desired to
—The municipal government of Paris
races, m well as individuals, . ty and alworbing recreation like Croutcommunicate by telephone with her among
Thomupplc X~a1c**&gt;« Mlol*.
blood tells.—Y. Evening Pott.
I aagling. New flies were tried last sea- has signed the rat contract for thh year.
L. P. Colk, Proprietor.
They
give a sou a head for every rat
got • newspaper reporter to manipulate
“
Si
—An Indiana inventor has patented a
the increment for ber because she wm
afraid of catching tbe small-pox over rt'nw.etadung machine.—Stolt Smti- I bodied, rather large fly killed a number
|mm
! *4tay'« rraraaU
Ztta^dVf
of varv fine bn*«. Lrtto^i July a yellow Oowzn.

”1’S

Yashnik jlirtdonj.

«

M

I

L

IRON

BITTERS

D

D
C

J

H

GIVEN AWAY.

J

0

J

MR. WM.WESTFALL,

Physician and‘Surgeon.

Photographer’s Supplies

BOOT AND SHOE MAKER,
1

�SATURDAY,- -

JULY 22, llfift.

MICHIGAN MBWS.
Mre. Daniel McIntyre, a young martied ladv of Bay City, committed sui. eide vk/B|»roform, on the 17th.
At Grana Rapids, on the 18th, a lad
named Arthur 8. Winters, fell into the
West Side canal and was drowned.
.
At Hancock on Sunday a sail boat
capsized and Geo. LaCasse and wife
and Mnu Blanchette were drowned.
Coldwater has a case of mysterious
disappearance. Wm. C. .Culver left
home June 38 and has not yat turned
up.
A young lad named Stark was drown­
. ed in Saginaw river near east Saginaw
Wednesday night. He waa n mill em­
ploye.
Tbe body of Charles Wesley was
found in tbe lake at Muskegon Thurs­
day. He was about 40 years old and
well dressed.
Sheriff Vaupell, of Grand Haven has
captured Hepner, the Cooperville
murderer, who kicked his mother to
death last week.
Flint has a case or so of small pox
and tbe Evening News states it as a
fact that Flinlgjrls get vaccinated on
their dainty legs.
August Ott.yR saloonTceeper of West
Bay City, committed suicide Monday
by shooting himself in the brain with a
32 caliber revolver.
Ed. Ewing, a journeyman carpenter,
got drunk at Buchanan and fell be­
neath the wheels of a train, receiving
injuries which proved fatal.
A Mrs. Foster wife of Esram Foster,
of Summit township, Jackson county,
has eloped with another man. She is
19 and comely ; hence the flight.
John Hunt, of Middlesex. Canada,
foreman in Russell Bros’, shingle* mill
at Manistee, on the 17th, while at­
tempting to remove a belt, was drawn
against a shaft and killed.
The body of Henry Heines of Adrian,
was found floating In Baw Bccm* lake
near Hillsdale, on the 17th. Heines’
habits were dissipated and it is sup­
posed he committed suicide.
At South Haven on tho evening of
the 14th, O.ILFoote, book-keeper in tbe
South Haven National Bank, and Miss
KitXkeUndgrwood, of Aurora, HI., were
drowned while rowing on the lake.
The St. Ignore Republican says no
trace has been found of tho woman and
two children who were lost in tl»e woods
south of Newberry station a month ago
It is feared they have been eaten by
wild beasts.
An eight-year-old son of S. MeNames, of Marshall, diinl on Sunday
night of lock-jaw, resulting from the
use of a toy pistol ou the 4th iust. Fa­
tal accidents of this character are re­
ported from nearly all parts of the
state.
On Saturday afternoon virile S. M.
Williams, aged 17, was assisting in a
•Raising” at Chas. Waters, three miles
east of Ovlfe. he lost his footing and
fell from a height of twenty feet
striking bis head on a timber, killing
him instantly.
Peter J. Stuart of Gull Prairie, and
Wm. Watson of Saginaw , were work­
ing upon a trestle railroad bridge near
Mandan, Da., Friday, when^hey quar­
reled,* clenched and fell to the sand be­
low, a distance of 65 feet, killing them
both instantly.
,
Robert Wilson, locomotive foreman
of die Grand Trunk works at the
Junction,-near Detroit, w.u» run over
on Monday and Lad both feet crushed.
He is 80 years of age, and had l&gt;een in
the employ of the Grand Trunk com­
pany 25 years.
An 8-year old son of Henry Labidie,
°f Whiteford, Monroe Co., was drown­
ed Sunday afternoon, while bathing in
a stone quarry. While searching for
the body Frank Burnham, aged about
60 years, was struck by lightning, and
and for an hour or mure showed no
signs of life.
George Bragg, of the township of

ville Saturday afternoon and returned
home in the evening quite late, and
after the family had ’retired." He was
found in the stable the next morning
dead.
His head was
cnislted in
and his shoulder broken, evidently by
the kick of his borae.

Washington, D. C., July 15, 1883.
Congress has directed the Depart­
ment of Agriculture to undertake a
work which will be of much more prac­
tical utility than raising sugar at fifty
dollars a pound or distributing' seeds
through the mails which nobody will
(ever plant. The Division of Statistics
|has l&gt;een'&lt;tirocted to collect and publish monthly, for the information of
farmers,
the freight rates of the var­
jious railroad and steamboat lines for
।
the
purpose of enabling them to judge
when and over what lines it will be the
]most profitable to ship their products.
If the department could devise some
;means to compel some of the trans­
.portation lines to give the farmers as
good rates as they do brokersand spec­
ulators, it weald have established a
claim to practical usefulness which
would be gratefully acknowledged. In
the meantime the move already made
is practical and good ns far as it goes.
Tbe rush for government clerkships
is something unprecedented. By re­
cent legislation^ nearly one thousand
clerkships have been created, chiefly
on
account
the payment of
pension's. Some eight hundred of these
places are in tbe Interior Department
alone, and that department as natural­
ly besieged with applicants. It is said
by Secretary Teller that he would not
have a moment of time for public busniess if he should devote a minute or
two to every individual who came par­
ticularly recommended to him. The

upon

ehold!

press concerning «. that we

" Tte dura mater waa quite strongly ad be-

RING all the BELLS!

of tho inner surface of tho dura mater. Quito
a number of pacchionian granulations was
distributed along the course of tho sinus, and
tbe cerebral sinuses captained but little If any
blood. The dura mater, pla mater and brain
were adherent to each other -&gt;o both sided
along a limited portion of the longitudinal fis­
sures adjacent to the pacchionian granula­
tions.
ahachxoid.
tl«« of lhe arachnoid, but no apparent thlckeie
itw extending over tho upper portion of tbe
convex surface of the bemUpherea only. As
etoewhere the membrane wnn perfectly nor­
mal. Three opucttlce were confined to the
upper portion of the auld tn thia vicinity excluitwly, and were such oa are often found
without previous history of disease. Tbe Bubanmhuid space contained very little fluid.
The pla mater was easily stripped from all
parts of the brain. The blood vessels of the
membranes and brain were empty, and
tbe general nppoaranco &lt;rf tho brain
waa anwmJc or bloodless. Both of those con­
ditions can be readily accounted for by the
unfortunate removal of the lungs and heart
and the severing of the inrgc blood vessels by
Dr. Lamb, before the brain or Ito membranes
were exposed or examined, and, on this ac­
count, nothing of Importance waa attached to
this condition, as the blood that was tn the
brain at the time the autopsy was commenced
had an opportunity at least of making Ito exit
into the chest cavity. (Sufficient examination
waa made of tbe large blood-vessels of the
brain to determine that they were In a healthy
condition.

let them file their applications. It is
estimated that about 4,000 applications
arc on tile already and more are com
ing daily. From Teller they flock to
tbe Pension Office.
Colonel Dudley
has certain views on civil service re­
form, and one of these views is the ap­
portionment of the places among mem­
bers of Congress pro rata as near as
“Tbe brain entire, with a portion of tho dura
mater attached, weighed forty-nine and a half
possible.
ounces, about an average weight for an adult
There is some comment In the Treas­ male. Just how much more it would have
ury Department over the section of the weighed bad it not been drained of Ito blood,
bauk charter extension bill providing and had the scales been more delicate, wo are
to say. but certainly it is safe tn assort
for the issue of 8 per cent bonds be­ unable
It would have been considerable more. The
cause of their exemption from “all
taxation by or under State authority” cific gravity and the measurements of the
only.
Heretofore such bonds J hare chords and arcs could not be obtained, owing
to tho lack of facilities There waa no appar­
been exempt from taxation_of every ent nayTn metry of the two hemispheres. Aa
character—national,si ate or municipal. regards contour and shape exact studies were
It is a question whether the new bonds not made,«nd the comparative weights of the
different parts were not obtained. Tbe cere­
will not be subject to local or munici­ bellum was well covered. Tte occipital lobes
pal taxation. Secretary Folger called were not noticeably blunt In shape."
Dnu Hartigan and Sowers say in conclusion:
attention to the omission during the
“ We were not In accord with Dr. Lamb in
consideration of the bill by Congress,
tho order adopted by him in making the au­
but it was not rectified. No great difj topsy. We did not object at the moment for
Acuity is anticipated, however, from tho reason that it bad been agreed that he
this source, as it is thought the prohi­ (Lamb) should do tbe cutting, and, after thia
we did not feel at liberty to Inter­
bition of state taxation will be consid­ agreement,
pose an objection nt the very Instant of begin­
ered generally as including municipal ning tho work, with n number of gentlemen
taxation, and it is hardly likely that present to witness the operation. We thought
the United States will tax its own bonds then, and think now. tbe brain should first
have bcA&gt; opened nnd examiner!; Instead of
The objection to the bill in its present which the first incision made by Lamb waa tn
shape does not hold good, as the taxa­ the region of the heart: nnd when tho
tion referred to is amply provided for 1 thomlc cavity was laid upon we had
no tfilca it was tbe intention of lhe op­
in section 3701 of tbe revised statutes, erator to never the largo vessels which
which is as follows: “Allstock, bonds, must necessarily be cut in the reinovk!
treasury notes, nnd other obligations of of the heart before the examination of
th" brain waa had. Tbe cutting of these vesthe United States shall be exempt from
taxation by or under state or muniei
before objection could bo interposed. That
tbe brain had been cut tn two pieces, and parts
pal or local authority.”
Senator Mitchell was asked by your distributed. and this before its examination
under the microscope, is true. It was done
correspondent to-day as to his news without consultation or authority from us,
concerning tbe action of the republican and furnishes another Instance of what has
been apparent all through this proceeding—
state committee at Philadelphia yester­
vix.: tho unwarranted assumption of author­
day. He said that he was as yec scarce­ ity and responsibility by Dr. Lamb."
ly advised fully enough to warrant any
A Washington special of tho 1.3thsays: ‘This
expression,:but if he understood the report, which is by tho majority of tho compurpose of the men who met yesterday, mittge. ought to settle tho question as to Gultcau's sanity. Dre. Sowers and Hartigan, In
it was simply to put the independents sUort, find Culteau's brain in a generally
iu a hole and deprivethem of tiib moral healthy state.”
support of tho country in their fight.
It was idle now to talk about harmony,
Arabi and the Egyptian Debt
the tight was bound to go on until Don
Arabi 1‘n'ha says: “Tho fellaheen are ru­
Cameron and his friends were driven ined, but not by me or my party. Tho real rea­
from power. The independents of son why they are In a condition of penury
Pennsylvania would not support Gen. is that they have ns ver yet been able to get rid
Beaver for Governor under any circum­ crushed by the regime ot Ismail. This hat com­
stances, and the proposition for a now pelled them to borrow and reborrow, and made
convention was simply a trap to catch them slaves of tbe Jewish and Syrian and Greek
money-Mndere. with whom they hare always
them. The only way to produce har- to renew their bonds at
augumcntlng
mauy was for the candidates on the rules of interest. They hare never been able
stalwart ticket to step down nnd out to escape from dheir ruinous obligations to
these blood-sucking uaurers. and the highand not come to the front again. The salaried
officials of the Control of course never
independents had a mission to perform deigned to give a tbcugbt to the Intolerable
and would not be diverted from it by nitaery which lhe tillers of the soil had thus to
any scheme of political tricksters. The endure. On tbe contrary, they told Europe
that under their improved adm’aistratlon
fight must goon, and let the regulars these wretched people wore happy nnd even
elect their ticket if they can. Senator rich. I declare this to be false.
“ I say that, on tbe contrary, tbe fellaheen
Don Cameron was told what his col­
of Egypt owe to-day over several millions of
league Iiad said, and was not at all sur- pounds sterling to the money-lenders, which
pliaed. He remarked that he was sat­ they are too poor to pay, and it has been the
isfied the independents did not intend principal part of my pulley to deal with this
fact, and to put a stop to the odious trade of
to accept any offer made them.
tho entire tribe ot usurers. Greeks, Syrians,
Tbe case of Sergeant John Mason, Jews and other-. Instead of their enslaving
the soldier who attempted to shoot the system, I intended to Inaugurate a scheme for
assassin Guiteau, is still pending be­ a National Bank, which would have enabled the
fellaheen to get over their financial difficulties
fore the President. He is hot determiued~upon bis action in regard fto it.
but the general impression among those
best calculated to judge is that be is
doc disposed to Interfere with the sen­
tence ot the court martial which tried
the case.
It has been known for some time that
the administration desires to have Mr.
Lowell retire from the English Mission Arabi's. Tho Control benefited the fellaheen

As three men were burglarizing the
residence of R. 8. Babcock, of Kalama­
zoo Saturday night, Marshal Gates shot
one, Geo. Stopcuaon, iu the left side,
wounding him aiortally.STbe other
- men escaped. Mr. Babcock nnd family
• were away fur the summer, and the
officer* were in the house waiting for
tbe burglars, having received a clu?
/ that tbe house was to be robbed, Steph
■euaon came to Kalamazoo from Chicago
about three months ago and is a paint and if he persists in bis determination
er by trade.
not to-volunteer his resignation he will
be recalled. It is expected that Mr.
It seems likely that AtexavAer Ham­ Bancroft Davis will then succeed him.
ilton Steplvens, once Vice President of but it cannot be stated just when the
the Confederate States of America, change will occurr.
AuguVt.
will be nominated by Che Georgia Democratn for Govenor. ifftbe Georgia
Iu Cincinnati the favorite way of
Dem&lt;»crata want for Governor a politic­ working off a big drunk append to be
ian with a long and atupenckiua record, the sheeting of a wife, then tbe sui­
who koowsaauiucli of public afiain aa cide ot the drunken murderer. Three
moat men now living, and who has cues of Hile kind within one month, na
generally failed through indecision of fatal faahions are followed.

the country whws toe boa hiul it in hi*
BRAIN.
Weilsfwwetk they wflt
» Goverwir
_ Health Ren
i»v •&lt;»iiriD;irin£ ::wd rift'll Mg Ml. Sirpt- । jj,.
atdracj
,8,.
DAVIS A

And call the people to

goal arteries!

G. A. TRUMAN &lt;fc SON
To prepare for the 4th of July

Fans, Laces, Collars, Fringes, Embroidery, White Goods,
Parasols, Gloves, Corsets, Skirts, Dusters and ’Shawls.

Linen Coats Long and Short, Hats and Caps, Gloves,
Neckwear, Boots and Shoes.
In "Visitingf Wanliville on tike 4th You Are Invited to
Make onv J^tore Yonr Headquarters.

CASH PAID FOR EGGS AND BUTTER, SALTED AND UNSALTED

GE. A- TRUMAX&amp; SOJXT.
THE CROWN SEWING MACHINE. J-jiuiibgr!
and put on tbe market.

FOWLER &amp; INGERSON
' Have the largest stock of LUMBER ever laid
down In Naahrille.
'

100,000
Feet kept constantly on baud.

Pine Lumber
.

Finishing Lumber,
Flwria^ Mii», Siding. Srintling, Jiist
' Or any thing Hi the building material line, see
our stuck, select what you want, and be happy.

Also Flour. Sult, Khinglrs, lustli.
mid Blacksmith’s Cool,
For laic st lowest prices.
HIGHEST PRICE PAID FOR

,

WHEAT, OATS, CORN, ETC,,
As usual.

FOWLER 4 INGERSON.
Guardian Male.
CORWIN GARDNER and ANNA GARDNER,
Minors.
, ,
Nodes it hereby given that I shall sell at public
drive- auction, to tbe bigbest bidder, an

A A ahowa the hardened ateel points ou which the crank shaft nutl,
wheel are hung and work. This Is the lightest running bearing which can be made. '------ --j, ««
o«y ■&gt;&gt; * usual,
hardly any friction- Points are adjustable to take up tbe wear and tbe crank oa whichtbe pit-1 D .i«M.st tea o'clock in the forenoon al the
man works to between tbe points, thus putting tbe strain direct and avoiding all side pull.
।
office tn th* dty of Ha«tiags,&lt;n the coamy
B B ahowa the hardeneti steel pointe on whiclftho treadle ia hpngand works, of Barry, la tte staw of Mkhigag, panoan: to
They are mad&gt;-adjustable for taking up wear.
'
*
C &lt;? shows the patent ball and socket joint connections of the pitman
with the crank and treadle. By this patent arrangement tbe “thumping” heard In other mach­ utate »ltuai*d anu being In tbe county of Barry,
ines Is prerented, snd there is no possible chance for the pitman to bind at any point in the re- lb. stau of Miehlgsn. known and described m f
Ution of tbe crank, no matter how uneven the floor may be or bow far from parallel the
cr*nk and treadle bearing for the pitman may be. There Is always a free and easy setion of following described land In town two. north of
^e pitman at every point in Ito stroke.
•
rungs ssvsn west, in Barry County. Michigan, toD shows the belt-replacing device, by means of which any lady or child can wit: Tbe south thirty acres of lbs north half of lb«
throw tbe bellon tbe drire wheel instantly, and without moving from ber chair.
E shows the enlarged nickel plated and polished drive-wh®4»l. By mak­ bore described being on section thirty-one.
Dated.Jnir
Ad ims
ing this wheel nearly four Inches larger In diameter, and putting the weight mostly tn the extreme
43-48.
1 1st.
TURNER
GARDNER, Guard’rt
outside rim of it, we make tt run easier and longer, when once started, as it bas more momentum.
F F shows the oil cups on the treadle bar for preventing the oil from drop­
ping on tbe carpet or floor.
(■ GG show the porcelain casters, one in each of four feet of the machine.

E. K. WHITE, Agt., it Kocher Bro’s Store-

Nashville, Mich.

ORGANS:

I

nan

ALL READY’
— THAT-----

To show you a large and well selected Stock of

N&lt;,r‘^‘GROCERIES
Of my Customers Complain

. CONSISTING OF

Sugars, Coffees, Teas, Tobaccos,
Spices, Fish, Canned Goods,
Provisions, 4c.,
----- FROM-----

The Nashville Mill,
—New Jersey ie said to be infested
with outlaws, who live and hide in the
woods and cav^s. like the bandits that
infest Southern Europe. They depre­
date mostly along tbe railroads.

A specialty

------- If you desire fine--------

---- BUT-----

AT THE LOWEST PRICES
For Cash or Ready Pay.
Also tbe Largest Stock of

Crockery, Glassware, Lamps,
Stone tare, Ac.,

27 Stop*,

TO BESEEM IN BARRY CO.

SATISFIED.

JNO. M. ROE.

I have finished repairing my store and shall
There Mens to be some ■uaundcrbe glad to see you all, and think I can sell you stauding a* to which senate F. M. Pot­
ter, of the Vermontville Hawk, ig can­
didate for. It U the state senate, not
the national body. Potter might do
foraConffreaaman, but no man who
indulge* in each criminal carelea«MMM
In nwfttiwrae hope to pi tot
United
State senate .—Evening hew*.

CASH PAID FOR PRODUCE.

c

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                  <text>Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun.

ORNO STRONG.)
Editor

and PxoPBiKTOfl..

J

VOLUME IX

j TERMS; $1.50 per Year
I Credit SuBaciimoxs $1.75.

NASHVILLE, BAHRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, JULY 29, 1882

NUMBER 45.

went to tiic barn and procured a strap with a
PRICHARDVILLE.
WEST KAlrAMO.
Milling him liquor, but neverthelew
LOCAL MATTERS.
buckle on the end of it and applied that in
Tom manages to get drunk every time
Hot and dry.
John don't b ugle any more.
such a manner that the young lady was not
TEACHERS INSTITUTE.
become* to town. Two weeks ago it
We
need
rain.
able to leave her bed for three or four days.
'
The State Teacher’s institute for Barry
wa* only by the largeness of heart of
Every community has it* “I” and “u.”
—Farmer Y. P. Cassell, living a short the Marshall that be escaped the mesh­
Mrs. Risbridger, of Battle Creek, is visiting
Very healthy In this section at present.
distance south, wm short of harvest es of the ’’cooler” and was sent home.
patch; we have natgot any more than we want her parents.
help and his good wife came to the Saturday himself and wife were here,
.
following. Miss Matic Hind­
Geo. Delano of Allegan, visited bis brother,
W. H. Ryan made a visit tobte old home this ourselves.”
march, Nashville committee. Il is draired .to
rescue by driving the reaper.
Along about five o'clock Mrs H. pre­
One of Frank Quick children had the diphth—Fowler.A Ingerson purchased the sented herself before Marshall Greg­
Wildt &lt;£ Colton will start their thrcalilng ma­ tbcria last week, but under the treatment of ' Mrs. M. Prichard has gone to Wauseon, O.,
first batch of new wheat on Thursday. ory and complained that her husband
Dr. Young's,he is fast recovering. No others to live with her sous at that place.
1(11. John Groat is visiting at Johnstown,
Apples arc all dropping from the tree* In have taken it at this writing.
• It wm brought in by H. Gorden, the wgs drunk and wouldn’t go home; and
ful instructors have lieen engaged to conduct
many
orchard*.
Loose wagon tire will insist upon coming off. where her husband is doing some harvesting.
price paid toeing nine£y-flve cents.
that on the former Saturday he was in
the various exerciser. With revised outlines
Corn te m uneven and uncertain as the way* We know this by experience. Just as we had
—Last Efidity while Mr. jAnnond, an Nashville, didn’t get home until the
of Institute work m a guide, and with the exof a “politiabun.”
•
got fixed for Sunday afternoon's nap, a lady la not m large aa formerly on account of har- pertenee of the past to aid us, it i* believed '
old and well- to-do—fanner of Irving, next day, and then his horse wm bo
Cap Bbwen intend* atartlnghii thresher aa called and said that her wagon tire bad run off
thofthe present scries will be of unusual value
“
biowed
”
1
that
it
soon
died.
The
Mar
­
was binding wheat, a straw was thrust
toon m next week.
,
after working about half an hour and getting - Mrs. E. Dando returned from Jackson last to all. Under'the operation of the new- school
week, where she hae becn learning the dress
up his nose, which commenced bleed­ shall hunted Hunter up and tried to in­
Some petty thief etole a dress from Mr*. Hc&amp;»
law better preparation and greater eflteiency
maker’s trade.
ing, all efforts to step the flow of blood duce him to go home, bat Tom wm un­ on Saturday nlghs.
sending her on her way rejoicing.
Orf Lenhart and family forn»erly of this place
Wm. Weak* killed a black «nake recently,
failed, and the man soon bled to death. ruly and “kicked” literally and with
The Sunday school institute of the flrat U.
fact all person* that intend to engage fa teachbut
dow
of
White
Cloud,
are
visiting
friends
fa
B. church conducted by Bev. Brldenstine on the
—Those petty thieves who are pull­ vengcnce, and Jim had to exercise a over tlx feet in tenth.
“You’re my huckleberry,.” i* about the way afternoon add evening of the 23 Inst, all de­ West Baltimore.
ing early potatoes from J. W. Powles’ little ingenuity and considerbale muscle
Miss
Rosa
Bostwick
returned
from
a
visit
in
they
spell
it
now-a-days.
side a success. The church was uncomfortaprepare for the increased requirements. The
patch, will do well to look sharp, while to get him to the lock- up; but the feat
W. H. Pont came near getting blotted out a abiy crowded at both sessions. The exposi­ Kalamazoo Co., lart Saturday. 8be began
morning and afternoon session will be devoted
maneuvering Zss John sleeneth be­ was successfully accomplished in due [ few day* ago by a fall from Mason's barn.
tion of Bible topics by Rev. Bridtnstine was teaching again Monday.
sides a loaded double barrel shot gun, time. At 10 o’clock Hunter wm sober I The larceny case of the people v». Mix and well Illustrated and well presented, and closely
Harvesters from the north and western part
to teachers, while the evening lectures wDl be
enough
to
be
taken
before
Esq.Parady,
with one eye and two ears open.
Slater is continued to the October term of interested the large congregation. Highly Im­
of a popular character. There will be no tu­
who administered a fine of $8. and
pressive music characterized the occasion and the wages range from |2 to *3 per day,
—Complaint lias been made to the
costs, aggregating $10; the X was fork
A few of our farmers have self-tinders, quite ition or enrollment fee. Full particular* in
If any are in want of bogs or pigs of extra all give without dissent the palm to the Cas­
authorities, protesting against the
regard to board, etc., may be obtained upon
ed over and Hunter departed Sunfield­ growth call, on E. D. Williams, as be has a tleton choir. The essay by A. G. Carr was a number have light reapers, but some of them
application to the local committee.
boisterausuess of the two couples that
wards.
full of profitable instruction and ably pre2 stick to the hard running Humpback A Arm­
Vokxcm B. Cochbsx,
occupied the room over Duel’s saloon
Rct. A. D. Newton will speak on the subject rented. The declamations were good, and tb^ strong machine, claiming that they can do bet
Superintendent of Public Instruction.
Sunday j^ght. and if the disgraceful
LOOAL GIBBLE-GABBLE
of political prohibition at the Matteson school whole order of exercises was commendable. ter work where the stumps are thick.
proceedings are repeated arrests may
Last Sundoy was appointed for a mtesionary
Aad Ptrsoaol Chit-Chbt.
house, Wednesday evening August 2nd.
The people already see the benefit of the 8. 3.
THE WHEAT HARNEST.
be expected.
Query: If correspondents for newspapers Institution and that they should be made an servlcc at the school bouse. Bui Saturday
The Western and Northwestern Land Asso­
The harvest is abundant.
word was received from the pastor, Rer. Mc­
(vide, West Bunfield a week ago) have “kata" established part of the Sunday school.
—C. Winchell, living north.afew
II. W. Dickinson has returned from for Mie, why are they not announcing* “katKee, that he could not be in attendance. So ciation will run a series of harvest excursions
days since since, hitched an unbroken
the 8.8. superintendent took.charge of meet­ tn Jamestown and Blwrarck, Da., via the
Ute West.
Mtropbyl”
colt to the running gear of a light
ing which consisted in seme timely remarks by Michigan Central and the Lake Shore end
Tho editor of the Olio js learning to
The funeral sermon of Mrs. Louisa Hender­
WEST
SUNFIELD.
wagon and took his seat m driver upon
Bro. Holcomb and reading of essays on. mission­ Michigan Southern Railways, the ‘ Albert Lea
son,
recently
decased,
wm
delivered
by
George
the reach of the same. The colt ran play the baujo.
Oh
hum
!
ary work by Mrs. Delano and Mrs. Dando. Route,” and ths Northern Pacific Railroad, the
। Miss Campbell of Chicago is visiting Matteson last Sunday afternoon at the Matte­
away, jumped a fence, and Mr. W. ex­
How we pant
The services were good, although not as good first leaving Detroit, Mich., and pointe western
son
school
house.
at J. M.Wood’s.
hibits several bruises as the result of
Our
back
aches.
as they would har been had the Elder been in
John Fowkr and wifeof Charlotc, were the
W. A. Aylsworth beamed on Nash­
Ing Buffalo and points west, on the Lake Shore
his carelessness.
Our fingers are torn.
guests of their daughter. Mr*. John Mason
ville this week.
Sweat
bathes
our
aching
brow.
Greeley Babcock a grandchild of A.Babcock, AMkhigan Southern R. R, Aug. 15.
orcr
Sunday,
and
graced
the
Association
witb
—The Medical Association of Barry
The wheat bar rest in Dakota this year, pro­
A. S. Foote and wife have returned
And this, kind friends, is harvest.
set Arc to the litters barns last week Tuesday,
their presence Saturday,
and Eaton Counties met at the Wol­
froma week’s sojourn at Petoskey.
Oh! that irrepressible school book agent burning two log barns and a quantity of hay. mises to surpass- all previous one*: and Eastern
Mr. and Mr*. Tom. Nile* of Nashville ure
cott House, Thursday afternoon last.
fanners
can, at comparatively little coat, see the
Bev. Newton will speak upon prohi­ attending and are members of the N. W. K.
The boy is about 11 years of age and d« of the
Twelve physicians attended.
Papers
And the unobjecUonal "noiseless carpet brightest order. He had been corrected by h|n fields of golden grain harvested on a colooaal
bition at his church, Sunday evening. association, which now numbers 124 members
upon “diphtheria,” “caesarean sec­
aweepc-" man.
grandmother for some misconduct, when be scale, and not only obtain new Ideas as to wheat
Miss Bertha W’ood is visiting rela­ with an increasing Interest.
tion” and “puerperal eclampsia,” were
And the highly perfumed, fascinating, “fam­ Immediately got some matches went the barn, culture, but see for themselves the capacity of
Deputy Sheriff Colton wm ’busy lot week
tives and friends in Potterville and
read by Drs. Drake, Foote and Young.
serving invitation* on West Kalatnoltcs to at­ ily record man.”
Charlotte.
The harvest wDl commence about July 25 aad
The next meeting of the Association
Miss Ella Hunter closed her labors in the Ho­ rested and taken to the jail st Hasting, andwill
Mrs. McEwen, Mrs. Foley and Mrs. tend the trial of Mix and Slater this week for
end August 20.
gan district last Friday.
will be held at Charlotte in October.
probably be sent to the reform school.
Wright of Lansing are visiting at their alleged larceny of wheat from Joseph Tomlin*
Fifty or more harvesters ean be seen cutting
How
tlicy
swoop
down
upon
us,
in
theseour
P
hu
.
Fttix.
1»rn.
—Domestic troubles preys so heavily sisters, Mrs. Alex. Blair.
the groin of a single field; and while the slckie
F. H. Dodds, attorney at tew of Mt.Pleasant, palmy days of “getting rich.”
upon Wm. Troxell that, it is suspected,
is doing Its work, steam threshers are separat­
P. Hatch A Co. have moved their gave West Kalamo a visit laat week, calling
The Ladies Aid Society will meet witb Mrs.
CEDAR CREEK.
he is unable te carry the heavy load candy store to the building formerly
ing the berry from the straw.
upon your scribe. Mr. Dodd* was looking up , Magdcn one week from Saturday.
These arc the only excursions that give patwithout recourse to ardent spirits and occupied by Herb. Walrath.
Harvest Is nearly flntebad. and the crop te
If you have a dog that is a nuisance, turn
evidence in chancery case wherein a sale of land
he has imbibed so extensively during
reported
M
being
heavy.
him
loose
tn
field
with
Wm.
Hill's
reaper.
W. H. Strickland of North Castleton Is questioned.
Those who desire to visit the Yellowstone or
Albert Marphy and JacooMott are the proud
The Woman’s Missionary (meeting will meet
the past three weeks that his fines for hand in a stalk of rye which meMures
Last week our chickens set up a terrible rack­
pointy west of Bismarck, will be' furniehed .
drunkenness avxtased at Hastings and eight feet and four inches.
et which caused quite a wonder in the family at the Kilpatrick church the flrat Thursday in father of bran new boy batHe*.
tickets at redueded rules from Bismarck.
There
will
be
a
meeting
held
q
uartcr
of
mile
this plye aggregate over fifty dollars.
Miss Nellie Truman is enjoying a pro­ until Saturday when the strange freak, wm exMr. C. R. Cook, will accompany the excursion
Wm. Benedict and mother of Vermontville, •oath of Cedar Creek, In the Grove of Tho*.
The last wm five dollars, and paid on tracted visit with friends at Lansing, plafned by the arrival at the’Vt.,Ville Hawk in
looking after the personal com fort of patrons,
the weeks mall, since which time all te quiet won-hipped at the Presbyterian ehnrch in this Bulchy.under the auspices the Univenaltets of
Saturday into Nashville’s exchequer.
Eston Rapids and Jackson.
Barry Co., commencing Aug. 11th and contin­ and giving facIliUs* for examination of lands.
place laat Sabbath.
except the cawing of crows.
Tho daughter of Jamea, Bower of
—The following item is clipped from
Don't fallto ask ticket agents fur C. R. Cook
We wonder If Francis Osgood knew anything uing three day* and evenings. A cordial' invi­
The farmers have had a hard ta*£ in doing
the Evening News, and will be of in­ Hudson, abducted 15 years ago, Iim their harvesting. Notwithstanding the weath­ of harvest and it* concomitants when she com­ tation te extended to all other religious de­ A Co’s rebate-receipts. Forfurther particular*
nominations to participate in these meetings. address C. R.Cook A Co., 18 and 90 Franklin
teract to many News readers rs the just been fouud at Genoa,’Ohio.
er has been all that one could wish, being cool posed the poem labor.
Mrs. 8cboDce, who Ilves In Woodland, has Ample provision* will be made for thooe who
E. P. Jones of San Diego, Cal., and dry, yet the great growth of straw and the
parties who have made themselves no­
has been the guest of Mrs. Kate Rals­ large amount of lodged grain made the har­ left home and care* for a few day* to visit her come from abroad.
torious are Kalamoites:
UOKX.
When Jcsoe Garrison Baker, the drag store McDERBY—In Naahrilie, on
■liter
and family, Mr*. J. FmC.
vest
tedious,
alow
and
expensive,
but
this
week
A Cadillac man named Ryan was ton. his mother-in-law.during the week
Mr. and Mr*. O. Fay of Vermontville, weary clerk rear! the »tory of bls suffering* In The
turned over to a policeman at Grand
Mrs. W. H. Griswold h^s returned will see the cutting all done, the wheat in the
of the heat and dust of town, are trying to for­ Naws, his rage knew no bounds. Ho found
Rapids for threatening to shoot his
ST The highest market pricepald
from Muskegon, where she has been shock or stack and prospects of a big yield of
wife. She had started to we her par­
sr and Eggs 1* Cash at
Who
grain, with one of the latest harvests for many get and be happy in Sunfield, m guest* of Mr. Dr. Peckham in C. F.»‘L&gt;rnbee’s store and
ents at Nashville, but concluded to go visiting her husband for a few weeks.
thinking be wrote the article- jumped, on hte
W. Fay.
totbedeviL via Grand Rapids.
The
G. A. Truman.A Son, have a new ad
GOOD JUDGES
Rer. Morriaun and wife left for their borne back M be was sitting in a chair and proceeded
man was released and the woman went this week, announcing the arrival of
HASTINGS.
in Canada, Monday teat, called there by the 11!- to pull bls hair and scratch bls face la the most
on.
their new stock of boots, shoes and
approved feminine fashion. On the following Men’s, Youth's and Boy*, Clothing, and Owls
—A little scheme wm worked up clothing.
Monday, he,'fearing arrest, went to-Hhetings Furnishing Gooods ever laid down tn Na&amp;Vilk,
A large party are recreating at Gut? Lake.
Saturday evening to try the spryneiw
Misses Carrie Baitinger, Stella Wheeler and Ian church until one week from next Sunday. and complained of himself for breaking tire
Ed. Mallory has bought a piece off
MONEY TO LOAN.
of our fire laddies. A pile of infiama- the old homestead, adjoining the Dur­ Mrs. Belle Youngs have gone to Bay View.
An item recently appeared in The News to peace. The Justice, good-naturedly let him
ble material wmcollected at the corner kee place, and has the frame of new
Prof. Hall has reutrued and is looking to the the effect that an ax tn the hands of a Mr. Har­
Lu * Dusan
en of Kahuno, slipped and cut Alvardo Welch
of Reed and Middle Eta-, Which, at the
interests
of
the
schools
for
the
ensuing
year.
house up.
-------- - ——--------------“VINEGAR”
Farmer* are busy getting in their wheat, con­ on the teg, and now a good citizen living near It, bat in the meantime ■ warrant bad been
first “tank” of the bell wm fired. The
H. M, Lee represented tvy Lodge,
Pure Cider Vinegar by the barrel or gallon,
boys were aware of the scheme, but K. of P., in the Grand Lodge session sequently our streets are very quiet and trade TVlwrwl arire* *o ash why It did not hit him
H. R. Dickimvox.
immediately beneath the chin. Who can guess
were from ten to twenty rods from the at Jackson this week, there receiving tedull.
• Mine boat Littlefield, late of the Hastings why. I guess he has a daughter, not for sale. parted.” A few lessona-of this sort will teach
building which the engine wm lock­ the Past Chancellor’s rank.
THINGS YOU OUGHT TO KNOW.
him his place.
House, goes to Greenville to manage Keith's
ed up in, when the alarm was sounded.
1*L That the tamilv aewtag i* ths- largsst
What became of the bottle of whisky
Last fall Billy Bister hired Romaine Freeman
vesting, nothing in the weather to jar the gen­
part at s woman’* wort.
But in just six and one-quarter minu­ taken by an assistant from the pocket
Charlie Barnes, while driving acroaa Wilkins’ eralness of downright hard work, and It is a to help him on a farm bo had rented, built a
2e&lt;L That la falac ccveomy to wear your­
tes, they had run the engine 190 rods, of Tom Hunter on Saturday, is what
fact to be deplored that the Sunday which house Ac. Freeman is mlnu» on-2 eye and all self out tiring to make the “old wunrout sewlaid 3U0 feet of hose and had a stream bothers the authorities.
into the river. He was rescued badly bruised dawned so bright and IwautlfuL and even mu­
sical by the ringing of church bells should hare boose was finished Bfliy bad to step down and out'rattle trap itMchlne that fa doing aarae to
playing upon the fire. Good.
On Monday W. G. Aylsworth receiv­
out while Romaine held the house Billy’s wife
ed the sad nfiws that a 7 year old niece * Will Bennett won for the fourth time in the
nave combined.
chlncry, together with loud talk and foolish
ting away with Milt. Flej harty, Thurs­ at EMt Clarence,had the misfortune to
•boot, ia*t Toeaday. He broke 24 out of 25. if
day. He had been drinking heavily have her right foot cut off by a mowing
he wins once more that will *ettte the question.
machine.
Geo. Tomlinson wm quite oerioualy injured
afeernooo went into A. M. Flint’s ofltee
W. IL Aylsworth, M. D., of Gras* at Bentley Bros. A Wilkin*' -mill laat week. The
WK “MT' Newva. Bom*.
and hardly aat down before lie threw Lake, ha* located in the! village.
He rope that holds the door of the dry kiln gave nooning some one Jostled us, and said, “There
his head over back and began chock­ will establish himself in the office now
is Grace Stuck, tell of her.” We think it worth
ing. H* wm haulsd out to air with a occupied by Dr. Murray, who leaves
telling, for but few girls could excel her. Last
NEWHOTEK
face aa black m coal, but through the shortly for Chicago to attend lecture* the abookter, bruiting it badly, aad then hitting
The NaithTflte
hariaehaMiibDrougbl
vigorous handling of Doc. Winn was afthe Hahnemann medical college, y
overhauled and improved, te asw open for th
soon able to gain his breath and con­
Now that we have a fire engine the
sciousness. Wm. Troxell one of the great question with our
villagedads is
where shall the instru­
erally being flrat in her ttudies. She certainly
J. M. Fua» A Sox. Paors.
fected by the event, and vowed he ment of deluge obtain its extinguish­
would never drink another drop.
A FEW THOUSAND DOLLARS
ing fluid. The opinion seems pretty interest by a large crowd. It was really atartBiSMARK.
When Cha»*ey Childs sees a man(!&gt; passing
—Would it not be advisable for the evenly divided between cisterns and

LIFE IN NASHVILLE
And Her Environs.

board of hredth to investigate the aam- well*
B, the retirement ot Mr. LitUelleld.
itary condition of our srieeta, alley*
and sink*. Tift time is at hand now S T. PaHrer.of the HMUnire Houe,
when the filth and refuse made in these
places will begin to have its effect upon and a* Nell Isa landlord of large exper­
Che health of our village
If by a lit- ience and has hoata of friends, a well
--- . —
Ivy Lodge Knighta, H. M. Lee, E.
Chipman. L. E. Lenta, Dan Smith. H.

rapid transit st one time.

Happy George

WILL DDL
is why.
Individual
far wurttr'

Harrant topragraaatac stow#.

LOOK HUB!

MAPLE GROVE.

Already ha* diptheri* made its
NMtatafat in HsstlBfs, art a
PMl. irtaMUy tMMo Bmry

Lode.

FOUND.

�By this tins
tended riel

J.V OLD STOHY.

Ha paused beside her

Amu, like a wooer.

wandered forth down by the rivet's side.

“Forrotunir time. tUl In tho darken I nr stream

That whim those light* that burned on birh fo
far
Looked ou the Chariot and aaw no answering

—Boston Journal.

4 ROMANCE IN REAL LIFE.

Robert Myron was the son of an
English tenant-farmer, who in the year
1848 found his family expenses increas­
ing so much foster than his income that
it wan absolutely necessary to decrease
the former, since the latter could not be
made larger.
In the nope of being able to assist his
father in some way, Robert came to
this country, and failing to find em­
ployment near the metropolis, walked
from town to town until when near
Rochester. N. Y., he was hired as a
firm laborer by Judge James E. Berry.
During six years young Myron worked
industriously, sending nearly all of his
earnings to his parents, and then came
the sad news that both father and moth­
er had died on the same day. After
recovering from this shock, it’ was but
natural the young man should begin to
think of establishing a home for him­
self, and quite as natural that his love
should go out to the daughter of his
employer, who plainly showed her pref­
erence fur the young man who had so
devoted himself to his parents. But
Judge Berry, while he recognized in
Myron an invaluable farm laborer, bad
not the same views regarding him ns a
son-in-law that Miss Bessie had, and the
consequence was that the lovers, finding
it impossible, to change the father's
opinion, resolved to elope, and build up
for themselves a home in the far West.
In 1858, with a few hundred dollars
and the Judge’s curse, the young coupie
were marrred. and settled at Green
Lake, Michigan, where, at the begin­
ning of the year 1862, they were in
reasonably prosperous circumstances,
with two children to make glad their
humble log cabin. Their farm was sit­
uated several miles from any settle­
ment, and although the Indians were
rising against the whites in many ix&gt;rtioiui of the State, neither Mr. nor Airs.
Myron felt any uneasiness, because they
believed they had succeeded in estab­
lishing the most friendly relations with
such of tho “forest children’’ as they
camo in contact with. Therefore they
ware by no means alarmed when one
day five Indians stalked gravely into the
cabin just as tho noonday meal was be­
ing served. It had ever been Mr. My­
ron’s custom to invite such visitors to
partake of food, and on this, as on other
occasions, they readily accepted the in­
vitation; but, greatly to the surprise and
uneasiness of their host, instead of
placing their rifles in one corner of the
room, as usual, they held them between
their knees, tho muzzles of the weapons
showing just above the edge of the
table.
Mr. Myron was too well versed in In­
dian customs not to know that such ac­
tion on thepart of his guests meant
mischief.
With a view of showing
them that he understood the meaning .
of this breach of hospitality, and in the
•light hope of intimidating them, he
arose from the table, took from the rack
on ths wall his rifle and fowling-piece,
and carefully examined them to show
they were loaded. Why the savages
did not attack him then is one of the in­
explicable things in Indian warfare.
Instead of making any hoetile demon­
strations, they stalked gravely out of
the house, disappearing behind *a clump
of bushes.
For the moment Myron believed be
had wronged his guests, and that thev
had taken umbrage at his move menu
when their intentions were peaceful.
stepped to the open door for the
purpose of ascertaining whether his
cuesta had really departed. When the
farmer appeared,'on the threshold, the
report of a rifle pas heard, and Myron

feu, with a dangerous but not necessa­
rily fatal wound in his side.
Women who lire on the border, where
eel veil woman's privilege-of faintWhen Mr. Myron fell? his wife

g -te hi* defense rather than a*iee. To close and barricade win. where everything was prepared
i occasions, and then the heroic
tamed her attention to her busThe father’s wound
tare to stanch the

I. tbe Held was a cart half-filled with
hay; in the stable-yrrd stood a yoke ef
oxen quietly anting. To fasten tho anijpabr to the cart and not expose tbeinreTvea to the deadly aim of those in the
;■ task, but one that
the Indians finally accomplished. To
get the load of hay against tfre budding,
that it might be set on fire, wan still
more difficult, and in this care unsuc­
cessful. for before it equid be* done both
husband and wife had shot an enemy,
while the fifth and only remaining one
•ought safety in precipitate flight
Each moment the conflict lasted tho
husband grew weaker, and medical aid
could uotoe procured without a journey
of a hundred and eighty miles. To tra­
verse tills distance, there was no other
mode of conveyance than tbe ox-cart.
In this rude vehicle Mrs. Myron placed
her husband and children, and not onoe
during that tedious journey, made pain­
ful by the suffering of the man for
whom she had braved the dangers and
discomforts of a frontier life, was a halt
made.
At St Cloud surgical aid was pro­
cured. and there, after Mr. Myron’s re­
cover v, he sought work ot any kind that
would bring in sufficieut for the support
of his family, since the depredations of
the Indians had impoverished him. It
was only by the greatest exertions that
Myrou could keep his family from ac­
tual want; and hearing tliat laborers
wore in greater demana at Cape Girar-.
'deau, he, with his wife and children, em­
barked on the steamer Tidal Wave for
that place, after having remained at St.
Cloud nearly a year.
Tho voyage was never completed,
however, for when Tower Grove, Mo.,
was reached, a tire broke out on the illfated steamer, and in a very short time
she wa.* burned to the water’s edge.
The loss of life was considerable, and
among tho missing ones were the two
Myron children.
For the second time Robert Myron
was homeless and penniless, with his
sufferings intensified by the loss of his
children. Perhaps it was fortunate for
him that he was obliged to - work very
hard simply to keep the wolf from the
door, for it prevented him from brood­
ing over his misfortunes, as even a
stronger man might have done.
During tho two years that elapsed aft­
er the burning of the Tidal Wave, Rob­
ert Myron labored industriously, but
without success, so far as the accumu­
lation of worldlv goods was concerned;
he had been able to pay the rent of a
rude cabin three miles from the village
of Tower Hill, and to furnish it scantily.
But the expenses attendant upon the
birth of two children, and his own se­
vere illness, during which he was con­
fined to his bed two months, had ex­
hausted the small fund he had succeeded
in saving to enable him to remove to
Cape Girardeau.
Then came a time when he could no
longer find employment near his
wretched home, and ho sought it some
miles up the river, going ana returning
each day in a small boat. Even then it
appeared that misfortune was not
wearied with pursuing him. for one
night when returning from his work a
storm came up, which overturned his
frail skiff, and. nearly exhausted, he was
thrown upon a narrow bar of sand that
made out from the bank of the' river at
the spot where the Tidal Wave was
burned. On this frail and treacherous
foot-hold
managed
during
,
. , he
. -;
-, to, remain
,
, the mghl.
unable to .attract attention
to his desper­
. .
ate condition.
The dawn of the da;, revealed still
more horrors, for close beside him. hav­
ing evidently been unearthed by the
waves, was 'the skeleton of a human
being.
At first Myron felt that fear
which seems to be natural in man when
he sees the deserted tenement of one of
his kind; but the resting-place which the
waves gave to the living and the dead
was so small that he wa* obliged to re­
main almost in actual contact with the
yellow bones. As he sat by the skeleton
waiting for help from the shore, which
seemed so tardy in coming, ho saw
about the ribs of the fleshless frame a
leather belt. Curiosity overcame his
horror, and. unfastening the belt, he
found gold coin to the amount of five
thousand dollars.
That Robert Myron was in a fever of
excitement hardly needs to be told. He
had struggled to the full strength of
man many years, and was hardly more
chan a pauper when he should have had
at least a spot of God's footstool he
could call his own. The dead had

_ sir ms
thrifty'* man.
at the plants, and set them out without
All hb InrMtowal* wm good ono*. i dulorbiog tbs' roou.—St Low Olobt,
--------------------- rare loKlo
will, th&lt;
-Merer hem ■ bnd&gt;. or Umoo roil
ting everything into oub „lth Bowing dlk; t»k» rente ot the r»ryou will find it rtmigthenv kJ! part* ut the
nt a moment’s !notee II nwaim, red elthn of
n-.mrew.
of tho irate
rial, thread
thread a oorere
Robert Myron became a-wealthy man. Deeolo with it and hem the veil The body, and very refn«hiog to nxntal focal Urs.*
‘Just tbe thing I want,’ thought I, and tt aulV
Ab ii ureal, with wealth came tbe re- stitches will not show at all if small
_________
ones ed my complaint precisely. T! never Iwlicved
Boeet rf hi. neighbor,, wbo. to ,ho&lt; m uken.-Bo«on lYmmipL

1882
KALAMAZOO

XTn M tK* X Jt will relieve any dl»e**e that burnau flesh ia
to the office of County Judge.
During the year 1870
tektvivaJ
™
ItffO the
the iInhabitant*
Inhabitants !
orat fat, whfle
of Tower Hill witnessed the destruction I “ extr* .
“®?P,
thirty-seven per
In North Carolina, the otbe&lt;day, lightning
struck and.killed two babies that a father was
holding on his knee.
down. Among all those men who la“d forty-four per cent fat
bored to save fife none was more active
than Robert Myron, and his house was
converted into a hospital (or the recep­
tion of those who were injured, but saved
from death.
Mrs. Myron was aa a&amp;rnest in her ef­
forts to comfort the distressed people A*
was her husband, and her labor wa*
signally rewarded by finding among the
unfortunate ones whom she was nurs­
ing her father, whom she had not heard
from since the day she left his boms to
found another with the one man she
loved above all others. The daughter’s
heart .was made still more glad when
the old gentleman told her ana her hus­
band that he had been searching for
them several
rerer.! months
menu., in
m the
Um hope
bo,x&gt; of
or In
m-­
hnS!g orhe5inw
renLin °wi h
home, or allow him to remain with
them.
Then he told a strange story, and one
which lifted* load that had grown heavier
with each succeeding year, from his son­
in-law’s heart
,
In 1861, Mrs. Myron’s aunt had died,
bequeathing to her niece tho sum of
five thousand dollars. Judge Berry.
half relenting that he had not looked
with favor upon his daughter’s marrfage, had sent Mb clerk to cany to her
thislcgacy. The mcBcngor hid writ-

—George R. Rice, living near ’
Farmer
Village, N. Y., has a pear tree two feet
In diameter, and forty high. It bean
from ten to twenty bushels of fine fruit
every year, and is remarkably hardy
and f ure. It is a seedling and sixty-two
years old. .
.
—The Canadian Government has re­
moved the duty of twenty per cent, im­
posed upon poultry imported into thei
Dominion, provided a certificate accom­
panies the birds stating that they are
thoroughbreds. The action is taken to
aid in Uie improvement of the breeds of
fowls in Canada.—St. Louis Globe.
—There is a constant!v-increasing do­

]

week passes that some ore not sent to
gantries. Mr. B. J. Treacy,

of Kentucky, lately sold and shipped
eight head of choicely-bred animal* of
the above class to parties in New Zesr
land.—Chicago Times.
—Captain J. B. Moore. Concord,
j
f"tag4®1.,’ is authority for the statement
- ~entleman in Salem, “with
| ,
4
manure
P‘enty 01 01
-------- and water,’’ raises the
corn and, other vege; ?*P^ra^U8j
o
■» •
oI
““
the Bommer keep of two oowb. end Imy
ten from St. Cloud in 1862, stating that 1 and mangel wurzels enough to winter
he had traced Mr. and Mrs. Myron to them—all on one acre of land.
—Cranberry jelly, that is pleasing to
that place, but that from there they had
gone, as he had reason to believe, to , the eve as well as to- tho taste, is made
Cape Girardeau, which place he was in this way: Dissolve one ounce of gel­
about to start for in the steamer Tidal atine in a* very little water, and to this
Ware. From that time Mr. Berry had add one pint and a half of cranberry
never heard from his clerk, and he be­ juice, strained so that it is perfectly
lieved he had lost his life when the clear. While you are straining ikje't
the gelatine and water boil until it is
steamer was burned.
As the old gentleman finished his thick, then stir in the juice and half a
story, the husband and wife gazed at pound of sugar; let this come to a boil;
boards
at hand and—
strain the
each other with an almost despairing
sspairing have
*------ •jelly
—j------------------------------&gt;nly iwith , jelly through a muslin cloth into them.
hope in their eyes, and it was onir
&lt;&lt;------- ! _£ Y. Post,
the greatest 'difficulty Judge Myron
coula ask the question: “W’hat was the
man’s name?"
"Henry Parks."
The loa'd was lifted for evermore; the
money which they believed was an­
other’s belonged rightfully to them; the
investments made with a viuw to being
able to restore the principal at any time
insured their own prosperity, end by
purloining their own from the dead
they baa honestly relieved themselves
from the thralldom of poverty.—James
Otis, m Harpers Bazar.

The Order of the Buried Alive.

The Order of tho Buried Alive, in
Rome, the Convent of the Sepolte Vive,
is a remnant of the middle ages Ln the
life of to-day. The London Queen's
oorrespondent had the privilege of an
entrance within, one after another, of
the five iron doors. an4 talking with the
mother superior through the thick
swathing of a woolen veil, but ordinary
communication with tho convent is car­
ried on through the •• barrel," which
fills an opening in the wall. Over the
barrel L* written: “ Who will live contented within these walls let her leave
m
every earthly care." You
knock at the barrel, which turns slowly
around till it shows a section like that
of an orange from which one of the
quarters has been cut You speak to
the invisible Sister, who asks your will;
and she answers you in good Italian
and cultivated intonation. You hear
tho voice quite distinctly, but as if it
were far, far away. She* is really sep­
arated from you only by a sender slice
of wodll. but she is absolutely invisible.
Not the smallest ray of light, not the
smallest chink, is visible between you
and her. Sound travels through 'the
barrier, but sight is absolutely excluded.
These nuns live on charity, keeping two
Lenta in this year—one from November
to Christmas,* the other the ordinary
Lent of Catholic Christendom. Living,
therefore, on charity, they may eat
whatever is given to them, saying
always filesh meat" daring the fasting
time.' If you take them a cake or a loaf
of bread, a bottle of wine, a roll of
chocolate bonbons, a basket of eggs, it
is all good for them. They must be
absolutely without food for twenty-four
hours before they may ask help from the
outside world. 'And when they have
looked starvation in the face, then they
may ring a bell which means: “Help
us! we are famishing!" Perhaps you
take them nothing eatable, but you
place on the ledge of the cut orange, by
which you sit. some money, demanding
in return their “cartolini," or little pa­
per*. The barrel turns slowly round,
then back again, and yon find on the
ledge where you had laid your lire a
paper of “cartolini'’ There are very
small, thin, light-printed slips, neatly
folded in tiny packets, three to each
packet, which, if you swallow In goal
faith, will cure you of all disease.
iyour talk is ended, the barrel turns
round once more and presents its face
as of an immovable and impenetrable
looking barrier.' One of the pretty tra­
ditions of Rome is that each Sister has
her day, when she throw*-* flower over
the convent wall as a sign to her watch­
ing friends that she is still alive. When
she has been gathered to the majority
the flower is not thrown, and the veil
ha* Callen forever.

purposes seemed a theft, and yet be
who had fastened it about his body
could no longer use it. The struggle
between his conscience and his necessi­
ty was a long one; but when those who
came to rescue him arrived at the sand­
bar they found him with a skeleton on
which nothing could be seen, and no
one oonld have fancied that the half­
drowned man had found a treasure.
That the bones were those of one of the
'passenger* of tho Tidal Wave, no odo
doubted, and they were given a resting­
place among the nameless graves of
those who had loot their lives in the
disaster. Noone save Robert Mjyon
and his wife knew of the money-belt, or
that on the inside of it, cut deep in the
thick leather, was tbe name “Henry
Parks."
But Myron, having this money, did
not dare to use it openly lest people
should question how he got it. He had
agreed with his wife that they should
use the gold for their own benefit, but
do it with the view of returning it if
they should ever find the dead man's
—A ahirt company at Catskill has fin­
heirs. Tins he hoped to do by making ished a shirt for Captain Martin Van
such investmenta as could be readily Buren Bates, the Ohio giant, which is
realised upon, so that they might show •aid to be the biggest garment of the
themselves to be good, even if self­ kind ever made in America. Its length
elected. stewards.
ta74 inches; waist, 66| inches; alaevea,
The cabin they lived in. and the five from middle of the back, shirt measure.
63 inches; neck, 26 inches; wristband,
IBitafea. It took

Washing Sheep.
There has been a difference of opinion
as to tho advisability of washing sheep
before shearing. The objections on the
Eurt of the wool grower are that washg in the water of tho cold streams in
this State is detrimental to the aheep,
both in the act of washing and also be­
cause they must carry their fleeces too
late in the season. Sheep generally
lote flesh during the last month they
carry their fleeces when kept to the
usual time, and even no longer than is
absolutely necessary to secure sufficient
warmth in the water to make the opera­
tion of washing safe. A second obEition is that it is a very unpleasant
i for the washers and endangers their
alth. This objection can be obviated
where large tanks can be constructed,
so that the washer can stand outside
and not enter the water.
This is
difficult to secure, and at the same time
have water enough to make the washing
effective. To the wool-grower, u far
u the sheep, its health and thrift is con­
cerned, there is not a single thing to be
said in favor of washing, while there is
much to be said in favor of not washing.
It is far better for the sheep to be
sheared as early as the middle of May.
It is then too warm to carry such a ooat
and they generally lose flesh after this
time till sheared. After being turned
out to grass the wool becomes more or
less filtny, ewes suckling lambs lose their
wool, and sheep sheared at this time if
kept under shelter nights and during
cold storms will do much better. The
wool also starts better than when
sheared after the weather is hot The
practical experience of every good
shepherd is that early shearing is best
as tar as the sheep is concerned.
The next question is regarding the
fleece. Tho wool grower is anxious, of
course, to put it in condition to get the
most money out of it, and buyers have
generally demanded that it be washed.
One difficulty is that wool Is not bought
and sold on its merits. In each class
of wool the different lots bring about
tho same price, no matter what the
condition unless decidedly bad: there is
a certain price for washed fleeces and a
certain deduction for unwashed, yet
the unwashed may have less foreign
matter in it.
It is, of course, impossible to test the
matter vrith the same fleece, but there
is hardly a doubt that a Merino fleece
washed in the usual way and the sheep
allowed to run for several days alter
washing before being sheared, will have
nearly or quite as heavy fleece as if it
were sheared before any warm weather,
and there is little doubt that the fiber
would be better and stronger. There is
little doubt that under the present meth­
ods the fleece will bring more if washed
on the sheep, but that Tt ought to is not
so plain. Having reference only to ito
value, tbe fleece certainly can bo worth

A PEERLESS PERFUME.
Tbe refreahlns aroma of Floreatoa
aim! iu lasting fragrance make its pct
fame for the toilet.

Many a man wbo pride* himself on being
A TRAVELER'S STORY.
months at watering places
best phyifci*M without bea­
st dUbcartcocd and expected
friend urged a trial of Parker's Gin­
ger Tonic. Three bottle* and careful bare
brouirbt me excellent health and spirits, and I
hop ttny experience may benefit similar Buffer,
er*.—Utoetnnatl lady, flee other eotahm.
*

DrunkenueM caused tbe punishment of more
than 23,000 British soldiers last year.
The symptoms of Itching Piles are moisture
, like prespiratlon, intense itching, most at night
seems aa If pin worms were crawling in or
about the rectum. Tbe more you scratch the
worse they itch, very distressing. Tbe private
parts are often affected. Dr. bwavne'B Oint­
ment is tbe most effective remedy extant for
this tormenting complaint. Gives rest at night
without that desire to scratch. Also has on
equal in quickly eradicating Tetter, Itch, Balt
Rneume, Erysipelas, Barbers’ Itch, Pimples,
all Scaly, Crusty, Itchy Skin Eruption*. Hen.

Spnng-2th Harrow
Wiard Plows,
South Bend Chilled Plows,
1
Gale Plows,
(Buy Genuine Factory Pointe)
They are much cheaper and better.

Strayer’s GRAIN DRILL,
RAWSON'S

REAPERS &amp; MOWERS
Lightest and Strongest Made.

VL. “troubled with Itching Piles for over Itwentv years, it cured me completely,” L. 8. M
Enfield, Me. Sent for 50 cU (in 3 cL sts
8 boxes, 81-25, By Dr. Swayne &amp; Bon. Ph
Pa. Sold by aU druggists.

HUBBARD

A Philadelphia barber shaves “from housv
to house,” and gets a good deal of money.
etableCompound Is the best rwnedy for female
weakncM that they ever heard of, for it gives
aniveraal satisfaction. Send to Mrs. Lydia E
Pinkham. 243 Western Avenue, Lynn, Mui,
for pam pleta.

An Iron fence is being built along tbe banka
at Nlagria falls, to bead off suicides*
ONE MOMENT', PLEASE.
When winter is passing Into summer, and
summer into winter sgaln, your health should
be especially looked to. The humors wbk-b
have accumulated in your blood should be

guzrd agaluat Blllloua Fever, or other aicknna
peculi*r to the change of Bcaaonn. Dr. David
Kcnnady’a “Favorite Remedy" will do thia for
you. Get a bottle now and begin using it at
once. A long fit of alckoeM and a long doctor's
bill may be the penalty of neglect If your
druggist hasn't It, write to the Dr. at Rondout
N. Y. Price 8100.
Tbe Sultan of Turkey has found a guardian
with a good backing.

Dklbvax, Wis., 8ept 24,1878.
Gkxts—I have taken not quite one bottle of
the Hop Bitter*. I was a feeble old man of 78
when I got it To-dar I am aa active and fee)
as well as I did al 30. 1 sec a great many that
need auch a medicine.
D. Bores.
The cburcbea of this country apend 8175,000,­
000 a year maintaining public worship.

Improved 1882.

Sash, Doors nd Blinds,
Paints, Oils, Varnishes,
BUILDERS HARDWARE,

DETROIT STOVE CO’S, STOVES
Domestic &amp; New Home

SEWING MACHINES
When in need of the Best
Grades of Hardware and Ma­
chinery.

Call and see me.

FRANK C. BOISE

ORGANS:

SHILOH’ 8 CONSUMPTION CURE.
This is beyond question the moat successful
Cough Medicine we have evsr sold, a few doses
Invariably cure tbe worst cases of Cough, croup
and Bronchitis, while tta wonderful success Is
in the cure of consumption is without a paral­
lel in tbe history of medicne. Since its first
discovery it has been sold on s guarntec, a test
which no other medicine can stand.
If you
have a Cough we earnestly ask you to try it.
Price lOcta, SOcta, and 81,00 If your lungs are
sore. Chest, or Back Luor, and Shiloh's
Porous Plaster. Bold by F. T. Boisz.
ANSWER THI8 QUESTION.
Why do im' many people a e sec around us,
seem to prefer.to suffer and be made miserable
by IrxllgcstlHU, coniUpatlou. dizziness, loss of
appetite, coming up of the Food, yellow skin,
when for 73cU. we will nell them Shiloh’s ViuHser, guarauted to cure them. Bold by F. T.
^SHILOH’S CATTARRH REMEDY, a mar­
velous cure for Catarrh, Diphtheria, Canker
mouth, and Head Ache. With each bottle
here is an ingenious nasal injector for tbe
more successful treatment of these complaints
without extra charge. Price 50cU. Sold by
F- T.Boisk.
'

[JENTRY ROE, Promubtob

MF,AT MARKET.

0NLY$30
&gt;0.

Fresh and Salt Meats,

Smoked Hams and Mien,
Ilf THEIR BEASOy

Lard, by the lb. or barrel,

YOU CAN GET
—A FIRST-CLASS------

EF“ The Highest Market Price paid
for Hides, Pelts, Ac.

Fresh. Goods, Full Weights and
Rati srfaetian Guaranteed.
HENRY ROE

Mower

QLZMZKT SMITH,
ing through the spring storms on the
sheep and allowed to till with oil on the
sheep after washing. If there is more
extraneous matter in it before washing,
it, of course, is not worth so much per

Attorney at Law,

WAMANTED

AS GOOD AS AHY HCBINEIADE,

difference in weight must also be de­
ducted. but that this difference is as
great as that made by buyers is denied

Here it until they see the price of wool
graded according to its condition and its
value.
There is a growing objection to wash-

OSBORN MAKE!

Attorney * Counooitor,

■Very Cheap
AT MY PLRCE,
Ab 1 have no Runner’s Charge*.

EiperiiBcei, Belittle, aii ReewesiHe. THE CELEBRATED

do it, and if none that grow

shear early, they a
oeive for their wool

A. H.WINEL Dentist.

Grain Cradle.

BEST SET 8IM TEETH &gt;18,80

J. M. WOOD

T«tb IrtratM WUkMl r«i».

�Grain and Produce,
—-------- ktA aeU

'

;—

Feed. U»e, Mil, Ftater. StatM, Hair. Plat Laster, LaU
nd
Art HE LOWEST LIVIXG PRICES.

■um tn soicm stimuli.

•zsa

gLA«K i SOK,

American and Foreign Marble,
Hnoti ng*. Mioh.

yyiLLIAM JONES,

NERVOUS
DEBILITY
A cnrcgnaranlerd.
lrralm«*t&gt;l.

L"

HALL’S
Catarrh Pure
Is

Recommsndod by Physlclansj

stoo maWmi
Wetaanufkctura aodacUit at th a

ifitfaiuiin a single Instance.

ItU unlike nay.othvr Catarrh remedy. M

duwaaSng Ji»ea»e, ast yourDrum&gt;i«t for It, and
accirr xo imitation o« -rnrrrrcrr. If bo
haanotRot it, aend to us and we will forward
SmmwWately. Price. 75 cmti per bottle.

f. i. CHENEY t CO., Toledo. Ohio.

z Great r
MINGTON
1^0 UTEPRINdPAU*UINE

condition, th®
served during the rebellion as First
rd with trees of differ*
Lieutenant ot the Eleventh New York
Battery, and. like every other old soldier,
Idvei to fight over again die battles of
demand for orth-i.pe/t. Tho eypeneuoes he told yes­
terday are striking examples of bow
not a mistake and st the expense of
Confederate cunning was outflanked by
years of enjoyment of the fruit and to
Yankee wit.
The Union army in 1862 Uy encamped tbe detriment of the value of the or­
on the north bank of the Rappahannock, chard. ■
Ir is not to be denied that where
opposite what was to be the disastrous
fieldof Fredericksburg. Onthe bank of wealth is in abundance and leisure to
devote
to t...................................
th? Mitino- of the whole :
the river, in the extreme front of the
Union line, stood the bouse of Mrs.
Gray, a long, rambling stone building,
whose front of three stories faced the rd with no narticular danirer. and to
river. The roof sloped steeply toward
the rear, where the stone side was but
one story high. Mrs. Gray herself, an of caring for such an orchard would
elderly widow, had received the Union
be greatly increased at first, but in the
advance with every demonstration of
end would be less. But for the major­
welcome, and her house soon became a ity of farmers who commence their oper­
favoriterendezvotis for young officers. ations with little means, and who have
A prime cause of this, besides Mrs.
to struggle along for a number of years
Gray's cheerful hearth and good fare, totaaku sure of their title to.tho soil
was the beauty of her daughter Sallie, a which they cultivate, it to an imjxissibrunette of perhaps twenty years,, with
bility to commence their orchard opera­
I glossy black hair and deop blue eye®. tions early if they insist on setting all
A young Lieutenant was badly wounded the trees at one time. They have not
Uy*these batteries, and spent all his spare the money with .which to purchase tbe
time at the feet of this fair Southerner, trees; Uje land may not be denred, and
who professed such sympathy wiMx the their time is .too fully occupied with
Union cause.
.
gaining a bare livelihood to permit them
Late one rainy night a sentinel pacing
to enter into extensive fruit manage­
back and forth before the stone front of ment. Hence the question arises, shall
the Gray house heard a faint but sharp such a farmer wait • a number of years
noise cutting the still air. It sounded doing without fruit entirely, or shall he
like the click of a telegraph instrument, set out a few trees each year in as fine
and it seemed to come from beneath his order as possible, and th the end have
feet. Greatly perplexed, he called the an orchard somewhat irregular in ap­
Sergeant of the guard. They listened pearance as to rows and size of trees?
carefully, and were presently joined by The average farmer will sav wait, his
the gallant lover of Sallie Gray. Con­ horror of unsymmetry in the orchard
victions of treachery smote his heart, overcoming all other considerations.
and with the Sergeant ho unceremon­
It is well to take into consideration
iously entered the Gray dwelling. Sallie tha^ a large orchard of young, growing
and her mother, despite the late hour, trees is an extremely difficult thing to
were busily sewing by a table in tbe sit­ manage. There are so many different
ting-room. The ladies rose in apparent theories as to their needs by those who
surprise and indignation at tho intrusion. are experts, the conditions of their suc­
•• Step aside, if you please,” said the cessful growth are so intricate and seem­
Sergeant.
■
ingly changeable, that they become al•• What does this mean?” asked Mrs. most an “ elephant” even on the hands
Gray, sharply.
of one who has spare time and means;
Frank. I appeal to you for protec­ and the many orchards in our vicinity,
tion,” cried the young lady to the Lieu­
the trees of which were set out at once
tenant That officer could only shake
and in perfect order, that are now con­
his head and sternly wave her aside. sidered failures in beauty and in worth,
You have deceived attest not so much to the laziness of tbe
•• You are false.
me,” he said, hoarsely, as the girl who owners (to which they are generally
had promised to be his bride, sank sob- !
attributed) as to the great difficulty and
bing upon a sofa
almost impossibility 'of bringing to a
The soldiers could hear the ticking successful termination such an under­
more plainly now. They moved the table, taking. Tho orchard at the Agricult­
lifted the carpet, and discovered a trap­ ural College is considered a failure, and
door leading to a cellar of whose exist­
there is some talk of tearing it up, root
ence they had no suspicion. A light be­ and branch. The many reasons given
low was instantly quenched, but they for tho failure are undoubtedly correct;
fearlessly descended and discovered a
there was poor soil, poor management,
telegraph instrument, with an insulated and insufficient means; but it exactly
wire running through the cellar wall and
illustrates Hie point which we wish to
evidently passing beneath the river to make. If the Agricultural College fails
Lhe enemy on the other side. Crouching in making a beautiful and paying
in a corner was tbe operator, a young orchard by starting it at one time, how
and handsome man, who had never be­ can the average farmer, who certainly
fore been seen about the house, having has no better soil and much less skill
lived for days in the cellar. “ You are and means, hope to succeed?
my prisoner ’ from the Sergeant brought
The farmer should, as early as possi­
the distressed wail from poor Sallie of ble, put out a few fruit trees, nnd add to
•■My husband, oh, my husband!" The them year after year until his orchard is
heart of the Union Lieutenant went back
as large as he desires. There are many
once more to the girl he left behind him. advantages resulting from this method
But, notwithstanding the detection of over that of waiting and setting all at
this line of communication the enemy onee. hardly compensated for by sym­
seemed to know of every movement of metry and beauty of the orchard even if
the Union troops. It was a mystery to they can be obtained. His few trees
tbe officers Low they gained their will cost but little money and labor, and
knowledge. There were no more tele­
if, in his ignorance, he makes mistakes
graph wires, and there was no passing in their care, the experience will not be
across the river. At. last the mystery dearly bought. He can gradually be­
was solved. Within the Union 'lines,
come' accustomed to caring for them,
but in sight of the enemy, there stood a and his acquired knowledge can be used
low frame house, occupied by a negro,
to better advantage on young trees than
who did washing for the soldiers. He on those that have grown under the
hung his clothing to dry in the front blighting influence of his ignorance. It
yard; but it was noticed that in the
is well to have new trees coming into

cowhlde 8hoes- 13 guiltless of corsets,

..mrhAdAriok d»y ta her We. uke.

c00.^* for *

?

&lt;tiie health bkingee.)

AND

a day’s washing or make a shirt. You
say you demand the noblest type of use­
ful womanhood in, your wife, and you
want to know where you can find the
wife you want Weil, I will tell you,
my dear bov. If that is the sort of a

PENGELLY^ WOMAN’S FRIEND
Every mother of daughters should
, know aixmt it—because it bring®
health -

Have Signed or Endorsed the
Following Remarkable
Document:

TO GIRLS
TO YOUNO LADIES

the
track-walker,
is
her
style
of a man. She igtbe useful sort of a j
woman you appear to wont, but I don’t
think she’d loot at you twice. Let ns
just examine into your qualifications as
a model husband after your own matri­
monial ideals, my boy. Can you shoulder
a barrel of Hour and carry it down the
cellar? mv dear boy, a quarter sack of
meal would get away with those chalky
fingers and slender arms of yours. Can
tending the Critical Period. Bloating. Numbla a rwntxine
you saw and split ten cords ot hickory
wood in lhe fall, so as to have ready
fuel all winter?
Telemachus. those
plaints, usually attributed to other cauaea. but
..
.. .
___ »«•», w &lt;-W»«I&gt;ATWW
twenty-three inches, of ooal padded out
over sixteen
inches of shoulders
LEVCOKRHCEA KVINS THE FINEST
wouldn’t’help you a cents’ worth? Do
COMPLEXION.-Zoe I’bora cures the former
you know, my son—look me in the eye ■oa*® Capdn® Plaster.
—do you know bow to measure ten
Abundant testinxmlaJs I have, front tho best
cords of wood, after tho man has piled
it in five irregular heaps and tails you
It is all there? Do you know how to
buy potatoes, and how to put them
’ IL PENGELLY, M. D.,
away for the winter? Do you know
KALAMAZOO, MICJ
(.SUdfty Druwtttt.)
hoW to pick up the apples after Christ­
mas? Do you know bow to watch the
shoeing of you own horse, if you
drive one, and can you tell timothy
from prairie bay when you are buying
it? Can .you spade up half an acre of
ground for a kitchen garden? Do you
niYrllTn •Atal ord for tn—-itaulc*l de»l«
know what will take the limy taste out
. of tho new cistern, and can you patch
the little leak in the kitchen roof? What
would yon do If a hoop fell off tho flour
barrel? Suppose tbe
chimney ggte
choked up? If the front door binds at
IL02ZST0K
the top? What if a mortise lock gets
out of order? If an extra shelf is want­
ed in the pantry? Or two or three lit­
tle houses for the hens with broods of
chicks? Can you bring home a pane of
glass and a wad cf putty and repair
damages in the sitting-room window?
Can you hang some cheap paper on tbe
kitchen? Can you fix lhe front gate so
that it will not sag? Can you help the
man carry the big kitchen stove out to
the summer kitchen? Do you know
how to fix a pump when it chokes?
Tba Bwt and Sunal Cough Cure Ever Used.
Can yon make two or three tree-boxes
for the shade trees you planted on lhe
siilo-wnlk,
if
you knew how to
plant them? Can you do anything
Ging,
about the house that Con Rogan can ?
My dear boy. you see why Nora Mulli­
gan will have none of you. she wants a
higher type of true manhood. You ex­
pect to hire men to do all the man’s
work about the house, but you want
your wife to do everything that any
woman can do. Believe me, mv dear
son. nine-tenths of the girls who play
tho piano and sing so charmingly, whom
you in your limited knowledge set down
UHACOUAIHTIO WITH TH, = E,OC»AFHT OF THIS OOU*T*Tas “more butterflies of fashion.” nro
better fitted for wives than you are for
a husband. Tbe girls know more about
these things than jou do. If vou want
to marry a first-class cook. and experi­
enced housekeeper, do your courting in
lhe intelligence office. But if you want
a wife, murry the girl you love, with
dimpled hands and a face like the sun­
light, and her love will teach her all
these things, my bov. long before vou
have learned one half of your own les­
bearing nt different times with large son. —Burlington Hawkeye.
crops; it will equalize the yields between
Morning Wrappers.
the diflerent years, and thus better dis­
tribute the farmer’s work. New varie­
At the large furnishing houses white
ties
fruit are constantly appearing striped and barred muslins are used for
and much improvement is being made, plain morning wrappers.
They are
which can be taken advantage of in this made in Gabrielle shape, with fullness
way. It is the experience of njany that shirred in below the' middle forms of
fruit trees do not necessarily do best tbe back, and are trimmed with ruffles
when associated with others, and many of polka-dotted embroidery with scal­
examples of remarkable growth and loped edges. More drassy wrappers are
yields are given of solitary trees by the of silk surah in pale blue. rose, or
side of some road or stream. With a cream white shades, with festooned
little precaution in furnishing shelter panjers around tho hips, giving the ef­
from the fiercest winds, a few trees fect of a Margueritq waist. Four plaits
standing alone with plenty of room may very deeply folded are down each side
do bettor than if they were in a large of the front from the neck to the foot,
orchard. Their roots xnd branches will where they meet a bias flounce shirred
Its main line runs from Chicago to Council
have no obstacle in the way of near and edgcil with Mirecourt lace at top
Bluffs. passing through Joliet, Ottawa. La Raila
Tho paniers. wide collar
neighbors, and the sun will have a bet­ and bottom.
ter chance to do his part. There is no। and cuffs are trimmed with lace ; bows
particular advantage in trees growing in of moire ribbon are down tbe front.
an orchard, although mutual protection Polka-dotted foulard of dark wine-color
is afforded; but it is often the case thati or navy blue is also used for wrappers,
: Washington toWrourwey, OUhotsa and Knox­
they cause mutual injury. A few trees and trimmed with white muslin cm­
, vUlsi Keokuk to FET'ffiSSESISSr
will generally be better tended than an. broidery in Irish point designs, or else
Eut and South.
.
—- orchard of many trees, for they require the creamy mull done in open star pat­
At EnawnroOD. with the LS. * M-A, sd®E.
less time, and the crop of fruit being tens. Scotch gingham wrappers nave lh Moinas to I ndlaaoia an® Wlimna; AUmUs to
small at the best, the fanner’s home gathered ruffles of the material edged
supply depends upon the closest atten­ with Hamburg-work, and are usually
tion, while a large orchard is almost; made of the solid-colored gingham,
.
—4,». -Ml I wan
sure of furnishing enough fruit for home cither pink, pale blue, or buff. Lowerconsumption even if much neglected.—• priced wrappers are of the domestic cot­
ton Cheviots with stripes of pink and
Lanxing Republican.
blue together, cr blue or brown with
—Any good garden soil will grow white, and are trimmed witb colored
roses. A rich loam Veil enriched with embroidery on the collar, cuffs and
well decomposed manure is to be pre­ pocket. Summer flannel wrappers for
Illinois i
ferred. Do not use fresh stable manure. using at the seaside or mountains have
Pruning may be done during the grow­ . half-inch stripes of red, blue, green and
ing season, to get the plants faito fine। ecru, like the Cheviot stripes ; these are
form. This for heavy sorts is desirable; of the simplest shapes, with the edges
their .shape can be easily controlled by scalloped and bound, or else wrought in
pinching off the young growth after the button-hole stitch. The cashmere wrap­
plant has attained the height desired. pers are of pale shades, with open-work
’citv.
When protection is removed in the embroidery of the same shade cut from
spring, all the dead branches should be the selveges, or else they are more sim­
ply trimmed with a tuned-over collar
JOHN,
II. R- CABLE,
and cuffs of embroidered muslin. Tho
Tks rMtae* ttl &lt;
—A gloss of milk suddenly swallowed, small buttons down the front are wooden
says tin English paper, will form in the molds, nearly flat, as large aa a silver
stomach a Jump of dense, cheesy curd. half-dime, and covered with tbe cash­
Under the action of the stomach this mere. For invalids’ gowns and foi hath
। table Balm. 0*1 will r-w.uv,-Tar., Freck.e*. Pia*
debility. Premato’
wrappers blankets are cut into shape, tous
of youthful lodiscretion,
. l5h' *- ,’s‘vlDs? tbcJskiD soft, clear an®
weight, and as the gastric juice attacks and the border of the blanket furnishes ferin* humanity, send fr
beautiful. also instructions lor producing a haans*sot growth o' hair on a h*H Uad or snoaU.ta»
only it® surface, it digests very slowly. the trimmings. Blue and rose-colored
Tbe same milk taken with a "biscuit, a blankets are preferred for these, but
slice of toast, or other solid food, forms there are also white blanket wrappers
Wlyr. JOHN B. OGDEN. Ci Cadar 8t„ X. Y.
a porous, friable clot, which breaks up with gaj bordm,—Harper’f Baxar.

TO OVER-WORKED WOIEM

HO PATENT NO PAY.

imnim

M MAH

062718751946377334032475

m

KANSAS CITY

8500 Reward!
*8 will pay lh« i bora reward for
a7WK H«k b-d»

~«y±. us

CD
^RfflJRSOFYOUTH:

every time the stomach turns it over,
and through which the gastric juice omx

CONSUMPTIVES.

—There is no wisdom in working a

RUPTURE
when fully

for fertilisers, you con
acre.—Denver Tribune.
Cc„Pwrtl*nd, Ma

�ubecfty. Hit

Puri Said. He reported haring sera Eun

CaroUna. Second IMatrict,

tested: North

Indiana, Fourth District. U’UHam &amp; Holman.

Aaron Shaw; Thirteenth District, William M.
District, Louis C. Latham, renominated; Ver­
mont, First District. Lyman Reddington:
rejected. The

Hardeman.
.
.
The Ohio Democratic Stale Convention was
held at Columbus on tbe 90th. John W. Oak­
ley was renominated fur Supreme Judge, and

platform adopted favors reform In the civil

wreidinj

twenty-flvo

ladnatriai tptinlngwcboois

punish

FSSJLS!7.
and White River
the SMh coua Ide ration of

....In the House a bill fixing the duty on inn
proposed a Conatituitte* the President the
:the United States unless it be

DOMESTIC.
NeKXly one hundred While Moan teln
Apaches left. San Carlos reservation or: tbe

train, killing the driver and running off fifty

a large quantity of cigars and cigarettes In
the coal and under the engine boiler.
A raw days ago Noah Parks, a colored
preacher of Winchester County, Mias., suspected«tsteallngaorn,wa»strungupby a mob
and left for dead, but bls friends took him
down and caved his life.
Tub Okio Insurance Superintendent has

H. N. HetaAeroou, Preaident and Secretary of
1 the Home Jnaarance Company of Columbus,
and each was held i a &lt;2,030. They returned
the a»*eteiast January at &lt;250,&lt;K», whea they
were only &lt;100,000.
‘
Tkem were 124 :feu*inoM failures in the
United State* during toe acven day* ended on

York, failed ou the 21st fora large amount.

munkatlon with Arabi.

Bounces the extortion of money fromofficsholders to corrupt the ballot and control eteo
•tian*.
’
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Fajott Pabkell, steter of the Irish Land
League chief, died suddenly from paralysis
of the heart at Bordentown, N. J., on the 20tb.

talk, diplomacy, intrigue and procraatlna-

' will and testament of Charles J. Guiteau, and
against the issue of tetters of administration
to any other person than herself.
Tbi Tennessee State Prohibition Conven
lion met in Nashville on the 20th, and adopt­
ed tbe usual platform of principle*. It was
decided not to nominate a candidate for Gov-

The Colorado Republican State Convention
has been called to meet at Denver on the 14th
of September.
It Is announced that John Bright will visit
tbe United States during tbe coming fall.
The Democrats of the Third North Carolina
District on the 21st nominated Colonel Whar­
ton J. Green for Congress, and tbe Republic­
ans of the Second District nominated J. O.
O'Hara (colored).
Miss Emilt MacTayish, of Baltimore, a
granddaughter of General Winfield Scott,
and a prominent society lady, who entered a
convent last May. was on tbe 23d invested
with the nun's habit, under tbe name of
Sister Mary Agnes. Tbe lady te exceedingly
handsome, finely educated, and has a private
fortune of &lt;300.000.
Alonzo Bell having resigned the Assist­
ant Secretaryship of tbe Interior, Secretary
Teller on the 22d recommended lhe appoint­
ment of Merritt L. Joslyn, of Illinois, to tbe

Attorney-Genera] Brewster on tbe 22d ren­
dered an opinion that a Member of Congrcaa
la not an officer of the United Statea, and that
a gif: to him for campaign purpose* doe* not
coate wKhin tbe term* of the itelute.
The Ma»«acbuaetta Republican State Coavention has been called to moot at Worcester
&lt;&gt;o the 20th of September.
Ur to the evening of tbe JMth 0.1500 bills
and 300 resolutions bad been introduced tn

the 21st were of a uniformly favorable tenor.
Kentucky Lad produced about 18,000.030

FOREIGN. \
era in JU

ota continued

Fovn aaw-miil&gt;, three factories and five
dwellings at Fairfield, Me., were destroyed by
i ployment.

2i*t broke through the Huerfano bridge, near

The corpse of tbe Earl of Crawford, which
was some pontbs ago stolen from the family
vault in Abbottohlre. Eng^ was found in tbe
grounds of lhe estate on the 18th. It had
□ecu stolen and interred by a servant wbo ex­
pected to realize a mnnl&amp;cent sum from the
reward whish be supposed would be offered.

Mexico on tbe UHh.

In the capital houses

. killed uad Engineer .Meyers fatally injured.
: seven days ended on tho 2tet was satisfactory

Smtrx*, in .Acla Minor, was on the lOtb
■visited by aoonfiagration which raged for sev-

. Dt'BtXG the three months ended on the l&amp;th
/Colonel PitLiroLox, late Commander of

teed l&gt;y liquidation in nrlvatrco.of the passage

patllcl[iaL'.m In their conspiracy, has becu

l»E0t
RHEUMATISM, Over 500 Suits

ort* to restore order and punish criminals.
They seemed snxions that the English should
bear all tbe odium of such measures. Among
the officers, the men composing the entourage
ot the Khedive were regarded with great sunj icion. and it might everituaUy be necessary

*o adjusted as to encourage productive Indus­
tries and afford labor a just compensation
without creating monopolks: the main to-

Convention at Auguste on the 20th. Alexan­
der H. 8te;hens was nominated for Governor,
and N. C. Barnett for Secretary of State. The
platform adopted reaffirms the principle* of the
Jefferaouian Democracy; expreaae* renewed
faith in Democratic doctrine*, and charge*
tbe present National Administration with par­
tisan and corrupt interference with local elec­
tions, and tbe pros’.ltution of executive pat­
ronage for the purpose of extending it* power.
Notice was given In tbe Probate Court at
Washington. D. C.. on the 30th, by an alter• ney, that Mr*. Scoville intended to protest

Having just returned from the Ea«t with three immkkbb
stocks for Nashville, Big Rapids and Cadillac, which
gives us the advantage over small dealers, who
purchase for one store only, we are offering
•

agabp.t tbe Khedive. Over 100 of Arabi’s sol­
diers had deserted and given them»d TO* Up to
tbe Khedive. The Egyptian authorities were

Meuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago,
Backache, Soreneu of the Chesty.
Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Spell­
ings and Sprains, Burns and
Scalds, General Bodily
Pains,
Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted
Feet and Ears, and all other
Pains and Aches.

The Kliedlvc’a posl-

to establish relations with the Arabs tn Tripo­
li and Southern Tunis.
As Alexandria dispatch of the 23d says that
Arabi Pasha’s new Government had Iwued a
proclamation stating that every native mo­
lesting Christians would be shot. Cairo was
denuded of troops. Reserves ware pouring in

patched to Arabi’s headquarters. Tbe In­
flexible had been ordered to watch tbeenemy'*
cavalry near Abouklr. and if they came with­
in range to fire at them.
Tbb Khedive of Egypt on tbe 23d signed a
decree declaring Arabi Pasha a rebel, and
loaned a general order forbidding the army to
obey hi* command. The Khedlre also pro­
claimed that tbe English were promoting the
interest* of the country. News from Cairo
wa* to the effect that there were 8,000 starving
homeless person* there, who were dying by
hundred*. Arabi was threatening that city.
Tho country was in a terrible state of anarchy, and murder* of aliens of a frightful characterware being committed bv the fanatie

SOLD BY ALL DBUGG1BT8 AID DEALEU
U MEDICINE.

A. VOGELER &lt;fc CO.,

-CALLON--------

i
AccOBnixo to Alexandria dispatches of the
33d Arabi Bey had levied a war tax upon the
land to tbe nominal amount of f2,OUO.OOQ. He
had sent an ultimatum to the Batten declaring be was acting to
Islam from tbe infldels, and giving tbe Sultan notice that if tbe
Porte sent troops to co-opcrate with tbe unbelievers he would fight them and proclaim tbe
Sbcreef of Mecca Calipb: An eye witness from
Tautah stated that eigbty-five Europeans had
been tortnrcd.&lt;l!sembowcled and torn to pieces,
and that women were outrageously treated and
tnrtnHwl.
»z&gt;lri(rr« nartirinated
tortured. TL.The soldiers
participated in
In the
tbe
atrocities. Two Germans at Tulkah, sheltered
by tbe station-master until the train was ready
to start, were caught entering the train, their
heads held over tbe carriage door and their
throats cut. Tbe Constantinople steamer
whirls arrived at Alexandria on the morning
of tbe 33d was embargoed and tbe Captain ar­
rested on suspicion that sue was tbe bearer of
dispatches to Arabi Pasha.
A skirmish between tbe English and Egyp­
tian troop* occurred on lhe 24th at Ramleh.
Tbe casualties were few, and tbe British re­
mained in possession of the town. An In­
spector of .Survey who arrived at Alexandria
reporesd the total force of Arabi at 100,000.
The latter dlspitched 9,000 men to re-enforce
CaiVL ,
The French Minister o? Marine on tbe 24th
proposed a credit of 9,500,00) francs for tbe
protection of the Suez Canal. De Lesscps
telegraphed that Arubl Pasha hail declared
his intention to respect the neutrality of tbe
canal. Spain would send one frigate to Port
bald, one to Suez and another to limallia.

LATEB NEWS.

I
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1

F. T. BOISE,
DI GS,
BOOKS,
JEWEIaKl’,
WALL PAPER,
WINDOW NI1.4DES,
DYESTL’FFM,
PROPRIETARY MEDICINES,
PKESCKIPTIONS,
RECEIPTS.

; And every article kr pt In a fint-class drug store

PAINT AND BRUSH
department
people.

field Club of &gt;'c» York, bearing 49,(00 signa­
tures. for tbe pardon of Sergeant Mason.
Fouktxen persons were killed in a riot «a
tbe 25th between railway laborers and peas­
ant* at Dombrora. Province of Dolnau, Aus-

Tur British Foreign Office on the 25th con­
firmed the reported arrest at Puerto Cabello,
Venezuela, of the aasasfn of Lord Frederick
Cavendish. He gave bte name st William

accomplices, anil said that the price of the

exiled to Siberia.

the 10th,

Meved chat the Venezuela Government would

----- NEW------

HEADY FOR BUSINESS

patieute.

FLOUR. NEAL AND MILL FEED
Kept constantly on hand.

Our

FOR THE LEAST MONEY.
Remember that we [have no old, shop-worn and unseasonable goods, but that everything te

Graham Flour

Jis concceded to be the best.

Try It.

er AU our purchases are made with tbe cash and by strict attention to the wants of ou
customers we expect to reap success.

Nashville, Apr. 20,1882.
By a strict attention to business, and square
dealing with all our customers, we hope to mer­
it a liberal patronage from the farmers of .this

n

a

. a

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN.

AGAIN TO THE FRONT!
fill tie LARGEST ail Inst Cmjlete Strci o!

CARDING F URNITURE
Ever laid down in any one store in Barry
or Eaton Counties.

fsbeap-SbeariDg time is upon us and the

Tjuiej; American prospectors were found
President Arthur said that no person Is the

-IK BUYING, IH TO BUY-

oex, at tec drop of the bat; and
Satisfaction guaranteed.

NewC a it ng Mill

Several persons

•4.3W-000

If yon want something new, neat and nobby, just take a look at our stock of

GRINDING I

of the harvest k&gt; Bohemia was .destroyed.

J* tbe Star -route trial at Washington on

At Buxton's new brick, have full and complete lines in

CUFFS, COLLARS, TIES, HANKERCHIEFS, JEWELRY, ETC.
CUSTOM

AND SPINNING

calctilible. The bodies of forty.

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN

Every day in tbe year—Sundays excepted.

WOOL
Evbby polygamist in Utah hub on the 25th
said to be living openly witb only one wife,

We want your BUTTER and EGGS and will allow you
PINE WOODS PRICES.
.
Respectfuly

Pouring Mill

H. K. DICKINSON A CO.

accept tbe resignation cf toe Cabinet, amities

Cheap! Cheap! Cheap!

Gentu FurniHhing- Goods

CUSTOM

The Democrats of the Thirteenth Ohio Dte-

ibc vidulty of Peasant VaL

Boots, Shoes And Groceries,
Is full up and PLENTY OF THEM. Ready pay purchasers
desired. WE OWN THE GOODS at about 70 cents on tbe
dollar. You can save money, and be comparatively happy by
buying your goods

R. DICKINSON &amp; &lt;O.,

that they were employed by Mr. O’Connor

with a portrait &lt;rf President Garfield, was

Our stock in this line is the largest and finest we ever of­
fered. All Goods from a substantial school suit to the finest
dress suit. We have in stock more boys’ and youths’ clothing
than the combined stock of any house in town. Our stock

W. JL. AYLSWORTH.

Call and Examine 1
F. T. BOISE.

Ttnucrr decided on tbe 25th to dispatch
troops to Egypt, and Dervisch P-sha would be

dlteon.
The British Government bus chartered
thirteen steamships plying to American porta,
to convey troops to Alexandria.
Pnnsident Abthub on the 25th referred to

-FOR--------

—

For $4- and $5, we are selling a 4ery good every day
Suit, many styles to select from.
For $8 and $10, we are selling a very desirable diagonal
worsted, bound and made in sack and frock styles. Other
stores get $12 for the same suits.
Our 12.00 and 14.00 Suits will surpris you
For 15.00 we can give you a suit yoh need not be asham­
ed to wear any place, and would cost $18 to $20 at any store.
Our 16.00 and 18-00 Suits are well made and trlmed, and for fit and wear can not be equaled.

E037-S Sclxcol S“CLits

|

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At less than you can buy the Cloth’and Trimmings.

ROLLS, OR YARN!

tribets would thereby be subjected to disall the wool of Uris section, with

5576
NEED NOT WAIT

Our mammoth two-story double store
Is full and running over.

Everything yon need from the smallest Bracket to
a $125 Parlor Suit. - *-■
You can save money and have a better selection to choose
from, by dealing with us than any’other dealer.

Don’t Ti'org-et It.

�them mere sorrow, shame, and hard­
ships, than any other evil- that lives.
The country numbers ten, nay hun­
dreds of thousands of women who are
widows to-day, and ait in rhe hopeless
weeds, because their husbands have
bws slain by strong drink. There are
hundreds of thousands of bopiea scat­
tered over the land, in which live lives
of torture, going through all the
changes of suffering that lie between
the extremes of fear a^d despair, be­
cause those whom they love, love wine
better than'they do tlm women they

'

have sworn to love. There arc women
by thousands wbo dread to hear at the
door the step that once thrilled them
with pleasure, because that step has
learned to reel under the influence of
the seductive poison. Thre are women
groaning with pain while we write
these words, from bruisea and brutali­
ties inflicted by busbands made mad by
drink. There,can lie no exaggeration
in any staremtintii regard
‘ to
’ thin* matter, because ni&gt; bui---------------ian4nmgiiiation can
create anythtog worse than toe truth,
and no pen is capable of portraying the
truth. The sorrows and horrors of a
wife with a drunken husband, or a
mother with a drunken son, areas near
the realization of hell as can be reach­
ed in this world at least. The shame,
the indignation, the sorrow, and the
sense of disgrace for herself and chil­
dren, the poverty, and not unfrequently the beggary, the fear and the fact of
violence, the lingering, life-long strug
gle and despair of countless women
with drnoken busbands, are enough to
make all women curse wine and en­
gage unitedly to oppose it everywhere
as the worst enemy of their sex.

‘

To not wear your troubles and thisfortunes all on the outside like an
ovei-coat, bnt‘keep them bidden within,
like a raged-back vest.
We are always pleased to hear of
a young man settling down, but it gives
us far more pleasure to record tbe fact

of bis settling up.
When Gen. Grant finished his testi­
mony before tbe Long Branch coron­
er’s jury the deputy clerk banded band­
ed him two silver quarters as witness
fees. . He didn’t refuse them, but like
a sensible man stowed them away in
his pocket. The money was his and
he had honestly earned it.
No sooner does the big hat craze re­
tire from tbe stage than the hoopskirt
madness makes it* appearance on .the
street. This sad fact proves that if a
woman can’t look like a mushroon she’s
bound to have more than her share of
the sidew *&gt;■ captious criticism to the
contrary notwithstanding.

The world certainly moves. Time
was when no Southern journal would
have ventured to ridicule dueling,
but now The Atlantia constitution
says; “The impetuous Carolinians who
seek to establish that doubtful article
called ‘honor,’ in blood, would do more
service by engaging in the corn field at
fifty cents a day. It is time to under­
stand that a bullet-hole neither makes
right wrong nor wrong right.”
The scene of Irish crime seems to
have somewhat shifted of late. In
driving through tbe Kin*’a County, or
Tipperary, a few years ago, a resident
would point out at Jevery mile or two
the spot where '“poor So and So was
shot” but to-day Galway seems to be
the most murderous of counties. Three
of her landlords have fallen in nine
weeks, without tbe least prospect of
the perpetrators being diaooved.

“Father," said tbe young man, as he
ance of trade is agin us.” “They do,
ehf” “And that oar bank reserves are
rapidtdly diminishing.”
“Du toll!"
“And that railroad extension has come
to a halt" “Well, I swan!” “And

daily without a market"

“Great

ever say anything about a feller stop­
ping to lean on his hoe to talk when
be might as well talk and boe too.”
Reuben spit on bi* bands and resumed."

/

his citotomers showed decided aymppms
of lead poisoning.
It ha« been demon­
strated time and time again that lead
can not be u^ed for this purpose with
impunity.

dons of oleander are deadly.
A very
small quantity of the leaves has been
known to kill a horse.
The flowers
have produced death in those persons
who have carelessly picked and eaten
them. The branches, divested of their
bark
and used as skewers, have
poisoned the meat roasted on them
and killed seven out of twelve people
who partook of it.
—In selecting a pump care should be
taken to have it of a much larger ca­
pacity than that needed to supply the
boiler, as there are many things which
affect the workings of a pomp, such as
defective suction pipes, leaky yalves,
•to. It is the practice of most manuacturers to give the capacity of their
.inrnps in gallons of water delivered per
minute, from which it is easy » select a
suitable size, but the speed given in the
tables at which the pump is to run is
generally faster than that at which it is
desirable to run them.
—That high astronomical authority,
the Providence Journal^ speaking of the
retrograde movement of the equinoctial
pointe, cays:
“This movement pro­
duces some curious result*.
It gives a
constant increase to the longitude of the
stars, and renders necessary a change
in celestial charts as often as once in
fifty years, to exhibit their altered posi­
tion.
Thus toe stars that were once in
the sign Aries are now in Taurus; those
that were in Taurus are nowJn Gemini,
and so on.
The polar stir changes
many times during one of these long
circuits; for to whatever point of the
heavens tho poles of the earth point,
lhe star nearest will be lhe polar star
for toe time.
Thus Caph in Cassiopea
was thousands of rears ago the polnr
star, and twelve thousand years hence
thebrilliant Vega in Lyra will fill the
gjr
honorable celestial office.’’

Labonchcre’s Dog Story.
“ I had a charming dog once—a re­
triever, a groat favorite—bat I never
came up to London without losing that
dog. The first time I lost him I offered
£5, and got him back. The next year
I lost him again; offered £5, and a mys­
terious individual again made his ap­
pearance, and said he *he knowed a man
somewhere in the Seven Dials as knowed
something about that dog.’ At last,”
said the Colonel, “I resolved to play
the game out, so I slipped a sovereign
into the stranger’s hands and said. ‘You
introduce me to your friend. I give
you my word of honor 1’11 act on the
square with him, and he shall be no
worse off—is that plain P"
“ ‘Well, Colonel,’ says the man, with
a shrewd twinkle, ‘we know you, Col­
onel, and you are a gentleman,-and if
you come around .to Seven Dials, No.
------- street, round the corner. I’ll intro­
duce'you to the man what knows about
your dog.’
“At the hour and place, to the minute,
I met my friend,” said the Colonel,
“and he led me into a back den. I saw
several dogs in dens and kennels and
one or two loose.
“‘Sil down, Colonel,’ said the fellow,
trying to make me welcome and at
home, and then eying me with a knowing
and confidential leer. ‘I’m the man,
Colonel, what knows about your dog,
and there’s not onejrent’lbnan in twenty
I’d say that to. But you are a real
gent’l’man, and that’s plump.’ Well,”
the Colonel continued, “I thought it
best to come to some arrangement with
the ifiU, bo I said, ‘WhM makes you
always steal mydogP Why canftyou
let mm alone for one year?’ ‘Well,
you see, Colonel, we’re wonderfu’ fond
of that dog o’ yourn. He’s a very nice
dog, and we get on uncommon well
with him ‘Pon my word, he’s not like
some dogs, as are always a-whining and
a-worrying. This ’ere dog is a affable,
conij -nionable kind ’o dog, and I a’m
never in a hurry to part with him.’
•What will you take to let him alone for
a year? Will you take £5P’ ‘Well,
Colonel, you see we really do like that
dog. Make it £8, and I’ll say done
with you.’ I made it £8," said toe
Colonel, “and for two years after that
my dog was as saie in London as in the
depth of the country. There was evi­
dently honor among thieves, and a com-

added the Colonel, “I gave that dog to
a friend of mine, and, of course, stopped
payment. Well, the next month my

Toe poorest girls in the world, are ed.”—-London Truth.
those wbo have never been taught to
A Little Babfs Big Adveatara.
work. There are thousands of them.
Tire beautiful little girl of Conductor
7
n ur___ 1
_____
-I___ _
___
have been taught to despise labor and
depend upon the labor of others for a
living, and are perfectly helpless.
If
misfortune come* upon their frienda,ae
it often does, their case is hopeless. k&gt;t of planks pnt over it, which the little
The most forlorn and miserable women child managed by some means to move,
upon earth belong to this class. It be­ and in bo doing fell into the well, there
being a quantity of water at the bottom.
longs to parents to protect their doughThe great mystery is why the child was
Un from Ihi. mwnbio eomUUon. not drowned.
Mrs. Ward, hearing its
They do them a great wrong if they •creams, ran to the well, bat to behold
neglect it. Every daughter should be
taught to earn her own living. The

swiftly around; the rieh are very likely

CLOTHING!

caused n rt-maiaed

—A miller in -Alsaee, resorted to the

fore, if yours do not ripen perfectly you
will be a* well off as any of your neigh­
bors.
It is time your potatoes were started.
The Colorado beetle is anxiously await­
ing the appearance of the vines, and
unless you push things, the poor creature
will be short of provisions.
‘
Pinch back your geranium shoots, if
the frost has not alreiuly pinched them.
Plant your bouts deep; if of the bi­
pedal variety, the deeper toe better.
Beanpoles* are hardy, and no danger
of late frosts need be apprehended.
Plank in rows and thin oat later.
Of course your peas are up a foot ©r
two ere this. If they are not, it is your
duty to say they are. Every enterpris­
ing farmer is expected to II© about the
.forwardness of his peas.
• Ab to beans, you know them. Soak
before planting, mulch with salt pork,
and keep in a warm place.
Cabbages do best in hot water. Pick
out good-sized plants, well headed, and
dress with salt and pepper.
Commercial fertilizers are the most
Cjfitable. Should you lose your way
me you can easily find it If your farm
be plentifully dressed with them and
your olfactones are not uncommonly

When trimming yopr raspberries do
not throw away the stout canes.
You
may find a use for them when your ap­
ple trees are full of green fruit and small
DOJ&gt;Don’t neglect your asparagus bed.
Manure liberally and sprinkle with brine.
By the trifling outlay of ten or twenty
dollars you can count upon an enormous
crop. A good bed, properly token care
of, should vield st least fifty cents’ worth
of vegetables.
Now is the time to trim hoe-handles.
Care must be taken, however, that they
do not get sunburnt. Keep them under
cover when the mercury rises above
fifty degrees.
u you would have your wheelbarrows
thrive, keep the soil about them con­
stantly stirred, and mulch with lard oil
or tallow.
Oleomargarine does best on fat lands.
It is better adapted than butter for this
climate, aa it does not droop so readily
during the warm days that may soon ba
expected.
A good corn crop may be secured by
wearing close-fitting boots. A double
crop may be obtained by judicious par­
ing. •
No farmer need be withoat a crop of
squash bugs. Five cents’ worth of seed
will raise 47,683 to each squash.
Turnips should be set out early. They
do best on trellises, but are somctimei
trained on poles.
Apples should not be dug before Au­
gust!
Care should be taken that they
are not cut by the boe, unless you wish
to dry them; in which case it te &amp; great
saving of time to slice while hoeing.
By all means keep fowl.
Farmers
who own hens invariably find that theft
seeds come up quicker than those who
do not.
Farmers do not find the milk-weed
profitable. A good pump is much bet­
ter and surer.
Strawberries, to be profitable, should

If you have any cats on tho place, '
mulch with bootrjacks, and add a plen­
tiful dressing of old boots.
Currycombs sould be set in rows.
Plant your pitchforks under the shade
of your cherry trees, pointe up. Should
your neighbor’s boy fall from the tree,
they might prevent him from striking
the grounds
Cover your cucumbers beds with con­
crete. It may kill the vines, but that is
the only sure way of destroying the
striped bugs.
Horse radish should be blanketed at
night, and bedded down nicely.
Noth­
ing like keeping your horae radish
warm.
Dados and other wall flowers must be
trained with care.
If they are not reg­

pot plant in this State, though corn beef
is still in considerable request.—Bos ton
Trantcripi.

In order to make loom for our
Z5. wbra it appear* »bc was Informed by Adil-

i Wnter Goods,

lady. In hot indignation, lmmodlat-ly wrote a
Garland, in which she warned Garland to ko-p
oerned; If bo did not abe would place the affair

•We are selling our—-------- -

Addison Indorsed the letter and forwarded It

At prices that requires no bantering to sei
Nothing further waa heard' from Garland,

having repeated *i!a pro-

HERE ARE BARGAINS FGR YOU!
Summer Pants for 95c

fonna! challenge to Garland, who replied, ac­
cepting it, and tbe prellmlnariM wore ar­
ranged by Messrs. W. W. Boswell, acting for

THINK OF IT

tn the following statement, which tho seconds
to-day prepared far publication:
Garland armed himself with a four-barreled,
thirty-two-callber pistol, and Addison with a

coodod Vi meet Garland, being accompanied
by three friends—Meaara. Orgain, Ranea and
Jones. Mr. Addlaon and friends walked some
thirty yards ahead of Mr. Boswell. Garland's
tween Garland and Addison, with the purpose
of having tbe matter settled without dllbculty
between the principals. Before Mr. Boswell
had got into tho merits of tho case Mr. Addi­
son and his friends halted and engaged Mr.
Boswell in conversation. Mr. B.mwoU then
rode some forty yarJs ahead, and the Addison
paity followed till they reached tbe ground,
when they were met by Mr. Garland and u
friend named Rocha.
Mean. Garland and Addison were Intro­
duced to each other. Mr. Garland, speaking
first, proceeded to ask Addison some question,
which was interrupted by tbe latter, who, in a
frenzy of rage, drew back hit right arm ar
though to strike Garland, who placed his hand
on his hip-pocket for his pistol. Addison at
tbte jumped back and said: “None of tbht.'*
Garland hesitated, k hereupon Addison drew
his pistol from an inside coat-pocket and fired
quickly. The ball struck«Gariand on the left
arm, a few Inches below tho elbow. Addison
snapped hl* pistol again before Garland could
return hit fire. Both beg in firing then in rap­
id succession. Addison snapping hit pistol,
which did not fire. Addison stepped back ward
at every discharge, and when about twelve
steps from Garland be got behind a tree,
shooting, or attempting to shoot, from behind

For fall and winter trade are comi
lent and cheap. Examine them.

in their adhcalon to him a* the Khedive's rep-

A male child three years and nine
months old, from
Casey County,
Kentucky, and weighing 140 pounds,
was waddling about the Capitol this
morning.
He is the most corpulent
individual of his age that fins visited the
Capitol since the flood.
He is about
three feet tall and stands about as high
from the floor sitting down as when In a
perpendicular oa his pedal extremities.
The child was the object of much
curiosity in the cloak rooms south of the
House floor for some time.
The pages
and a lot of men congregated and feast­
ed their greedy optics upon his corpslaucy, when the “little fellow” began to
cry. Hifl father didn't pick him up in hu
arms, like most children of his age are
embraced, but had to stand and let him
bellow it out.
It would have been aa

They are excel-

Of the befit quality and lowest in price. Try our 40c Tea.
Don’t buy poor eggs unless you prefer them. Our egg tester
tells you which are poor.

CASH PAID FOR BUTTER AND EGGS.

NEW VICTOR SEWING MACHINE is VICTOROUS.
Ready pay secures for you all the advantages iu trade.

L. J. Wheeler.
BALTIMORE.
Harveat U in full bl^T

1 Some good* taken from SatllfT* rioreat LanI
bur«l^«d’ &lt;cre foond nP°D

Farmers an. making It binding for liw wheat I
thia week..
'i
tered in every direction.
Dr. VanHorn dedicated hi* new barn with 1i
Garland's pistol being empty, he called to
Boswell to hand him bi* (Boswell's) pistol. on icecream party.
C Garnet and N. Edmons have adf binders.
Which Boswell did. Garland made ready to
fire the fresh pistol, when Addison called out They work like a charm.
from tbe tree: “ Unfair, gentlemen. My pis­
Mi** Florence, Glaago is engaged to teach
tol is either empty or falls to fire." Garland the fall term in lhe Bryant district.
then said: “ Have you got enough?' and AdMrs.
D. R. McOmber has decidedly the nicert
diron replied: “I have.-' Garland then low­
ered the pistol of Boa well, which be had not collection of flowers and bouse plant* in Balti­
tired, saying: "I am satisfied it you are.-- more. Mr*. D. know* bow to arrange them to
Addlson walked up toward Garland and said: give them a nice appearance.
“Gentlemen. 1 am done for; J am shot In the
Our school commenced the 24th, with Rosa
bowels." Garland said to Addison: “I am Bostwick as teacher. 8be will teach a short
but youself," to which Addison rejoined: term and then she will go to Hastings to accept
“All I regret 1" that 1 am unable to accommo­ a position aa teacher in tbe high school for the
date you further." Tbelr friends then con­ coming year.
ducted them from the field. Addiso ■ died the
Two little boys, I did not learn their name*,
were picking cherries at Henry Eaton's and a1
limb gave way letting them down, cracking a‘
Ing lends it additional interest, and there has bone of one of the boys wrists and tbe other
not been a duel In Virginia for years which has lauded on a hog that was under the tree; the’
attracted so much attention. Mias Hatchett, bog sprang out from under him letting him1
down ou a stub that protraded into hi* flesh. •
A sad accident. Chancy Games' Itttle girl
was leaving home on aa errand and J. Uchty
was starting home from Games' just then and
asked her to get in the carriage and ride, which
she gid. After they had gone aibOK dixtance
tbe horse hung back for her eolt that was com­
ing behind, whereupon Mr. Lichty hit the
Arabi Paaha’a Activity.
horae with the whip causing the horse to Jump
It te gradually being admitted by tbe British throwing out tbe girl, both wheel* passed over
journal* that Arabi Push* 1* constantly re­
ceiving tnopa both from within and without

A Fat Boy.

in.

PCI*infl. I. Claflin, who resides about throe
miles ‘of the dty, died at his home on Tuesday

morning. His funend took place thl* morning.
Mr. Claflin te one of the pioneer* of this Co.
having come to this port of tbe state wlum it
was, to a greet extent, undeveloped and has
lived to sec'tiie wilderness “bloMoni like the
rose.’’—Charlotte Leader.
Report* from the Charlotte races are to tbe
effect that notwithstanding busy times, the
races are well attended. In the 3:15 race on
Wednesday, best three in five, St. Loute won
first money, 1150, Wm. S- second $*«5, Cora
Bell third, G45, and Jim Earley fourth, f30.
Time, 2:37,3:35, 2:88. In the half mile run­
ning race, best three In five, Lady Mitchell won
first money, WO, Lontec second, ?.'»). and Jen­
nie G. third, »10. Time 53^',
52. Owing
to the mistake of the Judges in starting, beta
and pools on the running race were declared off.
“I’ll make you dance," cried an kote mother punning an erring ton slipper in hand­

bawl."
A ccmmerclal paradox: The Shylocks always

— DON’T DIB IN THE HOUSE.
Ask druggists for "Rough on Rate..-' Lt
cleans out rate, mice, bed-bugs, roaches, vermin,

No move Chill* and Ague in this section.
Our Druggist is selling an article called
“Agdb CoSQCMMOB.” It Is about the only
satisfactory preparation sold for the cure of
Fever and Ague, Dumb Chills, Intermittent or
Bllllou* Fcvenu The Proprietor of the Ague
EATON COUNTY.;
Cokqubmom has used bot little energy to make
this medicine known and ret its sales are Im­
Circuit Court convened at Charlotte, Wed- mense in Ague Districts. li purifies the blood

son* have bad them for years.
Entirely vege­
table preparation. Price, 50 cent* aud tLGC
resident of Cbarlottto per bottle. Two doaea will stop the chllla.
Tbe Republican state* that Judge Hooker

in Eaton Co.
Belcher and Warner of Charlotte, have sold
their boot and aboc store to Jobs File and B.

CATARRH OF THE BLADDER.
btinging, smarting, irritation ot tbe uriiwy.-

Nashville Markets.
Wheat,per bu.

Charlotte on the 15th.

ASST"-

Baan*. par bu,
OaJoM,perbn,.

about IL .
from bte horse, and as he fell the bone kicked
him on tbe forehead, injuring idm quite ae rere­

Ella Stoddard of South Waltoo, who whs ee-

—A man was recently arrested and
jailed in New York for passing upon a
tradesman a five dollar Irish- Republic
note, such as were common in 1867, at

Tbe note read a: •• The Irish Republic is

•

�converted into t
•at trouble, ami

moored a
’
.
iOfawp
of the sun.
bath readymade, which, if not'exactly
big enough for a swim, would serve ad­
mirably for every other purpose. Tbe
first experiment was a complete success,
and from that time regularly every
morning I slid down the mooring-rojro,
and had a “duck” ia my floating tub.
to' the unbounded amusement of' the
Arab boys, who came, splashing and
chattering around me.
.
In this way things went otr up to tho
very clay of our departure from Koomfi­
dah. That morning I rose earlier than
usual from my ••luxurious qouch,”
(which consisted of a sjmro sail on the
planks of tho aftcr-deck) to have just
one more bath beforeleaving. But' it is
always that “just one more” which
CHASED BY A SHARE
does all the mischief; and as a matter
of course, after being prudeut and cau­
tious up to- the very last moment, I
* What a jolly place for a swim! TH ended by committing an imprudence
have one as soon as my dinner’s di­ which all but cost mo my 1 Ifq.
gested.”
The sea, as I well remember, seamed
. “Takajny advice, and don’t do noth- cooler and more tempting than ever
*L-rsort.; for if you .do, as sure as that day, and since the appearance of
eggs. XhejellLbc'somethin' wise
that energetic gentleman who hail such
besides your dinner.”
a good appetite for flying-fish, no
do yo mean?”
sharks had been seen except at a great
•* Skarkt.^
•
distance. In short, I got tired of wal­
And with this impressive conclusion, lowing from side to side of my boat­
the worthy Captain turned on his heel bath, like' a hippopotamus in a tank,
and walked oil:
and decided to scramble out of it, and
We had run three parts of the way have a swim round the ship itself.
down the Red Sea, and were now an­
Twice, thrice, four times, 1 made the
chored close to the Arabian shore, just circuit of the vessel, then, seeing no
off the Turkish fort of Koomfidah. the sign of danger, determined to strike
low massive wall of which stood out I farther out to sea. I xm already about
white and bare in the blistering sun­ a hundred yards froni the ship’s bow,'
shine, while beyond it stretched, far as
when I suddenly heard a snout that
tho eye could reach, the dim immensity made me feel creepy all over.
of the great centra! desert.
•• Ixiok out! here’s a’sharkl”
Our vessel lay fully a mile and a half
Instantly came a rush in the water be­
from the shore,'although it seemed with­ side. and'up started between me and
in a stone’s-throw in the clearness of the ship the big, ungainly head, the
. that wonderful atmosphere. But be­ grinning teeth, the small, narrow, cruel
tween us and the interminable waste of ■eye, the huge pointed fin. Eke some
flat sandy beach tho clear bright water ugly vision in a nightmare.
was flecked with a broad band of white,
Luckily the shark’s overlapping snout
very, much like a streak of thick cream,
forces him to tuni nn his side in order
marking the whereabouts of one of those
to bite, or all would have been over at
treacherous coral reefs which make tho the first rush. A sudden turn foiled the
Red Sea as dangerous a place as any in monster, but the next moment he was
the world.
'
round and at mo again like an avow.
Outside the reef tyhere we lay tho sea
And so we went plunging to and frot&lt;
was still heaving restlessly from the churning the smooth blue water into
.
effects of the gale that had mown over foam, while the shouts of the sailors
. night; but the broad shallow lagoou
(who had clustered like bees along the
within was as calm as a mfll-ppndf Half
ship's side) seemed to rend the very
a dozen gaunt, swarthy Arabs were
skv.
splashing and wallowing in the smooth
Rut my enemy was too hungry to be
water with shouts of delight, which scared by noise, and although wo were
were very tantalizing to us as we gradual!? nearing the ship, always kept
•• stood on the burning desk,” with tho himself between. My brentii began to
very pitch melting between the planks fail, and I felt that before the boat cpuld
under the intolerable boat.
Olliers bo lowered I should be past help, for the
still were trooping down to -the beach I
, shark had turned short round and met
•
in their long white robes, like a train of II me front to front.
ghosts, from tho little group of tumble- j
I
There was n loud halloo from above
down mud • hovels which, clustering i|—something splashed heavily.into the
around the outer wall of tho fort, rep- II water—and then the sea all round mo
resented tho “town” of Koomfidah.
1 became n whirl of foam. A billet of
Their bathing-place was of course safe I
wood, flung from the upper deck, had
enough, for no snark could enter there; hit the shark on his tenden^t point, the
but as if on purpose to show us how lit-1
tie they cared for this, several of 'tiro | snout; and before he could rally from
this stunning Wow, I hud seized the
nearest Arabs scrambled across the reef j
anchor-chain and was safe on board.
and bStean to swim toward us; and in a
•’Captain,” said I, os the worthy man
twinkling the water around our ship
came
up just in time to witness my
swarmed with dusky figures (including
ascent, “I shall certainly take your ad­
not a few round-faced ••pickaninnies” vice after this.”
\
'
•who could not have been more than six
“ Dare say.you wilL when it’s too late
ar seven years old at the outside, plash- to
. be of any use!” growled the uncouring tad paddliisg about as merrily as if
teous skipper. “lalways thought you
no such thing as a shark had ever been
was a fool, and now I’m sure of it.
heard of.
This was certainly not complimentary,
“Some o’ them chaps ’ll be gettln’
but on reflection I was much of the same
picked up, if they don’t look out,” said ,
opinion myself.—Harper's Xpung Pvoplc.
a young sailor, looking down at them
over tbe bows.
A Cincinnati Hermit.
“Not they!” rejoined a veteran
“ salt,” who bad made the Bed Sea voyCincinnati has a strange hermit in
' age many a time before. “Sharks nev­ Edward Holroyd. He was once a parter touches a Harab.”
nefjnalarge and successful dry-goods
“Noradarkey neither.” added an­ house, ana at that time was public
other. “I’ve see’d the darkies in the spirited, jovial and widely known.
West Injies. iist afore they dived, put Twenty years ago he retiree! suddenly
tar on the palms o’ their ’ands where from biHiness, secluded himself in a
they was rubbed white, so as to give the very handsome suburban residence, and
•harks nothin’ to aim at. like.”
has’never since been oft the premised*
“I take it them H&amp;rabs ain’t good For months no human being sees him.
enough to suit Mr. Shark’s taste, and his orders to the family who live in the
mayhap it’s the same way with the dar­ house being sent from his room in writ­
kies,” said No. 1, writh a grin.
ing, and his food being passed in
And the two old sea-dogs, perching through a ricket.
The building is
themselves upon the bulwarks, ‘watched
geing to ruin through neglect and tho
with a look of quiet amusement the grounds are untended, but neither
whiri of lean brown limbs that kept through stinginess nor lack of means, as
darting to and fro like shoals of fish his property has appreciated to two
through the cool, clear water.
hundred and fifty thousand dollars in
"You see,” remarked No. 1, “there value, and he frequently gives away
ain’t a sign o’ thdr bein’ touched, and money in charity. He takes the* daily
Ct there's lots o’sharia closely. I’ll
newspapers, and seems to keep informed
bound. But if you or me. Bill, was
as to what is going on in the world, but
to jump in there, we wouldn’t ha’ will have nothing to do with it, and
touched the water afore there’d be ’art lately refused to see one of his former
a dozen o’ them sea-lawyers at us all to business partners. Many of his old as­
once.”
'
sociates believed he was dead, so com­
This conversation, following so close­ pletely had he dropped out of notice,
ly upon the Captain's warning, certain­ when a description in the Enquirer of
ly did not encourage me to try a swim his manner of existence called their at­
in these perilous waters, and a little in- tention to him. He is now eighty. The
ddent which occurred that very after- ,caise of his seclusion was his wife, with
icouraged me still less. ’
whom ho quarrelled, and who obtained
i standing near the binnacle, a
. divorce, compelling him to provide
ig the bursting of the waves for her a separate maintenance^ This
reef, when one of them suddenly isoured him, and he vowed to be done
to a high jet of glittering sprav, with human heinga
off a shower of tiny rainbows In

Which

again

the whole &amp;ea appeared to

__ —Mr. William Chambers eays in his
journal that a medical Superintendent
of a large prison told him lately that
there is no condition of society‘within
where the health is so

are, as no climate

WAGONS ONLY: $60.00.

leave elder in _
cellar during several years and wonder
that it does not clang* into sharp vfae-

A-UOMPLETE USE OF

people. They are preaumedly ignorant ,
of the fait that quite a high temperature “
, Favorite
and the presence of a large amount erf
of
air are necessary to change cider into ' the kind received by Dr. David Kennedy, of
vinegar. The sweetish Alcohol which ;Handout, N. X.
ceive -an additions! amount of oxygen
(tom tho air in order to become changed
into vinegar. The better the eider or
other liquid that is exposed to the at­
mosphere. anti the higher the tempera­
ture. provided it is not so high as to
CAi.se rapid evaporation^ the quicker
will the desired change take place
Ci­
der kept in full, tight barrels and stored
in n cool cellar may * become converted
into ti tolerably strong vinegar, but a
very long time will b«- required to bring
aUi'iit the change. If a vent is left in
the barrel, or the bimg is out, and some
of the consents of tbe Darrells occasion­
ally drawn out,’ the change will be much
more rapid, it the barfel is removed
from the cellar and occMionaily moved
from side to side, the conversion of the
contents into vinegar will be much more
speedy. If the barrel is taken into the
kitchen and treated in the wanner men­
tioned above still better results will bo
reached.
.
In all large establishments for mak­
ing vinegar on an extensive scale there
are arrangements whereby the material
is exposed over a large surface or a
large amount of air is made to pass
through the material The temperature
of the room where the operations are
carried on is kept a*, tho point most
favorable for the union of oxygen with
.the alcohol of the liquid. It Is not eco­
nomical. however, to procure appara­
tus of this kind in cases where only
a few barehu or a single barrel, of ci­
der or other material arc to be con­
verted into vinegar. It is cheaper in
Such a case to allow the operation to go
on slower, and to'dispense with thfc
use of apparatus- that costs considera­
ble, money and occupies considerable
space. Ito' the opinion of ninny, v negur made by the slow process h ■’» it bet­
ter flavor nnd is less likely to become
cloudy than that made by any of the
quick jiroceoe-. Vinegar can be made
in a kitchen or other moderately warm
room at any season of the year. but. the
presence of the generating barrels is
objectionable. The change from alco­
hol to'vinegar will go on quite rapidly
in the open airfrum the present time till
the occurrence of cold weather. A
sh&amp;l open on the south side furnishes a
favorable place for generating vinegar.
The generating barrels in a building or
on the open ground should rest on sup­
ports raised at least a foot from the
surface of lite earth. They should not
be more than two-thirds’filled, as by
leaving considerable space above the
liquid there is a large? surface exposed
to the netjon of tiro air. The ouugs
should be taken out o£ the vessel» nnd
to pre.cn. Insects from entering theta
the holes -lioind be c'vervd with wire
gauze or netting. If holes are bored
in the ondp of the barrels near the
chime—thnt is. on a line with the bung,
more air will enter, arid the process of
conversion into vinegar will go on
faster. *
If a few quarts of hot, strong vinegar ;
be poured into a barrel and well shaken I
about before it is filled with cider it will j
make a much better generator than one
that has not been thus treated. The
occasional addition of a small amount of
strong vinegar to the contents of tho
barrel will favor the change into vine­
gar. Agitating the contents of the bar­
rels also aids the change. The^Frvnch,
who nro^clebrated for making tine vine-,
gar by the slow process, practice draw­
ing off a portion of the contents of one
vessel that has become • uite soar and
adding it to a barrel whose contents is
still tolerably sweet. It is believed that
vinegar operates by what is known as
presence action to cause alcohol to ap­
propriate more oxygen. Some burse­
wives make use of this principle to make
vinegar . constantly_Jn_ the cask from
which they are drawlrig off for nsr^m
the family? Having n vessel partly tilled
with strong vinegar they mid as they
have them on hand, in small quantitie*s
at a time, sweetened water, cold tea,
sour cider, and wine, and the juice of
berries and tomatoes. Vinegar made
from these inexjiensive material and
generated in this way is often very fine,
though its strength and flavor are varia­
ble. ' Cider to which sulphate of limta
mustard seed, or other articles have
been added for the pnrpom* of prevent­
ing it from becoming sour can not be
converted into mod vinegar. The mhli'ion of some of the juice of red currants
or raspberries insures a fmeVolor and a
delightful flavor. A mixture of the
natural acids contained in sour fruits
and acetic acid, which is the base of
vinegar, is superior to any pure vinegar
as a condixrient, though it may not make
as good a preservative. It is likely that
natural vegetable acids, citric and malic,
for instance, will in the near future
Largely take the place of vinegar for
table use.—CAXca^ie TSmra.

--Elmer Slusser was a deformed
child. When ins mother died in Louis­
ville his father had some difficulty in

Tbe hotel keepers al lhe summer resorts are

Buggies, Carriages, Wheel Harrows «nd
Cultivators, Mounted Seeders,
and^kinds of Plows.

REED S GENUINE SPRING TOOTH HARROW
■010 SCRREERS, SQUARE DRABS. ORIRD STORES

WHAT IT DID FOR AN OLD L A DY.
Coshocton Station. N. Y„ Dec. 28, 186&lt;S.
GKXTh—A number of people had been using
your Utters here, and with marked aueccaa. la
one case, a lady of over seventy years, bad
been sick for years, and for the past ten years
SEWING MAOHINES.
lias not been able to be around half the time.
About six mouths ago she got yo feeble she
was helpless. Her old remedies, or physicians, PLOW POINTS for the Oliver Chlllek. Wlard, Three* Riv­
being of no avail, I sent to DcjkwU, 4tt miles
ers, Bryan, Cate, Curtis, Dodge, Robinson
away, and got a boule of Hop Bitten. It im­
And many other Plows.
proved her so she was able to drew benelf and •
walk about tbe bouse- When she bad taken
In
fact,
to keep a full and complete stock of first class Hardware and Fanning Tools. Call
tbe second bottle she was able to take care of
and
sec
them
before
buying.
tier own room and walk out to hr neighbor’s,
and baa Improved all tbe time since. My wife
and children also have derived rreat benefit
from their use.
W. B. IUtbway. ’

Flab don’t bite because they arc hungry, but
simply gnaw away out of curiosity, just aa a
man keejrn fooling around a buzz-saw.
‘BE KIND TOTHE SICK.
The only medicinal toqlc specially adapted to
enfeebled invalids and infanta is Brown’s Iron
Bitters. It will not Injure lhe most delicate,
but gives new life and new strength to both
mind and body. All leading physicians arc
now recommending it preference to all other
tonics.

HERE WE ARE A ft A TH!
-WITH A FULL STOCK OF-

Bug-g-ies

Propping up peach trcre to prevent them
from breaking down under the weight of fruit
is tbe news from all parts of North Carolina.
HOP BITTERS ARE THE PUREST AND
BEST BITTERS EVER MADE.
They are compounded from Imps, malt, Bt?
ehu, mandrake and dandelion,—the oldest, best
and most valuable medicines in the world, and
contain all the best and most curative proper­
ties of all other remedies, being the greatest
Blood purifier, Liver Regulator and Life and
Health Restorer Agent on earth. No disease
or 111 health can possibly long exist where these
bitters are used, so varied and perfect are their
operations.
.
They give new life and vigor to the ag d and
infirm' To all whose employments cause irreg­
ularity of tbe bowels or urinary organs, or who
require an apetizer, Tonic nnd mild stimulant,
Hop Bitters arc invaluable, being highly cura
live, tonic and stimulating, without intoxicat­
ing.
.
•
No matter what your feelings or symptoms
arc, what the disease or ailment is. use Hop
Bitters. Don’t wait untill you are sick, but if
you ouly feci tsul or miserable, uh- Herd Bittere
at once. Il may save your life. Hundreds
have been saved by so doing. 8500 will be paid
for a case they wilt not cure or helm
Do not suffer or let your frieuda suffer, but
use and urge them to use Hop Bitters.
Remember Hop BiUeni is no vile, drugged,
drunken nostrum, bat tbe purest and licet med­
icine ever made; the “Invalid's Friend and
Hope," and no person or family should be with­
out them. Try the bitters to-day.

George Washington had i. hatchet, but he
never ground It at the public expense.

Mothers of ailing daughters should look well
to the cause. Perhaps they need the strength­
ening and regulating infUicnce of Zoa-Phora.
The effect of delay may be life-long suffering.
The Irishman'iTdeflniUon of prophecy: “The
memory of events that have not yet transpired.
A VIGOROUS GROWTH
Of the hair Is often promoted by using Parker’s
Hair Balsam. It always reaterea the youthful
color nnd lustre to gray hair: gives it new life
and removes all irritation and dandruff.

Wagons
OUR LINE BUGGIES
EMBRACES

Timkins,
Dexters,
v
Phaetons,
White Ghappel and„Qoai Boxes, hnng with Elliptic Springs.
Two and Three Spring Democrats.
UR WORK IS ALL DONE UPON HONOR. BUGGIES

made from Second Growth Hickory.
OOur being
Tops are lined with All-Wool Indigo-Dyed Goods and

Warranted not to Fade. W. H. Atkinros, a painter, whose
work has never went back on him, has charge of our paint de­
partment,and can be relied on. Bolts, Dash Feet, Body Loups
and Stays are made from Norway Iron and the entire buggy
ironed in a desirable and superior manner and warranted.

WOMAN CAN'

HEMES CTW
wus'-rls THE HOPE

‘E./X-' iTHC RAC

Until you have ' thoroughly examined mine. Spokes made
from Second. Growth Stock and the wagon is made to stand
the wear and tare of our roads.
£3TI HAVE IN STOCK A NUMBER OFtaSt

l-'iir-Ht Ac Bradley’s

Chlled Plows, Hay Rakes and Cultivators
Which I will Sell at Cost to Close out.

E. COOK
LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S
VEGETABLE COMPOTOS.

LAPSUS UTERI, &amp;C-

OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE

Find Great Belief I* Ila Uae.

WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH

THREE INCH TIRE

length found a place for him with Mrs.
Newton, the wife of an intimate friend.
Mrs. Newton pitied the boy for his mis­
fortune. and it was supposed that her
tendernesH toward him arobe solely
from a sense of duty; but when his
father got ready to marry again, she
asked to keep him permanently. This
was refused. She declared that they

AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING

BETTER THIN COMMON TIRE

suited to

SCHOOL
BOOKS,
SCHOOL
8TATI0ME&amp;Y.

We believe the
wboi«*i« gud R«- into general use.
J'lkritovrH,
Sold by C.
ErSSTVS

is destined to cone

L Glasgow, Nashville,

Hartings, Mich., Sept.

�MAIN LINE.

habitant* than twenty aaeea loaded
%h madtetae.-Old Baying.

prick: siao,

nr paid in advance

To

Advertisers:
T«a News ba&gt; double the number of rradert
fa Ute Flrat Repreeenftlra District of Barry
cixuitv, than any other paper circulating there­
to, and our ratal ot advertising are lower th&amp;n
any other flnt daw country weekly tn the atete.

burdens are still placed upon many lit­
tle children in multitudes of miserable
tenerbest*, where both
father
and
mother
are forced to strain every to do
------------- - and to Like
nerve to earn the daily bread. This is
- — — —household duties and
sad, but perhaps inevitable in such simple errands will not seem burden­
some if they are not overtasked.
Real
But -how is it in more prosperous
homes*
Art. fathers and mothers

mind, longing—«s God made it to do—
for its time of play?
Should the far­
mer-father expect his young boy, after
“driving the cows,” banging in wood,
PERUSE THESE LIBERAL AD. RATES.
pumping wUer, and doing “chores"
generally, to gather apples or harvest
AOO corn with him, for hours together?
Mother, are you not demanding too
much of your slender little daughter,
when she, be it ever so willingly, works
&lt;00
14.00
about all the forenoon with you, setting
TOO
IMO
the table, washing the dishes, sweeping,
dusting, ironing, and carrying in her
young arms tho chubby baby?“What!" you ask: “wnen there is
tlou and eight cents for each anbaequent tnoerso much to do, are noc the children to
tkm.
ORNO STRONG,
help?’’ Most certainly. It is their duty^
Editor and Proprietor. to help willingly; it is yours to sec that
they do not work too much—too long at
a time. Better leave something undone
than to “make Jack a dull boy*;" bet­
ter have plainer food and clothing than
to see your little girl, in her young days,
VIL
8.
Ill
overburdened with multiplied household
Ynsldcnt—
cares.
Some parents seem to forget their own
childhood—the weariness, the aching
bones, the perpetual running on errands,
rniMtt-H. A. oarucr, r. 1. uoise. «. n.
the reiterated “do this,” “do that," and
Demaray, IL R. Dickinson, H. M. Lee and tho intense longing to get away from
work, the necessity of which they were
not old enough' to realize. Said a little
StarirtiM.
child plaintively, not long ago, “No­
body ever thinks I am tired; Tt is ‘An­
ETHODIST EI'J*COPAL CHURCH—A. D. NawTON. Paator. SvrvloM every Sabbath at 1QK
nie, you just run up stairs,’ or ‘you run
down cellar,’ all day long; and my feet
ache, too."
Except in cases of the
sternest necessity, has any ono the right
TVY LODGE NO. 37, K. of P-, meets at Its
1 Castle H*U, Nashville, Michigan, every thus to sap tho joy of childish life?
But there is an opposite error; and in
Friday evening, for the encouragement and
support of-all worthy, true, steadfast and hon­ many families, especially in those where
orable Brother Knights.
there is no lack of money, the younger
L. E. Lentz, K. R. 8. Okxo 8thono,C. C.
members are scarcely expected to help
themselves, much less others, even in
.Miscellaneous Cards.
little things. No matter what the cir­
MORY PARADY, Justice of tbe Peace. cumstances of the parents, the little ones
Office, Comer Main and Sherman Streets. should be trained to take care of them­
selves u&gt; some extent as soon as they
A. FOOTE PHYSICIAN A BURGEON are old enough; to be tidy; to be con­
• Sucestor to Dr. Wickham. Office and siderate; to be trusty- to be helpful to
residence at Dr. Wickham’alatc
office.
brother or sister.
Without denying
Prompt attention to calls night or day.
them their rightful inheritance of play,
R. E W. MURRAY. Office over F. T. they should be taught how to be useful
Boiae'ti Drug Stere. Residence Corner —not only because it is a part of their
Reed and Middle Sts.
education, but because it is a part of
their happiness.
R. C. W. GOUCHER, Electlc Physician and
If you have a house full of servants it
Surgeon, is prepared to answer all calls
may be more difficult, but ought not to
that may bo made for his services. Office and
prevent the children from learning that
labor is honorable; that to rely upon
tMENTER, M. D. Office orer
themselves is not only right but noble.
Drag store, VsnnontvUle, Mich.
How many servants might truthfully de­
clare that it takes half their time to
“pick up” after the children.
How
Art Prompt attention given to all business
many children, quite old enough to help
entrusted to my care. Conveyancing a opeclalthemselves, are not only “washea,
dreased and oombed" by the nurse-maid,
1AP. N. DUNHAM, proprietor “Monarch'
J Billiard Rixm. basement Boise’s drag but are never expected to put in' place
store. Everything new, neat nnd orderly. No one of the scattered articles which litter
the room where their toilet is completed.
Even where there is but one servant, or
LIEBHAUSER, Merchant Tailor and deal- none at all, the mother often says, “Oh,
• er in Ready Made Clothing. Bee me I cando it better myself." Of course she
before vou purchase clothing. Fits guar- can; and so, for the convenience of the
moment, the blundering little hands lose
the training which would make them
careful and skillful.
The training is not difficult, but de­
TTIRAM R. DICKINSON, manufacturer of mands patience and sympathy with the
JLL and dealer in Hard Wood Lumber. Build- child. The chief ena In view in the
tnr Material a speclaltr Caah paid for loga. Mill earlier lessons is not tbe accomplish­
and yard on Sherman BL, at M. C. R.R. crowing.
ment of a particular task, but the train­
AMES FLEMING, practical Jeweler and ing of the child to help himself—to be
A baby of two years may fold
Watch-maker. Clocxa, Watchea, Silver and useful.
Plated Ware, Jewelry audOptical Goods. Rock­ his own bib and put it in place after
ford Watches a specialty. Repairing and Engrav- each meal. Fold it smoothly r Oh, no!
taw done in a workmanlike manner.
The dear little follow will, with infinite
trouble, produce at first a shapeless,
r\RXO STRONG, plaini
crumpled bundle twisted into hopeless
V The best facilities f
wrinkles, and will hold it up triumph­
antly for your approval.
Check your
applause to laugh at the bungling re­
sult, and give him what ho expects, a
rewarding smile and kiss. Don’t grieve
ACOB O8MUN. Liveryman, bam near Wol­ the child at this time by unfolding the
cott House. First daw turnouts at reason­
able retea. Bjxxial rates to commercial men.wrinkled bib to show how it might be
Funeral and wedlng parties furnished with car­ smoothly laid; you are only teaching
him now that, after having used it, he
riages oa abort notice.
t^f
sflould take some care of it. At another
time you can show him the exact way;
Planing
but if you insist on his doing it exactly
right at first you will probably teach
him at the same time to forever hate
the laborious task.
Your little daughter three or four
years old may wash her own face and
hands. But don’t expect her to learn
to do it tidily in one or many lessons.
She will wet her apron, let the water
run down her neck and up her arms,
and over the basin and floor; she will
be a good deal more interested in rubbest of stock and warranted. First door aontb ut_ _
J
&gt;

aashrillt girrrtorg.

M

E
L

D

(

S

t________________

J

J

Betos'* hardware.

•pj A. BARBER, H. D.,
HOMtEOPATIIIC

Physician and Surgeon.
BUte Street*, Nashville, Mkb.

yyOLCOTT HOLME,
&gt;'a»H vill® MicHlffun.
A. 8. Foote, Proprietor.
Thl»l» a new Bote!, centrally located. »ei
nd IU patron* are olwiye tare of &lt;ettlr&gt;&lt; bei
oownodaUoc* for tbe anraon*. &gt;&gt;*&gt;&lt;]. than
•&lt;ber hotel in luny county. Tkre firal-cla

g A. BUSH,

BOOT AUD SHOE MAKER,
MASMT1KXK,

•

MICM.

p ATHBVN H+KJMK,

make preparations
.
confuse her with many directions; let
her -learn a little at first, and have a
good time in so doing.
Very soon
she can be taught to arrange her clothes
neatly at night, and to put them on in
the morning; some of the garments
she can fasten herself.
Did vou never
watch a tidy girl laboriously buttoning
her own boots ?
She can help put the
room in order and flourish a feather
duster over the furniture. No matter if

they are only taught in a gonial, pleas­
ant way, and their tender years and
childish needs held in considerate and

Fink Eye In Hones-

J

Dr. 0. E. Page writes to the editor of
the Boston Medical aud Surgical Journal
as follows.
This disease in horses is one of tho
varieties of catarrhal or influenxa colds,
so-called, prevalent in this climate
among human beings, and springs from
the same cause, namely,'excessive, over
frequent, or otherwise injudicious eating.
The custom of working or exercising
horses directly after eating; of feeding
them directly after hard work, and be­
fore they are’thoroughly rested; baiting
at noon, when both these violations of a
natural law are committed; these are
the predisposing causes of pink eye, aud
of most diseases that afflict our horses.
The symptoms 'denominated pink eye
are not indicative of dangerous disease,
unless feeding is kept up; but if dt is,
then pneumonia, which is merely an
aggravation of the original disease, is
very likely to result. Keep the horse
quiet, dry, warm, and in a pure atmos­
phere. The nearer out-door air the bet­
ter, and stop kis feed entirely at the first
symptom of disease, and he will speedily
recover.' As prevention is better than
cure, horsemen will do well to heed the
hint'here given and keep their creatures
from contracting this or any other ailmeat. It has been domonstated in tens
of thousands of cases, in family life,
that two meals are not only ample for
the hardest and most exhausting labors,
physical or mental, but altogether best.
The same thing has been folly proved
in hundreds of instances with horses,
and has never in a single instance
failed, after a fair trial, to work the best
results.
An hoar’s rest at noon is vastly more
restoring to a tired animal, whether
horse or man, than a meal of any sort,
although the latter may prove more
stimulating. The morning meal given,
if possible, early enough for partial
stomach digestion before tho muscular
and nervous systems are called into
active play; tbe night meal offered long
enough after, work to insure a rested
condition of the body; a diet liberal
enough but never excessive; this is the
Jaw and gospel of hygienic diet for
either man or beast.
If it be objected
that these conditions can not be fully
met in this active work-a-day world, I
reply, let us meet them as nearly as
possible. We can, of course, do no more
than this; but we can come nearer the
mark on the two meal system than on
three. I will add, in parenthesis, that the
nervous disorder commonly known as
“pulling" will yield readily to this
principal of treatment.
It makes the
puller healthy; he is better nourished
and therefore lees “nervous,” and he
will do more reading, and without ex­
citement or profuse sweating. He is not
made less ambitious by reason of re­
duced muscular power, but by reason of
better digestion and assimilation—more
nourishment
and
less stimulation.
Horse dealers or others whose business
or pleasure depends on the plump
appearance of their animals, regardless
of tho size of their muscles, who must
have a horse fat if he is not fleshy, for
stylo, may have to take the chances and
feed three times a day; but of this I am
by no means sc sure.
I have never
tried to fatten my horses, for I lor-j t^o
learned that fat was disease, but f have
always found that if a horse does solid
work enough he will be fairly plump if
he has two sufficient meals.
Muscle is
the product of work and food; fat may
be laid on by food alone.
But for per­
fect health and immunity from disease,
restriction of exercise must be met by
restriction oi diet. Horses require more
food in cold than in warm weather, if
performing the same labor. In case of
a warm spell in winter I reduce their
feed, more or less, according to circum­
stances, as surely as I do the amount of
fuel consumed.
I also adopt the same
principle in my own diet. The result is,
that neither my animals nor myself are
ever for one moment sick.

Oats, Peas and Bye as Pasture for
There is no question about green
oats and peas being a most appropriate
food for pigs, and that it oomes at the
very season when pasture is apt to be
short. Corn being the almost universal

portaat that the summer food of P*gs
should be more nitrogenous and better
adapted to the development of muscle
and bone than corn.
The pea is very
rich in muscle and bone-building ele-

corn in this respect. Tbe oats, also, air­
gist in holding-up the pea vine, so as to
prevent early lodging, and thus cause it
to-retain its succulence longer.
The
crop should be sown in the proportion
of two bushels of peas and one of oats
She is per acre, and well covered.
The drill
teeming.
puts them in best.
The united crop
Boys should be tidy in their rodms as should produce from forty to sixty
well as girls. As soon as they are old bushels of grain to the acre.
The suo•cough, let them have a cosy, prettily
furnished bedroom to themselves, and
teach them bow to be orderly.
Do not let them toss things here and they will then devour the whole plant,
there, for tbe maid to “pkl up.” If, and it contains as much nutriment aa
after your boy has left his room in the when fully ripe.
Ths succulent stalk
morning, his bed looks as if he bad contains irom io
turned a somerset inside and come out

tho eminent
Pasteur, and his cure
inh produces a mild

been followed by a discovery that
promises to be more important in its'
results by Dr. Koch, of Benin. Dr.
Pasteur is saving the li«-es of sheep and
cattle by inoculation with tbe bacillus
after it tias been modified in ita. char­
acter by cultivation in the bodies of
bovine*. Dr. Koch may yet save the
lives of human beings from the results
of a disease hitherto considered incurable
by a very similar process.
Prof. Tyndall, who has carefully
studied Dr. Koch’s experiments, and
who. it will be remembered, was the
original discoverer of the bacteria and
their insidious danger to man, has
written to the Landon Timis his im­
pressions of Koch's discoverv. and
they have been reprinted in the Chicago
Tnbunc. In tho course of his examina­
tions he found in every case that the
tubercles contained a parasite, the
bacillus, and that it wm this minute
organism that produced the tubercle,
and, transferring by inocculation the
tuberculous matter from diseased to
healthv animals, be never failed to pro­
duce tho disease. He developed several
generations of the bacilli without the in­
tervention of disease, and these purified
parasites in every case also generated
the disease. ’ ’
These experiments were so many times
repeated with different animals and in
different forms that there can remain no
doubt that Dr. Koch has discovered
what has never been known before—the
origin of consumption and of other dis­
eases like pneumonia andpbthisis. This
is a great step gained. The cause dis­
covered, it now remains for science to
find the remedy that will destroy these
parasites and prevent their recurrence
by inoculation or some other form of
cure. Pasteur’s remedy, in cases of
splenic fever, as we have already said,
is inoculation with the bacillus after it
hM beenmodlfied in character by cultiva­
tion.' Dr. Koch has attempted "a similar
modification with the tubercle parasite,
but after repeated cultivation the viru­
lence remains. Prof. Tyndall and those
competent to pronounce an opinion,
however, believe that the intensity of
virulence will be greatly diminished by
future experiments in cultivation.
Meanwhile it is not a secret in the
medical world, or at least among some
of the more eminent physicians, that
Dr. Pasteur himself has made experi­
ments of a highly interesting character
in the destruction of these parasites. It
is well known to all surgeons that car­
bolic acid is very efficacious in destroy­
ing bacteria in gunshot wounds, sword.cuts, or other injuries of this kind, and
that the proper use of its agency hM
been hindered by its impurity.
Dr.
Pasteur found it ujk&gt;u analysis to con­
tain traces of poison and foreign sub­
stances that were harmful enough to
prevent its perfect operation, and suc­
ceeded in removing them and producing
a perfectly pure acid, with which he has
been experimenting bv hypodermic in­
jections with remarkable success in
cases of consumption and its kindred
diseases, as well as cancer. Where the
diseases were long seated and tho
. patient too weak and too far gone to re­
sist the disease, he has prolonged life,
and in the incipient stages be has cured
in almost every case. A prominent
physician of this city hM been experi­
menting in a similar direction with pure
carbolic acid, which can now be ob­
tained. and hM met with success in two
or three cases of consumption in its
early stages, and in one deeply-seated
case of cancer. These experiments, it
need not be said, are being watched
with great interest by the profession.
Having discovered the cause, it would
be a reproach to science if she did not
vigorously seek to discover the remedy.
Consumption is tho ghastliest and most
deadly ivc
foe that
lu&lt;m. confronts
vuuuuuw the
uuc human
uumau
race. It iz
is zLzzz*
almost zrlrzzzzl
universal. It iz
is ~
no
z
respecter of persons or «s
of w.tinn.
nations. iw
Dr.
Koch himself says that “ If the serious­
ness jf a malady bo measured by the
number of its victims, then the most
dreaded pe&gt;ts which have hitherto
ravaged the world—plague and cholera
included—must stand far behind the ono
(consumption] now under considera­
tion:” and that one-seventh of tho
deaths of the human race arc due to
tubercular disease, while fully one-third
of those who die in active middle-age
are carried off by the same cause. Im­
portant as Dr. Koch’s discovery is, the
greater one remains—namely: the reme­
dy. Having gained one vantage in the
combat with the destroyer, it is to be
hoped science will press on until the
victory is complete.—Chicago Tribune.

Mr. Darwin, whose health- had not for
many years been good, had been suffer­
ing from a weak heart for some little
time past, with recu-rring fits of faint­
ness. but ho was not -tifficiently ill to be
confined to his room, nor, indeed, until
within a fortnight to the house. About
two months since the symptoms devel­
oped themselves in a more aggravated
form, and about a month ago he was
forbidden to walk up or down stairs, as
the exertion was considered too much
for him. A chair waa accordingly con­
structed on which ho was conveyed to
and from his bedroom on the upper
floor, but with rare exceptions he was
sufficiently well to leave his room and
be carried to his study, from which be
walked to the adjoining rooms, or when
the weather was favorable, for a short
distance into the grounds he loved so
well
During this period he never
ceased from pursuing su*K------ *— *■'"
strength would admit of
even so late as Tuesdi
eight o'clock, he was in
staining a plant which he had instruct­
ed one of his servants to bring him.
At half-past eight ho was carried up to
his room, where bo read for
a

until within a quarter at an hour o
death, at which Mrs.’Darwin, his
Mr. Frank Darwin, who has for some

daughters. Miss*Darwin and Mrs. Litch­
field, were present. At tho moment of
bis dpath he was sitting, supported by
his son, by the side of the bea, on which
hqjras reverently laid so soon as it was
found that all was over.
About five-and-twenty or thirty years
since, Mr. Darwin went through a long
course of hydropathic treatment at Mal­
vern and had a special bath made for
him at Down, which he'constantly used
for a couple of years afterward. In the
village of Down, which is between six
and seven miles from Bromley, and near
Cudham, he was scarcely ever seen, as
hq confined himself almost exclusively
to the grounds adjoining his home, in
which most of the experiments of which
the world have had the advantage were
made. It was here tha the pursued his
close study of the habits of worms which
form the subject of his latest work,
minutely adjusted frames of three feet
square being fixed in various places to
enable him to follow their exact habits
under various circumstances; and here
it was also that ho pursued those researcbes the results of which were aft­
erward given in his remarkable book on
‘•The Movements of Plants.” —London
Standard.
Marked Cards.

GRANO RAPIDS DIVISION.
!&gt;«•»

STATIONS.

MiAdtovJlU

Chariott*

WARD
STATIONS.

D« troll..

Nubrille.
Middtoriii
Hammond
Grand Rapids,.

IRON

BITTERS

er CIVEN AWAY.

K

MR. WM.WESTFALL,

the corner. That throw? up a small
burr. When I deal the cards I can tell
with my eye* shut when I come to one

Dr. Kennedy's “Favorite Remedy” is being ex
tensively used by our people are as follows: J is a combination of vegetable altcrnatirea. I
relief to all cases of Kidney trouble*Liter Con ‘

I will prick four deuces or fours and
deal you three aces. Then I make you
feel sorry. Tho slight embossing that
is done by the pricker will not oe no­
ticed. The old-fashioned way of bend­
ing corners to mark cards is out ot use.

“Dr. Kennedy's Faros lie Remedy" for a*Rb
*11 druggi*ts.

ALBERT M. HARRIS, ,

Photographer's Supplies.
—The costliness of the almost useless
office ot Lieutenant-Governor continues
to attract attention. In Ontario the
Governor receives $10,000 out of tbe
federal puree; it costs the province an
additional $12,006 to $15,000 a year for

FRAMES. VELVETS.*^ATS. GLASS.
AMRRJTA N OFTICAL CO B/BOXES

15 Grand RiverAve
DETROIT. MICH.

£AKE HOUME,
e sums have been laid out
then there is tho block of

Alter the arrival

p.

Alfantio Ex.—12:W a. m. Arrive iMtreit

There are many ways of cheating at
Th much Coache* sad
poker. One is by marked cards. Ono Grand ’Upldi asd Detroit.
wun« depot al Detroit with
way of marking cards is on the bocks at Trunk and Centda Southern Rallwey..
the time of their manufacture. Here K. C. rfROWN.
H. B. LEDYARD.
are seventeen different styles of marked
cards which I sell all over tho United
States. To an ordinary observer the
backs are of an intricate and symmet­
rical pattern; but I can tell nt a glance
every card in any one of the seventeen
packs.”
“How can one remember so many
marks?”
“It is very simple when you once
learn. I will guarantee to teach any in­
telligent person to read any one of these
marxed packs in two hours. It only
needs seventeen marks to a pack. Four
marks will expose the four suits, and
thirteen marks will expose tho cards in
each suit Although the marks are so
plain that they can be read as far as you
can see a earn, they are so covered up
in the scroll work and patterns that you
would not notice them unless they were
poinfeu out to you. Sometimes the
marks are in the told of a flag; some­
times in the turn of an ornamental
scroll. Here is a pack that is apparent­
ly-ornamented on tho back with a mar­
BROWJTS IRON BITTERS are
ble pattern. By looking at the upper
left-hand corner you can plainly see a
requiring a complete tonic; cspeheart, spade, club or diamond careless­
ly thrown into the pattern. All the
mittent Fevers, Want of Appetite.
liigh cards arc denoted by tho diflerent
Ixms of Strength, Lack of Energy,
। positions of a little scoop. This a gentle
etc. Enriches the blood, strengthi reminder of the way the boys get
I scooped by them. All the low cards
life to the nerves. Acts like a
are marked with various positions of a
charm [on tho digestive organs,
I little device that looks like tho butt of a
removing all dyspeptic symptoms,
; pistol A casual observer might think
such as touting tbe food. Belching,
tho backs are all alike on each card in
Heat in the Stomach, Heartburn,
■ the pqck. Yet, in fact, each card is
etc. The only Iron Preparation
K’ ‘cd from *a separately engraved
that will not blacken the teeth or
. These cards are sold at about
giro headache. Sold by all Drug­
$1.60 a pack.”
gists at $1.00 .1 bottle.
.
BROWN CHIIMICAIj CO.
“But do not these printed marks soon
become known among gamblers?"
Baltimore, Md.
“ Yes. Then there is a way of mark­
ing cards specially for one pack, which
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.
costa $7 or 88. Ibis is done to cheat
gamblers. I knew a man who went in­
I to a gambling game up town, and
nlayedand lost several nights at poker,
Zimmerman Fruit Dryer
lUtr a»&lt;i far Tern* Aldrw
j Then he put private marks on an ordiZIMMERMAN FRUIT DRYER CO, Cincinnati, O.
j, nary
of playing cards, staked the
ut^3 tpack
&gt;
darky
who
furnished
the
cards
to
the
:
wuo lurauaeu me carua
mo
players to put in his pock, and ho went
1 out of the game $1,000 winner that
I. M. Flint A. Son, Props,
j night."
_ _advantage
a---- ----- _*of
------u_a
TbU houra bai been thoroughly overhauled, r».
“ Whatj-.
is l
the
marked
j cards in poser?”
•« You can tell every man’s hand as it
n will find it
od nunpie roan
is dealt before he knows it himself. If
he gets a low hand you can often bluff
him out of his stake at tho start- If he
Eta a high hand you know when to
ep out But when your turn oomes
to deal you can give each plaver what­
ever cards you -please. Watch mo deal Of Duchess Co., N. Y., 80 years of age, snffervil
this pack. I wul give you. while you
Continually for ma nt years from Stone in
the Bladder.
are watcMng me, either the second or
third card from the top without detec­
Great age and painful disease arc a sad com
tion. If I see a good card on top I slip bination. Yet Mr. William Westfall, fo merh
it down and keep it for myself, and of Rock City, Duchess Co., N. Y., now of Wash,
ington Hollow, in the same county, came to th«
office of Dr. David Kennedy, the eminent Pin
and Burgeon, of Readout, N. Y., som&lt;
chance of getting a good hand is very sician
time since. In a condition to cfcl to tbe sympa
slim.” •
•
thy of the most cold-blooded nnd hard-bc*ne&lt;
“Suppose some one else furnishes person In the world. We say be came-.be wscards that are not marked. Have you rather carried to tbe doctor's office, for be watotally bdpk-as. and - bore the weight of eight­
any waf of marking them?"
years besides. He had suffered long from B« •
•• Several. Here is a little tool called tentlou of Urine, and bad all tbe symptom* ot
a poker ring. It is apparently an ordi­ an aggravated case of calculus formation in th.
nary diamond ring. Look at it You bladder. Tbe usual Instrumental examinatloi
see nothing peculiar about it Pass your revealed the presence iu tbe bladder of a uriti
calculus of uncommon size. Dr. Kenned'
finger over the part that is inside my ary
frankly told Mr. Westfall that, owing to bi­
hand. You will feel a little sharp steel age nnd debitor, an operation wa* out of thpoint Suppose you take out a fresh question, but that he could, by tbe prescriptto:
pack of cards which I have never seen, of “Kennedy's Favorite Remedy,” together
in ten minutes’ play I will have all the with local treatment, make him comforubh
and leave him tollv? out all his days. Tb»
good cards marked with my little prick- outcome of this was that tbe patient enjoygood health to this day.
3

midnight, however, he was attacked
with pain in the chest, faintness and

end.

Mall---------------- 8,-Oi p.

O»pExprw»_..

» from $200,000
World.

�ort
»d other debris in all directions among
WasniMGroM, D. C., Junr 29, 1882.
s- large crowd assembled at the fire, &lt;
It this Washington reason ha* been
’tu. Crawford, a yonng man about 21 ) a dull .one in respect of CongreMional
--------of
•-------------*—*i- muu
y»ara
age. was»—
instantly
killed —
and! proceedings, it has been a very lively
MICH IMAX NEW*.
Ferdinand tfchenm wa* so badly injur­ one for scandals, aud with regard to
ed that he died tn a few minutes after. there it may be said that the ppbik
T he names,ef the other* injured are aa outside of Washington bear* but a
rd m Eaat Saginaw while bathing on foliowSy-A' Mr. White, in bead and one jKjrtion of what is reported from
leg severely; James Hearne, right arm mouth to mouth here. It is a question
A 4-f|kr -old child of Chan. Coff of
broken; Robert Wiley, chief engineer whether Washington is really any
SriSktoo. was found dead by falling in fire department, left ancle slightly in­ worse than other places of immortality.
a cistern, which had carelessly been jured ;'Matthew Oliver, cut under one But the espionage of the habits of pub­
left open on Sunday.
eye; Walter Grasou, a smell boy,.leg lic men is here rather closer and more
Adalbert Tabor, of Adrian, injured broken; Oscar Orchard, boy, Inn Iff dly willing to make news of discovered
•
his hand with some machinery about scalded ; Henry Barney, one leg and failure* than it is elsewhere. If truth
ten days ago. Blood poisoning result­ one arm severely cut and bruised. The were known, It would probably been
ed, and Saturday the man died.
loss on the mill t* estimated at &gt;5,000; demonstrated that most of the mature
P. J. Finn aged 17 years,, was acci­ insurance stated at &gt;1,000.
men who figure in scandal here did not
dentally shot at Grand Rapids, Tues­
first lapse from virtue in the DiMtrict of
GBAND LODGE* KHIGHTB
day, by a companion. Tho wound is
Columbia. They are apt to be more
pronounced fatal by tbe physicians.
PTTHUB.
reckless here Qian at home, although
Nelaou Lemeir, young unmarried
there is reason enough for greater pru
It was our good pleasure to attend
man of.West Bay City, fell from the
deuce, because there is here a class of
lighter. E. J.-Ring, Saturday morning, the annual meeting of the Gi and Lodge despicable characters who resort ’to
and being unable to swim was drowned. Knights of Pythias, held in Jackson on means of obtaining influence which
* A nine-years-old son of Wm. Nicklay Tuesday and Wednesday last. The public men would have, little need to
of Pittaford, was playing with a loaded meeting was well attended, every. beware of in their own neighborhoods.
gun/ July 19, when th® weapon sud­ Lodge in the state, baring three or Elsewhere men are blackmailed only
denly discharged, blowing the boy’s four, being represented. A large num­ for the sake of money ; here they are
ber of Past Chancellors received tbe
head entirely &lt;»ff.
also blackmailed for votes or for pat­
A IB-year-old lad named Gilbert fell Grand Lodge Rank, and several char
ronage. There ore politicians who do
from a third story window nt Kalama­ ters were granted to new Lodges. Tbe not scruple to use any knowledge they
zoo, striking fair upon his back, yet report of tbe Grand Chancellor showed may obtain affecting the moral reputa­
strange to say he was Dot killed nor die order to be in a more prosperous tion of others for their own advantage,
condition than ever before, die Urge
even seriously Eitrt.
and there are some who, not without
' AX Lapeer «^n the Mr Elizabeth Smith accessions of members received during reason, are suspected of employing
aged 74 ye^ra of age, administered n the year, being from the test elements spies and detectives to search out such
a dose of strychnine to her two-year- of society. The constitution for sub­
information.
old grand sun and then took a fata! ordinate Lodges was so amended that
The hours passed in the galleries of
dose herself. Both died* in about two those lodges will now elect officers in
the Senate and House furnish amuse­
December instead of June. The Grand
hours.
ment at some times and instruction at
Ephraim Axtel, postmaster at Ma­ I»dge elected die following list of ofothers. In the Senate one is, of course
comb corner*, Macomb Co, tied an iron fleers for the ensuing year :
tetter ab)e to see and hear than in the
G. C.—John It Bennett, ot Muakegon.
wedge to his neck and jumped into a
House, nnd you can easily study the
G. V. C.—D. F. Glidden, Big Rapid.
cistern one day last week, but was flail­
G. P — N. W. Edgar, Jackion.
faces and figures of many men ef whom
G K. It 8.—Geo. 8. Lyon, Kalamazoo.
ed out alive. Mr. Axtel wants to die,
fame or popular report has had much
G. M. E-—J. M. Lenhoff. East Saginaw.
it appears.
G. M. A.—John F- MUler, Battle Creek.
to say. The left band side is occupied
G. I. G-—W. B. Morac, St. CLair.
At.Grand Haven on the 95th a small
by tbe Democrats and the right hand
G.
O.
G.
—
Oroo
Strong,
Nashville.
tenement bouse burned and two wo­
G. Trustee—J. W. Hopkina, of Kalamazoo, by the Republicans. Among the form­
men were burned with it Mrs. Wm. for three year*.
er one sees the cleanly cut features of
Baker, the occupant, was one and Mrs.
It was decided that the next session Mr. Bayard. Leaning over him is Mr.
Anderson, of Fruitport tho other.
It of the Grand Lodge should be held in
Lamar and Senator, once Confederate
is believed that both women had been Kalamazoo.
General Wade Hampton aits a little be­
drinking before going to bed.
All couceeded that the session was
yond. The m&lt;4t prominent figure on
A 4-^ear-old son of Wm. Carleton one of tbe most harmonious ever held
the Republican aide is beyond a doubt,
was drowned in the river at St. Clair, in the state. Wednesday evening N.
that of Senator Edmunds, of Vermont,
tbe 29d, by faUing from the wharf on W. Edgar gave a handsome and liberal
“the watch dog of the Senate.” He is a
which he was playing. Tbe child had banquet at tbe M. C. R. R. dining
tall man, with a beard nearly white,
been absent but a short time when his rooms and on the following afternoon
and presents a fine appearance as be
mother went to look forliim and found Supreme Representative H. S. Sanford
stands upright iu his closely fitting
him lying on tho bottom in about three entertained the Chancellors at his resi­
blue coat. No man 1 has made a tetter
feet of water.
'
dence.
record for unflinching integrity.
Ilia
Last week Wednesday, a son of Syl­
Probably the Grand Lodge of Michi­
colleague, Mr. Morrill, aits beside him.
vester Shake, of Minden township, gan has never bad a Grand Chancellor
and behind them is Senator Hoar who
was burned to death while with his that will have a more brilliant and
tears a striking resemblance to Sidney
fath er in tlie slashing. Mr. Shake left successful reign, or honor it more, than
Bartlett. Two other Senators sitting
the little fellow near a burning log will John R. Bennett.
Mr. Bennett
near together, present a marked con­
heap while he went to attend to some has been untiring iu his efforts to build
trast to each other—Augua Cameron,
cattle, and during his absence the boy's up Pythianism in his native city, is nn
with hia white mustache, and Logan.
Nothing caught fire, with the above re­ enterprizing, successful business man,
The latter is precisely like an Indian
sult.
has hundreds of friends all over the
chief—far more so than was genuine
Charles White, a “ten-cent express”
state, who are proud to greet him in
driver, committed suicide at Battle friendship, and, we opine, will be able, Indian, Parker, who was on Gen.
Creek Saturday night, by taking 25 cts. during the coming year, to largely in­ Grant’s staff after the war. There can
worth of morphine. The cause of -the crease the memtyership of tbe order in te but little doubt that‘Logan has tho
act is supposed to have Deen the issu­ his grand jurisdiction. All bail! most blood of the noble red man id his
ing of a warrant for his arrest upon Knightly Chancellor, John R. Bennett. veins.
Postmaster General Howe visited the
the charge of stealing a trunk while j
Senate to-day. and held a long consul­
Carrying i|from
tarrying
i|fi
the Grand Trunk DeTeach Temperance in the School.
tation with Senator Davis of West
pot to tho
‘
if
Hichigan Central baggage
room lane week.
' The W. C. T. U. is all over the coun­ Virginia, relative to certain proposed
The
Solomon Smith, a prosperous* agri­ try particularly alive to the importance changes in the fast mail system.
cultural bachelor in the to*n of Ridge­ I of bcieiitiiic and bygenje instruction Postmaster General reassured Mr.Davis
upon alcohol uud tobacco in the public that he would do everything in hi* pow­
way, distrusting banks and strong box­ schools, and is doing all in its power to
es, had some £2,900 concealed in bis secure it. In a good many localities er to promote tbe mail system through­
barn. A fow days ago he was startled, this has already ben accomplished. The out the West, as well as in other sec
making an examination of his treasury importance of this line of work can tions of the country. A short delay is
scarcely be overestimated. It is prac­
necessary in perfecting arrangements
to find that all but about &gt;100 in gold tical prevention
instead ot cure;
of his hoarding had been destroyed, a knowledge, where ignorance is moat with tbe railroad companies to protect
maternal mouse having used the pre­ dangerous, not only to individuals, but the interest*of the govercmenL
Chairman ^Hubbell, of the “Clerk­
cious greenbacks to construct a nest, to the commonwealth. How few, in­
deed, even of those whom we call ed­
Bleeding Committee,” is negotiating
nnd reduced them to fragments.
ucated people, fully under stand the
Daniel Goggins, a Grand Rapids lab­ physiological effects of alcohol, and un­ with a discharged clerk of the treasury
orer of Irish nationality, stabbed his til these understood, and taught the to go through that department.and
wife several times with n pocket knife, rising generation, the temperance re­ collect voluntary contributions to tbe
form will be pulling up stream with
on Wednesday,inflicting injuries which one strong oar of moral and social ben­ Congressional campaign fund. The
proved fatal in 90 minutes.
The wo­ efit to the masses, where it should have last time this thing wa* tried the col­
man had for some been living separate that one stronger still to the average lector was ejected from the building,
citizen, health uud long life to the pco- but this will not be done again. The
from her husband nnd was an inmate
rle,to make its progress swift and sure.
of St. Mark’s Home, where she was be­
n a country like ours where we must sending of a collector through the de­
ing treated for ill-bealtli.
She had receive and assimilate foreigners by partment is Mr. Hubbell’s way of im­
thousands
every year, people wbo ceme pressing upon the clerks the strictly
recently sold property valued at &gt;1,900
* and Goggins called at the Home aud to u&amp; with scarcely an exception as beer /olnutary nature of the contributions.
wine ui whiskey drinkers, there must
demanded a part of the money. When be soma way devised whereby they
Anourr.
She refuse^ he killed her.
The mur­ must be educated in the interests of
Dervish Pasha, who repreeonts the
our country, w we shall be foreigners
derer wns arrested.
S. S. Foss, a well known and highly in our own land. • In no way can this Sultan in Egypt is at once the moat
be done at all as we can see, except by
respected lumber dealer of Bay City, teaching their children with ours iu the vigorous and unscrupulous of all the
Al­
was driving down Washington street public scnools, that to drink liquor in Generals of the Ottoman army.
•cc Saturday, when one of the clips sup­ this country is dangerous to their health though he is now 70 years old, he is
porting the fill gave way, allowing the and life, and will render them incap­ quite as capable of ordering a massacre
able of taking those places for which
-eroas-bar to drop on the horses heels. they might otherwise be fitted. Wheth­ of tbe Mamelukes as was Mebemet Ali
■It became numaoagab!e,and inspite of er it be attributable to the climate or himself. He speaks nothing but Turk­
the utmost exertions of the driver, who to the quality of the liquors imbibed ish, and brought two dragomans with
here, it is evident on all sides, that him to Egypt, one Arab and one
-wasa strong man, dashed wildly down
with whatever impunity tbe foreigner
the street, throwing Mr. Foss out with may iu his native country use beer, French.
wich force that after striking a tele­ wine, etc., here, they will fall victim*
DROWNED
graph pole, he was thrown about 30 to iu natural and terrible effects, quite HAN'CHETT—Friday morning, July 3let, 1882,
between seven and eight o’clock, a. m., Hot,
feet.
Physicians were immediately as readily aud deplorably a* any,either
aged
8
yean,
8 month* and 98 day*, the oidbv intoxication or by becoming full as
summoned, but the injured man died sad a spectacle—a man constantly in
within a half an hour, and an examin­ the incipient stages of inebriation, un­
• bile gathering pood llUies for tbe last day
ation developed the fact that bis neck til a little accident or slight attack of
of school, leaving father, mother and brothdisease which a sober man could readwas broken.
•iy throw off makes them an easy vic­
/
It will be remembered that, June 16, tim.—Mr*. UkooU 6'm«U m HaMmp*
a Mrs. Wilson and two children, age 7*
Attending to Wa
Bod 9, left their Wne near Newberry,
There will be a political probibitioa
' to go through the woods a mile and a
bAulf distant, leaving a boy of 12 at ma»|doetiag io Nashville, early in
Auguat. D. P. Sagendorph of Char­
flhlrrell's Ford, N. C., ta the Ravenswood (W.
lotte, and Rev. J. Hamilton of Eaton
lUinda, will address the people.
May
IMFOKTAMT TO TBAVKUCBS,
rhere
there be a general rally, from country
J tadocemenU are offered you by the
ob Route, It will pay/tm tn retd their
and village, to hear these popular and
sOMSta tobetoaad etaewhereln thta
July 17. whew the body of
---------------------------------------yr and owe chW were fnu*d | A two-year oM heifer belonging to
BRAIN AND NERVE.
Wail.’ Health Renewer, greatest remedy on
i -«■ earth far impotence, leanodL. vexual debatty,
Ac..
81. atdranMa.
JAMES Kmvru
. ..Mich.
wi.i- Depot.
*

G. A. TRUMAN &amp; SON
DAILY RECEIVING THEIR FALL

Stock

of

or

amu» are low ot r,
needful information

Fri- ux

BOOTS AM) SHOES
We. Pay Cash. For

BUTTER Salt or Unsalted &amp; Eggs,
THE CROWN SEWING MACHINE
The Cat shows

aud pat on the market

FOWLER &amp; INGERSON
Have the largest atock of LUMBER ever laid
down in Nashville.

100,000
Feet kept constantly on hand.

Pine Lumber
A specialty

Finishing Lumber,
Flwrii; (Vilii;. Silin;, Stulliig, hist
Or any thing in the building material line, ace
our stock, select what you want, and be happy.

Algo Flour. Salt. Shingles, Lath,
and Blacksmith'll Coal,
For rale st lowest prices.

I

HIGHEST PRICE PAID FOR

WHEAT, OATS, CORN, ETC.,
Ab usual.

FOWLER &amp; INGERSON.
Probate Order.
At aamatoa of th* Probate Court far th* Coast/
B*rrT' •&gt;&lt;&gt;“•■ ‘ha Probate OMm, la Ike City ot
Holings. In said cocnty, on Monday th* 17lh day
A A shows the liardened steel point* on which the crank shaft andI drive- nl.lnlv
In thn Vann
__J
wheel are hung and work. This U tbe lightest running bearing which can be made. There
'_______la

hardly
________________________________________________________
oanlly any fricuon. Point*
Points are
are adjustable
to take np th- wear and the crank on whlehthe pitmam works
W'-'l'. i»between
f.l
,the
K— ^.1
—
... .U_
—.I— direct
.. - . and avoiding *11 side n
.,1
m*nj
pointe,
thus putting
the -.
strain
poll.

B B shows the hardened steel points on which the treadle is hungand works.
They are made adjustable for taking up wear.
' C C shows the patent ball and socket joint connections of the pitman
with the crank and treadle. Br this patent arrangement the "thumping-’ heard in other mach­
ine* la prevented, aud there 1* no possible chance toe the pitman to bind at any point In the revolaUon of tbe crank, no matter bow uneven tbe floor mar be or how far from parallel the
crank and treadle tearing for the pitman may be. There is always a free and easy action of
the pitman at every point in iu stroke.
I&gt; shows the belt-replacing device, by means of which any lady or child can
throw the belt on the drive wheel instantly, and without moving from her chair.
E shows the enlarged nickel plated and polished drive-wheel. By makfng thi* wheel nearly four Inches larger in diameter, and putting the weight mostly tn the extreme
o’itaide rim of it, we make it ran easier and longer, when once started, a* it has more momentum.
F F shows the oil cape on the treadle bar for pre venting, the oil from drop-

On

mar
be »■ I ml tied ta probate•

:
1
'
&gt;bow v»aw,ir any there ba, why lhe prayer
, nd
t the petitioner .hould not be grante-l.
। And it la farther ordered, that said petitioner sire
otic* to tbe panenb &lt;nt*re*ted ta said estate, atthe

G G G show the porcelain casters, one in each of four feet of the machine. I

E. K. WHATe, AgL, At Koclier Bro’s Store.

________________________________ N**hvllle, Mich.

•

;

CLXMXRT SMITH,
Jade* &lt;

(4S-U)

IT IS A. FACT
— THAT------

NOT ONE
Of my Customers Complain

ALL READY

Guardian Male.
CORWIN GARDNER sad ANXA GARDNER,

To show you * large and well selected Stock of

GROCERIES

PmbU

CONBIBTING OF

Sugars, Coffees, Teas, Tobaccos,
Spices, Fish, Canned Goods,
Provisions, Ac., ’
------ FROM —

AT THE LOWEST PRICES

roih half of lb*
bach 1**°*
bov* drecrii^ beta* &lt;m&gt; terdoa thirty-on*-

; 11
awttee tetteklsMM •*s*r' OB
■M4ar,te*9lA teya« AwgaM.

of Jtarry,^u*:

The Nashville Mill,
--- but---

For Cash or Ready Pay.

»“*. D-'lsS?")

Crockery. Glassware, Lamps,
Stone fare, 4c.,
T6 BESKKN IN BANNY CO.

geanUaa.

YOUNG ME®

UNIVERSALLY SATISFIES.

JNO. M. ROE.

GASH PAID FOR PRUNE.

HARVEST.

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                  <text>ORNO STRONG.)

BWTOK AMD PBOPltlETOX.

)

( TERMS; 81.50 per Year
( Credit Svrsckiptioxs tl.W. *

Devoted to the Interests of the Beet Party under the Sun.
NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, AUGUST 5, 1882

VOLUME IX.

ed a sound whack.
In the evening
LOCAL GIBBLE-G ABBLE
Habersaat appeared before Esq. Parody
Xafl Pmraal CMU-CkM.
and swore out a warrant for Debolt’s
The baud bole smileth.
J
arrest. Ho presented a pitiful appearYOUR EAR, GENTLE READER.
Geo. W. Francis, new nd.
enoe with hi* face cut in several
Ad. Stanton’s baby is seriously ill.
You that are Indebted to The Nashtux* places and so swollen as to be unrecog­
Ella Wolcutt is viMting at Homer.
nisable even to his intimate friend*.
For neat, tasty job priting, see ua.
carts eoA, and to order to lire and Ite recpect- Debolt was arrested the next morning
Mrs. Flora Crueeo, is in the village.
and brought before E«q. Parody, when
Potter is the sick man of the press
he plead "not guilty” to the charge,
gave bail and started on t in search of now.
Miss Tensie Bacon of Charlotte, is at
legal advice. Whisky is st the bottom
Itou’t forget it! Don’t forget it 1
.of thejre w. The case waa adjourned Tom Niles.
Charley Middleton has returned to
until to-day at 3 o’clock.
no patron can misB It, sad shall expect a prompt
Nashville.
—It is stated that the rains of the
Mrs. 0. F. Walrath of Muskegon, is
Oaxo Brsoxo.
past week have spoiled thousand* of at H. Walrath’s.
J. V. Johnson of Charlotte, was in
that Woodland’s wheat bushels of wheat in this vicinity. All
crop will
bushel* u&gt; the acre. wheat that was left standing m “rick*,” the village Tbcrsday,
or open shocks, is damaged almost be­
Dean Fleming and wife of Jackson,
' — Wm.
ram,TIving three mfles east,
yond redemption. The prudent and Sundayed in Nashville.
.
raised
Batthat averaged 41t bush­
frugal farmer had his wheat under
W. H. Aylswortb, the new M. D., has
els to the acre.
cover, stacked, or, at least, in capped anew card in this issue.
—A big medicine man and snake shocks before the rain set in, and is
Miss Ida Haye* of Manchester, Ind.,
wizzard cryed his wares and exhibited safe, but there are many others who
is visiting Miss Ota Wlieeler.
his snakes, Friday evening.
seemed to. think that the pleasant,
Miss JuliaBissell of the cast tarrio*
—Some sneak thief invaded Geo. weather we were blessed with must with her brother, the preacher.
Ferguson’s premises,on Saturday night last forever, and made no preparations
A special car of M. C. R. R. big bugs
and robbed their clothes line of the Tor rain, and must now J&gt;«y the penalty passed over the line on Wednesday.
week’s washing.
of their neglect
. v
' ' ,
If you desire to go with the crowd
—The bank vault is completed. The
—Mrs. G. A. Truman and Mr*. L. 0. have your hair cut with a lawn mower.
same is 10x12 outride and 6x8 inside—a Crocker started to drive over to Battle
The W. C. T. JJ. will meet at Mrs
foot larger each way than the vault in Creek on Tuesday. When out about Jas. Fleming’s, Thursday afternoon,
the Homings bank,
Aug
10.
four miles their horse became frighten­
Hiram Walrath is at home again
—The wet weather of the past week ed at some pigsand shied to the right,
has caused a gloom to ’oreshadow the a back wheel of the phaeton struck a having completed his work at Grand
farmers former bright faces. Growing Mump and both ladies were percipita- Rapids.
H. N. Mosey of Maple Grove hands in
wheat in shock is what they fear.
tod to the ground. Mrs. Crocker es­
timothy heads lit inches long and takes
—Several cases of petty thieving are caped with alight bruises, but Mrs.
reported, and the hand of suspicion Truman received a gash in the face the palm.
Fred Baker’s passion for accumula­
pointe toward certain well-known par- and numerous bruises. I n fact she was
injured so severely that she was com­ ting postage stamp/* abateth not. He
has
now 54,000.
pelled to keep her bed for several days.
ing crime.
.
L. Adda Nichols on Wednesday re­
—G. A. Truman longs for more room A farmer brought the ladies and their turned from a week’s visit among
to do business in and is fitting up the badly damaged carriage back the vil­
friends in Ionia Co.
hall in the second story of his building lage.
The lightning-rod Bwindlers will
-Mr. and Mrs. ,C. Ainsworth on re­
for a clothing, carpet and trunk de­
soon begin to operate, Spare the rod
turning from Pottersville, on Thurs­
partment.
—but kill the agent
—The father who: baa any small day, and entering their residence,
Miss Minnie Cook of Hastings is vischildren and doesn’t hang fain coat found that thieves had been there dur­ iting Miss Milly DeLong, at her home
ing
their
absence.
Bureau
drawers
were
where they can go through the pockets
jast west of the village.
is either meah to his dog, or^lse can’t rummaged and their contents scat­
J. E. Douglas of Detroit Macauley
tered, but the only loss discovered is
getone to stay with him.
Bro’s, “rustling” traveler, peeped in
some five dollar* taken from a couple
—The Hastings Banner la astonished of pocket books. The tbeiyes entered upon Nashville, Wednesday.
Agt Hawthorn sold 133 tickets to
at the amount of good men that wantfto via the cellar and by the wanton waste
ran for office this falL The Banner is of cake, bread, etc., desire to create the persons who took in the firemen’s pic­
liable to be more astonished at the impression that they are from abroad, nic at Thornapple on Wednesday.
Mrs. A. J. Fenn, living near Battle
amount of “good men” who will beaten but as they, didn’t, appearently, eat
Creek is in Nashville being treated *by
this fall.
anything, Cal. is imprcscad with idea
Dr.
Goucher for cancer in the breast.
—The Knights of Pythias are now lo­ that tney do not live a thousand miles
F. T. Boise and wife returned from
catedin the Buxton building with only from Nashville, and will be apprebenthe
north on Wednesday. Mrs. B.
a thiitpartition between them and the ed in due time.
looks, and feels, much improved in
Masons. The Knights intend to be
—The firemen’s picnic at Thornapple health.
friendly and if the Masons want to bor­
Lake last Tuesday was a financial suc­
C. Ainsworth and wife and J. M.
row their goat, all they have got to do cess, and was well attended, notwith­
Wood and wife picniccd at Grand
is to say so.
standing the inclemency of the weath­ Ledge on Wednesday, with a Potter­
—Joseph Hewett, living five miles er. H. L. Cronk’s string band, of Belle­
ville party.
north, has made arrangement* to visit vue furnished music for the bowery
W. S. Barnett, wife and daughter
the home ot his childhood, England, dance, and all who loved to indulge in Ada, of Grand Rapids, are sojourning
and will start in about a week. It has thee amusement had an excellent op­ in this village, guests of Dr. Young’s
been 43 years ninco Mr, H. left tho “old portunity to do so. Ice dream, lemon­ household.
•od” to try the realities of the new ade, ginger pop, taffy candy and pea­
John Kocher, of the firm of Kocher
world, and he looks forward to his nut* were served, and the receipts of Bros., j/as gone west to look at the
visit with much interest. His mission the day wert over $100, giving the country. Colorado and Dakota are tlie
inaugurated over 40 years uo has been company about $30, after paying ex­ prospective points?
crowned with success aiw he is now penses. It is to be regretted that ma­
J. S. Beigh, a young farmer living
known a* one of our most prosperous ny who went to have a good time, took
2 miles south made himself famous on
farmers.
bottles with them, but no serious inde­ Saturday by pitching 75 loads of wlieat
—A young man went,not long ago, to corum resulted until after the midnight on to the machine table.
call upon some ladies. He sent in his train brought nearly all the company
It is probable that the members of
card, was kindly received and passed a away, when a party from Hastings bc- no other class or profession have more
pleasant evening. The next day one came boisterous in the hall, but were frequent temptations to unprivileged
of the young ladies happened to pick soon quieted. Corwin had a meager osculaticm than the clergy.
up the card again, and on the back she1 number at the Grove House,and prob­
found the fblTowing r~°One game bil- ably learned that it is up-hill business
lards, fifteen cts; dnnks,twcnty cts; two to draw a crowd away from the flregames pool forty cents; drinks, twenty men.
the prayer of every good Nashvilleite.
-cents; cigars forty-fiye cents; drinks,
—The “hay fever” season is upon us
sixty cents.” The card was returned
and the “Kerchoo!” “Kerchoo!” of boy on Sunday. As this is the first
with a note, telling the young man he
the asmathically-inchned individual is time snch an event happened to Al., he
had last his memorandum.
heard upon every corner these morn­ feels exceedingly happy,and hands out
—An ex-correspondent of the defunct ings. A sneeze, to be in good taste, cigars with liberality.
D. P. Sagendorph of Charlotte, the
Bugle, living north, became so wroth • should crack like a rifle on a clear
because hi* wife went huckleberrying, morning.
A sniveling, dry, half- Prohibition nominee for Governor, and
Rev.
James Hamilton of Eaton Rapids,
frightened-to-death sneeze is odious,
she brought home, threw them on the but for one of your full, clear, sonor­ will speak at the Opera House in Nash­
ville,
Friday evening, Aug. lltli. *
ous. detonating, reverberating exploThis is. indeed, an unfortunate sum­
sions—one of those reports that set the
carpet with bis feet. Evidently he had glasses on the sideboard a jing­ mer for picnics. A huddle of men,
good training while with the Bugle, for ling, and awake pussy—we say for one women and children in summer clothes
not satisfied with this deviliabneaa, up­ of theme earthquake sneeze*, we have a out in a grove this season, shivering
on retiring, be kicked his long Buf­ love inferior only to ' that which we around 1 picnic table and calling for
fer-ring wife out of . bed, and what
bear to women. A receipe for a sneeze “more mustard on that ham” is not an
might have further ensued, had she of this genus is as follows: When you &gt;u»Diring right,
Prof C. B. Hall of Hastings, assisted
feel a tickling at the root of your
”
proboscis, just jump if you be seated by Prof. Austin George of the State
(otherwise, no necessity,) run to Normal school, and Prof. W. S. Perry,
—Thursday afternoon Jake Haber- the window through which the Supt. of the Ann Arbor school*, will
stow
your
head conduct the teachers’ Institute to be
bump* of philopro- held in this village, during this week
back until
powrfarinki,, kw.
White there
begimag Aug. 14th.

LIFE IK BABHVILLE
Aed Her Environ*.

wbohwl hwn dnnkic^ bearilf. b.m

•t»r ■«! liven* at &gt; piece ot Ire.li &gt;ae*t.

WEST SUNFIELD.

EATON COUNTY.

NUMBER 46.
MAPLE GROVE.

W. J. Bonnett i* putting up a fine brick «torc
at Charlotte.
A3,000 W belli* to be hung in Charlotte

Who cannot aee the com grow!
Who grieves that harvest boa come and gone.

The new ladles hall, Olivet, will be ready for
use at the opening of the fall term, Sept. 14.

• Grand Shafer returned to Liberty, Monday.
One of E. L. Shafers children has the scarlet

Mrs. Reynolds, living near Hoytville. Her age
•
Mrs. Jennie Hlkok, of Saranac, is spending 1*97.
J. B. May of Charlotte, while putting a self­
a few weeks with old friends in this burg.
School In the Kilpatrick district was rwum- binder in operation last week, had two fingers
•
rd again last Monday, after a vacation of two dipped.
The heavy artillerymen of Co. H. 6th regi­
ment, hold their ninth annual re-uniun at
pcratc in haying and harvest. Three weeks Charlotte to-day.)
J. Johnson an ex-editor of Charlotte, will be­
satisfied him and on Monday last be returned
come publisher of the Gratiot county Democrat
to his duties In the Rullson district.
Last Friday was a gala day for the Uttlc folks about Sept. 1*1.
lu the Hunter district. A picnic dinner, rheburned up six acres of wheat for EU Gallop of
pronounced by the school man, done.
Elisha Shephard, formerly a business man of
W. 8. Carter and wife of Woodland, were
hand shaking with friends last Saturday, and Charlotte, but now a farmer, will have nearly
10,000
bushels of wheat this season.
ere this, Will has sniffed the life-giving air of
F. B. Atngvr, one of the editors of the Char­
Dakota, and his feet trodden the boundless
lotte
Republican,
has completed a flue residence
prairie*. * •
^Thc following is an extract from a letter and now ablds under hi* own roof and fig tree.
Eaton county contains good farm' without
received by Mr. Hill, from bis brother in Wy­
oming : “ Our sheep have done quite well, one Dumber. Cha*. Clark pt Eaton township, sold

Hauk Spcneer and tastily returned to Fo4-

L. Parmenter can tel) yon the length, breadtit

Frank Wendell was here through harve*t,but
has retured to Muskegon.
Should thfen census taker call at Andrew
Eno's be would find a little strnger there. It’s
• boy.
Wm. Sutton, and wife of Battle Creek, were
Shoup Bros., Lave prepared themselves for
the large crop of wheat by jurchasing another
machine.

over night with him last Saturday night.

We will pay the market price, to know who
“Kit” is.
Geo. Thomas of Eagle, was harvesting with
The religion* sea of Shay town is becoming a self-binder the other day, when the machine
boistroua.
’
caught Are from friction and was In flames be­
The rain on Monday put a quetua oo stack- fore be could dismount from the reaper. It

The price of wheat will increase the acreage
of fall wheat.
We are filling a lofty condition this week—
on a wheat stack.
We hear of a cow that ha* been shot4 times,
the shot till* summer, and la a cow yet.
Miss Jennie Downing has returned home
from her Eastern visit, and taken her place be­
hind the counter.
How many times do Sunfield men have to
go to Nashville, get drunk and robbed of their
money before they take the hint
Charles Hammond, reports the sale of 110
books, entitled “Our Wild Indian.” He will
now add the “Royal Path of Life.”
Tuesday noon,—I have just been out to

■ “There now! look at yourself, you dampboolt" said a young man as be looked in front
of a mirror, on Monday, just after having two
of bls teeth knocked out by a base ball.—
Charlotte Leader. JIart Munson was the
Every one of our Eaton county exchanges
chronicles the fact that Potter of the Vt Vjlle
Hawk visited the towns their respective papers
are published in during the week. If F. M.
don't get the nomination, It won’t be because
he didn’t try.
A Mr. Corilaa of Grand Rapid#, was viewing
the Cbariottiana at work upon their artesian
bumped him so badly on the bead that he lay

Ing machinedo, to save baying a new one.”.
3rd. That It 1* tbc old “hard running" worn
oat rattletrap machine that is doing more to
injure your health than all the ricknc** you may
have combined.
4th. That you can get one of tho*e elegant
Improved Crown Sewing Machine which are
fully warranted for five years in exchange fcn.
r,ar oM m«hlM b,

tar Cash paid for fresh Butter
GOOD JUDGES
Concede that the finest and largest stock o'.
Men's, Youth’s and Boy*, Clothing, and Geate •
Furnishing Goood* ever laid down in Nashville
i* on exhibition at Phixdlk A Chicmax’*.4

P. HATCH A CO.
Are now located second door north of pottfficcFresli Taffy. Fancy Candies, the bow Cigar
and Tobaccos al way* on hand. Buy ot us am
be happyP- Hatch A Co.
LINEN DUSTERS
For Lsdies and Gentlemen reduced to Got*’
to close out, at
Guaxock*.
NEW HOTEL. ~

The N’aehvHle House, baring bren thorough 1
overhauled und lth}&gt;fdVea, R ftoW
—
accommodation of the public. Located In Un
Wbitibt.

EAST MAPLE GROVE.

Cool nights and warm days.
The scarlet fever is still raging in these parts.

2.30 race, Moliie Middleton second and Flirt
third; time, flJ4X,SJ»X.2AX&gt; In the 1.31
pacing race, beet three in Are, Bay Jim won
first money, Limber Jack second, High Jack
third; time, OIK,
2J0.
On Saturday afternoon one, Wm. Davidson,

convenient for

A FEW THOUSAND DOLLARS

WILL DIE.

bottle washer.

will bold of late enough this fall, it will be a
fair crop.
Mrs. Selestia How and Mrs. Rhoda Brown failing tn this drove rapidly off. The alarm was

BRICK!

BRICK!

drinking freely, and the next day stated that

Yankee Springs*.

Fred Ward, aged 14. employed- at the Baird
House, Charlotte, had a manta for stealing fc-

LOOK HERE!

cp missing, so did also all of the white goods
faithfully improved the time and have got their

FOUND
Charlotte. Frt-d. when ls*l heard from was on
a train bound Caudaward*, diagulaed as a fe-

WOODLAND.

FARMERS, LOOK HERE!

Win. Wunderlich lias bought the Chandler
Cborim Galloway and J. DQlecbeck, retarn-

TAKEN UP

partiea who
eachraeeiT-

He

Howard City.
While liarreating on the Joe Smith place,
Amon Wolf killed a thtee foot rattle snake and
Tim Biggs a four foot blue racer, and it was a
■poor day for snakes too.
Forest Lodge, No. 201,1. O. of G. T. of thia
^lacc is in a prosperous condition. U elected
Mrs. N. Watson, Mrs. Ltbbie Krupp and two the following officers July,
vancc of *4,800 for the wool,and expect *1,500
boys of Grand Ledge, were the victims of a
Mayo; W. T., C. 8. Duiiham; W. L G., Ltbbie
Writlst, we hope you are not in trouble.
Bally; W. O. G., Enos Wolf; W. M-, R. A.
When you wish to say anything again about
Bert Johnson fell from a cherry tree at Eat- Swift; W.F. 8., M. Culp.
“whistling hens,” if you had suffered our bit­
ter experience, you would get farther away
from home. We acknowledge the correct!^, vercly that he lay Insensible 12 hours before he
LOCAL MATTERS.
but blamed typo for making it 40 instead of 20. could be brought to.
Albert Crydcrman of Hoytville, last week
LAST CALL.
was displayed in flying colors last sabbath eve­ banged Ed. Stall, * fellow-townsman, beauti­
AU parties that are owing me on account
ning, by two persons dressed In the garb of fully, because be spoke disrespectful y of his are hereby notified that if their iDdcbtednres ta
, ’
men. Can Vermontville consistently furnish new wife. Al. did right
not paid bv the lit ot Sept, next, I ahall con­
The Island City flour mills now being built sider they don't Intend to pay me and shall take
neceesory atepa to collect the same. I mean
selves, and still be called a Christian villagel at Eaton Rapids by L. P. Roberta, arc about the
D. C. GstrrrrHready for the machinery. The mills will be de­ juat what I «ay.
God pity the young wife of one of them, and
voted to merchant work.
a- Call and see the best stock of Boots and
Mas. J. E. Clark, a well-known and blghlywealth of woman’s love, while the victim of
esteemed lady ot Charlotte, lost her bearing
that soul destroying vice.
Kit.
suddenly last week. The case Is beyond medi­
GREAT BARGAINS.
cal skill to explain as yet
BISMARK.
A Charlotte jeweler, the other day, got Merchandise for twenty days at Gmawoes’s.
Corn is allking.
drunk, got into another man’s house, unstrip­
highest market price paid for Bat- $
Gate are ripening.
ped, and got nearly into the man’s bed before ter and The
Eggs in Cash st
Wsssum’s.
Wheat harvest is over.
be was caught at It la this Thrift 1
Wheat is badly shrunken.
MONEY TO LOAN,
Farmers breathe more freely.
wbo was visiting in Potterville, died very sud­ On Real Estate at low rate of Interest of
Stacking, the order of the week.
denly of apoplexy. He was 83 years old. The
Potato bugs will have to give in.
body was embalmed and shipped home Satur­
rar Regular twenty-dollar Summer Suita
Flies are meeting out their veugence.
marked down to *16, to close out. at
day.
___________Gu*xg*&lt;’s.
Fields are dow in a shocked condition.
Last week at Bellevue when the ca*» against
“Belly-ache^ars” is becoming a drug.
Mrs. Eastman and Sam Jones for adultery
“VINEGAR”
The News is much like J lu these part*.
were called, it was found that Eastman and
Pure Cider Vinegar by the barrel or gallon,
H. R. Dicxuksox.
Jones were wanting. Both bad skipped, and
J. C. Downing, takes tn Petoskey thia week. the ease, probably, 1* ended.
THINGS
YOU OUGHT TO KNOW.
It is uncommonly healthy In these parts just
Bazzil Wells was arreted at Charlotte by
1st. That the family sewing is the largsat
Sheriff I.axclle on Saturday, In compliance with par| of a woman’s work.
Cabbage worms are doing their dirty work a telegram sent by the officer* in Jackson. He

�with which »o ।

us impatient, and rob ns

He

. izssr."
I had never dared tojfrny ,
;. A‘ tVliere did they come from?” hedeiSu^rdedf'
^Tf,ev grew. I*ap«oU-4Ike Topsy.”
I answered Helen. laughing uneasily.
j “ Where did you get them, Helen P”
I “ You are inquidtlve, Mr. Van Vieck.

;-K!T.!iy.ritSv«r
tllnx warstt» wmmUwpeep,

the groat advantage of enriching the
KWer*
’
.
„
—There h a certain way of dirtin• gulxhlng a man from n head-waiter at a
-well party, not. withstanding hot a may
I be d rawed t bo 'time. The waiter gener­
ally has a towel ou his left arm, and the
-; Iimn
man generally htu a young lady there..
;
agre'niblv.

and treating him to supper, ben and
breakfawt, beside starting him on his next
day’s journey with a. few pence in bis
pocket. The uninitiated vagrant notices,
a.* bo can hot help noticing, the constant
ure’ofthoM signs and countersign* on
th* road, and the effect* that follow
them in numerous instances. He often
sees a fellow as badly off as himself
nicked up and made much of by a per­
fect stranger, and for no reason on earth
thflt ho can two, except that one ad­
dresses another with an apparently un­
meaning catchword. Ho nicks up tho
word and employs it on all occasions, in
the hope that sometime or other it may
bring the like fortune to himself. Other
Hillv ones catch it from him, and use it,
for no reason at-all that they can . give,
as a ralutation. Thus spread over the
country such‘phrases a*: .“Have yoii
seen Simson?” "I* Murphy right?” “Is
your father working?”—Pall Mall Goultc.

bring the mung, fortunately. Is not m
Iwting. else they cxald not endure it,
The childish heart is m yet fuU of hope, debilitated, w wttwitig fn-ra dyratpaia.
and ita sources of enjoyment.so simple Btowu'b iron Bltlem will, gurelr cure j&lt;m..
and so easily supplied that the present
The C*u*di*D government b*» t»k*n op a
pain can be more speedily soothed, by.
I anticipations of coming pleasures, than i 11UCT which taink* In tne United Stat.- di*cutted
je*r» *go, aiMj te iMutog H till*.
.
' . it can be in more mature life. StlU the
darkness and disappointment* that ofThe symptom* of Itohtug Piles or* rn-&gt;;»:art
I ten oome to the little folks bring, for like psrapli stiuu, tauuoc fta-blog. nx*: st ntritf
the time, as acute pain as older peo- seems as if pin worms were mwling to or
the rectum. The more you scratch the
pie can foel' and worse in this respect: about
worse they- itch, very dlstrcHoiug. The private
|i that the
uw child
uuuu’s
o heart
ctah has
uan not
uu» yet
yes .part* «re often *flrttcd. Dr. swavtufs Ofat.
| learned the secret ot quiet, patient eu- mentis the most effective rcmedv extaatfor
this tonr.rntitig complaint. Gfres real st uhrht
durance.
v
wltlmut that desire to »cratcli. Al«n has &lt;m
A child, ii la true, finds it* pleasures

Mr- NigglM tn-day." ren.UAnalltr- l"*rk“* 1Irl- Ch;p»icli. “ H«'a RuiU&gt; a
I., yoor nanonalUr ।
1 |,^ly knew him. ho'a
i«., by Mr.
ch,M,d n^iy,..’ ..lnd«xl,” r.Sterling, uf e lurre-'
.h
Uri hu.band, mrelT. "How
He oo, ’’ he
h«ora.l
( I readln lho papor thu
“ Helen,
cried, bAr»a.h hl braath
and mokes ita plan! on a small scale;
“* ,O“ gU g
' M ' ilia wit. wSm for Europa lart wiek."ita hopes and anticipations are usually
centered on what it* ciders consider is the proof, •‘Certaioly the l»e«t renxslv ent
bwrllnitf"
ZJnwHyn A-oyte.
,
tued In my practice.” Dr. Cotton. Wooiuuxdt,
“ 1—I believe I- am,*' she said, drop'
trifle*. But to the young their plans VL.
“troubled with Hchinc Piles for over twen­
1 ping her eves
1
*ra not
to school any
and pleasures all aecm of the utmost im­ ty year*. It cured raecotuiileicly,” L- 8. Mewr
i Th.-odure oer. r knew -znolly how ha ;
•»'*» ii«J« fonr-yraroW boy to
portance, and they can not understand tuaeld. Me. Bcut for W ct« (in 3 ct. sumps)
found hi» way uut ..I U» hornm: ta. wm ! «• mamma, on hU return from hie first
the indifference shown by their parents 3 box«L .25, By Dr. Sw.yte- «fc B»n- Phltad'a
vagwh- ay.tr.
l&gt;™..htoB auninat » ' &lt;y « 'l&gt;« ktndeiwten. ‘•Why, my
&lt;?r elder brothers and sisters.
They Pa. Sold by all druxgist^.
atol.1
.-idum-Ht In urnr-trUnmodul.u-r, 1 dear, don't.you like to wra thellltleboya
cling to their fancies as earnestly as
On arwnmt of Ils melting so quickly, the
M b. ihoe into the .treat, o! h’at.toly and jprtaf • “ l ea, but I don IwuU to
men do to tho great schemes which they New Orleans Picayune thinks that winded ict?
osrrtw
end
pair
atandEg
at
tho
d..or
t
l
f
‘
&gt;.
”
per.uted
the
boy:
"M
um
my
' Utflo ci iu&lt;1f»b dream
labor night and day to perfect.
The in not what to cracked
to be,
&lt;• laid
slmpln flu-mo;
jnud.duk-browed lady loaning out to I tweher ,-nya that to-morrow .hoaxing
child values his small jwssessions as
'look niter Mm
to'put ar.Idea into toy head."— Bur­
bAvaRE Of IM1TAT1SS.
highly ns men.do the nuUions therhava
Wboa&lt;l»nK**rB.rouni1 nlxicit u» swell.
I L'he next day he. resigned his portion. • lingltmMackey
gained by hardships, self-denials and
Th® drilcate odo# at Ftarwton Colo*nie I*
As *ucn iH&gt;nc«nnu ozentr av.&gt;-n.
,
.
,
, ■
. 1
,
m die t&gt;.-»
~.n— drew
i.u
• From«r&gt;'*n&lt;b-oa,hnMdnl(u&gt;t!ec‘fsprfnin, ,: I12
P.Mt-olhce,
hi* saving* from j| —The world Is full of voung men who
ceaselow labor. Then the “ children ot etiUrely novel, laxtk fcralguature of uiscox
Aids for Deaf* Persons.
At Hh- f en&gt;*itu •nening time,
j xhebnuk and lult Washington. It were
wuj-q ;j are quite sure they are about' to “rovo‘a Ihrgui* growth,’’ who bare battled for
-•: lutionize the entire solar system,” but
| ’■ell, porb.us « b, ooul.l put dweru
years. to*- ward off reverses and disapHigh society will not bath at the oetum
a store window in Broadway,
In ft
■
—.v. r. A/»u-i:.rprtM. | and bcos and mountain range.* between j there isn’t one. of them who will any
pelntmonts, to piado the wealth so
I Helen and himself. It seemed to him ui'&lt;ro than get tfieJr lever all fixed be- whore a dazzling collection of apeetaclus, hardly earned on sure foundations, have ! beach this year. It’s too much of a give, sway
as if the earth had reeled front its orbit, fore.they will dtaoovcr they are altogcth- a variety of ear-trunlpcts, and several had time to learn by many sad experi­ on shanks, shins and^bald heads.
ONE WAY OF LOVE.
audit required time for him to readjust I er too light weight to more it an atom. dozen opera-glasses are displayed, a ences that there is always au element of
A GOOD FOUNDATION.”
She wafo clerk in the Treasury »; himrelf to the situation. His idea, was [ Then they will see the vanity of this number of ordinary-looking canes and a uncertainty in every plan or scheme
In Anufric^i liowehtil&amp;f the prevailing com­
Wiwbiugtifa/olba salary oLMme hundr^’ nil that was left to him; be put into it j world, and in'a moment ot despondency commonplace-looking umbrella stand* that human wisdom or foresight can plaints are weekbeu of the Moottcb and it*
- dollars a^yjiar; bh-wffrfnttie Post-offi^-. all his earnings, he devoted heart and “take a drink."—Acw litycn Reyislcr. in the corner. A placard affixed to one weave together, and therefore, though connequcncea. Indigestion, Nertuuimese nod
enjoylhg’j/13 privHcgc* afforded by '•n soul to its development, and he finally j —A Bpston'mai bosdoght his wife, he of the canes designates it nt an acoustic, hoping for success, they recognize the Riicum*tiam. Such sufferers can lay a,
four.duilou for health by using Parlte'r’s Gin­
Income di tweirs hundred. Oftcc ;r. a forgot himself and Halen Hildreth in his i being but three years married, for the canc. Another placed on the umbrella danger, and are more or less prepared ger
Touic *• It tone; up'the stomach and serve*
conveys the information that with the
while there wn&lt; a holiday, when tnoy work-and its success.
i privi’ege of ulutcU-key. “Latch-key!" assistance of tho acoustic umbrella a for tho failure.
and kecj.».lhc kidney* active lei carry &lt;jC the
It wits seven or eight years later that j she exclaimed, in lone- of amazement,
would take the boat down t? tf'unt
Not so the young. It takes many and foul matter.—N. O’ ricayunc.
Vernon, if it was • warm.. and sp.-end thoy met, oddly enough, on the Muunt । “what u»e can you have for a latch-key deaf persoq can hear conversation hen
grievous disappointments to teach them ^Earnestness is the path to immortality,
their luncheon in the shade ci
his­ Vernon boat.’ Her vivacity was no I when thu Women’s Emancipation the person speaking is nt n distance. A
to
look
for
shaiiow.s
over
their
bright
second
inspection
of
the
canei
.
after
'thoughtlessucw
the
path
to
death.
toric tree* and patronize nature as suc­ longer the sjjontaneoiia' effervescence of ■ Izsiguo mei’W Munday night,the Ladies’
hopes and roso-hued-expectations; For
cessfully a* if they were nabob*. Some­ youth and hope; 'she was a triflepati^e, | D annie Mi-sion Tuesday,, the Sisters reading tho placards discloses the fact thi? reason, when such losses come tS '*i&lt;4ruggi*te say that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegthat they consist of bamboo sticks With a
times thfty had tickets given tii-ru for a p0F^?8\ u
j
, ,
.
’
I of
of Jericho
.Jericho Wednesday,
Wednesday, the
the womans
Woman’s varnished black metal top and a very their young, undisciplined hearts, and cialde ConqxHiud is the txrshreincdv for female
comedy or tragedy, when they laughed
weakut-Mthat they ever heard of. for It gives
“Wealth and splendor have not , Science Circle Thr.rsdnv .tho Daughters
v 3
the brightness of their anticipation goes universal satisfaction. Scud to Mrs. Lydia E.
or cried with the discenunttt af million­ &lt;proved
’ —
ho ot Nineveh
Ninerch Friday,
FridaV. and the
the Women
Women’’ss small horizontal piece for u handle.
.all . her-fancy
* •- painted them,*
■ ..
A salesman in the store exhibited a out in darkness, tho sense of loss is far Pinkham. SIS Western Avenue. Lynn, Mas*.,
' aires atd tho old families. Or. Sunday thought, a*
n* their eves
eves-met.
met. * Mr. Van
V an . p
progressive
Ajvo .Art A-^ocixtion
A-«sociation and the
for jiauipicts.
more
acute
than
older
hearts
will
feel
cano
to
a
TriLimc
reporter,
and
twisting
mornings they ' song in a rhoir, anil VJeck,
Vluck,” she
rt» enod,
Saturday
cned, "who
“who would h»ra
have i• Safl'
-K1BU- „„ MWume
•
when their ’most important projects
France is playing secotnl Addle iu Egypt.
walked out to Long Brid^u I«tcr in the dreamedol iuooUui you- hero!
‘
■"
” Was
Wao 1।
Y1&gt;11 s,._ al honM and Mo tha. it in his hand disclosed a row of holes
come to naught.
Anything for music.
day, or st.-ollcd in the C*p’-&gt;.1 grounds lho plua.ure which bnubumod her eye, ,h„ b lb
onl o| lht. craji0... encircling the black metal. Placing the
Children often suffer real injustice,
same horizontal piece in his ear, in the.,
and snyprised tho first violet in its hid­ and deepened her somewhat exaggerated । jju ..uys,—Of,- -.
and
are
quite
as
keenly
alive
to
tho
feel
­
Delevan, Wis., Sept. 24,16*3.
cazy and natural way that some men
3 '
"
ing place. Helen’s landlady told every dimples a reuiinUcenee of her power, or
put’tlui handle ot a cane in the mouth, ing that it is cruel and unjust as their
Gcsts—1 have taken not quite,one bottle cf
new boarder that Mr. '’an VIeck “was was Mrs. Sterling a married flirt, he
elders
can
be.'
Tho parent, teacher or the Hop Bitter*. 1 h‘u» a feeble old man of 78
he
assured
the
reporter
that
his
voice
going with" Miss Hildreth, but Miss wondered.
“Wo have heard of you
Tramps and Their Houses.
when 1 got lu Today I ant a* active and feel
was so loud that he could hardly enduro playmate who is responsible for the as well ns I did it 30. 1 sec a great many that
Helen always protested that he was often, to be sure," she purred.
“The
lie then showed a small aperture wrong and tho sharp suffering it brings, need such a uitMilcioe.
'
merely a friend, that they were 'neigh­ newspapers have not befin silent con- I
All regular
—there
D. Bo'rcz. •
„---- tramp-house*
-----— -— - are it.
of
coarse,
it
is
to
be
hoped,
nas
no
in
­
through
the
horizontal
handle.
This
con
­
bors at home, and hxd jone to school cerning you nnd your great invention. 1 irregular onei, with peculiar and uoteHow to keep Let powder dry is what i« both*
together when they were in their pina­ I’vo hhvay* felt an ownership in that in- worthy features—are licensed taverns, nected with an ear-trumpet ingenious­ tention to act hastily or unkindly. But
what to tho Httlo one is of untold"impor­ ■ ring the brain of many a fashloftable belle
fores; and the landladv always sniffed vention, d j you know? I felt aj if I wera I «plrit-hou«e% or, as the phrase goes on ly arranged In the top piece of the cane.
when sho remarked: “If he’s nothing behind the scenes, let into the 'secret be- the road, "bingo kens" (from It. bianco, i Tho reporter then*held the handle of tance seems so trivial that parents do
BRACE UP.'
It sounded as a not feel it is worth while to investigate
but a friend I should think there'd bo n lore the rett of tho out«ido world, whoa | white, the color of gin). Most of those the cane to his car.
There Is serious meaning in this expression.
When the salesman and ascertain the true state of the cose. That wearied step, languid eye, and general
• secession of his love-making sooner or it was only a dream. 1’v# resented ev- • license* aro ven’ old indeed, and somo sea shell would.
So
in
a
hasty,
off-hand
manner
they
si
­
cry infringement—"
aro lho oldest in the kingdom. Every spoke lus voice was increased several
feeling of lassitude come from fickuca*. Be
One day when tsey were rambling
*“ I am flattered that you remember . -me of lhe&lt;e houses is known far end times its volume. The chief value of lence the complaints of the child, and assured, i&gt; Mrtlods and and peril*;w-fatal, diaabout Mount Vernon together Helen fcU my small affairs,” said Theodore, hum- , wide. No tramp, let him come from the invention lies in tho fact that the decide the case In a way that will cause
,
case is close in it* wuke. The system wants
it
intense
pain
and
plant
the
first
seeds
\ where ’he may, ever enters a town withinto a romancing vein. “Suppose this bly1*u cane or umbrella may bo used without
is my country sea^" *aid hIw, “and I
u &gt;«rB
«.wu, with au out very definite ideft* as to tho housd betraying the fact of the owner’s deaf­ of distrust. Their confidence is shaken cleansing of itnpuricties; the sluggish blood
“ Remember,” o«.
sho
repeated,
in tho wisdom of those who should needs to be sent in swift and. clear currents
have furnished »; in Lho Queen Anne lingering accent, “I have nothing else , where he is to put up. Ho has learned ness.
[ all abbut it—’aye, ft hundred miles off;
“It is wonderful,” continued the watch untiringly to secure the most through the’veins. Dr. Kennedy’s ‘•Favorite
style, and I’m entertaining the bn me &lt;Zc to do.”
la crane, just as they do in novels’’—
“I com-3 down here sometimes,” eho mid he goes to it as readily, and, when clerk, how much people dislike to ad­ perfect development of tho best quali­ Remedy” will do this; It will give new vigor to
“A sort uf Utdy Geraldine—and I am Eursued, after a brief pause, “when wo in-ide, conform? as smoothly to all its mit that their hearing is defective. ties in those young minds which are so the body, brightness to the eye, a glow to the
the poor poet, e'u ?' ’
nve a holiday, lor thu sake of auidlanff I ways, iw though he hud boon bornwith- They come in and ask to look at car­ dependent on their caro and prudence countenance, and elasticity to the Hep. One
We know that for tho wise use of tho authority vested Dollar a bottle. Every druggist has it. Di.
&lt;• AJ1 bat thu poetry.” mocked Helen. syne, and try to believe I am woven years in its precincts. The custom of fitlch
sfich a trumpets for friends.
younger
and tho world before mo where house is constant. The tramp stream they want them for themselves. People in them.
•‘Now suppose this is my manorDavid Kennedy, Proprietor. Rondout, N, ¥.
If parent, could understand haw much
I like to cornu when the ! thither is perennial, and maintains about who are hard of hearing are just as
iiduso,’’ suggested Theodore, “furnished to choose.
The New York tipper mourns iweanee Eve
in tlte renais-ance, lot us say—I'm mak­ peach trees are in bloom, as they were | the sumo level season after season and I numerous as persons who are near­ the future of their children depends
did not tell the serpent, “Xot this Err. some
upon
their
thoughtful
care,
on
their
ing great demands on your'imagination that day when
’■---------U..H*
------—
year
after'year.
This
kind
of
people,
'
sighted.
If
tho
wish
to
ignore
deafness
wo built our castles in
—and I’m entertaining-nil the swells.!the air.
Mine have crumbled into indeed, will halt here, and nowhere else, was not so pronounced, ear-trumpets habits and manner of training their lit­ other Eve.’’
tle ones when young, they* would feel
so long as the bouse continues to main­ would be as common as spectacles. *
I’ve lured you here on tho pretext of i dust "
SHILOH’ S CQXSCMPTJON CURE.
looking for a four-leafed clover, • but [ “
!'
“ Mr.-.
Mrs. Sterling,
I am sorry to hear tain its reputation among them, and '• “ Wo'have sold thousand* uf these," tho great necessity of weighing well
Tld» is beyond question the mot sutcesfifu!
they are much more profitable company continued tho storekeeper, showing a their words and acts; they would boar Cough
■ really to ask if yon will share my mag-■ yon speak bo."
Mvihcinc we have ever sold, a few doses
nificeneo with mo; what should you j, She
.. stared
star at him an instant, blushed thiui most people would imagine. In a miniature silver ear-trumpet, calculated in mind that their own convenience, invariably cure the worst caaes of Cough, croup
“They are popu­ ease, or pleasure should no; be of more and Bronchitis, while tta wonderful SUrccw U
«ay?”
'
’ 1 dropped her eyes in the old effect- 1 great many instances the tramp-house is to fit inside the car.
। and
“J should put my lessons in gymnas­ ive wav. “Haven’t you heard," she nrumged by the same family for age lar because they can bo used without .importance thantho comfort and happi­ in the cure of consumption iaallhnuta ;»ralness of their young children.
No lel in the history of uiedicnv- Store its first
after age. There is one—Die Goat, or, oxoiting remark."
tic* into uk and jump at tho chance.’’ &gt; said, “1 didn’t marry Mr. Sterling."
it has been sold on aguarntcc, a test
Another miniature ear-trumpet was Innocent pleasure and enjoyment shotikl discovery
' “And ill should ask instead,
: Perhaps she expected Theodore to as the genuine tramp prefers to tenn.it,
which no oilier medicine cau bland. If you
shown, made from two metals, the union be sacrificed to the too ’common plea have a Cough we earuestlv ask you to try It.
r|
.
'heand
Welsh
Buffalo—at W--------------------------------- , which
lieam
with
sudden
happiness
re|
•“Como share xny cottage, gnntio roalrfP”
hoarse
the
r.
1 : old
’ ‘ story
, she
’ ’' Lad
’ refused ’to nas Leon held by tho same people since of which produced electricity intended that it is “inconvenient.” Do parents Price lOcts, Wet®, and 8!.&lt;J0 If your lungs' are
' •
1 t|iu days of the Long Parliament, as to have a vivifying influence on dead or imagine that they can enjoy the bless­ sore. Chest, or Back launc, nnd bbitoh’s
“ Don’t?” criod Helen.
hear once- before.
z
•
1’r.n u- 1’J i-'.it. Sold by F. T, Bct*E.
“ You left no address, you know," records in the possession of the landlord dying nerves. Tho applicances for the ings of seeing their little ones grow up
He looked »t her a little blankly.
ANSWER TH18QLE.STION.
are ,just
the sort to conduct relief of deafness are all costly. The around thorn without making many
... They
—
-----------“ Yom ' don’t mean that you core so defending herself from the reproaches | &gt;h&lt;»w.
Why do so many people we see around us,
sacrifices
of
their
own
present
case
and
she anticipated.
“Mr. Sterling died.' such a lrou-e successfully.
' "
In. stature canos are $25 a piece, and the miniature
little for me?”
'
seem io prefer to stiffer mid be made miserable
They should
rather by indigestion, constipation, dizziness, 10M of
• *• I don’t mean anything. Don’t let before the wedding day was set. I thu family ht»s always been gigantic; a ear-trumpets $8 a pair.—Y. Tribune. convenience?
count any sacrifice for the innocent appetite, coming up of the Food, yellow skin,
ur . -dk abon. marrying and giving in thought yon would see it iuXhenewspa- » little too stolid and burly, perhaps, but
amusement and healthvdevelopment of when fur T&amp;efik wc will sell them fihilob’s Vitamarriage; we are happy enough as we per*.’ I am a Treasury girl yet* Theo- i in temper and tastes tramp all over,
The Little Woman.
happy, loving natures in their cbiiflren llzcr, guaranted to cure them. Sold. by F. T.
dore. Do you know that I sometimes For one thing, nobody ever heard of a
are."
Boise.
marriage uuuug
taking piocu
place aiKong
among
SHILOH’S CATTARRH REMEDY, A mar­
In daily life, who is the really fovx as all joy; for by judicious indulgence
“ Bat if I don’t marry you some other wish that I bad never seen Mr. Sier- '1 regular luarnage
ling?"
|' them.
’
them. The
Tho widest'
eldest son takes
takes oover *the
fellow wifl!”
midablc woman to encounter? The and tender sympathy in the small velous cure tor Catarrh, Dtohtherla, Canker
Only the Fates kndw what Van Vleek i house during the “old man's" life. Tho blacK-browod, broad-shouldered giant­ pleasures and rights of tho little ones mouth, and Head Ache, with each Ixittie
•♦Nonsense; penniless girls are a drug
here is an in^nlous nasal Injector for the
in the market. I’ve seen misery enough would' have answered, but just at that younger sons, as a rule, join tho police ess, with arms aitnod ns bigin the girth they may safely look forward to the moresucccaaJwtreutnientof these complaint*
from marrying on a small salary; I’ve moment a bit aterepe lisse floated into in their native town or elsewhere, but by ns am^p’s; or the pert, smart, trim time whey their lads anil lassies will without extra charge. Price 50ct?. Sold by
seen peopse living in two room;, on their neighborhood and a voice like a preferencedn London. Wherever they little female, with no more biceps than cluster around them, in full maturity, F-T. Boise.
, , , ___
__________
♦water
and_________
a crust,,
’so
to speak,____
doing summer brook cried: “Oh, 'my veil,- settle, however—and tho fact 1* worthy a Indy-bird, and of just about equal the crown and rejoicing of their
|]E.VUY Hp't:. Pkofkiktok.
their own work, with no pleasures
pleasure- and ! Theodore!" Theodora put out a hand. ot notice—they remain to the last in the strength with a sparrow? Nine times out parents. Then, as loving sons and
------J—
*— '■-----of'amendment;
-------- -*------- ’but.it eluded him;
Helen made full confidence of thu fraternity among of ten, the giantess with heavy shoulders daughters, they wHl repay by the tender,
no society,
and
no hope
—OLD RELIABLE----and brood, black eye-brows is a timid, watchful care of their parents’ doclin­
people who thought love would tide a quick movement and caught it on the w!&gt;i.:h they have been brought’up.
It i* the landlord? of those tramp­ feeble-minded, good-tempered person, ing years all the self-sacrifice, the tenthem over all the quicksands—and wing.
“ Let me introduce you to Mrs. Van houses wno keep' up the vagabond incapable-of .4uu-Uiiug harsher than a duruuMS and - indulgent - avmpa'hy be­
presently tho hallucination wore off, but
A’leck,
JIildretkr’-4ttr-rat’lr “
.. 8hn i Ort^EnlUHbn',' ana who renew and mild remonstrance with her maid, or a stowed upon their childhood.
the quicksands remained; reproaches
Wo do not believe in that indulgence
Mi’-y .V.
*-r j: circulateu«
ita ■Higas and passwords from gentle chastisemeat of her children.
in; She.grew hitter and unlovely, and would like to tbank you.”—
coDrtMlIj &lt;!■ hand * big Mock of
j time tu time. The vagabond* them- Nine times out of ten her husband has which' has no limit and exercl-es no
he morose nnd neglectful—”
Prescott, in Our Continent.
selves could not doit,and never think of her in hand in the most perfect working control, and think that, perh tp«, while
•• Then you think love an hallucina­
It is difficult to give an idea order, so that she would swear that the , wishing to exercise proper restraint and
tion?”
r—Tho Czar of Russia doesn’t have as doing it.
“I think marriage is a mistake on good a time as an ordinary tramp. of ‘oe beggar password* and sign sys­ moon shone at midday if it were his truly. seeking tho best good of their
—----- ——
—^.-1 LI I became He is so afraid of being poisoned that tem; but we will do tho beat, we can. pleasure that she should make a fool of children, there may be as many parents
ttrelve hundred
a i,year.
dowdy anti hadn’t time to cultivate a his appetite can’t be said’ to be of the ’* has no common center, and no uni­ herself in that direction. One of the who over givern as there »ro who deny
taste for aesthetics or whatever was the best, and ns fur sudden explosives, he is formity. There may be, and probably most obedient and 'indolent of earth's tho little ones pbrfectly safe and harm­
fashionable craxe, and grew jaded and on the lookout for them all the time. there are, fifty different sets of them in daughters, she gives no trouble to any less pleasures, for no reason whatever,
IX THEIR 8EA0O^
?■
apiritless with the uncongenial task of Very naturally he wants to be crowned, u»e in England. Each has its own do­ one, save the trouble of rousing, excit­ bat that by allowing them tho mother
washing pots and kettles and stewing hut he doesn’t dare to have the corona­ main, and these domain* intersect one ing and setting her going; while as for will find it inconvenient or likely to cur­ Lard,
These the conception or execution of any tail some of her own outside eaj &gt;ymenta.
.
over a range, and if nobody turned to tion services, lest a few dynamite cart­ another in curious fashion.
de., dr.
look after me as I passud, one dav you ridges be introduced as a pleasant sur­ landlord* form .small circles among naughty piece of self-assertion, she is ns Yet the first desire that everything
CP* The Highest Market Price paid
would find yourself disenchanted. 'Then, prise.
He can’t travel on the railroad, tlromseives according to contiguity; and utterly incapable as if she were a child th/sy do should be for tho best good of
supposing the new Administration because there is a degree of uncertainty a dozen to twenty of these small circles unborn, and demands nothing better their loved ones; the second act from for Hidcx. Pelts. Ac.
his reaching hi*
his destination which
whim
will form one great one. A great circle than to feel the pressure of the leading­ purely selfish, motives.
should push you out of office, even for a about hi*
Fresh Goods. Full Weights and
No mother need Ims a slave to her
month, or you should fall ill?
No, we disturbs hi* mind. He would rather be ! of tramp landlords—perhaps it were strings, and to know exactly by their
Satisfaction Guaranteed.
are happy enough just as we are; don't a dog and bay tho moon than such a ' belter to call it oval—may spread fifty strain where she is desired to go and children, ur give all her time and
thought to tljeir pleasures and amuse­
IIEVKY ROE
Jet ua discuss marriage: let us wait, like Russian^ lie want* to live, but the { mile* along one of the great highways what to do.
Mr. Micawber, till somcthing'turns up." people seem determined that he shall go j and ten to fifteen miles on each side of
But the little woman is irrepressible. ment. It requires but little to make
And so Van VIeck waited.
Perhaps to heaven. The school boy who sits I it. And so far the set of signs and pass­ Too fragile to oome into the fighting them supremely happy. Loving words, QLESElrr SMITH,
----------------------«- »—a for three
----- section of humanity, a puny creature gentle smiles, “stooping”—if so one
woidsinuse
therein
is good
he was disappointed in Helen’s views, down on a bent pin is in bliss when---Attorney at Law,
but he refused to confess it even to him­ compared with this man, who is afraid months, when t.Sey are regularly whom one blow from a man’s huge fist chooses to term it—to notice and mani­
A free tramp pay* three could annihilate, absolutely fearless, fest pleasure and interest in all that
self ; all women felt so, he supposed, lest at any moment hi* crown mav be cnanged.
cared more for shadow than substance, blown ofThi* head or his head blgwnofl pence for the sign and password every and insolent with the insolence which pleases and '•Interest them, listening to
time they arc renewed/ All he has to only those dare show who know that their childish remarks for a short time,
from his crown.—N, 11 Herald.
do on there occasions is to go to auy retribution can not follow. What can will make them very happy for hours.
eir poetic temperament which made
If nt times it is necessary to refuse
iveny hateful to thum and splendor
—A simplar magnetic property of landlord of the right sort, give in the lie done with her? She is afraid of noth
JAMES A. BWEECTT,
meteoric iron' ob­ _____
old sign and ____
password in due form, and ing, and to be controlled by no one. some childish request^it can be dona
efr natural atmosphere, and he ap- some specimens
»■-- ;» ofW
ied him*elt m^re diligently than qver ! tained in
m Brazil recently ba* been ob- pay his pence. And he has to pay again Sheltered behind her weakness m be­ without causing pain^H* discomfort if
Attorney A Counsellor,
the
mother
in
simple
Schild-language«
_
—
।
----------------Exhi* idea, working far into the night; served.
Small detached*
servea. oiiuui
acumnoa fragment*,
iragiuenu, not
nut Ii every time
uiue he
uo enter*
emara a new circle. lx- ninu
hind a triple
inpio sueet
sheet ui
of brass,
urasa, ine
the angneat
angriest
tiiH'-s.
। ;Weighing
.I t-&gt;
dius, ■ • pcrtviivS
weighing mure
more thau
than ”0.1
to 0.5 grains,
pertencetesobwS
teaches Him
him vc;y
verywell
welltho
the pre- dore not touch her, while she provokes gives her reasons and direct* their
“ You were not at the President’.* last I were very weakly affected by a magnet, else bond* of each. However, when he him to a combat in which his hands are thoughts by finding something elw
enfr-g,” one of hi« fellow-ckrkB said but on being flattened on a piece of menifast* ignorance on this point he 1* tied. She gets her own way in every­ more appropriate, but equally pleasing,
him later.
| steel with a steel hammer they became j very soon set right by the landlord, and
thing and everywhere.
At homo and to substitute In its place. A few gentle
“I? No; I should think not.”
! very sensitive to it.
Again, by heating must purehaM the freedom of the new abroad she is equally dominant and irre­ word* and loving caresses will recall the
“But MLh Hildreth was there; -she red’hot the particle* were made to l&gt;y | circle in the u*ual way. He meets with pressible, equally free from obedience smites and .ensure the child's- full
id Mr. Sterling, M. C-, were band in ; «till more ea-ily attracted than by flat- j little difficulty here, provided ihe pence and from fear. Who break* all the pub­ enjoyment.—Mrs. H. W. Beecher, in
ove. I haani him ask her to go and ’ tuning.
The nwteorio iron presenting j are for:he-&gt;ming. For the tramp land- lic orders in sights and shows, ana, in Chrithan Union.
t‘
night; these peculiar cluuacleri»tic* contains ot I lord can toll, iu an inttant, by the word spite of king, kaiser or policeman, goes
—General Sherman’s wife is the only
in luck,” wk* all , iron sixtv-six part* and of nickel thirty- ! and sign given bv the tramp, whether where it is expressly forbidden that she
mi Vieck wotnred to Bay; he dirt not four.— y. Y. Suu.
th« latter w one of the right sort or not. shall go? Not the large-boned muscular American to whom the Pope ba« ever
kmnm to carry hi* hoart on bis nleeve
------------ ***“.-------- P.M*w«:r&gt;l and #ign. indeed, serve. woman, whatever her temperament, given that renowned religion* emblem—
unless, indeed, of that exceptionally instituted more than five oenturie* since
—Mr. Randolph Li nd*ay, Meridian. , an
haughty tyjie in distinctly inferior sur­ —the golden rose, although it has been
! Conn.; seventy-two year* old, set out- ■ bv
i ruundings, and then sbe can queen ii
dw »»n;ntrv.
Mr..
once oollee’rd for thr
- ! royally enough, and s*1’ •teryiUng
Pope a “Peter’s pence” of #50,(XX).
:ho ihn vr.j-1 most lordly d«tiinov - p-xia.
*
•id.
'
•
.

r,

..

You &lt;l.&gt;

MEAT MARKET.

Fresh and Salt Meats,

Smoked Hams and Shoulders,

by the lb. or barrel,
de.,

Eijmcnce1’ Reliable, M BcsjMSiHe.

A. H. WINN. Dentist.

BEST SET BUM TEETH 118.00

■■

I

I’

�LONG DWWWU*

PEXGEU.VS WOTAN'S

2 Physicians

A T T11E WlWEST LI VI SO PRICES?
itw!-rint*
ttyt'di in sami simm jj^duallv advancing to that |WMttion.
frightfulcicatTkwe that Lilt
8 The oil bought and sold on the Petro- corners of her mouth a:
he*hh
laum Exchange to actual oil. Hie baato of t h« Done toward the
(Ml the boors—waiting for ano:her gu«.
oi aa Iranwmtton I» pipe-line certifr- make such a face pres
catos. The L’nitod Pifie Mne Company an impurrfbiHty. but the task was per­ *et—for another suun»«—for the com­ Have Signed or Endorsed the
end the Tidewater Pipe 1-Ine Company formed speedily and successfully. T he ing of the glad relief. When the body
Following Remarkable
me custodians of all ttfe Ml -produced. hose and lip bad already been molded 1 1m*s long Iwva ill and the soul .Nick—
They ootmect their iin«j* with the oil­ in celluloid from a piaster cast of the j when days and nights and .weeks and
Document:
months
have
brought
nothing
but
cold
tanks at (be wells on application of the face, and having D*eu carefully colored,
weh-ownera, and, after gauging the presented a most life-like appearance. [ and hunger and groans of despair, the
amiamt of oil, xud it to the pipa-llne 7110 dentist in molding the nose had to i dread or death is nothing. The coming
ktonge tanks.. The producer receives depend entirely on hi* imagination, and I of the shadow is even baiiod with glad
a certoieato from the company, -which had modeled a thoroughly Asiatic &lt;m«. I satisfaction.
And so they lived; and one night
is his voucher for the amount in tank. The artificial lineament* having been
Thtwe ccrtiticateaare -put on the mar­ prepared, there remained only the in­ when the winds bowled drearily and
I the snowflakes- whirled through the
ket.. At llie Iwginning of tho year the teresting but difficult feat of attaching
j broken panes, the mother and her boy
United L’ii-e iinei hold 1G.000.000 bar­ them.
.
slept—she to wake no more on earth..
rels of oil represented by certificates.
lu supplying artificial noses it is cusThe market price of crude oil is always tomary to attach them bv eprelacies, His little bauds acre toying with her
•the price bid on exchange fr
*II“ but Sn
for-------ccrtiti-.
Chinese woman** ease »uch 1 dead face when they found him. They other Porona Plaatcr* or I.fnfments tm
cates. No bid for less than 1,000 bar­ an arrangement would have been Im- ; took him away, and he smiled when external ua*.
rels to received. By rule of tho Ex­ possible, owing to the great site of the : they said: ‘‘Poor babe! You are all
change the broker’s commission Is one- dUfigurcmedl caused by the lo*s of tho I• alone now!” When the mother had
Scasop’a Oapelne Plr.wter is a annulr.'
.hali uf one cent per UsutuL Thus, if lip and taeth. The difficulty was oyer- j gone to her narrow home they crept '
a broker buys oil at $0 rente for acns- come by attaching a gold spring to the i. up staira to the dismal room, and one
n»!!y peculiar to th* sox, WILL CElCTAIXUf
totncr.be charges it to him at 801. Oil upper jaw in the manner-in which sin- *i of them said:
“Wo have found a home for the child, phyaiciaua and drusjfiata.
Hr. BZXamas l»y Soa Phar*.
purchased may be delivered at any gle teeth are affixed. The spring raa
IXVCORKHWeI KVINS THK irNKST
Huie within three days a^ the seller*a up to where the bridge of the nose j but he must, not forgot hi* mother. Let J
COMFXXXIOX.-Zo* 1’kara ears* UtoIman
* us look for his legacy.” •
option.
*1
he
margin
required
In
spec
­
should
have
been,
ana
to
this
spring
Monn^ern, Tntnlwfoces, Mantles, 4c..
ami restores tlio Uttar.
••And so they searched old dresses,
ulating in oil isOXbO per 1.000 barrels. the artitical nose and lip were attached
.----- HmdlUg* M4oh.
; and peered into the. dark comers, and !
TliCMj margins are deposited in the by an India-rubber loop.
The com­
bank. The margin slips, certified by bined pressure of the spring and the I reverently opened the old boxes at the .
the hank.are as good as the bank Hath. India-rubber drew the celluloid mask foot of the bed. . One found an old '
; A'ldrana *
■ •
' ■'
trical Xac&amp;stlo toys.
Pipe Line certificates are received as col­ so dose to the face that, being molded scrap-book; another a necklace of j ___ ._____ _
_
;
IL. PENGELLY, M. D.,
MliRBRlfflWY AYLAW. PrtenSScta.
lateral as readily as Government bonds. to fit the cheeks, it would bare looked ’ beads; another a knot ot ribbon, and ।
BEAD’S MefictMd CORN Md BUMION PLASTER. j
KALAMAZOO, MIC
when the search was ended there on j
After oil has been in care of the Pipe quite natural but for the lack of that
Lino for thirty days it is called ’•old transparency which living tissues pos­ ■ the table was a heap of relics which
•
»&gt;- • ”•&gt; •* ••eito 'AMilj e&gt;ade O«S
[PARKER'S
1
oatAt frw. Ayiri.TitrA «.&lt;&gt;., Atui'Ma. I
oil.” The Pipe Line charge averages sess. While the woman’s countenance they went over. There was something
HAIR
about L0. cents a day for carrying oiL was In repose the effect of the work there 4hich told of a girl’s love; there
,
was
somethiDg-wbich
told
of
marriage
—
'
When this charge is paid a slip testify­ was remarkably good, and the transfor­
I A perfect dtr.&lt;
ing to the fact is attached to the certifi- mation which is effected in her looks of happiness—of a busbnhd's death—of ,
|u&gt;a.«leeam»yp&lt;J
■ cute, ’lhe oil is then ••freshened,” and was so great that she eagerly seized the deep sorrow and bitter poverty. An
auctioneer would have turned away in ।
j goeson the market ^s newoih
mirror offered by the dentist, and, look­ contempt—a rag-buyer would not, have
The low price of oil for a few years ing at her reflection, she uttered an ex­
post has greatly stimulated speculation, clamation of surprise and delight. She gathered them up, and yet these wo­
und the commissions of the brokers are gave the practitioner a handful of $10- men, each with the heart of a mother,
--------_
nanaiea each
eacn relic
renc with
wiui fresh
iret tears.
handled
paid bv the laboring man as well as by
Mil trotted off with her Wt- T
w„ „„
ln them
Ior
A cure sruaranirrd.
2_
a man
— 1
the millionaire. Tho oil market is in­ caste
r-sjitrt osenrt.
nt ..
__
escort, tilled
filled with satisfaction at
ELOZIZTCi:
fluenced by the most trivial causes. parting with wealth seldom shown by there was a whole life’s htetory in them
They had not found ;
The re|&gt;ort that some one bis -truck a Mongolians.—San Francisco Bulletin. for a woman.
even a penny in money—not an article
100 barrel well in Allegheny County
that would bring a dime—not enough ,
will give some clique of bears opportu­
Trichlnlasls.
property there to call for removal, and !
nity to show that the market is to bo
yet they had found something there ot j
flooded by a rush of oU from a new
The Times cays thv ^&gt;ork-packers ol
territory. Prices go down, and the the West are evidently not very deeply , more value than gold or diamonds. ;
clique takes in lhe oil that frightened conecruod as to the question whelner There was a. piracy tor the babe. There
speculators sacrifice. Then a report the action of the various European was a failed ’oid tintype of father and
that a well in some port of the oil re­ Governments practically prohibiting mother, some letters stained with tears.
gion has “oome in dry” will send the introduction of American pork.-and i two locks of hair pinned to the same
prices up on tho strength of a pros­ particularly that of hams and sausage, card—more to him than if the old boxes
Wgeubie
• Lnmrn. &lt;Xrt« &lt;&amp;Mrdcii &lt; I
pective scarcity of oil. These^flurries,” is revoked or not.
And, curiously had been full of bright dollars. Only
the bowd«, aloaiach, (iwr. katecya and lurg«, &amp;M
as they are called, end as suddenly as enough, although of permanent scien­ ! by them will he recall the dead—will
Ths Best aad £ amt Coogb Cure Ever Used,
they begin, but they arc rci&gt;eated-with tific iiitercst, the recent European lit­ * he realize a mother’s love and devoif
you
are nifTrrirc
Frtnde _C«»pktoa,
V—__ I
a,.If'. ’TH*'*
remarkable regularity. There is at erature on tho subject has attracted but ■ tion—will he know that one dark morn­
pre-Mint a formidable bull movement in little attention from the Western press. ing women crept up stairs and found
the market. The evidences that the This is the more singular in that tho him prattling to tho dead. Money
flow of the Bradford field is declining discwjsion has taken the form of an in­ , might have worked hi* ruin. Those
nre now unquestionable. The new Al­ quiry whether tho infection of hogs relics, on which a mother’s tears have
legheny County field has reached the with tricJiina spiralis is more prevalent j fallen—over which a mother’s prayers
limit of its production andcanuqtmake in the United Slates than in Europe. If have ascended to Heaven—will be a
g&lt;tod the Bradford decline. Tho bull so. to what extent? And can ite spread holy light to guide him through the
Is Recommended by Physician^ element.in tho.market, although op­ bo prevented bv legislative interfer­ i deepest gloom.—Detroit Free Pt ess.
posed by tho Standard Oil Company, ence? For the fast two years these
Longfellow,
, vx
which is naturally on the bear side, questions have engaged tho services of
No American could have died who I Cj
WemantifMlura a^d rcll II eltba ^*»SitlVO
being the principal buyer of oil, stead­ wmo of the most careful microscopists, ,
guarantee that It will cure any
ily advanced prices for two weeks, and medteal men and veterinary inspectors * would
-------- -----have -----been -----more universally ;
tfjqa, &gt;ud wevill Corfell the sboffaamouut
*
~Longfellow.
j]
lJU| m WHO IO Ut.ACOUJ.HTED WITH, THE UlOUH.PHr OF TH.. OOUHTHT.
has maintained a market of unusual in France and Germany, and tho con- ' mourned than
...e |----ifiitaifoln a single Instance,
,
It la UnllkO
Catarrh YtlMdy. S3
steadiness.
Lending operators and elusion that seems to have followed j come into all homes, nnd was beloved
many who have taken the bear side are their inquiries, both experimental and , of all hearts. His sweet and pure nnd
now bulls, and predict that oil will go obsorvaUonal. may be stated in a single tender
dmnMlDSdKfax-.affk yourDru«i»tforiLMd
domestic
’ genius
' - *has
— hallowed
----- J all --------ACCKFT MO I MITATI OX OR aramTCTK. If bn
up to $1.,W.- Ior May deliveries 93 sentence, namely, that tho ratio per relations and events, and there is do
has not &lt;ot It, •’.nd to ut and w« will forward
cents is bid to-day. Spot oil brought 1,000 of infected animals in this coun­ emotion which does not readily and fit­
faugsdlsuly. Price, *f&gt;
i ]«r bottle. _
88 cents.
?. J. CHENEY 4 CO., t oledo. Ohio.
try is greater than it Is in France, Ger­ ly express itself lu his verse. Hd was
the most famous of Americans, and his
The rich petroleum brokers nearly many, Austria, Kuesin, Denmark, Swe­
all arose from very humble beginnings. den,’ Spain, Italy and European Tur­ faiue had become a personal affection
11. L. Foster, whose coihmissions have key. The disease is a common one in and a national pride. This was from
amounted to $60, WO a year, came to all these countries, and one that no no misconception of his position in lit­
Oil City six years ago with' six dollars prohibitory measures can exclude,since erature or of his peculiar power. But
in his pocket, Dan Goelel, of Bradford, it prevails everywhere among hogs it is the most significant tribute to the
tun y cars ago was a bootblack and mes­ bred in tho remotest agricultural dis­ man.
A more symmetrical and satisfactory
senger boy. 'Five years ago he had tricts os well as near the great centers ■
saved enough money to speculate in of population, and is evidently not of character it is not easy to conceive.
oil. He developed nekve, endurance, foreign origin. So far a* observation Rectitude and simplicity, exquisite
and daring, and to-day he is worth has gone, the proportion of infected courtesy and gentleness, infinite pa­
flCOO.lXW. One of his transactions was hogs ap|&gt;cars to be smaller, in France tience and sympathy and tact, blended
t0 take the market against a powerful tlian •ve'-y where else, but tho earliest in a manner which was As gracious as
combination. After forcing the price records of the disease arising from the a poem and benignant as a benediction.
up to $2«03 he sold 200,000 barrels he consumption of trichinous pork,even in His accomplishment.in letters, his ele­
had previously bought, making, it is that favored country.show that tho first gant scholarship was something extraor­
said. $163,000 in a few. minutes. J. J. coses occurred in remote country dis­ dinary. The felicity ot citation, tho
Fisher, of Oil City, is probably the tricts. not in the centers of population, aptness ot allusion, were delightful.and
stiffest broker in the trade- He oper­ where ita origin from imported hams all his wealth of resource never tipped
ates for Dr. Hoatettcr, of HtUburg.who or sausages may be fairly inferred. The a sneer or permitted an innuendo. His
carries hundreds of thousands of bar- history of the disease in England, perfect humanity instinctively appre­
Spain, Sweden. Italy and Russia illus- hended every fellow man, and, known
Uwtea the same hypothesis, that of an to everybody, not one who knew him
Is Tho Croat Connecting Link between tho East and the West I
indigenous origin from native pork.
- T.i Huin bn-.um iram-CbltMn to Council StropiM Cart’for S’eplar P'irp"'*. *oa
influence on the trade as the Standard Careful observation has also disclosed of feeling, for one who could not be un­
Itiuffa pMtlnai
Oil Company's have to-day.
Henry the fact that the parasites producing kind. Jus home, if deeply saddened.
! Lr^rio«aat&gt;\M*rea&gt;&gt;&gt;.UnMkly^Onn»t&gt;:i.
Ltcblaoo. Topeka Pent- Ixiwis, of Oil City, is generally be­ the infection are not confined to hogs. in receht years, was alwafs the House
tie. and Atoc*: with brxnefcea from Bureau
lieved to be the buyer for the Standard n*d that infected pork is not probably Beautiful, and its noble, urbane and
Jutittlon to reorl*: Wilton JuncUon to Mu»c&gt;.....
W.lr-I.l.t F.ldnn neikn&amp;CL
Oil Company. When he bids for oil no the principal agent in their distribution. beloved master welcomed guests from
one pays any attention to the bids ot It hu been discovered that in Paris and every land, and greeting them in their
other parties. D. W. Archbold, of Ti­ Vienna, at least, rate are subject to own. language, revealed to them au
tusville. was formerly a preacher. His trichinous infection, not uccacionally in America which they had not suspected,
brother. John D., of the Standard Oil such a manner as would lead to the and which they could never forget
hl &gt;i l Zion to Krwuwqwa: Newton to Monroe: Pea
Nationally rrpnUd u Company, brought him into the busi­ supposition that the presence of the
»«&lt;««: «£
Although for many months his friends LU
f^^betair the Croat ness. His commissions have been $30.­ parasites may be due to nibbling pork, have watched him wistfully, and wait­
=^S^H&gt;tenNf*Car
000 in three months.—Bradford (Pa.) but bo generally as to involve the im­ ed for news with half-foreboding
Cor. X K Sun.
pression of spontaneous origin. It is hearts, the old, old sorrow comes nt
I A’Jwwrt
Wffl
stated, furthermore; by those who have last with the old pang and unap|&gt;easAt DAVKXrpKT, W1J11
fully investigated this aspect of the ablo sense of loss. He was old. but
A Celluloid Nose.
still
his
sweet song was heard with all I 1 kw sad KuuMA Ciyr. via tee - Milwaukee aac C’A*/imrUasarr,wBB«fceB.C. R.* &gt;
subject,
that
these
household
pests
have
UloucMcUotM nude
A Kcarney-street dentist, who is any­ no doubt been among the agents in the the familiar music and inexpressible I—I “rhe1 “^jroat^Sex "atand"•!» laasmseenili
I. Cato,
Age touched his silvering Pi
thing but old in yean or his profession, spread of parasites from one country charm.
Wbatwttlpleaaeyoetnaatwttlbetaeetaarari
yesterday afternoon performed the dif­ to another. Such being the case, and head, but not his heart Dor his mind. UJ
ficult artistic job of supplying a horri­ the universal prevalence of tlje Infec­ His place among us in opr busy life was
r
Caro that acuoaBuaeT al
tion in various tribes of inferior ani­ that of the bard in the fond old golden
bly
disfigured
human
face
with
an
arti
­
*** tr”c
ficial nose and upper lip. A reporter mals being an established fact, the legends that he loved, the honored and
luxuryJ
who had heard that the operation was policy and wisdom of prohibitory legis­ cherished singer whoso hand the youth
to be performed called on the skillful lation are notvcry apparcnt,experience and the maidens kiss, and in whose lof­
■’■.k' JL J-**-; —._ _Hum f,.
practitioner and requested permission and observation alike having shown ty and tender melody the older men
!&gt;&lt; about K*ua
to witness the achievement of science. that infection is not to be avoided by and women hear once more the accents
r Fare. Slcaptar Caro,
Mr . H.-erfU..f fK.-QLT^r
, At lint the dentist declined to allow a such prohibitory measures as have of their early aspiration, and own a
representative of the press to witness lx&gt;en adopted in France and in ports of consolation for long-baffied hopes.
ER.
PERCEVAL LOWELL.
the Deration, having grave fears that Germany, while on the ether hand "And though. at time., impnUtona with emotion
&amp;£SJ?5Ersuch a proceeding would scatter the abundant experiments have proved that
uk. u- sacred traditions of the healing art thorough cookery of the meat is the n.
which maintain and encourage medi­ only preventive. The Belgian Govern­
ocrity by compelling every clever prac­ ment acted upon these principles some
titioner'to hide his Tight under a bushel time age. and the result of the report of

TO GIRLS

TO YOUNG LADIES

TO OVER-WORKED WOMEN

To Women Advuced in Life

B,J

American and

Marble

BALSAM.

NO pitentIppay

NERVOUS DEBILITY

COLOHE.

PARKER’S

GINGER TONIC

HALL'S

jJatarrhQure

Stop

1 Great -1
BURLINGTON
iRoute-

0

i CHICAGO, ROCK ISLAND &amp; PACIFIC RT

KANSAS CITY

' ERRORS UF YOU IH

—After Lodi

recorded for years in

the deni
•cd upper Up were dertruyed by cm-

®g

�Having just returned from the East with three immense
stocks for Nashville, Big Rapids and Cadillac, which
gives us the advantage over small dealers, who
purchase for one store only, we are offering

condemns the central lainx tewteucta* ot tlw

Convention et Dover on the 27th. Albert

ington HasUnga lor Cuogre*aman-«t-Large.
The platform adopted demands fair awl full
protection of. all American industries and
American workingmen from competition with
the pauper labor of Europe; a Just and whole­
some reform of the civil service: a free ballot,*
fair count, and au honest return; indorses free
schools and com mon-school education as the
only sure foundations of free government;
deplores tho untimely death of President Gar­
field, and tenders President Arthur and his

sffisass.%1

bin

wm

— Military Affaire.
An eysminr acMion was held, at which several
Paoaion bilh were pMAttl

DOMESTIC.
Tub Executive Committee of the trunk
roads has decided to increase the grass rate
on cattle from Chicago to New York to sixty
cents per hundred pounds.
•
On the afternoon of the 27th a careless
■workmax- in opening a keg of powder in a
quarry on the western boundaries of Chicago,
‘ernnmunicated to the powder am! precipitated
•an explosion. The flames extended to the
'magazine, lying adjacent and containing
1,000 pounds of powder and 200 pounds of
•nitro-glycerine. Thia exploded also and
wrought wide-spread destruction of property,
and Injured several persons, one fatally. The
property loss was In the neighborhood of
•40,0001
lx the Star-route cases at Washington 0X3
the 27th the Government enterel a motion
for the arrest of the editors of th* Washing­
ton Critic for making abusive and libelous
charges against witnesses for the Govern-

The Republicans of the Twelfth Ohio DU
trict on the 27th nominated Alphonso Hart
for Congress.
Tax Prohibitionists of the Fourteenth4 Ohio
Congressional District have nominated John
W. Bell for Congress.
-Tax Virginia State Central Republican
(straight-out) Committee met at Richmond
on the 90th and voted not to call u State Con­
vention. Rev. J. M. Dawson (colored) wm
The Colorado Democrats wilt hold their
State Convention at Denver ou the 21st of
September.
The Greenbackcrs of the Fifth New Jersey
District on the 27th nominated Erastua E.
Potter for Congrew.
J. G Hovskau, Director of the Brussels
Observatory, has arrived in Son Antonio, Tex.,
to prejKtrc to observe the transit of Venus in
December.
.Aaron G Bcrr, an adopted sou of Aaron
Burr, died ou the 27th in New York. He wm
a boo of Count de Lisle, and was born in Paris
In 1801
.
Professor Rossitew. who had l&gt;een con­
nected with Marietta (Ohio)' College for forty

Cnani.Es W. Cusrke, prlnrinal Reading
Clerk of the National House of Represent*-

28th, while ascending the steps of the Capitol.
B. Frank Bigelow, formerly Receiving
Teller of the National Bank of the Republic
at Washington, who absconded with *25,030
recently, surrendered himself on the 28th,
t On the 28th destructive forest fires were having grown tired of being hunted through
raging in Southern New Jersey. Over *150,- Canada.
Commodore Shufeldt arrived at San Fran­
000 worth of timber hid been consumed.
Tnxatx were 111 busineu failures in the cisco from Japan on the 29th ult. He takes
the
credit of planning and executing the
United States during the seven days ended on
opening of Corea.
the 27tb.
PO0tmabtxr-Gbnxral Howe was on the
The Texas Board of Health, learning of the
the 28th instituted a quarantine at Browns­
Ville, and avowed ita readiness to picket the
Rip Grande with rangers.
• Pv&amp;lDXNT Akthuh Las made proctamation of the ratification of the treaty between
the United States, Switzerland and other con­
,Meting powers, giving tn the adhesion of the

‘the “Genera Red-cross Convention."
men who had taken refuge under a tree dur­
ing a storm were struck and killed by ligbt- bring.
The thermometer registered ninety-nine
. degrees in the attade at New York on the 98th.
and many cases of sunstroke were reported.
_ Isaac Tvrnrk. a negro, who murdered Abe
. Ray, wm executed at Lexington, Ky., on the
2Btb.
i Sxven business buildings, with their con-

on the 30tli nit, Loss, *237,OJO.

■ult, and two of them were killed by a passing
•at Boston just after midnight on the 50th
Ult. Harriman, Hughea, Hart and Campana
were on the track.
• It waadiMYivered on the 29th ulL that the
late George F. Doughty, who waa Secretary of
the Cincinnati, New Orieana A Texas Pacific
Road, had fraudulently issued block to the

Road.
Inmbur, Cincinnati &lt;t Indianapolis Road for

hjs physicians ordered him to go to Wiscon­
sin.
The National Federation of Labor Unions
In an address issued on the 29th ult. says: “It
is of the greatest Importance that candidates
for the next Congress of all parties should be
called upon dearly to define their position no
the great question of capital and labor before
election day.” A convention of workingmen
has been called to meet In Washington, No

Coxorxmional nominations were made on
the 31st ult. as follows: Republican—North
Carolina, First District, John B. Resspas.
Democratic—Louisiana, First District, Carle­
ton Hunt; Pennsylvania, Ninth District,
William B. Given.

FOREIGN.
A DrauN.dispatch of the 27th state. that
O'Brien, the self-confessed assassin of Lord
Cavendish, sailed from Northwall ten minutes
before the tragedy occurred. His real name
la Westgate, and he la a Scotchman.
A Berlin dispatch of the 27th state* that
the emigration from Germany to Anferica
thus far this year had decreased by 10,000, as
compared with the- same period of 1881.
A son of one of the Russian Consuls In Roo­
manta wm arrested at Odessa on the 28th
on the charge of supplying dynamite to the
Nihllista.
Mauoix Chestnut and a little daughter of
Mrs. John Babbitt, while bathing In the river
at St. John, N. B., on the 29th ult, got be­
yond their depth. Mrs. Bobbitt rushed in to
save them, succeeding in rescuing her child,
and returned for Mbs Chestnut, when botu
were drowned.
In the French Cliamlxn- of Deputies on tho
29th ult. De Freycinet proposed that France

thousand men. and stated that the Ministry
450 to 75 the credit demanded by the Govern­
a Chicago on the 31 at ult
Tux mortality in New York City for the ment was rejected. The Ministers proceeded
to the Elyscc and tendered their resignations
the appalling figures of 1.317. A larger num- to President Grery. who requested them to
transact ail necessary business until the ap-

The body ot United States Minister Marsh
who succumbed to cholera infantum.

Oct of *1.000,000 taken by burglars from

reived by the Mayor. The Italian Ministry

escorted the remains to the Protestant ceme­
tery. where they were deposited in the mortu-

rebellion.
kir, nnd would

AlAXAXDKU dispatches of the 27th state
that an atte.-apt by Arabs to enter the town
French ami English Admiral* for Joint oc-

with wrath, calling the French Consul a fool
for playing into the hands ot England when
the Arabs had guaranteed the safety ot the
French. The British corvette Orion had en­
tered the canal without paying dues, against
. A URFVTATION ot six Egyptians from
Kafar-Dwar visited Alexandria on the 28th to
report that the people were determined to re­
sist England to the last The Khedive and
his Ministry refused to receive them
as delegates. Arab! Pasha bad announced

RHEUMATISM, Over 500 Suits
Hauralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago,
Backache, Sorenetc of tho Chest,
Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Spell­
ings and Sprains, Bums and
Scalds, Genera! Bodily
Pains,
Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted
Feet and Ears, and ai! other
Pains and Aches.

mand of the. Egyptian forces, a Provisional
with a National Assembly of three hundred
members. There was nothing' to confirm the
rumors scattered over, the world that Arabi
Lad proposed terms of peace.

SOLD BY ALL DBUMIBT8 ABD DEALEBB
IB MEDIODFE.

A. VOGELER &lt;fc CO

large powder magazine St Mekhuron. Two
armed parties that started from Alexandria
to repair railways cut by the rebels were suc­
cessful The conduct of De Leasep* at Port
Said was severely criticised, c* he was said to
be in drily communication with Arabi Pasha
The proclamation of the Khedive dismiss­
ing Arabi Pasha from the Ministry had been
publicly read. The news that France had DLGM,
BOOKS,
abandoned cooperation with England gave
much satisfaction.
JEWELRY,
A Constantinople telegram of the 30th
WAUL PAPER,
lilt- says the British Ambassador had the sec­
ond time rent the Secretary of'Legation to ask
WINDOW SHADES,
the Sultan to issue a proclamaliau denounc­
ing Arabi Pasha aa a rebel The Secretary at DYE8TUPF1C
the same time gave the Sultan conciliatory
PB0PBIETARY MEDICINES,
explanations, stating that England did not
alm at a protectorate over Egypt. He also
PRESCRIPTIONS,
asked for particulars concerning the composi­
RECEIPTS,
tion of the Turkish expedition to Egypt. The
Sultan gave no satisfactory answer. He

F. T. BOISE,

gland’s action, and bad sent a verbal message
through a Secretary that be would do nothing
for England, but would only yield to thewisb-

Axabi Pasha issued a manifesto on the
81st ult declaring that the Khedive had sold
Egypt to the British and left the country.
He therefore auumed a protectorate until
the Prophet chose to Indicate a suitable ruler.
Numerous outrages were reported within the
territory dominated by the rebela The Khcdive had authorized the English to occupy
the Suez Canal, while De Lessepa had been
given supervisory power along Ito line by
Arabi.
A Paris dispatch of the 81st ult states that
the Government had ordered the Infantry
Marine Brigade, preparing to start for Egypt
to be disarmed, and the transportt withdrawn.
The French residents at Port Said protested
against the withdrawal of the French squad­
ron, and announced their intention ot plac­
ing themselves under the protection of the
United States.

LATER NEWS.
Ax Alexandria dis natch of «.he 1st states
that the number of Christians murdered by
the adherents of Arabi was placed at 550.
The attitude of the European powers was
now believed to be hostile to English sggre*sion in Egypt, Russia being particularly
dissatisfied with the course taken by
the Gladstone Ministry. The Governor
of Assloot, the largest dty in Upper Egyp’
with two thonsandjneu at his back, had de­
clared for the Khedive. The Coldstream
Guards had embarked nt Dublin, en route to
Alexandria. Active measures were being
taken at Constantinople to accelerate the d&lt;&gt;
parture of Turkish troops for the seat of war.
The South Carolina Democratic State Con­
vention met at Columbia on the 1st. Colonel
Hugh &amp; Thompson wm nominated for Gov-

At the close of business on the 1st United
States called bonds had been redeemed as fol­
lows; Under the WSth call, *19,230,050;
109th call, *4,714,000; 110th call, *4,188,880;
lllth Nil, *4,S57,5«e; 119th call, *1238X900;
113th call. *10,150,000: U4th call, which ma.
tured on the 1st, *7,092,350.
Tuiktt-five barges, laden with coal, were
sunk tn the Licking (Ky.) River on the night
of the 31st ulL The water rose twenty-five

------- MY--------

PAINT AND BRUSH
DEPARTMENT

For $4 and. $5, we are Selling a ver^ good every day
Suit, many styles to select from.
For $8 and $10, we are selling a very desirable diagonal
worsted, bound and made in sack and frock styles. Other
stores get $12 for the same suits.
Our 12 00 and 14.00 Suits will surpris you
For 15.00 we can give you a suit you need not be asham­
ed to wear any place, and would cost $18 to $20 at any store.
Our 16.00 and 18 OO Suits are well made and trlmed, and for fit and wear can not be equaled.
_
__ finest we ever of­
fered. All Goods from a substantial school suit to the finest
dress suit. We have in stock more boys’ and youths’ clothing
than the combined stock of any house in town. Our stock

Boots, Shoes And Groceries,

7

Is full up and PLENTY OF THEM. Ready pay purchasers
desired. WE OWN THE GOODS at about 70 cents on the
dollar. You can save money, and be comparatively happy by
buying your goods

Cheap! Cheap! Cheap!
We want your BUTTER and EGGS and will allow you
PINE WOODS PRICES.
Reapectfuly

W. A. AYLSWORTH.
Call and Examine I
F. T. BOISE.
J.j

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN
At Buxton's new brick, have full and complete lines in

R. DICKINSON A CO.,
----- NEW-----

CUSTOM

Greiitn Furilishinir Goods

Fouring Mill
READYFOR BUSINESS

Every day hi the year—Sundays excepted.

CUSTOM

If you want something new, neat and nobby, just take a look at our stock of

CUFFS, COLLARS, TIES, HANKERCHIEFS, JEWELRY, ETC.

GRINDING!

f dercription, done in a superior
ner, al the drop of the hat; and
Satisfaction guaranteed.

FLOUR. MEAL AND MILL FEED
Kept constantly on hand.

Our

FOR THE LEAST MONEY
Remember that we (have no old, shop-worn and unseasonable goods, but that everything is

Graham Flour
ST All our purchases are made with the cash and by strict attention tothewantaof ou

Nashville, Apr. 20,1882.
Bv a strict attention to business, and square
dealing with all our customers, we hope to mer­
it a liberal patronage from the fanners of.this
vicinity.
•'
Mills.on railroad,—cast of depot.

II. R. DICKINSON A CO.
Rlver and Harbor Mil to the House of Repre­
sentatives without his signature. The bill
provided for the distribution of *18,7*8.875.
In explaining his reasons for vetoing the
incswrurc he declared that Congress had gone
beyond constitutional limits In granting fa-

At less than yon can buy the Cloth and Trimmings.

WOOL

AGAIN TO THE FRONT!
With the LARGEST and Most Complete Stock of

CARDING F URNITURE

A Faxn dlapateb of the 30th ult. state*
that, in comtequence of the rejection by the
Chamber of the motion for a vote of credit, all

talned were of a purely local nature.
The Amalgamated Iron and Steel Workers’
Association, representing 75,000 iron work­
men, met in National Convention st Chicago
co the 1st

Stopped. Admiral Conrad, commanding the
French fleet in Egyptian waters, wm ordered
to maintain strict neutrality. President
Grery bad a conference with the Presidents
of the Senate and Chamlicr.
A new Cabinet waa formed oa theBlst ult.

1st makes the following exhibit: Total debt
(Including Interest of »W,W*,918), *1,91*,152,404. Cash In Treasury, *241,096.031. Debt,
less cash in the Treasury, *1,&lt;CT,OM,433. De­
crease during July, *13,300,027.

New Carding Mill

on Foreign Affairs on the l«t adopted a re-

Of the undersigned, is prepared to make into

Peru Investigation, which discredited J. R.

ROLLS, OR YARN!

ter Huribut.
Yrtxow ravBH had appeared in Browns-

Ready for ure. all the wool of this section, with

4SD SPINNING

NEED NOT WAIT
To have

Ever laid down in any one store in Barry
or Eaton Counties.

Our mammoth two-story double store
Is full and running over.

Everything you need from the smallest Bracket to
a $125 Parlor Suit.
Yon can save money and have a better selection to choose
from, by dealing with us than aiy|other dealer

Don’t

�BXpenenco

clergyman, who told hi*
ag&lt;» that only tippler* and drunkard*
were aanatruckr wa» pro*tratad on the
A-------------- ...
very nextAday.
and*
now
he
hardly

tows how .to get out of his fix.

■ Two house* and a blacksmith shop
form a town in *ome portions of the
Wert. As soon aaa liquor saloon i*
adi’ed the inhabitant* become *0 proud
that they • shoot tlie individual who
neglects to speak of their place a* a
city~
’________ ___ _
A western editpr once apologized to
his reader* somewhat after this fash­
ion ; “We intended to have a death and
marriage to publish this week, but a
violent storm prevented the wedding,
a»d, the doctor being taken sick him­
self, the patient recovered, and we are
accordingly cheated ont of both,”

Gil Osmun, the spicy legislative
porter and scientific architect of tlie
—
state news column of the Detroit Even­
ing News, is talked of as among possi­
ble republican legislative candidate*.
The citv of the atraita would have a
creditable, clear headed representative
should the honor fall npou the genial
Gil.—Lunsing-Jtepublican.
Yoa’re sho
I and if Gilz4ived in
th hands
d b
this district
for him.
One of the queer things about this
queer war in Egypt is to see England
urging the Sultan to declare Arabi
Pasha a rebel. Any sovereign but the
Turk would be expected to know,
without being told by a foreign nation,
whether one of hi* vassals was a rebel
or not, England seem* to be more
•ensitive on the question of Arabi’s
loyally than the Sultan herself is. The
reason, of course, is plain, En­
gland’s interest* are involved. In the
mean tiufe, without waiting for the
Snlton,s decision, the British call Arabi
a rebel, and continue to shoot and flog
looter* in Alexandria.

It don’t pay to get mad about any­
thing, much lens about politics. Get­
ting mad cheats a man of his time. He
can lose a day or two days or even a
week, thinking about it and fretting
over it, and that interferes with his
business and damages bis digestion,and
makes bis family unhappy. He had
better go dead for awhile and come to
■life again. Getting mad is the poorest
way to get even with an enemy I ever
tried. It don’t pay worth a cent and
always makes a man lose his own self­
respect. Now a man may get mad
with himself for being a fool and it
will do him no harm. In fact, it may
do'good, for its a sign of repentance. I
knew a young man to go to a church
•fair and the girls honey-fugled six dol­
lars out of him and he went home and
undressed and tied one arm to the bed­
post and whipped himself with other
and a* he cut himself round the legs he
would say: "You go to another church
fair! You le| them girts fool you out of
your money again I You pay ten cents
for every fool letter they stick at you !
You give half a dollar for a little dab
of ice cream—I’ll learn you some sense
I will,” and as he talked to himself in
kept the switch going lively, and would
■dance up und down just like he was an­
other fellow. Now that is a good idea.
When a makes a fool of himself and
goes a rippiug around let him tie him­
self up and give himself a good whin
ping, and then take a fresh start in tb*e
morniug. If a man gets into a fight
with another man lie might accident­
ally get whipped, and then everybody
would hear of it, but if he whips him­
self all by himself it will do more good,
and nobody would ever know anything
about it. .

For Congress.
Just as we were about to make some
remarks in favor of the re-nomination

Laoey, at the hands of the Republicans
the Jackson Citizen takes oar argu­
ments out of our mouth. Consequent­
ly we cannot do otherwise than to copy
from the Citizen:
The Republican convention tor this
congressional district is called to meet
in this city ou the 23d of next month.
Tl»e work of that convention is already
foreshadowed, and the present congre**man, the Hod. E. S. Laeey. will
be nominated again by acclamation.
Undoubtedly thia ia the wish of the
Republicans of this district. Mr. I jv.
cey two years ago had the high honor
of being nominated by the unanimous
voice of convention. His services iu
congress cotitle him to similar endorse­
ment on the 88d. He has proven a cap­
able, industrious representative, and
the interest* of the nation, state and
district hare been closely attended to
by the member from the 3d Michigan.
&gt;Jr. Lacey has developed qualities
pleasing to his constituents and credit­
able to himself. He ha.", been useful,
faithful and diligent in the discharge
of his duties, and won a good name in
the country and influential place in tlie
body of which he ia a member. His ac­
tion has shown that be takes a states­
manlike view of matters of national
concern.
His postage savings meas­
ure has attracted wide attention, and
received commendation from high
■ources, while bis admirable speech in
favor of making the department of ag­
riculture a cabinet position evidenced
much thought, a great familiarity with
the resources and needs of the nation,
and his broad and able treatment of
Mull bn glad to ko rocb _• valoaHo

__
_
_-------- and
Hetp them along, thu-; saving them
mtutyffcilurcs I underwent. Now the
first thing I have
learned b
that if ■ I
want . a
good,
a
real good (not what some per­
sons call good) strong cup of coffee L
never buy the coffee all ready roasted
orground. ns wu can now find in- all
the stores. I admit that it b a great
saving of trouble to be able to run into
tho store and gist your ooffew all ready
to be put into the coffee poi, but to the
lover of good, strong coffee this trouble,
which I take, and advise .others to do
likewise, will appear as nothing, andthen what coffee we have! First of all
1 buy gocxl coffee in it* green stale,
then 1 pick it over taking from it 'all
decayed berries; then wash it well and
set it under the stove, or, better still,
in the oven; if there is a little fire in
the stove be careful to shake it from
time to time to prevent it* burning, and
that it may all dry. After it is dry put
some of it into a skillet, on the stove
over a hot tiro, and keep stirring it all
the-time so that it may. not blirn. let it
roast until it becomes ot a rich brown
color—almost black—then take that out
and place in a pan, take more coffee
and so on until you have roasthd all
you may have washed and dried. It is
better not to have too much on hand at
-one time as it will lose ita strength if
kept too long. When you have it all
roasted, set it where it will get cool,
then take the white of an egg to two
pounds of coffee and wet the coffee with
It, being careful that every berry
receives some of the egg.
This done
[et it dry, put the coffee away in some­
thing that will be perfectly air tight,
grinding it as you wish to use it, or for
the matter of’ that you can have it
ground and put away ready for use, but
you must be sure that it is id something
which is air tight, thus preserving tho
aroma of tho coffee. The coffee should
be well roasted, so that the germ or in­
ner part be well cooked, which is not
the case in the coffee we buy in the
stores ready for use. 1*17 mv plan and
I am sure you will neveruse coffee save
of your own roasting again.—Cor. Prai­
rie Farmer.
bo

Ills Son Peter.

“This is John Miller. I presume?"
observed his Honor.
"Yes. dot ishme.”
"Well, Mr. Miller, there is a serious
charge against you.”
••VnelL 1 can’t help it If I am sent
to shail for feefty years I shall be gladt.
I haf so much troubles mit my son
Peter dot I like to smash my brains
oudt on some walls.”
"It is charged that you went home
drur.k and drove the family out of doors
“Dot is drue. Vhen I goes home I
finds dot my son Peter has s’.hole my
monish und so I like to shop up der
whole peesuess mit der ax.”
••What is the matter with Peter?”
"Efenthing! He is der baddest boy
nobody efer heard of. He gets drunk.
He takes my monish. He gels in sbail.
He sleeps in der barn. He has a light
mit a breach er and cost me two hoonered dollar. He tells me to go to Tex-

“Can’t you control, him?”
••How can IP 1 haf kissed dotpoy
Peter und shed tears on him. I haf
coaxed him with sugar und sweet-cake.
I haf licked him mit straps und sticks
und proom-handles und whips-x,till I
vhas tired oudt, but he keeps on sbust
der same. He drives me so grazy dot
I shall hang myself mit some cloze­
lines.”
"I wouldn’t. In the first place I fine
you 810 for this offense, and in the next
place, you can have Peter arrested and
locked up. Three months behind the
bars may euro him.”
“Vhefl, maype so. I nays der tine
und I shall try der shail peesness on
Peter. If it doan’ cure him I shall
"Don’t be rash.’’*
‘•Shudge, 1 vhaa so rasher as never
pefore! Seems like I wish I vhas oop
in Heaven! Goot-py, Shudge—I vha*
sorry for dis troubles. Vhen Peter ish
in shall maype I feels better und kicks
oop my heels again.” —Detroit Free
Press.

Mrs. Mackay is exceedingly indig.
nant at reports current in Pans bf her

a Follaire reporter, the other day, that
there was not a word of truth in the
story. "If a monarch were to propose
to Miss Makay,” declared her mother,
"he would be refused.” Mrs. Mackay
expressed herself very strongly on the
whole subject. She complains that she
is besieged by fortune-hunters.
"If
this goes on I shall have to put a notice
apou the door.” said the wrathful little
lady, "announcing that in conformity
with American customs Miss Mackay
will not have any marriage portion.”
A Gurions' commentary on this social
incident is supplied to-day by the
Madrid correspondent of the Gaulois,
who, in noticing the report* about Don
PhiUippi, the Bourbon in question, and
Miss Mackay, observes that Paris does
□ot seem to know that Don PhiUippi
was married morganatically to a widow
called Bordrc, on the 18 th day of Feb­
ruary l**t—Parw Spectai&gt;

What the Girl/Should Learn.

1 thought I might as well drop in
and see how they run a weekly down
io South Carolina, and a Httle darkey
piloted me up one street and down 'an­
other until we balled* before a stairway
over which bung a sign of"Tlie Herald.’’
The office was up four flights of stairs,
of course, and I had only reached the
first when a hunk of composition cut
from some old roller wijtzed past u&gt;y
head. There was notbi-ig strange in
that, however, a* all well-regulated
offices kept a half dozen of those hunks |

been property swept, dusted and put iu
order,or to prepare puddings and mkke
dishes, that many young ladies spend
in reading novels that enervate noth
mind and body and unfit th cub for every
day life. Women do not. as a general
rule get pale faces by doing housework.
Their sedentary habit*, in over-heated
rooms, combined with ill-chosen food
arc to blame for bad health. (Jur moth­ lying around as weapons of defense,
ers used to pride themselves on their and I pressed on. At the head of the'
housekeeping and fine needlework. second flight I looked up the dark 'way
Why should not vref—-Baltimore Suh.
and thought I saw a mail with a gun in
A Close Relatlsn.
his hands. All weekly newspapers
There was a disagreeable scene having any influence always keep at
last night-over at the I%lmer mansion, least one shot gun lying around to in­
between Colonel Floyd Palmer and bis timidate poets, and so 1 went whistling
son William. Bill Palmer is an Austin along up the third ^flight. Then I wm
boy of the mosrmedern type, who al­ certain that I saw a muu, und certain
ways tells his parents just what he
thinks about them, regardless of their that the muzzle was looking dowu up­
feelings. Not long since, he wanted to on me. Some editors stand at the head
celebrate hi* birthday with.some of his of the fourth flight and practice at tar­
Eouthful companions, so he applied to get shooting to rest-their weary brains,
is father for an adequate appropria­ and I was wondering where the .bull’s
tion. Colonel Palmer, who is a close eye was when I beard a click ! click !
relation of William’s, being his penuri.
,qus father, responded with a quarter of and a voice called out:
“Stand! or you are a dead man!’’ •
a dollar, which bore about the same
No
man
who
thinks
anything
of hi*
proportion to the need and expectations
of Bill as did Galveston’s Congressional clothes will ever be fouud dead on a
appropriation to the one she applied stairway leading to a printing oflee. I
came to a lialt, and the voice continu for.
ed:
Billy looked at the quarter, sneered
“Throw up your bands and go down
at it, and finally said to the author of stairs or 1’11 blow your brains into tlie
his existence:
street!”
"That’s a mighty slim appropriation
I didn’t believe he would, but as I
to celebrate the thirteenth birthday of couldn’t prove it the best, way was to
an Austin boy on, but still I don't re­ ol&gt;ey his little request. 1 had just got
proach von. ' You are not to blame for back to tlie hotel when in came the
editor and the/oreman and the devil
my birtnday.”
"What do you mean, plr?” whooped and two comps, and they all began to
talk at once. They were expecting a
the now thoroughly arotsed father.’’
"I mean Just what I say. If mother lightning sort of a politiciou up those
hadn’tmatried such a close relation as stain* at that very time, nnd if he once
up he was to open fire from a re­
you are, I wouldn’t never have had any got
volver and have a scalp-dunce over the
birthday to celebrate, and I would be remains of the Ikrabl. It was a mis­
all the better off. She is the one who take, and thev were deeply grieved,
is to blame. She should have married and we had a lemonade together, nnd
a man of more liberal views, and then tlie man with the gun shook hands
my father would have afforded me the again and whispered:
"Boy! I had my finger on the trigger
means of celebrating my birthday in
accordance with my social status.”— i and a dead aim on your head, and if
I you had lifted one foot an inch high to
Texas Shiftings.
i come further up I’d have killed you as
j dead as a hammer!”
White House Conservatories.
। After that I nlways sent four boys,
A letter to the I*rovidence Journal bsvs: one after another, up. ataira with my
The white house conservatories, under card and a written declaration that I
the charge of five gardeners, are forced was not loaded.—Detroit Free Free.
to their utmost all of the time to provide
REPUBLICAN CAUCUS.
the decorative plants
and flow­
The rcnubllauu of Castleton will meet at the
ers for the
regular
use.
In
hull in Uic village of Naubvillc, on Sat­
the
rose
house
built
for Mrs. town
urday, Auguut 12th. 1B82, at 2 o’clock p. m. lor
Hayes some two hundred blossoms are tlie purpoaenf electing delegates to tlie county
cut each day. but for extra occasions convention to l»e held at Hastings. August 16th,
’
By order of com.
other government green-houses are lev­ 1NB2.
John Keaole, chairman.
ied upon, as at the last state dinner nine
hundred roses were used on the table REPUBLICANS OF MAPLE GROVE.
alone, besides the oceans of violet* and
The republicans of Maple Grove, will meet
heliotropes over which tho primrose ship at Maple Grove Center, ou Thursday, Aug. 10,
sailed. A few orange and lemon trees 18B2, at 6 o'clock in the a.'ternoon, for the
purpose of appointing six delegates to attend
are kept in tho hot-house, and a month tlie County Convention to be held at Hastings,
or later the grapevines produce their Aug. Kith, 1682, and transact other busineM
immense clusters of fruit The white which maVcomc before the meeting.
Dated, Maple Grove, Mich., July 30, ’82.
house conservatory has the most com­
plete collection of double geraniums in
the city, and some of the finest cinera­
SKINNY MEN.
rias, or Cape asters, in the country, the
Wells’ Health Kencwer. Absolute cure for
most of the flowers measuring an inch nervous debility and weakness of the genera­
tive
funcUona
fl. at dnigjrivu. Mich. Depot
and a half and two inches across their
discs of shaded purple and white. The JA'IES E. DAVIS A CO., Detroit. Mich.
matter of flowers is now asocial necessity
••BUCHUPAIBA."
that no one dares to disregard, and the
New, quick, complete cure 4 davs, urinary
florist’s bill about matches the caterer's affections, smartlng.frequent or difficult unnaon any great occasion. A Jacqueminot tlon, kldncv diseases, fl. at drucgiita. Mich.
rose cost* a* much a* a beef-steak, and if Depot, JAMES E. DAVIS &amp; CO., Detroit,
___________________
the lily-lunching resthetes live a la Mich.
carte there is no economy in tbeir craze.
No more Chills and Ague in tills section.
Our Druggist is selling an article called
Seats for Strangers.
“Aotre CoxqcKKox.” it is about the only
satisfactory preparation sold for the cure of
Speaking of inhospitality in some Fever and Ague, Dumb Chills. Intgrroitunt or
Fevers. The Proprietor of the Aous
churches an American gentleman sev­ CBillions
onqueror lias used but little energy to make
eral years ago went into an English this medicine known and vet Ita sales are im­
church and began to look about lor a mense tn Ague Districts. It purifies the blood
sent. Almost instantly a dozen gentle­ Liver and other Secretory organs so effectually
men rose, opened their pew doors, and that the drills do not return even when per­
sons have bad them for years. Entirely vege­
invited him so earnestly to enter that table preparation. Price, SO cents and &gt;1.00
he felt as if he had fallen in with a per bottle. Two doecs will stop the chills.
group of hackmen at an American rail­
road station. After much embarrass­
Auahville .Harkets,
ment ho accepted a seat. Lingering
aboufr the church after the services, he
remarked to the sexton: "Your peo­
ple seem very kind and anxious to give Applea.per bu, freon,.
.........— 40
people a seat.” "Yes. air; yes. sir; a
3.00 to 3 50
few months ago one of our pew-holder* Onlona,perbu,
Butter, por lb,
hod left him an income of $35,000 a
year. Several year* before ho was very
polite to a stranger—an old gentleman Timothy per hu.
—and gave him a nice seat and all the
10.06
hymn books and prayer bocks and
found the place for him. Ever since
pHRISTIAN
CHURCH
—
F.
A.
Blase),Pastor.
that windfall everybody is anxious to V7 Services every Sabbath at 10.30 a. tn. and
give a seat to stranger*, but nobody 7 p. tn. Sabbath achtiol at 12 tn. Prayer meet­
has got £7.000 a year for it yet. -De- ing every Thursday evening
—When Queen Victoria visits any of
her palaces, the rooms formerly occu­
pied by the Prince Consort, which in
all of them have been kept unchanged,
are opened and lighted every evening,
the Queen passing a part of her time In
them. In summer the Queen breakfasts
in a tent on the castle lawn, and trans­
act* her business in another, grooms
constantly bringing dispatch-boxes
from her secretary at tho castle to the
tent

—Curiously enough, the ancient
temples of Egypt are believed to con*
tain the oldest timber in the world, in
the shape of dowel pias. which are in­
corporated with stone work, known to
be not less than 4,000yeart old. These
dowel pins, according to the appear­
ances they present, are thought to have

tim wood, in ancient* times a sacred
tree in Egypt.—N. F. Bu*.

By all means let the girls Itarn to
cook. What right has a giri to marry
—Puck's editor disotose* his experi­
and go into a house of her own unless ence by sadly remarking: “There is
she knows how to superintend every nothing in this wide world that makes
branch of housekeeping, and ohe can­ a young man crazier than, after arriv­
ing at a party with a young lady, whom
he has got tbere at considerable ex­
pense, to have some baldheaded indi­
ing whether the woman of his ohoioe is vidual get her off into a corner and
capable of cooking him a meal, and it talk to her all the evening on tho pecu­
is a pity he is so sbort-rightod. as hi* liarities of the Gulf stream.
health, his chearfulnew, and indeed
his success in life depend in a very
—Two detected burglars at Daytcm,
great degree upon the food he eaU; in Ohio, leaped from a third-story window
fact, the whole household is influenced eighteen feet to a shed, and then rixtaan
feet more to the ground, dashed
through the crowd which bad oountod

H. AYL8WORTH, M. D., Physician
• and Burgeon. Office over Boise's drug
store; Room at Wolcott House. Will promptly
attend to all day and night calls.

J
Goodn

EXCEEBIK&amp;LY LOW!

CLOTHING!
In order to make room for our

Fall a..o Wnter Goods,
We are selling our-

At prices that requires no bantering to sei

HERE ARE BARGAINS FOR YOU!
Summer Pants for 95c
THIIXK OF' IT!

For fall and winter trade are comining in.
lent and cheap. Examine them.

They are excel­

Of the best quality and lowest in price. Try our 40c Tea.
Don’t buy poor eggs unless you prefer them. Our egg tester
tells you which are poor.

CASH PAID FOR BUTTER AND EG6S.

NEW VICTOR SEWING MACHINE is VICTOROUS.
Ready pay secures for you all the advantages in trade.

L. J. Wheeler
Spring
TOOTH1

Jarrow

South Bend Flow.
Buy Factory Foints,
they are much cheap­
er and Better..
Stayers Grram Frill.
Builders Hardware.
DOMESTIC SEWING MACHINE.

When in need of the best greades of Hardware
and Machinery, 'Call and see me-

W

WeAre StillHere!'"1 CAN GET
A FIRSTCLASS-----And shall stay and continue to supply the.

”"d”lu

OMAR CH

Reaper

BILLIARD HA.L.L
(No Liquors.)

C. H. DUNHAM.

HOUGHTON
He«ordor calalogus

address

A. G. HLJq EDICT,

RIVERVIEW ACADMEY

POUOHKEKPS1E.N. Y,
With U. 6. Military Department.

BROCERIES
-ass-

^lUlofue with chart of CoUer*
application, OTI8 BISBEB,

1.000 000*

OSBORN MAKE!

OF A NO. 1 QUALITY

warranted

I

AS GOOD ASAHI MACHINE MADE,
Very Cheap

FRESH EV ERY DAY, AT MY PLHCE&gt;
ROCK BOTTOM PRICES, the celebrated

ABOUT SEPT. 1
G. W. FRANCIS

Grain Cradle.

J. M. WOOD.

�reply,
kind of ]

. • WAGONS ONLY:$6O.OO.
.■Si,

&gt;‘vu discovered.

Mu- un- of Natural History. New York,
and includes over three thousand- objrrts in flint-imiilementa in every stage
of workmanship, from tho rude chip to
the beautifully-polished and aymmetrical celt or adze, nearly all obtained
A. map
from the Valley of tbe Somme. A
find HDtlon^ drawing, .how ,b«
tbe K
IoealiKBhd JumwlerSt eoil-imraonM,
chalk clifle—from whenoe these curious
relies hare boon taken. Thi cbalkcHUa
have furnished tbe material to'onr
knowledge of thepro-hUlorie raan. and
in the L^ravellv drift that has accumuILdX then. hl. aviated tea...

promptly and very properly refused to
! IThe London agent said be Would
! “ul The Chicago man said he might
me
rThc Loudon
Nt®n« »«»&lt;L -Th* Cmcago man engag«*d a solicitor and defended the case,
lie beat the 1London agent ***
out nl
of sight
I •Uh
»■»» «&gt;
with «-«•
eo,te. Th®
.—
------ ......
-: Ur m to .«y the Union agent eu a
i.Mo Iraud. a swindler, and pretty ranch
ercrything else worlhmonl ontag. The
(Chicago ruan-thought ho had a good
- thing and wa.go.ngoff.oongratuUUiur
I himself when the solicitor brought iu
i bl. MIL Tbat alraoet killed ffin. It

'
■

WHAT 1T.DJD FOR AN OLD L

! About six month* neo

|
|

■
j

cot m&gt;

A UOMFLETK LINE OF

ADY.

»he

uwxr, and got a iHittle of Hop Bitu-rK. It lmproved b&lt;y »he
able to drrM herself and
walk about the botwe. When ahe had taken
the wxtoud liottlr
wn* «We to take cxrc of
her own mom ur.d walk ?;ut to her ueicbbor’a,
----------------------and ---improved
nil Um- time- since. My wife
AIH] children ul*u have derived great benefit
taaa^rae.
w B. JUraw.y

Buggies, Carriages, Wheel Harrows and
Cultivators, Mounted Seeders,
.
and4kinds of Plows.

REED S GENUINE SPRING TOOTH HARROW
ROAD SCRAPERS, SQUARE DRASS. GRIND STONES
-

Common, and hung ready for use.

'

and Iraplomenl.
have ail
man- -•» «-r 913.'.. more than twite the
and
implements have
all found
found a
a mauSEW 1IVCJ MAOH1NES.
ooleuni. A number of -cella bear rude : amduntot lheatteiupt&lt;,d awipdle. Tho
A South Eud man calls hi» wife Ciy *ta), be ■
■ ­ Chicago man inquired into it. Ha cause sb* is always ou tbe watch.
carviugs as representatives
of- the
hu
PLOW POINTS for the Oliver Chilled. Wlard, Three Riv­
man figure, rings and crescents—all found that the law allowed his solicitor
AN IMPlWSIBILiTY.
ers, Bryan, Calo, Curtis, Dodge, Robinson
much in the manner of drawings that 82.50 every time his client called, even
Deserving article* are Always appreciated­
And many other Plows.
boys are apt to make on their dates. . if the client merely picked his teeth for -. Tbe
fitrt Ktartcd th* rowf
exceptional cleanliness o! Parker* Hair
These ancient peoples seem to have thirty seconds in the ballway and went Hal-aui make* it popular. Gray dulrs arc imIn fact. we keep a full and complete etoek-of first class Hardware and Farming Tools. Call
fancied any object that resembled the out again. Hu also found that every time I possible with Its occational use.
and see them before buying.
the
solicitor
wroth
a
letter
to
the
oppo
­
human face or form, and maw speci­
Ln’I tills country' about .ready to lynch the
mens in the collection had been care­ site party, no matter if he only said
fully polished and cut, to preserve and • How d’ye do?” in it. the law allowed manufacture* of toy pistols!
Ho discovered that thc
heighten the supposed resemblance, i him $1.37.
Mr. H. N. Morton, uf Oswego, N. Y. write*:
These were, undoubtedly,, household solicitor could not take' bis case into My wife lias lieen restored to perfect health and
aboETqck ancestors gods; or, possibly, may have been used court at all; the law, out of the lot of strength. She suffered many year* from in­
digestion,
complicate;! with female Irregular­
things
it
did
allow
him.
did
not
.allow
If theyrould speak, what wonderful as wampum—11 we may borrow the that. Not any. In order to bo heard tie*. I never saw her l!ps *o red and her
stories ’the flint arrow-heads that are term from our Indians.
In court he must engage a barrister. It
Among
the
choicest
relics
are
beau
­
■WITH A FULL STOCK OFplowed up over the country could re­
it once occurred to tho Chicago man
late about the battles, wars, customs tifully polished axes, set in stag-horn, to ask himself why he had not dealt , Men are like pin*. One with a little bead
and habits of an unknown people! How and In long bones of domestic animals. with tlie barrister direct, instead of en­ may be Jurt on sharp as one with a big bead.
little wo know, after all, of our origin Implements of the hardest nature are gaging this irrelevant middleman. Ho
THE HAPPINKSBOF THE FAMILY.
and history ! Our -school histories tell found, polished and formed into beau­ very soon found that the law had pro­
And prosperity, also, depend on the health of
us of the lives of men a few hundred tiful shapes, among which are jade, vided for that also. He must engage ’• the
mother. She should maintain her health
quartz,
crystal,
etc.
years back with accuracy. Beyond that
i and correct any monthly difficulties or uterine
In America wo find similar works. A two men to do what one would have I wcaknem by using Zoa-Pbora, the Ilealthwe have hearsay, and legends, and stu­
accomplished at half the cost, and
._
pendous monuments and buildings, to human skull was found* it 1857 one twice as well. He shuddered to think ! briuger.
hundred
and
eighty
feet
below
the
sur
­
tell the story; but of the nges further in
what might have become of him if he j The winner is be who give* himself to hja
. tho past, tile-flint arrow-head, broken face of Tabic Mountain, California, in
had
lost
the
case,
but
paid
tho
bill,
and
j
work
body
and
wul.
pottery and other rude objects alone company With the bones-of the mas to- ;• has been swindled right and left ever -!
”
don and elephant.
'
tell thtj.tale.
DON'T TRUST THEM.
Another was discovered in California, ii linen. He says he would rather give I
The study of man by these works is
1 his money to one thief than two law- j When you feel badly, and have pains ln-n\
called arciueology—meaning literally one hundred and fifty feet deep? The ■
i yers, any dav. With him it is a choice : and there in your Uxly that you don’t know
minors
had
sunk
n
shaft
through
five
the stndy of ancient things—and the
I between two evils.—London Cor. Chi- hnw to acet,nt for It i» the most RwdUh |-&gt;Hry
flint arro.w and spear-heaps, rollers, beds of lava and volcanic tufa, nnd I1 tago XtW3.
'
■ in tlA world to take Hie advice of people who
clubs and other objects that many of four beds of gravel, before finding the
---------- ------------ y---' say: "Oh, there's nothing thc matter with you.
skull.
How
.
old
was
this?
Perhaps
:
•our readers possess in the great un­
Mines
of
Precious
Stones,
L&lt;-t iour*elf alone and you will romeoul ail
some
of
our
readerscan
guess!
ArchieI
written history of early man; they are
. curion.
?
X’
monuments oi an unknown people, so ologists think it older than tho Amiens II Gems of »U kiail.
relies,
and
to
date
back
to
the
Pliocene
‘
EMBRA C E S-------inu.re.tto
human
UligZ
From
tho
“•
,ta lr""n',w“1’
every boy who owns such a collection,
and interprets it, becomes an historian time of geology—how long ago wo | earliest time, precious .tone, have ha&lt;t
™ l-lrar irouUe. Send rtjbt
• hardly dare to say.
and a public benefactor.
a strange attraction for the wealthy and
to your drogxUt and get ■ bottle of Dr.
Tho curious mounds so common in ‘
Tosimplify the study, the implements
' powerful of the earth. So far no dia­ I Kennedy'* ••Favorite Remedy,” and then you
found have "been assigned to different the Western States are. according to '
mond fields. have been discovered in ; will be all right, or write to tlie Doctor, nt
* ages; hence, in Europe, wo have the Doctor E. L Davis, the burial mounds i rr-t 7—vn,------ C------ “ : ‘ ------- “ ■ Rondout N. Y.
of a raw related to the Artec,; butJ '•”&gt;
nges of stone and metal. The first rep­
i tire
in several‘ localities.
In
itrsnsiBEti thiiT
little
more
about
them
is
known.
Many
* found
“
”
- New
—
resents the earliest man. and is divided
| Mexico there is a famous turquoise
If y»u are rick Hop Bitters will surely aid
into tho epoch in which man lived at arc covered over with dead and. living j mine Which**must hayo been worked lif- Nature In making you w ell when all el*c fail-*,
tho time of the mammoth, or hairy ele­ trees, that show them to bo over one I erally a thousand years ago,for it yield- j It you are eoHurc or dyspeptic, or are ttufferphant, the cave-bear, and other'enor­ thousand years old. Doctor Newberry
1 c«l up its treasures to tlie Aztecs aud to ; ing froiu any oilier of the uumerous di*eaac*of
mous animals now .extinct The second has shown that thcSc people were the . other prehistoric races, which dominated | the ktoiuach or bowde, it is your own fault if
remain ill. i««r Hup Ritter* are a •ovt-reigu
epoch of the stone age is called the ancient copper-miners of Lake Superi­ ' iu Mexibo and adjoiuing countries. It !• you
remedy in all such cuui|ilafnt*.
or,
and
the
lead-miners
of
Louisville,
. Reindeer, from the fact that these ani­
i is believed this mine c*.in still be used * 11 »ou #re wnaUng away with any form ot
mals, the giant stag. European bison, Kentucky, and that they knew of the , (or bringing out iu peculiar treasures. j Kidney oisea-W, *toj&gt; teuiptinsr tiewin this tun­
wild ox and others, then lived- in the oil wells’in Pennsylvania and Canada. but in the eager hunt for gold and sil- . incut, and turn (or a cure to Hop Bitter*.
warmer portions of Europe. Tho third One of the most interesting mounds is i ves mines, the mining of gems is over­ i If you arc sick, with that teiriliie NckncM
; Ncrvou*t»c*«. you wi(t find a ‘•B.ihu iu Gilead"
epoch is called the ••Polished Stone.” I in Adams County. Ohio, and is called looked. In Alexander County, North ‘ in the u«e of Hop-Bitters. ■
UR WORK IS ALL DONE UPON HONOR. BUGGIES
The people of ’ this tjme domesticated । tlie Great Serpent. It is an immense Carolina,’ they arc discovering emeralds, I If you are a frequenter, or a rwddcnt of a
I
serpent-shaped
mound
of
earth.
’
seven
animals of the present day, and their
being made from Second Growth Hickory.
I aud iu such quantities that the mining mla»uiatic di»lricL inm-a-ade your, siricm
implements, found in Central and North hundred feet long terminating in a triple ' of them is likely to become a profitable aiaiJnat the sreurge of all f*&gt;unlrn-*- malarial,
Our Tops are lined with All-Wool Indigo-Dyed Goods and
America and Europe, of rich design coil at the tail. If stretched out it । industry. A Mr. Hidden has sunk av. epidemic, bHiotWnrfiW, and intermittent lever*—
would
measure
a
thousand
feet.
The
and high polish, show a decided ad­
Warranted not to Fade. W. II. Atkixbox, a painter whose
jaws are widely open, and seem to bu i shaft some 36 feet ou the Stevenson I
vance iu art
equal' to j plantation, and in it discovered nuuaer- I Kcncmlh-. Hop Milter* will give yon fair akin, work has never went back on him, has charge of our paint deThe age of metal is later, and is di- trying to catch an egg that
ous pockets of emeralds. These nro rich blood, »« ectcst breath, health, und votnthat
of
a
roc,
and
is
a
hillock,
IGO
feet
partment.and oan be relied on. Bolts, Dash Feet, Body Loups
• Tided imo the ages of bronze nnd iron,
not ot much commercial value, as the
and coimects the history ot early man long-and eighty feet Wide. The snake ' colors are defective, and flaws in the
and Stays are made from Norway Iron and the entire buggy
is about six feet in width, and in some
with that of our historical times.
- gems are numerous, but further mining
places
over
thirty.
ironed in a desirable nnd superior manner and warranted.
Tho first discoverers who attempted
Mounds of other shapes orq found all may develop a great wealth of these
to show that man was an extremely old
i gems. An enthusiast named Byrne, in
Invxlld wife. sister,
inhabitant upon the globe were laughed over tho West, and contain curious ar­ Slott Haven, New York, is even now
made the picture
at Nearly the first discoveries were ticles. They arc usualfy of atone, nnd investigating the subject of diamond­
Hop Bitters, costmade In 1823. In France human bones sometimes of shell aud bone, and often making. He thinks he is On the point
let them suffer!
were found, with rude pottery, in the copper in its natural slate, flint spear i of finding out the secret of nature in
and
arrow-heads
.
Pottery
is
also
found
cavern of Bize, mixed with the bones
; tho production of diamonds. But this
of creatures long since extinct. In one in them, frequently of rich design. is probably as wild a dream ns that of
—the Engis Cave—the explorers were Two pottery vases, from a Georgia the alchemists of the middle ages who
mound,
are
of
rare
interest
one
oval
lowered down by a rope, over the face
Until you have thoroughly examined mine. Spokes made
| supposed they could transmute tho
of a cliff, and thus gained a foothold and low, tho other high with an oval I baser metals into gold.—Do^orcsTe
from Second Growth StocK and the wagon is made to stand
on a cleft of rocks.tnat led into a cav­ bottom, so that it will not stand. In | Monthly.
I the wear and tare of our roads.
■
ern. They went in on all fours, carry­ the latter the remains of a child were
ing .their iorches as best they could, found, showing it to be a burial urn.
Students of Zurich iu Revolt­
and squeezing through narrow passages Masses of quartz, sheets of mica, and
that had been filled up by stalactites. rough cloths, are also found in the ' Tho authorities of Zurich hava done
ES~I
IN STOCK A NUMBER OF-^J
The floors were made up of stalagmites mounds, but no writings to tell who or , a wise thing. Dueling among the
as hard as marble, and.for years these what the strange builders were. All • students of the university there has
we
know
is
that
the
Mississippi
valley
patient workers blasted and broke away
Bradley
| been.greatly on tho increase of late.
the work of nature, .being finally well was once populated by a race of men ,• Several encounters, in which one or
repaid by fiuding'beneath it all the re­ far more civilized than the present '' both combatants have received serious
’nro , ‘x,‘h combaUnls here rural
Indian,, liraf
but frsvm
from oziniii
norao rrauco
rails, Uwere
mains pl a former age. Besides tho Tnrlt^nw
*
*
.
In these
swept»«», thousands of rears before injury, *kwe taken
piece.
skull of a person taken from beneath America was visited by Columbus.
_______________
_ __ ot&lt; tho uni­
cirenrastances._______
the beads
Which I will Sell at Cost .to Close out.
this flooring was the tooth of a mam­
ew..
. . ....
t___
. r»t__
huvfl
versity
havidoomed
deemedit itei expedient to
The stone
antiques
from■&gt;__
Port
Rico vAHtitv
moth. With another was found the
warn the students that dueling involves
tooth of a horse, rhinoceros and rein­ are extremely interesting, showing a aot only a breach of the regulations of
deer, showing that these animals ran big b state of that kind of civilization. tho university, but ft violation of tho
They consist of celts, smoothing-stones,
, wild in France in that time.
law of the land. They have also called
In 1841^ Boucher de Perthes found pottery, stools, dhonirtal and mealing upon the loeal authoritieso..put into
quantities of flint chips in the Valley stones, beads, amulets, masks and col­ force the enactment which deciares fl'
of the Somme, near Amiens, France. lars,t be last one of which is a most curi­ legal associations or corps of students
They were discovered mixed with ele­ ous implement, They resemble horse­ whose rules make dueling obligatory.
phant bones, in a gravel bed, over collars more than anything else, and By virtue of this enactment, several so­
which was a bed of loam twenty to are made from solid stone, ornamented cieties have already been dissolved,
VEGETABLE COMPOUND.
forty feet deep, and over all a peat bed in a variety of carious ways, but wheth­ aud inn-keepers are warned that per­
from twenty to thirty feet deep. All er they were worn in a ceremony, as mitting dueling in their houses A Rave Care for all FEMAYJE WEAKthis has been deposited by nature since punishment or ornament, we have not they render themselves liable to a
the chips were deposed'or left there the slightest knowledge; as to who money penally and tho forfeiture of
by the men that found them. In the made them, we know less. Some are a their licenses. These measures have
upper peat bed tho workmen found heavy lift for a man. while others are greatly kindled the indignation of the
LA I’HL'S CTEHJ, 4c.
implements left by the old Gauls and Ro­ delicately made and highly polished, bellicose youth of the university, and
mans during their invasion,and deeper and the immense amount of work and jcvcral students—some accounts say a
OP OUR OWN MANUFACTURE
were tlie celt weapons of the stone age. years of time it must have taken to hundred—have threatened to leave Zu­
work
them
out
of
the
solid
rock,
with
M. de Perthes, when asked how old he
rich for some other and more liberal
considered the buried remains, answer­ imperfect tools of stone, can hardly be seat of learning, where they will be
ed that, allowing fourteen hundred imagined.
permitted to nut each others cheeks
The stone collars arc peculiar to the
years lor the super-incumbent vegetable
and snip each other’s noses without let
matter to accumulate, the gain in thick­ island of Porto Rico. Some were found »r hindrance. Ldo not think their de­
ness would be about three inches in in caves, while many others were parture, if they should depart, will be
one hundred years. At this rate,, our plowed up by planters. They belong much regretted- A university can well
mathematical readers can estimate how to the stone age of this country, end ipare »o&gt;disani students who care more
WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH
long it would take for thirty feet to be are the work of a people far above bar­ lor fencing than learning, who ,prefer
deposited, and the result will give the barians. ,
rapiers to nooks, and are more at home
date of the time these rude workers
We wonder at the little trace these in the Klllc &lt;r«scrimc of nmai/rr cCarmca
great races left behind them, yet the than in the lecture hall of their college,
same thing is transpiring to-day. The fi-tfttnat’rt Letter.
Indians, the last of the original inhab­
great skill itants, arc being swept Irvin existence,
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING
—A single plate of perforated zine,
generally and at the present rate of extermina­
about a foot souare. suspended over a
tion, in two or three hundred years his­
tory will alone tell their story,’and their gas jet, is said to retain tbe noxious
•mne atio ns from the burning gas,
rude implements will then be unearthed
which, it is well known, destroys the
bindings of books, tarnishes the gildwhich will thea be ex- fi________________________________
We believe the
is destined to come

' wwupraiyi

Wagons

OUR LINE BUGGIES

Timkins

P licet ons,

White Chappel and Coal Boxes, hung with Elliptic Springs.
Two and Three Spring Democrats.

O

HAVE

L'ui-st Ac

’s

Chlled Plows, Hay Rakes and Cultivators

E. COOK

LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S

50 Wagons
FOR SALE!
THREE INCH TIRE
BETTER THAN COMMffN TIRE

SCHOOL
BOOKS.
SCHOOL
STATIONERY.

Three inch Tire

into general use.
Ull Tnulr-

Call and see them.

Sold by 0. L Glasgow, Nashville, Mich.

�Irea Well
tok' llko

&lt;rf hi,
JtoThhS“°o

MMhdi

this, period were iiurh m “How many
manliness, and bravery conje to thnt ?
_ ___
____________
_____ days and bounr in 1,811 voara?" &lt;AnThere
are_ many
little children, some
Perhaps as remarkable a fest in con­
noi b span long^living’inlheir’ little
^eoomK’661.0U days,
nection with numbers as any of these,'
boxes, decked in all tho finery of fond j
hours), or•••««»* many «e- though it rested solely upon the memo­
M«ll.„.
affection,
tho
lace
and
ribbons
adding
I
on&lt;b
vl
®\T
n
’
(Answer
fa
four
raid to have afterward treated those of
It |1JO,’ IF PAID IN ADVANCEry, was that of Euler, who,-it was said, O»X kxpr»i»“Z 4SB
know not what of myckery to the wum- 1 "«wnd.s UG.89MM). Two years later,
Ireland.
.
’
carried in Jib head the firdt six’ powers AlUallc
To Advertisers:
—-It w said that the fashion of wear­ er.ed baby faces. One entire corridor is *“eu they were showing him in Enropv, of every number up to 100. Hl» jx&gt;wer
ing rye-glasses has aeriouxly injured tbe reserved for the women, and this hi “&lt;• Performed m a few seconds Wcb cal-1 of analysis was no lew phenomenal than
squaring 999^)99 and multisight of four-fiftha of the Riit-sian army more pathetic and profundly disgusting 1
tlna any other paper circulating there- ofllcere. An order has been issued for­ than the others. Those who died virgin
tho P^duct ftnee by 49 atn
ourrataaof advertulng are lower than
GRAND RAPIDS DlVJSIi
or
the factors of 2 1
bidding their use by officers in uniform, have crowns on thrir head* and palms b/
anv other first claaa country weekly In : m&gt; alate.
An atl. in The Nr.ws gore to the beartlMtones except on a medical certificate declaring or Blies In their bands. They were I
«
.
...
EA8TWAR1
ot HDD IxxiaSdc aubacribere, -who, for the aak- them to be necessary.
great beauties, I doubt not, before they
’~'?lbun? ini mediately gave 64 lx u
d
?’ &lt;ff
i I J
6.700.417.
when ..M 7lJ?
------------------«; Y.)’ J»eh Exta
i
’.'-0?!!1'* and *henMked
the factors of ]
I
—The following is to (re the inacrip- came here, for tho dark-eyed women
STATIONS.
Surah Dresses.
.instantanoemrty, “9411
PERUSE THESE LIBERAL AD. HATES. i tion on the statue of Sir Rowland Hill, Palermo are comely; but, mild or biide,
and they are the only factors.” ,i The
or wife,
wue, thev
incv are
ore not
not beautiful
DMrami now,
now, ’ —--■--•--.j
ine twilled
twuteu au;
Surahs with or without
which is to be erected at the Royal Ex­ or
_
i*.----- « *,
..
. silk dreraw,
»_____ I Allen
nroll..&lt;
rnaa*
?t«araising 8
n to tho
,i.a six-i. satin finish are in
although
bp
coble m.
&amp;iMiuugn they
mey raporo
reiMjMj In
in ma urc'ses, &gt; .---.«---------7 ~~.»***■
»«*- satin finish are in great favor for street
I LTO j » RSS |_£M» I 11 8.0b change, London: “Borland H $1. He lu
_____
_
_____ &gt;T'i
___ i teentti
Dower. irinno*
’and
aatlu slipper*.
These
teenjhp-iwer,
givingthn
thesnrinm
square root of _.i&gt;.
suits, and a....
these .take the place of the MiddUviUe.
founded uniform penny postage in 1840.’ ’ kid gloves,
ilDche*:
Hoi' tW] &gt;M| itao
or U»e cube root ot 268.336,175 summer taffeta silks so long used, and KMtaaZ.
BadrcflhCI
Mr. Ford, the sculptor, says that the be dresses for a ball, and what a ball
8.25 | 7M | 12.00 1 20.00
3 laches.7
and
dance
of
death
is
this
’
Is
it
any
'
ve
™
Svedin
:i
moment.
At
this
time
Col- rival the popular . foulards.
Dark
statue will be ready by tho middle of
Too |—8.00 nidBOKfr June.
pleasure for my lady to have her part- burn was igiiprant of the ordinary rules Surahs are used for the street, such as Chsriette
Eaten Rapidj
Tob|T(4~j~TA6d|~ad:do
—Lord Derby is the admiration and ner or lover come and roe her fa this of anthmettc, and c mid not teU how or navy blue, gray-blue, very dark garnet Riv«&gt; Junction.... •
■
why particular precedes camo into his and cypress groen. These arc trimmed Jackioa...
Rate* for larger ml*. given upon application. envy of ail Irish landholders, having ™G»
DaUoil....... |...Ar.|
II learned
Bu*in&lt;*» card* of lire lines or lew, t-3 per yr. cleared out of that country with 9900,learned that
that at
at death
death the
tho bodies
bodies are
are ‘“‘nd, though later he oould analyze and with embroidery on the material, or
Local Notices, ten cent* a line for firat inacrinterred in a sealed pit in this cemetery describe l»L method*. Once,’ when bid­ with tho ecru mull embroidery, or else
tlou and eight centa for each subraquaut Inser­ (XX) for his land five years ago. “Ted;”
__ A.WKST XV ARD.
den
to
multiply
21,7:14
by
513,
his
man
­
with black lace frills either of French
as bls father used to call him, knows a for a year. There is supposed to be
tion.
STATTaNB,
-thing or two, and probably bore in mhnl something peculiar in the soil which ner provoked a question, and it was imitation thread lace or the silk Spanish
ORN’O STRONG,
found that, for some reason which he lace.
Navy
blue
silk
Surah
skirts
with
dries
the
,
body
without
destroying
it.
Editor and Proprietor. that clause of Peel’s will prohibiting the
could not c.rphun, he was obtaining the two narrow plaitings around the foot D« troll,.
investment of a ponhy of his property in At the end of a year it is taken out,
W
result by multiplying 65,202 by 181.
add low apron drapery thnt has a frill
1:10 -fl
Irish soil. Sir Robert hod bt^n a Chief dres-ed, and either put in its box or
The late Mr. • GeoYge Parker Bidder of French black lace four inches deep
£ I13^3
1
hungup
in
the
corridor.
Every
year,
Secretary.
Eaton lUpldi,..
cultivated
.hh
remarkable
faculty
to
a
are renr stylish. Dark green satin Su­ Chariot
at least on All SainLs’ Day, the friends
-^Another
noise
is
to
be
added
to
the
When in his rah with a Greek apron on which is laid Vsrmoeivilla,..
of tho departed como to look upon the highly useful purpose.
which make tho streets of ’ Paris
sixth year he used to amuse himself by like a border ecru Irish point embroi­ Nashville..^..
Hastings,1
;ERS.
hideous by night and day.
Hitherto frightful remains. What satisfaction i counting up to IM, then to 1,000, then
dery on mull, with the scalloped edges MMJievlIIr......
they can have in tho spectacle ^ do not
the approach of a steam fire-engine has
Hammond
hoes jit-w
know, nor do I understand how any io 1,OW,UM; by degrees he accustomed upward, is very Effective. The polka- Grand
Rapids,.
Ireen announced by tho sound of a small
hfcso !nao
himself
to
eontcmphUe
the
relations
of
Treasurer—Frank C. Boise.
dotted
or
leaf-figured
Spanish
loco
that
trumpet much resembling those used by man or any womttn of presentable ap­ high numbers, aud in childhood ho in­ is all silk edges the plaitings of black
tho tramway cars. The”authorities, in pearance, who has visited these cor­ vented processes of his own by which
ThrontbCoarhM
and
Sleeping
Car*
and from
silk Surahs of light quality, while those Grand Rapid, and DMrolt All train,toconnect
In
Trustees-H. A. Barber, F. T, Boise. H. W. order to avoid tho confusion arising out ridors in life, can consent to occupy
depot at Detroit with Gnut Weatern, Grand
Dem stay, If. R. Dickinson, 11. M. Lee and of the similarity between thc two thorn after death. Interment here was mentally fee canid ]M?rform calculations that are heavier hare embroidery in jam.
Trunk
and
Canada
Herat
hern
Railway*.
•
more
rapidly
and
accurately
than
others
square designs only two or three inches JT. O. dROWK,
Chas. Lenta.
prohibited about a year ago. I dosounds,
not
H.
B.
LEDYARD.
have
adopted
a
now
kind
of
A,
know how long tho wealthy people of could with pencil and paper- by the or­ wide as an edging for plaited frills.
trumpet, of double-distilled screeching
dinary rates. At the age of 10 wc rend French fancy is to tuck these frills half
Palermo have been cxixised here,
but which,
power,
if it docs nothing else,GsB'IPaMMOdTlekox Aarnt .Chicago.
wo were told, as wo walked along, that that he answered in two minutes the their depth, stitching each plait near the
will
effectually
frighten
Into
fits
tho
“What is the interest of edge to form a lengthwise tnck, then
EruopiKr eic^copal cammn-A. d. x«w8,WO bodies we^o in sight.—Charles Question:
VOX, Paafort Sarvlcaa every EUbbsth nt ,’UU horses it encounters.
£4,444 for 4.444 days at 4 1-2 per cent, letting it fall loosely below, nnd sewing
'Dudley
Warner,
in
San
Francisco
Chr,on
a. m. rad 7 p. m. Sabbath retool at IS in. 1-rayar
—A priest of Ravenna, named Ravag-lia,
ncr annum?"
Answer, £2,434 ICs. on lace or embroidery.
has invented an electrical apparatus
For instance,
icle.
5 l-4d. A few mouths later, when he edge a short wrinkled apron of Surah
VY LODGE NO. 37, K. of P., meets at its which can bo sot in operation by simply
Going It Blind.
. was not yet 11 years old, he was asked: with a plaiting six inches' deep, tucked
Caftte Hall, Nashville, Michigan, everv pressing a button, and. by which the
“How long would a cistern one mile by machine down its upper half, and
Friday ipenlng, for the encouragement and doors of a large building can be instan­
Moses Schwartz, a trunk manufactur­ cube be filling, it receiving from a river, finished below with two inches of em­
support of ail worthy, true, steadfast and hon­ taneously opened. The apparatus was er of Brooklyn, w totally blind, yet he Is
120 gallons per minute without inter­ broidery.
To complete the front of
orable Brother Knights.
tried
at
the
Alighieri
Theater,
in
Raven
­
proprietor
of
several
trunk
stores
and
mission?” In two minute* he gave the such a skirt, have two narrow knife
L. E. Lzxtx, K. It. 8. Omro 8thono,C. C.
the most
sntisfatoqr
’nlt. 285
AU days,
s-a prosperous business man, and na,
doeswith
corect
answer
—14,300 rc
years,
plaitings of Surah at the foot, and above
business
witE
many
customers
who
do
the
nino
doors
opened
simultaneous*
12
hours
and
4G
minutes.
A
year
later
Jliscellnneoin t'ordSt
this another plaiting so deep that its
—.—
...
ij, as if through some spiritual agency.not detect his misfortune. When he was he divided correctly, in less than a min­ head is lost under the apron just de­
TpMQRY PARADY, Justice of tbe Ware.
inventor hopes to Improve his a boy he ruined his eyes by putting a ute, 458,602,413,563 by 9,076.
At 12 scribed; this very wide plaiting is also
-ID Office, Corner Main and Bbcnnan Btrc-te. apparatus, so that should a fire break match in a pan of gunpowder, and, al­ years of age ho answered in less than a tucked lengthwise half its depth, then
— ■;■
• ■ ——7^77“ ; • out on the stage of a theater tho rise in though his sight was mined for life, and minute the question: If a distance of simply pressed (or tacked on the wrong
A. FOOTE PHYSICIAN A SURGEON temperature would itself set tho machin- __
.
he v,'us
advised to spend his life in an nine and threo-fourths inches is passed side), and edged with embroidery. Tho
• Suceasor to Dr. Wickham. Office nnd ery in motion.
i asyh
"“him for tho blind, he resented such’ over in a second of time, how many back drapery is ten of two widths from
residence al Dr. Wlckham’slatc office.
-Short-sightedness has increased to ’ expressions of sympathy, and said that inches will be’ passed over in 365 days, thc belt down tonho lower ruffle, where
Prompintteution to calls night or day.
—’
•—• —------ *i--------- ■« -- he intended to make his way in the five hours, 48 minutes, fifty-fire seconds? it is tucked permanently, so that it can
H. YOUNG, M. D. Office cast Mdo of so great an extent among the youth at
by menus of his remaining senses.' MucB more surprising, however, was not be displaced, and "may be either
• Main 8L, Nashville. Office hours from tho great government schools in France world
that a committee was appointed sonic He was’passing St. Paul’s churchyard his success. When 13 years old, in deal­ widely faced on the wrong side, or else
7 to9 a. m., and 4 to 7 p. m.
time ago to inquire into the subject. one day, and being attracted by the ing with the question: What is the cube its edges are turned under and sewed to
He the lower skirt.
R. C. W. GOUCHER, Electlo Physician and In their report, which is now published, noise made*by the “fakirs” who ,*&gt;tantl root of .897,339,273,974,002,153?
Such dresses must be
ImoWN’S IRON BITTERS are
Burgeon, is prepared to answer all calls tho committee point out that jn their by thu iron fence to *ell their wares, he obtained tho answer in two and one-half made up on a foundation skirt of silk,
a certain care fbr all disease**
that may be mads for his services. Office audopinion the cause of the prevalence of halted and opened a conversation with minutes’—viz.: 961,537.
Sir William alpaca, silesia, or other fabric less flim-iy
requiring a complete tonic; espe­
one
of
them.
“
I
am,blind,
”
he
raid.
Herschel
undertook
to
pose
the
boy
than Surah, in order to moke the skirt
the infirmity is to be found in the fact
cially Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Inter­
“Light preserve its shape: and this w not to bo
TXTTf. PARMENTER, M. D. Offire over that tho school books are printed in type “ and ait not going to beg or steal. I with this cheerful question:
mittent Fevers, Want of Appetite,
T V Hull’s Drag store, Vermontville, Mich. which is too finely cut, and further, that think I can stand hero and earn a living travels from the sun to the earth in eight objected to as u sham skirt, as it often
Loew of Strength, I^ack of Energy,
a&lt;
you
do.
Now,
toll
me
where
I
can
minutes,
and
thc
sun
being
98.000,000
costs as much or more than the thin
etc. Enriches thc blood, strength­
/~1HAS. H. BRADY, Lawyer, Circuit Court tho custom of printing upon white pa­ buy a stock.” •
uf miles off (the then accepted value), fabric of thc outside which it is meant to
It is recom­
V7 Commissioner, Real Estate and Insurance per is still mo.ro hurtful.
ens tire muscles, and gives new
The next day ho was at tho church
if light would take six yours and four slip port; the best French dresses have
Igt.. Prompt attention given to all business mended, therefore, that the authorities
life to the nerves. Acts like a
entrusted to my care. Conveyancing a special­ will consider tho advisability of substi­ yard fence with a small lot of goods, months - traveling at thb same rate from tins foundation skirt, nnd thc best
charm on tho digestive organs,
ty. Office opposite Union House.
tuting thicker characters in the books, and he aUonce found that, though his ibe nearest fixed star, how far is that modistes here u’e it, taking care, how­
removing all dysiM*ptic symptoms,
?SaP. N. DUNHAM, proprietor “Monarch’’ and also of printing in white letters upon sight was gone, he could cry his wares star from the earth, reckoning 365 daj-s ever, to so arrange thc 'drapciy that the
Kucn as tasting thc food, Belching,
with a good pair of longs, nnd make his and 6 hours to each year and 28 days to foundation con not possibly be disclosed
Billiard R»x&gt;ms. basement Boise’s alnig tinted paper.
Heat in thc Stomach, Heartburn,
store. Evcrrthlng new, neat aud orderly * Nd
etc. Thc only Iron Preparation
—A.most affecting incident is said to fingers serve him in assorting money .each month?” In one minute came thc when worn.
liqucra.
'
'
•
For years he re­ answer, “40,633,740,&lt;900,060 miles.”
Tho short round polka basque is much
that will not blacken the teeth or
have taken place in St. Petersburg, at a and making change.
mained
a
familiar
figure
in
Broadway.
Jedediah
Buxton
was
another
pro
­
used for summer Surahs dresses. This
give'headache. Sold by all Drug­
LIEBHAUSER, Merchant Tailor and tiral- meeting of Jewish notables, who assem­ He found that his sense of hearing be­ digious calculator, more remarkable in reaches two inches below the waist line,gists at $1.00 a bottle.
bled to see what could be done .for the
. &lt;-r in Reaily Made Clothing.
came
most
acute,
and
ho
acquired
a
«ome
respects
than
either
Colburn
or
is
nearly
straight
around,
is
whale
­
before yotu purchase clothing. Fits •guar­ prevention of further atrocities. After
BROWN CHEMICAI* CO.
anteed.
several had spoken, none of them having sensitive touch. Having h mechanical Bidder. Ila never learned to write, and boned to the lowest end of each team
Baltimore, Mil.
turn, he began the manufacture, of in other branches of education was as (as all basques should be), and is tinishTONAH B. RASET, Express and Drayman- anything to recommend except emigra­ trunks in a small way, nnd now he riins backward ns n boy of ten, while hh ,ek on its eage with one or two fall bias
tJ Goods and Baggage carried to any place in tion, a venerable old man with silvery a factory.
BEWARE
OF
IMITATIONS.
Hu
has
devised
several
mental
faculties
were
slow,
saving
al
­
puffs, or else two thick box-plaiting of
hair, named Schmeriing, representative
ths Tillageof the community of Berditcheff, began things in trunk-making, and he avers ways his faculty of calculation. So com- satin, and perhaps on this may fall a frill
IRAM R. DICKIN8ON, manufacturer of to relate tho trials to which his friends that one patented article now yielding a pletelywas he absorbed in his theuiu \ of Spanish lace thnt is —
.j scant on the
very
and dealer in Hart Wood Lumber. BuJdgood
income
to
another
was
originated
that
he
took
little
cognizance
of
external
nnd full like a fan m the middle
hod been exposed. As his tale proceed­
Zimmerman Fruit Dryer
aMaterial a apedalty. Crab paid forloga Mill
objects save as they suggested numbers, j of the front and hack.
yard oi&gt; Sherman BL, at M. C. R.R. crowing. ed he grew more and more excited, nnd by' him.
How au&gt;d for Term.
In walking tho streets Mr. Schwartz Thus if a period of time or the age of a
a stvlish touche that is not too full
ZIMMERMAN FRUIT DRYER CO.. CincHaad, O.
so did his audience with him, till all nt
AMES FLEMING, practical Jeweler and once, overwhelmed with emotion, the uses no guide. He holds his head erect, man were spoken of Buxton at once , and fussv lor trimming the foot of a silk
Watch-maker. ClocKaWttchM, Silver and
and curries a*cane with which he deftly announced that “that made so inany kfcjrt has first nt the lo^er edge a gath- ^ISflVKJLLiE HOI NB,
A'thrill of
Plated Ware, Jewelry aud Optical Goods. Rock speaker fell down dead.
his way. His pace is slow, and he reconds,” and a distance was to Mm so ' ered frill, either straight or bins, two
forilW’atcbcraspecialty. RepalringandEngrav- horror passed through the assembly, nnd feels
seems to have no difficulty in getting nranv hair-breadths. By walking over J inchej and a half wide when finished,
I. M. Flint &amp;. Son, Props,
tnx done in a workmanlike manner.
we are told that thousands of Jews fol­
along.
H\j firmness of manner and the fields of Sir John Rhodes’ lordship j Then above this, with its lower edge
lowed his interment at Berditcheff.
dignified bearing create a' space about at Elington—his step was as infallible falling
—
-----“
1
—
upon
it,
is
tho
ruche
six
inches
RNO STRONG, plain aud fancy rfoo miner.
him, and persons who do not know his as a surveyor’s chain—Buxton gave tho deep when finished, either straight or
Tha best facilities fordolngwork of anv
A Ghastly Place.
blindness instinctively turn aside to • let proprietor their contents of some thou­ bins, ami gathered by three parallel men will find It
If by chance ho strikes sands of acres, first in acres and then in rows in thu middle. 'It is well to lino
There is one curiosity of Palermo him pass.
against
anyone he politelv begs pardon, roods, perches, square feet, square this ruche with crinoline or stiff net,
about which I hesitate to disturb you.
If you were to see it, and let your mind touches his hat, if tho coilidon chances inches and finally iu square hair­ and to tack the top edges to the skirt to
“ It breadths—forty-eight to each side of an keep it from falling.—Harpcr'j Bazar.
TACOB OSMUN, Liveryman, barn near Wol­ dwell on it, you probably would not to be with a lady, and passes on.
tz cott House. First class turnouts at reason­ sleep for a week afterward. Of all the is foolish,” he suys, “ for a Hind man to inch. He had the faculty of.being able
It to rest a 'calculation nt any stage and
able rates. Special rate* to commercial men. fantastic, ghastly, and sportive dealings have a bay or a dog to lead him.
Tho Future of Electric Lighting.
Of Ducbcas Co., N. Y., 80 year* of age, suffered
Funeral aud wcdlng parties furnished with car &gt; with poor mortality that I have seen in teaches him dependence, and, from take it up next morning, a week later,
Continually for many years from Stone in
riage* on short notice.
In a recent lecture on this subject Mr.
my short pilgrimage tho Convent of tho what I can learn, men who have guides or after a lapse of moiiths. He could
‘
thc Bladder.
number nil the-pints of beer he head George Lane Fox, of the Royal United
Cappuccini furnishoi the most astonish­ do not get along as well as I do.”
Great age andpufuful dbca*c are a rad com­
TT'ELLOGG &amp; BELL, proprietor! Plaiting ing. In seeing it I had a new revelation
“ Are you never ran over by vehi­ ever drank nt all the houses he faqd ever Service Institution, said that it was safer
Ij. Mill- Planing sad ilaichlug, Resawing -of tho capacities of human nature for cles?”
visited in half a century. Among the to prophesy what electricity could do bination. Yet Mr. Willbun Westfall, fo merly
“ I have been once or twice. I was problems given him to solve were such than whatIt. could not;- and he Hlus- fagton HoUow, tn the same county, came to the
indulgence in the horrible and tho grotesque. From the convent we descended knocked down by ft Indy’a phaeton in -os this!7 “llow many cubical eighth trated the unsafe character of negative office of Dr. David Kennedy, the eminent Phy­
------------------- ,.
.
Schermerhorn street once, because I of an inch are there in a quadrangular prophecy by pointing to the fact that a sician and Surgeon, of Handout. N. Y., somi
W. DEMARAT, tal« ta WUetal into the subterranean corridors where
miscalculated the distance of the vehi­ mass of 23,145,789 yards long, 5.642,­ committee of the House of Commons a time since. In a condition 10 excite tbe sympa­
V&gt; Clocks, Cm Jewelry and Silverware. Being are exposed, not buried, the dried re­
thy of tlie most cold-bfooded and hard-hearted
a practical Jeweler, patron* can dc;x.-nd upon mains of wealthy inhabitants of Paler­ cle on account of the tar pavement, 732 yards wide, and 51,965 yards thick,” few years ago arrived at the opinion, j&gt;erson in the world. We ray be came—be was
having their repairing done right. Two doors mo. These corridors, of which there which deadened tho sound of the wheels. *n appalling calculation which he per­ published in the Blue Book, that tlie rather carried to thu doctor’s office, fur be was
«nnth at Truman1* store.
are several, are archod, brood, well- But I have a trick for saving myself formed menuntly. Once ho set himself subdivision of electrical force was “not totally helpless, and ixire the weight of eighty
to doubling a farthing 140 times, and on to be hoped for.” The lecturer expressed years bwldes. He had suffered long from Re­
lighted, and I should think each a when I’m knocked down.”
OHN RBAVN, Shoemaker. Special atten­
tention of L’riue, and had all tbe synif&gt;toms of
“ What is that?”
another occasion he made himself, in his opinion that the development of an
tion given to fine and aeweil boots, also couple of hundred feet long. The air in
aggravated case of calculus formation in the
“ I roll over and over just as fast as I his own phrase, “drank with reckon­ electricity, great as it had been of late, bladder. Tbe usual instrumental examination
repairing. AU manufactured work made fromthem M dry and apparently salubrious,
best of sutek and warranted. First door south and one might walk through these wide can, sideways, until I’m sure I’m out o* ing” by calculating how many hairs an would be greater in the immediate fu­ revealed the pretence in the bladder of a urin­
Boise’s hardware.
ary
eak-ttlu* of uncommon size. Dr. Kcnnedr
danger
of
being
crushed.
Then
I
jump
ture,
especially
as
trained
minds
were
inch
long
and
how
many
grains
of
eight
aislei of death in comfort if he were
told Mr. Westfall that, owing to hl*
blind. On each side of these passages to my feet, call out I’m all right, and go differenfsorts of cereals there were in a now being devoted to the subject. lie frankly
age aud dcblllly, an operation was out &lt;rf the
mass of 200.000,000,000 cubic miles, spoke of electric lighting as opening up, question, but that he ctwld, by the prescription
are long boxes, piled one upon the oth­ my way.”
“Few person^know that you arc having previously counted the hairs and for one thing, a new industry^ and then of “Kennedy’s Favorite Remedy.’’ together
TJ A. BABBER, M. D„
er; not coffins, but boxes, sometimes
.
grains in - a single inch to get his point proceeded to describe the exhibition at with local treatment, make him comfortable,
with brass nails, and looking not unlike blind?”
* HOMOSOPATniC
“ Yes, that’s true.
My present wife of departure. What was most curious the Crystal Palace as illustrating the and leave him to live out all his days. The
old-fashioned hair tranks. Yon might
outcome of this was that tbe patient enjoys
imagine yourself in an emigrant’s bag­ did not knyw it until after we got in about Buxton, perhaps, was bis capacity strides which had recently been made. good heakh to this day.
I go into com­ for carrying owjhe*e( calculations while He declared that the questions frequent­
gage-room on a steamer but for some love with each other.
pany
as
much
as
I
can,
and
as
I
can
oonversing
or
listening.
At
church
be
ly
asked
—
whether
the
public
could
have
other
things
in
the
corridors.
Each
of
(jf&amp;ec first door east of Opera House, and
Dr. Kennedy’s “Favorite Remedy” is being ex-,
near reatflence on corner of Washington Mid these boxes contains a dead person. talk and sing I get along pretty well. only cared to count the words of the the electric current In their houses, and temlvely used by our jwoplc arc ra follow: It
Blate Street*, Nashville, Mich.
The occupants of part of them, which I had, however, to tell my wife of my Mirmon, and though he watched Garrick whet her the-light would be cheaper than is a combinatiou of vegetable alternative*. It
have glass fronts, are visible. There infirmity on one occasion before wo closely iu “Richard III,” it was but to j gas—could be confidently answered in is pleasant to thc taste, adapteii to both sexes
the affirmative. He then went into de­ and all ages, is effective la affording immediate
they lie grinning in arrested decay, with were married, to excuse my awkward­ reckon the words in the part.
yyoacOTT HOUSE,
relief in all eaacaof Kidney trouble, Li ver Cotnjust enough dried skin and flesh on the ness in a dance. I bumjred against
In 1839 there was shown at Paris the tails, and with reference to the various plahita, Constipation of the Bowels and derange'
XomHv'IIIo MTenitfon.
bones to preserve the semblance of hu­ fomo of tho others iu the figure so often cleveu-y«ar-old son of a Sicilian sh'Cp- systems expressed tlie opinion that tlie
A. S. Foote, Proprietor.
manity. The poor desiccated bodies that they became angry, and I had to herd, one Vito Mangiamele, who did arc light would shortly be superseded purifies the blood, thus giving tone and strangtii
have been forced into clothes, some­ confess my blindness. I go to the thea­ some remarkable mental calculating. altogether by thc “incandescent lamp.” to the system debilitated by disease or are.
“Dr. Kenuedy'a Favorite Remedy’’ for sale bv
times into finery, nnd many in this aw­ ter very often, and ftearly always have Thn« he extracted the cube root of 3,-; He believed that the cost of the incan­ all
druggists.
'
3
ful dress parade of death wear white kid a front seat in the balcony. I’m fond 796,416 in half a minute and the tenth , descent
. ........ lamp would be found far less
gloves end fine shoes. But this is not the of the music and I like comedy very root of 282,475,249 in three minutes aud than that of gn^. The great cost arising
worst. Above these rows at boxes hang, much.”
a half. Another shepherd boy, Jacques ; from the breakage of these lamps would
ALBERT M^HARRIS,
“ How do you decide upon your stock Ynandi, was brought out by Flaxnmarion ' be remedied when the lamps were prop*
in all the limpness of irresponsibility for
I at Paris about six years ago, who an- j erly made; they would then bo found
appearance which characterizes the of leather goods?”
g *. BUSH,
dead, ranks of mummies, hung by the
“ By the mum of touch and the sense I swared
very
rapidly
such
as,practically
. t------- —e
--------------------------------------------- -*------—
—
*- —questions
—
indestructible.
A 150-candJe -- FRAMES, VELVETS. MATA GLABA
*
-THB BOBB-.
I can tell you all the differ- “How many kilometres’ distance has a light by electricity woald, he calculated,
AMERICAN OPTICAL CO’B. BOXES
neck, or attached in some way to tho of smell.
। walls of the vault. They are prett-y nni- ent kinds of leather by sample—by the man 80 years old traveled through apace ' be produced at the cost of a 12-candte
I formly clad in somber, monkish robes oily feeling and smell. I never was ' with tbe world moving at the rate of । light of gas—a farthing an hour. With 145 Orax&gt;&lt;i River
j of cotton, and but for the horribh. faces deceived yet. In fact, I get along ro j twenty-nine kilometres a second?” or. regard to the danger at human life from
MMHTILLF.
.
MICK.
glaring at you ought pass for scare-; well that some of my rivals hare started i **One person is born every second—bow contact with the wires, tbe w’••ply would
*a«sist&amp;s4sws with JCsataSM asd IWpafcfV
crows.’
the story that 1 am nut blind—that I j many h»ve been born since the birth of I require only a low tension, wnich could
j Chrwt, inciudiag the leap-years.”
1 nor affect life. Danger from fire could L'tKK HOLMK,
The drying process has drawn the only pretend to be.”—N. K Zftm.
faces into all ghaxtly contortions, in
re that St. Paul,

S

,”71

S'iS * mi° -v-r-

i

Nashville gittrtorij.

M

I

IRON

L

BITTERS

W

D

S

GIVEN AWAY.

H

J

O

MR. WM. WESTFALL,

J

Physician and Surgeon.

Photographer’s Supplies.

BOOT AMD SHOR BAKER,

Tho early study of nature,” rays
trade* Difka, “not only bears fruit

-

-

�:r2frwf.

। Senate r -«taurant, and mimoporme the
■ accomodaUoos especially reserved for
' Senator*. A short time *m&lt;* • House
•- AUG. 3.1838.J
'SATURDAY
meml&gt;cr from a backwoods dhtrict,
with some of his constitdenta, was en­
MICHIGAN NEWH.
joying corn-beef nandwiehe* and pork
Clunta£Kimb*n, of Hudson wm kill­ and beans in one of the. ixkmub set

lowing llMoaor appropriation for surveys and

Guyandotte River, West Virginia
White River, above Buffalo Shoals,
4,000
ed by tlie cam At Toledo. Tuesday.
While Hirer, between Jacksonport and
Buffalo Shoals, Arkansas
Claud
fi&gt; bad* both feet
tjm
Arkansas
River,
st
Pine
Bluff,
Ark....
cut off by Showing machine at Pitto- came into the room with some of bis Arkansas River, between Fort Smith
swell Mends, with his mind intent on
tan
ford Monday.
10.00
woodcock and champagne. All of the
4DJK6
Joha Benton, engineer at Sand’s
tables weiwoccupled. Glancing with
mill at Muskegon, was drowned while
1X000
an expression of intense disgust at the Rallne River, Arkansas
4-ttD
fiahing ou tbe Slat.
5.U»
Little Tana—IM Mvsr, tamane..,.
3.000
/ Daniel Goggins, the old devil who pork and beans, he expressed hit in­ South Fork of Deer River. Tennemce.
3.0 0
Duck River,Tennesaeo.....
dignation
in
Uudible
terms
at
the
pre
­
•fibbed his aged wife to death at
French Broad Hirer. Teunemee
KM
KM
Grand Rapid* one day laat week, in­ sence of the intruders. But the back­ Hlawansee Hirer, TeflMSm..,...........
W
woods member, not at all abashed,held Tennessee Hirer above Chattanooga.. SttXJO
Tennessee River below Chattanooga..
flicting 92 wounds upon her.
bis place, and asserted with emphasis • ir Bondy Hirer. Kentucky.
J. H. Munson fell through the batch­
that the Representatives of the people Tread waler Hirer, Kentucky.., R®0
way Ln- Gnfmtnond'i! warehouse, De­
South Fork of Cumberland River
3.000
troit, on Wednesday, receiving injuries had as much right in that room as Mississippi Hirer, from the head cf tho
passes tn Caln. Including tho har­
Senators.
that resulted soon after in death.
bors at Now Orloan^ Nate hex, Vicks­
It is said that there ian probability of
M2N.OOO
burg and MempbsLt
Thursday morning fire was discover­
criminal, as well as civil, proceedings Mississippi River, from Cairo to- IUP
ed in Cornell' &amp;- McCay’s windmill
nols River, Including Alton Harbor.. I000,000
arising out of the alleged libels calcu&gt;- MlMbsippi River, from the Illinois
factory at Grand Rapids. Tbe build­
»\«0D
River to Dos Moines RapMs 1
luted in .the so-called Grand Army
00.000
ing and contents were entirely de­
Ash abula. O
....
7,000
Journal, a paper which wasstarted for lllack Hirer, O
stroyed.
(Tevoland;
O.................................
In£m
1S,&lt;00
John McNulty, of Ea*t Saginaw, age the express purpose, against Senator Harbor of Refuge, near Cincinnati
10.000
Ferry, of Michigan. It is charged that Fa rport. O
63, was killed by the cars of tbe F. &lt;Sc
2X00
Huron. O
the whold tiling was in the interest of IcvIlarlKirnt mouth of Muskingum
P. M. Railroad, at that city Saturday
40X00
River, Ohio
Joy Hubbell’s candidacy for United
OJHO
night. He attempted to get ofl' tbe
Port Clinton. O...
10,000
States Senator to suceed Mr. Ferry, Sandusky City.O..:
cars while in motion­
60.000
Toledo. 6
8X00
. E. S. Brownson, tbe Lansing man and that Mr. Ferry was now in pos­ Vermillion. O
20.000
session of facts to show a conspiracy to Mlt-b gnn City, ln-1
who was believed to have committed
MM
Henn pin Canal survey. Illinois
III............................................ MM
suicide bccau
ife pestcre^ him, injure him by the circulation of a paper Cnlumct,
2U0JW)
Ch
cago,
Ill
nnl
MM
is utill alive.
onl
Olivet fiHed with libels against him. The Waukegan. Bl•
UM
and staid their?until tbe btorm blew postoffice department has refused to Quincy Bay. Ill
5.W-3
Sable.'Mich
permit any more of the ••Ferry” edition Au
Ice Harbor of Refuge at Bello River,
over.
5.800
Micb.A Hillndale green bouse proprietor, of the Journal go through the mails. Black
10.00J
Lake. M'cb
attempted suicide Saturday, cutting The manager, or mogul, of the Grand Charlevoix and entrance to Pine Lane, MLOm
Micb.•
his throat with a razor, but be failed to Annv Journal. A. T. Bissell, is the no- i Cbeboygao. Mich.
MM
16.000
Frankfort. Micb.
make the thing complete having need torious individual who, under the non I Grand
40.000
Haven Mx b
.
a dull tool and cutting, too high for a de plume of "X.” treated* the readers of Harbor of llefugu at Lake Hu ran.Mich NUM
1X000
Uidinrt &gt;n. M ch
sure thing.
the comatose Gazette to the Sherman Manistee. Micb
.. . .......... 15.000
IM
People in portions of Ionia county treasury literature. It is said that ten Monroe. Mb t.
Muskegon. Micb....
. .. 26.000
IS.0M
arc much excitad over a strange dis­ thousand copies of thia blackmailing Marqu-tte. M cb
30X00
Micb
....
ease. The skin of persons attacked sheet containing no less than seven Ontodagon.
MM
Pentwater. M cb
1S.01J
peels ofl and death follows in a com­ long columns devoted to a personal and CVade River. M . b . .
5.000
New Buffa'o. M'eb
.
.
paratively brief time. Mrs. E. T. brutal attack udou the Senator were Hsrbnr of Refuge at Furlage Lake.
'
S.‘fl0
Micb
....
... .
Welch, of. Orange township, died of sent broad cast over the state of Michi­
12.000
S4. Joseph. Micb.
gan, with the hope of lifting Joy Hub­ Saugatuck. Micb
it Saturday.
.
a.ow
laooo
South Haven. Micb
During a thunder storm at Big Rap­ bell into the Senatorial shoes. The Thunder
15 000
Bay. Micb .... ...
...
.. .. 1X000
ids, Thursday afternoon, lightning feeling about thc matter is intense in White Hirer. Mich
Abnapee, Wts
12.001
struck the bouse of Mr.^Hill, Jcnocked the city and Jit ia hoped by everyone Green Bay. Wts
. .
20.000
1X000
him down, paralyzed the”whole of his here that Mr. Hubbell has by this time Harbor at Kenosha. Wts
Maolbiwoc. Wis
...
10.000
Menominee, Wi« .
15.000
right arm and side, burned a 18 year dug his own grave.
Milwaukee. Wit
.
10.000
old daughter by fireing her dress, sbatThe general belief in the Senate is Harbor of Refuge of Milwaukee Bay 100 000
.................................... I5.ono
ahatterel a liedstead ’on-which were that the tax reduction bill is dead for Oconto. Wis
Port Washington. Wts
17.00)
his wife and now born babe, and fired the session, though Senator Morrill has Racine. Wis...
.
7.000
. «i.on
tbe building. Rain“extinguiahedTtlie said that he intends to move to take it Superior Bay. Wis
Sheboygan. wi»
30,00)
flames.
up again ns soon as the naval appropri­ Harbor .if Refuge at Sturg’,ot&gt; Bay Ca­
nal. Wis
20.006
” Chester F. Randall, aged Ifl*yeais, ation bill is out of the way. The pre­ Bar
Lake Channel of Sault Btc. Marie
. 200.000
.River
was accidentally shot by his older vailing belief, however, is that if he
15.000
Two Rivers, Wis
brother, Daniel, aged 9, at ^Hillsdale, makes such a motion it will fail, os the Harbor of Refuge on Lake Pepin, Wis.. 20,000
River at Bellow Banks
. 30.000
last Saturday. Tbe older one was] go­ sundry civil bill will next claim tbe at­ Chippewa
. 10.000
Pcnssukee Harbor. Wis
.
30.1100
ing to shoot a bird but the gun was too tention of the Senate. The republican Ice Harbor at Dubuque, fit
. 45.0»
Duluth,Minn....
heavy and he could not hold it up, nnd Senators understand that the House Gr nd Marais. Minn
. 70.000
Cblo
River
.
350000
a* it dropped down it went off, the full would not pass the bill »s amended, Sandusky Ri^cr. Ohio
4JX»
charge of shot striking tbe younger and this fact acts as a damper upon ita Clinton River, Michigan
«M
Detroit River. Michigan
brother full in the face, near the nose, prospects. The talk now is that Con­ Grand River. Michigan, from Its mouth 10,000
to Grand Rvpida.
. 15,000
killing him instantly.
i gross will adjourn perhaps by the last B«g'naw
River. Michigan....
. 125.000
About July 6th, a man in the neigh­ of next week. The indications in the Chippewa River, Wisconsin. --------------- 35.000
Fox and Wisconsin Rivers, Wisconsin 300,000
borhood of 70 years of age, and a young Senate to-day are that the motion to St. Croix River, below Taylor's Falls.
Minnesota and Wisconsin
30.000
' girl about twenty, calling themselves recommit the nhval appropriation bill,
WatMsh River. Indiana and Tlllaols.... 70.0M
G. L. Palmer and wife, who registered with instructions to strike out all leg- White River. Indiana
2U.000
175,000
from Terre Haute, Ind., came to”board ulBtioo relating to reorK..ouactotl. will KUSXln'u
at
a.
Ml,
raters of tbe Misat tbe Leonard IIonse~Ahn Arbor prevail, and if it do«a that will uudonbtt I sissipni
tlMlppI itivcr
River.. ......................
aoo.ooo
.... ,.
.r.
,| Ur
I Urpcr
per MlMlsissippl
HiaslpplRiver,
River,
snag-boat.
mimr-lx ...
25.000
they paid no board up to July 31. and edly
delay the
cuijuciuj
mivadjournment
aujvu* iiiuajua. of Congress.’■ , MlMlssippl
MlMluippl River,
River, above
hbovo Fulls
Fails of St.
“'"r"c7“». T.al V.' ix, 10.000
tbe proprietor, N. F. Leonanl, haying Tit. Hoatat i. eri.l«ntly atublKtrn an IU |
...
.
,
I M'* iwlppl River, St. iPaul f
suspicions that the man intended to adherence to this legislation in the nn- । Moines
23%000
— «•
Iteplds....
—•-•.................. .
Drr-dock nt Ib-s Moines Rapids Canal 30,000
jump his lioanl bill, went_to get a war­ vol bill, and it will
--- nol -yield without a Des Moines Rapids. Iowa and Illinois
30.000
100.CO0
rant for his arrest. While he was gone sharp struggle. Should the Senate re- | Gnsconndc River. Missouri
1 l ulvre River. Missouri, from mouth to
commit the bill that will brinfc about
('bnln of Rocks
5.000
heart-broken,
another conflict with the" House in nd- ' Missouri River, from mouth to Sioux
T wo.ooo
City. Iowa
Wednesday evening, Lewis Huttle- dition to tbe two now existing. There I Missouri River, from Sioux City to
ta
Fort Benton
100,000
aon, of Comstock, was waylaid and is tbe matterof Senators mileage in the Surrey
of Missouri River, from its
mouth to Fort B'-nton. Montana
40.000
robbed by Jas. Mayloy and James Man­ deficiency bill, over which the two
Red River or the North. Minnesota
ion as he was returning home,from houses are dow at loggerheads.
To
7 ioo.ox
nnd Dakota
d:im nt Goose Rapids,
Kalamazoo. The robbery was effected make a contest over the naval t&gt;ill may Ccnstructlng
lied River ot lb? North
25,0.11
by jumping in the back end of Huttie- intensify the feeling between the two St. Anthony Falls
Allegheny RJv« r. Pennsylvania
.
15.000
son’s wagon, throwing a horse blanket house* and keep Congress there for Examinations and survevh. and for
contingent,-’** and for Incidental re­
over his head and emptying! his pock­ several weeks yet.
pairs of harbor* for which there is
A lively interest is created in the
ets. The robbers obtained about $15.
no apcdal appropriation . 150.000
Thi bill provide* tbnt the work of improv­
They were detected by their foot prints Departments upon the subject of the
ing the Mississippi from its mouth to Des
and the peculiar mark of their horses political assements.
While not ob­ Moines Rapids shall be prosecuted under tbo
shoes and were arrested and lodged in jecting to the rule, (which may be re­ Mts"i-slppi River Commission, as originally
jail Wednesday.
garded as an established one.) great proposed by the House. Instead of by tbe
Secretary of War. as subsequently proposed
At .Manistee, on Thursday, while doubt
______ prevails
__________
r____ * _ of
_
as_______
to ther__
propriety
by the Senate.
Henry Weston, in company with a j calling for the two per cent rate from
Thc appropriations for tbe surveys of the
friend, was walking on the street, a clerks who incur the additional outlay Hennepin nnd Delaware A Chesapeake Canals
nian named Phillip Hunter called to [ of recording their vote in Hie-various were finally fixed at FB.0JC for Hennepin and
8IU.OJO
for thc ficlnwurc Sc Chesapeake, with a
Weston to stop, and nt the same mo- state* at a cost in many instances,
proviso added In each instance that the Gov­
meat pulled a revolver from his pocket; considerably larger than the aaseos- ernment shall uot bv committed by three ap­
and fired throe shots, each taking ef- ment itself. As a matter of justice, propriations in favor of proceeding to the cod• feet in Weston’s head and causing in­ these aetive workers should be either
stant death. One of tbe shots was fired remitted] the assessments or the drones
—In the country districts of Canada
after Weston fell, and entered tbe should be subjected to an additional
“mum” sociables are becoming very
back of bis bead. Hunter was at once call to reimburse the double taxed popular. The intellectual victims gath­
taken into custody and lodged in jail. v®ter for the substantial benefit indi­ er in the church basement, and it is
Weston was a person about 40 year old. rectly rendered then.
agreed that any person who speaks shall
be lined from ten to twenty-five cents,
married and the father of five children.
Aug u st.
the fines to be devoted to the organ
He was an excellent mechanic, bat of
TEACHERS INSTITUTE.
fund, the library fund, or. the building
late has drank to excess, causing him
The State Teachcr]«_ institute for Barry fund, as the case may be. The success
to lose bis situation, which was filled
county, wfJt be held at Nashville, ' cocntneac- of thc entertainment is determined by
by Hunter, whom Weston had fre­ ing al 2 o'clock p. m., Monday, Aug. 14, an3 the numerical strength of the ladies who
quently accused of intimacy with his dosing Friday following.Matte Hitid- attend. No lady has yet escaped the
wife.
marcb; Nashville committee. It is desired to penalty for speaking.
make the institutes of this aeries of the (great—An Iowa man desired to send his
our
letter.
poae some of the moat experienced and success- two motherless children to Virginia. He
pinned an Odd Fellows’ badge upon the
little boy’s breast and started him off
Washington, D. C., July 29, 1882.
tlie vartout exercises. With revised oatlfnes
wilh his younger sister. All along the
When the weather got right warm of Institute work as a guuli-.1 ami with the ex' route the petite travelers received tbe
Ibis Sammer the Sergeant-at-Arms- of
best of care and attention and reached
Senate made arrangements by which that the present aeries will be of unusual va'uc their destination in safety. They had
been cared for by Odd Fellows whose
Senators and the employes of tbe Sen­
las bftter preparation and greater cfllciency notice they had attracted by means of
ate were supplied with Apollinaria and
are demModcd of teachers, and in view of this the three mystic links.
Bethesda mineral waters.
These fact all peraons that Intend to)engage in Uadisparkling beverages were kept in the ing will find It greatly to their interest to be
—An important and valuable fishing
cloak-rooms, nnd two venerable de­
ground is reported to have been discov­
scendants of Ham were detailed to do prepare for the increased requirements.; The ered fifty-five miles eut-by-north ot
the honors. Plain lemonade aud lem­ morning and afternoon session will be devoted St. Anns, C. B. The fish are very
onade with a stick in it was dispensed to the discussion of topic* of particular interest abundant and of superior quality, and
in lavish profusion. Members of the t &gt; teottbers. while thc evening lecture* will be tlw grounds are reported to be superior
to the Grand Banks.
Honse found it out, and flocked ovvr
to the Semite retiring-room* in such Ilion or enrollment fee. Full particulars in
—Germany is groaning under the bur­
regard to boaM, etc., may be obtained upon
numbers and with such frequency that
den of taxation. An artillery Captain
application to the local committee.
Wrote an article showing that military
S'-nafors could scarcely get a taste.
Vokxum B. Cochiux,
pomp and display oi troops could be
Tbe result was that an order to stop the
superintendent of Public lu^trartloa. abolished al a saving of millions, and he
lemonade supply had to be issued.

DAILY RECEIVING THEIR FALL

BOOTS AND SHOES

We Pay Cash For

BUTTER Salt or Unsalted &amp; Eggs
THE CROWN SEWING MACHINE. L til l ibel?!
slid put on the market.

The Cut sho

FOWLER&amp;INGERSON
Have thc largest stock of LUMBER ever laid
down In Nashville.

100,000
Feet kept constantly on hand.

Pine Lumber
A specialty

Finishing Lumber,
flHtiif Cnlisg. Siiisr. SrMliiir, Jwi
Or any thing in the building material line, see
our stock, select what you want, and bo happy.

Also Flour. Halt, Shingles, Lath,
and lAlacksmitli's Coal,
HIGHEST PRICE PAID FOR

WHEAT, OATS, CORN, ETC.
As usual.

FOWLER &amp; INGERSON
Probate Order.
, of Barry, balden at tbe Probata Office. I n! he City o!
A A shows the hardened steel points on which the crank shaft nnd drive------- - ' Haatlngi, Insskl county, ou Monday the 17th day
wheel are hung and work. This is tbe lightest running bearing which can be made. There Is
hardly any friction. Points are adjustable to Uke up thc wear and the crank on whichthe pit­ Probate.
man, works Is between thc pointe, thus putting tbe strain direct and avoiding all side pull.
t In the matter of
RD, deceased.
B B shows the hardehed steel points on which the treadle ishungand works. JABRA
On roodlnf and tiling the Million duly variM. of
They are made adjustable for taking up wear.
RacbMl R Itavy, a daughter of said dereoaed,
CC shows tho patent ball and socket joint connections pf the pitman praying that paper tiled with thia courtpurportlna
to be the laat w 1'1 and teatamaot of aald deceased
with the crank and treadle. By this patent arrangement thc "thumping” heard in otter
be admitted to orobota
Ines Is prevented, and there ia no possible chance for tbe pitmen to bind at any point In the re­ taaj
Thereupon 11 la ordered, that
volution of the crank, no matter how uneven the floor may be or how far from jArauel tn
crank and treadle bearing for thc pitman may be. There Is always a free and easy action of
next,
at ten o'elocx in the forenoon, ix- isaisnraior
the pitman at every point in its stroke.
tbe bearing of aaid petition, and that thebein at
I&gt; shows the belt-replacing device, by means of which any lady or child can
throw tbe belt on thc drive wheel instantly, and without moving from her chair.
E shows the enlarged nickel plated and polished drive-wheel. By mak­ Office, In th” city of Hastlnp, in said county,
ing this wheel nearlv four inches larger in diameter, and patting tbe weight mostly In thc extreme and .boi-------- — “■— ---- ------ - --------- icr and longer, when once started, as it has more momentum. of thfl peutfon.} .bouid not be graated.
'
outside rim of It, we make It run easier
In-ulkF F shows the oil cups on the
t
- -barfor
- prevcnllurf tbe
• oil from drop
_____
ping on tho carpet or floor.
,
“o'rilidprt'ittoi, and tbs
G &lt;&gt; &lt;■ show the porcelain casters, one in each of four feet of the machine, j by causing s ci'j.r o£tti» gnier ^

E. R. WHITE, Agt., At Kocher Bro’s Store-

Nashville, Mich.

1

‘

■

— THAT-----

-

...................... ....... ..

ATT
I J I J

IT IS JV I
’

■"
CLKMENT SMITH.
Jud«»l

(tf 48)

'

DPA D V
—
uuirdiiisiite;
X I la tbs mailer of th--taU-of

.

. C0BKTJ5 OAal,5EKind ANNA GARDNER,
Minors.
Notice is hereby given that I shall sdl al public

i

I To show you a large nnd well selected Stock or Bartjon to tbe highest bidder, on

not ONEponrrniro
OtojCjstoimrsConpIlin UhUuLIlILO

city of HasUnix, In tbe county
of Michigan, pursuant to II-

CONSISTING OF

irvjartgrox

"BOUGH ON RATS.”
Senators complain very much of what
Tte thing desired found at last- Ask Dnigthey call the cheek of the Hon*»- mem rlot
••k/inodi rxi Rabi” It elears out rata'
. w*». It !• a vuoiunui eastern., and has

1

- -----

Sugars, Coffees, Teas, Tobaccos,
Spices, Fish, Canned Goods,
Provisions, &amp;c.,
FROM-----

TheN ashvile Mill,
----- BUT------

AT THE LOWEST PRICES
For Cash or Ready Pay.
Also the Largest block of

Crockery, Glassware, Lamps,
Stone Ware, Ac.,
TO BESEEM IN BARRY CO.

UNIVERSALLY SATISFIED

JNO. M.-BOE

TURNER GARDNER. Guartlin

Guardian’s Sale.

I have finished repairing my store and shall
be glad to hsc you all, and think I can sell you
goods Cheaper and to your satisfaction better
than ever before. Calf and see me.

CASH PAID FOR PRODUCE.

C. W. SMITH.

____
JulyW.A.D.ml
«1-42___________ JOHN WIAKS, xoardion.

YOUNGMBS

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                  <text>ORNO STRONG, J
Editor ?amu Proprietor.

VOLUME IX.

1

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun.
NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, AUGUST 12, 1882.

[ TERMS; $1.50pm

K Credit Subscriptions S1.7B.

NUMBER 47.

OBITUARY.
WEST KALAMQ.
for. The meeting was a decided suc­
LOCAL MATTERS.
LIFE IN NASHVILLE
Lorenzo Mudge, Sr., departed this life Fri­
cess and reflected much credit upon
Corn is just jumping.
“I believe St Jacobs Oil to be the very best
the president. Miss If. Bissell, who is day, Aug. 4th,st his residence, fa Castleton,
And Her Environs.
Oat harvest will begin the last of this week.
where
be
had
lived
forty-five
years.
remedy
known to mankind,” says Mr Roberte,
an earnest worker in. the temperance
W. C. Wilcox has rented bls farm to Neal
He was born in Plymouth, Windsor, Co., Vt., Lamb. ■
bmdn-ss manager of this psj&gt;er.—Milwaukee '
'
YOUR EAR, OENTLE READER.
cause, and takes particular interest in
Sentinel.
________‘
'
Dec. 36th, 1809. When twelve years old he
The whistle o&lt; tbe steam thresher is heard in
.
You tlxat are indebted to Tbe Nashville
its relation to the children. The next with hte father and family moved on to a farm
Ifaboygeta on the wrong track it shows
meeting will be on first Sunday,in Sept, in Niagara Co., New York, where hizfboybood all directions.
i Nbwb, listen! Paper, ink and printers’help,
that
his
father's
switch
|
has
n»t had a fair
Mrs. J. A. Brown, and daughter May, are re­
at the M. E. church.
' costa cash, and tn order to live and be respect­
daya were spent and inured to the privations of
chance.
*
The defunct Bugle’s printing mater­ a pioneer life, receiving but a limited common creating at Tbornapple Lake.
ed we must pay our debts; consequently, we
Hundreds of tonn of hay, ready to draw when
TEACHERS INSTITUTE.
ial is being cleaned up and packed, school education. In March 1834 be was mar­
» arc compelled to aak you to pay that subacripthe rains came, Is completely ruined.
Tbe Stale TeacWs institute fur Barry
preparatory to shipment tn St. Louis ried to MiM Emeiine Seeley.
L tion out of your first wheat money.
A much needed rain came last week, just in
In Sept. 1887. with bis wife and two sons,
to be used on a Dembcratic sheet.
time to save the corn and potato crop.
Ing at 2 o’clock p. nt, Monday, Aug 14, and
Don't forget it! Don’t forget It!
Dell Squires, whose genial phiz lias Royal and Justice, be moved on to the place,
This is the way the owner of au unruly ox Is
We place this Item conspicuously so that
beamed upon patrons of Pnrchis’ bar-, where he has lived until his decease. -He was notified by. a fanner, of thia vicinityj to restrain closing Friday following. Miss Jfatle Hlndmarcb, Nashville committee. It is desired to
the first settler and built the first house in the
no patron can rnlsa it, and shall expects prompt
bershop for the past five years, has re­
the troublesome brute: “Your ox is over in-my make the Institutes of this series of the great­
township. In 1843 Mrs. Mudge died, leaving
I remittance.
‘
~
__
j
com field, and you bad better g&lt;&gt; and get him est practical benefit to teachers. For this pursigned to accept a more lucreative one
him with a family of five children. June 17th,
out, as he may eat enough to kill himself,” Of
at Petoskey..
1844, be was again married to Miss Ruth R.
|
—Ad active mosquito can’t fly as high
They buried him darkly, at dead of night,
ful instructors have l»een engaged to conduct
Hyde, who now survives to mourn the loss of a rellng.
H u an eagle but be be can bully all the
And without any pomp or pageant:
the various exercises. With revised outlines
devoted husband.
,
Thousands of bushels of wheat Is virtually
I 1 C^ristain graces out of a man a great
As they ahoveled him in they sold, ‘AU
He embraced religion in an early day, united lost to the farmers of this section by reason of of institute work as a guide, and with the ex­
right,
perience of the past to aid us, !• is believed
deal quicker.
the continued wet weather. Many fields of that the present series will be of unusual value
He was only a lightning-rod agent.
voted and remained an earnest member to the
—Lorenzo Mudge, an old pioneer and
Last Saturday Miss Alice Jackson, close of life, liberally contributing to all of its wheat of rank growth was Intended to be to all. UndCTthe operation of the new school
I highly esteemed citizen of this townthreshed from the shock, and, therefore, but law better (preparation and greater efficiency
living in the edge of Bellevue town­ interests, and generous and friendly to all oth­
little care was cxerdscd'tn shocking; the re­
| ship, died suddenly from heart disease,
ship took two ounces of Inudnuin with er evangelical denominations. Over thirty sult is, whole Helds arc ruined. Those farmers arc dcmandefrwLteachcrs and in view of thia
I on Saturday afternoon An extended
fact all persons that intend to'.engage InVeachthe
intent
to
pass
by
its
effects
into
years
ago
he
received
license
to
preach,
and
fil
­
who were fortunate enough to secure their lug will find It greatly to their interest- to be
I obituary will be found in another coldeath’s embrace, but the dose was so led many placet of trust among them and else­ wheat In stack or barn are to be envied.
I umn.
large that it was thought from latest where. Uli home and heart was ever open to
A much nte Jed work, was done on the road prepare for the increased requirements.’ The
I
—Mrs. F. Appleman has commenced
accounts that her life would be saved. receive and bless the tolling iUnerent and en­
morning and afternoon aewslon will be devoted
I action before circuit court commisaionShe gave as her reasons, that her sister tertain them with hospitality. He always gave tearing out of the old, dilapidated and danger­ to the discussion of topics of particular interest
I er Brady to gain possession of her
with libera lly and diicretion to the needy.
ous sluice way, putting tn a box drain and fill­ to teachers, while the evening lectures will be
was trying to ruin her character and
His memory is to be cherished and perpetua­
F house which waa rented to C. F.Wilkalso get all her share of the property ted and his virtues practiced by all with whom ing the ground to a level. Many more such, of a popular character. There will be no tu­
k inson some time since.
As we go to
places can be found In all parts of tbe country ition or enrollment fco. Full partietdara in
away from her.
he associated and mingled during hb long rest- and a few hours outlay of labor in properly con­
l press the suit is in progress.
regard to board, etc., nwy be obtained! upon
Prof Hall of Hastings, who will con­ de nee among us.
structing a culvert in such places, would save a]»plication to the local committee.
|
—Herbert Woodruff, a Hastings bar
duct the teachers institute here, next
For some time previous to hla death It was to the farmers many a sorry Jolting, break­
Vabnvm B. Cocbbak,
I tender, attended the fireman’s picnic at
week, was in town on Tuesday, to see apparent his vita) forces were yielding, of down or swear-wool, beUdes adding a bright
Superintendent of Public Instraetfoc.
I- Thornapple Lak© and being well Jondthat arrangements were being properly which he was conscious. He was able to be star to the crown of their pride, as they com­
I ed with benzine became exceedingly
SELECT SCHOOL.
made.' He complimented Miss Matie around and oversee his business, directing, placently view their surroadlngs and rejoice at
I disorderly. One of the fire laddies enA Select School will bu bold in dtotricVNeS,
Hindmarch very highly for the thor­ all to the last. At noon on the day of bls death the good roads they have.
rituated al tbe center of Castleton, commenc­
I tercd a complaint before Esq. Parody
Rev. A D. Newtoa addressed the people of ing September 4th, and contiiMlng eight week*.
ough work she had done as a local com­ [ be ate bis dinner ai usual with his family, and
in one abort hour the change came, he giving West Kalami &gt;, as per announcement lust week Any who desire a thorough review before the
I against him and Deputy Sheriff Lee armittee. It is expected that there will
up his life, surrounded by loved ones for whom
fail ex imlnatlon of teachers, will find it prof­
f rested and brought him to Nashville,
LOCAL GIBBLE-G A BBLE
be at least two and probably, three, I he labored so cheerfully and untiringly to Wednesday evening, on political prohibition. itable to attend this school. Tuition 35 cents
■The weather being unfavorable only about for­ per week.
■ on Friday evening, when he paid a fine
evening lectures for the public during bless.
Mina Mcvaz, Tkacobk.
ty persons were present, but the Elder made an
I of $10and costs for his unrulincM.
the session. A large number of teac ti­
The funeral services were held at hla house eloquent plea for temperance from a political
How is your wheat ?
ty A second-hand oca-borae Buggy for sale
K —On Saturday Jay Reynolds and Ed.
ers are expected to be in attendance J on Sunday, the funeral sermon being preached standpoint, and clinched bls arguments In such
Have you been huckleberry ing ?
■ Rathbun, two youths, were disorderly
and a profitable and pleasant time an­ 1 by Elder J. S. Harder of Naahville,—an old a manner that few could dispute the fact that
Heaven’s floodgates are still open.
WANTED.
■isnd awakened to the consciousness of
time friend of the deceased and family—to a the only way to shutdown the liquor traffic and
•
Aurora again smiles, but she smiles ticipated.
10W cords of two foot wood. Will pay. cash.
Tiiusdny morning we were informed very large and appreciative assembly. A post stop Congressional excursion jvhlsky bills is to
■Elio fact when they found themselves coldly.
J. Lentz A Sob's.
by letter of the dvath of Charles A. mortem convinced .ill it was trouble of the elect men to office w bo will sec that the law is
A the “cooler.” They were allowed to
Mrs. Allen and Helen have returned
*3- Call and see the liest stock of Boots and
\ktlect upon their iniquities in durance
Vogclcr, managing .partner of the heart that was the immediate cause of hla enforced. If all the clergy would stiffen their
from Kansas.
Shoes for the price, in Nashville. at
8. J. B.
justly celebrated St. Jacob’s Oil firm, deathback-bone n little and fight the devil via the
vfl|e until late in tbe evening, when
WnEELin’s.
Mr. and Mrs. C. “W, Demarav’s baby
‘ temperance rood there would be less need of s&lt; &gt;
which occurred on Saturday. Although I
tJ»wy were brought before Esq. Parody is seriously ill.
PRICHARDVILLE.
GREAT BARGAINS.
but thirty-one years old, Mr. Vogeler j
j many grog shops.
anil fined $3.88 apiece, which was paid
Moro new goods at Prindle A Chip­
I The common remark is among; fanners, “if In Summer Clothing and all kinds of General
; had a wide reputation ns n successful ; Growing weather.
by their respective daddies.
Merchandise for twenty days at GkaNOBR’s.
man’s this week.
j I had drawed my wheat Saturday and Sunday
H, II. Mersboa is sick
—On Saturday when Charles Debolt
Mrs. Geo. W. Francis is seriously af- ;1 business man. Promptness in all things j Will the rain never cea&amp;c.
The highest market price paid for But­
it would have been secure.” Yes, friends, un­
I waa one of his characteristic business
Wilee:Jia's.
■1 was arraigned before Esq. Parody for .flictpd
.icipa wmi
with erympenM!.
erysipelas.
..
, . .
.
,
doubtedly. But then, did you know that we ter and Eggs in Cash at
p. C. Btrnbridge has the ague.
A girl put in an appenanen nt Will I
and tb.. rtrtna, probaL| assault and battery upon Jake Haberwere to have such a rain! Did not the cry go
MONEY TO LOAN,
j bljr’ baa «« wuch to do w,th budding prices.
up from every heart for rain to sav» our spring Ou Real Estate at low rate of Interest of
■ east, he changed his plea to “guilty,” Clark’a Thursday morning.
Mra. David Haugl. of Grand RapidA । ”p.
&lt;b«
Potatoes will be an excellent crop If nothing crop! Has not Him wbodutball things well cut
Lbk A Dubkez
■ and was fined 815 and costs. On MonI
l.omm ha, gamed happens to them.
short the boasts of wheat speculators that by­
■ day, however, Habereaat had him, i. io Maple Grove, with friend,.
•3- Sewing and fitting at lowest prices by
N.C.Ra»y and .if. of Charlotte. “
en&gt;pl»Y«l- The
Mr. and Mra. Harley Powers of Johnston,vis­ crying an enormous crop-they could “ bear’ the Mas. A. D. VANNOCKBR. overDaughtety store.
B'Chas. Scheldt and jfts McGraw arresttnarket and purchase the crop for little more
••&gt;"«■&gt;» P^oer. w.ll eontlnu. tbe ited here last week.
Hed on a capias to secure private dnm- Suodayed with Nub rille friend..
LAST CALL
I Geo. Sulsbaugh has bought him a horse and than a song! Art we not belter off wjth pros­
B ages. They were taken before circuit Wo. to tb. little fi.h who gw, out ’bu..ne„unehanged.
AU parties owing mu on account or note
pects of a fair spring crop, good pastures and a
' buggy. He intends to ride In “chaises."
The Nashville News is a Barry conn- '
P circuit court commissioner Brady, and to enjoy himself on his own hook..
hereby notified that If their indebtedness ia
Geo. Holcomb and family from Eaton Co. more purified atmosphere than we would have are
not paid by the 1st of Sept, next, I shaU con­
Elder Deyo will address the people I
PBPcr published by Omo Strong.who
each gave bonds in the sum of $500 to
been with a bountiful erop of wheat and no po­ sider they don’t intend to pay nu* and shall take
। visited Mr. H’s parents the first of the week.
I we believe founded it nearly ten years
L appear at the next term of circuit of Hastings, on Saturday Aug. l»th.
J. W. Gibson came through tbe mud all the tatoes, corn, or even mature for our stock! Let the necewory steps to collect the same. 1 mean
D. C. Gkiftith.
The Baptist Sunday school will pit- *K°- The News is a six-column quarto way from Campbel! to see his girl last Sun­ us look on the bright side, take courage, and re­ just what I nay.
L court.
“II printed at the home office and very day.
member such a season is not more than once in
B —Milt. Fleyborty, who has made a nic at Thornapple Lake on the 17th.
C3F* Regular twenty-dollar Summer Suite
marked down to f 16, to dose out, nt
Marshal Gregory and Esq. Parody ! attractively made up. Its motto i»Cora has t&gt;eeu {Hitting in its best for the last a life time.
F practice for tbe past ten years of getYour scribe called upon.the Olio a fcB- days
1 "Devoted to tbe interests of the best two weeks an l has partially made up for lost
I ting drunk every time he could get the found business rushing on Saturday.
ago to witness and listen to tbe editor as he
*
••VINEGAR”
That “umbrella of mine” has been in
under the sunbeing indepen­ tin’?.
I liquor, has Anally got into trouble on
drew from his banjo sweet and melodious
Oat
harvest
•
has
commence
J.
Tbe
crop
Is
a
Pure Cider. Vinegar by the barrel or gallon,
I account of his imbibing propensities. greatdemand for the past two weeks, dentin politics, we utfer that Strong
strains of music. On entering the sanctum
H. R- Dickinsox.
•
believes
in
the
theory
of
the
indepenK
00
*
1
ooe
’
«
contains
a
great
deal
of
I That is to say he was arrested on SatMiss Julia Bissell has returned East.
one is almost lifted from his feet and wafted, to
smut.
THINGS YOU OUGHT TO KNOW.
■ urday, brought betore Esq. Parody and to complete her education at Wellsley ‘letnt voters ofthe country holding the
.
Elysian
fields
as
he
bears
the
soul-stirring
mu
­
Last week tbe fanners had quite a rest, yet,
■ L
balance
*'
of* power.
- — The News is a hand­
■ sentenced to four months ia tbe Ionia college, Mass.
their countenance does not show that that they, sic as it tills the air and rolls away over the
tops of the lofty buildings. Ye editor, siis com­
■ house of correction. Years ago Milt.
County treasurer Jno. Lichty and some paper, and besides containing an enjoyed It2nd. That is false economy, to wear your­
■ was accounted a bright youth, a W. F. Hicks of Hastings, were m the excellent correspondence department,
If you meet a fanner now-days, with a pleas­ pletely enthroned, hte eyes lifted to the ceiling, self out trying to make tbs ‘ outworn out sew­
machine do, to save boring a new one.”__
is also replete with well written locals, ant face you may know that he was one of the, his body immovable, and amid tbe echos of ing
■ good telegraph operator and tine pen- village Friday.
3nL That It ia tbe old “nard running” worn
his
music
he
seems
to
see
the
air
filled
with,
Bmen, with only one fault—a fondness
____ „tbe
__
out rattletrap machine that is doing more to
Frank Flint departed for Grand which makes it of value to its patrons, few who had their wheat cared for during
greenbacks falling In showers at hla feet, and injure your health than all the sickness you may
■fordrink. That fault has proved his Ledge on Thursday to attend a deaf and as a consequence profitable as a re- I rain.
combined.
presentative of Nashville to her busi- | It is reported that dogs killed a number of voices saying unto him: “Behold thy reward! have
■downfall, os it will with everyone who mutes picnic.
4th. That you can ,
Clark, arise! thy prayers are answered', I Satan
■pheriahes it, and to-day Milt is a coni of
for Mr- Weeks last week. If people
improved Crown “—
We have been showed wheat heads new men.—Grid Union.'
have heard thee, I have seen thy loyalty, and fully warranted fo
rainexchange for
1
would
practice
shooting,
and
use
dogs
which
^Hnned drunkard, subject to delirium with sprouts three-quarters of ^an inch
1 arc off of their owners premises for targets| now thou art bleased.” Nothing I have ever
"WHITE" BLACKBERRIES.
■reniMiH. and innst soon die if he does long upon them.
, at Focher Bros.
there
would be fewer sheep bitten and killed by. beard can equal Clark and his banjo,—unless
Shot quit drinking.
p
'tie the musk- of a dozen cats as tbe bold thetr
Clement Smith returns from Bayr
E. L. Parrish bos propagated a new I
gg- Cush paid for fresh Butter
■ —Miss Lizzie Larkins, aged about 20, View to-day, and will open probate
midnight
serenade
'neath
the
window
of
our
? blackberry, which, however is nearer ‘ East Saturday afternoon there was a surprise
sleeping room.
-------Wednesday evening took a dose of court on the 14th.
white than black. Our folks have en- variety wedding at tbe home of Mr. and Mrs.
GOOD JUDGES
^■audanum with, it is supposed, suicideOn Wednesday H. R. Dickinson start­' joyed a liberal dish of the same and Holcomb, it being tbe 42 anniversary of tbelr
HASTINGS.
^■1 intent. Lizzie has been confined to ed northward to join his wife, and1 find them as sweet a blackberry as they marriage. Friends and relatives from far and
Men’s, Youth's and Bovs. Clothing, and Genu
The Hastings House has rocel-red a new coat Furnishing Gooods ever laid down in Nashville,
near attendant d and various preseats were
^Rjcr bed and home with sickness for the view the country.
ever tasted, and although this is only presented and all partook heartily of viands of' of paint inside.
fa on exhlMtioo at Pmnble A CairMAX's.
■ past six months, which, with the fact of
John Roe has been appointed a mem­‘ their second year they tire nearly as
which there was an abundant&gt;upply. Towardi
Mrs. M. A Foland has moved her stock of
■ some stones being circulated deroga- ber of the Greenback county commit­
P. HATCH &amp; CO.
’ large as the Lawton berry. Elliot in­ sunset tbe guests departed, feeling far better1 millinery goods to Grand Rapkle.
■ tory to her reputation, caused her to tee from this township.
, tends to do his whole duty by the new for the days enjoyment.
H. Ctaher has purchased a fruit dryer from
Esq. Parody is doing all the justice* berry in rearing and cultivating, and
Query for the Cedar Creek scribe: Why is it; Charioue and will soon be ready for business.
. take the step that ate did to escape business which causes Judge Killen to
According to Fred Sweet's observations,
no one need be surprised to see in time that c irrespondsnt from Cedar Creek falls to&gt;
Krom her trouble*. Her mother who look gloomy and forbidding
'
days of August.
LINEN DUSTERS
•‘Parrish’s own” become as’famous as write unless there has been a row or is a goodI inches of rain fell the first
[has been her constant and faithful atChas. Grace Is sojourning at Houghtalln’s rc- Fov Ladle* aad Gentlemen -reduced to Ooei
L. Addie Nichols, has received an un­ the Lawton.
We subjoin the com­ chance for making one,and then only with cer­
Iteadant during her long illness, had usual large and fine stock of goods for
tain persous! for when Oscar Compile II an an­■ sort, lie was too familiar with other people’s to ctoae oat, at
Gk axobesments of the Michigan Farmer udor
other chap from Cedar Creek had.a little dif­ property.
left tbe room for a abort time and dur- her five and ten cent counters.
the berry:
A FEW THOUSAND DOLLARS
ficulty be came out with u glowing account but
Republican county convention next WednesMr. and Mrs. G. A.Truman visited at
To Load ou good Real Estate security.
The past week Mr. E. L Parrish, of Naehffer mother hastened for help, which CharloUe, on Thursday. Mias Nellie rille, this state, brought Into the Fabnbboffice shortly after when Charlie Murpny got levelledI day. City caucuses will be held Friday evening
.
Lbb A DCE4BB.
to elect delegates.
was soon tortbeomiug. when remedies returned home with them.
WILL DIE.
A base baU match will be played Friday afan account of It tn the paper, but we don’t just;
were applied and Lizzie saved.
The season in Nashville this year is
Potato bugs wlK die if property sprinkled
—The domestic relations, of Wm,Sea­ cooler than at Petoskey. Moral—Pe­
The rain of last week done thousands of dol­ Caas club of Detroit, on the fair grounda. Adman and wife of Maple Grove were not toskey people should come to Nashville
lar* damage in township of Baltimore alone. mutoloD 25c.
the kind that suited Mr. Seaman, and to keep cool.
Not one farmer la ten had their wheat all drawBRICK! BRICK!
Wheat waa only about half secured when tbe
it is rumored that mother-in-law rule
I have ou hand about 300,000 Bricis which I
A self-propelling threshing engine, wmafewspecimenaof.be Lawton, and also ed and a great many had not drawed a bundle
brought about a state of things which the
— property of Stephen Springett oi some of the ordinary wild one*. They that which was set up in capped shock® will
cauaedhim to think he could live better North Castleton, steamed along Main ■were found to be fully ripe, and of an agree­ cor.tain considerable good wheat, while that aet drawn any of their wheat and a large portion
able flavor. As compared with tbe Lawton,
of it is completely spoiled, while a few were
। svay from than in contact with, con- street on Wednesday.
1^_
- they were bmUw, but very much sweeter,
LOOK HERE!
sequent!.? he arranged his financial afJ. M. Waters has left at this office a
Un ami after July 1st, 1882. Qwlrrf to tbe
one, as tbe farmer* have found out. Another
Last Thursday a fellow went Into Holloway
fatip as best be could among his cred- curosity in the shape of a cucumber
rest downfall ta stock I will stake Price* at
year-they will be more careful and will take
u.
~ cwdeeweuitet&gt;; having a wagon with his father, with a fully developed leaf on the end
He then weut into Julius Russel!-6 store and
care for them and mc what they would amount
| who hat.pigned with him to buy it, opposite tbe stem.
•
The late rain puU us tn mind of a atary we asked for another blank note and asked wheth­
to- The fruit was of such fine flavor that be
Pby.
Us
nmr
with
his father-inA reader of The News wants to concluded to set out some 125 cuttings. Of
er a note of forty dollars against John FighU-r
bur, who had also signed with him to know if hh poem
an elegant patch of cabbage which wo* suf­ would l&gt;e good. He
declined "befering for the wan: of rain. She prayed the
buy it, and hade his wife and children
Lord that in? might send rain. Tbe:ain came,
good bpa, saying be was going to look cause it wbh too thin.
and with It hall, which totally destroyed tbe
Mbr a fam- His wife asked if he would
Toe exerciser at the Bine Ribbon
to
meeting, at the Christian church on
come. it would be quite lute.
He SRDdsy, were the best of any the club
has had in «*long time. The wnffU&gt;K
—Rev. Mr. Breed of Eaton Rapid®,
preached at the Christian Church, last
Sunday, upon exchange with tbe pas­
tor. The subject of his morning’s dis­
course was based upon the words:
"Lest we shall hinder the gospel of
Christ,” found in the twelfth verse of
the ninth chapter of I. Cor. The
speaker briefly spoke of the self-denial
of PauL the writer of these words; how
he refrained from marriage, eating
meat, etc., so that be would avoid , all
appearance of even hindering the pro­
gress of the gospel. The speaker then*1
proceeded to make practical applica­
tion of the text in regard to th© hinderance* of the spread of the gospel by
the church. One of the greatest hinderances is the fact that church mem­
bers don’t understand the sublime con­
ception of Christianity. They are apt
to look upon it as the way for the
world's escape from guilt, or salvation
after death, rather the the escape;from
the sin of the world. This causes
them to become careless and uncon­
cerned. Other great hinderances to the
spread of the gospel is the worldliness
of Christians, and irresponsible Chris­
tians. Mr. Breed’s remarks in the eve­
ning were from laiah LV: II, and were
properly a continuation of the morn­
ings argument,—the speaker giving
some of the hinderances of the world’s
people to the spread tbe gospel. Taken
altogether tbe subject was a decidedly
interesting one, given in an oratorical,
convincing manner, and made an im­
pression upon those who listened to it.

and the recitations all one could wish

Pau. Prim.

�loe to the

1
who can keep a boms bright and cheery,■
set a table neatly, cook food in the’
best manner and take pride in being’
■ able to do It, when neoesrity compels*
oitle
them to leave home, will turn r~*
“_ into untried fields of labor, clerk.fiirbarpL--- -­
h enough to keep life in the body, or'
. stitch, stitch away although they are
dally convinced that health is being
sacrificed, or perhaps without tbe least
taste or fitness for the position swell
the list of poor teachers, or . do any­
thing but that for which they are bent'
fitted and fdr which they can demand
the best pay; while factories, shops and
store.* ore crowded to overflowing.
In many homes happiness, at least to
,
the over-tasked mother, could be
brought by the entranue of a bright,
intelligent girl to share the burden too
heavy ioi* her to bear, and yet none can
be found for the place.
Better pay,
betlffr food and a belter place to stay
may all be ottered and still she will turn
&lt;way. Doos not the pride that causes
so much discomfort and suffering de­
serve the contempt of ail right-minded
people? Discomfort to many a young
,
girl, distress to many a housekeeper
and overtasked mother! I differ with
many in tbe opinion as to who ’ har­
bors* this contemptible pride. A young
girl in her father's house, who has
hardly in her life spent an hour alone;
been loved and petted all her days; her
(other's pride her mother's joy, there
- time wheta her father’s health
has boeo given up,
death claims him. She,
poor girl, with a heart almost broken,
goes lorth to earn a living for herself
and perhaps help younger brothers
and sisters. She is happy in soon find­
ing a place to work with good wages
and all goes well until the evening
meal is prepared. The family gather
around the table and she D not to be
counted iu. She is obliged to take her
meal alouc In the kitchen. It may be
a very nice kitchen, everything aeat
and clean, vet she is alone aud lonely.
When her work is all done she can
flit all the evening alone or sock com­
pany where she can find it—among
stable boys or hired girls of tbo neigh­
borhood. it is not such company as
..her mother would wish for her. but she
must have company and this is the best
to be had. Shu has been used to much
better, but misfortune has mado her a
hired girl. Then families must have
their nosy, private family talks, when
the presence of a hired girl, (even
though she bad been well Brought up
and surrounded by the love of affec­
tionate parents) is not allowed. In this
way she is made to feel that all com­
panionship must be sought away from
that home, and as she is ignorant of the
ways of the world, she will be an easy
prey to the designing. People must
have their privacy. Girls ! Let them
have it and their work with it now and
forever. Let them place their own
rugs, straighten their own pictures or
leave them crooked, set their own ta­
bles, cook their own food or eat it raw,
and get on with their own privacy as
best they can. You, at least will have
Iour self-respect for pay, and can sal­
ify your heart with this great truth.

the insect tribe.
_
.
meet has bettn made the nn,-quite hu
skipped for more pleasant povturee and
leM fatal field*. In view of thi» fact,
there baa been a great boom in caator.bean planting. jt ig beHeTwi that at
i_______
Mt tba______
-mostrelentlen*
;
enemy to the.
seaside sojourner’* peace can be met
with an engine of destruction which
will guarantee to human existence on
the ocean’s brink a charm it ho* never
known before. One enterprising hotel­
keeper at Atlantic City has already.
mode preparation* to set out hi* castor­
bean bed*.—Philadelphia Press.

Stanley Beaten by a Frenchman.
The French Geographical Society in
a few days &lt;wiB fete M. Savcrgnau de
Brazza, the Frenchman who ha* stolen
a march on Stanley and made the. Con­
go virtually a’French,river.
Every­
body know* the importance of the Con­
go line© Stanley made bi* famou* voy­
age. But for one thing it would be the
finest waterway in nature. Just be­
fore it reaches the sea it breaks into
dangerous cataracts, which render all
direct approach from the coast impos­
sible. The Belgian association which
fitted out Stanley’s expedition was
formed especially to find a way to turn
this difiicultv. The river begins to be
navigable only at Stanley pool How
to reach Stanley [pol, Stanley could
think of no other way than to cut a
road from the seaside by the cataracts
into the pool, and $1,600,000 was sub­
scribed for this purpose. Stanley set
valiantly to work, cut his road aud
transported his steamer, and at length
came in sight of the pool, only to find
some fifty vessels flying the French flag
in quiet possession. The truth is, Mr.
Savergnau de Brazza has found a
shorter way to the pool.
Near the
mouth of the Congo lies the French
possession of Gaboon, and in this direc­
tion De Brazza began looking after af­
fluents of the sgreat river which might
lead him all the way to the pool of wa­
ter.
He went up the River Ogovuo
and found that this was separated by
only eighty kilometers from another
entirely unknown river, the Alima,
which flows right into the pool. Tbe
Stanley road wav from the coast was
240 kilometers long; the roadway be­
tween Ogovue and the Alima was but
eighty. De Brazza kept his own coun­
sel, came back to France, obtained a
vote in aid from Parliament, went out
again, and made such good use of bis
time that long before Stanley arrivou
be bad seized the pool in the name of
the French, concluded treaties with the
natives, and bought large possessions
on the banks of the river. By this en­
terprise France taps the Congo route
and secures tbe outlet and inlet of what
may one day become the richest trades
in the world.—N. Y. Special to Chicago
Times.
_____
_______
A Facetious Justice Who Improvised *

Marriage Ritual.

Fred Flasher has lately got a com­
mission from the Governor of Maine as
a Justice of the Peace. Shortly after
that event a rural couple called on him
to marry them. He bad never read a
*' Houur and latne from no condition ri«e.
word of the ceremony.
Act well yuur part, there all the honor lie*. '
“Sam Jinkins. do you love this
—Rural New Yorker.
I woman?" he asked.
“
Yis, sur,” responded Sam. hitching
The Worries of Pronunciation.
|
I up bis striped trowsera.
Among the many sources of sorrow, i
“ Will ycu cherish and obey her?”
inconvenience and distraction by which 1
• our celebrated lexicographer was sur•• Fiorentina Harding, will you love
rounded in the manufacture of his best- • and cherish this man?"
known work, corroding doubts about
•• ...............
Yes.” she lisped, while wiping her
orthuephy should be distinctly marked. eyes with the cornpr of her apron.
It is recorded of him in Boswell’s chron­
•• Do you want to be married?"
icle that he consulted two of the lead­
•• Yin. Yis?’ said both, and Sam shift­
ing authorities of his time about the ed his weight upon his right foot.
pronunciation of the common word
Then Squire Flasher moralized and
“great.” Tbo one was Sir William finalfv said:
Yonge, the other Ixird Chesterfield.
“ We will dose by singing Chaplain
The best speaker in the House of Lords McCabe’s trundle-bed song:
• As 1
told him it should be spoken so as to tumbled in the attib,’ ” eta.
rhyme with “state,” its ordinary sound
And as he saw that tbo bride was
to the present day; but a pronunciation very plain be added: “After which
rhyming with “soat” wes preferred you will kiss each other and depart ns
by the best speaker in the House of the great men departed in the beautiful
Commons, who, moreover, added that hymn written by King David, com­
none but nu Irishman would pronounce mencing:
* Wire* of great men all remind u«.
it in any other manner. By this diver­
We may moke our wives oabhme.
gence of opinion, at once learned and
And departing leave behind u».
aristocratic, tbo good Doctor was
Footprint* on tbe mid of time.* ”
And here Flasher paused, took bib
doubtless so deeply disgusted that he
gayemp. the attempt to settle the fee and left, and ali seemed satisfactory
sounds of the English language in «ie- until someone call attention to the fact
spair. At all events, there is in bis that Flasher had omitted the import­
dictionary nothing more than a meagre ant point of pronouncing them hus­
array of accents contributing to that band and wife. This was remedied by
hunting him up and going through the
greatend.
Erudite classical scholars are ccilain- ceremony again, at the close of which
ly no sure guides in the tortuous path he said:
“ I now pronounce you husband and
of orthoepy, nor can wc set entire reli­
ance upon the sign-pasts of the stage. wife, married good and solid; now see
Mr. Percival, it is notorious, insists on how long you can stick to iu”—Detroit
%
pronouncing the name of our metrop­ Free Pnu.
olis, as though it were spelt “Lun—Portland. Oregon, has made aston­
Bun.” while Ixird Holland pronounced
Bordeaux, and supported himself by ishing progress in tbe past ten years,
argument, as though it were spelt and real estate has now attained a
“ Burdux.” Garrick—after the man­ speculative value there that is regarded
ner of Lichfield, where, as a« a distin­ by prophets of evil as sure to result,
guished native of that place h.is inform­ sooner or later, in n disasterous crash.
ed us, they speak the purest English, The city is lull of life and bustle. Im­
or perhaps niter tbe analogy of such portant railroad lines terminate there,
words a* “ sure ” and “ sugar ”—al­ and twice a week steamers arrive from
ways said “ shupreme,” while Kemble, San Francisco heavily loaded with pas­
besides talking of “ aches ” as though sengers and freight. Many passengers
they were the plural of a letter of go on to Washington Territory, where
the alphabet too frequently ignored, they settle, but they stop for a time in
produced, when speaking of a “ beard,” Fortland, and leave money there. Guathe impression upon his hearers that he : sidering the great strides made in Ore­
general term
rerm for
,orme
f rrilory. it b not
referred to a, general
tbe feath­
biich It Un7—
U!&gt;.»li.rMtorv : sfnu,it'
there ehould be no pert ol
ered tribe. ihoruv
ta m.-vter.ol.oeech.. 11110
in ’‘r f
nature of authority in ma*, ten of speech, i
;
are
more
confident
of a great future
even when it is concerned with the &gt;
simple'*, and most common words.— 1 than in this uttermost northwestern
1
corner
ot
the
Repub
lic.
*
London Globe.

—The St. Louis Board of Health late­
A Mosquito Crusade.
ly received tbe following: “Mansfield
The song of tbe mosquito is again Wright Co Mo June 28 1882 President
heard in tbo land, and there comes a Bd of Health Sir. I wish that you may
great wail from tbe river, sides and assist me in my proffess’ion I have
beaches of Delaware and Now practiced medicine as a student here
under a competent physician, and be
vsding myriads of pestiferous and ps- wants me to tend tin. fecturse but I am
ticooexhausing insects.
Down in knot able to do so and the people want*
Delaware and tbe •• Eastern Sho’ ’* the me to pracktise aud I beg of you to
its have lighted their great fires grant me a certificate. I can give you
ft the whole country with uli th“. reckameuduLkm you want me
a de*;»craie attempt to drive to anoer anv questions which you Wish
counties* hoiden. In some to ask.’
For a long rime the authori­
ties were unable to determine Mietfaei
ytHxM-niUM* have Imwmi a terrible
they had received a really truly con*
h •'
r moot c»t
‘
‘
or the king tinnoid hill of s
t
i- *»-i ha* linen
! &gt;og&lt;*lt»n ttat-iron wiulder.—Ch o-sge
... ■
«u.g rnSMlta.

becoming more disposed to draw tii'eir
own wills without employing lawyers!
There is no fuaeon why any one should
not draw a will who has . fair business­
like ability to write out the gifts. Com­
mon sense suggests that tbe paper
ought to be headed as a will, and it is
not difficult to learn by inquiry bow
many witnesses are required in toe par­
ticular State; thia, by the way, is toe
State where the testator resides (at his
death); a will drawn for a man on a
bad grammar nor misspelling in the
body of a will vitiates it; if the Judges
can understand what the paper means
they will order that done. Wills hav­
ing nearly every important word mis­
spelled and almost destitute of punctu­
ation have been accepted. Maine pa­
pers say that a court has lately taken
proof of a will made in pantomime by
a man who was deaf and dumb, and
could not write or use tbe manual
alphabet. But mistakes which obscure
the meaning make trouble. A story
last summer was that Mr. Matthew
Vassar, when drawing his will, meant
to leave 87,000 to seven churches—i. e.,
$1,000 apiece—but in copying bls
rough draft he inadvertantly inserted
the word “each,” giving the churches
$7,000 each, or $49,000 in all. The
general rule as to mistakes is that if toe
will is.lucid and intelligible, andean be
carried into effect as it reads, this must
be done; the language cannot be al­
tered because witnesses say that the
testator meant something different from
what be wrote. But if what is written
cannot be performed, the courts will
then take proof of what the man meant
to write.
Curious conditions are sometimes im| posed.
One testator declared in bis
will that if aay legatee should attempt
I to break it he should be debarred from
any share. Another cut off any heir who
should wear mustaches. Another said
that each legatee must take the pledge
before receiving his share, and should
forfeit a half year’s income for every
breach of it. Another left to bis family
physician £1,000 if testator should live
two years, or £3.000 if he should live
five; but unlucky for the doctor, the
patient only lived a week. Whether
conditions of this kind are operative
depends on the circumstances; if they
are lucid and practical courts will en­
force them, but many are so expressed
that they amount to nothing. If you
wish that your’legatee should not re­
ceive the property unless he complies
with a condition, say so plainly in
the will, and toe condition, if not
contrary to law, will probably be en­
forced. But to make him give back
the legacy because of breaking the con­
dition after it has been paid may not be
so easy. And do not mention' tbe re­
quests at all in toe will, but write them
in a letter separately, unless vou mean
that if they are not obeyed the legacy
shall be forfeited. Requests which are
not peremptory conditions often make
trouble.
When Heller, the magician,
died, he bequeathed his apparatus to be
bestroyed. In some instances a testa­
tor has directed that a favorite horse
or other pet should be killed “lest it
fall into unkind hands.” It is doubt­
ful whether a court would compel au
execution to destroy property because
the will so desired. Wills are allowed
for giving one’s property; tLat useful
animals or articles should be destroyed
is not for public benefit
Directions
given in a will as to mode of burial, or
for cremation, are also subjects of the
sanitary law of the place.
. It is only when one designs to give
bis property outright in simple ways
that he should draw jis own will; for
complicated trusts, endowing uew in­
stitutions. or tying up property for a
future time, a lawyer's aid may be
very necdfuL Even lawyers sometimes
make mistakes. A New York lawyer
named Rose drew his own will, leaving
about two million to be held ‘for five
years to see whether other givers would
add 8300,000: if they -ould. the whole
whould go toendow a “ Rose Benificent
Association;” if they would not, then
his money was to go to other charities.
Now the law does not allow property
to be held in suspense for a definite
term of years; therefore, his gift was
pronounced void. Some most absurd
blunders have been made by lawyers
in drawing wills for themselves. It is
not obligatory to appoint an executor,
but doing so is wise, and if a testator
has enough confidence in the person
named to direct
that “he shall
not be required to give .security.”
this may prove a great convenience.
As respects signing and witnessing,
wills often fail from some informality
in these; especially in New York,whore
the form is stricter than in most States.
A story of last summer was that a will
was presented, written partly in black
pencil, partly in blue (a will is not void
because in pencil. though ink is far
butter); about half was written on one
page, and the jyitnesses signed al tbe
fool; the other halt was written on the
other page.and then came the testator’s
signature. This instrument was dis­
carded, because the witnesses did not
sign at the end of the will. Common
sense ought to tell any one that any
important paper ought to be completed
belore the signatures are affixed.
*1 he new York rule as to signing aud
witnessing is that there must be two
witnesses. The testator must sign in
their presence. Inform them that the
paper is his will (he need not tell them
what is in it) and ask them to witness
it, and they must sign their names and
residences' as witnesses at tbe end of
the wilt They usuallv sign below a
brief memorandum certifying that these
things were done, but this memoran­
dum is not slricUv essential. Keep the
will, when completed, m a safe place.
In Massachusetts, lately, a will was
contested because rate bad eaten the
signature.
lx&gt;rd St. Leonard's will
was lost, and was established only by
the fortunate fact that his daughter
.was able to repeat the substance of it
from memory.—Springfield, (Mass.)
Journal.
—In Illinois tbo other day there was
a six-inch rainfall in a few hours. Tbe
unfortunate inhabitants saved them­
selves by staying in the saloons until
the storm was over.— Loulwille CourierhwnaL

■

HOW IT WAS DONE.

intend
..
—i* Gtanr
was the reply, “and thus easily
__—Jaod family in good bea’tb. When
I am well I always feel good naturwl.
Farmers grow - richest when factories arc
nearest to their farms.

------------------ **

&amp; X" p

The Champion Machines.
WAGONS ONLY $60.00.
■

A COMPLETE LINE OF

CHANGE OF MIND.
I declined to Insert your advertisement of
Hop Bitter* loot year becauoe I then thought
they might not be prornotlre of the cause of
temperance, but find they are, aud a very val­
uable medicine, myself acd wife having been
greatly benefited by them, and 1 take great
pleasure in making them known.
REV. J HN BEAMAN.
Editor Home Sentinel, Afton, N. Y.

Buggies, Carriages, Wheel Harrows and
Cultivators, Mounted Seeders,
and4kinds of Plows

7, Tbe cheap and small postal orders are to be
made payable to bearer.

ROAD SCRAPERS, SQUARE DRAGS. GRIND STONES

AN IMPOSSIBILITY.
Deserving articles are always appreciated.
Tbe exceptional cleanllnew of Parker* Hair
Balsam make* it popular. Gray hair* are Imposalble with its occasional use.

Common, and hung ready for use.

Many a man is not satisfied to live on the
face of the earth. He tries to live on hla own
face.

REED’S GENUINE SPRING TOOTH HARROW

SERVING MACHINES.
PLOW POINTS for the Oliver (Chilled. Wlard, Three Riv­
ers, Bryan, Cale, Curtis, Dodge, Robinson
And many other Plows.

Mr. H. N. Morton, of Oswego, N. Y. writes:
In fact, we keep a full and complete stock of first class Hardware and Farming Tool*. Can
My wife has been restored to perfect health and
strength. She suffered many years from in­ and see them before buying.
digestion, complicated with female irrtgulartles. I never saw her lipa so red and her
cheeks so rosy for years;
Kentucky promises to double its average corn
crop.

THE HAPPINESS OF THE FAMILY.
And prosperity, alao, depend on tbe health of
tbe mother. She should maintain her health
and correct any monthly difficulties or uterine
yeakueaa by using Zoa-Pbbra, the Hcaltbbringer.
.

A 000,000,000 bushel wheat crop ia the latest
figure.
DONT TRUST THEM.
When you feel badly, and have paiua here
and there in your body that you don’t know
how to aceout for it Is tbe moat foolish |x&gt;ilcy
tn the world to take tbe advice of people who
say: "Ob. there’s nothing the matter with you.
Let yourwelt alone and you will come out ail
right” Tbeoe folks know nothing about it,
and may t&gt;e trifling with your life. You may
have Kidney or Liver trouble. Send right
out to your druggist and get a bottle of Dr.
Kennedy’s “Favorite Remedy,’’ and then you
will be all right or write to the Doctor. at
Rondout N. Y.

HERE WE ARE A&amp;AIH!
■WITH A FULL STOCK OF-

Bug'g’ies
Wagons
OUR LINE BUGGIES
E MBRACES--------

The country which fans to protect its cwn,
deserves the misfortunes which follow.
REMEMBER THIS.
If you are sick Hop Bitters will surely aid
Nature tn making you well when ali else fails.
If you are coattve or dyspeptic, or are suffer­
ing from any other of the numerous diseases of
tbe stomach or bowels, it is your own fault If
you remain ill, for Hop Bitters are a sovereign
remedy tn all such complaints.
If you are wasting away with any form of
Kldnvy disease, atop tempting death this mo­
ment, and turn for a cure to Hop Bitter*.
If you arc sick with that terrible sickness
Nervousness, vou wi|l find a "Balm io Gilead”
in the use of flop Bitter*.
If you are a frequenter, or a resident of a
miaamatk district, barricade your system
against the scourge of all countries—malarial,
epidemic, biliousness, and intermittent fevers—
by the use of Hop Bittern.
If you have rough, pimply, er swallow skin,
bad breath, pains and aches" and feel miserable
generally. Hop Bitters will give you fair skin,
rich blood, sweetest breath, health, and com-

Blight's dUeasc. $500 will be paid for a case
they will not cure or help.
That )K»&gt;r lirdriddru. Invalid wife, sister,
mother or daughter, can be made the picture
of health, bv a few bottles of Hop Bitters, cost
lug but a trifle Will vou let them suffer)

Dexters
White Chappel and Coal Boies, hung with Elliptic Springs.
Two and Three Spring Democrats
UR WORK IS ALL DONE UPON HONOR.

BUGGIES

made from Second Growth Hickory.
OOur being
Tops are lined with All-Wool Indigo-Dyed Goods and

Warranted not to Fade. W. H. Atkinron, a painter whose
work has never went back on him, has charge of our paint department.and can be relied on. Bolts, Dash Feet, Body Loups
and Stays are made from Norway Iron and the entire buggy
ironed in a desirable and superior manner and warranted.
I&gt;OVT BI A

_A_

Until yo« have thoroughly examined mine. Spokes made
from Second Growth Stock and the wagon is made to stand
the wear and tare of our roads.
JCS"I HAVE IN STOCK A NUMBER OF-jga

Chilled Plows, Hay Rakes and Cultivators,
Which I will Sell ut Cost to Close out.

E. COOK

thcChar-sr of Life.’

OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE

______

FOR SALS!
WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH

THREE INCH TIRE
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING

BETTER THAN COMMON TIRE
SCHOOL
BOOKS,
SCHOOL
STATIONERY.

We believe the Three inch Tire
into general u«e. Call and see theni.

Sold by G. L Glasgow. Nashville, Mich.
DKTROIT, ■ MICH.

BEATTY’S OBO»8 rwu-p.
■ ■■■■■ .1

destined to come

’j •« FGaw 41.8. v

WMMagtr

'.BENTLEY BROS. &amp; WILKINSHastings, Mich., Sept. 15th, 1881.

�is dtatendit would

of New Tort

n my knees in ths
and clung tq the
I didn’tbear the
- .... .
faalixed my con­
dition and began to calculate the
chances for rescue. I looked back and
could not sea tug, boat, or sail. Off in
one direction I could see land, but it
seemed to be far distant, and I was
going from it.
I resolved to make
the best of my situation and keep coot
My better judgement said; “Don’t be
frightened." In cases of extreme
danger I have the most self-posses­
sion and at such times feel cheerful. As
1 dragged along I sang: "AllJ my
hopes id Thpo ore stayed,” and kept
looking over my shoulder for the tug.
I must have dragged twenty minxes
when I spied the steam of tbe tug in
the distance. I gave utterance to an
exclamation of joy. Then came the
chorus of the verse: “He saves me.
saves me now.” How I watched that
tug can better be imagined than de­
scribed. 1 saw they were gradually
gaining on me but slowly. I must have
dragged an hour before they overtook
me. It occurred to me that if I could
get the globe near to the water it would
not drag so fast, and I reached out ahd
seized a group of attachments and
pressed them down into the water, and
that drew the balloon nearer- to the Sur­
face. I heard the tug whistle, and
nearer ahd nearer they came, and I
could distinguish forms and bear the
yelling. It was the sweetest music 1
ever heard.
basket aud

cenu the lather* of familiw, they have
onlv to forbid the piercing of can of
their young daughters, and soon tbe
Advertisers^ ■
M double tbe uu-:&gt;’ ct of readea fashion w6uld fall Into desuetude. For
fan-mutative District nt Barry my part, I think the costly ornaments
iy other paper circulating there- mar the beauty of a well-made ear;
«o&lt; advertising arc ^&lt;’r duu» and u pretty ears are by no means
common, ear-rings inconveniently at­
tract attention to ears which might
to better advantage be concealed. Per­
haps it may be urged that, in such a
THESE LIBERAL AD. j&amp;TEfl.
•case, they afford an ‘agreeeble relief,
-msirir»s&lt;jij* •" and that "the jewel is more observed
, I | 1 73~| * S4» r» 5.00 I _• 5-00 than tho car which wears if Well,
~|—iJO|_'50Qr 8-501 14.00 there are few evils that do not serve'
"j---- 8J6'|"~7.00 | 12-00 | a0.00 some good purpose.
|---- 4 00 I SOO [ 14.00 | 25.00
Among many savage tribes this orna­
-|—£o01 &amp;.06 j ~16.» Fao.00 ment is reserved to the male sex. In
Jarjrer adx. riven upon eppllcation, the Pelew islands the men pierce one
__ .-*rd» of fire line* or lew. |ft per yr. ear only; the women both ears.
One
Load Notice*, ten cent* a line for flr»t luaer- may yet see, along our coasts, sailors
tfca and eight cent* for each auUequent Inacr- who wear rings of gold in tho ears; but
tho custom has never become general,
and U even, now disappearing.
Tho ladies of our day have maintained
tbe fashion within tolerable limits. One
seldom sees, nowadays, ear-rings so
elongated that they would pass mi/ster
for antique vases. The elongation of
tho ear does not appear to be desired,
[FICERS.
FILLAG
xhhougb this deformity Inevitably re­
eat—EJlhu
mits under certain conditions.of the
.issues of tho ear lobe, which, in some
cases, may support with impunity a
Marshall-.lame* L. Gregory.
Trnslees-H. A. Barber, F. T. Boise. H. W. relatively heavy weight; in other cases
Demany, IL R. Dickinson, H. M. Lee and t develops immoderately, and instill
others it has been known to be torn out­
right. A lady of my acqtmntance. sub­
jftuUtt.
ject to frequent attacks of erysipelas in
the face, was compelled to abandon the
Emoum ep'xxjpal church—j
wearing of ear-rings, because the irri­
Tow. Paalor.
every Siblm
tation produced by the ring broueht
on a recurrence of tbe disease. Dr.
Saint-Vel mentions an affection of the
VY LODGE NO. 37. K. of P., meets at its lobe of the ear produced by ear-rings—
Caatie Hall. Nashville, Michigan, every a sort of tumor, which increases in in­
Friday evening, for the encouragement and tensity after washing the face. The
disease is found more particularly
among negrqsscs.
Il was more particularly among tbe
NlisccltaiM'ouN (hrds.
aboriginal Americans that the fashion
of wearing absurdly long ear-rings ex­
TAMORY PARADY, Justice of the Peace. isted. Tbe Peruvians wore them down
A2J Office, Corner Main and Bheniuui Streets.
to the shoulders; and similar customs
A. FOOTE PHYSICIAN &amp; SURGEON have been noted elsewhere. Cook re­
• Sucessor to Dr. Wickham. Office and cords the fact that among the inhabi­
residence at Dr. Wickham'slate office.
tants of the lie de Paques the oars
Prompt attention to calls night or day.
were pierced with holes sufficiently
H. YOUNG. M. D. Office eart side of ' large to admit of the introduction of
• Main St., Nashville. Office hours from | the five fingers. This dilation was ob­
7to9 a. m., and 4 to 7 p. m.
tained by a leaf rolled tightly and in­
serted in the opening, and when the
ornaments were withdrawn the ears
hung down the back like rags. It ap­
pears that the inhabitants of the island
in question have had the good sense to
. D. Office over
abolish this foolish custom.
'ermontvtile, Mich.
In New Zealand the natives wear in
their ears pieces of cloth, nails, cards
ID BRADY. Lawyer, Circuit Court
Commissioner, Real Estate and Insurance
to which are attached small packages
Aft Prompt attention given to all buslnees or bundles, acissors,. needles, human
entraeted to my care.. Conveyancing a special­
teeth and nails, dog’s teeth, etc., etc.
ty. Office opposite Union House.
It was no uncommon thing for the
" AP.V DUNH AM, proprietor “Monarch” women of these tribes to insert in thpir
Billiard Rooms, ijosemenl -Boise’s drug ears rings from three to four inches in
store. Everything new, neat and orderly. No diameter.
liquors.
Among the Moguls the ordinary
LIEBH AUSER, Merchant Tailor and deal­ length of the ear-rings is one foot At
. er in Ready Made Clothing. See me Melabar pendants have been observed
weighed over five ounces,the per­
before you purchase clothing. Fits guarwhich
­
anteed. - __ _________________________
foration of the lobe of the car admit­
ting of passage of the fist.
””ONAH B. rJEsET, Express and Drayman
J
The Neo-Caledonians irritate their
Goods and Baggage carried to any place tn
ears so badly that they finally. lose all
tbe village.
form. Among the savage tribes the
TTIRAM R. DICKINSON, manufacturer of
men attach to their .ears pieces of wood
XI and dealer in Hard Wood Lumber. Build
tag Material aapccialtr. Casli paid for loga. Mill and tortoise shells, which, being curved
and yard ou Sherman St-, a. M. C- R.R. crossing.
into a circle before being introduced
into tbe holes, unbend like a spring
TAMES FLEMING, practical Jeweler end
tJ Watch-maker. Clocks, Watches, Silver and when left to themselves, and finally
Plated Ware, Jewelry and Optical Goods. Rock- give to the aperture in the ear an open­
fotd Watches a specialty. Repalringand Eugrav- ing of nearly three inches in diameter.
taw done In a workmanlike manner.
The women also snlit their ear-lobes,
aiming to transform them into strips or
things of more or less unequal length,
RNO STRONG, plain and fancy jod muter.
Tbo best facilities for dutng work of any
which are afterward submitted to re­
printing office in Barry county. When in need peated tractions, and are finally drawn
M printing of any description, whatever, see mo down to the base Of the neck.
htaeyoMbay.
As a rule the lightest ear-rings are
the beat. In my humble opinion they
TACOB OSMUN. Uvemnan, bam near Wok are also more graceful than the ear­
O cott House. First claw turnouts at reason­ bobs copied from savage nations. And
able rates. Special rates to commercial men. if a lady has nqiJiad her ears pierced,
Funeral and wodlng parties furntabed with car
I fail to understand why she should
riagea on short notice.
load them down with pendants kept in
position by mere pressure or otherwise.
TTELLOGG dt BELL, proprietors Planing
The pressure is insupportable, and by
Xk Mill. Planing and Matching. Resawing
this means a woman wrongfully de■M MnnWng. a specialty. Scroll Sawing.
Bractata, Window and Door Frames made io | prive^hcrself of aa originality that is
order. Wood Turning la all Ita branches.
sot without its charm.
HAS. W. DEMARAT, Dealer tn Watches,
Mlle. Adele’s Peril.
Clocks, fine Jewelry and Silverware. Being
a practical Jeweler, patrons can depend upon
having their rejolrlng done right. Two aoora
The following account of the experi­
ence of Mlle. Adele, the Syracuse aero­
TOHMBAaUN, Shoemaker. Special atteo- naut, who made a balloon ascension
tl tion given to fine and sewed boots, also from Oswego on the Fourth and
repairing. All manufactured work made from dropped into the lake, is given by tbo
beat of stock and warranted. First door south Oswego Times: After the balloon rose
Babe’s hardware.
it tended northwest and began to ap­
proach the lake. I threw out a winter­
cloak, thinking it might rise to a differ­
JJ A. BARBEIl, ». D..
ent current wuich would take the bal­
loon away from the lake, but it still
* HOMCEOPATmc
continued to work northward, and
when ovTir the west brakewater 1 cut
off the anchor-rope, and it presented a
Office first door east of Opera House, and curious sight as it fell. The water be­
near residence on corner of Washington and low looked nearly black, and I knew 1
State Strode. Nashville, Mich.
had attained a great elevation and was
still rising. Shortly after the balloon
y^roiANITT HOUSE,
was enveloped in a heavy snow-storm,
and fora tew moments I. could see
Nnwlia lllc NllcliUrnn.
nothing but the white snow-flakes be­
A. 8. Footf., Proprietor.
neath me. The snow melted on the
oaloon and tilled the cordage with
water and the additional weight caused
It to settle somewhat, so that in a few
minutes I came in sight of tbe lake. I
hung out tbe red signal flag, and fas­
tened on my cork jacket aud saw the
g A. BUSH,
sail boats, but could sot tell which was
.he life boat.. 1 saw a steam-lug and
*
“THJ BOBS’
thought it was coming to my aid. J
kept swaying the balloon toward the
shore, thinking 1 could keep linear
enough to the beach to strike on land
which I saw (probably Nine Mile
Point) for I dreaded to plunge into the
Ake. I watched the tug and saw 1 was
receding and gradually working off the
thorn. At this time the tug was a mere
b,Tffaid in advance.

•Rashvillt giwrtonj.

M

I

L

W

C

S

O

C

Physician and Surgeon.

BOOT AND SHOE MAKER,

dog trot, and. on her failure to keep out |
of tbe home's way. to receive a cut from |
a villainous whip.
And. there is
scarcely an evening but that we seethe
family cow brought home from pasture
with a horse at full trot. And this is
only what can be seen almost any­
where. Before boys got too lazy, or
before mothers thought it disgraceful
for their sons to walk, a horse was not
used for that purpose. The boys were
taught to drive the cows quietly and'
slowijy and especially in the evening
when the cow Is carrying her precious
load to feed tbe family. • But the cruel
and unmerciful way this, buriness is
done now, it will be strange if judgments
are not visited on the families that per­
mit such things. It will, and does,
come in rendering the cow almost
worthless. And in many cases the cow
is
entirely rnlncd. The judgment
.■omes to the family for using unhealthy
nilk by injuring tlie udder, and sotne.imes overheating the cow. When
children are weak’ or sickly, where
there is a cow belonging to'thfi family,
it may be attributed in many coses to
unnecessary cruelty to the animal by
rash drivers. There hhould.be no com­
plaining, for judgments frequently
i come in that way as the necessary re­
sults of bad conduct Wb have no
doubt that many cases of sickness, and
some deaths are caused by this inhu­
man practice, and there ought to be
more. A boy who will be thus cruel to
the kind ana faithful family cow, will
be a cruel man. dangerous to society,
The Telclogne.
and the sooner he is removed from the
have ! evil to come tbe better. And in such
Some experiments
which
Tui- cases the tears of the parents should bo
recently been made in the
to_ j few.—Iowa Stale Beqister.
leries gardens
are
believed
have pretty well proved that the
invention of a French officer of the
Keep the Stables Clear of Flies.
line known as the telelogue is destined I
-------to be usfid with some success in mill-1
One of tbe greatest hindrances to thrift
Uiry operations. The apparatus con- j during the hot weather is tbo annoysiste of a three-legged easel, cr frame, I anoe caused by flies. This is true both
surmounted by a field-glass, and ar­ in field and stable. In the former we
ranged conveniently for the exhibition cannot, in any considerable degree,
of the signals to be used. The only control them, but in the latter we can.
other thing required is the ease con­ Tho better class of stables should bo
taining these signals. This is flat, with provided with screens. By this mode,
a double-folding lid, opening when re­ fumigation being practiced to drive the
quired, so as to display the plate with­ flies out, the stock may be quite well
in. It is fitted with thirty-six plates, protected. The placing of small ves­
each of which has a plain black ground, sels of chloride of lime about the ceil­
with a letter or mark raised upon it. ing will sometime answer the purpose
The plates fit in like books into a shelf. of seeping them out of the building. If
and have marks on their outer edges, [ a decoction of lycopodium (sometimes
forming a sort of index, and. enabling j called wolfs claw), which is the largest
the operator to pick out ata glance the of the European mosses, be placed in a
one required. Usually the marks upon . bladder, the neck being supplied with
the plates are simply' the twenty-five | n quill nozzle, by' means ot which the
letters of the alphabet and the ten ' flies accumulate, early in the morning,
Lt-u_.
_lof
--------------------------------the effect upon the flies will soon be
Arabic
units
number,-but whenever
it is desirpd these can be replaced by seen, as it quite promptly destroys
others having a secret meaning and de­ them. This article is also used to de­
cipherable only by a friend, while use­ stroy vermin.
less as a means of conveying informa­
Large numbers of flies may be de­
tion to an enemy. The size of the stroyed by hanging up a small bundle
plates varies according to the distance ol motherworth, ora small willow bush,
which it is intended that they should suspended bv a string from tho ceiling.
“carry." For the purpose of commu­ The flies will bo attracted by the smell,
nicating at a distance of two and one- settling in largo numbers uoon tbe
At night a wide-mouthed bag
half miles, they are about seventeen bush.
inches high and twelve inches wide, may be held under the bush, and the
but by doubling the length and breadth siring cut, when the whole will drop
of them they are made useful at con­ into the bag. and the flies may be de­
siderably more than double that dis­ stroyed in any convenient wav. The
tance. In the former case, however, stable may bd1 fumigated by burning
the weight is only four pounds, dry. rotten cow dung. Flies are utterly
whereas in the latter it is raised to unable to tolerate the pungent odor of
twenty pounds or more. In one of the this burning dung, and if the .doors or
experiments conducted at the Tuileries windows be opened at the proper time
communications were carried on be­ they will leave the stable. By keep­
tween the operator in Paris and lhe ing cattle or horses protected with
race-course at Longchamps, which is a light covers, made of bagging or other
distance of about three miles, and tho stout, cheap material, uud oiling their
results were said to be altogether suc­ legs with strong fish oil each morning,
cessful. One of the chief advantages much of the annoyance from flies may
of tbe system is, of course, its cheap­ bo easily overcome.
Cattle may be
ness ami simplicity, which enables any turned out to grass with such covers on
private soldier, after a few lessons, H for a'portion of each day, if thought
work it with success. —London Globe.
desirable, and by applying the fish oil
to their legs as they go out, quite an
immunity will be secured against the
A I’ulifter’s Handbook.
attacks of flics.—National Live Stock
We arc preparing a new Punstef’j JournaL
' Hand-book for tbe use of new aspiravte
for paragraphical fame. When the
What Ails Yon!
“great American humorist" in embryc
sees a patchwork paragraph in an ex­
change, built by a dozen brilliant wits
—a paragraph, for instance, on Boston,
with its Hub-bub, good felloes, spokes­
men, never tire, for wheel or whoa, a
wag-on the press, axle lots of questions,
hold your tongue etc. When he sees
such an effort ho is seized with an irresistible desire to “catchon" with a.
pun of the same genus; but the pun
tor which he roaches may be so elusive,
coy ami retiring that ho grabs fur the
unattainable. It is for the benefit of
such punsters tbe Handbook is designed.
The annexed brace of specimens will
show the character of the work:
Undertaker.—Shrouded in mystery; appall-ing; a grave subject; tomb
much; a coffin fit; it is cemeterysi; brought to his bier; bury good;
don’t re-hearse any more; corse
jokes ;a little morgue gravity; please
don’t feel so “stiff” about it;
ghoul along with such nonsense,
etc.
•
Dressmaker—Only sew-sew; basque in
her smiles; a-he in; a -needles re­
mark; ofooree it is; ruffle her tem­
per; all tuckered out: jabot in his
eye; a bindingagreement; gusset’H
do, seams sew; a waist of time;
don’t train in that drowd; on unbias-ed opinion; give him the
sacque; upbraid her; such puns are
enough to make an ap’-ron, etc.
In'addjtion to the foregoing samples,
the book will contain ail tho possible
puns on such subjects as tbe wasp, the
goat, eggs, oysters, poker, the mothermdaw, the mule,, comets, fo«-ls, sea
serpent. Jonah, and more than one
hundred others in daily paragraphic
use. H our contemporaries will kind­
ly allude to the Handbook as a highly
immoral publication, not lit to be reed
aloud in the family cirole—of a variety
theater—and call on Anthony Comstock
to suppress it, the work will have an
immense sale.—Norristown Herald.

—President Pierce once had a car­
riage presented to him bv Boston poli­
ticians, end tbe wheels of it now adorn

Then you would really like to know
whai.s the matter with you. young
man? Why is it that you are round
shouldered, fiollow cheeked, dull eyed,
and have a general “all broke up" ap­
pearance? Well to begin with, you
don’t goto bed early enough, and you
dont get up early enough. Instead of
going to bed. at foiir aud getting up at
ten. you should reverse the process.
You see, while you are in bed in the
morning you are missing the very best,
invigorating atmosphere that would
hare a tendency to fill up your lungs,
distend your chest and brace your sholdera back where they belong. Then
again your nose is over too many
glasses of beer and whisky iu the
course of the day and evening, and
your lungs are permeated with vile
odors of bar rooms and smoking rooms
where the air is foul to a degree of un­
bearableness. This takes the color
away from j our checks and while it
may in time if you live long enough,
give a brilliant hue to your nose; it is
not to be desired. Then, once more,
the ever present cigarette is between
your lips, and you are adding ten fold
to the liarmfulness of tbe atmosphere
you seem to enjoy, by directly inhaling
the smoke of a compound youare notin
the least sure ot This helps your eyes
to dullness and puts your nerves in a
tremor. Why, if there was any possi­
ble chance ol growing old under the
conditions you impose upon yourself
you would be the most picturesque
old bulk oi humanity the world ever
saw; bat.thqra isn’t. Some day some,
little illness will take hold of you, and
the complicationsofyour system will be
io numerous that the illness cannot be
thrown off. and you will go tho way ol
all the earth, years before your time.
There isn’t anything funny about thh

—Chicago has bobbed up serenely
with a scheme for a mining expo;.illon.
This is fully r.i cheeky as if Denvej
were to start an exposition for the dia
plaw of salt water fish. But evt^M thing
foe. ir. Cbici^o.- JXnrer Trlt.uc.

Uan a iad. visited the United State*.
—Henry M. Teller,. of Colorado, the
□ew Secretary of the Interior, is a na­
il ve of Alleghany Conntv, N. Y./aod is
fifty-two years of age. He was former­
ly a banker in Denyer, and was elected
to the United States Senate in 1876.—
Chicago Journal.
—Cornelius J. Vanderbilt’s peculiar
figure was well known to most New
Yorkers. He was tall, very slender add
bent from weakness and habitual stoop­
ing. His face was very thin and his
features were sharp and irregular. He
wore a beard and mustache, which were
slightly gray, and of laje he dressed
very carefully and in costly clothing.—

RAPIDS

GRAND

DIVISION.

Nations.

Muldl.vHl/
Hutlnits,...
Nwbvllln...
V**rBK»a«vH
Ct-.wlotf .

—General Lew Wallace, the United
States Minister to Turkey, and Hon.
Walter Phelps. United States Minister
to Austria, were granted a rare privi­
lege in Constantinople recently—that of
inspecting the imperial Treasury. They
were surprised at tbe amount of treas­
ure in the vaults, and the great number
of precious stones displayed.
Forty
officials were in attendance, who
opened the locks with many formali—Henry Ward Beecher denies that
he intends to retire from the ministry
when he is seventy years old, which he
will be on June 24th, ,1863. Ho says
his father. Dr. Lyman Beecher, con­
tinued to preach until after he was
eighty, and he would like to do tho
same. His health was never better
than it is now. He has said that he
didn’t care to live beyond eighty,
but he might change his mind as he
neared that point.—K Y.‘ limes.
—M. De Struve, tho new Russian
Minister, is a tine-looking mau, about
forty-live years of age. He is a son of
the late renowned astronomer. De
Struve, formcrlv director of the Pulkov
Observatory. M. De Struve was edu­
cated at the University of St. Peters­
burg. At an early aue he entered the
Asiatic Department of the Foreign Of­
fice, and afterward served as a diplomat­
ist in the office of the Governor of Tur­
kestan. His wife was Miss Annenhoff.
a daughter of one of the most aristo­
cratic Russian families.
—Professor
George
Washington
Greene writes to the Providence
Journal that he is to prepare a biog­
raphy of Mr. Ixmgfellow. He says:
“Six" years ago he and I agreed to be
each other’s biographer, and from that
time to this have kept this intention- in
view.
The materials are abundant,
particularly the family letters, all of
which have been placed nt my dis­
posal." On the blank leaf of the “Di­
vina Com media" of Dante are these
words:
“To George Washington
Greene, with the memories of forty
years. May 1. 1867." Mr. Greene is
ulso the G.‘ W. G." to whom Mr. Long­
fellow’s “Ultima Thule" is dedicated.

i Railway?.

H.-a l.'EpYABD.

IRON
TRADE- z

MARKi

BITTERS
BROWira IRON BlTTEltS arc
a certain care fbr al! GisonAca
requiring a compxto tonic: c*i&gt;cc tally I nd location, Dy spcpal a, I ntcrnrittent Fevers, Want of-Appetite,
Loss of Strength, Lack of Energy,
etc. Enriches tho blood, strength-

lifts to tho nerves. Acts like a
charm on the digestive organs,
removing all dyspeptic symptoms,
such as tasting the food. Belching,
Heat in the Stomach, Heartburn,
etc. Tho only Iron Preparation
that will not blacken tbe teeth or
giro headache. Sold by all Drug­
gists at $1.00 a boule.
BROWN CHEMICAL CO.
Baltimore, Bid.

“A LITTLE NONSENSE."

—A dead beat—the muffled drum.
—How to get a head—buy a postage
stamp.
—“Well, ril bo bound." as the man
remarked when he heard quoted tho
lines “Chains of gold are fetters stilL"
—Lowell Citizen.
—Fox-hunting mav be lively sport,
but when a dozen Hoosiers get after a
tramp who has good leg motion the ex­
citement makes every fence-rail dance
a jig.—Free Press.
—A .Chicago man was found dead in
his bath the other day, and all tho
newspapers in that city are proud.
They say such a thing never happened
in St. Louis.—Burlington Hawkeye.

BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.

GIVEN AWAY.

Zimmerman Fruit Dryer

ZIMMERMAN FRUIT DRYER CO.. CiDcinnati. Q.

AMI VILLE BOI SE.
I. M. Flint &amp;. Son, Prop#,

—There lived » voong man down in Raleigh
Who thought« would be very jaleigh

Bat he very aoon found out hia faleigb.
—Oifcapo Tribune.

1

room?. Bige&gt;ee&lt;
welcome. Itairs

—The New York Ledger once paid
Longfellow twenty dollars a line for a
poem.
Mr. Bonner might continue
that style of liberality for years without Of
, Duchess Co., N. Y., 80 years of sfce, suffered
coming to want. That is, without
Continually for tnan^yTtant from Stone in
coming to want any of our poetry at that
price.—Noun.
Great age aud|Ntlnfui disease art- u sad com­
—“Nothing,” said an impatient hus- bination. Yet Mr. William Westfall, to merty
iuind, “so reminds me of Balaam and of
. Rock City, Duobcss Co.. N. Y.. now of Wash­
ms ms as two women stopping in ington Hollow, iu tbe Mme county, came'to toe
of Dr. David Kennedy, the eminent Phy­
church and obstructing the way to in- office
sician and Burgeon, of Rondout, N. Y., rorne
dalgc in their everlasting talk." “
But,'time since, in -a condition to fXritc tbe syrnpa"Bat
you forget, my dear," returned his thy of tbe most cold-blooded aud banRwiKM
la.
..-..-1.1 TX'a. —.... V— WAS
wife, meekly, “that it was the angel
who stopned the way, and Balaam and
totally helpless, and bore the weight of eighty
his ass who complained of it”
yearn Ix-aidea. He bad suffered long from Re­
—During the examination of a wit­ tention of Urine, and had all the symptoms at
ness as to the locality of the stairs in a an aggravated care of calculus formation in tbe
house, the counsel asked him: “Which bladder. The usual instrumental examination
revealed the presence Id tbe bladder of a Brinway did the stairs run?” Tbe witness, ary calculus of uncommon siic- Dr. Kennedy
who, bv tho way, was a noted wag, re­ frankly told Mr. Westfall that, owing to hia
plied that “One way they ran up, and age and debility, an operation was out rf tbe
the other way they ran down.” The question, but that be could, by the prescription
“Kennedy’s -Favorite Remedy,” together
learned attorney winked both eyes,and of
with local treatment, make him comfortable,
then took a look at the ceiling.
and leave him to live out all his days. Tbo
—“Yeo." said tbo editor's wife, “let outcome of this was thv the patient enjoys.
us be thankful that there is one above goo! health to tbiS*day.
who can rest&amp;re order and save the
country." “I understand, madam,” Dr. Kennedy’s “Favorite Remedy” is being ex­
returned her visitor, who had called to tensively used by our people are as follows: It
Is a combination of vegetable alternative. It
deprecate the unsettled state of affairs. la pleaMut to the taste, adapted to both sexes
"Providence is all powerful, and—’’ and all ages, is effective in affording immediate
“Uh, £ didn'tmean that," said she, “I relief In all cues of Kidney trouble. Liver Comreferred to&lt; my husband, who is now
up-stain preparing his leader for the purifies the blood, thus giving tone and rtnngth
morning paper, and it will be a smash­ to the system debilitated by dlrcase or age.
er. a regular country-saver, you bet." “Dr. Kennedy’s Favorite Remedy” ftc aaie by
—“You ain’t feeling very well, are all druggists.
you. mv son. since you sat ont under
the back stoop all alone with the stolen
ALBERT M. HARRIS,
K ?” Th&lt;j father spoke calmly, and
tone was so gentle that the appre­
hensive culprit ceased trembling and FRAMES, VELVETS, MAIS GLASS.
plucked up courage enough to observe:
A MRRIC A N WTiCAt UOT. BOXES.
“Yes, father, dear, I’m pretty sick."
“It’s too bad," he responded, sympa­
IS &lt;»rnnd K iv«-r Ave.
thetically uncoiling a trunk-strap; and
»KTKOIT. MK B.
then ensued a scene of wild commotion,
during which tbe sick boy bounded
about the room like an unto!— **-* J^AKK IIOUflK'
had never known a day’s
Kneel
by bis
pray*
more'

Mfi. WM.WESTFALL,

Photographer’s Supplies.

�CLOTHING!

prohibiting the

,••-•.-1. ■ I .•

at Christiana was feared,
unfriendly to the rebel

In order to make room for our

bill as

The Naval Appropriation bill and tbo Knit.
a Joint resolution for tho establishment of

veneaoourt of inquiry
upon American ablp-buildlna. A resolution
cn’n.T.rn-:)

tai Post-route bill were

DOMESTIC.
The engine, mall and express cars of an
east-bound train on the Union Pacific went
through a burned bridge near Beloit, Fin.,
on the 3d, resulting In the death of tbe en­
gineer and fireman, and the severe wounding
ot three other persons.
At New Orleans on tbe 4th William Walsh
and J. J. Bely, prominent young men, rival
suitors for the han J of a young woman, met
in front of her residence. Esch drew a pistol,
and commenced firing. Seven shots were ex­
changed, when Walsh fell dead with a bullet
in his brain.
Bt an accident to a coal train ou the 4th
near OH City, Pa^ six men were killed and
thirteen injured. The cars were smashed and
the track torn up for a Jong distance.
During the seven days ended on’ tbe 3J
there were 104 business failures tn tbe United
State.’.
Br the upsetting of a boal tn East bouth
Park, Chicago, on tbe 4th, three men and a
woman belonging to a picnic party were
drowned.
Four murderers were hinged on the 4lh:
Merrick Jackson, at Fernandina, Fla.; W. IL
Teatta, at Chatham, Va.; Armand Coleman,
at West Point, Mia*., and Harrison Carter,
at Jackson ville, Fla, m
A water-sfovt in Petry County, Ohio, on

Tua New York Bepubl’can State Conven­
tion will be held al Saratoga, Beptemhci 20.
Tkk following Congressional nominations
were made on tbe 3d: Republican—Illtaoi*,
Sixteenth District, Judge Green; Thirteenth,
D. C. Smith, renominated; Indiana. Twelfth,
W. C. Glaaegow; Iowa, Eleventh, Isa*-. Stru7
Lie. Democratic—North Carolina,- Eighth,
Robert B. Vanse, renominated; Indiana.
Twelfth, 8. T. Neil; Texas, Sixth. Olin
Welborn, renominated; Missouri; Fifth, A1-.
exander Graves; Mississippi, Second, Van H.
F. Fcnnicunc.
*
’
Thu Ohio Prohibition State Convention met
kt Columbus ou tbe 3d and nominated Ferdi­
nand Schumacher for Secretary of State, «nd
John N. Rosenborough for Supreme Judge.
Resolution* were adoptel declaring that the
manufacture and sale of liquor is a Crime:
demanding total prohibition, ang denouncing
ai wrong any license or taxation; declaring
that the policy of taxation ta a perversion ot
the principle* of our Government; demanding
the prohibition of gambling in every form,
and of all •peculation; tbe prohibition of class
legislation and prison contract labor; a re­
duction of salaries; asking frequent investi­
gation of Government affairs opposing; adopt­
ing candidates from other parties; favoring
woman suffrage, and approving tbe Woman's
Stale Temperance Union.’
Tua Georgia Republicans held two distinct

lion (known as tbe Blaine) nominated IL IL
Wight, of Richmond, for Secretary of Slate:
William X Pledger, of Fulton, for Comptrol­
ler; General F. F. Pitney, of Dougherty, for
Treasurer; George &amp; Thomas, of Fulton. for
Attorney-General; and IL D. Locke, of Musco­
gee, for Congress man-at-Large. Tbeopporiug
element (known as the Arthur) made tbe fol­
lowing nominations; For Secretary of State,
William J. White, of Richmond; for Attorney­
General, John D. Cunningham, of Fulton; for
Comptroller, Floyd Snellaon, of Liberty; for
Treasurer, W. F. Bower, of Hart; for Coo-

At the recent meeting tn St. Paul of tbe
Catholic National Total Abstinence Unite,
Right Rev. John Ireland, Bishop of Minneso-

Jvdob Wtlte, of Washington, refused to
naturalise a Chinaman, because of the re­
strictions of the bill recently passed relative
to Mongolian Immigration.
The county elections In Tennessee on the
4th resulted generally in favor of the Demo­
crats. An overwhelming vote was cast against
calling a Constitutional Convention.
Piiesidemt Arthur stated on the 4th that
$100,064. Several Ilves were believed to have under the circumstances connected with tbe
been lost.
.
passage ot tbe River and Harbor bill over his
A Washixotox dispatch of the Gth' states. veto, he did not feel at liberty to restrict the
that.lite total appropriations for the General expenditure of the money appropriated.
Government foot up $298,555,439, against
The Democrats made tbe following Con1ML
greasional nominations on tbe 4th: Missis­
sippi, Fourth District, Otho R. Singleton, re­
days walking-match tn Boston stood: Hart, nominated. West Virginia, Third, John E.
537 miles; Noretnac, 306; Harriman, 300; Kenna, renominated. Georgia,
Fourth,
Campana, IWO.
Hugh Buchanan. Ohio, Twelfth, Lawrence
For tbe five months ended on the 5th Chi­ T. New.
cago packers had slaughtered and salteil 1,­
Artemus Bale, the oldest ex-Member of
223,000 hogs, against 1,709,000 for the same Congress, died at Brockton, Mass., on the
period last year.
3d, aged ninety-eight.
Charles Bilgeet, a Philadelphia sugnrThe United States Senate on tbe-4th con­
dealer. failed recently for $500,000, and on the firmed the following nominations: William
'5th it was ^scovered. that bo had forged ac­ W. Astor, Minister to Italy; Schuyler Crosby,
ceptances on customers throughout the coun­ Governor of Montana; Gustavus Goward,
try to the extent of $300,OX).
Consul-General at Madrid, and C^arlea Sey­
Am officer and two of bis posse were killed mour, Consul at Cantom
on the 5th while attempting to arrest an a»Ur to the eyctrfng ot ttie3d the Twelfth
sassfn in Lafayette County, Ark.
Illinois District Democratic Congressional
Dl’BISG a fire at Pittsburgh, Pa., on the Sth Convention had balloted 1,136 times and had
four firemen were killed by falling walls, and not agree J upon a candidate for Congress­
six others were badly Injured.
man.
The wife ot Fred Douglass died at Wash­
spree on the Sth and lay down ox the Chesa­ ington on the 4th, of paralysis.
&gt;
peake «fc Ohio track at Ashland, where tb*President Arthur on the Sth nominated
were killed by a passing train.
Ulysses S. Grant and William Henry Trescott
aa Commissioners to negotiate a commercial
treaty with Mexico. ’
tended by four thousand men and women, It
Sandy Byxum, a prominent colored Re­
publican, was shot dead on the 5th at a politic­
The statistics lately published by the Cen­ al meeting at Hunteville, Ala., by.ex-United
sus Bureau in relation to the lutnber interest States Deputy Marshall T. G. Hewlett. The
show that Michigan leads all the Stales tn this
Industry, with an annua! production valued
CeLONEL C. B. C. Cash, who was tried last
at •83,30), OOH
year f«r killing Colonel Shannon Id a duel,
No railroad in Texas is now permitted to announces himself aa an independent candi­
date for Congrcas tn tbe Fifth South Caro­
lina District. Judge Mackey has idso an­
Few day* ago lightning struck a load of nounced himself as an independent Repub­
lican candidate. Another independent can­
didate is A. J. Hostetter, In tbe Second Indi­
ana DU-ict.

A few days ago a prize-fight occurred be­
tween cadets at West Point, tn which one of

Alexandria was discovered to m almost totally

of thtf canal by British vessels as an act of
war and a flagrant violation of neutrality ob­
ligations. A collision between England and
Turkey was predicted as the outcome of the
present troubles.
Accomdixg to Alexandria dispatches of tbe
Sd Arabi Bey bad Issued another proclama­
tion in which be accuses the English- of cow­
ardice and dares them .to attack him. He an­
nounces the deposition of tbe Khedive, be­
cause he had opened tbe gates of Alexandria
to tbe enemy, and declares that be (Arabi)
would act as the representative of the Eulten
and command the troops sent by Turkey to
.I,.. out and
tnS nnnl.l,
.It enemies fit
drive
punish all
of V
Egypt.
Ax Alexandria dispatch of the 4th states
that It was reported that tbe European
quarter at Cairo bad been fired. Tbe embark­
ation of troops .stationed tn India lor tbe eeat
of war had begun. Arabi was amply sup­
plied with money collected from the Interior
provinces, and, besides, regulars Itad twenty
thousand Bedouins .at his back. Tbe rebels
were reported • In great force at Aboukir.
England Dad declared that because of the
Porte’s "effrontery” it would be impossible to
permit tbe landing of Turklah-troopa in Egypt.
At Alexandria on the 5th a reconnolsaance
in force waa mode In tbe afternoon. Tbe ene­
my were driven tn from all the-advance posts,
and brought into action four battalions of in*
fantry, a force of cavalry, and several guns.
After a sharp encounter the British troops re­
tired. The casualties on ixjth sides were con­
siderable. It was stated that tbe Khedive
had authorized tbe English Admiral at Port
Said to lake what steps be thought nwsaary
in the Suez Canal matter, and had conferred
upon him the title of Governor of tbe Isthmus.
A Coxstamtixofu: dispatch of the Gth
states that 3,000 Turkish troops hsd sailed
from Salonica for Egypt via Suda Bay. Sixteen thousand more were under orders for
the same destination.
The official report of Admiral Seymour eoncerning tbe encounter with the enemy's reconnolsance party at Mahalla Jumt.on oq
tbe 5th says: "Our force consisted uf two
hundred men ot a naval brigade, with one
ilne-pounder guns,
forty-pounder and two nine-pounder
under Captain Fisher, one tL„
thousand
u»-..d marines
under Colonel Tuson, half a battalion of tbe
3Mb and 4dth regiment*, and all of tbe 00th
regiment. We bad a skirmish with tbe enemj,
which was two thousand strong, will; six gun*
and tlx rockets, from 5:80 until 7:30 o’clock
in the evening. Tbe total casualties to tbe
naval brigade and marine* were two killed and
twenty-two wounded." The Egyptian loss
was unknown, but several dead bodies had
been found and numerous prisoners captured.
Twesty Bedouins were arrested on the 7th
for pilfering at Ramleh. The Khedive an­
nounced his intention to indemnify sufferers
from the disorder* at Alexandria. The rebel*
were intrenching between Aboukir aud Ramleh and ou the western bank of the Mabmoudleb Canal. A train-load of rebels went
to Mahalla Junction to deatror the railway,
but they were frightened awly by a forty­
pounder inside the British lines. Arab! Pasba
bad ordered the garrison and people at I»mailla to retire to Cairo.

LATER NEWS.

Tnx election in Utah appointed for the 7th
went over becansa of the non-errival of the
Commissioner*. Governor Murray Is given
po»*r to fill ail important offices by appoint­
ment.
The Chief of the Tunisian in«urgenta was
reported on the 7th to l&gt;e encamped with 20,­
000 men upon the hill near TripolL
Tai .Secretary of tbe Navy has telegrsnbed
to tbe United States Minister at St. Peters­
burg directing him to order Lieutenant
Harber to bring the bodies ot Lieutenant De
Long and h i companion; to Orenburg sad
ship them to the United States.
After the testimony of Representative
Blackburn in the Star-route cases at Wash­
ington on the bth, tbe evidence closed on
both sides.
At the State election In Alabama ou the 7th
the Democrats elected eighty out of one hun­
dred member* of tbe lower bouse, and all but
three of tbe Senators.
. De LEBaEPS telegraphed to Constantinople
ou the Sth that the whole of Egypt hsd em­
braced the cause of the National party, and
that ih« English
- ---------------------every
where a--de
terminod opjoaltlon. The rebels at. Ramleb
Alabama and Kentucky, resulting in tbe suc­ made a forward movement, but were repulsed
cess of the Democratic tickets.
by kbota from tbe British iron-dad Teme.Os tbe 7th Rear-Admiral David S. McDou­ rairc. Thirty-seven battalions of English
gall died at 8an Francisco, ol Bright's dis- militia Lad volunteered for active service in

succMsful pugilists and second* were placed
under arrest.
The total wheat yield ot Dakota this year
is estimated at 85,000,00) bushels.
Uf to the 7th the discovered forgeries per­
petrated by Qtaries M. Hilgert, tbe abscond­
ing member of John Hilgert'* Sons, had
reached the'enormous total of $493,531

The United States Senate on the 7th con­
A. G. Leonard, editor of the Cairo (ILL J
firmed the following nomination*: General
Geartte, was fatally stabbed on the morning of
Grant and W. H. Trescott, Commissioners to
the Sth by a prominent colored policeman
negotiate a commercial treaty with Mexico; named George W. Tanner.
Colonel Charles EL Crane, to bo Surgeon Gen­
eral of the United State* army.
Newport, R- L, an tbe Sth.
Tue Democratic Stale Committee of New

There were 1.243 deaths In Chicago during
the month of July, against 1,7S6 for the cor-

reported missing on the 3d.

FOREIGN.

Two

hundred

fishing boats from Peter-

thu imprisoned Nihilist Kyrellow had dis­
closed a long list of newly-planned crimes
against the Emperor and other high officials.
Dtnuvo the festivities attendant on tbe re­
cent arrival of tbo Archduke Charles Louis at

About twenty acre* were burned

Injuring se: eral people. In retaUat'on a mob
broke the jrtedows of tbo houses frequented
by Italians.

call for a Stale Convention to be held at Syra­
cuse, September 2L
.
Twotessmir with yellow-fever on board
arrived at Boston on the bth.
Is tbo United Steles Senate on the Sth Mr.
Windom submitted a report in regard to ths
use of money to defeattbe Bqnded Spirits tall.

of this I ody for their generous consideration

side and tbe
a

Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago,
Backache,. Soreness of the Chest,
Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, S vett­
ings and Sprains, Burns and
Scalds, General Bodily
Pains,
|. Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted
Feet and Ears, and all other
I
Pains and Aches.

1.0 Bier Goods,
■We are selling our-

I

R'tatSj

A trial
„. —----- ,---------- ,
rriaiug on Gay of to feats, and evsry cos wfltring

At prices that requires no bantering to sei

HERE ARE

411

FOR YOU!

Summer Pants for 95c.
think OF it

SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AFD DEALERS
II MEDICHE.

A. VOGELER &lt;fc CO.,

F. T. BOISE,

For fall and winter trade are coinming in.
lent and cheap. Examine them.

They are excel­

-FOR-------

PUGS,
BOOKS,
JEWELRY,
WALL PAPER,
,
WINDOW' MH ADES,
!
! DYESTUFFS,

Of the best quality and lowest in price. Try our 40c Tea.
Don’t buy poor eggs unless you prefer them. Our egg tester
tells you which are poor.

PROPRIETARY MEDICINES,

|

CASH PAID FOR BUTTER AND EBBS.

PRESCRIPTIONS.

,
RECEIPTS,
'
I And ev«ry artlels kept in a Sntxlw drag store
,
------- MY--------

PAINT AND BRUSH

NEW VICTOR SEWING MACHINE is VICTOROUS
T3C j Ready

pay secures for you all the advantages in trade.

DEPAKT.Y1EM

Call and Exam ine I
F. T. BOISE.
; JJ
1

R. DICKINSON &amp; co.,
----- NEW------

i

custom:

---- GREAT----

Mark Down

Pouring Mill
READY FOR BUSINESS
Every day in the year—Sundays excepted.

CUSTOM

GRINDING I

Satisfaction guaranteed.

FLOUR. MEAL AND MILL FFED

20 patterns Mens all Wool Suits, cut in fashionable styles,
$6.50, marked down from 89.00.
25 Mens Cheviot Pants, in sack or frock at $10.00, marked
down from $14.00.
Mens fine Diagonal Dress Suits. Prince Albert cut aways,
$16, marked down from $20.
One lot of Boys Suite, age 10 to 15 years, very durable
material, all Wool, $6.50, marked down from $9,00.
One lot odd Coats, choice, for $4.00
100 pairs all wool Panto, $3.00, worth $4.00.

Kept constantly on hand.

Our

Graham Flour

“la conceeded to be the best. Try it.

In Boots and Shoes, Dry Goods, Groceries and Notion s.
Highest price paid for Butter and Eggs,
Don’t miss this great Sale, as our prices are considered less
than material alone would cost.

By a strict attention to business, and square
dealing with all our customers, we hope to mer­
it a liberal patronage from tbe farmers of. this
vicinity.
4 Mills on railroad,—east of depot.

W. A. AY RSWORTH.

H. R. DICKINSON A CO.

WOOL

Spring
CARDING TOOTH1
4ND SPINNING

Harrow.

Grale Plow.
AViarcl Plow.
New Carding Mill Soditli Bend. Plow.
Buy Factory Points,
Rolls, or Yarn! they are much cheap­
er and Better.
Strayer s GrrainlDrill.
STOCKING YARN Builders Hardware.
bheap-Sheariiig time Is upon u* and the

formally terminated the session in a brief
..... . ..__Of the undersigned, is prejxred to make into
long and very laborious session, in which the
Senate has performed Its part of tbe public I
duty faithfully, we are about to separate. !

tbe Senate adjourned without day.

sodod June 86, TWJQBim-

RHEUMATISM, Fall

and at tbclr approach the Egyptian JJWps

all the wool of this section, with

DCMESTIC SEWIID MACHINE.

n kh
the part of the House, and with my beat

NEED NOT WAIT

J. W. POWLES:

�Mt bi. wife in

outside the
upwanl of

-three last. Felix taking third money. Little
Mae and Faro Qteen ware distanced. Time,
3:*7X.S:«X« 2:«?&lt;■
■'

Sugars, Coffees, Teas. Tol
Spices, Fish, Canned
Provisions, &amp;c.,

Ir I* eaLI that W. H. Pont, the Wild
them again.
•
Biil of W&lt;-*t Kftlnmo, has been diaapAn ice eream festival was held last Friday pointed in love.. He engaged the coni1882 has been a shocking year thus
The Hawk U a wary bird. Il frequently afternun, at the house of Austin Btanroo. for panlODidtip of n fair and comely dams*
far tor parricide*. Guy Smith, the Mo.
visits roosts In this vicinity, where there is no
from Vermontville, to enjoy a tdmre.ot
toy just convicted of murdering his fa­
danger, but rapidly sails past our coop. Ob 1 gixj turnout, considering tbe stormy night- hia ginger-bread. peauntM and toffy ou
ther, does not stand alone/except for at the last regular meeting of the Woodland fly away, yon gentle bird, with beak and guild- Mrs. C. Clark had a part of tbe Battle Creek
Ind&lt;*jM*Ddenre day, and ahe met him
high
school
museum
there,
which
was
quite
youthfulncs-*. Io Jan nary a protract­ ;.;ornet Band.
Interesting to—,tte little
on®», and some of the here at Nashville. according to agree­
For Cash or Ready
ed quarrel between Jared Smith jn
Tbe U. B. Sabbath schools of Woodland and wun a&gt;uu uuic k rv»i.
.
ment, but alas for the dckleneaa of fe­
Notwithstanding
the
rain
of
la*t
week
and
one®
They
cleared
&gt;teut
14
dollars,
Richmond. Ind., and his wife and two Castleton will hold a union picnic in tbe grove
a had
a very pleasant
..... ..............
.... ....... lime. Pap looked as fat male fondnewt an&lt;J fubery, uh© aoon
sons culminated in bis being shot by near Joel BL. John's, on Wednesday, Ataguat the continaaucc-of tbe aame tbe front part of 'and
happy as ever, and Willie had a Rose on left him and xoon went off with a liandthis week, Hulett’s machine ha* look up lt»
his son Dan, aged IV, after which Dan and a good time is snticipaled.
line of march. Jim Walch took a threshing, his coat sleeve.
Homrr man. ,ln a week or ao Wild Wm.
and an older brother threw tbe body ;
have done incalculable damage to the wheal
received a tender bRlet doux from her
into « wellIn February, Solomon
crop.- Probably twothirds of tbe wheat was Wm. Hill's, the dauntless, where they are stat­
xtating that she had repented and ask­
BARRYVILLE.
Richards of Chariton, Msm., was shot jmt In open shock*. and Is'fit for nothing but ioned at this writing, Thursday.
ing for an interview. He, true to hie TO BESEEM IN BARRY CO.
and killed by his mm, a young married the hoes- It is ft s*d sight to drive along (he
Now Writlst, we will be rour Dorcas for
A sister-in-law and niece ot Mrs. Qscar War­ kind, loviug and forgiving nature, for­
Diab. Tbe murderer claimed that his road and see the second crop starting from about one minute. This to tbe way our better ren have l&gt;ecn visiting them recently.
got the past iu fiis hope* for tLe future,
Cheaper and to.your satisfaction belter
father had abused his mother. There the Mix of tbe shocks. Of wheat which was
Chas. Fowler takes the lead again in green and drove to the home, of the fair one, goods
than ever before. Calf and sec me.
was some evidence that be slew bis fa capped, probably one-half or two-thirds can be cooking, fill the cans to tbelr utmost capacity, things, dining on green corn on Bunday last.
only to find her gone witli another
seal tightly. -Wife makes a business of it, she
ther to get the farm.
In the same
The M. P. church of Barryville, will be dedi­
There will be n township temperance meet­ takes her wash boiler, lays Ironing ^heet In cated on Sunday, Aug. 20th. Services at ID.30 awnin. . Twice hna this acheme been
month, James G. Allison was hanged
RutTcNufully worked on Wild Bill, and
by Rev. Wm. D. Tbompktnson.
•
at Indiana, Pa., for the deliberate mur­ ing at the M. E Church or in the grove near
there,
du Saturday, Aug. »’&gt;, commencing at with a cloth between, and so ou till boiler Is
Mrs. Tucker.of Northern Iowa, e sister of if she gives him the dip a few more
der of hisljjiUier. Tbe father and
10 o'dock a. m. The object of this meeting la full, or as many as she wants, now put in tbe
times, lie will liegin to doubt her love
mother were onhad terms,.and tbe sou
to organize a township temperance society, store, fill.up with cold water, let boll 4 hours thirty years, returned to her home last Satur­ for him, and end his career' with astabsided with Jhis mbtEer^ He was 30.
take In both old and young.
Two or
day after a three weeks visit.
leau.—Olio.
Later in Ufe month, Charles B. Gillem, th re good speakers from abroad will be In at­ cd sufficient, take out cans one at a time, light­
aged 18, shot his invalid mother in her tendance and tee baud will furnish music for ening tbe cover still more If possible; when cyclone phased through the Briggs district in
Walt. Powera, tbe Greeno-Republico
— THAT----cold
put
with
other
cans
and
you
will
have
a
bed at Macomb, Ohio. Having had a the occasion. It is intended to have a picnic
tbe north-west corner of Assyria, aa usual lay­ editor of the defunct Bugle, has enter
dispute with her, and when arrested dinner, so let everybody bring full lunch ban­ delicious dish, when seasoned for table in win- ing waste orchards and timber, leveling to the
cd law buaineea with. D. P. Sagendqrph
Z.
manifested nu remorse. It was also in kets.
ground torn and oat fields, and fences, and tak­
can without cooking. Hope have made It ing barn doors ,from tbelr hangings. It was of Charlotte, the Prohibition candi­
February that John Lanolin, who lived
date for governor. Ho will probably
Kit,
BALTIMORE.
plain.
attended with an unusual fall of rain and
twelve mile® from Rock Rapids, lowo,
hall. Some places indicate the wind moving to act with tiie prolnbitiouista now.
wasshot by his daughter, aged 20. The
A gully washer, Sunday, last
MAPLE GROVE.
Nashville is too small a town for Walt’s
the
south,
and
other
places
to
the
north.
C.
Rained seven days last weekgirl’s lover, to whom the father object­
Briggs, Austin Button and David Miller were versatility of taleot to expand and
Blackterries and cream.
Whooping cough is in our midst
ed, furnished her with a pistol, and her
lilr.Moin out.—HaatinQn Democrat.
the most damaged a* far as We have beard.
mclBam Shafer returned home Bunday.
Tbe
late
rains
has
put
the
bulge
on
the
mother and younger sister were in the
Item Izer.
Mrs-LE. Walton had the shakes last week.
plot. They bad been intending to kill
Huckleberries scarce at ten cents per qL
RUBBING IT OUT.
Perry Henry finished cutting wheat tho 5th
John, but neither the wife nor the
Will. Hawks returned from Illinois last
The editor of the Courier, W. F. Cook, was
of August
EATON COUNTY.
younger daughter could muster courage
seized a few mornings ago by a terrible pain In
Potato prospects good, and com is making a
Tbe Bellevue Gazette has been greatly ints the left shoulder and neck. Haring been fav­
to do it, so they sent for the older girl, rapid stride.
Wm. Harding has his bouse up and partly
jiroved by a new dres#.
who was away. A somewhat similar
orably Impressed for some time with the virtue
C. C Garns’ little girl, lately run over by a cncloaed. .
A daily mail lias been established between of an article recommended for al) sudden pains,
crime occurred in May, in the same
Wm. Phlnlsey has sold a horse to Mr. Ben­
Charlotte and Kalamo.
aud especially rheumatism, we rubbed tlx* of­
Aprl baby rained down at Chancey Boise’s edict of Kalarao.
state, near Muscatin. A man named
The
Baptist
church
of
Charlotte
will
give
an
The Buck school closed Iasi Friday, with a
fending part, aud in less time than we write it,
McMenomon was shot by hja young son last week, and like tbe wheat In the shock, it is
excursion to Saginaw and Bay City the last of
■----- FROM----relief came. That article Is Bl. Jacobs Oil.—
picnic la the rain.
his two dapghteifk both young, being a growing.
the
month.
The Baker School begun Monday, with Miss
Canajohari (N. Y.) Courier.
N. Edmonds and C. C. Garn, are very much
parties to tbe crime. They said they
Clark Bloan, ot Windsor, marketed the first
elated over their new Buck-eye binder. For Brooks of ID. as teacher.
wanted to have things their own way
Wm. Covell, in fighting bees, whacked hlmr [&gt;eacbe» of the season at Charlotte, Thursday. GIBSON—In Maple Grove, Aug. Sth, Roy,
light draft and all kinds of grain, it is hard to
Tbe price paid for them was 13 per bushel.
at home, and they couldn’tso long as
youngest son of John Gibson, of tubercular
Charlotte people are kicking because their
tbe father lived. They planned that
BUI.
WheelT and Ira Cummings have been
David Roush, will soon make a visit up north,
railroad ticket agent sells them tickets for
. the youngest sister should coufess that and if be finds a farm that suits him he will improving tbe rainy weather breaking colts
----- BUT-----Thornapple Lake, when the trains don't stop FAV—At Oregon Wis., on Thuraday.Aug. 3rd,
she killed her father, their idea being sell bls farm in Maple Grove and make tbe
The U. B. and Norton Sunday schools picnic
Millie C., wife of Martin Fay, aged 20 years.
that her sex and age would shield her north his future liothe.
at Thornapple lake, Aug 12- Go, enjoy your­ to let them off. ’
.
The 10th annual reunion of company H. of
If Hastings editors would publish the deaths self and get a square meal.
froni severe punishment, nnd so all
REPUBLICAN CAUCUS.
%
the Michigan heavy artillery held at -Charlotte
Fred. Shoup’s house was loosed from it’s
would escape. But the plot fell through. from diphtheria, as readily In Hastings as they
.The republican* of Castleton will meet at the
do cases in tbe country surrounding, it would moorings one day last week, by fire yoke of on Saturday, had tbe largest attendance of town hall in tne village of Nashville, on Sat­
On the 4(h of July, Fiauk Dogan
veterans ever seen in that city.
urday, August 12lh, 1392, at 2 o"eK&gt;ck p. m. for
suit
tbelr
country
cousins
better,
but
it
is
kept
oxen
and
three
span
of
horses.
It
now
stands
Harwinton, Conn.', pushed his father
J. B. Belcher, of Charlotte, is the patentee of the purpose of electing delegates to the county
smuggled, and children arc taken to town, on the original site.
backward, breaking his neck, becanse
o invention to behild at Hastings, August 16th,
tbelr parents being Ignorant of the fact. A
Grand Shafer, instead of going to Liberty, an Improved boot strap-something one can 1392.
By order of com.
be was not allowed to take tbe horse
pull on his boot* with, and not make his eyes
John K«agi.e, chairman.
little trade at stake.
came down with the measles. Five of tbe fam­
bulge
out
like
rotten
unions
for a ride. .
Farmery laces s re long a* a rail, and reason ily expects to have then; In a short time If
A Charlotte merchant, learning of the large
SKINNY MEN.
enough. Their wheat Is growing in the shock there is enough to go around.
number of lockjaw produced by wounds from
Wells’ Health Re newer. Absolute cure for
Banian view of Egyptian duration.
Just as they get it aired and dried in rains
A man passed through here a few days ago,
nervous debility and weakness ot the genera­
again, and unless a change in the weather soon who had cscajicd from the insane asylum. He toy pistol cap*, immediately emptied his re­ tive functions. 11. at druggists. Mich. Depot
maining stock of these articles into the stove. JAMES E. DAVIS A CO., Detroit, Mich.
In the name of civilization and order takes place, serious results are anticipated. was on hla way to Bath, Clinton county. He
A couple of weeks since Mr*. J. E. Clark, of
the English bombarded Alexaiidiia.and Tbe straw was large and very badly down, claimed he had been kidnapped and taken there
Charlotte, lost her bearing almost instantly.
“BUCHUPAIBA.”
they did it successfully.
The light making tbe harvest a little later.
two months ago. While there he found a ladJ
It
returned last week as suddenly aa It left.
New, quick, complete cure 4 davs, urinazy And shall stay and continue to supply the
there forts were destroyed, and the
Horatio Hull, died at his brother Sidney's that had been missing more than a year, and
Catarrahal trouble is »up|K®ed to have caused affections, smarting.frcqucul or difficult urina­
city itself was made the prey of the bouse In Hope, July.IM), with lung fever, after
with
this
case
and
bis
own,
be
intends
to
make
tion, kidney diseases. 11. st druggists. Mich.
flamer'. Iu order to plant there a high­
Lbls.
Depot, JAMES E. DAVI8 &lt;fc CO., Detroit,
er civilisation they resorted to a sense­ an illness ot leas than three days. He was 4S it very uncomfortable for some of the officials
While Harrison Post's two little boys were In Mich.
_________ _________
less ana merciless destruction. T he years old. and hla career from beginning to connected with the institution, which to use a boat on Narrow lake, Brookfield township,
No more Chills and Ague in this section. I
English Government applies this theo­ end, baa been a changeful one, to say the least bls own language, is: “Hell upon earth.
Friday
afternoon,
the
yoqngest,
aged
10
years,
Our Druggist Is saUinr — —“»•-*ry, which is worse than Nihilism, to In 1855 be moved from Ohio to Baltimore.
fell out and drowned. The boy was recovered “Aoue CosqcEsoa”
------- — —
Egypt, while the Governments of the He soon moren on to a farm in Rutland townsstisfactory preparation sold for the cure of
rest of Europe partly approve English j
at midnight.
shipt traded tbit for a farm tn Yankee Springs,
and Ague, Dumb Chills, Intermlttant or
BISMARK.
Frank Ells, of tbeCbariotte Leader, the only Fever
action, nnd partly in ailence let these
Billknu Fevers. The Proprietor of the Anna
Then
he
traded
that
to
a
man
for
land
in
Ohio
ugly practices go on. It ia said that
I capitalist publishing a newspaper in this Co. CoNquEKOR has used but little energy to make
Weeds are booming.
Europe is about to aidEnglnnd, in oth­ and removed back to Baltimore. He then
is recreating In northern Mich. He hasn’t this medicine known and vet it® sales are Im­
Pollitica begin to revive.
er words to erect in Egypt a monument traded bls (Alo land for a span of hones and
in Ague Districts. It purifies the blood
been In the business but a few months.—Grand mense
Liver and other Secretory organs so effectually
Tbe rains have Dot reached far north.
of her weakness, but we don’t believe moved to Rutland again. For several years
l^dgc Independent.
that the CbHIs do not return even when per­
iL Some ten years year* ago Lord domestic troubles had been gathering around
F. M. Potter will cany Bonfield, you bet
- Not half ot the wheat In the vicinity of Bell­ sons have nad them for years. Entirely vege­
Beaconsfield made a good deal of noise him, and finally in the spring of 1379 a separ­
We put in a day at Charlotte last week.
table preparation. Price- 50 cents and 11.00
toasting that England could stand not ation took place between him and his wife, he
Our Northern explorers are all home agale. evue is secured. Last week's rain preventetl per bottle. Two doses will stop the chills.
only one but several campaigns at once
tbe farmers from drawing any. and the result
A
big
scare
and
a
little
fire
at
Blaa-rk,
Mon
­
applying
for
a
bill
and
with
her
consent
re
­
yet even Lord Beaconnfield did not
is
that
half
of
the
wheat
in
this
township
will
*
dare to invade Egypt, He was satis­ ceived It . About s’ year ago he married a day.
Xanttville Markets.
The pest few days has been good for corn be classed as grown. Oats arc a splendid crop,
fied witli buying for bis government widow from Kansas ami fanned his father’s
com is booming, potatoes excellent.
the Suez Canal shares, and sending a place In Baltimore until Feb. last, when, with and late potatoes.
Five
or
six
men
from
Convis
were
in
Bellevue
commualon tn investigate the financial
A littlp rain now and then weta the wheat
on Tuesday and filled up with benzin*. (While
condition of Egypt, At that time Eu- and It appears that his pathway was somewhat and sours the men.
X looked closely after English operreturning they got into a quarrel and John Mc­
Those who are threshing need have do fear
&gt;s in the east, and would pot allow clouded and not being contented with his lot
Ginn fell from the wagon and was run over by Onion., perbu.
there,
be
went
to
Iowa
and
July
2d
landed
in
of
fire
from
the
engine.
any invasion of Egypt. But now the
the hind wheel. Tbe party were’ soldrunk that
Sanford Childs and H. Bosworth threshed
English Government does not need any Baltimore again, bearing a haggard look aud
after haying run over him once, they stopped r.«&gt;,ivr aax,...
support from other European nations completely dlscuraged with troubles that seem­ from the field last Tuesday.
the team suddenly, and backed the wagon over Timothy psrbu......
in order to counteract Russian influence ed to be crushing him to the earth. While in
Work on the saw mill is progressing slowly,
him him again. The wheels passed over the Ckn «rbe-&lt;l, per ba..
on the Balkan peninsula, for Russian the harvest field, Thursday noon, July 27th, he on account qf the weather.
policy is now passive. England tramp­ was taken sick and the Bunday morning fol­
lower port of his chest. Fortunately no bones
plea down the righto of ito late allies by
were broken but it was some time before conlowing diol. Tbe funeral services was held at by tl
rains in Eaton county alone.
&gt;&lt;r v increite my «u&lt;-k abd make sptefal ef­
sdousoess returned to McGinn.__ ’
______ ij
pui tout international commercial way t . ME. church. Elder Whittiker, offi elating.
.
Tbe whisky dispensed the the thirsty nralti- 7' pm. Sabbath school at 12 m. Prayer meet­ forts to give patron* perpect satisfaction.
D
oxy
.
west,/and
quite
breezy.
A
spell
of
weather
Is
in the east, that is, tlw Suez Canal.
ing every Thursday evening_________ .______
tude
in
this
place
the
past
week
appears
to
While England was going od with her
looked for.
warlike preparations there was beard
H. ATL8W0RTH, M. D., Physician
Tuesday noon we were visited with rain. have liad more than tbe average amount of
WEST SUNFIELD.
i fight connected with it. We have made an cf- and Surgeon. Office over Boise's drug
no protect from any part of Europe,
aud dow Europe must deal with an ac­
Rev. Morrison hss returned.
’ fort to keep track of toe number of street rows, store; Room at Wolcott House. Will promptly
frantic.
attend
to
all day and night calls.
complished fact—the English occupa­
Are your oats loaded I IA not, then why.
The fires which burned In the north lastt but when they reached about half a dozen, we
tion of Egypt.
Elms of Vt. Ville has sold 63 Royce reapera
season done great damage, but leaving oatt got mixed in our count and gave it up It is
Civilization and order have nothing this season.
the loss of life, these late rains have done more. getting to be a disgrace to our village that day*
to do with Egyptian question.
Good
The potato crop 1» not injured by the rain. to ertpp le the interest of the state, financially. w!»ce there is a crowd in town men thculd fill
order can only suffer by armed inter*
----- A FIRST-CLASS-----ferenceby the European States with
What the end will be is yttlo be seen. A tim-’ up with fighting liquor and walk the street proMiss Vir* Gates of Charlotte, has been visit­
Egyptian affairs. England tramples
ular calamity befell the wheat crop 27 years
on the independcccand liberty of Egypt ing friends in this place.
ago. This present loss will be felt by mer­ vue Gazette.
tilings which are indispenitable for the
. .Jacobi, tbe Detroit oil swindler, was in Char­
successful advancement uf any country. Snively a few days, returned to her home in chant, miller, printer and. In fact, down to the lotte last week, to the sorrow of many. Purch­
lowest calling, even to that of a new* reporter.
BILLIARD HALL
There is yet time to stop the English
Government from further devastation Eaton Rapids, last Saturday.
Farmers should keep their shirt on right end asing a half pint of good coach varnish and
(No Liquors.)
labeling it “Daphlne," which he claimed was
and depredation in Egypt. Tbe bomb­
up, and pull a better card next time.
'
C, N. DUNHAM.
at
Wm.
Walch,
Jr.
Green
you
bad
better
stop
manufactured from a vegetable, he proceeded
ardment of Alexandria lias given so far
Warrwr.
only negative
reaulto.
_
- ------lit*. The city is ruin- buying and selling now.
to sell by sample. His price was $12 per galrtly by Enghsb cannon, and part*
ASSYRIA.
itoeordcr catalugn. sd-tress A. G. HEg EDICT,
.j
incendiarism. Hundreds of Eu­
$65 worth of orders which be endeavored to
ropeans have fallen victims of the in­
Measles have put in as appearance.
sell to a drug firm. The fact that be wished
furiated Egyptian mob. This was a
Huckleberry partied are numerous.
his money immediately raised a suspicion and
cruel revenge ou a great cirilizedjpowNotwithstanding die stormy weather the tbe firm refused to purchase. After collecting
er fur ito invasion of peaceful Egypt.
I*0DGHKK«MIE,9. T,
WARRANTED
But the Egyptian army, though it has route for Woodland cemetery with a load of
the money for goods sold to Individuals be
With U. 9. Military Dspar-nent. a tfc&gt;roo&lt;bretreated, is yet far from throwing
sudenly left town. HH price was three times jMd*. wide-awake school for boys, cdbbinlflg
study, military dri-l sad rrerraiion in due prewar­
down ita arms.
The English govern
Mah’.ou Herrick of Carmel, w» In these parts rtanuing the hurrying times.
the price for such varnish.
lion. CatateguS with chart of College Requisition,
mentis reaper. hie for this bloodshed, last Saturday looking for Wm. Ash, who lives
•ent on application, OTIH BISBEE, A. N; Priat.
■Very Cheap
Daniel Case was thrown violently from his
in view of the bad results so far gained
AT MY PLRCE,
it is fast loaitig confidence in itodf. and on the town line, with the news that his unde wagon, by hie team becoming unmanageable, tween M. A. Gibbs sod H. Cox, of Eaton, over
tbe
other
day,
but
not
seriously
injured.
a line fence dividing their property. Wednes­
is now beaeeching tbe other powers for
—at least for sanction of
Mr. Evans youngest child got Into a lye-tub day muni! ng it culminated in an encounter In
ihope tire French govami swallowed a dose that might Ita’ u proven
*'• fake any part in
fatal had sot remedies been promptly apjdlod.
ire knew of him te liv-d h&gt; West Kahmo. In

AT THE LOWEST

Crockery, Glassware, Lamps,
Stone Ware, &amp;c.,

DASH PAID FOR PRODUCE.

C. W. SMITH.

NOT ONE
Of my Customers tomplain

The Nashvile Mill,
UNIVERSALLY SATISFIED.

JNO. M. ROE

0269

Here!

ROCERIES
OF A NO. 1 QUALITY

FRESH EVERY DAY,

ROCK BOTTOM PRICES.

ABOUT SEPT. 1
G.W. FRANCIS

YOU CAN GET

Reaper

HOUGHTON

RIVERVIEW ACADHEY,

OSBORN MAKE!

A3 GOOD A8AHY MACHINE MADE,
—at so—

forced to

Fay received the

reat of tbe Gibboes. Tbe warrant wa* jdaeed
In tbe hands uf Sheriff Lazeil, who brought tbe
belligerents to this dty. It being late in tho
day' the trial w*« adjourned U» the 15th. The

litigation is Mabie to grow out of the i

THE VELEBRA

�tbe addition of nature there fa little to
the long ride aero** the
But milk dou* not eom* undar the same
doctor in charge of the institution he Schwartz, doing business in St Louis, compUiut*. hBrSra'* iron' Bitter*. It
category. When people drink tea as
AUG 12. 1W2. strong aa most of us tip al breakfast,
wm visiting.
••They ore,” responded tbe elderly has been indicted for using camon m utin. ju-t *ucl&gt; Irft^trtnc propose. «&lt;
tbe intense bitter is modified by milk, the villages showed much more life and
but weak tea is made insipid by it. | animation than usual; for the last weeks man of physic.
•‘But where are the marks on their
°lTb. PMtaMpM.
The Russinu ndjh u slice of lemon, the before the long season of religions
arm*?”
.
only additiofl&lt;iHer jogitr which does
an inquirer that one-thousand-doliar dutrfUtaied, «■ Buffering froro
feasts it is the custom for the young .
“There are none.”
upideterionUcThw-tpality of »delicate people to get married, and, the more
notes are in circulation. It may be Brown • Inxn.Blttev wtQ aunty cure you.
■’•you vaccinate them on their legs?’’ | true, but it sounds like the wildest kind
tea; but he also takes n little rum, a dis­ the merrier.
- --------In a score of villages
The great obstacle to rrrogrea* is prejudice.—
“No, they swallowed it,” said the !
tinct-departure front the pnrist stan­ through which we passed weddings
of romance.
- i Bovee.
dard. due probably to his general im­ seemed to be Ute onlv occupation going elder with a bland 'smile.
—Lord Lonsdale, the dissipated En- |
Then the doctors regarded each other, '; glisbman who died recently, had control •
bibing projiensity. Both rum ami cog­ : on. Sledges, driven by wreath-crowned
mowure
nac, having distinct flavors which dis­ I peasants,, crowded to the fullest extent on one side with amazement, on the ' Of thirty-three English parishes, to each I Hke pretjilrution. Intense Itching, tnoet at night
i arv jn»t one hundrrd.
guise the quality ol the ten. are abuses ■ with girls of all ages from six to thirty, other with a defiant consciousness of j1•of whtob h.
enUd^a to prMoot.
™
»
unless the tea is bad. A delicate yel: nil singing with unpleasantly high, virtue and un upright mind. The vac­ clergyman of his own choice.
wnrux «im&gt;»
.ml..
low ten, with sugar and lemon, is, me screeching voices, pass back and forth cinating doctor was harrowed up by
—The underwriters have adjusted
iuditx. the perfection of tea-drinkitig along the village streets or are driven awful thoughts of children lunching on their losses by tho fire at Haverhill, mentis tie most effective remedy extant for
«dle without spec*,
If made with the samovar.
A hint to | in procession around the little wooden quills and ivory points. But the swal­ Mass., and it is said that the total which till* tormenting complaint. Give* rest al night
thirty ehihiriu reaj
economists on long steeping of. tea (for j church. The older peasants, the rela- lowing doctor 'kindly came to his aid the insurance companies were obliged without that desire to scratch. Abo ha* on
boiling, is a horrible barbarism nevpr to i lives of bride and bridegroom, stay in- , by producing a bottle ot small white to pay is within a few thousand of ©2,­
The •ripen; uf its.** who bail*. ,
tod from tisc fury of toe sama
be dreamed of): thp samovar is ar­ side and gel dead' drunk in honor of lozenges. “These are what I give,”
all Scaly, Crusty, Itchy Skin Eruptions. Here
000.000.
Baras his good ship sith swiftest «a
ranged. so ns to'allow the teapot to ! the occasion. In one posthousc we were he said. “They contain a very high
—The Bodie (Cal._) Free Press wel­
stand in the chimney, keeping the tea j Caused a long delay; by the old post­ attenuation of the matter from a snmll- comed Oscar Wilde to “the cold, iaat a point just below thn boiling indefin­ master having drunk himself silly, pox postule, and, if swallowed, they tellectual atmosphere of Bodie, tem­ \ L. ‘'troubled with Itching Piles for over twen??***’11 curc&lt;1 mp completely,” L. S. Heuer
itely, and when the tea is of an old crop \ though only a little after noon; byhignt not only cure but prevent small-pox.” pered as it is with a warm love of the 8rdUkl.
Me. Sent for 56 eta (in 3 et iUmpu
And the aubeeribcr. **B.uatcH,
the’flavor will be greatly and judicious! v ; he- would'either have the delirium
The speaker was S. Swan, who is in
*1 •25'
Dr- 8w*ync &amp; Son. Philad’a
beautiful,” adding that "though, owing
developed by fifteen or’twenty minutes’ tremens or be found by the traveler charge of tho “House of the Holy Fam­
Pa.
Bold by all druggist*.
to the season, lilic^are scarce irl town,
ily,?
in
Second
Avenue,
near
Eighth
standing on the samovar top. A new- rolling outside in the snow.
Of ani- j
there is a brass band that will lift the
He
only
ia
a
well-made
made who has good
.
Street
This
is
a
Roman
Catholic
char
­
crop tea does not require this treat­ j mal life in the village streets you see ou I
,Ylctcnulnalion.—Emerson,
I itable institution for children whoso roof off his bruin shed.”
ment.
; tunny days all the cattle of tbo com­
—A State camp ground for New York
• BEWAKB OF IMfriTiSS.
The making of coffee is a much more munity standing close up against the parents are unable or unfit to care for
complicated operation. Whether made j walls ot the houses on the warm side of them, it contains at present about has been located at last. "The spot se­
nt Mlote ota ol Flore.to» Colwra, U
in the Enstqfn or Western method’, the tho street, getting all tho comfort they two hundred young girls, between tho lected is situated on the east side of the enUrely rnw.l Look lor .Ijn.tore ot Hlicox
MAKING TEAAND COFFEE, \
precautions and most of the difficulties can out of the sunbeams, the younger ages of five and seventeen, A short Hudson River, north of Peekskill, at a A Co., N- 1. on each bottle.
place
called
Roa-hook.
.
It
is
spoken
of
time
since
it
was
reported
to
the
Health
are
th?
same.
The
choice
of
the
Some carious fanatics in matters of
members here beginning that acquaintTbe greater our dread of crow*, the more
taste, bent on belittling the conclusions growth allows of latitude, as does the • pace. which in spring time ripens on Board that there was a case of small­ as s pleasant place, and is very con­
nececMary (her are for us.—Fcueloti.
of extreme civilization, maintain that choice of a vintage. The Turks prefer the stepnes to love and the more earnest pox in the home. A physician was sent venient. It is about oue hour and a
half
out
pf
New
York.
the
Mocha
or
Martinique
or
Java
min
­
up,
and
faund
that
the
sickness
was
the true and only wis© method of takA GOOD FOUNDATION.
duties of animal existence. Of fellow
—Two models in facsimile of the obo1U
gled. It is indispensable to roast your travelers you meet but few at the post­ not a case of small-pox. He also found
In American household* tbe prevailing com­
own coffee, of whichever growth, and houses along the road in winter time­ that both Mrs. Starr, a wealthy Igdy lisk in Central Park were recently pre- ,plaint*
taints arc weakness of the itotnach and Its
sented
by
Lieutenant-Commander
Gorconaeqc
consequences,
Indigestion, Nervousness and
who
is
interested
in
tho
institution,and
or the Egyptian (heather. ThG Ce- wise to got tho best quality of its kind.
In these resting places there is always
Rheumatism. such
Such anfferchi
*nffereVs can lay
hr a
j good
Dr. Swan was strongly opposed to the ringe, through a New York pentieman Rbeumatum.
.
lestial, who exbaustZhis tcsthetic pow­ The coflce-growers follow an antiquated one room set apart for travelers, where
foundation for health by using Parker's Gin­
ers on the appreciation of birds’ nest and barbarous method of preparation,
vou may sleep through the night on the ordinary method of vaccination, and in that oourary. tu lb, Iffiodixo ol ger Tunic a* It tones up the stomach nnd serves
soup and his gastronomic on the prep- steeping the berries in waler until tbo tiard benches if you choose without any were firm believers in tho efficacy of Egypt, who made a pleasant little and keeps tbe kidneys active to carry off the
• s oration of rats and puppies in pies, puts pulp is decomposed and ruhs off in a payment whatever being exacted. In small-pox virus taking internally. Sub­ speech of thanks in English, saying . foul matter. —N. Q. picayune.
'
a pinch of lea-lenves into u lin.t cup, slimy mi’8, leaving the berry naked.
11 &lt; Mr*. Wm. Bearding died at Perry, Ala., hut
our journey of a thousand miles the sequently Dr. Day went there.but failed thathe believed the Americans,perhaps,
pours on it boiling water, and swallows But the fermentation always damages number of travelers we met could be to see Mrs. Starr.and finding that many the most sincere friends of Egypt.
‘ week, aged 107, leaving a busband 109 Tears
. it. The gustatory fanatic, admires the the flavor of tho codec, and, if allowed counted on the lingers. At one station of the children were absolutely unvac­
—The destruction ot the harbor of
,
simplicity ol the operation, reflects to go too far. destroys it, so that many wo found a Russian officer and his wife cinated and without protection from Toronto, which has caused much anxi­ old.
small-pox.
Dr.
J.
B.
Taylor,
the
Chief
that the Chinaman grows tea, prepares samples of coffee apparently bright are
ety
for
some
time
past,
is
now
said
to
occupying two sofas of the guest room.'
Lydia
E.
nwkham's Vegetable Compound
it for our use, knows every grade and already damaged. I do not mention । At another we met an entire family of the Vaccination Bureau, visited tho be advancing so rapidly that, unless an has rapidly made
it* way to favor among dni£•
quality of it, and himself drinks it— ground coffees, as these are anything ! who had spent six weeks on the road homo-and vaccinated twenty-five chil­ immediate stop be put to theencroach- gi«t*, who have observed II* effect* on the
’
ergo, the ChinoQian’s way of drinking but coffee—chicory, barley, breao- I Irom Irkutsk so Troisk. The husband, dren. Dr. Swan courteously consented, *ments of the lake upon the island, no health of their customer*. Send to Mr*. Ly­
dia
E.
Finkham.
233
Avenue,
tea is the best way. The Arab, again, crusts, any burned gntminea, acorns, ’ fl man of about forty, had occupied a but held to his theory. His theory and harbor worth the name will remain.— ।
V V"™—Western
----“
,vu“v’ Lvnn,
’
discovered coffee, gave it to Europe juniper coiles, etc., enter in. and I was
post as cashier in a bank at Irkutsk,and his lozenges,, however, are better for CMcayo UeroJd.
!
and the world, drapk it first and drinks told last year, at Kalamata, that the Was going to St. Petersburg to seek a ornament than for use. In every case
—Mr. James Russell Lowell is quoted | So,ne ot the Iow“ brewers propose to *ouron
।
it still. He roasts it a littlei* pounds it whole fig crop of tho .Morea goes to i .tew and more genial climate. He was the vaccination took thoroughly, show­ by the Boston Courier as saying in a I tiie temperance law. and will convert their
to a fine powder, puts it into a little Trieste to be turned into coffee. Coffee accompanied by his wife, a little child ing that these little girls would have conversailon about Irish poetry: “I lirewcrtca Inio vinegarie*.
1
fallen
victims
to
small-pox
had
thev
copper boiler which they call an ibric, must be roasted slowly and evenly,
And an old nurse. One child, a little
have gone over all I could lay mv hands I
Dr. Swan, although uu.and you will be surprised if fshould ;
- pours some boiling water on it, boils it kept in constant motion, till the berry prl, be told tis, had been taken sick at | been exposed.
an instant, and serves it hot. to be will crack crisply when pressed be­ Kntsnejarsk, and there she had died nominally a homerpathic physician, is tZ?
U,|lyou-b«.nleo
01ijj|-d;rtheBre
.1&lt;..I&lt;,( ।
. 2.2 “t2- ’----------------------. drank groiftids and all. Now. the Arab, tween thumb and finger. The Egyp­
not
considered
a
regular
nommpatb,
if
and had been buried. At another sta­
Irish
. .
In.h poets.
rww.t« ” 1Pausing
a Imoment, he uhelher Hop Bitter* are p»od or not. I know
quoth our fanatic,' invented the bever­ tian stops ns soon ns it will break any tion we met au old government cm- ■ the
is -------------allowable, and
— expression
—r---- ho said: "’J’he greatest
—of
_* Irish
t_s_i poets,and
.------ 1 1 tjn.y arr good for Ecnenudebillty and indiges­
age* grew the berrv, djank it first, and way, but this will have a slight taste of ployee,. tottering and feeble, who had carries the extremes! views of Hahne- one ot the greatest, and sometimes I tion ; strengthen the nervous nyi&lt;tetu and make
drinks it still—therefore his way of the raw berry, which seems to me n •pent thirty year, ot bi, life in Irkutsk. : mann
in bis
--------ui.
.... last
j—days to the farthest think the greatest of all poets is Ed­ new life. I recommend mv patient* to u»e
them.
DR. A. PRATT.
drinking it is ideal: and one continually drawback. It should crack freely, but and had finally obtained intluencu i point. His process of preparing the ' mund Burke.”
Ninety-nine enough lo get himself removed to St. 1 lozenges showed the attenuation doc­
. hears people who have passed three by no means crumble.
—An unknown crank sent the follow- , Wasn't Adam the first man to sell the race.
months in tbe Levant ttTlk with thegravi- percent of the people who roast their Petersburg, where he hoped to end his , trine carried out to its last limit. He ing portentiuus missive to the office of I
• ty of a Turk on the suprein eand sublime own coffee burn it. and destroy all its life among his friends. He was a sor­
obtained one drop of matter from a the Detroit News, recently: “Dear
BRACE UP.
I
perfection of Turkish coffee, hot from best qualities. From this point. East­ rowful looking wreck, nnd had had the pustule ou a person ill with the small- Saits—I want $75 more than I have on
There i* Bcriou* meaning in tbi* expression.
the ibric, and swallowed grounds and- ern an&lt;l Western methods differ. The
misfortune to be robbed on his way by i jiox. This was diluted .with one hun- hand &amp; I in less than 30 days from tbe That wearied *tep, languid eye, and general
Turk
has
slaves
in
plenty,
and
is
no,
all.
Philosophy aud gastronomy are |
a fellow traveler. Rarely, indeed, does I dred drops of water. Then a drop of time 1 get it will kill 4 men or tilings feeling of lassitude come from sickne**. Be
both against the fanatic—the one sparer of their labor. He has his cof­
a petty official ever return from his far this solution was diluted with one hun­ our country must be rid of insid a year assured, a *cUous and and perhaps fatal, dis­
■ against tbe assumption that thu taste of fee pounded in a mortar to an impalpa­ Siberian post. It is easy enough to get dred drops of water, and the process —Hank W. Beecher. Old Vanderbilt. ease I* close In its wake. The system wants
ble
powder
(his
imitators
at
Athens
thu barbarian is a proper standard, and
sent out, but only one in a thousand | continued until about the millionth part J. Gould &amp; Presiilent Arthur. Any one cleansing of impurietics ; the sluggish blood
the other against the absurd cpnclusion and /elsewhere fail here), nnd then a can ever save money enough to return | was reached. Then, procuring little direct to G. A. Ro, just acrost the
need* to be sent in swift and clear currents
that tea and coffee, which are mlusions. spoonful for each cup is put into tho to their friends. Over tbe gateway to sugar pellets or lozenges, he placed a river.”
through the vein*. Dr. Kennedy’* “Favorite
can be rendered more delicate to the ibnc, the water poured on hot, it is set i Siberia could well be inscribed for | drop of this very much weakened water
—Iowa lawyers are said to be noto­
palate by swallowing of the woody par­ for a few seconds on the coals, not I these officials the dreadful legend:
with a glass rod on each lozenge. It is ; rious among their brethren of the bar Remedy" will do tbi*; it will give new vigor to
the body, brightness to the eye, a glow to the
- tides from which the infusion is made boiled, and is poured into the cup—if
“All ye who enter leave hope and friend* for i needless to say that neither in taste,
for the length of their arguments, and
aye behind.”
! smell, appearance, or effect do these it is even charged that this habit has countenance, aud elasticity to the step, .ttie
E simultaneously with the decoction itself. for himself without sugar; it for a
—Siberia Cor.
Y. Herald.
1 have never drunk tea with n man­ Frank sweeteeud; but 1 have always
lozenges differ from powdered sugar. assumed tho dimensions of a public Dollar a bottle. Every druggist ha* it. Tlr.
darin, but I have often taken it in the suspected Hint practices connected with
Dr.Swan said that any one taking these calamity. One of tho Judges recently David Kennedy, Proprietor. Rondout, N, Y.
Advice to a Young Man.
house of China merchants, habituated Eastern politics had much to do with
lozengas would be ill soon afterward said; “The State uf Iowa is paying
The best remedy tor a sting is to poultice the
to the Celestial usages, and us choice in tho exclusion of sugar, as enabling the
J with a ven' mild form of varioloid. A annually 8250,000 for unnecessary gab
Don
’
t
be
lazy,
my
boy.
Fly
around,
wasp Kdore it gel* it* work in.
their selection of tbe herb as Kung drinker to detect certain deleterious and do something, if it’s only to pound i buttle of tiiem has been procured at the
for these long speeches that do no
himself could have been; and of all va­ agent.- sometimes introduced.
j Health Department, and they have been one any good, that wear out tho court,
SHILOH’ 8 CONSUMPTION CURE.
The Western coffee-maker grinds the «aod. Put in all your minutes in hon­ freely swallowed by various persons lire out the jufry, and help rather than
rieties—Assam, Japanese. Chinese; and
est hard work, tranquil meditation, or
Tilts Is beyond question the most successful
at prices varying' irom £3 per pound berry, and not too tine, but yhe primi­
healthful recreation. Easy to meditate? without efleet. There have been strong hurt the clients for whom they are Cough Medicine wetiave ever sold, a few doses
avoirdupois to Is. 3d.—yellow, green, tive ibric gives place to numerous con­ Be careful my boy, or you’ll choose tho 1 expressions of opinion, however, in re- made. It is an outrage and ought to Invariably cure the worst cases of Uough, croup
black, overland nn«sea-i&gt;urnt!. 1 have trivances. of which I have collected and
and Bronchitis, while tt« wonderful success is
hardest lot of all. A lazy man stretches I regard to the danger of leaving children bo stopped.”—H. Y. Graphic.
In the cure of consumption is without a paral­
also had a large range of observation tried many. For stupid housekeeiiers
himself out in the sun and dozes, but | exposed to small-pox through the mis—Pauline Markham, in an interview, 1 lel in the history of medlcne. Since i‘&lt;* first
in coffee, my father having been a the best is the common French filter lie doesn't meditate. He doesn’t think. j taken ideas of their guardians. ---V. }'. says: “We on tho stage are like work- discovery
it ha&amp;lwcn sold on a guarutcc. a test
Sybarite in that article alone of all that placed above the coffee-pot. for any,' Edison, sitting beside his tireless forge
Trtbune.
era
on tapestry—we see nothing but the which no other medicine can stand. If you
| came ou his table, with the finest of one who has mechanical ingenuity
n-ith the idle hands folded in his lap,
wrong side. Wo are in the shadotvs. have a Cough we earnestly ask you to try II.
are Robbed.
the balance
enotwn to ysq
use it
n tne
oaiauec cafe"tiere
catetiere
,
Price Iticts, fiOct*. and 31,&lt;fo If your lung* arc
I
tastes for all the growths—Moclm, Java. enough
*„^t
’7 as listless as the
as it were, and however exhilarating a , *«&gt;re, Chest, or Back Laine, and Shiloh's
I. Brazil. Martinique, Sumatra, etc.— is
r the
" perfection
, ' - ' ” of* utensils,
‘ 1 ‘ . and
- - - should
-* __ log in the sunshine,
ohurad like
«uno.«r on
One of the victims of the recent stage spectacle or burlesque may be from the 1 Porous Plaster. Sold by F. T. Boise.
always b»
be placed
like lira
the samovar
on &lt;»1&gt;OW mlUlMj on . 1.
1 sampling it always, nnd buying tbe bag Jwav.
dreamily “lishingJor a cat.” But tho robbery near Fredericksburg, Tex., chairs, it is not very heavenly from the
ANSWER THIS QUESTION.
1 when be found a good article; and to the table. But in the hands of a fool it
telephone, the electric light, the quad­ gave to tiie reporter of the Express a wings, 1 can assure you. It has^Ls fasWbv'do »o many people we »ce around us,
4 me coffee is tbe one indispensable. is unsafe. Coffee with milk—cafe an
to prefer to suffer and be made miserable
ruple* instrument came from the statement of the affair: "This is how Ijcinalions,
--------- . - but a woman iu that class of seem
under gastronomy, but
' ~~„
LT’
| luxury. I never, except under neccs !ait—comest.not
bv
indigestion,
constipation, dizziness, Iom of
: a bilious
i-i.-i ot food,
i \ „„„„
dreams of „one,
the other
only it happened. One of the mtn did all entertainment neea never expect to appetite, coming
up of the Food, yellow «kin,
It is
article
„ague,
’ , while
l-„
j sity, lunch or dine at a London restau- dietetics.
...
,
.
, .
.
,
!ettonpn
a&lt;rue_
find
latches the
and serves linn
him ri&lt;rnt_
right. tiie robbing and tho other stood off a
through life without bemg.talked when for 73ct«, we will sell them Shiloh’* Vitat rant, for tbe simple reason that I never and better made uf chicory than cof­ Why, my boy, you waste enough time lUtle with a cocked pistol. The one in about- »“« thu raoro prominent her lizer,
guorauted
to cure them. Sold byF. T.
| found one where I could get a. .good cup fee, as the latter is wasted when thus
B
oise
.
to build a house.
waste lime be­ charge ol Uw job first took ray watch. | rautwtho more exaggerate.! tho stone,
I of coffee when I had finished.' I have used.—Pull Mall (itucUc.
■
SHILOH’S CATTARRH REMEDY, 'A ma.cause it slips by so pleasantly. We which is a verv peculiar one, probably । to*“.
velou* curc’for Catarrh, Diphtheria, Canker
1 drunk in the West and tbe East—Paris
can’t realize it. 1 have wondered some­ none like it iu'America.
(The gentle- ।
—A Pottsville dog that howled twen- mouth, and Head Ache. With each hottie
• and Constantinople. Turkish fashion
Suicide Fuslilonalilc.
times if a man had iq;his room a great man here showed the gold watch to the ty-four hours a day, causing a tidal here is an ingenious nasal injector'for the
| and Egyptian. French. Viennese. Mnnglass, an hour gla^s loaded with the reporter.) It is of European make, and wave of profanity in that town, was more successful treatment of these complaint*
Suicide seems to be in a fair way of
I hattanesc—have followed tbe decay of
without extra charge. Price 50ct*. Sold by
lands of bis life, so that it might be be­
its use and its gradual disappearance, becoming as fashionable : s suttee once fore him eveiw time that ho' entered is a highlv prized present. I told the found to have the toothache, and after F- T.Boise.
robber that if he took it it would surely the decayed molar was extracted the
until 1 can uo longer find a cup of ger* was. Not long ago a suicide, before that room. If he knew that not one
lead
to
his
detection
and
probable
aranimal
ceased
his
lamentations.
A
nine coffee, and properly made, out of drowning himself in an English river, । grain of the steadily dropping sand
pjEXRY ROE. PaoratKToa
my own house anywhere between Con­ took the precaution of addressing a let­ ■ could be turned back. If he could rest. As I said this 1 put one hand in ! number of dogs in Norristown are evi. —ataatiDople or Alexandria and New ter to the editor of the local newspaper, i watch it diminishing above and piling my watch pocket, taking out $2t&gt;, and dently suffering from the toothache the
----- OLD RELIABLE----told
him
M
take
that,
all
tho
money
1
worst
way.
and
a
cure
might
be
effectYork. As to tea, as tho Pall Mall Ga- explaining his intentions, and stating I up below; if. when he closed his eyes
He seemed very glad to get that, ed by blowing out the offending tooth
seUc has observed, there is little chance where his body should be looked for. | he knew th.it all night long it would had.
» —l ... .i - —• • •---- :— —• with dynamite. If the head were to go
of being deceived; and respectable A merchant at Arion, in Belgium, has ' run steadily, no foster, no slower; if and put back the watch leaving my off with tiie tooth, the cure would be
\ merchants can give you a good tea if improved upon this, and formally no­ when he came home from a journey ho ring and scarf pin, also. He searched ---------------- — — -— -------' you do not want it too cheap; but peo­ tified his inleulion to commit suicide I could see how much had run away: if all my pockets before he was satisfied, permanent.—Xorrislotcn Herald.
Now York Herald
ple who in London will use tea at three in a certain hotel in Paris to the bur­ he could stand before it, held by a Having searched myself and the driver j —“Pegging,” tho ...
j ahillingspcr pound or less must never gomaster of his native town.
That strange fascination, and watch its run­ to their hearts’ content, they invited ' claims, is a new slang term on tho
u", I “street.” Tho operation is as follows:
hope to understand the question. In worthy functionary, instead of attempt­ , Ding sands; if he could always realize me to help them rob the mail pouches,
I did,
not --------wishing
---------------, —
-----to rprovoke
-------- a “The modern financial magnate comes
•
England most housewives understand ing to prevent him, at once sent all that those grains of sand numbered the which
tbe mystery of making tea. but few necessary particulars for tbe correct seconds of his life; if he could sec that them. They got very little from the out boldly into the blaze of day, pub­
pouches. 1 noticed one take a very line licly announces that he desires to pur­ FRESH FISS and FOULTR1
know the advantage of the Russian filling up of the denib certificate to the- . sleeping or waking, going or staying,
samovar over all other . methods of local maire in Paris, for use ir. case the I sick or well, eating and drinking, work- watch from tbe pouch. It was a gold ! chase fabulous millions of some certain
IN THEIR SEASOr
making it. The samovar is a tea-kettle merchant executed his intentions. The j ing or idling, remorselessly the sands one. It was addressed to a United I stock, names a price at which he is
which has its fire in a tube running suicide took place, aud no doubt the ; ran through—I wonder if he would not States Captain at San Angela, Tex. 1 I ready to take all that is offered, and Lard, by the lb. or barrel,
This I 'xnprove the time better? I wonder do not think they got any money out I stations a broker to book the names of
through it, and which, with a few particulars were found useful
tic., de., de.
pieces of lighted charcua! dropjied into nonchalant official acceptance of a no­ now many of those grains would turn of the mail. They "kept us there about I tho sellers and tho amount of the pur• tiie tube, maintains the water at boiling tification of intended suicide is not far j to gold as they passed through, by the an hour until the other stage arrived. I chase.” Mr. Vanderbilt is said to have
t-tT The Highest Market Price paid
Not until the other stage hove in I assiduously applied the process to the
point with a minimum of evaporation, removed from the official superinten­ I alcnemy of his industry ?
for Hides. Pelts, &amp;c.
sight, did I become at all frightened; Lake Shore, and Jay Gould to the
and gives it that point on the table. dence of the operation once familiar
Ah, well, do you think such a steady,
Fresh Goods, Full Wcightn and
And as a beverage tho Russian docs enough in the far east- Though Eng­ constant reminder of the shortness of for the robbers stationed us in front. Western Union and Missouri Pacific
Satisfaction Guaranteed.
explaining that if any shooting was . during the last few days.
i
certainly surpass ail other nations in land, in the opinion of all Frenchmen,
life and the value of time would have J
/
.u_»
1.1
U_
__j
ogse
Gjaas,
of
Shelbyville.
Ky.,
a
done
from
the
stage,
we
would
bo
the
.
tea-making. We drink it as a stimulant, is the land of suicides, our foreign cen­ any effect on you? Foolish youth, as
HE.VRY ROEand take it strong in the morning, and sors have found themselves compelled j soon as the novelty of the thing wore first killed. Then I was a little alarm­ Director of the Bank of Shelbyville and
ed. There was a tree standing close one of the most reputable of that highI
too strong at night, with milk and to take precautions against those who i off.you wouldn’t mind it scent’s worth.
by
and
I
asked
permission
to
get
behind
.EXENT
SMITH,
toned
town
’
s
citizens,
was
well
ac
­
।
sugar as u general thing; we finish desire to put an end to their lives by j Why, when the old Egyptians used to
it. This they granted, so 1 felt safe. quainted with Zoreldk Cole, now tbe
।
and send the tea-tbings away; but to artificial means.- No longer will the i carry in the skeletons at their feasts.did
No resistance, however, wim made, as famous Mrs. Samuels,-when she was a
Attorney at Law,
the Russian it is an all-the'-evening stranger be able to climb the Vendome i It make anybody dismal? not a(bit of it;
enjoyment. The samovar stands un column for the purpose of taking a | made them all the jollier. “Send that tbo stage had no occupants—only the country girl, living near Stamping
driver. This driver had 850 in his Ground, in Scott County, the seat of
1 thajoblc, and the tea (the delicious bird’s-eye view of Paris. So many | thing back to the boneyard.” said
pocket, but they did not take it. They “Old Dick” Johnson’s Indian school.
I yellow variety generally) is put into Erenchmen have recently thrown them­ ‘Thothmes, “and open another basket
fl the teapot, the boiling water run on, selves from the top of the column that I of that New Jersey Heidsic. 'Apples alrio went through my satchel, but it He has often talked to the writer about
I1 «Uowea to stand a moment, and then the authorkies nave resolved upon re­ is apples this year? ”—Bob Burdette in contained only some wearing apparel. the bouvant and beautiful “Tomboy”
They did not take it They did tak« girl, whose remembrance of him was J AMES A. 8WEEZEY,
I tea is served mild rather than weak: fusing to tne tourist the permission to Burlington Hawkeye.
my line blanket, of English make, dark ' ------ -*—‘| in the Christian name of
I and more water poured on at onto—a ascend it In the early part of this cen­
Attorney &amp; Counsellor,
I littfo tea added from time to time if tury a mreat number of persons threw : —A good German method to soften blue roan colored. The drivers were j Hwr ,„uuo boy, who now lies dead in
r.- — represented
her, as k W.U attend to !«&lt;al buMnteB in any pana&lt;
I j needed.
I have often seen Russian themselves in despair from the monu­ 1 end remove hardened putty: Dissolve 'Jim Brown, on my stage, and a man Missouri. He .~
I I friends drink a dozen or more cups in &gt;-------r —that form
.--------ment,- —
and
of---------death------------became I* potash in water, and add caustic or called Ed on the other. One of them ] baxom country lu«, brimming fall of
a daring
horsewoman,
- —a
horsewoman,
a good
k| the evening. The quick making of the I the popular form of suicide m London. fresh lime. After a time pour off tho told me his name was Bill Jackson, and ' fon,-----*
- * -not afraid
-&lt;—•-* of
-* •the
u- devil nimand
I tafUMiun ia in accordance with Chinese I The officials thereupon removed the dear liquid aud bottle for use. Moist­ uaid he was one of the men who gol 1 dancer,
away at Round Rock at the time Sam eelL It is not strange that the pious
| anatom, but there the parallel ends. | temptation to self-destruction by »ur- ened with this, putty quickly softens.
I | The addition of sugar—to tho Celestial rounding the platform on the top with It should be added that the fresh lime Bass was killed. One was a tall man, 1 preacher whom she took for a husband
* inchei
* “
| found their Missouri home too warm
f a barbarism-is Dow opposed by some an iron cage, and since then thousands makes the putty intensely caustic, and about five feet ten and a 1half
high, light complexion, and
-’■* twenty
--------- j for ‘him. and sought peace by slopingr tO
[ j English tea-drinkers, but thu over-. of strangers have every year ascended । it should be kept from the fingers.
vears
old.. —
He ------------------------looked something
like the Pacific slope.—Chicago Times.
years —
* ----1 whelming majority of opinion is in lav- the monument with impunity. Why
Util..
&gt;k..
ITt.l
Tkn
nlkn.
w...
_£----- ..----- -------------!
—The damage done by rats on the Bi’ly the Kid. The other robber wm
not ,v
the
same
cr of it* use. It seems to me as iudis- should
“u—
----— * ' *"X“J —
—A fashion writer says: “A rather
DjtaMbWe to the development of the the Vendome column!
Mall Go- I public slaughter houses of Paris repre- about five feet seven inches high, dark
j rents an annoal loss to the city of 50,- complexion, no hair on the face, small, novel shade in bonnets has a tall,
Iwt appreciation of lhe tea as salt is to cettc. '
। 000 francs. It is impossible to extdt1- quick eyes, of very genteel appearance, •teeple-iike projection rising above the
I that of a beefsteak. The sugar is no
and wore a white hat and dark clothes. tbe waarer’s head.” To preserve the
IflomnS m an
— emollient that it absolute- ■ —The Mormons announce that thev I minute the destructive animals. All
•Teeth Extracted Wilhoit Pain.
no quality*uf tbe tea. and । will receive 16,000 convert* from Eu- ■ that can be done is to thin their ranks Meither were masked nor attemptedgk unities, a steeple-like projection which
i a little now and again by organizing conceal themselves in the least.”—Sat begins in vanity should end in vane.—.
AnTotiio

MEAT MARKET.

Fresh and Salt Meats,

Smofed Hams and Stonlders,

EiDerienct-d, Reliable, at Besptmsible.

A. H. WINN, Dentist.

BEST SET GUM TEETH

•

�—A little girl in Chester County,
Pennsylvania, died recently from eating
horse cheatnut flowers.
—A water-spout on Crooked Creek.
—The names of two Icelandic wo­ Idaho, a few days ago washed out and
men who arrived at New York recent­ left ou land thousands of trout.
— And sell - -......
m-;d or flour, pepper
ly were Girdidar Bergsdaltcr and Berg—Within n limit of three miles of
teds, Feed, Ume, Salt, Plaster, Stuc­ fry them a light bio
ciodar Sneudsdolter.
*
Auburn Ky„ live three brothers, who
LONG .KNOWS A«
co,. Hair, Fine Umber, lath
—Mrs. Catherine Albert, ot Baker- three years age married three sisterfl,
e
e
PENGELLY’S WOMANS FRIEND
-Never put a particle of soap about Ville, O., ia visited byifeoplu from all j and who now have three children each.
and Shingles,
your silver if you would have il retain sections because she is 1U7 years old |
THE LOWEST LIVING PRICES. Its original luster. Soap suds makes it and lives entirely on pap prepared from I —Georgia still gives away land withVtf
Every’ mother of daughters should
j in her borders to actual settlers forthe
JL //
know about it-becouse it bring.
look like pewter; when it wants polish­ milk.—A’. Y. Herald.
ing take a piece ot soft leather and
—CoL Daniel Shook, Sr., of Ash- i| fee exacted in colonial times and grants
health
‘whiting aud- rub it, hard.—AT. K Ex- ville, N. C., is ninety-five years old, and head rights under the same conditions
that
existed
in
the
days
pf
Gen.
Ogle
­
has 224 descendants, of whom 192 are
thorpe.
Hive Signed or Endorsed the
—Nice ginger wafers are made of living—children, grandchildren and
—The grotesque monkey with tho
one cup of sugar, * one cup of butter, great and great-great-grandchildren.
Following Remarkable
—u.ruLnitcotr.
one cuti of molasses, half a cup of cold His oldest child is seventy. He has perambulating hand-organ is no longer
coffee'left from breakfast, two even lived eighty-five years in the same to amuse tbe children of Philadelphia,
Document:
'
the city fathers having ordered its per­
lb, UullrdSUl—. teaspoonsful of soda, one tablespoonful
—'rhe youngest pensioner of the.Gov- manent exile ns a nuisance.—Philadel­
of ginger, and flour enough to make a
stiff dough; "knead it hard and roll very ernment is James W. -Crandall, aged phia Bccord.
—A couventien of working girls met
fifteen
years, of Philadelphia. A year
thin, and bike in a quick oven.—2T. F.
have •old various brands of Porous PImago inat March he enlisted in the Navy, in Toledo, Ohio., recently: its object
Po.d.
-^A good currant-cakn is made of one and soon afterward was sent to South­ to take measures for protection against
Bncxm’s Capctne Fotoub PLaotfr to all;
street
loafers
and
mashers.
Speeches
ern
waters,
where
he
contracted
ty
­
cup of butter, two cups of sugar, half a
cup of sweet milk.four eggs, three cups phoid fever, which left Jiim deaf. He were made to the effect that the nui­
others. Wo con^der themeno of tho very
sance bad reached a point that could ho
of flour, half a pound of currants care­ draws $13 a mohth. —N. K Post.
•medic o worthy
“
•
—A son of one of the Siamese twins, longer be endured, and funds were raisfully washed; alter they have drained, who
rraduhlod recently from th« North | rd to purchase rawhides.—St. Louia
superior to all!
sift flour over and through them; use
Carolina School for Mutes, visited i Globe.
half a grated nutmeg tor flavoring.
This is nice baked^in smajl tins or in Siaunton, Ya., the other day. He is | —At a fair of the Congregationalist
described as "a good-looking young । Church at Palestine, Texas, forty young
gem pans.
fellow.” very bright nnd well educated, i women gave an exhibition drill with
Benson’s Capclnn Planter it, a genuino ntfM, Wakcfnl w,.. Palpitation. EU-.
LACK Jk SO.V
—Oxalic acid will take rust bi* any
bothdumb.
deaf and dumb.
&lt; | fans,
showing
how gracefully and be« fans,
showing
profit, or ra. buh~.
other stain out of white goods. Dis­ He is_____
articles can be used.
order of merit, sod ~ reooealsed
Snr tweehsr td the ..x.WIX.1. CEKTAIM.T
—The London Truth is authority for witchingly
‘
' ‘ these
‘
solve a small quantity in boiling water
Then the, fans were sold by auction,
marriage
phrstrisa. sod draevlsu.
BE BELIev&gt;:i&gt; br z~ rho—
and tup
dip IUU
the spots
in. nuumci
Another way
is the
anu
nputs LU.
naj io
---- statement
,
---- , ,,that
---- ,--,1 rb, hasi imi
the
prices
depending
on
tho
popularity
to saturate tho spots with .lemon juice | proved Sarah Bernhardt. Sho looks
----------IsEUCOBRHOCA RUINS THE FINEST
WWS
—SV—
S' - A.,, —o Tlvrs. ' _____ ____ ....
... —
“ ■ -l and anrrad the cloth In.Uio »nn. It | hotter, acta better, and behave, better of its contributor, the whole profit
may, perhaps, have to be repeated once than ever Doforo: Her Solemn-iookmg reaching $500. MoriumehV’., TotnhrtoCM, Mantle?, dm.,
•on's Capcino Plaster.
I before
before the
tbe stains
afoina are
are all
all out.
out.SI. Louis
Louie ! Greek huabaud. either through hta
—Total abstinence from whisky for
—St.
J*
TTaMiLnaw, M\cH.
t'
strength of will or her weakness five years, with the
—extinction
—
of the
Globe.
love, hai succeeded in trans- , canine race in Tennessee, would, acWilliam jones,
—The American Rural Home
ob­ i ^through
iromise
onu'°S her whole nature. “Ho is the J cording to the Memphis Avalanche, reserves that as there is now a promise
—
It. PENGELL
■
first man,” said she to a friend, “who ! suit in the saving of means to pay off
of a superabundance of apples this
—MtlWR BKMEDY AT LAST. Price S&amp;cta.
.
' '
_
I ever made love to me of whom I am I the State debt and leave enough over
MEAD’S Medicated CORN and BUNION PLASTER.
by Druffjtui.}’
KALAMAZOO, Ml'
year, it will be a good time fororchard- i afraid. He can make me do what he | Jo stpek the State with sheep.
ists to try some 'experiments, such as
579 • wrok, »u ■ day Ji home »»»tiy made
, _Th0 slaughter of innocents by
I PARKER'S
removing all the young fruit from a I likes.”
* outfit fee -. A Jdrcj* Taoi'A. Co., Augoat*. M«
Rame declares
few good trees, to see if this will cause • - —Miss Louisa de la....
u j soothing drops goes on with increasing
own nanie
wefl 1 Vjgor.
A PhUadeiphia doctor estithem to benr next Year. U ton. twenty. that
| &gt;b»t her
her“"own
uxme h1« fully
folly as wch
~ fromTTobolak
i’jzL!: *_?toTsr~~r
’t mates that 25,000 bottles of such nostitty or a hundred orcbxrtlisU in any --[ known
Tangier*'
ra that
A perfect drvM*
locality
were to“( Cherbuliez
Cbnrb"!!-’ or Alphonso
Alphonro Daudet.
ti.oH.r ' trums are sold every week
------- in that city,
locality were
to - do
do this,
this, and
and all.
all, or
or I of
A obilined for wxhaulral
,
-------- “1-3 of the 1500
nearly all, should succeed in inducing tx-w
| Her “own name,’ however, isdoubt- f auij...
that a large
proportion
1 en, tnrdl.-.il. or other rctuponntfe
fruitfulness next year, while the trees (------I less not
nearly
widely
known
ns -her or
- --------— so
--------j —
- - -v, .jWX)
*vwbabies
waM.vowho
..raw die the
there annually
nnm
de
plume.
“
Ouida.
”
This,
by
the
|
are
killed
by
doses
of
them.
not so treated should be barren, it
■
•
•
would go far toward establishing the way, is said to be not formed from the
—The Scotch must be a very cleat* '
I expression, “oui, da," as rumor has
principle.
p"
,&gt;TPj
)le. and their sanitary system very
j often had it. but to be merely her own P
eo
A cure guaranteed.
—Every woman who is obliged to
perfect.
It
is
stated
that
only
four
floreston
Per,e
stand for hours at the ironing-tablo i pronunciation, in babyhood, of her cases
of small-pox have been reported I
Christian name.
cases
•poelfte for bydirla. dlrxlncw, convulilon*. nrrv
during July and August finds that her i proper
during ine
the poai
past year in
in ocuuauu.
Scotland, i
‘
,
..
,,
,,
।j curing
—nt&lt;l dirprenlon, lo*i of ae»»i*
feet are prolific sources of suffering, ' tv Vu” 'b’0, W ien th,e Kt7*
There is no reason, except the want of
npoUncy, Invaluutary eml*'l»n*
.
.
’
.immunity
r
.. ..from
----- ---a
s, cauicd by iivcr-rxcrlloti, &gt;nlf
liven if sue is wise enough to wear Ward Beecher was pastor of a little care, why
the
same
thick-soled shoes, sho will find her lot church in Indianapolis, he was dis- I terrific disease should not prevail in
x-ud »«
a hard one. One little thing can be lurbed one Sunday evening in the 1 this country.—Chicago Journal.
done to relievo her somewhat: take an midst of a long prayer by a sudden
PARKER’
—John Birdsell, a well-to-do farmer, I
old comforter, or part of one, fold it in commotion in the congregation, fol­
I et.krxr, And
. ..... - .—
i rMpo&lt;i&lt;l«ncc •lrir&gt;h c*&lt;i&gt;Ai1^&gt;iUaI.
just as many thicknesses as is possible lowed by an almost preternatural still­ owning his own land, of Streetsboro,
Uiom of xny rclfal'T-- *zKncy.
to make it'soft, and yot perfectly easy ness. Of course his eyes were closed, j| Ohio, took an insane freak several
U l.rlswn.^
nut nrwr lili.em
to stand on. Her feet will bo cooler, but the silence soon seemed so se­ 1 months ago. and, abandoning every­
amen luura or r . i. wr.
thing,
took
to
the
roads
as
a
tramp.
A
the v1ll»u-e &lt;f Ks«h«il!e. JOB*
and when sho is through with her work pulchral in its intensity that he could .
she will not bo as tired as usual, and endure it no longer, so he opened them. I few days since he returned home in a I
sorry "plight, and would probably die. |
her feel will not have the stinging and Not a living soul beside himself was in ,
The Bex! and Sored Coos* Curt Em Uttd.
burning sensation which is as hard to tho church. An alarm of fire had 1I He said be had tramped as far East as ;
bear as pain is. It is a good plan to sounded down the street, an engine i Boston, Mass.—Courier-Journal.
have a good supply of holders, so that had come trundling by. and every man, 1
—Tho landlords of Paris, like those
she can change them often.—A’. Y.Her­ woman and child had rushed out to in Chicago. New York nnd elsewhere,
"run with the machine.”—Ar. Y. Her- i। are doing all in their power to kill the
ald.
All
Psid for anything iniurioo*
] cud.
1 goose that lays the golden egg. Thev
or (ar a failure to help or cu
Lime as a Fertilizer.
have raised rents enormously, and if
“A LITTLE XOXSENSE.”
they are not careful they will drive
ndispensable ferr, is one oi
wewcai rucipv
iur making
muKiug picnic their tenants into tbe country. Cheap ;
—Newest
recipe for
ly.
ot tne
the Ii
i. While it is a lemonade. One tub of waler, one card, and rapid underground transportation
I» Recommended by Physlclansj
‘
....
mineral, it is doubtless of' organic ori-' with tho word "Lemonade
” thereon, would be an effective remedy against j QJ
their avarice.—Chicago Journal.
1
■
gin. Its formation is going on under Lacked upon it.
—“
*• Q
How many pounds have you
our observation every moment. Vast
—Mr. Jack Helton, a workman for ’
W« nuBuf*ctur« *nd mH it vllhi pn*itlVO
guarantee that It will cure any beds of limestone rock are forming in lost?” asked one young man of anothe. tbe Cheslatee Company, killed a large
caae, ml we will forfoil the above amount
WHO 18 UNACl
“About* 120,” I rattlesnake last week by cutting it m
tho ocean continually and the vast work during the hot spell.
tntraibin a single Instance.
It la unlike any othrr Catarrh remedy, aa
is accomplished by the most insignifi­ Miid the other, and quickly added: “She I two. leaving a fool or more with the
LWg.’liT-JSSSSA.lKffi
cant individual agency. And this agen­ was willing, but the bld man said head. Mr. Helton undertook to ex­
cy has been operating for vast periods •no-’ ”
amine the fangs ot the serpent with a
—Frankness: (Scene at a dance.) | short slick and was struck at by the
of time. Limestone bus been formed in
great mountain masses by the slow “Shall we—a—reverse. Miss Lillian?” snake, or what was left of it, and its
Immediately.' Price, 75 crnli per bottla.
Miss
Lillian
—
“
Reverse,
indeed!
Tho
operation
of
very
minute
animals,
fangs came in contact with his hand,
L CHENEY &amp;. CO., Toledo. Ohio.
known as infusoria-, ^hrenberg, a Ger­ idea! Why. it’s as much as you can ; since which time the hand has been
man student and scientific investigator, do ttxkeep on your le^s ns it is!”— | badly swollen raid throwing Mr. Hel­
was the discoverer of the manner of the Punch.
ton into spa«ms There is some chance
.note
—The Boston Transcript has found a for the bite to result fatally. — Savannah
formation of chalk, which is carbonate
ot lime, nnd of which thousands of man who is dissatisfied with Miss I (Ga.)
conmiles of the earth’s rocky crust consists. Parloa’a cook book. His grievance is '
—A Michigan farmer watched a threeHe found it to be made up of the skel­ that his cbairTiottom wore out and he card-monle game.as played by a campetons of infusoria! animnlculiv, and that “ searched the durned book cfcar fonower of a circus, and soon saw. of
one cubic inch ot it ebntained the re­ through without finding a reseat for . course, that the card with the bent ’
mains of 40,000,000 of these creatures. IL"
corner was never tbe picture one when ।
—“Oh. yes.” said the tramp, ns a ' a genuine bet w,js made on it. “
The solid limestone and the fine mar­
1 &gt;■ ■ 0
bles arc all of this character, but crys­ tear glistened like a gum drop upon his simple process ol reasoning he con
con-­ X
tallized by heat and pressure during the sun-stained lace, “ I served during the ■ cluded that by excluding the card '
slow changes by which the earth has entire war." After stowing away the which the dealer ' intended the victim
acquired its present form, while thu comfortable breakfast that was given should select, and chousing one of the
great beds of soft chalk arc of more him. he finished the sentence: “I was two others instead, an even chance of !
modem structure, aud indeed are even a waiter in a Canadian restaurant "
winning could be obtained. Ho wa- ।
now in course of deposit in tbe dark
—She was decked in flaunting jewel­ gored $100 on tliis theory and won.
s
depths of the-ocean. In other places ry. and as she sat occupying flouble- j But he had to whip the gambler and •
the coral insect is building up great room in thu car she looked the perfect the stool pigeon in order io 'get away I
reefs and cliffs which form islands of picture of self-sufliciency, selfishness ! with the money, os* they fought hard |
solid limestone, and our own Florida and cheek. A bluff-looking gentleman, against losing:—AT. 1’. Sun.
has been, in great part, thus raised evidently from the rural districts, halt­
Is..The
Croat
Connecting
Link between the
East
and
the West!
— “Old Dinah,” an Onondaga, (N.
from an ocean bed by its agency, weak ed abreast of her seat, but she did not
. ... uur
... -CM.,, ..wm
•—.A. r'V.i ——
!i ।
.'r . Il* nr.1
. I.n.1 ■
P”Hr,
liw lua.u
w
in its individuality,, but able to change deign to move. He gave her a search­ Y.) squaw living on the reservation at a
Bluff*. paMinx through Joliet, Ottawa. Ia Salle,
Tbe SHORTEST, QUICKEST rod
Grneeeo. Moline. Rock Island. Ilayenpcrt. West
the geographical "features of a great ing gbnee, looked at tho rings, an 1 wonderful age and in great bodily inere you can coJoy your “Havana"
IJt«rty, loweCltj.Marengo.Hrooklyu.GrinneLL.
lirmaty,
has
just
received
a
pension
of
I»ea
Moinet
(the
capital
oflowa).Stuart.
Atlan
­
continent
and
to
fill
up
great
seas
m
its
then remarked to the nearest gentle­
tchiioa. Topeka, Denltic, and Avoca: with branchei from Bureau
VlverxaVaS^S*
aggregate power. And the Florida man. “They wear ’em in the snout out $s a month and arrears of $400. Those
Junction io Peoria; Wilton Junction to Muaeairfera aruavofded al Connell Blue*. _
who ought to know as much about her
tlne. Washington. Falrteld Eldon. Belknap,
farmer, or the farmer everywhere, in in Obier!”—Boston iranscript.
vertua.
Centreville. Princeton. Trenton, Gallatin. Cataeas ever can be known affirm that she is
fact, who bums lime for his fields from
—Mr. Ruskin is anxious to know
While tho pension
tho coralline rocks, or the limestone what there is more “ beautiful than the 108 years old.
At
Kb
filled with shells, such os that over word wife.” Nothing, Mr. Ruskin, agent was reading to her last Thursday
Earl and South.
which the great Niagara plunges, is unless it is the wife herself, but say, the official notification that a pension
nVTifTffis’
turning to his own benefit and uses the old chap, since we are discussing this had been grouted, she listened atten­
At WuxiSQTO* HnanTC.
KauonaUr :
silent tabors of insignificant creatures matter, what is there less graceful than tively until he finished the clause, “so
which lived and worked and died in a man slipping down stairs in a shower long"as seid Dinah John shall remain
1 nrmiKii biprcn x
.. .... . ....
ages so far back that we' cannot con­ of bootjacks, old slippers, cold pan­ in her widowhood,” when she broke
Al Rock Isi.asd. with “Mltwaui
ir.au PalaeeCars attached, aro run each waydaily
ceive of their distance, and can '••uly cakes, and tender reminders that if he out into n hearty laugh and exclaimed,
between Chicago and PaontA. Kamai Citt. Irland Short Line," and Rock
■
. ' . -.7 :;
■ •
Council. Mem L«avkxwo«th antLAT"-’measure them.by figures, which we comes home that way again there’ll be •• Mo too old now.”—.V. K Times.
«ob. TliK'Ugh canare alio run urtweenM!
may contemplate only with hopeless war? Surround that question with your
—Peter Helm was menaced by a mob
kee and Kanias City, via ti
Boek Island Short Line.”
failure to realize their full meaning in­ giant intellect for a moment.—N. Y. in Indiana twenty years ago. He had
The -Giral Kock Island
equipped. ICs road bed Is sic
telligently. But we can gather from Comniercial.
killed a popular man m a drunken
irark Uhl with Hwl rail*.
the contemplation the interesting fact
—•• Well, well, what makes you so | wrangle, and was in imminent danger
Through
thftt the world was evidently made for glum this morning? “What’s happen­ of being lynched. He had stimmoaed
Tickets via
man, and that every creature, and the ed?" was the sympathetic greeting John L. Farrar, a lawyer, but tbo
work, ftl.d purpose, and labor of every which me: a citizen the other morning. crowd was inclined to hang the prison­
creature, seem to have existed for the "Everything h gone to pieces. I’ve er without listening to his counsel. In
benefit, the use, and the gratification of lost $15,000(in the last three months.” this emergency Farrar drew bis client
Eh .Ld'XlUMM pi»d
mankind and for our more complete “Goodness! How I envy you.”
“En­ aside as it tor"consultation, and. then
development; for the preparation and vy me?” was the astonishing enquiry. advised him to run for tbe woods,
the utilization of all those products of “Why certainly. You must have bad which were close by. Helm did so.
ages of organic life are but means to it to lose.” This put a retrospective and was not caught. Tho lawyer got
T. J. POTTER.
PERCEVAL LOWELL
develop human intelligence and skill. view of the case in a new light and no fee, and narrowly escaped vicarious
------- wJr,
Gen. Jbaa. Aol_
And not the least of this development they went down the walk puffing theii lynching. He never hoard ot Helm
Chicago. 111.
Chicago. IK
is found in the pursuit of intelligent aud cigars, slowly.
again until recently, when he received
aletter from Mexico containing a draft
skillful agriculture, helped to a great
8500 Reward!
extent by these useful and indispensa­
—When Miss Genevieve Ward went for $500, with the information that the
ble products. For certainly it can be to Newport for a visit, just before sail­ fugitive had become a successful coffee
easily realized by a thoughtful person ing lor Europe, she took with her s planter.—A’. Y. Herald.
dobtlttr. Prvtualu
ilhful ladlm-r. lion
ow great an advance has been made small black-and-tan dog, her almost
—The Rev. William T. Ellis, of Sl
in the social and material condition of constant companion. On tbe train, the
Louis,
was
fined
$5
in
a
police
court.
mankind by the more perfect and pro­ cruel conductor ot the parlor-car told
ductive labors of the husbandman l&gt;er that tbe dog must go into the bag­ But it was not for an offense which af­
whish have been made possible by these gage car.
It did; and so did Miss fected his standing as a clergyman. He
JOHN B. OGMEN, Iuseful aids.—A’. F. Ttmes.
Ward; aud the two snt there on s hod insisted on picking over a barrel of
trunk until the conductor relented, and decayed potatoes in front of his house,
—Col. Bagley, of Covington, Ga.
to
the
discomfort
of
his
neighbors.
—
A
’
.
allowed them to return to the parlor­
owns a mule eighty years of age, and car.—AT. Y. Graphic.
will soon nublish his pedigree iu drdex
—A bunch of artificial radishes ap­
to convince people that the age of the
—A fancy of the moment is to have
4 *.----.........^V_CVt,caga
the parasol, fan, gloves, and hose tc pears upon a new French bonnet ol
yiri.singing at a country fair in

G-raln and ±&gt;ro&lt;lnce

i Druggists
AND

th

nut in snscii snrrwix

Clfl flS
90

TO GIRLS

TO YOUNG LADIES

' TO OVER-WORKED WOMEN

To Women Advanced In Ute

American and Foreign Marble,

MAMIZ'
BALSAW-

NERVOUS DEBILITY

COLOGNE.
S

NO PATENT NO PAY?
11f* 1I '$I* f-I 12■ TI
rHI tn IJ

IHWillflHS

IMHHTORS

CINCER TONIC

HALL’S

S1OO

U)

Q

C’

F.

H

„ Great ;
BURLINGTON
flOUTE-

w

CHICAGO. HOCK ISLAND &amp; PACIFIC B Y

PRINCIPAL*UINE

3

H
F
d

KANSAS CITY

BRORS OF YOUTH.

PIWlES..

CONSUMPTIVES.

R J P TU K E

OPIUMSTSfi-S

xUrk-grtenAtraw^ctil with ro&lt;»e pink.

i

�ffrowiriK.

DAILY RECEIVING THEIR FALL
Many appi

thqatreetaand
basements throughout th©
&gt; Reilly, a Frenchman 48 year*
, found in N. Holland’s mill
East Saginnw on the 7tb. It ia

txw© Dailey of Jackson, a brakewm run over by the cars while
hing in the yard at Albion, Aug.
His injuries are considered fa-

Mr*. Matilda Gillett of Hudson, aged
years, was so severely scalded while
tang a boiler of hot water from the
&gt;ok »tove the other day, that her in­
ries proved fatal.
William Dudley, a 13 years old son
! Rev. J. H. Dudley. Baptist minister
; Niles, was drowfN&lt;while bathiofron
rtday. Hia father waKwiUUMui,' but

kt txMijg able to/wim could not rescue
L. Martinau, was drowned nt the
LU of Dempsey, Simpson &amp; Co., at
an isle© on the 7lh. He was engaged
the foot of a slide, and it is suppos1 be lost his balance and fell into the

While hunting near Portland on the
7ch, Harvey Soules shot over a corn­
field ata woodchuck, but instead hit
Frank May, the shot taking effect in
the head and proving fatal in about nix
hours.
The trunk on account of which Chao.
vhite, a Battle Creek drayman, killed
iself because be was accused of its
*t,has been found in way which.
• that .White bad nothing to do
muual canip-meeting for Albioo
of the M. E. church will be
’he old district grounds, 2f
t of Albion village, opening
g. 15tb and close the Mon• following.
on the 4th, Jarara Worden
ber, committed suicide by
hroat with a razor,completc jugular vein. He was a
"d man, and becoming
recently been heard to
-old son of Tliaddeus
ford, threw a pair of
ear-old sister. One
hip, and the other
'omen,cutting a gash
entrails protruded
th. .
a well known cJtiI o n day went to, the
n'-law, Edwin IL
the door and told
kill him.
Pulling
iot at him four
bitting him. It
financial trouble
■ecause his son-in­
dent to mortgage
a are interested in.

I5GT0N LETTER.
.ox, D. C., Aug. B, 1882.
probably no man in tbe
/ho docs more work than the
nt, Quite certainly no man in
■uutry does more irritating and
xravating work than the President.
* is pleasant enough to receive a social
all or to shake bands with friends, but
when shaking hands becomes a duty
xnd receiving all sorts of callers a nec&gt;»aity tbepleasnre of the thing dwindee most magnificently. The "Presilent' Room," is situated iu the right
rir.-g of The White House. This is a
xrge apartment, plainly but handomely furnished.
It Ison tbe second
Joor and opens into the hall, and looks
its windows nt tbe rc.tr upon tbe
well kept groundsand the Potomac beBmuI ; also upon the alleged Washing-

Bffimouamenr. The White House, csLrially this room, is excently ventila­
ted. Around the room are chairs and
km or two sofna.
There is but one
■tture on the walls—a life sized por■akof George Washington, painted
V South American artist, aud present11 by the President of the United
■*tr r of Colombia.
Although the

wir benever findsthe visitor*
Members of Cougreas and
rot’s advisers walk past the
• without ahowiug their
rvisiters must first send
iu by the doorkeeper.
here as many as twenty
room at time. Member*
lake their tarn at talking
ent in tbe order in which

seminaries in tho adjoining states to
bring
' Washington whole bat­
teries of beauty and bring them to bear
Important that I felt it my duty to
upon the President. Bridal parties are
quite numerous. Sometimes they an­
nounce to tbe President that they are
newly married, but whether they do so
or not that fact ia perfectly apparent.
When no attempt at the concealtaeut
of their happiness is made, the. Presi­
dent presents the blooming, blushing . nature would make ttaji bill appropriating for
bride with a flower from the large, fra­ three ami other valuable National objects a
grant boquet which is always on his a sense of duty, that I withhold It.
table. When concealment is intended
My principal objection to the Mil is that it
he looks unconscious while the groom contains appropriations for purposes not tor
cotp mon defense or general welfare, and which
looks remarkably conscious.
The
President pays considerable attention
to bridal parties, evidently remember­ for tbe benefit of the particular localities In
ing the-timo whet, he was a happyand
fortunate groom. Another classpfvis; public money os beyond tbo powers given by
itors axe excursionists by the hundreds. tbe Constitution to Congress and tho x'resiThese and large delegations are rece^v- deuL
.1 feM more bound to withhold my signature
ed in the east room,
There are fre­
quently as many as five hundred peo­ which manifestly would result from this In­
ple in one of these excursions.
Tbe fraction of the Constitution. Appropriations of
member ot Congress whose constituent this nature, to be devoted purely to local ob­
they are, arranges with the President amount.
for their reception. He gets them in
line, mid as they file by the President is to be expended for local Improvement
the member introduces each one. and
In another State, they demand similar benefits
makes lots of votes for the next time.
for themselves, and it Is not unnatural they
The rewards of Stalwart fidelity fol­ should seek to indemnify themselves for such
low each other in rapid successions. use of tbe public funds by securing appro­
priations for slfatllar Improvements In-their
The President nominated to-day for own neighborhood. Thus, as the bill becomes
the vacant mission to Italy bis per­ more objectionable. It secures more support.
This
result is Invariable, and necessarily fob
sonal friend, Mr. W. W. Astor, of New
lows a neglect to observe the constitutional
York. This mission is a very pleasant limitations Imposed upon tbe law-making
and desirable place for a gentleman of power. The appropriations for ri+er and
menus nnd leisure, ns is Mr. Aitor. harbor improvements have, under tbo In­
There were many who cast longing fluences to which 1 have alluded, increased
year by year out of proportion to the progress
glances upon it during tho very pro
traded incumbency of the late Mr. 1870 the aggregate'appropriation was *i,V75,Marsh, and there were several occasions 800; in 1875, •M43.517.5U: in 1880, *3,V7M00, and
InlSBL fILI&amp;IJNQ, while by. tho present act
when he would have been displaced, there is appropriated &gt;18,70^73.
it not been for the powerful influence
While feeling every disposition to leave to
the . Legislature the responsibility of deter­
which was exerted in bis behalf.
The house adopted the resolution of mining what amount should be appropriated
for the purposes of the bill, so long as thu ap­
tho committee on appropriations to ad­ propriations are confined to the objects Indljourn sine die ou Monday.
The differences between the two
Ing power of tbe Government, tbe duty de­
houses on tbe legislative, execution and volves upon mo to withhold my signature
judicial bill were settled to-day. and from tbe bill containing gpproprlatlonj
the bill was sent to the President for which, in my opinion, greatly exceed in
his approval. The principal hitch was
ent fiscal year. It being tbe usage to proride
in regard to tbe occupancy of the 4th
story of the State Department building priatlnn bills, tho President is. in effect, directby the additional clerks, who are to be
within so brief a period that the expend!-,
appointed to harry up the thousands of turo cannot bo made economically and ndvaupension cases under the arrearages of tnjreouily.
•*
An extravagant ex pond I turo of public money
pension act The matter was comprom­
U an evil not to bo measured by tho value of
ised by leaving it to the judgement of that money to the people who are taxed for IL
the Secretary of War. As soon ns the- They sustain a greater injury In the de­
bili is aigned Secretary Teller will make moralizing effect produced upon those who
tbe appointments of 800 additional uro intrusted with official duty through all
the ramifications of tho Government.
clerks provided for.
These objections could be removed and
August.
every constitutional purpose readily obtained
should Congress enact that one-half only of
It is said that a Cuban who has the aggregate amount provided for In the bill
appropriated for expenditure during the
fought five duels to protect his honor be
fiscal year, and that the sum so appropriated
is now in jail for attempting to cheat be expended for only such objects named In
his washer-woman out of three dollars. the bill wi the Secretary of War. under direc­
tion of the President, shall determine, pro
Tbo modern toy pistol is a. sort of vlded that in no cose shall the expenditure for
double Acting contrivance. Theft are
nau-d by tbi- bill for that purpose.
two locks, one of which occasions tbp
1 feel authorized to make this sutgestion
discharge, and the other of which is oc­ because uf the duty impcaed upon the Presi­
casioned by tbe discharge. The sec­ dent by the Constitution to recommend to tho
consideration
of Congress such measures as
ond lock is called lock-jaw.
he shall judge necesaary and expedient, and
Favorable reports from the potato­ because it is my earnest desire that tho public

We Pay Cash For

BUTTER Salt or Unsalted &amp; Eggs.
PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN Lumber!
At Buxton's new brick, have full and complete 1'nes In

FOWLER&amp;INGERSON
Gents f

Goods.

■ Have the largest stock of LUMBER ever laid
down In Nashville.

100,000
Feet kept constantly on band.

If you want something new, neat and nobby, just take a look at our stock of

CUFFS, COLLARS, TIES, HANKERCHIEFS, JEWELRY, ETC.
THE G-EdZEA-T SECRET
------------- IN BUYING, TH TO BUY--------------

Pine Lumber
A specialty
———If you desire fine--------

Finishing Lumber,
Flwriu Criliog. S4«, Stuiliii. J«5t
Or any thing In the building material line, 'aee
our stock, relect what you want, and be happy.

Also Flour. Salt, Shingles,Lath,
and Blacksmith’s Coal,

FOR THE LEAST MONEY,
Remember that we[havejno old, shop-worn and unseasonable goods, but that everything is

For tale at lowest prices.

HIGHEST PRICE PAID FOR

WHEAT, OATS, CORN, ETC.,
. As usual.

W All our purchases are made with the cash and by strict attention to the wants of OU
customers we expect to reap success.
Nashville, Apr. 20,1882.

FOWLER &amp; INGERSON.
Probate Order.

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN.

THE CROWN SEWING MACHINE
The Cut shows the new stand, just perfected and put on tbe market.

growing regions indicate that potatoes
will not be sold in the New York mar­
ket don© up in tissue-paper nnd packed
in ornamental baskets with a box of
French candies and n small bottle of
extra dry.________ _________
Mr. Knute Knutaon, noted through­
out Northern Wisconsin for tbe mag­
A singular case of too disappearance of a
nitude of his feet, has became popular boy. bls supposed death and burial, and sub­
by kicking a wolf to death.
It is ex­ sequent return home alive and hearty has just
been
brought to light here. Willie Wood heal
pected that special trains will have to
U thu hero of the strangb story. Ho is a bright.
be run out of Chicago on the roads Interesting lad, about fifteen years of agv, and
the son of Kellta Woodhead, foreman of tho
lending toward the wolf region.
workshops of the city jail. About the middle
John G. Croft, of Franklin, Pa., a of June Willie one day disappeared, and, al­
bank cashier, speculated in oil, became though tho anxious parents hunted far and
ncar.no traces of tbe absent boy could be
a defaulter and brought disgrace upon found. The grief-stricken mother was al­
his family and reproach upon the most crazed at the loss of her boy.
church of which be was a goodly dea­ Detectives were employed, and they,
after n long search, disco lured that
con. Treasures on earth trouble many WUUc and another boy bad been working Ina
a pi6fessed Christian, more than do atore in Philadelphia, but after staying there a
treasures laid up beyond the cares and week they bad disappeared again. As ho had
run away from home, some of hU companions
toils of thia world.
said be bad gone out on the plains to hunt buf­
falo. The father, thinking that bls wayward
Clark, a Chicago drunkard, beat hu&gt; eon might possibly bare gone to Bristol, their
wife with his wooden leg, and was seni old home, went there, and bis sister showed
to jail for ten days. - The prison was him a paragraph cut Crom a paper of Johns­
crowded, audrthe convict* were doubl­ town. Pa., about a boy who ha.1 been killed by
the oa*a. Tne clothing "nd entire dcacrlption
ed in the cells. Clark’s companion was answered that of young Woodbwl. The
Prindell. a man verging ou infinity. father went to Johnstown, showed tbo Cor­
Clark related hi* crime to hl* compan­ oner a photograph of bls son. and was told
that the boy who was killed and buried was
ion, i^t the leg in a corner, went to certainly the original of the picture. Tbo re­
sle«p#aud snored continuously. The mains were exhumed, and, though very much
snoring crazed Prindell, and he killed

The pastor of St. Chrysoatoo’s church
Philadelphia, lately parted with a
dollar which for two yean acted as a
detective of imposture. During that
time he offered the coiu to 118 starving
men. who had tried iu vain to obtain
work, according to their own stories, if
they would remove a heap of gravel
from hia bock yard. One and all dew bro he u ready to
dlnetl the job, tlmujrb it would not
hare taken more than an hour.
The
imk l&lt;-er»r &gt;U-C.pu&gt;i U&gt;. olhr .nd th.

tlrfjnhihig, Evert
; -vrhreil except thure

BOOTS AND SHOES

COBWIN GAKMSBR asd ANNA GARDNEB,

NoUm Is hereby given that I •boll sell at public

ELMIRA K, WIAK8. nrlnor
Notice i.bwrhy given thatlahsll •»« •» P«W*«
a&amp;otioc to the M«h«s Uddor. oa
HM4ay,tH3tlh4sr'f AwgaaU

the funeral. Last Friday morning. Ut&gt;wi ver.
M Mr*. Woodbowl was walking along Ccotral
avenue she* wm startled by what ut firet app.'!.rrd to be tbe apparition of her dead son.

A. D.1M4 at un o’clock te tb.forejx»a. »x **•

YOUNS MEN

M Kata Brri Mwe
Na»h»IH«,Wlch.

HARVEST.
•kx can to found at

Glasgow's.

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                  <text>ORND STRONG,}
EDITOR AMD PROPRIETOR.

I

VOLUME IX.

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun.

(

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, AUGUST 19,'1882.

hesitated when Hoffinan started the
HE IS A POT.
hymn, singing it and another in a tol­
On Monday last John J. Putter, edi­
And Her Environs.
erable clear voice,but in just two hours
tor of the defunct Bugle, with indomit­
from the time be prophesied, he was
YOUR EAR, GENTLE READER.
able cheek, but a sorrowful counten­
dead. His throat had swollen up simu You that are indebted to The Nashville lar to a case of mumps, and inside it ance, and a copy each of The News
Nawa, listen l Paper, ink and printers' help, was coated with a black substance to and Olio paraded Main street the live­
long day making a shameful exhibit of
his mouth. Evidently blood-poisoning
we must j&gt;ay bur debts; conroquently. we
biaignorance and narrow-mindedness.
had set in.
The reason of John’s actions are these.
—In his discourse on “games of For the past four months we have been
tloc out of your first wheat money.
Don’t forget it! -Don't forget it I
chances,” last Sunday evening, Rev. very busy building a home, as our
We place this Item conspicuously so that Mr. Newton, while holding that there
friends are aware, and have not paid
no patron can mtoa it, and shall expecta prompt was nothing wrong in tho games them.as much attention to our business as is
remittance.
selvee—that there was no such thing as our wont. Last week we were unusu­
Onxo Btsoxo.
evil per te—concluded, first, that games ally bu y outside, giving only two days
—Ti* well nigh useless for farmers of chance with which gambling was attention to our paper. A couple of
to bring their grown wheat to mill, as ordinarily connected should not be tol. items were copied from the Olio with­
the millers
'
tber buy nor,grind it. erated because of the demoralizing in­ out credit and as both papers arc print­
et in the fluence of their associations, and sec­ ed from brevier type of the same man­
. —The fire
town hall hereafter,the' City Father* ond, that the continuous playing of any ufacture as any printer can tee, there
games of chance had an unsettling and -was a similarity—the same as there
having accorded them the use of
weakening instead of resting and would bo in the gallon of kerosene oil
it free gratis.
strengthening effect on the mind. or the pound of sugar that comes from
—D. C. Griffith has purchased a Char­
—How peculiar some people are ! H. rival merchants, even though said oil
lotte steam heat evaporator, and will
M. Lee was suddenly prostrated by ill­ or sugar lie measured in different meas­
have the same in operation in Russell's
ness while on the street, Wednesday, ures.
•
building in a short time.
and Brit. Hoag said to Geo. Morgan,
Potter believing that the Oliq was the
—Justice Killen’s countenance is whose team was hitched near by, "Let
cause of his failure as a newspaper
more dolorous now than ever, for on me take your rig and take him home.”
maker, naturally noticed the similarity
Tuesday A. BL Flint, with whom he
Permission was given, and being in n and yelpt "Eureka” in a doleful ton&lt;‘,
has been officing, ejected him ns a nuis­
hurry Hoag unsnapped the rum strap and being chuck, ram, jam-full of con­
ance.
from the horse, leaving it hanging to ceit paraded himself around town like
—The fire laddies were ont with their the post, and started. Soon a woman as though be owned the place.
uniforms'all on and their belts buckled came along with a baby in her arms,and
Some of our men bluffed John, more
tight, Wednesday evening, to show walking up to the post antied the laughed at hiin.and a few accorded him
their skill. Judging by the exhibition, i strip, while Morgan standing by look
a little wishy-a-washy sympathy, of
it’s of pretty good quality.
ed on in wide-eyed wonder
Tucking which he stood badly in need, but not
—Tbe Baptist Sunday school, to the । the strap down behind tbe baby, tbe receiving enough to satisfy his babyish
number of forty, enjoyed a picnic at ■ woman walked od.
But Morgan con- needs,althougb out* dose was givenfrom
nn.
------- r .u„ Lake
..
Thornapple
on Thursday. Bort
Lw.. . eluded that be wanted that strap a lit­ an alopathy standpoint, John rushed
riding, swinging, playing croquet and I tle while longer, and overtaking her, into print in the Vt. Ville Hawk and
eating cake was the program of the I said she might as well give it to him. Hastings Banner for relief. As both of
“La yes!” she ejaculated. “I thought the papers mentioned arc edited by
day.
novices at the business—men. who are
—The village council on Tuesday Td find an owner for it."
—The professors satai the hotel table, fearfully jealous of the News’ prosper­
evening appointed Dr. W. H. Aylsworth health officer of the village. He and one said to the other, "Let’s see, ity, they slobbered with Pot.
John, however, overdone the matter
began his duties immediately, and has when wns it you taught at Hasting. F
proceeded with then; this week with “In ’59 and '60 ” came the reply. "Well as be usually doesand busted his argu­
the air of one who means to do what he didn’t you find the school pretty badly ment, by having the objectional item
run down,” continued the questioner, set up twice to illustrate his point,
he has to do, well.
—The report was rife upon our streets and he smiled a little. “Yes it was in which virtually defeated it, as the item
Next
. .... was
...... set up twice in
... Nashville.
-...OU.IUV,
i.VA*
yesterday that a certain Nashvillian pretty bad shape,” said tbe other. "You
see the scholars threw the teacher who I time John you should give tho Banner
who had attended the fireman’s tourna­
ment, the day previous, had fallen a was there the year before me out . folks more concise instructions so that
victim to the festive pick-pocket to the doors, the attendance dropped off. and they will "lift” instead of "re-set;”
tune of *500, but we were assured that the whole school ran down.” Professor meantime let some one be ready to
No. 1 and bis friend laughed a little and sympathize with John, for his feelings
the report was false.
the conversation dropped for a moment, are still nil harrowed up by the thonght
—Through the efforts and influence
when the party of the second part re­ that the Olio beat bitn, and next week
of Congressman Lacey, Assyria, Maple
marked to his questioner, " Let’s see, he will be slobbering as bad as ever.
Grove and Lacey will now have a tri­
you taught at Hastings once, didn’t
weekly mail instead of a semi-weekly
youf
” “Yes,” said the man from-Ypsi­
as before. iPeople who live along this
THE TEACHERS' INSTITUTE.
lanti, “I preceded you. I remember
route can appreciate this special favor
the boys were a little boisterous, but”—
shown them by Mr. Lacey.
But the party of the second part chang- •
The state teachers’ institute for this
—Tho suit brought by Mrs. F. Apple­ ed the subject.
: county, which commenced a fire-clays
man against C. F. Wilkinson to gait,
session here on Monday. haa not been
posession of a luiu.e rented to him.
TEE PRINTER'S VISION.
largely attended, because many of the
which was being tried as we went to
It was a dull day in the printing of­ district schools are now in session and
press last week, was decided in his
farmers teams, by which numbers must
favor. On Monday Mrs. Appleman fice.
The editor bad gene to the city; the come, h'.ve had more pressing engage­
had him re-arrested on a like charge,
farmers were busy ; the town was quiet. ments in a different direction. The lo­
but the matter was amicably adjusted
The printing office had not bad a caller cal interest, however, haa been pood,
and Wilkinson has moved out.
and through Ahe arrangements of Miss
—“Got any wheat in the elevator,” all the afternoon, and the dull, dark
Hindmarch, the local committee, the
asked a News man of Mr. Brooks, Wed­ cold day was drawing to a close.
But at last the monotonous dick of visiting teachers have been pleasantly
nesday night. “Yes a little with legs
entertained.
,
on,” replied he; “but we're not buving the type was interrupted by laughing
Tho list of those in attendance, with
any. We bonght a bagful to see if we voices in the stairway, and soon three
their
entertainers,
is
as
follows:
could clean it, but ’twas no use.” How­ smiling, blushing young ladies stood in
Chas. Williams. Jennie Williams, at
ever, farmer* may get a crumb of com­ the door. Seeing no one below, they
MrA M. E. Miller's; Emma Walker,
fort from the fact that the Detroit naturally enough cast their glances
Pcrly Eddy, at J. 8. Harder’s ; Edna
toward
the
sky
light
—
to
the
little
board of trade talks of establishing a
Havens, Mina Mudge, at F. C. Boise’s ;
special grade for grown wheat, which "heaven” where the printers while their
Ella Powers, Agnes Dean, at Mrs. O.
time
away
—
and
courageously
asked
if
will give it a market value.
M. Yale,; Helen Mill., Vina iloffman,
they wanted some news.
—Merer*. Fowler A Ingerson have the
Ths best looking compositor seemed at Dell Durham’s ; Diana ‘Payne, Belle
following advice* in regard to grown
suddenly filled with life. "Of course,” Mathews, Maude Brown, at J. E. Bar­
wheat: "Rejected wheat, to arrive.was
be quickly answered, and skipped down ry’s ; Flora Morgan, Emma Newell, at
offered but could not get a bid. Prob­
the stairway in double quick time. Geo. Gallatin’s; Clara Ketcham, Letha
ably if offered at 50c would not sell to
Then the spokesyoungwoman of the McCartney, at Mrs. Mina Wickham’s;
any extent, a fact which shippers will
Teressa Chance, at Chas. McMore’s;
trio said:
do well to Dote. Briefly, wet wheat
“Why, what we want to tell you is Mary E. Wilcox, at Mrs. Chipman’s:
should not be consigned at all. If farm­
that somebody stole some honey from Amanda Gsrlinger, at Albert Lentz’s ;
er* will persist in threshing it let them
us—from Friend Soules and Mr. Ware— Elsie Elarton, at E. W. Deriar’s ; Belle
keep it and cure it as beat they may.
last night, and we know who they were, Mitchell, at Mrs- Herb* .Wairath's ;
They have been amply advised that
Henrietta Witte, at James Clay’s ; Kinand—.”
tbe grain will do better in the straw
“Well, who were they,” interrupted nie Merritt, nt C. J. Cole’s; Stella
for a month or twc.”
Wheeler, at L. J. Wheeler’s, Olive
the comp.
—Full one quarter of the wheat crop
"Well I guess we won't say anything Clark, at Nathan Hoskin’s; Katie Mayo,
is still standing in the fields. Some
about "that this time; but its some at Mrs. Wm. Bargees’; Fannie Blair,
farmers are unbinding the sheave* and
young fellows out there and we know Carrie Griffith, Tillie M. Brigga Mary
thus trying to get it sufficiently dry to
who they are, and you can just say E. Guy, Lecta Fnrniss, Ota Wheeler.
•tack or thresh. Joljn Gatchere, living
-that if they want their names in the Bertha Wood, Alice Phillips, Mrs. Mary
north of the state road haa five acres
paper, all they’ve got to do is to Kellogg, Esther McMore, Helen Allen,
that ho will burn up where it is, if it
’ trouble our bee-hires again,” and a Mattie Hind march, Lydia Powers, Myrever get* dry enough, for jt is not- Joan-of-Are look of resignation and tie Myers, Mrs. E. W. Deriar, Mrs. W.
worth the expense of drawing. Some1 heroism shone out of the maiden's S. Powers, Messrs. Hickcock, T. M.
fields that were capped have suffered brown eyes.
Brady, C. W. Sloaaon, Thos. Daniels,
but little damage. Farmer* will take1
“How much honey did they get,*' W. J. Marble, W. E. Martin, Elmer
good care of their wheat next year.
asked.the disciple of Franklin. “Oh Moore, R. E. Ehret, H. W. Smith, Geo.
Locking tbe stable after the
is1 I can’t tell—not very much though, I Mosey, W. 8. Myers, B, 8. Holly, Byron
stolen, you know.
guess,—and they’ll get leas next time, Willison, A. Carr, Geo. Lee, D. S. Lee:
* —A SD-year-oid son of Jacob Hoff­ for *®J®,FOt the cover* nailed down. I
The program in detail it is needless
, noticed this morning that the covers
man, living in the south-west corner of were off, and I went to put them back,” to give. Suffice it to say that under the
Maple Grove, died suddenly from dipb- she continued; “but the bee* were aw­ conductorship of Prof. Hall, with the
theria on Wednesday. He was taken ful mad and stunt me dreadfully be­ assistance of Profs. W. 8. Perry of Ann
tick, with two other children, on Mon­ fore I could get aWay.” and she show­ Arbor, and Austin George of Ypsilanti,
ed a fair white ariJ all covered with
day. On Wednesday he sent for a
all principal branches of the curriculum
■ beestings.
Touched with pity, the compositor have been touched, and in an original
neighbre, H. Blake, teiiiag him he was।
todie in tsro boar* hnd reqaret- rowed that the item should go in : and and sensible manner that cannot but
with prof used thanks the bright visions
vanished, leaving the printer* again have bad a beneficial effect on all earn­
alone with the monotonous click of the est listeners. The two specially notice­
type.
able features of the instruction have

LIFE IH NASHVILLE

| TERMS: $1.50 per Year

been the enforcement by Uiustration of
the value of intelligent objective teach­
ing, and the thorough effort that has
been made to reach the real needs of
the district schools, as well as to bet­
ter prepare teachers for their work.
The organization and management of
schools, and tbe best methods of teach­
ingcommon branches, have been main­
ly considered, and every opportunity
has been given teachers to obtain the
information they so much need to make
district schools successful.
Tbe lecture on Education and Man­
ual Lal»or, by Prof. Perry, Wednesday
evening, was thoroughly sensible and
pertinent to the needs of the times.
Quoting tbe reqiark that all previous
civilizations had&lt;ai!ed in that they de­
graded instead of uplifting labor, he
said that tbe extensive introduction of
machinery had destroyed the appren­
tice system in which the laborers grew
broad and strong in mind and body to­
gether, and bad subdivided labor until
men themselves were little more than
machines—simply machine guiders,
with little or no opportunity to learn a
trade thoroughly. Thus the lalroring
man is dwarfed, and forced to stay ignornnt. and on account of ignorance
sinks to tbe bottom and is ground down

the village, settling up their organ bus­
iness here.
Frank Baker has a new shoemaker—
Dewitt Mosher of Detroit
An adjourned quarterly M. E. con­
ference occurs Auguni 34th.
Wells or cisterns, which? is the
question before the council.
But then, ifjgood wheat is leas in
quantity it will be better in price.
The M. C. IL R. pay car distributed
its favors along the line Tuesday.
‘
John Knegie and mother, of Jackson
are the guests of John Heckatborn.
The Christain Sunday school will
picnic^at Thornapple Lake on the 29th.
Miss Helen Kelley of Grand Rapids
visited at S. 3. Ingerson’s on Thursday.
Miss Grace Potter of Maple Grove, is
spending a few days with Miss Edith
Fleming.
Will Justice Killen now hold his court
where the fellow in the story had his
office—under his hat f
Some probationers are to bo taken
into full communion with the M. E.
society a week from to-morrow.
Herbert BI. Lee. and one or two
others of our millionaires, are getting
I in their wheat and sweating this week,
I
Delly Fowler presents The News
j with a pail of "Beauties of Hebron”

only to liecomo discontented and rise
in strikes. The intelligent laborer is
ulwavs at a premium over the ignorant
one; apd since the destruction of the
apprentice system has to a great extent
cut off the chance to become an intelli-

j
(
|
|

|

LOCAL GIBELE-GABBLE

*1.75.

NUMBER 48.
VERMONTVILLE.

Geo. Lamb U about to open a slock of dothIng.
Mr». E. Rawson la rcrr low with • lung dif­
ficult v.
The health of Mr. E. W. Hyde is again pre­
carious.
Ripe peaches have appeared in this market
from Ann Arbor.
Frank Loomis haa commenced the walls for
a brick block 00 x.110 feet. He abowa hU faith
by hi* works.
|
N. C. Bodine, Dr. Green and wife. Dr. Par­
menter and others have returned from their
trip to northern Michigan.
Mr. Gilea Gaylord ha ■ purchased the entire
stock of agricultural implement* owned by
Loomia A Lamb. Bo bays street rumor.
The teacher* engaged fof the coming session
&lt;&gt;&lt; school are Miss Bloomberg of Grand Ledge,
Miss Hattie Curtis and Mba Colley of this
place.
Mrs. Patrick Dooling haa returned from Ann
Arbor, where she was undergoing treatment
for sore eyes. Though some better they are
far from being well.
Mr. Henry Southwell haa refrained from intoxi^aatz ever since his proclamation tn the
Hawk, sometime last winter or spring. Everytxxrydt^leligbted- It can be done.
Dr. Parmenter says he went troql fishing with
Al’a Hart, and caught nineteen trout. Farth­
er advices state that Alva caught eighteen and
the doctor one. They did not cat them in the
Occasional.
potatoes; and they are beauties, too. same proportion.
The Methodist pulpit will be oocuITS STAR STILL ASCENDING.
pitd on Sunday by Rev. H. W. Hughe*,
Ina recent call upon Mr. W. II. McAllister,
morning,and Rev. J. S. Harder, even­
366 Front 8L. general agent for the sale of the
ing.
Star Chewing Tobacco, he thus spoke to one of
A large number attended the fireour reporters: “I was tortured with pain from
man's tournment at Charlotte, 31 ex­ acute rheumatism, and cared not whether I
cursion tickets being sold hero on lived or died. 1 tried St. Jacobs OU—just two
applications of which entirely cured me."—
Thursday.
■*«u Francisco Call.
'Miss Mary Lee of Woodland is tak­
_ LOCAL MATTERS,
ing painting lessons of Mrs. A. D.
Newton, stopping with her brother H.
Mason Fruit Can* and Slone Prc»erve
Jug* at
'
C. C. Smith's.
M. Lee.

gent laborer by that means, some other
way must lie furnished, and the public
school is that way. The public schools ’
are largely responsible for the discon- '
tent of labor, for their tendency is to
make men professors instead of intelli­
gent laborers, which they should be,
for agriculture and manufactures are
J. H. Ludington. M. D., of Sand
tbe foundation on which the super­ Lake, lias located in the village, hav­
structure of trade and the professions ing rented the old Parametier house,
rest. The studies of the school should for the practice of his profession.
John'* a vapor,
change with the changed needs of so­
Fall of woes;
ciety. The schools should by no means
Starts a paper,
be turned into workshops, but the in­
Up he goes.
struction given should be ns directly
Theodore Harry, a well-know n and
adapted to the needs of the mechanical
enterprising youna farmer of north
urtisars as to the needs of the profes­
sions. He wonld greatly increase the Castleton, was presented with a twelve
pound sou on Thursday afternoon.
attention paid to drawing, chemistry,
Mother and child doing well.
and like studies.
The lecturer was
The ladies of the Bl. E. church will
listened to by a large and intelligent
entertain their next social at Mr. 1. N.
audience.
Kellogg A Co.'s furniture rooms, on
On Thursday evening n full bouse
listened attentively to a lecture on Tbe south Blain street. Wednesday eve;
Art of Illustration by Prof. George. Aug. 24. A cordial invitation is extend­
While not on a subject of as vital im­ ed to all.
Messrs. E. H. Mallory. S. S. Ingersoll,
portance as the lecture of Wednesday
evening, it was unusually entertaining, H. M. Lee, E. Parady, F. McDerby, W.
and would have been more so could the N. DeVine, John Reagle, Geo. Norton,
professor have had a blackboard.
Ar ।| Minor Mead, and N. F. Sheldon attendthe republican county
abstract would do it no sort of justice. I1ed
------—■ con /ention at
delegates
Prof. George has shown all through I «"*»»**
Wednesday
the institute more than ordinary ability from
frnm this
* ’* township.
w«
*»-

to en terUlin as well as to instruct,
and leaves behind him a favorable inipression. At the close of the meeting
Prof. Hall, whonecondjict of the insti­
tute has been very happy, returned
thanks for the various accotfimodations
shown the teachers and the institute as
a whole. The institute closed at 12:30
Friday.
A warm word of praise deserves to be
said for thn music furnished during tbe
institute, for which credit is due main­
ly to Rev. F. A. Bissell, under whose
leadership it was prepared. It was of
a very high order and finely executed.
Besides a solo Wednesday evening by
Mr. Bissell, and a duett Thursday eve­
ning by Mr. Bissell and Miss Stella
Wheeler, of Hastings, both very fine,
choruses were rendered by the follow­
ing choir: Rev. Bissell, Dr. Barber, S.
D. Hawthorn, Misses Ota and Stella
Wheeler, and Bertha Wood, Mrs. C.
W. Smith, Mrs. C. W. Granger and
Mrs. T. Brady, Misses Fannie Blair and
Belle Truman have acted as organists.

Credit Subscription*

COMMON COCNOIL PEOOEEDINGSCouxcn. Rooms,
i
Nashville. Aug. 14, 1382. )
Regular meeting.
Present, Chipman, President ; Barber. Bolre,
Dickinson, Demaray, Lee and Lentz.
The following accounts were presented and
on motion allowed by ayca and nay* aa follow*:
Ayes, Boise, Dickinson, Demaray, Lee and
Lentz; naya none.
r. McDerby

Clark Rathlxirn .
Sid Koeber ..............
Fowler A Ingcrson .
Motion by Lee that thcTreaaurer be io*trad­
ed to transfer &gt;335.68 from the Incidental
fund to school fund. Motion carried by ayes
and nay* as follows.
Ayes, Boise, Dickinson Demaray, Lee and
Lentz. Nays none.
Motion by Lee that the President appoint a
committee of three to look up a suitable loca­
tions for engine house, the committee to re­
port at next meeting the aise of building need­
ed and probable coat of same.
Motkm carried by ayes and nays as follows:
I Ayes, Boise, Dickinson, Demaray, Lee and

i

Lancia Brady is in town.
New wheat moves slowly.
The blackberry crop is immense.
Oh, who will care for Killen now f
The roof is on Dr. Young’s residence.

The President appointed a* such committeec
Lee, Barber and Demaray.
OrxH/.r. I'f
■ i *. ■■ that
I. —
—company have_
Motion
by O
Barber
that •the
fire
the use of town hall for meetings, Ac.
Motion carried by ayes and naya as follows:
Ayes, Barber, Boise, Dickinson, Demaray,

SELECT SCHOOL.
A Select School will be held in district No 2,
lit noted at the center of Castleton, commenc­
ing September 4th, and continuing eight week*.
Any who deiire a thorough review before tbe
fall ex unination of teacbera, will find it prof­
itable to attend this school. Tuition 33 cento
per week.
Mixa Mcdoe, Tzachxm.
1
.
1

A Mtond-hand one-horse Buggy for sale
L. J. Wn*«.*B*a

t

FOR SALE
A 7-yeor-old bay mare, good heft, perfectly
gentle^ work dovble or single. C. L. Glasgow.
WANTED’

i
।

100 cord* of two foot wood.
Will pay cash.
■
J. Lkxtz dr Soh’b

W Call and see the beat etock. of BooU and
Shoe* for the price. In Nashville, at
WHKZUUt'S.

GREAT BARGAINS.
In Summer Clothing and all kind* of General
Merchandise for twenty day* at Giuxuu’t.

ty The highcMt market price paid for But­
ter and Eggs in Caah at
Whkklzk’s.
MONEY TO LOAN,
!
| On Real Estate aflow rate of interest of
Lkz &amp; Dtnuw
LOST.
A promiMory note for &gt;70. from Price dt
Brown to C. F. Wilkinaoo. Pleaae return to
thU office.

UOOK IN
At the new ten cent ttore In the Ree«e building.
A large’Belection of Tin Ware, embracing Cof­
fee Pot*. Pai la. Dipper*. Baalna, Pana, Tina,
Cupa, etc.; Gla*a Ware, Silver Ware, Caatora,
Camp Chair*, Bruabeo, Hoae, Notion*, and oth­
er article* too num«n&gt;us to mention. One
hundred useful article* selling tor ten cent*,
fully worth 23. Come in, l&lt;x&gt;k at my »tock,aak
prices and you will buy.
I. F. Makbpxac*.

tW Sewing and fitting nt lowest prices by
Mas. A. D. Vanxocxbb, over Daughter? store.
LAST CALL.
AU parties owing me on account or note
are hereby notified that if their indebtedness U
not paid by the 1st of Sept, next, I shall con­
sider thev don’t intend to pay meandthall take
the nivrsaorv t4e;» to eouect the ba me. I mean
just what I ray.
D. C. G bi with.
ty Regular tweniy-doUsr Summer Sult*,
marked down to &gt;16, to closeout, at

_____ Gbaxg bb’s.

“VINEGAR”
Pure Cider Vinegar by the barrel or gallon,
H. R. Dickibbon.
at

•*- Cash paid tor frveh Butter
L. J. Whbklbb'n.

LINEN DUSTERS
For Ladle* and GeutF men reduced to Coat
U &lt; bwc out, at
GkXxgbbs.
A FEW THOUSAND DOLLARS
Tb Loan on good Baal Estate security.
Lbb A Dubxzk.

BRICK? BRICK?’
Motion by Boise that the President appoint
I bare on hand about 300,006 Brick whidt 1
a committee/of three to ascertain what 100
A new roof is being put on the Barry barrel cistern* can be built for, and also about want to dona out this fall. Parties wanttali
brick come and ace me. Also a quantity ai
building.
bow many will be needed to supply the village Tile.
46-50
Wm. BB*tjx.
The glass fronts for the new block
LOOK HERE!
have arrived.
Motion carried by ayes and nay* as follow*;
On and after July 1*1, 1863, owing to tin
The oar factory resumes operations
great downfall tn stock 1 will make F^cea it
Monday morning.
d.c old reliable madutaafollows: CbMccwal)
On
motion
Dr.
Ayteworth
was
appointed
fatted
Beef from 6 to 1&gt;W eta., per lb. OCb*&gt;
A. R. Wolcott is clerking at Ains­
meats in ;xoporUon. Call and sec the di*
worth’s grocery.
play.
____ ______
________ hTSob.
naya as follows.
C. Ainsworth and wife visited at Bat­
FARMERS,
HEBE!
tle Creek this week,
I ne Maple Gram m
Several Naahvilleites pityticed at
Motion by Barber that the council borrow fire or exchange jour grial
We guarantee muaf*....______
Thornsppie yesterday.
lug repaired I he mil!; and It is x w
Mia* Della Cotant, of Hastings, is vis­
follows:
iting Nashville friends.
“Mankin’s great palace show.” show­
WANTED-BOABD
ed up here last night.
1883Jfe. Vanghan.
v augnaa. general traveling Aug.F.17th,
E. Chipman,
McDbbbt,

agent of Roe Steven* of Detroit i* in'

�CABIN tors SONG.
|L Iatan to ms. harkitw.

,bec*xne *uh«dlary to higfter ne • is. Tbe
oon*ci«iro&lt; ;ni.I rewhrte will applied to
one pha»r of
life have ai-H-asibly
ennoble! and Strengthened' the whole
character, anil small as were th* begin­
ning* there* »* incalcn'ubie gain in the
end. If prttlH.'fity conics there is Ims
chance of iMwfnging with it the selbdinesss and in^'tisibillty to others'
needs often f-&gt;und in its train. If it
fails at least th« higher prosperities reA»God live*. I» permanent.'*

Her bead is like de full moon.
Her Bpis sweet as a cherry;
Her fUrrud'n inmorus lookin -Hlas*
vfls wht.au'pearly;
la bright ai a Uxbtnin’-bux,
&gt;i-h.,'r '• ‘rn-ixlnourtv.

Out of all the drudgftjg discipline ths
soul may come liner and truer for such
labor, and the day of small th ugs mean
a final and fuller capacity fur the lufin­
ite.—Oar Continent.

The Modern Auuse of the Hair.

The recent methods of dressing the
hair, both by piling on the head large
:
quantities qf dead hair with its more or
less iniurious contact, the stiffening of
Ef Mtn would dr&gt;be m« 'bn
bands into position, with too free use
Fouke to be n tuUsMdip
of glutinous cosmetics, and the altera­
Kf Me* would act me out!
tion of color by "the application of
strong aikalies and other agencies, have
lu thlanln' out do oom:
produce t uu effect at last, after the
3be made my fee tin's flnttcrato.
fashion ms, in a measure gone by; by a
deterior-dion of the hair on women's
heads that makes a striking difference
between tresses ns they were thirty
Jears ago and as they arc now.
The
ead has become so heated, tho scalp
rifE LAWS.OF SPENDING.
has become so irritated, the hair bulbs
it would seem as if. whcn tho iu?oiuo and glands have become so irritated
had been earned! no law^rffnulil bo al­ by dhemicals, that it is wonderful tho
lowed to limit m/ebeck the direction in result should not be oven more destrap*'
whi-.'li it should g \ and yet the most law­ live than it has been. It is fortunate
less are bound, and in spite of them­ that the fancy for all these injurious
selves have to meet certain obligations ways and means toward beauty was ar­
entailed by the very fact of possessing an rested before the whole generation of
income. Chafe as one may tho actual women became bald-headed. And as
.nooMsitica of daily life are inexorable, it is, fully half of them have a crt»wn
and die who would have a quiet mind where tho hair straggles thinly over a
for work &lt;&gt;r enjoyment must plan for painfully blushing skim
skin, have partings
them wisely. Here, as in everything . that assume in their frightened eyes, a&lt;
else, tbe lair, recognized ns just and Ithey look in the glass, the proportions
accepted deliberately and with clear °f the gales of Gaza, and have b stub­
consciousness of
of what
what such
such accept
accept-­ tie of short, win-, coarse growth, inconsciousness
ance implies, ceases to be a burden, and clinod to'bruttlc up. and giving an in­
bec-mies rather an inspiration and stim­ finity of trouble to keep in decent or­
der, ezpeciallv when it is desired to
ulus to continued and witter effort.
The law* of spending are simple, and wear the hair low.
Much of this is duo to a loss of vigorous
yet con'usion reigns in many homes be­
cause they have never been presented circulation in the scalp, whether occa­
clearly enough to compel understanding sioned by the deleterious methods
and action. The same wise man quoted above mentioned or bv any other
in a former pajwr on "Earners and means. For the scalp, when in a heal­
Spenders” defined them as "the law of thy slate, is soft and thick and warm,
choice, the law of amount and the law with goodly blood-vessels able to afford
of method," and though different ar­ ample nourishment from which secre­
rangements could easily be made there tion shall be elaborated, and space for
is no better summary for tho spender of tho working of all that delicate ma­
chinery which exists at the roots of the
any income, large or small?
The " law of clioice” has a comforta­ hair. 'As tho circulation decreases, the
ble sound, seeming to pnt one at once scalp spreads, so to say, the glands and
on an independent fooling, yet when capsules are unable to'fullill their func­
definition ia attempted is simply that tions, and the state arrives which we
as we cannot have everything we have just described. Or, again, tho too
must give up some tilings for the sake free use of pomade* and dressings
of having others."'
Then arises the causes the head to catch dust, exclude*
question of what to give up, and here hair, clogs the perspiratory pores, re­
comes in one of the greatest differences laxes tbe skin, and deranges all its pro­
in capacity., nuiuag both men and cesses: while, in addition, the oils nre
women, shat of seeing tilings in their frequently rancid, however the rancid­
true order. For. many, great things are ity may b* disguised by perfumes, and
mode altrayu to wait on little things, w'hep this i* tlie case tte*y corrode and
and the svnalk-rt accident is xuflieient to 1 Iritate cvevTthfag, and change the nor■ spoil a day nad raeke c whole family roal production of scurf to an excess
uncomfortable ;yid unhappy. '•So in ex- ! Viat-necomes disease.
I Mko to chop &lt;&gt; 'looker natc
Wld Max rig'ht cl
iHmind
rd like to 1H’ -•' backwwu m

jiendltnn*, a sjpaK need is allowed to
The most consumating insult and in­
rise up and dwarf far gtvater ones. The jury to the hair, that of dyeing it, it
law. and the only law Uiat can hinder seems hardly necessary to mention, a*
auch disaster, is a distinction possible bleaching has gone so entirely out of
for all. •• that things which end wholly fashion that that peculiar form of ruin
or’ mainly ia privileges for the body is not likely soon to be generally- re­
should be fintted in favor of things repeated, and gray hair has come to bo
which tend to the higher joys of mind so much admired that dyes to disguise
and heart.
the gravness are not resorted to by any­
Self-indulgence has grown to be so body of taste. A beautiful young woman
much a part of our easy and prosperous of our acquaintance .some years ago had
American life that we are very apt to an experience by means of this puison.resent
................
... of ending ..
the necessity
it even in ous custom thnt’will hardly be shared
Blight degree. Yet often a good might 1 by any generation to come. Accustomed
:.u —
— -.t
be accomplished —
with
ease
if -------------we wereto admiration of beauty, her dislike of
willing to do without some small luxury. n few gray hairs drove’ her to the use of
A set of books, a picture, a micioscope, a dye, and as she continued it- from day
anything earnestly desired by some to day with gentle applications fo^som’e
one in the family to
whom
its years, she had tho satisfaction of seeing
possession
would
?ucan
progress her beauty to all effect unimparied. and
in a larger intellectual or spiritual had not "the remotest idea that the
life, could often be had if some work of silvering was all the time
table luxury were set aside.
Cake, going on with fearful celerity under
for instance,' or desert* on any day but the dye, and that every day increased
Sunday, could be dispensed with, with the ravages iu the dark color of
no real loss in comfort or health, and her lo.'ks, if the truth were known. But
their cost will be found a large portion frecuent and violent lieailaches at last
of the weekly table expenses. To go made her physician and her husband
without is not agreeable, and yet with positively command her to cease the
HiniiedlncdniP this fa one certain m«aus dyeing, and to cleanse her hair thor­
of obtaining many covoted, and unless oughly of the dyos. She went with her
one will go without, unattainable pos- detergent* into'the rather dark bathing­
room. where there was no mirror, as it
•essions.
The "law of amount” is even more chanced, and spent an hour or two in
binding, and implies not only "Live the process of washing and scouring,
within'vour income,” blit *• Live so far aud at length came out into the light,
within it ns th save something every pausing before a mirror as she did *o.
year.” It is the fashion to sneer of That first glimpse of herself was a hor­
small savings and economies, a fashion rible revelation: sho had gone into the
that makes us one of the matt lavish , room a dark-haired beauty in the guise
Nations on the face of tbe earth, yet the of youth; the woman in the mirror had
only road to real independence lies here. the long gray hair of age falling round
And because money will be spent for her white face. The sudden change
many things, each one of which stand­ was too much for her tried and tired
ing alone teems perfectly reasonable, nerves, and she fell in a dead faint on
and yet sums up m the total as ruinous the floor. It is fortunate for others that
extravagance, the final law becomes the fashion of gray hair fa likely to save
them the blow of so sudden a’ change
most essential of alL
The "law of method” then, meaning from the appearance of youth to that of
not only the accurate keeping of ac­ ^e.—Harper&gt;t Bazar.

counts. but* a fixed determination be­
forehand just how much shall be spent,
is the final essential of all incomes. It
fa not easy to settle upon what are essen­
tials and what non-essentials. Still 1«m
is it easy to decide before experience
has given the necessary lessons just
what portion must go for food, fuel,
light, eteta And because food at least fa
bought with leas calculation than any
■ other household neoesaity there is a
txn nhir belief that calculation is impaesibW. Where it is attempted nu !m-

akimpineaa raenu to attach itself at
«ce. Even when tho calculation is
made there is constant temptation to
break through the self-imposed bounds.

feeling a

"There goes a lucky man.” raid D».
Rus.* to me the other day, as a finelydressed Rnd rather fine-looking gentle­
man passed us on tbe street.
"Who is he?” I asked.
"Ufa name is Hill, his home is in the
neighboring town of W—,” replied tbe
doctor. "Several years ago Hili’« fa­
ther died, leaving to him and two elder
brothers considerable property.
This
son was the prodigal and soon wasted
hi* share by dfasipatton. Hte brothers,
respectable men, were »o ashamed by
this man's conduct that they offered him
81.O90 if he would leave and promise to
never return. Hill took the money and
Sve the promise and went to Leadville.
•L After looking around for a few
days he fell in with an old miner, wbu
। nrojiosed that the twain go prospecting.
They went and m&gt;ou • struck it rich.’
Hill sold bis share for •50.UM). came
fault to W—. paid hi* brother* the
that thereby be was
• not return,
invested hb

•u» thus related iu

that wore killed were lifted out of the
l/ara-yord, carried sixty rods, and *reje
oeen by some of 'the family in the tiatti
of fire at a height of three or four hun­
dred feet Tbeyuwere dumped down
in a gully, bi a pile, and all clo&gt;e to­
gether. and looked as though they were
dead before they touched the earth.
It is asserted by many reputable peo­
ple that in the center of the awful cir­
cle or loop that the tornado made at
Grinnell objects were carried a thou­
sand feet high, and one small house
was taken up bodily some four or five
hundred feet, and then dropped in a
lump some two" hundred feet from It*.
- Many people statej hat they saw the
balls of fire or electricity during the
tornado's time, and re(iort them to
have been of sizes varying from one
foot to five in diameter, and exploding
with a strong smell of sulphur, or more
like a smell of hot copper. Others re­
port a dense and stifling odor more of­
fensive than sulphur, and as foul, al­
most, as that of putrid flesh.
Tbe rain fall was phenomenal, as all
report. At the college it was heaviest
of all. The earth there.stlll bears evi­
dence of this.
Ono gentleman says that he saw
Deacon Ford, during a livid and pro­
tracted flash of light, up il the air at
least five hundred feet high.
'Hie storm of mud was phenomenal.
Tho pouring water made soft mud of
the earth, and the wind took this up and
filled the air with it in places and plas­
tered it over everything.
Everything tends to confirm the theory
that the tornado is of electrical origin,
and that it is the narrelou* power oi
electricity altyte that can apply itself to
such snin’ll surface and work such hhvoo.
Against its resistless force, a house ol
stone walls ton feet thick, or walls ten
feet of wrought iron, would stand no
more than a house of frame. Its power
Is tho impossible inode possible. No
force that is known could have the power
in small compass that, this has but elec­
tricity.
We saw to-day several large lumber
wagons that were dashed to pieces, all
the spokes broken out of the wheels, a
hub split open, and the tires broken and
flattened out as straight as though they
had been straightened on an anvil.
J. M. Wfahart’s horse stood in the
bam. This was a stallion weighing 1,­
600 pounds. The barn was broken up
and carried off iu one direction, white
the horse and part of his manger to
which ho was haltered were carried ofl
in another direction from the barn. The
two lines of travel may be described as
on sexangular sides eastward.
The
horse was found a thousand feet from
the stabler and unhurt.
George Toney’s house, at the north­
west comer of a square northeast from
the dejiot, was lifted by the air current
and deposited on the southwest comer
of the square east, white tho houso at
tho northwest comer of the square in
which had stood Toney’s house, was
carried to the northeast comer of the
square east This will be understood
by using tho letter X as an illustration,
and supposing that the two houses
originally stood each nt the foot of a
stem of the letter, and met in the center
to be deposited at tho top of its own
stem.
Tho freakish work of tho. unloosed
devil of tho upper air was well shown
in one street On one side a dwelling­
house was torn to fragments and left a
moss of splintered rain, white the op­
posite house was unharmed below the
cornice but was entirely stripped of its
shingle*.
An iron pump, with a two-inch pipe,
was twisted off five feet below the level
of the ground and carried off fully ten
rods.

Testimony of Experts.
An action wfa-s brought by an attor­
ney-at-law against his client to recover
&gt;2,000 for legal services, and in proving
tho value of these services ho put upon
tho stand as witnesses five fellow-attor­
neys, who estimated their value from
$.5,440 to &gt;1,000. The plaintiff recov­
ered a judgment of &gt;1,800, the Court
having charged the jury that they
should find their verdict on the testi­
mony uf tho attorneys, and the defend­
ant carried the^casc up to the Supremo
Court of tho United States.
In this
case. Head us. Hargrave, that court. In
April, reversed the judgment Mr. Jus­
tice Field, in the opinion, said:
••The evidence of experts as to the
value of professional services does not
differ in principle from such evidence
as to the value of labor in other de­
partments of business, or as to the value
of property. So far from laying aside
their general knowledge and idea*, the
jury should have applied that knowl­
edge and those ideas to the,matters ol
fact in evidence in determining the
weight to be given to the opinions ex­
pressed, and it was only in that way
that they could arrive at a just conclu­
sion. While they cannot act in any
case upon particular facts material to
its disposition resting in their private
knowledge, but should be governed
by the evidence adduced, they may,
and to act intelligently they must,
judge of the weight and force of
that evidence bv their own general
If, for example, the question were as to
the damages sustained by plaintiff from
a fracture of his leg bv the carelessness
of a defendant the jury would ill per­
form their duty, and probabiy come to
a wrong conclusion, if, controlled by
the testimony of the surgeon* not
merely as to the injury inflicted, but a*
to the damages sustained, they should
ignore their own knowledge and ex­
perience of tbe value of a sound limb.

fe-aional

bole. A full account of this particular
worm, with anatomical illustrations, is
given in tbe Journal al the Royal Mi­
croscopical Society for October. 1881,
by Dr. Charles Stewart, Secretary of
the Society.
The bore-holes, after
pawring through the oakum of thh
inner sheathing, either punrue a tortu­
ous course along the surface of the.
gutta-percha core, or go right into tha
copper wire, thereby causing a "dead
earth ” fault Dr. Stewart classes the
worm ‘ as one of tlio Eunicidse, but
proposes for it the generic name of
lAthognatha wondei, because of it* pos­
sessing a pair of calcareous mandibles
or cutting jaws, and' after Captain
Woraley, the commander of the repair­
ing ship which picked up the wormeaten cable. Tho pair of calcareous
jaws, in addition to the three pain of
chitinou* ones, is tbe most remarkabla
feature about the animal, and the white
plates which form them make the crea­
ture Jook as If it were in the act of
swallowing a tiny bivalve shell.
Tbe
best protection hitherto formed against
it is &lt;o cover the core with a ribbon of
sheet-brass, laid on without a lap.
First the gutta-percha is covered with
cloth, then the brass is overlaid. Can­
vas is then put over tho brass, and tha
hemp and iron wires over all A close
layer of iron wires is not a sufficient
protection, for the worm can some­
times wriggle in between the wire*
where they are not close enough; and,
moreover, the rapid decay of iron
wires in trojiical sgas is certain to leave
the core a, prey to these pests in a few
years. • • • In the earlier days of
submarine
telegraphy. Sir William
Thompson declared the life of a cable to
be practically inviolable, and Robert
Stephenson, on the other hand, was of
opinion that no cable would ’ last out
ten years. The latter view has proved
the most -correct, for the average life of
a cable hitherto has been about eleven
years. Thanks to the improved means
of repairing them, however, the out­
break of fijidts does not mean the loss
of a cable, for these flaws can be cut out
in the water, however deep, and the
cable can be put to rights again. In­
deed. every cable company expects a
recurrence of faults, and provides a
fully-e&lt;juipped repairing ship always on
the spot.—Nature.
The Woman who Giggled.

It is a singular fact that some people
find it very difficult to be serious and
solemn in churches and at funerals, and
at other places and occasions, when pro­
priety demands a subdued expression cl
countenance.
Mrs. Milo Stephens, an
Austin lady. Is just that kind of a per­
son. Whenever she attends a funeral,
she gets a giggling fit, and brings dis­
grace on herself and confusion on every­
body. Not long since, accompanied by
her husband, Colonel Milo Stephens,
sho attended the last obsequies of a
prominent Texas official, 'having sol­
emnly promised not to emit a single
giggle until she got back homo, but she
was hardly in the house of mourning befort' she saw something to excite her
risibilities.
"For heaven’s sake. Mirandy, wail
until the funeral is over before you be­
gin your infernal giggling.”
"He! ho! he!" gurgled Mrs. StephedK
“Think of something serious. Think
of your uncle, whom Governor Roberts
refused to pardon out of tho peniten­
tiary*•
The only response was a partially
suppressed giggle, that attracted the
attention of nearly everybody in the
room.
"I hope note of the children will
go near the cistern while we are away,
aa I left the trap-door open,” whis­
pered poor Colonel Stephens in des­
pair.'
The only response was another sup­
Eressed spasm of laughter.
Finally, a
appy thought struck Colonel Stephens.
He whispered in her ear.
“The milliner on Austin avenue told
mo to tell you that she could not get
your bonnet trimmed in time for you to
wear it on Sunday.”
The loot of unutterable woe with
which she responded scared him. Dur­
ing the rest or the funeral ceremonies
strangers who were present supposed
Mr*. Milo Stephens was the widow,
such an appropriately sad expression
was there on tier countenance.
She
even shed tears.—Tero* 8iftingi.
Photographs of Horses in Motion.
The method by which these photo­
graphs have been taken—the result of
years of experiment—fa substantially a*
follows: At one side of the track is a
long building arranged for photograph­
ic work, containing a battery of twentyfour cameras, all alike and standing one
foot apart. On the othep side ox the
track is a screen of whit* muslin and a
foot-board. The screen is marked with
vertical and horizontal lines, and the
foot-board beam numbers ind icating sep­
arate intervals of one foot each. The
instantaneous shutters of the cameras
are operated by electricity, and their
movement is governed by such power­
ful springs that the exposure is esti­
mated to be about one five-thousandth
of a second. The contact by which the
shutters are sprung is made by the
brea. ig oi a thread drawn across the
track at about tha height of the horse's
breast, there being one thread for each
camera. In his flight through the air,
therefore, he brings each of the twentyfour cameras to bear upon him at the
moment when he passes in front of it,
and that camera represents his position
st that instant. The series of represen­
tations indicates the consecutive posi­
tions at each of the twenty-four feet cov­
ered by the iuBtniments. In a series
ihowing a horse trotting al speed the

But he’s a peculiar man, centinned
„.»idy. "You’ve got to strike him iust
right or he wont talk for shucks. He’s
strictly temperate, and yet yon mu*t
take a flask along and ask him to drink.
It'* an old Soothers custom, you know,
and while he won’t (buck a drop, he’ll
expect to be invited to. You can fill
tbe flask with water, and bell never
khow the difference."'
When I readied Macon I arranged for
a call on the Colonel. I bought a pint
flask al a drug store, aud toid the clerk
to fill it with something good to soothe
a sore heel. I din'task him what it was,
but a Miff or two convinced me that
sweet oil and tar formed tbe greater
portion. With this bottle in my pocket
I entered, the Colonel’s office and told
him who I was and what I wanted.
“Yes, sir; glad to see you—sitdown.’’
be replied, and as soon as ho had sealed
his letters he turned and began:
"So you want to know what we can
raise here, do youT Well, my boy, you
can say everything—everything. We
raise wheat, corn, oats, potatoes, yams,
and—
Just then he looked over to the water
cooler, and I put in with—
"Say, Colonel, have a drop of somcthing^good, put up by the best bouse

time since,In a condition to excite tbe sympa­
thy of the most o&lt;»ld-bl&lt;XKled and hard-hearted
s sS

totally

teuUou of Crtue, and had all the srmfrtwis of
on aggravated case oi calcul us formation In tbe
bladder. The usual Instrumental examination
‘7^/,
age and debility, an operation waa out of the
quesfton, but that be could, by the prescription
of "Kennedy’s Favorite Remedy,” together
with local treatment, make him comfortable,
and leave Mm to live out all his days. The
outcome of this was that the patient enjoys
good health to this day.

tenaively used by our people are as follows; It
is a combination of vegetable alternative*. It
is pleasant to the taste, adapted to both vexes
and all ages, Is effective In affording immediate
relief tn all cases of Kidney trouble. Liver Compurifies the blood, thus
to- the system
“Dr. Kennedy
all druggfate.

"Thanks; that’s just what I was han­
kering after!’’ he replied, as be held out
his hand for the flask.
How I got out of there I can’t rumem­
ber, nor can.I recollect what became of
the bottle, but there is a whole newspa­
per staff in Atlanta who may look upon
themselves as doomed men. The Colo­
nel took hi* quart daily,, and it was a
put up job to get hold of my dead body
for a new medical collage at Savannah.

’ ftOUTE

GOOD-BT2, ILL-HEALTH.
When you feel Weak, languid and depressed,
try Brown’s Iron Bittern. You will find it a
a most wonderful reviver. It fa a true tonic.
It aids digestion. It strengibens every part of
the body. It fa refresting to the wearied ment­
al faculties. It fa perfect. This fa what our
family doctor says.—Local Editor.

Adversity borrows ft*, sharpest sting from
impatience.
The symptoms of Itching Piles are motsture
like prespiratlon, intense Itching, most at night
seems as if pin worms were crawling in or
about •he rectum. The more you scratch the
worse they itch, very distressing. The private
ports are often affected. Dr. Swayne’s Oint­
ment fa tbe most effective remedy extant for
this tormenting complaint. Ghrea rest at night
without that desire to scratch. Also has on
equal in quickly eradicating Tetter, Itch, Salt
Rbcume, Erysipelas, Barbers’ Itch, Pimples,
all Scaly, Crusty, Itchy Skin Eruptions. Here
fa the proof, “Certainly the best remedy ever
used tn my practice," Dr. Cotton, Woodstock,
VU. “troubled with Itching Piles for over twen­
ty years, it cured me comptetely," L. 8. Messer
Enfield, Me. Sent for 50 eta (In 3 ct. Stamps)
8 boxes. A1.3S, By Dr. Swayne «fc Son. PhOad’a
Pa. Sold by all druggists.

PRINCIPAL'*LINE
The SHORTEST, QUICKEST and
Topeka. Dealno. Dallaa. Gal-

Nationally rt^uicJ m

KANSAS CITY

Fortune does not change men, it only uu.
masks them.
A GOOD FOUNDATION.

In American households the prevailing com­
plaint* are weakness of tbe stomach and Its
consequences, Indigestion, Nervousness and
Rheumatism. Such sufferers can lay a good
foundation for health by using Parker’s Gin­
ger Tunic as it tones up tbe stomach and serves
and keeps the kidnevs active to carry off the
foul matter.—N. O. "Picayune.
Impatience dries the blood sooner than age
or sorrow.

Through
TlckaU via
find travelin*

T. J. POTTER.

PERCEVAL LOWELL,

Lydia E. Pinkham’* Vegetable Compound

health of their customers.

Send to Mrs. Ly-

■On
din P
E. PinL-h.n.
Pinkham, O-TO
233 TV.T
Western Avenue, Lvnn,

NCDuniic
nFRII ITYI
HuiiVUUO UCDIL.il
_

A cure guaranteed.

Mass., for pamphlets.

He that grasps at too much holds nothing
fast.

Bat Crrr, Mich., Feb. a, 1880.
I think ft my doty to send you a recommend
for the benefit of any person "wishing to know
whether Hop Bitters are good or not. J know
they arc good for general debility and Indiges­
tion ; strengthen the nervous system and make
new life. I recommend my patients to use
them.
DR. A. PRATT.
Rhode Island, with a population of only 276,-

York ho® 20,456 saloous.

BRACE UP.
There fa serious tn ear. Ing in this expression.
That wearied step, languid eye, and general
feeling of iraaitude come from sickness.
Be
assured, a setlous and and perhaps fatal, dis-

apenaatorrboa, ln&gt;j&gt;«Ut»cyt Icralunury «in'.ulona,
premature old age. caused by over-«s»rtlou, salt
abuse, or ever Indulgence, which leads to misery,
decay and death. One Lax will cure recent case*.

ihorlrcd agent for th* vtllsg* «t KaahviH*. JOHN
C. WEST * CO., So io Proprietors IM tad ISA W
or.e. —« &gt;----- ,,,
tl ,

JJJEXRY ROE,

Proprietor

----- OLD RELIABLE------

MEAT MARKET.

cleansing of impuricties; the sluggish blood
needs to be sent in swift and clear currents
through the veins. Dr. Kennedy's “Favorite
Remedy,r wlII do ttfa! it will give new vigor to
the body, brightness to tbe eye, a glow to the
countenance, and elasticity to the step. One
Dollar a bottle. Every druggist has it- Dr.
David Kennedy, Proprietor, Rondout, N, Y.

Fresh and Salt Meats,
Smotei Hams and Mien,

Simpson said that when he asked his girl,
who is now his wife, to marry him, she said: “I
don’t mind,” and that she never has minded.

Lard, by the lb. or barrel,

A steady, firm and regular beat of the heart
replaces the Interrupted feeble action of that
organ, if Brown’s Iron Bittern are freely used.

IN THEIR 8EABOV

ty The Higbrat Market Price paid
for Hide*. Pelt*, fee.
*

Fresh Goods, Full Weights and
The best remedy for a sting Is to poultice tbe
Satisfaction. Guaranteed.
HENRY ROE

SKINNY MEN
Wells’Bbolth Iteaewer. Absolute cure for
nervoas debility aod vreaknes* «fjbe genera­
tive functions, tl. at drugsfata- Mich. Depot
JAMES E. DAVIS &lt;fc CO.ntMrtrolt, Mich.

SCOO Renard!
wi.u nw.i . .TO.....
- ..— ------------------ HLMUwatricdrcoopiied with. Tb«y aro purely
Vegetable, aM never fall to gly* aallafaetion 8a-

RUPTURE
1J C .- I

HOUBHTON JKSZ-'J

itacord or caiBlogo* ad-Ire**
0H*to*.N.T.

O' 1&gt;EZ EDICT,

RIVERVIEW ACADMEY,

wrar"

CORWIN WARDNER wad ANNA GARDNER,

IMUUHKJCKFtaR.N. T.
With U. 8. Military Dajmr'Tisnl. A the

WILL HAVE

MONKY

opinion* of those familiar with the sub-

borso s tad. ra st wave* with his atnda.
are dearly marked.—Georg* E. War-

D«:«d. July 1(1
IM.
TL'MN ER GARDNER, •writfan

(No Liquors.)

C. N* DUNHAM.

�tliis opportunity to dispose of their
choicest pieces at higher prices than
could be pit for runued meats. When
the St. Lows Beef Canning Company
aniRLlbby. McNeil 4 Libby succeeded
attcontest,in the courts in
breaking the patent* by which it was
nought U' maintain a .monopoly in put­
ting up meat in cr.u«. there wa$ a nnturalIncrease in the borineM, ami. as the
price of meets advWBOwl. there ware

Armour fie Co., of Chicago, kJl about
500 cattle a day. The St. Louis Beef
jfTT
Canning Company pa-ked 2OU.U00 ani­
STATTOSB.
*«’
mals last year, aud s unctimes kill 700
in a day. Libby, McNeil 4 Libby, of
t£
Gr’B R»pRU_ Lr.
112*
Chi .-azo. also do nn immense business
IMS
Hammond---------ymd tuese‘three firms- are'sending for­
1:15 CSb
MUdforill*----------ward the bulk oi the fresh meat that
b*o CA3
5S!hrtTr«""'Lv"
SA» .70*
conies to New York. Tim supply is
1:15 *:3* 1
Varmoiiivllto ——
steady, nnd several firms in New York
H!
&amp;?3
|
2:*
make*a
business of supplying retail cusEaton Rapid*.----8.50 ।
Rlv.. JUKtlOK----V»m tn» with fresh meat Yille.l in Chi­
TW ft 10
jMkMS_..........
cago or St. Louis. Not only are choice
Petrol t------ „..AK.
piU
te•Mterloins s*»M in this wav. but even
inter &lt;&gt;Y cuts are sold at lower rates than
me .: killed in and near New York.
.
It is admitted that the Wet tern meats
are not of the very finest quality. such
as U sold here - at fifty to seventy-five
cents a pound. But ir is claimed that
the meat is much better than that of cat­
tie starved and thirsty that arc brought
to this city alive.
»
There has been complaint among the
Western dealers that the New York
.butchers have formed a ring to keep out
their meat. Mr. Le Fevre V. Styles, of
the bt. Louis Beef Canning Company,
said one day last week.: "Thad 1,000
pounds of nice beef tenderloins yester­
day. niro enough for anybody, and I
was glnd enough to sell them at sixteen
cents a pound. I have no doubt but
that this meat is sold at retail for twen­
ty or thirty cents a pound. The com­
gROOKS, MARSHALL k CO.
bination against Western meat was so
Sreat last winter that they got the prices
--------- Proprietors--------own to sixteen cents a pound. But
we put ours in cold storage, nnd kept it
until we got eighteen cents a pound,
Pay the h!gbe«t market price forall klndsof
which is a high price for us."
The growth of the trade has led to
Grain and Produce,
the building of great refrigerators for
. '----------- And sell----------both storage and transportation, and
eeds. Feed, Lime, Sait, Piaster. Stuc­ the cold storage business in large cities
is rapidly becoming immense. Mr.
co, Hair. Pine Lumber, Lath Style, says his firm is building a refrig­
and Shingles
erator that will cost $1UO.WW. Another
AT THE LOWEST LIVING PRICES. firm have immense refrigerators where
they keep the Western meat ready for
dailv delivery.
Although ' the railroad freight for
fresh meat carried in refrigerator cars
is double that for live cattle, the actual
freight of the consumable meat is less.
The prospects are that tlie keen compe­
tition of business-men to secure profits
from the present exorbitant prices will
continue to supply the New York mar­
ket with increasing quantities of West-

Nashville Elevator!

Encriencei. Reliable, and Respoiisibl:

A. H. WINN, Dentist.

BEST SET GUM TEETH $10.00

__
About
NoUung."’ Miss Susan is to be Much
Ado aud Miw Anna Nothing.
—Just before Carlyle married ’hi.
read Kant’s works in order to quiet his
nerves. Alter he was married he near­
ly talked his poor wife death, and to
quiet her perves she used to scrub the
—Dr. O. W. Holmes says that the
young scribblers who send’him their
verges have no more right to do so than
they have to stop him on the street,
show him their tongues, and ask what
remedies they shall take for their
stomach’s Kake.
—Tbe late fJovernor Dennison, of
Ohio, built a residence in Colutubua, O.,
al&gt;out one year ago. nt a cost of &lt;25.000.
He was preparing to spend his latter
davs in ease and comfort when the fata!
sickness came. " He leaves a wife anil
seven children. One of ‘his sons prac­
tise* law in this city.—-V- F. P&amp;&amp;
—According to Miss Cordon Cum­
ming's •* A Lady’s Cruise on a French
Man-Of-War." the Wedeyan mission­
aries on the Friendly Islands are doing
all they can to crush out all plot unique­
ness from native life, and to ihtroduce
black coaU and Parisian bonnets as an
integral part of the Christian religion.—
N. 1* Graphic.
■
—Mr. Corcoran, the Washington phi­
lanthropist. though very ill. did not for­
get to scad his annual •• treat” of straw­
berries and ice-cream to the various
charitable institutions of that city tho
other day. This treating is done every
June. On Christmas and New Year
days dinners are .served in the institu­
tions at h’s expense.—Chicago Times.
—The “Princess of Wales.’’ says Lou­
don Truth, “never looked more charm­
ing than she did at the trooping of the
colors. She was accompanied, ns usual,
by her -three little daughters. The
Princess appears to have solved the
problem of eternal youth. She looks
very little ol-’er than she did ns n
bride nineteen years'- ago. Her bonnet
was almost covered with gale-green
grapes."
—Miss Clr.rk, asisterof Edwin Booth,
in her work, lately published. “The
Elder and the Younger Booth.’’ tells no
incident in’the life of her father, which
gains interest from the fact that it is un­
doubtedly true. While on a trip South,
on tho steamer Neptune. Mr. Booth (J.
B.) had on one of hia tits of depression,
and tin illy jumped overboard.
Tom
Flynn, the actor wh &gt; accompanied Booth
on the voyage^ took a small Iniat, in
company with others, and finally suc­
ceeded in rescuing the would-be sui­
cide. Almost the first words uttered
by Booth after they drew him in were:
"I say. Tom, look out! You’re a heavv
man; be steady; if the boat upsets we'll
all be drowuetL’’—Chicago Journal.

Teeth Extracted Without Pain.

HIMOROVS.

OfflceOpen Day &amp; Evening.

Physician, and Surgeon.
Office first door east of Opera House, knd
near residence on comer of Washington and
State Streets, Nasbvilie, Mich.

qvsn,
"THE BOSS'

BOOT AND SHOE MAKER,
NASHVILLE,

-

HICH.

Bepalrtuf Sow with K-»ibm* and DUpateh.

JAMES A. 8WKEZEY,

Attorney A Counsellor,
Win suead t» Ujal bsOow hi a=y psrt of ths
8t*to, ud practice* U all tko coarU

American and Foreign Marble,
Monumento, Tmnhstonea, Manila*, 4c..
HawTingf., Mich.

yy ILL1AM JONES.

■UICiL HI SDIGIC1L SUITHIBI

The process of making the choicest
Havana cigars, ns practiced in Connec­
ticut, was exhibited at a recent trial.
The workmen • employed in making
"scrap end" cigars use a wooden
mold, shaped inside to the form and
size of a cigar, and into this mol’d is
crowded the snippings and cuttings and
oddsand ends of cigars—the refuse,
perhaps ft may be called, of the trade.
This interesting mixture—which may
or may not include the broken-up ends
of old cigar stumps—is left under pres­
sure over night, and in the morning it
is taken out and a dark, nice-looking
Connecticut wrapper is deftly and tight­
ly wound round it. and the cigar neatly
packed with others of the samb style,
in boxes bearing various'fancy names
of Havana cigars, as •• Flor de Fuma,"
"Reina Victoria,” and other names of
choice brands, and sold to dealers in
drugs or groceries, who do a wholesale
as well as a retail business, and who
purchase these cigars at twefity-fivo
dollars per 1,000, or at the rate of two
and one half cents apiece. A proposi­
tion to tear open some of the cigars in
court to show the jury just what was
inside of them was strenuously resisted
by the maker, who admitted that they
were "scrap end" cigars, and.thought
that admission should be . enough.-Nao Haven Register. _

_ lliv invujjiojiX'f Uie Island ol Grenada
by ants of the saccharivora species,
about a hundred years ago, was quite
Homeric in its magnitude.
"They de­
scended from tho hills,” we are ’told,
"like torrents, and the plantations, as
well as every path and road for miles,
were filled by them. Rats, inice, and
reptiles of every kind became an easy
prey to them; and even the birds,
which they attacked whenever they
alighted on the ground in search of
food, were so harassed as to be at length
unable to resist them.
Streams of
water opposed only a temporal? ob­
stacle to their progress, the foremost
rushing blindly on to certain death, and
fresh armies instantly following, till a
bank was formed of the careases of
those winch were drowned sufficient to
&lt;iam up-die waters and allow the main
body to pass over in safety.
Even fire
was’ tried without effect. ' When it war
lighted to arrest their route they rushed
into the blaze in such myriads as to ex­
tinguish it." Such was the devastation
enured by these little invaders that a re­
ward of "twenty thousand pounds was
offered; and in vain, for their destruc­
tion. and they were not got rid of until
a deluge of rain fell and swept them
away.—London Telegraph.
—Mr. Eugene Schuyler, who has been
connected with the United States diplo­
matic service in Europe for many years,
has returned to New York on a visit In
speaking of the present exodus of Rus­
sian Jews from that country he says that
one of the grievances that led to the
Eresent troubles are the methods they
are employed for getting the peasant­
ry in their power. The Jews, he stares,
lend money on good security and then
insist upon the most rigid enforcement
0f their claims. They are the possess*
on of a great deal ot land which haa
x&gt;me to (hem through this
None
fit III/- .
&lt; n'ftPJ —

PEKGELLP8 WOMANS

Physicians
Hits Signed or Endorsed tho
Following Remarkable
Document:

Evfery mother ot' daughter* i
know ftlxrat it—because it laingii
hmlih

TO GIRLS
Who. at n&gt;&lt;» eco of Puberty, begin la droop
owini- to Famful, Heanty, or Profuse Fertnda.

!""! &gt;:!" "!! ! $+'!! !! "!" ""!" !! ""!

TO YOUNG LADIES
nsonss, to which, wwa tho haaRhleui, w» c=b

TO OVER-WORKED WOKR

Abundant Wtlmonlaln I hare, from the best
tocicty, wbiet- with other informatSon and ad­
vice, will famish .privately to persons saktac-

K. PENG ELLY, M. D.,
t-rwatr.)

KAIAMAZOO, MICH.

PARKER'S

BALSAM

PATENT NO PAY

nasxsHS
COLOGNE.

I

PARKER’S

CINCER TONIC
A* Irrigoratlaf IWicitt tt«1 Haver l.twicatei
Thri delicious cmuUnotion of Ginger. Buchu.
Mandrake. Stillrngia. and many other of the best
vegetable remedies kn«wn. cures all divncers c.f
tbe bowels, stomach, liver, kidneys andlungs, &amp;u
The Bett ud Surext Cough Cure Ertf Uud.
If you »re tufferine from Female Compbuntt,
Nervouu.ev.% WakefuloeM. Kbenmamm Vytpepm. «ce or any d»e»e or infirmity, take r»&gt; ker I
Ginger Tonic, i t »ill attrn jlbeu brain and body
and give you new life sad vi^or.
1OO DOLLARS
Paid for anythwc injurious found in Ginger Tonic

— Doctors and mackerel have thia in
common; they are seldom caught
out of their own schools.—Boston Put.
—The person who stands anti holds the
spring-screen-door half open is abroad
in the land. We trust the flies will get
the best of him sometime.—AVtr Haven
Register.
— ••Am I hurting you badly?’’ asked
a Boston dentist of n iaily whose teeth
he was fixing, and who was emitting
horrible groans. "Oh. not in the least,
but I love to groan.” was the reply.—
Boston Globe.
•
—A Lexington (Ky.) youth, who
went to work in the country, wrote‘to
his girl, a June graduate, that be was
raising a calf. Imagine his feelings
when the girl replied: “ I am glad you
have begun to support yourself.”

—A Denver paper profesnses to think
it marvelous that a man whose brains
were knocked out is still living. If he
were out this way he would not be only
living, but he would be holding some
important office.—Louisville Cottier—Writing of the death of an old and
paid-up subscriber, the editor of one ol
our exchanges says: “Our hands and
heart and the foreman are all too' full
for us to express our tumultuous grief as
we cheerfully otherwise would^t.’’—
iMramic Boomerang.
—“Mamma.” said a wee pet, “they
sung * I want to be an angel.’ in Sun­
day-school this morning, and I sung
with them." ‘J Why, Nellie!” exclaimed
mamma, “ could you keep time with the
rest?" •• I guess 1 could/’ proudly an­
swered little 'Nellie; •• I kept ahead of
them most all the way through.'’—N.
y. Tribune.
'
—An East Boston father discovered
that his daughter, who has a soul for
romance, proposed to elope, and he
didn’t sit up with a bulldog and shotSm fo waylay the fugitives. Oh, no!
e went to his daugliter and told her
he desired her to marry a young man.
naming her lover, and h’e vcould set him
up in a good-paying grocery business:
and the young Indy at once declared
she’d die rather than marry any man
just to please her father.
—The “ preliminaries ’’ of the occa­
sion had all teen’ settled. That is, John
had asked Julia aud she had consented.
They were sitting on ths front verandah
watching for the sable curtain of night
to part and give them just one look at
the new comet. “Oh. by the way, Ju­
lia," said he a little nervously. "My
income is—is—$850 now. Do you think
we could live up to it?" “ Wfiy, John,
you precious, I can live up to an income
twice as big as that all by myself." The
farewell Kiss that night was a mere me­
chanical bit of osrtilaLion.—New Haven
Kcgirdcr.
.. —At a boil in Paris a gentleman un­
dertakes to Introduce a companion to a
young lady who seems to be pining for
a dance. “No, thanks, my dear follow,
I don’t care to walu with a cart.” A
cart, be it understood, is Parisian for a
partner that doesn't do her share of tbe
dancing, but has to be drawn around. A
few evenings later the young lady, who
had overheard the conversation, beholds
the young gentleman seeking an intro­
duction and asking if he may have the
honor, etc. “No, thank you," she re­
plied sweetly; •• I may be a’cart, but I’m
uot a donkey-cart —betroil ¥ree PrcM-

CHICAGO, BOCK ISLAND 4 PACIFIC RT
la Tho Croat Connotating Link botwoon tho Knot and tho '*«•'
' It’ main line rani from Chicago to Council
niutti. P-MM*nmrtJottm.Salfo,
Grncacn, Moline. Boek Bland. Davenport, wm
Liberty, JovaCIt). Maromp».BrooklinjQrin»etl.
De* Moinee (the capital of low*). Stuart, Atlan­
tic. aud Avoca; with branebea from Bureau

eat Rock Island" 1» mscnlflOCTUy
Iu road bed is simply perfaa. and IU
plMM you moat will be the plcasnre
your meal«, while pwuilng over U&gt;o
-airles of Illinois and Iowa, tn on* of
cent Dining Csrs that accompany all
iprsaa Trains. Too get an anUrw
Ml as D served tn any BrsKlaas hotel.

CONSUMPTr

�In order to make room for our Fall and Winter _
are selling our finest sIocks of Clothing at pricea
quire no bantering, to sell.

The condition of affair* in Tripoli to reto submit an amendment to the Constitution
Tu» following Cwcrewfonal nominations

ke crofireturns up to August 1, compiled

he loth by the Department of Agriculture
ft was thought proltable that the comspring and winter wheat product would
«n,a».0«&gt; busbell. The condition of
77 last year.

The general - average condition

reutly fatally prisoned by taking medicine
bought from * street-corner peddler.
He

tegropher*’ Coavcntion will be held *1 Mil-

note, Seventeenth Dtetrict, Samuel W. Moul­
ton, renominated; South Carolina, First,
Samuel Dibble, rcaomiuatod; Mfasforippl,
Fifth, IL E. BarkadhUi Ohio, Third, R. M.
Murry’. Republican—Michigan, Ninth, Byron
M. Cuteheou; Pennsylvania, Sixth', William
Ward, renominated; Kentucky, First, H. H.
Houston. Greenbocker*—Missouri, Tenth,
George M.. Jackson. Iteadjustere—Virginia,
Third, John A Smith; 8*cond, Judge Spalding.

tued its warrant to Mr*. Garfield for *22,ttA
being such portion of President Garfield's
year's salary as waa undrawn at tbe time of
hi* death.
Tar Democrat* of the Texas First Con­
gressional District on tbe 11th nominated
Charles Stewart ufor Congress, aud W. M.
Robinson waa nominated by tbe Democrat*
of the Seventh District of North Carolin*.
Tna Nebraska Greenbacker* will meet in
State Convention at Lincoln on tbe 6th of
September.
Tax following Congressional nominations
were made on tho 12th: Republican—Arkan
sas. First District, Charles A. Stewart; North
Carolina, First. Walter R. Poole. Democratic
—West Virginia, Second, John B. Hoge, rcnominated; Daniel B. Lucas, nominated by a
rival faction. Prohibltionteto-Ohlo, Twen­
tieth. JayOdclL
The death of Dr. George R- Dennis, form­
erly United States Senator from Maryland,
was announced on the 18th.
.
Ex.Mem nan or Coxorus Lazhe died at
New Orleans on tbe 14th.
- Little Thvxder, the orator of the Chippe­
wa Indiana, died at Chicago on the 14th. He
was on his way to Washington to negotiate a
treaty for the *»le of a part of the'reservation
at Red Lake, Minn. He waa one of the two
Indian survivors of the Custer massacre.
The Greenbacker* of the Second Arkansas
District have appointed an executive com­
mittee to nominate a Congressional candi­
date.
Jesse Hott, one of the moat prominent of
the active capitalists and business men of New
York, died tn that city on tbe 14th.
The death by suicide of Archbishop Nes-

affairs of Egypt, intends to send an army to
drive the French out of Tun la Tho native*

Al-zXandjma dtopstdte* of tbe 10th any that
while Mrs. Stone was waiting for th* train
Y*koub Paaha expressed regret that General
8u®e had cast his lot in with tho English.
He begged Mrs. Stone to tell her husband
the Egyptian army would show how greatly
it bad profiled by the twelve years’ instruc.
tton it had received from him. A Circas­
sian who had passed through Arabi Pasha’s
camp states that a Colonel. Captain, subal­
tern and seventy-six men were killed on the
rebel side In the recent engagement with the
British.
The following text of tbe proclamation by
the Sultan against Arabi Boy was communi­
cated to the , Conference at Constan­
tinople on the 10th: “-Arabi Pasha having
for tbe second time transgressed the law
oy taking authority which does not be­
long to him, and having presumed to men­
ace vessels belonging to an old and trim!
friend and ally ot Turkey, is for these mis­
deed* pJoelai med a rebel, together with his
adherents. Be it known to all that obedlefaca
Is doe tritely to the Khedive, who is tbe rep­
resentative of the Pulf-in.”
AX Alexandria disjiatch o'. the llth states
that Arabi Pasha had executed the Governor
of Beherx It was reported that Arabi was
two miles from temailla. The conduct ot De
Lesseps waa causing complication*- The
cable between Fyt Bald and Alexandria was
■open for business.
A xxw Egyptian Ministry w. s announced on
the llth, with CheriS Pacha as Premier. Two
members were sald'to be friends of Arabi Bey.
Several transports with troops for Egypt
passed Gibraltar and Malta on tbe 13th, and
the Coldstream Guards landed at Alexandria.
A skirmish occurred beyond the Mel* forts,
between marines and Arabs, the latter being
forced to fall back. It was Intimated that
Turkey was showing signs of bad faith in
sending troops to Egypt.- Rebels in great
force had taken up poritio** immediately
threatening the Suez CauaL The English
Admiral had occupied the water work*, and
would not allow any Interference whatever

Sugars, Coffees, Teas, Tobaccos,
Spices, Fish, Canned Goods,
Proiisions, ic.,
.

HERE ARE BARGAINS FOR YOU!

AT THE LOWEST PRICES

For fall and winter trade are eoq’.ming in.
lent and cheap. Examine them.

For Cash or Ready Pay.

Summer Pants for 95c—Think of It!
They are excel­

Mery, Glassware, Lamps,
Stone Ware/ic.,

Of the best quality and lowest in price. Try our 40c Tea.
Don t buy poor eggs unless you prefer them. Our egg tester
tells you which are popr.

TO BE SEEN IN BAPRY CO.

CASH PAID FOR BUTTER AND EBBS.

BOOTS AND SHOES
■
AB CHEAP AS ANYBODY.

CASH PAID FOR PRODUCE

NEW VICTOR SEWING MACHINE is VICTOROUS
Ready pay secures for you all the advantages in trade.

C. W. SMITH.

Chicago, just comThe school
(QpulsUon a* 560,415.
This does not.include sailors anti persons tem­
porarily rcsidcnZiherc• The Chicago Board at Education has
defeated a resolution declaring that the mar­
riage of a female teacher shall be accepted as
a virtual resignation of her position.
- Ar.ot t 1,000 French and. German farmers
landed at Castle Garden .on tbe 10th, their
destination being Iowa and Minnesota.
-------- FOI
The third case of yellow fever developed in
»OGH,
New Orleans on tbe 10th.
BOOKS,
A nus at-8potta»e Falls, Washington Ter­
JEW ELB Y,
ritory, on the 11 tli destroyed property to tbe
WALL PAPER,
amount of over *400,00); parttally Insured.
The river steamer Buckeye Stale was
WINDOW NHADEM,
wrecked at Louisville on the llth, being
DYESTUFFS, ,
broken almoct iu two by colliding with a dim.
IfVnTnDTFR
The paaaengcra reached the shore in safety.
rKUtKLLL AKI DLLDlULHhb,
Chess Thomas was hanged at Palestine,
PRESCRIPTION'S
Tex., on the llth, fur the murder of Houston
|
McMeana
'
.
j
KIA r.ll IB.
I Tmtu laborer* were killed and thirty or
: An4 e„ry
keK ,n s jnWlut dnj&lt;
$16,
$20.
forty were Injured on the Minneapolis &lt;k St.
j
Louis Road, near Waaroca. Minn., on the llth
---------MY--------j
by the derailing of a train and the rolling
$6.50,
$9,00.
'
dowu an embankment of the caboose in which
they were riding.
$4.00,
A CoxbtaXtixople dispatch of tbe 14th
Tn* busineu failure* In tbe United States
says tbe Mussulman priests, whom the Sultan
during the seven day* ended on the 10th were announced from Pau Francisco on the 14th.
DEPARTMENT
frequently consults, explain that Arabi Pasha,
10L
_
Judge William Schley, of New York, and
Three of the four men underz arrest at Judge William M. Levy, of Louisiana, both In so far as he disobeyed the Caliph, isarebcl,
people.
Taylorville, Ill., on suspicion of having been died suddenly at Saratoga Springs, N. Y., on aud may be unceremoniously treated a* such;
but in so far m he has been a defender of the
•oncerned in the horrible outrage perpetrated the Uth.
Mohammedan country against the aggressive
upon the person of a young lady school
design* of the Christiana, he has merely ful­
teacher named Mias Bond on the 29th of June
FOREIGN.
last, were on the llth held for trial in the
lx the British House of Lords on the 10th filled his 'duties us a good Mussulman, and
Circuit Court, bail being fixed in the the amendments of tho Common* to tha Ar­ consequently the Caliph cannot make com­
•um of *4,000 each in the case* of John Mont­ rears ot Rent bill were concurred in. The mon cause with England.
Ax Alexandria dispatch of the 14th states
gomery arid Lee PcltU, aud *3,000 -in
Chief Secretary for Ireland stated that when
that fires of considerable magnitude were vis­
the case of Emanuel Clementi The commit­ the bill became a law the Government would
ting magistrate before whom theexamlnation consider the proposition of Canada to grant ible In the rear of the enemy's position at
It. DICKINSON A CO.
Klngoeman- The steamer Holland, with
waa conducted took the ground that, while
lands to Irish families.
the guilt of tbe accused had not been
The official census of France, just com­ tbe Household Cavalry, and tbe troop­
clearly established, the testimony was , pleted, shows a total population of 37,672,048. ship Orontea,’ with the Cameron High­
----- HEW-----~
Der- i
such as to warrant their commitment
Four men were drowned at Flcsherton, lander* and a battalion of t'
Arabi
for trial before a tribunal competent to thor­ Ont, on the evening of the 10th, by the upset­ byshire regiment, hail arrived.
Pasha
’
s
troops
were
unusually
busy
in
erect
­
oughly investigate the awful crime. During ting of a boat.
the night an unorganised crowd of cilisens
The Lord-Lieutenant visited tbe Constabu­ ing earthworks beyond Mlllaha Junction.
forced their way into the jail where the prison- lary depot in Dublin on the 10th and an­ Some shot* were exchanged and several
era were, and the three men were captured nounced that £150,000 would be immediately prisoners captured near tbe canal There
and taken to tly court-house yard. A rope was distributed, aud that any grievance would be was much excitement at Port Said and an
put around ZHLutgomery’s neck, and he was immediately inquired into Hl* lordship’s outbreak was thought to be possible at any
then strung up and kept hanging until his
statement was enthusiastically received, and moment. Tbe ships were ready tor action.
READY FOR BUSINESS
troath was nearly gone. Ou l&gt;dng lowered
the men expressed complete confidence in his
Every day in the year—Sundays excepted.
LATER NEWS,
assurance*.
speak be said: “1 am dying, but I die an in­
Rxcext storms in Canada arosald to have
The First National Bank, of Kcwaned, HL,
nocent man.’,’ After further questioning and damaged tbe ripened grain to tbe extent of waa entered by two robbers on the afternoon
parleying, and the continued proi-atatiun of thirty per cent.
of tbe 14th, who knocked tbe Cashier and hl*
iDDo-.-cnre on tbe part of tbe prisoner*, they
Stxjuex J. Meant, a well-known Irish re­ assistant insensible, locked them in the vault,
were taken back to the jail.
form agitator who left New York about two and robbed the safe of *30,000.
Of every dcreription, done in a superior I
(—s. --■——■—-w-.
The first ot tbe Texas corn crop reached St. week* before, was arrested at Ennis, Ireland,
Gexeral Wolseley arrived at Alexandria
Louis on the 12th. In point ot tlm.. tbe ar­ his native town, on the morning of tlte llth, on the 15th. The Khedive had authorised
rival was unprecedented.
on suspicion of being concerned in Irish agra­ the British military authorities to occupy
Twelve business houses at Grant City, Mo., rian disturbances.
such points on tbe Sues Isthmus a* they
Were swept sway by fire on the night of the
Bishop UArxEcnx, of Three Rivera, Can., might deem nec^jsary for operationsNriUiut
haa forbidden the ladies of his congregation, Arabi. The Sultan had ordered Arabi Pasha
12th.
Ix Brownsville, Texas, on tbe 12tb there under the pain of tin, from wearing curls.
to lay down bls arms, and in event of hl* re­
A decker was published in France on the fusal would leave him at tbe mercy of En­
were sixty-two cases ot yellow fever, at Mat­
Kept constantly on hand.
amoras live hundred, and in surrounding ,11th giving legal status to all commercial, edu­ gland.
&gt;
cational aud financial associations attthorized
Yellow fever was reported to have ap­
Tim Randolph County (Missouri) court­
by the United State*.
peared at Pensacola, Flo., on tbe 15th.
Ax eminent German surgeon published a
house was destroyed by fire on the 12th, and
paper oii'the flth, Th which be attempt* to were made on the 15th: Democratic—MisaouJIs concealed to be the beat. Try' it.
show that President Garfield might have lived ri. Third District, A- M. Dockrey; Virginia,
the outskirts ot Evansville, Ind., and hi* but for improper medical and surgical treat­ Seventh, Charles T. Oferpall; Georgia, Ninth,
ment
A. D. Candler; Alabama, Sixth, G. W. Hew- J
night of the 12th. Four men had been arA Loxdox dispatch of the llth states that IU.
4UtaoU, T.e„uetb, WU&gt;- |
£££
,
,,
,
—
...
..._ ,
dealing with all our customers, we nope to merthere were 821 families, representing 1,619 iam
K. Murphy. Republican M_a*i*slppl, Jt n
patronage from the fanners of,this
I&gt;ersona, evicted in Ireland during the month Fifth, James HJ.1L Greenbocker—Illinoia, vicinity.
of July. The number of outrages for the Fifteenth, B- W. Conley.
•
j x*ni«
Mills on miimaH
railroad,—
—east nt
of &lt;lenntdepot. .
same period was 23L
Thekh wire twenty-eight new cases of yel- I
II. R. DICKINSON A CO.
Two tuovsaxd Indian warrior* were in the low fever and three deaths at Brownsville, ।
The County Insane Asylum at Lancaster, Maxatlan Mountains, near Urea, Mexico, on Texas, ou the 15th.
the llth.and were burning the crops and mur­
The first hole of thia year’s cotton crop
dering the inhabitants. In twelve days forty- was received st Mobile on the 15th.
Los*, *70,000.
five person* had been killed within a radius of
A DESTJtrcnvr. rain-storm and tornado
rialtedthe neighborhood of Bangor, Me., ou
By the accidental explosion of a barrel of the evening of the 15th, blowing down build­
explosion which resulted from )&gt;ouring * gunpowder In a trade* in an'* shop near a ing*. unroofing others, and prostrating trees,
quantity of cool oil into a kettle containing schoobbousc in Grodeno, Ru»sla, on the 13lh chimney*, etc. Tbe damage was estimated at
— THAT-----melted lead.
almost all the children in the school-house, about *100,000.
The Secretary of the Kansas State Board of
And shall stay and continue to supply the
A Madrid dispatch of the 15th alate* that
Agriculture estimates that the yield of corn of bodies were taken from the ruins.
the agricultural distress was assuming alarm­
for 1883 in tbe State will reach 20,030,000
Wests atr, the confessed assassin of Lord ing proportions in Andalusia. In consequence j
of px&gt;r harvests and want of labor frequent
Frederick
Cavendish,
arrived
at
Jamaica
on
The Governor of Texas on the 14th pro­
collision* had occurred between tbe peasanttbe 12th.
claimed a quarantine against all Mexican

‘—GREAT----

F. T. BOISE,

PAINT AND BRUSH

Call and Examine!

20 patterns Mens all Wool Suits, cut in fashionable styles,
$6.50, marked down from 9.00.
^5 Mens Cheviot Suits, in sack or frock at $10.00, marked
down from $14,00.
Mens fine Diagonal Dress Suits. Prince Albert cut aways,
marked down from
One lot of Boys Suits, age 10 to 15 years, very durable
material, all Wool,
marked down from
One lot odd Coats, choice, for
100 pairs all wool P/ints, $3.00, wortl‘ $5.00.

In Boots and Shoes, Dry Goods, Groceries and Notions.
Highest price paid for Butter and Eggs,
Don’t miss this great Sale, as our prices are considered less
than material alone would cost.

F. T. BOISE.

CUSTOM

Fouring Mill
TOSTOM

GKIKBING!

WM, A. AYLSWORTH.

Spring
TOOTH

Harrow

Grale Plow.
Plow.

“d 1 South. Ben cl Blow
Buy JTactory Points,
FLOUR. MEAL AND MILL FFED they are much cheap­
er and Better.
Our Graham Flour
Strayer’s Gri
Builders Hardware.
DOMESTIC SEWING 8

,

When in need of the best greades of Hardware
and Machinery, Call and see me-

WOOL

CARDING

We Are Still Here!

NOT ONE

&amp;ND SPINNING

Sbwkxtkex business house* at Chetopa,
Hxkky Mctuta, book-keeper for Hemlng-

Howtn’a livery-*tablc at Prori-

states that the vessel conveying Lieutenant
Bove and the member* of tbe Italian Ant­
arctic expedition had been wrecked off Cape
Horn. All-on board were saved.

critical on the 18th, and the precautions taken
denoted tho apprehension ot a serious out­
break. GaUlug guns had been placed in the
upper yard of Dublin Castle, and large bodies
of infantry with guns jxraded the streets in

borM:* pertebed in the

view of potalble riots during tbe O’Connell
at Farson town, County Louth.

g woek lost year

Ox tbe 15th the Sultan of Turkey issued a
proclamation ordering Arabi Pusha and hla
follower* in Egypt io lay down their arm*.
Advices of the 15th state that tbe crop* in
the western and southern portions ot Massa­
chusetts were rapidly dying for want of rain.

IT IS A. IFLA-CT

GROCERIES
New Carding Mill
8hcap-8bearing time to upon us and tbe

OF A 10.1 QUALITY.

Of tbe undersigned, la prepared to make into

Convention at Waterbury on the 15th. C. C.
Martin was nominated for Governor, and tho
following Congressional nomination* were
made: Fir«t District, I). R. Kidder; Second,
E D. Dunbar. The platform adopted ar­
raign* and hold* roapouaible tbe old political
parties for all tbe evils which have arisen from
the corrupt and Incompetent administration of
political affairs: Indorses -.he platform of ibo
National Greenback-Labor party, favors tbe

ROLLS, OR YARN!

FRESH EVERY DAY,

Ready for um. all the wool of thia section, with

STOCKING

YARN

ROCK BOTTOM PRICES.

------ FROM —

The Nashvjle Mill,
—C.1BUT------

TLum* dretrinfc

NEED NOT WAIT

ABOUT SEPT. 1, They

Ar&lt;

UIIIERSALLT SATISFIED
very soft.

�turn mJ

uxlMUa Nelli. M.mll of ClmiUllo^

•re tl.ltlur u E. P«r»&lt;b’..
up their job.
Dau Huliett has added the Geo. Hay 10 acres
of land to his farm.
To-day (Monday) we arc wielding an Arm-

lF**i crop with u»,*«l l!-O

to Nashville meet* with IncMenU which bring*
swear-words and blushes. He says more than

splendid that at JHjViw this mouth.

work and there is plenty to do, such

roadside as he drove past their dwelling and
requested him to buy for them a paper of safe­
ty pins.
Attention I The annual re-union of the sur­
viving comrades of tbe old Sixth Michigan,
Heavy Artillery,will beheld-at Three Riverton
old comrades attend if possible, and renew old
tics of friendship. Apply to tbe secretary, Dr.
Milton Chase, Otsego, Allegan couu’y, for par­
ticulars.
Now sec here, Mr. Editor, that white black-

ncr looks for him back Monday mornings about
daylight.

a patch of blackberries on a shady tract of
ssndy loam but what plenty of white blackber­
ries, as they called, could l&gt;e found.
Why,
bless your soul, out in Athcna,Calbouu county,
there is a tract of land where the huckleberries
next Saturday if tbe weather permits, from strawberries awl blackberries are always white
Woodland Center.
when ripe that is, wUd fruit.
We understand Charles Collins and wife will
return to the old sod this fall. We will be glad

sudden with
ting better. •

WEST 8UNFIELD.
Mr. Eastman baa a daughter living in Ionia

Egyptian trouble thicken*.
Ob! what really delicious blackberries
the fatal disease will reach Woodland, it being
Robbie Halstead la now a “hired man.”
so near Ionia county.
Rev. Mr*. Morrison is expected to-day (ThuraOur mall carrier barely escaped with his life
day).
last Thursday. He was standing in the back
Mr. David Shafer lost a very valuable horse

Bill came oat with a bad eye.

the man haa moved part of hla goods. We hope
we can get good responsible men, and If ao we
predict a good business.
NJ

eating liquors on tbe fair ground this fall. Now

ed and ace wherein they have failed hercto-

CEDAR CREEK.
Rainy weather Is In order anti has been for
Quite a large amount of wheat has been
badly damaged oy the recent rains.
Tbe wife of James L- Sbeantx was buried to-

her death, though expected, leaves her hus­
band and several small children grief-stricken.
We always supposed that our city boasted of
women that could talk pretty Lard, but the
landlady of tbe house treats her neighbors to
frequent open air exhibitions of combined obcenlty and profanity that puts the blush on

Mr. Thomas of Odessa, reports small-pox
plenty In that vicinity.
Harvesting oats and smut between showers is
tbe order of tbe day in this burg.
Tbe Evening News estimates the loss of
wheat in Michigan akine al $10,000,000.
stuff" should read tighten the cover, instead ot
lighten.
The lawn social will be held at Henry Hunt­
er’s, Friday evening, August 25. Ice cream
Will Hickok of Saranac, spent Sabbath in
town with friends, and with bis wife returned
tbe first of the week.
We regret now that we did not devote the
time in our younger days to writing valedicto­
ries, closing with thrilling perorations, tiien we
could stun tbe readers of tills paper with the
announcement that this is our last apjwarance
’ in public. As it is, we can only tbank Mr. Ed­
itor for giving our effusions a place iu tbe al­
ready crowded columns of Tub Nkwb, and wish­
ing it and iU 1600 patrons a hearty “God speed,’&gt;
baud tbe pen over to Van and step down aud
out and say good by.
Kit.
OBITVABT.

*

..L”
consump­
tion, Millie Colby Fay, beloved wife of Martin
Mr. Wm. Bishop, an old and rcapected dtp Fay, aged 26 years und 6 month*.
Thus has |&gt;**eed from earth into tbe great
zen of thi» place, died very suddenly teal Satur­ Beyond one whom to know was to love. Les*
day nlgbL He leave* a boat of friends among than a year of wedded bliss was her*, for dea.h
those who knew him best. Sober, industrious, had marked her tor It* own, and upon tbe even­
and a mtn wbo always attended to his own ing of her marriage she started for‘Mich., hopinwthat a change of climate would restore her
affair*. His loos as a neighbor will be keenly to health. But the contrary. Bbe continued
felt.
to fail rapidly, and soon returned to Wisconsin,
A shocking care of infanticide happened In her childhood's home, where, surrounded by
loving friend*, she passed away. A Hera was in­
the west part of this township on tbe 14th. Tbe deed a lovely character. .Even when a child
fart* arc reported ss follows: a daughter of she disclosed those trait* which afterward ma­
Frank Halleck gave birth to an illegitimate tured Into tliat beautiful character which
her entire life. Early bereft of her
child and took it* life by throwing it into tbe adonicd
mother, and of strong affection* naturallv, her
privy vault. Dr. Peckham was called and saw love centered upon her father and a voungcr
brother
and
sister, and to them she 'devoted
at a glance that tbe woman bad Just become
with bright and cheerful service. The
a mother, and although abc denied it, a search herself
fragrance of her pure life and character in those
resulted In finding tbe little victim where it* days is still fresh in tbe memory of her friends.
mother had pushed it with a piece of board,— But It is upon the bereaved and grief-etricken
fast beneath die surface in tbe contents of husband that tbe blow falls most heavily, hope­
ful to tbe last that she would be spared him yet
tbe vault. A coroner's inquest held by Esq. a little longer. But in tbe midst of his sorrow
Hall found a verdict that tbe child had lived he is comforted by tbe knowledge that she has
after its birtli, and came to its death bv the only gone before and willingly.
Glide softly to thy rest then; Death sho'd come
band of tta mother.
Gently to one at gentle mold like thee;
As light winds wandering through groves of
aalista of Barry county was well attended and
-[ bloom,
Dctaeh the delicate blossom from the tree.
the best order prevailed throughout tbe servi­
Close thy sweet eyes, calmly and wlthoat pain,
ces. We were treated to preaching by Rev. And we will tenet It, Ci,-I t„ .....
James Gorton of Charlotte, whose remarks are
Mm. D. F. Chilo*.
always received with marked effect In thia
place, while J. W. Hanson, D. D., of Chicago,
gave us several discourse* of tbe highest order.
power were ever preached in this vicinity.

against this denom-

EAST MAPLE GROVE.
Mrs. Gould is now getting better.
Mr. 8. Abbey and family of Bellevue, were
Miss C. Leonard of Charlotte, wm visiting at
John Ehrets the fore part of this week.
.
Mrs. G. Matteson who has been sick for the

that could offend the most fastidious.
&amp;MNACD88.

WEST KALAMO.

Oats are nearly all harvested.

A young lady of Assyria says that tbe young
time ago didn’t know enough to paddle his own
The hired girls ore apparently very scarce
now-a-days throughout this county; but if a
young man wanted a wife the probability is
that they wouldn't be half ao scarce
Qn Sunday night last the song entitled “On­
ly on Armor Bearer" waa sung very nice by a

deratond over three-quarter* of a mile.

was handling over some cartridges which had
slipped nut of bls hand and struck a piece of

of tbe obeli Bew back and penetrated his right
bond near the Engcrs making quite a painful
wound. Handling amunitkm of this kind a

ra houw, wlH

village surveying rhe b..tinf|MI»Ca (,f
Main extenainu on Fridny.
XPeter MeNoughtnn j.f Big RapHa,
waa in the village M&lt;ui&lt;lnv, trying to
rent J *M. Wood’s foundry.
W ella Stcvcna and Anon SJeveru' ut
of Albion and
Strveus of Vt,
Ville, were gneata of J. L. Strvt na over
Handay.
J. M. Roe visited friend* at Kontl*
Bend and Buchanan last week, lnH;gingborne with him aud hia abler, Mis.
Jennie Strong.
Caatleton will be represented in the
Greenback Conveotiun held at Hastings to-day,l&gt;y A. R. Wi.Ic.rtL Henry
Feighner and C. N. Young.
D.P.*Sagendorph, of Charlotte, «■»*
on hand accoidiug to agrei-ment Friday

Making an i .pproprtet'an for tbe deScico- v
or dies. rwprr u&gt;! stamps, nnd to continue
M. E. quarterly meeting at Blsmark last Sat­
Makin
urday and Sunday.
rives in ।
Unde Bovan la afflicted with rheumatism
C. E. Merrit of Eaton Rapids had ripe Early
and unable to labor.
Corn that was leveled by tbe storm last week
Mississippi River.
is regaining it* standing.
During a recent rain the mill pond at Eaton service.
Blackberries are quite plenty. Therefore Rapids roae at the rate of five inches a minute.
Post-4 iffloe Appropriation
The Journal names its authority for the state- ingJune3Q,l»«.
Twenty-six years ago Monday com in this
ilaklng appropriation* for fortifications for
vicinity was nearly ruiued'by frost.
Tbe only child of A. M. Fairchild of St. the year ending Jun*-30. IStt
A show showed Wednesday night at this Louis, Mich., a little boy, was taken sick with
spilal mcningiteo, while attending the tourna­
Making on immediate appropriation tor tbe
With blistered hand I *efec the quill.
ment, at Charlotte and died suddenly, Aug. 16. removal of obstrustious at Heli Gate. New
To write the happenings of thia rille,
Family troubles arc trying thing*. They led York.
To execute certain treaty ailpulatlon* re­
But find my thoughts are out of line.
Alice Clark of Bellevue to swallow' two ounces lating to China.
’
Appropriations for the Indian Department
of laudnum, the other day; but she finally got
evening and made a good argument for,
for
tbe year ending June 30, itWl
Wjutmt.
rid of it as the whale did of Jonah, and is saved
Appropriation* for tb- .Agricultuml Deport­
prohibition to a large audience.
ment for tbe year esdlnst June 5M, l*tG.
for more trouble.
To authorize tbe receipt of gold coin id ex­
I. F. Makepeace of Haoting* ban op­
ROWBURG.
Lightning seems lately to have a partiality changefur gold bar*.
ened a novelty or ten cent atnr* in the
for Eaton county Ilya stock. James Annes* of
Oar Sunday school concert two weeks ago Brookfield and Martin Saulsbury of South
Reeae building, and expum? hundreds
of articles for sale aba low price.
Walton each have lost a cow, and a neighbor
The ice crean: social by the M. E. society held of Saulsbury’s lost a cow and a horse.
The Republican county convention
For the sale of a portion of the Brannock In­ sent H. M. Lee io the atate and E. H.
Tiie four petty criminal cases that grew out
dian
Reservation
In
Idaho
to
the
Utah
A
North
­
ed over $12.
■
of the McAlpin-Bergth racket in Deita have all ern Railroad. ,
Mallory to the congressional conven­
K
There will be a supper, with ice cream also,st been terminated, says the G. L. Independent,
Appropriations for the Military Academy
tion aa delegates from tliis town.
the resldcnc- of Harley Relay on Wednesday by Prosecuting-Altorney Shriner, who entered for tho year endl ng J une 30, lK&lt;t
evening Aug. 23rd, by the Christian society. a nol pros, in each case and ordered tbe parties
—The Olio is yet the the thorn in J.
Appropriation*
for
the
Government
of
the
All are cordially invited to attend.
to pay tbe co^a—$10 for one and $14 for-the Histr.ct of Columbia for the year ending June
J. P’a. aide and Pot cling* to his hobby
Whooping cough is raging in our vicinity at other. Mr. Shriner did his duty in thus setting 30, IMO.
Autborixing the Sioux City A Pacific Rail­ still, like a broken—down drunkard to
present, but they don’t seem to have it very- down ou such petty actions, and the people
road to construct a bridge over tho Misaouri WfiboUle.________________
hard. Some seem to be a little ncrvims over tbe heartily approve his course.
River.
Appropriation* for tbe Consular and Diplo­
report that small pox is gettings little too close
The new society officers of Co. H, 6th Mich,
^iQnite n delegation of Nnahville
matic service for the year ending June 30, ISrii.
U I* said to be In tbe town of Orange.
vol. heavy artillery are; C. A. Hollenbeck,
To annul tbe act for tbe eonotrucuon of a Knighta will go to Detroit next week
Marine Hospital at Memphis, Tenn.
We are having pleasanter weather at present
For the purchase of tbe Freedmen's Bank to attend the Knight* of Pythin* con­
and farmers are thinking that their wheat is presidents; Milo Deuel, secretary; Isaac H. Building.
.
Appropriation for a statue of General James clave, upon tho occaMon of the meet­
not sb bed aa was first supposed. Corn, oats Ames, treasurer; Dr. G. B. Allen, correspond­
A. Garfield br tbe Army of the Cumberland.
ing of tbe Supreme lodge of the world.
look well; but notwithstanding all ing secretary; F. W. Ellis, historian; W. D.
To annul tho statutes in relation to bigu.ny,
etc.
Brainerd, chairman of . executive committee.
—We have now the worry of building
To extend the northern boundary ui Nel&gt;
so^Hvho will grumble if it is a little too wel Eaton Rapid*, Aug. 6, 1883, were selected as kraaka.
well off our hands; have secured the
To exertitc certain treaty stipulations relat­
or a little too dry, aud I bear that some goto the place and date of the next meeting.
service* of Frank P. C«»ok, a -young
ing
to
Chinese.
(Vetoed
April
4,
!!«!.)
tar, they get a little crazy over It.
The Charlotte Republican thinks that the
Concerning certain acta of the Indian Agent and stiring journal mt and printer of
It baa been suggested that we have a toll present harvest expcricence teaches three at Green Bay, Win.
Relating to license fees of officer* of steam Lansing, and shall this fnll tiirii out a
gate a little cast of the corners near Mr Coates’ things: That tbe Fultz and other varieties of vessels.
For the sain of a portion of tho Crow Indian better, spicier, •"rustling” News than
for said man’s'benefit, as it seems necessary for red wheat stand wet wbathcr 10 per cent better
Reaervatiau
in Montana.
ever before. ’
than the Clawson; that tbe loas will run under
For tbe payment of dividends of the Freed­
new piece of land late purchased (such aa shut­ 10 per cent; and that ’tls best “nev&lt;r to put off man's Savings 4 Trust Company.
—A car load of Juckmiu Knights of
To provide additional accommodations for
till
to-morrow,
”
you
know
—
which
being
inter
­
ting up bogs and cowa.)
He is a little notion­
the Interior Department.
Pythiaa, passed westward on'ihe Pacif­
To BUthorixe the construct on of a bridge
al however, aa all arc not requested to pay for preted means that it pay* better to get in your
ic,
Wednesday morning, lamud for
ncn-M the Misaouri River, bear St. Charles, Mo.
their release,ether* enough to make up for all. wheat than to go to a hone race.' It is said the
Uelnting to Appraisers at the Port of New Grand Rapids, to bury Brother Charley
And then it might help enough so that six days loo* will be heaviest in the northern part of tbe Orleans, La.
For the relief of the officer*, crew and own­ Utley, who for aeveral year* past ha*
tn one week might be sufficient to get one's county.
er* of the late private armed brig General
Some time ago several farmer* of this county Armstrong. iIjiw without signature of Pre*- been a well-known, muck leopected
work done without encroaching upon the *evand popular conductor on thi* division
enth. Therefore in view of all these fact* agreed to purchase a patent harness at $3, and ident)
Amending tbe act donating land for agriof Che M. C. R. R.
plcasc,'comc prepared to pay a little toll—a little they signed ready-made notes a* security. Now cu turn! college*
For tho sale of the Miami Indian lands in
from*all would belp,evcu pennies and half pen- these same notes turn up before them, but for Kanaaa.
—A pood man remarked to ns on
$80 Instead of eight. The trick la this: When
nles.
Creating two additional land districts in No­
Monday that he really b -lirved that
Victim.
the fanner signs the note he also signs a con­
John
Potter wm becoming demented
tract (willingly, ot course) to take the agency members of Uonirre** and tbe officer* anti em­
for the harness and to pay $1 a sett royalty on ployes ot tho two bouses In certain contingen- over the Olio. Another that if lie was
HASTINGS.
six dozen setts of tbe harness, besides $8 for
For asoertaiq|Bf tbe Indian war claims ot not becoming demented, he wm tijierMIm White from Jackson is visiting Genie
the sample sett. In the note the royalty is fig­ Texas, Colorado, Oregon. Nebraska, California ly devoid of pride or he would not Ire
Brown.
Kan«as and gevada, and tbe Terr.torioe ot
ured In advance (a fact not made particularly Washington nnd Idaho.
harping away upon a theory that wtia a
Tbe Odd Fellows have a picnic at TboroapFor a monumental column to commemorate weak admission that-he hud been Iwatapparent when the uote is signed), and so tbe
ple Lake. Aug. 24.
luirtlc of Monmouth.
note, when ft falls due, is for $72 plus $8, or the
Appropriation for final expense* of the tent* cn. Evidently the editor ol the de­
The Presbyterian school bad a picnic last
census.
.
W0.
Friday at Thornapple Lake.
&gt;
To provide additional Industrial schools for funct Bugle ha* been xneceiMfiil to one
Messrs. Wheatou and Kellogg inform us that
Indian youth, und uutborixltur the use of un­ thing nt least, that in &lt;&gt;f making him­
Several of our teachers arc attending the in­
the main building of Parson's Hall, at Olivet, occupied military barracks for such purpose*.
stitute at Naabville this week.
To enaldv National Hanking osaoclstioM to self appear ridiculous before the l»ei»t
la now all up excepting a fool at the top which extend their corporate exlstcuc.-. and for other
Tbe base ball game last Friday stood 14 to 5
men ii&gt; Nashville.
is waiting for the roof to be raised. At the purposes.
tn favor of tbe Cass dub of Detroit.
To divide tbe State of Iowa into two Judicial
rear of tbe main bull-ting they are putting up
—The Barry county Rrpublietti con­
D'stricts.
Will Bennett won the medal for the fifth time
another 40x60 fret. This take* the place of the
For tbo payment of Invalid and other pen­ vention at Hantinga; Wralmualay* waa
last Tuesday. He now bolds it for good.
small wooden building where the fire originat­ sion* tor tho yi-ar ending June :o. Hi-3.
decidedly
unanimous for triiiperhiirr,
Bridg*
across
Bolntc
Marie
River.
The Choral Society arc going to give a prom­
ed, and Is connected with the main building by
Bale of a certain portion of Crow Indian Jerome, and Lacey- A resolution in­
enade concert tha 23. We don't know whether
a brick passageway. Tbe smaller one is to be Reacrvstion for the use of Northern Pacific
structing the state drlrgrth-K for Jerome
that is anything like a war dance or not. We
Railroad.
used for a dining room on tbe first floor and a
AbolHhtng Fort Abercrombie Military Res­
never run across either one before. Any one
was voted down been use the con ven Linn
ervation.
society room above. They are to have gravel
an become an eye witness for ten cents.
Authorising tho sale of tho site of the old had confidence that they would *«•:«
or tin over the roof*. Both buildings treat posto-ffiee in New York City.
Last Friday was a good day for runaways. brick and are intended to be fire proof. The
To promote telegraph'c communication be- for him anyway, and it desired fonvnid
A team belouging to Mr. Kirby, a drover, be­ building will not be completed before tbe mid­ twe-'n America and Europe.
Salo nf certain Kickat-oo Indian lands in a precedent tor bind!nir &lt;h leg.»t«-a to
came frigbtend at the car* aud ran away with dle of December.—Charlotte Leader. •
Kansas.
„
, any delegate; but a resolution asking
Hoisting to the Uncompaghre aud White
an empty buggy. They took It alow and easy
The winnings on Wednesday at the fireman's River Uto lands In CoforWflo.
tbe candidate to suppoit it rvaoluiioii iu
for aliout half a mile and were stopped finally, tohvuamcnt at Charlotte were as follows: Best
Bridge urroM th- Rio Grande between El the state convention favoring the sub­
the buggy Was damaged slightly. Dr.Lathrop’s ■ appearance hc*c company—Old Alerts, Big Paso. Tex., nnd Paso del Norte, Mexico.
To fix th- coterie* in railway mall service
mission of a constitutional ameiulment
hone became frightened attiic car* also, and Rapids, 1st, Cadillac,'2d; Best appearance,
Appropriations for rivers and harbor* for to prohibit the liquor traffic was carried
succeeded iu breaking up the buggy badly, department—Charlotte, let, Eaton Rapids, 2d. tbe year ending June :.U. 1*3. | Vetoed by tho
August 1, and passed ovpr tho veto unanimously. Tbe following weie the
aside from dislocating a knee and ankle for ttic In the hook and ladder race, tbe Prairie Queen President
August S. 1*2.1
j
r
.
To regulate tbe carriage of passenger* by delegates selected: Congressional—W.
company, Charlotte, took the first prize, ttic
sea. ------------------ ---------------------- -- _ _______ H. Powers, Wm. Scudder, Gw».Mnir,
Hass.
State championship trumpet and $125; time,
To regulate immigration.
Public building at Williamsport, Pa.
E. H. Mallory, Tho-. 8. Brice. J. J. Per­
34J/ seconds. The Goguacs, of Battie Creek,
In relation to copyright
JOHNSTOWN.
won the second prize of $75; time, 38^ seconds.
Hight of way tor a railroad through tho kins, F. W. Collins, John Kilpatrick,
BesJe K., of Eaton Rapids, won third prize; lan&lt;ia of the Choctaw and Chickasaw Indians Ira Osgood, T. B. Diamond, J. W.
C. Breezy is preparing to build a bouse.
In Indian Territory.
Chartering tbe Oregon Short Lino Railroad Homes, E. F. Nye; Slate—M. L. Cook,
H. Merrill has nearly completed his bouse. time, 30 seconds. . Tbe Charlotte Juniors took
Company.
The grangers are putting a wall under tbclr tbe first prize, $30, in the Junior book and lad­
Ports of delivery at Kansas City and 8L Jo JohnCarveth, Milo J. Goss. H. M. Lee,
der contest; time, 20S seconds. Tbe Young
ball.
A. L. VanHorn, C. A. Hough, G. K
building *t St Joseph, Mo.
Onr young doctor is very attentive to bis America hose company of Battle Creek, took
Relinquishing tho tltlo of the United States Beamer. W. H. Jewell, 8. J. Bidlrman
the 1st prize, $30, in the Junior hrtse contest; to certain lands In Burlington, la.
patent. He visits her every Bunday.
Fort Benton Military Reservation George H. Ford, Daniel Striker, L. A.
C. Bristol and son are doing a good businew time, 25 seconds. Thursday, in the steamer tnRestoring
the public domain.
Nichols.
contest, Eaton Itapids 1st, Charlottes 3d; hand
To relieve certain soldier* ot tbe charge of
with their new Advance separat-r.
engine contest, Marshall 1st, St Louis 3d.
desertion.
•
Appropriations for Legialative, Executive
MAPLE GROVE.
Tungates last Bunday night. The audience
snd Judicial expenses of the Government for
A number of Rutland farmers clubbed to­ the year ending Juno 3U. 1WO.
consisted of a young couple riding post the
Mr. Acre and wife of Hope, were guests at
Appropriation* for deficiencies for 1882 and
gether this year and bought a threshing ma­
Mr Boltz's Sunday.
Fred took a trip among tb« sand hills of chine and are doing their own threshing aud
Mr*. E. L. Shafer has the cbiU fever.
saving threshers’ bills.
Yankee Springs last Saturday. He must have
To establish diplomatic relations with Persia.
Green corn and cabbage.
Appropriation* for naval expense* for year
Ex-Sanitary Coen. Rufus K. Hireman, of ending June SB, PWL
home until Monday.
For the manufacture of salt in the Indian Lake was well attended
New Orleans, was cured of a severe attack of
Jack.
rheumatism by St Jacobs OU, so we sec by an Territory'.
John Hill has tbe frame of his new boose up.
Rotating to land patents in the Virginia Mili­
item in the Coiumbus (Ga.) Enquirer-Bun'.
tary District of Ohio.
A gentleman from York Stare is stopping at
EATON COUNTY.
Mr. Balta's. He is investigating for a locaCORNS! CORNS! CORNS!
North Eaton lias a baseball club.
Everyone
suffering
from
painful
corns
will
be
vised
Statutes
of
tbe
United
States
(knit
goods).
John Ash of Carmel, aged 103, died recently.
succeeds.
Hewtatrotion of tnute-nuuk*.
glad to learn that there Is a new aud painless
Publication of the tenth census.
Tbe cabbage grub is ravaging about CharDouglas Blade was home Sunday.
of coma may be removed entirely iu a short
Kittle Mayo and Grace Potter attended the
A. M. Barber has has moved bis family to time nud without iwla. Putnam'* Painless
teachers institute this week.
Corn Extractoe ha* already been used by thou­
To amend Sec. 4.7(1! of tbe Revised Statutes
Charlotte.
sand*, and each person who has given it a trial
8. A. Barnes of Charlotte has bought tne becomes anxious U) recommend it to oilier*. It
i* tbe on y sure, prompt and painless cure for
running stallion Victok
Referring the claim* of tbe captor* of tbe Grove.
corns known. Putnams Painless Corn ExtrartBaptist excursion from Charlotte to Detroit
One of Fred Shoup’s children has the diph­
ram Albenmrto to 1 he Court of Claims.
ACO^fT,hm' Wbofe*Ue”,E-D-&lt;v» Repealing export tax on totamoa.
and Put-lu-Bay, Aug. 29.
x—
Transfer of j&gt;ropcrty of tho National Soidk.ra' theria.
Hon. D. B. Hale of Eaton Rapids wants to sit
nnd Bailor*' Orphans* Home to tbe Garfield
•i. . 7. 4uks it. snowa Memorial Hospital.
in the senate from this district.
that hi* father's switch has not had a fair
Buppioment to the act making approprla.
Hon. E. 8. Lacey of Charlotte returned from
tion for the final cxpenMM of tix- tenth comtu*. Hexa county convention, Wednesday.
To admit free of duty articles for tho Min­
Washington, Saturday evening.
ing and Industrial Exhibition at Deaver, Qjfo.
Naahville Jlarketa.
The Detroit League base ball dub plays tbe
To estabnah a port of delivery at Dtmvdr,

STRAYED.

Wednesday, entitled the I’rair.e Gem.
with the
reward '

�Not wert, bat wwry. make* havoc nt baalU-.

WAGONS ONLY! $60.00

CHANUE OF MIND.
—Pa
giring

(wrl4.Ui part*
It* briMlioK t

Bay to bl* pflferiug comrade* iww?
Why. when the direful thin&lt; be hav
Sacroak-1•croaely: •• Caw.- co-oic
And still alotur the corn* jrreeti track
BtaiMed the thl’vea tn jrllsteainff black.
Keter a stately «trp showed frltrbt.
Never a winr took hurried flijrbt:
But mil the nocks came. day by day,
- To find where the yellow kernels l*y.
puxxied her little mind.

»h«-ul&lt;ln't

have

put

on grand p*'i

—Mn. Can Doty Bain, tn Wide Awota.

THE DEFE5SE OF THE “ESSEX.”

and rig­
loon in a
taped his
cable, and, hoisting his flyiog-jib, bore
down upon tbe enemy, pouring broad-­
irides into them ns the ship slowly drift­
ed. The “Cherub” waadriven off for
a second time, and the “Phcebe” re­
tired out of the reach of the guns of the
“Essex,” but near enough to worry her
with her long-range ordnance. After
two hours of fighting. Porter tried to
run his vessel aahofe, to prevent her
falling into the hands of tho enemy: but
a change of wind prevented him, and he
anchored once more, making fart •
sheet-anchor with a hawser.
Very shortly after, the hawser parted,
and, to increase the trials ot these de-,
termined heroes, the ship took lire be­
low dock. In this extremity, Captain
Porter told the men to save themselves
as best they could. Som? threw .them­
selves into the sea and swam to shore,
some were drowned, and many were
picked up, while clinging to bits of
wreck, by the boats of the enemy. But
a larger part of the crew staid by tbe
ship, arid continued firing - into the
enemy, in the midst of the. smoke and
flames.
Finally, the lire Was partly
subdued, and men enough to work two
of tho long twelves kept up a brisk fire.
But further resistance was useless.
Only seventy-five men were left to do
duty, the 'remainder being killed,
wounded, or missing. So. after an en­
gagement that had lasted two hours
and a half. Porter, with a sorrowful
heart, hauled down the American flag,
and the wreck of the gallant “Essex’’
was surrendered to the foe. The Brit­
ish lost four killed and seven wounded
ou the “Ph’u-be,” and one killed and
three wounded on the “Cherub.” Bulh
ships were badly crippled, their sails
and rigging being riddled, and the
“Phabe” had received eighteen shots
below water-lino from the long twelves
of the “ E&lt;sex.” Thousands of sncelators crowded the shores to gaze on the
bloody encounter. The Spanish Vice­
roy was vainly entreated by the Ameri­
can Cocnul to insist upon the mainte­
nance of neutrality. He refused 'to in­
terfere.
Thus ended one of the most remarka­
ble naval engagements of modern times.
It ended in disaster to the American
cause. But the heroic defense of the
“Essex,” in which officers nnd men
vied with one another in a determina­
tion not to give up the ship, fired with
fresh enthusiasm all who heard the
story of their brave and obstinate tight.
And. when the young people of this ReSublic shall celebrate once more the
eeds of the patriotic defenders of the
American Republic, let them give a
hearty cheer for David Porter and his
crew.—Xoah Broaku, in SL Nicholas.

When I was a small youngster, jears
ago, we boys used to be told thrilling
stories of what was called “The Last
War.” In these later days, we have
had a war on our own soil, which was,
let tte.hope, the last warthat we shall
ever be engaged in'as long as the Ameri­
can Republic lasts. But boys of an older I
generation than this knew “The Last
War” to be the war between the United
States and Great Britain, now generally
called "*The War of 1812.”
Happily,
though the contest was not a long one.
Americans can look with pride at the
American navy of that period.
The
names ot Bainbridge, Hull, Decatur.
Porter, -Perry, and many other gallanf
sailors, will be remembered as long as
the traditions of tbe United States navy
endure.
In 1818. the frigate “Essex,” com­
manded by Captain David Porter, after
committing much havoc upon tbe
British marine off the Atlantic coast of
Sooth America, sailed boldly around
Cape Horn into the Pacific Ocean.
Porter had resolved to strike out into a
new field of operations, and. carrying
;-into the Pacific the first American'flag
that jiad floated from the mast-head of
. a man-of-war, he swooped down upon
the British merchantmen and whalers.
• causing tremendous consternation. No­
body had dreamed that the Yankees
would dare to send a manof-wnr into
this diAani sea. and the British frigate-,
weremaking things very uncomfortable
Scotch Funeral*.'
for. tiie few American merchantmen en­
gaged in tho Pacific thuie. The arrival
At Luas the fashion was to serve out
‘ of the “Essex” soon changed ( all that.
the
Within a year she hat! captured four no liijiior.at the house from which___
The primary pur­
thousand tons of British shipping, and funeral “lifted.”
' htad taken four hundred prisoners. She pose for which the company was met
may be said to have subsisted u|x&gt;n the was recognized as being,to gel the
buried
oniy body to the
• ••- church-yard'and
............
' bucmy
enemy,, op me
the vessel was ui»
not only
suppled*
supplied* with everything needed for there. The grave-yard was, however,
repairs, rigging, ammunition, clothing a l°ng distance from the vila^e, nnd
and provisions, taken from the enemy s the Luria! over the company adjourned
captured ships, but the men were paid to tho neighboring "stagv'hoose ” for
with money found on board of one of refreshments, which forty years ago al­
’ her prizes.’
ways took the following shape: Iirst a
Orders were given that tho “Essex” glass of whisky was handed round, ac­
must be destroyed, at all hazards, by companied by loaf bread, oat-cake and
any British man-of-war that should be cheese. When that had been discussed,
fortunate enough to catch her. But the a glass of rum and a farthing “ cappit"
American frigate was fleet, and difficult biscuit for each mourner followed.
to catch. Finally, in February, 1814, | This again was succeeded by a glass of
the frigate, accompanied bv a small wine and a sponge, or funeral biscuit.
craft called tjw “Essex Junior.’’ a It was a matter of compulsion, almost,
cruiser made over from one of the prises for each person to take. off his glass
captured from the British by Porter, each round, and many persons still liv­
cast anchor in the harbor of Valparaiso. ing remember with a'shudder their ex­
- Beni. -The Peruvian Government- was perience on such occaalnns. But even
not then,, independent. Pem being a this fashion was mild compared with
province-of Spain. But Valparaiso was the generation immediately preceding,
a neutral port, although the people of when every guest had to swallow three
Peru, an^thp Spanish, also, were some-- glasses of each of the kinds of drink.
what unfriendly to the Americans. So. The scandals to which this immoder­
when two Briti-h men-of-war. the ate drirfking led can be well enough
“Phoebe.” and the “Cherub,” entered conceived, and the Lairds, of Colquthe port, it was tolerably certain that hour. shocked at some stories that
there would be a tight. should the ** Es­ came to their ears, offered to provide a
hearse at their own expense for all In­
sex” dare to put out to sea.
The Englishmen had the redoubtable terments, to take awav tbe excuse for
“Essex” and her little consort in a trap. so much indulgence; but the proposed
For six weeks the two British vessels innovation
was resisted for many
On one
occasion a party
kept a very close watch on the Ameri­ years.
returning
after
the
funeral
cans, sailing up and down the the coast, was
just outside of the entrance to the har­ and subsequent refreshment, and some
bor. Finally, on the 28th of March, kind friend had lent them a cart to
Captain Porter, trusting to his ability to ride home in. A discussion on some
outsail cither of the British vessels, and point, whether political or religious I
draw them away, so that the " Essex cannot say, arose, the result being that
Junior” might escape, set sail and drew those who adopted the one side of the
out of thr anchorage. In doubling n question refused to ride in the same
headland at the entrance of the harbor, cart with their opponents, aud the
the “Essex” was struck by a squall, weaker side was consequently “dis­
which carried away her maintopmast rupted” into the road and had to walk
and several men. 'Captain Porter re­ the remainder of the journey. The
turned toward the roadstead,, and an­ custom ot not supplying drink' to the
chored three miles from the town and mourners till the burial was completed
about the distance of s pistol-shot from was one which might have been imi­
the shore.
The “Phoebe” and the tated with advantage elsewhere. On
“Cherub” had been exchanging sig­ the south bank of the Clyde it did not
nals. and it was evident that they meant prevail. Some of the inhabitants of the
to attack, although the vessels were all district through which the Greenock
branch of the Caledonian Railway now
The “Phnybe" carried thirty long runs had their family “lair” or bury,-J-—------ — J »rs and sixteen'thirty- ing-place in the gravo-yard of a village
muuIcs for her armi- over the .hills nearer Ayrshire. .Wheth­
ren small guns in her er it was usual to give a dram before
had 320 men, all told, starting or no, a supply was invariably
the party on tbe
carried twenty-eight furnished to
crJibe- and IwO men. road. Ata funeral which took pl.aae

use* can 'only be had by
rich, friable, well-drained

H”J&gt; Bitter*

beneficial—Jf. K Examiner.

REV. J JIN SEAMAN,
Editor Home Sentine’, Afton, N. Y.

—A gocxl dog, cays a recent writer,
will learn to herd fowls, and the fowls
will know tip- dog. Fowls have plenty
of intelligence, ami very soon learn for­
bidden ground, when told in dog lan­
guage. 1 know a farmer who keeps a
collie for a watch dog. He nays be
would never expect to raise a crop near
his house but for tbe dog. a part of the
dog’s business being to keep the fowls
from the crops.

A Buckeye SO years old I* defendant ‘ in a

A man bora at sea cannot be proud of his na
tire land'

—Young chicks
are
'sometimes
troubled with a disease that, for lack of
a better name, we call indigestion.
Thev lose their appetite. “ bake up be­
hind,” mope around and die. It is
caused by feeding sour, uncooked food,
lack of gravel and preen food. The
preventives are obvious.
Feed only
cooked food, provide gravel and plenty
of green food. Onion tops or lettuce
chopped and mixed with the soft fool
is excellent for young chicks and tur­
keys. Sometimes a cm re can be effected
in the early stages of this disease bv
giving a nalf-tea*por&gt;nful of croton oil
or tincture of rhubarb, and then feeding
for a few days on cooked riee, or stole
bread soaked in milk nnd seasoned with
pepper. A’ little pulverized charcoal
added tc the food twice a week tends to
keep the digestive organs of young fowl#
in good order.—Prairie Farmer.

Mr. H. N. Morton, of Oswego, N. T. writes:

cheeks oo rosy tor yean.

■

One dollar In gold now buy* *240 of Peruvian
money, and &gt;240 of Peruvian money buy* an
every day stnhf bat.

tha
, and
to look

Common, nnd hung ready foruse.

'KTEnT.T.-SrS B-ALRZBJSID WIRE.
SEWIING MACHINES.

In fact, we keep a full and complete stock of first claw Hardware and Fanning Tool*.
and see Ibra before buying.

Call

HERE WE ARE A&amp;ADT!
WITH A FULL STOCK OF

“DON’T TRJTST THEM”
When you feel badly, and have pain* here
and there in your body tljat you don't know
bow to oceout for It is the most foolish policy
in the world to take the advice of people who
»ay: ‘Oh, there’s nothing tbe matter with you.
Let yourself alone and you will come out all
right” These folks know nothing about it,
and may I* trifflng with your life. You may
have Kidney or Liver trouble. Send right
out to your druggist nnff get a bottie of Dr.
Kennedy’s “Favorite Remedy,” and then you
will be all right, or write to the Doctor, at
- Rondout N. Y.

Farming at the “Front.”

ROM SCRAPERS, SQUARE DRA8S. GRIND STONES

PLOW POINTS for the Oliver Chilled. Wlard, Three Rlv
era, Bryan, Cale, Curtle, Dodge, Roblneon
And many other flows.

Over 13,000,000 pound* of plug tobacoo were
used last year to sweeten America'* breath.

* Never before hate there been so man&gt;
people of all clause* taking a strong,
direct, personal interest in the agricult­
ural situation and prospects. Business
men. bankers, capitalists, stockbrokers,
merchants, mechanics* manufacturers,
operatives, anti day laborers even, arc
watching the daily bulletins :uid report.of the weather, with especial reference
to how it is affecting the growing wheat,
corn and oats, nnd the further planting
of corn. Never before have they s«en
so clearly that farming is the real basis
of all other businesss, nnd that upon it
rests the prosperity of the country.
They now comprehend tho fact that it
was the good crops bf 187!&gt;. 1880 nnd
1881. from tho export of which we re­
ceived so many hundreds of millions oi
dollars from other lands, which changed
the financial depression of 1873, and
the years following, into a prosperous
activity extending through nil branches
of trade and manufacture. Every extra
bushel of wheat or com. or pound ol
meat, cheese nnd butter that went to
market helped turn the scale. The hun-'
dreds of millions of bushels of grain
that came from the interior *o the sea­
board, -gave profitable employment to
tbe railroads. These bought and used
more cars, more iron, more st- el. and
the makers of these, from head director
to t£e_ lowest laborer, recek’ed more
wages and more constant employment,
and they purchased more free!, thoap
articles’that go to supply the necessities
and comforts of every day life. This
stimulated and increased the mercantile
trade, nnd made heavier demands upon
all kinds of manufactured commodities.
The farnfers who received the proceeds
were able to reduce debts upon their
farms; to buy more and better imple­
ments: to pay up their store debts, and
to buy more freely from the merchants.
The merchants and shopJkecpers xvere
in turn able to pay up their debts to
wholesale houses, brokers in manufact
ures. and importers, and to buy largestocks of good9 for cash or on short
credits. 1710 carrying of these goods
increased the transportation business,
and stimulated the building of five to
ten thousand miles of new railroads per
year.
This brief glance at some leading
points shows the great and far-reaching
influence of prosperity to farmer*. On
the other hand, the unfavorable winter
and spring and the summer droughts of
1881 cut down the surj&gt;lus wheat and
com and meat and dairy products and
cotton, many score millions in value.
This of course diminished exports, anti
has started gold abroad; -it has decreased
the ability of farmers, and all classes ol
workers, to buy goods and manufac­
tures. The decline in the demand for
iron and steel, and the fall in prices,
prevent the payment of the wages asked
for and there is now prevailing one of
the greatest “strikes’’ever kn-.rwn in
this country, of laborers who demand
higher pay to meet the increas-d cost
of living, due in part to the advance in
bread «tuffs.

A COMPUm LINE OF

Bugxies- Carriage*, Wheel Harrows and
Cultivators, Mounted Seeders,
and 4 kinds of Plows.

REED’S GENUINE SPRING TOOTH HARROW

AN IMPOSSIBILITY.
The cxccjitibnal deanlineas &lt;rf Parker* Hair
Balram makes it jKipular. Gray hair* arc Im­
politic with Its uccaMOual use.

—To can raspberries, fill the cans full
of berries, set them in a boiler of cold
water with wooden slats laid on the bot­
tom, and bring the water to the boiling
point. As the berries settle add more
till the juice reaches the top of the can.
then seal. In this way the sirup is un­
diluted with water. Or, .put the berries
iu a stewpan with a little water, let them
boll four or five minute7., then put iu
cans nnd seal.—.V, Y. Tribune.
—Rice jelly for a sick person is veg1
nourbthiug, and is very easily made.
Mix two heaping spoonfuls of nice flour,
with eupngh cold water to make a thin
paste; add a cupful of boiling water,
putting it in gradually; then let it boil
until It is transparent. When you take
it from the stove, sweeten and flavor it.
If it is for a fever patient, flavor with
lemon juice; if for one with summer
complaint, put a slick of cinnamon in it
while it is boiling.—Ocrmanlourn Tele­
graph.
.

.

. A Milwaukee woman ba* kept a kettle of hot
water on the stove every night for twent^two
years pa*t in order to scald burglar*.
“ROUGH ON RATS."”
The thing desired found at l**t- Ask Drug­
gist for “Rough on Rate.”
It clear* out rats'
mice,’roaches, flei, bed-bug*. 15c- boxes.

A man is only as he feels.

REMEMBER THIS.
If you are rick Hop Bitters will surely aid
Nature in making you well when all else falls.
If you arc costive or dyspeptic, or arc suffer­
ing from any other of tbe numerous diseases of
the stomach or bowels. It is your own fault If
vou remain'Ul, for Hop Bitters are a sovereign
remedv in all such complaint*.
If you are wasting away with any form of
Kidney di*ea*e, stop tempting death this mo­
ment, and turn for acute to Bop Bitter*.
If vou are sick with that terrible sickness
Nct v'ousness, von wi(l find a “Balm In Gilead”
in the use of flop Bitters.
If vou are a frequenter, or a resident of a
miasinatic district, barricade your »v*tem
against the scourge of all countries—malarial,
epidemic, blllousnrM-, and intermittent fever*—
by the u*c of Hop Bitters.
If vou have rough, pimply, er swallow skin,
bad breath, pain* and aches, and feel miserable
generally. Hop Bitter* will give you fair skin,
rich blood, sweetest breath, health, and com­
fort.
In short thev cure all diseases of the stom­
ach, Bowels, Blood. Liver. Nerves, kidney*.
Bright’s disease.
will be paid for a case
they will not cure or help„
,
That poor liedriddeu. Invalid wife, sister,
mother or daughter, can be made the picture
of health, bv a few bottle* of Hop Bitter*. eo*tinc but a trifle. Will you let them suffer!

Wagons
OUR LINE BUGGIES
EMBRACES

Timkins,
Dexters,
IPTieetons
White Chappel and Coal Boies, hnng with Elliptic Springs.
Two and Three Spring Democrats
UR WORK IS ALL DONE UPON HONOR. BUGGIES

made from Second Growth Hickory.
OOur being
Tops are lined with All-Wool Indigo-Dyed Goods and

Warranted not to Fade. W. H. Atkinron, a painter whose
work has never went back on him, has charge of our paint de­
partment, and can be relied on. Bolts, Dash Feet, Body Loupa
and Stays are made from Norway Iron and the entire bugg
ironed in a desirable and superior manner and warrante

Until you have thoroughly examined mine. Spokes i made
from Second .Growth Stock and the wagon is made to stand
the wear and tore of our roads.
Z3TI HAVE IN STOCK A NUMBER OF-^S
F'lii-Ht, Ac Bradley’s

Chilled Plows, Hay Rakes and Cultivators
Whichll will Sell at Cost to Close out

F.EP YOU EYE OY THIS

50 Wagons
FOR SALE!
OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE

WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH

THREE INCH TIRE
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING

BETTER THIH COMMON TIRE.
ERRORS OF YOUTH.

We believe the Three inch Tire i&lt; destined to
into general use. Call and see them.

Sold by C. L Glasgow, Nashville, Mich.

“7’4 Hwtmgs, Mich., Sept 25th, 1881.

come

�"BI’CHCPAIBA."

at ODM illieiu pity from any human

fatter form to amplify my meaning, the
—Tinted satin skirts, with pointed
exbeeejwf nervous force is in the child front breadths and lace tunics, drawn
most naturally and healthily reduced by pp-eu to show the tablier and held back
its cottveraion into muscular force, and
; tL^ nr^ID IM ADVANCE.
at very short intervals during the active
or waking period of life the child in­
stinctively uses its musclcH and relieves
.the brain and nerves of their accumu­
lated force, which passes, by the inter­
ha blue, are the most fashionamediate contraction of the muscular ble
ht colors tor evening dress, but
fiber, into ordinary force or motion, ex­ in I—materials
dark jhades are
still
--------------- ---------------------------- —
—
emplified by the child's own amuse­ much
mucn worn, Borde
Bordeaux,
aux, Corin
Corinlhe,
inc, Violet
ments and by those of some object or de Lorraine, and “Louis” green being
other which haa attracted its attention. | favorites.
.
PERUSE THESE LIBERAL AD. KATEA
The tihisuea of the growing organs,
brain and muscles are at thia period of
life too soft to bear a long continuance
The crown is of cameoot their proper actions; their fibers hare tultcd chenille, covered with a network
14.00
not attained their mature tone and firm­ of gold, amber, pearl, and pale pink
ness. This is more especially the case beads. A soft scarf of the chenille,
Taoo
with the brain fiber. The direef action beaded to match, is carried around the
StoctaT
of tile brain, as in the mental applica­ crown, brought forward, and fastened
tion to learning, soon tires; if it be too with a creaent of glittering beads set in
long continued the tissues are unhealth­ dead gold filigree.
ily affected: the due progress or growth,
—-The charming fashion of wearing
which should have resulted in a fiber
wash drosses of pattern materials has
-fit’ tor good and continuous labor
OBNO STRONG,
brought out painted muslins for the hot
at maturity, is interfered with: the
Editor and Proprietor.
summer days.
Both dark and light
child as an intellectual instrument is
grounds are exceeding popular, and
to that extent spoiled by an error in the
these muslins should be arranged over
process by which that instrument was
a skirt of thin silk. If this foundation
sought to be improved. The same ef­
fect on the muscular system is exempli­ is made of muslin, it should be of a
very delicate hue, and plain-in color,
fied in the racers that are now trained
. -Presldcnt^-Ellhu CWgCiam"
to two and a half or three and a half so as not to interfere with the one
Trauma-flank C. Boise.
years old for the grand prizes at Don­ above it.—N. Y Evening Poti.
caster or Epsom. The winner of the
Assessor—John E. Barry.
How They Print a Paper.
Marshall—James L. Gregory.
Derby never becomes an Eclipse or Fly­
Trustees—II. A Barber, F. T. Bobe. H. W. ing Childers, because the muscular sys­
Some time ago wo got a now press
Demaray, H. R. Dickinson, H. M. Lee and
tem has been overwrought two or three for this office and for a number of
years before it could have arrived at weeks it was our chief delight to take
lull development, which development is visitors through the mechanical de­
Pnittitf.
slopped by the premature over-exertion. partment of the paper, politely and
If the brain be not stimulated to work, cheerfully explaining to them a thous­
piHRISTIAN CHURCH—F -A. Btesd.Paitor.
Services every Sabbath at 10.30 a. m. and but is allowed to rest, and if at the same and things that we didn't know any­
7 p. IB. Sabbath acbool at 13 m. Prayer meet­ time the muscles be. forbidden to act, thing about. The foreman used to
ing every Thun-duv evening
there then arises, if this restraint bo too say that wo did pretty well, although
prolonged, au overcharged, state of the ho used to sometimes caution us about
TUTSTHODIBT EPISCOPAL CHURCH—A
JM. D. Newton, Pastor. Services every Sab­ nervous system. It fa such a state as the use of certain terms in certain
we see- exemplified in the caged Quad­ ways. You see, a man who is not a
bath at 10.40 a. m. and 7 p. m.
Sabbath
school at 12 m. Prayer r-eeting every Thureruped of active habits, when it seeks to Sractical printer has to trust a good
relieve it by converting the nervous into
eal to his memory and chance to help
VY LODGE NO. 37, K. of P.. meets at its the muscular force to the extent per­ him out, and he don’t always use the
Castle Hall, Naslnlllc, Michigan, every mitted by its prison, either executing a
Friday evening, for the encouragement and succession of bounds against the prison correct' scientific name.
Ono day Colonel Stanton, the Chief
support of all worthy, true, steadfast and hon­ Lars, like the agile leopard, or stalking,
Paymaster of the Department, came
orable Brother Knights.
like the lion, sullenly to and fro. If the up into the Boomerang office to pay his
L-E-Lkxtx, K. K. S. Oaxo Stkoxo.C. C.
active child be too long prevented from subscription and tell ns some blood­
gratifying the instinctive impulse to put curdling anecdotes about different en­
in motion its limbs or body, the nervous gagements, in which the Pay Depart­
H. YOUNG. M. D. Office ea*t side of system becomes overcharged, and the ment had waded in blood and came off
. Main St., Nashville. Office hours from relief may at last be got by violent emo­
more than conqueror. After we had
7 to9 a. m., and 4 to 7 p. to.
tions or acts, called ‘‘passion” or
ladled out a few lines to him relating
B. AYUWORTH, M. D., Physician "naughtiness.” ending in tho tit of cry­ to our frontier Ute, wo took him into
• and Surgeon. Office over Boise’s drug ing and flood of tears.—Prof. Ouvn.
the press room and showed him tho
■tore: Room at Wolcott House. Will promptly
new press. He manifested a good deal
attend to all day and night calls.
of interest in the thing and asked a
The Picturesque Side of Poverty.
good many questions which we an­
, Electla Physician and
Poverty, ns we must all own, need swered in our usual graphic style. Then
not of necessity be squalid.
Cross the wo went into the news room. We could
Channel and take a look at the conti­ see by the frown on the foreman’s
nental towns and cities. There the life brow'tnat we were making some awful
H. PARMENTER, M. D.
Office over
of the lower classes lias its picturesque breaks, but what can you do when you
Hull’s Drug store, Vermontville, Mich.
side; tho result, or possibly the cause of have a visitor who must be entertained
a natural taste for the beautiful being and who keeps asking about these
developed even in the poorest peasant. things that you don’t know anything
The fisher-girls upon the opposite coast about?
.
ty. Office opposite Union House.
dock their persons as well 'as their
After awhile tho Colonel seemed to
houses, and go about their daily tasks lose his interest in our description of
T A. FOOTE, PKTBICIAS S. BURGEON
1J* Succwor to Dr. Wickham. Office sec­ unconscious models for the-artist. The how a newspaper was made. At first
ond door north of the Nashville House: mi- blue-bloused peasant working in the he would look surprised and agitated
fields must supply his bit of color to over some rash statement we would
dedco first door north of the Wolcott House.
Prompt attention to calls night or day.
complete the lanilscape; and the bour­
make, but after a little while he
TNMOBY PARADY, Justice of the Peace. geois condemned to town-life would not seemed to care very little about what
JCJ OOTe, Corner Main and Sherman Streets. suffer about him the sad-colored house; we said, and acted almost rude, so we
and sober surroundings which we allow braced up and wont at it to explain
LIEBHAUSER, Merchant Tailor and deal­ under our gray skies. What a host of
. er in Ready Made Clothing.
Sec me stored-up pictures crowd into the mind, how type was set, and as we stood by
a case just vacated by one of the com­
before you purchase clothing. Fits guar­
as memory dlls in the pleasant back­
anteed.
positors wc told him where uU the let­
ground of a poor mans life abroad!
HATCH A OO., Manufacturers &lt; TtfLj Even the lazy lazzaroni who lounge ters were and explained the whole
philosophy of setting a galley, locking
• Candicrt, Chocolate Drop*, end Carmel*.
through life under Italian skies ask it. proving it, making up, etc., etc.
Fruits, Fancy Candies, Clgara, Tobacco*, etc.,
tlseir alms upon palace-steps, amid the There were a number of other officers
always in stock. Second door north of the
plash ot fountains and the scent of
post office.
present, and they all seem greatly
orange-groves! But what a revolting
17’RANK BAKER, Manufacturer of Boot* contrast presents itself when we think pleased, and tried to draw ns out on this
subject, which presents so much that is
A? and Shoes, pegged or sewed. Repairing
of a poor man’s life at home in Seven
promptly attended to. at the sign of the red
of interest to the novice.
Dials or similar slums, the Augean
boot, east side Main St.
________
Finally Colonel Stanton _,swned a
TACOB O8MUN, U^rvman, bam near Wol­ stables of civilization, whose cleansing little, stepped up to the vacant case,and beautifying must needs prove an
took the stick in his left hand, and
cott House. Fira* daM turnouts at reason­
Herculean task!
able rates. Social rates to commercial men.
gazed earnestly at the “ copy” of our
And sight is not the only sense grati­ article on •• an act to provide for tbe
Funeral and weding parties furnished with car*
fied upon the other side of the Channel retirement of the army worm at the
OHN BRAUN, Sboeuakcr. Special atten­
Age of 62.” He then lit out for deal
tion given to fine and sewed booU, also
life like a man setting by the thousand
repairing. All manufactured work made from
best of stock and warranted. First door south at no cost nt all The German imbibes and hopes to make San Francisco be­
fore the cold weather sets in.
He
Boise’s hardware.
f|.
,
with his beer a refreshing draught of
music, which elevates him above the dumped his stick in the right place, re­
mere sensual enjoyment of the moment. sumed his work cheerfully, and staid
with
it
tUl
tho
article
was
all
up,
and
The mountaineer jodefa his way-cheerily
then said he guessed he’d have to go.
from Alp to Alp. and peasant voices
food Turning in all it* braacbaa.
We looked around at the officers to
•verywhere lend themselves almost un­
consciously to a * ‘concord of sweet see how they felt. They seemed cheer­
J docks, fin* Jwweky and Silverware. Being
sounds,” which makes the wheel of life ful and pleased about something.
They Knew that that meek and gen­
practIrelJcweter, P«trooa can depend upon
revolve smoothly and harmoniously.—
tle fraud .was an old printer all the tune,
Chambers' Journal.
and when we were making a courteous,
self-forgetful ass of ourself all the time,

tk*

BfeshrilU Jittrtwj.
oFfioin.

’

I

W

S

J

AMES FLEMING.

yyoiLCO'TT HOUSE,

Nashville MUehligan.
A. S. Foote. Proprietor.

JT 4MVILLB H9VSB.

"Yes, I went to church yesterday."
said Job Shuttle with a yawn. ** Pretty
S sermon, pretty fair; bat what
ed me most was the antics of an
worm that was roaming about the
hat of a lady who sat in front of me.
That little, pale green incher reminded
me so much of the way we _ human
worms get on in the world. You see,
he was on the vane of the feather in the
hat and he would get a good hold, and
then reach up with his head and feel
around and look the field over to see
where he could make a good strike,
just like a man looking for business;
then he would throw himself soul and
body on to a curl of the feather, which
would bend and let him down with a
thud, just like a man who has made a
bad speculation; then he would wriggle
and twist and feel around for a new
hold, just like a man trying to "fix
things” with hi* creditors; then he
would mount to the very topmost sum­
mit of the hat trnd stfek his head up
and swing all around, just like a newlyelected Congressman gazing over the
U-._______ ____________ h.. 1_____ _

he inched along and
tag big rtride. right

sary for plowing is no ttxntM that only
the most careless and slovenly farmer
has any excuse to offer. Wagon and
cart barney are more elaborate and
complicated, yet even they arc simple
enough to lie manufactured at home, if
certain jiortions are purchased nt the
saddlers, such as buckles*, ring*, traces
and kames. Collars, beat suited to our
Southern climate, are made of shucks;
these are easily procured, thfere being
many persons in every neighborhood
who are very adept in making them,
and when made to lit, are smooth, and
with them tbe shoulders never become
chafed, and being so aheap, can be re­
placed as often as necessary. .
Nothing betokens a poor improvident
farmer sooner than slouchy harness, to
say nothing of the damage they inflict
upon their poor dumb brutes. ’ When
an animal is required to labor, the own­
er should compare his case to theirs.
For instance, how would a man like to,
follow a plow all day with shoes .which
pinched his feet, or which had a rock in
them? Yet he would not puffer any
more than the animal with a collar too
small, or a back-band which galled, his
back, or one trace shorter than the oth­
er: but unfortunately there are too
many who apparently care nothing tor
these details, though in attending to
them depends -in a great degree their
success.
.
On well regulated farms there is at­
tached to each barn or stable a harness­
room, where after being used? the har­
ness is carefully-hung upon pegs, there
to remain until’wanted; when a rainy
day comes, then it is overhauled. mend­
ed and oiled. By this means, they not
only Jast longer,’but are more comfort­
able for th'e horses, and are proofs of a
thrifty management. When harness
Is purchased complete, cheapness is not
always a wise consideration, because a
good set made of well-tanned leather,
properly nut together, will in careful
hands outlast two or three of the flimsy
made ones.—Southern Industries.

an italic shooting stick.

ilia

Mr. Hall stuck

HALL’S

QatarrhQure

S1OO CTAKS iiLWuli I

IRON

BITTERS

plants do not injure the soil any more
than we^ds do, and if the first are not
planted the last will be sure to grow
anleas the hoe is frequently used.—Cin­
cinnati Timet.

—Tbe whole town of Mineral Ridge.
without tel
afraid you

for all the

day or two looks as though it had been
drawn through a hone pond. Is it
likely that any one in his common Miuea
would mistake that for the best English
meat? As for the butcher palming it
off as such, thia fa simply stupid nonaense. How would a good cook like a
lump of atone sent to her to cook in the
shape of a leg of mutton? Is it likely
she would be deceived about what it
thawed and wet. would she be like!
take it taF’
--------

—One of the preltiatorio cities in Cen­
tra! America, recently discovered, hai

sSsnww

Our Druggist 1» selling
*’Aoca CvKqcBBoa.” It

there is a meal, IfabL satisfactory and
easily digested. It cun Be varied by
boiled chicken and escaHoped tomatoes
or salmon ateaks with Saratoga jiotatoes and a strawberry shortcake for
desert. People who are fond of-carrots
can prepare a good dish by boiling new
carrots and potatoes together—the car­
rots need to cook a halfhour before the
per bottle. Two
will Stop the chill*.
potatoes are added. Mash them togeth­
er with cream and buttfr. and eat wilh
8HILOH’ 8 CONSUMPTION CURE.
meats.
▲ meat and potato pie is a good sum­
mer dfah. Chip some sweet roast bee! invariably care the worst caw. of Cough, eroep
or veal—mutton is too strong—into a and Bronebilta, while its wonderful eucccae m
fine hash, mix it with cold gravy or
make a gravy for 4t; fill a tin pan'hall
full; add some hot mashed potatoes
cooked for the occasion, making a crust have a Cough we earnest!v ask you to try IL
of them to cover the pan to the top; set Price ItetAWeta. aud 81.W If your lunt* are
it in the oven and bake half an hour, or sore, Cheat, or Back Larne, and. fflifloh’s
until the potatoes are well browned and
ANSWER THIS QUESTION.
the meat heated through.
New apples make a good sauce and
to stiffer and be mode miserable
delicious boiled dumplings. Make a
lUUHitnUUU,, IVUI-GfM,
constipation, UG-GUC,..,
dizziness, IWO
low U*
of
light rich biscuit dough; pare and core appetite, coming up of the Food, vellow tkta,
the apples; cut out rounds of dough and when for 7Sct», we will *cll them Shiloh’s Vftoshape them about the apple to make an llzer, guaranted to cure them. Sold by F. T.
average thickness; tie each dumpling
sSlOH’3 CATTABRH KEMEDT, 'A mitseparately in a square of cloth and drop vclous cure for Catarrh. Diphtheria, Canker
them into a pot of boiling water which mouth, and Head Ache. With each-bottle
must not stop boiling until they are here i* an ingenious nasal injector for tbe
cooked, which will be m half an hour. more successful treatment of these complaint*
without extra charge. Price 50eu. Sold by
*Eat them hot with butter and sugar.
F- T.Botsa.
Avoid heavy feeding or over-eating in
hot weather; dritk lemonade freely and
Various Causes—
If possible eat a lemon with sugar before
Advancing years, care, sickness, disap­
the first meal Use plenty of salt in
pointment ana hereditary predisposi­
food; take salt baths; never bathe with­ tion—all operate to turn the hair gray,
in four hours after eating a hearty
and either of tb-m inclines it to shed
meal, and be scrupulously careful not prematurely. Aykk’s Hair Vigor will
to check perspiration, and eat at regular "restore faded or gray, lightor red hair
intervals, ana without haste. A l-ons to a rich brown or deep black, as may
don papers gives some good advice on''
desired. It softens and cleanses the
this point: "It fa a mistake to eat scalp, giving it a hcalthr action. It
quickly.
Mastication performed ir. removes aud cures dandruff and humors.
haste must be imperfect, even with the By its use falling hair Is checked, anti
best of teeth, and due admixture of the a new growth will be produced in all
salivary secretion with the food cannot cases where the follicles arc not de­
Feeding Horses by Clock Work.
take place. When a crude mass of in- stroyed or the glands decayed. Its
Nearly two years ago. as I had agreed
dequatelv crushed muscular fiber, or eflbets are bcantifully shown on brushy,
weak, or sickly hair, on which a few
to feed th'e horse of a relative at five
undivided solid material of any descrip­
applications will produce the-gloss and
o'clock a. m., so that the animal would
tion. fa thrown into the stomach, it acts
freshness of youth. Harmless and sure
as a mechanical irritant, and sets up a in its results, it is Incomparable as
be ready for service at half-past six,
and as the stable was located at a dis­
condition in the mucous membrane a dressing, and Is especially valued
tance of half a mile from my residence,
lining of that organ which greatly im­ for the soft* lustre aud richness of tone
I constructed a rude but efficient device
pedes, if it does not altogether prevent it Imparts.
to aid in feeding the horse precisely the progress of digestion. W*hcn the
Ayer’s Hau: Vigor is colorless:
practice of eating quickly and filling the contains neither oil nor dye; nnd will
at five o’clock every morning without
stomach with unprepared food is not soH or color white cambric; yet
the presence of any person (not patent­
ed nor patentable.) At one side of tne habitual, the digestive organ fa rendered it lasts long on tbe hair, and keeps
incapable of performing its proper it fresh and vigorous, imparting an
stall, I hung a lid with hinges over the
functions.
Either a much
larger agreeable perfbme.
top of the small feed manger. One
quantity of food than would be neces­
end of the lid extended about a foot in­
For sale by all druggists.
to the feed room. To make the end
sary under natural conditions fa re­
quired, or the system suffers from lack
of the lid in the feed room heavy
enough to go down and thus open the
of nourishment. Those animals which
manger, a piece of iron was attached
were intended to feed hurriedly were
either gifted with the power of rumina­
to the end of the lid making that end
tion or provided with gizzards. Man is
in the feed room about one pound heav­
ier than the part of the lid that covered
not so furnished, and it, fa fair to assume
that he was intended to eat slowly.”—
die manger. An alarm clock was then
placed hi a cupbard, fastened to the
Detroit Post and Tribune.
side of tho wall in tho feed room, and
Is Recommended by
Too Many Generals.
a half inch hole was bored up through
the bottom of the cupboard and through
A Detroit saloon-keeper who spent
the bottom of the clock case directly
considerable money for decorations and
Wo manuftotura and sell it vltha positive
beneath the large wheel of the alarm
worked his patriotism up to tho top
;uarantee that It will curs any
gearing. Then a small wire, about as
■aae.and we will forfeit tho aboveamoasl
round, was heard wondering if any of
largo as a coarse horso hair, was at­
the Generals would be nround to see
tached to the heavier end of the lid to
him, and this gave one of his acquaint­
the manger, while a long loop was
ances a clue to work on. He went off
made at the other end of the wire.
At
and put up a job with a friend, and
evening I fed tho horse his evening
yesterday morning walked him iu the
meal in his proper monger, and put­
toUMdUtely. Price. 75centsiperbottla.
saloon and said:
ting the mess for morning in the other
F. 1 CHENEY k CO., Toledo. OHb.
••Allow me to introduce General
manger, the looped end of the wire was
Alpaca Smith, the hero of three wars nnd
put through the hole in the bottom of
eighty-four battles.”
the clock case, and tho loop was hooked
"Sheneral, I vhas gladl to tee you.”
on one of the teeth or cogs of the iarge
said the saloonist, and he set’em up for
wheel. The wire was made just long
three.
enough to hold up the heavier end oi
In the course of twenty minutes the
the lid in a horizontal position, thus
deceiver returned with another stranger
closing the manger. Tho moment the
onhis arm aud said:
alarm wheels started, at five o’clock,
••Allow me to introduce General Com­
the wire loop slipped off tho cog and
missary .Jones, lhe’hian who fired the
the lid of the manger opened and stood
first gun in the war.”
erect, so that the horse could eat. Thia
"Sheneral. I vhas blessed to -hake
rude device never failed to open the lid
hands mit you,” said the man of beer,
precisely at the appointed hour. I could
and he set 'em up again.
feed tho horso with absolute certainty
Then the friend went out and re­
at any other hour, though I wore ' two
turned with General Hard Tack, and
hundred miles away Ytom the stables
after him came Generals Debility and
One ctock-would openlialf a dozen lids
Back. Pay. The . fart one received a
as well as one. -ISereno Edwards Todd,
rather cool greeting, and the BMP'
Sr., in Elmira Husbandman.
glasses were not quite full and after he
had departed the saloonist turned to
Slow But Sure.
his friend and said:
••My front, I vhas mooch, bleased to
A real estate dealer in New England
BROWN'S IRON BITTERS are
sold seven farms in ten days at prices see all dose great Shenerafa in mine
saloon, but you needn’t bring any more
averaging about 83,000 each—mostly to
requiring a complete tonic: cspeto-day. From now until night we’ll
persons who had been in mechanical
let der Sheneral* go und look out for
business, but who hod learned that there
is no property so safe as land, and no der fighting man. Dose men always
bay cash for beer!”—Detroit Free Press.
pursuit promising so sure a livelihood
etc. Enriches the blood, •trenjrthas agriculture. It is an indication of a
A Butcher op Frozen Meat.
general and wholesome tendency of the
life to the nerves. Acts like a
time. There are always thousands of
London butchers do not believe m
charm on the digestive organs,
men in these busy streets who left rural frozen meat. One of them writes to the
removing all dyspeptic symptoms,
homes many years ago. and who,
Times in these indignaut terms:
weighed down by commercial troubles,
•• The stupid twaddle written on the
IIcat in the Stomach, Heartburn.
wotud gladly return, if it were possi­
above subject by some of your comble. to some quiet country neighbor­ spondente fa most ludicTUQs to those
that will not blacken the teeth or
hood, feeling sure that they could at who practically know about butcher’s
give headache. Sold by all Drug­
least raise enough to feed their families meat and its supply. For instance, the
gists at $1.00 a twrttle.
with less strain of body and mind than
Agent-General for New Zealand says
BROWN CHEMICAJL CO.
that which is now wearing out their there was no belter meat to be seen in
Baltimore, Md.
lives. This is true also of every other the market the other day than the mut­
city or town, as witness the following—
ton from that country. Now, sir. any
a fair sample of letters that reach us one who knows anything of tbe matter
from all quarters:
knows this to bo absolutely untrue.
“ism about educated up to the point of bo- This meat, when it first comes into the
Hcvinr that a amall tana la about toe only lodeiwndentand aatuffactory poascMion a tolcr- market looking bright and clean, is to
ubl v poor man can obtain to the avorniro atato the touch like a piece of atone, when no
of trail®. I aoi imjw ••tutseed in the book bu«lneaa, and. Hkv errrythinff else, it la a aouroa ouacan be deceived by its appearance.
Afterward it begins to weep and become

of them were winking at tbe foreman,
and even the devil was in the scheme.
Since that we don’t even dare to
show a young lady how a printing press
works, and the other day a man who
was born without arms, and who there­
fore wouldn't make much of a compos­
itor, wanted to see how a paper was
made, but we put him off on the fore­
man and excused ourself from being a
professional guide to the mechanical
&gt;art of the Boomerang any more.
Once we allowed ourself‘ to act as
guide for Rev. Mr. Hall, of this place,
because it was nothing more than right
that we should be civil to a clergyman.
After we had told him a great deal
about the ins and outs of the printing
business, and Mr. Hall had gone, the
—N. P. Tribune.
city editor said; “You are the most
genial newspaper directory and speci­
—It is better to have all tho ground
men catalogue and price-list of print­
ers’ supplies I ever saw. You thought In an orchard occupied with vegetables
you played it on that gray-haired that can be eaten than to allow any part
You tooled away a
middle of the day

Mkh.

scrambled eggs, some thin slice* of
boiled ham and another diah of. berries.

Pennsylvania A Ohio track eetlkxl two

of race-bone celebrity.

ta about 88.000.000.

�njifcoel-

Oiruaan ymmgatar broke his arm
Ala* a taut* tatH.
hr -tote militia, in camp near Bright*

hun*, Gov. Tilden. dropped

While Pigt-oti wagon shop burned
,uk. IStn.
Luas $3,000; Insurance,

Beck worth had 84 1-8 bushels of wheat
John Gull of Jackson, Aug. 17, got
di uuk Hint fell from saloon steps, break

«.«»*.

ttelmew* MM (eU B4.BflS.1KM ortr 1*0.

ant at the University hospital, refuses
the regents’ requeat to resign, so the
resolution to force him out takes effect.
In brief tbe history ot the matter j*
thqs: Joy invented an electric belt
which was a good thing and -was used
with success in the University hospital;
Profs, McLean and Frotbingham signed
a paper saying it was a good thiug, and
this testimonial Joy retained ; Joy sold
(he right to manufacture' and sell the
licit to ou* Waggoner, a swindler once
of Marshal), and to prove 'the belt’s
worth showed him the taatimonial;
Waggoner somehow got a copy of this
paper, and used it in advertising'the
iielt, on which he secured patent. Now
it is against medical ethics for a regular
physician to recognize in any way n
patented medicine or medical device—
for p high professor to publicly endorse
one, bow horrible! Of this public en­
dorsement (though unintentional) Pro­
fessors McLean and Frothingbam were
constantly twitted. Thus stirred* they

Three 4th-uf-July liquor-seller* of
Flint have been convicted in a justice
court. They appeal.
The Haye- saw-mill at Muir, burned
with a loss of $15,000 aud $6,000 insur­
ant*. will l&gt;0 rebuilt.
Newspaper turn and printers are not
ordinarily vain, but they have au exccpttyii at Fowlerville.
Bergen &amp; Co.’* stave mill at Ovid
burned, the third time in seven years.
The biisiuess will be removed.
Lawreuec Barrett will open the Hib­ brought before tbe regents charges
bard opera h&lt;fHBr-at Jackson, Aug. 34,
against Joy for complicity with Wag­
M ‘•Richelieu.!’ OuhL$Aft-Beht.
goner iu subjecting them and tbe hos­
An' unmarked woman near Dexter
pital they had built up to this indigni­
was found it bed in spasms aud with ty, but the regents acquitted Joy after
dead twin* by her. She will die.
a thorough investigation.
Then Me
Lightmug struck in Pine Lake, Ing­ Lean and Frothingham threatened to
ham county, recently, and threw up resign unless Joy left, aud the regents,
Bufflcirnt earth to form a curious island. believing that they would fulfill their
A. M. White of Jackson proposes to threat and knowing that they were of
build aud equip a -treat railway in Bat
more value to the institution than Joy,
tie Creek fur $14,000 and take $4,000 succumbed to the force of circumstan­
stock himself.
a
ces and forced Joy to either resign and
Charley Watkins of the Rapids has stultify himself or be bounced. He has
been appointed collector of internal chosen the latter. Whether blame for
revenue, but hesitate* to accept. Vic­ the trouble should rest on the profess­
tory for Hubbell.
ors who signed the testimonial, on the
It was a big-hearted fellow who died one who showed it without intention
at Big Rapid* the other day. A post to mike it public, or on tho schemer
mortem showed his heart to be four who cunningly copied and used it, each
time* tbe ordinary size.
reader must decide. No doubt, could
Ed. August of Adrian lost both bands the trouble have been foreseen, the tes­
by the exploaiou of a box of cartridges timonial would neither have been
he was holding while blasting stumps.
shown nor written.
He struck a match on the box.
■
The Chicago Tribune of Aug. 11,
Auk. 14. the the Tittabawaaseo boom
contains the following dispatch from
company rafted more logs than ever Cleveland, which is of interest to Bar­
before in oue day, and the week ending ry county people, especialy in the
the 14th, more than ever in one week south and south-west portions: Ohio
before.
&amp; Michigan syndicate, which is largely
Catliarine Baird, an o Id lady of White composed of members of the Seney
Pigeon, was found in bed Saturday syndicate, has started and already got
morning, murdered and robbed. It is b
well under way an important project
mysterious case, as she was supposed in Micbigau. It is proposed to construct
to have neither money nor enemies.
n new and fairly direct line from To­
Fires: a building at Grand Rapids
ledo to Grand Haven, Mich., passing
occupied by various manufactories,
through the towps of Tecumseh, Mar­
A fig. 16; lo«* $12,8000, insurance $11,­ shall, Battle Creek and Allegan. The
300; at Fife Lake. Aug. 15, Chickering
new line will be about 180 miles in
&amp; Keysur’s saw-mill, loss $20,080, inlength, and traverses what has already
su rance $10,000.
proved to bo a rich country for rail­
The Alieguu county democratic con­ roads. The plans of tho project are al­
vention wm composed of 12 delegates ready well matured. Negotiations art
r .'presenting 8 towns; bnt it elected 17
favorably pending between the Ohio
delegate* to the state convention and
&amp; Michigan Company, ns the project­
was solid f&lt;&gt;| Messtuore for congress all
ors of Ulis new enterprise will be call­
tbe siune. Ami yet there’s kicking.
ed, and the Chicago A West Michigan
Fire at Davisburg destroyed $18,000
Rftilroad Company, owning about 400
worth of property on which there was miies of railroad between New Buffalo
$4,100 insurance. The fire, supposed and Pentwater, along the eastern shore
to have been incendiary, started in a of Lake Michigan, for a connection at
store pacify owned by H. W. Elliott, Allegan and a general interchange of
who i* supposed to symphatbize with
business at that point This arrange­
Dr. Hull, the ulleged murderer.
ment will make the Ohio 6l. Michigan
Fatal aud dents: st Muskegon, E. F.
line the outlet for the large lumber
Martin, head crushed while coupling traffic of the Chicago and West Michi­
car*; a German, arm torn off at elbow gan road, which traffic will of course
by a belt in tbe boom- mill; Clarence
continue on its way East over the Nick­
Wood of Wayland,struck by lightning,
le Plate aud Ohio Central lines. Tracks
Aug. 15: Henry Vessel1 of Owosso, for the construction of Uie new road
struck iu the ab tomen by u board,
have already been awarded, and work
Aug. 15.
on the line is to begin immediately.
Many reputable colored gentlemen in
Like nearly all other projects originat­
Detroit have white wives with whom
ed by Hie Beuey syndicAie. thts newthey bate lived happily for year*; but
one dashes into and right through Van­
they are now “on the ragged edge” be­
derbilt territory.
From Toledo to
cause the state law against such mar­ Jackson, Mich., it neatly parallels dif­
riages, tlvough practically a dead letter,
ferent branches of the Lake Shore &amp;l
has just been enforced in a notable case
Michigan Southern, and twice crosses
in that city. ’
oUier branches of that road on its way
Leading business men of Marshall
to Grand Haren. The new line is an
•- have voted a bonus of $10,000 to secure
importantone, not only as a feeder to
B large eastern manufactory of agricul­
the Ohio Central and Nickle Plato, but
tural implements. Appropriate build­
as adversely affecting the interests of
ings have been secured, to which
the Lake Shore.
large additions are being made. The
firm will employ from one to 300 men
OUR WASHINGTON LETTER.
within a year
*

The supreme lodge of tbe world 3f
Knights of Pythias meets at Detroit
Aug. 28-3 4. aud there’s “gwine to be a
big time suali.” John McCullough and
company will present the Greek play of
Damon and Pythias evenings of Aug.
21-2-8, and other attractions are offered,
including reduced railroad fare.
The Detroit Free Press ha* undertak­
en to belittle Congressman Ilorr, who
cipaHy by hi* ready and sensible wit,
an- all

manufactured

DULY RECEIVING THEIR FALL

Ni.4h.I1.. s. * Co. Kivo tho

WASHINGTON’, D. C., AUO. 12, 1882.
The Congress having adjourned aa
anticipated in my last letter it will per­
haps be interesting to know how the
people’s jnoney has been disposed of
during tbe session closed.
Well, here
it is in briefThe net increase of ap­
propriations for the current fiscal year
over those for 188$ is $77,582,621.
Of
thia sum $47,717,fiM is chargeable to
the Increased demand upon tbe pen­
sion fund, and an additional sum of $1­
750,000 bad to be appropriated for ad­
ditional clerical force in the Pension
bureau to enable it to keep up with in­
crease of it* work. The total appro­
priation* for pensions this year, includ­
ing tbe allowance for extra clerical
force, amount to $111,750,000 and re-

on the _
» that both
jxditical jjaraies are about equally re

KjHmsible for this extraordinary extra­
vagance of the peoples money and that
no great amount of political capital can
be made on either, side upon striking
the balance of responsibility.
Tbe House leaves behind it about 135
bill on the House calendar, two hun­
dred and thirty on the calendar of the
committee of the whole, and there an;
two hundred more bills on the Speak­
er’s table which have passed tbe Senate
and have failed of action In the House.
On the Senate calendar Uiere remain*
about one hundred and ninety Senate
bills, andjoint resolutions aud seventyone House bills and resolutions. Dur­
ing the present session seven thousand
one hundred and eighty-two bills and
joint resolutions have been introduced
in the House. Of this immense total
"eight hundred aud three have been re­
ported favoribly, two hundred and
forty-five unfavorably and no less than
six thousand one hundred and thirtyfour remain in tbe hands of tbe various
committees. Three hundred and three
bills and joint resolutions have passed
the House (most of them pension bills
and other measures of a semi-private
nature, such as grants of condemned
cannon for soldiers’ monuments, etc.,)
two hundred and eighty-seven have be
come laws and forty-one await the
President's approval. Two thousand
two hundridd and eighty-three bills and
joint resolutions have been introduced
in the Senate. Four hundred and six­
ty-six of them have passed by that
body. Aside from tho regular annular
appropriation bill about one hundred
aud seventy bills and joint resolution*
of a public nature have passed both
bouses during this session and have be­

come laws.
President Arthur left last evening for
a few days rest and daring bis absence
nearly all of tbe clerical force at the
White House will avail themselves of
their annual lleave.
Mr. Charles M.
Hindloy, executive clerk to the Presi­
dent, left to-n;gbt for Lake George.
The others have not decided where they
will go. The Executive Mansion will
l&gt;e thorougly renovated and the furni­
ture cleaned and repaired daring the
the next, few weeks. Not much new
furniture is needed, as tho house was
refurnished shortly before President
Arthur took possession. The outside
will probably be given a coat or two of
white paint, which it badly needs, es­
pecially tbe north front.
Col. Rock­
well commissioner of public buildings,
has repeatedly asked for an appropria­
tion to replace the gravel roadway in
front of the house with concrete, but
never succed in getting it until now, an
appropriation for a concrete roaeway
having been made in the sundry civil
bill. Daring winter storms- this road
waa a perfect mud puddle.
August.

N. P. Willis once said: “Tho sweetest
thing in life is tbe unclouded welcome
of a wife." This is true, indeed, but
when her welcome is clouded with an
atmosphere of angry words and coal
scuttles, there is something about it
that makes a man want to go out in the
woodshed and sleep on the ice cheat

BOOTS AM) SHOES

We Pay Cash For
I

BUTTER Salt or Unsalted &amp; Eggs.
PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN Lumber!
At Buxton's new brick, hare full and complete lines in

FOWLER &amp; INGERSON
Gents Kiiriiishing Goode

Have the largest stock of LUMBER ever laid
down tn Nashville.

100,000
Feet kept constantly on hand.

if you want eocnethtLg new, neat and nobby, jut take a look at our stock of

Pine Lumber

THE GREAT SECRET

-i

A specialty

CUFFS, COLLARS, TIES, HANKERCHIEFS, JEWELRY, ETC.

Finishing Lumber,
tlnriig Mur, Siiiij, Studiif, but

IX HI VING, xe TO Hw

Or anything In the building material line, 'see
our stock, select what you want, and be happy.

Also Flour. Halt, Kblnglrs, LaUi,

FOR THE LEAST MONEY.
For sale at lowest prices.
Remember that we fhaTe'no old, nhop-worn and unseasonable good*, but that everything la

HIGHEST PRICE PAID FOR

WHEAT, OATS, CORN, ETC.,
As usual.

FOWLER &amp; INGERSON.

.»• All our purchases are made with the cash and by etrict attention to the wants of ou
customers we expect to reap success.
NaahviUe, Apr. 20,1882.

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN.

THE CROWN SEWING MACHINE
The Cat shows tbe new stand, juat perfected and put on the market.

YOU CAN GET
•------ A FIRST-CLASS------

Reaper

Mower
OSBORN MAKE!

Farmers grow richest when factories are
nearest to their farms.

WARRANTED

mml

A8 GOOD ASANT IACBIREIADE,
AT

PLRCE,

THE CELEBRATED

Grain Cradle.

J. M. WOOD.
two plow

MOeiY

RHEUMATISM,

Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago,
Backache, Soreness of tho Chest,
Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, SaoH-

Scalds, General Bodily
Pains,
Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted

Pains and Aches.

Qocwyt of Baaar. { ,l
At asoMton of tha Pr
of Barry .teoidon M tbo I

A A show, tbe hardened rteei pointe on which the erank draft Hid drive­
'll ue han, .ad work. Thb U th. HihuB rumrlaalxartHr which.c.» b. t»da Tter. 1.
banllj mt trfeUoc. i’ob.l* or MJu.ul.le io uke up the w«r Md tbe rn.uk on whtahlb. p«.
maa work. UbetweeathepolnteTibue pautog the Mdodlrwl Mdarotdlni.tlddepoU.
B B shows the hardened steel pointe on which th© treadio is hungand works.
They are made adjustable for taking up wear.
C C shows tbe patent hall and socket joint connection* of the pitman
with tbe crank aud treble. Bv thl. patent arraagMsent the "thumping’' beard torocher math-

crank and treadle

•reglaelnr derioe, hr mew otwhlch^w^Udy or child can
throw the briti

r«wl nickel plated and ptdtabed dri»e7wheel. By nah-

ttw. Senate committee on pensions,
stated, by wav of information to tbe
$30,000000 would b«* necessary for the

Stock of

F F^ahowathsmlcapRoa tbe trstaUs bar for pre vesting tbe ■
."OLD BT ALL^DEUOfllJTjHtlD DEALEK3

4

&gt; - -■

—

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                  <text>ORNO STRONG, |
EDIYOB AMD PROPRIETOR.

I

VOLUME IX.
LIFE IN NASHVILLE,

Tuesday evening tbe justice,,* iury,
and a full house heard the stories. A
M. Flint presented the old man’s case
to the jury* but Miller went in on his
own muscle, detailing - the
trouble
and McKelvey’s attempt* to cheat
him and co break the
contract,
and rehashing the complainant’s gen­
eral record in a manner that highly
delighted the crowd.
He denied the
charges, which denial being supported
by the testimony of the only witness,
the jury brought in a verdict of "no
cause of action.” and on Wednesday
morning McKelvey paid for hia fun

*8.90. ________ _
___________
—A new frame engine hou^e, 16x24
—The common council bat decided
feet, has beeOuLilt, thisjweak, in the to increase the means of protection
LOCAL GIBBLE-GABBLE
rear of the tewn heiH.-ar acoat of be­ against fire by the building of six res­
And Personal Chit-Chat.
tween *75 ^rfd *100. It will accommo­ ervoirs in various parts of town. Ono
date the fire engine and village tools.
has been constructing in front of the
Corn is large.
—J. E. Garver pnt up one of Garver, 'school-house, this week. It is 9 feet
It is Braun Bro’s, now.
Shaw A Daniel’s acoustic telephones, deep, 6 feet across on the bottom and
Hort Flint is working at the eleva­
this week,for Frank McDerby, between 10 feet at the bulge, and is calculated tor.
hia house and L. J. Wheeler’s store. It ‘to hold 100 barrels of water, though it
Christian Sunday school picnic next
works nicely. There is talk that sev­ may 1*ck a little. It is to be arched Tuesday.
eral more will be put up soon. They, over with brick, the bricking to extend
Middleville billiard hall. Will Frace
are excellent time savers.
down some four or five feet, the re
proprietor.
The other
—The health officer has been on his mainder to be plastered.
H. D. Purdy of Middleville was in
travels this week, and has found some reservoirs are to bo of the same dimen­ town yesterday.
School will commence a week from
pretty bad places. He also finds, as is sions and build. They will cost about
to be expected, some little opposition. *20 each.
next Monday, Sept. 4.
“When will these hot nights end!”
Perseverance in the thorough and care­ • —Would not a union fair ground and
ful performance of his duty, however, nice track help the prosperity of Nash­ sigh the restless sleepers.
will increase the publie welfare and ville? and Can we not have one with
Miss Ida Wolcott is visiting relatives
should have the general approval.
proper effort? are the questions some at Westville, Montcalm county.
Mrs.
Myron Pennock is entertaining
—Among the seeedere—those who of Nashville’s more enterprising and
were opposed to fusion—from the able citizens are asking and wo com­ her parents from Hickory Corners.
Miss
Ella McLaughlin of Berlin, Wis.
Greenback convention at Grand Rap- mend them to the attention of others
is visiting her uncle, Wm. Bartley.
*
ida on Wednesday was Gill Buck of Ma­ It is rarely if ever that a whole county
Miss
Hattie Austin is spending a
ple Grove, and he has been elected a is thoroughly represented at one fair;
member of the seeedere’ state central too much territory is usually covered by couple of weeks with Ypsilanti friends.
committee.
With such men as Gill such societies. Quite largo portions of
Buck at the head the seceders’ success both Barry and Eaton, distant from the
is assurred.
present fair grounds of their respective
—On Monday L. O. Crocker sold counties, might be combined in a union
three mowers, one each to Christopher association and fair at Nashville with
Kill,a Mr. Harting, and Robert Elston, mutual benefit. No definite move has
and a top buggy to Mr. Kill.
That’s yet been made in this matter, but we
pretty good for one day,the only troub­ have at least a few men of means who
le is such days are not so thick as they will take hold if sufficient interest and
might be. He also reports having sold assistance can be procured.
—Some time ago wo noted the fact
that the Michigan Exchange hotel at
—The Prohibition convention of the Detroit bad come under the sole man­
3rd congressional district will be held agement of Wm. J. Ferguson ; and we
at Jackson Aug. 81, in Good Templars are pleased now to add that under his
Hall, commencing at 10 a. m. This management it has increased both in
county is not organised, and so can excellence and popularity, being now
send no regular delegates, but represen­ by all odds the leading hotel of Detroit.
tatives wi* be present from Hastings Its appointments are in every way ele­
and other places.
Rev. A. D. Newton gant, and it is constantly crowded with
guests, who find there every comfort
will attend from this place.
—Congressman Lacey of this district and attention at a reasonable price.
was nominated by acclamation at There is no place but home more pleas­
Jackson on Wednesday.
There was ant to a traveler than a good hotel, per­
not the slightest opposition, the motion fect in all its appointments and presided
to nominate by acclamation being car­ over by attentive landlord and clerks,
ried solidly. The resolutions were of whose genial and well-known faces are
one oaragraph. endorsing Mi. Lacey. like those of old friends, and t^ese at­
He made a neat speech, returning tractions, combined with a good loca­
thanks for the honor and referring to tion, tbe Exchange possesses in an em­
.
his
work and the fact that ho inent degree.

was sick and unable to vote on the riv­
er and harbor bil’,

—Fire cistern* have been located as
follows: One each by Wm. Burgess’
residence. C. Putnam’s hardware store,
Old’s mill, J. Croat’s residence, and G.
A. Truman’s residence. Others are to
be built, but m locations not yet deter­
mined. The one by Putnam’s hardware
store willl be extra large. The cisterns
are expected to cost but little over *20.
They will be filled from driven wells
alongside, one detachable pump an­
swering to work all the wells.
—Miss Marie Hindmarch was highly
complimented by the managers uf the

teachers institute last week, for the
very excellent manner in which she
performed her duties as local commit­
tee. The success of the institute was
in a great measure, due to the admir­
able manner in which she made the ar­
rangements for it- Her services were
performed without expectation of re­
ward. but after everything was settled.
Prof. Hall presented her with a *10
gold-piece. The professor knows good
work when b® acea &amp;
Mi“ Hind’
march is Dot the only one who has
cause to be thankful for his appreei-

—Mr. Fowler of Fowler &amp; Ingerson
in response to inquiries from the De­
troit board of trade, states that 88 per
cent win cover fully all the wheat in
this section damaged ao as to lower the
Krade ; that nor. more than 8 or 10 per
cent is entirely worthleaa. this he con■iden a big ectfanato; and that the oat
crop will be more than a full one, say
106 per cent Wheat is coning is rath­
er slowly, but that is largely doe to the
wet weather Which retards threshing.
In one ItwtMwe a thresher was oat
twelve days and only put in four days
ofwork.
Bat the wheat is nowall
•afely secured. TW priee-W eeata
for Na. I—gives good satisfaction;
though sons, damaged of course,
•ell* m low aa « out*.

Credit Subscriptions

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, AUGUST 26, 1882.

—Some two weeks ago oar village
marshal, it being in the line of hia doty
And Her Environs.
aa he supposed, served notice on the sa­
loons not to sell any more intoxicating
YOUR EAR, GENTLE READER.
liquors to Daniel Hobbs, and not so
Too that are indebted to The Nzshvillb much for the sake of that chronic old
Nbw», listen! Paper, ink and printers’ help,
guzsler as on account of others to
coats cash, and in order to lire and be respect­
whom the sale of intoxicants had been
ed, ve must pa/ our debts; consequently, we
are compelled to ask you to pay that subscrip­ forbidden and who were using him as a
cat
’s paw to get their toddy.
Hobbs
tion out of your first wheat money.
then turned around and with the aid of
Don't forget it I Don’t forget it I
We place this item conspicuously ao that Lawyer Flint, served notice on £he sa­
no patron can miss It, and shall expect a prompt loons not to sell liquor to the marshal.
So it goes, and this is one of the ways
we get something to talk about. *

fl McCormick and Manny reapers and
mowers this season.

TERMS; $1.50 per

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun.

Asa P. Green, of Battle Creek, is
visiting at his sister’s, Mrs. Wm. Park­

ers.
Little Miss Allie Hardy celebrated
her seventh birthday with a party on
Tuesday.
The "harvest-apple ache” is what
they call it now. Things improve with
tbe times, you see.
The golden oat crop done up in
shocks is a thing of beauty; and every |

particular shock is capped, too.
The families of C. Slade and Thomas
Fuller of Maple Grove, rejoice in
the possession of new born sons.
Tbe Olio says John Hinckley's
friends are canvassing the county in
behalf of bis nomination for sheriff.
We hear considerable inquiry for
board in private families, and in some
instances by worthy young gentlemen.

There is talk among tbe firemen of
presenting a play in the opera uouee,
and possibly of showing in Woodland
also.
Rev. Mr. Newton attended the M. E.
campmeeting near Albion the past
week. He will fill his pulpit to-mor­
row.
Brit Hoag, the jolliest man in town,
has made sojpe considerable repairs to
bis house aud has put a new roof on his
—For some time various parties have barn.
been getting water from the river near
The Democrat delegates form Castle­
J. M. Roe’s mill; and as the bottom ton township were John Barry to the
there is a sort of quicksand, consider­ congressional and Ira Bachellor to the
able difficulty has been experienced in state.
getting the wagons out Consequently
A. J. Beebe is getting figures on a
teams have repeatedly been brutally new residence to be built near his own
beaten. This is particularly true of a for his parents, who now reside at
fellow named Charlie DeWater*, who Johnstown.
is drawing water a for thresher. Mr.
Rev. Mr. Northrup, the Baptist min;
Roe proposes that it shall not go on any ister of Woodland, will preach at the
longe&gt;, and so hands us the following school-house here Sunday, Aug. 27, at
item: “To threshers and street sprink­ 2 o’clock p. m.
lers : In the river below the mill I have
The safe of Geo. Luther A Sons of
placed the following: ‘Notice—No one Middleville was blown open by burg­
but a heartless jackass will compel a lars on Thursday night. Only *80 were
team to draw heavy loads of water out secured by the thieves.
of this place. I have got sick of see­
J. M. McCaul. one of the worked in
ing hones maltreated, and I hereby the recent temperance revolution in
give notice to all persons who draw Iowa will talk on temperance in the M.
water from this place that they must E. church next Monday evening.
use their teams decent or be prosecuted
Misses Myrtie Myers and Belle Tru­
and prohibited from getting water man, D. S. Pierson and Dr. W. H.
here.’
Signed, J. M. Roe.”
It is re­ Aylsworth, were among the picnicefs
freshing to see » man with kindness at Thornapple last week Friday.
aud nerve sufficient to take tbe law in
Miss Ota Wheeler and Ida Hayes,
hand and break up a brutal practice.
were visiting friends at Charlotte the
—James McKelvey is a bad old farm­ fore part of this week, aud the latter
er of Maple Grove, who has the repu­ started for her home in Indiana, Thurs­
tation of having charged 25 cents for day.
Lavorn Thompson and wife, of Or­
two apples that a traveler picked up in
his orchard: of having demanded pay angeville, and Chas. Thompson, of
for two peaches that a fellow farmer Greenville, were the guests of mine
picked up under his tree* for his sick host Foote, of the Wolcott'Hoose, this
wife as they were riding by :’of having week.
Mrs. Minnie Hitchcock of Cleveland,
twice perjured himself in court, aud of
having been guilty of similar acts too and Mrs. Jennie Stewart of Detroit,
numerous to mention—in fact of being have been guest* this week of tbe lat­
the cussedest meanest man in all this ter’s sister, Mrs. J. E. AuaHn, leaving
'
'
section. About a won th ago he hired a on Wednesday.
Tbe green backers sent aa delegates
man named Miller to work far him three
months at “*18 a month and board from Castleton, John M. Roe to the
himself,” and the other day, after the state, Wm. E. Griggs to the congres­
harvesting was all done, he settled with sional, and C. N. Young to tbe senato­
.
him. Tbe settlement was not alto- rial convention.
Ten members of Ivy Lodge, K. of P.,
gMber lovely-in fact McKelvey came
down to Justice Parody with a pitiful all dressed in their bright new uni­
ful story of bow he bad bwo abn*ed, forms, marched gaily down to tbe de­
and swore out a warrant against Wm. pot, Monday afternoon, bound for De­
Miller for Mmsultaad b*ttery-^*ad on troit and glory.

" The beat toast of the season was, we
think, given by a printer, viz: "Wo­
man—the fairest work in all creation.
Tbe edition is large, and no man should
be without a copy.”
Knights L. E. Lentz, W. G. Aylswortb, D. L. Smith, H. R. Dickinson,
G. F. Truman, 0. Strong, John Stevens,
Wm. Atkinson anLT^r- t. Boise were

Ayes, Boise, Dickinson, Demaray, and Lentz.
Nays, none.
Tbe committee appointed to locate engine
bouse reported to build the sain? on lot No. 27.
back of town hall. On motion report accepted
and committee discharged.
On motion council adjourned.
E. Chipman,
F. T. Boibx,
President
Clerk pro tern.

in Detroit this weekly y
;
And now comes Jacob Heckathorn
with a white cucumber, and smooth,
too. It’s of good size, quite yellow at
the vine end, and looks like a cross
with a summer squash.
Ex-Sheriff J. C. Barber, of Battle
Creek, was in town Saturday, looking
up lumber for the school furniture
manufacturing company at the Creek,
in which he is a partner.
Mrs. Wheeler’s Sunday-school class
will entertain an ice cream social at the
residence of Mira Fannie Blair Wednes­
day evening, Aug. 80. A cordial invi­
tation is extended to all.
S. P. Hewett and Mary A- Springett,
left Nashville Monday afternoon, bound
for Liverpool, England, having pur­
chased of Lee A Durkee
tickets
over the State Line Steamship Co. line.

BARRYVILLE.

Year

*1.75.

NUMBER 49

'

VERMONTVILLE.
The Vermontville grange picnics at Tbornapole Lake, Aug, 30.
Duane Hawkins and Frank Loomis are daare delegates to the state and F. M. Potter to
tbe congressional convention.
Potter of the Hawk Las a leader this Weak
declaring himself in favor of the submission of
tbe prohibition amendment. Bound to boom
him&lt;elf Into office.
Tbe Vermontville council have decided to
Increase tbe protection against fire by building
a 500-barrel brick veneered tank above ground
near tbe town well, with a 12-ft wind-mill on
top, end constructing two 300 or 250-barrel cis­
tern connected with die tank by lj&lt;-to pipe I
and also buying 100 feet .of hose to use for
street sprinkling purposes; The estimated cost
of the tank a- d cisterns,is WOO the council also
recommended the .raising of from three to five
hundred dollars to purchase a hook and ladder
truck.

Picnicking is lively at tbe lake this summer.
Rev. L N. Crittenden was in the place tbe
fore part of tbe week.
Mias Idcli Kennedy is teaching the fall term
of school in this district
Frank Lathrop is beard from near Tuiley, N.
r., this time. It is a boy.
Miss Katie Feagles has a couein'riaiting her
from the east part of tbe state.
Anson Ware is rustlca'lng and fishing in the
trout streams north of Petoskey.
Mm. Boules is visiting at her daughters in
Emmet county near Cross Village.
_ LOCAL MATTKITS,
Tbe Mite society will meet at tbe residence
of Henry Lathrop this week Friday.
WANTED-A GIRL
Mrs. Higdon, formerly of this place but now To m general housework. Permanent place to
of Leslie, is vial Ung friends here this week.
qui.et and capable girl. Address Th* Nrwa,
Any one wishing to hear some big snake sto­
ries can call on Myron Sutherland and parties
FOR SALE. s
at Morgan.
A span of young mares well broken, harness
When you find a baby hitched to the fence and wagon; also some sheep and hogs, and a
G. W1 Fast.
you may conclude that the mother is near by few household uteuails.
The fire company was out Thursday picking berries.
NOTICE.
Some patches of blackberries have been pick­
evening and gave Herb. Lee’s house a
Tbe annual meeting of School District No. 1,
bouse a good wetting down.
If tbe ed over so often that it is sold the thorns are all of the township of Castleton, tor the election
of school district officers, and for the transac­
perseverance of tbe boys is equal to wore off the bushes.
tion of such other business as may lawfully
8. J. Babcock finished cutting wheat cm the come before it, will be held at the school house
their enthusiasm,Nashville will be well
18. It.is reported to be in better shape than that in the village of Nashville, on Monday, the 4th
protected.
day of September, A D. 1882, at 7 o'clock tn
which was cut before the rain.
The Woodland cornet band played a
Black berries arc a legal tender at Morgan. in tbe evening.
G. A Tbumah, Director.
couple of pieces on our streets Satur­ If you don’t happen to have a dollar in your
day night. They have pluck and a pocket take along a half bushel of blackberriesty t)ur new spring Tea® have arrived.
They
arc
of
the
garden
variety and May pick­
good set of instruments, and practice
Tbe wooden bridge near W. N. DeVine* s is
ing and for strength and flavor they can’t be
will no doubt enable them to make unsafe, and the highway commissioner has or­ beat. Aug. 1882.
C. W. Gazsoa*.
dered a stone culvert put in forthwith. W.
creditable music.
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN.
Cook A Cronk gave a grand ball at Stillwell will be the boas architect
Mrs.
Courtney
(a
sister
of
Dalle
Knight
For
making
flour
we
shall
buy the best wheat
Evans’ opera hall in Bellevue, Friday
whom the old residents will remember as a —Therefore we will not exchange for grown oi
evening, Aug. 25th, and very generous­
wet wheal—Tbe former we cannot receiveschool teacher some fifteen years agn) wa? vis­ The latter we do not want—8o blow into feed
ly invited tbe Nashville firemen to
iting friends here over Sunday.
the first—and cure out the second—Clean your
come over aud have a dance free gratis.
Most all of our farmers raised the long legged wheat well for we give the same number
of flour as our “tester” says it wrigte
Quite a number accepted.
kind of wheat this year. They say that is the pounds
per buabel—We expect to maintain the same
Dr. L. A. Foote, A. 8. Foote of the kind to raise, as when they get through thresh­ standard of flour os lost rear—for our recently
improved faclltles enable us so to do. Bran
Wolcott House, with their families ing it is able to walk off for aale.
There will be an ice cream and honey social in quantity and feed for aale. Come and try ua.
and some friends from a distance. Rev.
0. G. Smsixs zhd hi® Miixxbs.
F. A. Bissell, and Al. Durkee enjoyedat the church Wednesday evening, Aug. 30, for
gy Mason Fruit Cans and Stone Preserve
the
benefit of Eider Mills- All who can eat ice
the pleasures of Thornapple lake and
Jugs
at
C. C. Smith's.
cream and hooey are cordially invited to attend
and the Lake Hours on Monday.
Grain la being threshed at a lively rate by tbe
ty A second-hand one-boree Buggy for sale
Rev. G. W. Fast of Woodland, his steam threshers. There were three lu hearing at
L. J. Whkmlhr’s.
accepted the position of soliciting agent the other night. The Shoup Bros, were toot­
ty 1 am very much obliged to you tor your
for the Hartsville, U. B. University, in ing away off In the south-west, Springett was patronage tor the past five years and would re
southern Indiana, and will leave in blowing his horn in the east, t. hile across the spectfully announce that I nave added to my
shoes.
about two weeks. He offers some stock lake to the north came the blast of Miller A stock a complete line of boot® and
C. W. Smith.
and other things for sale, the particu­ Strong.
FOR SALE
John DeLong, while working on the road the
lars of which are stated in our business
other day, had a scuffle with a amaper, and
column.
only came out second best and will carry tbe gcnth&lt;
marks for several days. A full grown scraper
WANTED.
NEEDED "TOUGHIN’ UP."
and an overgrown wheelbarrow are the worst
100 cords of two foot wood.
Will pay cash.
things to scuffle with for they are always bigger
J. Lbxtz A Sox’*
He was one of Nature’s noblemen if than they look and very treacherous, and In an
**■
Call
and
see
the
best
stock
of Boots and
he did dig wells for a living and wear unguarded moment are sure to land a man on
Shoes tor the price, in Nashville, at
coarse clothes,—built in a big mold, his head.
Whkkuu’s.
The M. P. church here was dedicated last i
with a red face and a straw hat, a sandy
GREAT BARGAINS.
moustache and a countenance that Bunday. There was a large attend.- nee. This
In Summer Clothing aud ail kinds of General
beamed with geniality like the full- church has cost about 81.38Q, of which nearly Merchandise tor twenty days at GbaXOBB'h
81,100
had
been
raised
and
paid
on
It
before
orbed moon in a summer night; and as
E2T The higbe^t market price paid tor But the morning of dedication. The exercises were
he-walked iu and paid two years sub­
Wmbelbb’s.
conducted by Revs. Tompkinson, Stockwell ter and Eggs In Cash at
scription he said: "Now see here, Mr. and Mills. After listening to a fine and ap­
MONEY TO LOAN,
Editor, I want to know why it is that propriate discourse ty Udsr Tompkinson, of
On Real Estate at low rate of interest of
when any of these rich fellows move a Kalamazoo, from tbe text of building a house
Lbe A Dvmkb*
dry goods box a little or sweep tbe side­ for God, by Solomon, the audience subscribed
LOOK IN
walk you have it in the paper ; but if a what was back on ths debt, and tbe church was
working man builds a new house or dedicated free from debt. While this church
fixes up any, you never say a word was commenced some time time ago, and the
•bout it,” and he tipped a sly wink to society has labored under some difficulties, and Camp Chair*, Brushes, Hose, Notion®, and otl&gt;
some opposition, is now finished up In good ,
the “comp*.*
er irclcfe* too uumsroc* to taeotle*&gt;—&lt;&gt;•»•
shape, and the inside will compare favorably hundred useful articles selling for ten cent*
“Well now see here,” said the editor,
with any country church around. Tbe work- . fully worth 25. Come in, look at my stock,ask
hastily dropping bis pen ; “I wrote an Ing members of this society, atthougbt few, prices and you will buy.
TV
item about your improvements aud I have exemplified tbe old adage that a long pull
believe it went in. Don’t you remem­ and a strong pull, and a pull altogether is what
by
/
Gavnt*.
ber it?” and he turned to oue of tbe wins.

printers.
But the printer didn’t remember, and !
tbe man with the straw hat and genial I

BI8MARK.

Batter is scarce.
Politics arc rampant.
countance laughed and said.
We have found out who Kit is.
“Oh you know it’s so—you know its
P. C. Grimes sojourneth at Biamark.
so; you fellow* get to thinkin’ you
Plowing for wheat is tbe order of the day.
can slight us poor fellows cause we
Our saw-mill aa yet has displayed no steam.
don’t wear such good clothes, and you
A lawn social in the Hunter neighborhood
need touchin’ up once in a while.” this week
A. N. Morton will soon move to Elm Hall,
“Well I know I wrote that item,”contiuued tbe editor, “and I don’t see whv where he has bought a farm.
The story that Milo Deuel has bought store
it didn’t get set up; but I’ll say next
property is at variance with tbe facto.
week that EbeueKer Jones lu. j repaired
Oato arc nearly all harvested; corn Is doing
his house and put a new roof on his finely, and may yet be a big crop; pastures are
bare, and,—”
booming with fresh and sweet grass.
“No you don’t—No you don’t, broke
Will not some old Samaritan tell us when to
in Ebenezer, a* the two went down dig potatoes when ripe and afflicted with worms.
the stairs together,
“but I thought Should they be dug now or wait till cooler
fflffiw.
I’d just let you know that us fellows weather._________
MAPLE^ROVE.
notice all these little things if we do
wear poor clothes.”
Oa Tuesday Mrs. Frank and Fred Quick,
were olack berrying out back of their house,
COMMON POUNCIL PBOCEEDINGB.
and saw standing in front of them a blue racer,
which when killed measured 10 feet.
Council Booms,
( •
Nashville, Aug. 19,
f
Mrs. Sarah Baker made a bee to get Mr.
Abraham Wertz's oato cut on Thursday last,
Council met pursuant to adjournment
Present, Chipman. President ; Boise, Dickin- idie getting dinner for them. Some acventeen
aou, Demaray and Lentz, trustee®. Abeent, men wont out and cut all he had, aocnc 12
Barber and Lee.
acres, and put them up In good shape. Mr.
Motion by Dickinson that a da tern ut tbe fol­ Wertz has l&gt;ecn sick for some urn.
lowing dimension® be built on school grounds:
Snakes equal to Calhoun county.
Grace
9 feet deep, 10 'eel across the bulge and 8 feet Potter came very near stepping on a large rat
across bottom, inside measurement: tbe top to tie snake Sunday evening in their door yard.
be of brick work,to be 15 inches below the sur­ It had ten rattles. Tbe next day in the road
face, oak box inside 14x18 inches inside meas­ just north of tbe houae of the bouse, Ed. Sav­
urement. Motion carried by ayes and nays a* age killed another with right ratUea, supposed
1 to have l&gt;een tbe mate to the other.
follows.
■*

LAST CALL.

aider they don’t intend to pay me and shall tak»
tbe neceaaorv steps to collect the same. I meai
just what I say.
D. C. GurriTH.
gy Regular twenly-doUar Summer Suitmarked down to llfi, to close out, at

"VINEGAR”
Pure Cider Vinegar by tbe barrel or galiou,
H. R- DiCKIXSOH-

*** CaMi paid tor fresh Butter

LINEN DUSTERS
Grzxqkk®.

A FEW THOUSAND DOLLARS
BRICK! BRICK
Tile.

FARMERS, LOOK HERE?

�be rrninamu;

SATCKIMY,

*U0. M. IMO. to whom it la

Tflg MOON AND L

h anMen mmin that Ioann b«r eentl'5 f*

Ou th- blue darker* of lb- antnmt
W« vaUW bar -»« m! a Ju11 a little ftpfa.

liabt.

rnullsh game eeefers.

reckoned by the week, vary according
to circumstances. If ••bead keeper" 03
a large estate, with first-class character
and qualifications, hia pay will be high
in proportion. But tae average lor
.ordinary keepers is about £1 per week,
tmflurixe of hia lodge, which he bolds
There'are also other advan­
rent
tages obtainable by him, os perquisites
received for the breaking in of dogs be­
longing to his master’s friends, a and
percentage on the sale of rabbits; with
occasionally some sold that the master
wots not of. Sometimes, also, tbe
keeper's wife follows an economy
which adds to their common income;
having on engagement to raise and
provide the table of the mansion with
eggs, poultry, capons, and such com­
modities. often on a grand scale. From
all this it will be seen that gamekeepers
are better off than tbe -men of their
class who follow most other industries
in England. Few of them there are.
when sober and saving, that in old agu
have not put aside sufficient to live up­
on comfortably if not luxuriously. But
before thia period arrives there are also
few who have not passed through
scenes of trial and danger, rarelv to
come out of them unscathed, and often
.escaping death as it were by "the skin
of their teeth."—Captain Mayne Heid,
in N. Y. Tribune.
.

For game preserving, a game keeper
is, of course, required; and nearly every
gentleman owning'landed property has
one or more in his employ. It the estate
Lie a large one. and lhe owner much
addicted to s|»orting. there will be a
••head keeper," "under keeper,” and
staff of •'watchers"; these last being
men under command of tbe keeper who
perambulate the "covers,” or look out
after poachers and other trespassers.
Their duties are chiefly nocturnal,
though in part performed by day; and
on the estates of wealthy grandees the
tribe—keepers and watchers included—
Trent Raising. ,
frequently foot up to fifteen or twenty
individuals. Such princely establish­
The raising of trout in ponds or pre­
ments. however, are exceptional; and serves has been attempted on a large
the usual gamp keeping' Staff is the scale by many fish culturista, yet there
•keeper himself,'wlfSTa .watcher, or it isno record of any of themever making
may be^X couple of such assistants. Nor a fortune or even earning a living when
is the aid given by these restricted to they had to depend alone upon tbe re­
watching trespassers, they have often sult of trout-breeding. Ten years ago
to render it in personal encounters with there was a great deal said and written
the latter- -desperate fights where fire­ about the adaptability of the brook
arms are used on both sides—as the trout as a food fish for the people, and
poachers do not always run away. This, a book was written in which the writer
however, is a matter requiring more ingeniously demonstrated that immense
detail than present space allows.
fortunes were to be made by raising
Tables were
For dwelling-place the game keeper them for the market
i&gt; provided with, a neat, comfortable made up, stowing that a man having a
cottage known as the "keepers lodge,” few acres of water, either iu ponds or
picturesquely situated, nearly always streams, by the expenditure of 81.000
in tbe midstof woodsand faraway from in the purchase of young fry, would, in
other houses; this for the convenience the Course of two or three years, be tn
of bis being at all times near the area receipt of an income amounting to
of operations. Around it there will be S5,0U0or $10,000 per annum.
an acre or two of cleared ground not
The manner of figuring out this re­
garden, but grass ground. • on which sult was apparently honest and trust­
appears an array of little box-like worthy, because a person unacquainted
houses with pitched roofs. These are with practical fish culture could be
the kennels or dog-boxes,there are dogs easily'led to believe that from 100,000
chained to them of several breeds, but trout eggs, which ho could purchase
all of sporting specialty—pointer.., set­ for about JI,000. he would in two years’
ters, w-tlor spaniels and retrievers. time obtain about 75,000 live fish weigh­
Other wooden structure at some dis­ ing about half a pound each, which in
tance apart are the “cubs” and coops, tbe market would bring at least 75
where young pheasants are batched and cents a pound. This is an epitome of
brought up by common barnyard fowls the bright picture of prosperity drawn
belore being turned out into the covers. by the writer of the book. A great
It is the keeper's great ambition, as that many people, however, accepted these
of his master, to show a pheasant pre­ statements, and at once became en­
serve well stocked with these birds thusiastic fish culturista.
Tbe result,
when October 1st comes around and in two years, was usually a bankrupt
friends are invited to take part in tbe trout-breeder. for instead of 75,000 or
battue.
For attainment of this pheas­ 80.000 half-pound live trout, to his
ants’ eggs are an article of barter and astonishment he would find it a difficult
sale, and readily sell for a shilling each, matter to get 1.000 fish of that size.
the purchasers being the men them­
There are many fatalities attending
selves, and the only ones supposed to the life of a trout, from the lime he
Own pheasants. The traffic is carried leaves the shell until he attains tbe age
on rather surreptitiously, since it is when it gives a fisherman the greatest
well known that
most
of
these।joy of his life to see him rise to the
eggs must have come out of other pre- cunningly-devised fly so temptingly
serves—it may ba those of a near neigh- j dropped into the water. In the first place
bor—and stolen. Still tbe trade goes there is a fungus which forms on the
on. the keeper managing lhe delicate shell before the yolk-sack is absorbed,
negotiation, about which he "keejMi i and fifty jkt cent of the young fish die
dark,
his--------master
thev
the age when they
-------- , ” while
-------- ------- ... winks at it. before kuv
» reach
V.L.V.,1 ,11
a other kv
.---------------.. afood,
_ .
Thon lho nalul1i|
For sufh —
and
like
reosums. it «isa .
a .| .begin to :
take
common thing to hoar said that many enemies of tbe
the trout
trout arc many—birds,
gentlemen s pheasants cost them a muskrats, eels, and other fish—so that
Ginea a head6 before a single bird has the proportion of those which escape
m shot. This sounds big, proclaim­ all these ills, and reach the age of two
ing the owner a man of unlimited nuans years, when they are fit for food, is
and open hand, regardless of tl.e ex­ very small, indeed.
Then take into
pense, and earing only for the sport. consideration the element of food.
1 he assertion has long gone unchal­ Tbe trout has a most voracious appe­
lenged; yet it is anything buttrue. tite. he is carnivorous, and by the time
There may be occasional instances of he is two year? old and fit for market
plutocrats—and among them, more he will probably have cost his owner at
than any. tbe nuveaitx ricAoi-—who least fifty cents for each pound of fish
squander in this silly way; but to my matured.—N. Y. Evening Post.
knowledge most game preservers, gen­
try or otherwise, are game dealers as
Succession of Vegetables.
well, with a keen eye to business, and
The owners of many farms and gar­
every pheanut, hare or partridge killed,
save’ what they keep for their own dens plant all the seeds of one kind of
tables, is packed and sent off for sale vegetables at the same time. As a con­
to tbe cities. And it is an economy sequence they have a surplus of them
that pays them well; in most cases, if I during a short time and are destitute
I of them during a large part of the sea­
mistake not, returning the expenses of
preserving— keepers, watchers and ev­ son. The entire growing season is re| quirod to mature some vegetables, like
erything—with some profit besides.
A notable featurewhicH distinguishes celery, Lima beans, carrots, parsnips
the game-keeper’s dwelling from that and la’o cabbage; but many plants used
gable
oa L^10 La^l° can l,e produced in a few
of tbe ordinary cottager is its
its —
l-'- end
--•*
up the I
*mong U,Mf *" ‘&gt;"ou!"b«r';
Against this will be seen inailed
'
ot tuiimula, to him I rauuho?’.lettuc0 “d P?“.
.bo,“ni1
«,
.
nrrona r\f fnotn onn ho r«iuwt * known as ‘ •vermin” —weasels, stoats, crops of these can be raised the same
polecats, and possibly that of the season, and no family that has ground
should
them.
A
badger;। though the iua
fox,, inure
more UC3UUCdestruc­ ,to cultivate
,
, , be
. , without
.
.
,
game
tive to i------ Hua mv. will not
——•be
—j lew raduh toed should be planted every
killing
would week from the ume the froat 1. out ol
there. The
__________
„ of
„ 'Reynard
__
oed a
ther____
pari the ground till the commencement ol
be deemed
a "dirty
"dirty trick"
trick” on
c_____
--- ----------^ogt in
I the
fall. Spanish radishes, for winter
of a country
gentleman,jn and
most
cases the kee|&gt;er’s master is himself a use, can bo planted as late as tbe 1st of
fox-hunter.
In this "gamekeeper’s September. Radishes are among the
museum.” as it is jocularly styled, the most valuable of our garden vegetables,
predatory birds hold a conspicuous but to be truly excellent they must be
place—all the species of hawk, with quickly grown, and be eaten while they
the raven, carrion crow, magpie and are tender. Peas should be planted at
jay; even the rook and jackdaw figur­ intervals from early in the spring till
The same
ing there as suspected suckers of eggs. the middle of summer.
Apluitodo
epeclmeue' tn?c. II
•h°uU ,bc
Nation to
A til An It nrln ol toch onjantmARo
proof oftho keeper’, aeS and Indhttry I
&lt;»"&gt;. UUooe
menmbem.
In Ute perlonnaice of bi, dutiea
I
oanUeraitodtoa.not to occupy any ground exclusively. A few
These duties vary according to the
seed can bo dropped in the same rows
time of year. In spring, whefi the
devoted to other vegetables. They will
shooting season is over, and early sum­
be of a size to poll before they will be
mer. his ordinary work is to look after
in the way of the plants that require
the breeding of the game-birds, note considerable time to mature.
Two
their places of besting, and see that
crops of some of the other vegetable:
they are not disturbed or interfered
can be raised on the same piece ol
with. Then. too. is his time of best
ground in tbe same season. It is better
activity for the extirpation of ••vonnin,”
to have all the ground in an orchard
all sorts of it being at this season tamer
occupied with vegetables that can be
and so easier to circumvent. The bird­
eaten than to allow any part of it to
nesting boy, also, needs looking after.
grow up with weeds. Edible plants do
not injure the soil any more than weeds
tbTkSXi fad.

K&gt; grow-

«&gt;» 1&gt;«

the gun; and it xuay be gi’mg some
— The police do so little walking
young nxarter.bisfirstleiwuns in vcneric. , while off post that tbe Commissioners

walk
over
the
cored
reefs, wn
waded out. accompanied by nntivM
bearing torches and spears, sotue of
them going in canoes. The natives are
very cxjmrt at thus kind of fishing,
which
is on extremely picturesque
sight, viewed from the land,' but is
rather difficult Co assist at, the rollers
constantly over-turning us amateurs,
lauding us among the corals, from
which we recovered smarting with in­
numerable scratches. The torchlight
appears to fascinate the fish. They
swim up to -its rays, and lie quivering,
almost motionless, staring at lhe light,
while a native with a sure quick thrust,
impales them on his spear. I tried it.
1 felt confident that my arm was all
right, but my spear mysteriously slid
off into a dusky, uncertain distance,
where the big toe of the young Ameri­
can happened to be... Happily, the big
toe was rubber-incased, and the spear
did not penetrate, though the way in
which that- youth lifted up his voice
and yelled spoiled our fishing for that
night His terror was afterward ex­
plained when he told me that he
thought a devil-fish had claimed him
for his own. His fright was not without
excuse, for one of the natives did scoop
up a devil-fish about three feet across
its longest arms. Our host owns the
fishing right on the reef opposite his
{ilace, which he lets to some neighbor□g natives on liberal terms, in return
for which they' bring to him the choic­
est of their catch. The best fish here,
in my opinion, is the xumu, or royal
fish—a beautiful, brilliant • red fish,
shaped like the perch. A common fish
is the umauma, or silver mullet Our
torchlight fishing excursion returned a
good basketful of these two.
Another plan of rcef-lishing is by
giant-powder. Four of us waded out
one day with a powder-cartridge, fused
aud capped, to a high reef nearly ex­
posed at low tide. One kept a cigar
lighted, and, judging our time between
two rollers, the cartridge -was dropped
over the edge&gt;af the reef, the end of the
fuse was lighted with the cigar and
dropped, and we retired as hastily as
possible to await results. Hastily retir­
ing is not just the easiest thing in the
world,through breakersand over broken
coral reefs, and is generally accom­
plished only with various stumbles and
falls in crevices between the coral,
when one has to swim for it until a high
reef is reached again. We waited at a
safe distance until a low boom, a col­
umn of spray and broken coral dashed
high in toe air, told us the explosion
bad occurred, and then, with our scoopnets, we made for the scene of action.
A score of kumu and mullets, stunned
by the concussion, floated on lhe sur­
face. Th" trick is to scoop a fish, and
not get scooped yourself. I got scoop­
ed. I saw a brilliant kumu just recov­
eringconsciousness, and liable to get
away from me if not taken quickly into
camp. I pushed quickly on. stumbling,
splashing, yelling, and excited, until
suddenly I went down, something less
than a mile, in a deep spot I had not
noticed, and, of course, had to swim
for it, and climbed out on tbe next reef,
minus scoop and sans kumu. Enough
were captured to make a breakfast.—
Honolulu Cor. San Francisco Call.

An Itinerant Barber.

"1 suppose I’m what would be called
an oscillating tonsorial artist.'' The
speaker was a welkdressed man of thir­
ty. carrying in his hand a little leather
bag.
• Haven’t vou any shop?” asked the
reporter.
"No; this is my shop,” said the man,
holding up his little valise; then he
opened it and showed its contents,
which consisted of a dozen razors, a
number of brushes and other parapher­
nalia belonging to his trade. "Most of
my customers live on Walnut, Spruce
and Chestnut streets,” said the mail,
"and the majority of them aVe rich old
gentlemen, who have retired from bus­
iness, many of them who, in their
younger days, shaved themselves, but
have grown too infirm. I get all the
way from a quarter to seventy-five cents
for a shave. I start out every morning
about 8, and wind up about I or 2
o’clock. I have a regular route to go
over, and the barber showed a little
book in which were registered the ad­
dresses and names of his customers. "I
have different customers for different
days.”
"How much can you make in a week ?”
queried the reporter.
"In winter 1 average $50 n week, but
in summer L don’t mnk so much, as
many of my customers ^oout of town.”
"Are there any barbers iu your branch
in any of the other large cities?”
"No, I think not. I am ’die only man
in this particular branch. 1 cater to the
aristocratic class, and I'm saving i
money at it. It’s my own idea, and '
as a first-class artist can’t make morel
than $20 a week in a shop perquisites
and pay. I prefer this. — Philadelphia
Times.
______

Tbou««nda of dollars can be saved by using
proper judrtnrn’ in taking earc of the health
depressed spirits, and generally debilitated, do
not delay a moment, but go at once awl pro­
cure a bottle of those wonderful Electric Bit­
tern, which never fail* to cure, and that for the
trifilng sum of fifty cenls.-rTribune. Bold by
all druggists.

Experience is the name men give to their fol­
lies or their sorrows.
.
HOW IT WAS DONE.

friend, "to appear so happy and eood natarcd
all tbe timet" "I always nave Parkere* Ginger
Tonic handy," was the reply, "and thus easily
keep rayself and family In good health
When
I am well I always feel good natured.

AN IMPOSSIBILITY.
Deserving articles are always appreciated.
The exceptional cleanliness or Parkers Hair
Balsam makes !t popular. Gray hairs arc im­
possible with It# occasional use.
There are no oaths that make so many per­
jurers as lhe vows of love.
The only Legitimate Stimulant is a medl*
cine which slops all waste of vita) power, re"
moves obstructions from the physical machine,
repairs breakage,and thus "givesthe system a
change." This Is exactly what Zna-Phora does
for women.
..
.
The cheapest advice is that which costa noth­
ing and is worth nothing.

DON'T TRUST THEM.
When you feel badly, aud have pains here
and there in your body that you don't know
bow to aceout for it is the most foolish policy
In the world to take the advice of people who
say: “Oh, there's nothing tbe matter with you.
Let yourself alone and you will come out all
right." These folks know nothing about It,
and may be trifling with your life
You may
have Kidney or Liver trouble. Send right
out to your druggist and get a bottle nf Dr.
Kennedy’s "Favorite Remedy," and then you
will tie all right, or write to the Ductor, at
Rondout N. Y.

Ill kliort thev cure all diseases of the stom­
ach, Bowels, blood. Liver, Nerves, kidneys,
Bright’s disease. $500 will be paid for a caer
thev will not cure or help.
That poor tx-dridden, invalid wife, slater,
mother &lt;&gt;r daughter, cap be made the picture
of health, bv a few bottles of Hop Bitters, cost
Ing but a trifle. Wifi you let them sutler!

_______

'

Commoa, and hung ready for use.

'

SEW IIVGt MAOHINES.

PLOW POINTS for the Oliver Chilled. Wlard, Three Riv­
ers,- Bryan, Cale, Curtis, 0&lt;Mge, Robinson
And many other Plows.
In Oct n bep . toll u&gt;d cwnplcU nock ol Ont du, H.rdwnc u&gt;d FuMor Took. M
atid sec them before buying.
B

Cook’s Carriage Works
Carriages in Stock to Select From.
Our “Spirals”
RE ATTRACTING MUCH ATTENTION from buggy,
buyers. It is tbe newest, easiest-riding and best carri­
age made, its spring being so constructed as to admit of being
adjusted to suit tbe load.

A

Our “Dexters”
LSO MAINTAIN THE GOOD REPUTATION they
have gained in the past. In fact ail our work is made
upon honor, and our patrons extend from Middleville to Char­
lotte and Portland to Battle Creek.

A

EUGENE COOK.

Spring A

Harrow

toothI.
Grale Plow.

DOMESTIC SEWING 8

tL

When in need of the best greades of Hardware
and Machinery, Call and see me-

J£I:F.P

you eye otv this.

50 Wagons
FOR SALE!
OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE

/

--------------- :------WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH

THREE INCH TIRE,
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING

—In the year 1800 Francis Barrett
wrote: "If any one with an entire new
knife, cut asunder a lemon, using words
expressive of hatred, contumely or dis­ BEATTIE organs tnfuop.
——— ly *00 PiABoa^ltA u
like against any individual, lhe absent
party, though at an unlimited distance, I------------------------------------------------- -—

___

ROAD SCRAPERS, SQUARE DRAGS. SRIHO STORES
.

South Bend. Blow.
Buy^Factory Boints,
they are much, cheap­
er and Better.
Strayer s Grram-Drill.

—The following test is given by the
French Academy for distinguishing
false gems from diamonds. If tbe point
of a needle or a small hole in a card,
when seen through the stone, appears
double, the stone is not a diamond. All |
colorless genu, with the exception of
the diamond, cause a double refraction.

the txxiy.

REED'S GENUINE SPRING TOOTH HARROW

Il is easier to suppress the first desire than
to satisfy all that follow IL

REMEMBER THIS.
If you arc sick Hop Bitters will surely aid
Nature in making you well when all elec fallsIf vou arc costive or dyspeptic, or are suffer­
ing from any other of the numerous diseases of
the stomach or bowels, it is your own fault if
you remain 111, for Hop Bitters arc a sovereign
remedy in all such complaints.
If you arc wasting away with anv form of
Kidney disease, stop tempting death this mo­
ment, and turn for a cure to flop Bitters.
If you arc sick, with that terrible sickness
Nervousness, vou wl|l find a “Balm in Gilead”
in the use of flop Bitters.
If you are a frequenter, or a resident of a
miasmatic district, barricade vuur system
against the scourge of all countries—malarial,
epidemic, biliousness, and Intermittent fevers—
by the use of Hop Bitters.
'if you have rough, pimply, er swallow skin,
bad bn-ath. bains and aches, and feel mliwrablc
generally. Hop Bitters will give vou fair skin,
rich blood, sweetest breath, health, and com-

A COMPLETE LOT OF

.

Buggies, Carriages, Wheel Harrows and
Cultivators, Mounted Seeders,
and 4 kinds of Plows.

Who is lavish with promises Is apt to l&gt;e pe­
nurious in performances.
•

Colorless and Cold.—A young girl deeply re­
gretted that she was socolorleas and cold. Her
face was too white, and tier bands and feel felt
as though the blood did not circulate.
After
one bottle of Hop Bitters had been taken she
was ibe rosiest and healthiest girl In the town,
with a vivacity and cheerfulness of mind grati­
fying to her triads.

WAGONS ONLY $60.00.

.

' The man who Is always right find* every one
else always wrong.

—A French doctor has invented a
new. bed for babies, the idea being to
fill the greater part of the cradle with
bran, and immerse the legs and part of
tbe body of the child in Ibis nest and
fasten it in. - The bran is supposed to
have a warm and stimulating effect.
The inventor of the system has tried it
on his own children, and declares that
they delight in their bran beds, and
cry’when they are removed from it to
any other kind.

anpiish of the heart, together with a
is the
tie eJsrtxsr o? his cm- ,
----------- *■*-............
pknerand snch friends as the latter j
—A drunken man fell over a ciifl
m»- invil- to shoot with him, the । thirty fuel high at Salem. Ala. alightk. r~&gt; «rr
'-iig an ne to ihwr tporUng ing on his head, but escaped without
(c-«'X:o, to m* that it is in proper con. -urio«w injury.

FORTUNES FOR FARMERS AND MECHAN-

ERRORS OF YOUTH
Of youthful Itdtw-rllon, Will for the Mike of

BETTER THAN COMMO TIRE.
We believe the Throw inch Tire
into general use. Call and see them.

&gt;s destined to come

Sold by C. L Glasgow, Nashville, Mich.

BENTLEY BROS. &amp; WILKINS.

' —Pittsburgh makes flour sacks iroiu
old clothes-lines and ropes and last

tt-lyr,

JOHSD.OQVEjr,aC»iBrBb,ir.T.

Hastings, Mich., Sept. 15th, 1881.

'

�AW
of Central Africa still
husband.

didn't know

years ago. and he went and dug it up
and was made happy.—Detroit Fret

has acquired sixteen hundred acres of
land near Tux pan, Mexioo, on which
oil has been discovered.
—A significant sign appeared at
To Advertise rs:
Whitehall, N. Y.. the other evening. In
! Hawi haa double tbe number of reader*
the lire that raged on the brow of
i First RapreMDlatlva Dialrii-i of Barry
Skeen's Mountain appeared the form of
a large horseshoe. The sight was wit­
nessed by many.—Ar. K Sun.
.
—A lawyer in Bangor, Me., brought.
suit for $5,000 against the publishers of
a history of Penobscot County, which
PERUSE THESE LIBERAL AD. BATES.
reported him a» dead and gave him a
ftrnoal limea
complimentary obituary notice.
Itach"
— !*•■»
•’i» iiooi
iioo
—Mlle. Rhea wants to know why
2.50
M»T"84»|
S-50 | 1400
American gentlemen do not find iw
li« I 20.00
mud: time for amusement as French­
Too' T&amp;T 14 66 | 25 00
men do. The answer is plain: French­
16:061 80 00
TW
men make a business of pleasure and
Americans take pleasure in business r~
Chicago Nevt.
Load Notice*, tea cent* a line for
—We occasionally notice advertise­
menta in the newspapers-for ‘.’leather
ORNO STRONG,
bride is an intimate friend of Mr. Park’s workers.” This is probably a demand
Editor and Proprietor. eldest daughter, now Mrs. Gen. Mc­ for men to tackle the latent style of beef­
Cullough. and some veors ago made an steak that they are now retailing for a
dollar and a halt per square IMh.—
extended visit to Mr. Park’shorae in
North Bennington. Vt. Mrs. Park’s Chicago Herald.
—Secretary Chandler-paid BIOO for b
age is about SO years, while her hus­
vi^AaKarvw^Rs.
band is 58 years old. The first wife of cup of coffee at the recent Garfield Me­
the latter was Miss Laura Hall, daugh­ morial Fair in the rotunda at the Na­
ter of the Hon. Hiland Hall, ex-Gov- tional Capitol. Tbecoffe-.’ wasextblleni,
ernorof Vermont, and a very lovely but tho Secretary ol the Navy didn’t
pass bis cup tbe second time.—Chicago
lady. She died four or five years ago."
Marahall-James L. Gregory.
•
—Gen. William 6. Harney, the eighty- Journal.
Trustccs-H. A. Barber, F. T., Boise. H. W.
—A mild-tempered resident of Clin­
Demaray, II. R. Dickinson, H. M. Lee and two-vear-old veteran of tbe Block­
hawk, Semlnple, Mexican and Sioux ton, N. Y.. “respectfully” advertises
wars, is now lookiug remarkably well over his own name: "The parti-’s who
Jlorirtiw.
and vigorous, and his atatelv form is took away my gate, lawt Siitorday
not bowed by the weight of advancing night, will think better of themselves
/CHRISTIAN CHURCH—F .A. Blssri,Pastor. years. Memory and eyesight, however
some ten years hence if they will re­
v&gt; Bcrvlcc* ewery Sabbath at 10.30 a. m. aud are beginning to fail. ’ One of the great turn it unawares to itsfonnarpqsition."
7 p.m. Sabbath school at IS'm. Prayer meet­
Western railroad companies recently
— Users of arsenic tor the complexion
ing every Thursday evening
offered him 1O.U00 acres of laud as com­ are warned by a physician that its
TirETHODIBT EPISCOPAL CHURCH-A. pensation for the influence for peace he
effects are redness of the. eyf a, falling
1VL D. Newton, Paster. Services erery g*t&gt;- exerts over the Indian tribes, and to. out of tho hair, wasting of the fiesh ard r
bath at JO.40 a. m. and 7 p. m,
Sabbath
dropsical tendencies, and sometimes’
school at 12 m. Prayer rcectlng every Thurs­ induce him to remain in the Northwest,
but ho declined to accept it. He spends paralysis. Its use by the seekers after
day evening.
’
bis winter* at hia Southern home near personal beauty is said to be increasing.
VY LODGE NO- ST, K. of P, meet* "at tu I’ass Christian. Miss., and his summers
—There are all sdrts of wedding
Castle Hall, Nashville, Michigan, every
tours. When Frcfnssor F. W. Putnam,
Friday evening, for the encouragement and in St. Louis, Mo.—Chicago Tribune.
—Now come* on the uorthwest wind . of Cambridge. Mass., was married to a
support of all worthy, true, steadfast and hon­
orable Brother KnlghU.
a distressful rumor that the formerly fair Chicagoah the other day they pro­
L. E. Lbxtz, K. It 8. Oaxo Stkoxg.C. C. Reverend Mr. Miln will only tarry in
ceeded to Southern Ohio, where they
the Jericho of Dakota lumber-yards un­
were exploring, hand in burnt, the an­
niHcellaneoui* Cards.
til his dramatic beard has grown.
cient borial grounds of the ruotind'Within the fancy-free seclusion of the buildera. 'Professor Putnam is a curator
H. YOUNG. M. D. Office east side ol
sawmill,
with
logs
for
auditors
and
a
.
of the Museum at Cambridge.
• Main SL, Nashville.' Office hours from
tuneful buzz-saw for orchestra, he will
7 to® a. m., and 4 to 7 p. m.
—'•Very few boys.” says a writer in
57 AYL8WORTH, M. D., Phyddkn study and rehearse Shakesjiearc. And SL Nicholas, “know how to run.” On
when the melancholy days of October an crr xnd, or to school, probably not,
• aud Surgeon. Office over Bolte’* drag
atnrc: Room at WoicoU Houisc. Will promptly come he will make his debut upon the but tK-rhapa bcforo this writer’s decis­
Chicago stage. “I will, of course,” he ion f.-oCs on record he had better take a
attend to all day and night calls.
says, with touching diffidence, “com­ cursly view of any boy getting out of
fc. G W. GOUCHER, Elec’do Physician and mence modestly, with my name at the
Burgeon, L» prepared to answer all call* foot of the list, apnearing in the char­ a stinrgo orchard fifteen feet ahead of
of a farmer and a yellow dog.—Burling­
that may be mad* for
Mrricea. Office sad
acters of Hamlet. Richelieu and Iago.” ton Hawkeye.
rcaldauca opposite Ro*’* meat market.
Small need to wonder at the reporter’s
—A short distance from Buena Vista,
YTTM. PARMENTER, M. D. Office over statement that this information was
Cal., is a cave inhabited by spiders of
v V Hall'* Drug store, Vermontville^ Mich.
“smilingly imparted."
enormous size. Tho cave wak discover­
HAS. n. BRADY, Lawyer, Circuit Court
ed lost December by a party of sight­
A LITTLE NONSENSE.
CommlMtoner, Real Estate and Insurance
seekers. -The spiders are'abon- the
Agt. Piompt attention given to all businee*
—Cigar wrappers are now made of size of small biros, and make a strange
•strutted to my care. Conveyancing a ipcclal
neach tree leaves, and tho poor old cab­ sound while weaving their web. The
ty- Office oppoaita Union Houk.
bage must take a back seat. — Di trail webs are so tough and the fibers so
A. FOOTE, PHYSICIAN A BURGEON. Free Press.
large that it is almost impossible to
« Suceuor to Dr. Wickham. Office »ec—An Albany (N. Y.) paper tells of break them.
ond door north of the Nashville House: re»idedee Scat door north of tbe Wolcott House. a woman of that city who woke her
—Among the spectators at the circus
Prompt attention to calls night or day.
husband during a storm and said: “I at Rock City Falls, N. Y., recently,
’
MORY t’ARADY, Jtfutlce of the Peace. do wish you would stop snoring, for I were George Kilmer and wife, of that
Office, Corner Main and Bhcnnau Street*. want tq hear it thunder."
hamlet. Although "Uncle George” is
"Aunt Betsey ' is
—The season for snake stories may ninety-three, and
LIEBHAU3ER, Merchant Tailor and &lt;leal• er in Ready Made Clothing. See me b« well pronounced closed. A Rhode ninety, and their connubial hapolness
before you parchaK clothing. Fits guar­ islander has seen one oyer five miles extends back seventy years into the
long, and it had to curl up to keep from records of time, it was the first circus
anteed.
getting over tbe linn into Massachusetts that they hod ever attended, aud the
HATCH &amp; CO., Manufacturers of Tuff)
event wks noted und regarded by those
or Connecticut.— Toledo American.
• Caudles, Chocolate Drops and Cannel*.
—"You love me?” echoed the fair present as more worthy of remark than
Fruits, Fancy Candles, Cigar.-. Tobacco*, etc.,
• always In awek. Second door north of the creature, ns her pretty head oiled the the sj&gt;ectacles of the ring.
post office. ’
collar of his summer suit. “Xes," he
—Sevier County, Arkansas, boasts of
IANK BAKER, Manufacturer of Boot* •aid tenderly, ‘ ‘you are my own and a negress 125years of age. named Edna
Goodman. Sfi* is an inmate cf the
and Shoes, pegged or sewed. Repairing only------ " "Hush.” she interrupted,
Kuuptly attended to. at the sign of the red
“don’t say that—bo original.
That
poorhouse, and for the past quarter of
&gt;t, eart side Main 8L «
sounds too much Hke a circus show­ a century has steadily desired to live to
see another cotton crop raised. Tamah
TACOB OSMUN. Ltvrmnan, barn near Wol- bill.”
t* cott House. First class turnout* at reason­
—A school-mistress, while taking Brooks, a colored woman living near
able rates. Special rates to commercial men.
Atlanta; Ga., is 123 years old. and has
down the names and ages of her pupils,
Funeral and weding parties furnished with car
and of their parents, at the beginning given birth to seventeen children.—
rlages on abort notice.
of the term, asked one little fellow: Chicago Times.
"What’s i&lt;.ur father’s name?" ‘-Oh,
—Recently while Dr. A. H. Best, of Sa­
repairing. All manufactured work made from you needn't take down his name; he's vannah. Ga.. was silver-plating a small
best of atock and warranted. First door nouth too old to go to school to a woman," article with silver cyanide solution, he
Botee’s hardware.
was the innocent reply.
used an old Spauish silver coin as
—Mrs. A.—"We hod a beautiful ser­
onule. Tbe coin was worn perfectly
mon this morning, didn’t we?" Mrs. smooth and had been hafnmered to
B..—"Beautiful, and did you notice twice its original size; yet lu a little
Mrs. Smithson’s bonnet?" Mrs. A.— while after it was put in tho both every
ood Turning in all Its branch**.
“Notice it? Well I should say I did.
letter and figure became plainly visi­
HAKW. DEMARAT, Dialer fa Watchm, 1 couldn’t keep my mind off it the ble
Th** date, 1800, though defaced so
Clocks, fine Jew dry and Silverware. Being whole service."
Mrs. B. —"Nor I as fo bn beyond deciphering with a
neither.”—Boston Transcript.
powerful glass, became plain.
—Scene—A ward in a Scotch infirm­
—Some time ago a man came into a
ary. Lady visitor: "Are they kind to Baltimore lawyer's office in a state of
TONAH B. RABET, E
iraymaa- you here?” Patient, (who is recover­
great excitement and asked him to
Goods and Baggage
placs In
ing from his illnosa and is very hun- commence proceedings for a divorce.
• gryl: "Na—I never get hauf ma fuL" Mr. Dobbin heard him through, and
TTIRAM R- DICKINSON, wannfartuini of
Could you then said: “I think I have something
XI and dealer ia Hard Wood Lumber. BuM- Lady visitor: “Indeed.
eat an egg F’ Patient: “Eaton egg! that will exactly suit your case; sit still
Could a^eat twa? Mem. I could eat and I will read it to you." The man
the chap that laid them!”.
remained seated, all ear. supposing he
AMES FLEMING, practical Jeweler and
.—Lucy B., Denison, Tex.: “There was to listen to Blackstone or Kent,
Watch-maker. Clock*. Watches, SUrer and
Plated Ware, Jewelry and Optical Goods. Rock­ Is a young man paying attentions to when Mr. Dobbin began to read “Betsey
ford Watobeeaspedaily. Repairing and Engrav- me. Fdo not like him. and want to and 1 are Out.” - By the time he ended,
faydoua in » workmanlike manner.
the man’s eyes were full of tears. "I
get rid of him. How eon I do it with­
believe I will go home," he said. And
/ARNO STRONG.plain and fancy *00 mnuw. out hurting his feelings?” We suppose
VF Tbs beat facilities for doing work of anr if you were to moke some .sarcastic he aud his wife have lived happily ever
remark about tbe size of his feet or the since.—Batlimore Sun.
area of -his abundant cor. that it would
hurt his feelings, so we can suggest
—Apropos of the insane desire for
nothing but that you work up an ice adventura'Which impels men to engage
^TMXOTr HOUSE,
cream appetite and scatter hints about in the almost suicidal Artic expeditions,
a yearning you have to go buggy riding the Hartford Courant tells this pat
■^Caah-vllle1 NIloHiffan.
at his expense every evening in the story: A gentleman conversing with a
A. S. Foot::, Proprietor.
gloamiug— Texas Shiftings.
naval officer in that city relative to the
—The history of music has never sad fate of De Long and party remark­
lunrjakd, I&gt;im at any given us a more ravishingly seductive ed that he supposed officers would conr. Tara firrt-oi**. Sam­ instrument than the xylophone. It is tiiwe to volunteer for such foolhardy
nature’s own melody. Talk about the expeditions all the same. “Yes," said
oerfew bell or the warble of the bobo­ the naval officer, "call for volunteers
VI1.EE HOLME,
link or the ripple of mountain streams, to go to hell and fifty will step to the
if you pleaae, but the musical wash­ front.” “Perhaps some of them ought
I. M. Flint fit Sox, Prone,
board known as the xylophone scoops to go there.” said the gentleman.
them all. Make a picket fence with •Oliey ars not the ones that would
pickets of different lengths, and pound volunteer," quickly replied the naval
**■
f stove-wood, and •oflicer.
MUd: tlJO, IF PAID IN ADVANCE.

—Mrs. Beecher in a wonderfully vivaciotiB and agreeabla lady. She has
borne ten children and lost- aix.' •
She has seen trouble. ' With her
aquare,
prominent
forehead
and
d&lt;re|&gt;-sunk eyes, she scents seventy
when her face is iu repose, but in ani­
mated conversation, she looks nut more
thau thirty-five or forty.-• Boston Glob^
—When Cyrus W. Field first came to
New York City ho found, employment
in the house of A. T. Stewart &amp; .Co.,
od a salary of 82 per week. He wan
obliged to be the lirat at the store in the
morning, to sweep out, end to remain
until the partners and most of the
clerks had gone at night.—N. F. Her­
ald.
—The Hon. Trenor W. Park, the
Vermont millionaire, was married iu.
San. Francisco recently to Miss Ella ■
Nlehnta. The Albany Argus says: "Th« .

ilashvilk giwrttirg.

I

W

D
C

L

E
S
P

P

C

J

as mv.ch

—There is likely to be a revival in
bwc-baif throughout tbe country this

ing the summer months, but you canned
Mt them all the stuns.—Burlington
hawk chasing a lark. We cannot tell Bvdu^e.
—Never hesitate to offend the chronic
what the larks privste opinion may be,
but to all outward appearances it never book-borrower. You may be out of hie
books, but that is better than being out
appreciates “divine dexterity.” The
of your own..
cnase often'lasts from twenty minutes
to half an hour. Sometime* the lark
—The New Haven Register sees no
gets clean away; sometimes it takes
occasion for .alarm over lhe high price
refuge at the feet of a man, or in some
of beef. Dried' apples can be had io
friendly cottage; but more often tho
plenty at the same old figures.
'
poor creature’s flight grows feeble, and
—A little boy who baa Iwen used to
the savage enemy stoops and brings it
receiving his older brother's old toys
down. When the captive and captor
and clothes recently remarked: “ Ma,
reach tbe ground the divine dexterity
will I have to marry his widow when he
makes itself manifest in a most butch­
dies?"
erly process of tearing and rending.
—A lover and his girl went into a
Partridges and grouse, which are pur­
Springfield, Mass., drug store the other
sued by the larger hawks, seem also to
day to get some “sody.” One ordered
suffer terrible agony during their flight.
“bovine” the other “vaccine,” suppos­
In fact, from all observation, I incline
ing that these two words, which were
to believe that, if the birds could be
bung up near the fountain, were the
got to deliver an impartial opinion.they
names of some new syrups.—Detroit
would declare in favor of tbe swift ob­
Free Press.
livion given by the gun rather- than in
favor of tbe long terror of flight, and
fought, and I fought three times a
tbe cruel rending of beak and talons.
week," said Smallboy.proudly. “Yes?’.’
Prof. Newman may have means of ac­
replied Old boy, with a shade of woncurately gauging ornithological opinion;
dorjng incredulity in his voice, for bis
but we, tbe most part of us, can only
friend was small of stature. “Always,"
form judgment from common- observa­
tion. I hose who favor the Professor’s rejoined Smallboy, regretfully, “licked
view of nature's operations, should try
the dust."
to spend ono long day iu some wild
—“Is there such a thing as luck?”
place. They would find that day a asks a correspondent. There is. For
cycle of murder. . Supposing that the
instance if you gohoma st two o'clock
place is by the sea, lie down, first of in the morning, after promising your
all, by thejside of some deep break' in wife, to be in early, and find her asleep
the rocks and watch what goes on as and don’t tunible over any chair*,that’s
the tide flows in. The goby lurks be­
luck, but it isn't to be depended on.—
hind tire waving weeds and dashes out
Oil Oity Derrick.
now and again on his prey; tho dog­
—K letter mailed in 1853 was recently
crab sidles along ana watches his found behind a shelf in a country postchances; the black eel winds sinuously effloe, and forwarded to its destination.
about, with bis villainous eye and his It was addressed to a yonng lady, and
snaky coils making him look like the
contained a marriage proposal. When
very genius of murder. ' By the time
the young lady read it aho looked pleas­
lhe gup is completely filled the observ­ ed, and exclaimed, “Law me! I didn’t
er sees one great battle of species
expect to hear from John so soon. But
against species; and ho knows that the
what a wonderful thing is the fast-mail
same tight is going on in every bay down
service J”
tbe coast
Inland, the same kind of wild work
SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY.
•
may be seen by dexterous watching.
A rabbit stumbles hopelessly among
—The London Builder attributes the
the tussocks. It seems dazed and fore- marvelous durability of mortar in Italy
done.
A few yards behind comes a to the fact that the lime remains in a
tiny brown creature with white breast pit covered with water for two year*
and vicious little teeth, and tho poor before it is used. Hero the lime is used
rabbit knows that there is nd escape half an hour after it is slacked.
from this deadly pursuer. Unless you
—The clippings of sole leather in New
care to deliver the rabbit from divine
England shoe factories wore formerly
dexterity, you will see how nature's
regarded as worthless, and the smell of
butchers work. The chased beast be­
their burnings were a peculiarity of
gins to run in halting circles; then it
such towns as Lynn and Salem. These
stops and screams, then there is a
scraps are now stamped into buttons for
brown flash, and the weasel is fixed
clothes aud fancy tack-head* for up­
like an ugly parasite behind the poor
holstery, and the long familiar odor is
victim's cars; then there is silence.
missed.
Half an hour after you will see the rab­
—The little unicellular alga, which
bit abandoned with s gaping wound in
its neck. If your terrier accompanies makes the red snow, and figured in
you. then the rabbit is saved and the Captain Ross’s account of his Arctic
would-be murderer is murdered. The expedition in 1819, has been found on
weasel turns on tbe dog and squeaks the top of the Wasatch Mountains. Bot­
with a thin sound that' sets the teeth anists call it tho protococcus nivalis. It
on edge;- he also emits' an abominable increases rapidly after it once begins to
stench, which stays long in the air. The grow, and makes patches of snow os red
terrier knows that divine dexterity as blood.
—Plants do not take up water by their
must be exercised (not so much
•for tlw puq»ose of sparing the weasel leaves from a moist atmosphere, but
pain as for preventing that lively their roots must be supplied with plenty
creature from getting a hold on his of water, which will be takon up by the
The water
jugular), so he poises for a second root-hairs into the plant.
before striking. I'hen he catches the .thus taken up is not pure, but contains
soft little brute by lhe middle; there is certain mineral substance* in solution.
a swift flapping* sound as the dog These pass through the root to the bun­
shakes his head, and the weasel flies dles of the stem, then to tho leaf, where
four feet into the air. Evolution and the water is transpired.
training have made this butcher efli—A company has been formed in
cicnL ' Watch among the sloe-bushes South Florida, it is said, to manuhic
of some deep ravine.
Down in the ture an active fertilizer from the shell
hollow there is a red gleam as Reynard marl, which is found in large quantities
works his way among the sedges. He on some portions of thenuper St. Johns.
comes into the open, aud you actually It is proposed to grind tho r.holl, and
see him curl his lips into a queer kind supply ammonia by udtUug the decom
of Mephistophelian smile. He glances posed 06*11 and bones of li*h, which can
over his shoulder, and advances with Ou be obtained in large quantities in the
wary-gait.
The innocent water-hen lakes of the upper river.
goes on nodding her head and making
—ExperyflwiA made at Ixiipdc with
little noises, without being'in the least a cuirass formed &lt;jf a new kind uf steel
aware of the greedy eyes and lhe bare
preparation show some very satisfactory
teeth that are flashing so close behind
results. Tho metal of this cniras*, as
her. The fox makes his dart: there is described, is only about three-iif
a gurgling scream, and olivine dexterity an inch thick, and is lined inside with a
is once more made manifest How
layer of wool; tbe cuirass itself is four­
many more sights and sounds of death
teen inches wide and ten inches high,
meet eye and ear in the course of day
being intended only to protect the heart
and night there is no need to say.
and lungs, and weighs two and oneProf. Newman should go and see; and
fourth pounds.
Eleven rounds were
be might learn that man is not, after
fired at it, at a distance of 175 yard*,
all. the crudest of animals.—St. James'
from a Martini breech-loading rifle, and,
Gazette.
of eight bullets which struck the cuirass,
only two pierced the metal, while even
To Drive Ants From the Pantry.
these were completely flattened and re­
A correspondent asks, “How shall 1 mained in the woolin lining, so that a
drive black anta from my pantry?” 1 man wearing tbe cuira-ts would have
was afflicted one summer'by the arrival been uninjured, its lightness constitutes
of an army, wall marshaled, as it ap­ a marked advantage.
peared. of large black ants. They took
possession of the pantry and everything
The Aceru-Storing Woodpecker,
in it. I tried various experiments, but
for a time none were successful. At
The California red-headed woodpeck­
last I hit on this single expedient: We er has the curious habit of storing acorns
carried out every eatable, including a in the bark of trees.
Ou Howel Moun­
tightly-covered kugar-box; then we tain, Napa County, a pine one hundred
put. temptingly, on the wide lower and seventy-five feet in length, for eighty
shelf a good-sued piece of custard pie. feet above the ground, contained in each
In ten minutes it was literally filled square foot-of surface from twenty to
with anta, which were then easily dis­ sixty acorns. The holes are drilled to
posed of. The buusewife can decide suit the site of the acorn, and each one
for herself how this shall be done. Cre­ is driven In tightly. Mr. Stearns, in the
mation or drowning are recommended. May number of the American Natural­
Then we put moist pieces of cake in the ist, estimates for this single tree 41,000
same place, and in the course of the acorn holes, and at the rate of seven
afternoon the ante were exterminated, acorns to the ounce, 3G5 pounds of
with the exception of a few stragglers, scorns are required to fill tho holes.
wbo evidently carried the tidings far Tbe probable explanation of. the curious
and near, for we were never troubled by habit Li that tbe acorns are preserved
for the sake of tho grubs, which being
smaB when the acorns drop, grow until
—An eye disease of mysterious origin they fill the aoorn, aud arc then eaten
and destructive character is apparently by the bird. This industrious carpinteon the point of becoming epidemic m ro, as the Spanish Californians call him,
Louisville, Ky. It is supposed to be is compelled to fight off marauding
caused by germs floating in the atmos­ species of woodpeckers, which are too
phere, and Is always most prevalent laiy to collect the hatch grubs for themafter a flood. A Louisville physician solves.
Bays that it is known to medical science
It is singular the Indians have no
under the appalling name of “muoo’
md connected with
pnrulent conjunctiva,” that in times
interesting bird.
_
__
. _.,. ,lNi^&gt; Krom®the
Pacific States," nor Major Powell's
his knowledge there are now between “Contributions to
two and three Lune
Ihlt
vilk. outside the

the sealed lids.

Journal.

BtBlous Fevers. The Pr.
CoKtfDKXOKhaa twed but

SHILOH' 8 CONSUMPTION CUBE.

ThU ia beyond question tiic moat «■« w.ful
ud Bronchitis, while it* woixlerlui xicccaa ia
o the cun- of conauiupUou ia wtibout a pamL
cl in tlie Lfctery of niedicuc. Sim e iU flrat

you
and Shiloh's
Bi»K
ANSWER THIS QUESTION.
Why do so many people we
around ub,
•ecm to prefer U) Buffer and I* made miserable
by indigestion, connU{iallon, dlzzhitM, low of
appetite, corning up of the Focal, veBow «ktn,
when for TScts, we will aell.tbcm Ahiluh'a Vltoliscr, guaranted to-cure them. Sold by FI T.
Book.
•
x
SHILOH’S CATTARRH REMEDY, A mar­
velous cure for Catarrh, Diphtheria, Canker
mouth, aud Head Ache. With each bottle
here b an ingehiou* nasal Injector for tbe
more successful treatment of three complaints
withoutextra charge. Price 50c U. Sold by
Various Causes—
Advancing years, care, sicknes*. dLiapgieut, and hereditary predhposi■all operate to turn the hair gray,
ithcr of them inclines it to shed
turely. Ayer's Haim Vigor will
restore faded or gray, ii&gt;Jht or red hair
to a rich brown or deep Mack, as may
he desired. It softens and cleanses the
■&lt;calp, giving it n healthy action. It
removesand cures dandruff and humors.
By its use falling hair is check -d. und
a new growth will be produced In all
cases where the follicle* are not de­
stroyed or the glands decayed.
Its
effects are beaniiftflly shown on brushy,
weak, or sickly hair, on which a few
applications ■••.ill produce the gloss and
freshness of youth. H armless and sure
tu Its results, it is iucompirahfe as
a dressing, and- Is especially valued
for the soft lustre and richucss of tone
it imparts.
Ayub's Hant Vigor Is colorless;
contains neither oil nor &lt;ly ■; uinl will
not soil or color white cambric; yet
It lasts long on the hair, anil keeps
it ftesh and vigorous, imparting tin
agreeable perfinne.
For sale by all druggists.

HALL'S
fiatarrhQure
Is Becommondcd by Physician^

S1OO

CTASD I'lElWH
We tnmufMture end Mil h vllha —-'glttv®
pjaranteo that It will cure any
^eeasod »o will forfnli lhe above amvuui
ijiTaiiata a single Instance.
J
Itia unlike •uy Otb-r (4Urih remedy, aa
■e.m.WSI!

lamodUtely. Price. 75 cenu per bottle.

,

F. 1 CHENEY A CO., Toledo. Ohio.

IRON

BITTERS
BROWNNJ IRON BITTERS are
requiring a complete tonic: c*q&gt;omlttent Fevers, Want of Appetite,
Iamb of Strength, Lack of Energy*
etc. Enrichoe the blood, strength­
ens the muscles, and gives new
life to tlic nerves. Acts like a
charm on the digestive organs,
removing all dyspeptic symptoms,
such os costing tho fbod, Belching,
Heat In the Stomach, Heart burn.

Hint will not blacken the teeth or
give headache. Sold by nil Drug,
gists at $1.00 a bettie.
BROWN CHEMICAL CO.

BEWAKE OF IMITATIONS.

�SELLS GOODS EXCEEDINGLY LOW
In order to make room for our Fall and Winter Good* we
are telling our fineet atocu of Clothing at pricee that re­
quire no bantering to sell.

1 from Latest Dispatches.

CONSISTING OF

DOMESTIC.

Kfir Cborlten. Saratoga Cnwty, N. Y.. on
Wa mom lug of tU 17th fire ma*keJ men
broke into B dwelitax and handcuffed, bound
aadgnggnd two brothers named Ollchriat and
their rioter. Tbe robbers then force) open
toemfe aud eocsped with
in re*h and

91st for the White Mountains w»» wrrek-d
umr North Haven Hill, at a curve on an era-

oo tho rail.

A Kmwnrs coal-mine near Cumberland,
Md., barat out into a blase fifty fret high on
the 17th. threatening a great detraction of

^perty _

-_______ J -

iro. ...

Part of tbe train plunged down.

A Washington dispatch of the 21st say*
that the receipts at the Treasury were daily
more than ever known before within Uh- mem­
ory of official* at the Department. The
amount averaged a million and one-half every
day. and it waa estimated that the rece pt*
for the month would amount to nearly *50,ooaooo.

PERSONAL AND POLITICAL.

‘

In tbe Bankers- Convention at Saratoga
Springs on the 17th Mr. Henry (Mobile)stated
that tbe Alabama planters arc getting out of
tebi, and tbe Improvement of the rivers Is
doing much for tbe Blate. W. IL Perkins
(Mississippi) read a paper on the “ Growth
of Mlaateaippi and the Cotton State*.”
Charles IL Roots (Little Rock) spoke of the
change which baa taken place tn Arkansas

Thm American Womaa-8uffragw Aatodation will hold its thirteenth snnu.l meeting
at Omaha, Neb., os the 12th and 13th of
September.
• The following Congressional nomination*
were made oa the 17th: Republican—1111note.
Eleventh District. B. F. Marsh, renominated;
Virginia, First, Robert M. Mayo; Fourth, B.
8 Hooper; Michigan, Fourth, J. C. Burrow*,

merchants. He called for capital and young
men. R-M. Nelson (Selma) .depleted tbe
the Naitoual

i utlca

(Fir*t “National Bank of Chicago) Vice-Preai­
dent, with aame Vice-Prwldenta from other
State* and Tcirltorica a* Uat year, except J.
Thoma* Smith (Baltimore) to place of Daniel
Annan, for Maryland. The Executive Coundl
Ji the *ame aa laat year.
A committee
of three, eonalatiug of W. B. Gould,

appointed to
take into consideration
tbe laws of the various States regulating
savings banks, and present to tbe association
next year a plan for organizing and maintain­
ing such institutions whereby certain essen­
tial features may be incorporated Into several
Stale laws, so that they may be controlled by
more uniform legislation.
At Louisville, Ky., the other day a nineyear-old lad, who was playing on lhe Ohio
River bridge, slipped t&gt;clween the cross-tie*,
and fell Into the swift current of -the river, I
ninety feet below. The remarkable jMirt of
tbe incident was that be was safely rescued
and sustained no injury from hia tumble.
Statistics lately published by the Universal
Postal Union show that the number of letters
and postal-cards dispatched and received lb
tbe domestic and International service* per
capita of population in tho various countries
was, in 1880, as follows: Great Britain, 37:
United States, 23; Switzerland. 29; Nether­
lands, 17; Belgium, 10; Germany, 15: France,
14, etc. Eatimating the population of the
whole globe at 1,400,000,05) Individuals, tbe
number of letters aud postal-cards per in­
dividual averaged about three and a half.
Thouble exist* between tbe white and col­
ored laborers on the line of the Memphis &amp;
Kansas City Railway, and tbe white men final­
ly have succeeded lu intimidating the negroes

Adam M. Dundee, the defaulting cx-County Treasurer of Berks County, Pa., ha* been
sentenced, on a confesalou of guilty, to three
years’ imprisonment at hard labor in the coun­
ty Jail, to pay tbe costa of prosecution, and
to refund the *19,000 cmbexxlct
TnutTT-rnxEE new cases of yellow fever
were reported from Brownsville, Tex., ou the
18th. At Matamoras five deaths and a few
new casq| occurred.
for tbe seven days ended on the’ IStb num­
bered 148, being fifty-three more than in tbe
four over the same week in 1881.
Notice was received on the 13th st the
Post-office Department tn Washington that
the mails wen- being quarantined In the State
of Texas on account of the prevalence of yd-

Ox the IStb the Treasury vaults at Wash­
ington contained 90,000,000 new allrer dollar*
and *28,000.000 in fractional currency, mak­
ing a total of *118,000,030 In allrer eoln on
hand.
Advices of tip 18th from the Sonora Val­
ley sav that Urn lumber of hostile Apaches en­
gaged in tbe nA waa 300. commanded by Jah,
the Chlrieabua chief. Die outrages being

pursuit.
The Governor of Texa* on the 19lh asked
aid of tbe Government for the yellow-fever
sufferer*
Surgeon-General Hamilton had
forwarded tents for use at Brownarille. Thir­
ty new cases were reported at Brownsville and

The National Board of Health was on tbe
!&amp;th informed of the prevalence of cholera al
curred upto July 34.

and all were kilted.

Tbe party waa returning

ear retaining

othere ware aertocalv injured.
The strike of the coal-minen In Western
Pennsylvania, which began in April last, end-

Rrromon the 21 at from Mlnneaot* and

With only their nlgbt-dothiug.
Globe, Arizona, killed Andrew Hail,
. and secured 85,000 In

Sagars, Coffees, Teas, Tobaccos,
Spices, Fish, Canned Goods,
Provisions, 4c.,

Kiilaroey, Ireland, on tbe evening of Um 20th,
A Vibxn* dispatch of the 20th says the riu
nation in Roam aula was becoming very dis­
quieting. Tbe Russian* had apparently coin menced their old intrigue*. Russian officers
were frequently found oa the Lower Danube

AT THE LOWEST PRICES

Thm Dublin Mau* ton-house committee for
tbe relief of evicted tenants decided on tbe
21st to send a deputation at Irish members of
Parliament to tbe United Blate* to ask aaelat-

EGYPTIAN WAR NEWS.

enth, John P.Leedom, renominated: Arkansas,
Second, James K. Jone*, renotpinated; Indi­
ana, First, John J. Klelmer; Missouri, Fourth,
James N. Burns; Tenth, Martin L. Clardy,
renominated: Twelfth, Charles IL Morgan;
fanatical Mohautmedan dignitary on the her­
New Jersey, Fourth, Henry 8. Harris; Iowa,
Seventh, C. T. Gilpin. Greenback—Ohio, ders of Tripoli.
A Coxstantinoflb telegram of the 18th
Tenth, EL J. Rhodes. Readjuster-VlrgiuU,
says the Porte had withdrawn its agreement
Eighth, R. R. Farr.
to aend ’roopa to Egypt, and would protest
Genseal Binolbtox has announced him­
against Engilah occupation.
self as an Independent Democratic candidate
An Alexandria dispatch of the 18th says
for Congress tn tbe Twelfth Illinois District. that tbe official return* from Arabi’a army
The returns received from the late Ken­ gives the number aa follows: Regular*;
tucky election on tbe 17th indicated the 88,000; militia, 38.000; Bedouins, 50,000. It
choice of Henry, the Democratic candidate for waa reported from Cairo that Arabi Paaha
Appellate Clerk, and the only State candidate had warned the Eurojcm resident* that he
voted for, by about 45,000 majority.
would not be responsible for their »afety,
A. McCaixa, of Iowa,'has been elected Pres­ haring to call all toe soldiers and policemen
ident of the American Microscopist Society.
to the front.
The following Congressional nominations
AN Alexandria dispatch of tbe 19th states
were made on the IStb: Democratic—Virgin­ that a naval attack ou Arabi Paaha’* position
ia, Third District, Georgs I&gt;. Wise, renomi­ commenced in tbe alternoon on the M*hmounated; Missouri, Third, John Cosgrove. Re­ dlth Canal The firing ceased tn tbe evening.
publican—Virginia, Ninth, J. BowenA reconnolsaauce by land revealed the rebel
The Connecticut Republican State Conven­ forces masked behind tree*. Four English
tion baa been called to meet at New Haven soldiers were killed, and the number of
September 2.
Egyptians killed waa estimated at 300.
The Massachusetts Greenback-Labor party On the 20t!i heavy fighting wa* going
met tn State Convention at Boston on the on at Ramleh.
Ke port* from tbe inte­
18th and nominated General B. F. Butler for rior 'L.ted that Arabi Pasha waa making the
Governor, and a full State ticket. Tbe plat­ entire population labor on the earthworka.
form adopted demands that a check should be The British troops had occupied Port Said and
put upon tbe power of wealth; t^e rapid pay­ lamailia and disarmed tbe native soldier*
ment of tbe National debt; advocates eight Rear Admiral Hewitt Had slopped traffic on
hours as a legal day’s labor; opposes tbe Ns- 1 the Suez Canal, at which De Lesseps made a
tional Banks; abhors convict labor; demands 1
strong protest
that tbe General Government should coin and
Mr. Loxo, the American Consul at Alex­
issue all money, whether metallic or paper, andria, wsa attacked on the 19th by a body of
and make It a full legal-tender for all debts: forty of the natives inside the Gabarra gate.
that all citizens be allowed to use lhe ballot Mr. Long waa unarmed, but be seized a large
upon equal term*, and that all property dufl, and, backing into a corner, cried for
should be equally taxed for tbe support of the help, and made such an effective defense that
Government.
none of '.he assailants could get near enough
Tub funeral of the late Senator Hill, of to hurt him.
Georgia, took place at Atlanta on the 19th,
A Pout Said dispatcher tbe21*t states that
20,000 people witnessing the ceremonies.
traffic on the Suez Canal would be suspended
The Navy Department at Washington on only long enough to permit the British ves­
the 19tb received lhe following cablegram sels to p**s to Ismallla. Arabi Pasha w»«
from St. Petersburg: “Berry, Melville and erecting extensive earthworks in the vicinity
their party arrived this morning? All are of Aboukir. Tbe French Government sent
well.” The Berry mentioned Is Lieutenant to De Lcssep* Instructions to be more pru­
Robert M. Berry, who was tn command of the dent In hia language. Tbe men of the gun,
Rodgers at the time of her loss, The party । tioata Sea Gull and Mosquito, aided by .two
were expected to arrive io about three weeks. i hundred Highlanders, carried the intrcncbThe Utah Commission was formally re­ | menta at Sbaluf at tbe point of the bayonet,
ceived at Salt Lake on the 19th. Tbe Mor­ | killing one hundred rebels and capturing
mon Church has employed four leading law i forty-flve.
.
firms of Bolt Lake, and raised *10,000 to fight

LATER NEWS.

The DemocraU of the Eighth Texas Dis- ',

trict on tbe 19th nominated James F. Miller ]

for Congress.
,
*
The Tariff Commission will hold Its sesstons aa follows: Cleveland, August 81; De­
troit, September 1; Indianapolh, September
2; Cincinnati, September 4 and 5; Louisville,
September fl; Chicago, September 7, 8 and 9.
PnErABjtTioNn are making by naval officer*
at Washington for the receptloh of Chief
Engineer Melville, of the Jeannette, who
will arrive in New York about the middle of
September.
.
Hehhert SrxNCBit, the eminent English
•rientist, arrived in New York on the 21aL
Pbesidext Akthve and the greater num­
ber of his Cabinet held a consultation at New
York ou the Slit, but no important bualneM
| waa transacted. It was tbe first Cabinet
meeting held at New York since the time of .

j .Waanlngton

FOREIGN.

For fall and winter trade are comming in.
lent and cheap. Examine them.

They are excel­

AJao the Largeat Stock of

Crockery, Glassware, Lamps,
Stone Ware, 4c.,

Of the best quality and lowest in price. Try our 40c Tea.
Don’t buy poor eggs unless you prefer them. Our egg tester
tells you which are poor.
’

TO BE SKEW IN BARRY CO.

CASH PAID FOR BUTTER AND EBBS.

BOOTS ASB SBOBB
AS CBPAP AS ANYBODY.

cash paid

Tor produce.

NEW VICTOR SEWING MACHINE is VICTOROUS
£3C" Ready pay secures for you all the advantages in trade.

C.W. SMITH.

—G-TfrTnAT

F. T. BOISE,
■FOI

DIG#,
BOOKS,
JEWELRY.
WALL PAPER,
WINDOW SHADES,

20 patterns Mens all Wool Suits, cut in fashionable styles,
$6.50, marked down from 9.00.
25 Mens Cheviot Suits, in sack or frock at $10.00, marked
PROPRIETARY MEDICINES,
down from 14,00.
PRESURimONS,
Mens fine Diagonal Dress Suits, Prince Albert cut aways,
RECEIPTS,
SI6, marked down from ^120.
One lot of Boys Suits, age 10 to 15 years, very durable
material, all Wool, 06.50, marked down from '*0,00.
One lot odd Coats, choice, for $4.00.
100 pairs all wool Panta, $3.00, worth $5.00.

dyemtlffm,

PAINT AND BRUSH
departhent

All to uc m/.u a.
K... ---------- ,
Iioum in Hairy or Eaton couotie*.

Call and Examine!
F. T. BOISE.

H

In Boots and Shoes, Dry Goods, Groceries and Notions.
Highest price paid for Butter and Eggs,
Don’t miss this great Sale, as our prices are considered less
than material alone would cost.

WM. A. AYLSWORTH.

K. DICKINSON A CO.,

Boots &lt;fc Shoes

----- HEW------

CUSTOM

Fouring Mill
READY FOR BUSINESS
I Evi.y day In the year—Sunday* excepted.

Ax Alexandria dispatch
d'.spateB of
or the
me a=»
22*1 state
sxaac* ;
that a battalion of six hundred Highlanders
made a reconn&lt;d**ancc at Ramleh, and tbe
gun* at tbe water work* hill *imulUneou»ly
opened fire, to which the Egyptian* replied
after the third round. The officer* appointed
Of every dereriplton, done in a superior
manner, at the drop of the hat; and
by the Khedive to accompany the British
F-xtiafactlon guaranteed.
army had »tarted for Port Sold. The tran*port* which went into the Suez Canal de­
barked their troo|M at lamailia. General
Wolaelejr *uccecJed In eatlafylng De J^saeps
of tbe neceajliy for the use of the canal by
the Britlah. The Seventy tecond regiment
Kept constantly on hand.
engaged thd Egyptian* at Serapeum, killing
one hundred of them.
There were nine death* from yellow fever
at Brownivllle, Tex., on the 22d, and fiftyfour new ca*ea.
exceeded to be tbe beat- Try ItAncBBianor Goold, of Melbourne, Auatralla, waa ahot at and slightly wounded on
the 21*1 by a man named O’Ferrel, a brother
of the fellow who attempted the life of the
By a strict attention tn business, and square
dealing with ail our customers, we hope to mer­
Duke of Edinburg at Sydney In IHflB.
Toe Delaware Democratic State Convention it a liberal patronage from the farmer* of.this
met at Dover on tbe 22*1 n"d nominated vicinity.
t Milla on railroad,—east of depot
Charles C. Stocklcy for Governor and Charles

GRINDING!

Our boots and shoes have arrived. The largest supply in
town. $1681 now in stock. We handle

The famous Rochester make
And for Quality, Style, and Price they can’t be beaten any­
where. When you want to buy if you don't exam­
ine our stock you will miss it

WE WAVE NOW ON THE ROAD
-------- A LARGER STOCK OF--------

FLOUR. MEAL AND MILL FEED
Our

The coronation of the Cxar of Russia Is an­
nounced to take place at Moscow ou the 1st
of October.
A axuocs Insurrection against the ruling
dynasty and against foreigners Is reported to platform adopted commend* the common­
have broken out in Corex A London dis­ school system; favor* a revision of the tariff,
patch of the 17th says the King and Queen and &lt;ondemnsnational extravagance and po­
been aaaaaatnated.
litical assessments.
A London dispatch of tbe 17th says Glad­
A NUMBEE of white horses being trained at
stone bad recommended the removal of Judge Copenhagen for use at the coronation of tbe
I-swson, of Dublin, because of the excessive Czar were killed oc tbe *ckl by supposed Ni­
sentence passed upon High Sheriff Grey for hilist*
alleged contempt of court.
The Independent Republicans of Maine met
On the 13th the British Parliament ad- tn State Convention at Portland on the 22d
joured until the 24tli of October.
and nominated Warren H. Vinton for GoverAt Socorro, N. M., a few days ago Juan ernor, and James M. Stone, Nelson Dingley,
Elverad, a gambler who had been locked up Jr.. Charles Nash and Daniel Stickney for
for indecently treating a young girl, waa taken Congress.
from the Jail by a p*rty of Indignant dllAt Rock Creek, Wyoming, a hunter named
Gibbon on the 23d shot dead a clerk of the
Ox the 17th the palace of Count Andraaay name of Robert Aiken. Within fire hours the
at Vienna waa burglarized, and all tbe Count’a corpse of the murderer was found hanging to*
orders taken, together with many objects of box-car.
art and antiquity.
Pniur Ethno, a rich and eccentric farmer
Nathaniel James MbeximaN, Episcopal living Dear Port Jervis, N. Y., on the 23d killed
Bishop of Grahamatoam, South Africa, died a Jesse Mandervillc with a rifle for taking an
apple from his orchsrd. . ।
A dispatch of the 18th from St- Petersburg
Bt a collision of trains at Washington. N.
asya It was bettered al Erzeroum, Armenia. J., on the 22d Conductor Sheppard and a boy
named Edward Chriatine were killed, and En­
gineer Frost had both legs broken.
defended state.
Advices of the 23d from Kansas aay that
t!x- corn crop had been greaUy dam iged by
drouth. No rain had fallen for about seven
hl* own bouse In County Galway, Ireland. It
alive to the murder of Lord ArdBoan’s bailiffs.
Thus men working on a boycotted farm

Summer Panta for 95c—Think of It!

For Cash or Ready Pay.
*

Ox the 10th General Wolseley, by author­
ity of tbe Khedive, issued a proclamation to
the people of Egypt, declaring that tho sole
qbject of tbe British was tc restore tbe au­
thor! ty of the Khedive. On the same day the
British commander at Meka received orerturea for lhe surrender of an entire Egyptian
Infantry battalion.
According to an Alexandria dispatch of
the 17lh Arabi Paaha waa negotiating for bls

HERE ARE RARCAIHS FOR YOU!

fodder.

Fourth District. J. &amp; Ockliu; Thirteenth, H.
and mm mortally wounded.
C Dunkle; Louisiana, Third, Taylor Beattie;
Missouri, Ninth, J. IL Thomas; Arisons
Territory.!). P- Porter. Demoeratic-Geor8arh*rnpi district tbe Mexican troops tost gto, Third. Charles F. Crisp; Tennessee.
forty-fire men sbd tbe Indiana thlrty-alghU Sixth, Andrew J. Caldwell; Indiana, Tenth,

Graham Flour

II. K. DICKINSON A CO.

WOOL

oCLOTHINGo
Will be here in two or three days.

We want your Butter aud Eggs, and
will give you the Money for them.

C.W. GRANGER &amp; CO.

CARDING We Are Still Here!
AND SPINNING
Sbeap-Sbearing time ia upon u* and the

New Carding Mill

NOT ONE

GROCERIES

Of my Customers Complain

OF A 10.1 QUALITY.

Ready for use. all the wool of thia section, with
neataeM and dispatch.

YARN

ROCK BOTTOM PRICES,

NEED NOT WAIT ABOUT SEPT. 1,
To have their wool manufactured Into It, aa I

j

to be tn my

•cre

IheP, thall

1 Nashville, Mieb., June ?, 1882.

ProbJbcttodat—Ohio, Twelfth. Daniel Hill
!-------------------------------------------------------------------

J. W. POWLES.

— THAT----

And shall stay and continue to supply the
needy with

ROLLS, OR YARN FRESH EVERY DAY,

STOCKING

"

G.W.FRANCIS.

FROM

The Nashvile Mill,
-BUT-----

They

A.re

UIWERSHLLY SATISFIED.

JIO. M. ROE.

�Jd .

Of tbowthat
blU. and arbund » *u bulh
a hoenr of chjvulric gaynty
which good judges t-oucede eclipses

Ot&gt;e that we loved aud could trust:

R- Durfee’s this week.
1 In white raiu.

of thin eity. Tbe itreeU
full of clean, noble looking
men, arranyed in the bright uniforms
or inaign a of the order of Knight* of
Pythias, br«M bands and flaaliing
sword*. The city hall, all public buildinga and hundreds of. merchant!!® «tablislirncntM artj highly decorated with
tbe emblems of tbe order in flags,
Btreamera, triangle*, colored gas get*,

marching of tbe Knigbta. the guejfeous appear-

dog, and do matter bow shamefully a person

at Clear Lake, Sunday tbe 13th, the Bellevue

Lightning struck the residence of Esau Can­
non, a week ago Monday, demolishing the
qulte drove the spectator* wild with enthusichimney, passing down the atovepijw, lifting

marked, the largest and beat managed parade
under it; then passing through tbe floor to tbe
of the kind that baa been seen bere In many
cellar. Tbe family of E. McManus, which waa
occupying tbe house, was stunned but not in­
tbe dty.
jured. The bouse waa insured.

box wm covered w. th dmlien ;ajd aide by aide

ly part by urfng them welL Now If my name
I. to be mixed up tn all your jaaglca, I shall

on county can boast of. Don’t all vote for me
ms little opposition Is healthy crew in politics.
"Apples ia apples” thia fall, so don’t go and
get msd if we all have to go without elder.

■

that It look* like a

The grand prize drill by erack divi­
WOODLAND.
Nxws give a recipe for laying down cucumber
sions occurred at Belle Isle park on
pickel* for winter are, and oblige. Doxv.
Iu company with the NaahviBe boys
Wednesday, and was witnessed by
Blowing for wheat.
we arrived in Detroit at 6 p. m., Mon- thousands of spectators Springfled, O.,
CEDAR CREEK.
J
day, and took quarters, which had been division took the prize of &gt;500. Kokomo
Plenty of mosquitoes these day*.
. reserved for us, at the Michigan Ex­ Ind., the second of $300, and Dayton,
MEMORY
Plenty of green corn and.cabbagc.
Lyman Andrus had several aheep badly torn
change.
Bed Cross division of St. O., third of &lt;800. tup Dearborn divis­
Mr. Wood bM a sister visiting him from
Louis, Mo., and two others from Ohio ion secured the #100 prize offered for
Lavinua Campbell died last Saturday after a Ohio.
Elmer Rising killed a rattle snake with nine
and one from Indiana, bad jnst arrived division strongest in number.
After king and-terrible suffering with a cancer In hl.
omana
at tbe bonne, and oar boys, with com­ tbe drill tbe contesting divisions numand
Everybody
seemed to enjoy themselves at the
MEN
mendable patriotism, began to expre-ta beringorer lOOOSir Knights massed up­ township. He held the office of iustice of the
lake hat Saturday.
misgivings as to whether all woald be on the ground in dress parade which peace at tbe time of bis death.
Mr. Eastman's aoo-tn-Iaw of Ionia county died
THE
ARCTIC
STEAMER
•• JEANETTE.
able to
sleeping
odations. was pronounced by leading military
Theressa the wife of Myron Simpson died
with the small-pox.
, the city* was men as the most pleasing spectacle they Wednesday mcmlng. lhe Ifilh, which wm her
WHO DIED OP STARVATION
If the
Mbs Claud Haight and Nettie Lee have a good
46th birthday. She came to this town with her
fall of K’. Fa, they could,
IM LENA DELTA, OCTOBER, M8L
reputation m dress makers.
had ever witnessed.
father. JeckanlM Mott, when there were but
as evening advanced and divisions con­
z'. P. Barnum and daughter, bM returned
Lieutenant
To-day ia the last day of the demon­ one or two families in tbe whole town. She Dorn a visit at Harbor Spring*.
tinued to come in, realize that, like the
wm widely known and universally beloved and
G. W. DE LONG.
omnibus, it will always accomodate one stration—although the supreme lodge
We mis* Mr. Simmons for the watermelon*
will be in session a week longer—and
be uied to bring to market.
more—division.
Dr. J. M. AMBLER.
Eliza Newton plead guilty on the 18 ult. be­
Tbo*e boy* that ran horse* through our
Probably tbe divaion attracting the tiie boys are wringing each others hands
fore Esq. Barber to the charge of flourishing a street* last Sunday night were arre*ted and
J. J. COLLINS.
most attention was the famous Fort and preparing for the homeward trip
revolver and threatening to shoot a neighbor, fined 110.
Dearborn of Chicago, which arrived which in some cases extends to the sea­
and using indecent and profane language, and
The ladies of Woodland will bold a public
via a special train of ten coaches early board to the east, south and west of us wm put under bonds for good behavior for one
missionary meeting at tbe M. E. church next
in the evening. Tue division, said to —representatives of 'the order being year. She is the “landlady” mentioned last
Sunday.
be the largest in the world, was accom­ present from California. The demon­ week, and hails from the suburbs of I'richard •
DRESSLBR.
Miss Delia Rising i* clerking at Hastings for
stration
has
been
one
that
will
be
of
panied by its own band of sixty pieces,
rille.
Ed. Hogie while Ed. and wife are ou a visit
H. EH I CHSEN.
and a« they marched up Jefferson and great value to the fraternity in Michi­
Answer to the query of Phil Phin of Prich" down eut
G. W. BOYD.
Woodward avenues to their headquar­ gan in particular and the order in gen­
We can boast of a* good a band m there is in
ters with perfect step and bearing, it eral as acquaintances and new friend­ lea* some thing happen* I* this. Rather than county for the practice they have had. They
N. IVERSON.
was an inspiring sight never t-&gt; be for­ ships have bee formed that will last as lumber up tbe valuable columns of Tux Nbws did well at the picnic.
when we have nothing to write, we prefer to
The young people made J. F. Orwick’* fami.
long as life*
H. KNACK.
gotten.
We close this article with a few ex­ show that we have brain* enough to keep still. ly a surprise on Wednesday night and gave Mr*
Being handsomely located in a front
ALEXIA.
No person unless possessed of tbe egotistical
tracts
from
the
Free
Press,
which
with
parlor, our party had privileges not en­
inqtudence that hucharacterized hi* family for splendid time.
AH SAM.
joyed by tbe man in the cot in the rear its usual commendable enterprise has generation*, would offer to any editor m a mat­
George Miles died of Bright’s disease last
hall. All night long. Jefferson avenue, given a full and accurate account of ter of news the astounding intelligence that Sunday and the funeral services tixik place on
lined with electric lights, aud echoing the conclave:
Chief Melville hM made arran*ement* to
one man had the ague, another had been to Tuesday. George had a great many friends and
with the disciplined tread of arriving
see his girl, etc., and then done with an old wm well liked by all with whom he wm acqua­ have tho pyramid sodded this spring, under
Knights and music from brass bands may be proud....Serenades by Pythian bands laid beaded wornout yarn, Tbe fact that an inted. He had been a sufferer from this disease the direction of the commander at Bulun, in
were numerous all over the city last night.. .The able bodteu man wbo had tn the beat of passion
and bugle corps, presented an animated
about ten months.
cape before the breaking up of tbe river*.
visiting ImIIcs seem to enjoy the pageantry knocked down a half dead consuptive, aud wm
When men fight it looks bad but when women Tbe structure is a very creditable affair and
scene.
quite m
11 m their Knightly escorts... .The heartily ashamed of II m soon m he had time to
conspicuous from tbe river at a distance of
Shortly after nine o’clock Tuesday Knights have set an example of gentleman­ think, did not seem to u* a matter of new*; case bere last week one day. A couple of our
morning the reception of the Supreme like behavior everywhere, and often under try­ while tbe fact that tbe chap described by Phil women had a round, one bad a case knife and
ing circumstances.... Member* of tbe central Phin m from Cedar Creek, wm bora and bM
just bap|&gt;cned to cut the other combatant on Dr. Sehwcinforth’* Narrow Escape at
lodge by the Grand lodge of Michigan,
committee estimate that there are 10,000 visit­
occurred at Merrill hall,—the welcom­ ing Knlgbu. uniformed and ununiformed, in always lived in the virinty of tbe virtuous dty tbe cheek. One wm arrested and brought be­
Alexandria.
ing ad drew being given by Grand the city.... “Well, this crowd eclipses anything of Prichardville until Ust fall, when he came fore Justice Hough, and C. 8. Palmerton and
here, since which time hl* Prichardville moral* Haight were employed for defense, G. D. Bar­
Tbe traveler Dr. Kchwelnfurth narrowly oaChancellor BennetL We copy below a
have been a standing reproach to tbe commu­ den for plaintiff. After Haight had beard the caped losing his life st lhe bands of the Egypt­
portion which will prove inter-rating to
terday.. .The Knight* of PythiM demonstration nity. He paraded his muscle until he was a •tory of tbe plaintiff he took for tbe woods an I ian mob during tbe bombardment of Alexan­
every friend of Pythianism or it* beau­ vesterday attracted m many stranger* occmfng- nuisance to those who associated with him.
dria. He gives a graphic description of his ad­
Palmerton handled tbe case. Although tbe jury ventures in s letter to his brother, published in
1y m did the reunion of the army of the Poto­
tiful tenant*:
When such men meet a small boy wbo can cuff disagreed and the prisoner wm discharged, it the Cologne Gaxttlt. Schweinfurth and a friend
mac in June.
O. 8.
In looking over this andience that hM con­
them up in fair shape we mention it If we see leaves a disgrace behind.
। were watebinx from the terrace of their bouse
gregated here to-dav in- thl* hall and a* I pau*c
fit. Now ••Cuddie,” if you can get your mind
the course of the British mis*tie* when a crowd
to think of the object for which you are all
here assembled. I am led in my imagination to
off of the artichoke episode, try and gather up
giving signals to the fleet. Al) attempts to conconceive of a great heart, noble in its propor­
EATO
N
CO
UNTY.
a
little
new*
before
you
write
again,
and
ifjpu
C t. WEST SUNFIELD.
tions, from wboce separate twating the name
vino- tho Egyptian soldier* of tbeir Innocence
are not afraid that your family would disown
The county fair occurs Septi 26-2H.
impulse i* echoed in every br«Mt, and the mur­
were futile, and they finally endeavored to caKit to bat and Van on deck.
you for it yon might with a good deal of credit
mur of it* echoc*, my brothers, a* It leaves u*.
Considerable wheat is being marketed at Ea­ capc to tbe Coptic Church, about two hundred
A timely slKiwer made II* appearaece Tues­ to yourself add to your long list accompUsb“winging it* flight awal" and heralding the
feet distant, by lowering tbemselve* from tbe
ton Rapid*.
name of ‘‘Friendiihip” from tbe north to the day night.
menta the art of minding your own business.
A vicious bnrse lunched on a Grand Ledge rear window of the balcony Into the garden.
south.*rom the east to the west, from the back
Tbeir flight, however, was discovered, and tbe
Bamacvm.
woods to the sea, until over tbe great realm of
man'* cheek.
crowd
pushed angrily t-v.nl the garden,
post
office.
thia country it* utterance* are known, and for
The horticultural society discussed drainage where, fortunately, a wall eight feet in height
myself, may It be, that its silvery cadence never
West Sunfield people are at the mercy of ye
WEST KALAMO.
at ita last meeting.
impeded tbeir progress. "Shoot them." tbe
ccaacn til) it hM been forwarded beyond tbe threshers this week.
TbomM William* hM a thls-year mustard mob Bbouted. and three soldier* leveled tbeir
settlement* of thl* continent and 1im ki**cd
Mr*. Coalbaugh returned on Tuesday from a '
the shore* of Europe, even till ft ba* entered
guns at lhe two men. wbo now stood on the
Pumpkin pie* are nearly ripe.
stalk ten feet high.
into the posthu-.xju* habitation* of ancient brief visit among friends and relative* at Olivet
A spdj of weather is looked for.
C. IL Wellman of Grand Ledge recently told balcony, revolver In hand. “ Five of you shall
Tbe name of our post office is Dellwood in- I
Greece.
die before me," ScbwHnfurtb exclaimed, and
Mrs. J. A. Brown spent tbe week at- Muske­ a thla-year lamb that dressed 45 lb*.
It is a proud fact to consider, that the day Is
then attempted to appeal to the reason of the
not far in tbe future when the order of Pvthi- stead of Elwell m still pronounced by some.and gon.
Grand Ledgitea have been seeing the Spy of mob, telling them that be and bl* fr.ends were
anfsm will rise in the ascendancy to the oldest it is spelled with two “I's" Instead one as some
Wouldn't wonder if potatoes rotted badly Shiloh for the benefit of their firemen.
not Englishmen, but Germans, friends of tbe
write it.
tbl* fall.
Lightning hM struck on J. C. Sherman’* Sultan; that th-y had been twenty years in
Mr. Cary takes the premium on dwarf corn
the country, and remained, relying on the
Mrs. Geo. Matteson 1* just recovering from a farm In Brookfield four times this year.
by its rapid progress, and bM kept a watching m be hM a piece that will not average twenty severe illness.
John Llpoic of Chester bad 37 acres of Fultx good faith of the Mohammedan*, trusting to
eye upon each and every action of tbe brother­ inches high and It is all ta*«eled out too with
the prociamatiotM of tbe Khedive, of Itagheb,
Tbe wqatern fever hM taken possession of a wheat that yielded 43t&lt; bushel* to the acre.
hood. That luminous eye is ever upon us, and full ear* on the stalk.
few people hereabout*.
marks in the book bf memory tbe jpxxl, m well
Cha*. 8. Guile, a graduate of the University escape, then?” shouted the mob again. "Wedo
We have been requested by “Kit” to state be
m the faithless acts of the membership. 8o far.
Ana Beal started on Saturday to re-v!sl’ hi* law department, hM opened an office at Eaton not tire from the soldier*," wm their reply,
I am proud U&gt; -ay, the pages of that book are simply asked the West KalamcAraan a civil
’
Rapid*.
"but from th1- mob, who four week* ngo
disgraced by no mark of neglect. Tbe bluab question m to the prssent whereabouts of his home and parents in Ohio.
Plowing for wheal hM hardly began on ac­
of shame need not mantle the check of any
A thief broke into the Anderson house sam­ chased European* in tbe street like ao many
.Tl —4 —441.
... .U- old friend "W. Roe.”
count of the late harveat.
ple roam, Eaton Rapids last week, and stole a wild beasts." By similar harangue* and a lib­
eral
flourishing of their revolver* SchweinAlfred Barry a railroad man on the 8ti Louis
Interest and membership of the N. U. K. &lt;25 dolman.
light.
forth and his com pin Ion kept for some time
Iron Mountain A SOUUiern R. R., returned to
Tbe republican and greenback county con­ the mob at bay, who repeatedly attempted
Our duties if fulfilled will show to the world
his
field
of
labor
last
Thursday
after
a
abort
va
­
that true chivalry, true manhood and true
Charley Slosaon attended tbe teachers in­ vection* both resolved in favor of the *ntnnt»- to foruv an entrance. Suddenly a Police Cap­
friendship, are m much in existence to-day m cation spent here with hl* parent* and other re- stitute held In Nashville last week.
tain and a spy tn tbe gulaa of a Consular em­
•k&gt;n of a prohibition amendment.
they were in the time* of our nobis beroe*, Da­ lativea.
Mr. and Mr*. Mast and daughter were the
The Frost House Sanitarium at Eaton Rapids ploye appear before the door, tbe expreaaion
mon and PythiM. and that these quailtie*, inLet’s see, 610 worth of blackberries at five guests of Wt H, Davis last week.
of tbeir eyes plainly indicating a desire for
termlngled with charity and benevolence, are
ia
being furnished with an electric call bell by
"baksbiah." The door is carefully opened,
building up a record fur the order secund to cent* a quart q^uld be just 300 quarts or 6
which nine different calls can be given.
and the two worthies are dispatched with a
none in the annals of history- Pythianisui. bushel* and a peck. Well that is just the num- ,
A valuable colt being trained for tbe race
my brother*, is a gem in tbe crown of our civ­ L : of berries that Otto Terman has picked »o rapidly than for the paat two week*.
Mr*. Wheeler of south-west Maple Grove, track shied into a barbed wire fence on the fair tude, however. Schweinfurth and his friend
ilization. Its beauty ia only seen when painted
like the rainbow on tbe dark cloud of udateas. far this season. What town will be next to ।lias been spending the week in this vicinity.
grounds at Charlotte, and wm terribly lacerasend in return* t
tbe balcony. The crowd, growing more furi­
Farmer* are straining every n.rve to overtake
We feel it a duty to express our thanks to j
ous, shout to them with curse* to »urrender
lost time. Don’t think they’ll catch the old
Tbe Eaton Rapids Journal says that harvest
“
Kit
”
through
Tux
N
ews
for
his
valuable
la,
their revolver*. SchwelnfUrth throw* tbe
•till and tbe strong arm IlfeteM. and women
fellow.
apples
in
that
locality
are
badly
blighted,
and
leather csss into tbe garden, and a yeU of
and little children are wrapped in silence and bor lu behalf of West Sunfield during our ab­
triumph from below proves to him bow llttio
sorrow, then the the hidden plant awakens and sence ; and conscious, too, that it wm during ( L. MeKinnt* found hi* harvest and haying
so onerous that work on his new bouse
pct forth leaves, aa if tbe season of human the busiest season for farmer*, we feel that it duties
,
C.
V.
Bockoven
made
tueceaaful
use,
last
wm a double tax of time and effort.
We
disappear for a moment. Now Schwdnfurtb
AL Mix wants It tooted all over the dty that
The response by Supreme Chancellor would gladly remain in the dark and let I the ,be killed seven woodchucks at one shot tbe
uroe correspondent continue, but ss such can­
Linaey, of Maryland, waa equally aa
other day.
eloquent We copy one paiwage;
There’s nothing been said about It, but Stev­
Vam.
We stand in your midst M tbe representatives
en Downs ba* just completed a large grain and still Unger, sighs the citizen of Charlotte, lor death; you will tell tbs Sultan, the Khedive
of our noble order before the world, brought
fmm
toatA In
..4
THE COUNTY.
Tbe wet weather has not injured the crop of week though their gain* have been slight.
North, and from Use Southern Inland* where
Tbe county team, which cost 6360, hM been
A great many farmer* tn thia county have
tbe majestic billow* of tbe calm Pacific beat
will be a big crop.
whortleberries worth a hundred dollar* a quart. quarreling with the poitoo, whom they aowith unmeMured roll on the shore, upon which
Cbauncy Baker threshed a field of Clawson
The Hasting* Banner editorially defends the
floats our Pythian standard.
Assembled here from distant State*, *nd River and Harbor bill steal.
that pnjportion if they had stayed at home and
meeting with our brethren of tbe state af Mich
The Hastings iron and engine works have a 340 bushels, and not one-third is marketable worked tn tbeir wheat field*.—F. R. Journal.
grain.
1,500 job from a Grand Rapids firm.
In the fireman’s tournament at Charlotte last
week, tbe state championship wm won by the
eor own and realize that tbe spirit of fraternity
Young Alerts of Big Rapid*, aged from 16 to 20.
tor 400 bushels &lt;rf ears of corn to be delivered They beat the Union No. 1 of Battle Crock by
this faiL
man marines, tbe hospital
Tbe great event of tbe conclave was the county board af school examiner*.
Wm. Cowers is the member far Barry county
the parade which occurred Tuesday af­
But the ’Squire loses
—Ambrose Lindsay, of North Caroli­
ternoon.
Shortly after one o'clock
Frank Curt, of Orangeville has moved his
na. can go to Europe. His potato crop
street cars were stopped and the differ­ cklar mill to Plainwell, and tbe OraDgevillfte*
is gathered and sold, and its net profit
ent diriaionh began assembling at tbe
Report lias It that a West Kalamoite had his l&gt;est tbe Potterville band by WB to 180 pdinta.
on the #80,000 he received is something
point of starting, grand eiretu parkland
pockets rifled at gWat the fireman tournament
over #50,000.-N. Y. Sun.
LANGUAGE CANNOT DESCRIBE IT.
handsome uniforms, gay plumes, glit­ dar Creek died, the former on Sunday with st Charlotte loti Some doubt the story m our
Mr.
Robert
Gould,
book-keeper
for
Walker
tering swords, waving banners, brass
—The Chinese have a legend that
hands and music were omnipresent up­ sumption.
tea-leaves are the eyelids of a pious
Brit Hoag is in thia section putting down a
hawmlt
.. .. «_______ €
on every street and avenue. Sixty-one
elf, and up a wind mill. Tbe. former I* quite
different full-uniformed divisions and

« here life* long journey end..

if they will

and lanterns.

VICINITY LOCALS.

several lodges of Knights took part Id
tbe parade. Of the parade the Even-

and threw them from him.
perform
IXFOKTASTTOTRAVKLICliN.

duoemcnU ore offered yoatnr the
Route, It will nav you to resd tbeir

—A Nebraska
say* that everv
Jtebsiuka pap*
papo^aays
man out that way who isn't called
••Judge” can be addraned aa “Pro.
feaeor and not hurt hia feelings a bit

’

"God Bless Our Home,” ’tis * motto tree,
That adorn* tbe wall to-night;
May it always remain, may It continue to

life pure aAd bright.
There', a lamp that is burning bright.

Writing a letter to-night.

•pray—
quielwnd serene aa a day in May,

Oh, angry wind* ! bequiet and calm,
let the water* cease to foam
With our letter with new. from home.

ANDBBSON.—At her home near Pentwater, Ocaana county, Aug. 30, aged 40 year*.
She formerly lived in Maple Grove near Hancbett’s mill, and wm flrrl married to Benjamin
Jones of Assyria, who died in the army. Bbe.
wm long a school teacher In tills county, and
bad a wide acquaintance. .She leaves five chil­
dren. Her father, Elias Taylor, and a sister
from Minnesota were with her at tbe time of
her death. 8. J. B.
Mr. G. B. Johnson, business manager the
Houston Texas Port, ha* ured St. Jacobs OH
with the greatest benefit for rheumatism, say*
tbe Galveston Texas News,

Davids—8hki.it.—In the dty of Charlotte,
Aug 16, 1883, Miss Clara, daughter of Rev.
D. H. Shelly, to J. W. David*. B. A., of Danby, M^'h- '
Invited guests were present from Jackson,
HMting*, Grandville, Portland, Ionia, 8t Louis,
Needmore, Maple Grove, Danby, and Charlotte.
Among them were Rev. P. DUjardin, Rev. G.
iod, Rev*. Barnhart and Ferguson officiating.

The young couple received many valuable pres­
ent* Indicative of the high esteem and love in
y are held by their many frieoda. The
enjoyed by all. J. W. and bi* wife
will soon enter lhe itineracy with tbe hearty
wishes and congratulations of all who know
them. May their live* be long and prosper­
ous, and may the choicest blessings of heaven
rest upon them.

MmeoV.

RHEUMATISM,

Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago,
Backache, Soreness of the Chest,
Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Spell­
ings and Sprains, Buns and
Scalds, Genera! Bodily
Pams,
Tooth. Ear and Hoadacha, Fmttd
Fnot and Eon, and all othor
Pain, aad Ichat.

SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AID DEALERS

IffMEDICUE.

A. VOGIXER &lt;t CO.
Xaativlllc Markets

AS&amp;rr‘’n;&lt;r^

HOLMAN’S

pfl
I (or slafag both ««nwwofib, M
no extra rtwp for &gt;td* M

BOUND.

�toil m sire might, nothing she could do
would change tbe fixed attitude, or calm
•ea dde Bewton I
have opened. That is, landlords have
, the.quick-drawn, breath that told of
• hitter suflering.
Preoently the day
fixed tbeir rates, mosquitoes have ar-,
began to’wane.
The clouds ranged
rived,
and
table waiters have secured
••We may get in through a window,"
themselye* In xoHd miwtxes, and tlark- said the Inspector. "Hodges, fetch the I a full stock of impudence.
ne-s titoixtorm
tlie sea-girted 1 boat-hook."
.
• —Michigan baa a resident who offers
tower. v*iWnng to the clock in the
The hook was brought, and at the to jump from a railroad train going at
corner, xlie scanned its face. "Five second throw caught over the iron full speed, tor $5 in cash, and yet no
o’clock! So' late? .Why the sun is balcony under Dame Dutton’s window. one cncouragw him in his ambition to
down in less than half m&gt;hour, and the
The Inspector climbed the rope, fol­ break his neck. We have become wea­
captain will lo«e tils place if the Iwacon lowed by the others, and soon admis­ ry of champions.—Detroit Free Fran.
is not ligliteil liy sundown. But what
—A Nebraska Man wanted to learn
sion was gained to the room beneath.
can Fdo? It's the order, ho says, that
"Here’s one of the Seven Sleepers,” to throw the lasso, and his wife object­
women and children xhii’n't have any­ said Dick Trail, going up to the oouch. ed to his practicing with her neck. He
thing to do.with lhe lights."
He started back.
"Why, it's the is now in jail and she in a hospital just
One moment ahe stood with tightly Cap'u’s mother, and she looks as ii because they couldn't agree oh such a
compn-xsed lips. Then a brave, reso­ she were dying.’’
bttt very aUUlys
trifle as that.—Courii:r-Journal.
and kind beyond «
lute smile parted her lipa.
Two of the men gathered closer to
—The Havan nah 7\mca editorially asa. J vs seen tier late!
. “Wotl, I’m hhrdly a child, I suppose,
see what they could do for the poor sprta that a woman has at her oombut neither am ; a woman. Ships may
woman, and the others began to scorch inand 137 different sorts of smiles, ami
be lost if the beacon is not lit.” Then
the tower. No clew to tbe mystery, if she combines all iu one when her bus*
lighting the lantern tho captain* always,
band looks across tbe tea-table and
used, she huqg it on her arm, and after mystery it contained, was found below.
one more look at the sick woman, left Together in silence they mounted the remarks that he must drop down to the
I didn't atart the &lt;4t:rati-«! . ,
1— this evening.
winding stairway.
OMnaked metedinnlir: tbr lot !lhe chamber.
■
A flood of mellow light poured upon
—A mining company in Siskiyou
Almost at the threshold began the
the group as tho officer opened the County. California, recently turned off
seemingly endies* ftairwav, winding
' - Of cnnra* I will:
There an old horse which had. been working a
up into regions of height anti loneliness. door into the lantern-room.
upon the floor, bathed in the glory, lay whim in their claim for twenty-seven
Sne did not allow herxolf to hesitate
Huldah Deane. To her locked Senses, years, and is now thirty-three years old.
now, but began the ascent hurrjedly.
lulled into tin consciousness by the roar He appears still bale and hearty, and
A fearfuljourncy it seemed through the
of a the storm-lashed ocean, the tumult seems to take much comfort in his re­
darkness,broken only by fitful glimmer­
in tho tower had never reached.
lease from harness.
ings of her lantern, and now and then
She was only' awakened by feeling
cross rays of light from the Slits of
—A gentleman of Seabeck, Washing­
herself lifted in a pair of strong arms,
windows in the thick walls. Clasj^ng
and strained to the breast of the stran­ ton Territory, went out in the canal for
Ml ririri: I won t ! tint do
the iron rail she toiled on, her limbs
the purpose of catching fish, and when
ger seaman.
Youreelf, to
chilly •
failing, her heart thumping and her
a twenty-five-pound salmon took his
"Huldah! Huldah!
My Utile one!
brain in a whirl. Not until she reached
'Don’t!* rare*
hook it nearly upset him, and in land­
To ntimber f
thb top step did she drop down to rest. my daughterf ’ she heard n tender voice ing his game a 950 watch slipped
giriSmiTtrtal
U* was tbe »
Exhausted by fatigue and nervous ex­ murmuring, and in her glimmer of from his pocket and sank from his sight
About! -A 1 rfect tntaeurn I
citement, she had to recover strength consciousness felt hot tears dropping in the water.—Chicago Timca.
Her cyra would thrill mo tbrunen and before she could even open lhe door to on her face.
—Many persons who envy their neigh­
through!
After the first wild emotion of joy,
the lantern-room.
Abd-ahadeof Genera! Harrison !—
bors because they are making more
WMi «bc first kissed n;r. bouey-dew
Fortunately the great lamps were what a sense of rest thochild had, feel­ money than themselves, forget that
Waa acid by cumpatiaon !
,
trimmed and supplied with oil. Every ing the protecting arms of her father generally those wto get the largest sal­
T loved that girl with til my heart!
|&gt;art of the machiuery waa also in work- । about her! For the stranger, who had aries have their expenses increased, in
mg order.. &lt; 'aptniu itoUun was one of |' endured shipwreck and danger, was
proportion, and therefore often cannot
the most careful of light-house keep- I none other tqan Huldah’s father.
|
With only the name of Kyle Dutton, save as much as when they were living
era.
on a smaller salary.—Chicago News.
who had taken Huldah from the or­
“
Ami
he
shall
see
I
do
not
mean
him
।
I only mntn in fun, love !
—The oldest deed in America is said
to lore his place for one night’s failure ! phanage where he had placed her bcto be in the possession of Major Leland,
to light lhe lower." Huldah said, her fore soiling on his last fated voyage, to
of New York City. It was written
heart warming for the first time to the furnish him a clew.Captain Deane,after
eighteen years after the discovery of
silent man who hail, in his way, done a vain search of months, hod been
tho new world by Columbus. This doc­
his duty by her as well as by the place guided into the presence of his child
Ourtfonryi M ! IPr. 'a tour mother!
ument is a conveyance of Fisher’s
of trust he tilled. "Who knows.though, by the beacon her little hands hod
r. Checcrr Goodwin In Century JAxpufna.
Island, near the mouth of the Sound,
this light may fall upon the very spot lighted.
from certain Indian chiefs to the
There were honest tears in the eyes celebrated navigator,John Cabot, whose
HLLDAH DE\NK’S HEROISM.
. where he has gone down to tho bottom
ol the sea."
looking upon this reunion;-neither ciid signature it bears.
A sky darkened o. clouds hurrying
Again a shiver crept over the slender one of those strong hearts fail to re­
—A Berlin newspaper mentions lhe
before driving winds, a sen gray-faccd figure, and only the blazing'forth of spond with a thrill of admiration as the
and wrinkled tossing restlessly beneath the beacon dispelled her vivid fancy. daughter recounted to her father the case of a bov who fell sick and was
a mass of barren coclu upon which One by one the lamps Hared up, and' ’ trials to which her fortitude and cour­ found, after futile treatment for a long
stood a tall light-house, made up tho were turned into place. The reflectors, age had been subjected during the past period, to have worms in one of his
lungs that had unquestionably come
dreary picture Huldalt Deane was gaz­ polished to their utmost, caught Lhe
night of tempest and awful solitude.
from a pet dog which he had been ac­
ing upon w.th such wistful intentness. cheerful rays, aud sent them in a far
Two dangerous
Her gray eves presently iqllowed the reaching circle of radiance out through
It was several hours later that Kyle customed to fondle.
swoop of an osprey, and his after-flight the darkness und storm, to give warn­ Dutton returned .'rom the mainland. snrgieal operations were necessary for
upward with hts j&gt;rpy in his talons.
ing to those who were ‘ ’gone down to His boat hod been washed ashore, and the removal of the parasite, and the
I would rather be that fish-hawk than the sea In ships."
only after a terrible struggle had he hid barely survived them. The journal
Huldah Deane.’' she said, giving ex­
But this was only the beginning of succeeded in reaching a place where advises parents generally to take poto
pression to her gloomy thoughts^ "I Huldoh'x work. It was n chief part of there were kindly-hands to succor him. of this case, anil not to allow their
must stay here day in. j ear out—here, the keeper’s duty, she know, to see With him came the physician he hod —
children to
kiss
their
...........
— —
.. pet animals or
where nothing happens, where the sea that tho lights burned undimmed gono lo »w-k. The «bidow of death
to“ freely,
freU. and I fret with it. So I light tho throughout the night. Now, however, that had hung over the light-house dur­
—The largest steam whistle on record
Captain’s pipe, scrub tiib tower, and do she must return to attend to the ing that terrible night was lifted, and is claimed to have been turned out aL
chores for the dame. Who cares what dame awhile. But ns she turned to go before many days the good dame was the machine works at Bridgeport, Conn..
f Iso I do. or what
becomes of there was a sudden crashing of the able to join in the rejoicing over the recently. The whistle, which is made
me? Yes. old sea. I’d rather be a fish­ glass nbovo her. a whirring swoop of bappinesx that hod come to Huldah entirely of brass. was constructed for a
hawk. and .snatch fish from you. than some swift-winged creature overbend, Deane. —Harar's Young People.
firm in Canada, to be placed on a saw­
be Huldah Deane. Oh dear! ii some­ a gust of wind, a flaring of the circle
mill boiler, at a cost of $500. It is 4
thing would only happen ! If 1 could of lights, and then darkness, raylcsa,
feet 9 inches in length, weighs 400
Superstition
iu
Paris.
do something great and wonderful—go absolute.
| pounds and requires a 4-iuch steam
The storm moaned and
out iu a life-boat, may be, to save drown­ shrieked in her cars, ami Huldah
A curious instance of the force of 8U- pipe from a 150-horse power boiler,
ing folks, or—’’
'
, shrieked, too. hiding her taco in her
|r with 450 pounds’ pressure steam, to
perstition occurred iu a street in our
"Huldy ! Huldy Deane !’’ The quick, shawl.
j |j blow
it. -It is
ona...........
clear
quarter tho other uoy.
day. An aged woman,
, ~
" estimated
----------- -- that
•...............
impatient call reached her. oven above
What had hapia'itml?
Again the who had no tfriends
' - ' or
. relations,
____ 1had
__ 1 1 da* 1,10 ,M,und can ruaeh about fifty
the roaring of the surf. It was Cap­ w;nged intruder whirred by. beating • lived for a quarter
luarter of
a mttea.—Cftu-oj/o Jonrna/.
of a
a century
century in
in a
tain Dutton’s voice. "Come right on. thoMr with weaned and dripping pltifo- small room, reached by a spiral stair­
—A colley. or shepherd's dog. be­
quick; mother's taken in a spell, an’ nge. Ah' now she understood. Once J case, at the extreme top of a vast house longed to a farmer who belt! a farm
1 can’t make It out."
( aptain Dutton had told her of n storm- 1 inhabited by at least 100 different fami­ near Beaumaris, in Wales. The farmer
Huldah obeyed in awed silence. A bird breaking one of his transparencies.
lies. One morning the venerable wo­ disposed of this holding and went to a
spell the Captain couldn’t make out 1 Attracted by the light, doubtless.uhis
man was found dead in her bed, and th-? farm in the south of Carnarvonshire.
_________________
must be very bail, she ’thought. What wanderer luul dashed againstthe gloss. agents of tbe
Funeral Company were |
course, he took his dog with him.
if neither she nor anybody else could
There was but one thing to be done. sent for to
prepare the body for . The animal, however, had come into
make it cm? And, alas! who could She could not hope: tojelighl the lamps burial.
They came with the humble I the world not to herd sheep in any part
understapd1 the fixed stare of the until’those blasts were shut out. She bier, which is
lhe last bed. before Lhe j of the world where his master might
dame’s kind eyes.or the pinched shrink­ must find another frame and transpar­ grave, of the poor; and withthe simple take up®s quarters, but in the neigh­
ing of the fehtures so suddenly grown ency.
pine coffin. Next day the funeral was , borhoou- of Beaumaris. In ten days
unfamiliar to the two who dwelt under
to
take
place
—
i.
e., t&amp;e body was t&lt;rbe the animal returned to Beaumaris and
How the descent was accomplished
the same roof with her?
*
Huldah could never think without a carried by two men lo the’ cemetery, resumed his place on the old farm.
got to hev tho doctor aa soon
—A story is narrated of the present
shudder. At the very outset.when she To their surprise they found that thev J
as he can- be fetched, Huldv."
bad groped her way to the landing, and could not get the jjicr. encumbered with j Bishop, of Limerick, which, coming
"The doctor from shore?" questioned
had succeeded iu relighting her little tho collin. down the spiral staircase, from Lord Emly. must be true. The
the girl.
Every 'effort was made in vain. But Bishop, who has for some time bock
"(jertain, Thera's none closer as I lantern, the door she had latched be­
hind her flew open, -giving outlet to communicating with the tiny room in 1 been in extremely delicate health, was
know. Do you?”
which the woman had died was another*] told some days since by his physician
"No," she gravely answered; "but those terrible winds, which tore ul her
,,a* “
a **••"
trip ,n
to Nico 'wa,
vn - positively necesclothing savagely, extinguishing her tenement, which had an entrance open- '1 •that
the mainland’s a long ways off. and a
light, find li.aving her again in ilark- ing on the main staircase of the house. |1 sary to act him up in health;but he pos­
storm’s rising."
ness. Of necessity, sho'Atqod still un­ The bearers of the bier applied for per­ itively declined to entertain the idea of
"It makes no difference.” said Cap­
til the currents had strangled each other mission to pass through with their going, and shook his head so deter­
tain Dutton, stubbornly. "She's been
ghastly burden, but the Occupants, au minated that the man of pills and
a good toother to me, an’ she’s in a bad and sunk down into the depths of gloom
elderly lady and her daughter, refused.
Eotiors thought it only right to express
fix. Ice -ductor’a. got to be fetched, below her. Then, shutting her eyes
imself in plain terms. "My lord," he
Lightly, ahe went on her perilous jour- Never could they permit death to cross
that’s all.”
tiieir-threshold in stetoafonu, etc. The said, very solemnly. "1 tell you candid­
nev.
In his rough, good-h«arted way the
bearers ol tho bier then went -town ly that your case is a most serious one,
From
the
basement
stores
she
pro
­
Captain loved his mother as he loved
cured the frame and fixtures, and re­ stairs and sought .lhe intervention of and if you do not go to Nice you must
nothing else.
the CommiMary of Police. That func­ very soon go to Heaven.’’ "Oh! well,
"Ef she should die, I want her to turning with them by the same wind­ tionary camo and requested the mother in that case." said the Bishop, very
ing route upward, found it not such a
anoW somehow ns I tried to do my duty
dismally, “I will go to Nice!"—‘Life. '
difficult thing to unhinge and replace and daughter obligingly to waive t’teir
by her last of all. And, Huldy"—lay­
—Tho pressure of the brick shot
the shattered transparency, the tempest । superstition and to- give right of way
ing hts hand on^ffe girl’s shoulder—“I
having hilled slightly, and the force of j titrough their room. Rut they were us tower in Baltimore, 246 feet high, is
ain’t concerned but whht she’ll be took
the wind being broken. Yet by the firm tn their refusal as before. The found to be six and one-half tons per
care on as fnr ax jou can do it, child.
Commissary knew of no law by which square foot, and that of the famous
It’s hard lines to leave a \oung one like time, her task was complete, and the he could insist, in such circumstances,
brick chimney at Glasgow, Scotland,
lamps relit, her strength failed her.
you here with such terrible trouble, but
Vaguely tninking that maybe she was upon the violation of domicile; so he 468 feet high, is given at nine tons.
there’s no help for iu I’ll fetch the
said to the professional funeral men: Prof. Rankin calculates that in heavv
doctor soon as I kin—leastways’fore going to die. she fell upon the floor, "You must take tho body out through gales this pressure is increased to fif­
and with a deep-drawn sigh her eyes
the sue drops. No sdlor kin sav as ev­
the donuer window on the roof, ami teen tons on the leeward side.
The
cIomiI.
er Kyle Dutton missed lightin’ the bea­
from thence have it lowered to the walls of both are, of counftj, much
con wi’ the last ray o’ sunshine, or
Four hours later an Inspector from street” The services of half a dozen thicker at the bottom than at tho top;
turnin’ ofl' lamps ns tho *un stepped the mainland passing to the island light­ firemen from a neighboring post were
and he concludes that, with our pres­
’crost tho horizon. Livin’, I’ll be here house, wasJniiled by tho Captain of a called In. pullers were rigged, the
ent imperfect knowledge on this sub­
in time for that, Huldy.”
brig wliioh bail weathered the storm, coffin was securely fastened to tbe bier ject, it cannot be considered safe for
He nodded and went away.
and come to anchor for repairs.
ropes, and after some hours’ work the builders to expose even first-class
Huldalt shivered as she glanced dor. u
body
descended
slowly
to
the
street
A
"What ails the tower light, sir?" he
pressed'brickwork, in cement, to more
st the motionless figure ou the couch asked of the officer, nodding toward crowd of 3,000 or 4,000 persons had
than twelve or fifteen tons per square
below. Maybe sho would be loft thus Jhe beacon, through the transparencies collected to witness the operation. As
foot, and good hand-roolaed bricks
utterly alone for hour*—for days. Her of which a steady stream of light was the bier touched the sidewalk, tho bear­
to more than two thirds as much. The
breath came hurriedly. It ncerncd to still pouring, though the sun was doing ers appeared at the street door and
strength decreases as the proportion of
her more than she could bear. Frantic- hjs ln*st to dim its glory.
look up their burden.
A fireman the height to the thickness increases.—
ajiy she forced open tho window, and.
The Inspector frowned. "I only know swung aside the ropes; the throng N. Y. herald.
thrusting her bead through, shouted
that tbe keeper’s neglecting his duty.” parted to right and left; the men re­ j; —"Dr. D. Babcock, the inventor of
herself hoarse in a vain effort to make
The sailor shook his head. Some­ moved their hats; the women crossed i
Captain Dutton hear her above lhe thing more's amiss. I’m thinking. The themselves, nod the journey to the *; the fire-extinguisher, was up in Stockroaring of the sea. The boat tossed light come’near playing us a j.-tek-o’- cemetery began. No attempt was made Il ton, Ca!., recently, on the "charge of
| being drunk. He-'had indeed, he said,
from wave to wave, plunged further lantern trick just before day. She put at remonstrance with the recalcitrant
——
vwu
——
{ takentwo
twounaw
drinks
twoxmau
smallanan
drinks
and further away.
on her night-cap all of a midden, and tenants who would not yield a pax-rage. । but fae had been paralyzed and could
And it was but a few hours ago that ’' twas like the pole star had let loose o' it being considered that they had an Mt miluo was not drunk. w
uk.,i
not walk. He
He
had
Huldah had wished she *might have an the compass needle. A little moro n unquestionable right to tbeiropinion.n in tho hospital, bnt was a doctor
we’d a dashed upon the reefs, only she Paris Cor. lloslnn H'-rah!.
thoughthe could make a living and
waked up and showed us her ahiners
I did not wish to be a charge on tbe
-re a pitiful coward then, Htildah And not a wink has she took since.
— fho Worcester &gt;./ *a&gt;* that from public. -1 invented.’ said he. -the fire
?anc. You brave enough to go in a Somewhat's wrong.
Cap’s Dutton’s Oxford comes the atorv that a short j and water-proof paint and the chemical
e-bot.t to mve drowning folks! You been prompt as the sun this twenty tune since a dog caught a woodebuck. . fire-extinguisher that bear my name.’
serve to be nothing better than a year."
tut owing to tn&gt;or tce&gt;. could not bite | it was indeed the wreck of Dr. Bab"Captain Qntton? Is’tCaptain Kyfo him Mthoieotly hard to cause death, cock, the inventor of the Babcock ftreDutton that’s keeper of the light-house wboreupou the dog took the wootlcbuck i extinguisher. • The court remarked that
yonder?" asked one of the brig’s pas- to a pool of water a short distance the case seemed to be one calling for
xmitmh, starting forward excitedly.
।
•way.
and with teeth *nd paws held sympathy rather than severity, and
Kvie Dutton.
He’s a queer bun under water until drowned. We catered a plea of not guiltv. and al­
-Jit he ain’t the fellow to shirk lied
[I**
roamm for dog
lowed the old man to go on hiiraprt:

K.wd.K.1
It Un*t the girl

loaded with jwwder

FREE OF COST.
'
teution of Urine, and had all the symptom* 5
All peraons wiiblng - to test tbe. merit* of a
great retiM-dy—rrtif that will poaltively cure
OopauDiptkm, Cough., Cold*. Aatitma. Broa- -revealed'the presence in tbe bladder of a urtnchltia, or any affection of the Throat and Lung*
““l*,rY*|u^ted tocall at the drug atore aud get
a trial bottle of Dr. Klag * New Dlreoverv for
ago and debility, an operation was out of the
question, but that he could, by tbe prescription
of “Kennedy's Favorite Remedy," together
Thai which is bitter to be endured may be with local treatment, make him comfortable,
and leave him to live out all his davs. The
•weet to be remembered.
'
outcome of this waa that tbe patient enjovs
.
„ The symptoms of Itching Piles art moisture good health to this day.
like jircspirution, intense Itching, most at night
seems as If pin worms were mwlfng In or Dr. Kennedy's “Favorite Remedy" la being ex about the.rectum. The more you scratch lhe tenaively used by oar people are aa follow*: 11
Writer,
fly.K
'
rr.. .
,
v
te a combination of acgctable alternative*. 11
l« pleasant to tbe taste, adapted to both sexes
ment I* tbe most effre-ttre remedy extant for and all age*, la effective in affonline immediate
thia tormentiDg complaint. Glvea reot at night relief in all awes of Kidney trouble. Liver Com­
without that desire to acratch. Aino has on plaints, Constipation pt the Bowel* and derange­
equal In quickly eradicating Tetter, Itch, 8*11 ment* peculiar to wjmen. At tbe »anio time
Rbetime, Eryripelu*, Barbera’ Itch, Pimple*, purities the blood, tho5 giving tone end strength
all Scaly, Cruaty, Itchy Sktn Eruption*. Here to tbe system debilitated by disease or age
I* the proof, "Certainly the beat remedy erer "Dr. Kennedy's Favorite Remedy", for sale by
need In my practice," Dr. Cotton, Woodstock. all druggist*.
.
.
1
Vt. "troubled with Itching Pile* for over twen­
ty year*. It cured me completely," L. 8. Meaaer
Enfield, MS. Sent for 50 ct* (la 3 cL »tamps)
3 boxes, N1.2S, By Dr. Swayne Zt Sou. Phdad’a
P*. Sold by ell druggUt*.
Some men in marriage reck company rather
than a companion.
A GOOD FOUNDATION.
In American liocsebokl* the prevalUng complxlntx *re veaknew of the *u&gt;nx*eh *ud ttx
ronrequenee*, Iixliswtioo, Nervuu.ne*. *nd
-Rhemnatiam. Such sufferer* can lay a good
foundation for health by uilng Parker’s Gin­
ger Tonic a* ft tones up the stomach and serves
and keep* the kidney* active to carry off tbe
foul mailer.—N. O. Picayune.
.

KOUTE

Hypocrisy become* a necessity for those wbo
live scandalously.

Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
doubtieja ranks first a* a curative agent in all
&gt;ll»ea*e*of the prvereative system, degcucraof the kidneys, irritation of tbe bladder, urinary
calculi, etc. Send to .Mro. Lydia E. Pinkbain.
233 Western Avenue, Lynn, Mass., fof pampblete.
‘
The man wbo tries to belittle otbeAi must be
j little himself.
BRACE IIP.
There I* serious meaning in tbl* expression.
That wearied step, languid eye, and general
feeling of lassitude come from sickness.
Be.
assured, a setlous and and perhaps fatal, dis­
ease I* close In its wake. The system want*
cleansing of impurietiee; Hie sluggish- blood
need* to be sent in swift anil clear &lt;mrrents
through the vein*. Dr. Kennedy's “rtvorite •
Remedy" will do thia; it will give new vigor to
tbe body, brightnera to the eye, a glow to the
countenance, and elasticity to the step. One
Dollar a bottle. Every druggist lias it. Dr.
David Kennedy, Proprietor, Rondout, N, Y.

Be graceful if you can; but if you can't be
graceful, be true.

i Mr. Davldi). Jones, of Parkersburg, W. Va.,
. writes: "I experienced for many year*
great annoyande and suffering from riieuniatistn and weaMiess of lite kidneys, and mv buw«•« &lt;vre almost always Irregular. 1 tried
, Brown's Iror/Bittcrs. which acted like a charm
। restoring nif at once to regular health, and
! banishing ay pain from my body.
। Innocence and mystcriousncss never dwell
| long together.
1 The bc*t remedy for exerting a powerful tonic
| effect' on the muscle* governing and control­
ping tbi-action of the bowels. Is Brown's Iron
j Bitter*.

PRINCIPAL*UNE
Tbe SHORTEST, QUICKEST and
point* tn iowiX^Q^Atchlaon.TopekKDenlNebraika.MIi*oart,
»on. DoUa*. Gal-

Jbl* Route baa no aupertor for Albert
jeSfe^Lc*, Minneapolis and St. Pant
Nationally reputed aa
being tbe Great

t«- the batt equipped^c
Railroad tn tbe World for

KANSAS CITY
ouncctloM made
In Unloa

find irate
luxury, I

Celebrated Uae
•ale •: all otXcc*

comfort.

An

/&lt;CJ^/lnferm.Ura\^?A\K
VX

»boot Rate* of
Fare. Steeple* Care,
■’
'
■ .r'onl.T
PERCEVAL LOWELL
.. — —~ - —---- , Jr,
Gen. fsu*. Agr,
Chicago, Ill.
Cliicago. Ul

NERVOUS DEBILITY

An obstinate man doe* not hold opinions they
I hold him.
A NEW PRINCIPLE.
The principle upon which Putnam's Painless
Com Extractor nets ia entirely new. It docs
not sink deep Into Ute llesh. thereby producing
soreness, but acta directly on the external cov­
ering of the com, separates It from tbe under
layer, removes the direct prensta-c from tbe
part, and at' once effect* a radical eure, with­
out any pain or discomfort. Let thoso who arc
suffering from corns, yet skeptical of treatment
ait. and by tlic completin'** of the cure, they
1 be ready to recommend Putnam's Painless
Corn Extractor to others.
Wholesale, J. E.
DAVIS &amp; CO., Dftroit.

J.JEXKY ROE,

Proprietos

If a dog lias money he is called “Your lord­
ship tbe dog."

9500 Renard!
WE will jwy the rlwve reward for any case o&lt;
CvercompUlut. dyeprpela. eick headache, l-dl&lt;r»
lion, eoft*ti|i(Uon or ontlvrncM wo cannot curs
with West's Vi-rrtabls Liver Pill*, when the dircctfini ore striclir cotnnllrd with. They are purely

MEA T MARKET.
Fresh mid Salt Meats,

Smot&amp;d Hsias asi Shoulders,
PO7LTR1

FRESH FISH
'

Guardinn Naic.
CORWIN GAHl’NERaad ANNA GARDNER,
floors.
Nollen 1&gt; hereby given that I altall mH at public
Ia
I..I I.U.. __

IN THEIR SEA8O*'

La,rd, by the lb. or barrel,
Jx., de., dr.
C?" The Highest Market Price paid
for Hides, Pelts, &amp;c.

Fresh Goods, Full Weights and
Satisfaction Guaranteed.
rishi,
in&lt;J to

IIRNUY KOK.

R J PTURE
4 f«&gt; :&lt;•

TURNER GARDNER. Guardian

HOUGHTON

Iferord or c»talvgu» nd-free.

ta.lvr-

A. G. HENEDICT,

i

THE ONLY REMEDY KNOWN
TO DESTROY THIS DEADLY PEST
It waannbeard of. Frequently fatal di-ords
thedlK-MMfee function*. w**t*4 and enfeebled
1 ____
r.t mu'

Dr I. * nndeon Canal. M well aa the Inhabitant* of

RIVERVIEW
ACADMEY
PGUGHKEMPSIE,
T,
K.

Mo4y. raihtar; url I *od recreation In doe p-opar­
tion. Catalogue whb chart nf Col fere Requuitlon,
mi on application, OHS BIBBEE. A. M; IMa'l.

YOUNG MEN
th

leellfy that then
or osaiswfat poiaon1*8 -FAVORITK

HALL

�tbe other day, the

Uods,
lv

over 1881—cotton. 23,459. oom. 40.580.
V-The /nuMwlBr snbatanee of the
boaV;^•copying ab*m two fifth* the en­
tire' weight, fe composed of carbon, hy­
drogen, oxygen, nitrogau, in distinction
Kx...._lt:K a. m. Arrive iHlmll 8JJ1. m to the fata which contain only carbon,
hydrogen and- oxygen.
'—Ctac cubic foot of pure water, at 62
degrees F-, weighs 62,885 pounds; at
212 degrees F., only 59,640*pounds. A
GRAND RAPIDS DIVISION. cylindrical foot of water at 62 degrees
F. weighs 48.D78 pounds. One ton of
_
EA8TWAR1 .
water is 85.90 cubic feet.
8TAT10K5.
—The rear 1776 saw.29 public libra­
ries in this country. In 1878 there were
3.682 public libraries The books in the
29 libraries numbered 45,633: in the
■SKnto—
3.682 libraries, 12,276,964. with L$00.000 pamphlets.
▼•raaontvill!
— It is estimated on good premises
that tbe naval store crop of this country
along tbe Brunswich &amp; Allmny (Ga.)
Railroad will this year exceed that of
bwt by about 100,000 barrels of rosin
and 21)0,000 casks of spirits turpentine.
Wg8T W A. RD.
—In the United States 187,030 men are
employed In mining coal, while the
total amount of inverted capital in min­
Dttoh...
ing is 8250,502.373. The total output
Jvkwn,.
of coal last year exceeded that of the
previous year by more than lQ»OOQ,pOO
tons.
—The desert land tortoise of Califor­
Hamate,..
10:06
nia and Arizona carries on each side a
Eiffiwliii.:.
MM
membrane containing about a quart of
101.5 ISM
1030 1130
clear water. Tho water Is probably
derived from the secretions of the giant
Tbroagb r&lt;»cbM*nd SlrcpInvCin to and frac
barrel cactus on which the tortoise
Oraad Rapid! *t&gt;4 Drtroll. All tralna coanact 11
feeds.
•
«am« depot at Detroit wilb Great Waalara. Grant
T»Nrti b m OaaMa Sooteara Railway*.
—Moulting usually takes place in
*. U. BROWN,
H. B LXDTARD.
fowls through the months of October,
Aa«*t Oeo'IBapt'Jaekaou. Gea'I Bup’l I&gt;etro
November and December, according to
HturC. Wsrrvoat ■,
&gt;08
Gep'lPaaiandTleket A«»nt.Chlearothe age of the bird. February, March
and April chicks obtain their adult
jg ROOKS, MARSHALL A CO.
plumage in October and November.
They drop a few chicken' feathers, but
■
' —-------- Proprietors----------do not moult outright, until the follow­
ing August; oM birds moult later and
later each year, according to their age.
Pay tbe highest market price for all kinds of
—At one month old the ox has a full
complement of incisors, with three tem­
Grain and Produce, porary molars in each jaw. At two
years'old the fourth, fifth and sixth per­
----------- And sell-----------eedn. Feed, Line, Salt, Planter, Stuc- i Inancnt molars are present, and the two
’
u.lr pin* i nn,h»r I nth
central incisors are changed. At two
co, Hair, Pine Lumber, Lath
yea„ ud a half old thp fl£ anrf g4foond

re

Nashville Elevator!

and Shingles.
AT THE LOWEST LIVING PRICES.

Erperienced, Reliable, and Responsible.

A. H. WINN, Dentist.
BEST SET GUM TEETH $10.00
Teeth Extracted Without Pain.

OfflceOpen Day &amp; Evening.
A. BARBER, M. IK.
*

HOMCEOPATinC

molars are cast, and the lateral central
incisors are permanent. At three years
and three months all the temporary
teeth are shed and have been replaced
.by permanent ones.
—A German journal refers to a dis­
covery made by M. Gros, of Paris,
whicli tends to throw some light on the
complaints which were made) but not
seriously inquired into) during the
Franco-German war, as to the use of
Kisoned bullets by the combatants on
th aides. M. Gros explains that the
construction of the modern breech­
loading arms causes tbe bullet to convey
with it a portion of the hydrocyanic
acid which tho explosion.of the powder
has caused to be accumulated in the
barrel. Even if poisoning to a mortal
extent does not take place, it is re­
marked that the healing of wounds is
materially t, retarded by this circum­
stance. ’

Physician and Surgeon. ■

WIT AND WISDOM.

Office first door east of Opera House, and 1
—The moon, like some men. is bright­
near residence on comer of Washington and
est when it is full.
State Street*, Nashville, Mich.
—Guttenberg invented printing, bul
who is the genius who will rise up aad
invent a proof-reader. — flurangfon
’
“THE BOSS­
Hawkeyr.
—A white monkey with pinkeyes has
just arrived in New York
It must
make the society mashers nervous fox
their laurels.
’

gTirncsH,

BOOT AND SHOEMAKER,
AKE HOl'SE,
L. P. Colk, Proprietor.

Sportewen. plteaora Mtkera, or picnic parUra
rill And thte place and bouee a plraaant place to
pend aday1! recreation. A new ateamer and
bandance of row boat! ; al«o Hahing larkl*. bait

QLEMENT SMITH,

Attorney at Law,

Attorney &amp; Counsellor,
JgLACK &amp;

American and Foreign Marble,
Mmnunenta, Tnnhrtcnea, Manti—,

1

Hn-lnge. Mioti.

yynxuM JONES.

DENTISTS.
■OKU Ml SD1GIUL SHITA1IUR.

—There is a kick in some quarters
against tight trousers. It’s generally
a quarter where it hurts, too. u the old
man is very mad.—Hadon Post.

—InntM'cnce is very much like a bank
bill of a large denomination—you often
hear of its being lost but never of its
being found. —-From tht French.
—It is complained that some of the
beef now sold is impregnated with gar­
lic. They have to strengthen It so it
can hold up the price.—Lowell Cilizen.
—As between the "greenery” of our
bills.and the “vallery” of our gold
coin, Oscar Wilde lias no choice. He
takes them all in.—New Haven Reginter.
—What is more disgusting to the sight
than a voung woman m a state of intox­
ication* Two of ’em. of course. Noth­
ing easier; come again’—Chicago Her—Queen Victoria has n great dignity
on state occasions, “and looks every
inch a Queen.” ’ She has been a Queen
so long that she ought by this time to
bear a'faint resemblance to one.—Low­
ell Courier.
—A school teacher was asking her
little girls tbe other day questions in re­
gard to the growth of plants, and on
putting the question: What makes the
flowers? one of them presently answerod,
“the buds.”—Oil Cdy Demek.
—We arc told that "Nilsson wean
deepest mourning for her husband, and
recently declined an encore after sing­
ing at'Albert Hall. London.” Socha
touching display of grief as the declin­
ing of an encore is something to make
the whole world weep for sympathy.—
—Bozlon Post.
,
—Newspapere are noticing the fact
that a thief in Harrisburg carried off a
too ot coal without waking the family,
but we do not see anything remarkable
about that. A ton of coal is so small
now&amp;days that any smart boy could run
off with one.— PMfaklpina Newt.
—"What lunatic asylum is that?”
asked a stranger in Philadelphia, point­
ing to a building from which the most
horrible sounds were issuing. "Why,
my dear rir,” was tbe reply, "that is not
a lunatic asylum. That M a female sem-

—" Does hawa-racin' hurt any
exclaimed a Blue Grew turfman,
raoin' hurt anybody? Why, a
aquar nux-. run from vend to aer
no pullin' *and do pocketin'**, th
mot e danger in attendin’ tits:

dirmor. and saw him endeavor to pass
tiie clerk, who, on account of the crowd­
ed condition of the house, had been
placed there lo take up tickets or cash.
The clerk was too quick for him, and.
after a good deal of talk, tbe man ad­
mitted that he had no money, and the
clerk, who was in no charitable mood,
suggested that some portion of his tine
apparel would stand good for the price
of bis dinner. * AH right,' said the man.
•you may have my pants if you won't
take my word that I will pay you to­
morrow.’ The ofler was accepted al
once, and a few minutes later the man
with the big ulster left, the cloak-room
with his overcoat buttoned closely about
him and his pants apparently roiled up
A f«w inches to keep them out of the mua.
" You may oall this much chapter
ons, for I learned the balance of the
story in a confidential wav on my next
visit to Atlanta. One afternoon, per­
haps about the same date as the above*
incident, a man answering the descrip­
tion of the bne you see down there, en­
tered tbe other hotel, pie Kimball
House, and registered in lhe usual way.
He informed the clerk that he was not
feeling well, did not want any - supper,
and would be glad to have a room at once
Quite early tiw next morning the electric
alarm connected with the room to which
the stranger had been assigned seemed
to be unduly agitated. A boy was at once
sent up, and returned saymg that the
man was up there raising the dickens
about somebody robbing him. and
wanted to see the proprietor immediate­
ly. Some thief had stolen his pants and
all the money he had about him. The boy
hunted up Mr. Scoville as soon as pos­
sible, ana it took that gentleman a good
half hour to calm down his guest and
persuade him to accept a new pair of
pants and say nothing about it. ‘Keep
quiet, mv dear sir, only keep quiet?
begged Mr. Scoville; •my* house is full
of people, roost of them having money
and valuables about them, and if this
were to get out it would empty the
place in a day.’ After a time the new
pants arrived, and as Scoville came
down stairs with the man before
breakfast, they first walked into the of­
fice. where $88.50, the amount claimed
to have been in tbe stolen pants, was
counted out and placed in tbe latter's
hand, with the request, many times ns
neated: • Don't say anything" about this
for heaven’s saket)
*
“ About ten o'clock the same morn­
ing. as it was afterward learned, the
gentleman who had dined at the Mark­
ham House'on the day previous came
into the office of that hotel, and with a
withering glance at the clerk handed
him one dollar and called for a bundle
that he ha&lt;l left there. The clerk meek­
ly received the money, delivered the
bundle, containing one pair of pants,
and the stranger went straight to the
depot, where he bought a ticket and de­
parted for a distant city.
••Quite naturally Mr. Scoville used
every effort to discover the thief who
had robbed one of his guests, and hav­
ing no success he after a time related
the storv confidentially to Mr. Huff, of
the Markham House, hoping for a little
advice. Huff had been a little ashamed
of himself for refusing to trust a man
whoso promptly parted with his appar­
el. and who so promptly paid up pext
day. But Scoville’s story set him to
thinking, and in comparing notes they
came to the conclusion that the man tou
saw down there was a sharper. They
also concluded to say nothing about it,
but such things don’t keep worth a cent,
you know."—Louisville Courier-Jour­
nal.
The Newer Arithmetic.
If a man buys a box of strawberries
with the bottom shoved up half-way to
the top for twenty-five cents, how many
can he buy for 82?
Bought a horse fourteen rears old for
$65 and sold him to an editor for $120
as a six-year-old stepper. How much
did I make?
If it takes eighteen men to do the
bossing and four men to do the lifting
when a street car horse falls down, how
many bosses and lifters will it take to
put five homes on their feet?
■
Julia has rive beaux ard Emily fcas
three, while the old maid next door has
none. How many beaux in all. and
how many would be left if they should
give the old maid half the crowd?
How many are 818 less the $5 you
.lent a Congressman's eon to help him
pay his fare to Iowa?
A certain city has a population of
420,000. The census man can’t find
but 231,680. What is .the difference,
and where did the reminder hide dur­
ing the census taking?
.
A. has an overcoat for which be paid
&gt;18, and his wife trades it off for two
red-clay busts of Andrew Jackson worth
thirty cents each. How much mopey
will she get from her husband to buy a
faH bonnet?
If six men wbo talk politics and dis­
pute on Biblical questions can build a
wall in five days, how long will it take
two men who whistle and flirt with tbe
widow on the corner to do the same
work?
A man pays thirty cents for three
pounds of evaporated apples and gets a
$14 newspaper puff for sending them to
an orphan asylum. Does be gk»a or
lose, aud bow much?
How many peek peach-baskets, each
holding six ouarts. will be required to
hold seven bushels of peaches, each

How do you obtain an abetnwt nomber? Answer: Hire a strange boy to
take a dozen oranges to your bouse.
How do you obtain a'concrete num­
ber?
Answer: Mix oue part Akron
cement with two parte of sand and

-The fc
-e recent i

tics are from
of the Bishop

tbe first place, after stating " his inten­
tion of dying as be had lived, an honest
man. hating tyrants and corruption.”
be leaves the sum ot 6,00b lire—about
£240—free of legacy and other deduc­
tions. “to the editor enjoying tbe
greatest repute in any towns iu Europe,”
on condition of his printing and issuing
to the public the testator's novel, writ­
ten in French, aud entitled “ Zuleile, a
Prince of Satriano in "1670;” a fire-act
comedy, called " Ap English Election;”
aud several poems, including one on
‘•The Final Judgment.” The next
legacy Is to "Her Imperial and Royal
Majesty of India and of the United
Kingdom of Great Britain,” and con­
sists of the late Signor Pasquale Fa-,
vale's “ most cherished production.” a'
tragic ojiera named “Alzira."
This
work, which is still unedited, he trusts
her Majesty will order to be performed
•• for the benefit of the poor of London*”
Further sums of £480 each are left to
the municipalities of Gioia dal Colle,
Bari, and Naples, tbe interest to be ap­
plied every year in portioning three
“poor but honest girls.between 16 and
25T’ on their marriage, their names to
be drawn by lot. Seven hundred and
twenty pounds is also bequeathed to
tbe corporation of London for the same
purpose.
, The ecoentric Italian's bequest is not
the first of the sort which London has
received, for, though it is not generally
known, a Rosiere is crowned twice a
year nt St. George’s, Ratcliffe Highway.
A certain brewer named Henry Rainc
early in the last century founded a
school for bovs and-girls in that neigh­
borhood, which has never enjoyed too
good a repute. In addition 'to the
schools, he also endowed an asylum for
girls, who were to be trained for four
years in tbe duties of domestic ser­
vants, and afterward to have good
places found for them-. For another
four years after leaving the asylum
they were to bo under the surveillance
of lhe authorities of that institution,
and if at tho end of this time they had
kept their good character and found a ■
lover who was a native of St. George’s
or an adjoining parish, and a church­
man to boot, they were to draw lots for
a marriage portion of £100. This in­
stitution has been kept up for over 460
years, and tho ceremony of marrying
the successful Rosiere and presenting
her with her dowry takes place every
May and November, with appropriate
surroundings.—London Standard.

Worse Than Doctor’s Latin.
“ Ogsattogassett. ”
A clerk in a retail drug store pointed
to the above strange word, written on
a small piece of paper that was pasted
in a scrap-book. The thick book con­
tained more than a hundred puzzling
orders which had been received at the
store and saved as literary curiosities.
“There it is. Now tell me what it
means," said the clerk defiantly, ad­
dressing a newspaper friend.
When tbe reporter bad confessed his
inability to translate “ogsattegassett”
into English, the clerk explained:
“The person who wrote that wanted
oxalic acid. We were some time, how­
ever. in understanding the order. The
luitin prescriptions of physicians are
not as hard to decipher as the written
applications for drugs we frequentlv
get from unle?rned people. By experi­
ence we learn to read the latter, but I
must confess we have to study some of
them a long time. For instance, take
this one;
‘Avis chatara pills.’ You
would not suppose that this means
•Ayer’scathartic pills.’ Hcre’sanothet:
• Seena moue.’ I had to ask several
questions of the person who presented
this before I discovered that senna and
manna were wanted. There on that
page you sec ‘Box yclapercillacca.’
which was somebody’s'way of asking
for a box of yellow basuicon. This
*Tlnker mur* stands, of course, for tinc­
ture of myrrh: and this one, ‘Grose of
sepliment.’ for corrosive sublimate.
Many of these other ones you will un­
derstand at once.”
The clerk continued to turn the leaves
and point to his curiosities, among
which were these:

Druggists
AND
—-

Physicians ,

PENGELLT8 WOMAN’S FRIEND
Every mother of daughters should
health

TO GIRLS

Have Signed or Endorsed the
Following Remarkable
,
Document:

TO Y0UR8 LADIES
Threatened wttttuy of ttie compUHxta am

TO OVER-WORKED WOMEI
P”°°- VW*" to -a

To Women Advanced In Life
U . nnnlo.

XJEUCOKKHCKA KFTNS THE

cheap Flaetera, T.infmeuta, Pads or doctrical
toy*.

FINEST

viec, will luruitb privately to paraotu caking,
Address.
' ''

IL PENGELLY, M. D.,
(SoM »* Pnvrt—J
KALAMAZOO, MIC

1 MURK kMrtSy 'AT LAkT. Price sjai
REAMMSoiadCOOMdBUMON PLASTBL

A

I PARKER’S
HAIR

BALSAM

TWBESTOW

PATENT NO PAY.
58

PARKER’S

6611

GINGER TONIC
Aa lavijontlaf IltAdM thal N«vtr IntsxicatM
1 hn ikliooii* co«nbin»l&gt;o« of Gmsn. Buchn,
Mandrake. SdU&gt;nsL&lt;. ar..l nuny wbo- of tbe be*l
vegetable remexiiri known, euro all diwrden cl
the bowel*, atocuch, liter, khineyt and lur.gt, &amp; ia
The Best Md Sorest Caogh Cure Lwr Used.
If you are Buffering from k'raale Cctnplaiau.
NereoutaeM. WakcfJneM. Kl^umatiun Dy’pcp»U. ac« or any disease &lt;x mfcmny, take P’/J-e’ *
Ginger Took. It will strengthen Iran aad body
and pee you new life and vigor.
1OO DOLLARS
Paid for anytlunci. juriota found in Gincer Took
iK£3B

COUNTRY,

IfINTED

Bcod me one Jil of Jin.
2ocac«»-uf hikety p*ckery (blere pier*); also
called fur a« hide pik.
Buffer ia inkfeulpbate of rino).
10 cent* worth Ari I*ariek; aUo spalled pad? gorick. prigorick, pariorigoric.

CHICAGO, BOCK ISLAND &amp; PACIFIC BY

&gt;9 The Great Connecting Link between the East and the West!

Gobble salt* (Glauber^mH).

1 corgel (antae Med cordial),
of eaaut (liquid quinine,,
wine (colchicam wine).

"In almost everv drug store," said
the clerk, a book of this kind is kept.
Ours is a dreary
business and
these funny orders come in every little
while as an antidote for our many dis­
mal experienoes.”—K Sun. '

I

baewran CaXMAO and raoai*.
CtTT.
■ cucnent. Bx-vrra. lurirwotrn an^yem-

The Electric Railway In Ireland.
Ireland, though a "most distressful
counthry” ia political matters, can
show Great Britain the way in some
things. The first electric railway in
tho United Kingdom is already complet­
ed. and will be very shortly running
between Portrush and Bushmills, tbe
pretty little town so noted for salmon
and whisky, close to tho famed Giant's
Causeway. The track is laid on a side
path, and not iu the center of the
regular wheeled traffic. I have seen
the same thing in Lombardy, where
steam-trams
run along
one tide
of the main roads, sometimes for ten
or twenty miles st a stretch. Our first
electric railway, from Charing Cross to
Waterloo, has only passed its first par­
liamentary stege.— London World.

I Inwa K IL; W^

ZSSSff
rate ajurtmenU
laaiww | IMH

Geardian’a JiMle.
natter of tbe eelateof
. I ’r|"
KI.MIRA K. W1AE8. n leor
■ hereby gltmi tlMtl«l-»;i nH at puMi&lt;
,J
tbe Uabeec ..!&lt;Ker. an
beautiful, •!»-.

—The fact that a quart of pins, hair­
pins and needle* was lately found in a
mouse neat al Newton Ixiwer Falls, in
MkhUM. all ol
pulling down tbe piazza ol an oM hotel,
may not be a fact of importance in Itseli. Nevertheless, a partial rt»lu’ ion of «»B.known awddreeribwd' a. follow* «• wit
undlrldadtmwtiahn.ijM. th,

a duel

LOXG KROWY A8

#

.

half ..

consumptives.

�■ In Confnru I’xrk e.rry .utnmrr

mill M Mwter h to
house is to be built
ML Clmneos.
rown was killed while unloadi st Farwell.
lumber and saw-mill pool has

Over 2,000 Knights of Pythias and 14
bands in Detroit this week.
■
iaed in Detroit and Marlette.
Two more convictions of saloon­
keepers in a justice court' st Clare.
Various localities report tbe wheat
crop not so badly damaged after all.
A county temjM-rance organization,
has lieen perfected in Allegan county.
At a special election at Newaygo tbe
31*r, it was decided to bridge tbe Muskegeotrriver there.
Tbe Charlotte Daily Express has
given up lhe ghost. Poor tiling, it never
waa more than a ghost
Wm. Harvey, a notorious confidence
man who recently broke jail at Port
. Huron, has beerecaptured.
A baby bov two years old fell into a
tub' of hot soap suds, at-^ttakeside last
Sunday, and
fatally scalded.
Four prisoners in the Bay City jail
took the key from the turnkey and es­
caped, but three of them were captor-

and tbe products for three months,
burned.
A. B. VanBuren of Petersburg had
bis arm torn off and a big hole made in
his side by the bursting of a pulley in a
mill there.
8. M. Sackett, druggist and book sel­
ler of Monroe, fell out of a wagon on
to a stone pavement and sustained fa­
tal injuries.
The G. R. &amp; I. railroad company has
moved into.their new depot at Alanson,
on tbe Mackinaw extension, one of tbe
finest on its line.
Charley Watkins of Grand Rapids
has accepted that little appointment,
and N. A. Earle thinks himself solid
for congress now.
‘
L. M. Sellers, editor of the Cedar
Springs Clipper, has been nominated
for the legislature from the third dis­
trict of Kent county.
The body of a man apparently 35
years old, and terribly decomposed, waai
found in pond at Big Rapids, Aug..
23x1. No clue to his identity.
J^rs. Rivard of Bay City Tound guilty
by a corroner’s jury of killing Jessie
Grant, mistaking him for the son of a।
neighbor with whom she bad a feud.
Geo. Haddock, a wealthy citizen of'
Battle Creek, was struck and fatally
injured by a Michigan Central railroad
train while he was walking on the

'

Ufa GxrMId. mother of the late
president, with his eldest son and his
wife’s sister, are visiting the elder Mrs.
Garfield’s other son at Jamestown, Ot­
tawa county.
The Muskegon Bc_m Co. recently
recovered 78,000 feet of lumber in logs
tbat had been picked np along tbelake
shore by an enterprising thief, towed
down to Grand Haven, and neatly
piled up.
Two girls, wbo escaped from the re­
formatory at Adrian some time in June,
were found in a bouse of refuge at
Rochester, N. Y., whither they had
been sent from Oswego as vagrants.
They were brought back Saturday
morning.
Burglars have been committed this
week as follows: At Elba, Gratiot Co.,
—$65; at Charlotte—numerous small
aunts; at Flint, in a safe—$40 and a
watch ; at Manchester, in a safe— $100:
at Big Rapids, tbe Mecosta flouring
mill safe—$100.--------- ------------------------„
At Sarnia, opposite Port Huron, a
lady walked into a dry goods store to
make some purchases, carrying $800
in a band satchel. Three men soon
walked in and after making some in­
quiries went out, aud so did the satchel.
They were captured.
Gen. Bcnj. D. Pritchard, of Allegan,
now state treasurer, has been tendered
tbe support of his county for the re­
publican nomination for congress. Tbe
Allegan Gazette gives him n sensible
send off, and the Kalamazoo Telegraph
pronounces him "the best man before
tbe district.”
Q. A. Thomas, assistant engineer of
tbe Pontiac. Oxford &amp;. Port Austin
railway, in a disturbance with adrunkeu laborer while on a pay-car trip, shot
and killed him in self defense. The
/man demanded pay for four days he
was ofi, and waa abusive and threatenThe Adrian Scientific aociety dug up
recently an Indian mound nod secorAral flail, of tin tribe. Tbe next dor
toe, went mastodon hunting and sueseeded in unearthing port ion is of a treweighing several pounds.
Prof. J. A- Cobbin, of Wakeman, O.,

Are

ual luxuruwee thia year until within
tbe last three days, aa if they had waitSaginaw a grove of twenty acres for a
public park aud suitable grounds and
$100,000 (or tbe erection and mainte­
nance of a public library and reading
room.
Most of the Michigan congressmen
who desire renominations can have
them without much trouble ; but a ran­
corous fight is being .made against
Willits by Boise and his friends of
Leoawee. Tbe republican convention
for that county, Monday, was tbe bit­
terest ever known, and the WiBit|men
were beaten by a large majority, thoughthey secured three out of the twentyfour delegates. Boise made an ungen­
erous and weak kneed speech which
feel flat, in which he said he "was
sorry his friends bad .not used more
fairness and less force. His friends are
consequently rather ‘‘sick.”-Willits has
an excellent record. He was the Mich­
igan congressman wbo voted against
the river and harbor bill.
The Greenback convention at Grand
Rapids, Wednesday, favored "co-op­
eration” with the democrats to capture
the offices by 231 to 103 votes; nomina­
ted for Governor J. W. Begole of Flint,
for land commissioner John F. Yam le­
van ter of St. Jo. county, superinten­
dent of public instrqction David Par­
sons of Wayne. member state board of
education C. B. Hall of Hastings; elect­
ed W. D. Fuller of Newaygo chairman
state central committee; and adopted
"co-operation” resolutions. The Dem­
ocrats iu state convention at Jackson
the same day proposed a division of tbe
state offices, which proposition tbe
Greenback convention accepted; re­
solved to “co-operate” by 505 to 118
votes; adopted "co-operation” resolu­
tions ; endorsed tbe Greenback nomin­
ations aud made the following of tbeir
own ; lieut.-gov. Eugene Pringle, of
Jackson, secretary of state A. J. Shak­
espear of Kalamazoo, treasurer Edward
Kantor, auditor general James Blair of
Grand Rapids, attorney general Tim
Tareney of Saginaw.

OUR WASHINGTON LETTER.
[From our regular corrMpondeaU)

Washington, D. C., Aug. 13, 1882.
While you of thecan’t-get-away club
have bad to accept with resignation the
influence of tbe torrid weather of the
past week, we in Saratoga, while ad­
mitting that the weather was perhaps a
trifle too hot, have enjoyed the delici­
ous elasticity of the atmosphere and the
cooling breezes from the Adirondacks.
And what a wonderful place Saratoga
is, to be sore. It is the great exponent
of oar genuine and only American way
of passing a ’ watering-place summer.
Although but a village it is also a city
of hotels, and such hotels as only our
extravagant ideas of life on this side of
the Atalantic could main tain. The fre­
quent trains come puffing into the sta­
tion and discharge their crowds ef liv­
ing freight to be immediately swallow­
ed up and incorporated somehow with
the kaleidoscopic ever-changing pre­
vious
arrivals,
facetiously
called
"guests’! by the solemn and overwork­
ed administrators of these great insti­
tutions. If one may judge by one of
tho largest of these almost historical iu
its name and connection with earlier
days of Saratoga, they are admirably
managed, and upon the American plan,
too. The provisioning is excellent as
well as the working.
It evidently
proved very attractive to an individual
from the rural districts, wbo was heard
to say"Well, Ido enjoy it; but it’s
nip and tuck with me whether I get tbe
worth of mr flve dollars a day or
bust!”
Of course one of the principal objectaof Mourning here is to "take the
waters,” and at the various springs in
tbe bright summer mornings one might
imagine one’ll flelf by the waters oj
Babylon. There is no pleasanter occu­
pation than to sit down in one of those
saline temples and while quaffing one’s
own dose to watch the string of visit­
ors in quest of the health-bearing
draught. From the rosy cheeked mai­
den to the foot-in-the-graveold man or
woman, all consume tbeir allotted turn1
bierfuls, but is really past endurance
when a jweetly-tender, probably en­
gaged, young couple saunter to tbe
spring and gaze fondly in each others
eyes while absorbing tbe fluid. Truly
a tender act to be susprised on morn­
ing’s happiest page. The use ot these
mineral waters seems to be badly
abused by people wbo are ignorant of
their lasting effects. Hathorne water,
for instance, which is extremely pow­
erful should properly be only taken an
der medical advice. Yet slender girls
will quietly walk away with three tum­
blers or so under their jacket withont
winking, but often not without disnetrious after effects on their health.

Oscar Wilde arrived yesterday morn­
ing and in flve minutes walk from the
depot along the piazzas ot the United
States Hotel to tbe Brodway front of
tbat house be formed and expressed his
opinion of Saratoga, which being fav-

Ono of the greatest charms of Sarato­
ga is its variety in dress and its con­
tradiction*. It is dangerous to make
an assertion here, for you may receive
ocular proof to the contrary the next
minute. A calico sack walks content­
edly by the side of jflush or velvet, and
a ten cent lawn figures in connection
with diamonds as big as plover’s eggs.
‘'Tho beauty of Saratoga air is that; you
can wear anything in it,” someone ob­
serves, and just then comes along a
lady in a dress of-old gold plush, look­
ing as if wrapped in her own window
curtain. But if plush iu winter is bad,
as it is—except in upholsteiy—it is
worse in summer, and there is no fash­
ion about it, for neither plush nor vel­
vet are seen, except occasionally, and
then they look heavy and out of place.
Even in a cool, clear atmosphere like
that of Saratoga daring tbe past week,
velvet looks and feels burdensome,and
is soon covered with dust, while the
light lawns, tbe walking silks and sum­
mer veilings scarcely show soil and arei
wings instead of an obstacle an burden.
J
August.
A (Himat jn filing.

'

The average country girl will man­
age to keep up with the procession even
if it rips all tbe spokes out of the hind
wheel. A young lady from Vernjontville is risiting her Cass avenue cousins
and the other night they all sat out on*
the lawn entertaining a young man who
yells "cash!” in a dry goods store, for a
living. After scattering reference to
general topics the young man inquired,
as he felt around in his pockets:
“Do you young ladies like cream
caramels T”
"I should blush to murmur.” said the
elder with an artless smile.
"I should chirp to twitter” added tbe
younger sister.
The Vermontville girl was equal to
the situation. "Well I should hawk to
spit” said she in a comprehensive man­
ner, and the coh venation took a dif­
ferent turn.—Evening News.

DAILY RECEIVING THEIR FALL

Stock of
BOOTS AM) SHOES.

We Pay Cash For

BUTTER Salt or Unsalted &amp; Eggs.
TRTJMAX&amp; SON

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN: Lumber!
At Buxton’s new brick, have ful^and complete lines in

FOWLER&amp;INGERSON
fieiits Furnishing Goods

Have the largest stock of LUMBER ever laid
dawn in Nashville.

100,000
Feet kept constantly on hand.

Pine Lumber

if you want something new, neat and nobby, just take a look at our stock of
The father of a thousand children
has just died in Vienna. Ferdinand
Reidt was a man of considerable wealth
and was happily married, but the great
regret of himself and wife was that
they had no children, and they con­
cluded to act as parents for the father­
riHriq Ceihj.Siiif, Stalbw, Ji*
less and motherless. For nearly a quar­
Or any thing in the building material line, ’see
ter of a century be was known as tbe
our stock, select what you want, and be happy.
father of the orphans. He commenced
by taking charge of a couple of or­
phans, but bis zeal and repute increased
to such an extent tbat at the titnof his
FOR THE LEAST MONEY.
death ho was tho legal guardian of
more than a thousand fatherless chil­ Remember that we fbaTejno old, shop-worn and unseasonable goods, but that everything to
HIGHEST PRICE PAID FOR
dren. Those whom he adopted in this
manner were not fitfully taken up and
then let drop, but be kept conscientious
watch and ward over them, from tbeir
*?* All our purchases are made with the cash and by strict attention to the wants of ou
early education until their mairiage,
customers we expect to reapsuceeaa.
Nashville, Apr. 20,1882.
or their start in adult life at tho ciose
of their apprenticeship. He never

CUFFS, COLLARS, TIES, HANKERCHIEFS, JEWELRY, ETC.

Finishing Lumber,

WHEAT, OATS, CORN, ETC.

FOWLER &amp; INGERSON.

sought fame or publicity, and took no
credit to himself for his devotion to
those who had no natural claim upon
him.

PRINDLE &lt;fc CHIPMAN

YOU CAN GET

THE CROWN SEWING MACHINE
The Cut shows the new stand, just perfected and put on the market-

The ways of providence are mysteri­
ous. The other day a young man wKh
one eye met a poorly clad and woe-begone girl on a wharf in Baltimore. He
kindly asked her what was the matter.She hesitated, and then, being urged to
speak out, said that a clairvoyant had
told her to go to that spot at that time,
to meet a one-eyed stranger, wbo would
ask her to marry him, which she would
consent to do, and long happiness would
ensue for both, Of course he coaid not
doabt her story, for was be not there
with his single eye! He made the pro­
posal, and next day the wedding was
held.

---- A FIRST-CLASS-----

Reaper

OSBORN MAKE!
WARRANTED

AS GOOD ASAHI IACB1HE IADE,
Very Cheap
JAT

MY

PLKCE,

Judge Edward A. Thomas discusses
in the North American Review, the val­
ue of oaths iu court*. In his judgment
tbe oath should be entirely dispensed
with, as doing more harm than good.
He declares that the conscientious man
will tell the truth, when legally called
upon to do so, as thoroughly withont
an oath as with it, aud that dishonest
persons are seldom restrained by the
utmost solemnity of form. In short be
l&gt;elieves that tbe oath lias lost its force
as a restraint, and is merely the formu­
la of an exploded superstition.

THE CELEBRATED

Grain Cradle.

J. M. WOOD.

The Rev. John N. Bnsbee lent bis
horse fora race at Madison, Tenn., and
for tbat is to be arraigned before a
Presbyterian tribunal.

His horse won.

Two Indiana men built a skiff in a
cellar, where the air was comfortably
cool, and then worked three days in
the broiling sun digging it out.

"BOUGH OK BATS."

A A show* the hardened steel point* on which the crank abaft and drivewheel ire bung and fork. Thte I* tbe iWiteet runntagbearing which can be made. There to
hardly any Metlon. Points are adjustableto take up lhe wear and the crank on whfcbtbe pit­
man works is bet ween the points, thu# putting tbe strain direct and avoiding all aide pull.
B B show*the hardened steel points on which the treadle is hungand works*
They are made adjustable for taking np wear.
C &lt;? show* tiie patent ball and socket joint connection* of tbe pitman
with-tbe crank and treadk. By Ude patent anugMarot tba “thaamtatf’ Mart to other aaaebinm to prerented, and there to no poadbte chance tor tha pittnaa to bind at aaj point to the mreJatloc of the crank, no natter bow asms the Boor may be er bowJar from parsIM the
crank and treadle bearing for the pitman may be. There U always a free andeasy aetton of
the pitman at ewy point in its stroke.
B ahowa the b-It-replacing device, by tutsans of
throw the belt ou the drive wheel install Jy, and without mortal
E shows the enlarged Dickel plated and polished drive-wheel. By mak­
ing this wheel nmriy lour InrbM larger to diameter, and putting tbe weight mostly to tbe extras
omaMe rt« at it, we make it ran aa&amp;r end laager, when owe started, as ft baa more nosMBtsa

F F show* the oil cape on tbe treadle bar for preventing the oil from drop­
ping on tbe t«n»et or floor.
« 6 « show the porcelain camera, one in each of four feet of tbe ataehioe.
«•*» to A arrt-rlM. .uduc. far bi.
Ireton., till, rrrpitor. .nd tta

luiiiiiber!

E. R. WHITE, Agt., At K^r WlSm-

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                  <text>-A,

ORNO STRONG,!
Borrow AKD PjtOFXIXTOR.

)

VOLUME IX.
LIFE IK NASHVILLE
And Her Environs.
YOUR EAR, QENTLE READER.
Too that are indebted tn The N*si&lt;ili.z
Nnrs, listen t Paper, ink and printers’help,

are compelled to ask you to pay that subscripDon’t forget It! Don’t forget It!
We place this item conspicuously so that
no patron can ml** it, and shall expects prompt
remittance
Orxo Strong.

—The
theroun
__

eKRh officer hM completed
land'reportxnhe village *as
healthy condition. This is

good news.

—That such wrecks as McCaul impose
on good people can not degrade the
temperance cause in the minds of th^

—On Sunday last alittle four year old
boy of A. Linsea,living about two miles
north of town, fell from a pair of bars
and broke both bone* of hi* arm, be­
tween the wrist and ell&gt;ow. Wednesday
Dr. Barber was summoned, who re­
paired the damages and made the lit­
tle fellow as comfortable as possible.
—A young fellow from the country did
considerable talking around town, the
other day, because, as he said, he could
n’t get any of the drug stores to fill his
‘’subscription bill.” He said he wanted
the medicine fur a young lady in his
neighborhood who had "apilaptic fits”
bad, and was going into "spavins" every

—To-morrow is Rev. A. D. Newton’s
tickets from Nashville to the state fair,
| last Sunday here, and he will preach in
good for returning to the 23d.
the
evening on the superiority of the
—Cheer up, cheer upJ-r-the reports ut
.big wheat* yields come rolling in from religion of Christ. His labors during
his three-years stay here have been
all around, and when the holidays come
marked by very earnest' endeavors for
you will find your pile is as large as
spiritual upbuilding of a strict style,
ever.
and wore it not for the rule of limita­
—The lower meat market, Jos. Cole
tion be would undoubtedly be retained
proprietor, has woodbmed. Cole was
by the will of the congregation.
not “heavy” enough to do business in
—On Monday Jerry Vannocktr trad­
Nashville, and will try Woodland
ed his share in the livery business of
Center.
J&amp;aucamp &lt;Sc Vannocker to George
—The fire cistern near Chipman’s is
Lewis of Johnstoivn for bis 40-acre
digging, and another has been located
farm in that township, and on Tuesday
near D.C. Griffith’s house. It-is ex­
Vannocker moved on to the premises.
pected that all of them will be finished
It is said that, counting the worth of
* in 30 days.
the livery stock he brought here. Jerry
—"What ye doin’,” asked a simple­ can by this trade count himself as hav­
looking fellow from. Maple Grove, as ing made $1200 clear in the past year.
he came to where they are digging one
—On Wednesday, while Mra. O. M.
of the fire cisterns; "be ye puttin’ in uu
Yates’ living rooms were unoccunied
artificial wellf”
and open, $15—$4 in silver, $3 in bills
—There are 291 school children in this
and $8 in change— mysteriously disap­
district, according to the census taken
peared from her pocket book, which
by GeogF. Truman this week. Accord­
was lying on the floor under n stand in
ing to recollection there were 324 last
her tied room.
Some $22 in bills, the
year. Why this loss ?
residue of a roll from which the $3 in
—Wednesday at one of our elevators bills were taken, were left hi the book,
a farmer bjf leaning on the scales —aqd that’s where tile mystery comes
gained 16 pottndr of wheat—for a min­ in.
ute; but he lost much of other people’s
—The shipments of new wheat from
' respect and his own—for good.
this station aggregated on Thursday
—Chaa. Andrews,who recently bought about as follows: Fowler &amp; Ingerson,
the Zemeri Brooks place, southeast uf thirteen car-loads ^Brooks,'Marshall Ac
town, brought in, Saturday, some stalks, Co., twelve carloads; a xtotal of about
of millet that measured five feet and 8,400 bushols.
This ^huount will be
from seven to ten Inches in length.
seen to be very 'small compared with

*

.

the shipments of last season up to the
corresponding date. B., M. &amp; Co. have
held a large share their* wheat rather
than ship it in a dangerous condition.

—Chas. Fowler has been sighing for
farm and home and wife almost-' ever
since he went into the elevator and
lumber business here, and this week
he jumped ata chance to sell with the
alacrity of a hungry, pickerel after a
m:nnow. The buyer was Charley Inger­
—The story about a married man
son, his partner’s son, a solid young
walking with another man’s "wife”
business man well known in Wood­
Monday evening, is undoubtedly true ;
land. Nashville has lost a genial gentle­
but the dime-novel stories of what the
man,but there’ll be a happier man and
other man did About it are somewhat
u better looking farm in Maple Grove
township.
—Experiments nt Brooks, Marshall At
—Capt. 0. R VanEtten, a reformed
Co.’s elevator, the past week, prove
temperance speaker and one of the
that grown wheat will propagate all
most pleasing and effective talkers in
right The experience of farmers in a
the field, will occupy the M. E. ehurch
section of Lenawee county, some years
next week Friday evening the 18th.
ago, proved the same thing.
The Capt. is engaged by the State
—Mine boat Flint of the Nashville Temperance Alliance, the object of
house, has connected his office and which is to secure the submisson by
kitchen by telephone; and now the the legislature and the adoption by the
presiding genius of the gridiron can people of an amendment to the state
order more steak without scooting a constitution prohibiting the manufact­
ure and sole of intoxicants.
There is
—Westland of the Independent thinks also a National Prohibition Alliance,
finod Ledge goes Nashville one better whose object is to secure the same kind
’kite of an amendment to the United States
blackbird.-or at teart a bird that aaao- constitution.
elated with b flock of blackbird* and
—One of the most enjoyable and suc­
cessful picnics of the season was the
blackneM.
Christian Sunday school picnic held at
—Braun Bro’s., who recently formed TboAapple Lake on Wednesday. One
a co-partnership, evidently "know what hundred and thirteen took passage for
the lake on the WJ8 train; others fol­
night Friday of last reek, being low in carnages, on the local freight
and mail until the number was increas­
need work in their line evidently ap­ ed to 150, and a happier-looking lot of
preciate their skillful workmanship children, it has not been our good for-

—‘Prof. Geo. Conley, who is to have
charge of the Nashville school thia
year, was in town this week Tuesday,
and is spending the remainder of the
week with his parents in the country.

—Only a small party—some seventeen

1

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1882.
was rightly conducted, and together
with an elaborate supper at the Nash­
ville house, waa heartily enjoyad-by the
participants. They will try it again on
the 33d of September with a. W-cent
dance, to be followed by others every
two weeks duijng the winter.

thoughtful.
—Hiram Coe, administrator, sell? to­ few minutes.
day (Saturday) tho personal property of
—Dr.Barber recently removed a piece
the late J.acob Franck, one mile north­ of a sewing needle about an inch long
west of the village.
from the hand of Mra. Jacob Stine,
—The boys turned Al. Rasey’s front where it bad remained cm boded be­
door step into a boxing school, Tues­ tween the bones of the' hand, near the
’
'for over eight
'J*'*’ years,
It never
day ,evening.
Lots of fuu for the : wrist,
caused her any inconvenience until re­
fellows who looked on.
cently and for that reason she never
—Station Agent Hawthorn will com­
mence on the 18th to sell half-fare has had it removed before.

—Theo. Downing was so much inter­
ested in the work on his new building
on Thursday, that he took no note of
time, and about seven o’clock wanted
to know if there was not an eclipse.

(TERMS; Si 50 per

Devoted to the Interests of the Beet Party under the Sun.

LOCAL GIBBLE-GlBBLE
More wetness.
M. B. Brooks is at home again.
E. W. Peckham was iu Hastings over
Sunday.
Mrs. J. Osman and Hortie are visiting
at Greenville.
Stock buyers were numerous here
the first of the week.
Miss Ida Owens is visiting friends in
Baltimore this reek.
Miss Alta Derinr spent the week
with friends at Lansing.
"Judge” McCaul jumped a.botel bill
at the Nashville House.
•Miss Gertie Ingerson has returned
from a visit at Woodland.
Dr. W. H. Aylsworth 8 a nd ay ed over
with friends at Grass Lake.
Rev. Bissell exhibits considerable
nerve in the art'of swinging.
O. L. Palmer of Adrian was the guest
of Miss Mytre Myers the past week.
James Mosher of Shilah.'O., is visit-

toe bulge and 9 feet deep inside measurement
On Monday evening a little old man
with seedy clothes, wrinkled face, and
ong yellow hair, presented hk^self in
khe M. E. pulpit, in answer to the an
nouncement of "J. M. McCaul, one of
the workers in the recent temperance
revolution in Iowa.” His talk was’ of
the most disconnected character, and
at the close he took up a collection,real­
izing $1.30. So peculiar was |his “lec­
ture” and his general conduct, and so
familiar his countenance to many, that
considerable speculation arose as to
his identity and character, and inquiry
has developed the fact that he is the
same man who several weeks ago trim­
med carriages for E. Cook for a week,
and took his whisky straight Avery day.
On Tuesday morning be called at The
News office, and in response to in­
quiries said be was going to Hastings
to lecture that evening, that his ex­
penses were paid, but that he was in­
structed to make them by collection if
possible, and that be was working for
Uncle Sam. He remained here several
days, telling that he. bad property on
5th avenue, New York, an immense
tract of land in southern Iowa, and 100
acres in Assyria, showing a letter of in*
troduction from Rev. A. D. Newton to
parties in Hastings, a leaf from a work
of Ingersoll’s, which he claimed as his
own production, and meanwhile "blow­
ing iu” the $1.50 and lecturing on tem­
perance in Buel's saloon. He claims to
be stopping with a brother at Charlottle; certainly be was “too full for ut­
terance” at the tournament. On Wed­
nesday, not having money enough to
get Charlotte.be borrowed a dollar from
E. Cook ; and when last seen was wend­
ing his way to the depot, mingling his
hiccups with the announcement that he
was to lecture in Lansing that evening
(hie.) It is the general opinion that
he is crazy ; and certainly neighboring
townsand pastors will do well to go
slow in extending their confidence to
"a little old man with long yellow liair,
fresh from the work in Iowa.”

ipg and prospecting in this section.
Mrs. F. C. Courier of Battle Creek, is
visiting with relatives at the Wolcott.
Rev. A. D. Newton attended the pro­
hibition convention at Jackson, Thura-.
day.
C. L. Glasgow Snndayed at Jones­
ville and returned with Mrs. G. daring
the week.
F. T. Boise and family have gone to
house-keeping under their own vine
and fig tree.
Albert Congdon and wife, of Hepkins, Allegan county, are guests of 8­
S. Ingerson.
0. E. Hawthorn and wife of Vt.
, Ville were the gaests of his brother
over Sunday,
Mike, the taffy man, has bought out
his partner, and the latter has gone to
Grand Rapids.
.
Misses Blanche Boult and Daisy
Smith of Battle CreeK are visiting MLHattie Foote.
Dr. D. S. Conley is experimenting
with the remittent fever, at bis home
south of town.
Miss Jennie Barnum, of Woodland,
returned home Thursday from a visit
PLEASE LET US GO HOME.’
with friends here.
Dr. Ludington has rented Mrs. Wick­
It was between the hours of 11 and 12
ham’s property on the west side of , of last Sunday night, when the virtu­
Maio St. for an office.*
ous citizens of Nashville had sunk to
Regular meeting of the fire company rest on their snowy couches and the
next Tuesday evening/ Every mem­ golden moonlight flooded the quiet
ber is wanted on duty.
earth, that th{ peaceful dreams of the
A dozen or so of our people took ad­ sleepers %t the Nashville house were
vantage of the excursion from Char­ suddenly broken by die clatter of hors­
lotte to Detroit, Tuesday.
es hoofs and the load talking of two
On Monday Miss Gertie Ingerson lost bnmmers from "Varmountville,” who,
a dress and some ribbon while on the each accompanied by a bundle of dirty
way from Woodland to Nashville.
linen with an animating principle in­
R.J. Drake has gone to Dayton, side, begen to hunt through the hotel
Berrien county, and his place at the yard and around the barn fora place to
depot here is filleel by Wm. M. Haw­ rest. Not rinding any, however, they
thorn.
once more betook themselves to their
John Kocher has returned from the carriages and began racing np and
West. He made quite an extended down Main street. Finally two fellows
trip through Colorado, visiting its prin­ sitting on the hotel stoop concluded to
cipal cities.
stop it; so stepping out into the street
Alex. Blair went to Denver last week and preteAling to be the marshal and a
where he is now engaged in building policeman, they called to them that
operations. He expects to locate in they "had made a race track of that
that busy city.
,
street long enough,” at the same time
Miss Eva Gregg enjoyed the com .grabbing one of the horses and threat­
pany of a few friends at her home two ening to'land the driver in thecalamiles west, on Sunday last, on the oc­ bopwL-'"Jim! Jim!” yelled the terrified
casion of her birthday.
fellow after his pardner; but "Jim”
Onio Strong, of the Nashville News, was speeding down the street and out
is the conundrum th^t keeps several of town at a rapid gait. Then the fel­
aspirants to editoral fame a thinking. low began to blabber to the "marshal
-Grand Ledge Independent.
“didn’t we always treat you fellows
It is S. S. Ingerson &amp;. Son now. They well when yon came to Vermontville!”
will no doubt continue to transact the The "marshal” said he didn’t know
satisfactory business heretofore en­ anything about that—he’d never been
joyed by Fowler &amp; Ingerson.
.
there, and he thought the best place for
Frank Flint, the deaf mute, took* a the fellow in the carriage was in the
trip to Hastings, this week, to see his "cooler." But the girl pleaded so hard
girl, and seemed to find as much pleas- to "please let us go home,” Mint the
•ure in it as many a more gifted fellow. "marshal” relented—and they went.
A praise song service was held at the
Christian church last Sunday evening 00MM0H 00UJ0IL PB00EEDHG8.
in lien of the regular service. It was
pronounced good by all who heard it.
The good-looking phiz of Dr. W. H.
Present, Chipman, President; Barber, Boise,
Griswold beamed upon Nashville this
week. The Dr. is iu practice at Mus- Dickinson, Demaray, Lee and Lentz. Tnutea*

kegeon and reports flattering prospect?.
Railroad tickets to the ball play at
Charlotte to-day, (Friday) are sold at
one and one third fare. Probably there
will be a large attendance from Mid­
dleville.
.
Hon. E. 8. Lacey of Charlotte, was
in the village on business Monday. He
looked upon Nashville from the bighths
and was much surprised at its mag-,
nitude.
The ice cream social given by Mrs.
Wheeler’s class at Miro Fannie Blairs
residence on Wednesday evening, was
well attended and a very pleasant time

NUMBER 50

THE "BEV." J. M. MoOAUL (HIO.)1

And Perwnal Olt-tn*t.

Minutes of last meeting read and approved.
The following accounts were presented and

___ LOCAL MATJinW,
.

DISSOLUTION NOTICE.

The cop*rtner*hip heretofore exiting under
the firm name of Fowler &amp; Ingeiion. I* thi*
The following bids for building cisterns were day dl»*olved by indual conrent. Tbo»® in­
handed in: W.E.Griggs 835.00,each Tho*. Pur­ debted to the firm will rettle with Mr. Ingerwc,
who iMame« all th? liabilities of the Ann.
key WtUIO, each, Lewis Clark 828.00 each.
Naahrflle, Aug. 81,1882.
On motion the contract waa let to Lewis
Cbsbum Fowxxa,
Clark, the cisterns to be be completed within
SO-l
Stkvex 8. IxaxRSOM.
thirty days. The committee also reported to
CO-PARTNERSHIP NOTICE.,
drive wells at or near each cistern for filling the
For the purpose of continuing the elevator
same. Motion by Lee that the contract for
driving wells be let to B. H. Hoag at 810. each and lumber business at the old stand of Fow­
ler A Ingerson; I have thia day asMciated with
Motion.corried by aye* and nays as follows:
me In business rar son, Charles E. Ingerson.
Aye*, Barber, Demany, Lee and Lentz. Nays All liabilities of the old. Ann wiB be aMumed
by the new firm, .which will 1* known as. 8. 8.
Boise and Dickinson.
Ingerson A Son.
x Stkvzx 8. Ixorasox.
On motion council adjourned.
F. McDkbbt,
Euhv Cbifmax,
A CARD.
Clerk.
President.
I desire to return my thanks to the public
it* liberal 'patronage, during my connection
The live stock at the Wfaes sale on Wednes­ for
with the firm of Fowler A Ingerson, and ask a
day, went off at high prices—four common continuance of the tame to the new firm of Inspring calves for $36.50, a heifer at $36, the gereou A Son, who will be found to merit the
Charles Fowlzr.
sheep at $2.75,. and hogs that would go but same.
little if any over 45 pound* at $3.25. But the
OTA secood-h*nd one-horse Buggy for sale
machinery, on account of the careleMneM with
which It had been used, told at merely nominal
NOTICE.
•
turns—a grain drill for $12, a combined reaper^
and mower tor $1, two wagons for $3 and so •&gt;A11 parties'indebted, elthet by note due or
keebunt, will remember I have been here a year
forth. These prices simply illustrate how well and. hare bills to meet (taring the present
it doesn’t pay a man to not take care of hl* month, and would like to see and settle with as
tools. Most of the machinery waa bought by SpL many a* possible. Thanking you for past fa­
vors and hoping for others in the future, I am
Troxell, who haa the farm.
Yours respectfully.

HASTINGS.
Considerable petty tbclving here.
Kurtz A Newton have dissolved partnership.
Kirk Grant has returned from his western
trip.
Janies Crawley is going east for a ll'.tie re
creation.
M. L. 'Bowen haa a new safe. It weighs
about 4000 lb*.
The Browns of Pittsburg beat the Hastings
boys 15 to 0.
Mrs. Frank HoLhrook and daughter of N. Y.
are visiting Mra. Q. A. Holbrook.
Jsmes A. Sweexy lost a horse last Thursday.
It died while hitched to the wagon.
Base ball: Cedar Creek 2, Hastings 23;
Hastings second nine 5, Irving 17.’
Major Anderson thinks the Chicago firm will
push the K. H. A L. railroad prospect.
A son of A. Christy fell into a pail of hot
water last Satunlay. He waa burned severely.
A telephone has t&gt;ccn put up connecting R.
J. Grant’s store with bis elevator and ware­
house.
The temperance meeting will be addressed
next Sunday by Rev. Carnahan and P. T. Col
grove.
Walker Mathew* and Richard (Bate* attend
the agricultural college this year. They start
next Monday.
Next Saturday, Prof. Hall will examine all
student* who wish to enter school, but have
not been classified.
There is a demand that the old stagnant
mill-pond be done away with, as the mill is no
longer used and the jxmd breeds death.
The Hastings base ball club beat the Char­
lottes 13 to 0 last week, and the Charlotte pa­
pers didn't find time to speak about it.
The team of crack shuts captured about $150
at the Musk egeon tournament, last week, and
also the grand prize. Taking the four contest*
together their total score Is higher by five point*
than that of any other team. They were feast:
ed* when they got home.

gy A full line of new Groceries Just receiv­
ed to be sold cheap to cash custccnen*.
C. AJXSWORTH.

TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN.
VZRMOXTVILLX, ADg. !il, '82.

For making flour we shall buy the nest wheat
—Therefore we will not exchange for grown or
wet wheat—The former we cannot receive—
The latter we do not want—So blow into feed
the first—and cure out the second—Clean your
wheat well for we give the same number
pound* of flour leas twentv a* our “tester”
say* It weighs per bushel—We expect to main­
tain the same standard of flour m last year—
for our recently improved facilties enable us *o
to do. Bran iu quantity and feed for *ale.
Come and try iu.
O. G. Stzbbiss xxd ata Miu-za*.
Of 1 am very much obliged to you foryonr
patronage for the past five years and aould re­
spectfully announce that I have added, to my
stock a complete line of boots and shoes.
f \V -W1T1I
MONEY TO LOAN,
On Real Estate al low rate of interest of

{y Our new spring Tea* have arrived.
They are of the garden variety and May pick­
ing and for strength and flavor they can’t be
FOR SALE.
Good span work Horses, also 16 spring Pigs,
1 Berkshire Boar and 3 choice
with Pigs.
Enquire of
C. E- IXGXBSOX.

SSr Cash paid for fresh Butter

,

FOR SALE.
One or two cheap work Horse*, or will trade
for colts.
to-51 •
T. E. Niles.

gy Musin Fruit Cans and Stone Preserve
Jugs at
G. W. Surra’s. •

WANTED.
100 cord* of two foot wood.
Will pay cash.
J. Lextz A Sus’*.
SUGARS.
A pure sugar for. W cents.
A splendid sugar for .09 cants.
A Rattler for 10 cents.
C. Ji

VERMONTVILLE.
School open* next Monday. Tho boanl has
decided to admit foreign pupils.
Lecture on temperance t&gt;}' Capt. Van Etten,
next Thuradsy evening, Sept. 7th.
H. J. Martin and family are expected home
from Petoskey ou Friday of thi* week.
Hattie Curtis ha* gone to Natiivllle, Tenn.,
to take a position in the Flake Unlvendty.

Shoes for the price, in
TELEPHONES.
The Shaw A Garrqj Telephone. The only
perfect Telephone known to sdcaee. The only
one that con revs the voice a* loud nod distinct
a* when first utte red. Agent* wanted. A good
paving business. All parties wanting the agenciQcTtitthww. sAkwLE. (LurtMk-fBfc
eral western agent, oodland, Mich.

early completion of the Marquette and Macki­
&lt;W Go to Prindle A Chipman'* for the Exnac road through thia place. If so, we cordial­
ly invite your village to move up here and help ceWor Shin Polish.
“VINEGAR”
be selfish about it.
Pure Cider Vinegar bj the barrel or gallon,
W. H. Benedict and the council are at log
H. R. Drt-KIXBOS.
ger heads about the sidewalk in front of the
QT The highest market price p^d for Bulformer's lots. The council are laying a walk
sr and Eggs In Cash at
Whieler's.
about four feet on the street line placing the
I want vour Butter and Egg*. and don’t
covering plank parallel with the street, anti
irgct that I pay the mudc In rath as trade.
Benedict builds six feet wide between the form­
C. A15SWORTH.
er and his building, placing the plank at right
LOOK IN

Hopmachine*, was tried l&gt;cfore Esquire Steven* on
the 25th, and resulted in a verdict for Brown.
The cane stood thutiy: Hopkins and wife gave

A large selection of Tin Ware, embracing Cof­
fee Pols. Palls, Dipoers. Bastes. Pan*. Tina,
Cup*, etc-: Gias* Ware, Silver Ware, Castors,
Camp Chain, Broshe*, Hose. Notion*. »nd oth-

fully worth 25. Come in, took at my ttodc^ak
price* and you will buy.

but afterward refused to deliver them up.

Hojikin* and wife claimed that they signed the
billot tale under d ureas; and that the machines
were the private property of Mrs. Hopkins.
But the court did nut think so.

A FEW THOUSAND DOLLARS

BARRYVILLE.
A. C. Stanton,...
Elwood Martin,..
Horace Martin,..
Horace Larktea,.

NOTICE.
The annual meeting of School Dtatrirt No. 1,

craning, “receipted” 114.70

tn the nUage ut NsshvUhr. on Monday. the 4th
day of September. A. D. 1552, at 7 ooioek ta

2 40
470
8 61

G.

hall shortly after 11 o'clock, and the
the bride’s
P. Hollar, WflBe

. • rupTM]

Yba
Ckidit ScBrairrion n.n.

FARMERS, LOOK HERE!
Tin- Maple Grove milk are m.w ready to,
or exchange your jpiat*. Storage fro* of ch
Wo guarantee *atiti*ctiou ovevytteu. w«
Ing repaired the mill; Md it to »o* ready
butine**. We hope to have y,«*r potto

�- Walt W1

fr/O LATH.

sane and clear &amp;a the Min.

The Champion Machines.

an h*jur to order­ called on General .Butler to defend poor
... . nrovisiona. etc., etc., to women who were oppressed, eleven
be *ent to.Mra. Mallory. No.------- , ——• times; and that eleven times be re­
A VEXED CLEG YM AN.
street. North Side. Then we drove sponded. fopght and won their lights,
Even the patience of Job wonM become exback to hia houae in silence.
and never charged a cent tor his servbaurtedwere be a preacher and endeavoring to
"He gave the horse aud sleigh over
interest bi* audience while they were keeping
•
A COMPLETE USE OF
into the bands of his hired man, and
—Senator Hill cannot recover, bnt i« up an InceMant coughing, making it tatpoariblc
then so urgently invited me to go with not troubled by regret*. “I cannot for him to be heard. Yet, bow very c»»r c*n
him into the library that I abandoned complain.” be said the other dav. “I al! this be avoided by simple using. Dr. king's
New Discovery for consumption, Coughs and
the thought of BoeomplisbiDg all 1 had have lived fifty-eight years, and I sup­ Colds. Trial boules given away al every drug
planned for the forenoon, and went with pose no man ever lived fifty-eight haphim. When we were again seated be­ pier^vears
It may be best that they
Men often persevere In lovwg thewe who do
fore the grate he linked up and said;
not love them; women atop at once- •“Giloerf. I am'too touch ashamed
—Camilla Urso says that in Australia
of myself to know what to say; but if a bouquet is handed to the artiste, not
HOW IT WA8 DONE.
uric u.&lt;». iunvlu
ever you hear me complaining strain of
» n iin-dfurfatr..
“Hor do you nianaA,” Mild’a lady to her
having a hard time, 1 wish you’d knock, by the usher, but by the donor, the friend, “to appear so’Mppy and good natural
wife or daughter of the Governor, for
me down at once, and .do^t be at all
the time! ’ “I always nave Parkera’ Ginger
instance, walking to the stage and all
Tonic handy,” was the reply, “and thus easily
alarmed if I don’t gel up again until I
and bung ready^cr use.
making Mg present amidst the applause keepmyselfand family In px&gt;d iiealtb. When
have begged your, pardon on my khees.
JUDGE BlAEE’ri HARD TIME.
I am well I always feel good natural.
of the auaience.
Now, wliat was it you came over to talk
Darwin
is
remembered
in
England
as
The pooler playa a truly neutral part during
The thouglit often oomes to me that about' thia morning.’”—William N. a man who never Quarreled with those
a political campaign—It is always on the fence.
Gilbert wm born with a genius for find­ Burr, in Chicago Advance.
.
SEW ING -MAOHINES.
who disagreed with him. His contro­
tag out people who have a hard time.
versies were always conducted courte­
AN IMPOSSIBILITY.
One day last week a new family ap­
. The Queen of Burmah.
ously. This shows that he was not only . Deserving articles are always appreciated. PLOW POINTS for the Oliver Chilled. Wiard, Three-Riv­
peared down on the bottoms, put up a
ers, Bryan, Cale, Curtis, Dodge, Robinson
philosopher,
The Queen kept us waiting two a
*JP
“J™P°er but a Christian' and a The exceptional cleanliness' of Parkera Hair
tent, moved into it for tho winter, hung
Balsam makes it popular. Gray bain are 1mAnd many other Plows.
’
caring the words:
Wash-­ hours. At length there arose a slight *»
out a sign bearing
wools: “
"Wash
jxjMlble with ita occasional use.
. &lt; t .
V -. t
: . .i ■
_ ... _
—
—ilr
Dr. .Inhn
John M. Briggs, cousin and
tai’ Iraning and Mending,
Mending/”’ and before ihuldiub.
which meant that she was com­
In tact. we keep a full and complete stock of first daM Hardware and Farmtag Tool*. Call
The bachellon refrain—a 1*m ! The maiden's and sec them before buying.
Saturday night Gilbert know all about ing. nnd all the court put itself Into the brother-in-law of the late Governor
Charles S. Morehead, of Kentucky, refrain—ah men! Let .them no longer refrain.
*“■* dropped
■*---------- J so
““ usual attitude for receiving majesty in
lip*, and had
of comfort «n&lt;l good Burmah, i. e.: they prostrated them­ died in Bowling Green, in that. State,
much of
Zoa-Pbora the Heslth-brinKtir for Woman 1*
— eigl.ty’ ’/j.four years. Durfolded
cheer into
li ve?x of thojihptiking, di*-, selves, and fi
’J-J *their
v-*- bands tar in recently, aged
not a temporary stimulant but a permanent
icm m
U in, prayer.
The lag their echooMnye
iys he and the late cure for Female Diseases.
and
that, as they front of them
.
. x
inly twenty-one
twentr^&gt;no veer,
old. ।I Judge
ol' tho
»y when I called upon them Queen is only
vents old.
—«- Graham,
------------- - —
—- same
--- town.
-»------ told me
The thermometer aeems to be a very sensible
Sheds
nice-looking. UUUOIHUSS
unn'siaUy at-er
to / exchange
and’a suggestion—“It seems ’a cnv
’to very
IV, , uivvivvruir,
&amp;k, \ fgr««&lt;l
o
r*. ol medical ----.
- »»
___ _ . and
__■ xher
-1 _ * expression
.......... _ d- _ •is I ' Irwrwl
anri sort of affair. It Is always quoted as being iu
Burmese,
legal services fnifor In.iF
their mflrtadtirt
respective and
if tho Lord ain’t altogether forgot us fora
_______ _______
yet, though wo had jest about reached reallv good, and makes me inclined to prospective families, a contract which the shade.
1 given
-*--------— 1 was scrupulously kept for forty-five
the p’inf of givin’ up and nut believin’ credit the assurance,
me «by Sister
DON’T TRUST THEM.
in nothin* nonow.”
Teresa, that she knew nothing at the years.—Si Louis Globe-Democrat.
When you feci badly, and have pains here
Hans Hansen, a Swedish express­ time of the horrible massacres that took
—Mrs. Sally Rockwell, of West Brat­ and there In your body that you don't know
driver, who hashadone misfortune after place nt Mandalay about eighteen tleboro, Vt., who celebrated her 104th bow to accout for it is the most foolish policy
another during the past year—first it months ago. I hail to sit in front of birthday last Sunday, furnishes an aw­
In the world to take the advice of people who
WM aickness and death in his family, her Majesty, who herself did not occupy ful warning against tho use of tobacco.
then an unprincipled brother cheated the throne,* but sat on a .purple velvet She has been a constant smoker for say: “Oh, there’s nothing the matter with you.
IfCt jouraelf alone and you wfil come out all
him out of something or other that of carpet,
for her many
with
a
cushion
, years,. and is likely to indulge
right belonged to him; then a cow that elbow to
rest
on. Sister Teresa
‘
v.-»a the
tho habit for some years to come. If right." These folks know nothing about It,
and may be trifling with your life- You may
excelled all other cows in the neighbor­ then introduced me by. .name.
By l sho
she had
bad only let tho
the pernicious weed have
-Kidney or Liver trouble. Send right
hood fell sick one night and died before the wav, "Gamp” had l«en ques- Il alone, she might
might have been com- "out to your druggist and get a bottle of Dr.
*•
J
—
“
morning—added anotherhardship to the tioned about me in the morning, nnd. to 1। fortably gathered
to iher *■
fathera
Kennedy's “Favorite Remedy," and then you
list last week IW breaking his leg, and my great amiasement, I heard
ucaiu that
ilia, one
inoivuu
v, being
vzvima,
wu
she j■ long ago instead
of
con­ will be all right, or write to the Doctor, at
j------ j to a protracted
.
._j _n
*
Readout N. Y.
Gilbert heard of it in less than an hour had described me as a personage
only
detuned
pilgrimag*
ii
i •
and gave up an evening of comfort at second to royalty iteelf in
i rank. “The thia, vale of tears.—Chicago Tribune.
If* man's alm in thia world be good, the
home to go-over on the North Side to more they think of you the better” was I
—Lieut. De Long looked a littles over chances are that be will miss fire in the next.
seo tho unfortunate man. And nbw he the explanation she afterward gave me 1 thirty years of age. His features ’were
RE ATTRACTING MUCH ATTENTION from buggy­
has just been telling as of another man of this wonderful romancing. My well rounded, inclined to fullness, with
Colorless and Cold.—A young girl deeply re­
who has been haring a hard time.
buyers. It is the newest, easiest-riding and best carri­
presents were then mentioned, and
&amp; * a broad, firm tinder jaw. bespeaking gretted tuat she was so colorless and cold. Her
lace waa too white, and her hands and feet felt
** I called on Judge Bloke this morn­ then
w«iu a luuiu
maid «&gt;i
of Aiuuui
honor uauucu
handed «uO
me a’ a wealth of determination and force, as though the bkxxl dl.‘ not circulate.
After age made, its spring being so constructed as to admit of being
ing,” 1 Gilbert began as we sat down to beautiful gold cup, and a piece of silk— and a shapely mouth gracefully shaded otic bottle of Hop Bitters had been taken she
tho supper-table thb
evening. “I (he Queen’s gilts. I made a low bow. I by a dooping dark-brown mustache. On w as the rosiest and healthiest girl in the town, adjusted to suit the load.
thought I’d iast run in nnd talk over The Queen then
took a puff at
bridge of a rather plump looking with a vivacity and cheerfulness of mind grati­
that mining business a little, though I a huge cljerooL and then asked my age, nose ho wore a pair of spectacles, parl­ fying to her frinds.
don’t suppose we can do much with and several other personal questions. jy concealing a pair of expressive dark
“Vim, vinegar, vitriol and victory” is the
those now claims before spring; but I She seemed a little shy herself, and eyes. His snort hair was dark brown, mixed motto of a ncwiy-hatched Dakota paper.
didn't get
5t a chance to say a word of the , when the ^^.^.satsen
conversation flagged she once —Courier“—■ Journal.
’
REMEMBER THIS.
matter I went to talk about. The Judge or twice laughed like a school-girl, aud
LSO MAINTAIN THE GOOD REPUTATION they
If you are sick Hop Bitter* will surely aid
was having one of bis • nnliappy-state- made all the prostrate ones, including
A LITTLE NONSENSE.
Nature in making you well when all else fails.
have gained in the past. In fact all our work is made
of-mi nd’spells.' as old Aunt Ciarindy the nuns, laugh, too, by some remark
If you are costive or dyspeptic, or are suffer­
—"Reading maketh a full man.” the ing fnun any other of the numerous disease* of upon honor, and our patrons extend from Middleville to Char­
would say, and so I nut in the forenoon of hers. A mischievous' little dog that
poet says. The reading of sensational the stonnuh or bowol*. it is your own fault If
trying to get him under the influence of would run all about the throne-roon
juvenile literature also maketh a full you remain ill, for Hop Bitters are a sovereign lotte and Portland to Battle Creek.
something that would give pleasure to upset her gravity first, and for once 1
boy—full of wickedness—and he would remedy in all such complaints.
’ himself and more comfort to those about took off all the stiffness of the thing l&lt;
If vou are wasting away with anv form of
be worth more if he were to remain
him.”
see the general giggle. The Queet
Kidney disease, stop tempting death this mo­
empty.
«
suppose you found the Judge asked how I .liked Mandalay, and o
ment, aud turn for a cure to flop Bittern.
packing up his pile of deeds, notes, cer­ course I had nothii g but praises of all 1
If you are sick with that terrible sickness
—Tho CTeat grammatical conundrum
tificates ami what not of that ilk, pre­ saw. Upon this she said that these next —“the Lnited States are,or the United Nervousness, vou wl|l find a “Baim in Gilead"
the use of flop Bitters.
paratory to his loug-anticipa.ed advent few days would be a great Buhnes* States is?’*—Xcw Haven Register. Let in If
you are a frequenter, or a resident of a
into the'county poor-house,didn’t youP” festival, and that there would be all sort.4 us reirnrk that she probably has been, miasinatlc district, bar^ade your system
I remarked, attempting facetiousness, of entertainmeats at the palace that she and pciadventure they will be.and drop against the scourge of all c&lt;juntries-r-mauria(,
epidemic,
biliousness, and intermittent fevers—
for-------I knew Judge ----------Blake, or. thought
—o-------1 would like me to stay and see. I reallv
the subject.—Elmira Free Press.
by the use of Hop Bitters.
knew him. about as well as any man of feared there would' be no escape thn
If vou have rough, pimply, er swallow skin,
—16 India eggs are hatched by the
jay acquaintance.---------------------------------------- time, Init begged Sister Teresa a-.i&lt;le in |
heat of the sun. Performing the part bad breath, pains and aches, and feel miserable
Not Pvjirtlv."
exactly.” lainrhnd
l.uphcd Gillwrt.
Gilbert, in | V
French
to gel rno &lt;®l of the dUBpnhy.
"Not
—...
..
generally. Hop Bitters will give you fair skin,
■rsply; " Lpt that which you have sug- ; So &gt;he expressed my thanks to the I of a hen, therefore, let it no longer be rich blood, sweetest breath, health, and com­
g- te l wdhld hardly have been any more Queen, but said mv husband was the boast of Englishmen that the sun fort.
In short thev euro all disease* of the stom­
fovjlUhntomymind, than was the un war- obliged to leave at once for Rangoon, revet "sets” on tho British Dominions. ach,
Bowels Blasi, Liver, Nerves, kidneys,
•
t
ranted grumbling mood in which I I then asked if I might see the Princes, 1 — Independent.
Bngbt’s dix-ase. ♦500 will be paid for a case
—A new settler in Texas writes that thev will m&gt;t cure or help.
found that man. sitting as he was in his . —the baby. The Queen smihM a gratho hia tho “Rio Grande for a bath-tub.
That poor bedridden. Invalid wife, sister,
warm, cheery liarary—a perfect picture Bfled maternal smile, bnt said bal.v —
and the whole of Mexico for a back mother or daughter, can be made the picture
«f comfort and/.-i-k
ot
quiettoit —
was.
o h.uo.re.i.re
but for ’.he
j VvO months an&lt;l a half—was asleep.
It might do for him to use of health, bv a few l»otllc* of Hop Bitters, cost­
ikmwI on the brow of the man who calls After a few more formalities the inter- | yard ”
ing but a trifle. Will you let them suffer)
that Tine house his own. He grumbled view came to a sudden end through ray [ the Rio Grande as a bathtub if there
were
no
policemen
around, but Mexico
A- Ntrrjst* B»; CL .vi’lTiaiU WOMAN.
aiKiut this, that and the other, until one foot being a little cramped, so that I ,
inight have thought the woe of the world tried to wriggle into a more comfortable a* a back-yard would hardly bo a safe
’re.*ied on Judge Blake aiune.
Hi* position, seeing which the Qucga consid­ place to hang clothe*.—Lowell Citizen.
ui.ries had not yielded during the year erately remarked to Sister Teresa that I
—Seated in our library, surrounded
ail he expected; rent* are lower than mu«t be tired of sitting on the ground, by oriental magnificence and io’s of
they were two months ago; two of his and. rising herself, left the room. Here turkey-red ^drapery with arabesque
down-town storc-roumo nave been va­ I must say that women fare much better figures worked in gold, studded with
cant for a week, and one of bis tenants than men at these interviews. All that pearls, with here and there a $1.16 dia­
eo'ildpny him only two-thirds of Lit is necessary is to keep one's feet ont of mond to add brilliancy U&gt; tho efiect,we
rent ibe first of the month,, promising I sight, and a woman, thanks to her naturally .look out upon the poor way­
the other third, however, by the tenth. ! skirts, can easily do this, sitting tailor faring traveler with an eye of nity; at
He went on at such a rate that I began fashion, and as comfortably as she the same time if he persists in"isturbto think if dyspepsia were catching it would on her hearth-rug by the fire.
ing our delicious reveries with his in­
Were best for me cither to attempt to But the unfortunate men—Europeans— fernal whistling of "The bllver Churn”
cure the Judge at once or not expose must twist themselves into positions we shall throw our gold-mbunted. boot­
rnys.df further to what Mght prove a that soon become torture in order to jack at him, regardless of expense.—
caianfilbiis result; so I saldto bun:
keep their feet behind them. We did" Fettf Haven RegUter.
.
" 'Judge, yon have a horse in the not talk ]x»litics, or say a wonl on either
—We are Ratified to learn that Rear
stable and a fine sleigh, haven’t you?* side that could give rise to discussion— Admiral Nichols will act aj» Secretary
“ • Yes' be replied- *do you want to only one thing 1 told the sister to say of the Navy during the absence of tho
borrow the rig to give some miserable emphatically, and that was that 1 com­ Secretory. It would never do to lot
.invalid a sleigh-ride?’
plied with the Queen's wish to see me our weak and puny navv a day or two
•"I was going to propose that you because I heard that she herself was a without a protector. What would be­
and I take a little drive out togetlier goixl and humane woman. I was very come of our country if our t*vy was to
this morning,’ I said. ‘It will do you glad the King did not appear—one get lost, and the Secretary fifty miles
good to get but of doors, and 1 want could not pay him the name compli­ away! It Is hoped Mr. Nichols wdl not
you to make a-call or two with me.’
ment. When the Queen left, the Prin­ over-exert himself, and burst a blood
•* • On Mime of your bard-time folks, cesses clustered around me again, and vessel while be is acting as Secretary
i pre«umc to teach me that there are omW'f them took my hand and said of the Naw.— Norristown Herald.
trials and tears in this world which I sotm thing that seemed very amiable.
—"Yes,” Athelwald replied, speak­
know not of.’ he snapped, at the same It turned out to be that she loved me ing in low, impressive tones; "yes. 1
lime going to the door and calling to .very much.
Already! Poor things,
do like dogs; I am fond of them. But
am man to bring around the sleigh. they have not mfleh outlet for their af­ I like a shy. coy, shrinking dog, who
•Well. I aupjrose I do grumble more fections, for they are more closely im­ flies away to the shadowy recesses of
than there Is anv need of doing, but I mured than the nuns in the convent.
the woodshed when he bears the foot­
tell you what ’tw, Gilbert, those miser- Thert- are about 80 of them. all. I fall of tho stranger, and can only be
rrable people down on the bottoms ain’t believe, daughters of the late King, who won to sociability by lore and kindness,
OF OUR OWN MxkNUFACTURE
the only ones that have n bard time of had 53 wives and 110 children, of whojp
and patient pleading. I do not love
it in this world.’
only 59 were alive at the time of his tiw bold, forward, unquestioning maas
‘•The
Judge’s fine turnout was---------soon - j death.—Fraier't Magazine.
---------------------------------------------of canine insolence and obtiusivoness
m readim-M, and, putting on his henry !
.r T------------that comes sneaking out iroin netiiud
orerroautar cap u&lt;l glov«», h- anA Sarnw larapr.
a lilac bush, when one is just half way
xoi.nccd himself ut my serrict
।
--------between the gate and1 the pialzn. and
“I drove down town? o&lt;xadanaUy I
—An engineer on a Boston, Hoosac
nestles up to a stranger like an old ac­
giving him a .sort of good-fellow pat on Tunnel aud Western railroad train, re­
quaintance, and drags one a'I around
lic back as we parsed certain blocks cently, by rare preece of mind, avertthe yard in a backward altitude, with
WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH
Wlneb i«iar bis name, and then we went ed what would nave been a terrible acno thought of one’s dignity or comfort.”
over to the North Sideand stopped* al I cidenu Between Reynolds Station and
And with a drv conclusive -ob he
Jdr-. Mallory* I Mechanicsville is a 'deep cut. On one
turned away, aud. as he walked toward
and trouble,and a I side is a hill of clar and on the other a
the neck ware department, the book­
«*—&lt; I jp,,n liitrh. Tin- train wius ttmt enterkeeper noticed that his fawn-colored
trousers had been patched th •-'
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING
tern gate with a nine-cornered
oli re-green .—Burdette.
moment it would be down upon the
car*, causing great dan&lt;ag&lt;* and proba­
—Alfred B. Duyol having been sen­
ble loss of lue. He knew he could not tenced to be handed on June 3Uth in
2»®A
stop in time to avert the aecident. so be
Allan to, Gx, for the murder of a police­ BE ATT 1*8
'■ ■ h »■"' fl'.nrx
and We were ndtniUed | grasped the throttle with a strong hand
We believe the Three inch Tire is destined to coma
man, objected to the dale because it is
her- and pulled it wide open. The train
that set for the taking off ot Guitenu.
into general use. Call and see then.
pped 1 sjmm! with lightning-like nq&gt;id;ty. and The Judge thereupon comidcralely
been ’ it had barely cleared the cut when the named June
U9th-—Chicago Inlcrthat earth fell with a terrific force, covering
Ceean.
______
_____
the track ten feet deep for a distance ol
—The late Ne hemiah Gibeon, of East
arth struck
Boston. n*-er ate anima* fund, and
iloubt haw
through a hwu and Otola&gt; life enjoyed
wmpmre.counter.
i Hasting*,
Mich., Sept. 15th, 1881.
uawuttlly good health.
3*lyr, JOHNB.UODEX,«CW*rB&lt;„X.T.
®
’
r

WAGONS 0NLY;$60.00.

Buggies, Carriages, Wheel Harrows and
Cultivators, Mounted Seeders,
and 4 kinds of Plows.

REED’S GENUINE SPRING TOOTH HARROW
ROAD SCRAPERS, SQUARE DRAGS. GRIND STONES

's B-AJRZBEID WIRE.

Cook’s Carriage Works
Carriages in Stock to Select From
Our “Spirals”

“Dexters”

EUGENE COOK.

Spring

TiOOTH1

^Harrow.

South Bend. Plow.
Buy Factory Points
they are much cheap er and. Better.
Strayer’s Gri
Builders Hardware.
DOMESTIC SEWING MACHINE.

When in need of the best greades of Hardware
and Machinery, Call and see me-

Prank C.Boise,

rEEP YOU EYE OIS THIS.

50 Wagons
FOR SALE!
THREE INCH TIRE,

BETTER THAN COMMON TIRE.

ERRORS OF YOUTH

Sold by C. L. Glasgow, Nashville, Mich.

�rohin’s-

of w-1
. literally irotn Etutt­
. .....-p,___________ first choice. There
i iut also new outline de'lgn* bro ght out
I by English designer*, Stowing a light
tint or bine on a darker blue ground.PRICS: 81.50, IF PAID IN ADVANCE.
with ptrhnjm flume lines of gold: or
'
To Advertisers:
th^re are two rosy Pompeiian tones most
Tub Nbw» ha* doulte the nmuber of reader* intricately blended; another, fane/ in
olive and golden brown has light and
shade ingeniously introduced to repre­
sent gleams of sunshine passing across
the llqpr, while others accurately copy
•ulncribei*. who. for the auk- bits of old tapestry. Small palm leaves
.&lt;* black or bine and- diaper figures or
lattice patterns on .red are sb«wn; there*
PERUSE THESE LIBERAL AD. RATES.
are many soltd-eoiored- tent era with a
Ipaoe.
f 1 mon. |~3 moai fl mo*. i _13 mo*
rich bonier around the room: others are
I 5.00 | B8.00 mere mixtures of colors in small dashes,
’“5.501A00 yet without any fixed design, and finally
■Mm:
7.00 12.001 S0.00 there siill remain the once popular floral
T65| 8.00 14.661 25.00 designs. Which some persist in choosing;
W~wr»o.oo but eVen these are toned down by hav­
ing tinted grounds of ecru or tan-oolor
Budnes* card* of five Tinea or lea*, Ar&gt; per yr. instead of the ivory white fprmerly.
Local Notke*,.ten cent* a Utt* for firet Inser­ sought after, and tho designs are im­
tion and eight ccuu for each subsequent inser­ ' proved by haring Japanese or geometric
tion.
• ‘
figures introduced - here and there in-*
ORNO STRONG,
Editor and Proprietor. stood of the pattern being wholly of
flowers. All carnets are bordered, and
the use of rugs nas become so general
that it is now customary to make up
carpetfl as rugs; this obviates the dim­
. cult , experienced in getting rugs- of
•
.
vi l agiwwtK
• exact sizes- For those who like the Prealdent-Jtllhu Chipman.
deepest pile the roval Axminster car­
Reconler-^Frank McDerby.
pets with wool backs are selected for
Treasurer—Prank C. Boise.
their luxurious floftnes*;' these may be
Aaaeaaor—.lobn E. Barrv.
Marshall—.James L. Gregory.
had iu the new dark colors with Persian
Truateea—H. A. Bartier, F. T. .Boise. H. W. designs entirely covering the ground,
Demaray, H. R. Dickinson, H. M. Lee and and Also in the' gay floriated patterns
Chas. Lentz.
.______________ .
already mentioned.
The soft velvet­
like Moquettes are also in most varied
jlorirtUff.
patterns, and are particularly handsome
in the Fenian designs, and in somber
HRISTIAN CHURCH-F .A. Bl*»cl, Pastor.
bervice* every Sabbath at 10.30 a. m, and blue or red surfaces, dotted with small
7 p. tn. Sabbath school at 12 tn. Prayer meet­ black figures of palms dr other loaves,
then completed by nn elaborate bonier.
ing every Thursday evening
A novelty giving the effect of a che­
TUFETHODIRT EPISCOPAL CHURCH-A.
lv± D. Newton,’ Pastor. Services every S*l&gt;- nille covering is made of the waste wool
of
Axminster and Moquette carpets
bath at *10.40 a. m. and 7 p. m,
Sabbath
school at 12 m. Prayer t-cctiug every Thurs­ woven without design, but in the rich­
day evening.
est coloring wm in such carpets. These
VY LODGE NO. 37, K.of P., meet, at It* cost $1.50 or $2 a yard, and are very ef­
Castle Hall, Nobrille, Michigan, every fective when made up a* loirderml rugs;
Friday evening, for the encouragement anil that is. not lilted into the corners of Use
support of all worthy, true, steadfast and hon­ room, leaving about c ghteen inches or
orable Brother Knighte.
D. L. Swrrq K. R. 8. Ouxo Stkoxg, C. C. two of margin around the entire room.
This space may be lelt bare, and the
floor be painted, or it may be covered
Mfacellmicoun I'urda.
with a breadth of the ingrain tillhig that
H. YOUNG. M. D. .Office east aide of is now used in choice low tones ot col­
• Main St., Nashville. Office hours from or. Tiiis ••filling" may also be hr.d in
7 to9 a. m., and 4 tn 7 p. tn.
imported velvet carpeting, but the in­
TXT H. AYL8WORTH, M. D.. Physician grain is most used, and is seen with car­
v V . and Surgeon. Office over Boise's drug pets of the finest quality. The low•tore; Room al Wolcott Houac. Will promptly toned blue shades nnd Pompeiian red
attend to all day aud night calls.
are most used for filling out the space*
beyond rugs. Crimson tints are avoid­
PJR G W. GOUCHER, Electlc Pbyridan and ed, as they do not harmonize with the
JL7 Burgeon, l&gt; prepared to answer all call*
that may be made for hi* services. Office and subdued colors of Eastern rugs or of the
carjwts that imitate them
Soinetmies
residence opposite Boa'* meat market.
an ingrain filling of solid color is made
YVM PARMENTER, M. D. Office orer
V T Hull’a Drug store, Vermontville, Mich. to cover the floor entirely, and then the
rich rugs are thrown upon it; this h
pHA8. H. BRADY, Lawyer, Circuit Court done where great warmth is needed.
ComaiMioner, Real Estate and Insurance In country houses Chinese mattings of
Aft. Prompt attention pren to all buaine**
entrusted to my care. Conveyancing a special­ checkered straw sometimes take tho
place of the filling as a covering for the
ty. Office opposite Union House.
floor, and the rugs are then easily us«ri
A. FOOTE, PHYSICIAN &amp; SURtJEON or removed with changes of the weath­
• 8uce**or to Dr. Wickham. Office sec­
ond door north of tlic Nashville House: reri- er. For those who can afford hard-wood
dedee first door north of Hie Wolcott House. floors of inltud designs, the Persian anil
India rugs offer quaint and delicate col­
. Prompt attention to calle night or day.
MOrI PARADY, Justice of the Peace. orings. and of these the antique rugUtat show signs of use by their softened
Office, Comer Main and Sherman Street*.
tints are chosen. The velvet-like texl­
LIEBHAUSER. Merchan’ Tailor and deal­ ure and sheen of these are shown in tho
. er in Ready Made Clothing.
See me prayer rugs from the interior of Persia,
before you purchase clothing. Fits guar­ in the Bokhara pattern!, nnd in the long
anteed. ’
narrow breadths that are designed for
HATCH CO., Manufacturers of Taffy hails. T"he light Ghiordes and Smyrna
• Candies. Chocolate Drop* find Carmel*. rugs are pretty for chambers or guy liu
Fruita. Fancy Candles, Cigar*. Tobiu-w-. etc., tie sitting-rooms -of summer houses,
always in stock. Second door north of the
while the great Turkish rugs ns largo ns
post office.
carpets in the dark red am! blue Oushak
HRANK BAKER, Manufacturer of Boot* colors are liked for large dining-room^
and Shoes, jk-rkwI or sewed. Re|mlrinjr libraries and halls. 1 he modem rug*
promptly attended to, at the *ign of the red
madein Berlin with plain centers and
bool, eaat aide Main St.
rich borders are really carpets all in one
TACGB OSML'N, Liveryman, bam near Wol­ niece, large enough "to cover the room.
tz cotl House. Find da** turnout* at reason­ The measure and shape of the room are
able rate*. Special rates to commercial men.
Funeral and wedine partita furnished with car taken, and the rug can be woven to or­
der. fitting the floor in every part. As
riagea on abort notice.
1ms alreu«K’ been said. ex|&gt;erienced deal­
RAUN BROS., Sboemsker Special atten­
tion given to fine nnd aewed boot*. also ers advise people who move about from
house to house, and whose small means
repairing. All manufactured work made from
beat of stock and warranted. First door south will not buy valuable mgs. to have car-’
Boise’s hardware.
Cts of good quality made up as rugs,
Hoad of buyinglhe .cheap nigs now in
ELLOGG &amp; BELL, proprietor* Planlnr
Mill. Planing and Matching, Resawing the market. ’
For handsome rooms the Wilton car­
pets remain in great favor, both the
English and American Wiltons giving
•
pHAS. W. DEMARAY, Dealer In Watchea, excellent service, and their designs be­
Clock*, fine Jewelry and Silverware. Being ing of the best. Tho moresque Wilton
designs are very effective, being woven
in a new way that twists the yarn, and
gives the appearance of chenille. This
ONAH B. RASET, Express and Draj
moresque effect is also seen in the stand­
Good* and Baggage carried to any nil
ard body Brussels carpets, and those
hiree all the line low colors and Eastern
IRAM R. DICKINSON, ra*nuf*cturcr of designs shown in the Wiltons. Axminand dealer in Hard Wood Lumber. BuUd- sters. eto.; these are $2.50 a yard. For
ing Materialaa^eclaltv. C**hoald for log*. Mill
and yard on Sherman fit., at M- C. R.R. croaaln'g. much leas money there are also body
Brussels carpets of excellent coloring,
TAMES FLEMING, practical Jeweler and but not of the newest designs; these are
U Watch-maker. Clock., Watcher Silver and in fine Bokhara patterns, with grounds
ofJeep red or other c(ja*tc dark color.
For hall and stair carpet-, Pompeiian
red and terra-cotta grounds are chosen
Z"\RNO STRONG.pUin.
of solid color with a border, or else with
V The bcit faclituee f
diamond lines of block on rod, nnd also
In the intricate Oriental rug designs.
The’ pattern for the stair carpet matches
that of the hall, and very soft padding
is used beneath this to protect toe car­
■yyOIAOTT HOUSE,
pet &lt;m the edges of the steps, and to‘
IMnwI*vllle &gt;flohlgan,
make it pleasantly soft to toe tread.
•
A. S. Foote. Proprietor.
I hc tapestry Brussels come in many of
the designs chosen for the finest ttvefrttme body Brussels. These carpets
Itlng better aeshould be put on rooms that are little
used, such as spare chambers, or the
parlors that are dosed half the year, as
they soon show hard usage. The sim­
ASHVIEEE noi
ple ingrain carpets come in the dainty
.•olors and line designs of the most ex',
I. M. Furr k Hox,
fenrive carpels, and are provided with
borders of solid deep colors.—Harper't
Basiar.
’

I of Taur.da. which

sornw valuable

i health of to:
itar Mara loads*

HL Accordingly she prepared for a
shopping campmt.. and invited a young
gentleman who knew tho ropes to ac­
company her.
IV. This young gentleman went to a
friend m too shawl line and said unto
him: "I’m going to bring Mrs.-----here to-morrow to buy a camel’s-halr
shawl. Nhe won’t think it a good one
unless it costa her a good deal of money.
You understand?”
V. The "salesman said he did, and
went to the head of his firm, and said:
“There’aa lady coming here to buy a
camel’s-hair shawl to-morrow, and J
think I can sell her one dt a high price,
because she is’ a parvenue, and won’t
appreciate it otherwise. How much ot
a margin can 1 work on, because I want
to make something .for myself?”
“Well,” said the boss, "it’s a *600
shawl; anything you can get above
$650 you can have.”
VI ’ Next day, when Mrs. —- called,
toe salesman showed her the shawl.
••What is the price?”
Tho lady’s
companion winked at the salesman and
noiselessly pointed to the roof, as if to
say, “put it on steep;” but the young
salesman was afraid she wouldn't stand
the pressure, aud he replied, huskily:
“Seven hundred and filly dollars!”
•*Is that the best you have?” ‘‘The
very best, madam.”
“Well, I will
speak to my husband about it.” “You
infernal idiot,” hissed her escort to the
salesmun ns they went out, “you didn't
ask her enough!”
VII. When the lady went home nnd
told her, husband, he said: “My dear.
Aid. ------- 's wife has one she paid $1,000
for at------- ’s. I guess you had better
go there.” “Well, I will, to-morrow,
only I did like the pattern of the one I
saw to-day.”
VIII. Next day the lady called at the
otherstore and encountered a salesman
of a more Napoleonic character. “This
shawl at $1*50,” ho said, “ is about the
best we have—you see. it isn’t exactly
the scaAon.” • • I saw one at------ ’s yes­
terday thnt I liked very much, but it
was only $750, so it couldn't have been
good. I want a real good one.” The
sympathizing salesman drew her out
for a few moments, and then reflected
that they had one shawl left that they
were going to send up to Mrs. Vander­
bilt, and perhaps it had not yet left the
store. So be dispatched a trusty mes­
senger to get it.
La. The trusty messenger sped down­
stairs aud over to the rival establish­
ment and got the shawl, and the sales­
man asked the lady $1,100 for it. anti
she tbok it at once, saying that the pat­
tern was very much like the one she
had seen the day belore, but any one
could see it was a much superior ar­
ticle. And the salesman modestly re­
plied that it was evident that she was a
judge of camel’s-hair shawls.
X. But the other salesman is mad!—
N. Y. World._____
________
The Tile Fish?

Hashville directory.
L

C

I

W

S
P

(

B

K

J

H

ATMJBCN BOUSE,

DAVM a

I

A new fish was discovered about,
three years ago by the United States
Fish Commissioners in one of the dredg­
ing expeditions off No Man’s l&gt;and. a
small island in the Atlantic Ocean
south of Martha's Vineyard, and was by
them named the tile fish. Its scientific
name is I^jiholatUus chanicrleontictpt.
This fish is the one that created so
much excitement and discussion three
! or four months ago, when incoming
I sailing vessels anti smacks reported
I having sailed through miles and miles
: of them floating dead upon the water.
It has been suggested that ibey were
killed by some subterranean disturb­
ance, as they are a very deep-sea fish,
and are usually taken in from 150
to 20U fathoms of water. Thej- are
caught by the use of scrawl lines,
which arc long lines, sometimes more
than a half mile long, armed with from
500 to 1,000 hooks, each one of which
is baited, and then, being hetarily
weighted, is let out at its full length
and lied to floats. The lines arc not
disturbed for four or five hours, am|aro
then hauled in. and if it is a good day
for tile the fishermen will capture about
400, averaging about ten pounds. Tho
meat of the tile is very hard and rather
coarse, and in flavor is more like had­
dock than' anything else.
It is firm
and flake* off in scales like the had­
dock. The fish in form resembles the
blackfish, and is marked in a verv pe­
culiar manner by what is called" the
"neuchal crest,” a small bard fin over
the head directly back of the eye, whiph
in texture resembles tho adipose fin
found near the tail on the back ot the
salmon.
The tile fish has only ap­
peared occasionally in this market, and
the first specimen of tile kind was pre­
pared anti cooked at the Windsor Ho­
tel, and critically eaten by toe officers
of the Ichthyophagous Club, who pro­
nounced it “only fair, closely resem­
bling the haddock.” It is the opinion
of Professor Baird that, with boats
properly equipped, the tile can be
caught off our coast in quantities equal
to the cod, and that it would constitute
a cheap, good, wholesome article of
food, and could be sold at a price njt
to exceed eight MnU a pound.— .V. -K
Evening Post.

—The way they spend Supday in
Tombstone, Arizona, is indicated by an
announcement in the leading paper of
that place, to the effect that "On ac­
count of the fire, there will be no big
pool at the keno game Snnday night,
but Ike has received a fine lot of Jew­
elry. and will give away with his pool
at 9 o’clock a fine gent’s vest chain,
value 810, and at 10 o’clock a lady’s
neck chain, value 810. free to all play­
ers at that time.”

—They have kept track of 400 Vas­
—Humboldt told Sir John Bawrio ' sar College girls who have married off
Uiat all the dahlias of Europe were th
in the last fifteen years, and thirty of
desdendaala of a few seeds be had gatk
them are reported to have married
ered in Mexico aud sent in a letter U
husbands worth over *2.000 each.
La&lt;ly Holland.
Nevertheless it is a great comfort for a
man to return from his work and have
hi* little wife meet him at the gale in four
language® and a landscape.—Surru*
wnual
•*iutBtg» Hvre.1. . ■

caused by a very minute insect
—ft is not generally known that a fe*
sprigs of cedar “bush mixed with hay or
parishioner*.
any kind of litter for hen*’ Ttest*. will Billion* Fever*. Ti»e
keep them entirely free from lien-lice.
till* medicine known and
of his departure for £tir..;,e. lh- is now
—Cotswold sheep have large, hand­
more than seventy years of afh. and
some frame*, well covered w.th flesh,
hopes to preaeh utitirhe i» seventy-lite,
and a great propen-ity to latten. Their that tbe'Clill!* do not return even wi^v
i—Socrutr*.
Aristotle.
Gnostunsm.
mutton is apt to bo rather coarse
table preparation. Price, -6
Platonism. Christian Mv«ticlmn. Pbilo- grained.
pcr'botlle. Two dots* will
upby of the Bagavad ftita and Fichte's
—Sorrel generally finds its war into
works, are the subjects of some of the
SHILOH’ 8 CONSUMPTION CURE.
fields which have h thin or poor soil,
lecture* to’be delivered before the Cotv­
ami one of the best remedies is to enrich
cord school of philo-qphy-nest summer.
the soil with manure, and a small por­
—Iu the great work of foreign mis-, tion of lime is often useful.
■ions, the Moravian Church is the pio .
—To insure paste,from molding put
neer of the Protestant churches. It
•cut its first nii-«icn'aries to St. Thomas Into it a proportion of alum and rosin. Ivlin the hlrtory of midk-ne. Bluer it* first
A few drops of any essential oij will dbeeterj- it b*» been *»Won »guarnlee, mums
in the West Indies, m 1722. The 150th
preserve leather from mold, and a which no other medicine can *tand. if ym
anniversary of this event is »•&gt; be cele­
.‘single clove put into a bottle of ink will have *’Cough ye cart»e»tly 3*k yimtotrf it. Price lOctB, fiOcta, and
If your lung* are
brated on Augu*t 21.
have the same effect upon it.
•ore, Ch&lt;*t, OT Hack Lame, and Shiloh'*
—A Sunday-closing movement ha—The character of the food will affect Porouj. Phuner. Sold by F. T. Boi*e.
been
started in Russia under th»
ANSWER
TRIS
QUESTION.
the
quality
of
the
-manure
even
more
auspices of Archdeacon Bogovav’.ensky.
Wby do *o many people we see around "u*,
,Mo&gt;t of the clerks in St- Petersburg than the character of the animal. A
diet of com fodder and straw, for in­ reera to prefer to auffer-and te made mlaerabta
have signeii a petition to the Empttro*
stance, can yield only a poor manure, by iixligeBUou.conaUpatlou, dlzztae*-*, lota df
a king him to enforce a cessation of all
appetite, corainx up of the Food, yellow akin,
because these foods contain very little when for TScta, we wHl(*eH them Shiloh'* Vitamefcantile business on Sunday.
.
ilzcr, guarantee! to cure them. Sold byF. T.
--The new French version of the nitrogen' or phosphates.
—To prevent choking, break an egg Boutz.
Bible, by Prof. Segond.' has attained a
SHILOH'S CATEARRH REMEDY, A marinto a cup and give it to the person velour cure for Catarrh. Dit'iithivia, Cauker
great success, ami sweopy of the New
Testament a’ three-half pence has been choking to swallow. The white of the mouth, au&lt;l Head Aebe. With carb txrttle
here
is an iuccnlous na*al injector for Uia
S
seems
to
catch
around
toe
obstacle
published, of which 100.000 were s*»ld
remove it. If one egg does not an­ more eucccufal treatment of there complaint*
of the first edition. Of the second SO,swer the purpose,. Uy another. The without extra charge. Price 50ct*. Bold by
000 copies were sold in three weeks.
F- T.Botez.
.
—A flood o: manuscripts has iiefln white is all thrtt.is necessary.
—The outlook for Western cattle
A Vegetable Product,
pouring into Rome in response to an
growers
is
reported
as
exceedingly
Only used In Aykb'h Auuk Curb, has
offer of four flpld medals as prizes for
the besteulotrium upon Leo XIH. They- flattering. The average lo*a of cattle proven it-scIT a never failing and rapid
cure for every foim of Malarfid Dis­
were reduced by selection to seven for during the winter was four per cent
against
nine
i&gt;er
cent,
last
year,
nnd
the
order,
Fever and Ague, or Chills and
final decision. Two of the winners are
condition of cattle is .twenty per cent, Fever. No Injury follows its use, and
American, and not one Italian. The
It rouses
Pope has. however., rewanled all with better than usual Grass is more for­ Vs effects arc permanentward, especially in the southwest. The tlftssystcm to a condition of vigorous
the decoration of hi» benediction.
shipments will" be ten per cent, moi e health, cleanses the bloo^ of malarial
—The American Baptist missionaries
than last year. Prices average 84.25 poison, aud imparts a feelhlg of com­
speak well of the Telugu converts. In
fort and security most desirable In
a recent letter one of these missi&lt;»nari«« per head more than last year. There is Ague districts. It is an excellent tonic
says: “Threeyears have parsed since no disease anywhere.
and preventative, as well as cure, of
—It is said that an acre of wheat will all complaints peculiar to malarious,
then—years of’ persecution and trial to
a great" many of the new converts nnd.-, sustain three and a half individuals !&lt;K inarsliy and miasmatic regions. The
of riPmg the chaff from the wheat. I“ a year. Au acre of potatoes will *. -tji'.u great superiority of Arm's Ague Cure
ten personsfor a year. In Ireland toe over any other coui|&gt;ound Is tout It
Some chaff has been blown out. but
only enough to show the genuineness of introduction of the potato has lH&gt;en fol­ contain* no Quinine, Arsenic, or min­
what remains. Nowhere are there any lowed by a decline of every Irish in­ eral; consequently It produces no
indications of a collapse, uulessit is in dustry excepting agriculture.. The small quinism or injurious effects whatever
the interest of friends at home. During amount of labor required for obtaining upon the constitution'. Those cured
sustenance from the potato is taken as by It are left as healthy as If they had
the l-.ist year 2.757 were baptized, nn I
about l,8&lt;)0u/ far th s year—a number the measure of necessary labor, and the never had the disease.
The direct action of A Yen’s Ague
which will probably reach 2.0kJ before time gained is profitably spent in de­
Cure upon the Liver and Digestive
the end of the year, and perhaps more veloping other industries, but is apt to
Organs makes it a superior remedy
than that
In fact, there is no one who be passed in idleness. Il is so the world for Liver Complaints, producing many
can tell what might not b-- done if the over, where the earth yields of its remarkable cures, where other medi­
missionary force were what it ought ’o abundance almost without toil.
cines have fhklcsl.
be in this field. 1 have baptized with
For sale by *11 druggists. ’
my own hands convert* who have cow !
fnsccts on Garden Vegetables.
from villages nim-ty to one hundred j
In some localities one or more of the
miles distant, and who came all tha:
distance on foot, through mini nnd rain, cabbage wohns is still troublesome.
entirely at their own expense, mer-ly Th.- m&lt;At common of these are the
medium sized butfor the sake of being baptized. Ont of caterpillars of
two hundred candidates for baptism t»T ;«•*. the wings of which are white,
there are seldom more than ten from tfBy with a few black *puts; there arc threa
one village, often only one or two; ami distinct ^ cii-s. but all are similar jn
thev tell of great number* at home wito tlio.r aalw. Wherever these butterflies
are believing, but who cannot come so arc ^?n anting about over the cabbage
Is Recommended by PhysIclRnjJ
and c.-vtnnower plants, trouble from
tar.”
••worms" may. soon be expected.
Safety consists in attacking them early.
Wominuf»«tur* and *ell it vlth* pngithfO
3bme worms eat into the forming hertd.
guarantee that It will cure any
She was nothing but a baby, a little and when thev have thus hidden noth­
case, *nd wo will forfeit the above amount
quaint old-fashioned thing, with tumbled ing can be done. In small gardens
locks of sunny hair and deep suulftj hand picking will answer, but where
blue eyes that were always full of clouds there ure many cabbages this is not
&lt;ll*t realug di»ea»e, uk yourDrugtin for ILaad
or sunshine, one following the other in practicable. The Persian Insect Powaccxrr vo imitatiov ob svasitTura If bo
rapid succession. Only a baby, toddling dcr. t he Pyrethrum, is the best, and a safe
hu not got It, tend to u« and wo wUl forward
about after her weary mother, falling application. There arc in some locali­
tomediately. Price, 75 cr at* per bolt!*.
down and hurting beraelf a dozen times
F. J. CHENEY A CO., Toledo. Ohio.
ties cabbage worms which come from
a day, and going just as often to hold
other butterflies, but they are to be
up a sweet flower-fair face all wet and treated in the same manner. Tho large
dewy, with the lisped request: “Please,
gie n &lt; aterpillor, of the five-spotted
mamma, wipe my tears!” or to other sphinx, known as the “ tomato worm.”
members of the ffflnily in a more dicta­
is m &gt;st destructive; it will soon leave
torial andpereznjlory voice: "Wipe my
tears!” Either
could not or would n'thing but bare stem* upon a tomato
plant, eating the green fruit as well as
not make any attempt al brushing away
tie- leaves.
When ^fhe tomatoes are
the tears of sors^'v herself, and some­
supported by some kind of a trellis, as
times we laughed to see tho. shut eyes
they always should be in a garden.
nnd tightly drawn features, bathed in a
wonn« may be detected by the quanti­
liquid shower; sometimes there was a ty ol large pel^ta of droppings’found'
TRADE
pitiful accent in that Irttlo household
upou the gro»«d. Where these are
wail that made our hearts ache, but oftseen the worm should be sougiit for.
cner we talked nonsense as wo wiped
Stems without leaves also indicate its
away toe pretty drops from tho long
itresence. When not eating it will bo
curled lashes, the dainty cheeks, tho
ound close to the stems, on their un­
small, quivering chin, and we drew gay
der sale, ami as it is of nearly the same
pictures of the baby going about with
Tenr-bo'ttles hung around her neck, and colorrmay esca)ie notice. The worms are
never very numerous, and hand-picking
crooned her to sleep with an idle repeis the best way to deal with them. 1q
jitioi^of Tennyson:
spite of the horn at the tail end they
••Tear*. Mie tears I know not vrhnt they
cim neither sting xuir^bite. Frequently
mean."
niLOWN’S IRON BITTKRS aro
And we wondered among ourselves one of these will be found with [ts"body*
n certain .cure for all dlsCASWJ
what she would do as s|ie grew older nearly covered with small egg-shaped
requiring a complete tonic; espe­
white
cocoons,
often
mistakenfor
egg*.
ami learned to know real sorrow, and
cially Indigestion, I)yspepsia,Intcrif there would always be some dear one Worms with these should not be de­
niittent Fevers, Want of Appetite,
near to wipe away’the ready tears as stroyed, as they ure too weak to do
Ikmw of Strength. Lack of Energy,
much
damage
and
tire
parasitic
iusecEt
there was now.
'
etc. Enriches the blood, strength­
should have time to leave these cocoons,
ens tho muscles, and gives now
We bad never thought of Him, and as they are our friends and should be
life to tho nerves. Acts like a.
The tomato-worm may
she was still only a baby, a sweet, win­ encouraged.
charm on the digestive organs,,
some little thing that we thought wo sometimes bo found on potatoes.—
removing all dyspeptic symptoms^
had safe in our hearts under lock nnd ican AqriaiUurisL
such as tasting the food. Belching.
key, wito love for the keeper, when all
• Heat in the Stomach, Heartburn,
at once her tears were dried and ours
Neater Farm Houses.
etc. The only Iron I’reparatiwn
began to flow, for we all stood beside
that will not blacken the teeth or
It, Is the general complaint that when
her, and she knew us not, was insensi­
give headache. Sold by nil Drug­
ble to her mother’s voice, to tears and a man sells his form be never gets pay
gists at $1.00 a boule.
prayers. There was a short, sharp for the improvements. It is generally
BROWN CHEMICAL
struggle with the destroyer, hours of the case when a man buys a farm he
•
Baltimore, Md.
insensibility even to pain," and then for wants iuch improvements neat, appro­
Nearly all farm
a moment the baby woke and knew us, priate and useful.
and as she feit the’ last pangs of disso­ houses are built without regard to ar­
BEWARE OF IMITATI0H8.
lution. her dear little face knotted and tistic ta.ste.or the least aim at modern
seamed with the deadly pain, she put improvements. They may be large, but
one tiny, trembling hand up to her incouvefiTent, ungainly, low stones and
mother and said in a whisper, the old. probably located in just the wrong
quaint words: “W-i-p-e m-v t-e-a-r-s." place. "No wonders man of refinement
Then a sweet glad smile followed, and never t&amp;kos into consideration the cost
she was gone where there shall be no of such a house. It is reallv of no value.
more death, neither sorrow nor crying, A small, neat cottage, built with taste
and God shall wipe away all tears ’from and judgment, well painted, suitably lo­
cated for aesthetic taste, and surrounded
their eyes.—Detroit Free Prtst.
bv a few chosen evergreen trees, instead
— It is said that toe fifteen dynamite oi its never being paid for, it will aid
manufactories now under toe control ot more than double its cost in selling the
M. Noble (the man who introduced farm. In building a second house farm­
nitro-^l.vcerine in its varied forms into ers generally build too large, without
public u*e) turn out about 5.000 ton* a the convenient arrangements which
year. In this country and in Europe it modern science has invented. A small
is estimated that the ‘production of cx- house, with more architectural taste and
every thing clean, cozy and comfortabh*. the owner will stand ten chances of
and tills quantity fans the eneijjyof at aeUing at a profit, than where the house
lea-t 45,000 tons or ordinary gun- is a large, unpainted, shambling con­
cern. with dilapidated out-houses and

HALL’S

flatarrhPure

sioo gBanuMi

IRON

BITTERS

I.OOO'.OtfO'A-

—Scientists now -concede that parts t
Df Kauras, the adjainingMtates of Mis- '

�SELLS GOODS EXCEEDINGLY LOW

=====
PERSONAL AND POLITICAL.
Tbs following Congressional nominations

Fifth Dlrtrict; L. B. Hapri*;Nineteenth, Ezra

on Credentials preswntexl thtrfr

Maryland, Maasachuaetta, Michigan, Minne­
sota. Missouri, Mississippi, Nebraska. New
Fort Robinson, slating that Red Cloud had
given the Indian Department sixty days in

him by force at the eypiratlon of that period
tf his demaud were not heeded.
Thb report of the Commissioner of the Gen­
eral Land Office shows that, during the fiscal

ca-h 3,6»,¥JO acre* of agricultural land*, 37,­
04 acres e! mineral lands, 166,515 acre* of
desert land* and 7,194 acre* of coal land*.
Under the Homestead law7,347,729 acre* were
entered.
•
.
Hoc* were selling in th© Chicago markets
on the 23tb at &gt;9.10(19.15 per hundred
pounds—the highest figure for more than a
Alzxaxder Juuax recently killed himself
at Shelbyville, Ky., be&lt;iaase of bls defeat for
Sheriff at the recent election.
The following &gt;eraons were hanged on the
25th: Robert
Aiken, a C/; Will­

. and James
Redden, al N
boardelon the 25xh by about one hundred
persons, and two colored prisoners on their
way to trial for murder were riddled with
bullets.
Gexeral Haxen stated on tbe 25th that
tbe Post-office Department would turn Into
tbe Treasury a surplus' of &gt;l,OOU,ODO for the

There were five eases of yellow fever at
Point Isabel. Tex., on the 25th, and the Rio
Grande was guarded for sixty miles. Fiftytwo new cases and four deaths were reported
Kt Brownsville, and five deaths occurred at1
Matamoras.
Heavy rains on the 25th Inundated tbe
towns of Ban Angelas and Benficklin, In
Texas, washing away houses, hotels and
stores. The Iom was estimated to run up -in
the thousands. . No loss of life was reported.
Tbe people all fled to tbe adjoining bills,
awaiting the subsidence of the water.
The recent killing of Colonel L. W. R.
Haile, was followed on the 25tb by the suicide
of the Colonel's daughter.
The professional sculling contest at SoratoLee, of Newark; Chirk? E. Courtney * clow
aecond, and Wallace Rom a bad third.
There were fifty-three new caoes and four
deaths from yellow fever at Brownsville, Tex.,
on tbe 26th.
A Washixgtox dispatch of the 27th state*
that tbe number of 1 inmigrants who arrived
in tbe Unitod Stales during the month of
July was 65,010: same month last year, 56,607.
The Free-Thinkers, in convention al Watkina, N. Y., on tbe 27th, formulate l a series
f of resolutions denunciatory of ecclesiastical
po*er, lauded tbe march of liberalism, as­
serted that woman’s degradation was a re­
sult of Christianity, indorsed the rights of
labor, and petitioned for help to erect a Lib­
eral Orphans* Home.
Rronxo occurred at Augusta, Me., on the
36th when the Deputy Sheriff attempted to
seize sixty-two cases of beer illegally
brought into the State by an express com­
pany, and addressed to ■ fictitious parties.
■Bricks and stqfcs were thrown at the tearnBiers engaged to carry off the baer, and many
persons were hurt.
It was snnounced on tbe 30tb that tbe
Treasury Department at Washington, with an
appropriation of &gt;50,000, would establish at
the chief Atlantic seaparu quarantine sta­
tions for imported cattle.
Edward N. Welch, a traveling salesman
for a Boston fish-house, was arrested on the
26th, at McDonough, N*.
on suspicion of
being tbe perpetrator of tbe daring bank rob-

found about &gt;4.000. He was seen in the
■vicinity of Kewanee at the: time of the raid.
The Hocking Valley Manufacturing Com­
pany’s agricultural works at Lancaster, O.,
were destroyed by fire on tbe 27th, causing a
loss
&gt;133,000.
A Sax Antonio (Texas) dispvUch of tbe
36th states that forty-nine Uvea were lost by
the recent overflow of the Concho River at
Ben Flcklln. At Concho twenty-seven resi-

banks some City or sixty Mexican bouses
-were destroyed. At Dublin the Cosque River
waa a mile wide and several houses had been
■ The strike at tbe Harmony Milla at Cohoes,
N. Y., was ended on the 28th, and three
-thousand looms were in operation.
Martha and Flora Crosleyand Minnis Ped­
dick. age.1 respectlvelv fourteen, eleven and
twelve years, were drowned in the Juniata
River, near Huntingdon, Pa., on tbe 28th.
Thirteen Indian* who were engaged in the
recent rebellion in tbe Creek Nation, Indian
Territory, were given a formal trial at Kane
Hill on tbe 38th, found guilty, and punlahed
with one hundred lashescachon the bare back.

eight death* Mere reported at Brownsville,*
letined at Pensacola. Fla.
Returns from twenty-six of the principal
Clearing Houses in tbe United States for the

The report wm adopted. with * rvcommendn-

Congreaa; that In all other cases each delegate
is entitled to one vote.
Committees on Permanent Organisation and
Resolutions were then appointed.
ncntly organized by too election of tho foilow­
ing officers:
’ IVi-i nSiU'UL''-- HVVV.MM
—■
chusotU: Alabama. J. T. Tanner; Arkansan,

Whiting: Kentucky, Rev. A. J- Jutkins;
Missouri, Mr*. Rebecca Hazzard: Minnesota,
John Thrall: Mississippi. «. O, Middleton;
Maine. N. F- Wocxlbury; Indiana, WlUiam
Daniels: Michigan, Rev. A. A. Kanafen:
Nebraska, John B. Finch:
New Jer­
sey, H. H. Bartram; New York. J. Stanton:
Ohio. Mother Stewart: Pennsylvania, Mra Mat­
tie McClellan Brown; South Carolina, Mra. K.
F. Chapin; Tennessee, a R. McKinney; Wlaconsin. Nelson Gill: Indiana. M. Irwin: at large.
Miss Prances E. Willard. George W. Bain. GU-

Phillipa, 8. N. Wood, John Davis and Allen
Williams (colored). The platform adopted
opposes railroad, telegraph and moneyed
monopolies; denounces the National-Banking
system; favors the Issuance by the Govern­
ment of legal-tender currency, and keeping
iu volume unityrm with business and popuJatlou, and favors tbe enforcement of all laws
upon the statute-books in reference to pro­
hibition.
’
♦
The Democrats of West Virginia have re­
nominated Judge C. P. Snyder for the Su­
preme Court ot Appeals.
The following dbngiessloual nominations

Second -District, J. H. Reagan, renominated;
Recording Secretaries —Mary T. Lathrop,
Tenth. John Hancock; Kentucky, Third,
Mary A. Woodbridgo.
Reading Secretary—W. H. IL Bartram.
John E. Halsell; Missouri, Second, A. M.
Mr. Kanouse, on taking tho chair, made a Alexander; Fourteenth, L. H. Davis, renomi­
speech In which he alluded to the necessity of nated. Republican—Alabama, Fourth, George
leaving tbe old parties and going to the new H. Craig, full term; John W. Jones (colored)
National Prohibition party. Here all united vacancy; Mississippi, Second, IL &amp; Carter
in a common opposition to the liquor traffic in
(colored).
•yery shape.
Timothy Bailey, a soldier in the War ot
A Committee on Plan of Work was appointed,
consisting of Mcaara Nelson, of Illinois; Pat­ 1812, aud the inventor ot the knitting-ma­
ton, of Pennsylvania; Hayes, of Tennessee: chine, died at Ballston Bps, N. Y. on the 25lb.
Thompson, of Ohio; Finch, of Nebraska, andJudge Lawrence, First Comptroller of tbe
Miss Frances E. Willard, of Illinois.
Treasury, on tbe 25th received a letter from
Adjourned to the 24th.
Mrs. Garfield, stating that she had no objec­
tions to the proposed purchase by tbe Ohio
Theconventlon reassembled tn Farwell Hall Republican Association of the former resi­
on the morning of the 2tth. Rev. Mr. Cole, of dence of General Garfield.
Wisconsin, offered prayer.
The seven hundred delegates in attendance
A telegram was received from tho KnlghU
of Temperance of Atlanta. Gt, sending greet­ at tbe Free-thinkers' Convention at Watkins,
N. Y.,' on the 25th unanimously welcomed
ings to the convention.
The Committee on Credentials reported sev­ Herbert Spencer to America and lauded hla
eral additional delegates, who were given services in the cause of liberalism
In response to a call Issued by Bishop |
The call at State*, begun on the previous .Escher, of Chicago, Bishop Thomas Bowman,
day. aa to th© condition of affairs tn the sever* of Allentown, Pa., and other reverend gen­
al State*, was resumed, delegates making five- tlemen, for a meeting of German-American
minute speeches.
citizens who favored the spread of temper­
Resolutions, embodying a platform of princi­ ance ideas and the enactment of legislation
ples. After considerable debate on the wom­ to abolish the evils of the liquor business,
an suffrage plank and the adoption of some about one hundred German citizens assem­
amendments offered toother portions of the bled in Chicago on the 25th and sdopted a
platform, the report u amended was adopted. constitution, tbe title of tbe association be­
As finally agreed to the resolutions read as foling “Tbe Geanau National Association
for the
Promotion
of Temperance,"
Platform of the Prohibition Home Protec­ and its .chief object being to. promote
tion party:
All queations not of a National character be­ the temperance cause among German-Anierilong to the party within the several States and cans. A resolution was adopted pledging the
Territories tn define Its views, policy and ac­ aAsociallon to support all legal enactments In
tion respecting them.not inconsistent with tbe
favor of prohibition, and an Executive ComNational platform.
We declare In favor of the following Nation­ .mlttee of nine members was appointed, whose
al principles and measum to lx? incorporated constitutional duties are to attend to tbe pub­
in t o National Constitution and Aforced by
lication of temperance matter in the German
Cungrera and tbe Government. . uH
.
1. The prohibition, tm public crimes, of tbe language; make arrangements for public lect­
Importation, exportation, manufacture, rale ures; found branch associations, and to make
and supply of nil alcoholic bcvcrcgca.
£. The prohibition of all taxation, license, u*e of all other means for promoting the ob­
regulation, or legal sanction in any form, of ject of the association to tbe best of their
these or any other public Crimea.
X The civil and political equality nnd err ability.
franehiacment of woman. This question. *c
The following Congressional nominations
far as It concern* the States severally. Is re­ were made on the 96th: Republican—Michi­
mitted to tho party in those Stales.
gan, Second District. John K. Boies. Demo­
4. The abolition of polygamy.
,
A The abolition of Executive, Judicial nnd
cratic—Virginia, First, George T. Gsrri»on,
Legislative patromure. and election of ail offi­ renominated. Greenback—Louisiana, Second,
cers by the people so far at practicable, and
William H. filer.
civti-Aervic" reform in other appointments.
C. The abolition of ainecure* and unncceeAt Washington on the 26th Dra. Bits* and '
sary office*.
.
Rcyburn filed their claims for medic*' at- '
7. The universal and enforced education of
tendance during President Garfield's illness.
the youth of the Nutioo, wuh ample provision
for tbe support of an adequate nnd efficient
Bliss values hl* services at &gt;25,(XK). and Hey­
system of free public schools in all tbe States
burn demand* &gt;s,ouo.
and Territories.
8. Tho preservation of the public lands for
Ox the 26tb the Democrats of Connecticut
borne* of the people, nnd their division In lim­ issued a call for a State Convention to be held
ited portion* to actual settlers only.
®. The abolition of all monopolies, class leg­ nt Hartford, October 4.
islation and special privileges from Govern­
Dr. Hicks publicly stated on the 26th that
ment Injurious to the equal rights of rttlzena.
10, The control of railroad and other corpo- Guiteau'a skeleton would not be placed on
'public exiosition, and he denied tbe allega­
tect tho interest* ot labor tied commerce.
tions llut he bad intrusted the assassin's
Tbe fallowing resolution was subsequently bones to the carfof the United States Medi­
offered by a colored delegate from ’he South, cal Museum. Caterer* to public amusement*
who ably and successfully advocated its
were also iufurmed that tbe skelctonic curios^
adoption:
Reeved. That we declare, unequivocally,
The following Congressional nominations
against proscription and persecution on ac­
count of color, and demand full and exact
were nude on the 38th: Greenback—Illinois,
-civil and political equality for all American
Eleventh (.District, Rev. Richard Haney;
citizens.
The Committee on the Work nmong ths Michigan, Second, Albert J. Baker. DemoFreedmen reported that the work tn thf South ocratic—Arkansas, Fourth, Samuel W. Peel;
Pennsylvania, Twelfth, D. W. Connolly.
gToc* ought to be educated to a sense of their
In the Star-route trial at Washington on
responsibilities. Furthermore, Uic committee
tbe 2Stb Mr. Merrick closed bis argument for
the prosecution, and Mr. Wilson commenced
the Government to make proper provision for his argument for the defense.
the educationofthe negro. The resolutions
A Washington'dispatch of the 28th says
also called for thoestablishment Of free indus­
trial school* and the support of such schools General W. T. Sherman TflUl Kked to br
placed on the retired list in November, 1883.
already existing in the South.
purpose of constituting a National Committee,
with tbe following result:

Kansas—Mra.' K. Whiting'‘ Lorenzo WestVW.
JMarytend—William Daniel, James Bilver*

Hove

Miller, Charles.

A.

Minnesota— Res•. W. V. Sutterlee, L. Nison.
Mississippi—G. G. Middle ton. Judg.. Watwm
Maine—N. F. Woodbury, W. g; Eustis*.
Missouri—M. W. Watson, J- C. Flowers.
New Jersey-E. Hunt. W. B. Bartram.
New York—T. J. BlseeU. J. O. Hazleton.
Ohio—(LT. Stewart, Mrs.M. A. Woodbridge.

dine in trading.
from Toledo to Grand Rapids, 0., on tbe narrow-MUge ro«d. On the return trip a half'
dozen desperadoes went through the coaches
with ■ tiekrd re rollers aud stripped everybody
of valuables. One citizen of Toledo gave up
Aeveaty-five dollars, and another was relieved
ot his money «m tbe platform and thrown off

Cutis, renominated; Michigan. Eighth, Ros.well G. Horr, renominated; West Virginis,
Second. Joh n W. Mason; Tenncsaee, Second,
L.C.Houk renominated. Democratic—Tcxa«,
Third, A. H- Jones; West Virginia, Firot. J. H.
Goode; Iowa, Third, T. M. Griffiths; Indiana,
Sixth, L. Benson; Minnesota, Fourth, A. A.
Ames; Ohio, Sixteenth, Berish Wilkins; Lou­
isiana, Sixth, II. S. Van Eaton. Coalition—
Virginia, Fifth, Winfield Scott. Independent
—Virginia, Fifth, William E. Sima.
The Greenbackcrs of Kansas held their
, Bute Convention st Topeka on the 34th and
nominated Charles Robinson for Governor
aud a full Bute ticket The following were

Bally Chapin.
When Iowa was called Senator Kimball said
the Iowa delrgot on could not, in justice to thf

Power vm gives the National Committee

NATIONAL PROHIBITION.

FOREIGN.
B. Wrioht &lt;fc Box, worsted spinners oi
Bradford, England, failed on the 34tii, with
liabnities of &gt;Hk),00Q.
The yellow fever I* prevalent at Port an
Prince­
Lieutenant Berry, who commanded tbe
Rodgers, and Engineer Melville, of the Jean­
nette, were received by the Otar of Rural* on
the afternoon of the 23d, and started for home
on the 34th.
Sfaix bas determined to join with Russia
and Germany in protesting against tbe |&gt;ro
lection of the Suez Canal being confided to
the British.
A Vienna dispatch of the 24th aays that,
in the town of Gross Beeskerek. Hungary,
over one hundred women were on trial upon
tbe charge of having poisoned their husband*,
am! that thirty-five Lad already been found
gudqr.
The cholera is creating great havoc at MaTHZ corporation of Limerick, Ireland, has
- unanimously voted the freedom of tbe city to
E. Dwyer Grey, of the Dublin Frvrmen’s
Jvurrutl.

land was reported on the 25th. Il was stated
that tbe assailants
stuck by the officii
A max named Ga
.
Mayo on the 34th, on a charge of havingbeen

prieu r of the Dunraren Colliery, failed on the
25tti for &gt;750,000.
, A stock-tbain on the Grand Trunk Road

wrecking nine cars and killing one hundred
head
cattle.

room for our Fall and Winter Goods we
stocxs of Clothing at prices that re­
sell.

HERE ARE BARGAINS FOR YOU!
Summer Pants for 95c—Think of It!

EGYPTIAN WAB NEWS.
.
.----------------------- -------------------A^^^“1^:^or1&amp;Vn&gt;.dwin^tr^-earuecomttinginThey are exceI-

lent ana cheap.

,'that he waa deputed by Mchenwt Kaadi, Gov- |

Examine them.

*

emor of the Soudan, to inform tbe Khedive [
:that ho and all the officers and soldiers under
Jiis command were loyal, and would not rec­
ognize Arabi Pasha. /
^hTti twenty-are ■ 01 the best quality and lowest in price. Try our
' Information Arabi Paxbz
thousand men at K&gt;fr-ei-Dwar.
a iarg« Don't buy poor eggs unless you rrefer them.
Our
number of men were constantly intrenching tells VOU W’hich arp non1
at Tel-el-Keblr, and there was little doubt
Jou
**re pOO..
thr^ktbe big fight of the war would occur
tberS The prisoners taken at Scrspeum re­
ported that many of tbe enemy’s wounded died
during tbe retreat across the desert to Telel-Keblr.
Ax Alexandria dispatch of the 25th states
that some of the leading Arab merchants of £3T. Ready pay secures for you all the advantages
Port Said and Dimletta bad contributed moo-

40c Tpa.
ecc tester

CASH PAID FOR BUTTER AND ERBS.

NE^VlCTOR SEWING MACHINE is VICTOROUS.
in trade.

dred horses. Tbe orders at Alexandria
were not to ;&gt;ermlt Turkish troops to
disembark without the signature of tbe
Military Convention and the issuance

noundng Arabi Pasha as a rebel, but the I
.Turks were unwilling to accept the latter
condition. There were rumor* tbit tbe rebel
chieftain hid set*a price on De Lessepa' head,
charging deliberate deceit. General Wolse'ley, with tbe first division of infantry, all the
cavalry and sixteen guns, attacked the enemy
near Mahalla and captured five Krupp gun*
and seventy-five car-loads of provision*.
Cablegrams of tbe 27th from'Conatantinople report the arrest of fifty persons engaged
in enlisting men ta behalf of the Khedive.
The Turkish Prime Minister on tbe 26th in­
formed Lord Dufferin that the Council of Min­
isters had resolved to publish Arabi Pasha a*
a rebel and accept tbe British Military
Convention. The attitude of tho Ruulan
representative* wa* still antagonistic to
England. The British embassy at Constan­
tinople bad received information that Russia
was making large purchases of wheat and
storing It at Kara. The Engl.*sh opened fire
with two heavy guns on Arabi’s forces on tbe
left bank of the Mabmoudieh Canal, but the
reply was feeble. A party of Bedouins ad­
vanced to within a short distance of tbe Meks
forts, but found the position untenable and
retired after considerable flring.
Ax Alexandria dispatch of the 28th states
that the man-of-war Minotaur had success­
fully shelled tbe enemy out of Mandara, on
the line between Ramleh and Aboukir. The
enemy released the surplus water behind tbe
dam and fleoded the country on both their
flanks. The cavalry and the Bedouins con­
tinued to raid the village of Mcka,
murdering
tbe
inhabitants.
Ismailia advice* say that the troops
were
continually advancing, and It would not be
long before Tel-tl-Kebir was attacked. Be­
tween Ramses and Maxama ground was good
for marching, but the canal was full of dead
horse* and tbe bodle* of Arabs. Some of tbe
latter were thrown there by their comrades,
wlhle other* were tbe corpses of men shot
while attempting to escape. Five ships with
troops from Bombay had arrived nt Suez.
An Alexandria dispatch of the ‘.'Hth an­
nounces the formation of a new Egyptian I
ministry with Cherif Pasha as Premier. It i
was reported that several staff officers had |
deserted Arabi Pasha and given General
Wolseley Important information.

LATER NEWS.

on the 28 th, In the person of James &amp; Scett, a
dentist, who made a confession Implicating

On the evening of the 28tb the Arabs under
Arabi Pasha attacked the British position at
Kassasln, and were repulsed with heavy loss.
Tbe British lost 120 men.
Alexandria dispatches of the 28th state
that Sultan Pasha bad arrived at Port Said to
Install representatives of the Khedive in the
territory occupied by the British. The Porte
insisted that tbe troops of Turkey and En­
gland should jointly operate from Alexandria.
Three and a half per cent bonds to the
amount of &gt;3,730,000 were withdrawn from
the Treasury at Washington on tbe 29th for
convrrsion into the new three per cent, bonds.
As Athens (Greece) dispatch of tbe ?9th
■ays that for tbe past two days fighting had
been In progress between the Greeks and
Turks all along tbe border from Zorbas to
De gab L Reinforcements of 1,000 men had been
dispatched from Athens. Each side claimed
that tbe other attempted to occupy disputed
territory.
The banking house of William H. Lloyd A
Co., of Philadelphia, closed Us doors on the
29th, with liabilities of &gt;150,000.
A loss of $100,000 was Incurred on the 29th
st Haverhill, Mass., by the burning of three
factories and three dwellings.
Ex-Goternor Sprague on the 29fh still
threatened dire results to trespassers on tbe
Canonchet (R. L) estate. Trustee Chaffee
had appealed to the courts.

two deaths were reported from Brownsville,
Tex., on the 29th. Tbe disease was spreading
at Pensacola, Fla.
*
,
A Madrid dispatch of the *29th states that
within twenty days there had been 573 deaths
from cholera at Yokohama, Japan, and the
death rate from thedlscase at Toklo was about
fifty dally.
The citizen* of York County, South Caroli-

---- GREAT----

Mark Down
20 patterns Mens all Wool Suits, cut in fashionable styles,
$6.50, marked down from 9.00.
25 Mens Cheviot Suits, in sack or frock at $10.00, marked
down from 14.00.
Mens fine Diagonal Dress Suits. Prince Albert cut aways,
Si 6. marked down from S2O.
One lot of Boys Suits, age 10 to 15 years, very durable
material, all Wool, S€J.5O. marked down from $9,00.
One lot odd Coats, choice, for $4.00.
100 pairs all wool Pants, $3.00, worth $5.00.

In Boots and Shoes,. Dry Goods, Groceries and Notions.
Highest price paid for Butter and Eggs,
Don’t miss this great Sale, as our prices are considered less
than material alone would cost.

WM. A. AYLSWORTH.

Boots &amp; Shoes
Our boots and shoes have arrived. The largest supply in
town. $1681 now in stock. We handle

The famous Rochester make

' And for Quality, Style, and Price they can’t be beaten any
where. When you want to buy if you don’t exam­
ine pur "stock you will miss it.

We have now on the road a larger stock of

MENS’, BOYS’. AND YOUTHS’

Will be here in two or three days.

We want your Butter and Eggs, and
will give you the Money for them.

C. W. GRANGER &amp; CO
We Are Still Here!1™ A E'ACT
NOT ONE
— THAT-----

And shall stay and continue to supply tbe
ne£dy with
■*

GROCERIES
OF A NO. 1 QUALITY.

Mcrmon mlntont rles who were operating with

The following Congreadona! nominations
were made on the 28th: Republican—Illinois,
Ninth District, Lewis E. Payson, renomina-*
ted; Wisconsin, Ninth, Itasc Stephenson;
Ohio. Seventeenth, J* T. Updegraff, renomi­
nated. , Democratic—Pennsylvania, Eighth,
Daniel Ermentrout, renominated. Greenback
noia, Tenth, W. H. Mitehell.

ventioa, etc., tho convention adjourned

of Ohio.

In order to make
ground. The heads of pig* bad been thrown !
into wells with tbe corpses of Mohammedan ; (are selling our finest
children.
|
quire
no bantering to
Major Rogers, locating engineer rtf the (
Oansdlan pacific Road, telegraphs that be ..
has discovered a favorable pas* fur carrying i
the road through the Selkirk range of British |
Columbia, which will save the company mill- ■
ions of dollar*. Tbe para is one hundred
miles north of the boundary line and directly ’i
east of Kamloops.
’
i *

Coolttion-Vlr-

FRESH EVERY DAY.
ROCK BOTTOM PRICES.

■ FROM----

The Nashvile Mill,
BUT-

The Illinois Board of Agriculture on the

ABOUT SEPT. 1, Tliey
UIIVE1SALLY SATISFIED.

the decision nf the Bute Central

a Ftate Nominating Convention to be held at

G.W. FRANCIS

JNO. M. ROE.

�3, 1*2.

VICINITY LOCALS
WEST KALAMO.

make* bualurw dull.
Mr. Crowell ha* tod 100 quart* af canned
’
It look* u

much attention around here and is visited by
day erf last week, but are credibly Informed many to obtain the water, which they consider
that a larger assembly gather oil there than has very healthful. It is called a mineral spring,
though the water has never been analysed and
simply testes like soft water.
At tbe lawn social on Friday night of last
■icaiaiK frift projects.
week al) seemed to enjoy themselves exceed­
ingly well. Oneattractive feature 6f tbe even­ Report of Secretary Garfield.
ing was’ the numerous Chinese tatters hung
About the first of August I sent one hundred
about the orchard. The receipts of the even­
postal cards in envelojies to the moat prominent
ing amounted to over &lt;20.
fruit growers in Michigan, asking them to re­

Informed that Prof. Fajr of Hunflcld,

pblltttea!
is boiling.
8. A. Shepard is ou the tick Hat.

tloo as a teacher.
Henry Smith Bring on tbe town line, while
mowing With a span of ecdta, last Saturday.WM
thrown from the scat. One pf bls limbs waa
badly cut and to was hurt with the guards. So

What means so much tog in Augu»t!

• Formers are rushing tbslr plowing for wheat.
Jtihu Mast has bought forty acres of Sec- 19Oate have mostly l&gt;*en secured in good con­ life.
He managed to *U»p the colt*. Dr.
dition.
’
Baughman was summoned, and Mr. S. ia get­
A few eompietnents of potto* rotting tn the ting along finely.
•
grounds.
..
__ ' . _

fair at Nashville.
'
School directors are busy

doing their duty.
. .

—

VaM.

turn the percentage of an average crop that the
orchards and vineyards promised for tbe crop
of 1882. with such remarks as would naturally
Tbe telephone ha* been introduced at Free- be suggested by tbe questions enclosed.

......

PRICHARDVILLE.
dow,

a*II

!

if they are
livl

move to Dakota.
Corubas matured so rapidly that farmer*
feci mure hopeful.
Wm. Jordan la buying sheep to ship to Ohio
to feed for marketThe weather is all that could be wished for
winter pancake timber.
Ira Bradley of Walton spent Sunday with
friends In thia section.
Stock buyers are plenty, and farmers are
selling off their stock.
M1M Myy-Tlech ia visiting /friends In the
southern
new better at thia time
Tbe
of yearznan at present
Op Bowen of the county line is sick with
what is pronounced diphtheria.
John Mix is reported as having the bestqualitv of fruit iu thia section.
D. A. Wells lost a horse last week by reason
of iDflamutioc of tbe bowels.
8. W. Powers is testing a sulky plow ou bls
extensive and *l»leudkl farm.
‘•Kit,’’ ria "Van,” Don’t remember such a
person, will enquire after him.
Hon. Hannon Bradley of Battle Creek was
H. C. Sanders lost a raluble dog a few days
ago by ita getting stung to death by bees.
H. J. Slocking had a runaway a few days
ago. Result, bruise and a broken carriage.
The blackberry season Is nearly dosed, and
woman in strange costumes are not ao plenty.
Annual school meeting Monday evening
neat, let all attend to this our most important
trust.
,
Talk of a temperance hall being built tn
Wert K alamo. Better have better temberance
principles
Wesley Baker with help has been up in this
section for a few days past, putting up tbe bay
on his farm.
Mrs. Albert Barn Ja has In her poses*Ion a
bible over one hundred years old. That ought
to be an old truth.
Tlseasy to tell when you|paas through
West Kalamo. by the odor ot onions which Is

James Ehret and hie two brothers bare cut,
split and laid in fence over 4,000 rails this sum­
mer, by working odd spells.
Mra. George Matteson, who, it was believed
was recovering from tier recent Hine**, is
again in a critical condition.
If persona who go to public gatherings to be
boisterous, would stay at home instead, there
would be more peace in community. ’
It la not generally known that women are
votera at all school meetings in this state,
subject only to the same qualification* as
other y.itcr».
TbeEnumeration of person* between the age
of 5 and 20 in the Matteson school district, is
taken this week, agreably to tbe school law,
Mr. Norton, who lost his house by Are last
year, has got a « and much more splendid
dwelling erected and nearly finished on the
site of the old one.
T. A. Crandall, Graves aud son, al tbe vil­
lage. are doing a thriving buslaets tn their re­
spective stores.-and the village is putting on

J. 3. Reynolds received on Saturday evening,
as a present from tbe Lyceum, a valuable
book, ar a alight token of esteem for his effleent services a. steward for the past six months.
John Ehret says he ran beat Al Mix’s wood
chuek story of last week, as be killed, re­
cently, eight targe wood chocks without any
shot, and be considers it only half a Job at
A young lady, the daughter of Job. Vance
Of this town. Is in a very sail condition, being
able to retain the food she swallows, she has
became a mere skeleton, and her recovery is
doubtful.
Election of offiMrs at the Lyceum Saturday
•swung. PrtaflbL C. G. Brundage; vice
presidents, F. O. William* and James Ebert;
Secretary, Wm. Showalter: Steward. J. J.
Reynold*.
Tbe Barnes family brought with them when
they moved into thia town several year* ago, a
Jug said to to over 300 years old. Wouldn’t
It do an old guzzler’s soul good to get even a
smell of such a jug!
Wilcox and Robert cut a treee for toes a few

held forth laid open, only about one jiouud.
and but a very small quantity of comb. Ap­
pearances indicated an old swarm, but their
store room was limited.

Plowing for wheat
Oat harvest U finished.
School closes Friday. No picnic.
.Ben Toby drives a new span of horse*.
Miss Gertrude Mowry is visiting at Raa*.
Geo. Prichard and wife went to Otsego Mon­
day.
.Some pieces of corn will do to cut in two
Mrs. White of Battle Creek, visited at Sol.
Prichard'* last week.
MIm Lillie Norris and brotbeg returned to
their home in Lacey last Saturday.
Farmers who have threshed their oat* report
that they are turning out excellent.
The father and mother of Mrs Samuel Hinch­
man are staying with her at present.
Misses Anna and Grade Mowry from Milan,
Ohio, visited at Ed. Mowry’s last week.
Blackberries have been abundant around here
and pickers from as far as Calhoun and Kala­
mazoo counties have been after the fruit.
A abort time since there was a birthday par­
ty at the residence of Samuel Hinchman, it be­
ing Mrs. H 's 41st birthday. Some very eostly
presents were given her, among which waa an
elegant gold watch, presented by her parents.
PutU

MAPLE GROVE.
Joe Shbup ha* returned from Climax.
Frank Cummins was home last week.
Wm. Harding ha* his new house completed.
Corn i* very extravagaul it is dressed Id silk.
Hollster McCartney ha* retured from Ohio.
Will and Zalla Emery fare going to Illinois
next week.
MIm Carrie Bishop of Leslie, ia visiting Mis*
Carrie McOmtor.
The Norton school is Ln session, with Mis*

Tbe Odd Fellow.’fplcuic at Tboruappk lake,
wa* a large sucres.
,
Stafford A Clarke, lawyers of Hastings, have
dissolved partnership.
Tbe Red Stockings ball club of Irving give a
dancing party this (Friday) evening.
The county board of school examiners hold a
special meeting at Hastings to-day (Friday.)
The charge of selling liquor to minors, hro’t
against the Middleville saloonist, has been
dropped. .
A valuable cow belonging to Samuel McIn­
tyre of Hasting* died from eating wheat screen­
lugs at a straw stack.
Geo. Ingram of Irving lias more peaches and
some young fellows have more discretion—all
ou account of a pistol shot in Ingram’s orchard.
Tbe dramatic clubs al Middleville, and Hast­
ing* have united, and declared their intention
to produce a play at Middleville, Hastings and
Nashville In about two week*.
A Holstein heifer eighteen months old, be­
longing to Stone A Bigg* of Rutland, had a
heifer calf, Tuesday, which weighed eighty
pounds.—Home Journal.
Mrs. O. Clark of the neighborhood north of
Lacey, went crazy tbe other day. She under­
took to kill her children am! those around tor.
We understand that she Is to to taken to the
asylum.—Tbe Banner.
Edward Hymmen of Middleville ha* the fol­
lowing in tbe Republican:
“Notice—This
it to certify that Russell Kor.e ha* been slan­
dering my wife's character. I want the public
to know that he is a contemptible liar and the
truth is not in him.” That's business.

EATON COUNTY.
The county-fair occurs October 1011, and 12.
The county board of school examiners meets
at Charlotte today.
The D. L. A N. stock yard at GrandLedge

ruwenuIH^UoB. .. Mte.

|

School ... do«a taLheDuuh.m dl.trte, 1..1
week oo .n ouul of JlphtberU.
The new M. E. church is enclosed and nearing completion a* fast as poortbie.
Geo. Potter of Chicago wa* visiting his broth-

j
Udge (&gt;
lh, ,ob)„, oI how
[ to get * liberal .opply of water bawdy tor fire
,
i jamc# jUaiker, of Delta, last week, jumped
| at and seized a valuable ram suddenly, when it

! o~Jh.EucTretalU.’ 7 ”

dropped down dead.
Mrs. Wm. Covell has l«een quite sick, Alto
The residence of Silas Wood of Roxand waa
four of the children have the measles
burned recently. Lo*s, including FJUO in cash,
A girl Instead of a toy at Charley Slade’s, a* &lt;71X1; insurance, 53(A).
mentioned In the last week’s News.
Lansing Decker of Brookfield and Norton
Rev. A. D- Newton delivered bls farewell ser Du nliar of Eaton Rapid* start* for Washing­
mon at the Norton school-house last Sunday.
ton Territory Sept. Cth, to locate.
Wm- Sutton and wife of Battle Creek, were
Mrs. T. D. Green of Charlotte lost a pocket­
at D. P- WolPa, one day last weck.-blackberry- book containing 5222 in notes aud cash, jshile
ing.
ou the excursion to Detroit Tuesday.
Tbe brick work on the new M. E. church Is
John W. Scdore of Grand Ledp-. wboj was
completed and tbe carpenter work Is being
robbed at Lansing July 15th of 5300. ba* had
pushed.
a mau and woman of that.place named Malon­
The over owt of General Grant wuld not
ey arrested for it.
make Charley Slade a vest. That is he is pa
&lt;1,530 have been pledged to liquidate the inte a fine girl.
debtedneoa of the M. E. church at Grand
James HUI Jr., had tbe misfortune to have Ledge, and the prospect* for the extinction of
130 cords of woo 1 burnt oneday last week,while
the debt were never better.
be was burning bis fallow.
Dr. I. W. Huston has left the Anderson
Mrs. P. L- Smith and Miss Carrie McOmber
House sanitarium, al *^ton Rapids, because
were baptised and taken into communion with
matters were not soconducted as to Justify
the M. E. church last Sunday.
' him In efforts to buildup a profitable business.
Farmers have come to the conclusion that j
| Al Eaton Rapid* the ladies got up a big
they will have plenty of corn fodder. Wouldn't
social for the firemen and 5100 were in this and
wonder if it got upoq its ear yet.
other way* raised to buy them a new truck—
Excitement ran high a few &lt;Aay» ago at the
all because they did so well at the tornamcnL
Center. Three threshing machines were at
Eugene Reily left John Morse *, In Oneida
work within half a mile of each other.
township, last Bunday, after workt:« for him a
Calvin Nicewauder celebrated his eighteenth few weeft, and took some of John's property
birthday one night lari week with a party.
with him. He was captured it* tod at tbe house
Refreshments were served and a good time en­
of a farmer in Needmore, Sunday night, aud is
joyed.
•
now employed by the state at Ionian.
Why is It that the countenance* of John Mc­
Geo. A. Peston lias sued the city of Char­
Intyre and Al Stewart shine like a head light
lotte for 550,000 because he can’t walk. He
of a locomotive. It is whispered there is a boy aays that hi- inability is due to Injuries to his
at either place.
spine received by tumbling into a hole dn the
Geo. Bellas was somewhat surprised a few
sidewalk, in that town, but tbe Charlotte
mornings ago when he went out to milk to find
Leader says it la asserted that be received tbe in­
two young porkers robbing him of his morn­
juries by a previous fall while in a fit.
ings ’nes* of milk.
While hunting turkeys in Eagle township
It ia a nice thing to have a horse and buggy
just over the line in Clinton county, last week
at your disposal, so thinks Leander Lapham a*
Albert Parmenter thought he saw a nice one
be takes hi* horse and buggy and goes black
through a brush pile. The turkey turned out
to be John Graves, who had been plowing near
Lew Trimmer and Geo. Bellas are taking ad­
by and wa* getting a drink from a spring. He
vantage of the large blackberry erop to make
is dangerously wounded tn one knee.
SOO barrels (or less) of blackberry wine.
Charlotte: Burglars raided Fann Thorns*'
This is the first band of moonshiners heard of
residence, but got only a jewel case aud an
In these parts.
A midnight incendiary waa prowling around empty pocket-book. Tbe Congregational society
Levi Elliott's, a few nights ago. Mr. Elliott ha* bought the toll made puq&gt;o*ely for and
fired one shoe at him. which naturally caused used at tbe Island Park Assembly at Rome
him to commence putting space between Levi City, Ind., and ha* ordered the building of a
and himself very rapidly. Any one who will 53,500 pipe organ. Tbe Uni verbalist church
risk themselves before a revolver for the paltry building is well under way and is to to dedi­
sum of 5800 mA put a small estimate on hu­ cated Sept 5, probably with the dedicatory ad­
dress by Dr. Rexford of Detroit.
,
manity.

meetings.

Blackberries by tbe bushel and no one
An infant child of Mr. Putnam waa buried

ia to be tbe game.

n.e that f 100 and you bet that I would not
publish that disgraceful proceeding. Saturday

crop of grapes.
Col. Thomas of Odessa, is visiting bis brother
in this burg this week.

has, that It is not badly grown, and will aver­
age 85 bushels per acre of good wheat.—Grand
Ledge Independent.
At the last county
horticultural to-

amount of choice apple* was shipped from the
various railroad station* in Eaton county, last

pioyee* of TKB Nzwa to purukln pie and cider.

A. J. Carpenter is visiting hl* daughter at
Bay Chy-

Cole from NaahriDe.

THEATRICAL AND CIRCUS LIFE.
The Historical Publishing Co., of St. Louis,
have Just issued a book bearing the above tide.
It treats of a new and always InteresUng sub­
ject, and will, no doubt, to welcomed by many
amusement lovers who Retire to acquaint
themselves with the mysteries of tbe profes­
sion. In fact it will interest all classes of
readers, owing to it* revelations of secrete here­
tofore known only to managers and actors.
The author is a well known dramatic critic,
his style is easy and natural, and the numerous
anecodotes and personal adventures with
which he enlivens his work, render it refresh­
ingly iiiterestins,. Book agents will have a good
tiling in this volume. See advertisement.

WANTED—A GIRL
To do general housework. Permanent place to
toilet and capable girl. Address Tas News,

BRICK! BRICK!
I have on hand -about «».«» Brick which I
want to close out this fall. Partlea wanting
brick come and see me. Also a quantity of
Tlie.
4C-50
Wm. Boston.

SKINNY MEN.
Wells’ Health Reoewer. Absolute cure foe
nervous debility and weakness of the genera­
tive functions. 51. al druggist*. Mich. Depot
JAMES E. DAVI8A CO.. Detroit. Mich.
“ROUGH ON RATS.”
gist lor “Rough on Rats."
It clear* out rata’
mice, roaebea, flea, bed-bugs. 15c. boxes.

IIPOKTA3T TO TRAVELER*,
’ ’ inducement* ere offered you by the
Route, It will payyou to readtheir
ent* to be found elsewhere in this

—CongreMtuan Lacey of this district
gives notice that he will conduct a com­
petitive examination at Jackson. Sept.
4, to select a candidate for the naval
academy al Annapolis, Md. All can­
didates must be of sotted physical de­
velopment, well up in ordiuary studies,
and have reaided in the district two
yearn.
■________________

The straight Greeubackers, after re­
fusing to “co-operate,” lost week,
W. Halstead’s new house.
al society at Jackson daring tbe state fair, and went from the convention over to
School teachers will be scarce tbe coming Mr. J. Winters, James Pierson, W. P- Green Sweet’s hotel and nominated tbe fal­
lowing ticket: Governor—Amu S.
More copies ot Tai Naw* drculate in thia fruit, which I* to to brought to tbe society' Pennell, of Clinton; Lieut-Governor—
meeting on the IftUi, ready for *lii;»ment tbe Isaiah Mains. Otsego; Secretary of
18th, and the exhibit k to include all kinds
state—John E. Simmons, of Bay;
Quite a number of young folk* from this from raised. Tbe president. W. P. Greea, 1* to re-p
Treasurer—Gey. M. Upton, Ottawa;
this viemity will attend the select school at
Auditor-General—Walter M. Kelley,
Woodland this fall.
the Dev railroad boom.

WOODLAND.

SADLY AFFLICTED.
“Myboywaabadly afflicted with rheuma­
tism," said Mr. Barton, of the great stove firm
of Radway and Barton, of this city, to one of
our reporters. “We dOc’ored him a great deal,
but could find no cure; 1 bad beard so much of
the efficacy of BL Jacoba Oil that I finally de­
termined to try it. Two bottle* of the Oil fully
cured him.’’—Cincinnati Enquirer.

“
of the Charlotte Republican stated that C.
Bi
Wellington, of Roxand, had 40 seers of Cla-r-

and waa a total Iom. And now Mr. W.antborixes
Saturday evening. It was a
usually quiet and orderly Amo

thia writing, August, 14, and I am quite surptised at tbe results. Only one correapondeot
puts the apple crop at a full average, while
thirty-four place It at lew than one-fourth of a
crop, fifty reports make it !••»• than one halt a
crop, and seventy-five les* than three fourths of
an average yield. Tbe following localities have
the most promising ebow of apples: Ingham.
Bay, western Muskegon, Manistee, Geneasee,
Allegan, Macomb, and Lapeer counties; west­
ent Casa, weatern Kent, centrd Barry, and
eastern Ottawa, all unite in the statement that
the fruit will be imperfect, scaltby, and badly
Injured by inadeu.
Tbe crop of pears promises better than ap­
ples, and unless some new difficulty arises there
will be seventy five per cent of a full yield.
There is less blight thia season than for several
years, judging from reports to date. .
Peaches in unfavorable localities for this
fruit are a complete failure. Upon high ground
in the interior there will be above half a crop,
and upon tbe reliefs of Washtenaw county even
better than this; while upon the lake shore to
the north there will be a light yield, of say 40
per cent. In Allegan, Kent. Ottawa, and Mus­
kegon there will be two third* of a crop and the
fruit very fine. In VauBureu aud Kalamazoo
about half a crop.
Tbe most prolific fruit iu Michigan this year
Is Um* grape. There are promises of a very full
yield if the season Is prolonged so tbe clusters
will ripen. Many of tbe first setting were killed
by frost. There is tome mildew appearing In
several localities, and tbe recent wet weather
has developed some tendency to rot in places
where thia disease has appeared years before.
Tbe plum crop will be a good average where
persistent efforts have been made to fight the
curcullo.
Tbe yellows is gradually working northward.
A few “sporadic cases” have been announced
as tar north as northern Ottawa and Kent; but
there is a united feeling among peach-growers
that every ca.«c must be stamped out at sight.
There are a great many theories concerning
the cause of failure in apples- It la laid to east
winds, frosts, moist weather at time of blos­
soming, etc. The most common explanation
seems to be that the continuous frosts through
May weakened the vitality of the young frul’
so that it dropped through June. The varieties
of apples that have as yet hung on the trees
best are Baldwin and Golden Russet. Fall ap­
ples seem to be almost a dead failure. The
Northern Spy, which Is a great favorite in our
state, Will be represented by very small quanti­
ties in the fruit cellars next winter. Cider, ap­
ple jelly, and evaporated apples will be reduced
to a minimum.
To the lovers of apple sauce I would counsel
the selection of tbe best substitute in the way
o^auned fruit, and begin early.

L E. Pwswv. Ja

WEST SUNFIELD.

CpNSIBTING OF

tbe state.

The society has decided to make an

Jay Child* while laying test Monday wm so
severiy s’ung by bumble toes about the toad

"

Sugars, Coffees, Teas, Tobaccos,
Spices, Fish, Canned Goods,
Provisions, Ac.,
AT THE LOWEST PRICES

THE COUNTY.

____ .I* milmi fnr n union

.

SWJML UOCERIES
For Cash or Ready Pay.
Alio tbe Largest Suck of

•

Crockery, Glassware, Lamps,
Stone Ware, &amp;c.,

CERlffilEllf.
RHEUMATISM, CASH PAID

TO BE SEENJN^BARRY CO.
noon

Xnd

BHOl'f

AS CHFAB

Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago,
Backache, Sorenest of the Chest,
' Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Smelt­
ings and Sprains, Burns and
Scalds, Genera! Bodily
Pains, ■*
Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted
Feet and Ears, and all other
Pains and Aches.

AS A.VrBOPr.

FOR PRODUCE

C. W. SMITH. 9

SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AMD DEAL
MEDI0I5E.

n

A. VOGELER &amp; CO

-------- FOP.---------

DLGN,
BOOKS,
JEWELKY.
WALL PAPER.

Nnsiivilh* yinrkrta

WLX’IMm SHADES,

dyentuffs,

PutatOM.

PR0PKIETAP.Y MEDICIHEB,
1’REM iCIPTlOXN,
Timothy p«r bo..
Clot•rSe’d. per ba

RECEIPTS,
-------- MY---------

BUCKLES’S ARNICA SALVE.
The be*t salve Ln the world
Bruises,
Sores, Ulcers, Sait Rheum. F^rrSorv*, Tetter,
Chapped Hands. Chilblain*, Corns, arul all
Bkiu Eruption*, and positively cure* Pile*. It
I* guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, ar
money refunded. Price 25 cent* per box. For
sale by all druggist*.

PAINT AND BRU§H
DLPAKTY1ENT
people.

REPUBLICAN CAUCUS.
A Republican caucus to elect delegates to the
county convention to nominate county officers,
also to nominate one caiMlidate for Represen­
tative in tbe State Legislature and for such
other business as mav properly come before it
will be held at the village ball iu Nashville on
Saturday the 9tb day of Sept. A. D. 1WL* at two
o'clock In tbe aftcruoonJohn Keaole.
By order of ComChairman.

bouM in Dairy ur Eaton ennntie*.

Call and Examine!

F. T. BOISE.
PI

It. IHCKIXSO.V A CO.

SherilTSale.
----- NEW------

Notice I* hereby given that by virtue of a
writ o! Fierificio*. i**ucd out of the Circuit
Court for the county of Kent, in favor of Wil­
liam Hake against the good* and chattie* and
real estate of William E. Bud, Iu the county
of Barrv, to me directed and delivered, I did on
the 34tb day of July last, levy upon and take
ail the right, title and Interest of the mid Wil­
liam E. Buel in aud to the following described
real estate; that I*to say all that certain piece
or parcel of land deacrit'wd a* follow*, to-wit:
The east one half (J^j of the east one half (X&gt;
of the south west quarter (**) of section thlrtvfive (35,) iu tosm (3,) north of range seven (7)
west, in Barrv county, Michigan, al) of which I
shall expose for sale at public auction or vendue
to the highest bidder, at the north front d&lt;or
of the court house in Harting*, In said county,
on the sixteenth dav of October next, at
eleven o’clock in the fotpnoon.
Dated thi* 31 st dav of August, A. D. 1S82.
HENRY M. ROUGHTiLIN. Sheriff.
By Hekhxxt M. Lkz, Deputv Sheriff.
D. E. Corbitt. Pit'fa Atty.
5G&amp; ,

Fouring Mill
READY FOR BUSINESS

Every day

In the year—Sundays excepted-

CUSTOM

GRINDING I

Of every dercription, done In a superior
manner, at the drop of the hat; and
Satisfaction guararteed.

A NEW BOOK
ON A NEW
SUBJECT! FLOUR. MEAL AND MILL FFED
WANTED
THE THRILLING
AGENTS

FOR
NEW BOOK

Kept constantly on hand-

THEATRICAL
&amp; CIRCUS
LIFE.
Baveallnz the
nf
rtaM.OreeojHoorn

Graham Flour

Our

secrets
the
and
Clrcua tent. Private and public Fives ot uoted actor.

Is concceded to to the best. Try 1L
tfallnea Masber* and &gt; kidr baUse el ria . bow ac-

By a strict attention to business, and square
•ernaa.lHittnrjr of the drama from the rsrllesl day*
down to the present time Mntt thrilling and en-- deallug with all our customers, we hope to mer­
isrtalnlng book now Iu the field. Asioanding rev. it a liberal patronage from the farmers of this
elation* ! Truth uranrer than Art loo ! 175 POR­ vicinity.
Milla on railroad,—eset of de)&gt;ot.
TRAITS.
ENGRAVINGS. AND COLORED
PLATEb ! Selk on sight. Everybody want* Iu
Oraedeat opeortsalty erer offered to those desiring
II. IU DICKIXSOX A CO.
pleasant and profitable employment. Other pubpabliahera ore offering tbooaanda of doUara for eon
tool of terrtvwy. Ulartratrd ciienlani ahd full par-

WOOL

HOLMAN'S n®'

RDI1TG

CoaUlnlps both teraioua at the new tert*'
make so extra charge tor ’bis addition. Other
pabliaBcrschamBL FINE PHOTOGAl’H AU
BUMS ELEGANT DEdIGNS. HANI. BOM ELY
BOUND.
Oar Bible cuntalc. J ,000 pages,5.M» maslratteaa
Extra iodaiwmeate offered to energetic a&lt;enu
fflnetrnted catalogue sent on.application
£. J
HOLMAN A CO„ IBS Areb 8uPhiladelphia.

AND SPINNING

W&amp;nted New

8hea;»-Sto*ring time is U(kju us 4nd the

AjGLNTS! For Gen. Dodge s new book,
THIBTY-THKEE YEARS AMONG

OUR WILD INDIANS

Carding Mill

Of tbe undersigned, is prepared to make into

ROLLS, OR YARfT ?

9326

YARN

.’ oeking Yarn

NEED NOT WAIT

Inatrnc_JOOI At­
torney General—Janson E. Nichols,

gave way

J. W. POOLES.

�owing up about
idleneM. we feel
-Bui bow do they make the lights,
little himself.
and who Is St. JscqhM?” pursued
advise its restraint: bnl are y ou certain
Be graceful If you can: but if you can’t be
Fletcher.
filled to the top
.
•■They have.different colored ‘fires." ’ you are letting it work in the right di- ।graceful, be true.
tents, and at the ssitit* lime Fie'--her no­
reedon: are you sure that all lbts sac­
thy of tbr ruort r.AM.fc.Mted an.1
ticed thnuthr sun was very neur the tip as the nrenaruions are called, which
WOMAN S TRUE FRIEND.
of one AQhk’ *tK»w nwmniairis.
ore toucnod off at the rattle in*tout al rifice on yohr part is not directly iu- ।
“ComeTAifiy,'’ ho exlrlaimed. “we various। pcAute ‘about the lake: and as juring. instead of beneiftidg.^our chJ- : A ftfrnd in need Is a f fend indeed. This none
can
deny,
especially
wtlen
a**fst*iK-e
ia
rcudedrr.ti:
are
yon
not
killing
them
by
your
।
must hurry back, or papa'll bo there be- __
for St. Jacques, that ia the same m
kindness, and depriving them* of the 1ed when one is sorely afflicted with disease* lentlon of trine. at&gt;d had «U the avinptmn* of
fore us;” and taking herby the hand be I JU. Jame- In English.’’
thone comwlaints. and ■n acrtrrM vaietf eaw» nt
w
-i
._
;more yartfeularly
set out for the path by,which they had
“.That's what papa's queer speech opportunity of learning in thtjfr youth weaknesaamo
common to our female population
aacended. ..
'
I meant, tlroD.-wlum he found us.”
to depend upon their own exertions? ']Every woman should know that Electric Bit“But why can’t we go down right |
*« And I nay * Amen' to it.” returned Look at this matter fairly, and seo&lt; if tore
I
are woman's true friend, and will positive­ reveslcd the presence in the bladder of a urilP
ary
calculus
«f
unoommon
size.
I&gt;r.
Kennedy
here?'1 asked Amy.
“ It’ll i»o, aur'h j the voting man; huskily. “ for I believe you really believe you are doing them 1ly restore her to health, even when all other
frankly, told Mr. Westfall that, owing to hl*
Doqmt- from the *?&lt;x*i-rtir» rtpple*. cronlnr- fun to go sort o* sl.iiing down hill.'’’
we’d have gone right on part you itith service, or if. in the struggle of life. ]renicdlc* fail. A single trial always proves our
assertion. They are pleasant to the taste, and
•• I guess we needn't glide,'' returned J if it had uot been for that scarlet glow they will be able to successfully com- ,«m!y coat fifty cent* a bottle. Sold by all drug­
FIctchqr, “for here's a kind of path we | froru tbe fete of St. Jacques.”—Harper'- Sete with others who are in their youth ।
with local treatment. make him comfortable,
rhyme (dream:
oing something toward earning a
can take: ho now hold on to me tight. 1 Young People.
Hypocrisy becomes a necessity for those who and leave him to live out al! bin day*. The
‘l-fen we train a vine we bend and I
and be careful not to slip:” aud down ,
X**'
.-----outcome of -thU wa* that the pattern enjovs
the two started over the rough way. for '
Six Days Pith Brigand*.
good health Ui thl» day.
'
tho mountainside was covered'with I
twist, it and force It to take such posi­
When a man |IUI not a good reason for doing
.tone. Hide imd biff, which Uw.Iraiol I
L. tion as we believe will best insure its a thing, be han one good reanou for leaving it Dr. Kennedy’s ‘•Favorite Remedy” Is .being ex­
growth and healtbv maturity. With­
tensively used by our people are as follows: It
out training it would lie on the ground
is a combination of vegetable alternatives. It
'
.
Lrlnx here •till.
moiature is pleasant to the taste, adapted to both sexes
Tknorhts of tb« ocean make my «ad hem
and be trampled under foot;’ or if per­ ...■H’*’ T?1*?"" of ,lch,nK PH*
like prenpirattou, intense Itching, most at night and all age*, Is effective I can ord Ing Immediate
tbrlAchance by force of nature it reaches seems m if pin worm* were crawling in or relief iu all &lt;-a*esof Kidney trouble, Liver Cou&gt;
. That rx-e-tn rife
With atreuirtb nnd majewty and gloriou* life.
dU«,pw»rw.l vn.ir.-iy, .nd
» out and catches some-support, Jjfting it­ about the rectum. The more you scratch the plaints, Constipation ot the Bowels aud derange­
ments peculiar to women. At the same time
to b.- MOO but true, tutd rock.
|
A.
hi. romputlon. h..i self thereby into tbe sunlight’ and air,
purities tbe blood, thu* giving tone ajd strength
it grows at random, and will never at­
From dew-dropor from dfatMut waters brouabt,
meat la the rnoet effective remedy extant for
l!»e systotn debilitated by disease or age.
"Stan w. go teoK Amyf” »ked !i"n
(&gt; Ixiunteous Ruin ’
tain the position, either in respect.of thia tormenting complaint. Give* rert at night to
“Dr. Kennedy’s Favorite Remedy” for sale by
the ex-Syndic perceived his mistake.
use
or
beauty;
of
its
more
fortunate
.
• .
: z
Fletcher, as they both came to a halt;
without that dealre to acratcb. Al»o has on all druggist*.
HD captors were dressed in new Ber- sister that underwent the training. Set equal tn quickly eradicating Tetter, Itch, Salt
Spend and b^ spent I
and then, he ndiled: “But no. we
sagjien uniforms, spoke tho jargon of two trees side by side, give one proper Rheume, Eryripela*, Barter*’ Itch, Pimple*,
Ob graciuuR Ram! through thee I jrrow con­ haven’t'time; so we must keep oil"
tent:
soldier?, and hail a thoroughly military attention by straightening its stem, all Scaly, Cruaty, Itchy Skin Eruption*, flere
“All right: but you don’t think there
Thy etlm-volccd spell
is the proof, “Certainly the beat remedy ever
cutting out and shaping its branches, used in my^raettee,” Dr. Cotton, Woodstock,
and pruning its shoots, and,leave .the VL. “troubled with Itching Piles for over twen­
you. Fiet?‘ ”
*
Watching through night.
*t, - s:
'”’p*’n
Jor
Notarbartolo saw the state of other uncared for, and the difference ty years. It cured me comtl^etely,,, L- 8. Messer
Many with me await the tnortuug light
lairs he at once told his captors in a
In.ixiin or earn.
will be noticeable the first year, while Enfield, Me. Sent for 50 eta (in 3 ct. »tamps)
thc-nv Krow«errongber «n I rough- (
h
„
----------------------------------------------- I*J the beneiicial effect upon the first be­ 3 boxes, S 1.25, By Dr. Swayne «t Son. Ifbiiad’a
Or rapt, it tnny be, iu_tb*' trance of prayer.
er, and the stones slipped from under ■ ______ .
__ —
.. .
.
language toward him would be of no comes more and more apparent as tbe Pa. Sold by all druggists.
lb.fr tlrod ie..&lt; ntoro and moro fro.
_
was the effect of his su- trees grow older. Had vines and trees
nearing thy rbytht
inuslc^oitls- fall,
A man In New York plead* guilty to haring
• •* •
•
— - * • • A*
jijei
■
tsweet tho „ht* may
O -dear: ain't w. 'mW there?" half
voices, they might cry out against this been hired by eight different’" wives to watch
Ways doth lead u* borne.
...» detention the
...^ jrigaoblxtd Amy. a. she nublted her_loe ..U...Vw.
■'"“&lt;&gt;?. hi,
bn,
treatment, as boys and girls do when tliclr husband* during the absence at Saratoga.
i au&lt;is treated him with deference and
For not one drop
compelled to work and study, and the
IrontM un.
bn-.whll,
Wj ^mmnion. h.&lt;l been
FalU from th • cloud upon the baro hill top—
OguiUM .rock
n rocti, In
111 iniuvui
mine&gt;»
;a | ,
. A GOOD FOUNDATION.
Falla, through nark hour*.
stone rolled down on her heel from be- 1 *1
kind-hearted gardener might be in­
•L ; sent away with a letter to hi* family, ap­
Upon the cIomm! chnilcc of the flower*.
duced thereby to *let them bare their
In American households the prevailing cotnthem of what had occurred,
c».nii t
t.k Itff VM| jI prising “ttfemnbt-wbafiiau-occurreur
plnint* are wcaknew of tbe stomach and its
over
t£ lh.£ mu« bh™ ! •“»
.75-"° '?*“« »“ own way to their future injury.
..
Or on the murmurous thickly Toilaged tree.
eouMtiuencea,
Indigestion, NerrouNicm and
Inquire into the history of men emi­
But falls to cherish .
RheumatiMn. Such sufferer* can lav a good
I demanded.
The brigands first took
nent for their success in life, and you foundation for health by using Parker’* Gin­
What else would pine and, drooping, sadly been a brook here in the spring;” and
' Signor Notnrbartolo into the woods.
Fletcher pointe&lt;l out a shallow ravine 1 and then to a grotto, or rather deep ra­ will find that many of them were chil­ ger Tonic a* It tones np the »tomach and serve*
•
. And shall the tear.
dren of poor parents, and that from and keep* the kidney* active to carry off the
that crossed their path ob'i.|uy.ly. nnd
vine, in-the mountains, where he was
foul matter —N. O. Vicayunc.
3
Ebed by the Fntbcr’a.wclhloved children here.
which was choked with stones and i detained for six days. The cavern was their childhood they had their duties to
In doubt and pain.
perform, and they early learned to
Fail for a leas wise purpoa than the Rain?
brush-wofnl.
Nothing but politeoe** makes a lialdbead।
constantly
guarded
by
two
of
the
brig—Chambers* JuunuiL
work in some field of profitable labor, ed man lift bl* hat on meeting a young lady.
Without waiting for an answer, the 1
kind-hearted boy threw his alpenstock 11 ends, who bad changed their uniforms by which "habits of industry were fixed
THE SCARLET GLOW.
for the tom dress of peasants. The tYlat aided largely in insuring their fu­
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
across, and then picking Amv up in his
। light penetrated this ravine for only a
ture prosperity. An indulgent father doubtless rank* firet a* a curative agrpt hi all
“I wish I Could take you both with unns. started ovvr liini'elf. He readied..
- i few hours of the day, and during that
of the procreative system, degeneram. Topeka. Deal­
and kind-hearted mother who listen to disease*
me,” said Mr. Hanway, as he kissed his the opposite side in safety, and was
of the kidneys. Irritationof the bladder, tlrinarv
con, Dallas, Galchildren gocxl-byc, ami stepped into the about to step up Io level ground again’ time the prisoner could read a number the solicitations of a boy to be excused calculi, etc. Send to Mr*. Lvdia E. Pinkham*.
. ' of the Jl&lt; rue du'Deux Motultf, which he
from labor are doing him an injury for 233 Western Avenue, Lynn, "Mass., for pam­
carriage that was to bear him up among when his foot caught un&lt;'era s ■ nr nnd
f; happened to have with him.
’
the mountains bn a visit to an old. in trying to keep his sist-.-r from being!
which both he and they will suffer in after phlet*.
•'
This was his only amusement. He
life. We would not Gave.a child over­
friend; “but Fletcher hero will take harmed by his tail, he left no hand free . was not allowed to’smoke during the
We judge ourselve* by what we feel capable
worked. nor put al labor that is par­ of doing, while other* judge u» by what we
good care of you. Amy. aud I am sure with which to save himself.
Fiet, are vou hurt?” cried Amv, H.day, lest in so doing he should betray
ticularly distasteful, but he should do have already done.
neither of you will foigct what I’ve told
the* prace
place 01
of ut
hi*
The
------.-------—.-------------------------------*—
■' । Loe
- concealment.
x ori
Nationally reputed aa
as
she
quickly
scrambled
to
her
feet.
you about, keeping away from the
something. If he will not choose for
being the Great
But
'al!,,d Hie rivine their best
boats.”
himself—and few children can choose
•• Not much: only my ankle.” Bu,
^^^ThroughCar
BRACE UP.
pal.ice. fixing tl. y had others in places
Fletcher was ten and Amy eight, and the “not much’’ proved to be a sprain
properlv—choice should bo made for
,
There I* s&lt;*riou« meaning In tliia expression.
:'.: of access,
but that they
him. Even if he be designed tor a J
? ,e ditlic
.*
'
the two, with their father, 'who was a serious enough to prevent bL walking a more
• That wearied step, languid eye, and general
... ..u-... p^p
,t" PII
it p,,p
wasV more
com­
mmnrr
widower, were stopping at a cozy little step, and after attempting to do so once rnr._».i_
scholar, that is no reason why indolence
feeling of lassitude come from sickness. Be
or Iwiee. II..- bmrt- lit.jV- t. llo.r w I fortable for
?r„"hi- E-.eellency.” I Zll?
During
hotel -on-the shores of a lovely lake in
should be tolerated or physical labor
assured, a setlous and and perhaps fatal, dis­
ton-cl to fall tack upon th.- roeU with
* Xh &gt;
Switzerland.
excused. A boy should not be put to
z-y \ All connection* made
.□ expn-Mion ot pal'n which bo could a^,"',1"’ir| ‘ i*1’'-,
“■“E ’’
ease
is close In Its wake. The system rant*
' It was only on very rare occasions
study as a business before he is ten or
In Union
,
1K
1
' plolts, and then begged their pnsoner
that Mr- Hau way permitted himself to
twelve years old. and there nre many cleansing of Impurfeties; the sluggish blotxl
. '’ 8 " .
' .
.
.
.
. ■ to excuse them if it annoved him. but
needs to be sent in swift and clear currents
be wparated from his children during
weeks
aud
months
-thereafter
when
And now the children - situation be- lhcv did nyl know how-t&lt;)
about
through
the
reins.
Dr.
Kennedy
’
s
“
Favorite
their travels abroad, but as the hotel came quite a grave one
physical labor of some kind will be of
Th&lt;;&gt; were a* an&lt;thing but their own affairs. At the
wbereihey had now been staying for yet. as well os thev eonhl judge, a mile tdld of the tix tlftVS (dxiring whlch, in
direct advantage to him, and parents Remedy” will do this;It will give new vigor to Celebrated Uno
And traveling a
the body, brightness to the eye, a glow to the ••lent *U ofllcei I‘i/CxH/ySv luxury, laatead
nearly a week was a very Kome-like one, or more above the town, the sun had - accordance with* the petitions of the
should see that he has it.
and as he expected to be back in time already vanished behind the snowy fanfdv ftnd
If a child be not in health, it is a countenance, and elasticity to the step. One tbe U. S. “fJ/C°r * duh- h functionarv. the
for supper, he felt that he could safely* peaks opposite, the autumn twilight was brigands had. bv order of the Minister
reason why his labor should be gradu­ Dollar a bottle. Every druggist has II Dr. Cuuda^XCj/X JU1SK4SK
&gt;C\.\.yS&lt;lnform*:loa\fZA6&gt;v
t leave them to amuse themselves for a rapidly closing in. nnd. worse than all. Dep^..^ been left unmolested) the sum
ated to his physical condition, but not David Kennedy, Proprietor, Itondout, N, Y.
about Rates ot
' few faburs.
that he should be entirely excused from
Fletcher could not nnd Amy would not n{ MJ.oOof was conveyed to them, with
Fare. Sleeping C*rey&gt;&lt;*Zf
True goodness Is like the glow-worm, It
Thus cast ujion their own resources, ®°Y®it.
Many
a
boy
has
gone
to
ruin
be
­
rtc ■ ebeertnlly gtrea by
I which thev expressed themselves conshines most when no eyes save those of heaven
the brother and sister read story-books
cause
he
was
not
obliged
to
earn
a
por
­
Mow
„„ away .0.1
........ .tvnt.
wfinz
„ri5„n,,r t|ut h„
T. J. POTTER.
PERCEVAL LOWELL.
How can I go
and l.„O
leave ..voir,
talfin&lt;x thi
r. Gm- im Jgt.
and played in-door games until dinner­ here?" .he would MV when ur.re.1 to
tion at least of his own living from the are upon It.
b)J ;....ue&lt;iiately released. The
Chicaco. Ill
time. At the table were some Ameri­ hurry back, so that father ‘ —
-latter then asked for his watch, saving 1 time he was old enough to work. There
THE AGONY OVER.
can tourists just from the summit- of
1
is
no
faiA
in
tbe
economy
of
nature
betit was a keepsake very dear to him.
Walking, the source ot so much misery to
the highest mountain in the place, and
ler eslabli.hcd than that it H lor the | many, becomes,
....after using Putnam’s Painless
•• But I’m all right as long as I sit With characteristic courtesy it was im­
to their lively descriptions of the views still.” her brother would reply. •• Be­
best interests of each individual that he Corn Extractor, a rervfee“ of* ph
pleasure. Corns
should earn his bread by the sweat of | ----------------»tnall Jn -rixr,
but. —
their
un
—, —
„. tmjiortance
is not
to be had therefrom, and of the prettv sides. the sooner you go Mid tell them mediately restored to its proper owner;
A cure grim rail feed.
size, as any one fond of
nooks scattered nil over it, both chil­ at the hotel, the quicker they can spud not, however, before one of the brig*, Dis brow, and man is the only animal to
’ be
* ~ Judged 'by *their
’
and*
hail
eyed
the
chain
with,
grear
n
tramp
can
testify.
Try
Putnam's
Extractor
dren listened w^h eager ears, anil when I somebody up for me.”
created that allows the fruits of his lor corns. No disoinifort. no caustic applk-aenvy, exclaiming that it was very taste­
&lt; ,bne of the young ladies held up a bunch j
labor to be devoted to the subsistence t tlon. no blood letting, and yet splendidly efflAt length, convinced that under the ful and beautiful. Tbe ex-Syndic im­
of “just die loveliest wild flowers”
...
.._.e _______________ ______ „
i carious. Wholesale. .1. E. Davis d: Co., De;
mediately declared with vivacity that all
hintself. With nil others tho invariable I tro,t_____________________
which she had gathered by the road- . to do. Amy set bravely out. but had hot
side,-Amy whispered to her brother that proceeded more than twenty feet Iwforc
n&gt;l« H.
Work lor jonrrell," or as It is
.„nbera|;
to tliow »l&gt;o ar.
she really must go a little way up that I she came screaming back, declaring-die
■ometinres le.&lt; .•Ic.renlly okpressod. ln llcrf „a others to u,™»«l,n.
lured
that
his
very alternoori.
•■Root. hog. or die. '
had seen a snake, and that she could
“But papa isn’t here to take us.” ob­ never, never go on through the dreadful
The great sympathetic and muscular nvetcxn
The idea that the world owes a liv­
and that be would gludlv pay for it.
jected Fletcher, who longed to go as woods alone.
ing to any one who has done nothing on whk-h full and healthful development dvr At this time the band had assumed very
kept from growing flabby and Inactive
much as his sister, although he was old
to entitle him to it. is a fallacy. Dr. Knd*.
*• Let me stoy with you. Fief. ’ she , good cloth clothes, hud rings on their
. using Brown's Iron Bitters. '
JlClM*. **enough to understand that his fa'her begged, “1'm’surewi
Johnson’s reply to one who. importun­
r. JOBS
?n papa mis’Ses ' lingers, and gold chains to their watches.
would not-like to have them leave the
F
Strong
thought* ire Iron nail* driven in the
ing for assistance, said: “I must live,
e;’”’ and
her * Signor Notarbnrtolo was received in
us he’ll come right- tip here;
S— -,
hotel in his absence.
you know.” was directly to the point. mind, that nothing cm draw out.
brother,
seeing
she
luul
no
doubts
on
Palermo
With
.---------------------- o ... ----- _2“ (
great demonstrations of
He merely remarked that he could see
“Papa didn't tell' us we mustn’t
this point, thought it best not to remind jov. the street in which l.c lives being
R5&lt;H&gt; Kcwurdl
ppiHVRY KOE. Proprietor
. climb mountain* — only - boats.” re­
no necessity for it. and there are many
her that it was just a* natural to sup-' illuminated by the inhabitant*. Mcttsturned Amy,, cunningly. “And, be­
to-day sponging ujahi their relatives.
posc that he would look in a dozen otn- urea for arresting the inaiefactors were
------ OLD RELIABLE-----sides. didn't he say you could toko care
friends,
and
the
world
at
large,
getting
then immediately taken, the district
of me? and don’t 'you think you can?” er directions for them first.
subsistence without rendering any j wiib W*»i’&lt; Vegetable pvpr HU*,
So the two sat together there on the : around Termin. where they nre sup­
equivalent, ot yhom cue ,.ame may be I SSSgffi*
and the artful little tease looked up at
mountain-side, watching the stars come posed to 1be
-----still
— hiding,
t—--.."- being surroundi.­
her stout young brother with a most out, and wondering if this was their pun­
truly said.
i r»r cuarod i-a*** tore*. conuiol
ed by military. No news of their capt­
Parente seem to forget that they owe | Xo.r »^u br yLT‘ W**- Bewareo
confiding air.
ure ’has yet arrived.—Naples Cor. Lon­
ishment funbeing naughtyi
•ci ... 1 ...... i.wk..rol.»
Th*
m*Dtif»ctnr«l only J C
Kerj* (,e-M&lt;&gt;nily on Irand Able Mock of
Under these circumstances, what
duty IU
to svtice.
society. T
k“” have brought WEST A CO.. "Tho PUI Maker*." 1S1 *nd 1st W
ba MUfry
lhey
But presently Amy’s’ eyelids grew don Ntic.t.
could Fletcher reply but that he was
children into th« world, and thev should Madlaon St.. Chicago. Frra trial packagn oen&gt; t? |
rtitd Vsijf
»o educate them that society ihall not
"" roeolpt of a» cent
PUSH (Ulfl
JUeat8t
mon certainly able* to protect her, and heavy again, and leaning her head
Queen Victoria Amazed.
against Fletcher, she asked him to wake
that he would do so for a little way, a
be-the worre tor tlmirexhumoe. There
Guardian
I
OumVaf U,m» ami Ohonliirre
&lt;»unr&lt;ltan Sale.
Male.
her
“
as
soon
as
papa
comes,"
when
very little way. up the mountain,' as
During the marriage ceremony (that
is still another duty they owe. and that
ln lhf
suddenly a reddish glare flashed forth
CORWIN
UARI'NER nod ANNA GARDNER, j
they must be sure to be at the hotel out of die darkness beneath them; por­ ot the Duke of Albany) tho Que -n hap­
is to themselves. There fa no sadder
corv;
FRESH FISH and FOULTR1
pened to look up at. the Knights’ ban­
sight than to see parents mourning over i •f’.n=r=.
when father came Imck.
tions of mountain and lake appeared
Notice
li licfrby plreo that labkllaellat public
_
&lt;0*
ners, and. to her amazement anil indig­
the inefficiency or ruin of a child, aurtloti,
‘
” to
Greatly delighted at having gained her
Die
hl&lt;br*t bidder,nn
|
IN THEIR SEABp
distinctly as by day. while trees and
point, Amy ran off for her hat ns soon rpaks and bushes stoixl revealed in start- ' nation, she discovered half a dozen
caused principally, if not entirely, by
* opera-glasses peering from behind tiicpi,
as derert was over, and having stuffed
their own neglect to train it up. “ Just
ling vividness.
I all pointed straight at Iwr own face.
a paper of candy into her pretty little
as the twig is bent the tree’s inclined:’’ Probate Oflirr- In the city of li&gt;atiug»,ln the county
•• O, what is it, Fiet?”- cried Amy.
“** • An inquiry wag speffIlly made.-when ft
ih-xtauni Mkhlxau.parauantta.il-:.
arm-basket, announced herself ready.
but when the tree has matured It is too orhany.in
c«n»o *»d autbnrilj grant'd to mo on tbe 6th d«_r
biding her face in terror.
t?" The Highest Market Price paid
, j । turned Out that a permanent official at
And then tho two set out, Fletchew.
late—there is nothing left but sorrow of .lune, A. D. 1881, by tbe Probate Court of Barry
“Don’t be afraid.” he answered. “ i
Windsor, at the last moment, had se­
and remorse, and if they would avoid Conntv. Mkblgan. «ll of the estate, rishi, tltte and for Hides, Pelts. Ac.
with his alpenstock, leading tile way up
entereat of th* «»i&lt;i minor* of. In and to the real
through the town, on bv the winding guess it can’t hurt us, whatever it is.” cretly constructed a small private gal­
these, they must see to it that they- reute siluaicd and being In the county of Barry, in Fresh Grooda, Full Weights and
Still the boy had dreadful visions of lery iip behind the carving nt the top of
..__ w...vi__________ __________ o
..
path through the woods, up. up. until'
keep their affections controlled by their
earthquakes and volcanoes, which he the’ Knights’ stalk, froxu which, alter
Satisfaction Guaranteed.
tbe beautiful lake came into view below
reason, and refrain from killing their
somehow imagined were much more
reaching it by the aid of a-perpendicutbem.
HENRY KOKchildren as well as themselves by kind­
common in Europe than in America.
lar
ladder,
his
friends
had
nn
excellent
“Let’s rest hero a minute," proposed
ness.—A*. K Sun.
And now the red light had changed view, perched un like owls in an ivy
Fletcher. “This flat rock’ll make a
• nice neat; and while we eat some candy. to green, this in turn to blue, then back bush. The Lord Cbataberlain nnd the
bov» described bring «n section thirty-one.
A Canine Miser.
Citral without an operation or the injury truMco
Dated. July 1st. .V D J M2.
• „
,
I’ll teach you -the namcii of the snow to red again and to on, until the brother Ix»rd Steward. suppoPied by a posse ol
4S41.
TURNER GARDNER. Goardl.n
enfliet by Dr. J. A. 3l»eimxn’» Method. Uflkr SSI
and sister became completely mystified. their subordinate*, summoned the err­
Instances of canine economy are by
mountains over yonder.”
On a sndden. while the red glare lit ing official before them, and not con­
nd means rare; but the account of 3
So the expedition halted while the
dog-mi*cr is, so far as our records ex­
Captain pointed out what he thought up everything around, there was a tent with administering the que&amp;ion.
AUS TtTRNER fi ARI’NKR, Guardian.
tend. unique. Dandle, tbe animal re­
was Mont Blanc, the king of all the sound of rolling stones, a man’s voice ordinary and extraonunary. ordere&lt;l
UAHRUTAil
fet Y«n« wm
“Thank
God
for St. him to come up for sentence at the Lon­
ferred to, was a Newfoundland dog, be­
liUuuniUri
vI.-.
■ -■ .
peaks: the beautiful Jungfrau, with its exclaimed:
Ja&amp;raesf’ The next instant Mr. Han­ don office of tbe Board of Works, But . longing to a gentleman in Edinburgh.
lUrordor catafegu* adlrra* A. G. BENEDICT,
silver horn, and— But turning to see
1 Clinton, N. Y.
It frequently had money given to it,
if Amy was looking in the right direc­ way s strong prms were about both his before being again racked, he is under­
stood to have gone down on. his knees
because, besides other interesting signs
tion. Fletcher found her eyes closed, children.
"O, paj&gt;a, I knew you’d come!’’ to John Brown” to Induce hhn to "rep­
and her h^ad just sinking to his shoul­
of sagacity, it would go to the baker's
cried Amy, jej-omiy. “But now you resent tbe thing properiv.” So he got
POUGBKEEPSIE,N. Y,
der,
and buy its own bread. But Dandie
With V. S. MIBlary Drpnra wnL A thoronshreceived more money than his needs
Poor little thing, she’s tired out Til must put rne down, and carry Fiet, off with a tremendous wigging.—Lon^
xvlng. wWt-iwikr «!&gt;.*.; fur toy*. caubhiMf
I called for. and so he took to hoarding
fat her hare a short 0141 before we start ’cause I was naughty, and he’s hurt, and don Truth.
■ludy. mlitury dri 1 and mnatk* la due p-operall
from
’
sisLing
mei
”
tinlL'n strain *’ fin -urlitln Amv ulnnt
tion. CataJcKua with ehart of Ooilen Roiiiusilfen,
■ it. 1 his bis master discovered in cou•cot ou applia»Uon. OTIS BISBEE. A. M; Prin'L
Then the, situation w*s explained.
■ -The will of John T. Johns was
sequence of the dog appearing one day
» Two young gentlemen from the hotel broken by a Baltimore jury, and the I with a breakfast-roll when it was known
tenderly
raised
the
helpless
boy
and
verdict would distribute the estate of ”
Now, it would have been quite ro­
■ that no one had given it any money,
mantic and Babes-in-the-Woodsy if he, carried him between them, and thus, $&gt;200,9t0 among tbe natural heir*; buj j Suspicion aroused, search was made.in
too, Md Uwn overcome . wilt? ’dr»; wsi- the happy father still retaining his little the lawyers are trj’ing to impeach it, on • the room where the dog slept. Dandie
girl,
they
started
down
the
bill
again,
the ground that one of the jurors was ' appeared quite unconcerned until his
neM.whua leaving them both bring there
asleep on the monntain-sidd until nn guided by the strange lights safely to unduly Influenced by a flirtation in the ( bed was w
approached, when he seized
the town.'
'
court room with one of tbe-parti^R in... the
by her gown and tried to
_L_.servant
. am by
fn-mSaWr. Not un
a young la1
*
----------Fletcher soon recognized in his bear­ interest. This person
drag
her
away,! and became so violent Mnd a remedy. Now
ers two members of the party from the dy, of course, and very pretty, while
that his master hail to hold him. Sevmountain-top that h&gt;d been so enthu­ the juror was a susceptible bachelor, j enpcnce-ltalfpenny was found hidden in
siastic at dinner, and they furtherm&lt;m: The evidence is that the two exchanged I tbe bed. Dandie did not forego his
told hhn that it was at their suggestion glances nnd smiles during the trial; that ! saving propensities even after Uns; but
that Mr. Hanwav had first directed his they bowed to each other on meeting in
he exhibited a great dislike afterward QUITE REMEr.Y" *1«Q eure* Ure
the street: that he said to a fellow juror | for the servant who had discovered his at&gt;d kidney aotnpUtoto and all dUreom* cm
vlttaud Wood. Far *«fe by Ml dre«tU i
little
«KA pre bottfe. It U an atootal*ly mA,

SXS!i“^TbJS"'■&gt;'$«°'i"

•

PRINCIPAU+MN£

KANSAS CITY

K .

NERVOUS DEBILITY

MEAT MARKET.
Swid Hams and Siiooldcrs.

Lard, by the lb. or barrel,
dx., jtc., dv.

R j P TU RE

THE ONLY 982^74
TO DESTROY THIS DEADLY PEST

RIVERVIEW

YOUNG MEN

since become* a suitor (or l»«r hand

�when the

may be It's loaded;
ief Boys are very
don't
r____
new revolver. We never
sell them to very young boys who come
in alone, but If their mothers are with
them it’s all right’*
“Do you ever sell revolvers to wo­
men?”
r
'
GRAND RAPIDS DIVISION.
“No; the class of women who buy
revolver* go to the sporting stores
EA8TWAR1
where they sell fishing tackle and bunt­
~n7y
STATION’#.
ing equipments.”
Inquiries of a prominent sporting es­
tablishment developed no fiew facta.
trie
The’ gentleman in charge would not
Bmubmf*
i IMS
MlMtovUto-.........
Foil a revolver to an excited man or
woman who might rush in to purchase
yWasoMvtilM-----with suicidal intent.
The showcase
Ckarkrtto—wae full of “beauties" and ••pet*,” as
they are called, also ••terrors’*-in the
shape of the Remington border pistol.'
IMA
which is quite a full-grown “son of a
gun.” resembling that firearm exactly
WE8
TW RD.
on
a smaller scale. It is a formidable
" * fTa'ic Maw G.
weapon, and will send a ball half a milo
8TATIQK8.
Kir.
K
vrith deadly, alm.
Men going West
arm themselves with this for defense'
Detroit,.
4 00
and to shoot game, jack rabbits and
VtM
12 M
coyotes with.
Tho bowie knife worn
on one side and the Remington on the
»:OT
1 ij
other, sheathed in a man’s belt, give
KaahvUto...
2 -••I
him the requisite nerve in a country of
2M
MM
desperadoes, all of whom are as “well
3 27
tttlO
' IfcOS n n
heeled” as ho is, and also available
rtaso UM
among Indians and wild buffalo.
The dueling pistol, tho “Trantor."
ThroesbCoMbeesiffi.SlM-plucCar* to and trow
is no longer on sale. This is the odly
Grand KapMa and Detroit. All train, connect is
heroic use to which a pistol is ever put.
•awe Sopot at Detroit with Orest Wwtert, Grand
Truk and Canada Southern Railear..
When two men stand up and blaze
B. O. MAOWN,
H. B. CkDTARD.
away at each other, with equal chances
AM'tOesnSqpVJaokaon. Urn’l Sop’t Detre
HwwavC. Waarwoa* a,
of being killed, it has a navy look that
Sufi
Gte&gt;'lPa.»andTtek.t At.nl^htoaso,
amounts to real heroism, but the aver­
age pistol is carried day in and day out.
jgROOKS, MARSHALL A CO.
like an ornament, or to shoot at cats in
the back yard, and tHht\ must be done
outside of the city limits or an arrest
may follow. Men wito are waylaid by
robbers are usually too frightened by
tbe suddenness of the attack to think of
Pay the highest marketprice for all kinds of
a pistol, and it is not often that a burGrain and Produce, {;lar
is even Cred at. If a code of p6iteneas could be observed with these
eed.&lt;, Feed, Lime, Sait, Plaster, Stuc­ people the gentleman of tbe hauso
would sit up in bed and say: “P-p-l-c,
co, Hair, Pine Lumber, Lath
Mr. Bu-u-r-glar, give me a cb-a-n-co!
and Shingles,
W-ait until I unlock my satchel, pl-ase,
AT THE LOWEST LIVING PRICES. and g-g g-et my pistol!”
It has been observed that women use
the revolver generally with deadly ef­
fect This may be accounted for by
the fact that they shoot lower than a
man, who usually hits the ceiling or the
opposite roof, and they fire at close
range.
A “pet" is a gold-plated, finely
carved, pearl-handled revolver in a vel­
vet-lined case. A boy’s revolver is a
single-barreled, murderous affair, like­
ly at any moment to “go off" when it
isn’t loaded, and costs seventy-five
Teeth Extracted Wifliout Pain.
cents. The safest man is tho one who
OfflceOpen Day &amp; Evening. keeps good hours and goes unarmed.
The Derringer, the Remington, Colt,
Smith it Wesson, Bull-dog—an English
pistol (it was with an American imita­
A. HARBER, M. IK.
tion of ^iis make that President Gar­
field was killed)—tho horse pistol in
IIOMtEOPATIIIC
use with the cavalry, and numerous
others, are in use. It was common to
sell small boys’ cheap pistols for blink
Office first door east of Opera House, and cartridges to celebrate the Fourth of
near residence on comer of Washington and July, but the law has forbidden this
State Streets, Nashville, Mich.
license.
There has been a decrease in the eale
J£ A. fellSH,
of revolvers in the past ten years. In
war times there is a heroic tendency to
"
“THB BOBS"
learn the whole manual of firearms,
and even now the- day after * success­
ful attack of burglars h a good day to
sell pistols, on the old principle of lock­
MA1HTILLF. .
KICK.
ing the stable door wnen the horse is
stolen. — Detroit Post and Tri tame.
IMp.a.' Am,, DatrollSJS p
&gt;—44»b.«. Arri*« I&gt;el toil«. SO )&gt;

Nashville Elevator!

Erperienced, Reliable, and Responsible.

A. H. WINN, Dentist.

BEST SET GUM TEETH $10.00

Physician and Surgeon.

i

BOOT AND SHOE MAKER,

J^ AlaE HOUSB,
Thornopplo Lake, BtUoIi.
L. P. Coi.k, Proprietor.
SportMneo. pLaaur* M«ker». or nteale parti*
will 6txl tola pl*c« aaJ bitaM a plaaaaat place I
•mod a Saly'a ramaUoo.
A new atcamer an

QLEMEKT SMITH,

Attorney at Law,

Attorney &amp; Counsellor,
WW axtewd to iagaj baHaaas ta any part at

JgLACK &amp;. MOX,

American and Foreign Marble,
MonumerU, Tcmhronen. Mxatlei, tc.,

yyiLLIAM JONES,

/ ■Ma.msnwfiii saiitaubi.

t

E

'and

for it.

Delicacies for the Convalescent

When my physician savi, with a
smile, “Oh, you’ll do now. but do, not
sit up too long, and have something
nourishing to eat..something light,anything. in fact, that the appetite rel­
ishes,’’ etc., and straightway takes his
leave of me, as if he had accomplished
a good thing, which, of course, he has.
in getting me along thus far, 1 respond
with a weak smile, and gaze in a help­
less sort of way after his retreating fig­
ure. I sigh for the strength and vitali­
ty that once were mine, that would lift
me out of this state of helpless feeble­
ness, when my revery is broken by my
attendant’s pleasant voice, saying:
“Well, what shall itbe,brailed chicken,
lan.'- chop, or custard?
“No, no. none of these things, but a
piece of broiled herring,” at whiehsbe’

laughs and asks, “Anything else?”
••Yes, a slice of lemon.”
This is most appetizing, and will rel­
,
Ish when I turn in disgust from other,
food.
I’icked-up codfish is another
delicacy, properly prepared on sippet*
of toast, and a small slice of salmon is
also very good. A fries seen of cut
dried beef, shredded and heated ia
cream, with a dash of pepper, together
with a milk cracker toasted in the oven
to a nice bbowu and crispness. Oysters,
when they are not objectionable, and
when attainable, if ent up into small
pieces and staamed, not boiled, in their
own liquor for an hour, will be found
delicious, with a piece of toast daintily
and evenly browned. Take a very
tart apple, pare it and slice it exceed­
ingly thin in a bowl, pour over it boil­
ing water sufficient to just cover it, and
turn a small saucer over it; set it where
it will get quite cold, then strain, and
it will be a very refreshing and cooling
beverage. r Barley tea is also to be re­
commended where there is a cough.
Take a teacupfui of barley, add to it a
quart of waler, aud let it boil slowly
until the water is milky and thick ia
appearance, then strain it through a
small sieve, adding the juice of a lem­
on. and sugar to taele.
When you begin to fancy something
more hearty, snow pudding is very
light and delicate. Tomala custard
is also considered good for consump­
tive patients. Stew some rip« tomatoes:
strain through b coarxe sieve. To haW
a pint of the tomatoes add one pint of
milk, two egg# and one teaspounful of

to set it out with, and as 'a precantionary measure against everything
getting cold upon it,ihrow a large na;&gt;k in Over it all in carrying it through the
halls. Arrange things symmetrically
upon it, so that there will be uo un­
necessary fussing when the tray is once
set down. And last, but. not least to j
me, have some flower upon it; a half- !
opened bud, a full-blown rose, a sweet- ;
scented pink or a geranium blossom, a j
bunch of pansies, anything that shall ■
speak to you from nature, and thus -j
serve to-turn your thoughts from your- i
seif, your weakness and pains, to the |
world outride of your sick chamber, to )
other weary -ones more helpless than ।
yourself, more desolat*; who have not j
the comfort* you possess, no kind, loving hands to tend, or gentle hearts, as j
you have, to watch ana anticipate vour
every want, and glad eyes to sparkle at
your return to health.—Aunt Addie. »»i
Country Gentleman.

Simply Passing Away.

About three weeks ago William Dow­
ney of Blackwell’s precinct died in a
very singular manner. His strength
began to fall on Wednesday without
apparent cause; his flesh fell away with
alarming rapidity, and by Monday fol­
lowing he had absolutely dwindled
awAy without having felt sickness or
suffered the slightest p&amp;in or indisposi­
tion. When placed on his death bed,
u few hours before ha died, he was
laughing and talking, and declared that
he never felt better in his life.
Snch a
singular and
unaccountable death
naturally created considerable surprise
and wopder in the neighborhood where
it hapjiened. But these were increased
to consternation when in a lew davs
After Mr. Downey’s death, his daugh­
ter, Miss Eallie, who is about twentytwo years of age. was taken exactly as
her father was. and without suffering.
the slightest pain or sickness has grown
weaker and thinner each day, iTil she
is but a skeleton ot her former self, and
at our last account was lying speechless
upon what has doubtless proved her
death-bed ore this. The physicians arc
completely nonpulsed, and are unable
to form the slightest idea as to the
cause or nature of their very strauge
malady, and, to add to tbe confusion
and mystery, the sick bed of the young
lady has been almost constantly attend­
ed by strange and unnatural noises—
sometimes seeming like the roar of a
planing mill, then like a sewtng ma­
chine, and again like many other things,
continually changing but hardly ever
ceasing. It has thrown the whole neigh­
borhood into a fever of excitement, and
scores at persons have visited the house
where the young lady is sick, and are
able to testify to the correctness of
these statements.—Louisville Commer­
cial.

Yonng Rats Nursed by a Cat,

A few years ago, when at a neigh­
bor’s house, it was mentioned in the
course of a conversation that there was
then on the premises a singular case of
a cat having adopted children from n
nest of one of her natural victims. On
my expressing % wish to witness this
phenomenon, I was at once taken to
the stable yard, and there shown a fine
female cat nursing a family composed
of two kittens and two handsome young
rata, the whole four living in perfect
harmony. On my inquiring the history
of this remarkable group, 1 was infone­
ed by the coachman in charge that
shortly after the cat-mother had given
birth to a/litter of kittens, she had been
deprived oy him of all but three. The
■mother evidently did not approve of
this reduction in her family, became
restless fora time, and, on'her again
settling down, it was discovered ahe
had rcplsctul one of her murdered chil­
dren by a fine young rat. Seeing this,
and knourtng that cats were too numer­
ous to please the gamekeeper, the
coachman determined to destroy one
of the throe remaining kittens, ‘which
was done. On the following morning
the coachman, on visiting the cat’s
nursery, was not a little surprised to
discover that the mother, in lieu of her
murdered offspring, bad introduced into
her nurecry a second young rat.
The two kittens, in company with the
two rats, had been impartially nursed,
and were, when I saw them, 'living in
perfect harmony. They were at that
time about two months ph|,_and were
residing together in an old wine case,
with a piece of wire netting thrown
over the top. The young rats were
pretty-looking, sleek creatures, with
bright brown eyes, and evidently well
nourished.
They were, however, of
different dispositions; for while the one
would with confidence return the visi­
tor’s gaze, the other disliked being
looked at by strangers, and would, on
the approach of the Utter, make rather
frantic endeavors to conceal itself
amongst the fur of its foster-mother.
I atterward learned. I regret to say,
that the family party was broken up in
an abrupt and unsatisfactory manner.
The friendly coeohman bad left his sit­
uation. The cal-ktoUicr had given way
to some poaching proclivities, and dar­
ing * nocturnal ramble had been
caught and killed in one of the game­
keeper’s traps. Tbe kittens and young
rats were thereafter thrown friendleson the world, and left no trace behind
them. —Chambers' Journal.
—A little Boston girl who had seen
an engraved copy of Millais' “Th*
Princes In ths Toofer" in aplcture-shop
window went in the other day and said
to the shopkeeper: “I came to ask you
if you woeid please take that picture
out at- your window. Every time I
pass I look in, and the picture is no sad
tt makes me very unhappy. Won't
you please take it away?”—Boston

is likely to have an unfavorable effect
upon the fertility of Eastern farm*
The old adage “No cattle no manure,
no manure no crops, ” became current
when meat production was the principal
activity of cattie fanning. Dairying, as
now practiced, hat almost wholly grown
______ __________
up within
tbe last twenty-fii'e years.
Formerly each farm kept' a few cows
for breeding purposes, and incidentally
for the production of butter and cheese;
but the great improvements made in the
quality ot dairy products have so immeiiMily increased consumption, that the
breeding and meat producing part lias
been almost lost sight of, and the cow is
treated simply as a machine for the production of milk.'
Thus the food, in this kind of cattle
fanning, beyond the food of support,
js expended in tbe production of milk,.
which, in many districts, is all removed
from the farm, and thus produces a j
constant drain of fertility. The cow
that yields 5,000 pounds of milk in a
y«ir.’ would represent a beef animal
that should gain GOO • pounds in live
weight; and while the milk of the cow
would contain 32 pounds of nitrogen,
the A00 pounds gain in the berf animal
would contain only 1L2 pounds of ni­
trogen; and. the milk would contain :&gt;•'
pounds of ash constituents, while tbe
beef would contaiu only 20 pounds. It
may be said that the milch cow will car­
ry off three times as much nitrogen,
and about twice as much phosphoric
acid and potash as the beef animal, and
this shows the difference between the
milk and beef production, and the natu­
ral effect of these two styles of fanning |
upon fertility. But this view applies
strictly only to cheese-dairying districts,
or to districts of milk production for
city consumption. Where only but ter i«
sold, and the refuse milk isfed out upon
the farm, dairying compares very even­
ly with beef production.
We discuss these j&gt;oints here to show I
what must be the probable results ot
this Eastern style of cattle farming, and 1
to show a necessity for Eastern farmers'* I
to consider them iu time, and avoid such
depleting effects.
They bare an easy way of escape; and
that is', to ailopt. xn'a modified way, the
English system of feeding a certain
amount of'purchased food, containing
in excess the elements which milk pro­
duction exhausts. Two hundred pounds
of linseed or cotton-seed meal, fed tc
each cow during the season, would off­
set these losses, and would be likely tc
produce an extra amount of milk suffi­
cient to pay the cost: and, as tire to sev­
en million ’ dollars' worth of these oil
cakes are annually exported, it would
seem to be the dictate of prudence tc
retain them at home.
But the greatest loss in fertility undei
the system of Eastern farming consists
in the almost total loss of tbe liquid ma­
nure produced by farm animals. T he
nitrogen, phosphoric acid and potash,
which go to waste unon most Ea-steru .
farms, greatly exceeds any loss in the •
sale of milk. ' They do not seem to be 1
fully aware of this great waste—proba­
bly'because they do not think the liquid
manure of so great relative value ns it
really is. If they would completely save
and apply the liquid, and make no use
of the solid droppings, it would decided­
ly improve the fertility of their farms.
The cost of water-tight gutters for the,
complete saving of both liquid and solid
manure is but a mere trifle compared
with the advantages that would result 1
Western farmers have hardly l&gt;egun
to consider the manure question at alL
But as thev are quick to-see aud adopt
the profitable system of dairying, they
will soon be compelled to consider it,
for there is a limit to the fertility of the
richest Wectern soils. There, as in the
East, the question of com;&gt;ensatlon tc
the soil for the loss of fertility in con­
stant cropping, must be met. and an­
swered. Farmers cannot consider it too 1
soon.—Rational Live Stock Journal.

AND

X.OXG KXOWX AS

-

PENGELLY’S WOMAN’S FRIEND

Physicians

; Every mother of daughters should
know about it—because it brings
health

TO GIRLS

Hive Signed or Endorsed the
Following Remarkable
;
Document:
, „„
m_ 2 j w-o. K—
.
iaa Obcmlsta, 21 Flatt St., Hew York.
Oentlemen:—Tor the past few yean we

TO YOUNB LINES
Threatens^ wttb soy of IBs ootoWAinw am wsaa
wn^atnwst.« gubtoo*

JQ OVERaWORKED WOIIEIs

have sold various brands of Porous P1a&gt;AmH *.Ka ’PnWIr riw.ftrr

of confidence. They are auperlar to all

'

To Women Advanced in Life

external nee, *
ParmaccuUcal product, of the hl*he«t
BBBr
omnvAtir nf
ind so reccwuisod Vv pbUato. wuAliy attributed to other eaUMA. but

leucoiihhcea

itvixs

the

finest

When other firmed lea fall cat a Ben- ' cosir LEXIONZoa 1'bora cures tba fanner

cheap Flaatara, lAln
, AddTOM

trical Magnetio toy*.

K. PENGELLY, M. D

I fcdfatod CWtiTMd BUkibs PLASTEJL &gt; (.W »,

KALAStAROO, MX

I PARKER’S
HAIR

BALSAM.
.cLr^rCyper-

NA PATENT NO PAY

ga | ▼ F 11 T A obtained for mechanical d«*i.
1 I L ■ I \ r..n&gt;«licnl. or other compouaZ
r a 11 n i j zsss'irt.t*-- «•

Idandruff, restore*

frnmeca. InfrlBf*
relaUnf to pataota .

noBssros
COLDGHE.

INUHIIOhS

PARKER’S

GINGER TONIC

irnMSja

cliar*e. and wlti— yuta
|»t«reapondeixv *irirtl&gt; ■ ouAd'-uilal

Mindrake, Stillinga. and many other of the Uu
vegrubJe remerfie* known, cures all &lt;*i*crdc*» &lt;4
the bowel*, *iom»rh, liver, kidneys and lun£*, « u
The Best Md Surest Cough Cure fnr Used.

I.Ol’lH BAGGER A CO.,

i

MAH

U1

WITH THB OCOCRAPHY OF THU OOUNTRT,
EXAHMIMO THI* MAP, THAT TH*

CO
Q

Rnneapohl

.cldkN

H

4
0,

■a

Rats in Poultry Y*rd«.
An Illinois correspondent of the
Poultry Yard writes on this subject^
Procure an old eightcen-gnllon beer on
any other cask. “ not smaller,” whieffi
will hold water: knock one end out ana
cut a piece of board of the shape of the
cask to lodge on the top standing entl
wise. Then cut a nine-meh diamond-]
shape, with a key-hole saw. out of the
eenter of the piece lodged on. and bal-‘
ance it properly with two stout darning-]
needles at each side of the diamond,1
which will work up and down freely il
correctly done, and make a level top,
then bend a piece of stiff wire in be
arch about one foot high, directly ovei
the diamond and suspend in the cente
of it the bait out of the rats’ wav so tha
they can see and smell it well. Alw
place four gallons of water in the cask
and grease the sides, and in the center,
place a brick or stone only sufficient for
one rat to sit on with comfort half an
inch above the level of the water. The'
first rat lauded, finding itself like Robin-1
son Crpsoo on an island, commences
squeaking, and draws all his friends and
relations. The strongest rat lives the
longest, as they all tight for this posi­
tion as thev drop one by one into the
tub. and drown each other. The rats
should be fed for a few days on the top
of the cask to give them confidence, and
the balance made firm for that jH’riod.
I have seen as many as a dozen caught
in one night by thia wholesale drop. As
a rule, where poultry are over fed there
are plenty of rats.

—Considerable excitement has l*een
caused by th* dlscoverv of a seam in
tbe rocks near Fultonville, Montgomery
County. N. Y„ said to contain valuable
minerals. The seam is twelve feet wide,
and on either side of it is solid lime
rock. The mineral has even- appear­
ance of containing lead, silver and gold.

s
H CHICAGO, ROCK ISLAND &amp; PACIFIC R’Y

Is Th® Croat Connecting Link between the East and the West!
1u» niAln line run. from Cbtearo to Connell
Liberty, XawaCtty.MaraMra.Brookly u.Grinntu,
Itos Moines (tbs capital ofIowa i. smart, ArlanUcaM'TrsMir^Wn'snMMa from bureau
Junction to rsorls; Wilton Junetion to Muaenune. wuhtagtoa. VairSaM KUtoa. BeUtnap.
CsalMielns.MBn^stBaTysaHMi.q^ntta.Cswa-

Slrtpinj Cart for rieepinc pnrpoaea. and PaUca

SnBMM iron I
I MlMoort nvt*ra

urn*. mOmmMm a thro
lata tea *cto cSJtamaa.
i

c- rxcir. BLvrrs. LaAvaawoare amlatchi-

&gt;
|

Bock Utoad Short Um."
Ttir “Grext Roefc

is msinlflctelMy

Whstwiu pteMa/oaBostvilltMthsHaMvr*

I, S^VATI^aSUISSffXS
:

J

nut «us&lt;»llte»r.l Dii.ln* Cars Hiss AccjsnaAtrr All

■c».

CD
Guardian's Hale.

PIMPLES

(F'rrc) th- rntiw tor a

CONSUMPTIVES.

—Puffs: Mix four ^gs beaten sepa­
rately and very light, on* ~‘ - ----------of lord

ttof« or.heard.and yet has a name?
-—Nothing.

f-aritaa.

�n&amp;so:

which no i
aeaufetiona. Senator Faw

gained

•Ire Receiving JVew Fall’ Goods.

UCUIGAS ffEWH.
Kalamazoo i/ trying the electric
lightMatintgnr i« to have a $5,000 twostory brick boteJ.
‘ A stave factory at Milan burned, eni . IMS.'|„^.

■

that part of the state- It averages over
fonrteen feet in height, the highest
stilk beipg fifteen feet eight inches.
TheBfrfM.numberof ears on any one
stalk is nine- It is doubted if thia corn
enu l»e beaten in the state- The seed

Midland baa contracted for $90,000
worth nf water-works. _•
One man near Muskegon raised 10,­
000 head of cabbage this year.
Samuel Henderson shot nnd killed
himself at Au Sable, Tuesday.
.Col Luce of Monroe has been arrest­
ed for getting $1,450 by larceny.
A Htlc team has been selected to re-,
present Michigan at.Dreedmoor.
Geo. L. Yaple. of fit. Joseph county,

came from Russia.
A burglarous record : At Hubbards
town, Ionia county, Aug. 96th—$700
of jewelry from Capalau A Cowman,—
$900 cash from S. V. Bidder, and. a
buggy and sorrel mare from Dr. J. J.
Traverse; at Grand Rapids, Aug. S8tb,
$300 of goods from Spring A Co.; at
Niles, Aug. 96th. $3,300 worth of good
from A. J. Fox’s dry goods store.

ha« been nominated for Congress.
Buckont Bins, of Kalamazoo shipped
1,000 poonbsof celery one day recently.
Half n block at Mt. Pleasant destroy­
ed by fire. Lose $3,000, insurance $000.
Robert Gilmnn hastened Grand Rap­
id*-city for $10,000. Sidewalk difficulty.
Edward Ranter luia declined to run
for treasurer on tbe "co-operation”
ticket..
■rttus A Hicks of Battle Creek, are

LETTER FROM NEWPORT.

spending $12,000 to pnt tn the Hun­
garian or nMler-reduction Rystein of
milling.
.
’ I,07&lt;i logs .irere chrtEBay City mill

in eleven tyount—the biggest days work
on record.
A reunion of the tire sufferers in the
Huron Peninsula will bo held at Mindon Sept. 5.
Alpena with its nine saw mills expects
with luck to cut 175,000,000 feet of lum­
ber this season.
Teeuuiseh is excited over a new rail­
road. for which her citizens are subcribing liberally.
The D., L. A N. railroad company
. has contracted for tho construction of
$100,060'i*ar-shops at Ionia. '
Diphtheria is alarmingly prevalent
at Dauby in Ionia county. Fourteen
deaths have already occurred.
Battle Creek has a street railway
company, with $16,000 already sub­
scribed, out of $31,000 necessary.
Sportsmen’s clnbe are being organiz­
ed largely throughout tlA state with
the object of preserving game.
Goodness gracious! Four burglars
have been captured in this state. Two
nt Palo and two at Briminguam,
Frank Taylor of Tuscola hired n
stranger tliree weeks ago. He is now
‘ $300 out—just $100 for each week.
George Butler assaulted Ch ns. Davin
at Detroit Aug. 27, for walking with
his girl, and Butler shot him fatally.
Chas. Barrett of Kalamazoo, was
knocked down and his bead crashed beyond'recognition, by a freight train,
Aug. 90.
Dr.’W. H. Palmer a prominent man
of Jackson, has been arrested for em­
bezzling $500 raised for the blind po­
liceman of that city.
New religions society at Aljieno, call­
ed Perfectionists—a Mrs. Beekman the
headlight. |Wonder if it is ou thewomau-with-a-Untern plan.
A Mason carpenter was fined $50 and
costs for spanking a little step-daugh­
ter black nnd blue from tbe small of
her bock nearly to her knees.
A temporarily insane mother of near
Mt. Morris, bound her 5 years-old boy
to her and held their heads under wa*
ter in a tub till both were drowned.
The proprietor of one the steamboats
at Goguac lake has put aboard an
Italian band. Thus ho gets a complete
•cope on the other fellow’s boat.
Mathes Millard, of Palo, Ionia coun­
ty. has been arrested on suspicion of
having poisoned his wife. He died
some time ago, but the remains were
recently exhumed, ar.d strychnine in
fatal quantities found in them.
Dr. H. P. Bemis, formerly of Oberlin,
O.. but lately of Grand Rapids, has
“tlBraiffested for forgerieo in Reynolds
county Mo., amounting to hundreds of
thousands of dollars. He was taken to
Cleveland, and indicted. Several of
the same gang have been convicted.
July A 1881, a tram on the G. R. A I.
railway ran into Ebenezer Folger’s rig,
smashed it, and killed tne horse, and
seriously injured XnL F. She has been
an invalid ever since. Attempts to net­
tle the matter by negotiation have
failed. Mr*. F. will be satisfied if the
court, will award her $25,000.
R. G. Horr has been renominated for
congress-by the republicans of tbe Sag­
inaw district.—In Willits’district, Boise
of Lenawee, who fought him so vicious­
ly, was nominated on the 85th ballot.
The replacing of Willits by the moat
•elfish and unprincipled man before
Hint convention mint be considered a
disgrace to tbe district.
When Ute Allegan county convention
-'•elected its congreaaional delegates it
cirose some from die clique opposed to
Prichard and Reid, supposing that they

Newport, N. H., Aug. 26,1882.
Tbe ai rival of President Arthur and
his staffuf stalwart friends has brought
large deputations of visitors from
every state in the Union to these brezzy
zy shores, iu the frantic hope of find­
ing a relief from the fiery-furnace
atmosphere that has been ragigg from
Washington to Boston. Yet even New­
port bus not been altogether free from
the "hot wave.” In sonic localities of
the more sheltered streets, notably
Thames St.: aud the queer, quaint,lane­
like streets running up across the ave­
nue, the thermometer has been on a
dance away up in the eighties and nine­
ties, almost an unprecedented thing in
this city of the*sea. But a dozen steps
or so, a corner turned, and whiff, comes
a hint of the strong, cool, salt wind,
straight from the ocean, and with the
cooling of the blood, the slowiug of the
pulses, the naughty words cool ;and
“slow,” upon the exasperated, long suf­
fering; masculine lips, frosh from tbe
city counting houses aud warerooms,
and life once more seems to these suf­
ferers worth living.
On the cliffs aud
and the shoreward part of the avenues
it is delightfully worth living and the
"full houses” have started the social
festivities into a sudden activity, which,
is pleasant to see, nnd sometimes pleas­
ant to participate in.
Politicians from all parts of the coun­
try are off and on here, and under tbe
mask of flowers and the strains of or­
chestras the candidates for political
honors in the various states are can­
vassed and discussed enthusiastically..
So finely and adroitly is all this con­
ducted that the neophytes, before they
know it, are drawn into the silken
ring, magnetized into positions and
declarations of opinions that;half an
hour before very likely they were not
entirely conscious that they possessed.
The women of America an- developing
h genius in the political diplomatic line
which suggests here and there the wily
graces of a Frenchwoman, and it is to
their subtleties of magnetism that the
inexperienced succumb.
It has long
been a reproach to Americans that they
were over-fond of titles, but I am in­
clined to think that this is a good deal
of a libel. Barring the foolish ^aspira­
tions ot some foolish girls, and a fem­
inine species of young man. still more
foolish, I have failed to find any great
admiration extant amongst ordinarily
sensible Americans for. titles. There is
a certian curiosity with regard to the
possessor of loug-inheirited \ames
with tbe long-inherited prefix—a kind
of romantic interest which does not do
any discredit to the good sense or the
intellect. But when we hear that "Str
William” or "Sir Samuel so aud so”
was knighted by Queen Victoria, and
like intelligence in connection with
high-sounding prefixes, onr interest
wanes. If we are going to have titles
amongst us we want those with the

sacred flavor of antiquity.
The beat w
none too good for us.
'
Amongst the most interesting new ar­
rivals ere tbe English hanaome, which
a wise livery stable proprietor has im­
ported for the transient summer hire.
These are entirely new to most New
Englanders, and certainly, unseen be­
fore on New England soil. To the day
excursionists from Neighboring towns
and cities they are objects of great in­
tereat but the native Newporter, of
whom I spoke in.my previous letter, re­
gards them calmly, as only another of
the whims of "tboae foreigners.” Sev­
eral little cabs at a lower rate of hire
are also on the streets, all of which go
to show That tbe reign of the con­
scienceless hackman ia over. Thia de­
sirable state of things has been brought
about by the. public “drags” that have
bees put upon (he avenues and beach
roads for the past summer or two.
Theae were so handaame aud comfort­
able that they were constantly patron­
ized to tbe great neglect of tbe car­
riages. I have aeen myself within tbe
last two seasons more than half the car­
riages in waiting on tbe wharf, as the
would vote as the oouysmtton instruct­
excursion boats of tbe awraing came iu
ed.
They rrfnw- to do it N. A. driven lack to the town unoccupied,
Earle's chance# f«H the nonanation while the big hnudaome drag at fifteen
cents per bead rolled triumphantly
away parked as cloae as it would hold.
KHlnnmxuu, Aug. Mbit; rrnmuinates] A- thia stare of things didn’t “pay”
tbelivery stable who owned the cardive, aud (he old extortion of five dol-

Acouht.

M««n.

Splendid Line of Those 5c Prints
backward and forward about tb- extensive

NEW HATS AND CAPS.

•eutlncl ou the tower wax watching tbe attack­
ing psrtr, and appeared u&gt; be acting as chief

rifle. There seemed
outer irate dented that lhey were acting M
keepers under tbe Pelted States Marshal s alobeying bis commands, wnlch were to exclude
anybody from tbe grounds of Canonchet, - no

-OTT-

BOOTS &amp; SHOES

Do Sprague up to bls carriage, raying:

have you?"
Willie replied: “No. I have not I should not
think that I would."
. The boy wra then queatloned as follows:

“ Have you got any Gattllng guns up there?"
lad’s reply.
*• How many men have jrpu on tbe place?"
asked Cbaffi'c.

.

100 CASES

Have already arrived, and more coming. We intend to
make a specialty on these goods this fall. Call and see
them. CASH PAID for BUTTER and EGGS.

this place," replied WUlle.

on the grounds, but waa answered tn tho neg­
ative. The attacking party then agreed that
It would be dangerous and unwise to attempt
to invade the fortified premises, anil accord­
ingly withdrew. Mr. Chaffee says he shall now
ty, but tho latter did net accept It, because ho
could make no delivery. He did not Intend to
forsake bls claim, and would stand by bls pur-

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN- jbYim'ber
At Buxton’s new brick, have full and complete lines In

S.S.INGERSON&amp;SON

The Recent Flood in Texas.

Gxlvxston, Texas, August 25.
Fort Concho dispatches to tho A’am today in
relation to the Inundation of Ben Flcklln are
heartrending. Forty deaths are reported from
drowning. Tbe only names so far ascertained
are:
Mre. Metcalf and daughter, George Robert­
son Scott and Dr. Owens and one child. One
Mexican is also among the victims. The other
victims were twenty-one Mexicans at Kelly's
ranch, and ten Mexicans at Beasley's ranch,
also Joseph Matthews, wife nnd four sons, and
one woman and n baby. Ben FickUn is all
washed away except tbe Dght-houscs. Tho
court-house and jail are a total loss and unin­
sured from Ices'by water. The people of San
Angela tried to render assistance, but the nig.
Ing watdr prevented. It Is still impossible to
cross the North Concho. Tbe country presents
a spectacle which beggars description. Houses,
bones, cattle and clothing are piled up in
heaps at every step. The bodies of Mra. Met­
calf and daughter are the only ones found.
The telegraph-wires are still down.
Lirrix Hock. Ark.. August 20.
Tbe GaxtUc't Texas specials furnish more
particulars of the damage done by heavy rnlns.
The Not th Concho River at Pan Angela, is
swelled to unheard-of depth. It bad at four p.
m. gained a point on tho main stream of San
Angela, submerging all the houses. The Con­
cho Hotel is now deserted. The fcoplo are
moving all their effects on the high ground.
Ben Flcklln. on the main Concho, is complete­
ly Inundated. Tbe Court House has fifteen
feet of water In it. Houses, trunks, cattle,
sheep, nnd every conceivable thing are fior.ting down the river. The town is entirely cut
off from all communication except by
Fort Davis. Military telegraph lines are
covered with water' for over a mile from
Concho. Fears nro entertained for the people
of Ben Fick It n. An old stage station
Is covered with water, but the occupants
must have escaped. The loes of property In
san Angela, os seen from the opposite side,
includes Mrs. Tankeriy's fine hotel, Patton A
Longworth's tin-shop. Vick's storehouse.
Miller A Reck's livery stable building and
four dwellings. These were all abode build­
ings. Along tbe banks some fifty or sixty
Mexican bouses were washed sway. Tbe post
eagine-boti.se Is destroyed. The loss at Bon
Flcklln is not yet ascertained. At Dublin the
Cosiue River Is a mile wide. Several bouses
have been washed away. Tho amount of
damage can not yet be estimated. Many
horses nnd cattle were floating down the
stream. Several persons had to leave or get
on top of tbelr houses for protection.

j Hare the largest stock of LUMBER ever laid
down in Nashville.

Gents l^urniHltiny Goods,

100,000
Feet kept constantly on hand.

Pine Lumber

It you want something new, neat and nobby, just take a look at our stock,of

A specialty

CDFFS, COLLARS, TIES, HANKERCHIEFS, JEWELRY, ETC.
THE

Finishing Lumber,

SECRET

lioflriur Cnlinj. filing, Saitliig, hist
I Or anything in the budding material line, 'see
I our stock, select what you want, and be happy.

j Also Flour. Salt, Niiingles, Lath,

FOR THE LEAST MONEY.

aud Blnek.mlUi . Coal,

Remember that we {have .'no old, shop-worn and unseasonable goods, but that everything Is

For tale at lowest prices.
HIGHEST PRICE PAID FOR

NEW JLTTZD FRESH I

WHEAT, OATS, CORM, ETC.,

*

As usual.

S. S. INGERSON &amp; SON.

arf- Al) our purchases are made with the cash and by strict attention to the wants of ou ।
customers we expert to reap success.
Nashville, Apr. 20,1883.

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN.

Horses
-MUST BE-

THE CROWN SEWING MACHINE.

Sh.od

The Cut shows the new stand. Just perfected and put on the market.

ALWAYS BEST
'

TO HAVE THE JOB DOKF

SKILLFULLY.
Recognizing These Facts,
And detiring to increate my proeperity
by affording the public

Immigrants.
Wasrisgton,

z

jgnstffr.

THE BEST WORK

the Immigration into tbe United States for tho

In that line, I have employed

name month in IttiL During July userc ar­
rived in tbe customs districts of Baltimore,
Boston. Dctriot, Huron. Minnesota, New Or-

Chas. Middleton,
TThom I can recommend as an

of whom fS.01# were immigrants, 3.8S7
atttzensof tbe United States returned from

A No. 1 Workman.
land. Ufa: Austria, L1B0; Belgium, 80; Bo-

J. M. 'WOOD.
FOUNDER and MACHINIST

Poland, 4ff7; Sweden, 5.M8; Kwltxcriand, T75;

Probate NoUee.
Stats or MicmoAX, (
Coearr or B»ut, i"'

Scotland..

. un
. LP®
.1S.7X1
■ !-,1M

Eg

1M07

Total................ *.......................... M0»

M,«T

—A Nemon County (Georgia) widow­
er rode up to the gate of a handsome
endow and asked for a match to light
his pipe- The lady gave him the dc•ired article, when he naked: "Did
you ever think of coming to my house
(•liver
-No," she raid; •• if 1 had it
would have done me no good.” In ten
davs thev were man and wife.

-- ——---------- * tor the pUtnuti may be. There U always a free and easy action oi
the pitman at every point in tta stroke.
D riiowg tbe belt-replacing device, by means of which any lady or child can
throw tbe belt on the drive wheel instantly, aud without moving front her chair.
E ahowa the enlarged nickel plated and polished drive-wheel. By mak­
ing thia wheel nearly four inches larger in diameter, six) putting the weight mostly in tbe cztremt
outside rim of it, we make It ran easier andlocger, when none started, m It has more momentum
F F ahowa the oil cup« on the treadle bar for preventing tbe oil from drop[ on ti&gt;c carpt t or floor.
® ® ® show the porcelain coaters, one in each of four feet of the machine.

E. R. WHITE, Agt., At Kucrtr Bro's StareMaabvtlla, Mich.

-

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                  <text>ORNO STRONG. |
Editor

and

Proprietor.

J

VOLUME IX.
LIFE IN NASHVILLE
And Her Environs.
YOUR EAR, GENTLE READER.
You that are indebted to The Nashville

we must pay our debts; consequently, we

Won out of your first wheat money.
Don't forget it! Don't forget it!
no (tatron can miss it, and shall expect a prompt
remittance.

Orno Strong.

—The hesfith officer has completed
the rounds tnd reports the,/village as
being in a Wealthy' Condition. This is
good ne'wr
—That such wrecks as McCaul impose
on good people can not degrade the
temperance cause in the minds of tbe
thoughtful.
—Hiram Coe, administrator, sells to­
day (Saturday) the personal property of
the Late Jacob Franck, one mile north­
west of the village.

}

.

crowded with business. Thews who
Deed woii in their line evidently appraciate their skillful workmanship

oowptee

tripped the “light tantartie*

about &gt;14 out. However, they have the

&lt;

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1882.
was rightly conducted,» and together
with an elaborate supper at the Nash:
ville bouse, was heartily enjoyed by the
participants. They will try it again on
the 22d of September with a 50-cent
dance, to be followed by others every
two weeks daring the winter. •
—On Sunday last a little four year old
boy of A. Linsea,living about two miles
north of town, fell from a pair of bars
and broke bath bones of bis arm, be­
tween the wrist and elbow. Wednesday
Dr. Barber was summoned* who re­
paired the damages and made the lit­
tle fellow as comfortable as possible.

—A young fellow from the country did
considerable talking around town, the
other day, because, as he said, he could
n’t get any of the drug stores to fill his
“subscription bill.” He said he wanted
the n^edicine for a young lady in his
neighborhood who had “apilaptic fits”
bad, and was going into “spavins” every
few minutes. ’

—Dr.Barber recently removed a piece
of a sewing needle about, an inch long
from the hand of Mrs. Jacob Stine,
—The boys turned Al- Rasey’a front where it had remained embeded be­
door step into a boxing school. Tues­ tween the bones of the band, near the
It never
day evening.
Lota of fun for the wrist, for over eight years.
caused her any inconvenience until re­
fellowa-who looked on.
—Station Agent Hawthorn will com­ cently and for that reason she never
mence on tbe 18th to sell half-fare has had it removed before.
-To-morrow is Rev. A. D. Newton’s
tickets from Nashville to the state fair,
last Sunday here, and he will preach in
good for returning to the 93d.
—Cheer up. cheer up!—the reports of the evening on the superiority of the
big wheat yields come rolling in from religion of Christ. His labors daring
all around, and when the holidays come his three-years stay here have been
you will find your pile is as large as marked by very earnest endeavors for
spiritual upbuilding of a strict style,
ever.
and were it not for the rule of limita­
—Tbe lower meat market, Jos. Cole
tion he would undoubtedly be retained
proprietor, has woodbmed. Cole was
by the will of the congregation.
Dot “heavy” enough to do business in
—On Monday Jerry Vannocker trad­
Nashville, and will try Woodland
ed
his flbare in the livery business of
Center.
Beaucamp A Vannocker to George
—The fire cistern bear Chipman’s is
Lewis of Johnstown for bis 40-acre
digging, and another has been located
farm in that township, and on Tuesday
near D. C. Griffith's house,
it is ex­
Vannocker moved on to the premises.
pected that all of them will be finished
It is said that, counting the worth of
in 90 days.
the livery stock he brought here. Jeny
‘ —“What ye doin’,” asked a simple­
can by this trade count himself as hav­
looking fellow from Maple Grove, as ing made &gt;1900 clear in the past year.
he came to where they are digging out
—On Wednesday, while Mrs. O. M.
of the fire cisterns; “be ye puttin' in on
Yates’ living rooms were unoccuoied
artificial well 7”
and open, $15—84 in silver, $3 in bills
—There are 291 school children in this
and $8 in change—mysteriously disap­
district, according to the census taken
peared from her pocket book, which
by Geo. F. Truman this week. Accord­
was lying on the floor under a stand in
ing to rfltoollection there were 324 last
her bed room.
Some $23 in bills, the
residue of a roll from which the $3 in
—Wednesday at one of our elevators bills were taken, were left in the book,
a farmer by leaning on the scales —and that’s where the mystery comes
gained 16 pounds of wheat—for a min­ in. .
ute ; but he lost much of other people’s
—The shipments of new wheat from
• respect and his own—for good.
this station aggregated on Thursday
—Chas. Andrews,who recently bought about as follows: Fowler A Ingerson,
the Zemeri Brooks place, southeast uf thirteen car-loads; Brooks, Marshall A
town, brought in, Saturday, some stalks Co., twelve carloads; a total of about
of jnillet that measured five feet and 8,400 bushels.
This amount will be
from ^fyen to ten incbee in length.
seen to be very small compared with
—Theo. Downing was m&gt; much inter­ the shipments of last season up to the
ested in the work on his new building corresponding date. B., M. A Co. have
on Thursday, that he took no note of held a large share their wheat rather
time, and about seven o’clock wanted than ship it in a dangerous condition.
to know if there waa not an eclipse.
—Chas. Fowler has been sighing for
—Prof. Geo. Conley, who is to have farm and home and wife almost ever
charge of the Nashville school this since be went into the elevator and
year, waa in town thia week Tuesday, lumber business here, and this week
and is spending the remainder of the he jumped at h chance to sell with the
week with his parents in the country. alacrity of a hungry pickerel after a
minnow. The buyer was Charley inger—The story about a married man
sor his partner’s son, a solid young
walking with another man’s “wife”
business man well known in Wood­
■ Monday evening, is undoubtedly true ;
land. Nashville has lost a genial gentle­
but the dime-novel stories of what the
man,but there’ll be a happier man and
other man did about it are somewhat
a better looking farm in Maple Grove
exaggerated.
township.
—Experiments at Brooks, Marshall A—Capt. O. R. VanEtten, a reformed
Co.’s elevator, the past week, prove
temperance speaker and one of the
that grown wheat will propagate all
most pleasing and effective talkers in
right. Tbe experience of farmers in »a
the field, will occupy the M. E. church
section of Lenawee county, some yean
next week Friday evening the 18th.
ago, proved the same thing.
The Capt. is engaged by the State
-Mine host Flint, of tbe Nashville Temperance Alliance, the object of
house, has connected his office and which is to secure the submisaon by
kitchen by telephone; and now the the legislature and the adoption by the
presiding genius of the gridiron can people of an amendment to the state
order more steak without scooting a constitution prohibiting the manufact­
small boy round the back way.
ure and sale of intoxicants. .There u
—Westland of the Independent thinks also a National Prohibition Alliance,
Grand Ledge goes Nashville one better whose object is to secure the same kind
because over there they have a white of an amendment to the United States
blackbird,—or at least a bird that aaao- constitution.
cirtes with b flock of blackbirth and
—One of the most enjoyable and suc­
has Mil their characteristics except the cessful picnics of the season was the
bheknees.
Christian Sunday school picnic held at
—Braun Bra’s., who recently formed
a co-partnerahip. evidently know wbst

|TERMS; $1.50 wk Yex

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun.

Tbomapple Lake on Wednesday. One
hundred and thirteen took passage for
the lake on the B-.83 train; others fol­
low in carnages, on the local freight
and mail until the number was increas­
ed to 150, and a happier-lookiLg lot of
children, it has not been our good for­
tune to look upon for many a day. A
sumptuous repast was spread in the
ball shortly after 12 o’clock, and the
day was spent in boating, swinging,
playing croquet and lively eon versa-

LOCAL GIBBLE-GABBLE
More wetness.
M. B. Brooks is at home again.
E. W. Peckham was in Hastings over
Sunday.
Mrs. J. Oamun and Hortie are visiting
at Greenville.
Stock buyers were numerous here
the first of the week.
Miss Ida Owens is visiting friends in
Baltimore this week.
Miss Alta Deriar spent the week
with friends at Lansing.
"Judge” McCaul jumped a hotel bill
at the Nashville House.
Miss Qertie Ingerson has returned
from a visit at Woodland.
Dr. W. H. Aylswortli Sundayed over
with friends at Grass Lake.
Rev. Bissell exhibits considerable
nerve in the art of swinging.
O. L. Palmer of Adrian waa the guest
of Miss Mytre Myers tho past week.
James Mosher of Shilah, 0., is visit­
ing and prospecting in this section.
Mrs. F. C. Courier of Battlb Creek, is
visiting with relatives at the Wolcott
Rev. A* D. Newton attended the pro­
hibition convention at Jackson, Thurs­
day.
C. L. Glasgow Sundayed at Jones­
ville and returned with Mrs. G. during
the week.
F. T. Boise and family have gone to
house-keeping under their own vine
and fig tree.
Albert Congdon and wife, of Hop­
kins, Allegan county, are guests of S.
S. Ingerson.
0. E. Hawthorn and wife of Vt
Ville were tbe guests of bis brother
over Sunday,
Mike, the taffy man, has bought out
his partner, and the latter has gone to
Grand Rapids.
Misses Blanche Boult and Daisy
Smith of Battle Creek are visiting Miss
Hattie Foote.
Dr. D. S. Conley is experimenting
with the remittent fever, at his home
south of town.
Miss Jennie Barnum, of Woodland,
returned home Thursday from a visit
with friends here.
Dr. Ludington has rented Mrs. Wick­
ham’s property on the west side of
Main St. for an office.
Regular meeting of the fire company
next Tuesday evening.
Every mem­
ber is wanted dn duty. .
A dozen or so of our people took ad­
vantage of the excursion from Char­
lotte to Detroit, Tuesday.
On Monday Miss Gertie Ingerson lost
a dress and some ribbon while on the
way from Woodland to Nashville.
R.J. Drake has gone to Dayton,
Berrien county, and his place at the
depot here is filled by Wm. M. Haw­
thorn.
John Kocher has returned firm the
West. HP made quite an extended
trip through Colorado, visiting its prin­
cipal cities.
Alex. Blair went to Denver last week
where he is now engaged in building
operations. He expects to locate in
that busy city.
Miss Eva Gregg enjoyed the com
pany of a few friends at her home two
miles west, on Sunday last, on the oc­
casion of her birthday.
Orno Strong, of the Nashville News,
is the conundrum that keeps several
aspirants to editoral fame a thinking.
-Grand Ledge Independent.
It is S. S. Ingerson A Son now. They
will no doubt continue to transact the
satisfactory business heretofore en­
joyed by Fowler &amp; Ingerson.
Frank Flint, tbe deaf mute, took a
trip to Hastings, this week, to see his
girl, and seemed to find as much pleas­
ure in it as many a more gifted fellow.
A praise song service was held at tbe
Christian church last Sunday evening
in lieu of the regular service. It was
pronounced good by all who heard 1L
The good-looking phiz of Dr. W. H.
Griswold beamed upon Nashville this
week. * The Dr. is in practice at Muskegeon and reports flattering prospect*.
Railroad tickets to the ball* play at
Charlotte to-day, (Friday) are sold at
one and one third fare. Probably there
will be a large attendance from MiJdlevil’e.
Hon. E. 8. Lacey of Charlotte, was
in the village on business Monday. He
looked upon Nashville from the high ths
and was much surprised at its mag­
nitude.
The ice cream social given by Mrs.
Wheeler’s class at Miss Fannie Blair’s
residence on Wednesday evening, was
well attended and a veiy pleasant time
was enjoyed by all.
A line from Joseph Hewitt says they
were detained on the way six hours by
a smashup, but arrived safely io New
York eariv Wednesday morning. They
were to leave Thuraday noon by the
steamer Indiana, for the “auld sod.”

On Monday evening a little old man
with seedy clothee, wrinkled face, and
ong yellow hair, presented himself in
hhe M. E. pulpit, in answer to the an

Doijncement of “J. M. McCaul, one of
the workers in the recent temperance
revolution in Iowa.” His talk waa of
the most disconnected character, and
at the close he took up a collection,real­
izing $1.50. So peculiar, was [bis “lec­
ture” and hia general conduct, and so
familiar his countenance to many, that
considerable speculation aroba as to
his identity and character, and inquiry
has developed the fact that he is the
same man who several weeks ago trim­
med carriages for E. Cook for a week,
and took his whisky straight every day.
On Tuesday morning he called at The
News office, and in response to in­
quiries said he was going to Hastings
to lecture fhat evening, that his ex­
penses were paid, but that he was in­
structed to make them by collection if
possible, and that he was working for
Uncle Sam. He remained here several
days, tolling that he bad property on
5th avenue, New York, an immense
tract of land in southern Iowa, and 100
acres in Assyria, showing a letter of in­
troduction from Rev. A. D. Newton to
parties in Hastings, a leaf from a work
of Ingersoll’s, which he claimed as his
own production, and meanwhile “blow­
ing in” the $1.50 and lecturing on tem­
perance in Buel’s saloon. He claims to
be stopping with a brother at Charlottle; certainly he was “too full for ut­
terance” at the tournament. On Wed­
nesday, not haring money enough to
get Charlotte.be borrowed a dollar from
E. Cook; and when last seen was wend­
ing his way to the depot, mingling his
hiccups with the announcement that he
was to lecture in Lansing that evening
(bic.) It is the general opinion that
he is crazy ; and certainly neighboring
towns and pastors will do well to go
slow in extending their confidence to
“a little old man with long yellow hair,
fresh from the work in Iowa.”

PLEASE LET US GO HOME.’
It was between the hours of 11 and 12
of last Sunday night, when tl&gt;e virtu­
ous citizens of Nashville had sunk to
rest on their snowy conches and the
golden moonlight flooded tbe quiet
earth, that the peaceful dreams of the
sleepers at the Nashville house were
suddenly broken by the clatter of hors­
es hoofs and the loud talking of two
bummers from "VarmountviDe,” who,
each accompanied by a bundle of dirty
linen with an animating principle in­
side, began to hunt through the hotel
yard and around the barn fora place to
rest Not finding any, however, they
once more betook themselves to their
carriages and began racing, up and
down Main street Finally two fellows
sitting on the hotel stoop concluded to
stop it r bo stepping out into the street
and pretending to be the marahal and a
policeman, they called to them that
they “had made a race track of that
street long enough,” at the same time
grabbing one of the horses and threat­
ening to land tbe driter in the cala­
boose. “Jim! Jim!” yelled the terrified

the bulge and 9 feet deep inside measurement
Oak box on top of arch 16 inches inside me&amp;sThe following blds for building cisterns were
handed tn: W.E-Grigga &lt;35.00,each Tho*. Tur­
key &lt;30,00, each, Lewis Clark &lt;28.00 each.

Clark, the cisterns to be be completed within
thirty days. The committee also reported to
drive wells at or near each cistern for filling the
same. Motion by Lee that the contract for
driving wells be let to B. H. Hoag at &lt;10. each
Motion carried by ayes and nays as follows:
Ayes, Barber, Demaray, Lee and Lentz. Nays
Boise and Dickinson.
On motion Council adjourned.
F. McDehbt.
Elihu Chipman,
Clerk.
President.
The live stock at tbc Wises sale on Wednes­
day, went off at high prices—four common
spring calves for O6J0,’ a belter at &lt;36, the
sheep at &lt;2.75, and bogs that would go bat
little IT any over 45 pounds at &lt;3.25. But tbe
machinery, on account of the carelesaness with
which it bad been used, sold at merely nominal
sums—a grain drill for &lt;12, a Combined reaper

forth. These prices simply Illustrate bow well
it doean’t pay a man to not take care of his
tools. Most of the machinery was bought by Sol.
Troxell, who has the farm. . .

.

Cocncil Rooms,

i

Naihvllle, Aug. 28, 1882. j

Dickinson, Demaray, Lee and Lentz. Troateaa

The following accounts were presented and
on motion allowed by ayes and nays aa fol­
lows:
,,

LOCAL MATTERS.
DISSOLUTION

NOTICE.

day dissolved by mutual consent. Th avoir
debtod to the firm will seule with Mr. Ingereoe
who assumes all the liabilities of the firm.
Nashville. Aug. 31,1981
mH

'

Charles Fowler,
Steven 8.1 No erbon.

CO-PARTNERSHIP NOTICE.
&gt;r tbc
For
tbe purpose
purp&lt;4e of continuing the
tbe elev
rievator
and lumber business at the old stand of Fow­
ler A Ingerson. I have this day associated with
me in buineaa my son, Charles E. Ingersou.
All liabilities of the old firm will be tatumed
by the uew firm, which will be known ss 8. 8.
Ingerson A Son.
Steven S. Inoba»on.

A CARD.
I desire to return mv thanks to the public
fpr its libera’ patronage, during my connection
with the firm of Fowler A Ingerson, and ask a
continuance of the same to the new firm of In­
gerson A Son, who will be found to merit tbe
GT A second-hand onc-horse Buggy for sale
t
L. J. WHtttii'a

NOTICE?
Jflj parties Indebted, elthei by note due or
a. count, will remember I have tx-cu here a year
atkl, have bills to meet during the present
montth-and would like to see and settle with aa
many as possible. Thanking Vou for past fa­
vors and boning for others in the future, I am
Yours respectfully.

HASTINGS.*
Considerable petty theivlng here.
Kurtz A Newton hare dissolved partnership.
Kirk Grant has returned from hia western
trip.
James Crawley is going east for a little re
creation.
M. L. Bowen has a new safe. It weighs
about 4000 lbs.
The Browns of Pittsburg beat the Hastings
boys 15 to 0.
Mrs. Frank Holbrook and daughter of N. Y.
are visiting Mrs. Q. A. Holbrook.
Junes A. Sweesy lost a horse last Thursday.
It died while bitched to the wagon.
Base ball: Cedar Creek 2, Hastings 23;
Hastings second nine 5, Irving 17.
Major Anderson thinks the Chicago firm will
push the K. H. &amp; L. railroad prospect.
A son of A. Christy fell Into a pall of hot
water last Saturday. He was burned severely.
A telephone has been put up connecting R.
J. Grant's store with bls elevator and ware­
house.
Tbc temperance meeting will be addressed
next Sunday by Rev. Carnahan and P. T. Col
grove.
Walker Mathews and Richard |Batea attend
the agricultural* college this year. They start
next Monday.
Next Saturday, Prof. Hall will examine all
students who wish to enter school, but have
not been classified.
There is a demand that the old stagnant
mill-pond be done away with, aa tbe mill U no
longer used and the pond breeds death.
The Hastings base ball club beat tbe Char­
lottes 13 to 6 last week, and the Charlotte pa­
pers didn't find time to speak about IL
The team of crack shots captured about 1150
at the Muskegeon tournament, last week, and
also the grand prize. Taking the four contests
together their total score is higher by five points
than that of any other team. They were feast­
ed when they got home.

•

Hans.

VERMONTVILLE.

School open* next Monday. Tho board has
decided to admit foreign pupils.
Lecture on temperance by Capt. Van Ettcn,
next Thursday evening, Sept. 7th.
H. J. Martin and family are expected home
from Petoskey on Friday of thia week.
Hattie Curtis has gone to Nashville, Term.,
to take a position in tbe Flake University.
Tbe people here again have railroad on the
brain. Much confidence la expressed tn • the
fellow after his pardner; but “Jim” early completion of the Marquette and Macki­
was speeding down tbe street and out nac road through thia place. If so, we cordial­
of town at a rapid gait. Then the fel ■ ly invite your village to move up here and help
us enjoy the benefits of It. We don't want to
low began to blubber to the “marshal
be selfish about iu
“didn’t we always treat yon fellows
W. H. Benedict and the council are at log
well when you came to Vermontvillef”
ger beads about the sidewalK In front of the
The “marshal" said he didn’t know
former's lota. Tbe council are laying a walk
anything about that—he’d never been about four feet on tbe street line placing the
there, and he thought the beat place for covering plank parallel with the street, and
the fellow in ithe carriage was in tbe Benedict builds six feet wide between tbe form­
“cooler.” But the girl pleaded so hard er and bis building, placing tbe plank at right
to “please let us go home,” that the ang'es to the street You pays your money and
“marshal” relented—and they went.
, takes your choice.
A salt between T. D. Brown, and A A. Hop-

COMMON OOUHOIL ‘ PROUEEDIHqB.

NUMBER 5M

;

THE “BEV”.I. M. MoOAOT, (HI0.)

AM Psneeal Chit-Chat. '

CgKDIT SVBSCRIPTIONB &gt;1.75.

A full line of new Groceries just receiv1 to be sold cheap to cash customers.
C. Ainswoktn.
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN.

For nuking flour■
Tbe latter wcdo not want—So blow into feed
the first-and cure out the second—Clean your
wheat well for we give the same number
;«unds of flour les# twenty as our “tester’’
■ays it weighs per bushel—We expect to main­
tain the same standard of flour as tot year—
for our recently Improved facilties enable us so
to do. Bran in quantity and feel tor sale.
Come and try us.
•
0. G. Stebbins and his Millers.

tSy I am very much obliged to you tor your
patronage for the past fire yean and would re­
spectfully announce that I nave added to my
stock a complete line of boots and sliocs•
• C. W. Smite.
MONEY TO LOAN,
On Real Estate st low rate of Interest of
•
Lee A Durkee

£37“ Our new spring Teas have arrived.
They are of the garden variety and May pick­
ing and for strength and flavor they can’t be
beaL Aug. 1882.
C. W. Grangea.
FOR SALE.
Good span work Horses, also 16 spring Pigs,
1 Berkshire Boar and 3 choice Sows with Kb.
Enquire of
C. E. Inoersom.
sg- Cash paid for fresh Butter,

,

FOR SALE.
One or two cheap work Horses, or will trade
for tolls.
5tk51
T. E. Nilbb.

□ST Mason Fruit Cans aud Stone Preserve
Jugs at
C. W. Smith's.
WANTED.
100 cords of two foot wood.
Will pay cash.
J. Lentz A Son's.

SUGARS.
I take a back seat foe no one.
A pare augarfor .08 cento.
A splendid augar for .00 cente.
■
, A Rattler for 10cento.
C.,A’N»wortm.

S3" Cali and sec the best stock of Boots and
Shoes for the price, in Naahvllle. at
,
TELEPHONES.
TbeShgw A Garrcr Telephone. Tbe only
perfect Telephone known to acience. The only
one that conveys the voice as loud and dlatlnct
a&gt; when first uttered. Agents wanted. A good
paving business. AU parties wanting the agen­
cy or Telephones. address J. E. Garver, gen­
eral western agent, Woodland, Mi&lt;^i.

&lt;y Go to Prtodle A Chipman's for the Ex­
celsior Shirt Polish.
'•VINEGAR”
Pure Cider Vinegar by the barrel or gallon,
H. R. Dickinsow.

HF The highest market price paid for Bubsr and Eggs to Cash at
wheelem's.
O“ I want your Butter and Eggs,' and don't
forget that I pay the same in cash aa trade.

LOOK IN
At the new ten cent store tn the Reese building.
A large aelectlon of Tin Ware, embracing Cof­
fee Pots, Palls, Dippers. Baalnj, Pana. Tins,
Cups. etc.; Glass Ware, Silver Ware. Caatora,
Camp Chalra, Broshe*. Hose. Notion?, and oth­
the 25th, and resulted In a verdict foi Brown. er articles too num rous to mention. One
hundred useful articles selling for ten cento,
The case Mood thusly: Hopkins and wife gave fully worth 35. Come In, look at my atock,aak
Brown a bill of sale of the machines Id question, prices awl you will buy.
•
I. F. MAKETEACB.
bat afterward refused to deliver them up.

' anxocub, overl

Hopkins and wife claimed that they signed the
bill of sale under duress; and that the machines

Occasional.

A FEW THOUSAND DOLLARS
To Loan on good Real Estate security.
Lu 4c Dukkeb.

BARRYVILLE.

Elwood Marlin....
Horace Martin,...
Horace Larkina,..
Clark Rathbun,...

.&lt;596
. 413
. 200 evening,"receipted” &lt;14.70
*. 550
. 075

NOTICE.
The annual meeting of School District No. 1,
of the township of Cartieton. for the election
eotne ixtfore

David Stevens,.

4 70
301

Dr. tt C Scott, formerly president of the
Morgan r»d ribbon dub but now of Grand
Rapids, and David Forbes. •the Uainltabk,"
will talk temperance at the ball in Morgan,

the 4th

FARMERS. LOOK HERE!

near G.

�The Champion Machines.
WAGONS ONLY $60.00.

A VEXED CLEGTMAa.

back to his house in ailenoe.
" He gave the horse and sleigh errvr
into the band* , of his lured man, and
then so-urgentlr invited me to go with
him into the library that I abandoned
the-thought of accomplishing all I had
planned lor the forenoon, and went with
him. When we were again seated be­
fore the grate he looked, up and said:
“ • Gilbert, I am too much ashamed
of myself to know what to gay; but if
ever you hear me complaining again of
6 drva«hful Cate.
having a hard time. I wish you’d knock
me down at once, and don't bp at all
—ISMtoa Arise rttwr.
alarmed if I don’t get up again untill
have begged your pardon on my knees.
JUDGE BLAKE’S HARD TIME.
Now, as hat was it you came over to talk
; The thought pften comes tome that about this morning.’”—William N.
Gilbert was burn with a genius for find­ Burr, in Chicago Advance.
ing out people who have a hard time.
One day last week a new family ap­
The Queen of Burmah.
peared down on the-bottoms, put up n
tent, moved into it for the winter, hung
The Queen kept u., waiting two
out a sign bearing the words: "Wash­ hours. ’At length there arose a slight
ing, Ironing and Mending.” and before hubbub, which meant that she was com­
Saturday night Gilbert knew nil about ing, and all the court put Itself ■ into tho
their hardship*, and hod dropped so usual attitude for receiving majesty in
much of the oil ot comfort and good Burmah, i. e.: they prostrated them­
cheer into the lives of the shrinking, dis- selves. and folded their hands far in
eonrngod man 0n(£woman that, as they front of them as if in prayer. The.
told me to-day
I called u u them Queen I* only twenty-one years old.
- —
seems 's She is very nice-looking, unusually fair
. if the' Lord
't altogether forgot us foga Burmese, and her expression is
yet, though
had jest about reached really good, and makes me .inclined to
the p’int of givin' up and not believin' credit the assurance, given me by Sixter
in nothin’ nohow."
Teresa, that she -knew nothing at the
Hans Hansen, a Swedish express­ time of the horrible massacres that took
driver, who has hadone misfortune after place at Mandalay about eighteen
another during tie past y ear—first it months ago. I had to sit in front of
was sickness and death in his family, her Majesty. who hersdlf did not occupy
then an unprincipled broUier cheated the throne, but sat on a purple velvet
him out of something or other that of carpet,
with
a
cushion • for her
right belonged to him: then a cow that elbow to
rest on. Sister* Teresa
excelled all other cowa in the neighbor- then
Wvuuvc« &lt;uv
*,»
then *u
introduced
mo by wuuo.
name. By
hood fell sick one nigfit and died before the
way. "Gamp
” hail
questhn wnv.
•‘fiiunn"
hnil been mn».
. morning—added another hardship to the tioned about mun the morning, and. to
lUt
WO..V
hr
l.runVInhlo
ln.»
____
________
.7!......
I
I
.....
1
list last week by breaking his leg, and my
my great
great amusement,
amusement, I
I heard.
heard,0that
that she
she
Gilbert heard of it in less than an hour 1 had described me as a personage only
and gave up an evening of comfort at second to royalty itself in rank. -The
home to go over on tho North Side to more
mrxrn they
ikor think
ttiinlrnf
.A,, the
11. a better’”’ was
of you
see the unfortunate man. And now he the explanation she afterward gave me
has just been telling ns of another mau o'f this wonderful romancing, My
who has been having a hard time.
presents were then mentioned, and
“I called on Judge Bloke this morn­ then a maid of honor handed me n
ing,” Gilbert began as we sat down to beautiful gold cup, and a piece of silk—
the supper-tab^e this evening. “I the Queens gifts. I made a low bow.
thought I’d just run in and talk over The Queen then
took a puff at
that mining business a little, though I a huge cheroot, and then askdB my age,
don’t Qippuse we can do much with and several other personal questions.
those new
claims before
I --------- 8ecra°d n little shy herself, and
,
.— spring;
------------Fbut
—
didn't
‘ chance
----- - -to
------------------‘ -*
u- I when the conversation flagged she once
didn
t get a
Ray a word
of *the
1
matter 11went
to Urik about The Judge or twice laughed like a school-girl, and
having one of his *‘ unlinppy-stateunhappy-.-.MwC- made all the prostrate ones, including
' was baying
spells,’ as old Aunt Clarindy
Ckr’-J~ the nuns, laugh, too, by some remark
of-mind spells,
hen
would say, and so I put in the forenoon of here.
A mischievous little dog tliat
trying
to
get
him
under
the
trying to get him under the influence
influence of
of would
WOuld run
run all
all about
about the
the throne-room
throne-room
something that would give pleasure to upset her gravity first, and for once iq
•omething
if
hunst-lf and more comfort to those about
himself
about ; took off all the stiffm-ss
stiffness of the thing
thino- tri
td
.
see the general giggle. Tho Queer*
" I suppose you found the Judge I Mked how I liked Mandalav, and o|
poking up hrs pile of deeds, notes, eer-1 course I had nothirg but praises of all 1
tificaie.' and what not of that ilk. prb- saw. Upon this she said that these next
ponrton-F»hw long-anticipalcd advent | few days would be a great Burmese
into the county poor-house, didn’t you?” | festival.’and that there would be all sort*
l reinarKed, attempting facetiousness. . of entertainments at the palace that she
for I *new .Fudge Blake, or thought I would like me to stay ana see. I really
knew hint, about as well as any man of feared there would be no escape thb
my actjuaintance.
‘ time, but begged Sister Teresa ur.ide in ,
"Not exactly, laughed Gilbert, in French to get me out of the difficulty.!
r. jny; " but that whrch you have «ug- So „he expressed my thanks to the
g&gt; v.ed would hardly have been any more Queen, but sa d my -husband w««
lo .;?h. to my mind, than wa* the iinwar- obliged to leave at once for Rangoon.
’ sauted grumWng mood in which I 1 then naked if I might see the Princess
. found that man. sitting as he was in his —th,, baby. The Queen smiled a &lt;»ratwarm, cheery liorary—a perfect picture jfied maternal smile, but said ba'bv—
o: emtort Mid
it was. but tor tho ns,.,| two momh, «,„| s bull—wu,MlSip.
l on the brow ot tho man who cull.. Atter a few more formalities tbo i»U-rtl&gt;at Dao Jkm» lus own. He grumbled .-iclv
„ .mkUm emi through mv
about teSa. that ,nd the other, until one (oot being a little cramped, ro that 1
ought have thought the woe of tho world tried to Wriggle into a more comfortahle
n-fe.l on Judge BWt".»!»»«.
Hie petition, seeing which the Qu«mcoruldm nro I&gt; ..1 not yielded dunn- tho year erMelv remarked to Sister Teresa that I
arl he expected; rents are lower than mu« be tired of sitting on the ground,
they were two months ago; two of his I and. rising herself, left the roonf Here
down-town store-rooms Truro been rn- I must say that women fare much better
con: for a week, and one of his tenants than men at these interviews. All that
. could mv him only two-thirds of Lm l, necessary i* to keep one’s feet nut of
rent ilw fim pf the month, promising night, and * woman, thinks to her
the other third, however, by the tenth. „kirt*, can cully do this, sitting tailor
He went on at such a rate that I bqgan fashion, and as comfortably as she
to think if dyspepsia were catching it wou]d on her hearth-rug by tbe fire,
were next for me either to attempt to But
But the
the unfortunate
unfortunate men
men—
—Europeans
Europeans—
—
cure the Judge nt once or not expose niu*t twut themselves into positions
myodU further to what might prove a that soon become torture in order to
cnlnmitotL? result: so I said to him;
| keep their feet behind them. Wc did
•• * Judge, you have a horse in the not talk politics, or aav a word on cither
.
Mabie and a fine aleigh, haven’t you?’ side that could give rise to discussion—
" ’ Ye&lt; he replied; ’do you want to only one thing 1 told the sister to say
borrow the rig to rive, wmo miserable emphatically, and that was that I oominvalid a ulelgh-rido?’
Dlied with the Queen’s wish to see me
, ■
I was going to propose that you because I heard that she herself was a
and I take a little drive out together good and humane woman. I was very
this nlorntng.’ I said. ‘It will do you glad the King did not appear—one
good to ger out of doors, and I want could not pay him the same compli­
, you to make a call or two with me.’
ment. When the 'Queen left, the Prin­
" ‘On some of your hard-time folks, cesses clustered around me again, and
L pre*umv. to teach me that there are one of them took my hand and said
trials anil tears in this world which I something that seemed very amiable.
know not ot.' he snapped, at the same It turned out to be that she loved me’
Cme going to the door and calling to very
._.zmuch.
,A_,
Already’ Poor tilings.
Di* man to bring around the sleigh, j they have not mfleh outlet for their af■- .‘Well. I suppose I de grumble mure | lection*, for they are more closely im­
than there Is atty Deed of doing, but I; mured than the nuns in the convent.
'
• toll you what ’ tin, Gilbert, those miser- There are about SO of them, all, I
arable peopb; down on the bottoms ain’t believe, daughter* of the late King, who
tiie only ones that have a hard time of I hruf 53 wivesjjnd 110 children, uf whom
it in thu world.’
onlv 59 were alive at the time of hi*
•• fhe Judge’s line turnout was soon | death.—Frazer sMagazine.
. in readiness, and, putting on bi* heavy ]
.
, , .
. .wm.,: lur rop .»&lt;! gtorro. he
A S.rron Ewape.
nouuird lumsrlf at my service.
"I drove down town, occasionally]
—An engineer on a Boston, Hooaac
giving him a sort* uf good-fellow nat ou • Tunnel and Western railroad train, rethe baek as we n:i*»cd certain blocks cently, by rare presence of mind, avertwhiyl. »®ar his name, and then we went ed what would have been a terrible aoover to the North Side and • topped at i cidenc. Between Reynolds Station and
Mrs. Mallory’.*.
! Mechanicsville i« a. deep cut On one
l
. "
w for
'trouble, and a ■ side is a hill of c-Iaj; and on the other a
J -1 re.-ital of
* life-tong
““deep
ditch.
Thelrain was just enter­
loug-lar
trials.
’
mu I th" Judge, as we alighted.
ing the cut when the engineer. Charles
” I did Boiasay a word, for fast then Siloway. of Mechanicsville, disaovered
wc caught the sound of Mrs. Mallory’s that the hill was moving and that in a
voice, singing; ,
moment it would be down upon the
cars, causing great damage and proba­
ble lo.'S &lt;rf life. Hr knew he could not
stop in time to avert the accident. mi.Ihj
" 1 knocked. and we wen* admitted
_____grasped the throttleririth a atmng hand
her- [ and palled it wide open. The train
rapidity, and

and never charged a cent for mi serv-

F&gt;hria«-r’«

—Senator Hill cannot recover, but is
not troubled by regret*. "I cannot
complain,” he said the other day. “I
have lived fifty-eight years, and I sup­
pose no man ever lived fifty-eight happfer^ean. It may be best that they
—Camilla Urso says that in Australia
'
a bouquet is handed to the artiste, not
by the usher, but by the donor, tho
wife or daughter of the Governor, for
Instance, walking to tbe stage and
making her present amidst the applause
of the audienoe.
Darwin is remembered in England os
a man who never quarreled with those
who disagreed with him. His contro­
versies were always conducted courte­
ously. This shows that he was not only
a philosopher, but a Christian and a
gentleman.
.
' —Dr. John M. Briggs, cousin and
brother-in-law of the late Governor
Charles 8. Morehead, of Kentucky,
died in Bowling Green, in that State,
recently, aged eighty four years. Dur­
ing their school-days ho and the late
Judge Graham, of the same town,
agreed to an exchange*of medical and
legal services for thoir respective and
prospective families, a contract which
was scrupulously kept for forty-five
years.—St Louis Globe-Democrat.
—Mrs. Sally Rockwell, of West Brat­
tleboro, VL, who colebrated her 104th
birthday last Sunday, furnishes an aw­
ful warning against the use of tobacco.
She has bein a constant smoker fur
many years, and is likely to indulge
tho habit for some years to come. If
she had only let the pernicious weed
alone, she might have been com­
fortably
gathered
to her fathers
long ago 'instead of being con­
demned to a protracted pilgrimage in
this vale of tears.—Chicago Tribune.
—LicuL De.Long looked a little ever
thirty year* of age. His features were
well rounded, inclined to fullness, with
a broad, firm under jaw, bespeaking
a wealth of determination and force,
and a shapely mouth gracefully shaded
by a dooping dark-brown mustache. On
the bridge of a rather plump looking
nose he wore a pair of spectacles, part­
ly concealing a pair of expressive dark
.eyes. His short Lair was dark brown.
—Courier-Journal.

A LITTLE NONSENSE.
—"Reading maketha full man,” the
poet says. The reading of sensational
juvenile literature also maketh a full
boy—full of wickedness—aud he would
bo worth more if he were to remain
empty.
—The^reat grammatical conundrum
—“the United States are,or the United
Statesis?”—New Haven Register. Let
us remark that she probably has been,
and peradventure they will be.and drop
the subject.—Elmira Free Press.
—Ifi India eggs are hatched by the
heat of tho sun. Performing tho part
of a hen, therefore. 1st it no longer be
the boast of Englishmen that the sun
never “sets” on the British Dominions.
—Independent.
—A new settler in Texas writes that
he h« the “Rio Grande for a bath-tub,
and tho whole of Mexico for a back
yard.” It might do for him to use i
tbe
Grande as, a bathtub if there
wsfo no policemen around, but Mexjpo
as a back-yard would hardly be a safe
place to hang clothes.—Lowell Citizen.
—Seated in our library, surrounded
by oriental magnifiqeuce and lota of
turkey-red drapery with arabesque
figures worked in gold, studded with
pearls, with herewnd there a $1.15 dia­
mond to add brilliancy to the effect, we
naturally look out upon the poor way­
faring traveler with an eye of pity; at
the same time if he persists in disturb­
ing our delicious reveries with his in­
fernal whistling of “The Silver Churn”
we shall throw our gold-mOunted boot­
jack at him, regardless of expense.—
New Haven Register.
—We are gratified to lea rn that Rear
Admiral Nichol* wij act as Secretary
of the Navy during the absence o' the
Secretary. It would never do to let
our weak and puny'navy a day or two
without a protector. What would be­
come of our country if our navy was, to
get lost, and the Secretary fifty miles
away! It is hoped Mr. Nichols will not
over-exert himself end burst a blood
vessel while he is acting a? Secretary
of the Navy.—Norristown Herald.
—"Yes," Athelwald replied, speak­
ing in low. impressive tones; “yes. I
do like dogs; I am fond of-them. Hut
1 like a shy. coy, shrinking dog, who
flies away to the shadowy recesses of
the woodshbd when be hears the foot­
fall of tbe stranger, and can only be
won to sociability by love and kindness,
and patient pleading. ' 1 do not love
the bold, forward, unquestiouiag mass
of canine insolence and obuu«iv&lt;&lt;ness
that comes sneaking out from neaind
a lilac bush, when one is just hall way
between the gate and the pla2zu. amt
nestles up to a stranger like f n old actiimintanee, and drags one a* I around
the vard in u backward altitude, with
no thought of one’s dignity or comfort.’*'
And with a dry conclusive
ob he
fumed away, and. as he walked toward
tbc neckware department, tho book­
keeper noticed that his fawn-colored
trousers had been patched in th* pos­
tern gate with a nine-cornered piece of
olive-green.—Burdette.
—Alfred B. Duval having been sen­
tenced to be handed on June noth tn
Atlanta. Ga.. fur the murder of a police­
man, objected to the dale because it is
that set fur the’taking off of Guitoau.
The Judge thereupon ix&gt;n*idcnUely
named Juuc
29th. —Onatjo InterUccan.________________

—The late Nohendsh Gibson, of EasJ
Homo. never nte animal food. and

tmuudlj g,»d benlU..

A COMPLETE LINE OF

New Dfacovety for
Colds. Trial Ixritka given away at even- diug
etore.
Men often ;&lt;cnwvere in loving tho*e who do
not love them; women atop at odc«.
HOW IT WAS DONE.
"How do you manage,” iald'a lady to her
friend, “to appear to happy and good naUired
all tbe timer’ "I olwavs have Parkers’ Ginger
Tonic handy,” wm the reply,' "and thus easily
keepmyeclfand family in grxx! health. When
I am well I alwaya feel good natured.

Buggies, Carriages, Wheel Harrows and
Cultivators, Mounted Seeders,
and 4 kinds of Plows.

REED’S GENUINE SPRING TOOTH HARROW
ROAD SCRAPERS, SQUARE DRAGS, GRIND STONES
Common, and hung ready for use.

The poster plan a touly neutral part during
a political campaign—it la alwaya on the fence.

AN IMPOSSIBILITY
Dewrving articles are always appreciated.
The exceptional deanlineM ot Parkers Hair
Balaam makes It popular. Gray hairs are impoaalble with its occasional use.
The bachellors refrain—a laaa! Tbc maiden’s
refrain—ah men! Let them no longer refrain.

Zoa-Pbora the Hfaltb-bringer for Woman is
not a temporary stimulant but * permanent
care for Female Diseases.

Tbc thermometer aecms to be a very sensible
sort of affair. It Is always' quoted os being In
the shade.
'

DON’T TRUST THEM.
When you feel badly, and have pains hm
and there in your tody that you don't know
how to aceout for it is the n&lt;o«t foolish policy
in tbe world to take tbe advice of people who
say: "Oh, there's nothing the matter with you.
Let yourself alone and you will come out all
light.” These folks know nothing atout It,
and may be triffiug with your life.
You may
have Kidney or Liver trouble. Send right
oat to your druggist and get a bottle of Dr.
Kenncdy’N "Favorite Remedy,” and then you
will be all right, or write to the Doctor, at
RondoutN.Y.

If a man’s alm In tills world be good, the
chances are'that he will miss fire In the next.
Colorless and Cold.—A young girl deeply re­
gretted that she was so colorless and cold. 'Her
face was too white, and her hands and feet felt
as though the blood did not circulate.
After
one bottle of Hop Bittcra had beta taken she
was the rosiest anti healthiest girl in tbe town,
with a vivacity and checrfulncas of mind gratitying to her frinds.

SEWING .MAOHI&gt;’ES.
PLOW POINTS for the Oliver Chilled, Wlard, Three RlverSf Bryan, Cale, Curtis, Dodge, Robinson
And many other Plows.
In fact, wc keep a full and complete etock of firat claw Hardware and Fanning Tools. Cali
and see them before buying.

Cook’s Carriage Works
Carriages in Stock to Select From
'

Our “Spirals”

RE ATTRACTING MUCH ATTENTION from buggy­
buyers. It is the newest, easiest-riding and best carri­
age made, its spring being so constructed as to admit of being
adjusted to suit the load.

A

“Dexters”

"Vim, vinegar, vitriol and victory’’ Is the
mixed motto of a newly-haUhed Dakota paper.
REMEMBER THIS.
If you arc sick Hop Bitters will surely old
Nature in making you well when all el»e 'folia.
Il vou are costive or dyspeptic, or are Buffer
Ing from any other of the numerous dUcasesof
the BtoDiach orbowelo, it Is your own fault If
vou remain iU, for Hop Bittern are a sovereign
remedv in all such complaints.
If you are wasting away with any form of
Kidney disease, stop tempting death this mo­
ment, and turn for a cure to Hop Bitten'.
If you are sick with that terrible sickness
Nervousness, vou wip find a "Balm in Gilead"
in the use of Hop Bitters.
If you are a frequenter, or a resident of a
miasmatic district, barricade your system
against the scourge of all countries—malarial,
epidemic, biliousness, and Intermittent fevers—
by the use of Hop Bitters.
If via have rough, pimply, er swallow skin,
bad breath,pains and aches, and feel miserable
generally. Hop Bitters will give vou fair skin,
rich blood, sweetest breath, health, and com­
fort.
In abort they cure all diseases of the stom­
ach, Bowels, Blood, Liver, Nerves, kidneys,
Bright’s disease. $500 will be paid for a ease
they will not cure or help.
’
, Tliat p&lt;x&gt;r bedridden, invalid wife, sister,
mother or daughter, can be made the picture
of health, by a lew bottles of Hop Bitters, cost­
ing but a tnfle. Will you let them suffer t

LSO MAINTAIN THE GOOD REPUTATION they
have gained in the past. In fact all our work is made
upon honor, and our patrons extend from Middleville to Char­
lotte and Portland to Battle Creek.

EUGENE COOK.

Spring

^Harrow

TOOTH1

A NOTED BUT UNTITLED WOJUK.

South Bend Plow.
Buy Factory IPoints,
th.ey are ititlcIi cheap1
er and. Better.
Strayer’s Grrain Drill.
Builders Hardware.
DOMESTIC SEWING MACHINE.

When in need of the best greades of Hardware
and Machinery, Call and see me-

Frank C.Boise,
tbe CbA.-.'O ul U&gt;.”

50 Wagons
FOR SALE!
OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE

WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH

THREE . INCH TIRE,
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING*

BETTER THAN COMMON TIRE.
ERRORS OF YOUTH.

We believe the Three inch Tire is destined to come,
into general use. Call and see them.

Sold by 0. L. Glasgow, Nashville, Mich.

BENTLEY BROS. &amp; WILKINS.
I Hastings, Mich., Sept. 15th, 1881,

�same valuable

—It Is no1
IN ADVANCE.
j there arc two rosv I‘om;x-iian tones mott
i.intricately blended; another fancy in
| oifve and" golden brown has light ami
shade ingeniously introduced io repre-'
Isent gleams of sunshine passing,acrusa
rekly in tbc state,
thohetrthMotiM ■the floor, while others accurately copy
bits of old tapes: ry. Small paltn leaves
(A black or blue and diaper figures or
lattice patterns on red are shown; there
are ninny solid-colored centers with a
slob border around the room: others are,
*| 5.00 | » ROD mere mixtures of colors in small dash?*.'
imi
wu yet Without any fixed design, and finally
8J5|- TOO iftoo j Moo there still remain the once, popular floral
-AOOi—g?00 ~li00| IS5.00 designs, which some persist in choosing;
-'Ol'MBI but even these arc toned down by hav­
•r mis. riven upon application, ing tinted grounds of ecru or tan-color
iof five line* or less, 83 per jt. instead of the ivory white formerly
sought after, and the designs ant im­
proved by having Japanese or geometric
figures introduced here and there .in­
ORNO STRONG,
stead of Ute pattern being, wholly of
Editor and Proprietor.
flowers. All carneU are bordered, and
-thd use of rugs has become so general
that it is now -customary to make dp
carpets as nigs; this obviates the iliflicultv experienced in getting rugs of
VILLA O E OFFICERS.
exact sixes. For those who like the
President—Ellhu Chipman.
deepest pile tne royal Axminster carRecorder-frank McDerbv.
,
l&gt;et.&lt; with wool back® are selected for
TreaaurrrrT'rack C. Boiae.
their luxurious softness: these may be
Marshall
had in the new dark colors with' Persian
-H. A. Barber, F. T. Boise. H. W. designs entirely levering the ground,
Demaray&lt;11. IL Dickinson, H. M. Lee am!
and also in the gay floriated patterns
Chua. Lentz.
already mentioned".
The soft velvet­
like Moquettes are also in most varied
jlsrirtitf.
patterns, and are particularly handsome
in the Persian designs, and in somber
HRISTIAN CHURCH-F A. Blwei,P«tor.
Services cvctt Sabbath at 10.30 a. m. and blue or red-surfaces, dotted with small
7 p. m. Sabbath school at 12 m. Prayer meet­ Muck figures of • palms or other leaves,
ing every Thursday evening
then completed by an elaborate border.
A novelty giving the effect of a che­
■LTETHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH-A.
JxL -D. Newton, Pastor. Service* every Sab­ nille covering is madepA'the waste w&lt;x»l
bath at 10.40 a. m. and 7 p. m.
Sabbath of Axminster and Moquette carpels
school at 12 m. Prayer feeling every Thurs­ woven without design, but jn the rich­
day evening.
est coloring seen in such carpets. These
VY’ LODGE NO. 37,'*K. of P.. meets at ita cost $1.50 or $2 a yard, and are very ef­
Castle Hall. Nashville, Michigan, even fective when made up as bordered rugs;
Friday evening, for the encouragement and that is. nut fitted into the corners of the
support of all worthy, true, alradfaat and hon­ room. leaving about eighteen inches or
orable Brother KnlgbU.
,
?wu uf margin around the entire room.
D. L. Smuk K. H. S. Obxo Stroxg, C. C.
'This space may be left bare, and the
floor be painted, or it may be covered
MiscellaiBeotu 4'nrdM.
with a breadth of the ingrain filling that
H. TOUNG, M. D. Office east side of is now used in choice low tones ui col­
• Maia St, Nashville. Office hour, from or. This -filling” may also be had in
imported velvet carpeting, but the in­
W II. AYLSWORTH, M. D.. Physician grain is most used. and is seen with car­
v v • and Surgeon. Office oyer Boise's drug pets of the finest quality. The lowstore; Room at Wolcott Home. Will promptly toned blue shades and Pompeiian red
attend to all day and night calls.
are most used for tilling out the spaces
beyond nigs. Crimson tints are avoid­
TYR C. W. GOUCHER, Eloctlo Phyilclan and ed, as they do not harmonize with the
XJ Surgeon, U prepared to awwor all ealla
that may be made for hia eervieea. Office and subdued colors of Eastern rugs or of tbe
carpets that imitate them
Sometimes
residence opposite Roa’a meat market.
an ingrain filling of sbUd color i- ma la
YTTM. PARMENTER, M. D. Office over
V v Hull's Drug store, Vermontville, Mich. to cover the floor entirely, and then the
rich rugs are thrown upon it; this is
HAA H. BRADY, Lawyer, Circuit Court done where great warmth is needed.
Commissioner, Real Estate and Insurance In country houses Chinese .mattings of
Agt. Prompt attention given to all businesscheckered straw sometimes take tho
entrusted to my care. Conveyancing a special­
place, of the .tilling as a covering for the
ty. Office opposite Union House.
floor, and the nigs are then easily usut
A. FOOTE, FHTS1C1AX A SUKOEUS. or removed with changes of the weath­
• Bucemor to Dr. Wickham. Office sec­ er. For those who can aff«»rd hard-wood
ond door north of the Nasbdlle House: reridedcc first door north of live - Wolcott House­ floors of inlaid designs, the Persian and
India ruga offer quaint and delicate col­
Prompt attention to calls night or day.,
orings, and of these the antiqtfe rug1
TpMORY PARADY. Justice of the Peace. tAat show signs of use by their softened
-Lu Office, Corner Main and Sbcnnan Streets.
tints are chosen. The velvet-like text­
Q LTEBHAUSER, Merchant Tailor and deal­ ure and sheen of-these are shown in the
Ov er
Ready Made Clothing. See me Jiraver rugs from the interior of Persia*
before you purchase clothing. Fits guar­ n tne Bokhara patterns, and in the long
anteed.
narrow breadths that are designed for
HATCH &amp; CO., Manufacturers of Taffv balls. The light Ghiordes and Smyrna
• Candies Chocolate Drops and Caimis. rugs are pretty for chamber^ or gay lit­
Fruits, Fancy Candies, Cigars, Tobacco*, etc., tle sitting-rooms of -summer houses,
always in stock. Second door north uf tbe
while the great Turkish rugs as large as
carpets in tbe dark rod anti blue Oushak
"EpRANK BAKER, Manufacturer of Boots colors are liked for large dining-room^
T and Shoes, pegged or rewed. Repairing libraries and halls. The modern nigs
promptly attended to, at the sign of tbc red
niadein Berlin with plain centers and
boot, east side Main 8L
rich borders are really carpets all .in one
TACOB OSMUN, Liveryman, barn near Wol- piece, large enough to cover the room.
cotl House. First daw turnouts at reason­ The measure and shape of the room are
able rates. Special rates to commercial men.
Funeral and weding partie.* fumUhcd with car; taken, and the nig can be w oven to or­
der. fitting the floor in even- part. .-Vs
riagea on abort notice.
has already been said, experienced deal­
T&gt;RAUN BROR., Shoemaker. Special attenJL&gt; tion given U&gt; fine and sewed boots, also ers advise people who move about from
repairing. All manufactured work made from house to house, ami whose small means
best of stock and warranted. Fl»t door south will not buy valuable rugs, to- hare car-1
Boise's hardware.
■,
jiete of good quality made up as rugs,
I/- ELLOGG A BELL, proprietors Planing instead of buying Ihe cheap rugs now in
.
.
JtV Mill. Placing and Matching, Resawing the market.
For handsome rooms the Wilton car­
Md Moulding a specialty. Scroll Sawing,
■rackets. Window and Door Frames made to Ets remain in great favor, both the
order. Wood Turning in all Its branches.
iglish and American Wiltons giving
excellent service, and their designs be­
ing of the best. The moresque Wilton
» practical Jeweler, patrons can depend
designs are very effective, being woven
in a new way that twists the vara, and
gives the appearance of chenille. This
moresque effect is also seen in the stand­
ard body' Brussels carpets, and these
hhve all the fine low colors and Eastern
iram r. Dickinson, manufacturer of deeigns shown in the Wiltons, Axminand dealer In Hard Wood Lumber. Build­ iters, etc.; these are &lt;2.50 a yard. For
ing Material a speehUtT. Cash paid for logs. MUI
much less money there are "also body
Brussels carpets of excellent coloring,
AMES FLEMING, practical Jeweler and but not of the newest designs; these are
. Watch-maker. .Ciocks. Watches, Silver and
in fine Bokhara patterns, with grounds
Plated Warr, Jewelry and Optical Gtiuda.
of deep red or other chaste dark color.
For hall and stair carpets, Pompeiian
‘■r Ann* tn * «nrrm,nlll-«
red and terra-cotta grounds are chosen
RNO STRONG.plain and fancy,
□f solid color with a border, or else with
The beat facilities for doing »
diajnond lines of block on red* a nd also
in the intricate Oriental nig designs.
The pattern for the stair carpet matches
that of the liall. and very soft jiadding
is ti-ed beneath this to protect the car­
yyOLCOTT HOLKE,
pet on the edges of the steps, and to
JCn«l» vlllo Mlobla»n.
make it pleasantly »oft to the trend.
The tapestry Brussels come in many ot
A. S. Foote, Proprietor.
the designs chosen fur the finest tivettlrig better a«. fraitae body UrusscU 'These carpew
should be put on rooms that are little
Jsed, such as spare chambers, or the
parlor* that are closed half the year, as
tlk-y soon show hard usage. The sim­
XT ANH VILLE HOLME,
ple ingrain carpets come in the dainty
lolors and fine designs of the most exMmsive carpets, and are provided with
borders of solid deep colon.—Harper i
liaxar.

Rashtilk Jittrtortj.

C

I

O

L

P

H

J

O

IOLBE.

—Humboldt told Sir John Bowria
lha* all the dahlias of Europe were th
descendants of » few seeds he had gatk
rml in. Mexico and ‘•cut in a letttf.* it
Lady tiullund.

tail hnMw." It will l« needed u th,
UUlie.l ethiHtfwt of oow'» taihk

company her.
IV. This young gentleman went to a
friend in the shawl line and said unto
him: •' I'm going to bring Mrs. —
here to-morrow to buy a camel's-hair
shawl. She won't think it a good one
unless it costs her a good deal of money,
You understand?”
V. Tho salesman said he did, and
went to the head of his firm, and said:
“There’s a lady coming here to buy a.
camel’s-hair shawl to-morrow, and I
think I can sell her one at a high price,
because she is a parvenue, and won’t
appreciate 1: otherwise. How much of
a margin can 1 work op, because I want
to make something for myself P”
“Well.” said the boss, “it's a *600
shawl; anything you can get above
$650 you can have.”
VI. Next day, when Mrs.------- called,
the salesman showed her the shawl.
••What is the price?”
The lady's
companion winked at the salesman and
noiselessly jrainted to the roof, as if to
say, “ put’it on steep; ” but the young
salesman was afraid she wouldn't stand
tbe pressure, and he replied, huskily:
“Seven hundred and fifty dollars!”
•• Is that the be*t you have?” “Th®
very best, madam.”’ “Well, I will
speak to my husband about it~” “You
infernal idiot.” hissed her escort to the
salesman as they went out, “you didn’t
ask her enough!”
VII. When the lady went home pnd
told her husband, he said: “My.dear.
Aid.-------'s wife has one she paid $l.ou0
for at------ 's. 1 guess you had better
go there.” “Well, I will, to-morrow,
only I’did like the pattern-of the one I
saw to-day.”
- VIII. Next day the lady called at the
other store nnd encountered a salesman
of a more Napoleonic character. “ This
shawl at $350.” he said. “ is about the
best wo have—you see. it isn’t exactly
the season.” “I saw one at----- ’s yes­
terday that I liked very much, but it
was only $750, so it couldn’t hare been
good. I want a real good ofie.” The
sympathizing salesman drew her out
for a few moments, and then reflected
that they had one shawl left that they
were going*to send up to Mrs. Vander­
bilt,* ami perhaps it had not yet left the
store. So he dispatched a trusty mes­
senger to get it .
IX. The trusty messenger sped down­
stairs and over to tho rival establish­
ment and got the shawl, and the sales­
man asked the lady $1,100 for it, and
she took it at once, saying that tbe pat­
tern was very much like the one she
had seen "the day-before, but any one
■ coujd see it was a much superior artide. And tho salesman modestly re­
plied that it was evident that she was a
judge of camel’s-hair shawls.
X But the other salesman is mad!—
N. V. World.

The Tile Fish.
A new fish was discovered about
_____
three years ago by the United States
Fish Commissioners in one of the dredg­
ing expeditions off No Man's Land, a
small island in the Atlantic Oceaff
south of Martha's Vineyard, and was by
them named tne tile fish. Its scientific
name is Lfrpholatilux chamcrlcontiecpx.
This fish is the one that created so
much excitement and discussion three
or four months ago, when Incoming
sailing vessels and smacks reported
having sailed through miles and miles
of them floating dead upon the water.
Il has been suggested that they were
killed by some subterranean disturb­
ance, as they art a very deep-sea fish,
and are usually taken in from 150
to 200 fathoms of water. They are
caught by the use of scrawl lines,
which nru long lines, sometimes morq
than a half mile long, armed w.\h from
500 to 1.4J00 hooks.’ each one of which
is baited, and then, btriug heavily
weighted, is let out at its full length
and tied to floats. The lines .are not
disturbed for four or five hours, and are
then hauled in, and if it is a good day
for tile the fishermen will capture about
100, averaging about ten pounds. Tho
meat of the tile is very hard and rather
coarse, and in flavor is more like had­
dock than anything .else.
It is firm
and flakes* off in scales like the had­
dock. The fish in form resembles the
blackfish, and is marked in a very pe­
culiar manner by what is called the
“ucuehal crest,” a small hard tin over
the head directly back of the Cye, which
in texture resembles tho adipose fin
found near the tail on tho back of the
salmon.
The tile fish has only ap­
peared occasionally Ln this market, and
the first specimen pf the kind was pre­
pared and cooked at the Windsor Ho­
tel. and critically eaten by the officers
of tbe Ichthyophagous Club, who pro­
nounced it “only fair, closely resem­
bling the haddock.” It is the opinion
of Professor Baird that, with boats
properly equipped, the tile can be
caught off our coast in. quantities equal
to the cod, and that it would constitute
a cheap, good, wholesome article of
food, and could be sold at a price not
to exceed eight cents a pound.—*V. Y.
EvcittHg Pott.

—-The way they spend Sunday in
Tombstone, Arizona, is indicated by an
announcement in the leadiag paper of
that placo. to the effect that. “Ou ac­
count of the fire, there will be ffo big
pool at the keno game Sunday night,
but Ike has received a fine lot of jew­
elry, and will give away with his pool
at *J o’clock a fine gent's vest chain,
value $10, and at 10. o’clock a lady’s
neck chain, value $10, free to all play—.They have kept trsmk of 400 Vas­
sar College girte who have married off
in tbe last hfteeu years, and thirty of
them are re;&gt;ortcd to have married
husbands worth over
each.
NbVertheleM It is a great comfort lor a
man to return from his work and have
hi* little wile meet him at titegate in lour
hii'gUMitvs and ft laadwope.—-Vtrri*.
tou-;&gt; HtraU»

of h»s de;&gt;arturc for Europe. He b now
more than seventy ydars of age, an 4 I
hope&lt; to preach until he is sevinty-fii e.
-^Socrates,
Aristotle,
Gnoatidxru.
Platonism. Christian Mvitticbm, Philos­
ophy of the Bagavad Gita and Fichpi’s
works, are tbe subjects of some of the
lectures to be delivered"before the Con­
cord school of philosophy next summer.
—In the great work of foreign mbsions, the Aioravian Church is. U:e pianeer of tbe Protestant churches. It
sent its first mi-sioharics to St. Thomas,
in the West Indies, in 1732. ’The I5otb
anniversary of this event is f.» be cele­
brated on August 21.
—A Sunday-closing movement ha*,
been
started* in Russia under tin ‘
auspices of Archdeacon Bogovavlensky.'
Most of the clerks in St. Petersburg
have signed a pelition to the Emperor
a&gt;king him to enforce a ecs«ation of all
mercantile business on Sunday.
—Tbc new French version of the
Bible, by Prof. Segond. has art tuned a
great success, and a copy of the New
Testament at three-half pence has been
published, of which 100,000 • were sold
of the first edition. Of the second 50,­
000 copies were sold in-.time weeks.
—A flood of manuscripts has bc»n
pouring into Rome in response to an
offer of four gpld medals as prizes for
the beat eulogium upon Leo XIII. Tl;ey
were reduced by selection to seven for
final decision. "Two of the winners are
Amerjcan.,nnd not one Italian. -The
Poj&gt;e has, however, rewarded all with
the decoration of his benediction.
—The American Baptist missionaries
speak well of tho Telugu converts. Li
n recent letter one of these missionaries
says: •• Three years have passed since
then—years of persecution and trial to
a great" many of the new converts and
op rifting the chaff from the wheat
Some chaff has been blown out. but
only enough to show the genuineness of
what remains. Nowhere ary there any*
indications of a collapse, unless it is in
the interest of friends at home. During
the last year 2.757 were baptized, and
about 1,800 oo for this year—a number
which will probably reach 2.000 before
tbe end of the year, nnd perhaps mure
than that
In fact, there is no one who
can tell what might not be done if the
missionary force were what it ought to
be in this field. I have baptized with
my own hands converts who have come
from villages ninety to one hundred
miles distant, and who came all that
distance on foot, through mud and rain,
entirely at their own expense, merely
for the sake of being baptized. Out of
two hundred candidates for baptism
there arc seldom more than ton from :fny
one village, often only one or two: and
they tell &lt;if great numbers at home who
are’ believing, but who cannot come so
Wipe 31y Tears!

She wai nothing but a baby, a little
quaint old-fashioned thing, with tumbled
locks of sunny hair and deep soulftff
blue eyes that were always full of clouds
or sunshine, one following the other in
rapid succession. Only a baby, toddling
about after her weary mother, falling
down and hurting herself a dozen times
a day, and going just as often to hold
up a sweet llowAt-fair facaallwet and
dewy, with the lisped request: “Please,
mamma, wipe my tears!” or to other
members of the family in a more dicta­
torial and peremMiory voice: “Wipe my
tears!” Either «lb could not or would
not make any attempt at brushing away
the tears of soregw herself, and some­
times we laughed to see tho shut eyes
and tightly drawn features, bathed in a
liquid shower; sometimes there was a
pitiful accent in that little household
wail that made our hearts ache, but oft*
ener we talked nonsense as we wiped
away the pretty drops .from the long
curled lashes, the dainty cheeks, the
small, quivering chin, ana we drew gay
pictures of tho baby going about with
tear-bottles hung around her neck, and
crooned her to sleep with an idle repe­
tition of Tennyson:
•• T«mhv Mio tear*, I know not what they
mean.'*
And we wondered among ourselves
what she would do as she grew older
and learned to know real sorrow, and
if there would always be some dear one
near to wipe away" the ready tears as
there was now.
An l God Himself Khali wipe away all tears!
We had never thought of Him, and
she was still only a baby, a sweet, win­
some little thing that we thought we
had safe in our hearts under lock 'and
key. with love for the keeper, when all
at once her tears were dried and ours
began to flow, for we all stood beside
her, and she knew us not, was insensi­
ble to her mother's voice, to tears and
prayers. There was a short, sharp
struggle with-the destroyer, hours of
insensibility even to pain, and thftn for
a moment the baby woke and knew os,
and as she felt the last pangs of disso­
lution. her dear little face knotted and
seamed with the deadly pain, she nut
oae tiny, trembling hand up to her
mother and said in a whisper, the old,
quaint words: “W-i-p-e m-y t-e-a-r-s.”
Then a sweet, glad smile followed, and
she was gone where there shall be no
more death, neither sorrow uor crying,
nnd God shall wipe away all tears "from
their eyes.—Detroit Fne Pram.

—It is said that the fifteen dynamite
manufactories now under the control of
M. Noble (the man who introduued
nitro-glycerine in its varied fornp into
public use) turn out about 5.00*1 tuns a
year. In this country and in Europe it
0 estimated that tbe produnUr/n of ex­
plosives containing witro-giycerine is
between 7,0O&gt; and 8.000 ■ tuns a year,
nnd tills quantity iwts the energy "of nJ
least 45,000 tons or ordinary gun­
powder.
'
_

—Scientists now concede that parts
of Kansas, the adjoining States of M!.s-

'ii

.

«itWaetar&gt; jxepfcmti. r.

tor :he

any kind of litter for bvns’ nest*, will
keep them entirely free from hen-lice.
some frames, well covered’ with flesh,
and a great propenrity to fatten. Their
mutton is apt 'to be rather 'coarse
grained.
*
—Sorrel generally finds its way into
fields ■which have a thin or poor soil,
and one of the best remedies is to enrish
the soil with manure, and a small por­
tion of lime is often tuefuL
—To insure paste From molding put

’

SHILOH* 8 CONdUMPHON CURE.

' Thia i» beyond question tlmn,&gt;-t suez c^.t td
Cough Medicine we have ewr «.M. m f&lt;-w &lt;f*«

into it a proportion of alum and re,in.
A few drops of any esseutia. oil will
preserve leather from mold, and a
single clove put into,a bottle of ink will
ftaia the same effect upon it
* .

dlKcMftry it h»* teen wld on a gHimtrt, a te»t
whk-ffiHi other ux'dlcinc can »uadIt t u.
hare a Cough we cantci-tiv uric vou i« Ur it.
Price lOcto, S0r.ta,and
If your lunp. -are
•rtrc, Cheat, or Back Lanir, and Shiloh’s
’ —The character of the foot! will affect Porous Plaster. Bold-by F. T. Boi«s.
the quality of the manure even more
ANSWER THIS QUEMHON,
than the character of the animal. . A
Why do so many people wc sec around u«,
diet of corn fodder and straw, for in­ Kcem to prefer to suffer and be made in:«-nble
by
indigestion,
constipation. dlzxiueM!, k»*a of
stance, can yield only a poor manure,
appetite, cuirtng up ot the Food, yeikm ridn,
bccau-M) these foods contain very little when for 75cA. we will sell them Ndinh'a Vh«nitrogen or phosphates.
llzer, guaranted to cure them. Sold by F. T.
—To prevent choking, break an egg Boias.
SHILOH'S CATTARRIf REMEDY. A mar­
Into a cup and give it to the person velous cure for Catarrh. ■ DiW.therin, Canker
choking to swallow. The white of the mouth, aud Head zkebe. With each 'buttle
egg seems to catch around the obstacle hftrcissn InttenlouA nasal injector for the
and remove it. If one egg does not an­ more gucccrsful treatment uf there complaints
without extra charge^ Price 50cU. Sold by
swer the purpose, try another. The F T.Botaft
white is all that is necessary.
—The outlook for Westerp .cattle
A Vegetable Product,
growers is reported as, exceedingly Only used in Ayer's Aqtm Cuur.. has
flattering. The Average loss ot cattle proven Itself a never filling and rapid
during the winter was four percent cure for every form of Malarial Dis­
against nine ]&gt;er cent, last year, and the, order, Fever and Ague, or Chills and
condition of’cattle is twenty per cent’ Fever. No injury follows its uw. and
It rouses &lt;
better than usual. Grass is more for­ its effects are permanent.
ward, especially in the southwest. The the system to a coaditi..a of •fgorous
shipments will" be ten per cent mote •Health, cleanses the-blood of intdarhd
than last year. Prices average $4.25 poison, and imparts a feeling of comper head more than last year. There is S‘-^t and security most desirable In
Ague districts. It is uiyxccllcnt tonic
no discase'anywhere.
*
•
and'preventative, as well ns cure, of
—It is said that an acre of wheat will all complaints peculiar to .malarious,
sustain three and a half individuals I’rtr marshy and miasmatic regions. Tbe
a year. An-acre of potatoes will sustain great superiority of Ayer's Ague Ccke
te'u jtersons for a year. In Ireland the over any other compound is that it
introduction of the potato has been fol­ contains no Quinine, Arsenic, or min­
lowed by a decline of every Irish in­ eral; consequently -it produces uo
dustry excepting agriculture” The small quinism or injurious effects whatever
amount of labor required for obtaining', upon the constitution. Those cured
sustenance from the potato is taken as by it are left os healthy as if they had
the measure of necessarv labor, and the never had the disease.
The direct action of Ayer's Ague
time gained is profitably spe^t in dts
veloping other industries; but is apt to Cure upon the Liver and Digestive
Organs makes, it a "superior remedy
be passed in idleness. It is so the world
for
Liver Complaints, producing many
over, whore tho earth yields. of its
remarkable cures, where Other medi­
abundance almost without toil
cines have filled.
For sale by all druggists.
Insects on Garden Vegetables.

In some localities one or more of ths
cabbage worms is still troublesome.
The most common of these are tho
cnteqtillars of
medium sized butter.’ies, the wings of which are white,
with a few black spots;-there arc threw
distinct species, but all are similar in
their habits. Wherever these butterflies
are seen flitting about over the cabbage
and canhiidwer plants, trouble from
“worms” may soon be expected.
Safety consists in attacking" them early.
Some worms eat into the forming head,
and when they have thus, hidden notliing can be done. In small gardens
hand picking will answer, but where
there are manv cabbages this is not
practicable. The Persian Insect Pow­
der. thePyretlfrum, is the best, nnd a safe
application. There are in some localit ies cabbage worms which come from
other butterflies, but they are to be
treated in the same manner. The large,
green caterpillar, of the five-spotted
Sphinx, kdown as the •• tomato worm.’.’
is most destructive; it will soon leave
nothing but bare stems upon a tomato
plant, eating the green fruit as well as
the leaves?
When the tomatoes are
sut»ported4&gt;y some kind of a trellis, as
they always should be in a garden,
worms may be detected by the quanti­
ty of large pelUts tff droppings found
ujxin th? grosad. Where these are
seen the wonm should be sought for.
Stems without leaves also indicate its'
firesence. When not eating it will be
mind close to the stems, on their un­
der side, and as it is of nearly the same
color, mnyescajie notice. The worms arc
never very numerous, and hand-picking
is the best way to deal with them. Iq
spite of the "horn at the tail end they
can neither sting nor bite. Frequently
one of these vjilT be found with its body
nearly covered wish small egg-shaped
white cocoons, often mistaken lor eggs,
Worms with these should not be de­
stroyed. as they ace too weak to do
much damage and the parasitic insec*
should have time to leave these cocoons,
as they are oar friends and should be
encouraged.
The tomato-worm may
sometimes be found on potatoes.—Amer­
ican Agriculturist.

Neater Farm Honscs.
It is the general complaint that whan
a man sails his farm he never gets pay
for the improvements. It is generally
the case when a man buys a form he
wants such improvements neat, appro­
priate and useful.
Nearly all farm
houses are built without regard to‘ar­
tistic taste or the least aim at modern
improvements. They may be large, but
inconvenient, ung&amp;irJy, low stones and
probably_ located in just the wrong
place. No'wonder a man of refinement
never takes into consideration the cost
of such'a house. It is really of no value.
A small, neat cottage, built with taste
and judgment, well painted, suitably lo­
cated for esthetic taste, and surrounded
by a few chosen evergreen trees, instead
of its never being paid for. it will aid
more than double its cost in selling the
farm. In building a second house farm­
ers generally build too large, without
the convenient arrangements which
modern science lias invented. A small
honsc. with more architectural taste ami
even* thing clean, coxy and comforta­
ble, tho owner will stand ten chances of
selling at a profit, than where tho house
is a large, unpainted, shambling con­
cern. with dilapidated out-houses and
tumble down barns. A man with money
wants something of use to him anil

HALL’S

Qatarrh Pure
Is Recommencictfrby Physician^

S1OO REW
WomtnnrMlure and »cil It »ttha -'AsltiVO
guarantee that It will cure any
case, and we will forfeit the above amount
XfitWihis single Instance.
J
Itb unlike any ‘■•.fur Catarrh remedy.M

inicdKtely.

Price, 75 cent j per buttle.

F. 1 CHENEY &amp; CO., Toledo. Okie.

IRON
TRADE z

.

MARX

BITTERS
BROWJTS IRON BITTERS are
n certain cure for all tltHSoscs
requiring a complete tonic; espe­
cially Indigestion. Dyspepsia, Inter­
mittent Fevers, Want of Appetite,
Iams of Strength, I*nck of Energy,
etc. Enriches the blood, strength­
ens the muscles, and gives new
life to the nerves. Acts like R
charm on tbe digestive organs,
removing all dyspeptic symptoms,
huc1&gt;.&lt;b tasting the food. Belchin®,
Heat in the Stomach, Heartburn,
etc. The only Iron Preparation
that will not blacken the teeth or
give headache. Sold by all Drug­
gists at $1.00 n bottle, ’
BROWN CHEMICAL CO.
Baltimore, Md.

BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.

■nr

�■Y LOW.
In order to make room for oar Fall and Winter Good* we
..Koon— ot Mou«.n*u. are selling our finest stoats of Clothing at prices that re­
ns, tocattnx engineer of th- QUire no bantering tO Bell.

rt Diiptichw.

Iowa. Kai

Third, A. H. Jooer; Wert Virginia, First. J. H.
Goods; Iowa, Third. T. M. Griffiths; Indiana,

:1C
The report of tbe Commlsalcner of |Lhe Gen-

is entitled to one

Virginia, Fifth, Winfield Scott. Independent
-Virginia. Fifth. William E. 81m*.
State Convention at Topeka on tbe 94th end
nominate! Charles Robinson for Governor
and a full State .ticket. The following were

Reaolutlon* were L.eu appointed.

cash 3,eM,bW acres of agricultural la
064 acre* of mineral lands, 1M.06&amp;
Under tbe Homestead law 7,347,729 acre* were

Hoos were selling in the Chicago markets
on tbe 25th st &lt;911009.15 per hundred

aliiixdez Jeu*x recently killed himself
t Shelbyville, Ky., because of hia defeat for

Tux following persons were hanged on tbe
Sth: Robert Parker, at Aiken, &amp; C.;JFU1faun Bryan, at Jacksonville, Fla., and* James
Redden, at Newcastle, DcL
•

I prisoners on their
were riddled with
. bullets.

/

Gzxekal Hxeex stated on the 25th that
■ tbe Post-office Department would turn lutp
tbe Treasury a surplus of f 1,001,000 for the
Point Isabel, Tex., on the 25th, and the Rio
Xxfandc was guarded for sixty miles. Flfty&lt;wo new cates and four deaths were reported

Heavy rains on the 25th Inundate^ tbe
town* of San Angelas and Benflcklin, in
Texas, washing away houses, hotels and
atores. The loss was estimated to run up in
The people all fled to tbe adjoining hills,
awaiting the subsidence of the water.
The recent killing of Colonel L. W. R.
Halle, was followed on tbe 25th by tbe aulcide
of tbe Colonel's.daughter.
The professional sculling contest at Sarato-

second, and Wallace Ross a bad third.
There were flfly-three new cases and four
deaths from yellow fever at Brownsville, Tex.,
on the -26th.
A Washisctox dispatch of tbe 27th state*
that tbe number of imu.lgranta who arrived
in the United States during the month of
July was 05,010; same month last year, 56,607.
The Free-Thinker*, in convention at Wat­
kins, N. Y,t on the 27th, formulated a serie*
of resolution* denunciatory of ecclesiastical
aerted that woman’s degradation was a re­
sult of Christianity, endorsed tbe rights of
labor, and petitioned for help to erect a Lib­
eral Orphan*’ Home.
Riotixo occurred at Augusta, Me., on tbe
96th when the Deputy Sheriff attempted to
seize sixty-two cases of beer illegally
brought into the State by an express com­
pany, and addressed to fictitious parties.

•ten engaged to carry off tbe beer, apd many

It was announced on the 26th that tbc
Treasury Dhpartmqpt at Washington, with an
appropriation of &lt;50,000, would establish at
the chief Atlantic seaports quarantine sta­
tions for Imported cattle.
Edward N. Wzlch, a traveling salesman
for a Boston fish-house, was arrested on tbe
36th, at McDonough, N. Y., cm suspicion of
being the perpetrator of the,daring bank robfound about &lt;4,000. He was aeen in the
•vicinity of Kewanee at tbe time of the raid.
The Hocking Valley Manufacturing Com­
pany's agricultural works at Lancaster, O.,

•

loss of 3135.0001
*
A Sam Axtoxio (Texas) dispatch of the
93th Mates that forty-nine lives were lost by'
tbe recent overflow of tbe Concho River at
Ben Fieklin. At Concho twenty-seven resi­
dence* were washed away, and along the
bank* some fifty or sixty Mexican house*
were destroyed. At Dublin tbe Cosque R'ver

Tnr strike at tbe Harmony MUI* kt Cohoes,

Mautha and Flora Croeley and Minnie Ped­
dick. aged respectively fourteen, eleven and
twelve years, were drowned tn the JuulaU

Trustees Indians who were engaged in the
recent rebellion in the Creek Nation, Indian
Territory, were given a formal trial at Kane
Hill on tjie 2Stb, foun^ guilty, and punished
with one hundred lashes each on the bare back.

Retckx* from tweoty-Mx of tbe principal
Clearing House* in tho. United State* for the

from Toledo to Grand Rapids, CL, on the nar­
row-gauge'void. On the return trip a half
d-.-seu desperadoes went through the coaches
with i-ncked revolvers and stripped everybody
of valuables. One citizen of* Toledo gave up

of hia mwry cm tbe platform and thrown off

NATIONAL PROHIBITION.

Itev. Dr. Brush; Kans**. Mre- Kate M.
Wbitingr Kentucky. Rev. A. J..Jutktas;
Missouri, Mrs. Rebecca Hazzard- Minnesota,
John Thrall: Ml^lsdrpl. G. G. Middleton:
Maine. N. F. Woodbury; Indiana. William
Daniela; Michigan, Rev. A. A. Kanafen:
Nebraska, John B. Finch;
New Jertic McClellan Brown; South Carolina. Mrs. 8.
F. Chaptn; Tennessee. C. 8. McKinney: Wis­
consin. Nelson GUI: Indiana, M. Irwin: at large.
Miss Frances E. Willard. George W. Bain, &lt;jU-

Phillips. 8. N. Wood, John Davis ami Adieu
William* (colored). -Tbe platform adopted
opposes railroad, telegraph and moneyed
monopolies; denounces the National-Banking
system; favor* the issuance by the Govern­
ment of legal-tender currency, and keeping
its volume uniform with business and popu
lattQn, and. favors the enforcement of all laws
upon tbe statute-books in reference to prohiffltlon.
The Democrats, of West Virginia have re-

preme Court of Appeals.
Thb following Congressional nominations

HERE ARE BARGAINS FOR YOU!
imUea north of the boundary Hoc and directly

Summer Pants for 95c--Think of It!

EGYPTIAN WAR NEWS.
Ox the 23d nn Egyptian officer arrived at
;that he was deputed by Mebemet Kaadi, Gov­
, ernor of tbe Soudan, to Inform the Khedive
'thrt'Le and all the officers and soldiers under
'ognlze Arabi Pasha.

According to authentic

thousand men at Kafr-eLDwar.
A largo
number of men were constantly intrenching
at Tcl-el-KeMr, and.there waa little doubt

ported that many of the enemy’s wounded died
during tbe retreat across the desert to Telel-Kebir.

that some of the leading Arab merchants of
Port Said and Damlett* bad contributed mon-

Second District, J. H. Reagan, renominated; disembark without. the signature of the
Tenth, John Hancock; Kentucky, Third, Military Convention and the- issuance
John E. HalseU; Missouri, Second, A. M.
Mr. Kanouse, on taking the chair, made a Alexander; Fourteenth, I- IL Darts, renomi­ nounang Arabi Pasha aa a rejel, but tbe
nated. Republican—Alabama, Fourth, Georgq .Turks were unwilling to accept the latter
II. Craig, full term; John W. Jone* (colored) condition. There were rumors that tbe rebel
National Prohibition party. Here all united
in a common opposition to th? liquor traffic In vacancy; Mlssisaippl, Second, H. 9. Carter
(colored).
charging deliberate deceit General Wolseevery shape.
1
Timothy Bailet, a soldier In tbe War of jiey, with the first division of infantry, all the
A Committee on Plan of W&lt;&gt;rk was appointed,
consisting of Messrs. Nelson, of Illinois: Pat- 1812, and the inventor of the knitting-ma­ cavalry and sixteen ifuns, attacked tbc enemy
chine, died at Ballston Bps, N. Y. on tbe 25th. near Mahalla and captured fl.e Krupp gun*
Thompson, of Ohio; Finch, of Nebreak a, and
Jvdoi Lawhexce, First Comptroller of the and seventy-five ear-lcad* of provisions.
M1m Frances E. Willard, of Illlnola.
'
Treasury, on tbe 25 th received a letter from . Cablegrams of the 27th from Constantino­
Adjourned to the 24th.
Mrs. Garfield, staling that she had no objec­ ple report tbe arrest ot fifty persons engaged
tion* to the proposed purchase by the Ohio tn enlisting men in behalf of tbe Khedive.
The Turkish Prime Minister on the 2f/h in­
The convention reassembled in Farwell Hall Republican Association of the .former reslformed Lord Dufferin that the Council of Min­
denoe of General Garfield.
isters had resolved to publish Arabi Pasha as
Wisconsin, offered prayer.
T
he seven hundred delegates tn attendance
A telegram was received from the Knfgtt*
a rebel and accept the British Military
of Temperance of Atlanta. Ga-, sending greet' at the Free-thinkers' Convention at Watkins, Convention. Tbc attitude of the Ruslan
N. T., on the 25th unanimously welcomed
Ings to tho convention.
representatives was still antagonistic to
The Committee on Credentials reported sev­ Herbert Spencer to America and lauded his England. The British embassy at Constan­
eral additional delegates, who were given services In the cause of liberalism.
tinople h*^received information that Russia
Ix response to a caU-dssued by Bishop was making largo purchases of wheat and
Tbe call of States, begun on tbe previous
Escher, of Chicago, Bishop Thomas Bowman,
day, as to tbe condition of affairs in tbe sever­ of Allentown, Pa., and other reverend gen­ storing It at Kara. Tbe English opened fire
al States, was resumed, delegates making five- tlemen, for a meeting of German-American with two heavy guns on Arabi’s forces on the
left bank of the Mahmoudieh Canal, but the
minute speeches.
citizens who favored the spread of temper­ reply was feeble. A party of Be-loulns ad­
A report was presented by tbe Committee on
Pceolutlons, embodying a platform of princi- ance ideas and the enactment of legislation vanced to within a short distance of the Meles
to abolish tbe evils of the liquor business, forts, but found tbe position untenable and
an suffrage plank and the adoption of some about one hundred German citizens assem­ retired after considerable firing.
amendments offered to other portions of the bled In Chicago on tbe 25th and adopted a
Ax Alexandria dispatch of the 28th states
platform, tbc report aa amended waa adopted. constitution, tbe title of the association be­ that tbc man-of-war Minotaur had success­
As finally agreed to the resolutions read as fol- ing "The German National Association
fully shelled tbe enemy out of Mandara, on
for tbe
Promotion
of Temperance,” the line between Ramleh and Abouklr. The
Platform of the Prohibition Home Protec­ and its chief object being to promote
enemy released the aurplua water behind the
tion party:
All questions not of a National character be­ the temperance cause among German-Ameri­ dam and flooded the country on both their
long to tbc party within tbe several States and cans. A resolution was adopted pledging tbe
Territories to define it* views, policy and so- association to support all legal enactments in flank* The cavalry end the Bodoulna con­
tinued to raid the village of Meka,
favor of prohibition, and an Executive Comth&lt;*
Inhabitants.
IsmailWe declarr in favor of tbc following Nation­ .mlttee of nine members was appointed, whose murdering
al principles and measures to bo incorporated constitutional duties are to attend to tbe pub­ la advices say that the troops were
Int eNational Constitution and enforced by
continually advancing, and It would not be
lication
of
temperance
matter
in
the
German
Congress and tbe GoverumcnL
1. The prohibition, m public crimes, of tho language; make arrangements for public lect­ long before Tel-el-Keblr waa attacked. Be­
importation, exportation, manufacture, sole ures; found branch aMociatlona, and to make tween Ramses and Maxama ground was good
and supply of all alcoholic beveregea.
for marching, but tbe canal was full of dead
X Tbe prohibition of all taxation, license, use of all other means for promoting the ob­ horses and tbe bodies of Arabs.* Some of the
regulation, or legal sanction In any form, of ject of the association to the beat of their
these or any other public crimes.
latter were thrown there by their comrades,
3. Tbe civil and political equality and en­ ability.
while others were the corpses of men shot
franchisement of woman. This question, so
The following Congressional nominations
far as It concerns tbe States severally, is re­ were made on the 36th: Republican—Michi­ while attempting to escape. Five ships with
mitted to the party in tboso btalc*.
gan, Second DistAct, John K. Bole* Demo­ troops from Bombsy had arrived at Suez.
, 4. The abolition of polygamy.
Ax Alexandria dispat^i of the 28th an­
5. Tb- abolition of Executive. Judicial and cratic—Virginia, First,* Genrge T. Garrison,
Legislative patronage, and election of all offi­ renominated. Greenback—Louisiana, Second, nounces tbe formation of a new Egyptian
cers by the people so far as practicable, nnd
ministry with Cberif Pash* as Premier. It
William H. Hler.
clvll-st-rvlce reform tn othcAppolntment*.
At Washington on the 36th Dr* Bliss and was reported that several staff officers had
deserted Arabi Pasha and given General
Reyburn filed their claims for medical at­
*. Tbe universal and enforced education of
Wolseley Important Information.
tbc youth of the Nation, with ample provision
tendance during President Garfield’s I line**.
for tfaq support of on adequate and efficient
Bliss value* trt services at &lt;25,000, and Hey­
system of fn-e public schools in all the States
LATER NEWS.
burn demands &lt;8,000.
and Terri toriea.
A The preservation of the public lands for
Ox tbe 26lh tbe Democrats of Connecticut
The leader of the robber* of the Ke­
a.----------------------- —-• **--rr dlriaton In Mm- issued a call for a Stele Convention to be held wanee (III) Bank waa arrested at Su Louis
ited portions to.act uni s&lt;
anly.
at Hartford, October 4.
on the 29tb, In the person of James &amp; Scott, a
A Tbe abolition of all
illation and special pri.......____ ________
De. Hjckb publicly steled on the 26th that dentist, who made a confession Implicating
ment injurious to tbe equal rights of citizen*.
Gulteau’s skeleton would not be placed on Pratt, the Cashier it the time of the robpublic ex; oaition, *ud be denied tbe allega­
tions th«t be had Intrusted the assassin's
Ox the evening of the 98th tbe Arabs under
bones to the care of the United State* Medi­ Arabi Pasha attacked the British position at
cal Museum. Caterers to public amusements Kasszaln, and were repulsed with heavy losa.
who ably and successfully advocated lu
were also informed that tbe skeletoaic curios­ The British lost 190 men.
adoption:
Alexandria dispatches of the 22th atata
IltMivid. That we declare, unequivocally, ity was not for sale, w
The following Congressional nomination* that Sultan Pasha had arrived at Fort Said to
against proscription and pcraecutlon on ac­
count of color, and demind full and exact were made on the 38th: Greenback—Illinois, install representatives of the Khedive in tbe
civil and political equality for all American
Eleventh District, Rev. Richard Haney; territory occupied by tbe British. The Porte
citizen".
Michigan, Second, Albert J. Baker. Demo insisted that the troops of Turkey and En­
ocralfc—Arkansas, Fourth, 8amuel W. Peel; gland should jointly operate from Alexandria.
Three and a half per cent, bonds to the
Pennsylvania, Twelfth, D. W. Connolly.
Ix the Stei^route trial at Washington on amount nf &lt;3,750,000 were withdrawn from
respoMiblliUe". Furthermore, the com ml ties the 28th Mr. Merrick closed his argument for tbe Treasury at Washington on the 29th for
reported that It was ' tbc imperative duty of tbe prosecution, and Mr. Wilson commenced conversion Into the flew three per cent. bond*.
tbe Government to make proper provision for bls argument for tbe defense.
Ax Athens (Greece) dispatch of the 29th
the education of the n«-gro. The resolutions
A WasHixuTOX dispatch of the 28th says says that for tbe past two day* fighting bad
also called for tbe establlahment of free Indus­
General
W.
T.
Sherman
had
osked
to
be
been
In progress between the Greek* and
trial schooli and-rthe support of such schools
placed on the retired Hat in November, 1883. Turks all along the border from Zorbas to
already existing In tbe South.
Degani. Reinforcement* of L000 men bad been
dispatched from Athena. Each side claimed
purpose of coi..-dtutlng a National Committee,
FOREIGN.
with tbe following result:
B. Weight A Box, worsted spinners of that the other attempted to occupy disputed
IlUnoi»-J. G. Brwin. IL W. Nelson.
territory. '
Kansas—Mrs. JC Whiting, Lorenzo West- Bradford, England, failed on tbe 34th, wfia
The banking house of William EL Lloyd A
HaMU Ilea of &lt;400,000.
"51arylr.nd-WiiiJam Daniel. James SUverThe yellow fever Is prevalent at Port an Co., of Philadelphia, closed lu door* on the
29th, with liabilities of &gt;150,001
Mn-sacbuwae-A. A. Miller, Charles. A. Prince.
A loss of 1103,000 was Incurred on the 29th
Lzbvthxxxt Behby, who commanded tbe
Rodgers, and Engineer Melville, of tbe Jean­ at HarerhllL Mas*., by tbe burning of throe
nette, were received by the Czar of Rossi* on factories and three dwelling*.
Ex-Govebxoe Sprague on the 29th still
the afternoon of the 23d, and started for home
on the 24 th.
-threatened dire results to trespasser* on the
Sfaix has determined to join with Russia Canonehet (R. L) estate. Trustee Chaffee
New Jersey—E. Hunt. W. B. Bartram
New York—T. J. Bissell, J. O. Hazleton.
and Germany In protesting against tbe pro­ had appealed to the court*.
Obio-ti. T. Stewart, Mrs. M. A. Woodbridge. tection of tbe Suez Canal being confided to
Seventy-two new cases of yellow fever and
Pennsylvania-A. C Prtut. j. N. Pierre.
two deaths were reported from Brownsville,
Tcnnesare-Emeraon Etheridge, Bev. W.J. tbe British.
St. Clair.
A Vnrxxa dispatch of the 24th says tljat, Tex, on the 29th. Tbe disease was spreading
In the town of Gross Becskerek, Hungary, at Pensacola, Fix

For fall and winter trade are comining in.
lent and cheap. Examine them.

They are excel­
»
"

Of the best quality, and lowest in price. Try our 40c' Tea.
Don’t buy poor eggs unless you prefer them. Our egg tester
tells you which are poor.

' CASH PAID FOR BUTTER AID E88S.

NEW VICTOR SEWING MACHINE is'VICTOROUS
ST Ready pay secures for you all the advantages in trade.

Recording- Secretaries —Mary T. Lathrop,
[ary A. Woodbridge.

Sally Chapin.

the charge of having poisoned tbe r husband*,
and that thirty-five had already been found
guilty..
The cholera Is creating great havoc at Ma­
nilla.
«
(
The corporation of Limerick, Ireland, has
unanimously voted the freedom of tbe dty to
E. Dwyer Grey, of the Dublin P’reewwo*’*

within twenty days there had been 579 deaths

JmwvmL

tn following Congreastona! nominations
wars made on tho 90th: Republican—Illinois,
Ninth District, Lewis E. Payson, renomina­
ted; Wisconsin, Ninth, Isaac Stephenson;

that the assailants were encouraged In their
attack by the officials.
Mayo

death rate from the disease at Tokio was about
fifty dally.

—G-ZRZELA-T

20 patterns Mens all Wool Suits, cut in fashionable styles,
$6.5Q, marked down from 9 .00.
25 Mens Cheviot Suite, in sack or frock at R10.00, marked
down from 14.00.
Mens fine Diagonal Dress Suits, Prince Albert cut aways,
SI6. marked down from $20.
One lot of Boys Suite, age 10 to 15 years, very durable
material, all Wool, 86.50, marked down from $0,00.
One lot odd Coats, choice, for $4.00.
100 pairs all wool Pante, $3.00, worth $5.00.

In Boots and Shoes, Dry Goods, Groceries and Notions.
Highest price paid for Butter and Eggs,
Don't miss this great Sale, as our prices are considered less
than material alone would cost.
' •

WJlI. A. AYLSWORTH.

Boots &amp; Shoes
Our boots and shoes have arrived. The largest supply in
town. $1681 now in stock. We handle

The famous Rochester make
And for Quality, Style, and Price they can’t be beaten any­
where. When yon want to buy if you don’t exam­
ine our stock you will miss it.
We have now en the road a larger stock of

MENS’, BOYS’. -A.TVD YOUTHS’

Will be here in two or three days.

We want your Butter and Eggs, and
will give you the Money for them.

C. W. GRANGER &amp; CO
14444388

IT IS

FACT

— THAT---And shall stay and continue to'supply tbe

NOT ONE

GROCERIES o,™“B
OF A NO. 1 QUALITY.

Mormon mlsMontrlea who were operating with

FRESH EVERY DAY

Daniel Ermentrout, renominated. Greenback

ROCK BOTTOM PRICES.

FROM

The Nashvile Mill,
------ BUT------

Taut Illinois Board of Agriculture on the

ABOUT SEPT. 1
UNIVERSALLY SATISFIED.

G.W. FRANCIS.

JKO. M. ROE

�nm l

I

I
WEST KALAMO.

Dog dsya, good bye.
The politfteal pc* IsWtteg.

CONSISTING OF

! simply ta-tes like soft water.

Henry Smith living on. the town line, white j week all seemed to enjoy xbefnaelves exceedmowing with a span of coh*, last Saturday,was iugly
tngiy well. One attractive feature of the evenf Seeretarv (tert^d
ing wa* the numerous Chinese tenter* hung
‘
*7
.
,
—.
,
. .
-About the first uf August I aent one hundred
•bout the orchard. The receipt* of tbe even-I
...
,
.
Mn
i ostal cards in cnvelo;ie* to the twMt promiacut
far as we can learn be barely escaped with hU tnw
*
’
Xui.
! fniit growers in Michigan, asking them to relife. He managed to atop tbe colte. ‘Dr.
■
' -w
' । turn tbe percentage of an average crop that the
1 orchards and vineyards nromised for the crop ,
THE COUNTY.
ting along finely.
of 1881. with such remark* m would naturally
NauTbc telephone bn# been introduced at FreeNearly all of tbc returns have been made at
PRICHARDVlLLEt
The Odd Felknri’fpiculc at Tboroapptelaks, this writing, August 14, and T am quite sur­
prised at the result*. Only one correspondent
■ Plowing for wheat.
Stafford A Clarke, lawyer* of Hastings, hare put* the apple crop at a full average, while
Ost harvest i# finished.
.
thirty-four place it at les* than one-fourth of a
School cluses Friday. No picnic.
dissolved partnerrhlp.
The Red Stocking* hfdl club of Irving give a crop, fifty report* make it less than one half a
Ben Toby drive# a new span of horse#.
crop, and seventy-fire less than three fourths of
Mias Gertrude Mowry is visiting at Rasa. '
dancing party this (Friday) evening.
The county board of school examiners hold a an average yield. The fiallctwing localities have
Geu. Prichard and wife went to Otsego Mon­
tbe most promising show of apples: Ingham,
special meeting at Hasting* to-day (Friday.)
day.
Tlie charge uf selling liquor to minors, bro't Bay, wcjtern Muskegon. Manistee, Geuesaee,
Some piece* of coni will do to cut in two
against tbe Middleville saloonfst, baa been Allegan, Maeomb, and Lapeer counties; wertMr*. White at Battle Creek, visited at Sol. dropped.
Heuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago,
A -valuable cow belonging to Samuel McIn­ eastern Ottawa, all unite in the statement that Backache, Soreneit of the Chest,
Prichard's last week.
Miss Lillie Norris and brother returned to tyre of Hasting* died from eating wheat screen- the fruit will be imperfect, scabby, and badly
Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swell­
injured
by
insect*.
thdr home in Lacey last Saturday.
ings and Sprains, Burns and
Tbe crop of pears promises better than ap­
Geo. Ingram of Irving ha* more peaches and
Fanner# who have threshed their oats report
a
Scalds, Generdt Bodily
some young fellows hare more discretion—all ple.*. and unless some new difficulty arises there
that they are turning out excellent.
Pains,
Tbe father and mother of Mr*. Samuel Hinch­ on account of a pistol shot tn Ingram’s orchard. will be seventy five per cent of a full yield.
Tbe dramatic dubs a: Middleville and Hast­ There is les* blfgbt this season than for several Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted
man are staying with her at present.
Feet and Ears, and all other
Miues Anns and Grade Mowry from MiUn, ings have united, and declared their intention years, Judging from reports to date.
Peaches in unfavorable localities for this
Pains and Aches.
Ohio, visited at Ed. Mowry's last week. •
to produce a play at Middleville, Hastings and
fruit are a complete failure.' Upon high ground
Blackberries have been abundant around here Nashville in about two weeks.
A Holstein heifer eighteen months old. be­ in the interior there will be above half a crop,
and pickers from a# far as Calhoun and Kala­
longing to Stone &lt;x Bigg* of Rutland, had a and upon the reliefs of Washtenaw county even
mazoo counties have been after the fruit.
A short lime since there was a birthday par­ heifer calf, Tuesday, which weighed eighty better than this; while upon the lake shore to
tbe north there wtlbbe a light yield, of say 40
ty at the residence of Samuel Hinchman. It be­ pounds.—Home Journal.
Mrs. O. Clark of the neighborhood north of per cent. In Allegan, Kent, Ottawa, and Mus­ SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AHD DEALERS
ing Mr*. H.’* 41st birthday. Some very costly
15 MEDIOIHE.
presents were given her, among which waa an Lacey, went craay tbe other day. She under­ kegon there will be two thirds of a crop and the
elegant gold watch, presented by her parent*. took to kill her children and those around her. fruit very fine. In VanBuren and Kalamazoo
• Phil.
We understand that she is to be taken to the about half a crop.
The most prolific fruit in Michigan this year
•aylutfc—The Banner.
.Vasliville Markets
Edward Hymmen of Middleville ha« the fol­ is tlie grape. There are promises of a vety full
MAPLE GROVE.
lowing in the Republican:
“Notice—This yield if the season is prolonged so the cluster*
Is to certify that Russell Kane has been slan­ will ripen—Many of tbe first setting were killed
Joe Shoup has returned from Climax.
dering my wife's character. I want the public by frost. There is some mildew appearing in
Frank Cummins was home last week.
Wm. Harding has his new bouse completed. to know that he is a contemptible liar and the several localities, and tbe recent wet weather Potatoes,
Be*ne&gt;p
ha* developed some tendency to rot in places Onion*.t&gt;«rbu
Corn is very extravagant It la dressed in silk, truth is not in him.” That's business.
where this disease has appeared years before.
flollster McCartney has retured from Ohio.
Tbe
plum
crop
will
be
a
good
average
where
EATON
COUNTY.
Will and Zalla Emery 'are going to Illinois
persistent efforts have been made to tight the
The county-fair occurs October 10 11, and 12. curcuiio. ’
Ml** Carrie Blabop of Leslie, Is visiUng Mis*
The county board of school examiners meets
The yellows is gradually working northward.
Carrie McOmber.
at Charlotte to-day.
A few "sporadic cases’’ have been announced
Tbe Norton school is tn session, with Miss
BUCKLEN’S ARNICA SALVE.
Tbe D. L. A N- stock yard at GrandLedge as far north as northern Ottawa and Kent; but
Power* of Hasting* as teacher.
The best salve in the world for Cut*, Bruises,
ba# been over hauled rebuiltthere is a united feeling among peach-growers Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter
School was closed in tlie Dunham district last
Grand Ledge is ogluting tbe subject of bow that every case must be stamped out at sight
Chapped
Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and al)
week on account of diphtheria.
to get a liberal supply of water uandy for fire
There are a great many theories concerning Skin Eruptions, and jioaltteely cures Piles. It
Tbe new M. E. church is enclosed and near­
is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction,
and other uses.
the cause of failure in apples. It is laid to east money refunded. Price 25 cent* per box. 1
ing completion as fast a* possible.
Jame* Stalker, of Delta, last week. Jumped winds, frost*, moist feather *l time of blos­
Geo. Potter of Chicago wa« visiting hia brotbsale by all druggist*.
at and seized a valuable ram suddenly, when it soming, etc. Tbe mod common explanation
droppeu down dead
REPUBLICAN CAUCUS.
Mr*. Wm. Covell has been quite sick, A l*o &amp; Tbc residence of Sila* Wood of Round was seems to be that the continuous frosts through
A Republican caucus to elect delegates to the
May weakened the vitality of the young fruit
four of tbe children bare the measles.
.burned recently. Loss, including *300 in cash, so that it dropped through June. The varieties county convention to nominate county officers,
A girl Instead of a boy at Charley Slade's, as
also to nominate one candidate for Represen­
*700; insurance, *300.
of apple* that have as yet hung on the trees tative in tbe State Legislature and for such
Lansing Decker of Brookfield and Norton best are Baldwin and Golden Russet. Fall ap­ other business a# mav properly come before It
Rev. A. D. Newton daltvered hi# farewell ser
Dunbar of Eaton Rapid* start* for Washing­ ple* seem to be almost a dead failure. The will be held at the village hall in Nashville on
mon at tbc Norton wbool-houtc last Sunday.
Saturday tbe Otb day of Sept. A. D. 1883 at two
ton Territory Sept. 6th, to locate.
Northern Spy, which is a great favorite in our o'clock in the afternoon.
Wm. Sutton end wife of Battle Creek, were
Mr*. T. D. Green of Charlotte lost a pocket­ state, will l&gt;e represented by very small quanti­
By order of Com.
John Keaglk,
at D. P. Wolfs, one day last week, blackbenyChairman.
book containing *222 in notes aud caah, while ties in the fruit cellars next winter. Cider, ap­
ing.
on the excursion to Detroit Tuesday.
ple Jelly, and evaporated apples will be reduced
The brick work on the new M. E. church, is
MierlfrNair.
John W. Scdorc of Grand Ledge, wboj was to a minimum.
completed and the carpenter work is being
Notice is hereby given that by virtue of a
robbed at Lansing July 15th of *300. has had
To the lover* of apple sauce I would counsel writ of Fierificlaa, Issued out of tbe Circuit
pushed.
a man and woman of that place named Malon- tbe selection of the best substitute in the way Court for the countrof Kent, in favor of U ilThe over coat of General Grant wuld not
iiam
Hake against the good# and chatties
of atoned fruit, and begin early.
make Charley Slade a vest. That is be ia pa
real estate of William E. Buel, in the county
*1,536 have been pledged to liquidate the In­
to a fine girl.
of Barrv, to me directed and delivered, I did on
debtedness of the M. E. church at Grand
tbe
24tn
day of July laat, levy upon and take
Jamea HC1 Jr., had the misfortune to have
SADLY AFFLICTED.
Ledge, and the prospects for tbe extinction of
the right, title and Interest of the said Wil­
120 cords of wool burnt one day last week,while
“My boy was badly afflicted with rheuma­ ail
liam SwBuel In and to the following descrilxx!
tbe debt were never better.
he was burning hl# fallow.
tism,” said Mr. Burton, of tbe great stove firm real estate; that is to aay all that certain piece
Dr. I. W. Huston has left the Anderson
Mrs. P. L. Smith and Mis* Carrie McOmber
of Radway and Barton, of this city, to one of or parcel of land described a* follows, to-wit:
House sanitarium. at i-ston Rapids, because
were baptised and taken into communion with
our reporters. “We doctored him a great deal, Tin: east one half (X) of the cast one half (J&lt;)
matters were not soconducted as to Justify
of the south west quarter (J^) of section thirtythe M. E. church last Sunday.
but could find no cure; I had beard so much of five (85,) tn town (8,) north of range seven (7)
him in efforts to buildup a profitable business.
Farmer# have come to tbe conclusion that
the efficacy of St- Jacob* Oil that I finally de­ west, in Barrv county, Michigan, all of which I
At Eaton Rapids the ladles got up a big
they will have plenty of com fodder. Wouldn't
termined to try It. Two bottles of the Oil fully shall expose for sale at public auction or vendue
social for the firemen and *100 were in this and
to the highest bidder, at the north front door
wonder if it got upon its ear yet.
cured him.’’—Cincinnati Enquirer.
of tbe court bouse in Hastings, In said county,
other Ways raised to buy them a new trackExcitement ran high a few day* ago at the
the sixteenth day of October next, at
all because they did so well at the tornamenL THEATRICAL AND CIRCUS LIFE. on
eleven o'clock In the forenoon.
Center. Three threshing machines Were at
Eugene Belly left John Morse's, in Oneida
Dated this 81st dav of August, A. D. 1882.
The Historical Publish Ing Co., ot 8L Louts,
work within half a mBe of each other. .
HENRY M. ROUGHTALIN, Sheriff,
Calvin Nicewander celebrated his eighteenth township, last Sunday, after working for him a have just issued a book bearing tbe above title.
By Herreht M. Lek, Deputy Sheriff.
few weeks, and took some of John's property It treat* of a new and always interesting subbirthday one night last week with a party.
D. E. Cokbitt, Flt’f* Atty.
•
5045.
with him. He waa captured in bed at the bo^se
Refreshments were served and a good time en­
of a farmer in Needmore, Sunday night, and la tbemralve# with the mysteries of tbe profes­
joyed.
sion. In fact it wil) interest ail classes of
now employed by the state at Ionia.
Why te it that the countenances ot John Mc­
Geo. A. Peaton ha# sued the city of Char­ readers, owing to its revelations of secrets here­
AGENTS WANTED FOBTHETUR1LUNG
tofore known only to managers and actor*.
Intyre and Al Stewart shine like a head light
NEW BOOK
lotte for *50,000 because he can’t walk. He’ The author is a well known dramatic critic,
of a locomotive. It I* whispered there is a boy
says that hi&lt; inability is due to injuries to Mis hb style Is easy and natural, and the numerous
spine received by tumbling Into a hole in the anccodote* aud personal adventures with Bavraling tbe aemU of the al age,Greenj Boom »nd
Geo. Bellas waa somewhat surprised a few
which he enliven* his work, render it refresh­
sidewalk, in that town, but tbe Charlotte ingly Interesting. Book agent* will have a good Circa* tent. Private and pab|ie Tlvn ot noted aeton
mornings ago when be went out to milk to find
and actrcoeee, lheir professional work aud «utnmcr
Leader says it is asserted that he received tbe in­ thing in thl# volume. Sec advertisement.
racaUotu.aaiusiBK sketebee and th rilling trejedle*;
two young porker* robbing him of his momjuries by a previous fall while in a fit.
the Black Art rcrealed,
eat Arc,
women
______ how men______
a
WANTED—A GIRL
While bunting turkeys tn Eagle township
It la a nice thing to have a bone and buggy
just over tbe line in Clinton county, last week To do general housework. Permanent place to
at your disposal, so thinks Leander Lapham as
Albert Parmenter thought he saw a nice one Nash m"1
B1*1, A(Wre“ Tux Nbwe,
through a brash pile. Tbe turkey tamed out
berrying on hl* own farm.
BRICK! BRICK!
to be John Graves, who bad been plowing near
el*tlom I Truth stranger than 'fiction ! 175 POR­
Lew T. ...imer and Geo. Bellas are taking ad­
I have on hand alwut 300,000 Brick which I TRAITS. ENGRAVINGS. AND COLORED
by and was getting a drink from a spring. He
vantage of the large blackberry crop to make
want to close out thl* fall. Parties wanting
is dangerously wounded in one knee.
500 ) barrels (or les*) of blackberry wine.
e and see me. Also a quantity &lt;3
Charlotte: Burglars raided Pann 1 nomas’ Tile.
46-50
Wm. Boston.
This te the first bind of moonshiner* heard of
residence, but got only a jewel case and an
SKINNY MEN.
A midnight incendiary was prowling around
Wells’ Health Renewer. Absolute care for
Leyl Elliott’s, a few nights ago. Mr. Elliott has bought tbe bell made purposely for and
tive function*. *1. at druggist*. Mich. Depot
fired one shot at him, which naturally caused
JAMES E. DA VIS A OOTDetroit, Mich.
him to commence putting space between Levi City, Ind., and baa ordered the building of a
“ROUGH ON RATS."
*3,500
pipe
organ.
Tbe
Unlveraallst
church
aud himself very rapidly. Any one who will
Tbe thing desired found at last. Ask D
risk thetusclves before a revolver tor the paltry building is well under way and 1b to be dedi­
girt for “Rough on Rata.” Il clears out
sac- of WOOmurt put a email estimate on hu­ cated Sept 5, probably with tbe dedicatory ad­
dress by Dr. Rexford of Detroit.
FraE photogaph al
manity.
JlLKGA,fr DKdIGNS. HANDSOMELY
IIPOKTAMT TOTiilVELEBK,
BOUND.
.
1 Inducements are offered you by the
of tbe Charlotte Republican staled that C.
Oar Bible contain, 2.000 pages,2.M» Uhulration.
on
Route,
It
will
pay
you
to
road
their
Rxm
InriuremoHL.
--WEST SUNFIELD.
Wellington, of Roxanfi, had 40 acers of Ciawtments to be found elsewhere in this
HOLMAN A CO.. Ufi Arch St.1
issue.
_______________________
Poor time a year for items.
and waa a total Joss. And now Mr. W.authorizes
—CongreMman Lacey of thia district
gives notice that be will conduct a com­
petitive
examination at Jackson, Sept.
baa, that It is nos badly grown, and will avcr4, to select a candidate for tbe .naval
An Infant child of Mr. Putnam was buried
academy at Annapolis, Md. All can­ ACEirrSI For Gen. Dodge's new book,
horticultural so­ didates must be of sound physical de­ THIBTY-THREE YEARS AMONG
crop of grapes.
velopment, well up in ordinary studies,
CoL Thomas of Odessa, is rUltiag bis brother amount of choke apples was shipped from the and have resided in the district two
in this burg this week.
various railroad stations in Eaton county, last years.
_______ ______________
aiCfll&amp;AX FBtlT PROSPECT*.

Farrows are rashing their plowing for wheat.
John Mast has bought forty acres of Bee. IBdiIk®.

fair at Nashville.

doing their doty.
move to Dakota.
Corn has matured so rapidly that farmer*
feel more hopeful. •
Wm. Jordan is buying «beep to ship to Ohio
to feed for market.
Tbe weather 1* all that could be wlthed for
whiter pancake Umber.
friends lu this section.
Stock buyer* are plenty, and farmers are
selling off their stock,
.
Mias Mary Tlech te visiting friends in the
southern part ot the state.
better at thl* time
Tbe pastures
sick with
diphtheria.
John Mix is reported a* having tbe bestr
quality of frail in this section.
D. A. WeUs lost a home last week by reason
of inflamatlon of tbe bowels.
8. W. Powers is testing a sulky plow on his
extensive and splendid farm.
“Kit,” via “Van," Don’t remember such a
person, will enquire after him.
Hon. Hannon Bradley of Battle Creek waa
in West Kalamo, a few day* ago.
H. C. Sander* lost a valable dog a few day*

H. J. Stocking had a runaway a few days
ago. Result, bruise and a broken carriage.
The blackberry season 1* nearly dosed, and
woman in strange costumes are not so plenty.
Annual school meeting Monday evening
next. Jet all attend to this our most important
Talk of a temperance hall being built in
West Kalamo. Better have better temberance
principles.
’
Wesley Baker with help has been up in this
section for a few days past, putting up the hay
on his farm.
Mr*. Albert Bara» has in her posession a
bible over one hundred years old. That ought

Tie easy to tell when you [pas* through
West Kalamo, by tbe odor of onions which is
wafted far and near.
James Ehret and hia two brother* have cut,
split and laid in fence over 4,000 rails thia sum­
mer, by working odd spells.
was recovering from her recent illneM, is
again in a critical condition.
If persons who go to public gatherlncs to be
boisterous, would stay at home instead, there
would be more peace In community.
It is not generally known that women arc
voters at all school meeting* in thl* state,
subject only to tbe same qualification* as
other voter#.
The enumeration of persons between the age
of 5 and 20 in the Matteson sch&lt;x&gt;l district, is
taken this weeK, agreably to the school law,
arid the result is 82.
Mr. Norton, who lost hi# house by fire last
year, has got a new and much more splendid
dwelling erected and nearly finished on the
site of the old one.
T. A. Crandall, Grave* and son, at tbe vil­
lage, are doing a thriving business tn their re­
spective stores, and the village is putting on
some of tbe old airs of busine**.
J. J- Reynold# received on Saturday evening,
a# a present from the Lyceum, a valuable
book, a* a slight token of esteem for his efflcent services a* steward for the part six mouth#.

cently, eight large wood chucks without any
aboL and be considers It only half a Job at
A young lady, the daughter of Job. Vance
of this town. 1* in a very sad condltloe, lelng
able to retain tbe food she swallows, she has

doubtful.
Election of officers at the Lyceum Saturday
evening. President, C. G. Brundage; Tice
president*, F. O. William* and Jame* Ebert;
Secretary, Wm. Showalter; Steward, J. J.
Reynolds.
tbey moved Into this town several years ago, a
Jug said to be over 300 years old. Wouldn’t
smell of *ueh s jug!

evening* since which came as near being a

and but a very small quantity of comb. Ap•tore room waa limited.

usually quiet and orderly Association meeting*.
What spirit of evil has taken posessfou of this

me that S100 and you bet that I would not

plovers of Tbe Nkw# to pumki n pie and cider,

CErmanremedY

RHEUMATISM,

A. VOGELER &amp; CO..

Sugars, CoUees, Teas, Tobaccos,
Spices, Fish, Canned Goods,
Provisions,^.,
AT THE LOWEST PRICES
»For Cash or Ready Pay.

Crockery, Glassware, Lamps,
Stone Ware, &amp;c.,
TO BESEENJJ^BARRY CO.
BOOTS AND SHOES
AB VHFAf AS ANYBODY.

CASH PAID FOR PRODUCE.

C. W. SMITH

F.

T. BOISE,
---------FOR--------

(

BOOKN,
s
JEWELIll.
WALL PAPER,
Wl.MMIW SHADES,

D1BNTCJFFN,
PROPRIETARY MEDI0IHE8,
PKEM Itll-TIOXW,
KBCEIPTS.
-------- MT-

PAINT AND BRUSH
DEPARTMENT

Call and Examine!
F. T. BOISE.
J.!

R. DICK1XSO.V XCO.
------ NEW------

CUSTOM

Fouring Mill
READY FOR BUSINESS
Every day tn the year—Sundays excepted.

CUSTOM

GRINDING!

Of every dercripUon, done in a superior
manner, at tbe drop of tbe bat; and

ANEW BOOK ON A NEW SUBJECT I FLOUR. MEAL AND MILL FEED
Kept constantly on band.

THEATRICAL &amp; CIRCUS. LIFE.

7^^10720

BIB$

Our

By a strict attention to buiinew and square
dealing with all our customer*, we hope to mer­
it a liberal patronage from tbe farmers of this
vicinity.
Mill* on railroad,—east of depot.

II. R. DICJKIXSOV A CO.

WOOL

CARDING
AND SPINNING

TT&amp;nted New

OUR WILD INDIANS

WOODLAND.

More eoptea of Tbe
it be.
Qu ite a number ofyoung folks from this from

Woodland this fall.

Tbe straight Greenbackers, after re­
exhibit at tbe meeting of the state horticultur­ fusing to “co-operate,” last week,
al society at Jackson during the state fair, and went from the convention over toSweet’s hotel and nominated tbe fol­
lowing ticket: Governor—Amu S. i
Pennell, of Clinton; Lieut-Goreraor—
meeting on tbe 16th, ready for shipment tbe Isaiah Mains, Otsego; Sty^etary of
state—John E. Simmons, of Bay;
Treaaarer—Gey. M. Upton, Ottawa;
Auditor-General—Wai tor M. Kelley,

Miller. Saginaw ; Sapt, Public Instruc-

Graham Fleur

Carding Mill

Of tlie underslgucd.li* prepared to make Into

Rolls, or Yarn I
all tbe wool ot tills section, with

STOCKING
Btodrteg

YARN
•

NEED NOT WAIT

�are railed, which

oLone of tin' -now mountains.
•’Cbmo. Amy,” bo exclahned, •*&lt;«
, -tad faking herby the unndbe
setout for the path by which they had
•Mcniwd.

that 4 the Mine
8L James in English."

•• And 1 say ’Amen.’ to it.” returned
the To.iwg man, huskily, “ for 1 believe
we’d have gone right on past you l»:th
if it had not .been for that scarlet, glow
Fletcher, "for here's a-kind of path wo ,fn»m the fete of St Jacques.”—Harpe?’
can take: so now hc»id on to me tight, Young People.
.and be careful not v&gt; slip:” and down
Six Days With Brigands.
tho two started over the rough way. for
the mountaiu side was covered with
The reappearance of brigandage. In
stones, little and bi£. which tho fcerof
the distant neighborhood of ralerino so
the children m.-dL rcftlmg and crashing on
soon after the recent rejoicings Ims pain­
ahead of them.In quite .a noisy fashion.
With each advancing step the path fully hupresMd the inhabitants. The
particulars of the treatment of tho ex­
grew fainter nnd fainter, until it finally
Syndic, Signor Notarbartolo. by the
dhapptutred entirely, and nothing was
to be seen but trees nnd rocks and brigands have, become known since his
return. As soon as his companions had
stones.
.
• ••Shall we go back, Amy?” asked, been disarmed by tlie pretended patrol
the ex-Syndic perceived his 'mistake.
•Fletcher, as they both came to a halt;
His captors were dressed in new Bernd a id bt? spent!
and then he added: , •* But no, wo
saglieri uniforms, spoke tho jargon of
Cain! thnnigh Uwe I grow eon­ haven't time; so we must keep on.”
soldiera, and hail a thoroughly militaiy
‘‘All right; but yon don’t think there
Thy c .Im-vnlewd spell
Goes deeper in the heart than words can telL ere onr snakes under' these slonea, do appearance, rendering it likely that they
had all once served in the army. When
you, Ffet?”
. .
Watching thr.nurh n'ght.
Signor .Notarbartolo saw the state of
.Many tv!th tnc await the luorning Ugh:
Then they went on down again, but
niluirs he nt once told his captors in a
- . tn pain or care.
the wav greVt ever rougher and rough­
Or raft. It may be, tn tbe trance of prayer.
er, and the stones slipped* from under decided manner that all threats or bad
their tired feet more* and mote fre­ language toward him wotdd be of no
avail, and such was tho effect of his su­
Hearing tarrhythmic music oofliy fall,
quently.
&gt;weet thouzhts tnnycwte
periority, of character that during the
" O dear' ain’t we ’most there?” half
Of Him^TwTtey His way* doth lead us
whole term of his detention the brig­
sobbed Amy. as she Stubbed her too
For nuNfflPTfrop
ands treated him with deference and
against a rock in front of her, while a
• Fall* I Ini th:- cloud upon tho bare bill 1
respect.
His companions had been
Falla, through uark hours,
stone rolled dowu on her heel from be­
Upon" » dosed chalice of tho flowers.
sent away with a letter to his family, ap­
hind.
’
.
prising them of what had occurred,
•
‘
I
g'.ivss
so.
Shall
I
try
to
lift
you
Or on the murmurous thickly follaged tree.
and that a ransom of 75,000 francs was
over this place? See, there must have
Out tails to chsrisfa
The brigands first took
What else would pine and, drooping, sadly been a brook hero in the spring;” and demanded.
Signor Notarbartolo into the woods,
Fletcher pointed out a shallow ravine
and then to a grotto, or rather deep ra­
And »ha!l tbe tear.
that crossed their path obliquely, anil
Shed by th.' Fithlir'» welt-loved children here. which was choked with stones and vine, in the mountains, yvhere he was
In doubt end pain.
detained for six days. The cavern was
Fall fur a lea* wla&lt;fpurpo*e than the Rain?
brush-wood.
. ,
constantly guarded'by two of tho brig­
• Without waiting fpp- an answer, tho
ands. who had changed their uniforms
kind-hearted boy threw his aljxsnstock
■
THE SCARLET GLOW.
for the torn dress of peasants. Tho
across, and then picking Amy up in his
light pcROtrnted this ravine for only a
“ I wish. I couhl take you both with arms, started over hijnselt He reached
few hours of the day, and during that
me.” said Mr. Hanway, as he kissed his the opjxx-rite side in safety, and was
time the prisoner could read a number
children good-bye. and stepped into the about to step up to level ground again
carriage that was to iitar him up among when his foot caught under a sienc, and of the RevueDrax Monties, which ho
•
the mountains on a visit to an old in trying to keep his sister from being happened to have with him.
This.was his only amusement. • He
friend; "but Fletcher here will take harmed bv his mil, he left no hand free
"was not allowed to smoko during tho
good care of you, Amy. and I atn sure with which to save him-elf.
.day, lest in so dqing lie should beteny
neither of you will forget what I’ve told
"O, Fiet, are you hurt?” cried Amy,
the place of his’ concealment
The
vou about keeping away from the as she quickly scrambled to her feet.
brigands railed the ravine their best
boaM.”
‘
’
“Not much: only my ankle.” But
palace,
saying
they
had
others
in
places
Fletcher was ten and Amy eight, and the "not much” proved to be a sprain
thi? two,'with their father, 'who was a serious enough to prevent his walking a morp difficult of acfcess. bnt that they
widower, were stopping al a cozy little step, and after attempting to do so once had chosen this ns it was more com­
hotel on the shores of a lovely lake in or twice, tlie -bravo little fellow was fortable for "his Excellency.” During
tho first evening they conversed frankly
Switzerland.
.
forced to fall back upon the rocks, with
It was only on very rare occasions an expression of pain which he could about theii affairs, recounting thoir ex­
ploits, anil then bogged their prisoner
that Mr. Hanway y-ermitted himself to not repress.
to excuse them if it annoyed him, but
be *ejjora:ed from his children during
And now the children’s situation be­ they did not know how'to talk about
their travels abroad, but as the hotel came quite a grave one. They were as
where they had now been staying for yet. as well as they could judge, a mile anything-but thoir own affairs. At riic
efiil of the six days (during which, in
nearly a week was n very, home-'likeone, or more above the town, the sun had
accordance with' the petitions of tho
and as ho expected to be back iu time already vanished behind the snowy
for supper, ire felt that he could safely peaks op|K&gt;site, the autumn twilight was family and a high functionary, the
brigands had, by order of ’tho Minister
leavv.lhem\to' amuse themselves for a rapiilly closing in. and, worse than all,
Deprotis, been left unmolested) the sum
few‘hours.
Fletcher could not and Amy would not of 50,000f was convoyed to them, with
Tints cast upon their own resources. move.
which they expressed themselves con■ the brother and sister read story-books I ’ S?w,caa 1 p®,oWay n’J&lt;1 leav® y°° tent, telling ‘their prisoner that ho
•
and. played in-door games until dinner­ here?” she would say nhen urged to । ^4 bc immediately released. The
time. At the table were some Ameri­ hurry back, so that lather should not .
-his
. watch,
. saying
.
latter then asked. for
can tourists just from lhe summit of worry.
it was a keepsake very dear to Iiinj.
the highest mountuih in the jd-yce, and
•• But I’m all right as long as I sit
to their lively descriptions of the viHVs stiM." her brother would reply. " Be­ With characteristic courtesy it was im­
to be had therefnim. and of the* pretty sides. the sooner you go and' tell them mediately restored to its proper owner,,
nooks scattered nil over it., both chil­ at the hotel, the quicker they can send not, however, before one of the brig­
ands had eyed the chain with great
dren listened with eager ear.', and when somebody up for-me.”
envy, exclaiming that it was very taste­
one of tha young ladies held up a bunch
At length, coir; inccd that under the ful 'and beautiful The ex-Syndic im­
of "just the loveliest wild flowers” cireum-tanci’S this was the wisest thing
whieu^he had .gathered by the roaii- to do. Amy set bravely out, but had not mediately declared with vivacity that all
side, Amy whispered to her brother that proceeded more than twenty feet before efforts to deprive him of it would bo
she really must go a little way up that she came screaming back, declaring she useless: on which the brigand who had
taken a fancy to it declared ’hat his
very afttfmoon.
had seen a snake, and thnt'she could wish to have’ it was quite disinterested,
"But papa isn't here to take us,” ob­ never, never go on through the dreadful
and that he would gladly pay for it.
jected Fletcher. whoTonged to go as woods alone.
.
At this time the band had assumed very
much as his sistrr. although he was old
“ Let me stay with you, Fiet.” she good cloth clothes, had rings on their
enough td tnjdewtafod that ‘his father begged. "I’m'sure when papa misses
fingers, and gold chains to their watches.
wouhl not Hke to have them leave the
'us he’ll come right up here;” and her Signor Notarbartolo was received in
hotel in his absence.
brother, seeing she had no doubts on Palermo with great demonstrations of
“Papa didn't tell us 'we mustn’t
this point, thought it best not to remind ioy, the street in which he lives lining
climb mountains — only bdaes.” re­
her that it was just as natural to sup­
turned Amy, cunningly. "And, be­ pose that he would look in a dozen oth­ illuminated by lhe inhabitants.^. Meas­
ures for arre.‘'ing the malefactors were
sides, didn't he say you could tako care
then imnfedlately taken, the district
of me? ami don’t ?ypu think, you van?’’ er directions for them first.
Sotnetwo-Mt together thereon tlie around Terrain, when? they are sup­
and. the artful little tcasc.-lddkied; ttyx''at
mountain-sill*, watching the stars come posed to be still hiding, being surround­
her stout young brother with a moat
out, and wondering if this was their pun­ ed by militaiy. No news of their capt­
confiding tor.
ishment for being naughty.
«
ure has yet arrived.—Naplu Cor. ten­
Under these ciicunutances. what
But presently Amy’s' eyelids grew don New.
________
couhl Fletcher reply hut that he was
heavy again, and leaning her liead
iiibsi ctrtainlv able to protect her, and against Fletcher, she asked him to wake
Queen Victoria Amazed.
that he would do so for a little way, a
her “as soon as papa comes,” when
veiy little way. up the ipounMuft. os
During the marriage ceremony (that
suddenly a reddish glare flashed forth
they must be sure to be at the hotel out of the darkness Deneath them; por­ of tlie Duke of Albany) the Queen hap­
pened to look up at 'the Knights’ ban­
when father came back.
tions of mountain nnd lake appeared ners, and,, td her amazement and indig­
Greatly delighted at having gained her
distinctly a* by day. while trees and
point, Amy ran off for her hat ns soon
nation, she discovered half a ttozen
rooks and bushes stood revealed in start­
rb desert was over, and having Muffed
opern-irlasscs peering from behind them,
ling vhddness.
'
a paper of candy into her pretty little
all pointed straight at her own face.
"0,
what
is
it,
FietP
”
cried
Amy,
arm-basket, announced herself'ready.
An inquiry was speedily made, when it
hiding her face in terror.
• And-then the two set.wut. Fletcher,
turned out that a pennaneat' official at
“Don’tbe afraid,” he answered. “I
with his alpenstock, leading the way np
Windsor, at tbe last moment, had se­
guess it can’t hurt us, whatever it is.”
through the town, on by, the. winding
cretly constructed a small private gal­
Still the boy had dreadful visions of
path through the woods, up. Up. untfl
lery up behind the carving at tho top of
earthquakes and volcanoes, which he
lhe beautifid lake came into view below
the Knights’ stalls, from which, after
somehow imagined were much more
reaching it by the aid of a peiyendicucommon. In Europe than in America.
••Let’s rest hero a minute,” proposed
lar ladder, his friends had an excellent
And now -tbe red light had changed view, perched up like owls in an ivy
Fletcher. ••This flat rock’ll make a
to
green,
thii.in
turn
to
blue,
then
back
bush. The Lord Chamberlain and the
nicy scat; nnd while we eat some candy.
I’ll tfachyou the names of the' snow to red again and do on. until the brother Lord Steward, snppoTOsd by a posse of
mountain^ dtfer yondffr.”’ “
" '
' and sister became completely mystified. their subordinates, summoned the err­
On a sadden, while the red glare lit ing official before thenf, and not con­
So the expedition halted while the
Captain pointed out what he thought up even-tiling around, there was a tent with administering the question,
was Mont Blanc, the king of all tho sound of rollipg stones, a man’s voice ordinary and ..extraordinary, ordered
"Thank God for St. him to come up for sentence at the Lon­
peaks; th'i VeautiiaT JUngfrau, with its exclaimed:
silver horn. and^ But turning* to see JaeriuesP’ The next instant Mr. Han­ don office of the Board of Works. But
li Amy.was looking in the right direc­ way’s strong arms were about both his before being again racked, he is under­
1
.
tion. Fletcher found her eyes closed, children.
stood to have gone down on his kuees
•W,
I knew you’d comer’ to John Brown to induce him to "rep­
aud her head just sinking to.his shoul­
- '•“"■"’y , "Stat now you
der.
resent the thing properly.” So be got
1,
Mid
carry
Ilet.
•• Poon little
off with a treaiendous wigging.—Lon­
r, mid he’s hurt, and don Truth.
all from i*ist
imiu.
-The will of John T. Johns was
broiiiet srte Chocolate drot&gt;8 and studied
broken by a Baltimore jury, :tnd the
'
A
.
Now, it would have been quite ro- tenderly raised the helpless &gt; boy and verdict would distribute the estate of
matuic and Babe&lt;-in-the-Woodsy if ha, carried him between them, and thus, $200,000 among the natural heirs: but
too. hail been overcome with rdrbwsi- the happy father still retaining his little the lawyers are trying to impeach it, on
nesnu thus leaving them both lying there girl, they started dowfr the hill again, the ground that one of the jurors was
asleep cm the liiountain-riae until an —aided by the strange lights: aafdy to unduly infinenced by a flirtation in tlie
TJ town.
. - ■
- court room with one of the panics in
Fletcher soon recognized in his i»ear- interest. This person was a young lsparty from lhe
No enthri-'
here;

it'll ter such

WOMAN’S TRUE •
Instead of benefiting, your ebtl____ _ are you not killing them by your
kindness, and depriving them of .the
opportunity of learning in their youth
to depend'upon their own exertion*?
Look at ibis matter fairly, and eec if &gt; ter* art woman'* true friend,.nnd wfil pool
you real!V believe vou are doing them : ’J »eMore her to health, even when all c
«•&lt;" ih' “wgi--•«thnr will be able to successfully
sticepitNlullv com­
or.u.,j
.___
they
pete with others who arc in their youth
doing something toward • earning a
Hypocrisy becomes a necessity fur thdk who
living.
When we train a vine we bend and live ecandaluuriy.
When a man baa not a good reason for doing
twist it and force it to take auch posi­
tion'aa we believe will beat insure its
growth nnd bealtbv maturity. With­ alone.
out training it would lie on tbe ground
and be trampled under foot: or if per­ „ Th® «ypptou»« of Itchlug Pile* pre. moisture
like pre»p’rall&lt;in. tntenre itch'ux, moot at uirfit
chance by furcC of nature it reaches- Menu Mtfpta worm* were crawling in or
out aifrcatches some support, lifting It­ about tbc rectum. The-more you sera, cb the
self thereby into the sunlight and air,' worse they itch, very uleUcoa ug. Tbe private
it grows at. random, nnd will never at­ jMrts t re of-ttraffeclid. Dr. Swaire * Ofatmctx teibe most effective rrmedv extent for
tain the position, either in respect of i’ll* loriuent tn. complaint. Give* rest al night
use or beauty, of its more fortunate without that ilralre to wxnteh. A1k&gt; hat on
sister that underwent the training. Set equal in qnlcklr cnullca,!ng Tetter, Itch, Fait
two trees side by side, give one proper Rbcume, EiTflpetea, Earbeia* Itch, Pimple*.
Scaly, Crusty, Itchy Skin Eruption*. Here
attention by straightening its stem, *11
I* the proof. “Ccrtrtnfy tbe beat remedy ever
cutting out and shaping its branches, v.»ed in my prac-ke.” Dr. Cotioo. Wcxxiitock,
and pruning its shoots, and leave the Vl. "troubled who Helling PBet for over twen­
other uncared for, and the difference ty years, I: cured me complctelv,” L. 8. Mewer
will be noticeable the tirsi year, while Jlnflekl, Me. Sent for 30 cte (in 3 ct. rtamp*)
8 twxea, S 1.25, By Dr. Swayne &lt;t Son. Pbflad'a
tbe beneficial effect upon the first be­ Pa. Sold by all druitgisl*.
comes more and more apparent as the
A man in New York plead# guilty to haring
trees grow older. Had vines anil trees
voices, they might cry out against this been hired by eight different wire* to watch
treatment, as boys and girls do when tbeij husbands during tbe absence at Saratoga.
compelled to work and study, nnd the
AGOOD FOUNDATJOK
kind-hearted gardener might be in­

OUtenr.M! ot thW WM I
good health to this day

and al! ages, is effeettve tn affording immediate
relief in all cases of Kidney trouble, Liver Com­
plaints. Constipation of die Bowels and dcrangements peculiar to w&lt;4i&gt;cn. At ttyc mine time
purifies ITie blood, iliu* giving tone atwlstrength
to the system (fobililated by disease or age.
••Dr. Kennedy's Favorite Remedy” for sate by

z

Great .

Burlington
ftOUTE

• In American household* tbe prevallinK com­
duced therebv to let them hare their
plaint* are weakness of the stomach and its
own way to their future injury.,
Ipquiiy into tho history of men emi­ consequence*,. Indigestion. Nervousness and
Rheumatism. Such sufferer* can lay n good
nent for their success in life, aud you foundation for health by usine Parker's Giv*
will find that many of them were chil­ gerTonic as it tones up the stomach and »erv2
dren of poor parents, and that from and keep* the kiduevs active to carry off tfc
J
their childhood they had their duties to foul matter.—N. O.Vicayune.
perform, and they early learned to
Nothing but politeuess makes a baldheadwork in some field of. profitable labor, cd iq^n lift hi* hat ou meeting a young lady. '
by which habits of industry were fixed
tBat Aided largely in insuring their fu­
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
Tbc SHORTEST. QUICKEST aod
ture prosperity. An indulgent father doubtlesr ranks first as a curative a^ent in al!
of the procreative ajmtem, degeneratebbon. Topeka. Deniand kind-hearted mother who listen to diseases
of the kidneys. Irritation of the bladder, urinarr
■on. Dallas, Galtho solicitations of a boy to be excused calculi, etc. Send «o Mrs. Lydia E. Pinkham,
from labor are doing him an Injury for 233 Western Avenue, Lynn, Mass., for pam­
which both he and they will stiffer in after phlets.
life. We would not have a child over­
We Judge ourM'Jve* by what we fee! capable
worked, nor put at labor that is par­ of doing, while others Judge us by what we
ticularly distasteful, but be should do
have already done.
something. If he will not choose for.
himself—and few children can choose
BRACE LT.
Eroperlv—choice should bq made for
There U Serious meaning hi this expression.
im. Even if ho be designed for it That wearied step, languid eye, mid general
scholar.that is no reason why indolence
feeling nf lassitude come from sickness.
He
should be tolerated or physical labor
assured, a sctlour and and par haps fatal, dis­
excused. A boy should not be put to
study as a business before he is ten or ease is close In ite wake. Tbe system wants
twelve years old. aud there are many cleansing of tmpurietfes: the sluggish blood
weeks and months thereafter when needs to be sent lu swift and cicar currents
physical labor of some kind will boot through tbe veins. Dr. Kennedy's •‘Favorite
direct advantage to him. and parents^ I ■Remedy"’ will do thia; it will give new rigor to
should see that ho has it.
, 1 tbe body, brightness to tlie eye. a glow to the *ale n: all odee*
If a child be not in health, it is a ■countenance, and elasticity to the step. One
reason why his labor should be gradu- :Dollar a bottle. Every druggist bus ft. Dr.
ated to his physical condition but not :David Kennedy, Proprietor. Rondout, N, Y.
that he should be entirely excused from
Fore, Sleeping Cars.
True goodness is like the glow-worm. It
It. Many a boy has gone to ruin be­
. rb-rrfullr jrlvrn V
most when no eyes wive tbove of heaven
cause hc'was not obliged to earn a por- shines
1

PRINCIPAU+UNE

KANSAS CITY

tion at least of his ovyn living from the
time he was old enough to work. There
is no fact in the economy of nature bet­
ter established than that it is for the
best Interests ot each individual that he
should earn his bread by the sweat of
his brow, and man is the only animal
created that allows tho fruits of his
labor to bo devoted to tho subsistence
of a neighbor that docs nothing fur
himself. With all others tlie invariable
rule is. "Work for yourself,’* or as it is
sometimes less elegantly expressed,
•■Hoot. hog. or die.
The idea that tho world owes a liv­
ing to any one who has done nothing
to entitle him to it, is a fallacy. Dr.
Johnson’s reply to one who. importun­
ing for assistance, said: "I must live,
vou know,” was directly to the point.
He merely remarked that he could see
no necessity for it, aud there are many
to-day sponging upon their-relatives,
■friends, and the world at large, getting
subsistence without rendering any
equivalent, of whom the'same may be
truly said.
Parents seem to forget that they owe
a duty* to society. They have brought
children Into the world, and they should
so educate them that society shall not
be the worse for their existence. There
is still another duty they owe, and that
is to themselves. 'Thera is no sadder
sight than to see parents mourning over
the inefficiency or ruin of a child,
caused principally, if not entirely, by
their own neglect to train it up. “ Just
as lhe twig is bent tbe tree’s inclined:”
but when the tree has matured it is too
late—there is nothing left but sorrow
and remorse, and if they would avoid
these, they must see to it that they
keep their affections controlled by their
reason, and refrain from killing their
children as well as themselves by kind­
ness.—N. Y, Sun.
A Canine Miser.

Instances of canine economy are by
,
no means rare; but the account of a
dog-miser is. so far as our records ex­
tend, unique. Dandle, the animal re­
ferred to, wm a Newfoundland dog, be­
longing to a gentleman in Edinburgh.
It frequently had money given to it,
becadse, besides other interesting signs
of sagacity, it would go to tlie baker’s
and buy its own bread. But Daudie
received more money than his needs
called for, and so he took to hoarding
it. This his master discovered in con­
sequence of the dog appearing one day
with a breakfast-roll when it was known
that no one bad given it any monev.
Suspicion aroused, search was made in
the room where the dog slept. Dandle
appeared quite unconcerned until .his
bed was approached, when he seized
tbe servant by her gown and tried to
drag her away, and became so violent
that liis muter bad to hold him. Scvenpcnoe-balfpenny was found hidden In
tbc bed. Dandle did not forego , his
saving propensities even after tbw: but
he exhibited ft great dislike afterward
for tbe servant who had discovered his
hoard, and in future

T. I. POTTER.
PERCEVAL LOWELL,
d net PrtXtA Gsn’t MaaotfST,
&lt;?&lt;n. nut. AfftCblcaco. III.
Cblcaco. UL

1

THE AGONY OVER.
Walkin'-, tbc bcrarce of m» muck mi«erv to
.many, becomes, after using Puuitm't PsInTeas
■Corn Extractor, a ren-ice of pleasure. • Corns
are small In size, but their importance fa not
tb lie Judged by their alxe, as auv one fond of
n tramp can te-rifv. Try Putnam * Extractor
for corn*. No discontfiMi, nocuuailc applica­
tion, do blood lettii’g, and yet splendidly efllcmc
1 Ious. Wholesale. J. E. "Davis &lt;x Cd.', De­
troit.

NERVOUS DEBILITY

All men are liberal; some to those who are
In need, and others to themselves.

Tlie gieat avrojulhetic and muscular system
1on which full and healthful development de­
pends. kept from Crowing flabby and inactive
by using Brown's Iron Bitters. '

C Strong thoughts are iron nails driven in
mind, that nothing can draw out.

8500 Renard!

|_JENR1’ ROE.

Proprietor

------OLD RELIABLE—

MEAT MARKET.
Imltetteoi. Tb«ncnlna manufactured onlr j. G
WEST A CO., -rh. Pill Maker.,” 1S1 and iSS W
:Madfooo gt, Cbic*KO._ Free trial pack aft m nt bj

:

Fresh and Salt Meats

Guardian Sole.
CORWIN GARDNER and ANNA GARDNER,
Mltiur.,.
Notice 1» hereby tlren that I shall cell at public
,auction, to tbe Inghcet bidder, oo

Smoked Ham and ShflQlders..
FSBSH FISH Bud POULTRY
IK THEIR AEABO.’’

1

Lard, by the lb. or barrel,
Probate Office, la the city qf Ilaaiin^ln tbe county
of Barry, la ib-atoteol Michigan, pursuant to 11cenM and authority granted tn m. on the Sth day
of June, A. D. IMS, by lhe Probate Court of Barry
County. Michigan, -d! of lhe e.tate, right, title and

ibc *taU&gt; of Michlpan. known and d**eribe&lt;! a* fol-

rang* Mven wr«t, tn lla.-ry Com.ly. Mtchte*n. to
—I. .
- ----- -r .1.hair of 'K*

.bore dMcribca briar on Mnion thirty-one.
Dated, July 1«t. A. D 1S83.
„
„
&lt;2-41
TURNER GARDNER. Gnardl»n
Thr nbova-.ale ia adjourned until Tburaday,

TURNER GARDNER, Guardian.

&lt;tc., die., &lt;tc.
nr The Highest Morkut Price paid
for Hidea, Pelts, ’dec.

Fresh Croods, Fall Weights and
Satisfaction Guaranteed.

RRNRY ROE.

RjPTURE
Cored witlxMit an alteration ortho injury 1
rnd let by Dr. J. A. ftheiman'r Method. Ofli

HOUGHTON
Record or

catelugor ad-lraM

THE ONLY REMEDY KNOWN
TO DESTROY THIS DEADLY PEST

A. O/BENEDICT,

RIVERVIEW ACADMEY

11JDGHKEKWIE.N. Y,
Witk’U. S. Military Depar-wM. A thoroughWug. wk!»*w»kt Kbix&gt;! fur boy*, combiuhij
•vniou application, OTI3 BISBEE, A. M; Fria’l.

It wm nutaeard of. Frequoutlv
tbc dltratlv faaettMA. » **t-d
poiaonia not nratraliard Tb
Del. * Hudaon t'aoal. M well aa

YOUNG
MEN
teadlDjf tie Q*m4

MieMfiin, Bu
Colleip, and reoelro a ttv ronoh. qutakeninic
tiylcflucaUun. BcnC for C«U«»e Journal,,

til,

&gt;ns non 10a: «
REMEDY.” which by Ra aetk.a upon .he blood

uu.n

�Druggists

porfbl..' No m.t'.w bow

lbl

ISE

Arris*
Arris* &lt;

M'hen
The i

b. mar.be if* loaded;
u„.,---------------- mer B°r'
”r.’r
proud of a new revolver. W c never
sell them to very young boys who come
in alone, but if their mother* are with
them it's all right.”
-Do you ever sell revolver* to wo,

GRAND RAPIDS DIVISION.
EASTWAR) .
STATlOKS.

STATIONS.

4 0-J
430

i •&gt;
10.20

10 39
11
11^0

rad CurtdaBoalbm Railway*. '
*. U. rfROWK,
H. B. LEDTARD.

gBOOKS, MARSHALL A €0.
------------Proprietors--------—

Nashville Elevator!
Pay the highest market price for all kinds ot

Grain and Produce,
------------And sell-----------

.

_

teds, Feed, Lime, Salt, Plaster, Stuc­
co, Hair, Pino Lumber, Lath
and Shingles,

AT THE LOWEST LIVING PRICES.

Erperienced, Reliable, and Responsible.

A. H. WINN, Dentist.
BEST SET GUM TEETH $10.00
Teeth Extracted Wlfhout Pain.

OfflceOpen Day

A.

Evening.

A. n. WINN.

*

JJ A. BARBER, M. !&gt;..
*

*

HOMtEOPATinC

Physician and Surgeon.
Office first door erat of Opcr* House, and
near residence &lt;&gt;n corner of Washington and
State Streets, ^shville, Mich.

J£A'. BUSH,
*

“THB BOSS”

BOOT AND SHOE MAKER,
MAStfOCLJK.

-

MICB.

Rayotrtat &lt;9— Vtth BTsauw sad PWpstok.

AKE IIOU8M,
TJxornapple 1-dilct.-. AIlvli. .
L. P. Cole, Proprietor.
Sportsmen, pbasare Mekers, or picnic Yerile*
will find thU place m&lt;! house a pleasant place to
spend a day's recreation.
A ucv suatner and
abundance ot row boat. - alto fishing tarkle, bait

attorney at Law,

Attorney a Counsellor,
gLACIA A MON»
Detfer !a

American and Foreign Marble,
Monwneru, Tnsnhrtones, Mantles, 4c.,

Bnaitln^a. Mich.

^yiLLIAM JONES.

muL in snsmL suimin.

ing this apceialty into dairying'aBd oth­
white can be; have the finest china, tho erAgricultural activities, and Ute change
brightest silver, and the clearest glass, is likely to have an unfavorable effect
to act it out with, and as a precau­ upon the fertility of Eastern farm*.
tionary measure against everything The old adage "No cattle, no manure,
getting cold upon it,throw a large nap­ no manure no crop*,” became, current
kin over it all in carrying it through the when meat production was the principal
halls. Arrange, things -symmetrically activity of vat tie farming. Dairying, as
upon it, so that there will be no un­ now practiced, has almost wholly grown
necessary fussing when the tray is once tip within the last twenty-five yefira.
/.nW,
set down. And last, but not least to V^.rer...-1-lv I.*ir4, farm k-ant a
me, have some flower upon it; a half­
opened bud, a full-blown rose, a sweetscented pink or a geranium blossom, a
bunch of pansies, anything that shall
speak to you from nature, and thus
serve io
to .urn
turn .your
thoughts num
from /v...yourrerro
our uwukuu
„u, yoar weiow. and pain., to tho
world outaldo ot your .lek chamber, to
oUu!r weary onoi-more belpleu than
vootMII. more desolate; who hero not
lhe
comtoru you
you possess,
poaaou. no
no kind,
kind, lorthe comforts
lov­
r
■
a. to I...
ir or
__gentle
___ i_______
~
ing
hands
tend,
hearts,
as
you have, to watch and anticipate your
every
want,
and
glad
eyes
to
sparkle
at
ViClj ivjbiti-f nuu urau t-Jt
| ------yonr*reluni
to
health.-.
----------------Aunt Addie, in

-No; the class of women who buy
revolvers jo to the sporting stores
where they sell fishing tackle and hunt­
ing equipments.”
Inquiries of a prominent sporting es­
tablishment developed" no'new facts.
.V;----------- .
7 r ,
— ,j
:
Jh« g.nUemoo In chorg. would not
&gt;«Ua rorolror to an eicltedman or
woman who might nuh In to purrhaw
with amcidai intentThe .Imran
waa full ot "beautiee and “]»“."«•
they
that? are called,
nnllixl also
nlart ••terrors
‘'termra’' in tlie
thei
shape of the Remington border pistol,
which is quite a full-grown
"son
of
‘a
o
.
,nllng that nrearm
y
gUU,” resemPHnir
firearm exact
exactly
on a smaller
--------i“
S'-__—,-----------------------, Cbwdry Oenttanan.
will send
konil n
r.AH half
linlr n
.
.
weapon, and1 will
a ball
a miin
mile
with -dcAdly aim.
Men going West
. .
Simply Passing Away.
arm themselves with this for defense
ago
and io
to bucksi
shoot game, jau*.
jack lauuiu
rabbits auu
and
ana
-About
—--- three
---— weeks
—--------- William DowCOVOU. with. J-hobowi. hull, won, n.y o&lt; BlMkwriT. precinct died in «
on one aide nnd th. Remington
off th. ■ very
length
nemiugiou uiriiw
•—j .Ingnlxr
----- -- —— Hie
—
—
’s belt, give ik™.
: began to 1.11
rail on u
Wednesday without
other. .heMhod in » man
1
re In • counli?- ol nppnronl enure: hb 0»b fell ewny with
him the requisite nerve in ___________ _
•
•--—
alarming
rapidity,
and
by
Mondav
fol­
desperadoes, nil of whom arc as "well
heeled” as be is, and also available lowing \ne had absolutely dwindled
away without having felt’sickness .or
among Indians and wild buffalo.
The dueling pistol, the ‘.‘Trantor,” suffered the slightest pain or indisposi­
.is no longer on sale. This is the oilly tion. When placed on his death bed,
heroic use to which a Distol is ever put. a few hours before he died, he was
When two men stand up and blaze laughing and talking, and declared that
Such a
away at each other, with equal chances he never felt better in his life.
unaccountable death
of being killed, if has a nary look that singular and
amounts to real heroism, but the aver­ naturally created considerable surprise
age pistol is carried day In and day out, and wonder, in’the neighborhood .where
like an ornament, or to shoot at cats in it happened. But these were increased
the back yard, and that must be done to consternation when in a few davs
outside of the city limits or an arrest after Mr. Downey’s death, his daugh­
may follow. Men wlio are waylaid by ter, Miss Sallie, who is about twentyrobbers orc usually too frightened by two vears of age, was taken exactly as
the suddenness of tlie attack to think of her father was, and without suffering
a pistol, and it is not often that a bur­ the slightest pain or sickness has grown
glar is even fired at. If a code of po­ weaker and thinner each day, till she
liteness could be observed with these Is but a skeleton of her former self, and
people the gentleman of the h«uso at our last account was lying speechless
would sit up in bod and say: "P-p-l-e, upon what has doubtless proved her
Mr. Bu-u-r-glar, give me a ch-a-n ce! death-bed ere this. The physicians are
W-ait until I unlock mv satchel, pl-ase, completely noupulsed,'and aro unable
to form the slightest idea as to tho
and g-g g-et my pistol!”
It has been observed that women nse cause or nature of their very strange
the revolver generally with deadly ef­ malady, and, to add to the confusion
fect. This may be accounted tor by and mystery, the sick bed of tho young
the fact that they shoot lowpr than a ladv has been almost constantly attend­
man, who usually hits the ceiling or the ed by strangt) and unnatural noises—
opposite roof, and they fire at close sometimes seeming like tho roar of a
pinning mill, then l&amp;e a sowing ma­
range.
chine, nnd again like many other things,
A "pet” is a gold-plated, finely
continually changing but hardly ever
carved, pearl-handled revolver in a vel­
ceasing. It has thrown the whole neigh­
vet-lined case. A boy’s revolver is a
borhood into a fever of excitement, and
single-barreled, murderous affair, like­
scores of persons have visited the house
ly at any moment to "go off” when it
where tho young lady is sick, and are
isn’t loaded, and costs seventy-five
able to testify
correctness
of
testify to
__ tho
.
_____
cents. Tho safest man is the one who
- - - — *- —Louisville
(^inincr.
these statements.
keeps good hours and goes unarmed.
The Derringer, the Remington, Colt, cial.

Smith &amp; Wesson." Bull-dog—an English
pistol (it was with an American imita­
tion of Vhis make that President Gar­
field was killed)—the horse pistol in
use with the cavalry, and numerous
others, are in use. It was common to
sell small boys’ cheap pistols for blank
cartridges to celebrate the Fourth of
July, but the law h.-s forbidden this
license.
•
There has been a decrease in tho sale
of revolvers in tho past ten years. In
war times there is a heroic tendency to
learn the whole manual of firearms,
and even now tho day. aftpr a success­
ful attack of burglars is a good day to
sell pistols, on the old principle of lock­
ing the stable door when the horse is
stolen.—Detroit Pot! and Tribune.

Delicacies for the ConvalescentWhen my physician says, with a
smile, “Oh," you’ll do now, but do not
sit up too long, and, have something
nourishing to eat, something light,anything. in fact, that the appetite rel­
ishes,’’ etc., and straightway takes his
leave of me, as if he had accomplished
a good thing, which, of course, he has,
in getting me along thus far, 1 respond
with a weak smile, and gaze in a help­
less sort of way after his retreating fig­
ure. I sigh for the strength and vitali­
ty that once were mine, that would lift
me out of this state of helpless feeble­
ness. when my revery is broken by my
attendant's pleasant voice, saving:
"Well, what shall it be,broiled chicken,
lamb chop, or custard?
“No, no. none of these things, but a
piece of broiled herring,” at which she
laughs and asks, "Anything else?"
••Yes, a slice of lemon.”
This is most appetizing, and will rel­
ish when I turn in disgust from other
food.
Picked-up codfish is another
delicacy, properly prepared on sippets
of toast, and a small slice of salmon is
also very good. A fricassee of cut
dried beef, shredded and heated in
cream, with a dash ot pepper, together
with a milk cracker toasted in the oven
to a nite brown and crispness. Oysters,
when they are not objectionable, and
when attainable, if cut up into small
pieces aud steamed, not boiled, in their
own liquor for an hour, will be found
delicious, with a piece of toast daintily
and evenly browned. Take a very
tart apple, pare it and slice it exceed­
ingly thin in a bowl, ponr over it boil­
ing water sufficient to jnst cover it, and
turn a small saucer over it; set it where
it will geUquite cold, then strain, and
it will be a very refreshing and cooling
beverage. Barley tea is also to be re­
commended where there is a cough.
Take a teacupful of barley, add to it a
quart of water, and let it boil slowly
until the water is milkv and thick in
appearance, then strain it through a
small sieve, adding the juice of a lem­
on. and sugar to taste.
■
When you begin to fanev something
more hearty, snow pudding is very
light and deliqate. Tomata custard
is also considered good tor consump­
tive patfenta. Stew some ripe tomatoes;

AND

LORO KNOWN AS

______

PESGELI.Y-S W0MAV8 FBIESD

Pbysitians

health

TO GIRLS

Have Signed or Endorsed the

Following Remarkable
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Document:

TO YOUNB LADIES

GeatlsEuonor the prat fowyranwo
have aold various brands ofPorous Plsur-

TO OVER-WORKED WORM

uiAHM

To Women Advanced In Ute
BMWOtt'. Crete, nrerer I. . wreto.
Parmsoeuticsl product, of the highest plaints, usually attribatod to other causes, but
really pecaliar to tho sex, WHJL CERTAIXX.T
BE RELIEVED by Zoa I’liora.
LEUCORHHCEA RUINS TBE FINEST -

son’s Capclno Plaster.
taaffh rrtreulr Io

Tire.

reU*

Aa':W B. PENGELI.Y, M. D.,

Ai^aaycV^Tior^
PARKER’S
HAIN

ISMft Drvsuui

KAU1UZOO, MICH.

i *79 * week, 112 a day al boia
■ v&lt; - outfiAfr**. Addrto* Tasi

BALSAM

NORATENT
NtWFENT NO PAY.

hITr ilTft obtainedfor mrcbAlcat derl*
QIlLlIl &lt;m, med leal, or other roinpounds
Cavexta. Aa»fantncnl«, Interfi-raueea. lufr.nye
menu rad all other matters relating to pauota.
f.rvmntlr atti tid-nl to.
th»t hare been rejected
by the Patent Ofiireinay
•till. In motneaan. &gt;»■»•
eurwibyns. llrinjop.

yUDBKTON 0033

2706

PARKER’S

thary, an-d wi»U.rmtpoodri.ce «tsf&lt;-t 51
thou of any rrH»l&gt;.. .. .....
.
W* refer So &lt; iiBcUm H&gt; t!«&gt; Parent Uff.e*.
■
ln»*nton of ctmv Stsrfr of the Union Ad4r*M.
I.OU43 BAOUEK *C0..
Qwpoelta Patent t»«5rr. *VM&amp;h&lt;WR, 0. C

CINCER TONIC
Iff livl,Dral:i&gt;, .rildM Uffl U&lt;«r
ffi:.

lluchu.

The Bert and Surtit Cough.Cure Ew Uwd.

Young Hats Nursed by a Cat.
veers ago, when at a neigh­
Afewr rears
bor's hottse,
&gt;flse, it was mentioned
mentione
in the
course of a conversation that there was
then on the premises a singular case of
C cat having adopted children from a
nest of one of her natural victims. On
my expressing a wish to witness this
phenomenon, I was at once taken to
the stable yard, and there shown a fine
female cat nursing a family composed
of two kittens ana two handsome young
rats, tbe whole four living in perfect
harmony. On my inquiring the nis.ory
of this remarkable group. 1 was inform­
ed by the coachman in charge that
shortly after the cat-mother had given
birth to a litter of kittens, she had been
deprived by him of all but three. The
■mother evidently did not approve of
this reduction iu her family, became
restless for a time, and, ou'her again
settling down, it was discovered &gt;die
had replaced dfie of her murdered chil­
dren by a fine young rut Seeing -this,
and knowing that cats were too numer­
ous to please the gamekeeper, the
coachman determined to destroy one
of the three remaining kittens, which
was done. On the following morning
the Coachman, on visiting the cat's
nursery, was not a little surprised to
discover that the mother, in lieu of her
murdered offspring, had introduced into
her qursery a second young rat
The two kittens, iu company with the
two rats, had been impartially nursed,
and were, when'I saw them, living in
perfect harmony. They were at that
time about two months old, and were
residing together in an old wine case,
with a piece of wire netting thrown
over the top. The young rats were
pretty-looking, sleek creatures, with
bright brown eyes, and evidently well
nourished.
They were, however, of
different dispositions; for while the one
would with confidence-return tho visi­
tor’s gaze, the other disliked being
lookea at by strangers, aud would, on
tho approach of the latter, make rather
frantic endeavors to conceal itself
amongqf the fur of its foster-mother.
1 aitqyward learned, I regret to say,
that the family party was broken np in
an abrupt and unsatisfactory manner.
Tbe friendly coaohman had left^ts sit­
uation. The cat-mother had given way
to some poaching proclivities, mid dur­
ing a nocturnal ramble had been
caught and killed In one of the. game­
keeper’s traps. The kittens aud young
rats were thereafter thrown friendless
on the world, and left no trace bchikd
them. — Chambers' Journal.
■

COUNTRY,

WHO IS UNAI
incspoli

5

CHICAGO, BOCK ISLAND &amp; PACIFIC B Y
13 The Croat Connecting Link between the East and the West!

wasjitoinon tuMIgounwy. Oskalonsa. and Knoxvinci Keokuk to Farmlnpon. llouspsrtc, Hen-

and South.
^A^EsourwooDj with tbc LA.
GrHwotd still Audubon; and A»oca to Hsxlsn
rad Canon. This ta naaUrtatyUs* only itoiiru.nl, which owns, sod operates a througb Un*
from Cblcrao Into the Stotoof Krasox
Thmurh Kxpre»s J'asseuRsrTrains. wlthFoUman J-MJaze&lt;:*rsana&lt;n&lt;-&lt;l.are run earn waydally
iKstwern chwaoo and Paonia. Kawsa* crrv.
cocafiL MLurra. Lrayrawoirru ssmLatcui«om. Thmoah cars arc also run between MlIwao-

ioxjnts.

— « »-------------

—A little Boston girl who had seen
an engraved copy of Millais* "The
Princes in the ToWer” in a picture-shop
window went in tire other day and said
to the shopkeeper: "I came to ask you
if you woald please take that picture
out of your window. Every time I
pass I look in, and the picture is so sad
it makes me very unhappy. Won't

LttViTTk
”
At WfciT UBKRTT.

JOHN,

AuurtUuu'i* Mule.

PIMPLES
consumptives:

—There in a calm content and self-

higher philosophy mnnot supply.

-

�■ largest ae»a corn

fucUrr al Milan buro'd, nThe largest numtar of ears on any one
Istou, Ionia county, possess­ stalk is nine. It is doubted if this corn
or thieves.
can be beaten, in the state. The seed
J ha* contracted for $90,000 camo from Russia.
A burglarous record : At Hubbards
man near Mnakegon raised 10,- town, Ionia county, Aug.'96th—$700
of jewelry front Capalan At Cowman,—
ttel Henderson shot and killed $900 cash from 8. V* Bidder, and &amp;
_____ f at Au Sable, Tuesday.
buggy and sorrel mare from Dr. J. J.
Col Luce of Monroe has been arrest- Traverse; at Grand Rapids, Aug. 28 th,
1 for getting $1,450 by larceny.
$200 of goods from Spring &amp;l Co.; st
A rifle team has been selected to re­ Niles, Aug. 26th, $3,300 worth of good
present Michigan at Dreedmoor.
from ANJ.Fox’s dry goods store,
Gw. L. Yupie. of SL Joseph county,
has been pnm in sled forCongrdss.
LETTER FROM NEWPORT.
Buckoui Bro*, of Kalamazoo shipped
1,000 pound* of celery one day recently.
Half a block at Mt. Pleasant destroy­
Nbwfort, N. H., Aug. 98.1881.
ed by fire. Los* $8,000, insurance $600.
Tbe arrival of President Arthur and
Rotart Gilman has sued Grand Rap­ hi* staff of stalwart friends has brought
ids city for$10,000. Sidewalk difficulty. largo deputations of visitors from
Edward Ranter has declined to rnn every state in tlie Union to these brezzy
for treasurer on the “co-operation” xy shores, m the frantic hop© of find­
ing a relief from the flery-furnace
ticket.
Titus Ik Hicks of Battle Creek, are atmosphere that has been raging from
spending $12,000 to put in Jhe Hun­ Washington to Boston. Yet even New­
garian or ruTIeri-reduction system of port Iras not been altogether free from
the “hot wave.” In some localities of
1,070 low rere cut at Bay City mill tbe more sheltered streets, notably
in eleven fi
rs—the biggest days work Thames St., and the queer, qualnt,lanelike streets running up across tbe ave­
on record.
A reunion of tbe fire sufferers in the nue, tlie thermometer has been on a
Huron Peninsula will be held at Min- dance away npin the eighties and nine­
don Sept 5.
ties, almost an- unprecedented thing in
Alpena with its nine saw mills expect* this city of tbe sea. But a dozen steps
with luck to cut 173.000,000 feet of lum­ or so, a corner tinned, and whiff, comes
a hint of the strong, cool, salt wind,
ber this season.
Tecumseh i* excited over a new rail­ straight from the ocean, and with the
road, for which her citizens are sub­ cooling.of the blood, the slowing of the
crib ing liberally.
pulses, the naughty words cool land
The D., L. At N. railroad company "slow,” uporf the exasperated, long suf­
has contracted for the construction of fering; masculine lips, fresh from tho
$100,000 car-shops at Ionia.
city counting honses and warerooms,
Diphtheria i* alarmingly prevalent and life once more seems to these suf­
at Dauby in Ionia county. Fourteen ferers worth living.
On the cliffs aud
deaths have already occurred.
and the shoreward part of tbe avenues
Battle. Creek has a street railway it is delightfully worth living and the
company, with $16,000 already sub­ “full houses” have started the social,
scribed, out of $31,000 necessary.
festivities info a sudden activity, which
Sportsmen’s cluta are being organiz­ ib pleasant to see, and sometimes pleas­
ed largely throughout the state with ant to participate in.
the object of preserving game.
Politicians from all parts of the coun­
. Goodness gracious! Four burglars try are off and on here, and under the
have been captured in this state. Two mask ot flowers and the strains of or­
at Palo and two at Brimingham,
chestras the candidates for political
Frank Taylor of Tuscola hired a honors in the various states are can­
stranger three weeks ago. He is now vassed and discussed enthusiastically.
$300 out—just $100 for each week.
So finely and adroitly is all this con­
George Butler assaulted Chas. Davis ducted that the neophytes, before they
nt Detroit Aug. 27, for walking with know it, arc drawn into the silken
his girl, and Butler shot him fatally.
ring, magnetized into positions and
Chas. Barrett of Kalamazoo, was declarations of opinions tbatllralf an
knocked down and his head crushed be­ Lour before very likely they were not
yond recognition, by a freight train, entirely conscious that they possessed.
Tbe women of America are developing
Dr. W. H. Palmer a prominent man a genius in the political diplomatic line
of Jackson, has been arrested for em­ which suggests here and there the wily
bezzling $500 raised for the blind po­ graces of a Frenchwoman, and it is to
liceman of that city.
their subtleties of magnetism that the
New religious society at Alpena, call­ inexperienced succumb.
It has long
ed Perfectfeniste—a Mrs. Beekman tho been a reproach to Americans that they
headlight. 'Wonder if it is on thewere over-fond of titles, but I am in­
woman-with-n-lantern plan.
clined to think that thia is a good deal
A Mason carpenter was fined $50 and of a libel. Barring the foolish'aspira­
costs for spanking a little step-daugh­ tions of some fouliall girls, and a fem­
ter black and blue *rom the small cf inine species of young man, still more
her back nearly to her knees.
foolish, I have failed to find any great
A temporarily insane mother of near admiration extant amongst ordinarily
Mt. Morris, bound her 5 years-old boy sensible Americana for titles. There is
to her and held their heads under wa­ a certian curiosity with regard'to the
ter in a tub till both were drowned.
possessor of long-inheirited names
The proprietor of one tlie steamboats with the long-inherited prefix—a kind
at Goguac lake baa put aboard an of romantic interest which does not do
Italian band. Thus lie gets a complete any discredit to the good sense or the
scope on th© other fellow's boat.
intellect. But when wo hear that “Sir
Mathes Millard, of Palo, Ionia coun­ William” or “Sir Samuel so and so”
ty, has been arrested on suspicion of was knighted by Queen Victoria, and
having poisoned his wife. He died like intelligence in connection with
some time ago, but the remains were high-sounding prefixes, our interest
recently exhumed, and strychnine in wane*. If we are going to have-titles
fatal quantities found in them.
amongst ns we want those with the
Dr. H. P. Bernis, formerly of Oberlin,
sacred flavor of antiquity. The best is
0., but lately of Grand Rapids, has
none too good for us.
been arrested for forgerie® in Reynolds
Amongst the most interesting new ar­
county Mo., amounting to hundreds of
rivals are the English hansome, which
thousands of dollars. He was taken to
a wise livery stable proprietor has im­
Cleveland, nnd indicted. Several of
ported for the transient summer hire.
the same gang have been convicted.
These are entirely new to most New
July 4.1981, strain on tbe G. R. &amp; I.
Englanders, and certainly, unseen be­
railway ran into Ebenezer Folger's rig,
fore on New England soil. To the day
•mashed it, and killed tiio horse, and
excursionists from neighboring towns
•eriuusly injured Mrs. F. She has been
and cities they are objects of great in­
an invalid ever since. Attempts to set­
terest but tbe native Newporter, of
tle the matter by negotiation have
whom I spoke in my previous letter, re­
failed. Mr*. F. will be satisfied if the
gards them calmly, os only another of
court will award her $25,000.
*
the whims of “those foreigners.” Sev­
R. G. Horr ha* been renominated for
eral little cabs at a lower rate of hire
eoagres* by the republicans of the Sag­
are also-on the streets, all of which go
inaw district.—In Willies' district, Boise
to allow that the reign of tlie conLenawee, who fought him so vicionsscienceleM Luck man is over. This de
। wm nominated on tbe 85th ballot. sirable state of things has been brought
i replacing of Wiiiita by the moat
about by tlie public “drags” that have
b and unprincipled man before
been put upon the avenues and beach
convention must be considered a
roads for the past summer or two.
I'.-e to tlie district
These were so handsome and comfort­
en the Allegan county convention
able that they were constantly patron­
cd its eungresmoual delegates it
ized to the great neglect of tbe car­
some front the clique oppoaed to
riage*. I have seen myself within tlie
trd and Reid, supposing that they
hint two M-ajMinsiDore than half the car­
riages in waiting on tbe wharf, a* tlie
rate as th« coHveatioa iastnwtexcursion boats of the morning eame in
driven back to tbe town unoccupied,
rbaDee* fm lb© nuu&gt;i nation
while the big handsome drag at fifteen
cent* per head rolled triumphantly
rr-pKldiran rtate couveutiun at
away packed a* clone as it would hold.
A» this state of thinga didn't “pay”

itta.veBUr and tbe

A^GiaEr-

Splendid Line of Those 5c Prints

and bolding a “shellalsh.’

NEW HATS AND CAPS.

100 OASES
be 8praguc up to hto carriage, saying:

Willie replied: "No, I have not I should not
Tho boy waa then questioned aa follow#:

*• Supposing we go on tho grounds, what will
c the consequences?"
•* You will nio it, if vou do.”
.

Have already arrived, and more coming. We intend to
make a specialty on these goods this fall. Call and see
them. CASH PAID for BUTTER and EGGS.

asked Chaffee.

thls place,” replied Willie.
Mr. Moulton wanted to know if bo could go
on the grounds, but was answered in the nea-

TRUMAN &amp; SON.

it would bp dangerous and unwise, to attempt
to invade the fortified premises, and accord­
ingly withdrew. M r. Chaffee says be shall now

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN

ty, but tbe latter did not accept it, because he
could make no delivery. He did not Intend to
forsake his claim, and would stand by hia purpo Herald.

Lumber!

At Buxton’s new brick, have full and complete lines in

.

S.S.INGERSON&amp;SON

The Recent Flood In Texas.
GALYwrox, Texas, August SB.
Ft&gt;rt Ctoncbo dtspatcbM to tbe New# to-day in

Have the largest stock of LUMBER ever laid
down in Nashville.

Gents Furnishing Goods

100,000

drowning. The only names so far ascertained

Feet kept con#tantiy on bind.
Mrs. Metcalf and daughter. George Robert-

Pine Lumber

If you want something new, neat and nobby, just take a look at our stock of

A specialty

CUFFS, COLLARS, TIES, HANLERCHIEFS, JEWELRY, ETC.

Finishing Lumber,

THE GREAT S2EOHZBT

tag water prevented. It is still Impossible to
* spectacle which begxare description. Houaes,
horses, cattle and clothing are plied up in
heaps at every step. The bodies of Mr*. Metoalf and daughter are the only ones found.
The telegraph-wires are still down.
Little Hock. Ark.. Augusta.
The Oatette't Texas spectaia furnish more
particular# of tbe damage done by heavy rains.
The Not th Ccncho Hirer at San Angela, Is

Huraj Cflliif, SIiij, StuUiif, Jiisi

-IN BUYING, IR TO BUY-

Or any thing in the building material line, 'ree

FOR THE LEAST MONEY.

Also Flour. Salt, Shingles, Lath,
and Blacksmith's Coal,

Remember that we fhave^no old, shop-worn and unreasonable goods, but that everything Is

HIGHEST PRICE PAID FOR

WHEAT, OATS, CORN, ETC.,
A# usual.

moving all their effects on the high ground.
Ben Fick 1 in. on tho main Concho, is complete­
ly inundated. Tbc Court House has fifteen

ssr All our purchases are made with the cash and by strict attention to the wants of ou
customers we expect to reap success.
NssbviUe, Apr. 90,1882.

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN.

off from all communication except by
Fort Davis. Military telegraph lines are

Horses

THE CROWN SEWING MACHINE

Concho, Fear* ore e ntortalned for the people
of Ben Flcklin. An old stage station

\

S. S. INGERSON &amp; SON.
-MUST BE—

Stiod

The Cut shows tbe new stand, Just perfected and nut on the market.

include* Mra-Tankcriy-# fine hotel. Patton i
Longworth* tin-shop. Vick # storeb -&lt;m.
Miller A Keck&gt; livery stable building and

ALWAYS BEST
TO HAVE THE JOB DOKF

SKILLFULLY.

Flcklin to not yet ascertained. At Dublin the

Recognizing These Facts,
on top of their bouses for protection.

And desiring to increase my prosperity
t&gt;y affording the public

luimlgTRLts.

_ Washixotom, August«L
Jos. Nlmmo, Jr., Chief of the Bureau c

THE BEST WORK

the immigration into tho United States for the

In that line, I have employed

Chas. Middleton,
Whom I can recommend at an

A No. 1 Workman.
■umber of immigrants there arrived from En-

land, MB: Austria, 1.U0; Belgium. CO; Bo­
hemia. IU; Denmark, MM; France. MS; Ger­
many.
Hungary, &lt;71; Italy, LUM; Netb-

•I- M. WOOJD
FOUNDER and MACHINIST
Probate Notice.

principal foreign countries during the month

Germany

A A shows tho hardened steel pointe on which the crank shaft and dnve*re h?',‘g .BQd 'V“r‘c Thta l* tt»Mihtsst running bearing which can be made. There to
‘y*0; friction. Potato are aAoatabfo to take up the wear and the crank on whichlbe pit­
man work# to between tbc potato, tbu« patting the strain direct and avoiding all sidc^pulL
B B show* the hardened steel pointe on which tbe treadle is hungand works*
They are made adjustable for taking up wear.
1.111s

shows the patent ball and socket joint connections of tbe pitnun
with^tbe crank and treadle. By this patent arrangement the ‘•thumping" beard in other mach­
ines a prevented, and there fa no possible chance for the pitman to bind at any point la the re­
vol udon of the crank, no matter bo«r uneven the f.oor mar be or bow far from parallel tho
rr» uk and treadle beartag for tbe pitman may be. Thereto always a free and easy action of
the pitman nt every point in itaatrolre.
D shows the belt-replacing device, by means of which any lady or child can
throw tbe belt on tbe drive wheel instantly, aud without rooting from her chair.
E shows die enlarged nickel plated aud polished drive-wheel. By mak*
,n$ 42’
f0^ lucb“ Ur&lt;er ta dtontetw, and patting the weight mostly in tbc extreme
■ outside rini of it, we make it run easier and I.Higer, when owce started, at n ha* more moawrtrtura.
•Did ping on tac*carpet or fl&lt;&gt; ’.,cniH “n t*lc
bar for preventing the oil from drop-

•• if I had tt
«L‘* In ten

4i G G show the porcelain casters, one in

.

of four fret uf the machine.

E. R. WHITE, Awt.. At Koeber Bn's Stet

.

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                  <text>ORNO STRONG, |
AWH Pup PR IX TOR. J

Rdctok

VOLUME IX.
LIFE IK NASHVILLE
And Her Environs.
—The burglar . proof safe for tbo
bank has arrived and attracts much
attention.

—Let Jack Frost keep away from
this section a week longer, and we will
have the biggest corn crop known for

years.
—There is a report rife that our
wheat buyers have been taken In sev­
eral hundred dollars worth on grown

wheat.
—WaltrBeaqcamp haa' taken Ijis

share of lhe latodBeaucamp &amp; Vsnnocker Ijvery, and moved to the barn
connected with the Nashville house,
where he opens up alone.
.

—Mrs. Sarah Baker, of Assyria, who
was recently divorced from her hus­
band, was married on the 13th ultimo
to a wealthy Californian by the name
of Diver. They will take up their res­
idence in this village about the first
of October.
—The Grecubackers held a caucus nt
the town hall, Monday evening, and
elected A. M. Flint, Wm. Stillwell and
H. W. Flint, delegates to the county
convention to be held at Hastings to­
day. Upon the question of fusion the
delegates go uninstructed.
—The fire company stowed the en­
gine away in the new engine house
Tuesday evening. It is well that they
did so before they went down to the
train. In fact Tuesday evening was
the date of a number of startling es­
cape from severe injury and death.
—The Brices, living three miles
south, well-known not only in their
own town but this and many others, as
stirring, enterprising and progressive
farmers, are erecting upon a sightly
eminence of their farm a brick resi­
dence, the main part of which is 26
feet square-

—The school board has had two
meetings this week relative to reviv­
ing the crowded state of the school, but
has done little more than toUecide that
some steps in that direction must be
taken unless the number is aooh re­
duced by* the sickness with which one
or twoAtpils are now suffering.
—LdJ. Clark with a red face and
nervouslir, invaded our domicile for
a few moments last Sunday, aud then
went off with our hired girl and Sun­
day hat, leaving a straight six dollar
hat in exchange. They were married
and our hat has been returned, but we
shall always fee I th at we have an in­
terest in that couple and their posterity.

—Dick Murray of Baltimore, was
quietly dragging in wheat the other
day when the drag caught on to a
stump, struck his horses heels and they
ran away. To reach the highway the
drey steeds scaled a high fence, the
diac, after the jump, lighting on their
backs. Mr. Murray now has the worsemangled $500-team he ever heard of,
which were aS badly injured as his, and
yet live.
—That there was nothing very senti­
mental about our ex-Prof. Niles is
proven by the fact that he never saw
the girl he married until he went to
marry her. A lady of this village in­
formed Mr. Niles that Miss Roberts of
• Olivet would make him a good wife.
Niles opened a correspondence to in­
vestigate tbw matter. The investiga­
tion proved satisfactory and the conple
are now one flesh.
—A pleasant company of some thirty
couples enjoyed themselves in the so­
cial dance given by the fire lads for C.
N. Young at the opera house Monday
evening. Excellent music on piano,
violins and horn was furnished by
Messro. Hoag, Purchis, and Stebbins
brothers. Clark appreciated the honor
done him by his fellow firemen to the
extent of a half column of “brevier”

—A family of seven from Richland
Co., Ohio, were put off here, on Wed­
nesday, because they had no money to
pay their way further. Village Presi­
dent Chipman authorized the marshal
to pay their fares to Grand Rapids at
the township’s expense, and generous
aid in money and eatables was extended
by several citizens. The man was evi­
dently a bummer, but the Toman was
in every way worthy of the Aid.

—C. N. Young departed for Chicago
Tuesday evening. The fire laddies
were down to the train, and proposed
to see Clark off in fine style, so when
the train drew up to the station, the
boys, all dressed in uniform, attempted
to file in to bid him g-ood by; but the
train, being 'late and having no bag­
gage to take on, suddenly started out
■tbe car.

The

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun.

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1882.

TERMS; 81.50 per Ys*
Credit Subscbiptioxs $1.75,

NUMBER 52

a committee oz organisation. After gentleman of good ability, once a pre­ OOMMOH COUNCIL PROCEEDINGBexamining the discharges presented, siding elder. .Rev. A. D. Newton goes
CorsciL Rooms,
/
raising the necessary funds to secure a to Homer.
100 USEFUL ARTICLES
Nsobville, ScpL IL 1882. f
Easily worth 25 eta, selling for 10 cts at tbe
A nine-carload excursion from Grand . Regular meeting.
charter and a very pleasant informal
I’reMnt, Chipman, PTCaldent, Barber, Boise,
greeting among old comrades,the meet- Rapids to JackRoa, passed through, Dickinson and Lcntx, Trustees. Absent, Dem­ Ten C-'nt Store tri the Reese building.
eray and Lee.
adjourned until Tuesday the I9th inst., Wednesday.
Editor Nashville News:
The oHowipg aceto, were presented and on
Ideslre to moke the following proposition
at 7 o’clock p. m.. when a mustering of­
The M. E- Sunday-school picnic, an­ tnoUoq
allowed by ayt» and nays as follows:
to butter makers: 1 will furnish gratis to all wb»
ficer will be here to muster and organ­ nounced last week, has been indefinite­
Ayes, Bcrtxr, Boise, Dickinson and L«nta. dcauot use file salt and who erlJ me their butter,
Nays
none.
the Ashton or Eureka salt by their calling at my
ize the post. The outlook for a largo ly postponed.
I 13 00 store for It.
W. H. Aylaworth,
L. J. Wheeler.
post here is more promising than the
Charley Youngs made two trips to 8. 8. Ingeraon A Bon,
39 79
16 38
NOTICE.
most sanguine had hoped, and the or­ Buffalo, this week, taking two car­ H. IL Dickterom
Wm. Boston,
All parties indebted, eitbci by note- d&amp;e or
ganization will no doubt reach over a loads of hogs.
Jaa. Gregory,
account, will remember I have been here a jeax
J. L. Stevens-is entertaining friends W: 8. Boaworffi,
hundred members. The object of the
and have bills , to meet during the present
David Stevens,
month, and would like to see nod settle with as
organization is to preserve and strength­ from Lyons, N. Y.,—Charles Tindeli John
B. Marshail.
many as possible. Thanking you for past fa­
en those kind and fraternal feelings and Sarah Gats man.
H. A. Durkee,
vors and boning for others in the future, I am
Yours respectfully.
that bind soldiers together; to perpetu­
J. M. Roe’s eight-yeare old soa has H. Hickman,
Gao. Gallatin,
ate the memory and history of the been very sick with diphtheria, bat is Jaa. Harper.
N.
Rathbum,
now
slowly
recovering.
tw-A
fall
line of new Groceries just receiv­
dead; to assist such former comrades ;
Sam Hartford,
ed to be sold cheap to cash customers.
Cal. Ainsworth is anxious to retire H. Partello,
their widows and orphans as are in need
C. Ajxhwortb.
to maintain true allegiance to the from active business and will sell his M, Heit,
Geo. Wright,
SAVE MONEY.
United States of America, based upon a stock and village property very low.
Elwood Martin,
And
buy
Buggies
aud
Carriages
and Wagons of
Wh'at a tnsh of little curly-headed WIB Freer,
paramount respect for and fidelty to
from 10 to '36dollars below any body
1 13 Glasgow
the National Constitution, and to dis­ "cackR*”there is for Miss Allen s de­ Ed. Pfcrtcllo,
and all first class and warranted. Don't
125 00, else
Lucius Clark.
------—Not a fireman can be found who
forget
the
celebrated
Tiffany
Bro
’s, goods kept
countenance whatever tends to weak­ partment when the school bell rings !
On motion the oltffoekup wns
to Wm. &gt;cnly by him.
can tell anything about how, in the
The firm of Stcve&amp;s &amp;. Cook, black­ Bartlcv for $4 00.
en loyalty or incite insurrection, trea­
"good-by business” on Tuesday night,
Motion by Barber that the Marshall be order­
ATTENT1ON,SALL!
son or rebellion, or in any manner im­ smiths, have dissolved. Mr. Stevens ed to sec that gutters were ccostrurtcd on
a certain member jumped off the train,
Of course in buying a HaracM yoo desire lo
pair the permanency of our free insti will continue the busraesa uninterrupt­ both aidea of Main 8L from north Uno of Wash­
plowed his nose in the sand, swung his
ington rtreet to alley, running j*&lt;ialHl with buy a irwxl oue. Thu kind we warrant to make
tions ; aud to spread universal liberty, ed.
in
every
instance.
Harness sold for cash or
WiLsiilngton
street
south
of
town
hull,
in
ac
­
feet around under the car. and wns
Herd. Walkath.
Jim Cook and Phil Caverly have cordance with ordinance No. 18 of the ViUagv gilt-edge paper.
and equal rightsaud justice to all men.
jerked out and stood on his head by a
Nashville.
Old “vets” remember the* time, Tues­ gone m together and opened a black­ of Motion
tar
i
am
ven'
much
obliged to you for your
carried bv ayes and nays is followa.
Jimmie McCartney, just in time to
patronage
for
the
past
five
years and would reday Sept. 19, at 7 o’clock p. m., at the smith shop in Hardy’s building on^
prevent the loss of both feet. Nor how
spactfully announce that I have added to my
town hall, and be sure and bring your Main street.
when he got right end up again, with a
0u motion H. A. Garber was appointed stock a complete line of booto and shoes.
Miss Bell Truman entertained a health officer for the ensuing year.
discbarges.
C. W.fiMITV.
sigh that seemed to come clear from
On motion council adjourmd.
small company Wednesday evening,
MB.*,,
MONEY TO LOAN,
his boots he remarked, "God bless THE WAY OF THE TRANSGRESSOR.
F. McDboby,
Elie
------ --------- —
---- ------------------ —------ among the number Dr. Hull and Miss
President,
j
On
Real
Estateat
low
rate-of
Interest
t&gt;(
Clerk.
you.”
- I Ware of Morgan.
Lee &amp; DrxKxx
—The Republican township caucus
He was of middling size, with dark I The "William Tell” drama was well
held at the town hall on Saturday af­ hair, a black moustache, and a surly rendered
'
by the Middleville dramatic
jibleh—NnsBrrr.—Id Middleville. Sept 6th. Imwnw stock of fail goods.
ternoon, was the slimcst attended of way that said "it’s none of your busi­ club. Messrs. Fullerton and Southwick
Isaac H. Keeler and Mis* Sarah E. Nesbitt.
py I keep in slock the famous Scotch Col­
any republican caucus held in Nash­ ness where I came from.’’ She was also played like old stagers.
Rev. Sptttlw, Cestlelon. Sept. 10, 1882, Mr. lar. the favorite among good-teamsters.
liaiui. WaleaTZ.
ville for years, there being only eight­ of medium size, also dressed neatly in
I. M. Flint A Son give a fifty cent
Lucius G. Clark u&gt; Miss Luis A. Loomis, all
of
Nashville.
teen voters present. Thia fact taken in black, and had dark hair and a hand- dnnee in the opera-house
____ ________________
Friday evenSUGARS.
the face of the one that Castleton Re­ some face. In fact they were a nobby j mg, the 32d, Good music and a good
A pure sugar tor .08 cento.
publicans have been in the habit of couple, just out on their wedding trip, time for all who cun behave,
Jordan.—In Middleville, Sept. 5th, Mary, wife
A splendid sugar for .09 cento.
of Jacob Jordan, on early settler.
bolding caucuses with from 150 to 300 and having come in on the 2^33 train ‘ F. C. Boise, C. W. Granger i Con
A Rattler for 10 cento.
C. .4
H
anes
—
in
Nashville.
Sept.
6th.
of
consump
­
voters present, does not show well, to from the east, Tuesday, they registered and C. L. Glasgow are hve business
tion, Miss Story E. Hanes, aged 18 years ami
gy Our new spring Teas have arrived.
say the least. That it argues the de­ at th’e Wolcott house os "L. E. Jackson men and they have something new to
0 months, oulv daughter li W. 11. and Ab- They are of the garden varitty and May pick­
agaii
E.
Haines.
cline of the Republican party in Cas­ and wife, Middleville.” Suitable atten­ say to you. Read their proclamations.
ing and for strength and flavor they can’t be
Mato—In Maple Grove Sept- Sth, of heart dis­
tleton, we deny, for the reason that tion was shown them by the landlord,
_____
Rev. J. F. Orwick, who wasstationease, Mrs. Fannie Mavo, aged 45 yean.
Castleton was not particularly interest­ and life seemed happy indeed. But the ‘ ed at Woodland and in whom there
Funeral services were field at the hoUM,
if Cash paid for fresh Butter
Elder Holler officiating. A. large number of
ed in the county convention and that way of the transgressor is hard, you I i« considerable local interest here, was
people were in attendance.
we are now in a very busy season. It know, and by 15 minutes after supper transferred
'
‘ to Orange, in Ionia Co.,
• MACHINERY.
will bo well, however, for Castleton, some parties from Middleville, also and district.
FOR SALE.
Land Boiler—Iron frame—Good one—cheap.
Republicans to be more earnest in their stopping there, bad penetrated the lit
As I wish to go out of business and remove Reed Harrows and Seeders, Buckeye Harrows
G. W. Francis and E. Cook departed
and Seeders, Farmer’s Friend, Biickeve and
work from tow on, or they may have game, and "Mr. Jocksou" was earnestly for Chicago Tuesday morning ; the for­ from Nashville, I now offer fcr sale, twoDwril- Triumph
Drills from 60 to 71/dollars,sofd cheap
fng Houses, one Barn aud Orchard. cotnprisUtg
cause to repent for their procrastination beseeching one of them to not "give it mer to buy goods for the new store, 223 feet frnqt on Main street, Nashville; also for cash or on time, and as good assortment of
machinery as Is in either Barry or Eaton ceuntlea
4
acres
pasture
connected
wiib-the
above.
away.” Bat the landlord also ‘•smelt a i and the latter in the interest of his
in sack cloth and ashes.
C. L. Glasgow.
I will also sell in connectlomor separate fxxn and prices away down.
—Our board of health cannot be too mouse.” and “Mr. Jackson and wife” wagon-painter’sjack.
the above, mv entire Stock rZ Groceries. A
Buy you harness of Hehh. Waliutu.
Mrs R. Lilly, nee Shepard, a talented gtxxl trade will go with them m my Ixxjks show
careful to enforce the law to .the very paid up and found himself in * qunnover &lt;15,000 cash sales the fine year.
APPLES! APPLES!
letter in reference to sanitary matters. dry. To go to Hastings would be to Spiritualist lecturer of Brooklyn, N. Y.,
Now is tiie time to buy a bc«Be and go into
bushels of apples wanted for drying, at
Several cases of diphtheria have already meet still more Middleville folks, and and well known in this vicinity, lectur­ burioess. Would prefer cash, customers, but at 5,000
the steam heat Evaporator two doors cast of
would
sell
for
good
paper
or
trade
for
a
good
go
to
Charlotte
ho
evidently
dared-not;
ed in this village Wednesday and salable farm well located.
occurred, and though as yet of a mild
Powles' Woolen Mills, Noshrille. The highest
market priee in cash will be paid.
form we may at any time have cases of so they went to the other hotel, where Thursday evenings. Mrs. Lilly speaks
B. C. GRirrrrn.
the most malignant type. Every possi­ they registered as "G. E. Johnson and from subjects given her by her audi­
AT THE FRONT.
Mason Fruit Cans and Stone Preserve
ble means should be used to prevent wife, Lansing,” and the deeption Dot ences.
Jugs at
C. W. Smith’s.
M isttes Fannie B’.air and Caddie
the spread of the disease and to remove being discovered they remained till
A Rattler
LATHI Buy of Brooks, Marshall A Co.,
every probable cause of the fell de­ the morning train east. Notwithstand­ Griffith.are twoestimable and indepen­
Nashville.
New
car-load
Jusr
received.
stroyer. The law makes it obligatory ing his aliases, it is “strongly suspected” dent young ladies who long have long­
MICHIGAN AHEAD.
upon every householder as wejl as every that the man with the black moustache ed to "do something themselves.**
THIRD AND LJVST CALL.
The Michigan Stoves leads them all and the
physician to report to the board of was none other than George Matteson, They begin to gratify their ambition
NO EQVIVOC^TION.
Round Monumental Is the is the finest heating
All partica indebted to the former firm of stove mode to-dav. Call at Gl^ooow’s and
health every case of any disease dan­ once of Middleville bat later of Potter­ this week by entering the employ of
ville, and »jjio disgraces respectable re­
Ainsworth &lt;t Brooks by note or account, srw see the finest display ever in Noahrille.
gerous to the public health.
This lations. He has a legal wife from whom D. C. Griffith.
hereby notified that they most pay up imme­
should be strictly adhered to, so that all he has tried to get a divorce: perhaps
diately or steps will be taken to' collect the
Call and see those new Prints—Satin finislL
same.
C. AINSWORTH.
precautionary measures may be taken she will grant it now. "The wav of the
MAPLE GROVE.
H. A. BROOKS.
transgressor is hard,” and its devious­
to prevent farther spread of the disease. ness is impossible to conceal..
TO RENT.
No one of good sense will take offense
NOTICE.
’ "Sow, Sow !” says the wheat.
An office building on Main street.
Mrs. M. Wickham.
AH persons indebted to n»e by book account
if required by the proper authorities to
Miss Alvie Nice wander is quite sick.
LOOAL GIBBLE-GABBLE
or note past due arc requested to call and pay
clean up their premises or to remove
Uncle John Stewart is on toe sick the same at once. I need the money to pay my
n- Call and sec the best sUxrk of Booto and
Shoes for the price, in NaahviBc, at
any nuisance that may exist, and at
debts.
list.
"“ffiS’c.
any rate the authorities should not be
Sickly.
Geo. W. Brown has a sister visiting
negligent of their duty in thia matter.
TELEPHONES.
Apple cropjight.
him.
Nashville, Mich., Sept. 15, 1882.
The Shaw &lt;fc Garver Telephone. The only
Look out for a frost.
Elmer Brooks has returned from
—The power of imagination is
HARNESS!
perfect Telephone known to sdcncc. The only
Office-seekers
smileth.
Illinois.
great, and was plainly and painfully
Three times the number settaof Harness to one that conveys the wire us loud and distinct
The "Liliputians” this (press) eve.
C. S. Dunham is entertaining some select from ever offered be fore In Nashville, and
illuoli-atod last week by the circum­
every sett made fromaelect stock and will be
Nashville house buss newly painted. cousins of his.
stances of Miss Hanes’ death. Accord­
' sold at bed rock prices.
Herb. Walmath.
H. R. Dickinson has started his cider
eral western agent, Woodland. Mich.
Buckwheat is being harvested, It is
ing to current reports she expected to
HATS! HATS! HAT8!
well filled as a general thing.
recover until a few hours before death mill.
Go to Prindle tfc Chipman's for the Ex­
Will Frace is down with the typhoid
Dut. Jarrard has moved his house up FStiff Hats—Fall Block. Stiff Hats-All the celsior Shirt Polish.
when she asked her mother concerning
New Styles at
her chances of recovery and was told fever.
to the road. It is now opposite Wm.
C. W. Granger &amp; Co?s.
“VINEGAR”
Mrs. J.H. Smith continues te im­ Sanford’s.
there was no hope. She was frighten­
GF New Groceries coming tn crerr dav.
Miss Hulda McCartney returned
ed, expressed her fear of death, and re­ prove.
H. R. DlCKUfSOM.
C. AINSWORTH.
Notice
C.
C.
Wolcott
’
s
hardware.
to Olivet on Monday. Her brother
fused to abandon hope before hearing
The highest market price paid for But­
WAGONS! WAGONS!
Henry returns next Monday to attend
ter aud Eggs in Caah at
Wueeleb’s.
an opinion directly from the doctor. Dr. Advertised in this paper.
What la the use of paying sixty-fire dollars
Jack Roe, of Battle Creek, Sunday- college.
Goucher wns finally prevailed upon to
for a wagon when you can get one every whit
nr I want your Butler and Eggs, and don't
There was a dance at the Baker os good for flftv dollars at my shop one-half
go to her, and under pressure of the ©d with his brother Henry.
Mrs- E. Keet, of Battle Creek, is school house, one night last week. A mile south of Naahrille. Sec them.
circustances he reiterated to the young
J..
large crowd was in attendance, and a
lady Uie fact that there was no hope visiting at Wm. Parker’s.
Henry Scheldt, of Reading, Pa., is good time enjoyed.
for her. She died within an hour af­
Glass Ware!
Fred Quick should have M. D., con­
terward. It is said on medical author­ visiting his son Chas, Scheidt.
O’ Stone Ware!
A FEW THOUSAND DOLLARS
Mrs. C. N. Young is visiting her nected with his name. That is, he has
W Wooden Ware!
ity that but for this knowledge of her
To Loan oo good Real Estate securiW.
w at ooeri
husband
parent*,
at
Tekonsha.
got to be mule driver—having traded
certainty of death she would probably
C. AINSWORTH.
E. L. Miller, of this vicinity, removes teams with Ed. Stewart.
have lived a week,—such is the effect
BOB SLEIGHS!
venrart, Broshe
Some little Shavers were out “coonof a loss of hope. Doctors are often to Boyne Citv, Mich., this week.
Ten Cent Store.
Miss Addie Reed was the guest of ing,” the other night, in west Maple
severely blamed for withholding
Grove. They found their way home
knowledge of a patient’s true condi­ M iss Belle Truman over Sunday.
The unrelenting hand of time begins by the big dipper, north star, and a
tion and chances of recovery, and* no
Jas. Moou*
saw mill.
PRIVATE SALE!
One-half mile south NaabvlUe.
doubt they sometimes err in the mat­ to rest heavily upon Judge Killen.
G. A. Truman wns in Detroit Tues­
11 sell, V mile Dorth at state
Three men of south Maple Grove, in
ter ; but this incident shows vividly the
I
CIDER! CIDER!
county line. 1 span horses,
importance of keeping hope alivei in day and Wednesday buying new goods. coming home from town a few nights
1
yearling
heifer, 21 sharp, ttac
We win make Cider every Saturday until
C. N. Putnam is erecting a small ago, lost their way. After going some further notice. Let those interested take heed.
the heart of a sick one.
H. R. Dickixbox.
building, adjoining his store, for an distance out of their way they stopped
GRAND ARMY POSToffice.
ata house and asked: "Can you (hie)
AUCTIONEER!
JL _. Downing.
H. 8. Lamb of Manton, Wexford tell us (ble) where we (hie) live t”
Pursuant to tall, about thirty ex­ county, is visiting friends in this lo­
L. Gregory (Happy Jim) and be happy.
YOUR EAR, GENTLE READER.
The moonshiners are not succeeding
soldiers of the late civil war assembled calityin manufacturing wine as well as
A CARD OF THANKS.
at Esq. Parody’s office in this village,
Nelson A. Brown, a bright, stirring was anticipated. They had at one
The undersigned (Wires to express their
for the purport of organizing a Grand young citizen of Battle Creek, was
titne nearly four gallons of the raw ma­ grateful thanks for ths many fa v.ira conferred
Army of the Republic post.
Emory hand-shaking with Nashville friends
terial; but the rectifier not working
Parody, Esq., called the meeting to or­ yesterday.
well, and the guxzler working all the and friends.
der, L. J. Wheeler of this village was
M. and C. E. Ingerson are visiting in time, they have failed to make the
called to the chair, and J. J. Potter was Hopkins, Allegan county, having driv- aoo barrels,
Doo t frrjcrt ft! Don’t forget ft!
A CARD OF THANKS.
elrcted secretary. Emory Parody and eu through.
style with which the boy# finished the
good by business is something inde­
scribable—perhaps it’s as well that is.
Suffice it to say that some one manag­
ed to pull the bell rope and stop the
train after it was well on the way to
Vt. Ville ; but not until one of the boys
in his hurry to escape had landed him
self in the woodrack and narrowly ea. caped sudden death.
—Bennie Gee’s Liliputian Cornet
Band and Concert Troupe, composed
of girls and boys from four V&gt; thirteen
years old, will give a concert at the
opera house this (Friday) press even­
ing. . This company embraces the
youngest* artists, probably, ever or­
ganized in a band or concert, and has
met with good bouses and immense
success everywhere they have "show­
ed.” Wc bespeak a full house for
them.

hurried and peculiar Potter of Maple Grove, were appointed Rev. F. B. Bangs, a portly, elderly

ZZ

�A OAILY EVENT

death'* door.
“ Poor boy I • Alice. I wbb ynu would
go in aud Bit beside him awhile,” su.d !
Th« Receipt of Letters Like
I iu object
is Dotannoylog.
understood
hence
ulaliou.
sornotimBa
andand
upon
Mr*. Derwent, on the first evening of I
i‘. is improperly uwi. The wearer of a
The Following:
lfw&gt;h' •‘•"
- ‘t"*-- “He i« x-rieep French heel should bear in mind the parmiwrioa not always easy to obtain,
Commoxwkalth, Wia, Jaljt 20, 18^2.
Ught.
.-ougta,
,
taoigmtlun,
eatarrtt
of
the
bladder
or
a*
favors
ungraciously
accorded,
all
SATURDAY
now. If he wakes you can call me. If fact that such heel* are only intended
general despondency. When thusafficted
we only knew his people, I would send mi alight aiahtaBM in walking on rather tending to show that the treas- ami
make haste to use Brown’s Iron Bitters. It
for them. I fear he will not last long.” tiptoe aud to make the carriage more
surengthens mind and body exhausted by disTOTAL ANNIHILATION.
ewe sod suffering; 1. the trnest.of all fi/e-givAhoo crept in, and took her place in steady and uniform than walking on
exclusion of th# .ingtank-*, and*mure’s best assistant tn res- •uttered from Infiamatlon, Ukeratloo and
Oh, b« w us K Bowery boot black bold,
-toe nurae’a chair.
Tears of pity dim­ tiptoe ordinarily is, instead of suppos­
Prolamu* Uteri, weaknea* aud heavy head, in
And bis ytmre they uttmlrered nine
med her eye* a* she looked at the ing that they are to bear the weight of
fact felt worn out. not aide to alt up. I am
During
these
later
years,
however,
wasted figure in the bed—the pale, thin the body a* flat heel* are.
feeling Just-splendid now, and.Rhal! continue
the love of object# of art has been so
Zoa-Pbora pntll cured.
face, the fast-closed eyes, tho hollow
The square “ heel aad toe ” walk of
Missouri has just Imported a cargo jackasses.
temple* under the waving brown hair. the pedestrian should never be attempt­ disseminated among all classes of peo­
“I wish his mother ur father could ed on French beel*. Th# fol-oe with ple that thousand are now anxious to
hl* ant looked wistfully
sturhr and appreciate them in plaoo of IMPROVEMENT FOR MIND AND BODY.
come!
”
*he
said,
aloud.
which
the
wearers
strike
their
heel*
i*
And "Uro us a bite!" they said. ’
The heavy lids opened.
Two deep­ shown by tbe fact that they are gener­ the few who had formerly had any de­
Tberelgmorcstrcngth-rrstorinK power in a
sire or would take the trouble to arrive bottle of Parker'* Clinger Tonic than to a bush­
But the boot-blaek smiled a lordly smUe; blue eyes looked al her imploringly.
From Mr». John Spittier, No. 28 WUt 8L,
ally iron clad or shod with brass, and
The el of malt or gallon of milk. A* cu appetizer Fort
“My father!” whispered the sick that on old boots they are invariably at the means of seeing .them.
Wayne, Ind:
blood purifier and kidney corrector, Ahere Is
I have been •uttering tor over 1&amp; ymn with
man.
“Bring him—tell him—I was worn off or “ run over.” This should South Kensington Museum and many nothing like IL and invalid* consequently find
of
the
provincial
exhibition*
of
similar
*}&gt;aAn&gt;odlc
pain in mv bead, and general ner­
coming—Seaton—Seaton—’ ’
a wonderful invlgorant for mind and body. vous debility.
never be. A lady that would walk character have done bo much to educate it
I had a Mvere attack ot pain in
■ -Commercial.
The faint voice died away—the eye* gracefully on French heels shawld be
Thirt buol’blnck *mll«a once more,
my bead two weeks ago, cauiw-d by weakness
the public that a vast change ha* taken
And a mischievous dltnnie grew in hla again were closed.
and
nervous
exiiuustfmi. I really thought I
A crosneycd woman often possesses a better
able to walk as well od glass heels* as place in these matters, and the regrets
check—
•bouiddie. We had Zoa-Pbora in the house,
Alice stood an instant like one struck on iron or wooden one*. Worn in this
temper than a sweet-mouthed one.
of some at the dispersion of great col­
and my husband wild we would test ft to tbe
dumb. She had never noticed the re­
way real French heels (not One
thevoice
base
all over the land goes up from uttermost. He gave it to me, according to di­
semblance before; but notf she could imiuftion-s sold os such in this country) lections is replaced by the pleasure of
mothers, that aays, “My daughters are so feeb­ rections, for severe cases, aud in lew than two
the
hundreds
who
feel
that
now
they
trace the firm lines of the old Suuire’s would develop the calf and improve the are enabled to indulge a taste which le and sad, with no strength, all out of breath bourn to his great MtiKfaction. I had what be
WHAT THE EXPRESS BROUGHT.
countenance in that pale, pinched face. shape of the leg instead of injuring it
and life at the least exertion. What can we do called immediate relief, and felt like going to
“Sleeping still? That is a good os high heels now have the reputation was so long believed to be the sole for them!” The answer is simple and full of sleep. I advite all Judies who suffer from ner­
With a roar ai.d a rattle, tho six
perquisit of a small and narrow-minded hope. One to four weeks' use of Hop Bitters vous or sick headache, or any form ot female
o’clock expresa trnin rushed across tl»e sign,” said her mother, coming in, of doing, and the serious charge that set of admirers. Time and circum­ will make them healthy, rosy, sprightly, and weakness, louse your Zoa-Pbora, for there la
bridge that spanned the narrow river ready to resume’ her place for the night. Burgeons make of their throwing the stances have changed all this.
no medicine to compare with it.
This cheerful.
May 15tb, 18*4.
Alice hesitated a moment. Never be­ whole weight of the body on the arch
on the DefwontFiirm near Concord, and
impecuniosity of many of the aristo­
Tbe reason Ere tempted Adam, is because
Alice Derwent, the farmer s preUy, fore had she acted by or for herself 4n of the foot would vanish at once.
I
.
cratic and higher classes, and the in­ man never comes before Eve.
dark-eyed daughter, stood on the vine-' any matter of moment.
Ladies (and gentlemen, too) if they
But the sound of voicas might arouse wish to walk gracefully on French heels crease of wealth among the middle
shaded porch; looking after it, with an
Lone Jack, Mo., Sept., 14, 1879.
and
trading
members
of
the
communi
­
the slumbcrcr.
Her father and Tom may practice indoors by taking a pair
. unconscious sigh.
I have been using Hop Bitten, and hare re­
ty have caused a remarkable transfer ceived
. JzRszxvnxB, Ill., April 25,1883.
great benefit from them for liver com­
“ Soatnany come by you, so many go had gone on a household errand to the of slippers or lace boots without heels,
ot art treasures from the great man­ plaints and malarial fever. They are superior
Da. PKNfiKi.LT—Dear Sir:—lam more than
by you, out into tho great, wide, beauti­ village; there was no one else to con­ and fastening to each, at the point
pleased with the effects of your Zoa-Pbora in
sions
of
the
one
to
the
more
humble,
to
all other medicine*.
P. M. BARNES.
ful world,” she thought, as she gazed sult.
our daughter's case. I am surprised to see
where the heel should be, a small rub­ and those things which were consider­
Finally, she threw on her waterproof,
' e fertile vallpy farm and out
The spectacle of a lot of bald headed men iu how she has improved. 8be is gaining in
ber ball with a whistle in it that makes
drew--its
hood--over
her ----head, and sped a noise when if is squeezed. The size ed caviare to the million have become bathing is said to resemble an animated game weight and color; her nerves are steady, aud
rqugh lbe break jn . tho circling blue --------------tbe distress she suffered in her chest is entirely
shouM £w the in their more modest dwellings a daily
taJn^rfrorpwnenoe a trail of white acron tho valley to Squire Seaton &lt; ) o( (be
of
billiards._________ '
gone. I firmly believe that Zoa-Pbora is all
source of enjoyment, “a joy and a
ke came floating back.
“I wonder house.
.
i height of heel to bo worn. When tho
that has saved hzr life. 1 am willing you
beauty
forever.
”
Ek's
Creai
|
Ely's
Cream
Balm
reduces
inflamatlon,
Sores
Lren
the
well
tnunni
Mirant
wore
|
w&lt;
.J„
r
u
,
o
,
b
or
b
c
,
n
Wllk
you will ever bring me anything? or
should1 use my letter, for I am not afraid to
■
in
the
nasal
ja
sages
are
healed
in
a
few
days.
We
cannot
leave
this
subject
without
m
nu«ai
v—.—.pressing
—
—
_,._ v
__j
what a wonderful cure vour medicine is,
carry mo away? or must I live my life an ostomsed face ns he ushered this j _,.
without
on the L
balls
hard
Is dissipated. Senses of tell
the reflection that all is not gold that I Catarrhal headache
*“
and I would like all who suffer to try it.
visitor
into
bis
master's
I
out to the end, shut in by these quiet mysterious
s
i.ell,
taste
and
hearing
arc
restored.
Price
•----------- —
1 enough to make them squeal, they will glitters that many of the curios that come I
Yours respectfully,
50
cents.
hills?”
study...
t.. ' be able to walk Hqhlly and gracefully
Mrs. Sarah Randolph.
from
Wardour
street
and
other
mines
|
Apply into nostrils with little finger.
Squire Seaton
Seuon looked
ooked up from
fn.m his
hl, QD &gt;.
h&lt;wU wi[hoo[
“ Supper ready, mother?" called out
I shall always remember gratefully the good
of bric-a-brac at home and abroad are
o in book »u J bu luuul pallor !“
bcreued
77 7 : * *7
lo
„cb o[ h f u „ld
the hearty-looking farmer, halting
health
your
.;M*dicine has brought my daughter.
Lightning struck a brewery In Milwakee the
nothing
but
plausible
and
cleverly
man
­
rt
.rhactlv
nila
na
nn
lutanun
tn
tnq
।
,
*
oiTthe
a
ghastly
hue
as
he
listened
to
the
Lr-ww Randvlhr.
tho glow of the bright firelight
“
| need of brass heel plates.
ufactured forgeries, copies or imitations other night, and made everything hop. •"
open hearth, as he came in from fodder- breathless girl.
mr Phnin .t '
I® ©vide?1 that .pointed toed boots of things their venders pretend them to
BEATTY’S ORGANS SIRtOSs 10 (Vlt Reeds on
Ing the stock, followed "by
*by his son
“ My son—my boy—
ray Philip
ing
A GENERAL STAMPED.
1
ly t'A» Pianoa
up Rare boUda
.J
1 .. at. aro not Ro well adapted to use with be, foisted on the inexperience of the
induo-mepta. Write to Eastty. WaahinKteff. N.J.
Thomas, who was the living, breathing your father's house?
7 j?renci1 heels as square toed ones, for
And y nn, you
self-sufficient vanity of credulous pur­ Store as is now for a Trial Bottle of Dr.' Klug’s
Comm?
to me?
. have
.
■ sire.
- ”
"
A-kinit for mo? Coming
to,nef
’ . - .... &lt;raiklo^tho toca
“image of“
his
chasers, and which could not for a mo- New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and
“ To be sure it is,” replied his bustling ' Wait, child! Ill go with you, of course j .
,
of to
room.
Short steps
are also
stand the test or deceive the probably | Colds. Al! persons affected with Asthma,
But-lba ’plenty
.ref..^. bIo
lon|?.wd^.
--------------little wife, who had just such eyes and -I’ll p&gt; to my poor boy!
Bronchitis, Hoarseness, Severe Coughs, or any
. _r_i.
•_
A Gentleman who suffered for years from Ner
dearly bought knowledge of any one i affection
,. is
t_ not .,
■ part of science
. to»• dischss
hair as bonny Alice, and just the same room is turning round—I think I must ! r It
of the Throat and Lungs, can get a voUs debility. I’rematute decay, and all the effects
tho
who has suffered from the tricks of the
of youthful Indlacratlon, will for the sake of •ul­
- sweet smile.
“Isn’t it always ready, bo going blind!”
the rcalalivo beauty of high anil low trade—a trade (hat is thriving success- 1 Trial Bottle of tills great remedy free.
terior humanity, send free lo all whl need it the
Alice sprang to his side.
The gray
father, when tho train goes by? Come
-•* l heels, but merely to state the underly- fully wherever confiding flies ara.to be . Better to.be despised for too anxious appre­ recipe and direction for making the simple remedy
head fell on her shoulder.
T
Alice!”
lenueriy jng principles of mathematics and caught by tho honeyed words or impu­ hension titan ruined by too confidant a security by which be was eared. Sufferers wishing to tirofll
by the advertiser* experience can do so by adarcM“ Alice is out there looking for her she smoothed the silvery hairr away
awav anatomy, and to show how they may dent assertions of tho curiosity-dealer.
In perfect contidence.
Woman suffering with any form of Female Imt
from
the
high
forehead,
and
bathed
the
-fortune, mother,” said Tom.
“It is
84-lyr, JOHN B. OGl&gt;EN,&lt;2Ccdar fit,, N. Y.
be made conducive to health instead of
Wo have only to add that should any | Weakness, send to R. Pcngefty, M. D-, Kala­
coming by that train.
1 know all pale face with the cold water and fra­ as now tho reverse. Hitherto scientific
49(1 P«» day at home. Samplea worth »S tree
mazoo, Mich.. for advice and information con­ $5 ta
Iv i.v Address Snssos a Uo.Portlsud. Mt.
about it.”
grant essences which the frightened observers have held themselves aloof of our readers fall victims to tho epi- cerning
Zoa-Pboru.
domic and bo seized with a bric-a- !
Alice smiled and shook her head at servant brought.
from all matters -of fashion, treating brae mania we give thia advice—“Co- I
The old man revived, to find her min­ ; her with contempt. Hygienic reform­
hex’ saucy brother, as she took her seat
REMEMBER THIS.
If you are sick Hop Bitters will surely aid
istering to him thus.
And it was al­ ers content themselves with abusing ixal emptor.” •‘Let the buyer beware!”
at her father’s side.
Nature in making you well when all else fails.
Little did any of them think how most like father and daughter that they I fashion, which goes on totally indifler- —Continental Times.
If vou are costive or dyspeptic, or are suffer­
many a true word is spoken in jest, or took their way across the valley to­ | ent to all they say. No one has ever
ing from any other of the numerous diseases of
Cattle-Raising in Montana.
that the fortune which the evening ex­ gether, ho leaning on her arm, and list­ attempted to study the science of fash­
the stomach or bowels, it is your own fault if
remain 111, for Hop Bitters are a sovereign
press was to bring the daughter of the ening greedily to all that she could tell
-AWARDEDTo assert that Montana is the best you
ion and yet Herbert Spencer save that
remedy in all such complaints.
nouse was even then nearing their hos­ him of his Jong-absent, long-mourned
wherever there are facu which can be grazing country in the world, writes a
If you are wasting away with any form of
pitable door.
son.
collated and compared, wo have the correspondent of tho St. Paul Pioneer- Kidney disease, stop tempting death this mo­
“ I’ve worked like a beaver all day
“ It is my father's voice!
I hear his basis for forming a science.
Pros.'. is merely to repeat the deliber­ ment, and turn for a cure to Hop Bitters.
long, Martha, and Tom has kept pace step!
I shall gel well if he will only !
If you are sick with that terrible sickness
If there is a science of history there ate verdict of hundreds of practical
with me, and wo both said, as we came forgive me!” said the invalid, greatly must be a science of fashion, absurd as stock-raisera who of late have visited Nervousness, vou wijl find a ‘’Balm in Gilead”
in the use of Hop Bitters.
to
Mrs.
Derwent
’
s
suprise,
as
the
housflhome, that we were too tired to eat.
this may sound. Facts are abundant, this region and made it the subject of
If you arc a frequenter, or a resident of a
But this is comfort! It would be hard to door softly opened to a stranger’s and we have every reason to believe cautious investigation. For some time miasmatic district, barricade vour system
see anything much pleasanter than this touch.
the scourge of all countries—malarial,
that tho principles of evolution and de­ to come the eastern half of the Terri­ against
epidemic,
biliousness, and intermittent fever*—
He struggled up from his pillows, re­ velopment will be found to hold good tory is likely to stand foremost among
nice, tidy kitchen, and just as hard to
by the use of Hop Bitters.
find any of their French, cooks that can sisting her attempt to scxithe him.
there as elsewhere. The above sketch tho beef and wool producing sections
'If vou have rough, pimply, er swallow skin,
beat you and Alice, my dear,” said Elihu
“.Father, I am sorry—forgive me!”
of the origin of French heels will serve of America. It is now known that ) bud breath, pains and aches’ and feel miserable
Derwent, glancing thankfully at the he said, in a firmer voice, as Alice en­ I lo show that, when properly inter­ Montana cattle make better beef than I generally, Hop Butera will give vou fair skin,
blazing fire, the table laid so neatly, the tered, followed by the aged man.
b,oud’ ,werU’t
health, and eompreted. some of the most absurd fush- the average stock of other beef-pro- |
tempting meaiof botlor-cakesand maple
And then Squire Seaton came, feebly । ions leach a useful lesson, and if prop­ duoing Territories and Stales, and this
jh Khort the-, cure all diseases of the atom­
-MEDALS.
syrup, wheaten bread and golden but­ but swiftly into the room, and held his erly directed they may lead to benefit ic largely due to the nutritious quality I ach. Bowel,'. Blood, Liver, Nerves, kidneys,
ter, and a large platter of cold corned son to his heart, subbing aloud with | instead of injury. Il is safe to assume of the native perennial grasses.
Height's
$500 will be oald
paid for a case
I Bneht
’s disease.
dto-asc. zboowtu
beef and vegetables, the’, was placed Kalitude and joy, while Alice drew her that twenty-five per cent, ot our people
tbev
wtil
not
cure
or
help.
Unlike cultivated grasses, these pro­
That poor t&gt;edriddcu. Invalid wife, sister.
wiidered mother into the kitchen and
■before the two hungry men.
are bound by the chains of fashion. Is lific wild products have firm, solid I mother or daughU r, can lie made the picture
Mrs. Derwent poured out the tea— told her of her expedition to the house
not a subject so intimately associated stooks,andtneir heads arc full of seeds,
of health, bv a few botllea &lt;ff Hop Bitters, cost-------- ot the lonhty millionaire.
Btrong, hot and fragrant.
•ptly
'
inc
but a trifle
Will you let them suffer!
with the welfare of humanity worthy a combination whose merits are _a
J-»y seldom kills; and there is a ro­
• “ Squire Seaton, up in the big house |,
The Best Known Remedy for
the study of scientific men.—SeiLiUijic
yonder, don’t often get such tea os this, . '• r ifving power in love and happiness
American.
Backacho or Lamo Back.
with all his staff of servants,” said Tom. I' combined,
c.......... ,w
. beyond t he .....
far
skil!...of.......
earthRheumatism
or Lamo Joints.
' NEW BOOK
looking across the valley to the brick-| ly physicians, or the virtue of ail earthwith regular and liberal feeds of grain.”
Bric-n-Brac
Cramps or Sprains.
nnd-freestone palace of the one million- ly drugs.
Before the frost has left the ground
Nouralcla or Kidney Diseases.
What is bric-a-brac? our readers may the grass appears above the soil, cov­
aire of the village.
I So it' happened that, a* the spring
Lumbago, Severe Achoa or Pains
well ask us. Of this combined word
Revealing the secrets nf the stsgr.Green;Boom aud
“Poor man!” sighed M.s. Derwent, months jieepened into summer, Philip
ering the face ot nature with brilliant
tent. Private and public livre ot noted actor*
Female Weakness.
♦‘I do pity him! H&amp; wife and daughter Seaton, strong and well once more,
the popular Interpretation we believe emerald verdure. At this time of year, Cirrus
and actresses, their professional work and summer
Are Sapc^ior to all other Plaster*.
to be. in auctioneer’s parlance and that
dead, and his only son so wild and will- ; stood beside bonny Alice in the porch,
voi-atlon*,
amusing
sketches
and
thrilling
tragedies;
however,its freshness is nearly all gone.
Are Superior to Pads.
ful, and a wanderer all over the world, one evening, to see the six o'clock cx- ot curiosity dealers, in fact, Wardour The period of moisture has passed, and the Black Art revealed, bow men eat Arc, women
Are Superior to Llnlmeuta.
street language. “ objects of art ”—
• •last week
’ ’he told
- ” me, with tears press ilash by.
Only
the plains present a yellow and with­
Aro Superior to Ointments or Salves.
“ At Leadville, when I was utterly every vendible article, indeed, of an­ ered appearance for the rest of the
in his eyes, that he had heard of his boy,
ruot*tro»lt&gt;re ; wonderful o-crets of transformation
Arc superior to Electricity or salvaalsss
and that ho bad been seen lately in reckless, acd utterly penniless, too, a cient or modern manufacture which year. The fact is that the grass has •CCUM.
History
the dremi from the earliest dsy«
They Act laimedlaXoly.
Leadville, intoxicated and poorly- letter from my father reached me," he can be dubbed as such, whether it be a bedn converted, on the stock, into down to the present lime Mort thrilling and rnThey Strengthen.
terUdnlnz book now In the Held. Astounding rev­
tin trumpet once belonging to, and
dressed, in a gambling saloon
Yet said in a low tom* “It was so kind, so
hay, upon which the sheep and cattle elation* I Truth »t ran ire r than fiction I 17S POR­
They Soothe.
played upon by, some crowned and af­
when he wrote there to him—and wrote sad, that it seemed to turn me from mv
pasture and fatten throughout the cold­ TRAITS. ENGRAVINGS. ANU COLORED
They Relieve Paia at Oaee.
terward dethroned monarch of any past
kindly—he had disappeared. If it was evil courses on the moment. Jost as I
winters. Sheep, require greater care PLATES ! Sells on sight. Everybody -wants lu
They Positively Cure.
age, from Tarquin the JSuperb down than cattle, but if successfully handled Grandest opportunity over offered to those dealriiig
our Tom, Elihu, I should just break my was—in the rough garments of a miner
pleasant and profitable employment. Other pubto Napoleon III.—the pipe on which
heart. Tom, if you ever do grow un­ —I set off to return to my father, like
the profits are considerablylarger. The publlshers are offering thousands of dollars for eon
Hamlet vainly desired Guildenstern to average inerdtse of the herd is about trol of territory. Illustrated circulars nod full par­
son. And God led me
steady, and run away like Philip Seaton, the prodigal
r.
ticulars FREE or send 60 rents in mousy ot stamps
try his skill—some armless, headless,or -seventy-fiv#
;
you will give your mother her death- ' here! ”
for
complete canvaaslng outfit, to Historical Pubper cent The production
otherwise dilapidated group of old is the measure of the profit in sheep­ lishlngCo.,G02 N. 4th St. Louis. Mo.
There was a long silence; the sun
blow. Remember that!”
Then
Dresden china yclept Corydon and raising, as the sale of wool, which is
♦‘Thank God, it isn’t Tom, Martha! sank out of sight behind the circling
Phyllis—some old suit of engraved ar­ always in eager demand, defrays the
I’m sorry, too, for the man and for the mountains; the first chill of evening
mor worn by a nameless knight, per­ whole expense of maintaining the herd,
boy. Mr. Seaton owns that he turned was in the air.
chance a crusader and companion of and sometimes exceeds it, to the ex­
WOMAN CAN\f* HEALTH OF W
“ In my anger I swore that I would
him out of his house, in New York, in a
Richard the Lion-hearted—a damas­ tent of 81 or $1.25 perhead.
, father’s
fit of anger, and that the boy swore he never enter the door of my
SYMPATHIZE WITHES THE HOPE
Here I may €~L:.,
enter, r
puri
— ­ cened cimeter which was yielded by
would never enter his doors again. Bad home!
It is evident that Montana stock­
WOMAN .-r-cS^THE RACE
fied, _,
repentant,
r______ ,forgiven,
__ o____ , ’A
if only '±B
the Saladin in the Holy Wars.
temper on both rides, you see; and so ____
raising rests on a solid basis as a legiti­
Coming down to later periods we mate field of enterprise widely sepa­
—why, Martha, what on earth is that?” good angel of my new life will go with
meet with strange Japanese ware.mon­
Farmer Derwent might well ask the me. Will she, Alice?”
rated from the character of wild-cat
strous looking animals in bronze, of
He took her hand.
question, and rush from the tea-table to
speculation in which many capitalist*
Eastern invention, but which never
“But your father!” stammered Alice.
the door, followed by his wondering
regard it. It should be stated that
wife anil children.
'
“I am only a farmer’s daughter!
And came out of Noah’s Ark—elegant Jap­ Western cattle-raisers are no longer
anese vases—splendid clocks of the
A procession of four of his neighbors you—”
the uncouth, half-civilized beings they
Louis Qusiorze period by Robin—
“ I am not worthy of your love in any
was coming up from his garden gate.
were ten years ago. A majority of
buhl cabinets and marqueterie writing­
At the gate stood a horse and a light ex­ way. But my father bogs you to be his
them are men of education and enter­
tables
and
other
furniture
by
Keisener,
Say yes.”
press wagon, and from the wagon the daughter, Alice.
prise from the older States, who have
She did say it.
And’ so the greatest exquisitely ornamented with ormulu come out here and invested their capi­
■four men had lifted an inanimate body,
gilding
-chiseled
by
Gonthieric,
once
and we.-e bearing it toward the house. fortune of her life—tho brightest happi­
tal in cattle and sheep raizing. With
u The six o’clock express has run off ness of both their lives—came on that the property of the unfortunate Marie few exceptions, those who have paid
Antoinette, and sold the other day lor
'the track a mile or two up the valley,” evening train.—Sulurdat/ Hight.
attention to their business either have
the
fabulous
sum
of
15,000
guineas
in
said Deacon Jones, as he and his two
realized large profits or are in a sure
that great dispersion of bric-a-brac and
•eons and hi* brother-in-law reached the
—Goodall is a professional skater in
way to do so. Such. men. of course,do
.porch with their senseies* burden. Cincinnati. He teache* young women objects of art which formed the Ham­ not pass their whole time upon the
ilton
collection,
the
sale
of
which
is
the
“Ever so many people hurt, but able to in a roller-skating rink, and, being vain
ranches, but live chiefly in towns.
wonder
of
the
season,
and
is
in
process
Eon as soon as they got nghted.
But of his good looks, talks rantimentally
Here, where I write in Billings, a num­
of consummation by the little ivory ber of them are taking up their resi­
■ poor fellow is so nearly dead that to some of them.
It happened that
hammer
which,
suspended
in
the
fin
­
■ we thought we had better bring him Wori.um and Ezekiel decided on the
dence. I have met many of these cat­
here, being as it was the’nearest honae, same day to thrash him for making love gers of either Christie or Manson, keeps tle kings, and 1 have found them all, LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S
and send for the doctor.
We knew to their sweethearts. Workum met him an audience of connoisseurs on the tip­ without exception, well-informed, gen­
ysSETATtTjg COMPOUND.
that your wife could narse him back first, and blackened his eve without toe of cxqited expectation till the rap erous, enthusiastic, hospitable men.
into health again if any one could, Mr. difficulty, as he made no resistance. He comes on to the desk at the last bid­ Many of them have planned great im­ A
Cm
•"
ding of some well-known and popular provements for Billings, notablv the
Derwent.”
.
was to have a benefit performance that
“ YotTre right there, neighbor*. Bring evening, and, carefully sponging and purchaser.
case in regard to the construction of
The great sale of the Fonthill Beck­
him right in,” said the farmer.
powdering his eye, be started ter tbe
the stock yards.
Hi# wife led the way to her best bed­ rink. On arriving there be encountered ford collection, that of Bomal, followed
bv the omnium gatberuYn formed by
LAPSUB UTERI, &amp;c.
room, next the parlor. Tom sprang on Ezekiel, who at once made known an
—“How many toes has a cat?” is
Horace Walpole, the treasures of Stowe
.the back of his swift sorrel colt and set intention to further disfigure him. But
axe all eclipsed by the present regret­ one of the questions asked at a school
off for rhe doctor.
Goodall wouldn’t take any .-uare. He ted breaking up of the Hamilton Pal­ examination in Paterson, N. J. No
Half an hour later the supper-table drewapiatol. and Ezekiel, after bran­
ace gathering together of much that is one, even the principal of the school]
was cleared, the supper dlsnes were dishing a knife^ lo&lt;t courage and fled. finest in painting, sculpture, books, fur­ could answer the question. The teach­
washed and put away, ana Alice Der­ X F. Sim.
»
niture—in a word, in every element of er sent two lads out on a foraging ex­
went sat pensively by the kitchen fire,
pedition, and thereafter it was found
—The peculiar costume of the dwel­ all that is most remarkable and recher­ that the feline had eighteen toes—ten
while her mother and father were busy
che in the history of bric-a-brac.
with the doctor in the spare room; and lers in Arizona Lm thus graphically doon the front feet and eight on the hind
The
sales
of
the
collections
wo
have
Tom, hurrying to and fro on their er­ •aribed by a ‘‘tender-foot;’’ “In ordi­
feet.—Chicago NctM.
rands, stopped onoe or twice to intern, nary weather he wears a belt with pis­ named created great sensation When
her that, the stranger was young and tols' in it. When it grows chill) he puis they took place, but none caused the
—Chicago burglars robbed
stir
and
animation
among
the
purchas
­
•n another belt with pistols in It, ar.c?
ers of curiosities or objects of art, who wus sleeping with two revolvers
and that tho tlocior said “it was a near whan it becomes resuj cold ho throws ?
whether in Great Britain or on the con­ under his pillow. He thinks that the
chance whether he lived &lt;ir died.”
. Winchester rille over hi* shoulders."
tinent, which the sale now going on revolvers being unloaded had some­
Two tz. dr*, pOAMd on. The doctor
thing to do with it—Chicago Herald.
—A movement lias been started in Sa-­ has excited
----- —| srnl each day; the neighMany have expressed regret on the
and near volunteered their I Francisco to erect, a monument in »•«.
••vend occasions of the breakii
breaking no of‘
— Fashionab
-Fashionable people at Long Branch
several
great ool lection*, forgetting that while affixt bouquets to the blinders worn by
they existed they were generally almost their borsu.s.

ERRORS'OF YOUTH?

Bensons
Capcine
6

Porous
Plaster.

IA NEW BOOK ON A NEW SUBJECT!

THEATRICAL &amp; CIRCUS LIFE.

CAUTION

�irprised at anything that happens in
"BUCHUPAlBAi”
ia Russia.
Russia. •ri.
Tm
i other evening, while smoking a cigar
New, quick, coaplete cure 4 data, urinary
for oon- coelided the whole business ot provid- |{ with one of my old friends, who has affwtk*u*_M»*sling,frequent or difficult urina­
CUSTOM
I seen, read aud traveled a great deal, I tion. kidney dlresbwa. fl. at drurriste. Mich.
ing '.he essentials.
Depot. JAMES E. DAH8 A CX) , Detroit,
some causes be necessary, but a delicate
was told of
not crimp in the matter of lemons wm
ot an incident which occurred
ridicule is generally ranch mure effect­ and powdered sugar. Weak lemonade some forty year* ago at Novgorod,
ive. A troublesome attorney, who was will dampen the spirits of an otherwise quite a* sinitier a* that which recently
No more Chill* and Ague W thia section.
pleading his own cause end raising un­ cheerful party.
occurred at Smargon, when a popula­ Our Druggist is selling an article called
tenable points before Lord EllenborDetail homo young man—a hunter or tion of raging madmen dung children “Aoua Comqvbbob." It to about tbe only
habitants .than twenty eases toadefl
oojjh. bqiuiie exasperated because he camper-out by profession—to make the into a blazing tire, aud reveled at the satisfactory preparation sold for the cure of
READY FOR BUSINESS
with medldne.-Gld Baying.
wasumiriably overruled, and ex­ coffee, and do not limit him as to sight of tbe poor little bodies writhing Fever ami Ague, Dumb Chill*. Intermittent or
BiDlooa Fevers. Tbe Proprietor ‘of the Asub
^E: SLBO, IF PAID IN ADVANCE^
claimed: “My Lord, my Lord, al­ amount. Strung coffee can be mitigat­ like vine stems upon the blazing coals. Conqcbbob ha. 'um-i! but llUlc energy to make
though your Lordship fa so great a man ed. but weak coffee is lost forever.
But io the narrative I am about to re- this medicine known and yet its sale* are itr.To Advertisers:
now, 1 remeirfber the time when I could
Tea, if wanted, should be made by a late there was no race hatred or re­ meuse in Ague District*. It purifies the blood
Liver aud oilier Secrepiry organs sb effectually
have-got your opinion for five shil­ lady to whom the making is a work of ligious passion fur a motive.
that tbe Chill* &lt;k&gt; not return even when per­
lings.” Such imperttnenoe would, with. love.
Tbe Colonel of a certain Russian reg­ ansi* have had them for year*. Entirely vege­
Many Judge*, have led to the commit­
All three of the beverages named iment. ferociously tyrannical and. I table pre[«ratlon. Price. 50 centa an&lt;( ? 1.00
i- dercriptioo, done In a superior
tal of the offender; but Lord Elfenbor- should be made on the spot, and to may say merciless toward his soldiers, ■per bottle. Two Joeea will stop the chill*.
tier, at the drop of tbe hat; and
Satlafaction guaranteed.
ougb merely observed with an amused these the cookery should be limited. If was in the habit of treating this human
tionafidfl
8HILOH’ 8 CONSUMPTION CURE. '
smile: *' Sir, 1 dare say it was not more elaborate culinary operations are flock like a pack of brutes. He dis­
worth tbe money.” The same Judge undertaken some one will have too ciplined with the knout; sentencing
This ft bevond question the moat succetafai
PERUSE THESE LIBERAL ,AD. RATES.
Medicine we have ever cold, a few &lt;!&lt;•«
was on one occasion silting at the GuiVl- much to do.
men to whippings for having .one but­ Cough
invariably cure the worst case* of Cough, croup
। hail, when Henry- Hunt, the famous
The dessert may be safely left to in­ ton insufficiently polished; whipping a and Bronchitis, while tta wonderful *ucce*a la
'• Abb | t *00I demagogue, apt&gt;eared upon the floor of dividual and local tastes.
non-commissioned officer for one stain, in the cure of consumption I* without a paral­
I the Court. Mr. Justice Talfourd de­
If possible, take along a crate of on his cloak; striking veterans of Boro­ lel in the history of medienc. Since its flrst
SiOChM^
it ha* been apld on agusuntee, aleat
ia.ooj 2o.oo) scribes the scene which followed in wooden plate*. They cost only half a dino in the face for aaluting too slowly; dlacovery
T.OB
no other medicine can stand. If you
! these terms: “ • 1 am here, my Lord, cent apiece, and can be thrown into sending poor wretches lo Siberia fur which
hare a Cough we earneatlv ask you to try iL
&gt;.otf
iS3ffj 30.00, ou the part of the boy Dogood,’ pro­ the tire as fast as they are soiled. Thu* giving too free an answer. In short, Price lOcta, QOcta. and f 1,(» If your lung* are
finches.
ceeded the undaunted Quixote;
His will be avoided a gruesome element of during tbe lapse of years this Colonel sore. Cheat, or Back’ Ijsme, and Shiloh’s
Is couceeded to be the best.
। Lordship cast a moment's glance on the wreck.
had made himself so detested by his Porous Floater. Sold by F. T. Boise.
ANSWER THIS QUESTION.
; printed list, and quietly said: • Mr.
H the expedition involves a nde of men that he reaped a frightful ven­
Wbv do to many people we aee around u*.
1
Hunt,
I
see
no
name
of
any
boy
Dogood
geance
from the seeds of haired he
several miles, let the aforesaid camp­
tion and eight centa for each subsequent tnacrseem
to
prefer
to
suffer
and
be
made
miserable
Bv
a strict Atention to business, and square
in the paper of causes,’ and turned to­ out be made responsible for the pres had sown.
Uoc.
bv indlgeetlou, coifttlpetion. dizziness, loea of dealing with all our rastomera, we hope to mer­
OlOiO HTR(»NG,
ward the door of his room. ■ My Ixird,’ ence of an ax or hatchet, some nails,
One morning, during parade, he sud­ appetite, coming up. of tbe Food, yellow vklu, it a liberal patronage from the farmers of thia
Editor and Proprietor.; vociferated the orator, • am I to have no and a coil of light rope, and possibly a
when
for
73cta.
wb
will
sell
them
Shiloh
’
s
Vltadenly saw tile off from the regiment a
: redress for an unfortunate youth? T spadv. These are always convenient company of soldiers, bearing, instead llzer, guaranted to cure them. Sold by F. T. viclntly.
Milla on railroad,—east of depot.
thought your Lordship was sitting for in case of accident or break down. If of muskets, those long rods which cut Boise.
SHILOH’S CATTARRH REMEDY, A mar­
II. R. IHCRiySOX A co. w
I the redress of injuries in a court of he is really a competent camper be will
deeply into the flesh at every blow.
velous cure fur Catarrh. Diphtheria, Canker
: ‘ justice?
iusticer *O!
‘O! no, Mr. Hunt,’
’ etill
ftill calm- also have ‘ handy a supply of courtNevertheless, he had given ho orders! mouth, and Head Ache. With each bottle
SbrrilT Sale.
VILLAGE OFFICERS.
iv responded the Judge; ’I am sitting at plastcr and a flask of brandy; the latter There was no soldier to chastise.
here I* an ingenious nasal injector for the
Notice 1* hereby riven that by virtue of *
n»«&gt;re successful treatment of three complaints
Nisi Prius, and I have no right to re­ only to be used iu case .of accident, and
•• What is that for?" he demanded.
writ ot Fiertficiaa, i.-aurei out of the Circuit
without
extra
charge.
Price
SOcta.
Sold
by
dress any injuries except those which to constitute the sole supply of spirit­
Court lor tbe county of Kent, In favor of wDA grenadier advanced from the ranks, F- T-Boisk.
may be brought before the jury nnd uous liquor attached to tbe expedi
llam Hake against the Ronis and chatties and
and replied with temble coolness:
real estate of William E. Buel, tn tbe county
me in the causes appointed tor trial.’ l tion.
Marshal*—.lame* L. Gregory.
“ For thee!”
of Barry, to inc directed and delivered. I did on
•
My
Lord,'
then
said
Mr.
Hunt,
some]
A
Vegetable
Product,
Trustees—IL A. Barber, F. T. Boise. H. W.
If it is objected that undue space is
The entire regiment, non-commis­
the 34th day of July last, levy upon and take
Dcmaray, H. R- Dickinson, H. M. Lee and what subdned by the unexpected amen­ devoted herewith to provisions. 1 reply
Only used in Arm’s Aguk Cure, has all the right, title and interest of the raid AVBsioned
officers
and
soldiers,
were
in
the
Chas. Lentz.
proven itself a never falling and rapid
ity of the Judge. • 1 only desire to pro­ that the commissariat is the main thing
E. Buel in and to the following described
plot, which had been concocted in the cure for every form of Malarial Dis­ Uatn
real estate; that to to say all that certain piece
test.’ • O! is that all?’ said Lord Ellen­ to be provided for. The landscape and
barracks. .The whole regiment was order, Fever and Ague# or Chills and or parrel of land des&lt;-dx-d a* followa, to-wit:
SertrtiM.
boro ugh; ‘by all means protest, and go the weather are unalterable when once
present nt the terrible spectacle. The Fever. No Injury follows its use, and
The east one half (X) of thc ea,t on’',uUf &lt;K)
about your business.' So Mr. Hunt pro­ a start is made; but a good-natured
H-fthc south west quarter
of section thlrtjHRISTIAN CHURCH-F .A. Bl*ael,Paator. tested. and went, about his business; j and congenial party may easily have Colonei wa* seized, his uniform torn off, its effects are permanent. It rouses ,'flve (33,) in town (8.) north of range sevrt (7)
he was tied down in a wheelbarrow, the system to a condition of vigorous
Service- every Sabbath at 10.30 a. m. and and my Lord went unruffled to his din­
&lt;e«-«t, in Bern- county, Michigan, all of whieh I
■
it*
equanimity
disturbed
by
an
inadu
nnd
wheeled
up
and
dowu
before
thu
7 p. m. Sabbatli school at 12 m. Prayer meet­ ner, aud both parlies "ere content.'
health, cleanses the blood of malarial
4%^cxpore fur sale at public auction or vendue
j
quate
or
unattractive
luncheon.
ing every Thurnlay evening
ranks of the grenadiers, armed with ■poison, and imparts a feeling of com­ to the blgbcst bidder, at tbttytortii front door
Great Judges have - aS ways been the ' There will probably be a few men in
of the court house in Hastings, in said county,
ethodist episcopal church-a. objects of intense respect and venera­ the part) who will al least pretend that rods, all of whom struck and insulted fort and security most desirable in on the sixteenth day of October next, at
him. The officers who attempted to aid Ague district*. It is an excellent tonic
D. Newton. Pastor, services every S*t&gt;- tion to the English people, and few or­
o'clock in the forenoon.
they
cannot
do
without
tobacco
smoke
their Colonel were immediately seized and preventative, as well as cure, of eleven
tiatli at 10.40 a. m. and 7 p. iu.
Sabbath dinary persons would venture to dis­
Dated thia 31st day of August. A. D. 1882.
after luncheon is over. Let the Queen
all complaints peculiar to malarious,
school at 12 m. Prayer i-cetlng every Thurs­
HENRY M. fiOUGHTAl.lN, Sheriff.
pute without diffidence the law which of the Expedition ask the hunter which nnd bayonets pointed at their throats. marshy and miasmatic regions. The
day evening.
Bv HekbeM M. Lek, Deputy SiierlfL
i
Some
were
taken
away;
others
garruled.
they lay down. There is, perhaps, no
I). E. C&lt;-RHiTT, Fll’fs Atty.
3&lt;M5.
VY LODGE NO. 37, K. of P., meet* at ito more amusing or Hngrant abuse of this way the wind ia, and banish all tho । Univ one soldier Attempted to take
smokers at least two hundred yards to part with them. Then a Sergeant, still over any other compound Is that it
Castle Hall. Nashville, Michigan, every
Friday evening, for the encouragement and confidence in judicial acquirements than j leeward. — C. L. Norton, in Christian pallid from the effects of his last whip- contains no Quinine, Arsenic, or min­
eral ; consequently it produces no
support of all worthy, true, steadfast and hon­ tho proceedings of Sir Edward Coke Advocate.
। ping with the knout, put his musket to
orable Brother Knlghto.
when he went in search of his daughter,
' the soldier's temple and blew bis brains quinism or injurious effects whatever
/ii , miiui
....... .... ....----- *
D. L. Smith K. K- 8. Orno Strong, C. C. lie had lived for years on very bad
upon the constitution. Those cured
•&gt;r hum .balden M the Probate Office, in ih« City el
The Dry-Goods Clerk.
out.
by it arc left as healthy as if they had
ileum**. iurakl county. «» Saturday the 3d dayterms with his wife, who, when be pro­
And all the regiment saw its colonel never had the disease.
Ylisccllitiieoua A'urda.
posed to marry their only daughter to
The dry-goods clerk is
i; a young man
pa*» under the rods.
The direct action of Ayer’s Ague
Sir John Villiers,. carried her off and i who
to stand beho is paid
paid $12.50 a week
we
Present.Ci*nM*Dt Smltl&gt;. JuJrr
I*,•&gt;'«■.
TIT 11. YOUNG, M. D. Office east side of concealed her ala
When it was all over they opened a Cure upon the Liver and Digestive
In the matter of tk* e*lat".. oi I-AHRAk
house at Oatlands I hind "a counter and sell dry-goods. If
v v • Main St, Nashville. Office hours from
kilu-oven. The Colonel was flung into Organs makes it a superior remedy
E. UTAE8, a minor.
’
belonging
to
the
Earl
of
Argyll.
Coke
,
he
can
conceal
his
real
feelings,
and
be
7 to9 a. tn., aud 4 to 7 p. tn.
On rradtos •«»&gt; fi|ln« lhe P“Hll«ndu5r *enfW4.o&lt; .
it,
all
bleeding,
together
with
the
offi
­
for
Liver
Complaints,
producing
many
received information of this, collected polite lo old ladies who o*k for samples
John Wise*, guardian of raid minor, pravlnit that
And remarkable cures, where other medi­
YTT »• AYLSWORTH, M. D.. Physician a body of armed men and put himself of seventeen different pieces of calico, cers who had well obeyed him.
hi* artount »• »uch maniian tbi» day 1104 may
V V • and Surgeon. Office over Boise'* drag
l^beanl and allowedand he Jl»cbar|rd Irom aaM a
have failed.
Encased in a breast­ his employers sometimes increase his when the furnace was well fed. the cines
lru"t upon payment of tbe amount fouaJ due
store; Rooui at Wolcott llouoc- Will promptly at their bead.
For sale by all druggists.
heated it siowly, slowly—until
plate. with a sword at his side, and weekly pay to $15. Five dollars goes soldiers
from him
attend to all day and night calls.
at last that hideous, heavy and revolt- |
pistols at his saddlebow, he arrived for board; the other ten he invests in
R. C. W. GOUCHER, Elects Pbyrictau and with his followers at the outer gate of clothes. h*ir oil and tbe hire of a buggy ing smell ot melting fat and burning i
Burgeon, la prepared to answer al! calls the house, where he repeatedly de­ on Sunday. He wears his hair pasted flesh arose iu the air. which the savages
that may be mad* for hi* *ervice»- Office and
manded his daughter in the King's dowyi on his forehead in a half circle, ot the Russian frontier inhaled some
iotrrealed in
name laying. it down
for law , that if i and is the proprietor of a sweet smile, days ago al a Jewish cemetery at Smar.
---------\TTM. PARMENTER. M. D. Office over death shouldeensue it" would
'' 'be jnstifia-which spreadsail across his countenance gon.
V v Hull'* Drug star*, VennoutvUle, Mich. ble homicide in him, but xuurder in
But tbe tragedy of Novgorod was
and diffuses itself over the whole estab- '
HAS. H. BRADY, Lawyer, Circuit C4urt those who opposed him. Such an opin­ lishment when the up-town young ladies not yet over!
Comtnl**loc».-, Real EaUte aud Insurance ion coming from so inspired a source, call to get a ribbon matched. He as­
An imperial courier bore to the Czar
Agt- Prompt attention given to ell builnea*was enough to cause the most resolute
the news of the mutiny.
Nicholas
Is Recommended by Physlclanqj
entrusted to my care Conveyancing a special­ garrison to tremble, and the result was sures these young ladies that it is ‘ ’ no listened, became white, but said noth­
trouble to show goods;” be is respect­
circulated in said County of Barry, onee In eech
ty. Office opposite Union Hou**.
that Coke recovered his daughter with­ fully deferential to matrons with mar- ing except to order four batteries of
week for two *--------- ----------- -------------““
d-y ■'f hearing
A. FOOTE, PHYSICIAN A SURGEON. out much difficulty. — Wit and Wisdom riablo daughters; is charmingly famil­ artillery to Novgorod. Ten days after
[A true'copy ’
• Succsaor to Dr. Wickham. Office sec­ oj the Bar.
iar with country customers, and digni­ a white-haired and grav-muslached Ma­
guarantee that It will cura any
(51 54)
„ ----------------ond door north of the Naahvilie Houac’.resiand
wo
will
forfeit
the
abateamoonl
F. T. CotcBovs. Attorney for oetltlcuer.
fied and noncommittal with male pur­ jor-General. accompanied bv a single
dedee fl ret door north of the Wokotl'HouseLfttfsiuin * single instanceThe Picnic of the Period.
chasers who forget whether it was foul aide de-canip, knocked at the door of
Prompt attention to calle night or day.
It la unlike »ny «*"«■»■ fitarrh remedy, aa
There are two kinds of picnics; to wit. yard* of blue insertiou or a quart ef the barracks which the soldiers had
MORY PARADY, Justice ot the Peace.
,
never
left
since
tbe
murder
of
their
foulard nainsook double-width striped &gt;
Office, Comer Main and Sberuian Streets. social and commercial.
distraauncm*«***,**k yourDru&lt;ri»ttot 1^and
chiefs.
sccarr mo imxtxtiob os tumrvn. i&gt; *»*
The first usually includes a select hose that they were told to get.
The dry-goods clerk wears a seal ring
LIE$HAUSER. Merchant Tailor and deal- company of judiciously selected friends;
The General gazed coldly upon those
AGENTS! l'"or Geu. Dodge's new book,
tmmadiately. Price. 75 rent* per bottle.
• er in Ready Mode Clothing. See me the second comprises the members of a and a gorgeous expanse of shirt cun. pale men, all neatly and faultlessly uni­
F. J. CHENEY L CO., Tolcdl. Ohio.
THrRTY-THRFfT years among
before you purchase clothing. Fite guar­
church, school, or society. The differ­ When a customer has got all be has or­ formed. who gave him the military
anteed. '
dered.
the
clerk
says.
••
Anything
else?"
salute,
ence between them is that Qie tirst calls
HATCH A CO., Manufacturers of Taffy । for diplomatic tact oq. tbe part of the and then, in a very affluent voice,
Not a reproach—not one useless word.
A Introd action by Gen. W. T. Sherman. Cootam* (
• CandlA., Chocolate Drop* and Cannels. management, and the second demands shouts •' Cash:’’ When he returns the He only said to them
*__.LZ-.I - - J---- - t ■ . - . -___I
.1____ ..__ ,__ . _
Fruit*. Ftacy Candf?*, Cigars. Tobacco . etc.,
customer's change he again says: i'
“At 6 o’clock to-morrow morning
always iu siock. becond door north of the administrative and exe^uFn.- ability.
daring tt years among th
A satisfactory picnic iuiplios, tirst, a “ Anything else?’7 Why he says it we the regiment will assemble in undress
post office.
Great
&lt;
West.
Splendidly
{ pleasant day; secondly, a congenial cannot understand, as no one has ever uniform and without arms at the Tartar
RANK BAKER, Manufacturer of ftoot* : party; thirdly, a suitable place; and known the query to enure a customer camp, upon the Little Square. Order
and Shoes, jwgged or tewed. Repairing
to purchase even an additional shirt of the CzskT.’’
promptly attended to, at tbe *.gu of the redfourthly, a sufficient luncheon.
1. The unknown quantity regarding .button.
boot, east side Main Sl
Not one voice replied. But the next
After the store is closed in the even­
tbe weather is the most formidable dif­
day upon the narrow square, all in
TACOB OSMUN. Llvemuan, barn near Wol­
Chicago Interior.
ing, Che dry-goods clerk refres' «• him­
ranks without arms/in their long gray I
cott House. First daa* turnouts at reason­ ficulty, and cannot be altogether elimi­
able rate* S|x-clal rate* to commercial men. nated until the whole affair has become self by rolling up the nieces of goods coats, their Sarpt-iq*’8 al tbeir usual
that,
in
the
course
of
business,
he
has
Funeral and weding parties furnished with car? historical.
Consult Vminor's predic­
post*, all tbe mutinous soldiers were
It read* like a romance, and it far superior to any
riages on abort notice.
tions, or the signal service, or the local opened during the day, and in discus­ | there, in lines regular as if adjusted to
took ever publi'-lied on tl»e subject." The CJucaet
sing the financial
nciai nnu
nnd soettu
social suiuutag
standing
.
Inter Oeean : M It vividly portray* the Indian just
■ ?.‘“
- ~nth a double line of lanceTJRAUN BROS.. Shoemaker*. Special atten- weather prophet if you Like, but cau­ ana tho imperfections
srfections
!
*
su
n
K'
of
character
of
[
“
nv,
i
-!-&gt; tion given to fine and seared booto, also tiously provide for post]xmement. and
I bearing
irin' Cosaacks before and behind.
999'
repairing. All manufactured work made from in any cose take a full supply of um­ tlie old ladies who have an insatiable ’ 'rJ
craving for sample*, but who never buy ' Then
en all
’ at ouce from every far spire,
l-est of stock aud warranted. First dour south brellas and waterproofs.
waiting tbousandal It l» the opportunity of a life­
,( Wil
*11 uio
the gicai.
great bells
uciib
began w
Lrcgau
to toll.
tun.
time for rapid money making! Remember, new
Boise’* hardware.
anything.
Y. Leave the composition of the par­
The Cossack horsemen withdrew. Only
■fche
dry-goods
’
elerk
lives
in
a
board
­
ellogg a bell,
Planing ty. if the affair is of tho social ty pe. to . „ . „„„ u,,,,
. . the unarmed infantry remained upon
house, in an 8x10 room that has a
MUI. Planing and
the ladies. There is always some one ing
f*5..■
. „ opening
■„
th®“square,
waiting!
CO., ctlicsjo, III.
ibere with afolded
lohf arms,
low roll
ot ;
window
‘u* 1 v Then
among them who has a knack at bring­ ■mall
tho djing echoo, d
, „d w.,h it tromR^i tbe a&gt;ening together people who like one yard, through which tn&lt;
BROWN’S IRON BITTERS aro
4he smell of rooked codfish balls ;
. ..
. , ,,
.
anoChers company.
The trouble is to of
bo dutiuctlr beard a. they gently
tl” '?“¥•
’ola certain cure for till diseases
HAB. W. DEMARAY, Dealer ta Watches, persuade tbe ones who do not know may
requiring a complete tonic; espe­
Clock*, fine Jewelry and Silverware. Being bow to do this to let it alone. A small Ooi from th. fau-henon th. Jentag I *%’.while hnt
,breeze.
m_ His
u:.:ambition
ts*_
loeu nothing was heard awhile but
a praotkal Jeweler, patrons can depend upas
cially Indigestion. Dyspepsia, Inter­
in life is to mar- 1'
having their repairing done right. Two door* pleasant picnic is better than a large
mittent Fevers, Want of Appetite,
ry some girl whose father will set him the thunder of the cannon in that city,
disagreeable one.
otherwise silent as a cemetery, when
Loss of Strength, Lack of Energy,
3. The place must be one of nature's up in business or” to be a drummer.— men, women and children kneeling be­
etc. Enriches the blood, strengthown. A picnic does not merit tho name luat Siftings.
fore their holy images, were praying
amidst
artificial
surroundings.
Still,
a
th-village.
for tho soldiers they were shooting
lift to the nerves. Acta like a
—The Reform club in London is made
farm-house or a barn may be convenient
doam
in
the
square.
And
during
an
charm on the digestive organ*,
iram r. Dickinson, maaufactarer ot
There up of 1,400 members who pay $55 each interval in tbe cannonade, a hymn roll­
and dealer in Hard Wood Lumber. Build- in case of a sudden shower.
removing all dyspeptic symptoms,
yearly
dues.
The
income
from
sub
­
must
be
somewhere
within
reach
a
tog Material a special ty. Cash paid for loga Mill
ed up from tbe square; for the soldiers
such a* tasting the food. Belching,
scriptions
and
debentures
is
$80,000
a
and yard on Bbennan St.,a&gt; ILOR-R. croealng. spring or a brook, a river or a lake.
were dying with the prayers of their
Heat in tbe Stomach, Heartburn,
Certainly drinkable water of some kind. year. The dinney* are not now what childhood upoa their lips. The cannon
etc. The only Iron Preparation
AME8 FLEMING.
Jeweler end
they were when Soyer, and after him
The
most
delightful
landscape
in
the
Watch-maker, ci
that will not blacken tbe teeth or
Franeatelli, directed the cuisine. Th&lt; thundered for hours. Then all was si­
d« signs.
Rock- world will lose its charm in the pres­ committee is largely made up of met lent. Powder and iron rested awhile.
give
headache. Sold by all Drugence of thirst.
The cannoneers entered the square
giirts at *1.00 a bottle.
i
4, The ladies naturally assume charge whose digestion is not improved with and recoiled at tho sight of those ranks
BROWN
CHEMICAL
CO.
age.
They
only
lunch;
they
neret
of the luncheon. They should consult
promptly att»od«d tc •
of men mown down like wheat—the
RNO STRONG, plain and fancy.
Baltimore, Md.
beforehand and decide what each shall dine. Consequently the lunch is the marah of blood. From under the dead
Th* beat facilities tor doing *
best in
London
provide, so that there may not be an cheapeat and
they pullod out a few still breathing
The
club
committee
numbers
16,
undue proportion of any one thing.
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.
victims, able to live awhile.
ColdJUct de bauf mak.es a capital the political, 15. Of the latter Lord
“What shall be done with them. Gen­
Kensington and Mr. Lewis Morris, VioeW- NIBKERN. Attorney aud Cooncellor center-piece. Let it be trimmed free Chairman and Secretary, are the moat eral? Shall we put them in the hos­
from all superfluities as touch as possi­
• al Law, practices in an Blate Courts. Col
pital?"
ketion* promptly attended to. Office over ble, so that when out in slices it will active.
“Put them under the knout!”—Farit
Spaulding's store, Hastings, Mich.
look tempting under tbe bright out-of­
—The cashier of the Palmer House. Figaro.
door light, and little or nothing will be Chicago, is a woman; two others also
N ASHVILLE HOUSE,
left to make a litter. Cold roast chick­ have responsible positions at handsome
raspoodenve stricti&gt; confidential
Price*
—A Texan stepped into a Philadel­
three of any roll* ble agencr.
en or turkey, especially if the boned salaries; other women are employed by
WerWerto Officiate lathe PatentOffit
L M. Flikt it Son, Props,
species can be obtained, is eminently the proprietor to collect his rents and phia tonsorial saloon to have his hair
. desirable. Head cheese or some of the look after his money. This attempt to cut. Tbe officiating artist, having en­
similar appearing preparations of veal place the sexes on an equality is ex­ veloped his victim's neck in towels and
securely in the
make excellent entrees. So far as pos­ cosed by the proprietor on the misera­ compressed him
sible, avoid viands of which a part must ble pretext that women do not visit chair, opened the conversation by
“You are a little ' ner­
be thrown away.
Bones, scraps of saloons aud play billiards, spending saying:
vous, sir, 1 perceive. Allow me to
•kin, and the like, lying about on the their money and probably hla.—Dcirotl
say that our “Capillary Elixir” not only
ground, do not harmonize with tbe en­
pATHBUN BOUSE.
covers bald heads with a luxuriant
vironment.
growth of hair, bat calms the mind and
Sandwiches there should be, of
co., iv
restores the whole nervous system to a
The Spitz Jog healthy equilibrium. What do you do
course, and of two or three kinds, bqt sycophantly 'polite.
let the meat be chopped into fine mor- that fawn* and lick* your hand to-day for nervousness in Texas?” The rep­
■els. It is highly exasperating to bite is apt to bite to-morrow, while the resentative of the Lone Star State look­
at something that will not come away, gruff mastiff will be faithful to you. ed up rerenely and answered: 4,We
and it fa not preUy to see, either. Sar­ even after you have proved faithless to
dines and some of the dainty canned him. And the nature of mankind par­
relishes in the way of meats are very takes of the same general characteris­
acceptable, but the real article is al­ tics as that of the canine kingdom.—
Ct ths
ways preferable to the canned variety. Chicago News.
United

CUSTOM

GRINDING!

FLOUR. MEAL AND MILL FFER
Our

Graham Flour

RashiilU giwrtort}.

C

M

I

D
C

L

HALL’S

fiatarrhfiure

S1OO

Hmiled

E
S

OUR WILD INDIANS

P
F

IRON

AGENTS

K

MB

C

H

NO PATENT NO PAY
MTEITS

J

O

IRYENriOHS

P

mniuoRS

000 000-

Choi

consumptives:^

HAT FkikKifchtSKiM

�And
rite
P Jtodway, . &lt;Xrj-gooAs
hundred feet; two men were re­
ed. aud three slightly bruited.

in violation of individual and personal rights
and contrary to the fundamental principles
Tira number of deaths In the Philippine
Islands on the 7th from cholera was 449.

wMb a crhuiaa! assault upon a white

T ho* become almost epidemic at
to the impure

State Convention al San Frandaco on tho 7th
»nd nominated 'Tiomu J’. McQulddy for Gov­
ernor.
A Salt Lake dl«patch of the 7th says tbM
the Mormon priesthood had been tnstruettag
their foliowets to disobey tho law rulings of
the Utah Commission. Bishops had also
been appointed to oversee the registration of

the 9th. Half the population were Bleeping

Iowa’s State Fair a’. Dea Moines had 30.000
Txxak ad vires ot the 7th state that the re­

,

widespread destruction, the Concho and Rio
Grande Rivera being out of their banks, subnrfrgiug miles of country.
Nine ease* of yellow fever were reported at
wa ■
• V;. ....
w. k
A young son of Henry B. Auehindoaa, of
tNew York City.
die.! al N
.
The a
phydaimfailure* Li the United States.
during tho seven days ended on tbe 7th agrre-

Mu. Bru:. *, who was injured by Barnum's
elephant at Troy, N. Y., some time 'since, died
-on the 81b, and Mm. Langley and tbe husband
•ot Mrs. Bums, who wert? also hurt by the in­
' .furiaied animal, were in a dying condition.
Jobs Ruk»t, a Ibhermaa living at Secretary
'Crock, Md., while druuk on the 8th seised hts
■eight-yuaivold boy by the feet and struck his
bead on the floor. kfllirg him instantly.
The eeMluft*of the Social Science Associa­
tion were closed ou tbe evening of the 8th, at
tJaratog*. N. Y. Next year's sessions will he
held at Use same place, beginning, ScptcmTub Board of Health al Pensacola, Fla., on
.the 9th declared yellow fever epidemic.
ported. The number of patients at Matamo­
ras,* Tex., had decreased to sixty. Bruwnitville reported fifty-one new cases and three

the 10th.
In tbe Supreme Court at Providence, R. L,
■on the 9th the petition of Z. Chaffee, trustee
and assignee of the Sprague estate, for advice
and aaalstance In the matter of the sale of
Chnonchet to F. D. Moulton, was dismissed,
thus leaving cx-Governor Sprague in practical
possession of Canonchet indefinitely.
A heavy storm prevailed all day on the
10th on the South Atlantic seaboard. The
wind attained a velocity of fifty-five miles an
seamen drowned.
At Laredo, Tex., on the 10th tbe Rio Grande
was twenty-two feet high and still rislng^sub-

being swept off. The debris floating with the
water indicated great destruction at property
further north.
Fifty deaths have recently occurred from
Ophtberla in Pittsylvania County, Virginia,
whole families having perished, and more
Tita stacc-cfech running between Seligman

evening of the 9th by two masked men.
heavily armed, and the ten passengers in the

AT Cleveland ou tbe 10th two boys, named
John and Henry Bender, attempted to light a
fire with coal oil, when tbe can exploded, and
they were so badly burned that they died in

A Jew it Denver recently committed buIdde because be lost a quantity of gold-dust.

436 cases of yellow fever at Brownsville, Tex.,
aud 22 death*. The total number of cases
■Wince the beginning of the epidemic was 1,539,
aaeola, Fla., up to the 9th then. had been 39
Dtnuxo the nine days ended on tbe 9th, 10.-

Health Association, the National Board of
Health and various State Boards of Health to
aider tbe question of holding a Medical San­
itary Exhibition In 1881
VicteJ of murdering a landlord, was hanged

•Utt.
During an alarm ot Ore st Cincinnati on

* Catholic Church. In the frantic rush for

A Denver dispatch of the Hth states that
George Nesbitt, residing in Donna Ana Coun-

{nation* made on the 7th. Republican—Ne­
braska, First, A J. Weaver; Third, E. K. Val-

tion; M: K. Tunrer, nominated by bolters; eighty-seven buildings being consumed al
Michigan, Seventh, John T. Rich, renomina­ Tort an Prince, with an estimated loss of
ted; Pennsylvania. Twelfth, J. A Scranton;
Michigan, Eleventh, Edward Brictung. Dcmo- An&gt;yr,ln Porto Elco.
eratic-Ohlo, Eighteenth, J. W. Wallace;
Ise settlement of the recent bloody out­
Twentieth, David R. Paige; Missouri. Eighth, break Corea agrees to pay £500,000 to tbe
John J. O'Neil; Minnesota, Fifth, E. P. Bar­ Japanese Government, and £50,000 to the
num; Alabama, Third, W. C- Gate*, renomi­ relatives of her murdered subject*.
nated; Texas, Sixth, J. C. Buchanan. Green­
back-Michigan, Ninth. Reuben Straight.
11th for 41,000,000.
Russia to bring back the remain* of Com­
The wife o’ D. A. Radcliffe, a banker at
mander Delxmg and hts comrades of tbe Danville, Ont., died in a dentist’s chair ou
Jeannette. The bodies will reach this country the 11th while under tbe influence of chloroabout the middle of December.
The Republican*.of the Fifth Illinois Dis­
There were 340 deaths at Manila (Philip­
trict on the iftli nominated R. R. Hitt for Con­ pine Islands) and the Provinces on the Kith
gress. and the Democrats of the Second Dis­ from Asiatic cholera.
trict of South Carolina renominated George
D. Tillman.
*
EGYPTIAN WAR NEWS.
Nominations for Congress’were made as
According to the Egyptian correspondent
follow* on tbe 9lh: Democratic—Ohio, Twen­
ty-first District, Martin A Foran; Kentucky,
Tenth, J. S. Hart; Tennessee, 'Ninth, Rice of 98,100 men, of whom 80,MO are Bedouin
A. Pearce; Texas, Seventh, George P. Finlsy.
Republican—Pennsylvania, Eighth, Isaac McIia*e; Tenth, James 8. Briery. Greenback— that the Sultan offered Egypt to England
two months ago, on the same condition on
We»t Virginis, Third, D. D. T. Farnsworth.
Luther II. Hutcuinbon, Speaker of the which she took Cyprus, and that England de­
Maine House of Representative*, died at clined the offer. At IsmalUa a general mow
to tbe front had been ordered, and a deeisSw:
Lewiiton on the 9th.
The skeleton of Watson Brown, son of attack on the enemy was soon expected.
Arabi’s forces were still busily engaged oo
John Brown, ha* been found doing duty in a
lodge of the Knight* of Pythias at Martins­ ■ the Sth In strengthening the defenses of TeF
el-Kebir, whither he had brought alKhe troops
ville, Ind.
The Utah Commission have reported lo from Cairo, together with the negro regiments
tbe Interior Department their action under and forty gun a A rcconnoissance by tbe
from
Kassassin
caused
a
the Edmunds Act creating the Commission. British
They have appointed officers to revise the
registration and formulated a series of rules forces. The Khedive had issued slrtagnut
to govern such revision which, they believed,
would be satisfactory. They also expressed
the belief that an election would fallow which canal hod been cut above Tel-el-Kcblr, thus
would be Impartial and satisfy tbe .Govern­ flooding the low lands In that section.
Arabi Bet’s attack ot the English force*
ment and country.

a disastrous ‘ move. The British surcea was
complete, the Egyptians leaving two hundred
dead on the field, while the English loan w«
alight. Four Egyptian officers., who surren­
nsted George W. Way for Governor; T. O. dered nt Ramlch, said that Arab! bad but elx
Saunders for Lieutenant-Governor, and L. J. thousand troops at Kafr-el-Dwar. Aratei
Pasha was said to have diverted the canal st
Hcrzlnger for Secretary of State.
The Maine State election on the 11th re­ lamailia around hl* Intrenchment*. A large
sulted In the success of tho entire Repub­ party of Bedouins approached Meks, and a
few
succeeded In entering, but were repulsed
lican ticket, Frederick Roble being elected
Governor by a plurality estimated si 7,000. by the British.
An Alexandria dispatch of tbe 11th state*
The Republicans also carried the four Con­
gressional Districts, electing Messrs. Reed, that tbe Egyptian loss la the recent fight at
Dingley, Bortelle and Milliken, and have' a Kat sariin was over one hundred killed and
majority of two-thlrda on joint ballot in the many wounded. The British had four men
killed and sixty wounded. The bulk of tbe
State Legislature.
Ajteh being out for nearly three days the Engilah army bad arrived at Kassaasin.
Jury in the Star-route cases again reported on
LATER NEWS.
the afternoon of the 11th that they were un­
able to agree. The Court then stated that it
bail come to the conclusion to accept a partial Britlsb forces at KaasaMtn was issued on tbe
verdict. The jury then rendered a verdict of evening of tbe 12th by General Wolseley. Tho
acquittal as to Turner and Peck, and of guilty tents and baggage would be transported by
rail Boats had gone up the fresh*
they were unable to agree. On the o'ajection
of Merrick that Peck had not been arraigned, structed by the Egyptians. Llcutcnant-Comand consequently could not be in­
cluded in the verdict, tbe foreman repeated detailed to accompany the British army, had
the report os to the others, but left arrived at Alexandria. Tbe very latest bulle­
out the name of Peck. The jury were then tin stated that the British were bivouacking
discharged, and HtmldC and Williams, for
Miner and Rerdell respectively, gave notice of with orders to reach fighting distance at an
a motion in arrest of judgment and for a new
trial. One of the jurors gives the following
The Michigan Democratic and Greenback
information aa to the result of tbe balloting State Central Committee have placed L. G.
on flrat ballot aa to all defendants: With the
exception of Turner the vote stood: For con- State Treasurer, Her Router. of Detroit, dadlned.
lot the vote as to Brady stood: For convic­
tion, 10; for acquittal. 3. Tbe vote a* to &amp;
W. Dorsey stood; For conviction, 9; for on tbe 12th, and thirty cases st Po.Jt Isabel
acquittal, 3. The vote as to J. W.
Dorsey .tood: For conviction, 10; for
acquittal, 3. The Tote as to Valle stood:
Advices of the 12th from Maine state that
For conviction, 11; for acq ulttal, L Dickson, the Republicans had carried the State by a
plurality of 10,000 for Roble for Governor.
Court a willingness to present certain facts The indications were that the Senate would
as to tbe alleged attempted bribery, but the stand twenty-eight Republicans and three
Court stated that that was a matter which Fuslonists, a Republican gain of six; and the
would probably be investigated In another House nlacty-scven Republicans and fifty-four
Fuslonists, a gain of. thirteen- All fourtef
afterward publicly tiie Republican Congressmen were elected,
Which was a net gala of one.
A Jacksonville dispatch of the 12th says
Department of Justice offered him 125,- that great damage was done In Middle and

A VEXED CLEGYMAN.
Even the j-atfence of Jeb wcuid become ex­
hausted were lie a preacher and endeavoring to
interest lilt audience while they were keeping
up an incessant coughing, making it impossible

al! this be avoided by simply using Dr. King’s

‘•ROUGH ON RAT8.” ' .
The thing dc»lred found at last. Ask Drug­
gist for “Rough on Rats." It clears out rats’

Eternity is long enough to make up for the
ills of our brief troubled Life here-

isrorroTTO tkitklkks.
1 Inducements are offered you by the
on Route, It will pay vou to read their
:ments lobe found elsewhere in thia

When was * man ever weak that that the de­
vil did not charge down upon him.
SKINNY MEN.
Wells’Health Rencwer. Absolute cure

tire functions, fl. at druggists.. Mich. Depot
JAMES E. DAVIS de COTDetroit, Mich.

Tbe September number of Good Health con­
tains an excellent variety of interesting and
practical articles on subjects relating lo the
care and pcrtcrraUon of health, among which
is an Illustrated paper on the “Rational Treat­
ment of Consumption” explaining the meth­
ods employed and the results obtained in the
scientific treatment of thi* formidable disease.
Editorial bints on seasonable topics and ex­
posure of medical frauds, add greatly to the
practical interest of the journal. We know of
no way Id which a dollar can be more judicious­
ly expended than in paying for a year's
scription to this magazine. Published at
tic Creek, Mich.
X'asbviile fflnrketa

FOREIGN.
The American Consul at the port of Manila

the lith, and fifty-eight new cases developed
at Browu-tvllle, Tex.
The steamer Peninali, which v.-as recently

Paints, Oils and Colors, Doors, Glass, Sash and
Blinds Iron and Wood Pumps,Wagons, Buggies,
Carriages and Platforms, Drills, Cultivators
Seeders, Plows, Land Rollers, "Reed Spring­
tooth Harrow.
Plow Points for AU the Leading Plows
B-AZEdBElD 'WT'R.’Fl
A Large assortment of Shelf Goods and Tinware, and the best
Tinner in the County. ।
FOR COOD8 CHEAP CALL AND SEE ME

Pioneer Store
SELLS GOODS EXCEEDINGLY LOW.
In order to make room for our Fall and Winter Goods we
are selling our finest stocKs of Clothing at prices that re­
quire no bantering to sell.

HERE ARE BARGAINS FOR YOU!
Summer Pants for 95c—Think of It!
For fall and winter trade are comming in.
lent and cheap. Examine them

They are excel­

Of the best quality and lowest in price. Try our 40c Tea.
Don’t buy poor eggs unless you prefer them. Our egg tester
tells you which are poor.

CASH PAID FOR BUTTER AND ERBS

NEW VICTOR SEWING MACHINE is VICTOROUS
Ready pay secures for you all the advantages in trade.

ton crop suffered severely, and in some

The Republicans of New Hampshire met In
State Convention st Cowcord on the 12th and
nominated 8amne! W. Halo for Governor.
Tbe platform adopted indorses the principles
of a protective tariff; approves the President's

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN
At Buxton’s new brick, have full and complete lines In

SCHEDULE

OF

EXAMINATIONS

The following places and times have be*n
designated by the board of County Examiners
for holding of public examination for teachers
in Barry county. The Secretary is empowered
to grant apecial certificates upon satisfactory
examination, which are valid only until tbe
next public examination by the board:
Saturday, Sept. 23. Middleville, Special
”
Oct. 14, NaahvtUe,
“
Friday and Saturday, Oct. 27 and
28. Hastings.
Regular.
Sat. Nov. 4, Prairieville,
Special.
The examinations will be both oral and writlatter.
‘
‘
Candidates for third

A BXrzRR shock of earthquake occurred at

Gents l-'ni-iiiHliinc- Goods

If you want something new, neat and nobby, just take a look at our stock of

CDFFS, COLLARS, TIES, HANKERCBIEFS, JEWELRY, ETC

graphy, raiding, writing, arithmetic, geogra­
phy, grammar, spelling, (J. 8. history and dvil
government.
For second grade the additional requirements
will be elementary algebra, phvalology and
physical geography.
For first grade, general history
natural
phlloaopby.
Experience and success In teaching will be
Important factors In determining the qualifica­
tions of teachers, especially of the candidates
for the bigbergradew of certificates. Candidates
for third grade certificatm most paas70 per
. ■ -f
..L..I
---- -

FOR THE LEAST MONEY

will be required.
The board will only examine the papers of

T. B. DIAMOND, Chairman.
CLARK B. HALL.

M

Naahvilie, Apr. 30,1883.

PRINDLE &lt;fc CHIPMAN

DOMESTIC

We Are Still Here! SEWING

MACHINE

And shall stay and coulifiuc to supply the

MOST

GROCERIES

Dura
able

OF A NO. 1 QUALITY

RUNNING

tutor who was recently arrested In Ireland,

total clearluCT were

filled with Stoves of 20 Different Kinds

nouuces himself as an Independent Demo­
cratic candidate for Congress from the First
Missouri District.

been approached from different dlrectious
with offeswof from I3U0 to 4300.

Twenty new cases of yellow fever and two

tiUtles.
Two destructive conflagrations were re-

to-that place
struck
—.
was
thete, and took bi« brother’* port;
Knapp making it exceeding intferewtug lor both.
At Irugth Tom got
away from bi* autagonwt, grabbed a
weight, from the ncalea and hurled it
at Knapp, hittng him on the chin.tmttiDg n &lt;leej» giudi and hurting him
quite severely. Knapp wan arrcattil
for luumalt aud battery, tried,’ and
fined $10 and coma Taken all in all,"
bis Hniuoement wae not m&gt; very amiraing. and wan quite expensive.—Hast­
ings Banner. ,,
’
-

ia

MONUMENTAL U lhe Finest Bound
Stove Made.

of comuran schools as essential to National
security and prosperity.
x umkzh of failure* in the grain and pro-

FRESH EVERY DAY,

Peninsular Stove Co.’s Stoves
OP- DETROIT.

maritei. Xinra. V,rr Fumllur,. !«&lt;•.

tbe Hth from the

ROCK BOTTOM PRICES.

stated 308 of tbe 225
tacky, Ninth District, W.

ABOUT SEPT. 1

PO1HTS. PIPE. SISKS PTC.
CHAMPION X-(WT SAWS, AKES, ETC.
BU1LDBKS HARDWABF, SASH. iMMjks
CLASS, LOCKS, KNOBS. At. &lt;fr.
NA1L8. IKON, AND STEEL.

�Creek at OH ret.

E. Kuappen a vote of thank*. by rising, blind Charley’* hogs into Eaton’s wheel
of th® cxmnty

FmranxalM L. E. Kn»ppeu to the
diair u toinpomrr
op«.o
Motion Onio Stroliu ot NMbTill. wm
elected temporary secretaryMessrs. T. B. Diamond of Barry,
Gilbert Striker of Baltimore and C- A.
Hough of Woodland, were chosen m
eommittee on permanent organisation
•nd order.of business. Messrs. Geo.
w; Brown.of Irving, Philo A. Sheldon
of Hasting* and Milo J. Goss of Prari®▼ille were tuado committee on creden­
tial*. And the convention adjourn ed
for dinner.
.
At 1:80 the convention was jtgain
called to order. Committee on per­
manent organization and order of bus­
iness made their report, naming L. E.
Knappen president, and Orno Strong
of the con
tion.
tiah through
rinan read the name* of dele­
tes from the different towns who
were entitled to seats in tbe convenvention. Below we append the names
of those from Eastern Barry:
CMUetou-EuKwr Parody, E. H- Malkry, J.
L. Stevens, Oreo Strong, Riner Mead. W. N.

DeYtoe, Jolm Ke^^ Srac Swarthout, L J-

Wbeelcv, F. D. Soules. Repreeentattve-E. &gt; .
Evan*, Jm. Fleming. J. J- Tbtt^, H. A- Bar­
ber. George Norton, H H.tatfka,F-Andros.
8.&lt;hborn, W. H. Atklnaon, Sidney Smith.
Auyrta—Choo. Tuckerman. A. W. Chapin,
WUliam Protl, R. D. Chapin, J. B.. Milla, Goo.
P Bt.
Baltimore—Dr. A. L. VanHorn, Bert Striker,
w. O.Oiwl, H. Mmboo, E G. UenlJ,
1.
Erb.
HMUngv-Sperv E. Pfclllil*
Elmer 8- Thorn, Francis Crackca, B. F. Castle.
.Harting* City—John McElwain. Oncar L.
Crook, George Ooborne. W. H. gchontt. Dr. A.
Philo A Sheldon, loaac W.-Vrooruan, Aaron
M. Black, Nelwin T. Parker
Johnatowu—Wealef A. Clark. Frank BullU,
Willard 8. Nye, Harry Miller, Edward P.
ng. Peter Fisher.
role Grove—T. 8. Brice, E- G. Potter,
jdcr I&lt;tihain. John Calcy. C. J. Norris.
oodlsud-D. B. Kilpatrick, C. A. Hough.
F. Holmes, A W. Diilcnbeck, John Lee,

In answer to the roll call it was found
that every town sent full delegations,
except, Castleton and Yankee Springs,
which lacked one of the regular quoto.
The vacancies were promptly filled
by persons who were present from
their towns. It was also found that
Assyria, Castleton and Yankee Springs
had followed the custom of past years,
and sent two sets of delegates—one to
name county officers and the other rep­
resentative to the state legislature.;
Such delegations were allowed to do
the work for which their towns had
elected them.
The chair appointed W. H. Schantz
of Hastings, Chas. W. Armstrong of
Yankee Springs and T. 8. Brice of
%Iaple Grove, tellers.
Everything being in readiness for
business tbe convention proceeded to
tbe nomination of a representative to
the state legislature. The informal
ballot stead:
Whole number of votes cMt, 110.
Fere Mil rr to choice, 56.
Lycnreui J. Wheeler of Nashville, rac’d.. 44
John W. Brigjra Yankee Springs
Marshall*

J. M. Rogers, Carlton
Scattering
The formal ballot stood

Scattering
Mr. Wheeler was declared the unanemoos nominee of the convention.
The convention then proceeded to
nominate county officers, tbe informal
ballot for sheriff standing:

Jonathan H- Valentine,.HopeIS—
Mr. Cressey was declared the unan­
imous nominee for sheriff.
The informal ballot for clerk gave:

tattering». 1—110
Mr. Mack was declared the nominee.
The informal ballot for treasurer

Frederick Alexander, of MiddhrviBe.. .39

The formal ballot stood:

io-no
Mr. Alexander was declared the
unanimous choice of tbe convention
fur EMMMQME,
Upon motion the roles of order were
sospeuded and Wm. P. Sidnam, the
present incumbent of tbe office of
register of deeds, was declaied the

daring tbe past two terais, aud servi­
ces to th® convention as its presiding
officer; and adfoamed to the court
house square to be entertained and in­
structed in republican arguments for
imll an hour longer by Gen. Byron M.
Cutcheon of Manistee.
CONVKNflON NQTKS.
There were no dark horses.
L. E. Kuappen is boas as chairman.
Again has Nashville been remember­
ed.
.
Tbe crop of young Republicans ia
immense.
“Polithul -adulterers” is an awfal
titie. Marshy.
,.
The woods seem to be as full of Re­
publicans as ever. *
» Clement Smith presided with grace
while Gen. Cateiteon spoke.
One of the most harmonious ever
held, ia the popular verdict.
There were no soreheads, ar least
if there were tbe fact was kept well
concealed.
Castleton has do reason to, nor will
she complain of her treatment at the
hands of the convention.
The ticket is made up of four farm­
ers, three lawyers, two doctors, one,
merchant and one brick-maker.
Tbe various candidates were all pre­
sent, barring Alexander, wearing store
clothes arid anxious countenances.
Within an hour after tbe convention
adjourned the Banner came out, con­
taining a full report of the convention.
This is commendable Marshall and
better than running for office.
L. J. Wheeler, the republican nom­
inee for Representative to the Legisla­
ture, is 53 years old. He has been a
resident of Eastern Barry from early
boyhood and is the pioneer merchant
of Nashville, and is still actively en­
gaged in the dry goods trade in this
village, being rated as one of our most
enterprising citizens. He is a good
citizen—moral, large-hearted, and tem­
perance to tho back-bone. Tbe con­
vention did well to select him aa their
nominee for this important office.
.

Howe’s peaches. The young kids were
tracked to their roest.and another repeitition of rite kind they will be caled on
to answer for tbeir past deeds.
Doxy.
HASTINGS.

Will Geer has returned from the

Geo. Barnes is in New York buying
Milo Williams returns to Louisiana
thia week.
Rev. Bancroft' is away &lt;yi a three
week* vacation.
Miss Shear, of Charlotte, |a visiting
friends in this city.
The new bridge oh Jefles-son street
is nearly ready for the plank.
Mias Anna Brown from Florida is
visiting her brother, Ed.
Mias Belle Greble is attending school
at Forest Lake Seminary, DI.
Our base bollists were beaten by the
Crescents on Tuesday, by u score of 10
to 5.
Mrs, C. F. Dwight, of Chicago, has
been visiting her mother, Mis. Barlow
the past week.
Judge Smith and -W. D. Fuller of
Newago, will address the temperance
meeting next Sunday.
Tbe sportsmen’s club put the water
set up at lottery, for $75. Homer Moul
and John Beasmer were the lucky ones.

Messrs. Sweecy and Clark of the le­
gal fraternity went up to Leach Lake
to indulge in a little piscatorial sport.
They were out in the middle of the
lake smiling sweetly at the Any tribe
by way of persuasion. When sudden­
ly their boat became freakish and they
went down head foremost to make a
formal call ou tbe unpersuaded inhabi­
tants below.
Their boat was small
and they were unable to get into it but
helu themselves up by holding on to
the stern and kicked themselves ashore.
Alex. Christy loaded up with benzine
Wednesday and started out for a time.
He had a brash with several which re
suited in a few scratched noses only,
but finally ran across Blanchard, who
proved to be loaded inside and out.
They got into row and Blanchard drew
BISMARK.
a revolver and fired twice at Christy.
It is not long ago that Blanchard load­
Farewell to dog days.
ed up with poor whisky and flourished
Farm work atill in a beap.
a revolver very close to the nose of a
Manitobian breeze Monday.
young M. D. threatening to blow bis
Wheat sowing is in order now.
brains out for an imaginary wrong.
Politicians alternate with smiles and
Christy has a large family and lives on
charity of the people part of the time.
Everybody wanting to thresh to­
Yet they caa both get all the whisky
morrow without fait •
*
they want.
The Rulison school closed this week
Hans.
Wednesday. Samuel Downs, teacher.
Unless wehave raia we may look for
WOODLAND.
more frost at an early date, and don’t
Business is lively.
forget it,
*
We are all anxious to see and bear
Tbe Bismark school will resume next
«
Monday. A Miss Treadwell wili en­ the new minister.
Eddie Dunningbam has been progineer the fall term.
sented
with
a
baby.
First frost on the morning of the
David Height is patting up a neat
15th. The ground *is dry and some
wire fence in front of his house at the
damage may be expected.
Dan. Halette tried to thresh'a straw­ Center.
School commenced Monday with a
carrier crank the other day. The crank
went in concave, but ended convex- good attendance. Full particulars next
week.
ingly.
W. J. McArthur and D. B. Kilpatrick
Well ye know the boys gave Loo.
are putting in the Marshall furnace in
Snyder a bit of a breeze, Saturday
their dwellings.
night. Now Lou I am glad on’t, be­
Mrs. Steahl was buried one day last
cause ye didn’t give me the job and the
week. Services were held at the
$3.00.'
Lutheran church.
Writist.
W. Finefraugh is digging a new
welt and has one of those iron pumps
BALTIMORE.
found at Glasgow’s.
Sowing wheat.
John Palmerton and Ellis Lamb have
Everybody wants to thresh.
booked $90 per week since they started
Peter Kemcrliug has a dcw horse with their new thresher.
team.
The Rev. Bridenatine was sent to
Hog buyers are offering 6 cents per Cedar Creek, this conference year, and
pound for live bogs.
Rev. Lane takes his place on the Wood­
J. Hall’s house has its looks improv­ land charge.
ed by a coat of paint.
Mr. Colstock is turning out some fine
Cyrus Altman has been confined to harnesses, and if there is any one tbst
his bed, but ii better now.
wants a good honest harness, please
Fifteen hills makes a bushel of pota­ give him a call.
toes this way. Potatoes are commenc­
Our farmers are going away from
ing to rot.
home for their seed wheat. They seem
Miss Alice Erwin, who has been not to be anyways discouraged, for
working at ti»e Rapids, has re tamed there is plenty of wheat being sown.
borne afflicted with the rheumatism.
Our sportsmen are putting in good
F. Wilcox and George ?.ruold had a
time shooting ducks. George says only
set-to because George wouldn't give W.
his portion of three quarts of blackber­ seven fell to one shot That is like
trading tbe old horse off to a farmer in
ries picked on sb ires.
Odesai..
Tbe annual school meeting in the
Ed. Crites was taken with a States
Durfee district passed ofl quietly. D.
warrant last Saturday for forgery. Hin
B. Freeman was eltrcted assessor. The
vote was challenged and he swore it
school houne is to be repaired by a now
in, though not a legal voter. The ex­
ceiling over head and plastering its
amination took place Monday, before
sides. We are to have eight months
Justice Hough.
school this year.
Nell.
bill
J- Madison, while passing up
by Mr. Fishers’, with his steam thresh­
horgan
er, got stack, the teams not pulling

VICINITY LOCALS

Some farmers of Carmel are pre­
paring to try Arnold^ “Gold Medal”
wheat.
*
.
Eaton Rapids Mods ten students tn
various eolleges—and pride-* itself od
with provMona limiting Ute expedition nnd lobeing a literary town.
M. L. Munson of Charlotte, has re­
ceived from Spain an order for a dozen Tbeother- . ____ _ ___ ______ _______
judicial Invcatigotloti. Thf* Invertlgatlon folof his patent lamp holders.
A Wagner apple tree at Grand Ledge
bears a good crop of apples and the
blossom* for another one.
historical; eeoond. &lt;i&gt;-8cribin&lt; tb® conspiracy;
fourth, overt acta; nod, fifth.
John McMullen, of Grand Ledge,has
sued Hamilton Bear for $100 damages
for caMterating his merino buck.
Frank Butler—Eaton Rapids—play­ trouble themselves about that. Whether or
ed with powder aud matches. Same
dictuH-nt was not for them to consid- r. The
old - story—face nnd hands terribly division of money depended upon the queeburned.
A lady took the schtml census in was really tho only consideration for the jury
Charlotte, finding 838 urchins. The —whether there wns a conspiracy, followed by
school 'has enrolled 557 pupils, 60 of
had been held that the Government wm re­
whom are “foreign.”
to accurately. de*cribe th? means.
Judge R.W. Mcloudy, an ex-soldier quired
Whether tbe parties were mutually interested
and once a prominent character of St.
Joseph county, was found dead in bed quence. Ttv-f r taterert in tbe conspiracy must
be coiMhlered. Tbe partita were, according
at Eaton Rapids Sept. 9. Paralysis.
The E. IL Journal tells of a new var­ tracts. and mutually Interested only tn the
iety of wheat called “Bates.” It is a
haiti white wheat, makes excellent the contracts
flour, will not sprout like the Clawson,
Referring to tho defendants* prayersytfudjte
and yields with fair cultivation 30 to Wylie said that-thc conspirators wcreuointly
united for the same purpose, and sevChd^for
40 bushels per acre.
others. Each mjtn stood on his own defence.
A high school grade has been estab­ Thu jury could not convict one man of con­
lished in the Grand Ledge school. The spiracy. but they could convict two of the dototal number of children of school age, L-nilanta. If there tr.id !&gt;4hn only onji overt
last year, was 390, of whom 370 attend­
party committing IL then the defendants must
ed school—an unusually large porpor- fill bo acquitted. Brady had i«i‘n called the
of attendance.
key. the mMtci-kcy, to tbe whole conspiracy,
The lauies cornet bund, of Cnrorwill and if no overt act* w;-rt* shown to bo commit­
ted by any other defendant, then thov must all
make music for the Eaton county fair. be acquittc«L The position taken by tho de­
They will also assist in three concerts fense tbst all the defendants must lie shown to
to be given during the fair, evenings
of Sept 37/ 38, 29. The dining hall and criminally intereated-in only one. that was aufother privileges of the fair grounds Helent. and the conspiracy wm establinbed.
Surplusage in tbe Indictment would hot vitiate
were sold to-day, (Saturday.)
At Bellevue they voted to sell »tlie IL This Indictment charged but one offenae.
one conspiracy, it equid hot comprise two
old school site, and buy one of R. B. conspiracies. Part ot defendants might be
Hughes, near tiro village cemetery and wholly acquitted airl part convicted, but if the
“Sligo” writing to the Leader, says Jury found two conspiracies—throe ot the
parties guilty at one and tbe remaining four
“this-does not represent tiro will of a guilty of another—then the indictment failed.
majoritj of our citizens, but shows the Bo much for tbe frame -f tbe indictment.
Now m to the proof. A conspiracy is seldom
sharp practice of a few of our would-bereduced to writing: it is generally entered
promiuent men.
into in a very informal way. Tho parties
And now the Charlotte Republican might reside indifferent parts of the country,
saysG. A. Snyder has presented that but if by any means, even by dumb show, they
office w ith some wild white blackber­ ernment, followed by an overt act, that was
ries. Really, these white blackberries conspiracy. The law required a verdict of
are becoming common. A fellow at guilty only when tho jury entertained no rea­
our elbow says that when he was a boy sonable doubt of the guilt of tbe defendants.
Tho doubt, to bo reasonable, must bo based
in New York he used to pick lota of upon ovldenoc, not upon mere conjoctur*. He
them.
After the Eaton Rapids M. E. society
theory of innocence. If it could, tbe defcniL
tiro first of last week, had been to much nnts won- entitled to tbe benefit ot that theory.
expense and trouble, had advertised a Ho would select a small route—the route from
“grand picnic excursion” to Coldwater, Vermillion to Sioux Falls. D. T. Tho da'e of
and been promised from three to five the contract wns March 15, 1878, to .run four
cars, they were coolly informed that no trips were onto a week; the dl Lance fifty,
cars could be furnished till after the milea. to which two mile* had been, added;
the time was fourteen hours: there wire
16th. The picnic didn’t come off.
nine post-offices, but no towns, on the route.
Halsey Bowers has returned from a
month’s visit in .Dakota. He brought
back with him a good many specimens distinctly and repeatedly furnished to the Sec­
from that region.
Yet he considers ond Assistant Portm arter-G eneral. On De­
Michigan the better country to live in.
Not every one cad afford to live there tically assigned by sutxontract to Vaile. On®
with butter a dollar a pound and eggs
a dollar a dozen.—Charlotte Leader.
Charlotte is raised into prominence
by the leaven of inventive genius, as
see: Patents grafited to F. S. Belcher miles in nine hours. Petitions and letters hud
been sent ia. and it did not absolutely follow
and F. A. Hooker, for troit dryef; to that this expedition was fraudulent. If the
IL K. Heald, plow ; J. B. Belcher, boot
strap; Wm. Smith, boot strap; F. B.
Gamon &amp; Co., double rivet; R. L.
Pancost, fence bracket; Dolson &amp;.
Thorn*®, buggy body; Jas. H. Bacon,
signal light
The committed appointed at the last nett Indorsed this
meeting of the Horticultural society to
make arrangements for a display of
fruit at the state fair, after looking the
ground over have decided that it is not
best to attempt an exhibition this sea­
son. Apples, with tho exception of the members of OoograM wore responsible ror ex­
pedition. Yet in this case, when it bad b»en
Baldwin, aro generally poor and wormy expedited
... - I,. at the request of a member of O&gt;n&gt;L..
Grapes will not be ripe. There will be
no peaches to speak of. There will be
General Henkle interrupted at this point to
a fair crop of pears, but they are late.
The committee do not wish to damage
the fair reputation of Eaton county by
a poor sliow of fruit, and so will make
no exhibit this year.—E. E. Journal.

The story of a quick-tempered, sen­ through Ignorance. Maulfcetty, It was psitive man. “Last Sunday, Billy Parr
and Phillip Coup, living a few miles
south of here, indulged in a sparing
exhibition.
Parr won.
Lawsuit to
follow.”—Charlotte Leader, Sept 7.
‘For this lie was arrested and will have
an examination before Justice Green
to-day.—Republican, Sept. 8. “Suicide
r to another Lord while ho was in
of a wealthy farmer.—Charlotte, Sept.
mooted
8.—Wm. Parr,
wealthy and well
known farmer tiring in Brookfield
towariiip, seven miles from Charlotte
committed
suicide in
his
house
this morning by shooting himself in
the bead with a shot gun.
Death was
instantMieouH. Anxiety over
land­
ing suit cauMxl the deed. Deceased
They call was 45 years old and hail resided in
Eaton county twenty years.—Free

:ng boy, weighs about 186.
him Brag.
It is requested that the l»oard fence

BWXUKV AMMKIA SALVE.

House’s might be turned ip telephonic

H. T. H U

came iir.o the uomMnatioa.

interfir*nc: of members of

jury must not except tha: o
We shnukl hare a wretched
mintstrative efiuiri if pub!
l&gt;c guided by tb-&gt; advice
re jurats of m&lt;mbers of Congrera, even where &lt;x&gt;nslntent with
tbe public go.-d.
regarded as negtwunl praye-O. tbe oom t nlrmwt uniformly refua ng v&gt; grant them. Tbe
reading and diMzualon of tt—'-------------much time thul it wns nca
when tbf jury retired.
■
A rcei-w* until six vclock

malnerd In their Heats, and »-&gt;me time b
the court ron-fv-mb ed tb&lt;&gt; rootn wm ■:
coTupictoiy fill'-d with «n expectant ci
John Dora -y ami Hrr b ll sat aMe by ahL
them wore a strained nnd anxious exprea
of coiintrn -ncc. nad they ginnovi furtivr-l
th- ciook ax tn - tb-ur &gt;&gt;f an a^prooel
Turner won uncoir-erm-d. olmi nt -rnillnc. 1
o:b&gt;.-r &gt;k*fi:ndiinia were n-&gt;« preaeaL t-bot
after tbe appointed hour the Judge took I
M-nt. nod the Jury wx* "umm- n&lt; d P.-nd

the Clerk inquired:

Fun-muu Dickson answered;
exc pt as to on® of the def -tkIiu..
The Court—That will not do. You bad b-tter
take your neats until counsel for tho Govern­
ment come in.
affair*.

The Court then directed the jury to retire for
further dellticratlon, aaylrg that (&gt;erh'r»t&gt;y
to-morrow they would fin i another verd et.
They were cautioned to beware of “juryfixera."

Poisoning Husbands.

Thekla Popov, the j-easant woman who la
l&gt;clnrf tried on u cluirgt- of aiding and alwtting
upWMrtl of a hundred women in poiaoning
—drrttned to occupy a position at once unique
and picturesque in the annals of crime. She

site

Sho lived tn n little village named Me*

hours, and giving them the diabolical advice

neighboring country side, cag- r. for *otns
oouroo of nntun-, but who. by Tbekln'a friend­

exhibition.

dealing* with young girls who qu &gt;rrolled with

man's b-rrtblo trade prospered amazingly for

failed to reveal any

suddenly

revelation

tbowlfcof Jocx^ruktaabotUe of «.roe red
liquid poises prepared by ber mother. Bbo
did this by her mother'B irwtructums. Having
had a quarrel with her re pectel parent over
“Otto property, aba detarmVt-d to betray her.

io»s you bold your tongue.-’

�WHAT IT COSTS TO GET MARRIED.
A correspondent of the male persua­
sion and of matrimonial inclination
dropped a postal-card into the Courier­
Journal postoffice box the other day
which contained thia apparently very
simple question: “How much will it
aoattoget married?” A very short
nonundram, the reader will observe,
but one which requires a deal of space
to answer, m is attested by this article.
The postal card was turned over to a
good-looking, girl-touched reporter,
and he was ordered to get n full and
complete reply on pain of having his
salary cut down so low he oould never
hope to ask any woman to “gohalvera"
with him. Fortunately the young man
knew a gentleman, now well advanced
in years. whfHxas been married three
~~ ‘—1 —
W*.-aud to him
told him
____
_____ -and
,_______
what Was Wanted.
“Well.” said the gentleman, who shall
be called Col. B., “I’ve had some ex­
perience In that business, and if it is
worth anything to you it ia yours free

of cost.’*
The young man’s eyes filled with
grateful tears, and he silently laid his
hand on that of his kind-hearted friend,
and said with a sob:
“Tell me about it”
.
“What do you want to know?”
“Everything, everything, so the
postal-card bend may get full sati­
“All light, here goes. 1 was married
four times, and I have in my desk over
there receipted bills for all expenses
incidental to each occasion."
“Good," said tbe reporter, "figures
’won’t lie."
As I have said, I have been married
• four times. .The first time was fortyfive years ago, when I was young and
green, and hadn't a dollar but what I
borrowed, and the girl didn’t have any
more than I did. so it was necessarily a
poor man's wedding.
Let mo see
(reaching into the desk for the papers),
here's the bill. I find hero the follow­
ing itemized account: One suit of
clothes, ready made. $10; shoes, &lt;2.50;
shirt, 75 centa; hat. Bl; yarn seeks,
knit by mother, no charge; no collar,
no cuffs, no neckties, no button-bole
bouquets, no gloves, no carriage-hire;
license. &lt;2; preacher. 50 centa in money
and four bushels of apples; no present
to the bride, and no anything else so
lar as 1 can remember. Tola!, &lt;16.75
and four bushels of apples."
“Cheap enough,” said the scribe;
“but do they do it that cheap now?”
“Yes, plenty of them, and some of
* them cheaper; but my wife and I were
pretty respec&amp;ble young people, if we
were poor, and we thought we were put­
ting on considerable style."
•’Of courts; but how w us it next
time?” •
“The next one too* place ten years,
later, and I was a little better off in
the world, and was forking in a store
at &lt;40 a month. My hills on that occa­
sion show the following result: One
suit of clothes, &lt;25; boots, &lt;7; two
shirts (I only wore one,however;,&lt;2.60;
. hat, &lt;2; gloves, fifty centa; necktie,
twenty centa; collars and cufij made
on the shirt without extra charge; 11-

present to the bride, gold breastpin,
&lt;2; cotton socks, fifteen centa; no car­
riage hire; no wedding trip; total,
&lt;43.85."
“That looks a little heavier."
“Yes,.but it is about an average, and
the thing is done daily now at a similar
outlay.’“
“How wm it on the third round P”
“Well, that didn’t occur until fifteen
years later, and I wm a partner with
about &lt;1.200 or &lt;1,500 a year, and I
was a risingyouagmerchant. Of course
I wm called on then to put on consid­
erably more style, and the bills show
up correspondingly, as follows: Suit of
clothes, &lt;50; underwear, &lt;10; boots.
&lt;10; bat (plug), &lt;6; gloves, &lt;2; neck­
tie, &lt;l;bctton-bole bouquet, twenty-five
centa: wedding ring ($10) and present
to bride, jewelry (J25). &lt;35; carriage
hire, &lt;10; license, &lt;2; preacher, $10 in
gold; incidentals. &lt;15; short bridal
trip. &lt;100; total. &lt;251.25."
"Hum,” said the reporter, thought­
fully. “that style costa a little more,
doesn’t itF*
“Yes, they come high, but we must
have them, and it is no more than is
ordinary in tnat station.”
“Hut what are the incidentals speci­
fied in tbe bill?”
“O, that includes a variety of unex­
pected item* a man has to meet on a
holiday occasion like a wedding, and
cannot be definitely enumerated. You
will see what it means when you g*L
there, but if you get married in a real
quiet way you can avoid much of it."
“Thanks for the advice.
Now for
the fourth call."
“The fourth event happened at only
a comparatively recent period, when I
had become a bloated bond-holder, m
It were, or, to put it milder,a rich man.
I married a young wife, m most of us
old fellows do. and she wanted me to

you know, overgo
that, but they have such an enormous
amount of extras.”
“Now, you’ve told me the cost to a
man, how ia it,-state it briefly, on tub
other sideF’
.“For the women, do you mean?”.
“Yes."
“Well, there’s no telling. My first
wife's dress coat $:i,and it was a mighty
preUy looking piece of goods, too. I
suppose her other fixings were worth
$5 more, so that &lt;8 or &lt;10 would cover
it all. My last wife’s trousseau com-.
filete coat &lt;3,000, but then her
ether was rich. I saw a little state­
ment the other day about a New York
girl who had sent to Paris for two
dreases only, nnd the bill was &lt;2,600.
The other stuff to match this woufd no
doubt coat &lt;5,000 more, so there is a
wide margin on the woman's expense.
I may say here that my experience and
observation hare taught me that mar­
riage. in more senses than one. costa a
woman dearer than it does a man. A .
very fair wedding turnout for a girl in
the average circle of society I think
could be furnished from &lt;100 to &lt;300.

it down considerably below this.’’
Some further talk was indulged in,
when the reporter thanked his friend
and went around to see some other ac­
quaintances who were posted on the
matter at issue. In the course of his
travels be ran on one man who had
been married- at an outlay of only
eighty-five cents.
•
“How did you get it so cheap?” he
inquired.
'
,
“Well, you see.” said the man,
“Mary wanted to marry, and so did I,
and we fixed it all up in about ten min­
utes in the kitchen and slipped off to
the office and got a license and saw the
’Squire and ended it."
"But the Icense costa more than
eightv-five cents.’’
“Mino didn’t. I only had that much,
and I told the clerk my fix nnd that I
wanted the other ten cents for a bridal
street-car ride, and he let me have the
papers for seventy-five cents. Then I
told the 'Sauire how it was, and Mary
she blushed aud looked so pretty that
the old fellow laughed and married us
for nothing, except a kiss from the
bride. But look here, young fellow, if
any other man had kissed that bride,
you bet your monev the wedding would
have cost a good deal more, and don’t
you forget it,"
The reporter promised not to forget
it, and went on with his inquiries, until
he found that the figures given by his
quadruple married friend, though given
for an earlier date than the present,
were still applicable, acd that a young
man could marry in 1882 at prices
ranging from &lt;15 or &lt;20 to as many
hundreds or thousands, if he happened
to have the propei pocket-book'ranges.
The graver matter, however, of the cost
afterward, presented itself, and when
be had finished writing this article,
with its array of figures for the inquir­
ing correspondent, be indicted him the
following personal and confidential pos­
tal:
"DkaM 8im—Your qucsliuu in a dollar-and&gt;arria«e ia only tn be rooudervd in that rest:
ou bad better swim out. tor you are over »&lt;»

■ad.”

—Louisville Courier-Journal.
tablimity Not Cheek.

After Elder Tt-ota had taken his reg­
ular position and closed his eyes in
sleep, and Samuel Shin bad bung up
the water dipper and wiped off his
chin. Brother Gardner began:
"How few men in dis wornl&lt;| rise to
de sublimity of dnoccashim! An', too,
how few of us knowwLar’ de sublimity
comes in. When trubblc comes we
knuckle to it an' lose our sand, instead
of soarin’ aloft an’ look'n’ down upon
it from de clouds. De ancient martyrs
bad sublimity. De ancient Greeks an’
Romans bad it, an’ our ttatesmen on’
generalsan* citizens hat'* bin chuck­
full ot it. A man who cinnot be sub­
lime when occasion demands it am only
fit to work in a boneyard. What am
nobler than to see apolly Vshun demand
to be 'leeted to offis on bis merits,
’stead of gwine aroun’ to buy wotes.
pull wires an’ wallow ih. de slums’
What am nobler dan to ste a cashier
who uM got away wid &lt;40.31'0 in a mo­
ment of weakness rise abdvo it an' re­
turn wid de cash an’ confess his er­
ror?
“Be kecrful dot vou dotin' confoun’
sublimity wid cheek. It am cheek to
borrow five dollars of a friend, but it
am sublimity to pay it It am cheek to
run in debt when you know you can't
pay—it am sublimity to turn ober an
ole red cow, two sheers of stock on’ a
yeller dog to yer creditor*. It am
cheek to climb s back fence an’ brrtk
into de hen pen—it am sublimity. ,n
case you am diskiverad. to convince de
ownerdatyou wm lookin’ furjnnr los’

••’I sickness comes, ue subiti.e Dat
is, put on mustard plasters mi' Ute
three pills.
“Il de man who Lop’s a* ofiattel
mortgage on your sewin' much fit fore­
closes, be sublime. Dal is, Ua'» your
family sewin’ did by some fi .•»’&lt;-class
df^M-maker.
••If sorrow comes, be snblime, dal is.
cent ner to pay 100 cents on do dollar.
•4f misfortune obertakes you, be
subHihe. Dal ia, take off yer silks an’
welweta an* diamonds an’ lay ’em away
far a few days until people have had a
change to weep wid you. Let us now
purceed to de bisaess which de kentry
has intrusted to our charge."—lieport of
from the akin out, hat and boots, 9125-, Lime-Kiln Club in Detroit Free Press.
gloves,
necktie. $2.50, the finest
In the market; boutonniere. Marechai
—Wine aertus to hare become un-

will not understand the reason why.
Losing one’s temper in so important a
work is very hurtful. If yoa.think .it
will not matter—that it win be all for­
gotten-then you are sadly mistaken;
It will not be forgotten, but will con­
stantly act m a reminder ct the untraswortbinea* of the man.
Begin
early with your coll, and never con­
tradict yourself to bi Ji, and be will
think it is all right: that he has to do
what you require of him. What yon do
in the w4y of teaching or breaking, do
it gradually—mildly, of oourse—and
with confidence; this will inspire con­
fidence in return. Thus get ijim used
to the harness, saddle, etc., by degrees,
first by part of the harness, and so on.
By and by he will have reached the full
attainment, and he will hardly know
how, only that he; is to‘ abide by it; it
will be seen ns a matter of course. But
If a vicious fit takes him while training,
yon-must bold him os with a rise, and
let him know that resistance is entirely
useless. Flinch once and he will want
you «to flinch again, and he will en­
deavor, and harder than before, to have
-it eo; but if he have no excuse, the way
will soon be.clear to you. Make your
coIt know what you want of him m a
horse. He is an instrument, and you
are to fMhion him ns you waul him.
If for farm work, not for a trotter; if
for a trotter, not for a1 racer. If you
want him for heavy farm work alone,
he must be treated somewhat differently
from what is necessary for a mere'road­
ster, and vice versa. For a saddle horse
or a lady's horse, you want something
different still. If he is high tempered
Sou must treat him differently from a
arse with a mild disposition, and so on.
You must know your horse, and know
what you want him for; then.make him
such; shape the instrument to your
purpose. Begin earlv, st birth is not
too early; hints and signs have an
effect—and these go through life.
We have given general directions;
special rules cannot be given, m it
would require for almost every animal
special treatment, so various are the
manifestations of horses, particularly
the different breeds aud almost innu­
merable varieties.
There is not much to do to train a
horse; we have mentioned most; but it
takes time and patience to do it. I:
must be gradual, growing work. The
colt must grow in his training, as in his
years; it will be nature with him then,
and he will want to do that only; in fact
he knows only to do that—this makes
him reliable. The man who is a hu­
mane and intelligent man ha* made
him so; and he will treat him with dis­
cretion. work him what he can really
bear, and what mainly he loves to do.'
He will, therefore, wear at least a third
lengef. He will do good service till a
ripe old age, while others with hard
treatment are worn out st what should
be their prime.
Take pains to thoroughly and com­
pletely break your colt, and then by
kind handling keep him so. Let no one
interfere with your work; or, if not fit­
ted yourself for the work, gat someone
that is qualified to assist you. A horse
is worth it; or if not, he is not worth
having.—Cor. Indiana Farmer.

The Season and Planting.
The season of 1882 will long be re­
membered for untimely fronts, continued
cold weather and deluging rains. These
have not been confined to any particu­
lar portion of the West,bnt it is reneral,
so that the opening spring, which prom­
ised everything that could be desired,
has given later anything but what was
expected. The winter was mild; wheat
wintered admirably, except that in some
instances it was too rank. From all
that wo can learn half a crop wiil be all
that may bo expected. Spring wheat
and oata were late in being sown, and
have growth slowly, and continued wet
weather lias prevented proper growth,
but yet seems not to have seriously in­
jured the crop; as a whole the injury
ha* been confined to particular portions
of farms and to particular localities.
The worst feature in the season, how­
ever, is that continued rains have pre­
vented the planting, or when planted,
the cultivation of corn. It is true that
disabilities of a season are always over­
rated. As a rale the worst view of the
season is apt to ba taken by farmers,
and naturally so. If the soil is wet it is
always concluded to be disastrously so.
If too dry crops are burning up. If
frost strikes the blossoms, fruit is en­
tirely killed, while succeeding days show
perhaps tnat a full crop is left. Thus
this season tbe outcome of trait now
promises fully half a full crop, or more,
except as to early blossoming varieties;
the severest loss being strawberries, and
next peaches. Winter wheat will proba­
bly make half a full crop, which moans
almost or quite an average crop. The
damage early anticipated from destruc­
tive insects will prove next to nothing.
For the weather that was bad for crops
was fatal to insect life. So far there
seems no cause for being disheartened
over small grains, M a whole.
In relation to corn the metier is more
serious. Oar great corn years are those
when tho corn may be planted early
and cultivated right along.
Dry sea­
sons give better crops than wet ones,the
best seasons being moderately dry warm
springs, followed oy warm, rather moist
weather during June and July. As a
rule corn planted in June does not make
a full crop to ripen on the stalk, but it
cut up at tbe time of the first frost, it
will ripen sound. It the autumn is late
and warm, the June plantings may
ripen perfectly on the walk, but this
may not be cx]&gt;ected.—- Prairie Fanner.

—The colored minister who whipped
his wife at Alexandria, Ya., wm fined
*4 by a Justice. He had no money, and
wm given a week in which to pay. On
tue intervening Bunday ho preached
statuary re vend very fashionable private parties, from tbe text, “Whom the Lord loveth
tailor at including the wedding reception giveo be chacteneth," drawing from it the
by the British Minister, Mr. West, at conclusion that he h.vl punished his
his legation, lo Mr. Drummond and wife properly. Thon he asked the con___
________
attnrothw’bnde. ihere
was
no wine
«t att; grega
nut tfon to-contnhiito t.he_&gt;k_far Jus.
dr, nor wm there any at the fine. and they did it, though the plates
s card reception the “
v----------- ’
**—’--*—‘*auK»UQt wm realized.
K.Vera/d.

should be melted up int
ten; otherwise they will

DON’T WASTE MONEY.

simple, or better, than to make a bag
out of some coarse sacking, fill it wito
pieces of comb, tie it up, and pdt it into
a wash boiler. Set the boiler on the
stove and fill it nearly full of water.
When the water is almost hot enough to
boil, take a stick aud punch, poke,, and
press the bag until the wax is all melted
'and risen to the fop. Now lay a narrow
strip ot board across the top of the boiler,
and tie it fast to the bandies; then take
two or three sticks that are nearly as
long m the boiler is deep, press the bag
down to the bottom of tbe boiler with
these sticks, and keep it in this position
by putting the upper ends of the sticks
under the strip of board that is fastened
across the top of the boiler. Now set
the boiler off the stove, and when, its
contct&amp; are cold, the wax can be taken
off in One solid cake. In passing through
the ba^ the wax is cleansed frota all
coarse impurities, while the fine particles
of dirt that do escape will be found e*th«e
upon tbe top or bottom of the cake of
wax from whence they can easily be re­
moved.
•
.
When the combs and cappings bare
all been worked up, and the cakes of
wax have been scraped free from all dirt
or sediment, the cakes should all be put
into the boiler, melted up together, and
the wax run into neat cakes.
I mode twenty-five pounds of wax,
last spring, jn the above manner, and
the nicest wax I ever naw. To dean
utensils from beeswax, they should first
be scraped with a knife as clean as pos­
sible, and then rubbed with a cloth satu­
rated with kerosene oil. Beeswax is
sometimes adulterated with paraffine,
ceresin, or tallow. To detect these
frauds, a piece ot wax should be chewed;
if adulterated, even slightly, witn either,
it will chew like gum. while, if pure, it
will crumble and break to pieces in the
mouth, nnd will not make gum at ail.—
Hutchinson,
Country GentleIF. Z:r"
* ”
’in
- -------------man.
Old Time Sermons.

According to the testimony of “ tbe
oldest inhabitant" the sermons of the
old Dutch dominie in New York were
fearfully and wonderfully made. “As
there was no hour glass in the pulpit,”
he says, “or warning clock in the bleak,
square edifice, the clominie, merely for
form’s sake, consulted his ponderous
gold •bull’s-eve,’ and placed it out of
arm’s reach before beginning his dis­
course, but was only restrained in his
zealous labor of love by utter physical
exhaustion. Men were strong then,
ministers' sermons were long, loud, pon­
derous, nay,
even muscular—they
clinched each telling point with a heavy
right-hand blow on the sacred volume
before them, as if resolved to fix it there
for all coming generations. After the
pewter plate had gone' round for pen­
nies. another eight-stanza hymn, closing
with the doxology, was shouted, when
followed the benediction, which to-day
■ would be considered a prayer of reason­
able duration, but was always a blessing
to youngsters; for during its delivery they
were permitted to stand. On the walk
home grandmother said the sermon was
full of refreshing consolations; father
*q&gt;oke of its vital power; mother thought
the Doctor had never been happier, while
the children were delighted when the
massive Bible was shut with a slam, de­
noting a speedy termination of the ser­
mon. The prominent points of the
morning lesson were again set before
them in tho lengthened grace, ere they
were permitted to eat the cold apple pie,
merely as asustainerof nature, tlialthej
might be fortified in the inner man to
endure the afternoon nnd evening ser­
vices. which wjre nearly equal in extent
and power to the grand trial of the morn­
ing.’’—Detroit Free Press.-

A Queer Surgical Case.

Twisting tbe ta'l of the British lion, is a danger.ms thing for £bc country that loses its grip.

A BENEFICENT ACTION.
Tbe miserable looks and feelings ot those

beneficent adieu ou these organs and so
cleanses the poisonous matters, from the sys­
tem, that rosy checks and good health are soou
It WAX AD apple that inadeJAdani tall, and ths
aaru* fruit made Wllitam Tell.
The aymptoma of Itching Piles are motature
like preeplraUoo, intense itching, most at night
•eemsaatfptu worms were crawling in or
about the rectum. Tbe more you scratch the
worse they tteh, very distressing. Tbe private
porta are often affected. Dr. Swayne's OtnL
ment is the most &lt;?ffectire remedy extant for
this tormenting eomplsinL QIvea rest at night
without that desire to scratch. Also baa on
equal in quickly eradicating Tetter, Itch, Salt
Rucume, Erysipelas, Barbers’ Itch, Pimples,
all Scaly,-Crusty, Itchy Skin Eruptions. Here
-_______

KANSAS CITY

Vt..

Piles for over twen-

3 ixjxes, $1.25, By Dr. Swayne A Sou. Ph Had'a
Pa. Sold by all druggists.

Tbe man who forsakes the lecture field for
the corn field is a public benefactor.
ONLY TWO BOTTLE8. .

Messrs. Johnson, Halloway A Co., wboleaalc
druggists of Philadelphia, Pa., report that some
time ago a gentleman handed them a dollar,
with a request to send a e&lt; kx! catarrah cure to
two army officers in Arizona. Recently tbe
same gentleman told them that Ixitb the offi­
cers anu the wife of Gen. John C. Fremont Gov
of Arizona, had been cured of catarrh by two
bottles of Ely’s Cream Balm.

Fare. SlssptMCm. \
etc., ebrerfar.y ptvra Ly

T. I. POTTOL

PEBCEVAL LOWELL.

NERVOUS
DEBILITY:
A cure guaranteed.

Tbe man who boasts of bis ancestral timber
FOUND AT LAST.
* An agreeable dressing for the Lair, that will
•top its falling, has born long sought for.
Parker's Hair Balsam, distinguished for its
purity, fully supplies this want.

The private soldier has a public duty to per­
form.
For the delicate and complicated dllSculUcs
peculiar to female constitution. Lydia E. Pink­
ham's Vegetable Compound is the loverign
remedy. It aims at tbe cause, and produces
lasting results. Send to Mrs. Lydia E. Pink­
ham. 2X1 Western A renue, Lynn, Mass., for
pamphlets.
Song of the tramp—Gobble, gobble, gobble!
TRUE TO HEB TRUST.
Too much cannot be said of the ever faith­
ful wife and mother, constantly watching and
caring tor her dear ones, never neglecting a
single day in their behalf. When they are as­
sailed by disease, and the system should bare a
thorough cleansing, the stomach and bowels
regulated, blood purified, and malarial poison
exterminated, and she must know that Electric
Bitters are the only sure remedy. They are
the best remedy In tbe world and only cost fifty
cents. Sold by all druggists.

thorliwj ■jei.t for tbs vlUags cf Hi
C. WEST X CO..Hols Proppston.
U—e,
,11

JJENRY ROE, Pkopkibtob

MEAT MARKET.
Fresh and Salt Meats,

Sffloted Hams ant Shoulders,
IN THEIR BEA6O''

A Christian should show bis religion over a
Lard, by the lb. or
counter as well as at an alter.
Weakness of the Joints and muscles, impuri­
ty of the blood, urinary catarrh, and other dis­
ty- The Highest Market Price paid
ordered organic functions, permanently cured for Hides, Pelts, &amp;c.
by using Brown’s Iron Bitters, It strengthens
the affected parts, infuses new life, new health,' Freail Qoodn, Full Weights and
and new vtenr into tbe whole general system,
Satisfaction Guaranteed.
and makes life seem well worth living.
A F1RST-CLAB8 ARTICLE.
*
This ia, and must continue to be, the excla­
mation of everv one who has used Putnam's
Painless Corn "Extractor, for it is, without ex­
ception, the only remedy in the market, that
will remove corns without pain. All we ask
for the Cora Extractor is a fair trial, for it will
give to you what it has already given to thous­
ands of others suffering from corns—unbound­
ed satisfaction. Putnam's Painless Corn Ex­
tractor Is sold everywhere. Beware of cheap
counterfeits. Wholesale, J. E. DAVI8 A CO.,
Detroit•'

HEX RY ROE-

VsasUNe,

THE ONLY REMEDY KNOWN

TO DESTROY THIS DEADLY PEST

directions

ATARRH

insert with little llo-

ILrSCtUItAUI

SSOOltewardt

The celebrated Vienna surgeon. Prof.
Billroth, has al present in his hospital a
case which will shortly create some sen­
sation in-Che medical world. One of his
patients has been in the habit for the last
Guurdian Sale.
six years of " rinsing" his stomach daily.
This manipulation, one of the wonders
CORWIN UAHONKR aad ANNA GARDNER,
of modern therapeutics, consists of in­ Minors.
Kollee I* hereby given that I *h*U m&gt;1 st poblle
serting a tube into the stomach through auction,
lo tbe highest bidder, an
the gullet, and pouring lukewarm, or
medicated water through the tube by
means of a funnel, till the stomach is
full. Then, by simply lowering the end
of the tube to* the waist, a siphon is
formed, and the stomach is emptied.
The patients who undergo this operation
suffer mostly from chronic catarrah of
the digestive organs.
The process
is so simple that they soon learn to
perform it unaided, and this wm the
case with the above mentioned patient.
Unfortunately for him. he had not
July 1.L A.b 1»K.
____
thought it necessary, or did not possess
4M1.
TUBXEB OARDRJtR. Goardlsn
the means of purchasing a new tube, but
contented himself with mending and
patching, and tying defective parts with
AB&lt;’ ^rklRSER G ARDNBR, Owrtlin.
thread. Tbe inevitable took place. A
portion of the tube, measuring eight
inches at leMt, remained in his stomach,
and he is now awaiting Prof. Billroth's
decision -m to the beet means of treat­
ment. The skillful surgeon is still hesi­
tating between the two courses open to
him; he must either attempt to extract
the intruder throught the (esophagus,
with tbe help ot gastroscopy, or ne must
resort to gastronomy. Meanwhile the
patient enjoys a good appetite.—London
Ufi.

—The artificial foods used for young
horses should be rich in flesh-formers,
like clover, hay. beans, peas, oats and
linseed cake. A few cut swedes daily
aid digestion, and tend to maintain the
general health. Regularity in feeding is
an important point Compared with the
bulk of the animal itaelf the stomach of
the home is small, hence it should be fre□uently replenished. L&lt;mg fasts produce
flatulency and indigestion.

PRINCIPAl*UNE

bssllhr aecrsUoss
ya
iBflamstloa,

a

■ I A VaEEUrn restores there nee of
■-taste and arnell. Benerleia! results are realised by a fee application- A
thorourh treatment a» directed will rare Catarrh,

Unequaled For Ceid In the Head
Tbe Balm baa galne.! an envlabbi reputation when
•vea known, dUptaelnr all other preparaliout.

Recognized as a Wonderiul Discovery.

RJPTUBE
Cored without an operation or tbs Injury trnn
•nfllct by Dr. J. A. Shuman** Method. Ofllre !

HOLMAN’SfakilWle

(ontalnln* IxBh ver.loua ottbe new isstamcnt Uc
make no extra charge for thh addition. Giber
pnbUaberechance SI. FINE PHOTOGAPH Ata
BUMS ELEGANT DBR1GN8. HANDBOMXLT
BOUND.
*

HOLMAN A

AttAl

Ktqn

estafofiM U&gt;irw
T.

A. G. BENEDICT,

RIVERVIEW
ACADMEY 1
NMHKINNO.X.T,

YOUNG MENJL^tSV.0^

BILLIA
C. N. DUNHAM.

�principle that lea* care to required of a

GRAND

RAPIDS

DIVISION.

Through Cuaclje* and Sleeping 0»r» to and from
(hand Baplde and Detroit. All train* connect In
wm-depot at Detroit with Great Western, Grand
Trunk and Canada Southern Railway*.
X. C. RROWK,
H. U. LEDYARD.
Aae’t Gen'ISupt-Jackeon. G.n’i Sup’t Delro

HsyarC. Waarwoain,
qen'lPa*aandTiek*tAr*nt.Chlea&lt;o.

jgROOKS, MARSHALL A CO.

Nashville Elevator!
*Pay the highest market price for all kind* of

Grain and Produce,
---------- And sell-----------

rrds, F«a, Umr, Salt, Plaster, Star- j
co, Hair, Pino Lumber, Lath
and Shingles,
AT THE LOWEST LIVING PRICES. 1

Emeriencefl, ReliaNe, ail Responsible.

A. H. WINN, Dentist.
BEST SET GUM TEETH

$10.00
Teeth Extracted Without Pain.

OfYlceOpen Day A Evening.
A. BARBER, M. !&gt;..
* |IIOM&lt;EOI»ATIIIC

Physician and Surgeon.
Office flrat door east of Opera House, and
near residence on corner of Washington and
State Streets, Nashville, Mich.

£ A. PUSH.
‘

-THE BOSS­

BOOT AND SHOEMAKER,
NASHVILLE.

-

MUCH.

AKE HOUSE,
Thornapplo Ualcc. Mich.
L. P. Cole, Proprietor.

QLEMENT SMITH,

Attorney at Law,

Attorney &amp; Counsellor,
A SOS,

American and Foreign Marble,
Uaatins*. JMioh-

YyiLLIAM JONKB,

DEUTIST
-KIK1L HI SBBSW1L SHIT1IIU;

church in the town, erected a neat edi­
thunder and lightning ahowera.
What a woman’s part, timidity and inexperi­ fice. called it a Union Church, and
tolhcxKMter with tho powers &lt;4 tho ence producing a care which is absent
from tbe conduct of men. The Court
apparent in this general weather melee, held that it, therefore, Is unphilosophiit to yet quite avid ent there to an un­ cal and unreasonable to establish a rule
usual combination of forces at work of law which necessitates leas caution ou
somewhere.
The
kaleidoscope of the part of a woman.
Nature is revolving rapidly, and sending
' The immunities of women aro not to
her hidden machinery into new po- be gainsaid, and the deference and len­
aitions and displaying constantly a iency which are due them must not be
succession of fresh and varying phe­ withheld. This decision of the Michi­
nomena.
gan court, however, excludes any ex­
But high scientific authority declares cessive allowance for the errort of judg­
that this world, like a huge bead, to ment and conduct, baaed on the ele­
strung upon a thread of law. and if this ment of sex, and shows thatJ while
be so, we must not suspect any element women are less likely than mep to ex­
of chance or capricious uncertainty in pose themselves to dangter the fact of
the regular and orderly movements of their being women to not to excuse neg­
natural forces. Venncr has recently ligence when the risk i&lt; 'assumed. If
given out that ho bases hto observations this decision to to stand tor good law,
nnd guesses in part on tho periodical re­ as it probably will, the equality of the
currence of certain courses or demon­ sexes .to established in an important
strations of atmospheric phenomena; particular. Women must bo as careful
that about' once in so often peculiar as men when they are in physical dan­
beacons apjMiar, and unusual occur­ ger. They may be on a different footing
rences take place in earth and sea and when standing at the ballot-box, but
sky,- and that oy a careful study of tbe when crossing a trade before an oncom­
past he is able to predict to some ex­ ing train, that equality, as shown by this
tent the future. It would thus seem decision, to indisputable.—Boston Ad­
that in the original constitution or ar­ vertiser.
•
rangement of things, uniformly and
regularity were to be the prevailing
A Decided Agony.
rules of all natural movements and
A young man from the best cirales in
•sequences, and in addition to this the
law of variation was also to come in at New Haven started out last evening to
staled intervals and modify or inter­ call on a lady friend, a very proper and
laudable
exhibition of his 'gentlemanly
rupt the otherwise monotonous proces­
sion of events. Just as in a skillfully qualities.
He had taken exceeding
composed piece ot music, there to the pains with his toilet, wearing hto extra
central theme of melody running double-reefed trousers, hto wash-bowl
through the whole, and then, harmoni­ hat, the watch-fob of his father, and
ously mingling with it, an almost in­ other appurtenances pertaining to what
finite nuuibcr of divergencies and varia­ might be called the best style of the
tions, so in the grand plan of tho world, day. It was the dreamy, ausky hour
as revealed in the operations of the ma­ of twilight that he camo lo the front
terial universe, there to a main chord gate of the residence of the father of
of regularity and uniformity visible, nto “best girl.” for ’twas she he was
and, coupled with these, any number of calling on. With palpitating heart be
variable and extraordinary divergen­ brushed the cigar ashes from his vest,
cies from the usual course.
put hto hand on the gate, and with hto
Many years ago, among the popular most charming smile looked up the
and instructive lectures of the Rev. T. Evel path. There stood in defiant
Stair King—who, as a far-seeing and
tude a big bull dog. Tho close cut
subtle thinker, has never had an equal of the young man’s trousers precluded
in this country—wiw one entitled “The hto going boldly past that bull dog.
Laws of Disorder." in which he demon­ There was not enough “slack" in tno
strated with rare beauty and force the cloth to give free play to tbe animal’s
fact that the most uncertain and appar­ teeth.. Tno yoiing man was in a pre­
Somehow he never knew
ently capricious of all earthly events dicament.
and movements were under the control the old man kept a dog before, and be
of fixed and unchangeable laws.' In thought it very strange that the girl
like manner the results of the patient
and protracted studies of all modern
scientific naturalists, like Darwin and eluded to try the power of kindness
Spencer, go to prove that the idea of and his “animal magnetism” on the
unity ana uniformity, coupled with the dog. So he carefully opened the gate
power of variations? forfns one portion and advanced with his eye fixed steadi­
of the ground-plan of the world. This ly on tho brute. “Bose, Bose, Bosey;
to seen alike in the perpetuation of. spe­ nice'old fellow; Bose, Bose, Bosey,”
cies or types of animals and vegetable but thd dog remained imperturbable,
life, in the movements of history and not even a tail wag of recognition did
the unfolding of civilization, in the re­ he vouchsafe. Not exactly in love with
currence of natural phenomena and in the situation, and still being of cour­
the rolling of tho worlds through the in­ ageous mold, he advanced a step fur­
ther.
“Bose. Bosey, Bose; all. you
finite spaces. .
It can thus be seen at a glance how rascal! Boee, Bosey. Bose! Nice old
Bose, Bosey, Bosey!”
But
erroneous are the views of those who dog!
The
would attribute all the extraordinary oc­ “Bose” didn’t wince or move.
currences of life to the direct intelposi­ cold perspiration stood in great bends
tion- of an unseen and divine hand. The on the young man’s brow, but the dog
Just as the
conception of a Creator and Ruler of seemingly cared not.
this and other worlds sitting ou a hid­ young man' was about to postpone his
den throne and hurling thunderbolts at call to some other evening, the hired
hto own will and pleasure far an&lt;J near, man sauntered around the corner of
as Jove was supposed to do from the the house, picked up the big earthen
top of Mount Olympus, may be Grecian pug and set it on the piazza; out of the
and classic, hut in the light of ascer­ wet, remarking with a knowing wink:
She
tained scientific facts an«T laws, it can “It's a new idea of Mias Flo’s.
hardly be called either Chrtotiah or civ­ thought it might scare off some o’ the
fellers.” And hearing a sound as of
ilized.
feminine laughter behind the
Another thought in connection with rippling
blinds the young man walked rapidly
the working of these terrific natural
forces to. that any new light which can up the street—New Haven Register.
be thrown upon the times and seasons
Understanding Men’s Natures.
which they observe, or the methods and
laws which they follow, wouM bo a
About mid-afternoon yesterday a citi­
great public benefaction. And to this zen who pulls down the scales at 196
end tho recent efforts of General Hazen pounds descended the first flight of
and the Signal Service corps to observe stairs beyond tho post-office in just the
more accurately the origin and courses same manner that a bag of oats would
of tornadoes in the various portions of have chosen, and when ne brought up
this country are worthy of all commen­ at the foot he was in no frame of mind
dation. It is not much, at the best, to chip in anything for the heathen in
which cun be learned or communicated
Africa. The first citizen who arrived
concerning these terrific aerial .visita­ on the spot knew what his duty required
tion*. but all* that can be known should
of him on such an occasion, and he smil­
be known aud distributed broadcast
remarked:
throughout the sections bf country most ingly
“1-don’t belietv you can improve on
liable to suffer from their desolating
ravages. The recent exhibitions of cy­ the old way!”
The second vitizen passing was in a
clonic power iu Iowa and elsewhere
make this subject a most pertinent one hurry; but he knew that he iqust halt
at th* present time, and call for renewed and inquire: .
“Like that any better than coming
activity in the direction which the
down the way the rest of us do?”
Signal Corps has so happily and oppor­
The third citizen had business at the
tunely "marked out.—Chicago Journal.
post-office, but he turned aside, cleared
his throat, and remarked:
“Evidently fell down stain? Curi­
Sex and Contributory Negligence.
ous how it sets the blood to circulating!
The Supreme Court of Michigan has Some of you hail better see if his nose to
granted a new trial in an action for broken—good-bye?1 ’
damages against the Michigan Central
There was a fourth spectator, and he
Railroad Company, which, in the slowly entered the door-way. bent over
ground taken by the plaintiff, presented the victim, and remarked:
a novel question. A young girl was
“I’d have given a dollar to see him
killed by a train of cars of the defend­ come down! He’s one of the sort who
ant company, and the plaintiff contend­ bump every stair!”
ed that contributory negligence could
The fifth man was about to add his
not bealleged by the company to inval­ mite when tbe victim rose up. His
idate the claim for damages, since the elbows wore skinned, his nose barked,
same degree of care was not required his coat torn and his back sand-papered
from a child as from an adult, and fur­ the whole length, but he was a man
thermore, that the law did not expect who had traveled. He knew that ev­
or demand as much prudence in a wo­ erybody in the crowd was hoping to see
man as in a man. The jury gave a him jump up and down and shake his
verdict to the plaintiff allowing for the fists ana paw tbe air, 'and to bear him
youth and likewise for tbe sex of tbe declare that he would lick all the men
victim. The Court held that the in­ who could be packed in a ten-acre lot,
structions of the Court below were cor­ and therefore he brought a sweet smile
rect, so far as concerns the directions to his face, lifted his nat like a perfect
respecting the age of the deceased, but gentleman, and limped up stairs with
that it was an error to charge the jury, the bland remark:
that the sex of the plaintiff affected the
“Stubbed my toe as I came in the door,
rule as to reasonable care nnd pru­ vou know, and came near falling in a
dence. The same care to expected on

20 patterns Mens all Wool Suits, cut in fashionable styles,
020002020202000200230000021202020201020202020001002302330201020159015900
86.50, marked down from 9.00.

The Court dwelt upon the fact that
the difference in aex has much to do
with tbe application of legal principles
in many raws.' Police regulations make
distinctions. Words and conduct which
in the presence of men would be con­
demned in bad taste. may be punished

—The Paterson (N. J.) Police Magis­
trate has decided that the members of
the salvation army are a public nuisance,
and the captain and lieutenant have
been fined and warned to desist from
singing and shouting on tbe streets.

ot their varying

In Boots and Shoes, Dry Goods, Groceries and Notions.
Highest price paid for Butter and Eggs,
Don’t miss fliis great Sale, as our prices are considered less
than material alone would cost.

WM. A. AYLSWORTH.

50 Wagons
FOR SALE!
OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE

WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH

THREE INCH TIRE
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING

BETTER THAN COMMON TIRE
We believe the Three inch Tire is destined to come
into general use. Call and see them.

Sold by C. L Glasgow, Nashville, Mich.

BENTLEY BROS. &amp;, WILKINSHastings, Mich.,'Sept. 15th, 1881.

gS!

I^K'3^“^^S-U.S&amp;

ron. Leaven worth, AUhUorc and Kansali city;
Washington toKl«rarner. Oditooia and Knox-

M t. Zion to KMMoqa*: N ewton to Monroe: Dea
Moines to Indianola and Winteraet; Atlantic to
UrUwold and Audubon; and Avoca to Harlan
idcSoTlW* ia pMKHoty tw —ly BaUroad. which owm, andoperateji a through lino

at THZ NEWS omcz
Glet Our “rice* Before I^ooliii.^
Elsewhere.
.

—The venom of the cobra of India to

into the system it often ^itaes death in

differawNM

25 Mens Cheviot Suits, in sack or frock at 110.00, marked
down from 14,00.
Mens fine Diagonal Dress Suits, Prince Albert cut aways,
#16, marked down from 880
One lot of Boys Suits, age &gt;10 to 15 years, very durable
material, all Wool, #6.50, marked down from $9.00.
One lot odd Coats, choice, for $4.00.
100 pairs all wbol Pants, $3.00, w»rth $5.00.

Years*

�•Are Receiving New Fall Goode,

Grand Haven, have

boarder* kicking against

fair al Grand Rapid*,
Lacaiog is being numbered on the
Philadelphia plan.
John T. Rich renominated for con­
gress at Port Hilton.
Over $5,000 low bv a "cave-in” of the

Shingle mill burned bj incendiary in
Oooola county. Los* $3,000.
k
Rrv. J. B. JLogau, colored, drowned
in I’ligaley* lake, near Paw Paw.
Edward Broitung nominated for
congress in place of J. A. Hubbell.
John W. PliilHw killed at Ferrys­
burg by a plank tfirown from an edger.
W. F. Brayman, of Big Rapids, mar­
ried. gone. Also part of bis employer’s

Four freight cars wrecked and a fire­
man’* foot crushed in a collision at
Jackson.
Sidney Morse, of Berrien county,
poisoned six of David Well*’ cows be­
cause Wells beat him in a lawsuit.
A pickerel in a^ake near Ogemaw,
tried, to swallow । a Bupfisju-bu^ got
stack arid both ‘■jtere found drowned.
Frank Niti, tof Ovid, and Thomas
Cal sb an, of New York, walked ten
miles for $700. Nita won in 1 hour and
45 minutes.
By a steam and tow boat collision on
the Sault river, two and perhaps three
lives were lost, besides a schooner and
a load of iron ore.
The Michigan rifle team sent to
Creedmore, has made at 200, ' 500 and
1,000 yards, 51 more points than the
winning team made in 1880.
The Woman’s Foreign Missionary
Society met at Coldwater,, Sept. 9th.
$1,807 more were collected the past
year than the year previous.
’
The scrap-iron swindle of the Grand
Trunk at Fort Gratiot has collapsed.
It is now said that only a few hundred
dollars’ worth of iron was stolen.
Ben. Colvin, of Saginaw county, who
led the bolting Green backers, has hod
himself nominated for Congress by nine
out of a convention of thirty-five mem-

way to get money, for the clerk* are
ahellinjUrnt iu good style and murmur­
ing *goodTteal ** they do it. The
word* “voluntary contribution” are
not pleasant to the ear. 1 met * Treas­
ury clerk a few days ago on his way to
Republican beadquarter* to pay, in his
language, hi* “political blackmail.”He shut one eye and significantly and
said that his “right aay^on American
citixen to contribute Ida two per cent
cannot be infringed.” Wo went down
to Jlepablican headquarters, where a
young mau, sorioanded by aynpaign
literature and two or three clerks, gave
him*a receipt for $40. It was the on­
ly money the clerk bad saved during
tho year, he said, and he had been lying
awake nights recently for fear Brews­
ter’s decision or Folger’s letter would
ent him oft from the privilege of con­
tributing it voluntarily to “the

.

Willard Johnson, of Ingham county,
should be remembered as a wretch.
He got Maria Oliver in a family way,
and she died from the effects of a hor­
rible abortion.
As Eugene Webster, tho man who
castrated Stephen Tarbell, and tbe de­
puty sheriff were ascending the jail
*tep8*at Marshall, Webster knocked
the deputy down nnd escaped.
The engineers of the C. &amp;.. G. T.
railroad bauqnetted one of their num­
ber who had l&gt;een promoted to be chief
engineer of the Canadian Pacific, and
presented him a $1,000 tea set.
There is a very large scandal circu­
lating in the Ontario, Canada, press, in
which a profesSor in tho medical de­

partment uf Michigan University is
charged with having seduced a Cana­
dian woman who went there for treat

Peter Cev*iia,of Landing, a murd*ret,
escaped from toe Ingham county jail.
He is of shallow complexion, has gray
eyes is29 years old, weighs 135 pounds,
is five feet five inches tall, and is a
miserable, vicious looking cups gener­
ally. $100 reward.
•
Tbe Democratic congressional con­
vention for this district met at Jackson,
Sept. 7th, bat only chose officers, elect­
ed a district committee with A. J.
Bowne on from Barry, and adjourned
to Sept., 19th, determined to get the
Greenbackers to also hold their con­
vention at the same time and place.
Mr. Hicks, of Kalkaska, suspected
Mr. Tuit of destroying his domestic
piece by debauching his wife. The
two men went out on the railroad to
see if they couldn’t settle the matter
with-talk, but before many minutes
Hick called Tuit a liar, and when tbe
latter slapped him, shot him dead.

OUB WlHHLWQTO’f LETTER.

Washington, D. C., Sept. 9,1882
Tbe many people in Washington
-who make their living in government
employ, are, a* * rule, considerably
torn up in mind. They are hopeful of
continuation of the republican party in
power, yet very anxious about result*.
Their interest in politic!* is at the
highest pitch. When they pick up n
newspaper they invariably read the
political new*, before looking at any­
thing else. Here and there will be
ftpnd* clerk who believes that New
York, if Folger is -Dominated Gover­
nor, will be loot by the Democrats.
There is al way* an unsettled condition
•f things in the department* just be­
fog* election time*. Many of them have
boose* which they are paying for in in­

A* a rule, they ;d-

The men with families are many of
them behind hand to the batcher, the

The criminal court was again crowd
ed yesterday to hear the Attorney Gen­
eral’s closing remarks in the star route
trial, and at tbe conclusion of which
ensued the scene of the day if not the
whole trial, and one which has few, if
any, parallels in the judical history of
the country. The jurors were again
on their feet, and about to leave the
box, and many of the audience were
preparing to leave the court room, when
Judge Wylie stated that he wished to
devote a moment to another matter.
Tho significant tone in which he said
this warned the spectators that some­
thing important was to follow’, aud in­
stantly there was a dead silence. "Sev­
eral of the members of this jury,” he
Continued calmly, "have come to me
with information that they have been
approached with propositions most
manifestly of a corrupt kind. The first
intimation 1 had of this kind was sev­
eral weeks ago. Several more (inter­
rupting himself) I cannot call them in­
timations, they are square aud direct
information given to me privately for
the purpose of asking me what they
(the jurors) should do. My advice was
to say nothing about it. The court did
not want to interrupt the progress of
the arguments of the case by any such
side questions as this. But I advised
them to be careful. This thing has
grown (becoming more indignant as he
proceeded), and within the last twentyfour hours it seems that that these
wolves, which have been around this
jury have become fiercer, more deter­
mined.”
Judge Wylie’s remarks,
which were delivered with greatearn­
eatness and an indignant tone, created
e profound sensation, and tbe foreman
of the jury, Mr. William Dickson, rose
and said that after the disposition of
this case he would lay the whole mat­
ter before his honor.
Couscl for the
defense jumped up and said they want­
ed an investigation.
Last night there was much talk
about town in reference to the sensa­
tion at the court-house, and numerous
rumors were afloat as to the number of
the jurors who bad been approoced and
by whom the approaches were made.
There was nothing, however, tangible
learned. Tbe defendants declined to
say anything on the subject, and the
attorneys were equally; reticent.
It is
said however that should the jury Con­
vict it will, under the circumstances, be
a comparatively easy matter to secure
anew trial, and that this is simply a
shrewed trick of the defendants to pro­
long their case.
August.
VERMONTVILLE.

D. W. Church and wife are still at
East Jordan.
Wheat is coming in freely and farm­
ers look smilingly.
The new drag store building of Stone
A Hull is nearly completed.
P. C. Grimes is about to move H. J.
Martin’s mill from Woodland to this
place.
H. J. Martin and family are home
again from Harbor Point, and their
summer vacation.
Every house .in the village is full,
and still inquiries for house to rent
‘‘come op the night air.”
The news from all quarters about the
forth coming new railroad from Mar­
shall to Mackinac, through this place is
of a most oneountging character.
Ida Parmentier, who has been rusti­
cating in tbe wilderness of northern
Ohio, for the past two mouths, is at
borne again, ready for the fall cam­
paign of music.
Looking from my window I can see a
boy of thirteen wrestling with bicyle
It is difficult to tell which is atop the
most of the time.. It is a good school
; iu which to learn perseveranae.
' Considerable dissatisfaction is ex­
pressed by numerous tax payers over
the village sidewalk tax, as well as the
general tax. Tbe whole amounts to a
little overonc-half of owe per cent of
valuation.
Three large cisterns, two below
ground and one above, are being conBtmtted oo Main Street, which will
bold in the aggregate about 800 barrels

Splendid Line of Those 5c

DISSOLUTION NOTICE.

NEW BATS AND CAPS.

day-dlsinlved by mutual connral. Those h
debind to tbe firm will setile with Mr. iugeraot
who oMutntw all the UablUthw of the firm.
Nauhvlllc, Aug. 81,1882.
Chaklos Fowl**,
50-1
Stxtxm 8. Ixoaasox.

100 CASES

CO-PARTNERSHIP NOTICE.

Auguwsi, itne.

BOOTS &amp; SHOES New Meat Market.
Have already arrived, and more coming. We intend to
make a specialty on these goods this fall. Call and see
them. CASH PAID for BUTTER and EGGS.

I have opened a market

ATTACHED TO C. SMITH’S
GROCERY,
and intend to keep a
FULL LINE OF

SALT and FRESH MEATS.
register, Joel son; treasurer, Spauld­
ing ; clerk, Perry; circuit court commiaaioners De Graff and Wood.
Tho whistle of the ateam brick press
reminds the quiet citizens that C. E.
Hammond and D. U. Warner arc get­
ting good building materials in readi­
ness for the business boom of next
year, when the now railroad comes.
School opened with so many pupils
that the board was obliged to use all of
tho rooms, instead of three os at first
intended. The teachers ore Mr. and
Mrs. Hawthorn, Miss Jewell and Miss
Collie, for the high school, grammar,
intermediate and primary respectively.
Frank Loomis’ new brick block pro­
gresses slowly but surely to comple­
tion. It is now stated that he has pur­
chased a largo lot opposite his new
block, on which he purposes erecting a
largo building for agricultural ware­
rooms.
John Williams, constable, went one
day this week to VanVleet’a, armed
with a chattie mortgage, to capture
some wheat that was being threshed,
and after being told he was not needed
ed he fell over some part uf tho thresh­
ing machine and skinned his arm. He
then left concluding it was not a safe
place for anybody with no protection
but a chattel mortgage.
Another replevin suit was brought,
Tuesday of last week, before EsqBodine, by L. D. Brown, late teacher
of our public school, against Rcv.(f)
A. A. Hopkins, dealer in pianos, organs,
sowing machine, etc. The suit was
based upon the identical facts and was
defended upon precisely tbe same
grounds as the suit of the week previ­
ous between the same parties but was
decided in just the opposite way.—that
is to say, In favor of Hopkins. Brown,
who is a Canadian, begins to think thalaw in the “States’’ is a mighty ticklish
business.
Occasional.
THE COUNTY.
S. I. Mapes, of Kalamo, is attending
college at Olivet.
A young man from Bellevue, accom­
panied by two young ladies from Nash­
ville paid our city a visit on Sunday
last. The young ‘man got full, was
locked up, and the young Indies re­
turned home.—Hastings pemocrat
Tbe Congrgational church of Mid­
dleville has a floral festival this Fri­
day evening. Tbe display of flowersis
expecthd to be very fine. This might
be made the starting of an annual flor­
al fair, such u is held at Colon in St.
Joseph county.
Francis Graves, editor of the Barry
County Plaindealer, is iirlots of troub­
le. He was recently incarcerated for
drunkenness and is now under arrestfor sending obscene matter through
the mail*. He is an old man. peculiar
and poor, and more sinned against
than sinning—tbe convenient target
for the spice and deviltry of others.
Tbe following are the appointments
uf Methodist ministers in thin county
and adjouning place*, made at the re­
cent conference : Bellevue, P. J. Maverty; Olivet, N. Fossett; Penfield,
W. P. Mosher; Woodland, Wm. Judd.
Vermontville. C. C.Olds; Johnstown
ami Baltimore, S. D. McKee ; Prairie­
ville, R. Clarnaey: Irving, J. Archer ;
Middleville, A. Huysberger.
Middleville: John Maloney, tbe whig
key dispenser of Middleville, senten
ced to pay $25 tine and be imprisoned
ten days for selling liquor to minors;
but John appealed.—$4,500 voted for
school expenses the current year,—
Three dollars fine and five dollars
costs is what it coat A. Spiingstend for
allowing hi* horse to follow injjj about

four rod* on the sidewalk.—Some of
the young men of Middleville wear

Latest News

Aino ^er^kkiag pertaining lo a fint-claM
market.
x

Cood Coodsand Full Weight
Owe me a trial.

D. L. DIRFEE.

C. W. GRANGER &amp; CO.
Have just received their new goods for the Fall trade.

THEIR PRINTS and GINGHAMS
Are the finest ever brought to this market for the price.

WORSTED DRESS GOODS,
In Brown, Cardinal, Dregs of Wine, Bronze Green, Slate, and
Drab, for 12 1-2 cents per yard.

CLOTHING.
Men’s, Youths’, Boys', and School.

SUITS.
From a Cheap Cottonnade to an Imported Worsted.
WE GUARANTEE OUR

PRICES AS LOW AS LOW AS THE LOWEST
Call and See our Hats and Caps, Boots and Shoes.

ALLON-------

F. T, BOISE,
DEGM,
’
,
BOOKS,
JEWELRY,
IV ALL PAPER,
WINDOW SHADES,
DYESTUFFS,
PROPRIETARY MEDICINES,

PRESCRIPTIONS,
RECEIPTS,

5000 LBS. OF BUTTER WANTED
For which we will pay the highest market price in Cash.

PAINT AND BRUSH
DEPARTMENT

Horses
— that----

8h.od,

NOT ONE
Of my Customers Complain

ALWAYS BEST
TO HAVE THE JOB DONF

SKILLFULLY.
Recognizing These Facts,
----- FROM —

The Nashvile Mill,
----- BUT------

And desiring to increase my prosperity
by affording the pvblie

JNO. M. ROE

ALL READY
To show you a targe *Dd well selected Stock of

GROCERIES
cowtrrwQ or

THE BEST WQRK Sugars, Coffees, Teas, Tobaccos,
Spices, Fish, Canned Goods,
/» that l.ne. I kaee mployai
Provisions, Ac.,
Chas. Middleton,
A No. 1 Workman.

UNIVERSALLY SATISFIED.

Call and ExamineI
F. T. BOISE.

J. M. WOOD

FOUNDER and MACHINIST
Probate. Notiee,
&amp;TAT» or MlCIICil, j M

AT THE LOWEST PRICES
For Cash or Ready Pay.

Crockery, Glassware. Lamps,
Stone Ware, Ac.,
TO BKSKKNJN^BAimY CO.
BOOTS ABD SHOES
AB CHTAP AB ABYBODY.

cash pah*
On nwllncand flits* th* Motion, duty
f S. Halrht one of the cro-ltan. ot Mid d

■Ity of HuMinip

Tor

prodice.

W. SMITH.

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                  <text>ORNO STRONG.!
amv Prop* nttor. I

Editor

VOLUME X.

| TERMS; $1.50 per Year
I Credit Svbscriptioks &gt;1.73,

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1882

In one case a gentleman who had a
LOCAL GIBBLE-GABBLE
sick child, left homo in the morning,
Aad Pmoaal CMt-CkaL
And Her Environs.
and on the way retnrniiig in the after­
VOL. X. NO. 1.
—A fine job of counter work is being noon was three times stopped and told
Daylight lessens daily.
that his child was dead; while the
done in the bank building.
*
The sick are improving.
truth was, the child was much bet­
—H- R. Dickinson has commenced
Wheat comes in briskly.
ter, and had been nteadily gaining
the erection jof a tenement house, ‘just
Miss Ida Woolcut is home again.
during the whole day.
One parson
east of his saw mill.
Dance this (Friday) press evening.
even went so far as to tell almost the
—Hartford Perkins of North Castle­ hour of the child’s “death.” This one
Oats move moderately and are damp.
ton has just completed a fine residence, instance illustrates the character of the
Mrs. Sam Hartford is dangerously ill.
and will soon move in.
Dr. W. H. Griswold is at home for a
rumors that have gained circulation.
—Now that the senatorial contest has How- they ever originate is indeed a
been decided, the VtVille Hawk is a mystery.
Miss Edith Fleming is visiting at
.
better reading than previously.
—A Poet of the G. A. R. with 47 Mason.
Miss Hattie Austin has returned from
—Taylor’s self-propelling threshing charter memliers was organized on
machine steamed into town, Thursday 1 Tuesday evening, in this village, which Ypsilanti.
Mart. Cole, now of Charlotte, was in
evening, o ’ way southward.
will be known as the Col. Jeffrey’s Post,
town Sunday.
.
7-One of) our
rts more No. 82. C. H. Rose of Custer Post, No.
Ed.
Roscoe is putting a cellar under
“printsd during the last week than 5, Grand Rapids, mustered in the old
his residence.
in any other seven days within recol­ “vets,” after which the following of­
Rev- Bangs is Baid to bo a bang-up
ficers were installed: P. C., E. F. Ev­
lection.
ans ; S. V. C., E. Potter; J. V. C., E. good preacher.
—Robert Gregg has traded his farm of
Miss Ota Wheeler left on Tuesday
Parody; Snrg., J. Osman; Chaplain,
160 acres, west of town, to Charlie Bra­
for Albion college.
dy for 40 acres of the Stacy farm and a L. Me Kin n is; Q. M., E. A. Bush; 0.
Clement Smith looked m upon as for
D., F. D. Soules; 0. G., W. D. Feister;
cash balance.
Adjt’., E. D. Williams; 8. M., J. 8. a moment, Thursday.
—8. J. Prindie has purchased the
Thanks to the management of the
Perry; Q. M. 8., H. H.Sparks.
Carpenter property on State St., and
county fair for a “comp.”
—A number of cases of diphtheria
will move in as soon as he can come
D. S. Conley, who is ill with typhoid
.developed the first of tho week, and
into possession of the same.
fever, is slowly improving.
under the direction of the school board
Fare to Grand Rapids and return dur­
—Dr. A. H. Winn has purchased the
the schools have been closed for a short
ing West Michigan fair, &gt;1.80.
house and lot across Quaker brook.
time as a precautionary* measure. The
C. L. Glasgow shipped a carriage to
Doc. now poasCBScth an elaborate cage,
disease was brought here by a child of
so let the bird fly in and occupy.
a customer in Nebraska on Thursday.
Dell Bacon’s, who caught it while vis­
Hastings bath charma to soothe the
—The cheeky part played by Walt. iting in Assyria and was allowed to go
Powers in the Greenback convention to school when he should have been savage breasts of Nashville young men.
C. E. Roscoe has sold his house and
is only another evidence of his self-con­ in bed, under the doctor’s care. The
ceit, egotism, ignorance, and narrow­ teacher of the department he was in lot on North State St. to Lucius Clark.
G. A. Truman A Son have the floor.
mindedness.
noticed he was sick and sent him home,
Let silence be maintained while .they
—Some of the more cheerful farmers but be returned the next day. In a
speak.
are now declaring that the increase on few days there was a case, the next
Mrs. W. Marble is recovering from a
the corn and potatoe crop caused by day another, and so on until now we
severe attack of typho-intermittent
the “flood” more than compensates for have a half a dozen well developed
fever.
the loss by grown wheat.
cases, and all directly traceable to the
See Hastings house card, and keep
—That cold weather approaclieth is Bacon child. One case has proved fatal,
in mind this house is the popular Hast­
very apparent to ye editor, as his but the rest are reported as mild cases. ings hotel.Good
physicians
have
charge
of
them
;
neither limbs are still arrayed in his
G. W. Ho wo and wife departed for
summer pants. Now, unfeeling delin­ our health officer is on the war-path, their future home at Fairfield, Neb.,
quent, will you hand in that subscrip­ and we expect to hear of no new cases.
on Thursday.
'
tion.
Miss Grace Black and Mrs. C. E.
‘AH OLD FOGY."
—At a meeting of the echool board
Bowen, of Hastings,called on Nashville
on Tuesday evening, the board decid­
He was an oldish gentleman, slim friends Saturday.
ed to use the money now in the treasury
Lennis Brady andlamiiy moved here
and bent, with grey hair, a thin face,
for school expenses the coming year,
and a bright, sharp, but pleasant twin­ from Battle Creek, Monday. Going to
which action necessitates the raising
kle in his gray eyes; and after he had buy a farm he says.
by tax for this purpose of only &gt;1200.
When you make bread of grown
paid up his subscription he acted as
It
—Verdi, the 8 year-old son of i. M. though be had somewhat to say but wheat flour mix in a little alcohol.
will
restore the strength.
Roe, mentioned in last week’s News wasn’t quite sure it was best to say it.
Mrs. Dr. Higby of Potterville, and
as being sick with diphtheria, sudden­
“ Is there anything else I can do for
Miss Myrtie Cranston of Irving, are
ly depafed this life on Saturday. Mr. you,” asked the foreman.
“ I don’t know,” said the oldish gen­ visiting at Joseph Wood’s.
and Mrs: Roe are most estimable citiz­
Many of our people took in the state
ens, and have the sympathies of hosts tleman ; *'I had a little item to give the
fair at Jackson this week. Agent Haw­
the editor to write np.”
of friends in their affliction.
thorne reports 170 tickets sold.
“
Well,
maybe
I
can
tendYo
that
for
—“Get you ready, children, get you
E. S. Kennedy hands in two mam­
ready.” Round trip tickets over the you -r I do a hftle in that line occasion­
moth tomatoes,—three pounds and ten
M. C. railroad from Charlotte, to Chica­ ally.” And the old man proceeded.
ounces
being their joint weight.
“Well, George Brown of Maple Grove
go Exposition, good until the following
Frank McDerby is oft'on a few days
Saturday, inclusive, for &gt;4.25, with a has a horse that is 40 years old, and for
vacation—taking in the state fair and
ticket to the Exposition free. Round the last four years Brown has worked
him on a horse-power threshing ma­ hospitalities of friends at Parma.
trip to Charlotte eighty cents.
Dr. Foote and wife went over to
chine. He isn’t working him on one
—Geo. W. Francis and one of the this year, though ; bat the horse is jast Battle Creek to attend the funeral of
finest stocks of groceries ever laid down as well satisfied, for Brown lias made a Dr. Cox of that city, on Thursday.
in Nashville, now occupy the new track in the field, and the old horse
Peter Roodhaar picnicked with the
brick. Geo. has shown commendable gets into that and goes round and round Evangelical Sunday school of l^aple
enterprise in building the fine building from dawn until dark. And a pole has Grove nt Thornapple lake, Tuettday.
that he has and stocking it so liberally, been laid across the track on one side,
Rev. J. M. Aikin, well known to our
and his efforts should be rewarded by and every time the old horse comes people as a former pastor of the M. E.
an increase of trade, as, no doubt, round he stubs his toe over it as con­ church, was in the village Tuesday.
they will be.
Huson and Frank Miller of Jones­
tentedly as ever he did over a tumbling
ville visited their sister, Mrs. C. L.
—They say the most important figure rod.”
head in the Prohibitionists’ county i “And this just shows,” the old man Glasgow, a couple of days this week.
Miss Lottie Evans, teacher in the
convention held at Hastings on Satur­ as he disappeared through the door,
day, was James M. Martin. Nashville “how old habits are kept good by old Grammer department of our school last
people, at least, are so well acquainted fogies, who never can take up with any year, ia the guest of Mrs. H. R. Dickin­
son.
with Jim, that they cannot believe that thing new.”
Rev. Mr. Bissell is billed to deliver an
any good can come out of anything he
ABOUT BLAIR
address for the north west Kalamo
has anything to do with. No cause, no
Lyceum association at its first annual
matter how worthy it may be, will
That tho community, as well as The
picnic to day.
prosper when ran by such men as Jas.
News, was misled in regard to the re­
Station agent Hawthorn sells return
ports concerning Alex. Blair, is selftickets from here to Marquette, good
-To-day The News enters upon the evident from the letter which we print
till Oct. 7th, for &gt;18.15, with stop over
tenth year of its reign. From the maid­ below:
at Mackinaw.
—
en number The News has been con­ To theEditor of The Nashville New*:
Dear Sih:
Ed. Reese has The News thanks for
ducted by its present proprietor, who bb
Having through misapprehension been In­ those luscious plums. They were de­
entirely satisfied with the success it has duced to believe that our business relations
received. The public, undoubtedly, are with Alex. Biair were not altogether correct,we licious and reflect credit upon the tree
have unwillingly been the means of causing
■
confident that The Newb will continue certain reports and publication to be thrown that bore them.
The fire company was out in force,
to be published week by week with the upon the public that, toaay the least, were very
same punctuality as of past years, con­ Kriou la their nature. Now In justice to him Monday evening, to pump out the cis­
we would aay to you and the public generally,
sequently comments and promises are that our misaj»prehenrion.i were entirely terns at Putnam’s and Grifiiiths, for
।
unnecessary, and we shall make none. groundless- We find the business in which wc repairs as both leak.
were engaged and of which be had charge ha*
Geo. Francis made his son Clyde a
—Rev. H. R. Williams of the Vt.
present in the shape of a bycicle less
Vilie Congregational church, occupied
than a week ago, and Clyde has the
the Christian pulpit Sunday evening been strictly honest with ns in all our deaUngs
thing well tamed already.
on exchange with pastor Bissell. Mr. We willingly retract all wc have said detrimen­
tal to him during his absence and cheerfully
Alex. Blair returned from Colorado
ful’y subMribe our names to till*. Wc acknowl­
Monday evening. He is settling his af­
the kingdom of heaven is like onto a edge ii is but a feeble way d./.ng justice to him
fairs here»and expects to move his fam­
for the wrong be baa sustained.
merchant, seeking goodly pearl: who,
NaahvfDe^epL 91,1882.
ily to Denver next week.
Signed.
John Bill,
when he had found one pearl of great
S. D. Hawthorne was sick with re­
LN. Kxllogc.
price, went and sold all that be had,
mittent fever several days this week.
and bought it,” found in thirteenth
APPOINTMENTS:
His place at the station was supplied by
chapter of St. Mathews. The arguFred Cross of Centerville.
Robert Gregg and daughter Eva and
master preacher, fell upon mentlooM below upon the
John Murphy started for Jamestown,
D. T., this week. They will travel quite
and bai
of the
extensively in that section.
On account of being extensively en­
gaged in business at Big Rapids, W.
village
A. Aylsworth has decided to close out
ly the i
his interests here, and therefore offers
ORMO STRONG.

LIFE IN NASHVILLE,

’

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun

bargains to purchasers, ss can be seen
by perusing his doublehalf column ad­
vertisement in this issue.
-A Shaw A Garver telephone now
connects our sanctum and residence,
and we can hear the “hello” of our
four-year-old almost any hour.
Two large congregations greeted
Rev. F. B. Bangs, on Sunday. Mr. B. is
a clear thinker, a pleasant speaker,
and a preacher after the Calvamstic
doctrine.
Jake and George Miller, of Franck’s
Corners, went up to - Vermontville,
Saturday, with their three-year-old
colt, and beat the Goodonough horse a
race, for &gt;10.
Wheat 93, pats 28, is the top of the
market ar we go to press Friday. By
typographical error this market has for
the past two weeks been quoted about
five cents too low.
Win. E. Fleming, an old forty-niner
of California, with his wife is stopping
at his brother’s. Jos. Fleming’s. Mrs.
F. is an invalid and they may become
permanent citizens of.Nashville.
It is stated that Dr. J. H. Ludington
has got weary of waiting for patients
in healthy Nashville and. has departed
with pills and plasters for the more
unhealthy town of Grand Rapids.

There will be a praise meeting at the
Christian church next Sunday evening.
A cordial invitation is extended to all.
Gospel song, No. 1. 2 and 8, will be
used. Let all who can sing bring their
books.

The News has received an invitation
to the annual ball of .the Hastings
fire department, Oct, 5.
The hall will
be nicely decorated, and the music will
be by Squiers’ orchestra, the best in
Grand Rapids.
Misses Bissell, Evans, Truman, Car­
rie Ingerson, Wilson and Wolcott made
Thornapple lake ring with laughter and
song, Thursday afternoon. Little pic­
nic all by themselves, with not a boy to
mar the beauty of the acene.
The bed spring manufactory was
closed several days this week, not be­
ing able to procure wire on account of
strikes in the cast.
Few ever realize
how far and wide and quickly strikes
make their benumbing influence felt on
industry.
A business meeting of the Christian
church is called by order of the trus­
tees, on Friday. Oct. 13th. nt 2 o’clock p.
m., to decide upon a change of organi­
zation and such other matters as may
cbme up for the action of the church.
It is important that all the members
be present.
We received a call this week from
Saulsbury of the firm Stauffer A Sauls­
bury nt Hustings. This firm is driving
n Inrge business in dry goods nnd gro­
ceries, nnd they buy nnd hnndle a
large am cant of produce.
Farmers
journeying Hastingswards will find it
to their advantage to go and see them.
, Tuesday evening just as Daniel
Sthley and family were retiring, they
were attracted by a noise in front of
their residence and upon investigation
found at their door the mother, brother
and sister of the former. Their names
are Evaline, Ralph and Elizabath Staley
and they come from Schenectady, N.
’
Y. The mother is 87 years old.
PRICES FOR WHEAT.
NumeroiiB farmers around Nashville
are drawing their wheat to this place
claiming that they get from five to ten
cents more on a bushel than they cun
at home.—Hawk.
The News might have said last week
that farmers were leaving the Ver­
montville market and selling here be­
cause they got more. butitdidn’t aay
Bo though the statement would have
been true, and is true now.
The in?
ference from the item in the Hawk is
that the Vt. Ville market is better than
that of Nashville, which isn’t true, be­
cause Vt. Ville farmers also come here
to sell. Take it day after day and the
price will average just about the same
at both places. The difference is in
tbejudgment of the individual buyer
on each particular load, and is as mark­
ed between the different buyers here as
between the buyers in the two markets.
Men will come in here and going to one
elevator will be offered a certain price
- all the buyer deems the wheat worth
or dares to pay; and will then go, per­
haps, to the other elevator, where the
buyer on his independent judgment
and without knowing the price pre­
viously offered, will in some cases of­
fer from two to five cents more or leu.

HASTINGS.
Henry Ford will enter 31 coops of
blooded poultry at the county fair.
8agendorph, prohibition candidate
for governor, spoke here Saturday
last
Rev. J. W. Bancroft is enjoying a
three weeks furlough, from postorial
duties.
Miss Jennie B. Wooten, a highly re­
spected young lady, died of consump­
tion last&gt;week. '
The council have appropriated &gt;100
towards the completion of the new
bridge, foot of Jefferson St.
Clru. Schumann, aged 13; was strick­
en with paralysis a fere days ago. His
lower limbs and half his body are para­
lyzed.
A slight unpleasantness occurred at
Pflug’s saloon Wednesday night last.
Revolvers clicked and bowie knives
glistened in tho gas light.but no gore
re as shed.—Democrat.
A couple of saloon rows occurred here
the past week. In one a combatant
tried to use a revolver, but fortunately
failed, and in the other Wm. Panstle
was badly cut with a knife by Charlie
BaileyThe democratic convention passed
off harmoniously with Wru. Rowley of
Woodland os chairman and M. H.
^Clark of this city as secretary. The
convention was unanimously in favor
of fusion if the Greenbackers would
give them clerk, register and one cir­
cuit commissioner. The Greenbackers
were willing to concede clerk and C. C.
C.. but not register, consequently “fu­
sion” so far as the county ticket is con­
cerned, is busted. A committee pre­
sented a ticket to tho convention
which was adopted without dissent nnd
the convention adjourned, fully deter­
mined to elect their entire ticket and
thus defeat tho Greenbackers.

LOCAL MATTERS.
r»iJET&gt;.
SnxRMAN—In Kalamo, Sept. 19, Mr*. Wnt
Sherman, aged 33 rears of paralysis of the
heart. The funeral nerrnon was preached at
the home of the deceased by Rev. Blesell
Wednesday afternoon, the remains being
burled in Kalamo cemetery.

I WILL FAY CASH.
For a Thoroughbred Jersey Cow. Owner* &lt;
such stock please address box 134. Nashville.
THE VERDICT: Having nought the Crown
sewing machine and fullv tested It in all kinds
of family sewing, we all join In saying that it
is Hie Easiest Rt-NNtNo, Most Silent, High­
est Arm and combine* more Improvements than
any Machine yet produced: E. Paradv and
wife, H. G. Hale and wife, R. P. Allen. Lottie
L. Perry, Mrs. F. E. Ingerson, Carrie Ingereon,
Mr*. Min- N. Foote, Jona Ra*cy. Mrs. Oruo
Strong, Mr*. Thomas Nile* and Mrs. Wm.
Thornton.
E. R. WHITE, Agent.

AT THE FRONT.
A Pure Sugar for 10 cents.
A Grand
for 9 „
A Rattle’for 8 „
Gratgeh A

market and for the r&amp;iuo prices, and in
the long run they must of necessity pay
about the same average price—they
cannot afford to do otherwise.

Co.

THIRD AND LAST CALL.
NO EQUIVOCATION.

All parties indebted to the former firm of
Ainsworth A Brook* by note or account, are
hereby notified that they must pay up imme­
diately or steps will be taken to collect the
unit.
C. AINSWORTH.
H. A BROOKS.

IOO USEFUL ARTICLES
E^v worth 25 eta, selling for 10 ct* at the
Ten Crot Store In tho Reese building.

EnrroR Nashville New* :
Ifcslre to make the following propoahloa
to butter maker* : I will furulab gntl* to all who
do not use One nalt and who sell me their butter,
or
«h b, tMr jjlll c, « a,
r

store for It.

FOR

r ti n... ....

8ALE.

’‘t* ths above.
I will also sell in connection or •epumte from
the above, my entire Stock of Groceries. A
good trade will go with them a« my books show
over 115,000 casb sales the first y(ir.
Now is the time to buy a home and go Into
buslncM. Would prefer'cash euMoamra, but
would sell for good paper or trade for a good
salable fan well located.
B

4

A car-load of the celebrated Ohio Lime
and Cement just In at the Elevator of
•___ BROOKS, MARSHALL A C&amp;.

NOTICE;
All partie* Indebted, elthci by note due or
account, will remember I have been here a vear
and have bill* to meet during the preient
tionth, and would like to see and nettle with a*
nlany a* possible. Thanking you for. past favorSImd hoping for others in the future, I am
I our* respectfully. \
OTA full line of new Groceries just receiv­
ed to be sold cheap to cash customer*.
C. Ainsworth.

SAVE MONEY.
And buy Buggies and Carriages and Wagons of
Glasgow from 10 to 3fidollars below anybody
else and all first class and warranted. Don’t
forget the celebrated Tiffany Bro's, goods kept
only by him.
.

i am very much obliged to you for your
patronage for the past five year* aixl would respectfullj announce that 1 have added to my
stock a complete line of boots nnd shoes.
C. W. SMrrm
MONEY TO LOAN,
On Real Estate at low rate of Interest of

C. W. Granger A Co. have just received an
immense stock of fall goods.
SUGARS.
I take a back scat for no one.
A pure sugar for .08 cent*.
A splendid sugar for .09 cents.
A Rattler for 10 cent*.
C. Ainsworth.

ST Our new spring ffeas have arrived.
They are of the garden variety and May pick­
ing and tor strength and flavor they can’t te
beat Aug. ISSi.
C. W. Granger.

AN oFeN LETTEIL
E. R. Warm, Dear Sir:
The great demand throughout the country
for the Crown Sewing Machine, made It im­
possible for manufacturers to furnish as fast
a* ordered, although running night and d*y.
We have just completed our new manufactory
and are-turning otrt 348 machines every 34
hours and expect to fill all orders in future a*
fast a* received.
Florence mfg. co.

«3” C**h paid for fresh Butter
MACHINERY.
Reei! Harrows and Secdcre, Buckey e Harrow*
and Seeders, Farmer’* Friend, Buckeye-and
Triumph Drill* from,00 to 70 dollars,sold cheap
for cash or ou tipie. and as good assortment, of
machinery a* 1* in either Barer or Eaton counties
and price* away down.
*C. L. Glasoow.
C3T New Groceries coming itr every dayC. AIN8W)KTTC.

APPLES! APPLES!
5.000 bushel* of apples wanted for drying, at
at the steam heat Evaporator two door* cart of
Powles’ Woolen Mills, Na*hvflle. Tho highest
market price in ca*h will be paid.
D. C. Grarrmi.

NOTICE.
All person* Indebted to me by book account
or note past due are requested to call and pay
the same at once. I need the money to pay my
debt*.
Respectfully.
frank C. Boise.
Nashville, Mich., Sept. 15,1882.

ST Ma*on Fruit Cans and Stone Preserve
Jug* at
• C. W. Smithes.

HATS! HATS! HATS!
Stiff Hate—Fall Block. Stiff Hate—All the
New Style* at.
C. W. Ghanokr &lt;fc Co.’s.

Call and see those new Prints—Satin finish.
C. W. Granger &lt;Jr Co.

MICHIGAN AHEAD:
The Michigan Stove* leads them all and thi
Round Monumental is the is the finest heating
stove made to-day.
Call at Gutsoow’* and
seethe finest display ever In Nashville.

TO RENT.
An office building on Main street..
WAGONS! WAGONS!
What Is th* use of paying sixty-five dollar*
for a wagon when you can get one every whit Shoes for the price, tn Nashville, at
eh good for fifty dollar* at my chon one-half
mile south of Nashville. See them.
JUST ARRIVED.
Gias* Wan!
ar Stone Ware!
tar Wooden Ware!
as- AT COCT!
C. AINSWORTH.

BOB 8LE1GH8!

*

A car-load of Star and Second Shingles at
the elevator of BROOKS, MARSHALL A CO
ptr* Go to Prindle A Chiptnan&gt; for the Ex­
celsior Shirt Polish.

E3F* The highest ’aarket prictuaid for But­
ter and Eggs in CMh at
Whxelrr’*.
ar I want your Butter and Eggs, and don't
forget tiisit I pay the Mme In cash as trade.

elm ever turned from the mill*, and propose to
pell said sleighs for twenty dollars per sett.
Jas. Moore.
One-half mile south Nashville.
CIDER! CIDER!
We will make Cider every 8*lurday until
further notice. Let those Interested take heed.
II. R. Dickinson.

AUCTIONEER!

'

If you want the bos* aacUoueer, employ J.
L. Gregory (Happy Jim) ahfl be happy.

•VINEGAR
H. R.

changing markets, they may al«J lose.
The dealers in both places and in many
other undoubtedly sell in ' the same

NUMBER 1

A FEW THOUSAND DOLLARS

O'Camp Chair*. Tinware, Glassware, 8X1’erware, Brushes, Hone, Notions, Etc., al tta
Ten Cent Store.

tar Whew! Have you seen Rskkt’s dc*
stock of Neckties! Biggest and b«t in town

YOUR EAR, qjENTLE READER.

Dickixson.

AUCTION.
cost* cash, and in order to lire and
Saturday, Sept. 30, Joseph Hough, north­
west of W oodland Center, will sell 1 work team
12-year-old colt, 2 cow*, 1 wagua, 1 double

paid when due.

Joseph Hough.

remittance.

�Receipt
Husketh was a hwhly respectable par­
son. and frankly admitted that b« kng
and faithful service entitled him to sub­
stantial benefit* from his late master.
MAJUT AND I.
Wherrthe young man proceeded to say
ment, dryly.
a woasa inru
" 1 shall also ask you, as a matter of that he must now resign his commission,
businsss, to act m one of my executors,” and emigrate to the Colonies- to beria
said Mr- Downing. ” It will then bo life afresh. Mr. Parchment felt that he
youvduty to uphold the will, in case it would gladly forfait his legacy if he
could find a flaw in old Mr. Downing's
“ I hardly think, sir, that my busi­ unjust will. However, he knew very
ness engagements will permit me to ac­ well that the document wm perfectly
fpp«d her dainty llugvns deftly in cept the office,” replied the lawyer, who valid on the face of it, and ho therefore
did not relish the prospect of being
Moy brook;
made responsible for the vagaries of an
ioally as they parted with mutual ex­
eccentric testator.
■
"I said, as a matter of business. Of pressions of good will.
course,
I
should
not
think
ot
asking
vou
i
This interview, though it tended to
riUtimlng rolled and fell apace.
to act for nothing,” said Mr. Downing. increase the lawyer’s antipath v to Mr.
Bracthlro* sat I, safely hidden In tho trve-top **I will leave you five hundred guineas Husketh, served to satisfy him of the
for your trouble, and besides that, there man’s integrity, and he therefore took
will probably be a good deal of profit the necessary steps for proving tjie will
attached to the winding up of my es- without delay, leaving his co-executor
to dispose of the testator’s furniture and
Mr. Parchment perceived'from tfais household effects. As old Mr. Downing,
speech that he had to deal with a though a rich man, only occtmied the
shrewd, clear-headed man, and ho upper part of a house in Harewood
rhUpcr in therefore felt less hesitation about com­ square, his domestic affairs were easily
plying with hie wishes. No doubt the arranged, and the lawyer was much
legacy .and tho prospect of future busi­ impressed bv the coof. business-like
little. Marit—well, ‘Us scarcely
ness had their influence also, though manner in which the latf valet set to
the lawyer affected to be quite indiffer­ work.
There w 11 n my leafy bower «at L happy as a ent to these inducements. He reflected
One evening, about a week after the
funeral, Mr. Parchment was preparing
And tw.. anxious wrens were timing round a few ipoments and then said:
abjut in &gt; twt:»ring,
•‘•Well, Mr. Downing, it will depend, to leave the office al an unusually early
While I gate I at Marit'a Image framed In
of course, upon the nature of the hour for him. when Mr. Husketh was an­
. Ma v.«n . a. A..I
nounced. The ex-valet appeared less
trusts."
•‘ There will be no complication, for placid and self-possessed than usual,
I propone to leave everything to one and asked the lawyer to let him havtf a
individual.” replied Mr. Downing. "I loan of £200 for a few days until the pro­
through the bltyrij leaves may mention that I am a bachelor, and bate of the will could be obtained.
tny only near relation is a nephew, who Though surprised at the request, Mr.
And at just-tbj&gt;d&gt;Tf-same moment sighed the has behaved badly to me, so I am de­ Parchment asked no questions, but at
termined to disinherit him.”
once wrote a check for ■ the amount.
image luAhj tide.
“ If. as you say, tho matter is quite Husketh was anxious to receive the
Tbenlh-a-da mournful whisper: “O thou
money in cash, but as the lawyer could
straightforward.
I
shall
have
no
objec
­
1«or, thou pretty face,
without gold wh it will avail theo, bloom of tion to act,” said Mr. Parchment, tak­ not accommodate him, and the banks
beauty, youth and grace?
were closed, he had to be content with
For a maid who ha* no dower—" and bar curly ing up his pen nnd drawing a sheet of
paper toward him. “ Will you give me an open check. Having handed over
b.i id she shook:
It was litt.s Marit speaking to her Imago in the the necessary instructions for your the draft, Mr. Parchment directed his
brook.
confidential clerk to prepare a formal
will?”
••I leave everything to Edward Alfred receipt for Mr. Husketh’s signature, and
lug sigh expired.
Husketh. and I appoint him joint exec­ hurried off to keep an appointment.
N6xt morning, when no reached the
utor with you,*' said Mr. Downing,
Full of love and full of pity, down 1 stoopod readily.
office his clerk, an intelligent young
her plaint to boar;
"And who may Mr. Husketh be?” fellow, who had a desk in the corner of
I could almost touch the ringlets curling arch­
inquired the lawyer, as he wrote down Mr. Parchment’s room, closed the doer
ly round her tar.
behind him with an air of mystery, and
the name.
Nearer, stilts little nearer, forth I crept along
•• My man—valet, I suppose you said:
“ If you please, sir, I ventured to stop
ought to call him.” answered the old
that check vpu gave Mr. Husketh last
M Procioin darl.nr.” thought I, "grieve not gentleman.
'
"Dear me!” exclaimed Mr. Parch­ niglU.”
that thuu bast no lover found—"
Crash ho branch went, and, bewildered, down ment, leaning back in his chair. "And
“What!" exclaimed Mr. Parchment,
I tumbled on tho ground.
quite aghast. "How dare yoa do such
you leave him everything!”
a thing without asking me?”
Up then sprang the little Marit with a cry of
"Absolutely.”
“ When old Mr. Downing signed his
" Of course. You see your duties will will, sir,” said lhe clerk, hurriedly, ** I
Swift ah-- d irtirl through the bushes, and with be very simple.”
was one of tho attesting witnesses, andl
stupid wonder mu tn
•’ But you have considered, Mr. noticed that be had a singular scar on
Stood I staring blankly after ere I started In
pursuit.
tho back of his hand.”
Downing? A man in his position—”
*■ Well, and what if he had?” ex­
"I know all that!” interrupted the
old gentleman, testily; •• that is what claimed the lawyer, irritably.
Over fallen trunks and bowlders on she tied every one will say, and that is why I
"It
is a singular coincidence that
w.th skips und hops,
Glanc.ng sbHrply o'er bor shoulder when she wish a lawyer of respectability like your­ Mr. Husketh has a precisely similar
beard my footsteps sound,
self to act as my executor, in order to mark on tho back of his hand—a- scar
Daabmg on with reckless terror like a doer
Erotect his interests.
You will find like a burn just below tho wrist. I no­
before the bound.
[usketh a very decent fellow, well ed­ ticed it w'hen ho signed the receipt yes­
Hot with seal 1 broke my pathway where the ucated. and so on, and quite gentleman terday.” said the clerk, impressively.
clustered boughs wore dense.
enough to make better use of my money
Before Mr. Parchment had time to
than my nephew could.”
comment on this communication, an­
And at last* exhausted, fell she on tho grwnentered the room,---------------followed
Mr. Parchment said no more, as it other clerk
------- -------------------------------iw trd quivering,
.
panting, pleading, weeping, like a was quite clear that Mr. Downing had ' bJ’ a young woman, who did not wait
Wild. unr.nunhlnr th I no*
deliberately made up his mind. After I to be announced, but pushed herself in
all, the Lawyer felt no interest in the | fronl
1,im» “d confronted the astondisinheriled Aeir. and ho knew instinbt- kked lawyer with flaming eyes. In her
Id cry;
In all the pariah such
ively that his. new client wns not a per- ' hand R,le he,d a 9,‘P o( paper, w’hich
son likely to be swayed by impulse, or !1° recognized as one of his own checks,
to take a serious step without exercising j and
circumstance helped him to
’No, Indeed," she sobbed. In answer—-* no, in­ his judgment He therefore drew up identify the young woman as the sen-,
deed. I do not know.1.
the will according to instructions, not 1 aPl maid who had opened the door to
But methought that in hor voice there was a oiniUing the legacy to himself; and.Mr. ,,im "hen he called at Hnrowoodsquare
touch &lt;&gt;f petulanoe;
announce to Husketh his good fort­
Through tho glist uiing tours 1 caught a little Downing culled and executed it in due
any nnd fttrtlve glance.
form the following evening, insisting | tino’.ir
.
Growing bolder, then, I clasped bar dainty upon paying the fees on the spot The |
” " bat *s lbe meaning of this?” she
band ful t &gt;ndcrly,
I
will
was
confided
to
Mr.
Parchment's
cr
’
cd
« folding out the slip of paper,
Though it made a monk exertion, struggling
fain Uy to be free.
care, and the new client took h&amp; detrembling fingers.
“I :un sorry,” said Mr. Parchment,
• Little Marit.*' said I, gently, ••tell me whut nurture, apparently much ‘relieved in
b is grieved you so.
his mind.
i perceiving that it was tho check he bail
For J Buitni you sighing surely at the brook a
But the lawyer feit very uncomfort a- P'cn
Hu'keth. “There has been a
while eg ■.’*
“Oh," she said, her soba subduing, with on ble when he reflected upon the matter, misunderstanding. Pm afraid. Pray be
a-’r demure and mock—
■ Oh. it w s that naughty kitten: be had The idea of a client bequeathing his seated.
property to a servant, to the exclusion
“Misunderstanding! Yes. I .should
scratched me on the check."
of his own relatives, was repu&lt;ma&gt;it to I lmnk so!’’ exclaimed the young womMr. Parchment’s old-fashionecl notions an, speaking in a shrill and excited voice,
strove her glance to catch.
।
" L?t me look: my kiss is healing. May I cure of justice and decorum: and his con- I “ He told me 1 had only to go to tl ?
too kitten's scratchF
science smote him for not having pro- bank and 1 ahouW
two hundred sov i
And I kissed the burning blushes on her
tested more strongly against such a dis- I '’reign-''
that, instead of which I am
chocks in hoodies* glee.
I
Though tiie mark* of Pussy's scratches were position. To ease his mind, he resolved i treated lite a pick|M&gt;cket. and sent over
.
invisible to ma
to call upon old Mr. Downing, and i here- I knew it was only a trick of his.
wanted niotogo without money; but
“O, thou poor, thou pretty darling," cried I, make an effort to induce him to modify '
I knew
’
‘him too well; so then he gives
’
WMUtranJc
afe . .. with delight,
__ ___ ,11__ ___ . ——.... his will in favor of the nephew; hut this ,a
project was tho outcome of several me this to quiet me.”
*• Where did he want you to go to?" in­
weeks’ uneasy reflection, nnd in accord­
ance with tho legal propensity for pro­ quired Mr. Parchment, pricking up his
"
c.r i. iuur Ml KViu,
crastination. he put off his 'visit from ears.
—Hja-mar H. lio^eMn, In lisrpcr'* Magazine.
day to day. until he was shocked nnd
•‘To Holland first, and then to join
startled to hear of the death of the ob­ mo in a t/eek or-lwo, as soon as he'd
■R. PARCHMENT’S KEW CLIENT. ject of his solicitude.
got the money." replied the young
Mr. Parchment wns too practical to woman, who seemed carried away by
Mr. Parchmcnt'generaUy regarded a
worry hi.-.self with vain regrets, and he furious indignation; but after being
new client.with a certain aruountof dis­
therefore at once proceeded to discharp’ treated like this, he won’t get me out
trust. being an old-fashioned family so­
the duties imposed upon him by the of the country—not he! I ran see his
licitor of conservative notions, with a
wilt He found the fortunate legatee a game; he wants to get me out of the
very respectable and wealthy connec­
sleek, clean-shaven, quiet mannered, way because I know too much—the
tion. But Mr. John Downing came to
middle aged individual, answering ven­ mean-spirited, sly-faced scoundrel!”
him with an introduction from a relia­
well to his late master’s description of
"If you will tell me what you know it
ble source, and at a glance Mr. Parch­
him. Mr. Husketh expressed mild sur­ will be to your advantage,” said Mr.
ment was favorably impressed by him.
prise
when the important news was Parchment, with sudden interest.
He turned out to be an elderly gentle­
communicated to him. but showed no
••I don't know what he has been up |
man. somewhat infirm, with an air of
importance and quiet dignity which the emotion whatever. Though he treated to, if you mean that,” replied the wom­ ।
Mr. Parchment with respectful defer­ an, viciously; “ I only wish 1 did. But
lawyer had learnt from experience to .
ence, the lawyer could see that he in­ you ask him why he came creepin’ in
associate with . a good rent-roll and a
tended to manage his own affairs, and one evening dressed in master's clothes,
pred.lection for the three per cents.
wm not likely to develop into a tracta­
Mr. Downing commenced by a[x&gt;lo- ble, confiding client. Perhaps it was and so disguised that I thought it was
exing for the lateness of the hour he owing to circumstances that Mr. Parch­ the master himself for the minute,
id chosen for his visit, it being then ment conceived n strange aversion to though I knew poor Mr. Downing was
between six and seven o’clock in the his co-executor—so much so. that he lying up stairs too ill to move hand oi
foot.”
evening. Observing that (he old gentle­ di&lt;l not feel very loyally disposed to­
••Bless my soul!" exclaimed Mr.
man was mutiled up to the eyes, and wards him.
Parchment, nearly jumping out of his
spoke in a hoarse whisper, as' though
On tlr« other hand, he sympathized chair.
“Can you—ahem!—are you
he was suffering from some affection of
vert much vylth the old man’s nephew,
the chest, Mr. Parchment remarked up­ Arthur Downing, who came up to town aware whether the late Mr. Downing
had a scar on tho back of his right hand,
on the imprudence of his venturing out
te attend his uncle's funeral. When like Mr. Husketh has?”
&lt;1 ter dark.
»
Mr. Parchment informed him of the
•• I’U swear he had not, for I nursed&gt;
" If it does me any harm 1 shall have purport of the will, he bore his disap­
to bear the consequences.” replied Mr. pointment so bravely, without a trace him through his late illness,” said the
Downing, rather sharply. "The fact is, ,of anger -or resentment, that the old woman promptly.
Mr. Parchment drew a long breath,
nobody &gt;*nows I have come out. At lawyer’s expressions of i-ondolenoc had
the present moment 1 am supposed to a genuine ring in them. Arthur Dovrn- and exchanged a significant glance with
be confined to my room with bron­ ing explained that he had inburred his his elerk, who at once took a cab, and
drove to Scotland yard, while the law­
chitis.”
uncle’s displeasure by’marryihg against
Mr. Parchment opened his eyes at the old man’s wishes, and he was there­ yer dispatched a brief telegram to Ar­
this, but sad nothing, while the old fore not altogether surprised al being, thur Downing. — London Truth.
gentlemau indulged in a quiet chuckle disinherited. At the same time, l.iii
which terminated in a fit of coughing. uncle had written him a letter shortly
—Several Earn Indian officials hpve
•• I—I a-'k-'d our ruuUisl friend. Gen­ before his death, in which he did no't signed und seat to manufacturers in this
eral Turnbull, to introduce me to a so­ repeat his threat of,altering his will, and country a circular requesting informa­
licitor uf eminence, on whose discretioni Arthur Downing had come up to town tion a* to the possible instruction here
and integr ty 1 could rely,*’ said Mr. in the full expectation that he was hh of Indian youths in the mechanic -.irts.
Downing, when hi* rough ‘ had ceased. uncle’s heir. Mr. BWchment was much The purpose of thia movement is the inHe gave me a letter to you, and 1I struck by tho Magnanimity which the troductiin in Indra of profitable indus­
have taken the earliest opportunity of! voting man displayed toward Mr. Hus­ tries. Must of those native to the coun­
’•all n . I .-'Mh t'» make a fresh will., krth. Far from attributing his rival's try have died out under English nils.—
Mi Parc w«uf
( good fort ’ine to chicanery or undue in- A. Y. Examiner.

the thinker much food for meditation,
and the journalist much material for
••copy.”
An olwUnate man does not hold hl» opinion*,
I have often been impressed by the
vast number of persons, of a more or
impecuniosity, whq earn—or try to DtnovKinurr for mind and body.
—ffieir bread and butter, to say noth­
ing of beer and tobacco, by the sale of
all aorta of riff-raff, objects useful and cl of “*11 &lt;&gt;r gallon of imilk. As au appetizer
eo“dcorrector, thereis
DCrihtaR like it and invalids consequently find
formMand body.
Do yoa know what can be bought for
one penny in the streets of London?
A nan abopM not' resign— even an umbrella
No. Well, then go with me and stroll —while ujderactoad.
down St. Paul’s churchyard into Ludgate Hill, through Temple Bar. down
Fleet street, and into the Strand, and
I’ll guarantee you that Ln fifteen min­
utes’ walk, you will acquire a more
App»y Into oottrih with lltta finger
Ely»r C ream Bain cured me of Catarrh at
varied stock ot merchandise at Id. per
ianv yearn ataudiniy—me —
object than lhe divine- William had in
mind when he caused Hamlet to ob­
serve:
"There are more things in
heaven and earth than are dreamt of in
W6 recommend Elys’ Cream Balm in every
your philosophy, Horatio.”
case where a cure for catarrh is called for, and
Here, opposite the soot-stained cathe­ in no Instance have wc beard of disappoint­
ment We consider that wc are doing the
dral, we meet on the corner a flower public a service by making ito virtues known to
girl who presses us to buy a •• nose­ those afflicted with tbis loathsome dtoeaae, for
gay;’’ “ bunch o’ roses, sis, only a which it, ia in moat Instances a perfect enre.
penny! ’Ave a nice bunch, sir, only Ptck Baos., Druggists, Grand Rapids, Mich.
apennyP] You invest your copper, pin
Time is a good deal like a mule.. ft la tatter
the three big roses in your button-hole,
to ta alidad of time than behind time*
.
and march onward, oonauering nnd to
conquer. At the “ top ’’ of Ludgate
DO NOT DESPALJL
?
Hill, a raggexl woman, barefooted, and
Persons suffering from complicated diseases
red-nosed, an infant in her arms, and that have a tendency to exhaust and weaken
throe dirty brats tugging at her bedrag­ the brain and nervous system, find themselves
quickly
cured, and perfect tone and real
gled skirts, attacks you. She extends
strength given to the affected parts, dry making
two boxes of matches toward you with free use of Brown’s Iron Bitters. It makes the
the cry, piteously plaintive* “ Lights! old feel young, the young feel buoyant, and re­
sir, two boxes o' matches, only a pen­ moves every symptom of Jllncss from the hu­
ny, sir! buy a box, sir, only a ha’penny, man system, A trial bottle will convince vou
sir!” You pull out a second copper, that it is the best tonic made.

tew. arotert, otaA,

Sko'S.Tbii?

feell^ just splendid now, and shall continue
Zoa-ETtora until enred.

*piUJer’ No * W“l 8t-’

»I have Bren suffering for over 16 years with
spa-modic pain in mr bead, end general ner­
vous debility. I bad a severe sttaek of fate ia
my bead two weeks ago, caused by wcakneun
and bervouu exhaustion. I real! v thought 1
should die. Wc had Zoa-Phora in the hdusc,

Kg BuikiST'0!”’’ s“”“‘

pocket your two boxes at "lights,” and
on you go, feeling very virtuous at
having atded to clothe the naked and
fill the hungry mouths of London poor.
At the next step you are boarded by
the man who sells key-rings, “only a
penny!” Then you successively en­
counter sellers of picture-books, of
photographs, of bananas, of apples, of
peaches, of oranges, of candies, and of
hundreds of other commodities more
or less undesirable. By this time you
have reached the stately dragon which
prances ou top of the monument,tnarking the spot where formerly stood
famous Temble Bar. You stop to gaze
al that gorgeous "auimile.” which
■‘ was exceeding rare,” just like the
odc which was " reconstructed from
them some bones” found in lhe cele­
brated Mr. Jones’ family vault.
While gaping »l tho monument a gen­
tleman of oorn-kllllng proclivities ap­
proaches with a bottle of specimens
preserved in alcohol and resembling
very nearly a bottle of "mixed uickles.R
He offers you a box of hie infallible
remedy for the eradication of all corns,
bunions, wens,
warte,
etc.—Price
"Only a penay, skf’
At frequent Intervals you stop to
buy a copy of The News, tn The Echo,
or Uoonshine, or Lloyd's Weekly—each
one penny. These purchase* are sand­
wiched in with penny pipes, penny
lead-pencils, penny penholders, "a
sponge for a penny,' sir!" shoe-buttonera. shoentrings " three pairs for one
penny I” penny neckties, •• litte brown
jugs, only one penny!” penny pocket­
combs, etc.
Becoming hungry, you
lunch on a penny bun and a penny sau­
sage. and make your dessert off a pen­
ny stick of chewing-gum. Then, with
a penny cigar in your mouth —"genu­
ine Havana”—you pursue the even
tenor of your way as jauntily as the il­
lustrious “Lardy Duh ” of poetic fame,
who is always depicted with
I n bi* mouth a penny pick.
In hr» hand a ptmpy stick.
And a penny in Eia pocket,
tardy Dahl tardy Dali.
Ami a penny in hi* pocket taidy Dnh*

—London Cor. Chicago Times-

rfake Up!
AH snoula wake up, both men and
women.
When one man is getting
four hundred pounds of butter per year
from a cow, the neighbor, who is get­
ting one ‘hundred and fifty pounds per
year, if he does not wake and see what
is the matter, he has neither that spirit
nor enterprise which will ever win. If
one farmer’s wife is getting thirty-five
cents per pound for her butter because
it is sweet, n^at and wholesome, the
neighbor woman who is getting only
fifteen cents for her trash, if she does
not arouse from her slumbers, it Is evi­
dence that her husband made a gross
mistake when he married her.
One
farmer pushes forward his grade steers
so that they sell for $80 per head, at
two years. If his neighbor persists in
raising scrubs and sell them for $50 per
head at three years, he will soou have
a mortgage on his farm, if he has uot
already. No man or woman likes to be
outdone if they are half awake, or have
a sprinkling of the spirit which is necessary for success in any enterprise.
We want to get a bee in the bonnet of
every woman, and a hornet behind the
ear of every man. who are toiling away
behind their neighbors. There is a bel­
ter way—there is a higher life—there
is a more certain road to success—to
every one who will wake up to the
spirit of the age. Be first-class in
everything—dress up to the most advancedfUeighbor. ami pass him if poasible in the superiority of everything
produced on the farm, orchard, or
dairy. Too many of our farmers are
dreaming away existence, with but lit­
tle more enterprise or intelligence than
the bivalve in the mud of the estuary.
Woke up.—Iowa Stale, llegisler.
—A Kentucky lover who swore by
the great horn spoon that he’d like to
die for his girl stood on the river bank
and saw another chap pull her from the
water and never even offered him fif­
teen cents reward.—Detroit Free. Tress.

—They hare now got to adulterating
outter, sugar and lard with soapstone.
Soapstone is verv healthy, if you eat

mmediatc relief, anti felt like going to
I advta- all ladles who suffer from nermedicine to compare with R.
May 14th, lUtHT

do

Juunou, HL, April 25, 1882.
Da. Pknosllt—Dear 8!r:—lam more than
pleased with the effects of your Zta-Phora in
our daughter’s case. I am surprised to see
how she has Improved. Khe is gaining in
weight and color; her .nerves are steady, and
the distress she suffered in her clKst is entirely
gone. • I firmly believe that Zoa-Phora ia all
that baa aared hsr life. I am willing you
should use my letter, for I am not afraid to
tell what u wonderful cure your medicine is,
and ! would like all who suffer to try it.
Yours respectfully,
.
Mrs. Sarah Randolph.
I shall always remember gratefully the good
This year people hare been going away to health your medicine has brought rav daughter.
r
'
1-xwti Raniwlhh.
spend their money, not to spend the summer.

MILLIONS GIVEN AWAY.
Millions of bottles of Dr. Ring's New Dis­
covery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds,
hare been given away as Trial bottles of the
large size. This enormous outlay would ta
disastrous to the proprietors, were It not for
the rare merits jicssessed by the wonderful
medicine. Call at the drug store and get a
trial bottle free, and try for yourself. It never
fails to cure.

' ERRORS OF YOUTH.

Step on a woman's trail and ube ha* a claim
forMatnages. Her redrew Is a new drew.

■u
Address Sviasox * Co..I‘ortl*nd. Me.
M
-------- ------------------------------------------------------------------

REMEMBER THIS.
If you are sick Hop Bitters will surely aid
Nature In making you well when all else fails.
If rou are costive or dyspeptic, o» are suffer­
ing from any other of the numerous diseases of
the stomach or bowels, it Is your own fault if
you remain ill, for Hop Bitters are a sovereign
remedy in all such complaints.
If you are wasting away with any fonn of
Kidney disease, stop tempting death this mo­
ment. and turn for acure to Hop Bitters.
•
If you are sick with '.hat terrible sickness
Nervousness, you wifl find a “Balm in Gilead”
in the use of Hop Bitters.
If you are a frequenter, or a resident X1 •
miasmatic district, barricade your system
against the scourge of all countries—inalariaf,
epidemic, biliousness, and intermittent fevers—
by the use of Hop Bitters.
If you have rough, pimply, er swallow skin,
■bod breath, pains and aches, and feel miserable
generally. Hop Billers will give you fair skin,
rich blood, sweetest breath, health, and com­
fort.
In short they cure all diseases of the stom­
ach, Bowels, Blood. Liver, Nerves, kidneys,
Bright's disease. $5OJ will be paid for a case
they will not curt or help.
That poor bedridden, invalid wife, sjster,
mother or daughter, can be made the picture
ot health, by a tew bottles of Hop Bitters, cost­
ing bu t a trifle. Will you let them suffer!

ANEW BOOK
ON A NEW SUBJECT!
WANTED FOR THE
THRILLING

AGENTS

NEW BOOK

THEATRICAL
&amp; CIRCUS LIFE,
tlx'
of tho •lsre.GreenJ

Brvealing
secrets
Room and
Circu* tent. Private and public lives ot noted actorand acirvsac*, their professional work and aummer
v scat I on*, a must oc sketches and thrilling tragcdle*:
| the Black Art revealed, how men eat Are, wnmen
are flied from cannon*, headi are ent off. ole.
, Matinee Masher* and viddy ballet clri* , how »ctor* and actresses are made : aucientaud modern
I tnon»tro«ltlc* ; wonderful *ecrot* of lran*t»&gt;nnailon
| scenes. History Of the drama from lhe earureldayi
; down to lhe present time Mort thrilling and en­
tertaining book now in the field. Astounding rev­
elation* I Truth stranger than fiction! 1’5 POR­
TRAITS. ENGRAVINGS. AND COLORED
PLATES I Sell* on sight. EveYybody wanU II.
Granget opportunity ever offered to tbo»c deairing
pleaeWnt and profitable employment. Other pub­
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trol of territory. Illustrated circulars and full par­
ticulars FREE or send 30 cents In mou«y ot stamps
for complete canvassing outfit, to Historical Publlshlag Co.,602 N. 4th St. Louis. Mo.

A qrnlleman who suffered for yesra from N«r
vou* debuity. Premature decay, and all the effects
of youthful indiscretion, will for the sake of suf­
fering humanity, send fre« to all who need it the
recipe and direction for making the simple remedy
by which ta was cured. Suflercra wliblng to profit
by tbs advertisers experience can do so by address­
ing In perfect confidence.
S*-lyr, JOHN B. OGDEN.43Cedar flt„N. Y.

io

P".’&lt;J,Thowt'-worth•*

Over 5000

Druggists
AND

Physicians
Have Signed or Endorsed the
Following Remarkable
Document:
Mewara.Soa.bury A Joiwnon, MannfncturIxUT Chsmlata, 21 Platt St., New York:
GrtxttlamanFor tho past few years we
have ao’d various brands of Porous Plas­
ters. Physicians and tho Public prefer
Benson’s Capcino Porous Floater to all

othera We consider them ona of tho very
few reliable household rcmodleo worthy
of conhdenco. They uro rupcrior io all
other Porous Plasters or Liniments fcr
external use.
Banapn’s Capeine Plaster ia a genuino
Firmacoutical product, of tho highest
order of merit, and so recc*nlasd by
phyaicians and d-uyo-ta**

When other remedies fall get a Ben*
won's Cupolno Plaster.
You Will be di nappe in ted If you USO
cheap Plasters, Liniments, Pads or Hloo^rical Magnetic toys.
MURE REMEDY AT LAST.

Price BScta.

A BEAD’S Bedloisd CORN ud BUNION PLASTEE
.WOMAN CAfAj

HEALTH OF WOW

MPATHZE WITHES THE HOPE

PARKER’S

Y WOMANS&lt;THE RACEi

BALSAM.

TLOBXSTOK

ICOLO&amp;HE.
PARKER’S

CINCER TONIC
brvlgoratiaj Medicine that Never IntadcMM

LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S
VEGETAgT-X COMPOUND.
A Hsre Cure fur all FEMALE WEAK­
NESSES, Including I.cucorrhma, Ir­
regular and Palnfnl Meartraatloa,
Intlammation and riccrstlon of
the Womb, Flooding, PKOLAPSUS CTEMI, Ac.
rg-FW—«to tte two*, qMrcdoas m&gt;4 tsmsttaSs
tn Ita effect. It b a groat «P ta pregnancy m® *•tere. Jata daring labor aad at regOar partudo.

rHtsicKtsrsxrr

ax» ya-sccicr

rt

fkeii.t.

rrFoa *ix Waacraana ot tba rrncrailre organa
of UlWr « U to —&gt;-d to s*™-*?
*72

Thi* delaiou* cixnbmatioa i&gt;&lt; Ginger. Iluchu,
Mandrake, StiUin;u. and many other of the tert
vegeubie remedy known, c.ire* all diwrderi of
the bowel*, *tom»cb, Lira, kidneys and lunjs, &amp; u

Tta lot aafi tmU Cm^i Cert Cwr Deal
If vou are suffering from Female Complaint*.
V__ ______ «V-&gt;
.__ .
IlvMien-

�“BVCHUPAIBA.’' ’

wer -jaw i«*o
dered, when thinking of the vast n«mmoutih close*, | ber of packs of card* manufactured in
ofthoee unwritten law* which might
J------effort
"
— t
parts of the world, what became of
on
with advantage often be-roore honored the part of Ute gripped animal can unfix
hem all, just as the old woman was at
in the breach than in the observance; I the grimly vigorous bite. Simultane
a
­ , a low to know what'became of all the
just as a matter in which people trust ously
-?"1**- ■ pins. Russia ha* a population, I bo­
iy tbr
the badger's little cyx
eyes ttwinkle
their instincts, add in which their In­ with
lt apparent glee, aad
and his whole body j Here, nf about t»G,OuO,O(X», and they
stinctfare really not to be trusted. I writhes as it were *with fun at the
‘
, make lhe be.*t playing-cards in St. Pe­
liai.itanu than twenty awe* loaded
am dejkd against the current frequency sensation that he had got tight hold of
tersburg
of any place in Europe. Be­
----with medicine-—old Saying.
of hand-sKaking in sortiety. J ones drops his victim. ' At this critical moment ' sides,
------------------------------------------j-------sides, the
authorized manufactory
there
1 ■ idjfcii m. nr paid or advance
in for an afternoon call; he does not meu who are aware of the creature's , by the Government is -the only one
really want to see me; 1 don't really habits often step in to redress the bal- ■ in all that vast Empire. R is a GovTd Advertisers'.
want to sec Jones; when he comes I ance in favor of their dogs. The nose
ernment institution lost the same as
Tux Nsws ha* double th* number of reader* shake hand with him, more or less;
is the badgir’A vulnerable point, and a j the mint or the United States Treasury
la the First Representative I Strict of Barry
is a Government institution here.- It is
county, than any other paper circulating there­ when he leaves, in five minutes, he smart tap upon it curls him up at once,
in, and our rate* of advertising arc lower than shakes hand* with me, less or more. ’ 1 and leaves him at the mercy of his ' licensed by the Government, protected
any other first claw country weekly in the aUte. hate Jernes’ hand, because it is always quadrupedal assailants. There is so- j by the Government, and the net profits
AD ad. tn Tn* Naw* gne* to the bmrthatooe* damp; Jones knows that u well as I do, cording to a weekly contemporary, but
go**
*—&gt; to the support of a foundling'asyof 1000 bextaflde .ubaertbera, who, for the aakand sometimes, oiler* me his hand one regular pack of hound* in England
Ian
fum.
The «nma system prevails m
eovert—but I dete t a gloved hand. I kept purposely for badger hunting. A
Mexico. In France
nnd Germany
.. ------ - ---------„ the
—
PERUSE THESE LIBERAL AD. RATES.
--------___
id rather not shake hands at all. If 1 moonlight night—such as the negroes
manufacturers
are licensed, but *ij
the
most do so, I .will do it once, and no of Virginia.and Alabama delight m for
mwwmuoo
business is not so much of a monopoly
inore;
no
oue
but
a
lover
wants
to
a’possum or ’coon hunt—is selected
there as it
- is
- in Russia.
”
Unch..7Z77jiI* LTOjlXtt | • AO&gt; 1/ i-00
B tacbe... "|“B-BO |~M0T'MO | _)UJ0 shake hands more than once in five min­ for the purpose, and about 11 -o’clock
_—
“
How is it in this country in this ro­
.
*
all the badger-earths within a radius of
spect?
Bincb**. ~!~ Xgj
7JOi~fc,00| 30.00 utes.
a
dozen
miles
are
stopped,
and
the
:
•*
'
rk
* “ The only restriction that exists ia
1,
masBut Jones has a detestable habit of
fKaSTT. I
&lt;&lt;»i '™~iroo1"25.oo
and exr | this country is lhe imposition of a revlingering on his way out. He gels up ter sallies forth with his eager on&lt;
to go. igive him my hand. It’s over! povuM*-.
j enue of live cents per pack, and this
pectan’. pock.
Rates for larger ad*. given upon application, No, it’s not. A picture catches bis eye.
Upon arriving at the first earth the , tax has to be paid-on all grades of cards,
Bustneaa card* of five lines or less, &gt;5 per yr.
Local Notices, ten cents a line for first Inser­ He turns and says with a simper, dogs are laid on. and, although boars | regardless of their value.”
“ the varmint” |
“When and where and by whom
tion and eight cents for each subsequent inser­ “Capital portrait,’pon my word!” “Ye. may have elapsed since “
—as,” 1 say, half accompanying him set forth upon his nightly prowl, the 1 were cards invented?”
tion.
■
OIINO STRONG,
“The idea, which has finally been
scent remains
remains so
so strong
strong that
that the
the hounds
hounJ_ i
to the door. ’ “Who’s it by?
“O—by scent
Editor and Proprietor. —Smearuni, R. A.”
'■
. 'in picking
‘ ‘
t it
developed into tbe playing-cards of the
“Dear me! ho have rarely any difficulty
ing to
to it.
it. Presently
Presentk* a present day, as we know them here in
painted—a—who
did
ho
point ?” up and answering
of musie rings through the dark
da
j this country, is supposed to have orig“Don’t know; paints everybody—paints crash v.
woods, tipped
upon
their
edf —awith
edges
mated
himself.
”
“ Really
—good-by
!” in Hindoostan, and the seeds
ot silver falling from It
lite moon- which have produced such an enormous
Shakes handsagain; but. before he has slashes of
VILLAGE OFFICERS.
got through tke door, he remembers a beams, and lhe meditative badger, en- crop in Europe and America were unPresident- Elifin_Chlpman.
/
i message from his wife.
1’11 see him •gnged, perhaps, two or three miles doubtcdly sown by the gypsies, who
.out; he shan’t get into the room again. away in digging out a rabbit’s nest or migrated from that far eastern clime
about the beginning of lhe fourteenth
1 go into lhe passage with him.
1 ac­ ohmbipg a tree in pursuit of honey,
company him to the door. He shakes pricks up his listening ears and reqog- century. It is pretty generally estabMarshall—James L. Gregory.
Trustees—H?A. Barber, F. T. Boise. H. W. hands again at tho door! There ought nizes the sounds proclaiming that his 1 is bed that they found their 'way to
1
j ttit.v
uu
Spain and Italy first, then to France
Dcmaray, H. R. Dickinson, H. M. Lee and to be some rule about thia It should enemies
arei_»
abroad.
With __i
ashambling
Chas. Lentz.
run he retakes off without more ado
­
and Germany,
and is
finally
intoin
England,
beto
understood
. that once
enough
one visit. Of coume, 1 know we often ward the nearest earth, and finds, to
in which latter country they probably
*,rirtU».
arrived in the*first half of the fifteenth
shake hands with anion to finish an in­ his consternation, tbat it is barred
century. It is clsimed, however, that
terview and bow him out. Well, tbat against his entrance. A few sharp
/THR1STIAN CHURCH—F .A. Biswl.PaoU’r. is for our own convenience, although it scratches with bis powerful claws con­
cards were known 11* China al least as
Bervicca every Sabbath at 10.30 a. tn. ami does not always act—just os a man’s vince him-that the earth Is too. secure­
early as the first quarter of lhe 'welfth
7 p. tn. Suitbath school al 12 m. Prayer meet­
after-dinner speech is sometimes ap­ ly stopped for him to be able to force
century. The cards introduced by the
ing every Thursday evening
plauded rapturously in .the middle to hisAvay into it within the time at bis
gypsies, however, were very different
From those in use in this country, and
ETHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH—A. make him sit down—but he docs not disposal,
ood
again
—
he
darts
—
I&gt;. Newton, Pastor. Service* every Sab­ always sit down.
forest
with
his
off
into
the
were used by them for the purpose oi
bath at 10.40 a. in. and 7 p. tn,
Sabbath
senses
preternaturally
quickened
by
Those
people
who
shake
hands
should
fortune-telling,
and 'not for plavinc
school at 12 tn. Prayer rcccting every Thurs­
games of amusement or chance, it i»
consider their ways. I hate a man. for tbe rapidly approaching notes of his
day evening.
instance, who can’t leave off shaking pursuers. Another earth is tried in
to the Spaniards wu are indebted 1'01
VY LODGE NO. 37, K. of P.. meets at its hands. He begins so heartily, - you vain, and the hotly hunted beast now
the invention of gambling, while to th&lt;
Castle Hail, Nashville, Michigan, every
French belongs the credit of trans
Friday evening, for the encouragement and think he will soon be done He relaxes lakes in despair to the open. His
fUpport of all worthy, true, steadfast and hon­ his grip, you attempt to withdraw; but stumpy legs are plied with a will, nnd,
forming the original 'tarots,' a paci
orable Brother. Knights.
he tightens it again; he holds you in a like the wild hog of Central India, he
of which consisted of seventy-eighi
vise. You begin to shake him up and shuffles along at a speed with which in­
cards, into the present more compre
down, whoa you suddenly find be has experienced sportsmen would little
hensive compass of four suits and fiftyJlfacellnneou'i Cards.
dropped your hand like a hot potato, credit him. The scent which he leaves
two cards. ”
and you are left shaking the air! Tbi* behind him is, however, breast-high,
“When was tho manufacture o
TE7 H. YOUNG, M. D. Office east side of
playing-oards introduced into this coun
V V • Main tit., Nashville. Office hours from ■[ is bad enough, but tbe wooden shake and before many minutes lhe foremost
. is almost worse. A bund is stretched dogs overtake him. Then may be
&gt;ry?”
7 to 9 a. tn., and 4 to 7 p. rd.
— j out and you get nothing but the sensa- seen with what undaunted pluck and
“That is a question I can hardly an­
DR. C. W. GOUCHER. Electlc Pby*lci*n sad ] tiou of bone—angular bone; there is tenacity the hunted badger fights for
swer. All the data I have given th 11
•urc*».te prepared to
no flesh and blood, no grip—the hand
his life. He is seized, perhaps by a
far I have gleaned from a history ol
that may b« mads for his serricea
Office and
might belong to a lay figure. I don’t fox-hound who has never tackled a
playing-cards published in England
resldsoce opposlts Ros’s meat market
want to shake hands with u lay figure. badger before, but the cast-iron jaws of
TTie subject has never been extensive!]
XTTM. PARMENTER M. D. Offire over Then I objeet to the crusher. Ladies the quarry imprint a mark which sends
Vt Hull'* Drug &gt;tore, VwtnontTille, Mlch- suffer more than gentlemen from this the assailant hopping away on three f;«ne into by anyone ambitious of en
rghtening the world so far as thi
country is concerned. Cards have n&lt;
fTHAB- H. BRADY, Lawyer Circuit Court festive ••bore,” because they wearmorc legs, and making lhe night vocal with
V? Commlwiooer, Real EiUts and Inauranc* , rings; he seises you Impulsively, and his hotels. The rough terriers close in
doubt existed in this country for mon
Aft. Prompt attention glren to all burinea* | manages to crunch yonr finger* verti- their turn with the enemy, and issue
than a century. The first reputabli
antruflied to my core. Conveyancing * tpeciol- callv one on the top of the other. You
shortly from the affray sorely the worse
manufacturer of playing-cards 1 han
ty. Office oppoaite Union Houm.
don’t like to soroatn if you are a girl, for the encounter. At length a couple
any kpowledge of in America, wa
or
U&gt;
show
displeasure
if
you
are
a
man.
of old and experienced hound* make a
T A. FOOTE, PHYSICIAN &amp; SURGEON
1 homas Crehor, of Boston, and he wa
X-l, Suceasor to Dr. Wickham. Office sec­ but you ore dreadfully hurt, and you concerted attack, afid the hardly-beset
bnrnt oat in 1844. A man named Cal
ond door north of the Nashville House; reel- suffer what Mrs. Gamp called “ all the but indomitable animal yields up the
vin Bartlet carried on the business i:
dedcc first door north of the Wolcott House.
tortoises
of
the
imposition
’
’
from
the
ghost, without a single cry of pain or a
this city from 183d to 1840, and
Prompt attention to calls night or day.
oppressor’s effusive but iron grip. Then symptom of cowardice, lighting grimly
Frenchman named Zanzade was ul.*&lt;
MORY PARADY, Justice of the Peace. there is the flabby, pulseless shake, to tno end. Such is the sport which
here from 1840 to 1844. But the be*
Office, Corner Main and tiherman Street*. which means nothing, or means. “ you diversities at this season the pursuits of
goods at that time were manufacture
hi boston by Crehor.’’
LIEBHAU8ER, Merchant Tailor and dcai- are less than nothing to me, and 1 hope visitors at East Devon. In South Wale*
• er in Ready Made Clothing. See me 1 am tho same to you.”
the same kind of “chara” may bo
• • How long have you been in th
before you purchase clothing.
Fits guar­
I am not so absurd as to suppose that had with a few scratch terriers, which
business?”
anteed.
we can always regulate our hand-shak­ hunt out the badgers from the holes
•• Thirty-four years. And there ha
been a great change in it during tha
HATCH A CO.. Manufacturer* of Taffy ing by rule, or that our acte will always In the rocks shared by them with the
• Candids, Chocolate Drops and Carmela. be indicative of our moods; but 1 notice foxes. It would be impossible, how­
time. In France and Spain there ha
Fruita, Fancy Candles, Cigars, Tobaccos, etc.,
ever. to conceive anything more pic­
been no improvement in the method
always In stock. Second door north of the reduce band-shaking to a minimum, turesque than the deep-lying combs and
of manufacturing cards for the lai
post office.
i and then make it genuine os far as it woods of lhe west country by right, 1 hundred years. They use the same ol
&gt;f Boot*
RANK BAKER, Manufacturer of
Boo’s goes, but as formal as possible, and 1 and the sporting visitor, from whatever
hand-presses, printing the sheets i
rnairing j think this is a step in the right direc- part of the globe he may come, is sure
and Shoes, pegged or sCwed. Repairing
black, and putting in the colors wit
promptly attended to. al the sign u*®
of the
red red
I tion, and worthy of imitation. Deep of finding here not only on abundance
slensils. Tbe presses, too. are small
boot, east aide Main St.
I feeling will never fall to find fitting oc- of excitement, but all the pleasure
because large sheets cannot be printei
TACOBOSMUN, Livervnuui, bam near Wof- j casions; but tho less importation there which is afforded by the sight of
on a band-press, and consequently i
colt House. First ejas* turnouts al reason- &gt; j3 of spurious feelings or offensive charming scenery under its most ro­
requires several impressions to com­
able rates. .,
;UnilUritv&gt;nu,iWh«i.u.U1Uy^ni»r^ mantic aspect.—London Telegraph.
plete a pack. 1 use steam presses
Funeral and wediug parties furnished with car;
ly polite formality, the better.
print a whole pack at one impression,
riagc* on short notice.
The damp-handed man should re­
und, what is more, print all the colon
How It Worked.
RAUN BROS..Shoemakers- Special atten­ member that his hand is damp; the
tion given to fine ahd sewed bool*. also flabby, irresolute creature should try
They were girl-friends, and sat to­
“ Do the styles ever change?”
repairing. , All manufactured work made from
gether
on
the
sofa
with
their
arms
and
improve
his
style
ot
grip,
the
im
­
bait of stock and warranted. First door south
“ No. not so far as the -figures an
pulsive and muscular Christian should around each other’s waists, and lhe
concerned. Attempts have been modi
recollect the agony of crunching rings; head of one reposed upon the shoulder
to change the styles of lhe face card
TXT ALLACE BEAUCHAMP. Liveryman. and most people, might be less frequent of the other.
VV
Nashville House Bam.
Single and
and the snots, but they have invariabb
“ You tell me my faults nnd I will
double turn out* furnished promptly end rea­ and more brief with advantage. In
resulted in failure. It is in my opinion
sonably. Commercial men driven to neigb- England we shako hands oftenor than tell you yours,” said Mabel, slipping a
practically impossible to improve 01
. boring towns at special rates.
we bow; in France, they bow ofteucr caramel into her rosy mouth.
what we have been tsmiliar with s&lt;
than they shake hands. 1 believe the
“ You haven't a fault in tho world,”
many years, and which has proved st
ELLOGG A BELL, proprietors Planing two methods might be more judiciously
satisfactory for so many generations
Mill. Planing and Matching. Rerawing worked. I think I should like a little said Katie, chewing a marsh-ma low.
“
That
’
s
too
sweet,
”
murmured
Ma
­
and Moulding a specialty. Scroll Sawing,
About lhe only change has been in th&lt;
Brackets, Window and Door Frames made to more heartiness and a little less polite­ bel, referring fo her friend and not to
style of back and general improvemen
ne«s
---------abroad,
1-------- 1 and
j perhap8 a little more the candy. “ 1 know I’m just full of
in quality.”
I politeness, with ai little less anxiety to faults, and I want you to tell me so 1
•• How about the manufacture o
HAS. W. DEMARAY, Dealer in Watches, &lt;I appear
•
. b
,.nP.v
hearty.
Cocks, fin* Jewelry and Silverware. Being !
hcarl
yat home.—London can correct them. Now what do you
marked cards, such os gamblers some
think is my worst one?”
times use?”
“Well love, since you ask me—now
“ Those cards are generally markei
Badger Hooting.
mind, you uro to tell me all ot mine,
by the gamblers themselves. Some
ONAH B. RASET, Express ud Drat
There is a widely-spread notion tbat too—I think yoa are—you are sure you
times they make them by cutting u]
Goods and Baggag* carried to any pb
the badger—the last of the bedr tribe won’t be vexed pet—? just a little
cards and pasting them together ii
which these islands now contain—is proud!” said Katie. “Proud! hum­
some peculiar way. No reputable cart
ON, manufacturer of becoming extremely scarce within their rm sure I don’t see how any one can
manufacturer will manufacture market
Wood Lumber. BuOd- confines, and that he will shortly dis­ ever call me proud!” pursued Mabel.
cards or have anything to do witl
appear altogether, like the wild cat and “ Well, darling, yoa asked nje to toll
them. The gamblers who use market
the marten. So far is this from being you your greatest fault; now tell mo
cards used to resort to the dodge of get
ames Fleming.
mine
—
I
know
I
’
vo
got
one,
you
see,
”
the case that, while to-day we might
ling the regular manufacturers to prin
Watch-maker. Cl
search in vain for the wild cat and and Katie leaned carelessly on her
the face of the cards, leaving the back
Plated Ware, Jewelry
Goods. Rock- the yellow-breasted marten, spoken of friend, who straightened up.
ford Watches a special t
white, and they would get the back
“ Oh, I suppose we all have by
fnalte,
lx&gt;rd Macaulay
in the famous
printed somewhere
else. third
Now no rc
chapter of his history, when describing and if I must tell yours it is tbat yoa
rutablc manufacturer will do that even
RNO STRONG, plain and fancy,
the state of England in 1685. it is still are just the least little bit selfish,
have not printed a white-back can
Ths best Utilities for doings
dear!
”
possible in many parts of the country
for anybody in twenty years.
Ther
to quote his words, that “ the badger
“Selfish! me, selfish,” ejaculated
are though, I believe, one or two place
makes his dark and tortuous' hole un Katie, regardless of her syntax; well.
in New York where they are manu
the side, of every hill where the copse­ 1 must say you’re a very disagreeable
factured to order for gamblers.”
W. NISKERN. Attorney and Councilor wood grows thick.” This harmless girl, Mabel!'1
“ Arc there any illuminated card
• at Lav/, practices In all Stale Court*. Col
“Thank you. Miss! when I tell yon
manufactured in this country?”
lection* promptly attended to. Office over and hardly-entreated animal lives by
day
at
the
bottom
of
deep
burrows,
y Spaulding* store, Hartings, Mich.
anything for your own good again, I’d
“ None whatever. They are purel;
where he sleeps awnv his time upon a like to know it, that's aTl.”
a French invention nnd are manufactur
! very comfortable bed of hay and grass,
“Oh, you had better practice on im­
cd in France.— .M Y. MaiL
VILLE HOUSE,
until the evening approaches, when he provement yourself. I’m sure I wish
arises and goes forth in search of food. yoa a very good morning,” and the
I. M. Flirt 60 Sos, Props,
—Of Mehemet AH. the ancestor o
He supports himself chief!v on roots, two, who had been as one, flounced
the present Khedive, the following
grass, fruit, and slugs, with an occa­
oat at separate doors and have not
story is told: “ A milk-woman came
sional young rabbit for an appetising i.pokcn since.—Detroit Post and Tri­
lhe Pasha one day, complaining tha
monel. When undisturbed by his mor­ bune.
one of his soldiers had robbed Iter o
tal enemy, man, he is one of the mer­
milk she
was
bringing
to­ camp
riest of the
animals,
seeing
that
he has lit
—The New Haven Register man
The soldier was identified and denioi
tle to dread from any fellow quadruped
would be willing to be a Prince if he
having taken tho milk. • What did hi
JJASTIAf-S HOLME,
or bird of prey. His terrific bite, as
do with it5” asked the Paeba. • Drani
sharp and tenacious as a steel-trap, coaid only run in debt to the tune of
$3,000,000—like a oertain chap over
it,” was the reply. At a sizn the man’
llaRtintTM. Mich.
secures him from molestation, and
head was off his body, and his stomach
N. T. PARKER, Prop.
when, being like all bean fond of the big pond.
being opened, was found to be foil o
honey, he plunder* a wild bees’ nett,
This fe the leading representative hotel of
milk. • • Go.’ said the Pasha to the hor
—“He is the happiest man,” eay*
rifled milkwoman, payfcg her the val
_
...
duces no sort of effect upon his shaggy Henry Ward Beecher, “who can cany
ne of her milk: ' but if he had no
Tbefr CAUSE *md
♦ l.z.
1___ ■ l. __ l__ ~

ilashrille girtrtorw.

,
n»&lt; ten. mtau;
»artlitg.fregucnt or difficult uriuaA Mich.
Detroit,

No more Chill* and Ague In thia section.
Our Druggist 1* *elling an article called
•‘AflVB Conqrraoi.” it1* about tbe only
•atiafactory preparation sold for the cure of
Fever and Ague, Dumb Chills, Intemiittant or
Bfiliou* Fever*. Tbe Proprietor of rhe AOUK
Conqukmoh has usAl but little energy to make
till* medicine known and vet it* ules arc initncnse in Ague Dlrtrict*. It purifies the blood
Liver and oilier Secretory organ* *o effectually
that the Chili* do not return even when per­
son* have bad them for yearn. Entirely vege­
table preparation. Price. SO cento and f 1.00
per bottle. Two denea will atop the chilis.

E

P

F

C
J

J

O

'.s

CUSTOM

GRINDING I

Of evefy dercription, done tn a
manner, at the drop oi ibr l»»t
Satisfaction gusnmtectl-

FLOUR. MEM AND MILL FFED
Kept constantly on haiuj.

Graham Flour

Our

I* contxedtSl to be the best. iTy it. •

By a strict attention to business, and nquare.
dealing with all oir cuatomcrs, »r (wipe to turr­
it u liberal patronage from the farmers of Ibis,
vicinity.
Mill* on railroad,—cast of depot.

II. IL D1CI£KWM»X
-------------------------------

A &lt; O.

, -

TjATHBUN HOLMR,
JL V
B- ANTISDEL, Paorarrroa

ti.--- agents in the vegetable kingdom.
I: r.-«m-s gnjy htiir to Its original
,It r.nkc* flic scalp white and
« ; 1:1. It cures &lt;!mlrufl'.atnl humors.
:m ! I'.:1!ing-Oiit of ti«i-liair. Il fiirnkhes
th
.i::tri’iv.' principle by which Hie

|
1

!
1

।
j
I

i
|
&lt;
1
'
1
ihiln- th- hair moist. soflrai:d glr^’-y. '
i
।
।
.
«.:r-r.-»l t.. •
pufii -. ..s U-.if—r« '
I
]
o
»!!.*) appiicatutu
j.
it Is
ft-.-xihih uih-d nn&lt;l mu-d by einlui-nt I
n. -iiml in-11. and officially endorsed by
th- Slate Assay, r of Massachusl-tls.
Th-.- |M&gt;|iulurity of Halils Hair Rencwer
- increased with the lest of many
isitli iu Uiis country and in
l-’relgn lands, und it is now known and
used in all the civilized countries of
the world.
For sale by all dealers.

HALL’S
QatarrhQure
I Is Recommended by Physician^

S10OJWAM

Mberifl*Nn r.
Notice l« hereby given th*t by virtue of a
writ of Fieriflcias, iwracd out of the Clrmit.
CouBT'for the county of Kent, in fmor of WilliaA Hake against the goods mid chattie* Mid
r&gt;*4i\e*tate of William E. Buel, in tbe county
of BaH&lt;*,to me directed and delivered, J did on
the 24th day of July last, levy tyon and take
nil the right, title and interest of tbe raid WillUm E. Hue! in ms! to the following d«*ecrtbed
tea! estate; that is to say all that ccrtum piece,
&lt;&gt;r parcel of land described a» follows, to-wit:
Tbe cant one half (^0 ”f Hie cast one half
i f tbe «oulb westquartcr (J0 of witioii thlrtv11vc435,&gt; tn town (3,) north of range wven (7)
west. I:. Barry county. MichlgHit^al) o! whirl! I
of tbe court boure In Hasting*, in raid county,
on the sixteenth day of October next, at
eleven o'clock In tliq forenoon.
Dated tbis3l»t day of August. A D. ISS2.
HENRY M- HOUGilTALlN. tiircnff.
By Herbkxt M. Lee, Deputy Shcrfff.

Probate Ordri
' r.f IHrry.liolden •&lt;t tbe Ftobale■

Prcceut, Clement Smith, Ju^ne nl Prutiela.
in lhe matter pf the earn*- 01 El MIRA

that

S3
lru»i upon payment of lhe a
from him
Thereupon Illa ordered,that

for bearing of sXid petition, »t.d that all

|»*tr&lt;&gt;u*

guarantee that It will cure any
caaS*&lt;UMl wo will forfoli tbe *bot* amount
un3*tbin * single instance.

It ia unlike
O“T Catarrh remedy, a*
55,tttea.,nWa*!!!I’JS8i!S«t.llP8C

dI»tre*Btajdl*ra»«.Bik yourDroxxirt tor it. and
ACCBTT BO IMITATIO* OB RUBBltTOrt II no
b*&lt; not got it, toad to u» and we will forward
fcamadfauiy. Price, 75 ewntapcr bottl*.

F.

L CHENEY &amp;.

pendency ofsaM petition, and the l-.rurlng thereof,
by cauaing * ccpv of thi* order to be puhltalwd In
the Nxibvill* N**i, a new*p. j«r pnuled and

CO., Toledo. Ohio.
[A true copy ’
;si Mt

IRON
M.ARKl

llffntfd
AG EATS I For Gen. Dodge’s new book,
THIRTY-THREE YEARK AMONG

OUR WILD INDIANS
i Introduction by Gen. W. T. Sherman.

Contains 1

lions, thrilling adventures and exriling cxpcricncel
dur.ng n years among the wildest tribes of th«
Great r West. Splendidly iiluatralcd with Steel

Chicago
like a ronuiicc, and is far
pnblishcd on the *uMrct.’
. •&lt; !•
. ...

BROWNS IRON BITTERS are
requiring a complete tonic; espe­
cially Intliiceatlon, Dyapcpaia, Inter­
mittent Fovcm, Want of Appetite,
Ixmsm of Strength. Lack of Energy,
etc. Knriehce the blood, strength­
ens tho musclcM, and gives new
life to the nerves. Acts like a
charm on the digestive organs,
removing al! dyspeptic symptoms,
such as tosdng tho fcxxl. Belching,
Heat in the Stomach, Heartburn,
etc. The only Iron Preparation
that will not blacken the teeth or
give headache. Sold by all Drug­
gists at $1.00 a bottle.
BHOWN CHEMICAL CO.
Baltimore, Md.
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.

’ Wanted at once, torapnly
,1.1.
. ...I
&lt; I..

;!

particular*, to
It A CO., Chicago, HL

NO PATENT NO PAT.
■a a Y r 11 T A obtained fur mechanical davk

L■1 \
“HI tn I
UH

e., medical, or other rumpound*

—

promt.Ur attended to.

INYENHONS
arc remote from W**hl»gton.

6611

P

tor it *”

READY FOR BUSINESS

lli-t’s VrxiKranr.K Sicilian H.un
Uunewkk I- n Nclcntlfic combiuatlon
«»r »&lt;„::«• &lt;»f th;- most* powerfill rcstora-

B

K

Pouring Mill

OHt WHAT A COUGH.
Will you heed the warning- Tbe signal per­
haps ot tbe sure approach of that more tehribldiseasc consumption. A«k yourself if you can ;
afford for tbe sake of raving SO cto to run the J
risk and do nothing for it. We know from ex­
perience that Bhflnh'* Cure will cure yuur
cough. It never fails. This explains why
more than a million bottlqi were sold last year.
It relieve* Croup, and whooping cough, at once
Motbern do not be without it. For lame back,
side or chest use Shiloh’* Pofou* Plasters.
Sold by F. T. Boise.
DYSPEPSIA A LIVER COMPLAINT.
Is It not worth the small price of 75 cents to
free you roe f of every symptom of those distres­
sing complaints, if you think
"
of Shiloh'* Vitaltacr,
store and get a
- bottlp
•—
every bottle has a printed guarantee on it, use
aixordingly and if itfloes you no good it will
cost you nothing. Sold by F. T. Boise.
1
Wc haVe a ttieedy and positive cure for I,
Cstarrah. Diphtheria, Canker mouth and ;
Head Ache, in SHILOH'S CATARRH REM- ;
EDY, ' A nasal Injector free with each bottle ,
Use It if you desire health and sweet breathPrice 50 cento. Bold by F. T. Botec
•

M
I

CUSTOM

pTd. W.MOfflLiNA co.
/^OlANAPOUS.JfJOlANA.

•t

Not Fail
to send f-r
■our FALL

Price-List
Lr 1882.
jRw to any address upon
ipplicalion. Containsilcscriptiocs of everything
required far Personal or Family use, ’
with over 2,200 ilhMtratiou*. We sell
quantities to suit the parchesrr. The
only institution in America who moke

MONTtoMERT WARD A CO.

LOOTS BAGGER

PIMPLES,

will mall (Frreitto rveipe tut *
1&lt;J Balm that will rom«v»T*n, Fl

beautiful, also iuanjcMs-m. lor jVrwhKlnr * .uxuriont growth of hsi#4S» &lt; beM bPB,| „r mMh tore
Addrew. indmtav 3c.
BFN. V AN 1^L&gt; *

CONSUMPTIVES,
rill find *

Rrnx-m

�=
Ouapiled from Lstart DiipatoliM.
. DOMESTIC.
it's pension roll*, and that there

FxxxX Sn andlxt, otw O.f the civil engineer*
who constructed the Hoosac Tunnel, died in

Nebraska Democratic State Conren-

Ung Morton wu nominated for Governor.
tecthre tariff tax; condemn* tbe Republican

Vanderbilt's Iasi trotUhg team, Aldine and

track in 2 :!«•{. anrjwwing tbe celebrated
lime made by Frank Work'* pair. Edward nnd
Dick Bwtxeler, by one-quarter of a second.
The ascertained defalcation of Ruth, the

-Tbe total llabQltlea of the defaulting Moe­
’ areal Notary, Hunter, are *900,000.
Wmh.k Sheriff Cate and Deputy Conway, of

veylng John Taylor, who killed Captain
Ftetcber.two year* ago, to Knoxville, a party

purpoac, murdered tbe Sheriff and hl* Deputy,
relraxed tbe prisoner, and fled.
Anoor twenty person* were injured by a
cyclone which burst over Winsted, Conn., on
the 14th, causing great destruction of prop-

The total amount of currency outstanding,
September 1, was $79S.28\4-W.
James Thacev wa* hange l In the county
Jail in Chicago on the 15th for the murder of
Officer Huebner.
The fallttfci In the country during the seven
days endedfon tbe 14th numbered 108.
.
. ToLEDOJOhlo, cxpefTcpce l a $335,000 con'flagratiouX&gt;n the morning of the 15th, a large
Mtaiber nnl and mill being destroyed.
A Chattanooga (Tenn.) woman recently
shot and killed her husband because be dogged
her footstep* after she had left him to return
to her fatlicr's house. Tbe dead man eloped
with hl* wife from Alabama air mouth* before.
Dcrurr United -States Marshal Stcdemster was shot and killed at Fort Davla,
Tex, the other day by a ranger on whom he
Dwiout S. Lathrop, Assistant Cashier In
the office of tho Central Railroad of New
Jersey, absconded on the 15th with $ 10, (DJ.
Charles M. Wellington, Cashier of the
Manufacturers' National Bank of Troy, N.
Y., w£son tho 15th discovered to-be * de­
faulter for W7.000.
The international rifle match at Crpcdmoor
resulted on tbe 15th in a victory for the British
team at every ranpv, the total score being 1,975
to 1,805.
Thirtt-Nixb new cases of yellow fever and
four death* were reported at Brownsville,
Tex, during the twenty-four hours ended on
the 17th. At Pensacola seventeen new case*
and one de ith were bulletined.
A LARGE shoe-factory st Elmira, N. Y., was
destroyed by fire on the morning of the 10th.
Loss, $250,000; insurance, 8142,000.
Four
firemen were seriously Injured by falling walls
John McInttbe and Cornelius Thornburn,
sailor* lost from a fishing vessel July 0, ar­
rived at Gloucester, Maas-, on tbe 16th.
They were adrift in an open boat eight day*
without food or water, and were picked up by
a passing vessel in an exhausted condition
and taken to Pernambuco, where they were
cared for by the American Consul and sent
home by steamer.
The Chicago &amp; Alton freight depot at Kan­
sas City was destroyed by fire on the 17th, to­
gether with a large quantity of merchandise.
General Sherman’s party found the wind
oo the summit of Mount Washington on the I।
17th blowing 108 mile* an hour, and the terndescend.
The Common Council of Tonawanda, near
Buffalo, feeeatly pasted an ordinance giving
the New York Central Road permission to
CTOs* Main street, but saw fit to rescind its ac­
tion on tbe evening of the IGlh. Tbe railway
people, however, laid track all the forenoon
of the next day, which the city authorities
destroyed a few hour* later.
The National Board ot Health on the 16th
decided not to remove the cordon extending
from Laredo to Corpus Christi, and had sta­
tioned, additional guard* at tho river crosstagsopposlte the district* infected by yellow
An extensive shoe factory at Hudson,
Maas., was destroyed by fire on tbe morning
of the 18th, involving a loes of about $ 100,ed by burglars.
Tbe deposits in tbe Savings banks of New
Hampshire aggregate 130,181. 166,70, and tho
depositors number 101.432. Tbe deposit* are
14,000,000 more than they were last year.
• TH« bark Arthur C. Wade, from Cardenas,
arrived at the jx&gt;rt of Boston on the 17th. She
had three cases of yellow fever on board. Ou
the 18th the Italian bark Galileo reached
Hampton Roads with four cases on board.
Since the 1st of May tbe contributions of
the American branches of lhe Irish Land
League have aggregated $20,000.
,
IxCRKDiART Ores on the 18th caused the
’ destruction of the greater part of the village
of .'Grand Meadows, Minn., and numerous
buBdlng* were constancd at Red Wing by the
same cause.
Amricss of the 18th from twenty-six lea 1-,
tag clearing-houses In the United States Indi­
cated a general improvement in business for
tbe week ended on the IC:h. Tbe aggregate
clearing* were «L297,373,Sal, against $1,070,­
830.575 forthe previous week.
Alonso Cash, aged forty-eight, shot snd
mortally wounded his wife, Minnie, aged
seventeen, near DormanavRie, N- Y.. on the
Ib'-h, and then killed hlmaalt
. Twextt-seven new cases and one death
was the yellow fever record at Pensacola, Flo.,
o» tbe 18th, and the same number of cases de­
veloped at BrownavUle, Tex.
At Georgetown and Central City, CoL, a
comet was plainly visible to the naked eye on
the foreuoou of the 18th, being Located about

PEILSONAB AND POLITICAL.
D«. Nouris 43eeex, the Preaident of the
Western Unhtt Telegraph Company, Ins reThe New Turk AnH-Monopoltata met In

tailed to am.

■declare* that the prohibition of the manu­
facture and sale of liquor* is QBcetuUtuThe following Congrei

.naled; Second, Amos Smith, Jr.; New York,
ITwcnty-fl'th, Frank Hiscock, renominated;
•Twenty-ninth, Archie E. Baxter; Michigan,

Democratlc—Illinois, Second, Henry F.Sheridan; Tenth, N. E. Worthington; Michi­
gan, Second, N. B. Eldridge; Iowa, First, B.
,J. Hall; Second, J. H. Murphy. Greenbackier—Iowa, Sixth, James -B. Weaver. Prohl bl­
itIon—Minnesota, Fourth, E. C.'Phillips. Froetradere-Mlchlgan, First, Wllltam Brownlee.
Jcdox Wtlu*. of lhe Criminal Court st
Washington, at the 15th set aside the verdict
of guilty against Rerdell and Miner, the
two convicted defendants in tbe Star-route
case, and granted them a new trial.
Tua Colorado Republicans held their Slate
Convention at Denver on tho 15th. Ernest
L. Campbell was nominated for Governor.
The platform adopted deplore* the death of
President Garfield; Indorses the course of
President Arthur; denounce* the demonetiza­
tion of silver, and recommend* the apportion­
ment of fund* arising from the sale of public
land* to the sinking of artesian wells in
Colorado. '
Nominations for Congress were made aa
follow* on thp 115th: Republican—Colorado,
James B. Belford, renominated; New Jersey,
First District, George AL Robeson, renomi­
nated; Michigan, First, J. W. Ganverilnk.
Dcmooratie—Kentucky, Fourth. T. H. Robert­
son; Wisconsin, Second,’ David II. Sumner
(on the 1,001st ballot); Pennsylvania, Nine­
teenth, William A. Duncan. Prohibitionist—
Wisconsin, Sixth, Theodore D. Kanouse.
A box of Bishop Wiley,- of the Metlindist
Church, was burned to death In a store In
/Cincinnati on the 15th by the explosion of a
, barrel of olL
J. B. Campbell, Republican nominee for
Sheriff of Sierra County, Cal., was shot dead
on tbe 15th by a man named Stubbs, for
whom two hundred men were scouring the
county. Tbe murder was attributed' solely
to the bitterness of the political struggle.
Enoiskek Melville, the Arctic hero, upon
his arrival at his home in Sharon HUI, near
i Philadelphia, on tbe evening of the Ifith, was
tendered a reception by his frienda During
the festivities he was driven away by hl* wife,
v ho became very violent whenever she aaw
hltn, and be was com;&gt;elled to spend Sunday
at the house of a neighbor. The physician*
attributed her deranged condition solely to
her prolonged anxiety for her husbandTiie Grccnbacker* of Delaware met in State
Convention at Wilmington on the 16th and
nominated Milo L. Blanchard for Governor.
Tbe usual platform of principles was adopted.
A demand for tbe abolition of the whipping­
post was inserted in the platform.
Factions of the Republican party tn the
Third Wisconsin District on the 18th nomi­
nated E. W. Keyes and George C- Hazelton
for Congress.
The Republican* ot the Nineteenth- New
York District on the 18th renominated A. X.
Parker for Congress, and J. W. Candler
wa* renominated in tbe Ninth Massachu­
setts District. Tbe Democrat* of lhe Thir­
teenth District of Pennsylvania nominated J.
AL WethnrelL
Me. Bioelow, counsel for Sergeant Mason,
now confined in the Albany Penitentiary for
(hooting at Gulteau, on the ISth prepared »
petition for a writ of babes* corpus addressed
to Judge Alfred C. Coxe, United States Dis­
trict Judge fop the Northern District of New
York.
The wife of Engineer Melville was on the
18th placed tn the asylum at Norristown, Pa.,
on a certificate of insanity given, by two phy­
sician*.
•
President Arthck, accompanied by Sec­
retary Folgcr. arrive! in Washington on the
evening of the 18th to attend a Cabinet meet­
ing.

server near GSstutta*. County Itaa&gt;e*dd, Ire­
land, tecMM aha restated lb* aatare of bar
cattl*.
'
Ths Csar ba* extended tbe martial-law
period over fit. Petersburg and vicinity an­
other year.
Tbe Dean of Windsor, the Domestic Chapkla to .the Queen of Great ■Britain; died on
tbe 18th.
Dvrixo the three days ended- on tbe 17th
there were WJ deaths from Asiatic cholera st
Manila (PhUUppine Islands) and it* vicinity.
Major Pinrrs, who forged Comptroller1*
certificates tn Philadelphia to the amount of
$153,000, wa* arrested on tbe 18th at Hamil­
ton, Ont.
.
A London dispatch of the 18th states that
heavy flood* bad occurred in jxirtlon* of
Austria an! Italy, damaging bridges and sub­
merging lhe town* of Trent and Verona. No
live*, however, had been lost. Thu damage
was estimated st 2,003,000 florins.

-BLA-S G-OIVIC.
•rwaa crowded.

All the date-rooiM were

And is filled with Stoves of 20 Different Kinds.
cry direction. They loft the cabin, and found
was rolling so heavily. Ttnkt* got a life-pre­
server, and put it on. Tbe boat fell into tbe

glDce working, about 11:10 o'clock.

Tbe Asia

was in tbe first boaL About eight mon wore

EGYPTIAN WAR NEWS.
On the 13tb the Governor of Port Said
caused the arrest of several Sheiks for circu­
lating false news of a victory gained by Arabi
Pasha.
On tbe 14th an officer from Kafr-el-Dwar
reached Alexandria with a letter stating that
all tbe military ships wished to surrender to
tbe Khedive. Tho general opinion was that
tho natives would surrender Arabi Pasha. The
British troops had been ordered to hold them­
selves in readiness to occupy Kafr-el-Dw*r.
The English advance guard arrived at Cairo
by rail on the 14th and entered tho city with­
out opposition. General Wolseley bod gone
forward. Butroa Bey and two Pasha* went
from Cairo to Alexandria and te:.dcred the
Khedive an addreas pledging loyalty on tbe
part of the people of the. former city. They
atated that Arabi Pasha was atoned by tbe
[opulacc, and later reports were to tbe effect
that he had been arrestee] by the Prefect of
Police. Butroa Bey arid the rebel force at
Tel-el-Kebir comprised 80,000 regulars, 7,000
Bedouins and 3,000 volunteer*. Tbe British
loeawa* 54 killed and 350 wounded. Tbe
Egyptian* were negotiating for tbe condition­
al surrender of Kafr-el-Dwar.
The British' War office received, the follow­
ing dispatch from General Wolseley on tbe
morning of the 15th: “General Lowe has
.Occupied Cairo. Arabi Pasha and Toulba
Pasha have surrendered unconditionally.
Ten thousand troops at Cairo havc.laid down
tbeir arm*.” At noon another dispatch waa
received from General Wolseley, declaring
the war ended on! requesting that uo more
troop* be dispatched. Arabi Pa*ha was In
the guard-house. General Wolseley reported
that be should return to Alexandria.
The Britlah on the 16th occupied Kafr-elDwar.
Damietta was said to have sur­
rendered, and the artillery camp at Ramleb
had been dissolved. All the Egyptian soldiers
at Mallali* had left that port and quit the
army. The commander *t Abouklr announced
bjs readiness to surrender. Lord Duffcrin
Informed the Porte at Constantinople
that British military operations in Egypt had
ceased, and M England was about to withdraw
a portion of her troops the Sultan might de­
cide whether It was necessary t° "Ign the
Military Convention. The Egyptian Counril
of Minis tern was pre [Ari ng a decree dlsbrnding the army.
A Port Said dispatch of the 18th »ays the
Egyptian commander at Damietta had re­
fused to surrender that place ami the -djacent port* of Dibha and Gbemilleh. Gun­
boat* and troops had been ordcre I to operate
against him.
When the Abouklr garrison marched ■ ul
to surrender on tbe 18th, an entire regiment
decamped to join Abdclla Pasha at Hamlett!,
who refused to surrender. Arabi, because of
dread of poisoning, had bl* victual* cooked
.by member* of his family while at Kafr-elDwar. Tantab had been occupied by i;iel
British, and service on all lhe rail road* bail
been resumed. Natives with torn and bloody
clothing bad been paraded in the streets of
Cairo by Arabi’* orders, as reprennita*
brutal treatment by the English.

LATEB NEWS.

The obstinate Egyptian Pasha, who had in­
sisted upon holding out against the British at
Damietta, Anally concluded toaurrendcr, and
on tbe 19tk all show of resistance to British
occupation had ceased.
The Massachusetts Democratic State Con­
vention waa held at Boston on the 19th. Ben­
jamin F. Butler wa* nominated for Governor.
The platform adopted demands clril-scrvlre
reform; a tariff for revenue only; hoi?^*tand
economical Expenditure of public money in
State and Nation; an impartial freedom of
the ballot. North and South; favor* legisla­
tion tending to lessen tbe hours of labor, and
FOREIGN.
One of the buttresses of St. Patrick's Cathe­ to increa*: and protect the wages of the la­
borer.
dral at Dublin fell on the 14th. Four women
An explosion of 'fire-damp tn a mine near
were killed.
The Bank of England on the 14th ad­ Dartoiund. In Westphalia, on the 18th caused
vanced ita discount rate from four to five per the death of twenty persons.
The following Congressional nominations
cent.
A DcnuN dispatch of the 14th states that were made on the W.b: Republican—Tennes­
an Irish national movement was being see, Third District, D. C. Trowhltc; Louisiana,
planned by Parnell, Davitt, Dillon and Bren­ Sixth, Louis Trsger; Pennsylvania. Eleventh,
Democratic—New Jersey,
nan, on Lhe ba*is of self-government, no H. G. Fisher.
landlords, the pro motion of home industries, Second, . Lewis C. Parker; Pennsylvania,
Twenty-»ec&lt;-ud, James H. Hopkfti*; Ohio,
and a pild representation in Parliament.
On the 15th tbe River Thame* Rowing Club First, John F. Follett; Sccsnd, Isaac
beat tho American Hinsdale Club by two M. Jordan. Independent — Pennsylvania,
Eleventh, J. Irvine White.
lengths.
The Portuguese Government on lhe 19th
Emile I*lantamoub, tbe distinguished
Swiss astronomer,’ is dead.
contracted for laying a telegraph cable be­
At Trieste on the 14lh a hurricau* destroyed tween Lisbon and the United State*, which
tbe iron i&gt;avtUon connected with Die exhibi­ •hall touch at the Axorea.
tion building.
Sarah Elstone made a fire at Wood­
At a recent Council of Minister* in Pit. *4
stock, Ont., on the 19th, deliberately stepped
tersburg it wc* definitely decided to postpone In the middle of it, and, as she was dying,
th- Emjxjror’s coronation until next year.
exclaimed: “I am going to Jesus."
Sis James Anderson, physician extraor­
The Liquor Dealers’ Convention at Rock
dinary to Queen Victoria, and the author of Island. III., on tbe 19th resolved to use oil
two medical works, died In London on the effort* to defeat any candidate for office who
15th.
favored prohibitory legislation.
Tnfmllftary barracks at La Prairie, Can.,
There were 154 death* at Manila (Phllwhich originally cost $503,001, were fired lipino Island*) and vicinity on the 19th from
during a storm on the 15th, and totally con­ ebolcra.
sume!.
.
Br tbe breaking down of the seat* in a cir­
Thzbd were 457 death* from cholera at cus at Mount Airy, N. C., an tbe evening of
Mania, Phlllipine Island*, during the two tbe 18th, 1,500 person* were precipitated to
days ended on the 14th.
the ground, many of thegi being seriously in­
A Colli sowood (Ont.) dtapateu of the jured.
17tb state* that the steamer Asia, which left
NnrgTEEX new case* of yeRow fever and
that port on the evening of tbe 13th for French five deaths were reported at Brown*viRe,vTex,
Rh er and Sault Ste. Marie, «a* struck by a on tbe 19th. At Pensacola, Fla, twenty-six
storm thn nrfrt morning In Georgian Bay, new casfcj nnd four deaths occurred.
and, falling Into tbe trough ot the sea, the
A terrific storm raged on tbe afternoon
Asia rolled for twenty sniuutes, when a faugu of the 19th at Newburg, OnL, unroofing many
ware acct her down with her engines working. Mllldlngs, blowing down tbe steeple of the
Three small twats were loaded, bat the sea Methqdlst Church, demolishing barn* and
broke over them with such I Ivy that only fences, and uprooting trees.
two persons out of the one hundred on board
Bcrge Bros., coffee merchant* st Havre,
reached tbe shore ax Point an Barrie.
France, failed on flic l»Cu, with iieavy lialifllTeanksoiying service* were held in all tte*.
tbe churches of England on the 17th over
T*rx new comet was watched by the Naval
tbe victory achieved by the British army In Observatory « Washington on the 19th, snd
was supposed to have passed it* perihelion.
Rev. Dh. Potkt, bead of the High Church In a few day* It would be very brilliant in
party of England, died in London cm tbe tilth, tbe early morning. It is one of the extra­
ordinary bravtnly wanderer* ot modem
Acnxo upon the decision of bi* Bishop, time*. Br. Lewis Mwfft, of tbe Warner Ob■ AngHiurti churtirnriubter at- Quebec, Camr serrt»orT;-statesttatt1t-tairot-fc»enticriirtthaay known comet.

The MONUMENTAL in lhe Finetrt Round
Stoie Made.

Paints, Oils and Colors, Doors, Glass, Sash and
Blinds Iron and Wood Pumps,Wagons, Buggies,
Carriages and Platforms, Drills, Cultivators
Seeders, Plows, Land Rollers, "Reed Spring­
tooth Harrow.

and asked John McDougall, parser, to help

was a largo numtwr dinging to the boat
be had tefL He known nothing of the third

POINTS FOR ALL THE LEADING FLOwJk

EARBED WIRE.

.

A Large assortment of Shelf Goods and Tinware, and the best
Tinner in the County.
FOR GOODS CHEAP CALL

missed McDougalL People were hanging on

XnD SEE ME.

Captain's boat was full of water, and a sea
constantly breaking over IL Ono of the first
dying, and being supported by one of the men,
• when a wave washed him overboard. Tbe

Ho could be *ecu paddling around in the water

/ore reaching the beach. Captain Savage, who
was tbe last, died tn Ttakia* arms about mid­
night. Thursday. John Little, of Kault Ste.
Marie, Mato McDonald ami two othens, whose
The-boat finally stranded near Point au Bar^
ric about daylight Friday, with Miss Morrison
and Mr. Tlnkf* tbe only one* surviving. Tlnkls
put the bodies out on tho beach and pried tho
boat off with an oar, but did not bale It out.
Miss Morrison went down tho beach In tbe boat
to tbe derrick, about two mile* distant, and
laid on tho beach all night. About eight o'clock
Saturday morning an ind'Rn camo along and
was engaged to bring tho two to Parry Sound.
He would not bring tbe bodies. The steamer
Northern Bello, ot tho some line, which
reached here this morning. h;mbe&lt;-n furnished
with Ice andcotnns nnd ba* gone fortbebodies.
There were probably about one hundred pur-

Engineer MehiUe’s Wife.
Philadelphia. September !?.
Mr*. Henrietta B. Mol rille, wife of Engineer
George W. Melville, wu» taken from her home
at Sharon Hill L&gt; the Stale Asylum fur tho In-

upon which she waa deprived of .her liberty
ItarUi?mn. of Clifton. Tbe former has long
bocn her medical attendant. The certificate

from examination that Mrs. Melville l* not of
sound mind; that she w.i* brought to th’&gt;t con­
dition through alcoholism, and that she was
Ute proper person to receive treatment at an
asylum forthe Insane. The parting between
toother nnd children wiu(most affecting.

Pioneer Store
SELLS GOODS EXCEEDINGLY LOW.
In order to make room for our Fall and 'Vinter Goods we
are selling our finest stocxs of Clothing at prices that re­
quire no bantering to sell.
(

HERE ARE BARGAINS FOR YOU!
Summer Pants for 95c--Think of It!

For fall and winter trade are comming in.
lent and cheap. Examine them.

They are excel­

Of the best quality and lowest in price. Try our 40c Tea.
Don’t buy poor eggs unless you prefer them. Our egg tester
tells you which are poor.

CASH PAID FOR BUTTER AND EG6S.

NEW VICTOR SEWING MACHINE is VICTOROUS.
TS"

Ready pay secures for you all the advantages in trade.'

the comfort of his wife Mr. Melville returned
to thia city, whence ho aent tho children b &gt;me
home. Prior to his departure a reporter enlh-d
upon him to obtain his story of the facts connetted with thia dlstrcMlug affair. He said:
“ My wife’s insanity has mamfcsUHl iueif oc­
casionally ever since our marriage, but has

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN ' 1

her drawing a toy wagon along the street and
asking [Asscra-by to look at the now baby that
waa to be a surprise to George (that's I) upon

Clo t

baby in tbe wagon; stiU. ns her hallucfna
tlous were generally harmless, I felt no
fear of her doing anything xiolenL 1 would
rather have bud nothing said publicly of thia
sad affair, but since it hna got Into tbe news­
papers 1 want the true facta to be act forth.
One of the members of her famfly died in an
asylum for the insane. Another Is a 'simple,'

At Buxton'* new brick, bsve full snd complete lines In

1

G-entss Ifm-nisliing- Goods,

curxd. G-roceries.
If you want something new, neat and nobby, just take a look st our stock of

CUFFS, COLLARS, TIES, HANKERCHIEFS, JEWELRY, ETC.
mi-uted uiltxl. but. like many insane persons,
she possessed the faculty of speaking very
sensibly and coherently, even with bar mind

THE GCEEZEAJE SECRET

writer of the article had any Intention of do­

metit, and not cf intention. He did not know

ot mx friend* know of the troubles I have
experienced In my domestic life, but none
know them all.’*
With regard to ebe story »«to tbe troubles
about money. Chief Engineer Able, an Inti­
mate friend, sold: “According to tbe regula­
tion* of the navy, an officer at *ea can only
allow hi* wife ono-half of bis salary. This Mr.
Melville iVd. giving her $90 a month. Beside*
this, be owned tho bouse, which wa* well fur­
nished. laid In a stock ot coal sufficient for
three yeura. paid the taxes nnd tbe school expensc* of the children for the same term, nnd
paid off the debt* that she had contracted
while he wns with the Astatic squadron. To do
th&gt;* he bad to get a special order from tbe Sec­
retary of the Treasury, allowing him to allot
bi* whole salary, except $10 a month, to hi*
wife. On thi* pitiful sum bo had to live tor a
long time.”
__
_______
A Sister’s Heroic Efforts to Save Her
Brother From Death.

Baltimore, M&lt;L, September 18.
The residence of E- J. Ostercarnp, of Belair,
MtL. was destroyed tiy Are yesterday’. Two
children of Mr. Ostercarnp were asleep in aa
upper room at tho Umc. Charlie, tbe little
boy, was burned to death, though his sister,
but fifteen years old, made a heroic effort to
save him. He waa frantic with fright, but she
trio! tn calm bi.n and drugged film from tho
bed to the window. She beggt-i him to leap
with her from tbe window, but be fainted and
fell on the floor. Putting her arms around
him sho tried to raise tho inanimate body, but
her strength was not aufltelent, and she was
compelled to leave him. Tbe stairway was a
mass of tlam&lt;&gt;. Her parent* and friend*, who
were on the outside of toe building, calle-1 to
hot to Jump. After kissing her little brother
good-bye sbo Jumped from tho window, and,
though buninl badly about the arms nnd
bonds, escaped any serious injury. An effort
was made to save her brother, but without
a via I, tor just ns* i«ddcr was ruaxl to the
Window the floor of tberecond story fell In
with n crash and earned the child with ft, his

-IP.’ I5VYI7NG, IH TO BUY-----------------

THE BEST GOODS
FOR THE LEAST MONEY.
Remember that we have no old, shop-worn snd unseasonable goods, but that everything Js

TTZEW

jAHSTTD

FRESH I

tr All our ;rarcha»e« are made with the cash and by strict attention to the wants of on
customers we expect to reapsucecM.
•
_
.
.

Nashville, Apr. 20.1882.

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN.

SEWING

MACHINE.

Peninmilar Stove Co.’h Stoves.
—An Ohio man bus written a long ar­
ticle arguing that tbe center of the earth
is the center of the solar system, and
that the sun. moon nnd nlonete are flat
and reflected from the sky. Hia theory
that tbe moon is flat goes a long way
to prove the ancient hypothesis that
pale Luna is not only mode of green
cheeso. but i» also the shape of one.
But at will require an able-bodied de­
bating society to determine which is
the greatest flat—the san or the au­
thor of the new theory.—Norristown
Herald.

OF DHTB01T.
Improved iu&gt;d Flnrtl PMIerna or &lt; ook» and Heaters In tbe
market. Zincs. Moie Furniture. Etc.
PAINTB. VAIUnsnF.R. OOLO&amp; BRUSHF8.
».
WFLL«-A VIST EH X PUJIFS.
FOISTS, PIPE. SISKS. BTC.
CHAMPION X-CUT SAWS, AXES, ETC.
Detroit White Lead Works Colors.--Tiie Best In the Market.
PV1LDEKS HARDWARE. SASH. DOORS,
GLASS, LOCKS, KNOBS. &lt;h, &lt;fc.
naiEs. IRON, AND STEEL.
When In Need of the Best trades of Hardware and Ma-

�Littte Fay Childs, only two and a the head and neck the snake moved off! 1 «« K™* wedal ewtlficau-* upon wttafm*
TUo
eounty nomimioa.!
fSld”"1
half year* old, youngest son of Mr.
and
Mr*. C. 8. Childs, met with a ssd must be pretty near all in. Tbe latest
Saturday. Sept. 23, Middleville, Special
would do the Bost good; vis ia bU hip.
TBZ OREEIBAOI OOITEITIOI.
•ct. 14, Nashville, .
.. .A*?*’
his aide and under hi*ear, and received
Tbe Morgan race track is utilized accident one day last week. While out are aa follows: Dsnwmi—rpnri&gt;»M&gt;Saturday,Uet. g* and
in return two or three balls from Wil- j nearly every
_ day by some ambition* on the straw pile playing with an older tative, Henrv, A. Goodyear; sheriff.
, M cwirawoo. w.
brother, he fell off and threw his right Mason Boyington; clerk, Willard J.
•on, carrying away a couple of rin- : horse-owner.
ger/and ipjunng arib or two.
Both
; proaecu- ten, cMefirthe Utter,
_ __
W. 8. Atkins of Morgan.- must be shoulder out of joint, at tbe same time Le«her; register,. John Barry
day last, with delegations &gt;emat from
ting attorney,
attorney, Wm.
Wm. Rowley.;
RowleY ; circuiti
circuit —
P*«le
certlfieates will l
*r—
pai-tie# hauled oft for repairs, Wilson making money or he wouldn’t have in­ badly shattering his arms. Tlteshpul- ting
n
but Prairieville. M. F.
der was set by Dr, Snell, but the child court court commissioner, Marcus W. ipby^pramma
being the moat injured. Downs has vested in that new safe.
JordaBand J. H, Denuia were made
been arrested and held to bail to An­
Van.
Riker; coroners, George W. Ingraham, go»wnm«nt.
There is great need of a blacksmith is a great sufferer.
■ chairman and Secretary respectively, swer in tbe circuit court of Ionia Co.
Milan WulrlnrfF
' Far second gnde the additional requirements
who makes hone shoeing a specialty at
Milan Waldorff.
Greenback-reprebe elementary algebra, physiology and
and the proceedings opened with a
BALTIMORE.
sentative, John H. Dennis; sheriff, pbv*k-aigeography.
Wilson’s brother istlie man who re­ Hanchett's mills. Tbe site is a good
speech from A. M. Flint of Nashville,
John Liehrj ; clerk, Wm.H. Merrick ■,
°“°™1
ceived a ball in bis thigh from Case, a one.
Engage your girls for tbe fair.
who read a letter to prove that he
treasurer, Juba Dawson; register, | ”
-------‘ ---------*- •—**-------- “ '
couple of years ago under similar cir­
Rev. R. W, Carnaham, the Presby­
Monro Merrit is erecting his house.
made five greenback speeches in this
Isaac Wickwire; prosecuting attorney, 1
cumstances. The Wilsons’ are prepar­ terian minister of Hastings, will preach
Baltimore furnishes two candidates
vtiouh of teachers, especially of the candidates
district in 1880, and that the report that ing to operate a lead mine soon.
Silas Stafford; circuit court commis­ for the higher grades of certificates. Candidates
in the M, P. church at Barryville, Sun­ for county offices.
he worked for the Republicans was a
sioners; Edwin Clifford, W. B. bweezy; for thin) grade certificates must pass 70 per
Occasional.
day Oct 8th at 3:30 o'clock p. m.
Farmers are cutting their dover,
cent of tbe questions asked, for the wond
bold, bad lie.
surveyor, G. B. Manchester; coroners, grade 80; and for Ute first grade to per cent
While Myron Sutherland’s people saved for hay seed.
In tho afternoon the curtain rose to
PHICHARDYILLE.
A. G. Courtright, P. H. Evans. Pro­ will be required.
were at church Sunday evening, some
Mr. Tanner has rented Mr. Heath’s
quick music, made principally by A.
The board will only examine the papers ot
hibition—representative, John S. Vauevil persons burglarized their water farm near Barney mills.
such as desire certificates.
M. Flint, who depicted in vivid colors
Dry at present.
Brunt; sheriff, G'eocge D. Babcock;
melon patch of its choicest melons.
•
T. B. DIAMOND, Chairman.
Mrs. A. P. Wkrner’s mother from'
the outrage sought to be done to himCorn cutting commenced. ’
CLARK B. HALL
clerk, Judge E. Barnum; treasurer,
Ind., is making her a visit.
5®-3
and brother by W. S. Powers and
A number of persons from these
William
Lowden
;
register,
Jonathan
M. Pilgraim and wife is visiting
W. E. Griggs. It seems there were two parts took in the state fair this week.
DISSOLUTION NOTICE.
EAST MAPLE GROVE.
R. Ruswll; prosecuting attorney, Jas
fnends
and
relatives
in
Ohio.
caucuses held in Castleton township
The rr&gt;partner.-hlp heretofore exislng under
Mrs. Tyrrell from Diomondale, Eaton
M. Martin ; commissioners, Wm. Row­
Cyrus Altman reported better last
the firm name of Fowler &amp; Ingeisoa, is this
one regularly called, which elected as county, returned home last week after
Corn cutting has commenced.
ley, Jas. M. Martin ; coroners, Hezekiah day dissolved by mutual cousenL Those in­
week, ia again confined to hia bed.
delegatee A. M. and H. W. Flint and a short stay here with her parents.
debted
to tbe iirni will sctUe with Mr. Ingerson,
There is considerable sickness in this
El»en
Pennock;
surveyor,
The next U. B. quarterly meeting Smith,
who assumes all the. liabilities of the Ann.
Walter Stillwell, and another compos­
The ladies society meets at Mrs. section at present.
Nashville, Aug. 31, 1W2.
will be held at the north school house. Samuel Wix.
ed of W. S. Powers and W. E. Griggs Hinchman’s, next Thursday afternoon.
ClIAKLES FoWUK,
J. Bowerman and wife, of Hillsdale,
Walter Warner started Saturday last,
50-1
Steven 8. Ixgebsox.
Bills are posted hero for the fifth an­
who sent themselves and Arthur Still­
Mrs. Edward Mowry intends starting are visiting at James Hull’s.
to visit bis sick sister living south of nual Knights of Pythias excursion, to
well as delegate. Flint depicted the for a visit in the Buckeye state next
A slight Irost on the low grounds
Battle Creek.
leavu Jackson at 10 a. m. next Tuesday
latter caucus in fiery and impassioned
last week, but no damage done.
The jbb to repair the Durfee school for Chicago. The round trip fare is
A team belonging to Isaac* Weeks
. tone. He told how Powers and Griggs
A valuable white boar hog strayed
house
was let Tuesday ; M. M. Slocum $4, and reduced rates are advertised
called the caucus, how Gri
nomina­ ran away last week, but did no seri­ from the premises of Geo. Mason, Sept.
and A. Freeman taking the job.
-MUST BEfrom al! points to Jackson. Excursion
ted Pow
airman, t tbe mo- ous damage.
10. The finder will be rewarded by
The Rev. Bridenstine of the U. B. tickets good returning till Oct. 3d.
• tion, and
. elected ; how
Earnest Haynes and Charley Prich­ making himself known to Mr. M.
church, preached his first sermon at
Powers
proated by nominating and ard are attending the teachers' class at
Mr. and Mrs. David Bsdle, of Carmel
—L. J. Wheeler, of Nashville, was
the Durfee school house» lost Sunday.
electing Griggs as secretary ; how they the Hastings high school.
gave uh a pleasant call Sunday, while
nominated for representative to the
nominated and elected each other as
The person who lost a vest in the on their wedding trip. Will says tliat He superceeds Elder Whiticer.
legislature,
by the Barry county Re­
Tbe town purchased calico and fac­
delegates ; and then, after Powers had road near the residence of Jos. DeLano, he is completely Buttoned oi^t.
A better choice
tory fotMra&gt;Geo. Arnold nnd two girls publicans last week.
made out the credentials,how they fell will find the same at his bouse.
Mrs. Maggie, wife of Casper Bowen,
could not have been made.—
FiMe
on each other’s necks and wept for joy
H. H. Me rah on has the frame raised died at her home in Maple Grove, Sun­ two dresses apiece, a change of under­
Hawk.
TO HAVE THE JOB DONF
wear,
sheets,
pillow
slips,
etc,
and
Mrs.
at the success of their scheme. He for his new bouse. Mr. Fisher is help­ day nipht, Sept. 17, of peritonitis.
D:C. Warner, Mrs. G. Frey, Mrs. M.
traced Powers’ course through all its ing him do the carpenter work.
| She was 26 years of age, and"of robust
LINES
M.
Slocum,
Mrs.
C.
Woodruff,
Miss
torteous windings, from the time he
Mr. and Mrs. Kilpatrick from the constitution. She leaves two small
made out bis "forged” credentials till northern part of the state, are visiting children and a busband and a large Maggie Durfee, Miss Minnie Henry Addressed to Hr. and Mrs. Hen. Coolbaugh, on the death of their little
and Mrs. J. Endsley met at A. P. War­
the time when Laving got on the cre­ relatives and friends in this vicinity.
circle of friends to mourn her untimely
Mamie, Sept. Gth, 1882.
dentials committee, in the convention,
Ben Toby is getting to be quite a death. The funeral services were held ner’s, cut nnd made the above articles,
A
nd has vour dear one thus been called
he passed on the validity of those same hand at trading horses. He has owned in Kalamo at 11 o’clock on Tuesday. and the next day presented them to
Away from earth o soon,—
Mrs.
Arnold,
who
received
them
in
Her spirit unto God above
forgeries, and then in his most drama­ four difterent teams in the last two Mr. and Mrs. Bowen, had succeeded in
I Jwd desiriny lo increase my prosperity
tears. The women then gave the "w Her body to the tomb I
tic manner he pointed for confirmation, months.
by affording the publie
surrounding themselves with substan­
vzn, ii
ua.ru io pari wnu iier,
to Powers’ blanched face outlined
An eel, measuring nearly three feet tial comforts and were just prepared to hoiiHe a thorough cleaning.
While
yet
so
young
and
fair.
Sparking is something that nearly
against the wall. It was a great day in length, was speard in the creek just take lite at its best when the fatal time
But God who dwells above tbe skies
everybydy has had experience in the
for America and Flint, end the conven­ below tbe mill last Saturday. This is came.
I. C.
course of their life .time ; some more
How much she’s at the table missed:
tion voted to seat the real delegates.
the first one ever seen in these parts.
In that line, I have employed
You miss her at her plav.
and some less. Some prefe r to spark
The next act was "fusion.”
A comEarnest Havnes has a now carnage
WEST KALAMO.
You uiImi her at the fireside,
one way and some another.
While
ittee was appointed to confer with "die and harness, and drives one of the best
You miss her all the day.
some would prefur to have the lamp
unterrified,,’ and after a long time they teams in the town, and the girl who be
Mrs. Barras lies dangerously ill.
Although your hearts arc very rad.
turned down, others delight in spend­
returned with a plan for the division of chooses to ride with him is indeed very
Yet In nubtnisalon bow
Dry and dusty, and wheat flying in
Whom I ran recommend as an
To Him who balled your Mamie home.
ing this delightful season in a ramble
the offices. While the committee on lucky.
tbe air.
For she's with angels now.
in the woods or boat-riding.
Some
"co-operation” was out some addresses
Last week Wm. Howe run a large
Harry Ehret is just recovering from
I
d
her
last
sickness,
well
you
know.
young kids will go to see his intended
were made, among others one from Mr. wrench into his threshing machine, a severe run of fever.
She suffered much with pain;
and not speak half a dozen words dur­
Remember tliat your loss of her,
Hecox, in which be denounced “fusion” breaking it so that they were unable
S. A. Shepard is able to be about,
Is her eternal gain.
ing a whole evening, while his lady
unsparingly. Hort Flint also told the to thresh for a half a day. He thinks and rapidly "regaining his health.
,Twll not be verv long at most,
love picks out and cats all the coals on
boys plainly that he’d got all tbe green- threshing wrenches are not profitable.
Mrs. Albert Spaulding died on Tues­
Ou earth yow'll have to stay:
tho stove hearth. But the last mode
backism he wanted, and diey needn’t
Edna Fisher attended school every­ day, after an illness of two weeks.
Oh‘ be prepares) to meet your child.
is this: Young gent assists his girl on
In realms of endless days.
count on him any more. Tbe plan for day lost summer, and was thereat roll
School in the Matteson district began
the top of the gate post, then be raises
Whcre sin and sorrow arc unknown
"co-operation” was repudiated by the call to answer present to her name On Monday,
”
’
Miss Esther McMore
And all Is Joy anil love.
up on the opposite one, then they play
convention—47 to 73. A ticket was every night. There are few Hcholars | teacher.
And there’s no pain ar sickness there.
then nominated. It will be found in who have as far to go to school as she
In that bright world above.
D. F. C.
L. McKinnis has got snugly settled bean porridge hot, bean porridge cold,
Dellwood, Mich.
* another column.
does who can show as good a record as into bis new bouse, bringing him in while their heels kuock the bark off the
posts keeping the jocky moaqnetoes
k
The convention as a whole was nota- Edna.
plain view of the village.
\
ble for two things: tho presence of a
away; which together with lots of gab
Little Phil; Jk.
And shall stay and continue to supply tbe
Near Jacob Showalter's is a highway
needy with
and laughter makes it pleasant in­ Stbwakt—In Middleville, Sept. 11, a ton to
majority animated by a spirit of un­
hill that needs the help of the town to
deed. This method is adapted to the
comprising hostilities in which it de­
MAPLE GROVE.
Beach—In Middleville, a sou to John Beach.
make passable for teams.
Yural districts. Try it boys.
feated the maneuvers and overrode the
Offlet—In Nashville, Monda:, a daughter to
John Mast has erected and nearly
Doxy.
Mr. and Mrs. Offley.
Yoa are shocking, says the corn.
wishes of its ablest leaders and organ­
completed a log bouse on his new farm,
Swtrr—BitACE—Sunday, Elmer Swift and
Geo. Pearce drives a new buggy.
izers, such as Orson Swift of Maple
and will soon take posession thereof.
Amelia Brace, both ol Kalamo.
THE COUNTY.
Miss Edna Griffin was homo Sunday.
■ Grove, a^d W. F. Hicks, of Hastings.
This community was saddened on
Mr. Shultz is building a new ^rrain- Monday by the announcement of tbe
A VjXEDCLEGYMAN.
E. J. Kershner ot Carlton, has just
Even tit petit tee cf Jeb wculd leer me exdeath of Mrs. Casper Bowen, of our completed a $700 barn.
baurtetl were be a preacher and endeavoring to
Geo. McCartney has stoped ..threshing sister town Maple Grove, who expired
Intanmt
bin
audience while they were keeping
Gun Lake continues to attract large
up an inccaMut coughing, making It impouible
to repair his engine.
.
the previous evening.
VERMONTVILLE.
numbers of pleasure seekers.
for him to be heard. Yet, bow very eanv can
Ad; Wolf and wife spent Saturday
Al Mix recently found a burglar in
Smith Holmes teaches the Carlton all this be avoided by almply using Dr. Ring's
and Sunday at Potterville.
tbe shape of an owl which caused quite Center school the coming winter; New Dlscoverj- for consumption. Coughs and
Rufus Hauer and family are home
Colds. Trial boules given away al every drug
Uncle Tim Brooks was visiting old
again.
a quiver by its nocturnal racket in the compensation, $40 per month.
store.
friends here a few days ago.
D. W. Griswold han sold his farm
stairway of his bouse. Supposed en­
Cailton claims to contribute more
"HOUGH ON RATS.”
Sam Shafer was here a few days ago
for $8,800,
trance, a chamber window.
material to high schools nnd colleges
The thing desired found at U«t. Ask Drug­
gist lor “Rough on Rats.” It clear* out rata'
N. A. Yates has bought Lo- Green’s but has returned again to Liberty.
Found at last. This time we’ve bent than any other town in the county.
Elmer
Shafer
has
relatives
from
Al
mice,
roachea,
(les, bed-bugs. 15c. boxes.
house and lot.
'em all. Mrs. A. Mix lias m he;'pos­
A brass band has been blows into ex­
len, Hillsdale county, visiting him.
Eternity Is long enough to make up for the
Fred Hull starts on a big trip through
session, a Bible printed in London in istence at Freeport, and tho inhabitants
Miss Lettie Howland returned to her
the south about Oct. 1.
1321, and handed down in her family of that little burg contemplate heaps of ills of our brief troubled life here.
There is much rejoicing at the re­ home in Newago county a few days from generation to generation.
•
IIPOKTA5T TOTBAVELEUS,
fun.
ago,
turn of Rev. C. C. Olds.
Commissioner Dillie advertises to
Special Inducement* ire offered you by the I
The Hastings school deserves to be
Frank Quick says those boys had
Jas. Fin too and Mrs. E. U. Stiles have
let the job of finishing the long want­ entitled the "Barry County Universi­ Burlington Route, It will payyou to read their .
advertlsementa to be found elsewhere in this
better look out for some shot the uext
purchased the Hoyt farm.
ed highway near E. D. Williams’ on ty”—for which thanks are due to Prof. iMue.__________________________
time, they come after peaches.
The Odd Fellowshave newly carpet­
last Saturday, 23d.
When finished Hall.
When was a man ever weak tbat that the de­
L. E. Phant, Ju.
ed and furnitured their lodge room.
this will be the grand highway of Kal­
I hope to be in my new store snd then shall
Miss Sybil Wooley, organist of tbe vil did not charge down upon him.
largely increase my stock and make special clThe Toledo and Marshall railroad is
amo and Maple Grove.
’ SKINNY MEN. ”
Lacey Congregational church received
forts to give patrons perpect satisfaction.
WOODLAND.
being inspected through to Elm Hall
Wells’ llealtli Renewer. Absolute cure for
a donation of $16.50 ns a token of the
this week.
nervous debility and weakness of tbe genera_
_ , . _
church's appreciation of her services,
Dig your potatoes.
WEST 8U5HELI).
tive functions. #1. at druggirts. Mich. Depot
Frank Farmer and Chas. Hall are
JAMES E. DAVIS A CO Dclroli. Mich.
| VT" ” • *
Now is the time to engage school
last week.
putting a ball alley in the rear of their
Dry, dusty nnd disagreeable.
A number of Carlton people are un­
warms.
barlwr shop.
Wesley Fay came out with a $130 sophisticated enough to believe that a
Quite a number took in the state fair
Stone &amp;. Hull moved into their own
buggy this week.
house in the vicinity of Freeport is
at Jackson this week.
.
building on the opposite side of tbe
Rev. Geo. Fast and family have de­ haunted. Ten to one it is haunted—
Mr. Baitinger lias raised tbe millin­
street last Monday.
with rats.
ery shop and will put an underpinning parted for Indiana.
Vt. Ville has three-quarters of a
Mrs.
Charley Bennett is still in a
L. A. Cain of Carlton, received a pre­
under the same.
mile more of sidewalk than it had at
sent of a thousand dollar boy from his
Dan. Miller has the job of repairing dangerous condition.
tbe beginning of thia season.
Jake Riley smiles and says: “come wife and another (present) of seven
Geo. Lamb is preparing to build a tbe bridge across the river near C.
over and see our girl.”
hundred dollars cash from his mother
Smith’s nearly completed.
large brick block, two stories. 44x100,
Mrs. Gallaway nud daughter of all in one day. last week.
Have just received their new goods for the Fall trade.
Geo. Barden and L N. Harter is in­
just south ot Bai ber.Hull i. Ambrose’s
Woodland,
visited
at
Charley
Sackett
’
s
Baltimore -. John Fancher's horse fell
troducing a new set of text books in
store.
last week.
dead of heart disease recently.—Mrs.
our
school
and
are
meeting
with
good
A red-whiskered old man, wearing
Miss Martha Benedict of Vermont­ J. C. Anderson, of Belleville, Kan.,
Are the finest ever brought to this market for the price.
dark clothes and a slouch hat, tried to success.
Mis# Della Palmerton will teach in ville, visited friends in this section fisiting at Samuel Jones', fell from a
•teal Wilfred Snyder last week, but the
last
week.
stoop and broke her arm.
tbe Lee district the coming winter.
boy was rescued near town.
Rev. M. Furgeson, and family of
P. T. Colgrove, Republican nominee
Miss Della ranks among the first-class
Last week constable John Williams
this place visited here in company with for prosecutor in Barry county, is an In Brown, Cardinal, Dregs of Wine, Bronze Green, Slate, and
teachers.
took three swarms of bees from Lewis
.
old Eaton county boy, and R. W. Drab, for 12 1-2 cents per yard.
Rev. Judd is tbe minister sent to ns, his wife last week.
Mead on an attachment suit -broughfby
Geo. Bennett who has l&gt;een laid up Shriner, for prosecutor in the latter
and will preach next Sunday for the
Dr. Snell for services, but on Saturday
first time at 10:20 o’clock. Rev. Or wick for nearly three weeks with a sore eye country, was raise*) in Woodland.
Mr. Samuel Herring replevied tbe
is again able to be around.
Geo. W. Tyler, of Woodland, has re­ Men’s, Youths', Boys’, and School.
goes to Orange.
/ same and carried them oft’in triumph.
Samuel Downs having closed his ceived $1,328 back pay and $10 per
Wesley Myers has not occupied his
Now whose bees are they T That’s to be
place in the drug store lately on ac­ summer school, started on Satunlay month pension.
His heart troubles
tried.
him at times—an effect of army service.
count of poor health, and at this writ­ morning for Olivet college.
Last Saturday and Sunday a couple
A very pleasant reception was given He fans rented Jthe S. S. Ingerson From a Cheap Cottonnade to an Imported Worsted.
ing is'no better. ,We would be pleased
of "kids” from Jackson and another
tbe Rev. McMartin at the residence of place.
to see him again in the store.
from this place, assisted by a couple of
Mr. Fay is getting along finely with James Hunter's on Monday evening of
The Barry county fair will be held
WE GUARANTEE OUR
"soiled doves’’ from Nashville and an­ his school and as n teacher in liked. last week, in which all were highly
four days commencing Tuesday. Oct.,
other, residence uncertain,—all parties
He baa only 28 students, but if the pleased to again meet their former 3d. Work on the grounds ia now pro­
well known—made such exhibition of
school had been advertised a few weeks pastor.
gressing under direction of President
bestiality and general nastiness in this
While other reporters are telling Waldorf. According to the premium
in advance, he would have had many
village as came near securing them an
snako Morie*. we wish to be heard. list, intoxicating liquors and games of
more.
Cull and Sec our Ilnta and Asps. Bootn and Shoe*.
opportunity to visit the county jail free
Kirk Grant will have to sell toweling Master Bertie Fay, while on his way to chance will be excluded from the
of charge.
some time yet before he can mn c the the postoflice last Saturday, killed a grounds.
The premiums aggregate
Last Tuesday Riley Wilson of north town line people believe that ne doos black snake, measuring 8 inches around
about $1,000.
Sunfield, went on the premises of Wai- not know the way to Woodland, as he the body'iuid just four feet in length.
Terror lingers around Freeport in

FFAURDAT

- 3KFT-

m

school with nineteen scholars in atten-

Horses

Shod

ALWAYS BEST

SKILLFULLY.

Recognizing These Facts,

THE BEST WORK
Chas. Middleton,

A No. 1 Workman.

.J. VI. WOOD

FOUNDER and MACHINIST

We Are Still Here!

GROCERIES

VICINITY LOCALS.

OF A NO. 1 QUALITY.

FRESH EVERY DAY,

ROCK BOTTOM PRICES.

ABOUT SEPT. 1
fl

fr K. A I\l CI 1 S«,
J.

Latest News
C. W. GRANGER &amp; CO.

THEIR PRINTS and GINGHAMS
WORSTED DRESS GOODS,

.

CLOTHING.
SUITS.

PRICES AS LOW AS LOW AS THE LOWEST.

5000 LBS. OF BUTTER WANTED.
For which we will pay the highest market price in Cash.

of some wheat which Dowds was then ।day if he wm on the direct road to said
threshing, and which Wilson had bid ;place.
Null.

I’reabyt-rian church, Saturday, Sept »,
the following persons were admitted as

Samuel Roush
Roush says
says is 25 or 30 feet long,
long.
He saw ft lying along the roaJKde, and

^TWrURANtlERA(().

�"but iti« time that something was
‘iF'lerDiab die tn with facilities
which would make tbe task of learning
to like whiskey at least as simple and

ired'thr art of smoking
lwith the greatest difficulty. He had j
to take bis first lesson with a pij»e and
The Market.
strong tobacco, or with a rank and
». wretched cigar. Withdrawing behind
Young men—Steady.
the bam, in order to pursue his task
Girts—Lively, willing, and in dewithout interruption, he smoked his
pipe or cigar until the inevitable and maud.
Papas—Firm, but declining.
deathly sickness that foliows'tlie tinaccnstomed use of tobacco in heroic , Mammas—Unsettled, but waiting for
doses overcame him.. How terrible higher bids.
Coffee—Considerably mixed.
* ,
were tbe hours passed by the young
Fresh fish—Active and Slippery.
student prone on the damp turf, and
Wheat-A grain better than barley.
conscious that no concealment of
Eggs—Quiet, but will probably open
the state of tris stomach from the pat­
ernal eye would Impossible! How well up lively in a short time.
Whisky—Steadily going down.
he new that he wns doomed to pass
Onions-Strong and rising.
from the bam to the wood-shed, and
Breadstn ffH—Heavy.
tbat to the disturbance wrought in bis
Boot* and Shoes—Those in the mar
interior by tobacco would l»e added the
acute disturbance of his exterior by ket are soled, and are constantly going
the rod which Solomon—after he was up and down.
Hats and cans—Not as high as last
safely grown up—ao warmly approved!
except foolscap, which is sta­
Yet it was only by hard and thorny spring,
■
tionary.
. path that the?
could become a '
Tobacco—Very low, and has a down­
old oMhe doamoker. On
forever the ward tendency.
vnain&gt;of sm
Silver—Close, but not close enough
and deadly faintness.
The only way to learn to smoke wa* to to get hold of.
grapple boldly with the pii&gt;e and cigar,
A Cincinnati Penny Paper reporter
and to persevere through pain and fliekrecently interviewed the Indy artist
neiw and the shadow.of the apple-tree I. who was tabooed, by her female co­
switch, until success crowned the in- ।
workers because she■ believed that the
domitable will of the young smoker.
i
Tim boy of the present day knows ] demands of her art necessitated her
studying the nude, and so availed
nothing of the sufferings of his pred­ I herself of the only opportunity in a
ecessor. The i«th of smoking is modi',
' night class of gentlemen. The inter­
plain and easy to him by mean» of tho. I view was one evidently embarrassing,
cheap and gentle 'cigarette. He takes
if not actually distressing, to tbe lady,
his first lesson in smoking in the seclu­
f but one in which she made no mean
sion of hisToom, and without, dream- ';
j defense of the propriety of the true rtrting of the necessity of a retired locali- I
ist’®
s fistudying the human form in the
ty wherein to stretch himself upon the I&gt; w
ground.

His. first cigarette contains I nu e'

just enough cobacco to slightly effect
The Benton family of Scarburgb,
his system, but not enough to produce {
nausea. If the second cigarette begins | Cal., have turned their farm into a
separate Kingdom. The nine members
to fill him with abdominal distrust, be .
y &lt; passed a formal declaration of indethrows it away in time to save himself.
' peodence a few mouths ago. and crownBy practicing for a few days with onee I ed the husbaud and fAther aa king.
cigarette, lie presently becomes able to’ They hoisted a new flag over the house,
•«inoke two without unpleasant conse­ announced that hundred acres were
quences. Soon he is able to smoke
no longer a part of the United States,
three or four with impunity and is then
and refused to pay taxes. They are to
ready to take up the higher branches
have a war on tlieir hands, for the
of piph and cigar smoking, confident
sheriff intends to make an invasion.
that he can master them in a short
time, and without any internal distress.
The daily receipts at the United
For the modern boy there is no dan­ State treasury arc at present greater
ger that he will be discovered by his than they have ever been known to be
father in that limp and hopeless con­ by the officials of-the department. The
dition that admits of no plausible re­ amount averages 11,500,000 every day.
ply when the dread words are uttered, The receipts this month will aggngate
“You’ve been smoking, and don’t let nearly $50,000,000. This sum must, of
me hear yoa deny iL” On tbe approach course, be lessened by the payment of
of a sudden father or an unexpected the usual contingent of pensions,
mother, he can always drop his cigar­ claims, appropriations, etc. Pensions
ette, and no pale cheeks or chuniny alone constitute one item of $0,500,000.
forehead will betray him. He never
know* the autruisli of that awful loss
The idea of teaching every girl to
of confidence in bis stomach that for­ thump a piano, and every boy to be a
merly made the juvenile smoker tern
.................
.........................
........ ,_________________
Ixiokkeeper,
will make
potatoes worth
paiarily wish tliat he had never been four dollars per bushel in twenty
born. Nothing is simpler tliau—thanks | years.
.

to the introduction of cigarette—than
for any boy of ordinary abilities to be­
come an accomplished smoker, and the
hufecess of the new system is illustrat­

ed by the fact that our boys, with hard­
ly an exception, learn to smoke at an
age at which their fathers fancied
themselves far too young to undertake
so difficult and trying a study.
Proud as we may justly be of the facil­
ities dow nt the command of the youth­
ful smoker, it must nevertheless be
conceded that there are certain branchea bf knowledge which our
boys
must still acquire with pain and
difficulty.
They are compelled to

to drink wblAey in prec«ly
the —
crude
which
the art- Vhas
...
a. way ,‘m
-------..------------------been learned from time immemorial.
Whiskey is al ways disagreeable when
toated for the first time, and the boy
.who' is determined to learn to diink
must have his throat scorched and his
breath taken away many times before
his taste becomes so educated that he
can truthfully say that he likes whis.—
key.
has m
topass,
fact, VOIAHAKU
through
-.J, He uuro
, (Mum, in luvt,
an soxnorionfw
n* AI «&lt;&gt;«««..iu«
anrapenenceat kast a* diaagreeablc
as tliat ot the young smoker in- tne
day* when cigarettes were unknown.
This is by no means creditable to our
civilization. We ought long agn to
have made it a* easy for a boy to learn
to drink as it is to learn to smoke.
What isoecded i* some means of sup­
plying boys with whiskey in small
quaatitie*, aud with its fiery and ob­
jectionable taste partially concealed.
We should have whiskeyretts as well
as cigarette*. With their aid a l»oy
’ily accustom himself to whis.
jw—
fair progress toward
becoming an able an successful drunk­
ard without once experiencing the unplcaaant sensations which sometimes
•o thoroughly disguM. the youthful
drinker aa to induce him to entirely
abandon all hope of learning to drink.
are offered

-------Killing Perkins.
It is on record in this state that a
Michigan editor was once engaged to
tight a duel. If the editor himself is
not living he must have died witiiin a
week past. The affair occurred about
twenty-five years ago, and was brought
aliout by the journalist making several
vicious attacks upon the honor and
honesty of a member of the Legislature.
Tbe Solon first tried the usual way of
getting even, by buying a horsewhip
and hunting tbe editor, but when he
„
] found him he wns knocked down and
• roiled in" the mud.
He then sent a
| formal challenge, and ns the editor
opened the letter he turned to hl* two

।
i
I
1

bnv. T.„
nn for tlio first nw t"
“Three columns, replied the fore­
man after measuring upon the galleys.
“And we need five. You’ll have that
nil up by to-morrow, and by Wednes­
day night all the inside will be up.
Then I’ll wet down the paper and make
up. nnd while you are working off the
outside I’ll run out and shoot old Per­
kins, who lias sent me a challenge.”
He sent a formal acceptance, named
rifles
a*VT.
weapons,
appointed tbe ren,------- ------r
detvoua within thirty rod* of the office,
and thpn ,M.Kan |4&gt;
out
When the hour arrived he was making
up
tbe
forma,
having
got a little l&gt;c—
- ------------—----------Innd *tbe
programme,
’*“ ”
***”*“ and by and by
his second came in nt tlie back door aud
said:
"We’ve been waiting for you all of
twenty minute*.”
"But I’m busy.”
“This is no time to be busy. Perkins
if all ready.”
,
. "Hang the luck !” growled tbe editor
ns be filled out a col tun a ami flung
down his rule. “That’s just like Per­
kins—he wants to throw our publica­
tion day. Come on—I’ll fill him up!”
Tbe editor seized Lis gup, and hat­
less and coatless he set out on a lope for
the spot. Perkin* saw him coming in
that fashion, nnd his knees weakened
aud his chin dropped, and though tbe
editor yelled for him to bold on a min­
ute, bs bolted over a fence and didn’t
come Ant of the woods until he was six
miles away.—FrecPran.

The waabime my of the Texan
town of Ben Ficklin, in a torrent, with
the loss of forty live*, eight bouses
only escaping, contrasts strongly with
the suflerinirs from ’
" '
parts of the
irastofove

Rpor7 01 aecMywK
“Good
Goral heavens!
heaven#!” yelled
yelle&lt;l tbe
!
reporter,
vegetation undergoing deoompoMUou. "how
“|&gt;ow dirt
dirt it
it happen!
happen^ Let
Let’’s
® go at once!"
Thrae spore* when inbailed with die and
and he
Iw tor®
tore up
np and
and down
down the
t
den, got
breath or taken into the system with his coat and hat, kicked over three
water soon enter the blood and germin­ chairs, scattered the newspapers.every­
ating there find a foothold, wlierehy where, spattered the paste up agarasl.
tho whole system is poisoned and tiie the wall, and myde Rome howl gener­
various functions disordered. ’When ally.
tbe germ theory of disease was first,
"Hold on,” said the man with the
advanced it was supposed that these news, "don’t get so Arcitcd. Go slow.”
spores were of animal nature, and like
"Go slow! How can IF
the bacteria in diphtheria were propa- I
Yes, but—
gated in the blood, but they ant now
"But what—but whatF gasped the
conceived to be of vegetable origin, editor.
like the fuilgi found on decaying wood
"Well—ah—well—you see.” and he
iu cellars. The scourco of this state of edged toward the door, "these dead
the air is generally swamps or stagnant iMMliea are buried in the cemetery, and
pools, which, partially dried by tbe hot you know—
son, send forth vavors loaded with
But the editor didn’t know anything,
this malarial poison. These vapors de­ and when he recovered from his sudden
scend to the earth in the night cooled revulsion of feeling rhe man with the
by tbe loss of temperature, and breath­ item was gone.-Battle Creek Moon.
ed by sleepers are readily inhaled
Hence persons living near stagnant
A JerseymnD went to Mauch Chuuk,
pools or marshes are liable to be fflicted with chills and fever, and such lo­ Pa., to spend bis vacation, and during
calities ore never healthy, though they hie first night three old hens, which had'
are more so when the streams flowing gone to roost on a tree out side his bed­
room window, were disturbed by a cat
into them are pure, and also when the
and flew into the apartment. Tbe Jerwater is high. Again the drainage of
hoiptes, barns, etc., are a fertile scource aeyman awoke nnd splashed a pillow Tbrcush
around until the bewildered fowls Ticket* Ti»
of malaria. One will often notice in
Bad :r»ve!icc
coming into the neighborhood of oue found tlieir way out. Tbe next morn­
of these sluggish streams that pass ing he told his host that he should •aie M *:i office!
through all most every village a most come there every summer, for during
the whole night he had seen but three
villainous smell caused by the offensive
refuse which communicates its bad odor mosquitoes.
to the atmosphere, especially on hot
Mn. hate Alklna, a wedtby lady of Pitts
days. This absorbed into the system
by the lungs or taken in through water, burg, Pa., write*: “Rich food and high living
T. J. POTTE*.
pLRCEVAL LOWELL,
which also absorbs it from the air, pois­ night parties, fashionable dressing and the
A Vic* Trttl *
Mruut^ r,
Otn. nut. Agt-.
Sneral frivolity of high life, had iieen affectons the blood and deranges the whole
Chteoco. Ill.
Chlcoso. 1U
g my health quiteaeriourty. I commenced
system. 'i’his poison is also developed nelng Brown'® Iron Bitten*, and now I am aa
iu force iff welts and springs when they lively u a young girl, and excel them all in
become low, and the result of drinking cuuurancc.
endurance. 11
It is more reiresning
refreshing than ehamebsm- ,
these is the same os breathing the poi­ pogne, and ita strengthening effects arc lasting. I
sonous air. In a time of drouth a great
Speak well and little, if you with to be con­
Suantity of vegetation rhat dries up in
le niedows, stubble fieldsand pastures sidered at. powtenaing merit.
a tpreific for bysfaria, dlulucn,
the corn fields and forest leaves pro­
out headaeha. mental dvpreMloi
duces the same effluvia. On the prair­
DON’T WASTE MONEY.
■twoiatorrbaa, Im
'
'
ies when large tracts of prairie ground Ou uaahy extracts when you can buy a lasting premature old ajre,
are turned over, the decaying vegeta­ perfume so delightfully fragrant and refresh­
ing as Floreston Cologne.
Care of Table Knives.
tion is a widespread cause of malaria.
The evih which follow-malarial poi­
The chief cause of the destruction soning are almost infinite. Disease of
The wages of sin are not paid In trade dob
of knives is their treatment, or rather a malignant nnd dangerous nature, ac­ krs. Old Nlck(’l) pay them in bis own coin. |
want of treatment, as soon as they companied by symptoms the most dis­
A BENEFICENT ACTION.
are removed after the different meals. tressing are certain to manifest them­
The miserable looks and feelings of those
Instead of being attended to first, selves and life is a burden so long as
confined at desk* or work tables, are caused by thorite*! «&lt;*t&gt;i for th* »III*c* &lt;4 No«hv|l!*. .1OH*
this
poison
remains
iu
the
system.
The
they are left anywhere and everywhere,
weak Stomach, Kidneys or Bowels. Parker-*
scattered about, while the china and indications of malaria are loss of ap­ Ginger Tonic without Intoxicating has such a
silver are washed and dried, and then petite, shortness of breath, pains about beneficent action on these organs aud so
the
heart,
wasting
of
flesh
and
strength,
cleanses
the polronous matters from the sys­
they come in last, but not least, to be
tem, that rosy checks and good health are soon PjElwRi ROE, Propribtob
washed in the greasy water, handles despondency, nervousness, chilly sen­ brought back again.—Express.
and all, and then only half wiped; sations. unaccountable lassitude; dull
pains in various parts of the body,
and so they lie until to-morrow, if
When a man gets bal i he'll take, hair of
bead aches, dizziness, a coated tongue
there are plcnt,- of others “to take nnd dry mouth, night sweats, muscular somebody else.
to;” if not, they are hurriedly cleaned debility, puffing under the eyes, unus­
FOUND AT LAST.
up just as the next meal is going up. ual color, order of sediment about the
Now, the knives are of the very first fluids passed from the system, etc. Any­
An agreeable dressing for the hair, that will
importance in ’‘washing up.”
Better one of tbe above symptoms may be cu atop Its falling, lias t&gt;ccn long sought for. '
tv iu
atui gnif jyrgat*,
far leave cups, and plates and sil­ indication of malarial poison in the purity, fully supplk-s this want*1
ver waitxig their turn than delicate body which necessitatcsimmediate and
*
steel. I like better than anything a careful attention.
But if malaria! poison could not find
pewter can to wash ktuves in, the
height of which should be the length lodgement in the human body, it would
For the delicate and complicated difficulties i ^P^ESH FISH and POU LTRI
of a large table knife. First, they be just ns harmless ns tbe oxygen of the
air. The great- difficuty is that, after peculiar lo female constitution, Lydia E. Pink„
should be wiped on a knife-rag, and being absorbed into the system, it pro- • ham’s Vegetable Compound is the soverign j
ZS TUEIR 8EAB0
then wash them in warm water in duces obstructions in the ptomach and
this can. aud then not only quickly lungs, clogs the circulation of the
dried, but taken out singly and sepa­ blood, affects the kidneys, liver and
rately out of the water, and well and other organs, and brings on diseases of
thoroughly dried.
a most dangerous character. There is
1 wonder servant* do not like aud opkr one known way by which these
wish to get their knives out of the diseases may be avoided or cured after
way first; and if they would only use they have once made tlieir appearance,
Kalamazoo, Mich., Feb. 2,1880.
Satisfaction Guaranteed.
soap and water, and dry thoroughly, and that is by keeping the great puri- j I know Hop Bitters will bear recomtnenda11E.VR1 ROEI can assure them that their knives fying organs of the body in perfect Uon honestly. All who use them confer upon
would look almost fit to come to the health. These organs are the kidneys them the highest encomium*, and give them
and liver. No one whose kidneys or credit igr making cures—all the proprietors
table without any more cleaning, and
liver are in a perfect condition was claim for them. I have kept them since they
if they would only adopt this method
ever affiicted by malarial poison. And were first offered to tbe public. They took
daily the labor of the knife-board wo'dd when tuese organs are disordered, they high rank from the first, and maintained it,
and are more called for al! others combined. So
be far less.
not only permit, but invite, these dis­
as they keen up tbdr high reputation for
There ought to be a japanned ktfifo- eases to make their inroads into the long
purity and usefulness, I shall continue to rec­
box for the knives that have been body. It is now admitted by physi­ ommend them—Something I bare never be­
ill b* absorb*!.
washed and not cleaned, and a japann­ cians, scientistsand the majority of the fore done with any other patent medicine.
ILH CHAI BALI
' J. J. BABCOCK, M. D.
ed box or tray with a handle and a general public that oue medicine, nnd
division for those that have been onlv oue whose power bus been tested
Devot*’ each daj to the object then I-j hand
cleaned, and well dusted after the and proven, has absolute control of,
nnd keeps the kidneys and liver iu and tbe evening will find something done.
cleaning.
,
Indigestion and habitual eoatlveness arises
As to the keeping of the handles of constant health and hence prevents
malarial sickness.
This remedy is from weakness of tbe nerves and muscle of the
from, additional
table knives, I have one very simple
eolda,
completely
recipe which I Kpply to all ivory arti­ Warners Safe Kidney and Liver Cure, stomach. Due attention to the proper habit of
the most impular medicine before the Hfe in connection with the timely use of Brown
heal* th* tore* and
cles, and that is whitening. Take a land. It fully counteracts the evil Iron Bitiers, will strengthen the affected parts
irssi.r-L;!
remove every symptom of tbe di«soft piece of flannel, put it tightly on effect* of malarial poison in tbe system, ' and quickly
qt
your finger, dip it in whitening, mois­ ;iuu
and nut.
not uuiy
only banishes
it, uut
but resiurvB
restores ,
;ordcr
efiefal rnulla are mllxrd by" a few application* A
uoiiituics ii,
---------.
•
______
ten with water, and with this rub the til, member, which tbat poiaou ba. I Do rou ever look at younwlt when yoa ,bu« tharourh freatcucntai directed will cure Catarrh
handle of the knife the way of the grain weakened. How well it does rfhis can
Im learned from tho following
I “,Mb"
as hard as you can. Continue rubbing
Unequaled For Cold in the Head
Kansas City, Mo., June 30. 1882.— j
for some time, and then polish with dry
NEVER GIVE UP,
whitening. Clean ivory brushes, work­ Moving from Jhe state of New York to
If you
11
vou arc
are suncnDE
suffering wiin
with low
iow ana
and uepressca
depressed
~
,
the
western
country,
I
was
at
kicked
boxes, paper knives, or any other arti­
with malaria and general debility. I spirits, loss of appetite, general debility, ‘dlaor- Recognized as a Wonderful Discovery,
cle of ivory in this way, and you will
rvcelplof price
Sold bv dru«&lt;«t* si SA eta. Onrvcelplof
prio
bad lost all appitite ami was hardly tiered blood, weak constitution, headache, or
see the immense improvement Quite able to move about. I had tried a great any disease of a bilious nature, by all means
You will be
a skin seems to come off the iv^ry a* many remedies, but nothing bettered procure a bottle Electric Bitters.
ELY C REAM BALM CO., Ow.p, X. Y.
surprised
to'
see
the
rapid
improvement
tbat
you rub, and the jvory loses the yellow­ my condition until I began using War­ will follow; you will be Inspired with new life;
ness of neglect in proportion to its de­ ner’s Safe Kidney and Liver Cure, strength and activity will return; pain and
-s-j
fl? TT
TH
gree. A clean brush will remove all which seemed to help me right away, misery will cease, henceforth you will rejoice i
J-C J I" | IJ JV Fl
a-v
particles of whitening from the rooks and I feel as well as I ever have in my iu tbe praise of Electric Bitters. Sold at fifty
Cored without sn operation ortb* injury tra*_
life. It is a blessing to people in this cents a bottle by all druggists.
and crevices.—Farm ami Fireside.

—A Hural Now Yorker correstxmdent
has a new method of keeping hh beef
steaks and mutton chop* for three or
four day*, or even longer, in the warm­
est of weather, by strewing each piece
thickly with Indian meal, and rolling
it up, and then burying it ia meal.
—It i* said to be the custom in Spainfor every oue who eats a fruit to dig a
little hole in the ground, and plant’the
seed.
In consequence, the roads of
that country are lined with trees,
the fruit* of which are free to all.
Thera is a hint here which might well
be acted on in this country. —N. Y.
Examiner.
—To raise sixty bushels,of oat* to tbe
acre, plough tho ground in November;
be particular to turn it all over; then
in winter give a light coat of manure,
spread evenly, from five to ten load*
pej acre, according to fertility of land.
Early in spring, as soon as the ground
ia dry enough, sow the oat* and work
them in with a cultivator, going over
and then across; level the ground by
going over once with a harrow, and
roll, if desired, thus getting them In
early. A late snowstorm will not hurt
them, if not put in the ground early
the ground gets hard.—Htubandnum.
—Blue Holland Shades, with inser­
tion and edge of antique lace, make a
pleasing change from the red ones
which are and*have been so popular.
These shades are especially adapted for
windows in doom, and for bed-room
windows. Like the scarlet ones, they
do not show dqst, and wear as white or
cream-colored ones do. Under white
muslin curtains in abed-room, curtains
of common turkey-red calico not only
answer well for a lining, and give a
softened light to the room, but are dur­
able also, as they can be washed with­
out fading.—N. Y. Post.

KANSAS CITY

NERVOUS DEBILITY
SKj*ure guaranteed.

MEAT MARKET

UZ

i

SimM Hams 2Di Sionlim,

ATARR

DIRECTIONS

hay-fever

-------- 1---------- ---- -------------------

—Mr. Black; who resides at Hilisboro. Ark., exhibits a control and in­
fluence over the reptile family astonish­
ingly mysterious, in the wooiis, creeks,
or wherever he finds a snake, it mat­
ters not of what type of‘ deadly poison
and venom it may be, he succeeds in
capturing it alive and suffering as little '
from the clasp of its fangs as if it were
an ordinary pin scratch. He handles
and fondles them about his person with
as much indifference as if they were
so many harmless toys. He will allow
the largest rattlesnake to deliberately
strike and bury its fangs into his flesh,
and apparently suffers no inconvenience
or serious consequences frpm the tragic
risk. By a certain weed or growth of
vegetation he claims to destroy the ef­
fect of tho bite.
When bitten, ho
chews and swallows the juice of the
weed, which acts like a charm.—Chi­
cago Timex.

malarious country. C. F. william,
Absence in love is Ukejwatar upon fire—a lit,
, ,
. .
. ‘ .
..
1412 Grund Ave., of William &amp;. Co.
tic quickens, but much extinguishes it.
1
Hardware.
This great remedy lias proven i|s
“We get along splendidly since tny wife repower in innumerable coses, and is ened her health. Zoa-Pnoru has been worth
to-day more extensively used in mal­
adreds of dollars to us.”
arial districts, whether in cities or in
The man who forsakes the lecture field for
the country, than any or all other rem­
edies for the cure ot the same class tbe com field Is a public benefactor.
of disease. No one can afford to trifle
THEMF8TKRY EXPLAINED.
with the first symptoms of malaria, but
Nothing K-jccecds like sureem. This explains
instant care should be taken to check it
,on tbe start before its evil influences why l*utnam's Painless Corn ExtractorAas ri»
en so rapldlv in public favor. It positivelywucovershadow the life.
ce«U in accbmpUshing all that Is darned for
iL Corus are as easily and painlessly cured by
its use a* the greatest sufferer could desire.
Probate Order
Putnam’s PainfeM Corn Extraeuw. Mark the
name. Boid bv druggists ever* where. Whole­
sale. J. E. DAVI8 AC0-. Deiroit^

arosaway New York. Mia book with Pl otounpblitiio- . ill cu*.M tMf&lt;r« *al A^ter co e. m
- - ---------—

WORTH SENDING FOR.
(nt, c*u nc A-iirvu, wnit'x 2* oner (tv ir**. posl
to all applieatiis. It cental"* valuable infora i
for all who Mppnte tbcmaelro afflicted wi
liable to, any &lt;Ii»ca»* of tbe throat at lunca.
drew DR. J. H. HH1ENK &amp; HON. GOO Irak

MASON &amp; HAMLIN

It was an apple that made Adam tell, and lhe
same fruit made Wmiam Tell.

BUCKLKN’8 ARNICA SALVE. ,
Tbe b«t sdve la the world for Cut*, wutaea
Sorao. Ulom, Sell Rheum. Few bon* Tetter
Cliapj.ed Hands, Chilblain*. Corns, sud all
Skill IHUp.lVUB, OKU

...... - ----

ftOSttv

—Near tho corner of Hutton and Fif­
teenth streets, in Troy, two fond and .
respectable parents named Foley Are }
isbing a seven-year-old son :who
!
cherishing
‘

has gradually bleached into a peril
perfect • u» ot »»id
albino. His long hair is as watte as
snow, and his pale pinkeyes are of lit­
tle use to him while the sun-shines. At
night, however.his vision is wonderfully

millet by Dr. J. A.SImman’* Method. Oflire »1

: «l*tar-Ce
». Wilf not

•sic by oil druggtata.

9500 Reward!
re be. why tbe prayer of Uw
b*grwute3.
rdi red, that Mid petitions

and their poverty.

C. N. DUNHAM.

�over 73,00a

Troy’s Dew di-

something over 74.000.—£ Y. Herald.
gradually and sroidily worked Ms way
up in th. line of military promotion
and efficiency, until he cant, to bo the
central figure in the Russian army. He
was oue of those men who seem to in­
••Mrs. Kernnl Dash was aria* my ole
bent genius by tho operation of natu­ woman only las’ nite if she couldn’t
ral-physical laws. His father was a hunt her up aseamstress who'd-be kind
distinguished military man before him, an’ obleegin' ’nuft to do a few days’
and at one time tbe son was a member work at twelve shillin’s a day. She
de season when
half paid HU&amp;mIrawsher money
a to de seashore
if de ozone an'

—From 1870 to 1880 the increase in

Indian corn, 62 per cent, and popula­
tion, 23 per cent—Chicago Tribune.

20 patterns Mens all Wool Suite, cut in fashionable
020000010202020002000102010202010611010100010100010102020200010101020200010101000102020000000002
square miles. Its mean depth is said to
GRAND

RAPIDS

DIVISION.

d to left oue of
taker or broker,
■ biznesa. Let
ler, keep sober,
io orolq close—
t us now cxtrireg’lar order of

WESTWARD.
Pa«'io Mail. g.
STATIONS.

u who does not
messes. Be has
’s head off with
any other man
&gt;m improves his
occasionally the •’
strong. We
barbers were
led with a wild
ouldn’t whack a
e whack of the
larto that which
man when he is
e 'of a precipice,
® throw himself
ve no doubt that
fe such thoughts
ially when they
&gt; has an impediwho is liable to
the price of the
e shavec somepossibility as he
ratching the maceiling, and re;s trying to whit­
! his chin.
lot so loquacious
When he is
lip with a razor
ison to believe he
and cuts strings
: you a question
&gt; answer fearing
see of your lip if
se he acts very
q does. He subtueUc, and keeps
nirpose of tranid occupying the
ier, who has been
ber tbat he is
really ahead of
t to get shaved,
s of having his
idruff eradicator,
a corn softener,
mself, that he is
anxious to sell.
he hangs up to?mos, and richly
males dressed in
garments.
Ho
. parts your hair
i pastes it down
usually suspends
soap hardens on
usses some matacter with a bar­
n a bald-headed
of the'establish-

7

Grand Baplde and Detroit. All trains conned In
«*m« depot al Detroit with Gnat WeaUrn, Grand
Trunk and Canada Southern Railways.
B. Ci. dHOWN,
H. B. LEDYARD.
Aae’t Gon'lSnpt’Jackaon. Uen'l Bup’t Detro
HaaarC. Waarwoaia.
Gen’IFaaaandTletei Aaent.Cbleajto.

jgKOOKS, MARSHALL A CO.

Nashville Elevator!
Pay tbehlghestmarkelpriceforallkladsof

Grain and Produce,
------------And sell-----------

eeds, Feed, Lime, Salt, Plaster, Starco, Hair, Pine Lumber, Lath
' and Shingles,
-

AT THE LOWEST LIVING PRICES.

Experienced, Reliable, and Responsible.

A. H. WINN, Dentist.
BEST SET GUM TEETH $10.00
Teeth Extracted Wlfhout Pain.

OfficeOpen Day A Evening.
A. H. WINN.

yy A. BARBER, H. !&gt;..
* (UOMCEOPATUIC

Physician and Surgeon.
Office first door east of Opera House, and
near residence on comer of Washington and
State Streets, Nashville, Mich.

*

"THE BOSS’

BOOT AND SHOE MAKER,
NASHVILLE,

-

K1CB.

B»p»Uia&lt;&lt;oa« vUa Msataw aa4 DtepsUk.

AKEHOLNE,
Tlioraapplc Lake. Mich. L. P. Cole, Proprietor.

•p*nd a day'. rccrvaUob.
A new atearuer and
abundance of row boat* ; alto fUhing tackle, bait

QLEMENT SMITH,

Attorney

Attorney A Counsellor,
Will

U !frU bD*!D«m tn any ptrt of

JgCACTA

American and Foreign Marble,
Moaumento, Tnmhrtones, Mantles, 4c.,
Ha»tirnp«, Minh.
yyiLLIAM JONES,

DEKTISTS.

styles,

be 160, and its greatest depth, about 200 $6.50, marked down from 9 .00.
fathoms. Its surface is about ‘635 feet
25 Mens Cheviot Suite, in sack or frock at {10.00, marked
above the level of tho sea.—Chicago
down from 14.00.
Journal.
.
Mens fine Diagonal Dress Suite, Prince Albert cut aways,
—A New York journal devoted to the
toe interests estimates tbat 600,000 men $16, marked down from $20
arc employed in that business in the
Oue lot of Boys Suite, age 10 to 15 years, very durable
"United States during the season; that
$40,000,000 are expended in a year, and material, all Wool, $6.50, marked down from {9,00.
that $40,000,000 are invested in that
One lot odd Coats, choice, for 84.00
business. The toe storage capacity of
tho States is placed by the same author­
100 pairs all "wool Pants, $3.00, ’orth $5.00.
ity at 32,000,000 tons.—Chicago Tima.
—Tho greatest run by the steamship
Alaska in her quickest trip was 194
miles’Ii 24 hours. This is not equal to
In Boots and Shoes, Dry Goods, Groceries and Notions.
what was accomplished before 1850, tho
Highest price paid for Butter aud Eggs.
dipper-ship James Baines having made
420 miles in 24 hours. Tho Flying
Don't misa this great Sale, as our prices are considered less
Cloud, Mr. Lloyd’s moat celebrated
ship, once made 374 knots, or 433 miles, than material alone would cost.
in 24 hours and 25 minutes.—N. Y.
Herald.
—Emigration to Liberia every yorf
under the auspices of the American
Colonization-Society has been uninter­
rupted for the past sixty-one years.
The number colonized since the late
civil war is 3,577, and tho total from
lhe beginning is 15,575, exclusive of
5,722 recaptured Africans whom the
society enabled the Government of tho
OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE
United States to settle in Liberia, mak­
ing a grand, total of 21,287 persons to
whom the society has given homes in
Africa
—The biggest trees in the world aro
the mammoth trees of California One
of a grove in Tulare County, according
________________
\
to measurement made by members of
the
State Geological Survey, was
WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH
shown to be 276 feet high. 106 feet in
circumference at the base, and 76 feet
at a point 12 feet above tho ground.
Some of the trees are 376 feet high and.,
34 feet in diameter. Some of tholargest
trees that have been felled indicate an
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING
age of from 2,000 to 2,500 years.—Chica­
go Journal.
—Tho Dominion Cattle Company of
Canada has now invented nearly $&lt;00.­
000 in lands and cattle in the pan-han­
dle of Texaa Their latest purchase was
We believe the
i« destined to come
tho Wolf Creek cattle ranch of 18,000
cattle and 400 horses and mules, with into general use.
Call and see them.
nil the personal property belonging to
the ranch, for tho sum of $450,000.
This property adjoins the Word ranch,
containing 11,500 cattle just previous­
ly purchased by the Dominion Company,
thus uniting tho two ranches, which
combined aro capable of carrying 50,000 Hastings, Mich., Sept. 15th, 1881.
cattle, making it the most valuable
progeny in the pan-handle.--Toronto
Globe.

WM. A. AYLSWORTH.

50 Wagons
FOR SALE!

THREE INCH TIRE, .
BETTER THAN COMMON TIRE.
Three inch Tire

Sold by 0. L. Glasgow, Nashville, Mich.

BENTLEY BROS. &amp; WILKINS-

■&gt;

WIT AID WISDOM.

—Never run in debt for what you
cannot pay for to-morrow.
—At the West Point review the other
day General Howard had his hat on
hind side before. Perhaps he is coming
out with a new style of tactics.—Bur­
lington Hawkeye. '

—There is no antidote for the poison
used by the Carribeau Indians on their
arrows. If you want to be safe have a
Pawnee shoot you with a bullet.—De­
troit Free Press.
or a member of
ability to shave
—Where are we going this summer?
legro bather—an
Paraguay, dear reader, Paraguay. That
least we suppose
is the country where you are expected
to kiss every woman to whom you're in­
wer seen a barber
—Texas Siftings.
troduced.—Lowell Citizen.
—Dr Bell, of New York, is sure that
Brash or Heart
germs of disease remain iu ice after it
is frozen. —Exchange. If’they are in
imonly employed
ice at all it must be after it is frozen.
use of some alkali
We don’t have any unfrozen ice in this
1. A litth soda,
country. —Norristown Herald..
the suffering at
’ —“So Garibaldi is dead,” said an
cal remedy is not
Omaha girl yesterday. “I remember
to say, the oppohis name perfectly because ho invented
ccessful, viz: the
those Garibaldi waists we used to wear
doses of acids.
a few years ago.” There is nothing
i who have sufexactly "like fame.—Chicago Tribune.
r-brash, to cure
—•• Deacon Jenkins was vesterday
ly use of a little
threatened with a severe- attack of eon’ of lemon juice
cussion'Of the spine, but is now out of
danger,” was the way the editor stated
udent, consulted
that the deacon got over the fence in
year for a most
time to escape the old ram.—Boston
.
It seemed to
■ Post.
-—The Boston Transcript is sad once
more. It remarks: “ It is now affirmed
ps of lemon juice
that poor digestion is caused by weak
se of each meat
rcral months after
eyes. And we had always supposed just
the opposite, namely, tliat dyspeptics
r had cured him,
Ived himself into
were generally people with eyes bigger
than their stomachs.’’
How students,and
known as a good
—“What is the matter, old fellow?
le whole instituIou seem worried.” “Well. I am —
cgibing the lemon
m being dunned up hill and down dale
. been careful to
by roy infernal creditors.” “Oh, you
irinks at and im­
owe a large sum of money?” “No."but
. and likewise the
a great many small sums, and debts
In fact, suffer
are like children—the smaller they are
under eonsiderthe more bother they are."—-V. K
•elief by a dry
Tribune.
—A gentleman is a rarer thing than
s employment of
some of us think for. Which of us can
le stomach, I forpoint out many su’ch in his circle—men
liva, which is alwho are generous, whose truth is con­
ilief. 1 have, for
stant and elevated, who can look the
&gt;en in the habit of
world honestly in the face with an
, who might be
equal, manly sympathy for the great
and the small? We aft know a hun­
with heart-burn,
and swallow all
dred whose coats are well made, and a
score who have excellent manners, but
obnoxious' to the
of gentlemen, how many? Let us take
a little scrap of paper and each make
his list—Thackeray.

&gt; colored barber
ty he moves in.
an authority and

of this affection
discontinuance of
reduced it It
terms, to sty
ut the discoutinleal time and of

itter.

the world’; it was made to order for me.
I have had it ten years, and it jas. only
been tuned three "times since, and it is
in pretty fair tune now; try it,” she
said, as she opened the lid.
“Now,
how often ought a piano to be tuned?”
••Well, madam, that • depends on what

ALOON where too can enjoy your " Havas*"
I all boon ot tbe day.
MajpIQcent 1 ronU rldxee ma tbe MUatrtpoi
ndMlMourt riven at all point* eroeaedbythU

THE EEST
TOE

E=E2IETTIETG-! ’

AT THE NEWS OFFICE.
--------- ---------

.

artist baa hw piano tuned every time he

Get Our Prices Before Ijooking
Elsewhere.

it needs it, purchasers of lirat-elaas in­
struments three or four tiroes a year,
and people with sole-leather ears.

-1OO

It would

Years

�We made addition to' our sale room to doubte our atock^aQd we

One solid Bale room 250 long by 22 wide, filled to overflowing with
dtanouda found at Mockjm Lord, of Detroit, re-

railroad building from Sturgis,
Mkh.. to Danville, III.
B. J. Zylman, merchant taylof, Grand
Rapids, cImnI by creditors.
A Hudson jeweler baa erected a $500
town clock in front of hia store.
A big lodge of Knights of Pythias
was instituted at Adrian last week.

- Experiments at tbe agricultural colhn prove sprouted wheat good for
The Free Traders at Detroit have
nominated W. G. Brownlee for conDr.Cox, one of the most prominent
men of Battle Creek for years, died
Tuesday.
Henry Allison, a young man, killed
by the cars on a logging railway near
Manistee.
Daniel Goggins, of Grand Rapids,
convicted of murdering his wife. Sen­
tenced fordife.
r
StephetfUaikill has discovered nearly
pure copper near-s-iprihg on his farm

Detroit dock mill burned Wednesday.
Loss $87,000, insurance $10,000. The
mill is being rebuyt.
David Sander, a boy wlio jumped on
trains, at Ft Grotiott, run over and all
broke up. He died.
.
Redmond’s *100,000 opera-house at
Grand Rapids has been opened. "Es­
meralda” Christened it.
Tom Courtew, a noted cracksman
captured at Detroit. Will do a guest
of the state of Ohio for 14 years.
Tbe Hillsdale boating crew was
beaten by the Thames crew on account
of an accident to the Hillsdale boat.
Over 200 immigrants entered at Port
Huron during August. Exports dur­
ing that time amounted to $700,000.
A $3,000 fish hatchery, capable of
hatching 80,000,000 eggs, is being built
at Alpena. Will hatch only whitefish.
A miss placed switch ran a train off'
the track near Sheboygan, wrecking
engine and coaches but injuring no one.
On Monday the Eflinger brewery at
Marshall burned, entailing a .loss of
from six to $8,000, with $4,000 in­
au rance.
Five horses have been killed and
fifteen badly injured by barbed wire
fence, in Jackson county during tbe
past year.
k
Some kind of blight haa attacked the
late potatoes in Cliippewa county,
which are hardly half grown, and they
are rotting.
A lumber-mill'boiler explosion at
Reed City scalded two men. mangled
one woman and destroyed $4,000 unin­
sured property.
W. T. Sockmar fell overboard from
ayachtgit Port Lmnbton, nnd W. T.
Hartmann jumped over to rescue him.
Both were drowned.
Collision on tbe Port Huron A North­
western railway near Mayville, between
mixed and contraction trains. One
conductor’s legs crushed.
**
Tbe meeting of straight-out Green­
backers, called at Ionia, was attended
by three persons—Ben Calvin, Col.
Roberts, and a man from Ottawa.
A burglar at Cheboygan made a good
haul, bat was found next morning un­
der a bridge, in n di unken sleep and
hugging his plunder to his breast.
Geo. Davis aged 31, raped the seven­
year-old daughter of Jas. B. Sanden,
bis neighbor, near Mt. Moms, recently,
inflicting serious injuries. He fled.
The. Democrats and Greenbackers in
the Adrian district did “not co-oper­
ate.” The former nominated Col. El­
dridge ot Adrian aa a mere matter of
form.

Tom Kerney, n fanner living near
Dexter, lost hia barn last week, to­
gether with 2,500 bushels of wheat, his
Aay, sttaw, etc. Camta of the fire a
.'■lantern used while doing choree.
■Col. Hodge, opposition candidate for
- eongrew in this district, has withdrawn
and urges tbe calling of a mamcOBven- tion. The move is one in a scheme to
nominate Willard of Battle Creek.
- Forgeries to the amount of $3,000,
perpetrated by J. E. Mack, dealer in
agricultural implements at Chelsea,
have come to light. What is now want­
ed is to have tbe forger come to light.
Mrs. Barnard, of Curtis-Barnard
murder notoriety, has received a di­
vorce at Stanton from her husband, on
the ground or cruelty and failure to
aupport, no one appearing io oppose
her motion.
A young xuou of Columbus, 0., ate
too much supper st E*at Saginaw, mrftra&amp;wiih Mick headache, drank from a
btakfuotANiing hydate of chloral, and
k'led ehloroforui a few miuntex. He

I MelAm. of the State
I sued the Detroit Eve$50,000 Ubel. alleging
... falR.1, rJiargrt him wiU,
I vdm-d Emily Wgrdell.

jorllur Asia foundered in the Georgian
Baf^pdse Huron, and there are only
known to b» two survivors in 122 puaengers.
,
A copper spear-head, forty copper
beads and a dozen silver beads, said to
belong to the age of the moand:builderw, were found in leveling some
ground in the heart of Grand Rapids.
The silver beads are said to be the
first ever found in tbe state.
Herbert Tyson, who is purchasing
cattle throughout the country, reports
the quality rather below the average.
Farmers, however, are turning their
attention more and more to stock rais­
ing. for they know tbat cattle, sheep
and hogs will find a quick sale.
John Keither, one of Napoleon’s old
soldiers lives at Dexter. He was with
the emperor at Moscow and on thefamous retreat therefrom, and also fought
jit Waterloo. He is Dot quite 100 years
old yet. One of Napoleon’s guard bn
St. Helena Uvea at Battle Creek.
Ann Arbor Courier: If there be any
individual who does not believe in, the
thickness of the negro’s skull let him
ponder on this story. Last week Thurs­
day afternoon, while the carpenters
were working on the new postoffice,
one of them dropped his hatchet, which
fell through to the ground floor, where
a son of Senegatabia was employed in
the peaceful occupation of wheeling
bricks. It struck him on the side of
the head, penetrated the skull and re­
mained standing in tbe wound. He
reached up. pulled it out, went and got
his head shaved, had a plaster pat over
it, and, without making this little epi­
sode an excuse for a holiday, in half
an hour he was back again hauling
bricks. The contractor did not dock
him for lost time. There are 1,150 entries in the horti­
cultural department at the state fair, as
against 800 last year. Among the dis­
plays of plants is one from James
Vick’s gardens, Rochester, N. Y. There
isnotmuchof a show in machinery
hall, but the number of farm imple­
ments exceeds last year largely. Tbe
entries of cattle and horses exceed those
of last year. The total of entries in
the various principal classes as follows:
Cattle 507; horses 480; sheep 500;
Poultey 583 ; Swine 348; farm produce
303: lairy articles 139 ; bees 60; farm

implements 560; carriages and wagons
160;
machinery 40; manufactured
goods 117: musical instruments 70 ;
fine art 870; needlework 473 ; miscel­
laneous 75; children’s department 60. f
The attendance is larger than hereto­
fore.
The crop reports received at the of­
fice of the secretary of state showm!. so
far as known, there has been 1365,323
bos. wheat threshed in the four south­
ern tiers of counties, and showing an
average of 17} bus per at re. -The oat
crop is probably one of the best ever
ever grown in the state. Yield so far
about 31 bushels to the acre. Corn,
though very late, promises dn average
crop. The estimate for barley is the
same as in Angust, 36 bushels per acre.
Meadows and pasture, and clover sow­
ed this year, ere in excellent condition.
Beef cattle and sheep are in better flesh
than on Sept. 1st, 1881. In the central,
southeastern and southwestern parts
of the state winter apples promise from
one-third to one-half and in tbe, north­
ern counties about eight-tenths of an
average crop. The average for the
state is 55. Late peaches promise sixtenths of an average crop.

EATON COUNTY.
Charlotte ia to have a new clothing
sfbre.
Tho*. Cary took 100 buck sheep to
TexoA, recently.
base ball i Detroit League dub vs

Charlottes—35 to 6.
Grand Ledge will spend $1,000, thin
fall, to build bridge abutments.
From 50 to 100 cars of stock pass
Charlotte on the C. A G. T. toad every
day.
The Lansing district womtt’i for­
eign miaeionary society meets at Char­
lotte Sept. 31-2.
Tyler Hull, of Windsor, is the Re­
publican nominee for representative in
the first district.
The Charlotte Leader is enjoying a
big advertising boom. One man takes
the whoh, last page.
The Boston operatic minstrel com­
pany at Charlotte Sept. 23. “Operatic1
minstrels is new, sure.
Under Sheriff Peterson says the suit
against btaria for blackmail nnd denies
that ke haa resigned his office.
The number of saloons in Eaton
county decreased six during 1881, and
iu the state the decrease was 270.
Mr*. Frank Butler, formerly of Olivet
but now of Charlotte, haa received back
pay and pension amounting to about
Some of the baeineu* men of Eaton
Rapids have formed tbe “Eaton Rapids

*10.000

Carpets and Oil Cloths,
Cloaks and Dolmans,

Trunks and Satchels,
Scarlet Underwear,

Ladies’ Cloaking,
Dress Goods,

Gents’ Furnishing Goods
Boots and Shoes,

Dress Flannel,
Notions,

Hats and Capa,
Wall Paper,

Clothing,
50 Cent Ten.

;

ATTACHED TO C. SMITH**
GROCERY,

FOLK. U1VB ®F

8ALTand FRESH MEATS.

Grocerien.

Also everything yertaming to a firtt-da—
market.

Now is the time that mothers should be preparing

Cood Goods and Full Weight

KJLMIL

Giro me a trial.

We start Cotton FlanJel at 8c; a better one at 10c; an extra heavy one at 12 l-2c.
wool and Shaker Flannel Cheap.
■

All

.

D. L. DURFEE.

A large stock, and plenty of that 50c Tea.
It is a pleasure to acknowledge to our many customers and friends our success since we have
put the knife to high prices and sell goods cheap for cash, and see our store crowded with cuetomers who come to us for style, durability and reasonable prices.
tarCash paid for Butter and Eggs.
.
&gt;

-CALLOX-

F. T. BOISE,
-for-

buggy chase, throwing away the goods
their .flight.
On examination they
plead not guilty. They were tried last
Monday.
B. F. Sweet of Bellevue, raised some
very fine Centemiial (white) wheat
this year, and is selling tbe seed at at
$1 a bushel.
Dr. Dennison’s house wasn’t burned
after all. The mistake is due to the
brilliant imaginations of the Charlotte
reporters for the Detroit papers.
Charles Sayles and Bert Gou'd set­
tled “an olfl score” ac Charlotte, the
other day. Sayles’ nose was nearly
bitten off and Gould’s eyes nearly goug­
ed out
Geo. Hayden, once of Charlotte,
had a nice reception there last week.
AU on account of having taken a fe­
male partner and settled in business at
Ishpeming.
Eaton county won the premium ban- j

CLOSING OUT

PROPRIETARY MEDICINES,

PRESCRIPTIONS,
RECEIPTS,

Being engaged in clothing and lumber business in Big Rap­
ids, have concluded to dispose of by private and auction sale
the entire stock

Call and Examine 1
F. T. BOISE.

AT WHOLESALE COST

the county fair.
Which
The last number of the Charlotte Re-•

means a saving of 30 to 50 per cent to the purchaser.
r

°

SALE TO COMMENCE FIRST DAY OF OCTOBER.
READ THE

tongue.
A remarkable curiosity is a minia­
ture bunch of grapes, ripe and perfect­
ly formed, each grape being about the
size of a bird shot.
They were pro­
duced on Chas. Preston’s place,—G. L. •Jeans

Wholesale Price List,
AND BUY, BUY, BUY.
Suits,. $3.75,, 4.50,, 5.00.

Satinett Suits, 5.00, 6.00, 7.00

Independent.
Men’s Cotton Worsted Suits. 4.50, 5.00, 6.00.
J. R. Peterson ot Charlotte, deputy
All-wool Cassimere Suits,
sheriff, has been arrested by Miss Edna Union Cassimere Suits, $6, 7, 9.
S9, 10, 12, IS. All-wool Worsted Suits, $10, 12, 14.
L, Reed on a charge of bastardy, He
is a married man, and has resigned his
Beaver Suits, »12, 13: 14.
Pilot Suits, 10.50, 12, 14.
office. A former wife left him for al­
100 pairs Pants at *1.
leged adultery.
One of the ring leadeis of the “vit- 100 Vests, 60c to *2.
Union Cassimere Pants, $2 to 3.
tles” party gives out the following pro­
Wool Cassimere Pants, $3, 3.50, 4.*'
gram for Sept 26: On that day Green­
School Suits, 6 to 14, $4 to 6 ; All-wool
backers, Democratsand Prohibitionists 'Boys’ Clothing :
Cassimeres, $5.50 to 7.
will meet at Charlotte and hold three
conventions, conference will be held
Boys’ Suits, 11 to 16 : Union Cassimeres, $4.87 to 10.
and a fusion of three brought aboat.
Union Cassimeres, 5.75 to 6, 11;
In lhe evening a jubilee will take place Youths' Suits, 32 to 36 :
to celebrate the proposed election of
Worsted Suits, 7, 8, 9, 10. ‘
the ticket.
Like the Irishman who '
Worsted and Cassimere Overcoats, 5, 6, 8, 10. 100 odd Coats
proposed to throw the bull, they are
•
at 3, worth 5.
going to have their laugh first. And a ■
might, good idea it ia-Charlotte | Women’s and Childrens Shoes at 50 cts on the Dollar.
Men's
Republican.'
•
Boots at the same.
The senatorial convention at Char­
lotte oo Monday nominated Dr. P. D. AH Yard goods, including Prints, Shirtings, Demins. Tickf,
Stripes, Etc., clased at actual cost.
Patterson, of Cliarlotte.
The ballots
stood os follows; 1st ballot, Patteraon,
9; McPeck5: F. M. Potter 5 ; George
£3C"This is a genuine closing sale. All kinds of country
N. Potter 2; blank 5. Snd ballot Pat.
produce taken at full and satisfactory prices. Parties indebted
12; McP.7; F. M. P. 2; G. N. P. 1;
blank 6. Sid ballot, Pat. 11; McP. 10; either by note or account are requested to call and settle be­
G. N. P. 1; blank 5. 4th ballot, Pat 13; fore I close for good in Nashville.
McP. 10; G. N. P. 4; blank 5. 5th bal­
lot. McP. 13; Pat? 11; blank, 4. Sth
ballot, McP. 18; Pat. 11; blank, 2. 7th
ESTStore building for sale or rent
ballot, McP. 11; Pat 11. 8th ballot,
Pat. 12 ; McP. 10. A motion was then
Nashville Jlarkeu
made and supported to make the nom­
Probate Notice
ination unanimous which was done.

*

WM. A. AYLSWORTH

Ifeports of firee caused by steam
thresiiera begin to cerae in all over the
state.
Here’s a araplA for Eaton
Unknu.p.rbu,
county- Last week, while VVildt At
Morey were threshing on the MeWithy
farm, three miles northwest of Char
lotte, the wheat stacks caught fire from
an engine spark, and the separator,
standing between the stacks, was
Admin
Saleburned, also 150 bushels of wheat.
Loss on separator $400. The wheat
OSOBOK (HLLH.DMOMMd.

Farmen’ Mutual for $100. While
threshing on Orrin Tamer’s farm, in
Chester township, five miles northwest
of Charlotte, three wheat stacks caught
fire from sub engine spark anti burned.
Fivehtuidred bushels of wheat were lost

PAINT AND BRUSH
DEPARTMENT

Olotlxxxxg'

ner’at the central Michigan fair last
year, and will receive it and a speech j
from O. M. Barnes tho second day of

publican reports no less than five ran- I
a ways, in one of which Jas.Bramm and
father were badly shaken up and their
wagon totally wrecked—all by a short j

DUOS,
BOOKN,
JEWELRY,
WAIdL PAPER,
WINDOW SHADES,
DYESTUFFS,

ALL READY
To show you a large aud well selected Stock of

GROCERIES
CONSISTING OF

Sugars, Coffees, Teas, Tobaccos,
Spices, Fish, Canned Goods,
Provisions, 4c.,
AT THE LOWEST PRICES
For Cash or Beady Pay.
Also the Largest Stock of

Crockery, Glassware, Lamps,
Stone Ware, 4c.,
TO BE8EEN_IN_BARRY CO.
BOOTS ABD BHOBB
AB OHBAP AS ASTBODT.

cash paid

produce.

Tor

C. W. SMITH.
— THAT------

NOT ONE
Of my Customers Complain

Moad.yth. :Ut

JOSHUA

------ FROM------

The Nashvile Mill,
----- but-----

They

A.re

UIIVERSAU.Y SATISFIED.

JNO. M. ROE.

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                  <text>Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun.

ORNO STRONG,!
Editob

awd

Pbofbietor.

)

LIFE IK HA8HVILLE,
And Her Environe.
—The bright full moon makes nights
liltbt aa day.

—John Wing cut ten acres of corn on
Geo. Gribbins’ place in three daye last
week.
'
—The bank will move into ite hand­
some andcoumiodiouH new quarters on
Monday.
—The Gillis lota on State street have
been sold to Herb, and C. L Walratb.

Consideration $400.
—I. M. Flint (jr.) has boughtthe right
of the Stope-patent tanning process for
this township a^hBlLeaoh of Kalama*
zso and Calhoun counties.
— 'Willfam Sherman,of Kalamo whose

wife died recently, took hia children,
this week, to a home with friends in
Auburn, N. Y.

He returns.

—So far this year flo car-loads of new
wheat and two oata have been shipped
from this point, making about 34,000
bushels of wheat and 800 of oata.
—Rev. Bissell preached a moat excel­
lent sermon Sunday morning. The pith
of it was that God pardons like a moth­
er, who kisses the offense into everlast­

ing forgetfulness.
—We publish this week two •‘where­
as” notices. Any wife who will go
back on her husband at this season of
the year, just as cold weather is coming
on, deserves to be advertised.
-Judge* Killen hasn't forgotten the
Rado Reynolds matter yet, and talks os
though he thought the purpose of the
law was to split hairs; shield criminals,
and to hit justice between her blind

eyes.
—Quite a number of our citizens have
visited the fairs this week, 62 tickets
for the Grand Rapids fair being sold
here. Among the purchasers were
Messrs. Dickinson, Granger, Francis,
G. F. Truman, Durkee, Blair, Demaray,
Roe, and Burgman.
„
—A. Sellick now possesseth a home of
his own, having bought the premises
he has occupied for the past rive years,
corner Gregg and Middle St’s, and has
already commenced to improve the
aame by starting the erection of a
commodious addition.

L00AL GIBBLE-GABBLE
ka4 PcrwMl (jhit-ChaL
Cora cutting.
Gloomy davs, bright nights.
'
Every voter must re-register tins fall.
John Barry has returned from the
west.
These are the times that try editors’
souls.
Henry Scheidt has returned to Read­

ing, Pa.
Kite-flying has given away to velocb
pede- riding.
Miss Cora Blair is prostrated with

rheumatism.
Regular meeting of the fire company
Tuesday evening. .
See John M. Roe’s plain talk about
“legged wheat.”
8. 8. Ingerson made a flying trip to
Detroit this week.
Mrs. Kate Ralston is at Ypsilanti,
visiting her daughter.
Charley Young shipped another car­
load of stock this week.
Miss Hattie Austin takes Miss Blair’s
place at Griffith’s dryer.Dr. Griswold returned to, Muskegon
Wednesday with family.
W. A. Aylsworth was.in the village a
couple of days this week.
A large delegation of Nashvilleitos
attended the Charlotte fair.
Miss Addie Reed,of Hastings, visited
Nashville friends this week.
Mrs. A. J. Fenn, of Battle Creek, is
again under Dr. Goucher’s care.
Burt Burgman, now of Grand Rapids,
has been in town the past week.
Robt. Chambers and wife of Albion,
Ind., are visiting at Wm. Brice’s.
Joseph Hollon, of Marshall, is in the
village visiting old acquaintances.

Miss Tillie Badeaux, of Holton, was
Mrs. Ed. Reese’s guest over Sunday.
Wm. Parker and wife have been
visiting relatives at Battle Creek this
week.
Mrs. W. T. Hess and son of Grand
Rapids are guests of C. Ainsworth, this

week.
George Fleming’s genial face, from
Detroit, greeted his Nashville friends

Sunday.
.
The Wolcott House has enjoyed an
unusual good traveling patronage the
past week.
Plasterers have commenced spread­
—Nashville has a specimen of Young ing mud on Dr. Young’s new and ele­
America that takes the cake. He hired gant house.
out to Ail. Caverly to brush the flies
Mrs. O. M. Yates is soon to occupy
from horses in the blacksmith shop at a her larger store with an extensive stock
cent a day.“At;the end of the first day of millinery.
Jas. Allerton, living north is enter­
everything seemed all nght; but in the
morning the boy didn’t come to work. taining his sister, daughter and broth­
Phil couldn’t imagine what the matter er-in-law from III.
H. A. Brooks hands in grapes of his
was until a lawyer came down and in­
formed him that the boy had been own raising, one of which measures
around that morning saying that Cav­ three inches round.
erly hadn’t paid him and he wanted to
Tima. Berry, employed \vith J. M.
swearout warrant and force a settle­ Wood for some time past, has gone to
Battle Creek to work.
ment.
Mrs. M. V. Cooper on Thursday de­
—On Tuesday John Furniss over­
heard a man “cussing" our wheat mar­ parted upon an extended visit to friends
ket. The next forenoon while out in at Jackson and Detroit.
The regular meeting of the Blue
the country he met a man, residing
near Quimby, with a load of wheat, Ribbon will be omitted next Sunday on
account
of the diphtheria.
bound for our market, and having the
H. J. Akin, connected with the
grumbler’s case upon his mind, inquir­
ed of the Quimby man with consider­ Grand Rapids Eagle, with his wife, vis­
able amassment, why he patronized ited I. N. Kellogg this week.

the Nashville market. “Because I get
more for my wheat,” was the prompt
reply. “Yesterday forenoon I hauled
aJoud to Hastings and not being satis­
fied with the price, in the afternoon
hauled another, out of the same bin, to
Nashville, receiving for it eighteen
-cents more per bushel than I did at
Hastings.” And so it goes. Our wheat
buyers are honest men—not specula­
tors—and will pay every cent .'or wheat
there is in it, every time. Taken day
after day we believe our market pays
better prices than any of the neigh­
boring markets.
—While the editor was out, the other
-day, a fair damsel who has something
against the fellow in our office who
wears a led polka-dot necktie, usurped
- our place and prerogative to perpetrate
' the following: “There is an old saying
» that “coming events cast their shadows
before.” If the size of the “event” is
^proportioned to the “shadow," a verv
large event will shortly occur to The
Hewk. First our lyred girl got married
and the bridegroom wore off our Sun­
day hat, and now our “devil” has a new
necktie. We bade the pH good bye
with but a few tears, but if that necktie
should lead our“devil” astray, what the
devil would we do. He soys ’twas giv­
en him by one of his admirers. When
admiration takes such a piactleal form
one might look for an event in that di­
rection too. No wonder that the “dev­
il” is comparing houw. rents ir. different
localities. He prefers the ortetocraiir
portion ot town, over the railroad and

’ ISX'ST',h“

I

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1882.,

VOLUME X.

nearly

■ } TERMS; $1.50 per Year

be

Ed. Yonng was layed off at Eaton
Rapids recently, but is now employed
on the Grand Trunk road at Lansing.

Mrs. E. Varry, of-Chicago, and Mrs.
J. W. Stewart, of Battle Creek, were
Mrs. L. O. Crocker’s guests this week.
Mrs. C. L. Collier has rented the Blair
house on State St., and taken the care
of the invalid wife of Wm. E. Flem­
ing.
A new and very quick system of tan­
ning, taught by a Mr. Stone, attracted
attention at the Nashville House Satur­

day.
I. M. Flint has moved back to Nash­
ville, and is now occupying the undivid­
ed one-half of his residence on State

street.
M. H. Ingerson, who has been buy­
ing stock in this vicinity for some time
past, has returned to his home in Kal­
amazoo.
The schools have been closed again
tliis week and Prof. Cooley is said to
hbve been putting in good time cutting
•Witches.
Sid Jvocber and Miss Ida Parker were
married last Friday week, and the boys
have saved something on cigars in con­
sequence.
Peter Stacy, who has been laying
brick in the northern part of the state
all summer, has returned to the bosom
of‘hia family.
E. LW. Murray started for Chicago
Wednesday morning to- take a five
months course in the Hahnemann med­
ical college there,
Mrs. J. L. Wotring and children were
visaing at Ogden Lenawee county

Iwl wetk.

Oa.Friday

the father

received a dispatch that Lena, aged
two years, was very sick with cholera 1

HASTINGS.

H. A. Goodyear has a new* side walk.
infantum. On Monday they returned I
The croquet works are in full blast.
with the dead child.
Parker A Hoaghfalln are a new liv­
Hon. Robt E. Frazier, well known os •
ing firm.
a leading temperance and. political
Firemans dance Thursday, Oct. 5th,
speaker of the state, will speak at the
at Union Hall. *
.
Opera House, Wednesday evening,
Mr. Benton has moved into the Marsh
Oct 14th.
house on Green St.
Dr. Kealar. “the sick horse’s friend,”
The Democratic county committee
has gone to Hastings with expectation
meets here Saturday.
of locating there.
The doctor lias had
Base ball, Friday. last: Irving 23,
good success in his treatment of the
Hastings second nine IP.
equines in-this locality.
The high school department has at
Miss Belle Price takes Miss Blair's
present 205 scholars enrolled.
place as organist at the M. E. church.
&gt; C. W. Warner has gone to Waterloo,
The M. E. and Christian societies are
0., to join an orchestra and band.
well supplied with Dell(e)s," said to
The county fair begins next Wed­
be. of very, sweet tone.
nesday. A large attendance is expected.
The Euterpean choral society of this
Will Hnyes won the medal at the
place is called to meet next Tuewiay
last contest. He broke 34 glass balls
evening at the Christian church. Im­ out of 25?
portant matters concerning the musical
A large number of our citizens have
interests of this place will come up.
been'attending the fair at Jackson,
A. W. Phillips returned last we/k
also nt Grand Rapids.
from a tnp to Benzie county. He re­
The Hastings boys play the Char­
ports ‘ex-Nashvillices there as happy,
lotte ball club this Friday, and the
growing fat and rich, and very anxious
Pittsburg’Browns next Monday.
to peruse every issue of The News.
Bion Newton died at Colorado
The average attendance at the M. E.
Springs the 90th inst. Mr. D. F. New­
Sunday school during the past quarter
ton has gone there and will bring the
was 83. Among the officers, the only
little daughter back.
one whose attendance was perfect for
The charming opera of "Glenevieve^
the quarter was Miss Fannie Blair, the
will be given during October by a
organist. She has also been on hand
children’s chorus of fifty voices now
every Sunday this year.,
I being trained by Miss Addie Reed.
A memorandum book carelessly left
The secretary of the agricultural so­
on a store counter by Elwood Martin ciety will be at the county clerk’s of­
has been the source of considerable fun fice in the court bouse until next
for the boys. His style of sparking, as Tuesday to receive entries for the
detailed therein, beats our Baltimore county fair.
correspondent's by a long distance.
Ed. Powers, D. Goodyear, and Fred
The book has also given him an unex­ Barlow, have purchased Mr. Wilkins’
pected reputation for generosity, on share in the engine and iron works.
account of such entriesas“For Charity, The capital will be increased. The
•5.”
change is a gratifying one, as the busi­
It is with no ordinary pleasure that ness will now be extended.
we note the nomination of Lycurgus J.
Mat Corrigan anti Alvin Rice came
Wheeler for representatives in the state
to town together and got drunk to
legislature by the Republicans of Barry
getlier, but on the way home Corrigan,
county. We have known Mr. Wheeler
knocked Rice down, kicked his face to
intimately for nearly twenty years, and
pulp, broke two of his ribs, and injur­
if there is an honest, outspoken man in
ed him internally. Corrigan is "aus-,
the state,^hat man is Mr. Wheeler. We
gespeilt.”
predict, that he cannot be beaten —
D. McOmber of this place, received
Otcouo Times.
premiums at the state fair on second
Harrison P. Hayes, a partly paralyzed
(vest bull, short horn, four years old
Union soldier with a pleasant counte­
and over; 4th premium on heifer calf
nance notwithstanding his infirmities,
six months and under one year; class
dropped into our sanctum this week,
13, horses for all work, four years old,
with some curious and bandsome fancy
2d premutn ; third premium on station
work, including a pretty card basket,
colt, and third premium on three year
all made by him during his leisure hours
olds.
at the soldiers home in Dayton, O. He
The Greenback county convention
is stopping with bis brotber-iu-law, E.
held a meeting hero Saturday.
"Co­
W. Hyde of Maple Grove, aud willjbe
operation” was the prevailing senti­
at the county fair with his goods. Peo­
ment. They were willing to give the
ple can then satisfy their desires and
Democrats clerk, prosecutor, and one
be charitable nt the same time.
'
commissioner, but at last accounts the
Democrat weren’t anxious to “co­
“HOWS THE DIPHTHERIA?”
operate," believing themselves the
That being the question that people strongest and not caring much to win
till ’84.
Hans.
are anxiously asking each other, and
it being the duty of a newspaper to fur­
WEST
KALAMO.
nish reliable information on important
subjects, a News reporter waylaid
Since the frost farmers are rushing
Health Officer Barber, Thursday morn­ the corn cutting.
ing, and demanded on behalf of the
Several of the Went Kalamoites vis­
public an accurate d.agnosis of the case. ited the state fair.
“I want to know,” he began, “how
Farthers are a long way behind in
many cases have been reported up to sowing their wheat tfiis fall.
this morning."
Quite a delegation of red ribboaites
“Twent/^four,” was the reply.
picniced at Thornapple Lake Wednes­
One would think by the number that day.
the disease had an awful hold here.
West Kalamoites find l*e trees;
Are there any palliating circumstan­ Naslrvilleites come and cut’em. Now,
ce connected with the matter?”
that’s naughty.
“Well, yes,” said the doctor. “You
If a dry seeding makes a fat harvest,
see it’s like this: When a physician is next year there will be an enormous
first called, a case may have all the crop of wheat.
premonitory symptoms of diphtheria,
Jack Frost left his footprints in this
but it will take often twenty-four section last Sunday morning, for the
hours or more to tell whether the case first time this fall.
will turn out to be a bail case of diph­
Reported: that Cap. Bowen has sold
theria, a slight case of diphtheria, or
nothing but an acute catarrhal attack.
Many cases( wherever diphtheria is pre
valent) which are reported as diphth­
eria. the patient is not confined to the
bed at all and is running out doors in a
couple of days;and in time of suchscares
many cases are reported as diphth­
eria, that do one would think of re­
porting as such at at any other time.
Since diphtheria was known to exist
here, twenty-four cases have been re­
ported as having symptoms of the dis
ease, but not more than twelve have
been clearly marked cases, and only
four of these—Roe’s, Cross’*, Purkey’s
and Yates’—have been bad ones, while
there are now only ten cases of all
grades under treatment.”
"Well, how are the latter two cases?”
“Well the former just now has about
an even chance, and the latter is im­
proving.”
Thanking the doctor the reporter
transferred hie remarks to paper, and
readers can flatter themselves, as they
read, that they have personalty inter­
viewed a reliable authority a&amp;d have
got at the bottom facte.

TELEPHONE

Credit Subscrutiomi $1.78.

NUMBER 2.

experience.

L. J. Wheklkr’s.

One day last week I chanced to be
. Id the editor's offlee, that you see
Is how I found the way ’twas done,
This talking through a telephone.
Well, 'twas something like the following:
The editor apesking of the thing,
Says:.“did you ever”—in a sturdy tone—
“Talk by way of telephone. ”•
“No," I replied, “I never did”
—The secret always from me slid,—
He says, “my work is nearly done,’
“Now you shall talk by telephone. ”

lOO USEFUL ARTICLES
Editor Nashville Newh:
*
I desire to make the following proposition
to butter maker*: I will furnish griti. toTu wb.
do not use fin-; salt and who sell me their butter,
the Ashton or Eureka salt by their calling at my
store fa it.
L. jr, Wheeler.

FOR SALE.
. A“
«? oat
and remove
from Nashville, I now offer for sale, two Dwell­
ing Houses, one Barn and Orchard, comprising
225 feet front on .Main street, Nashville.; also
4 acres pasture connected with the above.
I will also sell in co.lnection or separate from
IbejbwjmyaMIre Block of Grorertre. A
good trade will go with them as my books show
over 115,000 c**ii sales the first year.
Now is the time to buy a home and go Into
?ould ?"fer c*,h ™su»men., bat
would sell for good paper or trade for a good
salable farm well located.
_________
- C. Ainsworth.
•S- Don’t fail to see those J4.35 Suita at
AtLSWOUTH’s.

The editor to his sanctum goes.
And me the mysterious object shows,
Hung up against the window side,
A curious implement I spied.
The editor to the thing does go,
And In lusty tones he cries “hello!”
And in reply I heard it say,
“What do you want,"—M plain M day.
The editor had a pleasant chat
With some one,—while I felt quitdHat,
Then plain I-heard the editor say,
“Mr.----- wishes to investigate this thing
to-day.

W A NTE D

In answer came the question “what I"
Then this is what nailed me on the spot:
The editor says in louder tone
“Mr.----- wants to investigate the telephone."

3-2

S M. L. Stevens.

^-A full line of new Groceries just receiv­
ed to be sold cheap to c ash customer?.
C. AlXsWOBTH.

Then tore turns and “go ahead,"
Was what the editor to me said.
But shades of Plato! what to say
I ne'er could told If I’d stood all day.

SAVJB MONEY.
And buy Buggies and Carriages and Wagons of
Glasgow from 10 to 30 dollars below anybody
else and all first class and warranted. Don’t
forget the celebrated Tiffanv Bro’s, goods kep*
only by him.

But rather than to start and run
I was bound finish what 1 had begun .
I boldly walked up to the thing,
Saluted something by that string.

MONEY TO LOAN,
On Real Estate at low rate of interest of
__ ______________ Lee Dl-rkeb

I soon found out—you bet jour life
That I was talking with tbc editor’s wife—
But if ever I talk through telephone.
I hope 'twill reach to my own home.
As bow to talk with naught to say.
With listener standing far away, ‘
Deliver me for toe rest of my. life
From making believe to the editor’s wife.
E. D. W.

BOBSLEIGHS!
I have commenced to make 30 setts of bob
sleighs which will be made from the best rock
elm ever turned from the mills, and propose to
sell said sleighs for twenty dollars per sett.1
Jas. Moore.
One-half mile south Nashville.

COMMON COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS.

C2T“ Rubber Boots *3.25, at
Ayls worth’s closing out sole.

Council Rooms,
r
Nashville. Sept. 25, 1833. {
Regular meeting.
Present, Chipman, President; Barber. Boise,
Demaray, Dickinson and Lenta, Trustees.
Absent, Lee.
Minutes of last meeting read and approved.
The following accounts were presented and
on motion allowed, by ayes and nays as fol-

SUGARS.
I take a back seal for no one.
A pure sugar for .08 cents.
A splendid sugar for .09 cents.
A Rattler for 10 cents.
C. Ainsworth.

l

MACHINERY.
Land Roller—Iron frame—Good one—cheap.
Reed Harrows and Seedere, Buckeye Harrows
and Seeders, Farmer's Friend, Buckeye and
Triumph Drills from 60 to 70 dollars,sold cheap
for cash or on time, and as good assortment of
machinery as is in cither Barn' or Eaton counties
and pdcca away down.
C. L. Glasgow.

Ayes, Barber, Boise, Dcmaray, Dickinson

W. S. George 4 Co.,
M. Heit,......................
L. Everts, ..............
WUl Clark.................

.» 9 51

GT New Groceries coming in ererv dav.
C. AINSWORTH.

B. H.Hoog,.............................. 800Q
The account of LuciusClark for 43 00 was pre­
sented andon motion tabled by ayes and nays
as follows:
Ayes, Barber, Boise, Damaray, Dickinson
Tbe following'resolution was presented and
on motion accepted and adopted by ayes and
navs as follows:
Ayes, Barber, Boise, Dema-ay, Dickinson
and Lentz. Nays, none.
Be it Resolved,*By the common council of
the village of Nashville, that there be levied
and raised by general tax upon all the real and
personal property liable to taxation in said
village, the sum of one thousand dollars, to
constitute a general fund, and that there be
levied and raised by general tax upon the real
and personal property liable to taxation in said
village, the sum of eight hundred dollars, to
constitute a general highway fund.
Motion by Barber that the sum of thirty dol­
lars be paid the fire company, and that an or­
der be drawn on the village treasurer for the
amount Motion carried by ayes and nays as
follow:
Ayes, Barber, Boise, Demaray, Dickinson
aud Lentz. Nays, none.
On motion council adjourned.
F. McDekbt,
E. Chipman,
Clerk.
PreaidenL

* Glass Ware!
S3- Stone Ware!
tar Wooden Ware!
ST AT COST!
C. AINSWORTH.

KT Don’t forget the Round Monumental
Heating Stove at
Glasgow’s.

CIDER! CIDER!
We will make Cider every Saturday until
his engine and machine to Milan An­
further notice. Let those interested take heed.
drews and Neal Lamb.
H. R. Dickinson.
R. A. Perry boasts of nlore pounds of
BOOTS AND SHOES.
pumpkin on one vine than can be
A complete line of heavy and fine goals foi
found elsewhere hereabouts.
ll. H Uh prices on the cash basis, and barMrs. Geo. Barnes died last week, aftera long and painful illness. She re­
LAMPS, LAMPS.
sided just over the line in Walton.
The largest lino ever opened In NubvlUe.
Remarkable fatality among the mar­ All kinds, all Ytyles, with prices for all. Coll
and see them.
ried women for the past two weeks,
many in this and adjoining towns dy­
W Don’t forget the Royal Oak Beating
ing quite suddenly.
ore al
Glasgow’s.
Last week Saturday T. C. Barnes felt
very happy, and enquiry as to the
Pure Cider Vinegar by the barrel or gallon,
cause elicited the following: “Tell
II. R. Dicxixaox.
them we’ve got a bran Dew boy at our
boose.”
A. G. Carr, of Woodland, will speak
THIRD AND LAST CALL.
upon the subject of temperance from a
NO XQCIVOCATION.
moral and Christian standpoint, (leav­
ing political matters out of the ques­
tion) at the Matteson school house,
Saturday evening, Sept. 40.
udp.
C. ALNSWORTH.
A splendid time is reported at the
H.A- BMOOKA
picnic last Saturday, and the address
WAGONS!
WAGONS!
of Rev. Bissell is highly spoken ot by
What is the us* of paying rixtj-ftve dollars
all who were present. Rush of work(
prohibited farmers from taking part in
the festival as they wished, yet the
young folks had a good tqge.

S3- Cash paid for fresh Butter •
.
L. J. Wheeler’s.

APPLES' APPLES!
5.000 bushels of apples wanted for drying, at
at tbc steam heat Evaporator two doqr» east of
Powles* Woolen Mills, Nashville. The highest
market price in cash will be paid.
D. C. GuimiH.

I
I

JST" Prints at 4 ceuta per yard at
_____ .
Atlsworth’s.
ONCE MORE
C, L. Glasgow asks those who have not al­
ready called and attended to their account(and notes that arp post due) to do so at once
and save him the expense of calling on them.
gyDon't forget the Royal Oak heating
atove
at Glasgow’s.

MICHIGAN AHEAD.
The Michigan Stoves leads them all and thr
Round Monumental is the is the finest beating
stove made to-day.
Call at Glasgow’s anu
seethe finest display ever in Nashville.
TO RENT.
An office building on Main street.
Mrs. M. Wickham.

ST Call and see the best stock of Boots anc
Shoes for the price, in Nashville, at
___ Whekur’s.
ST Big bargains in Clothing at
Atlsworto’s Closing Out Sale.
ty The highest market price paid for .But­
ter and Eggs in Cash at
Wheeler's.

SHINGLES.
200,000 selected shingles just unloaded ‘ at
Brooks, Marsh ai.ll &amp; Co.’s elevator.

ST C. L. Glasgow is agent for the Wid.Awake Thresher aud Engine, manufactured a:
Union Springs, N. Y.
*3- I want your Butter and Eggs, and don't
forget that I pay the same in cash as trade.
______ ___________ C. Ainsworth.
NOTICE.
All persons indeflled to me by book acrons
or note past due are requested to cull and pu;
the same at once. I need the money to pay m
debts.
Respectfully,
Frank C. Bohr.
Nashville, Mich.. Sept. 15,1883.

y Sewing and fitting at lowest prices hj
Mrs. A. D. Vannockkr, over Daughter)- store

A FEW THOUSAND DOLLARS
To Loan on good Real Estate security.
'Durkee.

0-Camp Chain, Tinware, Glassware, Sil­
verware, Braahea, Hose, Notkma, Etc., at thTen Cent Store.
_ ______________

YOUR CAR, GENTLE READER.
News, lUten! Paper, tak and printer*’be)}

ORNO STW5NG.

�/

MMNBI

MMI

HAPPY MOTHER! HAPPY ■ CfflLDttX!
Nantag mother* nbouM keep their Infanta

Following:
“Probably I can wake the ba
bow, and the baby will wake 1

vow chHdrvu to be
uat it fn w----- UjKX wanttiuwn
Iron
bealttiy and rtrong&gt; pre Uh bi b^n t iron
Bitter*.

waltb,. Wk.,
i lIBa.
r, n ■ommojtwkaltb
wie., July 33,
D*OCMl me &lt;DM&gt;
.
Zoa-Phora. The one tarttte I have

rrw to hui wife, urging her to yome to
tns4e for plowing large tract* of land at
him at once, and right speedily came a •Jw rate of three dullirs per acre.’
GoMlp b the patent olgn of vulgarity In
reply from her, Raying that ahe would,
—The beat peach-growiag belt of tbs heart and mind. It Is aa thoroughly vulgar u
fine. The baby aecmed te.be sleeping itake the train which ordinary reached
pnited States extemfi from the middle of cunority.
Bristol
at
nine
o
’
clock.
with rfmort Hipeftiatural Boundnw, and, :
feeling ju»l splendid aow, aixl (ball continue
From the window of his bed-room in North Carolina through South Carolina.
Dr. Pengaliy:—I could not rest nights l&gt;e- Zoa Pbora until cured.
marrttodtly/Mr*. Whitaker bad her deaf
the hotel the invalid could see the atation Georgia;,Alabama and a part of Mis­
ear up.
.
sissippi.
—
Chicago
Tribune
and
the
railroad,
and
aa
he
watched
Mr. Whitaker was almost beside him- ;
owt that 1 could scarcely get about my bouse.
—Itxeq'iires about 5,000 young fish to
self with rage. “A woman,” he add, them, while he longed for the train to
oa-Phors cure great relief. I now rest well.
Mteolin** io Dim with faithful heart!
Feb., 1878?
MRS. H. K.
“ who would treat her husband in such come, he tried to arrange in his mind, ■took a pond of one acre in extent. Of
Ibr bru&lt; t&gt;«r (r«7 heavy ***“!•
Uo«rtt, lean the Pair M*rl•j
lUh
weighing
from
one
to
two
pounds
Clarlufield., O.
forms
wife,
an
explanation
of*his
con
­
a manner aa this is capable of anything.
1,0
JO
to
the
acre
is
a
liberal
eajimate.
From Mn. John Spittier, No. 28 Wilt 8t,
Either Ellen will atop aleeping with her .duct which would present it in the befit
Sadte West, of Iwwa, bas recovered BIBO damThr taoor. after ringing talaely.
and these will require artificial feeding
bacaatpa a&gt; d co-« to i*rte unknown;
deaf ear up, or we will separate.” A piasible light.
Ste lady prove* that thi* afflux* bar
unless lhe pond is very rich with food­
third time he applied- hi* lipa to the
Senseless
anger
is
one
of
a church fair and acratchodlber nose.
By flaittn« almost bah a too#.
tin pipe and bawled into it until he was the
things
that
defies
justifica­ producing vegetation.—St. Louit Globo
WORTHY or PRAISE.
Bb« taUa h«r trouble to bar xrrant.
—Successful poultry raisers are those
hoarse. He thought lie heard lus spouse tion, and a man’s very sense that hi*
A wr- faithful ialto) mud.
walking across the floor, but when he wife’s love makes her capacity for for- wfao always have pure water and grass
Who Matraa without much csnotiou.
should die. We had Zoa-Phoraln the house,
As if she Mt quite nadae paid.
Siveneas almoat Illimitable only tends to tains for their fowls. Chickens should
called again there was no response.
and my.busbAiwl said we would teat It to the
oepen his shame when he is conecious of never be permitted access to the horee- tbrn we coDsidcr It our duty to Impart that In­
The soul of Mr. Whitaker was filled
formation
to
all.
Elcctrict
Bittoni
arc
truly
a
mable, and it is bad policy to allow
with gloom. In his anger he indulged having wronged her.
moat
valuable
medicine,
and
will
surely
cure
hours to his great satisfaction, I had what he
them to make themselves at home in the
in sardonic humor.
*‘I suppoee she
Mr. Whitaker resolved, after thinking
Bllllouanesa. Fever and Ague, Stomach, Liver called Immediate relief, and felt like going to
it U partial*,
rather relishee haring me down tor the the matter ovef, that the best tiling to do baymow. Their roopaahould be entirely aud Kldoey complaints, even when a» other sleep. 1 advise all ladies who suffer from nertrighttal paaa.
‘
remedies fall, we know whereof we speak,
cellar here all night; it ia a good joke I would be frankly to confem his fault and separate .from the stable.
—As a rule it Is better to sow grass- atxl can freely recommend them to all.—Excir
But let her take caret She may laugh to throw himself upon his wife’s mercy.
—Sold at fifty cents a bottle, by F. T. Boise.
upon the other side of her mouth before
He heard the whistle which announced *ced early than late, for when tho sun
May 15lb, IW3.
we are done with this business!” And the approach of th? nine o’clock train. iioa great Dower, young plants are read­
Buffalo has 1,157 factorial and 1.700 saloons
he laughed a wild and bitter laugh.
The train came in view and drew up at ily lulled, and a long dry seuon results When a factory tries to get ahead of a saloon
in
tho
cracking
of
heavier
soils,
which
is
Poor Mr*. Whitaker, sleeping sweetly the station. Mr. Whitaker
looked
then comes the tug of war.
Early
up stairs, in perfect unconsciousnem, eagerly at the persons who got out of the very destructive to grasses.
Mr. Earnest Srlccrton, a rich Wall street
would have been deeply pained to learn cars, but Ellen was not among them. summer sowing is a frequent source of broker living In Hoboken, N. J., opposite New
disapix&gt;intment,
as
if
often
happens
that
how gravely her husband had wronged She had not come. He fell back upon
r» n
“
' i4.ua, iu., April aa, 1883.
York City, writes; “The excessive strain of
—D®*r8ir:—lam more than
her.
the bed with, a sigh and began again to seed which has come up perfectly is nerrotte cxbttement resulting from stock spec­ plctued with the effects of your Zoa-Pbora in
Iba k/ver demn t sectn to like it.
killed by intense and long-continued ulation and too high living made quite an tu- our daughter’s case. I am surprised to see
“ I must get out of here somehow or grow angry with her.
And dra^a a high C from hi* cheat,
valid of me- Brown’s Iron Bitters restored me how the his improved. She Is gaining in
heat.
f
.
other,” aaia Mr. Whitaker.
“Pie win­
But the poor woman ^as on the train.
to perfect health and strength.”
The brother stabs tbs awkward tenor.
dow is small, but I can crawl through it, Alarmed by the discovery When she rose
—Browned potatoes arc very tnucn
Who &lt;‘oesn't know which way to fal
the distress she suffered in her cheat is entirely
Bu» finally bwoomca recumbent,
I reckon, if I tnr.”
in the morning that Mr. Whitaker was liked now when new potatoes in ths
Moat of our misery cbiiiro from Mr fearing gone. I firmly believe that Zoa-Pbora Is all
W itb an enm-»»qu* caterwaul.
He unhooked the frame containing the not in the house, her alarm was increased market render the old ones tasteless. and disliking things that ;uever -fefippehM st that baa saved hxr life. I am willing you
. Tb« brother,llonelv
wire screen which protected the window when she received tfac telegram sent L’eel them and steam them until they are
should use my letter, for I am not afraid to
-Upon tbec&amp;Ad topntno c*Ua;
all.
____________________
tell what a wonderful cure Your medicine is,
and pushed it outward. Then procuring bv him. What could be the explanation tender; then about half or three-quarters
TV e c turruv’e -okinE ■patbetie.
and I would like all who suffer to try it.
HUMBUGGED AGAIN.
biasa oi/uaul tho curtain falla.
a wash tub and climbing from it to the of the mystery of his disappearance? She of an hour before dinner—supposing
—Music nnd Pmma.
Yours respectfully.
I mw so much raid about the merits of Hop
window trill he thrust his head out and was so agitated that she could hardly there is a roast of beef or lamb or fowl in
Mm. Sarah RiWlMum.
Blttcra,
aud
mv
wife
who
wa*
always
doctor
­
dragged tou body through.
When he prepare for the journey. But she reached the dripping-pan in the oven—lay tho
I shall always remember gratefully the good
lug and never well, teased inc so urgently to
MRS. WfllTAKEK'S DEAF EAR.
reached the front jnvemcDt his face was the depot and got into the car, and potatoes under the meat. When they get her some. I Concluded to be humbugged health your medicine has brought my daugh ter
Lewis Raxpomib.
covered
with
cobwebs
and
his
clothe*
are
brownedHake
them
out
with
a
skim
­
again
;
and
I
am
glaI
did,
for
in
leaa
than
two
began
to
move
toward
Bristol.
Some
­
Mrs. Whitakers wax deaf in one cur.
It waa her right ear, and it wax stone with coal dust; but he exulted in the what weary from too great -nervous ex­ mer. let them drain, and send them to months' use of the Bitters, my wife waa cured,
and she has remained so for eighteen mouths
thought that he was n free man.
citement; she placed ner muff against the tabic on the platter with the roast.— since. I like such humbugging.—H. T. 8t.
deaf.
He took his dead-latch key from his the frame of the car window and rested Geniianloipn Telegraph.
Paul.—Ptooeer Pres*.____________
Mrs. Whitaker had acquired a habit
—Fruit Jumbles.—One cup of butter,
3&gt;f sleeping upon her left side, with her pocket and was about to try and open her head upon it, while her veil covered
Wbat we are merely taught seldom nourishes rouJa^billty. Premature decay.and
the front door, when he remembered that her closed eyes. Unhappily she had two cups uf sugar, three cups and a half
of youthful ludUcntlou. will for th.
deaf ear up, and this had often been a
he had locked the door and put up the arranged herself with her deaf ear up, of flour, half a cup of milk, three eggs, the mind like that which we teach ourselves.
source of annoyance to her husband, who
chain bolt There was no use trying to and so she did not hear the conductor half a nutmeg grated, three teaspoonfuls
IMPROVEMENT FOR MIND AND BODY.
waa nervous and irritable, while ahe was
ring the bell. The wire w.as broken, and when he shouted ‘‘Bristol!'-and she was of baking powder, one cup of English
There 1» more strength-restoring power In a
a woman whose calmnc^ nnd serenity of
Mrs. Whitaker wouldn’t hear the bell if bo deeply absorbed in thinking of Mr. currants. Wash the fruit in at least bottle of Parker’s Ginger Tonic than In a bush­ ln« in perfect confidence.
disposition were remarkable.
34-lyr, JOHN B. OGDEN, 43Cedar fll„N.T.
Sleeping with her dedt car up Mrs. the wire hadn’t been broken. There was Whitaker that she did not notice that three waters before adding them to the el of malt &lt;»r gallon of milk. As an appetizer,
Kr fl*y ,l home, temple* worth
•ilood purifier and kidney corrector, there Is C-: t*
but one last hope of making her hear, the train had stopped.
dough.
Bake
the
jumbles
in
a
broad,
Whitaker at night was rarely disturbed
nothing like it, and invalids consequently find vJ 10 CiV Ad«!rrmhTi»»o» * «aJ-ortland.
and that was by throwing gravel stones
When he found that his wife had not shallow tin, cut them in squares while It a wonderful Invigorant fur mind and body.
by noises which robbed her htwband of
against the window. Mr. Whitaker tried
come, Mr. 'Whitaker made up his mind warm! using a thin, sharp knife. If the —Commercial.
his rest. The hum of the mosquitoes
the experiment. The first handful pro­
which maddened him was not heard by
to go home atoll hazards. A steamboat dough is stuf you can mark the squares
The average life of a locomotive is only 30
duced no effect.
The sleeper did not
her. A passing thunder storm which
stopped at the wharf at half-past nine, with a fork before baking.—Christian
years, but the average life of locomotive en­
hear it ■ Neither did she hear the sec­
Union.
on its way to the city; and borne upon a
roused him in a rummer night and sent
ond handful, nor the third, nor the tenth,
gineer is (50. The engineer can Jump.
him flying pbout to close the windows
litter he had himself carried on board.
which was dashed against the glass with
Going Into Sheep.
would leave her in perfecj unconsiousIn an hour he wax at tho city wharf,
The most oballnate cases of Catarrh and
such violence that Mr. Whitaker ex­
-AWARDEDnere of its existence. The noise in the
whencca wagon carried him to hishouse.
Hoy Fever are cured by the use of Elys' Cream
pected to see it shivered to fragments.
A new beginner, who has had no ex­ Balm, the only agreeable remedy. Price fifty
street and the rattling of the windowHe was shocked and disappointed to as­
Mr. Whitaker was at his wit's end.
aaxhesupon windy nights frequently filled
certain from the servant that Mrs. Whit­ perience with sheep, asks us whether it cent*.
There was a faint light burning in the
Apply into no«tril*-wltli Hille finger
Mr. Whitaker with vexation as they
aker had gone to see him in the train in would be safe fur him to buy itJOormore
Elys’ Cream Bahn cured me ot Catarrh at
room, and as be looked up nt it and
•deprived him of sleep;buthis wife slum­
which ahe said she would go. He could sheep after shearing, with a view of feed­ many years' standing--restored my sense of
thought of his wife slumbering quietly
bered sweetly on and heard than not.
not comprehend why she had mined him; ing them for market He has uasturo tmel'l. * For colds in the Lead it works like
on while he was in such great trouble,
for
them,
and
thinks
of
feeding
them
in
magic.
E. H. Sheuwood, National State
Indeed, it rarely happened that she heard
and all any long he lay in bed worrying
his wrath grew bo fierce that he felt ca­
’ the crying of the baby until Mr. Whit­
about her aud wondering why site did winter, for spring sale. If our cores­ Bank, Elizabeth. N. J.
pable of doing something reallv terrible.
pondent wishes to take a lesson in dearWe recommend Elys' Cream Balm in every
aker, indignant at its refusal to go to But
not
come.
what
should
he
do?
The
bought expdfcocc. which will make a case where a cure for catarrh la called for, and
sleep, would roase her by shaking her,
Mrs! Whitaker got back to Bristol
poor lady waa
as
much
l&gt;eyond
most lasting unpression. then his project In no instance have we beard of disappointand would ask her tp try anti sooth the
We consider that we are skiing the
ills reach, for the time, as if she about noon, and ascertained by inouiry would probably be entirely successful. mrat.
public a service bv making its virtues known to
.little one.
had been in Chino.
He thought for a that her l.usband had returned, with a We generally advise taking lessons at n those afflicted with this loathsome disease, for
Mr. Whitaker had often remonstrated
There was no
moment of trying to borrow a ladder, broken leg, to the city.
which It Is in most instances a perfect cure.
lower
figure.
Sheep
feeding
requires
a
with his wife about thia habit of sleeping but where could he get a ladder in the train that she could take until four
good deal of judgment, founded on ex­ Peru Bkos., Druggists, Grand Rapids, Midi.
^with herxlcaf car up, and she had often
o'clock, and she spent the interval in in­
-MEDALSThe moment a man is satisfied with himself
replied good-humoredly with a promise to middlc.of the night? No; as his sense quiring about the accident to Mr. Whita­ perience, to manage proiitably. We
of
personal
injury
deepened
he
more
and
have known one instance where “New cvcrytiody else is diaratlaAn) with him.
try to remember to break herself of it
more resolved that ho would punish ker and in trying vainly to ascertain the Beginner's" project was tried success­
but somehow or other it continued to
reason
of
Iiis
extraordinary
conduct.
Ellen somehdw for her indifference. As
REMEMBER THIS.
fully, and a fair margin left on the trans­
cling to her.
About half-part five o’clock he heard
If you arc sick Hop Bitters will surely aid
be could not obtain admission to his
action; but the circumstances were ox
One night in winter time Mr. Whit­
Nature in making you well when all else faiG.
own house why should he not fly? her voice in the lower entry. He listened optionally favorable—he ha&lt;i an expert
If
vou
arc
coetive
or dyspeptic, or arc suffer­
aker sat up in his library till a' late
Why should he not go off somewhere eagerly to her quick footsteps u|K&gt;n the ’encod Montor nt hh elbow in the pur- ing from any other of the numerous diseases of
The Best Known Remedy for
hour reading a book in which be was
aud give his wife something to worry stairs. Then she flung the door
'chase, and at frequent periods in the the stomach or bowels. It is your own fault if
very much interested. His wife retired
Mrs.
Whitaker
did
not
qx*ak
ax
she
en
­
Backache or Lamo Back.
you
remain
ill.
for
Hop
letters are a sovereign
early. Mr. Whitaker finaJy closed his over in repayment for all the wrong she tered the room. She uttered a little cry, feeding, as well as in the sale at the remedy in all such complaints.
Rheumatism or Lame Joints.
had inflicted upon him by pemisting,
time of marketing. The*e three things
■ book, ami after locking the front door
If you are wasting away with any form of
flew to the ' \&lt;idc, nnd put her arms
Cramps or Sprains.
went down in the cellar, in accordance against his earnest and repeated re­ about her husband's neck andkised him. are important landmarks in the sheep Kidney disease, stop tempting death this mo­
Neuralda or Kidney Disease'..
monstrance, in sleeping with her deaf
business—to know how to buy., how to ment,’and turn for a cure to Hop Bitters.
with his custom, to sec if the furnace
Mr. Whitaker felt that if he should feed. and. lastly, bow to sell. A slight
Lumbago, Severe Aches or Pains
if you are sick with that terrible sickness
ear up?
fire had been fixed properly for the
Female Weakness.
Mr. Whitaker turned passionately Lave exact justice dealt him he would be mistake in each part is sure to result in Nervousness, vou wifi find a "Balm in Gilead”
night. While he was puking it a gust of
in the’wu- of flop Bitters.
away from the house and_ walked rnpidly Bent to the acaflbld.
a loss. It is generally thought to be
If you are a freqaeotee, or a resident of a
wind came through the screen upon one
When ahe had ncally smothered him
of the cellar windows and slammed the dtiwn the street. He lin'd no particular with kisses she xat down beside him, and more risky for a new beffimier to at­ miasmatic district, barricade your system
against the scourge of all countries—malarial,
destination if his mind, but he hurrietl
tempt
thb
feeding
of
200
sheep,
than
a
door leading into the back hall way above,
taking
hold
of
his
hand
said:
epidemic,
blUousnea*, and intermittent fevers—
proportionate number of cattle, but he is
through which he had come. For a mo­ along with a vague notion that he might,
“And now, dearest, tell me what not likely to be successful in either. If bv the use of Hop Bitter*.
perhaps go to a hotel when he felt
‘If you have rough, pimply, er swallow skin,
ment Mr. Whitaker did not think of the
calmer. In a few momenta he came to caused all this strange trouble?”
our
correspondent
has
a
liking
for
.sheep,
txul breath, pains and ache*, and feel miserable
matter particularly, but suddenly he re­
“ Why, you know, Ellen,’.' said Mr. or. thinks l.e would have, it would be generally, H- p Bitters will give von fair akin,
the railroad depot not far from his dwell­
membered that he had put a spring lock ing. It was brilliantly lighted, and ax Whitaker, "it was your deaf ear!"
safer for him to trv a small number— rich blood, sweetest breath, bc*lu&gt;, and comon the other side of that door, and the
“ How do you mean!”
he looked at it he reifk-mnered that a
•»y
tea
to
twenty-.nd
then
feel
his
way
lnimxl
..............
They Foal lively Cars.
short thev euro all
disesses of the -------atomthought struck him that the catch might
“Youslept with it up.”
train started for New York at mid­
up to greater numbers. Let him visita
“bowH*. Biood. Liver. Nerves, kidneyo,
possible be down. He ascended the stairs
’ win
be wild
pa’ldfor
a rase
rase
And then*Mr. "Whitaker related the
__ tha nearest sht ep market and leisurely Brtglit’^discarc.'TM*
night
He walked into the waiting­
rmow
IU be
for*
and tried the door. The catch was down;
room. The minute hand on the huge whole story, aud as he did so his wife be­ inspect the different grades, and see bow they will not cure or help.
and he had no key. He was locked in
That {•oqr bedridden. Invalid wife, sister, palm off some other plaster having a similar
marble clock indicated three or four gan to cry.
each stands when brought to sale: keep mother
or daughter, can be made the picture aoucdlng name. Sea that the word to spelled
the cellar, for the key of the out-cellar
minutes to twelve. Mr. Whitaker rushed
“lam so sorry,” she said.
will his eves open to all the points, and re­ of health, by a few bottles of Hop Bitters, cost­ C-A-P-C-I-N K Pries » eta.
door he knew waa in the kitchen.
up to the ticket office nnd bought a promise you never to sleep with mv deaf member them in his acicctions. Tills ing but a trifle. Will tou let them suffer!
He oould hardly think what he had
will
be
cheaper
than
hi$large
experi
­
ticket for New York. Then he hurried car up again; never, never, never!”
better do about the matter, but finallv he
HURB REMBDY AT LAST. rtetBc.
“Ellen, responded Mr. Whitaker, “you ment, for a new beginner. Again, if be
concluded to try to make his wife hear into the car and took a scat. He had
NOTED BUT UNTITLED WOMAN.
MEAD'S Hodlcatad COBN and BUNION PUSTHL
upon his head his smoking-cap, so that will do me a favor if you will always should spend a little time in visiting
him and come to his rescue. He seized
his appearance did not excite remark. sletfp with it up and stuff*cotton in your some successful #eedcrx, and get an in­
the long and heavy furnace poker, and
Presently the train started, and Mr. other ear beside! 1 have behaved like a sight into their way of doing it, he will
inserting the crook of it above the bell­
be taking practical lessons nt what they
Whitaker actually felt a kind of ma­ wretch.”
wire that ran along the joist of the cellar
Then the doctor, who had been vainly an* well worth to him. It may lie con­
ceiling be pulled. The bell jangled loudly,* licious joy as he thought he would soon
sidered somewhat stftmge that f.inn^rs
be far away fronl bis wife.
pulling
at
the
broken
bcll-w.re,
knocked
but it was in the kitchen and Mrs. Whit­
It waa a 'slow train, and he had plenty upon the front door and came in to ex­ do not visit each other more in search of
aker was in the front room in the second
of u.ac to think, and as he thoughthis [Mis­ amine Mr. Whitaker’s fractured leg.— the practical experience of those who
story. Would ahe hear it?
He pulled
have succeeded in any specially. This
sion began to cool, and die conviction ,Ow Continent.
- the wire again, twice; then he sat down
is in the natural line of those whodorw&gt;t
began to press in ujxjii him that he bad
on the steps and waited.
TItere was no
believe in book-farming, but even^tbis
been behaving very foolishly.
How
response. It then flashed upon the mind
Win* Fences as Telephones.
sensible way of gaining information is
absurd it was to blame poor Ellen be­
of the imprisoned man that Mrs. Whita­
Some Observing genius hns suggested not much pursued.
cause he had locked himself in the cel­
ker was probably sleeping with the deaf
lar! He pictured her lying by the side that the loneliness of home life on the
We would suggest that “New Qfgincat up.
of the bany, calm in the belief that he Western prairies, where farm-houses are ner” might find a Hock which he might
This increased his grdwjng irritation,
and he pulled the bdl-wire with the wu still sitting in the library. This re­ often miles apurt, may be alleviated by pasture through the summer, nt so much
called to his mind her deaf ear and her a general utilising of fence wires for jiOTbead. and thus gain some iutormspoker fifteen or twenty times.
fondness for sleeping with it up. Then telcphdnic communication. Aa in some tion fn handling them. A flock of 2DQ
” I could hear that a mile from here if
he had a revulsion of feeling, and he be­ sections of the country ail the fences are sheep, well bought, the Latter part of
I were am deaf aa a post!” he exclaimed
gan to grow angry again. But this wax a
aa he threw the poker on the floor and mere flash. Steadily ne advanced toward of wire most nf the “ plant ” for several June, to l»e pastured through the reA Pure Family Medicine that Never letezicxlrt.
private telephones is alreadv in posses­ maindcr of the season, with a view of
took his seat again, with the bell still
a more reasonable view of the situation, sion of every'fanuer, so only terminal feeding for sale nt tin most favorable
vibrating.
and ns he did bo he concluded that it would fixtures are nece»ary to a free inter­ perioju should be judiciously fed from
But Mrs. Whitaker did not hear the
be a great act of folly to go all the way change of goasip between families that the start. If the pasture is good the
noise, for no sound of hfir coming reached
tainted by r
to New York. He asked the conductor uro too far apart for neighborly calls in •heep wi Ifdo well on that Tilone. but a
the rare of her impatient and indignant
the name of the next station.
It waa bad "breather. The plan certninlr hax little extra feed will be liberally repaid
husband.
Bristol. He made up his mind to get attractive features. If it were adopted in fattening. As fattening Ls the object
If you have Dnprptu. RkeuostMm. K'&lt;’ncy «
He grew angrier ever moment
He out there and to go home early in the
the farmer’s wife, when so tired of the sought, let this be done in the most ecofelt a sense of injustice. It xeemed' un­
morning. He really felt bad to think monotony of home life that she can get nouiica! way. A little grain on pasture
kind, inhuman for hia wife to be deep­
how much alarmed and distremed his ik) comfort indoors except by slapping will pay much better than the aarae
ing away calmly upstairs while he waa
I wife would be when she discovered his the children and peeking at her husband, amount‘of grain in winter. As we have
locked up in the dismal recesses of the
absence.
can drop into a rocking chair near the often ad vis.*-1, economy requires that an­
• tellur.
jn» up fine* u&gt;« fim Awe bat wiili
When he stepped from the train at telephone and chat ax cheerily with a imals intended for meatshc*'ld be pitshcd
I u has saved huiaued* of iocs Kt
“HImake her hear me or I’ll break
distant neighbor as if she had never had in th? warm season. A quarter of a
Hrtcox a co.. :•» w»ik« a*..
oitnething,”
he exclaimed,
seizing Bristol rain ws* falling quite rapidly,
a trouble in her life. Then she could pound of corn and onto, or corn and
and
one
feeble
light
in
front
of
the
sta
­
the
]&gt;oker and
booking
It
upon
GREAT SAVING MTTI.'fll :&gt;OtAAB BCTE.
give her husband a chance and let him wheat bran, or corn and linaeesl meat
* the
bell-wire.
Then
lie
pulled tion nhone through the deep darkness.
swap horses and exchange crop prospects mixed, for each sheep, will produce a
the wire with such furious energy Mi Whitaker inquired of the man upon
the platform the way to a hotel, and then with the “ boys” at the nearest village rrvaier result than twice that amount of
that he broke it, and the jangling of the
he started to go to it In descending the store. Aside from its convenience, such feed in winter with good hay. The lime
bell died away into silence.
a telephone would be a great educator, to give a start L; fattening sheep h in
“It hi little abort of scandalous,” said wet and slippery steps of the platform he for when in use by the gentler sex Ait
summer. If these sheep become fttt in
,
lie was very
Mr. Whitaker, in a rage.
“I have lost his footing and fall.
would do whg* society rules have always the fall, aomueh the-'better are they for
spoken w&gt; often.to EHru about sleeping, much hurt and found that he could not
been unequal to—it would compel wowith her deaf ear up, that it looks likeJ rise. He called for help, and when the
malice, deliberate, fiendish malice when[ railroad man—the only man that was
tion than if they were thin in the fall.
anywhere about—came to him, he disshe persists in doing it
—Memurutl HaU. erected by Phila­ The best western feeders of cattle wisely
W hat should be. do next? He couldi covered that further asairtance irould be
Sheep feeding al bar tao* to Lyr-n. Horn.
U,
---------------- --for Mr. IVhltofar. leg
delphia for the Exhibition of 1876 at a give corn on pasture.
oort of $1,000,000, and intended to stand should be done id the same way, except
did not like to batteT down the door with I hroken.
tie- pokar. A happv thought! He went i The man wx»n brought three other as a reminder of that event, i* serving that it it better to give some more nilro«.'th* funuaee ana'with the help of the । men, and placing the hurt man upon a the latter purpose by rcauiring vety weoons feed with corn. The rale should
hsufart fr
the kindUng-wocid pile he I Imard tiiey carried him to the hotel and extensive repair*. The root raun&lt;&gt;* hold be to push the sheep' in warm weather,
itself up much longer, and other part* of and then feeding in winter will be com «-»rf i'» ■ t. r.!*!'*l&gt; cunwvcd the hem ' amt for a factor.
porathdy way—National Mire Stee*
&gt;m. C.-rtaixdy i If Mr. Whitaker, silting in the car, had the pretentious rttacture are falliug to
£ trit* *.•«•?* rw.i
bear him now, 'thought himself a very foolish man. ruin.'.__ ‘

J MUDBRN OPERA PLOT.

ERRORS OF YOUTH.

Benson’s
Capcine
6

Porous
Plaster,

CaUTI0N3^®“

*

GINGER TONIC

�«declared

wrilie.

PRICE: gLiQ, IF PAID IN ADVANCE.

po-Advertisers:

ii-4 from an infected dkstrixrt into oae
which ha* not been infected. In Ftainfield^Lwas first discovered, it b said, in
the public: wuhool on West Fourth street.
This building accommodates between
eight hundred and a thousand pupils.
Many of the scholars had cwght the
contagion before the fact was discover-

and all efforts to check the disease prov­
ed unavailing. For about two months
peruse them: liberal ad. rates.
past cases oYmeasles have been frequent
In the city, but within the past two or
I A® | • EDO thrw weeks there has b:wm a regular
K®|_1€® epidemic. From the public school it
Stoctae.'
12.001__ a.® has spread* to the different private
3 inches.'
schools, and all classes are infected by
4 inct»e*7
Vdfll i£6b | 30.06 it. The disease is not confined to chil­
Stnchea.
dren, bat hu attacked a large number
of aduita. There are about fifteen reg­
ularly practicing physicians in Plain­
field, and they have been kept busy day
and night attending to sick-calls. One
OIINO HTRONG,
doctor has had between one hundred
Editor and Proprietor. and fifty and two hundred cases among
his patients, and another physician ha*
had a like number. The other medical
practitioners have hud from seventyfive to twenty cases each."
VILLAGE OFFICERS.
There are different estimates of the
total number ot cases within tho past
few weeks. One authority yesterday
^aid that there had been not less than
from nine hundred to one thousand
Boise. H. W. cases. By another the number was fix­
ed at five hundred. One of the singu­
lar features of tho epidemic is that those
children who have nad the disease be­
£crietirf.
fore have not escaped having it a second
time. In fact, in many cases when
ZIHRIBTIAN CHURCH—F A. Bla*c),Pa*tor. children have had it before the return of
v&gt; Services every Sabbath at 10.30 a. m. and the disease is characterized by far more
7 p. m. 8abl&gt;atl&gt; *cb&lt;xd at 12 m. Prayer meet­ serious symptoms than on the first at­
ing every Thursday evening
tack. In many instances the trouble
ETHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH-A. assumes the appearance of .what is called
D. Newton, Pastor. Service* every 8al&gt;- black measles—a malignant type of the
iMth at 10.40 a. tn. and 7 n. n&gt;,
Sabbath
•chool at 12 m. Prayer recetlng every Tbur»- disease.
There have been some six or eight
day evening.
death* so far. Two of these occurred
VY LODGE NO. 87, K. of P., meet* at it* in the Children’s Home, a charitable
Caalie Hall, Nashville, Michigan, every
Friday evening, for the encouragement andinstitution for destitute children, situated
support of all worthy, true, *teiidfa*t and hon­ on Hillsdale avenue, in the southeastern
part of this city. Thu disease, after
orable Brother Knight*.
D. L. Smith K. k. 8. Okno Strong, C. C. circulating around in North Plainfield
and Plainfield, swept down upon the
home, which at the lime had within its
JllNt-rllniMUHiN &lt;'nr&lt;iN.
walls twenty-five little ones. It spread
II. Y0UNC, M. D. Office cast side &lt;‘f among the children with startling rap­
v V • Main St., Nashville. Office hours from
idity until twenty-four or the twenty7 to9 a. m., and 4 to 7 p. tu.
five were on tho sick list. The only one
TAR- c. w GOUCHER, Eiecpc Pbyddsn and who escaped was a little girl who had
JLz Burgeon, I* prepared to aniwer all call* been ill all winter with other forms of
that may b* m*d* for hir *enrlcc*. Office and disease. Strange to say that while her
residence opposite Roc’* moat marketplavmates, one oy one, caught tho con­
•YTTM. PARMENTER, M. D. Offliw over tagion, she went througn it safely.
VV Hall’• Drug store, Vennontville, Mich. Among those who died was tho 15months-old child of the Mayor, L. V.
/~1HA8. H. BRADY, Lawyer, Circuit Court
It was acting as if ill on
V&gt; Commtsaioner, Real Estate and Insurance F. Randolph.
Agt. Prompt attention given to all burinea* Wednesday.night, but nothing serious
•ntrusted to my care. Conveyancing a special­ was feared. On Thursday tn &gt;rning the
ty. Office oppoolte Union House.
child was worse. The family physician
A. FOOTE. PHYSK IAN &amp; BURGEON. was summoned, bat tho little ono was
• Sucewnr to Dr. Wldtbsm. Office *cc- Iteyond medical control. It died that.
•ml door north of the Nashville House; resi- name night. Four children of tho May-1
dedee Brat door north of the Wolcott House. or have been sufferers from the disease
Prompt attention to coll* night or day.
—the child who died, one who is recov­
MORY PARADY, Ja*ti&lt;&lt;e &lt;»r the Peace. ering fast, and two who are still con­
Office, Corner Main and Sbcrtnan Streets. fined to their bods.
The mortality
seems to have been restricted to the
LIEBHAUSER, Mcrchan*. Tailor and dfeal• er In Ready Made Clothing. See tne children, but many of the adult oases
before you purchase clothing. Fit* guar­ have been very malignant.
anteed.
One of the most serious was that of
the Rev. A. N. V. Richmond, pastor of
HATCH A CO.. Munufn.-turei* ot Taffy
• Canilim. Chocolate Drop* mid Carmelo. the Trinity Reformed Church. On last
Fruita, Fancy Candles, Cigar*, Tobacco*, etc., Bunday week he preached two sermons.
always in nock. Second door north of the While delivering his afternoon discourse
post office.
be felt troubled with his throat. He
RANK BAKER, Manufacturer of Boots went to his physician and told hftn about
and Rliocti, prgged or rewed. Repairing it. “ Why,” replied tho doctor, “yon
promptly attended to, a&lt; the *lgu of the rra
have the measles.”
“ Nonsense!’’ was
Loot, east side Main St.
the reply.
Last night, however, the
ACOIl OSMUN, Liveryman, barn near Wol­ clergyman had the disease in down­
cott House. First claw turnouts al reason­ right earnest. It wai so severe that the
able rates. Special rates to commercial men.skin became a dark purple in color.
Funeral aud woding parties furnished with car The pastor, after a week’s ilfeess, is,
riages on short notice.
however, fully recovered. There is a
R.4UN BROS., Shoemaker*. 8j»ecial atten­ difference of opinion among the physi­
tion given to fine and sewed boots, also cians as to whether the disease has
repairing. AH manufactured work made from
reached its height or not. Bv some it Ls
best of Mock and warranted. First dour routh
said that the cases are diminishing and
Boise’s hardware.
that Plainfield is about to bo rid of it.
ALLACE BEAUCHAMl’T^Ltverytnmu Yet others say that there are no &lt;ign- of
Nashville Hou*e Barn.
Single and a falling off in tho number of cases, but
double turn out* furnished promptly aud rea­
sonably. Commeretal men driven to neigh­ that they are as numerous as at any
time -since the epidemic began.
As
boring towns at special rates.
Plainfield has a population of about ten
YT'ELLOGG &lt;fc BELL proprietors Planing thousand, or with North Plainfield
JV MUI. Planing and Matching. Resawing twelve thousand, and as the number of
and Moulding a specialty. Scroll Sawing, cases is placed at one thousand by
Bracket*, Window and Door Frames made to
some, it may well bo imagined that the
order. Wood Turning in all Its branches.
city is thoroughly alarmed over the mat­
PJHAR W. DEMARAY, Dealer in Watches, ter.— Veto York Herald.
,®u® Jewelry and Silverware. Being
a practical Jeweler, patron* can det-cud upon
baring their repairing done right Two doors
Mountains of Ice.
XMlth nr Tmtnanla

$a$iivillc girertonj.

M

I

L

E
K

P
F
r

B

W

Icebergs of enormous proportions
continue to be met by ocean steamers
with amazing frequency, oven in very
southerly latitudes. An illustration of
iYIRAM R. DICKINSON, manufacturer at
JLJL aud dealer in Hard Wood Lumber. Bulld- this may be found iu tho statement of
aMateriiil a spectaltv. Corti paid for logs. MUI four ship captains who have just arrived
yard on Sherman BL, at M.C. R.R. crossing. in the city. Capt. Hansen, of the Unm­
AMES FLEMING, practical Jewalor ud j burg steamer Frisia, who was found at
Watch-maker. Clock*, Watches, Silver and • the office of Messrs. Kunhardt &amp; Co.,
Plated Ware, Jewelry aud Optical Good*. Rock■ ­agents for the line, said: “We left Ham­
ford Watch--.** specialty. Repairing and Engrav- burg on May 28, with a general cargo
Ittir
in * vrvirnianlilra
- *
and 622 passengers on board. We had
light, -variable winds and moderate
RKO STRONG, plain and fancy.
weather. On June 5 we entered latitude
The best facilities for doing v
42.37, longitude 47.08.
The tempera­
: of any description, whatever, s«e m* ture both of the atmosphere ana the
water then fell considerably, arid I con­
W. NIBKERN, Attorney and Counceltor cluded that icebergs were not very far
• at Law, practice* in all State Courts. Col off. I had already gone througn the
lection* promptly attended to. Office over I mill before, you know,” with a wink,
Spaulding's More,’ Hastings, Mich.
j “Well, of coarse, I was not mistakon.
I When tho first iceberg hove in sight,
^ASHVILLE HOUSE,
about 12 p. m., wo were running paral­
lel'with the Bremen steamer Main. 'Die
I. M. Flint &amp;. Sox, I’xope,
Mosel and an unknown English steamer
were also near by. This iceberg was a
big fellow, and was being carried toward
us with great rapidity by the gulf
stream. Its height above water was
fully two handrod feet, and as that por­
tion always represents bat a seventh part
of the entire mass it mast have been
JJASTIXoH HOUSE,
fourteen hundred feet high. It covered
an area oi probably five hundred square
feet- Atl2:30jt arrived nt an equal
N. T. i’ARKEB, Pkop.distance between tho Main and my
Thls is the leading representative hotel of steamer, creating a number of small
Hastings. Bates reasonable.
whirlpools around ns.
Indeed, both
, *nrtr VAunona vessels heaved heavily from one side to
the other in consequence of the commoiand
cuke
‘r S
isa Hon produced in the waters. On the
ONAH B. RA8ET, Express sod Draj

J Good* and Baggags earned to any ph

J

O

P

.

. LJ_
OT.g.»v w. w—
hundred feet before the day wm over,
Tbte wm Utltuda 42-06, longitnd® 49.04.
The two knocked toge .her shortly after
pawing u«, and a third iceberg, oonsidcrably smaller than the rtet. wm
formed.
The eight was magnificent,
though enough to make anyone dixxf.”
“ How do you account for the pres­
ence of iceb-rgs in such southerly lati­
tudes at this time of the year?”
• *‘By the fact that wo have had a very
mild winter, which has severed the bergs
from the mainland. They have drifted
southward as far as Newtoundland,
which is in lati.’ude 50. and not being
able to gain a foothold on shore there,
owing to their depth, have drifted east­
ward. They are tn bo found in mxny
different latitudes, bat pretty neStr the
same longitude, that is, between 47 nnd
60. I do not think any of them are m &gt;re
to westward than that.”
‘‘Is not navigation greatly impeded
by their presence so far south?”
“ Most assuredly, and it is a wonder
to me that no accidents have occurred
so far. After meeting the three icebergs
I spoke about ju&lt;t now. a heavy fog en­
veloped us, and I know I hover slept a
wink that night. Hui an iceberg ap­
proached us, there would have been no
means of discovering the fact in time to
steer out of its way. The only manner
of ascertaining the presence of icebergs
in southern waters is' by testing the tem­
perature. but then ot course this does
not tell one how near the ice is.”
“ Then there is practically no wav of
elirainating thls danger to ocean trav­
__
el?"
•
' “ None, unless a very southerly and
consequently roundabout ootirse is taken
by the steamers. That i* what most of
them are doing, by the way, and a* 10
myself, I intend running two or three
degrees further south on my return jour­
ney.”
Capt. Barre, of the Bremen steamer
Main, corrbb irated the above statement
of hi* brother captain, and added: “My
experience with icebergi on this trip
was, perhaps, even more extensive than
that of Capt. HAnsen.
Ltta in the af­
ternoon of, June 5 we lost sight of the
Frisia and very nearly missed c &gt;ming
in collision with an iceb *rg as large aany I have yet «een.
This wm owing
to the dense fog which cime in tho
wake of the first three burgs.
Indeed,
strange to say, most of the large fl rat­
ing masses of ice I have met have been
followed by mists.
Luckily tho ap­
proach of the monster was noticed in
time by the seething of tho waters
around it, and we escaped without a
scratch, so to say. Judging by the ex­
treme coldness of the water during the
night, we mtL.1 have passed several
more icebergs. That wo escaped collis­
ion and instant death on this trip was
nothing short of a miracle.”
Capt. Hilmers, of the German bark
Amaranth, from Hamburg, had a still
more interesting story to tell to the re­
porter. “We left Hamburg in the mid­
dle of May,” he said.
“Wind* were
very variable, but mostly westerly. On
May 23, latitude 44, longitude 46.50, we
narrowly missed coming in collision
with three icebergs from forty to fifty
feet high. This was only a foretaste of
what was to follow. When day dawned
on the 24th wo almost thought ourselyes
transplanted to the north pole. With
the exception of a few hundred feet
around us, the surface of the water was
covered with huge masses of ice, some
of which rose in peaks to an unprece­
dented height.
In other words, wo
were completely hemmed in: and as
tho icebergs continued to drift nearer
and nearer around ns, and the circle
became smaller, almost all hope was
finally abandoned. At this critical mo­
ment a channel sufficiently large to al­
low of our passing through it presented
itself to view, and without a moment’s
delay wo steered for it. Luck and good
seamanship combined proved our salva­
tion, and we dodged our way to clear
wii
’nr
TI
ia icelinnra
water.
The
icebergs with whinli
which wa
we hnzl
hod
coped were of an average height of 100
feet each, and oucupied 4&lt;X) to 600
siiuaro feet ofthe water’s surface. Two
white bears were seen on the plateau of
one of them, and many gulls, ducks,
and other northern birds were perched
on the peaks. On May 25, latitude 42,
longitude 51.20, three icebergs pns«ed
us, being rapidly drifted along by the
stream in a northeasterly direction."
Captain Young, of the American bark
II. Routh, who left London April 26,
with general merchandise, told tho re­
porter that from latitude 47.15, longi­
tude 44.30, to latitude 45.20, longitude
50 he sailed though a sea covered with
icebergs ot various sixes.
Ho met the
largest on May 24, longitude 54.
It
was almost split in two and co”©red a
large area.—AT. F. Mail ani Expre.is.
Getting Particular.

♦♦Nevada isn’t the country it used to
be,” ho remarked, as ho slowly cut a
slice from his plug of tiu-tag, and sol­
emnly shook his head.“What’s the trouble!”
“Folks are getting too particular to
do business. Twenty years ago I could
sell shares in a railroad to run from
Denver to Russia, and never be asked
a question, but now they want to know
all about it, even* to
VO how
uu» many locomo
lucumo-­
tives you have ordered.
■derod. Why, it’s getting so you canPt
” v
—"7 sell
zz’’ —
hardly
mining
stock any more.”
“Indeed.”
“Fact, sir; I was three months work­
ing off $600 worth of stock in the Golden
Paradise, and my expenses ate up all
the profits. Men had tho impudence, to
ask mo where I came from, what ma­
chinery 1 had, how many hands I
employed, who elected me President;
and some went so far as to doubt tho
certificate of assay that I paid a fellow
$5 to write forme.”
■
“And you left?”
“Loft? Of course I left. Why, In
another week some one would have had
the brass to’ask me in whit ernntry my
mine was located, and I could nover
have stood that—never.”— Wall Street
Daily News.
—A Kansas farmer look Lome a
severugr-five cent dog to please hit wife,
and in one night the animal killed *90
worth of sheep to please himself.

tnrough the uung-hole until they have
, arrived at years of diwn-lkm. And yet
*’u'r m*ay «rel ‘oreible reason- for re-’
faffing b“Y» *• blessing* in di-gutoc,
w,d ** *dl disguised m to be m: .taken
tor •ometbing quite Ute contrary, nor.
| over^ body will agree with the eulogy.be
pronounces upon the hov.
After all,”
|
“Uwro U ^methiugl like about
• boy.”
Boys are the terror of eate, their tooth­
ers and their elder ikteni, but the cate
would lead but a dull career without
them; while a mother would ■eareely
know what life really is if she was frv«1
from tho constaut anxiety who, feck
alMiut her boys. VVhat unruffled but
unprofitable hours of lazy enjoyment*
would fall to the lot of elder sisters, Were
It not for their younger brothers. Sloth
and ease and a mistaken belief that this
wjirltl is not a world of annoyances and
discomforts would enervate their ‘charactcr&amp; Boys make them feel that we
are not put here simply, to enjoy our­
selves, but to develop ".our characters.
So with teachers. What^a monotonous
existence would be theirs were it not for
boys! A teacher of girls aloue would
mistake earth for -paradise, and so not
having’any use for Heavun and not be­
lieving in any such place as a refuge
from earthly miseries would never-strive
to get there. But a teacher of boys,
even- week looks forward to a better and
brighter world, makes good use of Sun­
day in fitting himself for it, and in
hoping that he will gel there sometime,
to make up for hisjrials hare.
■
The ash man who should not get a
snow-ball down hia back ; the rag peddler
who never found the wheel of his chrt
suddenly coming off; the street car con­
ductor who did not have to drive the
I boys from the rear platform ; the passer­
by who did not get a base-ball in his ab­
domen or a bean in his ear; the nurse
girl anil her baby who were not scared
out of their wfts by the sudden m&lt;h of
a velocipede unon their heels, would not
enjov their tau-ptil intervals of existence
nor fully know the value of peuve aud
quietness. So that after all bovs are of
very great use—especially asamsciplins
and a means of mural itiapn venient;
and they are not to be despL&gt;cd. but rather
to be .cherished and loved, aS they u.e

"BUCHUPAIBA.” .

KftMioua. KwuUn^.i

4 deva, nrinuy
or difficult nrina! dmagiat*. Mich.

Cullirate n Swoct Voice.

r

There is no power of lore so hard to
get nnd keep ns a kind voice. A kind
hand ri deaf and dumb. It may be
rough in flesh aiidbloml, yfitdo the work
of 3 soft heart, ami do "it with a soft
touch. But there is no one thing that
love so much needs as a sweet voice to
tell what it means and feels, aud it is
hard to get it and keep it in the right
tone. - One must start in youth, and bo
on the watch night and day, at work and
play, to get and keep a voice that shall
speak at all times the thought of a kind
heart. But this is the time when a sharp
voice is most apt t&lt;&gt; bo got. You often
hear hoys and girls spy words at play
with a quick, sharp tone, as if jt were
uie snap of
01 a whip.
wiup. When
•, hen oue of them
the
gets vexed you
_... -will •hear
—j. a voice thtit
u of a snarl,
sounds as if it were made up
a whine nnd a bark. Such a voice often
f;leaks worse than the heart feels.
It
shows more ill-will in thtf tone than in
the wools. It is often in mirth that ona
gets a voice or a tone that w sharp, and
sticks to him through life, and stirs up
ill-will and grief, aud falls liken drop of
gall on the sweet joys at home. Such
as these get a shaq&gt; home voice for use
and keep their best voice for tljose they
meet elsewhere, just as they would save
their best cakes aud pies for guests arid 1
all their sour food for their own board. 11
would say to all boys and girbt, "(Ise
your guests voice at'home.” Watch it
by day as 3 pearl of great price, for it
will be worth more to you in the days to
come than the best pearl hid in the'seiL
A kind voice is a lark’s song to a dearth
and home. It is to the heart what light
is to the eye.—Jctcish Mc^,cnyer.
—A gold fish ten and a half inches
long was recently taken from a cistern in
Macon, Go.

'• Mill

reVER AND AGUE.
Are you troubled with Ague, Chill* and Frver. Blltous Fever, Rem ittoot or Intermitting
Fever, Night Sweats or any disease tlut cranes
Iroan Malaria or disordered Liver and Hot
buns I If to, procure a hottie ot Green’s Ague Every
Conqueror, which faaauawtic extract of sfcnmg
tonic roots, combined with t»ulphatc of Mag­
nesia, de-, and portlTely contains ho Quinine,
Arsenic or other rxdsrlns. It purlOea tite blood
cleaimw the liver, spleen mimI other wvrtnlve
organs so effertuliy (hat the chills wHI not re­
turn. We have never found any case of Fever
and Ague it will not cure. Price, &amp;J cents and
f l.iW per bottle. . One Urge bottle lias cured aa
live in one family. Sold by alJ druggists and
dealers everywhere.
ISJautCJ I

READY FOR BUSINESS

CUSTOM

GRINDING!

iuc 1&gt;bi ,
8eti*(*cUon guaranteed.

i&gt;cr, ai me orr-p

OU! WHAT A COUGH.
Will you heed tbe warning. The signal per!mp.« of the sure approach of that more tcrrlbldlwase consumption. Ask yourself if you can
afford for the sake of saving 50 cts to ruu tbc
risk and do nothing for II. We know from expcrience that BmJoh’a Cure will cure ydur
rough. Il never fall*. This explains why
mure than a million bottles were wold lost year.
It relieves Croon, and whooping cough, at’once
Mothers do not be without il: For Ume back,
ride or ehest use Shiloh’s Porous Plasters.
Sold bv F. T. Boise.
DtSPEPSIA A LIVER COMPLAINT.
By a strict attention to trartne**.
Is it not worth the small price of 75 cents tq
free youreef of every fyniptotn of those distres­ dealing with all ojr customers, we hope Ui mer­
sing complaint*, if you think so call at our it a liberal patronage from the fanner* of thia
vicinity.
store and get a bottle of Shiloh'* Vitallzer,
Mills on railroad,—cart of depot.
every bottle has a prinfed guarantee on it, use
accordingly and If It doe* you no good it will
II. IL DICKINAOX A CO.
cost you nothing. Sold by F. T. Boise.
We have a speedy and poeltive cure for
Caurrah, Diphtheria, Canker mouth and j^ATHBUX BOI SE,
Head Ache, in SHILOH’S CATARRH REM­
EDY. A nasal Injector free with each bat Ge
A. R. ANT1BDEL, Yaoranrroa.
Use it If you desire health and sweet breath­
Price 50 cents. Sold by F. T. Boise
•

FLOUR. MEAL AND

Our

A Vegetable’ Product,

Only used in Aykk's Ague Cure, has
proven’ itself a never failing and rapid
cure for every Tonn of Malarial Dis­
order, Fever and Ague, or Chills and
Fever. No Injury follows its use, aud
its effects are permanent.
It rouses
the system to a conditUu of vigorous
health, cleanses the blood of malarial
poison, aud imparts a feeling of com­
fort mid security most desirable In
Ague districts. It
au excellent
tonic
_ _ is —
-------------------and preventative,’ __
..
_____
a^_ "
’•’** __
as c
.,,r^‘
I
all complaints peculiar to malarious,
marshy anti miasmatic regions. The
M&gt;1 their eighteenth year.
great Superiority of Ayer’s Ague Cure
But there are “boys*’ and boys, “boys’’ | Over any other compound is that it
with a quotation mark and boys without. contains no Quinine, Arsenic, or min­
It is the ••boys’’ with these marks that eral; consequently it produces no
do not deserve much charity, nnd do get quinism or injurious effects whatever
but precious little liking anil admiration. upon the constitution. Those cured
Il is the “boys” with- tiie.-e marks that by it are left as healthy as It they had
frequent drinking saloons, stand on the never had the disease.
The direct action of Ayer’s Ague
street comers, become rowdies at an
Cure upon the Liver and Digestive
early age, are riotous, foul-mouthed,
violent and even bloodthirsty before Organs makes It a superior remedy
for Liver Complaints, producing many
they are twenty-one. This is the kind of
remarkable cures, where other medi­
“boys” that are nut entitled to the name.
cines have failed.
They become street roughs, if not bmgFor sale by all druggists.
paled, vicious, lewd and going to perdi­
tion in droves. It is gangs of this sort
in large cities and on the frontiers, who
are known as “boys.” but who belie the
name.
A mean but true specimen
of them are the Malley •• boys ”
—young men well advanced in man­
hood. but covering up their delrauchery,
dissoluteness, riotous living, and even
graver o;Tcn«es. by pretending to the
giddiness ami thoughtfulness ot noyhood.
They hare no claim to any apch excuse
or any such exemption.
They are men
mature in wickedness and crime, anti
cannot hide their sins under cover of
Dovish folly.
■
Tbc same may he said of tho •■ James
boys” who long since arrived at mature
life, and instead of being pushed into
crime by the frolies«»nie impulsiveness
suggested by the word “ boy.u long
since resorted to robbery, nnd murder as
the business of life, not as the s]&gt;ort of
irrepressible and hot-headed youth.
Tlie politicians, too, love to hide their
tricks and their games with the public
service by pretending in a jocose and
lightsome way that it is the •• boys” who
are really responsible for the evil deeds
of caucuses and conventions, of wire­
pulling anti political deviltry generally.
They imagine it softens the oiieusv if
they assume that it is the “boys” who
miht be looked after and looked to for
the wrong-dmng in politics, whereas the
majority of these “ boys” art gray with
the many years they have given to learn­
ing arid practicing their contemptible |»olilical (nurils and maneuvers. No;in jus­
tice to the real boys, whose youth excuses
much because it ip -their nature to.” the
“boys” of/he street-corners, the fron­
tier. and the |&gt;olilival managers ought to
have trie name taken from them-—bcirod Free Press.

CUSTOM

MkL.

HALL’S

Patau h Pure

WherilF^n c.

I
•
!
;
|
!
I
I

Probate Order,

o! JSnrry, hc.kien

£ WJ.AE8, a uiiur.r.

tru.t upon pajmrnl of ih&lt;* amount found du*
from him
Thereupon it I* ordered, that

Is Recommondod by Physlclansj

bearing ol laid pnUlluD.

sioo awA-.u'iMToo^n
We manufaatur* nnd rtl! It rftha pnflitlVO
guarantee that It will cure any
caaO.aod we will forfrit the above Amount
ifttfsibia a single instance.
it is unlike a»y
r Catarrh remedy, aa

,

'

Notice Is hereby given that by virtue of a
writ of Fierflkdas, iuued out of tbc Circuit
Courtjor the county of Kent, in favor ui WillianrHakc apdnrt the good* and chatties and
rc.viestatc.of William E. Bucl, in the county
of mtaGFJto me directed and deli vend, 1 did on
the iMtnaay of July last, levy upon and take
ail the rigid, title and interest ortlie mid WHliain E. Hue! in and to the following described
rcaj totale. jjmt
MV a]| u,al certain piece
or Jiwcel of land describwl a« follows, towlt:
The east one half (JcJJ of the eart one halt (jj)
of the »&lt;&gt;utb west quarter (14) of secdoo thirtvlire (85,) in town (3.) north &lt;w range seven («)
west, in Barry county, Michigan, all of which I
-.ball cxioic 1&lt;&gt;a!t-at; iL’ic sucllint or vendue
to the highest bidder,
the north fton! door
of the court hou-e jo Hartings. In *aid comity,
&lt;&gt;n the sixteenth day of October next, at
eleven o’clock in the lorruuon.
Dated this Girt dnV ot Aut'urt. A- D. 1SS2.
HENRY M. BOUGHT.’. LIN, Sheriff.
By BBitnEKi M. Li.?;, Depute Sheriff.
D. F.. Cokhitt, Plt’fA Atty.
' M 6.

, n any tl.«rc &lt;&lt; •hr
ihould D»l &gt; e
udtiy:y of Multi ।
. ranking a eop*

K

aistrMalng disease,ask yuurDruggiitfor it,and
Aocarr no nrrtATtoN on M trrrrvTr- If ho
hu not got It, scud tu u« and wo trill forward
Immediately. Price, "i crai*i&lt;r boitlsF. J. CHENEY &amp;. CG., Toledo. Ohio.

CLEMENT SMITH,
■I ml v&lt;'&gt;f f'rohati

IRON W&amp;nted
MANS

i AGEXTS! For Gen. Dodge’s neiv Ixx.t
THIBTY-THREE YEARS AMOI.G

GUR WILD

BITTERS

, •............... *
y.y-.,.nS cTpcncnccl
during u year* atnen^ the Wildest irilnt of tht
Great Wert. Splendidly Illustrate 1 with Steel
Platev, Fine Engraving* and Sup&gt;.-rb Chromo-Lith­
ograph Piltea in fifteen color*. 1U» received the
unqualified endorsement of the mart eminent men of
cur coantry. Gen. Grant write-.; ••The Sest book
on Indian and Frontier Life ever written." Bisho*
Wiley, of Cincinnati, rays: “A much needed book

^Z/ET^’

ft vividly portray* tl&gt;c Indian juat

r.nOWX’S IRON nrrrEHS are £*&lt;“•&gt;. _____

AGENTS

.

certain cure for nil diseases &gt; 999
Uli* grand T&lt;il°toFti&gt;.
requiring a complete tonic; espe­ waiting thousands 1 It i* /Az opportunity of a life
cially Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Inter­ time for rapid money making! Hrmsanbcr. ner
.
...
coo*, superuiy utiiuraiea; immense
*c arrow; exciumittent I'overs,
Fevers, Vs
nht of Appetite, sire territory and Special
A.’nut
_ Term*.
......4. Send for iliusStrength, Irack of Energy. I trulrd cireiHra, with full partic
particular
atari, to

etc. Enriches tho blood, strength­
ens the muscles, aud gives new
life to tho nerves. Acts like a
charm on tbc digestive organs,
removing all dyspeptic symptoms,
such as tasting the food. Belching,
Heat, in tho Stomach, Heartburn,
etc. The only Iron 1‘reparation
that will not blacken the teeth or
give headache. Sold by all Drug­
gists at $1.00 a bottle.

DISOWN CHEMICAL CO.
Baltimore, Md.

HO PATENT NO PM
D i t f mt e
..r..-.-,’
IM I LH I 0 mlr*? -udV.’L’”*0*

rnmnoas
1796

&gt;&lt;4. W. MORGANA Cd

/NOANAPQUS. INDIANA.
Not Fall
u l*n‘1! r
■jour FALL

Price- LLt
for 1882.
JVcc to any address upon
application. Contains &gt;/.•criptiona of everything
required for Personal or Family use,
with over 2,200 Uluatniiom. W«®K
all goods at wholesale prices, iu
only institution in America who make
thi* their special business.
Address

M0NT80MERT WARD A CO.,

'"***

�THE IlSw’i

Have just received their new goods for the Fall trade.

Oanpilod from Lafort Dicpitohei

THEIR PRINTS and GINGHAMS

British troops

Are the finest ever brought to thia market for the price.

DOMESTIC.

_

suing year;

President.’ General John Gibbon.

GcmtoI L. Fairchild and General J. A. Kel­
logg; Secretary, Colonel J. A. Watrous;
Treasurer, Captain Otto1 Scborse; Honorary
Vice Pnwidenta, 'General W. W, Dudley,
Colonel W. W. Roblnsoa, General M- A. Mor­
rill, General C. 8. Hamilton, General Hollon

sone, two ot whom were fatally injured.
Firx coovicu escaped from Un Texas Penl­

captured, one wounded, aud bloodhounds
were after the other.
Iters continued falling on the 25th in tbc
already inundated districts of New Jersey,
adding greatly to the destruction ot property
previously reported., Sixteen of tho thirty
bridge. crossing the river at Rahway bad been
destroyed, and half a million dollars would

diesex and Somerset Counties. Riflrosd trav­
el between Washington and the North had
alone-work from the vault of C. E. Smith

A Bxaxx-Tinxr stole bonds valued at $13,­
000 from a Baltimore bank on tbc 23th.

away good* aud materials valued at $30,000.
Branch Railway at Wllkeabarre, Pa., gave
way recently while twenty-seton loaded goncarried down fifteen feet, two of them receiv­
ing fatal injuries.
A most determined attempt at suicide,

90th by Henry Weiner, a grocer at Carondelet, MqA-Lie stabbed himself thirty times
twelve slashes behind the
right^sr, cut a gash of an inch on the crown
of his bead, and wounded himself in the
right wrist. When the physicians had suffi­
ciently revived him, he drank tlw contents of
a coal^oll lamp. '
.
The United Presbyterian Synod has in­
itiated measures to raise $500,000 in honor of
the quarter centennial of the organization, to
be celebrated next year.
The firm of James G. Sands &lt;S Co., a New
York stock mining concern, failed on tbe
21st, and the members thereof absconded.
ArroHXEf Bio elow, counsel for Sergeant
Mason, on tbe 3Lst filed iu the United States
Circuit Court at Buffalo, N. Y.. a petition for
a writ of habeas curpus. The petition was
granted by Judge Coxc, and the hearing
would probably take place st Utica, Octo-

There were 109 business failures tn the
United States during the seven days ended on
the Slat.
. It is announced that General Grant and Mr.
Trescott, the Commissioners appointed to
.negotiate a commercial treaty with Mexico,
will leave for that country about November 1,
after danger from yellow fever is over. Per­
sons Interested in American enterprises there
are of opinion that this Commission will ob­
tain such concessions from the.Government
of Mexico as will open the mining regions of
that country to American capital.
The Home Insurance Company of Colum­
bus, O., with assets of SCO,000 and liabilities
unknown, has made an osalgumcnL

trains in the Hudson River Railroad Tunnel
in New York CKy on the 23d, by which four
persons were killed and many more or leu
seriously Injured. Tbe accident is alleged to
have been caused by gross mismanagement. '
For tbe eight months ended August 31,
1S82, the exports of dairy products aggregat­
ed 4,728,121 pounds, against 10.4C7.698 pounds
for the same period last year.
6u leading New York milliners arrived home
from France on tbc 23d. and customs de­
tective* fonnd on the person of one woman
silks and laces valued at 1,225 francs, while
another carried dutiable goods to tbc amount
A Mbfcte between Western herders touch­
ing the ownership of some cattle was settled
. pa the 22d by a duel on horseback, near Trini­
dad, Col. Each party presented six picked
men, who were placed fifty feet apart. At tbe
first fire four ni&lt;-n were killed. Tl»et a aettleyurnt wm made, and an equal exchange ot
mixed cattle perfected, and tbc dead were
buried.
Axothex of the passengers mutilated by
■.the recent railway accident in the Fourth­
avenue tunnel at New York died on the 23d.
A telegraph operator, a conductor and a
brakeman bad been arrested.

Treasury in place ot Mr. Fol ger, on the 23d
Issued a call for 325,000,030 In continued five
per cents, principal and interest payable DeA fire at Susanville, Cal., on tbe 23d
burned two bloeks of business buildings, tbe
loss being $150,600. A conflagration al Fort
Smith, Ark., swept away property valued nt
$75,(JOO. The business portions of Watford,
Ont., and Rosenberg, Tex, were also de­
Strayed by fire.
Aloxzo Follett, a New York City note
broker, made an assignment on the 23d.
Liabilities, $500,0X11
SBVEXTT-nvr. new eases of yellow fever
nnd nine deaths were reported at Pensacola,
Fla., during the twenty-four hours ended on
the 34th.

•cus train was thrown from the track front
aome esmsa unknown and sixteen cars were
piled In a deep ditch. Three men were killed,
three fatally wounded, and several others
badly Injured.
A omeat rafn-stor u and food In the Eastern
State* on thcfiSJ caused the destruction at an
immense amount ot property and the loss of
several lives. Tbe pointe menUoned m hav­
ing sustained heavy losses by the tremendous
raln-fgll and the rapid rise af rivers which
Immediately followed include, in New Jersey,
Faterson, Princeton. Trenton, Hoboken.
Hackensack, Bordentown. Plainfield and
New Brunswick, while at Waterbury, Conn.,
PhOtttelphla, Pa, and Fredericksbsrg, ^a.,

tnaoy tnantha ent off Irasn-all communication
trout the North
Tb» twenty-seventh National Convention of
tl»s German CotnoHc CeptralSociety, a secret
organization having 300 branches in different

maiding at Stone Creek. Ohio, carried a banrl
rtly traced to Scott's

of Egypt
A Dl’mltn (Ireland) dispatch of the 25th
states that in Cocnty Mayo fifty families had
recently teen evicted by the military aud

not to shelter the unfortunates.
A uoHTXtxo-BTaoxB killed five persons In
a church at Concordia. Mexico, on tho 20th,
and many others were seriously Injured in the
scramble which ensued.
t
Fll'ctvxtiosh in gold In Havana on the
20th almost caused a general panic, the price
being 197 in Cuban currency.
A Cavnoty clergyman of Brpslau has been
fined two hundred marks for libeling Bis­
marck.

chine, Canada, on the 31st, sod four persons
were scalded to death.
The last of the Irish “auspecta" was re­
leased from jail on tbe 21st.
The report that Abdellah PMha, one of
Tux Rubber Comb ami Jewelry Company
Arabi's
Generals, had surrendered at DamiNew fork failed cm the 25th for $130,000.
etta, and had been shot by his own soldiers,
wm
denied
on tbe 21st.
PERSONAL AND POLITICAL.
The Damietta garrison on tbe 21st resolved
Coloxel Ibaao O. Eaton, 'for many years
a member of tbe National Democratic Com­ to laydown Its arms. One thousand Bedouins
mittee, and a Spiritualist ot national repute, had occupied the entrenchments at Kafr-eldied suddenly in Leavenworth, Kan., a few Dwar which tho British abandoned. Arabi,
nights ago.
. while in power, despoiled the National
The following is tho ticket' nominated by Treasury of £300,000, £18,000 of which had
been recovered. Tho Ambassadors had ad­
the New York Rcpubllcara^tato Ccnreutlou
at Saratoga on the 21st: Governor, Charles J. vised tbe Porte to act in accord with t he British
Folger; Lieutenant-Governor, B. Platt Car­ policy in Egypt. Arabi and all of his sup­
penter; Chief Judge of tbe Court of Appeals, porters would be tried by court-mart tab
A Trieste (Austria) dispatch of the 21st
Charles A. Andrews; CongresBman-at-Large,
A. B. Hepburn. The platform adopted favors ssys that four towns had been entirety de­
equitable taxation; denounces monopolies stroyed by the flood In the Tyrol, and the
Tbc bodies of
that oppress the people; declares for a free rainfall still continued.
ballot for alt; favors submitting the prohibi­ twenty-six persons had been recovered.
Patrick Waiau was hangel at Galway,
tion question to a popular vote; tbe redac­
tion of taxation m fast a* practicable, and Ireland, on the 23d, for the murder of Martin
tenders to President Arthur assurance of con­ Leyden.
A recExt public meeting tn London adopt­
fidence in bis Administration.
The CougreMional nominations made on ed resolutions urging the Government to for­
the 21st were m follows: Democratic—Mich­ bid tbc importation of Chinese labor.
HeavyI snow
storms were
reported JU
in
auv~ .W1UU
WOW ICUWW1
igan, First District, W. C. Marbury; Ne­
braska, First, John I. Redlck. Republican— S-lUcrl^l ou lb. 311 TrtkralbM
New Hampshire, First, Martin A. Haynes; and crops were destroyed.
T
he Industrial Exposition at the city of
Alabama, Fourth, M. A. Howsee (colored);
Delegate from Washington Territory, Thomas Sydney. In New South Wales, has come to a
H. Brents, renominated. Prohibitionist—Wis­ sudden and disastrous end, by tbedestruction
consin. Third. 8. D. Hastings. Trade Assem­ of the building and all its contents by fire.
A Cairo dispatch of tbc 22d states that all
bly—Wisconsin, Fourth, George B. Goodwin.
The Nebraska Republican State Conven­ rebel officers at Rainleh below the rank ot
tion, in session at Omaha on the Slat, nomi­ Colonel had been released. The English bad
nated J. W. Dawes for Governor, and A. W. abandoned the works erected at Port Said.
Agee for Lieutenant-Governor. A platform Damietta had surrendered, and General Wood
would see that it was completely evacuated.
was adopted favoring free labor, free speech,
the right of every qualified citizen to vote Property in Alexandria valued at £1,000,000
once in every election; free non-sectarian would be confiscated to indemnify sufferars

at Brownsville, Tex., up to the 25th was 1,870;
deaths, 108; at Pensacola, Fla., 344; deaths,

schools; a sound currency on a specie basis
under National control; the raising of Na­
tional revenues by taxation of articles not
essential to tbe comfort and well-being of tho
people and from a tariff on imjxjrta, so ad­
justed aa to protect the investment of capital
In home Industries.
The Colorado Democrats met In State Con­
vention at Denver on the 21sL James B.
Grant was nominated for Governor, and Jobs
R. Powers for Lieutenant-Governor.
The National Convention of distillers and
liquor-dealers, recently held at Cincinnati, is­
sued a declaration that, while they have
obeyed tbc most oppressive laws, they believe
tbe sale of spirits should be placed on the
same footing as other merchandise; that
they favor a judicious licence system, aiding
the Government and protecting dealers.
The New York Democratic State ConvanCleveland was nominated tor Governor; David
P. Hill, for Lieutenant-Governor; for Judge
of the Court of Appeals, WDiiam C. Huger;
CongressmvMt-Large, Henry W. Slocum.
Tbe platform adopted favors a State Consti­
tutional amendment for the local self-gov­
ernment of cities; declares against fraud at
the [oils; fuvora free labor and free canals,
and charges the Republican party with ex­
travagance In both State and^iatlonal affairs.
lx an affray at Hot Springs, Ark., on the
23d, growing out of a newspaper controversy,
Charles Matthews, editor of the Hornet, was
shat dead cltlror by Colonel Fordyce or
Colonel Bugg.
The following were the Cougretslonal
nominatioa-i tuadeou the 22.1; Republican—
Ohio, Sixteenth District, X' B Clark. Demo­
cratic—Illinois, Sixth, J. L. Tieknor, full term;
AL Y. Johnson, vacancy; Colorado, Congress­
man-xt-Large, S. J. Wallace.
Oklahoma Patxk nnd his followers, who
Lad been brought prisoners to Fort Smith,
were released by the United States Court on
the 23d.
General B. F. Butler has been retained
to defend the Dorseys in the next Star-route
trial
The contributions toward tbe Garfield Hos­
pital in Washington amounted to $80,000 on
the 23d. -Consul Fcxiotto, at Lyons, France,
opened a subscription and received 15,&lt;K&gt;J

General Wood, with two regiments, pro­
ceeded to Damietta, on the 23d, where Abdellal pMha surrendered at tbe railway station,
bne of tbe latter’s' black regiments plun­
dered tbe barracks end private residences and
fled with all the ammunition it could carry
away. Two men implicated in the June mas­
sacre were hanged at Alexandria. The Brit­
ish cavalry made a demonstration at Cairo to
overawe tbe Arabs.
Geohoe Roe &lt;fc Co., distillers at Dublin,
Ireland, suspended on tbe 23d, with liabilities
of from £100,000 to £400,000.
Whiles passenger train on an Austrian
road wm crossing the river st Drave ot^the
23d. the bridge gsvc awsy, resulting in the
drowning of thirty soldiers.
A CoNsrsxTixopLE dispatch of the 34th
states that tbe Sultan had ordered the imme­
diate surrender to Greece of the frontier sec­
tion which caused the recent trouble between
the two countries.

LATER NEWS.

Three strangers recently entered the jew­
elry store of C&lt; Ak &amp;. Sloss, at Louisville, and
managed to abstract diamonds worth $5,(XX)
while pretending to find nothing suitable in
the stock.
The Western Hardware Company of Atchi­
son. Kan., made an assignment on tbe 2t’&lt;lh,
with debts amounting to $250,000.
The Comptroller of tho Cur ••ney on the
26th authorized the Fourth National Bank of
Louisville, Ky., to commence business with a
capital of $300,000.
Cnats Davis, a wife-beater, fired the jail at
Detroit, Minn., on the 26th, and perished In
the flames.
Sixtt new cases of yellow fever and two
deaths were reported at Pensacola, Fla., on
the ‘Jilth, and there were five new cases and
one death at Brownsville, Tex. At Mata­
moras, Max., the fever had exhausted Itself,
while it still raged at Reynoso, Camargo and
Mier, wltfi great mortality.
Mexico on the 26th adapted a Constitu­
tional Amendment giving tfie Presidency, in
the event of removal, to the presiding officer
of tbc Senate, instead of tbe Chief Justice.
Fraxhh P. Weed, of New’ argh.
T., on
the 36th compromised bis civil and criminal
suits against Hedges and Scott in tbe colossal
poker game, leaving him out about $80,000.
Tkz following Congressional nomination
The small-pox was increasing at Cape
tucky, Tenth District, George M. Adams; Town, South Africa, to a fearful extent on
Pennsylvania, Seventh, William Mutchlcr, the 26th. Already there had been 2,000 cases,
renominated.
Greenback—Illinois,
Fifth, and tbe streets were deserted and business
wm at a standstill.
Bairnridge N. Dean.
Weujxqtox Bros. A Co., tbe oldest dry­
The death of J. D. Osborne, of Louisville,
a partner with the late George D. Prentice in goods firm in Boston, made an assignment on
ti&gt;e 26lh for 3403,000.
the Journal, was announced on the 34th.
George Hallexbeck and William Stratton
Some New York speculator has offered,Prof.
Hjixlcy $503 each for 200 lectures on popular quarreled fifteen years ago at Palmyra, N. Y.
adenee, to be delivered In this country in 1883 They again met pn the 26th near Carrizo Pass,
Tex, and went into,a darkened room and
and 1884.
Mjudh-Genkum. Schofield has been as . fought a duet Stratton wm brought out a
signed to the command of the Military Divis­ corpse, but Hallenbsck wm uninjured.
Near Kalrwan, Africa, on the 2Bth a band
ion of the Pacific, the appointment to date
of marauders attacked a party of sixty horse­
from October 15.
The Republicans of the Second Louisiana men belonging to a (Frcnch topographical ex­
District on the 25th nominated Judge Marks pedition. Tbe French Commander was killed
for Congress. The Democrats of the Fourth and seven of his men disabled. The brigands
Michigan District nominated George L. lost thirty killed and fifty wounded.
Yaple, and Carter Harrison wrageC by the recent great rain-storm on the
the Third Illinois District.
2Cth estimated the total loss at $1,530,003.
Thx plated-ware factory al Birmingham.
FOREIGN.
Accordixb u&gt; a Constantinople dispatch of Coun.. was destroyed by Are on the morning
the 34th the Sultan of Turkey hod deposed of the 26th, Involving a loss of $150,000.
Nomoutioxs for Congress were made as
follows on tho 26Cb: Republican—New York,
treasonable relations with Arabi Pasha.
It was officially annonneed in London on Twenty-secoud District. Charles R. Skinner,
the 24th that General Wolseley and Admiral
Seymour would be raised to the peerage in Pennsylvania, Seventeenth, J. M. Campbell,

renominated; Missouri. Seventh, Stuart
were killed in Maryland aad one

'

mandcr. Tiobaker Pasha

»&gt;f domestic breadstuff* exi5,T:«, agalou 8157,505,906

evening. Tbc total full fort bo tblrty-*lx hour*

WORSTED DRESS GOODS,

In Brown, Cardinal, Dregs of Wine, Bronze Green, Slate and
Drab, for 12 1-2 cents per yard.

CLOTHING.
Men’s, Youths’, Boys’, and School.
eighteen lncb&lt;-« per hour, so that tonight ft
able flood of 3810, which was the highest on
record. Th-? Oldham Brook, the principal

SUITS.
From a Cheap Cottonnade to an Imported Worsted.

above the city, rose with great rapidity, and
about two p. m. burst through the mllbdam at
Oldham. The torrent thus suddenly released

all before It, including several bridges and a
part of tbe borsi-rttllroail track. A brick and
stone arch bridge erected by tbe county at a
cost of $MOO ten years ago. and recently re­

WE GUARANTEE OUR

PRICES AS LOW AS LOW AS THE LOWEST.
Call nnd See our Unu and Ca0&gt;. Boots and Shoes.

avenue, near the city alms-house, was underDr. Myers, the city physician, driving up to
tbc institution and to visit tho small-pox pa­
tients, got to tho bridge tv* the flood was beat­
ing savagely, against It. He urged his horse-

5000 LBS. OF BUTTER WANTED,
For which we will pay the highest market price in Cash.

C.W. GRANGER &amp; CO.
A massive reta ning wall of stone adjoining
tho bridge to protect the alms-house property

down with a rush, and iu a twinkling the mad
torrent was eating its way into tbe sand-bank
on which tbe films-bouse rests.
Martin Rossiter, a gentleman aged about
seventy, lived in a pleasant cottage along the
riverbank, neat the outlet of the Oldham
Brook, with bls family, and bad some fine

C. C. Wolcott
GONE.

'

tried to drive along the doad near tbe river,
when tbe Hood came down with such a sud­
den rush that before be could get out of its

THE STORE REMAINS

river, and, with horse and wagon, wm whirled
down and out of si cbt before any one could
extend him n helping band.
AU .......
the cellar* along the river below
the -----fal's
.

The MONUMENTAL is lhe Finest Round
Stove Made.

ba-1 their lower floors filled, with water, to tbe
treat damuge of their machinery. Tbe shops
of tbe great locomotive wotks had to shut
down on account of tbc great flood.
The flood dabbed with such violence against
the Lincoln bridge, above the city, that it tlrr
ally gave way. and went down with a mighty
c twh. Tbc bridge consisted of two iron spins,
very substanlialiy built, ond span about 140
on an island In the river. The bridge cost
alwut FAduo In all. It was one of the best
bridge* in the country, the mx«onry nnd super
structure being of the moat substantial churaoter. The Hoboken stream al»o felt the effects of
tne great stonn, and last night Z.abriskle’s Mill.

And is filled with Stoves of 20 Different Kinds.

—-ALSO:----

Paints, Oils and Colors, Doors, Glass, Sash ’ and
Blinds Iron and Wood Pumps,Wagons, Buggies,
Carriages and Platforms, Drills, Cultivators
Seeders, Plows, Land Rollers, “Reed Spring­
tooth Harrow.
BAKBED WIRE.

POINTS FOR Ai.1. THE I.EADING Pf.OwS.

into s rubber factory went down tho stream,
involving a loss of perhaps $15,000. The heavy
rains have inundated oil the meadow section
of tbc city of Hoboken. Houses are cut off
from the streets by sheets of water, and thoccupants ate obliged to sail on raft* to get
from the sidewalks to their frontdoors. Tne
ravine road sewer wh ch empties near the
meadows yielded to tho Increased pressure
and burst this morning. This buret let all the
water from Jersey City Heights out upon tb&lt;meadows and increased the discon flture ot
those residing there.
There has been Immense damage In Hudson
County, N. J. Entire sections at Jersey City
and Hoboken are inundate*!. Collars and base­
ments are flooded. The Inhabitants are tak­
ing refuge on tho upper floors. Tbc Jersey
avenue wooden pavement was hurled into the
mouths of the sewers, completely choking
them. The waters, backing, swept info the
bouses, destroying carpets, etc. Morris Canal
is overflowed, and the tow-paths washed. A
section of one of the main sewera, twenty-eight
by alx feet, was lifted bodily out of place, and
tbc rushing waters dashed into tbe air thirty
feet. Dwellers on tho “Meadows” were ree-

The new tunnel of the New York, Ontario &amp;
Westen. Railroad wm damaged between 3-0,OOUand $100,000.
By the giving way of a bridge over Berry’s
Creek a freight train wm precipitated Into
the stream. Edward Webber, the conductor,
wm killed. George Currie, the engineer, and
Francis Burke, a fireman, probably fatally in­
jured.
Pi-AixrrrLn, N. J., September 24.
French's dam, the last dam but one remaln-

o’clock last night. Tho flood then carried
away two frame buildings at Somerset street

four-story carriage factory. Fred Moore, a
boy, was lost off one bridge. In Bound Brook
the water rose suddenly, flowing ten feet deep
through the main etreet, lined on both sides
coses, nnd n large amount ofgotxU wm ruined.
In the Ramsey Hotel tho water is almost to the
top of the bar. One family were rescued from
a house by a Ihml The Elm Park Hotel Is sub­
merged almost to the roof.
Tbc flood is tbe highest known in Bound
Brook. It was nearly throe feet higher than
that of July, 1K5. which wm the greatest pre­
viously recorded. More Iom will be suffered
bv the Bound Brook people from flood than
by the fire which destroyed the greater port of
the town some months ago.
•
The dnmagu caused by the heavy rains in
other portions of New Jersey, in Connecticut,
Pennsylvania. North Carolina, etcu. is very
great, and tbe rain-fall In many sections U
unprvoedentod. Nearly eleven inches fell at
Philadelphia in seventy-two hours.

—A Connecticut dairyman, having
brewed half a barrel of strong beer, and
having carelessly left it exposed, one of
his cuws found the Iwer and drank it,
the result being that those who drank of
her milk became visibly affected. From
tho number of men within ten miles of
that dairy who have since blamed their
peculiar condition on that cow’s milk it
is estimated that she must have given
about 300 gallons on that night—PMlatklpkia Ncics.
—Captain Sam, the Shoshone Chief,
died in Lander County, Nevada, recent­
ly, and according to the big medicine
man of his tribe, his death was caused
from tho influence exercised by evil
spirits in his horses. The superstitious
Indians cut the throats of all of them—
four in number—and now think they

A Large assortment of Shelf Goods and Tinware, and the best
Tinner in the County.
FOR COODS CHEAP CALL AND SEE ME.

Pioneer Store
SELLS GOODS EXCEEDINGLY LOW.
In order to make room for our Fall and Winter Goods we
are selling our finest stocKs of Clothing at prices that re­
quire no bantering to sell.

HERE ARE BARGAINS FOR YOU!
Summer Pants for 95c—Think of It!

BOOTS and SHOES
For fall and winter trade are comming in.
lent and cheap. Examine them.

They are excel­

G-ROCRIES

01 the best quality and lowest in price. Try our 40c Tea.
Don’t buy poor eggs unless you prefer them. Our egg tester
tells you which are poor.

CASH PAID FOR BUTTER AND EBBS.

NEW VICTOR SEWING MACHINE is VICTOROUS.
CX* Ready pay secures for you all the advantages in trade.

__________ L. J. W heeler.

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN
At Buxton'* new brick, bare full and complete lines in

C 1,01 li i xi g,

.

G-entis Vwraiisliing- Goodw,

a-xxd- Grroceries.
/

If you want something new, neat and nobby, just take a look at our stock of

CUFFS, COLLARS, TIES, HANKERCHIEFS, JEWELRY, ETC.
THE G-IR/IEA-T SZECIRCET
—-----------IN BUYING, X8 TO BUY--------------

THE BEST GOODS
FOR THE LEAST MONEY.
Kcmen;bar that we have no old, shop-worn and unaeaaonable goods, but that everything |i&gt;

cream is not to bo classified, among the
necessaries of life, and has fined n con­
fectioner ten dollars and costs for sell­
ing it on.Sunday.

3STE'W -Ausrro FRESH!
W AH our purchases are made with the cMhattd by strict atteutian to the wanu of ou
customer* we expect to rtapauceeix
r

Nashville, Apr. 20,1881
—The trade in cotton in Montgomery,

PRINDLE A. CHIPMAN.

�How nice it would be it tho editor

b»«de.

Robert Bur, i» toeli.it hie b-rt tbeover to Graodmother Hollsnd’a each
the fair, and proceed tp the grabs and
morning and bring her home nt nighL
have a jolly reunion.
One day when she had been to grandTbe brothers and siaten of tbe East­
_Mf*. Jacokeo. wife of Rev. Jacokea,
m»’a with Bessie, and returning had C*ooa—Id
reached her own gate, the cirri er-boy
r Voxa, Satujuut Arraawbox, Barr. 30- is visiting her* brother B. Meddangh, ern Star lodge will meet on Saturday
night. They expect a good tarn out.
put the weekly paper into her land, and
and expects to be joined by her has
BASYUK, BaTcanar, Oct. Tra.
briSt^ roafnmralQrr*
aa aha went slowly iat»- the h use hei
band next Monday. They are cordially and will elect delegates to 'attend the
riira,, 'toe r.la
. ~eoAau
eyes fell upon these words, in th poet’s
A VEXED CLEGYMAN.
welcomeed back among their old time grand , chapter to be held at Hastings
friends here, where so well aud favor­ Oct. 11.
h*UM«l
Nell.
ably known.
_
ORNO STRONG.
And now, oh naughty naughty typo,
Would trouble m.r ml nd.
WiUiUiMcrlie-croea Baby?
CARLTON.
This ertss-ctom Baby J
what shall we say to thee, what an
all thia be avoided by atwply u*ing Dr. Kfasg’s
Thm fretful. Whining, paevtah, pining,
egregious blunderer you make us to
Grisfrcsuss Babrl
Corn ia (shockingly) fine.
be. You make Mrs. D. Morriaonr Mrs.
Jim Friend has a new top carriege.
TUB COl'STt.
M. M. Tersman you spell with an L.,
Mrs. Center Blood is dangerously ill.
“ROUGH ON RATS.'*
make Miss Grace a Mrs. and ignore the
Riley Smith baa moved to Isabella
Tbc thing (h-idretl found st last. Ask Drug­
Fair October ?d, 4th. 3th and 6th.
, sobbing, sighing!
tit lor “Rough oo Rati ”
It clear* out rat*’
fact that the rite of baptism was ad­ county.
.
Sisson &amp; Leach have opened a gro­
ministered to the Misses Bro*n. Come
Mahlon Center and C. Burton started
cery at Freeport.
over and lets settle.
for
Dakota
last
Monday.
Barry county took a fair share of
Ilk of our brief trouNed life ben-.
Van.
M. P. Fuller is sowing his wheat the
state ftdr premiums.
You fretful, whining. peevish, pining.
second time on account of the dry
CrWcroM Baby I
'
' IXFOBTArr TO TRA VELltafc,
That sorrow can never set right.
Adrian Watkins, of Rutland, raised
BISMARK.
-Boston TraiucrtpC.
*1 inducements are offered mu by tbe
weather.
853 beans on one stalk.
Wc have careful tbourbta for the itnnrtt,
ton Route, It will tmy mu to n-wftheir
John Blood had hia hand cut quite
A ..1 .&gt;•» I I... ....
.............
.
uanente to be found elsewhere lu this
An epidemic affecting bead, throat,
Whew, how chilly.
“OUR OWN.”
badly by the band cutter while feeding
Tbe bitter tone.
and lungs, has quite a hold of Barry.
Hear we are again.
••Linar’ “Goaway." "Say, Linar’
a threshing machine.
J. P. C.
When was a man ever weak that that the de­
N. Conklin, of Lacey, has built a silo - Good heal tli is ours.
“ Rob, go away, I want to read." "So
vil did not charge down up in him.
Ah! brow with look of acorn;
and will turn two acres of com to en­
Foliage begins to fade.
doL Can't you lend me your book?”
EATON COUNTY.
•Twerv a cruel fate
‘"fflUNNY’MENr"
silage.
“No, I can’t. Stop your noise.” “I
Wes Fay is a pensioner.
Were the nighi too late
Wells’ Health Rcnewer. Ahaolate cure for
know
you
can
’
t
stop
my
noise.
You
Editor Graves, of Hastings, has been
Wheat sowing continueth.
nervous debility and weakness of the. genera­
Eaton Rapids union fair Oct. 10-18.
told the truth that time. I'll keepotill . “ A cruel fate, indeed,” thought Lina, tive
Frost and a freeze Saturday night.
held for trial for circulating printed
functions/
&lt;1. at druggist*. Mich. Depot
Hoythaa opened a hotel at Hoyt­ if you’ll play checkers with me." "I sadly, as she carefully cut the verses JAMES E. PAVIA
A CO-, Detroit. Mich.
obscenity.
,
Corn stalks were leftSaturday night
want to read. I tell you. Do go coast­ from the paper and clasped them into
ville.
.
Z It is aaiiTHtetJa*:. Whitmore of. RutI feel for my coat these frosty morn­
let me
alone." "Sled’s her Bible." “If Rob should die now,
\iuhville .Ylurkeia.
Rouaea to rent are scarce in Char­ ing and
• land, lias vambosed?lcaving consider­ ings.
smashed." “ Then you might go with I Dever could forget that impatient
lotte.
able zndebtedn ess.
The frost begins to dofl its summer
A gambling house'raid is*needed at other boys on a bob-sled.” “Suppose I words were the last I ever spoke to
prefer to cultivate the society of my him. O, I wish I had been kinder to
Stone 6c Briggs, of Rutland,took first clothing.
Graud Ledge.
sweet- sister?" No answer. “Lina, him always."
Old Grimes has taken up his abode
premium on a Holstein one-year-old
John Gallery,a Democrat and pioneer my dear, it isn’t safe for you to be such,
But Rob did not die then, and one
in Vt Ville.
bull, at the state fair.
a book-worm, for fear vou will get day during his convalescence, while Onion*,perbu.
of Eaton Rapids died last Saturday.
Base ball; Lacey vs Bellevue, SaturWe are covering a good deal of
Two Brookfield hens have hatched stepped on. or some early bird will catch quietly watching Lina dust the sittings
. day; innings 5, time 38 minutes, score 3 ground this fall.
room, he said: "What is that new sonzbroods of quails this season—42 litllei you.*’
Frank Clark and wife think that can­
to 1 in Lacey’s favor.
Lina Laving re-read a single sentence of yours, Lins? I only catch a woira
“fellera” in all.
a dozen times, at least, gathered her or two about * oiir own.’” “Saucy»^ Hay. per ton.
The Irving base ball club holds the ned fruit has fallen.
D. B. Ainger, once of Charlotte, is brow into on impatient frown. "O, my!" prying boy," cried Lina, tragically,
count)* championship, but the Middle­
I shall tell you a\big story at next
vice president of Garfield memorial said Rob, "your forehead’s a regular leveling her feather duster at him. “I
writing. Watch out a “leddle.”
ville club wjll contest it soou.
HUCKLEN’8 ARNICA SALVE.
roailroad map! There’s a grand trunk won't tell vou." "O, you just wait till
monument association.
A five-year-old girl of Richard Carier
Congressman Horr will present pol­
The best salve in the world for Cuts, Bruiae*,
Mrs. Susan L. Edson, one of Presi­ line from your bangs to the bridge of I get well?’ replied Rob, insinuatingly. Son.-*, Ulw.Tr, Salt Rheum. Fever Son-*, Tet Ur,
itical issues in Horr-ible style at Hast­ fell aud broke an arm last Sunday.
Years later, Rob saw nnd read the Ckutpt^d Hands, Chilblain*. Corm, aud all
dent Garfield's physicians, visited.rel­ your nose, and ever so many branch
ings next Wednesday eveuing.
I. C. Downing will soon be number
roads and lightning express tracks.” veraes he was curious about, bat even Skin Eruptions, and posith cly cures Pile*. It
atives near Charlotte last week.
•• There! have it if you want to.” cried tnen he could nut tell why Lina had I* guaranteed to give perfect rathfactluti. or
Mrs. Aaeneth Balch of Rutland died ed among the big ones of Vermont­
Elmer Swift and Amelia Brace, of Lina, suddenly springing up and fling­ kept them so long and hummed thktu money refunded. Price 25 cent* t&gt;er box. For
--If T u..... suddenly at Lansing, Mouday of apo­ ville.
Kalamo, were married in royal style ing the book angrily at Rob. "You are so much, but he voted her the best
plexy.
Funeral at Rutland, Tuesday.
Ob, how fair this week (county fair)
the plague of my life.” •• I don't want sister a boy ever had, whether the poem
last week. A pile of presents.
SCHEDULE OF EXAMINOIATSN
The Cedar Creek Grub Eaters won yet the fare at home is no better than
had
anything
to
do
with
it
or
not.
—
Mr. and Mra. H. L. Bobiuson, of it, you know 1 don’t; here, take it," an­
back the bat and ball from 'the Lacey common.
Angie M. Alogiit^ in Congrcgalionalist.
Walton, celebrated their silver wed­ swered Rob, seizing her sleeve to pre­
। The folio* Ing places ami time* have tx-ea
dub on the 23d, by a score of 18 to 12.
Did you ever hear of a soldier serv­
vent her leaving the room, and trying
ding lately. Thirty three presents.
dcHlgustcnl by tbe Uxnl «&gt;f County Examiners
to make the book stay in her unwilling
Two “Beats the World” peaches, ing his full three years and ever get­
Pulling Csllle’s Tooth.
for bolding of public exaiuluaiioi&gt; for te*eb«r»
A raspberry stalk with ripe and green bands.
raised f»y J. W. Mead of Rutland meas­ ting a pension.
in Barry county. Tbe Secretary !* empowered
fruit and blossoms was recently pre­
"That
tooth
must
come
out,
”
saia
But
Lina,
snatching
herself
away
to grant special certiflcatc* npou satisfactory
ured!)} inches’each in circumference.
Our new saw mill is in tunc and runs
examiualion,
which are valid oulv uuUl the
sented to the Charlotte Republican.
from him, was hurrying toward the। mamma. Because, you see, it was loose,
Mrs. Roush, of the northern peninsula iwveetly. The blue dome above is its
public examination bv the board :
door when Rob with:
" Here, youi and there was a new tooth pushing right next
John
Cai
ver,
who
has
relatives
at
Saturday, Sept 23. Mlihlb-vilh-,. Staclal
but formerly of Barry, died suddeuly present covering.
l along behind IL
needn
’
t
go.
I'm
ofl,
”
vanished
with
“
Oct. 14, Nashville..
“
Bellevue, died suddenly at Lansing,
of Bright’s disease at the latter place
In a few days I shall be out among
“ It’ll hu-urt!" said Callie, with a
such haste that the slippers got left be­
Friday and Saturday, Oct. ’-7 and
Sept. 15, and was buried at Bellevue.
36. Hastings,
Regular.
last week.
the boys and then shall be able to
hind. Soon after, the outside door wasi doleful quaver.
J. H. Sayles, of Walton, raised shut with a bang, and Rob, clearing the।
Sat. Nov. 4, Pralrierille.
Special.
"Not much. I guess," answered
Mr. Clemens, 3* miles east of Lacev, hawk on to more news.
Tbe examinations will be b&lt;dh oral and writ­
"Beauty of Hebron" potatoes from a fence with a whoop and a bound, raced. mamma, cheerfully. •‘Open your mouth,
lost straw stack, sheds, and part &lt;&gt;f
The cheese factory temporarily stop­
ten, chiefly tbe Utter. Candidate* for third
■ dear,’’ and she managed to tie a strong grade certlDcatea will be examined ii. ortho­
barn. Sparks from thresher engine. ped all at once on Monday, on account square rod at tbe rate of 640 bushels to off down the street. Lina picked up her
'
linen
thread
around
the
tooth
before
graphy,
reading, writing, arithmetic, geogra­
book,
and
putting
aside
the
feeling
of
tiie acre.
About £109 damage.
of tbe bursting of the boiler.
phy. grammar, spelling, U. 8. history ami civil
Wilts Messinger raised some beauti­ late repentance that came over her as। Callie shut her mouth, again, tight.
government
W. S. Atkins, of Morgan, rowed a
Martin Harris has bought back the
“1 ca-an/ have it pulled!” said she.
Rob disappeared, read on without inter­.
For
second
grade thca&lt;idltional rcqulrqncnts
boat down to Quimby, three or four Devil’s half acre on the corner, and is ful white potatoes about seven inches ruption until her mother entered and[
"Very well," said mamma, vexed a will be elementary algebra, physiology aud
weeks ago, blistering one hand a little. moving tbe building to suit his own long this season, known as the "Bur­ said: "Lina, I wish vou would go&gt; little. " you must keep the string around physical geography.
bank Seedling.’’
For first grade, general htetorv and natural
down street and get half a dozen more। it until you can."
He has carried it in a sling a good share convenience.
Then Callie's trials began. Papa was philosophy.
The neighborhood pencil pushers foi buttons like this one. I can finish Bes­.
- of the titne since os it is much swelled
W RITIST.
Experience and success In teaching will be
the Charlotte Republican made each sie’s cloak to-night if I have them."' going over to the village, and he said important factors bi determining tbe quallflcaand very sore.
ether's acquaintance at the Republican "Well. I suppose I must,” answeredI ZWlhc might go with him. But how Uona of teachers, especially of the candidate*
MAPLE GROVE.
In the United States Court at Grand
Lina, reluctantly, running the remain­. Wuld she, with that awful string hang- for the highergrades*ofcertificates. Candidates
office this week.
Rapids, Wednesday, Francis Graves,
for third grade certificate* must pass 70 per
ing leaves of her book under her thumbt &amp;g out of her mouth?
Mrs.
Nice
wander
is
sick.
Waldron's Mambnno, Middleton’s regretfully.
editor of the Hastings Plaindealer, was
"Maybe I can pull iL now,” said cent of tbe questions asked, for the second
grade SO, and for the first grade 90 per cent
The Dunham school closed last Fri­ Hambletonian, Lizzie G., and ottier
convicted of sending obscene matter
will be required.
It waa a long walk and Lira was gone( Callie.- “Count ten, mamma.”
"One-two-three-four - live-six - seven.
Eaton Rapids trotters, are being fitted some time, but when she returned and
Tbe board will only examine the papers of
through the mails. In consideration of day.
such as desire certificates.
Fred Shoup has the frame of bis new for the various county fair races.
was hurrying to the sewing-room with1 eight-nine-t-c-n,” counted mamma, with
tbe fact that Graves was old. penniless
T. B. DIAMOND, Chairman.
E. B. Green with Clydesdale homes, the buttons, she was hailed from the. long pauses.
CLARK B. HALL.
and g»f impaired intellect, he was re­ house up.
“
Oh.
I
can
’
t!
”
cried
Callie.
Mart. Cummins plastered his house L. C. Nelson with fine-wool sheep, and library and entering saw a little whiteleased on suspended sentence.
And she didn't; and papa went to the
robed figure with green leaves clinging,
last week.
A. H. Willard with five trotting horses,
NOTICE.
to it, and scattered about it in great pro­; village without her.
Mr. and Mrs. McKea spent Sunday in were among the representatives of fusion.
WEST SUNFIELD.
It was almost Fourth of July, and
Woodlaod. 8ept. 37th. 1883.
। there was to be a picnic in the grove,
To whom Ii may concern.—I hereby warn
Eaton county at the state fair.
Charlotte.
_
"Why, Bessie! You haven't picked
Oh! dear.
Mrs. Wilcox has gone to Indiana for
An Eaten county man claims to have these leaves off the plants have you?"1 and Nannie Slater said her mother was you not to ttual or harbor any of mv family at
my expeotc. As 1 shall pav no debts of
Hear the crickets.
a pumpkin viue iu the garden 150 feet cried Lina in dismay, seeing the row of, going to make currant-pies; Callie their contraction from date hereof.
a three weeks visit.
' likcu currant-pies above everything
Pathick Cvxxixoham.
How they disturb our rest.
feet
long anil growing thereon are naked geranium stalks in the window.
Uncle Norton and Elmer Shaffer
else, to eat.
Good weather for Antuni labor.
seventeen pumpkins, the largest of "I’se tne babes in the woo ls." replied
have traded horses.
NOTICE.
“ But you can't go to the picnic with
(he little one, gravely. "Iwosmos1
Corn ought to be in the shock now.
Clarence Smith has returned from a which is 43 inches in circumference
Wukkz«4, My wife. Birdie Boganlns, has
that string.” said mamma.
love red up when you tame, now I—”
Keeping late hours wears a man out. six years stay out west.
and the smallest 24 inches.
So, one day, Caljie went out on the left my bed and board without Ju»l cause or
•• But what are you here all alone for’’’
this is to warn all persons from
County fair* are row iu full Idossom.
Among the jurors drawn for the
door-step and sat down to think it over. provocation,
Lymau Hodge will reopen the black­
luirlMjring or trusting her on my account as I
interrupted Lina, for it was something
Mr. Burry has relatives visiting him smith shop at Shoupburg.
term of Eaton county court lommenc- unusual for the little mischief of the■ Joe w» splitting wood in the yard. Joe shall pay no debts of her c&gt; &gt;ntractiug after thia
date.
ing OiT. 17, are M. H. Bradley, Porter household to be left to her own sweet' was papa’s chore-boy.
from Wisconsin.
The donation at Elder Gillespie's
" I’ll tell you how’to pull it,” said beDated, Sunfield, Sept. 29,1883.
Mrs. J. King returns from the west was largely attended.
2-7.
Hkxky 8. Bogakdus.
Receipts about Barnes, Kalamo ; Samuel Helms, Rol­ wilL "And what in the world are you
“How?" asked Callie.
improved in health.
and ; John Bosworth, Sunfield ; O. P. lied for?” added Lina, discovering ak
" Hitch it to tbe door-knob and then
•15.
cord connecting baby to a bracket on
Charley Sackett and wife WoodlandFay,
Vermontville
;
Geo.'
Barney.
'
open
the
door.
”
said
Joe.
“
If
you
’
re
Cutting corn, pulling beans and dig­
the window'-frame.
“’Spots auntie’sl ’fraid’twill hurt, you needn't open it
Bellevue.
ed the first of the week.
ging potatoes is the order of the day
’faidl wun ’way," Bessie answered sol­
The Eaton Rapids Mfg. Co., organiz­
but a little.”
Andrew Kilpatrick will start for Da­ with fanners. *
emnly, after a thoughful glance at the
" Well, I will,” said Callie; and she
ed
last
week,
has
purchased
land
nnd
kota Monday of next week.
cord that bound her.' She evidently did1 lied one end of her “tooth-string” to
Mrs. Young wan quite severely in­
W. C. Fay is erecting a fine grainery. jured. recently, by the runaway of Wm will erect a factory 36x60 feet, two not quite know whether to expect'a re­
; the door-knob. But it wasn’t a mite of
stories, with a two story, 20x24 brick buke or not, but after a careful survey of
Harper and Witheral carpenters.
Wheelers colts.
: use. for when she o:&gt;ened the door she
I have opened a market
. engine house, and next season they Lina’s puzzled face she continued: "I walked right in after it.
Mr. aud Mrs. Cotton of Woodland
The cabbage worm has been making
will put up 40x40 feet more shop. Just had to tome in here, tause I made1
Joe’s eyes began to laugh.
are spending a few days in Sunfield.
sad havoc with the cabbage but the
s’muts noise, and, ’sides. Wob’s sit."
what they will manufacture, though,
West Sunfield sent a full delegation frost will fix them.
■ "I guess l’n get a drink of water.” ATTACHED TO C. SMITH'S
“Rob’s sick!” echoed Llrta.
“Yes,
does uot'yet appear.
said he. He went in. and pretty soon
&lt;&gt;f her best to the county fair at Char­
GROCERY
lawn time ado, mute week, seems me.
The place to get peaches is about a
he wanted to come out again.
George Bidewell, of Brookfield, has
lotte.
men brought him home all white.” and
mile west of Hanchett's mill. A man
“Go e-easv! o-vh!” screamed Collie.
experiuiented with potatoes till he has Bessie’s eyes grow wide and frightened,
atul intend to keep a
Rev. D. Morrison was absent a few there has 200 bushels.
,
.
............. ................... - ’ huviv 1/nn ow MUSlieiM.
But Joe didn’t go a bit easy. He
days last xvm
-L- attending
~ tbe d
-.-i...
week
PresbyMeedamea Kline and Moffet have produced what he calls the "Bidewell at the remembrance.
banged the door open so quick tlint CaiSeedling,” three yearn from the seed.
Just then. Aunt Nan. passing* the lie couldn't keep up with it. Aud there
been enjoying a visit with their mother
door
on
her
way
up-stairs,
paused,
and
They
are
of
a
reddish
cast,
grow
rather
1
hung
her tooth on the door-knob.
Mrs. C. Bennett, is still in a critical Mrs. Warren of Middleville.
long and of good size and flavor. From said in a relieved tone of voice: “t’m1
-condition, but kindly cared for by her
“ What made you?" she demanded,
Mrs. A. S. Quick has been enjoying a
glad you’ve come to look out for Bessie.
four
potatoes
he
raised
thia
season
be
­
,
and
she
sat down to cry about it. But
friends.
She was in the way so. I had to tie her when ahe found It didnrt bleed the leas',
visit from
ner neice, «r*.
Mrs. varrte
Carrie ShelShel- tween seven and eight bushels.
TLaw. win 1
■
vuul
ir,HU ner
Also everything pertaining to a fint-clattf.
1 here will be no rerv^es at either hr, of Battle Creek.
On Wednesday
there while we were all busy with Rob."
Mra.
W.
H.-Thornton,
of
Grand
mite,
nor
hurt any, she began to laugh
market.
the
te Presbyterian ot U.
IT B.
n church
,.i.......i. next ..
.
. ..
* _ J
"What’s happened to Rob. auntie?"
they returned from a visit to friends nt Ledge while in bed had a scrimage
Lina at last found voice to say: "He instead.
Sunday.
Grand Ledge and Lansing, aud im­ with a burglar, who got away with her got a blow on the head. A bob-sled ran
aAnyway, now I can go to the picnic
Good Coodsand Full Weight
No aervicT at the Presbyterian church
mediately departed for Decatur, trav­ husband's pants and $8; and Mr. into a truck wagon." and staying for no an^havfi some currant-pie," ahe said.
next Sabbath, Communion service at
' “and that’s one comfort.”—JouZAP
eling, iu both instances by buggy.
Give me a tried.
Thornton, who lay beside her, alept more words Aunt Nan harried softly Companion.
Sebewa.
up-stairs,
and
Lina,
mechanically
re
­
L. E. Ph ant, Jr.
through tlie whole fracas, just as
Oar cheese factory rested last Tues­
though be livin’t sworn to "love, cher­ leasing Bessie, seated herself in a low
D. Im. IH RFEE.
day, on account of a break down in
—Mr. Mackay, tho millionaire, was
rocker with the child in her lap.
.
ish, and protect.'’ But such is life.
WOODLAND.
the machinery.
"Why don’t you say somefint?" mentioned in a story that went the
Garry Fox, late county clerk, was
rounds of the press some weeks ago as a
We feel about now that “man’s in­
foolish enough to write a sassy letter to whispered the little one,'after ahe had
Wesley Myers is do better.
AdniinhilratorM Naic.
nestled her head down ou Lina’s very ungrateful man. The gist of the
humanity to man, makes countless
o matter of I be eaute of
Plenty of thieving going on nowa­ the Eaton Rapids Journal becauaeitcp- shoulder and been quiet for some time. story waa that an old fellow who had
UEORUE GILLIS, DMrnsrf.
thousands mourn."
days.
poaed his re-nomination, accusing Receiving no answer, anil connecting befriended Mackay, the boy, is now a’
Mrs. Schuyler Weeks is again enroll­
Jack Frost visited us last Saturday the editor of taking an "unmanly, un
her sister's silence and strange ex­ lowed by Mackay,' the man, to end hia
ed ou the sick list, and her friends night.
daya
in
the
Ulster
County
(New
York)
generous and vindictive” way. By this pression with, her brother's accident,
are greatly pained by it.
We are to have the aisle* of our time Mr. Fox has found ftom the the little creature set about admin­ alms-house. Mr. Mackay rises to say
Mrs. Giles Gaylord, of Vt. Ville, church carpeted.
She that he never saw or heard ot the alms­
editor’s public reply how mistaken was istering comfort in her own way.
mode no more direct remarks to Lina, house person, never was in Shankaden.
smiled down upon parents and friends
The Advance takes the lead ou all Ina opinion and how foolish his letter.
but, as if talking solely for her own i as the story has it. and never wm
Twas well he was Dot renominated.
in this burg. Tuesday last.
When about
separators tins fall.
The Union Democrat and Green­ benefit, said, in a slow, 'dreamy under­ helped to an education.
John Childs, formerly a W. S. boy,
Potatoes and corn are good crops,
tone: "Use been up-stairs; Wob spote twenty-one years of age he found him­
bnt now of Wyoming, is nursing a and farmers are harvesting the same. back convention for Eaton county ipet to me once, he did; be smiled wite at self an uneducated youth al work as a
in Charlotte on Tuesday.
IL ' D.
broken leg, caused by a home falling
Our band boys are getting up a nice1 Wheaton, of Charlotte, Democrat, was me, and said: *HaHoo, puss.’ same’s he laborer in the mines of Sierra County,
&gt;a.tw vithr- V? N»»hvilla.
always does. 1 dess he’s Jetting better. California, and since then hia daya have
with him.
band wagon.
People can come to
'BI-RT Bk GRJW^^AdrUalatretoc.
elected chairman, aud G. Homer Jones,
been pawed on the Pacific Coast—ChiSteve Perkins and Will Shaffer come Woodland if they want good music.
cage Times.
of Grand Ixslge, secretary. Nomina­
After
pausing'to
observe
tho
effect
of
ta the front now, with beaming coun­
The man who took the lines and tions were made as follows: Sheriff,
SS&lt;M» Steward:
this soliloquy upon Lins, she added:
—William Gaylord Gordon, aged lift
tenances, all on account of that addi- bridle from Jerome Waite’s barn is
WE win pa; Uw . bm*
J for My c«w «.
Charles Ells; clerk, Wm. E. Sterling; •* Yes, I really lint he mus' be dotting died recently near Mount Gilead, U Dwcca&gt;pai
nt.4;»MMi*.M«k tw*l«U.
requested to return them as soon a* he register, G. Homer Jones; tres on ver, better.” But the quiet of the house, ana He was a confirmed slave to tobacco, “®«ur cMUvencxi w« maant cw*a
We have been requested to call the can make it convenient.
wl’h Wm:1. V^uUi LivsWSla. «k»t&gt; lbs Wwthe lulling motion of the rockor proved
J. E. Smith ; prosecuting attorney, C.
which habit no doubt hastened his death
tl&lt; as are atrlcUv aumnl)a&lt;l wltti. Thrv ar* wet*
attention of some of our fanners to the
There is a bridge south of Woodland ir^nerA circuit court commiMrioners, too much for Bessie, and her comfort­
Ver-tablr. an,1 r./v&gt;r JaU U. &lt;*•** M&amp;foUw tofact that it is against the law to allow Center that is in dangerous condition.
slter I »&gt;wrra, J. I. Corbin ; coroners, ing assurances grew fainter and less fruqitant, til! al last the white lids were shut I
—Tbe quarrying interest &gt; EjX T«*
If the township has a horse to pay for J- F. LsteH' W. W. Miller. Judge
tight and she was fast asleep.
Henry
A.
Shaw,
of
Eaton
Rapids,
ad
­
netsce itas doubled wilhir the la ’&lt;,«’)
The ladies aid society will meet with they will lean to repair such bridges.
dressed tbe convention.

iuns him, aod he 1. ".bowioe op" Mich.

VICINITY LOCALS.

New Meat Market

SALT and FRESH MEATS

�■msAnnn,
rhioh

* pocketbook

u»Uph«!eofp», .nd Jut*,pooafulrf Idrink.

little, his good resolution let* up; he
ing the debate
gard m thw ma
the session takes just one more mouthful of pie.
and which brou
&lt;tf tbair
,
_
__
___
The hou«c is a little larger than our which they all declare to be delicious,
They used to My when a man was in
Bepreseetative Chamber in Borton, not then another spoonful of ice cream;
an ill humor that he “had his back up.”
quite so well proportioned, I thought, well, in short, he repeats for tbe thou­
Now they remark that he is "on Lis
OUR M ASkf iiitvTv?-. .LETTER.
bat arranged on the same plan, as I sandth time an excess, suffer?, and so
ear.” This is a great and needed inisuppose are most such houses in the goes on for months and years.
This ntruggle of the dyspeptic always
world, the House of Commomt being the
Washikgton, D. C„ Heit. 16,1882. great exception. The seats rise boldly seems to me mo«t pitiful. Eating was
Eighteen women met together at.
The farco of the trial of the Star from the level of the floor in the designed by the Good Creator to afford
a
real, unmixed pleasure. It hi sad to
They are all of red
Whitewater, Wis., and prayed for raja Route defendants is practically at an amphitheater.
and when tbe rain descended seven­ end for the present, and most likely for velvet, except the Ministerial chair, see it changed into a bitter fight between
appetite and conscience. Besides, thia
which
is
the"
front
bench
right
of
the
teen of them screamed t&gt;ecause they all time. The milk and water policy of
Speaker, and is of dark-blue. They con­ earnest effort of tho will breaks in upon
• had no umbrellas.
tbe present administration is the only stantly allude to el banco azul.
All the the pleasant flow and harmony of na­
cause for allowing the prosecution to Mini-stars were present yesterday, Ss- ture, and disturbs digestion. The whole
Arabi Bey had a lot of sympathy in
languish into final failure. Miner and gosta at their head. Martinez and Sa- trouble grows out of a lack of common
this country until he got licked. Every­
sense in the management of our meals.
both spoke.
.
Rerdell, the tools of Brady and the
body now says that be was a cantank­
What sense, I should like to ask, is
There is a tribune for speakers, as in
Dorseys’, were convicted, while tbe
France, in front of the President.
But there in this: Suppose a drunkard finds
erous rebel who ought to Drive been
chief directors of the conspiracy, which
while everyone uses it In France no one himself too weak to resist temptation,
clubbed on the start.
the Government counsel however fail; chose to use it here.
The speakers and he persists in keeping right before
A woman who feels that she most ed to prove, are left virtually free. The stood in thpir seats, exactly as in our him the most delicious liqudra, in placing
pinch her waist, pad her hips, cramp verdict, or the failure of a verdict, is Legislature. There are large and ele­ right under his nose, several times a
day. just that brandy which he never
her feet, paint her face and wear false simply a reflection of the sentiment of gant lobbies and refreshment rooms all
around the house, and it is clear enough found himself strong enough to resist
hair to secure admirers, will find her- those who bask in the power of the that usually these may have os many What an idiot! we all should exclaim.
Isef no whept—besides a rirofis street government. It was safe to refuse to members in them as the ebamber. But Not only Miss Ophelia, but every one
convict; it would offend none in as I have said, it was not so yesterday. with five grains of common sense would
parade.
authority; it would assure the hearty
The subject of discussion was the in­ cry out, “Why don’t the fool keep away
The N
11 Ntateainnn has changed commendations of every administra­ troduction of the Jury into their system from it?” .
For one man who is spoiled with drink,
its form from a nine column folio to tion organ, and the Dorseys’ and Brady of jurisprudence. Four or five times
tho popular six column quarto style. are practically free, because the gov­ has the jury been tried in Spanish juris­ a hundred ore spoiled with pie, cake
and
other similar trash. I join this
prudence
since
1872,
and
ns
often
Tbe change is a decided improve­ ernment was ready to tolerate the de»
common-seuffe party, and ask why they
ment, and the Statesman is more in­ feat of the law. As far back as Feb­ thrown out again, in one or other reac­ don’t keep away? Take, for example’,
tion. It seems to be agreed on all
teresting than ever.
ruary 14th, I predicted this signal fail­ hands that the present Government the ordinary American family, consist­
ure in my letter to your paper. The party, or at least that part of. it known ing, say, of half a dozen persons. NineA Chicago girl of 18 is exposed ns a
government counsel possessed moun­ as theConstitutionals, had declared jury ten ths of the dyspeptics of this country
professional burglar.
Instructed in
live in such families. Of these persons,
tains of evidence to convict, these men, trials to be one of their demands before
crima by an old woman, ahe entered
constituting a largo part of the popula­
yet it is now an uncontradicted fact they were in power. Now they are in tion. not one in ten has a perfect stom­
some house nearly every night, and the
they ore keeping their pledge by a re­
that one Bowen, special agent of the
arrangement of tho whole judicial sys­ ach. Now, I ask. can’t these poople
booty recovered bad l»cen taken from
Department of Justice, Inis approached tem, and they declare with preat earn­ shun this sweetmeat and pastry tempta­
numerous different places.
the foreman of tbe jury with offers to . estness that jury trial is to bo a part of tion? Nothing is simpler and easier:
Revolt ing incident* froHi • Ireland— bribe.
An connection with .these this scheme. Tho bill which the Gov­ and I will mid that fow duties are morr
sacred nnd imperative.
how often the cable fiends them to us. charges gentlemen conversant with the ernment supports has been reported by
The time will soon come when intelli­
Now we hearofprocesA-HervcrRhoOhng recent management of the Department a commission, has passed the Senate, gent mothers will no more think of pro­
aqd for two or three days has been be­
a woman who “refaaed the seizure of of Justice say that Brewster is very nu- fore the House. At.this juncture, as I viding such stuff for their children, than
her cattle”—by which is meant, we popnlar in the office, not less for bis understand tho matter, the leaders of they would prepare whisky slings for
Mippooe,'the seizure of her pig or cow ivsthetic affectations and vanity than the “Democratic-Monarchic” party, one them.
Just now, we feel about these things
for bis bad law. His unfortunate per­ of the largest sections of the opposition, .
for rent.
»
• •
sonal failing moreover, have interfered finding that there were members of the as people used to feel about. whisky.
A Delewaro woman, in scratching a
“Liberal-Dynasty,”, or
Government Nothing mortified a good deacon more
sadly with the execution of his duties.
party, who thought tho bill did not go than to be eaught with no whisky in the
match on her shoe, set her clothing
Another grievance is that since he
house. What, no whisky? If, when the
on fire aud was fatally burned. This came into office he has surrounded far enough, really hoped to make a
breach in that strong body on this ques­ minister called, our good deacon could
is a strong argument why women
himself with a gioupof personal friends tion. Senor Linarez Rivas introduced, not set out a decanter before him be was
should wear pants. Until they can
and sycophants who play upon his as an amendment, a more ont-and-out poor indeed! ■
•cratch matches on their hip they’ll
And now, when entertaining friends
foibles nnd thus secure a power alto­ bill. The speaking on Friday had de­
at your table, if you can’t close the
never be safe.
gether beyond their places and deserts. veloped the fact that there was some dinner with pudding and pie, or
little uncertainty in the Government
In a Deadwood church the other day There are attached fo the Department camp,’and yesterday, therefore, became if you can’t present them nt the sup­
the large congregation were devoutly of Justice two permanent special agents a field-day in which everybody of note per-table with preserves, cake, strong
kneeling in prayer, when an irrever­ at a salary of *10 and $8 a day. whose took occasion to define his position, not tea and half a dozen other indigestible
things, you feel it is “real mean. What!
ent joker quite audibly whispered.- duties are to examine cases of irregu­ so much in regard to jury trial as in re­
gard to everything else in tbe political nothing but roast beef, potatoes and
"Here comes an eastern detective.” In larity in marshals'offices, aud other de­
bread for dinner; and nothing but a plain
history of the last twenty years.
tective
work
of
that
sort.
The'Attor
­
t7 seconds all of the congregation ex­
Sagasta, who is a very wise and very sandwich for supper,”—Dto Lewis, in
cept the chief elder had slid through ney General has made bis nephew, eloquent mah, closed with one of his GoUten Huie.
Brewster Cameron, the Chief Special bravo and spirited speeches, and carried
the window.
.
Agent, nnd Tidball is the $8 n*siBt4ft.
Coal Mining With Lime.
thef house with him triumphantly. ThoAn Indianapolis girl, forbidden by Special agents for special duty can al­ scission, if there hod been any, was
At last there appears a possibility that
her parents to marry tho man of ‘her so be appointed, aud it is one of these quite too small to bo important, and the the terrible loss of life which annually
choice, pretended to be consoled by the temporary commissions which the now other parties in opposition had no care occurs in these isles through mining ac­
promise of a grand birthday party. notorious Bowen bolds. Tho Depart­ to play into the hands of the “Demo­ cidents will soon be sensibly reduced.
cratic-Monarchists.” It was, therefore, At the present meeting of the Iron and
When all the guests were assembled ment of Justice is showing sifobbish
a brilliant debate and nothing more.
Steel Institute, Mr. Mosley read a long
on that occasion she walked iu on the
loftiness of virtue which is not war­
What interested me most, us a stran­ ami instructive paper on a new methotl
arm of her.lover, who had within the ranted by tbe circumstances. This is ger, was the real dignity and decorum
of winning coal. The principal feature
hour been made her husband by a perhaps due to the fact that thia de­ of the whole scone in the midst of tho is that cartridges containing lime in a
clergyman round the corner.
partment, like all others, is just now excitement, often intense, of people of highly caustic condition are employed
under the curse of absenteeism. Law­ a southern race, to whom the whole insteail of explosives. After one of these
“Suffering sister-!” exclaimed the
business is still experimental.
They has been rammed down tightly to the
yers are surprised that the Attorney
cry, *• H&lt;&gt;ar, hear," as in England; they bottom of the shot-hole and “ tamped.”
speaker, energetically shaking tiie hair­
General should .stay away at a time cry, “Very well,” “Good,” and in
water is injected into the cartridges by
pins from her head in her excitement,
like this, when the purity of bis office other ways applaud. You hear occa­ means of a small foree-pump and hose,
•‘women will never obtain their rights
is attacked by definite charges made sional hisses, but I was not sure but an&lt;l a rapid generation of steam then
until they display more courage. Let
these camo from the gallery.
The takes place, gradually renting asunder
by responsible parties.
me say to you, in the words of French
It is said that upon the return of the speaking' was too personal, and the the coal in all directions, ami. iu short
orator,‘Courage! courage! courage!”
President, a fine old Roman, held -hem performing all the duties of gunpowder
President to the Capital that there will
up quite clooely when this happened. or* dynamite. It is too early as yet -to
At this stage of the proceeding some­
be "a new deal a roti nd the City Hall ;” But all this was still dignified. No man say whether this process will prove
body threw a box of catterpillars upon
that the Marshal nnd the deputies, will looked at a newspaper or pretended to 1 applicable in all cases. Whefi lately tried
the platform, and the meeting broke up
be requested to step down and out. It read. Every man sat as if he were, list­ at tho Shipley collieries it more than
in great confusion.
is said that the princinal object of ening. When, on the report of a ‘ dis­ answered expectations, having worked
110 tons more coal in 100 hours less time
There are wrongfullncwi aud negli­ .Attorney General Brewster’s visit east tinguished speaker, the lobbies emptied
themselves and a hundred men filled than the wedge method did In the next
gence in the management of every one was to consult the President on the re­ the vacant spaces to the right and left
••stall.” Commercially, therefore, its
of these banking and other concerns moval of the officers above refcrprtl lo. of the chair, no man presumed to cross success seems to be demonstrated under
that are plundered by their clerks. It is said that Mr. Bliss stated before to his own seat, if thus he would have ' the conditions which exist at the Shipley
Now we have a dispatch from Phila- leaving the city last Saturday night, to puss between the President and the pits. It is further claimed for this in­
orator. If yqp saw any one in that vention, apparently on good grounds,
adelpliia that the insurance company that tho present Marshal and his depu
of North America has been defrauded tics would have to give way for otliers. range you were sure it was nne of the that it gives Absolute immunity from
pages or other officers of the house.
gas explosion, as no tiro or Ihune is
of $35,000 by its transfer clerk. But the There can be no doubt but that there
They al! spo’ak.with perfect ease, no generated; that it does not create any
transfer, clerk would not have carried is a strong pressure being brought to man with any scrap of paper iu his smoke or noxious odor; that unskilled
on his operations iflthe chief officers had bear on the President to clean out hand. Tho hall is not bad for the voice, labor can work it, an&lt;l that the men en­
■ done their business in a proper way, the present officers around the City and one can hear any speaker easily in gaged always have plenty of lime to get
the gallery.
They claim the floor, as I away before tin c-»;d begins to fitd.
and had vigilantly watched it.
Hall.
The heads of most of our Depart­ tliink they do in France, in advance, so Should only a portion of these preten­
that the President has a little list of men sions be established, cohl winning by
Arabi Pasha, now a captive, is suffer­
ments are now away on “tours of in­ who wish to speak, and, from time to
lime will assuredly replace all other
ing the usual penalty of failure. From
spection” and the lower grade of em­ time, he tells who they are. L fancy methods.—London ‘Globe.
being looked upon by some of iris fol­
ployes arc left to themselves to uiiunge there is :i rule prohibiting men from
lowers as the Washington of Egypt, or
as best they can. Many have 'gone speaking more than once, fori observed
Ancient Paper Currency.
a
her Simon Bolivar, he suddenly shrinks
home to vote but there are however almost every one s|&gt;oke “ in explana­
iu their estimation, to the proportions
The oldest bank notes are the “ flying
enough left to make up a good sized tion,” or “ for correction.” or “ justi­ monev” or “convenient money.” ’first
fying himself personally.”
' .
of a pestilent ad ,’enturer, who has been
city.
The number is about A),000.
The House is composed of men most issued in China 2697 B. C. Original'y
plunging his country in misery, aud
This is exclusive of the Capitola city
tlieie notes were issued by the treasury,
causing it to revolt against the good Post Office and District government of whom are much younger than mpst but experience dictated a change to tie
of our National representatives or else
Khedive and the wise Sultan. The
offices. This body of government em­ men’s hair stays on their -heads here synteiu of bonks under Government in­
various beys and pashax who had been ployes forms not only a large share but longer than in ’America. They looked spection and control. The early Chinese
profuse in their admiration for him,
•• greenbaoka” . were in all p.sseutially
a very intelligent and agreeable ele­ as young as does our Massachusetts
House; another point of the strong re- .similar to the modern bank Doles, bear­
hastened to transfer it Wolseley, wb^n
ment of the population of Washington. semblajjco I noticed between these two ing the name of tho bank, the date ot
the latter arrived in Cairo, and in a few
A large proportion of them are people bodies. I regard t he ( habits and the issue, the number of tho note, the signa­
hours Arabi's greatness was gone.
of thought, education and refinement oratory of oar House' as of the very ture of the official ireuing it, indications
’ ./
Tbe North Star,a New Bedford whal­ and their presence would be an ac­ best, »o that in this comparison I am of its value in figures, in words and in
Tbe re­ expressing my high appreciation of my the pictorial representation of coins or
er, has suffered a fate like the Jean­ quisition to any community.
heaps of coin erjual iu amount to its face
new friend- here.
.
nette’s, 'being crushed by the ice of tbe muneration of the employes in the de­
It is impossible to see what this Gov- ।| value, and a-notice of the pains and pen­
,
Artic aixmt a dozen miles from Point partments varies sonreyhat, but gener­ ernment has done and is trying to do I cities for counterfeiting.
Over and
ally
the
salaries
range
from
$900
to
$2,
above
all was a laconic exhortation tolnBarrow, where the signal station is es­
without conceiving a very high respect :
tablished. The lot of this vessel is a I 000 for clerical work, the latter being for its leaders, and without great «ym- i dustry and thrift—■••Produce all you can;
U»rd oiH-.for it -Mike North Star that given to those who occupy responsible • pathy for them and hope for their ine- ■ spend with economy.’’ Tho notes were
printed in blue ink on paper made from
by nndt exorlion, Hx.k ott lire crow of or particularly important poaitions.and cess. They are trying to straighten out ; the fibre of tbe ttmlberry tree. One is­
their finances, really to improve juris- i
tbeBodp.na and transferred them to I tbe first generally to copyists, a great
prudence, and to carry Spain funvard ' sued in 1899 is preserved in the Asiatic
The latter
rU-! Corwin. The story of the journey many of whom are ladies.
a? fast as they can. The difficulties are Museum at St. Petersburg.
tbe wrecked whalers over the ice- are hard worked and they work well enormous, but the pluck and spirit of
W* to Point Barrow, now dragging and receive tbe smallest remuneration, those who have tho problems in hand _ —Several planters living in tbe ovarbut the wolf is hept from the door of are tnily admirable.—Maoris Oor. Dos- flowed district of Terrebonne, La-, have
•old their mules and will not attempt to
runny a family by their earnest enI cultivate their lands until there is a cer­
tainty of the levees being rebuilt and
to families of wealth, bat re­
after the woman their widower papa

kou-beartetl wive*, and tilling up the

pc rate clau of wife-wbippera and
criminals in general.
•

Tima.

I-,’, an old Himtheni e«

You cun fill th« flask with, anythii.-g
and he’ll never know the difference.
I
When I reach ed Macon 1 arranged
for a call on the Colonel. I bought u .
nt,.* «„_1.
.1___ __ __
i . ■ • .-1

PRINCIPAL* LINE

to Boothe a More heel. I didn’t nakhim
what it wan. but a sniff or two convitiTbe BHOBTE8T. QUICKEST tad
ced me that Rwoet oil and tar formed the And
greater portion. With tin- bottle in po^u u------ my pocket I entered the Colonel’* offlee nnd told him who I was aud what I i ®», Xe* Mexico, Aruona.,
wanted.
txa&gt; tod Tcxm._________
5
»,ir ■
!° *ce you—«ii
down, he replied,,and as soon aa lie
sealed Ina lettern h£ turned and began :
“So you want to know what we can |
raise here, do you ! Well, my troy, you
can mv everything-everything. We
raiRO wheat, corn, oata, potatoeri vams
and------ ”
Just then he looked over to the wnter-cooler nnd I putin with—
.
“Say, Colonel, have a drop of some­
thing good put up by the best house
here,”
“Thunks—that’s just what I was
hankering after!” he replied as he held
onUlria hand for the flank.
How I got out of there alive I can’t
Cad trsvcila*
rememlror, nnr can I recollect what be­
XOf/TSu. luxcry, lar^a
came of the bottle, but there is a whole
newspaper staff in Atlanta who may
look upon themselvea aa doomed men.
The Colonel took .his quart daily, and
it was a put-up job to get hold of my
'
“s ete.. cheerfully given by
dead body for a new medical college tit
T. I. HHTER.
---------------------PERCEVAL LOWELL
SavMinafi.—Free Press.

KANSAS CITY

Etiquette.

The Hon. VV. J. Hendricks, of Frank­
fort, Ky., once undertook to jrive a les­
son in politeness, and this, according
to his story was the result. He was sit­
ting in his office one day. when bis col­
ored office boy entered with his bat oh
and singing, “Dar’s one mo’ ribber to
cross.” Mr. Hendnek’s was impressed
with the boy’s want of politeness, and
said to him : “Look hero sir, that’s no
way to enter toy office.
You need a
lesson in behavior. Now. you take a
seat in my chair, nnd act just ns though
yon were proprietor—just as I do, and
I will uo out and come in just as you
should,” whereupon be laid down his
cigar nnd went out of the door.
In a
moment he returne&lt;l, nnd there sat the
boy with his feet perched upon the tab­
le, n copy of the revised statutes of the
United States open in bis lap aud the
half-smoked cigar in his mouth, nnd his
hat cocked down -over one,eye. The
teacher of manners entered quietly
with his hat in his hand, but hud not
fairly gotten into the room, Iroforo the
darkey looked up and said : “Jack, you
«l----- &lt;1 rascal, pick up that spittoon,
clean it quick, ami then come in neah,
sail, and black my boots—doy«iu hcahf”
Jack was kicked out, but was soon reins.'.H, &lt;1.

In chronic disorders resulting from fixed bad
habit* of mind and body, the removal of the
evil, to be permanent. must be necessarily be
gradual. Although in some Instance it lit slow
Brown’s Iron Bitters are alwavs auro and nev­
er fail to restore ;&gt;erfcct health to the physical
organization. It is a complete strengthener.

Tbe maiden who dropped from a rope ladder
bankrupl huurancc company. Why! Becauxc
she was in the liands of a reedve-her.

’ DON'T WASTE MONEY.
On trashy extracts when you con buv u lasting
perfume so delightfully fragrant and refresh­
ing afi Fiorrston Cologne.
Two Boaton boys bumped heads so forcibly
that one &lt;lic«l tbe next day and tbc other was
made dangarously ill.

A BENEFICENT ACTION.
The miserable looks and feelings ot Ukmc
confined at desks or work tables, are caused by
weak Btamarh, Kidney* or Howels.
Parker's
Ginger Tonic without intoQcadng lias such a
beneficent action &lt;&gt;ij these organ* and so
cleanses the poisonous matters from the sys­
tem. that rosy cheeks and good health are soon
brought back again.—Express.

NERVOUS
DEBILITY:
ciireguarapircd.

rith ti

J.JEXR1

ROE, PRormxTox

----- OLD RELIABLE-------

MEAT MARKET.
Krv|« cou&amp;tantly on band a

dock of

Frexh and Salt Meats,

Sniaked Hams and Shouldgrs,
FRESH FISH and FOUI/TRI
IN THEIR fJEABO’’

Lnrd, by the lb. or barrel-,
tic., tie., dx.

‘

ry The Highest Market Price paid
for Hides. Pelts, &amp;c.

Frosh.Goods, Full Weights and
Satisfaction Guaranteed.

■irvitl ROE

Catarrh DIRECTIONS
Balm into ihc i.oitril

r'’'ctV c-“ «”** i

Etfs cun nu

An Atlanta negro, aged 90, lias 51 children.
He took a fourth wife the other day.
FOUND AT LAST?
An agreeable dressing for the hair, that will I
stop its falling, lias been long sought for.
Parker's Hair Balaam, distinguished for Its I
purity, fully supplies this want.

in the Head

Economy is half tbc battle of life. It la not
half so hard to earn money, as to epend it well.

• vei known. dbplacfng all o&gt;b»r preparation*.

it was an arrow escape that young Tell had
at that archery tournament so long ago.
Devote each day to the object then In hand
atKt the evening will firwl something done.

Cored without an operation or the Injury trusses
•nfllctby I&gt;r. J. A. bheinran'i Method! Office 241
H roan way New York. Ilia book with Photograph-

Ik cognized as a Wonderful Discovery.
Sold hr dnnfufau al Meta. On rvreipi of price
For the delicate and complicated difficulties will
maira jewkaip'
Xenn fru circular contain*
peculiar to female coimtitution. Lydia E. Pluk- full •uforniatiar anil reliable leatlmonUi*.
ham's Vegetable Compound U the suverign
remedy. It alms at the cause, and produce*
lasting result*. Send to 51 rv Lydia E. Pink­
ham. 3B Western Avenue, Lvnu, Mass., for
pamphlets.

RjPTURE

Kalamazoo, Mich.,'Feb. 2,18S0.
I know Bop Bittdra will bear recommendatiou boneatly. All who use them rotifer upon
them tl&gt;&lt;: higluat encomiums, ami give then*
cretilt for making cures—all the proprietors
claim for them. I have kept them since they
were first offered to the public. They took
high rank front the first, and maintained It,
and are more called for ail others combined. So
long a* they keep up their high reputation for
purity and usefulue**, I *hall continue to rec­
ommend them—Something I have never be­
fore done with any other patent medicine.
J. J. BABCOCK, M. D.

WORTH SENDING FOR.

tir. J.-H. Schenck, ofl-hlladelphis. h»« Ju»i pubIl.hed « liouk on "DlM-oiea of the Luno and how
the* can tic Cured,•• which l&gt; offered tn™, pe.tpnld
to all applicants. It eoctai»s valuable Inforn atlun
f.irallwho tupporo liicmaelvea afflicted wither
lUble to. any Jiwas- of the throat ot lunr*. AdtPJP.flt--J. »«. MTUWK a HON. 600 Arch SC.,
Btiiladrlphla, Pa r.O;Box2«34.

MASON &amp; HAMLIN

nDClUCar*,,'”rt"tnly
having bc- n~ (J«.
UnOA!lw&lt; &gt;&lt;-&lt;&lt;) nt bTcry Gnat WorM** Induc

The Qunkcrstinakc Friends of ail their con­
verts.
/

GIVEN AWAY.
We cannot help noticing tbe liberal offer made •71. |78, fSLi. S1OB, |114. tn
to all iuralixls and (uCerera by Dr. King'* New
Diiseoven- for emuamption. Yon are rcquent«1 to calf at F. T. BoIm’b «lrug store, ami get *
trial bottle free of met. If you are »utiering
with conratnjpti«n,aeven!ccnusb*, colds, asthma introducing Important Improvetnemi; aMinf to
broDchitlla, Gay few, loMofvofc-e, hoarsenees.
or any affection of the thijMl or lungs, Il will
pnailrcly cure you.

PIANGS~^V&lt;fet.?7^4£

The mind dor* not kwnr what It can ft-eduoj
until It has been brought to the starvation
point.
........ ..........................

CHARLATANSAND QUACKS
Have long plied their tocation on the suffer-

�■N. Y. Herald.

^uai .struggle with man for the survival

WatorhooM tell* »that the kangaroo

"grand
stations.

rapids division.
dm

KKK

_________ WB8T W A. RD.
. '_________ i PaeherlfxtL. [ G. R.
STATIONS.

j Ex». |I Kip

DttroH,-

GrandKapW sn-J Detroit. All trains eonueel In
—m- 4oiK&gt;tai Detroit with Grsat Western. Grand
Trank and Canada Southern B-nwava
r
BROWN
II. B. LBDTAHO.
Ate'lGen'l Bapt-Jaekson. Gvn’l Bup’t Dvtr*
uy*,oiggsaT..&gt;..

J^ROOKS, MARSHALL k CO.

-------- —Proprietors---------- -

Nashville Elevator!
Pay the highest nxsrketprice tar all kindaof

Grain and Produce,
------------ And sell—--------

cediS Feed, Lime, Salt, Planter. Stuc­
co, Hair, Pine Lumber, Luth
nnd Shingle*,

AT THE LOWEST LIVING PRICES.

Erperienced, Reliable, ani Responsible.
A. H. WINN, Dentist.
BEST SET BlZM TEETH $10.00
Teeth Extracted ^T,n,ont Fo,n-

OfflceOpen Day &amp; Evening.
A. If. Wilk 5• .
TJ A. BARBEIt, M. D.«
* [UOMCEOl’ATIHC

Physician and Surgeon.
Office first toot east of Opera House, and
near resilience on romer of Washington and
State Streets, Nashville, Mich.

£ 4. BV8H.
*

"THB BOSS­

BOOT AND SHOEMAKER,
-

NASHVILLE,

RICH.

IKEHOUBE,
Thornapple Uckc, Mich.
L. P. Cole, Proprietor.

alvo Orbing terkit, bolt

QLEMEKT SMITH,

Attorney at Law,

Attorney &amp; Counsellor,
Will BUMd to Segal beatown to any part of

JJLACK ASON,
Dvalvr la

American and Foreign Marble,
MorumcEbi, Tr.cihrfones. Mantlet, 4c..

yyiLLIAM JONES,

DENTISTS,
■HIGH ID 8HGEH SlIITiliBM.

tall m a. man. “ The fore-legs are very
short and useless in walking, but em­
ployed for digging or bringing food to
the mouth.”
What amount of green
food he and his congeners, the wallaby,
the poddvmeloD, and, tbe kangaroo rat.
are capable of consuming let those hap­
less settlers whom these voracious pests
have eaten out of their-stations, “and
ruined stock, lock and barrel,” declare
for themselves. The kangaroo loves a
hot climate, and it is in torrid.Queensland that he thrives with unparalleled
productiveness.
So countless were the
numbers of hi* swarming armies a few
year* since in tbe northern portion of
Queensland that all the large squatters
found it necessary to lay out £100 a mile
in fencing, so a* to protect their sheep
and cattle runs irpm the marsupial
pests. A small run would require fifty
miles of thia fencing, aud J a big run
three or four times that quantity, so
that a very heavy lax was thus imposed
upon the squatters.
Many who could
not face the outlay were driven out .by
the invading quadrupeds, which in
these cases had no difficulty in winning
the battle. When, however, the fence
has been finished, no slight additional
expense has to be incurred in keeping it
in repair. Tbe marsupials, big and lit­
tle, swarm along it* outward edge, and
are always on the alert to find out a
weak spot and to push their way into
the inclosed sanctuary’.
Having once
got inside, they will, if. undisturbed for
a few hours, do an incredible amount of
damage.
Hundreds of miles of good pasture
have been eaten as bare as a bone by
the unproductive consumption of these
useless brutes.
It is impossible to de­
scribe the marvelous rapidity of their
increase.
Some naturalists maintain
that it is due to the wholesale destructi a of the dingo, or native dog, by
a inch tho kangaroos are kept down, but
which is also a dangerous enemy to the
squatters’ sheen, and has, therefore, to
be got rid of by bits of flesh with a
strychnine pill introduced into them,
which are scattered about on the edges
of the runs. Every stranger who draws
near to Queensland with some big bore
guns and an unlimited amount
of
cartridges, with from one to two ounces
of B B shot in them, will find swarming
armies
of kangaroos and
wallaby
awaiting him, ana the heartiest welcome
from the squatters, whom he helps to
get rid of their worst enemy.
Kangaroo-driving, as described by a
London
contemporary, entails
far
earlier hours than the ordinary field
sports of .civalizatlon.
Breakfast at
half-past six or seven in the morning,
^d a gallop it may be of ten or twice
Un'~
to the rendezvous, will
enable the *‘.new. chum»” or stranger
from foreign lana*. to
8V&gt;ck of the
company constituting the field.
He
finds, as a rule, aboirt thirty horsemen
at the appointed ttys*, of whom half
are white meh, with
in their
handl, nnd tbe other fifteen are black
natives, mounted on capital bersre,
which they sit and manage to perfec­
tion.
Tbe beaters, with the masters of
the station to marshal and keep them in
order, are spread ofit at distances of a
quarter of a' mile from each other in a
half moon exteading over three or four
miles.
The guns are sent ahead some
six or eight miles, and take up their
station in line at points for which the
kangaroos, when started 'are accus­
tomed to make. The marksmen lie down
behind bushes or among some logs or
trees, nor have they long to wait before
the “thud," “thud” of an “old man”
kangaroo, leading tbe van of the mob
which follows him, strikes forcibly upon
the listening ear.
The usual practice of experienced
hunters i.» to allow the first few kanga­
roos to break through the line without
being shot at, and when once the lead­
ers have passed ahead nothing will de­
ter the rest from following.
Then the
deadly fusillade opens, the shot being
poured into the hindquarters of the
quarry. Three and a half drachms of
t. o-wder and an ounce and a half of
heavy shot make havoc with the game,
which keeps bounding along on each
side of the shooters until their gnns be­
come fairly too hot to hold. At last tbe
first mob is exhausted, and stillness
takes possession of the woods for a
quarter of an hour or so, broken only
by an occasional cry of a dying kanga­
roo.
Presently the second mob begins
to heave in sight, and again there is rare
work for the busy guns. At last an un­
earthly storm of shouts, screams and
yells rings through the bush, and the
blacks, cracking their stock whips,
which make a noise like tbe discharge
of a pistol, and brandishing their gaudy
red and yellow handkerchiefs, burst up­
on the view. Just ahead of the beaters
comes a straggling array of wallabies,
and it is impossible for the shooters to
thrust in their cartridges fast enough.
The sport goes on again just in the same
way for a week, at the end of which the
bag may be some 1,500 kangaroos and
about a third of that number of walla­
bies. If ever indiscriminate and whole­
sale slaughter be juidfi.-ble, it must ■ be

like pepper. The brown shell* are not
ground so fine, and «ome from the mill
fooking exactly like ground coffee. Tba
Camden factory ia said to hare been in
operation for * about a month. The
shells cost very little, aud the millihg is
doue at an expense of about 2 or 2i
cents per pound.
A representative of a loading spice
house, »n speaking of.this novel prepa­
ration, said that while his house had not
used it, he supposed it was a harmien
edulteration for spices. “We have our
own method* of adulteration," said he,
“and sell to the trade probably more
adulterated'go,?d; than pure. We can’t
help 1L There is no- pretense on our
port that the lower grades of spices are
nure. We simply sell the retailer what
bs want*. We sell them spices as low
as eight and nine cents, but it is about
as much something else as it is pepper.
It would ruin the trade to prohibit adul­
teration, aud, besides, there are not
enough spices grown to supply the de­
mand of. the United State* alone, if
nothing but pure spices were sold. We
are constantly making experiment* to
discover the cheapest'' harmles; foreign
matter with which we can make our
goods, in order to supply the demand
for low grades."
The powder made from ground cocoa­
nut shells has a fine color, and on ac­
count of its weight and appearance is
considered bv spice manufacturers to
be choice adulterating material.—Phila­

Peninsular Stove Oo/is Stoves.
OF DETROIT.

,

Improved and Finest Pattern* of Cooks and Hentern In tho
market. Zincs, Stove Furniture. Kte.
PAINTS, VARNISHES, COLOR, BRUSHES.
WELL and 0187 ERN PUMPS,POINTS, PIPE. SINKS. ETC.
CHAMPION X-CUT SA WB, AXES, ETC.

Detroit White Lead Works Color*.—Tlae Best in the Ttarkrt.
BUILDER'S HARDWARE, SASH, DOORS,
GLASS. LOCKS, KNOBS, dr, dr.
NAILS, IRON, AND STEEL.

When in Aced of the Beat Grade* of Hardware and Jia­
, ‘
chlnery Cali and See He.

OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE

There is one lady in New York who
does not intend waiting until her death
to distribute her wealth for benevolent
purposes, only to have herself, like the
late Miss Burr, shown up in court ns a
vile and dirty miser, hor old clothes and
broken furniture exhibited as proof of
her squalid and menial existence, and
her intelligent capacity to give her
money away denied by tho heirs nnd re­
latives, who think. it should come to
them instead of going to religious and
charitable objects.
Miss Catherine Wolfe is credited with
disbursing in the last ten years $2,000,­
000 of the large citato left by hor
father. She has given it to a score of
institutions and societies, but all of the
most practicable and useful kind; to a
homo for incurables; to a newsboys’
lodgings house; to Union College tor
the education of poor and deserving
young men from the South; to a school
for girls in Colorado; to an enterprise
of Christian socialism or communism on
Long Island; to the erection of a build­
ing In connection with Grace Church, of
which she is a member, mainly devoted
to club rooms for young men and young
women, where clerks, art students,
teachers and others living in lodgings
may find the best current literature,
music, bright, cheerful and elegant
club-rooms, bath-rooms, writing-rooms,
etc., for the use of members, whose
due* (25 cents a month or $2 50 a year)
are so small as to bo a burden to no on?,
and yet preserve the feeling of self-re­
spect which reluct* at using a dole; and
where, though the club-house adjoins a
church, no religious tests are exacted,
nor, indeed, any question iu to one’s
belief or denomination asked; to the
Metropolitan Museum of Art, and to the
chureh of which she is a niamber, by
the addition of costly and beautiful
specimen® of ecclesiastical art and archi­
tecture, unexampled in this country.
This has been done under, her own
immediate supervision; showing a broad
and catholic taste; a shrewd, practical
sense; a want of bigotry and iwtarian
prejudice, and securing to her the pecu­
liar but enviable pleasure of s.-nmg her
bounty Rnjoved and the fruit* of itrealized while she is here and alive to
gather all the luxury of being honored,
loved and admired.
The greatest pleasure which‘the ven­
erable Peter Cooper, now approaching
a century of existence, derives from life
m the love and gratitude, the deference,
homage aud affection shown him when
he visit* his “ Institute” and is sur­
rounded by scores of admiring pupils, of
both sexes,, that are the recipients of his
bounty, and are learning art and science
and practical affairs by means of the
schools add professorships his wealth
long ago endowed.
It is said that the
sight of this spectacle so touched the
sensibilities of a hundred millionaire one
day that he was almost persuaded to go
and do likewise. Unluckily for him and
others, when he got by himself this
spasm of generosity and human sympa­
thy passed off, and he set himself at
work again to pile up higher an already
huge fortune. Bnt even his momentary
weakness was ample proof of tbe genu­
ineness of the scene he had witnessed.
Mr. Reuben Springer, of Cincinnati,
is another of the oenevolent'given who
get cash dividends of pleasure from
their investment* for other people’s
liencflt.
His rich gifts to his fellow­
citizens have made him the idol of tho
city.
Only tbe other day, In the pres­
ence of a vast multitude who cheered
him to the echo, the statue of their
firing benefactor, chiseled by the hand
of the son of the artist Powers, himself
derived from a Cincinnati family, wm
unveiled to the public. It was a gift to
tho city of other citizens hi* example
bad affectedThe old man is now
ready to depart in peace, for hi* own

Prcw.

*

^^^^/./../0::9$-^-$7/^^7$C

Spend As You Go.

not

Used by spice
&gt; and ocher of 1
■ vert igat ton ah

in their career. In most cases this is
considered tba result of a oyld or the
beginning of consumption, and thous­
ands have become terrified at this rev:
elation and have sought by a change

delphia Record.

were not kept down they would make
the land uninhabitable by the squatter. in their lifetime attain, a* a reward for
their humanity and their practical and
personal distribution of their wealth for
the good of their fellow citizens.
It is
Tbc Fiery Pepper.
a noble and beautiful leason.
This is

' »nd the aroused
*a* notquiatpd

the personal fnrnda of Mr. Booth, .ex
cept that it brings to light a troth of
the greatest importance to the world.

—Switzerland has 1,504 miles of railsad, ro&amp;cMantifig over &lt;200,000,000

OOR SALE!
WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH

THREE INCH TIRE
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING

BETTER THAN COMM
We believe the Three inch Tire i« destined to come
into general use. Call and see them.

Sold by 0, L. Glasgow, Nasnville, Mich.

BENTLEY BROS. &amp; WILKINS.
Hastings, Mich.,'Sept. 15th, 1881.

WMF*

JMNTXD WITH THE GEOGRAPHY OF THIS COUNTRY. WILL
C53 ?r STAM’NINC THI? MAP, THAT THE

---

W. C. BEACH.
Fureman Buffalo Rubber Type foundry.
There are thouimndsof people in Am­
erica to-day who believe they arc the
victims of consumption any destined
to an early grave aud who arc trying to
save themselves by the use of consump­
tion cures but are growing worse each
hour. Let all such persons stop, and
calmly consider whether they are not
seeking to check a disease in the lungs
when it is located in the kidneys and
liver. Let them then treat the ’disease
in it* original stronghold aud by the
remedy which has been proven to the
most effective nnd then look for tbe
return of health and happiness which
such treatment is sure to bring.

Huxley my* •’there was a time when
men walked on all four*.” He probab­
ly alludes to that interesting time iu
the early life of us all when we ap­
proached a neighbor's melon patch
from the back way.

Probate Order.

Chicago, Rock Island &amp; Pacific R'y,

II Jelna the Crest Central Line, affords to travelers, by reason ot Its unrivaled gao-

LJ
'/l
*“|
•L

ffl
vJ

jraphlcal position, the shortest and best route between the East, Northeast and
Southeast, nnd the West, Northwest and Southwest.
It is literally and strictly true, that Its connections are all of the principal llnee
jf road between the Atlantic and the Pacino.
B&gt; Its main line and branches It reaches Chicaso, Joliet, Peoria, Ottawa,
Ln Satie, Oeneseo, Moline and Rook Island, In Illinois; Davenport. Muscatinc,
Washinot
“ishinaton, Keokuk, Knoxville, Oskaloosa, Fairfield, Des Moines, West Liberty,
lowa
City,
__ T,______
, _________
, _____Harlan, ______
__________
— '•
“V, Atlantic,
Avoca,
Audubon,
Cuthrte
Center ,and Council Bluffs,
n lowa j Calin tin, Trenton, Cameron and Kansas City, In Missouri, and Leaveneorth and Atchison In Kansas, and the hundreds ot cities, villages nnd towns
ntcrmedlate. The
•

ft'1 GREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE,”
J|U It la familiarly called, offers to travelers all the advantages and comforts
&lt;1ncldent to a smooth track, safe bridges. Union Depots at eh connecting points,
T =ast Eipresa Trains, compose* of COMMODIOUS. WELL VENTILATED, WELL
-J HEATED, FINELY UPHOLSTERED and ELEGANT DAY COACHES; a line of the
‘ aOST MAGNIFICENT HORTON RECLINING CHAIR CARS ever built; PULLMAN’S
-1 atest designed and handsomest PALACE SLEEPING CARS, and DIN INC CAR*

THREE TRAINS each wny between OM1CAOO nnd tho MISSOURI RIVER.
TWO TRAINS each war between CHICAGO .--nd MINNEAPOLIS and ST. PAUL,
»t»e famous

ALBERT LEA ROUTE.
between Newport News, Richmond, Cincinnati, Indianapolis and La Fayett%

R. R. CABLE,
lathe matter o’. the relate ot

E. ST. JOHN

JONATHAN

CHICAGO.
of S. Batabl

Tbriwpo-, 11 !• ordered that

at the news offie.
O-et Ou.i’ Prices iJefore
Elsewhere.

�Sa-tv:'.!" ns!!.DAY

■ 1CH1GAM NEWS

light.

ordinsry (rood Judgement, is thorough,
aud avails himself of all the moat approVaq^rn^Uiods of farming.

A leebefoas beast •&gt;( Way laud, Alle­
gan county, known under the title of
VanValkenbarg, lasciviously handled
some of the Rule girls of that village.
has been discontinue#*'
Grand Rapida is to have 150 electric He was tried for the attempt but was
discharged because proved guilty of the
lights and a new 817,000 bridge.
A safe at .Tennhumville, Ottawa Co., mV of rape; and he has so tar main­
tained his freedom on account of an es­
was crocked aud robbed of 8800.
IgOOabtwp have been shipped from timable wife nnd influential relatives,
of
the cowardliness of the men of Way­
Plainwell, Allegnu Go, to Texas.
Small particles of gold were found land, and the selfishness ot F. S. Don- !
Sldson,
prosecutor of that county, who
while digging a drain at Blissfield.
A crab-apple tree at'Adrian is loaded is more anxious for office than for Jus­
tice.
Nearly
twenty married women of
with blossoms and bas new leaves.
One hundred men thrown out of em­ Wayland unite in a public card charg­
ing
Van
with
the crime and detailing
ployment by a fire at Birmingham.
Telephonic coinunications has been the circumstances of bis release and the
established between Detroit ifffi'Pon- prosecutor’s failure to prosecute. In
tbe course of a thorough exposure of
tiac.
Three Rivers has an association to the matter, which no other paper in that
county
has the courage or morality to
encourage tbe location of manufactures
undertake, the Allegan Gazette says:
there.
“
It
is
a
shameful
sight to see the prose­
Work at the Jackson coal mines has
been stopped on account of a demand cution of a lecherous seducer of children
abandoned
by
the
men of a tow, and
for more wages.
Wm. C. Maybnry nominated for con­ worse to see some ot them unite in de­
gress by the Detroit Democrats. He’s fense of tbe hoary reprobate against a
band of women striving to protect their
a strung nim
The jury disagreed in the malprac­ little ones from a ravishet. A corres­
pondent
may betray it for a season, but
tice case ot Mrs. Hayes against Prof.
the Gazette never shall be enlisted with
Donald McLean.
such
men
in such a scheme.”
Thirteen car-loads of European con­
verts to Mormonism passed through
OUR WASHINGTON LETTER.
Michigan last week.
f Jericho poatoJlce, Newaygo county,

The Dutch reformed church at Bat­
[From our rofuUrcorrvopondent.]
tle Creek will be converted to manu­
Washington, D- C., Sjeit.33, 1883.
facturing purposes.
The first premium at the state fair
The worst fears of the 'inqjority of
on school furniture went to the efim- the office holders here have been real­
pany at Battle Creek.
ized in the nomination of Secretary
A drunken man was run over and Folger for tbe New York Governorship.
killed on-the G. R. &amp;- I. railroad near Unsupported by the most influential
papers of the Empire State, the Times
Moline, Allegan county.
A ranchero from Texas bought 1853 and Tribune, Judge Folger’s election
sheep nt Marshall, recently, with which is considered very doubtful, and as the
to stock his lone star ranch.
state of New York is essential to the
Charles Newell, of Kalkaska county, success of tbe Republican party in the
has been held for trial for outraging next presidential election, there is, as
his own 8-ycAr-old daughter.
stated, a feeling of anxiety as to the re­
What is claimed to be tbe finest salt sult of Folger’s election. In my inter­
well in tbe world has been struck at views with what few politically promi­
1918 feet depth, at Manistee.
nent men, now in the city. I learned last
Horace Young got drunk, made his night-that Hon. John C. New, the pre­
bed on the railroad track near Dorr, sent Assistant Secretary of the Treas­
ury, heads the list of aspiring candi­
and was beheaded by the. mail train.
W. E. Randall, of Tekonsha, has in­ dates for Mr. Folger’s place. He is an
vented a new railroad velocipede and acknowledged and recognized Repub­
it will be manufactured at Kalamazzo. lican leader of Indiana aud his official
A number of horses at Muskegon career, it is held, recommends him in
feel good, act well, but won’t cat, and the higheest terms for his personal in­
have dwindled down to skin and bones, tegrity and capacity. Judge Folger
to-day, however expressed a doubt to
it were.
At Detroit a cigar maker blew his your correspondent ns to his immediate
brains out because charged with steal­ resignation, and would much prefer, if
ing cigars, nnd another man was run he could, to hold on to his present pos­
over and killed by a freight train at ition until after the New York cletion.
which indicates that be, himself, is not
that place.
.
•
R. E. Frazier, a prominent prohibi­ too sanguine of success. John Crowley
tionist and member of the temperance and J. H. Starin are also spoken of ns
alliance, opens the Republican cam­ wanting thl Secretaryship, but neither
paign at Htort Huron. He seems satis­ will be appointed unless it is found ab­
solutely necessary to save New York
fied with Jerome.
In order to encourage the develop­ by their appointment.
Crowley and
ment of a fast walking gait in farm Starin belong to what is here known as
horses, the Chicago Breeder’s Gazette the lesser liglits.on tbe political horizon
offers a $50 prize for tbe fastest mile and were but little known prior to Mr.
Arthur's access to the presidency. Mr.
walk .at any county fair.
One mysterious thing about state New on the other hand is well and fav­
politics, jnst now, is the number. Oppo­ orably known throughout the country
sition candidate who decline. We’d and h&amp;s'done as much if not n\ore than
like to hear a fe^r declinations on auy man in his state for his party.
A short Cabinet meeting was held
the other side, just to even up.
Gov. Jerome, at Us Jtepublican candi­ last Wednesday at which only some un­
date, tnvom the submission of tbe pro-, important matter were considered. It
hibition question by tbe legislature to was the last Cabinent meeting that will
the peopl^. He so declares in reply to a be held for several weeks, as the Presletter from the secretary of the saloon dent has returned to New York and
will be absent until the Executive
society.
Arnold, the B. C. saloonist, sent an Mansion is thoroughly and aesthetically
officera half pint pottle of whiskey repaired and overhauled. It is under­
and the offer of $10 to not testify stood that during his vacation tbe
against him, but the officer replied that President will’devote a considerable
portion of his time to revising his Cab­
he preferred to get Lis arsenic at th
inent and making other selections, and
drug store.
Can a woman hold the office of regis­ a rattHngamong dry bones is expected
ter ot deeds? is a new question to the prior to the assembling of Congress.
The defeat of Representative Crapo
judiciary of this state and is principally
interesting to a woman wbo is deputy for the Massocbusett's gubernatorial
register of Saginaw county under her nomination is ascribed by the wiseacres
husband, now deceased. Her lawyers here to bis voteto override the Presi­
say she can. She expects to be nomi­ dential veto of tbe river and harbor
bill, and his fealty to Senator Hoar.
nated.
Tbe opposition congrosaioyal con­ The stalwarts say that Bishop, the
vention for this district met at Jackson nominee, is of their number, and his
Wednesday. The Democrats of Branch nomination yesterday, forecasts the
county were not represented other­ political end of Senator Hoar.
The Cbrutiancy divorce case was
wise the delegations were full. Three
ballots were taken, aa follows: 1st—H. brought to close yesterday* by Judge
Hagn&amp;r,
of the Equity Court, who
C. Hodge 117|, George Willard 116;
Hodge 11H, Willard 961. A. B. granted a decree of divorce on tbe suit
.of
ex-Senator
and ex-Minister ChrisAllen 90; 8d-Hodge 146, Willard 79.
tiancy. The decree of the court says :
So Hodge is tbe nominee again.
Tbe prosecutions for violations" of “It is hereby ordered, adjudged aud
tiie liquor law* progress nt Battle decreed that bonds of matrimony here­
Creek, and it is said that public senti­ tofore entered into between the said
ment is turning iu Mayor Gage’s favor. Isaac P. Christiancy and Lillie M.
for the desertion and
A. C. Arnold, wbf. forgery notoriety, Christiancy,
and hi# uhrht watchman, are the latest abandonment set forth in said supple­
arm'.*. The mayor recently lectured mental bill, be and hereby are dissolv-

Kt Bedford, apd at the rio#e, tbe audi­
ence voluntarily voted him thanks
and their aid Ln sustaining the proaeciiiitinx ar tin-Creek.
. Judge Curtis J. Gale of Corunna, a
low. worth-

Just now th^re u good deal of ac­
tivity about the Capitol building.which
has been repainted outside and inside
and regilded where needed. "The

Senate chamber is quite noticeable, and
iug ntiMnjr onion*. He built thereon serve* to relieve the somewhat somber
light. At the last srsmoa of Congress
thoroughly un&lt;Ir rd rained the whole. an appropriation was made to eomIt ie now probably tbe most profitable
die ctMt front of tbe Capital. The de­

&lt;,r » No. I

tiw iMuWini. to be

We made addition to our sale room to double our stock, and we

One solid sale room 250 long by 22 wide, filled to overflowing-with

Carpets and Oil Cloths,
Cloaks and Dolmans,

grikUUad rammon.
never was done, and any miller know* that

Trunks and Satchels,
Scarlet Underwear,

Ladies’ Cloaking,
Dress Goods,
Dress Flannel,
Notions,

clslms'

It tot

Gents’ Furnishing Goods
Boots and Shoes,
Hats and Caps,
Wall Paper,

dotliing',
50 Cent Tea.

Grocerlen.

Now is the time that mothers should be preparing

wheat tad flour paw through so tuanr eleva­
tor*, conveyor*, bolts, machlncrtea, etc. No
miller can make good flour of crown wheat.
A man who take* grown wheat to mill may get
much belter floor than bis wheat would made
because he la apt to get some one’a good wheat.
And tbe num wbo takes good wheat to a ml!!
when they grind all kinds will be just aa apt to
get flour from bad wheat. The only way to
make good flour for all U to grind nothing but
good wheat, and that U jurt what I propose to
do from thU time on.
I won’t make flour for any one that la not
good enough to-aack up and put Into tbe markwhich I give in
which I make fr
Those having

We start Cotton Flannel at 8c; a better one at 10c; an extra heavy one at 12 l-2c.
wool and Shaker Flannel Cheap.

All

rind them.
good floor

rated Nubrllk Sept SOtb.

John. M. Boe,

A large stock, and plenty of that 50c Tea.
It is a pleasure to acknowledge to our many customers and friends our success since we have
put the knife to high prices and sell goods cheap for cash, and see our store crowded with cus­
tomers who come to us for style, durability and reasonable prices.
ESTCash paid for Butter and Eggs.- -

A contract was recently awarded to
Middleton &amp; Lane of this citv to com­
mence the work, and they have already
begun operations. The Senate eleva­
tor is being repaired so as to accelerate
its speed. The old one was one of tbe
first patented, and the intention is to
modernize it.
The iniquities perpetrated by Con­
gress at its last session are slowly
working their
way towards
tbe
light and are found to be far more
numerous than the public had any sus­
picion of. Tbe gentlemen who were so
lavish in appropriating millions for
•‘improving the navigation” of all sorts
of dock ponds were by no means as
liberal when it came to doing any
work of reaTutility, and tbe way they
handled the appropriations for carry­
ing on tbe scientific labors undertaken
by the Government is enough to damn
them as a crowd of meddlesome igno­
ramuses, whose notions of the functions
of government are of the lowest and
haziest.
August.

CLOSINGOUT

F. T. -BOISE,
Dtto,
s
BOOKS,
JEWELRY,
WALLPAPER,
W1ADOW SHADES,
DI E STI FFS,
PROPRIETARY MEDICINES,

PRESCRIPTIONS.
RECEIPTS,

Being engaged in clothing and lumber business in Big Rap­
ids, have concluded to dispose of by private and auction sale
the entire stock

-------- MY---------

PAINT AND BRUSH
DEPARTHENT
People.

Call and ExamineI

AT WHOLESALE COST
Which means a saving of 30 to 50 per cent to tbe purchaser.

ALL READY

SALE TO COMMENCE FIRST DAY OF OCTOBER.

To*how you a large and well selected Stock ot

BARRYVILLE.
Some hereabouts pineth for a penaion.
Mr». Henry T. Miller has a sister vis- ■
iting her from Ohio.
Allen Abbey, for the month past, luis
been severely afflicted with sore eyes.
Who will say it is not a good rime to
take tbe Cars, now it is fair time, and
rates reduced ?
Jo. Ashalter claims to be a citizen of
this burg. They are to have a pickle
in bis place in Morgan.
The comet is plainly to be seen in
the east about 5 o’clock in the morn ing, or just previous to sunrise.
Mrs. WnE 0. Freeman is visiting
friends in the north part of the state,;
and writes that she finds Miss Ella&lt;
Shipman dangerously sick.
'
J
The conference of the Methodist I
Protestant church, Weat Michigan dis-1

F. T. BOISE

READ TUX

XVholesale Pi*ice List,
AND BUY, BUY, BUY.

GROCERIES

CON8L8TING OF
'
Jeans Suits, 83.75, 4.50, 5.00. Satinett Suits, 5.00. 6.00, 7.00
Men’s Cotton Worsted Suits, 4.50, 5.00, 6.00.
Union Cassimere Suits, $6, 7, 9. All-wool Cassimere Suits,
$9, 10, 12, 13. .All-wool Worsted Suits, $10, 12, 14.
Beaver Suits, &gt;12, 13: 14.
Pilot Suits, 10.50, 12, 14.
100 pairs Pants at &gt;1.
100 Vests, 60c to &gt;2.
Union Cassimere Pants, $2 to 3. AT THE LOWEST PRICES
Wool Cassimere Pants, $3, 3.50, 4.
For Cash or Ready Pay.
Boys’ Clothing : School Suits, 6 to 14, $4 to 6 ; All-wool
Also tbe Largest Stock ot
Cassimeres, $5.50 to 7.
Boys
’
Suits,
11
to
16
:
Union
Cassimeres,
$4.87
to
10.
trict, held its annual session last week I
.
• •’. Suits,
~
* '*'•
at Riee Creek. C. P. Goodrich wo* I Youths
32 to
36 : Union Cassimeres, 5.75 to 6, 11;
elected pi^sident. Bev. A. Byers is to i
Worsted Suits, 7, 8, 9, 10.
TO BE8EEN_IN_BARRY CO.
'WorBted and Cassimere Overcoats 5 6, 8, 10. 100 odd Coats BOOTS AND SHOES
at the charch in this place Sunday,
.
Worth .5,
AS CHEAP AS ANYBODY.
Oct. is, at io a. m.
, Women’s and Children’s Shoes at 50 cts on the Dollar. Men’s
______ _
lT"
Boots at the same.
cash paid or produce
VEBXOXTT1LLE.
All Yard goods, including Prints, Shirtings, Demins. Ticks,
C. w. SMITH.
„
_ t ... , . ..
..
I
Stripes,
Etc.,’ closed at actual cost.•
Vermontville feels big over the pros- I
1
’

Sugars, Coffees, Teas, Tobaccos,
Spices, Fish, Canned Goods,
Provisions, &amp;c.,

Crockery, Glassware, Lamps,
Stone Ware, 4c.,
T

pect of the new railroad.

|

“

C3C*This is a genuine closing sale. All kinds of country
produce taken at full and satisfactory prices. Parties indebted
pnWroan state central committee.
either by note ot account are requested to call and settle be­
ll. J. Martin, one of our oldest and • r •
T i
e
j •
kt
i
:n
•
most relisblo mercluuits, ha. formed a | fore X ®'09e for g0"1 “ Nashville.
Rev. c. C. Old* is the father of s. S.

Old*, of Lansing, secretary of the Re-

co-partnerahip with John Downing, a I

young gentleman of excellent charactand ability.
The Republican representative con­
vention, held here Saturday, nominat­
ed Lyman Sheppard on the third ballot
by 38 votes to 30 for Mr. Dean. Mr.
Sheppard is an elderly and cultured
gentleman of solid character, who will
no doubt make a good representative
it elected.
George Harris of West Kalamo, has

back end of the pasture where be has
some stove w'ood and loads on a half
cord. At night tbe cow has ate her
way to the house, aud while George
empties tbe scone boat Mrs. Herring
empties the cow.—Hawk.

THE \XRDirr: Hiring bought the Crown
or jatnut M-wiag,
an join n. Maying tnas n .
fa the Exaikhz KrxNiNU. Most Siuxt, High- I

L. Perry, Mr*. F. E. lueracm,
Mr». Man- a. F -xe, Jon* Hs
sprung.-Mr. Tb.mw Nile#
TborJwa.
JL K WE

.

Horses
-MUST BE-

Shod.

WM. A. AYLSWORTH
ESTStore building for sale or rent.

.

ALWAYS BEST
TO HAVE THE JOB DOST

GEO.W. FRANCIS,
At his new store, is ready for customers with a larger stock
of

Than ever before.

Particulars Next Week.
THE BEST

‘ SKILLFULLY.
Recognizing These Facts,
THE BEST WORK
Chas. Middleton,

A No. 1 Workman.
ar. M. WOOD.

at Th£ NEWS OFFICE.

FOUNDER and MACHINIST

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                  <text>Z.DITOR AXl&gt; FBOPKIETOR.

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun.
■

)__________ -

VOLUME X.

FATAL ACCIDENT.

And Her Environs.

Cheater McMore, aged about 60, 'a
prominent farmer living three miles
south of the village, came to his
death without warning on Wednesday
evening last.
He brought a load of wheat to town,
returning with a load of lath for Wm.
Sanford. * neighbor who is building.
The lath was unloaded in a grove of
trees just as darkness had overspread
the earth with her sable mantle. San­
ford noticing that Mr. McMore had no
seat, inquired if be shouldn’t get him
one. Mr. M- replied in the negative,
and Sanford started ahead with a lan­
tern to guide the team out of the groye,
leaving McMore upon his knees in the
front of the wagon. The team sudden­
ly left the road, starting smartly to one
side, bringing up against a grape arbor.
Sanford spoke to.McMore, but receiving
no answer went to the wagon. It was
empty and the lines dragging the
ground. He again called out to Mc­
More, and heard a guttural sound.
.Grouping? his way back on hands and
knees, he soon came upon McMore’s
prostrate body. Help was soon at
hand, and Mr. M. carried into Sunford’s
house, When it was found that his neck
was broken. His pulse continued to
beat for twenty minutes and then stop­
ped, and Chester McMore was no more.
It is presumed that Mr. McMore arose
to his feet to better guide his team, and
the wagon wheels striking an obstruc­
tion he was pitched out upon his head,
which broke his neck and produced in­
stant death.

—The first new corn of the Mason
was brought into this market by the
Do plan ty boys, of Vermontville, Wed­
nesday- Brooks, Marshall A Co. took
it at29 cents a basket
—Dan. Clever was on the streets
Saturday with a scarred face. He said
he "bad been bit by a hog,’’ but later
developments indicated that be had
had a set-to with Toot Beigb.
,.
—Mrs. H. A. .^Barber had some speci­
mens of patch (Work of her own/ hand­
work upon exhibition
the county
fair, and received first premium upon
a carriage af£hnn and sofa pillow, and
second upon a quilt.
-^Cleanliness is next to godliness.
The unjiealty season is upon’us and it
behooves every one to be just as good
as they possibly can; consequently
scrub, scour, rake, sweep, burn and let
no offensive smell go unchallenged.

Haberesat.

—He was a fellow straight from the
great state of "My Yok,” and as he sat
down on a dry goods box beside Rol.
he asked where people got maple sugar
from. "Why tap maple trees,’’ said
Rol. "Well when do they tap ’em,” in­
quired the other. "In the spring,r Rol.
replied. "I suppose they get cider by
tapping apple trees, don’t they,’’ the
inquirer kept on, and Rol. assured him
that that was the way. "I thought no,”
remarked the fellow from New York,
. as he slid off the box, “for I never saw
any fresh cider any other season.
—For .obvious reasons, only a small
audience listened to Hon. Robt. E. Fra­
ser. at the opera bouse,Wednesday ev­
ening, but the gentleman made an hon­
est and manly speech and was listened
to attentively. He noted the facts that
Bcgole'is a national banker and that he
has not dared to answer the letter of
the saloon-keepers’ society and declare
himself in favor of submitting prohibi­
tion to a vote of the people ; that the
state debt is practically paid; and that
the law under which the auditor gener­
al designates papers to publish the tax
sales is a democratic law. He compared
the Democratic and Greenback parties
to the big and little wheels of a bycicle.

—Saturday afternoon J. H. Kennedv,
engineer for M. R. Taylor, met C. H.
Berry in front of the post office and
politely interrogated him as to when
he was going to pay him for cash
squandered on him. when sick, a year
ago at Grand Traverse. Now “Charley "
is a very sensitive, onion-skinned sort
of a ••fellah," and nothing insults him
morwthmi for a creditor to ask him for
hh dur; consequently he worked his
mad right up, repudiated th* debt, and
wanted to knock Kennedy into a cock- I
ed hat. The Utter, however, wM a
sensible, cool-headed fellow and could
receive Berry’s epithets without thirst­
ing for gore, and none was abed. Ken­
nedy informs us that while Be.vy was
sick be waited upon him, setting up
with him deven nights and finally
brought him home, paying fare anil
traveling expenses. His c^sh outlay
wastSSAO, and this is all he claims.
The ps-raon who forgets and iusnlu a
friend who baa «ood by him in dis­
tress mast be very low indeed, and if
Kennedy should awaken this hair­
brained, impudent rascal to a realising
■sna* erf his degraded condition, no one
would be eorry.

j TERMS; $1.50 per Year
( Credit Subsckxptioxb S1.75.

.

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1882.

LIFE IN NASHVILLE,

—The Knights of Pythias, of Nash­
ville, have the finest lo&lt;|ge room in the
county. It is handsomely draped with
curtains. The officers’ seats are fur­
nished with fine upholsteied chairs, and
the papering and frescoing are very ap­
propriate. The lodge is to be congrat­
ulated for its life and vigor.—Hcutinys
Journal.
,
—F. S. Loomis of Vermontville is a
host. A doren. good men informed us.
Saturday, that he had done more for
Vermontville than all the old ■ heads
put together. He is now building four
brick stores and a hotel, which
when completed makes him the owner
of six stores, five dwellings, one hotel
and one opera house. A man who builds
up his own town is a public benefactor,
and is entitled to extra reward in an­
other world.
—It seems as though the authors of
the premature reports of the death of
children suffering with diphtheria,
wdnld beleM anxious to have people
think they know something if they
could only know a little more of the
suffering they bring to others by sash
reports. The Marshal twice ordered
the little daughter of D. Pratt to be
buried immediately before she was
dead, being misled to such action by a
false report of her death started, as
near as can %e ascertained, by Jake

*

,

THEY DID IT.
DsMoerata cad Crsssbackm Fbm upon Seaator,—
■•■laatlair H»arj F. F»«ala&lt;tos af Charlstt*.

P., inform him of his nomination and
produce him before the convention.
Mr. Pennington in accepting the
honor made a fitting and neat speech.
M. W. Riker offered the following:
“Boolred, That we endorse the senti­
ments of the platforms made at Jack.son and Grand Rapids, so far as they
relate to National officers, and de­
nounce the corruption now so preval­
ent at the seat of government.”
The two senatorial committeew. were
made a joint committee to act during
the canvas. Then followed more talk.
Dawson said that the convention was
the most harmonious and smoothest be
ever had anything to do with; Dr.
Slater thought it was way ahead of the
Republician senatorial
convention
Which was the most awkwardly-con­
ducted of any he ever attended; H. O.
Goodyear aaid it was good that he was
here,—didn’t expect any such harmony
when he left Hastings, and wound up
up with some remarks on railroad
monopolies, in which W. R. Martin J.
H. Dennis and another man joined,
and the convention adjourned.
THE NOMINEE.

Henry F. Pennington is a live, pro­
gressive, lawyer of Charlotte. He’s a
comparatively young man, but is tal­
ented and stands with the beat of bis
profession in this district. The fus­
ion iste did an exceedingly wise thing
in choosing him as their nominee, and
Dr. Patterson, in order to carry oft the
majority Republician
senators
in
this district have been in the habit
of doing, must rise early and “be
previous.’’
CONVENTION NOTES.

“Contra-minded” aiid"disremember'’
seem to be favorite words with John
Dawson. He should get them patent­
ed.
While Dr. Slater was talking about
that million and a half of dollars and
neutral papers, three out of the five
editors present, blushed painfully.
Potter said he stood the talk all
right until railroads, were mentioned
and then his pass bore down so heavily
on his pocket that he had to leave.
Editor, Ells of the Charlotte Leader,
Perry of the Bellevue Gazette, Potter
of the Vt. Ville Hawk and Dennis of
the Hastings Journal, took in the con­
vention.
.

Representative Democrats and Geenbackera of the fifteenth senatorial
district, delegated with the powers and
wisdom to nominate a candidate for
State Senator, one that would beat the
Republican nominee, assembled at the
Wolcott house in this village on Mon­
day afternoon.
Each held preliminary conventions—
Democrats occupying the parlor and
Greenbackers a sample room. Of the
former, Hon. Welts IL Martin was
made chairman and M. W. Riker of
Hastings secretary. The latter chose
v jhn Dawson of Rutland as chairman,
THE NEW BANK BUILDING.
and Walt Powers of Nashville-Char­
lotte secretary. The Democrats show­
On the first of January, 1874, the Bar
ed up twenty delegates present from ry. Everts A Co. bank, of Nashville,
the two counties and the Greens six­ wns organized, the parties to the con­
teen. T. D. Green of Charlotte, was tract being John E. Barry, Daniel H.
elected chairman of the Democratic Everts and T. C. Downing. They
Senatorial Committe with W. S. Good­ opened business in the narrow room
year and John Barry of Barry, ahd H. between the stores of L. J. Wheeler
&gt;’. Pennington and Jas. E. Smith as and Frank C. Boise, where it hu ever
aids. The Greenbackers made Dr. S. since been continued. This week,
W. Slater and Chas. E. Bale of Eaton however, the firm, now composed of J.
and R. B. Wightman of Barry its Sen­ E. Barry and T. C. Downing, Evert*
atorial committee. Upon motion of J. having sold his interest in June
H. Dennis a committee of three was 1883, has moved its business into new,
appointed to visit the Democrats, in­ commodious, and handsome quarters in
vite them to join with the Greenback­ a building expressly fur banking pur­
ers in convention, with the privilege of poses erected by them just across the
naming the nominee. This .John street
thought no more than fair as the Dem­
The public banking office is 30 x 35
ocrats in 1880 loyally endorsed the feet with a 25x10 private office in tlie
Greeenback nominee. No opposition right side rear, and off from this on
being manifested the committee dis­ the left another-room 10x13 with cellar
charged their duties without much way. The rooms nre all high, with
stammering and the two conventions plain white walls, and at present of
were immediately in joint convention, course have a rather bare appearanc,
with John Dawson as chairman and but they will soon be nicely furnished.
M. W. Riker as secretary.
Of course the most elaborate and
The chair made a short speech stat­ important things about a bank are its
ing that he was glad to act in any ca­ counter and its vault and safe.
pacity he deemed right and proper. The vault
is
two
feet
thick
He believed that the people believed on all sides, with solid stone founda­
that the Republican party bad ruled tion in no place lees than five feet
long enough and should go no farther, thick, and with arched roof of heavy
and that this convention would select tie irons,—the latter someting we be­
a man that was going to Lansing next lieve no other bank vault in the county
winter, -f
possesses. The &gt;afe is one of Hall’s
T. D. Green nominated Henry F. with all the latest improvements. It
Pennington of Charlotte for Senatorial has a time lock with safety device; its
Honors. Norman Bailey upon part of walls are composed of layers of Chrome
Barry county democrats seconded the drill-proof steel and other metals and
nomination. J. H. Dennis stated that are fashioned m the strongest manner;
the convention couldn’t select a man and besides being stopped and tong­
who would suit the Nationals of Barry ued and grooved, it is supplied with
county better if it tried all summer.
Hall’s 1883 patent dovetail work, a
W. R. Martin stated the same of the powerful protection against blowing
Democracy of Eaton Co. Warren King open with powder possessed by no
of Kalamo arose to speak in tiehalf of other safe in Barry and probably not in
the feeble citizens—the farmers they Eaton county. In fact in the matter of
would desire a candidate nutaide of the vault and safe Messrs. B. A D. have the
professions. Dr. Slater retorted quite satisfaction of being able to offer the
sharply in faror of tbeprofeaaiens, and best protection to be bad in this section.
stated iu behalf of Pennington that if The counter is of calico nab. the top
lie went to Lansing he would see that made up of alternate strips of calico
and plain ash ; is wainscotted inside
a million and a half of dollars was Dot and furnished with drawers, and out­
left in the treasury to be used to start side is fashioned with bracket po*tA,
neutral papers, which always support­ panel work,and black walnut bordering
ed the Republician ticked just before and ornamentation. It is built with
right angle and extends two thirds the
elections.
length from the rear and three quar­
This proved to be an effective speech ters the width from the left of the room,
for immediately Mr. Pennington was and the enclosure is reached only from
Dominated by a rising vote. A com­ the private office,—which is still an। other protection. The counter railing
mittee-was appointed to wait upon Mr. and the desks are yet to be put in.

LOCAL GIBBLE-GABBLE
Ab4 Fsnsaal Chit-Chat.

Hot days.
“When the leaves begin to turn.”
Will Fracc is able to be about.
Kocher Bro’s, are enlarging their
store.
C. E. Roscoe is down with the typhoid
fever.
Arthur Ainsworth Sunday ed at
home.
H. C. Wolcott left to-day for a visit
in Ohio.
A. M. Flint bos been at Battle Creek
this week.
Alex Blair and family started on
Monday for Denver.
Mrs. J. J. Potter and daughter, are
visiting at
Ville.
H. G. Hale has been in Chicago buy­
ing goods this week.
W. H. Kocher is in Chicago buying
fall and winter goods.
W. E. Buel, wife and Carrie Velte are
visiting at Cedar Rapids.
J. D. Dickinson responds nobly, pay­
ing for his News up to Feb.1884.
Ingerson A Son are shipping a few
car-loads of wheat to Grand'Rap.ds.
Diphtheria about the same,—rather
lessoning, though, the last two days.
Brooks, Marshall A Co. bought a
thousand bushels of wheat Wednesday.
Cap Dunham is about to occupy one
of the Yates stores with his billiard ta­
bles.
A large number of the citizens of this
village and vicinity attended the fair at
Hastings.
The good-looking “phiz” of Dr.
Snell of Vt.Ville, smiled upon Nash­
ville Tuesday.
Richard Drake is back at the depot
again, Mr. Hawthorne having returned
to Wheeler, Ind.
Levi Smith raises a pumpkin that
weighs 55 lbs. and measures four feet
nine inches ’round.
Claud Potter is filling the place of
day telegraph operator on the Mich­
igan Central at Charlotte.
Braun Bros, have bought of Smith A
Free the right of the Crossman patent
bed spring for this village.
Margaret McGraw went north Tues
afternoon to attend a sister who is
lying at the point of death at Point St.
Ignace.
C. D. Pierson, for some time clerk
for Wm. A. Aylswoith, left on Friday
, for Lansing, where he hopes to obtain
employment.
Hon. James O’Donnell, of Jackson,
will promulgate Republican truths at
the opera house on Wednesday even­
ing, Oct 11 th.
Prindle A Chipman have added
largely to their already complete line*
of desirable goods, and come forward
with a new advt.
A. threshing machine from union
Springs, N. Y., arrived for Geo. Mc­
Cartney on Wednesday. C.-L. Glas­
gow was the seller.
G. A. Truman and daughter Belle,
and E. R. White, were in Kalamazoo
over Sunday, to attend the funeral of
Mrs. Effie Lewis, a near relative.
Robert Gregg and daughter Eva, ar­
rived home last Saturday, much pleas­
ed with Dakota and particularly Ran­
som county, where they both took
claims.
*
Walter Webster of Bellevue, suc­
ceeds W. 8. Powers in the law business
here. Mr. Webster is a stirring, well­
read. honest young lawyer, and merits
success.
Among the callers at The News of­
fice on Monday, were H. F. Penning­
ton and F. A. Ellis of Charlotte, and
8. J. HunaiKer and G. W. Perry of
Bellevue.
On account uf a miatake in the date
given last week. Mr. A. G. Carr, of
Woodland, will not lecture in the Mat­
teson school house. West Kalamo, till
Oct. 14th, Saturday evening.
Jerry Shores, of Fayetteville, Mo.,
arrived here Friday morning and paid
Tse News office a brief call, leaving
us specimens of Missouri corn and ap­
ples. He will visit here for som 1 time.

R. Dickinson A Co., have added finish­
ing lumber, pine and shingles to their
already large stock of building mater­
ial. Their stock is now complete, and
persons contemplating building can­
not find a more liberal or satisfactory
firm to deal with this side of sunrise.
Theo products of their flouring mil),
also, are up to the mark.
Down at the county seat, W. S. Good­
year A Co., have their show-windows
very tastefully trimmed with elegant
silks, rjch 'velvets, fascinating satins,
and a silk, fur-lined cloak, valued at
f 100. Their place of business simply
swarms with the fair sex; sparkling
eyes have shot bewilderingly glances,
bright cheeks have blushed their pret­
tiest and luscious lips nave sung praises
and Bill.Goodyear, George Barnes and
Frank Goodyear. are to-day. the most
popular men in Hastings. If we ever
run a store we shall keep silks, velvets,
satins, and fur-lined cloaks. But we
must get rid of "palpitation of the
heart” first.

GETTING UP EARLY IN P0LHT08.
The early nreviouaness and unex­
pected anteriority displayed by the
various candidates in working up their
campaign before the nominating con­
vention or the primaries are yet ap­
pointed reminds one of the story told
either by Mr. Lincoln or Mr Douglas
of the closeness with which a politician
bad to watch his constituency in
their day in central Illinois.
A candidate for congress had worn
out nearly the whole day in setting his
constituents right iff a somewhat un­
frequented part of the country, and
along a wild and solitary road. He de­
termined to’capture whatever votes
there might be at the next farm-house
lie came to, and then to take supper
with the farmer, tell some stories to
his oldest boy, explain to the wife a
new plan for drying apples so that they
would not shrivel, kiss the baby, and
go to bed. Arriving at the farm-house
at dusk, he found tue good man and
his wife engaged in trying to milk a
very lively cow.
“Any politics herp’” he mildly en­
quired, m an interval of the circus
which the penqiiring farmer and his
wife were holding in the barnyard.
"Law»! stranger!” said the farmer,
“powerful glad youv’e landed and
tast in the nick of time. Step in here
old this yer critter’s horns, while I
hang on to her tail, and I reckon how’s
mv old woman’ll milk her in no time.”
The candidate could do no less than
get oft bis horse and “tackle” the “entter’s” horns.
For the next half-bour his bands were
full and his thoughts were well occu­
pied, but the cow was milked.
The result achieved, his thoughts re­
verted to the main point. He was
chiefly desirous to kuow if his antag­
onist had beea upon the ground.
"Haven’t seen anything of Judge D.
here, have you!” lie inquired, nam­
ing his rival.
"Lor’ bless you soul,” replied the
farmer's wife, “why, he fetched up here
more’n an hour ago. and we agreed to
vote for him strffigbt and clean if • he’d
go around behind the barn and hold
the calf; and he’s there now.”
DEAB LITTLE BBOTBEB.

The following verses were composed,
without any assistance whatever, by
Miss Minnie L. Roe, about 18 years old,
daughter of John M. Roe of this village:
Dear little brother we loved him »o.
Now be i» resting that do I know:
Free frocn all troubles and the world of sin,
Turned away from foes without and within.
Dear little brother eo cold and so white,
We cannot see him no more In sight.
Until the day of bright angels shall come.
And then we shall see them all one by one.
Dear little brother we n las him so,
Miss him eo much wherever we go;
Miss him at day time all through the boura;
We mise him aa other do birds and flowers.
car uiue oroiuer is uua away,
We cannot see him do more la play;
dw he ia resting and that I do koow,Dear Utile brother we miss him so.

NUMBER 3.

A CARD.
Having fonned a partnership with D. P.
Sagendorph, of Charlotte, I take pleasure tn
introducing to my friende and patrons Walter
Webster a young man of ability and Integrity,
to whom I have tranaferred my unfinished btrniness, who will be- found over L. J. Wheeler’s
store ready to tnuMact law, resl estate and in­
surance business to the aattsfactlon of all.
3-5Waltm &amp;' Powna.
MON^Y to loan,

On Beal Estate st low rate of interest of
Lzk &amp; Dcbkbb
CyMichigan Stoves at Glasgow's.
«-A few more B4.85 suite at Aruwornft.

•B" Don't forget the Roval Oak Heating
Stove at
Glasgow’s.
WANTED.
Good Black Ash Hoops fefr pork tarrrla, at
the cooper shop In Nashville.
•
3-3
M. L; Btbvxxs.
jyDoti't forget the Round Monumental
beating stove at
Glasgow's.

FOR Sale.
As I- wish to go out of business and remove
from Nashville, I now oiler for sale, two Dwell­
ing Houses, one Barjj and Orchard, comprising
225 feCHcjnt on Main street, Nashville; also
4 seres pasture connected with tb^above.
I will also tell tn connection or separate from
the above, my entire Stock of Groceries. A
good trade will go with them as my books show
over 115,000 cash sales the first year.
Now is the time to buy a home sod go into
business. AVould prefer cash customers, but
would sell for good paper or tnwle for a good
salable farm well located€. AlNSWOKTM.

ty Call iM see our large and elegant as­
sortment of Gents Furnishing Goods, just tn.
Pbixdlx Jc Cmipman.

ONCE MORE
C, L. Glasgow asks those who have Dot al­
ready called and attended to their accounts
(and notes that are past due) to do so at onev
and eave him the expense of calling on them.

its from to to M, worth 110 and
at ATLswoarn'a.
CIDER! CIDER!
We will make Cider every Saturday until
further notice. Let those interested take heed.
H. R. Dickinson.
«■ C. L. Glasgow Is agent for the Wide
Awake Thresher and Engine, manufactured at
Union Springs, N. Y.
Hf“Will pay the highest market price at
Nashville for 5,000 bushels good Rose potatoes
after Oct. 11, 1882.
J. H. Smith.

BOOTS AND SHOES.
A complete line of heavy and fine giKxls for
With prices on the cash basis, and t»rgaina worth looking after.
all.

LAMFS. LAM1*3.

The largest line ever opened in Nashville.
All kinds, all styles, with prices for all. Call
and sec them.
C. W. Smith.
W Don’t forget the Round Monumental
Heating Stove at
Glasgow's.

tySchool suits at to, to, and to at the
Closing Out Sale
at Aylswobth’s.

WAGONS! WAGONS!
What is the use of paying slxty-flve dollars
for a wagon when you can get one every whit
a* good for flftr dollars at my shop one-half
mile south of Nashville. See them.
Jas. Moobb.
QFDon’t forget the Royal Oak beating
stove
at Glasgow's.

SHINGLES.

.

300,000 selected shingles Just unloaded at
Bbooks, Marsuaixl «fc Co.'s elevator.

“VINEGAR”
Pure Cider Vinegar by the barrel or gallon,
H. R. Dickinson.
ty All colors la Germantown Yarns and
Zephyrs at Adda Nichols' store.
3-4
ty Wagons. Buggies, and Carriages
at Glasgow’s.

IOO USEFUL"ARTICLES
Easily worth 25 cis. selling foe 10 cts at the
Ten C.»nt Store in the Reese building.
QTA Big Rush, at the Closing Oat Sale
at Atls worth’*.

THIRD AND LAST CALL.
XO EQUIVOCATION.

All parties Indebted to the former firm of
Ainsworth &lt;fc Brooks by note or account, anhereby notified that they must pay up imme­
diately or steps will be taken to collect the

A FEW THOUSAND DOLLARS
To Loan on good Real Estate security.
LBS «fc Dt'RKBB.

WCaiap Chairs, Tinware, Glassware, Sil­
DIED.
verware. Brushes, Hose, Fotionn. Etc., el the
Malloht—In NaahrtUe Saturday, Sept 30, of Tea Cent Store.
inflamatiou of the bowels, Clyde R.. roungest
ty Whew! Hare you seen Rasky's new
SOO of E. R. Mallory.
stock of Neckues I Biggest and best tn town.
Praxar.—In Nashville.Friday, Sept 39th, of
avDoot fall to avail yoareelves of the op­
portunity to buy Cheap at the Great Ctoatag
at Aylswobth's.
PaATT—In Nashville. Wedncsdar. Oct. 4th. Out sale
of diphtheria, daughter of Daniel Pratt, aged
three years..
Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Mallery have the Robinson—In Castleton, Oct. 5, 1883. of
sympathy of the community in their
affliction. It is such times as these of
sickness and bereavement that bring a
Mra. James Tyler, died tn Woodland, Barry
realizing sense of the value of human
sympathy.
YOUR EAR. GENTLE READER.
I. M. Flint, junior, has opened r James Tyler, January, 2d, Itffi, with whom she
lou that are .ndebted to The Nasmvuxr
lived until death took him away in Sept., 1879.
law office in Mis. Dr. Wickham's build­ Bbekave her heart tn God about the t ear i’i.’S, Nkwb, listen! Paper, ink apd printers’ http,
costa cash, atKl in order L&gt; 'feml be respect
ing on Main street. Mr. Flint has had and lived a coMiaumt life unt!! deith calle-d ed we must pay our Qcbts; ronseuueatlv, we
seventeen years of practice in the brr fnan labor to re want All through her life sre compttted to ask you to pay that subsertp
tton nnf vm.r
n k....
southwestern part of the state, and is a
pleaaanLreliable man to deal with.
The Euterpean choral society has ■Mcrate to the sick around her. and will lout
in the memarv of all who ki« .. her. She
decided to do nothing about a conven­ lire
leaves !lmt children. Ove grand ebihlreu. M»&gt;
Okxo SntoNU.
tion for the time being. Prof. Vine, they each ao live, as to all meet in that beautfworld
where afUctlou and durth n&lt;w cnoua,
who conducted a convention hsre last
year, was very much liked, and there
is an impression that he wriHyertsrn
this season.
*
Mattbsox—Kwaauaxu.-Oct. :
EnS
V
The live manufacturing firm of H,

�thia effort is always
dollar ia it* OWU MM
tkm with the quor

O2t.n

"TUX NIGHT

- That Ugbtrth Uw funeral pyrv ■
Of th &lt;iav as K »IW.m down the western
And d&gt;t« tn its crims- o fire;
And m«bt with its swift win* mouuUng,
■turk'i*-**

And the w*iifu&lt; Uhland the fathering gloom
Will wteisiaf".
night ootn"4h ou.”

AXF.RiriN NONET AND ITS USES.
Th. unitol the American money tnU. is the mill. It ia not coined, now.
They tnud it once, but it was discovered that all t^e pastors in America
were getting tli '----- •M/coin.
S[&gt;eople
To.rave these
.from ■starvation,
coinage
of the mill wiyr”
—T into the out­
stretched hand of poverty and the tincup of the melodious organ-grinder.
It is also tueii to run the Sundayschool. suptfort foreign missions and
bribe children of six years old and un­
der. It isn't good for'any other pur­
poses west of-the Missiosippt. but fur­
ther Eust. down in the cultured region
round about Boston, in the plane of
high political morality and general
purity of New York, and generally all
through the barbarous orient, it is used
to buv new'Mpapers, many of the newspape^htn that land being sold for a
cent It will, also, in that favored
land, buy bananas and orange*, and asalso used largely aa change.
When a
man buys a New Hampshire rock
patch—sometimes culled a farm—
eleven and one-quarter acres at f I’jO
per acre, the buyer will wait in the of­
fice three hours and a half while the
real-estate agent shins around and geta

world over. eave only In York State,
where it is called ••■ixahiilin’.” In this
Rate. ab&gt;&lt; the half-dollar itself is fre­
quently designated by the awful title of
••four shilLn. ”/ After a hnJf-dollar has
onceboencBfed••fourahdHn*,” and you
can prove it. it will only pass for forty
cents out West.
*
In the United States the dollar varies
in rains tram ninety-two to one hun­
dred cenU, the greatest Republic on
earth having experimented with several
kinds of dollars before it learned just
what it wanted.“and it hasn’t found out
what it Is yet. A dollar will buy any
thing in a 99-eent store, and it ia con­
sidered the proper plaster for the head
waiter if you are going lo stay three or
fodr days. When made of silver, it is a
splendid thing to throw at a dog. or
carry in your pocket when you want to.
drown yourself. It is u«d to subscribe
for the Washington Monument, and it
will buy enough iife-crackm to go
around one boy on the Fourth of July.
When the dollar is twins, it will take
you a weekly newspaper for a whole
year, or a sleeping-car berth for one
night W hen we get among the deL
latrs. we are in the very aristocracy of
money.
The £ve-dollar bill is used to bet on
the' ^ag hors, with” It 1. alao popnUr
Tx,m&gt;wing medium Saturday
« —___ __
.1 7.it ____
— a
_ uZ.X.
afternoon,
and
pays «for
livery
.'■hoss” all Sunday. In domestic affairs,
it is generally understood among men
that with five dollars a woman ought to
run a household of eight children and
two servants a whole week. The same
bill will keep up with the man's per­
sonal expense* nearly a day and a naif
in good weather.' it will also buy a
man a Dew hat, or a new buckle for his
wiie’i old one. When the fire dollars
is a gold piece, it is handy lo give to a
beggar or street oar conductor lor a
cent, after dark.
,
A ten-dollar bill is the alternative of
ten days; you pay the one br get the
other.' It will also buy five red of ten
white chips.
The twenty-dollar bill
will buv your wife a new bonnet, and
its brother will enable her to make the
children—if thiff’e is. onlv one of them—
look half way deeeiit The uses of the
twenty-dollar bill are very limited, and
this piece of money itself ia yery shy
and nurd to fiud, hiding away in ban&amp;
and fire-proof safe*, and only capt­
ured by long davs of hard labor on a
full hand.
It has been said, and is still claimed
by some writers on fiuance, that there is
a’ 8KJ0 bill This is an awful lie; the
extravagant coinage of the wandering
bruin of some financial editor, who has
gone mud bv the compilation of bank
reports in w^iich turns of one thousand
and even two thousand dollars have
been mentioned. One hundred dollars!
Why. there would be no limit to the pur­
chasing jxjwct of such a coin. It’would
buy a new press and a new dress for the
paper, put up a new building and hire a
funny man at each end. It could put a
new organ in the church and pay the
pastor's salary with one hand tied be­
hind 1L It could bay a railroad ticket
that would carry you farther than a
pass. In the hands of wicked and de­
signing men it would be a power peril­
ous to the safety of th'b Republic. Why.
it would buy two suits of clothes, and
plank the money right down for them. A
*100 bill! Th- very nature of the state­
ment. its wild, 'uncuybed, limitless
exaggeration brands itself with its own
hand, as a measureless lie.
8100!
When men allow themselves to be
dragged into such absurdities by the
heat of discussion it is time to closu the
debate. A $100 bill. Why, man iuive,
the President of the Uniteif States never
bad that moch money. One hundred
dollars!—Ifurlinqton Hawkeye.

far-West, the cent, save that which is
worn by the guileless Indian, is almost
unkndwn. It takas ten mills to make
the United States cent. Ono gin mill
does the work for the Indian.
The next coin in the ascending scale
is the two-cent piece. It is twice us
worthless or twice as useful as the cent,
according to the accidental or oriental
locality of its circulation. In any State
it will buy a revenue stamp to put on a
bank check, and this causes it to be in
such constant and heavy demand in the
newspaper offices that it always com­
manus a large premium.
The nickel is worth five cents, and
stands on the verge of silver money. It
is used to play “crack loo” with, and’
is also largely employed in ••match­
ing.” It is invariably lost when you
match with it. Iu principal use in com­
merce is the purchase ot schooners; like­
wise schnits." If the coinage of the
Dickel should be stopped for two weeks
three-fourths of all the beer saloons in
the United States would go into bank­
ruptcy. The nickel will buy a newspa­
per anywhere in America, and but for
the strong demand on the part of the
beer garden, it would scarcely be apSlied to any other use. In some places
Is Vaccination Safe I
, will get a " shine ” with the heels left
out. It will pay a streetcar fare in any
One argument against vnccinatioh for
place in the world except Philadelphia. the prevention of small-pox is, that
A dime is the familiar ten-eent piece it possibly may communicate other
erf cotnmerce. It is always made of sil­ diseases to the person. vaccinated. A
ver, all others being imitations. A dime writer in the Medical ami Surgical Hewill buv a five cent cigar witfi a red pa­ porter. replying to a physician who
per collar on. It wifi secure you admis­ thought be haascen two cases of the
sion to the side show. It will also buy kind, gives the following conclusive
a drink of whisky that will burn a hole facta:
through the sole of your beots. It is
Mr. Marston, an English physician
also largely used for the purchase of who had performed more than fifty thou­
fine-cut tobacco.
Efforts have been sand vaccinations, had never seen an
made to utilize it as a purchasing power instance of Any other disease thus com­
for ice-cream, but as it will only uuy one municated.
Similar testimony was
small dish, it has been a failure in that given by Dr. Lees, whose experience
direction. It is the most inconvenient was eauallv extensive.
coin known, and is disliked greatly on
Dr. W. Jenner, who had some thirteen
account of its supreme selfishness' It thousand *ick under his care, had no
will not buy two of anything, except reason to believe, or even to suspect,
malt liquor and the fatal brand of al­ that in anv case disease hod been com­
leged cigars known as ••tufers." It is municated by vaccination. Dr. West
used to a considerable extent in the pur- had treated 'a still larger number—
ehase of cigarettes, by. young men who twenty-six thousand with a like ex­
are not yet able to smoke tobacco.
perience.
A guarier is a real coin. It is worth
Agh:n-t the two cases referred to
two dimes and a nicklu and has some above, the writer in the lieporter men­
«yte about it.
It i» the purchaaing, tion*
„„„ the
w, case
vlv,„ „
„„„ deof .
a woman who
aqturalAtot throe domeatif or taro Im- nomMd a phraieian x» calling her
ported ogam. It M an anstoerat at the cUM-s j.-ath-tbe child having dennMud but a plebeian at the theater. ...loped aerolula not long after itTraocb
Laid la the honest palm oi the hotel
Bal .ubaequentlv rhe loot anporter, it make, him ubiquitous; devoted olh„ chud bt Kroluia. though &gt;he had
to the waiter, he becomes a horn oi reIurad to hare this child vaccinated,
plenty and ta-ten. himself with a deathUr
0, Ik,wn. o( lortr ,
hke
the back &lt;rf your chair. The
s&gt;ioMd
lik« gnp to lhebuk
Th. prn(1
prn(l,.„
i&lt;m»l .xperjenee,
experience. aaya:
uyi: “I hare
quarter maud. iu too beat .lit er society I n(!T,r hlu! , k,,, dle in '
and thnnk. not from even the dollar. could
,y.u]j be.
u, directly
directlr or
orindirecUri
indirectly attributed
He is convivial, social and friendly, and to vaccination. I have never bad the
is the eastat to lend and handiest to slightest reason to suspect, in a single
borrow iu the whole lot. hence he is instance, that vaccination had in any
never stilL and is largely known in way impaired human vitality, but have
society as • lemmas quarter.” You can i seen several cas**s in which, besides pre­
ybuy something of anything
,- . - for a venting small-pox, it was the means of
quarter.. and hire a boy
I ~ to
‘
-an
­
run
ofy certain trivial ailments and
tone mite. ..y
lor one.
one
1 1 of improving
„
„ general health of th«
4. for
In
the
Itenend. Uta worththlrty rente, beeauw
’“**. “3tienL”—JbuZA’a Companion.
whatever is sold foi a dime,
e, you can
can.*
&lt;1
*
- ______
yr
Uu.r in three.tor fcqimrter. Very often.
otten. I -Oscur
-0«mr Wild, ran arrow s lyochlu,
indeed, have efforts been made
Bonfouca.
Li.
A negro assailant of
sue to enlist i B
»tt Bo
nfouca, La.
the activities and enthusiasm of the ; a white woman had been taken out of
quarter
at foreign
quarter in
in Ute
the cause
eatme at
foreign missions,
missions. '. jjn
a|t
i| byv a
a u
mob. and Oscar saw the hang­
but
n«r from a oar window. The negro
hut it isn't
isn t that kind of a
s bird.
biro. It feels |. ijjjg
l-vn too Into
.
that it has grown
big 4..W
for tl,.**
that sort II __ ....
a preacher,
and his wild, eloquent
of thing, but Is
&lt;rf
is exactly the correct
current size : appeals for mercy moved the Ristnetio
and proper age for the porter
portur of
ot Ute , traveller greatly, but did not affect the
alee j&gt;tng-car.
■■
J lynchers, who quickly suspended him
The half-dollar is s rather more lone- 1 front a railroad bridge.
some coin than the quarter. It is a
------ -------------haH-broth* r to the dollar, and it is prin-, —Of the Yale class of 1H$2 no fewer
cipallv devoted: to sustaining Mr. Bar- than scienty-two confe-w that they
uani'i great mural show
In *otne drink intoxicating liquids, sixty-srven
}an of ’America tlie hall-dollar tanev- »moke. fifty-seven bet. forty gamble

It WM

them. Even politioa is affected by
good or had harvests. The country ia
m carefully canvuced for indications
of the agricultural prosperity as jt ever
is for votes. More so, in fact. Il the
fanning community is prosperous the
benign influence of the fact permeates
all industries. It is a tonic that can lift
the country out of the depth*, unless
other circumstances are overwhelming­
ly unfavorable, an* in that case it ef­
fectively paves the way for better
times. There have been years of
abundant crops, when credit was
badly crippled and the country suffer­
ing from a shock that is not liable to
happen more than once or twice in a
century, that did not appear to have
the customary effect of energising busi­
ness. The economic world for the limo
being seemed to have lost the strength
to rally. But these occasions are very
rare, and notwithstanding appearances,
the seeds of coming prosperity are in
them none the less.
The time was when the agricultural
communities were regarded a* the
servants of the others; now it seems
that the business world are purveyors
to his majesty, the farmer, and rise and
fall with his 'fortunes. Such at least is
the case in the United States. The
country merchant gauges his purchases
for the season by the amount of money
he thinks the fartner will have in his
pocket. The wholesale dealer is of
course affected through the demands
of the country merchant, and th* man­
ufacturer ana importer likewise. The
transportation corporations are in­
terested iu a double scuse, for they
both bear to the farmer what he wants
and take away his crops, and the ser­
vice performed in one direction has a
very direct relation to that done in
the other. With the good fortune of
an abundant harvest, the fanner im­
proves his stock of machinery, indulges
in luxuries, is disposed to better edu­
cate hi? children, to visit the metropo
Its, etc., etc. The difference to the
outside world between his doing these
things and not doing them is some­
thing immense.
And as for lbe operators on the stock
and produce exchanged the crops lie
at the base of pretty much everything.
The fluctuations on Wall street to-day
depend upon the weather; because of
its effect upon the farmer. And there
are the best reasons in the world why
such should be the case. With respect
to operations in grain, cattle and hogs,
there is necessarily a direct connection
between them and the farmer. In
some way, therefore, everybody has
come to watch the crop prospects with
interest. The men who feed the world
and furnish it the raw material for
clothes are, if they onlv know it, kings.
Through them Providence or nature
distributes its gifts. We have about
arrived at this discovery in America.
The dignitV of labor is here vindicated
more perfectly than in any other
country, and the social rank of the
farmer there is none to dispate. In
fact, there is no people more closely
wedded to the soil than wo are. The
merchant, or lawver. or physician, or
minister, or mechanic who does not
date back through one or, at most, two
generations to a rural origin is a rara
avig.
In no country is agriculture
raised to a higher plane of respectabil­
ity.
Washington claimed it to the be
noblest human calling.
Our agricul­
tural laborers arc not serfs. Over sev­
enty per cent of our cultivated land is
owned by the tillers of it.
We are tied to the soil by interest,
respect and affection. The throb ot
the* American heart is an agircultiKzl
throb, and our eminence among nations
is mainly an agricultural one.
In a
sense this quality makes us a kind of
balance-wheel in the world. Denselypopulated Europe looks to us princi­
pally to supply her food deficiency. By
the sufficiency or ’ insufficiency of our
harvests the cost of living is influenced
throughout civilization.
Speculator"
abroad as well an those at home are
compelled to make our crops an im­
portant clement in their calculations.
The great variety of our productions is
another important fact that contributes
to the interest with which the agricul­
tural yield is regarded. Maize, wheat,
barley, cotton, tobacco, wool, pork and
beef are all main staples. The amount
of business these products involve in in­
numerable ways can scarcely be com­
puted.
Then we have our butter,
cheese and egg interests that are some­
thing enormous. During the last fiscal
year’ about $2tX).000,000 worth of
these were exported, and the home
consumption is greater than that of
beef and pork.
The infinite variety of fruits and veg­
etables, added to our other products,
render in the aggregate about the most
interesting thing to contemplate there
is in the world. It is by no means
strange that the weather is carefully
watched and canvassing is constant­
ly going on. and that in short the su­
preme topic of practical and specula­
tive American thought is the crops. It bebecomes also a social—not say a family­
topic. for where is the individual whose
brothers or cousins are not, some of
them, farmers—St. Louie Globe-Demo-

—A Western writer suggests that
the summer food o! hogs should be
more nitrogenous than corn, and reocommends green oats and peas. The
pea is very rich in muscle and bbnebuilding elements, and oats are also
superior to corn in this respect. The
crop should be sown in the proportion
of two bushels of peas and one of oats
per acre, and well covered. The pigs
should be turned in when the i
is just passing out of* the milk.
—A train of ten can. ench fitted up
with separate stalls for sixteen cattle,
recently carried 160 head from Chicago
to Boston in throe and a half days, the
shrinkage per head being only 21J
pounds average, or about one-fourth ot
the muni loan. The stalls were provid­
ed with springs to prevent serious jar­
ring, and with water and feed-trougha.
The saving in shrinkage under this hu­
mane system compensates, it is said.for
the highest cost of carriage.

—Lunar caustic, carefully applied «
aa not to touch the skin, will destroy

.sway from the mines about a year, hut
it was not then known that he had got­
ten away with anything verv valuable
in tlte shape of a atone, He roamed
around for a period of eighteen months,
through every vicissitude.
He bail
many difficulties before him in trying to
gain passage. Finally he got on board
a boat which chanced in the Gambexa
River. Twice be was confined in servi­
tude. until by two escapes be finally
made a safe arrival in London. There
he inadvertantly became acquainted
with an African woman who had been
brought from slavery to London, and
was then free. She was a servant in the
family whose guestlwat. This woman
c iuM speak his tongue, and, after be­
coming better acquainted with her he
divulged itis secret, telling her that he
had been a slave, in servitude for years
in the diamond-fields 'of Africa: that by
providential escape he had made his
way to London. He told her that he
wanted to obtain information in refer­
ence to getting his wife and children to
London. The black woman, in her ig­
norance. was unable to tell him what to
do, and she applied to me. knowing that
I had a knowledge of slave times in
America. After hearing the- story I ad­
vised them to apply to the British Con­
sul in the provincial building. I went
with them, and upon explaining to the
Consul, the question arose, among other
questions, what recompense h« could
make the English Government for go
ing to such expense as he had asked.
After demurring a good while, on ac­
count of the great (ear he felt about let­
ting the officials know he bad such a
treasure, he finally admitted that he had
a rich stone. Upon further inquiry and
delay he requested the gentleman to
come and make' an examination. He
exercised great caution for
one
of such ignorance, but finally brought
down a large stale loaf of bread and
laid it on the table for its examination.
Before the loaf was cut open he negoti­
ated for the safe arrival of his family
and protection against his former mas­
ters, provided the value of the diamond,
was such as represented. I having ten­
dered him advice, was given an invita­
tion to be present in the provincial build­
ing when the examination was made. I
was not prepared, however, to believe
that I would nave the satisfaction of see­
ing what is considered as the iargestand
most valuable diamond in the world.
When the loaf WM cut open few be­
lieved that a diamond would be revealed.
Hatton Garden experts were called, and
they were loth to believe that the stone
was as Largo and valuable as the owner
had represented. It was the size of an
ordinary orange when revealed; and
thereupon it was at once claimed by
some present that it was of a very low
grade and of inferior tjualily. On a
more thorough examination and partial
cutting it was found to represent n
weight of over six hundred carat'*. It
was subsequently shown to a number of
the largest diamond dealers in London.
Its history was traced as accurately as
possible; the slave was believed, money
was put up. and his wife and children
were at once sent for. The slave was
treated like a lord of the manor, and the
last time that I snjv him he was riding
in a fine carriage and enjoying all the
comforts and luxuries of London. It
was1 a queer sight to see him—as black
as tar and a regular Ethiopian.
••The diamond was purchased by n
syndicate of capitalists, and the very
best experts pronounced it a very tine
specimen. Its owners hold it at
. 500,000; and have refused. £3,000,000
for the stone. Shortly after it passed
from the hands of the black man to its
present owners, it was examined ami
admirea by the Queen of England and
the Prince of Wales.”—Cor. SL Loui‘
Republican.
Insect* Go In? West.

Iron Biliera.”

and tody.
PENGEL’.Y'S WOMAN’S FRIEND.

any one dying ot a broken heart wu dabbed
by. a girl who.didn't want.to see life robbed of ।
iu dearest seutiment.
'
ICS*

. TbouKinda of dollar* con be nved by using
pn&gt;I*r judgment in taking care of ibe health
of yuundf and family. If you are Bilious.
Lave sallow cum pic ih m. pour aj.jMrtlte. low and
dcpreMcd epiriu, and generally debilitated, do
not delay u uiotitent, but gr» al once and pro­
cure a boule ot thoae wonderful.Electric Bll-

Bcrgt. Muon ha* abandoned the Idea that be
is a great hero and ha* come down to tolierlng
that be U a Mood deal like a State Priepn cou\Vby continue the use of remedies tbxt only
relieve, when Elya* Cream Balm, pleasant of
application and a sure cure for Catarrh, Hay
Fever and Cold in head, can be had for 50
cental
Apply into noatrila with little finger.
I waa troubled with Ch omc Catarrh and
gathering In my bead, was very deaf at time*
and Lail discharges from my ears, l»caides be­
ing unable* to breath through my nose. Be­
fore the second buttle of Elya’ Cream Balm
was exhausted I was cured, ami today enjoy
sound health. C. J. CouBix/ttS Cheatnnt SU,
Field Manager Philadelphia Pub. Honae, Pa.
£1 vs’Cream Balm, for Catarrh Cold in the
Head. Ac., give* the beat of satf.'faction. Have
yet tn hear of single case where it has not giv­
en relief or permanent cure. Ciias. L. Bhux
dxgl. Druggist, Muskegon, Mich.

It is believed that a ful)-gn&gt;wu grizzly beu
could pull a load of 30,000 pounds on a level,
but the trouble is to find any one to harneM
him up.
.

—It ia reported that a New Jersey
.•tear maker La* dis overed that the leaf
it the tobacco plant makna a ver&gt; good

TEACHERS,
LADY (
HOUSEWIVES,

A Prevention and Cure
Headaches,
Lansitnde,
Pale or Motliy Complexion,
Sleeplessness .- Palpitation,
Numbness, Nausea, Dizziness,
Dry Cough, Nervous Irritation,
Weak and Laine Baek,
and pains in various parts rd th* body.
Zoo-Phon* is not a Cure-all. It applies to this
Not a Umporrt-y Stimvlani, bat a psrmaunr
Cars.
■
TESTIMONIALS I hare in. abundance Irons
persons in tbo tost society. who prefer that thej
evidence be g.ver privately to thoa* asklnc it
WMOTHEBS, are your DAUGHTERS a'.Llnc'

R. PENOELLY, M. D.,
Sold by Jfrvfffftete.)Yalqaaiwi, Mich.

ERRORS OF YOUTH.

A Geflriajjjac who Buffered for year* from Ker.
HUMBUGGED AGAIN.
vouedcbi.il*. Prenjatu’e decay, and »J1 the effect,
I saw so much said about the merits of Hop of youthful luditcretlon. will for theVakeof suf
Bitters, and mv wife who wan always doctor­ ferine humanity, eettd free to all who need it th*
recipe
and direction for making the simple remedy
ing and never well, teased me so urgently to
get her some, I concluded to t&gt;c humbugged by which he was cured. Sufferers wishing to profit
again; and I am gta I did, for in lea* than two by the advertiser* experience esn do so by addressmonths’ use of the Bitter*, my wife was cured,
14-ljrr, JOHN B. OGDEN. 43 Cedar Bt„ N. Y.
and she has remained so for eighteen months
i. C-Qft per dayal home. Sample* worth '•* free
sIdco^ I like such humbugging.—H. T. St.
IS ?«,v Addrna Hr&gt; »*o« * CoLPortlaiid. Me.
Paul. —Pioneer Preaa._________
.

It is now the fashion to have bare floors and
scatter a few rugs around. It tan't easy to kill
a cockroach on a velvet carpet.
THE HEIGHT OF FOLLY.
To wait until you are in tied with disease you
may not get over for tuonthf. Is the height of
folly, when you might be easily cured during I
the early symptoms by Parker’s Ginger TouicWe have known »ick)y families made the
healthle»t, by a timely u»r of this pure medl- |
Evangel 1st Barnes has been hit by a stone
from a sling, and he doesn't believe that David
killed Gollah In any aach mannnr.
HIGHLY ESTEEMED.
The youthful color and a rich lustre are re­
stored to faded or gray hair by the use of Park­
er’s Hair Balaam, a harmless dres sing highly
esteemed tor its perfame and purity.

A California paper thinks it Is ungrateful for
girls to commit: suicide, it costs so much to
raise them.

&lt;

/g
-AWARDED-

Capcine
6

Porous
Plaster.
-MEDALS.

THE BAD AND WOTHLESS
arc never imitated or coutcrfetfod- This is
especially true of u family medicine, and it is
The Best Known Remedy for
positive proof that the remedy imitated is of
Backache or Lame Back.
highest value. Aa soon as It had toon tested
Rheumatism
or Lame Joints.
and proved by the whole world that Hop Bit­
ters was the purest, best and most ratable fam­ Cramps or Sprains.
Neuralcia or Kidney Diseases.
ily medicine on earth many imitations sprung
Lumbago, Severe Achec or Pains
up and began to steal the notices in which the Femalo Weakness.
press and jieople of the country had expre* ed
Arc Superior to oil other PIo»trr*.
the merits of H. B- and in everv way trying to
induce suffering invalids lo use their stuff iu
su-ad, expecting to make money on the credl
and good name of H. B. Many others started
nostrums put up in similar style u&gt; H. B., with
variously devised names In which the worn
"Hop” or "Hope” were used in a way to induct
people to believe they were the same as Hop
Bitter.". Ail such pretended remedies or cures,
no matter what their style or name is, and es­
pecially those with the word “Hffp" or "Hops”
in their name, are imitations or counterfeit*.
Beware of them. Touch none of them. Use
nothing but genuine Hop Bitters, with a bunch
or cluster of green Hops on the white label b*ha iff some other nbutrr hartn? a similar
Trust nothing else. Druggists and dealers are •oimdlnc name. See that th* word ia apelted
warned against dealing m imitations or coun- . V' ■ l» 1’ T XT T&gt; I*.--.. M —
terfeits.

The tide of travel V'th insects, as
with men. seems naturally to be from
east tQ west. With the noted exception
of the grape phylloxera anti the Colo­
rado potato beetle (as Miss Murthly
points out in a paper to the St. Louis
Academy), Europe ha* ’not received
from America any considerable pest,
while innumerable noxious species nave
NOTED BUT UNTITLED WOMAN.
crossed the Atlantic from Europe.
There is a compar»tive scarcity, too. oi
Asiatic insect species on the western
seaboard of America, notwithstanding
the frequent ocean traffic. Spite of
great arid plains and lofty mountains,
nearly all the insects of Eastern Ameri­
can States, including those from Europe,
have found their w%y to the fields, or­
chards, and vuicyanis of the Pacific
States. One • f the latest insect in­
vaders from Europe is the cabbage or
rape-butterfly (Pieris rapnt, Schrank).
It appearet! about twelve years ago in
some northern seaports, and its range
now extends from far north in Canada
to the south of Georgia. It attacks
every cruciferous garden vegetable, but
in the flower garden curiously reject*
plants of that family in favor of migno­
nette.
Miss Murthly has noted a large
amount of premature emergence from
the chrysalis, and consequent death ;
indicating imperfect adiustment of the
insect to the climate of, its new habitat.
In Europe the insect is mainly kept In
check by numerous parasites. For sev­ amaatiiSra at tte tflUl ot thl&lt;
eral years in America none such came
to the aid of the disheartened gardener,
but some have now appeared, the most
important being a small metallic green
fly. which, though identical with the
most destructive European parasite, is
proved to be indigenous on both sides of
the Atlantic. It lays its eggs in or upon th* Ctenc* ot Uta."
the skin of the mature caterpillar, and
from these come small maggots, which
live on the fatty tissues of tnsir victim
but do not touch its vital organ until the
chrvsalis state is reached. —Haiurr.
—Nome years ago William Francis
Henrietta left Huntington Landing,
Conn., where he owned property, and
wu not heard from for years. He died
recently in Brazil, leaving $158,000 to
Ida relatives in the North.
Ilia rela­
tive* were delighted 10 bear from, him
once more and learn that he had Dot
been dead all those years.—Button PaaL

For Women

FORTUNES FOR FARMERS AND MECHAN-1

CAUTI0N.“&gt;S“
■ NUKKREMEDY AT LAMT.Priceme.

A MEAD’S Medicated CORN and BUNION PLASTER.

PARKER’S HAIRThe UeU.
BALSAM.
CteaneU and

toot Ecooooucal Hair

-

k itn." rril; n Rssn

bl~~'|~jjy?

'

■

’ -’'v

Ftatstn Cckpt.

PARKER’S

GINGERTONIC
A Purs Family Mtdicine Dial Never Istexitates.

�iiendeman gives the following info:
Moat of the sturgeons which boy*
tried to train killed Weasel vet by stay­
ing too long under water when they have seen grow on good, rich, upland
were taken out into the lake, and others soils ■ moderately manured . and .wuL
-tond-wagou shone with a pined away and died before. any pyogcultivated. Owners di ter os to the best Fever, Night Sweats or any disease that come#
re“H could be made.
soils, some insisting that low and from MaUrta ar diMrrdered Liver and Hot
For three years Tom did his young naturally damp land is the best, while Sun*! If.so, procure a buttle of Green'# Ague
boys behind, high and low of master good and faithful service, but at
Conqueror, a bleb Is an acetic extract of strung
others prefer die reverse.
During-the
Voote, corulrfued with Sulphate of Msg!: 31.60, IF PAJD tN ADVANCE.
last he changed ow’ners. and nothing U discussions nt a meeting ot the West­ ionic
ned&gt;, etc., and jiOMfrely contains no Quinine.
known of his history from the time ho ern New York Ho-thmltilral Socie’y, Arsenic or other points. Ilparffiwtbe blood
To Advertiser*:
was sold. Harry wss forced to pert C. 1- Hoag, of Lockport, who is a suc­ ck-auxc# the liver, optaM and other wreltve
wita his pct.because the Millers moved cessful cultivator, said that quince trees organs so etfcctuily thsRibe cbIQs trill not re­
awav from the lake, but the twenty-five drop’ the loaves if planted .on low turn. Wc have qever ‘found any ca#c of Fever
and Ague it will nor cure. Price. 30 cents and
dollars he received was a poor recom­ grounds, whatever might be the culti­ 11.00
per bottle, (hit- large bottle Jias cured apense to him for the loss of such on ac­ vation given them, but hold them well five In one family. Bold by all druggist* and
15 Jau SB ,
complished fish.
.on upland.
On the other hahd. El dealer* everywhere. •
lialiln tr.
t-ir natmm.
But though he never heard of him A Bronson, of Geneva, well known also
BHILOIT 8 CONSUMPTION GUREr~'
again, ho has always cherished his as as skillful cu’.tivntor. said that’ acPERUSE THESE LIBERAL AD. KATES.
Tills I# beyond question the most (ueccaaful
And ihe cwper# olI tho llttlo horse that can­ memory
.cording to his observation tho leaves
Mr. Harry Miller is now a middle­ drop from trees growing on upland, but Cough Medicine we have ever sold, a few do«ea
tend at hla side.
,
Invariably cure the worst cases of Cough, crour
« 5.00 "I 8-00 How the «hambiing«.unelA tame to tho piaud- aged gentleman, living in the4town of
and
Bronchitis, while tta wonderful succcm is
adhere
well
on
low.
moist
ground.
Somo
aof their tamo.
•
“ 6.80 ' 14-00
leas eye# came •Ueut, nuurticatlng a« Warren, Pennsylvania, where he often
succeeded best with them in grass, to the cure of consumption l» without a paral­
in the history of mediene. Since It*’ Am
entertains Ids young friends with the others on zwell . cultivated soil.
" 90.00
So lel
discovery It ba# been #oM on aguarntee. a test
story of his wonderful sturgeon Tom, doctors differ.
Among tho mr»«t suc­ which no other medicine can stand. If you
iinebea.
~£0f1 S-'OTl 16-00
woo And tiie mystery within it only hinted of at every word of which is •strictly true.— cessful trees whfeh we have seen were have a Cough we earn ent Iv ask you to try itttoeUs.
Harper's Young People.
those on good upland soil la the Price 10cta,fiOcta.«Bd*l.&lt;Jo Uyonr lung# are
laat
Chert, nr Back Lone, and Bhfiob’s
Fnnn the llttl-- grated square In the rear, and
vegetable gmdsn of Robert J. Swan, of sore.
Porous Plarter. Sold bv F. T. Boise.
ooainr there
The Lesson of the Briers.
Geneva, N. Y.
They were twelve or
The snout of wmo atranzo animal that sniffed
ANSWER THIS QUESTION,
fifteen v e ira old, four or five inches in
••Charley! Charley!” called Elia to diameter, and eight or nine feet high.
Why &lt;Jo so many people we sec around u«.
ORNO STRONG,
And, Last of all the clown, making mirth for her younger brother; “ don't go among The ground was well cultivated, and scent to prefer to stiffer and be made mirerabkitidlgeftiou. constipation, dlzzlne#-. low of
nil the town.
Editor and Proprietor.
those briers; coma ovor here in the small ftiounds of coal ashes were placed by
appetite, coining up of the Food, yellow skin.1
brows ever aowu.
. . .garden!"
about theta to exclude the borer. Some when for 75ct«. we will sell them bhiloh’s Vitai And hi* chief attention paid to the little mulo
••H&lt;»! stay in the garden! who wants of tho trees have borne two bushels, fixer, goaranted to cure them. Sold by F. T.
;
that played
A tattoo on tee dashboard w.th his heels, tn to stay in thd garden?” answered master and one year a hundred bushels were Bdui
SHILOH’SCATTABRH REMEDY, A marCharley, with great contempt. “I picked from sixty trees.
Those were velou# cure fur Catarrh, Diphtheria. Canker
VILLAGE OFFICERS.
‘ Ob the circus-day pnrndel How the bugles guess you think I’m a girl to want to the orange quince. Rhe’s quince, on mouth, and Head Ache. With each bottle
play where it's all smooth and every­ the grounds of E’wanger &amp; Barrv, at here I# an Ingenious nasal injector for the
played and plap-dl
And h (W tiro giossv horses to«M»d their flossy thing. Ho!”
.
•
Rochester, which have borne hear ly are more successful treatment of these complaint#
manes and neighed.
“That’s not it, Charley, but you many years old, and some are ten or without' extra charge. Price 50ct». Sold by
As the ruttie and the rhyme of the tenor-drum-,
know we both have on our good clothes, twelve feet high. Thevgrow on upland, FT.BoisX.
mer's time
_
,
,
Filled
the
hungry
hearts
of
all
of
us
with
mel­
and
we
must
be
ready
to
run^uick
Boise. H. W.
have received good cultivation, anil the
ody sublime r1 ir
I., tlA Vegetable Product,
when we bear the carriage drive up to ground has an annual moilera’.e top­
the gate with Aunt May and Cousin dressing of manure. From the little we
Only, used in Ayek’s Ague Cure, has
proven Itself a never failing aud rapid
Harry and Alice.”
HARRY MILLER’S STURGEON.
have sc «n of the Champion quince we
“ I know that as well as you do," said are led-to regard it as a very promisin '
cure for every* form of Malarial Dis­
order, Fever and Ague, or Chills and
Thirtv-fonr years ago boys who lived Charley, pushing his way throagh the \ ar
anil it m iv prove the best
Fever. No injury follows Its use, and
1HRISTIAN CHURCH-F A. BlteekPastor. on the shares bf Lake Champlain were nuugc
umaaiuui^w'i
hedge a#
as no
ne apuau.
spoke. “ Giris
area t good
J Services every Sabbath at 10.30 a. m. and very fund o! catching the big sturgeons for 'any thing but to sit md sew. I known The quince is too often qiii e its effects are permanent. It rouses
neglected, and allowe.I ’o grow into n the system lo a condltLa of vigorous
7 p. tn. Sabbath school at 12 m. Prayer meet­ that abounded in its dear waters. No: 1 mean to'c!------ ”
ing every Thursday erehltig
mass of unprun-d brush. a .«l t • become
more so, perhaps, than bovs would be
Ella felt like giving some angry an- incumbered with gross mid weeds. health, cleanses the ,blood of malarial
poison, and Imparts a feeling of com­
VrETHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH-A. now if fine fish were as plenty and ns swer. but she checked herself, and went Nurserymen raise straight and hand
fort and security mofct desirnlile in.
Xli. D. Newton, Paator. SetTicee every Sat&gt;- easily captured; but then* other sports on with her sewing a-- she sat under the
hath at 10.40 a. in. am! 7 p. in. Sabbath were not so common in that day, and’ big tree, wondering what nnule Charley H»:ue irees. which do best if the ketuls Ague districts. It is an excellent tonic
are formed within a foot or t ao «»• iho and preventative, as well as cure, of
•cbool at 12 m. Prayer t-cetlng every Tburafishing had much less comjietition. Of - break off his sentence so suddenly,
day eventug.
ground, with a single straight xtem. If all complains peculiar to malarious,
en six or seven would g&lt;| o it Cogetiter 1
El ku El-la!’’ cried a pitiful voice nt
VYLODOE NO. 37, K. of?., meets at IU with long seines, and some famous ' last, “come help me! I’m acting all the young trees happen to be crooked marshy and miasmatic regions. The
great superiority of Ayer’s Ague Cuke
CaAtft Hall. Nasbviile. Mlchlgnn. every catches they used to make.
torn. O—oh!”
Friday evening, for the encouragement and
cutting down lo a bud or new shoot, kovcr any other cotn{&gt;ouud is that It
One spring day several lads about
Sure enough, Charley teas gelt nz a’l and a, vigorous stein will spring up and contains no Quinine, Arsenic, or min­
•uptxirt of all worthy, true, uteailfaxt end bullora ble Brother Kuighta.
•igh ccn years old hauled in a splen- torn; some big thorns had &lt;-mght his ■foini a stra gbt tree. If this new tree eral ; consequently it produces no
D. L. Smith K. R. S. Okno Svaoxa, C. C. did s:urge&lt;&gt;n. whose good nature and • new trousers, aud the harder be strugdoes no- incline to prow fu i cimtly quinism or injurious effects whatever
intelligeuce won him ouiie a local fame, , gled the worse ntauurs Iwqutm
upon the constitution. Those cured
Jlhtcellniiroiit CardM.
and whose story ought to have been
“Hold still, dear.’’ said Ei a “lean t stake. The rutun«g back and pruning by it are left as healthy as if they bad
written long ago.
.
help you while you kick s .
There!
must o' course be done before tho buds never had the disease.
ITT H. YOUNG. M. I). Office east side of
He was such a fine, handsome fellow. | now you're tree. ’ Oh! Charley!”
The direct action of Ayer’s Ague
-well in spring The princ pa) disease
’ » •• Main St., Nashville. Office hours from
tlia. Harry Miller, a kind-hearted boy who । Charley, clapping his h nd to his nfl’ee ing the quince is t.:r tw’g-blighL Cure upon the Liver and Digestive
7 U&gt;9 a. tn., and 4 to 7 p. tn.
Organs makes It a superior remedy
.was fond of pets, determined to take him trou«er-s"knew well-enough whrst Elin’s
for
Liver Complaints, producing many
TXR. C. W. GOUCHER. El.ectlo Physician and home and try to tame h.ra.
' “Oh!” meant. It meant a great big
ways well to cut &lt;&gt;fl and burn the dead
a f Burgeon, is prepared to answer all calls
The rest of the party were all willing tear in his new clothes two cousins portions. The borer attacks the* stem remarkable cures, where other medi­
cines have failed.
that may be mads for his services. Office and to give up their share inthe prize, so the coming to spend the d r\ anti a poor
For sale by all druggists.
big captive’s fate was sc:tied then and , little boy sobbing in the nursety until be treated the-same as the apple borer,”
[. PARMENTER, M. D. Office over there. Harry took him to his homo at the nurse would stop scohling aud make
Bull’s Drug »U&gt;re, Vermontville, Mich. Cedar Point, near Port Henry, and pnt I him fit togudown and see the company,
Netting Out BInckberrieH.
HAS. H. BRADT, Lawyer, Circuit Court him in a box which he had sunk in the I The very thought of all this misery
Blackberries can be set out in the fall
Commlaalouer, Real E«uta and Inauraoca water, and fastened to a landing st the made him cry.
..
Aft. Prompt attention given to all buiinea#edge nf the lake.
•• .A
On! they’ll be herb .in a minute! as well as in the spring. Lnl alway?
an trusted to my care. Conveyancing a special­
The box was about eight feet wide i boo-hoo!” l»e -ohbed; “what dial. J do?” when in n dormant state. Nearly all
ty. Office oppoaile Union Houao.
and thirteen feet long, so that a stur­ I
“Why, stand still, that’s all.” said late planting in the spring are failures.
A.^FOOTE. PHYSICIAN &lt;fc SURGEON- geon could have pleniv of room, even I Ella, hastily threading het in-e&lt;lle with But if late planting is unavoidable, the
il
he
was over three anti a half feet long, !n long black thread; “stand just so, sets must be shaded an.I kept continu­
J* Sueeawir to Dr. Wickham. Office #cc•udiWor north .of the Nashville House; reri- and weighed .about one hundred and dear,
___ _ till 1 mend it.”
ously moist until all danger of wilting
dedet tirst door north of the Wolcott House. fifteen pounds, as this one did. Harry.
“Men
* ’ t!” cried master Charles, de­ ami shriveling is oyer. They do best Is Recommondod by Physician^Prompt attention to call# night or day.
was careful that there should be plenty ligiue.L
on light soils mid in satiny exposures
, _
*O Ella! li’i/f you?”
•••Certainly .I will,
....., ” &gt;h« ......
With partial shade on moist, heavy
MORY PARADY, Justice of the Peace. of chance for the fresh lake water to i
answered.
Office, Corner Main and bltennan Streets. llow all through this novel aquarium. | very gvutlv. at the same timebegi
land, the canes are apt lo grow too late,
eo that it was always fresh and pure. I to draw the edges of the tear tug
and tho heavy frosts find them un­ guarantee that It will cure any
Q LIEBIIAL'SER, Merchant Tailor and deal­
case* and we will forfeit the store amount
i-ripened an&lt;l unable to endure the win­ Mu fail# iu a single Instance,
er in Ready Made Clothing. Sec me He also nude a door which c &gt;uld i&gt;e " you know girts are no: good iu
,
ter. Warm, well drained, but not dry.
It is unlike an? other Catarrh remedy, #a
before you purchase clothing. Fit* guar- securely locked, so that ho could lake thing but to sit and sew.”
hi*taken
Internally, acting upon
his pot out when be wished, and yet bo
...........................
“
compost soil is the best. On dry. bard
“U Ella: I didn't say that.”
the D|OOd- if y“u ar* ’troubled wltKlhl#
sure that no one would steal liini“ I think you did, Charley.”
soil the fruit often either perishes be­ dlitrualng dl*ea*e.a*k your Drusjp»t for It, and
HATCH «fc CO.. Manufacturers of Taffy
Accarr so lairino# on rrnrrrrvTX. If be
The next thing was a name, and com­
“ Not'xactli/ that. 1 guess. It was fore maturity, or is only a bunch ol
■ Can&lt;%s, Cbocidatc Drop# and CarmeU.
ha# not got It, lend to u&gt; .-.f.d ve trill forward
mon place Tom was chosen, jnsl as it awful mean, if I did. Oh. harry! I hear tasteless seeds, in the preparation oi Uamodiataly.
Price. 75 cents per tottla.
might be f-»r a horse or a dog. It did the carriage.”
the soil, plow deep, thoroughly loosen­
F. 1 CHENEY &amp;. CO., Toledo. Ohio.
not take Tom long to learn his name,
ing. if possible, tho subsoil. If an op­
•• Du 1ms quiet, you little wriggler!”
and
as
he
had
all
the
worms,
taent
ami
portunity
is
given,
the
roots
of
the
laughed his sister, hastily tinUUutg the
RANK BAKER. Manufacturer nf Boots
blackberry arc great foragers. * It dcand Shoe*, lagged or mjw&lt;*1. Repairing kitchen scraptzlie could eat, and was work as well as she could, so that Char­
promptly attended to. rt the rign of the redalways treated kindly, ho soon grew ley in a moment looked quite fine again.
m.an&lt;Ls mellowness rather than richness.
bout,ca«t side Main Stvery tame and 1st.
He was ready •• There! we'll get to the gate before With the latter it grows too rank.
in liefil culture the rows of blackber­
ACOB OSML’N. Livemnan, l»arn near Wol­ whenever any one come to feed him. they turn into the lane, after alL”
cott House. First class turnout* at reason­ and when his master playfully patted
i hariey held Ella's hand m &gt;re tight­ ries should be from six to eight feet
able rates, S(&gt;cclal rates to commercial men.his sides, he would roll -over just as ly titan usual as they ran toward the apart, ami the plants set three feet apart
Funeral and wedlng parties furnished with car roguishly as a pet puss might.N
gate together. Ella noticed it, and in‘rows. It will take about 1.6U0plants
riejjea ou short nonce.
A Frenchman who lived near Harry stopped to kiss him.
tor nn acre. Il is best to give the cane#
••i’tn sorry I spoke so," he p'-oted, support. This can l o dore by posts
RALN BROS.. Shoemakers. Special atten­ Miller's home was wonderfully skillful
tion given to One qnd Mired bail*, also in training animals, and ho persuaded kissing her again right heartily. ••Hoes and fence wire, and grown in a'continu­
repairing. All manufactured work made fromHany to let him seb what he could do it show?”
ous bushy row. In Slay and June the
best of M»ek and warranted. First door touth
with Tom. He found a most docile
•• Not a hit; yon wouldn't know any roots send up vigorous sprouts, which
Boiae'a hardware.
’
pupil, and succeeded amazingly, to thing had happened. Hurrah: liere g.ow with amaziu;
TXT ALLACE BEAUCHAMi~UvSrywKn; Harry’s intense delight- After several they ttrel’J
rhe black*
irom fivi
v ’
Nashville Hou«c Bam. Single ami weeks ho considered his task accom­
"Hurrah! Howdy do. everybody!”
double turn out# fumt»be&lt;l promptly and rea­ plished, and returned his charge to bls
shouted Charley.—Joel Stacy, iu SL management and culture, both ot which
sonably. Commcreial men driven to neighyouyg owner.
‘
it needs. It the cauc-t are allowed to
Nicholas.
tHiring’town# nt »[M'cinl rates.
Tom was now ready to do something
grow tail, and then cut oil with slu-nr-,
TTELLOGG &amp; BELL, proprietors Planing practical in return for his master’s kind­
thev have few. if any lateral br.-.nehe-*
Pleasant
Remedy
for
Toothache.
Ik Mill. Planing and Malching, Resawing ness; in fact, he had become a real
and produce meagre crops. The best
and Moulding a specialty. Scroll Sawing, “sea-horse.” wqll broken to harness, or
Dr. T. C. Osborn. in the .V« dical Brief, wav is when in rapid growth and about
Brackets. Window and Door Frames made to
rather
to
rope,
for
that
is
all
he
needed
three
or four feet high, pinch off with
order. Wood Turning In all Its branches.
states that his cook dame to him with a
BROWS IRON BITTERS arts
to pull a boat
Swollen cheek, asking for something to -he fingers the terminal biid. Then
a Certain cure for all diseases
HAS. W. DEM ARA Y, Dealer Iu Watches,
A heavy ring was fastened through relieve the toothache with which she lateral branches will start out. ' They,
Ctoeki, fine Jewelry cud Silverware. Rein­ the thick cartilage just behind tho dor­
requiring
a complete tonic; «pehad been suffering all night He was too. must be watched and pinched so
a practical Jeweler, pAtroaa cun depend upon
ckilly Indigestion. Dyspepsia, Inter­
haring tbeir repairing done right. Two doora sal or back fin. and a stout rope was on the point of sending her to a dentist soon as long enough. In this way good,
mittent Fevers, Want of Appetite,
snapped into this ring when Tom was when it occurred to him that there was safe, stocky canes can be had which will
•oath of Truman^ «u&gt;re________
Ixms of Strength, T^ick of Energy,
“hitched up," just as a rein often is in the hou-e a vial of compound tincture support themselves in windsand storms.
ONAH B. RASEY, Erpre## anti Drayman­
etc. Enriches the blood, strength­
BlacklM5rr.es sprout, but those which
Goods and Baggage carried to any place in into a bit.
of benzoin.
ens the muscles, aud gives new
The other end-of the rope was held or
tbe village.
_____________
come
up
between
the
rows
can
be
re
­
••After cleaning the decayed tooth,”
llito to the nerves. Acts like a
,made fast in the boat, so that .all one he says, “I saturated a pledget ol moved if taken in time, as easily as
IRAM IL DICKINSON, manufacturer of had to do to have a fine ride was to at­
charm ou the digestive organs,
cotton lint with the tincture, and [lacked weeds. But if left to their wild im­
and dealer Iu Hard Wood Lumber. Bulldremoving all dyspeptic symptoms,
tend to the steering. A long pole did it well into the cavity, hoping this would pulses the farmer or gardener will soon
aMaterial a specialty. Cash paid for logs. MID
such ns tasting the Food,Belching,
yard ou Bbennsn et., st M. C. R.R. crossing. duty lor reins, and a slap on the water suffice Jor the time, and told her to come find a bramble wilderness in the midst
Heat in the Stomach,' Heartburn,
either side of Tom would turn him in back in two or three hours if she was of his premises, which will require
AMES FLEMING, practical Jeweler and ,thc opposite direction.
etc.
Tito only Iron Preparation
not relieved. I was turning away,when strength and patience. They can be­
Watch-maker. Clock*, Watche#, Silver and
that will not blacken the teeth or
come
very
easily
a
very
unruly
and
dis
­
If
he
grew
lazy,
as
he
sometimes
did.
Plated Ware,-Jewe)ry and Optical Good*. Rock­
she said it might not be necessary, per­
give
headache.
Sold by all Drugford Watchea a apeci al ty. Repairing and Engrav- a sharp splash just lichind would quick­ haps, as the pain was alreadyGgone. agreeable tertant.' With care and watch­
g:sta at $1.00 a bottle.
.
tor done In a wot kmaniika tnauner.
en him up. There was never any trou­ Supposing her faith had a large amre in fulness they are a source of pleasure and
BROWS - CHEM IC&lt;4Ij CO.
profit
—
luwa
Stale
Hegiskr.
ble
about
getting
homo
after
a
ride.
the relief, I would not allow mMiaif to
Z~kRNO STRONG, plain and fancy ,u»u rnntar.
Baltimore.
Md.
V/ Tha best facintlea for doing work of any J ust as soon as Tom hod a chance to think that the medicine had anytiyng to
Sure Death to Lice.
turn around, he would start straight for do with the cure any more than so much
Jiia box. and swim with all his might hot water would have had. But when I
CEWARE
OF
IMITATIONS.
Take a bar of common soap; place in
iintil he was once more snnrly housed. arrived at my office two other patients a pan containing a little water; thou
While Tom was being trained, he was were awaiting me with the same afflic­ heat until melted down; then add car­
W. NISKERN, Attorncv and Councilor
allowed
only
about
six
feet
of
rope,
but
I
• at Law, practices in all Stale Courts. Col
tion, and I determined, by way of ex- bolic acid crystals (carbolic acid crys­
Harry
that---he -could
leetiODS promptly attended to. Office over after
---- —-.T ’felt sqro ----—- - -tni-«t
-- - . l&gt;eriment.
UULU.. to 1,3V
ULUVUJ . JLW
use MIV
the DMUIV
sdme Iremedy.
To tals can l&gt;e hail of a druggist in oneSpaulding's store, Hastings Mich.
hi* pct, he lot bim go twenty or thirty my.ngrecnbl • surprise, both patients de­ jound bo:ties at seventy-five cents
feet irom the boat, and instead ot short ulured themselves immediately relieved, each), at least one ounce of acid tu
^ASIIVILJ.EIIOL'SE,
rides housed to stay out as longa-i three and begged a vial of the tincture for each pound of soap used; there is no
or four hour*.
future use. During the winter a num- danger if used stronger. To reduce
I. M. Flint &amp;. Sox, Props,
Just think, boys, of going fishing with bernfs'
”----------------”-J and
~J------similar
cases applied,
were die crystals to a tiuid state remove tho
a tish to do the sculling! Naturally
Tom instanth
lyTom
instantly relieved with the same treat- cork from the bottle, place in water and
was . kept quite busy towing fishing
tishing |1 ntent.
menu rall
1 expressing much satisfaction heat the water, when it may be easily
Not Fail
parties, and he worked all the better
’
r -with •'
the remedy. In December I told poured out and mixed with the soap.
when be had plenty to do. A vacation my druggist of the discovery, and rec­ When cool, a strong suds made with
our FALL
ot two or three days would make him ommended him to sell it to'any person this soap will be sure death to all in­
behave like a colt the next time he went applying for •toothache drops.’ This, sects that live ou domestic animals. It
for 1882.
out
be reports, he has done, and that every will cure mange, barn itch, aud all cu­
pjAKTIXuS HOLME,
At first he would rush off' at a great one seems delighted with the roedi- taneous diseases, and make a cheap and
;
aptiiierukin. Com.:::; - : effectual slwep-dip. When cattle are
rate, drawing two men in a good-sized cine.”
Kriptiouc of everything
boat nearly as Jost ns one could rqw,
The reader should remember that hide-bound, or the hair does not appear
N. T. PARKER,
required for Pcrsocal or Family uae,
but he would soon cool down until he benzoin is a rednous substance obtained healthy, u wash of the suds will prove
with over 2,200 illustrations, Wcrell
hardly wanted to stir at aU.
from the Slyrax benzoin, a tree of the a benefit, as it is cleansing and healing
Work everyday was what Tom needed East Indies, having a fragrant odor and in cases of sores. It is valuable in the
poultry house. Jib a good and sure
rrtPbifr OAC8JE aid to make him willing and steady, and if an aromatic taste. It should not be con­
he had it he was a model of good be­ founded with benzole, benzine or any Mjsinfec’.ant; is cheap, safe and effect­
only institution in America who nutka
CURE.
havior.
preparation from petroleum.—Brains ual. and will be found useful for a great
diis their apecial btudnesa. Addras
Of course a great many other boya Farmer.

ilashrillt girrrtoni.

C

I

W
C

E

HALL’S

flatanil Pure

S1OO

CUSTOM

Fouring Mill
READY FOR BL'BINEMM

GRINDING!
SaU«facU«i guaranteed.

FLOUR. MEAL AND MILL FFED
ou hand.

Our

By a strict attention U&gt; bti*lne»*. and square
ilealing with alJJour cu#lunier*&gt;. u e hope to mer­
it a liberal ;&gt;atronagc from the farmers of tbi#
vicinity.
Mills on railroad,—east of depot.

II. K. HICKIVsoy A €X&gt;.
^ATHBIV HOUSE,
A. R. AHTI8DEL, PaororrTox.

Grand IVapldu, 3t£lob.

Thia
Mberiil’Nnlr.
Notice I# hereby gtv&lt; a Unit by virtue of ■
writ of Fieriflcla#, T##u«! ont of the Circuit
Cptfrt for the county of Kent, InTavor of WUllttn Hake against the rood# and chattle# and
rtalcstatc of William E. Bui-I, In the county
oflBtacy, to me directed and delivered. I did on
Uic 34 tiro lay of July laaL levyk upon and take
all the rigid, title and intcn-M of the raid Wil­
liam E. Bud in and to the following described
real catate; tliat I# to say all that certain piece
&lt;&gt;r parcel of land deacribcd a# follow#, to-wit:
The ea#t one half (X) of the east one half (X)
of the *outb wot quarter (&gt;4) of acction thirtyfive (85.) In town (3,) north of range seven (7)
wc»t, in Barrv county, Mictitgau, all of which I
Shall expose lor rale at public auction »&lt;r vendue
to the highest bidder, at the north front door
of the court hoUMi in Ha*tlnp*. tn mid counit,
&lt;m tht- xlxtceotb day of October next, at
eleven o’clock In the forenoon.
Dated thia.’llrt day of August, A. D. 1862.
HENRY M. I1OUGIITALIN, Sheriff.
By Hr.KnrnT M. Ltc. Deputy Sheriff.
■ D. E. Cokjhtt, I’lt'f# Atty.
5(MI.

Probate Order.
At ■•eMlon of lb* Protialr Court far tbrUoaatJ .
of Itarry.hoklen«l the Prvbslr Office. In the City ot
HxMtnc*. hi»«kl county, ou baturtfov tiro Jd day
.*1 S-pteiul .-r In the j car on&lt;- UioumuA clybt buu&lt;1 red and cl*hly-two.
1‘reacut.Clement Smith, JlMfe of Probate.
Iu th* matter of Hie c»tat*- of ELMIRA
I WIAEii. a miner.
On rending and illiug the palUlonduly vc-rlArJ.of

Iru-t u|*on payment of the amount found due
from him
•
Tlicrcupoti It l« ordered, that

EM WE I

ny tli&lt;
&gt;1^ not
uld petition, and thr liearing thereof,
eopr of thh order tu be published In
ca Nava, a Oewaprper printed and

P

F
J

B

BITTERS

C
J

H

J

P

M0NT00MERT WARD A CO..
MT

&lt;--------

«----

au

(51.54)
.tiulirc of Probata*
1’. T. CoLcaoT#. Attorney Ur pctitlvrer.

minted

AGENTS I F or Gen. Dodge’s ne w b&lt;A&gt;k,
THIRTY-THREE YEARS A-VTOhir.

OUR WILD INDIANS

... ... .vr/niains 2
truthful aatl graphic record of tho author*# obterr*ttoni, thrilling advrntore* and exciting experience#
Junng t: year# among the -wildest tribe# of tht
Great We«t-_ Splendidly iUur.ntted with Steal

accurate account of the Indiana " Cii.-a~r Tr^unt;
** 1r
Itl*. .
.1
__ I__ ‘_ _ . .

939 AGENTS

wai-umr thousand#! It i# /A&gt; opportunity of a Jifelin»c for rapid money making! Remember, new

trated circulars, with full particular#, to
A. C. NETTLETON A CO., Chicago, 111.

NO PATENT NO PAT.

h
1 T r 11 T ft
Uli LN I \

obuin^l fur in^bauteal &lt;#Vh.
#•. &gt;»•*«! "Ul. nr n’.h'r rsai poato#

i fl I f II IJ ssra'uJf*"

IllUIlUf
W4&lt;i4o«ton.

6611
ar any reliable aat-ucy.
We refer to OfiMal# ir tha Patent Office
&gt;»»t&gt;tor»of er-ry Stalaof t|„ Uoton. .\dtn
_ ____ _
«-OUW RAtMlEH A UOa

table Balm ihut will rnuwxaTan^ Frt

CD., 19 ftarelay St,, K. y. ’

CONSUMPTIVE^

ItoON, IM

�i&amp; CHIPMAN
THK ONK-PRICK CLOTHINC STORK
Albany PsuHvctUry for ah jotlng *t Guitcau.

DOMESTIC.

tun» October 4; Congi

Fall and Winter Clothing

November R.

CHILDREN’S, BOYS’, AND YOUTHS’ CLOTHING,

/writ, and General Bigelow an-

Scotiand for steal tug &lt;75,000 from

HUM* stole &lt;12,000 worth of diamonds

was swept into the Passaic River, whence the
people of Jersey City and Newark obtain their
drinking water.
Meluba Power and Addle Johnson fought
at New Orleans on the 28th with buteberkaives about a young' man. Melissa was
stabbed to the heart, and Addie was fatally
’ injured.

abama on tbe- 28th for murdering Major
Smith, killed tbe Major's son, wbo was one
of the pomc, aud wm then riddled with bul­
lets and left where be fell.
Tax firm of Helmrich &amp; Hansen, of San
Francisco, wheat brokers and dealers In
promissory notes, tailed on the 28th with lia­
bilities of &lt;100,000.
fixcKKTAXT Tellkr on the 38th decided to
reopen for settlement a tract of ten million
acres of agricultural land iu Northern Dakota
which wm
wn by Secretary Schurz to
•wait a
the claims of yhe Turtle
Mountain 1
■ made on the 28th ult.
___ . __
County, Mita, and that several
deaths had already occurred.
A LQOomovive near New Britain, Conn.,
struck the carriage of C J. Welton the other
day, killing him and fatally injuring his wife.
The Flathead Indians asked tho Interior
Department 81,000.0X1 for a strip through the
reservation 2(W feet wide for the use of the
Northern Pacific Railroad. They compromised
on &lt;28,000.
Thru was a heavy fall of snow In the
western part of Wyoming Territory on tho
29th ult.
The Secretary of the Interior has distrib­
uted &lt;789*000 for the support of Indian schools
in various portions of the country.
The Denver &lt;fc Rio Grande Road has sued
tho Union Pacific Company for &lt;350,000 for
unlawful use of Its track on the Leadville
branch.
The business failures In the United States
during the seven days ended on the 28th ult.
aggregated 120.
A Baltimore dispatch of the 29th ult.
states that pleuro-pneumonla was prevailing
to an alarming extent in Caroline County,
Md., and some of the largest cattle-owners of
the section had made application In Baltimore
for veterinary aid. The damage to farmers
had reached a heavy amount
the 99th ult. caused the death of Mrs. Lewis
Rathbone, wife of a prominent retired manu­
facturer, and the fatal injuring ot ex-As­
semblyman Amass J. Parker. Jr.
W. G. Whittaker, of Philadelphia, was
arrested on the 29th ulu for poisoning hl*
write and six children by putting arsenic in

* A ttrs which broke out in the Democrat of­
fice at Ridgeway, Pa., on the morning of the
i»th wit destroyed seventeen ot the leading
bustaeeo houses, causing a loss of &lt;100.000.
Rucven deaths from yellow fever occurred
st Pensacola. Fla., on the 29th tilt., and fiftytwo new cases developed themselves.
A nortuxast gale at Long Branch on the
29tb ult. wrecked the bluff for fifteen miles
snapped columns in the new pier, and buried
Ur to the evening of the 1st there had been
823cases of ycllowfeverandeighty-two deaths
at Pensacola, Fla. The Health Board had 120
nurses employed, and continued lo send out
appeals for aid. Official reporta from Mfer,
Mexico, announce 1 590 cases of yellow fever
and 135 deaths up to the 30th ulL
John IL Bogoess, a man deranged by
liquor, beat out the brains ot his wife and
thlrteeu-year-old daughter near Clarksburg,
Near Cornwall .Station. N. Y., on the Mid­
dletown Branch of the West Shore Railway,
three men were killed and three badiy hurt by
a premature blast on the 30th ult.
noted boats on the Mississippi River—was
burned to the water’s edge on the morning of
the 30th ult, about thirty-five miles below
Vicksburg. Twenty-one person* were lost.
The steamer was valued at &lt;100.001 The
books of the boat and the United States nufl
were lost, together with a cargo of 500 bales
of cotton. The Lee had just been repaired
throughput and was on her first trip this seaaon. It was thought by some that the fire
wasiheworkof an incendiary, while others
believed it to have been accidental.
Nelson Walling, a wool manufacturer at
Millbury. Mass., failed pn the 30th ult. for
•90,(XXL
A. T. Stewart’s dry-goods house in New
York closed ft* doors permanently on the EOlh
nlL
At a point one mile out of Granada, Cob,
armed men stopped a Santa Fe train on the
Sdth ult. and carried off the express matter,
valued at 85.5C0.
The War Department has prepared an order
forbidding army officers from assigning their

0

Tbb Slug Sing /N. Y.) State Prison reports
ns: earnings of &lt;0,022.09 for the month of

The Hillsdale crew reached Philadelphia on
the afternoon of the 1st, and shortly after
left for their homes in Michigan.
Tnr gross receipts of the Post-office De­
partment for the fiscal year ended June 30,
1882. were .•4L3S.817.it). against 636,217,­
811-53 for the year preceding.
Jim Rhodes was taken from the jail at
/ Char)ottesrille, Va., on the night of the 2d
Drum the twelve months ended August
Mt, 1882, the value of imports of merchandise
into the United States was &lt;741,983,917. For

Irb public-debt statement kaued on .the
Sd makes tbe following exhibit.: Total debt
(including iuterM^f &lt;12,74^068) &lt;1.990,Wfi,9W. Cash tn Treasury, *&lt;M-&gt;46,064.
nebLlaas cash in Treisury, &lt;L«4,110,234.
Dcereaee during September. &lt;14,803,MS. De­
crease since June -TO, ISSA &lt;44,794.237.
-

Kan., on the 2d caused the infliction of fatal
injuries on several persons and the destruc­
tion of both engines. .
&lt;
.
Genehal McDowell reported to the War
Department on the 2d from the Presidio, San
quiet on the Arizona frontier.

PERSONAL AND POLITICAL.
The Nebraska AniPMonopollsts met. in
State .Convention on the 27th and nominated
the fallowing State ticket:' Governor, E. P.
Ingersoll; Lieutenant-Governor, D. P. Rey­
nolds ; Secretary of State, J. Klrtly: Treasurer,
P. D. Sturtevant; Auditor, John Battle; AttoTney-Geueral, John Barnd; Superiutendentof Public Instruction, J. K. Points; Commis­
sioner of Public Lands, C H. Modcly; Regent,
John Bell.
In a political riot between whftes and
blacks st Lancaster. 8. C., on the 27th four
colored men were killed anJ several wounded.
The Temperance organizations of Massa­
chusetts held a convention at Boston on the
28th and adopted resolutions favoring a Coostitutioaal a mendment to prohibit the manu­
facture or sale of liquors.
Congressional nominations were made as
follows on tho 28th: Democratic—Maryland,
Third District, F. C. Hoblltzell, renominated;
Fourth, J. V. S. Findley; Illinois. Eighth, H.
H. Cod,; Ninth, E. B. Buck; Wisconsin,
Fifth, Joseph Rankin; New Hampshire, First,
George B. Chandler; New. Jersey, First,
Thomas M. Ferrall; Pennsylvania, Fourth,
Wm-J. Neal, Republican—Connecticut, First,
John R. Buck, renominated; Pennsylvania,
Seventh, Arthur Bingham; Fourteenth. John
IL McCleery; Missouri, Eighth, Thomas J.
Daily. Prohibitionist — Illinois, Eleventh,
Rev. Richard Haney. Antl-Monopolbl&lt;-Tenncs*ee. Second, R. N. Moore; Third, W. K.
Turner. Greenbacker—Pennsylvania, Thir­
teenth. C. W. Brumm.
General Sherman, actins *• Secretary of
War, on the 28th accepted tbe resignation of
General George Stoucman as Colonel on the
retired list, after thlrty-slx years of service..
Stoneman Is the Democratic candidate for
Governor of California.
The New Jersey State Central Committee
of the National party has adopted resolutions
declaring that the party shall form no alli­
ances with either of the old political parties.
The Republicans at New Mexico have re­
nominated Trangullllno Luna for Congres•ionol Delegate, and the Democrats have
nominated F. A. Manzanere*.
The Minnesota State Central Committee
have decided not to call a Republican State
Convention this year, and have renominated
Judge James Gllfallan for Chief Justice.
It Is announced that Alonzo Follett, the
New York note-broke^, whose recent coUapse

rccretiy crowned during their rhll to MosAn ammunition train exploded near the
Cair^ (Egypt) Railway depot on the morning
ot the 2sth. Thlrlr persons were kill«L
The cholera has broken out In a virulent
form in Uxtla, s. small town In Southern Mex­
ico. Twenty-eight deaths were reported in a
single day.
A CoNSTAWTTNOrLK dispatch of the 18th
states that five battalion* of troops had been
sent to Hedjaz, Arabia. ■ where an' outbreak
was reported. The disturbance was thought
to be connected with the recent deposition
of the Grand Bhereef of Mecca.
Hicebt, a Tipperary (Ireland) farmer, was
murdered on the 2Sth for paying his rent in
violation of the orders of the local Land

A yxmcxoks train struck a cow on the 3d
York, Twentieth, Edward Wcmpie; Ten­
nessee. Seventh J. G. Ballentine. Republic­ on the Mont Alto Road,* near Chambersburg,
an—Pennsylvania, Fourteenth. Samuel F. Pl, throwing one car from the traux and in­
Barr, reuotx.inated:'South Carolina. Second, juring nine persons, four of them seriously.
Tiiitca hundred cartmen at the coal mines
E. M. Brayton. Greenbacker—Pennsylvania,
at Wellston, O., on the 8d struck for an faEight, Joshua WrigbL
Ml Blecher, in a sermon prcacbci in crease of twenty cents per day In wages.
Prut. Tkjjmn on the 3d submitted to
Plymouth Church oa the 3d—the thirty-fifth
anniversary of his settlement in Brooklyn— District-Attorney Corkbill at Washington
a rejort of the chemical examination just
his religious belief, but that he recognized no concluded of the poisoned bouquet given Gnlendesisatlcal authority above and beyond that
of his own congregation.
Tun recent political riot at Lancaster, S. C., bud contained over five grains of white
turns out to have been more serious than was arsenic, far iu exccas of a fatal dose, which,
if taken, could hava been defeated by emet­
Richmond, Va., ou die 2d state that seven ics. District-Attorney Corkhill wm making
negroes were killed ami twenty-one wounded. efforts to discover who poisoned the flowers.
The jxll at Fonda, N. Y., wm set on fire oc
The Democrats of the Ninth Missouri Dis­
trict on the 2d nominated Colonel ’ James O. tbe 3d by a young burglar named Cafferty,
Broadiicad for Congress. Hiram Hoagland who secured some matches In tobacco, tore a
has declined the Democratic nomination in bole In tbe plMter, aUtled in straw and ig­
the Fourth Iowa; James W. Freeland the nited it. Twenty-five prisoners were safely
nomination in the Eight Iowa, and Mayor removed. The Jail wm totally destroyed by
Harrison, of Chicago, the nomination in the
Tas General TransaU&amp;slic Company of
Third Illinois.
fiECRRTAET Foi.ocn on the 3d accepted the to ply regularly between Havre and BalURepublican nomination for Governor of New
At the Delaware State election on the 3d
the vote was so close that official returns
pubiican nomination for Congressman-at- would bo necessary to decide the result.

FOREIGN.

dens of the Vatican. The assassin missed his

The German Government i* considering a
tas thrown down aa

with the Baltic.
As unmanageable engine on the Manitoba

twivera. Twtjre shots were flrad end both

enUidinxrrith a caboose at Wilmar and killing
Edward Broth, ra.
A meat Balbriggan. I relaud, on the 27th
destrored Smyth’s h'*lery factory throwing

Which U the most complete ever laid down in NaahvUc.

setts, Sixth District, E. G. Converse; Eighth,
W. A. Russell; Eleventh, William Whiting;

We have made additions to our

Maine elected Republican Governor, Legls-

Micfalgan will elect State officers. Legislature

A Remarkable Duel.
Dallas, Texas, September £5.
The Eoeninp Times publishes n letter from
an account of a hostile meeting between two
miners In the Pecos Mining Company's camp,
twenty miles north of the Mexican bonier, last
Monday night. The duelists were George Hol­
lenbeck and William Stratton, both New York-

of rich descent of the early Hollander*. They
were educated nt Cambridge; the former
graduated as a lawyer and the latter aa u phy­
sician. They came out of college about the
time of Lincoln's first call for volunteers
to suppress the Southern rebellion. They en­
listed and went through the war, serving in
Colonel Gordan’s One Hundred and Forty­
fourth New York Regiment. At tho close of
the war they returned home, but finding pro­
fessional pursuits too tame for them
they concluded tn go WewL Before they
left home a difficulty arose between
them which was prevented from eadl&lt; g in
bloodshed by tho interposition of mutual
friends. Before they bad it chance to meet
again Stratton sought his fortune in tho Far
WedL Ho wandered to California, where be
went to work as a miner. Hollenbeck went In
tho same direction, but stopped at Colorado,
whore he also became a miner.- They never
beard of each other after this. They have
since followed tbe business of mining,
but have never become ns rich as they at
the Pecos mining crimp and recognized each
other. The school and social polish bad

shlps Incident to life In the mining camps.
Hollenbeck was overjoyed to meet Strat­
ton, who repelled him and said they
would settle that, little unfinished dlffi•culty which arose between them nt their last
meeting. Hollenbeck said he had forgot­
ten ail about tho difficulty referred to, and
entertained no Ill-feelings whatever against
him. Stratton Insisted on a settlement ac­
cording to the code. Botlcnbeck s ■ id If noth­
ing short of that would do he would accommo­
date him. Accordingly arrangements were
consummated for a duel. They were to fight
with pistols in a dark room. Each man was to
announce ready, hfter which a thltd party was
to count three, when they were to lire. Tbo
room was m dark as Egypt They went into
it and announced ready from opposite corners.
“One, two. three,”and Stratum fired. Stratton
fired a second shot, but the only response from
Hollenbeck wm h groan. Stratton. Imllcving
he had wounded Hollenbeck, fired a third Shot
in the dlrrction of the groaning. Tho report of
a pistq) came from a Corner directly opposite
frnuMMlUrwtita rroon appeared to procccd.and
HtratUh felt No more shota being exchanged
tK,,
opened the room and entered. A
oaletl the fact that Stratton bad been
kill
h!le Hollenbeck wm unhurt. Hollen.ventrlionulat, and. on entering tho
»k bia stand in a diagonal corner from

that quarter of tbe nxim. where the bullets
from W« adveraary'a pistol hannlesaly buried
tMtnseivi* In the wall. It had been an fong
since they had seen each other that Hollcn-

CAPS, CAPS,

And tfelieve we have something desirable and very cheap.

.

BOOTS, SHOES, GENTS’ FURNISHING GOODS, UNDERWEAR
GROCERIES, ETC., ।
With the view of suiting the most particular customers.

CALL A-KL SEE.

PRINDLE &lt;k CHIPMAN

.

Latest News
C. W. GRANGER &amp; CO.
Have just received their new goodr. for the Fall trade.

THEIR PRINTS akd. GINGHAMS
Are the finest ever brought to this market for the p?ice.

‘

WORSTED DRESS GOODS,

In Brown, Cardinal, Dregs of Wine, Bronze Green, Slate, and
Drab, for 12 1-2 cents per yard.

CLOTHING.
Men’s, Youths’, Boys’, and School.

SUITS.

’

From a Cheap Cottonnade to an Imported Worsted.
WE GUARANTEE OUR

PRICES AS LOW AS THE LOWEST
&lt;'a!l and See our Slats nnd Caps. Boots and Shoes.

5000 LBS. OF BUTTER WANTED
For which we will pay the highest market price in Cash.

C. W. GRANGER &amp; CO

C. C. Wolcott
HAS GOM

THE STOKE REMAIN'S
And is filled with Stoves of 20 Different Kinds.

The MONUMENTAL is the Finest Round,
Stove Made.
■

Paints, Oils and Colors, Doors, Glass, Sash and
Blinds Iron and Wood Pumps,Wagons, Buggies,
Carriages and Platforms, Drills, Cultivators
Seeders. Plows, Land Rollers, “Reed Spring­
tooth Harrow
A Large assortment of Shelf Goods and Tinware, and the best
Tinner in the Count}’.
FOR GOODS CHEAP CALL AND SEE ME

PIONEER STORE
SELLS GOODS EXCEEDINGLY LOW.

In order to make room for our Fall and Winter Goods we
are selling our finest stocKs of Clothing tt prices that re­
quire no bantering to sell.
.

HERE ARE BARGAINS FOR YOU!
Summer Pants for 95c--Think of It!

but as xnytbing Is colled fair In such InMiness,
no fault In found by &gt;ho miners with the strat­
egy employed by Hollenbeck.

For fall and winter trade are comming in.
lent and cheap. Examine them

—A Philadelphia family has a jewel
of a servant girl. She’s not handsome
and won’t kiss tho innater of the house,
and still she is a jewel. When burglars
broke in. pointed a pistol at her head
and demanded to know where the mon­
ey was kept she replied that she would
not tc!l them. 'I'hough her life was
threatened site persistently held her
Sand she burglars departed after
her an Impudent hussy.—

Of the best quality and lowest in price. Try oar 40c Tea
Don’t buy poor eggs unless you prefer tbep»&gt; Our egg tester
tells you which are poor.

phia Record,
Maryiand, A. G. Chapman, renominated;
Kentucky, First. J. R. Grace; Pennsylvania,

HATS, HATS,

State Court of A poo* la August 7; will elect

Hbnrt Edmond Knight was elected Lord
gresamen November 7.
Mayor ot London ou tbo 28th ult.
MissiMippi will elect Congrooamen NovcmThe Coercion act ’of Parliament, having
expired.by limitation, all prisoners remaining
Missouri will elect minor State officers, LegIn custody In Ireland under suspicion of un­
lawful Land League acta, were released on
the 29th ult.
'
Nebraska will elect State offioers, LcgislaDisturb tnoea have.broken out among the
uro and Congressmen. nnd vote upon a WoMontenegrins In Kolaschin.
.
The British on the 29th ult. decided to and Congressmen November 7.
New Hampshire will elect Governor, Itallkeep twelve thousand men in Egypt to hold
the Khedive iu power.
A London dispatch of the 29th ult. aays
dire distress was prevailing among the labor­ gressmetr November 7.
New York will elect Governor. Llcutcnanting classes In tbe Tyrol, Austria, caused by
tbe flools, and it'was stated that hundreds of
wealthy land-owners bud been reduced to vote upon amendments maXhur tbo canals
free,
and providing for tbe election of ad­
poverty.
ditional Supreme Justices. November 7.
Tambaci &lt;fc Sox, shippers, merchants and
North Carolina will elect Associate Judge of
tbo
Stale
Supreme Court, six .Superior Court
manufacturers, of Manchester, Calcutta and
Legislature and Congressmen Novem­
Bagdad, failed on tbe 29th ulL, with liabilities Judges,
ber?.
•
Ohio will elect minor State officers and Con­
approximating &lt;800,001
A mob at Presaburg. Austria, destroyed the gressmen October 10.
' Oregon elected Republican State officers.
windows in many Jewish houses on the 29th Legislature and CongroMrucn June 5.
Pennsylvania will elect State officers. Leg­
tilt., and quietness was only procured by
islature and Congressmen November 7.
military intervention.
Rhode Island cl-ctod Republican State of­
Two orrtcXHS and thirty seamen were ficers and I^rixlature April 5; will elect Conkilled at Odessa on tbe Ist-by an explosion on er-Mmcn November?.
South Carolina will elect State officers, Legis­
a Russian Iron-clad.
lature and Congressmen November 7.
Ax Alexandria dispatch of tt.c 1st states
Tennessee rejected a proposition to bold n
that nearly all the British troops bad left CnnNt tutlonal Convention August 8; will
elect Governor, legislature and Congressmen
Ramleh. Alexandria was dally becoming November
7.
more crowded with people. At Cairo Arabi
Texas will elect State officers. Legislature
Pashi and Toalba Pasha watched tho review and Congressmen November 7.
, Vermont elected Republican State officers.
of troojw through the bora of tbe prison win­ Legislature and Congressmen September .I.
dows The Kbe livc made a speech to tbe
V irginla will elect Congressmen November?.
West Virginia will elect Judge of the Su­
heals of depart;.ienta and advised all to ad­ preme
Court of Appeals to fill a vacancy,
here strictly to the particular business of of- Legislature and Cangrvramen October 10.
Wisconsin will .elect Legislature and Con­
gressmen
November 7, and vote upon amen'lThree children were burned to death in the ment« relating
to tbe r*-sidcnco and registra­
residence of Hilaire Rousseau, at St. Simon, tion of voters, and the election of county of­
ficers. and providing tho general elections of
Quebec, on the 30th ulL
State and county officers, except Judicial,
Junog Lawson, of Dublin, Ireland, on the shall
be held biennially in the even years after
30tb ult. ordered the release from prison iso*. tb'M&gt;cwbo wcjre chosen In 1X81 to bold over
of E. Dwyer Gray, High fibvriff, on the pay­ until ISfS if the amendment Is adopted.—N. F.
Time*.
ment of hit fine of £500.

A rtAitrUL hurricane raged In Ireland on
the 1st, doing a great amount of damage. At
Limerick. Newry and Cork the spires of
churches
were blown down, houses demol­
has not absconded but is at home sick.
Eleven sophomores have been suspended ished and shipping wrecked.
Colonel Berdan has declined to enter the
from Lafayette College, In Pennsylvania, for
service of the Porte as Chief of the letter’s
hazing freshmen.
The Republicans on the 29th ult. nomi­ torpedo service.
Jewish families to the number of six hun­
nated Rev. J. W. Asbury (colored! In the
Seventh Congressional District of Kentucky; dred left Pretsburg, Austria, ou the 2d on ac­
count of the riota
A telegram of the 2d from Madrid, Spain,
York, and Rev. W. D.‘ Hall in the. Seven­
reported a great fire In the suburb ot ZacatL
teenth Pennsylvania.
Tub California Prohibitionists met in State Nine persons were Injured- The loss of propConvention at San Francisco on the 29th ult
and nominated It H. McDonald for Governor
LATER NEWS.
and William Sima for Lieutenant-Governor.
At the National Woman’s Suffrage Conven­
The State election In Connecticut on the
tion in Omaha, Neb., on the 29th ult.. resolu­
tions were adopted thanking Congress for the
appointment of a select Woman’s Suffrage and but little Interest was manifested. In
Committee in each house, and declaring that several of the largest towns there were Dem­
the association should labor for the submis­ ocratic galna
Five deaths from yellow fever occurred tn
sion of an amendment to the National Con­
stitution prohibiting the States from dis­ Peusacola, Fla., on the 3d, and flfty-five new
franchising on the ground of sex. Elizabeth cases developed. There were three new cases
Cady Stanton was elected President of the at Brownsville. Tex.
An Alexandria dispatch of the 3d states
association.
•
The Executive Committee of the Anti­ that while tho arrival of tho Khedive st Cairo
Monopoly League of New York on the 30th was being celebrated by illuminations at As­
ult. formally indorsed the Democratic nomi­ sloot, 1.000 Mussulmans attacked the Copts
nees, for Governor and Lieutenant-Govern o-. and threatened to kill all the Christians in
The National Liberal League, it, session at town. The Mudir Interfered and quelled the
rioL
The annual meeting of the New York
man. of New York. President. The calendar
was changed by making li500 the starting Clearing House Association was held on tbe
point, and substituting E. M., meaning the 8-1. The transactions during the past year
amounted to &lt;48,147.MG,400, being an average
era of man, for Anno Domini.
The following were the Congressional nom­ per day of &lt;156,533,373Geohoe Baxcmoft, the historian, cele­
inations made on the 30th ult.: Democratic—
Massachusetts, Fourth District, P.
Collins; brated bls eighty-third birthday at Newport,

everything. Now. atyllah. sad »«ira.bie.

The attention ol Parents ia respectfully called to our large Mock of

Moryland will elect State Judges and Con-

Thk boundary line between Mexico and
Guatemala has been definitely established by
treaty, the proposition made some ycira ago
by the former Government having been ac-

i

— The rope with which a Kansas mur­
derer wa&gt; hanged has Imjcd woven into
book marks aud given to the convicting
jury m keepsakes.

They are excel

CASH PAID FOR BUTTER AND EB6S.

NEW VICTOR SEWING MACHINE is VICTOROUS
t3C Ready pay secures for you all the advantages in trade

�from more than one .14. before it rec-

fall list.

SATURDAY,

HASTINGS.

APPOINTMENTS:

BrrvnDXY ArrwBMOoa, Bwrr. 80
, Sarvan&amp;T, Oct. ?». ■
SXtcbdat, Oct. IA

VICINITY

LOCALS.

M1PLE GROVE.

Over 2,100 entrie* at the fair.
A priooner crawled through a hole in
the "cooler"'door Saturday
IV Bickinaon &amp; Co. made some fine
Henry Ford took $27 of prcmiam* on
fowls at tbe Grand Rapids fair.
G. W. Beadle has leased and is run­
ning the carriage and wagon factory
near Uie wooden bridge.
Tbe children's concert, under tbe
management of Miss. Addie Reed,
will occur at union hall next week.
Annilla Halleck will be tried before
’Squire Burgher on Thursday, the 17th,
an a charge of murdering her child,
and Hannah Halleck for complicity.
A. J. Britton, Ed. Reynolds, R. S?
Gordan, D. F. Newton and James
Nims, have bought the Stone patent
tanning process and gone to work to
make something out of it
Mary, wife of Wm. Barhan, com­
plained on Monday of a terrible pain m
her head and has since been somewhat
deranged. On Thursday she got a
razor from a hired man’s trunk and cut
her wind pipe in two places, but will
recover. She has been sick all summer.

Tbe Charlotte base ball clnb had tbt,
Bob. Fraser spoke for tbe Republi । conceit taken out of them last Friday,
at Middlerille the 5xh.
by tbe Hastings nine, f»y a score of 5 to
‘
“ 11 in six innings, notwithstanding the
Edgar Moon, of Johnstown,
had both
jaws fractured by a kick from a horse. Charlottes had several players "im­
The Greenback and Democratic ported exprrsely for tlie occasion."
county committees failed to effect a fu­
Chas. Mead of Bellevue, while ex­
sion of tickets.
tracting a catridge from his gun, ac­
The Middleville Congregational and cidentally canted it to go off, the
Methodist Sunday schools pic Diced at charge knocking a common wooden
Barlow lake Tuesday.
rocking chair all to pieces that two
Mrs. Amanda Hayes, of Blooming­ seconds before had been occupied by
dale, VanBuren county, is Mrs. Lewis bis sister, and who at the time of the
H. Barnes, of Hope, now.
discharge, stood with one hand on top
D. R. Cook, chief editor of the Ban­ of the chair. Tbf fright caused by tbe
ner, and wife, will celebrate their sil­ unexpected explosion paralyzed her for
ver wedding on the 18th ln»t.
about thirty-six hours, causing her face
T. B. Diamond, of Barry, has taken to (urn black and robbing her of her
charge of tbe Bellevue schools, find ha* speech for that period.
moved his family to Prairieville.
Tbe fair at Charlotte was fairly suc­
Charles Woodman, of Orange, and C. cessful. The* numtier of entries was
H. Stone, ot Rutland, are tbe Barry 1.558, or about 100 less than last year,
county delegates to the state grange.
the displays in the departments of
Woodland select school closed Fri-' stock (excepting swine) and fancy
day, and the *cbolars took in the fair. work being light; but the attendance
—Jesse Hull, of Lansing, and Cora was good the last two days, 2,000 peo­
Colestock, of thia place are married ple lieing on the grounds Thursday.
Among the noticeable things was the
and will live at Springport.
- The stories circulating at Woodland Hescock.n new process of-makingmaple
about diphtheria in Nashville are all sugar,a 15 foot corn stalk,and a base ball
exaggeration* of tbe troth and some game in which a picked nine from
got in
to
are abeolutoly false, particularly the Eaton and Carmel ..
. 32 fellies
.
one about four children dying in one , Kalamo'* 9. In tlie race* Harry Holt
day,
.
, won the 2-minute, Lady H. the green,
Carlton. William McKenney has sold and Golddust the stallion race.
his 90-acre farm to Oliver Leydy for
The Vt. Ville Hawk complained be$1,000.—The Brown district school * cause Barry county delegates did not
house is nearly completed.—Mr*. A. G. ’ vote in the ballots for senator in the
.
The
Center receive* $5,000 the insurance on ; recent Republican
coveution.
""
Hasting* Banner criticiseil thy Hawk,
her son’s life.
t saying it was the custom for .he dele­
I gate* from the county from which
EATON COUNTY.
| the nominee wan to l&gt;e taken to ballot
| alone for the nominee until they
Charlotte has a new orchestra.
. had
Anew bridge across Indian Creek iu | selected one. the delegates from the
Walton.
I other county voting blank* till the first
Apple tree sprouts full of blossoms at ! countv had selected the nominee. But
Grand Ledge.
, it seems tbe rule ha* heretofore been
Riley Wilson, of Sunfield, shot by violated, for the Hawk cites the fol low
Dann, is recovering.
ing; "We can prove and if necessary.
The Caro ladies band makes munic present the affidavit* of three delefor the Eaton Rapids fair. too.
gate* from i^itoti county, who voted
Mrs. Eva Hotchkis*,of Eaton Rapids two years ngwi Barry countv first nnd
has become Mrs. Dan O. Holdeu of "last. Six yeJkago, two delegates from

Arthur Quick is seriously ill.
Amon Wolfe has gone to Castleton to
work.
■
Mr. and Mr*. Shafer have gone to Al­
len for a abort visit.
Mr. Mason has been entertaining rel­
atives from Canada.
Mrs. Jeff Hyde is quite sick and the
children have the measles.
Gill Lapbam and wife spent the fore
part of thia week at Mason, Ingham
county.
Alonzo Wolfe has the cellar dug for
a large house on his place east of tbe
Center.
A bay horse, a four-year-old. sorrel
The dance at Fred Quick’s Tuesday
night was largely attended, and a good mare, and a top buggy were stolen last
.week from N. T. Parker’s livery stable
The social at Harry Mayo’s last week by a fellow registered at the hotel as
was largcly4ttended. Ice cream and L. Berger, Dakota, who was buying
young stock to ship west. The cetioncake were Reived.
A gentleman from Carlton Center able feature about the buggy was
pat a $125 furnace into the new M. E. light red stripes on canning gear. Ber­
ger was a German with a rather Jew­
church, a few days ago.
Oscar Archer and wife, of Hillsdale, ish look, blind in one eye and wearing
spent a few day* tlie fore part of the spectacles, and was of tall straight
build. Mr. Parker offers $50 to tbe re­
week with friends here.
Joseph Streeter aud wife, of Grand turn of property and Sheriff Houghtaling
$50 for the thief.
Ledge, formerly of Maple Grove, spent
the past week here, visting old friends
BALTIMORE.
and relative*.
The world is fall of small men. Not
Fair this week.,
small in statute but in principle. A
This week finistiea seeding.
certain man hired a woman to cut corn
Joseph Arnold lost a large fat hog.
at 75 cento per acre but because she-cut
Clinton Woodruff, has cherry trees
two acres a dav he made her quit and in bloom.
would not pay her for what she had
There is a threshing machine on
done.
Bellevue.
Eaton county? voted at the senatorial
every corner.
Bon Potter met with an accident a
James Clark of Hasting*, opened the convention nt Hastings, from beginEd. Whtiaker removed his goods and
few days ago in which be got wet and chatties, Tuesday.
Republican campaign in Bismurk. Mon- ning to end.'
Potter thinks the whole
kicked at tbe same time. He was rid­
convention, not the delegates of one
Sunday school picnic in David Ickus' day night.
ing a mule to water, when his muleahip grove last Tueaday.
Married at Charlotte, Wednesday. county, should select the nominee.
became frightened, throwing Bon off in
Sowing wheat continues, but very Miss Corn L. Brackett and Robert
tbe creek aud then kicking him on the little has mode its appearance.
NEWS NOTES.
Brown, of Chicago.
arm quite badly.
Public examination of teacher*, at
G. R. Durfee has bought the U. B.
What is tbe matter of the women of parsonage, located on his farm. Price Charlotte, for second grade Oct. 14, for
Tbe explosion on tbe Popofl, which
West Maple Grovel A regular Indian $600
| killed about thirty-two seamen and ofthird grade Oct. 27.
pow wow ha* been going on for nearly
An accident in repain ng the railroad fleers, is by no means the first fetal acWm. H. Spensc has a corn stalk 14
two week* among about eight women. feet long with two large ears of corn bridge at Bellevue quite seriously in- i cident that has occurred on these clrThe particulars, as near as we were thoreon.
jnred Horatio Higgins.
cular ironclads. Great things were ex­
able to ascertain, are these: Mrs. A.
Tom Walsh, of Benton, got eighty- pected of the Popoft's by tbe Russians,
Frank Lawrence from Ohio, has
got a new polkadot dress; Mrs. B. moved onto the Barnes farm, now own- four bushels of Egyptian red wheat but they have thus far destroyed more
—i*
1 of their crews than of the enemy.
dipped in and said she wanted to see, by J. Litchty.
from an acre and .
a ihalf.
also said Miss C. had one almost like
Olivet now receives three mails a day
A Medford rum manufacturer meant
Mr. Frost staid over night in Balti­
it -, then Mr*. A. told Miss D. and Mi**
and
the
clieese
factory
captured
first
to leave a will under which his distil­
D. told Mio* E, and Miss 'E. told Mrs. 'more, and cut nearly one half the corn premium at the state fair.
lery would be torn down and the bnsi
in a single night.
F. and Mr*. F. told Mr*. G. and Mr*.
Hoytville sends out "Reed's Comic ness discontinued; but, as he wrote
G. R. Durfee is making preparations
G. told Mira C. that Mrs. B. said that ,
and Jubilee Troupe" to entertain the "after the expiration of three years”
she hail a new dress. But it seems that for moving the U. B. parsonage to his small towns of the state.
without specifying how soon after, the
Miss C. had never worn her dress residence. A Hastings mover does the
Mrs. M. Adele Hazlitr, opened the heirs will continue nj the old stand so
job.
and had not told Mrs. B ; then Mrs. H. *
~
long as it is profitable.
E. Edmond* attended the Jackson campaign at Charlotte for the Repubcomes to tkb rescue and told Miss C.
licans, last Saturday evening.
that Mrs. B. was in Miss C.’s house fif­ fair, also the union fair at Grand Rap­
Henry Todd, who lives in Darien, is
The Grand Ledge House, burned
ids, and thia week ia taking in the fair
teen minutes when there was no one at '
the wealthiest colored man iu Georgia.
at Hastings. He expect* to talfe some some time ago, is being rebuilt, It will When a youth his master died and left
home; and then they all met nt Mrs.
be
two
story,
brick
veneered.
on stock.
.
F.'s and had a big time. And so it premiums
1
Joseph Astley’s residence, five mile* him freedom. When the Confederacy
The Rev. Mr. McGognl of Oil City,
fell he lost twenty slaves and sonic
goes. (To be continued.)
Penn., and a gueat of D. C. Sanburn, south of the Ledge, was burned re­ Confederate lionds. After tbe war he
L. E. Ph a xt, Ju. &lt; '
cently.
Loss $900. insurance $700.
preached at the M. E. church last Sun­
The M. E. Sunday school of Grand continued farming operations and cnday afternoon and evening. He re­
WEST SUNFIELD.
Ledge holds an annual fair, on Oct. 20 gagexl in the lumber business. He is
turned home this week.
now 65 years old, and is worth $100,000
Wheat all sown.
Mrs. IL N. Bartlett, sister of'M. M. this year, and offers nearly $100 of pre­
iu good investments.
October'* pleasant breezes fan our Slocum of Detreit, intended to soon miums.
G. V. Meaeroll, of Eaton Rapids, got
cheeks.
Others besides the kith and kin of the
make her brother a visit, but Wednes­
a
bushel
of
"Bresee"
potatoes
from
five
J. Walsh advertises his farm for sale day he received a telegram that she ।
little victim will be glad to iearn that
this week.
died Tuesday morning.
I hills. . The variety is an Eaiiy Rose the Lizzie Selden abduction-of Brook­
As snake stories have been going the “eS&lt;P*np‘ .
.
, ,
8. Green contemplates a visit to Ohio
lyn has not turned out another Charley
- nnd- the
next week.
rounds
snake
season I wing | The assistant engineer of tbe Jenn- Ros* case. The crime of kidnapping
Lumber for tbe Dunkard church was nearly over I will give mine, which is nette arctic expedition was a Mr. Mor- | children is one that strikes terror to n
sawed this week.
true one. M, J. Glnssgo and family riaon, son of James Gibson of near 1 multitude of homes, so that when n
Applications for our winter school have killed about 20 rattle snakes tins Eaton Rapids.
child is stolen many who never knew
The Eaton county prohibitionist con­ it or it* parents share iu the anxiety, as
are very numerous.
year, killing four last week in one day.
We insist that a gentle shower would Last summer they harvested eight in vention met at Charlotte, last week, : if it were to them also a personal cabe acceptable to all.
one day. Arthur Glassgo lias been and resolved and resolved, but nomin­ ' laiuity.__________ ______
M. Bell nnd family, of Kalamo, spent bitten three times, nearly dying each ated no ticket.
A nail room car is the latest novelty
Mr*. Marion Baxter, of Charlotte,
.
.
Sunday in tins place.
time, and last Saturday their dog, in
Look out for more real estate trans­ trying to kill a rattle snake, got bit Ulked poliiics at Eaton Rapids Mon- \ intraluced on the Chicago. Milwaukee
day.
Somehow
the
ladies
arc
getting
1
and
St.
Paul
road,
and
recently
a
ruerfer* in the near future.
three times, but dog days aren’t over
into politics, ballot or no ballot
i ty party of St. LonU belle, and beaux
Miss Myrtie Conklin visited friends yet and he will get well.
Doxr.
8. J. Acker’, -Dan HA won fir.t ';&gt;»de an cxcur.iou orertbe road, aud
in thia place last Sunday.
premium in the 4-year-ohl atalliou race
w‘* the '™"
Will Bishop has sold bis gray team
VERMONTVILLE.
at the state fait, and Len Acker took ‘"g at forl’' n,ll“
hoor- Tb,&gt; ,b"!l
to lumber woods parties for $300.
Some of our people went to Hastings wren Ant premium, on poultry.
' '°°m,
!“ “ blrge hWW “r- "W
Charley Hill and B. L. Thomas are
to
bear
Horr.
Tho
Charlotte
Bremen
propow
to
|
,cetb
{
afteen
T
,a‘- 1,c ,'loor
attending school at Woodland this
Editor Potter has lost a little grand­ give a dance won, and giro the pr0. ’«■ elegantly carpeted, the wjdl, beaufall.
son,
at
Algona,
Iowa.
ceed. to two of their number who have ‘lfa"5’ P"'”'®*n"b
The Rev.
p. e. in the east
P Sprague ha* sold his property to recently had Anger, amputated by cirb™ii°g.evorgreeu,,aml
district now occupies the house vacated
an Ohio man, and gone to Charlotte.
enlarww,.
gar and. of row .,
There wa, an
by Rev. G. W. Fast.
E. Hyde and daughter, of Chautau­
orchestra of eight piecei*, and refresh­
Charley Childs now drives a span of
According to the new deal, the
"spanking bays" which for roadsters qua, N. Y., are guests of his brother, Methodist Protestants of Charlotte ments were passed around every hour.
E.W.
cannot well be lieaten.
listen to J. Riley, those of Assyria to
The project of expelling the Turk
Mra. Marion Baxter, of Charlotte,
Tbe U. B. missionary meeting was
A. Byers, mid those of Hickory Corners from Europe, and pushing back Islam­
spoke
here on political questions Tues­
held at the church on Thursday of this
to L. D. Abbott.
ism to Africa and Asia, is attributed to
day evening.
week with a good attendance.
Darkins and Hale, whip and robe Bismarck. It ia even claimed that he
EL F., 15-year-old son of N. A. Hop­
Rev. Morrison and wife are at Sagi­
stealer* at Grand Ledge, plead before has picked out the residence of the sul­
naw thia week where the Synod meet*. kins, who left this place some time ago, the court that they wept «o drunk they
tan, a« he likewise did the new scat of
Rev. Youngs supplies his pulpit died last week Wednesday, of typhoid didn’t know anything about having
empire for the pope some year or two
fever.
'Sabbath next.
stolen,.and were fined $80.
■ince.
The place is Cairo. It is even
Col. H. (4 Hodge, opposition candi­
G. H. Jones, supervisor of Oneida,
The county organization of soldiers claimed that the sultan, after long hes­
and J. E.Smith, of Sunfield,both on the date for congress in this district, will "reune" during the tsjfclays ami
itation,
has given his consent to tlie
fusion ticket, are very popular men, speaks ia Vermontville this Saturday if you’re a soldier ia gotxHumding but
scheme. The fact is that but little re­
evening.
and the Republicans must beware.
not a member of tbe society it will cost mains to the Osmanlie* in Europe.
A social under the auspices of the
yau just fifty cents to "jine the gang." Tbe Danube and its fertile territorica
EAST MAPLE GROVE. •
Ladies Aid Society, will be held at the
Eaton Rapids is a great town for sur­ are lost to them forever; Roumania and
residence of C- 8. Childs, Friday even­
Wheat sowing ba* cl oserl.
prise parties, they say. Tiiat’* what Servia have been erected into inde­
ing, Oct. 18, to which all are invited.
Corn cutting nearly ended.
Henry W. Fairchild of that place pendent kihgdoma; Bulgaria is free,
Wheat that is np is looking fine.
Peaches and cream will be served.
thought when he saw one of his love­ except in name; so aLo is Roumelia;
There wa* a dance at Fred Quick’s sick letters to a young lady whbm he A□ stria has grasped Croatia, Bosnia
E. Harper, while shingling a granary
the other day, slipped and fell to the Thursday night. .
didn’t know printed in the Eaton Rap­ and Herzegovina, and is reaching out
Arthur Arch-r of Hillsdale was vis­ ids Journal.
ground, but fortunately no damage re­
for Constantinople itself; England has
sulted from the fall as he kept bis pres­ iting in this section over Sunday.
Thiams what Potter of the. Hawk grabbed Cypra*; Epiras sooner or
Emery Bush nnd family of Eaton
ence of mind sufficent to strike on his
Rapid*, are virating at Phoebe Bock’s. thinks: "In the rate for nomination later will go to Greece. There is noth­
feet.
Lew Lawrence cut 8j acres of corn in to the county offices just closed, there ing left for tbe government of Turkey
Yea “Writist,” we can tell you of a ,one day, and didn’t work very hard has probably been more lying, more but to seek out an Asiatic or African
man right hereJ in your owntown who either.
J. C.
cheating, more stealing,more Christians *1 center. This offer of Cairdtoin the

In tbe list of those who contributed
to tbe funds for the erection of a mon­
ument to the miming Morgan—«upposed to have been cribbed by furious
freemasons— appears the name of wid­
ow lady, whose contribution i* so muniflcent by &gt;ideof others as to attract
attention. That a married- woman,
and eanecially widow*, should entertain
no very kindly feeling toward these
secret societies is not in the least to be
wondered at. As is well known, when­
ever a man has to go down-town, it is
always that he is going to the "lodge,"
and when he comes home at 8 in the
morning, and can’t find the keyhole,
and is scented up worse than a tanyard
it is always that he has been to Die
"lodge." Thia sort of thing has been
played on suffering women until they
are right in their rebellion, and perfect­
ly justified in erecting a monument to
Morgan, or any other man who has
made an effort to break up this nefar­
ious lodge business.

ix»y from Borneo.
« w
have more fun, nnd not git
the time."

to see if the

comi wm

all

clear.

A great many peraou* upon coming
to tbe bamtanum express wonder a* to
how patients manage to paas their time
while tinder treatment here ; but after
a stay of a few days the question solrea
iterlf, and they find that the time dip*
away almost unperceived.
An early
walk in tlie morniug, breakfast, gym,indies, a lecture in the parlor, a re­
freshing bath, rcat one hour, dinner,
an evening entertainment—all these
take up so much of the day that pa­
tients who have been here the longest
nay the time seems short. We Linux it
is very rarely tiiat a pationt become*
weary of the routine. The.consckuutneas of returning health give* a seal
and pleasure to tliedaily exercises that
prevent* them from becoming weari­
some.— Battle-Creek G&lt;xxl Health.
Pink oye ha* "removed", throe borne*
at^ Battle Creel|.

Hi* Ma Had Got Home.

Snahviile Jlurketa.

•"When is your ma coming backT”
asked,the grocery man of the bad boy,
a* he found him standing on the side­
walk when tbe gryery was opened in I
the morning, talBg some pieces of
brick out uf hia coat tail pockets.
"O, she got back , at midnight last
night,” said tlie boy, os he nte a few
blue uerries out of a case.
"That’s
what makes me up so early. Pa hah
been kicking at these pieces of brick
with his bare feet, and when I came
away he bad hi* toes in bis hand and
*vhs trying to go back up-stairs on one
foot. Pa haint got no sense.”
"I am afraid yon are a terror,” said
the grocery man. a* he looked at the in­
nocent face of the boy. "You are al­
ways making your.parouts some trouble
mid it is a wonder to me they don’t
si’ll!! you to the reform school. What
jI deviltry were you up to last night to
get kicked this morning I”
[
“No deviltry, just a little fun. Yun
st e, ma went to Chicago to stay a week,
mid she got tired and telegraphed she
would be home last night, nnd pa was
down town and I forgot to give him the
dispatch, aud after he went to lied, me
and a chum of mine thought wu would
have a 4th of July.
You see my chum
has got h sister about ns big as ma, and
we hooked some of her clothes, aud afK*r pa got to snoring we put them in
pa’s room. O, you’d a luffed. Wo put
a pair ot uumlier one slippers with bine
stockings, down in front of the rocking
chair, beside pa’s boots, and a red cor­
set on a chair, and my chum's sister’s
best block silk dress on another chair,
and u bat with a white feather on, on
the bureau, and some frizzes on the
gas bracket, and everything we could
find that belonged to a girl in my
churn’s sister's room. O, we got a red
parasol, too. aud Ipft it right in tho
middle of the floor. Well, when I
looked nt tlie layout, and heard pa
snorniug, 1 thought I should die. You
see ma knows pa is a darn good feller,
but she is easily excited.
My chum
slept with me last night, and when we
heard the door bell ring I stufft^l a pil­
low in mv month. There was nobody
to meet ma at the de^iot, and she hired
a hack mid came right up.
Nobodv
heard the bell but me, and I bad to go
down and let ma in.
She was pretty
hot. now you bet, at not being met nt
the depot.
"I told her I guessed pa had gone to
sleep by this time, but I heard a good
deal of noise in the room about an hour i
ago, and maybe he was taking n bath.
'I lieu I slipped up stairs and looked
over the banisters. Ma said something
about heavens and earth, and where is
the huzzy, and a lot of things I couldn’t
hear, and pa said damtino, and iU no
Mich (Ring, and the door slammed, and
they talked for two^ioura. I s'pose
they finally laid it to me me. as they
always do, ’cause pa called me very
early this morning, and when I come
down stairs he came out in tbe ball and
bis face was redder'n a beet, and he
tried to stab me with his big toe-nail,
and if it hadn’t been for these pieces of
brick he would have hurt my feelings
I see they had my chum’s sister’s clothes

Potatoes,

Onion*,perbu,.
Butler, par lb.
Timothy pcrbu....
OoverMeM.per bo,.

SCHEDULE

OF

EXAMINOIATSN

TKc following place* and time* b*ve been
ih-.«&amp;n*led by tbe board &lt;&gt;f County Examiners
for BNdjpg of public examination for teaebrr*
in Rai ry county. The Secretary
empowered
to grant rpecial certificates upon satisfactory
examination, which are valid only until tbe
next public examination bv tbe board:
Saturday, Sept. 23. Middleville, Sped*]
"
Oct. 14, Naabvtile,
“
Friday and Saturday, Oct 27 and
28, Hostings,
Regular.
Sat. Nov. 4, PralrieviHc,
Special. •
The examination* will t&gt;e both oral and writ­
ten, chiefly the latter. Candidate* for third
grade ecrUflcatea will lx- examined In ortho­
graphy, reading, writing, arithmetic, geogra­
phy, grammar, spelling, U. 8. history and aril
government.
For second grade the additional requirements
will be elementary algebra, ph v Biology and
pbrdeaJ geography.
For first grade, general hbUny and natural
philosophy.
Experience and success in teaching will be
Important factor* In determining tbe qualifica­
tions of teachers, especially of tnc candidates
for the higher grades of eertiflcatCA. Candidates
for thin! grade certificates must pass 70 per
cent of the questions asked, for tbe second
grade 80, and for tlie first grade 90 per cent
will be required.
The IxMrd will only examine the; papers of
such as desire certificates.
T. A DIAMOND, Chairman.
CLARK B. HALL.

I M. FLINT, JR. Uw. Real E*tate, and In1. Bunince. Conveyancing and Collections *
■pedalty.

New Meat Market.
I have opened a market

ATTACHED TO C. SMITH'S
GROCERY
aiul intend to keep a
Ft El. LISE OF

SALT and FRESH MEATS.
Cood Goodsand Full Weight
Give me a trial.

». L. IHRFEE.

rortftoit»br ■o^ouS&amp;f

By Buying Your Dry Goods
------- O F-------

W. S. GOODYEAR. &amp; CO
Hastin^K. Udell
We fully realize the

That most all kinds of produce are bringing this fall, so have
bought a large stock of all kinds of

DRY GOODS, FANCY GOODS, NO­
TIONS, BOOTS and SHOES,
and CARPETS,
And are Belling at prices that will astonish you.

W. S. GOODYEAR &amp; OO
HasnaoX, October 4, 1882. ‘

�-

-

OCT. 7,1688.

field.* for poultry farm purposes; the
aheiter of the leave* in *npimer is very
■tatM It wm a leading crop, and it wm beneficial. Worms and caterpillar* fall­
that 5u profitable production could be ing from the tree* are conwumev.1, windrabbits (wiling out are enmesbvd and greatly extended in others, where the 'fali* are made use of. instead of harbor­
FREE OF COST.
get theirsDbcks instantly broken by a attention of tanners was mainly devoted ing vermin, which again creep up uud
And I ack my heart, ■shall I never mor*
wrench fronm^J^oacher’* wrist. There to tbe growing qf cotton, tobacco, and destroy good fruit
’
&lt;X «y o»u will ;&gt;••« through tliti.d.x&gt;rf
the small grains. There wm scarcely
—
One
of
the
most
brilliant
of
garden
I aak. Oh! l.'Wcevnr
those tame and trained womIc*, his most any demand for it for exportation, and flower* I* the gladiolus. .Some of the new
TW* &lt; havc
to ba
efficient assistant*; and for a reason- its employment for making glocove and French vorities are especially fine, and —str reqarated to cal) at F. T. Borai's drug
Oneirf tlfo rr.Kip aruun-t u»- hr irt’.i,
tBtuatxuc tbrar aormw or c-telr mirth.'
imparted to me iu confidence by one of starch was not known. It wm used to make a graml display. The cultivation Ftnreaud j-rt H trial boule of Dr. King’* Mew
From an concent Jith tlrc thins* erf life.
the fraternity—the white, pink-eyed va­ a considerable extent as food for humau of" the gladiolus is very simple. It
riety is preferred to the brown or “fltohet .beings, and WM.very generally employ­ thrives in any good garden soil, and
Doti* with it* aorrow, and toll, aud rtrifot
ferret”; the former from its color being ed for fattening hogs in sections where the bulbs may* be planted from the last
kaM they carry me forth in nUrmco.
ttwkV fn I - &gt; &gt;I. I......
_______ __ ____ _____________________ _ —
easier seen in the darkness and so bet­ it was extensively grown. It was rarely of April to the middle of June. They
With liiinrf end waled-np oyjm?
ter for poaching, mostly done by night. fed to other horses than those engaged should be «et four or five inches deep.— had for &lt;20.
hall tbov throw tbe window* wide to U
.nd retiree memnitoca bor* end thero.
In addition to hi* ferrets, the poacher in work on the farm, aud was still more A’. K Examiner.
Aa WM think, with tears and airu*. A
DIFFICULT
PROBLEM
SOLVED.
keeps a dog, aad sometimes two, ia rarely fed to cows. There was no fresh
-Flax-growing is getting to .be an
The desire far *ttau!*nt* is bccorninw a
which case one will ba a halt-breed gray­ beef or mutton sent abroad, and there
evil anti how to overcome it to * *erhound or lurch for “coursing” hare*, was onlv a limited demand for highly important industry in the newer por­ monstiou
tions
of the Western Statoa It proves tous question with reformer*. Parker’s Gle.when the opportunity offers at early fattened meat at home. As a conse,a
good
crop
on
new
lent!*,
ana
pay*
motn or on a moonlight night. He car­ Stience, sheep and steers were geuerTHE ENGLISH POAfJlIER.
well, tbe eeed being aljyayi in demand,
ries a ran, too, though not always; and
Uy fattened on grass, with the aid of a while there is an increasing'demand for ing, aud ha* brought health aud happiness to
many desolate homes.—Enqircr. bee other
There Is no parish in England without even when thus armed use* it sparingly, few roots. In mostof the Western States the straw for making twine. The prue- column.
its poacher, and In some two, three, or dreading betrayal by ita report. The corn was a drug in the markets. With ent yield in the United States U between
gun
itself
is
peculiar
and
known
as
a
It will aoon be time put yourself In tbe hand*
poor
facilities
for
transportation,
com
­
more may be found. I do not speak of
two* and three million busheb of seed,
occasional transgressors of the Game “poacher’* gun,” being short-barrel led paratively little of it wm sent to Eas­ and nit estimate of 19,000 tons ot fiber. ot your frtnda.
Laws, as idle fellows out ou Sundays or aud easily taken to pieces for deposit in tern cities. Corn wm often so cheap
ENTIRELY SATISFACTORY.
Fried Chicken: Parboil your chicken
holidays, who spend them in the capture the inside pockets of his coat. These and plenty that it was burned for fuel.
Ladles wishing a perfume that combines
of ^.ame partly for the pot, but os much are ample, ia fact the whole skirl is a Fanners preferred to raise small grains until very tender. Drain. Have some
novelty delicacy and ricKheas find Floreston
AU eoenoeUoea mada
by way of pastime. Tlin-e are poachers pocket round and round, capable of con­ for the market, for the reasons that butter melted in a frying-pan,.aud fry Cologne entirely *ati*factory.
too, punishable and punixhed all the taining quite a hamper full of hairs and their pace was higher and they would quickly. Take out your chipken and
stand transportation better.
In parts add a little flour, pepper and salt to the
Lynn, Maa*,, tlekle* it* nose with three ton*
same; but they are not Recounted in tbe phesants:
nrwi,
Ttytt,
In the personal appearance of the out- ot the country where corn was very pro­ butter. When thia boil*, pour in a lit­ of snuff per year.
category of the regular, or as he is often
Ticket* vta ttuJsrr /X
m4 yon wia
atylesl, “ professional,” poacher. True, and-out poachar there is an idiosyncrasy, ductive it was generally thought that tle milk nnd a few spoonfuls of chicken
A treatise'on Disease of Women and Test­ Celebrated Line
find traveling a
he does not style himself so, only by his both as to dress and general bearing. the business of raising it was greatly gravy. Be cartful anfl'don’t, let it get imonial*
concerning
Zos-Pbora,
a
sure
rcmedr.
•ale
ax
rtl
office*
|OIO,
7.
t
n
*tra*
too 'thick.
Pour over the chicken.
His garb is very much like that of a overdone.
deeds having ear -JI the
•*-- designation;
J—’
•'*
will be sent free on application. Address It tbe
of • dUA short time has been sufficient to This is a delicious way of cqokl-ig a Fcngelly, M. D., Kalamazoo. Mich.
-ro-otendi to bkve gamekeeper, only n£t&lt;o neat and new,
instead, he genen
fowl.
—
Deliver
Tribune.
and
would
better
dMipare
with
a
suit
__
__ ____________
produce great changes in relation to
some
trade or oth&lt; .ndiWtrvuuuL*4tenIts uses have multiplied and
Kalamazoo, Mica., Feb. 2,18B0.
Unless hay and grain or oilcake be
tibly practices it daring tfi^uny. When tbe gamekeoiMsr hid c;vt off. The coat corn.
—Unle«s
/
Uwut RMe. oPsWKKS.
Fare. Sleepte* Cara,&gt;&lt;^(f \
ployed to make,
malted given
I know Hop Bitter* will bow recommenda­ / \
night comes on, jtown go his trade tools, h of a brown but faded velveteen, with increased, it is now employed
'
‘to sheep
‘
&gt; as an extra feed, mere
‘ ' ftWeaLy &gt;yF
\
»ell as to make feeding of .jeep
she
and In their place arming him-wlf with four outside flap pockets besides tbe starch and glucose, as wel
on a pasture eannot tion honestly. All who u»c mem confer upon
them
the
highest
encomiums,
and
give
them
PERCEVAL LOWELL,
T. J FOTTE1. .
tea and
aud vinegar.
vinegar, add to its fertilising
ferti
net*, wire-snares, gins and gun. he is great inner one; vest of the same ma­ alcohol, whisky, highwines
matter; but when credit for making cure*—all tbe proprietors
r. G«*. Ttm. Jgt. .
off to the game pre-terre*. But there is terial; kneebreeches aud gaiters of fus­ Considerable quantities of it are con­ these animals have even asmallamount data for them. 1 bare kept them since they
Chicago. Ill
also the poMber /air sany, who disdains tian or corduroy; and stout, heavy- verted into malt. In all the great dairy of oilcake, for instance, the advantage to were Aral offered to-the public. They took
all such subterfuge, rersnlluM of repu­ noled half-boots." hobnailed and laced. districts it is extensively employed for the pasture Sa at once observable. As high rank from the first, and maintained it,
There u a grow­ the supposed enrichment of a pasture and arc more called for all other* combined. Bo
tation as of law, who for his livelihood Add a soft felt haCworn slouchingly, feeding milch cows.
long a* they keep up their high reputation for
depends solely on t he sale of the game with a necktie loosely knotted, usually a ing demand for fancy fattened beat aad by,beep I, all the drawing that «,a.e purity and usefulness. I shall continue to reche may capture. Not such a poor de­ red cotton kerchief, and you have the mutton for export and home consump­ fields have had for years, there is ao txnmrixl them—Something I have never beMsQure guaranteed.
pendence is it, either, considering that English poacher in the costume he most tion. To fatten steers and sheep as the wonder thflt pastures become worn out. j fore done with any other patent medicine.
I
J. J. BABCOCK, M. D.
hares sell for s dollar each, pheasants commonly affects. Not less character­ market requires it is found necessary to —(icrmanlotrn Tdcyraph.
Vast
the same, partidges a dollar and a half istic u the expression of his features, feed corn in large quantities.
The Quaker* make Friends of ail their con­ •oenaatorrbaa, itnpoteticy. invaluntary emlaaieoa
the brace, and woodcocks two dollar* which, though they may not be natural­ quantities of it are now sent to almost The Relation of Water to the Farm.
premature oxi aga. rauacd by ..ver-exertlon,
verts.
ft
the couple. True, these are ihe retail I ly sinister, still have a cast about them every country in Europe this side of
• btiM, or over ludulreuee. which lead*' to ml very,
Ihe value of water is not fully npdecay and death. One box will cure recent caaee.
prices; but the licensed game-dealer telling of prison experience. No wonder Russia for the same purpose. American
A SUGGESTION.
nimsclf—he must be licensed—li xs to they should; for rare is the poacher who corn is used to feed both beef and dairy predated upon the farm till there is a
A line's pleasure at your disposal instead of a
It is also used to drought. Lands where, from climatic
give figures close up to them, whether i ho* not spent a portion of his life inside i cattle in Denmark.
I th caeh older
he purchases from the owners of pre-1 the walls &lt;&gt;f a pil or been lucked up feed the coach nnd dray horses in most influences, the clouds rawly give out day’* agony. i.vcrjoue who has corns can
testify i ' the constant discomfort they pro­
serves or otherwise. He is nolsupposed ; repeatedly for sdcILs longer or shorter. of the large cities in Great Britain and moisture which reaches tbe earth, are duce. “1 could have enjoyed the ball, or the
to negotiate with the poacher at till, : An outlaw by his own seeking and briog- France.
Now, while tin uses for com worthless for crop growing or stock Eionic, or tome other social imstimc, but Ob I
■nt
mw
Ikiuid
!&gt;
To make lands, located in
ow my corns ached!" No necesaity now, for
though he often undoubtedly does, and ■ ing about, he is often deserving of out­ have increased and mujapned ia a most raising.
JOBS
as the traffic.1* illegal, with as much . lawry in its worst farm—a very wretch remarkable manner, its cultivation has such a region, ot any value, it is neces­ such complaints. Putnam's Painless Corn Ex­
tractor removes the cause s]&gt;cedlly. Try it’
danger to the buyer as the seller, the re­ and ruffian. But it would bo untruthful not extended in anv considerable extent sary to sink deep well*, or ollterwise to Beware of another article, ’•just as g&lt;axl."
irrigate.
To
live
for
a
season
or
two
duction in price is*not so great ns n.’i"ht I to say that all poachers are so, or even into any new sections of tbe country,
Take only Putnam’s.
Sold everywhere.
be supposed. In auy case, the poacher tlie majority of them. Many show traits and has not greatly increased in foreign upon land so situated, is to he let! to ap­ Wholesale" J. E. DAVIS i&amp; CO., Detroit.
JJEX’RV ROE. PRnPMiSTOB
receives* a fair remuneration; and the i of character more commendable than countries.
The entire country from preciate fully tho value of such natural
Muzlin'
makes
a
dog
safe,
while it makes a
more when his dealings are direct with (■■mdemnable; among t!ie*e a proud in­ I’Uget Sound to the Gulf of California is water supply upon the farm as was
tbe consumer, us they generally are. dependence of spirit, which possibly opened up to settlement, bat no corn is described in tlie Journal during the young Indy dangerous—*111!, In hot weather
except in a very few favored past winter. So far as the aid required they both want muslin.
He can almost always.dispose of hare or has much D&gt; do in making them what । raised
.
‘
” ■
Dakota and Montana are of water in crop growing is concerned,
pheasant, sub rosa, to the semi-gentility they ore. For it can not be denied that . localities,
Mr. B F. Porter, a rich banker in Utica N.
residing in villas, and the shopkeepers in the mind of the English poor man fast being peopled with farmers, yet filthy water is popularly supposed to bo V.. says: “I have ii.mmI Brown's Iron Bitter*
of the towns; besides there is never there is an instinctive idea of resistance . scarcely any corn £* or can be produced j more valuable than pure spring water. lhe part year, much the chagrin of our fondly
Tlii*
belief
holds
’
good
wilh
water
L
iuzj
Bztnmin.,
nnnma.iv.
__
nr.
mnm
'
'knr.
ivk-i'
tirh
nn-Ilr-d
th.
nr*ur
lilH
llplil'f
ho
’
.ll.S
ITOOti
With
Wtitct
physician,
for neither myself, wife nor little
wanting in any neighborhood a publican to laws seeming oppressive—no more there. Few of what are called the new
ir'l* have since snffered from a single day’s
who makes surreptitious game-dealing can it be questioned his too often having, States and .Territories produce much that has filtered through the barn-yard fInes
a. It is making us all robust and strong.”
a specialty, and is ready to act as his rexson for it. One good quality the corn. They are deficient in warmth or —at any nite, through the average barn­
Brain !» the propelling force of [he world,
“fence” and receiver. Ir will thus be poacher possesses in a high degree— moisture, or in both.
Cora was never yard—for tliis too often contains a
seen that he has no difficulty in finding courage; and the very fact of his being a profitable crop to raise ia tho Southern deposit of riches, which the laud round aud thought Is lhe symbol of progrc»s.
If the
a market for his commodities; and, sup­ n poacher is goosl proof of it. But there State*, and as the soil becomes about is suffering for need of.
F3SSB FISH and FOtrLTBl
seeping*
from
this
store
during
each
posing him to takc.only a single hare or is other anil better evidence, though I exhausted of its fertility in production
IN THEIR SEA8O*"
shower, can gel to tho crop of grass or &lt;, Well*’ Health Rencwer. grertest remedy on
”
;
People
pheo/ftmt in .the night, greater are his bad for him, produced at almost every becomes still morn difficult.
\
...iii j-.‘ „ JLrwl ■&gt;„ earth fur imtMtcnce, leannew, sexual debilltv,
grain near by. it will give a g.xnl ar- , Vc
M1),h. Dei«u JAMES £.
gains than those of tbe poor laborer who Potty
y Sessions, and certainly
-.j
have
at finally
every become convinced that the
Lttrd, by the lb. or barrel,
pay nnnw»
some (jAVltt &lt;S CO.. Detroit Mich.
toils all day for a-scant two-shilling Assizes; often proof of too much cour-j extent of country adapted to the count of itself, nnd will nn-.of
'the
interest
which
rfr., &lt;fe., &lt;fc.
age, getting him &lt;n&gt;nt*»nnn«i
sentenced tn
to nonsl
penal a,&lt;r.
ser- 1I nmfitahln
wage. From a night’s poaching, how­ n&lt;ra.
profitable nrmltictian
production of corn Is
is anitn
ijuite portion
Gossip is lhe patent sign of vulgarity in
ever, there will frequently accrue many vilude for life, if not actually sent to I limited. It is embraced in a strip of the accumulation in the barn-yard
But the filthy water heart aud tn I lid. It is us thoroughly vulgar aa
beads of game; hence the temptation to ilre scaffold. “Affrays,” as they are country about two hundred miles wide, should yield.
follow it as a profession.
termed, between parties of poachers and terminating about a hundred miles which comes from a clay gu|ly will cunoetty.
Fresh Goods, Full Weights and
scarcely add value to the soil over which
In the pursuit of his unlawful calling, and game-keepers areot frequent occur­ west of the Missouri River.
CATARRH OF THE BLADDERi
Satisfaction Guaranteed.
the regular poacher displays remarka­ rence; fierce encounters, with firearms !
If the amount of corn in the country it may How. except by performing the
Stinging, smarting. Irritation of the urinary |
ble skill, -having an intimate acquaint­ used on both sides, as in a battle, often is to be largely increased it must be done snmc’service that pure spring water can passage*, iliseased discharges, cured by BuetiuHEART ROE.
ance with all^the ways of tho game resulting In fatal wounds or death itself by improved methods of cultivation in do as well, viz., through its power to pabbLf 11, at druggists. Midi. Depot, JAS.
birds and animals, and the modes of upon the spot. When bent upon such the places whore it succeeds best. Much ; dissolve
. . ,
, in the soil the ingredients E. DAVIS A CO.. Detroit, Mich.
h
«»P’ K™’?.
capturing them, lie will find the tree desperate resistance tho poachers gen­ ol the :»nd in the We.lern Suu. thu b ! ’rMf
Sadie West, of Iowa, has re-covered &lt;130 dam-1 CATARR
Water
friend to tlie
Water is
is an*ex&lt;Liieht
an exec
on which peasants roost at night by lhe erally go disgtiiscd and with maskei^or capable of producing the largest crops ।
eges ot a man who paid ten cent* to kiss her at
hocumuln'ion of their droppings under­ blackened faces, though not always.
of corn is in no condition to do so dur- shiftless fanner whoj is negligent in the a church fair aud scratched her nose.
disfnbut’ng his
matter v.
of .......
hauling and
a1
•*&lt; th*
nn*. , uMM.vt
The penalty for poaching varies wilh 1I ing seasons •«
as tveet
wet as
the nr.l.n*
present one.
neath; die hare he catches in wire
snares set in-the breaks or “grata" of the nature of the offense; the season of It is covered with water in tbe early manure where needed. That i; is a
BUCKLEN’S ARNICA BALVE.
hedges, where “puss" is in the habit of tho year, the hours of the day or night, j spring, and can not be plowed till it is friend, there can be no qucstioi, pro­
The ticst salve iu the world for Cute, Bruises,
passing through; while the partridge even religion, affec'ing it. As, for in- ' too late to plant without incurring the vided hg has built his stable and stable Sores, Ulcers, Salt Klteutn, Fever Sores, Tetter.
Ill’S CREAS BALM
yards
upon
a
knoll,
from
which
drain
­
he takes in the stubble, by means of stance, taking ganfe on a Sunday or danger
Cbttppcd Hand*, Chilblain*. Cortis, and all
‘
of an early frost ia -t.
the •_.*
fall. v._
By
long nets; a confrere or two assist him Christmas Day subjects tho taker t\ a draining it with tiles it can be made to age can go in -.-.cry direction where Skin Eruptions, and positively cures Piles. It
guaranteed to give perfect saUsfactiott, or
to extend them. Sometimes a whole tine &lt;if £•&gt;, and for killing game birds produce more com than any land in the needed "to reach the field and grass Is
money refunded. Price 25 cents per Ixix. Fur
covey will be thus captured at a single during the elate season the fine is £1 country. It is naturally rich in mineral lands. The water carries off the nitro- sale byF. T. Boise.
draw. Passing through u district of per head of th'ise killed. These penal­ and organic rnattcy, and iu only defect, geneous elements, the potash, soda and
Buffalo has 1,157 fictories and 1.700 saloons
country where game is iealodsly pre­ ties, however, are not special to poach- is iu inability to part with the moisture phosphoric salts, it"ir.s of sma,’! mo­
served, one often sees a stubble-tield j ers, tbo owners of the game being Hable that accumulates during the winter and ment, so far as the bulk of the t-innurc When a factory tries to get ahead of a saloon
pile is concerned, ns the propr.etor of
with branches of hawthorn sacking up | to them.
The laws that more affect early spring. The drains will not only lhe barn-yard would not at the end of then comes the tug of war.
HAY-FEVER
here and there over it; the object being I tho poacher come under the head of carry of! this water, but will extend the.,
application*
to obstruct high-netting by poachers. 1“ Trespass,” and ha is termed a “ tres­ growing season fevera! weeks. Experi­ the year perceive that anythin/ wa*
miss'.hg from the pile. However if the
Probnte Order.
True, those might pluck the thorns up passer’in pursuit of game.”
When ments made in the counties of this State drainage led stra'ght out. ujnA his
anieJear them out of their way: but in caught so. trespassing.....„
.—
j
show
that
tho
average
yield
of
oom
is
in tho day ^yhich
it.endow, he would realize the value o&gt;
County of Barry.
Unequaled For Cold in the Head
“x the beg:h~in^»f
tho increased one-fourth by putting down
doing so the birds would lie flushed and ;, jg defined as “
“ ffrom
beginnii
these, and find that he could &lt;;rt four
Tbe Balm &gt;ma gilne l an cnviabl* reputation where
cleared off also.
In most neighbor*
neighbor-! }a.st hour before sunrise aud
and co
concluding grain-tile. The cultivation of the crop tons of meadoftr hay where, but I &gt;r the
evea known, dtap*ae.ntf all other preparation*.
hoods the rabbit is tho poacher’s best ' W1th the expiration of the lirst hour af- u also rendered more easy and tho or­ silent abstraction from the man-n*« pile, day 0. September, n. tbe year one thouuml
Recognized as a Wonderful Discovery,
■ource of supply nnd emolument, its , u?r sUn-d”) the penalty is £5 and costs, dinary risks arc avoided in a great he would not have cut more tin n half eight liunJteil and «-l&lt;l..y-lTO.
S -M by druraOt*. ntSOcte. On reralpl of price
Wescnt.Ctameni Smith. Judge of Probate.
capture paying him better than even , n the trespass be by night it is punished measure. Improved methods of pre­
aiiil a P*CL1£*' - on 5” eireu’.ar contains
lhe amount.
In th. matter o' the estate ot IUNATJ1AN will
full information and rcllaM” trallmouiah.
that of the nobler sorts of gain :. And not by fine but imprisonment, and tho paring the soil, of putting in the seed,
In hauling manure which Ibu* not I* K RDU N. dec s»e.l.
of Into, more than ever, the price of term is accumulative; for a first offense and of cultivating, the growing crop
rcadin* and fiiiu* the nrtitioo, duly verlAnl,
parted with any ot lu wiu«*r. upon a .ofOn
S. ilaivhl OUO of the crc-.lfor* v( wild deceased,
rabbita having ri*en in a remarkable de­ three months, with sureties required at I will do much toward increasing
distant Held, it ishnrdlv realized that in
that V. A. Hough or romr other •altal-k
gree, But a few years ago, the indigo- its expiration; for a second, six months, I production. Generally the farmers of each load of a ion pitched on tin wag­ praying
person may he appointed sdtniatelralor ut &gt;uid
bou* wild species "could have been pur­ with double the amount in money se­ I Pennsylvania, nnd others of the Eastern
on. hauled and again pitched otf. there ratal*.
Thereupon Hl» ordered that
Ccrcd without an operation ar.tfir Injary tniaae*
chased in any part of England for six­ curities not to offend again; and in case j States produce more corn to tho acre
is fifteen hundred-weight of water.
wiflirt by pr. J. A.nheiinau’* Method, llfliee 251
pence or twelve cents;. now it is throe of a third or further trespass it is treated than tho farmers do in tho most fertile
ynuuioar New York. Hl* hook with PhotographIhereforc it would not !«• surprising if
time* m much. This is partly due to a* “........................................
misdemeanor.” And ..
if ________
the tres- of tho Western States. They have a the farmer who moves hi-* stable to
tho increased scale of prices for butch-1 passer refuse to give his name to those much poorer soil, but they prepare it save the labor of hauling away tbe ma­
er’a meat, the use of rabbit’s flesh being «-ho have the right to demand itof him, better, pay more attention to manuring, nure pile should, under lhe knowledge
WORTH SENDING FOR.
•
j an economy.
jj
■. found
J (lt t|WyC . ftL«o a offer resistance to them, or use violence, and employ the hand-hoe In connection of the above fact, be quite readv to de­
Dr. .1.11. Scbruck. of Phlladelpliix, has ju»i nubgreater appreciation of it in modern the punishment assumes a still more with the horse-cultivator in working the fend himself in his practice. Yet the petitioner »houbl viol be Eranted.
li.bed a ixx.k un
of lhe l.unio and liov
days as a delicacy, many people esteem­ serious phase, especially if he be a known fields. It is not only possible but prac­
Ajm! it is further ordered, Hint said petitioner ibey ran lx- Cured.” which l* otT.’red fn». postpaid
pile cf stable manure, containing, as it five
notice lo the per*«il&gt;» Ititererted iu »*ld e*tnf* lo all upnllraute. b o&gt;t;lai-» valuable Infurw al.vn
ing it eo, nnd when properly cooked it poacher, and above all, where there tical to produce eighty bushels of com does, so large an amount of water, val­
of lhe pendeuev of «ald petition. »nd the heartt s for all wiiii
thmarive* affiieUd wilh or
is. Of course the poacher does not get are several acting together and'armed. to the aero on much of the land in the
ueless tn that position becaute soon thereof, by catiJnen copy of thia order to be pub­ lUNo to. »i.t &lt;iiM'aM*of lhe throat ol lune*. Adeightoenpcr.eefor a rabbit; but he has
As may be supposed, gamekeeper* West wircr* •» tly forty U ordinarily har­ evaporated when spread upon, Lhe sur- lished in lhe Na*»vills Nawn.nncwepaperpriaUd dr... DR. .1. JI. HKNK A HON. GOO Arch BL,
•nd circulated In raid County of Barry, one*’ in Philadelphia, Pa P. O: Box UG4.
no difficulty iu obtaining ten pence or a and policemen are empowered to n&gt;ako vested.—Chicago Tima.
faev, nevertheless contains salts of each week tor th re* aucceMire week*, pmiouilo
ahilling. He hxd needs h -wevor, be summary jxrrest. of those thev may
higher value to growing crops than any •aid day of bearing.
cautious in hu dealings with this at with suspect of being poachers, and were
JAtrnocopyJ
CLEMENT RMTTH.
Where Sheep Lose Their Wool.
utner known fertilizer whatever. It i» (ll-Ui
'
Judge of Probate.
nther game, nnd so also they who buy ttiis power confined to its legitimate
believed that tho passage of excrement
from him; for although rabbd« are not purpose thero would be no great harm
Sheep will lose their wool in the through the bodies of animals, bceomfl D P A tl C-B"’
brat bavins b~ n «»/«•
Adniiiiixfrntors Hale.
strictly regarded as game, they ore in it. Unfortunately, however, it is not
U nb AN V' ” &gt;•‘1 every Gr.mt World’* It»du»iwcond year that they are on this island. ing mixed as it does with mucus and
In Ito matter of th* «»i«i* of
equally ondet protection of the Game thus restricted, but too often stretched
No matter where they are brought from, other secretions, is rendered of more
GXORGB OILUS. l*«ccM»e.
Statutes as property. A recent act has and abused, especially by tho policeman.
Notice
I*
hereby
*[&gt;*«
ttrt
I
»h*ll»ell»l
public
value n-* foot! for plants than any prep­
somewhat relaxed the law relating to Exulting in the possession of this almost they will become as woolless as goato. aration of artificial manure. Even su­ uirtion, to the bicbrat bidder.at*
Ijxmbs dropped here will* retain wool
Honday
Olb day •» November.
them, M also to hares, giving tenant irresponsible authority, he also glories
perphosphate contains one-sixth of its
Mrmara a limited leave to kill them on in making a display of it; the conse­ just at&gt;out the same length of time, weight in tho form of water. Hence,
their own land. Agricultural depres­ quence being that many a poor laborer, when their woolly coats become nothing
in buying a ton of this at a given price
else
but
a
soft,
snort
hair,
like
in
every
sion, with ihe outcry railed at the returning wearied from his day’s work,
is paid for the water
respect to that of n goat. We knew be­ —say
damage dune to. crops by the “ground with no more thought of gome-stealing
m aUftC&gt;Tbl»r««npsny hare comni.nlrd the
—National Live Stock
F IANUwmrnulietnic.il Upright Grand Ffoora
fore that there were woollew sheep, but containe&lt;l
game,” as these are called, led to the than the man in the moon, ta-brought
~
inrrudutlD* haportaol lm|&gt;ro»rmrni «; addin*
did not think that an importation ot' Journal.
passing of this act; which, however, up by hail as of a highwayman to
lower and IwMty «rf &lt;*■« »»’* durability. Will not
any
kind
to
a
atricUy
tropic
dime
would
has no beneficial bearing on the poor “stand and deliver.”—Captain Mayne
—
It
is
said
that
much
surprise
is
result m above.—Key Wat Democrat.
man, against whom game and sport are Drid, in the N. Y. Iribune.
evinced at Berlin at the fact of thu
Tt ;- M ••-•N
alike tabooed.
As to tho poacher, it
. United States Government having sent
Dated, Hwptrtntor 91. A. D I’-kL
—The pastor of a certain church at‘ two men-oMvar to Alexandria, the Ger­
affects him for the worse, making every
—A Florida paper says that within a
1-7. ROBERT IL QBEGO. Adninf»tr»tur.
farmer a zealous watcher and aid to the radius of eight miles of Sanford, that Hempstead, L. I., asked &lt; a furniture, mans considering American interference
gamekeeper; still poaching is not put. State, there are 2,992 orange groves, dealer the price of a sofa. Tho dealer, unnecessary. If two vessels of oar navy
containing 165,235 trees, and, although told him he could have the eofa for frighten Germany, what would our endown, but goes on as ever.
A gang of throe or •four poacher.-.,, only five per cent, of the trees are now nothing, if be would, carry it home.’ tire fleet do? We have a better opinion
working together, will capture two or■ beoriog, tiiey prodteo 2,500.0 A) oranges Much to his surprise the minister shoul­‘ »f our navy now.—Ndrrutown herald. Uon, conailpatton or ea*tlv.n&lt;m« w* rannoi «c
with Wart’a VerrfaWa Liver I1H*. when l!»a dl.-i
three score rabbits in a night's excur­ ■ annually. The entire State is said to dered the sofa aud carried it to the pan
th-w are rtrtollv complied wIUk They are pun
•onage, amid the cheers and encourage-’
sion. They take them in .various ways;; produce 50,000,000 orange*.
—There has been a rise in the price VeaataNr. and never fail to Riva **iirt*c:ion. i
menu of the villagers. A few more such} of copper in England, which is partly Kcnatnd ta-*-» boxaa. rvtiUiBtn* *9 FQ.», M c
one of which is by wire snares, set as
•ale by F. T Buia*. lieware&lt;rf MrarJrrf-lt* a
for hares in the hedge-breaks or on the&gt;
—The Cincinnati (bntmercial h trying spectacles would convince the world duo to tho belief that tho extensive u-&gt; ImSiaifoh*. The r-cuine ntaDufectured aulv J.
I311^Lu£-A.lM&gt; HL-A.LL.
IM Md ie ’
beaten “runs.’* when tbe rabbits are»; to get up a boom for eel pie by recoin­ that muscular Christianity still exists.— of electricity will greatly increase the west • co., ■iL pin
MadieoaBL.
Chtcacn. Free trial packacnaaul
I demand for that metab
abroad feeding; then ’hepoeehftr’-dog,&gt; mn iding It (or disappointed t'ulilician* Christian Knion.
mall prepend on raoeipt of a a amt stamp.
DUNHAM.

KANSAS CITY

NERVOUS DEBILITY

MEAT MARKET.

Fresh and Salt Meats,

Snioied Hams and Shoulders,

DIRECTIONS

R j P TU RE

MASONlHAMLIN

�»«iln tbe

land cut off is never renewed without

dbappearance of our fore*.
Ittakes
so many millions of acres for fuel, still
mors for lumber, millions for railroad
Um, agricultural tools and machines,
dHly;
lartA, shoe pegs, matches, boxes for
packing, etc., every yc:ir, and at this
GRAND RAPIDS DIVISION.- rate the country,is book to be denuded of
its forests, tbe streams dried up, aud our
agriculture and manufactures depending
upon water-power are coming to ruin in
FTATION8.
a very short time. This is the picture
as it u presented to us by the city editor,
tlt’O
as he looks at things from his sanctum.
Ham round---------12.00
It ft. about time this nonsense was
MMdiavlUo-........
exploded, and the facta in the case
1317
stated as they appear to uswroodVenaoBivllls ——
ohoppen and clod-hoppers in the
Cbarlotio --------country.
It is undoubtedly true that
there has been a great decrease ot
forests in the old seaboard States, since
the first settlement of the country, for
WESTWARD. ____ _
that has been aneewrity, without which
----------------- -G. K. | Local
there could be no agriculture, and not
Exp. Paaa’ce
. STATIONS.
much increase ot population. It took at
least a hundred years in these States to
remove so much of the forest as was an
obstruction to agriculture.
Not more
Bits* JuncUoa...
than one-fifth of the area of a country
need be left in mood, to secure its high­
est
productiveness
in
farm
crops.
This
Nubville.
point has not yet been reached in some
parts of the seaboard States, yet in
.Grand R*i
other parte it has been somewhat passed,
and there is a deficiency of wood for
fuel and timber.
Tho alarmists over­
look the
------------------- most important fact that very
Trank xi&gt;4 C«nvia SouthernJU wav».
much of the timber land that is cleared
K. C. BROWN,
H. B. hEDTARD.
in tho older States is very soon renewed
A—’t Ooa’l 8upt-Jack»on. Gen’l 8np’l Petro
by natural agencies. •There is a regular
system of growth and clearing, and
timber and fuel are as much reliable
JD ROOKS, MARSHALL k CO.
money crops as corn and potatoes. On
fair, average soil, a forest will renew
itself once in twenty-five years.
It
would probably pay belter to stand
thirty or forty years, but it is available,
£ay tbe hlgbertmarketpricc for all kinds of
and can be turned into ready money
twenty-fifth year. A farmer with
Orain and Produce. every
twenty-five acres of forest can clear an
acre every year with no diminuton of
——And sell---------ee&lt;ls, Feed, time, Salt, Plaster, Slue- [ woodland.
In tho rural districts of Connecticut,
co, Hair, Pine Lumber, Lath
• with which we have been familiar for
and Shingles,
the last fifty years, there boa been no
ATTHE LOWEST LIVING PRICES. 1 waning of forests.
Ship-timber, near
seaports, has grown scarce and high,
but the price of wood for fuel is no
'higher,. and’ ’ini some markets b even
cheaper than it was fifty years ago. Tho
census shows that, in the exclusively
agricultural towns, there has been no
increase of population, and in some of
them a decrease daring the last forty or
fifty years, so that there is no more de­
mand for- fuel and timber to-day than
there was in tho days of our grand­
fathers. Wood for fuel, except in the
shape of kindlings and charcoal, has
Teeth Extracted Without Pain.
gone out of use in our cities and vil­
OfflceOpen Day &amp; Evening. lages on tho'seaboard and along the lino
ot our railroads. , Farmers, not a few,
within four or five miles of these vil­
lages, are beginning to use coal, and
A. BARBER, M. D.
the base-burner, once in the parlor or
sitting-room, soon drives out the wood
fires and stoves from the rest of the
house. Coal is found to bo far cheaper
and a cleaner and more convenient fuel
Office first door cast of Opera House, and than wood, even for those who own wood
Kerosene is also becoming avail­
near residence ou corner of Washington and lote.
Blate Streets, Nashville, Mich.
able for heating, and wo see no prospect
in the future that wood for fuel will ever
be any more in demand than it is to­
£ *. BUSH,
day. It is doubtful if it ever will be
■TE3 BOSS*
dearer for lumber. Iron is taking its
place in ships, bridges, machines,
houses and public buildings, and the de­
mand for icon, stone, brick, as the most
NASHVILLE,
H1CH.
desirable materials for building is likely
to increase as tho country increases in
wealth. In some of these rural districts
^IKEHOLNE,
there is more danger of’a relapse into
wilderness and barbarism than of ex­
Thornupplc XJnlce, Ml
terminating our forests lor the ad­
L. P. Cole, Proprietor.
vance of.high farming and civilization.
EporUmon. pl.uarn Mekers, or ph
In seventy-five of our farming towns
rl tl fled this plica and house a pleaast
there was a decrease of 12,000 in popu­
pood a day’s recnaUon.
A nr* •
lation daring the last decade, which
means an increase of woodland.
In
a ride of an hour, yesterday, in one of
QLEMDTm smith.
the towns bordering on the Connecticut
River, we passed six old chimnev stacks
Attorney at Law,
and cellars, tho rites of deserted homes,
the road for much of the way bordered
by forests. Even in the Nutmeg State,
where we use some superfluous wood, it
is difficult to feel the elarm about wan­
ing forests.—Cor. American AgricuL
luritl.
,

Nashville Elevator!

Experienced, Reliable, and Responsible.

A. H. WINN, Dentist.

BEST SET GUM TEETH $10.00

Physician and Surgeon.

BOOT AND SHOEMAKER,

Attorney &amp; Counsellor,
Stock in Montana.

JgEACK A MOW,

American and Foreign Marble,
Monuments, Tnmhrtoaes. Munden, Ao.,
HTneUnc*. MioH-

yyiLLIAM JONES,

DENTISTS,'
■U1C1L HI SI1GIUL S1BITUU01

A representative of the Pioneer-Press
was Yesterday introduced to a couple of
gentlemen at the Merchants’ Hotel, b&amp;th
of whom were interested in stock-rais­
ing, the one in Montana, tho other in
Texas. The Texan was on his way to
Montana with a view to decide for him­
self the advantages that the latter
offered over Texas for stock-raising.
The Montana man is the junior member
of a firm, which consists of himself and
brother, that are considered as among
the heaviest stock men in the Territory.
raising in tho Territory of Montana,
having commenced about sixteen years
ago. Provisos to this they were en­
gaged in freighting from St. Joseph,
Mo., to Denver, Colo., and afterward,
when the railroad was completed to that
point, from Denver and Salt Lake to
Helena, Montana Territory, which was
then coming iuto prominence as a min­
ing ctfmp. These long trips were made
with mules and cattle. Sixteen years
ago the last trip of the season was made
rather later than usual, and, owing to
delays ou the rood, it became necessary
to winter in Montana. With great mis­
givings as to the result, the mules snd
cattle were turned loose to find what
substance they could for themselves
through the winter mouths. Spring ar­
rived, when what was their surprise to.
find that the cattle turned up in mag­
nificent condition, with a sleek, well-fed
look that showed they had had no trouble
in providing for themselves. It should
be noticed, also, that the snows

"In the first place,” he said; "do
you know what hair is, anyway?”
“ Only in a general way, perhaps.'* ’
“ Then let me- tell yoe in a wool.
It

SEWING

Ils erwential structure consists of au as­
semblage of epidermic cells, at the bot­
tom of a flask-shaped follicle in the sub­
stance of the skin, supplied with blood
by vessels distributed to its walls.”
“Can hair be mule to grow on a bald
head?”
Not as a rule. In deblliated persons
the hair somtimes fall ou. spontaneously
or with slight assistance, and if tho
bulb alone comes away, and the Sheath
and germ remain behind, they are ca­
I pable of reproducing tho hair, under
proper treatment or favorable circum­
stances- The short and pointed hairs
on the scalp of old people show that new
shafts are constantly forming. The nu­
OF DETROIT.
trition of hair is effected through vessels
which are in jcontact with their tissue, Improved and Finest Patterns of Osoka and Heaters in tbe
without entering into their structure, so
market. Zines. Htovr Furniture, Etc.
that causes affecting the general health, PAINTS, VARNISHES, GOLOS, BRUSHES,
or effecting the health of tlie skin affect
WELL and CISTERN PUMPS,
also the nutrition of the hair.”
■
POINTS, PIPE. SINHS. ETC.
CHAMPION X-CUT BA WS, AXF8, ETC.
" What causes premature baldness?”
"In a great measure tbe violation of Detroit White Lead Works Colors,—The Best in the Market.
hygenic rules, and the excess of mental B UILDERL8 HA RD WA RF, SA 8H. DOORS, |
and physical labor in a climate foreign
OLA S8, LOCKS, KNOBS, &lt;(v,
to the race.”
.
NAILS. IRON, AND STEEL.
"Is there a greater disposition to When in Need of the Best Grades of Hardware nnd Jlagreyness in this country than in others ?' ’
cblnery Call nnd See Me.
"Well, some well-informed people
think that it,is about tho same in all civ­
ilized countries; but if their is any diff­
erence it’is because of the hurried and
unhealthful habits of life and mental ex­
ercise among Americans.”
" What is the chemical action which
produces gray hair?”
" Accurate!v speaking, that’s one of
those things that no fellow can find out
OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE
The color of tlie hair depends partly on
the'presence of pigment granules, and
partly on the existence of minute hair
spaces, which cause it to appear dark by
transmitted light. In Albinos and grey­
The Rea! Worship of Juggernaut.
haired persons this coloring matter is
limply absent.”
Jagannatha’s relation to the Hindu
"Isit the case that hair may. from
mythology will partly explain his true extreme fright or other strong emotions,
nature. lie is one of the manifestations .turn white as is said, in a single night?”
WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH
of Vishnu, and is.supposed to be the
" It is an undoubted fact- Just how
same as Krishna. The forms unde&gt;- which the change takes place is a matter of
Vishnu is worshipped are more or less conjecture, bnt it may perhaps be-Ex­
connected with love, while the mani­ plained by some chemical action upon
festations of Siva are, on the contrary, the oily coloring matter. This oily mat­
of a fierce and terrible kind. Had the ter would be withdrawn from the hair
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING
character given to Jagannatha been under conditions of cold, debility er in­
attributed to Siva, something like justi­ sufficient food.”
fication might be found for it. There is
"Does
gray
hair
then
become
dead?
”
a well-known legend which illustrates
the character of these deities. Among Not by any means. The loss of vitality
the loss of
ineinnumerauiegwuoiiuenmuuiuu, not necessarily
__
, . - follow
.
the
innumerable gods of the Hindu Pan­ I does
—
--n m-Qxva vigor­
thoon a
. diScusaluu
dlMOMiaS had
hul Brtwn
to th.
theon
arisen M to
the
- lor gr.y hx.r ottoo
We believe the
is destined to come
matter hair will grow
u personages.
poraoniigKs. One
Go. of
«. the
rh. Devas
S..» । °y
"1;•
F°rk
principal
sly- „Forthat
into general use. Call and see them.
M iMt r“- to -----------------• 11 ‘__
fter J..
proposed
try a practical —
lest
aIler
tl,e body s death. One Tft-'tbe
A
thTmatwr
inight
b.
settled,
causes
of
premature
baldness
and
grey
­
by whici----------------- —.
_ • kicked
&gt; ,1. j Siva.
ot__
The
ness
*** **•
is- Itwhtlv-nmno
lightly-fitting’ an
and unyielding
So he went up and
The | n
result was terrible: that god burst into hats."
" Are any of the thousand and one
a wild passion and destroyed some mil­
lions of worlds before he calmed down preparations for restoring the hair of any
again. The Deva then kicked Brahma. value?"*
Hastings, Mich.,1 Sept. 15th, 1881.
“Tonica and stimulating applications
This deity became *»ugry, and grumbled
and growled a little, out did nothing in arc sometimes beneficial. When the
particular. The Dera then approacned hair is thiu and falls out easily, shaving
Vishnu, who was asleep, but awoke in­ the scalp will often produce a thicker,
stantly on being kicked. He caught the firmer and darker growth."—N. K Sun.
foot that had given tbe blow, and strok- I
American Horses.^
ing it.with his hand, said he hoped it |
Tl-D WITH THE GEOGRAPHY OF THIS COUNTRY, WIU.
was not hurt, at the same time mani- ।
: BY EXAMINING THIS MAP, THAT THE
Mr. Lorillard docau't seem to have
festing a warm anxiety as if he had j
been the cause of pain to tho Deva, or very good hick this year in England.
The reason is that Mr. Lorillard is too
as if ho had done nim an injury.
»
The feeling against taking life, even smart. He thinks he is going to teach
of tho most insignificant insects, which these chaps racing tricks on this side
tho Hindus carry at times to very ex­ of the water. The truth is that they
travagant extremes, is somehow con­ know all about his stylo of work when
nected with the worship of Vishnu, or is he was in swaddling clothes. I have
derived from Buddhism, two fprms of jest learned the inside of the Derby
faith which are thought to hove been ease. If a man enters two horses for
closely related, and both of vhich seem a race in England Ife is expected to
to have had something to do with tho declare his winner long enough before­
origin of tho worship of Jagan- hand so that those who. are in the ring
nn’.ha at Puri. From this it will be soon mav shape their bets. Now, Mr. Lorilthpt the destruction of life must be utterly lardhad Gerald aud Sachem in the Der­
opposed to such attributes, and that it by. and he let everybody suppose he had
would bo out of harmony with the spirit marked Gerald to win. when, in reality
which ought to guido in the worship of that horse was merely to cut out the
Vislvtu and Jagannatha. The Temple running while Sachem was to be saved
services present u? with an 5'lustration for the linal dash. Lorillanl’s agents
of this.* Should by accident any person here let it remain with Gertld as winner
dio within the temple walls, the core­ up to ths last moment, and' then de­
monies are at once stopped, the offer­ clared Sachem. My! weren’t lhe others
...B- are __
...._____ ___
_______ _____
_ mud? They swore a high and mighty
ings
considered
ns ,polluted,
and
have to be carried away, ' and the t
that Sachem should not win—-anil
_*._i
i—i_
—u-j----------1 ­ I he didn’t, though it was perfectly evi­
whole—
place
is ilooked
upon as-----------being un
dent to those who saw tlie finish that he
clean till it has been purified.
When the Raths Yatra, or Car Festi­ was by all odds the best horse in the
val, takes place, accidents do happen; field. In addition to his being badly
hicago
ock sland
acific
there are thousands pulling the ropes by ridden and not let go until too late, there
3b!f.x the Great Central Line, affords to travelem, by reason of It* unrivaled geowhich the cars are moved. It is impos­ were two jockeys in the race who had
■’ranhtool position, tho shortest and beat route between tho East, Northeast and
sible to stop such a mass, and if any one orders to cross him if he came up, even
Southeast,
and
tho
West,
Northwest
end
Southwest.
should fall, he may be trampled upon if their own. horses got ruled out lor foul­
It Is literally and strictly true, that Its connections are allot the principal tine*
by such a surging crowa, and the wheels ing. This was the way the English horse­
jf rood between the Atlantic and tho Pacific.
of the car may also go over the body; owners took of teaching the American not
By its main lino and branches It roaches Chicaso, Joliet, Peoria, Ottawa,
La Salle, Geneseo, Molino and Rock Island, In Illinois : Davenport, Muscatine,
but the frequency of such events has to be so fresh. I reckon ho will be more
Washington, Keokuk, Knoxville, Oskaloosa, Fairfield, Des Moinosf West Liberty,
been exaggerated, and if there is blame, careful another time, and not want to do
Iowa City, Atlantic, Avoca, Audubon, Harlan, Cuthrle Canter and Council Bluffs,
it is doubtful if Jaganuaina should be all the betting that is back of h'is horses
in Iowa 5 Gallatin, Trenton, Cameron and Kansas City, In Missouri, and Leaven­
made answerable. It has often hap­ when .they win. Gerald and Sachem
worth and Atchison In Kansas, and tbe hundreds of cltls*, Villases and town*
pened when the Queen or the Prince of, were entered for the Sandown Derby
yesterday,
but
Sachem
was
scratched,
Wales has made a state visit to the citv
that verv serious accidents have ocoured, and Gerald ran. He did nobly at first,
attended with loss of life; as a matter of running a dead heat with the two others
As It Is familiarly called, offers to travelers al! the advantage* and comforts
foot such state processions through the in the race; but in the second heat he
Incident to a smooth track, safe bridges. Union Depots at all connecting points.
streets of Loqdon have seldon taken weakenetl. aud lost the race by a couple
Fast Express Trains, composed of COMMODIOUS. WELL VENTILATED, WELL
HFATED. FINELY UPHOLSTERED and ELEGANT DAY COACHES j a line Of th*
place without some one in tho crowd of lengths. This seems to be a good
MOST MAGNIFICENT HORTON RECLINING CHAIR CARS ever built | PULLMAN’S
losing his life, yet no one ever dreams year to back Lorillard for a place, but
latest designed and handsomest PALACE SLEEPING CARB, and DINING CARB
of ascribing to the royal personage just not for winner. Only the horses he h^s
that are acknowledged by pres* and people to be the FINEST RUN UPON ANY
named such a character as has been discarded and sold to Englishmen are
ROAD IN THE COUNTRY, and In which superior meals are served to traveler* at
given to Jagannatha.
Daring the Car doing great things. Passaic, thrown out
tho low rate of SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS EACH.
THREE TRAINS each way between CHICACO and the MISSOURI RIVER.
Festival self-immolation takes place. of the Lorillard stable because he was
TWO TRAINS each way between CHICAGO and MINNEAPOLIS nnd ST. PAUL,
This, also, has been very much exagge­ thought to be no good, caught one race
via the famous
rated.
Hamilton, in his Gazetteer, a while back, ana bids fair to do better
states that during the four years prior to yet as the season goes ou. Old Wallen­
1820 only three cases occurred, one said stein, the sturdy racer, who won many
to be accidental, and the other two to good contests hi America, was sold out
between Nowport New*, Richmond, Cincinnati, Indianapolis and La Fayette,
— — .M—m
• • Dnt.l
r
■ I&lt; w r ■— -1 ■ ■ ■
‘-aget rid of excruciating diseases with of the Lorillard collection last season be­
which the victims were tormented." U cause he was judged to have outgrown
this is anything like a fair estimate of his. period of usefulness. Well, he has
the death rate, there need be no hesita­ won everything he has tackled up to the
R. R. CABLE,
E. ST. JOHN
tion in asserting, on tbe basis of statis­ present tim*. including tlie Manchester
tics. that the British cab is a much more cup. His present owner paid Lorillard
bloodthirsty institution than the car of *2,250 for him. and has won thus far
CHICACO.
nearly *60,000 on his performances
Jagaunatha.—Fraser's Magazine.
alone. This shows what Lorillanl's
judgment amounts to—or the judgment
—A curious freak of lightning occur­ of ms agents, which is just the same
red at the house of Alexander Avery, thing. Luck •has pulled him along a
Centreville, Ala. None of tho inmates good while on the turf, jk spite of tils
were killed, but the shoes of each were •martness, but it bcgimF to look us
destroyed. The stroke fell on Miss Josie though he was about done on this side
Avery's neck, and passing down the of the water. No turfman in tbe world
body threw the shoe irom the foot with is so thoroughly detested m Pierre Lorjllard in England. ■ Folks refuse to be­
Prices Before l^ool
show on
lieve that he Is a square man.—London
more numerous in the Territory. Sheep
require more pare and attention than
cattle and give correspondingly large
results.
It is also a business that re­
quires less capital than it docs to engage
in the raising of cattle. The expenses
of herding and shearing, including
herder’s pay and board for one year,
for a herd of 2,000 is about *2.000. The
yield of wool will average *1.50 per
head, or a total of $3,000. The increase
of lambs can be calculated at 25 per
cent, of tho original number of tbe herd,
and, as at the end of the year they are
of equal value to a full-grown sheep,
their value would be *1,000. Tho gain,
therefore,Is almost 100 per cent, with
ordinary attention. It is estimated that
there are now about 200,000 sheep in
the eastern part of Montana, and the
number will increase rapidly, as new
people are constantly going into the
business. In response to an inquiry as
to the sheep freezing, it was slated that
such a thing was unknown.
It is true
there have bean losses, but in all cases
death has been caused by suffocation,
on account of the pens having been too
small, so that the sheep have crowded
together, one on top of the other; this
causes them to sweat, and then when
they are turned out in the cold air in the
morning they take cold and die.
The
best cattle and sheep region was stated
to be between the Clark Fbi;k Bottom
and the Musselshell River. The ex­
ceptionally fertile and temperate region
is, however, practically unoccupied as
vet, and the stock interest of Montana
is at present but in its infancy.—St.
Paul Pioneer Press.

Stove^Co.’s^Stoves.

50 Wagons
OOR SALE!

THREE INCH TIRE
Three inch Tire

Sold by C. L. Glasgow, Nashville, Mich.

BENTLEY BROS. &amp; WILKINS-

r.-h

C

,R

I

&amp; P

R’Y,

“GREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE,”

ALBERT LEA ROUTE.

at the NEWS OFFICE.

Get Our

hi* shoestrii

the fact that ail the deer aad elk they

From cattle they
g of sljeep and

Elnew here.

Bly out, the
off, and a

—We arc all of us liable to commit
I Manders; but it is only the wise who
‘ I profit by them.
" M

1OO-»^

�T&gt;r3IrwS

WE NEVER STOPles

Washington, D. C., B«n. 30.1882.
Ju accordance with the act of Con­
gress Secretary Chandler to-day ap­
OCT. 7, l*tt. pointed the following board of naval
SATURDAY,
officers to investigate tbe circumstan­
ce* of the low of the Jeannette: Com­
MICHIGAN NEWM.
We made .addition to our wale room to double our stock, and
modore Wm. E. Temple, president
CapL Jowjjh N. Miller and Commander
Hog epidemic in Saginaw county.
Fredrick vSMcJiyir, Master Samuel G.
Ionia will sggu be lighted by gas.
Lenly, Judge advocate. 1’he board
One solid sale room 250 long by 22 wide, filled to overflowing with .
will hold ita first meeting on Thursday,
at Detroit.
October 5, at the Navy Department.
Four prisoners escaped from jail nt
The survivors.of the Arctic expedition
Cheboygan.
at present in the city, Lieut. Danen Andrew Leet.h, killed by tbe cars at
bower, Engineer Melville and Seaman
Detroit while drank.
.
they will become mixed tn a mill where the
Niuderman and Noros, will appear as
' Telephone line from Grand Rapids
wheat and Cour p*M through ■&lt;&gt; many eleva­
witnesses before the board, and will be
tors, copveyors, bolts, mschioeries, etc. No
to Newaygo, 90 miles.
miller esu make good flour of grown wheat.
thoroughly examined concerning all
Mexican war veterans reuned at
A man who takesgrown wheat to mill may get
the particulars of the expedition, from
much better floar tuan his wheat would made
-Grand Rapids last week,
the sailing 6t the Jeannette until their
because he is apt to get some one’s good wheaL
A little boy was butted to deatl| by
And
tbe man who take, good wheat to a mill
return here. The report of Lieut.
when thev grind all kinds will be just m apt to
sheep near Kalamazoo.
.
Danenhower, which has been submit­
get flour from bad wheat. Tbe only way to
James Ackerson, temporarly insane,
make good flour for all is to (AinothInp but
ted .to the Secretary, and the report of
‘ Clothing-,
• ■
Groceries.
hung himself at Marshall.
S3?SJ ““ u
“
Engineer Mellvllle, which is in prep­
There are only 637 convicts in the
aration, will be considered by the board.
50
Cent
Tea.
atate prison, the lowest number since
Secretary Chandler gave an interview
cl There Is not a particle of difference bethe war.
Now is the time that mothers should be preparing
of some length this morning to Engin­
the flour I put Into the market and that
Wm. Love of Bay City, aged 87, was eer Mellville, Lieut Danenbower. and
which I give in exo?----- ■
-­
which I make from ।
whirled around a shaft, till he was the seaman Niuderman.
All of the
Tboac having
can get good flour
frightfully mutilated.
m
wheat
must
pstrelics and records of. the Jeanette ex­
Kalkaska county had an anti-mo­
pedition which have been in the cub
We start Cotton Flannel at 8c; a better one at 10c; an extra heavy one at 12 l-2c. AH 'Dated"NLihvUlfl Sept. 30th.
nopolist convention and has a county
tody of Engineer Melville were form­
ticket of that title.
ally turned over to Secretary Chandler. wool and Shaker Flannel Cheap.
At Mayville, Joseph Watson, while
They are of considerable bulk, com­
drunk, seriously stabbed Mr. Ogden, a
pletely filling what is known as a mus­
metchant at J un iatiu—/ ket box aud a large Saratoga trunk.
Wm.. McCracken; formerly of KulaA large stock, and plenty of that 50c Tea.
‘•Text books were of little value to us.”
masoo. was run five/at Detroit- by an
said Engineer Melville in the course of
engine, and fataliyinfured.
It
is
a
pleasure
to
acknowledge
to our many customers and friends our success since we have
a conversation concerning the cruise of
-The Universalista held a state con­
•CALLON--------the ill-fated Jeannette. “We had two put the knife to high prices and sell goods cheap for cash, and see our store crowded with cus­
vention at Marshall this week. Nearly
of what Are regarded as standard au­ tomers who come to us for style, durability and reasonable prices.
eighty delegates were present.
thorities on dog sledging and they fail­
£3F’Cash paid for Butter and Eggs.
- .
A year ago Bad Axe was destroyed in
ed in almost every particular to agree
the forest tires. Now the town is re­
with’ our experience. We bad to de­
built and has six churches,
L ---------- FOR--------termine everything by experiment.
Mrs- Peter Laquay, of Battle Creek,
The revenue cutter Corwin,” he said,
had 175 figs from a 18-year-old tree
BOOMS,
\
“had been remarkably successful in
growing out doors, this season.
The Perfectionists at Alpena.
JEWELRY,
getting as far north as she did, but
Piatt Bros, have bought the old cap
W ALL PAPER,
e
Capt. Hooper was favored with an un
Considerable excitement is occasion- !
itol building at Lansing, and will soon
usually opefi season, whereas tlie Jean­ ed at Alpena by the teachings of the 1
WLADOW SHADES,
turn it into a manufactory of handles
nette had to contend with one of the perfectionists. They have been hold­
DYESTUFFS,
and bent work.
hardest, eVen in that region.”
ing meetings every day for some days
A great many Jackson young ladies
A day or two ago the New York
PROPRIETARY MEDICINES,
are taking lessons on the violin. Anx­ lieraid had a ten column attack of the past in tbe hall of the Knights of Hon­
or, having been refused the use of the !
t PRESCRIPTIONS,
ious to know, just how to handle a
Jay Hubbell grabs. It further bewails churches.
’“bean” you sec.
RECEIPTS.
and bemoans the fact that that eminent
Their doctrine, as expounded by the
Morris Knapp, of Jackson, sprang
And every article kept in a Ant-cUm dm, atore
subscriber to the Grant fund of a quar­ Rev. Schweinfurtb, is. “If you do not
from his buggy while his team was run­
Being
engaged
in
clothing
and
lumber
business
in
Big
Rap
­
ter ot a million, raised and kept by believe that Mrs. Dora Beekman is
--------- MY---------ning away, nnd struck ou his head,
George Jones, of the New Yoik Times, Chriit, you are a lost man.” They ids, have concluded to dispose of by private and. auction sale
fatally injuring him.
has obtained control of N. Y. Associa­ teach that divinity has settled upon
Greenville is going to have a red rib­
ted Press. The N.Y. Associated Press Mrs. Beekman, and that she is one with the entire stock
bon club of young men who will not
is a decrepit institution which has long God; and that when she speaks it is
DEPARTMENT
associate with young ladies who do not
since ceased to be of any particular val­ with the voice of God. Mrs. Beekman,
know how to do housework.
ue as a news gatherer. If Gould wants who is also at Alpena attending tbe
people.
Near Dickerville, a young man nam­
it let him have it. He can put it in a meetings, claims the godly attribute;1
ed McDonald, accidentally shot and
glass case, so ita remains won’t attend that she has been appointed to convey
killed John Peak, while they were
viators, and keep it on exhibition in the wool, aufl that she has to perform
hunting together, mistaking him for a
his office much as one would an Egyp­ tho mission assigned her, whether she
bird.
tian mummy, which it resembles so far wants to or not. Her disciples, in open
At Deer Lake mill in Oscoda county,
as the possession of vital power is con­ meeting, right before her and the aud­
John Freeeman, while temporarily in­
cerned.
ience, proclaim her their savior. One
sane, threw himself into a large pulley
Secretary Chandler, when asked last man at the meeting on the 87tb, spoke
wheel and was slung out horribly man­
night about the rumor that he was to of her "as jiie Lamb of God that tak.
gled.
.
succeed Mr. Folger as Secretary of the eth away tne sins of the world.” An- |Which means a saving of 30 to 50 per cent to the purchaser,
An anti-monopoly convention, non­
Treasury, said : “You had better deny other Baid she was “tbe candle that il- j
----------------------- —
partisan, was held in Ionia county lost
it. There is nothing whatever in it. If lumined the whole world.” Others pro­
Toabow you a large and well selected Stock of
S-YLE TO COMMENCE FIRST DAY OF OCTOBER.
Saturday, a county ticket nominated,
Secretary Folger should leave the de­ claimed her their Lord. One fellow
and committees for county organiza­
partment, it is not at all probable that who said he came from Detroit, stated
READ THE
tion appointed.
I would succeed him ; moreover I do that he had had terrible work in his
Hon. J. W. Be cole' has not replied to
pursuit of the Holv Ghost. He had
not t»clieve that Secretary Folger will prayed night and day and had not
the letter of inquiry Irom the state sa­
loon society asking him whether he fa­ venture to resign, unless compelled to found it. lie woke up in the night in
do so, and then the Assistant Secretary order to see if it had come to him. He
vors the submission of tbe question of
AND BUY, BUY, BUY.
New will surely succeed him.” It is in­ had consulted Moody aud many other
prohibition to a vote of the people.
ministeis, but still no success in hi.'
CONSISTING OF
ferred fronrthis and other statements
hunt; but Bnally the Loot took him to I jeans Suits, $3.75, 4.50, 5.00.
Satinett Suita, 5.00, 6.00, 7.00
Rumored that a Republican paper is
tl-at Secretary Folger intends to remain Chicago; he met Mrs. Beekman, rec- 1
*r , n L vr- / j o -x j
r aa z? n/\
to be established at Batue Creek. In
ognized
her
as
the
Savior
and
now
he
Men
S
Cot|OU
W
OrSted
Suits.
4.O0,
5.00,
6.00.
in office until after the New York elec­
fact Joseph Saunders, who formerly
tions.
ri^^L»Mlo«T«S;rJ™on 'Union Cassimere Suits, S6, 7, 9. All-wool Cassimere Suits,
ran the Michigan ready print at Detroit,
The Woman’s Christian Temperance
from Mr». Beekmuu or from the heed
10, 12. 13. All-Wool Worsted Suits, $10, 12, 14.
has bought the Tribune and will run
Union of the District of Columbia clos­ light. Rev. Schweinfurtb, which gen-'
'
.
~
.
it as a stalwart Republican sheet.
Pilot Suits, 10.50, 12, 14.
ed its session at the Congregational erally consists of a rambling discourse Beaver bUltS, $12, 13: 14.
Tho smoke from 25 charcoal pits nt
without point or substance, except the !
iaa _ • o pqnta
«1
*
Church, at tlie corner of Tenth and G. divinity
of Mrs. B. Mi. Schweiufurth
1UU Pair8 ^ants at
Elk Rapids is utilized by a chemical
streets northwest, yesterday.
This frequently tried * to explain
how ; i nn VAqtq 60r
$2
Union Cassimere Pants, $2 to 3.
works.
Everv 24 hours 2,800,000 cubic
' e9Cfl’ DUC„
body of earnest women bus done much he was expelled from the Methodist
feet of smoke arc turned into 12.000
Wool Cassimere Pants, $3, 3.50, 4.
good in the past, and it is believed that church and has many bitter things to
pounds acetate lime, 200 gallons of
of that society, and then excuses „
,
.1 •
the late meeting tended to still farther say
School Suits, 6 to 14, $4 to 6; All-wool
himself by saying that be can’t help JjOJ’B Clothing :.
Ako the Largest Slock of
alcohol, and 25 pounds of tar, all of
good. Miss Frances E. Willard, the making such remarks as he must tell
.•
Cassimeres, $5.50 to 7. %
which are saleable.
distinguished temperance apostle, was the truth. He stated that God was
Michigan's population has increased
Boys’ Suits, 11 to 16 Union Cassimeres, $4.87 to 10.
in attendance on the meeting, aiding pleased with him, aud then made a dec­
since 1850 over 1,000,000, her farms the local members with her wise coun­ laration to the effect that his individ­
uality had merged somehow with God. Youths’ Suits, 32 to 36 :
Union Cassimeres, 5.75 to 6, 11;
nearly 100,000, aud the timber produdt
sels and giving them the benefit of
After
the
disciple
has
believed
in
now amounts to $60,000,000; copper,
Worsted Suits, 7, 8, 9, 10.
TO BESEENJN^BARRY CO.
tlie lessons experience has tanght Mrs. Beekman’s divinitv, he or she ap­
$8,000,000 ; iron, $10,000,000; salt, $12,­
pears to be all rigfot. They are then Worsted and Cassimere Overcoats, 5, 6, 8. 10.
100 odd Coats BOOTS ABD SHOES
her.
perfect; cannot commit sin and can do
000,000 ; and fish, $1,000,000. Michigan
The investigation into tlie charges of no wrong. They do not believe in an
at 3, worth 5.
AS CHEAP AS ANYBODY.
Stands fourth in wheat growing and
the attempted bribery of jurors ia the organization, as they are too holy for
wool raising. The number of acres
Men’s
star-route cases,which has been in pro­ such earthly things, and there is no Women's and Children’s Shoes at 50 cts on the Dollar.
bare increased nearly 500,000, aad coni
Boots at the
same.
gress in the office of tbe District At­ word sac red enough to be used os a ।
name
for Alieiu
them nn
as n
a body. They are ;&gt;
uuuic 1UI
,
.
_ .
.
,
.
in tlie same, proportion. There are now
torney, is now so nearly completed God', people, or, judjinu from the re- All Yard goods, including Prints; Shirtings, Demins. Ticks,
305,591 horses, 311,800 milch cows, 323,­
that the matter is expected to be
^"tob'ouTJth'-^'pT-.oMb.
’
ere
stripes,
Etc.,
closed
at
actual
cost.
348 other cattle, and 434.795 swine.
brought to the attention of the police
---------------------------Tbe Detroit Free Press recently court in a few days. It is anticipated of God.,
charged that the state treasurer nnder that the testimony will develope some tr^bte’.mong'femmXi'thewoZep^
£3C"Thi- is a genuine closing sale. AU kinds of country
Republican rule had habitually lent tlie new facta of an interesting character.
when they get the belief, become fa- pro&lt;luce taken at full and satisfactory prices. Parties indebted
funds of the state to various national
J * . *
11
□
It is understood that a number of natical in tueir doctrine*, and it is the । r
banks and received bonus therefor, leading free-trad* writers will appear belief of many that it will end by cans- either by note or account are requested to call and settle be­
thereby increasing the actual pay of the liefora tbe tariff commission when that
fore 1 cl09e for g0*1 in Nashville.
-office to about $10,000 a year instead of body goes to New York. These gen­ and females, who have come from var-1
VffTlkff*
A
A ATT CiTT7T\~nrrTT
The Free Press claimed that an tlemen declined to go to Long Branch loo. port, of th. country, aud there
-ex-Republican state treasurer told its when the Commission was in session «em« to lie a sort of general gathering
of the faithful at Alpena to witness the I
£3TStore building for Bale or rent.
reporter eo; but every living Republi­ there, but stated that if the commission second coming of Christ in the person 1
can ex-treasurer the state ever bad would come to New York they would of Mrs. Beekman. Some years ago Mrs. i
TO HAVE THE JOB DONF
Beekman
waa
at
Alpena
teaching
her
when interrogated by telegraph by the give their views in regard to tlie neces­
Post and Tribune^ denied having ever sity of a revision of the tariff laws. doctrines, the result of which was|
much trouble in some estimable fnmi-.
said such a thiug.
Among the gentlemen referred to are lies, and when she was ready to leave ’
,
A farmer named Cole living rear Dip-id A. Wells and J.S. Moore, “The town (it wns in the winter time) she
Z
•Cprunna was killed ou Friday by an Porsee Merchant” who prepared the
! At his new 8tore. “ read-'- for customers with a larger stock
•enraged bull. The animal was known Fernando Wood tariff bill. Both are
on the stage free of charge. The stage
of
■to be dangerous, nnd Mr. Cole had of­ well known writers on revenue and driver told her that tbe Lord was not i
Aad desiring to increase my prosperity
ten been requested* to get rid of the tariff reform.
running that stage line, and that she
August.
by affording the public
would have to pay, aud pay she had to. |
■annual, but be only laughed nt the
About
tlie
same
time
Schweinfurtb
j
Both
slavery
and
polygamy
exist'
in
warnings of his friend*. On Friday
came near having his faith put to a
morning lie saw the bull nnd other cat­ Egypt, though the Egyptian Govern­ practical teat. He had told some river
tle In the cornfield, and succeed; d in ment has for years made pretences’ of drivers of his ability to walk on the j
Than ever before.
that line, I have employed
driving them into the paatare, when putting :ui end to slavery. It is to be water, and the boys were about to make
the boll turned on him and nt the first pie*umed that one of the advantages him do it, when he effected bis escape.
There Is a protBbilitv that his faith as,
charge sent his Lorn through die un­ arising from British domination in regards walking on the water may yet
fortunate man’s l*ody. Mr. Cole was Egypt will l»e tbe speedy adoption of be put to a practical te»t.
then towed and gored by the infuriated mt-nsnres for tlie prohibition of slavery
animal till • nothing but a nhapsleKs and the slave trade. But polygamy
NOTICK.
maw of q«ti' t-ring flesh wn.s left in a will n«t of course be in any way inter­
WnnuUM, My wife, Birdie Bogardua, has ■
fence corner, where it was found some fered with. It is permitted by the Mo- left mr t&gt;ed and board without Just cause or*
provocation, this I* to warn all person* from .
tiiue afterwsid by tbe hired man. HU ham modan religion, which prevails in
c
---- f her on my accoont mI
bar contracting after thia!
clothe* were compl.*tely torn from his Egypt, and the British Government has
date.
au. SM UW2
. .
!
I ound
and machinist
Hsxky 8. Bogamiil's. [
«lhe Ea*t India iMHu^saiona.
and th* wristband of tbe shirt.

FOB

Carpets and Oil Cloths,
Cloaks and Dolmans,
Ladies’ Cloaking,
Dress Goods,

Dress Flannel,
Notions,

Tranks and Satchels,
Scarlet Underwear,
Gents’ Furnishing Goods
Boots and Shoes,
Hats and Caps,
Wall Paper,

,

John M. Hoe.

F. T. BOISE,

CLOSINGOUT

PAINT AND BRUSH

Olotlrxizrxg'.

AT WHOLESALE COST.

"Wholesale JPrice List

Call and Examine I
F. T. BOISE.

ALL READY

GROCERES

Sugars, Coffees, Teas, Tobaccos,
Spices, Fish, Canned Goods,
Provisions, 4c.,

AT THE LOWEST PRICES
For Cash or Ready Pay.

Crockery, Glassware, Lamps,
Stone Ware, 4c.,
cash paid

Tor

produce.

C. w. SMITH.

Shod

\\ Al. A. AlLbWvKln.

ALWAYS BEST

GEO.W. FRANCIS

SKILLFULLY.

Recognizing These Facts,

THE BEST WORK

Particulars Next Week.

Chas. Middleton,

A No. 1 Workman.

THE BEST

J. M. WOOI7

ATTHE NEWS OFFICE. ....

F

er

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                  <text>ORNO STRONG.)
Zditom awd Proprietor.

1

VOLUME X.
LIFE IK NASHVILLE
And Her Environs.
-Tbc cartridge-belted and wily hunt-

—Old age is telling upon Joseph Otis,
and he is not expected to live tbe-week
out. He is 88.
—Miss Carrie Velte has purchased
Kocher's bouse and lot.corner Mid-

—Thursday was the big wheat day
of the week. Brooks, Marshall &amp; Co.,
alone, took in 1,W7 bushels.
/
• —A new ani eleg»»t-^300-ponhd
Diebold safe ^tow'does duty in F-. C.
Boise’s hardware, It arrived on Thurs­
day. '
•
—The long looked for rain arrived
Tuesday afternoon, refreshing tired
and-deirty-Tuother earth in a bountiful
manner.
—Telephones are getting to be all the
fashion. G. A. Truman has the poles
on the ground ready for one to run from
his store to his residence.
—Sol. Feighner wag on the streets’
Monday selling watermelons so cheap
;hat it made ons wish he had been
made big enough to eat two watermel­
ons at once.
—Oar diphtheria has now diminish­
ed to six caaes. No new ones are ap­
prehended, and a week or so more and
we expect to be entirely rid of the
scourge.
—The gutters on Main St. to the first
alley north, aril being paved with stone,
the same as the main portion of that
street is paved. J. H. Smith has the
job at 65 cents per square yard.
—Wheat has come in briskly this
week, and the streets harebocn throng
ed. About 8,000 bushels have bccri
taken, at prices ranging from 45 tp 90
cents. The prices paid as we go to press
Friday are 45 to 90 cents.
—it is qntte' probable that the IxMird
will have the high school, at least,
opened next Monday. A meeting of
the board of health and school board
is called for to-moirow, (Saturday)
evening, to consider the master.
,
—Deacon VanBrunt and those few
Hastings prohibitionists who are en­
deavoring to injure L- J. Wheeler’s
election are fteally making themselves
appear ridiculous. In temperance mat­
ters he is the peer of his traducers.

*Two8 rumored here this week that a
big railroad smashnp occurred at Char­
lotte. Tuesday evening; but alas! it
was nothing but a freight car knocked,
across the M.C. track by careless switch­
ing on the Grand Trunk. And still the
rumors fly!
—A shaft in Ingereon A Son’s eleva­
tor broke on Tuesday.. Some little in­
convenience was thereby occasioned
to wheat sellers here, and the junior
partner had a chance to try bis muscle
as an elevating power. The break has
been repaired.
—Our business men were notified on
Monday evening that the footpads who
robbed B. A. Sherwood in Baltimore
township, Sunday, came in on the
evening train"!rom the west and got off.
here. But no depredations have been
committed so far.
the opera house Thursday evening,
Oct. 19. Cap., will be remembered as
the man who delivered our excellent
4th of July oration last summer, and
can be relied upon for something en­
tertaining next Thursday.

-—Two civil cases came up in ’Squire
Parody’s court this week. One was an
action for debt brought by R. Elliston'
against M. Bloom and resulting in “no
cause of action”; and the other bought
by Wm. Kerr against Y. P. Castle, who ■
signed a note with his brother, and was
decided “no cause of action."
—Calvin Ainsworth has sold his stock
of groceries to Charles Fowler, wbp
has associated with him Mr. W. 8.,
Campbell, an old groceryman of Grandy;
Rapids. The new firm will be known '
as Fowler A Campbell, and will con­
tinue the business at the old stand.
The News wishes them success.
—Several numbers of The Heaperia
A'atv—Clark N. Young’s paper—has
1
reached thia office. Ita locals are lively,
news reliable, miscellany, interesting,
and it will, undoubtedly, prove a profit­
able investment,—as it is well filled
with home ad vs. During the local fair,
held there laat week. Clark issued a
daily. Hesperia is to be congratulated.

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun.

| TERMS; $1.50 per Year
I Credit Subscbiftioks tl.79.

NUMBER 4.

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1882.
with good natured smiles and remark
laconically, “Beer did it” But on the
other hand there are some who think
that too mucn temperance is what did
it, and they may be right, for accumu­
lated experience seems to justify the
remark of a recent campaign orator,
“Prohibition is right in theory, but I
fear it is impracticable.” The Ohio Re­
publicans don’t fear it, they know i^
—K Holler received very flattering
• proposals to exchange his mill proper­
ty in this village for property at
Owosso and Corunna, and went* up
to investigate. He found the prop­
erty all fight, but the morals of the
places so much worse than Nashville
that he now values his property 100 per
cent better than he did, and thinks he
cannot do better than to continue to
remain in Nashville.
—Voters will be interested iu the
coming election, -not only in selecting
officers and legislators but in the adop­
tion of several constitutional amend­
ments: one proposing to make the sal­
aries of circuit judges $2,500 a year, the
other to authorize the establishment of
boards of county auditors to adjust
claims against counties. The people
must also decide whether they will
make a general revision of the state
constitution.
—M. Touhey, alias Mike, the taffy
man, a week ago Monday left town, os­
tensibly to take in the Hastings fair
Not returning it was surmised that he
had skipped, and on Tuesday Prindle
A Chipman levied on the chatties he
left behind him to reimburse them­
selves fora suit of clothes sold to Mike.
As we go to press, the imformation
reaches ns that Mike still lingers at
Hastings, but is expected to return
home to-day.
■ —Wm. Buel of this village and Dr.
Baughman of Woodland, started north
Wednesday to pick out a camping
place for a hunting party which is ex­
pected to leave this section next Mon­
day. It i&amp; extracted that the party will
be composed of Wm. Buel, T. C.
Downing, J. D. Dickson, of this place,
R. Mudge and Dr. Hayes, of Hastings,
Conductor Baker of Jackson, and Wm.
Bonnett of Charlotte. Charley Debolt
will be chief cook for the expedition.
—About a dozen auditors greeted C.
W. Stewart of Grand Rapids, at the
opera house, Monday evening.
His
manners were pleasant, his talk clear
enough, and he may not be, ns he said,
cnlzy; but he seemed to have a very
erroneous conception of what subjects
the people are interested iu just now,
for nearly all the points he discussed
were greenback fallacies, which the
great book-keeper Time long ago bal­
anced on the opposite side froth that
which he would have them.

BASS WOOD BOLTS.
Prohibitionists heretofore have asked
FELL DEAD.
for—shall be submitted to a vote of the
Wm. Decker, a farmer aged 53, liv­ people. If Republican representatives
81.25 per cord for 18 Inch,
ing a few miles south-east of the vil­
Autumn is a sear-ions season.
were elected this would'be done, would
Cash aa fast delivered. For particular# see
lage, on the county line, arose on Tues­ come up to be voted upon at a time
Have you seen the comet; yet!
Gao. W. Pbaxctb.
Will Kocher still linger* in Chicago. day morning in his usual health and when people were not distracted by
&lt;yMichigan Stores at Glasgow’s.
Where, oh where, is Mike the taffy spirits. After lighting the kitchen fire politics, and could be carried.
A CARD.
be took the milk pail and started for
man!
The speaker didn’t believe that the
Seeding done, the farmers flock to the barn to do the chores. His wife river and harbor bill was such An aw­
I take this opportunity of thanking my many
was watching him and he bad scarcely
town.
•.
*:
riends
for
their
Ub4ra)
patronage during the
ful bill, but yet if he* had been ra ConEmmett Everts is clerking at the traveled four rods of the distance when gie*w he would have voted against it. last nine ycara I have been engaged tn borineM
here.
C. AiXswobth.
he fell to the ground. The wife rush­
bank.
Michigan with all of her sea-coaafecould
STA few more 84.85 suits at Atlswobth’s.
To brown and gold the wood* are ed to his assistance and found him ap­ not be expected to feel very-fitter
parently lifeless. With the aid of the
turning.
ST
Don
’t
forget
the
Royal
Oak Heating
against -the bill. The grumblers in this
Glasgow’s.
H. A. Dickinson is enjoying himself children she carried liim into the house, case, as usual, were the Democrate,but Stove at
and sent after Dr. Goucher. He arriv­
in York State.
LADIES LISTEN.
how they could hold the Republican
Marshall Gregory has -donned a ed iu due time and applied restoratives party responsible for it, when a Re­
Having moved in our new store, Yates Block,
and added large’y to my stock, I am better prebnt to no avail. The stricken man re­
stove-pipe hat.
publican President vetoed it and more panxl than ever to plcar-c my patrons. My slock
L. J. Wheeler has a new clerk—G^o. mained unconscious from the time he Democrats than Republicans voted for consists of fine Millinery of every description,
fell until about nine o'clock, when he
Beautiful Hats, Bonnets, Fancy Goods,' ureas
Bullen of Panna.
it, was a mystery to the speak
Silks, Satina, Laces, Ribbons, Vel­
I. M. Flintr Sr., is building an ad­ breathed his last, and was numbered fact the opposition had become ironic Trimmings,
vet, Flowers, Feathers and a thousand or more
no more among the living. The doctor
other articles you »ill surely be interested in.
dition to his house.
th out Call
grumblers,—often grumbling
and see my goods, give them a critical ex­
J. L. Stevens is cracking up the mer­ pronounced, as the cause of the sudden-ji cause nnd in a manner that ma
them amination, compare prices vith those of other
taking off, paralysis.
and you will buy. More partlcuUra
its of n new farm gate.
j appear ridiculous.
They । i ruble dealers
next week.
O. M?Yat».
J. C. Haney and family moved to
specially at the expense of car ng on
O'DONNELL SPEAKS.
Howard City tliia week.
KW* Mv Books will be left for a Jew days in
the government; yet the cost’s
FowIci’-AdCainphcll’s store. All {xrties In­
"Have you heard from Ohio,” is the
A much larger audience greeted was not as large, deducting pension debted to me will please settle, \
prevailing interrogation.
C. Ainsworth.
James O’Donnell of Jackson, at the fund, es when under control of the ,
We are sorry to note that Col. Ains­
grumbled at Reneunesusj eveuiug,
' opera nouse
house ou
on Wednesday
evening, Democrats. They giuiuuicu
A CARD
worth retires from business.
than had been expected, owing to the pnbiicaus assessing office holdera-^T.A.
Haring formed a partnership with D. P.
The railroad wood and tie contractor jj sour weather. L. J. Wheeler was Hendricks of Ind., has become^oarse Sagendorph, of Charlotte, I take pleasure tn
become,
Introducing to my friends and patrons Walter
made contracts here Thursday.
made chairman of the meeting and the in denoucing the system, and f when Webster a young man of ability and integrity,
Giles Gaylord of Vt.Ville is the fu-!
Glee Club opened the exercises.with a Hendricks, some years ago, hel| igov- to whom I bare transferred my. unfinished bus­
iness, who will be found over L. J. Wheeler’s
sion nominee for representative.
i(
.
1 campaign hymn entitled “Rallying eminent position nt Wasbingtol he;not
Will Clark has opened a harness shop
only assessed his employes, but fixed
Song.”
Walters. Powim.
in the room vacated By the bank.
35.
The chairman introduced the speak­ the amount and kept it back on pay­
A. J. Hardy and wife and Levi Smith
er. Mr. O’Donnell, ns an orator, im­ day. In fact the Democrats, although
MONEY TO LOAN,
are taking in the Chicago exposition.
proves every year. His arguments are they denounce it, are heartily in favor On Real Estate at low rate of Interest of
The ladiesof the M. E. church meet
Lkk A Dcbkeb
reasonable, clear-cut—without abuse— of and practice it.
with Mrs. C. Ainsworth’s this (Friday.)
tyOata nnd poUtoes are worth 30c at A 8.
The fusionists are hungry and cold,
and cjnchisive.He rather inclines to wit
The front of Lentz A, Son’s block
Tngercon's
elevator.
nnd the most obstreperous Democrat but oil and water will not mix. The
has been improved by a coat of paint.
gW"Wood and Potatoes taken in exchange
or Greenbacker often finds himself profit, if there is any will go &lt;o the
Dan’l Pratt has so far recovered from
obliged to smile at the ridiculous man­ Democrats. The action of the Demo­ for any goods tn our Hue. Gbaxgkb A Co.
his recent illness as to able to be about
crats
in
the
matter
of
fusion
is,some
ner in which his party is held up to
again.
REGISTRATION NOTICE.
public view by O’Donnell's compari­ thing like the stranger at a party who
Richard Drake tried night operating
The township Board of Registration, for tbc
asked a girl to dance with him, and she Township
sons.
of Castleton,will meet at the office of
nt Charlotte this week, but ’twas no go
The speaker pronounced a brief eu­ replied:."! um not acquainted with you. the Township Clerk on Saturday, Nor. &lt;h ’82.
—too tirtsome.
laws of 1881 requires a new registration, ,
logy to the memory of President Gar­ I have never had introduction."' “Well The
to
be
made,
therefore every legal voter in the
Revs. Teel of Charlotte and Wright
field and then proceeded to enter upon never mind, you don’t take any more township who wishes to vote ar the approacbof Big Rapids were guests of W. G.
the main duty of the hour. A refer­ chances than I do,” was the reassuring i tug election are requested to appear personally
before tbc Township Clerk prior to Nov. 4,1882
Aylsworth this week.
ence was made to Democrats and the response.
and register hl» name. Frank McDehdt.
Mr. D. Pratt states that the report
4-7.
Township Ctert
lidtWoter they were constantly in on
In the matter of free trade
should
of the marahafs ordering the burial of
go
slow.
'England
parcticeit
protection
account of the tax question, corruption
rsrik,,.'!
»
his child was not true.
Glasgow’s.
of the Republican party or othergrrevi- 200 _years,_ or until her industries be~ heating stove at
H. A. Brown of Cross Village, t&gt;penf
ous ills. There also exists a remnant of 1 came so numerous that she was com­
Z3f~ Call ai.&lt;l sett our large and elegant ai
a few days In this vicinity this week, a party entitled Greenbackers. Inger- 1 j&gt;ellc&lt;l to resort to free trade to keep sortment
of Gents Furnishing Goods, Jost 11
PrINDLE A ChIFMAX.
visiting old friends.
so»l says that the only party that can ' them going. Other countries had tried
Mrs. Yates and a fine stock of mil­
get fat on a famine is the Greenback. ; it and gone back tn protection.
ONCE MORE
linery are now located in tbetr new and But now times are good, rates of inC, L. Glasgow ask* those who have not al­
------•’— :is
----‘:J-------*■•’ ‘the
‘
The
nation
ns-~
solid
as rock,and
commodious quarters.
called and attended to their accounts
terest are lower than ever before, aud accomplished work of the Republican ready
(and notes that are past due) to do so at once
Bellevue subscribers whom we did there is no good reason why the Green­
party ore landmarks from the Atlantic and Mve him the expense of calling on them.
not see Saturday may hand their ■ back party shouldn’t have a funeral. to the Pacific and gulf of Mexico to the
Iverroate from 86 to 88, worth &lt;10 and
amounts to Postmaster Cogsdill.
j| The idea is simply a delusion. Buenos
British possessions. No country pays
' J. D. Dickson has re-shingled and re­ । Ayers since our last campaign has be- such liberal pensions to its defenders,
ry
If
buy Clothing of Granger A-Co.
painted his residence and improved it |i come converted to the Greenback as does our country. It is rich and they will you
save you 10 percent.
materially by the addition of a porch. II theory, nnd.now has a currency worth
powerful
—no country has so many hap­
’
*T V.
C. »J.
L. OinBKUW
Glasgow i» HgCUl
agent »ur
for MJV
the TIIUC
Wide
H. M. Lee returned from his western i:ten
________
____________
_____ ...
cents on
a dollar. Greenbackers
py and prosperous homer, and it must , Awake Thresher and Engine, manufactured at
trip —
the ------latter ,part
of------lost---------week. He ,' ......
rant „
about
national bonkers,
aud-------then be re nj i! in t tube red that the Republicans Union Spring*, N.Y.
...j,
----- —
—
— ----expresses himself well pleased with turn around and nominate a national f assumed the reins of government when
BOOTS AND SHOES.
Kansas.
* banker for Governor. There isa time the
' country
*
---------------------wan rotten
with corruption,
A complete Hue of heavy and fine good* foe
D. S. Conley, who has been suffering Lfor all things, as the man said when be they founght war with wfir, raised the all. With prices on the cash basis, and bar­
gains
worth
looking after.
with typhoid fever since , the first-of | went home after all the saloons
.
had public debt from a state of bankruptcy
September, w*as able to be in town closed, and it seemed that the time for to the standard of the best of the
The largest line ever opened in Nashville.
Wednesday.
the Greenback party to believe that world, and contributed largely to the All kinds, all styles, with prices for all. Call
and see them.
Registration blanks printed cheaply their mission had been accomplished blessings we now enjoy,
C. W. Smith.
' And
at this office. Every township 4clerk had arrived.
And die
the glee
glee club
club close
closed’ “
the exercis­
•9~ Don't forget the Round Monumental
must have them so send in your order
Why doc* the Democrat party exist T es with a suitable song.
Heating Store at
Glasgow's.
It’s sole object seemed to be to place
without delay.

L 00AL GIBBLE-GABBLE

—“Talk about pumpkins,” said Mr.
R. A. Perry, &gt; of this vicinity, as he
dropped into The News office to pay
his subscription Saturday; “I see yon
mention one that weighed 55 pounds,
but I’ve got one that weighs 87 pounds.”
"W-h-e-w!” exclaimed the "boys,”
Cap. Dunham is fixing up his new
“Yes sir,” continued Mr. Perry, **I
raised from one seed 353 pounds of bil’ard ball in the Yates’s block quite
elaborately.
A lunch counter is among
*pumpkins,—one weighed.87, one 70j,
one 5©, one -57, one 45 and another 85.” the new features.
In
a
little
less
than two days this week
And The News boys agreed with him
Freem Rathbun plastered, at Wm. San­
thatlhnt vine was “some pumpkins.”
ford’s new house in Maple Grove, 351
—It is absolutely necessary to re-reg­ yards two coats and. floated it down.
ister in order to vote this fall, and to
Misses Zoe SAnford, of Middleville,
re-register every voter must either ap­ nnd Emma Bessmer, of Hastings, and
pear in person before the registration R. T. French of Middleville, were
board on the last Saturday before elec­ among the Nashville visitors this
tion, dr must make out and personally week.
*
present to the township clerk an appli­
O’Donnell tells jokes in such an apt
cation blank. In Castleton township manner that the causual listener is led
blanks may t»e found with Clerk Mc- to believe that he is* not only a firstDerby at L. J. Wheeler’s store in this class Irishman, but a respectable
village. Mr. McDerby will also be at Dutchman.
Morgan next Wednesday with blanks
The ladies C. T. U. will meet with
to accommodate the voters in that vi­ Mrs. G. W. Francis next Thursday, the
cinity.
19th. Officers will be elected, AU who
—Tuesday morning, S. G. Matteson are interested in the temperance cause
of Kalamo, had passed through Nash­ are requested to lie present.
C.B. Lusk and wife and Mrs. Wil­
ville and was climbing Pnrkey’s hill,
when he made the startling discovery letts of Buffalo, N. Y.» arrived at W.
that he had lost his pocket-book, con­ G. Aylsworth’s on Wednesday. The
taining a respectable sum of money. two former departed on ^Tuesday but
Then he remembered that while in the latter will remain all winter.
Nashville he had taken the book out
H. N. Mosey, a staunch friend of The
of his pocket to give his wife some News, dropped in Saturday with a
raspberry
sprig bearing green and ripe
money, and hastened back with fears
and misgivings, which, however, gave berries, second growth, for the editor,
place to feelings of joy when he found sad a box of large, delicious Concord
his pocket-book lying open in the Prolific grapes—for the “boys."
&gt;
srect, near where he had made the
Dr. A. H. Winn departed for Schenec­
financial transaction with his wife. tady and other places in Albany coun­
The town was full of people, and the ty, N. Y., Saturday evening. It is whis­
book, probably, had been passed over pered that Doc’s mission cast is a matby scores of teams unnoticed. George nmouialone, and that he will return
was much more fortunate on this oc­ with a Mrs. W. Tbit is right and prop­
casion than he was a year or more er. Doc has a good business, a fine
since, when lie took out his pocket­ home, is out of debt, and can make a
book to get a match to ignite an old wife happy. Every young man iu such
circumstances should do likewise. His
brother, A. S.. has charge of the dent-

stumbling blocks before the people. It COMMON COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS.
had strode .forth to victory times in­
CoL’XCtL Rooms.
(
numerable, and retreated every time
Nashville, Oct. 0. 1882. f
badly defeated. It was something in
Regular meeting.
the condition of the man who had mar­
Present, Chipman, President: Barber, Boise
ried rive times—a good example of faith Dickinson, Demaray, Lee aud Lentz, Trustees.
triumphing over experience.
It had Absent, none.
Minutes of last meeting read and approved.
sown by the bushel and gathered by
Petition of Geo. A.Truman asking permission
the thimble-full. The party in conven­
tion at "Jackson recently, complained to ereet poles along the line of Main Street to
bitterly because the Republicans kegt be used for the purpose of erecting a telephone
between bls store and residence
presented
money in the state treasury.
The
and on motion prayer of petitioner was grantspeaker could readily understand why
this was un-Democratic as the Demo­
The following accounts were presented and
crats left the treasury not only barren on motion allowed by ayes and nays as follow’s:
of money, but in debt. For six years
Ayes, Barber, Boise, Dickinson. Demaray,
the Democrats had control of Congress Lee and Lentz. Nays, none.
and bad the opportunity to institute I F. C. Boise,............................................. 813 78
L. Brown..........
many reforms, yet their measures were । .1.
Ri-clnrtin.rn.
mischevious, among which were the
Jas.’Gregory,..
Motion by Lee that the council receive blds
attempts to break down our banking
system and pay rebel claims. And at the next regular meeting foi cleaning streets
doing village draylng for the balance of the
those rebel claims were still there aud
ensuing vear. Council reserving the right to
awaiting a suitable time to be brought reject an'v and all b_Jd.’.
Ayes, Boise, Dickinson, and Lee. Nays,
up, and a peculiar feature of govern­
Barber, Demaray and Leuu.
ment claims is that they, like men
There beluga tie the President voted aye.
On motion ths street committee wm instruct­
gain reverence with age.
to let the job of paving North Main street.
There was another party, called edOn
motion council adjourned.
Prohibitionists.
The speaker was a
F. McDbuby,
E. Chipmax,
Clerk.
President.
strong temperance Iman and believed
that prohibition was right. But he
LOOK! LOOK!
couldn’t understand the Prohibitionists
A SUIT OF CLOTHES GIVEN AWAT.
this year. In Jackson its advocates
were waging a war against the Repub­ amount of 83, will be given a free ticket which
wil'
the holder to a chance to draw any
lican party. The whisky traffic was a suit entitle
of clothes the lucky owner may select onl
gigantic evil and hard to crush out. of a stock of 88,000. One ticket In every 100
will
secure
tbc prize. If a lady bokls the
The speaker believed that it had been
better controlled under the tax law
than under the former prohibitory law, to cboow from our stock of 84,0O’&gt; wortb of
gsneml merchandise. Will comm.aw to issue
—at least the number of saloons were rickets Batuniay, Ort. 1L and continue until
far less. The matter ought to be kept ooe hundred tickets are sold, when the distri­
separate from politics. The Republi­ bution of the prize will take place.
Atlswowth.
can party deserve well at the hands of
CT Baring just sold my entire stock of
the Prohibitionists. The party in its
groceries to Gentlemen lFo« ier A Campbell. 1
platform demand that n prohibitory respectfully a*k tor them a liberal patronage
from tin: public.
C. Ai xs worth.

arSchooI suits at 84, 85, and 8G at the
Closing Out Bale
at Atlsworth's.

WAGONS! WAGONS!
What Is the use of paying sixty-fire dollars
x a wagon when you can get vne every whit
s good for flfir dollars at my shop one-half
ille south of Nashville. See them.
fyDon’t

■tore

forget the Royal Oak beating
at Glasgow’s.

IT All colors in Germantown Yarns and
Zephyrs at Adda Nichols'store.
2-4

tJT Wagona, Buggies, and Carriage*
at fiuMow'#.
Ejmie best Hue of Boots A Shoes In town
at
C. W. Graxgkr A Co.’a.

100 USEFUL ARTICLES
EasDv worth 25 eta, selling for 10 els at the
Ten C jnl Store In the Reese building.

at ArujwoRTH'a.

A FEW THOUSAND DOLLARS
To Loan on good Real Er Ute security.
Lek A Dcrku.
wCamp Chairs, Tinware, GlaMware, Sil­
verware, Brushes, Hose, Notions, Etc., M the
Ten Cent Store.

wDoo’t fail to avail youndves of the op-

BOB SLEIGHS!
elm ever turned from the mills, and jropoee to
sell Mid alclgbs for twentx dorian per sett.
Jaz. Mooaa.
One-half mileK&gt;uih Nashville.

YOUR EAR, GENTLE READER.
You that arc indebted to The

we muat par our debt#; coascqw
compelled to auk you to pay that
Don’t forget It I Don’t foqpnl it’.

�—

tail

Thero! Dow ti»at hurt you?”

"Madame la Marquise died of diph­
aud that through hhn waa the clearcat theria. My wife knew her well and waa
arid earnest way of bringing to justice greatly grieved at-her illneo and death.
the perpetrators of this foul crime.
On what grounds do you base such a
Then I went back to my painting and charge?”
again toe fever of inspired work seized
I told xnr rtory m briefly an I could.
me. I wm scarcely sensible of the lapse Both my hearers listened attentively,
A French doctor who laughed at the idea of
of time, till toe clock upon toe mantel­ but, I felt, incredulously. When, I had
PESGELLT'8 WOMAN’S FBIEND.
any one dying of a liroken heart wm dubbed
piece warned me that it wm already fir*. finished, the Minister asked:
It was wiib no little difficulty that I After considerable trouble I managed to
••What proof have you of the truth of by a girl who didn’t want to.eae life robbed of
managed to descend the stairs with my pack my sketch in a way that would this extraordinary tide?”
load. At the landings the stranger took cover it without injuring toe moist colors.
••None,’.’ I answered, "except the
hold of an elbow and gently guided me. I collected my brushes and tubes, tied sketch I made. I had nevey seen the FORTUNES FOR FARMERS AND MECHAN­
As we passed Into the street my com­ toe handkerchief over my eyes and rang Marquise in life, if it be indeed her like­
TEACHERS,
LADY CLERK*
ICS.
panion spoke in a whisper to some one the belt Almost immediately I heard ness, no other proof of my truth is
Thousands of dollars can be saved by using
HOUSEWIVES,
who was evidently waiting for him.
the door unlocked and the’sad voice needed.”
proper judgment to taking care of the health
I was then put into a carriage and whose tones had become so thoroughly
‘•I knew her well,” said the Minister. of youroelf anti family, if you are Bilious,
driven rapidly away, but so many turns impressed on my memory asked:
"Show me the sketch.”
were made that 1 could not determine in
"How have you succeeded?”
I unpacked it &gt;nd placed it before him. not dUay a moment, but go at once and pro­
By fitidhiK where th ■ tn&gt;ntt!ouy
what direction we were going. Some
••Well.’’
* He started as if he had been violently cure a bottle of thorn wonderful Electric Bit­
With ftuleiuti in»k» n&lt;ut tbuustatu profound.
one was y’tting by my side. I presumed
ters. which never fail to cure, and that for the
struck.
WOMEN know what th&lt;*s® 'Ilsaaaas are. bat
The men of h-nniinir u’itbennl "rouad.
not always ciro proper ASteutioQ to tow
it was my visitor, but he did not seemi you to your studio. Come with me.”
•Th&lt;- beast was nbmuix-d o’er with care; .
"It is indeed the Marquise,” he mur­ trifling sum of flf.v cents.—Tribune. Sold by do
symptema. ru:
Twy proved him by the plumb and Mutant,
inclined to speak, and I-had plenty to&gt;
He
led
mo
through
tho
passage,
down
mured.
Then
,
turning
to
me
he
said:
The cotuiMUM to hl* rib* uppit»l.
^Headaches,
Lassitude.
occupy my thoughts. Where teas 11 the staircase a&amp;d to the carriage. When "Describe the man who came to your
And every joint by rub- w.w tried;
ScrgL Maxon has abandoned the idea that he
But nothin* CHMii l th- *l *&gt;:•»« find
being taken, and for what purpose? Tbs► I had'seated myself he took ms place by studio.”
Pale or Mothy Complexion.
To wove be differed front bis kind.
la a great hero and has come down to believing
more I pondered the more uneasy I be­ my side. The ’ homes were urged to a
"I could not see him welL I think he
Held they/ ** Tour H&gt;b'iir&gt;o*si It appear*
came. My only comfort lay in the cer­ vety rapid pace, so fast, indeed, that I had a moustache; he was tall and thin, that he is a ^ood deal like a StrtekPrison con­ Sleeplessness,
Palpitation.
Tin beast iahound from teoof to eant;
No outward bkmhhro we see
vict.
__________
tainty that I had a thousand francs ini wondered the police did not interfere. and spoke in a low, sad voice.”
To iluiit action fair nn I frvo.
Numbness, Nausea, Dizziness,
my pocket
Mpr companion did not utter a word.
‘•That would be a rough description of
In view of this, the fact &lt;• plain
Why continue the use of remedies that only
Th® mfawtUef lira within the brain.
After a while the carriage stopped and H nen the carriage stopped he helped the Marquise, eh, AL Bonteaux?”
relieve, when Elya’ Cream Balm, pleasant of Dry Cough, Nervous Irritation.
Nov. we tuiprrAi. to atop his tricks,
1 was told to got out. Some one took me to descend, took me as for us the first
"Yes, Monsieur. I have heard that application and rsurc cure for Catarrh, ‘ Hay
Weak and Lame Back,
Fever and Cold in head, can be had for M
my arm and led me up a flight of steps, staircase and said:
the Marquis was overwhelmed with cents?
•
-thoh along 'a hail, then up n staircase
"When you reach the next landing grief, and that some of his friends feared
Apply into nostrils with little finger.
and
finally
along
a
corridor.
I
judged
you can uncover your eyes. I shall send for his reason.”
The Sultan well their wisdom praised.
I wax troubled with Chrome Catarrh and
from the height and width of the stair­ for the picture in twelve days. Remem­
“A needless fear,” said I; "his grief is
case, which was of stone or marble, and ber your promises; keep faith with me only remorse or perhaps dread of dis­
With h illinrdn. spanker-boom nnd sail.
Ing
unable to breath through my nose. Be­
tho
rich
earoeting
or
the
passage
or
cor
­
In proper aha;*® equlppod wita he,
and you may secure a more powerful covery."
fore the second bottle of Elys’ Cream Balm
Aa thuutfb .Ifstgaed to sail tno ana!
ridor, that I was in a grand mansion.
friend than you imagine. Good day.”
The instincts of the detective., who was exhausted I was cured, and to-day enjoy
persons in tbo best society, who prefer that their
“Sit down. M. Godin. There is a
I heard him pass away. The tempta­ distrusts everybody and everything, sound health. C. J. Corui.x, US3 Chestnut St., evidence
Abd when tMe^nlmn next bestrode
b® given privately to thoso asking it
chair immediately behind you. When tion to follow and instantly denounce were beginning to ba aroused in me.
Field Manager Philadelphia Pub. House, Pa.
Wliornn'.s, ere your DAUGHTERS ailing’
you hear me close the door of this room hhn was almost irrestible. But sober
"M. Godin, Justice is indebted to you.
Elya’ Cream Balm, for Catarrh Cold in the Ix»k well to the cause. Send for my adv.co to
you may uncover your eyes and begin. second thought came to my aid. I re­ All that can be done to-night ahaU be Head, Ac., gives thereat of satisfaction. Have mothers.
And old and rounir alike axrev l
You are to paint precisely as it is the— flected that he hod at least one and prolx- done. In the morning I shall again yet to hear of single case where It has not giv­
A atnuurcr aixtat could not lx* round.
what is lying on that bed. You must ably two confederates in tho carnage, claim your aid. Go to your rooms at en relief or permanent cure. Chas. L. Bnux
From side to aide the province rouud.
finish before five o'clock to-morrow and that at so early an hour it was once, and do not leave them or speak to daol, Druggist, Muskegon, Mich.
R. PENOELLY, M. B.,
—Mma- Oar, tn SI. ATfcholaa
morning. When you are ready to go unlikelv I should find any one to render any one till. I send for you; and lest’ you
Sold fey DrufpufsJ
lalanaaoo, Mioh.
away you must rebandage vour eyes, mo efficient assistance. I passed up should be in any.personol danger, I will i It is believed that a full-grown griuly beaj
i could pull a load of 30,000 pounds on a level,
•U MYSTERIOUS COMMISSION.”
then’ sound a' bell vou will find on the stairs and took off tho handkerchief,
have the entrance to your apartment but the trouble is to find any one to harness
table.
A
person
will
come
and
conduct
Whe..’ I was once safe in my own room watched."
.. was almost dusk, on a wintry after­
^-A^enUeman who suffered for years from Ner.
’ you to your studio. In ten or twelve
1 thanked him for this courtesy, though him up.
noon. when I was sitting in my studio’ days I will send for the picture; it must I was torn by distracting doubts as to
vvos debility. I’rematU'c decag. and ail the effects
Lady BcauUflers.— Ladles you cannot make of youthful indiscretion, will for the sake of sufwondering if. after all, I had not been a1 be packed so that no one can sec it, and what 1 ought to do. If I held my tongue I could not help knowing that he va*
1 should make two thousand francs cer­ actuated quite as much by u desire not fair skin, rosy cheeks, and sparkling eye ■ with
fooi in believing 1 was ever destined to
the cosmetics of France or beautitiers of the
make a living as an artiet My dear old। you must pack it yourself. The person tain, and possibly more in tho future. to have rue escape as by his wish to pro­ all
world, while in poor health, and nothing will
, who will come for it will pay you the Could I afford to’throw away this won­ tect me.
father—a small manufacturer of silks at
give you such rich blood, good health strength by the advertiser* experience can do so by address
thousand francs. • You will find derful opportunity? Moreover this was
In perfect confidence.
Lyons—had spared all that was possible'' second
and beauty as Hop Bitters. A trial Is certain in&lt;
refreshments on the table. Now I leave the course which ’ had the great recom­
14-lyr, JOHN B. OGbEN.UCedar Bt„ N. Y.
M. Bonteaux called for nro m the proof.
from his savings to give me an art edu­
vou. Do not forget the conditions you mendation of safety. If I should inform morning. He told me I should have to®5 fa ftftl P" flay « bomf. Santpea worth H firoe
cation'in Paris. I had entered myself as’1 have
•• IS «-• Addrew 8t&gt;ik&gt;» e Co„Portbnd. Me.
promised to keep.”
It
Is
dow
the
fashion
to
h
ave
bare
floors
and
the police I might very possibly be re­ accompany him to the cemetery of Fere
a pupil at the Academic and had been a
I heard him close the door. Then 1 garded as a madman, or if my story waa la Chaise, as the Minister had decided to scatter a few rugs around. It Isn’t easy to kill
most diligent student at the life classes.
There the rapidity with which 1 worked, eagerly tore the bandage from mv face. believed and the murderer or murderers have the coffin of the Marquise taken a cockroach on a velvet carpet.
The glare of a brilliantly-lighted room
and the gcaeral correctness of drawing,
traced I should undoubtedly incur the from the family vault and opened. It
THE HEIGHT OF FOLLY.
and truth of color in my sketches, earned oppressed my eyes fora few seconds, and vengeance of rich and powerful villains. had been brought into a room of the
To wait until you arc in bed with disease you
forme much praise. When my funds I could only distinguish that the apart­ My solemn promise, too. bound mo to mortuary chapel, when we arrived.
ment was large and magnificently fur­ secrecy. But then I told myself I was The Minister and two o** three assistants may not get over for months, is the height of
were almost exhausted—and I knew ’.hat
folly, when you might be easily cured during
-AWARDEDexcept under the most urgent necessity nished. As my vision grew clearer I not compelled to keep that when the were examining the body. The wound the
early symptoms by Parker’s Ginger Tonic.
I must not ask for more from home—I saw that almost immediately in front of doing so would involve tho escape of a had been found exactly as I described. We have known sickly families made the
I was cordially received by the Min­ healthiest, by a timely use of this pure medi­
•ought to fill my pockets by selling pict­ me was a very handsome coffin standing murderer. At last exhausted nature,
ures to the minor dealers. They gave on a platform or dais covered with black which had been subjected to tho most ister and told that the Marquis had been cine.—Observer.
me but little encouragement; all that the velvet I had been prepared for some­ severe tension for twelve hours, claimed sent for under the pretext tnat there had
thing strange, but the sudden sight of her rights. I slept, but my dreams been some informality about the register
Evangelist Barnes lias been hit by a stone
most favorable was willing to do was to
5ut a picture in his window and try to the coffin made me shudder. In a mo­ were hideous. The figure of'the dead of the interment. Orders had also been from a sling, and be doesn’t believe that David
ispose of it—in which case I was to re­ ment or two, however, I gathered cour­ woman rose ever before my fancy. She given to bring the doctor who had killed Gohah In any such mannnr.
age
enough
to
walk
toward
it.
It
was
ceive three-fourths al the purchase
jiointed to Cho dagger in her breast and signed the certificate of death, and also
HIGHLY ESTEEMED.
money. Day after day I caHed to in­ empty. The lid stood by the side, and seemed to entreat me to speak, alt hough one of the surgeons attached to the de­
The youthful color and a rich lustre are re'
quire if a keen discernerof unreoogniaed some of the silver screws had fallen on I heaYd no words and could not distin­ partment of justice.
the
floor.
I
picked
'
one
up
and
looked
I felt elated at my success and import­ stored to faded or gray hair by the use of Park­
guish any sound.
genius bad found out the merit of my
er’s Hair Balsam, a harmless dressing highly
work. The same statement was always at it The head was badly mauled. Evi­
It was again nearly dusk when I awoko, ance. and had no longer any qualms esteemed for its perfume and purity.
dently the coffin had been opened by some
about my broken promises. All Paris,
made to me—“a gentieman had looked
unpracticed hand. Where was its for­ troubled and unrefreshed, but with my I was sure, would soon be ringing with
at it and promised to oaliagain.” But the
mind
fully
mado
up
to
tell
the
police
all
A California paper thinks it la ungrateful for
-MEDALS.mer occupant? Instinctively I turned
mysterious promisers never did return.
I knew. 'I understood the necessity for praises of my shrewdness and courage. girls to commltt suicide, it coats *&lt;&gt; much to
Presently a gentleman entered, whis­
While I was merlitating on my gloomy toward tho bed. On it was lying the acting with all possible dispatch, but I
body of a woman. I looked at the face.
pered to the Minister and handed him
prospects I heard a low knock at the
I think it was rhe most beautiful.I ever was hungry end felt that I needed some- something wrapped in paper. Itpro^ed
door. I rose and opened it The gen­
THE BAD AND WOTHLESS
saw. The expression was so calm and tiling to give me strength and confidence to l&gt;o the dagger I had described.
tleman who stood outaide was tad and
are never imitated or coutcrfelted. This is
happy it was difficult to believe she was before I undertook to make my extraor­
“Let the Marquis be brought in," said especially true of a family medicine, and It Is
thin and dressed in black or very dark
After I had once
not merely sleeping. 1 had only noticed dinary revelation.
The Best Known Remedy for
clothes—in the dim light I could not the face. As my eyes passed from that decided on a plan of action I felt easier. the Minister.
AU eyes were on the door. The Mar­ positive proof that the remedy imitated is of
tell which.
to the figure a sight met them which The dread of the ever-haunting presence quis entered, looking pale and thought­ highest value. As soon as it had been tested Backache or Lamo Back.
"M. Paul Godin?” he inquired.
of
the
dead
woman
began
to
disappear.
Rheumatism
or Lame Joints.
"Yes, monsieur. Will you not do mu drew from mo a cry of horror and rage. I went to a restaurant I had been in the ful. When he saw me his look changed aud proved by toe whole world that Hop Bit­ Cramps or Sprains.
Her breast was bared, and through her
ters was the purest, best and most s alable fam• the favoi^to enter?”
habit of frequenting when richer. Some to one that I tried hard to think showed
Neuralsla or Kidney Diseases.
heart
a
jeweled-handled
dagger
was
&gt;
ily
medicine
on
earth
many
Imitations
sprung
He bowed and passed In.
of that villain's thousand francs should fear, but still it seemed to me only like
buried to the hilt!
up and began to steal the notices in which toe Lumbago, Severe Aches or Pains
contempt.
"I must apologize for asking you into
I felt ill and faint. I went to the table help to give me the strength to denounce
"Ah, M. Godin! I thought you were a preM and people of the country had expres ed
a dark room,” I said, as I moved toward
him. This idea pleased me, for it seemed
and
took
a
loug
draught
of
brandy
.
Then
the
merits of H. B., and in every way trying to
the table on which stood a lamp. "I
to savor of retribution. I took up Le Noir, gentleman. I see I made a mistake. induce suffering invalids to use their stuff in
had almost fallen asleep in Lhe twi­ I camo back to the bedside. It was no;, turned over tho pages carelessly, almost You have betrayed me.”
stead, expecting to make m.joey on the gredl
as
I
had
tried
to
persuade
myself,
a
hor
­
light."
"It is not betrayal to give a criminal and good name of H. B. Many others started
rid dream, a phantasy. There was the unconsciously, and was just about to lay to Justice.”
nostrum; put up in similar style to H. B., with
“Pray do not light the lamp; my eyes
it down when on tho last page my eye
lit! looked at me and smiled ever so variouslvacvlscd names in which toe worn
are weak, and what I have to say to you dagger, driven with unerring aim and caught this heading:
“Hon” or “Hops” were used in a way to induct
deadly
force.
I
notie-ed
that
so
skillfully
faintly,
yet still perceptibly.
1 can say better as we are.”
“ Funeral of the Beautiful Marquise de Bien­
Eople to believe they were the same as Hop
had
the
blow
been
given
that
only
two
"M. ie Marquis.” said’the Minister,
ville."
My curiosity was thoroughly aroused,
tiers. All such pretended remedies or cures,
visitor was evidently a gentleman; clots of blood had escaped {rom the
The words startled me, for I had heard ‘Tregret to be compelled to inform you do matter what their style or name la, and es­
his manner and accent proclaimed that. wound. Tho bleeding must have been of the beauty of the lady about whom all that you are cliarged with having mur­ pecially those with the word “Hop” or “Hops”
In their name, are imitations or counterfeits.
wholly
internal.
Again
I
glanced
at
tho
In his voice there was a Sadness which
male Paris had been raving fo* some dering your wife.
Beware of them. Touch none
nope of them. Use I
am
sweet, peaceful face. There was nothing months. Uiad never had an opjxirtuat once evoked sympathy.
• "Who makes this charge?”
nothing but genuine Hop Bitters, with a bunch I .Mil I IliN
"As you will, monsieur. To whom in it to indicate the agony which I had nity of seeing her, though I had much
“M. Godin, who states that he saw or cluster of green Hops on the white label 'WUllVIli
been
taught
to
look
for
in
painful
aud
•omo o*
have I die honor of speaking?"
wished to do so. I did not know she her lying with a dagger buried in bar Trust nothing else- Druggist* and dealers are I
warned against dealing In imitations or coun- I
i
sudden death.
had been ill. and to learn suddenly that heart.”
"I do not wiei. to give my name; I am
terfeits.
Where wasd? Upon what frightful
“That is true.”
here on business that can be transacted tragedy had I lighted? Had this mur­ she was dead and buried shocked me not
“He confesses! Officers, arrest that
without disclosing it. I must ask you to dered woman been a faithless wife, or a little. I read the article with consid­
SURE REMEDY AT I*AST. IMeatoe.
erable interest. It slated that the Mar- man.
excuse the customary formality.”
■EAO'S MrilnM COM sad BUNION HASTEN.
was she some innocent girl who had been
"One moment, M. le Minister. When
I bowed and pointed to a chair. My enticed here to meet ruin and death? Suise had died four days before of diph­
teria after only a short illness. The that dagger was driven into my wife’s
visitor took it, paused a moment as if What should I do? What could I do?
heart
it
had
ceased
to
beatfor
more
than
last
part
of
the
article
gave
a
brief
de
­
thinking how he should begin, then
My first impulse was to raise an alarm,
•poke quickly, almost abruptly, as if he but a moment's reflection convinced me scription of the lady’s appearance. As two days."
“Explain yourself, monsieur.”
was anxious to lose as little time as pos­ of the uselessness nnd danger of such &amp; I read on I became more and more en­
•• My wonis can easily be verified by
grossed. for I could not but believe that
sible:
proceeding. It was evident that the per­
DreMWE.
“AL Godin, I have been told by some son or persons who had committed this the murdered woman and the Marquise any surgeon. Matlame la Marquise hail
KeTti FaiU ti Bsan
one who knows you well—no matter who crime- would not hesitate at another to were one. The recognition of this fact a morbid dread of being buried alive.
be youthful color to grey
She
made
me
swear
to
her
that
if
she
frightened
me.
I
could
not
help
seeing
—that you can paint from life with great secure safety. I hail no idea in what
•quickness and accuracy. I want a fig­ quarter of Paris I was, nor of how to that such a charge made against a man died before me I would not allow her to
occupying the rank and station of the be buried until her heart had been punc­
ure painted to-night.”
Ihnstn C«ltpa
gain egress from the house. Beside, I
Marquis de Bienville would need more tured. I could not bear to tell this to
"To-night!" I exclaimed.
had heard the door locked behind me.
substantial proof than was to be found any one else or to allow any other hand
“Yes. by candlelight, and it must be
But why should any one desire to per­
than mine to strike the blow. After I
done before daylight to-morrow morn­ petuate that terrible sight? This was a in my extraordinary story.
It was with great difficulty that I could had done so the strangeness of the sight
ing: that Is, in the rough; you can finish question I could not answer, though I
it here afterward. The subject is a racked my brain for a response. Then manage to eat apart of my dinner. That began to overpower me. Sometimes 1
done
I went back to my studio, took my think my great grief has made me half
•tranp.* one, and the conditions on which I looked again at the body and the fright­
I shall give the commissions are: that ful fascination of the subject began to sketch and set off' for the office of the mad. I felt that I must have a record
you submit to be taken to and brought .enthrall me. Its grim awfulness appealed Minister of Police. I inquired for him, that I hod been faithful to her last wish.
from my house blindfolded; that you to something in my artistic nature aud and after having stated to one or two In this state I sought out M. Godin. He
A Para Family Mcdldna that Never Isloxfsitn.
shall not atk any questions; that you. urged me with irresistible force to begin minor officials that my business was of has doubtless told.you all else that you
wish to know. The reason I desired to
• ahall never tell any one what you may work.
I had always had a touch of the utmost secrecy and importance I keep the matter secret can be easily un­
see there; that you shall never show any morbidness in my inspirations, yet i had was informed that he bad gone home.
one the picture you paint or reveal its .never conceived such a combination of
-Could I not communicate my wishes derstood."
•abject; and that if you should ever meet ithe beautiful and the horrible. Yes, to bis representative?”
’
, The two doctors had arrived in time
me after tonight you shaH make no sign whatever I might feel it my duty to do
On mv replying negatively I was told to hear the Marquis’ explanation. They
needed only to glance nt the body to cud
of recognition. I know that these are on-tlie
(
morrow, I would work fliy best 'that if I particularly desired it I could firm his wonis.
startling conditions, but I am willing,to ithat night.
be taken to the Minister's house, or I
" O, how poor and mean and misera­
pay liberally. I will pay yoti one thou­
An absorbing desire to express not 'could see him at his office the next morn­ ble I felt! I crossed over to where the
sand francs now and anotiwr thousand &lt;only what I saw but what I felt took pos- ing.
I dreaded a night with that fearful
i
Marquis stood, and I knelt at his feeti
when I send for the finished picture. Dp ।session of me.
secret
still
undisclosed,
so
I
chose
the
Never before had I '
“ Monsieur,” I cried, “take back your
, jou accept?”
alternative.
painted so quickly or so weM. I obtained former
I
and the sketch and try to forgive
For the moment I was stunned. Here with
&gt;
I trembled a little when I was ushered money
'
a few touches effects that I had be­
me.”’
was what seemed to-be b fortune plac -J fore
1
vainly labored to produce. It al- into
I
the presence of the famous Minister,
•• Rise, Monsieur; I have forgiven you.
-anddenly within my gnwp. The condi- imost seemed as if I were controlled by but
I
his calm, quiet manner, soon reas- ;I asked and expected more trust than I
tions were cortitinly “startling." but I ।some overwhelming force.
The soul sored
i
me.
had had a right to believe a stranget
was young. I hid no fear aud lhe mys- innd power of a great artist had tempor­
"What is it that you have to disclose, could
.
have given to a stranger. Keep
arily pjtssed into me. and my poor hands Monsieur?"
j
lie asked.
,
the
money; finish the picture, and I hope
Giincs ano *M
and eyes were but the means through
"The secret of a murder, Monsieur.” ।it will not be the last you shall paint for
“
Well?"
;
which another was working.
ma.”—Our ContinenL
Marguerite
Valois summoned her
The hours flew tapidlv by, but I la­
"I wish to confide it to you alone,” I
lovers, who arrived blindfolded and were bored unintermittingly. The figure grew said
i
as I glanced at the gentleman who
—An insane man in Butte Country,
borne away dead by th- silent waters. upon the canvas and began to look life- had
1
accompanied me from the office.
&lt;California, luw spent his time for the
If wine such tragedy was in store for mn like in its deathlike fidelity. At last my
“That U impossible. M. Bonteaux la Ilast thirty years in building a boat in
I W-i' p.»«r«u.xig4 aud desperate enough aching hands and arms cotnpeUed me to iu
i possession of all the secrets of my de- ’which to go to a big mine which he thinks
to take all the cinuoes.
rest. I looked' everywhere for some part
|
menu Even if I were to hear you 1he owns in Nicaragua.
He has built
“ Well.” said be somewhat inipatient- mark or sign by which I could discover ialone now, I should lie compelled to con- &lt;one or two very good models, which
in whose house I w
Not the faintest fide
I
in others before I could act upon ishows a great amount of natural skill.
your story. Why do you hesitate?”
LHe
-----says
—if—his
-----------crew o
go
-------------------------back on him when
-Hare an- one thousand
"Because. Monsieur, mv accusation he
to sail he
will have ;
a crew
Il is
L ready
—tz
*zz —
zzzzt
will appear almost incredible. *1 ------- j composed
z,.of women, as there is --------more
dependence to be placed in ■M female
’ aux than the men.
TUB BULTAJi Or THE EABT.

My hat w« fortunately a soft one. Hj
turned the brim down so, a* to conceal
the fact thol iuy eye, were covered.
"Now follow me to the carriage, and
^remember, M. Godin. I trust to your
IroaorA* a gentleman to fulfill all tbe'con-

For Women,

A Prevention and Cure

ERRORS OF YOUTH.

Benson’s
Capcine
Porous
Plaster.
6

»MggS*A°^.9A^

*

PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM.

PARKER’S

GINGER TONIC

raagg]

—

�,1

■ II

CUSTOM

forth?

atill playing with
waging, and the

m

It beam the
Cruelty of the Ancient Rouraau

TO BOARD.

:

M

I

L

D

W
C

I

P

J

B

J

H

J

O

P

nAnme

Hnatlngw. Nllcii.
N. T. PAKKEB. Piu.f.

nary' for plowing is so small that only
the’most careless and slovenly farmer
has any excuse to offer. Wagon and
cart harness are more elaborate and
complicated, yet even they are simple
enough to be manufactured at home, if
certain portions are purchased at the
saddlers, such as buckles, rings, traces
and hamos. Collars, best suited to our
Southern climate, are made of shucks;
thes-e uro easily procured, there being
many persons in every neighborhood
who are very adept in making them,
and when made to fit. are smooth, and
with them the shoulders never become
chafed, and being so cheap, con be re­
placed as often as necessary.
Nothing betokens a poor improvident
farmer sooner than slouchy harness, to
say nothing of the -damage they inflict
upon their poor dumb brutes. When
an animal is required to labor, the own­
er should compare his ease to theirs.
For instance. Bow would a man like to’
follow a plow all day with shoes which
pinched his feet, or which had a rock in
them? Yet he would not suffer any
more than the animal with a collar too
small, or a back-band'which galled his
back, or one trace shorter than the oth­
er: but unfortunately there are too
many who apparently care nothing for
these details, though - in attending to
them depends in a great degree their
success.
.
'
On well regulated farms there is at­
tached to each barn or stable a harness­
room. where after being used, the har­
ness is carefully hung upon pegs, there
to remain until’waited: when a rainy
day comes, then it is overhauled, mend­
ed and oiled. By this means, they not
only last 16nger, but are more conifortaMe for the horses, and are proofs of a
thrift}' management. When harness
is purchased complete, cheapness Is not
always a Wise eon-'dcr.irion. because a
good set made of we l-t .nned leather,
properly put together, ‘will in careful
bands outlast two or three of the flimsy
made ones.—Southern Ind'.s'-i’s.

That in an advanced period of mate­
rial civilization sjieetacltfs whereof the
one grand interest consisted in the elab­
orate and wholesale torture and carnage
of men and animals should not only have
been tolerated with scarcely a protest for
centuries, but should have formed the
chief and indispensable amusement of
botli sexes and all classes of the popula­
tion including the highe-t—this api&gt;eani
at first sight to modern thinkers a moral
fact almost incmlible in its atrocity.*
And so firm moreover was their hold on
popular sympathy that they lasted lung
after the conversion of the empire to
Christianity- Constantine, to be sure,,
issued nn edict suppressing the gladia­
torial shows,. but it was suffered to re­
main a dead letter, and it was not till
nearly a century later, when the Asialic
monk Telemachus leaped into the arena
and separated the combatants at the cost
of his own life—he was stoned to 'death
by the indignant sj&gt;eeintor*—that these
games were finally abolished. .Something
may be due to the religious origin of the
custom, which is commonly - alleged to
have sprung out-of a rite of human sac­
rifice oflered at the. tombs of great mull,
though some scholars, like Mommsen,
deny the existence of human sacrifice at
Rome. Later on motives of policy con­
spired to sustain the practice, both as a
means of keeping up tiie military spirit
of the people and as offering the sole op­
portunity under a despotic Emperor for
the thousands of citizen* then assembled
in presence of their sovereign and his
ministers to present petitions and make
known chair grievances.
Still these explanations do not carry
us very far. Theatrical entertainment!!
such as the Greeks delighted in would
have answered the latter purpose al least
quite as well, but for appreciating BtU’b
refined amusements these ghastly orgi«*s
of blood quite uniitto&lt;i the Roman pop«&gt;lace. And it is a curious fact, noted by
a distinguished .modern writer, thst, as
Feeding Horne* by Clock Work.
different kinds of vice which might ap­
Nearly two yean* ago. as 1 had agreed
pear to have no mutual connection Ju
to
feed
tile horse of a relative at live
yet act and react on one another, so here
the intense craving after excitement en­ o’clock a tn., so that the animal would
gendered and gratified hy gladiatorial be ready for service at half-pa&lt;t six.
eornlmts served to stimulate tin* taste for and as the stable.was located at n dis­
such orgies of sensuality os arc described tance of half a mile from my residence,
by historians like Tacitus nnd Suetonius. I constructed a rude but vrticient device
And hence not only wa-s Hercules burnt to aid in feeding the horse precisely
on the stage, not tn effigy but in the per­ at five o’clock every morning without
son of a condemned criminal, hut the the presence of any person (not patent­
deeds of gods and heroes were repre- ed nor patentable, i At one side of tite
seuted. as Jnvenal says, to the life. Nor stall, I hung a lid with hinges over the
can it be questioned—and it is chiefly in top of the small feed manger, tine
order to Illustrate that terrible Ic-son end of the lid extended alwiut a foot in­
that we have referred to the subject here to the feed room. To make the end
—that the gladiatorial show* bet raved of the lid in the feed room heavy
not .merely indifference to human suffer­ enough to go down and thus open the
ing, but that capacity for a real and keen manger, a piece of iron was attached
pleasure in the contemplation nt suffer­ to the end of the lid making that end
ing, ns such, which many are loth for in the feed room about one pound heav­
lhe credit of human nature to admit. ier than the part of the lid that covered
Suetonius, for instance, tells us that it the manger. An alarm clo k wa» then
was the special delight of Claudius to placed in a cupba-d, fastened to the
watch the faces of the expiring gladia­ side of the wall in the feed r»om. and
tors, as he had come to take a kind of a half-inch hole was bored up through
artistic pleasure in observing the varia­ the bottom of the cupboard and through
tions in their agony. Heliogabalus and the bottom of the clock case directly
Galcrius used to regale themselves while beneath the large wheel of the alarm
at table with lhe spectacle of animals de­ gearing. Then a small wire, about ns
voured by wild beasts; and Lactantius large os a coarse horse hair, waa at­
says of Galerius that “he never supped tached to the heavier end of the lid to
without human blood." And what is the manger, while a long loop was
more horrible still, ‘.‘beautiful eyes, made at the other end of the wire. At
trembling with passion, looked down evening I fed the horse his evening
upon the fight, and the noblest ladies in qteal in his proper manger, and put­
Rome had been known to crave the vic­ ting the mess for morning in the other
tor’s love.” A story told by St Augus­ manner, the looped end of the wire was
tine exhibits the ghastly fascination of put through the hole in tin- bottom of
the spectacle. A Christian friend of his the clock cose, nnd the loop was hooked
had somehow been drawn into tiie am­ on one of die teeth or cogs of the large
phitheatre, which Christians were strictly wheel. The wire wa* made just long
forbidden to eater, and resolved to guard enough to hold up the heavier end of
against tiie temptation to sinful enjoy­ the lid in a horizontal position, thus
ment by keeping his eyes closed: a mid­ closing the manger. The moment tho
den cry led him to look up. and he was alarm wheels started, tit five o’clock,
the wire loop alipp&lt;*&lt;! off the cog and
unable to withdraw his gaze ag-.-’.n.
the lid of the manger opened-and stood
If it shocks us to find among a highly erect, so that the horse could eat. This
civilized people this national consecra­ rude device never failed to open the lid
tion of cruelty, it is perhaps more start­ precisely at the appointed hour. I could
ling still to leant that with a few excep­ feed the horse with absolute certainty
tions the novelists and philosophers of at any other hour, though I were two
the day hail not a word to say against it hundred miles away from the stables
The refined and gentle-hearted Cicero One clock would ojx-n half a dozen lids
calmly observes that some men think as well as one.- Sen no Edirartli Todd,
these'spectacles cruel and inhuman, but
that to make this use of criminals is
really to present to the eye nn excellent
Slow But Sure.
discipline Itgainat suffering and death.
Juvenal's aristocratic feelings were out­
A re.tl estate dealer in New England
raged at the Roman nobility condescend­ sold seven farms in ten days nt prices
ing to act as gladiators; but there is noth- averaging ntx»ul 8f.'l.&lt;XW each—mostly to
iniUto show that the spectacle in itself person, who had been in mechanical
offended him. Seneca and.Plutarch. as business, but who had learned that there
we pointed out before, adopt a very dif­ is no property so safe as land, ami no
ferent tone, and Marcus Aurelius ordered , pursuit promising so sure a livelihood
the gladiators to tight with blunted as agriculture. It is an indication of a
swords, as he also ordered that no rope­ general nnd wholesome tendency of the
dancers should perform without n net or ■ time. There are always thousands of
a mattress being spread beneath them. men in these busy streets who left rural
But such rare and honorable exceptions homes many years ago. and who,
only help to prove-the rule. During the weighed down by commercial troubles,
Reign of Terror in France a spirit very wouhl gladly return, if it were possi­
like that of the worst period of the Ro­ ble. to some quiet country neighbor­
man Empire was evoked, and it has been hood, feeling aure that they could at
observed that in )x&gt;th cases tho grossest least raise enough to teed their families
inhumanity was sometimes found united with leas strain of body and mind than
with affection for animals—that is, for that which is now wearing out their
pet animals. Fournier was devoted to a lives. This is true also of ererv other
Suirrel, Couthoa to his spaniel, and city or town, as witness the following—
urat kept doves. But it may well be a fair sample of letters that reach us
Jiuestioned whether these particular at- front all quarters:
1 am ntxiut educated up to the point of boectioiH indicated any general temper of
ivimall tnrm 1* abouttae only tnmercy toward animals more than toward ileving thuand
Buti-factory posseMlon a toler­
manldnd. Even the most bloodthirsty able p or man can obtain in the average stalo
monsters may have a sincere partiality of Ira 1c. I atu now emraged tn the book buttnrM.
and,
like
everything
else. It is a souroa
for theirown belongings.—Saturday Re­ Cftrnre worry {hnn revenue,
and tt require*
constant care and straining t &gt; keep one's head
view.
above water.'’
—X. 7. Tribune.
—A New York Judge the other day
sentenced a voung man to live years im­
—It is better to have all the ground
prisonment for counterfeiting, whom he in an orchard occupied with vegetables
had before him. together with the young that can be eaten than to allow any part
man's father several years ago, when of it to grow up with weeds. Edible
they, were convicted of this same crime. plants do not injure the soil any more
He sentenced the father to six years im­ than weeds do, and if the first are not
prisonment, but the boy he only fined planted the la-t will be sure to grow
one dollar. The lesson had do effect and unless the hoe is frequently used.—Cintho son followed his father both in his outnati Timet.
crime and its punishme nt.
—The whole town of Mineral Ridge.
—The latest novelty in minerals, aaya Mahoning County, O., is caving in from
the Reno (Nev.) Gazette. is found in the thrte to live feet in consequence of the
after- mountains south of the Humboldt Houn. removal of the coal. The New York,
It is a pocket of cry stallized quarts, Pennsylvania &amp; Ohio track settled two
bearing silver, gold, lead, and antimony. or three feet near the ciepaf a few day*
The rwst&amp;llizxtion Hev.ms to be complete, j ago.». and the hole had to be filled with
noil the mineral, i« very rtrong jn iu
j cmdi
_md«re.—Chicago Tunes.
,

_* reporter saw the
PRICE: SLM, IT PAID IN ADVANCE.
। c&lt;nj
inside. A hundred
.—.
——------ - -—-— canvy-birds were singing in different
To Advertisers:
key*. Gorgeous parrot* were chattering
and swearing. A small-sixed monkey
with flaring eyes waa gvrating on the
bar of a big iron cage. He wa* trying
any other firu class country weekly in the *t
bis best to make mince-meat out of a
An ad. in Tua N«w» gne* to the brartbsu
marble.
of 1000 tonaflde subscriber*, who, fur the
•‘Have you a bird you desire to board
here, sirr’ said a MiickisetGerman, with
PERUSE THESE LIBERAL AD- RATES. ,
a big red mustache and red hair, to the
reporter. “0, you’re a reporter, and
want to find out about my burincss.”
Just then one of the parrots swore a blue
streak, the monkey fell off his perch and
cried piteously, while a mocking-bird
trilled “Dem Golden Slippers.”
“ It’s a peculiar business, this,” said
the reporter, shouting to make himself
heard above the din. “Very,” saidthe
German. The poll parrots held a cOn_suItalian and profaned in one key. “Dur­
ORNO HTKOXG,
ing the summer,” continued the man. “I
EditorandProprietor. have generally scveuly-five or a hun­
dred birds to take care of and feed.”
Then the bird aud monkey man began
to explain the exciting occupation of har­
boring birds. In the warm weather,
VILLAGE OFFICERS.
when the owners of valuable bird&amp;go to
Preeident4-EHhuPCbtaraxiir' ’
the country and Europe, they find it un­
‘ Kecocder-^-Frauk McDerby.
safe to leave their pets to the care of
Treasurer—Frank C. Boise.
servants. It would not do to leave them
Aucseor—John E. Barry.
shut up in a house alone. For these
Marshall—J amen L. Gregory.
Trustee*—II. A- Barber, F. T. Boise. H. W. reasons, die man went on. the birds
Demaray, H. R. Dteklnson, H. M. Lee aud were brought tc him, and he saw thst
Cha*. Lenta.
___
they bad ail the comforts sud luxuries
that lhe mo-jt exacting canary could de­
JUrlrtiM.
sire. The charges are moderate, only
twenty cents a week for canaries. This
I CHRISTIAN CHURCH—F A. Bissel,Pastor. allpws for a small profit of seventy-five
Service* cverv Sabbath at 10.30 a. m. and per cent. Owners furilish their own
7 p. m. Sabbath school at 12 m. Prayer meet­
ing every Thursday evening
______ cages. They must be of nice, bright
bri-.s. No, the man would not have his
ETHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH-A. store disfigured with wooden coops. The
D. Newton, Paster. Services every Sab­
bath at 10.40 a. m. and 7 p- m. Sabbath monkey munched his marble. The par­
schooLat 12 m. Prayer raceting every Thurs­ rots swore in trebles. Thu din was al­
most deafening. A man who is stone
day evening.
_____
deaf might enjoy life in a bird-store. To
VY LODGE NO. 37. K. of P., meet* nt IU a man with a well-preserved ear-drum
Castle HuU. Nashville, Michigan, every
Friday evening, fur the encouragement and the confusion of sounds there is heart­
tupport of all worthy, true, steadfast and hon­ rending. When the noise had sulnided
orable Brother Knights.
the speaker resumed his talk. He has
D. L. 8m:th K. R. S. Omxo Stboxo, C. C. customers from the fashionable halls
of Murray Hill, and expects to re­
Jfixcellaneou* Cards.
tire rich. Yhe reporter thought he might
TIT H. YOUNG. M. D. Office cast side of on the seventy-five per cent. plan.
••What is your price for boarding par­
Vv . Main St., Nashville. Office hour* from
rots?”
7 toll *- m.. and 4 to 7 p-hn.
"Forty cents a week.”
A. FOOTE. PHYSICIAN &amp; SURGEON.
“Whatdoyou feed them on?” “Well,
• Sucevoor to Dr. Wickham. Office sec they will eat anything from carpet-tauks
ond door north of the Nashville House; reai- to boot-heels, but I am very careful and
dedee first door north of the Wolcott House­
keep such food away from them.”
Prompt attention to calls night or day.
Some parrots, the man explained,
R. C W. GOUCHER Elactlo Physician and were very dainty. He had one that
Surgeon, is prepared to answer all call*
Chat may be made for hl* service*. Office and would not cat his cracker unless it had
butter on it. And the butter h.-vl to be
rtsldsnce opposite Roe’s meal market.
good, too. No oleomajgarine, if you
M. PARMENTER, M. D. Offica over please. It was observed that this con­
Mull's Drug store, Vermontville, Mieh.
servative bird was very distressed-look­
lHAS. H. BRADY, lawyer, Circuit Court ing. She bad a blue eye, and regarded
Commissioner, Real Estate aud Insurance the monkey ardently. The monkey did
Agt. Prompt attention given to all businessnot regard her. He chewed hi* marbie
antmsted to my care. Conveyancing a speclaiand was happy. This parrot, the bird­
V- Office opposite Unton House.
fancier explained, belonged to a rich old
M. FLINT. JR. Law. Rea) Estate,’and In- maid who had gone to France. She
• surance. Conveyancing nnd Collectton* a remitted her forty cents regularly, and
epedalty.
sometimes inclosed a piece of poetry,
ipMORY PARADY. Justice of the Peace. which she requested the man to teach
Corner Main and Sherman Streets. the bird. The old maid would have
taken Polly to Paris, but she was afraid
Q LIEBHAUSER, Mercban’. Tailor and dealO. er in Ready Made Clothing. See me ' tho Parisians would teach it to swear,
before you purchase clothing. Fit* guar­ i Very often the bird-fancier received
anteed. '
parrots that did swear, and beautiful
swearers at »hat- ile-had one once that
HATCH A CO., Manufacturers nt Taffy
• Candies. Cbtxulate Drops and Carmel*. belonged to a politician. The bin! used
Fruits, Fancy Candies, Cigars. Tobacco*, etc., such profane language that it had to be
always in stock. Second door north of the sent back. Every man that came into
post office.
the store was sworn at in the roundest
T71RANK BAKER. Manufacturer of Boot* terms by the politician’s parrot. Such
A and Shoes. pegged or sewed. Repairing a bird was dangerous. It had taught a
promptly attended to. nt the sign of the red few oaths to the old maid's parrot, and
boot, cast aide Main Stthe speaker was fearful of consequences
ACOB OSMUN, Lirtmran, barn near Wol- when the lady returned. With regard
. cqtl House. First claaa turnouts at reason­ to the other birds on board the speaker
able rates. Special rales to commercial men. said that be. received many mocking­
Funeral and wed lug parties furnished with car birds. These were very hard to take
riagea on abort notice.
care of. He charged sixty cents a week
RAUN BROS., Shoemakers. Special atten­ for boarding them. They were softtion given to fine and sewed t»oote, also Ulled birds, and their food had to bo
repairing. All manufactured work made fromespecially prepared. At thLs stage of
best of stock and warranted. First door south the narrative the monkey had cracked
Boise's hardware.
two or three teeth on the marbie, but he
IVALLACE BEAUCHAMP, Liveryman, crunched away. Still the parrots swore.
v v ■ Nashville House Barn. StngTc and
“Who bears the loss if the birds die?”
double turn outs furnished promptly and rea­ “Why, the owners, of counte. I- take
sonably. Commercial meta driven to neigh­ the best of care of them; butif they don't
boring'town* at special rate*.
live it isn’t my fault.” He said that it
was a common tiling for the boarding
«uu. riaumg ana M&amp;tcmng, neaawiag birds to die, especially parols. He re­
Moulding a specialty. Scroll Sawing, lated a sad ease. A beautiful girl left
keX*. w lDdaw and Door Frames made to her parrot for the summer, ami when
V. cod Turning In all its branches.
she returned In the fall the bird luul
FWAS. W. DEMARAY, Dealer In Watches, died, having" chocked himself with a
VJ Clock*, fine Jewelry and Silverware. Being piece of bard-tack.
The young girl
a practical Jeweler, patrons can depend upoa would not be comforted, and went into
harfpf their repairing dona right Two doors a convent There were tears in the
south of Truman'* store.
dealer's eyes as he told this story. Even
ONAH B. P.A8EY, Express and Drayman­ the monkey looked gloomy. But stilj
Goods and Saggage carried to any place in the parrots profaned. The dealer went
the village.
on to say that on another occasion a lady
iram r dickinson. manufacturer of
left her canary with him. She had re­
and dealer In Hard Wood Lumber. Build- ceived it from her lover, who was
tn&lt; Material * specialty. Cash paid for lor*. Mill
end yard on Sherman St., at M. C. R.R. eroealxig. drowned at sea shortly after presenting
it Tho canary was sickly and died.
AMES FLEMING, practical Jeweler and The lady had it stuffed and wears it now
Wateb-maker. Clock*, Watche*. Silver and on her best haL The Babel of canaries
Plated Ware, Jewelry and Optical Good*. RockJord Watches a specially- Repairing and Engrav- and parrote was very severe at this point
The. monkey could be heard crunching
t»r done in a workmanlike manner.
his marble. Ho had broken several
RNO STRONG, plain and fancy jod mnur. other teeth.
The be»i foclhUea for doing work of any
“Is tlrat monkey a boarder?” asked
Ice in Barry county. When tn need the reporter. “ Yes,” was the answer,
of any deacriptloa, whatever, aee me
“he belongs to an actress, who insists
that her pet shall have marbles to plav
W. 2S18KEKN, Attorney and Counccllor wUh. I get two dollars a week for board­
• at Law, practice* in all State Courts. Col ing him, which includes the price of his
lection* promptly attended to. Office orer toys.”
“Now, look here,” continued the
dealer. ••This is a magnificent canary.
V.4HHWLLE HOLHE,
It was sent to me last week. It is the
property of Mrs.------ , of Fifth Avenue.
I. M. Flint A Son, Props,
She has gone to Europe, and I am to
feed it well and take good care of it
forabbMi.imprc-rtd and m-&lt;
while she is away. Do I have birds from
ids located in the center of
other Gian fashionable t&gt;eople? • My, yes.
It costs very little. This bird is a mag­
nificent ringer. It is the property ofa
Wall Street broker—a bachelor. He
can t attend to it himself, so he loaves it
hovse,

Hashrillr girrrtoru.

tl and patched, that the
illicit* pity from any bumnn

it, 11 win pay vou ui reao ineir
tube found elsewhere in this
8HIL0H’ 8 CONSUMPTION CURE.

And manufacturer of hardwood

Cough

Lumber.

In tiie cure of &lt;■-mrumptfoo i* without a paral­
lel in the bb-tory of medkme. Since ita flrat
discovery It ha* been sold on aguarntec. atert
which no other medicine can (stand. If you

Have

AV" e

^ AGOODFAMILYFLOUR
r-4

•ore. Chest, or Back Lame, and Shiloh’s
Porous Piaster. Sold bv F. T. Botsx.
ANSWER THIS QUESTION.
.
MILL FEED &lt;md BRitf.
Why do *o many people we see around t&amp;,
*ecm to prefer to suffer and be made miserable
Can* Heal.
Q
t»y itxlIirrstlou.comUijiation. dizxtnc**, low of
apjietite, coming up o( the Food, vellow ekin,
when tor TScta, we will sell them Shiloh's VitaPUBB OUrr VIXEGAR.
llzcr, guaranted to cure them. Sold byF. T.
Beu*.
SHILOH’S CATTARRH REMEDY, A mar­
velous cure for Catarrh, Diphtheria, Canker
mouth, and Head Ache. With each bottle
HARDMOOD LVMBEK.
here is an Ingenious nasal . Injector for the
moresucceaafu! treatment of these complaints
without extra charge. Price 50cts. Sold by
pT| BA88WOOD LUMBER.
F- T.Bou*.

05

4

QQ
po

0*

ALL READY

PIN^PINISHING LUMBER

0

Mill on Sherman Street. East from
Depot.

’

To show, you a large and well selected Stock of

H. IU DICKIN8OX A «).

GROCERES New Meat Market.
CONSISTING OF

Sngars, Coffees, Teas, Tobaccos,
Spices, Fish, Canned Goods,
Provisions, &amp;c.,

I hare opened a market

ATTACHED TO C. SMITH'S
GROCERY
and intend to keep d

AT THE LOWEST PRICES SALT and FRESH MEATS.
For Cash or Ready Pay.

Crockery, Glassware, Lamps,
Stone Ware, &amp;c.,

Alto everything pertaining to a first-clast

Good Coodsand Full Weight

TO BESEEM IN BARRY CO.

I&gt;. la. DUKFEE.

BOOTS AX 1» SHOES *

.4 N CHFA P J N .4 A’ YBOD J'.

CASH PAID FOR

PRODUCE

J^ATHBL’.’V noifit,
A. IL AimSDEL, Pbofxixtob.

Grand Rapids, Mloh.

C. W. SMITH

HALL’S
QatarrhQure
Is Recommended by Physicians^

sioo swaam
W j tnanufwlur* and *eli it vltha po*it1vO
guarantee that It will cure any

case, and wowill forfeit the above amount
Ku tails in a single Instance.
,
It i* Unlike any other Catarrh remedy, a*
alitraaalng disease, ask your Druggist for it, and
Accarr xo imitstiox ok sriwrrrvTX. If ho
has not got it, send to us and *e will forward
Immediately. Price. 75 cents per bottle.

F. J. CHENEY &amp; CO., Toledo. Ohio.

•ihrrillNah'.
Notice is hereby given that by virtue of a
writ ot Fierificiaa, iMued ont of the Circuit
Court fur the county of Kent, in favor of Wil­
liam Huke acninst the guod* uud diattk-a aud
real estate of William E. Buel, In the county
of Barn-, to me directed and delivered, I did oh
the 94th day of July laat, levy ujiou aud take
nil tl»c right, title and interest of the *ald Wil­
liam E. Buel In and to tbc following described
real estate: that is to «ay all that certain piece
or j&gt;arccl of land described as follows, to-wit:
The east one half (X) of tin- cast one luilf (X)
of lhe *outh west quarter (&gt;/) of m-ction thirtyfive (35,) in town (3,) north of range seven f»)
west, in Barry conuty, Michigan, ull'of which I
dial I ckposc for sale al public auction or vendue
to the highest bidder, nt lhe north front door
of lhe court house In Hastings, in said county,
on tiie sixteenth dav of October next, at
eleven o'clock in the forenoon.
Dated tills Hist day of August, A. D. 1882.
HENRY M. HOI GIFfaI.IN, Sheriff.
By HentixuT M. Lee, Deputy Sheriff.
D. E. Corbitt, Plt’fs Atty.
’ 504k

IRON Tainted
OUR WILD INDIANS
AGENTS I For Gen. Dodge's new book,
THIRTY-THREE YEARS AMONG

J introduction by Gen. W. T. Sherman. Cootaias l
truthful and graphic record of the author's observaSplendidly illustrated with

BITTERS
BROWN'S IRON RITTERS aro
n certain cure for all diseases
rcquirltiji a complete tonic; csjxicially Inti ideation, Dyapcpala. Inter­
mittent Fevers, Want of Appetite,
Ixxss of Strength, Lack of Energy,
etc. Enriches the blood, strength­
ens the muscles, aud gives new
llfb to the nerves. Acts like a
charm on the digestive organs,
removing all dyspeptic symptoms,
such as tasting the food. Retching,
Heat in the Stomach, Heartburn,
etc. Hie only Iron Preparation
that will not blacken the teeth or
give headache. Sold by ail Drug­
gists at $1.00 a bottle.
DROWN CHE5IICAL CO.
Baltimore, Mil.

Steel

Chicago lairrior; “A
itial value.’' ChieaRC
c cootain* a« full and
«.'•
TrOws
1 is far 5u,-erior to asv
look ever published on the subject.'* The Citicart
~ ** I* vi’kily portrays the Indian just

999 AGENTS

CO., Chicago,

Ilk

NO PATENT NO PAT

Finns

BEWARE OF IMITATIONS

6611
cualwlcntUI.

A.WAfQffGANACO.
//WiANAPOUS^NDiANA.
Not Fail
to send fur
■our FALL
Price-Lb:
for 1882.
Free to any address upon
application. Qmtaiw de■crip'.ioxja of everything
required for Personal or Family use,
with orer 2,200 illustrations. We oell
!

quanti lies to suit the purchaser. Tho
only institution ia America who make

MOWTMMERT WARD 4 CO

Frier* n-

MHJteBAGUEk A CO,

PIMPLES.
bv*-i or
BFN. VAXDE»a

CONSUMp-

�rd tai* evening iu relation to the

country.

onaoi

OCT. 14.1883.

rope waa established on the 5th.

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN

THE NEWS.

THB ONK-PRICK CLOTHINC STORK.
Mont Cent* Tunnel, on tiie Mb.

Oompilod from Latast Dispatches.
DOMESTIC.

BOlfl^tobar 1,1S81, tbe Trustees ot ths
Psobody «duc«t ional Fund h*vn distributed
&lt;80,UM among tlw various Soutbera Blates.
Tmirtt incendiary fires have occurred with­
in ths past six mouths at Youngstown, a

killed.. Charges that he had misused money
tip)oration of Barmall, starting from China.

Txi Conference at Balt Lake, Utah, ad­
journed ou the 9th. In an addreaa Cannon
predicted that “no power on earth or in hell
can check or prerent tbe onward march of the
Kingdom of God." Taylor tald that “any

of our constitutional rights are Tyrants and
oppressors. We intend to lawfully contend
Tub officers of the Irish National Land
on tbe morning of the 5th
,
T»» Coroner1 a Jury investigating the re­
cent Harlem River tunnel collision declared
on the 5th that the telegraph operator, Con-

New York Central Company and a brakeman
were gullly of culpable and criminal negli­
gence in tbe discharge of tbelr duties
Thx recent defalcation of Cashier Wc!lingtoe, of tbe Manufacturers’ National Bank of
Troy, N. T., was on tbe 5th stated by the
bank examiners to be 631,545.
Bx tbs neglect ot duty by*a flagman on the
Baltimore A Ohio Rood two freight trains col­
lided at Pittsburgh on the 5tb, and two men
were killed and five others were badly Injured.
During tbe devotional half-hour of the
American Board of Foreign Mlaslona, in an­
nual session al Portland, Me., on the 5th,
after a statement by Secretary Alden that a
sum equlva!enr~to-v&gt;100,000 more than the
Prudential C&lt;«umlttdc puMsaaed was dethe work, at least one
and doubled their conthousand; _
tribotiona, and in fifteen minutes 650,000 was
pledged.
The dwelling boose of Mrs. Morris Gay at
Batavia, N. Y., was destroyed by Are on tbe
5th, and her daughter, Miss Ellen Gay,
perished In the flamc*.
Tuk Interior Department, on the advice of
a special commit*Ion, has decided to wall up
the creek at Hot Spring*. Arkansas, and con­
struct an arcbed Inclosure over it through­
out the city st a cost of 6140,900.
During the nine months ended September
30, 1883, there were 4.897 business failures In
the United States, with aggregated liabilities
of $69,523,813. The failures for the cor­
responding period last year were 3,890, aud
tbe liabilities &lt;51,039,010. During the seven
days ended on tbe 5th the failures numbered
1SL
All the men
the Globe and Anchor Roll­
ing Mills tn Newport, Ky., 700 in number,
stopfted work on tbc morning of the 6th,
owing to a redaction of wages.
The greatest portion of the business sec­
tion of Warrington, Eacambta County, Fix,
waa destroyed by an incendiary fire early on
tbe morning of tbe 6th.
.
A misplaced switch near Muscogee, Indian
Territory, on the 6th sent a freight train into
a ditch. Engineer Bplar was crushed to a
jelly, and Fireman Walker had both legs sev­
ered from bls body.
Leopold Pt nnEn, President of the Board
of Bupervlsora al Fort fuma, was shot dead
ca tbe 6th by William Douchy, for refusing to
pay an alleged debt.
Two daughters of Mr. Rosecranz. residing
at Lowell, Kan., were burned to ashes by the
destraction of the bouse by Cre on tbe Olh.
The oldest could have escaped, but Ln at­
tempting to rescue her little sister met her
1MH bodies uf sixteen victims of tbe steamer
Tt E. Lee horror had been recovered up to tbe

No les* than 6343.54$ has been sent to
Treasurer Egan, at Paris, by tbe Iruh World,
ot New York. The editor on the 6th closed
tbe fund, declaring that tbe Land League no
longer exfap.
A BCRGLtk who was surprised on the night
of the 6th In tbe residence of Mr. Pierce, at
Dallas, Tax., threw a lighted kerosene lamp
at the gentleman, and the house and an ad­
joining cottage were burned to the ground.
A special engine on the 7th ran ini* a
wood-train near Bridgeville. Dek, killing
Edward Webb and injuring eleven train
hands.
IN the river at Amesbury, Mass., by lhe
capsizing of a small boat in n squall on tbe
7th, George Huntington aud Ids wife aud four
children were drowned.
Willi in Martin, « bootblack, applied at
police headquarter* In New York nn tbe 7th
for a ; erm it to carry a pistol, in order to
shoot President Arthur. He stated that he

Isr emphatically protesting against tbe JriaA
H'erid’s stater ent that the League no longer
existed in Ireland.
five deaths were reported at Pcnsseota, Fla.,
on the 9th. At Brownivllle, Tex., the disease
was rapidly abating.
A BARaRL containing 50,00) breech-loading
caps exploded on theOthat Bridgeport, Conn.,
demolishing lhe building, - bat injuring no
person.

PERSONAL AND POLITICAL.
Con'gmxssmln were nominated as follows
on the 4th: Republican—Illinois, First Dis­
trict, Ransom W. Dunham; Massachusetts,
Tenth, William W. Bice, renominated; New
York, Seventeenth, F. A. Johnson ♦ North
Carolina, Fifth, J. R. Winston; Maryland,
Third, T. F. Long; Fourth, Heury Stock­
bridge. Democratic—111 loots. Third, William
P. Black; Virginia, Second, R. C. Marshall;
Maryland. Second, J. F. C- Talbot, renomi­
nated. Greenback—New York, Eighth, Louis
F. Post Prohibitionist—Kentucky, Fifth, J.
M. Hunter.
Frank James, the outlaw, surrendered to
Governor Crittenden at Jefferson City, Mo.,
on the 5lh. He. would be delivered to the
Jacluou County authorities.
The Democrats ot Connecticut held their
State Convention at Hartford on tbe 4th.
Thomas M. Waller was nominated for Gov­
ernor. Tho platform adopted advocates econ­
omy in appropriations and expenditures; a
revision of the tsriff upon a strict revenue
basis; the abolition of all unnecessary offices;
protection against frauds on lhe ballot; ap­
proves the veto of the River and Harbor bill
by President Arthur, and opposes legistatloo
tor tbo prohibition of tbe liquor traffic.
The State election in Georgia on the 4tb re­
sulted In the aucceu. of the Democratic ticket
by about 30,0.0 majority.
Alexander IL
Stephena for Governor, would probably have
49.00 majority.
Tub New \ork State Temperance Conrentlon waa held at Syracuse on tbe 4tb. Reso
iutions were adopted calling for the submlsalou to lhe people of the State of an amendmerit to the Constitution prohibiting tbe
manufacture and sale of alcoholic beverages,
and calling upon all good citizens to seek
such legislation aa would free the State from
tbe power of rum.
Geobgb Scoville filed In the Cook County
(IIL) Court on the 5th an affidavit that hl*
wife waa Insane, and asked that proceedings
be instituted to determine the question. Not
having the six dollars to pay the fees required,
he swore that he and his wife were pauper*,
The following Congressional nominations
were made on the 5th: Republican—Massachusett*. First District, R. T. Davis; New
York, Twenty-first, George W. Ray; Thirtysecond. John P. Moulton; Maryland, Second,

IL Coffroth. Democratic—Wisconsin, Fourth,
P. V. Deuster, renominated; Massachusetts,
Sixth, D. W. Lawrence.
The wife of President Gonzales, of Mexico,
has arrived In Chicago to prosecute her
studies tn medicine and surgery.
The Republicans made the following Con­
gressional nominations on the 6th: Massa­
chusetts, Third District, Ambrose A. Ranney,
renominated; New Jersey. Fourth, B. F.
Hovey; New York, Thirtieth, John Van
Voorhls, renominated; Maryland. Fifth,
Hart B Holton; Kentucky,Eight, R. L. Ewell.
Alexa Niixn H. Stefhbxs, who has been
elccteil Governor of Georgia by a majority ot
60,000, on tbe 6th sent to the Governor hl*
resignation as Representative Iti Congress of
tbe Eighth District, and a special Mellon to

The Egyptian Council of Stale baa decided
to expel from tbe country tbo Swiss Ninel,
Arabi Pasha’s late adviser.
The negotiation* which have been in progPeru and Chill were reported on the Oth to

possibility of a meeting betweenthe comet and

Everything Now. Acwiisb.

brethren.

Iar.su

Cz

Tbe attention ot Parent* i» rrapectfiiilx called to onr targe nock at

I of a teloscopo. to -follow
half. We have not ma.de a
N«w gold digging* have been discovered in
the Cariboo district, in Victoria.
In the Royal Opera House at Berlin on tbe -subsequent ooumr.
night of tbe 5lli tho iron curtain fell among
the footlights. In tbe panic which'' followed
many persons were severely crushed, but no
one was killed.
A Cairo dispatch of the 6th states that no The great comet now visible travels In a patch
genuine documents connecting Arabi Pasha
with the outrages In Alexandria had yet been and ISO. Hubbard found the pericd of revo
discovered. It was stated that an English
barrister named Lambton had arrived to de­ hundred years. The period of revolution of
fend Arabi A water famine was prevailing
al Sues, and many jersons were sick with yet calculated with certainty, owing to the lim­
ited time of Observation. These three comets
Thb people of Dublin are reported to be
• excited over tbe dosing of tbe Land-League must traverse the solar atmosphere, thus ex­
fund in New York. Two land agents were periencing a great degree of resistance. Tbe
fired at on the 7th fyom behind a hedge at
BaIIv Castle.
Riax Pasha, the Egyptian Minister of the must have boon violently changed by some
Interior, stated on tbe 7th that the country outside force. If they are not.tbe same comet,
waa completely tranqulllxcd.- Tbe people were then the hypothesis of Prof. Salford that they
gratified over a rcjiort that British and ere piece* of the 1M3 comet may bo hold as
French control of financial affairs was likely
to be abolished.
dictions of tbe future movements of th.* com­
At Longford Mills, Ont., on the 7th the ex­ et until it bad been observed through a longer
plosion of three boilers killed Firemen Ellis arc. He sal'Fthat even If Prof. Proctor's pre­
diction should bo borne out It wouldn't neces­
and Gray, blowing their heads from their bod­ sarily
follow that the destruction of the earth
ies, snd seriously Injured several other ; ar­ would result. Jt was all owing to what tbe
comet might be made of. He did not believe
sons.
It to be so very ponderable an affair, and In
A train conveying Chilian soldiers from tho face of Its coming In contact with the sun,
IMcasco to Inca, In Bouth America, was par­ Un- sun may be able to take care of It without
tially blown from the line on tbe 6th by tor­ any difficulty.
pedoes laid by Monteneros, snd seven or eight
A Kentucky Komance.
soldiers were killed. Tbe Italian Consul at
Plcasco, on the train, wa» captured by MooA Lexington (Ky.) dispatch gives an account
loueros, who demanded &lt;IM.000 for his re­ of n romantic marriage which recently took
lease. An Italian man-of-war had gone to en­ place!n that city, “ at tb" residence of Mr. T.
J. Nichols, tbe well-known horseman, the par­
deavor to bare him liberated.
Th&gt; authorities of Montreal on tbe 7th dis- ties being Mr. R. A. Mulligan and MU* Maggie
Johnson. Year* ago. when little children, they
were members of the Community of Shaker*,
City-Attorney, was a defaulter for a large near Harrodsburg. As children they loved
amount of money collected on arrears of
aornc day marrying. The boy left b!« home
Tnx Board of Freedmen at Havana, Cuba,
tn accordance wtth the provisions of the "itltin in a manufacturing house. In c »ur»c of
be wn* advanced to a wcil-paytng posi­
' Emancipation law. have, since January, set time
tion. and b&lt;- determined to go back to Ken­
free
20,900 staves
j
tucky un&lt;! claim bls Shaker bride. They
j
could n &gt;t marry In tbe Community, so
fatal cases of cholera in Mvnlla. Philippine ■be came to Lexington List spring and
Islands, averaged between thirty and forty ■enured a home In Mr. Nichols' fam­
daily, and in the vicinity of the town twelve ily. She changed her queer garb to
daily.
one more fashionable, ani riore than one
young man in Uris city fell tn love with the
of Cundlmarco, Central America, and hit pretty, dignified maiden nf nineteen. But she
was true to ber first love, and anxiously looked
J
A disastrous fire occurred in a hardware lorward to tbe day when be abould come. He
. factor^ in Paris on tbe 8th, at which the came, and, a* she waa under the legal age. a
aroee as to the procuring of a license.
• (?blcf of the Fire Brigade was killed and sev­ difficulty
Maggie's moth'r could not leave the Shakers
, eral fl remer. were Injured.
and come here to glv- ber consent. A lawyer
wna
consulted,
nnd. going before the County
j On tbe 9th thirty persona 1c London, OnL,
Judge, she cbone Mr. Nichols as her gu-a rd I an.
were poisoned from eating bead cheese pre­ He gave bl* consent, nnd tae coveted Hern*। pared by a local butcher.
wa* lamied. The sequel took place last night
at eight o clock. Tbo erstwhile Shaker chil­
I
Tua German steamer Herder, tn rvuit from dren were made man and wife, In presence of
j New York to Hamburg, was lost oo tbe New­
j
foundland coast on the night of the bib.
Iler passenger*. 2.^8 In number, were saved.
They Ran Away and Got Married.
Scltan Pasha. President of the Egyptian
Chamber of Notables, slated on the 9tli that - William Cran.- and Mary Bayne, a runaway
Turkish Intervention tn tbc affairs of the couple from Culpeper County, arrived In Alex­
country would cauae anarchy. He aaid the andria a few days ago on matrimony t&gt;enL
cost of the joint control was extravagant, The couple were accompanle 1 by a young
■nd admitted that the mass of the people
were unfit for representative government
Two men nimbi Field were burned to iteath Ilayne, through their troubles. Tbc loving
during ■ fire al Stagg Creek, O.it, on the 9th. couple stated that they had had lota of trouble
in this matter, but that there was no ox-team
LATER NEWS
In Culpeper County that could drag them
Rxtvrxs from th-- Ohio State election on
the 10th Indicated that tbe Democrats had
elected their State ticket by 10,000 plurality they Intended to lie made one “os sure as
and secured thirteen out of tbc twenty-one guns." After taking refrosbmonta at a boardlug-bouso In the city, the party left for Wash­
Congressmen.
where, falling to find tho City Hall In
Such Is tho increase of pauperism In lhe ington.
time to secure the marriage license, they
south of Ireland that tbe Dublin Union on bad to remain nil night. Tbe next
evening, however, they returned to this
Ing one thousand able-bodied men and women city, and tbc groom, with his face all

The Manhattan Temperance Society of NewYork City on tbe "th. nominated William E.
Doilgc for Mavor.
Genkhal B. F. Bvtler has written two
Tmt Democratic State CoovenUon of Minletter* to the Demrcrat* and Greenbackers of nesota, in session st St- Paul on tbe 10th.
Maxvacburetta, accepting the nomination for 1 unanimously indorsed the Republican homiAn inquiry as to his mental condition
Governor of the State, tendered by both par- nation of James Gilfillan for Chief-Justice of
the Supreme Court. The platform adopted
A FREMATtraK blast on the line of the
John W. Gcitnau denies that lie had any­ oppose* tbe submission of an amendment to
Springfield A Memphis Railroad, la Missouri, thing to do with the arsenic alleged to have tbe Constitution lessening the right* of the
on the “th killed live laborers, awl seriously been found in the bouquet presented to h;s people, and demands a chance to sell in the
Injured six others.
highest and buy In tbe lowest market Id the
brother before bls execution.
A. W. Rotts, a coal-dealer
Cincinnati,
A Statz Granger’s Convention was held in world.
who rea.ded al Glendale, was urtfrdcrrd near Ban Francisco on the “th. at which a board ot
Montkeal was shaken by an earthquake
tbe depot early on the morning of the 8th. Railroad Commissioner* and a State Bo .rd of ou lhe morning of the 10th.
A reward of $5,(00 has been . ffervd for the Equa'ixatlou were placed In nomination.
In West Virginia on the 10th the Repub­
detection of tbe (terpetratora
licans elected Goff, Republican, to Cougress
by from 300 to 500 majority. The Democrats
■ After a long Investigation by the Secret from bls flaking excura.ou on the sth.
Service Bureau. William F. Salter arid Wilmot
A Balt Lake dispatch of lhe 9th says that elect their Congrecnten in tbe other three
H. Ward, of Washington, have lorn im­ the registration of voters in Utah corer* districts in the State.
Thb Nation*1 Board of Health at Washing­
prisoned for conspiring to steal bonis and 54,000 name.-, four out ot nine being women,
ton has been informed that there had been
plates from the Bureau ot Engraving, In or- and three out of four Mormons.
derto bring about the dismissal of Colonel
GaoviR CLBTXLAND and David B. Hill on 1,300 cases of yellow fever and 113 deaths tn
Irish, tbe Superintendent.
.
tbe 9th officially accepted tiie Democratic Pensacola up to lhe 10th.
Two natives, convicted of murdering
Tnxaz were 5.117steam vessels In the United nominations for Governor and Lieutenant­
Messrs. Ribion and Caltani on tbe 11th at
States during the fiscal year 1882, with a total Governor of New York.
tonnage of 1,278,564, aud with IM, 467 licensed
Tub following were lhe Congressional nom­ June, were hung at Alexandria on the 9th.
inations made on the 9th: Democratic— Mass­ Four were executed at Damanhour on the 10th
Tax total values of exports nf petroleum achusetts, Third District, Francis A. Peters. for other murder*.
Tux following Congressional nominations
and petroleum products during August, 1682, Greenback—Massachusetts, Eleventh, Wilbur
were $3,509,440; during August. 1'81. $5,- F. Wbitoer. Independent—Illinois, Second, were made on the 10th: Republican—New
963,Mil. For the eight months ended Au­ John F^Finerty.
York, Congrcsaman-at Large, Howard Car­
gust Hl, 1882, there were J.ll.imi.-.V. md for
rol], Thirteenth District, John H. Ketcham,
renonynated; Seventeeuth, H. G. Burleigh;
tbe corresponding period of the previous year
FOREIGN.
A Cairo dispatch of tbc 4th states that' Masaachusetta, Seventh. E. F. Stone; Penn­
•0,190,259.
At Pittsburgh on the 9th Jacob Becker was General Wolseley had Issued a general order sylvania, Tenth, ex-Congressman Blery.
complimenting
tbe
troops
in
the
Egyptian
Democratic—Connecticut, First, William W.
standing on a scaffolding cleaning the rust
irom a shaft which was making 15) revolutions campaign an their endurance, courage, gal­ Eaton; Fourth, Edward W. Seymour; New
Jersey, Seventh. William A. McAdoo; New
a minute, when by some meins h;s right leg lantry and gnod behavior.
The knlres with which the murder of York. Fourteenth, Lewis Beach, renominated;
became entangled in a telephone
Cavendish and Burks was committed hive Thirty-second. William F. Rogers; Iowa,
Third. €. M. Durham. Greenbacker—Wis­
been fuuud in Dublin.
Ox the night of the 4tb bandits entered the consin, Sixth, L. A. Stewart.
rapidity and tbc telephone wire wrapt-cd
The I\ eside nt has declined tbe banquet
bouse of Hubb’i, Tax Collector at T.cubay*,
from tbe body, when be fell through tbe Mexico, murdered the officer, mortal! v tendered him by tbe merchant* of Boston, be­
hatchway to the ground below. When picked wounded bls wife, and robbed tbe cafe of cause of tbe pressure of official duties.
«.oai
Axabi Pasha oo the 10th showed some
A Cairo dispatch of the Sth says Arabi alarm orer a rumored remark of the Khedive
Fraha bad asked to be tried by Englishmen. that they could not live in tbe same country.
Tbe question of employing foreign counsel
AT a baptismal ceremony near Canton, Gs„
tue Sth a rotten bridge carried two hun­ ported on tho Italian frontier of France on for the rebel leaders would be referred to the
British Government. The indictments are
dred persons into tbe water, many of them tbc. 5th.
for instigating massacre, directing the bun&gt;Washington advices cf the 1th state that
mflltary service to tbc military Governorship
of Egypt, as proposed by Great Britain, and
At the meeting of tbe New York and Brook­
to have ordered his return to Constantinople
In Brooklyn on tbe 10th Her. Henry Ward
Beecher withdrew from membership, on tbe
ite President of tbe court-martial organised ground that he could not place on others lhe
responsibility for bis peculiar view*, although

Fall and Winter Clothing1

time to hazard a definite opinion on pwt Proc-

thing had been done." nnd said be foil like be
could “put to tilgbt a thousand old duds;" that
hr w «■ bappr h • f'-lt Ilk - be could fly. At
nlgbt the newly-wolded pair were *ercnaded
by the l-oardcr* In the house were they were
utoppinr, and tbc grtxttn returned bis thanks
•Udine that It was folly tor young men to pnr
ersstlnittc in matritnonl. l affair*; that there
w»&lt; more bliss in one day nf married life than
tn a ih&lt;*u«and year* of single cusaedneso. Tbo
nt xt mornihg tbe bridal party loft for tbelr
L-omea. the groom still enthusiastic over whm
hi- railed “his good lu k."—Alexandria (Va.)
Sod Shooting Affair.

This morning detail* of an accidental killing
which occurr.'d yester lay nenr Macon reached
Afl-tnta. It seem.* that James Dunden and
Charles Tankersley arc interested in a sugar«»!&gt;« patch a short distance from Macon. For
some time past—In fact ever since tbc cane
bus ripen rd— .uantitlra of tbc cane have been
Stolen, thieves making almost nightly raids,
and Thursday night Dunden made an nrrangement with a neighbor. Richard Davis,
to watch tbe patch. Both armed themselves
with iloubledMirr ied shot-gun*, and for some
cause or other ibe friends separated to meet
the patch, anti be supposed -.hat his friend was
already there, but on tbe opposite side, as
agreed upon. He hnd not been there long be­
fore he beard rustling In the cane, and, sup­
posing the Intruder to be u thief, let loose both
tiarrele. To his horror be found that ho bad
shot hl* friend, one load taking effect In
tbe stomach and the other shattering his left
arm. Dundcn went at once for help, and Mr.
Davis ww taken to Tankersley's bou*e and a
physician sent for. As soon u the physician
saw the wound he pronounced It a fatal &lt;me.

live. Th'- affair I* deeply di-ptored by aU In
tbo --ttl.-ment. Dtjnden and Davis arc protul«i nt ett xena of the locality In which they re-l.!o, n-nl thoir friend* In the vicinity and In

—Ira Townsend, lone known m "the
hermit of 1’owelton,” died in the Phila­
delphia alms-house the other day. For
years ho lived in a lime box not more
than eight feet square, from which he
had to be dislodged by force when Ute
exigencies of local improvements made
his occupancy of the place no longer
possible. His relatives in Vermont are
iu comfortable circumstances.—C/mrugo Timex,
—Tho grasshopper has 120 times the
kicking power ot a man, taking sixe into
account. What, a failure
you come to think it over.

CHILDREN’S, BOYS’, AND YOUTHS' CLOTHING,
Which is tbe most complete ever laid down tn Naahvfle.

proud of our new stock of

HATS, HATS,

CAPS, CAPS,

BOOTS, SHOES, GENTS’ FURNISHING GOODS, UNDERWEAR,
GROCERIES, ETC., r
With tbe view of suiting tbe mod partleuiar mstrener*

CALL .AJND SEE.

PRINDLE «fc CHIPMAN

Latest News
C. W. GRANGER &amp; CO.
Have just received their new goods for the Fall trade.

THEIR PRINTS and GINGHAMS
Are the finest ever brought to this market for the price.

WORSTED DRESS GOODS,
In Brown, Cardinal, Dregs of Wine, Bronze Green, Slate, and
Drab, for 12 1-2 cents per yard.

CLOTHING.
Men’s, Youths’, Boys’, and School.

SUITS.
From a Cheap Cottonnade to an Imported Worsted.
WE GVAKANTEE OUR

PRICES AS LOW AS THE LOWEST
Call and Ser our Unix and Caps. Boots and Shoes.

5000 LBS. OF BUTTER WANTED
For which we will pay the highest market price in Cash.

C. W. GRANGER &amp; CO.

C. C. Wolcott
THE STORE REMAIN’S
H AS GONF

And is filled with Stoves of 20 Different Kinds.

The MONUMENTAL is lhe Finest Round
Stove Made.

Paints, Oils and Colors, Doors, Glass, Sash and
Blinds Iron and Wood Pnmps,Wagons, Buggies,
Carriages and Platforms, Drills, Cultivators
Seeders, Plows, Laud Rollers, “Reed Spring­
tooth Harrow.
A Large assortment of Shelf Goods and Tinware, and the beet
Tinner in the County.
FOR GOODS CHEAP CALL AND SEE ME.

PIONEER STORE
SELLS GOODS EXCEEDINGLY LOW.
In order to make room for our Fall and Winter Goods we
are selling our finest stocks of Clothing at prices that re­
quire no bantering to sell.

HERE ARE RARGAINS FOR YOU!
Summer Pants for 95c—Think of It!

For fall and winter trade are comming in.
lent and cheap. Examine them

They are excel­

Of the best quality and lowest in price. Try our 40c Tea.
Don't buy poor eggs unless you prefer them. Our egg tester
tells you which are poor.

'

GASH PAID FOR BUTTER AND EBBS.

NEW VICTOR SEWING MACHINE is VICTOROUS.
ISC Ready pay secure, for you all the advantages in trade.

�Oaite... *»4 wbra
tears Of sorrow for this iduful nation
aaking Gnitean’a pardon and forgivenetofor dying, and blaming the wick­
ed doctors aud .the whole Yankee Da;
tion, when, crash! bang! goes the
bureau over on its face from where it
had stood undtatarbed for months; flat
on the floor lies tbe heavy piece of
furniture ; erect stands the only soul in
the house; on the floor lies an dpe.o
book; like two onions Curt’s eyes ap­
pear in their sockets, and, with hair ou
end and palpitating heart he views the
wreck anil declares that there are mys­
teries surrounding the room and d----- 1
is in the furniture. And even to day’,
C. G. Brundige declares Mrs. Davis’
bureau jumped right away from the
wall and landed out in the room. The
above is somewhat garbled, but tbe
bureau did tumble, and why no bue
knows. Curt says he was all alone,
and badly—well,, excited, and can’t
give any explanations, only he thinks
the spirits are about
---------

him.
.
i nearly morning.
'
The. tJ. B. society is contemplating
If Mi« L. J, Wheeler whs good euuugk
tbe eiSClign of a parsonage for the j temperance man to be the Prohibition
AL Baseett has just finished an ad­
Rev. Mr. Labe, tlieir uew minister.
• nutuiuee for the legislature in 1880, why
SATURDAY, - • ■ OCT. U, 18HB.
dition to his house.
The remains of D. Pratt’s child, for- j slmtild they oppose him now ! Ha» noy
. The very dry weather shortened the
mrrly of this place, but now of Noah-; one lieard of any change pn his i^rtT
APPOINTMENTS:
married, but tbe trath hasn’t yet been
pastures wonderfully.
ville, paaaed the other day for burial. [ That be is now run Ding on the ftepublifound out It seema very carious that
Clover hulling is part of the farmers
The literary society is ao enterpns- can ticket instead of tin- Proliibitiou is
folks will get married and then try to
duties now being done,
ing. organization, and deserves the [ not due to his efforts.
• .
kecpji still when they know it will be
Some farmers re-sowed their wheat
praise of mH who can appreciate labor, : Mi. C. W. Tayloi, of Maple Grove,
found out some time.
», Satumdat, Oct. 91.
by reason of the drouth,
industry and generosity, for it is work- ba* a young Fearnaught coll, that for a
The excitement now principally hangs’
Batckday, Oct. 28.
Now well into October and but one
ing a great lienetit in ouf community, chree-year old, promises to be hsrd to
towards a comet which is fixed in the frost to nip vegetation.
_.. wife,
------a—
-------- 2.----iM B free trBVr|er&gt; jpjjj cau4jJy
Wesley r
Fay,
and
youngest
son.
south east, which apparently is making■
Corin husking has not begun, and
Charley started’ this week, for Ohio on b«*at every tirree-year old^ in bis clans
its way towards the sun, and can only' consequently will be late.
a visit. Thera is to ks family gath­ on tbe track. Unfortunate)?, Mr. Tay­
be seen with the naked eye about 41
Well, the long wished for rain at last
ering nt Mra. F’s patents the 18tb ipst., lor whs too late to make au entry, and
o’clock in the morning. The flash or’ and now the weather is damp.
to celebrate the fortieth anniversary of could not compete for the premiama
tall'of the comet is the largest and1
Growing wheat is looking very, very
their wedding, and a grand time is an­ but his colt had many udmtrers.brightest that has been seen in these■ unpromising, if that’s the word.
ticipated.
Van.
Journal.
parts for some time.
.
John Roscoe of Bellevue, visited 8.
The recent county fair was a very suc­
Our neighbor village of Bellevue, it
BELLE5UE.
A
short
time
ago
a
young
man
living
t
A.
Shepard
the
last
of
last
4rtek.
cessful one. The show in most depart­
will bo rrmemberwf. ’»« »i«ited by a
J. Lundquist wishes to sell^his farm
devastating fire, in February last, near here was invitedto play eucher byai
ments was excellent, particu’arly that
Mr. aud Mrs. Rrowning of Mkkod are of swine, which some yr in minced bet­
which licked up seventeen business company of boys simply for amusementt and take Horace Greeley’s advice.
visiting her parents, Mr. and Mra. Ed­ ter than the shows at Jackson or Grand
J.T.Moon has purchased Neal Lamb’s
buildings, or a third of the business to which he said that his ma htd learn­■
win
Osmun.
ed
him
better
;
but
a
few
days
later
he
interest
in
the
threshing
machine.
Rapids. One notable thing was the
portion of the village, and it was then
Joel Kelly and wife started on Mon­ absence of games of elm nee «• d the like.
Andrews 6z Moon are finishing up the
that many predicted that if Bellevue waa seen on the streets of Nashville so1
day
for Cedar Rapids, Iowa, to visit Thu attendance whs large, and tue re­
chuck
full
of
rot
gut
that
be
could
hard
­
■
few
remaining
jobs
of
threshing
in
this
had not received ber death-blow, she
HASTINGS.
Mr. Kelly’s brother.
ceipts are cstiinateil nt $8,500. Much
had certainly received a shock from ly walk. It must be that his ma didn’t section,
J. L. Roe has moved his family to credit for painstaking work is duS tho
Albert Reese and wife of Battle
Mr. Welton basa new gig.
which she would never recover. But learn him anything about drinking.
I. Kalamo
C.
Creek were visiting
friends the
L. E. staffer is in Chicago buying Battle Creek, much to the regret of officers of the. society, particularly the
Bellevue numbers among her busiues**
their many friends.
goods.
•
past week.
1 president.
men many enterprising fellows, andMAPLE GROVE.
Mra. M. 8. Brackett, formerly of j John S. V’anBrunt, the Prohibition
Joe Mix of Battle Creek will return
The firemen cleared about $200 by
being surrounded by a superb farming
Bellevue but now of Petoskey, is visit-1 nominee for representative, wrote to
to Kalamo this fall and work tbe old their dance.
community—one abundantly able to
Miss Powers’ school closes this week. homestead.
-The fair was the largest ever hold in ing his friends in this place.
I the Detroit Evening
News, asking
support a brisk village, she was not
Will Wheeler is drying apple toss to
John Mast took possession of his Barry county.
Mr. and Mrs. Morgan celebrated their, whether the sulopnists had concluded
destined to succumb to the fate pre­
eat
in
Kansas.
fifth
anniversary,
which
called
for
a
■
to
support
Jerome
for
governor and
house
last
week,
and
now
ia
in
a
homo
The Buptist society took in $123,
dicted. Nevertheless upon visiting the
Elder Gellispie has sold his little of hie own.
wooden wedding. None' nut relatives wanting the true inwaidness of the
place onl SatovdRX_laat, 'we were uon.
•
selling meals at the fair.
farm for $550.
invited.
Enjoyable
time
aud
many
usematter.
He
got
it
in
the
News of OctoJ. L. Andrews, of Ionia Co., formerlv
Our base ball club rather got scooped
eiderably surprised to note the pre­
Briefly, the facts are these: Charley this town, spent lact Sunday among at Grand Rapids,—8 to 0.
ful presents.
t&gt;
jtx'rlOth as follows; "The position of
vailing growth and thrift manifested
Norton is pa. It’s a boy.
Frank McNamee, a young man of■the Detroit saloon keepers on trier govfriends here.
Seager &amp;z Atkeraon are buying aud
upon every hand. New and beautiful
The republicans will discuss the po­
Chas. Slosson has secured the .school shipping potatoes at this poiut.
tliis place, has shown symptoms of in- cmor question is simply this: Cornelius
.
business places had nsen from the ash­
litical issues at the Buck. Norton and in the Mapes district and began his du­
Rev. J. F. O^wick will deliver a cam­ sanity for a number of weeks. Helms o’Dwyer, secretary of the Detroit aaes of former inferior ones, which we
Dunham school houses this week.
ties Monday.
paign prohibition speech here next been pronounced insane, nnd will t&gt;e loon keepers’ union, addressed duplicould not contemplate without feeling
Rev. Win. Stewart is visiting Dis
John Hurd has just completed two Tuesday.
sent to the asylum at Kalamazoo.
J ■cute letters to both the gubernatorial
that the disaster had proved a blessing.
father and other relations. He spoke very necessary conveniences, a well
Mrs. David Nelson, in company witliI candidates, asking them for an expresThe high school students have charge
The only apparent loss is the hotel—
at the U. B. church Sunday evening.
and a cistern.
of tbe temperance meeting next Sun­ her brother and his wife, Mr. nnd Mrs. aHhi of their opinion on the liquor qucSthe village now being without one—
We bad about came'to the conclusion
The young West Kalamoites have day afternoon.
C. B. Wood. visited Chicago this week, tioo. Gov. Jerome replied iu a very
but J. K. Taylor, owner of the old site,
that Maple Grove wouldn’t have any been for some time wrestling with the
A. E. Holbrook, an old time resident, and attended the exposition. Also Mr. manly letter that be had been nominat­
informed us that the loss would be
big yields of wheat, but C. C. Ames whooping cough.
has been visiting bis many friends here and Mrs. Dupuy of Section Hill. They ed on tbe Republican platform, and that
made good next spring by the erection
comes to the rescue with 41 bushels per
Potatpes do not yield as well as ex- &gt; the past week.
report a good time.
be could not do otherwise than endorse
■of a new one—one that will not only be
acre.
pected, and many are complaining of
Friday night N. P. Shumway’s straw its principle-. The democratic caudlRev. Carnahan is to be ordained the
a credit to Bellevue, but will rank with
An emigrant family passed through theirs rotting badly.
31st of this month in the PresbyUn iap 1 stack Was set afire by n little boy that: date, entirely ignored l he request for bis
the 'best of those of neighboring
the center of the town on’ Monday
The robins and blackbirds are form­ church of this city.
| was living with his sou. The Bellevue&gt; opinion and did not send any reoly
towns.
having driven to and from Dakota ing excursion parties to visit the south
Mra. Bailey of this place is a delegate j fire company was called out nnd in time■ whatever. This brought forth an inUpon introducing ourself to C. D.
since April 1st. Blizzards and Door to spend the winter.
to the national W. C. T. U., which ; to do good service, ns (he bain « ns butl fonual expression of opinion from the
Cogsdill, the good-looking, accomodat­
water are the cause of their return.
A. R. Williams visited Newago Co., meets this mouth in Louisville, Ky.
a short distance from the tire.
ing and etficent postmaster, we were
saloon keepers that owing to Jerome's
An ex-expounder of the gospel iu a few days ago to attend to property
Saturday night, after shutting up the- manliness and Begole's discourtesy
Considerable poor whiskey aud a few
given the freedom of the city and
East
Maple
Grove,
became
all
nled
up
which he had there.
*
rows were mixed up with a ten cent stores, Charles York and Win. Lus­- they would support the former.”
proceeded to enjoy it.
Tracey Atherton and family, of dance, held in the Thorp building dur­ comb started for the barber shop., They
H. Ovenall ire, proprietor of tbe old, at a certain young man, and wanted to
were trying to see who could get there
reliable Gothic mills, has just complet­ pound him ; bitt wheu the young man Bellevue were the guests of Charley ing the fair.
ed. at an expense of $600, a new stone got to the front, he squealed and went Atherton a few days ago.
Mina Stella Wheeler received an offer first. Will ran against a mortar lied lie SnzpiizuD—Harrinotox—In Charlotte, Oct.
3, ElhhB Shepherd aud Nettie Harrington.
Perhaps he might have
Mr. and Mra. Eli Wells have been last week, of a position in the Pueblo, York Bros.’store, aud fell over into it.
dam. It i« a substantial improvement. away Huffy.
Portbr—Wic«».—At Plainwell, Oct- 5, John
IL S. Biggs, an old patron of Tue been thinking. "If the nghteons are visiting friends in the south part of tbe Col., school, but «ra» obliged to decline Supposing that he would gather himself
porter and Mina Nora Wick*, of Orangeville.
up and put in an appearance, Charles BC«tx—GvNN—Al Charlotte, Sept. 29, Ralph
News is running the only planing null scarcely saved where will the ungodly state fur a short time past.
on account of her engagement here.
Henry Aungst was called to West
in town. Mr. B., however, complains and tiie sinner appear f”
Nov. Sth and 9th the semi-annual went on to the shop; but as Will did
Bu&gt;&lt;-11 and Emma Gunn, both of Vermont­
L. E. Ph ant, Jb.
ville.
Sunti“ld’Sunday, by reason of an acci- convention of the W. C. T. U. will be not come they went after him and found
that business is poor, many going to
d&lt;&gt;pt which befell bis father.
• held in the M. E. church of this city. him lying just where he fell. Hu «a»» PiKitcz—Blrxham—At James Conklin’s, in
Battle Creek and Charlotte to get their
Bedford. Edwin H. Pierce, of Kalamazoo,and
KALAMO.
Frank Crowell aud wife of Walton, Mra. Mary T. Lathrop and other good of course badly, bruised : one of his'__________________
work done. This is a sad error and if
Misa Ora E. Burnham, ot Bedford.
and Mrs. Smith, of Stanton, were the speakers will be present.
largely indulged in will work greater
. badly cut,
. ' xusost—Rcbart— At tbe residence of and by
i teeth knocked out, lijs lips
Mr. Editor and readers: If the Kala­ guests of D. Fitch, over Sunday.
— ve:y
«. j: much
__t —discolored.
j «•
JuBt
ce■ Win. W. Latty, ul Assyria, Monday,
disaster to any town than three or four
According to the estimates of the |i and his none
Hr
mo items are not very interesting this
2. 1862, Henry Auugst and MIm Delia
Frank Hartwell and M. H. Bradley, board, the expense of the current | was unable to sit up the next day, hut' Oct.
Rubart, both of Kdatnu, Eaton county. .
wet-k, please excuse as this is our first
per see that the wheels of industry are
accompanied by their wives, spent last school this year will be $9,000, of which I is doing finely at present.
Alpha. ■
Fish — Nzvins — 17ie wedding of Fldim K.
writing
and
we
arc
naturally
bashful;
kept in motion.
Sunday with friends in Middleviln.
$3,500 will
... be interest ........
money
J and V$2.—'• ,
*
Fish and Misa Ella Nevlua. at the home of tbe
but we will try to overcome this in time.
bride iu Orangeville, Oct 2, was a large affair
G.F. Anson, for eighteen years post­
The highway job let recently near E. (XX) for last year's improvements and
THE COUNTY
Our name is Pod, our face resembles
alike ia guest.-, present-, and happiness.
master of Bellevue,'still lives, and is
D. Williams’ farm will have to be re­ bonds.
die race from which we sprang, and our
making himself popular with the farm­
let, as a slight error occurred in the let­
Tbe board of supervisors here this
Supervisors iu session this week.
Wm. Latty iu AssvrU township, Sunday,
feet are as long as any of the Kalamo
ting.
ers, by exchanging both soft arid hard
week elected Orson Swift, of Maple
G. M. Evera of Prairieville has sold
Aug. 13, by Justice Latty. Frank C. Slater,
boys. You may expect to hear from us
■■•idMisti Angle
Angie WaienniD,
Waterman, bothut
bothuf Awyria.
। and'Miw
People will have it that there was a Grove, permanent chairman by a vote bis store.
money in liberal quantities, for their
each week. As Paul, wheu arraigned be­
butter, eggs and apples.
wedding on the county line a few days of 13 to 4 scattering. The committees
The Middleville cemetery is to be Ccntbh-Smitii—At tbc M. E. papwnage in
'
v (IrwU-lt.
fore Agrippa, w? say "here am P’ with
Orange, n..&lt;
Oct. R8. 1882, hv
by It,.v
Rev. JJ. F.
drwick,
ago.
Arise,
;Henry.
and
exjilain
matC. B. Wood wears rather better rega­
were constituted as follows: Equali­ gniblwd aud mowed.
Cornelius Center, of Carlton, and Mrs.
what gleanings we were able to find.
lia thsfh usual, which, nndoubtly is ow­
tcr».
Cynthia F. Smith, of Odeaaa, Ionia comity.
Two cows belonging to Mr. Lepnrd of
zation—W. W. Cole, John E. Barry,
Johnny
Graves
has
tbe
boss
clerk,
—
H. J. Stocking and wife were called George Abbey, John Dawson, A. C. Carlton died from eating wheat.
ing to his doing a rustling business in
so tho girls all say.
to Mouroe Co., a few days ago, by the Towne, W. H. Cridler and Dugal Cam­
the insurance line.
A musical society has been organized
The Rev. Williard Roacii is clerking sudden illness of Mrs. Stocking’s bell : Claims—W. H. Memck, Chas. A. at Middleville, and it will »:ive a grand Bacos.— In Orangeville, Oct. -4, infant son of
The daisy store is kept by Phelps Az
father.
Barney.
We don’t know wheie a at Crandall’j. He is quite handy
Frank Bacon.
Polley, Jas. N. Covert; Finance—C. H. concert soon.
We had a beautiful rain Tuesday
Ye Editor Strong dropped in on tbe Hicks, Elijah Barnum, Edgar Nye, A.
country store can be found that tarries
The as.-wssineut «»f the Eaton aud Bar­ Hunzt well—In Prairierille. Oct. 3, of con■umption, Mrs. Cheater Honeywell.
a larger or more complete stock of dry which will help the wheat crop greatly. Lyceumers last Saturday evening, aud, J. Gott, Chas. D. Pierce; Salaries— ry County insurance company will be
Cazier.—In Bit-mark, Oct. 5, of cancer in tbe
Mr. Russel! has a pair of Hambleton although but a few were present he Wm. Richie, Lemuel Wiug, John Bar- light (bis year.
goods and clothing than P. &amp; B. They
stomach, Samuel J. Caxier, aged 48 yean.
are lively boys, love bhainess and are ian colts that are beauties, and we don’t honored them with a few very appro- j ry ; Comm buildings—Elijah Barnum.
Jas. Williams and A. Woodruff of
TlFlAtf* remarks.
rf*.mArkR.
Tr.lt rt 1'Ian*u.,»t
A
\
priate
keeping lots of trade in Bellevue that need to tell him so.
C. M
H. Ifl.'L'U
Hicks, John
Dawson •; ApportionMiddleville
_____
have- become
___ r_____
paitners iu
ut-U, aged 84. Years ago he served 00 the old
Mad,
did
yon
say
?
well
I
should
re
­
otherwise would go te Battle Creek.
Mrs. Amelia Swift, wife of Elmer
ment—Wm. H. Cridler, Edgar Nye, i the boot aud shoe business.
ship ofwar Franklin.
D. H. Chisholm is another one of the Swift, is very sick. Hope to be able to mark. And ’tis all because the road Lemuel Wing.
j Stone dt Biggs of Rutland, took a fine Mikesell—In Cannel. Eaton county. EllzaAt
the
dose
of
the
M.
E.
Sunday
‘
lot
ut
pre«u»u«n»
»&gt;tb
their
Holstein
boys that makes himself felt in the bue- report her better next week.
job and Slasun ditch bridge is not done ’
ticth, wife of Jas. Mikesell Sr., a resident of
the county for 29 years, aged 74 years.
inras arena of Bellevue. His traffic is
Miss Mary York of Kalamo and Mr. or doing. That’s what ails the West school, Sunday last, tire superintend- j
at the Grand Rapids fair.
buggies, carriages and all kinds of Frank Weaver of Grand Rapids were Kalamoites.
ent. Mra. Clement Smitli, read a beauWebster, once of Midjllefarm machinery.
Don’t know what others may think tiful and effecting little story, descrip- I v’lle. is the republican candidate for I Clark—To J. Clark of Prairieville,a &lt;UugUtcr.
united in the bonds of holy matrimony
Evans, Huusiker &amp;*Co., do business, on tbe 11th inst. Was the cake sweet! of "weans,” but certainly the Kalamo­ tive of the goodness and good work of Pro8ecuting attorney of Mecosta Co.
Bbkmch—To Hugh Beemer, of Convis, » son.
probably, in tbe largest store in Eaton Well, Hi don’t koow.
ites ought to be thought fair, as they one of the most prominent members of i On Saturday last a two-yuars old Smith—To Stcpben Smith of PralrievllU, b
Co. They are general dealers and car­
H. C. Saunders and E. A. Gage took were represented at Jackson, Lansing, tb.
after winch » b....,tir„l Uaughier of Fred W.rhe. of C.rl«&gt;0.
o[
ry a mammoth stock. We were pleas­ in the Exposition at Chicago last week. Grand Rapids, Marshall, Hastings aud floral basket, containing $42 in gold. ; feU from B &gt;««&lt;* an&lt;1 woke her neck. , Spaulding—To Geo. Spaulding, ot Bellevue,
I a sou.
ed to meet and chat with that old They report broom corn worth two Charlotte fairs, and some even take in
the gift of the Sunday school scholars, i Smith A.
' '•
’ of' Middleville,
...
.have । Bhuwn.—Tu Postmaster Brown of Prairieville,
Curtis
wheel-horse in the no He cause of tem­ cents per bushei. S. Bushnell, T. A. the Chicago Exposition.
a ““■*
was presented to the aubjoct of the story sold theiy equalizer patent right and
Say, "Van,” let "Writist” rip about
perance. and senior member of the firm and C. W. Crandall represent our town
—Miss Addie Reed, who is soon to make factory to Coats &amp; Gibbs, blacksmiths.
vis, a (laughter.
—John Evans.
’
at Chicago this week. We expect to pensions, as a large number of the old her home in Detroit, in the words of
11. A. Sherwood of Jackson, while
Wecouldn’t leave Bellevue without hear from them when they return.
veterans—those who went out with the
tiie story, "there went with the little riding along the road in Baltimore
A CARD.
hunting up and shaking hands with F.
same regiment in which “Writist"
basket of flowera, not only tho bright township Suudny evening, was assault- । I drain* to return my heartfelt thanks to the
BLSMARK.
A.Ford.We found nt him Hance’s store,
served,and who were in at «he"bornin”
frienda for their kind attention to my
pieces of gold, but a wealth of love ed by footpads, knocked ouf of his car­ i many
wife during ber aickuea* and after death.
talking up the merits of a* piece of cot- j
of the regiment in 1861, and uho served
and good wishes, and the gratitude of riage aud robbed nf his money and ef.
J. Robinson.
Clover is well seeded.
ton factory iu his usual happy and con­
faithfully to the muster outiti 1865—are a whole church society and Sabbath
An item at dur shanty.
vincing st)le. Frauk grows better­
now drawing pensions, and this I know
school for the work that she bad
looking as he grows older, is always
Wheat sowing is not all done yet.
to be a fact.
wrought among them ; and besides all
happy and numbers his friends by the
The cheese factory is still in motion.
Mr. McMoie, whose sad death was
this, a hope that if she never again
hundreds.
Tranquil peace reigneth at Bismark. announced in last weeks News, was
comes to make her home among the
We also met Fanner John A. Spauld­
Elmer Hammond rotaineth the sick making preparations to start this week
old friends, that they may with her all
ing, the Republican nominee for county bed.
with his wife, to Ohio, from which
be permitted to enjoy a home together
treasurer. He i« built from good ma­
Give ns a shake,—we are turned state he moved several years ago, and
OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE
beyond the beautiful golden gates.”
terial, wiD make an efficient treasurer, loose.
visit old scenes aud friends. His sud­
.
Hana.
and should be elected by a handsome
Leisure moments are becoming more den death brings to mind how uncer­
Duffieroua.
tain is life, arid how ueccssary for us to
WEST SUNFIELD.
Mary B. Young is not fast recovering be prepared for death.
EAST MAPLE GROVE.
from her sickness.
,
The lyceum has met with several
Our sick are improving.
Preaching every Sunday at the Bis­ severe-drawbacks recently, which has
A. P. Barnes is visiting in Ohio.
The farmers are now attending to mark. church.
given it a bad name, but nothing has
WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH
Political speeches by the wholesale.
fall work.
It is feared that the two ahootists at transpired that the /WKiety ought to be
The rush of work shortens items this
Mrs. Howe, of Potterville, is visiting Burna-town will recover.
blamed for, as the disturbance was tbe week.
in this vicinity.
The nakednesas of nature is becom­ result of too much Nashville whisky
J. Childs has purchased one of Will
Harvey Beal and family moved back ing more and more visible.
which came to the meetings inside of a Hill’s big horses.
to Ohio, Wednesday.
A fine rain in northern Sunfield last man’s clothes. Now the young folks
W. K. Bare and family are going
Henry August has gone to Sunfield, week, but only a little sprinkle here.
are getttng up their “dander” and are north after the fall work.
to work for bis father.
Milo Duel has nine children, and the bound to succeed in recovering lost
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING
Charley Sackett, spent one day at
Wm. Niles, has an item the weight of sympathies of the whole neighborhood prestige or fail in a good cause. Bravo tbe Ionia jail last week.
sixteen ounces to the pound. It’s a are with him.
young friends, remember, "order is
D. D. Krebbs is enjoying a visit from
girt.
Johnathan Wright is building an ad­ heaven's first law.”
I bis sister Mrs. Thompson of Chicago.
.
Neal Lamb has sold his half of the dition to his house, aud to the addition,
He was sitting in the easy chair, his
Henry Miller and wife of Charlotte,
threshing machine to Janies Moon for an out door store cellar.
whole being absorbed in the finely spent two or three days this Week, vis-,
I have put in 37 acres of wheat this wrough meshes of web span for the eu- iting Mrs. M’s. parents.
We believe
i» destined to come
A few days ago Harrison Eldred was fall, single handed and alone, except traping of the unwary reader of fiction;
Mr. Wright is making improvements
Call and examine them and yon will have
thrown oat of his wagon and quite three days help. Now do yuu believe hw attention was drawn to thejterrible on his preiniseA by way of building a into general use.
I
’
ve
been
busy
!
t
badly hart.
no other.
scenes enacted by tbe spirits of depart­ new kitchen and milk house.
John Downing, a buyer and his bees ed victims of this naughty world; he
rho has been work
J. John Fletcher, who is attending
lias had a lively rumpus the other day. The was on the poiut of doubting the truth­ college at Olivet, made a pleasant visit
buyer concluded tbe hive was full of fulness of Praaideut Garfield standing
returned home.
among us Saturday and Sunday.
(
Hastings* AUcht,
James Hall dog 50 bushels of good hooey and his face full of beesat the portals of tbe other world, waitJake Riley, with his faq^ly, moved
^BmsTj—jag for, tin, arqval of ths peraeegted i lastMonday-from the pteee aptnwllft

------- -gxgtfvixXg---------

VICINITY

LOCALS.

getting id

of calling our

»lory

501 Wagons I

for

Sale at

rock bottom prices.

THREE INCH
BETTER THAN

l liree inch Tire

BENTLEY BROS. &amp; WILKINS,

a^_6ol(’jn_N«hyiUe.bxILLJiLAaflflK._________

�•Now this is the Inrt

HD j rrj r /

A Jtm com* In a minute.

IhjM.-eMr.te.-lmwrtm
_ as a wucu

w ...o ....... ..

His arm on the shelf that holds the dolt,
- Ho lookr- across tbe dairy:
-Shall Igo to bar aide? Shall 1 dure her pride?"

Noreeem In an awful taking.
iWMtklaoM be takes so loud and fust
That ho takes b r breath completely.

“ I'll fro outright for the ring to-ntgnt!1

“THE BRIGHT SIDE OF THINGS.”
The following extracts are from nrecent
lectu^p delivered by Rev. T. Du Witt TalmagfgiK^D.. L. L. IL; before the stuhufimnness College nt
. N. T. The celebrated Brooklyn
• appeared in one of tho regular
course of college lectures, before one of
the finest audiences ever assembled in
Newark. Mr, Talmage, on his introduc­
tion by President Coldman. was greeted
with great applause.
Among many
other good things, he raid :
“Wnetfier'it rain or whether It shine,
this is a very pleasant world to live in. If
I had been consulted as to which of all
the stars I would choose to. have been
born on, then 1 know of none that I
would liavc preferred to this.
The human face is admirably adapted
for its work; it is sunshine in its smile,
tempest in its frown. Two eyes, one
more than is absolutely necessary, so
when one is put out, we can still look
abroad upon the beautiful works of
nature; one nose, which is quite sufficient
for those who walk among so many nui­
sances. It may be inclined to be Roman,
or it may turn up toward the heavens
with celestial admiration. C)r|&gt;erhaps it
reaches out a long way and then sudden­
ly shies off. illustrating the old proverb
that it is a long lane that has no turning.
One tongue and one mouth which arc well
able to express our wants and communi­
cate our thoughts to each other. Yet
no two ot these features' are alike nor
are any two persons alike. It is not in­
tended that they should be. On stand­
ing before any specimen of sculpture or
painting, a dozen different men will hare
a dozen diflerent sentiments. Wo can
not all think alike, but where is the blas­
phemer of his God who would criticise
the arch of the sky or the crest of a
wave, or the flock of snow-white fleecy
clouds driven by the shcphenl of the
winds across the liilly pastures of tbe
heavens, ortho burning cities of the sun­
set, or the fern-leaf penciling* of the
frost on the window-pane? • Why, mv
friends, where there is one discord in
nature, there arc a thousand harmonies.

It will be well for us to work a little
hairier when we are tempted to look at
the dark side of things, and keep our
thoughts occupied by paying closer at­
tention to other things. By always look­
ing at the dark side, we get discouraged
and down-hearted, and by the natural
reaction of One soul on another, we may
get others into tiie same way of think­
ing.
•
•
•
jj v idcas of re.
ligion are a little diflerent from those of
some people. Mine is a sunshiny re­
ligion, a happy religion, full of love—
love is everlasting suushine —and I have
noticed that the more religion people
have &lt;jf this sort, the happier they are.
Now. a great many people seem to think
that to be religious one must wear a
long face; but when people come to me
with a long face they don’t impress me
at alt The world .has a great many de­
lightful people in It—so many real clever,
people that have n faculty worth any
sum of money. They never yet came
away from a picture-gallery but what
they saw one landscape, one face that
they admired. They orc very like the
spring, for it seems so full of fragrance
nnd youth and bloom. Like a priestess,
she stands swinging her censer of per­
fume before the Lord. The summer,
too, is the tiling for them, for they like
to hear the musical whirr of the machines
as they plow through the shuddering
Enin, the whetting of the scythe, the
wing of the cattle and the glad carol­
ing of the birds. And they like the
autumn, they like tbe forests that, with
their blood-red leaves lleckeil with fire,
look like an army marching with- ban­
ners dipped in the sunset's glow. And
they praise God for winter, that brings
the shout of children playing blind
man’s buff with handkerchiefs thev can
see through, getting up theatricals fn the
kitchen and turning the wood-shed into
a royal dressing room. If you are a
lawyer, they are the kind of people yon
will like for clients; if you are n
merchant, they arc the people yon will
like for customers; if a physician, the
people you will like for patients, but
they can generally cure themselves
by a bottle of laughter—and the
laughter, like
medicine,
is bet­
ter if well shaken up.
•
*
•
I noticed that, when I was in the cool
district of Pennsylvania, in the coal
mines, every miner carried his own light
In his hat. He takes his light with him ;
he is perfectly independent of his neigh­
bor. That struck me as a first-rate plan,
for it leaves every man free and teaches
him to depend on himself. A blacksmith
who wax in comfortable circarnstance
had a son in college, and after awhile he
letter from hint Now, neither tbe
unith or his wife could read, so

“Ah!” says the father. •• if that’s the
case, send him all he wants.”
[Great
laughter and applause.] It is all in the
wnjr you rvnd it. You can take almost
everything iu'life in the name way. It iz
the nworathm to always look at the
bright side of things that brings us hap­
piness nnd cheerfiHnoM and peace. O
my friends, let us stand up and listen for
tho sweet sounds, instead of straining
our eyes and ears to detect‘the discords
ot life. Let us cultivate thyme and ane­
mones.and roses, and have vines and
flowering plants around tbe house; have
the windows arranged «o that wo can
hoist them to let in the sunshine- God
has planted a paradise of bloom in a lit­
tle child's cheek, and adorned the pillars
of rock by hangkig tapestries of morn­
ing mist around them. The.lark rays,
•*L will sing, soprano,” and tho cascade
says, “ I will carry the bass; let us leave
it to tho owl and the croaking frog and
the surly bear to do the grumbling anti
the fault-finding.”
•
I have no respect for the theory that
fine clothes will make a gentleman. 1
have no liking for Lord Chesterfield.
All the fine clothes that a tailor’s goose
ever pressed cannot make a gentleman;
I don't care how large a diamond flashes
in his cravat or how elogant the cut ot
his garments or the materials from which
they are made. A bootmaker, a hatter
ana a tailor got together one day and
resolved to mako a gentleman of a man
If it could be done by tine clothes; Thq
bootmaker said: "I will make a gentle­
man's boots.” and the hatter said: “1
will make him a lino hat,” and the
tailor: .“I will make him a fashionable
suit” They did it, and their gentle­
man went out Before night no did
something so perfectly contemptible that
everybody said ho was not a gentleman,
and a neighbor said: “Sir: you cannot
mako agentleman. God only can make
that large-hearted, 'generous, magnan­
imous being that we call a gentleman.”
[Applause.] A very little thing will
Udi you that a man is a gentleman.
You can tell that in five minutes. One
day’s visit tn his home will reveal all his
domestic history as well as if you had it
in a half dozen volumes.
Neither cau all the arts and skill of the
dressmaker or perfumer make a lady.
Here is the history-of a woman’s work
during the late civil war of ours. Her
dress was very much faded, and she
came out from an humble home with n
basketful of little delicacies on her arm.
She had a boy in tho army that was
missing after one of the battles. She
wanted to do sometlting for others, be­
cause she couldn’t do anything for him.
She went into lhe hospital, straightened
the bed-clothes, wrote letters, and
when she found a poor fellow shot
through the arm. brought ice for the
shattered limb, turned the hot pillow,
and offered up the silent prayer: "God
do so to me and in*- soldier boy that is
missing if I neglect to care for these
poor fellows.” A man hearing the whis­
per, after situ had passed shoves up the
uandagu from his eyes and says: “God
bless her! may she gei back her soldier
boy that is missing.’* The great tall
captain wounded in the foot whispers
over to a lieutenant wounded in the head
and says: ••Ah! no sham about that;
she’s a lady." That vision of kindness
lingers in tiie Western soldier's dreams,
nnd that very night he thinks he is home
beyond the prairies and hears the cattle
coming down lhe lane, and hears the
leaves rustling in the wind and bidding
him a welcome. His children appear at
the door and his wife cal|s to him to look
at his boy strutting the' floor with his
father’s knapsack “ou. All the house­
hold work stops to hear of his advent­
ures. Ab! they shall only meet again
in Heaven!
Now. compare such a Christian lady
in the hospital with a woman 1 saw in a
street car in Philadelphia? A poor ragged
soldier came in and sat near her. She
got up with a show of indignation aud
took a seat opposite ami said: “What a
dirty fellow!” and I said to myself there
was probffbly more nobility in the mean­
est patch of his clothes than in that
woman. Two rough boys were, riding
down hill nnd they couldn’t steer the
sled as they wanted to, and ran against
a lady and tore- her dress. They ex­
acted a perfect volley of abuse, but the
ady said: “Boys, boys, you have tom
my dress very much: but I see you dicin' t
mean to. Go on with your fun.” One
boy said to the other: “My .eyes. Bill,
isn’t she a beauty?" She was a lady.
'
*
*
A wan of good manners
always has the faculty of making you
feel good; while on’ the other, hand,
when you arc in the company ot one of
tho ill-natured kind, you feci uncom­
fortable and unhappy,
■
•
•
Great accomplishments and learning
may often be dignified by gentleness.
Luther's directness would nave been
mightily helped by Melanchton’s suavity.
Society will bear anything sooner than
a bore. In a former pastoral charge
there was a minister that had one or two
offensive characters in his congregation.
One of them was a man who was given
to sneezing at some of the most awkward
Xhd embarrassing moments. When the
church was particularly silent and sol­
emn. ho would give one of those awful
sneezes, that sounded as. if all the inside
of the earth was being ripped away.
Now, a man has certain inalienable
rights guaranteed to him by the Con­
stitution. Among them are that of life and
liberty and the right to sneeze; but what
1 contend for Htthataman has no right to
select a time when his explosions will an­
noy his foliow-worshippers. No man is
-well educated, no man is well behaved,
who has no regard for times and cir­
cumstances. While without any respect
for one of those obsequies mortals that we
call a fop, or for namby-pambyinn in
any form. I yet fully appreciate the value
of good manners and courtesy. Let two
young men go out into the world, the
one with &gt;20.000 to start him and bad
manners, aud the other with no capital
and good manners, and the young man
with no capital will beat the other in the
race of life.

happy. Now, Jenny, you -sit down
to the piano . and nlay Saudayschool tones, and you, Johnyie and Rob­
bie. get down the hymn-books and lie
prepared to sing as ooyn as I xead this
psalm of David—O, praise the Lord, all
ye angels of His: prate Him, all ye
stars and light; monntaiu-t and all hills;
fruitful trees and all cedars, beasts and
all cattle, creeping things and firing
fowls; let everything that hath breath
prautc the. name of the Lord, for His
name only is excellent and His praise
above heaven and earth.’ Go now,
children, get readv to sing while I beat
time for you.” They sing, and let mo
tell you that a person that can sing, and
wow I sing deserves to be sent to1 Sing
Sing. [Laughter.]
4
Despondency is the most unprofitable
thing that 1 know of. The hyacinth is
the only flower I know of that will start
best in a dark cellar. Good cheer di­
vides our burdens and carries threefourths of them. To most of us, life's a
struggle—an Austerlitz, a Waterloo. We
all nave care enough. God knows, we
all cry enough. If we didn’t laugh anil
play sometimes. I don’t know what
would become of us. Ijwk of acquaint­
ance with the laws of life often results iu
depression of spirits. Did you ever know
of a man among your acquaintance that
preferred to work till ten or eleven
o’clock at night, and then take a hearty
supper, and do that regularly, to ever
look on the bright side of things? Tell
me whht a man eats, when he eats, and
bow long it takes him to eat it, ami I will
tell you how he gets along*in business.
A man who will go to tho store in the
morning, find btumess matters all mixed
up, cannot see how to raise the money to
pay his notes, things all going wrong,
has been up too Inte ttfe night before or
eaten something that didn't agree with
him. We must live well if we want to
take a cheerful view of life. We want
to live out-doors as much as jxmible.
If you own a horse, have him well
groomed—let him be black or bay or
gray of sorrel—no matter, have him
brought out of the stable, get him some
water, put the bucket to his mouth and
hear the water rattle down his throat in
great swallows, pat him on the shoulder,
and.then pul your foot in the stimp ami
leap into the saddle; let him prance and
gallop and paw and plunge till you feel
the blood tingle in your veins. Let him
trot anti gallop and amble, keep a stifl
rein and a firm seat, anti after an hour
of that, you will come back with an apEetite that will amaze the good folks at
omc. " * • I have known people
who &gt;pent fortunea at Saratoga and
Baden Baden, and came home unbene­
fited. to join in a game or two of base
ball, an&lt;l in attChipting to catch the ball
have actually taken jheir lost health “on
the flyr" as it were. Whether it be boat,
skate, rod, guu or gymnasium, get out
of the city if you can. go into the coun­
try, get plenty of fresh air and exercise,
nnd you will come back to tbe shop, count­
ing-room and stool and pulpit better pre­
pared to bargain, to instruct, to work, to
pray and preach. Remember, there is
no stock that pays a better dividend than
a cheerful heart and a pleasant face and
kind words.

Newark

with

Lrat Wednesday, a mao on the Dela­
ware, Lackawanna A WeaternBoad met
an acquaintance, who may be called
Higgins, on the train which left New
his left arm in ailing, and walked with
a limp. His face was seamed with ugly
scars, aud ornamented on the chin with
a rosette of crossing strips of court­
plaster. Dark blood had settled in a
pool under each eye. His nose, besides
being in an attitude ot ungraceful flat­
ness, had much of tho appearance of
raw beef, and one ear had lost its shape.
“In the name of goodness, Higgins,
what has happened to you?” asked his
friend. “Been ground up in a stone­
crusher?”
“ N^” was the reply, sadly spoken.
“ Wlat is iu. then? Have you had a
tumble through a hatchway?”
“ No.”
“ Did your celling come down on you
in your sleep?”
“ O no, nothing of that kind.”
“You had no unpleasantness with one
of the wildcats when over at Barnum’s,
I hope.”
Higgins did not seem to enjoy this
jocose questioning. Finally he asked:'
" Do you still jump of! the train going
up the hill? If so, I must warn you
against it»”
.
“ Well," said the other.
“ I thought,” went on Higgins, “you
told me the 5:50 train from New York
Was » slow train, and last Thursday
night I stayed aboard of to until we got
to Sheffield street, because it was so
muqh nearer home.
We were going
very fast; but I got on the rear plat­
form of the last car and jumped in the
way Vbu showed me. I had landed all
right at other times, but now I was
whirled in the air, nnd when I came
down my head went plowing into the
ground with the force ot a mud-digger.
“ I was stunned and lay alongside the
track for a minute or two. The blood
poured from all those cuts, and by the
time I had staggered home I was a hor­
rible sight. The doctor said ho never
knew a man so mussed up and live.
I've been in bod five days, and with my
knee nearly smashed, this wrist sprained,
and my face feeling os if a harrow had
been over it, I ought to be there yet.
Hereafter I won’t jump off even a horse­
car until it comes to a dead stop.”

Hitters; thus will you Jive to a good old age.

The milking stool 1b lhe latent in the decorat­
ing line. It la affected.only by the cream ot
FREE OF COST.

AU ,

rrat remedy—one that will noaiUvely cure
Conramptloo, Couchs, Cold*. Aatbma. BronchitU, or any affection ot tbe Throat and Lanas
—arc reaaeated to call at F. T. Bowe’# drwr
»tore and gel a trial bottle of Dr. King'* New
Dbcovery for Connumptton, free of ccwt,wbJeb
will ubow you »yhat a .regular &lt;loliar-»ize bottle
will do.

son, IMUm, Gal-

guns at an enemy. '■
JT A DIFFICULT PROBLEM SOLVED.

Tbe desire for stimulant* ia becoming
nionauota evil und bow to overcome it ia a se.
ious question with reformer!. Parker’s Giuger Tonic .fairly solves tiie difficult problem.
lUnvigorates body aud mind without intoxicat­
ing, and haa brought health and happiness to
many desolate homes.—Enqirer. See other
column.
It will soon be time put yourself In the hands
of your frinda.

an ci»np of travel,

^‘*‘**^^*‘*^3

KANSAS CITY
Thnragh
Tickets via

and traveling

ENTIRELY SATISFACTORY.

1-adlcs wishing a perfume that combines
novelty .delicacy and, rlcbncaa tlnd Flores ton
Cologne entirely satisfactory.
Lynn, Mana,, tickles its nose with three tons
of snuff per year.

T. J POTTER

fEBCEVXL LOWELL

AVOID CURE-ALLS.
Zoa-Pbora Is compounded solely or dl
of woman. In its sphere ft has no equ
testimonials and advice, address A P
M. D. Kalamazoo, Mich.

The Rev. Wm. Brooks of Hampstead, R. I.,
is acuscd of having three wives.

ONE EXPERIENCE FROM MANY.
------- CALL ON-------1 have been sick and miserable so long and
had caused my husband so much trouble and
expense, no one seemed to know what ailed me,
that I was completely disheartened and discour­
aged- In thin frame of mind I-got a bottle of
Hop Bitters and used them unknown to mv
family. I soon began to improve and gained
rfnt
so fast that my husband and family thought it iliums,
strange and unnatural, but when I told them
what had helped me. they said, “Hurrah for
BOOKS,
Hop Bitters! long may they prosper, for they
A Troublesome Elephant.
have made mother well and us nappy.”—The
Secretary Kalb, of the Fair Associa­ Mother.
tion, was found in his Chestnut street
WIXDOW SHADES,
Baltimore baa a girl 15 years old wbo has
office yesterday afternoon, looking very
thoughtfully at a patent padlock lying eloped three times.
Dl KSTl’FFb.
before Limon hisdesk. “I don’t know,”
SEE, FEEL AND BELIEVE
PROPRIETARY MEDICINES,
said he to a Globe-Democrat reporter
“Truth conquers,” and Painless Corn Ex­
who entered, “I don’t know as that tractor
is the emlwxilment of truth. •‘Actions
PKESCIKIPT1OXH,
will answer, but I think it will.” Then speak louder than words,” and its action on
KECEIPTS.
he fell into a brown study for a few coms of every description has !&gt;cen the means
minutes, that was ended by silently of extending its reputation far nnd wide. The
of Its success Is that it performs nil
passing tbe lock over for examination. explanation
that it claims to do, viz. to remove the worst
-------- MY--------The reporter had no idea what it all coms in a few days without pain. Beware of
meant, but expressed the opinion that imitations and substitutes. Sold by drogsists
the padlock was apparently a good one, everywhere. Wholesale, J. E. Davis &lt;&amp; Co..
and asked the secretary what ho had Detroit.
bought it for.
DKI»AltTM£.\T
‘•Well, you know the elephant at the' MuzHn' makes a dug safe, while It makes a
young lady dangerous—still, Iu hot weather
Zoological Garden?” was the answer.
I’ve got this for her, to make sure that they both want muslin.
The Original Bootblacks.
she don’t get into mischief.
We have
Mr. B- F. Porter, a rich banker in Utica N.
always kept her chained up by a shackle Y.. says: “I have used Brown's Iron Bitters
All to T’C sold at prices lo compete with any
We believe New York claims to be' the
house In Hairy or Eaton c/ unties
round one leg, but of late she has been the past year, much the chagrin of our family
place where the street bootblack first
physician,
for neither myself, wife nor little
freeing herself every night, and we have
appeared, but tiie professional bootblack
have since suffered from a single day’s
। got to try a new scheme.
For a long Sris
nets. It is making us all robust and strong.”
is essentially a Boston institution. At
। time the shackle was kept clasped by an
first the business was associated with
ordinary thumbscrew, but she got an
Brain is the propelling force of the world,
window-washing,
chimney-sweeping,
insight
to
the
way
it
worked,
aud
would
and
Hiought la die symbol of progress.
clothes cleaning, and waiting nnd tend­
unscrew it as fast as put on. Then we
ing. and the principal localities were
tried a small square nut, tho same that
Lindell Street, now Exchange Place.
atarr
Wells' Health Renewer, greatest remedy on
Franklin Avenue, and Brattle Street. you see on carnago bolts. This both­ earth for Impotence, leanness, sexual debilitv,
ered her for several weeks, when she
ELY’S
In time, however, it became a distinct
&lt;Vc.,$l. aldnigjdsts. Mich. Depot. JAMES E.
finally managed to get some sort of a
branch, and many of the bootblacks of catch on it, and. every mornin" she DAVIS A CO., Detroit Mich.
that day acquired a handsome independ­
ARWH COLOn
would bo loose. Then she got in the
Gossip ia the patent sign of vulgarity in
will be absorbed.
ence and became real estate holders.
way &lt;tf throwing the nut away and wq heart and mind. It Is as thoroughly vulgar as
nn chai Bin
The custom then was to call at the
could not find it at all.
Now, I have curiosity.
homes of the gentry, take the boots and
effectually cleanses
got this padlock, that works with a
the nasal pasaagea of
shoes, string them on long poles and
CATARRH OF THE BLADDER.
Catarrhal virus eanssmall spring on one side, and I am in­
carry them to their respectitv places of
Stinging, smarting, irritation ot the urinaty
tic healthy secretions
clined to think it will puzzle her to get pOMuges,
diseased discharges, cured by Bucbuallays
luflamatlon,
busings. polish aud return them nt dn
the best of it.”
•
pabia. gl, at druggists- Micb. Depot. JAS.
early hour the next day. These poles
•* She’s not ugly?”. “Not a bit; but E DAVIS &amp; CO.. Detroit, Mich.
would hold a dozen or more pains, and it
colds.
ipletely
we don’t like to go out in the morning
rn and
was a novel sight to see the ^bootblacks
Sadie West, of Iowa, has recovered 1150 dam, and find her wandering around appapa*s«ng to am! fro. The boots were al­ ; really laughing at you. She is as gen- egva of a man who paid ten cents to kiss her at HAY-FEVER
most invariably blacked on a tree last. । tie ns a lamb, and it would do you good a church fair and scratched ber nose.
Most of the blacking was done by the
i to see her take her bath every evening,
week or month, and the bills sent iu when he takes her from her quarters to
BUCKLES’S ARNICA SALVE.
were n curiosity in their way. But those the house for the night. She goes iuto
The best salve In the world fpr Cuts, Bruise*,
Un equaled For Cold, in the Head
were good old times. The boot-polisher the pond all over, diving and swimming Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter,
The Balm Las gained an envlabl- reputation where
of that day was an important factor in as if it was the best of fan.—St. Lonit Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Coma, and all »tM
known, displacing all other preparations.
Sklu Eruptions. .uni positively cures Piles. It
fashiontdde life, and the shine on a gen­ Globe-Democrat.
is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or Recognized ax u Wonderful Discovery.
tleman's boot marked bls social standing
money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. Fur
8 Jd by dru/rista at 50 eta. v On reccipl of price
as much as the cut and quality of his
Evil Results of Smoking.
will mail a package
Senn for circular conlalng
coat, tile style of his beaver, or the per­
full Information and reliable testlmouUla.
Buffalo has 1,157 factories and l.TUO saloons
ELY CREAM BALM CO., Owego, N. Y.
fection of his linciL—Motion Traveller.
My debut as a smoker was like every­
body's. My first pipe made me very ill* When a factory tries to gel ahead of a saloon
—A French chemist is said to have in­ and’ it was only by degrees that I man­ then comes the tug of war.
vented a process by which fabrics can aged to become a’ third-rate smokdr—
FEVER AND AGUE.
bo permeated with’a solution of tin. an that is, I disposed of eight or ten pipes
Cured without an operation or the Injure trusses
Are you troubled with Ague, Chills aud Fe­ enfllrt by Dr. .1. A. Sherman*. Method. Office 241
exceedingly thin layer being spread over * day without inconvenience.
Jlut
Bilious Fever, Remittent or Intermitting j| roadway New York. Ills book a Uh l’b&lt; tographthe cloth, rendering it waterproof and whenever I exceeded that average X ver,
Fever, Niaht Sweats or any disease that comes
protecting it against rough usage. The suffered from violent sick-headaches. from Malaria or disordered Liver and Hot
utility of the invention is not quite ap­ ushered in by indistinctness ot vison and Suns! If M», procure a bottle of Green's Ague
parent, for probably few people would numbness ot one side ot the face/the Conqueror, which is an acetic extract of strong
WORTH SENDING FOR.
Dr. J. U. Scbetida otPhiladelphia, has Ju»t n
care to don garments in which they longue and one arm, most often on the tonic roots, ccmblued with Sulphate of Mag­ .to.I
a
..T.1
II— f
&gt;V
nesia, etc., and postivcly contains no Quinine.
would bear a very close resemblance to left side. These preliminary symptoms Arsenic or other polaom&gt;. It purifies tbe blood .... j - ——
h m.vu uuukvv i(w, ftvetpmu
animated tin kettles and teapots, though lasted about ten minutes, after which elqanses the liver, spleen aud other secretive to an applicants. It contains valuable InfortratlOn
in tho preparation of theatrical dresses the headache came on in full force. The organs’so effectully that the chills will not re­ t.»r all who stii.poee ibetuselves afflirlcd with or
liable to, any diM
ot tho threat at langs. A4and even in the bright “ trimmings” in most refactory organ, however, was mv turn. We have never found any case of Fever dreDR. .f. II. eCBKNK * SON. Oft Arch St.,
and Ague it will not cure. Price. 50 cents and
which the female heart delights, lhe in­ stomach.
After haring snicked too •1.00 per tx&gt;Ule. One large bottle has cured as i'Ulhdclphla. It P. O: Mox XK4.
vention might find a limited application. much I used to experience the five in one family. Bold by all druggists and
15 Jan 83
symptoms
known as pyrosis
or dealers everywhere.
—Tho pastor of St Chrysostom’s Prot­ heartburn to a very trying extent,
Some New Dngiand (pan fish can be baited
estant Episcopal Church, in Philadel­ though as any alkaline water speedily
*
nBftlllQarecertainly beat having beeuvodophia, until lately possessed a silver dollar caused these phenomena to vanish I did with plug "tobacco or a red rag.
U naflndort-tal every Great WurWa Indus
which, for two yfears, had served as a not care to give up my tobacco.
/ AdminlMtrntors Male.
shining witness and detectire of impos­
About a yeuV ago, having smoked for
ture. During that time he offered the some months more than usual, I sud­
coin to 113 starving men who Jiad tried denly found myseir 'affected by a
auction, to the hujh/vt bidder, an
in vain to obtain work, according to peculiar and teriffiepain orer the region
their own (glib wail, if they would re­ of the heart; in abort, I hod a violent
&gt;lyh» are wholly unrivaled by any other wnpMNmove a heap of gravel from iiis back attack of angina pectoris,
Also tor easy pay menu.. New Jllnstraicd catalogue
ft put a
yard. One and all declined the job, stop to my smoking, as, though I have
DI B||ft ©This Company have o.mmrncrri tbo
r lARUOmsnufscturr of Uprlaht Grand Ih.no.
though it would not have taken more since tried once or twice, I have
than an hour. The 114th beggar ac­ always found my cigar or pipe detesta­
itee.ourt of Barry
. rirht. tlti« and
cepted the offer and received the dollar, ble, and, to sum up, am radically
'although he did little more than level converted. I did not wish to discuss
the heap by kicking the sand around the scientifically the niootiaic origin of my
yard-.
______
suffering, bat am sure they all sprang
from tbe same cause—excessive use of
■ptrnitc. SI, A.
IShS.
—New York claims a citizen jvho has tobacco. Degeneration of the cardiac
ROBERT B. OKBGU. Adnlnlsiratvr.
backed out of three different marriages muscle is often caused by tobacco.
Sc
just as tho minister was ready for bin&gt;I- long as the rest of his organism remain?
ness. A shot-gun has often held a faint­ in good working order the smoker only
hearted chap up to the rack.—Detroit experiences intermittent palpitation*
Free Frets.______
and the grave injury done the heart
Sunday morning comes in a house­
—“No pay, no paper,” Is the epigra- remains uuperceived until some trifling
hold; Sunday morning—and the father
‘ mom where ■matte way a-Yerk Wale paper -has rtf-re-­ ca»M brings into, rail ' **■
lisorders
minding its backward subscribers of ! ,bie “J
901]*’'/ produ
their obligntiona.
1 *onEe'1 UM of

F.

BOISE,

PAINT AND BRUSH

Call anil ExamineI
F. T. BOISE.

C

DIRECTIONS

RjPTURE

MASON &amp; HAMLIN

�“5

MACHINE.

fully verify it. Bright's dUe&amp;ee bos
The following article from tbe Dem- (UauDctivr
dhtinctive *yuiptoa&gt;i
symptoms of its own. (in­
ocrat and Chronicle, of Roebeater, N. j; deed, it often oevelo
developed without any
Y.» ia of ao striking a nature, and ema- । pain
~ whatever in the kidney* or their
vicinity.) but has the .symptoms of
Dates from oo reliable a source, that it neari
.
everr
otber
?fariy every other known complaint,
is herewith republished entire. It will Hundreds
“ccdrelx of
cf people
Ticr.pk die daili
daily.
burial* atd authorized by a physician’*
be found exceedingly Interesting.
To the editor of Democrat and Uronicle: certificate of "Heart Disease,” "ApoP^
x
y,
“
P«
,
aW«.
”
“
Spinal
Complaint”
ifiR:
—
My
motive*
for
the
publication
Introduced in France. It in imbedded in
of Mie most unusual statements which "Rbeumntis.ii),’’ "Pneumonia,” and oth­
iwtv. From the sides it slopes follow ye, first, gratitude for tbe fact er common complaints, when in reality
o the center, »o
to unable the that I have been saved from a mm t it was Bright's disease of the kidneys,
horrible death, and, secondly, a desire t ew physicians, and fewer people, real­
ize the extent of thia disease or its dan­
»tb«rniB Sally MorptBasd*?.
__
upon it. The estimated cost i* about $2 to warft all who read this statement gerous and insidious nature. It steals
against some of the moat deceptive in­
grand rapids
ivision.
fluences by which they have ever been into the system like a thief, manifests
—A new explosive hi reported to have surrounded. It is a fact that to-day its presence by the comrmoncMt symp­
been invented by a Viennese engineer. thousands of people are within a foot toms and fastens itself upon the consti­
•ST
It contain* neither sulphuric add, nitric of tbe grave aud they do Dot know it. tution before the victim is aware. It is
TKF
BTATI0N6.
acid, nor nitro-glycerine., Ito manufac­ To tell bow I was caught away from nearly as hereditary as consumption,
ture i* simple and without danger, and* just that position and to warn others finite as common and fully os fatal.
it preserves its qualities in tbe coldest against nearing it, are my objects in Entire families inheriting it from their
11 10
ancestors, have died, and 'yet none of
or
hottest weather. It can be made at tliis communication.
Stove Co.
Middleville-On the first day day of June 1881, I the number knew or realized the mys­
&lt;0 per cent, less oust than gunpow der.
terious power which wm removing
Of DUTKO1T.
lay
at
my
residence
in
the
city
sur
­
, —A Detroit man has, after a labor of rounded by my friends aud waiting for them. Instead of common symptoms
two years, perfected a machine to make my death. Heaven ouly knows the ag­ it often shows none whatever, but Improved and Finest Patterns of Cooks and Heaters in tbo
Ch*rlott. —market,
Zincs.
Stove Furniture. Ktc.
needles, which will usurp hand labor in ony I then endured, for words can brings death suddenly, and as such is
that direction, and which promises to never describe it. And yet, if a few usually- supposed to bo heart disease. PAINTS, VARNISHES, COLOB, BRUSHES.
WELL and CISTERN PUMPS.
Detroit-revolutionize the manufacture of that years previous, any one had told me As one who has suffered, and knows by
POINTS, PIPE. SINKS. ETC.
much used article. It is estimated that that I waa to be brought so low, and by bitter experience what ho says, I im­
CHAMPION X-CUT SA W8, AXES, ETO.
not les* than 2,000,000 of needles are so terrible a disease, I should have scoff­ plore every one who reads these words
Loral
o.a
Fxs’ic
ed at the idea. I bad always been un­ not to neglect the slightest symptoms Detroit White Lead Works Colors}—The Best In the Market.
used
per
day
throughout
the
United
Kxp. Pm*'&lt;s
BTATIOK8.
Ms*
Kidney difficulty. Certain agony
States alone. A company has been or­ commonly strong and healthy, had of
B(TILDENS HARD WA RF, SA8H. DOORS.
weighed over 900 pound* aud hardly and possible death will be the sure re­
p.m. 4*a&gt;"
ganized in Brooklyn.—N. F. Times.
GLASS, LOCKS, KNOBS, dr, dr.
knew, in my own experience, what sult of such neglect, and no one can
MS ’ 4OS
NAILS. IRON, AND STEEL.
—Milk when heated in closed vessels paifa and sickness were. Very many nftord to hazard such chances.
7 JO
*:50
12:30
7:M
7:12
I am aware that shell nn unqualified When In Need of the Best Grades of Hardware and Ma­
to a temperature of 75 degree* Centi­ people who will read this statement
»:35
5 45
nn 7:40
chinery
Call
and
S?e
Me.
statement
as
.this
coming
from
me,
grade
remains
sweet*
for
ninety-dx
reMize
at
times
that
they
are
unusually
9:01
B.00
1:44
hours. If the vessel is opened eourness tired and cannot account for it They known as I am throughout the entire
2:1 S
*:27 9 25
VcrEv.rf.i!!'..
400
,*23
NrahMIle.....
4:12
tn SJS
occur* after forty-eight hour*. If the feel dull and indefinite pains in various laudas a practitioner and-lecturer, will
z*55
9:07 IM*
4:1 S
milk ia heated in the open air it remains porta of the body and do not under­ arouse the surprise and possible ani­
9:37. 1OX9
4:27
4:00 10:05 11:05
sweet only twenty-four hour*.
A tem­ stand it. Or they are very hungry one mosity of the medical profession and
all with whom I am acquaint­
4JJ0 IC30 11 JO
7.10
perature of between 50 and 60 degrees day and entirely witbouf appitite tue astonish
»- m.
p.m. p.m. P
ed, but! make the foregoing statement
doe* not alter the taste of milk, and if it next. This is just the way I felt when based upon facts which I am prepared
Tbroajh Corabraand SlrapIncCar* to and fr
the relentless malady which bad fas­
bo
curdled
at
this
temperature
tho
curd
Grand Rapid* and Detroit. All train, connect
tened itself upon me first began. Still to produce nnd truths which I can sub­
------- r»-.„.. _..h Or-al xVcBUrn, Gri
i* flocculent.—Chicago Tribune.
I thought it was nothing; that prob­ stantiate to the letter. The welfare of
&gt;ra Hallway*.
—Helmuth Dneburg, of Barlin, has ably I hnu taken a cold which would those who may possibly be sufferers
U. B. LEDYARD.
M. &lt;J. SHOWN,
come to tbe conclusion that the side of soon pass away. Shortly after -this I ‘such ns I was, is an ample inducement
tho moon which is continually turned noticed a dull, and at times a neural- for me to take the step I have, and if I
from tho earth possesses air, water and gaic, pain iu my head, but as it would can successfully warn other* from the
life. His idea is that in the absence of ■come one day and be gone the next, I dangerous path in which I once walked
JgROOKS, MARSHALL k CO.
any centrifugal force duo to rotation on paid but little attention to it, How­ I am willing to endure all professional
and personal consequences.
her
own axis, the only centrifugal force ever. my stomach was out of order and
■
1 Proprietor*—. ■*
J. B. HEN ION, M. D.
acting upon the moon must bo that re­ my food often failed to digest, causing
sulting from her own motion round tho at times great inconvenience. Yet I
earth. This would tend to throw the had no idea, even as a physician, that
these things meant anything serious or
Pay the highest marketpricc for all kind* of
moon’* air and water to the side oppo­ that a monstrous disease was becoming
Hastings. Wic-li.
,
Grain and Produce, site to that which i* always toward the fixed upon me. Candidly, I thought I
earth.
was suffering from Malaria nnd so
----------- And sell-----------—The electric lamp, designed for doctored myself accordingly. But I
We fully realize the
eeds, Feed, Lime, Salt, Plaster, Stuc­ producing intermittent luminous sig­ got no better. .1 next noticed a peculiar
No more grown wheat will be ground at lhe
nals, is described in foreign journals. color aud oder about the fluids 1 was Nashville mill.
co, Hair, Pine Lumber, Lath
A cam motion is used, by which the passing—also that there were large
I have found it impossible to make good
and Shingles,
carbons are separated at each revolu­ quantities ono day and very little tiie flour for those who have good wheal if I grind
AT THE LOWEST LIVING PRICES. tion,and can be operated by clock-work next, and that a persistent froth and grist*
of grown wheat.
There i* no mill, old process or new process, That most all kinda of produce are bringing this fall, eo have
for regular signals, or by hand for ir­ scum appeared upon the surface, and a
sediment settled in the bottom. And
can prerent tbe fiour of different grists
regular ones. According to the prefer­ yet I did not realize my danger, for, that
from mixing together.
bought a large stock of all kinds of
red mode, ths rim of the homogeneous indeed, seeing these symptoms contin­
The Ide* of giving a man the fiour from his
car wheel, as it is called, is cast from ually, I finally became accustomed to own grist without mixing in fiour from other
Mnelted scraps of wrought iron and them, and my suspicion wholly disarm­ grist* is ail gammon. It can’t l&gt;c done, and
steel. When “set,” it is taken from ed bj the fact that I had no pain in the never was done, and any miller knows that
is trying to deceive his’ custoncrs when he
the mold and placed in another, the affected organs or in their vicinity. he
claims to do it.
center piece cast of best wheel iron, and Why I should have been so blind 1 can­
It is even Impossible to even e&gt;vate grown
tho two metals firmly wedded together. not 'inderstand.
and good wheal alternately without mixing
There is a terrible future for all phy­ them more or less. If you doubt this, ask the
—N. Y. Sun.
sical neglect, and impending danger elevator men about it; then how much more
And are selling at prices that will astonish you.
always brings a person to his senses they s ill become mixed in a mill where the
PITH AND POINT.
even
though it may then be too late. 1 wheat and flour pass through so many devaTeeth Extracted Wlfhout Palp.
conveyors, bolt*, machineries, etc. No
tried to overcome it. And. oh ! how tors.
—A Tennessee paper announce*: hard I tried ! 1 consulted the best med­ miller can make good flour of grown wheat.
A man who takes grown wheat to tbill may get
OfflceOpen Day &amp; Evening. “Subscribers sent to Jail for the summer ical
Hastings, October 4, 1882.
skill in the land. I visited all the much better floar than bls wheat would made
season can have their papers mailed prominent mineral springs in America because he is apt to get some one’s good wheal.
regularly by notifying us of the change and traveled from Maine to Californa. And lhe man who takes good wheat to a mill
when
they
grind
all,
kinds
wilt
l«
Just
as
apt
to
of
address.
’
’
Still 1 grew worse. No two physicians
A. BARBER, M. D..
get flour from bad wheat. The only wav to
—More than half the newspaper* in agreed us to my malady, due said I make good flour for all is to grind nothing' hut
lIIOMOEOI’ATniC
the world are printed in the English was troubled with spinal irritation ; good wheat, and that is Just what I propose to
another,
nervous
prostration
;
another,
do from this time on.
language; that is to say, in suoh En­
I won’t make flour for anv one that 1* not rf\
glish as the writer happens to have on malaria; another, dyspepsia; another,
Ai:«T£U YJITH THE GEOGRAPHY OF THIS COUNTRY. WILL
heart disease; another, general debil­ good enough to sack up nnd put Into the mark- \JI
hand.—Louisville CourierJournal.
ity ; another, congestion of the base eL There is not a particle of difference be­
Office first door cast of Opera House, and
—They don’t have nuns out West of the brain : nnd so on through a long tween tbe flour 1 put into tbe market and that
near residence on corner of Washington and
Blate Streets, Nashville, Mich.
A cloud just saunters up snd examines a list of common diseases, the symptoms which I give in exchange for grists, or that
I make from grists when I grind them.
town and then collapses right over it. of all of which I really had. In this which
Those haring good wheat can get good flour
Nobody escapes but the newspaper way several years nassed during all of j here, an i those having grown wheat must pat- rA
bush
reporters and the book agents. — Atlanta which time I was steadily growing ronin some other mill.
Ill
*
“TO lOBS’
worse. My condition had teally beDated Nashville Sept. 30th.
Constitution.
ome pitiable. The slight symptoms at
—It isn’t the value We care for when first experienced were developed into
a neighbor wrings the neck of a chicken terrible and constant disorders—tbe
and flings the body over the fence. little twigs of pain hod grown to oaks
VUSVILU, KOH.
What hurts is the fact that ho ha, no of agony. My weight had been reduc­
dog which can be poisoned by way o! ed from 207 to 180 pounds. My life was
a tortue to myself and friends. I could '
getting even.—Detroit Free Press.
JIKEHOLSE,
retain no food upou my stomach, nnd ,
—Thor sst by ths tower jf Pl**,
-MUST BE—.
lived wholly by injections. I was a •
And bo did what he eoold co pil»*;
living
mass of pain. My pulse was |
L. P. Cole, Proprietor.
uncontroliabh..
In my agony I fre- j
Then atuck out hl* arm* for to aqule**.
quently fell upon the floor, convulsive- I
—Louirville Courier ■ Journal.
rtimen. plraanr* xekrra. or pirnlc parties
—When you find a newspaper an­ ly clutched the carpet, and prayed for
ilealli. Morphine had little or noeffect '
*l»o fishing tarkla, ball nouncing that “Miss Arabella Dash, the
plain-looking, commonly-educated and in deadening the pain. Foi; six days
passably-tempered daughter of CoL and nights 1 hud the deatb-nremouiQLEMEKT BIITB,
tory hiccoughs constantly. My urine
Dash, is about to wed.’’ eto., you will was filled with tube casts aud albu­
find
an honest journalist—who will get men. I was struggling with Bright's
TO HAVE THE JOB DONF
Attorney at Law.
the bounce within twenty-four hours.
Disease of tho Kidneys in its last stages, j
MfSAS CITV
While suffering thus I received a call i
—“Vy. Adolph,” said Mo. Felderstelderberger, at Long Branch, “you from my pastor, the Rev. Dr. Foote, j
hef been helped tree dimes to dat recter of BL Paul’s Church, of this city, j
*herrv pies, und you vill be sicks!” I felt that it was our last interview,but I
“Meffer mind,” say* Mr. Felderstelder- in the bourse of conversation he men- j
berger, “I bay four tollar mlt a Uy and tioned a remedy of v. hich I hud heard 11 UuUgl lia.11IIIUOC laUlu, 11 Acin-tho Great Central Lino, affords to travelers, by reason of Its unrivaled
much but bad never used. Dr. Foote
wj*raphloal position, the shortest and best route between the East, Northoast and
Adolph is entitled to a whole pie, any­ detailed
Attorney A Counsellor,
to me the many remarkable .......
.
। Southeast, and tho West, Northwsst and Southwest.
how.”
cures which hnd come under his obser -4 nd desiring to increase my prosperity
I
It ta literally and strictly true, that Its connections are all of tho principal linos
—“ We have plenty of fresh salt aii ration, by means of this remedy, and
affording the public
W
roa J b«*we®r’ the Atlantic and tho Pacific.
Zl
Bv a* main lino and branches It roach*® Chicago, Joliet, Peoria, Ottawa,
here; even our lady boarders wear sol­ urged me to try it. Asa practicing phy­
JJL.ACK A SO.V,
kn
Salle,
Geneseo, Molino and Rock Island, In Illinois j Davenport, Muscatine,
itaires in theirears,” said an enthusiastic sician and a graduate of (he schools, I
"DTCJrn TRT/^T&gt;TZ'
Keokuk, Knoxville, Oskaloosa, Fairfield, Dos Moines, West Liberty,
seaside landlord. “Don’t say so,” said cherished the prejudice both natural 1rfiwwx*
AXXXl
WvlUk lR Iowa City, Atlantic, Avoca, Audubon, Harlan, Guthrlo Center and Council Bluffs,
the press guest. “Have you a salt and common with all regular practi
f
in Iowa ; Gallatin, Trenton, Cameron and Kansas City, In Missouri, und Leaven­
rheum in the house?” “Ye*, sir,” said tioners, and derided the idea of any
In IU IlK I knr, empfo,..!
Q) ”^21^75" “
""a
&gt;»’"•
medicine
outside
tbe
regular
channels
;
the landlord quickly; “a humorous cor­
iHimg uie
die lease
least oeneucui.
beneficial. no
So solicitsolicit- i
‘ *
respondent has it just now.”—Chicago Iwung
on*,
however,
waa
Dr.
Foote,
thnt
I
Monuments, Tomhrtones, Mantles, 4a.,
Tribune.
finally promised I would waive my 1
1
Hutlng* MiaK.
—Teacher—“What is a score?” Pu- prejudice and try tbe remedy he *o I
As it Is familiarly called, offers to travelers all the- advantages and comforts
Whom I can recommend as an
Incident to a smooth track, safe bridge*. Union Depots at «U con noct I ng point*.
highly recommended. I liegau its use I
yyiLLIAM JONES,
Fast*Express Trains, composed of COMMODIOUS, WELL VENTILATED, WELL
cricket-match.”
Teacher—“No, no; on the 1st day of June and took it ac- i
HEATED. FINELY UPHOLSTERED and ELEGANT DAY COACHES ; a line of the
what I mean is, how much does a score cording to directions. At first it sick­
I MOST MAGNIFICENT HORTON RECLINING CHAIR OAKS e-er built: PULLMAN**
ened
me;
but
this
I
thought
was
a
good
|
signify numerically. What idea does it
“1 latest designed and handsomest PALACE SLEEPING CARS, and DINING CARS
-give you? That is to say, if I were to sign for me in my debilitated Vondition
. that are acknowledged by press and people to be tbs FINEST RUN UPON ANT
-Jj ROAD IN THE COUNTRY, and In which superior meals are served to travelers at
tell you that I had a score of horses, I continued to take it: the sickening
•|the low rate Of SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS EACH.
J. M.WOOD
what would you think?”
Pupil— sensation departed and I was able to
"j
THREE TRAINS each way between CHICAGO nnd the MISSOURI RIVER.
food npou my stomach.
In a
“Please, marm, I should think you wm retain
m
TWO TRAINS each way between CHICAGO and MINNEAPOLIS ana ST. PAUL.
few days I noticed a decided change
stuffin’ ma.”
■J
via tho famous
for the better a* also did my wife and FOUNDER and MACHINIST
friends. My hiccoughs censed and I
experienced lt«a P*in than formerly. I
Vukrlll*. Wticb.
I Chinese Compositor.
id Direct Lino, via Seneca «nd Kankakee, has recently
was so rejoiced at this improved condi­ J-JEiVRY ROE. Profrixtoh
that, upon what I had believed but
■HEIL in SD1GIGAL sniTiun ’ A Chinese compositor can not sit at tion
his case ar our printer* do, but must a few days before was my dying lied, I
walk from ono case to another con­ vowed, in the presence of my fniuily
11.
and friends, should I recover I would
stantly, as the character* needed corer both publicly and privately make
R. R. CABLE,
E. ST. JOHN
known this remedy for the good of hu­
manity, wherever and whenever I had
i an opportunity. I also determined that
CHICAGO.
I would give a course of lectures in the
•eript the Chinese printer will waits Corinthian Academy of Music of this
up and down the room for a few mo­ city, stating in full the symptoms arid
menta and then go down stairs for a almost hopelcssneM of my disease and
line Of lOWm*
Than h* -tlru t.ha the remarkable means by' which I have
been saved. My improvement was :FRESH FISH and POUXTRl
constant from that time, and in less
IN THZ in IjEABOy
than three months I hod gained 2*
pound* iu flesh, become entirely free
Irom pain and I believe I owe my life
aud present condition wholly to "War­
, V-rounrT
IT T r) ■
— -- .1 uTvrrVtirr,
T ~ -■ &lt; . — -. - .rtir
1, Mr. n rmiT
sttttx
reniedy which I used,
Since my recovery I have tboroughlv

D

&gt;PeniiiHiilai-

’HjStovea.

LT

By Buying Your Dry Goods

Nashville Elevator!

LEGGE DWHEAT

W. S. GOODYEAR &amp; CO.,

EiBErienced, Reliable, aid Responsible.

DRY GOODS. FANCY GOODS, NO­
TIONS, BOOTS and SHOES,
and CARPETS,

A. H. WINN, Dentist.

BEST SET GUM TEETH $10.00

W. S. GOODYEAR &amp; CO.

Physician and Surgeon.
,

BOOT AND SHOE MAIER,

John M. Roe. —

H

Shod,

ALWAYS BEST

0

SKILLFULLY. 3

Recovnizin? These Facts

American and Foreign Marble,

Chas. Middleton,

A No. 1 Workman.

mGK'CACO’

Rock ,sland &amp; Pacific R’ksoY,~

“GREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE,”

3

DENTISTS.

ALBERT LEA ROUTE,

MEAT MARKET,

U1

Fresh and Salt Meats,

Swled Ham and SimWers.

AT THE NEWS OFFICE.

Lard, by the lb. or barrel,

re-investigated the subject of kidriev
i ffirii 11 nnrl

the truths developed art astounding. I i
therefore ^tate, deliberately, and u* a

SatiAiaction Guaranteed,
HE.XKY ROE

�■ICflIGAM JIEWM.

been found in .Tuscola eounty
lUMiiul dollar fire at Lowell.
&gt;tt«and dollar fife at Lawton.
■ Forty-two ca*e« of pink-eye at Battle
Creek.
:
’
A Canuck farmer near Minden, Mich,
murdered hi* wife.
Jackson han a new paper mill. One
macliinn &lt;x»t $16,000.
A county Prohibition ticket has been
nominated in Lenawee
L
Montcalm county has an independ­
ent people* county ticket.
Two Sand Lake men were jailed for
■mutty talk on a railway traiu.
Cereaeo, Calhoun county, has n flourialiing juvenile temperance society.
Arnold, the Battle Creek oaloonist.
-was fined $100 and costs. He wants to
•ell out.
Four persons were killed and one
seriously injured by a fall of rock in a
Michigan mine.
A suit for seduction against the ven­
erable Henry Fralick bolds th© boards
at Grand Rapid*.
Railroad smJHihup on the F.y&amp; P. M.
railroad in teeregion of Bjg Rapids,
(inly nine freight catK T
ThompaoX a railroad section boss
of Portland, run over and killed bv a
freight train Sunday night.
From all quarters comes the news
that the attendance at campaign meet
ings is discouragingly slim.
Mra. A. Hill of Greenville took arse­
nic and died because her husband
wouldn’t take her to the fair.
The Michigan grand lodge of Good
Templars meets at Lansing Tuesday
the 17th. Special rates on railroads.
One hundred nnd eleven is the num­
ber of 'potatoes Arnold Phelps of
Convis, Calhoun county, got from one
hill.
.
Near Hart, a stranger chloroformed a
boy, and when he came to, be found
himself stretched across tbe railroad
track.
,
The shoe manufacturing and cooper­
ing business have been discontinued at
the state prison, tbe contracts being
worked out.
New directories of Battle Creek, Mar­
shall, Albion, Bedford, Bellevue, Ce­
resco, Augusta and Climax will be pub­

WAsstxGTOX. D. C., Oct. 7.1882.
t&gt; Democratic CedgreocbBal cambcomgrittoe baa very flattering re­
ports from Ohio, some of the leaden in
that state claiming that tbc Democrats
will not only carry tbe state, but will
elect aeyen certainly, and posstbly ten
members of Congress. Since the nom­
ination of Cleveland in New, York' by
tbe Democrats and the admission by
tbe New York Republican newspapers
that bis candidacy is a strong one, the
committee is advised that gam in tbe
Congressional delegation will be made
in that state. The same ad vices are re­
ceived from Pennsylvania. These sev­
eral flattering reports inspire Secretary
Thomtaion, of the committee, with an
abounding confidence that the Demo­
crate will certainly have a majority in
the Fbrty-eight Congress, which will
enable the party to control its organiz-.
ation. Certain it is that other leading
Democrats are of the same opinion,and
there is already speculation as io who
will be elected speaker, clerk and set

‘‘Morgo-Thorno
oom po-men to
correspondent of tbe Banner, “Lend
me your ears.” Allay your fears, shed
no tears. Plagiarist! Nix.
The sermon by Bev. R. A. Carnahan
at the church last Sunday was well re­
ceived. Rev. Byers the new pastor of
the Assyria circuit will preach there
next Sunday at 11 o’clock a. m., at
Quimby 8 p. m.. and Morgan in the
evening.
In a drive of twenty-five miles to­
wards Grand, Rapids, tbo best field of
wheat by far, to be seen, is a summer
fallow of 25 acresone mile south of this
place belonging to Wesley N0171s. It
is evidence of good farming or superior
•oil, or perhaps both.
This autumn* proves to be a dull one
to those who are in the habit ot "cooning,” as melons are unusually scarce.
The attention of a few has been turned
to "subtracting” honey to a certain ex­
tent. It would be well for such to
leave their dog at home, and when they
leave the premises to keep erect.
Item Izek.

We made addition to our sale room to double our stock, and

One solid sale room 250 long by 22 wide, filled to overflowing with

Carpets and Oil Cloths,
Cloaks and Dolmans,
Ladies’ Cloaking,
Dress Goods,
-

Dress Flannel,
Notions,

Trunks and Satchels,
Scarlet Underwear,
Gents’ Furnishing Goods
Boots and Shoes,
.

.

Clothing,
50 Cent Tea.

Hats and Caps.
Wall Paper,
Groceries. -

Now is the time that mothen should be preparing

We start Cotton Flannel at 8c; a better one at 10c; an extra heavy one at 12 l-2c.
wool and Shaker Flannel Cheap.

All

geant-at-arms. For the speakership,
EATON COUNTY.
of course, ex-Speaker Randall will be a
candidate. Should Pennsylvania go
Olivet has three daily mails.
Democratic this fall it would plart? him
A large stock, and plenty of that 50c Tea.
Board of Supervisors this week.
‘in a very commanding position to win.
Circuit commences next Monday.
His chief competitor will be Hon. John
It is a pleasure to acknowledge to our many customers and friends our success since we have
The Valley House, Charlotte,, has
8. Carlisle, ot Kentucky, whom it Is closed up.
put the knife to high prices and sell goods cheaf&gt; for cash, and see our store crowded with cus­
thought will get the bulk of the south­
Grand Ledge has a couple of new tomers who come to us for style, durability and reasonable prices.
ern vote. The nomination of ex-Clerk store buildings erecting.
ESTCash paid for Butter and Eggs.
of the House Adams by the Democrats
In the Bellevue schools, there is not
of the 9th district of Kentucky puts a scholar over 17 years old.
him out of the race for clerksphip, as
Under Sheriff Peterson has been ache will no doubt be elected to Congress quitted of the charge of bastardy.
Tbe most prominent candidate spoken
Examination of teachers for third
Here’s a Pair of Go’s.
of for tbe place is Representative Mar grade certificates, nt Charlotte tbe 27.
tin, of Delaware, who will be strongly
Rev. Ira. D. Hall was ordained to tbe
supported if the speakership goes to’a Baptist ministry at Eaton Rapids last From Pomeroy’s Great West Denver, Colorado.
Inna late number of tbe A’cic«f at
candidate west of the Alleghnnios. week.
Nashville. Mich.,are two new advertise­
Mr. Martin declined a Congressional
Club dances at Eaton Rapids, the ments, as follows:
rgnomination. Should Ohio go Demo­ only Sufficiently wicked place ih th&lt;
NOTICE.
cratic ex-Sergeant-at-arms Thompson county.
Woodland, Sept. 37th, 1882.
.
To whom It may concern.—I hereby wam
will be a candidate for his old place.
E. P. Mills, once of Brookfield, drop­ you
not to trust or harbor any of my family at
He is managing the pending Ohio can­ ped dead while out riding near Olivet, ray expense. As I shall pay no debts of
their contraction from date hereof.
vass,-and if he succeeds in winning the last week.
PaTKICK CtfXNIXOHAM.
state his claims for his old place will
Being engaged in clothing and lumber business in Big Rap­
Mias Esther McMore will teach the
no doubt receive just consideration. To scholars of district No. 1, nt Kalamo
NOTICE.
ids, have concluded to dispose of by private and auction sale
look on the other side of tbe picture, this winter.
Whereas My wife, Binlie Bogardus, has
left ray bed and board without just cause or
the officers of the Republican Congres­
Grand Ledge is a fast town, It has provocation, thte is to warn ail perrons from the entire stock
sional committee laugh nt the idea of a gambling hell and will soon have a harboring or trusting her on my account as I
shall pay no debts of her contracting sfter this
the Democrats securing the next House race course.
date.
of Representatives. They are willing
Charlotte ii^f trying to start a tele­
Dated, Sunfield,. Sept. 29, 1882.
toconceed a slight loss in Ohio, but phone exchange, and with some pros­
2-7.
Ren mt 8. Booabdus.
feel confident they will more than over pects of success.
Good for Patrick! When a gentle­
lished soon.
man
’
s
family
gets
so
low that he has to
balance
it
by
expected
gains
iu
the
Rev. Dr. Bruce, recently pastor of the
The Marshall Statesman says Potter advertise the entire caboodle of them
of the* Hawk is dreamer,—a railroad m a bad lot, he is justified in giving
Congregational church at Bedford, is south.
A circular was issued in all of the de­ dreamer, as it were.
publicity to his grief nnd proving that
going.to lecture for the National Prohi­
partments to-day granting a leave of
One hundred nnd eighty public schol­ be alone is the one altogether lovely,
bition Alliance.
as tho law cannot compel
A man near Flint is shipping Indians absence for ten days to such of the em­ ars at Eaton Rapids were neither ab­ especially
him to pay any debtaof their contrac-j
to Europe for the purpose of exhibiting ployes as desired to go to their homes sent nor tardy last month.
tion that he is not lawfully bound to
the noble red men in all their native to vote. It was stated that this leave
Miss Minnie Roe, of tho Bellevue post pav, and which he cannot escape merewould not be subtracted from the an- office, has gone to Battle Creek to live,
glory, It
it pays.
glory.
.
need»i'vv'llich nieans a ™ving °f 30
&amp;0 per cent to the purchaser,
Tbe Central Michigan fair was a nual vacation of thirty days, and it and Miss Kate Holden takes her place. sympathy. For Mra. Bogardus to leave !
great succes. Over 32,000 people were seems to be very popular on this ucS. W. Gibson, of Bellevue, took eight her husband now that pancake season
SALE TO COMMENCE FIRST DAY OF OCTOBER.
present. The receipts were $9,000, count. Every employe that spare mon- first and three second preimums on is hovering near, and when the dying
Vmbera of the year make bed-fellows
$2,000 more than expenses.
| «y for a trip home will take advantage
] fruit and vegetablesat the county fair, doubly desirable, is a blow at the rights
BEAD THE
Wm. Harrison killed by a freight 1 of tbe election leave, as it is called nnd I
such as are impecunious will be.assistA family named Riddell left Char­ of man that the general public should
train collision at Flint on the C. &amp; G.
resent. When a wife leaves the bed I
ed bv their state associations.
Where : lntto some years ago and went to Lar- j and tbe board, and the shingles, and
T., and aifrther run over and horribly
the contest appears at all close lists *«“&gt;«, Neb. They returned the other the empty cupboard of her husband
mutilated there by an F. &amp; P. M. train.
without j. c. or p., she deserves to be
have been prepared of the employes day. battered and ragged.
AND BUY, BUY, BUY. .
Chief Engineer Drake, of the Cold­
credited to the state in whicliythe fight I Jas- Dangle Charlotte clothier, gave elected coroner and compelled to sit-on
water fire department, has been ac­
her own remains and sing songs of &lt;
a .. -.o
4 -A r rvi
is to be made, and agents aro careful to n »»PPer to
th®
mechanics and work- praise to the loving lord she has left in JeailS
’
”
dis,
©3.75,
4.50,
Satinett Suitfe, 5.00. 6.00, 7.00
olllts,
$3.
1
0,
4.01), 5.00.
D.uV,
quitted of. the charge of setting fire to
go through and cheek off each voter I men on
~ u new block
U’ U of his lost week,
'
the lurch. Birdie dear, don’t come this ■
‘’s Cotton Worsted
•
Men
Suits. 4.50, 6.00, 6.00.
the armory there, and another n_an
way! You must boa h-b-b-b—a bold,
because
they
got
it
done
so
quick.
And
and assertain bis intentoins. Such a j
has been arrested for it.
bad Birdie Bogardus! But for this ad­ Union Cassimere, Suits, $6, 7, 9.
All-wool Cassimere Suits,
that’s the kind of a man ho is.
Charles Marks of Flint invented a thorough canvass not has been made for
vertisement
of your
real character
yon
, w r., ui r
vemsement
oi your rent
cuaracier
you
J; W . Gladding, harness maker at (.quJj |iave come to Denver and bought
$9, 10, 12, 13. All-wool Worsted Suits, $10, 12, 14.
car coupling and took it to England many years, and those who decline to
Charlotte, has sold to J. M. Darron &amp; printing office, City Hall, Opera
where he took the prize in a great com­ go home and vote are marked men.
Beaver Suits, 312, 13: 14.
Pilot^uits, 10.50, 12, 14
and Wm. Smith. His health won’t al- I House, new' smelter or the Exposition
petition held by railway experts. That At any rate, the campaign managers jo* him to work, .nd iu that report
•' 100 pairs Pants at &gt;1.
“ S-’wX^
cannot
be
charged
with
lack
of
zeal,
offsets the Hillsdale regatta business.
he’s like u jjpod many other men.
Union Cassimere Pants, $2 to 3.
but now, you big, bold, bad Birdie, 100 Vests, 60c to &gt;2.
Tbe biggest eel ever taken in Central aud the army of employes in the de­
Henry Boody lived for fortv-six your wings are clipped and you are in
Wool Cassimere Pants, $3, 3.50, 4.
Michigan was caught near Jackson last partments must vote or lose their im&gt;8- years within seven miles of Charlotte the
nine wince.
boles.
.
., |
jc uiuv
week. It was th e feet long and weigh­ itlous.
How thankful all good CiirMtuui. in BOys’ Clothing:
School Suits, 6 to 14, $4 to 6; All-wool
iia labyrinth of
ot the
tbo country are
ale that
J
°
_
.
’
_
i
President Arthur seems to be living and was never in the place but twice. this
ed 10J pounds. Two ponds near Jack­
He bad never been to Lansing, but Brothers Cunningham nnd Bogardus
Cassimeres, $5.50 to 7.
son aud Grass Lake fairly swarm with a sort of go-as-you-please life at once to Jackson, and never was on the have thus forewarned the public. Now
Alexandria Bay, setting at defiance all
Boys’ Suite, 11 to 16 : Union CassimereB, $4.87 to 10.
eels.
A
they
unite,
wash
their
own
socks,
cook
cars. .He died recently.
their flap-jacks, and in one bed
with
Joseph Thompson of Arbela, Tus­ therulesof successful.fishing and let­
____
mok
’—
ni! Youths’ Suits, 32 to 36 : . Union Cagsimeres; 5.75 to 6, 11;
If the republicans don’t manage the nice clean sheets of their own j-cola County, reports the second crop ting the government of this great and canvas of Eaten county better than
■loan1-5Atbe
11A !j
clMpedJO eacli’other’s »rni«. ,leeD
Worsted Suits, 7, 8, 9, 10.
glorious
republic
take
the
best
possible
of apples on some of his trees; also
they
did
at
Bellevue,
when
Mrs.
Baxter
"11&lt;i * °
Worsted and Cassimere Overcoats, 5, 6, 8, 10. 100 odd Coats
that the buckleberry bushes in the care of it itself. It begins to look as was to speakEhere last week, the Char­ manhoodP °f
though
he
was
of
the
opinion
that
the
I
swamp near his farm are in full bloom
at 3, worth 5.
Detroit has a young men’s social
lighting wouldn’t strike again in his lotte Leader will take the “pap” next
again.
year and Doc. Patterson won’t change club.
Women’s and Children’s Shoes at 50 cts on the Dollar. Men’s
One man was killed and four parties quai'er and he might as well enjoy
his title to Senator.
Grand Haven Is to have a trotting
Boots at the same.
.were seriously injured in the jam along himself while he has the opportunity at
Frank N. Green of Walton, donated park.
the road to the Ionia county fairgrounds the expense of the government. [This
All Yard goods, including Prints, Shirtings, Demins. Ticks,
$10
to
the
agricultural
society to en­
Peter
Mahoney
drowned
in
Reed
’
s
is
rather
unfair
to
the
President,
whose
last week. A Democratic congressman
Stripes, Etc., clased at actual cost.
courage them to build a few cattle Lake.
from Mississippi delivered tiie address extended vacation is necessitated by
Marshall has a young men’s Repub­
a kidney disease that seriously threat­ stalls, which they did ; and then he in­
at the fair there.
sisted on paying rent for two of them, lican chib.
ESTThis is a genuine dosing sale. All kinds of country­
The Republican representative con­ ens his life.—Ed.]
Oxford had a baseball tournament
The Supreme Court of the United just the same ns the fellows who didn’t
vention at Jackson, last week, tried all
produce taken at full and satisfactory prices. Parties indebted
this week, with $150 in prizes.
day to find n candidate, but in vain, so States will meet on the 9th. There are donate a cent.
Jonathan Dean Sr. of Kalamo now
The Kalamazoo Wagon Co. took the either by note or account are requested to call and settle be­
they finally let tbe job out to a commit- 038 cases on the docket, among them
’tee and went home. Michigan politics | two involving the civil rights an^elec- eighty-seven years of age, is perhaps highest prize nt the great fair held re­ fore I close for good in Nashville.
as
old
a
mason
as
there
is
in
tbe
state.
cently at Kansas City.
tion laws. The Secretary of the in­
seem to be very flat this season.
terior has decided to reopen for settle­ He belongs to Union Lodge, No 34, of
The Hon. Edward 8. Lacey is doing
Geo. B. King’s boy made a bonfire
ment a tract of about 10,000.000 acres of Canada, and was mode a mason there splendid campaign work at the bead of
near a straw stack, on his farm, three
rarstore building for tale or rent
agricultural lands in Northern Dakota. iu June, 1817, having just arrived at the state committee, snd his constitu­
■miles west ot Parma. The stack, two
ents should see to it that his minority
The public debt statement for Septem­ the age of twenty-on©.—Charlotte in increased. Every Republican in bis
barns, thirty tons of bay, farming
ber, issued Monday, ahows a decrease Leader.
district owes it to the good cause to
utenmls and a horse were burned. Tbe
D. B. Ainger, postmaster at Wash­ work a little harder for the candidate
of $14,806,947. General McDowell re­
Farmers Mutual Insurance Co. grill
port* to tbe War Department from San ington and proprietor of Charlotte Re­ who surrenders his own interests for
the good ot tbe st ate .—■Detroit Tribuac.
foot the bill.
Francisco that Indian matters appear publican is now at home aud will de­
In digging a well near Detroit, work­
vote his time to editing his paper until
to be qniet on the Arizona frontier.
men struck a volume of odorless ‘ilNaMhviUc markets.
At bill new store, is ready for customers with a larger stock
the close of the campaign. D. B. wields
Acnvsr.
-luniinoting gns which flows steadily.
a sharp and vigorous pen, and our fu­
oi
KviewMie was struck near there some
sion friends can expect some telling
The first round between the Demo­
jrear* ago, and it is surmised that the
blows from that quarter.
crat*
and
Republicans
was
fought
lection contains an outcropping of tbe
The W. C. T. U. and R. R. club of
in Ohio, last Tuesday, resulting in a
Canada oil fields.
.
Charlotte have arranged to have the
In his speech to the convention on bad, bad eye for the Republicans. The
Democrats elect their entire state tick­ “Lever” course of lecture# delivered
Than ever before.
Tuesday, Got. Blair spoke in deprecathere during the fall and winter. At
aremi* of the river and harbor bill, et. fifteen Congressmen and moat of the
least eight, and probably ten lectures
county
tickets.
That
this
election
will
iu extravagant appropriation, and
will be given, all advocating constitu­
dtarged it to the IJemoernt*. When have a decided influence upon tbe
tional prohibition. Conroe tickets $1.
Burr lauded it at Union ball iu the election* in mher states—cannot be
The speakers i«giurod are Hon. Geo.
evening, he turned to the Governor denied aud many goso far as to predict
W. Baine, of Ky.. J. J- Hinchman, of
who occupied a chair on the platform, that the next Congress will U DemoMo.. Prof. Geo. E. Fo*ten Hon. Geo.
and Mid, "my ftieud Blair will not say
Woodford, of Iowa, Jeoe Harper, Dr.
aulwcribe for

SOTST. *

CLOSINGOUT

Clotlxixs-g'

AT WHOLESALE COST

YVliolesale Price List,

WM. A. AYLSWORTH.

GEO.W. FRANCIS

IF YOU WAIT TO MOW

public library will open a public read­ ala. Mid Mt*. Hout, of Boston. Po*r-‘
ing room in connection abort Noy. bly lecture* by John E. Finth and Dr.
Pool will Ik added to the euuree.
1st. GoedtUcg.

hashmi&gt;0

Particulars Next Week.

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                  <text>J

ORNO STRONG. I
EntTOB *WU P»OTB1»TO».

I

VOLUME X.

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun.
NASHVILLE, BARRY CQ., MICH., SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1882

true T» WASHVILLE.
LIFE I*

«»&lt;I Mwrie C. Potter. Pariw Eddr. E.
Dean B B wiHiooo, Cbw.
And Her Environ!.
Williams. C. E. Matteson, Martin A.
-The NMbville Hooae eEjoyi • new Fay, AnnaEbz, Emma L. Newell. Elner Moore, KateP. Campbell, Henry
1 Gaskill, Alfred Hare, Wm. Pratt, Geo.
—Jack Frost visited promiscuously •
' Mosey third grades.
Tuesday night.
—It was rumored here this week that
—The fire laddies hate hung n tire
' A. M. Flint had been put on the fusion
bell in the cupola of the town hpnre.
ticket for prosecutor iu place of Silas
—The galvanized iron cornice for the Stafford, but it seems from investigation
Francis and bank block is up and looks that be has only been taken off the
well.
,
—The potato;&gt; market baa been good

'

—Judge Killen hoa been elevgted to
a seat on the bench—tlie work bench at
Baah’s shoe shop.
—W. L. Paiker haa sold is honw and
lot. corner Statu and Sherman .8t«.
to Henry Hickman of Vermontville.

__Geo. Francis haa sold hia old store
to C. L. Walrath. who will repair the
same and rent It to hh brother Herb,
for a harness shop.
—The Nashville fire department htw
decided to have a grand ball about
Thursday evening. Sov. 2.
Battle
Creek music is talked of.
—H. L. Blair did his laat job of thresl. ing for Chas. H. Brady, on Wednesday,
last, when he threshed 30 acres of
wheat, or 450 bushels, in 8:15.
—G. A. Truman has his telephone in
fine running order, and George tlie
younger says ittakea the cake right off
from the pantry shelf; as it were.
—"Do you eec any grapes, Bob ?”
"Yes, but there is dogs.” "Big dogs.
Bob?” "Yes, very big.” "Then come
along—three are not ours, you know.”
—The News has accumulated from
its exchange this week, a large lot of
"campaign supplements” which it is
willing to dispose of cheap—yes, very
cheap.
• — Capt. Allen gave a good audience
one of hia characteristic speeches
Thursday evening. It was good, ear­
nest, and powerful. A. 8. Foote acted
as chairman of tlie meeting.
—The editor of the Hatting Hanner
not only edits that sheet in pretty good
shape, but finds time to examine scores
of school ma’ams and occasionally
counts as many as W) beans.
' —“Talk about pumpkins." ejaculat­
ed Alex. Price. "Why, I raised one two
men couldn’t lift on to a lumber wagon
and I was compelled to get the stone­
boat to draw it to the house.”

| TERMS; $150 per Yb«
I Credit Svbscriptiovs $1.78,

ticket for commissioner, Wolter Web­
ster taking his place.

—A very large family reunion was
held at Mrs. Lorenzo Mudge’s on
Thursday, the family name to which
tlie participants owned allegiance be­
ing H/de. Among those present were
parties from New York state as well as
this and Eaton counties.
—It is said that curtain school book
publishers have formed a syndicate for
the purpose of running out the Harper
school books by offering theirs nt low­
er prices, and that liaving thus destroy­
ed opposition aud secured a monopoly,
they will raise their prices higher than
those now asked by Harper Bros. Be­
ware, it may lie present economy,but it
will be eventual loss!

—Charles Berry is n bold, bail berry
and hardly out of odo scrape before lie
guts into another. On Saturday night
at the instance of Roe Stephens of De­
troit, whom he has been sailing organs
for, he was arrested by Officer Babcock
for embezzlement. He was taken to
Hastings and laid in jail until Monday
when he was bailed out by C. Clever,
tbedayforbis examination being fixed
for Friday, Oct. 27th.
—On Saturday afternoon last, as
Lewis E. Lentz was at work at a buzz
saw in the Lentz factory, his attention
was attracted for an instant from his
work, his left hand came in contact
with the swiftly revolving saw and the
middle fingers were severed at the first
joint, only hanging by shreds af flesh,
aud the two others somewhat mangledDr. Young was immediately called, who
fastened the fingers on, and as Lewis
is a moral, healthy man,acxpects that
they will knit an^ in time be able to
perform their natural functions as of
yore. Lewis is a live, stirring young
workman and thia going around with
his hand tied up in a sling is dull busi­
ness for him, but he will have to stand
it for a month or more'.

LOCAL GIBBLE-GABBLE
—E. Chipman and L. J. Wheeler were
called to Charlotte, Thursday, to testi­
fy in the larceny case of the people vs.
Look out for frost nip®.
*
Ed. Slater. The case—also Mix’s—was
The average girl’s oath: by gum.
put oyer until the January term.
Is this paper yours, or a borrowed
—An Assyria man is endeavoring to one?
•
procure a divorce on the ground that
Miss Hattie Gregg has been visiting
his wife talks t3o much. That man’s at Battle Creek.
appreciation of domestic bliss surpaMes
Mrs. L. C. Boise will return to Nash­
the wildest flight* of imagination.
ville to winter.
—Again are J. M. Roe and family
Numerous Nashvilleites are troubled
been called upon to mourn the lore of with aooldinthehead.
another son from that dreadful disease
H. M. Lee was in Detroit on business
—diphtheria. Little Harley, aged five Thursday and Friday.
years, departed this life on Saturday
Mike, the taffy man. is back at his
last.
old place and boaincsa.
G. A. Truman A. Son and Geo. F.
—A woman will face a frowning
world and cling to the man she love* Francis bave'new advta.
David Goodyear of Hastinga. was in
■ through the most bitter adversity, but
she wouldn’t wear a hat three weeks town on bnrineM Wodneoday.
John F. Luak of the Grace Ixite Nem
behind the style to aave the govern­
was in the village yesterday.
ment.
Russell Cross is up in Leelenaw
—You may all talk, but there’s notiiing that Will make a man drop his county prospecting for a borne.
Jack
Frost Dips nightly and doctors
"stick,” bis packages, hi* buninres—
that will make him forget everything will soon begin to cry "dull times.”
The
G.
A. R. now occupy the old
and go completely wild—so quick as a
Wheeler store for their poet meeting*.
dogfight
P. T. -Colgrove, tlie future proeeAppleman, some three miles north, and catar,'smiled on The News Tuesday.
Mrrjoe Smith of Ypsilanti, was tlie
relieved his bee-hives rtf forty pounds
of honey. They also called at other guest of Mias Hatrie Austin over Sun­
places on that street, bnt did not se­ day.
Charles Brady has associated with
cure any plunder.
him in the law busineaa, his brother
—When the recording angel observes
a minister of the gospel holding a nail
W. II. Koclier returned from Chicago
it with a hammer, the trustworthy Monday, and those new goods loom
right
sp.
scribe drops into a .brown study and
H. A. Brunks and wife Snndsyed
with friends at Battle Crewk and Gpn—The fire department held its regu-

New paper, paint and whitewash
have wrought great changes at Raney’s
barber shop.
The
Mias Lizzie Gillelaud of Hastings is
Itbc spending the week with North Castle­
dissertation on “draining ton friends.
Mrs. Fannie Foster of Duluth, Minn.,
—The village was full of school
E. R. Mallory'..
Ed. Mallory baa moved into his new

Supervisors in completing their ardu­ of wheat of a large Job of threshing of
HASTINGS.
ous duties, one week not being enough over 1,000 bushels uf grain, the boiler '
Rev. Jov filled the pulpit Sunday
flues gave out, extinguishing the fire
for them.
Bert Smith, son of David Smith of and necessitating long lay oft for re-. evening.
E. P. Burrell from Jackson- wa* in
this vicinity, has become an employee
of Ingerson &amp; Son.
A West Kalamo man wishing to hear tire city lost week.
Miss Berry of Detroit is tire guest of
The hunting party went north Mon­ from n sick relative living at 9 distance
day, but minus T. C. Downing, who j hastily wrote a postal card for informa­ Miss Edith Babcock.
Mias. Langmaid is visiting her par­
tarries until next week.
tion, mailed it, and in.due time called
E. R. White is doing a rushing trade at the post office for an answer bring­ ents in Topeka, Kansas.
in the "Crown” sewing machine. His ing t^L desired information, when,
Clara Martin of Irving died last
what wKMiis chagrin to receive that Thursday of consumption.
sales already number 40.
Mrs. Slinntz will entertain the M, E.
A. G. Murray and wife are entertain­ self same postal, which, in bis haste lie
ing a bridal party,—Mr. and Mrs. Hen­ had addressed to himself, to bin own social next Wednesday evening.
Irring Creasy is attending the Grand
post office. .
ry Reynolds of Huron county, O.
In the announcement of the sudden Lodge of I. O. G..T. at Lansing. .
The improvements to Al. Sellick’s
The manufacture of stoves is an en­
house ate being rapidly pushed; under death lost week of Mr. Decker of this
locality, the types make it that lie fell terprise of the near future in this city.
the skillful hand of John Larnmy.
Charlie Jones was around shaking
Rev. Sj.-th-r, a German Evangelical dead ou Tuesday instead of Thurs­
pyeacher living three miles north. wh« day. • Mr. D. had arisen in. the i hands with his old friends, Thursday.
Mr. Kirk Grant and Mias Carrie
badly poisoned by sumach on Wednes­ nnrnhig crtmulainingof feeling unwell
took the pail and went and milked the Beitinger are to lie married next Wed­
day.
J. L. Stevens is getting out some fine tows, and Ix'ing unable to reach the nesday.
swell liox cutters. They are well made, ■house called on his child to go and get
Will More, Richard Bates. Walker
substantially ironed and will wenf his cane with the aid of which he Mathews and Truman Parker, came
thought he could reach&gt;he bouse,which home to spend Sunday. They are well
well.
Rev. Sarah Graves of Grand Rapids, he did -by the aid of his family. A pleased with the agricultural college
will preach Clyde R. Mallory's funeral physician was immediately sent for,but where they are attending school.
The operetta of •‘Genevieve” given
sermon at the opera house next Sunday1 before he arrived Mr. Decker was past
recovery, aud soon after the doctor’^ by Miss Addie Reed last Tuesday
Rev. John Hughes and wife (lire Kit­ arrival expired. Mrs. Decker has been night was greeted with a full house.
tie Matteson) of Table Grove, 111., are norely afflicted. Ou Tuesday an in­ About fifty children look part in the
visiting their many friends in this and fant child, daughter of Wm. Sherman entertainment. Miss Reed sang a fine
(then in New York, nua who lost bis solo and it was the general verdict that
vicinity.
Mrs. H. Gates and sister of Ionia, wife only a short time ago) which child ail did remarmobly well.
Lost Sunday the temperance meeting
and Harley Ladue and wife of Lansing was in therare of Mrs. Decker, died,
spent Sunday with friends in North and the next day, was tenderly laid be­ was conducted by the student* of the
side its n\other’s grave, then the next the high school, under the leadership
Castleton.
E. Cook departed for Chicago on day, Thursday, Mr. Decker suddenly of Miss Oliva Carter. It was a grand
Thursday to accept ah engagement expired bringing to the family great af­ succ«M, 34 sign .-d the pledge. Next
with 8. D. Kimbark. a heavy carriage fliction. Mrs. Decker and family re­ Sunday Miss Belle Throop and Dora
ceive the sympathies of the entire com- Kennedy will have charge of the meet­
supply man.
—- ing.
W. 8. Campbell, the new grocery­ oiilnity.
A very pleasant affair took place last
man, is herewith his wife and baby and
WOODLAND
week Friday evening on Green St. The
has Rented living rooms over F. T.
silver wedding of Mr. and Mrs. D. R.
Boise’s drug store.
Vote ou principle.
Cook. There were about two hundred
There is much demand for tenant
RjMfister your name now.
invited guests from the city and fifty
houses, with none to fill the demand,
Political apeecbes every evening, from abroad present. Many valuable
noth withstanding new houses are ron
some evenings.
.
presents were presented and all will
stantly being builf.
Monday seems to be a busy day with long remember the enjoyment of that
Rev. Mr. Bissell will visit Clev -land
all bur merchants.
occasion.
Hans
next week, to attend the dedication of
Mike Rising sold a two-year old colt
the new building for the Western Re­
last Tuesday for $175.
y
VERMONTVILLE.
serve college of which he is a graduate.
The U. B. Society have purcbaAdd a,
The college will at that time enjoy the.
Ralph E. Stevens and wife have a
formal receipt of a little donation ’ parsonage paying $800.
Mrs. Palmerton is nearly through new daughter.
$500,000.
with her fall term of school.
Frank Loomis has rented his howto
A recent copy of the Larimore Lead­
Henry Stowell having sold out, has C. Clever of Hostings.
er, forwarded by C. C. Wolcott, con­ moved from Woodland.
.
Stiles &amp;. Pray is the title of our new
tains thirty columns of ads. Charley
Rev, Bridenstine is-kept pretty busy firm. They are in the hardware bald­
is continually forwarding us stating on bis new work, the circuit being a
ness.
advertisements about his "garden of large one.
Jno. Wolpert of Oneida, the cider
Eden,” but it is simply sweetness
Cap. Allen of Ypsilanti made a very mill man, lust his mill bv fire this week
waisted on the desert air, as we are able speech at the town hall last Tues­
and is about $1,000 poorer.
satisfied with Nashville and long not day evening.
to migrate to a country that breeds
Rev. Orwick was to give a temper­
LOCAL MTATER8.
blizzards like Dakota does.
ance lectme here last week, but failed
S3- The Crown has oil «ap» under the tread­
to put in au appearance.
WEST KALI MO.
bearings to prevent oil from soiling the floor
Rev. M. Monroe, a former minister of le
or carpet. _________________
this place, preached here last Monday
C3f“Wagsns, Buggies, and Carriages
Potatoes are rotting badly.
evening in the M. E. ceurch.
at Glasgow's.
Jack Frost returned again Tuesday
Jesse Jordan had a tine exhibit of
tar The Crown castors arc porcelain, which
night.
swine at the Hastings fair and carried are handsomer than others, and will not rust
Thanks, Heiiry, now we know you off bis share of the premiums.
carpet.
__________________
are married.
George Tyler, who has taken the
THE NEW FIRM.
Corn husking Ihw begun, but is hard­ Ingerson farm, has just moved on to
We arc now prepared to furnish the people
ly fit to crib.
the same and offers his house for rent. of Nashville and vicinity with Freeh Family
’Squire Slosson and wife visited tlie * J. W. Fan rather, onr carriage paint­ Groceries, Crockery and Glassware, in fact
everything pertaining to a first class grocery,
state capital last week.
er, has moved intothe country and now at prices as low aa the lowest. Please call and
Beech-nuts are said to be an enor­ occupies the house owned by Olney examine at Ainsworth's old stand.
Fowlkr A Campbell.
mous crop this season.
Wheeler.
*
■
John Mason and wife paid a visit' to
*3- The Crown has a belt replacing device
A. W. Dillenbeck now has one of the
by which the belt can bo throgn ou Inst xntiy
Lansing a few days ago.
finest residences iu town, aud will oc­ without the operator moving from her cb *lr.
The great comet, tired of its stay in
cupy the same as soon as the painting
**r Wbv U our stock of underwear like
the east, is journeying southward.
is finished.
Barnums elephant Jumbo!
Andrews A- Moon had a little "lay
Because it la the largest ever renin thia
Dr. Bangbmau and Geo. Smith, in
off” last week od account of a defect in company with parties from Hastings country, “Fact.’’
Kocrjra Bros.
their steamer.
and Nashville, have gone north on a
ROCK BOTTOM PRICE8.
The recent rains have been of un­ hunting expedition.
Don’t bay a single pair of Boot# or 8boc# be
told benefit to growing wheat, which
vialUng Prindle A Chipman'#, and insjiectBoth of our dry goods merchants, fore
ing their stock and price#. Stock larger and
was suffering for rain.
Hilbert and Holmes, have a full stock more complete than ever and price# marked
Apples are Ireing liarvested and star­ of goods and the finest display ever right down to bed-rock. , No competitors al­
lowed to undersell ua.
ed or marketed,—that is all that are
brought to Woodland.
Pkixdlr A Camux.
suitable, which are few.
We are glad to announce that Rev.
Coon hunting- during the night is
Mr. Lane has become a resident of
now raging, but the melon pafth Woodland. Now with three or four dld till* fall stock. You can save time and
won’t refresh the thirsty hunter.
ministers in the village, can’t we have money by looking us over a* soon as poaalble.
Mr. Norton, at the center, has a large services oftener than once in two
force of men grading around his house, weeks ?
SflT The Crown baa ball-joint connection, at
taking the gravel, which the bank is , So far as we haven been able to learn both end. of Us pitman, which prevent all
chance of its binding at any point In It* stroke
composed of, to repair the highway.
, about schools near here, Miss Della
Tlie commissioner of highways has Palmerton our present teacher will
advertised to receive sealed proposal* conduct the school west of of town in
until the 24th for the construction of a j the Lee district, Joi.n Lee will teach
WANTED.
100 bushels good charcoal at once.
causeway across a swamp in this sec-i DOrth of town, and M. A. Fay in the
Hon.
। Galaway district.
W We hare a rare display of Drew Fabrics.
A. G. Carr of Castleton, addressed | Among the new enterprises ot the
the people of this section at the Mat- j place we would note the baroer shop In fact tins Block is so large and varied Strong
eson school house on Saturday even- jqBt tited up next dcor to the poet
Kockvu Bugs.
ing last. Subject. "Temperance as a * office aa a venture well worthy of patdttty.”
j rouage. Johnny Cole of Carlton is the
Two West Kalamoites, Porter Barnes popular proprietor, and we bespeak for
and M. H. Bradley have spent the week i )H|U abundant Huccess.
.ii» Charlotte
..... courting,
...
....
commissioned as
both jurors. .
FowlRR &amp; CAMHWLL.
be succcMor to "Nell” in gathering
THIS FOB LADIES ONLY.
sojourning *t the same place as court

be thankfully received at all times.
At’CTiOX SALE!

NUMBER 5.
■

BASS WOOD BOLTS.
Now Is your time.
»1.» per cord for 18 Inch,
S2.50 per cord for 85 Inch.
Cask as fast delivered. For partlculsrs see
_________Geo- k'- FkamcizSV The Crown tresdle is broad and bangs

•r Don’t forget tbc Royal Oak Heating
»ve at
Glasgow’s.
LADIES LISTEN.
Having movcfl tn our new store, Yatcn Block,
and added largely to my stock, I am better prepered than over to please my patrons. My stock
constiu of fine MlUinery of every dowripefoa.
Beautiful Hata, Bonneta, Fancv Goods, Dress
Trimmings. Sf.ks. Satins, Lace*, Ribbons, Vel­
vet, Flowers, Feathers and a thousand or more
other artie'es you will surely be interested in.
Call and see my goods, give them a critical ex

"n t,r*Te"w*ieel ls nlckel

k.jyTsrnxr, should use Dr. Joseph
Jose, Hass’
L'ug-aud Poultry Remedy. Jjold by
’ F.'T. Bomb.
A CARD.
Having fonixxl a partnership with D. P.
Sagendorpb, of Charlotte. I take pleasure In
introducing to my friends and patrons Waller
Webster a young man of ability and integrity,
to whom I nave transferred my unfinished bus­
iness, who will be found over L. J. -Wheeler’s
store ready to transact law, real estate and In­
surance business to the satisfaction of ail.
3-5.
WaLTKK 8. POWKHS.

Kf The Crown is symmetrical In form and
beautiful in finish.

MONEY TO LOAN,
On Real Estate at low rate of interest of '
OPOata and pxitatoes are worth 90c at 8. 8.
lugeraon’# elevator.

BUY BREAD
At the City B*kcn-, fre«b every day. AUo qystcrF, creckerif, olki-r, coffee, tea, rplce. tobac­
co. etc. Warm meal« at all time#. Give ua a
call and we will endeavor tn pleaac.
.
' ■
J. D. Blair.
3y~Wood and Potatoes taken in exchange
for any goods In .our line.
Granger A Co.

jy Tlie Crown treadle runs on harder.ed
steelpoint*.

REGISTRATION NOTICE.
The township Board of Registration, for the
Township of Castleton,will meet at the office of
the Township Clerk ou Saturday. Nov. 4tb ’82.
The laws of 1881 requires a new registration,
to lie made, therefore every legal voter iu lb&lt;townsblp who wishes to vote at the approach­
ing election arc requested to appear personal!*
before the Township Clerk prior to Nov. 4,1882
and register his name. Fraxk McDrrbt,
4-7.
Township Clerk.
fy Don’t forget the Round Monumental
eating stove at
Glasgow's.

C5V The Crown drive-wheel is biiqg c
sued steel points.
[y Our Cloaks and Doh.iaas arc lieautlful
Over 200 to select from ringing iu price Iron.
•3. to |30.
Kocher Bros.
W Potatoes, Apples and Beans wanted
Inquire of J. A. ARNOLD at the WolaX&gt;
Ilouae, Nashville.

sortmcDt

PriruuI A Cbtfmax.

ONCE MORE
ready called and attended to their account,
(and notes that are past due) U&gt; do *o at once
and «arc him the expense of calling on them.

.

Kocbkb Bros.

HTIf you buy Clothing of Granger A Co.
they will aave you 10 per cent.
Awake Threaher and Engine, manufactured al
Union Springs, N. Y.

BOOTS AND SHOES.

LAMPS, LAMPS.

ear Don’t forget the Round Monuments
eating Stove at
Glasgow ’a.
ar-Our Charpet oeparunmt ’la {filled i
choice twtectioua and should be seen to lie

at Glasgow’s.

OF~ The points on which the Crown tread’.
ct»d drive-wf.ee) run are adjustable to take u.
t

C. W. Gbaxoer A Cck’a.
A FEW THOUSAND DOLLARS

D08T-4.COLT!

YOUR EAR, GEHTLE READER.

�family, 'frtldws in a new and unsettled ,
&lt;j.»u!ttry and has little or rd intercourse |
with his fellow men. The other is .the j
wealthy, kind-hearted and social man
VHK2i Tffg FRO#
who dwells in the better part of a great
FUA’h.
city, and'eujoya with his wife and chil­
•tfext' aoc:%hle, Mr. Ashton
dren the frequent visits of his many
ton Kin;
in ten i
" No 1 hr ng ned. pr a lev 1 once had friends. No one will say that the lonely
diu* of l.’ranstou, by Mr. Richards. '
DIFFICULT' PROBLEM SOLVED.
pioneer has the social privileges and the ”The desire tar ’rtimaUnt* to becoming a
a
•Iriono
t &gt;e ru n m tny tu.ng*eon,irBu;n ™rs. y-c «■.
•
। Their opinion* in regard to the brothers
.
And th ctaeslu* ik tiw aulneyk and the ; were feedV expressed when the sewing • lirr id it. For ins..inc.-, on-- &gt;la. you enjoyable intercourse of mind with mind moustiot* evil antf bow to overcome it Is a *«xoctotyuBot on the following Wednex- druppe.1 a Card uii th &lt; L.b u. aud it had that I* granted to the man of wealth iou* question with reformers. Parker's Gl»*“ »'■'&amp;.* ““ °’’’
i.Uv, s«,n. ptMMuiMt u.em w mii.-h • H. A. Kings.r-y‘ wr tfen -;u :L Anoth­ and influence in the olo«eiy built-up city. SToole fairly solves the difficult problem.
irigixate* body and mind without intoxicaU
— ^..1
thm it would behnpoxiiUe ever to ’ er day. whtfh you t-time
A.xhton, you The one may fenvy the other in some
ing, and hu* brw-ucht health and happiness to
[ know them apart. Others drought Ash-1 attended to something wh ch ha I hap­ ii-iintJi, but, taken nil in all, the city fam*' many dc-ol»te botue*.—Enqlrer. See other
..
! ton sontewh.it tai'er than hh brother. pened wheu you wore here the prev.ous Uy can live the most bec.iu«e it hat su­ cnlainm
b‘r-“b
1 and flow land believed hi* hair and ryes we ref weet; though &gt;t was as xtenrv that perior advantages for the highest form
Forty &lt;tollara* worth of flowers were laid on
fob'darker.
Mo&lt;t oonrdered him more you had then been here. But tell me,'' of existence. Man doe* not livebv bread
tix»»boc~
L
quiet and reserved than Henry, and all ] she continued, “what made you ever ^'■•nr, nor docs he Jive to himself alone
death vm hartenel by »tarvrtlon.
•
• . IM.. MMHIU rt «l th.
U&gt;« Belle
likely IO ,ppro- think ot ihuspersoimtingtwobrotliersP” when ho lives at hi* bdat.
•• I used often to dp it at school,” re­
I am not saying a word against the
; prlate both.
, Topete. Bcm
'
ENTIRELY BATI&amp;FACTORY.
DO'
n -rx ever and tti* . it certainly seemed *0 a* the reason j plied Mr. Kiugslov. “It was com­ pioneer; we must have him; bnt it is a
Ladies wishing a perfume that combine*
hT's and the h|lM*. ’ wore on. and one or the other of the menced by my .schoolfellow* declaring pity that so many families tnu-t. lose so novelty delJcoev and riehneM find Florerton
i twin* was -Belle’s davpted cavalier at ■ that in my different moixls ot grave or many of the comforts of friendsUp that Cologne entirely aatiafactoiy.
bMrtnin-bidi und F?ery ffanoo anj rte'ghiug party, and , gay, I vyns as unlike ax if'distinct boys, are impossible in the life, the lonely and
Whoa an Oil City man's wife gave birth to
...
. n ; an i th ■ u hK-apc many were the &lt;ti*cux*lo'n* as to which i after which they" called me Henry wlien separated life, of the sei flor «*f the new
ib
the it* *
‘
*he would choo-e. If such discussion* lively, an&lt;l Ashton when quiet, and I ou.intry. The f wily that lives on the twin* he was surprised into - saying, “Cat a
?u’naa£y7W‘V m’n’lnrofthr early *»- .
,o
w?uld iau&gt;,b. used*to take much delight in making prairie, a dozen miles from any other twr&gt;-«pot by gosh."
Us! renaP*
!*■ j&gt;i&lt;-turo that no pdni.v ln« the c'lnrin’ k&gt; j iugj • suggest that she might never the two characters a* unlike as possible. family, may escape some of the annoy­ SHE RUINED HER HEALTH AT SCHOOL.
When 1 came to Frankfort. Joe revived ance* of neighbors that may be too
wi
'
,
.... t have thr (li.ince to choose either.
Sad. hut nee !'e«&lt;. .With proper earc and tlie
ms
_.„.r
--------vied
that
Wh,’!?rV£%.^?,p‘,nkln
“O. but that is all nonsense.” Lixxie -*•_
the old joke, and finally propoi
neighborly,' but at the same time its u*e of Zoa-Pbors, at needed period*, her splen­
in
_________________
i mymembers
two
_ , v
k Culler would cry. “Anv one can see11 should appear at Cranston
lose many of the blcising* did intellect might now be supported by perfect
"“•“££■
1 th.-n you wUl H.W rbi «bu» won •characters, and thinking it would only which only come when other families physlcal.power* and grace.
be for onoc.or. twice, and never dream­ are near at hand. Living bv themselves,
And ib । •”xpla &lt;&gt;r t io tnnxlol eave*, •*'enough:”
The Rev. Wm. Brook* of Hampstead, R. I.,
irin.1 ..• i&lt;
- Weil, then.” said Belle on one of ing how far we should carry it, I con­ a* they most, the Mtparated family lives
- a &gt;n»i •&lt; in ij tu 1 m H—*inii o v.nc*-*tn y .
.
... 1
....
;Ik . b 1. 11
these occasions, with a sudden gravity sented! 1 assure vou,-I have' been •well loo much for itself, and, it may be, is aciiMd of haring three wire*.
A-pn-n i.injw’rnipixtou* of the ba-n« they i of demeanor that made all her compan- punished, since 1 found how much I j_v-.»ws thoughtless ot the duties that one
ONE EXPERIENCE FROM MANY.
Th- mnXZUi* Mor. on I /he rmp r ’•»«’ l“-‘ ‘'v°
,,h« hajl really decided had risked by my folly.”
family owes’to-another as such.' This
I have been »ick and miserable *o king and
Great was the excitement when’ Belle spirit of independence may last even
intiieaiidi
/ .
the ma'ter. “then I will tell you what
find traveling a
•told of her engagement. . Not a stitch after the sound of the pioneer’* ax has hat! caused my husband *0 much trouble and
’^•‘‘VrtK "l)’b,’4r
-«»»•• Ctnvar ( ! think 1 will do!”
expense,
one seemed to know what ailed me,
O II ^'t.'inv yirt IM.-J ek tf ike thx t i kffi- ot
• W hat?'
exclaimed even
one. of setting was done at the Benevolent ceased to ring through the forest, and that I wasno
completely dinbeartened and dixeour' - chiv'.r
eagerly crowding about her. in their I Society .meeting that afternoon, cxbept its a result of the isolated family life ngrd. In tbl* frame of hiind I got a bottle of
»«xi.-u lo Imowiklte', preleronce.
' which Belle did herself, ns she sat with there may be a lack of Intercourse be­ Hop BlUem and used them unknown to mv
•»— u ....... ...
j •• F11 chiMi.se both!” and Belle laughed | pretended calmness, listening to their tween neighboring families after the family. I soon ticiran to improve and gained
• comment*, for she had explained that time has come when a ready inter­ no fast that my husband and famliv tb&lt;Hight It
j gavly nt ihe di’aapp'iinted group.
Fare. si
strange and nnnatnral. but when I told them
j . But in her own mind Belle was dehat- ' there wa* but one Mr. Kingsley. Weary change of thoaght and sympathy ia pos­ what had helped me. they said. “Hurrah for
WHICH WILL SHE CEOOSEI
PERCEVAL LOWELL.
~~'1 Mg
ing tun
the SMUV
same UHBMIMU.
question. OMC
She luummuiivcould searee- । at last of their endless exclamations, she sible.’
Hop Ritter*! long mar they prosper, for thFy
T. J POTTER.
1
l
_
L
.
1
.
.
.
I.
..
•
I.
—
»
_
1.
..
.......
1
i
1.
-Ctoi new.. . w..&lt;
cn«d pretly ,
hnnUotbe ltd that ,he
like- • sprang up to leave, saying as she did
made mother well and u* happy.”—The
There is one crop that has been neg­ have
Mother.
Belle Winters, as she ca no dancing! j,
;;„; on to .decide
. . . between the
.
so; “Al least, you must acknowledge
ly to uv
be vn
called
lected by the American farmer.
He
iu o the parlor, where a group of young. two brothers, With Henry -he was that I have- kept my word, for! always tumid not grow it when the trees were
Baltimore has a girl 15 years old wbo has
gibi* were assembled. All belonged t **
&gt; gay, read 1 for any frolic \or mischief. told you 1 would lake both, whenever
being cut to clear a place to yield him eloped three time*.
what they proudly d •nu’pinnted “The‘ । and found him such a willing partjeipa- yntf ' wondered
• which will she the necessary food.
In taking up new
■Cranston Benevolent &gt;ewing Soc-cty," .1 tor; though upon occasion he would re­ • choose?’ ”—Ballou's Magazine
land there was no opportunity to be very THE SOURCE OF MUCH ILI^TEMPER
and they met p.unctnn ly e. er.- Wednes­* veal p'.euty of good sterling sense, as
social, and. as a result, sociability has
When your husband come* home In bad hu­
day afteruoon. at the bouse of some much, purlin s. as Ashton', who, while
The Channel TunueL
not rvCiivetl much attention as a farm mor. jerk* of! h!* lioot* au.i appear* to be p?none of the member*; but, if truth must equally p easant, was more reserved in
mlaerable, do not attribute it lo business
Some interesting observations ou the cop in lhe’early days of our agricul- eraHy
be told, the sunonut of talking done ex- . hi* manners. Belle, according t&lt;» her
&lt;arc* or hard times, lint 'o the real caum*.— ,
iW corns which are constantly annoying him
ceeded the amount of sewing, as a Chon- varying mood, sometimes preferred one, ■ Channel Tunnel have Been commuuiThe time has now c^rno when it A won! to the wise will lie sufficient--buy a
' c.'ited to the French Academy of Sci­
Hmd uxoeod. » » ngl. unh.
.. ..... .................................
ami .........
sometime*
the other, till...she was
ence# by M. Daubrce. After referring •ihouldhe more extensively cultivated. IxMHc of Putnam’* Painless Corn Extractor.
A, B.II. » .xd«mati..n rea. li.-d rlrelr lia|(.|„l.li„1..|
think »bo could n.
| to the three stages of the work, the sci- If any one inks mo why the farmer boy HI* com* will be-quickly and palnleakly re­
e ra. every' need.e was suapriidgil in choose.
•
moved, and hl* gratitude will befunbounded.
.
entitle researches, the preparatory op­ and girl long for the city, I only answer
mid air, tn its owner e:t;erly demanded:
&lt; ine day while thinking over the mat- ;' erations, and the exe?ution of the pro­ that they think the society is better Putnam’s Painless Com Extractor sold every­
where. Wholesale, J. E. DAVIS A CO.,
“ Whafis it? Tell us quick, Belle ”
tor a sudden Idea struck her. At first ject. he points but that while the Rouen there.
Detroit.
On
the
farm
they
grow
lone
­
"Well.’’ said that young la ly, ax she she rejected it ns utterly impossible, but.,
------- FOR-------subsided into a chair, “ 1 met -me R ch- । the more she pondered the more con­ •' chalk is water-bearing in its upper some, and their young, active natures
Nature shows no merer—cveryjvhcre It Is DRI’OM,
•rds this morning, driving with stieli a vinced she was that she had now found | strata it ia only slightly’so in ite lower crave more life and chingo than the hand, pitiies* law. even- infractlou of which in­
B4M&gt;KS,
।
beds.
The
French
Association
have
dug
farm,
as
wo
too
frequently
find
it
pro
­
splendid-looking man.
O. 1 can tell a way to make her decision, and she re- ;
JED EJLRY.
Some one has beauti­ curs punishment.
you he as just perfect! And I won solved to watch carefully for any proof I. two wells at Sangatte, ea h about nine- vide* for them.
BRAIN AND NERVE.
tiered who he could be. and made of.herown theory. This she did. and;{ty-fivc yards deep, and have begun to fully written: “No «»ne wants too much
।
rim
two
galleries
from
them
toward
Well*
’
Health
Rcnrwer,
createst
remedy
on
of
anything,
oven
of
the
iserene,
comup my mind to find out. So 1 was think­ grew more and more confirmed in her ,
WIMIOU SHADE*.
earth (or Impotence, le*t:nc«*. sexual deb’illtv,
ing and thinking abmit it. as I walked belief: her intimate knowledge of Joe ■, Shakespeare's Cliff tinder the sea. In pnnionle's quiet of a beautiful country Ac.. *1. at dmggUtB. Mleh. Depot. J AMES E.
here this afternoon, and just as 1 turned Richards, who was a distant cousin and I one of these gal^ries at a depth region, and the happiest existence must DAVIS A CO., Detroit Mich.
।
ot
sixty
seven-tenths
yard*
below
bu
that
which
can
command,
aioug
with
the corner of this street who should I a li:e-long confederate in every bit of I
PBOPHIETAEY MEDICINES,
French' hydrographic bench­ green fields and singing streams, some­
Upon a nuxlest gravestone in Vinccnne»,In&lt;!.,
mu-l but Joe and this same gentleman mischief or practical joke, much aiding 1 the
mark. . the
Beaumont
perforator thing of the good cheer and inspiration cemetery appears this plaintive legend: “Hl*
w.tlking. Joe stopped and legged to in her decision.
PKEM'niPTIOXN,
at work,
and in
other themn.
will be
nt' ’ni
wor*. ;iuu
111 the
un-uuirr
mv niu- of congenial fellowship both in social neighbor played the comet.”
introduce his friend. Mr. Kingsley, and
Therefore, wl
rhen.
toward spring. v|,iD0&lt;&gt;f Jir, Brunton will be employed, and business life.” Man is a social be­
KETEIPT*.
then said that Mr. Kingsley was an old ' Belle received a letter
from each ot—
the Qn tll0 Kn-glish side the uuder-chnnnel
L------------------------ing. and this part of his nature asserts
CATARRH OF THE BLADDER.
school-friend of his. who had just re­ brothers, each containing an avowal of ,
“ 1 galley begins at 3 depth of aboutthir- itself at very early years. A child lovi^t i Stinging, smarting, irritation of the urinary A ml
moved to -Frankfort, and he had prom- j their love fur her. she was not unprei
passage*, diseased discharge*, cured by Bucbu------- MY-------ised lo firing him here to Cranston fur pared. Both were earnest, manly let­ I ty-two yards below the French hydro­ to be with other children, and in the in­ pabia. 81, at drngiri»t*. Mich. Depot, JAS.
&gt;11 the.parties this winter, so he should ters. though differing in style as the graphic bench-mark, thanks to the drier tercourse with each other the better E. DAVIS A CO.. Detroit, Mich.
depend on us to.invite him. Of course brothers differed in character. Henry’s nature of the chalk near the surfa- e, qualities of the child nature are quick­
ami run* under the sea nt a descending ened and expanded.
•
1 said we should be happy to du so.”
I was inoy lively and playful than.Asbthe flog of our un­
“O, of course!’’ echoed nil herlisten- . ton’s, but in ’ one respect they were slope of one in eighty. This gallery is
The country, perhaps, can never off^r
DUFARTHEXT
now nearly a mile’ long under highere. sympathi/.lngly.
alike Each stated that ho knew of his water mark, mid no water has entered all the. advantages found in the city for ion !'*
rr krpi riimplrte, lo me-1 tbr dem*n«!* uf thv
“'Ihere i* the bo Table for next wpek. : brother’s feelings toward her. and that
a rapid and easy interchange of thought
[K-opir.
BCCKLEN'S ARNICA SALVE
Belie; did you invite them to that?” they hud agreed to write at the same it as yet. The mass uf the rock through And feeling; that Is, the people in town
Tlie best salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises.
asked Lizzie Cutler. “ You were on the time, asking her to choo-e between which the tunnel is bored is quite dry, may be more social with les* expense
Sore*.
Ulcer*.
Salt
Rheum.
Fever
Sores,
Tetter,
but
from
lime
to
time
little
tunnels
of
inviting committee.”
them, and pledging themselves that,' water are met with issuing from crack* than those who dwell in the rural dis­ Chapp’d Hands. Chilblains, Corns, and all
house in Kory or Eaton consists
“Certnuly. 1 did!” responded Belie. the rejected one.
tricts. But this is no reason why the Skin Eruption*, and positively cure* Plies. It ”
whichever
he
“And ^#bat did they say?" exclaimed might Im*, would henceforth reganl in the rock. The cylindrical form of farmers should not be much more neigh­
guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or
bon* adopted by Colonel Beaumont has
a dozen voices.
' her a* a dear sister, and harbor no ill .in advantage under these circumstan­ borly than they now are. There is no 'money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For
i *
what wutild thev *ay?
id-i
ng io
feeling
to ner.
her. or
or ms
his more
more lonunate
fortunate ces, a* it allows of the gallery being In­ serious reason why the farmers and their
laughed Belle, witn a little trinmph in :&gt;rt,thcr’
families in every township in the older
her tones. “Promtoed they would come. . ..This.” added Ashton, “ix'perimp* sulated from these trickling* by means portions of the country should not have Hint this Is the la-st crop year America luis had
and each begged for tlie hnt dance, uf | t4ffcij1g.it too much for granted that one of an iron lining formed of rings having u society for mutual improvement and
a diameter equal to that ot the gallery.
COUI*tf .....
,
! of us may find favor in your eyes. If These rings are in five segments, bound social growth. There are many of these
And wh en did you choose.
was not&gt; We ^jjj, nl
endeavor to conI together by ribs, through which pass clubs already formed, but the number
■ 1
““
Io»crt with little fin,b*
lotion.
i01e eaeh (,th8rA
is small in comparison with th se that
Are you troubled with Ague. Chills aud Fe­
ELY’S
tftTM particle ul the
, ^r’ Kingsley, to be sure. I can ;
\ quizzical smiie hovered round 1 bolts which connect the segments to­ might be—may I aay, ought to be?— ver, Bilious. Fever, Remittent or Intermitting
Balm mio the hoetrl!
Fever, Night Sweats or any disease that come*
dance with Joe any luuf. besides I । Belle's mouth as she wrote her an- gether, and each ring to tlie naxt ones. looped.
■ When n water fissure is encountered,
from Malaria or disordered Liter aud Hot
promiseu him the second.
swer—answer, for she wrote but one.
As our country grows older the lines Sun* I If so, prtK-um a bolUaof Green'a Ague
Her auditors looked slightly di*:ip- UBj addressed it to the two brother*. one or mon* of these rings are placed
f*t distinction between the city and coun­ Conqueror, which is an acetic extract of strong
ILFSCHAJ BALM
ponied, but afll wen- accustomed to Lmlen&gt;
*he reads it over. halLaloud: over it so as to misk it completely.. At
tonic roots, combined with Sulphate of Mag­
try
people
must
be
broken
down.
The
:
।
first
four
segment*
are
put
into
portion
effectual!*- ejeanvea
yielding the first place to Belk, and To
^ht(1|1 Klnjr.1PV.
etc., and postively contains do Quinine.
|r j and then the fifth or key is added. The city will go to the country and teach nesia,
Arsenic or other poison*. It purifies the blood
she was such a general favorite that 1 PUmoo accrpt t-jy sincere ttenfc* tor your
hist joint is tightened by a baud of thin many things, and perhaps learn more, cleanaes the liver, spleen and otlicr secretive
there wa* never anv ban! feeling &lt;jn the ! k.1P'1
.4.al.r 1
”
Hltl^nrt the contents, I have decid
’d lbxt
decid-d
text I1 will
w&gt;H । sheet iron inserted into it. When yhe while the country boy will lie not so very organa so effectully that the chili* will not re­
■UOjeci,
accept both nf you. I shall be happy to
*■’ *&lt;-e
*'“* i spring from the rock is tolerably strong different from the one who has been turn. We have never found any case of Fever
‘••Joe said something.” continued , you to-morrow evening.
Ague It will not cure. Price, 50 cents and
brought up in town. Year by year the and
redBelle. ,:aboui Mr. Kingsley’s brother.
Hnxr. Utma*. I it is luted with a.cement
---------- containing
- fll.00 per tsottlc. One-large bottle ha* cured aa
■plelriy
cold*.
They hnd turned half swav.' and 1 did
" 215 there ever before such an an- . h-ad before the rings are placed over it social nature of the farmer will be ex­ five In one family. Sold by all druggists and
res sn.l
panded,
and
along
with
the
wheat
and
dealer*
everywhere.
'
15 Han S3
not bear distinctly. It will be fun if •♦wer written by a girl to two offers of | If the fissure is dblimie a sort of tube
there are two additions ot that kind to nutrriage! Y'et its oddity did not seem j has to be bnilt up of the rings until it is corn, root* and clover, there will be an­
Some
New
Dngland
[pan
fish
can
lie
baited
encia) rrsullaarr realised by a fci
our stock of beaux."
I to trouble Belle, who sprang I’ghtly ’ up j masked, but half an hour serves to place other crop grown, in the care of which
Ihnrouvh trraiment a* directed ’
“Well. I am sure such additions are ' fr‘,ra her desk, and donning her outside | a ring into position. Giving to the slope all the members of Che family, and oth­ with plug tobacco or a red rag.
DOST DIE IN THE HOUSE.
seeded, ’’ cried Addie Palmer, “for wraps quickly conveyed her letter to the of the gallery the borers recently at- ers, will gladly take a part, and socia­
Ask diuggiaUfor '‘Rough on Rats." I
there are scarcely adozen young men in P*’!41j tnineii a deptbof fifty-six jards &gt;e ow bility will be a regular and most profit­
l HK|U«lrd For Cold Io Ihi- H&lt;»d
Upon the proper clears ont rum. mice,bed-bugs, roaches, vermin
Cranston, aud Joe is the onlyoue who
it must be confessed, however, that j the French bench-mark. At this point able farm crop'.
ever drives over from Frankfort to at- 0,1 the evening of the following day. the depth of low water is five and one- growth of this crop rests much of the
SHILOH’ S CONSUMPTION CURE.
teud any of our parties!”
i
^rt3W decidedly nervous.
j holt yards, so ihat the thickness of best progress in the future agriculture
Recognized as a Wonderful Discovery*
. “Mr, Kin sley mav as well stay I
“Suppose I am mistaken, after all.” ' strain between the tunnel and the sea of our country.—B A., in Christian
£t .M l»v dn»rtt»*i- al5‘»rU. On neolpl nf prk&lt;e
This is bevond question the most successful
mail ■ |Mcka&lt;c
Stun foi circular contain*
away for all we shall gain,” laughed she thought, "bow shall I ever get out bottom was there about fifty yards.— Union.
Cough Medicine we have over sold, a few do*c» will
full ‘nlormatltw atvl reliable le-limnuUls.
Invariably cure the worst rase* of Cough, cn&gt;ut
v. ■ v »v . vt uiIU.ro «
*C V
Jjzzie Cutler, "for Belle will mo- ! oi the scrape? I half wish 1 had never 1 Scientific American.
and
Bronchitis,
while
tl*
wonderful
micccsm is
Resonrce*
of
British
Burundi.
nopollze him. as site does every one.” written that letter, but I never can do
In the cure of consumption b wlihout a paral­
Crushing a CiUzrn.
There wa*. however, no unkiudnex, or anything like other girl*.’’ She paced
lel in the history of medicne. Since it* first
The administration report of British discovery it ba* been sold ou aguaruUt, atest
eafoosv in the remark: Lixxie thought ber room excitedly for a few moments.
The proprietor of a Woodward ave­
Belle pe faction, and would- have , thcn
“ 1W »•»
raak- nue store which had been finely dec­ Bnrmah shows that out of 87,220 square which no other medicine can stand- If you
quarreled on the spot with any one who I mJ’!wU presentable: perhaps some one orated in honor of the Knights of Pyth­ miles of fertile soil, barely 5,600 are cul­ hare a Cough we earnestIv ask vou to try it.
Price lOcta, 50ctx, and 11,A) IT your lung* are
Illa book with Pl-oto^rspbAs illustrating the wonderful sore, Chert, or Back Lame, and Shiloh’s
dared to d;w&gt;ree with her. ’
maY come: though I may hare offended ias wa* at his door yesterday, when an tivated.
fertility of the soil, it is pointed out that Porous Plaster. Sold br F. T. Bora*.
“ All 1 waul to a fair field and no rJ*'t
forgiyenes*: at any rate. I will old man lounged up*and began:
favor,” .aid Mie. merrily. "If Mr. i?•
and if worst comes to worst,
ANS^TJi THIS QUESTION.
“Such ignorance I never saw in all my in a single orchard' the following trees
Kingsley prefers any of vou girl* to me. 1 “lwt Put » brave face on iL and tarn life! You see that man across there— were in nearing at the same time: the
Why do so many people we see around us.
cocoanut. the areca, the Korean mango, *ccni ti&gt; prefer to Buffer and be made miserable
lam perfectly willing. But. now. to [into a jesL ’
,
the one with the white bat on?”
complete the’ arrangement for next I ,
‘J presentable
sne certainly
orange, lime. Mangosteen, pineapple, by ind!gc*tk&gt;u, constipation, dixxlnes*. low of
appetite, coming* up of the Food, yellow akin,
wee
and thereupon followed a long looked, though unusually pale, when a
•• Well, he was having a good deal to black pepper, plantain, and coffee. The when for 75cts, we will sell them Shiloh * } iteand earnest discussion of order of' hrtif-fiiiur later, as *he *at alone in the sav. and I asked him who Pythias was? soil is suitable for sugar-cane, tobacco, lUer, gnarauted to cure them. Sold byr. T.
dance*, the music, .upper and toilettea. parlor; thf&gt; servant announced Mr. Would you believe it, he couldn’t an­ •nd cotton. The hill slopes afford ev­ !&gt;■ list;.
ungsley.
SHILOH’S CATTARRH REMEDY. A mar­
during which sewing&lt;wax a tiling for- Kingsley.
.
„
ery facility for the production of tea,
swer me.’’
Where was the other brother? Only
cinchona.
Petroleum velous cure for Catarrh, Diphtheria, Conker
gotten, and if the poor of Cranston
“(.’-couldn’t heP’ stammered the citi­ coffee, and
and Head Ache. With each hottie
abounds, and iron, tin, lead, and anti­ mouth,
were waiting for the Benevolent Sooiniy one entered, and if Belle were pale, he zen.
here
Is an ingr.rtious uawl injector for the
to'clothe them, it is much to be feared wax deathly white. No look of tin ac­
“No, sir, ha couldn't. Think of such mony are plentiful, while the supply of more succcMfid.treatment of these complaint*
cepted
lover,
but
more
that
of
a
man
who
forest
trees
is
infinite
and
their
variety
without extra' charge. Price OOct*. Sold by
that they would have little to protect
ignonuict! in this enlightened age! When
had lost all tie holds dear on earth, wa* I told him who Pythias was ne called inexhaustible, 'rhe local demand for to­ F- T.Boirt.
them from the winter’s cold.
.
- The night for the aodablo arrived in on hia face, at with a sort of desperate me a liar. Now,* I want to prove that bacco is prodigious; every man,woman,
A&lt;la*skuiairulorN Male.
courage
he
walked
up
to
Belle,
who
due Muon, aud with it Mr. Richards
I’m right. You come over and tcll him and child smokes. From 40,000 to 80,­
In tbr ui-ttrT nt tbf -Mate of
and hi* friend, whom be impartially in- bad risen silently to receive him.
000 cigars are sent every month to Eng­
GEORGE GILLIS, PoMmovd.
all about it.”
Notice I* hereby rt«i&gt; • t I -hall -ell at pubbe bT It- uar tlKni.
land, and • large supply Is imported
trmluced to every young lady of hi* ao- ' For a moittMt he stood before her
•• But I—I can’t leave.”
b,u&lt; ibongh pj ud polit, !
-poking, jrtthonl looking U
of Iona atvodn
into India.
Yet with all these advan­
“Then I’ll bring him over here.’’
w th di Mr Ktap.,rv w» «i Bolin t»r. Uiencriod out lmp.cuou.ly: BePfc
tages of soil most of the tobacco is
••No, you needn't— I’m busy.”
Wintrni- ,1.1. wluSrtor If .u poniUe. B*11*- c“
•*»
•uoh doo.p“1 sec you are, but when a man calls brought from Madras, so great is the
___ U XT.,
«uH.mi.&lt; ua.rtpre.UaionlCuB.ll. tro«f 11 “•“’’’J •»« « &gt;"* «*u ’“ur me a liar I want to prove that I ain't __ _________ a -1_______ 1Ul"M.'occ'SImrwda ■«.Twould
Aim.
)U«|, I noU &lt;*me.
tten I re»b»4 It» n»- I’ll have him over in a minute.”
to prove t rue.
’ I ment wh&gt;t 1 had risked, and how by my
He hadn’t crossed the street before prosperity is astounding; 885,388 too* at November.A.I&gt; HM.
“ I meant to have told you more about j foUY 1 had lort J00-’’
the merchant slid into the store and hur­ of rice were exported to Europe in 1880,
C. C. ne- r&gt;. M. !&gt;. A S&lt;&gt;n,&lt;» Fourth avctine, Ne«
Harn’* brother the other day, Belle.” i Belle could not speak; the ready re- ried up Btnim to keep out of sight for an being an increase of 85,000 tons over
ratirl Mr. RachardH. coming to Mis* Win- i portee or saucy jest which she usually hour, and it was only after he was cer­ that exported in the previous year, alten*, who was hi Lite iuuui* trillion with 1 had *t command failed her now, but she tain that tlie old mini had departed that tbougb price* fell 20 per cent. The to­
-------- .
। shyly extended her hand, while she he slipped down and consulted Web­ tal trade in 1870 amounted to £10,263.*
r. Kingxiey?" asked smllad re-awuringfy upon her hirer.
fiUHKMT » GhEOti.Adc-dnkitahir.
ster’* dictionary to see if he could find 000, while that of 1880 was &gt;22,222,000.
•• Belle! Do you mean it! Can you out whether Pythias was a town, a The revwnnea have increased in the
pardon ntn ?” he exdiumed, » he cov­ man, or a temple on a hilL—Detroit free same period from £1,232,066 to £2,380,­
ered the little band with kiauts.
000, the local and municipal revenue
Apparently Belle did mean it, and
having more than trebled.
minuxi* passed in a biiartui siritsbAY.

SI. 1HHS.

KANSkS CITY

F.

T. BOISE,

PAINT AND BRUSH

■Call and Examine
F. T. BOISE

Catarrh DIRECTIONS
“"“JaD

a?

Hay-fever;^

R J P TU RE

The MANIPULATER

",l.

MUNKEXJI885 i’OPIM EATIHG

nyvbr&lt;»*

�rve, thin, thst Bright's di»-

GRAND

K 4 HDs

bay a **ol ■ »f
•TATIOXM

. _»d b »nd*
i!e*it in in th- Exahtitge.
In eitiutr
c.i-« tho re:».il.ai &gt;n, worth, bidnbtedqedi
XMh&lt; in.

the e tamuieri. A anas in tho Exchange
l*r»v he t wfeiwd for ini oond icL and a&lt;
m i c &gt;n never i»e «»M &gt;*nd mxv not give
p: vc, V&lt;au »Uy_T, there is n 'poSsthditv
DaUoll11 Z in the u'lurse of sc.vural thotusod*
u v.Mfs the Exchange will in this min‘ WgSTW
n-tr wi «e I:-eT «&gt;n‘. of existence. I say
wive a! thoutand* of year*, beoa-isr
ITTATTOX8
while there woc'.d be found anv number
of meth &lt;d* of enudug tlw forfeiture &lt;/f
th* *eat of any man who might make
hiin**df gwne: dly odious to the mum­
bo-*, tho only breach of tho rulesXhat h
&lt; TurinK. .
ordina-ily made tho medium for the de­
VareMwivilla,
croe is the heinious offense of “cutting
the CommUsi »n,” which Is t» say tran*IMF
MMdlrvith..
11 ■ I
a-*riiig bti*lneM nt 1«** than the rate
fixed by the Exchange.
Tne ’member* have recently spent
about half a million dollars in im »r&gt;rl'»g their quarters. Iu the first place,’
they enlarged the building by taking in
U B. LKDTARD.
X. C. rfROWN,
a-trip in the rear, which, when built
nrer, made the B-iard room, a« tb« mar­
ket hail it called, considerably lar *er
than it wa*. They also raised a towe-jgBOOKS, MARSHALL A CO.
i.ig freot on Broad street (tne Wall
*teeet front is in reality only a hall vav),
facing 1). O. Mill*’ gigantic office b Hid­
ing, and in their effort to have the fa
c ide rich and ornatbental have mingled
Pay the highest market price forallktndaof
no many architectural effects that none
pre-eminent, and the result is pain­
GH-ain and Produce, are
ful to a practiced eye.
About the only
----------And Mil---------।•art of the curioils building that re­
eedn. Feed, Lime, Kalt, Plaster. Stuc­ main* wholly a«t it was is the safe-det&gt;odc vau’t room in the cellar, which,
co, Hair. Pine Lumber, Lath
although ivwa* the firat of thn ra &gt;dern
and Shingle*,
order of gigantic v.«ult system*, is said
not
yet tn have been excelled for sftATTHE LOWEST LIVING PRICES.
curiiy or c »*t. Here, it is said, Samuel
J. Tilden keeps the major part of hi*
heap of securities and J*y Gould store*
what the slangy broker* Hippant! v
speak of a&lt; bis “b-todle.” Three armed
men are locked in the vault chamber

Nashville Elevator!

Eiperiencei, Reliable, and Responsible.

A. H. WINN, Dentist.

BfST SET GUM TEETH $10.00
Teeth Extracted Without Pain.

OfficeOpen Day &amp; Evening.
JJ A. BAKBBK, M. !&gt;..
’ lIIOMCEOPATinC *

Physician and Surgeon.
Offire first door eant of Open. Hoose, and
near resilience on corner of Washington and
Blate Streets, Naabrille, Mich. .

]£ A. BUSH,
*

“THE BOSS'

BOOT AND SHOE MAKER,
NASHVILLE,

.

HIGH.

IKEIIO USK.
L. P. Cole. Proprietor.
Sportuaen. pljuuare «r«k»ra,or picnic partle*
will fled Chl* pl*ce and hotuc apleaaanc place lo
•jiend * day** recreation.
A new (Cramer and
abundance ot row boat* ; alto fl,hlo&lt; tarkle, bait
ete.

pLEKEnuna

Attorney &amp; Counsellor,
JgUACK &amp; SO X.

American and Foreign Marble,
Monument.*, Trnnbrcnes, Mantlet, 4o.,

WILLIAM JONES,

aiuee winch en* duly puiilisb.d, &lt;u taiiiugliis triiiMi kaldc rxperienee mid'
A fe»r?'il nne. I hud felt langui«l
ivecuv- hum wliut awmrdcertain deatii j and &lt;n;tiltrd forbuaiue** for safer*. But
It would In* faupuawible to vjiumeratc ’ I di&lt;! nor know wiiar felled me. Wln-n,
the'personal »*tiquirie* which hurt- been j imwever, I fotird it &lt;*m* ftidury diffirtiluiMdcat our offim »« to the validity of j ty I tbonght there wa* little hope, and
Hie.article, but they liavr trocu *u num- ‘ mi did the doctiue. I have since learucruii* that flutter iiivrsligatiuu of tbc., ed that one of the physician* uf thin
aubjecC whs deemed nn editorial urces- . city pointed me out to a gt-ntlvuiun on
Stove Co.’
I flw Kin*et.o!N'day. aay ing: ‘Hiere goe* jyi*eninh
Witli this end in view a represent*- I n»m«n who will Im- dead
’
------ . within
» --------a--year.
•
OF DETHOIT.
rive of this papercalletipu Dr. Huoiuu. I la-lievr&gt;1.1.; t
rHnd
Finest Pattern * of &lt; '«Hvk* aud Heaters in the
nt hi* residence on bl i’util street,when (true tf I h..l
had ..»«
not L..n.uu,.iv
fuitiiUHtHy w...i
M i-Hied
»
market. Zine*. Mtnse Furniture. Btr.
the foliownig Interview occurred: I and hmm! the* remedy now known h*
“That Article of yours. Doctor, inis ’ Warner * Bale Kidnev and UvenCure.** PAiSTS, VARNISHES, COlAtS. BftrsHFS.
WELL and ClSI ERN FFilPS.
created quite • whirlwind. Are tne I “And tbi* cahsvd you to UMunifurture
POINTS, PIPE SINKS, ETC.
statemeute hIhiuC the terrible condition it J"
CHA MPIONX CVT SA WS. A NFS, ETC.
you were in, mid the wrjr yoU were res- । “No. it cnnM-d inc to investigate. 1
Detroit Wblfr I.ead Works ( olon.vThe Beat in the "flarkrt.
curd sticli u*you cuu.sustain F
I went to lire piini-i|wt cities, ww pfiyai
“Every «Hic of tbeni and many mbit- : chin* prescribing and umdr it, aud i BUILDER'S HARD WA KF, SASH. DOO Its.
tiooMi one*. Few people ever get so • therefore determined, a* a duly I owed
GLASS, LOCKS. KNOBS, Ac. dr.
neat thegtave n* I did and then return huinanirv H»d tlie suffering, to bring it
.NAILS. IRON. AND STEEL.
and I »ni uot i&gt;urpri*cd that the public | witbin their reach, and now it i* known
think it tuarvelou*. It
marvel-1 in every port of America, i« sold in ev- When In Need &lt;»F the' Beat &lt;*rad4-« of Hardware and Jlacliinery &lt;‘all &gt;.ud Sre Me.
■
ou«.”
. &lt;*ry «l&gt; ng atore, Hihl Im* became n bonsc“How iu the world did you, a physi- Imhl necrssiiy.” ’
cian. cotue to be brought
low »"
I The reporter left Mr. Warner, nineh
"Bv neglecting the first and innst ! iiuprc**ed with tlie eurucstnra* mid *iu*imple syuiptoiua. 1 did not think 1 [ verify of hi* atatrinente, and i.ext paid
wa* tick. It i» true 1 had frequent | a vi*it to Dr. R.‘ A. Lattimore, at hi*
headache*, felt tired iuo*t of the tiutr, rcehlevce on Prince street. Dr. Mtticuuld rat nothing- one rhl.v anil wa* ra- I more, nlilioitgh bnally engaged upon
venou* the next; felt dull indefinite । matter* connected with the State Bonn!
pain* and my *toiu*cli wa* out of order, of. hcnltli, of which lie i* nneof tlie anbut 1 did uot think it meant Mirythiug ; nlysta, courteously answered the quc«.enuua”
- ’I’U'* that were propounded him.
“But have those contnion ailment.* I “Did you make chrnileal analysis of
anytftiniGto do with the fearful Brighi’s the raa.* of Mr. H. II. Warner some
disease which took so firm a bold on I three year* ago, doctor!"
yuttr
,
! * *’Y«a» sir.?...............................
_
“What did this nntilx-i- show vou!"
“Anything! Why, they are the sure
indication* of the first stage* ol that ; "Thi-presence
. .. , ... ... of albumen mid till**
S.
CO.,
drrndt'il malady. The fact i*. few pro- : cast* in great abiindiuirr.’’
pie know or realize what ails them,- "And what
wliht did tlie
the symptom*
symptoms indiiiinl 1 mn aorrv to say that too few phv- cafe!"
sictau* do either."
1 “A serious disease of the kiunrvs."
"Thati* n strange statement. Doc- • "Did you think Sir. Warner could retor."
.
covetT*
.
.
“But it is a true one. Thb me&gt; icaj I •’Nasir. I did hot think it possible,
ptofeamon haw beru treating syrup-I II w***»'ldom,inde«d.tlints»»pronniiriWe fully realize the
toius instead ot diseases for ycais, ninl | ced a caw Imd, up to that time, ever
it is high time it censed. We doctors : been cared.”
liuve tieeii dipping oft the twigs when I "Do you know anything about the
we should stnke at tlie root. T-iivsym- remrily which cored hinif”
ptoins 1 haveju*t luvntiourd or any uu- . "Ye*. 1 have chemically analyzed it, That must all kind* of produce are bringing this fall, so have
usual action or irritation ol w ater cluin- | mu! upon critical examination find ii
uela indicate the approach of Bright’* i entirely from any poisnuou* or deleter­
bought a large stock of ail kinds uf
disease even more than a cough an- ’oils snlmtincrs."
nouiK-ea the approach of consumption. I We publish thr foregoing statements
We do not treat the c-Higli. but’try to I in view of the commotion which the
help the lune*. We should not wnstr pnldidtv of Dr. Hrnion’s article h.t*
our time trying to relieve tli-hcadndiei emi red mid to meet the protestations
st.'iunch, pain* about the body or othei i which havelwen made. The standing
*ymptniu*,.but go directly to the kid- of Dr. Heiiion. Mr. Warner and Dr.
ney*, tlie source of most of tiiese ail- Lnttimore in tire commnnitv^i* lieyond
question mid the stareqient* they make, '
And are selling at prices that will astonish you.
“This, then, i* what-you meant when cannot fur a moment be doubted. They I
you said that more than oiu-;half the conclusively show that Bright'* disease
deaths which occur arise from Bright* of the kidney* is one of tlie moat de- j
c-ptive and dangerous of all disease*. I
disease, is it doctor !”
Hastings, October 4, 1882.
“Precisely. Tliousaud* of so-called that it is exeedingly increasing and I
diseases are torturing people to-uuy. can lx* enred.
wi'eu in reality it i* Bright’s disease in
Mmro one of its many form*. It is n
Hydra-headed monster, and the slight­
est symptom* should strike tenor to
every on-who La* them. I enu look
back mid recall hundred* of deaths
■30 WITH THE CEGCRAPHY OF THIS COUNTRY, WILL
which physician* declared st the time
SV EXAMINING THI? MAP, THAT THE
,
were paralysis, apoplexy.heart disease,
No more grown wheat will be gr -und at file
pneumonia, malarial fever anil other Nashville mill.
common complaints which 1 *«’ ,,oW
I have found it ImpoMlblc to make pxxl
— wheat if I iW
flour for tbiwe who have
gixxi
* , k
were caused by Bright’s disease.
trown wheat.
QJ ’
"Aik! did all these case* have simple griata of grown
There i»» no mill, old proccre or new proceB*. rf
symptoms at first!”
prevent
the
flour
of
different
grisu
II
that
can
pr
‘
“Every one of them, and might have from mlxitu,
ing together.
been cured as I wa* by the timely use
.. of__
_s_.
----------()Ur -------fn&gt;m —
1,1, . । r
The idea
giving
a mantbc
L—fi----of the same remedy—Warner’s Safe own griat without mixing in
In flour from other v*
Kidney and Liver Cure. 1’ —
am
getting
r V
—V-" ' KT,*U is a11 ganimon. It can’t be done, and a
ripened
my eye* Thoroughly op*"’ in this i never was qjine, *nd any miller knows that
helping others
j he is trying to deceive hia cuatoncre when he
matter arid think 1 am i.
,
j ... dan
. claltba tooo iL
to see the fact* and their-------possible
ci «m«Hv
„ uj , there are
.- no end of 1 H
LM-rnl
n Whv
“ Is
«» even impossible to even
even elevate
ricvste grown I■ : :
ger also, p ny■.Luiere
J , Bnd pod Wheat alternately without mixing; kr|
truths bearing on this subject. If you-Jthem more or les*. If you doubt this, ask the UJ
want to know urore about tt go and *&lt;•«• t ri^t^mimsboaiit/toeu tow much more '
Mr. Warner himself. He was sick the they will become mixed in a mill ’here tto I
same aa I, and I* the healthiest man in wheat and flour pa*» through m&gt; many eleva-1
Rochester to-day. He has made a Study Ijor*, conveyor*, tolta, machineries, etc. No.
of thi* subject and can give vou more | milta can make good Cour of grown wheat.
j
‘threb.SSuottfl'S^ i
n
r.e..
»OJ ।
0

By Buying Your Dry Goods

W.

■UIW. in SD1G1C1L SH1T1RI81

&amp;00DYEAR

&amp;

HaHtiiiR-. TVIioh.

DRY GOODS, FANCY GOODS, NO­
TIONS. BOOTS and SHOES,
and CARPETS,

Be-ide, toe gain of room, the main
imonpvemtuit in tha reconstructed Board
room has been through various devices
to lessen the noise and confusion iu that
mod noisy and disorderly of apart­
ments. A* it was. the messengers and
criers made a goodly portion of the
racket in calling incessantly, and at tlie
top of their lungs, the names of the
brokers for whom there were callers,
telegrams or letters. An ingenious ar­
rangement of spsaking-tubef from each
of the multitudinous d&lt;x»rways to a table
near the telegraph instruments in the
southern end of" the big room is the
means of avoiding most of this extra
and unnecessary noise. A young man
at this table applies the tubes to his ear,
and hearing the name of a broker for
whom there i* a visitor, looks on a chart
near at hand for the number by which
that broker is designated, and, finding
it, presses an electric button in the table,
and throws in immense wh-te numeral*
the designated number on the big black­
board on the gallery front o verb etui.
The broker sees the number, and goini
to the youth at the table, learns at which
door to find his visitor. Itettcrs and tel­
egrams are delivered J)y the messengers
without award being spoken, bv mean*
of envelopes, which every broker sup­
plies, whereon the brokers’ numbers are
printed in large type. ^he*e envelope*
the boys hold over their heads as they
-,*o*h their way through the crowded
.-oom until the broker whose number is
qnaitiity of them showing, the alarming , when th,.T
,n klndlk wlI| i„. jart „ Bpt u» ■
displayed claims the missive.
increase of Bright * disease, it* siiuph- [ p.;
fn&gt;ra
wheat. The only way to
Even now, however, there is no much and deceptive symptom*, anil that make good flour for alLi* to grind nothing but*
noise that a person unaccustomed to it there is but one way oy whieh it can be good wheat, and that ia juat what I propose to
—to umj a trite expression—can not hear escaped."
do
from
this
time
on.
,
'
*“ •k,‘”
I won’t make flour for anv one that Is not j
aimseif think.
But to the brokers I
Fully satisfied of the truth ami force,
enough to sack up and put into the mark­
have no doubt it becomes as little con­ of the doctor’s words, the reporter hade good
et. There ta uot a particle uf difference be­
him
good
day
and
called
on
Mr.
War
­
fusing as the-uniform rattling of hun­
tween the flour I put into the market and that
dred* of soundefs in the main room of ner, was inclined to lie reticent, but which I give in exchange for prirt*. or that
the Western Union Telegraph Company learning that the information desired wldrh 1 make from gri»t* when I grind them.
Thoae having gotgood wheat
flour
Thons
-------- can
,— —get
— .good
----------is to the operators who spend their work wa* about the alarming increase &lt;»f
an . there having grown wheat rami pat­
days in that equally bewildering babel. Bright's disease, his manner changed here,
ron lac M&gt;me other mill.
Of this noise in the Board room of the tusU^lly and he spok • v -ry earueatly :
Dated
Nashville
Sept.
30th.
“It 1* true that Bright’s disease has
Exchange it is stud that a person who i*
Increased wonderfully, and we find, by
accustomed to hearing it can tell by it* rvliulde statistics, that iu the post ten)
cone exactly the condition of the market years its growth bus been 230 per cent.
aj any given time by listening outside L&lt;M.k nt the prominent meu it ha* car­
the building in New street, on which the ried oil: Everett, Stmuaer, Cluuw, Wil­
windows of the Board rodta open. When son. Carpenter, Bishop. Haven and
there is what is known as a “bull mar­ others. Thia is terrible, aud show* n
—MUST BEket,” when value* are rising, the tone is greater growth than that of any other
high and sharp and the brokers seem to known complaint. It should l&gt;e plain
be screaming, whereas, when there is a to every.one that something must be
controlling bear movement depressing done to cheek this increase or there is
the values the tone is low and deep and no knowing where it may end."
« “Do you think many people are afwould be described as the united sound fiicUMl with ft to-&lt;lnv who do not’ real­
of a thousand men hoarse from colds.— ize it, Mr. Warner f"
AT. F. Cbr. San Francuoo Chronicle.
“Hundred* of thonKind*. I have a
striking example of this truth which
TO HAVE THE JOB DOXF
—The following is an extract from ha* just come to my notice.
A promi­
one of Emerson’s letters, written in nent professor iu a New Orlean* medi­
March, 1833: “ And what if it be Na­ cal college whh lecturing before hi*
ples ! It is only the same world of cake cIom on the sutoeevuf Bright’*disease.
and ale, of man, and truth, and folly. He had various fluids under miero*upic
I will not be imposed upon by a name. analysi*, and wa* showing the utudrut*
It is so easy to be overawed by names what the indications ot this terrible
malady were. In order to show the
that it is hard to keep one’s judgment contrnstbetween healthy and unhealthy
upright, and be pleased only after your fluids, be had provided n vial tlie con­
own way. Baia and Pau-illippo sound tents of which were drawn from hi* A nd desiring to in create my profperify
by affording the public
so big that we are ready to surrender own person. ‘And now, gentlemen,’
at discretion, and not stickle for our pri­ he said, ‘as we have seen tlie unhealthy
vate opinion against what *eema the indications, I will show you bow it
human race. But hern’s for the plain appears in a stale of perfect health,'and
old Adam, the simple, genuine self submitted his own fluid to the usual
.esuXAs he watched the result* his
against the whole world.”
Z, that Hu, 1 hart emplaiirrl
countenance suddenly changed—bis
—Frederick Lamprey, who died in color and command both left hitn, and
in
a
trembling
voice
he
said:
'Gentle
­
Orford, N. IL, tho other day, aged 27,
men, I have made n a painful discov­
had for ihe last three years been strange­ ery; I have Bright’s (Iiscmm*. of kid­
ly diseased. At times be would be »ev- ney*.’ and iu les* than a year he wa*
and days without food, then would eat dead"
a large quantity and seemingly throw it
“You believe then that it ba* no
all up. At other times he would drink symptoms of it* own and is frequently
■onr quart* of water. All the time he unknown even they person who.is.af­
Ra* losing flesh. Hi* height wa* five flicted with itr
“It ha* no symptoms ot its own. aud
ieet and nine inches, and at the time at
hi* death hi* weight wia only fifty-three very often none at all. Usually no two
people have the sameayptoms, and fre­
quently death i* the first symptom. FOUNDER and MACHINIST

LEGGED WHEAT.

John M. Roe.

Horses

Sliod

ALWAYS BEST

DENTISTS

H^StoveN.

ulai-

SKILLFULLY.

Recognizing These Facts,

W. S. GOODYEAR &amp; CO­

to
c

URI

_ !j
jM
LJ

Jh^caco, Rock Island &amp; Pacific Rjy,

It is literally and etrictly true, that Its eor.ncctlonu are all of th«principal lino*
| ?f road between the Atlantic and the Pacific.
&gt;1
S) Ita main lino and branches It roacha* Chicago, Jol'et, Peoria, Ottawa,
|i .h Salle. Oeneaeo, MoHno and Rock Island. In .ll.noia; Davenport, Muecatlqo,
L I Washington, Keoku
Keokuk, Knoxville, Oskaloosa. F.t.rfiold, Den Moinas, Won Liberty,
■ Iowa
*2 “ City, Atlantic, Avoca, Audubon, Harlan, Catbrie Center and Council Bluffs,
n Iowa ;i Gallatin, Trenton,
'
Cameron and Xanana City, In Missouri, and Leaven*
| worth and Atchison in Kansas, and the hundreds of c.ties, tilt&amp;aea "Od towns

GREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE,”
incident to a smooth trunk, safe bridges. Union Depots at afl connecting points,
1 Fast Express Trains, compose* of COMMODIOUS, WELL VENTILATED, WELL
LJ|HEATED, FINELY UPHOLSTERED and ELEGANT DAY COACHES; a tins Of tho
‘•MOST MAGNIFICENT HORTON RECLINING CHAIR CARS «««r built; PULLMAN'S
“1 latest designed and handsomest PALACE SLEEPING CARS, and DINING CARS

I
TNRtt TRAINS each way between CHICAGO and the MISSOURI RIVER.
Fn
TWO TRAINS each way between CHICAGO and M.NNEAPOUS and ST. PAUL,
Jlvta the famous

H

ALBERT LEA ROUTE.

^4
A New and Direct Line, via Seneca and Kankakee, ha* recently been opened,
I । between Newport News, Richmond, Cincinnati, Indianapolis Jind La Fayette,
rVSiMn*
OlxH. ft, Pa .1
:••
For more detailed information, mo Mopscnd Folder*, which majr be obtained, aa

R. R. CABLE,
Vicw-Prca't A Gon’I Manager,

THE BEST WORK

|E. ST. JOHN

'CHICAGO.

Chas. Middleton,

ATTHE NEWS OFFICE.

A No. 1 Workman. O-et &lt;_&gt;nr T’riceis Heibre !.&lt;»&lt;&gt;

Jr. M. WOOD

_________________ Elsewhere._____
^JOQ^S

ears

�Evcn thim Sew, Ht.vHih. rend Ihirwbk-.
New**.
after notifying Newiu. went to tlo- Sheriff's

iaud) hunt on tl&gt;e 12th.
Gxxxxal&amp;x AncMJMALU Alisox has made
I a rejort nnfav&lt;ir«b!e tn the project for a tun। nel under the British Channel.
on the 14th.
BxoADXJnr. an English ixm-later, has itf»
ftsrrwosn and ahln,,&lt;n&lt;r nm-^rtv Worth * Tttnlt for Egypt, 1O defend ^Tabl Pashx

CHILDREN’S, BOYS’, AND YOUTHS’ CLOTHING,

fouid to

named J. 11 Crapo, murdered lu cold Wood
Richard Elgin.» book-keeper for a cattle firm.

•mow,

tam.1 u&gt; rMuaSpbi/oo u» :

rad Deputy Sheriff of Hamilton County.
Hxrwaxx-January L 1817, and June 30,
lie laud in Indiana. for which the Government
reeelrod All.&lt;U 1,219.42.
At Natick/Maax, on the 18th two little girls

T.»S«'ini

HATS, HATS,

CAPS, CAPS,

And believe we have something desirable and very cheap.
We have mode- additions te our

•i.an.tw.zrj, uu»at «i.«H,nn.wi th. ««k t
.
I loss of life and great uc*tract ion of property,
peevioux •
j At Herradura 3J0 hute and' bouses were de­
Mil Elmer, Second A»*ittnnt PoatmuA'.er- •
rnoflahed. Two thou• and palm tree* were
General, atated on the 16th that the" mall t blown
down. At Consolation del Sur 783
houses were destroyed. The bodies cl
tent of 300.000 miles, as compared with IbcO, fifteen persons drowned by the overflowing ol

them, but they did not falter. They took him
prisoner and werefnto toe jail-yard in a jiffy.

Boots, Shoes, Gents’ Furnishing Goods, Groceries, Ondenear, Etc.
Our Kt&lt;Jck of

Boots and Shoes i* larger than ever, and no competitor
will be allowed to undenwll |u.

halL Kewirt. Martin and Tom Kerth, ■Jropened np a brisk fire, which waa responded
to by the mob. Who poured a fuailade through

about 03^03,030.

-Rlgs, Russia, was discovered on the 14th.
three deaths ware reported at Pensacola, Fla., •Boxes of ; etroleum snd gunpowder were
on the 16th. Tbs malady had appeared in found on the premises.
sections of the city previously axempL It was
ALoxdox cablegram of the 14th stales that,
reported at Brownsville, Tex., thst.cholera
against »bc advice of Angio-Egyr.t-.an officials,
bawl made Its appearance at Matamoras.
vatiou in-tho insist of plenty. The parents
A Washixotos dispatch of the 10th states
should be defende) by English couniel, and
that for the nine months ended September
household 33, 1882, the total value of domestic bread- the order had Leen rent to Cairo by Earl
waa known of
Grenvtle. The opinion among Enffilahmen'
stuffs exported was 0134,512,779; same time who know Egypt was nearly unanimous.that
of aioldlttrs'
Arabi should be left lo bls fate, as there
platform fell
7as Department of Agriculture at Wash­ wm UUte chance bl restoring tranquillity
ington on the 10th estimated the crop yields
rhoot were saricoaly Injured.
for the present year as follows: Oats, 480,000,­ while Aralrl lives, as It was joaslble that
000 bushels; rye, 20,000,000 bushels; barley, be might be the chief in a new re vol L
The owner and ihqenjfincr.r of the Canadian
13th of the ■liaanclal condition of the Post­ 45,000,000 bushels; buckwheat, 11.500,000
bushels, and potatoes, 163.OM.OCO bushels. steamer Richelieu and ths Government In­
year ended isune 30, J&amp;S3. show ed total .re­ Careful comparisons lead the officials to be­ spector of boilers have been committftd to jail
ceipts of 041.878,410; total expenditures, 040,
lieve that the corn crop will approximate by the Coroner at Montreal, to-stand trial for
manslaughter; The boat recently explodeAher
039.834: excess of receipts, 01,830,775.
1,050,000,000 bushels.
water-Jacket and killed several persona
Nkarlt fifty shots were fired In a difficulty
at Tifton, Gx, on the 12th, between Green It PERSONAL AND POLITICAL.
A Paris cablegram announces the death of
Mayo and Martin Harrell, whose friends took
The returns from the Ohio e'tcUun re­ Count Napoleon Ney, a sou of the famous
part. -Bolh,principals were mortally wouud- ceived ou the 12th indicated a Democratic Marshal, at. the age of seventy.
majority of about 20,000. The Democratic . A Constanti xorls dis;xtch of the 14th
Tn annual report of the Commissioner of (.'ouxTessmen-elect were believed to be: John says that the 8bcikh Obeidullah, the Kur­
Pensions at Washington, issued ou the 13th, 11. Follet in the First District; Isaac M. Joi- dish Chief, had appeared before Van. with a
shows that for the fiscal year ended June 8J. dan in the Second; R. M. Murray in the Third; force of 10.00Q men, and demanded the sur­
1862. there was 2S5.0U5 pensioners on the roll, Ben Le Fevre in the Fourth; George E. Seney render of that city. Thirty thousand 'Per­
and the total disbursements were 029,311.­ iu the Fifth; W. D. Hill iu the Sixth; Frank sians. with Turkish trw» » n 1 rt’Jlery. were
101.03.
Hurd In the Tenth; George E. Converse in marching against him. and had bren ontered
WaajAM AvsTiX was hanged on the 13th at the Thirteenth; George W. Geddes in the
HxxrtAL StaXUT has recently returned
Fourteenth; A. J. Werner in the Fifteenth;
Mr*. Eland, and made a full coufejalon at the Beriah Wilkins tn tbs Sixteenth; J. IL Wal­ to London, the work on the Congo undertaken
last momeuL Paul Pringle (colored) &gt;wu lace in the Eighteeuth; David It Paige in the for Belgium being practically finished.
hanged Lt MauzHeld, Lx, for murder.
Twentieth, snd Martin A. Foran in the Twen­
Five of tho northern de;ar:meats of Peru
Tux elevator.of John Hurd at Bridgeport, ty-first. The Republican Congees smen-elect have declared for Pierola for Dictator.
* Conn., etered with grain, wm devtroyed by •were: IL L. Morey in the Seventh District;
Wister h.s set In in Rusolx On the 18th
fire on the IRh. the low being 0135,0)1
J. W. Keifer In the Eighth; J. D. Robinson tn navigation was suspen led by ice.
♦
SaxcrL C'lat &amp; Co., prominent dUHItem •the Ninth; John W. McCormick lu the
The Atlantic steamer Frankfort, of tbs
&lt;&gt;f Boarimn County. Ky., made an awlgument Eleventh; Alphonso Hart in the Twelfth; J. North German Lloyd line, was recently de­
•-« ll»c J3lh. with ItobilltlM of 01OXOM.
T. Updegraff In the Seventeenth, and E- B.
The Tallowing appeal wm iwuml on the Taylor in the Nineteenth. Democrats, 14; merhaveti, Germany.
U4h by-tbo Boardcf Health of Prn«acolx Fix: Republican*, 7.
lx s s.eech ntElgewiut'-wtow i. Ireland, on
JJr. Johx W. Parker, of Columbls, a Q. the 16 h Michael Davltt declare 1 that abso­
whose humane and skillful management of lute ownerahln by a tenant iu .and he either
the Insane Asylum there gave him a national created or purchased, and unj.slurted oc­
reputation, died on the 11th.
cupancy, were the the only thL.^s that would
Ox the 12th the following Congressional bring ;&gt;eace to Ireland.
nominations were -made: Republican—NevYork, THrtyahlrd District, F. B. Brewer. mall postilion near O.lessx aud secured a half
Democratic—New York, Eighteenth, A L. million roubles from the letters.
urv Isolated from ft ■ world ' by
A Cairo dispatch uf the 18th states that
In mac; Connecticut, Second, Charles' L.
rigorous und Impenetrable quarantine '
Mitchell; Massachusetts, Fifth, Leopold Ar-bl Pasha persisted in declaring that be
source* arc exhausted. &lt;Wc arc drpcndeqt Mona; Sixth, Mayor Lovering; Pennsylvania, would defend himself, if denied English
upon the ^generosity. of our fellow-citizens Eighteenth, Francis M. Kimmell: Maryland, counsel at hi* tris'. It was believed in offi­
abroad florae means of supplying the unrent Sixth, Montgomery Blair; Iowa, Eight, Lewis cial circles that proof of Arabi’s complicity In
wants at the stek, dying, and destitute. It is Bonnett.
the June t;&gt;a&lt;»acrj at Al .-xun.lria would not
not Improper,under tbo circumstances, to sav
be obtai cable.
thxtour own servtoea are rendered KralulAlabema,died on the 12th at Huntsville.
i»r Kajary fnr hia e ervic'X As such,
LATEK NEWS.
Tub 100th anniversary of the birth of Dan­
pett-onal Interest in the matter exiel Webster waa celeorated on the 12th with
Tea Irish National Conference opened on
peculiarly Interesting exercises at Marshfield,
Maw. President Arthur and Secretaries Lin­ the 17th at Dublin, with nearly eight hundred
n. G. Bttcwr. M. I)..
coln and Chandler, Senators Hoar and Dawes, delegates in attendance. Messrs. Parnell and
Davltt were greeted by wild cheers. Mr. Par­
and other notables were presen L
John F. Caine waa on the 13th nominated nell was called to preside. A letter from
toy .the Mormon, at Salt Lake for Delegate to Treasurer Egan, at Paris, conveying his res­
•CongruM. Me la a churchman but not a ignation, stated that funds of the Land
League, amounting to £344,520, had passed
polygamist.
pany made on Laalgnmenton. the 14th to cov­
John A. Cockerklu editor of theSt^Louls through hl» hands, the sum remaining being
er liabilities of tttl.OOOi
AMf-Dbpa/cA. shot aud killed Colonel A. W. ££,000. A vote of confidence was passed.
Slay back on the 13th lu the editorial r&lt;&gt;oms Numerous letters and telegrams from the
Central Rond atruck a carriage In Syracuse of hia journal Slaybeck hod come to de­
on the 14th as.1 kilted Mrs McGane. Mrs. mand an explanation of an a&lt;aault ou him establishment of an Irish National League
Comstock, her another, and Mrx Burress, an through the columus of the ;&gt;a|&lt;er ot a pollt- was adopted.
Fifty Dew cases of yellow fever and three
leal nature, and, aa a.Heged, w.,s atteinpt.ux
aunt, and la tally injured Mr. McGoue.
At midnight on the 14th Captain Webb, to draw a revolver, when Cockerell antlclpat- deaths were reported at Pensacola, Fix, &lt;s
the 17th, with oppressively hot weather.
the English swimmer, .completed tn Boston
A bill was introduced In the Vermont
The De.nocrats of New York City on the
the feat of remaining 128JX hours in water.
Legislature on the 17th providing that con­
Charles &amp; Childs, Superintendent of the 14lh nominated Franklin Edson for Mayor.
cemetery at Cambridge. Maax.whltesJrivingon
ArfiL Lou a on the Mt‘j three witneuea to demned criminals shall be rendered insensi­
Coolidge avenue on the forenoon of the 14th, the recent affray in the editorial rooms of the ble before being executed.
Ths New Hampshire Prohibitionist met In
wa* stepped by two dtegntsed men. .who shot Pos^-DupahA testified tnrfore Use Coroner that
him tn tho eye and roblxid him of 0550. He the deceased Colonel Slayback was an armed State Convention at Concord on the 17th and
would probably die of htafnjurie*.
aggreiasr. The jury returned a verdict that nominated a full State ticket, headed by
There were slxty-four^ew coses of_yellow Slayback came to hia death from a wound Josiah W. Fletcher for Governor.
Retcrxs on the 17th from the recent Ohio
prodnoed hg a bullet fired from a revolver in
election Indicated that the plurality for New­
the hands of John A. CockerilL
the 15th.
Ihntixu'thc fiscvlyear.safei June80, 1882,
The following Oongresslonal nominations man (Dem.), for Secretary of State, would be
about 18,000. The Prohibition vote wonld be
there were 11,200.OJS piece* coined by the
United States mints, representing a raise of linola, Fisat District, John W. Doane; Ken­ In the neighborhood of 12.000, which would
•80,413,447, being nearly fl 1.000,00J greater tucky, Tenth. J. C. R. Bla. kburn, renominat­ give the Democrats a clear majority of about
6,000.
ed; New York, Thirtieth, Fred C. Winkler.
Pucro-fxxcxoxia appeared among the
Rev. Tbcmas Gaoto. s leading Metbod.st
above Mentioned amounted to 23,(87.233 pastor of Baltimore, died on the 15th from the cattle near Lancaster, Px, on the 17th. J.
IL Saunders, President of the Cattle Com­
effects of a surgical operation.
mission,
pronounced Baltimore and the farms
A cubs in a Cincinnati hotel drcampet!
The Gentiles of Utah have nominated Dis­
on the night of the 14th with JiS-ki placed in trict Attorney Van Zlle for Delegate in Con- adjacent a hot-bed of theXlspase.
A letter of the Official Department of the
Tiiomx-1 A. McDevitt aud Christian Price, Public Domain of Alexandria, Egypt, waa
the lake off Chicago on the 13tu hyXhc capsiz­ tl»e two Star-ranters couvtcted at Phi'adel- published on the 17th, declaring that tlie coun­
ing ot d small aMl-bpst.
phlx were on the 16th denied a new trial, try was in a state ol ferment, which could
and the former was fined 053J aud sentenced only be cured by the execution of the leaders
UXDKRWoao's
Ikhrtvr i&gt;r Octo­
ber xunouncaa that a Dew (trnnterf-lt stiver to one year’s imprisonment, sod the latter of the rebellion.
The failure wakanuouuccd on the 17th of
d«’lUr, dated DHL has a p; cared in QaclBnatL
in the Penitentiary.
the iron Importing firm of A. A C. J. Hope,
of Montreal and Hamilton, with liabilities of
Hent in weight, weighing but 074 gra as. It
to is a fine ring, and la without doubt one &lt;-! grew men elected In Ohio at the recent State 0500,000.
Tn« Democratic County Convention In
election were:* Democrats, 13; Republicans,
8; a Democratic gain of 8. in West Vir­ Tammany Hail, Now York, on the 17th unani­
Germantown, Kentucky, the other evew
ginias Republic ins and 2 DemocrAU were mously resolved that Mayor Grace was a spy
elected; a Republican gain of 2.
and traitor to the party, and demanded that
'Hexbt Gr.or.uE, the Labor Reformer, ar­ the State Central Committee Immediately ex­
fait-grounds with Um wife of George Cooper,
rived la New York from England on the 16th. pel him from that body.
Reports to the Canadian Government on
the 17th indicated an uprising of the Indians
FOREIGN.
on the Caradoc reserve, in tire Northwest
Territories.
Fiftkex dynamite cartridges with a light­
(Dated. in accordance will: requests made bced fuse attached were recently discovered in
the Moapcauiea (France) mines.
cromailon
CoTCMesiOXAL Dominations were made as
den. built at Aberdeen, Scotland, foe the follows on the 17tli: Republican—New York,
American trade, was recently totally wreebotl Fourteenth District, Henry R. Low; New
Jersey, Serente. Gilbert Collins; CounecUon her trial trip.

rn to Naahrite.

Which Is the moat col

■unralnr nt the Iflth
I
Jo®n»
**•» *or
OS contract With
Twnenr:»or.
_Tvcrrr
r«m l»jl« ele^n« hnnaea
hou«« tn
lo ‘h* Young Men’s Christian Association, and
ellrtnJTLuX wJk endedHw. ihefab of
HaVaXa (Cuba) advfcm of the 13ib state
Ok the KWi the Sheriff of Lactode County,

The attention of Parents U resj&gt;c&lt;-tfnlly called to our large stock of

CALL 0VNI&gt; SEE.

BRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN.

soon brought and willing bands went to work,

kfiled by aifrslght locomotive.

that If they would give him
would kill some of them.
rushed through the corridor to Hodman's cell.

Latest News

in their hands. They tied hia bands with

C. W. GRANGER &amp; CO.
Have just received their new goods for the Fall trade.

front window, which he opened and blew his
whistle. Then the mob followed him and threw

THEIR PRINTS and GINGHAMS
Are the finest ever brought to this market for the price.

were bringing liedman out of the front door.

tho city, the chemical engine came rapidly up
the street, and "triking the buggy into which
the mob ha&lt;l placed Ib-dinan, overturned IL
This threw the mob Into some disorder, when
one of the lenders said: “Put him on horse­
back.” This order was countermanded, and
orders were given to kill him on the spoL
One of th» band seized n sledge-hammer and
dealt Redman a powerful blow on the head,
felling him to tho ground.
At this point Chlcf-of-Policc Pritchell ar­
! rived on the scene. One of the mob ran up lo
him and said: “Go away from here, Pntc-h-

Uy Uris time several officer* were on the
ground, woo, without the orders of their supe­
riors, opened fire on the rapfdly-retreatlng
-mob. The mob ilred as they retreated. They
was fought on Third street. Bulletts whistled
in every direction. Chief Pritchell and Dctect-

lie fiat on the ground to escape death.
Redman waa killed where he was stricken

en balls entered his body.
It was at this place that David Murphy, a
brother-in-law of the murdered woman, met
bls death. The mob was so intent ou killing
Redman that they nred helter-skelter through
horse, which started down Third street with
the remainder of tho mob. When they left, a
hiiir square from "tho scene. Murphy reeled
and fell. I*rttchell and Mewltt hurried to his
a*sl»tance. He was aimed into the court­
house, nn&lt;l medical aid was summoned.
The body of Redman wm conveyed to the
oourt-bousc, but Ute was extltfcL Murphy
askrel for a drink of water, end said he resided
in ML Vernon. In twenty minutes afterwards

WORSTED DRESS GOODS, '
In Brown, Cardinal, Dregs of Wine, Bronze Green, Slate, and
Drab, for 12 1-2 cents per yard.

CLOTHING.
lien's, Youths’, Boys’, and School.

SUITS.
From a Cheap Cottonnade to an Imported Worsted.

WE GUARANTEE OUR

PRICES AS LOW AS THE LOWEST
Call and See our Huts and Caps, Boots and Shoes.

5000 LBS. OF BUTTER WANTED
For which we will pay the highest market price in Cash.

C. W. GRANGER &amp; CO.

C. C. Wolcott
HASGONH

THE STORE REMAIN’S
And

is

filled with Stoves of 20 Different Kinds.

The MONUMENTAL is the Finest Round
•
Stove Made.

and everything ’
lu a short tit
young man, a an

were lying. Chief Pritchell urrc-trd filmland
be gave his name as Quincy A. Gill, and said
he resided In ML Vernon. He was locked up.
Chief Pritchell also arrested a large, heavy­
set man, with black whtskcra. but he was afti ption riven answers for the lead
lob of Saturday last at ML Vernon.
Dave McFadden, a brother of the' murdered
woman, was shortly afterward arrested by
Detective Merritt in Young's saloon. Newitt
him In
as tfen
the Iperwon
who
.recognized
..■nl.-.f- ■* him
m.I
..
IJ- pointed
— nna

raa locked up.
s made by Officers Zopp
rnerof Fourth aud Main
street on horseback, and prepared tn arrest
him. He fired nt the officer*, but fortunately
rnlMcd them. He was takeu into custody. He
- knocked one of them down, and gave the oth­
er a revere tussle, bin was landed In the «t»tlon-housc.

1

On the night of the Sth Inst, the neighbors of
Hume Redman, wboao home was about three
mile* northwest of Mount Vernon, heard loud
cries of "Mercy 1” “For God's sake, don't kill
taring siruck, and shortly after a pistol was
fired off. Several of the neighbors went over
to the bouse and found Redman's wife lying
upon the floor atxnit two feet from tho door in
a dying condition, weltering tn her biood.
Mot leala ■aid
summoned,
but"by
■ t was.hn
i—
.***
- - the
J time the

and blows. The pistol balU-ntered her head
Just behind the left car. it Is supposed that
wKII— bKa Wm*
&gt;&gt; ... ....
---- - - —
arrested and placed in tho Mount Vernon JalL
A mob was organized to hang him, aud on
learning of this the Posey County officials de­
termined to take Redman to Evansville. When
' it ■&gt;&lt; Inlrm^l thru h" had I ;.&lt;.n
rmm
. luc auuui v criMiu
ue bcuz on, • moo
atarte&lt;F for the depot after him, bat the train
pulled out Just before they readied tbnre.
. Reiman wm releiuh.-d from tbo Joliet (IU.)
Pcnitcnt'ary about a year ago. having served

—Near Heber City. Wasatch County,
Utah, recently, Thomas Davis killed his
son, a youth of twenty-one. Tho boy
Davis had decided to leave his home.
He wm packing his clothes in a bundle
on the floor, and wm on his knees, when
his father came up behind him. and
with repented blows from a neck-yoke
fractured the
llffer,ent places.—

■ —Wonders in nature never mam.
iTho law. one is that of a lamb with three
mouths. It is on a farm near Marlboro,
and has no trouble in

Paints, Oils and Colors, Doors, Glass, Sash and
Blinds Iron and Wood Pumps,Wagons, Buggies,
Carriages and Platforms, Drills, Cultivators
Seeders, Plows, Land Rollers, “Reed Spring­
tooth Harrow.
POINTS FOR ALL THE LEADING PLOWS.

DABBED WIRE.

A Large assortment of Shelf Goods and Tinware, and the best
Tinner in the County.
FOR COODS CHEAP CALL AND SEE ME.

PIONEER

STORE

SELLS GOODS EXCEEDINGLY LOW.
In order to make room for our Fall and Winter Goods we
are selling our finest stocss of Clothing at prices that re­
quire no bantering to sell.

HERE ARE BARGAINS FOR YOU!
Summer Pants for 95c—Think of It!
For fall and winter trade are comming in.
lent and cheap. Examine them

They are excel­

Of the best quality and lowest in price. Try our 40c Tea.
Don’t buy poor eggs unless you prefer them. Our egg tester
tells you which are poor.
’

CASH PAID FOR BUTTER MB ERBS.

NEW VICTOR SEWING MACHINE is VICTOROUS
J3T Ready pay secures for you all the advantages in trade.

�span of blacks.

anticipated.

uraiz Dot once, but twice j u.. j4th
ibr-boli M
„„„
(hand, I
i Aud takes fraoi iby circle preck&gt;u»oMc.
•____ g—

amonirGte Na we brigade. May yon
something about drees. He wnrtr the , troduotion of trousers arc pe-haps
find jtrans plenty and remover from loudest ot neckties, and. as soon as be hardly worth srering; they’seem, howyour bashfnint**, iaour-wiah.
had liberty of purchase, the moot extra- j ever, to have been evolved at the mere
The aid society met at the residence ordinarily patterned pantaloons, and dictate of fashion from the tight trousers
laughed at the “old woman’s” notions, and Wellingtons of the early part of ths
Mbecribe for
Mire Ell. 3. Cook, of HaUinn. h" of Mrs. U. 8. Childs’on Friday of last Hta mother waa alwavs the “old woman,” |' eontnre.
the-w,-------------------turn, h«vtn«r
having »m«m
grown
tha*a.
in »nm
ww-K, huu
cxceiicui caitnniu---------- - . -century,
------- -----------and a bhih
most excellent
eu terrain tewnt Mm. Eilw.nl E. Rn&gt;« ot th. week,
■ from
from the
tho knee-breechas
knee-breeches and
and stockings
stockings
«... iriv.n in fl,. «v&gt;*nin&lt;r bv wav *»“ father alwavs an “old fogy.
meat WAS gi en
IW /
7
At last thev'sent him to a boarding- of fifty years earlier. Bat what himsame place.
hopefully: I portant to bear in mind is that history j
Mr. aud Mra Wm. Jewell of As-yria, of peacbeaand cream, aud the preaent-4hooL The fjuber
NA8HYILLE.
will
knocksome
some
conceit
j has
roo- &gt;rd
ofgarment
a garment
at once
so rim- j
_
...J
knock
of of
thethe
conceit
j has
no no
rec-&gt;ra
of a
at once
so rimcelebrated their 30th wedding anniver­ at inn of various tableaux, among the ••School
tarter a repnmentation, of the ,"Greek out of him.” But the father either had pie and *o ugly m tronaers. We are going ; In faith tbou’lt see th* little beckoning Landf,
sary la*t week Friday.
not read dr had not heeded Solomon's J clean against all precedent in shrouding
Stave
”
well
worthy
of
notice.
Tlie
re
­
Levi Phillipa of Morgan, is going to
wtao saying: "Though thou shouldst i our limbs in cloth funnels devoid nf
have an miction sale the S5th, prepars- ceipt* of the evening were &lt;10.30, net, bray a fool In a mortar among wheat I graceful shape aud incapable of folds, . Thai reunites with thee’ tba two ou earth
VAX.
to trying the Ohio climate awhile.
with a pestle, yet will not his foolishness . And this departure from ancestral wis- With these "not low,: but gone before,” tn
(Heaven.
depart from him.” Poor Solomon evi- dom has no particular advantage to reC. Wilcox of Rutlaud has bought
BISMARK.
To ahow you a targe am! well Aelrcted 8lock nf
Hastings, Oct. 18th.
M. J. T.
dentiv had sorrowful experience with commend It. Trousers are not econo­
Harry Le Baron. Stone &amp; Biggs’ livemen that knew it all. The school was a mical I"
inasmuch "
aa they get
“t baggy Xt
at
months Holstein bull calf, for &lt;150.
mortar; and the teacher and all the boys the knee long before they are worn out.
Corn busking is in order.
Edward
8.
Lacey,
the
republican
North Irving ia quite stirred up over
_•___ ___
- _ but
. -not
----------They are alwavs getting dirty at the
were
pestles;
evencontinued
&lt;
. Sheep buyers are plenty.
nominee for oongreM from thio district,
strange noises iu the house where Mrs*
pounding did any good. The boy knew I ankles. They are not specially adapted
Apple picking will tie a short job.
Bergey killed herself and children.
how to hold bls pen better than the either for cold or wet. On a wet dav hoe proven himself a clear-beaded, in
Wheat threshing will soon be ended.
writing-master, aud how to manage hie it is the part from the knee downward , d astrons,. capable
. and creditable rep
John Carveth and Clement Smith
We nre too busy to be very brilliant. voice better than the ringing-muter, and that ca&gt;oh&lt;M »he rain and necessitates ■ xeteDtativr, and he should lie his own
will dtacuM politics from a Republican
Hurrah for General Jacktou. No, No, hew to translate better than the Latin changing the whole garment. Indeed, successor by a large majority. His ef­
standpoint, at town ball, Assyria, Sat-,
CONSISTING OF
teacher, and how to bat and catch better It ia the way in which they ignore the | forta to raise the standard of agricultCorneel.
urday evening, Oct. Slat./
niakiDI thc Jep.rt„.nt of
The elrese factory will shut down than the ball-captain, and how to handle kn..-|..lnu which rente, tromre pne- , Qr,
The fiddleyille_base 'twill club, has
his
knife
and
fork
better
than
the
moth
­
tic
dlr
so
Objectionable.
It
is
at
this
■
.
.
• «•»»««« P^Uon, has won
partially redeemed itself. It captured next week.
erly matron who made table habits her hint that they drag, and not only spoil I
There ia now a host of news but we
special care. The boys called' him iron­ their own shape, but Inflict a sense of {l,im »■».▼ newjnenda among thc farthe comity championship belt from the
can’t catch ’em.
ically “the boss.” He took it as a com­ tightnesa over the whole body by means I mere of the district and he should ro­
Irving nine, last week, by 10 to 3.
Sanford Childs is entertaining vi-i’- pliment/ and it added an inch to his of braces.
, cd ve the rote of this class regardless
It is said that an Italian with a rath-1
DeigbL At the end of a year he eame
ora from the East.
The nv*re discarding of trousers, and j of party. We are sorry to learn that
er romantic htatbry has been unearthed
back from school with a bigger stock of _______
Our
youug
Writist
is
growing
fine
eabsti'n:jng
kn&lt;ckerb&gt;tek**rs
and'stock-।
.«/i
■
|)t, j# unai,]e
make a personal canvas
[ at Middleville. He in known as “Vul­
assurance than he bad when he went j [ngs,
w&lt;n»«
"
rould effect a great reform in male of this district, bur as he is a valuable.
finely and-needeth a crib.
can Junior.”, Romantic name. too.
there.
His genius for conceit was co-tnmes.
_ . ie«. a more striking and salutary '
We
Leaf
all
sides
of
the
political
W. Byington of Hickory Comers |
amazing; admirable.
change than any other detail, except j। statesmau and our chat ia appreciate^!
He went to college. He was at first a , perhaps
I oettled thi-re in 1837. He says that tif- question of the day. cussed aud dis­
perhaps the abolition of the tonhat. It ' by hia district, Thk Nawa predicts belittle taken aback that he had a dozen f„s almost a waste of breath to declaim I will go back to congress with an in­
| ty year© ago there whs but one white cussed.
Also the Largeak Stock of
Mrs. L. W. Hunt is in receipt of a oomlllioo. &lt;o work out io the lurnm.r , against trousers, their-hideouvness
ln„1;
is so creased majority and new zeal to la­
settler in Barry county, and he was a I
bor for the itest interest, of his district,
admitted.
„____ Sculptors
and
bachelor named A. S. Parker, ‘ who | stock of millinery goods. Withan ex­ vacation; aud for once in his life he ; generally
state
and
nation.
'
tensive, experience and a fair deal she really did work hard, for he was painter* have f&gt;und them quite intracta­
I died about four years ago.
ashamed to fail of entrance. But ble. and resorted in despair tis clothing
Dr. P. D. Pattenuin, the Republican I
expects to please all who patronize her.
Two railroad projects are engaging
he attributed his conditions wholly' to
J. C. Downing, no longer measures the stupidity ot the professors; and after men of the nineteenth century in Roman n miinee for State senator, is the lead- I
the attention of Marshall, Vt. Ville,
drapery. Examine what record of pqe- ing physician of Charlotte. He ia &gt; TO BE8EERHN_BARRY CO.
calico at Bismurk. His stay here wi’d he got m he faithfully fulfilled one-half
tnme you like, and you will find the staunch repnbliaiu and baa all the good
Allegan aud other neighboring towns,
be devoted to the settlement of out­ of one °f Paul’s exhortations; he dilli- shape of the lower part of the leg either qualities—such as competency, magnifi­ BOOTS AND SHOES
and one of them is of interest in the
standing accounts. This reporter is gantly forgot those things that were be­ displayed or clothed with an interesting cent physique, clean history. good morAB CHFAI* AS ANYBODY.
south-western portion ot Barry county.
hind. No secret society would have boot until you come to this century. alaetc.,—and if elected will perform the
One project is that of the, Ohio &amp; his successor and will be found vend­ him; he aasured'himself and friends that Turn over the pages of Tunch, and you duties of hia office iu a creditable man­
ing goods on a ready pay basis, bur
Michigan road from down in Ohio,
taa would- have no secret society. The can not fail to be struck with the superi­ ner to himself and district.
will buy anything that can be procured prayer-meeting could not shut him out,
। through, Marshall and other places
ority of knickerbockers over trousers
.Xaahville Ylarketa.
Writist.
and he attended regularly and spoke al­ from a picturesque point of view, while
| south-east, to Allegan. The' contract ou the farm.
ways. He flunked with greater grace for comfort and utility they are equally
for building from Marshall to Allegan
and ease than any fellow in the class and to be preferred.
This
substitution
of
BALTIMORE.
has been let to Brown, Howard Ac Co..
said “not prepared” with as smiling self­ knickerbockers or knee-breeches for
। and ties are being unloaded at the tat­
assurance as if he had mode the best
Fly is working in early sown wheat. recitation of the day. He did not get trousers is one of the pressing reforms
ter place. Eight engineering parties
School in the Bryant district, has on the base-ball nine, owing to the pre­ of the day—the change it so ’imnle and
are now in the field, and it is expected
yet so effectual—Z A. Gotek, in Ike
Only 50 cents a Year.
judice of the captain, nor take an oratori­ Clothier.
It h a fit»l ei**&gt; A&lt;nculiur*l paper, pablubad
that 70 or 80 miles of road will be coiu- closed.
I M*nl mooU&gt;ly. All wtao wud o« U»rtr «ub»rr|ptloa
Nettie D. Slocum still shakes with cal prize., though no one could deny that
pleted by winter. This road will prob­
he was self-postessed on the stage. He
A Prolonged Fast Ends ia Death.
ably run through Barry and Prairie­ the ague.
Sample Copice. cmtlAfairw Prenilutn' I.ui, eraf
Your scnlie ate ripe blackberries off ought to have been valedictorian; but be
free on epplkalioa. Addme
ville townships of this county. The
did not even get a part. He saved his
Mra. He«ter A. Fryer, Crozerrilte.
other road is the Toledo A Michigan, the bushes the 15th of Oct.
diploma by the skin of his teeth, and Delaware County, abstained from food
Mr.
Butler
has
sold
his
farm
of
80
carried
himself
so
loftily
on
graduating
which has enthused Vermontville peofor fifty-two davs. Her period of starv­
day that some sub-freshmen, who had ation waa ended bv her death last Mon­
pie of late, and which Judge Ingersoll acres to Mr. Hill for &lt;2.SOO.
Mrs. H. Latham’s father and mother come up to see how the college looked, day. Yesterday ahe was buried. For
I of Marshall says will surely i»e built.
thought
he
must
be
President
of
the
two years the lady had been an invalid.
Grading operations on the Ohio A of Branch Co., are making her a visit Faculty.
Previous to her illness Mrs. Frrer was a
M. Pilgram and wife returned home
Michigan have been begun this week
He went into business. His father large woman, weighing about 2-V)
at Marshall both east and west from last week Friday, from a four weeks had some influence and got him a place pounds, and seemed to have a very
as clerk in a wholesale dry-goods house.
strong constitution. About two yesrs
that place, and it is thought the road visit in Ohio.
The U. B. quarterly conference was He did not know cotton, woolen and ago she began to be troubled with hys­
from Toledo will be working Ky Jau.
held at the north school bouse last linen apart, nor a ledger from a journal; teria, and gradually became so Ill that
but he was a graduate ot--------- Univer­ she was confined to the house. She
Saturday and Sunday.
«•
Our efforts to improve our surroundings and the commun­
MAPLE GROVE.
Miss Ruth and Elma Bryant of Bat­ sity. and from his pinnacle of lofty emi­ wasted awav slowly, snd finally became
nence he looked down with a serene and unable to take any food except milk and ity at large have been appreciated, and our trade is larger than
tle Creek, have bet n sojourning with lofty self-complacency upon the m-mweak tea, upon which she subsisted for ever before.
The*Baker school closed last Friday.
tlieir relatives here.
bers of the entire establishment, from the nearly a year. Even this became un­
Some people are busy making apple
James Ensdley, baa purchased .1. principal to the errand boy. He came pleasant and irritating to her stomach,
butter.
Smith’s yoke of oxen, and will take late and went away early; and always and about two months ago she deter­
Stock
Wm. Archer sold a cow a few days
wore irreproachable' kid glove*, and car­ mined to attempt a complete fast, with
them to th© Piuery.A1THACT ATTENTION.
ago for &lt;50.
The movers engaged in moving tne ried a delicate littie cane. He talked of the idea that by absolute rest her stom­
“our house” so largely in evening gatli- ach might become more vigorous. Fif­
Our store room though ample is completely filled and our shelves fairly groan under them
Ferry Pearce is building an addition
parsonage for G. K. Dur(pe, complet­ eringa that the giru supposed him to be
ty-six days ago she commenced her long And still they come. We have everything In the Grocery line.
to hia barn.
ed moving the house on Saturday last a partner, aud even practical men. after fast, and no food of any kind passed her
Jobnpy Hill and wife hare gone to
and this week they will move the barn. they had made large discounts, still esti­ mouth for forty-five days, although she
housekeeping.
Crockery
Glawsyrare.
M. M. Slocum has started up the mated him at one hundred per cenL more occasionally drank water. She said that
C. R. Palmer took a business trip to
If you want to »ec * pretty and complete line of Crockery, see our* We have only time to
cider mill of James Endsley’s, and will chan his real valuation. He married, of she felt better every day that the fast
Indiana a few days ago.
c©urse, and his wife thinks that loyally
make on Tuesdays and Wednesdays to her husband requires that sue should continued, and really appeared to rally call your attention to China Tea 8ctU, Majolica Ware, and Decorated Ch*qjxr Sett*. In Glass,
It is about time to pull your tomatoes
and pick up In spirit and hopefulness if ware our »tock in complete and attractive. Our trade in I.AMPS 1* simple tmmenae. We
the balance of this month, and then think o! him as highly As he thinks of
not in flesh. She waa no more troubled have Pendants, Decorated Vase, and Common Goods. Low cstlmales given on Church and
and pick your cabbage.
every day.
Doxy.
himself. She tries faithfully to be loval. with dyspepsia, and although her physi­ Hall Chandeliers.
Mrs. Ex. Whitjuore. of Allen, ia mak­
but she is a sensible woman, aud it is cians protested against her course, she
ing her friends here a visit.
KALAMO.
vary hard work. He is now s man in persisted. Her friends and the doctors
We have added a fins line of
Farmers are complaining of their pomiddle life. He haa shifted from place watched the case with great solicitude,
toes rotting iu the around.
to place a dozen times, and has gone and the latter with great curiosity. One
Cutlery,
Mrs. Swift is recoving.
down
a
step
or
two
at
every
shift.
He
Clever seed is being cased for. The
day,
about
two
weeks
ago,
she
'for
the
Lanterns, and Oil Cans. Your special attention is invited to the former, as we feel assured that
E. Power’s reverened brother will
now stands at the door of a retail More first time in a year complained that she
acreage is unusually large and i&lt;is well winter here.
we
have
something
that
will
suit.
ia Broadway and bows the enstoinem in/ was really hungry, and called for some­
filled.
Charles Slosaou of New York statte is He performs thin service with such a thing to eat.*1 Solid food was at first
Clement Smith epeaks at the Norton visiting his brothers here.
We keep the celebrated Snow Flake Flour.
lovely air that country shoppen SUppoae given to her, but this would not stay
school bouse on Friday evening Oct.
8. Y. Noble and wife, and Mta. Van­ him to be the proprietor, and always ad­ upon her stomach, and the old diet of Everything Mew* Fresh, and Cheap. An examination will convince*
37th.
dress him by the name ujion the sign. tea and milk was resorted to, but this
Horn of Jackson, are visiting hei«
'
Mrs. Wm. Phinisey haa returned
Mr. and Mrs. W.C. Wilcox are en­ He acknowledges the compliment with was also rejected. In short, it was dis­
from a short visit in the Eastern part of joying the company of their daughter a gracious smile, but in troth count* it covered that her long fast had so com­
no .'compliment at all He amures his pletely worn out her stomach that it
the stake.
May from Cairo.
wife that if he and the head of the house could not work, and every effort to feed
A Mr. Hampton advanced his politi­
could only change places he would make her failed. Her husband and friends
cal ideas from a Greenback standpoint
things buzz, for he knows a thing or two and the doctors were, therefore, com­
MORGAN.
at the Norton school house last Tues­
and the head of the house is a fool. But pelled to watch her slowly but surely
he
still wears the nnreproachable kids, starve to death, without being able to
day night.
The M. C. R. R. buy do wood at tlie
and he walks to church on Sunday morn­ help her. The physicians who attended
A Sunday school institute will be station, will contract for ties.
ing with his wife, who has earned hey her propose to give a history of the case.
conducted by Rev. Mr. Bridenstine at
Mr. Hyde and Iris daughter are now own dress by furtive services for a com­ —niladelphia Record.
the fU. B. church evening of Oct. 20. visiting Mrs. Lorenzo Mudge.
passionate uncle, with such a lordly air
presenting the following program:
OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE
The second son of Mr. Rodgers is re­ that the sexton pays him as much defer­
Paid a Bill.
Singing; prayer by superintendent; ported to have diphtheria pharyngia.
ence as though he were a millionaire,
and every’ Sunday afternoon puzzlux his
singing; remarks by conductor; essay
▲
Detroit
-lawyer
took
in
a
new
boy
Soules and Hainan returned from the
by Mias Mina Mudge—"Lesson from went to spend the winter. Both look •bead anew over the insoluble problem the other day, and as he had suf­
the Life of Christ;” singing; recitation fine—will resume business there next why so rich a gentleman should take a fered to »ome extent from the depreda­
pew in the gallery instead of the center tions of the former one, be decided to
by Miss Mary Guy; recitation by Fred.
aisle.
spring«
try the new lad’s honesty at once.
He
Richards; singing; essay by Miss
“Seest thou a man wise in his own therefore placed fifteen dollars in bills
Our citizens should kindly take the
WE HAVE MADE A PEW WITH
ooooeit?
there ia more hope of an idigt under a weight on his desk and walked
man in charge, and keep him confined,
Incentives of Sunday School LaborY"; till gvery sign of disposition of drunk­ than of him.”—Ckrittian Union.
out without a word. Upon his return,
half an hour later, the bills were gone
recitation by Mias Florence Dean; enness ia sweated from him.
—The London Siandard says that toe and seventy-five cento in silver had taken
abort select reading; essay by Miss
dominant influence* of the day are uni­ their place.
Stella Eliei ton ; black board lesson by
formly hostile to copious, and uot too
CARLTON.
“Boy! when I stepped oat to get a
Rev. W. N. BrideDstine— "Wheat and
friendly to moderate drinking. There draft on London I left fifteen dollars un। The whistle of the steam thresher is are few English refreshment room*, in
| yet heard.
piaews of public resort where milk is nut
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING
Capt Alien spoke at the Center Wed­ kjS«lr in demand. The amount of
wine drunk at dinner parties i* much cental”
nesday eveaing.
WEST SUNFIELD.
smaller than of yore. Many drink hone
“Yes, sir, but you see you hadn’t
J. P. Raymond has put a feed grinder and others largely dilute it.' This arises
been gone five minutes when a man
Core husks begin to fly.
in hia saw-mill.
from the action of the teetotal sodetiea, name In with a bill against you of &lt;14.35,
The long looked-for rain ha* come.
The following are attending school whouc sobering influences have aptvad and I paid IL I guess the change is
Wheat looks aa though it had the in Hastings: Lillie Center. Zells Odeli, upward.
,
correct?’
We believe the
if destined to come
Jessie Barnum, Emma Duak-y, Arthur
“Yes, sfr—there it is, all receipted. into general use.
Call, and examfne them and yon will have
StillweH. WiH Wright, and Smith
Tho
man
said
it
had
slipped
your
mind
Holmes.
G. Fraacklyn intend* to emeu a Memo­
no other.
rial Home for Friend lee-* Children at Long tor the last four yean, and *o~”
He didn’t get any further before ba
Branch. For this purpiwe hr ba* purwm ruaiied for the stain, and be isn’tia

VICINITY

LOCALS

IF YOU WAIT TO KNOW

THE COt'STV.

ALL READY

GROCERIES

Sugars, Coffees, Teas, Tobaccos,
Spices, Fish, Canned Goods,
Provisions, Ac.,

ATTHE LOWEST PRICES

.•

For Cash or Ready Pay.

'Crockery, Glassware, Lamps,
Stone Ware, &amp;c.,

cash paid

Tor produce.

C. W. SMITH.

“SOUTH &amp; WEST,"
NKW

NEW

STOREGOODS
Our ?iew

Groceries

and

Table

G. W. FRANCIS
501 Wagons 150

FOR SALE AT ROCK BOTTOM PRICES.

THREE INCH TIRE

BETTER THAN COMMON TIRE.
Three inch Tire

BENTLEY BROS. &amp; WILKINS,

Xla.Ktlng's. Mich.
hrer

itti

1

Kg, Sold in Nadiville by C.

L. GLASGOW.

�aucHnn «n&gt; Kiwly'in

hear the roar of the train as it kehoed
hack from the hill*, and he
most
afraid too look toward tbe Turn of the
BOW JOHNNY, SAVED THE KAIL­ track, fur fear he should see the bead­
light of tbe engine gleaming around the
ROAD TRAIN.
curve.
[The members of the Whirling Chib
If he could only get over in time!
are off on a midnight excursion with
Faster and faster spun the wheels,
their bicycles, the noys having stolen and faster aud faster best Johnny's
away from their home* without the heart, as he reached the end of tlie tres­
knowledge of their parents
After a tle-work, and turned the Bend.
ride of about nine miles by the light of
Tbe head-light of tbe coming'train
a full moon, they hare come to a halt shone bright and clear up tbe trick.
■ear u raiirnad" just where the, track j “ Oh, why
they go so fast?” said
| Johnny to himself, 'as he stopped, and
Tbe Club wm at length beginning to leaped from his bicycle to Tight his sig­
feel the effect* of the unusually long nal. He crouched down beside the
ride; and, a* the part)’came to the rsif- track and struck a match against the
rail; but hi* hand shook so that the
••Ia»V* rest here until the expresses head of the match flew off. The next
ooe'burned, and he sheltered ’.he flame
1!” Mid Bob.
“What time between his hands until the hay and
handkerchiefs wore in a blaze. It
•‘After one—ten minute* after.
It seemed a long time to Johnnv, but it
must be time for the train now,’’ he really was only a mome^ unfi’l he was
answered. looking down the track.
up and away again, onFmn along the
Tlie up-Axprvs* wn&lt; duty at fifteen track, waving tne flaming bundle back
minutes otter ohc, and th® down e$- and forth.
' pre*.* »t almost tmrfiSijwTiour, but they
“ They must see' it! Yes, they arc
wldota wvre on time.
In a few whistling. They’ll rarely stop, now!”
minute* 5he trains would surely pass cried Johnny, half aloud, still waving
tlie spot where tlie bovs now were, and the fiery signal. The flames blew
they thought the sigfit worth waiting against his hand, but he was ttx&gt; excited
for. because tlie trains were through ex­ to mind the heat The glaring eye of
presses, aud always dashed along a* if the engine grew brighter and brighter.
•peed was the only thing cared for.
But not until The train was close enough
Tbe boys agreed to wait. Two of for him to see thfe anxious face of the
u,em
on 'bo engineer looking ..out
..............
from his window.
ground bj- dip *de of tlw wuroo-road. ,|j,Y
tb0 brave boy jump from the track.
track,
id the
and the others rat around on logs, glad I ••They
.. They’’re
re stopping,
.topping,’’.-’’ 'was
’ was tho
the last
la*t
to take a breathing spell, a. Joe called thing he thought, for he heard
themi
” :L_„
...
. i whistle "down brakes.” as ho
he ium-»jd
ium&gt;.-d
"I ssy. said Davie, suddenly, *‘U,e ( off
„-the
Un, track;
M.wk. and
aut; he
„e knew
kucw niruiin^
nothing more
railway would be a splendid place for untii 6orae men ra5lM;&lt;| him h) lhdr ai.,n9
our m^chiues to run on.
and asked him if he was litiri. The-, he
••.So it would.
said Bob.
‘‘The | opened his eyes to find hk nea«l on some
places brtween the ties have been filled t one-H shouhter. and a crowd «.f strange
and pxu ked. and so many people-use it fRces around him.
a* a foot-path, that it s ns smooth and
••Here, little chap, what did you stop
solid os a floor.
U9 for?’» asked an important man in bine
,'ien. “1&lt; . upaexpre** came uniform and brass. buttons, coming up
whistling ami roann- along the track. to the group aroun&lt;i Johnny.
aud da.bed past tlu nr m trvmt-ndou.
•• Rock’.tumblo.l down jud aurora tlia
Mtecd. raising cknid* of dust, lwig&gt;i. and bridge.” answered Johnnv. wondering
dry grass.
I he buys held their breath why he felt so tireil and weak. -Where
as the monster swept by them, without ig UJV mavh:ne?” he added, trying to
aiaciicntng sjx-ed even'to cross the long | ](K&gt;k around
.
bridge over the owk ami the trestle- . The
— conductor
■
-looked puzzled.
work beyond. ‘
I
• Reckon this is it. ' answered tbe en­
And t6en followed a strange crashing gineer. coming up with the bicycle and
sound, ns of earth, and rocks rolling | stand
it against a tree.
down hill; but soon all was still again.
I •• WeU, he s a plucky chap, sure’s I’m
•‘ Whete are you going now?” asked ! a-livin', an’ I can tell you some of ns
lien, as Johnny and Ned suddenly . came pretty near gettin' dished.” went
jumtMxl up. moved by the same impulse. ' on the engineer, who had I een taking
••To see how tbe track will do for , a view of the situation, and hod learned
our ”bikes^’ answered Johnny, as they । from the other Whirligigger* UhaX a
trundled their machines toward the rail- narrow escajie the train had bad; for
*way.
j the bqys bad-run swiftly across on the
Bob had his mouth wide open to sug­ ' foot-bndge. and had now reached the
gest that all the Club should follow, j scene, out of breath from their rapid
when a startled call from Johnny, | climb up the steep mink.
echoed by one from Nesi; unused them
•• If it bad nt been for him. we’d all
to rush down to where tjw two boys ’a' been down there.” tini»hod the en­
were.
gineer, with an expressive wave of hi*
Their faces turacd as pale as were sooty hand toward the etcek. and a nod
Johnny's and Ned's, when, in answer to 1 to the crowd of passengers.
their •• What's the matter?-' Ned pointed
Johnny did not hear the words of exu dark heap across the track, close to 1 planation and praise which followed.
the bridge. A moment's glance showed ' for when the conductor tried to help
them that one bf the great rocks from him to his feet, he fainted sway again.
the. hill, no doubt shaken loose by the
•• Let me see—I am a doctor. He
train which had ju*t thundered past, I has hail a rough tumble, and ram afraid
had rolled down upon the track, carry­ ■ he has broken some *boneit." said a
ing with it a mass uf dirt and gravel. 1 passenger, stepping forth from ths
Tl&gt;e rock was so large that the boys ' crowd.
could not move it, although thev at once : Tlie doctor was right; for Johnny’s
tried their best
ankle was badly sprained, and one arm
“It's of uo use.” said Joe, as they i had been broken hy striking against a
gave up; panting.
stump as he fell.
X
•• We must do something; it’s time the
But Johnny knew nothing more of
down-express ^yas here, now.” cried I. what went On around him, until he
Davie.
1 opened his eyes a*n*in in his own room.
"We must signal them in some way. ; in his own bed. The first thing he saw
Il we only bad a lantern!” cried Frank, was hi* mother’s face bending uvea him,
breathlessly.
and the first thing he heard was old Dr.
“There’s no time to lose!” cried Bob. Clark’s voice saying: ••He'll do now.”
i “Hay!” and with the ward Beu and
“Lknow we oughtn't to have gone
Ned were off. and. before the others without asking leave," said Johnny, at
cuuld think what they meant, they were the end of a confidential talk wirii his
back with their arms full ot dry hay, . mother, a few days later, when he-’was
from a little shed they luul remembered beginning to feel belter. •• I’ll never
seeing a short distance up the hill.
Si again, that way. but I’m glad I was
■‘We hud better go beyond the fallen
ere then.’’
rock, and then, when we set the train
“I’m not afraid of my boy breaking
coming, we’ll set fire to the hay.” said his promise,” said his* mother. **bpt
Joe, as they hurriedly divided the hay prord as we are of your courage, there
into several small bundles.
'
are two kinds of braven*, Johnny, and
,
They had just startetl up the track, it may be harder for you to keep your
when there came a sound which made promise than it wa* to’erossthe bridge.”
them stop. It was a faint whistle, far
•• 1 don’t know,” said Johnnv, shak­
awav around the curve.
ing his head, doubtfully. ••! was badlv
■
"The train is coming now and, bcscared, and my heart just thumped all
rides. our light won't be seen from tlu, time I was going over. It’a a good
around the bend!” cried Ned, as the thing I practiced so much at the gym­
boys stood staring blankly at one an­ nasium. and walking beams and things,
other, for at last they fully realized the or I could not have done it,” added
danger.
Johnny, hoping to reconcile his mother
, **Some uf us must cross the bridge, to the ruinous wear and tear hi* clothes
and signal them from tho other side of suffered from athletic performances.
the rirer.’’ said Joe.
It was weeks before Johnny was able
" The ties are cut from some places, to be out again; for the ankle got well
and w« should have to jump tho gaps. slowly, and for a time he had to use a
Men were setting blocks under the rails crutch, even after his arm was wall
when I came past there this evening; enough for him to leave off the sling.
they were then going to leave the gaps,
The members of the Club were faith­
and replace the ties to-morrow, said ful in their visits, and came' every day
Johnny.
,
to see |iim- as rood a* he was able to
•• There w&lt;fh’t be time to climb down have company. Thev brought him all
and up the banks, and crow on the little the school news, and did everything
foot-bridge, nor to swing across the they could think of to make tbe time
gaps by holding to the rails,” said Bob, pas* more quickly.
his voice shaking as he talked.
One day, about two weeks after their
“There were boards laid lengthwise eventful ride, a box came by express,
aero**. 1’11 go over on them,” cried marked "John R. Ellis.” When it wa*
Johnny. reiue:nl»ering that he had seen
opened, there appeared a great roll of
meu whcirl gravel, from the hill on the pack cotton, and nestled snugly in this
other ride, along tho whole length of was n solid silver cop, quaintly.shaped
and daintily engraved; but what gave it
its greatest value was tbe inscription on
by it. mounted on hi* wheel; there wm the plain oval front:
oct time for running.
• • A testimonial to John IL Ellis, from
"Get out all your handkerchiefs, tie I the passengers who owe their liras te
m together, and put them in this
pocket Ghe m* some matches, Davie
—here, in my mouth. Hurry! hurry!”
—A letter 'addressed “gin ■» sited,
ourturir.” mailed in Cliamplaiu. N. Y..

Tbe Ternate a* a Dietary.
PriveS) cent*.
The profeaeion and tbe public, «ay«
Apply Into nostril* with little'finger.
the Australian ItediM Journal, are bv
My .UagtiU-r and myself, cn«»t a
no means w,*-d a* to the diatotio value
of tbe tomato. The clsarical ■utboriomi
the rate of six, eight, or even ten miles ou food, such as Pavy and Chambers,
per hour, without any extraordinary ex­ dtimUs tbe claims of this vegetable very
Mj. I. VuMVr-ren, Dra^mt, Gnmd H.vm
ertion or fatigue; while if two club to­ curtly, simply placing it among the anti­ Mkb.-T
». mI.i, rer,„nx.^ KI;'. Cwm
gether and Mt ride by ride on a “ soda- scorbutics, and allowing it little, if any, Balm for the cure of Catarrh. Cold Id the Lead.
ble,” the labor is considerably dimin­ nutritive power.
The public, on the
ished. What pleasanter mode of spend-, other hp.oa, believe this ally of Ute po­
ij---- •
.. 1 "K“ •***’«• ai nine* i
ing a holiday can there be than for a tato to be not only a highly nutrienfo could raoccly aiueil anythin* ai&gt;d had a hcadache row* of the time Hkxkt Lilly, Agent
man to take his wife through the coun­ vegetable, but a sumachic, a'cathartidr for the American kxj.reM Co., Grand Hkreu,
try in this fashion? The luggage is aud generally a potent blood purifier.
strapped behind; you start at what That the tomato is thought too little ot
hour yon please, taking whatever route by the profession generally is true, but
you prefer; you ball when and where it it may be doubted whether it possesses foot long in Kentucky, but they do not say
suits you, and have no trouble with those wonderful alterative powers as­ 1 how long they have the *U&gt;mach-ache.
your horse when the day’s joarney is cribed to it bjrthe Americans, many of
l-*dy Beantlfiera.—Ladirw you cannot make
done. The traveling costs you noriiing, whom persuade themselves that they fair akin, rosy cbeeka. and sparkling eye with
unless it be a few pence for turnpikes. are never io health except in the tomato ad the cosmetics of France or beaubflera of the
You save your railway fare; and season. This fruit (as It may also be world, while In porn- health, and nothing will
you such rich blood, good health strength
you see more of the country than you called), however, exhibits one'remarka­ gire
and beauty aa Hop Bitters. A trial la certain
could possibly do ia any other way; ble property in connection with plant proof.
while the moderate exercise—which yon diseases, which suggests its use aa a ger­
Troy thieve* must lx-on time even if they
need never permit to become irksome— micide and a protector against those
will do you a thousand times more good disorders, so many of which we now have to steal the clocks out of chnrhes.
than lounging on the sands or rushing know derive their origin from bacteria
THE HEIGHT OF FOLLY.
over the continent.
and allied germ?. If a tomato shrub be
To watt until you are In bed with diaeaae you
Still, we admit, we have not proved uprooted at the end of the season and may not get over for month*, ia tltf height of
our point.
The question Is, whether allowed to wither on the bough of a folly,-when you might be eaaiiy cured during
these modes of locomotion will ever sup­ fruit tree, or if it be burned beneath, it the early symptoms by Parker* Ginger Toole.
plant in anv large degree our present will act not only m a curative, but pro­ Jk have known sickly families made the
healthiest, by a timet? use of this pure medi­
method. We acknowledge£hatso long tective against blight and similar at­ cine.
—Observer.
,
as any physical lalior whatever has to tacks. This hostility to tow organisms
It is said that Hannibal Hamlin hasn't miss­
be performed in the propairion of tricy­ is due to the presence of sulphur, which
cles, they will not oome into universal is rendered up in an active conditio® in ed a boil figtiA since be landed in Spain.
u-e. Let us not forget, however, that the dehay dr burning.
Remembering
HIGHLY ESTEEMED
in many districts where railway accom- that digestion also cpiits up the tomato
Thr youthful color and a rich lustre are re*
modstion is nil or defective, they are into its chemical constituents and releases stored
to faded or gray hair by the use of Park­
used very extensively for .business as sulphur, probably in a nascent condi­ er s Hair Balnam. i bsraile** dreaaiug higblv
well as pleasure. Postmen and doctors, tion, and probably in tbe intestinal ca­ erteemed for its perfume aud purity.
£.«]&gt;ecialJy, have taken readily to this nal, it may have aa great potencythere
Treadwell Smith, colored, of Manhasset was
method of locomotion. But inventions as experiments prove it to have outside
nre in progress, and have indeed been the body. Summer diarrhma, English arrested oo Saturday for tying the tail* of two
already perfected, which promise to take cholera, and typhoid fever are all due to cals toeether and hanging the cats over a
the triofele out of the category of veloc­ low organisms.
As the diarrheas! and clothes line. He was fined I—
ipedes, or foot-worked machines, and typhoid seasons are luckily contempo­
IS PflKTANT TO TBA VELEKK,
give it a for greater value and im]&gt;ort- raneous with the fruiting of the tomato,-s
Special Inducements are offered mu by the
aoce.
•
it ia not unreasonable to assume that Btirltutrutn
Route. It will nayyou u, readtheir
It is well known that one of the first tomato-eaters would be more than ordi­ advertisements, to be found elsewhere lu this
uses that M. Faure made of his new dis­ narily likely to escape such diseases.
coveries relating u» the storage of elec­
It ih worth noting that typhoid fever
THE BAI) AND WafHLESS
tricity wa* to pro cl a tricycle, and tho is most prevalent Among the poor, to
speed he tlfon obtained wn* ton miles whom this expensive vegetable is almost ore never Imitated or coutcrfeiwd. Thf* la
per hour; and in this connection it-ap­ unknown. Sailors, too, jus*, after land­ eapecially true of a family medicine, and It 1*
pears as though the French, who wore ing, are particularly liable la typhoid, poaltive proof that the remedy Imitated Is of
the first to introduce the m idem biev- and in them we may alwavs assume a hlghcat value. Aa aoon as It had been tested
cle, about fourteen years a*o, will belhe more or less scorbutic c indilion.
But aud proved by the whole world tb|t Hop Bit­
first to manufacture its direct descend­ the question of the protection against tern waa the purret beat and most ridable fam­
ant through a clearly traceable evolu­ di-ease by certain diets, aud by such ily medicine on earth many imitations sprung
tion. the electric tricycle. With such a habit* a* the use of alcohol, tobacco, up aiiel Lexan to steal the notice* iu which the
machine, supposing* that the cost of and opium, has as yet been hardly in­ , press and people of the country had exprea ed
producing the power be not prohibitive, quired into.
Experiments are now be­ tlie merits of 11. B., and in every -&lt;ay trying to
we can foresee the day when the family ing made on tbe tincture of the tomato, induce suffering invalid* to use their stuff in
party will journey down to Brighton on which will help in determining its ther­ su-ad. expeeliug to make money ou the ore di
good name of II. B. Many others started
a fine afternoon by road instead of rail; apeutic value. Meanwhile, eaten cooked and
noatrum* nut up iu similar style to H. B., with
when the splendid main roads of our with hoc meats, and in the form of salad TarioiislvdeTlacd names in which the worn
country will again be thronged with after a cold lunch, it is a pleasant and "Hon" or "Hops” were used in a way to induct
travelers moving along easily, safely useful addition to our ordinary regimen. Cle to believe they were the same aa Hop
rs. All such pretended remedies or cures,
and inexpensively, not iu swaying The fruit acids it contains,'combined
uo matter what their style or name is, and es­
coaches, but in smoothly rolling tricy­ with the mechanical effect of the seeds pecially those with the word "Hop" or "Hops"
cles; when the old Red Lion and Blue and skin, render it to some extent an in their name, are imitations or counterfeit*.
Boar, deserted these last forty year*, enemy to scurvy as well as a laxative,and Beware of them. Jou&lt;-h nouc of them. Uac
will again become gay and busy: and the sulphur, withits known power ever nothing but genuine Hop Bitters, with a bunch
or cluster of green Hop* ou the white label
when the iong-neglected villages and septic ' conditions, would
probably Trust nothing else. Druapsta and dealers are
by-lanes will be explored by tourists contribute
to make
its
use
n warned against dealing in imitations or coun­
♦ho will never want to catch a train.— • protection against the poison germ« of terfeit*.
Chambers' Journal.
those diseases, like typhoid, that find
their way into the system primarily by
the alimentary canal.
Uiie caution i* I
Abuse of Bam Cellars.
needed to the lovers of this esculent..
A great change has come over the The taste for it being an acquired one,
farm during the last thirty year*, in all it is more likely to be induigt-d in to ex­
our thrifty farming; district*, in the gen­ cess, and we have known alm •«• a*
eral use of barn cellars. Formerly such many tomato-maniac* as ostro-m.iniscs.
an arrangement of the barn wa* a nov­ All kind of raw fruit, it should be re­
elty,. and
have ------slowly
learnedi membered, except used with caro, are
----- fanners
---------------J----------lu grral
pealer com- fil,b|e wirriuw, „.d
b.v. kno.n «n
Is Recommended by Physician^
'“bl
ChtUe’ th'
cl&lt;'"nil,S. o! in.uncc where a person working hard
KUble*. the more eonrenienl wetennr „|| dny on „„
onlr
MizM
°
h”J ■E’V°' ’"t muct; I "1“1 Mw-malion ot tho bowel-., which
We maau&amp;etare and sell it »ith» pocHISQ
and headland, in the eompo.1 heap, and
in a le„ ho„„
A&lt;1W1
guarantee that It will cure any
the greater value of the manure made i tide
* ot...............
•
SM,
vevtll forfslt the above emennt
diet, then, -two or three
toma­
under cover.
.Now the cry i* raised of toes will be found a* effective a., and
damage t^ fodder and st^ck from the oertainly safer, than a dozen.
barn cellar. Almost any good thing can
be perverted and become a nuisance,
The Assimilation of Fat.
and it were strange if men who d» not
itamadlatsiy. Pries. 73 reais per buttle.
read much, and think less, could -tut
lio* physiological text books teach
F. J. CHENEY &amp; CO., Toledo. Obla.
abuse the barn-cellar, which is the that the,fat of the body is not derived
stomach of the farm. The same kind of directly from tho fat of the food. Hnt
men not infrequently abuse their own from statistical analysis Hoffman has
stomachs, and suffer grievously in con­ arrived at tho conclusion that the formed
sequence.
“If you make your barn fat of the animal body arise* not only
cellar tight, carbonic acid gas and am­ from heterologous elements of the food,
monia are thrown off and injure the but also in part at least from ingerted
qnalitv of htfr stored in the room* above, fat. Rndz-.-ejewsky conclude*’.iia" toe
snd the health of the cattit. iu the sta­ special destination of this tat is the in­
bles.
If you tnrn your pigs into the tramuscular adipose tissue. A series of
cellar to make compost, and keep them investigations, undertaken by Leb -d&lt;‘ff
from the air and tho light, they become in the clinical department of the nathoNotFnil
diseased, and you put bast meat into logical laboratory at Berlin, leads him
to send for
your barrel to breed disease in your also to the conclusion that the ingested
■ our FALL
family.’’
These are not uncommon fat is deposited unchanged in the fatty
Price-Lid
complaints, cirouiayng in our agricul­ tissue of the b&lt;»dy. Two dogs were Kept
farissa.
tural journals. Well, suppose we admit fasting for a month, losing in the time
F¥er
to
any
address
upon
these thing* to be true, what of it? Ls about forty per cent, of their weight.
application. Contain*de­
there any necessity for having a barn­ Previous experiments have shown that,
scriptions of everyth log
cellar without ventilation? If you leave under these circumstances, all the fat of
required for Personal or Family use,
one end open towafd the routh you cer­ the body disappears. Tho dogs wore
with over 2,200.illustrations. We sell
tainly have ventilation enough—and the then fed'on a diet which consisted of
all goods at wholesale prices, iu
gases that are evolved from fermenting largo quantities pf . fat foreign to their
manure are not going through two-inch own nature, and a small quantity of
quantities to suit the purchaser. The
stable plank and the tight riding of tbe flesh.
only institution in America who make
Both dogs regained their nor­
barn when they have the wind to carry mal weight in threw weeks, and were
this their special business.
Address
them off.
* then killed. One had been fud on lin­
MONTBOMERT
WARD A CO.,
If a barn cellar i* properly managed, seed oil, and from its tissues wa* ob­
SSt m4 SSS Wafow* Atmin, 01—*, HL
and seasonably furnished with absorb- tained more than a kilogramme of f.uty
isnta, the ammonia will be absorbed as .oil, which did not become solid at the [|E*RY ROE. Proprietor
fast as it is formed. There will be no freezing point of water, and which cor­
----- OLD RELIABLE----odors of ammonia that the nostrils can responded closely in chemical charac­
detect. If the pigs da not do the mixing ters to linseed oil. The second dog wa*
fast enough, the shovel and the fork, fed on mutton suet, which had a boiling
tbe plow and the harrow, can be added. point about 50 deg. C., and in its body,
Tbe packing of compost under the bn&gt;-;, in the muscles, about the internal or­
is nice work for rainy days in winter, gans, and beneath the skin, a form of
and h more likely to 'pay than any fat was found which waa almost identi­
work exposed to' the storm. The keep­ cal with suet. The organs of each dog
ing of pigs under the barn is a question were free from disease. Thus it would
of two sides, and however we may de­ appear that ingested fat, even such as is
cide it, barn cellars will stand upon foreign to the individual constitution,
FBESH FISH «a4 FOULTHI
their own menu. Any farmer who may yet becomu transformed directly
makes a business of raising )&gt;ork for into the fatty tissue of the animal- Other
the market win find a welLrtppbintad experiments of the name investigator
pig-stye, with convenience for storing seem to show that this is true also of Zarri,
milk fat.—Lanod.
ar The Highcat Market Price paid
pigs by making comport in a wail-venti­
—An English fishing boat landed a for Hides, Pella, fcc.
1
lated barn collar, their health is not halibut weighing 187 pounds, in wbuM
FVeaix
Goods, Full Weighta
stomach was found a fine salmon weigh­
ing twentf pound*.

TEACHERS, ______
HOCSEWTTES,

A Prevention and Cure
Headaches,
Lassitude,
Pale or Motby Complexion,
Sleeplessness,
Palpitation,
Numbness. Nausea, Dizziness,
ary Cough, Nervous Irritation,
Weak and Lame Bock,

SS-MOTHKUS. ir-. yrnrr nsUGHTERStil !--•
Jzx* well to tbo c*u«&lt;'. u«u4 for rar «4vfo« t &gt;
mother*.

R. PENOCLLY, M. D.,
Sold by DntfjjjisJ
Eslaaas**, J|fh»

~ ERRORS OF YOUTH.
WM..®..., ,w,
ir-rm o
ia debility. Pn-tnaiu-r decay sad *11 the eff*
routhfui Indteerslton. will tor the eakeof a
ng humanity, aend free u. all wbi need It i
lj* and dlreellon for maklngth* etmple rem&lt;

&gt;‘5 !* S^l) P” c’’ ••
Wuniwre
9b tre*
iv
Adurrea Sna«» « Co .Portland. Me.

Back
Ache
POSITIVELY CURED

Benson’s Capcine
Porous Plasters,

ottotar irritant effect!.

HALL’S

QatarrhQure

r^cauee they will poaiUrcly cure dlaeaaea which
—.11 ...... ----._
.

sioo

MKAT MARKET,
Fresh and Salt Meats
Swiei Ham aM Mien,

by the lb. or barrel,

BEARl KOK

Baisoii’s Capcine Porons Mar!
SEABURY 4 JOHNSON,-

AMfAaKKMKftYA^JLSST.

Prire &lt;hct7.

KEAfPS Mediated CORN end BUNION PLASTER.

PARKER'S

BALSAM.

nOHZSTON

GOLOGKE.

L£l5SSA'&amp;

PARKER’S

GINGER TONIC

»xc or »wf disease or nfewy. take P»far*
G.ncer look. It w.-l
Lr*»n sad tody
and p«&lt; you new life and vi&lt;«r.

1OO DOLLARS

Paid for anythin S infonoa found fo Ciager Tome

�; fr.it which ha* bee®
i««t by wtew autoiqiriatex fan
complete suocem. lius u »sn

not r
why your **da«M?‘’
here
And manufacturer of hardwood
I'ornelr a -el of ladv pedestrians as ever
undertook « long tramjx They started. 'I
in tbe ;.e gb’lxnhood.of Hendersonville *
Lumber.
* »
nearly » month ago unon what was 're- «
bhorfld not bii mild J rum tbe farm. And
I don’t know what hasn’t happened. mebt, and, in fact, tha amount' *re only
■arded by their friends'as a foolish and
»
I wish you’d let this fellow with known when tbo packagna beoom* .
setonue to, walk over North Carolina Judge,
*
big fact whom they call Bijah kill broken and have to be reonnksd and
and see the'principal po nt* of interest tho
t
But to keen tld* straw upon the farm it in the Sta e. and lb pay special attention me
MUCX: •1JQ. IF PAID IN ADVANCE.
with a sled-stake.”
sealed. Bonds sent betwoen this coun­
1
is cwt out and trodden under foot; nKy, to the mountains. Three of the girls
“ I’ll see about that later on. ' Let’s try and Europe uro now transmitted
To Advertisers:
wine farmer* barely know how to disa look at the warrant. I see you almost entirely by mail, because that
were at scliool when thq project was take
t
pewe of it, because they have no) stock first agreed upon, and the other three are
charged
with
disorderly
conduct.
”
method is the cheapest and quickest.
i
“ Is it disorderly to sit on i salt-barrel There is no delay of packages for ex- ।
Jwr
eircuUtluK there- enough to tread it down and work it up who agreed to join them were friends.
MILT. FEED and BRAN
advertising are lower than with their manure. Now, there is a They made all »b®ir arrangements for and
cry? That’s all I was doing, your amination at the custom house, and the
i
very simple way to manage this busi- the proposed journey' as quietly as pqs- Honor.
”
cost
is only 10 cents on each package.
1
im* aud to turn straw to, its best and
Yes, but you drew a crowd around beridM the postage. The bonds/ are
slide, for they knew attempt* would be
legitimate use and this fa to feed iL If made to dissuade them Irom the under- you,
and you wouldn’t move on when insured by the marine ineuaunce compa­
j
PURE Cider VINEGAR.
. there fa Dot stock enough we would pur­ taking. Their friends were taken com- ordered.
”
nies in the .samb way .as other merchan­
&lt;
chase it, although the money should be Eletelr bv surprise when they were told
PERUSE THESE LIBERAL AD. RA'rES” How could I help the crowd? I felt dise, and tho Government is not legallv
borrowed for this purvose. For it will
nnd wept, and whed I’m weeping I responsible for their 'safe delivery. U
nt a'day or two before the commence- sad
i
be—nay, it Is already, if it were but mcnl of tho walk of the’ intention to don
’t move ou for any policeman who the value of tbe package is declared, the
&lt;
UA RD WOOD LUMBER,
known—a great truth that nothing that trump over the State without any es- ever
killed a man. Con the law say post-office authorities may refuse to take
&lt;
'Ittr’UO
can be fed should be thrown into the cort. To the suggestions that going when
a man shall laugh and when he the risk of delivery. The transmission
'
manure, heap, because it may be more aloDOteud with no one to protect them shall
weep? Does the scalding tear de- of property worth several hundred tbousi
profitably used. With beef at sixteen
upon the whim of a blae-coat? and dollars is thus secured at the cost of
।
80.00 cents » pound in the wholesale markets, thev would subject themselves to insult, Jend
BAHS WOOD LUMBER.
a few dollars. Tbe sending of gold by
thev replied that they were willing to , udge, I am now about to weep.”.
not a ]&gt;ound of straw should be cast out. make the attempt, and they averred to­
PINEnidSHlMli UMBER
“Don’t—don’t do it! Wait until I mail is also very cerumen, especially bu1
nor. indeed, under any circumstances. day that from first, to Ian they had get
through with you! . As I was going tween San Francisco aud this city. Tho
।
Anything, that contains nutriment is
tion and eight cent* tor each subsequent inser­ made to be eaten and digested and •never received one rude wort! ot1. rough ito remark, don’t you want to get out in­ gold sent by the Government from Cali­
fornia is packed in heavy iron safes and
jest from any pne, their only grievances ito the country?”
tion' .
ohno strong,
turned into human food, forIs not every
being that once or twice some person*
“ Wouldn 't I bo as sad amidst scenes is delivered under the usual Govern­ Mill on Shrnnftn Street. East from
Depot.
' ’
Editor and Proprietor. herb and every beast of the field made of their sex attempted to prevent them rwtoral m iu the bustling town ? No; ment 4rnnk. The safe* are taken from
for nnd given over to mankind fof their from continuing their walk by charaotl»e post*ufltoe to the Sub-Troasury, and
do not wish a change of scenery.”
II. R. nif’KIXSOX A C9.
own it-es and frenefil?
terizing such an undertaking m immod­
“ But I oan’t-haveyou weeping around the contents carefully counted, the seals
Stull ;ee.ling of cattle is an important est and unladylike. One- old lady of­ here in public, if you feel sad and not beiijg touched from the tjme of de­
branch of udvancetl agriculture, be- fered to be*their chaperone if they per­ must weep, why can’t you crawl inte a parture to that of arrival. Gold sent
TILtlGt: OFFICERS.
c.vuie In stnllffeeding there fa the greatest sisted ’in their purpose, but the would- lumber yard of sit down on a box in*the by private persons is packed for mailing
economy, the least used for the greatc.«t be chanerone wanted to go in a buggy, alley?”
in bags, $l,Ooo. be inspent in each bag.
,
eflci-t, and conae ptently for; the^rea’est and when she learned that they expect­
“ I’d like to see myself doing any The Nevada Bank receives the largest
profit. Every particle of fojner. lino ed to tramp ever mountains where there such thing!” was the indignant an­ Start of.the gold thus sent from CaliTreasurer—Frank C- Boi*c.
Asaenor—John E. Barry.
aud course, is turned in part into the were no roads, she backed out. al­ swer. “When I feel like crying I’m go­ omla. The value of the gold sent
I hart opened a market
Marshal I—Jame* L. Gregcwy.
.
must valuable product, and at the saint though they mischievously gave her ing to cry, no ^matter where I am or who
through the mails is often many millions
TrtMtee*—H. A. Barber, F. T. BoiM. H. W.
Dcmaray, R. R. Dfcklnaqn, H. M. Lee andI t me the most of it. that is all that isn&lt;&gt;l an invitation tn join. On the first sees mo. It's the only consolation I have, of dollars in a year, and that of the
ATTACHED
TO C. SMITH'S
used,
is
rethrned
in
a
condition
weei^of their trio 'they sutlbred much and I won’t let anybody deprive me bonds is larger. It is said that when
Cha*. Lenta.
.
. .
____
greatly more umj ul than it was before, from exhaustion, and the youngest and of it.”
tho bonds of the Erie railway were be­
GROCERY2
'flu-.*• ill feel eha
’•'*
1y‘ ‘b
JlarictlM.
frailest of the party. Miss Murdock,
“Then I shall hare to send you up.” ing sent to this country for a special
straw mid coni fodder into beer, ot hod to stop and rest by reason ot
“ All right! I can be sad in "the cooler purpose, thete were securities valued at
and intend to kecy a
/NHRIJTfAN CHURCH—F A, Blasd.Pa.tor., mutton and the very best bf manure; severely-blistered feeL It was feared os well as on the street.” .
$80,000,000 within the walls of the post­
V Service* every Sabbath nt 10.30 a. in. andI adding t&lt;&gt; it bran, corn-iwnl or eotton- that she would have to abandon tho
“ I’ll make it thirty days.”
office at one time.
7 p. m. Ssbbath wEm k»1 at 12 m. Prayer meet­■ seed-meal, nearly the whole value of trip, lint she pushed on nobly, and at yer
Great precautions are taken by the
“ That’s good enough. It Is but aning every Thursday evening
, which i* ndurned iu each way; that is, the eighth day she began to gain
othcr-shadow o’er my darkened life— Ijost-ofiice authorities to guard against
TirETHODIST EPISCOPAL CHLRCH-A. on the whole, it is doubly returned, strength, and is now ono of the health­ another grief o’er which to weep. I sup­
oas of the valuable matter committed
Ill D. Nekton, Pastor. Service* evrry Sab­ unre iu flesh aod fat, and once in tho iest of the fair tramps. Her weight pose it woiFt hurt anybody if I sit down to their charge. In tho Registry De­
bath at 10. ♦» a. m. and 7 p. ra. Sabbath1 richest kind of manure, which feeds-aud when she started 'was but ninety-two
in the corridor and shed a few tears be­ partment, as far ns possible, every Aleo everything pertaining to a firut-rloM
school at 12 m. Prayer mecllng every Thurs­' fattens the land.
pounds, and she turned the scales to­
market.
transaction is witnessed by two clerks,
day evening.
But it may be useful to pdhit out, day at 103 pounds. All save two of the fore I go up.”
“ Well, don’t make any special effort ; and no article is at any time out ot the
।
with
some
particularity,
how
this
may
VY LODGE NO. 37, K- of P-, meet* at its
walkers fattened after the first week, to got up a freshet.
charge
of
some
person
responsible
for
We
’
ve
had
plenty
Good Goods and Full Weight
Castle Hall, Nashville, Michigan, eVcry' be done. There arc hundreds of farmers while two who were.inclined to obesity
its safety. Receipts are given for the
of rain here this spring.”
Friday evening, for tire encouragement and
[ who are eager to dispose ot their best
support uf all worthy, true, steadfast and bon- calves fora trifle. These farmers still were pulled down twelve and eighteen
The prisoner retired to a seat on a delivery of each package by ono clerk
pounds. Their record shows that they nail keg in a dark corner and shed some to another.
arable Brother Kpigiit*.
If
any
package
falls
open,
D. L. Smith K. R. 8. Oaxo Sthoxg, C. C.. uncertain the ancient belief that made 120 miles. They started o l with tears, but it was such hard work on his the fact has to be at once reported to
: it never pays to raise au animal, the expectation of making between 500
I). 1- BlBEEE.
the superintendent, who sees that its
’ aud *0 they sell their calves and buy and 600. Each walker wore a pair of spinal column that ho soon dried his
MlaeelluuroiM Cards.
r cows, and dispose x&gt;f their young pigs red-leather walking-shoes, and wore eyes and began to pick his teeth with a contents are safe, and that it is securely
refastened.
When
tho
registered
let
­
silver
torn
from
the
broom-handle.
—
And other farmers short wallting-dresnea. and carried
XV H. YOUNG. M. D. Office east side of! nnd buy' bacon.
ters and packages are distributed for J^ATHBCJIV IIOI NE,
Detroit Free Frexs.
“ . Main St., Nashville. Office hours from1 who know that some persons can
strong staffs in their hand* and knap­
mailing thev are put into canvas bags,
7 to0 a. tn., and 4 to 7 p. tn.
. raise cows for les* than their value when sacks upon their shoulders. In which
A. R- ANTISDEL, Pbopbuttox
which
are different from those used for
Hon
a
New
Hampshire
Woman
Lived
mature, and that what one can do
Grand Rapids, Allots.
A. FOOTE, PHYSICIAN A SL’RGEON. another may. buy these cheap calves were packed hammocks and other
common mails, and are fastened with
on
#40
a
Year.
necessary articles. They also wore
• SuceMor to Dr. Wickham. Office sec­
padlocks
of
peculiar
construction.
Tbo
ond door north of the Nashville House; resi-- ami feed them, and bring them to ma- very broa I-brimmed ha's, which, how­
This House furnishes th* host accommodn
In the IRwmib’s Journal “T. W. H.” padlocks are numbered on one side, and
dedee flrat door north of the Wolcott House.■ turity n* cow* or steera, aud tlisprye o! ever. do not seein to have । rote.:ted
Prompt attention to call* night or day.
them at a handsome profit. Here is one their complexions, for they are all relates the story ot a New Hampshire have an opening through which can be
woman, who by the sudden loss of her seen a rotating number which changes
opportunity for the feeder.
Again,
Two o! the parties little invested property had remaining every tiuffi the hoik is opened.
TAR. C. W. GOUCHER. Elactic Physician and there are always unwise farmers u ho burned brown.
The
SberilTSalc.
carried pistols to protect them from ac­ only an old farmhouse and some land. I number of tho padlock and. rotary num­
U Surgeon, b prepared to answer all call*
Notice ie hereby riven that by virtue of a
that mar tie mad* tor hl* service* Office and are disposing of their half-fed stock, not cidental in-ursion* of wild-cats and “The sufferer was wholly alone in the ber aro registered at each place, and writ
of Firriticia*. isaued out ot tlie Circuit
knowing that it costs more to build up' bear*. Much of the time they slept in
world, had a paralyzed arm, and was the lock can not bo disturbed between Court for tbe coquty of Kent, in favor of Wil­
the open air in their hammocks under
liam Hake aralnrt the gund* and chatties and
with le-h and fat, and who djspoe of canvas coverlets, which were used to threatened with blindness. Tho only the stations without the fact appearing real estate orWllliam E Buel. In the county
’ennoutville, Mich.
of Earn*, to me directed and delivered. I did on
ihi* lean stock to farmers who know shield them from heavy dews and rain. work which her enfeebled condition per­ in a change of the number.
Beside
valuable
articles
there
are
also
mitted
was
in
the
way
of
knitting
and
tlw 24th day of July last,Ury upon and take
HAR H. BRADY. Lawyer. Circuit Court better. And this tliin growing sin -k. One night, ten days ago, apprehending
CuratuiMioner, Real E*t*te and Insurtnc* that need* only fat to make it mnrketumaking artificial flowers; by these two sent by registered mail some that are ail the right, title anil interest of the said Wil­
a revere storm, they camped Ina grave­ arts she could earn $15 annually." Her remarkable in other ways. A firm in liam E Bucl In and to the following described
Agt. Prompt attention given to all busiuras
yard an&lt;l slept between tho graves.
real estate; tint 1st* say all t!u&gt;: certain piece
entrusted to tnv care. Conveyancing a special­
bought at every market, where it is Another night, in the mountain*, they whole available income was $40. She one of the Northwestern Territories has &lt;&gt;r |M*rccl of land described a* follows, io-wlt:
ly. Office oppbaite Union Home.
commonly so pScntitui as to be n'most were thrown into consternation by the appropriated one-fourth of it for read­ a habit of sending registered otter skins The cast nne lialf f*-,) of tbe cast one half &lt;K&gt;
mTfLINT, JR. Jaw. Real Estate, and In- uusniab&lt;e.
Hero is another opportunity appearance of a bear, but the beast be­ ing. In her own very interesting account to tho city, and their odor is a fruitful of the south west quarter ( *4) of seetlou thirty• fturanct*. Convevanclng aud Collection* a for the feeder. Tlicile thin annual.* are
of her life she says:
source of complaint among the clerks. lire &lt;3S,)4n town (3,) north of range wren (t)
v est. in Barry comity. Jliihigau, all of which I
•pertMty.
__________________ fed and fattened and increased in ing as frightened as they were, fled
In very cojd spells I took a warm The same fault is found with packages shall
without offering to molest them.
expose for snlcat public auction or vendue
freestone
anil
crawled
into
bed.
I
was
‘
of compressed mushrooms that are sprit to the highest bidder, at tbe north front door
EMORY I&lt;\RADY. Justice of the Peace. wi ight. and this increased weight not In
the
mountains
they
were
too
illTo
work,
and
thus
to
dosaved
to
this
country
from
Italy.
Two
trade
of
tbe court house in Hastings, in said county,
Office, Corner Main and Shennan Street*. only brings it* price, but the better qual­ in great terror of
rattlc-snnkps,
bn
the
sixteenth day of Octotier next, at
ity of the animal adds nu extra value to hut did not encounter
anv
of tirowood. I would put -mittens on my dollars were sent the other day by an eleven o’clock iirllic t&lt;iretux.iD. .
LIEBHAUSER, Merchant Tailor and deal­
economical person, who did not seal
. er in Ready Made Clothing. See tire etery pound of it. not only &lt;A the in­ the reptiles. Along their rout® they hands and read awhile, and when tho
Dated this 31st day of August. A. D. 1&gt;S2.
room
became
tbo
cold
for
this,
cover
all
them
in
envelopes,
but
tied
around
them
crease,
lint of the original weight as were treated kindly, ninny of the hos­
before you purchase clothing, rits guar
­
HENRY M. IIOI'GHTALIN. Sheriff,
By HlMiBKitT Mi Lek, Deputy Sheriff.
anteed. ’
_______ ________ _ well, and this is where the iinmlsmnc pitable fanners cniertaiulng them, but up and think over what I had read. This a piece of paper containing the address,
D.F.. CoHtitrr.Pit’f* Atty.
50-8.
saved me in a degree from enervating so that the coin* might go as fonrthHATCH * CO.. Manufacturers of Taffy profit comv.4 in. Beeves. Sheep and they shunned notoriety and avoided all myself still further by fruitless poring class matter. Occasionally a bag of
• Candice, Chocolate Drops and Carmel*. pigs are all fed in this way with great the towns and ullages, frequently going
Fruits, Fancy Candle*. Cigar*, Tobacco*, etc., profit by the-judlciou* buyer -and judge some distance out of their way rather over poverty aud privations.” As for mall matter on being opened willdis­
always in slock. Second door Dorth of the of stock who is a ski Iful iveilcr ns well. than meet crowds. A novel mature of food; “Ooc-fourth pound of meal, one play loose coins and paper money from
The
post'office._______________________ _
What is rcquireil for this profitable their undertaking was the keeping of cont; one-fourth pound of dried beans, packages earelcs«ly fastenedT?RANK BAKER. Manufacturer ot Bout* enterprise are, a knowledge of the char­ what they called their log-book. In one and a half cents; two cants' worth letters'that are sent witii the packages AG EXTSI For Gen. Dodge's new book,
T and Shoe?, pcgxed or sewed. Repairing acter and peculiarities of the stock*, this the record of their impression/ and of salt pork—four and a half cents in usually contain enough particulars to
promptly attended to. at $he sign of the red lu Igmcnt in purchasing them, derived adventures were kept, each taking her all—would support me a day and a half enable the clerks to replace the right THIRTY-THREE YEARS AMONG
boot, east side Main St.____________________ iiom a knowledge of their present value, turn. The book contains 1.246 closely- very well. This was my usual fare amounts.—-V. F Tribune.
Although frequently throe davs out of seven. Three cents’
ACOB O8MUN, Liveryman, bam near Wol­ the cost of the food, and their final value written pages
Summary Matchmaking.
cott Hoose. Firn el*** turnouts at reason­ when finished, for all these must be con­ offered vehicles, they always declined, worth of barley, boiled with two cents’
able rates. Sj&gt;oci*l rate* to commercial men.sidered when the purchase price is de­ saying that thev started with the deter­ worth of butcher’s trimming&lt; and three
Funeral and wedlng parties fnratsbod with car termined on. Some conveniences for mination of walking. They spent throe cents’ worth of potatoes, would make
A farmer from Germantown. I’.. . dunng Jt years jmong the wildest tribes of the
riages on short notice.
, ,
West. Splendidly illustrated with Steel
wholesome,
nourishing
food
for
two
lodging the animals are required, and a days in exploring the celebrated Bald
camo yesterday to Castle Garden in Great
Pistes. Fine Enjjravino and Superb Chromo-Lith­
knowledge of and experience in feeding Mountains whose mysterious rumblings «1 *ys and go a long way toward support­ search'of a yonn? married couple to ograph Pistes In fifteen colors. Haa received tb&lt;
stock and handling them—for the hand­ some years ago created so much excite­ ing existence. ... I made a con­ take into hi? wrvice. His name wits
repairing. AH manufactured work made from ling is often more than tho feeding, and ment They not only made the difficult siderable use of rice and baked fish. In Amos Miller, and he was of a jolly and
best of stock and warranted. First door south food may be utterly thrown away by ascent to the top, but went into ono of cold weather, a pound of oatmeal cooked benevolent temperament. H«t was will­
Boise’* hardware.
Chicago Interior: “A
mismanagement in giving it or caring tlie crevices, which they examined mi­ Monday would serve a* dessert through ing to give $25 a month and b7nrd to
WALLACE BEAUCHAMP, Liveryman, for the animals. Then one must know nutely, with'the aim of discovering the week. Sametimes I had a gift of a man and his wife who would accom­
TV Nashville House Bant. Single and when and how to dispose of the stock, what caused the strange sounds in tlie milk, and then 1 fea*ted like an epicure. pany. him home. Unfortunately there
like a romance, and it far
dout* turn out* fnrnWted promptly and rea­ for there is n point past which it is not interior. The novel trip of the six Now and then I had »ome kind of a happened at tbe time to bo no married
published on the subject.‘
sonably. . Cotaunerrial men-driven to nelgh- profitatle to feed an animal and at which young ladies has been much talked vegetable* as a beet or a turnip, and couples at the Garden who w«to de­
there is the most money in it. Beeves। about, but as they • had avoided the from time to lime bought a few cents’ sirous of obtaining such a situation as
have been fed up to four or six years1 erOA'ded thoroughfares thev v ere igno- worth of butchers’ scraps, more to season he offered. Not to be discouraged, how­
TT’ELLOGG A BELL, proprietor* Planing and sold nt a loss when they would have1 raut of the interest taken in them, and food than to be food.
1- .1- trr..
. . Once a ever, ho set about finding two single —
AX Mill. Planing and Matching. Resawing
and Moulding * specialty. Scroll Sawing, made a handsome profit if sold nt two or were much astonished aud slightly in­ month I indulged in a baking of dough­ young persons of opposite sex who
Bracket*. Window «nd D.x.r Frame* wade to three years. “Experience teaches** in sulted when they learned that nets had nuts, or got a pound of lard and fried might not bo averse to nnitlng their
ibis as iu nil other things, and we do not■ been made by certain sporting men tin eating of doughnuts, about six, one lives and their luck. lie first nceosted
think any person who' ever liecaine a&gt; that they would not make four hundred at a tim», in a tin cup over my oil-stove.” a number of men, who looked like
. skillful feeder of stock, and who has made‘ miles in the month. The parties are The contrivance* for clothing were cu­ honest, amiable fellows, and among
$72^
money at it, ever laarned anything of modest and shun notoriety. They aver rious. The writer says: “There could them discovered one whose fancy was
the more intricate parts of the business। they end the trip ntsw becau«e three of be no reductions beyond hers, for she taken by the picture which he held np
-excepting by his own i erson.nl experi­ their number will liegin their school literally bought nothing in the way of to him of a ooxv, rustic home and a
ence.
The'general rules of feeding, days early in September, but they assert clothing whatever. So she lived, so to gbod-natured young wife to keep it, all
TON AH B. RASKY, Express and Draj
,Fr»-.- ||.
tor •
Iml will leniorrTiu,. Fi
V Good* and B*sg*ge carried lo any pb
such as a liberal allowance. jMjrfeel reg­ their detertnination to walk over.the sjieak. on the past—on the wrecks of her to be acquired by Bringle and very sim­
ularity, the cmfort and «piiet of the an- unexplored portion of the State next own clothing and other people’s. She I ple transaction. This negotiation set­
summer. They, leave to-morrow bv rail made a whole suit out ot an old straw tled, he sought for a damsel to match
iram r. Dickinson, manufacturer of Imals^regular nnd sufficient watering,
.Kama, BFN. VAXDEkT
and dealer iu Liard \S ood Lumber. tJa'Jd- the best food.the purest water, a wise for their homes, near Hendersonville.— IhmI ticking, combined with the frag­ the willing swain, and it was not long
tog Material **p«dalty. Cash paid for logs. M1U
choice of stork, and the quick finishing■ Monroe (N. CL) Cor. Chicago Timex.
ments of a pair of tho drilling 'overalls before ho succeeded in obtaining from
and yard on Sherman At-, st M. C RR. crossing. and early disposal of the nnima’s--these
that some workmen had left on the such a one her shy oon*ent to change
—Representatives of tho most fash- premises: these she out into strips, and her social condition.
AMES FLEMING, practical Jeweler and I -may be learned by *tudv and by pre-■
He immediatciv
Watch-maker. CloekaWatebea, 81) w and | cepL or by information: but the partic­■ ionable families in Van Buren County, mode, she declare*, a very stylish trim
brought tho future husband and wife
Plated Ware, Jewelry and Optical Good*. Rodt-ular application of theta rules tospeeialI Ark., recently met in a small village to tiling. She unraveled old, worn-out,
fc*d Watclraaa specialty. Reps!ring and Enpar- circumstances i* the business of tne in­■ indulge in a hunt after horse thieves. homespun undergarments, and mode together in..-*pikJ of their sudden con­
tusion aud assumed reluctance. Onoe
dividual who undertakes it. ’
Owing to bad weather, there were no yarn which she knit into stockings. presented to each other, thev found no
An experimental effort w first advi«a- ladies in the party, but their absence She had fifteen mottoes in the house difficulty whatever in making an ac­
/ARNO STRUNG, plain audUnc)
ble. but every fanner who can thus de­• was forgotten in the • 'ensure and ex­ made on white miudin and cotton flan­ quaintance, through the medium of
V Tbe bort fx.-H.tU* fordutnxj
vote his time ami care ni ght very wellI citement of the chase. After a lively nel ; these she boiled clean and had a their native tongue, the German. She
prepare to undertake the lending*of one) gallop over fences and rough fields the supply of material for undergarments,
was Ro.vida Haeffner, 19 years of age,
or two beeves, a doxen or two ol sheep,. bn liters bagged three- thieves, two of being the first person, probably, who and be was Adam Horner, 25. The
W. NIBKERN, Aliornrv and CotrotwHor or half a dozen of. thin pigs during the&gt; whom, however, were killed before the
Rev. Mr. Berkemeier was suramoned
. at l&gt;w, practices tn all Stat* CourU. Col next winter; If he succeeds he will learni BjHicInters arrived in a coach and four, found behind a closet door an old over­ and in the employment office he united
how much he knows and how muchi The chase will be renewed as soon M a coat of her father’s, onto* whose quitted them by the time-honored tie that man
more he should know, and it he fails he; general me»;t can be arranged. These lining of black lasting she made for her­ la solemnly forbidden to sunder. A
will discover why he failed and what hej sportsmen say that tbe sport was far bet­ self a cloak that looked like quilted sat­ matron and an officer attached to the
ASHVII-LK IieiSR
needs to learn to secure future success.. ter than fox hunting.—N. Y. Suu.
in. The question of liats or bonnets
And this i* the best way In which therewaa easily settled; she wore none for
I
—In Merchantville, N. J., a ra*K^Jk
I. M. Fust &amp; Sox, Prop*,
three years. As for shoes, the incx- embraced with hearty satisfaction and
cheaply gamed.— Hrnry Stewart.' in N.. trate fimwi a boy $1 for swearing. This h iiistible lining of the father's overcoat went away leaving smiling faces behind '
iurniahes a basis for calculation to a
provided her with slippers which wore
Y. Derail.
brother of Colonel Sellers, who lives in
—The National Mercantile Traveller*’' Camden. He reckons that in Camden better than leather.”
Association recently in ronton at &lt; 'in-• County there are 70,000 people, half of
-When Mm. Homespun heard of the Lampton, N. Y., and is a shoemaker b
11| W f ||*
cinnati resolved to drop tbe term&gt; whenn swear. That would be $35,000
trade. She haa pegged forty pairs et III LI
••dnnmnep’ ami adopt that of "com
for an oath apiece. Each fellow swears
.___ i__
it was attributed to the Irish, she ex- boot* in ten hours, and averages twelve I In ! Lil

A BOOD FAMILY FLOUR

cd

o
4

0

’ aashviUr girrrtory.

New Meat Market

SALT and FRESH MEATS.

I

L

C

I

S

Mdnted

OUR WILD INDIANS

J

999 'AGENTS

PIMPLES

H

CONSUMPTIVES.

J

NO PATENT NOW

P

imiiiKg

-The

N. T. PARKER. Prop.

•iMaaooo
days to tbe month, i

�i..K f.»th al

Catholic rhure.h is going up
to Alpena.
A batten factory lias been establish­
ed nt Adrian.
Four Grand Rapid* churches have
tier trie HghU.
Livingston comity is to'have a $4,000

Cbitrieai Knfiman of Freedom blew
bin brains out Monday.
The 2&lt;l Michi infantry held a reunion
at Jackson tbe 10th innt.
Kelly of Owosso got drunk
and whs di owned nt Jackaon.
Vanderbilt will build a now $900,000
Michigan Central depot at Detroit.
William McKinstiy, near Niles, ac­
cidentally idiot and killed himself.
The Muskegon car and engine works
are making 300 car* for a southern rail­
road.
Big Rapids has had diphtheria more
or les* for
. there now!
raa found
dead ift/
Thuradny morning.
Epilepsy.
A big manufactory from Cohocton.
N. Y.; will ooon Ims added to the Indus­
trie* of Marshall.
Mackinaw county ha* an Independ­
ent ticket. ludepeudeutisiu seem* very
popular this year.
In a special ward election at Grand
Rapids, this week,a fuslonist wu* elect­
ed iu a Republican ward.
Tbe Green backers have endorsed
Maybtiry, Democratic nominee for
congress in the Detroit district.
The sheep breeding business in Genessce.LivingHtou, and Oakland counties
is said to-be prospering finely.
Frank Black, an eight-year-old lad
at Battle Creek, had both legs cut off’
while climbing on the cars, Oct. 18.
Lieut. Guv. Crosby was elected pres­
ident of tlie states Baptis association.
Aud that's die kind of a man he is.
The Patruns of Husbandry held a
fair at Bedford, Calhoun county, last
week. Big attendance and a large
allow.
A Manistee man's daughter got mar­
ried and lie hired two Pullman palace
coaches to bring over Abe Chicago
guests.
The new wheat look* well in most
part* of Michigan, although there are
b quite n number of bad fields which re­
quire to be resown.
A coal miner named Duncan was run
over and killed ou tlie railroad near
Jackson, and Cliailes Hicks was all
chawed up on the Detroit &amp;. Bay City
rail read.
At die meeting of tbe Good Templars
grand lodge at Lansing this week, 890
subordinate lodges (114 sew) with 10,000
members and $2,605 assests were re­
ported.
A Care doctor traded horses the odier day “sight unseen,” giving $5 lioot
money. When be went for his new
home be found it in tbe field—widi its
neck Droken.
Frank Wilson, a bog and sheep
breeder of near Jackson, attended the
St. Louis, Tri-state, Illinois and Michi-

gregating $788. .
Joseph P. Lodge, formerly prosecut­
ing attorney for Calhoun county in
tills state, will figure as attorney for
Cockerill, tho 8L Louis editor who
killed Col. Slayback.
Anna Stephenson of Gladwin county,
who barred her husband out of the
house and shot and killed him while
trying to get into the window, has been
convicted of murder in the necond degrae.
At Grand Haven they have tlie little
scholar* in the nttie of the school build­
ing. Of course the temptation to slide
down tbe banister* Ml in the way and
ene of them broke hia back at it re­
cently.
While Jas. M. Harris, of Kalkaska,
was splitting slab* in a saw mill, his
ax canght on a rope above hi* head,
and the recoil threw him oyer back­
ward on to a circular saw which sawed
him in halves.
Zirriyu’s jewelry store at Grand Rap­
ids was burglarized of $0000 worth of
good* and $700 or $800 in money.
Sunday night. Rewards amounting to
$1500 Imre beeto offered for the capture
of the Zierlyn jewelry rtore burglars at
Grand Rapid*.
The Baptists of this slate in couyenvention assembled at Niles, resolved to
urge upon church member* the duty uf
jtbetaimug from the use of tobacco,
upon the two-tohl ground of conmderl sUonof health and tlie violation of.

.VI,,.!.,.

will be enti
«1»
of
haring mat
raid ever inaugurated against tbe ofbauda of tb« mru who sire bin! *100 dee-holders. Fully $400,000 hare been
collected and distributed where they
wrestling with his «Jnl and feels that will do the most good for the Stalwart
they are going to torn tbe,u&gt;wn up*idr
down, to which assertion the groveling miosed his clerks and is preparing to
Leader say* be cat. tint do it without return to the Michigan wilds to com­
tbe consent of tbe common council. plete hi* Senatorial canvass.
Mr.
The Lender ia little better chan ooe of Hubbell points with pride to this
the wicked.—ifeem'ny'A'cmr.
achievement, which he declares is unA ‘•Democratic” convention for the preceedented. Unfortunately the asscounty of Wayne waa held last week. eased clerks aud tho American people
are not neariy no unanimous about the
largely composed uf aud controlled by benefits of the two-per-cent method of
gamblers, thieves, pugilists, aud even running a great government as he is,
murderers, who at the convention act and they are likely to make him end
up liquor bars, gambling devices, pick­
trouble about the matter. They
ed pockets, and even robbed and par­ are juit unreasonable enough to claim
roted one man and secured a pris­ that he ought to be allowed to return
oner from the police. It was altogeth­ to private life, and the prospects are
er the mhst infamous collection of good that they will carry out their own
scoundrels that ever got together for suggestion.
any purpose iu this conntr except to
Postal telegraphy as wrll as the pos­
witness a dog fight or to innttgurate a tal savings bank system will, it is un­
riot. To compare it with any political derstood, be •vcommended to Congress
gathering would be a libel on the wont in the forthcoming report of the Postconvention in the villainous annals uf mnster-Gefieral. Besides repeating tbe
county politics. Aud to think that arguments made by formerPoatpmstersuch a mass of degradation, is tbe General in urging the adoption of both
scource from which emanates the pos­ measures. Postmaster-General Howe
sible future-government of the wealth­ will add other arguments based upon
iest and most enlightened county in the succeMof both as iu operation now
tlie great state of Michigan.
in England.
Nothing is more frequently heard at
President Angell, of the University,
in bis annual address says: Much the Capitol now than the expression by
progress was made lost year. The eye veterans in politics and public life, in
and ear .infirmary wu* created; tbe both of the great parties, of the belief
sewer, extending from tbe grounds to that “a general break up” iu parties is
the liver, was completed ; the capacity near at hand. So intolerable have be­
of the chemical laboratory was nearly come tbe abuses in the public services,
doubled; tbe museum building was so corrupting tbe practices pf public
completed and occuoied ; the interior life, so unbearable the burdens conse­
of tbe North College was partially re­ quent thereto, that few indeed, so far
constructed ; and the tire-proof library as can be ascertained, outside of tbe
building, so long needed, was begun. circle of those who profit limufediately
A professor of mechanical engineering by tbe present state of things, appear
waa appointed, and work in that use­ to be disturbed in tbe least.
A bluer lot of politicians were never
ful branch has been begun with a skill
aud enthusiasm which promise excel­ seen anywhere than ares® countered in
lent results. A school of political the Departments this week. Tbe re­
science has also been established. The sult in Ohio of Tuesday’s election al­
number of students during tbe last most took tbeir breath. Tbe fellows
two years has been larger than erer who bet on their wishes, regardless of
before. The changes in tbe faculties judgment, are pinning for departed
during tbe past year have been fewer shekels. -It was announced iu some
than usual. About three-fifths of tbe quarters that even bets were offered by
students in tlie literary department Republicans that Cleveland will be
were from Michigan. More than half elected Governor in New York.
Different views are taken of the ap­
of the students in the other depart­
ments were from elsewhere. Perhaps parent indifference of General Arthur,
no other institution in the country baa not only to public affairs at the seat of
so widespread a constituency. Last Government but to political movements
year we had students from every one iu which be might be supposed to have
of the Eastern, the Middle and tbe great personal interest, as well ns a
Western States, and from every South­ deep stake in . the ultimate outcome.
ern State but four; from four Terri­ Of these one is that General Arthur
anything beyond th*
tories and the District of Columbia; does not exp
nnd from Ontario, New Brunswick. expiration of his term of office that he
has
lost
interest
in
politics, being con­
Monitoba, the Hawaiian Islands, Nic­
aragua, Cuba, Benmuda, England, Ire­ vinced that tbe Republican party has
land, Ron man in, Eg? pt and Bunnab. lived out its allotted period, that the
The increase in attendance has nut great actors have run tbeir race, and
been due to a lowering of tlie standard tliat a break up of the old parties and
of admission, bnt has come during tbe formation of new ones u in the
these years when we have been gradu­ near future.
____________
August.
ally raising the standard. Tbe presi­

dent expresses tbe opinion that there
are too many protessional schools in the
country, and that it would ^e better if
professional schools were all attached
to or incorporated with a vigorous
University.
.
OUR WASHINGTON LETTER.

Washington, D. Cn Oct. 14.1882.
The heads of bureaus in.the various
Departments are busily engaged in
preparation of estimates for the ex­
pense of the government during the
next fiscal year, but the Interior De­
partment alone haa sent in its accounts
to‘he Treasury Department. It ia in
the latter Department that tbe compi­
lation ia made before the figures are
printed for the use of Congress, and it
frequently happens that changes are
found necessary at the very last minnte. The indications arethat this work
will be sufficiently advanced by tbe 25,
instant to admit of it* being turned
over to the Public Printer, who, in
turn, will endeavor to put it in shape
before Congress meets. As the next
seasion expires on the 8th of March, ’88.
it is desirable that tbe estimates shall
bo ready for action by th Appropria­
tion Committee uot later than the mid­
dle of Nov., and a meeting of tlie committe lias been called for that purpose
at least two weeks before the beginning
of the next session of Congress. Even
after the estimates are printed they
are subject to changes by tbe head* of
Departments, and therefore any state­
ment of the necessary amounts would
not be absolutely correct until after
tbe appropriation committee bad pasa-

Senator Don Cameron,* with the
chairman of hi* *tate committee, »pent
looki

EATON COUNTY.
Tbe Eaton Rapid* fair had 3,117 entries and was largely attended.
Jared Rail, of near Grand Ledge,
raised os*head* two feet long.
Charlotte had 108 school children who
were neither absent or tardy last
mouth.
\
Tbe fnsionista of the east representa­
tive district, have noninated Jno. W.
Ewing of Oneida.
A. S. Parker of Roxand, has sold his
80 acre farm to Ira E. Crawford of
Hillsdale county for $4,200.
Roswell G. Hirr of Saginaw and Ebin
Horr of Kalamo are cousins. Roswell
hews to the line on tbe stump while
Ebin hews to the line on fallen timber.
—.4 Hawk-item.
The Barry and Eaton county medical
association will discuss “tuberculosis”
and listen to papers from Dr*. Slater;
Parmenter aud Upjohn, at Charlotte,
Thursday the 98th.
Grand Ledge people and officials are
bending the law rn a desperate effort to
reform “Toney” Berner, a notorious
drunk and disorderly of that place,
now working in Charlotte.
The fanner’s institute to be held the
third Wednesday in January, ia to be
presided over by H. M. Allen of Belle­
vue, C. E. Ells of Carmel vice president,
and A. P. Green of Charlotte will keep
tbe “minnits.”
A real estate auction sale occurred nt
Eaton Rapids last week, $9,027 worth
of property changing bauds, which
leads the Journal of that place to re­
mark. “Verily, we believe a new era is
Ixirn for Eaton Rapids.”
D. P. Sagendorph, and Mayor Gage
of Battle Creek held a big temperance
meeting at Charlotte Tuesday evening.
Tbe mayor explained his course against
the salooniau nt ths Creek, and advis­
ed people to vote the prohibition ticket
st might.
Tbe supervisors elected Dr. Warren

aoluth.n favoring the adoption of the

FOR ZLzTElST -AJSTD

$2.75
3.00
4.75
5.oo
6.oo

BOYS -A.T:

ULSTERS and OVERCOATS—
$3.75
4,50
5.oo
12.00
15.oo
$7.50
9.00
10.00
16.5o

Cloaks and. Dolmans Cheap

HORSE BLANKETS AT 90 CENTS
We do not ask you to take our assertions on paper, but we do want you to come snd ex­
amine o(ir prices and see the largest stock of goods in Barry county.
*

Butter, Eggs, and Dried Apples Wanted.

CS"

his arm from the shoulder downward*,
sawing into the shoulder joint. He I
will loose tbe use of his arm.
C. D. Spaflord, of Kalaino, one of the ’
liveliest working men of the county, I
called Monday. He was accompanied
with his brother, W. H. Spofford, of
Laramie, Wyoming Territory, who is
making a short visit here. The brothhad been separated 19 years until last
Friday.—The Journal.
Being engaged iu clothing and lumber business in Big Rap­
The residence of George Griffin, of
Carmel township. together with the ids, have concloded to dispbse of by private and auction sale
entire contents was destroyed by fire the entire stock
Saturday afternoon. The family were
away. Mr. Griffin waa working at a
neighbor’s, and wa* left without even
a coat. Loss, $1,900; no insurance.
During the session of the circuit
court this week, Gary C. Fox. Ute Co.
clerk, and Clarence H. Walker of Belle­
vue, who haa studied day times and
worked in a lime kiln nights to get
money to pay bis way, were admitted
to tbe bar. The case of Reuben Hall,
now under twenty-year* sentence for
rape, but given a new trial, goes over
Which means a saving of 30 to 50 per cent to the purchaser
to next term. Joseph Seachrist who
pounded the city marshal badly, being
tbe only support of an invalid father,
SALE TO COMMENCE FIRST DAY OF OCTOBER.
plead guilty and wm let oft on smpended sentence.
RKAD THE
At the second semi-annual meeting ;
of tbe Olivet athletic association a
A. Worden won first and W. A. Lewis
second on the 150 yard dash; F. M.
AND BUY, BUY, BUY.
Hollister ran the diamond in ISseconds
and Lewis in 14; J. R. Cochrane threw Jeans Suits, &gt;3.76, 4.50, 5.00.
Satinett Suits, 5.00, 6.00, 7.00
a ball 80 yards and Chas. Evarts 90
Men’s Cotton Worsted Suite. 4.50, 5.00, 6.00.
feet less; snd in the heavy weight con­
test J. B. Tracy was first, A. E. Heart Union Casaimere Suite, $6, 7, 9.
All-wool Cassimere Suits,
second. The ball match was won by
*9, 10, 12, 1'3. All-wool Worsted Suits, *10, 12, 14.
tlie Tracy nine by 15 to 12 in five in­
Beaver Suits, *12, 13: 14.
Pilot Suits, 10.50, 12, 14..
nings. The reception in tbe evening
100 pain Pants at *1.
i
was very pleasant, with music by Miss
Jessie Maynard, T. R. Patton and Prof. 100 Vesta, 60c to *2.
Union Cassimere Pants, *2 to 3.
Smith.
Wool Cassimere Panta, S3, 3.50, 4.
It is with extreme reluctance that
School Suits, 6 to 14, *4 to 6; All-wool
Hon. E. 8. Lacey finds that be will Boys' Clothing :
have to forego the pleasure of a per­
Casaimerea, $5.50 to 7.
sonal canvas of the third district. He
Boys’ Suita, 11 to 16: Union Caasimeres, $4.87 to 10.
find the duties of bis position as Chair­
man of the State Committe more labo­ Youtha’ Suits, 32 to 36 :
Union Caasimeres, 5.75 to 6, 11
rious aud exacting than he anticipated,
Worsted Suits, 7, 8, 9, 10.
and that he hasn’t a moment of time
100 odd Coats
that he can call bin own.
There are, Wonted and Cassimere Overcoats, 5, 6, 8, 10.
three congressional districts in the।
at 3, worth 5.
state where the contest is close, and he
' Women’s and Children’s Shoes at 60 eta on the Dollar. Men'a
feels U his duty to devote all bis ener­
Boots at the same.
gies in assisting bis colleagues—even
to the sacrifice of his personal interest*&gt; All Yard goods, including Prints, Shirtings, Demins. Ticks,
His Republican friends will, readily
Stripes, Etc., clased at actual cost.
recognise that it is of far more general
importance that the state ticket. Im?
C3TThis is ft genuine closing sale. All kinds of country­
elected, with a full congressional dele­
gation, than that be should be engag­ produce taken at full and satisfactory prices. Parties indebted
ed in the moreuohgenial occupation of either by note or account are requested to call and settle be­
visiting his constituents, when hia
fore I close for good in Nashville.
election by a majority is so well as­
sured.— Charlotte Republican.
Down at Olivet college, the other
day, so the story comes to us, a straightt3C"Store building for sale or rent
laced and modest
collegian bad
an older sister call at bis rooms. While '
CUT 8H0WING-THE SIMPLICITY OF THE
there, a gentleman called who had occopied the same room years previously..
To avoid any talk among tbe boys the
young man pat hi* sister in a closet to
wait till tbe close of the visit. The
gentleman came in, saying, after the
usual greeting*: “Tbe same eld view
into the master’s garden. Yes, the;
same old view. The same old pictures, j
too;” nnd he got up and tapped the,
frames; “and I declare! tbe same old ’
sofa. Dear me!? Next be walked
around the room, stopping at the flre-

CLOSINGOUT

AT WHOLESALE COST

hole s;ile Drice List,

WM. A. AYLSWORTH

he got to the closet and turned the
handle. “Same old-

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                  <text>VOLUME X.

~

LIFE IE HA8HVILLE,
And Her Environs.

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1882.
BEADY, THE BRUISER.

There are various Bradys known to
fame—more or less known: Brady the
i —You must register tn person, and
chief justice, Brady the star-router,
don’t you forget it!
and Brady the farmer; but the partic­
—Nashville ie now without a night ular one around whom the interest of
watch for the first time in over three Nashville (and some individuals in
years.
Vermontville) centers this week is
—Only ten more days in which to- Brady the bruiser, alias Jack Brady,the
make up your mind how yon are going “lawyer."
The particular deed on Ulrich hi&amp; no­
to vote.
—Pete Roodhaar, a clerk at the long toriety at present rests was performed
brick, has purchased John KohiFs 80- on Tuesday evening, in the shadow of
Ox. Jenson’s barn, and was occasioned,
acre farm in eaM Baltimore.
—A boy with/grey pants and a black as nearly all such deeds are, by beerbload cloth piftch was the interesting bottled beer, hidden away, so the story
apectacle upon our streets Wednesday. goes, in that barn, and the victim was
Walter Beauchamp.
How long the
—The overcoat and duster are en­
fiery fluid had been there does not ap­
gaged in a spirited match these times
pear; but the first intimation Mr.
but the overcoat is generally abont
Beauchamp liad of it was when, coming
three lengths ahead and the duster ap­
out of the barn after putting up a horse
pears badly blown.
■he bad been driving,was seized frombe—C. B. Athern has purchased of Loe hiflU,while the question “Where is that
Sc Durkee the house and lot on Phillips beer, you s----- of b------ ," was hurled at
St, which he had occupied since he him and he was hurled back into the
has been a resident of Nashville, and barn, somewhat to the detriment of his
will immediately proceed to improve good looks.
The assailant was Mr.
the same.
Brady, the—the—“lawyer."
—Otto Kaiser, living two miles north­
The tragedy being over, a warrant
east is the man that held the lucky was sworn out and the fun began.
number that drew the suit of clothes Constable Flint was detailed to look up
at Aylsworth’s on Wednesday. Otto's the fierce young disciple ot Blackst—
phiz was surfeited with smiles as he no. beer; and he found him in fiont of
made his selection.
the Nashville House. But the finding
—Town clerk McDerby has been was the easiest part of it; when it came
scouring the country this week, to give to the arrest that was—well, that was
every voter a chance to legally register different. And here the stories begin
himself, the supervisors having provid­ to differ. One has it that the constable
ed for this in all the townships by a began by calling upon some bystanders
to help him ; another that he began by
little appropriation of &gt;12 for each.
remarking to the disciple of Black­
—Wheat, oats, and corn are coming
stone that be arrested him, the latter
in plentifully, and our buyers have all
replying that he guessed not, and that
they can tend to, notwithstanding the
then the constable called on bystanders
Hawk's awful stories of Nashville fann­
for help, and jumping behind n strang­
ers who go to Vermontville to sell. On
er commanded him to arrest the bruis­
Friday (press-day) morning oats were
er. Anyhow the wouldn’t-be prisoner
worth 80, corn 20, and best wheat 90c.
was not got. The constable then went
—Cards are out for the grand fire­ after other officers, and thanking him
mans ball at the opera bouse on Nov. ,for his kindness, the “prisoner" took a
2. Humphrey &amp; Evans’full orchestra, quick walk around the chemical works
of Battle Creek, has been secured, and and down toward the woods. Then an
every tiling possible will be done to attempt was made to get the other
make the affair in every way a success. constable into the business, and though
There will be an oyster supper at the ho said he felt obliged to refuse to play
second fiddle, he kindly offered the
Nashville House in connection.
—Miss Stell/Wilson celebrated her loan of his revolver. This was refused
however, and the search abandoned,
19th birthday on Thursday evening of
the disciple of B—eer in the meantime
this week, with a very pleasant com­
takings trip to Vermontville on the
pany of friends, including Misses Tru­
seven o'clock train and returning on
man, Austin, Bissell, Foote, Elwell, and
die morrow. What the object of his
Wolcott, and Messrs. Fitzgerald, Dur­
visit to Vt. Ville was, has not got out.
kee, McCartney, Truman, Cook, and
Possibly he wanted to condole and
C. H. Brady. An elegant supper helped
sympathize with that fellow be knock­
to while away the happy hours.
ed down the railroad bank a coupld of
—A reading circle, composed of the weeks ago; we will for the present re­
following members, has been formed, frain | from saying anything about
and will meet weekly on Tuesday eve­ that scrape how the fellow bellowed
nings: Misses Myrtie Myers, Lottie for help, or how white he turned when
Evans, Hatue Foote, Marie Hindmarch, Jack threatened that if he ever said a
Emma Bissell, Bertha Wood, and Car­ word about it he’d “drill a hole right
rie and Gertie Ingerson, Mrs. Dr. through him."
Foote, and Messrs. Charley Ingerson,
We want it expressly understood that
Clarence Crocker and Rey. Bissell. the particulars of these two matters are
They met with Miss Bissell this week. not guaranted to be absolutely correct
—It has been deemed safe to open in all their minutia ; but whether they
the schools again under certainrestrie t- are or not, tEey serve to .'paint a moral
tions which should be rigially enforced, and adorn a tale. And there’s another
as too much care can not be taken to thing we might speak about. We do
prevent the spread of the disease diph­ not believe Jack is such a bad-hearted
theria, owing to the prevalence of fellow as he makes himself appear to
which the schools were closed. Up to be—in fact he appears at times to be
the present time there have been 51 actually ashamed of himself. But na­
cases reported to the health officer ture has gifted him with more than
as having diphtheria symptoms, seven usual strength and a wanton desire for
of which have proved fatal, the bal­ its reckless use. And yet with all this
lance are all convalescent except he wouldn’t be so bad if it wasn’t for
three or four. There has been but one beer—and that’s where the devil gets
or two cases within two weeks, except in.
But however this maybe, his career
in families where the disease has been
for some time. It is considered by in this particular matter came to an
end
on Thursday, when after a short,
good authority that the disease is so
thoroughly controlled that with proper but excitingj;hase on Math street, he
caution there will be no farther trouble looked intb the dark recess of a revol­
from that scource. The Sunday schools ver in the hands of Deputy Sheriff Lee,
will resume their usual sessions next and white with fear heard him remark,
“I want you to distinctly understand,
8tmd*y.
young fellow, that you’re not dealing
—Some one haring remarked that
with a d----- d mosaback now." So he
Mr. Wheeler and Mr. Dennis, rival
pleaged guilty injustice Parody’s office
candidates for reprcsentitive, were en­
and handed over $22; and white-wing­
title to equal creditZaa soldiers in the
ed peace again hovers by the bed­
same regiment, a "member of Co. K.,
side of Constable Flint.
Gtb Mich, Car.,” was moved to say in
a communication to the Home Journal
THE ALI0E FIELD’S OUTRAGE CASE.
last week, that he didn’t think so, and
to further say some unkind things
about Mr. Wheeler. But Mr. Dennis,
who is one of the editors of the Journ­
al, publishes the following card this
week.
'
"A communication from an old com­
rade found its way into our columns
. 1
mnch to our regret. Al­
though the subject of persona! abuse
*p5a~&lt;'n‘writer* we had not
intended to make any reply in kind,
believtog such personal matters did
not have the sanction of our honorable
apponent, Mr. Wheeler, whom we re­
friend. We are absent
******
°™c® much of the time, but
will see td jt that uu more personal
matters appear in the paper."
.

' ITc^nM

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun.

orno strong,i

some distance, according io her story,
he gave her some candy which she said
wm drugged with something that ren­
dered her helpless. Then he took her
out of the buggy, outraged her, and
brought her back to Carpenter’s. Af­
ter two or three days she was taken
sick and taken home, or rather to A. J.
Byer’s where she made it her home —
became deranged, and remained so
nearly the whole time until her death,
which occurred on the 19th inst. She
also claimed that Carpenter had some­
thing to do with her.
•
So highly wrought had public feel­
ing become during the girl's sickness,
that Coroner Upjohn of Hastings was
called in, a jury empaneled, and an ex­
amination made; but much to the pub­
lic surpise the physicians reported that
they found nothing that would nec­
essarily cause deatli, and the jury ac­
cordingly returned a verdict of “died
from natural causes,”—a verdict which
has shrouded many an unholy mys­
tery.
But this verdict was generally un­
satisfactory and the people continued
very much excited over the matter. So
strong is the feeling that it has led to a
preliminary examination by the prose­
cuting attorney, held at Hastings on
Saturday,at which time a number of the
Carlton people testified to what they
knew about the matter. The girl’s af­
fidavit was never taken because, while
a justice of the peace was present sev­
eral times during her sickness, he
found her incapable of making one;
owing to her derangement. No arrests
have yet been made.
The Carlton people deserve credit
for the strong and kindly interest they
have shown in the welfare of a poor
girl, and for their determination to
bring to justice the guilty parties. It
is comforting io know that amid all the
harshness of daily life there is a strong
human sympathy in every community
that in the absence of ties of direct re­
lationship, demand justice for the
weak and the wronged.
HOME.
"This is our beautiful, new home,
isn't it," interrogated our little fouryear-old the other evening.
"It is, darling—yours, Nellie’s, ma­
ma's and mine," was the reply. God
grant that it may always bo a home in
deed as well as name to that littie
prattler.
It is but a humble home, to say the
least, but it is clean and warm, and
wife says we mean that it shall be a
"beautiful home," always, to our God­
given blessings.
Every father should have a home,
and that home shpuld be just as beau­
tiful as ho has money to make st. There
should be bright carpets on the floors,
the walls should be appropriately fin­
ished, papered and ornamented with
cheerful pictures, there should bo some
easy chairs, plenty of pure air and
pleasant words, and green grass grow­
ing in the front yard. Jlome should
be a beautiful oasis in this dusty, un­
feeling world, where tired man can re­
fresh and renew himself for life’s stern
duties—a spot that children, when
grown old, can look back to with rev­
erential feelings.
We believe many a promising young
man—many a noble young woman has
been wrecked because their parents
had failed in early life to provide them
a "beautiful home."
This life and the life hereafter is a
progressive one and those who have
beautiful homes here will pc better
fitted to occupy that more beautiful
one Over There.

Up at Middleville Jno. Osterburg,
a Swede, drowned himself in a lake in
the Swede settlement last week. The
man was found standing up in the
water beside a tree, the top of his head
out of the water. He had been drink­
ing much of late, but the fact that there
was a black and blue strip about his
neck, coupled with the fact that an­
other Swede settler mysteriously dis­
appeared in that neighborhood several
years ago leaving no trace, has given
rise to suspicions that Osterburg got
into trouble with his fellow settlers
and was foully dealt with. Aft inquest
Carlton is very much excited over a
was held, and a verdict of suicide ren­
case of alleged outrage upon the person
dered. Osterburg had little property,
Alice Fields, a girl of that place aged
and his wife and child are in the old
about 15, from the effects of which, it is
country.
claimed, she died on the 19th. Mention
to this efiecttwas made in The News
We know' of no inland town which
lastweek, but the particulars were not carries a finer or more complete stock
given and The News has been to some of general merchandise than F. F.
trouble to look them up.
Hilbert of Woodland, but Frank is a
It seems that Miss Fields was at young man, amply endowed with en­
work for J. B. Carpenter of Carlton, terprising business qualifications and
and that on or about the 4th ef October is bound to give hi* patrons as good
Wm. McMurry called in the evening goods as there is in the markets—hence
and asked her to take a ride with him, his large "stQck. Note carefully his
which she consented to. After going advt. in The News.

L00AL

GIBBLE'-G ABB LE

WEST SUNFIELD.

GF"Wagons, Buggies, and Carriages
at Glasgow's.

Quite a blizzard Sunday.
Reautifulmoonlight evenings.
Good time for evening parties now.
V. Myers will soon have a nice new
barn.
"
.
Mr. Garmer has a new roof on his
house.
Illinois han charms for Dell Bishop,
arfd he has sold his farm here.
Harry Hammond is opening up a
harness shop at Vermontville.
Henry Hammond, not being content­
ed with his location, has sold his farm.
The Missionary society of the U. B.
church will meet on Thursday, Nov.
2nd.
Ben Thomas spent Saturday and
Sunday in visiting his grand parents in
Odessa.
Mrs. Jake Fast spent the first of the
week visiting her sick sister Mrs. King
of Hastings.
Henn- Hunter is making improve­
ments by way of new coni house, hog
house, etc.
' Burly Thomas is trying the strength
of his now wagon with three cords of
wood to a load.
C. Shafer is erecting a new barn on
his place and will occupy the new house
this fall sometime.
John Walsh went to Westville last
week where his father is engaged in
thn mercantile business.
There are still a few more in our
burg who ought to take The News and
if they so wish, we will order it sent to
them.
Although there are but few apples in
the country, yet Andrew and John
Kilpatrick are packing a good many
we notice.
Wednesday, Nov. 1st, the aid society
will meet at Mrs. S. Rawson's, when
1 the election of officers will take place.
A large attendance Is desired.
Henry Miller was here last week mak­
ing some preparations for his new
house, which he intends to occupy
about the middle of November.
Last Sunday Rev. Morrison of the
Presbyterian church exchanged pulpits
with Rev. R.Williams of Vermontville,
who preached a very able sermon from
Mark XIX. 8.
Tne comet is creating quite a sensa­
tion in this part of the country, os some
are sure it is going to come tin contact
with the sun and cause a general
smashuD while others affirm as positive­
ly that it is all the time traveling away
from the sun.
.
For the benefit of voters in general
and no party in particular, we wish to
state that previous to Nov. ,4, all np-’
plications for registration must be
made m writing to the town clerk, but
on that day,|Nov. 4, verba! application
may be made to the town board then in
session for that purpose.
Vax.

nr Why is our stock of underwear like
Barn unis elephant Jumbo •
Because it is the largest ever seen in this
country, "Fact." ________ Kochzk Bros.
ROCK BlilTOM PRICES.

•Aad Nneiil Chit-Ckit.

Jlegister in person.
Fill out a registration blank.
See Ingerson &amp;. Son’s new adv.
In order—sere and yellow leaves.
Frank Purchis is again horseless.
Preacher Cook is re-shlngling his
house on Sherman St.
Mrs. Parsol Wheeler, and son Ernie,
of Woodland, were Li town this week.
Tom Niles and Homer Davis have
opened a billiard room in the old bak
ery.
The doings of the county law-makers
can be found upon the inside pages of
this issue.
S. J. Prindlo has moved in and
began improving his late purchase on
State St.
J. H. Smith completed die paving of
Main St. gutters yesterday. He did a
good job.
Herb Walrath now occupies his new
business place, one door north of Fran­
cis' grocery.
There will be no service at the
Christian church, Sunday, the pastor
being out of town.
Rev. Bissell has been in Cleveland
this week attending commencement of
the Western Reserve college.
R. M. Collier of the Washington P.
O., is spending a few days in the vil­
lage with mother and friends.
Mrs. Yates is confined to the bedside
of her sick boy and Mrs. L. O. Crocker
is conducting her millinery business.
Hon. Geo. Huggett and Dr. P. D.
Patterson of Charlotte, were callers nt
The News office Thursday afternoon.
Wm. G. Wheeler, of Maple Grove,
has sold out and will try the "wilds’’ of
Kansas, probably somewhere near
Glen Elder.
J. D. Fowler, keeper of the Eaton
county poor farm, appreciates Nash­
ville workmanship and is getting a har­
ness made at Will Clark’s.
’Tie only right for us to say that Mr.
Chas. H. Brady, the circuit court com­
missioner, is not Mr. Jack Brady, the
bruiaer. Far from it.
Hon. John C. Patterson of Marshall,
speaks at the opera house in this village
Thursday eve., Nov. 2nd, from the Re­
publican standpoint. ■
Mrs. S. D. Hawthorne dislocated a
shoulder by falling down stairs on Sat­
urday. Dr. Barber set the same, and
Mrs. S. is doing finely.
*
T. C Downing and Jacob Osmun de­
parted for the northern wilds on Weddesday to join the hunting party now
there, mentioned in last week’s News.

L. Fanl of Woodland, has a tidy and
commodious place to do business in.
and is doing lots of it in his particular
line—hardware, tin and copperware.
See his new advt.

NUMBER 6.

Gen. W. H. Gibson a talented politi­
cian of Ohio will (speak at ^Hastings,
LOCAL MTATER8.
Wednesday eve., Nov. 1st.
Many
sw* White Sewing Machines—best In market
Nashville Repub’s contemplate going —just received
at Glasgow's.
down to hear him.
X.
&amp; We are daily receiving new goods, all
Dr. A. H. Winn returned from New of which are being sold at bottom prices at
Ainsworth’s old stand,
York with his newly acquired wife,
Fowler A Campbkix.
Monday evening. The happy couple
OPENING OF THE SCHOOLS.
have commenced house-keeping in
The schools in all the departments will open
their home in Brooklyn.
again on Monday, with the following restric­
Geo. Huggett of Charlotte discussed tions : Families tn which diphtheria has existed
since
the 10th of the present month will not be
the political issues of the day in a pleas­ allowed
to send any member of the family to
ant, straightforward and matter-of-fact school, whether haring had the disease or not,
manner before n fair audience at the URtll after the 13th of Nov. This precaution is
deemed necessary for the projection of those
opera-house Thursday evening.
who have not been exposed tn the disease.
H. A. BARBER, M. D., Health Officer.
Dr. J.F. Goucher of North Lawrence,
E. A. BUSH, Director.
0., whom many of the old residents
t2T We have th* largest stock and we make
about Woodland will remember by the the
lowest prices.
Fowler * Camfbkli..
more familiar title of "Joie,” is spend­
■WNew load of Rock Sall just arrived, at
ing the week in town. The doctor not
Brooks, Marshall A Co's.
only enjoys a good business but the
Our Wet Tea djn’t be beat.
pleasures, of (home and the title of
FbWLER &amp; Campbell.
“pa.”
C2T
After a most"rigid examination of the
We desire to call Woodlanders at­ Crown Sewing
Machine we can reccominenil It
tention to the quarter column advt. of to buyers as a first class machine. The work­
J. W. Holmes Sc Co. in this paper. ing jiarts are perfect in material and construc­
tion and embrace all the late Improvements of
This firm are now showing the finest all machines. We have bought one for our
stock of general merchandise they own use. exchanging in part payment the
Remington, and are highly eatistlcxl with our
ever carried, and one that—quality and exchange.
'
A. C. BrXTOXprice considered—bear the inspection
tSTA whole-stock, hand-made boot tor 82.75
of the most careful buyer.
at the Closing-out Sale at
Atuworth’s.
D. B. Ainger the efficient P. M. at
tSJT We have just opened a line ot new
Washington, D. C., paid his. flrat visit Cigars. Call and see them.
Fowlbr A Campbell.
to Nashville and The News on Wed­
nesday. Mr. A. is a positive, energetic,
ty A few All-wool Overcoats at 88, to close
atAtlsworth’s.
progressive and fair worker in the
cause of Republicanism, a leader in
OYSTERS!
Washington society and a popular man
Fresh Ovsters every day, served at my Lunch
Counter in every style. Price per can80 cents.
generally.
Also celebrated"Vaf! A Crane Crackers.
The funeral service of little Clyde
Cap Dcxkam.
Mallory, aged 6 years and 9 months,
«rDou'l fall to secure a Sult of those
were held in the opera house on Sun­ Clothe* at |U0, 8A and 88,
at Aruwonn'i.
day, Oct. 23d, a good audience of sym­
pathetic friends being present to listen
(y Bring your Butter, Eggs and dried ap­
to a discourse dclfvered by Mrs. Graves ples direct to ox and we willyou the cash
for them.
Fowlkr A Campbell.
of Grand Rapids. She spoke from in­
(3TWho will be the next to secure a suit
spiration &lt;m the life that now is qpd
of clothes free of coot &lt; at Atlmworth's.
the life to come. Her words were el­
oquent, full of meaning and could not . BfirClover Seed wanted. Brooks, M. A Co.
fail to comfort the breaved ones and
tyAnother rare chance to buy good* ebrari
□ext week,
at Avlswuktii's.
instruct and interest her hearers.

Don’t buy a tingle pair of Boots or Shoes be
fore visiting Prindle A Chipman's, and inspect­
ing their stock and prices. 8t x-k larger and
more complete than ever and prices marked
right down to bed-rock. No competitors al­
lowed to undersell us.
Pbindlk A CUtPMAX. •
ar We never had so full a stock of Boots
and shoes, and never bought so cheap os we
did this fall stock. You can save time and
money by looking us'over as soon as possible.
Kocsbr Bros.

WANTED.
100 bushels good charcoal nt once.
C. L. Glasgow.
nr tfe have a rare display of Dress Fabrics.
In fact ahe stock is so large and varied Strong
won'Wpare us the room toenumcrate. So you
must ^ome and see for yourself.
•
'
Kocher Bros.

E0T A good large com’ for sale
____________ E. R. Wuxrs.
THIS FOR LADIES ONLY.
We open this week an elegant line of new
Cloakings, very pretty and very stylish. Also
Fur Trimmings and ornament* to match.
Kocher Bros.

BASS WOOD BOLTS.
Now Is your time.
8L25 jiercun! for 18 inch.
83.50 per cord for 85 inch.
Cash as fast delivered. For particulars see
Gbo. W. Fraxcls.
jyMicblgan Stoves at Glasouw's.

nr Don't forget the Royal Oak Heating
Stove at
Glasgow's.
"LADIES LISTEN. '
Having moved in our new store, Yates Block,
and added largely to my stock, I am better pre­
pared than ever to please my patrons. My stock
consists of fine Millinerv of every description.
Beautiful Hats, Bonnets, Fancy'Goods, Dres*
Trimmings, Silks, Satins, Laces', Ribbons, Vel­
vet, Flowers, Feathers and a thousand or more
other artie'es you will surely t&gt;e interested !r.
Call and see my goods, give"them a critical ex­
amination, compare prices with those of othei
dealers tfnd you will buy. More particulars
next week.
O. M. Yates.

tyFarmera should use Dr. Joseph Haos’
Hog and Poultry Remedy. Sold by
F.’ T. Boise.

MONEY TO LOAN,
On Real Estate at low rate of interest of
Lek A Di-rkee

BUY BREAD
At the City Baliery, fresh every day. Also oys­
ters, crackers, cakes, coffee, tea, spice, tobac­
co, etc. Warm meal* at all times. Give us a
call and we will endeavor to please.
J. D. Blair.

Wood and Potatoes taken in exchange
for any goods in our line.
Granger A Co.

REGISTRATION NOTICE.
The township Board of Registration, for the
Township of Castleton,will meet at the office of
the Township Clerk on Saturday, Nov. 4th '82
The laws of 1381 requires a uew registration,
to be made, therefore every legal voter in th«*
township who wishes to vote at the approach­
ing election are requested to appear personally
before the Township Clerk prior to Nov. 4,195'and register his name . Fraxk McDerby,
-1-7.
Township Clerk.
heat

forget the Round Monumental
I at
Glasgow’s.

gy Our Cloaks and Dolmans are beautiful.
Over 200 to select from ranging in price from
83. to 820.
Kocher Bros.

THE NEW FIRM.
We are now prepared to furnish the people
of Nashville and vicinity with Fresh Family
Groceries, Crockery and Glassware, in fart
everything pertaining to a flrat class grocery,
at prices as low as the lowest. Please call an-i
examine at Ainsworth’s old stand.
Fowler A Campbell.
mt asjy Call and see our
sortme nt of Gents Furnl™„w------- ,,— ..
Prixdlk A Chipmax.

ONCE MORE
C, L. Glasgow sales those who have not al­
ready called ami attended to their account&lt; andnotes that arc past due i to do ao at once
and save him the expense of calling on them.
»T 200 Shawls all prices, all colors. Cheap.
Kocher Bros.
ty If you buy Clothing of Granger A Co.
they will save you 10 per cent.

BOOTS AND SHOES.
•
A complete line of heavy and One goods fru
With prices on the cash basis, and bar
gains worth looking after.
all.

The largest line ever opened in Nashville
All kinds, all styles, with prices for all. Cal.
and see them.
■
C. W. Smith.
as- Don't forget the Round Monuments
Heating Stove at_____________ Glasgow's.
nr Our Chariot department is filled wit
choice selection* and should be seen to be a;
predated.
Kch her Beus.
F&gt;TDon’t forget the Royal bak hcarit'.
store
at Glasgow's.

gyrbe best line of Boots A Shoes in tow:
at
C W. Gmab^b* Co.’b.

A FEWL THOUSAND DOLLARS
To Loon on g»&gt;od Real Estate seeurlt v.
LbbA Dvbkkb.
(y Whew I Have you seen Raost'a De1stock of Neckties! Biggest and be»t in towi

YOUREAR, GENTLE READER.
You that are ImlebUd to The Nashvill

Dou'lforgrlit". Don't.

no patron can

�11!
4*.

4-JU
113 Jan.

115 Dewitt C. G:iff&lt;h. juror
J. 0&lt;iTT.

iuoved that the tshair sppuinl

New* and Middleville Republican
&gt;hl»&lt; the proceeding, of (he lxmnj

116 W. T. Hicka, wit. fees.
117 Orvon bwifi, services on

6 on 6 00 Gott, Hicks. Merrick. Nye, PoUey, Pieroe
I 80 Richie, Towne, Wt»g and chairman—18.
Cridler, Covert CampbeU. Dawson: Gott,- 119 Charles llotchkiM. dep­
Kayo—0.
kepy T. French, juror
Hick*. Merrick, Nye. Pierce. Richie, Towne
uty shertl! feos.........
5 30
Wiug and ehairtwin—16
120 Franklin T. Campbell,
.....Ur &lt;.r voire cast. 17. - f which
jultioe’s foes........... .
14 00 H eo row morulug.
twift iwivtid 13, (.'hnrlre H- .Hicks, Numb'r.of pt-rmanenl paupers main.
Richard Watkins, juror
12j Gaylord W. Searles, dep.
John itewnmi. I, A. C Towne. Q.
sherifffvea.......................
-On motion of Mr. Towue, the report was
36.70
in any asylum ur instilutioic ...............
Mr. -&gt;wift, having reeel ve&lt;1 the vntrs ot *
Froiik CSIer, juror fees „
then referred to the committee on apportion­ 122 Silas A. Geer, deputy
W
hole
number
ot
insane
supported
a*
Saturday, Oct. 14th, 1S82.
q/wriry oi*all «he tnembera •l«ei,.w»« then,
30. Austin W Hart, jaror
sheriff fees ..................
ment.
i «Mk« of Mr. Towne, dCcUre i duly elect' On motion of Mr. Towne, board then took 124 Waller Foster, constable
Whole number of deaf and dump sup­
called to order by the chair. Roll called.
juror
31. Henry Da.'i.ouii
a recess till the hour of one o'clock p. m.
ported at Flint Institute within the
Journal read and approved
2 40
year . .................
I...... . .............fees ............................. ..
Mr. Polley moved that claim No 169 be
82. Cimrlev Stuart. Juror fere
ArTKBSOOX SKSatOX.
Total number of ditierent persons who.
referred to the special committee now holdtian prevailed. ■
ioal services..
8 00
3 00
Board mtt at the hour fixed, with lhe
mtssiotier. which motion was font.
members all present. ‘
84, Au non Ware, juror fere,.., 1 00
1W
blefees.............. ... .......... 17 90 17 90
The leciiuu of a superiuleudvi t of the
Mr. Cole offered the following, and moved
35 William WiLon, witnrte
poor being the Npecinl orfler of business, the 128 Ferguson k Fullerton,
the adoption of the resolution contained
Exocju ANitBt'F, Clerk.’
Whole amount paid from the poor _
10 00 10 00 therein;
1 28 chair, on motion of Mr. Abbey, appointed
medical services................
1 ’
.
fund during the year.............-$4,744 89
86. Enoch * Andrus, births
129
C.
P.
Mathews,*
oonslatwo tellers, consisting of Messrs. Abbey aud
Tuesday, Oct. 10. 1882.
Wltule amount paid front all other
4 70
4 70 muted in the township’ of Maple Grove in
and deaths.......... ........... 58 CL 53 61 Richie, when the board proceeded to ballot
Board met pursuant to adjournment and
funds during the year.
— 1,585 83
Horace F Peckham, wliI8U James McKelvey, witwith lhe following result.
apportioning the primary school money,
was Culled to order by the chair. Hull call1 18
2 92
2 92 and
1 18
•
Whole number of votes cast, 17,'of which,
•d. Quorum preaent.
Whole aiuouns expended by the
85
88. Silas Endsley, -witness
85
IVhkkkab, School District Ko. fi of said
Porter Burton, received................................ 10 131 C. P. Mathews, wit. fees
The chair then announced I he following
county tn the core and support
85 township has received $64 81 of primary
fee* ..................................
1 23
85
Oliver F. Long.........J.......... ......................... 5 182 George Ghest. wit. fees.
standing commit lees:
of the poor ...
$6,330 7t
89. George Endsley, witness
S. Long....................................
1 1S3 Jno. P. Fetfuson, wit­
school money for the year of 1882 that law­
.
On equalization— Messrs. Cole, Barry.
rmiKIIOVSR ASP I’OOBrABX kxfxmses.
1 23
ness fees....V..............
V-'m. H. Merrick’......................
1
fully belongs to the remaining districts of
Crid.er. Towne, diaw^qn. Abbey and Camp­
50 '
L. 8. McIntyre, juror fees
4’aid to lhe keepsr of lhe poorhouse $356 M
said township, therefore,
Porter Burton having ree’d '(ltd votes of a 184 Roger Guest- wit. fees..
bell.
I
------- y '
178 77 41. Thorndike Nourse, Book
Beoohfd, tint the supervisor of said town­
majority of all the members, was declared 186 William McKee, witness
On claiuMt— Mk-rrs. Merrick Covert and Paid for clxthing..... ................. ••
of' Record-................. .... 18 VO 18 00 duly elected.
85 ship be, aud is hereby authorized to spread
►5
Paid for food...................................... 265 81
Potty.
/ ■
Gouchor, juror
1 50
50 upon the taxable property of said dtslric:
Ou motion of Mr. Davrsoa, board then took 136 N. Pl Mathews, jut. fee
On finance-—Messrs. Hicks, Nye, Gott, Paid for medical attendance, nurs­
50 the *um of $54.31 in addition to the moneys
fore ......:................... ;____
50
50 a recsss ti 11'4:30 p. m.
137 Juo. Sweeglea.iurof fees
1 50
ing sick, and medicine...........
Darn utu and Pierce.
On motion of Mr.Towne, the report was
138 Jno. (!. Smith,
••
I 60
ArrxBxbos remiox coxt.xckd.
reported to be raised.
Vu Salaries— Mcasrs. Richie, »\ing and Paid transportation of paupers to
50
*•
1 50
28 50 accepted and adopted by the following
and from poorhouac..................
Ou again assembling, lhe committee on 139 Fairell Burns,
The question being on the adoption of the
Barry.
1
.60
140
M.
Coykendall,
••
50 resolution, after some discussion on mo­
8 0O
claims offered tji« following additional
i&gt;u county buildings—Mtwers. Bu-num, I'aid for furniture .................. .. ......
Ayes—Meszrs. Abbey, Barry* Barnum, port:
1 60
50 tion of Mr. Towne the tame was laid on the
14L Richard Doyle, •• '
Paid for labor hired tn poorhouse.
Hicka and Dawson.
Cole.
Cridler.
Covert,
Campbell,
Dawson,
142
Charles
M.
Mack,
serv
’
g
exclurivs
of
keeper
’
s
salary
.......
98
56
'■
Kalamazoo
Pub.
Co.,
book
• On apportionment— Messrs. Cridler, Nye
on special committee-----6 00
6 00
Goit, Hicks. Merrick. Nve, Polley.- Pierce,
Paid for fuel, crockery, cutlery
of records....................
65 00 05 00
;&lt; tic committee on salaries, through their
and Wing.
Oo motion of Mr. Baradm, the report was chairman, Mr, Richie, offered (he following
94 16 Richie, lowue, Wing, and chairman—18. 04. Charles Hotchkiss, dep.
and tableware............... ............
Thr Judge of Probate presented the fol
20 19
sheriff fees...................... 125 40 121 60 accepted, and on motion of Mr. Towne, the
lowing report, which was, on motion of Mr. Paid for repairs of buildings...,. Vn motion of Mr. Hicks, the election of a
same
was
adopted
by
the
following
vote:
Paid
for
other
improvements
on
Richmond,
Backus
&amp;
Co.,._
To the Board of Suptn-ieon o^Barry County:
Merrick, accepted:
Sup’t of the poor was made the special order
Ayes—Messrs. Abbey. Barry, Barnum, Cole,
. poorfarnl......
books and blanks ...... — '20 62*
Gentlemen—Your committee to whom was
To the Hunoruble Board qf Supmitore of Paid for stock.................................... ' 100 Ot) of business for to-morrow at the hour of one 66. 0. II. Greeefieldjus. foes 10 3! 10 45 Cridler. Covert, Campbell, Dawson, Hicks. referred the matter of salaries would re-'
Barry County, Michigan:
o'clock.
Merrick, Nye, Polley, Pierce, Richie, Towne, spectfitlly report the following : That the
Paid for farm implements.........
67. C._M. Runyan, dep. shcr.
On
motion
of
Mr.
Dawson,
board
then
Wing
end
chairman
—
17.
Nays
—
0.
Ab
­
31
50
Gkstlkxk*—The unden-igtied respectful­ Paid for hay, grain and seed........
fees..... ............
8 2:
8 26
County treasurer receive annually ... .$&amp;0(»
took a recess till the hour of five o'clock p. 68. Roberts A Hotchkiss.md. 14 18 14 18 sent—Mr. Gott—1.
ly reports to your honorable body that since Paid for labor hired on poorform
Prosecuting attorney .............................. 7qv
.^The committo on equalisation, through County clerk........................................... ’. fctuj
15V ffO
exclusive ot keeper’s salary...
your fast session there has been sent to the
69. Henry Houghtalin, turn.
AtTCTXOOX SESSIOX COXTIXUKn.
their
chairman,
Mr.
Cole,
offered
the
follow­
asylum for the insane nt Kalamazoo, Itj' the Paid for hardware and black­
key lees........... —........ 44
44 05
Wm. F. Hicks, Supl. of poor.............. . .. 133
On
.again
convening,
the
committee
on
ing
report
:
68 20
orders of this donrq lhe following named
smithing... . .............................. —
70. Henry Houghtnliu,attend­
J. M. Nevins ............................................. 73
claims made a further partial report ns 'fob
’
•persons, to-wit:
.
ing court....____ _______ 43 50 43 60 To the Board of Supt niton of Barry Coun­ Porter Burton. .............................
40
lows:
•’
.
ty, Michigan : '
January 28, 1882, Ira Blackford, from Total expense of maintaining the
71. Henry Houghtalin, turn­
All of which is respectfully sabmitted to
43. William Burgher, justice
Mb. Cuaikxas Axu Gkxtlemkx:—Your you.
poorhousc and farm for the year,
Township of Yankee Springs.
key services............. ........ 800 00 300 00
35
fees................................... 81 83 81
committee, to whom was referred the equal­
June 20, 1882, John Murray, from Town­
exclusive of interest on capital
72. Henry Houghtalin, erhni।
8. C. Bitcmie,
44. Henry Campbell, witness
nnl account........... .......... 18 10 18 *10 ization of the several assessment rolls of
invested and value of paupers'
ship of.Prairieviilc.
L. W. Wino,
fees .
1 18
Barry county, would most respectfully sub­
August 28, 1882, Maria M. Clark, from
lahorw.................
$2,228 22
78. Henry Houghtalin, mis­
J. E. Bakbt.
55.
Wallace
Campbell,
wit-.
mit
the
following
as
their
report
:
.
TX.PXOBABT BKL1EF.
Township of Baltimore.
cellaneous account....... —116 84 116 84
L'otaiiiittee.'
ness foes-.................. ....-* 1 18
18 74. T. Noone, book of record 18 00*
Paid for medical attnendace, nurs­
Dated Oct. 9th, 18c2.
.
'
On motion of Mr. Merrick, the report was
83 75. N. T. Parker, livery bill. 6* 50
46. John Cole, witness fees—
85
accepted
Respectfully submitted,
ing sick, and medicines....... 592 76
‘
6 60
John
Fighter,
witness
CLXMKxr Smith,
Paid funeral expenses................... - 125 81
Mr. Nye moved.the adaption of the re­
76. L. E. Knappen. mis____ 15 75 15 76
fees............................
90
90 77. Mrs. A Hilton, wit. fees..
port.
Judge of Probate.
Paid for food....... ...........
1,002 88
Martin .Blanchard, wit.
65
67
Motion prevailed by the following vote:
79. Clem. Smith, miscellan... 32 21 82 21
On motion of Mr. Merrick, all claims in Paid for fuel.........................
tires fees............ -.........
Paid
for
clothing
............................
207
10
Aye*
—Messrs. Abbey, Barry, Barnum,
80. Ihling Bros., b'ks &amp; bl'ks 80 50 80 50
the hands of the clerk were referred to the
Paid for other neceaoary supplies41 70 49. Cyrus P LaAbee, wiu
Cndlei, Covert, Campbell, Dawson, Gott,
-81. Wm. L. Cobb. jus. fees.... *16 70 16 70
committee on qlaim*.
ucm fees................... I......1 18
18 82. Chas. Bundy witness fees
33 41
Hicsa, Merrick. Nye, Polley, Pierce, Ritchie,
96
96
Chairman Swift called Mr. Dawson, to the Paid transportation........................ 50. Dr. II. F. Peckham, hold­
83. H. Masters,
••
••
48
chair and then presented the report of the
ing inquests..........
6 O'
.. .......
refer'd 84. Geo. Luther,
48
“
••
special committee appointed at the j'anqary Tot&gt;l amount expended for tern51. Richmond, Backus A Co.,
porary relief of persons’ nut in . ’
Mr. Dawson offered the following resolu­
■HSBSJh
85. P. J. Fullerton ••
••
•48
sessiau, as follows:
N. W. Reporter . .............
5 00 86. W. Foster,
5 00
tion and moved its adoption :
poorhouse-................................ .$2,060,82,
96
•• . ••
To the Honorable Board of Superviton of
gSSsss?
52. C. A. Hough and others,
Wukkkab, An amendment to the constitu­
96
87. A. Sherman,
•*
•**
Barry County:
' justice,
court,
jury
and
tion increasing the salary of the circuit
TO THK FOOKHOCSK ANN FABM OB
88. G. Sherman,
" ’ “
1 16
egBg»i
tlKXTLKMES—Your committee that was ap­
witness.................. -......... 17 24 17 24 89. John Coats,
judges is io bo submitted to a vote of the
“
•*
48
pointed at the January session of 1882 of
Jonas A. Hall and others,
$250 00
people nt the coming election, therefore .
48
90. H. Fredenburg “
••
ttaid board to attend to the interests of said Paid to superintendents of the poor
justice,
,
court,
jury
and
m
8
c
*
j
»
J
—
1
6
8
*■
■*
Ketolced, That it is the sense of thia board
48
91. M. F. Jordan
•*
county in case suit should 'be, brought by Paid to supervisors for official ser­
witness........................... 12 29 92. M. Dietrich
23 00
that the beat interests of the people demand
vices ............................................
••
48
Judge Smith to compel the County of Barry Paid
for justices of ths peace....... 1 85 54. Emory Parody, justice
the adoption of such amendment, and we
93. W. J. &amp; L L. Holloway,
io pay said Judge of l*rvbale the sum of $^0U
fees . ..................................
3 65
therefore
recommend that the voters of the
Paid for support of permanent
merchandise
.......
..
60 66
claimed as back salary, respectfully report
county give it their hearty support st the
paupers outside lhe poorhouse- 147 50 55. George Marr, dep. sheriff
1*1. Enoch Andrus, postage,
as follows:
fees.................................... 13 00 13 00
polls.
Paid transportation to and from,
29
67
express
and
freight
29
57
On the 19th day of January, 1882, a'copy
56. Herbert M. Lee, dtp.
Motion prevailed and resolution adopted.
aud for support of th? insane in
2 00
95. J. 51. Bauer, juror fees— 2 00
of an prdcr issued out of the Supreme Court,
sheriff fees ..1................... 4 20
4 20 96. James Thorpe, expenses
1,685 88
Oh motion of Mr. Merrick board then
the asylum ul Kalamazoo........
against the Ijpanl of Supervisors of said
67. Emmanuel Feighuer, jur­
Paid transportation to and from,
with insane person_ 85 90
80 00
caouty, wax served on ths chairman of said
or fees. ’.....................
’ 1 00
1 00
and for support of deaf and
Elias Caldwell, expenses
board to show cause why a writ of manda­
56. James M. Hewes, juror
dumb at Flint Institute..^........
Forenoon session, continue.'.
with insane person------ 10 00
g SBSSBSSaSsS 5 §5st§#-’
mus should not be issued out of said court
fees .......... ................. 98. 0. A. Huges, ex. with
MISCKLLAXKOfS
.
The committee on claims further reported
to compel lhe County of Barry to pay said
59. William Burgher, justice
Value of all products of said farm
upon
the
following
bills:
insane
person
Judge of Probate the further sum of $800.
14 15 99 Hotchkiss Bros., mdse.— .
during.lhe year (estimated)... 1,175 00
124 Abram Ellis, con. fees..
27 40
Said awe waa to be heard the Tuesday fol­
60. James T. Wright, juror
147 James A. Standley, con­
I JO
100. Wm. P. Sidnam, express I 30
lowing, giving your committee but three Value of all farm products sold
1 50
1 60 10J. Barry Co, Dem printing 8 76
stable fees...'............
during the year........................ 407 83
3 00 8 00
days in which lu procure counsel and pre­
81. Russell A Powers, bard161 Isaac Swarloul, witness
102! Wm. H. Powers, crimi­
pare the esse for defence. James A. Swee- Value ot paupsra* labor during the
8 75
Wm. W. Cole, Ch’n,
year (estimated)-.... ........... 100 00
nal account............ _..._..120 (Mi 120 96
sey was employed to mke charge of the case
62. Albert Newton, witness
Okoioi W. Abbkt,
162 A. L. Von Horn, medical
108. Wm. H. Powers, attend­
for which be was to receive the M.m of $60, Value of county poor form, iuelu50
fees ......... i..«4.........
60
_
services.............................
aive of buildings (estimated)....{9,000 00
00 5 00
ing court™........... ............ 45 00 45 00
assisted by L- E. Knappen in preparing the
On motion of Mr. Barnum, the report of 104. Goodyear A Co , md^ - 14 00 14 00
William C^idlxb, Com.
163 Bentley Bros. &amp; Wilkins,
\5due of live stock on said form
facts in s*id case.
the
committee
so
far
as
it
related
to
claims
J
ohn
D
aw
sax,
:b7 00
(estimated)....... .. .....................
103. Hastings Banner, print. 108 20 refer'd
Tour committee done all they cou’d con­
recommended,
wm
accepted
and
adopted
by
Dfcial Campbell,
164 Lexer Mead, wiu less.
1 45
Value of all farming implements
I0Q. Haniings Danner, print. 89 05 refer'd
sistently m the short time allowed them.
165 Henry Worm;, wit. fees 18 50
8 10
400 00 the following /bte.
on said form (estimated)........
107. H. Webb, witness fees™ 1 35 1 13585
AU of which is respectfully submitted.
Ayes—Messrs. Abbey, Barry, Barnum, 108. Wm. H. Schantz, mdse. 13 57 18 57
166 Charles Lentz, juror....
■"*
50
60
Value of nil other property on sold
Dated Haatinga, Get. 9, 1882.
Cole,
Cridler,
Covert,
Campbell,
Dawson,
166
Geo.
D.
Babcock,
Dep
’
y
form, uol included in foregoing
Osnon Swift,
To give memban an opportunity to exam­
Sheriff's feta........ ............
500 00 Gott, Hicks, Merrick. Nye, Polley, P^eroe,
(estimated)
................................
Oa
motion
of
Mr.
Dawson,
the
report
waa
Wm. H. Musick,
Richie, Towtie, Wing, and chairman—18. accepted.
ine the report, on motion of .Mr. Polley, 168 Frank B.
Littlefield,
Total value of farm and appurtenChablis N. Mack,
board of jury................. 12 10
9 10
nDoes1(eatimatad)-..—...—....—11,667 00 Nays—0.
On motion of Mr. Towne, the report, so board look a recess lor one hour.
Committee.
On motion of Mr. Campbell, claim No. 50 far as it related to claims recommended was
On motion of Mr. Bantum, the report was
On again coming to order, Mr. Hicka 169 C. W. Taylor, temcet as
She cHmrman of lhe above committee
was allowed at the sum of $6.00, the amount then adopted, by the following vote;
county drain com..........254 20
moved the adoption of the report of the com­
accepted.
.
would further report. That a writ of man170 Ezekiel Pierce, con. fees ‘ ’
On motion of Mr. Towne, the prohibition­ claimed, by the following vote :
Ayes—Messrs. Abbey, Barry, liarnum, mittee on equalization.
-daiDus was granted to the Judge of Probate ists were granted the um of the court house
Ayes—Messrs. Abbey, Barry, Barnum, Cole, Cridler, Covert, Campbell. Dawson,
171 Smith &amp; Preston, mdae 4 21
4 21
Motion prevailed by the following vote .
-for the sum of $80U without costs, but has for a meeting this evening.
Cole, Cridler, Covert, Campbell, Dawson, Gott, Hicks, Merrick, Jiye, Polley, Pierce,
172 E. C. Clifford, jus. fees 1 00
I 00
-not yet been served.
On motion of Mr. Barnum, board then Gott, HIcks, Nyj. Pierce, Richie, Towne and Richie, Towne, Wing, qnd chairman—18. Cole, Cridler, Covert, Campbel!, Dawson, 173 C. W. Taylor, blanks... 13 00 13 00
Toe Board of Supervisors did not make took a recess till the hour of five o'clock p. chairman—15.
Nays—Messrs. Merrick. Nays—4).
1 70
Hicka, Merrick, Nye, Pierce, Richie, Towne 174 John Wickham, wiL fees
- any provision for the payment of the said
Polley and Wing—3.
50
50
Mr. Barnum moved that claims Noa. 105 and chairman—15.
Nays—Messrs. Gott, 176 Merrick Reed, juror.-...
- claim, therefore I requested the Judge to
On motion of Mr. Barnum, Hoard than ad­ and 106 be allowed at the sums claimed.
On motion of Mr. Towne, the report was
_.»TKKXOO)« SZMUJX OOMTiXVKtK
withhold lhe service of sold writ until the
journed till the hour of eight o’clock to-mor­
accepted and adapted by the following vote.
The question being on the motion of Mr.
Board met as per adjournment, and oh row morning.
October session so as to avoid catling an ex­
Esoch Axuavs,
Barnum. on motion of Mr. Merrick, the mat­ then referred to the committee on apportion^
tra session of the board.
He (lhe Judge) motion of Mr. Hicka, ad'ourned till the hour
Clerk.
Cole, Cridler, Covert. Campbell, Dawaon,
ter was laid on the table till to-morrow meat.
wanted the money at that time, and to save of nine o’clock to-morrow morning.
morning nt the hour of nine o’clock.
On motion of Mr. Covert, board then look Gott, Hicks, Merrieka, Nye, Polley, Pierce
Exocn Axnat's,
all unnecessary expense, I signed a joint
Thursday, Oct. 12th, 1882.
Ritchie, Towne. Wing at&gt;d -chairman—18.
The county drain commissioner, Mr. C. W.
Clerk.
note with Judge Smith tor $800, running to
Board met as per adjournment. ”Roll Taylor presented and read his report to the
Nays—0.
John Licbry. nnl is due Oct. 9th, 1882.
I
called. Journal read and approved.
(Jn motion of Mr. Polley, the report of the
board.
Wednesday,
Oct.
11th,
1882.
would recommend that this board instruct
The committee on county buildings,
Mr. Merrick moved that the report be ac­
Board mrt as per adjournment.
Boll through their chairman, Mr. Barnum, of­
On again aaaemhllng, the committee on
4he clerk to draw nn order on the treasurer
cepted, and referred to a special committee claims further reported as follows :
4 fered the following report:
4n Hirer of Clement Smith. Judge of Probate, called. Journal read aud approved.
143 Henry Houghtalin, board
To give committees an opportunity to
efnr lhe sum of $300. the amount uf the almve
Cole, Cridler, Covert, Campbell, Dawson,
their earliest convenience.
of prisoners... ............... 476 45 476 45 Gott, Hicka, Merrick, Nye. Polley. Pierce,
work.* on motion of Mr. Barnum, board took
dhim.
.
Respectfully,
Motion prevai ed, and the chair appointed 144 Henry Houghtalin. wash­
a reeen till the hour of cue p. tn.
Oasos Swift,
Ritchie. Towne, Wing and chairman—18.
47
30
ing
for
prisoner*
......
47
80
Chairman of Com.
referred the matter of county buildings, Gou... .
■
,
145 Wm. Upjohn, med. ser .. 25 (X) 29 00
’
AmiBBooB sxaaiox.
On motion of Mr. Covert, lhe report was
would respeetfolly report that they have ex­
On motion of Mr. Polley, board then ad- 146 D. A. Miller, eon. fees...
60
60
• Boards met at the hour fixed, and proceed­ amined the codnty form buildings and
tbeir chaiiman. Mr. Cridler. offered the foL
accepted and adopted.
148 Geo. D. Babcock, dep.
On motion of Mr. Hick.-, lhe oevoral «*■- ed to business.
found them in good condition and needing row morning.
Enoch Axdbvs, clerk.
4 &gt;5
4 50
The esmmittee on claims, through tbeir no repairs nt prewent. We also found lhe
To the Honorable Board of Supmiton of
HMurni rolls were referred to the commit­
30
50
149 A. McCoy, juror fee*....
Barry County ;
tee on equalisatiun.
■ chairtnao. .Mr. Merrick, offered the follow
Friday, Oct. 14&lt;h, 1882.
150 Wm. 8. Goodyear k Co.,
.
G entlkm as :—Your committee, to whom
On motion of Mr. Abbey, board then look ing partial report:
order and the inmates of said house looking . Board met at 8 A. M. Roll called. Jour­
6 67
pleasant and clrun. and further report that nal read and approved
a recess till the hour of cue 0 clock p m...
i oo waa assigned the duty of apportionment,
1 00
we believe said house is running in the in­
5 60. would respectfully report as follows :
On mqlioo of Mr. Barnum. claims Nos. 152 O. H. Greenfield, jus. fees 5 60
Gentlemen—Yoor commit toe having had terest of economy and humanity.
We 103 and 106 were taken from the table.
163 Huffman Brow. mdse... 13 18 18 18
under consideration the following claims,
The question being on the motion of Mr.
Roll would recommend their allowance
fol* ' jail and find the lower part in good order,
Barnum io allow the bills al the sums
19 30 19 20
lows:
but portions of the upper part are op«n and
1 85
I 85
cold, Mid .we would rooommeud that the
11. Merrick, sersheriff be instructed to make the necessary num, Cole, Cridler, Covert, Campbell, Daw­
6 00 6 00
reprint
and
bring
hie
bill
before
the
board
92
1 92
ton, Gott, Hicka, Merrick, Nye. Polley, 157 Dennis &amp; Slingerland,
feds ...*»«.........................
■ » £
printing............................ 88 8(1 refer'd
2. Mary J. McKnight, witPierce, Richie, Towne and Wing—17. Nays
158 O. H.Groenfiald.jiis. fees '1 00
15
1 00
All of which is respactfully submitted.
60
Mr. Polley moved that the omul stenog­
8. D- C. Wooley, juror foes.
■ ft. P. Bakxvm,
rapher be paid during the coming year' the
John Dawsom. .
00
1 00
sunt of tMree hundred dsllars, the same to 160 Middleville Rap., pnnt’g 4 00 refer d
* Chaklxa H. Hicks,
On motion «f Mr. Cidler, the report was
be paid quarterterly, at the close of each
accepMd sad adopted by the following vote:
40
term of court.
Oa motion of Mr. Merrick the report waa
Motww prevailed by the following vote:
Ayes—Messrs Abbey, Barry, Barnum,
acooptod.
Cridler, tfovert, Campbell. Dawson, Gott,
Cridler. Covert, Campbell, Dawson, 0ot»;
Hicks, Merrick, 5ye, Volley, Pierce, Richie,
bssssmbi^m
85. John Armstrong, witness

I lifer
im
?: : : ’• irHCsra
4 : : : : . ».

IflBBsSB ?
HISRilif!
3 Ms.1- •
s§js£^ssjgsa ?

• ;
s.
i aSfiaaW 4 sisiat?
sIsVBiVWAssi i ssssa#-

aiiismssi 2

•n motion of Mr. Barnum, board then
be allowed at the sum claimed. which u&gt;otook a recess till the hour of 11 a. m.

e

53
• SBBl ''I

�luwu » city.
— A Lxmdns elergyt
End iDwkes a chai-g*
upon. It merely change* the j&gt;eriod»of tion, at least the strange fact may be
stated for tbe c&lt;in*iderAtion ot those
the examin*- work and rest, earing lhe former and devoted to psychological phenomena.
lion which he himself felt incompetent lengthening, without taking anything Official records show that in 18?1 there
from, the latter.—.V. F. TYrne*.
were 277 bodies fished up from the
—During eleven years of peace the
Thames.the circumstances of drowning
ordinary debt of British India haw in-,
PRICE: tLflQ, IT PAID IN ADVANCE.
not being eertamly known. We have
creaMd from £97,WJO,OiX&gt; to £157,000.This worm at present Is attracting it on the authority of an old and trust­
To Advertisers:
(XKj. In the meanwhile £145,000,000
worthy resident of Clifton tbs' during
has l*«n expended on canah and irri­ considerable attention by its appearance the summer season alone of last y ear
in various sections of the country. It is
gation
work,
and
R,
000,000
people
have
thirtv bodies were discovered between
Iher toper circulating U.erteven
now
one
of
the
debated
questions
i
sd vertlainR are iuwTr than died of Ktarvation. although a famine ot entomolo'ry. and needs more ck»*« ! th* Falls and Queenstown, m almost
i country weekly tn tbe state- fund of £I5,DUO,OOO has beer, expended.
observation before all win agioe as to all cases the circumstances ot drown­
w* r &gt;r. to tile bcartlistoue*
—The system of linking in Scotland, whether it is single or double brooded ing not.being certainly known. If we
whereby shareholder* were liable to in the Northern Sttges. Als* its man- | assume that the same pro|x&gt;rtioir ot
your pair
tbeir last oent for the debt* of the bank, ner of passing the winter, .the causes cases in each instance Ere those ot sui­
PERUSE THESE LIBERAL AO- RATESis now at an end. All the banka have necesaaTy to it* occasional greai devel­ cide—and so far as cireumstantial evi­
concurred in forming themselves into opment,'and the reason why it marches • dence goes, lhe jmriuritv of cases
Feniimtilfir Ht-oVo CJo.’w
t Lt* I $*JS| • 5-00| &gt;.A00 Joint stock companies and at the worst every now and then.
For it is usually of ••found drowned” are suicide—
—----- ------------- i- 8-M | ~ 14.00 all that they can hereafter loose is lhe
ftF DETROIT.
found with us as a simple cut worm, then we have a starting disparity '
when
we
compare
the
;x»pulntion
alxmt
_j2.oo
r
at.oo
value
of
the
shares
which
they
have
ac
­
IiHprov
d mid Finest Pattern-, «sf
mid Hratrrs in the
unnoticed,
feeling
at
night
and
hiding
8 loUiea
I
A85
market. Zinc*, tiiorr Pursilttirr. Ktr,
.
^Tidof ~26 00 quired in their bank.
at the roots of tbe grass during tbe day- : Niagara. whb*h cannot be more than'
4 00
4 Incbe* .. ■ ■ I
,iCoSj" woo
—The Mansion-houre (London) Com­ time. It was formerly claimed that St. ■ 4C,0u0. Including viriiorfi, to the popu­ PAINTS, VARNISHES, COLOR, BRUSHES.
6 lpctw ••• 1
koo
WELL and ClSi ER V PUMPS,
mittee of the Rowland Hill Memorial Louis was about as far North a* It was lation around the Tharuvs at London,
■
POINTS, PIPE. SINKS, ETC.
fund has completed its work by erect­ fan nd to be double brood, but latterly which will number 5,. The pro­
‘
CHAMPION XHJUT SAWS, AXES, ETC,
ing a «tatute at the Royal Exchange and even the latitude of Iowa is believed by portion of such mysl eriouii cases of
•a memoriht in We«tmin-ter Abbey, and many to possess two baxuls a year. W* death stands against Niagara tu 125 to Detroit WVhlte Ijeml Work* t’olor*.—The Ke*t In the tlurfcet.
has handed over the remainder of the recently visited a field in the southern 9. That this proportion is not far from RUlLDEirS HARDWARE, SASH. DOORS,
ORNO STRONG,
fund, amounting to more than $70,000, part of Mnsoatine County where a week the truth may be judged from the tact
GLASS, LOVJRfi, KNOBS, rf-c, «fr.
,
Editor and Proprietor.
to Trustees a* a nuclein for a fund for or ten days ago all the heads of tim••thy which nearly every well informed resi­
,
NAILS, IRON, AND STEEL,
the relief &lt;&gt;f aged aud distressed postal in parts of the field were alive .with the dent of the’ Falls and vicinity recog­
employees, and their widows and or­ army worms, and although we searched nizes, that a large number of bodies
clihiery &lt;’ull *nd Kcc vie.
phans throughout the kingdom.
carefully we could npt find ■ a single are seen in'the river, and fished out and
buried, which are not officially re'port—The Dake of Hamilton has declined worm, .only some of the ca*t-off molt- ed. The finding of a body under or­
Ix&gt;rd Roscberv’s offer of $5,000,000 tor Ings that were left clinging to a |w»rtion dinary circumstances is Loo common
PreiUletp*—Ellhn Chlprnau.
the Island &lt;&gt;f Arran, on which Hamilton of the heads. The worms ha 1 descended a story to raise great excitement
RerovdCT—Frank McDerby.
P.thice is situated. Tbe island is near Into the ground where they havechanged about orcause unusual astonishment,
Treasurer—Frank C. Boioe.
A*«e*M&gt;r-J&lt;&gt;hn E. Barn-.
the mouth of the Clyde. It is about into pup:u£
Marshall—James L. Gregory.
Now, if there is but one brood a year and people who have no special rea­
Tnwtee*— H. A. Bart»er, F. T. Bol»e H. W. twenty miles long by eight to eleven they will not emerge from their subter­ son to think of foul plav do not care to
Deiuarav. H. R. Dickinson, H. M. Lee and broad, and contains a superficial area ranean home until the next spring, but put a'manfcipality to expense or them­
of
165
square
miles
or
105,814
acres,
Cha*. Lentz.
selves to extra trouble and loss of time
of which about 15,000 are cultivated. if there be two broods, in about six every time a body washes against the J
It is a nigged, mountainous island, and weeks the army worm* will again be bank or goes tossing around the whirl- ।
jheirtiw.
not of much account to anybody but a at wortc, very likely, however, in small pool.
So a shove ofl‘ into lhe river
nambers, for they have a great host of
A CHRISTIAN UHURCH-F A. Bireel,Pa»tor lord or wme rich person who wishes to insect enemies, prominent among which again or a nuiet burial in a prove
ve about
*
1
• I'
V.* SerrL-e* every Sabbath at 10.30 a. tn. and be known as a landlord.
are the red-tailed tachina fly, (Nemo- the banks closes up the-strav r»»lume of
7 p. m. Sabbath rebool at 12 m. Prayer meet­
—The price obtained at a London mea ('ttcanuil/the vellow tailed tachina a human life completely untilI ILite &lt;lnv
&lt;lay
ing every Thurtday evening
shew for the prize bull-dug I»rd Nel­
fly, (Erurula Fbiriwvta). and a num­ when the seal of alt human mysteries
ETHODI8T EPISCOPAL CHURCH-A- son, who had won'every cup for which ber of beetle* and small ichneumon shall be broken. Doubtless in some
k. Newton, Paawr. Services every 8ot&gt; he ever competed, w.w $.50,000. His
hath ® 10.40 a. tn. anti 7 p. m. Sabbath aspect is described as that ot the “most flies. The.*e enemies usually keep die cases the story is one of simple acci­
school al 12 nt. Prayer r-ecting every Thur»worms in check, but frequently they are dent, but in too many in-Linees it ia.
Hastingw.
unprincipled ruffian that ever ran on
believed that if tile tale could be read
day evening.
baffled in their good work.
four legs to help his master in the at­
The worm when full-grown is from it would be that of disappointment in
VY LODGE NO. 87. K. ot P.. meet* «t fu tack on a helpless traveler on a star­
love,
or
money,
or
more*
frequently,
an
inch
and
a
quarter
to
an
inch
and
a
C«*lle H*U. Naebvtlie, Michigan, every
We fullv realize th»Friday evening, for the eneouragrtuent and light night.” His coatis milk white, half long. It I* stripett lengthwise with perhaps, of indulgence in strong drina
support of all worthy, true, *teadfa«t and hoi). hi* eyes red and bloodshot, his chaps alternating stripes of'dirty white'and a combined with want of employment
fall down each side ot bis jaw, and
uratJf Brother Kntrtt*.
An ob enrer| Some stranger—he may be a penniless
D. L. tiMiyn K. R. A Oaxo Stkoxu, C. C. when he raises bis lips and shows his greenish brown cast.
immigrant
looking
for
work,
or
he
may
teeth tbe sjieclators draw back in ter­ who has been watching the worm feed, be a wealthy European searching for
describes their method to us a* fol­
YliacrItanroiM Card*.
ror. ’
some new form of idleness—strives That must nil kind* of produce lire bringing tnii* fall, ko have
lows:
—Recently a remarkable mirage was
They creep no the spears of tinv»thv. against his incubus till in madness and
H. YOUNG. M. D- Office east ride of
bought n large stock of nil kinds of '
• Mato SL, Naahville. Office hours from witnessed between fojir and seven sometime* pausing half way up the head impatience he rushes in where angels
o'clock one afternoon at the • Lake of and often reaching the verv top. Then tear to tread. To sink to-day under a
On*, Sweden (latitude 61 deg.), in a they bend the h»iwl «ver into a curve, perplexity which to-morrow would have
region by the way, notable tor phe­ the worm occupying the concave aide seemed but a summer's cloud over the
a. FOOTE. PHYSICIAN A SURGEON• Suceeeor to Dr. Wfakhani. Office rec­ nomena &lt;rf this kind. First large and
face ot the water—to rush recklessly
cud door north of the Xetoville House; rest- small steamers were observed as if ply­ of the cti£r«*. and commence feeding, to-day into the realities ot a world the
retreating backward until lhe head 1*
dedec first door north of the Wolcott Hotfreing on the lake, and their outlines were neylv if not entirely destroyed. This passing thought of which yesterday bad
Prompt attention to calls night or day.
very distinct. The funnels of the ves­ statemen' seemed to us to be fully con­ blanched the cheek and checked the
TAB. C. W. GOUCHER, Electie Physician and sels seemed to emit smoke. Then a firmed by the aspect of the timothr throb ot a confident heart—withal to
And are selling at prices that will astonish you.
JL/ Surgeon, la prepared to answer all calls transformation occurred. In place of heads, and tbe molting* of the worm
lean with faculties awake and eyes
that may t&gt;e made tor his cervices Office and the ships there were verdure-clad is­
left as mementoes of their visit. The wide open into a rir**r whose sweeping
residence opposite Roe's meat market
GOODYEAR
lands. Lastly a haze came on and tbe blades of the hay also had a ragged ap­ rapids and remorseless roar seem to
'
L PARMENTER, M D. Officv over wonderful spectacle ended.
pearance where their egdes had been embody the aspect and voice of EterHastings, October 4, J 882.
.
Hull’* Drag (tore, VannonivUle, Mich.
eaten, while Rhe clover that grew ' nitv itself, is a thing which baffles our
, Work in Hot Weather.
among the hay was untouched. Ju-t philosophy.—Toronto1 Truth.
over the line in Lonisa County is another
All the congratulatory songs relating
field, two miles distant from the first,
A Ring-Dove Romance.
to harvesting and the harvest were
where over four acres of timothy were
V- Office opposite Unioa House.
written for a different climate from ours.
About three weeks ago one of mv.
entirely destroyed.
One can feel a w armer sense of grati­
M. FLINT, JR. Law. Real Estate, and h
From specimens reared in captivity, male ring-doves suddenly disappeared
Tf CfCCRAPHY OF THIS COUNTRY, WILL
tude when lhe thermometer marks 6u
• surance. Conveyancing and Cidlectious
the age of the worm has been estimv-id one evening, leaving his mate alone
deg. or 70 deg. than when it ranges
specialty.
to be from*fifteen to thirtv days. Then with the burden of two eggs laid only
a few day* before.
The mode ot hii
from 90 deg. to 100 deir. in the shade,
MO* PAKADY. Justice of the Peace. and a score degrees higher in the open they descend into the. ground a few
Office, Corner Main and Sherman Streets.
inches, where they spin nn cocoons, but disappearance wus altogether mvstefield where the American farmer works;
ious and has not yet been cleared up.
LIEBIM USER, Merchant Tailor and deal- and so all the poetry relating to this In­ in simple little earthen cells change into As he did not appear next morning. I
• er to Ready Made Clothing. See me teresting occupation is quite inapplica­ richly-colored dark pupa:, averaging concluded that ne bad been seized by
two-thirds
of
an
inch
in
length.
After
before you purchase clothing. Flu guar­ ble to oar fields and our broiling sun.
seventeen days pass away, they make some of the neighboring cats which
anteed. ’
In fact, our harvests arc the most la­
their next appearance, this time in the prowl about the houre in the evening.
HATCH A CO., Manufacturers ot Tsffy borious, exacting, and painful labors of role of pretty fawn-colored moths, ex­ Eleven day* passed and no sign of him.
• Candles. Chocolate Drop* and Cannel*. the year, and instead ot being ap­
Meanwhile the female remained faith­
Fruit*. Fancy CmmIW. Cigar*. Tobaccos, etc., proached with agreeable, if not hilari­ panding an inch and a half, with the
alwav* in stock. Second door north of the
principal marking a simple dot near the ful to be,'charge, leaving her eggs only
ous, anticipations, have to be met with
At first
center of each front wing. From sixteen a few moments twice a day.
care and strict precaution*. Indeed,
■he called for her mate when tbe hour
THRANK BAKER. Manufacturer of Boots tbe rigors of our harvest weather are to seventeen days is the average life of came at which she ought to be relieved;
" and Shoe*. js-gRcd or sewed- Iteiwirine more fatal to careless and reek less per­ the moth, during which the eggs are but in a few days, comprehending, as
prumptiv aitemicd to. at the sign of the red
deposited between the folded edges of a
son*, who ignore the ne^i for observing
loot, east side Main fcu _______'
blade of grass near the base, and are seemed, that she was a widow, she be­
the requirements of safety from the ex­
came silent and brooded alone over her
covered with a white, glistening fluid.
TACOB 08MUN, Llvemnan. bam near WoL cessive heat, than all lhe rest of the year
Years ago, Dr. Fitch, who was one of egg*. To my surprise, however, on
■w cott Houre. Fir&gt;t cliw* turnout* at reason­ together, and even tbe most careful
the morning of tbe twelf tli dav, a soldier
able mu-*. Sjx-cial rates to cetninerclsl mtn. maintain their health—comfort is aban­ the earliest observers of the insect, ad­
Funeral and « edtnx parties furnished with car
vanced the theory that the army worm of the Alpini brought me tbe missing
doned as hopeless—only by the practice
riages on short notice.
years were unusually wet, preceded by male, saying that be bad been found by
of the most rigid sanitary rules. We
another soldier in the woods near the
RAUN BROS.,S-bocmakcr*. Special atten­ propose here to- consider the harvest unusually dry, summers. This theory, quarters; that is. fully a mile off. The
tion given to -fine and rewed boots, also field in regard to its risks and dangers, like all others, has its friends as well os
poor little bird's tail looked rather rag­
repairing. All masufacturi-d work made from
foes,
the
latter
arising
from
the
fact
beM nf stock and warranted. First door couth and the precaqtions necessary to be that occasional local exceptions do occur, ged, and he seemed as he must have
taken to perform it* labors with the
Boise's hardware.
been in captivity somewhere, but he
but
the
greater
weight
of
testimony
is
in
most ease, the least discomfort, and the
recognized me at once and came to me
XTTALLACE BEAUCHAMP, Liveryman, greatest safety. And in discussing the its favor, consequently it is generally without trouble. I carried him to lhe
v v Nashville Roose Bara. Single and subject in this way we will first consider accepted. The summer of 1881, in this nest whore his mate was sitting and
double torn onto furnished pronptly and rea- the work of the harvest field and the vicinity, was very dry, while this reason
placed him besid* her, wishing to see
souaMy. Commercial men drives to neighmeaner of doing it, and second, tbe re­ is exactly the reverse.
Ill
' ■&gt;;;
Croat Central Lin*, afford* to travelers, by reason ot its unrivaled b«m&gt;It is a commonly known fact that the what he would do. To my disappoint­
quirements needed to secure the comfort
-tth*33i position, the shortest pnd best routa between th* East, Northeast and
ment he did not seem to recognize her.
army
worm
may
be
kept
out
of
a
field
Planinc and health of the |&gt;orsons aud animals by surroundin'? it with a ditch, from and jumped out again, placing himself
t .J
ana srr.ctiy true, that its connections are all ot th* principal line*
engaged in the work.
upon a rod in front of it. I ought to LJ &lt; road
between the Atlantic and the Pacino.
A midsummer’s day has its coolest eight to twelve inches deep, taking care say that the nest, being in a hole in a /\
‘t* main line nnd branches it roaches Chicago, aolk-t, Peoria, Ottawa,
and its hottest parts, and the hottest part the side* toward the field shall be per­ wall, is somewhat dark, and that ring­ •“J, .a Sail*, Geneseo, Moline and Rode Island, In Illinois । Davenport, Muscatine,
pendicular.
The
worms
fall
into
it
and
of tbe day is about two in the afternoon.
doves do not sec without a goodTdeal of L Washington, Keokuk, Knoxville. Oskaloosa, Fairfield, Des Moines, West Liberty,
And Oils is no because as the ground can not climb the perpendicular sides. lighL In a minute or two the female -r» own City, Atlantic, Avoca, Audubon, Hart an, Gathrio Center and Council Bluffs,
n Iowa ( Gallatin, Trenton, Cameron and Kansas City, In Missouri, and Leavencools daring the night It has to absorb a They can now be killed la various ways. c&amp;me out of the nest and placed her­
Some
fanners
drag
a
log
through
the
vorth and Atchison in Kansas, and the hundred* of cities, village* and town*
large quantity of heat during tbe day,
self beside him.
There they re­
r.tormediat*. The
and is thus, as it were, some considera­ ditch and thus cruyh them. Others have cognized each other in an instant, and
ble time behind the san in regard to hole* in the bottom of the ditch about a such a recognition I never saw! The
foot
deeper,
and
from
sixteen
to
twenty
heat, and when the sun is at the highest
two kissed each other a hundred times
Ae it is tamlllarty called, oners to travelers all the advantages and comforts
and hottest al the meridian, or at noo*; feet.apart, into which the worm drop* with cries of xlelight, they flattered
Ihevfflege._______________________
- ,1... ... .
___ K____________ _ -- _
...
the earth has not yet caught up to it in while attempting to escape. They are round each other and at last, in their
killed
by
covering
them
with
straw
and
IRAN R DICKINSON, manofreewer
its absorptive capacity, but this equilib-.
The
sad dealer is Hard Wood Lumber. Baild- rium is reached about two p. m., after burning it, or.by burying with dirt and own way, embraced each other.
MOST MAGNIFICENT HORTON RECLINING CHAIR CAR* ever built 1 PULLMAN'S
male
then
entered
the
nest,
looked
at
which the earth is actually hotter than pressing it down. If a ‘field of hay is I the eggs, called the mother to come
lateet designed and handsomest PALACE SLEEPING CARS, and DINING CAR*
the sun and begins to give out its accu­ already infested so as to be destroyed,
pr°” arM‘ P&lt;’°Pln tO
the F,NEST RU« UPOM AH'f
AMES FLEMING, practical Jewrisr and mulated beat, and so actually adds to tbe best thing to be done ordinarily is and Mt on them, went in quest of twigs
Watch-maker. Clocks, Watches, Sliver and tile heat of the sun. As this Is the case, to plow it under while the worms are to make the nest more comfortable,
and at the end of an hour camo and
Plated Ware, Jewelry and Optical Goods. Rock­
young
and
plant
some
other
crop.
For
ford Watobeaaepcclalty. Repairing and Engrav- then, the hardest work of the dav, such tunately for the farmers, two army­ took his turn on the eggs. The female
as mowing, cradling, raking and bind­
then went out, percheu on a vine, and
ing, whether these are done by hand or worm years in one focality rarely, if ev­ carefully trimmed her feathers. Since
/ XRNO STRONG, Plato
by machine, should all be done in th* er, follow each other.—Alice B. Walton, then the family life ha* gone on in the
in
Iowa
State
lieyuter.
V Th* beat farthUe* f
forenoon during the hottest weather,
I ordinary way. The voung doves came
between Newport News, Richmond, Cincinnati, Indianapolis and La Fayette^
and as the early morning is the eoulast
out two or three day* after the father**
and Council Bluffs, St. Paul, Minneapolis and intermediate points.
—A peculiar system of mortgaging
part of the day, that is the time to be
return, and are already as large as
chosen for out-door work of a laborious farms is used in Switzerland. A farmer chickens just hatched.—'Italy Cor. Bos­
W. NISKERN. Attorncv nd Councellor kind, or that calls for direct exposure to may borrow of a dozen men successive­ ton Advertiser.
*
• at Law. practices to all Stale Courts. Col the sun’s heat. Now, m a man can do ly, the simple record In an official book
R. ft. CABLE,
E. ST. JOHN
factious prntaptiy attended to. Office over more in an hour st a temperature Of showing their ordgr. If he fails to pay,
—“Yea,” said the sober-faced man.
Spaulding's store, Hastings, Mich.
a successor is found for him by begin­ “we tried everything for her. We had
CHICAGO.
ning at the bottom of the Hat of debtors, allopaths and homirpaths and waterl^ANIIVIULE HOLME,
100 deg., or even more, in the sun, it and calling on each in his order to cort-rs and movement curers. and they
would be not only a great comfort, but assume all th-* debt* and manage the could do nothing for her. We finally
a positive economy, if a farmer would
gave up in despair, and—” “And she
begin his field work at daylight, or at
lingered along for a week or two until
four in the morning, Junch’at eight and
death at last brwught relief to her suf­
rest tor half an hoar, and finish his day’s
—During a lai© thunder-storm near fering,” said the man who interrupts.
out-door work at one in the afternoon, Centerville, Md., three mules oat of a “No/’ continued the sober-faoed man.
and then dine. This change might team of six were killed by lightning. “she got well immediately.”—Boston
easily and comfortably be made by the The mules ware attached to * timber Transcript. Our Prices Before I-ookint
whole
wnuie xioureuaiu,
household, who
woo could
cvui'J rest within
witnin wagon, geared tandem, and the light­
doors in the cool, shaded Entire during ning struck the leader, missed the next,
—The Cincinnati GtuoUe has just
| the houeat part of the day, and the more struck the third, missed the fourth and discovered that juries do ndBoonvict or
IK— fifti, and struck the breech mule, kill­ acquit on the evidence, end Ihinks the
case might as well go to th* prisoner
ing three.
titre hotel of »
himself for a yerdicL

Hasjuillr girtrtory.

. ...

By Buying Y6ur Dry Goods

W. S. GOODYEAR &amp; CO,

I

W
L

DRY GOODS. FANCY GOODS, NO­
TIONS, BOOTS and SHOES.
and CARPETS,
■
W. S

&amp; CO.

W

I

E
S
P

B

T| O’-isoago, Rock Island &amp; Pacific R’Y,

‘GREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE,”

J

z.

ALBERT LEA.ROUTE.

P

AT THE NEWS OFFICE.

G-et

Elsewhere.

�PRINDLE&amp;CHIPMAN Winter

Goods!

THE ONE-PRICE CLOTHING STORE
ihaa ever

Actvatbd by Jealousy John X. Nape, of
.Port landviUc,N. Y., on the93d shot id* wife

day* ago under the’foil owing circumstances:

and, besides * hooting hlnoaelf, cut hi* throat.
Mrs. Nape and the hired ma:, would recover.

ente a Mai of creosote, with d&amp;slructiout to
bathe the tooth with It. ' Misundcrstioding
' tbe doctor’s instructions, they compelled tbe
child V» swallow tbe drug, sod she died a

were 953,010 standard silver dollars put In
circulation by tbe mints. For tbecorrespond­
ing period Ust year but 4fl4,497 standard dol-

19th resulted In the death of General Jcweph

Tns stock-yard building* at Lexington.
Ky., together with twenty valuable mules,
•nd eighteen short-bom cattle, were burned

were American print*, which were confiscated.

latter should be nulled and vigilant to meet
the onslaught. The league will struggle to
take jower from the bands of privileged'
e’rengert, an&lt;| haip to prepare tile people for
tba work of self-government.
’
Overdaxk, the Austrian who was captured

brskeman seriously injured. A partially rot­
ten and defective bridge ws* the c*u»e of tbe
accident.
NBARLT forty thousand dtixeus of Patereon, N. J., have this fall been vaccinated, but
ble pbyklclans slated on tbe
used was spurious. Small19th that

rylce cover* 76,741,.TuRaU .
438 miles
ually, requiring tbe services ot
8,570em
_______
_
_ 93,. .
at salaries
aggrrgsting
456,779. Tbe railway jxntal clerks handled in
the fi»calyear ended June 30, 1882, 3,433,390,4«0 pieces of ordinary mail matter, besides 14,­
234,310 registered packages and 570,483 regis­
tered pouches .
Ox the 24th of September thirty-*lx boraes
and mule* were atolen from Williams, Arlions, and the four horse-thieves with their
plunder started for Texas to dispute of 1L
Eight men started in pursuit and surprised
the thieves at a canyon 500 miles east of Willlams. At tbe .first Are the latter were all
killed. The animals were recovered, and al)
arrived at Williams on tbe 19th.
; A dahixg fellow recently sprang into the
cab of a locomotive ou tbe New Engl md track
at Boston, and took a quick ride of fourteen
miles, stopping only when be found a freight
S1XTT rubber manufacturer* recently met

works December 21 and keep them idle until
the price ot material shall fall to a point
which warrant* the resumption of business.
■ Judge Timotht P. Redfield, of Vermont,
, recently fell among bunkp operators in Nea
York, afid suffered tbe low of 97,000.
The failure* In lhe Unlted State* during tht
I seven day* ended on the 19th numbered 117.
A. Wam bold, postmaster at Johnsville. 0.,
has beau arrested for intercepting and open
। Ing letters containing money. He admitted
hi* guilt.
i The Interior Department ba* decided that
i where a person ba* entered laud under th*
' Timber-culture act he baa no right to dispose
I of Ills claim until be has complied with the
| requirements of the act- Tbe fact that th*
«, purchaser of an uuperfected clxlm carries oui
. the conditions of tbe set gives him no title sc
I tbe land so purchased.
I A WashIXQTOX dispatch of tbe 20th s*y&gt;
‘ that the Post-office Department alter January

more It will also print, free of ehsrge if so de­
, eircd. the special return request notices.
' A fikb which originated in a Chinese laun­
dry on the evening of the 20th destroyed six­
ty frame Vtruclures 1b Dunutgo, Col.
Five negroes, including one woman, were
bunged at Eastman, Ga., on tbe 2Jth, for com
1 pliclty In a terrible riot which occurred at a
’ camp-meeting at that place In August last.
Freight trains on the Hudson River Road
collided on lhe 20ti&gt; at Rhinecliff, N. Y., by
' into tbe water, causing a loss of *0,000.
. Tunas were forty-two new cases of yellow
fever and two deaths ■£ PcnsacoD, Fla, on the
190th.
, Tbe thefts perpetrated by EUls P. Ph!ppi
tn tbe Philadelphia alms-bow, were on tlx
! 30th stated to have been 9650,000, and to have
I continued for nine rears.
I A collision- occurred ou the 21st in tbe
l freight-yard at North Adams, Mass., between
i an engine and a car cent sluing forty railroad
I employe*. Tbe engine exploded, and several
' men who were not hurt by the collision were
badly scalded. Thirty-three person* were in
' Jurel, eight fatally.

PERSONAL AND POLITICAL.
Jong D. Defubs, lata. Ptfblic Printer at
Washington, died at Berkley Springs, Va.on
tbe mornlug of tbe 19th.
The President has suspended Jonathan
ptggs, Indian Agent at Colorado River
Agency, and *pj&gt;olnted John W. dark as his
successor. Agent McGillicuddy, of tbe Pine
River Agency, has tendered hl* resignation,
but the Secretary of the Interior h;s declined
to accept it, jxrudlng the investigation into
his official acta now in progress.
Till CongresKional nomination* made on
the l»lh are as follows: Republican—Rhode
Island, First District, Henry J. Spooner, re­
nominated; Second Jonathan Chaco, re­
nominated.
Democratic — Massachusetts,
Second.Edgar S. Dean; New Jersey, Sixth,
ex-Mayor Fielder; Pennsylvania, Twenty­
fourth, John G. McConcby. Prohibitionist*
—NaMcchUM-tlS, Third, Samuel Capen;
Fourth, Wendell Phillipa; Illinois, Seven­
teenth, B. W. F. Carley.
Dr. Hamiltox, of New York, on the 19th
forwarded to the Garfield Auditing Commit­
tee at Washington a Mil for 925,000 for pro­
fessional service*.
Mari* Prescott, tbe actress who brought
suit in New York against lhe President of a
new* company for circulating a dramatic pa­
per containing libels upon her reputation,
was on tbe 19th swarded 913,500 damages.
John Hibbard. American Consul at Gode­
rich, Ontario, died on tbe 19th.
The National Liquor-dealers aud Brewers'
Association, in session at Milwaukee, on the
19th resolved itself into the Personal Liberty
League of America, aud elected olllcers. An
agitator wilt be sent into all the States to
organize District Leagues.
Dr. Ezra M. Hvxt, of New Jersey, was on
the 19th elected President of the American
Public Health Association, in session ixt In­
dianapolis.
'
The trial of Mrs. Fiances E. Scoville, wife

sin Gulteau, for insanity, was commenced in
Chicago on the 19th.
Tub President has returned to Washington.
Colonel Tbom a* Retxold* late Pension
Agent st Madison, Wls, was again arrested
on the 19th. ou another charge of forgery.
Ox the 20th the following Congressional
nomination* were made: Republican—New
York, Eighth District, John W. Russell;
Eleventh, William L. Strong; Missouri,
Ninth. J. IL McLean, (long term); George
Bain, (short term). Democratic—Naw York,
Second, William E. Robinson, renominated;
Ninth, John Hardy, renominated; Pennsyl­
vania, Sixteenth, W. H. Early; Connecticut,
Third, John J. Penrose. German-American
Independent—New York, Tenth, Abram 8.
Hewitt.
The Right Rev. Robert Paine, senior Bishop
of tbe M. E. Church South, died at Aberdeen.
Mils, on the 30th.
The Unlversaliata' General Convention la
session at Philadelphia on the 20th con­
demned the death penalty, indorsed the ef­
forts of tbe Proalbltlonlsta, and ;e*olvcd that
the State Legislature* should enact stringent
law* for tbe prevention of cruelty to animals.
Ix tbe Oregon Legislature on the 20lb
Joseph N. Dolph (Rep.) was elected United
States
Senator
on the ---■■•
forty-first ballot
_ -------—----------—Robert Ford, one of the slay^s of Jesse
... pUC « Mil
n.tUborp,
M&lt;x, on tbe 20th. for the murder of Wood
Bite.
.
Tbe death ot Admiral Hugh Young Purvtance, of Baltimore, occurred &gt;u tbe 21 *L
At tbe examination Into tbe sanity of Mrs.
Bcovile, in tbe Cook County (Illinois) Court
on tbe 21st, l.'r. Andrew McFarlane, of Che
Jacksonville Asylum, testified ths: be t&gt;eifeved all the members of the Gniteau family

JltMHM of the Society of. Friend* on the
trian* commenced at Madison Square Garden,
! Durixo the yellow-fever epidemic at Pea
i sacol* Fla, there have l«eu 1.970 eases ami
Ittl death*. On tbe 2M there were flfty-twe
• new ca»e* and one death.
, I Coloxel Jonx Bradt. Of Jackronvtll*
Art, his wife and four children were pofj
- soiled to a dangerous degree on the 21st bj
eating corn bread in which Indian berries bad
-Ltt* thrown by some miscreant.
The French brigantine Mary Anne, from
fit. Domingo, wm towed to the quarantine
ground below Norfolk, V«-. «»the 21st, hc&gt;
Captain, two mates and six men having died
of yellow fever.
Ax Earthquake shock was distinctly felt at
Leavenworth, Kan., on tbe afternoon &lt;of the
23d, contlnuiug for eight second*.
The New York Stole Insurance Department
ou tbe 2ist announced the retirement from
business of the Manhattan Insurance Gompony of New York City. Tbe risks ot the
curtMwatlon would be assumed by the Fbenlx
. Insurance Company of Brooklyn.
. Charles X Strout, who receive 1 severe4ot Juries at the hands of a baaing party of seven
stndeute nt Bowdotn College, was on the 91M
•warded damageyif 92.7U1
■ A fire broke out In tbe cab of an engine
drawing a passenger train on the PiAinsylvi-

A J. Steele, suceeedc.1 In stepping the train,
but was probably f-tally burrwu.

.was Chirk of the United State* Circuit Court
In Boston, killed himself with lau■lanum oo

Ox tbe 2&lt;4d 4.484 immigrants iaaded at tbe

nlvenary of (he landing of Wflliem Penn st
that point John G. Whittier, the Quaker
poet, sent a letter and poem, tbe latter writ­
ten by him sixty years ago.
At the first j^litlcal meeting ever held by the
Mormons, which took place at Ogden. Utah,
on the evening of tbe 21st, Cannon denounced
what he termed the attempt to despoil the
Mormons of their constitutional righta
Tub following Congressional nomination*

York. Sixteenth District. Theodore V. Ven
Heuscn. Democratic— New York, First, Perry
Belmont; Fifth, Nicholas Muller; Twenty­
ninth, John Arnot; Illinois, Fourth, Lambert

Laxgtrt, late the nrofe*alona! beauty

District oo the 23d nominated John E. Brod-

Ohio State election held October 10, made by

following totals and majorities tor Secretary of
State: Newman, Democrat, 818,874; Town-

hibitioutet. 12.9U9; Hafer, Greenbacker, 5,345;
Newman over Townsend. 19,115; Newman

A mat
MAT in tiw
tbe New York Stock Exchange
J- w- Gkivtith, Democratic nominee for
sold on the 21st for 9115,0)0. This is tbe 1 Congress from tba Third Iowa DU*tel, died
highest price ever paid
Dubuque on tbe Od.
e
wm

FOREIGN.

A ■ntt-elam Cold Weather Bait for SB.

EVE1Y MAK WHO DWVEB A TEAM

CHILDREN’S, BOYS’, AND YOUTHS’ CLOTHING, Blankets and Robes.
Which i* tbe most complete ever laid down tn Nasbvile.
IN THIS LINE our stock will compare favor-

-We are proud of our new stock of

CAPS, CAPS,

M. Stanley slated that De Brjxza bad betrayed
And believe we have something desirable and very cheap.
the International Asaociation by establishing
Prints, Dress
Flannels,
with its resources French relations tn Africa.
Ladiea Clookingi, Shawl* Underwear,
We hare made additions to our
Rich gold mines have been discovered In
Blanket^ Boot* Shoes, Hate, Cap*
Guatemala, Central America.
The first installment of tbe returned Egypt­
Mitten* Glove* Grooerie* Glaaaian troops hare arrived in Loudon, and have
ware, Orockey and Queouware
With the view’of suiting the roost particular customers.
been accorded an enthusiastic reception.
Tna new krmy of Egypt will number 11,000 Our stock of Boot a and Shoes is larger, than ever, and no competitor
men and cost £363,000 per annum. Baker
will be allowed to jinderocll u*
Pasha propose* that the field officer* ba half
CALI. A.ND SEE.
British and half native, the gendarmery to be
Woodland, Oct. 25, &gt;882.
officered by Egyptian*.
News was received at Irkotak. Siberia, on
F. F. HILBERT.
the 30th that the harbor-exploring party tn
tbe Lena Delta were all well. Nothing bad
CUSTOM
been learned concerning the fate ot Lieuten­
ant Chlpps.
Br tbe collapse of a floor on tbe 23d at Han­
ley, Eng., on which wsa congregated the Sal­
vation Army, many member* were aeriooaly
injured.
NiXXT, the Swiss «bo campaigned with
------- HAVE Jl'ST RECEIVED THEIR-------Arabi Pasha, staled oo tbe 21 *t that be could
prove that tbe evacuation of Alexandria and
Aiid manufacturer qf hardwood
the defense of the country were ordered by
the Ministry and sanctioned by the Khedive.
For the Fall and Winter Trade.
Sixes May 1 over 47.00J cases of cholera
Lumber.
have occurred in the Kingdom of Corea, ot
which nearly 28.000 ende i fatally.
Arabi Pasha was viatied by Broadley and
Napier, bis English counsel, on tbe 22L Arabi
complained of bad treatment.
A riotous demonstration occurred - at
Ever brought to this market for the price.
Lyons, France, on tbe 23d, which the police
waa unable to subdue. Several bombs were
exploded and considerable damage wrought. WORSTED DRESS COODS
MILL-FEED and BRAN.
.
In Brown, Cardinal, Dregs of Wine, Bronze, Green, Slate and Drab, for
The Bey of Tunis ba* made a treaty with
12 1-2 Cents per Yard,
France by which the Utter power assumes
the Tunisian debt, orgmUe* an ad mlu 1st ra­
tion of justice and takes charge of all public CLOTHINC
•PMA CXdrr VINEGAR,
For Men, Youths, Boys and School.
property, giving the Bey a retiring allowance.
The King of Core* ha* Issued a proclama­ SUITS
tion to his pe pie In which be secures bitnself
From a cheap Cottonade to an ltn|&gt;orted W orsted.
of employing Incompetent Ministers and neg­
UABD WOOD LUMBER,
lecting the welfare of his Kingdom and people.
The city of Manila, in the Philippine Islands,
was in great, part destroyed by a cyclone on
the 91st.
BASSWOOD LUMBER,
A jCairo (E^ypt) csblegrtm of lhe 23d
states that most alarming news had been re­
PIKE FINISHING LUMBER
ceived from Khartoum. The False Propbet,
at the beid of the whole able-bodied popula­
tion of lhe Soudan, reinforced by some can­
Mill on Sherman Street, Eaat from
nibal tribes of Central Africa, had utterly
Depot,
defeated Abd-el-Kider and Giegler, the
For which we will pay the Highest Markit Pricb in Cash.
Egyptian Governors, In seven sanguinary
II. R. DICKINSON A CO.
pitched battles. Tbe Egyptian loss in killed
•
• '
.
C. W. CRANCER * co,
and wounded was 8.000, with their stand of
arm*, including 5,000 RcmlugtouA
The
remnant of the Egyptian army took refuge in
Khartoum, and ws* besieged there.
-

Goods,

Boots, Shoes, Gents' Furnishing Goods, Groceries, Underwear, Etc.

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN

LATEST NEWS

Their Prints I Ginghams are the finest

0

A GOOD FAMILY FLOUR

Cg

Hats

and

0
4

Caps, boots and Shoes. 0

5,000 POUNDS OF BUTTER WANTED,

NKW

May, 187b, by order of King Milan, ou tbe 23d
fired twice at tbe Servian ruler in the cathe­
dral at Belgrade, but did not succeed in hit­
ting him.
A rata In tbe lumber yards on the River
Neva, at St. Petersburg, on tbe 23d destroyed
5,000,0-X) rubles' worth of property. The toreats and peat bogs around the dty were all
aflame.

LATER NEWS.
Cvetomi officers at Ban Francisco on the
14th caught a boot-lood of men in the act of
smuggling ashore from the steamer Arabic
allks
0_lam valQtxj at 94O.OOQ.
— Broxsox AtcOTT
Alcott, tp™tbe sage a
of CoPeort.
Concord,
Maas., was stricken with paralysis un the
94th, and sf night waa only partially con­
scious.
Firri-oxi new eases of yellow fever and
five death* were reported at Pensacola, Fla,
on the 34th.
Dn. Oltveb Wexdell Holmes on the 94th
closed a career of thirty-five years as Pro­
fessor of Anatomy st Harvard University,
desiring to give more time to literary pur­
suite.
Dvxixo the pyrotechnic display at the
William Penn celebration in Philadelphia on
tbe evening of the 34th a mortar need for
discharging bombs exploded, killing six per­
son* snd wounding twelve others.
Aovices of the 34th from Cairo, Egypt,
state that tbe Capital ot Kordofan had been
besieged for forty day* by the Ftute Prophet,
and its capture was expected. An attack on
Khartoum would follow.
Homer Oumox, a fourteen-yeorold Isd of
Paris, Ky., *hol hl* teacher, Professor
Yerkes, through tbe right arm on the 94th
for having requested a written excuse for
tardiness.
Adam Bor* A Co., iron merchants of Ham­
ilton, Ont., failed on the 34th for 9L«».000.

riding along tbe Sonora River on tbe 94th in
Campony of Buffalo, has my«teriouaiy disap­
stockmen tn tbe dark. In tbe fight which
peared.
•
The deaths of E. Feahlne Smith, recsatly ensued one man was killed and two taken
•chief law officer of the Japanese Government, prisoners before tbe mistake was developed.
A terrible hurricane prev.Bad in England
aud of Joseph Medliery, one of the originators
of the Western Union Telegraph Company, all day on tbe 34th, causing great damage.
By a collision during the gale in the Channel,
are anuonneed.
,

Fourth New York District nominated Felix
Campbell. Ft P. Flower hat positively do­
r-lined tbe Congressional reaominatlon of the
Eleventh New York District Democrat*.

The attention ot Parent* is respectfully called to our large stock of'

HATS, HATS,

Thoma* UlCounor.
bany «fc Susquehanna Railroad broke through
a bridge above Otego, N. Y., on tbe ISth, aud
tbe locomotive and fifteen coal-car* were
precipitated Into the Susquehanna River.

Everythin* New, Myltah. and Durable

Dublin to Che Irish people, issued ou tbe 19th,
point* out that the landlord* hare comblued

SiXTY-rnorsaxD families were rendered

equipped in tbe United States, which was
valued at 9150,00G, was deslrovc.l by Arc on
the 34th.
.
The following Congressional nominations
syIranis, Twenty-fourth District, George V.
Lawrence. Democratic—Rhode Island, First,
Oscar Lapbam; Second, Jonathan M,
Wheeler; Massachusetts, Twelfth, Rev Beu
Noble; Now York, Sixth, B. &amp; Cox. reBomiRated; Seventh, William
Docaheiroer;
Eighth, John J. Adams; Ninth, John Hardy,
renominated; Kleve nth, Orlando B. Potter.
The British ParlLimeut reassembled on tba

ACalcvtta (India) dUpatch of the 34th

jnd Itdind

NEW

STORE GOODS

ALL READY

To show you a large and well selected Stock of

Our surroundings and tbe community at large

GROCERIES

HAVE BEEN APPRECIATED!

CONSISTING OT

OUR EFFORTS TO IMPROVE

Sugars, Coffees, Teas, Tobaccos,
OUR NEW STOCK OF GROCERIES Spices, Fish, Canned Goods,
Provisions, Ac., ■
' Our store room though ample is completely filled and our sbMvee fairly groan under them
And still they come. We have everything in the Grocery line.
AT.THE LOWEST PRICES
Crockery and Glassware.

If vo« want to see a pretty and complete line of Crockery, sm ours. We have only time to
call your attention to Chics Tea Sett*. Majolica Ware, and Decorated Chamber Bette. In Glaaswsre our stock is complete and attractive. Our trade in LAHir* 1« simply immense. We
have Pend*nt* Decorated Vase, and Common Goods. Low estimates given ou Church and
Hall Chandelier*.
We have added a fine line of

Table

Cutlery,

For Cash or Ready Pay.
Also tbe Largest Stock of

Crockery, Glassware, Lamps,
Stone Ware, &amp;c.,
TO BE SEENJN^BARRY CO.

Lantern* and Oil Cans. Your special attention Is invited to the former, u we fee) assured that
BOOTS ABD SHOES
we have something that will suit.
AS CHEAP AS ANYBODY.
We keep the celebrated Snow Flake Flour.
Evervthiug New, Fresh, and Cheap. An examination will convince.

CASH PAID FOR PRODUCE

G. W. FRANCIS.

501 Wagons 150

C. W. SMITH.

Horses
Shod

OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE

ALWAYS BEST
FOR SALE AT ROCK BOTTOM PRICES

TO HAVE THE JOB DONF

SKILLFULLY.
WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH

THREE INCH TIRE
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMEfHING

BETTER THAN COMMON TIRE

Recognizing These Facts,
And detiring to increase my prosperity
by affording the public

THE BEST WORK
In »»a! Iim, I Im ««plos«i

Chas. Middleton,
We believe the Three inch Tire' is destined to come
into general use. Call and examine them and yon will have
no other.
‘
।

BENTLEY BROS. &amp; WILKINS,
i
Hastings, Mich.

A No.l Workman.

J. M. WOOD

,&lt;oia in Nashville hF c. L. eiASiSOW.-------------FOUNDEB and MACHINIST

�ot Bollemo GwotU Mid

he can’t hold out will do
Some of our sidewalk* near the stores
running before the fight be- might be much improved.
The roof of the grist mill has beet,
treated"»•&gt; a coat of paint.
Mr. Pettit, our hotel man, reports
reach sympathy with |h© idea-that buttaeM lively Id his line this Tall.
Mike Riser haz joined the crowd of
declared it to be "in itself an awful hunters which went north last week.
■ in—one of the worst of sins, in short,
The aisles of tbe M. E. church have
a dreadful crime.”
been carpeted, which improves it very
much.'
Douglass Autx, of Norwich, fell un­
Albert Sheldon of Benton Harbor
der a moving train be'was attempting
seems to be the apple-buyer in Wood­
o board.
When the train passed
land.
Douglass arose uninjured with his
Mr. Downing has sold his blacksmith
cigar in his mouth. And yet there are shop to Joseph Hough, who already oc­
people who claim smoking injurious.
cupies* it
The finest display of lamps and lamp
The Washington Post recollects that
hangings we ever saw is to be found at
the forces with which Gen. Scott went
hrough Mexico to the capital, was on­ F. Hilpert’s.
Mr. ’ Lamb of Springport passed
ly about half as large as that with which
Wolseley scattered a few thousand rag­ through this place last Monday enroute
forSxrinac.
ged Egyptians at Tel-el-Kebir, on hi*
Mrs. Baitinger made a trip to Detroit
journey to Cairo. _ ~______ ___
last week to purchase a stock of goods
price of Wheat in for her store.
■
One year
cento, aud • Lewis Faul has purchased the build­
Neu York
____ „_________ The abundant crop* ing next to his store, recently vacated
have greatly reduced these prices this by Mr. Runyan.
George Barden and I. N. Harter are
year, and no w it seems probable that
the cost of living will be less during in Isabella county putting up tele­
the current year than for a long per­ phones for Mr. Garver.
Mrs. Runyan has moved her stock of
iod.
__________
__________
goods to Grand Rapids, where she
Press dispatches from Chatham, Va.. will open a millinery shop.
represent the lavage* of diphtheria as ■We are receiving four weekly news­
fearfol. It i» estimated that 900 deaths papers, but the NARHViLi.E'NEWsis tbe
have occurred in two months; nine but first one caught for every time.
every ten families have lost from one
Eugene Davenport of this place had
to five children, and twenty-one deaths charge of the Hastings schools this
have occurred in four families. One
~
week, during the sickness of Prof. Hall.
school has lost twenty pupils.
If you want a good shave call upon
Johnny Cole at his new barber shop,
In the prospectus of a Kentuck "col and he will guarantee satisfaction.
It would seem that John Holmes
lege” for young women is the follow­
ing: "The President is Southern by could appreciate more room in bis store
birth, by rearing, by education, and by since the arrival of his new goods.
Mr. Cole the butcher is about to put a
sentiment; Hie teachers are all South­
ern in sentiment, and, with the excep­ full stock of groceries and provisions
tion of those bora in Europe, were born in the old Runyan store on the corner.
David Haight who owns the "pink”
and reared in tbe south.* Bcliving the
Southern to bo the highest type of civ­ house next to the post office, has mov­
ilization this continent has seen, the ed into town and will occupy the same
young ladies are trained according to hereafter.
The Dunkards bad sacramental exer­
the Southern ideas of delicacy, woman­
hood, religion, and propriety,-hence we cises at their church on tbe south town
offer a first-class female college for the line, Thursday and Fridy, with a large
South, and solicit Southern patron- attendance.
Last Wednesday afternoon the band
boys went to Sunfield to sernade tbeir
The dedication of churches is too of­ teacher Mr. Gillison, using their new
ten a canonization of a ten per cent wagon which shows off finely.
mortgage, and making the holder of
The primary school closes to-day
the mortgage a he dairy maid to' milk (Thursday) and Miss Palmerton will at­
the congregation semi-annually of in­ tend the teachers’ examination at Hast­
terest, till they starve the pastor. Mil­ ings on Friday and Saturday.
lions of women, worthy of a better
Will Cramer has threshed eleven con­
fate, wear their lives out freezing ice secutive weeks with an Advance thresh­
cream and cooking rubber oysters for er. He recently threshed 250 bushels
festivals to pay interest on the church of wheat in two and one half hours.
debt to nA, skinflint who never had a
Warner &amp;. Leedy have done a good
Christian rentimeut.
business the^past season, selling agri­
cultural implements.
Aside (rom all
UncleSam has reason to feel con­
other burinees done they .have sold 14
tented with himself if the figures
self-binders.
about his worldly wealth, given by Mr.
Mr. Garver of the firm of Howe A
Mulhall, the English statistical writer,
Garver, telephone manufacturers, is
are correct. Mr. Mulhall places the
stopping in this village for a short time
value of property in the United States
and seems to find a good 'manjr people
at a round &gt;50,000,000,000, which is con­
who want telephones.
siderably in excess of the two next rich­
The new engine for the oar factory
est countries in the world—England
has arrived) and been adjusted ready
and France. The wealth of England is
for business. We have the promise
placed at &gt;44.100,000,000, and that of
that it will start up the last of this
France at &gt;37,109,000.000, so that the
week or the first of next.
United States are almost &gt;6,000,000,000,
Dan. Myer* is canvassing for a book
worth richer than the former and near­
entitled "Polygamy, or the Mysteries
ly &gt;13,000,000,000 worth than the latter.
and Crimes of Mormonism.”
The
In proportion to population England is
author is J. IL Beadle and he treats the
the wealthiest country of three, how­
work with his usual ability.
ever, the average for every inhabitant
Considerable of a stir was made in
there being about &gt;14*00, whereas in
the village last Monday by tbe appear­
the United States it is but &gt;1,000.
ance upon the streets of half a dozen
Indians who were selling small baskets
A curious death befell Daniel Dnsand trying to trade with some of our
coll, a firemah on a California railroad
merchant*.
near Alameda. Saturday week. Ttie
Another one of 'Woodland’s fair
track lay on trestlesacrow a salt marsh
daughters has been captured and taken
over which the tides rose and fell. Tbe
hence. Last ./Wednesday Mr. Kirk
train jumped from this trestle, aud
Grant of Hastings came down to de­
Driscoll waa fastened to the ground by
mand the heait and hand of Miss Carrie
a timber from the wreck. His comrades
Baitinger. In the presence of a large
undertook to release him but he was
assemblage of friends and relatives she
held fast aud the tide waa rising rap­
said “yea,” and at dusk the bridal party
idly. One device after another was
quickly employed, but it was impossi­ departed for Hastings, their future
home.
ble to release him. As all attempts in
Quill Pen.
this direction were in vain, it was fin­
ally proposed to build a levee around
BELLEVUE.
his head to keep the water from reach­
ing his bead.
Buckets were brought
Will Luscomb is around and looks as
and by faithful bailing it was attempt­ good as new.
ed to keep the water from reaching ills
Henry Harts’ son is very sick with
head. He was lying under the cab, spinal fever and considered danger­
snd a hole was cut in through (which ous.
he could put his head which they raised
Hon. Geo. Huggett gave the first pol­
above the water us much as possible. itical speech of the season here. It is
He remained thus two hours, when tbq well spoken of.
levee broke, aad the men who were
Mr. and Mrs. G. D. Atmcre have been
bailing out the water found that they visiting their parents, Mr. and Mrs, F.
could do no more. They held his head A. Ford of Bellevue.
shove the water which rose slowly
The W. C. T. U. of this place are
about his body. Tbe men found they talking of taking the seven courses of
must make a final effort
Then his lecture or at least part of them.
head was lowered aud they all caught
J. O’Donnell of the Jackson Citizen
hold and pulled desperately. It was in gave a good speech at tbe opera bouse
vain.
They could not move him. from the Republican standpoint.
They raised his head again. The wa­
Rev. Wm. Riley, wife and daughter
ter rose slowly but surely. It reached of Marshall, have been riaiting their
his chin. A friend held his band over old friends and recei red a cordial weltbe doomed man’s mouth. The water
roae to bu nostrils. Nothing more
Mr. John Evans has bought the old
could be done, aud be was drowned homestead of Martin 8. Brackett and is
with his friends standing by, power- patting up a building for storing lum­
ber, etc. The building is one hundred

Chicago for- the last week, returned
Monday.
Rev. Sbafford, Baptist minister of
this place, returned from the east af­
ter a three weeks visit and resumed
bis duties last Sabbath.
Quarterly meeting was held at the M.
E. church here last Sunday evening.
A visiting reverend officiated. At the
morning service, ths pastor being ab­
sent, Mrs. Emma Grinnell read a ser­
mon.
"Long Bill Cary” of Seetion^Hill is
genial as ever and fixing up somewhat.
Your correspondent does not say he
has any seriousintentions in regard to
any widow or maiden lady, but such
may be the case.
John Jenkins of Canada, and Mias
Jennie A. Warren of Bellevue, were
married Sept 16. They left for
thair future home which is to be in De­
troit. Mr. Jenkins is telegraph opera­
tor of tbe Western Union Telegraph
Co.
F.Hull of the firm’of Barber. Hull &amp;
Ambrose,Vermontville, passed through
Bellevue Monday, on his mustang,with
broad brim hat. and pack attached to
saddle. He waa on his way to Georgia
by tiie overland route. He goes for his
health.
Charley Hull, our efficient township
clerk, is groaning under bis duties iu
regard to the new registration. He has
to spread himself out into all the school
districts of the the township. Such a
law” might do for a large city,
but for a law to tell, in registering for
voting how much a man weighs the col­
or of bis hair, how long he has lived on
this mundane sphere, whether married
or single, whether one wife or two, or
whether he expects to l&gt;e married, etc.
Charley thinks is'requiring to much of
flesh and blood and is frequently very
embarassin.
Alpha.
MAPLE GROVE.

The beaebnuts are falling.
Mr. and Mrs. Endinger spent Sunday
at Hastings.
Mrs. Cora Young is visiting her par­
ents and iriends.
Geo. Baltz started last Monday for
the north woods to work.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilcox have returned
from exhort visit in Indiana.
Wm. Freeman of York State is visit­
ing his mother Mrs. H. Demarav.
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Baltz are making
a couple weeks visit at McBrides’.
John Cotten of Battle Creek, visited
bis brother Sam here tbe fore part of
the week.
All are invited to attend the Sunday
school institute at the U. B. church
next Sunday.
C. S. Ducham and Geo. Spencer at­
tended the I. O. G. T. Grand Lodge at
Lansing last week.
Miss Nancy Spencer and -Mr. Albert
Spencer of Coldwater scent a few days
at Wm. King’s and Ad. Wolfs.
Arthur K teller had a leg, defo.tned,
by the contraction of the heel cord,
straightened a few davs ago. Dr. Y'oung
performed the operation, and at last
account was doing well.
Last week we noticed two dog fights
in which their ret pective owners came
very near participating. If this state
of affairs continue, it will be consider­
ed bad conduct on the part of the dogs.
L. E. Ph a nt.
BARRY VILLE.
It was not a cyclone but a wedding
that visited Dan Meads of Kalamo
tiiis week, and made a heavy draft on
this community for its guests.
It is Mr. Valentine Ostroth now that
has a new carriage.
Nothing looks
mote sensible than to see the early set­
tlers providing such comforts for their
declining years.
At C. J; Norris,one mile south of this
place on the 19th inst there was an in­
teresting reunion of the Hyde family,
relatives of Mrs. Norris and Mrs.'
Mudge. There were fifty-two at din­
ner, representing four generations.
The oldest person present waa Mr. W.
Wilkinson aged 81 years. Tbe young­
est waa an infant child of Willis Lath­
rop’s, aged thirteen months. The old­
er members of the family living and
present were Mr. E. Hyde of York
state, Edward Hyde of Vermontville
Mrs. Wm. Wilkinson,Mrs. Jonas Davis
and Mrs. Madge.
Itbx Ixer.
BISMARK.

Registration is drawing attention jMt
Church and Fenn no longer measures
tape at Shay town.
Speeche.. were made Wednesday
evening by Cobb and Shriner.
Relatives from Onondagaand furth­
er east made us a call last Saturday.
J. C. Downing is preparing to wood­
bine and seek the solitude uf Vermont­
ville.
Milo Deuel will buy all of your poul­
try. old iron, paper rag*, old rubber
anil any other kind of farm produce.
The Bismark postoffice will be open
Sunday from 10 till 11 o’clock a. m. Let
thia be borue in ufind by all concerned.
' The Bimnark store in receiving new
goods this week with a chap ready to
measure aud weigh the needed to cus­
tomers.
Writist.

get lumber for bis big barn.
Frank Allerton hat returned from
Illinois. No place like Mich.
The horse trade between Pick Ellis­
ton and Dr. Goucher fizzled.
Our roads are receiving some work
under the management of Pathmaster
Brow.
.
Farmers are making preparations for
winter. Soon the wind ’round the gnbleawill whistle.
Mrs. Park and daughter, of Edmore,
are spending a few weeks with her
father, Elder Hughes.
-Hager’s mill on the county line is
driven with work. Two sets of hands
run it day and night.
Henry Harmer lost g valuable cow,
Monday, while driving her to pasture.
She. slipped in going down hill, and
broke her leg.
*
X.

HASTINGS.
Miss Adda Reed has gone to Detroit
to «tay.
.
A course of phrenological lectures
here this weelc.
Gov. Plaisted of Mane, epeaka here
next Tuesday afternoon.
Wm. McPheYson and wife have gone
to Hot Springs, Ark., for Mrs- M’s.
health.
Mnj. Littlefield formerly of the Hast­
ings House has taken charge ef the
Bailey House at Stanton.
Tom Beckwith’s livery stable and tin
old building* adjoining were burned
last week. Loss about &gt;1,000. Tbe
’
homes and stock were saved.
Tbe district W. C. T. U. meets here
Nov-8th and 9th. Mrs. C. G. Bentley
will take care of the guests. It is ex­
pected that dinners and suppers will be
served in red ribbon hall.
MORGAN.
Clara Ware is at Battle Creek.
Mrs. Ed. Hyde and Lora have re­
turned home.
The town clerk is to visit each voter
that he may register his name.
A new minister speaks at Morgan
Sunday evening at seven o’clock.
Mrs. Wilson is said to have lost her
pocket book containing several dollars.
Mrs. Baxter u dextrous in comparing
the bitter republican points with the
weak democratic.
Mr. Root gave has relative a dance
party at L. P. Cole’s. Supper was ad­
ded and an enjoyable time was had.

EATON COUNTY.
Pomona grange met at Kalamu the
30th.
The Eaton Rapids agricultural socie­
ty cleared &gt;100.
A telephone exchange is being organ­
ised at Charlotte.
’Tis said the expulsion suit of E. L.
Smith against Olivet college will soon
be tried.
Whitford’s Bay Tom, of Charlotte,
has been sold to Frank Dickey of
Marshall, and will be sent to Boston.
The first first-grade certificate ever
granted to an Eaton county pedagogue
waa captured by Prof. Dickenson of
Potterville, the other day.
An east Roxand farmer offers &gt;500 to
any one who will break up a match be­
tween his daughter and a man already
too much married.
W. S. Henderson of Eaton Rapids
wants fish ladders put in the dams of
the Grand river according to law and
has served notice on the supervisors of
townships along the river.
Potterville not only listens to the
hum of the rake factory again, but it
has a singing school, club dances, and
a course otlectures .on phrenology by
P.oL Cavendish of Battle Creek, this
week. My son, Potterville’s a live
town.
The literary exercises of the .Ver­
montville schools are becoming a
prominent feature of their work. The
last proposition
discussed was an
unusually sensible one, Resolved that
the study of Civil Government is
more beoeficial to the youth of to­
day, than is United States History.
The supervisors passed a resolution ,
that tiie committee on building the
new Court House should ascertain if
the Gibbs plan could be built for &gt;40,000, the amount appropriated for this
purpose. If not they might exclude
finishing the basement and heating. If
it could be done for this amount they
are to advertise for bids, but if not they
will wait for further instructions from
the board.
If this column isn’t up to its usual
standard thia week, it must be laid to
an ojsthetic social given by the ajpthetic
young ladies of a-sthetac Charlotte, tbe
other eveoing. The program included
such things as "wild, weird, fleshy
tongue,” and was. on the whole so aw­
fully assthetic that the writer has hard­
ly recoved from tbe utterly utter effects
of its perusal yet.
The Kupervisors elected Hiram Smoke
drain commissioner, C. A. Merritt
superintendent of the poor.
Salaries
were arranged as follows: Clerk* &gt;750,
prosecutor &gt;800, treasurer &gt;900, super
intendent of the poor &gt;450, drain com­
missioner &gt;3 a day. The following
axes are to be raised: Poor &gt;8,000,
county salaries &gt;15,900. probate judge
&gt;1,800, rentof hall and county officers
&gt;500, for insane &gt;8,500, jury fe«L $8,000,
printing &gt;100, court house &gt;13,333. mis­
cellaneous &gt;8,366, state &gt;30,196.

er and wan bought at

Rock Bottom Prices
rtwntrdod By tbe Cummlwinner m a very Import-

■ entin -

nltlon and whlaky in Sol; Lake City, and fn n
short-time a! ne-tentha of the payment went tn
thooame dlrmtiou. The fund# appropriated
by Gmyrew tn the regular appropriation bill
fpr tbe support of the Indiana proved entirety

and will be sold at n slight ad­
vance above acthal cost.
Prepare for cold weather by
buying your

now. Our stock is complete
in every respect.
Also New Dry Goods, Boots,
Shoea, Hats, Caps, Groceries,
Etc., in endless profusion.
We haven't time to enumer­
ate, and if we had these goods
must be sef n to be appreciated.

licet and dour. The total number of Indian*
in t»v Uuliod States, axcluilv* ot Alaska, is
XU.WL
, .
.
.
Tbo Commissioner commcuts in severe
terms upon tbe Iniquity of tbe liquor traffic
nmon* tbe Indians, und quotes many InManeea
of trouble arlsirqr from it. Hi- rvcotnmcnda
STuatcr *trin*cucy in tbo 1-iws on tbe subject,
and says tboso aoctlon* of tbe statutes which
WOODLAND.
allow army officer* to Introduce liquor into the
Indian uountry should be repealed. The re­
port declare* there is unreal necessity for ad­
ditional ItsrlaUUon to prevent Intrusion upon
Indian innda.
Exclusive of tbe five civilized tribe-, tbe
whole number of Indian pupils attend n*
•uboo: the past ye«r its# been
Of th«-*c
4 S were in attendance at the Cartiftle, Hamp­
ton aicllorestGrovetrulnimj-scbooU. Oftbo
remainder, «4U) attcwlod res rvatlon lioardCUTLERY, NAILS, PAINTS.
liiff-seho-.l- andr,Uto reservation &lt;hiy-*cbqol*.
1 be avciarfc uttepilano- for tbe year was
Industrial trninfmr for tioys is curried ou at Olla, Pumps, Croaa.cut Sawi,
agency boardin-recBool*. aud is recclvinffnoru
und more attention oacj year. In txmnvoFarm Tools,
Uon with flity-aevcn *i bools. 1,433 acres are
under cultivation. LiL.ek* nithinr. tailoring
AidrcvcryUiing in the linrdware line, 1* st
snd barness-niakltriritn- tuuatat nltour-cbools.

J. W. HOLMES&amp;C0.

Hardware, Glass, Tin and Copperware,

ton nnd Forest Greve. An appreurtat.'on «&gt;f
not lea* than *3u,0» &gt; rboul&lt;&gt; be male l»j- tonitrrM at it-# next » •
to properly equip the
&lt;‘-c:atinK M"ncv «vh xil« fo fndnatr al «n:k.
airStock larger and Prices lower than ever
.
before.
Report of the

Signal-Service Office.

The Chief Signal Officer of the Array, in his
report, says eleven new stations have been
added, and special rvjorts are made for the
cotton and tobacco-growing regions of the
country, and the means for giving warnings
to caltlo-raiaer* of Texas agalust the approach
(it • northers" have b&gt;?en improved. Experiimr the value of the funner'# bultepn by the
addition of a weather chart of ibe United
State*, and it is believed that in a short time
these chart* may be successfully r*.produced
on the farmer#’ bulletin. With o ich year the
popular knowledge of tbe u#c&lt; of thia bulletin
enables tho&lt;e Inten ated in njrrieulture toJud&lt;c
of tbe correctness of fon-cnata, and with the
aduition of the proposed weather-map individ­
uals will be able to make correct prediction#
of the weather for localities which it la
Impossible to provide for in the brief sentence
which express*-* the prevailing weather Indi­
cations anticipated for an entire district. It is
contemplated, m the work of the office proxresaea. to add to this bulletin brief instruo

Every Description of Tinware Bone
Right and Low.
L. FA UL.

S. S INGERSON &amp; SON

Grain-Lumber-Goal
Everything in these lines.

Nashville, Mich.

hereafter be furnished for local observers.
warning# for the benefit of the *ugar interoata
In lx&gt;ulni#n* hu l&gt;-cn continued. During the
coming year It I* propo*c&lt;! tn ti lcgraph frost
warning* direct from the Hlfcnnl Office to all
telegraph office* In the augnr-g rowing Miction*.
It la proposed the coming fall to cxtabllah
a #y*tcm ot fn«t wnrnlng* for tbe
benefit ot tbe tobacco-growing Intereeta
of the country. al*&gt; aim liar service for the
benefit of the orange grower* of Florida. A
ayatem of report* for tbe benefit of the cotton
intereata baa been thoroughly orjnuilxni and
aucceiMfnllyoperat'-dginoe Septcmber.lMl. At
the solicitat on of those Interested In the culti­
vation of wheat and other grains in the North­
west it fa contemplated to establish a service
■imttar to that now In operation for the benefit
of the cotton inu-resti. which will enable thia
office to publish in the journals of lhe North*
west the dally rainfall and u-mpcrature, m de­
termined from a large nuthher of stations.
Tbe coat to the Government of the men who

T. BOISE,
---- FOR-------

DBIGN,
„
BOOKS,
JEWELRY,
WALL PAPER,
WINDOW NIIADEN,

DYEHTLFFS,
PROPRIETARY MEDICINES,

P RESC El PTIOXS.
RECEIPTS,

number of civilian clerk# would amount to
more than KXjO.OOO-

A Terrible Ruliroad Accident.
North Ai&gt;AM*,Mn*a., October 3L
A terrible accid-mt to u caboose of working­
men, belonging to lhe North Adum# freight­
yard, occurred thia morning, in which thirty
men were injured, several fatally. About#:30
this morning Engin-.x-r Charle* Wells and Fire­
man James Boetly left the North Adam* depot
on the engine Deerfield on tbe State Road,
pushing a catxXMc loaded with thirty men go-

------- MY-------

PAINT AND BRUSH
DEPARTMENT

sectlon-rang, John Flynn, foreman; a gang of

crusher*. Peter Barry, foreman; tracklayer*.
Thomas Quinn, foreman; and carpenters,
J. J. Peckham, foreman. The engine
rhlch was In

catcher ot the onrine Deerfield. The front of
the engine waa smashed in. Steam and hot
water Hew into the caboose. The men not
hurt in the coUlidon were burned badly, and
but few eacaped without Injury. None would

in Hairy or halon connuca

Call and Examine!
F. T. BOISE.

LEGGED WHEAT

N more grown whest will be ground at the
Nashville mill.
I have found It impoMlble to make gtHxI
flour for tboae who have good wheat if I grind
gri«t» of grown wheataH-4
There I* no mill, old nrocciw or new process,
thirty-three Injured, all that can prevent the flour of different grist*
rut*, bruises and broken

The steam blew open tbe door of tbe cabooao,
and filled tbe o*r in which there were thirty-five

claim# to do iL
It Is even itnpoealble to errn elevate grown
many bone* wen- broken. The boiling water and good wheal alternately without mixing
and steam saturated the men’s clothe* in a them more or leaa.. If you doubt this, a*k the
moment and the men were fearfully burned.
elevator men about it; then how much more
they will become mixed in a mill where the
wheat aad flour paa* through »o many eleva­
tend their injured.
tor*, conveyor*, txdu. machineries, etc- No
miller ran make good flour of grown wheat
A man who taken grown wbe*itomill may get
—Among the recent arrivals in thia
better Bov than his w heat would made
city is a gorilla preserved in alcohol. much
bcraumj be Is apt to ^et Home aty’s good wb^t
Although dead the animal was in uxcelV.bl ..t»M
rju*t a* apt to
get flour
—A young lady of Connecticut re­
that Is just what 11 -repose to
cently died of a burning fever, because
she ate ice-cream. Which goes to prove
that cream cremateK. — Tnc Judge.
—The grand staircase in the new
Hotel de Ville, of Paris, will have one
hundred step# oT Carrara mart)
of which will cost thirty dollAra.
ronlac
Dated

�diZ-on, la
to the greet white l»»n\ parently competent wnh r in tbe Lon­
---------, i don T.niet, when writing of it last year, to the prophet by the angel Gabriel,
k* j”.'?” ' in*i’*ted ^at it was practically impowd- and it is kept, in fair covering of green
buk.’jnAbfully.
J* tbe tatter j,U for tin idea at ajeho'l. or war of ex- taffeta, inclosed in a case of green cloth,
from snd what is it all aboot? Either ! tcrTOinJttioB
tb&lt;J infidel*, to be in the mosque of Ayoub at Constantino­
&lt;xnnmeou " carried out. Islam—the word rignlfi®, ple. A third authority "recites that it *u
mentally
as
you
rend.
”
““*■
"
[full submission to God, and L* u-^d by carefully preserved in'the seraglio in a
" I’ve half a mind to go,” she said in ’ Mohammedans to designate tbeir faith case built into the wall.
“The stand­
firm decided tonev.
and the whole body of believers in it— ard,” we read, “is twelve foot high, and
"Oh, have you?” he interjected, had its rise among the Arab* of the the golden ornament, a closed ball
with mild sarcasm, “shall I go pack desert who inhabited lhe sterile ranges which surmounts it, holds a copy of the
your trunks while you finish that let­ on the eastern coasts of the Red Sea and Koran written by the caliph, Osman III.
ter?"
•
the almost equally barren districts of In times of peace it is guarded in the
“I don't see how they can do it,” the Nejd, who, like all nomad and hall of the Noble Vestment,” where nre
she said^after an interval of silence.
semi-savage tribes, relied for their live­ preserved the prophet’s dress and other
“Why don’t you look at the post­ lihood chiefly upon plundering tliefr relics. Still another authority declares
mark, then?” he growled. “Maybe richer ’neighbors, and as often raided that it is “an innocent piece of rotten
that would tell you.”
each other’* territories with equal vigor. and faded silk, which used to be covered
She rend on. silent and. unimpressed, These raid* were and art called gluixi, with sacred writings, and which once
Hi O. !Hia» Dinah.
for two or three lines further, and then and one who takes part in them aghaxi. was green in color. The only legible
Gwinn towey'io
with au exclamation’of astonishment, “All the expeditions-and petty warfare word remaining upon it is ‘Alem’—
. Hi O. Miw Dinah.
said:
by which. Mohammed established ’ his world—which appears In a secluded fold
“How very low!"
power in the Hejaz are spoken of,” we near the staff - The flag is never un­
“Ah, well,” her husband snarled. read, "as ghaxtiweti, and it was only when furled—nor, indeed, can it be from rot­
MBS. r.IDDLERlB’S LETTER.
"Pm glad to learn .something about more ambitious attacks were made ud­ tenness—but is kept rolled on ite staff
that
letter
at
last
It
’
s
about
£&gt;ur
Mr. Middlcrib paused with his coffee
on the Roman and Persian border* arid and covered with a green satin cover,
’
cu» raiaed half way^o his lips, as bis Uncle Marcus’ family, isn’t it?”
the cry at ‘There is no god but Allah, the whole packed away in a gold or
She did not hear nor heed.
She and Mohammed is his prophet,’ bad lie- gilded box."
Wife took the letter from the servant
glued
her
eyes
to
that
precious
letter
She turned it over once or twice, gazed
When the holy standard is to be
come the watchword of victory, that a’
and went oil, ejaculating at irregular ghazi came to be synonymous with ‘one brought our, it is carried in its green
earnestly at the address and said:
intervals:
“I wonder who it can be from?”
who fights for the faith.*’ This title, ex­ cover through the streets of Constanti­
“
H
’
m.
”
She looked at the stamp, but the
pressed in full, ghazi cd din, was much nople. and .after the city wall* are passed
“ Oh, that must be lovely! ’H
Eicture of the good George Washington,
affected by later Mohammedan princ-s it is “in the field.”" It is then stowed
“It can’t be the same.”
is vissage satlly marred by the rude
of other than Arab blood; but few, if away in the gilded box once more and
“
I
never
heard
of
such
a
thing.
”
impress of
canceling st^mp, made
any, of the conquering- Persjnti, Turk or this is carried* with the" army much as
“ Oh, my goodness!”
• Tartar - notables ever' even understand the Jews used to take tbe ark of the cov­
no‘sign.
Until her husband was fairly frantic the term in iu original sense; Jr ever enant to lhe wars. When it is in the
. “lea
with
curiosity.
Finally
she
concluded
Mrs.
__
Mi erib said, carefully studying
fought mere!? to propagate thb mono­ field every Moslem is in duty bound to
that
e to the authorship of letters. the perusal of the important document, theistic creed.
Mohammed was' the follow in its train. The usual procla­
“ It isn’t Perryville; it looks something sighed and, with profound and exas­ first to make iCghazi on a large scale, mation is": “This is the prophet’s ban­
like Tonawanda, but I don’t know any­ perating deliberation, folded it care­ and the first to preac'j to his Arab com­ ner; this is the standard of the caliph­
body in Tonawanda. 1 wonder if it isn't fully and replaced it in the envelope.
patriots the duty of jehad —that is, of ate. Xt is planted before you and' un­
Mr. Middlerib looked st her in blank ‘mutual strenuous effort’ for the attain­ furled over yonr heads, O true believ­
intended for York? Cousin Hiley Ann
Jackson used to visit in York. Why amazement. ment of their common aim.”
The ers, to announce to you that your religion
“ Well, by George!” he said. “ You prophet, knowing that the tribes never is threatened, that your caliphate ts in
don’t they make the postmarks plainer,
Here I’ve waited could become a power while'they wasted peril, and that your lives, yonr wives,
I wonder? 1 believe its Indianapolis, are a cool one.
after all. Thon its from Eleanor Mc­ fifteen minutes to learn what that their energies in internecine warfare, your children and your possessions are
Pherson whoso husband you met last blessed letter is abouk and nil I know and at tho name time that they could in danger of becoming a. prey to cruel
summer in Canada. It Isn’t Indianap­ about it is that vou couldn’t make out not be united under any master, sought enemies. Any Modem, therefore, who
olis, it's Lacon: that's where .Silas the post-mark. Ily George, woman—!” to bring about national unity by bind­ refuses to take up arms and follow/his
"Why, whatever is the matter with ing them by that "common religious holy flag is an infidel amenable to
Mb shall Uvea That isn’t an L. either.
No, its New Philadelplim, Illinois; I you?" she exclaimed, with unfeigned feeling" which really meant, as it so death.” When the flag was brought
can make it out now; uon’tyou remem­ surprise. "Here it is, if you want to often does, common interests, customs, out in 17C8, according to Baron TolUs
ber? Unde Abner. Beasix went out see it- 1 didn't suppose you cared to and superstitions.
the Christians had no difficulty in rent­
there in lhe grindstone business. I hear it.”
At Mecca were all tho elements-of ing vfindows and housetops from which
"Didn’t want to hear it?” he shouted,
wonder if anv thing has—oh psbaw.lt
centralization
—tho kaabah, containing to view the ceremony, out when the
“
what
do
you
suppose
I
waited
li-re
isn’t New I’liiladelphia, either; it’s—
all tho gods of the different tribes and uroclamation was made: "Let no infi­
what is it? it’s R-, R-o-m—Oh now I nnd missed my train for, if I didn't the locale of all the fair* and gatherings del dare to profane with his presence
see, R-o-m-e. Rome. Why, it must be wait to hear that bldssed letter?”
at which the-historical and religious tra­ the holy standard of the propbet, and
“
Why
it
isn't
a
letter
nt
all,
”
she
from—Oh dear me, it isn’t Rome,
let every Mussulman, if he sees an un­
said, in the tone of a superior being ditions of the race were circulated and believer. instantly make it known!"
either. I can’t make it out at all.”
kept alive. The Persian Empire was
And she turned it over and looked commiserating measureless aud inex­
weak and the Roman Empire w.u de­ I tbeir hosts pushed them over the roofs
cusable
ingnorance.
“
it
is
a
circular
mournfully at the receiving stamp on
or drove them out of the houses to be
from Wachenheimers, about their mil- clining, and their dominions bordering butchered by the soldiors and mob. The
the back.
upon Arabia foil an easy prey to the
"It was received ’ here at seven | linury opening next Thursday------ ”
bands now for the first time acting in scene waa different when a few years
The
bang
of
the
street
door
cut
off
o'clock this morning.” she said, finally.
concert. "The long scries of conquests ago, in order u&gt; obtain Christians as
“ Now, where would a letter have to ! the rest of the sentence, and Mrs. Mid­
that followed in quick succession were," volunteers, “flags of brotherly love"
come from to get here at seven o’clock? dlerib became aware that she was
say* the writer already alluded to, “of were paraded through the streets of
alone,
and
that
her
husband
was
the
If you knew that, we could tell where
course
attributed to tho potency of the Constantinople, which bore in white
angriest man in the State.
it came from."
upon a crimson ground the cross and the
“And what had occurred to vex profession of faith which formed their crescent.—N. F.' World.
“Let me look at it,” said Mr. Mid­
nattfe-cry, and their religious enthusi­
him,
”
she
said
to
her
neighbor,
who
dlerib, who was beginning to fidget
asm
grew
stronger
with
each
triumph.
dropped in during the morning, “1
with impatience. “Assassination by Silence.”
“ No,’' replied his »\ife, turning back can’t for the life of me imagine. Every­ The Arabs had at last found the all­
powerful name of which the children of
to tbe post-mark once more. “ I can thing about the house has gone on
Shem have ever dreamed, by means of
" Assassination by silence” is ,the
__
see what it is now. It’s Spartansburg, smoothly, and I can't recall a single
which Solomon controlled the demons latest Gallicism, It'was the verdict of
,Ky. Sarah Blanchard went thereafter irritating incident or Circumstance.
Men are strange animals,” she sighed, and the elements, was wafted through the medical men and of society in lhe
she married. I expect she wants to­
tho air on his magic carpet, or sealed
il isn’t Spartansburg, either, it’s Grid­ “and there is no accounting for their up the refractory genie in a bottle at case of a Frenchwoman recently de­
ceased; and a coroner’s jury would
ley. That’s where Cousin Jennie Bus­ vagaries and pecuiarities.”—Duriingion
the bottom of the sea. Henceforward probably have rendered the same ver­
Hawkeye.
kirk lives; her husband went out there
the conquered infidels were offered but dict if the case hod not been kept from
and bought a grist mill. I wonder if
one
alternative
—
to
acknowledge
the
rthe
cor .er. Noble by birth, she was,
His Royal ’fghness.
she’s coming out this summer? I nope
name of Allah and his prophet, or to and very rich; but she was hopelessly
if she does she won’t bring the chil­
The scene was a first-class carriage perish by the sword; while the formula,
rlain,
ugly of feature and hump-backed.
dren. But it isn’t from her, either. I on the Great Western Railway. The
•In the name of Allah, the merciful, tho
ler husband, a Duke, married her tor
thick that is'Mount Pleasant—Oh! It’s date need not bo mentioned. • There
compassionate,’ was over after placed at her money and hated her for her ugli­
from Ayit Harriet Murdock, and I were no ladies in the carriage. One ot
the head or every Moslem'writing. Tho
know they’ve all been killed by that lhe passengers took out his cigar-case, conquest of a country was first treated ness. A fortnight after her wedding
dreadful cyclone.
I can’t open the and, giving a look of inquiry, but not by the-e Bedouin rai'ders like that of an her martyrdom Im; an, but not as other
conjugal martyrdoms have done. The
letter, my hand trembles so. Do you making any remark, lit up. ^nd vigor­
or desert village; all the Duke lavished attentions on her—in
know, the last thing’! said to her when ously pulled away. As he progressed encampment
Krtable property that could be laid public; be was affectionate—before the
she moved out West, I said—Il isn't toward the end of his cigar he noticed
nds on was seized and shared among servants; it was "darling” and "be­
Mount Pleasant, either; there are cnly a look of great irritation on the face of
five letters in it. 1 can't make any- hi* vis-a vis. “ I am afraid. «ir,” said , the soldiery, and a poll-tax was imposed loved,” and "my little cat”—when any
oh all who chose to save themselves
thtDg out of it.”
the smoker, hurriedly, that my cigar from massacre by the profession of the one was present; but in private changed,
and onlv one old nunc was in the se­
“Perhaps,” said Mr. Middlerib, with annoys you.” “ It does, sir; it annoys
Mohammedan faith. But this primitive cret.
He pretended to be jealous of
a slight tinge of sarcasm in his inflec­ me excessively.” “ I am sure 1 beg
system soon became unmanageable as her, and so played the Othello.' He
tion, "perhaps we’d better send aftef your pardon,”*said the gentleman, and
their dominions extended, and a more had the hinges of all tbe doors 30 care
the carrier who brought it- He may- threw his cigar out of the window,
settled and elaborate governmon! was
know.”
“That’s all very well.” said his fellow­ required. Jhe only way in which this fully oi-ed that they could be.opened
without a creak, the domestic* were
“ But it is so tantalizing,” complained passenger. “ but I .meau to give you in could be secured was by leaving the ad­ trained to move about noiselessly, snares
Mr*. Middierib. “ to receive a letter charge directly I get to Bath. You ministration practically in tho hands of were set in the vast garden* of their ho­
and then not be able to tell who or were perfectly aware that this is not a native officers and holding the country tel so that never lhe chirp of the spar­
smoking-carriage, and 1 mean to de­ by a military occupation, which consti­
where it is from.”
row was heArd. The poor woman wa&lt;
“Did you ever try opening a letter to fend the rights of passengers.” “ I , tuted a perpetual stale of siege.
forced to.live in the midst of silence, and
ascertain these facts?” r.*ked her hus- am really very sorry, sir; but I took it
The possibility of a holy war being when they went together into society he
for granted that there was no objecbaud.
scowled so fearfully- nt every one who
preached
has
been
discussed
repeatedly
“I made up my mind, sir,"
Tbe lady looked nt him with an tiomV
of late years. It is held that In India approached his wife to speak to her that
expression ot speechless disdain upon was the dogmatic reproach, “soon after the influence of Islam has never been little by little people ceased to make the
we
left
Shindon,
that
I
would
giveyou
her features, and half whispered: “if
much more than superficial, and that at effort. And then after they had re­
that isn’t like a man." as though anv in charge the first opportunity.” Tben the present time an’ Indian Moslem, in turned, and she had gone to bed. he
woman ever looked into n letter until there was an awkward pause, and his observance and tenets, is but a Hin­ would enter with list shoe* on his feet,
presently
the
offender
said:
“
Perhaps
she had guessed nil around her circle of
doo in foreign dress. With scarcely an so as not to announce his coming, and
relatives and friends and clear through Jou will take my card. I happen to exception the Ulemas, when appealed would simulate a scone of’ jealousy.
old n public position, aud should like
the United States Postal Guide, to
to to decide whether or not India was That is to say, he would pace up and
to
avoid
any
disturbance.
”
"I
don't
decide whence and from whom it
want your card, sir.” "But you had anr al harb,—an. enemy’s country— down like one in a fury who is about to
came.
pronounced fetvas. In trie negative, an burst info reproaches: words of anger
better look at it.” The aggrieved pas­
This particxllar post mark, however,
senger looked at it contemptuously, but opinion confirmed later by the assembly would seem on the point of issuing from
was too “blind” for the most ingenious it was the card of a royal Duke! Things of Meccan. doctors, who disposed of his mouth; then he would stop by the
expert to decipher, and at last, with a now went on pleasantly; but before no the subject once for all. At the same bedside and raise his hand in threat; but
sigh and a little gesture of desp&amp;ir.Mrs. left the carnage the gentleman ex­ time it is pointed out that the Arabs he never struck, he never spoke, and,
Middlerib yielded to the inevitable,and pressed a hope that his Royal Highness who migrated to Africa and set up the resuming his walk, would go through
resignedly opened the letter, pausing
would not think that he had acted rival caliphate in Spain were not sub­ the same scene over and over again,
once or twice in the act, however, to wrongly. "That is a point we need ject to the same extraneous influences until, overcome by fatigue and horror,
look longingly bock at the tantalizing not discuss,” said his Royal Highness. as those under the caliphate ot Bagdad, the Duchess swooned. Every night for
post mark.
'
having mixed but little with the na­ ten years his victim watched for menaces
—London .Society.
•
“ At last*” groaned her husband,who
tives, and having preserved to the which he seemed about to proffer, but
by this time was burning up with curi­
present day their Arab customs, tradi­ to which he never gave vent. The doc­
Soap az Currency.
osity.
tors were summoned at last; but the
"How are you off for soap?” is &amp; tions, and general ogies. "The same
But she laid down tho envelope and slang-expression which originated in elements of Arab religiouB fanaticism,” utmost they could say was that they
looked at it &amp; little while before she Mexico. I discovered that fact in rath­ said the writer in The Times, “combined were in the presence of some horrible
turned to the unfolded letter in her er a carious way. In one of the small with Arab clan feeling, exist there as mystery which could not be fathomed
hand. Her husband by a desperate ef­ towns I bought some limes, and gave in the Hejax or Yemen, and should without killing the husband. And when
fort controlled his rising wrath, and, tbe girl one dollar in payment. By the some powerful Moslem saint and chief the poor woman died and the old nurse
in a voice harsh aud strained, besought way of change she returned me forty- —and there are many such in Morocco, told her story they rendered the verdict
her to rcjyd the letter, as It was late nine pieces of soap, the size of a water Tunis, and Aimers—preach the ex­ above recorded.—Detroit Free Press.
and he should have been down town cracker. I looked at her with aston­ termination of I fie Kffflrs, it would be
half an hour ago.
ishment, and she returned my look useless to hope that any such moderate The Desired Article Fully Dessribcd.
She did not answer. She opened the with equal surprise, when a police offi­ counsels would prevail as those -which
letter, turned tbe tint page to look for cer who witnessed the incident hasten­ averted a similar danger in India. It
The following letter was recently re­
the end vt it, went back to the first ed tx&gt; inform me that soap was the lego! might be strictly a ‘Pan-Islamic’ move­ ceived nt Castle Garden:
•
page, settled herself in an easy posi­ tender in many portions of the country ment,- to quote the current jagron of the
Addiea«&lt;-d nv&gt;*t full of re.«p&lt;&lt;et and bumbioday,
but
it
would
be
a
universal
Arab
tion. and said:
for small sums. I examined my change,
aesa in iberery &lt;U«UnxuH i«“d Conirnboarya
movement,
which
would
give
rise
to
in- Well, I wyi declare!”
of Emtmuion in tbe town ot Sew York.
and found that each cake was stamped
.
Then she read on in silencu, and Mr. with the name of a town and a manu­ exprenible horrors of war and blood­ United stale*.
,
HT.Fivn,J41nn.. July 3. un.
Mlddierib ground his teeth. Presently facture authorized by the Government. shed in Western Africa itself. *nd it Respected
Gentlemen: ‘
would
attract
sufficient
sympathy
'In
•he said:
•
Three yaw ago l arlfed in United State-i nt
Tbe cakes of soan were worth one and
“ H^m.”
'
a half cents each.
Afterward in my other Mohammedan countries to prove
She read three or four more lines travels I frequently received similar a serious danger to the general peace.”
The “unfurling of tho green flag” is a nionney a grest ileall. no * 1 hut M Dtorc anti
with eager eyes and noiseless lips, am? change. Many of the cakes showed
* hornte and uaxgon only I tint nota*ff«
soddenly exclaimed:
signs of having been in the wash-tub; form frequently used, probably because and I mo*t irKpociouly a*ic tl&gt;*
the
flag in question i* not green and con
“1 don't believe it!”
but that, I discovered, was not at all
den girl)
not
be
unfurled.
It
would
be
refresh
­
uncommon. Provided the stamp was
Uirlt I do
Denial) langn&lt;«
nuud of the document, end a moment not obliterated, the soap did not lose ing. indeed, to find any two authorities do uot.ap..■ -h^...
•tie must nut —i
iater astonished her husband by look- any value at* currency. Occasionally a quite agreed upon the subject of this lit:*, uau also dres-. h.ui&gt; boots and uianie),
lHWMn»e ckxbtnx* • v«-ry dear In Mtnacsouc
banner.
Mohammed's
earliest
standard
man would borrow a caA of a friend,
wash hi* bands and return with thanks. was the white turban which he cantured
replied in

gust and September, the corn crop of
the corn Stales cannot be more than
half a yield for the area planted. If
tbe same .weather continues Chat has
characterised the season.So far, what
with the weedr nature of tbe crops
from lack of cultivation, caused by tbe
sodden condition of the soil, prevent­
ing, the yield may shrink to not more
than a quarter of a crop.
What, then, i* indicated in view-of
these circumstances? 1. The clesniltg
of the crop so far as it may be possible.
2 In the event of an early frost, the
cutting up and shocking so much as
msjr be possible of all that portion yet
unripe, but hardening; and S: using
every means to make the oropego a*
far as possible. '
In the feeding of cattle it will be
found that shodeed corn, even if the
grain is not fully ripe, will feed cattle
economical! v and tat; but. in following
the cattle with bogs, itwoqld seem this
year to be the true policy to use more
hogs to pick up the refuse, with a view
to growth rather than fattening. In
the case of sheep, the grain itself must
be used, but here it will be found that
they will grind their food perfectly,
and this brings us again to swine,
where, more tnau in any other direc­
tion, money can. be saved by using
means to au end.
.
The first things to be attended to are
comfortable quarters, and facilities for
preparing the -fo*l and feeding it eco­
nomically and without waste.
In the feeding of hogs, our plan has
been to keep the pigs growing during
the summer, using clover, and other
succulent vegetation, pieced out frith
slop and grain. In lhe autumn, small
potatoes, pumpkins,- unripe squashes
and ocher vegetables may furnish the
ground-work of the food given, and as
these begin to fail, more and more
meal is added, until at lost meal fur­
nishes the sole food. Thus swine may
be made fully fat. and at the lowest
possible cost, whenever the price of
corn is over forty cents per bushel.
Tht higher the cost of corn the greater
the protit of feeding ground and cooked
food to swine. There is no probability
that the nrice of corn will be low for
two or three years to come. There­
fore, the time to prepare for saving in
the cost of food is now.— Prairie
A Pest Which Is Destroying Orchards
In Western Hew York.
It is a fact which can no longer be
concealed that,although this is a general
bearing year through the orchards of
Western New York, tbe crop of apples
is quite likely to be a short one. This
lamentable etale of affairs is not, how­
ever, to be attributed to the peculiar
weather condition* of the season, but
to the fact that a destructive parasite
has attacked the leaves of the trees,
and is working sail havoc with them.
This little insect is a species of the
aphis, but is commonly spoken of as
the “apple-louse.” It is by some con­
founded with the rose-bug, but in re­
ality is a •• horse of an altogether dif­
ferent color.” Its habit is to fasten it­
self to the young leaves of the trees
early in the season, where it feeds upon
the epidermis of the leaf. The visible
result of this is the turning brown of
the leaf and its subsequent dropping
off. Later the fruit seems affected, and
It, too, drops off. The damage al­
ready done is very great, and the
gravest fears are entertained by those
who have looked into the matter.
A Post-ErpreM reporter has examined
jrchards in this ana other counties, and
has found the scourge quite general.
Especiallv is this true of orchards in
Niagara County. Seneca County, Mon­
roe County, and Way pc. If you will
inspect your apple trees you will find
iha’t many of the leaves are already
curled and brown, and will upon the
■lightest touch fall to the ground.* The
young and growing fruit, top. drops
readily, and unless some effective meas­
ures are taken, and that right speedily,
to prevent it. the apple crop will fall so
far below the average as to cause se­
rious trouble. It is. however, possible
to fight the pest successfully, and ths
weapon to be employed is Paris green,
that enemy of potato-bugs and other
Vfermin. The best way to use.it is to
sprinkle the tree with a solution of the
poison. Of course, the only way to do
this is with a hose or a large syringe.
A hose and a portable force pump at­
tached to a tank on wheels would be
the easiest method probably, but it
would also be more expensive* than the
syringe method. The “apple-house”
is something of a new coiner here,
though this is not absolutely its first
appearance. In the past, however, its
ravages have been for less extensive,
and general attention has not before
been drawn to it. Farmers and pomologists should take every measure to
check it? destructive work.—Rochester
Post-Express.

—For genuine originality of concep­
tion and boldness of execution the
scheme devised and carried out by a
Butte County, Cal., farmer, challenges
hearty admiration.
Being short of
“hands.” amLunable to find men willing
to work, be drove to the nearest town
loaded into his spacious vehicle idl the
drunken men he could find. 4t'hose
who wen not sufficiently helpless to be
easily managed he plied with liquor
until the desired stage of helplessness
was reached, and then drove-them all
to bis farm. The result of this high­
handed proceeding was eminently sat­
isfactory.— Chicago Herald.

hatchet.

In order w bring out «U tu, l.terrr
and unUu-nt tafan or Jnffirmu,
Him., tbe manager., ot tbe count, fair
odered a Jug ol ubiakg u a piixe r«r
the brat essay on ttguperance.
Nashville, Tenn., lias a female robbcrwlio entices men to her den and

surrender tbeir money and their jew­
elry-

Rev. H. Hoftinai), of Lincoln, HL, has
been found guilty of JyjDg. mealing,
adultety, slander, and swindling. He
didn’t mean to be hung f^ralamb.

8onora.uCal, bonst* a citizen whose
boots are 17| inches long, a half inch
slxirter than the alioes required by. hie
wife. Thq« is one of the truths that are
stranger, than fiction.
FREE OF CHARGE.
AU peraoos suffering from Cough,, Asthma
Bronchi!!*, Lou ot \ alee, w an? affection of
Bie£hn^t an!1 Lunga, are rvqueticd tn call at
F. T. Bows m and grt a trial bottle of Dr.
Kin? s New DMcorerv for Couaumption, free
of charge, which will tonrince them of Its woodrrful merit* and almw what a regular dollaralxe boUl? will do. Call early.
There are »:x different type* oftbe GoddeM
nt Liberty &lt;float In thi» country and not one of
your ahrter adopt.

HopBtumCa.To-mo.
I have bee!) slek for the jwf: ,‘1 -year*, »ufwring from dyspepsia and ci-nend WeakneM. I
have UMtd three bottle, of Hop Bitters, and they
done wonder*for me. I am well aud able
and eat and sleep aud). I cannot *a*
too much for Hop Bitter/
J
___ __
SIMON ROBBINS.
They have discovered the bed of an anc!ent
river while digging a well In Arkanaa*. Won­
der what tbe river got out of bed for!
ta‘
rarJr tor
&gt;■1“T1V t'",&lt;UU‘U1'|I™1 .nd B., Firrr.
1 nee .X) ceou.ta- ar~_ r
jri .-*/
Apply into nostrils witb|ifit!e$f!ngen
.'“J'lms-lt. mt .uilerer.
from Catarrh, have been cured by Ely's Cream
Palm. My seme of smell restored aud health
rrraUy Improved. C. M. Staslkt, Dealer tn
and Shoes, Ithaca, N. Y.( - .
"TItTJ Vandcneen, Druggist. Grand Haven
Mich.-I ran »*feJy recommend Ely’s Cream
Bahn for the cure of (. aurrh. Cold in the head,
Ac. Before I had used the first bottle I purcIiusctI of you I flud-myself cared.
At times I
could wrarcely smell anything and had a head­
ache most of the thue. Hzxnv Lillt, Agent
fojcjj40 Amerlc*n Lxprea* Co., Grand Haven,

FtMilishness places iuelf In the foremost rank
tobeobserved; Intelligence stand* Iu the bindI^&lt;ly Bcautiflcr*.—L*&lt;|[&lt;&gt;* you cannot make
fair skin, rosy checks, and sparkling eve •• with
all the cosmetics of France or beautifiera of the
world, while in poor health, nnrf nothing will
give you »ueh rich td&lt;nd, good health strength
and beauty as Hop Bitter*. A trial fa certain
proof.

The District Court at Cincinnati ha. decided
that tbe word “damn’’ I. not a profane word.
THE HEIGHT OF FOLLY.
To wait until you are in bed with disease you
.nay not get over for munth&gt;, i» the height of
folly, when you might i)e easily cured during
the early .ymptoma by Parker'. Ginger Tonic.
We have ’ known sickly families made the
'heabhleat, by a timely uh- of this pure medi­
cine.—Observer

Troy thieve* muit be on time even If they
have to steal tbe clock* out of chrches.
HIGHLY ESTEEMED.
The youthful color and a rich lustre nre re
stored to faded or gray hair by the use of Park­
er’s Hair Balsam, a Harmless dressing highly
esteemed for It* perfume and purity.

It Is said that Hannibal Hamlin hasn’t miss­
ed * bull tight since be landed in Spain.
IXPOHTA.XTTOTBiTELEBS.

Special inducements arc offered you by tbe
Burlington Route, It will pay you to read’their
advertisements to be found elsewhere In this

Treadwell Smith, colored, of Manhawet was
arrestod on Saturday for tying lhe toil* of two
cal* together and hanging tbe cat* over a
clothe* line. H&lt;- w&gt;* fined &lt;2.
THE BAD ANDW0THLES8
arc never imitated or couterfeitcd. This Is
especially true of a family medicine, and It is
l»&gt;eitive proof that the remedy Imitated is of
highest value. A* soon a* It luul been tested
and proved by the whole world that Hop Bit­
ter* wa* tbe purest, beat and most volatile fam­
ily medicine on earth many imttatioDa sprung
up and Ix-gnn to steal the notices hi which the
press and peottle of the country had expres ed
the merits of H. B., aud in every way trving to
induce suffering invalids to use their stuff in
rtcad, expecting to make mouqy.ou the credi
and good name of H. B. Many’other* started
nostrums nut up In similar stvle to H. B., with
variously devised names in which the worn
•Hon or • Hops” were used tu a wav to IndutK
people to believe they were the same as Hoy­
Bitters. All
...__ &gt;1_______ r

pechUy those with the word “Hop” or “Hops”
in tbeir name, are imitation* or countcrfelteBeware of them. Touch none of them. f*e
nothing but genuine Hop Bitter*, with n bunch
or cluster of green Hop* on the white label
Trust nothing else. Druggist*mnd dealers are
torf^u ,,'alust dealing *n IralOtion*- or conn­
NOTICE.
“
Woodland, Sept “7th, 1882TiBWbora it jn*y concern.—I herein- warn
you not to trust or harbor any of my family at
my expense. A* I shall pay no debt* -*X
their contraction from date hereof.
Patrick CvxxnrutuM.

NOTICE.
Whekeas, My wife, Birdie Bogardu*. ha*

—The Gridley (Cal.) Herald says:
her souwacttag after thU
Recently a ten-horse team with an im­
Datcd, Sunfield, Sept. 2J&gt;, 1882.
mense load ot lumber went, off Dead­
Hmxxt 8. Boeaanr*. .
man’s grade, on tbe Chico and Hum­
boldt road, about twelve miles from
Chico, and were precipitated into a
canyon several -hundred feet deep.
Seven of the horses were killed and the What is happealng all around thia onucty •
abd the borders &lt;rf Eaton.
driver, named Kernard, had one leg
broken and sustained various bruises.
The accident waa cause by the brake­
block giving way while the outfit wm

• IF YOU WANT TO KNOW

The News

oa the grade.

NASH VILLE.

�NEER STORE

.3 GOODS IXOfifiBINGLY LOW~“
I. nu-t

^■oaiwts lH levied by tax, and the law
provides that tha several township clerks
shall make and deliver to tbe supervisor
of his township a certified copy of all autatnenu of mewiea to be raised by tax in his
township, and tho township clerk to deliver
a certified &lt;x«py to tho supervisor, and arid
auperrieor to deliver the same to the oounly
elrrk and
WsMtxas. this board hne been legally
advised by tbe prosecuting attorney of this
connty. therefor*
1
Btsolood, that the board of Supervisors
stand adjourned until next Thursday, Oct.
19th, A. D. 1882. for the purpose of pct
foctiug the several reports Iron; the town­
ship clerks of ^rry county.
Mr. Merrick moved to amend by fixing
lhe time at Wednesday, the 18th, which
amendment was accepted by Mr. Vole
The reooiqiioo
"
adopted and board adjourned.
*
Enoch Axdbcs, Clerk
Wednesday, Oct. D=lh, 1881 '
Board met parauant io adjournment.
Roll called. Journal read and approvod.
On motion of Mr. Dewaon, tbe reports of
tbe several township clerks ware referred
to tbe prvoocuting attorney for examina-

After hearing a partial report from tbe
prosecuting attorney upon the reports re­
ferred to b&lt;m, and train* discusion thereon,
on motion of Mr. Campbell board adjourned
till the hour of eight o'clock to-morrow
morning.

far —W

■&gt;i&gt;read ut*vtt tbe s*-assmeat rolls of the
proper townehipB and of the wards of the
-*liy-of Hasel up.
Motion earned by the tollowing vote:
Area—Mensra. Baroam, Cole. Campbell.
Dawson, Merrick.’ Nye, Polley. Rtichie, PEN GELIY'S WOMAN’S FRIEND
Towne, Wiofi *■&lt;» chairuian—11. Nays—
-Measrs. Abbey, Cridler. Coven, Gott. Hicks, Every mother of daughter* should
know about it—becauaa it brings
and Pleroa—6. Absent—Mr. raxr;—1.
On motion of Mr. Merrick, board than ad•
health
jearned till the hour of eight o'clock to-mor
row morning.
Exocit Axnxcs. Clerk.
Friday, Oct. 20th, 1?82.
Board met at 8 a. m. Roll called. Jour­
nal read and approved.
Mr. AbMy moved that the chair appoint a
ommltioe of five to equalise the fractional
achool districts within lhe county.
Mo lon lost by the following vote:
Ayes—Messrs. Abbey, Coven and Ritchie
—8. Nays—Messrs. Barry. Barnum, Cole,
Campbell, Dawson, Hicks, Memcks, Nye,
Polley. Pieroe, Towne, Wing and chairman
—13. Absent—Messrs. Cridler and Gott—

The spacial committee further reported as
follows:
To Uf BaaatrMe Hoard of Superritor* oj
Barry Co., IMi.:
Gentlemen—Your special committee to
whom was referred the claim ot C. W. Tay­
lor, Oo. drain com., Na 169*
Am t claimed
Am’l recommended
Which is respectfully submitted.
E. F. Nra,
.
C. II. Hicks.
On motion of Mr. Abbey, the report was
accepted, and on motion of Mr. Merrick
lhe same waa adopted by the following vote:
Ayes, 12; aays, 8; absent, 8.
Ou motion of Mr. Towne, board then look
a rccenatill lhe hour of 1 p. m.

Board met at tbe beur fixed. Roll called
After the reading of tbe journal, on motion
of Mr. Polley, Iraanl adjourned till Monday,.
January 8th, al tho'hour of 2. p. tn.
'
Oxsom Swtrr, Cbainman.
Thursday, Oct. 19lh,1882.
Board uiet nt tbe hour fixed and proceed­
Exocit Asdxus, Cbunty Clerk.
ed to business.
Mr. Barnum moved that the county canDO NOT BE DECE1VED.
r*Mn for the coming year be paid lhe same
In these times of quack medicine advertise­
compensation as is received by members of ment* everywhere it is truly gratifying to find
the board of supervisors.
one remedy that is worthy of praise and which,
really does as recommended. Electric Bitters
Motion carried by the following vote :
we can vouch for a* being a true and reliable
Ayts, 18; nays, 0.
\
remedy, aud one that will do aa recommended.
On motion of Mr. Merrick, a recess was Tliey
Invariably cure Stomach and Liver Com
taken till the hour of 11 a. m.
plaint*. Disease* of the Kidneys,and Urinary
ilifficulties. We know whereof we speak, and
On assembling, the committee on claims can readily say, give them a trial. Sold at fifty
cents a bottle, by F. T, Boise.
presented their final report as follows:
167 G D. Babcock, dep. sher.
feesv1..
SHIA DIFFICULT PROBLEM SOLVED.
179 C- W. Tayler, services as
The desire for stimulant* is becoming a
county drain com”
monstiots evil and tow to overcome it is a ser­
176 G. D. Babcock, dep. sher.
ious question with reformers. Parker’s Gin­
ger Tonic fairly solves the difficult problem.
177 Ferguson A Fullerton.
Itlnvlgoratea body and mind without intoxicat­
holding inquest
10 00 ing, and has brought health and happiness to
178 M. F. Jordanrjus. fees.,
many desolate home*.—Enqlrqr. See other
179 W. A. Shank, officers fees
180 Nashville Xesra, printing
disal­
181 Dennis &amp; xSlingerland,
ENTIRELY SATISFACTORY.
182 printing ...,\
lowed,
Ladles wishing a perfume that combines
188 Jm. Clarke, Attor’y fees
refer’d
novelty delicacy aud richness find Florcaton
IM A. C. Carpenter, jur. fees
Cologne entirely satisfactory.
165 L. Hayes, jpror fee" ...
188 8. Abraham, juror fees..
167 Wm. Dye, juror fees....
188 Jas. Irving, juror fees ..
189 Frank Hayes, juror fees.
If you are a frequenter or &gt; resident of *
190 H. Marsh, juror fees....
lalasmatlc district, barricade your system
against lhe scourge of all new conn tries—
191 Geo. Walker, wit. fees..
ague,
billion* and inlcrmlUcnt fevers—by tbe
182 J. Johnson, wit. fees....
use of Hop Bitters.
198 W. VanEvery, wit. fees .
LvnrkaTox, Mich.,.Feb. 2,1880.
194 8. Johnson, witness fees.
I have sold Hop Bitters for four years and
r.'jfWm. Parker, wit. fees ..
there is n&lt;&gt; medldae that surpaasess 'them for
196 J. Weissert k Son, hard.
bilious attack*, kidney complaints and many
197 Barry Co. Democrat,
diseases incident to this malarial climate.
printing
195 E. H. Lathrop, ex. of
insane parson
199 Wm. M. ."rudder, lime.. .
. .
All of which is respectfully submitted.
SHE RUINED HER HEALTH AT SCHOOL.
Wm. H. Msxkick,
- Sad. but needles*. With proper care and tlie
Jamxs N. Covxxt,
use of ZtMrPhora, atneeded periods, her splen­
did intellect might now lw supported by perfect
physical powers and grace. \
.

BftAIN AND NERVE.
Wells’ Health Renewer, greatest remedy o
earth for Impotence, leannesa, sexual deblliti
Ac., 81. at druggist*. Mich. Depot. JAMES t
DAVIS A COTDetroit Mich.

Board met at the hour fixed with a quor­
um present.
Mr. Towne moved that claim No 183 be
allowed at $ 10, the mmount chimed, which
motion preuailed by lhe following vote :
Ayan, 18; nays, 0; absent, 6.
On motion of Mr. Towne, claim No. 169
was referred to the special committee upou
til. r.fWkrt —r tla.
n.■

For fall and winter trade are coimning in.
lent and cheap.' Examine them.

TO OVER-WORIED WOMEN

FEVER AND AGUE.
troubled with Ague, Chills and Fe­
ta Fever, Bemitfent or Intermitting
Fitt Sweats or any disease that come*

PRINCIPAL* LINE

CASK PAID FOR BUTTER AND EGGS.
To Women Advanced in Life
Who suffer from Hot Flushe*, cither before or
after change, or from any of the Irregularities attsndlDC tbo Critical Period. Bloating, Numbnoe*. Walu:fuli&gt;«». Palpitation. Etc.
•AH these, and many other dlsUeealng compi*luU. usually attributed to other causes, but
really peculiar to the sea, WILL CZBTAINLT

NEW VICTOR SEWING MACHINE is VICTOROUS,
tsr Ready pay secures for you all tbe advantages in trade.

KANSAS CITY

rie*. will funiUh privafeiy to persons asking.
Adiireaa.

R, PENGELLY, M. D.,
ISoUba DroffyisttJ #

KALAMAZOO, MICH.

PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM.
. Inu liih i» Beam
uhe youthful color to £Tey

filled with Stoves of 20 Different Kinds.

The MONUMENTAL is, lhe Finest Hound
Store Made.

DIRECTIONS
^LELY’S

.CJEAMW
uh chai

Florrstw Cehpe.

PARKER’S

GINGERTONIC
A Pare Family Medicine that Never Intxtkaln.

If you area nsechanie or firmer. »n&lt;n out with
&lt;wr-»' k or a mother run down bv Hmiiy c«
iiold dunes try Pa mean's Ctwcau Toxic.
If yon are a lawyer, minister or InmneM man «*■
lauded i*y mental strain or a ns mi. cam do nos
u'-e mtoxicaling slunuLutg Lux us: Pskitsx'*

im

effiwtoslly rtvatHv*
I the Basal passage* «*

Paints, Oils and Colors, Doors, Glass, Sash and
Blinds Iron and Wood Pumps,Wagons, Buggies,
Seeders. Plows, Land Rollers, ‘‘Reed Spring­
tooth Harrow.

L'uequaled For Cold in lhe Head
Tbe Ila In, has gainrrl an rnrisbt* reputation where
« re* known, iffep’acing al! otb-r prrpennlone.

Large assortment of Shelf Goods and Tinware, and the beet
Tinner in the County.

Recognized as a Wonderful Discovery.
8-4&lt;i br drueriri* alSOela.

On re cnl pi of price

GROCERY*

POSITIVELY CURED

Benson’s Capcine
Porous Piasters.

SALT and FRESH MEATS
Good Goodsand Full Weight

Not Fail
to send for
■oar FALL
Price-List
for 1882.'
FYec to any address upon
application. Contain-de.
scriptions of everything
required for Personal or Family use,
with over 2,200 illustration*. We sell
all goods at wholesale prices, in
quantities to suit the purdumer. The
only institution in America who make
this their special business.
Address

The MANIPULATER

I* the G n ateet 8- Ilins Anlete. and mo&gt;t pnpolar 81

MONTGOMERY WARD &amp; CO.,

lift

IT STANDS THE TEST OF TIME.
Time tries all things, and few are the cus­
tom*, habits or adjunct* of life that are not
swept away before its rwnorselre* march. Re­
medy after remedy for cxirns ha* been introduc­
ed. tested, and found wanting. Putnam's
Painless Corn Extractor alone holds undisturb­
ed awar. gathering new strength as years roll
ou, and bolding ft with tbe jwwrr that merit
alone can rive. Take no substitute. Putnams
Painless Corn Extractor never falls to make a
complete cure. Sold everywhere. Wholesale,
J. E- DAVIS &amp; Co., Detroit.

They are excel­

Of the best qQality and lowest in price. - Try our 40e Tea.
Don’t buy poor eggs unless you prefer them. Our egg fester
tells you which are poor.

ATHBLY BOISE,

BUCKLBN-S ARNICA SALVE.
Tbe best salve in tbe world for Cuts, Bruise*.
oiv», vKc&lt;&gt;,
luivuiu. rever wires, leuer,
Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all
Skin Eroptloas, and positively cures Pile*. It
Is guaranteed to rive perfect satisfaction, or
monev refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For
Gewtlemeu—Year special committee to sale byF. T. Boisx.
A young lady-attending halls-and parties
whom waa referred the couiqr drain com­
missioner's report, having had the aame un­ should always secure a female chaperone until
der their consideration, would respectful'y abe Is able ao call some male chap her own.
recomtnend that said report be laid noon
the table.
E. F. Nta,
CBas. H. Hickj.,
A. J. Gott.
On motion of Mr. Abbey, the report
A Baltimore belle has married a policeman.
accepted.
His beat waa In front of her bouse for over a
Mr. Barnum moved the adoption
year, aud she noticed that be never snored.

Ayas, 18; nays. 0.
Tbe county drain commissioner presented
* auppienientsi report which wm on mo­
tion of Mr. Polley aeceptad and adopted by
the following vote:
Ayea—Messrs. Abbey, Barry, Barnum,
Cbfe, Cridler, Dawson, Golt, Hicki. Marrick. Nye, Polley, Pieroe, Ritchie, ’Towne,
Wing and chairman—16. Nays—Given
and Campbell—2.
Mr. Dawsun moved that the report of the
several township storks and of the recorder
of tbe city of Hastings be accepted, which
motion prevailed.

HERE ARE RARGAINS FOR YOTi

TO YOUNG LINES

The special committee above mentioned
through their chairman, Mr. Nye, offered
the following report:
To tka HoturrabU Board of* Saptrritors of
Barry Co., Mtek.
' '

Motion lost by the following rate:
Ayes—Messrs. Abbey, Barnum, Hieka,
Nye, Ritchie and Towne—6.
•Measrs. Barry, Cole, Cridler, Covert, Camp­
bell, Dawson, Gott, Merrick, Polley, Pierce,
Wing an&lt; chairman—12.
Mr. Dawson moved that lhe report of the
eanaty drain commissioner be adopted,
which motion prevailed by tbe following

iu oniar to make room lor our Fall and Winter Goods, we
are celling our finest stocKa Of Clothing at prices that re­
quire no burteriug to sell.’
' dH

MEAT MARKET.
n-niM the masuiaetarers have received the
&lt;miy matlab ever gnraa for porous piasters.

Bsdmu’s Capone Pom Plaster!
SEABURY 4 JOHNSON, *
___ Msnafs rtwiag mlMx Mw Tort.

Smsiei Ham and Shoulders.

I CORN aad BUNION PLASTER.'

ERRORS OF YOUTH

SOUTH &amp; WEST,"

Fresh and Salt Meats,

Lard, by the lb: or barren
nr The Highest Market Price paid
for Hklea, Pelts. Ate.

Only 50 cents a Year.

flsuday tbe Bek dwg wf llsvessbsr.
A.D. IMS.ati»n o'clock, in tho foretuoa. al* the
Louse «u lhe prrmiae* described Ulow In lhe
tiiisgv
of
Nashville
Iu
tbo
county
of Barry, iu th* state of Michigan, pursuant to IIcense nnd authority granlrd to me &lt;ib tbe SSth dor
ofStovvmbevjl.D.iMi.by t be Probate* Court of Barry
Coub y, Michigan, all of tbe estaU, right. IU** and
cBtervat of tbe Mid derearoed ot. In and to the real
eetati’ Sltvsh 1 sod bring io tireeuunty of Barry, In
lhe Mita of Michigan, known and dewenbed aa fol-

Freah Goods, Full Wai&lt;hta and
Satisfaction Guaranteed.

HEX KI* KOK

THE MONARCH

BILLIARD HALL
'

(XoLIquw*.

C. N. DUNHAM.

---------- ... —

. —----------- |luH.r |&gt;uhli»h«J
their&gt;ulMcr!plinn

▲GENTS! For Gen. Dodge's Dew book
THIRTY-THREE YEARS AHONC

NO PATENT NO PAY OUR WILD INDIANS

Finns
mnoirsm

* introduction by Gen. W. T. Sherman. Cuotaias ■
n-ethfui and graphic record of the Sutbnr^ nfeoi ..
tfeoa, thrilling adventure* and exritmg experieac. ■

�It rM down hiU on b smooth
'

•

■

in. j*rf«tly

MEN’

This mads
I tremendous impression on the inhabi­
tant w ho really belived that the pow­
ers of tbe machine were perfectly marveloita, both as regards speed and en­
durance, and after divine service there
was a unanimous call for an exhibition
Three thousand dollar fire at East ride on the winged pegasns.
Saginaw.
L
THE XJOUSTY.
Orange Baker of Forester suicided,
Saturday.
.
Wm. Blake of Ingham county waa Mrs. Hartwell of Allegan.
kicked to death by a horse.
e
Will Stanton and Rom Cadart of La­
. Gov. Plaiated of Maine is campaign­ cey aro married aud ofl to Chicago.
ing iu this state thia week.
Mrs. Fritz Lentz of Missouri, once of
The Huron and Northern railroad Woodland, died recently of typhoid
has been extended to Bad Ax- ’
fever.
.
Tbe German workingmen of Muske­
D. M. Treat of Assyria has sold his
gon will build a $7,000 hall.
40 on section 12 to 8. G, Hayes and bods
Win. Vandekar was tfirown out of
for Cj,000.
.his wagon at Owosso, and killed.
Henry Hodges, wife and daughter, of
Lumber camp victims: Robert Watts Califoria, are visiting in Cedar Creek
a young unmarried man of Howard and Baltimore.
•
.
City.
The Congregational churches of Bar­
Tbe Evqhipg News has/filled an ry and Lacey and the M. E. churches of
answer to|Prol.\McLaio’* charges of
Johnstown and Assyria all united in a
libel.
}
“harvest home” meeting at Lacey, re­
CUfionr Mullikin. a boy of Lansing, cently.
was thrown from his horse and fatally
It is reported that Joseph Simmons,
injured.
sons, and families, who went from
We do not ask you to take our assertions on paper, but we do want you to come and ex­
Jackson has four miles of street rail­ Woodland to Missouri, arc disgusted
road and ten cars acquired in six with the country and will return as amine our prices and see the largest stock of goods in Barry county.
months.
soon as possible.
Eddie Houseman fell from a boat in­
Mr. 1‘rindle, tbe Middleville Norman
to ‘Shiawassee river. Tuesday, and horse breeder, took five .or six premi­
was drowned.
•
ums at the Grand Rapids fair with the
Clarence Thompson of Grand Blanco same stock that he couldn't get a pre­
killed in the lumber woods near the mium with at Hastings.
,
An Gros river.
The Wesleyan Methodists of Hickory
Mrs.Effie C.White-Lewis waa bora at Venice,
Legislative and county prohibition Corners recently dedicated a new
tickets'hnve been nominated in Wash­ church, raising over $500 on dedication Cayuga county, N. Y., May 12, 1335. When she
wm eight years old berparenta removed to near
tenaw count}*.
day. which more than paid the balance thia place settling in the home which they now
The upper Peninsula is growing rap­ due. Tbe church cost $2,150.
occupy, three miles north, by the water which
idly. In Maniatigile alone $200,000
Fred Sweet’s electric clock business la to familiarly known at “White’s Lake. ” In
were put into two new buildings the at Hostings is growing rapidly, and thia quiet home of beautiful surroondlngs her '
past year.
before long that virtuous village will happy girlhood days were passed; and there
A reunion of ex-prisoners of war oc­ be known all over the civilized world she grew to that beautiful and graceful young j
curred at Lyons recently and camp No. as the birthplacc'-of a great invention. womanhood in whlqb abe waa known and be­
loved by so many in all thia region. Her edu­
2 was organized.
Being engaged in clothing and lumber business in Big Rap­
cation, acquired m it waa at the college of this
Eliza ;Travis, a child of 18, suicided
The Workingman’s Tariff.
place, never took her long at a time from the ids, have concluded to dispose of by private and auction sale
because her father threatened to kill
surroundings
of
her
borne
and
the
presence
of
Few men bave ever crowded more
with a corn cutter.
the entire stock
relatives. Situated as It wm by tbe lake which
A young man named Kimball, of good sense on tho tariff question into
Grand Rapids, probably fatally shot fewer words than C. H. Barlow of
Evart, Micb., who writes the following
himself while hunting.
at the lime of her marriage to Mr. Lewis, there
A member of a Cleveland, 0.. bunt­ letter to the Detroit Evening Newt:
With a proper fear of landing in vour
ing party was mistaken for a bear aud
capacious waste basket I address you.
shot dead near Grand Rapids.
Have been reading an article in The number. She died Sept. 20, 1882, of puerperal
A. Backus jr. &amp; Son's plaining mill News on the tariff question, and I no­
at Detroit, destroyed by fire Tuesday tice that great encouragement is held
• night. Loes-t108.000, insurance $40,000. out to tbo laboring classes and their
votes solicited to help gain tbe case, as daya more than a year ago (Sept 14, 1881) it
F. A. Fields, a young man just start­ though the tariff, whether np or down,
ed in business on borrowed money at could help homeless laborers* .
I believe that it is wrong to encour­
Bronson, lust $513 by burglun..
It age laborers or any other class of pro­ and flowers to wish her mucn Joy In the new
of her life upon which she wm entering. Which means a saving of 30 to 50 per cent to the purchaser
may break him.
ducers to rely upon political action or epoch
It waa my privilege to pronounce tbe word*
A libel suit brought by Peoples, the legislation of any kind for material which united her to the husband of her choice- j
help.
Ten
years
ago
I
was
landed
iu
supposed murderer of Martha Whitla
SALE TO COMMENCE FIRST DAY OF OCTOBER.
the nit of labor and compelled to de­
angiust the Post and Tribune, is being pend upon wages for a living. I was great joy and long life. Flushed with health,
tried at Detroit.
one of 500 men of a mill gangin a lum­ radiant with beauty and blessed by her many
REAP THE
AnEaal Saginaw man is going te con­ bering country. I soon learned that friends, she partook of tbe wedding feMt and
then came with her husband to this home which
struct some railroad cars that will be neither tho poltician nor any other of be had made ready for her reception, with tbe
the popular teachers of isms and ideals expectation of her cntoylng with him many
transformable into an opera house at could be of any material use to me.
years of happineas. Who of all thow- present
pleasure, and will cost $75,000.
But I saw the crowd often getting here today dm a better hope of man v years to
AND BUY, BUY, BUY.
A foreign tra«ip asked to sleep in a very much excited and enthusiastic come than she had a year ago! Bat alaa for hu­
man anticipations 1 How •adly does this scence
Jackson barn, and being refused forced over political and theological specu­ contract with that of only a brief year ago. We
lations, divided and following their
Jeans
Suits,
43.75,
4.50, 5.00. Satinett Suits, 5.00, 6.00, 7.00
his way in and hung himself. All he porticular favorites, and at times rous­ who then spoke tbe words of joy, are now called
Men’s Cotton Worsted Suits. 4.50, 5.00, 6.00.
upon to utter the burial wrvire of the dead.
wanted was a place to die.
ed op to the uttnot pitch of enthusiasm Tne
beauty still lingers upon he- cold face,
A runaway team killed two women at political and other revivals.
but the soul which once shone through it hu Union C&amp;ssimere Suits, $6, 7, 9.
All-wool Cassimere Suits,
In the panic of 73. when wages stop­ departed. There Is no need that I should utter
at Grand Rapids; and Jacob Walker of ped,
$9, 10, 12, 13. All-wool Worsted Suits, $10, 12, 14.
within three to six weeks after any word about her beautiful life, which bM
Ypsilanti and John Beneberger of Cass heir great glorifications, I saw this gone so suddenly out, leaving her husband des­
Pilot Suits, 10.50, 12, 14.
county went to kingdom come in tbe host of workers—lacking one in fifty— olate and l»er father'* house in unuttenuile sor­ Beaver Suits, »12, 13: 14.
one-half on the tramp and tbe other row. Your ifvsence in such large numbers is
same manner.
.
100 pairs Pants at *1.
half on the town ; ana those who had
Various interior newspapers quote excited them to such joy and “glory”
100 Vests, 60e to *2.
Union Cassimere Pants, *2 to 3.
potatoes at 35 cents per bushel, but by had got their reward and were gone,
Wool Cassimere Pants, $3, 3.50, 4.
the time they get to Detroit they are and the happy converts to political and
60—and not extra good even at that other theories of salvation found them­
Boys’ Clothing : School Suits, 6 to 14, $4 to 6; All-wool
selves hungry and unable to apply
price.—Nan.
tbeir star-spangled theories; but that which has so suddenly cut her down we
Cassimeres, *5.50 to 7.
Mrs. Jennie Bolton, of Ludington, an they had to be fed and sheltered
Boys’ Suits, 11 to 16 : Union Cassimeres, $4.87 to 10.
inmate of a disreputable bouse, com­ all the same, and entirely another class of such sorrow In three beautiful assurances
mitted suicide Monday night by taking of ‘'reformers” had to furnish the fund. which! read to you a few minutes ago from the Souths’ Suits, 32 to 36 :
Union Cassimeres, 5.75 to 6, 11;
I saw one in fifty of this “unlucky”
morphine. “The way of £he transgres­ host get out for the homestead and word of our God: ‘God is our refuge and
strength, a very preseat help in trouble; there­
Worsted Suits, 7, 8, 9, 10.
sor is hard.”
Flint A Pere Markette railroad lands fore will not we fear though th. earth be re
Worsted and Cassimere Overcoats, 5, 6, 8, 10. 100 odd Coats
Lodges of the Knights of Labor, the of north Michigan ; and these men, bemost widespread, powerful, aud reas­ giniiig poor as tramps five to ten years held at the bouse last Sabbath afternoon in the
at 3, worth 5.
■go, are to-day independent farmers,
onable labor league ever known in and, tariff or no tariff, high or low wa­ presence at a very large number, of friends, for
whose manifold tokens of sympathy those who Women’s and Children's Shoes at 50 cts on the Dollar.
Men’s
fids country, are being organized in ges, republican or democrat adminis­ mourn her low ar j sincerely grateful.—KalaBoots at the same.
tration. all is well with them; for leg­ inaioo Daily Telegraph.
..........
this state.
islate
as
you
may.
got&gt;d
or
bad,
their
During tbe past season the Kalama­ granaries are full, their barns cram­
All Yard goods, including Prints, Shirtings, Demins. Ticks,
ELK4TIO.V .&gt;OTIi E.
zoo canning works hare put up of med to the ridge pole, and they are in­
Stripes, Etc., closed at actual cost.
com 90,000 cans, of tomatoes 30,000, dependent in.spite of all that man can
beans 16,000, peas 11,000, and many do. Can your politician or theologian
beat thib plan T
tyThis is a genuine closing sale. All kinds of country
cans of blackberries and other fruits.
Tbe immense crops, and fine flocks
produce taken at full and satisfactory prices. Parties indebted
Homer being alow about raising the and herds, the fine farms and peace,
prosperity
and
contentment
of
the
few
bonus for the new Ohio &amp; Mich, rail­
either by note or account are requested to call and settle be­
deserters from the labor army who
road, Albion and Concord are taking broke away from the crowd, all by
fore I close for good in Nashville.
. heart and trying by bonus-raising to themselves, and came into the wilder­
Stale Treasurer, Audbuy the road to run via them instead ness,-tn cut tbe Gordian knot with the
ax
—
all
this
tells
a
story
that
cannot
be
of Homer.
taken down.
Wm. Shapespeare is running for «•£3TStore building for sale or rent
A man would have tn vote very early Congreiut for the Third CuogrcMioDal DiMrict,
retary of the state on the fusion ticket and often, and “agitate” politicalism this state to which this county belongs ; also a
and
theories a good while, ere he could Senator for tbe Fifteenth SenatoriiuDislrict,
over at Kalamazoo; aud yet this is the
CUT SHOWING THE SIMPLICITY QE THE
find a better way to solve the problem couKUttng of the counties of Barry and Eaton •
name of the man who wrote : “Fling of life.
away Mubition; by that sin fell the
district
Ten thousand north Michigan pio­
angels,’"
'
neers, beginning penniless in ’72 and
The brown stallion Tekonsha, bred "70, have proclaimed a truth that is ot
and raiM-d at Jacksou, recently trotted ' vastly more importance to poor Ameri­
cans— proclaimed it with sharp ateel in
a mil* st Vienna, Austria in 2.341—the till* hearts of the beech and maple for­
bcM re-cord e*er madeou the European est trees—than anything that popular
in« m. and waa immediately after, teachers have ever been able to tell to
to an Austrian nobleman fori the weary laden.
This truth says in most emphatic
terms that industrious, frugal working­
men eon win home and true liberty in
nr capitalist

$2.75
3.00
4.75
5.oo
6.oo

ULSTERS and OVERCOATS—

$3.75
4.50
5.oo
12.00
15.oo
$7.50
9.00
10.00
16.&amp;0

Cloaks and Dolmans Cheap

HORSE BLANKETS AT 90 CENTS

E^Butter, Eggs, and Dried Apples Wanted.

CLOSINGOUT

Slxoes

GRAND RAPIDS DIVISION.
STATIONS.
Or'd Raplta----- Lt.
Ha=n-.o=d.............
MiddWrlll.-------NaahTlDs____ Lt_.
VcrntontTHit*____
Chfa-lctle............ ..
Eaton lUpld........
Rives Junction....

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Ha.i: OR.

STATIONS.
D.tron,.................
Jocrion,------------Hi»e» Junction.-...
Eaton Rapids,.....
Cbarloite................
Vermontr.Je,-----NaahrUle,____ —
HasUngs.------------MlddUrille,_____
H am?r.r.n4
Grand Rapid*,___

R. Y

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2:45
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r.
.
H.B.LKDYARD.
Aaa't Oeu'l Bapt-Jaakaop. Gea’l 8np’» Petre

JgEOOKS, MARSHALL A 00.

Nashville Elevator!
Pay the highest marketprice for all kinds of

Grain and Produce
wl», Feed, Ume, Salt, PUuter, St»eco, Hair, Pl»e Lumber, Lath
aad Shinales,
AT THE LOWEST LIVING PRICES.

Emeriencei, Reliable, and Ressouible.

A. H. WINN, Dentist.
BEST SET BUN TEETH $10.00
Teeth Extracted Wlfhout Pain.

OfYlceOpen Day A Evening.

AT WHOLESALE COST

A. BL WINN.

tHOMtEOPATIHC

Physician and Surgeon.
Office first door east of Open* House, and
near residence ou comer of Washington snd
State Streets, Nashville, Mich.

'Wholesale Price List, E.*•

BOOT AID SHOE I1LB1,
g.lKEHOIJSK,
Thornapple Lake, Mlcl*.

L. P. Cole, Proprietor.

Attorney at Law,

Attorney A Counsellor,
gLACK ASON,

American *nd Foreign Marble,
Monunratt, Tmhram
HMting«, Mloh.

fa,
_

yy ILL1AM JCNKS,

WM. A. AYLSWORTH

ts

—HZ

dentists,

■uitiL in sum sniriuu.

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                  <text>ORNO STRONG,]
Editor and Proprietor. J

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Partya' under the Sun.

And Her Environs.
—It ia whispered that a movement to
organize a new band is on foot.
Hope
it will materialize.
—The dog* have been unusually “sas­
sy” and vindictive of late and fights
have been numerous.
—The fire laddies have received their
uniforms: navy blue shirts with grey
collars and shield, and regulation belts,
both lettered,
—Eighty-t^reeoHinbera weje sold at
the firenian’eiball Thursday evening, a
number beig'g present from Hastings
and other neighboring places. The
music was fully up to Humphrey &amp;.
Evans' excellent standard, and the floor
management was entirely satisfactory.
—A Mr. Cose, who lias been the
guest of J. M. Wood for some time
past, and who is reported to be a kindhearted millionaire in search of a
blushing young feminine keeper for
his heart—and possibly Dart of his
money—has created quite a stir among
our young ladies. But ’tisonly a clatter
of tongues; not a flutter of hearts.
—The fireman got out Thursday af­
ternoon, and limbered themselves up
for the dance in the evening by a short
parade on the principal streets, headed
by the martial music, winding up by
throwing a litte water on Main street,
to the infinite delight of the yelling
small boy. The company made a very
nice appearance with engine, how? can
and new uniforms.
—At the recent meeting of the W. C.
T. U„ at Mrs. Francis’, the following
officers were elected for the ensuing
year: Mrs. Dr. Barber, president; Mrs.
Jos. Fleming, vice president; Mrs. Geo.
Francis, recording secretary; Mrs. L.
J. Wheeler, corresponding secretary;
Mrs. J. M. Wood, corresponding secre­
tary : Mrs. A. Selleck, treasurer. The
next meeting will be held at Mrs. Bar­
ber’s Thursday the 16th.
—Politics are quite liyely here this
week. H. C. Hodge held forth foi the
fusionists at the opera bouse on Tues­
day evening, and to-night (Friday)
James Clarke will entertain for the
Republicans at the town hall, and H.
F. Penniiurton for tlie fusionists at
the opera house, and people are sure of
being well entertained which ever they
hear. Hon. Clement Smith will greet
his old fellow townsmen from the poli­
tical platform on the eve of electioq.
—School opened up Monday uiornjng in all the departments, but with,
of course, a somewhat decreased at­
tendance compared with that before
the run of diphtheria. A number had
to be sent home in accordance with
the restriction of the board that no
scholars from a family where the dis­
ease had existed should be admitted.
In some instances this restriction was
violated knowingly, the excuse being
that they "that they thought there
wasn’t any danger.” On Thursday the
high school had 30 pupils, the gram­
mar room 22, Miss Allen 27 and Miss
Brown 16.'

—That they might become better ac­
quainted with the folks, and incident­
ally to help pay for repairs to the par­
sonage, Rev. Mr. Bangs and wife call­
ed a social at the M. E. Parsonage,
Wednesday evening. It was well at­
tended and very pleasant; but only
about $5.50 were raised, while the re­
pairs cost over $20. They were need­
ed, made by the pastor on his individ­
ual responsibility, and have added
greatly to the comfort and convenience
of the parsonage. It might also be re­
marked that the repairs have demon­
strated that the reverend gentleman is
not dependent on the pulpit for a liv­
ing,—he can do good carpenter work
on a pinch.
\
—Mrs. HumphreyAtchison was statled
on Saturday by the news that her
mother, Mrs. D..R. Perry of Wbodland
township, died very suddenly that
morning of heart disease. Mrs. .Perry
was taken on Friday evening with a
very severe pain in her chest, and was
ill all night. About eight o’clock in,
the morning Dr. Kilpatrick, while talk­
ing with her, asked her if she was ever,
troubled with heart disease, and she
replied that she "sometimes had such
spells on being scared,” and while ot­
tering the last word she suddenly ex­
pired. Mrs. Perry came to Woodland
with her husband from Cindsnatus,
Courtland county, N. Y„ some five or
.six years ago, and at the time of her
death wm in her 56th year. She had
four daughters and two sons. The
funeral serviees were held at the Bap­
tist church at 2 o'clock on Sunday, the
Methodist minister from Woodland
Center preaching, and the remain*
were interred in the cemetery near by.

|

I

X

terms:

"WITH INTENT TO MURDER"
Now west Castleton is not by any
means a bad section of country,.and
there are many good and pious folks
whose homes are cast in that section ;
but somehow a few individuals with
more energy than discretion have
brought it somewhat into disrepute, and
even made one cross road in that sec­
tion known by the sanguinary title of
"bloody corners.” For some time past,
things have been pretty quiet *there ;
but a few days ago Jacob Odell sent
word to Jacob Burgdorf, that he had
in his possession one of his heifers,
which ho might have by calling and
paying damages,—and thereby hangs a
tale.
Now as to the Justice of Odell's claim
for damages, we know nothing, but
Burgdorf denied it and against Mr.
Odell’s protests vowed ho wou]d take
the bossy away by force. He chased
her two or three times around the
field, but nil in vain. Then the two
men quarelled, then they fought, and
when they had done Mr. Burgdorf
wasn’t feeling in his usual health,—in
fact, according to a learned gentleman
of the medical profession resident of
that section, he had been pounded with
a club alongside of his "corbaxa,” black­
ening his eye, bruising his scalp, and
sending the blood oozing from his ears.
Meantime the innocent bossy had wan­
dered on to the property of a third par­
ty. and being out of Mr. Odell’s posses­
sion, her owner secured her and took
her home.
But his anger was not appeased by
the possession of the live stock; his
soul clamored for "justice,” and Mr.
Odell was accordingly arrested on a
warrant from Justice Sparks of Mor­
gan for assault and battery. At first he
was released on his own recognizance;
but as Burgdorf got worse, he was rear­
rested on Tuesday on charge of "assault
with intent to murder” and languished
in durance vile at Hastings over night,
being released nn the morrow on $200
bonds given by Abram Frye and Sime­
on Overholt, and his trial ia set for to­
day (Friday). All this on account of a
cow.

LOCAL
.

GIBBLE-GABBXE

Aad Prrmil Chit-Chat.

Town’s getting livlier.
Rain Saturday and Monday.
D. S. Conley, is again attending the
University.
Mrs. W. S. Barnett of Grand* Rapids
is in town.
The merry jingle of the school bell is
again heard.
'
Miss Ida Owen went home tp Balti­
more Monday.
M. E. quarterly meeting this Satur­
day and Sunday.
Jas. A. Sweezy was in the village on
legal business Tuesday.
Mrs. J. C. Stone,Laingsburg, is visit­
ing friends in this vicinity.
W. A. Aylsworth has been in town a
couple of times since our last issue.
J os. Conley, of this vicinity, returned
from a month’s visit in Ohio Saturday
last.
The shepherd and his flocks wend
their way through town quite often
lately
The ladies society of the M.E.churcb
meets at the parsonage this (Friday)
afternoon.
Mrs. Jesse Austin and daughter
Hattie have been visiitng friends at
Hastings this week.
Miss Quinn of Port Huron and Miss
Walsh of Westville were guests at Lew
Clark’s, this week.
Nearly forty of oar citizens and the
martial band, went to Hastings, Wed­
nesday, to hear Gibson.
I. M. Flint, Sr., is seriously ill, and on
Monday night called in a legal func­
tionary who drafted his will.
Miss Blevia Boise of Medina county,
0., is expected here this (Friday) even­
ing, for .a visit with her brother*.
• Prof. C. H. Wearne will lecture here
on phrenology Wednesday, Thursday,
Friday and Saturday evenings next.
An adjourned meeting of the Ho­
moeopathic medical society of Eaton
and Barry counties met at the Wolcott
House on Thursday.
During our recent visit to allegan we
■were pleased to make the acquaintance
of Warner P. Sutton, the U. 8. consul
at Matamoras.
Tayloi Walker exerted himself too
much in the ran during the fireman’s
parade on Thursday, and was prostrated
for a few hours’ in consequence.

Ed. Youngs is in town. He will take
his wife and household goods and go to
housekeeping at Haskells, Ind., on the
Grand Trunk, where be is now located.
Miss Josie Reynolds and mother of
Shelby.O.. who have been the guest* of
William Reynolds, son and brother,

of this vicinity, returned home Wed­
nesday morning. ”11* said that the
Mias left behind her most charming
impressions on the hearts of some of
our prominent young men.
The president and secretary of the
Euterpeau society call a meeting of
that organization at the Christian
church next Friday evening for the pur
pose of reorganization. It is hoped
that every member will be present, and
that those who have books in their pos­
session belonging to the society, and
who cannot themselves meet that eve­
ning. will confer a special favor that
the books are there.

HE WAS DEALING IN 8T00K.

Dr. J. F. Goucher gives us the fol­
lowing "pointer,” incidental to his re­
cent visit to Woodland. That being
his old "tenting ground” be paid many
old friends a flying visit, and among
the number for whom he still entertains
a profound regard is Albert Barnum,
the jolly farmer of Woodland. Albert
can appreciate a joke as in the days of
nuld lang sync, and Joie,
recalling
this fact, struck a corner oa devices,
and concluded to test Albert’s strength
of memory in recalling friends and
neighbors. Joie called at the residence
and after making himself known to
A REMARKABLE OLD LADY.
Mrs. B., he arranged the program for
The Waterloo (Ind.) Preu Las the rictimiziug.bis object. Going to the
’
following notice of the death and his­ field where Albert was engaged at
tory of Grandmother Day, of Waterloo, work he introduced the business of
who was mother of Mrs. Joshua Martin stock dealing and proved himself a
of this place, an aunt of Gen. George veteran in the "calf” line, buying three
H. Thomas, and one of the oldest twins calves for sixteen dollars and paying
in the United States. Mrs. Day was for the same in legal tender, simply
somewhat known to the older people stipulating that Albert should assist
of this section,ha ring visited here sev­ in loading one and and keep the other
eral times.
The "youngest child,' two until Thursday of this week. Gospoken of in the swim across the river, iugtn the house for the purpose of
| making a delivery of one blantant
was Mrs. J. Martin:
Died, in Waterloo, Oct. 16, 1882. at ' calf, the scene changed and a dumesthe residence of her son-in-law, Hon. i tic jar ensued. Mrs. B. asserted her
It. M. Lockhart, Eleanor Thomas Day. marital rights, and with amazonian
at the great age of ninety-four years j emphasis insisted that a combination
and four months. The subject of the
al&gt;ove notice was born near Hagerstown "ran that form" together with the
Md., June 17, 1788. Her mother dying calves and "sich” like rolling stock—
when she was 10 years old, her father of which combination she stood in the
father removed to Washington county,
Penn., where she was married to Joseph relation of an equal partner. Albert
Day, March 18, 1865. In 1813 they in was in a qunndry—he stormed and she
company with a few of their friends, raged, and Joie with injured innocence
concluded to -eeka new home in what contended that his money bad been
was then called the far west, the state
of Ohio. The trip was made in wagons paid—his calves bought and the veal
and on horseback.
She rode a horse should be his, even if compelled to
meat of the way, carrying her youngest drag the bawling calves through a
child on her lap. and crossing the Ohio justice court. Finallv Joie, in demand­
river by swimming the horse. They
came to the small village of Mansfield. ing a receipt for money paid, present­
Richland county, then containing but a ed his professional card, when Albert
few houses, and the country full of took a huge "tumble," smiled a large
wild Indiana. They purchased laud 6
miles west of Mansfield, and commenc­ "smole," recognition occurred. Albert
ed making a home in the unbroken offering to "set 'em up,” and Joie took
wilderness. For many years they were a sugar in his. In fact Albert exhausted
subjected to all the inconveniences of his stock of maple sugar in trying to
pioneer life, but as time rolled away
and the country became settled—with bribe Joie to'keep the whole matter
a large family of children growing up rub-rota. but it being the first time Al­
around them, they lived very happily bert was ever caught napping, it seems
until the death pt her husband, which 'too good to keep,” and we give it to
occurred Jan. 11, 1854.
Soon after his
death she left the old farm, and remov- our readers and dedicate it to Albert
' ed to Crestline, O., living there until Barn am.the jolly farmer of Woodland.
1858. since which time she made her
, homo with her daughter. Mrs. R. M.
The ladies society of the M. E. church
Lockhart. She was the mother of 12
children ; 11 of them lived to l&gt;e mar met at the parsonage on Friday lost and
ried and 9 of them. 4 sons and 5 daugh­ elected the following officers: Mr. Sei
ters, survive her.
Her descendants at leek, president; Mrs. Bangs, vice presi­
her death, including children, grand dent; Mis. Cruso, secretary; Miss
children and great grand children,
numbered 130. Her twin sister, Mrs. I Jeffrey, treasurer. Regular meetings
Mrs. Elizabeth Thomas Coleman, ia yet I will be held on the first Friday of each
living, making her home near Morgan­ | month.
town, Indiana. Her descendants are | As we tr press Friday, wheat is
even great than those of Grandmother
I worth 90c, oats 30, corn half a cent a lb.
Day, exceeding 140 in number.
She was a member of the Presbyter­
ian church for over 50 years.
Her
PRICHARD VILLE.
memory rrtbsined unimpared until
within a few days of her death. Dur­
Corn husking in progress.
ing her long sickness of over 2 month*,
Wild geese are southward bound.
she was visited by her children, coming
from fogr different states. Her mind
Mr*. H. C. Fisher, still tarries in the
remained clear, and she died rejoicing East.
in the happy thought that she would
Mrs.
Edward Mowry has returned
soon be at rest in the bosom of that
Sayior io whom she had placed her from Ohio.
trust so many years ago.
Ben Toby is in the northern part of
These twin sisters were the aunts of the state, looking for a place.
one of the brave defenders of our coun­
Ed. Prichard and Will Delano went
try in the late-rebellion, Gen. Geo. H.
Thomas, better known a- Old Pap to Allegan and Kalamazoo counties on
Thomas. A large number of friends a vis|t last week.
and neighbor* followed the remains to
Mr. DeLauo and daughter from
their last resting place, and many
beautiful floral decorations were fur­ Cooper. Mich., made his son J. E. of
nished by sympathizing friend*.
this place a short visit this week.
Great change* have came over our
A Mr. Bennett from Hope has moved
country during the-life of Grandmoth­
er Day. When she was born,railroads, into the house belonging to Cal. Stan­
telegraphy, telephones, electric lights ton, situated near the Larrabee bridge.
and manp other things that we now
J. W. Gibson and wife of Ionia Co.,
enjoy, were unknown.
Life’s work made a visit at R. R. Haynes' last week.
with her was well done. May her soul
Mrs. Gibson ia Mrs. Haynes's daughter.
rest in peace.
.
Wm. Howe has still a few jobs of
The News is inclined to think that threshing to do. He bad a steady run
the harmfulnes* of the granting of free all the fall, not even stopping in seed­
passes to legislators—a matter which ing.
D. C. Warner, will teach our school
has come prominently to the front in
this section during the last week or so the coming winter. He received a first
—has, so far as this state is concerned, grade certificate at the recent examin­
been overestimated on account of lack ation.
of definite knowledge in the matter.
Thia scribe went to Grand Rapids last
But however this may be, if legislators week to visit an old acquaintance who
accept favors in the shape of passes is attending the busines college at that
from the railroad* without returning place.
equivalent favors, the violate’the gen­
Important business charges are be­
eral sense of fairness; and if by Un­ ing talked of, but we can not say at
acceptance of passes they are led to dis­ present whether there will be anything
criminate against the interests of the but talk.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hedges, former­
commonwealth, the practice certainly
is wrong. But matter can be greatly ly of Woodland, California, have been
influenced at another point—the se­ visiting in thia neighborhood. They
lection of the lieutenant govenor and have sold their ranch in California and
the speaker of the house. These of­ will buy a farm in Michigan.
As we have not written for some time
ficer* appoint the committees, includ­
ing the two committees od railroads, numerous thing* have happened which
and these committees have considera­ we have failed to note, but we will
ble power to influence railroad legisla­ take room to say that Joo. Groat is
tion. The voters should, in so far as father to a bouncing baby boy.
Ernest Haynes will teach the school
they can see to it, that the men elected
to the two offices mentioned, are those in the Durfee district the coming win­
whose whole record is indisputable ter. Mr. H. is a number one teacher,
evidence that they are men who will so
construct the railroad committees that and we congratulate the peoajp of that
the public interests will be fully pro­ district at having procured hi* services.
tected.
Isaac Week* and wife have been

visiting relatives in Ohio. Mr. Weekly
on hi* return, brought with him some
blooded cattle and hogs, but of what
breed we are unable to say as we havenot seen them.
From Frank Hodge* we learn the
following.concorning California: The
climate is considerably wanner there
than here; harvesting begins about
the last of May or the first of June,
and continue* until some time in July ;
the harvesting ia all done with headers,
whicFi cut the straw off from six to ten
inches from the head; this is then
drawn nud put into stack*; qo ptuiiA is
taken in stacking, for there is no fear
of rain* for during the long summer
not a drop of rail? falls. Threshing
machines ic that country thresh from
2000 to 4000 bushels in a day, tlie
thresbermen furnishing their own help
and boarding them al* I vex, charging ten
cents per hundred for threshing wheat.
Shortly after harvest, seeding begins,
the wheat being nil sown broad cast
with seeders for that purpose ; n man
with a good team will sow seventy-five
acres in a day; they sow instil some
time in October, nud then wait until
spring to finish seeding. No rain falls
mi the summers, but in the winter it
rains Dearly every day. Instead of
having sleighing, as we have here, they
have to content themselves with mud,
and holding an umbrella up every time
they step out doors. From these and
other descriptions we come to the couclusion that it is a gixxl country (fur
some oue else) to live in.
Phil Pinx.

$i.50pzRy«r

Credit Bpmcniptiok* tl.TO.

1882.’

VOLUME X.
LIFE IN NASHVILLE,

_________________

NUMBER 7.
er Why
our stock of underwear like
Banrams elephant Junilxit
'
Became It t« tlie large*t ever seen In this
country, “Fact"
Kocnzx Bro*.
We are dolly receiving new goods, *11
or which are being aold at bottom price* *t
Ainsworth’s old stand,
_______
Fowlzm A Campbell.
hock Bottom prices. '
Don’t buy * single pair of Boot* or Shoes be
fore visiting Prlndie A Chipman’s, and Inspect­
ing tlieir stzwk and price*. 8t x-k larger and
more complete than ever and prices marked
right down to bed-rock. No competitors al­
lowed to undersell u*.
.Prixiilk A Chifmax,

HT A good large cow tor sale
E- R. White.

TIHS FQR LADIES ONLY.
We open this week an elegant line of new
Cloakings, very pretty and very stylish. Alsu
Fur Trimmings and ornaments to match.
Kocaxa Bbos.
LSf" " r have the largest stock and we make
the lowest price*Fowlkb A CaurBELU
BASS W0OD~B0LT&amp;
|N'ow is your timeVHJ5 per cord for IS Inch,
fJ.SFpcr cord foe 35 inch.
.
Caah m fast delivered. For particulars see
Gko. W. FkaXCI*.

We never had so full a stock of Boot*
and shoes, and never boughl^ro cheap as we
did this fail stock. You can save time and
money by looking u* over a« »oon a* possible.
Kocher Bmos.
I
WNew load of Rock Salt just arrived at
Bkooks, »: AitrfiALL A Co’s.

LADIES USTHH.
Having moved in our new store, Yates Block,
and added largely to my slock, 1 am better prc|i*red than ever to please my patron*. My stock
&lt;n&gt;mdsta of fine Millinery rf every description.
Beautiful Hats, Bonne’s, Fancy Giioda, Drese
Trimmings. Silks. Satina, Laces', Ribbon*, Vel­
vet, Flowers, Feathers sod a thousand or monother artie'ea you will sorely be interested In
Call and sec my goods, give'them • critical ex
HASTINGS.
amination, compare price* with those of other
dealers and you wUL buy. More [Mrticuiar.
(). M. YatEa.
Win. Nutt of Hope broke his leg last next week.
week.
er Our 5Ort Te* c*n*t l&gt;e beat.
F
owlkk &amp; Campbell.
Rev. Masters will fill the M. E. pulpit
ty Farmers should use Dr. Joseph Haa»'
Sunday.
Hog and Poultry Rimed}. Sold by
Mrs. Hnzlett speak* in Union Holl
F. T. Boiab.
next Monday evening.
MONET TO LOAN,
R. K. Grant and wife are keeping
On Real Estate al low rate of Interest of
house on the hill.
Lke &lt;k Di mkri
Prof, Hall is again at his post having
BUY BREAD
recovered his health.
At the City Bakery, freah every day. Also oys
Gor.Plawted of Mainespoke in Union trr«, crackers, cakes, coffee, tea. spice. toba&lt;
co, etc- Warm meal* at all time*. Give u» a
Hall Tuesday evening.
There is a movement on foot to close call and we will endeavor to please.
J. D. Blajb.
the stores at eight o'clock.
Wood oad Potatxies taken In exchange
Will Hayes has returned from the
tor any goods fa our line.
north. He says game is very scarce.
Ghaxukr &amp; Co.
Mary Lathrop will deliver the address
After a most rigid examination of tb&lt;
I before the W. C. T. U. district con ven- Crown Sewing Machine we can reccommend f
to buyers ** » first da** machine. The work
lion Nov. 9th.
lug parts are perfect In material and construe
Gen. Gibson of Ohio spoke to n large tion and embrace all the late improvement* o'
all
machines. We have bought one for ouand euthusiastic audience Wednesday.
own use. exchanging in part payment th«About 50 from Nashville headed by a Remington, and are highly satisfied with ou’
A. C. Bt’XTOX.
baud of martial music, marched up exchange.
from the depot to hear him.
er We have a rare display of Dress Fabrics
Mr. Carnahan was regularly ordained In fact the stockds eo large and varied Strong,
won’t spore u* the room to enumerate. Bo you
by the Presbytery of Lansing iast Wed­ must cuuse and see for yourself.
Kocn bm Bboa.
nesday evening. He preached his trial
sermon ^Tuesday evening. The church
REGISTRATION NOTICE. .
was beautifully decorated with flower
The township Board of Registration, for the
and house plants. The services were Township of Castleton,win meet at the office o'
well attended and impressive through­ the Township Clerk on Saturday,* Nov. 4th *lti
The laws of 1881 requires a new registration
out.
Han*.
to be made, therefore every legal voter in tin­
township who wishes to vote at the approach
Ing election arc requested to appear peraoaalb
LOCAL MATTERS.
before the Township Clerk prior to Nov. 4,18&gt;&lt;;
and register his name. Frank McDbrbt,
4-7.
Township Clerk.
Yatbs — In Nashville, on Friday, Oct. 27, of
Our Cloaks and Dolmans are beautiful
blood poisoning, Voney, son of Mr. and
Over 200 to se lect from ranging in price froeMrs. P. C. Tales, aged 0 years.
KOCHEM Bboo.
Stbovp.—Al Olivet, Oct. 14th, Louise A. 63. to *20.
Stroup, aged 18.
THE NEW FIRM.
Martix.—In Nashville, Oct. 20th, ’82, Clyde,
We are now prepared to furnish the peopl­
son of Wm. and r.intn* Manin, aged 3 rears, ed Nashville and vicinity with Fresh ramil.
R hvm anr* t .lav.
Groceriea, Crockery and Glassware, in far
None but the parents’ heart can tell
everything pertaining to a first class grocery
How hard It ia to aay farewell.
at prices as low as the lowest. Flease call an&gt;!
To give to Heaven so dear a one
examine at Ainsworth's old -land-.
■ And manner low “Thy will be done."
Fowler A Campbell.

success. Fresh goods full weights, and
ty A whole-stock. hand-made boot for *2.75
t the Closing-out Sale st
Amwcumi'L

We have just opened a line of new
Cigars. Call and see them.

er Wagons cheapest at Glasgows, the
Jackson and Hastings.
C. L. Glasgow.
C3TA few All-wool Overcoats al *8, to close
*1
Atlbwohth’il

*W Try a lucious steak or a rich Roast at

rar Call and se^our large and elegant a*
aortmenl of Genu Furnishing Goods, ju*l 11
PXIXDLB A CH1PMAK.

O Y 8 T E R 8 I
■
Fresh Oysters «verv dav, served at my Lune
Counter in every style. Price per can 30 ceulAlso celebrated Vaft A Crane Crackers.
Cap Dcxham.
er 200 BbtMwls all price*, all cotora. Chea;
Kocmeb Boo*.

BOOTS AND SHOES.
A complete Hoe of heavy and floe goods D*
Wilk prices on the cash b**i». Mid bar
gains worth looking after. .
alu

LAMPS, LAMPS.

•rDon't fall to secure a Suit of those
Clothes at 64-50. M, and *8.
*
at Atlsworth’s.
tar Bring your Butter, Eggs and dried ap­
ple# direct to itt« and we will pay you the cash
for them.
Fowler a Campbell.

The largest line ever opened in Nasbrilb
All klmN, all stylo*, with prices for alL C*
and sea them.
__________________ C. W. Smith.
er Our Carpet department Is tilled wtl
cboleo selections and shoold be seen to be a;
preoteted.
Kochbb Bmm.
tyrbTboiTihi’at Boot* A Shoes in to*
at
aw. Gbaxobb A Cta’a.

BW Clover Seed wanted. Brooks, M. A Co.
A FEW THOUSAND DOLLARS
For Steaks (either beef pork or mutton) To Loan on good Deal EUato security.
'
- ” -MuUk Dvkkbs.
roast, bolls, sausage salt meats, lard, etc., pat­
ronize D. L. Durfee's new market and be happar.
5 of Nwktte*! Bigge*! and boat tn towx.
, W Store* going fast at Glasgow’s. Don’t
buy till you see him and get price*.

Qg** Another rare chance to buy good* aheap
next week.
at Atls .vomth’s.

YOUR EAR, GENTLE READER.

’oa that are hxlebted to Tin- NaMivtu.
ws, listaa! Paper, ink and printev*' hel;

they will save you 10 per cent­

er Sewing Machines, White* and others lion out of your first wheat moocy.
at 95 do! l*r», 35 dollar* and 50 chMlara.
Don’t forget it I Don’t forget tt'.
C. L. Glasgow.
remittance-

ObhoSthoxg.

�it i* doubtful

BWRKT PBYLLIR.

•r. Ute* bird:

Ht»nu?si Il'S floc*,
t he •■&lt;«»

Ami Oolitfi

• FOSSIL MAN TRACKS.

there were tracks of some wuding birds,
m latere mentioned. The &lt;&gt; did not
aeeurto^djflbr much ,in form and size
from those of the same order now living.
Several quite distinct tracks of deer are
also to l&gt;e seen. Others, again, were
found which in size and length of stride
much resemble those of a wolf. At one
point those tracks may be traced for. a
distance of twentv feet, where they also
are luet in the ledge. There are also a
lew poorly-defined imprint* of what we
believe to be a borae. Near the western
liimt we find clearindications of animal*
having wallowed and lain in the soft
mud. .
■
'
' •• There have been, we believe, but
two objections thus far raised against
the claim that the imprints first de­
scribed were those of mail. First, that
the colcesal size of the sandal will bo
likely to cause doubt* In the minds'of
many. Secondly, that the space be­
tween the feet. or. as it is called, the
straddle, isao marked .as to create a
suspicion that they were those of an an­
imal other than of man.
'
"To the first objection we reply that
for the protection of his'feet the primi­
tive man would naturally select tlie
sandal In fashioning this sandal of
wood, it is reasonable, to suppose »that
with his gouge of obsidian he would cut
out a hollow to correspond to the size of
his foot, leaving a raised border which
might serve as a' protection to the ride
of his foot, as well as to the heel and
too. Its raised border would also be of
great sen-ice in securing the thongs by
which the sandal was attached to the
foot Some such' nlar. must, we think,
have been adopted for securing the san­
dal. as we find no.indication of holes in
the bottom of the sandal through which
thongs might be passed to fasten it to
the feel
"Taking this view of thij case, it
seems to be apparent that to protect a
foot of twelve or thirteen inches he
would be likely to fashion a sandal of
nearly if not quite the proportions of
the one shown by the impression.
‘■While it must be admitted that the
firint of the sandalled foot is unusually
arge, much larger, in fact, than the
hide sandals worn by the Mexican In­
dians or the straw sandals of the Jap­
anese, yet the stride is but that of the
average man of five feet ten inches in
height.”

Dr. H. W. Harkni'M has read a paper
before the California Academy of Sci­
ence* on the recent discovery of foot­
prints in the sandstone of the yard of
the Nevada State Prison. In the course
•f this i -Alter hew aid:
“ Wq find ii
ia. ex­
po«ed bv the'w
fresh­
wate.-’shclh. xv
, mus— ------ ------ ,-------- At an
elevation of thirteen feet above these is
found another strata in which, in addi­
tion to the shells of Anodonta, wo find
a species of Physa. This dboovery is of
additional interest from the fact that
. Clarence King reports that ho found no
fre-h-waler shells in the region except­
ing those of' Planorbis. It should be
mentioned that tbe floor or area of the
, yard w». are Ddw studying bears evi• de nee of having been slightly tilted at a
perio l subsequent to its deposition. It
also gives evidence of having been nt
one time the slsorc of some lake, or,
perhaps, pond, local and isolated ns its
level was above that cf Lake Eahontan.
Presumably we stand on the shore gf
. this ancient gond or ■ lake, and as wc
look about us we sec the footprints of a
variety of nninial-s among which we
recognize those ot the mammoth, the
deer, the wolf, those o. many birds, ap­
parently those ot a horse, and. most im- portanl of all, what seems to be the im-'
A Romance of Atlanta.
prints of the sandaled fool of man.
Once u;&gt;on a time, and not very long
•‘There are «&gt;x aeries of the tracks of
man. Each of these series is represent­ ago at that, a young man of Atlanta
ed by a number or luoiprints (from eight fell in love with an Atlanta girl. This
to seventeen) in reg—.ir order, and each happens every dav, and. as also hap­
showing more or less nlainlv the im­ pens, the girl fell in love with the young
print of a sandal. Besides this, in one man. Somehow or other the parents of
of the series there is a marked differ­ the girl frowned upon the union of these
ence in tbe form n( the sandal. The two heart* that beat as one, and they
first of these series wnich we examined continued to frown until the young peo­
is to be seen euieigiug, hs it were, from ple, thrown upon their own resources,
the southern tide c. tiojyard, and where eloped, as young people will do. and the
the cliff is fifteen feet in height above Earental frown alluded to instead of
ecoming a smile and a benediction in
the tracks.
TLL . ores consists-of
twelve tracks, to wfe'ch number four the presence of the inevitable, widened
were subscquentlv added by tunneling I and deepened into bitter disapproba­
Into the roex. Hie oa-tracks were evi­ tion. The father and mother set great
dently made in a layer of sediment of store by their daughter, ami they were
perhaps two in-be« in depth, for below overwhelmed with grief when they dis­
this layer we find the compact sand­ covered that for the first time in her life
stone. In each instance the mud had she hnd disobeyed them. They did not
been raised by t..e p. -ssiiro of the foot seek her out for the purpose of bestow­
into a ridge'vl.ii i* cuurely surrounded ing their forgiveness.
In the course qf time a little baby yas
it. Thja mndJs only partially solidified,
and is still I&gt;•
sfl: *v at’d easily uruKcn
broken on .bo™ to the&gt; young couple -a marvelouschild we have been told—
‘ exposure.
exposure. Efcb
I-'"-’: of the
the imprint*furnish-1
imprints fund-li­ lv
---------—
u
—
------------L._.
.
and
it grew to be as cunning as it was
es us with evidence, as we believe, that
tbe feet of the one making the tracks beautiful. One day recently a lady
luuoais
I acquainted with the facts, and intonate
were protected by sandals.
-apreraion.
nwhora '?lh 1,0,11
railed
upon
"In no sinjk* rs
*
ivr -avidence of this t,ie y°unK '“Other, but found nobody
do we fin'J'concluxit..
■
fact, but when we study- •them
as ‘a at home but babv and nurse. An idea
whole we find that that which Is want­ struck her, and she lost no time in
ing in one is furni«h&lt;*d by others which carrying it out. She seized the baby and
follow. In ut:aii&gt; ull the tgc ;&gt;ortion of bore it off in triumph to its grandmoth­
the sandal is well shown. it being as er. When she rang the door-bcM at
smooth as the wo-1; of a mason for the grandmother’s house the lady was in a
distance of two or three inches. Back­ tremor,-but the baby was a* cool and as
ward from tbe toe wo generally find the unconcerned as a cucumber. Perhaps
impression of the ou’er portion of the we ought not to say unconcerned, for
sandal. When studied as it whole wc when tlie grandmother opened the door
can determine with a good deal of ex­ the baby laughed and crowed in her
actness the actual length and breadth face, and was as pert and as saqcy as
of the sandal, which we find to be nine­ you please. And wouldn't the lady
teen inches in length, eight inches at come in and rest herself? Well, the
the ball of the foot, white the heel is ladv dicin't know; she was just passing,
■ aix inches.in breadth. In its outline it anil she thought she would ring
all
were getting
follows Clearly the shape of the human and see how
but
in she
went,
and
foot. From the great toe outward there along;
is a really graceful curve, which draws presently grandmother was admir­
in toward the heel; while from the great ing baby as i‘. sat perched, bright and
toe inward tlie line is drawn toward tlie buoyant, upon the lap of the lady. At
instep, ami thence in an onward curve this' juncture the baby displayed the
to .thebeci. In one series this curve is most exquisite diplomacy- It boldly
deeper, showing a slightly different held out its dimpled little arms to its
form of sandal. The average length of grandmother, and was soon nestling
the stride is two feet three inches. The against her motherly bosom. It laughed
distance between tlie feet or the strad­ and'crowed and cuddled, and when
somebody made a pretense of taking it
dle is eighteen inches.
“ It seems.very important to know if it cuddled the closer. What wonderful
there were more footprints of Che same bright eyes it had. to lie auro! What a
series still running on into and under this cunning .little curl, half hidden behind
rock face. To determine this fact Mr. its little pink ear! What tempting little
Garrard, who was anxiolu to assist us toes! What dainty little hands! Oh. a
in every way possible, immediately wonderful baby altogether, tlie grand­
oom me need a tunnel upon the line of mother thought and said.
At this critical moment the grand­
the prints of the same series, if such ex­
isted. In this effort he was completely father made his appearance, and. this
successful, bringing to view four other remarkable- baby seemed to understand
it*
business thoroughly. It cooed and
footprints, three of which were more
pcr.ect than those which had been pre­ crowed at the grandfather.- found a
viously exposed.
One of tbe four, filace in hi* strong arms, and hid it*
owing* to a fault of the rock, was too ittle face in his coat collar. The grand­
obscure to be of value. Of this scries father was captivated. He tossed and
wc secured twelve more or less perfect dandled the baby, and fondled il in a
way altogether unusual. Then the lady
cast- in plaster.
"One marked feature is that in all was asked whose baby it was. Her po­
. of these tracks tlie toes turn well out­ sition was embarrassing. She had no
’ ward, which is not a • a rule the habit idea of tbe result, but she made bold to
of tbe North American Indian. Within, tell tlie two old people that it was their
daughter’s child. With this tbe grandmotberfidl to weeping, and clasped this
track* made by an individual who was wonderful baby to her breast, and the
walking in deeper mud. which clung to grandfather walked nerfously around,
and clo*ed in upon the foot. Seven or wiping bi* eyes and wondering why he
eight such are to be seen in regular was- so foolishly happy. Nothing would
orat-r, and then the track, like the one do these old people but their daughter
previously described, is lost in the ledge must be sent for, and such another re­
toward which the stops an* tending. union and revival a* w»&lt; held over that
Three of these are somewhat Smaller baby ha* never before been seen in At­
than the one described, while One has a lanta. That we'U say and stick to.
Kudal m* re curved than that of hb fel*----- *-------jassed in front of the C.-nme are lost in tbe ledge, utitutfan office j
yesterday,
______ ,,and
___ ___
in it
___were
__
maybe followed by future seated
all ---the members
the reunited
-------------------- 1 of
:-----family- The baby had a front seat, and
few Indies lower than । it was laughing and crowing and look­
ing as pretty a, a pink, and as cuteBOW tn our iim described well as cute a* it could look; and if any
reader of the CouMtuliun is inclined to

a mam-----------

Mexican domestic economy that we may
well afford time to examine a typical
if a forest bird takes refuge indoors, a« at Mhk*» will be found in the
‘rare
------ . The tortilla
or we nurauoal or we liberal 1 ’•’•MM.nrao; ’ll*
tonill.
sometimes happen* in a great 'storm,
which bra .born. Sell ralremely *•
bT
.efa»— Jbrougbool 9"
[ Negroes look on this as a certain an­ party, which ha* shown
.1-elevation
nW
‘
on
’
&amp;n&lt;
^
the exclusive
nouncement that death will soon visit, j friendly to the English.
partisan _____
io tbe_____
Sherifal,
nn“b*"
avowed partisan
: Home member of the household. I re- &lt; of an '■rowed
of -such a step upon . r people. I have met with it at the ban­
। member one dav seeing a bird fly through ud the effect
quets of cabinet ministera and literary
a window that had been left open to air Mohammedan subjects in India
1
men,
and
the
implements
for its manu­
I the room, during a yery severe winter, smong the substantial benefit* Which
i in my childhood. An awe-strijken cx- England ha* reaped from her i*pid con­ facture are invariably found in the hum­
blest
native
hut.
Visitors
to toe Cen­
.
prewion fell on the face of my sable quest of Egypt.
To elicit the fell meaning of tbe mea­ tennial will remember in the Govern­
“mammy,” who was present.
She
shook her head and looked gloomily ger telegrams which have been received ment building a large drawing of the
interior of a Pueblo Indian bouse; this
around, and by,a strange coincidence from Mecca, we should look back over
drawing, with a very few variations,
not a month elapsed before a death oc­ the recent history of the Hejaz. • We
would represent the interior of a hun­
curred In our houbchold, though of mast bear in mind that the Grand Sherif
dred thousand Indian homes existing
course il might have happened and diss or official representative of the Sherifal
from the borders of Colorado to tbe
happened a thousand times that forest family is, In Arabia, a much more, im­
State of Yucatan. Maisc b everywhere;
birds have taken-refuge indoor* without portant personage ’ than the Ottoman two-thirds of the cultivated ground in
and that through
hi* intercourse
any such result following. .We note onlySultan,
------- ----------------------,
Mexico is devoted to raising it. There
111 pilgrims,,tituacB
the rare chance fulfillment,* and not the' with
multitucof whom visit
is a saying that there are but two pre­
frequent failure of the omen. A young Mecca every year, ho exerts a great requisites fqr a household outfit by an
Southern lady visiting a Northern city moral influence over the Moslem world. Indian couple contemplating matrimo­
one spring, remarked to her hostess one Even at Constantinople the Sultan rises ny : a petate, or mat of reeds, which
day on the occasion of a wild bird flying to receive member* of the Sherifal fami­ serves for a carpet, and a bed, and a.
into her room during a storm, “That ly, and it is said that should he make
metate, a flat inclined stone placed upon
would throw negn&gt;es in the South into the pilgrimage in person, he would be
the earthen floor, on which to pulverize
consternation. .They always look on a received by the Grand Sherif as an infe­ the corn before forming it into cakes for
It is certain that no officer of the
bird as a messenger of death under such rior.
baking. I concur in tbe estimate of
Turkish Government is permitted to re­
circumstances.”
well-informed natives, that so general
Before the day was over the young side in Mecca, and. the sole revenue
lady, by a coincidence, received tatellj-" which it derives from the Hejaz comes and exclusive is the use of Indian corn,
that, were this crop to fail, one-third to
gence of the death of her father's siAer. from the custom, duties at the seaports one-half the aboriginal population would
Negroes also always take, it as a-sign of Jeddah and Yembo. The number of
of death if the “whip-poor-will” comes Turkish troops stationed at the points perish of starvation. A single frost
that, on the 21kh of August, 1784, in­
into the porch and utter* his note. A just named, and at Medina and Taif in
jured the young plant, it is calculated,
great many of them seem to hold the interior, is usually about 8,000 men,
doves sacred, and to consider it ri»ful but only half of these are regulars, and resulted in the death oi 30,000 persons.
A population of millions is dependent
to shoot them, probably because the all of them are unpaid and unrationed.
upon the success of the crop. Ireland
Holy Spirit manifested itself as a dove
at the baptism of our Lord.
• and millions in India scarcely so de­
Another superstition they have about have been thought requisite to avert an i pendent upon rice, as the Mexican peobirds is, that if they get hold of the outbreak on the part of the partisans of | pie are upon maize—now tlie foremost
combings of your hair and twist them the deposit Shu if.
.
. . , of our cereals, the’ monarch of our praiinto their nbsts you will have a head­ Sherifal familv" dncTtn their nndi«nnt»a rie lands, and the arbiter-of stock exache in consequence. Once when I was
complaining of headache in the pres­
,rcm
ence of a negro girl, she said:
“You ha.alro.y, oxeiuxl ibi jraloray oi thi "V? u
boun.,1 .very doe to It. n^Ottoman Gov.ron.ont, which hk-rourtt !
ought to burn up all the combings from Olu.nran
ot inc
th. nouse
house by
“d 10 th» form oI lu Croi,lc
your hair, and then your headache to
to weaken
wcaum th.
ino iniluen.-.
inuuence oi
Dy i tiT°
pr2?®nlr^-,.
...
..
would stop.
The birds get hold of the fomenting feuds between its branches. Drocen,tor
a.klUlul
UMOI
riralrira tba
T,lh wtde
By a
skillful use
of .»oh
such rivalries
the A The u,n‘! * *J°P
hairs you throw away, and twist them h(y
siltanhrabMn»blotoIrequenUrlnt«r. do*" “P°“ “j? “”e‘; l,h0 “u”n “u.y
into their nests# and that is what makes Sultan
has
been
able
to
frequently
interfora with the order of saccLion. Dur- ?!lulk “P°.“ 0,0 "»«•
your head ache.” They used to have a f?“ “i’h th2
lug the
th. Ifrarant
rautury
tbe Porte
Porte hu
'nd "ot
obe? th”
present
century
the
has b,!r h“
mortal terror of being conjured, and ing
-oLtlmra
f.rored
on? end
rometime.
tnS
this feeling, though on the wane, is not
the
other
of
the
two
branche.,
reepoct“
V"
1
P
“
’
-.
b
"5"J!
1
”
“■« *o
entirely extinct, I believe. Certain ne­ irely known ee Zeyd end Aonn“nto I
»&lt;
groes, generally old women, got the
credit of being conjurers in slavery which the Sbertfel family l&gt; divided. “»■»'»&lt;&gt;. comment upon, end. If need.
d’r“* the
lh'’ whole
”h"'" process of manutimes, and if they stuck, up two sticks The Grand Sherifal, Abdul Mufalleb, be, direct
under the window of any of their fellow­ who ha* just lost his place on account i. facture.
servants against whom they had a of his relations to Arabi Pasha, has had a j Imagine a blacksmith’s shop from
grudge that nigger was considered long and eventful life. He first obtained which the Amazons have driven Vulcan,
doomed.
I knew a negro woman who the office in 1827, and although he was leaving only the grimy walls, the glow­
fell into a decline and pined away under soon expelled by the Aoun faction, he ing, unchimneyed hearth, and a store of
The Ama­
the belief that she was ooniured, and was reinstalled in 1848. He held power, charcoal piled in a corner.
her master could only break the spell by however, but for five veara, at the end zons have rolled back their sleeves to
sending her off .to a hospital, where she of which time he was deposed for alleg­ the shoulder (if they possess such in­
spent six month.
ed disloyally to the Caliph, and thence­ cumbrances), and have placed them­
selves on their knees upon the stone
They h&gt;ve many signs and supersti­ forward the Aouns were supreme in the
tions connected with corpses and funer­ Heiaz. They represent the more liberal floor, with tbe inclined rough surface of
als. Nothing would induce one of them and progressive party among the the leva,nictate before them. Upon this
to sweep beneath a bed on which a Mohammedans of Araoia, and have stone they place, from a wooden tray,
corpse was laid. If the grave prove* too always shown a tolerant spirit toward handful, after handful of corn, which
short they always look on that as a sign the’Shiites and other heretics with whom | has been soaked and heated in water
auicklime in solution. This
that another member of the family will they are yearly brought in contact at jI| containing
alkaline substance has softened and
soon die.
Th^ir morbid love of seeing the season of the pilgrimage. So long ?'*** 'J®.
—
~r coating of the
; loo-cned
the exterior
—
corpses and attending funerals is a very as they remained in power, tbe relations ..
marked characteristic with them.
between India and Mecca were of
1 the bran.
a long,
hr*n With
"‘th *
,on’ ‘ round
rf’nn&lt;‘ stone,
Their movement* are very much regu­ friendly character, and it is only within
I held like a rolling-pin, this corn is
lated by the moon, like the tide.
For the last two years that the holy city has | nibbed to a coaree paste, which
K is
instance, in planting vegetables, killing
hogs, making soap, and various other kou^ bvrocb^l IIu^,wbol»Lm.
T T^°
operations, they are careful to select a
time when the moon is supposed to be Grand Shnrif tn 1BT7, mndo hiniwlt
favorable.
Irish potatoes are always nbnoxtov lo the renctinnarv fartion al |
planted by them “on the dark of the
moon,” as they call it, and hog killing
is also done under similar auspices.
I know of a negro (a half insane oue, terests of its Indian subjects came in u l«
too.) who extricated himself very ably question at Mecca. According to Mr.
vv . b.
&lt; Blunt, it
:» .wo.
l- । The tortillas thin made are collected hot
from a dilemma by tbe aid of a vision. U
was mainly on .this
I
j into closely covered baskets, and are
This negro, partially insane, but not ground that the Turkish Government,
sold at three cents per dozen to the peo­
considered sufiicieutly so to be placed which dared not depose him on account
ple who flock around, ready to carry
in confinement, roams about the streets of his great popularity, determined to
them off in their hands or beneath pieces
of Lynchburg and the adjacent country, remove him by other means. It is cer­
wearing a bright, fantastic garb, and tain that his assassination was foreseen of protecting cloth. Enormous as is the
.•sticking gay feathers in his head when­ at Constantinople, for hi* successor sent agjmcgute of this manufacture, each shop
b iffhinently a retail affair. I once asked
ever his aberrations come on.
A feX- orders to Mecca for his reception months
the proprietress of such an establish­
years ago he stcflfc (if we may apply that before the crime was committed.
ment how many tortillas she would sell
term to an irresponsible creature) and
Tbe man who succeeded the murdered for a dollar; she threw up her hands
killed a heifer belonging to one of his El Husseyn in 1880 was, as we have and eyes at the Visionary immensity of
brethren, an influential elder in his said, the aged and already twice de­ the transaction, exclaiming: “Good
church, who convened a meeting and posed Abdul Mutall eb, .the representa­ Heaven! I oould not count—a very great
indignantly summoned him to appear tive of the fanatic and reactionary^party, many!”—R. H. Lamborn^ in the Cen­
for the offense. The accused listened in Arabia, ft was of &lt;x&gt;urse exj&gt;ectod
tury.
very coolly to tbe indictment against that the Zeyd faction, by way ot return
himself, and, without denying the for their restoration to power, would
A Noteworthy Trial in Belgium.
charge, replied: “The fact is.’brethren, vigorously support the policy of Abdul
the way I camo to kill that heifer was Hamid, which from his accession has
England, it appears. Is not the only
beeame I hnd a vjfion. I saw an angel been directed to the enforcement of the country where it is possible to have an
who told me, ‘Rise, Peter, slay and Caliphal authority of th.e Ottoman Sul­ indictment fifty feet long, and for a trial
eat,’ and 1 was bound to do as he told tan*. But Abdul Hamid had chosen to last a month and cost several thou­
me, so I just killed the heifer.”
Si­ the wrong party for hts purpose, for sand pounds. The great Bemays mur­
lenced, if not convinced, bis accusers while the Aouns are indisposed to dis­ der case is coming on before the assizes
disbanded.
pute the pounds of his title, the,Zeyd* of Brabant as soon as the papers are
I recall another instance of a negro are, of all Arabs, the most bigoted up­ ready; 250 witnesses will be examined,
explaining away his conduct by means holders of the doctrine that a Caliph and twenty writers are occupied night
of a vision. One winter, some ten or must be of the blood of the Koreysh. and day copying the documents, which
twelve year* ago, when our Legislature, When, accordingly. Arabi Pasha, in or­ alone will take 3 month. The expenses
with a’ sprinkling of sable representa­ der to intimidate the Sultan, began to
up to the present have reached £8,000,
tives, was Bitting in Richmond, an im­ moot the ides of an Arabian Caliphate, and the indictment fills a b’g volume.
portant railroad bill, involving the in­ he seems to have had no difficulty in If it is rend entirely.as in France, it will
terest* of several Northern capitalists, persuading Abdul Mutalleb that he take several days. 'It will be recollected
was before the House. There was a would be selected for the office.
But that Bernays, an avoc.it of Antwerp,
negro member who at first vetoed the the capture of Tel-el-Kebir put an $nd who mysteriously disappeared, was
bill, but suddenly went over to the other to all such plans, and the ambitious found dead In a. furnished room of an
side of tbe question. On being ques­ head of the Zeyd faction has now been empty house in Brussels, siding in an
tioned by a gentleman from the same relegated for a third time to private arm-chair, with a bullet through hb
copnty as to this sudden change on bis Hfo.
heart.
A lettpr received from Basle
part, he explained it away by atying he
His successor is the hereditary head some months afterward describing the
nod seen a vision: that a man had ap­ of the Aoun family, a brother of El occurrence as the result of an accident
peared to him and told him that it was Husseyn, who, since his assassination, in showing a pistol, and purporting to
Some be from a stranger-who had come from
very wrong for him to set himself has been regarded as a saint.
against the people who bad freed him. collision* will probably enough occur America to see him on business, was the
But later it transpired that the vision between the ousted and the reinstated find clew to his whereabouts. There
which had wrought so great a change parties; but inaamnch a* the Aouns are Was a certain* amount of semblance in
was a check for a good round sum—a not only supported by Turkish baro­ the story, but it ended in the arrest of
vision that politicians of his stripe stc nets, but command much the larger fol­ two brothers, by name Peltxer, and the
more apt to roe than a vision of angels. lowing in the Hejaz, their ascendancy at details of the coming trial will probably
—Lynchburg (la.) Cor. Philadelphia Mecca is not likely to be shaken. rival anything related bv Edgar Poo.-*
Henceforth a party which owes its tri­ St. Jennet Gazette.
'
umph to England's success in Egypt
will be dominant at the religions center
The Religions uuicome
—Chicago is not the only city in which
of Islam, and ite friendship may be ex­ judges of election are justified in ex­
tian Troubles.
pected to have an important bearing on pressing indignation over the difficulties
the influence of Great Britain in the of their labors. The following arc some
it has for some time seemed probable East.—N. Y. Sun.
of tlw Boston voters: Zaulzickiwerck
that tbe political schemes of Arabi
Waelcr, Wolniewieakae Tomasi, MamPasha and tbe so-called National party
—Justice Robinson, of Easton, Md., ningoctaka Mennae, Zigsworcki Johan­
in Egypt were complicated with a wide- discovered in his office a curious in­ nes, Wortgaenstegt Marcus, Youiireaching religious intrigue, whose ob- stance of what a spider oould do. A canzskiwareJea Gnbeppe, Weinwawiczki
oowsucker snake, a foot long, had se­ Gustav, Sirzeleckibamnisicka Zinka.—
creted himself under an old sofa where Chicago Herald.
a large spider had a web. The spider
firmed by the news which has lately succeeded in entangling the snake, and
reached us from Arabia The Grand when discovered half of his body wm
Sherif has been deposed by tbe Turkish raised from the floor. Doabtle«s to tlie

Emma J. Mawtix.
tbe prmlactlve iuIdm aim! tcrttV? pmifirs erf th,

cd tn the Kan«A Ctty pkmrer line, eompowd
of tbe C. B. 4 Q. and OM Reliable Hannibal
and St. Jiwph Railroad*. Through: as: train*
are ran by thU line and the equipment is nusurpessed.

Bai
Bkacu-Wbmi—At
October 22. by
Iter. I.. E. ktiantra-n Clrarl^ V
of Hasting*.
■’
-‘
Cols — Prrnxonx. — At the residence of
ffirikev. fa Haatinga, Oct. 25. Wm. B.
&lt;x&gt;le of Kalamazoo and Eleanor M. PcttingUl
oi Hastings.
FREE OF CHARGE.

•;Okr-Md. -U.

Luck, like lightning, often comes fa a a dark
hour.
.

nopBtturaCa.Ttraoxro';
I have been rick for the past six year*, suf­
fering from dyspepsia and general weakness. I
have used three Ixntlea of flop Bitter*, and they
have done wonders for me. 1 ain well and able
to work, and eat and sleep well. I cannot say
too much' for flop Bitters.
SIMON ROBBINS.
They hare discovered tl.s bed of an andent
river while digging awe!' n Arkansas. Won­
der y &gt;uit tbe river got out of bed for ’
BJUMj-ou lie free from Catarrh, Hay Fever
and Cold In Head t To- Ely’s Crete: Balm. It
is cunng hundreds of chronic case*. Price 50
cent*.
Apply into nostrils with little finger.
A gentleman from Orwell, Pa., called mv at­
tention to Ely*’ Cream Bahn us a remedv" for
Catarrh, Hay Fever, Etc. He was so earnest
asserting It to t&gt;c a positive cure (himself har­
ing been cored by it) that I purchased a stock.
The Balm has already effected a number of
cures. P. P, Htatt, M. D., Bordentown. N.

Mr. John R. Bennett, 'Druggist, Muskegon.
Mich.—In regard to four inquiries about Elys'
Cream Balm for the cure of Catarrh, my an­
swer is, I can recommend It alwars the beat
remedy I hare ever used. Dn. J. 8. Valouax,
Dentist, Muskegon, Mich.
le lore making the young people hellers that
ardor Is heaven's first law.

AN EXPLANATION.
Die delicate, flowery and lasting fragrance of
Florestou Cologne explain why it »uch a favor­
ite with the ladle*.
Fashionable saddle horses at Newport wear
tbelr tails banged.

WHT SHOULD THEY.
No man or Romanian do satisfactory work
when the brain b dull, the nerves unstcady.the
system relaxed and they feel generally wretch­
ed. Why should anybody drag through their
work in tills condition, when a Boule of Parkeratilnger tonic will at moderate cost give them
the strength and will to perform their duties
satisfactorily.—Ed.
Foolishness places Itrelf in thejoremost rank
to lie observed; Intelligences.amls Int'wb'nd-

Lady Bcautifiers.—Ladiew you cannot make
fair akin, rosy cheeks, and sjurkling eye with
all the cosmetic* of France or iieautitiers of the
world, while in poor health, and nothing will
give you such rich blood, good heal.h Strength
and neaaty as Hop Bitten.. A trial is certain
proof.

Tlie District Court at Cincinnati has decided
that tire word “damn” ia not a profane word.
IMPORTANT TO TRAVELERS,

Special inducements are offered you bv tbe
Burlington Route, It will nay vou to read-their
advertisements to be found elsewhere fa this
issue.
Treadwell Smith, colored, of Manhasset was
arrested on Saturday for tying the tall* of two
cats together and banging the cats over a
clothes line. Ha wa* fined *2.
HOP BITTERS ARE THE PUREST AND
BEST BITTERS EVER MADE.
They un- compounded from bops, malt, Bnchu, mandrake and dandelion, —the oldest, best
and most valuable medicines in the world, and
contain all the best and most curative proper­
ties bt all other remedies, being the greatest
Blood purifier. Liver Regulator and Life and
Health Restorer Agent on earth. No disease
or ill health can possibly long exist where these
bitters are used, so varied and perfect are their
operations.
They give new life and vigor to the aged and
intirml To all whose employments cause irreg­
ularity of the boweb or unnarv organa, or who
require an apctixer. Tonic and mild stimulant,
Hop Bitter* are invaluable, being highly cura
tire, tonic and stimulating, without intoxicat­
ing.
Ko matter whal your feeling* or avmptom*
are, what the disease or, ailment is, 'use Hop
Bitters. Don’t wait ainUll you are sick, but If
you only feel 1ml or miserable, use Hop Bitters
at once. Il mar save your life. Hundreds
have been saved by *o doing, f500wiN be paid
for a care tbev will not cure or help.
Do not suffer or Jet your friends suffer, but
ure and urge them to use Hop Bitters.
Remember Hop Bltlera Is no rile, drugged,
drunken aoatnim, but the purest aud teat med­
icine ever made; the “Invalid'* Friend and
Hope,” and uo ;rerson or fanolr should be with­
out them. Try the Utters lo-4*v.

NOTICE.
WoodUnd, Bent LTth. 1832.
To whom it n»y concern.—I hereby warn
yon not to tru»i or harbor any of n»y f*mily st
my expenra. A* I shall jar no debts of
their contraction from date hereof.
Patkicx CvxxntGHAM.
NOTICE.
Whkhka*, Mr wife, Birdie Bogardus, has
left my bed and ‘board without just cause or
prorocation, thia is to warn all I kitsou5 from
hariwring or trusting her on my account as J
shall pay no debts of her contracting after this
date.
Dated, Sunfield, Sept. 20,1882H*xar S. Bo aAKnt*.

IF YOU WANT TO KNOW
What is haj.peiiimr
»round thb county
aud tbe hunJera &lt;&lt; Eaton,
sulKKWtt* for

TheNews^

�In order to tuake room for our Fall and Winter GimmI* we
are Belling our finest stocr? of Clothing at prices that re­
quire no b.mtering to sell.
LONG xxowr AS

of the ■

ring wore or
idges cannot
stand, what security is there for the gi­
gantic dam which alone is to stand be­
tween the swollen Uhagres and the in­ little mure than eight millions sterling.
stant dfwtroctiou of tbe canal? It is pro­' Before it was opened it cost little less than
verbially dangerous to build a house twenty millions. M. de Lessens estiupon sand, but it Isiworse to rear a dam[ mates the cost ,of cutting the Panama
upon an earthquake. The catastrophe’ Canal at twenty-six million pounds. At
not only will impair the value of the1 the Subs rate it will not be completed at
railway property for which M. de Les­ much below sixty millions., At present
sens has paid such a handsome pnoe, he has raised six million^, hut including
but it is likely to shake public confidence the money required to purchase the rail­
in the ultimate succesj of the canal it- road. There is only one point more to
■eU. • Even before the earthquake the which we need advert. At Suez. M. do
outlook was bv no means inspiriting, and Lesseps has a monopoly of the traffic,
if the truth about the canal were fully whereas the Foreign Affairs Committee
known it would hardly conduce to the of the American House of Representa­
oomfort of holders of Panama stock.
tives has already reported in favor of a
Take, for instance, the question of the bill incorporating a company with a
health of the Isthmus.
" Although the Government guarantee to cut a maritime
rainy season is very light this year,” canal through Niearaaga. There may
says a recent telegram from New York, be traffic enough to pay for making one
“ILhas been found necessary to order canal from the Atlantic to the Pacific;
the stoppage of ail heavy work on the but what prospect is there ot a dividend
cohkI. No laborer is able to work three if there are tW9?—Pall Mall Gazelle.
^together or ho would be stricken
• duw i wlthf&lt;'rcr/L_Th&lt;“ thermometer in
Crime-Inciting Story Paper*.
the »ot seakiTTsfands 180 to 140 degrees
Reference has already many times
iny&gt; a sun; the mean heat alike in hot
been
made in these columns to the de­
__ ms and dry is 85 degrees. For five
months in the year during the rains work moralizing efiect of what used to I*
is almost impossible. Yet M. de Lcsseps styled “yellow-covered literature” ex­
declares that there is hardly a healthier erted an the minds of youthful readers.
place in the whole world than Panama, The old dime novel has been replaced in
and not so long ago is reported to have these days by a cheap wteekly story
•aid that “if his family were sick he paper, and the average novel itself,
would send them to the Isthmus to con­ which was in its ancient form believed to
valesce.” It must be admitted, howev­ have reached tlie .very lowest notch in
er, m justice to tlie “great Frenchman” the scale of sensationalism and vice, has
that if they did go there they would find Sine still lower as its form has taken on
is new phase, until now its baneful ef­
hospital accommodation provided by the
company on a scale which shows a much fects are still more hideous than when
more accurate appreciation of the exi­ the yellow cover was its daunting sign.
The deplorable influence of this sort
gencies of the climate. “The Canal Com­
pany’s hospital buildings in Panama,1' or scurvy. literature has recently been
we are told, “will form a small city of strikingly exemplified in this State.
eighty-four buildings, and will cost Two young boys, aged respectively four­
£100,000.” Another large hospital has teen and sixteen years, sons of respecta­
been established at Colon, with dispen­ ble parents, became engaged in a quar­
saries along the line of the canal; but rel about a girl while going to church.
numerous as they are the number of Angry words were exchanged, and sud­
sick is in excess of’ the accommodation. denly, without warning, one of the boys
According to the official report, the mor­ took a knife from his ftockct and stabbed
tality among those employed on the the other, killing him instantly. Subse­
canal was no higher than tlie European quent investigation develdtwd the fact
average.
In July, 1881, only twelve that both of these boys had been ad­
deaths occurred among 1,118 workmen, dicted to reading every week a great
and last April only five out of 2,652. quantity of this trashy literature, in
This year the correspondent* on the spot which just such scenes as they them­
represent the mortality as appalling. "In selves finally enacted were of frequent
four days recently the company lost nine occurrence. Doubtless every number of
officers from fever. Instead of averag­ the weekly publications so eagerly de­
ing five to ten deaths per month, they voured by these young boys was tilled
are averaging that number daily. Two with sensations equally startling with
of tlie ablest engineers ot the company tlie one which they at last enacted. Long
succeeded each other as chief -of-work’s mental familiarity with such deeds oi
only to be swept off by fever, one after violence had made them ready for tlie
three days' illness, the other only thirty- reality. That familiarity breeds con­
'six hours after seizure. The general tempt is as true in such a matter as this
.-uerctary sharvil 1 heir fate, together with as in any other. There can be no possi­
manv other Officers, and laborers by the ble doubt that reading such fiction, in
hundred.” The lady superior of the which horrid scenes of violence are de­
hospital died the same night as the last scribed. and looking at their accompany­
chief-of-works. It is difficult' to conceive ing Illustrations—which frequently rep­
i» more sombre picture of a pest-stricken resent the murderer or the assaasin in
district than that which is painted by the act of committing a crime, his mur­
those who are living in M. de Lesseprs derous knife raised high in the air. or
sajutorium for convalescents. Small-pox pistol cocked and aimed—is productive
htw been succeeded by yellow fever and of the very results which are so vividly
the health authorities nt Jamaica and portrayed in words and engravings. The
New Orleans order all vessels arriving cause and the effect go hand in hand,
from the Isthmus into quarantine.
and the bad results are becoming of
American observers, whether journal­ alarmingly freqdent occurrence. No-,
ists. naval officers or consulagree in body was surprised to learn that Jesse
declaring that little work has been done James was a regular reader of the
on the Isthmus. The latest testimony Police Gazette.. It would naturally be
on this head is dated July 16, and de­ expected that such was the case. For
clares that beyond a few wooden villages •the sheet in question is simply a grown­
and a laue hewn through the woods up edition of the present day boy’s storymarking tbe sight of the ctnal. next to paper; substituting facts for fiction, and
nothing has been done. From one to yet unscrupulously exaggerating the facts
two thousand workmen, mostly negroe&lt; "to nearly as jrreat an extent as to become
from Jamaica, together with some Chi­ fiction itself. So it would naturally be
ftamen, have been employed since Feb- expected that when a boy of sixteen is
niary, 188!; but so far the ground him murdered by a boy of fourteen, some of
hardly been broken. A ditch has been this trashy literature is at the bottom
dug here and tliere. but excavation om« of it.
be begun in earnest before any euneep- • There is a lesson and a warning in this
tion can beformedofthetru&lt;worthm-:s8
—----~ -------tiun
be formed of the ti*w«twor!hmu4« I last boyish tragedy. T*
The
camo
cause
oJ —
U&gt;« estimate
or- —
the pmibllilr
of .iuevbrought .boat un*
thi. oepioraoie
deplorable re
re-­
u.
~ —
r-~........ . ...
»- ।j which
woicn urvugiii
ecution. The canal is divided into sec- suit may result in the death of some one
------------A
-------u
—
.
t..„
------I
who
IU&gt;JU
_
&lt;k&gt;ar
to
tions, and much satisfaction has been ex­
pressed that in letting the first two con- ff our young boy goes to the news-stand
■ tracts the excavation has been under- each weekend purchases a piper which
taken at fifteen pence per moire instead he instinctively feels can be read by
of two shillings allowed fur in the orijri* him with safety onlv in a wood-Bhed,
n.l estimate. So far. of course, this is or at .1
' r .
1
na!
the_____
wood-shed
of a playmate,
or
veiygood. But it remains u» be seen in some secluded spot, we may be sure
whether the adventurous speculators will that
ultM, w
seeds of future sorrow are being
be able to complete their contract at the ■ sown.
— But if the boy, seeing the heed­
leanness and carelessness of father and
Colon to G&amp;tyn, a distance of seven and mother, brings this firebrand of sensa­
a half miles, is to be completed in three tional literature right into the household,
years; but *s the line passes through a and gloats over the fiendish tale before
swamp to which Ohat Mos* was solid him, while parents neglect to examine
ground, and a breach of contract only into the character of the mental stimu­
involves the forfeiture of £4.000, it is lant eo greedily self-administered, how
premature to conclude that tlie- work much more likely is the result to be heart­
which is not yet begun will be com­ rending anguish to those who, by exer­
pleted at contract price. According to cising control over the boy’s habits, could
a French correspondent, the dredgers naV
c owrcu
«««. ui.uu
w&gt;m&gt; the
mtoxmoiuouw
have
stored that
mind with
elements
and excavators sent out from Europe, -of
-of pure
pure and
and noble
noble manhood,
manhood, and
and given
given
are not worklug well, and will hare to ’it*■ -a healthy
—’*L—stimulus
•’—’----which
—»-A— have
would
be reconstructed. 'These difficulties will afforded proper food for its demands.
no doubt be speedily overcome. but we Parents cannot -exercise too much care
must wait for a serious beginning to bo in this respect And we caution them to
made before the company can be said to have a greater care now, lest present
be fairly face to face with the rejil obsta­ neglect bring future sorrow.
cles which they have to surmount
In cities the youth is daily exposed to
It is Often taken for granted, that be­ the temptations of these vicious papers,
cause M. De Leseepa severed the futh- and parents have double cause of vigi­
miw of Suez he must also succeed in lance to guard against them. For copies
severing th st of Panama. But the ditch of the papers, or first chapters of tneir
vicious stories, are circulated like hand
to Suez oonnut for a moment be com-' bills and thrown Into door-yard^, in
pared to die ehanncl which he has under­ this way these papers are stolen into the
taken to hew through die rocks and hands of children who would otherwise
«w4tn|w of Panama. The qew canal never see them. And it seems impossi­
will only be half M long as the old one, ble to head off this device of tbe devil in
butMitpamea thrcffigh a mountain range
Bccwxsitating a clean cut 850 feet deep
throdgh solid rock, the difficulty of its

&gt; HERE ARE BARGAINS FOR YOU!

PENGELLY’S WOTUTS FRIEND

United

Every mother of daughterM sliould
kuuw ahout it—because it brings
hemlth

to

amts

canty, o^l’rofuse 1’e.rkxtt.

Summer Pants for 95c—Think of It!
For fall and winter trade, are comming in. They are excel­
; lent and cheap. Examine' them.

TO YOUNG LADIES

Saxon Hacks.

Of the bext quality and lowest, in price. Try our. 40e Tea.
TO OVER-WORKED WOIEN Don’t buy poor eggs unless yon prefer them. Our egg tester
jnycrtHi? from or tAr.wcnttjtts.-A Pr&lt;.i.p.un rtea tells you which are poor.
or Beartnc Down, wlttxtta attendant Ulceration ;
'
ream rnn aiivvfa ■sass
I. ran«u mt. oi u»CASH PAID FOR BUTTER AID EGGS,

In all the Saxon cities, .as I have once
before remarked, the hack, or, as it is
known here, the droschka, is called
upon by all ctawes of people for all
sorts of wurposes.
It is u*cd a great
Ready pay secures for you al I-the-advantages in trade:
deal more than in Chicago or any
American city. The fares are so low,
the service so good, the drivers are gen­
erally such good fellows, that the plaints, uauallr n'.tribuUxl to other causes, but
droschka stands in high repute from one really psfccliar to the ecx, ILL CEKTA.LVIA'
end of the country to the other.
In all BEKELH-TVE-D fay Zoa. Phora.
cities there are hack-squares, or rather
LEVCrfllKHCE.l KV1NS THE FINEST
squares where hacks can be found, but COMPLEXION.- Zom l'hora cares the faraor.
to find them in perfect swarms one
must go to the railroad stations.
It
puzzled me for some time to discover
how they all secured jobs; how it came
GONM.
»•
about that in the course of day or night Address
It. PENG ELLY, M. D.
none of them were entirely neglected,
(Z+ibv
Drugguu:)
KA.ULMAZOO,
MH
like the Chicago hackmen; but I very
soon discovered the secret.
The ddrschkas, as a rule, are very
good-looking vehicles. Some of them
And i« tilled with vS^oves of 20 Different Kinds.
’present even a handsome appearance,
and you could indulge in a very stylish
turn-out upon the streets for a very
small outlay of money were it not for
two drawbacks—the driver’s hat, which
even-body recognizes, and the number
of the vehicle, which is displayed like a
Chicago clothing store advertisement
No matter how you may settle yourself
hack against the cushions, no matter
how dignified and respectable you may
try to appear, no matter what airs you
put on or how condescending you gaze
upon the people as you pats, they know
you are silting in a droschka, and they
can guess just about how much you are
A Pon Family Mrdlclse that Ktver latoxlcatu.
paying for your grandeur. But then,
again, there are drewchkas so old and
worn in the service of their country that
they should have been retired on half­
pay long ago.
They are worn at the
heel, out at the elbows, and so seedy
A Large assortment of Shelf Goods and Tinware, and the best
that should the Crown Prince ride in
Tinner in tbe County.
onepf them, dressed in his most elegant
court uniform, he would look shabby.
FOR GOODS CHEAP CALL AND SEE ME.
On leaving the crowded Saxon rail­
road station, the stranger naturally,
therefore, picks out the best-looking
you up from the firvt do»e but
droschka ha can find, and attempts to
h ha» med hundred* of lire*
enter it, at the same time giving the
driver directions. But the latter bows,
CKEAT SAV2KO BUTI.XQ DOLUX StZC.
and informs him that he must get a
check from the uniformed, fat, fair, and
■able Halm that will wmioreTan. Fru'tk.&lt;», Jhpipobliging official who stands at the main
leantid Bklche., h-arlmt Jhr akin soft, clear and
beautiful, aliu {attraction. &gt;or producing a luxuri­
entrance to the depot.
This is annoy­
ant emwth of hair «n a bsbl Iread nr snoot h tsco
ing, but you must get that check.
No
Addrr-J.inclosln 3c. ataiutr, HFN. VANPEt-F A
check, no ride.
The stranger ap­
I have opened a market
proaches the check-man, informs that
gentleman that he wants a droschka,
ATTACHED TO C. SMITH’S
and is soon in possession ot the neces­
sary certificate. This is a large oblong
thatdrvad dlirnsr, Cntnnmptirn by a airapJe ren &lt;
GROCERY"
brass check with.the number of the
hack which is entitled to the next job
and intend to keep a
upon it.
Everything goes by rotation.
You must take the hack for better or
for worse. It is a game vf chance. Per­
haps you will draw a prize, and perhaps
you won’t. It Is a little sever? upon
POSITIVELY CURED
the strangers, but it is a great protec­
BY
tion to the poor hackmen.—Chemnitz
Also everything pertaining to a first-class ।
Cor. Chicago Netcs.
market.
Not Fall
* Brain Stimulation.
to tend f &lt;r
Cood Coodsand Full Weight
■
Bour FALL
The anatomist is familiar with the fact
Price-Liu
tho^thore are two larsro nerves of sensa­
Give me a trial.
far 1882.
tion known as the “fifth pair,” which
ft-tc to any address upon
are distributed to the top of tbe head
application. Contain^ Jeand face, and to the mucous -membrane
gcriptioua of everything
of the mouth, nose and eyes.
These
First.
required for Personal or Family use,
nerves are closely connected with the
Because they possess all
with over 2,200 illustrations. We soli
pATIUBUN BOVSe,
nerves which control the action of the
rri4;t!wm!ng poroua plaster,
tlM thereto the newly diset
all goods at wholesale prices, in
heart and of the blood vessels. By their
A. IL AKT13DEL, Pkothixtok
stimulation the heart’s action may be
quantities to suit the purchueer. The
;utcr irrtlAbt effect*.
increased. This explains the fact that
only institution in America who make
Grsxxxd FUvpldm, Mloh.
application of cold water or cold air to
tliis their special buainetB. .Address
the face is one of the best means of re­
.-.rstion, and so recognised by the profsaaiou.
MONTGOMERY WARD A CO.,
viving a person who has fallen in syn­
Third.
cope. It is a curious fact that people of
all nations are accustomed, when in auy
difficulty, to stimulate one or another
Propriktok
branch of the fifth nerve, and quicken
their mental processes. Thus, some
----- OLD RELIABLE----persons, when puzzled, scratch their
heads, others rub their foreheads^ and
dthers stroke or pull their beards, thus
stimulating the occipital, frontal, or
mental branches of these nerves. Manv
Germans, when thinking, have a habit
.Admlntetrulors Sale.
of striking their fingers against their
In the matter oCtlw* rxateof
“
noses, and thus stimulating the nasal
.
OEOHUE GILLIS, IXaMtwd.
cutaneous branches, while in other coun­
Notice ia hereby given xt-»t 1 shall Mil at public
ai-llnn In IK.
SEABURY A JOHNSON, "&gt;
tries some people stimulate the branches
distributed to the mucous membrane of
the nose by taking snuff. The late Lord
A
iMoM AnKwilniiJSisft*:
.
IN THEJU SEABOr
Derby, when translating Homer, was
village
PMhvfllr
accustomed to eat brandied cherries.
Lard,
by
the lb. or barrel,
One man will eat figs while composing
Ae., Ac., Ac.
a leading article; another will suck
chocolate creams; others will smoke roue dubilily. Premutu*
The Higbcnt Market Price paid
cigarettes, and others sip brandy and ofyoathfnl ItuIUcrtdan.
for Hideh. Pelts, fisc.
to-wit: village iotj. (
water. Bv these means they stimulate
Fresh Goode, Full Weights
and fuur in Iha vt'kj
the lingual and buccal branches of the
Satisfaction Guaranteed.
nerve, and thus refiexly excite their by the advertlecra experience can do so &gt;&gt;y adurraa
lur to perfect eontVh'nce.
.brains. Alcohol appears to excite cir­
M-Ijrr, JOHN B.O(H&gt;EN.«Cc4ar 8i„N.Y.
,
IIEVK1 ROE
culation through the brain rfflexly from
the mouth, and to stimulate the heart
refiexly from the stomach, even before
it is absorbed into blood. Shortly after
it has been swallowed, however, it is
absorbed from tbe stomach, and passes
with the blood to the heart, to the brain,
and to the other parts of the nervous
THEUiOKARCH^^
system, upon which it begins to act di­
rectly.—Contemporary Review.
BILXJLAJEtO HALL
Is ff&amp;coinmended by PhyslcinnsJ
(Ho Liquors.!
—Gov. l&gt;ong, of Massachurett®, re­
C. N. DUNHAM.
uTAtihyMi
cently received a letter asking for in­
formation oonoerning the day appointed
any
as Thanksgiving Day. The writer said
he intended to be married that day, and
would like to make his arrangements
ahead, if he could know the date. Tbe
Governor replied that it would undoubt­
edly l»e upon the last Thursday in No-

To Women Advanced in Life NEW VICTOR SEWING MApHINE is VICTOROUS.

C. C. Wolcott

THE STORE REMAIHS

The MONUMENTAL is the Finest Hound
Store Made.

PARKER’S

GINGERTONIC

Paints, Oils and Colors, Doors, Glass, Sash and
Blinds Iron and Wood Pumps,Wagons, Buggies,
Carriages and Platforms. Drills. Cultivators
Seeders. Plows, Land Rollers, "Reed Spring­
tooth Harrow.
.

New Meat Market.

PIMPLES

CONSUMPTIVES.

Ache

SALT and FRESH MEATS.

Benson’s Capcine
Porous Plasters.

ROE,

meat market.

Benson’s Capcine Porous Plaster!

Fresh anil Salt Meats,

Smoied Hans aid Stioulden,

ERROR? OF YOUTH.

HALL’S

flatarrhQure

sioo

NO PATENT NO PAT

nnms

�—*

SB

GO

TO

•tbe former with a knife in tbs ri.-ht brewt,

SATURDAY

NOV. 4. 1*0.

THE NEWS.

Ufled that the best |«cuniary result* will Le
obtained by absolute rest one day Xu seven,
have decided to stop work on the Bsbbath

HR Mayor of Philadelphia bas announced
that he shall issue no more permits for the
exhibition of. fire work* during hl* term-of

Robert Ford, on trial al Plattsburg, Ma,
for the murder of W'ood Hite, wa* acquitted

Frrsidkxt Arthur on the 20th ioiutwl a
proclamation appointing Thursday, November
30. as a day of Nation*! thanksgirlug and
prayer.

I-

A Waihyngton dispatch of the 20th says
that up to date there had been coined 127,
755,880standard sliver dollars. There was In
the Treasury 492,500.000, and the number of
dollars in circulation among the people was
35,250,000, or a little over twenty-five per cenL
of the total coined.
Tn« Assistant treasurer at Chicago ha* ap­
plied to the Treasury Department for &lt;3,­
000.000 in gold * —
4 Thomis^F. Talbott, one of
tbe oldest real fnt* of Cheyenne, was mortally wounded .r his wife In self-defense, be
being intoxicated and ugly.
The Governor of Texas has received a tele­
gram from New York offering seventy cent*
per acre for one million acres of Slate lands.
Concerning the recent aalc of the “NickelPlate” Road a Cleveland dispatch of the 26th
says: “A telegram from New York to-day to
a local broker here report* tho sale of the
coutroUlng.Inlereat in the Nickel Plate Rail­
way to Vanderbilt at seventeen for common
■lock and thirty-seven for preferred. The
officials of the road at headquarter* here dis­
claim any knowledge of the sate. A proml-

derbill's confidence, was asked what be knew
about the rumor, and evasively replied be Is
not In a position to «.iy anything aboct it at
present The report Is believed here."
The business failures in the United States
during tbe m ven day* ended on tbe 26th num­
bered 134.
Lewis Lt®-., President of tbe Third Avenue
Railroad Company of New York, was twice
fired at on
27th by his nephew, who Chen
New out hi* owt; brains.
Ax cxploslei. of flre-da:nj&gt;
the 37th tn a
colliery near ’. Wilkesbarre, Pa, caused &lt;hc

The family -Cu Alvis Regar. a German &lt;aloun-kceper of JS'jtfalo, N. Y„ w** polscncd
on the 27th by arsenic eaten In pancakes. The
son «va* des&lt;Lwtke mother nnd father wore
d'.ng, and two rhildran would probably Xollx a dlsputeov tbe 27th at Nicholasville,
B. Letcher killed Ed* a rd Evans, a young phy­
sician.
.
Soldiers' Home Jo, Washington, waa robbed
of diamond*. silks and laces to the amount
of 15,000. A acarcb on the -27th developed
the missing properly In the trunks of a French

closed at ten o’ctock. ba the night of the 28lb.
Fitzgerald woa, having covered 577 mile* and
two laps. Noacmac • was second, with 5G7
miles to his credit, On&gt;y four of the nlac
who started bfad qut la the epd. The total
receipts were 430,3fS.
A man named iWcllsrWaa struck and killed
by lightning near GranvtUe. O., on the 38th,
and another was fatally In Jared.
Eight colored peqple v,crc poisoned at
Shreveport, La., on the Sotiaby arsenic which
had been mistaken for yeast powder and used

. •Che Flint mill at Fall River, Mesa, valued at
4800,000. The fire caught from a belt in tbe
picker-room. Tbe mill employed five hun­
dred bands, had fifty thousand fpindle* and
an annual product leu of thirteen million
yards of print clothe The propcity was in­
sured lor 1600,000.
The foreign malls csat out oLthe United
Staten-during the fiscal year ended on the 28th
exceeded those of the iprevious yeatfhy 452,000
pounds The United States standi at the
bead of al| countries, J c, the nurnhe: of its

A Washixotox dlspetali of the 231b state*
that the Paymaater&gt;Gcneu* of the Acny, in

were 415,132.345.
Tnx Maaiachusetta BoariLrf Railroad Com­
missioner* on ths 28th decided that Engineer
Wattspn .was responsible for the disaster on
the Troy
Greenfield liahroad at Nocth
Adams, rsecntly, whereby eight persons' la t
their Urea.
Eighteen cars were buwd
a firemsc.
and brakemac killed by a fnalght tealn on the
Delaware A Hudson Railroad Jumping tbe
track at a trefa’.e near Putnam Btgtkm, N. Y..
A OKIAX posiion of ’he biufateae ^wtkm of

68th. The flre.vss attributed to cnrolaisnes*
. of employe* in Jfcuk's brewery, and.there was
. talkxit lynching the proprietor.
Fo&lt; the twenty-four hours ewded on the
29tli there were fofty-seven new cases of gellow Xcvcr and four death* reported at l’&lt;n.sacola, Fla.
_
The Eureka Cast Steel Company'* works
ot IteABlk. TM lw.(S1M,O») ra
by tnsurau'.-e.
. Ox tiuISth an acemnt-latlon of explosives In
/tb* shaft of tbe Eureka (Nev.) Consolidated
ruin* exploded with .tetmendoua violence,
-shattering the abaft from .top to bottom and
hurting the debrta in *K direction a. The
eastern portion of the company's works wa*
demolished qpd tfie roof erpahod in, infilctlag.
a money lq*» of about fifi^DOl No lives

at the Fhiladel.hla mint. Tbe low by the
operation to U» Govacament was 413,0X1.

Auguat GoekeL fa FhUadddU*. and exuded
Ik the proprietor i.ii; work. but uftbouMu‘arrest for ifee crime.
At Oevriaada few days ago Gsorge Tnotup.
**
JiQffJ. bttf* ftW)! txmnnet

emzEM or wonuid,

TH1 ONE-PRICE CLOTHING STORE,

Montana

And save from 15 to 20 per cent.

Balkan Feninaula.on tbe 26th..
The Hawaiian volcano la in eruption op a
grander scale than for twenty-five year*. *
Tbb British Parliament on the '.'dtb pa***d

DOMESTIC.

pany refused to pay tbe interest- ill’ now
oCers to compromise on &gt;125,(XXL
Tmj: proprietor* of the Bessemer Steel

'

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN Winter

Brow tslloa tbe W» Xor the first time ibis

Compiled from Late Diap&amp;tohn.
3,000 in Indian trust funds *wer*
»e-bond* ot the Nashville, ChatleLouls Railroad. During tbe war

NASHVILLE

‘ And buy your dothtng of

A Mammoth Stock of

Goods!

•awger ana More CompMe
&gt;h»n ever.

Fall and Winter Clothing CLOTHING

motion declaring that tbe war was un Ju* tillable
first appearance in America ou the evening of was voted down—857 to 14.
the 80th, was totally consumed by Ore late oa ■
lx the British House of Common* on the
Everything Mew, Mtylkah. and Durable.
tho afternoon of that day. Its origin was un­ '26th tbe Premier announced list the Go vern­
known. "Two employes were Injured by ment favored the freedom ot the Suez Canal
Jumping from ths -window*, and one was
Tlie attention ot Parent* I. n-Bpecttully colled to our large .lock ot
Intelligence ha* been received at Alex­
missing. The total loss was placed at 4250,000.
The exchanges at tsrenty-six leading clear- andria that Prof. Palmer and party were re­
ing-housos in tbe United States for tbe week cently murdered -by the desert Bedouins. It
ended on tbe 28th aggregated 41,135,534,060, is stated that the party were led to the edge
Which is tbe most, complete ever laid down tn Nashvile.
being a reduction of about 4210,000,000 from of a precipice and offered tbe alternative of
throwing tbe naelres over or being *hoi- Prof.
We are proud of our new stock of
Two little child ran of Curtis Lampmaa, Palmer.chose.the former alternative and per­
'living near Troupobunt, N. Y.. were burne I ished, wh!l«0the rest of tbe party chose tho
to death a few morning* ago during the ab­ datter and were put to death.
sence of their parents from the home.
•
Nrar Alamaos, Mexico, a battle was
And believe we have something dralrahlc and very cheap.
fought on the 27th between Indian* and the
pjEKSONAL AND POLITICAL. State troope. In which 100 Indians and
We have made addition* to our
Joitx P. Saxhorx, Speaker of the Rhode twenty-three soldiers were killed, end several
Island House of Representatives, ha* forfeited wounded.
hl* poeltton by accepting mi appointment as a
Ax naessy feeling pervades France, owing
-commissioner to in* pc ci a section of the to tbe Revelation* concerning the anarchist
With the view of suiting the most particular customer*.
Northern Pacific Railroad.
consplr.rcy. The financial institution* and
Architect Mvllrtt surprised the Treas­ Republican Journals at Lyon* were threatened Our ntock of
and Shoes is larger than ever,' and no competitor
will be allowed to undersell uh.
ury Department ou tbe 25th by formally ten­ by the -mob oa the 37th, and an outbreak
dering his resignation as Superintendent of Reemed.to be almost inevitable. Numerous
CALL ^V&gt;I&gt; SEE.
■Construction of Public Buildings In Chicago
The Russian police -captured seventy-five
has not been recognized as a public offijer.
revolutionists at Odessa on the 27th. among
Richard B. Cokxwsi-u, indicted for tbe them a student who had a pre**. and many
embezzlement of upward of 47D,&lt;K» from the Nihilist rnanlfeatoes.'
Fourth National Bank of New York, has lorA Vienna (Austria) dispatch of the 27th
’Mted hi* ball and fled to Europe.
Southern Tyrol would exceed 4600,000, which
charged with attempting to bribe Mr. Brown,
of the Star-route jury, was arraigned before a
A Ix&gt;ni»on dispatch of the 28th says that
police Justice in Washington on tbe 25tb, and lite floods along the Thames were very seriheld to ball In the sum of 42,000.
ouiu Windsor was inundated, and tho water
■HAVE JUST RECEIVED TBEI1
A New York grand Jury has indicted three was mi) rising.
■ pollen officers for intimidating voters and aid­
Tm nssembly-room«. vicarage, and the
ing In the eommlssibn of frauda
whole side of Cecil squ ire, at Margate. En­
Promotions tn the ahny consequent uponfi gland. were destroyed by fire on the 38th.
For the Fall and Winter Trade.
the retirement of Major General Irving Mc­ the loss beirig 4»X&gt;,(WX
Dowell were announced by the President on
Three huxdrrb people were on the 28th
tbe ?6th, as follows: Brigadier Genera! John reported to be without food on Tory Island.
Pope to be Major General, an ! Colonel Ron­ County of Donegal, on the northwcstc|oa*t ot
ald 8. Mackenzie. Fourth Cavalry, to be Brig-

CHILDREN’S, BOYS’, AND YOUTHS’ CLOTHING,

HATS, HATS,

CAPS, CAPS,

Boots, Shoes, Gents’ Furnishing Goods, Groceries, Underwear, Etc.

PRENBLE &amp; CHIPMAN.

A flret-elam CoM Wealker Sell hr tH.

EVESY MAH WHO DRIVES A TEAM

Blankets and Robes.
IN THIS LINE odr stock will compare favor­
ably with any tn Barry or Eaton counties,
and good Judges state that our prices are
lower.
-

----- OUR STOCKS OF—

Prints, Dress Goods, Flannels,
Ladies Cloakings, Shiwle, Underwear,
Blankete, Boote, Shoea, Hate, Caps,
Mittenn, Gloves, Grooeries, Glaasware, Orodtey and Qneeniware
And, tn fact, everything usually kept fa a first
class general store are larger than ever and
arc being sold at popular low prices. Come
Woodland, Oct. 25, 1882.

F. F. HILBERT,

LATEST NEWS

CUSTOM

And. manufacturer of hardwood
Lumber.

Their Prints I Ginghams are the finest y
Ever brought to this market for the price.

Joseph Sizo. the locomotive engineer on
from a flcry death, died st Jersey City fr&gt;«m
hl* injuries on the 36t!i.
111 ham TrcKEit, a Boobm Inventor of note,
recently committed suicide l*y inhaling il­
luminating ga*.
Warhaxts were issued at Washington on
tbe 27th for tlie arrest of William Dickson,
the fore »an of the recent Star-route Jury, on
the charge of endeavoring to improperly In­
fluence tbe Jury, and of conspiring to gel
money from the United Stale* lorthe pur[&gt;o»ot impeding Justice.
The Woman's National CbrisUau Temper­
ance Union, in session at LoulsrlUe, Ky.. on
the 27th re-elected Miss Frances E. Wlllant

re-elected Corresponding Secretary-, Mr*.
Mary A Woodbridge, of Ohio, Recording
Secretary, and Mis* Esther Pugti, Treasurer.
In Chicagoan the 28th tbe jury In tbe trial
of Mr*. Scoville for Insanity found that «he
six months' d*ratlon, and hereditary. It
found that she did not manifest suicidal or
homicidal tendencies, and that she uas not a
pauper. Mr*. -Scoville did not appear In
court, and could not be found.
Jury, was arrested and arraigned in the Police
Court at Washington on the 28th. He gave
bond to appear for examination.

drowned by tbe branding of the steamer GuL’
of Panama on tbe shore* of the island at Texd.--------------------- ---The Government &lt;»f France ha* found it
nccewtry to prevent the «ale of dynamite,
and to that end prepared a decree on the 28lh
prohibiting Die sale or manufacture of that
explosive.
day* ag&gt;&gt; a hurricane nearly dei'royed
the village
Re of (irindel * aid. In Switzerland.
Swiss Government concerning tbe movements

to Inquire Into the facts, the conviction is ex-

a ted.
The Servian Ministry bas tendered It*
resignation, but Prince MD*u declines the
tender. .
The damage er ased by tbe flood in Tyrollan
Austria Is estimated at IB iDtr.000 florin a
The elections for members of the Italian
Chamber of Deputies have resulted favorably
to the Progressists.
A recent water-spout at St. Raphael,
France, destroyed seven brigs.
A storm on the coast of Southern Spain
has resulted in the wrecking of uianv vessels
and the drowning of twenty-four flsbrrmcn,
whose fao-illes are left destitute and helpless.

from 4&lt;Kj to 5&lt;)0 rebels at Juchltan, the hot­
bed of the malcontents, about twenty miles
general election contained, up to the _.‘»tb, from Balina Crux, surrounded tbe soldiers, tak­
tbe tinme* of 196,233 voters, the largest num­ ing their arm* The rebel* were roving over
the country robbing and killing the peopleber, ever known.
Mrs. SeovitXE sad her daughter Berth* The troops were inarching to meet the rebel*
were found in Ixiadon, Ont., on the SJth,
wbltbsrthe unfortunate woman had 'fled in
LATER NEWS.
anticipation of a vsrdict by the Jury pro­
nouncing her Insane.
charged from tbe shops ot tlie Iron Mountain
Amistaxt-Srcretart French, of tte
Treasury Department, baa decided in favor of pact with his ton that be (the father) should
Chlusse be ng permitted to return to Ameri­ commit suicide, and tbe son should then kill
ca without certificate if they lived here at tbs tbe man who discharged him. On the 31*1
time of the treaty of 1880. and left Desire the .ult. the old man coolly stood up at the din­
jAssaze of tbe Anti-C»incse law of 1882.
ner-table and blew his brains out, and tbe
AMONG tbe resolution* adopted at the •son proceeded to the aboj* and mortally
dosing session in Louisville, Ky.. of tbe Wo­ •wounded Georgy F. Barnes, the clerk and
man's National Christian’ Tenq-crance Union time-keeper of the Master Mechanic, the
■as tbe following: "We rejoice in th&lt;-day latter being tbe Intended victim. Cazat had
that gives recognition to our Prohibition
principles by political partisani. and will en­
OrriciALdeplal was made on the 31st ult.
deavor tz&gt; influence the beet men In al! com­ of tbe reports that the Bui tan secretly con­
munities to commit tbemecvea to tnat |&gt;arty nived at tbe actions of Arabi I'aahs In Egyptby whatever name called that shall give to Thc Sultan desired an early and open tala) of
tbesn-.the bestosnbollment of the Prohibition Arabi, and would not Interfere in the finding
pet nd pic, and &gt;Ul most aurcly protect oatThe large Rathbone flouring mills at Clon­
Jcx&gt;ce Huxtu, al Salt Lake City on the mel, Ireland, have been burned by an Incen­
30th, daa ted a.writ ot mandamus to oust j»&gt; diary fire.
• lygamfai official* under tbe Edmunds law,
lx a public school at Leavenworth, Kan., a
and great excitement had resulted. The few days ago, W. G. Rom, nine years of age,
Gentile- -"serted that Hunter had been pur­ acting as "monitor," reported a boy of
chased ty4he Mormons, and demanded his twelve years, named Winter, for whispering.
removal
8ecret«t Chawdlkr has received at Before hl* intention could be fathomed the
latter rushed upon the smaller boy and
WashiRgtcn a.cable message from Lieutenant
Harber, of ihc Jeannette search party, dated plunged a knife Into hl* tide, Inflicting a mor­
Bulun, July 2, and Irkutsk, October 30, as tal woundThe trial of tbe negro Payne, charged with
follows: *-Arrived at Bulun July 2, nine days
from Irkutsk. Strong head wiids. The corruptly approaching a member of the late
schooner does well. Will begin Work in tbe Btar-route Jury, began in the Washington Po­
lice Court on tbe 81st ult.
Delta July 5, with four parties. No further
Two s-Eusoxs lost their Jive* by the recent
. communlcatten until .return.”
burnlnrof the Pack Theater In New York
6.,.
FOREIGN.
There were fifteen new cases of yellow
fever and four death* at Pensacola, Fla., on
ok.the British ooafa,durlngthe recent gale,and
tbe 31st uK.
tin thirteen sailor* on board were drownedAccounts on the 81*t ult from 8u Peters­
ilEKR Moot, editor of the London FrriteiL,
whossru sent to prison lor applauding the burg made mention of a strong revival of the
Nihilist agitation. A copy pt a revolutionary
reprint,
Woljn, announced that the
outbreik of tbe revolution was Imminent.
ment having expired.
Adelina Patti, tho cantatrice, arrived la
The Council of .Mlnktcxa ct Cairo, Egyi&gt;t,
on (he 24.h decided to Instruct tlie Govern­ New York from Earope on the 30th ult.
Mr*. De. E. C Bbguix, of' New York, took
ment of Soudan to bold out at Khartoum un­
til assistance* arrived. It was stated that her three children, two boy*, aged five and six,
the False Prophet had reached Kordofan. It
■was decided to enlist as many black troops top of the house on tbe afternooi of tbe 31st
UlL. blindfolded them, tied their hands be­
hind their Backs, and then shot each ooo in
.Gladstoxx announced In Parliament on
the 25th that General Wolseley and Admiral Immediately dealt herwlf the same death.
Floods in Southern France, tn the vicinity
Seymour had accepted peerages, and hoped
Che Hmisc would provide them with suitable
mated at 3,0UQ,000 franca
'
annuities.
Jcdou Waldo Colb&amp;kx, of the Superior
A New Bedford iMaas.) dispatch of tbe
Court of Boston, ha* been appointed to the
fiupremc bench at Massachusetts, to succeed
tbe British feark Horeneath, recently wrecked Judge WlOfam C. Endicott, rasiguei.
The Norwegian Government »a* badly dein the Straits ot Magellan, who took refuge
feeted in the recent election*, four-fifths of
the members relonied to the Biortblng being
Radicals or Republicana
up the steamer on whfeU King Milan

cx-

Twr Pnualtn rlarllotta tv the Laodta&lt;^

Hon of Fresklinz Bishop Smith, of Kentucky,
vu celebrated in New York ou the morning
oX the list ull.

i

0

'

WORSTED dress coods

A GOOD FAMILY FLOUR
MILL FEUD and BRAN.

ln Brown, Cardinal. Dreg* of Wine, Bronze, Green, Slate and Drab, for

0

12 1-2 Cents per Yard,

j

--------------------------j CLOTHINC
I
For Men. Youths, Boy* and School.
I SUITS
From a cheap Cottonade to an Imported Worsted.

PURE Cider VINEGAR,

4

HARDWOOD LUMBER,

hats and Caps. Boots and Shoes. 0

BASSWOOD LUMBER.

0

ZFZRZECES AS LOW AS THE LOWEST.

PINE FINISHING LUMBER

5,000 POUNDS OF BUTTER WANTED,

Mill on Sherman Street. Ea«t froi
Depot.

For which we kill pay the Highest Market Price In Cash.

C. W. GRANGER &amp; CO.

।

new

:txtfcw

STORE GOODS
OUR EFFORTS TO IMPROVE
Our surroundings and tbe community at large

HAVE BEEN APPRECIATED!

IL K. DK KI^SpX A. CO.

ALL READY
To show you a large and well selected Stock of

GROCERIES
CONSISTING OF

Sugars, Coffees, Teas, Tobaccos,
Fish, Canned Goods,
OUR NEW STOCK OF GROCERIES Spices,
Provisions, 4c,,
And our trade Is larger than ever before.

Our store room though ample 1s completely filled and our shelves fairly groan under them
And still they come. We have everything In the Grocery line.
•'

Crockery and Glassware.
If vou want to see a pretty and complete line of Crockery, see our*. We have only time to
call your attention to China Tea Sett*. Majolica Ware, and Decorated Chamber Sett*. In Glass­
ware our stock is complete and attractive. Our trade in I.A.TIPN Is simply immctiBc. We
have Pendants, Decorated Vase, and Common Goods. Low estimates given on Church and
Hall Chandeliers.

We have added a fine line of

■

Table

Cutlery,

AT THE LOWEST PRICES
For Cash or Ready Pay.
Also the Largest. Block of

Crockery, Glassware, Lamps,
. Stone Ware, &amp;c.,
TO BE SEEN IN BARRY CO.

Lanterns, and Oil Cana Your special attention is Invited to the former, as we feel assured that BOOTS AND SHOES
we have something that will suit.
AB CHEAP AS ANYBODY.
We keep the celebrated Snow Fluke Flour.
Everything New. Freali, and Cheap. An examination will convince-

CASH PAID

FOR

PRODUCE

G. W. FRANCIS. C. w. SMITH.
Horses
501 Wagons 150
Shod
OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE

for

Sale

at rock Bottom prices

ALWAYS BEST
TO HAVE THE JOB DONF

SKILLFULLY.
WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH

THREE INCH TIRE
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING

BETTER THAN COMMON TIRE

Recognizing These Facts
And detiring to increaee my proeperity
by affording the public
%

THE BEST WORK
In that line, I have employed

Chas. Middleton,
We believe the Three inch Tire i» destined to come
into general use. Call and examine them and yon will have
no other.
.

BENTLEY BROS. &amp; WILKINS,
•.

HaHtinRS. Mich.

Sold in NaahviHs by C. L GLASGOW.

A No. 1 Workman.
J. M. WOOI&gt;
FOUNDER and MACHINIST

�Let every Wood lander re­
member that my new stock &lt;&gt;f
winter goods b larger than ’ev­
er and was bought at’

TbeM.M.
PYTHIAS.
edge sufficient to fill the office credit*
ably.

j....

the district to build

Grand Rapid* we Ml In with tbe good­
looking and gallant Paat Grand Chanrellar Chaa. A. Mack of Detroit, and
half a dozen Grand Rapids K. F*. Tbe
former enjoys tbe honor* of the pro­
mulgation of tbe* "Dsys;of Heraldry.”
sod had just completed the somewhat
arduous yet refreshing task of instruct­
ing a dozen of tbe Grand Rapidt breth­
ren in the “Grand Orient” degree.
The tnp from Grand Rapids to Al­
legan via the C. ami L. S. is a tedious
and uninviting one to any but lovers
of pine stump-oak grub-corduroy
scenery, yet made in the midst of the
gem* of thought and wisdom that fall
from Charley Mack’s ready tongue,
’tis simply a tiip through a land flow­
ing with milk and honey.
Upon arriving at Allegan and tlie
Sherman house we found the latter
» crowded with Knights from a score of
different tfhtees who were (here to lend
their aid And enbonragEmen t to the my •
•tic cereufonies and new lodge. Kal­
amazoo, Muskegon, Grand Haren,
Grand Rapids, Jackson, Detroit, Mich.
City, Montague, Breedsville, Battle
Creek, and Nashville were represented,
the first named sending seventy-one
uniformed Knights and a brass band.
The total number of Knights present
were fully 1*0.
Promptly at 8 o’clock tbe Knights
were called to order in a commodious
ball, secured for the occasion, by Grand
Chancellor John R. Bennett of Muske­
gon, who proceeded to organize a Ledge
of Emergency with the following
grand officers:

G. L G.—Geo. A. Magoon, of Muskegon.
G. O. G.—Onio Strong, of Nashville.
The ceremonies were immediately
begun and continued without cessation
until 2 a. m., when the work was com­
pleted, pronounced good and all ad­
journed to the Sherman house to en­
joy a banquet that had been given by
the new Lodge.
Below we give a list of the officers of
the new Lodge:

The lodge starts sat with a member­
ship of twenty representative men of
Allegan, it is well officered, has had a
good send-off and will flourish like a
green bfiy tree.
The order in the state is booming as
it never boomed before, and too much
credit for this satisfactory state of af­
fairs cannot be given to tbe eminent
Grand Chancellor, John R. Bennett.
Although bat three months has elapsed
since he assumed the duties of his of­
fice, he has instituted five large lodges,
ions to fifteen before hi* year closes.
Allegan was somewhat surprised. A
prominent business man stated that if
that was tbe kind of attendance they
had at K. P. meeting* he wanted to be
counted in a member right off.
Tbe acting G. P- the Rev. W. T.
Whitmarsh, is an Episcopal minister
of Muskegon and fitted the position as
neat as wax.. As prelate he stands
without a peer in Michigan.
Tbe granger, with baby and two
women, that tried to work his way into
tbe mysteries upon plea that he thought
. it was a political meeting, was prompt­
ly put out.
J. D. Jennings although 6&lt; year* old,
is the baby of Grand Rapid* lodge. He
baa taken 88 degrees in masonry, but
couldn’t stay at home.
The "lodge of sorrow” went into
•cmion abaut 4 a. m., when the Kal­
amazoo K. Fs departed for bscne,
Charley Mack is up to the mark, no
ia simply perfection.
A better-looking or finer-appearing
body of men than a ledge of K. P’b ia
difficult to find.
Tbe Grand Lodge officers did their
work admirably and a book wasn’t
thought of.

Tbe candidates for representative*

to receive railroad passe*. arc much
more deserving of credit than the can­
didate who makes the promise, well
knowing he won’t "get there." Mrnare.

K ALAMO.
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Gravca are virit-

visit in behalf at tho party which would
not nominate him to the state senate.

The following certificate**
were
granted at tho teacher’s, examination
at Hastings Friday and Saturday last:
First—Him Mary Beat^e, Mr. Daniel
C. Warner; Second—L. K. Fullerton,
Ada Cuykendall, Ethel Putnam, Lciha
McCartney, Clara Ketcham, 8. W.
Rein, Geo. Lee, Chas. D. Prichard,
Marie Stokes, A. JL. Nichols, Emma
Walker, Leroy Orr; Third—J'. W.
Armstrong, Will A. Wright, M. D.
Jodss, Harry 8. Thiers, Charles Hoyt,
Arthur Stillwell, 3. H. Holmes, Levi
A.'Boice, Ettie H. Smith, Effie Salisbuiy, Matie Headworth, Ettie Thomp­
son, Omar R. Shaw, Elner Moore, LlxBrighral, David D. Lee, Annie Win
ters, Edna A. Griffin, Augusta Hinkly.
laa E. Davis. Gertie Mjmmo, Marie
Dun well, Coia A. Cutler, Emma Althouse, E. W. Billings, Earl P. Carpen­
ter, Frank L. Willison, L. T. Patter­
son, Fayette Lamont, Ida Flory, Albert
Hofoer, Guy Erb, Geo. E. Bryant, Geo.
A. Robinson, Ernest Haynes, Eugene
Ward, Dani M. Myers, John Lee, Geo,
J. Hams, Tlios. Daniels, J. J. England,
Howard Mosher Belle Brainard, Mrs.
Clara Robinson, W. H. Otia, Teresa J.
Chance, Emma Colby, Lottie Beals,
Morris Barton. Seventy-seven candi­
dates were examined.

Any man who will go to town and
drink whisky, smoke cigars, receive a
dowery of &gt;800, and then walk around
the streets with his bauds in his pock­
ets. smiling in the face of his creditor*
and denying that he owes them any­
thing, is no man at all.
We are requested to insert the fol­
lowing : To the ladies of Maple Grove.
Please take notice that our church fait
wlll.be.beld at the 1st M. E; charch of
Maple Grove in about four weeks.make
all Die preparations you can to make it
a success, by way of furnishing articles
for sale and a good dinner. By order
of committee.

MORGAN.

Rock Bottom Prices

CI.OTHING

Suppose we have a Bible school so­
cial.
•
Jessie Cole is attending the wedding
of a friend at Kalama.
WOODLAND.
Mias Gay has concluded a success­
£lla Biguold, of Charlotte, died very
fully taught fall term of two months.
suddenly while employed at Battle
Dr. F. 8. Hull is having a suit of
Creek, last week. Foul play was sus*
office room* fitted up ' at Coles hotel,
pectttd at the time, and the Battle
where be will remain during the win­
Creek daily Moon of a later date says
ter mouths.
9
'
die was driven to suicide by a brute
John Lichty, candidate for sheriff,
named J. C. Hickock. The Moon says
purported among us. He speaks well
CUTLKFY, NAILS, PAINTS.
farther: "A.lady of position stated to
of his opponent for office, J. Q. Creasy
the editor to-day that the girl had
Oils, Pumps. Cross-cut Saws,
of tbe republican ticket.
worked for her and that this drunken
Pay your own fare on the train ; buy
Farm Tools.
beast bad taken her wage* regularly
WOODLAND.
your own cigars and beer; arrange
and spent them in drink and d* baucli- K_And everything tn the hardware Ihie, is at
j our ticket yourself and vote just by
ery. Also that when she lived at Belle­
A heavy rain Monday afternoon.
your own best judgment.
vue and before she came to tins city
The boys n^w gather hickory nuts.
NORTH CASTLETON.
Rev. Bissell of Nashville, will give
she begged him to marry her, aud he
Who has some butter nuts to will
a sermon to the public at the Mudge
refuted, after he had ruiued her, mid
Overcoats were comfortable Sunday.
school house, Sunday next at 2 o’clock.
Fine rain Saturday.
she, in her desperation took a vial ‘of
L. Paul is using tbe Runyon buildiug
Wm. Bradley is at borne again.
He will no doubt say something worth
laudanum iu bis presence to kill her
Prices lower than ever
for a store room. ‘‘
A self, driven to it by hiiu, but he coolly ST* Stock larger and
Mr. Thorp on tbe county line h hearing.
before.
The school in tlie Lee district opened
building a barn.
•‘Draw on me” “Let no one suffer
looked od and “hoped die would die.”
Every
Description
of Tinware Done
Henry Hanner intends to build on while I have money” because Begole for tbe winter term.
The dose proved too large howe ver and Right and Low.
his farm t his fall.
Mr. James Clarke is to speak upon
had in his hands large quantities of
she recovered, only to kill herselt it
L. FAUL.
Geo. Witte and wife spent Sunday, supplies ready to be distributed. That’s political issues to-nigbt, Thursday.
appearri.
There is no hell too hot for
alL See
‘ Post
with her father at Ionia.
The band boyn are to bare an oyster
and--Iribune.
such murderers of virtue aqd life.”
Elder Spitler is improving his farm
suppar on Saturday evening at th?
by building a fine corn house.
town hall.
DARBYVILLE.
Constitutional Amendment,—Yes.
S. S INGERSON &amp; SON,
Geo. Appleman went to St Thomas,
Dug Cooper, who has been seriously
The following resolution was unanimously
Out, to look after his father’s estate.
A case of diphtheria is reported, a ill for a cquple of weeks, is now much
adopted
by
tbe
Bo*
d
of
Supervisors
of
Barry
improved.
Mr. Smith of Saranac is spending a child of H. O. Branch’s.
days with his daughter; Mrs. J. Par­
We notice considerable clover which county, at their October scaaion 1882. That
Sunday evening th* pulpit was filled
the amendment therein advocated i» not a
menter.
by Rev. E. E. Wheat, an old member of baa been cut for seed was out in the question of party politics, is evident from the
Mike Ehret returned from Indiana, the Genesee conference of New York, late rain*.
fact that the board 1* composed of twelve na­
Jiveryiking in these lines.
where he baa been spending a few who has been the guest of S. J. BadMr. Perry has cut over 40 acres of , tlonals, five republicans, and one democrat.
weeks with friends. He left his oldest cockclover for seed with his reaper the “Wunzaa, an amendment to the constitution
increasing tbe salaries of our Circuit Judges Is
son there to go to school.
Rev. D. G. Jennings, a former paster the past season.
m be submitted to a vote of the people at the
Alex. Price bas had the pleasure of of Assyria circuit, has been calling on
Frank Hilbert 1* kept busy these days coming election, therefore. Resolved, that
Allowing to the public one of ’natures his many friends here the past week. with registration business. He reports It is tlie sense of this board that the best Inter­
ests of the people demand the adoption of such
curiosities by tbe aid of a string and a Last Sunday morning he delivered an a few men who reiuseio register upon amendment,
and we therefore rrwramend that
pole. Unde Alex, is food of fine able sermon at the church.
being asked.
f,
the voters of the county give it their hearty
birds.
Hon. D. K. Cook of Hasting, is to ad­ supp*&gt;rt at tbe polls.’’
Eaton, Calhoun and many other counties
The way that young man got left was
dress us on tbe political issues of tbe
WEST SUNFIELD.
not very pleasant After he had hired
day from a republican stand point up­ have adopted similar leaolntionr.
The
reasons why they voted for it are ■ Be­
a horse and carriage to take a certain
A fine shower Saturday night.
on the eve of election.
cause they pay tbe bills of the county and
young lady home she went home with
It is time gather hickory nuts.
.
The select school will continue only know that it cost* *65 a day ’o run court, *50
another fellow.
These are pretty frosty mornings for this present week, but Mr. Fay will re­ for jury alone; Because they know that ex­
Elias Long from Central Iowa spenta corn husking.
main a resident of tbe town and teach perienced Judges do work faster than inex­
few days with friends here last week.
Mrs. Wesley Fay is expected homo in one of the public schools.
perienced ones; Because they know that a
He is much pleased with the country from Ohio next week.
Our merchants appreciate tbe value single error of a Judge may cost the county a*
there but thinks if a man has a good
The infant child of Mr. and Mrs. G. of printers ink, and show their good much as his salary; Because a good judge
------- FOR—---home he had better stay in Mich.
Swick is dangerously ill.
judgement in knowing where it does is capable of earning more off than he ia upon DRUGS,
s
Mrs. Alice Hill-Coolbaugb spent last tbe most good by advertising in Thb the bench; Because a judge must give bis
BOOKS,
whole time to the public—he cannot lawfully
■week visiting her parents here.
JEWELRY,
MAPLE GROVE.
Mr. Wescott is building a much larg-1 Ira Stowell of this town is candidate hold office* or practice his profession, as pro­
W ALL PAPER.
er addition to bis house than be at first upon the’democratic ticket for county bate judge* and other sute officers do; Be
WINDOW SHADES,
cause they know that a Judge must pay large
Sam Mill haa built an addition to his calculated upon.
treasurer.
Mr. Stowell is a good expenses for books and postage, must pay all
barn.
School in tbe hunter district will open straight man, and has held various his help himself, and pay large hotel and oth- DYENTUFFN,
There was a dance at Wes^Dunham’s next Monday under the charge of Mr.
town offices from lime to time.
PROPRIETARY MEDICINES,
last Friday night.
Figg of Sebewa.
A petition has been presented to the judgrn elsewhere get much more than In Mich­
PREMRIPTIO^S,
There was a surprise party at Johnny
Mrs. Henry Hunter spent la ‘ week school board of this district to call a igan : Virginia *2,500, Teunea.ee *2,500, Colo­
Hill's a few nights ago.
RFCFIFTS,
in visiting*her daughter Jennie, who special school meeting to consider the rado *3,000, Vermont *2,500, Tex. *2,000, Wis­
Mrs. Archer has returned from au ex­ residse at Saranac.
consin
*3000,
Florida
*2,000,
N.
Hamspbire
*2,advisability of continuing tlie primary
tended visit at Hillsdale.
Sterling Green returned from his department tlje coming winter. At the 400 and few, Colorado *3,000, Misrimippi *2,------- MY------The McOmber school begin* next Ohio visit last week, and he reports a
500, Maryland *2,600 to 3,500, Rhode Island
present writing no call baa been issued.
*4,000, Nebraska *2,500, Kentucky *2,400 to
week, with Vina Hoffman teacher.
grand time at the family gathering Oct.
A card from Paul W. Freidrich of *3,400, Pennsylvania *5,000 to 7 000, Ohio *2,Allie MoOmber is engaging his time 18th.
Grand Rapids, offering a prize of an | 500, Milne *3,000, MassachumrtU *6,000 to
breaking hi* dog to work in harness.
We have bad exceedingly nice weath­ organ worth *185 for the most words *7,500, Kansu *XM0, 'Alabama *3,000, Naw
John Bindhower of Williams county, er for getting clover seed, but there
DKPAKTWENiT
found from the letters of his address Jersey *7,000, New York *7,200.
O., stopped over Sunday with hi* uncle are a few tardy ones who had clover
has been received, and now the school
Michigan pays *1,500 and it is proposed to
Adam Wolfe- He was returning from out in the late rain.
mams of Woodland have a chance to pay *2,500: Because there have been twentythe north, where he had been to locate
The Misses Rawsons, Nettie and procure an organ,—if smart enough.
a farm.
Became today there an* bat four circuit
Clara, who have been visiting friends
Quill Pen.
Sam Norton and family have return­ in Indiana, returned last week, report­
ed rrom Nebraska.
Drouths, hail ing a very pleasant tune.
WEST K1LAM0.
•terms, grasshoppere, and other unJohn Fletcher has returned from
one year ; Because 44 different judges have sat
tooked for happenings caused him to Olivet, and after a two weeks vacation
John Hurd got tbe big road job.
upon tho bench within two years; Because the
think that Michigan ia rather a good will take charge of a school down in
Growing wheat looks very discourag- 15th circuit has had six judge* In about ten
Johnstown for the coming winter.
Uncle Phillip Shaffer met with a very
Some of the bridges in this part of
A much needed rain last Saturday paid *3,000 under amendment adopted a year
serious accident eae day last week. He the town are in very poor shape, and night.
ago last spring. Everybody know* that exper­
was ascending a ladder in the barn,and unless soon repaired serious damages
Will Davis had a corn husking bee a ience U what makes a good fanner, blackwhen near tbe top it turned,, throwing moy result from them by the low of a
few nights ago.
N more grows wheat will be ground at the
him to the floor. He struck on his feet horse or toe upsetting of a vehicle.
Corn husking is progressing, and not true of Judges I
Nashville mill.
RfeM
but was jarred very much and one of
Judges salaries are paid by the State and
I have found it impossible to mak&lt;goo«
Tbe schools, so far as we have been much of a crop either.
hit legs was fractured in two places. able to learn, willfbe presided over as
W.H. Brundige is coopering for not by counties; Michigan has 28 circuits and flour for thooe who bare good wheat if I grind
Dr. Youngs was called.
30 circuit judges; *30,000 pays the increased
follows, the coming winter: Magden Stevena of Nashville.
district, Warren Ludwig; Kilpatrick
This scribe has a 3} lb., tater, and
district, W. D. Barry; Andras distinct lots of mammoth turnips.
has *810,000,000 of property, bo one twcntyEAST MAPLE GROVE.
Wilson Bowser: Patterson district,
M. H. Bradley has enclosed bis wind­
Emma NewelL
mill derrick.
J. J. Reynolds work- cent ou *270 valuation, about 3J£ cent on *1,
Mr*. May Clarkson is visiting at
The excitement on Rochester street
000. A man jwys taxes on *5,000 payb about he is trying to deceive 1
claims tn do it.
home.
last week was a lively runaway in
Freeman Upham and wife, of Olivet 18 cents. Which la best, pay 18 cents for the
It I* even hnpoeelbk
Cora is tumbling out of the husk at a which Ed. Fruston’s team tried to dis­ Station, callod on West Kaiamo friend*
Judge and M-e 18 cental
rapid rate.
•
play their speed and finally brought up Sunday.
Neal Lamb is the possessor of a horse against a tree in front of Henry Hunt-,
Mrs. Morgan cf Hastings, spent Sun­
they wfll become mixed in a mill where the
MAHHIAGIW.
and buggy. .
er’a, when they were caught Little day with her daughter Mrs. W. C. Gx*vk*-Mbax&gt;.—At tbe residence ot the
Emory Buck is soothing a carbuncle
Wilcox of Kaiamo.
bride’* parent* in Kaiamo, Oct. 25tb, by Rev. miller can make good I
r.. „ G. 8. Northrop, Jobo H. Graves end M1m
on his right hand.
A man who takes grown wheat to mill may get
the cause of the mishap.
Town Clerk Ackley called on the
Curte Mead, both at Kaiamo.
much better floor than his wheat would made
Diphtheria has broken out iu the
The literary society met at tbe resi­ voters of this town last week to get Lsoxoxn—Nichollp.—In Middleville. Jrttl:
Quail Trap school.
dence of Peter Weeks, last Friday evp their autograph*.
’• ■
but, by Rer. B. Moore. Mr. Meloro Leonard
■ The threshing machines are now do­ niag, and elected the following officers
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Green of Tekon­
ing their odd jobs.
for ensuing term: President, M. A. sha, spent Sunday tfith Mrs. Green’s
Casper Bowen and James Perry have Fay; vies president, H. L. Magden; parent*. Eli Wells and wife.
secretary. Miss Ella Hunter; treasurer,
Mrs. Wm. Wheeler of Maple Grove,
Harriaon Eldred has told his place to Dennis Hager; executive committee, paid a short visit to West Kuiarfio be­
Miss Alice Fletcher, L. C. Palmerton
ing for Kansas, Wednesday.

J.W.HOLMES&amp;CO.

Hardware, Glass, Tin and Copperware,

Grain-Lumber-Coal
Nashville, Mich.

F. T. BOISE,

PAINT AND BRUSH

Call and Examine!

F. T. BOISE.

LEGGED WHEAT.

Farmers are doing
as rapidly
wadding day by about 75 friends and

BISMARK.
Wild geese are scarce.
Beech mow is quite plenty.,
Milo Deuel is baying poultry.
.
The saw-mill is running again.
There Is much corn yet to husk.
Farmers ought to look well to their
seed corn.
The cheese factory shut down last
Saturday.
The road east of the burg is badly
out of repair. ■ . Many of the little folks of this com­
monwealth are sick.
E. F. Prestoni* expected home from
the busy west in time to vote.
The Bismark school under th*management of Miss Tread well.is a success.
Henry Hammond bus sold bis posses­
sion and will soon move to Vermont­
ville.
Mrs. Peak’s speech Tuesday evening
was fine; tbe best heard in this place
this season.
The forest, a few days ago clothed in
beautiful green is now unrobed of her
leafy covering.
Milo Deuel reports a very rick child
and perhaps ere tin's issue is in the
hands of readers it will be gone over to
to thegolden shore.
Writut.

drawing pumpkina, . .
A
kins!” “Why, ye*, pits Fitch and my- ’
relf have to draw our pumpkins J uat a*
one would log*, they are nn long and
heavy.” Your scribe drove on, be •
couldn’t wai; u* hear any more.
and will be sold at a slight ad­
Next Tuesday the voter* will be vance above actual coet.
called upon to perform a duty which
'Prepare for cold weather by
they owe not only to the'ttiaelve^ but to
the state at huge. It certainly ia the buying your
duty of every one to cast their vote for
only such candidate* a* are the mo t
fitted for the office to which they aVe
nominated.
Apd as the temperance now.
Our stock is complete
question is a great, issue, none but men in every respect.
of strong temperance principles sbonld
Also New Dry Goods, Boots,
be elected. Such practical temperance
gentlemen *a Hon. Edward S. Lacey, Shoes, Hats, Caps,- Groceries,
P; D. Patterson and L. J. Wheeler de­
Etc.,
in endless profusion.
serve the support of their conatituents,
and we liave no doulit but they will lie
We haven’t time to eautneri
elected by a very large majority. ate, and if we had these goods
Kaiamo will certainly give to our form­
must be seen to be appreciated.
er citizen*, Hon. E. S. Lneey aud Dr.
P. D. Pattcrsofi a “big lift” to office,
and she is proud to eupport so able
and honorable gentlemen as they have
proved, to be._________ _______________

ia by all right.

�bixd-wxkd.

allother 7evilsf Are yon not rtmdv to‘I
with all then. Good morning.
That was bow Charley Quedglington admit that it is largely through the jn- ' I
was sent down. Some people are tiaouned fluence of the ladies of tlie different j I
and all row up and hit out at Charley
states that (ht temperance sentiment j I
____________ rather wildly, .who warded off a bldw w
gated oiiurtha end of the terra. lie says ! tw®‘
drt,D1 stopped lightly backward But that, we know, is all nonsense. One him gained the magnitude that it has! |
he won t oomfl to Watlingbury to-mor- ! °n
the platform to avoid others. He thing about it is certain—that. to.this dayv If you are ready ‘to admit ttris, why I
row.”__________________________________ i
onl-v i’18t
time; before they oould the venerable Archdeacon is totally ig­ withhold your influence lougerl Moth- . 1
"UMnnxm! TU oom. up ud dr»w th, : ,oll“'* h,“ lk? **•» ,beKM&gt; &gt;» ““v«: • norant, and so are bi» intimate frieadt, era. if this tempter hn* dot entered your . I
badger What is a iratlng?”
porter, who, in the hubbub of the sta- that hi* son ever incurred tbe d'tigrace liourehidd, do you hot fear that it may! j
Gordon ■hot.ld hxvo koo»n. lor Chu'- i Uoo had woq uothtag ot tt. ■Urnmul of being sent down from St. Aldafj’s.
And that souk* one of that happy numley oxooptod, no on, nt SL Alduo', hoi i “&gt;’
«nd the Iwt th.t Cbari«, —London Budetu.
t*r may not be able to resist theae PPIMPIPAf A
Kl
more exprri.no, ot it. WulinKlmn- I ■“"‘&gt;"‘8 upon th, pl.tlonn.
oi hl,
temptations! There is danger, for this F, rVIlXVir
Xaanfarturing “Cerners.”
nun, were .trioUy forbidden to the uit- I «PP““«nu. »» n .ltnwp of anjry hunt
. dewradnnteiof th, CnirmitT-, ^ideren I Iremed in th, quickly moying window,
rum traffic knows no mercy, and is no \
bboktebt. quickest snd
When a speculator in stocks manages respecter of person ; and you may be ' XDd
th, wmewhxi Ux rain of Sc. Aidnt,’, _.H» unwd nmnd with a Hute laugh of
“ 11 *’»&gt;*•
wan upon thia point rtrletM thon of tr-'imph. and «a&lt;r hu dynuel. so lately to gel into bis hands and nuder his con­
Anrt ret, tn-l yet. I know ttn* roe* .
IM through fairre«'i&gt; ■&gt;&lt;•»« k*Uhi« ana glows1 mon learned oollepM. The arrival of I &lt;" 'liatr™. .Undlng at hu elbow. 'She trol the whole or nearly tlie whois cif a brought to see that under the present ,
licecse
law
the
rtitu
seller
has
the
powm*. New Msxiso. ajimios.
vsaua,
Had aw* to tullrr tfuwer
given
stock
and
continues
to
buy
at
va
­
the train, front Wadiugburr. at any rate i
“fch the more Mlf-poaMtwod of the
Ifth&gt;*fragilepsr-cdto
.
rious prices from other speculalo'ra large er to! destroy your ha ppi new and the '
of then late in tho day. waa attended by j -WOL.?°W;
....
.,
ntnounta
of
the
sxm*
stock
for
future
you so much.” she «
said,
preta proctor and bull dog to mb 11 any
... "Thank
ai&gt;“k X™*i&gt;«
W'JP
r’thli Boek had been uMy; *hH« « '"U* Sf’WM“t
b’ *ir?d; deliven-, bs Is, in the peculiar language trust, mid thn*e men have that power j
td. t
I pull tbe tender leaves apart.
There bee a iwm. oh. my hca
waa alao kept upon th, raula which led hut they radly wen rude, wen thev of Wall Street, said to hare ntade a granted them ;by the influence and j
not?
I
am
afraid
now
that
I
have
caused
from the
the city in
in that direction.
direction.
amafratd
thatlhavecauaod “corner.” He has "cornered” that par­
from
••LoSt city
hJe!” that
cried th, tempter, dad y»u to Iw left behind ; It doe, not matter ticular stuck, or, rather, those who en­ authority of this so—called 'free Rcpub- «r enacted
uS*wSL
tered into contracts for selling it to him lie. What mockery, when thousands ’
for the
lathe
to —
ma.may
out to
It you.
may”to you." _
for
the occaaion
occasion in
the lixmMolored
flamo-colored much —
- ••Not a bit,” answered be, with a for future delivery. Holding all of tha upon thousands are Ixiund in cliuius i ^L*1******^ n»r*t
blazon of the Honorable Richard Gor­
stock,
he
controls
the
price,
and
those
“
To biurtt it* fruit, like uumb-rod vtue,
don. "if we get back by the four o’cloclff vivacious mendacity which impressed who agreed to sell ft to him at a certain that language cannot describe, iu view
which aesroe a duster shows:
train, we/ffidl see all the best of tun, her greatly. Yet he was not unmindful price must, in order to fulfill their con­ of tiiesc facts let one that is inten-Ktetl j
To dwarf with narrow selfish claim*
The growth of wide and generous aim*.
escape'the proctors, who will not bo on that now be could not get back io col­ tracts, buy it of him at the price which urge upon you to u*e your influence jn
look-out until the six o’clock train, and lege until after six o'clock, and would he chooses to fix or pay him the differ­ every possible way to put down this
certainly be reported for breaking his
save Charley's gate.”
evil.
■
"It's all very well for you fellow^ to gate, even if his visit to Watlingbury ence between the price at which the stock
Temperance Contributor.
It springeth in the heart:
was sold and this price, or fail to fulfill
risk It, but I can’t afford to be sent escaped detection and be did not. upon their contracts. They expycted to buy
H» only when we tack tbe grace
his
arrival
at
the
station,
fall
Into
the
to train It fairlyMn ita place.
Celebrated L:oe
Bad traveling g
down.”
the stock for less (han they agreed to de­
"Pooh! nota chance of your being sent hands of the proctor, at was rp&lt;«t proba­ liver it to him. and in this way to make
iBXBry.lMuad
The Chicago, Burtlgtim &amp; Quincy Railroad I ltl. L-.a and
dofrn! It ain’t like you to funk. What a ble. • ‘They were awful brutes, were they money by the operation; bat, unfortu­
capital time wo had there last year! And not? I am very glad I was there to be nately for their expei-tatioas, he has Coni|*ny lias jurt Iwued an illustrated treatise. ’ c*asdx
&gt;ve should go;
of
some
assistance
to
you,
”
•The
Heart
of
the
Continet^.
”
describing
the
my cousin has a horse running and we
•‘And I cordially share iu that feeling.” "cornered” Athcm. They are largely wonderful growth of the Bix Great flutes. Tbe
can get the tip from him.”
•
"short” of a stock which they have
For God. Il brings u» woe.
ate'. eBrerfnily glwa Vy
\
"Are you sure that there is a four she said, with a laugh of pleasure at the agreed to deliver at a specified time: and •ImxiIc is beaqtlfully printed, and numerou* em
thought
of the blow be bad struck. “I
graving* of blgfi merit adorn iu pages. Any
For let the bl nd-weed have IU will.
o'clock train?”
’
r. J POTTER.
PEMCEVAt LOWELU
am going to nee some friends who live. he has the whole of it iu hu own hands, one sending hi theft name and aildreM with
ttre PruTt &lt;» /?«•» XoaotNr.
G«a. FttM. Agt,
Nor human toll nor buntan skill
"Certain.
Come,
that
is
a
good
fel
­
Chicago. III.
Cblcaco. IU
Qan keep the garden fair:
here; but I hope I may have some and, hence, “has *the power to fix the t« o three cent postage sump* will receive a
low.”
.
But train the bind-weed In Its place.
terms upon which they shall settle their
And larger blossom. tplrer grace.
"Then, by Jove, I will!” cried Char­ other opportunity of thankin" you. I contracts with him.
copy by return mail, by applying to Piaccr al
Will straight repay the care.
am greatly obliged to your bravery.”
ley.
L
owkll
,
General
Passenger
Agent,
Chicago.
This, even according to the ethics of
And as no nrorniscs are so well kept She looked brightly up into Charley's Wall Street, is not regarded as an honor­ Illinois.
So If the garden of the heart
Be overrun In every part
rem particle of U&gt;«
ns those which please ourselves^.he kept face, held out a little gloved hand, and able transaction. It involves secrecy,
By lore hoyond control.
.
| Haim inuihhe uo.lrtl
his word to tne letter. life was too was gone; quite conscious, however, duplicity, and a deliberate purpose to
Life'* worthy labor can not spe.nl.
DO NOT BE DECEIVED.
drew ,irr&gt;a« brentbs
And flower of thought and fruit of deed
yo.ung to find the pleasure turn to dust that the young fellow's eyes wore fixed cheat under the form ot bargain and
-.rd'i&amp;sr u
In tbeae lime* of quack rurdiclne advcrtlaeGrow never in tho soul.
upon
her
as
she
passed
oflt
of
the
station
and Hihci. Ho thoroughly enjoyed his
sale. The man or men who ' manufact­ meou everywhere it is truly gratifying to find
m'Sl'BEHBAU
afternoon on Watlingbury race-course; and probably not ill-pleased by the fact. ure ■ the ” "corner” mean to get the one remedy that Is worthy of prahe and which,
But train that weak and dinging loro.
She was gone, and ho was left to kick
Hr atu nt y props, to wayo above
really doca a* recommentfed. Electric Bitters
add for once, the tip, wonderful to re­
rffrctually
cleanses
••shorts” into it, and when they get them we can roncn for as being a true and reliable
Life'* work, and rive it grace;
late, was the straight one, and the nflair his heels fora couple of hourg in a dreary there, then they mean roundly to fleece remc&lt;j-,
No longer then a panMito.
and one that will do as reroinnietxied.
station',
and
get
what
amusement
-he
Love cloihex with garlands of delight
went off capitally.
them. These "shorts” are not entitle I They invariably cure Stomach and Liver Com­
It* own appointed place.
"My boy,” said Gordon, taking him a could out of the refreshment room and to any speeial sympathy, since they ex­ plaints, DiscaM-s of ti»e Kidneys and Urinary
। pretncU the men.
little aside about a quarter to four, "you the bookstall. ' In time t^e next train pected to make' nvmev by selling for difficulties We know -whereof we speak, and
readily say, give them a trial. Sold at fifty
i*»c from, additional ~
have just time to catch your train. We came, and he rejoined his astonished, future delivery what they had not at the can
cenu a botUe, by F. T. Boise.
■b.’ZtfIS
HOW QUEDGLINGTON WAS SENT will risk it; but if you arc not a fool you party.
••Quedglington, .St Aldate’s.” The time ot the sale, and subsequently buy­
Archimedes Invented the slang phrase,
will be off.
DOWN.
ing,
in
season
for
the
delivery,
at
a
•‘Give lisa real,”when be offered to move the
"I’m not going,” cried Charley, reck­ proctor had known quite well both his
wk-IsI malts are rrshxcd by a (ev BpplIraUom 4
name and college, but preferred to go cheaper price titan tho selling price. world with his lever.
Charley Quedglington was in a lessly.
ihorousb trrxltaent
dirreted will cure Catarrh
"Then you arc a fool,” answered tho through the old formula. So a tine whs They are themselves speeulatora. and in
thoughtful mood. This was an unusual
If you are a frequenter or a resident of a' liar rarer, Ac.
least--to be. expected'
as the result of thh instance they have simply slipped up miasmatic
Arrrenble co Use.
"take mv
advice
and
tro.”
’ the
— ----------in--addition
district,
barricade
your
system
thing for him. As a general rule he other:
ft w».ucb
. rare
thing
lofSord™to
Ih^Wmlingbrny^p.
to«h.
tLi
*r' , 1“
th2 in their calculations, or,•rather, have against tlie wuurge of all new countries—
L
nequBled
For
Cold hi the Head
didn't think; but the most rhekety and
penally to 60 pui«l for tbe broken gate, been outwitted by others smarter and ague, bllUou* and lulenniRent fevera-rtnr tbe Tkc halm has Kalnnl an eaviabU*rvjmtatlon where
mischievous and debt-incurring, don- give advice of this kind that our hero of tlie nature of which there couki be stronger than themselves. The opera­ use of Hop Bitters.
•res known. dlspUetac all oibsr prrparnUoita.
baiting undergraduates have their mo­ took it as that of a good angel, who. in­ little doubt, after tho Dean’s solemn tion was a goab game on both sides, and
LvmxGTojr.Mjcn., Feb. 2,1880.
Recognized ax a Wonderful Discovery.
menta of thought, though they may stu­ stead of the suggestive flame-colored warning. And, therefore.when hlS scout, when the “corner” 'succeeds the actual
I have sold Hon Bitten for four yean, and
by dr»vr1«. si so Clc On rrcwlpt
pdco
diously conceal them. And Charley’s blazon of yesterday, had assumed with on calling him next morning, said that grabbing is done by those who made tho there is no medicine that surpaaMs* them for will mill a pack*&lt;r ■—ns fo&gt; circular contalar
bilfous
stuck*,
kidnev
complaints
and
many
full
■□formation and reliable teatlnxmlak.
thoughts, this sunny May morning, as much appropriateness, a fashionable the Dean requested the pleasure of his "corner.”
When it fails, then the diseases incident to thia malarial climate.
frock-coat
of
Quaker-like
gray.
Quedg
­
he glanced into •the blazing hot quad­
company aj twelve o'clock. V'harlev felt “shorts” carry qff the prize.
U. T. ALEXANDER.
rangle, waiting until it should be time lington reached the statiofl just in time that ho might os Well tell Hunu to begin
It would be" well for the community if
The "fours of habit" said the gambler, soft­
to partake of Gordon's luncheon, were to tumble into a hrst-class carriage al­ packing his tilings. A breakfast witli these cornering operations were con­
ready
pretty
full.
Many
of
ita
occu
­
not very pleasant. "If your name comes
Gordon, however, cheered him up a fined exdusivelv to the Stock Exchange. ly, os he dealt btniself all the sees in the pack.
before us again,” the Dean hail said pants looked as if the tickets in their little, but the momentary gnyetv sank They are quite bad enough there. wittiThrifty, enegetlc women are great helps to
grimly, with his sternest aspect, and the pockets might be of any hue save white, down again at the door of the Dean's out being extended to Boards of Trade, their husbands. A sickly woman cannot be
which
wasj
and
is,
tho
color
of
first-class
old gentleman, the. wiliest of talkative
house.” “What will the governor say?” where tlie commodities &lt;Jn which people energetic. She can be aenalble, however, and
hosts at dinner, could be very grim and tickets upon' tlie Watlingbury branch ho groaned. When he was ushered in live arc bought and sold,, as a’ matter write to Dr. Pcngelly. Kalamazoo, Mich., for
stern about twelve o’clock in the day—"if line. Charley looked them over with be saw no sign ot relenting in the Dean's of speculation; rather than in'the line of advice and Information concerning Zoa-Pliora.
the Health-Bringer.*
your name comes before us -again. Mr. the superciliousness of St. Aldate’s, and face.
legitimate and regular business. When,
When • powder magazine blows up. It can,
Quedglington, we shall-have no Alterna­ came to tho conclusion that, if under­
••You were not in college yesterday, however, "corners” become tho order
tive but to send you down for a consid­ graduates at all, they hailed from some Mr. Quedglington, by the time at which, of the day, and wheat, corn, oats, pork »e *uppoae. tie called flash literature.
erable period. 'You are never out of college more titan a Sabbath day’s jour­
A BIG SLCUES&amp; ~
anddtber commodities are thus manipu­
for
you.
the
gate
closes.
I
am
also
in
­
trouble, either in college or in the city. ney from the center of university life.
lated for speculative and gambling pur­
"My wife was In tied two years with a comThey had lunched well, and were loud formed that you returned from WatlingThis is the last time you wjll be warned,
bury by a train arriving after that time. poses, the genera! community feci the pl Icauon of disorders her pinsleans could not
and
noi^y,
as
was
Charley
sometimes;
cure,
when
I
was
Jed to try* Parker's Ginger
sir. Consider yourself gated after six
disturbing and injurious effect far more
but, somehow, their loudness and noisi­ The doings at Watlingbury were dis­
Tonic. It was a big sucees*. Three bottles
for the rest of |he term.”
graceful. sir, as I have good reason to than when the operation is confined sim­
her. at a coat of a dollar and fifty rent*,
"And, by Jote. 1 believe the old gen­ ness were not like tlie same things at St. know. I cannot imagine you have any­ ply to stocks. The articles gambled .in cured
and she Is now as strong as any woman.—R. D.
tleman means it I* ’ ruminated Charley. Aldate’s, and Quedglington regarded thing to urge.” Charley regarded the are the staples of life. The people must Buffalo.
stretching his legs upon the window­ them with much the same disapproval third button of the diaconaT waistcoat have them and must use them. They
It may be set down as au axiom that when a
seat and puffing hm cigarette smoke into that tilled the Dean of St. Aldate’s w&lt;hen with a stoical calmness. "After toe are necessaries to human comfort, and j-encu grows fat he grows waistful.
the recesses of tin* sheltering sun-blind. brought face to face with his (Charley’s) solemn warning we gave you only two to have the pride of these articles kicked
vagaries.
“As sure as Fate, I shall get into a row
A LO38 PREVENT D.
up and kicked down by a set of gamb­
His gore settled at last on a face in tho days ago, I think' I am exercising some
before tbe end of the term, though it is
Many lose their bcautv from the hair- falling
leniency in merely sending you down ling speculators is a great inconvenience
only a fortnight off. There is Cum­ far corner which, under the circum­ until the end of tlie term. You will go indeed, an unbearable nuisance, to the or faddlug. Parker's Hair Balsam supplies nec­
essary nourishment, prereats falling and graymings’ wine tonight: and they’ll go stances, caused him xoinn surprise. Il down to-day. flood morning.”
general public.
Cur*.! wltKoef an operation or Uw injury traaa
nets and Is an elegant dressing.
and draw the bunar afterward, and then waa so decidedly out of place. . It was
millet by I»r. J. A. Shrtmnn** Mtthod. OAw 1
Tlie city of Chksago, by reason of its
Quedglington of St. Ablate’s was not
the fat will be in the tire; for whether I that of a rather pretty girl, with a l»lrA policeman in Gallon. O., bad his shoes
location.* has become the great center hi
the
man
to
plead,
even
if
be
could
think
am there or safe in bed. the porters will haired, graceful little head, sol off by a of anything to say, in mitigation of sen­ this country where such "corners” are stolen from his feet while he slepf ’at bis poat.
swear to Mr. Quedglington—small blame small gray hat. It was a face formed to tence. He turned to Iqave with a slier/. made, especially in wheat; and this is
BUCKLEN’flTARNICA BALVE.
to them!" And hu.laughed with a keen be either gravely sweet or cpquettishly Ixjw, when the ftfh her door of the library perhaps the reason why tho State of Il­
Tbe test salve in the world for Cuts, Bruise*,
appreciation of his own bad eminence. smiling; but now it was a frightened, was opened, an 1 a voice he knew ex­ linois haw by express statute forbidden
Sores, I leers. Salt Rheum, Fever floret. Tetter,
"Umph! it’s all very well: but if it comes piteous little face. The sudden irrup­ claimed:
them, not only declaring "options” to Cbaptcd Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all
to rustication, won’t the governor be tion of the noisy and excited crew into
Eruptions, and positively cares Piles. It I« tbe Oreaifft S. IUb&lt; Ardele.sou met popular at
"I teg your pardon, uncle; I thought, ■be gambling "contracts and void, but Skin
savage? He’s a jolly old boy, and he’ll her carriage was evidently not to her
present teCore the (M-opIr. Armta
exclu­
making it a penal offense, punishable by is guarauU-ed to give perfect satisfaction, or sive
you were alone.”
Male or Fraaie
money refunded. Price 25 c«nU t«r box. For A and cvn'rolI-»f.*KrriU&gt;ry.
swallow the bills with hardly a grimace: liking; but as she was sitting at the end
I.
___ --__ ___ .-1-~ .
Charley lo:»ke.l up in astonishment. fine and imprisonment, to "corner” or sale byF. T. Boise.
furthest
from
the
platform,
it
was
no
but this affair wouldn't be qtffte a coat­
attempt to "corner” the market in re­
It was his friend of the train.
easy
matter
to
extricate
herself.
"She
’
s
ing of sugar to help them on their way.”
How paradoxical is mau'. First he lies and flmnu'nth’. work: number inode &gt;40 tn 4 hours:
"Good gracious!” said she. recogniz­ spect to the staples of life. If Boards of
ao«*ber H7A**iti cnriUi, Comr and
It or kd4
Charley’s forebodings were not without a governess, and a very pretty one.” ing him al once, and coming in; "I am Trade will not. from a sense of propriety then stands—to his He.
fur a elrrutar
Mdrma MANIEU1.ATXK U
"Certainly she is
a more than usual shore of probability. thought Charley.
Meridian 8u, ChJea»o.’ 111.
“BUCHUPAlBX”'
so glad you are a St. Aldate’s man. and justice, ad6pt rules that will put an
traveling
first
class,
so
she
must
be
a
There was not much chance of the most
end
to
these
cornering
operations,
then
Uncle, this is tho gentleman who inter­
New. quick, complete cure 4 days, urinary
S' «bd reckless of St. Aldate’s men Newham or Girton girl. Thoy get n lot
fered on my bchaiff'esterday, and missed the law ought to lay its hand vigorously affections, smarting.frequent or difficult urina­
out of a row for l he remaining of money. She is too plainly dressed to
his train through his kindness. Perhaps upon the iniquitous system and nrrest it tion. kidney diseases. »1. at druggists. Mich, i
f the summer term. The dons be a swell. 1 wish I had some sisters
Depot. JAMES E. DAVIS A CO., Detroit.
by
proper
penalties
and
by
the
enforce
­
you
will
thank
him
for
rue.
”
had been very long-suOcring with him. who wanted a governess.”
“It was nothing at all!” murmured ment of these penalties. This is de­
It was not Quedglington only whose
Th«.re was so much good in him at bot­
manded by a thio regard to the public
Men who have money to loan lake the great- ET'"
Charley.
tom^ the great luminary said in confi­ attention she attracted. The young men.
r
"This Is very remarkable.” said the interest. The ;&gt;e&lt;&gt;ple are not bound C»t
e*t ttoaaible
pu*dUe interest
interert iu Lhsir
tbslr huaineM.
buaiue**.
dence after dinner, and the fewer lights their bets settled, turned toward her
Dean, in the accents of.Domine Sampson. quietly to surfer huge oviU from the op­
agreed with him. lie looked so young; more of their regards than was polite or
HAPPY CONSUMApON.
"If this i* so. I have to thank you for erations of a set ot produce gamblers.—
pleasant.
From
this
they
advanced
to
a dark-complexioned, handsome fellow,
Discovered, the means by which anv ladv
2f. K Independent.
may wear dippers or shoe* one two sixes small­
hardly as old as his years, and with but making eulogistic re marks upon her ap­ doing, not only my niece, but myself, a
great service.”
er thau usual. Everyone who has Ehituam’s
the faintest symptoms of a moustache, pearance to one another, and generally
A Substitute for Black IV a! a tit.
"It is •of’ cried Miss Gertrude, pet­
Painless
Corn Extractor u pleased with tlie re­
to
talking
rather
in
a
way
(hat
made
to which only his scout knew how much
sult. Ven few persons are exempt from suf­
tishly.
care and time were devoted. Ho ap­ Quedgiington’s face hot with anger. By
Black birch, which is rapidly coming fering {Treat disevmfurt and julo from corn*,
‘ "indeed, indeed! Then it is very re­
peared quiet enough, and • not very the time the train stopped al the junction
into favor, is a close-grained and very but corns are of small iraportancr when they
markable. llus is my niece Gertrude.
strong. Appearances, however, are de­ Charley.wM on the point of interfering.
handsome wood, and can be easily may be removed bv a few ajiplicnUons of Put­
Mr. Quedglington; I am greatly obliged
staiued to resemble walnut exactly, it nam’s Palnh-k- Com Extractor. Beware of
ceitful: nud Charley was not-long in im­ The young lady rose, however, and, tak­
Only BO cents a Year.
sutisUtutes and bad counterfeit.-. Sure, prompt
pressing his set with his utterlv thought­ ing up herdoak, stood prepared to leave to you—greatly., Will you be kind is just as easy to work and is suitable for ami painlesa. WhulcMle, J. E. DAVIS A CO.,
enough to run away, Gertrude, and we
the
carriage.
Her
tormentors
made
way
less, .reckless gayety, which yet had not
nearly, if nut all, the purposes to which Detroit.
will talk about it again?”
a grain of real evil at tbe tnUom of it. for her not an inch, but sat with their
walnut is at present applied. Birch
„
------------------uIJnuoMt, 1»MIn a few minutes they were alone black
Is much the same color as cherry, but | To *** UP • dinner of great variety, cooks
I't’iuium LL*«.
His father, the Archdeacon of Loa in ford, knees meeting across the pawige.
the latter wood is now ven’ scarce, and &gt;t,ouH *»o*ed * *ide range.
.
" Would you be kind enough to let me again.
was a rich man and a fsmoiH pillar of
"So that was how you missed your "consequently dear. It is a difficult thing I
SKINNY MEN.
the Church. Charley would t&gt;e well pass?” she said, bravely, Ir quite a
enough off some day'; so that the mere steady vutcu. Bui they wet e hrated with train?” asked the Head.
to obtain cherry at AW per 1,000 feet, j Wells’ Health Uneven Absolute cure for
t 'barley noddetL
getting into debt would hurt no one very exeitemeut and the wine they nad taken
"Well," I am greatly obliged to you. white birch wood can be hnd at any saw nervous debility and weaknew ot the gineramuch. But the Archdeacon had passed at luncheon.. Charley hail co ne to the
mill at «1 per 1.000 feet. When prop- (
ro
Mid.
through his college carver without a re­ oonclusicMi by this lima that fney were You are an honor to the college—In erly staintJd it is almost impossible to i JAMg8 K PAVtt ACO^P^t,Mkh.
proach. and wa? a great preacher, of note not 'Va?sitv tu”n stall, and wn willbop^ some respects. But of course I can make distinguish the difference between it |' A statiitlclan^M* &lt;auini*ted that cuurtebl| « i AGENTS „I horGen.
_
.. Dodge’s new book,
no alteration upon this, account. You •xd.w.Init. •• it U WMopUble ot .1
rtaewhere than in ectdesuH’inal circles, and trust tb it he was right. A' any rate
tnn&lt; tif real each
THIRTY-THREE
THIRTY-THREE YYEARS AMONG
Iwd no business going to Watlingbury, beautiful {&gt;ollsh. equal to any wood now 1 a rent er-three
k would tea terrible thing if the mw of they tat still.
—-----------------or
returning
from
ft.
So
I
must
say
•• I think.” said one, with mock posucha mannbonld be pul to open shame,
used in the manufacture of furniture. In ;
"ROUGH ON RATS.”
and wnl down like the «w of any god­ Iftenees, " that the ticketyou »bowed at g'.Mxl morning.”
the forests throughout Ontario birch !
thing desired found at ln*t. A»k Drug­
Introdnetioa by Gen. TV. T. Shennaa. Certain* (
Even Charley thought the Dean was grows in abundance, especial!v if the gi*t ti&lt; "Rough on Katr” It drars out rau’ *
WatUngbnfy was for our drxunalion.
less Earl or weak-minded Bishop.'
truihfnl and graphic record o( the author’, oteervatreating
him
a
little
cavalierly,
but
he
tur.», thriilin&lt; adrrnturc* nnd exciting- expericnrei
landv not too boggy. There is a great j u,Scc’
*”• bed-bugs. ISc- boxcs.
"Hallo, Charley!” erted a jovial voting We do not change here."
"And we really cannot spare so pretty was nut one to make much of lus ser­ difference in the wood of different sec- ' You can bold an opinion more firmly than
voice from the quad below, at this point
tions. Where the land is high and dry j you can chitefa a boroet.
of his meditations; "vnu’l! breakfast a face. We are hoping to hive the vice. He made for the door.
/‘Ah, yes." said the-Dean. when his the wood is firm and. clear; but if tlie '
----------------------------with me to-morrow? 'The. best train pleasure of seeing You home.”
FEVER AND AGUE.
So the girl wu-T in tact a prisoner; the hand was already upon it, "do you know Iftod w low and wet the wood iuw a ten- i
for Watlingloiry it at 12:,T0.”
ray
brother.
Sir
Richard
?
No,
I
think
dcticy to be soft, and often of a bluhh ; L
Are you troebted with Ague, Chills and Fe"I’m not coming.' ’ answered Charter, noise uix&gt;n tbe {datform made it impossi­
ur, Biltous Fever, . KemiUcnt or latenullttng
rather shortly.
ble for tvw to get help from thence. H»r not. He ha* asked me to send him a color. In all the Northern regions it ver,
"You've art coming?” cried his inter­ •res wandered round the flushed faee« rod or two, to make up his party. My can be found in great abundance, and as ; *■’« "
the tree grows to great size, little trouble
rogator, -WiuttJs up now ’ Hut wait and rested ri|&gt;on Charley’s, flushed, too,
but from a differeut/uuise.
a moment, and I’ll be with you.”
She saw that he was not of the others. iingtuu, you would e«&lt;ort them, and quantities.— Toronto Globe.
stay
until
the
end
of
lite
term.'
when
your
-Don’t lot us have any of this rot!”
i with
—The little boy of Aukland,
he said, quwllv. "Let thia lady pass, if home aagnga i nenta fall in. Would ft suit
who tied a cow'a halter about hii
, “I stefll Im delighted, sir.” stammered while he wa* leading the animal u
will not do mi any more. His nai
and with acme rou
Hincktoy.-aMcajFoBfmW.
the window aud. jwxxwiing a man in a
maay-oolprwl coat who WM leaning out

| I

E7

KANSAS CITY

tarrH directions

HAY-FEVER

R JPTUEE

The MAN IPULATER

MB

DRUHKENHESS &amp; OPIDN EATING

“SOUTH &amp; WEST,’’

OUR WILD INDIANS

�MACHINE.

circulating ttorer are lower tkau

PERUSE THEBE I-'HERAL AD. RATES.
1 A00 3 i-oo
~8Jd
14X0
TEoo, ___
*14 &lt;» *» 00
fa.06
M&gt;.uo

ifeitas"
4 SuhsaT
Blncbes

ORNO STRONG.
Editor aad Proprietor.

itashuillr giretlortj.
VILLA]

MBMBK
until they
ly sick, M
subbing the father, clubbing the mother,
and sniMhing the furn jture.
—From a report of the accidents
which occurred iMt yew on the railways
of Great Britain, it appewr that ths
proportion of paaaengers killed And inJurtHTfrom all causes wm 1 in 6,760,740
killed, and 1 in 335,577 injured.
, —The committee appointed to con­
sider the question of substituting a nickel
coinsgo for tbe bronze ooinagu now cir­
culating in France Lm decided in favor
of nickel, which hM already been
adopted in Germany and Belgium. .
—“The Mother of Five Swimmers”
writes to the London Times that two of
her daughters recently swam about
three miles—from Shanklin to Sandown
—in one hour. The tide wm in their
favor, but re strong wind wm against
them, or they oould have done k with
ease in less time. They were not tho
least fatigued, and took a four-miles
walk after.
»
.
—The Krupp gun business is now con­
sidered the wonder of the world. The
population of the Essen Works is 15,700,
ana the statixtiM ot the number of boil-

boilers, 463 steam-engines, with a horse­
power of 18,600 ( 82 steam-hammers,
1,668 furnaces, of which 14 are high fur­
Trustees—H. A. Barber, F- T. Boise. H. W. naces,
producing 300,000 tons ot steel
ffemaray. H. A Dickinson, IL M.‘ Lee and
and 26.000 tons of iron yearly.
—Another famous collection is com­
Jjlrttlit*.
ing into the market, for, among the nu­
merous private bills that have been
/CHRISTIAN CHURCH—F A. Bissel,Pastor. quietly smuggled through -Parliament
vJ Bcrv’cea every Sabbath at 10.10 a. m. and Is one giving power to tbe trustees of
7 p. m. Sabbath school at 12 m. Prayer meet­ Sir Henry Hoare’s settled estates to sell
ing f very Thursday evening
the heirlooms at Stourhead, most of
TLTETHODI8T EPISCOPAL CHURCH-A. which were collected by tbe well-known
AU. D. Newton, Pastor. 5ervire» every Balc Sir Richard Colt Hoare, who died in
batii at 10.40 a. xn. and 7 p m. Sabbath
Some years ago the collection
achool at 12 in. Prayer rcecting every Thurs­ 1838.
was valued at £60,000.
day evening.
__________
—A writer describing Newmarket
IVY LODGE NO- 87, K. of P.. meets at its fifty years ago says: “ It’s staple trade
Castle HaU, Nashville, Michigan, every
Friday evening, for tbe encouragement and is blood horses; its inhabitants, for the
supjiort of all worthy, true, steadfast and bon- mobt part, jocKeys and gamblers । its
•rsble Brother Knights.
language that of Tattersslls; its busi­
D. L. Smith K. R 8. ■ Oxxo Btkoxo, 0. C. ness an endless succession of matches
on the race ooune, in the cock pit, the
JIlsrdhiueouM Cards.
tennis court, on the billiard table or the
card table. About 300 horses are trained
H. YOUNG. M. D. Office east aide of
. Main SL, Nashville. Office hours from every year. From f2,500 to f10,000 is
a common price. Now and then 820,000
7 to 9 a. m., and 4 to7 p. m.
ia given. Nearly every one in the town
A FOOTE, physician a, surgeon. beta more or less. Even the children
• Sucessor to Dr. Wickium. Office sec­ learn to lisp the pedigree of horses, the
ond door north of the Nashville House; reaidedee first door north of the Wolcott House. long odds, and the merits of jockeys.”
It is much the same to-day.
Prompt alien Don to calls night or day.
—Some time ago a well-known native
R C. W. GOUCHER Electlo Physician and
of Bombay offered to give a new clock
Burgeon, is prepared to answer all ealla
and chimes to the University of Bombay,
that may be made for his services. Office and
and deposited a large sum of money
with the authorities to carry out his
Id. PARMENTER M. D. Office over generous intention. The gift has been
Hull's Drug store, Vermontville, Mich.
manufactured in London and is about to
A3. IL BRADY, Lawyer, Circuit Court be shipped to Bombay. Doubtleas it ia
such a time-piece as India never aaw.
The dials, of opal glass, are thirteen
feet in diameter; it is fitted with an ap­
tf. OtOct opposlU Union Hoose.
paratus enabling it to telegraph its time
M. FLINT, JR Law, Real Estate, and In- daily to the observatory and to correct
• aurance. Conveyancing and Collections a all the other clocks in the city, and con­
specialty.
nected with it is a chime of sixteen bells
T7TMORY PAAADY, Justice of tbe Peace. which can play, automatically, sixteen
JLJ Office, Cofier Main ftixl Sbennan StrcetK tunes and 150 changes.
—Throe hundred and aeveq thousand
L1EBHAU8ER Merchan t Tailor and deal• er in Ready Made Clothing. 8ae me francs in gold, rolled up in wrappers of
before you purchase clothing. Fits guar­ the Monileur newspaper of the hme of
anteed.
•
the French revolution, were discovered
HATCH A CO.. Manufacturers of Taffy recently by 6 carpenter in the wall of n
. Candies, Chocolate Drops and Cannels. house at Dijon. Dr. Cbannut, the own­
Fruita, Fancv Candies, Cigars, Tobaccos etc., er of the hou.se, claimed the money, but
always in slock. Second door Dorth of tbe a counter-claim was set up by the de­
scendants of the Viscount de Moussier,
THRANK BAKER, Manufacturer of Boots who owned the house al the time&gt;of the
A and Shoe*. I&gt;cgred or sewed. Repairing revolution, and memoranda in whose
promptly attended to, at the sign of the red bandwriting were detected on the
boot, east side Main BL
,
_______ __
wrappers. . The Dijon tribunal has de­
ACOB O6MUN, Lirervnun, barn near Wol­ cided in their favor, on the ground that
cott Hoose. First class turinjuu at reason­ their ancestor must have hidden tbe
able rates. Special raUs to commercial men. money between 17M and 1816 for rea­
Funeral and wedtng parties furnished with car; sons unknown.
riagea on short podee.____________________

W

L

D

I

P

J

BROS.,Sbr«makere. Special aliention given to fine and rewed tooU, also
BR1UN
repairing. All manufactured work made from

bett &lt;&gt;f Mode and warranted. First door south
Boise’s hardware.

V\TALLACE BEAUCHAMP, Liveryman
V Y Nashville Home Barn.
Slagle and
double turn outs furnished promptly and rea­
sonably. Commercial men driven to neigb-

ptoy
J erst

•go thia intelligence reached young
Lathrop. He was at that time doing
special work fora sick clerk, whose duty
it in each afternoon to deposit in bank
the fundi of the company. Three days
hie did this duty, and then suddenly he
announced his desire to make a little
visit to his parents at Northampton. He
left the city for this avowed purpdie/our
wocks'ago yesterday, promising to re­
turn to work on the following Tuesday.
Thia promise he broke, and a week
passed by with no word from him. By
accident almost a casual examination
was made of his books. There were
found the evidence! of brime.and a little
later it was discovered that the deposits
he made at the bank had been for much
less sums than had been given him. He
had simply changed the face of deposit
tickets and added 8 16,000 or so to his
personal fortune. His father had been
informed of the sad facts so far as they
were known before tha Anal revelations
us to the manipulations ot the deposit!.
When he learned of the further crime
he was obliged to confess that he Could
not make the deficit godd from his own
fortune except by impoverishing him­
self and family, out the old man did
not give up all hope. He did all he could
to prevent publicity, and secured the
consent of the railroad officers to allow
him to try to find his missing aon, be­
lieving that on his person would he found
the greater part of the stolen $20,000.
Two weeks have gone by, however, and
no trace has been secured of the embez­
zler.—JIT. F. Times.
A Tongh Miser.

Night before last, Roger Stinson had
both of bis legs broken while at work in
the Chollar croppings. The accident
occurred fifty feet below the surface of
tbe ground. • There were two caves or
falls at rdek. When Mr. Stinson was
knocked down and partially covered up
by the first, his comrades did not hesi­
tate to run to his Assistance and do all
in their power to extricate him, though
a second fall of rock upon the same
spot was imminent. Indeed they were
only driven back when the second idam
was actually in motion—falling. Twice
was the unfortunate man covered up in
caves of earth and rocks, bat his friends
stood by him, though all about them
was crumbling and threatening to come
in. When he was finally dug out he was
of course utterly helpless m regarded
locomotibn. He wm at -once carried
back to a place of safety, when a mes­
senger wm sent for a surgeon. As there
was a shaft fifty feet in depth to be as­
cended, and the only way of reaching
the surfnee wax by means of a rope and
bucket, tho miners thought that a sur&lt;reon could come down into the mine
and in some'way so mend tho legs of
their wounded companion as would ena­
ble him to go up in tho bucket.
When the surgeon came ho said it
was no use to try' to do anything with
the man down in the mine; he must be
brought out. The miners descended and
set to work on tho problem. The strong­
est man among them stood efect in the,
drift, when the others lifted Stinson
noon his back. With a long rope the!
two men were then lashed together,
Stinson being so placed that his broken
legs were well up from the ground.
The miner, with his living load thus,
lashed upon his back, then got into the,
bucket and wm hoisted to the surface.
At tho surface tho wounded man wm.
carried into an old blacksmith's shop,
and laid upon the ground. The surgeon
then split up some old barrel staves nnd
bandaged thev temporary splints upon
the broken limbs, preparatory to plac­!
ing him upon a wagon for removal to,
his home.
When laid upon his back in the black­
smith's shop, instead of howling and
bellowing about pain, Stinson asked his,
Lathrop’s Disgrace.
companions to fill his pipe and give It to,
him, which being done, he smoked a*,
Lathrop entered the em- calmly m any old Indian brave could
Central Railroad of New have done under like circumstances.—,
T’f.yinJa City Enterprue.
■

wax at that time managing the company
under his powers ax’Receiver. The
young uisn wm his nephew, and be gave
him a comfortable position at about
ellogg a bell
Planing $1,600 a year,making him nominally an
MUL Planing and
Resawing assistant to the Treararer of the compa­
ny, having, however, duties of his own
and not liable to orders or supervision
from any superior dfficer. He had en­
HAA W. DEMARAT, Dealer tn Watebss,
tire charge of the sale of commutation
Clocks, floe Jewelry aad Silverware. Being
a practical Jeweler, patrons can depend upontickets. This is a source of especially
great revenue to the Jersey Central, anti
the moneys handle*! by the young
nephew of the Receiver aggregated
TOMAH B. RA8EY, Express and
enormous same. But be wm inrolicltlv
V Goods aad Baggaga carried to si
trotted and there wm no one to demanil
IRAM R DICKINSON, manufacturer of of him any official accounting. Neither
and dealer iu Hard Wood bomber. Build- wm he under any bonds. His manners
were pleasant and he quickly became a
favorite with everybody in the office.
Since his disgraceful departure various
TAMES FLEMING, prsrtlca! Jew.ler and
W Watch maker, docks, Wgtehca. Silver and stories have been publicly circulated
picturing his manner pf life in wretched
Plated Ware, J
ford Watrhrea
colors. Tbe fact is that he wm alwavs
rated m an exemplary young man. So
far as known, his habits were all to his
credit. He did not swear, he never
drank, and only smoked when it was
necessary to oblige some» generous
friend. Hcwm held up to the other
clerks as an ideal, .a virtuous, reliable,
moral young man. No extravagances
O’See over were charged to him. He lived modest­
ly in a Staten Island boarding-house,
and soemed to care absolutely nothing
for the small vices which are so easily
J^ ASHVICI.E HOL ME,
acquired in a great city. Now that he
BM turned out m he baa, the opinion is
I. M. Flint A Son, Props,

K
C

H

$‘.*0,000 he Stole is
and al
as they

AXTISwM

He appoint-

is by means oi a line about four-tenths
of an inch ia diameter, to which a lead
of six to Dine pounds b altochod as a
sinker. This line ends in a tinned or
fathoms in length, so that it can Oot be
injured by the familiar habit of the fish
of winding itself up. The hooka are
made of strong iron or steel, nearly fourtenths of an inch In diameter. As soon
m the boats reach the bank they are
brought to anchor and the cord let
down. Before thia, however, a perfo­
rated box, filled with rancid or putrid
seal-blubber, is fastened about two
fathoms above the hook. This sub­
stance escapes through the holes of the.
OF DETROIT.
box, and is carried along by the water,: Improved And Finest Patterns of* Cookn and Heaters in the
thus attracting the fish to the hook,!
•
market, SEiucs, Stove Furniture. Ele.
which is also baited with seal-blubber.
The fisherman holds tho line in the hand,: PAINTS, VARNISHES. COLDS, BRUSHES.
•
WELL and CISTERN PUMPS.
as in cod-fishing, and m soon m it is'
■
POINTS, PIPE. SINKS, ETC.
observed that the animal has taken the
•
CHAMPION X-CUT SA W8, AXES, BTC.
hook, by a sudden jerk this is forced
into the month. As soon.as captured Detroit White I&gt;ead Works Color*,—The Best in the Market.
the shark rolls himself round and round BUILDER'S HARDWARE, SASH, DOORS.
GLASS, LOCKS, KNOBS, de, &lt;fr.
in the chain, which is not injured by the
,
NAILS. IRON, AND STEEL.
rough, file-like skin, as would be the
case with a line. The animal is then When in Xeed of the Best Grades of llarylware and Jlaehinery Call mid See .Tie.
hauled up, sometimes -by the use of a

Peninsular StO5re Co/s Stoves.

windlass. As soon M it appears above
the surface it is killed and held fast un­
til the bellv is opened and the liver re&lt;
moved. The swimming bladder is then ‘
filled with air by means of a pipe, so
that tbe carcass will not sink. It is then
fastened to the stern of the vessel. Sometimes other sharks follow the
body of the de&amp;one, being occasionally
caught by means of gaffs.
When the
boats leave the banks a buoy is gener­
ally fMtened to each fish, so that it may
remain at the surface withont sinking;
otherwise it would be eaten by its fel­
lows, who would Deplect the baited
hooks. The yield of this fishery is not
only dependent upon tho wind and
weather, which are so inconstant in the
arctic seas, but also upon the variation'
in the size of the fish and their abund­
ance. Some of the fish- furnish a liver
weighing only twenty-five to thirty
pounds, while from others livers of 220
to 450 pounds are obtained.
Of late
years the carcasses of these sharks have
been brought ashore for the purpose of
being manufactured into manure or
piano; especially when they are taken
inshore near tho land, as is the case
sometimes in the winter on the coast of
Fin mark, where they are sometimes
taken with trawl lines.
These trawls
usually carry thirty hooks, six or seven
fathonurapart, and are kept immedi­
ately above the bottom by means of
glass floats. The annual yield from this
fishery amounts to eight to ten thousand
barrels of livers, wortii 150,000 gulden.
The oil, obtained by steam heating, is
extremely fine, and is used for purposes
of illumination.
The undissolved por­
tions of the liver are then boiled, and
furnish the brown tanners’ oil. On ^he
coAst of Portugal is another great fi«hety. The fish are brought up from a
distance of nearly two-third« of a mile
in the -bay, and are invariably dead
when brought to the surface.—Cor. N.

Women of France.

Here in England, says the I-ondon
Glibe, we have a very flippant way of
hitting off the characteristics of the
Frenchwoman. We say she is frivolous.
Idle, rend inordinately fond of pleasure.
The description will not bear looking
into. Firstly, it should be noted that
the Frenchwoman often seems what she
is not. When bent on amusing herself
—and it is through the medium of this
mood.of hers tnat English critics gen­
erally weigh her character and judge
her actions—she leaves, it Is true, all
care at home and enters upon tho -bust­
ness* of pleasure with tho spirit of a
child; but it is unjust to call ner frivo­
lous and idle on this account.' Perhaps
no women are such industrious nnd seri­
ous workers m those of France.
The
material prosperity of their country is
certainly largely attributable to their
admirable capacity for making them­
selves useful,in all departments of life
from which they are not shut out by tbe
wails they can not hope to scale—walls
which they show their practical wisdom
by leaving alone. The typical French­
Ancient Flavorings.
woman's character is not deep, buL it
has been traced out by nature with no
It is a canon of cookery that there unsteady hand. Her spirit of independ­
should be a little salt in all sweet .dishes, ence, her comparative freedom from
and a little sugar in all savory dishes, that timidity which is often represented
but that the palate should not perceive■ as a beautiral weakness of-hcr sex, have
the mixture. In many of the recipes of enabled her to conquer much of the
the fifteenth century large quantities of ground that belongs traditionally to man
sugar or honey are mixed with spices simply by qualifying herself to compete
and saffron, and few dishes can have with him, industriously and intellectu­
had distinctive flavor or color. Apices ally, in a multitude of ways. She likes
and sugar were brought from Venice in to oe self-reliant, and to feel that in case
1485; the freight for gross spice, small of need she can do battle with the
spice, and Levant sugar is regulated by world.
no less a person than tbe Doge. Later
Although French - women generally
on, in 1505, pepper is worth 18 1-4 grus marry earlv and under conditions of
the pound, equal to 56 ducaU the cargo; parental influence, which invent the act
ginger from Alexandria, 24 gros, and of putting on the bridal veil with about
what comes from Portugal, of which m much sentiment m that rd taking to
there is very little, fetches 17 gros. The their first long gown, or gathering up
ducat at Antwerp is worth 76 groj. their girlish tresses into a maidenly coil
Milk and butter are so seldom used we of plaits, the majority of them make
infer they were very scarce articles. good wives nud still better muthfr*.
•‘May butter” is once npmed as an in­ i'be French woman is not the most af­
gredient. Probably no butter wm made fectionate of spouses, but in her devoted­
&lt;or many months in the year, during ness to her children she is not to be sur­
which the cows were too ill-fed to yield passed, while tbe interest she takes in
milk, or the calves required it exclnsiro- her husband’s work and her desire to
ly. Salted batter there was, bat over­ help him for the common good throw
sailed and ill-mud-', and no improve­ into bold relief the strongest side of her
ment to “cookry.” Milk of almonds is character. If he is a doctor she will
constantly named, where we should use make out his bills for him; if a trades­
cream of milk; though it must always man, she will look over the accounts
have been a costly material. Perhaps and preside over the till; whatever his
the explanation is that these recipes occupation, she will lend him a helping
came -TV7from the
South
France
and
■■■;■
—---------- t of --—— —
— i ; band. It will be correctly surmised that
Italy, where the climate does not favor 1 we are speaking of the
the use of cream. The impression we j r"
all-powerful ---------women•-in France. The
extremes of luxury and poverty hire
tbe effect of so modifying the salient
points of a nation's characisr that in iomiddle class.

By Buying YoutDry Goods

W. S. &amp;0ODYEAR &amp; CO.,
Hastings, Mich
We fully realize the

That most all kind.-* of produce are bringing this fall; sb have
bought a large stock of all kinds of

DRY GOODS, FANCY GOODS. NO• TIONS, BOOTS and SHOES,
•
and CARPETS,
And are selling at prices that will astonish you.

W. S. GOODYEAR &amp; CO.
Hastings,

October 4, 1882.

iAMAM

WHO IS UNACQUAINTED WITH THE GEOGRAPHY OF THIS COUNTRY, WILL
SEE BY EXAMINING THIS MAP, THAT THE

rf)
W

C}
M
ffl
OK

0

Chicago, Rock Island &amp; Pacific

r&gt;y,

Seine the Great Central Line, affords to travelers, by renoon of Its unrivaled geoCiphlcat position, tbe shortest and beet route between the East, Northeast and
utheast, and the West, Northwest and Southwest.

3
(B

Ln 6«!l«, QenoMo, Molina and Rock lstan'1. In Illinois । Davenport, Muscatine,
Washington. Keokuk, Knoxville, Oskaloosa, Fairfield, Dee Moines, West Liberty,
Iowa City, Attantic, Avooa, Audubon, Hartin, Guthrie Center and Council Bluffs,
In Iowa ; Catiatin, Trenton, Cameron and Kansan City, in Missouri, and Leaven­
worth and Atchison In Kansas, and the hundreds of cities, Villases and towns
intermediate. Tho
’

“GREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE,”
As It la familiarly called, offers to travelorn all the advantages and comforts
Incident to a smooth track, safe bridges. Union Depots at all connecting points.
Fast Eipress Trains, comoose! ot COMMODIOUS. WELL VENTILATED, WELL
HEATED. FINELY UPHOLSTERED and ELEGANT DAY COACHK8 | a line of the
MOST MAGNIFICENT HORTOH RECLINING CHAIR CARS ever built; PULLMAN'S
latest desicned and handsomest PALACE SLEEPING CARB, and DINING CARS
that are acknowledged py press and people to bu the FINEST RUN UPON ANY
ROAD IN THE COUNTRY, and In which superior meals ara served to travelers at

4

■

ALBERT LEA ROUTE.

between Newport News. Richmond, Cincinnati, Indianapolis and La Payette,

For mors detailed information, see M.np?»..r&lt;l Folders, which may be obtained, as
weas Tickets, at nil principal Ticket Offices in tho United States and Canada, or ot

R. R. CABLE,

00

E. ST. JOHN

Vloe-Prae't A Oen'l Manaacet,

CHICAGO

AT THE NEWS OFFICE.
Get Oinr*

Before Loo
Elsewhere

�NHSM

•■rulmurr

MICMIBAM nn

ronullralion'

Traia times on the Grand Trunk were &gt;100 for campaign purposes.” There
being eighty towns in the distnet, the
changed Bunday.
A msD near Jack ton raised 6700 good
u»*d to help eloot Barrows

$2.75

ULSTERS and OVERCOATS-

$3.75

3.00
4.75
5.oo
6.oo

4.50

io thb state treasury Oct. 31.
•
5.bo
The University has. about 100 less
The jieople of this district are to be
•indents tlds year than ImL
congratulated upon having the good
1200
There is tala of establishing a paper
fortune to be renrrhented in Congress
mill at Ceresco in Calhoun county.
by Hob. Edward S. Lacey. He honors
Tbe recent stat-i teacher’s institute the poaition, and not tbe position him.
Small and unworthy men are -honored
$7.50
at Ionia hail an attendance of eighty.
by being sent to congress. Air. Lacey
A ease of infanticide at Grand Rapids reflecta honor upon the constituency
9.00
—a dead liaby found in a box in a sand that be represent*. He i^able, honest,
clear-handed, clear-headed. • zealous
pile.
10.00
and inductions. At all times and in all
Albert Shearer accidentally shot and places he is a manly wan and an. hon­
killed himself while hunting at Sister orable gentlt-inau. No man who en­
16,5.0
oyes the peraoual acquaintance of Mr.
. Lakes.
Christiue Myouning was accidentally Lacey will for a moment fear that bis
name will ever be associated with any
ran over and killed by the cars al Big corrupt rings, jobs or steals. His mor­
Rapids.
---------J118T THINK OF IT,--------al character is unimpeachable and do
force
of circumstances can corrupt hi»
A tree, blew across the road near Big
.
.
Rapids, Monday night, killing Charles sterling integrity.
VVlii e he is a sincere and earnest re. Munsonrtn Swede.
Ejlican, Air. Lacey haa not devoted
Bob.
11 deliv
his lecture on
energies to partisan legislation in
“Talru
' at Detroit congress; but he has labored for tbe
advancement of measures for the ben­
Wed
.
efit and amelioration of the people.
W . Hagadorn, .a young man, was Hu bill for tbe establishment or postal
killed by a log rolling over him in a savings banks, his speech on tbe agri­
We do not ask you to take our assertions on paper, but we do want you to come and ex­
cultural hill, his labors tn promote tbe
hi inlier camp near Reed City.
purity and efficiency of the postal ser­
New postoffices: Seabrook, Mackin­ vice of tbe country, and to protect in­ amine onr prices and see the largest stock of goods in Barry county.
ac county; Falcon, Sanilac. county; nocent purchasers of patented articles
may be mentioned to illustrate the
county , Mirian, Ionia county.
C. A. Merrill of Battle Creek has put- character of his services in this direc­
tion.
ented a new school seat that is said to
Reared in the midst of an agricalturbe .far nhead of any of the old kinds.
al constituency, and having been so
Tl&gt;e contract for building the north­ intimately associated in his business
calves that are triplets and look exact*
.
ern insane asylum at Traverse City haa relations with the farming interests,
he is able to intelligently judge ot the ly alike. Rather uncommon.
been let to a Milwaukee firm at $279,- needs and requirements of the district.
Miss Sena Fairchild of Chester has' H
n H nf 1
/ /'"i
u I W3 W
i
'
' ,
1U9..
His efficient services in tiehalf of his
A. Gross (or Graves), a brakeman on constituents may be seen upon every become Mrs. Jno. Bundle.
hand. He lias procured tbe establish­
Laura E. Youngs of Assyria is Mrs.'
the D., G. H. &amp; M. railroad and a young ment of eight new post offices. He has
married man, was run over and killed added two new post routes. He has Clarence D. Kimberly of Bellevue.
secured increased facilities and stope
at Gaines' station.
Albert Pope of Kaiamo has bought I
In West Bay City about 300 men are upon nearly every post route in tne the Tyler 40 acres adjoining his farm.
lie has procured pensions for
employed in catching fish for market, district,
nearly one hundred soldiers whose
A hose tower 59 feet high is being
and the aggregate catch daily reaches claims he believed to be worthy and built for the Grand Ledge tire depart­
deserving, many of which haa been
*00 tons in H good season.
Being engaged in clothing and lumber business in Big Rap­
ment.
.
. Tbe Alpena Arpns says: “There are rejected upon technical grounds and all
ot which had been banging for years,
Tho Grand Ledge Good Templars ids, have concluded to dispose of by private and auction sale
now 007 deer and 1914 hunters in this and, which would still be undecided
county, and something leas than 2,000 but for his untiring industry iu their held a public installation of officers this the entire stock
week.
behalf.
more hunters soon to arrive.”
Such in brief, is the record Mr. Lacey
Selah Fleming, an early settler of
A Berrien county man has the petri­
has made in congress.,, The people
fied skull of some huge animal for without regard to party, should ap­ Oneida township, died of cancer.re­
which he has refused $750. Better prove and show their appreciation of cently.
such a record. Partisanship should be
Israel Anspacher and wife of Char­
skulls have went for loss money.
aside, for once, and the free voice lotte celebrated their china wedding i
Au ox was roasted for Begole at cast
of public sentiment should be echoed
last
week.
Ovid the other night. A prototype of at the polls. That is the most potent
Geo. French of DeWitt, raised 5,000 j
the soastiug of the big-olo ox himself method of voicing approval of tlie acts
watermelons
this year, and is making'
ot
public
men.
Especially
should
tbe
in November.—Kalamazoo Telegraph.
thrifty farmers and the veteran soldiers
The Cincinnati, Wabash &amp; Michigan manifest their appreciation of the syrup from them.
L.
B.
Ketchum
’s saw mill at Chester,
railway from Niles to Benton Harbor faithful manner iu which ho bas repre­
was completed this ■ week.—The T. A sented them. That they wil 1 do ho we was burned Monday night. Loss ♦!,will
not
do
them
tbe
injustice
to
doubt.
200 and no insurance.
M. has been surveyed through Homer.
Which means a saving of 30 to 50 per cent to the purchaser
Eveiy citizen of the district, be he re­
R. L. Walker of Charlotte, has
In the libel suit of Peoples.vs the publican, democrat or grecnbacker.
Post and Tribune at Detroit, a large will be performing an act that will bought the Wm. Pilmorc faim aeir
SALE TO COMMENCE FIRST DAY OF OCTOBER.
amount of evidence tending to prove meet tbe approval of his own con­ Eaton Rapid*,—100 acres for ♦5,500.
The^Grand Ledge Independent, one
an alibi for Peoples with regard to tlie science, and that will contribute to
the public good, by vodng for tbe re­ of the best local paper* in this section,
READ THE
murdqf, has been presented.
•
election of Mr. Lacey. If partisan
The ^*est grows wonderfully fast,but prejudice does not bridle or bias the is now printed on a new power press.
minds
of
men
more
than
we
are
pre
­
Caddie
Treat,
of
Dimondale,
ate
a
northern Michigan keeps up a pretty
to believe, Mr. Lacey will be re­ pound of silver gloss starch, the other
good gait.
Mackinaw City, eight pared
turned to the seat which he has honor­
AND BUY, BUY, BUY.
months old, haa 250. population, and a ed in congress, by a majority increased day. She is slowly recovering, and she
union depot iMO.fect’ldng is non* build­ a many hundreds above that given won’t do it again.
Satinett Suits, 5.00, 6.00, 7.00
n two years ago. The people of the
Silas Barnes of Charlotte has bought Jeans Suits, *3.75, 4.60, 5.00.
ing there.
Men’s Cotton Worsted Suita. 4.50, 5.00, 6.00.
’Two young men—George Tuttle and district will give evidence of their en­ an unusually fine Percberon Norman
lightened judgement if such proves to
stallion immported direct from France
Charles Stabitaki—were killed by tlie be tho case.—Charlotte Republican,
Union Cassimere Suits, $6, 7, 9. All-wool Cassimere Suits,
Sept. 20. paying S3000.
cars at Detroit this week.
The
$9, 10, 12, 13. AU-wool Worsted Suits, $J0, 12, 14.
Seth Reed, an Eaton county pio­
former was attempting to couple cars Dr. Patterson Opposed to Free Passes.
neer who resided in Benton township, Beaver Suits, »12, 13: 14.
coming together on a curve, and was
Pilot Suits, 10.50, 12, 14.
The following correspondence ex­ died suddenly Saturday evening after
caught and crushed' by the inner
100 pairs Pants at »1.
plains itself and shows Dr. Patterson’s an illness of two or three days.
position:
Union Cassimere Pants, *2 to 3.
If Dr. Hull don’t go to the legisla­ 100 Vests, 60c to *2.
C. R. Mabley, the wonderful business
Philo D. Patterson, M. D.
ture :th is season it won’t be Tyler’s
Wool Cassimere Pants, $3, 3.50, 4.
man of Detroit, has boon for a week
Dear sir :—Tbe following preamble
fault.
Every
school
house
in
hu
dis
past advertising an immense gift sale. and resolutions were unanimously
Boys’ Clothing : School Suits, 6 to 14, $4 to 6; All-wool
The chief of police ordered it stopped adopted at Windsor Grange (P. of H.) triet bas heard or will hear the ring of
Cassimeres, $5.50 to 7.
Monday, but Mabley will let the courts No. 619, Dimondale Mich., Oct. 11, 1883; his voice.
YVheueas, It has become a prevailing
Geo. McQuown, known in Eaton
settle the matter. Tbe sale was prov­ practice of members of Congress and
Boys’ Suits, 11 to 16 : Union Cassimeres, $4.87 to 10.
county,
suicided
with
poison
at
Spring
­
ing a great success.
of the state legislature and other public
Youths’ Suits, 32 to 36 : Union Cassimeres, 5.75 to 6, 11;
The Free Preen tuyu: “A Mormon officers of receiving regularly free pass­ port recently. Too much whisky. His
Worsted Suits, 7, 8, 9, 10.
mirmonary is at work in the town of es from trans portion companies. Be­ brother committed suicide some years
lieving such practices result in partial
Maple Grove, and is reported as having legislation for such companies, tbereWorsted and Cassimere Overcoats, 5, 6, 8, 10. 100 odd Coats
Willie KimbelL a 18-yeara-old boy
made about thirty converts who will fcre be it
at 3, worth 5.
Eeeolvod, That we, tbe members of of Charlotte, climbed a tree to gather
soon leave* for Utah. They sacrifice
Men’s
• considerable to follow the vagabond's this grange, pledge ourselves individu­ Date on Saturday; but he fell and broke Women’s and Children’s Shoes at 50 cts on the Dollar.
ally not to support suy candidate for
bis
neck,
and
gathered
a
golden
crown
advice.” Guess that can’t be our Ma­ Congress or state legislator* who will
Boots at the same.
.
ple Grove, but it shows that the Mor­ not pledge themselves to refuse all such instead.
An Eaton Rapids divine preached, All Yard goods, including Prints, Shirtings, Demins. Ticks,
mons hove invaded virtuous Michigan. free pannes from any and all transpor­
tation companies.
•
Stripes, Etc., clased at actual cost.
last Sunday, on the subject of ‘‘Young
The list of fatal accidents this week
Yours Very Respectfully,
Women.” Bet you a dollar be’s a mar­
is unusually large. W. H. Sullivan,
D. G. Carpenter, Sec.,
ried man, or be wouldn’t give the busi- j
.
Dimondale, Mich.
run over by a switch engine at Detroit;
CSTThis is a genuine closing sale. AU kinds of country

GRAND RAPIDS DIVISION*
rroTlowa.

Emj».

■RTF

15.00

.

Cloaks and. Dolmans Cheap*

Cbsrlntu-'.

ZE

15.4B
l:l»
IM
3.06
Ll»
SAO

I'

«A3
IM
fii

sat
»T? «;80
3:&gt;0 9.UI
•J* iiao

WESTWARD.
__ ZZ
!•*«’»« Mau..~57

STATIONS.

Dttroii,.__

Charlotte*........
VermootvUle,.
Ksahviila,

7:1S

g
4:!7

til

.• 27

IMS

HORSE BLANKETS AT 90 CENTS.

E^Butter, Eggs, and Dried Apples Wanted.

V/JL4 V#

JLA W KJl

JL

Olotlxija.g',

AT WHOLESALE COST

"Wholesale Price List,

Joseph Burnham, killed by the acciden
tai discharge of a gun, at Detroit:
Charles Smith, xteam boat clerk at
Detroit, crashed between a dock fen­
der and an iron fence; Thomas Carson
fell from a load of hay at Big Rapid*,
and broke his skull.
*
An attempt to wreck a passenger
train was made on the D., G. IL A M.
near Berlin last week. A.rail had been
removed on a down grade where tbe
bank was thirty feet. ’Tlie coupling of
-$be tender hu«1 baggage car broke, and
the
and two
passenger
— baggage
—~—
----- w—
——-cars
—
were thrown down the embankment.

D. G. Carpenter. Sec. Sic.,
Dimondale, Mich.
Dear Sir
I received copy of pre­
amble and resolutions adopted by
Windsor grange, P. of H. No. 619, the
38dinst. In reply will aav that tbe
giving of passes to the members of the
legislature by railroad corporations is
generally considered a means employ­
ed by such corporations to secure fa­
vorable legislation, and I know of do
other reason by which to ae«x&gt;unt for
such practice. With this view of tbe
case 1 regard your resolution a just one.
I propose, If elected, to stand in a positiiu that I can aclj for tbe good of the
whole people unbiased from any source
’ aud shall wecept do passes during my

Fortanateh- than were but few naasen- : terln
gers on the irain. Two or three were
slightly injured.
The* ory ««f Hod. J. W. Bcgole’*gen- ■

„

m Respectfully,
P. D. Patterson.

EATOM COUNT!.

a campaign lie. The Lfart* arc thus: -I C. B. revival meeting* at BrookTbe citizens of Elint formed a relief j arid.
Tlie new iron bridge at Olivet is
finished.
A hoop and handle factory ha* been
started at BpicerviHc.
A portion of tbe new Grand Ledge
hotel is being rooted

winter.

produce taken at full and satisfactory prices. Parties indebted
settle be­

Frank Etto, a young business man
of Charlotte, died suddenly Saturday either by note or account are requested to call and
while at his wife’s home in Leroy, Cal­ fore I close for good in NashviUe.
houn county, preparatory to starting
for California for bis health.
Is tbe Eaton Rapids Journal prosper­
tarStore building for sale or rent.
ing Y Well my son, I should say so. If
yon don’t believe it, count the columns
CUT SHOWING THE SIMPLICITY OF THE
of advertising. The politicians want
organs, but the people want a news­
paper. That’s why.
Frank Mulholland, ot Carmel, was
thrown in front of a mower while cut­
ting clover recently. His legs rested
on the tongue, his hands on tbe ground
and he bad to walk hand overhand
several rods before he conld stop the
horses.
Henry Snyder and another man kill- CO

WM. A. AYI^WORTH.

day. They ought to have been sent to
Ohio.—Eaton llapide .Journal. Never
mind, never mind, they’ll have snakes
enough of their own soon. Democratic
victory and free whisky’ll fetch ’em.

)by

8

t5

Grand Rapid, rnd D-t roIU *711 Tr.
•aa-depot at Detrv.t with great Wwisra. Gr
Trenk and tarrida Southern Railway.,
B
v l
H. B. LEDYARD.
Am lOenlriapt-Jackin. Uen’l Bup’t Det
Hll.vC. Wsrrvon n,

ELECTION NOTH E.
Notice is hereby given to the electors of tbe
township of Csstieton, in tbe county of Barry,
and state of Michigan, that tbe next ensuing
ceeding the first Monday of November next,
being the 7th day of Raid mouth, at tbe town
hall In the riHa^of Nashville In said township,
at which ejection tbe following officers are to
be chosen, to-wit: Governor, Lieutenant Gov-

this »Ute to which thia cwuntj belongs; also a
Senator for tbe Fifteenth Senatorial District,

county of Barry. Also a Sheriff,
urer, Register of Deed*, Proeet

tlon.tbe following amendment* to tbe constitut‘on are to be submitted to the people for their
adoption or rejection:
An amendment to section 1 of article 9, rela­
tive to the salaries of tbe Judges of the Circuit
l^Tof SiL **
Jot“‘®“0,aUoQ 2,o-28»
Also an amendment to section 10 of article 10

There will also be submitted to the people for
their adoption or rejection, tbe question of a
Reoenti revision of tlie Constitution of the Suu
of Michigan, pursuant to Joint Resolution No.
10,iivi at 1881.
•
Dated Nashville, Oct. 35. 1882.
FRANK McDRRBT,
Township Clerk of CaMleton.

T\R. F. 8. HULL, Graduate of Medical and
Bundcai department of University of
Mich. Morgan.
v
1
££ROOKS, MARSHALL A CO.

Nashville Elevator!
Grain and Produce,
---------- AM sell---------eeds, Feed, Lima, Salt, Plaster, SUcce, Hair. Ptee Lumber, Lath
aad Shingles,

AT THE LOWEST LIVING PRICES.

Eiperieicei, Reliable, ail Ramate.

A. H. WINN, Dentist
BEST SET BUN TEETH

$16.68

Teeth Extracted Wilhoit Paia.

Office© pen Day A Evening.

IUOMCEOPATHIC

Physician and Surgeon.
State Street*, Nashville, Mich.

BOOT AID SHOE IAKKK,

a

gUCKAW'

American and Foreign luble,

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                  <text>ORNO STRONG,!
Editor

ami?

Proprietor.

Devoted to the Interests of the

i

COUNTY MAJORITIES:

THE LOCAL ELEOTIOH6.

Below we give tlie vote and m^jorite* of the candidates in Barry county :.
Governor—
Begole G. D.
Begot eW maj. 563
Jerome R.
2260
Secrvtarj- State—
Sbakeapear D.
iCT. Shake's
Conant R.
2501
Congreamsn—
CASTLETON.
Hodge G.
3611 Hodge's
2335
Election in this town passed off qui­
etly. There were 554 votes cast, a fall­
Pennington D.
ing off of 96 from the poll list of twe
Patterson Ryears ago. Of this number there were
192 straight Republican, 48 Democratic,
Dennis G.
Goodyear I).
81 Greenb^Ickt 5 Prohibition/ and 1 antiBhrriffMaaou. The vote on^the■'amendments
3607 Creasy's •'
and revision stooJTsalary—91 for, 03
Llchty G.
Boylugton D.
against ■/county auditors — 86 for, 35
Clerk­
against; revision—14 for, 18 against.
Mack R.
Merrick G.
Repub- Demo- Green- Prohl­
Lasher D.
— —1 •—bit’n.
lican.
State—
Alexander R.
Governor,
277
Dawson G.
Lieut. Governor, 303
Stowell D.
Register—
an
2506 Sidman's “
Bldman R.
Senator,
281
2053
Wickwire G
Representative,
27S
Barry D.
G65
County—
Colgrove R.
Sheriff,
3607 Colgrove’s ••
1939
Clerk,
Stafford G.
Treasurer,
Rowley D.
641
Register,
Surveyor—
Prosecutor,
Pratt R.
Commissioner**,
Manchester G.
Surveyor,
Commissioners—
Coroners,
If 0-190 54
Brady R.
Brady'?
Niskern R.
MAPLE GROVE.
Clifford G.
In Maple Grove the Republicans bad
Rlker I).
106 straight tickets, Democrats 46, Na­
Rowley D.
donate 111. The vote on the amend­
• Touers—
Upjohn
R.
2510 Upjohn's ••
ments and revision stood: salary—7
Ferguson R.
2530 Ferguson's "
for, 166 against; county auditors—5 for,
Cortrigbt G.
2035
Evans G.
3011
182 against;
revision — 18 for, 143
Waldorf! D.
647
against.
642
Ingram D.
State—
Governor,
ELECTION NOTES.
Revolution!
Hon. L. J. Wheeler.
Senator,
, 116
"You all know him."
Representative* 130
57
Thank God, ’tie over.
But where was the ox 1
Now lets shake hand# and be friends.
Pennington goes in by a majority of
Register,
Prosecutor,
600.
Commissioner, 126
"And yet the party is not saved.”—
Surveyor,
126
C.J.Fotger.
Barry county Republicans feel well,
A8BYRIA.
In Assyria 252 votes were cast, of notwithstanding.
John Barry received an aggregate of
straights the Republicans
_
having 109,.
Democrats 17. Greenbackers 90, prohi­ 665 votes in the county.
Latest estimates give Congresman
bition 1, anti-Masonic 2. The amend­
ments and revision were voted on as Lacey a majority of about 2,000
The number of men who are Demo­
follows: salary, 60 for, 57 against; re­
crats just at present is simply startling.
vision, fffor, and 12 against.
Discussion of free trade about the
State— •
Governor,
118
polls was a prominent feature of the
Lieut. Governor,
late election.
Judge Killen has knocked the “For
Congressman,
Senator,
Sale’’ shingle from his real estate, and
Representative,
will
continue a resident of Michigan.
County—
128
inherit!
Greenbackers don’t appear surprised
196
at
all,
but howl “victory” with as much
126
vehemence as they once did "rag baby."
134
105
Prosecutor,
129
99
Said one Republican tv another:
121-124 23-22 100-108
“my friend, yon look bad.” "Afy God,
Surveyor,
134
123
136-126
100-100
who wouldn’t with a Democratic GavWOODLAND.
ernor in Michigan,” was the reply.
Election passed off very quietly there
Mr. Rijah Flint says he loves Mr.
being no particular excitement.
Killen. Then why was he so cruel to
State—
the old gentleman—why diet he so
Governor,
Sec'v of State,
summarily eject him unto the street
once upon a time T
Perhaps Mr. I. M. Flint junior would
Senator,
Representative,
not have been so ready to call the Re­
publicans liars and thieves if be had
only known that it was the Democrats
101
106
who shot off the anvil in order to choke
Register,
171
100
off the small brother.
Prosecutor,
170
__
101
era, 189-170 103-100 49-30
“ Here, boy, get to the front there,”
170
said a democrat to a small boy who
170-188 103-104
was carrying a torch in the rear of the
HASTINGS CITY.
prosessiou Thursday evening.- "Oh,
what’s the matter with you T” respond-

BALTIMORE.

127
137

12

142
28 118 ___
139-18S 135-159 22-22
188
130
139-139
fl 130-130
JOHNSTOWN.

| TERMS; $1.50 per Year
I Credit Subscriptions $1.75.

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH;, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1882.

VOLUME X.

248
238-233 50-44 888-286
287
264-263 56-54

under the Sun.

Mr. I. M. Flint struck the nail
square on the bead when he said that
the political revolution was a victory
Dot .of the Democratic party but of the
people, and that if the Democrats
kicked over the traces of political de­
cency, a bigger political cyclone than
the present one would strike this
country.
“BUe” Flint—you all know “Bije”he says that Potter of the Hawk was
paid $300 to keep still just one issue
during the campaign. Which party
paid it tbc public i. l«tt to-infer, bnt
hia language ha* been generally taken
ns pointing toward the Democratic
party. "Bije” also says that $700 were
expended in thia township—but then,
you all know “Bije ”
The people of Barry county have
spoken unanimously in favor of Re­
publicanism and the following are the
names of the "ins” for the next two
years:—Sheriff, John Q. CrcMy; Coun­
ty Clerk, Charles M. Mack; County
Treasurer, Frederick Alexander Jkegi«ter of Deeds, Wm. P. Sidnam ; Pro­
secuting Attorney, Phillip T. Colgrove '
Circuit Court Commissioners, Charlee
H. Brady and Philip W. Niskern;
County Surveyor, Seth Pratt; Coron­
ers, Wm. Upjohn and John P. Fergv•on. They are aH good nwn Md tk'

* wnraty

in TsaFiKas-

*

DASH LOCALS.

LOCAL GIBBLE-G ABBLE

Aad Prraraa! Chit-Chat.
—Theo. Downing,, W. E. Buel and
Dr. Baughman returned from the
Church time changed.
northern hunt Thursday morning. The
Sunday-schools reopened.
party bagged ten deer, four of which
Choral society meeting to night.
followed them home by express,
The season of socials is close at hand.
I. N. Kellogg has completed a barn.
—The “boom” of the big bass horn
Will o’ the wisps on the river o’
floated around in the frosty air near
Olds’ office Tuesday night—sort of a nights.
P.
G. .Stacy has gone to Grund Rapids
goatly reminder of day* that were, for
who the blower-was no one can learn. to work.
Cal. Ainsworth and wife are in Grand
—It is reported that a couple of lovers
of the village lejoice in the fact that Rapids. • .
The hose cart now spdrts a bright
the comet cannot be seen until morn­
ing, apd sit up night after night to new bell.
Sherman Fowler’s sick horse died.
catch a glimpse of the heavenly, visitor
with a persistency worthy of nny cause. Loss $165.
Mrs. Vannocker has a nice new sign
—The new side track is to Im? put in
here next week. It will be on the down Main st.
Mrs-Charles Fowler is visiting friends
north side, will extend from the first
switch cast to the road in front of the at Montague.
Reese A Co. are buying poultry and
«tation, and is built more particularly
for the accommodation of those who game at this point.
The
presiding elder was not present
wish to load from wagons.
at quarterly meeting.
,
—Some of the boys are |nsing con­
Charles Fowler and family will move
siderable sleep and getting a good into town next week.
many fish these nights,
The river
"Mrs. James Fleming is spending sev­
abounds in pickerel, some of which are
eral weeks at Jackson.
unfortunate enough to ornament the
Dickinson A Co. continue to grind
ends of spears.
Burt Kellogg was out the mellow apple juice.
wheeling a barrow load of them ’round
It is stated that several more tele­
town, the other day, among them one phones are to go up soon.
that would weigh six or seven pounds.
Charles Fowler will move his family
—On Friday of last week Jack Brady to the village next week.
and Steve Miller were arrested by
Henry Roe has sotae of the spoils—
Deputy Sheriff Williams of Vt. Ville, not of office, but of venison.
charged with assault and battery upon
Mrs. M. E. Fleming has gone to Vt.
Sylvester Hall, aged 20, of that place, ViHe to live with a son there.
upon the railroad between here and the
Nathan Hoskins and family Suu’ville two weeks ago last Sunday. The dayed with relatives at Olivet.
lx&gt;ys were taken before Esq. Ralph E.
Dr. Winn has put up a telephone line
Stevens, of Vt. Ville, when they gave connecting hia bouse and office.
bail in the sum of $200 each for their
A 12i lb. son arrived at the abode of
appearance for trial on th’e 11th.
Horner Davis Wednesday night.
Misr. Occie Keith of Greenville is visit
—A. L. Sheldon shipped the last of
1,000 barrels of apples this (Friday) ing her sister, Mrs. Harry Hale.
morning, the shipments being made
Mrs. T. N. Kettle well, of Dayton, is
partly from Nashville, Morgan, Hast­ stopping with Mrs. S. D. Hawthorne.
ings and Vermontville, but mostly
Charlie Youngs shipped a couple
from Nashville. A. J. Arnold has also loads of mixed stock to-day, (Friday).
bought about 500 barrels of apples, all
Mr. West, a new comer, has built an
at this point, and some 1700 bushels of addition to his place near the brick
potatoes. He is storing his apples and yard.
most of his potatoes. One car-load of
The oar factory has been silenced till
potatoes and two of apples are all that winter, part of the force being put on
have been shipped from hero this handles.
season.
Dr. Kealar has opened an office for

—The fire department, at it its meet­
ing Tuesday evening, elected Frank
McDerbv president, and accepted the
resignation of H. W. Flint, vice-presi­
dent, electing Al. Durkee to the vacan­
cy. A present of $5 was received from
Deriar Ac Sous of the oar factory, for
which the members of the department
tender their hearty thanks through
the columns of The News. A new bell
for the hose cart has been received
from the oom pony from which the cart
was bought.

—The Democratic jubilee that began
Tuesday night with a grand firecracker
splurge in front of Osmun’s livery lia­
ble office, and was continued Wednes­
day evening by a torchlight procession
o( small boys, culminated on Thursday
eveningwith a bonfire on Main-st, mar­
tial music and Chinese lanterns on the
Nashville House porch, a torch-light
parade of about 40 “eminent” citizens,
and speeches by Mr. Dickinson senior
and Abijah and I. M. Flint »r.. the
whole accompanied by a deafening an­
vil chorus and cries of “ ’Rah for Hoolihan.”
—Elmer Coreett, formerly of Battle
Creek, has been in the employ of Henry
Roe, as butcher, for the past year, and
a few days since believing that Coraett
was not square in- his dealings with
him. Roe discharged him.
A few
mornings since upon going to his
slaughter house Roe found that eight
tine beef hides hod been ruined by
their being cut. Now Henry is a pretty
straight man and believing he had no
enemies, naturally suspected Coiaett,—
who Lad betaken himself unto Host­
ings, where Officer Osmun captured him
Thursday night. As we go to press ar­
_
_____________
_ being made to examine
rangements
are
iim
Parady.
‘ im before
before Juatico
justice rorady.
—The blue ribbon meeting on Sun­
day wr well attended and thoroughly
•joynble. Among the exercises pre­
sented were a song, "Steal away to
Jesus,” by Ina Hobbs; a recitation by
Horde Osmun; a very cute political
“oration" by Orta Granger; song, "To
God be the Glory,” by Gracie and
Markie Foote; trio song by XPercy
Demaray, Ada Cook, and Mabel Selleck; a laughable recitation by Markic
Foote, entitled "Old Dog Bowser;”
and pieces by Charlie Walrath and
Allie Hardy. Mr. 8. S. Ingerson made
tom* excellent remarks. Mias, Bissell,
who has succeeded most admirably in
the position of president, resigned, on
account of Door health, and the vice

he Singer sewing machine on south
Main-st.
Miss Perlie Eddy is teaching a 5rnonths term of school in Convis, Cal­
houn county.
A meeting to consider the formation
of a band is to be held this (Friday)
evening.
Our young folks are pleased to count
Miss Barnett of Grand Rapids among
their number.
■ N. P. Frink and" wife returned on
Friday last, from a visit in the south­
ern part of the state.
The ladies of the M. E. church will
entertain a social at Mrs. Dr. Barber's,
next Wednesday evening.
Mrs. Jennie Wills (nee Appleman) of
Battle Creek, is in the village visiting
parent* and old friends.
Mrs. E. E. Blair retiired from a three
weeks visit with relatives at Toledo
and Cleveland, yesterday.
R. M. Collier, returned to his duties
as one of the efficient clerks of the J
Washington post office on Wednesday.

The G. A. R. post assembles in the
basement of Boise’s drug store, and has
changed its night of meeting to Satur­
day.
Wm. Parker has moved his family
into Geo. Squires’ bouse, and the two
men have gone north to work at their
trades.
’
.
Walter Webster has taken in a part­
ner in the law, collection and real esstate business,—J B. Mills, Esq., of
Assyria.
Little Mark Foote, son of Dr. Foote,
ha* quite a remarkable voice for a
child. He can reach in singing as high
as upper "c.”
Levi Smith will have a shooting
match at his house, about a mile south­
east of town, the Saturday before
Thanksgiving.
Another Republican at 8. D. Haw­
thorne’*. He arrived on election morn­
ing and is a fine specimen. Mother and
child both doing well.
Not the least happy part of the fire­
man’s dance was the excellent supper
served at the Nashville House. Mine
host Flint knows how to do things for
the boya.
L. 0. CMMberhu on exhibition a lot
of buggiei and carriages of the Michi­
gan M’fg Co.’s make. Those road
carts are the finest thing of the kind we
have seen.
The indies mite society of Maple
Grove, will meet at the residence ot
Mr. and Mrs. Horace Dean on Friday

NUMBER 8.

new chandelier, recentiy purchased for
LOCAL MATTERS.
the church. All are especially invited
to attend as the election of officers
succeiui. Fresh poods full weights, and
takes places at this meeting.
nrire-, I; Ih*. re.
Herb. Walrath at his new place of
»r M by I* oar »tock of underwear like
business is doing an immense trade in Barnum*elephant Jumbo!
Because itir *v- •-------- ---------------- this
harness. His stock is large and com­ country,
“fi
Kocher Bros.
plete,work excellent and his customers
We are dally revel ring new good*, all
are satisfied.
Of
b are being sold at bottom prices at
The funeral sermon of Ella, daughter
Ainsworth’s old stand,
of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Cross, was
preached at the Christian church. Sun­
Stoves going fast at Glasgow'*. Don’t
day morning. No service was held buy UH you mt him and get prices.
there in the evening.
ROCK BOTTOM PRICES.
C. Cruso and J. McGrhwhave paid
Don't bny a single pair of Boots or Shoes be
considerable attention to raising of the fore visiting Prindlc &lt;x Chipman’s, and Inspect­
celebrated Plymouth Rock fowls this ing their stock and price*. Stack larger and
more complete than ever and prices marked
season and now offer 500 cocks for sale. rlgfit down to bed-rock. No competitors al­
Another season they intend to raise a lowed to undersell us.
couple of thousand. Persons interest­
EgT"A wbole-sUx-k hand made boot fur •2.75
ed in good poultry will do well to note at the Closing-out bale at
A rLswoKTH's.
these facts.
- nr Wagons cheapest at Glasgows, the
Miss Ida Parmenter of Vt. Ville liosse-* Jackson and Hastings.
C- L. Glasgow.
cured some five or six scholars in music'1
here, and will give lessons every Tues­
day, either on piano, organ, or in har­ do *&lt;&gt; we bare marked everything In that line
down to coat. Thia I* no humbug, but a genu
mony, beginning next week, her terms ine aale. Call and nee for youraelf.
being $8 for 20 lessons. Word for her
can be left at Truman’s dry goods
nr Sewing Machine*, Whites and others
at 25 dollars. 85 dollars and 50 dollars.
store.
Mrs. Dr. Barber, Mrs. G. W. Fran­
cis and Mrs. Burgman were delegates
THIS FOR LADIES ONLY.
from this place to the meeting of the
We open this week an elegant Uno of new
dristrict W. C. T. U., at Hastings this Cloakings, very pretty and very stylish. Also
Fur Trimmings and ornaments to match.
week. Mm. Osman, Mrs. Wheeler and
Kocher Bit os.
Mrs. Gaines were also present as visit­
Z3T" Buckwheat flour for sale by
ors. The ladies report a large meeting
15GSRSOX A Bon.
and a pleasant and profitable time.
HTA few All-wool Overcoats at • **. to close
Rev. Mr. Bangs is full of the spirit of
progress, notwithstanding his years.
BASS WOOD BOLTS.
At his suggestion the congregation now
joins in nailing the morning scripture
lesson, pastor and people reading alter­
nately. In addition, the evening ser­
mon will hereafter be short and will be
followed by a sort of religious social.
The literary circle, considerably aug­
mented in numbers, was entertained
by the Misses Carrie and Gertie Inger­
son, Tuesdav evening, the subject of
attention being the wonderful advent­
ures of the tremendous adventures of
Major Goliah, O’Grady Gahagan, in
India and Spain, as detailed by
Thackeray.
E. R. White is a wide awake business
man and is having a lively trade in the
Crown sewing machine, but then this
machine is a superb one, has many
good points not found in other mach
met, attracts attention from all and
satisfies those who purchase it. See
the Crown and Ed. before you buy a
sewing machine.
Mrs. C. N. Young and child arrived
here from Hesperia Saturday .The child
was sick with throat disease on their
arrival, and despite tlic utmost efforts
on the part of the mother and doctors,
died Wednesday night. Up to press
time Mr. Young had not arrived or
been heard from, though telegraphed
to. The afflicted family liavo the symphathies of not only The News but a
large circle of friends in this village.

NASHVILLE K. Fs.
Knighte of Pythias every where will
...
be glad to learn that the Nashville
branch of that noble and benevolent
order is prospering finely. Ivy Lodge
was instituted a year ago last July,
with some reluctance by the grand
lodge, as it argued that Nashville was
too small a town to support an institu­
tion of this character, but the conduct
and progress nf the lodge was so good
that the boys now point with pride to
the handsomely framed charter, (secur­
ed at the last session of the grand lodge
by Representative H. M. Lee) which
hangr upon the walls of their lodge
room. And a word about their new
lodge room in the Buxton block : The
room is carjMited, handsomely papered,
painted and fitted np in a style that re­
flects credit not only upon the lodge
but the community at targe. Should a
double triangle be drawn upon the
floor of the'lodge room, at the pointe
or apexes of such' triangle would be
found the four principal stations of a
lodge,—in fact such a triangle is dia­
gramed in the ceiling, but is cut into
smaller triangles to show the colors of
the order. The station at the head of
the room is curtained with red, die one
at the foot uf the room with blue, at
the right of the room with yellow and
ibe left with black. Triangles of the
same colors are painted on the ceiling,
directly above each station. Uphol­
stered chairs of fine make and finish
are within these stations. A handsome
triangular altar occupies tin* center of
the room and its walls are decorated
with such pictures as “Damon and Py­
thias” “Our Shield,” "Pythian Altar,”
etc. In fact all the paraphernalia of

raising money for the payment of -the teutious to chivalry than Nashville,

• 1.25 per cord for 18 Inch,
•2.50 per coni for 35 inch.
Cwh as faat delivered. For
Gao.
Fowler &amp;, Campusll.
a»- Try a lucious steak or a rich Roast at
the new market of D. L. Durfee.

3T We never had so full a stock of Boot*
and shoe*, and never bought so cheap os wc
did this fail stock. You can save time and
money by looking us over os soon as possible.
Kocuer Bros.
L# Another rare chance to buy goods cheap
next week,
at Atlsworth's.
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE.
Tbe'propertv now occupied by J. Osmun. and
the store and lot adjoining, known as the A. M.
Daughterly property. Addre**
8-9
8- Sellers, Bellevue.
•y Wc are headquarters for 5(k: tea.
Farmers should use Dr. Jowph Haas’
Hog and Poultry Remedy. Bold by

er 500 Plymouth Rock Cacks for sale from
• 1 to 810 each. Inquire of
8-9
James McGraw.
ty For Steak* (either beef pork or mutton)
roost, txiiht, sausage salt meats, lard, etc., pat­
ronise D. L. Durfee’s new market and be happy.

MONEY TO LOAN,
On Real Estate at low rate of interest of
SVDon't fail to secure a Sult of those
Clothes at &gt;4.50, 86, and
Z3f~ Bring your Butter, Eggs aud dried apCiles direct to us and we will pay you the cash
or them.
'
Fowler A Camhhell.

BUY BREAD
At the Ctly Bakery, fresh every day. Also oya
tors, crackers, cakes, coffee, tea, spice, tobac
co. etc. Warm meals at all. times. Give us a
cal) and we will endeavor tn please.
J. D. Blair.

ty After a most rigid examination of the
Crown Hewing Machine we can reccommend It
to buyers as a first class machine. The work­
ing parts are perfect In material and construc­
tion and embrace all the late improvements of
all machines. We have bought one for our
own use. exchanging in part payment the
RemlngUm, aud are highly satisfied with our
exchange.
A. C. Bvxtox.

er We have a rare display of Drem Fabrics.
In fact the stock is »o large and varied Strong
won’t spare us tbe room U&gt; enumerate. Soyoti
must come and see for yourself.
Kocher Bros.

&lt;y Our Cloak* aud Dolman* are beautiful.
Over 200 to select from ranging in price from
»8.to820.
Kocher Boos.
ty Call and see our large and elegant Oi
sortment of Gent* Furnishlug Good*, juat li
Prixdle &lt;fc Chifmsn.

OYSTERS!
Fresh Oysters every day, served at mv Lunch
Counter In every style. Price per can Jfocents.
Also celebrated Vail &lt;fc Crane Crackers.
_________
Cai* Di xham.
er 200 Shawls all prices, all colors. Cheap
Kocher Bros.

BOOTS AND SHOES.
A complete line of heavy aud fine R»*uds for
With prices on the cash basis, aud bar-

ah..

The largest line ever opened in Nashville.
All kto* al! atyh*, with price, foe all. Call
MT Oy Carp* dapsrtarct te MM with
choice relcctioua nod should be seen to be opprodated.
Kochka Boos.

A FEW THOUSAND DOLLARS

�The soil ma sandy loam aud very
dartire for all kind, of ptodHrc-.

; atrawlirrrira the mo
Themsy im* the

halted in
but a tn-

■noounoed hi, intention of finishing the
a broom and brush the
lake a loaf of stale bread
the neper, end It will look quite fresh.—
• that has been kept from a ros.«t, and cut
tt into small pieces and put it Into a
stew pan, with sliced potatoes and

two of water, and stir in while cooking.
—Buckwheat short-cake: • A pint o(
•our milk, a tsospoonful of soda and a
liitl* salt. Stir in enough buckwheat
flour to make s stiff batter, and bake In
thin sheet*. A spoonful of butter may
be rubbed through the flour. By many
thh is liked better than pancake*. Nice
eaten with honey or molasses — Tht
Uphold.
—Black teeth iu pig* do not produce
dhe*M, but are the symptom* of it.
This is an important distinction. Dusty
pens are likely to cause thumps, and
vermin induces mange. The pig wal­
lows in the mire in order to clean him­
self, and as he is clggner in habit than
may be supposed, Hrere is a necessity
for providing him &lt;|lean quarter*.
—A palatable corn pudding is mode
of one pint of graft-1 green corn or one
can of preserved. One pint of milk, two
eggs beaten well, one tablespoonful of
butter, one teaspooufu! of salt, and half
a teavpoonful of pepper. Butter a dish
that will hold about a quart, mix the
seasoning and eggs with the corn and
the butter, which should be melted first,
and then the milk, and bake in a mod­
erate oven half an hour.—Szchanyn.
—Apple preserves: Allow three-quar­
ters of a pound of sugar to each pound
of fruit. Select gooa flavored fruit.
Make a sirup of the sugar and boil in it
a piece of root ginger (bruised and tied
in a bag) until the strength is well ex­
tracted. .Add a little lemon juice, skim
off the scum and boil in the sirup a few
apples at a time, until the pieces look
transparent. As you take the pieces out,
put into bottles. When all are cooked,
boil down the sirup nod pour over.—
The HotU'hold.
•
Hops.
The culture of hops u one of those
special branches of agriculture which
requires for its success much skill in its
practice, and persistent adherence
through bad years as well as good;

change which b the especial bane of the
bop-grower.
For skill can only be
gamed by much and long observation
and experience, and the impatient hop­
s growe?, reduced to unnecessary despair
by a few years of trouble from blight,
mildew, lice and grubs, and who in a
petalent mood plows up hb yards, often
finds, to hb more intense disgust the
next year, when he ha* no hops, that
they are selling at such prices as would
have wall recompensed him for all his
past losses, paid him well for hb pres­
ent labors, and have'left him &amp; comfort­
able balance to
against future mis- i
fortune. How thb want of confidence
■nd impatience of disappointment affects
thb business is shown by the decrease
of it fa Wboonsin, where, ten years ago,
4,000,000 pounds of bops were produced,
but after two or three years of partial
failure the more exuberant, but less pa­
tient, Western farmer plowed up hb
plantations, made firewood of hb polps,
and went to growing wheat to such an
extent as to reduce the product precisely
•one-half: and yet the soil and climate of
Wisconsin are well adapted for thi*
growth.
.
THe variations in the price of hops are

his word. Why, then, should he havs
ordered mules to be sent to him to draw
either his baggage-wagons or bls artil­
lery, when be knew that the animals
could not reach Egypt until after the
end of the war, and why should be send
to America for draft mules when, m the
•rent has proved, be had all the beasts
of burden that he needed?
Furiherm &gt;re, the British General ia
an intelligent and well-read man, and
he would never dream of employing
Kentucky mules in connection with bat­
teries. The experiment was tried dur­
ing our civil war, and with the most
disastrous results. In the rare cases
where a battery drawn by mules la'-ted
long enough to reach a position assigned
to it on the battlefield it never proved
to be of any service. The mules, the
moment they were detached from the
guns, invariably began an assault up^n
the entire battery.
The landing of the mules at Alexan­
dria will unquestionably strike terror to
the Egyptians.
The former animals
have brooded over the wrongs they have
endured during their confinement on
shipboard, and they will land in a more
than usually gloomy and vindictive
frame of mind. The Arab donkey boys
will crowd around them, regarding them
u a new style of donkey, and the mules
will improve the occasion. The 4,000
flonkey boys will sail simultaneously
through the air, and. the mules, whose
appetite will merely hare been whetted
by the trifling exercise of kicking ten
donkey boys each, will roam through the
city ready to take a band—or rather a
heel—whenever an opportunity of kickingan Egyptian presents itself.
The 400 Kentucky mules, under the
guidance of a dozen Kentucky mule­
drivers, will constitute the force with
which Mr. Gladstone proposes to bold
Egypt in subjection.
Marching from
puce to place throughout the country,
they will reduce the Egyptians to a state
of abject terror. British troops or Brit­
ish gendarmes will not be needed, and
the mules will suppress the Chamber of
Notables and check the spirit of nation­
ality in the disbanded army with more
ease and certainty than could the entire
contingent of East Indian troops.
It is
greatly to be hoped, in the interest of
science, that the mules will be given a
fair chance at one of the pyramids.
There are scientific persons in this coun­
try who are ready to bet largo odds that
a Kentucky mule can kick the largest
pyramid into ruins in less than twentyfour hours, and although the pyramios
ought not to be wantonly destroyed, it
would be entirely proper to devote one
of them to the purpose of settling the
question whether there is anything on
earth that a Kentucky rqule can not
overcome.
No fault can be found by Europe with
the proposed method of occupying
Egypt. Kentucky mules are not open
to the objections which could be urged
against an occupation by British troops,
and even M. de Lessens, jealous as he b
of his international relations, will never
think of finding fault with the landing
of a few hundred alleged draught ani­
mal*. It is the genius of Mr. Gladstone
which has devised thb brilliant solution
of the Egyptian problem, and next to
hh pacification of Ireland, it will be his
grandest title to immortal fame.—AT. F.
Tinies.

Why Barbers Are Talkative.

The German barber near the Cooper
Institute, New York, had not been par­
ticularly talkative. Indeed, be had per­
mitted hb customer to get iu a word more
than once. It may have been a little
unfair, then, for the cu«tomer to ask, as
h" did: "Why do barbers all talk so
much?”
“Dot vos all humbuck*,” said he.
“Der barbers don’t dalk much. Dem
dalk choost enough. Pefore 1 vas a
barber und got rich und&lt; gondended like
I been bow, I voa der whole vorld all
» .tsn..
ofer. und verever I vent der barbers had
I |UTS..
der same consdidnshun of demselves.
rx M7U..
Dem all der time daiked I found me oud
how dal ras since I been der peezness
.MKiUM (expect**!).
inside. There must been ohno«t no und
. Nor does this variation occur only by ■o much d&amp;lfr, und ven der gustomer is
reason of difference, ia the product here l&gt;eing shafed und has mit sonpsud* hb
1 by which values might be equalised, nr moot full, den der barber dalk* dwfee
' whena'hwge yield at a low price
*o much, vonce for hfm«elf und vonce
»a* a small yield at
for der gustomer. Barbers are choost
depends, also, upc
like der rest der beepies. I find dis out
ct to a' Urge extent, aud ven I cut about barbsrs’ dings der newsis apparent the American babers.out. ?y hookey, I yos bretty
hop-grower might, perhaps, have a dis­ near drowned mit so many dings. I hsrf
astrous season ns regards growth and at von of dem ding* by my head. It vos
fhe name time a very low price because about a Imrber shop rich had a eadlng
nl n large foreign crop; but he may al*o houses underneath in Boris, und dor
dwo -rorked together by themselves.
■ price became of • failure of the crop Der vay it got out vos dfe vay: Voa
abroad. Thu* it is seen there is a very time a eoldier and hb sweetheart vent
large-dement of uncertainty in this bus- j together mil each oder. Der soldier
ineas of hop-growing, which gives to It dolt der giri to vait py der eading
• soma* bi ng of the nature atftl excitement booses vile he got shafed. Den der bar­
V oisg'fejttcry in which there are no po-i- I ber cut hb.throat. Der girl vos buzzled
' &gt;«Uve blanks and some very profitable I ven she ran agross one of hb buttons by
hi* goat, but ven she bad round hb
The co&lt;t of
xu«pender» rich she herzeif had made,
py hookey, she rent and gomblained of
der bolioe.
.
•which the plants are grown are runners
“Der barber py der next shair, rich
frsta old root* and are planted eight mH der vile foolishness makes, he says
fact apart. Ths hop is diu-eious, that ho had heard of a man rich used to go
is, having Maminate flowers and pistil­ i In der barlier shops und say: &gt;‘Yon
late flowers upon separate plant*; and speak English here?’ If derbarber had
for the fertilization of the latter one said ‘Yes,’ dot man vsnt right away
.plant of the former kind is required to out, but
„ if der barber said ‘No,’ _be
tnrr dxly-l)nw ol tha bOUr, or oa&gt; to ;
tjiiomlme motions
M*
&lt; squat, of eight bill, —eh &lt;ny. The }&gt; lods th*t he ronld like to b,en ehefea.
TiitH require .bort etakea the ti* j&lt;»r, I Th- feUor wmediuiM moko. me xiek
‘ ‘
‘’
He says it a dalkaUva
dhiking makes der chin go«&gt; and down,
dec barber mint dake der vords out of
hi* mouth, odervise be till been out,”—
Near York Sun.

De Court of Connecticut
■&lt;t Mis* Mary Hall can
the Conner uut Bar, as
- ttee *duri-«ion of
ri dl u

inebriate*.

boisterous, mounted tbata* bores* aad
rode furiously through the town.
A
number of railroad employees were
present, and did. not seem fnclined to
allow the boy to have their fun out.
They were, however, deterred from in­
terfering by the wiser counsels of some
friends who were present, but were still

icons gone a little beyond the bounds of
reason. They reined in their steeds in
front of the railroaders, called 'them
gringos and other pet names, threatened
to ride over them, and in other offensive

breeding broil.
Just as things were beginning to get
serious, a long-bearded citizen made hb
appearance on the scene and asked the
Mexicans which of them claimed the
lame mare. He was informed that she
was the property of both of them joint­
ly, and that she was the “best mare in
Arizona.” Thb, though explidL was
not satisfactory, as the bearded cit­
izen claimed the mare as hb property,
and said she was stoleh from hb ranch
on the Bab'acomari some two weeks be­
fore. The Mexicans, maddened with
drink, said the claimant was a liar, and
fortified their positions by pulling their
pbtois.
Almost instantaneously a
dosen pistob were pulled, and without
unnecessary delay as many shots were
fired, and the Mexicans fell off their
horses, pieroed by several bullets. When
the smoke cleared away the Mexicans
were picked up and their injuries inves­
tigated. It was found that Lopex was
shot through the right arm in two places,
and had two flesh wounds in the upper
portion of hb body. Monteverde had
one serious wound in hb left breast,
the bullet having apparently passed
through hb lungs. Peace was then pro­
claimed, the wounded men were taken
into the saloon and tenderly oared for
by those whose fingers touched off the
deadly missile? that wounded them.
Dr. Peters, of Calabasas, was sum­
moned, and succeeded in extracting al!
the bullet? save that which passed
through Monteverde’s lung. He declared
both men not necessarily fatally wound­
ed, but still in a very precarious condi­
tion. The bearded man took the dis­
puted mare to hb ranch.—Tombstone
Epitaph.
k Horth Carolina Venice.

I suppose Morehead City is the only
city in the world without a wheel In it.
The main export of the town besides
truck b fish, but the fish caught here
embrace everything from a whale to a
shrimp. Last year two or three whales
were taken off thb coast, and a
whale b worth from $1,200 to $2,000.
It b said that they get between the shore
abd the gulf stream, and in trying to
beat out to sea are sickened by the warm
water. They turn to shore again, and
soon strand themselves. Along the bays
and inlets mackerel arc caught in large
quantities in nets. But thb wholesale
fishing b neither picturesque nor inter­
esting. A pretty sport practiced along'
the snore b spearing flounders. A small
row boat is put adrift. A man with a
flambeau walks alongside up to his knees
in water. In the bow of the boat sports­
men stand with slender gigs. Along the
bottom, by the reflection of tbc light,
can be seen white flounders buried in
the sand. They remain perfectly still
while the gig b poised above them, and
never move until they are either speared
or missed. The only drawback to thb
sport u that occasionally your torch
bearer b stung l»f a stingaiee. A stmgaree b simply a long boggy whip,
broken out with the small-pox and filled
with steel springs, aquafortis and needies. When he hits you, Inckiaw is the
mildest possible result. The little colored
contingent about Morehead makes its
living by crabbing. With a little boat,
hardly.bigger than a tub,-thev go out
in the surf, and flopping in ana out like
amphibia, soon come in with a bushel
or SO of the ugliest looking aud sweetest
tasting things that swim the water
One other very important industry of
thb most mterevting place b the raising
of "ma’«h tackles." The marsh taekey
h a shnggy pony, hardly larger than
the Shetland, fight bo»t and hardy. Be
lives in the water, and will not eat corn
or bey. He is brought up on the marsh
grass, wfaeh he eato between tides.
__ W____ .Ll__ 1_____ Jt—
its leader, who selects the eating ground,
and decides when the tides are going

nenntog." All the ponies along the
eiast, running ntto the thousands, are
driven fa by boats and either branded
or sold. They bring from $15 to $30
apiece, and it is a tribute to their utter
wildness that a "broke" pony, that is,
one that can be ridden or driven, is
ealted a "trained tackey,’’ and brings
$70. They are in great demand in the
middle part of the State, eating little
■ nd doing a heap of work. They run
down to skin and bones before they
learn to eat corn or hay, but then fatten
rapidly and lose the ugly reddish color
the salt water giree them. There are

W AMHIMOTOX, D. C-. Oct. 88,1882. j
The last session of Congress left a
well burdened calendar, and if nothing
else b done at the coming srwinn it
could hot be disponed of by a great
deal more than half. Among the more
important of a public nature are: the
bill to admit the territory of Dakota as
a state in the Union ; to authorise the
construction of new vessels of war for
the navy; to establish postal saving*
banks'; to suspend the iuue of silvir
certificateH; to establish a uniform sys­
tem of bankruptcy. There are on th»v
House calendar alxiut twenty bills for
public buildings in various sections of
the country.
The department clerks are generally
allowed ten days’ leave of absence to
go home and vote, although in many
instances half that time is nut really
needed.
A great many applications
for leave of absence on this account
have already been tiled, and about the
middle of next week the exodus will
lx-gin. Instances have not been infrequ-mtiu cast years, where clerks have
asked for leave to go home and vote
and have spent the period obtained
either in loafing around here or in
pleasure excursions; but the watch
will be so strict this year that it is not
likely any qf them will venture to try
this little game. t
The committee of ways ami means of
the House of Representatives will meet
in this city on the 20th of Nov., which
will be two weeks in advance of the
meeting of Congress, to assign to sub­
committees. to be appointed, all sub­
jects with reference to the tariff.
It
is expected by that time the tariff com­
mission will have submitted a partial
report. About the 22nd of Nov. it is
expected the committee on appropria­
tions will meet to consider three, at
least, of the regular appropriation bills
in ad franco of the session. The esti­
mates of the several departments are
being made slowly, and it is believed it
will be the end of Nov. before all arc
ready.
Ex-Secretary Blaine’s new mansion,
which for over a year lias been build­
ing, is not yet nearly chough complet­
ed for any time to be set for the family
to move in. None of them, except Mr.
Walker Blaine, am now here, and be is
reported to have said that possibly his
parents would not occupy the new
house all tlx is winter, but would remain
in the! old one on Fifteenth street,
Although that is for sale there seems
no prospect of it being sold soon. To
furnish the new one will require at
least $50,000 at once, says one familiar
with such matters, and more, in addi­
tion tn run it. It is the largest private
dwelling ever erected here. As com
pared with Mr.Blaine’s spacious dwell­
ing the new residence of Ex-Secretary
Robeson, into which his wife is just
now moving, and Senator Pendleton’*,
which has been occupied by his family
since the first of this year, *eema small
indeed. Of these Mr. Robeson's is the
larger, yet it in only about half the sixe
of Mr. Blaine’s, having a front uf IM
feet by 78 feet 7 inches In depth, not
inclusive of any projection*.
It coat
only about $35,000. while Mr. Blaine’*,
originally estimated to cost $60,000,will
run 'up at least $10,000 more before
completed.
The city is full of bridal parties.
There hasn’t been for several year*
such n flood of newly wedded bliss
poured into the city at one time, and
the capito) city may' be said to be
wreathed in smiles. There is nothing
mean about a ypang couple on • wed;
ding tarer. They are happy and they
want everybody else to be happy. They
in net have the best rooms in the hotels,
aud as a clerk in an up-town hotel told
me this morning. "There is not a va­
cant private parlor in our house.” The
satne is true of other hotels. These
yoang people have their meals served
in their own rooms, and give so Utile
trouble that hotel men welcome their
arrival with joy and their departure
with sighs. The bridal eouple scatter
happiness around them wherever they
go, ami as there axe about forty cowpies
now fa this city, the amount of happi­
ness tIm t is aow Iteiug diffused in the
comm unity can readily be calculated,
AUttUST.

HEID CITY.
Mt Editor:
Rsrliapa seme of the people of Wood­
land and render* of The News would
like a drncriction of my new home.
Heed City in in the northern part of
Oceola county, Richmond township,
and one of the nicest towns io west­
ern Michigan. It is a junction of the

train them, and take them to the moun­
tains aad get fancy prices for them. As
1 write there is a drove of tackles march­
ing in stow and sedate procession against
the horiaon. The leader, bearing his
respoosibilibr with dignity, picks the
wav carefully, and hb company follow
with a blind sense of con Men r*. The

union depot is nearlv finished, and the
business done on the two roads is sur­
prising.*
It ha* three large flouring mills, two
stave factories. three planing mills,
five churches and a union school house.
There bn* been about one hundred
dwelling houaes put up the present

bronao. On

chance for carpenter*. Wage* are good,
two to three dollar* per day. Reed
City has a population of over 1500, and,
like many other northern town*, haa
a good many auloona; yet there am but

brief
sketch of Rwd'Cfty, IM nofarquainted enough with the buait&gt;«iss interests
to tell all that is to be tol^ so I will
not bother you farther ut present.
To Woodland people I,desire to
that I havs been your correspondeot
for nearly three year* and hare tried
could. Probably some have been of­
fended at some items I hare wriUeii,
but I have tried to keep within bounds
of the editor’* rules and If such is not
the ca*e, I am sorry If I have dune any
one a wrong. If I have it waa through
ignorance. I shall be a reader of Thr
News while I remain in this place and
hope there will be a correspondent to
Thk News Irpru Woodland that will
continue to be represented in Tax
News, a* I am verv much attatched to
its people, having been a resident there
for86 year*, and trust I have many
warm friends within her Imuudaries.
H. J. Btowcll. •

cipal+une

KANSAS CITY

NEVER GIVE UP,

any dlaexae of a bllkms nature, by all mean*
procure a bottle Electric Bltiere. You will be
aurprirctl to aee the rapid Improvement that
will follow; you will be Inspired with *&gt;w life;
strength and activity will return; r«tn and
misery will cease, henceforth you will rejoice
in the praise of Electric Bitter*. Sold at fifty
cento a bottkrby F. T. Boxsx.
• Six million lager beer ghss** were sold in
this country last year, and then some men Lad
to take theirs from a Jug.

Throetb
Ticket. tU

Bad traveling

T. J port ER.
FEJICEVAL UMTELU
4 Bev
Jt G**'l
Chicago. Xll.
Chicago. Hl

That poor bedridden, invalid wife, sitter,
mother, or daughter, can be made the picture
of health by a few bottles of Hop Bitters. Will
you let them suffer! When so easily cured!

DIRECTIONS

RR

You may like a physician without feeling
obliged to take hl* medicines. It is the wmt
with a prcabcer.

will be absorbed

Kirs CHAI IALI

Zoa^bor* to compounded solely for diseaset
of women. For tuch utoeae* with all their d!*treaalng symptom*, it to a positive cure. .

rffretaally

cieansaa

A boy describing bow he had a tooth drawn,
said: “The doctor collared me, pulled like
wild horses, and Just before my bead came off
the tooth dropped out.”

A BIG SUCCESS.
“My wife was in bed two years with a com­
plication of disorders her piiyslcana could not

cured her, at a coat of a dollar and fifty cents,
and she is now a* strong a* any woman’.—R. D.
Buffalo.

AY-FEVER

Uneqnaled For Cold in the Head

A Kentucky girl glories in a head of hair Recognized as a Wonderful Discovery,
Slid by drnrsi.u st 40.cU. On receipt of price
which ui 70 inches long and very tlpck. She will
mall a package
rtnn for circular contains
ha* refused f SO for it
A LOSS PREVENT D.
Manv lose their beauty from the hatr falling
or /adding. Parker’s Hair Balaam suppliea neceaaary nourishment, prerent* falling and grarneas and 1* an elegant dressing.

uRHar-’iw *■ ™ m

A North Carotins preacher threatens to go to
work in a cooper shop If his congregation doe*

**•

tnnti mja^n

BUCKLEN’8 ARNICA SALVE.
The beat salve in the work! for Cut*. Bruises.
Sore*. Ukrra. Balt Rheum, Fever Sutra, Tetter.
Chapped Hunds, Chilblains, Conn, and ail
8kin Eruptions, and positively cures Pile*. It
is guaranteci to give perfect satisfaction, or
money refunded. Price 25 cent* per box. For
•ale by F. T. Buisx.

treasure, but afterward she became dearer and
be treasurer.
New, quick, complete curt 4 days, urinary
affection*, smarting.frequent or difficult urina­
tion, kidney diseases, al. at druggist*. Mich.
I&gt;pot, JAMES E DAVIS A CO., Detrom
Mich.
At Alton, III., a preacher asked *sli Sunday
school scholars to Stand up • who Intended to
visU'lbe wicked, soul destroying circus- All
bat a lame girl stood up.

SKINNY MEN.
Well*' Health Reoewer. Absolute cure for
nerrou* debility and weakness of the generatlvs function*. &lt;1. at druggist*. Mich. Depot
JAMES E DAVIS A COTlMtrolt, Mich.

•A;*

»j

Rj PTU KE

The MANIPULATER

A aUtistldan ha* entiinated that courtship*
“ROUGH ON RATS.”
Tin thing desired found at ImL Ask Drug­
gist lor “Rough on Rata.” Il clears out rats’

Meridian Sc, Cblouro. Ill

Yow can bold an opinion more firmly than
you tan clutch a hornet.

FEVERflAND AGUE
Are you troubled with Ague. Chills and r cver, Bilious Fever, Remittent oe Intermitting
Few, Night Sweat* or aur disease that cornea
trots Malaria or disordered Liver and Hot

DRUNKENNESS &amp; OPIUM EATING

Conqaeror, which Is an Beetle extract of strong
tonic rooU, cwnbiDed with Sulphate of Mag-

SOUTH &amp; WEST,'

clsauoea the liver, spleen and other secretive
oqputs oo effcctully that the chill* will not re­
turn. W6 hare never found soy c**e of Fever
Only 60 cents a Year.
and Ague it will not cure. Price, 50 cent* and
It is afire! Ciaa* A(ricattaral sapor. psMtoted
8100 per bottle. One large ix*t le ba* cured a* wrnl raouthly. All &gt;m eeod «’ Owir •ubac-riptioci
•re in one familv. Sold by all drumtist* «od
dtaler* everywhere. _
15 J«u S3

p A. BUSH.

BOOT AND SHOE MAKER,
e MMHVILLI, - MICM.
lC'K

A OON.

American and Foreign Marble,

attorney et Lew

Bampie Caple*. c«
tne on ippliritlon

Wanted

▲GHATS I For Gen. Dodge s new buvk
THIRTY-THREE YEARS AMONG

OUR WILD INDIANS
txm». thrilling

and exciting experirocri
the wildest tribe* rd th«

�I

StWIfG

IMACHINE.'

littering purpose*, and
•erior advantages over sawverts chips of every kind
ilk,

w paid ln advance.

house after house huUt on foundations
at dew retentive day, inefficiently
drained, they foretell,the certain ap­
pearance among the inhabitants of
catarrh, rbeumatistb. scrofula, and a
ho*t of other diseases of a similar na­
ture.
Where a damp house exists in
connection with inefficient sewerage,
tag, are liable to become yr»ur patrons. drainage or a cesspool full of decom­
posing material—an unfortunate con­
rencn -rrai lSblu. ad. rates.
junction too often met with in country
and suburban bouses—other ‘and more
dangerous diseases, as typhus fever are
i50 f 5,0(1 L
1
14 00
induced. The watery mist of fog rising
~kte]
T-ooj it.oo | 9ono
from a damp soil affords ah admirable
-4.00 ITOTJ-UOfil 2500
vehicle for the subtle and deadly exalaI ~ 30.00 ■ tion of the decomposing drainage mat­
ter, by which they are too certainly
conveyed to the interior of the house.
And, physiologically dependent upon
•this osndition of affairs, a mental as
well as a physical depression is induced,
which drives those subjected to the
temporary relief afforded by the use of
ardent spirits and other stimulants.
Thus, in thia, as well as in other de­
partments of sanitation, the connection
between physical and moral disease is
easily traced. There can be no doubt
as to the increased pecuniary and sani­
tary value of land suitable for building
sites, arising from efficient drainage be­
MarahaU—James L. Gregory.
ing carried on. The greater the induce­
Trustees—H. A. Bartier, F. T. Boise. H. W. ments offered by the healthy condition,
of a neighborhood, the greater the value
of the land for building sites.
An ex­
cess of moisture in any district inevita­
bly influences the local climate both as
/ YHRIBTIAN CHURCH-r A. BlssekPastor. regards dryness and temperature.
. The most effectual preventive of
Services every Sabbath at 10.30 a. m. and
7 p. tn. Sabliath acbool at 12 tn. Prayer meet­ damp houses is the complete drainage
ing every Thursday evening
of the site on which they stand. All
ethodist episcopal church-a. other remedies arc but remedies in
D. Newton, Pastor. Servlet* every Sab- name, more especially when the soil is
batij at 10-40 a. m. and 7 pm.
Sabbath very damp; in such a case lead or
icbool al 12 m. Prayer r eeling every Thurs­ slate placed round the bottom courses
day evening.
of the foundation with water-proof ce­
VY LODGE NO. 37, K. of P., raved al It*’ ment may prove efficient for the time,
Cartie 11*11, Nashville, Michigan, every but will ultimately become inoperative.
even,nK’
tb* eueourageoient and The system of drainage for carrying off
Af si!
support or
betworthy,
Kn£hutrue, steadfast and hou- surplus waler from the land U different
arable Brut tH r. R. 8. Orso Sthoxo. €. C. from that adopted for conveying away
domestic refuse water, etc. In the latter
it is essential, nay, imperative, that the
Miscellaneous Cards.
drain should be water-tight, capable of
H. YOUNG, M. D. Office cast side of conveying the water admitted to their
• Main 8L, Nashville. Office hours from interior immediately to its ultimate des­
7 to9 a. nt., and 4 to 7 p. ni.
tination, but incapable of passing any
of it to the surrounding soil through
a. FOOTE, PHYSICIAN A SURGEON.
• Sucessor to Dr. Wickham. Office sec- which the drains are laid. The former,
on the contrary, should be permeable
dedee first door north of the Wolcott House­ throughout their length; that is, have
Prompt aUentioe to calls night or day.
apertures of sufficient'width throughout
which the water of the surrounding soil
r. GOUCHER, Elect!. Physician and
can find its way into the interior of the
drain, which should be of such a shape
as to facilitate the removal of the water
to ite destination, preventing its return
\XTM. PARMENTER, M D Office ®vw
V Y Hull's Drug store, VermontvUls, Mich. to the soil.
In laying and forming the drains the
following points should be attended to:
The first to be observed is the uniformi­
ty of slope or level of the bottom of the
» my care. OoureyandDg a cpecial
trenches. The method of accomplish­
opposite Union Houaa.
ing the perfectly uniform slope of the
M. FLINT, JR. Law, Real Estate, and In- drains, from their highest point to their
• surance. Cocveyancing and Collections a outfall, is by the uae df level-rods or the
specialty.
______________
spirit-level. Three rods are required,
Justice of the Peace, two of them two feet long and
u and Sherman Stteeu. the third as much more than two
Mcrchjuj’. Tailor and d«al- feet long as the drain is deep
._
Made Clothing. 8c. D&gt;e —that i-5, if the drain is three feet
you perchase clothing. Flu guar- six inches deep, the rod ''must be five
feet six inches long. - The rods are strips
of wood with cross nieces nine inches
long on the upper end. The two shorter
rods are planted upright, one on the
ground on a level with the field at the
bead of the drain, and the other at the
T71RANK BAKER, Manufacturer of Boots lower end, and a person stands at one
J? and Shoes, pegged &lt;&gt;r sewed. Repairing of them looking over its top, with his
promptly attended to. at the sign of U»c red eye on a line with the other. A second
boot, east ride Main «tman then takes the longest rod and
holds it upright in the drain, just touch­
TACOB O8MUN, Liveryman, barn near Woltl cott House. First clam turnouts at resuaon- ing the bottom, and walks along from
ableratc* Special taxes to Commercial wen. one end of the drain to the other, keep­
Funeral ax&gt;d wedtog parties furnished with car ing it in an upright position. If, while
riages on abort nonce.________ ____ _______
it is moving along, its top always ap­
RAUN BROS.,Shoemakers. Special atten­ pears on a line with the top of the other
tion given to tine and s. wed boot*, also two—as seen by the person looking
repairing. All manufactured work made fnwnalong the three—the fall of the drain ia
best of «&lt;xk and warranted. First door south uniform; but if it rises above this line at
Boise’s hardware.
any place, the bottom is too high there
and requires to be reduced; If it falls
ALLACE BEAUCHAMP, Liveryman,
NaabvlUe House Bam.
Stogie and below the line the bottom is too low, and
must be raised.
In this way the fall
double turn outs furnished t»roni;»Uy and rva
souably. Commercial rpen driven to neigh- may be rendered perfectly uniform. In
cutting drains the best way is to com­
mence with the main drain, and at its
I Planing lowest point, working gradually up to
Resawing the highest. An intelligent mason or
carpenter may be intrusted to make
drains of this sort at very little cost, and
we are sure no houseowner who cares
for the health of the family will ever re­
gret the investment.—Builder and Wood­
worker. ■

o Advertisers:

.

ilashvillr girtrtoni.

M

I

W

L

*

I

B

W

Heaters and Health.

“ Heaters ” is a general term for any­
thing that generates heat, but is gener­

R. DICKINSON, manufacturer of
and dealer to Hard Wood Lumber. Bulld- ally applied to stoves and furnaces, by
HIRAM
SMaterial a specialty. Caah na!d for logs. M ID
which,dwellings and other structures are

yard on Bbannaa St, st M.C. R.R. croaatog.

FAMES FLXXHIG,

r\RNO STRONG, plain and fancy,
V/ Th* bert facilities fordoing «

W. NI8KERN, Attorney and Councellor
• at Law, practices in ail Stale Courts. Col
ketkxw promptly attead^i to. Office over
BpanJding’s store, Hastlnga, Mich.

P

MrVILUK HOCHE,
1. M. Flirt &amp; Son, Prop.,

made warm. The simplest and healthi­
est heater is the open fireplace. It an­
swers the double purpose of warming
and ventilating. The objections to it
are that it consumes a larger amount of
fuel than stores or furnaces to furnish a
given amount of heat and needs more
care and labor to supply it. Close stoves
are objectionable on the ground of pro­
ducing vitiated air. Open stoves have
the advantages of open fireplaces. In­
deed they are open fireplaces much im­
proved,
as to increase largely the
amount of heat generated by a given
amount of fuel.
Open fires of both sorts produce a
glowing heat, and so are pleasant and
agreeable to all, but especially to the
sick and feeble, who need the purest air

charging her culinary duties.
Few causes of disease In infancy are
so common as the hot and vitiated air

vious fact that rooms In which cooking
stoves are used, often become full of
poisonous ga«, generated by burning
coal. The oxide of carbon, carbonic
acid gas, and the sulphide or oxide of
oxygen are at once disagreeable and
very harmful to infantile health and life.
Those mothers into whoso cook-room
carbon and other gases are slowly and
slyly entering may not perceive their
coming until a largo quantity has ac­
cumulated and is producing its legiti­
mate
effects—weariness,
hca'lache.
These gases arq heavier than ordinary
air and so fall to the lower level of the
floor, eo that an infant in its cradle is
more exposed to their influence and
really • suffers fnore than the moth­
ers, whose breathing organs are three
feet, or more, higher, than are the
child’s. Most mothers must be aware
that pure air is as necatiary to infantile
life and health as pure milk.
But fath­
ers who come home at certain hours of
the day fully realize that 'the air of
their homes is not so pure and agreea­
ble as the air outside their dwellings.
We can not help thinking that all moth­
ers, and fathers too, will now realize the
importance of having double flues in
their chimneys. Even for their own
health and comfort double flues are im­
portant, bat for their young children
they are beyond price. The cost, when
building, is very small, but the benefit
to health and life U very great.
One word more on close stoves. Their
size or capacity must depend upon the
amount of heat we wish to generate.
Heaters of any kind may be too small
for the dwelling we occupy. If too
small, it*can furnish heat, enough only
by driving the fire so much as to' force
out the gases generated within. And a
very small stove Is apt to burn the air
and render it at once unpleasant and un­
healthy. On the score of economy noth­
ing is gained by using small stove, when
its small capacity compels forcing it In
order to obtain a certain amount of heat.
A close stove or a cooking stove should
be so large that a moderate fire may
generate heat enough to make a room*
comfortable or to cook properly various
articles of food. Food to be well cooked
does not require excessive beat. A large
cook stove is more economical than a
small one, that is usually so often forced
that its soundness and usefulness arc
soon impaired, if not destroyed. A hot
fire does not contribute so much to
health and comfort as a moderate one.
In cold temperatures, “taking cold” Is
caused not so much by the low tempera­
ture without the dwelling as by the heat
within. The great and efficient means
of securing health and oomfort are a
moderate temperature, pure air, proper
diet and exercise in the air.—Dr. AUen.in
Western Rural,

'» Stovex
OF DETROIT.
Improved nnd Finest Patteruw of C'ooka and 11 enters iu the
mnrket. Zinr&lt;.. Mtow Fifrniture. Etc.
PAINTS, VARNISH EH. COLOR. BRUSHES.
WELL and €181 EBN PUMPS, .
.
POINTS, PIPE. SINNS. ETC.
CHAMPION X-CUT SA JIN, A NFS. ETC.
Detroit White Lead W'vrlM Color*.—The Best in the Market.
BUILDER'S HARDWARE, SASH. D&lt;Hills.
GLASS, LOCKS. KNOBS. &lt;Pe. &lt;fr.
NAILS. IRON, AND STEEL.
When Im Need of the Best Grades of Hardware and !!acbinery Call und See .lie.

M O

E Y

By Buying Tour Dry Goods

W. S. GOODYEAR
&amp; GO.
Hosting*. .'Vlioli.
We fully realize the

That most all kinds of produce are bringing this fall, &gt;o have
bought a large stock of all kinds of

DRY GOODS, FANCY GOODS, NO­
TIONS, BOOTS and SHOES,
and CARPETS,
And are selling at prices that will astonish you.

W. S. GOODYEAR &amp; CO­
Hastings, October 4, 1882.

. AMAN
Uj
.

WHO IS UNACQUAINTED WITH THE GEOGRAPHY OF THIS COUNTRY, WILL
erC RV SYAMIMIMA TU1« MIS THAT

IIo.M'kerpIng.
------ (Suinci

One of the best things about house­
keeping is that it requires the exercise
of the highest faculties of the human
mind; we see women every day who
are statesmen in the wise management
of affairs, calm, independent, and selfnossessed in emergencies. Some of the
best traits of character are constantly
cultivated.
If any class of women can be said to
have virtues thrust upon them, it is the
housekeepers of our day.
If every
woman would set it before her as an
aim worthy of all that is strongest
and belt in her, to conduct a wellordered home, a great deal of happi­
ness and real beauty would be gained.
How many faces, once lovely, are trans­
formed by the addition of those wicked
little lines about the eyes and mouth
which comes from having fretted over
necessary work?—work, too, which, if
properly engaged in, would not injure
the doer.
There are times, probably, when the
happiest wife and mother thinks with
longing of Thoreau’s housekeeping at
Walden Pond, and admires his resolu­
tion in throwing the fragments of lime­
stone with which he had ornamented
his desk out of the window when he
found they must bo dusted every day;
but there is absolutely no use in fretting
over petty annoyances, and since the
danger of falling into the habit is great,
every sensible woman will Endeavor to
look on the bright side of all her trou-

Chicago, Rock Island &amp; Pacific R*y,
graphical position, the shortest and b&lt;*t route between the East. Northeast and
Southeast, and the West, Northwest ijnd Southwest.
It Is literally and strictly true, that Its connections are all of the principal lines
nt
*- .u- — •— — . -------------- -------------- -------------- ■ W.IM,
La Salle, Geneseo, Moline and Rock Island, in Illinois j Davenport. Muscatine,
Washington, Keokuk, Knoivllle. Oskaloosa, Fairfield, Des Moines,. West Liberty,

“ GREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE,”

Suppose the baked potatoes should be
•eaten the mament they are done, and*
atr important member of the family,
knowing the dinner hoar, is late; don’t
worry over the matter; every such lit­
tle worry indulged in is like
chisel
deepening the lines already formed by
some real trouble.
Everybody, it is
to be feared, knows women who never
seem really to rouse up to enjoy any­
thing unless it is a misfortune, and who
remind their guests of the dinner
Charles Lamb describes where roast
lady was served with every course.—E.
W.B.,inN. Y. Pott.

Fast Express Trains, composed of COMMODIOUS, WELL VENTILATED, WELL
HEATED. FINELY UPHOLSTERED and ELEGANT DAY CJACMK8 ; a IIn. of the
MOST MAGNIFICENT HORTON RECLINING CHAIR CARS ever built ( PULLMAN'S

ROAD IN THE COUNTRY, and In which lupw
the low rate Of SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS EACH.

ALBERT LEA ROUTE.
between Newport News, Richmond, Cincinnati, Indianapolis and La Fayette!
•
St PaiiI Mlnxa.nxU. MnH In t

k Hopeful Child.
Mrs. Hamilton K. Fish, of Austin, is a
verv vain old lady who is in the habit
of dressing in a very youthful manner.
A few days ago she called on Mrs.
Bezombee, and Mrs. Bezembee s little
girl, about ten years of age, was much
struck with the visitor’s hau
•• Doyon like my hat, little girl?”

“ Yea, I like it very much.

JJASTIAuM HOCHE,

020100320201020202000100000200020200000000010105050002020202010001010

I told

but she told me when I got to be ninetytheir objectionable faaturcs are easily five years old, and wore false curls,
obviated by adopting »me efficient that she would get me just such a hat—
form of ventilation, aapecially if we wish didn't you mammaf"

Teuu Sifting*.

&gt;4 Cai

R. R. CABLE,

ID

.

E. ST. JOHN

cwicir.n.

,

RUPTURE

�0M

or whkM
MCTKOOO »» coM, fc.STl.SW Mirer and WM

re reported on the Sth
on the war-path and
oa the Dolores. The
lanaed and sent mee-

sMxl

Thb pastors of two colored churcbec In

Thb annual report of Health Officer Town-

the 5th by announcing that they had decided

Stewart and Rev. IL M. Brown.
Near Yellville, Art, Minnie Shanks and
Mary Godfrey were fatally injured the other
day by a tree toppling over upon them.

‘ Two heavy failures were reported from
New York on the 3d: Henry Graff, txxjt .-nd
shoe manufacturer, with liabilities of KOI-.'
.000, and Richardson, Boynton * Co., stove laud. Me., swept away establishments v -Tued
at nearly 31M.000.
Sbtbn prisoners in the jail al Bowling
William G. Ivmeix, paying teller of a
Philadelphia life Insurance and annuity com- 0th and gained their liberty, but were soon
captured by the cltIrena. All the prisoner*
in the jail of Prince George County. Md.,
thirteen years connected with the Institution.
Tnt exchangee nt twenty-nix leading clearPatkioc Cabby, a New York ’iougabore, man. who waa crippled for life by an accident
ended on the 4th were11,832,947,317, an toages, and wm recently awarded 115,000 by a
showing that the general trade of the country
The annual report of Edward Clark, archi­ lain a healthy condition.
tect of the United Blates Capitol, shows the
amount expended for the Capitol extention
duringthe last fiscal year was &lt;37,000; foe
Ghkat exclti
lighting the Capitol and ground*, 330,030; for
reaching 3L8i per barrel'. The day’s transacCOO; for extension of the Government Print­ tlous were the largest ever recorded, aggre­
lag Office, 340.0UJ; enlirglug the Washington gating H,375,0J0 barrels.
Court Bouse. 3117.00(1
The following business failures occurred on
Extensive forest fires were raging In the the 6th: William A. Leavitt, proprietor af
Catskills, opposite Germantown, N. Y-, on the Hero Glass-works. Philadelphia, for 371X1,the 2d. Ti« ilarnea were rapidly approaching 000; Lewi* Coleman dt Co., small wares, Bos­
the summit of the mountain.
ton, for 3370,000; Hall « Co., commission
Five farmers returning home after selling merchants, Boston, for 3350,000; Barnett, Bach
cotton were robbed near Galveston. Tex., the &amp; Co., notions. New York, for 3100,03d
other day by highwaymen, at the point of the
The flrat through passenger train from the
pistol
,
Mexican seaport of Guay mas arrived on the
lx fifty-five cases of fraudMen t pre-em ta­
ttoo caMUMtried In Northern Minnesota, not

Ing, and all were decided iu favor of the Gov­
ernment by default
, Thb first killing froirt of the season occurred
throu^boct the Eaatern and Middle States on
the.night of the 2j.
Thb business failure* In the United States
bcred 116.

mother's throat on the mom Ing-of the 3d, and

PERSONAL AND POLITICAL.
William Dickson, foreman of the late
Star-route jury, who bad been cited to appear
before the Criminal Court of the District of
Columbia to show cause why he should not bo

letter to the Grand Jury that reflected U[&gt;on
Judge Wylie, filed hl* answer on the lat, ex­
plaining that he meant no disrespect to the
Court. He was accordingly discharged.
J. W. SnsoTTOX, for many year* General
dlad suddenly

Baurnrnaa variety theater waa burned

Da. D. F. Golubs, of Minneapolis, brother
of Jerome J. Collins, who perished with Ueu-

Pearson «aa found.
rent fiscahyear of the Chief of 'the Bureau of

ville, who.

Colllaa, “left De Long and his companions

of SlilU,‘-ia

For the corresponding period

unpof* rt fc4’V-’40,233.
Postmawteu-Gexbiial Hove has made an
order giving postmasters discretion In re­
turn Inr letters to writers upon application
aud prodcction of proof. Heretofore this

Joaun Qvixcy, who had held the office of
Mayor of Boston and other public positions.

editorial rooms of the Washington (D. C.)

The King of Corea. In oritar to insure the
loyalty ot Ms subjects, has tesaed as edict
adcuoMlodgtag that the recent rebcBton waa
due lotos owa mtagwreremeot- There Insur­
gents who were arretted have been pirdooed.
The Pari* revel ntJonisU have posted pla­
card. oc the rerid an re o&lt; General Mac Mahon,
threatening Ma with death.
Owixu lotbe failure of the potato crop, the
death of the hogc/rom an epidemic, and high
prices of all kinds of food, great distress ex­
ists In County Clare, Ireland.
Ox account of the ravage* of cliolcra at
Mecca, quarantine was on the 4th 'estab­
lished nt Port bald on vessels coming from
Book.
L'UUIOIC, Russia, waa on the 4th visited
by a terrible conflagration, which destroyed
most of the prominent building* and inflicted
enormous kisses.
An earthquake In Northern Syria on the
3th caused the deatrucUoa of several village*,
but no live* were loat.
.
. Thb Servian Cabinet, which tendered its
resignation under the impression Hut King
Milan disapproved of the project to bring to
justice those engaged 1° the plot against hla
life, have agreed to retain their portfolios In
deference to the King’s wishes.
. A London dispatch of the Sth aays de­
structive’ galea and inundations continued
throughout England. In Radnorshire, a coun­
ty in the south of Wales, the grain crop* had
suffered complete destruction.
Ax Alexandria (Egypt) dispatch of the 5th
state* that in a determined attack on the
town of Obcld, the False Propbet’s forces
were repulsed with great lore, .two of hla
brothers being among the killed. Obcld re­
mained Invested, and the Prophet had pro­
ceeded on hie march on Khartoum.
Extreme cold weather prevailed in Russia
on the 6th.
Thb Danish exploring steamer Dymphna
was recently wrecked on the Siberian coast.
Thb King of Corea has lately conclnded a
treaty with Great Britain upon the same basis
as the CoreainAmerican treaty.
Hku Bebel, the German Socialist, has
commenced to serve a term of three months
in prison at Leipsic, for using the press to ex­
press his sentiments in regard to the Govern­
ment.
’
The Russian police has discovered a con­
spiracy at Pultawa for a rising of the pear
an try.. Two hundred of the latter were im­
plicated.
The Eastern and Provincial Poor Asylum at
Halifax, N. &amp;. took fire at midnight on the
Oth and burned with frightful rapidity, roast­
ing alive, it waa thought, a number of in­
mate* confined in the hospital of the building.
Distress prevail* to a great extent at Alex­
andria, Egypt, among t,he sufferer, by incen­
diarism, and while waiting for the inde nnlty
they are compelled to appeal to private
charity.
Admiral Sbtmocr la now a member of the
British peerage, with toe title of Baron AJcealer.
A London dispatch of the 6th aays two
Uatterie* of Transvaal Boer* had an engage­
ment with Mapoch. the Kaffier Chief, who
defeated the Boers. Mapoch feigned to re­
treat, and drew the Boers Into an ambush,
kIIUng 30U
The Cabinet of the new Bey ol Tunis la con­
stituted as follows: Minister of Foreign
Affairs, Cambon; Minister of War, General
Forge more; Minister of Marine, General LogeroL AJ1 the officials are French except the
Prime Minister, I.uxla.
Govbhmob Ortez, of the Mexican State of
Sonora, who waa forcibly deposed by Gen.ral
Reyrs, ssya that in endeavoring to develop
the country to ueceaaarily increased taxation,
which brought about the armed dispersal of
the Legislature at Hermosillo. He intend*
to appeal personally to President Gonsales
to be reinstated.
' A Peruvian journal states that peace ne­
gotiations with Don Garcia Calderon have
been abruptly dosed, and that he haa been
imprisoned at AngcL

LATER NEWS.
A tahtt of citizens of Jackson parish. La.,
Tn death by apoplexy of Rear Admiral a tew days ago took from the jail at Vienna
two negroes, charged with robbing an aged
white planter, and riddled them with bullets.
General Bhebman’b annual reoort recom­
mends U*at the limit of the army be Increased
to 80,000 men, and that the pay of soldiers be
made sixteen dollars per month. The deser­
F. Reek, Republican candidate for Superin­ tions during the year numbered 3,721.
tendent of Public Instruction. in which Che
Advices of the 7th from Halifax, N. S.,
state that by the burning of the al ms-bouae and
a national reputation during the Congres­ hospital at that place twenty-three women
sional tuvestigattou concerning the Louisiana and eight men horrify perished In the flame*.
living near Hopkinsville, Ky.. shot dead a election difficulties.
The loaa of property was estimated at over
33M.OJ0.
.
in a dispate shunt partnership eoru
at Andover Theological Seminary, died a few
HbXky Hcisbl was killed by burglar* at
Sharon. O., and his wife was knocked sense­
It la understood st Washington that tbs less wtth«a dub the other night. Ttie rob­
United Slates Government will bo Invited to bers secured fifty dollars.
ditions wear. aliDilar.
The prosecuting counsel in the case of
WniLB raarrylng a couple at polite head­
Arabi Pasha on the 7th asked permission to
quarters at New York the other night, Ju*,
retire, selling up the claim that English
tire Ottertxxtrg had his pockets picked.
Govekxok Hott has appointed Colonel
The New England mackerel fleet captured ' Francis Jordan Secretary of the Common- pressure had caused the laws of Egypt to be
violated, whereby the trial ot Arabi bad beooumi a matter of politics.
A CmcAoo Board of Trade clerk, John
I Joex a Sncixn. District Attorney foe fiberman. .was found dead onuide the door of
Northerti Florida, recently died of pneumonia bi* lodgings a. few mornings ago, hla neck
• the 84.
In Providence Hospital at Washington.
broken and a deadly gash on the right tem­
A onasD JCrr at Danville, Va, has indict- ple.
John D. Bkka. a convicted murderer, and
4th made n contrealon Implicating eight perfive other prisoners escaped from the jail at
fit. l.oul* on the afternoon of the 7th.
ly-QTgiflizcd baud of lincendlsrtes. Fires in
Ax earthquake shook up the region between
the vicinity had been irequeut. and much
FOREIGN.
Laramie and Evanaton, on the Union Pacific
valuable property Lad hreu destroyed.
The man who started the conflagration In Railway, on the evening of the 7th, with such
vigor m to release plastering.
meUlhc cap works near Sheffield, Contain
Ax exptaaion on the 7th at the Clay Cross
mines in Derbyshire, England, killed thirty
men and shattered buUdings five mllre dis-’
died Uy counterfeit bills [dated from plate*tant.
.AQokk (Ireland! dispatch of the 1st say*
A firb the other day swept away the west­
ruary, JS8D.
moonlight outrages acre increasing in the ern half of the Oliver wire-mill at Plttsbi.rgh.
Dritisu a temporary
vicinity of Killarucy.
the largest cooenii of the kind In the United
Mates, causing a loss of 3100,(XX).
rendered into the
lx a reeeat riot at New Ban. a Vienna
(Austria) suburb, between the. polke aud
Tub .FreAstt, the Loadoo SoeUllat newa- tredesmeu, twenty of the latter and a num­
ber of the former were injured.
3.334, with 172
Sbctionb of Warwickshire. Chester and
Somersetshire, ia FngUod. through which
runs the Exeter Canal, have been inundated
by a break in its banka.
Anthony Tbollofe, at Lpndon, haa been
atricken with paralysis in the bead, but there
were strong hoj-e* of hia recovery.
A coLUBfox of mall and paaseu^er trains
tin* other day on the road between Paris and
Boulogne resulted in injury tn many p-areenpans Including Hie Countess «rf fiotnera, but
no one waa killed.
Thb new iron steamship Arragun, loaded
with ralla for the Canadian Pacific Rood, wu
stranded oft Anticosti Island on the Oth,
and it wm fearod that abe would prove a total
wreck.
THE CsaadiM Department of Agriculture
wiU send ^ageni to WaaLUgxm to r *mtdl*
aultatUt showing tlw emigration from the
IMninkm to the Stotea

GexerslCook held aco-fercaee with the
Man (Jarios-Apaches recently. The Indians

thb one-frice clothinc store.
A Mammoth Stock of

'

*

Fall and Winter Clothing
Everythin. Mew, HlyUih. nn. Durable.
l am-du, C.U WMttar Meli hr *a.

Tine attention ot Parent* b respectfully called to our large Mock bf

CHILDREN'S, BOYS’, AND YOUTHS' CLOTHING,
Which is the most complete ever laid down to NaabvUe.

•

EVERY IA! TOO DRIVES A TEAM
----- ehovld Hava-----

Blankets and Robes.
aH^ kINE our stock will compare favor-

We are proud of our new stock of

CAPS, CAPS,

HATS, HATS,

And believe we have aomething desirable and very cheap.

Prints, Dress Goods, Flannels,

Wc have made additions to our

Boots, Shoes, Gents’ Furnishing Goods, Groceries, Underwear, Etc.

8h*«U trader™.

BlanU-u, Boots, Shoes,

Cao*.

ware, Orockey ud QoMnsware
Out Mock of Boots and Shoes is larger than ever, and no competitor
will be allowed to undersell ua.

•

8RJS.

CALL

»

PRINDLE A CHIPMAN.
CUSTOM

FARMERS, TEAMSTERS, HORSEMEN!
—DO TOU KNOW THAT—

YOU CAN SAVE MONEY
id manufacturer of hardwood

Lumber.

OF HERB. WALRATH.
In the Heavy Line 1 manufacture Farm Harness, Read liarness. and Lumber Harness, using the best brand of “A” stock, stitching
with 0 cord No. 10 thread, and Eberhard Trimmings.
^My Light Mingle and Double Harness are the Pride of nil who

use them, are

© A GOOD FAMILY FLOUR
a.d BBAN.
"5 MH^rBBD
Cent
Wm,.

Made in all Styles

Q

PUBB OU^r VIXBOAB. 4

—FROM—

Best Stock in the Market,
HABDWOOD LUMBER,

AND WARRANTED TO GIVE SAU8FACTI0N.

0

I also keep full lines of

Saddles, Whip»» Robes, Blankets, Halters, Riding Bridles,
^Z.1
Collars and Pads, Curry Combs, Brushes,
Harness Oils, Etc.
Everything marked down to Bottom Prices and satisfaction guaranteed.

BASSWOOD LUlakR.

PIKE FINLSHI5G LUMBER

MUI on Sherman Street, East from
Depot.

HERB. WALRATH,
West Side Main-st, Nashville

NEW

0

Mich.

NEW

STORE GOODS
OUR EFFORTS TO IMPROVE
Our surrouDdlugs and the community at large

mam have been appreciated

H. R. DICKINSON A CO.

ALL READY
Toahow you a large and well selected Stock of

GROCERIES
CON6I8TING OF

And our trade Is larger than ever before.
U------------------------------------

Sugars, Coffees, Teas, Tobaccos,
OUR NEW stock; OF groceries Spices, Fish, Canned Goods,
ATTKACT ATTENTION.
Provisions, Ac.,
Our atora room though ample is completely filled und our ahelvc* fairly groan under them
And rtlll they come. We have everything to the Grocery line.
.
AT THE LOWEST PRICES
Crockery and Glawaware.

If you/want to see a pretty and complete line of Crockery, see ours. We have only time to
cal) vour attention to China Tea Setts, Majolica Ware, and Decorated Chamber Setts. In Glass­
ware our stock is complete and attractive. Our trade In LAMPS is simply Immense. We
have Pendants, Decorated Vase, and Common Goods. Low estimate* given on Church and
Hall Chandeliers.
We have added a fine Hue of

Table Cutlery,

For Cash or Ready Pay.
Also the Large**. Stock of

Crockery, Glassware, Lamps,
Stone Ware, 4c.,
TO BE SEEN IN BARRY CO.

Lanterns, and Oil Cans. Your sped*] attention is invited to the fonntr, u we feel assured that
BOOTS ABD SHOES
we have something that will suit.
AS CHEAP AS ANYBODY.
We keep the celebrated Snow Flake Flour.
Everything New, Fresh, and Cheap. An examination will convince.

cash paid

.

G. W. FRANCIS.

Tor produce.

C.W. SMITH.

501 Wagons 150 Horses
Shod
OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE

FOR SALE AT ROCK BOTTOM PRICES.
WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH

THREE INCH TIRE
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING

ALWAYS BEST
TO HAVE THE JOB DOSF

SKILLFULLY.
Recognizing These Facts,
And dewing to increase mg proeperitg
by affording the public

THE BEST WORK

BETTER THAN COMMON TIRE.
Chas. Middleton,
We believe the Three inch Tire ie destined to oome
into general uee. Call and examine them and yon will have
no other. •

BENTLEY BROS. &amp; WILOS,
tSr

bold in Nuhville by C. L. GLASGOW.

�LOCALS.
TB« CWMTT.
Smith, of Brikro. b

SATCKBAY. ■

-

-

BOV. 11,
charged recently

lag bee near Middleville, the other day,
with 78 to 100 in attendance.
&lt;rf *o boal* ore «ri«« tb«. dwlorationa of the people: “Ws are deter­
mined tolrteak'Qp tings aud political
Bacbiot*, to reform the civil service
and break the impudent power of fed­
ora', palrunaar. and to iuveaUaalo and
if necCTaery reform the tariff,”—and all
these thing* the conacienci of the Re­
publican party haa ionic demanded.
.
The Opposition victory has been most
complete where the demand* of the partiaan machinery were most completely
ignored and the leading candidate se­
lected becauae worthy the confidence
of all honest men. The fusion in Mich­
igan waa dictated by the machine and
was utterly minus any good principle,
and its partiaLvictory »• insignificant
when compared with the revolution in
New York, tn that state the popular
voice of the Democratic convention
overwhelmed the machine and nomi­
nated by fair means a man whoae rec­
ord was untarnMird by the mistakes of
his party arid wIioms conduct in official
position had made his name synony­
mous wita great ability and the strict­
est integrity—a man worthy the confi­
dence of all good citizen irrespective of
party. Against him the Republican
party put up a good candidate by cor­
rupt methuds,staining his candidacy by
those
methods
and
loading it
down with the odium of federal inter­
ference.
The defeat of Folger in New lork
and Beaver in Pennsylvania ia cause
for rejoicing to all Republicans who
regard their party as a means to good
government rather than as an engine
of personal selfishness. The people
demand, first of all, reform in the civil
service, so that people and parties shall
be freed as far as possible from the cor­
rupting and choking influence of official
patronage and partisan cliques; and
with this, also, reform of the tariff and
strict honesty and integrity in all de­
partments of the public service. If,
now, the Republican party, ridding itsself of its unscrupulous ••bosses” and
heeding the demands of the people,
shall lift up for its leaders honest and
fearless patriots who love their party
only for their country’s sake, it may
again become what it once was—the
powerful instrument of the country’s
good.
&lt; w r
____ * . I
Pomeroy’s Great Wett comes to ns
now as Pomeroy’s Democrat. Its size is
eight pages, seven columns to the page
same size as formerly. • It will be sent
one year for $2, or eight copies one year
for $10. and one copy free to the&lt; one
who gets up the dub. Those who wish
some rather lively, and at the same
time a little waspish reading matter
that doessnot let men sleep while read­
ing it, will find Pomeroy’s Democrat
about what they want and can have it
by sending to M. M. Pomeroy, Denver,
Colorado. As an editor Brick Pome­
roy is a rattler, and if he can’t make
Rome bowl there are few that can.

The general results of she state elec­
tion are the election of Begule by from
eight to 10,000 mgjyrity and the Repub­
lican state ticket by about the same
majority. The Democrats have six
congrea-iman—from the first, second,
fourth. fifth, sixth, and seventh district.
The legislature stands : house—Repub­
licans 82, Democrats 88; senate—Reputyicans 19, Democrats 13. Most nf
the Democrats elected are tree traders.
Michigan stands second as a wool­
growing state, Ohio being first, and in
in three’ markets Michigan wool is
quoted as high as that from Ohio.

*.

KQKTB CASTLETON.

Farmer* are hulling clover.
Elder Hawes ia on the sick list
Fine weather for doing fall work.
Jas. A Merton is ditching his Iwamp.
H. Hosmer, baa moved in with his,
mother for a time.
Two caws of diphtheria are reported
on the State road.
Rev. Spittier made a flying tnp to
Jackson Thursday.
John Ellerton has a brother visiting
at bis place for a few days.
k
Orin Manley, of Stanton is spending
a few days at Amos Snyder’s, his broth­
er-in-law.
,
The young people of the U. B. Sun­
day school enjoyed a pleasant evening
at Unde Geo. Morgan’s Nov. 4.
••When whisky is in brains are out”
is the old adage. So thought a’peddler
when he traded horses on Battle Street
last Friday.
One of our voung men bad the pleas
me nf taking a certain young lady to
the fireman’s dance, but was saved the
trouble of taking her home by another
fellow.
Mrs. Spitler, mother of Rev. Spitler,
and Thomas Forepaugh and wife and
two children, of Fairfield Ohio are visit­
ing at Rev. Spitler’s.
They speak
well of our country.

MAPLE GROVE.

Election paased'off quietly.
Nellie Archer is on the sick list.
Geo. W ilex'x left for parts unknown a
days ago.
Dan. Wolf bought a cow of Gill Lap­
ham for $50.
One of Mr. Wilcox's children has the
lung fever.
John Wolf has moved to south-west
Maple Grove.
One of Andrew Eno's children has
the diphtheria.
Dan Blowers of Newaygo county, is
visiting his mother.
Bill Buck, an ex-residenU0f Maple
Grove, dropped in on us a few days
ago.
•
Hank Spencerand wife of Potterville
were in town for a day or two this
week.
B. Pearce started Tuesday for Kal­
kaska county to try the merits of his
Springfield rifle.
The dance at E. G. Potter’s last Fri­
day night, waa largely attended and a
good time enjoyed.
The Buck school began last Monday,
also the Baker and Norton schools will
begin next Monday.
Wm. Pbiniaey’s daughter and daugh­
ter-in-law of Clare, who have been here
some time, returned home Monday.
Fred Quick got up on his, ear and
busked flu bushels of corn in six hours,
bound and set up the stalks, and it waa
a poor day for corn too.
David Kingston and daughter of
Coldwater, was visiting at his sister’s.
Mrs. Wm. King, and other rel^tives,the
fore part of the week.
It must be that there is going to be a
hard winter for there waa a quilting at
Mr. Streeter’s Saturday, one at Mr.
Wilcox’s Monday, and another at Ad.
Wolfs Tuesday.
Forest Lodge No.891, LO G. T., is
in a prospering condition and elected
the .following officers Nov. 4th: A. J.
Wolf W. C. T., Grace Potter W. V. T.»
Ed. Money W. 8., H. M. Dunham W.
T-, Carrie Pearce W. L G., Wm. Phiuisey W. O. G., Geo. Pearce W. M., Eva
Dunham W. F.3.
L. E. Ph a nt.

Glerioas News-

From the Detroit Free Press
The promise of Ohio has been more
than fulfilled. From every quarter the
glorious news comes in. The fiat that
went forth. “The machine ia to be
smashed,” has been answered with the
triumphant cry."The machine is smash­
ed.” The whole country waa strewn
yesterday with the flying fragments,
and to-day and 'or many a day the po
litical atmosphere will be the purer and
sweeter for the explosion.
It is a grand, a glorious triumph, one
in which every honest elector, every
oppressed tax-payer, aud every hardworked civil servant of the country
will uafeignedly rejoice. It would i*e
idle to claim it as a Democratic victory
iu the narrow sense in which those
words are sometimes used. It is due in
large measure to the revolt of Republi­
cans disgusted with the arrogance of
the “bosses” who have abused the pow­
er of the party, prostituting it to their
own selfisn end and the aggrandizement
of their followers.
But, in a broad sense, the victory is a
Democratic one. The people have won
it; but they have selected the Democ­
racy as their instrument. They have
repelled indignantly the stalwart sneer
which has pr;»claimed the Democracy
at times untrustworthy and, at times,
dead; and they have trampled under
foot the pretentious stalwart claim to a
administered in their own intereat.
The rebuke of Hubbellissn, star routeism, bnesism and river and harbor
tiueveiy ia a crushing one; and the
friend* of honest economical govern­
ment, of reduced y&gt;va*ton and a reform
ed civil service, have a right to rejoice

The oyster supper given by the band
boy a laat Saturday night waa asncceas
considering the short notice given.
Net receipts $79.
Chas. Collins haa been building a
large wing on the west end of bis
house, since his return to Woodland,
much improving it.
Rev. Bridenstine no longer haa to
bother with buying milk by the quart
for his family as be baa recently invest­
ed in a fl rat-cl ass cow.
The special school meeting is called
for Friday evening of this week, when
it will be decided 1x0* many depart
meats of school there will be sustained
the coming winter.
Hon. D. R. Cook of Hastings, made
Cue closing speech of the campaign at
town hall on Monday evening, but
owing to the bad condition of the roads
there was not a very large crowd.
If every voter in the town of Wood­
land baa not registered it is not the
fault of Frank .Hilbert, for be has
made a thorough can vans irrespective
of party and given every man a cliance.
Mr. Spindler, the miller, still contin­
ues to make ’ improvements and this
time it ia a nice large commcMlious hog
house with various apartments and
bins for grain and a well shingled roof
upon it.
Uncle John Dillenbeck now baa a
new pump again and it woulp seem no
more than right that the half a dozen
neighbors whoso generously patroniz­
ed bis old one should come forward
and donate their share toward paying
for the new one.
It waa our good fortune a few days
ago to take a look over Albert Dillenbeck’a new and handsome residence.
Although Alliertsays it is not complet­
ed, still he has made a vast improve­
ment upon bin former house. One at­
tractive feature of hie new house is the
furnace with which it ia heated, which
is a prince of its kind and works to
perfection.
MORGAN.

C. O. Scott gave us a flymg call.
Some very urbane noses are alive.
Rev. Bissell gave a practical talk.
L. Carpenter is studying medicine.
Jake Burgdorf is reported critical.
Jake Odell ia bailed from the cooler.
Mufl Creek road should be repaired.
H. H. Hull ordered e lot more grocer­
ies.
Nov secure our teachers for the win­
ter.
■ ‘
The sing waa a medley in the windy
fall.
Mr. Harvey Towl returned from Da­
kota.
Mr. Enos gave a fine temperance
lecture.
Miss Nancy Main is nursing her
brother.
Secure an efficient teacher if we must
pay more.
Hand in your little bills to Dr. F. 8.
Hull; now.
Some improvements in the buildings
of Morgan.
Lay Cole is enjoying a good time in
Arkansas.
Mrs. Cutler haa recovered from re­
cent illness,
John D. Bishop and daughter at
Lake House.
Wm. Main had an erysipelatous
abceaa lanced.
Corwins have bargained to rent the
Darling house.
Herman Branch's boy has recovered
from diphtheria.
Prayermeeting—Mudge'school house,
Wednesday eve.
H. D. Webb’s family are recovering
from their Illness.
Social—Morkau Hall. Wednesday
evening Nov. 14th.
BELLEVUE.

WOODLAND.
Sagendorph received forty votes.
Another heavy rain on Monday.
Bad time for clover seed that was
out.
Threshing is all finished in these
parts.
The select school closed last Monday
afternoon.
Numerous auction bills were posted
up Tuesday.
A new corn crib is to be seen on the
farm of Jonathan Haight.
Gen. Baiden will teach the coming
winter in the town of Odessa.
Improvements are being made daily
in our village in one way or another. _
A large delegation went from this
place to Hastings to hear Gen. Gibson
speak.
Francis Miller bow occupies the
house recently vacated by Mr. Tyler on
the latter’s farm.
The school in the Galoway district
will commence th"?? winter term Mon­
day the 11th inst.
Mrs. D. Mallory wlio has l»een visit­
ing Ohio friends the past three or four
weeks has returned.
Miss Rettie Bridenstine who has been
attending select school in Castleton
this fall returned home last week.
Rev. Mrs. Judd.w ho has been in very
poor health since their arrival ia this
place, we are pleased to note is oonvaleacent.
J. W. Holmes is handling the Harp­
er’s series of school books for this dis­
trict to the complete satisfaction of all
concerned.

Mr. Barton Anson has been quite
sick, but is con valesing.
Miss Hasler of Eaton Rapids is visit­
ing Mr. and Mrs. Grinnell.
Rev. William Riley of Hawaii
preached in the Methodist church, Nov.
5th.
Mrs. Abbott and daughter of Hast­
ings are visiting Mr. and Mrs. McWil­
liams.
Mrs. C. 8. Fox of Grand Rapids, is
visiting her daughter Mrs. Joseph
Grinnell.
Mias Sackett sister of Mrs. Geo. Per­
ry haa gone to Ionia to visit her father
and mother.
Menadames Lane, Bailey and Follett,
all daughters of Mrs. Col. Ives, have
have just returned from Ohio.
Mrs. Karr, mother of Rev. Mrs. Maveety, has come to visit her daughter’s
family. «ud will remain for some time.
Harry Holden haa recently returned
from England where he has been on a
long visit,—was gone from America
nine montns.
Mrs. Mary Van waa'called by tele­
graph to Saginaw- where she haa a mar­
ried daughter living, Mrs-Etta Holton,
she ia known by many in thia place.
Resell and Frank Holden are home
again. They have been in California
for some time. Frank baa certainly
improved in looks. We welcome them
back.
Chas. Thomas of New York, ia visa­
ing his brother David, of this place. Id
gmpany with Henry Holden and
Chas.|Mareh, be baa gone north on a
hunting expedition.

expecting office.
»f5, Gaylord 178—89. Coaaty officers— iliea, from the contractor whn anpplira
al days but ia better under the careful Sheriff, Lazell-238. EHs 189-77; clerk,
Perry 947, Sterling 148—99; registor.
One of Thomas Walsh’s little girls
fell upon an ax, inflicting a long and Shriner 848. Grier 151—93; com mi#- By thia the raetalwifcof the r/immigaton
deep wound in one hip the wound re­ ■Qooera, Dr-Graft and Wood 342, Corbin are required to buy -wf L»r lheir fami­
ceived surgical attention and the child 153, Powers 151
lies in the public uvirkrf. Tile com­
will soon be sound again.
mission, in getting mi tfcrsirat omtrart
Whit ist.
KA LAHO.
fixed it so that Gc». SturnL, who m In
Oscar Wilson and wife are home command, and his family; who reside
BALTIMORE.
with him at the home, will be like
again.
A few more corn baaknrs needed.
buy Itrrf iu the
John Webber and wife of Syracuse, themselvewobliged
Corn ia being ^arrested and is a little Neb., will winter here.
open market Tin- .wn rm-tor is not
.
allowed
any
lot
gei
nrw&lt;*uuAdvance Lodge 408, I. O. G. T.. has
G. R. Durfee hits the wall under
elected the following officers: W. C. tract to furnish him lie- in-rt t&gt;m&lt;*hnar&lt;l
house competed.
T., H. U Earl; W. V.T.. Minnie Grant; by the fund of tiie h&gt;om*. Thia freling
Philon Granger and wife start
W. 8., U Z. Slomon; W. A. 8.. Mia. between the govern-o&lt; of th,. I&gt;&lt;&gt;mei&gt;ml
the north woods Wednesday.
Mary Gridley ; W. F. $., Mrs. Minnie the commiaaioDerr- ■» ।
P. G. Henney is going to have a
Chambers; W. T., A. T. Green: W. much that it ia mo &gt;- ■mu likely there
of hay scales in his new bain.
M., James Wil non; W. D. M., Libhie will lie legislation
Joseph Wardell and son are erecting Green; W. 0. G.. Charles Richards; approaching session
•olisliinx either
a wagon house for D. R. McOmber.
W. I. G., Hattie Smith ; W. C., Brother the office of govern .r
H. Reynolds has a new wagon house Jennings; P. W. C. T., Mrs. N. E. Ad- of commissioners.
and corn crib combined completed.
Those who have .
.
ams.
G. Risbridger has returned to put
political situation ri-.o-ly mitnrnlly look
the finishing touch on P. G. Heuney’s
to Blaine as a lead* । in rmw evvnra liike
EATON COUNTY.
barn.
the right turn. On
loim xiich as
Sunfield has a new millinery store.
Joseph Megratb has so far husked
outlined they say I• i«&lt;| *-&gt;ny N«-.v
The Eaton Rapids MFg Co’s factory York iu spite of ad min istrat ion influ­
1,000 bushels of corn and still lingers in
is rapidly building^ *
the cause.
ence and sweep P&gt;..
iu »pne
A firm at Charlotte recently received Cameron tactics.
A long needed improvement has been
i-&gt; Virgiifia their is
completed by J. Crosby in the erection $2,700 worth of tea at one time.
no Republican tuo «■ popular ilian
"Spy of Shiloh” holds the board nt Blaine.
of atone abutments for a bridge across
With M .hour xik-nced he
Potterville this week, commencing could hare the Rt-puolicrfii dt-l&lt;-gatiou
the highway by Sidney Hull’s.
the
7^1.
Those that would like to purchase
irrHny event, aud ns
nomine*? of an
Grand Ledge will give thanks with ^nti-bou party In Mould carry U.e
cabbage for winter use should call on
a dance at the Mineral bouse, Friday
A. E. Durfee. He has about i,80(fheads,
SIMs. There is a glowing feeling all
1,800 of the mammoth kind. It is eva., Nov. 94th.
through the South m tnvhr**f »peldi&gt;&lt;
James Dye aud Lucinda Figgof Sun­
enough to make one hungry for cab­
Nation with a big N. mid a National
field, and Albert Hubba and Rilla Calk­ movement would uiv.ik up the **M&gt;Iid
bage to look at them.
ins of Roxand are married.
Doxy.
South” forever.
Whatever of truth
The Moot Court, a literary society of there may be in tln», ii ia a fact that toe
HASTINGS.
young lawyers and law students, has coming elections air bmKeil upon with
been organized at Charlotte.
great anxiety. Tin news heir i« that
The band will soon give a musical
The wedding of Miss Ida M. Brown the bosses will be defeated in New
aud dancing entertainment.
of Potterville, to J. M. C. Smith of York, Pennsylvania M»d Virginia, and
Winckleman has sold his grocery to
Charlotte, was a brilliant affair.
then we shall see what we *liall see.
Frank Parker and Charley Bailey.
Miss Florence High by, a school teach - Whether the itepublirau party in the
The hook and ladder company haa
er of Potterville, has gone to telegraph­ two former States till be able to rid
been organized with W. H. Huffman
ing at Marshall, Texas, at $800 a year. itself for good of the laiMtes mid recu­
foreman.
Three wooden buildings near the perate or whether it will lx* hopelessly
The Democrats have&lt; a jubilee here
county offices, at Charlotte, were burn­ split is a question 1 »r the futtre.
Saturday night, with Senator Penninged recently and the offices narrowly
A num bet of Treaauiy .uid other
escaped.
clerks will leave here to a &lt;bty or two
Prof. Hall was recently the recipient
Golddust, a well known stallion own­ and go to theatotes wucte Uiey will act
of a fine sett of Walter Scott’s works,
ed at Vermontville, died recently. His as deputy marshal** far the day of elec­
from the teachers class.
owner waa offered $1,500 far him short­ tion—next Tuesday. I'heae gentlemen
Marriages have been rattier numer­
ly before his death.
in addition to drawing thrir ralarirs
ous here lately.
Among them are
There were more shipments over the from their reaped in- D -partiueutK,
Mark Russell and Ida Knappen, Geo.
D. L. A. N.. from Grand Ledge last
will also get pay f&lt;*t acting aw deputy
Webb and Miss Myers of Grand Rapids
month, than ever before in the same
marshals. It is said time the Treasury
B. F. Warner of Paw Paw and Clara
length of time.
alone will send out 85u more.
Pray. _________J_____________
Over in Roxand A. L. Parker has
Mr. John Q. Thoui,i^»n, who has liebought Henry Vetters’ farm of 130 come editor of the W.isliiiigtou Chron­
WEST SUNFIELD.
acres for $4,800, anu Vetter has purch­ icle, is well known .»• our of the ablert
Wild gee4e begin to fly.
ased Elisha Milter’s 80 for $3,000.
of the younger joinimliwtM who have
Sunday waa a cold raw day.
A colored prisoner, sentenced at been connected with the pi raw. The
Dr. Snyder drive* a Dew team.
Charlotte for 90 days at Ionia, escaped first number of theCInouicle loaned un­
Who ia the "Wandering Jew •”
from Under Sheriff Peterson while on der his editorship i»*mim abm:&lt;tanC wit­
Mr. Seaaman l^a sold bia ox team.
the way there, by jumping out of the ness of his ready amt vivaciouM pen iu
TbeDunkard church nears comple­ water-closet window.
its columns. He ha** the capacity (p
tion.
A prominent Greenbacker and fusion
Wm. Hull haa bought another heavy candidate for the legislature was elect­ make's first class paper in Washing­
ton,
be in gone of tin* orsi tul«»rmrd men
team.
ed chairman of a Republican meeting
Misa Mary Riley enjoys Vermont­ at Grand Ledge recently. Must have as regards affairs h.-rr, and having the
courage
of the truly mdr prudent'jour­
ville life.
been a pretty nice fellow.
nalist, aa well as the diopowitiou to
The next on roll with a new wagon
WestKalamo: The Lyceum baa 144 speak frankly and Imueatly on all top­
ia Peter Weeks.
*
members; Wm. Showalter has gone
Charlie Fay and his mother returned to Petoskey thia winter for his health ; ics that he discasarH.
Oneof tiie pretti- ot rlmtauteof tlie
from their Ohio visit.
the lyceum will debate the resolution
Mrs. D. Weedman is visiting her sis­ that "the former is the greapst bene­ coming season in Washington will be
the youngcat daughter uf ex-8euator
ter, Mrs. Geo. Week’s.
fit to society,” this Saturday eve.
Mitchell, of Oregon, who has spent
Miss Nettie Riley presides with dig­
V t. Ville has enjoyed considerable of
nity behind the tea era at A. Downs’. a boom this fall. The freight receipts three years in Europe with Iter mother.
Now and then a man has finished his and shipments for last month lack but She celebrated her righfrruth birthday
husking, but there is a good deal of very little of equ&amp;lliag those of Nash­ while at Richfield Springs Inst summer
by a handsome al fteacu riitrrtaiuuiruC
com out yet.
ville. Immense quantities of apples
Rumor haa it, tbaa E. Harper haa de­ have been bought and shipped from on Lake Otsego. The reaftleuce ot ‘exposed of bis wood sawing machine there by Nickerson A. Son of Chicago. Senatorand Mrs. 8frwart iu Chia city
ia, by her wish, being restored exactly
to Soddie A. Bo men t.
Eaton county elects a Democratic
And still the new buggies continue' Sheriff and Register, which is stated as aait was before it was burned four
years
ago. She bail it built originally
to roll into town, the last one being being the first instances in which Dem
after an old castle she had seen in
imported by Schuyler Weeks.
ocrats have been elected to county of­ Germany.
She is In Washington
Charley Sackett haa a very tasty ad­ fices in the history of the county. The
dition to the north sid« of hia bouse. remainder of the ticket with represen­ daily now,superintending the work up­
on
it,
and
returns
every evening to her
The result of bia own labor.
tatives goes Republican by decreased sisters residence iu Alexandria. Pref,
Cyrus Shaffer now occupies bis own majorities.
Baird
and
his
wife'aud
daughter, who
house, and F. Waich, jr., haa posses­
Cyrus C. Cummings, one of the old­ have lately been vudtiug bis relative*
sion of the one vacated by him.
est settlers in Eaton county, died Fri- at Carlisle, have retuiueu to their resi­
The most comical sight on Hunter’s' day. Became to Charlotte 85 years
avenue last week waa an asa baraeaaed ago, a comparatively poor man, but by dence in Washington.
August.
up and driven by two women.
bard work and economy had accumu­
The most of our Weat Sunfield teach­ late a large fortune and was reputed to
Alabama lightning lore U&gt;e feathers
ers were in attendance upon the exam­ be the wealthiest man in the country
off a rooster and threw him over the
ination at Charlotte last week.
nt the time of his death.
fence, but he waa up anti crowing
Mrs. Murry from Troy,Ohio,baa been
A great excitement waa occasioned
the gnest of Mrs. Peter Weeks a few at Charlotte last week, by the receipt fore the thunder came.
days, and eqjoys Michigan muchly.
of a telegram from Jackson saying that
We neglected to state that 8. Green a traveling man who got badly kicked
Gsbgoby—Bbyzwt.— At Pottervllh
waa accompanied on hia Ohio trip by in a scuffle at Charlotte, had died at
Frank Gregory aud Meady Bryant.
bis wife, who also has near relatives Jackson from the effects of the kick,
Johnstown and Mary L Chase of Assyria.
there.
and the Dice young man who did the Com—Ous.—Wednesday, Nov. I, by Justice
The result at the re-election of the
Green, L. J. Cole and Lucy Olin, both of
kinking and who never did such a thing
Ladies Aid Society, was a big crowd,
before in his life went nearly crazy
an excellent time, the retention of over it. ^But ’twas only a hoax—a cruel
by Rev. F. B. Bangs, Nov. 31, Jwmea HUI and
the president and vice-president, Mrs.
Ida Townsend, both ot Batumure.
hoax—and the Dice young man has re­
H. Hunter, treasurer, Mrs. C. Sackett, covered his senses.
secretary and a good dinner.
Mr. Matthews is enjoying a visit wit
OUR
LETTER.
a brotiter from Iowa, whom he has not
seen for 38 ye&amp;xs. Although at the ad[Frooi oar ragularoMrMpoodraL]
Wamhmgton, D. C., Nov. 4,1888.
Picxls—8wjx&gt;
younger, and his superior convertaIt ia currently reported that the Preational qualities combined with his va­
deut’a Cabinet* will shortly undergo a
ried experience, render him an agree­
very thorough’ change, and that Secre­ Ct-ASM—GaatasH.—Nov. a, at the Woodland
able visitor.
tary Lincoln, the only memberleft in it
of Garfield'a choosing will retire to en­
M1m Anna E. Greinrr al ieben.
ter the Senate from Illinois. The Tuon-Caox.-Nov. 2, st the residvoca
Grand Lovewell, Woodland, by C. A I
young Secretary haa latterly been
Mr. 8. H. Porter died on Wednea- evincing a very decided character, and
a disposition to control affairs in his
OIEI).
The home of Norman Green resounds own department to the disgust of cer­
with tire cry of a bran new baby now.
tain partita who have hitherto regardter Gale.
The ladies Christian unk&gt;MWrill give
an entertainment Thanksgiving even-

The next social of the Vermontville

�A MJWL’LAR DUEL.

SATURDAY,

NOV. 11,1882.

la th# heart of tba H llls-of Ute, I know
Two springs that. with unbroken flow,
Forwvar pou^fedr inc-oat atreauas
Into my •ouP^L- lake of Dcwama.

Mot taraer than two ajraa. they Ho
Baaeath tbo many changing nky,
And mirror all ot We and Uno,
Serene and dainty pantomlwMl

Their &gt;blulnx depth* u» sanctify.

rhen Faith with rilfllrfg rfroaa

Always, when Charity and Hope.
In darkness bounden. feebly gropa,

love of doing nothing useful.
‘•Ruling, MstrlfleldI”bs exolalmad.Mbow

point of hunting you up, as I promised. 1
cams at lunch time, for fear, otherwise, ol
finding you nlOMtod with some rich hypo­
chondriac.” .
tlmo."
.. • .... —
, jvr. H.ID J ..u
naked the Irrepressible Jones. * ’Of ooura
London Is al read v ringing with your
praises.” I wished he would talk on some
other subject, hut truth compelled me to
answer, carelessly:
.
"No, no. not yet*, these are early days;
the truth ia, I bare very few patients. To
be quite open with you, my dear fellow, you
aar my first.”
Jones Jumped up. pulled a face, and then
gave his chest a mighty slap, intimating he
was perfectly sound In that direction.
"My dear doctor, I wish I could think
there was anything the matter with me, but.

However, if tbe case fe a* you say, you won’t
I gaze tn my two spring- and see
quite despise my news; I fear it la not worth
A charm that brings him back to mo.
more than a guinea fee, but It may lead to
more. My rich old unde. Jonathan Dillon,
#hen Labor talnta and Glory fails,
Is coming to consult you this afternoon, be­
And coy Reward in sighs ex hairs,
cause J told him you*were the very man he
J gaze In my two »prtngs and are
Attainment ful^ and heavenly.
wanted, but I just looked In to tell you that
he Is rerv crotchety, and you must manage
OLoveJ O Wife! thine eves are they—
blm properly. As to his ailments, I don’;
My springe from out wbo«e shining gray
believe they are of much consequence, be­
lastie the sweet eelr-stlsl stream*
cause
be has been just the same ever since I
That feed my life's bright luikr of Dream
was In arms. Never looks a day older.”
Oval and large and paLsinnJmre.______ ✓
“I’M do my best, professionally,” I arid,
And gray an&lt;l wi«e anfl lionor-suTv;
secretly not much believing this rich man
would turn up. ‘‘As to mtmopfnp him,!
am afraid that Is not in my line.”
"Well, that’s a pity, because If be were to
Thronged Jibe two dovecote* of gray dovee.
With wife’s and mother's and poor folk's take a fancy to you, you would want no oth­
er recommendation. He’ll recommend you
lore
And bome-loves and hlgli-clon* loves
right and left, and the whole Dillon class
are dlsguatinglv rich. And all Inherit astbma or bronchitis. Fact,”
And loves for all that God and man
I began to express my thanks, for In spite
lb art ud nature make or plan;
of bis off-hand manner, T felt sure Jones
And loves (no less) for spidery- lace
bad taken some trounle about me; but be
And broideries and suplc grace.
onlv laughed at my gratitude.
And diamonds, and tire whole sweet round
"Don’t mention It. Besides, old Dillon
Of Utiles that large life compound.
m»y take a dislike to you. However, he
And love for God and God's bare truth,
mustn’t find me here; perhaps be wouldn’t
And love* for Magdalen and Ruth ;
believe I had come to consult you, though I
did tell him you were the cleverest fellow in
Dear rw, dear eyne! and rare, complete—
Ixmdon. And so vou are. In my opinion; I
Being heavcnlv sweet and earthly sweet—
1 marvel that God nride ynu mine.
wouldn’t mind telling tbe Queen as much. If
For when He frt/wnx, 'tis then yw sbine!
I had the chance.” And then he was gone.
But no; once more he turned back.
** I say, Merrifield, old Dillon’s daughter
I* sure to come with him; be never goe* out
MY FIRST FEE.
without her; a perfect slave he make'* of
that girl!”

I fear I am not saying anything very orig­
inal wben I mention that my father was a
poor clergyman. There are hundreds of
poor clergy; naturally their sons can be
reckoned by thousands. I know there were
thirteen of us, and how we al) managed to
find standing room In our small North coun­
try vicarage seems a marvel to me, when I
look back upon that time of growing up.
And then the struggle to settle the profes­
sions of eight sons I Mine was. however,
soon fixed upon. Mr aunt’s husband, a
Scotchman, and an M. D. In a country town,
•aid be would bring me up to his own profeaaion, provided I eventually became bls
partner, and In this manner repaid him tbe
coat of my education.
Tbe propoaal sounded well; anyhow. It
was accepted. But, gb! tbe realization was
different. He novar praised me wben I
worked myself almost to death in order to .
pass brilliant examinations, and only grunt­
ed wben at last X came to settle down with
him in a desperately dull town, after having
come out first on the ll*t at Edinburgh.
My unde cared nought for my being Ar­
thur Merrifield, M. D. I was to be his
white slave, and repay, with bard labor,
what be bad spent on me. I honestly tried
my best to please him, the practice tncreased considerably, but time went on, and
■till my uncle never spoke a word about
money affaire. I waa more than a partner
as to work, but iw partner at all aa to pay.
* Aud yet I felt th’t I could make g name,
alio a fortune. If only I could get a fair
chance. And the five girls al homo were ex­
pecting grand things of me, which looked as
if they might never be realized, for even If I
persevered till my uncle died and left mo hla
practice, I might by that time have become
gray with age and unable to begin to make
my way.
At last I could bear It no longer, and one
day I determined to come loan understand­
ing with him. I am sorry to say this ended
in a regular quarrel, and 1 declared I would
seek my fortunes in London. My unde
called me all sorts of names, which, n« they
were tbe reverse of complimentary, I will
not repeat, and 1 respectfully disagreed with
him. Hh last words were:
"1 should like to know, sir, bow you are
going to find a patient in lx&gt;ndou?’r I did
not answer him, for I was perfectly unable
to do so, but I had courage and persever*
ance. "Where there’s a will, there’s a
Way,” I thought, and thus I left m; unde’s
house, knowing well enough that I should
never see a penny of his money.
I will pass over the many difficulties I
next rn"",,"!nrerf;Jiie applause of :hc other
^■t, and the regrets of
my father,:
Jahdcd I.at least,waa off
hla mind; ■
P. tbe difficulty of find­
-- ------me some money where­
with to make a start. I meant V&gt; begin at
once in good style; nothing venture, noth­
ing hsve; and I waa determined to have one
of tbe best practices In town.
At latt a part of my dream was realized.
But yet It was all very well to be the occu­
pant of a respectable-looking house in a
quiet London square; to hare gone to the
expense of a brass plate on which was neat­
ly engraved “Dr. Arthur Merrifield;” fur­
ther, to have engaged a worthy, middle­
aged female to answertbe door, It the door­
bell bad ever been ning end the master Injired for. Ala-1
I waa beginning to feel
epressed in mind because no patient ap­
peared, and no fees filled my pockets.
I had told the five girls at home that my
house would soon bs besieged al all hours
of the day And night. I had even bad a
night-bell attached, which rung In a dcaf-

3

peep-bole through my window-ebuuer, la
order to distlnguiih tbe rank of tbe visitor
who disturbed my slumbers. But up till
now, I had slept peacefully nlgblafier uighl,
and 1 might have alept all day If I had so
wished It, for no patients had come to ask
me to cure them.
“And yet,” 1 thought, as I paced the
floor of my consulting room, where no coneulfeUon had ever taken place, "and yet
that rich young Jones promised that be

amily must ba terribly good, for I
e the fellow meant what be said; he
nature Itself. I’erhapa 1 have been
nothing I"
You must understand that my spirits had
reached far below* zero to bo able, erep In
my most private thought*. to Wonder any-

"Shnw th* visitor into the consulting

afternoon that a carriage and pair dashed
up to my door; then a grand footman
jumped down from the box and gave the
correct announcement of my first patient;
I had just time to escape to my den before
the front door was opened. I heard voices,
then a loud cough, then doors being closed.
Yes—my first patient had come. In another
moment bis card was handed to me, and on

IttUs girl at seven years old hsd
when I. a ntae-year old uixhla,
in desperately la love with b«r.
X aaeertad the pair
ia nothing there unworthy to lie
|ust as Mr. Dillon had
next
to
tbe
paper which Luria Dillon’• fin­
his daughter made a
gers hsd touched.
Later in the dsy I received a note from
mid, looking right up Into my Xaos with a Mr. Dillon, begging me, if I were not too
tenance. •"Please forgive toe, but what do
you really think of papa?”
."In excellent haaitlr, Mbs Dillon; pray
don’t be anxious.” But before she could
•ay any more her father eriled, her impa­
tiently, and she waa gone with, jurt one
.swaocjsmifo and a.**Tteank yoa, go mtrab,”
for all tbn world as If I had just cured her
father of some obstinate disease.
And now, clasping my first fee, I returned
to my room. There I unclasped my band,
and id the middle of my palm lay a bright,
jsUTu. welfoss. wfeoar Iri—arrr ’
The expectation had been great, and the
realization was so small that I burst out
laughing at mr own bad luck, and my dis­
comfiture. Yet not tor a moment did It en­

vision cf golden hair would blush, with con­
fusion, even though I did pot see her, and
the blue, truthful eyes would look troubled.
No, my first fee was not worth a guinea,
but such as It was I did not hate it, because
—ah, well, I might well call myself a fool
for aven fancying that I, Arthur Merrifield,
penniless and unknown, should, for a mo­
ment dream that I had fallen In love at first
sight with my rich patient’s only datvzhler.
I put the ioxenge away tn a box, and that
night I again slept the sleep of a feeies*
physician.
.
HI.

Tbe next dsy I found myself thinking of a
vision of fair hair, instead of taking tn the
sense of a clever treatise on the aDaiomy of
the hand, which certainly could In no way
be connected with the eveuta ot the day be­
fore. Curiously enough, however, about
eleven o’clock, a cab drove up to tue door,
and what was my astonlsnment—I need
hardly say pleasure—when Ml«s Dillon, fol­
lowed by an elderly maid, made her ap­
pearance. There she stood, as fair, and
soft and beautiful as the dav before, but. If
furtslble, more shv and embarrassed. Ths
lltle hand aha bold out to me trembled visi­
bly as she said:
"Oh, Doctor Merrifield, can you forgive
me for disturbing you this morning? I don’t
know how 1 made up my mind to come, but
I felt I must, even If, If—” She paused, and
tears almost came Into her blue eyes, while
I could think of no word* suitable enough
to set her mind at rest, being Ignorant of
what she wanted to say.
" Indeed. Mias Dillon, If there Is anything
I cat. do for you I shall be delighted; so I
beg vou will not apologize for troubling
me.”
"It isn’t that exactly.” she answered,
once more looking at mein a most distressed
manner.
** Perhaps you require further particulars
as to your father’s health. I must repeal
what I aald yesterday—”
"Ob, thank you, Il was so kind of you; be
was much better la»t night; I know you will
do blm gool; but that was not whit I

SUU-

great favor of dining and spending tbe avening with them, be would bo very gfafeful,
for be saw •• few people, on account of his
wretabad aonkUlutlon.
•
Well, I went, and spent a very happy
Dillon was aa good as hl* word; from tbe
day of bls first visit my practice slowly hut surely increased, end though there were
years of up-hill work, yet It ia perfectly true
that "It K only the first stop which l» diffi­
cult” .1 had at last got a chance, and I
seized It. I worked with double energy,
because at ths bottom of my soul I had an­
other object beside ths one of making the
five girls at home proud of me; I wanted a
•mall, fair, blue-eyed Luria to-be proud of
me; and I wanted to be able to lay at her
feet all that ia best and grandest In this Ilfs.
But she was a rich man’s daughter, and I
was a struggling physician.
it was not till I had freed myself of all
debt—and though atlll a poor man, I was
comparatively rich, for I had a good and In­
creasing practice—that at last I made npmj
mlod to ask Lucia to be my wife. I should
not hsve had tbe face to do It even tbea,
only a young, good-for-nothing aristocrat
wav perpetually coming to tbe bouse, and I
knew that If Lucia, so young, simple and in­
nocent, became tbe wife of that man her
Ilfs would be miserable. The fear of IMj,
and some amount of jealousy, perbaps.made
me speaK out one day, I shall never forget
Luria’s face when I had arid some strong,
eiruest, passionate words. She put bar
little band once more into mine, and looked
np with her beautiful, truthful eyes, ae aba
half-sobbed.
"O—do you really mean ft? Because,
somehow, I thluk .1 bave—loved you aver
since----- ”
“ Ever since you gave me my first fee, my
darling,” I said, as, I drew her beautiful
bead on my shoulder, and—well, never mind
tbe rest. * * Well, Luria,” I added, "I loved
you tbe first moment I saw you. 8o you see
I loved you long before you cared for me.”
But Lucia, who Is Just a little matter-offact, shook her head decidedly, and arid that
that was all nonsense.
There was still tbe question as to what Mr.
Diliou would say about it, but our true loye,
which had bad to waft so long, thia time ran
smoothly. Mr. Dillon, who still suffered
from hi* wretched constitution, was delight­
ed at Lucia’s choice, and said all kinds of
complimentary things about my rising fame
and my other qualities. And'so we were
married, and the five girls from home were
bridesmaids, though they soon afterward
married from our house under Lucia’s care.
And though 1 often tell Lucia that the last
person sue should have married was a pop*
ular physician, considering she is never ill,
vet she alwsys shakes her pretty golden
bead, and say*, gravely:
"Bu». pernaps. Arthur, some of the chil­
dren i»ay inherit papa’s wretched constitu­
tion. ”
As to the story of tbe ginzer lozenge,
Lucia and I kept that a secret till Mr. Dillon
died. He left Lucia all hi» m»ney—end so
ends this true story «&gt;f My First Frb.—
Argoey.

me so rude, or else an Impostor, or—or—”
"Impossible,” I said, more vehemently
than the case required.
“ I don’t know bow to begin: I mean, per­
"Mr. Jonathan Dillon.**
haps you don’t know the peculiar way papa
keeps hi« accountsy*’
I waa startled at tfejs question. Remem­
the yellow lozenge in a lx&gt;x, I thought
Thwarted.
I entered the room in my most profes­ Ibering
could say I did know one of Mr. Dillon’s
sional manner, and looking straight before peculiar
wayrof paving fee*: but not for
Barbarians know nothing of that art
world would I tell this idushing, shy,
"old Dillon,” but ao much wrapped up that the
which a recent health article unwisely
very little more than a quarter of his faoe was bewitching girl before me the truth.
advised young men to practice as an in­
visible. I can honestly say I never noticed
vigorating exercise. We mean the art
Miss Dillon till her father himself waved a
ing
tv
tell
you
about
It.
Papa
always
makes
•mall, fat band In her direction, saying:
of boxing. No doubt it develones mus­
bls
confidential
man,
Baker,
put
the
same
•‘My daughter. Dr.. Merrifield; she al­ change every morning into hla pockets, and cle and health, and without tne least
ways comes with me wlserever I go, for I in the evening, when Baker turns out the doubt it developed also a certain "bump­
am so Infirm I don’t think It safe to be left pockets, he just puts down In a book what is
tiousness” that Is decided^* objectiona­
alone—but she enjoys excellent health.’*
This last remark was said In a deplorable missing, and makes up the number of the ble. However, an Englishman who
the next morning. He does It juit the
tone, and as I turned, I almost started with coins every
made the pilgrimages to Mecca and
morning.”
surprise, for old Dillon’s daughter was a same
1 was getting rather puzzled rayself now. Medina once saved hi» life by his vigor­
small, delicately-made girl, who could not
and could think of nothing more original to ous muscles that bad l&gt;een trained to
be much more than seventeen years old. say
than:
this exercise. He was disguised as a
Her forehead was encircled by 'he most
•Indeed I”
.
golden hair I had ever seen, and her tac-.
" Yes, ft’» quite true, ffr you see I shouldn’t servant to a Mohammedan, a rich East
though not what could be called extremely
Indian, whose devotion led him to seek
have
known
about
II"
(Here
the
fair
vis
­
beautiful, was yet one of the sweetest I bail ion blushed atlll more.) "Baker puts In a happiness at the city andthetombof tbe
ever gazed aU The expression was ao sim­
ple, the large blue eyes were so Innocent sovereign, a half-sovereign, a crown piece prophet.
the»e rather difficult to xet some­
One night, while tbe caravan was in
and shy, that for a moment I«was completely —be finds
—half-a-crown, a shilling, a sixpence,
loot In wondering bow such a m in a* Use times
fourpenny piece, a threepenny piece, a camp, the Englishman, finding it im­
one before me bad any right to possess such apenny,
possible to sleep, set out for a stroll and
a halfpenny, and a farthing.’*
a daughter. Miss Dillon was evidently verv
" A very complicated way ot keeping one's smoke. With a "God bless you!” to the
retiring, and at this moment also feeling de
money, isn't It? or perhaps complicated for nearest sentry, he went oft some thirty
Crop.
.
” I said, feeling it perfectly Impos­ yards and sat down.
“I dare any, Dr. Merrifield,” she said, Baker,
sible
to repress a smile, though Miss Dil­
hurriedly, blushing up to the roots of her lon 'ssweet,
He had noticed two Bedawi followed
earnest mouth kept so grave.
hair, " that there is a room I may sit in
" No, Il l« &lt;/uite simple wben one under­ him out of the camp; but as they disap­
while you bold your consultation. Papa stand*,
because Baker knows exactly what peared in the darkness he gave them
never likes me to leave him alone a mlq- a sovereign,
a half-sovereign— and all the no more thought. After smoking for
ute, for fear anything should happen. Any­ rest come* to—
forget what It is—but, oh, some time, he beard a gentle scratching
where will do.” I bowed, and rang the Dr. Merrifield!I Biker
knew we bad been
bell, saying, tn as calm a tone a« possible:
yesterday
to
consult
a new physician, and .iound on the ground close beside him.
‘•Show Ml&lt;s Dillon Into the study.” The in the evening tliere^aa
only a tbret-penny Throwing aw-ty the cigarette’s end, he
vision of fair hair having disappeared, I bit and a farthing missing,
and so—and so I glanced over his shoulder.
gave myself up to the examination of my
Thqre, close beside him, on his knees,
patient. After a careful Inquiry I rame to a that papa must have given vou something
conclusion which made me certain that thia t&gt;y inUtakn. It wasn’t the farthing, I can .one hand on the «and and the other
was the last lime I should see Mr. Dillon.
for that, and—but was It the three­ In the act of lifting a broad-bladed,
The truth being there waa nothing much the account
penny piece, or—?”
curved knife, crouched the form of an
’• fray, dear Mbs Dillon, don’t distress old gray-bearded Bedawin. In another
regular hypochondria*.—In fact, that all bia youreelf
ancu a little matter,” I said, second ihe knife would have been driven
aliments wert Imaginary. But yet, come nastily. about
"Any time will—”
what might, I must speak the truth; even
“Oh, no, but papa thinks he paid you, be­ into tne Englishman’s back.
for the sake of further fees I must not give
"I have no fecollection,” says the
be said to me he never gave a fee with
a dishonest opinion. I would not be the cause
so much pleasure, so now I begin to think disguised traveler, "of tbe process, but
first of the thirteen to act aJIe.
he
mu»t have—given you—” Mis* Dillon I at once found myself standing up fac­
Mr. Dillon now began to give me a mlnuta qpire
ga&gt;ped,
so
that
I
hastened
to
fill
In
her
account of hl* ailmcnU. aud to repeat the pause, tbts time feeling quite diitreav.jd.at ing the Bedawin. He also bad sprung
advice of varlou* doctor*.
to his feet and was at short arms’ reach
trouble.
“ And now Dr. Merrifield, I feel aure you her
“ Your father gave me a very gnod ginger from me with knife attll uplifted.
will agree witn me in thinking it absolutely lozenge,
Miss Dillon; one of those little
"The string of my trousers had brok­
imperative that I should leave England at mistakes which
will occur now and then. en, and I was obliged to hold them up
once, to cure this troublesome cough.”
Fray don’t make youraelf the least une .sy with my left hand. 1 knew if I closed
If only I oould bave agreed with him; but about
it.
”
no.
" How very kind you are,” she said, again with my man I should have them down
"Quite tbe contrary,” I said, calmly. "I
out her hand, which I took and round my feet, and should be at a dis­
think you should atay tn England, the finest holding
to let go till she had done advantage.
•
and most healthy climate for a constitution forgot
•peaking.
"I felt «ura It must Le that, and
‘4 doubled my right fist as hard as I
like vours.”
perhaps you would think u»
“ Bless me! Blew me I” ejaculated Mi. then I thought
and I knew you would be too coind squeeze it, then gave a quick,
Dillon, looking distressed. MI)o you really impostors,
sharp
blow
that
landed
my
mau on hh
much of a gentleman to mention it—do you
think so?”
think I was wrong? I came off with Mrs. back. The knife flew out of his band
” Without a shadow of doubt, sir.”
“ But about exercise? I ought to take Brown this morning, and made up my mind into the sand.
I icoxid explain tbe mistake, only it was so
“Just as he fell I saw another Beda­
very little, of course?”
But 1 don’t mind now that yon
*• Not at all; the more you walk, tbe bet­ dreadful.
look so kind about It. And then would you win, about five yards behind him, get
ter ft will ba for you.”
do
a great favor. Dr. Merrifield? Would up from the sand where he had bison
"You are quite unique, sir. In your opin­ youme
mind
not
appearing
to
know
anything
lying
and rush off into the darkness.
ion—remarkable I But about a prescription, about it, or that 1 c:nu, or anything, be­
“The Bedawin lay on his back hurt
Doctor. I suppose you will write one for cause papa doesn’t know I am out; he ia not
some, of course, but not seriously hurt.
me, to allay this cough, for Instance?”
and he would be so distressed he
"No.” I answered, "any ordinary Ioxenge down yet;
never come again, and I abould be so Dragging him to his feet, I called out to
will suffice.” I knew now I had signed my might
the nearest sentry that I had got a thief,
as you suit him exactly.”
deatfi.warrant; or rather, I thought I knew; sorry,
**
Pray
don
’t call this a favor,” I said, as and in a few minutes was relating my
fol* what was my surprise when Mr. Dillon gravely as I could.
" I think you will be­ story to an admiring crowd, who looked
exclaimed:
lieve
me
wben
I
say
that,
without
even
" My dear rir, you are the first physician
your wishes on the subject, I upon tne blow I had struck with ‘the
who haa given me no prescription! I be­ knowing
empty hand' as almost incredible.’’—
lieve you under-tand my case. I hope I should never have mentioned the—tbe Fouln't Comjxinv-n.
”
may come and consult you aa often as I feel lozenge.
•• 1 don’t know how to thank you I Now I
the need of It; which need, I grieve to say, must
go.” And then Miss Dillon put that , —A leading business man of Central
occurs frequently.”
gloved band into her muff and drew it New York, finding be had reached the
I was amazed. Curiously enough, for small
again, holding It out toward me onoe close of his life, called his two Bonn to
once the truth had pleased the old mau, but out
more,
and thia time I fell a Utile square bit
now I was obliged to answer:
of
paper
In my hand. Somehow, our eyes his bedside, told them that he had ar­
"I am aure you win find it quite unnecranged his affairs so that they would
easary to come again, noiea soma untor.
both laughod, feeling, I am sure, have a million each, and begged them
*^Tut, tut. Dr. Merrifl.ld, not one of my
a^.VSd:
to do dothlng but live like gentlemen
many medical advisers ever told me not to
on the income from their possessions.
" Please, Dr.Merrifield, don’t laugh at me. Then ho died; and his two sons, in pursuaMe of their father's last request,
I snp- proceeded to do nothing and to live like
pose some day I shall be III and want a doc­ gentlemen. In 12 months, the life of a
doctor, but it’s no good: the girl never tor, but I never, sever have wantod to go to gentleman finished one of the sons, and
one
before.
And
it
wasn
’
t
for
myself
this another year completed the earthly ca­
eomolaine. even ot headache.”
This time I rally smiled. " I am sure time, waa It? you will bear witness—I mean, reer of the other. Both fill drunkards’
graves, and they own tbe graves.—N.
r. Tima.________
________
Ion was not listening to me, for suddenly
—Tbe President of the Society for the
ho turned round (for he had rfr-n to leave),
had Prevention of Cruelty to Animals in
Washington, caused tne arrest of wo
mw shining men recently for carrying live chickens
borne from market by the legs.

'rjraar‘‘-

nxlt ‘® borsebaek a distance of (Jfl miles.
Al&lt; ENTHUBUmC ENDORSEMENT

■«?J«*l grateful to yc
uj no. m;kj more
• «lrtt Aoek rfpX.
which unnerrKl me to such an extent that tiie
least excitement woold make me shake like the
ague. Last may I was induced to try Hop Blu
tzrs. 11 u*ed one bottle, but did not see anv
rhanxe ; another did so charge mv nerves that
tln-v .r. fu&gt;w ..
.. .I
___

. ..

pwri right batid writes this. Row, If you con­
tinue to manufacture as honest and good an
article as you do, you will accumulate an hon­
est fortune, and confer tbe greatest bJeaslug on
your fellow men that was erm confenri on
mankind.
TIM BURCH.
duelist wms supplied with an extra whip to
be used by his principal in tbe event of th*

and level

spot

about

half a

mile from

rope fsatroed to tbu ground with k»nx staple*.
•ecotiil* to adjust the difficulty the men Ux&gt;k
places for the tiytt. Both were in their shirt­
sleeve*, tbe provisions of tbe flyht beln&lt; that

At seven o’clock tbo qutmUon was asked;
ded his bead. Th - command " Strike I", was
then (riven and tbe duelists fell to blows with
vlyor. Although tbe blow ■ riven were heavy
and fast, neither man flinch'd. Upon the

times they wicldel thc:r weapons with one
and then with loth Anids. and occasionally
one or the other waa torve-1 by tbe desporste assault of his sdv-raary to fall
back from his line. Alter nxburur half an
hour time was call'd, n । tm- men. nearly
breath ices, were xacn brief rcstlnw tlm--. Tbe
tight c utioued tor throe hours with short In­
tervals for rest, Tbe seconds Anally decided
tbe n-qulremcnts of the cede had tx-en com­
plied with, and forced the combatants to de­
sist. It ta understood that Johnston waa more
severely hurt tbui bls adversary, and that
there is n .tA pine? on his body that is not bovI bi- llcsh In a horr b'le manner.

Williams L»

itD-rln&lt; terribly trom Ihe effects of their
duCwhicb sre such that tbi-y can scarcely

t&gt;een made, and the friend* of the duelists are

THANKSGIVING.

liver—too high to be reached by a liver pad.

•AdOaMlnHerfl Trj FJ&gt;'. Cmm tUlm
1,
Urertu, buulnfe —
of ebnailc
w
Y'mnc case*, frtc,
rncc UM
T^pply Inujnretrlls vAth HtUe flnger.|
A gentleman from' Orwell, Pa., called mv at­
tention to Elys' Cream Brim a. . remed?
Catarrh. Hay Fever, Etc. He waa.T^US
asserting It to lie a positive cure (himself hav­
ing been cured bv II) that I purchased a slock.
Tbe Balm haa already effected h. number of
cure*. P. P. Hyatt, M. D-. Bordentown, N.
Mr. John R. Bennett, Druggist. Muskegon,
Mich.—In regard t_&gt; your Inquiries about Elys’
Cream Balm for tbe cury of Catarrh, my an­
swer is, 1 can recommend n always the best
remedy I have ever used. Dk. J. 8. Vauohax,
Dentlat. Muskegon, Mich.
Shoplifting Is a profitable bad profession. A
woman with a good face aud a lady-like man­
ner has been known to make 1-300 per year.
S- AN EXPLANATION.

The derate, flowery and lasting fragrance of
Floreatoi Cologne explain why ft such a favor­
ite with UjPSadlc*. .
The moment we quit the paths of prudence,
and become unable to use our judgment, our
passions nurry ns headlong.
WHY SHOULD THEY.
No man or woman ean do satisfactory work
when the brain 1* dull, the nerves unstrady.the
system relaxed and they feel generally wretch­
ed. Why should anybody drag through their
work in thia condition, w hen a bottle of Pnrkera Ginger tonic will at moderate cost give them
the strength aud will to perform their duties
satisfactorily.—Ed.
It la observable that icvera) church conventiona at Saratoga somehow bap|xm to get there

Wabkixotom. October M
Tbe foUowinz Thankaxivlnx proclamation
“Uy the President of the United Ftatea of
AmiTtis, a proclamation:
"In conformity with a custom the annual
observance of which Is Justly held In booor by
this people. 1. Chester A Arthur. Preaident of
tbo Cnlted Btatro, do hereby set apart Thviu*day of Public Tbnnicsrlvinx. The blowoinr*
demanding our jrrntltuae urv numerous and
varied: For tbe peace and amity which sub­
sist between this Republic and all nations of
the world; freedom from Internal discord
and violence: for Increaalnr friendship be­
tween different sections of a land of liberty,
just oe. and constitutional government; for
the devotion of the people to our free Institu­
tions and their cheerful obedience to mild

• f the It' public, whila extending Its privileges
to the fellow-men who come to us; for im­
proved mean* of internal communication and
!m re-ased facilities of intercourse with other
nations: for tbo general prevailing health of
the year; for tar prosperity of all our Indus­
trie*. a lliieral return for the mechanic's toll,
affording a market for tbe abundant harvests
cf tbe busbundmen; for the preservation of
tbe National faith and credit; for a w-.ae and
generous provision to effect tbe Intellectual
and moral education of our youth; for tbe in­
fluence upon the conscience of a restraining
and tronsionnln* religion; and for tbe joys of
home. For those, and for many other Uoasing*. we should give thanks.
“ Wherefore I do recommend that tbe day
above designated be observed tbronvhout tbe
country as a day of National Thankagivintr
and Prayer, and that the people, ceasing from
their d rily labors, and meeting In accordance
with ibeir several forms of w&gt;&gt;ivhlp,draw near
to the Throne of Almighty God, off ering to
Himprnlre and graUtiide for the maniroM good
which Hr has vouchsafed to us, and praying
that H's bleasintr* and mercies mny continue.
“ And Ido further recommend that the day
thus n’ pointed may be made a special occtt■lon for deeds of kindness and chnjity to the
•ufferin.- and needy, ao that all who dwell
within the Upd may rejoice nnd be glad in
ibis season of National Thanksgiving.
" In witness whereof I have hereunto set my
hand nnd caused tbe seal of thr United States
to be affixed.
“ Done at the City of Washington thia Sth
day of October. In the year of our Lord 1®C,
and of tbe Independence of the United HtaXas
the 107th.
CinwTzu A. Aimiun.
•• By tbe President:
“FREDKKICX T. FtCXUINGHtTYRBK.

Army Reports.
The QuartcnuasU-MJencral of the United

Juno :d» IBtCL The amount available durtnx
the year wm S 14,878,SB1. the total disburse­
ments 112,118,442. leaving a balance on band of
HJftLSSS.
The responsibilities and nmg-nl-

Special Inducements are offered you by tbe
Burlington Route, It will nay you to read their
advertisements to be found elsewhere in thia
isaae.
Truth Is a good dog. but beware of barking
too close at the heels of error, lest you get your
brains kicked out- _____
HONOR TO WHOM HONORIS DUE.
Honor tht^nainc of Dr. Scott Putnam, In­
ventor of Putnam's Corn Extractor. Many
leas deserving men have their names enrolled
aiuong those considered benefactors of their
nut. Why not hla! Aak those who have used
Putnam's Prinless Corn Extractor what they
think of it. Their thankful hearts cannot
sound his praise too high. Safe, sure nnd
harmless- Beware of cheap substitutes. Sold
everywhere by druggtsta, Ac. Wholesale, J.
K. Davis A C&lt;».. Detroit-

Women 80 year* old are young enough to I*
arrested for bigamy tn Penn.
HOP BITTERS. AKE THE PUREST AND
BE8T BITTERS EVER MADE
They are compounded from Uupa, malt, Buchu, mandrake and dandelion,—Hie o’-deat, beat
and most valuable medicines in tbe world, and
contain - all tbe beat and most curative proper­
ties of all other renurile*, being the greatest
Blood purifier, Liter Regulator and Life and
Health Restorer Agent on earth. No disease
or ill health can possibly long exist where these
bitters are used, so varied and perfect are their
operation*.
| They give new life and vigor to tbe aged and
inflrm* To all whose empfc'jmento cause irreg­
ularity of the bowels nr urinanr orgaux, or who
require an apctizer. Tunic and mild stimulant.
Hop Bitters are Invaluable, being highly cure
tire, tonic and stimulating, without mtoxieat-

N\&gt; matter what your feelings or symptoms
are. wh*t the disease or ailment la, use Hop
Bitter*. Don't waft untill you are sick, but if
you only feel bad or miserable, use Hop Bittcra
at once. It may save your life. Hundreds
have been saved by so doing. &lt;5(10 will be paid
for a case they wlb not cure or help.
Do not surfer nr let your friends suffer, but
use and urge them to use Hop Billers. *
Remember Hop Bittcra la no vile, drugged,
drunken nostrum, but tbe purest and beat med­
icine ever made; the “Invalid’s Friend and
Hope," and no person or family should be with­
out them. Try the bitters today.

MASON &amp; HAMLIN

ORfiAMS^58^^*515

UHUnivv industrial Competition
far Slxtarw Years: M &lt;Hh«r American ontaaa
also uryed that the ranks be opened for pro­
motion and appointment The enlistment of
post Quartennssti r-Scrgcants Is recommend­
ed. Tbe Qunrtermastcr-Gencral renews tbe
recommendation heretofore made that an al­
lowance of ten dollars per month be made In
addition to the pay of every line officer who
Is detailed by tbe proper authority as actitut
Assistant-Quartermaster at a military poet

partment during tbe year
amount available for the purchsao luid manu­
facture of clolhlny and oamp and rarriaon
•qulpsRe.
Tbe (.'ommlMary-G'-neral of Subsistence h*s
submitted to the Setaretary of War a report of
tbo operations of tho Subsistence Department
for the fiscal year ended June ah la-X Tbe
report shows total resources of *l.lr*MU8; ex­
penditures, •J.TdlUS*: IgUances unexpended,
V41V.731; tuc amount expended for subsist­
ence stores, property and contintvncie* &lt;1ur

lief &lt;&gt;f sufferaro from the mKm ppi «Qti£
numbered 3^51,000. The value of stores Inst
?ft. sto- m*. Are, etc., durinx the y&lt;-ar was
2. The value ot suppUes issued to Indurinr the year wm «k7.19A

in •eboob

&gt; ■* °£*7 •?»- •sa»Mas»dW*
•57. m.C:. KB.m. ties, tin

1QEMTC Br* re*p,n« Bha*‘

AulII 10 ’*»

(Kitten Queu Safety Lup

CLIPPER MFC CO.

r tri o IU Niks
Apply now. Wto
ln&lt; widowhood. G

—A man named Parker took up a lit­
tle dog in the atruet at New Orleans
about aix months ago, to save it from a
lot of boys who were abusing it Iu
return for the kindness the .animal hit
untold agony.—X. O. JPioavtme.

yyiLBIAM JONBS.

was loaded when he put a cap on it
pointed it at his brother Fhillip, agri
the brain of

theyconger boy.__

Mukv11La. Mick.

�.-LI'.'1

P1QNEER STORE

Bariar FralL
'hatever
lAnooln
favorably to the corn

their habiur.
However, a brother of
John is famous to-dav on the minstrel
stage.— Washington Cor. Chicago Timos
—There has been incorporated at Bos­
ton an association with the long-drawnout title of tbe State Grand Council of

League for Aiding

put did September, the eon, crop of
th. oom SUU* CMPM be more th»o
bdl a jWd lor th, «re» phawd. U
the Mtoe wetther cootinae. that bo
ehwutlertted the Huoo eo far. what
with the weed, nature ot tha oropa
Iron look ot oultlratlon. cauaed br the
ing, tbo yield may shrink to not more
than a quarter of a crop.
What, then. I* indicated in view ot
these circumstances? 1. The cleaning
of the crop ao far a* it may be possible.
2. In the event of an early frost, the
cutting up and shocking so much a*
may be possible of all that nortion vet
unripe, - but hardening; ana 3: using
every mean* to make the crop* go as
far as possible.
In the feeding of cattle it will be
found that shocked corn, even if the
grain is not fully ripe, will feed cattle
economically and fat; but, in following
tbe cattle with hogc, it would seem this
year to be ihe true policy to use more
hogs to pick up the refuse, with a view
to growth rather than fattening. In
the case of sheep, the grain itself must
be used, but here it will be found that
they will grind their food perfectly,
and this brings us again to swine,
where, more than in any other direc­
tion, money can be saved by using
means to an end.
The first things to be attended t® are
comfortable quarters, and facilities for
preparing the food and feeding it eco­
nomically and without waste.
In the feeding of hogs, our plan has
been to keep the pigs growing during
the summer, using clover, and other
succulent vegetation, pieced out &gt;rith
slop and grain. In the- autumn, small
potatoes, pumpkins, unripe squashes
and other vegetables may furnish the
Sound-work of the food given, and as
esc begin to fail, more and more
meal is added, until at last meal fur­
nishes the sole food. Thus swine may
be made fully fat, and at tbe lowest
possible cost, whenever the price of
corn is over forty cents per bushel.
Ths higher the cost of corn the greater
the profit of feeding ground and cooked
fooa to swine. There is no probability
that the Drice of corn will be low for
two or three years to come. There­
fore, the time to prepare for saving in
'.he cost of food is now.— Prairie
Farmer.

A Pest Which Is Destroying Orchards
In Western New Fork.
It is a fact which can no longer be
concealed that,although this is a general
bearing year through the orchards of
Western New York, the crop of apples
is quite likely to be a short one. This
lamentable state of affairs is not, how­
ever. to be attributed to the peculiar
weather conditions of the season, but
to the fact that a destructive parasite
has attacked the leaves of the trees,
and is working sad havoc with them.
This little insect is a species of the
aphis, but is commonly spoken of as
the “apple-louse.” -It is by some con­
founded with the rose-bug. but in re­
ality is a “ horse of an altogether dif­
ferent color.” Its habit is to fasten it­
self to the youtg leaves of the trees
early in the season, where it feeds upon
the epidermis of the leaf. The visible
result of this is the turning brown of
the leaf and Ito subsequent dropping
off. Later the fruit seems affected, and
it, too, drops off. -The damage al­
ready done is very great, and ths
gravest fears are entertained by those
who have looked into the matter.
A Post-Express reporter has examined
orchards in this ana other counties, and
has found the scourge ouito general.
Especially is this true of orchards in
Niagara County. Seneca County. Mon­
roe County, and Wayne. If you will
inspect your apple trees you will find
that many of the leaves are already
curled aud brown, and will upen the
•lightest touch fall to the ground. The
young and growing fruit, too., drops
readily, and unless some effective meas­
ures are taken, and that right speedily,
to prerent it. the apple crop will fall so
far below the average a* to cause se­
rious trouble. It is. however, possible
to light the pest successfully, and the
weapon to be employed is Paris green,
that enemy of potato-bugs and other
vermin. The best way to use it i* to
sprinkle the tree with a solution of the
poison. Of course, the only way to do
this is with a hose or a large syringe.
A hose and a portable force pump at­
tached to a tank on wheels would be
the easiest method probably, but It
would also be more expensive than the
syringe method. The “apple-house”
is something of a new'comer here,
though this is not absolutely its first
appearance. In the past, however, its
ravages have been far leas extensive,
and general attention has not before
been drawn to it. Farmers and p&lt;&gt;~
mologists should take every measure to
cheok iu destructive work.—Rochester
Post-Express.
—For genuine originality of concep­
tion and boldness of execution the
scheme devised and carried out by a
Butte County, Cal., farmer, challenges
hearty admiration.
Being short of
•‘hands.'1 and unable to find men willing
to work, he drove to the nearest town
loaded into his spacious vehicle all the
drunken men he could find. Those
who were not sufficiently Mpless to be
easily managed he plied with liquor
until the desired stage of helplessness
was reached, and then drove them all
to his farm. The result of this high’innded proceeding was eminently sat­
isfactory.— Chicago Herald.

—The Gridley (Cat) Herald saya:
Recently a ten-horse team with an im­
mense load* of lumber went off Dead­
man’s grade, on the' Chico und llumboldt road, about twelve miles from
Chico, and were precipitated into a
canyon several hundred feet deep.
Seven of the horam were killed and the
driver, named Kernard. had one
hrnkfla-and-ausuunad. various—bnuaea. .
The aocideut was cause by the brake­
block giving way while the outfit waa
coming down one cf the steepest place*

In order to make room for our Fall and Winter Goods we
are selling our finest stooics of Clothing at prices that re­
quire no bantering to sell.

taking us as a whole, we

II th, wcubersboula pro..

oujgK a little recess in the high board
feaoHbrith hia “stand,” and contrasted
with laecAous grapes, bright bananas,
and ether portions of his stock, are, tbe
flaming posters ot the minstrel troupe
that has fust played an engagement at
the new Ford’s Theater, the attractions
of the Baltimore Oriole, and the
advertisement* of two or three ocean
steamship companies Behind the acenes
Is, however, one of the most curious ob­
jects to be found in Washington. Back
of the high board fenoe are the ruins of
a frame house which formerly stood on
the lot, and which, by the lowering of
the street’s level under Gov. Shepherd e
•■eherne of beautifying the nitioul caoltal, was undermined and fell to the
ground. Only the roof remains intact,
and underneath it is constructed a room,
very much as if a huge dry-goods box
had been crowded into the space, in
which live John Birch and hie sister,
both of whom were born in the house
that formerly stood on the lite; lived
there alone after their parents had died,
and continue there under its ruins the
life ot a hermit. They come out upon
the street but rarely. If you scan the
high board fcnoe closely you will dis­
cover the dooc.
"*
———&lt; over with«i&gt;*
covered
the
posters, j sfhaps^but it is still there, ar.d
»en wEeneithor of the two
should it
the place desire to come
out thai the
ie door is parted
pasted shut, they
do not stop to swear, but simply part
the posters by crowding the door'open,
door open,
believing that the paper, after all, is
beneficial to them in making weathertight the high board fence.
The existence of John and his sister
Is known to comparatively few people,
yet they live in the oenter of the citv,
within arm's reach of almost thousands
who pass and repass the place every
day. The man’s age may be stated at
somewhere between fifty and sixty years.
Ho wears a peculiar dress made from
the skins of some animals, his breast
being entirely bare, though his long
beard almost entirely hides ilfrom view.
He never goes out in the sunlight, con­
sequently his skin is as white as a
child’s. The long beard he oils with a
peculiar preparation which he himself
makes from a mixture like molasses and
lampblack; He sleeps generally by day,
the sister occupying the couch or
“shake-down” by night. Birch wa, al­
ways of a musical turn of mind, and
though a stranger to so many people,
he has some acquaintance with local
musician*, who often take their instru­
ments there for repairs.
The music
dealers sometimes send him odd jobs of |
repairing, and the work is skillfully
done. Ole Bull, when in Washington,
always visited Bireh, and Remenyi has
also called upon -him, the latter once
taking his favorate violin to the hermit’s
home because of some unaccountable
interference with its tone, after a num­
* ber of musicians whp had examined it
declared their inability to restore to the
instrument its lost powers. Birch looked
at it a moment, and, taking out the
bridge and sandpapering it a little, he
tuned the instrument up, and Remenyi
at once recognized his violin with' all its
former wonderful tone.
Bireh has devoted much of his time to
invention. He plays remarkably upon i
a sort of accordeon which is constructed
of a series of whistles and fifes, a strange
combination, yet one that gives forth
the sweetest of sounds when in the
hands of its inventor. He has also a
liking for theories of perpetual motion,
and ha* devoted many weary hours to
their study, as a number of partially
completed machines of one kind and an­
other which lie around amply testify.
He has a little maahlne, a combination
of levers, which wnl lift, it is said, a*
incalculable load, yet he never allows
anyone to examine the machines, and
the results of bis genius be keeps to him­
self.
.
He doesn’t like visitors, and unless
one goes in with some musical instru­
ment which needs tinkering, he is soon
made to understand that he is not wel­
come. Birch never comes out on the
sidewalk more than two or three time*
a year.’and then after nightfall, when
his strange appearance is not noticed
by so many people.
Once in about a
year he goes on a spree and get* so
drunk that be generally brings up in tbe
police court, where his remarkable appearence always causes a temporary
sensation. I suppose be indulges in in­
. toxicating beverages now and then, but
if he does so, they are brought to him.
His sister comes out whenever it is
necessary to make any purchases al the
grocery, but their food is selected to
avbid as much as possible the necessity
for drinking it.
Birch’s sister, who u
upward of sixty yean old, does most of
tbe talking for the family. “John, you
know,” she will say, “is a little weakminded, and has no idea of business.”
Wben their father lived one of the ad­
joining lots belonged to the family, but
John, by sharp practice, it is said, was
induced to sign a deed for it and thus
virtually gave the property away. Hlnce
being made the victim of knavery he is
very slow to talk about selling anything,
though the lot on which they live, L‘ im­
proved and built upon, would make one
of tbe most eligible sites in Washington.
The Italian owner of the present stand
is always jealous of any one who wants
to m Birch, fearing that a purchaser of
the property will one day happen along,
and he will be compelled to move his
stand, and it is his habit to mislead those
who -caM and want to pass behind the
high board fence by telling them some
story about Birch being absent just
then;
' ' ‘
.
Washington, it is said, bn* two or
three hermits, but none stranger than
John Birch.
Tbe Birches, from the
earliest recollection of tbe oldest inhab-

SELLS GOODS EXCEEDINGLY LOW.

not saving of fruits for

(TXTE UKALTH BKLNGZKJ

______ This waste i*
alTlimei', bpt more es-----------nit is scarce. This rea­
son certainly is a good one to begin the
exerpbe of care In such matters, if we
have never exercised it before. Fruit is
scarce. With many it will be difficult
to preserve a winter’s supply even with
the most careful management. To such
the advice to adopt some effective sys­
tem of preservation will surely be time­
ly, while those who may happen to have
a surplus will find it to beJgreatlv to
their pecuniary interest to be guided by
such counsel. Carelessness in picking,

fruit dm

.
Ix&gt;xa K«0Ww.ac
FEXCELLY H WOMANS FBIEMD.

For Women,

HERE ARE BARGAINS FOR YOU!
Summer Pants for 95c—Think of It I

BOOTS and SHOldS

TEACHERS.
LADY CLERKS,
HOUSEWIVES,
For fall and winter trade are comming in.

lent and cheap.

A Prevention and Cure

handled in gathering can not be expect- .Headaches,
Lassitude,
ed to keep well, and all who are en­
gaged in picking, therefore, should be
Pale or Motliy Complexion,
compelled to handle the fruit with care. .
Palpitation,
The owner of the orchard does not al­ Sleeplessness,
ways do this, but uraally a man takes Numbness, Nausea, Dizziness,
pretty fair care of his own. If any reader
should happen to be an exception to this Dry Cough, Nervous Irritation,
rule, he can hardly expect that help will
"Weak and Lame Bock,
be' different from himself. As a general ,
thing, however, fruit growers suffer the
most severely, in the direction indicat- ,
.
ed, through the carelessness of help. It jJX-rt»Ct.
Not a Umparary JUmv-’drU. but a
is so difficult to get those who will per­
form their duties codscientitnwly, that 1Ciirf.
TESTIMONIALS I hav» hi abundanco from
thb farmer and fruit grower is liable to
great damage almost all the time. It jevidence bo siren privately toUioao aaking It.
will be judicious, therefore, to keep a
SarMOTHEBS, are your DAUGHTERHaillnc?
strict surveillance over those who are j
employed to pick fruit, and in most or- i
chards the fob will not be so extensive this
year to make that difficult, if it ever is. J
A. PENffCLLY, M. D.,
The damage done to fruit by careless
T*lmw, Mich.
handljng is so Irretrievable that it must Sold bg Druggists.)
be prevented, or we might pretty nearly
as well not pick the fruit at all.
Parker s Hair
The practice of placing apples in the
cellar too early iu the season is altogeth­
er too common, and can but reenlt in
injury. Apples never should be placed
in the cellar until cold weather ap­
proaches ; until Ghat time they should be
kept in a dry building above'ground, or
in tbe shade out door*. Keep them jdst
as cool as possible this way until freezing
weather is near, when they may bo re­
moved to the cellar. Perhaps as common
a way as is practiced Ls to place the ap­
ples In a tight barrel. For a time they
will keen perfectly in this way, but if
left too long will rot. How long then
should they remain barreled? We can
not answer the question, which is equiv­
alent to sajing tnat some better way is
advisable; and the best way that we
know of to preserve apples is to place
'hem singly on a shelf, where they can
be readily inspected, and those which
show signs of decay removed. On a
large scale thia might not prove practi­
cal, but tbe average orchardist this year
will not find such a method very difficult
to practice. Of course this method
would only be practical for keeping
fruit for home consumption anyhow,
and pnless that consumption is very
large indeed, it would be practical.
To achieve the same results in a some­
what handier way, boxes can be con­
structed deep enough to hold one layer
of apples, and of other dimensions to
suit the convenience, filled with the
fruit, and piled one top of each other to
a convenient height.
In fact this is a
better plan than exposing the fruit on
open shelves, for it is protected from the
changing currents of air that come from
the ventilating windows.
The boxes
should be made with some care, so that
the bottom of one box will act as a lid '
and fit very closely to the box below it. i
When examination of the fruit is to be ;
gone into, the top box is first examined,
the decaying fruit removed, and the box
£laced on the floor. Then tho next box
POSITIVELY CURED
examined, and placed on top of ihe
first one, and so on until the first pile of
boxes is inverted. It is not very difficult
thus to examine the store, and it should,
be examined about every two or three
weeks.
But even if it is a little trouble,
it is the sure way to keep fruit through
the winter, for it is a fact that apples
from the same tree have not equal keep­
ing qualities, and when we put them up
there is i.o tolling which will keep the
longest. The line between the good and |
poor keepers can not be drawn.
If for |
any reason the room can not be perfect- i
ly ventilated, the fruit can be slightly
exposed byplacing the boxes one a lit- I
। tie over the end of the otler, leaving say l
an eighth of the top of the box below ’
open.
.
Iu this connection it may be well to
call the attention of those who may be
fortunate enough to have apples for the
market to the necessity of packing
nce*a»c they will poaitlvely cure dlMA«e« which
them tightly in the barrels. Apples that
are not thus packed rattle about in the
barrel in transportation and are bruised,
much to their injury in a marketable 1 vcioDtsrily
point of view. To avoid this fill the i
Bink.
barrel well up. and have it stand upon a
plank to which is fastened, by means of
a chain, a lever. Place the head of the
barrel, or a board large enough to cover
the fruit, over the apples, bring the
SEABURY A JOHNSON, •&gt;
lever down upon it, and thus press the
fruit dowr Into ihe barrel. Such a bar­
rel of apple* w'll not be injured in '
PLASTER.
transportation.— Western Rural.
I

Balsam

PARKER’S GINGER TON!

Back

Benson’s Capcine
Porous Plasters.

Bauson’s Capcine Porous Plaster!

—Timber for granaries: There i* but !
one kind ot timber which is rat-proof,
and that is hemlock. Rats do not like
to cut through thi* wood for the same
reason that carpenters dislike to handle
or work it, and that is the abundance of
sharp splinters which it makes. Its
fibers are very hard and stiff and sharp,
and stick in the rats’ mouths.
If the
rats are so hungry aud desperate as to
gnaw through hemlock plank 1 1-4
inches thick, the remedy is to procure
sheet-iron cut into atrip* 3 inches wide
and bend it into an angular form length­
wise and nail thi* around the corners of
the bin*. Bat the very best remedy for
rata in a granary is to have the bins re­
moved from the wall all round about six
inches and keep a good cat in it.—N. F.

ERRORS OF YOUTH,

G-ROCERIES
Of the best quality and lowest in priee. Try our 40c Tea.
Don’t buy poor eggs unless you prefer them. Our egg tester
tells you which are poor.

CASH PAID FORBUTTER AND EGGS.

NEW VICTOR SEWING MACHINE is VICTOROUS.
Ready pay secures for you all the advantages in trade.

L. J."Wheeler.

C. C. Wolcott
'

HAS GOIYE.

THE STORE. REMAINS
And is filled with Stoves of 20 Different Kinds.

The MONUMENTAL is the Finest Hound
Stove Made.

---- -AJLSO:----

Paints, Oils and Colors, Doors, Glass, Sash and
Blinds Iron and Wood Pumps,Wagons, Buggies,
Carriages and Platforms, Drills, Cultivators
Seeders. Plows, Land Rollers, “Reed Spring­
tooth Harrow.
POINTS FOH ALL THE LEADING PLOWS.

i
j
I
!

BAHBED WlHf .

A Large assortment of Shelf Goods and Tinware, and the best
Tinner in the County.
FOR GOODS CHEAP CALL AND SEE ME.

C. L. G-LASGFOW.

v&lt;t.

Market.

uMaBalm that will rcmor-Tan. Froi'k.ra. Pimp
*es and Blotohca, learing lhe|«kli&gt; .oft. clear and
H-autlful. also inatroctian. lor producing a iuxurl411 growth ot hair on a bald head or smooth *fae«
kddress. Incloalo. Cc, stamp. BFN. VANDELF *
;u., 1? Hare lay St., N. Y.

■awes

I have opened a market

“CONSUMPTIVES.

ATTACHED TO C. SMITH’S

thaldrend dlinur, OnsotnpOon. by ■ .Imple ten e-

GROCERY
and intend to keep a

/-&gt; a { T

| m TO I I

ebariv, wl-b the dlrcuUin for preparing at&gt;&lt;! u»ln,
t hr tame. which thry will And a »ure Cure tor
Coog'-a. CoMa, Contnmptlan. Aathma Rrenrh.tlh
addrea*. Ra» K.A. WILSON, 194 PrM Hi.. Willia

liriTH'

SALTand FRESH MEATS!T- —
__--------Not Fail

Also everything pertaining to a first-class
market.

■

Cood Coodsand Full Weight J
Oire

. trial.

I». la. Dl KKEE.

RATHBUN HOIIIE,
A. B. AKTTBDKL, Piofxitto*.

10
J^r
■ oar FALL
Price - Liat

J

\ ■Mw
OwUbuJe■
BcripUons of everything
required for Personal or Family
with over 2,200 illustration*. We sell
nil good* at wholesale prices, in
quantities to suit the purchaser. The

: thi* their special business.

Address

MOMTQOMERT WARD A CO..

JJFN’RY ROE. Pbopbibtob
^A.W.AfOffQANiCa.

----- OLD RELIABLE-----

surrmi

MEAT MARKET.
Fresh and Salt Meats, :

Smoted Ham sal Shonlden,
FRESH FISH and POULTRY,
IN THEIR SEA8O*

Larfl, by the lb. or barrel,!
vff The Highest Mnrk**t Price paid
for Hidea, Pel to. Ac.

Fresh Goode, Full Weights and
Satisfaction Guaranteed.
JOHN B.OObEN.WCedar 8i„N. Y.

HENRY KOK.

HALL’S

NO PATENT NO PAY

' RlTrilTk obtalnadtoe ■eebauloU Aavt.

TMF- MONARCH^

C.

—After several experiments with oats
a* to “thin and generous seeding,” a
gentleman in New York says he finds
oats grown frcm thin seeding more lia-

They are excel­

Examine them.

'

:i» .um.ioj io.

N- DUNHAM.

ortwa.wsare.
Ifh

gfj

finds that the ,b«*t crop be ever grew
inaedlaSAly. 1’rioe. 75 cearoperbettie.

F. L.CHMEY A CBw

«We.

�SATURDAY.

JFOK/ ZMZEDST -AJSTZD

MDBEJ00AL.
that C. N. Yoan&lt;’n child
Iri-rU
not true. The
disw-aoe wn* h.flxmattan of tbe throat
nnd bronchial talw-a.
Miao Berth* Wrasd will entertain *
company of Iwr mmde-taving friend* abaut S.WI0 majority. Wallace (De*.) for
»t Iw-r home cui* (Haturdgy) eYeoiog, Congras* probably elected.
in honor of her ro&lt;n«in. Mr. Wood of
The Democratic Biale ticket aloe led. Thrae
Hasting*, who ia n tine violinist.
Three different kinds of dates in The
tta
Newk. last Week. Isn't aa tire majority
I fifty-eight.

$2.75
3.00
4.75
5.oo
6.oo

reader wm* lead t&lt;&gt; I elieve that paper
tbe returner Flral Di*trict, Dunham (Rap);
wm “too pre.■tan*."
Second, John Ftncrtr (lod Don), gain;
Tbe Ww*i Kalamo correspondent of Third. Gro. R Davi* (Rep), re-elected:
Geo. X Adam* (Mp.); Eighth. P. C.
RaakMji teat “Edward Slater und Fourth.
Haley (Dem.), gain; Ninth, Lewis k. Pavao*
Mi*s Mary Sherman, about a week ago, (Rep.), re-elected; Eighteenth, Kueffnar
(Rep),
gain;
Nineteenth, a W. Townstoand
were united in the goldem bands of
(Dam.), re-el^t-d. Twentieth, Wm. X
wedhickbut Ed. says it’s nothing Murnhy (Dem.). Cook County Republican
by about 1,000 majority.
but'anaMgravating lie.

been has arrested nt El Paso, Texas.
The 38th Mich, infantry, with their
fa mi lira, will hnve a reunion at Mason
the J5th.
A livery stable and six teams horses
burned .at Nile*. Loss $4,0000, insur­
ance $1,000.
A floating corpse, the head gashed
aud skull crushed, was found in a pond
Dear Monroe.
Mrs. Chas. Hauwr of Ann Arbor fell
from a roof, while hanging out clothes,
and broke her Deck.
Hammond Station, on the Volley
railroad near Gntud Rapid*, will be
changed to Dutton this months.
John H. Hauk of Toledo, waa kiled
a railroad train near Wayne, Mich.,
Sunday, while sitting on the track.
James O’Hrrn of Veatabnry, near
East Saginaw, was fatally stabbed Sat­
urday last, by a man named Canady
from Crystal Lake.
The anther of that famous poem,
"The Curfew must not Ring to-Night,”
Mrs. Rose Hardwick Thorp, is a resi*deut of Grand Rapids.
Fatal accidents': E. C. Colburn, a
brakeman, had his bead crushed at
Jackson, while uncoupling two sleep­
ing cars; Mr*. E. A. Call, an old .lady
of Midland, killed by the cars.

Democrats elect Congressmen tn th* First,
Third and Fourth Districts, snd tbe Repub'le­
ans in tbe Second. Filth and Sixth—a Re­
publican gain of two. Fisher, Stewart. Garey
and Pbelpa. Independent candidates for
Judges, elected over the regular candidates.
Massachusetts.

Butler (Dem.) tor Governor, about 10,000
plurality: Republican State Council elected,
and the Republican State ticket with th* ex­
ception of Governor. Legislature R«publlcan
by s reduced majority. Democrat* elect three
member* of Congress
Michigan.

Democratic State Central Committee claim
the election of the Democratic candidate for
Governor, two CongreMmeu and a majority
of the Legislature, a claim not conceded by
tbe Republican*

Mlaalaatppt.

Muldrow, Moaey. Slagletoo and Barksdale
(Dem.) elected to Congress beyond a doubt
The Republicans claim election of Chalmers
a»d JeSord* (Rep*), and think Lynch
(Rep), may pull through.

The jury in tbe Peoples libel case at
Democrats probibiy elect all of tbe ConDetroit decided that the Post and Tri­
greaamen (14). the Judge of the Supreme
bune puMialird Ihe artide in good faith C ourt, the Railroad Conimlaalooer and tbe
and withont malice, and found also Superintendent of Public School* Majority
on State ticket believed to be about 40.00O.
that Hugh S. Peoples had knowledge In 8L Louis County Republicans elect about
of and consented to the death of Mar­ one-half of tbe ticket
\
tha Whirls.
Republic tn majority greatly reduced.
*Tia stated by tbs Evening 5'ncs tha Dawe*
(Rep. 1 for Governor, receiving about
Jay Hubbell and Geo. W. Webster of 10,000 to 15,000 majority. Weaver, Laird »od
Ionia have formed an agreement that Valentine probably elected to Congre**,
though th* lat’er** etaetton la not definitely
if Hubbell control* enough votes jn the assured. Tbe Woman Suffrage amendment
to the Constitution defeated. Strong Re­
publican maj irity tn both bou»»» of the
ahnll be turned over to Webber. The Legislature.
ml lying cry is 1® be any tiling to beat
Hale (Rep) elected by a small majority.
Two Bapauliean Cougreasnen elected by
Four burglars made an extensive small msjoritlea, and Legislature- Republican
raid at Frankfort, one night laat week. In both brsnehe* Democrats claim that the
count will be neee»»ary to determine
They blasted a large double safe, official
whether Hale or Edger'.y (Detn.) (selected.
blowing off both doors, upeeUing it.
and moving tbe partition walls about
Republican ConmumrB elected tn tbe
an inclu bat gettipg only &lt;30. They Fe- trad. Third and Fifth District*, und Demo­
in tbe other district*. Legislatu re Demo­
then blew open the safe in a lumber crat*
cratic tn both branch**. Robeson (Rep) da­
■office nod got $3,000; then robbed a te i tod In the Flnt Di*trict, tbe Democratic
doctor’s office of $200, and stole two majority beta: about SOI
home* and two beggieA Tbe citizen*
are after them.
*
•
TYle flmt young lady who catered
Michigan University, Miss Madeline
Stock well, gives this bit of reminisoenct: “The yotrpg men of my class were,
without exception very kind to me
throughout the course. Bai this lean
hardly say of the young women of A.
A. during the fl rat few months after I
■entered. I once attended a senior par­
ty of about 100, and not a woman ex­
cept tbe hostess sod her daughte spoke
to me daring the whole evening.’’
Adrian Evening Record : Mr. George
Hoadky. who resides about fourteen
miles sooth of the city, dropped in up­
on as yesterday- Mr. Hoadley ia rath­
er peculiarly circumstanced. He re­
side* on a farm which lies in four town­
ships, twocounties and two states. He
pays taxes in three different places,
does road work in three districts and
p*ynschool tax iu four dialricte. He
resides a few feet over the state line
and vote* iu Ohio. He snore* io Ohio
4tnd kicks tin: footboard in Michigan.

'

C e**i«nd's (D*w*.» majority for Governor
। fr&lt; m 19i,&lt;00 to 150.001 In New York County
h* -..tajunty 1* 77.007. and in Brooklyn 3&amp;10S.
The . ro*peet is th &lt; the Home will stand 70
Democrat* to 58 R publ can*. Tbe rre*ent
8e-&gt;* e bolds over. Tbe •.’ongrrsslonal ticket
appear* to be about evenly divided, the Dem­
ocrat* claiming 17 .nd conceding 18 to the
Republic-.na.
North Carolina.

io-itv. Dow, Vsnee. Seale* Green and Robbtoa. Dem.Krillc cand dates for Congress,
dieted. I er fatal nre De uocretlc. Th* Co*grestlo-fl d • eg.-tion believed to stsnd: Demcrata, 8; Itepu -lictn. L
Patllson, De—ocrat, for Governor, p'uraltty*
U&gt;ut 30. ODO Contrreavincn elected. Repub­
lican*. aeveutem. Democrat*, ten: a Demo­
cratic gain of two.
South Carolin*.

erat*. and Stacker. Republican, a ere elected

uoubt.

Ireland, for Governor, and tbeentire Demo­
-ratio State ticket I* elected by on enormous
majority • Tbe Legislature ------ »--»—«—»Democratic.
Vlrgtal*.

CMgreMmen.

A Jerary vity girl Unshod and fainred tin other day when abe found that
the inunr of the paper she hail naed for
a Imatta »n» the Chriathur Obeerver.

Charlotte

WB

.............

H-rWAko.

8TATIOWB.

Local
G.B.
Rap P—’se

Ear.

Vermotivlile,.
NaahvilU,___
Raatiaga......... .
Mi'IdievllU,...

HORSE BLANKETS AT 90 CENTS.
We do not ask you to take our assertions on paper, but we do want you to come and ex­
amine our prices and see the largest stock of goods in Barry county.

tS'Butter, Eggs, and Dried Apples Wanted.

Through Coaeteaand Steeping
Grand RapiaaaM Datrelt. AH
un« dopot st Detroit with Grew
Trank and Ckirada aowthsra RaHwav*

*
Ledyard
.
.1^.1
U_-

h. b.

■ A-*1!brown,

jg ROOKS, MARSHALL k CO.

Nashville Elevator!

ATTENTION PATRONS.

can nav for mv e6od* Please do not let this

LADIES LISTEN.
Having moved tn our new atore, Tate* Block,
and added largely to my stock, I am better pre­
pared than ever to please my patron* My stock
consist* of One Mlllinerv of every drecrlpUon,
Beautiful Hate. Bonnets, Fancy Goods, Dreas

other
with thoee of other

Physician and Surgeon

Office first door east of Opera House, ahd
near residence on corner of Washington and
State Streets, Naahvflle, Mich.

S. S IN6ERSON A SOI,

V/Aj Vf

Im tJT VJ U X
1 W

AT THE LOWEST LIVING PRICES.

Being engaged in clothing and lumber business in Big Rap­
ids, have concluded to dispose of by private and auction sale
the entire stock

dotliixxe1

AT WHOLESALE COST
Which means a saving of 30 to 50 per cent to the purchaser

SALE TO COMMENCE FIRST DAY OF OCTOBER.

AND BUY, BUY, BUY.
Jeans Suits, *3.75, 4.50, 5.00. Satinett Suits, 5.00, 6.00, 7.00
Men’s Cotton Worsted Suits. 4 50, 5.00, 6.00.
Union Cassimere Suits, $6, 7, 9. All-wool Casjimere Suita,
$9, 10, 12, 13. All-wool Worsted Suits, S10, 12, 14.
Reaver Suits, S12, 13: 14.
Pilot Suite, 10.50, 12, 14.
#
100 pairs Pants at *1.
100 Vests, 60c to *2.
Union Caasimere Panta, S2 toT.
Wool Cassimere Panta, $3, 3.60, 4.
•
Boys’ ClothingSchool Suite, 6 to 14. *4 to 6; All-wool
Casaimeres, *5.50 to 7.
Boys’ Suite, 11 to 16 : Union Cassimeres, 84.87 to 10.
Youths’ Suite, 32 to 36 : Union Cassimeres, 5.75 to 6, 11;
Worsted Suite, 7, 8, 9, 10.
Worsted and Cassimere Overcoats, 5, 6, 8, 10. 100 odd Coats
at 3, worth 5.
Women’s and Children’s Shoes at 50 cte on the Dollar. Men's
Boots at the same.
All Yard goods, including Prints, Shirtings, Demins. Ticks,
Stripes, Etc., clased at actual cost.

And everything iu the hardware line, Is at

L. FAUL’S
NV OODLAND.
fcT-Stixk larger and Price* lower than ever
before.

Every Description of Tluware Done

BEST SET GUM TEETH $10.00
A. H. WUVN.

Everything tn flbeoe linn.

CUTLERY, NAILS, PAINTS.

A. H. WINN, Dentist.
Teeth Extracted WUhoat Paia.

Nashville, Mich.
THE PLACE TO BUT

Eiuerienced, Reliable, and Responsible.

OfflceOpen Day &amp; Evening.

Grain-Lumber-Goal AV li ole sale ZPrice List,

Hardware, Glass, Tin and Copperware,

Pay the highest marketprice for all kinds of

Grain and Produce
eeds, Feed, Lime, Halt, Piaster, Ster­
eo, Hair, Pine Lamber, Lath
and Shingles,

READ THE

LEGGED WHEAT
N more grown wheat will be ground at the
Nashville mill.
I have found It Impossible to make good
flour for those who have good wheat if I grind
grists of grown wheaL
There is no mill, old process or new process,
that can prevent the nour of different grists
from mixing together.
„
Tbe Idea at pving a man tbe flour from hla
own grist without mixing tn flour from other
grists is al) gammon. It can’t be done, and
never was done, and any miller knows that
be is trying to deceive his custoners when he
claims to ao it.
It is even impossible to even elevate grown
awl good wheat alternately without mixing
tSfcn more or lee* If you doubt this, ask the
-l__ ._______ ’
wheat *nd flour pass through to
tore, conveyor*, bolt* machines

A man who take* grown wheat to mill may get
inch better Wear than hb wheat would made
rben they grind
ft flour from tn

or that

Those having
D.IM SubTUI.

BTThis is a genuine closing sale. All kinds of country
produce taken at full and satisfactory prices. Parties indebted
either by note or account are requested to call and settle be­
Let every Woodlander re­ fore I close for good in Nashville.
member that my new stock of
winter goods is larger thanjever and was bought at
JCaTStore building for sale or rent

-CALLON

F. T. BOISE,

WM. A. AYLSWORTH

Rook Bottom Prices
and will be sold at a slight ad­
vance above actual coat.
Prepare for cold weather by
buying your

CUT SHOWING THE SIMPLICITY OF THE

«»&gt;■

John M. Boe.

NEW GOODS

now. Oar stock is complete
in every respect.
Abo New Dry Goods, Boots,
Shoes, Hats, Caps, Groceries,

for anything.

15.00

PAIR OF WOOL BLANKETS $1.25.

TAR. F. 8. HULL. Graduate of Medical and
kJ Surgical 'departmer* of University c
Mich.
Republican
can candidate for Supreme
8u]
Judge .----- ---------------------- - ---- ;-------------- elect’d. White, nr.u-a.u
Wakefield and Btralt, _f&amp;- JJ A. BARBER, ML D.,
Chilean candidates for Con ere**,known to
* |UOMCEX&gt;PA.TinC
elected, and Wait burn (Rep.) believed to
be Nelson (Rep) probably elected in th*
Fifth DUtrict.

*

GRAND RAPIDS DIVISION.
ST ATI OHB.

D« troll,

Tbe Coorr*M local del
■land nine Democrat* ai

Maryland.

$3.75
4.50
5.oo
12.00

Cloaks and Dolmans Cheap

Governor BL John (Rep.) probably re­
elected by a amall plurality/ Tbe three Con­
gressmen elected are Republican*

Congressional delegation si) Democratic
except In tbe Third District * here tbe result
waa doubtful.

ULSTERS and OVERCOATS—

$7.50
9.00
10.00
16.5o

M1(‘HIWAX NEWS.

In the Second. Third. Fourth. Fifth and Sixth
Jittpea N. Kerr, of Dear Lowsll. BUl- Cuugreeeional Dtotricls, Cobh, Btodulagw,
Holman, Matooo and Browne (all Dem* but
•cided recently.
the last oarne l) probably re-elected Iu the
Battle Cre^k ha* a prosperous co-op- First, Nta’h, Eighth and Tenth Districts it
was thought Hrlmtn, Pierce. O-th and De
Mott* (Rap) were defeated. The Democrata
fire at Fore claimed all tbe Congree«men In tbe State but
• Twenty
Browne and Pelle, Tn ths Sixth and Seventh
" G
insurance.
Districts.
hit* a chair manufacturing
law*.
The Dea Moines JZsateter puts the Repub­
-oompsny with $35,000 capital.
lican majority in the State over the DWBOThere were 838.32H barrels of salt In­ crata at 40.OOO, nnd 90.000 over all, with nine
Republican C&gt;&gt;ngre*«men certain. F rwell
spected in this state last month.
(Rep) was defeated In tbe Second DtaA barn with «ute bona aad fifteen trlct. and tbe Sixth District elo*e between
Out tv (R-p) and Weaver (Greenbacker),
cows, all iHtHH-d nt Ludingtou.
Navin, dafnnlting Mayor of Adrian, with tbe chances In favor of Cutt*

BOYS AT

--------FO

DRl'fcrK,

JEWELRY
WALL PAPER,
W1MIMWW NHADES,

WYHNTUFFM.
PBOPBIETABT MEDI0IKE8,
PKRscamieNM,
PAINT AND BRUSH
OKraimnEiVr

We haven’t time to enmner.1 Cgbt uftnu

Call and Examine!
F. T. BOISE

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                  <text>STRONG, I
I

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun

SuMCumoxs *1.7*

&gt; PbOF«IBTOM.

VOLUME X.
LIFE IE EABHVILLE

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1882
taking the principal character Within
at Eaton Rapid* and Grand Ledge un-

-Some alight change* have been
aulta.
,
saade in the railroad time table this
-They came into a store, the other
day,with a little toddler just able walk,
and while the parent* busied themT. Boise'* drug store, and he will see aelvee with dry goods the toddler bnai­
yon on Monday*,Wednesdays, and Sat- ed itself with a box * of boot*. Finally,
in the natural oouroe of event*, the
—TbeG. A. R. poat now hold* its toddler lay flat on the floor with end of
meetings in rooms in the rear of Com- the box retting on hia neck, *and
mhaionerfirady’* office, having moved •creamiug for bi* life. Then the man
wm mad. He wanted to know why
county she didn’t take care of that child, and
are Mr*. Monroe of ahe said ahe a’poeed the child knew
W. C. T.
t;. MraC.G. Bentley enough to take care oCitaelf; and while
Rutland,
of HaaUuga, corresponding secretary; they were jawing about it a traveling
Mra H. A. Barber of Nashville, record­ man took the box off and stood the
•
ing secretary; Mrs. Ickes of Middle­ frightened toddler right end up.
—The funeral of little Otto, sou of C.
ville, treMurer.
.
N.
Young,
waa
held
at
the
M.
E.
church
—Jack Brady paid S40 fine on Satur­
day laat for the fun he hod three or Sunday morning, the pastor preaching
four weeks ago in knocking Sylvester from the text, “Who bath abolished
Hall down tho railroad bank and rob­ death.” The laat leave taking of the
bing him of $5. and Steve Miller waa parent* was very affecting. The mys­
aaaeased $5 in the same matter, princi­ tery of, Mr. Young’s failure to come
sooner was explained on Friday by the
pally for being in bad compay.
—A. IP. Sheldon, who baa bought a receipt here of a letter from him at
good many apples in thia section this Hesperia, in which he tenderly sympa­
•eaaon, say* the most noticeable thing thized with his uncle, Nathan Sheldon,
over the supposed death of the latter’s
about the crop is that nature seeiPB to
be a respecter of persons,—one farmer son Alley. The misunderstanding was
' will have an orchard loaded with fruit, occaaioned by the telegraph operator at
while his neighbor, just across the road Fremont, who in taking the first tele­
gram for Mr. Young wrote the name
perhapa. won’t have an apple.
Otto as “Alley.” The fiist reliable in­
—A donation for Rev. F. A. Biuell formation of the death of his eon which
will be held at the reaidence occupied
Mr. Young got was from a copy of The
by Dr. Foote and Mr. Bissell, on Tues­ News that he borrowed of Mr. Ains­
day evening next. Mr. Bissell has
worth in Grand Rapids while changing
. worked zealously for the good causem
depots. ______ ______________
which he is engaged, and a rousing
“ALL BROKE UP."
benefit should be given him. All are
cordially invited, and a jolly good time
A distressing accident, and one
is expectrd. x
which may possibly prove fatal, occur­
!
—Asa Smith, a boy of about 12 years red in Maple Greve township on Wed­
who lives near the cemetery, was ar­ nesday, the unfortunate vicitm being
rested on Thursday for mutilating the Thomas Telley, (or Telling), an Ira­
tombstones. He has been imagining nian about 75 years old, who has beta
himself to be David and the Cross, living on Lyman Hotchkiss’ farm iu
Cruso, Nichols, and some other head­ Bellevue.
stones to be ’ Goliahs. and they have
He desired to move on to 8. W.
suffered considerable damage from Mapes’ farm in Maple Grove, and for
pebble stones in consequence. The that purpose went to Levi K. Kenyon’s,
trial is set for Monday.
Wednesday morning, to borrow his
—Mr. Wm. A. Aylsworth has closed team. Mr. Kenyon said he had only one
out bis Nashjrille business, the purch­ objection to lending it, that being the
asers of his clothing stock being Fowler liability of the horses running away.
&amp; Campbell, who have rented the Telley replied that he had long been
Aylsworth’s building for five years and used to driving horses, wan to have a
will move in tills week and next. boy with him, and promising to heed
While we can but regret that Mr. some injunctions of Kenyon’s, the lat­
Aylsworth has seen tit to discon­ ter Ibt him take them.
tinue business here, it is cause for
About three o’clock iu the afternoon
congratulation that hi* place is taken Telley was driving along with a load
by a young and energetic firm.
and wanting a whip, told the l&lt;oy to
—The literary society met with Mis* jump off and get one. The boy pro­
Edith Fleming on Tuesday evening ceeded to do as requested, but he had
and organized by the election of Rev. hardly alighted on the ground before
F. A. Bissell as president, Mrs. Dr. the team started on u run awsy, *“4
Foote vice president, F. P. Cook sec­ after going about forty rods Telley was
retary and Miss Emma Bissell critic. thrown off. Both of his arms were
The society decided to devote it* atten­ broken near the wrists, his left ear waa
tion mainly to American history, hav­ torn almost off. and his breast waa bad­
ing such other exercises as should give ly stove in. Geo. Brooks soon came up
a pleasing variety. The next meeting with with 8. W. Mapes’ team and took
will be with Mis* Electa Furniss, on the unfortunate man to Jerry Hotch­
kiss’house in Assyria, where he will
Monday evening next.
.
remain until able to be moved.
—Arch. Smith, who lives some three Hull of Bellevue attends the case. Dr.
miles ea«t of townj?tried to bo real kind
the other day, but to his sorrow got
ABOUT A WITE-BEATIKG.
even worse than his labor for his pains.
Overtaking a woman who was walking
Last spring—barely six months ago—
he gave her a ride ; but just as he a well known young man of Maple
started to help her out at her stopping Grovfc township with loving words and
place, his colt took a sudden start, ran dutiful vows took unto himself a wife.
bchms the road and threw the woman Tuesday evening of this week, in a
out, and kept on running till there was jealous rage and with vile imprecations
very little left of the buggy—then he he dragged her through the muddy
stopped. The woman waa not serious­ road nearly a quarter of a mile, her
ly hurt. Of course it wasn’t any won­ brother finally rescuing her. This is
der Mr. Smith felt a little crestfallen.
not the first time the young man has
—General * improvement has been abused the wife of bis choice, and so
made at the ‘Eeighner school-house far as wejiave learned she has given
(district No. 8), and the school room has him no just cause for his jealousy, nor
a more inviting appearance. The di­ has she been derelict in any wifely
rector has just purchased of N. H.Wal­ doty. In the hope that the young hus­

bridge A. Son of Grand Rapids a splen­
did $88 globe for the school. He be­
lieve* in getting ont of the old ruts and
making jmne improvement*. The
school is dow in full blast undercharge
of ChariesWiBMun* of fiii* place. The
young people’s literary society will soon

band may reform his couduct, The
News withholds alike the particulars
of the trouble on Tuesday and his
name, both of which it is in possession
of. The man who cannot live happily
with his wife is exceedingly unfortu­
nate, but the man who to mutual un&gt;
happiness adds jealousy and abuse is
brutal indeed and has someth i tig to
learn. Not only this,-bat upon repe­
tition of such otEeases against private

report of tbemaelves.
—The firemen, at a meeting held
Wednesday evening, made an engage­
meat with Frank “
■h«Jl bare the uopleMaat DOteriety and

LOCAL

QIJBLB-OABBLE

"Peek-a-boo.”
Dark night*, eh?
Snowflakes, Monday.
Donation next Tuesday evening.
Didn’t materialize—the band project.
Around the gable* the wind* ore sigh­
ing.
' And now it is James Fleming who has
a telephone. '
Ye editor and family are absent at
Mi** Ida Cranston of Irving has been
visiting at J. M. Wood’s.
E. A, Bnah’s family have returned
from a visit at Chicago.
A, R. Woloott and family arrived
home from Oh’o Thursday evening.
Herm. Haver of Battle Creek Sun­
dayed with hi* old-time friend* here.
About fifty had a very pleasant timo
at Dr. Barber’s, Wednesday evening.
Mias Stella Wilson went to Battle on
Wednesday for a visit of several weeks.
R. C. Pool, now of the Creek, stopped
with E. Chipman a few days this week.
W. 3. Campbell’s brother James,
stopped with him a few (lays thi* week.

The jury in the case of Roe against
Corsett acquitted the prisoner, Satur­
day. ,
Mr*. Chas. Stewart of Muskegon has
been visiting Mrs. Jessie Austin, this
week.
Miss Ida Owen, who baa been quite
ill at Baltimore, ia in town to stay over
Sunday.
Jimmy Holbrook’s smiling counte­
nance beamed on his Woodland friends
lo*t week.
M. B. Brooks, Herb. Lee and Chas.
Furniss have each shipped a car-load
of bogs this week. z
Milt, fleyharty arrived iu town,
Wednesday from an extended visit iu
northern Michigan.
Mie* Mattie Frace has returned to
Nashville to stay. Hesperia’s a poky
old place, you know.
Mr*. Dr. Emmons is stopping with
her father, Mr. Frank Fuller, and ex­
pects to remain some time.
Jay Pnrchis of Vermontlillc. is the
gentleman who is helping Will Clark
out with his rush of work.
Mr*. G. A. Truman left on’Tuesday
for a visit with friend* at Kalamazoo,
Marshall and other place*.
L. E. Mudge think* of going to Ar­
kansas about the first of December,
with a view of locating there.
Mias Lottie Evans is teaching srhoo
in Maple Grove, and Miss Myrtle Myers
is interesting some Kalamo youngsters.
A poor blind man paraded the streets,
Thursday, with a hand organ, and wen£
unharmed. If he hadn’t been blind—
Ed. B. Lee, formerly of Woodland,
arrived in town last week from Har.'.y,
Neb., and—amt—well, he may stay nil
winter.
Prof. Wearne, die phrenologist, says
that Mr. Partello has a large bump’of
affinity. Sort of a mind reader, that
professor.
T. N. Kettlewell of Dayton. Sunday­
ed witii S. D. Hawthorn and family,
Mr*. K. retailing home with him
Sunday night.
Ozzie Jenson is limping around on
cratches, the cause- being a sprained
ancle got while leading one of bis
horses last Sunday.
Wm. Offley of Wayne county, Ohio,
has bought the Lorenzo Mudge farm,
and Mrs. Mudge will probably more to
Hasting* in the spring.
Mr. and Mrs. H. Truman of Ledyard,
Cayuga county, N. Y., spent several
day* thi* week with G. A. Truman and
family. On their wedding trip.
’
Mrs. Jesse Austin and daughter Hat­
tie go to Ypsilanti (Jii* Friday, tbeir
good* having already been shipped
Mr. Austin is hunting up north.
Joseph Hewittand Mr*. Mary Spring«tt returned from their trip to England
the first of the week, Mr*. 8. bringing
her son, a lad of some fourteen years.
A meeting of the Enterpean choral
society i* called for next Friday even­
ing at the Christian church. It is hop­
ed that all will be on baud promptly at
seven o’clock.
.
Clement Smith will be at the Wolcot
House on Thursday the 33d inst, from
morning until half past two in the
afternoon, and will be glad to see any
who desire to see him at that time.

J. L. Stevens had a bridal party for
gu&lt;*to this weex—Mr. and Mrs. Wm.
Phelps of 1' ork state—MraPhelps being
Mr. Steven’s sister. The newly married
pernpn of average good couple atari in business at Kalkaska.

better for a quarreling couple toaepar- died at Denver, Col., Sunday, Oct »th,
occasioned by teething.
thfiiruni
tath*.

the presentation of
in,” St Charlotte Tuewbiy evening,

getting home at four o’clock in the
morning. Strange what a fascination
that old play has.
Wm. Messner and family, from
Shelby, O„ are moving on to the
Joseph France farm about two miles
south of town, now and for several
years owned by Mr. Messner but occu­
pied by tenants.
Miss Mary Lee of Woodland, who has
been taking lessons m painting of Mrs.
Shtiner at Charlotte, Sundayed with
friends here on her way home. Judg­
ing by her recently executed work. Miss
Lee gives promise of becoming a flue
artist.
Mr*. Warner, a suiter of A. J. Hardy,
who has been visiting friends and rel­
atives in this place and vicinity, has
returned to her home iu'Albion. Miss
Ida Hardy accompanied her to take a
thorough course in music of her cousin
Mrs. Gifford. .
&lt;
Porter Bement and family, who have
many kindly rememberers here, aro to
move from Charlotte to Shell Rock.
Iowa, soon. Mr. B. is offered a per­
manent and profitable situation with a
cousin who is interested in the elevator
business there.
Jay Reynolds has been buying a
rather unusual quantity of a certain
kind of plug* tobaco, lately, and on
Monday be got his reward when Fowl­
er &amp; Campbell handed over to him a
Waterbury ($4.50) watch for which he
drew the ticket for last week.
This is particularly for the ladies of
Maple Grove: “Please take notice that
our church fair will be held at the 1st
M. E. church of Maple Grove in about
two weeks. Moke all the preparations
you can to make it a success, by way of
furnishing articles for sale and a good
dinner. By order of committee.”
Prof. Wearne had small audiences
at his lectures on phrenologys last
week, but kept them fairly well inter­
ested. Saturday evening he lectured
on matrimoney and expressed his opin­
ion on the fitness of several cbuples, to
the merriment of those not directly in­
terested. Gn Sunday evening he de­
livered a good temperance lecture, and
on Wednesday left for Caledonia.
A8 OTHERS SEE US.
N. Lawrence, O. Nov. 6, ’82.
Ed. News:
Again upon my “native heath” me
thought to send you “pointers” touch­
ing my recent Michigan trip and the
many courtesies received at the hands
of many of your wortbycitkens. Four­
teen year’s absence from your progress­
ive town had the effect of clouding
memory and confusing recollection
which required repeated “hand-shak­
es from, George Francis (Train)—Re­
present ive (to be) Wheeler—banker
Downing, (the nimrod of Nashville)—
lugersons, (the approximative appella­
tion of naughty Bob) and last but not
least, also the many courtesies extend­
ed by disciples of Galeu, to fully dissi­
pate. In short, the brief association
bad with all your worthy citizens was
pleasurable m the extreme and will
not soon be forgotten.
The rapid and solid growth of Nash­
ville during the past fourteen years
seems,
to me simply marvelous,
|
and it the past is an index of your fu­
ture development we would suggest
that tho boundaries of your corpora­
tion bo extended so as to include your
county capital, as “Hastings addition,”
—Woodland Center, “as Across the
Rhino”—Vermontville, as the “Aviary’’
(Hawks-Martins “an sich-like birds),
while Maple Grove township might be
metaniorphosied into a sub-urban
park and be controlled by the City
। Fathers.
With candor we can say there is a
push and enterprise al»out yonr west­
ern towns not found in Ohio and farth­
er east. There is also a leveling of
caste, a social spirit, a perfect freedom
of fraternal associations which has a
tendency to elevate the general tone of
society and put* a quietus on pride,
seliishnes* and arrogance.
As a town, your people have much
to be proud of. Having energetic bus­
iness men, cultured and successful phy,
.siciaps,
tasty and commodious church
,edifices, substantial business buildings. ■
and comfortable residences, together
with a finely appointed graded school
and a live newsy journal, the Nashville
News, (which the people ought to pat­
ronize, for its merit and excellence is
far beyond that attained by journals
of much greater pretensions in larger
tow'n*,) in all these ,ou have levers,
always considered necessary for the
maintenance of alive and prosperous
in an especial manner would we
pleaeed tewultsgiae your-pablic ecbt
which we had the phaanre of hurriedly

or should be a source of pride to your
citizens. All the departments are in a
fine condition, with such accomplished
teachers and competent principal, they
ought to alone be productive of good
results.
.
The rural districts about your town
have improved in a corresponding de .
gree, and from a limited oleervation
weave forced to the conclusion that
your farmers all have a sufficiency of
the “legal tender.” even though all do
not adbept the "Greenback theory”
and vote it straight.
For fear of wearying the “devil” with
too much copy and corrupting his mor­
als by attempting to decipher our poor
chirography, we will relinquish our
labor and close with a brief mention
of our homeward-bound trip.
Shaking the dust. of Nashville from
our feet at 2:05 p. m-, we were whirled
into Detroit at 7 p: m. At 10:30 we
boarded the steamer North West and
landed in Cleveland at 7 a. m., Friday,
being tossed upon the boeom of Lake
Erie for 8f hours. Taking dinner with
J. Goucher, M. D., on Euclid, we I
passed the remainder of the day visit­
ing our elmn mater, the Cleveland
nlqdical college, recallingreminscences
of college life and familiarizing with
the two hundred, medics there assem­
bled.
With the kindest of feelings for all
Nashvillians, intimating to all, (espec­
ially the editor) that, should any of
you wander this way, you will always
fine our latch-stringout,
I remain spurs truly,
J. T. GoventH, D. M.

NUMBER 9,
BIRTHS.
RtF««LBa.—To Mr. aad Mrs. G. A. RugglM, ,
at Bsllevue, Oct. 81, s daughter.

Sackett.—To Mr and Mrs. Frank Sackett,
of Bellevue, Nov.. 4th, a daughter.

Coox—McDowxlu—In
JaA R. Cook of Thoma
Dowell of Leighton.
Bbadlet—Thoxxtox.—In Charlotte, Nov. 8.
by Rev. G. D. Dee, Austin A. Bradly, of
Walton sad Almira M. Thornton of Bellevue.
DIED.

DeWarat—In Woodland October 2nd. 1882.
Benjamin Dcmnray aged 70 years 1 month
and 1 day.
Mr. Demarey was married to Elizabeth Ward
iu Pickering, Upper Canada, October 7th, 1835
who still survives him an,’ with whom be lived

1842^ In 1861 he left! that church.
AfterTiti-removAl from Canada be went to
laws and Indiana, but settled In Woodland
Barry county, Mich. It was here that he was •
reclaimed In a meeting held by Rev. G. 8.
Lake and joined the United Brethren ebureb.
and was an earnest Christian and a devoted
member of the church up to the time of hl*
death. He leaves an aged companion and four
children—three sons and one daughter, beside*
two girls reared In the taipilr.
iLAMGOW.

As we Intend cloning out our entire line
of Crockery *“d Glassware, and In .order to
do so we hare marked everything iu that line
down to cost This Is no humbug, but a genu­
ine sale. Call and see for youregf.
Towles A Campbell.

*3- Sc-.rlug Machines, White* and others
COMMON COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS at 25 dollars, 35 dollar- and 50 dollars.
_______
C. L. Glasgow.

Council Rooms,
i
NsahvUle, Nov. 13, 1883. f
Regular mestlng.
Present, Chipman. President; Barber, Boise,
Dickinson. Lee and Lentz, Trustees. Absent,
Demaray.
'
Minute* of laat meeting read and approved.
The following accounts were presented and
oa motion alloyed by ayes and nayz as fol­
lows:
Ayes. Barber, Boise, Dickinson, Lee and
Lentz. Nayz, none.
.849 00
A. C. Stanton.
N. Rathbone...
Frank Parke-...
Homer Blair, - .
toss
F. MeDerby,.
sst
David Stevens. .
908
tngereon A Sou..
10 08
J**. L Gregory,.
SO
John L. Steven*..
672
Wm. Boston........
John Heckatboni.
7 IS
John H Smith. ..
Cha*. Artbernv
H. R. Dickinson.
a aa
Joel Kocher.........
soo
Wm. Parker........
401
Ed. Partello........
H. Partello..........
Bld Kocher..........

THIS FOR LADJES ONLY.
We open this week an elegant line of new
Cloakings, very pretty and very stylieh. Alar,
r ur Trimming* and ornaments to match.
____
Kocher Bros.

rr Buckwheat flour for sale by
Ibgerson &lt;k8ox.
BASS WOOD BOLTS.

S1.25 per cord for 18 Inch,
*2.50 per coni for 35 inch.
Caeh as fast delivered. For particulars s&lt;
_ __ Geo. W. Franciz.

E2T" Call and see our new line of Sugars.
the new market of D. L. Dvara*.

did tids fall stock. You can eave time an
money by looking us over as soon as possible.
Kocher Bros.
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE.

tin: store and lot adjoining. known as the A. J
Daughterly property. Address
8-9
S. Sellers, Bellevue.

G?- We are headquarters for 50c tea.
H. A. Durkee......................... ..................... 6 75
The bid of A. C. Stanton for doing the vil­
C3f“Farmcrs should use Dr. Joseph Haas’
lage draying for balance of the year was re­
ceived and on motion accepted. Said Stanton Hog and Poultry Rcmedv. Sold by
F. T. Boise.
500 Plymouth Rock Cock* for sale from
draying for 15 cents per load.
♦1 to 810 each. Inquire of
On motion council adjourned.
8-9
James McGraw.
F. McDzrsy,
E. Chipmax,
For Steaks (either beef pork or mutton)
Clerk.
Preslden
roast, boils, sausage salt meats, lard, etc., pat­
ronize D. L. Durfee's new market and be happy.

LOCAL MATTERS.
CARDS OF THANKS.
We detire to express our deepest gratitude
to all friends who to kindly rendered asslst-

MONEY TO LOAN,
Ou Real Estate at low rate of interest of
Ln A Durkee
ST Bring your Butter, Eggs and dried at
plea direct to us and we will pay you the ca»
for them.
Fowler A Camruilu

BUY BREAD

Manv thanks to tho#e kind friend* who aided
In husking my corn, Nov. 9th, my thirty-sev­
enth birthday and the eleventh week of my
illness.
L. E. Booth,

J. D. Blair.

Crown Sewing Machine we can reecotiuneud It
The undersigned In behalf of the other rela­ to buyers as a flrrt class machine. The worktives as well as for ourselves desire’th rough the
columns of your paper to return our warmest
thank* to our friend* and neighbors for their
kind assistance during the painful sicknea* and
sudden death of. our departed husband and
emarat axd
and Sosa
Sons.
exchange.___________ ,
A. C. BCXTOX.
father.
Elizabeth Demakat
TAXES! TAXES!
I will be at toy office st F. T. Botee’s Droz
store on Monday Wednesday and Friday of
each week during the mouth of Dec., for the
purpose of collecting Taxes.
8-9
Wm. E. Martin, Town Treasurer.

Ey Sugars and Coffies cheap,
HT Boots and Shorn veryefieap,
tW“ Crockery and Glassware awful cheap
at C. W. 8mitz'j

sar We have a rare display of Dress Fabries.

.

Kocheh Bbo*.

ST Our Cloaks and Dolmans arc beautiful,
•ver 300 to select from ranging in price from
S- to 820.
KochbmBbob.

3T Cull and see our large and elegant a:
sortment of Gents Furnishing Goode, just li
Prindlk A CHirxAy.
OYSTERS!

success. Fred* goods full weights, and low Counter In every style. l-rte.:
Also celebrated Vail A Crane

ny Lunch
I w cents.

MV-Xn&amp;MirlaaU

country, “Fact"

Kocher Bros.

tar We are daily receiving new goods, all
atwhich are bring sold at bottom price* at
Atasworth’s oid stand,
:
Fowlbb ACavfbklu

ROCK BOTTOM PRICES.

predated.

Kocaaa Bikm.

A FEW THOUSAND DOLLARS

ATTENTION PATRONS.
Owing tn

�*z»y, -

—rr

GuvrCrn. Mo..

oidl
fotertu niy^i«-inla uf your village aud
W.-xUmuH tlmt the report circulated
a^Miur Joe'Himniiuis nous and families
being iliMguxteil with this vimutry M
fa lot*. Wr are well natisfird with the
place; It h a nicy, i*aulifnl country to
live in. We rni-e as hue crops as ever
I mw. grow. We have abundance of
every fit jug. and Why should we be dis­
' gusted nitb the country T .
The only Immceirkand disgusted one
in Herbert R. Smith of Woodland, who
lire returned to tlmt towu. It is true
that Van Simmoiin talks of going buck
to Naaiiville to Ijve becauHe he has
property tlo-rr. We have been visited
with idckuvM while here,'having laid
•way one of tile family, Mrs. Ixmtz,
who dteil a ahort time ago; but that
ought not to direourage ua, for sickness
will find ua in any bind.
•
We have a ginai market aud get ;i
good price for produce, and also good
wagrH for IuImh*. Our town. Grant City,
ItHN the name of U-ing one of the busi­
est placra in nortk&amp;FaC/HiBMOuri.^l't is
••the county seat ofWorikxutruty, popu'latioii fifteen hnpllred; is situated on
the C. B. St. Q. railroad, and is growing
-rapidly. I would like to say more about
the country to encourage my friends to
. come, bdt time will not permit me.
Hoping to hear from you through The
News,.I reniHin
.
ifwtrs Fraternally,
Sam. Simmons.

shall be liable for the value of such sbeep
or lamb to the owner thereof, without

Of oouree there was aa immediate de­
mand for the story. Father teased us
fora little while, and then he told it, as
his dog was malicious or
to kill follows:
sheep.
“Sixty cr seventy years ago, my
—We have teen the suggestion that
cruise round the world in the United the harness should always be removed friend's father was a pioneer in the re­
States war vessel Ticonderoga, called from tired aniteals when they are taken gion bordering on the Ohio River. He
into one of the Corean harbors with a to the stable for the noon rest. With and his son were cutting wood In the
letter for the King, expressing the de­ the fatigue of the morning tasks,./the forest one day, and Polly, then a little
sire of the President for a treaty of sweat and aousequent discomfort, the girl of five years old or so, was playing
near them while they worked. When
harness becomes irksome, and it is an lhe time came to go home Polly was no­
act of mercy to remove it while the poor where to be seen.
animals are resting at midday.—A. F.
“That’s strange.’ said her father.
bad ample time to digest hU request and
“ She always obeys so well I don’t see
to consult their suzerain, the. Emperor
—A oelebrated English physician says how she oould have strayed off.”
of China, the Commodore returned
“ ‘She wouldn't have gqne home with­
alone, and. after a few month’s stay In • pint of milk is equivalent in nutritive
North Chiba, wended his way to the power to an ordinary mutton chop, and out telling us,’ said her brother. ‘Look!
United States to obtain the ratification as a pint of milk will yield only an here’s her sun-bonnet full of nuts. She
of a treaty in which the King of Corea ounce of cheese, we must have in the must ba somewhere around.’
•’They looked again and again in every
expresses '‘his earnest desire to estab­ latter a cheap and highly concentrated
lish relations between the two countries food. Ths English eat double the cheese direction, calling. ‘Polly 1 Polly !' all in
on a permanent and friendly footing, in proportion to the population that is vain. There were no Indians living
and to facilitate commercial inter­ consumed by Americans. The Italians near, but wolves and panthers were
course.” The “solid substratum of live to a great extent on cheese and In­ plenty, and only the jrfater before the
father and son had killed two bears in an
force” on which a distinguished English dian corn.—Detroit Post.
attack on the cow-house. So they began
diplomatist said our relations with. Eas­
—In bad seasons honey is apt to .be
.
tern counties must alone rest has been poisonous. This arises from the fact to feel seriously alarmed.
“Presently the brother,
looking
conspicuous all through the American that in such seasons the bees are often,
ofBoer’s negotiations only by its ab­ obliged to gather it from poisonouf* anxiously about, espied an odd-looking
heap of leaves on the further slope of the
sence.
flowers. Great care should be taken to hill, where no wind could possibly have
The history of European intercourse remove all poisonous plants from the
them. He went to nave a closer
with the inhabitants of the little penin­ ‘neighborhood of hives. In 1790s great | tossed
look at it. Carelessly ‘browing aside a
sula in Northeastern China is brief and many people in Philadelphia died from
melancholy. The touching story of the eating honey gathered from the flowers portion of the heap. In, uncovered, to
his joyful surprise, a bit ot Polly’s red
crew of the Dutch vessel wrecked on of the Kslmia latifqlia. In good seasons
the Island of Quelpaert In the middle of the bees avoid poisonous plants.— Phila­
“Father, pome here,’he called, and
the seventeenth century, who were de­ delphia Press.,
in a moment more they had the child
tained among the Coreans for more
—Cream figs for dessert nre prepared
than thirty years, as told by theijr “Sec­ in this.way: Beat the white of one or safe and sound, but fast asleep, in their
arms.
,
. How They Prosper al Inland.
retary,” will be found in the ’ pages of two eggs (according to the quantity you
“ ‘That’s strange,’ said her father
“Pinkerton,” and need not be further
Mr. P. Holler writes as follows to referred to here. It was not until the wish to serve); when very stiff, so that once more. ‘John, take Polly home.
you can almost turn the platter upside I’m going to stay here and see if I can’t
ThK.Nkwm conn-ruing some of those treaty of Tien-tsin had opened North
down without the egg running off; stir find' out whnt this mejms. She never
from this section who have settled China and Manchuria to the zeal of in as much powdercAl sugar as you can covered herself up this way. Pm certain.
Roman
Catholic
missionaries
that
Corea
around Inland iu Benzie county :
and yet leave the frosting so that you Come back ns quick as yoik can. and
was agiin visited by Europeans. The dip the figs in it. If the fig. is not 'en­
I am stopping with A. P. Denton,
bring your rifle with you. Here, hand
Jesuit fathers seem to have made thoir
who I* completin'.- a saw-mill in addi­ way there about 1862-63. We have now- tirely covered at the first dipping repeat me mine before vou go.’
“So saying, be piled the leaves up
tion to his shingle mill on his excellent­ only their own accounts of what took the process; let them dry in the heater
or on a shelf over the 'stove.—N. K neatly once more, putting a small b&gt;g of
water power. I have also been stopping place. Their efforts to make converts Post.
wood into the place where tho child had
with Mr. McKinzey. He is well pleased were, they say, crowned with success
lain. He then crouched down behind a
with his home here, and has raised a for a few years. But in 1865 commenced
Plants and Animals.
*
fallen tree near by to see what would
good supply of corn and potatoes. Mr. a persecution unparalleled even in the
happen.
frightful annals of religious persecution
The connection between these two de­
“He did not have long to wait. John
•has raised 600 bushels of corn and of in the East. It is said that 150,000 Co­ partments of life is closer than is gener­
good quality for this year. -Mr. H. T. reans, men’, women add children, lost ally thought. The plant is the bridge had scarcely had time to return, almost
Davidson is making very fine improve­ their lives on this occasion. Of the between the mineral and the animal out of breath with the haste he had made,
when the soft patter of paws was heard
ments on his farm, and bis crops look French priests, four alone escaped in world. It digests and assimilates mineral on the dry leaves, and they saw three
good. The town of Inland has improv­ disguise and assisted by some of the matter, and then yields its own substanca gray wolves approaching at full trot,
faithful of their flock. An attempt was as food for bird, beast and man. Plants, with another slightly in advance leading
ed very much in the two years since I
made by the French fleet in the Chins like hnman beings, have a, capacity for
*
was here. Lands are coming up, and seas to take vengeance for this slaugh­ culture and for what might be called the way.
"The wolf in front led his comrades
those who wisli to secure a home in ter, but it was' unsuccessful. Until the civilization,’ which gives comeliness at
■ Inland will do well to be at it immedi­ history of modern Corea is studied by the expense of vigor, and often of fer­ straight to the heap of leaves, and
scratching eagerly, ouickly uncovered
ately. I am holding a protracted meet­ our scholars in the native works them­ tility. The favorites of our gardens are
the buried log. His dismay was almost
ing at the Roxbury school-house. Six selves, we can not correctly ascertain monstrosities, with little power to propa­ comical to behold. He snifled and
the
ciuse
of
this
persecution/Meantime,
gate their kind.
have come out and expect co put on
smelled and turned his head this way
the student of the history of other
Chiis^by baptism on the Lord’s day.
The plant and man equally depend on
P. Holler. Oriental nations who finds analogous sunlight for health. Each will alike and that in utter bewilderment How a
events will probably look for analogous starve without its proper food. Analo­ dainty little girl, plump and soft, and
just suited to the taste of a wolf who
causes.
gous diseases, to some extent, affecteach. enjoys a good dinner, could suddenly
MICHIGAN' NEW.S^
The subsequent attempts of the In both cases, life and health often fail turn into a great uneatable log of wood
There are twenty firms in Kalama- Jesuits to cross the Corean frontier, and before influences too subtle even for
was too much for him to understand.
c&lt;hi mIiipniug celery.
Nearly 200 acres the suoce«ei that attended them, will be modern science to explain or detect. Bo finally gave the problem up in des­
have thia year been devoted to the cul­ found recorded in the annals of the Plants, like blood-suckers, frequently pair, and turned to his companions, cow­
Mgr. Ridel, draw their entire life from their fellows. ering like a beaten hound.
tivation of cylcry. The daily shipments “Missions Etrangeres.”
who availed the frontier guards and en­
As men are often poisoned by the bite
“There were some sharp barks of dis­
are now very great, and the demand is
tered the country in 1878, has left us an orating of insects, so are plants. Nut appointment, followed by snarls, os the
Unubuted.
I account of his adventures. Ho pene- galls and other galls are merely tumors, three guests, who had evidently been
In 1863. Churles Turner, then in the crated Corea, he tolls us, in the hope of morbid or diseased growth, due to sack bidden to a feast which was not forth­
fur Mini skin businrss in East Saginaw, attaining the crown of martyrdom. In stings. Says the Medical Record: " There coming expressed their indignation at
issued a large or of advertising card* I this he was disappointed, for he #as are nundreds of varieties of such galls the supposed hoax.
promptly discovered and imprisoned, to easily distinguishable, and each one owes
“ Tne other wolf only whiued dole­
iu the lorniof.one cent pieces, which iu us released a few months afterward at its existence to a different agent”—a
those days of scarce currency, circulated the intercession of the Governments of diflerent kind ot poison from the differ­ fully, but in vain, for the three fell upon
him. and in less time than it takes to tell
as pennies. Tuesday one was brought China and Japan. Buttons of thousands ent insect that bites it.
of it, tore him into pieces, and began to
It is now known that a large portion
to him for redemption. He says there of wretched Coreans, who were sup­
deypur him. They did not finisn the
are 80,000 still out somewhere, aud he posed to be tainted with Christianity, of human diseases result from micro­ meal, however, for’the two rifles behind
plants which find their wav into
has not seen one. until Tuesday in over suffered death, many of them with the scopic
I . , tne
the log cracKea
cracked once anu
and again, ana
and au
all
most horrible torture, because of this the. S
“'on”,7lbl» thrwwolve. l.y dead be^d. (he comfifteen years.
r—•— —----- ’•*- ’1------------- -----'"r
gentleman's ambition .to be a martyr. rapidity,
,r°" I eade wljomthej-had punished aoterriHy.
Beecher’s every day experience has An American naval expedition sent to the। most vital parte
parts of our bodies.
..
r
C
_______
■
_____
____
_
“ I have every reason to believe this
Says the above authority, "The num­ story literally true,” continued my fath­
convinced him that ninety-five men out punish an outrage on a ship 'which
of every 100 are guilty of lying every sailed up one of the Corean rivers met ber of parasites which infect plants is er; “and the other dav I told if to Mr.
with little more success than its French enormops. There is hardly a dowering,
E. S, Ellis, the well-known writer ot
day in the week.
EreJeoessor. In 1868 a steamer manned plant which is not injuriously affected
y American and European filibusters by one or more fungi which pray upon stories of Western adventure.
The NewYork Suu defends the word
“I have no doubt it happened just as
set out from Shanghai to rob the tombs it. The grapevine alone is attacked by
Eou heard it,” he said. "The incident
“ttoureis” and sneers at the world' of the Corean Kings, either for the sake
at least thirty species. The morbid
i uncommon, but not unknown in nat­
'•pHHtalouns.” We don’t care which it of the gold coffins in which Mendes changes which these parasites induce are
ural historj. My grandfather knew a
is long as the suspenders don’t giv way. Pinto says they were inclosed, or be­ manifold : the rust on wheat, the scab
cause the' Jesuits reported that the body on apples, the rot in potatoes and in lumberman who went to Heep in the
woods
in Northern New York, and was
zxn exchange says that “Lhe coming of a dead King could be held for almost fruits, all represent»the activity of these
awakened by a panther covering him
girl is to be prettier than the kind we any ransom. In 1860 Ignatieff, then foreign intruders.” All forms of mildew with leaves. He lay still till the animal
Russian
representative
at
rekin,
taking
have the same origin. — Youths' Com­ got through and went off, when he
now have.” Impossible; there can be
no improvement on the original article. advantage of the Chinese difficulties panion.
jumped up and left too. He didn’t wait
with England and France, obtained the
for the panther to come back.”—Har­
cession
of
a
vast
tract
of
Corean
terri।
Contract Work on Farms.
* Out institutiousaresacred,” observ­
per's Young People.
ed a Mormon elder the other day. lory lying in the Amour region.
The report comes from England that
These
are
a
few
of
the
salient
pointe
“The power which seeks to crush us
a considerable proportion of .the work ।
Novelties in Wedding Music.
in the history of Corean intercourse
must be met with bullets and bayo­ with the civilized nations of the West, on farms there is now performed by con­
A lady traveler just from the South
and it hardly seems a matter for great tract This is especially true of cutting,
curing, and putting up hay. The hay tells of attending a stylish wedding of
surprise that Corea should have prefer­
■c«ffee is a hurtful beverage, accord* red exclusion to more intercourse of season occurs at the time when farmers colored persons. The groom was a short,
tug the doctor*, aud yet itM conBUiup- this description. Nor is it difficult to and the usual number of men employed thin specimen of humanity, the bride
immehse and robust. As the pair sailed
- titMidnui increased ten per oeut every taliere the tales told by Japanese trav­ about the place are engaged In harvest­
ing grain and cultivating turnips, and up the aisle of the-church, with a train
year far Che lust halt-centory,—and so elers 6’ pillars erected over the whole the labor of securing the hay-crop is let that swept away in the rear like the tail
country
calling
down
a
curse
on
the
- hav&lt;i.tbe doctors.
of a comet, the' choir*sang with all the
head of him who should first propose out by contract. Some enterprising man
organizes a force of laborers, purchases race fervor “Broad am de road that
il is n timehonored custom in Quincy friendship with the hated foreigner. * team and some tools, and contracts to leads to death.” to the great amusement
Political
considerations
have
ultimately
/-Fl*., to Salute a newly-married couple
prevailed. Chinese and Japanese states­ cut cure, put in stack and to cover with of the few whites privileged to be present.
• by.firing a cannon. This is to remind
men have long been persuaded that the thatch all the grass that grows on several This, however, is equalled by the ex• those present that the battle of life has only chance of preserving Corea from farms In the same neighborhood. Oc­ Crience of a country pastor’s wife not
r away, who was requested to play ’•
• fairly began.
absorption into Russia and tbeir own casionally all the men m the force arc
countries from a standing mennnee was interested in the contract, and work on wedding march at a funeral, the mourn­
Durango, Cal., offers free passage to open it to foreign intercourse. Fol­ lhe co-operative system. The fanner ers knowing no difference between it and
1 over tlie railroads to all female school- lowing their counsels, Corea has now generally furnishes teams • portion of a dirge. At a recent wedding in Hampthe time, and some of the tools required ahire County the hymn, “Sister, thou
• teo^bere who will go to their enterpris- entered, the comity of nations. Com­ for haying, and aometimM furnishes wast mild and lovely,” was sung as
tug littto town. That’s only a catch ; mercial advantages' she fias few to offer. meals and lodging for the men. It is SDeciallv fitting the occasion.—Boston
Her total trade with Japan daring 1881,
■
t It’s wives they want, not school- at the three opened pons, hardly ex­ claimed that the men who work on the Journal.
ceeded a quarter of a million sterling. contract system perform more labor than
—Utah road agents camp in full view
those
who
are
employed
by
the
farmer,
There is said to be much mineral
‘‘'Are you ci-ruin of secunug the di­ wealth, but this must be mere surmise that they acquire much greater skill in of the stage road. The United States
pdem F asked Che minister of the dy­ at present. Trade or no trade, it is to the u « of tools and machinery and that authorities do not molest them because
they do not disturb the mails, and the
ing man. And wlien the dying man be hoped that the little kingdom which they build and cover stacks better than local authorities do not interfere be­
common laborers. By having the use
add he "didn’t want to dieadem bit.” has just come among us win prerent an
of several teams they economize in the cause the stage company dare not
instance
of
at
least
one
Oriental
nation
the minister and the doctor flew.
m&lt;ike formal complaint against them.
with which England can continue tc employment ol mowing machines and
Sympathy for penKuu rubbed in Utah is
live without vicHeoce or bloodshed.— make one do the work that is ordinarily wasted.—Chidffo Herald.
performed by twe or three. The farmer
Pall Mall Gazette.
A lady barber of Homer. 111., boa
who lete out the contract for scouring
—There is something appalling in the
«hui up aliop to marry a wealthy farm­
his hay crop is able to devote all his
time as well as that of his ordinary farm statement that twelve and a half mil­
er with whom she scraped an acquainthelp to doing other kinds of work? The lion false teeth are made every year in
working &lt;d cultivated crons is not neg­ Philadelphia, and that gigantic total is
lected. m it ia likely to be when all the

negotiated the treaty with the Japanese,
which has been the model for all the
treaties made no to the prweat moment

•d to joy.—*W? JoriMw.

•aid: “Ttie doctor collared me, pulled like
the tooth.dropped out.”

FRINCIPAl+UINE
WL11

1 ■Jll.l'.TTg.iaS'

—

A BIG BUUCE88.
»»oye«" Wttha e
plk-atkajof dlawders berphysicans could
cured her, at a coal of s dollar and fifty cents,
am! ahe to no* as strong aa any woman.—R. D.
Buffalo.

A Kentucky girl gtorim In a head of hair
which u 70 Inches long and very thick. 8he
has refused 880 for it.
A LOS8 PREVENT_D.

Many lose their beauty from the hair falling
or faddlng. Parker’s Hair Balaam supplies nec­
essary nourishment, prevents falling aud gravoeaa and is an elegant dressing.

KANSAS CITY

North'Carolina preacher threaten* to go to

BUCKLEN’8 ARNICA SALVE.

The beat aalre iu the world for Cuts, Brakes,
Sores, Ulcere, Salt Rheum. Fever Sore*, Tetter,
Chapped Hands, Chllblataa, Owns, and all
Skin Erajrtions, and positively cures Piles. It
is gaareutoed to give perfect satisfaction, or
money ^funded. Price 25 cent* per box. For
-sale, by F? T. Boisz.

treasure, but afterward she became dearer and
he treasurer.
"_7‘bUCRQPaIba?~
1
New, quick, complete cure 4 days, uriuajy
affections, sniarting.frvquent or difficult urina­
tion, kidney diseases. &lt;1. atdraggfsta. Mich.
Depot, JAMES E DAVIS A CO., Detroit,
Mich.

•

• cheerfu/lr flzen by 'ST’

t.

i rorria.

PERCEVAL LOWELL

DIRECTIONS

TARR
ufLVS^
?£AM BMJ

ILFSCBIAIIALI
effectually

cleanses

At Alton, Ill., a preacher asked all Sunday
school scholars to stand up who J,tntcn ;ed to
visit the wicked, soul destroying circus. All
but a lame girl stood up.
eolda,

completely

|heal« the aorew and
SKIXNY MEN.
Wells’ Health Renewcr. absolute cure for
nervous debility and weakness of the genera­
enclal
reoult.
are
realized
by
a few applications A
tive functions 81. at druggist*. Mich. Depot
thorouab ireatMicni ai directed w
e Catarrh
JAMES E. DAV18 &lt;fc CO.. DcUolt, Mich.

hay- revERssasarkS

A statistician has estimated that courtships
average three tons of coal each.

Unequaled For Cold In the Head
The Balm h»&gt; K»ii&gt;&lt;xl an enriabla reputation when

area knovn, dl«plac!n|{ ail other prepantiona.
“ROUGH ON RATS.”
The tiling desired found at lost. Ask Drug­ Recognized as a Wonderful Discovery.
gist for “Rough on Rats.” It clears or*, rata’
mice, roaches, flea, bed-bugs. 15c. boxes.

You can hold an opinion morv firmly than
you can clutch u hornet.

FEV’ER.’AND AGUE.
Arc you troubled with Ague, Chills and Fe­
ver, Bilious Fever, Remittent or IntermitUnp
Fever, Night Sweat* or any disease that comes
from Malaria or disordered Liver and Hot
Suns! If so, procure a bottle of Green’s Ague
Conqueror, which is an acetic extract of strong
ionic roots, combined with Sulphate of Mag­
nesia, etc., and poatlvuly contains no Quinine,
Arsenic or other poisons. It purifies the blood
cleanses the. liver, spleen and other secretive
organs so cffectuliy that the chills will not re­
turn. We have never found any case of Fever
and Ague it will not cure. Price, 50 cents and
81.00 per bottle. One large lu/ttle has cured as
five in one family. Sold by all druggists and
dealers everywhere.
15 Jan 83

full Information and reliable teatlmoulaK
K LYC It K AM BALM CO., Oweto, N.Y.

»woTmi&gt;4|i‘.
hf,
•MJ :vrj&gt; IUU. rjE'

f jOl

&lt; &lt;WMK

XVUHVMV ;

&gt; jo

' *!« Rfl

niwioM-i

SXS
'.;■ **
u.q»n(«.U| :

&lt;1

1EX

J£ A. BUSH,
'
“THE BOBS’

BOOT AND SHOE MAKER; R J PTURE
RA1HVILLE,

.

KICK.

Cored without an oiwrstlon or tbe injury trnMes
enfllct by I&gt;r. J. A. bbcirrmu'* Method. Offlcc 2U
Qroauway New York. His book with Pbotograpb-

gLACK A SOIN,

American and Foreign Marble,

The MANIPULATED

Monument*, Tamhrtoncs, Mantles, Ao,,

QLEMEWT SMITH,

.

AddreaS MANIPVLATKR.

Attorney at Law(

JAMES A. 8WEEZET,

Attorney A Counsellor,

CyatoCsr*

“SOUTH &amp; WEST,”
Only BO cents a Year.

An only Daughter Cu.ed of
Consumption.

11 !«•!&gt;•■&lt; et«*&gt; Azriculiural paper, published
■cfnl moothly. All who wnd a* thetr .ubxrrlpllon

T1U
.penaea. Thi* herb alao &lt;*ur«a ol&lt;h&lt;

Roes rtreal. 1’hllad.lptoU, naa&gt;lng U&gt;la p^ar.

Winled
JkGJEXm For Gen. Dodge’s new book,

THIHTY-THREE YEARS AMOXC

OUR WILD INDIANS

Kot Fall
Co send 6-r
■our FALL
Price-Lis:
far 188 2.
to any address upon
application. Contain- kKriptiou of everyunqg
nmind far Fowul or F—lily
.Uh orw 3,300 lUortniSoo.

this their

bwinraz.

Address .

WARD AC0m‘

'

�rvmw« «MM0CP.
—A London clergyman of the West
End makes a charge of Y5 a year to wo­
men who want spiritual advice.

BLOODY WORK.
bwlm, wbanlha

slightly curvad to the eastward toward
j extremity, was oommeueed in 1860
iu
tand carried out about 1.1W0 feet; beyond
which point and at a short distance from
1 it was deposited a heap of stonos that
was surrounded by iron piles, and'from
her public business between breakfast iudstacLed position wm called “the
and luncheon, and hardly once in a island.” The work was then left un­
month does'she concern herself with touched till 1866, when the breakwater
wm Joined to the island, and it wm con*
pu!4Jc affairs at any other time.
PBCR: IUD, IT PAID IN ADVaKCX.
—Two brothers have been convicted tinned to it* present length and finished
at York, England, of a crime which has in 1868.
To Advertisers:
*
From the mainland to the Island th*
Tbb Kbwb hM foublt the nnmher of reader#
breakwater is formed on Iu inner side
M the Ftr#t Repreoontetiv# Dunrict of Barr* pering with parish register*. To obtain of a bank of rubble-stones, nuriuounted
county, than any other patxrr clrvulutluK there­ property they forged an entry of birth.
by a promenade, over which the spray.
in, nd oar rates of adrertuinK are lower than
—lame* Fleming, late a director in breaks with a very moderate northwest
any other first daaa country weekly tn the state.
An ad. In Th* Nxwa gi&gt;ee to tho hcartltetonre the City of Glsugow Bank, has just been wind, and on the outer or sea front of
convicted by the Sontch High Coart of concrete blocks; but beyond the island
Jddiciary of embezzling •3,217,5.55, j»ud to it* termination it is entirely construct­
sentenced to eight months' imprison­ ed of lar*e blocks of artificial atone,
PERUSE THESE LIBERAL AD. RATES.
ment.
, composer! of one. part of French hy­
—There are some audacious thieves draulic lime with two part* of sand, and
5.00 |_&gt;*8-00 In the world. One is a Loudon youth
some of which were transfered to it
8.60 | _ 14.00 who walked into a yard where a num­
from the eastern breakwater. The laH
90.00 ber of pinks were growing, cat them ter, which is also constructed of large
—25.00 from thrir stalks, and, knocking at the masses' of concrete, is of more recent
80.00 front door. Bold them for a few pence to construction, extending to about 6,020
their rightful owner.
feet, and converging toward the wes­
—The Maharajah of Bulrampore.who tern harbor. Such is the harbor of Port
ten cent* a line for first inaer- died recently at Allahabad, was well Said. It can not, according to these
known to sportsmen in India, and is authorities, be considered as a harbor
said to have agisted at the killing of either in respect of extent or depth of
ORNO STRONG,
Editor and Proprietor. BOG tigers. Ho waa one of the most re­ vessels of large tonnage and great draft;
spected native princes.
For distin- but, slightly improved nnd well main­
gvished serylces daring tho mutiny he tained, it ha*, as we have seen, nobly
Near the com­
was granted a large reward by the Brit­ served it* purpose.
mencement of tho West Mole is lhe light­
ish Government.
—Italian papers announce the dis­ house, the tower of which, composed of
VILLAGE OFFICERS.
covery at Dorgali, In the island of' Sar­ a solid mi” of concrete, Is 160 fpet
President—EHhu Chipman.
dinia, of a great stalactite cave. Fifteen high, lighted by an electric light flash­
Recorder—Frank McDerby.
Treasurer—Frank C. Boise.
galleries have been already traced. In ing every twenty seconds and visible at
one of them there is a row of pillars a distance of twenty miles. Three other
asaraoeu—wregurv.
lighthouse* of the same height, though
Trustees— H. A. Barber, F. T. Boise. H. W. like white marble, nnd the floor is
Bemaray, H. R- Dickinson, H. M. Lee and smooth, resembling the finest basalt. differing in construction, have been
CbM. Lentz.
When lit up with torches the combina­ erected along the coMt between the fort
tions and varieties of coloring aro won­ and Alexandria, it is interesting to
know that the solid blocks of concrete
&gt;,rtrtt«.
derfully beautiful.
—Pollnk Castle, lately burned, wa* or artificial stone so extensively used
/ THRISTIAN CHURCH—F A. Bissel,Pastor. one of the most interesting country have, at least below water, become
x-7 Services every 8abb*vth st 10.30 a. in. and houses in the west of Scotland. It was firmer and more trustworthy by reason
7 p. tn. Sabbath school at 12 tn. Prayer tuect- built in the picturesque old Scottish of the growth of seaweed upon them.
ing every Thursday evening
baronial style, about jJOO years ago. Port Said is de-cribed in the latest edi­
■UTETHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH-A. The wiills and entrance* of thn courtyard tion of Mr. Murray’s invaluable “Hand­
1YL I). Necton, Potor. Scrvictu every Sab­ were very quaint; every where were to book of Lower and Upper Egypt” as
bath at 10.40 a. m. and 7 p. in. Sabbath
now regularly laid out in streets and
school st 12 m. Prayer r'eetlng every Thurs­ bo seen carved stone repnwentations of squares, with docks, quays, churches,
the elephantand the greyhound,tho sup­
day evening.
porters ot the Crawford Pollok fami­ hospitals, mosques, ana hotels, and all
the adiuncis ot a seaport, and with the
VY LODGE NO. 87. K. of P., meet* al IU lies.
Castle Hal), NMhvIlle, Michigan, every
most easily approached and safest har­
.Friday evening, for the encouragement and —The rainfall of Ceyinn fqr six bor along lhe coast. Fresh water b
support of all worthy, true, eteadfMt and bon- months in the year is very heavy, and supplied to it from Ismailia, that now
table Brother Kqlgut*.
the monsoon bursts sometimes with famous half-way house of the canal
frightful fury. Thunder and lightning voyage. The town no longer present*
add to the scene. Bridges are swept the same busy appearance which it did
IWiscellanrous Cards.
away almost without warning by the when it was the headquarters of the en­
H. YOUNG. M. I). Office east side of rushing water. Mr. H. F. A. Robinson,in gineering work ; but the increasing traf­
• Main 8t-, Nashville. Office hours from a paper lately read before tho Institute fic through the isthmus always impart*
of Civil Engineers, Ireland, stated that a certain activity to the place.—-V. F.
7 U&gt;9 a. m., and 4 to 7 p. m.
he found by an old diary that on May
A. FOOTE, PHYSICIAN A BURGEON. 14, 1877, his official rainfall raturn Herald.
• Succssor to Dr. Wickham. Office *ec- showed 7.KG inches ; on the 15th, 8.76.
and door north of the Nashville House; resi- nnd on the Ifirh, 8.35, or a total for
Why Egyptians Lack Patriotism.
dedee first door north of the Wolcott House.
throe days of 24.91 inches.
Prompt alien Unn to calls night or day.
During my visit to Egypt—mime seven
—Sir Charles Beresford, who won or eight years agtf-^there was certainly
I C. w. GOUCHER, Electio Physician and
distinctioh nt Alexandria, is thus spoken no national fueling among the Egyptians.
•urgnon, U prepared to answer all calls
of by an officer who knew him fifteen Neither they nor their ancestors, for
that may bo nnfls for his service#.
Office and
years ago: “That young follow wa* nearly two thousand years, had known
During all these long
tXXM- PARMENTER, M.~E Offira over the wildest, most reckless boy I ever native rulers.
YV Hull’s Drue #tor*, Vsnoontvllle, Mich. saw in rav life. There was nothing he centuries they had been the spoil ol
wouldn’t do.
And for all that he was Roman, Arab, Turk and Mameluke in
/"'AHAA H. RRf DY, Lawyer, Circuit Court a splendid sailor. He could show older turn; from none, since the Roman time,
Ucwniai—ion«r, neoi utare ana ouuin .-. officers than he was all over the ^ip. had they received pmlection of life and
A&lt;L Prompt attention (riven to all burina##
property, or anv national benofils, and
•ntnteted to my care. Conveyancta* a #ped»lstraight to the mark when on deck ; bat it was impossible that patriotism should
ty. Offiea opposite Union Hour*.
between deck*—well, there was nothing exist among them, for there is no patri­
M. FLINT, JR. Law, Real Estate, and In- too hot for him. If there wa« ever a otism save in a country worth loving.
• surance. Conveyancing and Collections a dangerous niece to get into Beresford The conduct of the Egyptian troops in
specialty.
__________________________
waa there first.”
the late Russian war is a proof of this.
The few battalions I saw in Egypt wore
MORY PARADY, Justice of the Peace.
Office, Corner Main and Sherman Street*.
tine-looking troops—well armed, in­
Port Haiti.
structed and eauipped, with intelligent
LIEBHAU8ER, Merchant Tailor and deal• er in Ready Made Clothing. See me
Pon. Said is distant by sea from Alex­ faces and excellent physique; yet they
proved
utterly worthless, as it soems to
before yop purchase clothing. • Fits guar­ andria *-.boui l+'J miles. Tho port is
anteed.
purely the recent creation of human in­ me, because th*y were destitute of that
pride
which
Is inspired by patriotism;
genuity
snd
labor:
and
the
town
which
HATCH A CO., Manufacturers of Taffy
• Candles, Chocolate Drop* and Cannels. has sprung up behind it, though num­ for them their flag had no meaning, iu
Fruits, Fancy Candies, Cigars. Toitaccos, etc.. bering now at least 10,000 inhabitant, honor was no concern of tbeirs. Their
always In stock. Second door north of the is not leas the creation of the port. As oondoct in Abyssinia and lhe Soudan
post office.
M.
Masson, the French engineer, ob­ was similar, nnd no doubt from the same
TTIRANK BAKER, Manufacturer of B-wts served, it is a port “contre nature.” At cause. How can valor and patriotism
-T and Shoes, pegged or sewed. Repairing this Mediterranean extremity of the ca­ be expected from men whose only
promptly attended to. at the sign ot the red nal, indeed, tho prospect might well knowledge of their government is that
boot, east aide Main Su
have daunted the heart of tho most derived from the tax-gatherer, the basTACOB O3MUN, Livemnon, barn near Wol- courageon* &lt;&gt;f projectors. Tho problem1 tlinado and forced labor? The achieve­
tl eoll Hoose. First class turnouts at reason­ was to get depth upon a comparatively ments of that great soldier, Ibrahim
able rates. Sjiecial rales to cooinicrcla) men. shallow, sandv coast; and this was prac­ Pacha, are not in contradiction with this
Funeraland wediug parties f uratebed with car tically attained by commencing the work conclusion,
few of his troops
uuunusiuu, because
uwa
riages on short Douce.
" ‘
. His conquering armies
on a sand-bank twenty-six miles from J wer® ”
Fellaheen,
T&gt; RAUN BROS., Shoemakers. Special atten­ the mainland. This long bank or belt wore mainly composed of Arabs Syntion given to fine and sewed boota, also o( sand, extending from tho month of ।l aur,
... fact, of nghtnns, ouMinun,
Nubians, niuuuv?
Anmuts—
—in
repairing. All manufactured work madMrutn
I ing mon from all tho neighboring parts
best of stock and warranted. First door south tho Dauiietta brunch of the Nile to the of the East, who were reduced to dis­
Gulf of Pelosium, is described in Mr.
Boise’s hardware.
Wyld’a map a* being of fine gray sand, cipline by his stern will and guided to
WALLACE- BEAUCHAMP, Liveryman. five feet osly above low water mark, victory by his great military genius.—
Gen'~
VV NsabvUlfl House Barn.
Single and and varying from 109 to 164 yards in Gen. Georqe B. McClellan, in the r
doable turn outs furnished promptly and rca- length Behind this irregular barrier is lury.
rnnabty. Commercial men driven to neigh­ the shallow lake of Menzaleh, through
boring towns al special rate*.
which it was, of course, necessary to
Woolen Machinery.
ELLOGG &amp; BELL, proprietors Planing make an artificial channel tor the
The statistician makes known on the
Mill. Planing and Matching, Resawing canal. The first thing to be accom­
and Moulding t specialty. Scroll Sawing, plished, however, was to construct the authority of good judges that a woolen
Brackets. Window and Door Frame# made to foundations for the future town to be mill requires thorough renewal every
order. Wood Turning in all iu branches.
namerl after che then Viceroy.and then to double decade. There are altogether
ffAA W. DEMARAY, Daalar tn Watehaa, project into the sea the two enormous nine thousand set* of woolen machinery
Clocks, fin# Jewelry and Silverware. Being breakwaters or moles which form the in the country. The number worn out
» practical Jeweler, patrons can de;&lt;ad upon outer port and protect it against that and replaced every year is estimated at
baring their repairing done right Two doors constant tendency to the accummulation four hundred and fifty sets. This in­
■oath oi Truman’s store.
of sand, which, even as it is, demands cludes thirteen hundred or more cards
TOMAH B. RAfiEY, Express and Dntj
constant dredging. The spot chosen on and spinning mule*, with ten to fifteen
V Goods and Baggage carried to any pli
the sand bank, or strip of what is lo­ thousand looms. The price of mules
cally known as “slob,” is described as varies from seven hundred and fifty to
nine hundred dollars, according to the
IRAM R DICKINSON, manufacturer of little more than 600 feet wide.
and dealer in Hard Wood Lumber. BuildTho plan of the engineers was simple. number of spindles. To replace the
At first a light framing of piles was run mules worn out every year the sum of
out, on which a crane and trucks laden nearly one million two hundred and fifty
The
TAMES FLEMING, practical Jeweler and with loose stones traveled, and in a thousand dollars is expended.
if Watch-maker. Clocks, Watches, Barer and short time a fairly substantial pier that average durability of the machinety of
Plated Ware, Jewelry and Optical Goods. Rock­ served as a landing stage for material and a mill is about twenty years. The dura­
ford Watches a specialty. Repairing and Engrtrmachinery was constructed. Hero was, bility of different piece^ of machinery
in fact, the great workshop of tho un­ varies. A set of cards' used carefully
/~kRNO STRONG, plain and Iauc} «od rnnter. dertaking throughout tho ten years of its may last half of a century. The cloth­
V/ Tbs best facilities fordcilngwork of any construction. Encouraged by this suc­ ing on them may be renewed every five
cess (says Mr. fitzgerald) a bolder work years. Looms are long lived. They
waa ventured on. Out In the bay, at may continue in use fifty years, but gen­
nearly a mile distant, huge piles were erally twenty years’ service is about a*&lt;
W. NIBKERN, Attorney and Counccllor screwed into the sands, and an oblong much as they can render. The males’
• at Law, practices Id all State Courts. Col island was then formed with stones, the average time of durability is fifteen
lections promptly attended to- Office over space between this island and the wood­ years. A set of cards comprises gener­
en shore pier being gradually filled Jn. ally three to four separate carding ma­
In manufacturing different
Every day the piles settled firmly iu chines.
HOUSE.
their places in spite of the storms of the styles of woolens there are thirty-five
bay.
This temporary structure was or forty different processes, and nearly
I. M. Flint &amp; Son, Prop*,
carried out to a distance of about 300 every process call* into use a different
feet, and it was not till throe years- be­ kind ol machine.—Providence Journal.
fore the canal was complete and ready
for opening that the work was seriously
—An Indi*n*polis girl, forbidden by
Iteatefr cstykd free. F*m- resumed and the breakwater joined to her parent* to many the man of her
t Kaus, rsaaonaMe. F&lt;wd the pier. Two officers employed by the choice, pretended to be abundantly con­
British Government to examine the port soled by the promise of a grand birth­
described it m formed by two rough, day party. When all the guest* were
jjArnXfcig bouse
narrow, and low breakwaters, inclosing assembled on that occasion she walked
in on the arm of her lovdl*, who had
N. T. PARKER, Prof.
of
Tills is the leading repree
MONK I---' •

StWING

err I'ndrr

Boaujon, France, and then awoke very
slowly, the use of the faculties as weu
m the limbs relurningonly by gradual
steps. r^Spceoh was restored last.

Hashvillf ginrtonj.

I

W
L

WiUiam Heal u&gt;1 Kill* Cruft were convict'd

Supreme-Court. George Ellis, an sowmpHce,
tncr.t for life, wm hanged by

On Monday lost Neal and Craft, guarded by
one section of artillery, arrived st Catletts­
burg from Lexington, where they bare been
odd for safe-keeping, to stand trial. It was
learned at Ashland, tn soiqe mysterious way,
that Judge Brown wm going to grant a change
word wm telegraphed from that place to
Catlettsburg that most of the men bad quit

OF -DETROIT.
tory bad closed down. A11 &lt;he men. ao the improved and Finest Pnttrrns of* &lt; &lt;H&gt;ks un&lt;l '
ninrkrt.
Zii&gt;&lt;*s.
Mime Furniture. E
dispatch said, wore marching on Catlettslmrg.
in an hour or so nearly one hundred and fifty. PAINTS. VARNISHES, COLOS. BRUSHES.
WELL and CI SI E UN PUMPS.
.
POINTS, PIPE. SINKS. KTfl
looking crowd they were. They carried no
CHAMPION X-CliT SA
arms about them, but were said to bare
Detroit White IzCh&lt;1 Works Color*.—The Ik*st i
marcbed sullenly about the streets, the rumors
BUILDERS HARDWARE, SASH. DOORS.
of coming trouble increased.
GLASS, LUCKS. KNOBS, dr. Ac.
At one o'clock the court-houso yard was
•
NAILS. I RO
packed with a dense mass of men, most of
whom seemed to have come from the Adjoin­ When in Itieeti of lhe Bfest Griuli v of Hard
ing counties. The couri-bousc waa packed
when the soldiers marched in with the prison­
ers. The soldiers went inside the bar. sur­
rounded the chairs of the prisoners, and pro-

E
S

P

K

O

H

he

• NFS, ETC.

for a change of venue was overwhelming.
Judge Brown said be wm sorry to say. for the
honor of his old borne, that Boyd County could
not give the accused men a fair trial, and bo
wouid havc-to grunt a change of venue, and in
compliance with the lew he would have to
County, and the trial would be act for the thlr I

By Buying Your Dry

begins on the flnit Monday in February.

■rrarcbcd them
room.
Soon then* were but a few men In the yard
or near the building, and the dangerou*-l*&gt;ok-

W. S. GOODYEAR &amp;

of violent1*. Strunge to say. lite Bxcellciiry.
Governor L. P. Blackburn. wm abused almost
This afternoon at 2:30 Sheriff Kountx. with
the State troop* snd priaoni-rs. boarded tho
steamboat Granite State fur Mavsvlllo. intend­
ing to go th •■nee by rail to Lexington to the
Jail, to confine the prisoner* until trial.
After the Granite State. with the soldiers
and escort had left, the citizens took the train
and returned to Ashland, which is live tnilea
alxiut thirty or forty, mostly wild boys, board­
ed tho ferry-boat an I started out to bail the
Granite State, which »#* hurrying by near th.

r*-garde*I the fi-rr*-boat's signa! to bind, and

CO.,

We fully realize the

That most all kind.s of produce are bringing thif« 1.1U. &gt;o huve
bought a large stock of all kinds of

DRY GOODS. FANCY GOODS. NO­
TIONS, BOOTS and SHOES,
and CARPETS.
And ure selling at prices that will ft8tonii*h \&lt;»u.

D

I

MACH.NF,

up. but wm t nnii principally agultist the
crowu o« uixiiicniiiiig Bixjcumnrs u|xio cue
wharf and Front street. All who wcr.* killed
tu&gt;d mortally wound# I were shot on or near

fcrrj-iiout the military kept tlnng a** lonv
as they could sec the boat or a soul In
ct-yb *dy Iu B&lt;&gt;y&lt;l County.
Thu f**lli&gt;w li&gt;irnamed pvrvon# were killed or mortally w nitnL
cd: John Ba»«. Jnm&gt;-« McDuna'd, Colonel Ra|&gt;rurt. Georjn* Kcelor. Mr. Dunlap'** twbv. Mort
tunlan. Alexander Watt. John Gnlliurhcr.
Mra. Jack Seen. Graham Randall. Bob Lath-

Seventeen

l&lt;cri&gt;onx were

Hastings,

W. S. GOOD YE
October 4, 1882.

I

bL

CO.

, iamah

WHO IS UNACQUAINTED WITH THE GEOGRAPHY OF THIS Gv/UNTRY, WILL
RFC nv FXAMIMIMQ THIS MAP. THAT THE

(jj
Va4

Mltrhtly

Allen wuhlair to avoid a ooliteion with the
mob. They t&lt;'l«-;rni|&gt;b&lt;sJ to Major Alien that
they would lx* at Cutlcttsbur* nt 11:30, but

I
H iZ
|_J lH
“
‘i

rhoie trouble would have b&lt;*en avoidnd.

cupled the pilot-LouM*. the latter lielng on
watch, says the soldiers were placed In the
pik&gt;t-bou#e to keep the pilots at their post. He
says that Shota were fired at the Granite State
both from the wharf-lmat nnd the men on the
lank. Many of Uicmj were aimed nt the pilot­
house, and six bulls struck the pilot-house. A
number of other bullet-marks appear on other

OR

Imat Dvnn.n fs certain. Both be uud lhe clerk.
I’hteter. say li would have been easy for U|(.
terry-boat to bnvc overtaken them nnd bad &lt;i
nctod with promptness in n-tumnix the tire, i MJ
_
__
They.peak in o.mm. ndotlon of the «&lt; tk.n &lt;.f I I
Ito officers, und say then* was no disposition , krl MlHUHUV, RUvR lOLHlVU OL
V&lt; ■ y
shown to be bloodthirsty or malicious.
PJ Being the Great Central Line, afford# to travelers, by r*x\»on of l»-v unrivaled n®oUom ih*-rv um nf Urn tnions to Ix-xinvfon n .
____ _
...__ ______ _________________ ....______ _

CHICAGO

Major .A Urn. und obtain- d the following state­
ment: Thi- motion tor change of venue bnv- .
In&lt;r been grantu.l bv Judge Brown, nnd the ,
css* removed fo Carter County, an order
issued directing the Sheriff, In connection 1

in# that aftcrnixin then* wen- a pood tnntiy ru­
mor# to tho effect thnt I arm* crowd# were congn-trntinpnt Aihlxnd prviMirattiry to coming
to Cntlctt«t&lt;urv that nUbt to take the prison­
ers. Craft nnd Neat A telegram wan received
by Major Allen from an official of the Chosnp*-ake A Ohio Hnilroad. stating that a tnul* b»&gt;l
taken poa*i-Mlot&gt; ot the tool# ot the railroad
section hurida at Ashland. #n*i. ns the telegraph
«t*L*a, evidently meaning mischief. Another
telegram whs received by the Major t*Citing
thnt the mob hail torn up the track nt A«l»land. believing that the troops would return
that night with the prisoners. Major Allen
bait for his command return tickets over the
Cb-Mapcakc A Ohio Itailrond. nnd intended to
gb back that way. but believing It unsafe,
made arrangements through his QiiHrtcrnuutter with the Captain of tho Granite State,
which went upto Huntington that ev* n«xur. to
t»lro them un his return tripto Maysville. That
night the troop#, in expectation of an attack
from a mob from Ashland, were under the
stricteet guard. Eighteen men, relieved every
two hour*, guarded every street approaching
th** court-house, and mounted pickets were
posted at different points of the town under
the command of Captain Murphy. Major AL
^u said that the only lighting done by his men
whs dore as the txisu passed each other. He
did not round to or stop to fight; all ho want-

P

ROCK ISLAND &amp; PACIFIC

i
It is literally and strictly true, that Its connections are all of the principal lines
iof road between the Atlantic and the Pacific.
By Its main line and branches It reachas Chicago, Jolie*, F-’Orin, Ottawa,
'Washington, Keokuk. Knoxville, Oskaloosa, Fairfield, Des Mon.-., ’.Vest Llburty,
Iowa City, Atlantic, Avoca, Audubon, Harlan, Guthrie Center
'J Council Bl-jfts,
In Iowa
Iowa;; Gallatin, Trenton, Cameron
Car
nnd Kansas City, In Mlj-n--l, and Lcavon; worth and Atohlson in Kansas,
I Intermediate.
I"*««rI.... The
Th,*

I■

W.“GREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE,”
A# It Is familiarly called, offers to travelers all the ad van tt roa and comforts
Incident to a smooth track, safe bridges. Union Depots at al! connecting points,
H'Fast Express Trains, composed of COMMODIOUS, WELL VENTILATED, WELL
HEATED, FINELY UPHOLSTERED and ELEGANT DAY COAC ilZO; a lino Of the
II MOST MAGNIFICENT HORTON RECLINING CHAIR CARS ever built | PULLMAN'S
r*‘latest designed and handsomest PALACE SLEEPING CARS, cind DINING CARS

&lt;

THREE TRAINS each way between CHICAGO and the MISSOURI RIVER.
I
TWO TRAINS each way between CHICACO and MINNEAPOLIS and ST. PAUL,
1 via the famous.
1

1

ALBERT LEA ROUTE.
between Newport Now#, R^rhmond, Cincinnati, Indianapolio nnd La Faydtta.
—1 Council Bluffa, St. Paul, Minneapolis and intermediate points.
*
All Through Passengers carried on Fast Express Trains.
For Rtore detailed Information, see Ma pan nd Folders, which may be obtained, a*

R. R. CABLE.
“Is nils woman your wife!" asked the
Justice of a colored man. “ Is what my wife f
“Is this woman your wife!” “I don’t see no
wile.” “Is thia man your hnsbandl” “Dat
goa’leman is my husband." "Weil, ladies
and gentlemen, I have investigated this case,

E. ST. JOHN

CHICAGO

at the news office
Get Our Prices Before JUo
Elsewhere

.

bum an night is because the light is so small
ttartrt teafrwM touunutalxme.-J---------

Years

�"f .
LICET.

Tljir3irw;S
SATL'RDAY

Our eleotton pawed off quietly and

10th.

Will Stanton and wife have returned
from Chicago, and report having a

Propbet In th# Pou lan.

Uwey Beema to be left out in the wet
■o far m a correspondent is concerned,
■o I will •end yon a few items.

William McCombxr Bartered Manin WoU

Compiled - from Lata Shpaioha.
DOMXSTra,
B.XT ik. OUUUw. of Xwlook,

lun

teapted to hide his crime by burning the
When McComber was ipprebended by
tbeBberiff be drew a revolver and shot blm-

Tag Aluk* Indians Laving captured two
the United tHates revenue cutter Corwin on
the I'.'th shelled the unlive village and ds-

eral Missionary Committee of the Methodist
Episcopal Church In New York City a report
was made showing a decrease of liabilities
amounting to &lt;28,343 during tl»o year. The
gregnUng *715,000.,
. The Erie Canal will bo eloecd eo the 7th of
December.
,
Ar Baltimore a few days ago Bartholomew
Tally fell from tbe third to the second floor of
the dty hall and waa Instantly killed.

by the caving of a sand-bank on tbe line of
lhe Macon A Brunswick (Ga.) RailroaL
Diphtheria andscarlet fever are causing
great mortality amoug children at Birdsboro,
Tiir call ier gold certificates irotn cities
outside of New York aggregate 119,000,000.
8an Francisco has made an application tor
*5,000 000.

the New York Herald had organ lxcd a coro-

presa, primarily, and for
tbe public apcommodarion^jceondarily, wijh
the avowedbbject oYTargely diminishing lhe
coot of o&lt;»m telegraphy.
The Globo Rubber Company, of Trenton,
N. J., failed ou tbe 9th for &lt;173,000.
George E. Buck, a railroad contractor,
started from Mobile a few days ago for Now

Mississippi City he stepped oat on the plat­
form and shot himself dead. It waa thought

Lee, Bloom A Co., wholesale liquor dealers
of Louisville, Ky., made an assignment on the
9th for 180,000.
■
Miss Mast Axdeesox, teacher in a Louis­
ville public school, got up from the breakfast
table at ber home tbe other morning, went
to a room, and shot herself dead. Heart
troubles.
Dreino the month of •October 1,068 mile*
of railway track ysre laid in the .United
Blates, reaching a total of 9,143 miles laid
from January 1 to November 1, 1882..
The great wooden railroad bridge across
the Susquehanna River at Great Bend, N. Y..
Ox tbe 9tb a New Orleans journalist offered
to pay tbe gas company for lighting tbe streets
for five days, and appealed to citizens to
meet and take measures to relieve themselves
from their humiliating situation. Because
of tbe failure of. the city to jury Its gas bills
the gas company has refused longer to light
the street and public lamps.
Tax residence of Biefstadt, the artist, at
Irving-ou-tbe-Huteon, together with a large
collection of pictures and other valuables,
waa destroyed by fire on the morning of the

The Interior Department has decided that
land entries made for grazing purposes do not
constitute residence.
Tin. business fnJ lures in tho United States
during the seven days ended on the 9th num­
bered 141, against 516 for the week previous
At the meeting of the 6an Francisco Stock
Board on the 9th •LUO was bid for &lt;1,000
Confederate bonds.
The report of the .Superintendent of the
Carlisle (Pa)‘Indisn School shows that at tbe
date of the last report there were 180 Indian
boys and 87 Indian girls at school During
the year &lt;75 l»oys and 51 girls had been re­
ceived, and 02 boys and 28 girls returned to
the agencies. Four boys and two girls filed,
and at the close of the fiscal year 188 boys and
108 girls remained at school.
There was a heavy •now-storm in Wyoming
Tcrtitory on the 10th.
Araw days ago Father O'Donohne. a Cath­
olic priest at Morrow. Ohio, wm kUlexl by the
husband of a woman whom.he bad denounced
from his pul pi L
It laannounccd that an organized effort k
making in the East to break down the recent­
ly inaugurated Chicago dresred-beef trade.
,At tbe recent meeting ot the higher priest­
hood trt the Mormon Church at Salt Lake
President Taylor Instructed them that Presi­
dents and Bishops and Ifcclr councillors were
not entitled to bold their positions unless
they qualified by becoming polygamists.

dtana were killed and the priaonen were reJohn Kean accidentally
George.
The Paine &lt;fc Sackett Woolen Manufactur­
ing Compay v, of Providence, R- L, failed on
the 13tb. Liabilities, &lt;300,000.

urb

Catholic Church in New York on the 18th by
the tailing of a portion- of the celling, three
women fainting, but no one was seriously in-

The bonds held by tbe United States Treas­
urer to secure National Bank circulation
amounted on tbe 11th to &lt;303,840,050.
The Agricultural Department in its No­
vember report estimates the corn crop for
-the* current year at 1,680,030,030 bushels. In
tbe South the quality of the crop la superior.
Oxly one case of yellow fever developed
at Pensacola, Fla., on tbe 13th, and the change
continuance of quarantine. The Governor of
. Texas has ordered the cordon abolished.
By the burning of tbe court-house and jail
at Crockett, Tex. the other morning, two
male prisoners perished. All the records were
destroyed.
Tax fast train westward on the New York
Central Road ran into a locomotive at Peeks­
kill on the 13th, throwing the engine and
drawing-room car from the track, severely In­
juring four persons. Secretary Folger, who
was a passenger, escaped unhurt.
Thr total exchanges for twenty-six leading
clearing-houses In the United States for tbe
weekended on the 11 th wpre &lt;1,263,677,366,
against &lt;1,322,947,347 for the week previous.
Tua boiler in the iron-works ot Atkins &lt;fc
Clark, al Cleveland, Ol, exploded a few after­
noons ago, killing four men, inflicting fatal
Injuries upon a number of others, and totally
wrecking the building.
8ix colored inmates of the jail at Bowling
Green, Kj., made their escape before day­
light on tbe morning of tbe 18tb. Three of
them were about to be taken to tbe peni­
tentiary.
There were frosts in Louisiana. Arkansas,
Tennessee and Texas oc the night of the
12th.
Ax unknown man and woman were found
dead in tbe Astor Place Hotel, New York
City, a few mornings ago, having been suffo­
cated by blowing out the gas.
Ur to tbe 13tb there had been received at
tbe Treasury in Washington &lt;267,128,650 ex­
tended three-and-one-half per cent, bonds for
exchange into three-per cents.

PERSONAL AND POLITICAL.
The Vermont Legiahture mot in joint as­
sembly at the Capitol on the 7th and elected
the following State officers: Secretary of
State, Nichols; Auditor of Accounts, E.
Henry Powell; Brigadier Commander, Lieu­
tenant, J. Kingsley; Adjutant and Inspector­
General, Theodore S. Peck; Quartermaster­
General, Horace K. Ide; Judge Advocate­
General, a M. Marsh; Bute Superintendent
of Education, Justus Dart; Chief-Justice of
tbe Supreme Court, Homer E. Royce.
Francis George Shaw, the famous antlalavcry advocate, died at West New Brighton,
Tus vote In New York City on the propo­
sition to amend the Constitution so as to
make the canals free was practically unani­
mous, only 630 rotes being recorded against
IL Tbe proposition received a very large mv
jority throughout the State.
x
Or the 293 members of the laat House of
Representatives, 173 were candidate* for re­
election. One hundred and thirty were re­
elected and forty-three were defeated.
Archbishop Bourget, of Montreal, cele­
brated on the 9th the sixtieth anniversary of
his entrance Into the priesthood.
It Is announced that W. W. Corcoran,
ot Washington, will next spring cause the
remains of John Howard Payne to be ex­
burned in Tunis and brought across the Au
lantlc tor interment at lhe Nsttoaal capital.
Tn Free-Car.il amendment was indorsed

«&gt; tbe 11th for Liverpool.
Tax Democratic leaders in North Caro­
lina on tbe 11th conceded the election of tbe
entire Republican State ticket and of Q. H.
Dockcry as Congress man-at-largc by 1,000
Four roofers were precipitated to the majority.
The President returned to Washington on
ground a few days ngo at Gardiner, Me., by
tbe breaking of a staging, &lt;11 being fatally the 23th, to remain for the winter.
The proposition to cede tbe Illinois &amp;
Injured.
Michigan
Canal, in Illinois to the General
Robert Cakfbell, proprietor of an ex­
tensive tanning establiamcnt at Plctou, N.S., Government was carried by an overwhelming
majority at the late election.
■ failed on the 16th for &lt;150,000.
Mna. Scoville lectured at London, Ont.,
Secretary Holger on the Mrth issued a
caU for the redemption of &lt;15.0SQ.000 flvo-per­ on tbe evening ot tbe 13th, and pronounced
cents continued At three and one-half, paya­ her busband the craziest member of ths
ble February 10 acxt, on which date interest Guiteau family. She announced her inten­
tion to return to Chicago and await the result
Q M. Burgess, «who waa defeated for Conn- of a new hearing as to her sanity.

monogamists. One has since resigned rather
than take another wife. His resignation haa

Donley dead at Henriette on tbe 10th for
making ditporart ng remarks about kirn dur­
ing tike campaign.
Foes tons of povrfier exploded the other
day a£ Keenan’a )ia.e-worka, near White­
hall, JL Y., blowing two men to atoms.
Vaxhcrbilt has recently sold to wo-inga
banks in Nev York, in a quiet way, no lss&gt;
than •19,000,000 of his faur per cent boafis,
two pointe below the enrrent market price.
TBRBEeadets have beca-dismlMcd from the
Naval Academy at AnnapoUs for bszlnz.
B. C. Akmbtroxo, Superintendent of the
Indian School at Hampton, Virginia, reported
on the 10th that &lt;50.714 Lad been contributed
by individuals and nid to the amount of &lt;35,­
935 waa furnished by the Government Tho
pupOs last year fonwd out aeMsty-five sets

FOREIGN.
The British Consul at Jeddah telegraphed
oti tbe 7th that the cholera had disappeared
from Mecca.
Mrs. McLachmax, the wife of a wealthy
farmer residing near Ottawa, Ont, recently
killed heroelf with 1’arta green because a
neighbor refused her offer to purchase hla
lands and add them to another.
the 9th.
The Egyptian Government haa announced
the abolition of the joint control over Its
financial affairs by England nnd France.
Grkbce and Turkey have signed a protocal
looking to tbe evacnstlou of tbe disputed
points on tbe frontier.
'
The American Consul at Dunkirk. Franca,

the Mississippi in barges to Naw Orleans.

In Brazil.
was ordered by the Lord.

new on the Bradford, Eldred &lt;fc Cuba Ballroad

Tax Spanish Cabinet, at a meeting on the
Oth over which Ktaz Alphonse presided, re-

England.
feet. The engineer and fireman were killed,

tween luirich and Bordj Banc Aneridj, tn

and the injury of thirty-six others.
In his month. The result waa the destrucUuo

docks at Toronto were burned a few mornings
■go, entailing a toss of 110^000.

Buhr'a hotel, and other bulldlngr, the Joos
at the improved

E L, has been created Archbishop of Halifax.
Tur cor[&gt;oration of Dublls, Ireland, after
a heated debate on the 10th decided against
conferring on General Wo'.seley the freedom
of the city.
Tub French journals attribute the suppres­
sion of French control io Egypt to Dufferfa’s
Influence, and on the 10th fiercely attacked
what they termed the bad faith and evil poli­
cy of Great Britain.
Tire capslxtng on the 12th of a fishing-boat
off Bay Dedorr, Lake Ontario, caused the
drowning of all hands.

TM1 ONB-PRICK

The fall crops are nearly all Mcuied
in good order. The opinion here is
that wheat ia injured some by the in-

The hunters that went north from
here send home word that they are
killing some deer and * having a good
time generally.
Our store and blacksmith shop seem
to be doing a good business, but we
need a shoe shop and wagon shop and
the 12th, which remained visible until ten then farmers in this vicinity would be
o’clock a. m.- The people were awc-stricken, very well supplied;
The Bulls and Bears of Lacey were
proaching. They declare It is a bod omen to
them, as after the appearance ot the last com­ out on a raid among the Fish last week.
et 60,000 persons died of'small-pox.
Tbe Bulla went out one night, and the
At Dublin. Ireland, on the 11th Patrick
old saying is "bullhead luck against
years' penal servitude tor highway robbery science,” consequently they brought
and firing upon an officer, attempted to shoot in about 9000 bullheads. A few
Justice Lawson, but bls design was frustrated, nights after the Beays went out and
they came in with barely anything.
Tn coffee crop of Hayti is said to be less
The Lacey Blue Shanks and the
than a two-thirds yield, and the quality is
Dowling Shad Bellies played a match­
Ab a philanthropic measure, the Govern­ game of ball last week for two gallons
ment of India proposes to institute agricult­ of soft soap. The Blue Shanks came
ural banka, to make loans to the poorer
classes st lhe maximum rate of twelve per in ahead ten to two, bat they got in so
much foul that it took all the soap to
cehtChili has reopened, peace negotiations clean them up fit for Sabbath school
Sunday morning. I understand that
Taena and Arial.
the Shad Bellies offer to bet them nine
Margaret Scott, of Mart intown, Quebec,
calf
livers that they can’t do it again.
who for three years had been almost helpless
from congestion of tbe spinal cord, claims to That’s the* kind of grit—who cares for
have been restored to heal th by the prayers of expense.
Pink Eye.
a party of ladles st her bedside. Rev. James
MeCaui, of Montreal, vouchea for the truth of
tbe story.
WEST
KALAMO.
- The London newspaper printers have
■truck for higher wages. Tbe demand has
Growing wheat improveth.
been acceded to in some quarters, but up to
Corn husking still lingereth.
tbe 13th most of tbe proprietors stood cut,
□oe Mix has moved back on the old.
and a general dead-lock prevailed.
The propiaal of the German Government homestead.
to prohibit the importation of American
Farmers are prearing for a very se&gt;
pork meets with a general protest.
vere winter.
The native population in tbe Nile Delta la
8. P. Robart is preparing material for
In great distress on account of the failure of
a now house.
Da E. Lute, of Cleveland, stepped through
L. McKinnis lost by death one of his
the open door of an elevator in the Black­ horses last week.
stone block a few days ago and fell thirty
Wild geese are journeying south­
feet to the stone basement, fracturing bis
ward in large flocks.
skull.
Last Monday morning a young bliz­
Figuexas, who for four months after tbe
abdication of King Amadeus was Preaident zard visited this section.
of tbe Spanlsu Republic, died the other day
Will Showalter left last week for Peat Madrid.
tosky to spend tbe winter.
A daughter made bcr appearance in the
Elias Ogden and wife of Eaton Rap­
royal household at Madrid on the 12tb.
Ox Looloo Island, one of the PhUIppinea, a ids were visiting in this section last
week.
body of insurgents attacked the Spanish fort
on the 13th, aud were repulsed with a lots of
The "beautiful,‘snow” sprinkled
seventy meu.
lightly over tins section Monday.
A niAitiE fire on the Mongolian frontier
A couple of sample peddlers were
of Russia bad covered a space of seventy
square miles on tbe 13th, consuming many victimising West Kalamoites last week.
Don’t mention mule riding to Will
Cossack villages.
The British steamship Angelica, running Griffith, as it might cause a blush on
from Hull, foundered In the North Sea on bis cheeks.
tbe 18th, and forty Ilves were lost Tho
John Andrews’ little four-year-old
•teamship Westphalia struck an unknown
vessel off the English coast and eent ber to son is just recovering from a long and
the bottom, causing the loss of several Uvea. severe illness.
lx the British House of Commons on the'
Mrs. A. B. Tillison is reported as be­
13th Mr. Gladstone stated that Arabi Pasha ing a sufferer with a cancer of the
would certainly not be put to death unless stomach, and very ill.
the British Government was consulted.
George Rapson will move into Cas­
Thirtt-thhee persons were badly injured
tleton, and Will Green takes possession
by a recent explosion in a mine In Saxony.
The G:rm n authorities have caused tho of the bouse vacated by Rapson.
Indictment of two thousand persona for deal­
The book "MichigaB in the war” is
ing In forbidden foreign lotteries
is now being distributed to Michigan
soldiers, and ’tis a splendid presentLATER NEWS.
The great comet must have got tired
The proposed Woman-Suffrage amendment
to tbe Couitltution of Rhode I Bland waa voted of the sun and started out on a ram­
down at tbe recent election. Tbe count page, as it is scudding west in great
Hood: For, 4.398; against, 5,122.
haste.
During the week ended November 11, 743,­
Geo. Slater and Will Davis went to
400 silver dollars were placed in circulation. Battle Creek on a fishing tour last
For the corresponding period last j ear the
Saturday, got wet, got fish and got
number wa#*444,000.
•
D. Arnott &amp; Co., wholesale dealers In dry home.
goods at Toronto, Can., made an aastgnmeni
L. M. Winters and wife of Petoskey
on tbe 14th for &lt;250.000.
are visiting Eaton county friends. Mr.
Typhoid fever Is epidemic at Providence, Winters was formerly a resident of
IL I. On tbe 14th there were between 1.300
■ nd 1,5&lt;M cases iu tbe city, and great uneasi­ this town.
Old Mm. Reynold’s a pioneer of Kal­
ness prevailed.
The fall of a derrick at Cleveland recently amo, now a resident of Walton, has
caused tbe death of three men almost instant­ been visiting Kalamo friends for the
ly, and the severe wounding of another.
post few week.
Emperor William opened the Prussian
Republicans despondent, democrats
Diet on tbe 14th with the statement that tbe
relations of Germany with the foreign pow­ jubilant Green—what’d you call ’em
ers justified the belief that lhe benefits of are up Salt River, and still the country
ih prospering.
Ax Alton construction train, when near
Mr. and Mrs. Will Green are again
Oak Grove, Mo., a few days aBo struck a residents of West Kalamo. They have
hand-car on which were four men. The train
was ditched, and a brakeman and five sec­ a host of friends here who are happy
tion hands were killed and ten others were to greet them.
wounded.
There is a considerable rush for the
The report of the Irish Land Commission poor house among our townspeople
issued on the 14th says agreements for fair this fall. They are looking for free
rente between landlord and tenant were in­
creasing, while an indisposition to purchase trade and better times.
Miss Esther McMore closed ber fall
holdings was evident, although many land­
owners were willing to sell.
term of school in the Matteson district
Jox Hughes and Marker Davis were found this week Friday. Miss McMore will
murdered in the streets of 8L Joseph, Mo., teach the winter term in *the same
early a few mornings ago. It was believed
they were killed by a man named Harrington district.
because they refused to return to him money
which they had won from him at cuds.
■ORGAN.
The suit of Samuel Wilkinson against
Henry Ward Beecher to recover *10,030 for
Fire—Mr«. Ruckle received, every
breach of contract touching tbe publication
cent given, and don’t you forget it.
H. D. Webb Bowed the harvest of
York on tbe 14th.
Mb. Gladstoxb stated In the British House ftOcta worth of oata which will bring
of Commons on the 14tn that 11 was neces­ him now &gt;23.
sary that 12,000 British troops remain in
Philip T. Colgrove made a good im­
Egypt :ot the present, and that a treaty
pression upon our honest headed, in*
would soon be msde providing that tbe coat of
the maintenance of this army would be de­ dustrial clauses.
Mrs. L. P. Cole’s brothers family
frayed ly England.
CHARLES Hxwet. Jh_, a Texas merchant, (Schothornes) from Ohio, are now pay­
quarreled with two brothers named Butler, ing her family a visit.
at Texarkana, the other night, and when they
Miss. Emma Walker cloned her fall
followed him with deadly Intent, shot them
term of school Friday,
She received
both dead.
The Baptist Congress begun a three &lt;lay« next to the highest grade.
Msalou In tbe First Baptist Church al Brook­
Will Gurd is home from —
lyn ou the 14th. The Rev. Dr. Boardman. of He has been confined in a hospital and
ITilladcilhia, presided.
praises the Sisters of Mercy.
Tax Knickerbocker Block In Minneapolis
Mrs. Lorenio Mudge sold her farm,
Minn., was recently burned, invalving a loss
purposing to remove her family and
permanently reside at Hastings.
The stores at Morgan have good
sales. The goods are milked with
Hastings prices. Come and see.
Com.

Everytbllw Hew, Hlyltah. and Durable.

Ttie attention ol Parents is respectfully called to our large stock of

CHILDREN’S, BOYS’, AND YOUTHS’ CLOTHING,
.

Which U the moat complete ever laid down tn NaahvUe.

CAPS, CAPS

HATS, HATS,

And believe we have something desirable and very cheap.
We have made additions to our

Boots, Shoes, Gents' Furnishing Goods, Groceries, Underwear, Etc.
With the view of suiting the most particular cnMomere.

Our stock of Boots and Shoes ia larger than ever, and no competitor
will be allowed to undersell ua.

.

CALL jVND

SEE.

PRINDLE A CHIPMAN.

This space belongs to

C. W. CRANCER a CO.
Look out for their

NEW ADV. NEXT WEEK,
For they are receiving a large stock of
IWew Good* and
will offer
Something ol Interest.

NEW

JN.EW

STORE GOODS
OUR EFFORTS TO IMPROVE
Our surroundings and the commubity at large

HAVE BEEN APPRECIATED
And our trade is larger than ever before.

ODE NEW STOCK; OF GROCERIES
Our store room though ample is completely filled and our shelves fairly groan under them
And {till they come. W e have everything tn the Grocery line.

Crockery and Glassware.
It you want to see a pretty and complete line of Crockery, see ours. We have only time to
call your attention to China Tea Setts, Majolica Ware, and Decorated Chamber Setts. In Glass­
ware our stock is complete and attractive. Our trade in LAMPS is simply immense. We
have Pendants, Decorated Vase, uud Common Goods. Low estimates given on Church and
Hall Chandeliers.
w
We have added a fine line of

Table

.

Cutlery,

Lanterns, and OH Cans. Your special attention Is invited to the former, as we feel awturtd that
we have something that will suit.
Wo keop tho celebrated Know Flake Flour.
Everything New, Fresh, and Cheap. An examination will convince-

G. W. FRANCIS.

501 Wagons 150
OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE

FOR SALE AT ROCK BOTTOM PRICES
WE HAVE MADE A FEW WITH

THREE INCH TIRE
AS OUR ROADS DEMAND SOMETHING

We believe the Three inch
to general use. Call am
no o1 ier.

Tire is destined to come
yon will have

Hastinfra, Mich.

tS* Sold “ Nashville by C. L GLA8Q0W.

�owned by H. G. Barber.

SATURDAY.

VICIHITY

-

MOV. U. 18U.

LOCAL

THE COUNTY.
We team from Mr. Young that As*
Matteson, well known to the people of
Nashville and vicinity, has left his farm
in tbe suburb* of Hesperia and engaged
with John C. McCowen, a leading mer­
chant of that place, to clerk in his dry
goods store and post-office for a year.
At the recent mec|4ng of the W. C.
T. union of thi* congressional district,
at Hastiegs, the following officers were
elected; Mnu N. Bailey of Hastings,
president; Mrs. A. L. Shepard of Char­
lotte, corresponding secretary; Mrs.
Robert Frazer of Jackson, recording
secretary j Mra. N. G. Austin of Battle
Creek, treasurer.
The official election majorities in
this county, according to a Fne Preu
di*patch, are as follows: Bcgole 491,
Shakespeare 310, Hodge 106, Penning­
ton 863, Wheeler (plnr,) 478 (Goodyear
having 755 votes.) Tbe pluralities on
county officers weroi Creasy 381—7
over all opponent*. Mack 590, Alexan­
der
Sidman 443,Colgrove 677,Brady
340 aid Niakanriw/
Pptnons Grange will hold its next
meeting at the Johnstown grange hall,
Dear the Bristol school house ou the
34th, commencing at 10 a. m. Among
tl*e subjects that will engaged atten­
tion are the following: “What are the
aims and subjects of the Pomona
Grange, and what is expected to be ac­
complished by it,” R. M. Slawson;
“Our daughter should receive the same
compensation ’as our son for the same
labor equally well performed,” Mrs.
Hellen Brainerd;
“Our
common
schools,” Mr*. Naomi Slawson.
Tbe people of Assyria and Bellevue,
complain that they are being victimized
by cloth agent*. The parties come to
the house, and offer to - sell cotton
clotlia, bagging, brureels carpets, etc,,
at marvelously low figures, to be de­
livered in thirty- day*. They then pro­
duce shoddy cloth for garments, which
they sell on the spot for cost The
farmer is caught- by the cheapness of
the articles “to be delivered" later,
which are fine samples easily falls a
victim to tbe shoddy doth sell. It is
needless to say that the thirty days de­
livery is never made, aud the fanner is
sold on his purchases.
*
The Tompkins sorghum factory
Dear Assyria Center, is said to be one
of the finest iu the state. They have
made 3,500 gallons of as fine syrup a*
we ever tasted. Sorgham cane can be
raised with bit very little more trouble
than corn, will net the fanner about
900 gallons to the acre after allowing
a third for making, giving the farmer
$96 to the iu-re (at a coat of twenty
cent* a gallon for making), besides ennabling him to have a sweetning free
froy adultterations. With three or
four barrel^ &lt;rf sorghum syrup in the
house a man's sugar bill would be less,
and it is only a question of time w&amp;en
a large part of the sugar for this coun­
try will be made from sorghnm. The
Tompkin's also make delicious apple
jelly and very pure clear cider.

NORTH CASTLETON.

friends at Battle Creek and Leroy.
U is about time to begin fattening
Uiat turkey of yours for TLanksgiv

A Mr. Stevens of Leroy has left a
number of fine wool sheep at Frank
Quick’s for sale. Call and see them.
The M. E. ladies 5 cent quilt is being
quilted. They have received about
400 names and yet there is room for

Sam. Cotton as, she stunea ne.----bands over coat into the fire because
he would not buy her smoking tobacco.
Young Elkphant.

EAST MAPLE GROVE.
Business is brisk.
Fall plowing has commenced.
Lumber is in good demand at our
new milk
The buyshave commenecd trapping
for muskrats.
Joe Ruse ha* a broken rib, from ths
effects of sparring.
.
To get kicked by a women is stimu­
lating but not nourishing.
A good time waa had at tho dance at
Eastman Latting’s on Friday night of
last week.
Wheat in places is quite badly struck
with the rust, which looks rather dis­
couraging in tbe eye of the fanner.
And again. This time it is George
W. Perry that comes to the front and
says we have got a boy at our house
that weighs 8 lbs. 6 ox.
A few evenings ago a party of half a
dozen came a surprise on a barrel of
cider, which they began to help them­
selves to, but before the thirst for
cider was quenched the boys were sur­
prised by a woman, who drove them
away.
It was quite a surprise all
around.
A man vrho resides in Bellevue townis tryingevery way imaginable to get a
divorce from bis wife. He has whip­
ped her, and misused her beyond rea­
son, just because *lie will not leave bis
bed and board. A short time ago he
hired a young man of the neighbor­
hood to take bi* wife and skip the
country. The young man, thinking
that it might be a fine job, made the
proposal to her, but she took it as an
inault,and seized a stick of stove wood.
The young man did tho skipping act
alone.

HASTINGS.
Circuit court opened Monday.
Two case* of diphtheria reported.
Dr. Wolf was in the city last week.
John Goodyear has the Rheumatism.
County canvassers met last Tuesday.
H. F. Pennidgton was in
'
'
'
the
city
over Sunday.
Jennie McNaughton is clerking for
D. H. Goodenow.
W. D. Fuller spoke at the temperance meeting Sunday.
Dr. Fuller has gone to N. Y. for a
visit of a couple of weeks.
Postmaster Nevins has been housed
up with rheumatism, but is on the gain.
Some of our citizens went to Grand
Rapids Friday night to hear Bob In­
gersoll.
The Baptists break their jugs Friday
ninght. Lots of wealth is expected to
roll out.
Mrs. Susan E. Graves, once editor of
the Home Gem, a temperance paper,
died here Saturday last, nnd though a
county charge, received a kindly Chris­
tian burial.
' Monday a team belonging to John
Fuller ran away with a top buggy.
They ran down Main-st until they
struck the old music store sign where
they left the buggy in a pile with the
siga and passed on as far as the depot
where they were stopped.
The Democrats and Greenbackers
had a jollification Saturday night. It
was a decided success taking into con­
sideration the small amount of practice
they have had in the last 35 years.
Cannon boomed, torches flared and
roman candles spluttered, the street
decorated with Chinese lanterns and a
platform erected in front of the bank.
Speeches were made by Hon. H. A.
Goodyear, Hon. F. M. Pennington,
W. D. Fuller aud others. The exer­
cises closed with a sour mash dream,
set to slow music and beautifully ren­
dered by Lute Bennett.

A change in tbe weather.
Bert Hart ha* traded horse*.
Isaac Warner is building a new barn.
One of Nathan Sheldon’s children is
quite sick.
Dick Elston and family spent Sun­
day with Mr. Carl* in Kalamo.
Vet Owens and wife of Farwell spent
a few days here with old friend*.
Bank up your house and cover up
those potatoes or you will have to buy.
Wm. Ash has sold hi* team and
bought a span of tbree-yeara-old colt*.
The few dems, seems to feel well
over election,—and who has a better
right!
Nelt Hager Ias shut down his mill
and intends to move it up near his
house.
Mrs. Sabo McMellon’s oldest daugh­
ter is afflicted with fit*, aud jB not ex­
pected to live.
Joel St. John has moved his steam
saw-mill on Mr. Cole’s farm 5| miles
north of Nashville.
The Hosmer school commenced Mon­
day with a good attendance and Cha*.
Newton as teacher.
E. Lockhart and children spent Sun­
day with bis grandfather Gates and
VERMONTVILLE.
friends in Ionia county.
Mat ion Shores has moved his house
Potter of the Hawk is glad lie did not
from the 40-acre farm he bought last
run for Senator.
spring up beside his log house.
Mrs. D. W. Church is in Ann Arbor,
Milton Bradley, the 'jolly farmer,
undergoing medical treatment at tbe
with intent to k^ep his wife from scold
University.
ing, has Wraght a new oook stove.
The decking of the school house is
receiving a tin covering preparatory to
MAPLE GROVE.
the winter rains.
Mr. M. L. Squird and Mr. Allen, wife
Corn hoskiffg is about finished.
and son Arthur are expected home from
Fred Sboup is plastering his house.
Dakota this week.
Levi Good rich is again confined to his
More than fifty voter*
roter* id the t&lt;
tOWDbed.
ship neglected to register and a
Willie Dillon is visiting friends in larger number neglected to vote.
Ohio.
*
The antopey of tbe body of S. II.
More’s, Porter did not satisfactorily account
Friday.
'
for his long illnes*—over four years.
0. H. Cole ia building on addition to
are coming into Martin &amp;
his barn.
Grime*' mill in a way that i ndicate*
Mr. and Mrs. Acre'.were guests at Mr. business a* soon a*, they caq get up
steam.
Mr. and Mrs. John Clark are visiting
Little “Ned.” invalid son of J. C.
at 0. H, Cote’s,
and Mary Griswold, died last Saturday
Mrs. Dr. Bearion*
Allegan county, _™or5lDKx-lfterjxtaiaix. jraara of con-,
.4- « ■ * . --- - — ----------- - ----stent suffering.

An Mr*. Caudle would say: "just six
months, always six months of mdd and

discovered that Dr. Patterson was the
mean* of defeating |he county Repub­
lican ticket. That's too bad.
Geo. Lamb ba* bought snd sold tbe
brick house and lot on west Main-st
formerly owned by N. Deplanty. Hi*
brother-in-law, Geo. Wright, I* present
owner,
G. H. Gaylord ran ahead of his ticket
m this town for representative to the
state legislature and had one vote for
congress to boot, and yet he sells agri­
cultural implement* jnst as he used to
—cheap for cash.
Dr. Green, L. Dunjsp and ’Mark
Barber started for the woods on a deer
hnnt last Monday morning. They ex­
pect tojoln a party that left here ou
the previous Wednesday and is locatcd in the vicinity of Walton junction.
Mr. McLafflin has purchased for bis
rod the farm formerly owned by Goo.
S. Browning but of late owned and oc­
cupied by Mrt W. K. Norris. Mr. Nor­
ris however, will not leave our village
but will engage in the lumber busi-

It waa dectead at the special school
meeting to hare three months primary
school the coming winter.
Mrs. J. Coleatock is visiting her
daughter and other relative* iu Spring­
port, for a couple of weeks.
The people of the Tamarack district
areto be congratulated ppon having se­
cured the service* of Truman Parker as
teacher.
One of the beet shoemakers to bo
found in the country is Geo. Trabert of
this place and be is doing a flourishing
w. W. Eaton.
bnsinesa this fall, too,
Ciiarlra L. MRcbelLI
The Republicans look blue, and the
Greenbackers look pleasant, while the
FLORIDA.
Democrats wink slyly and say “We
killed the bear, ugh big bear.”
I' Geo. Barden went out to open up his
[Democrat*. Kt]
At I.HW-Thom** Hardeman.
school last Monday, but owing tosomc
L
C. Nichol*.
NJcbolo.
fl. Jama* H. Blount*
misunderstanding be didn't commence X Ho ry G. Turner.* '7. Jud. a dement*.*
3. (Trarle* F. Crtap.
«. Seaborn Ree^
the school. He will begin the term 4.
Hugh Buchanan * 0. AEen D. Candler.
5.
Nath.
J.-Hunmond.*!
next Monday the 30th.
ILUNOIS.
The hunting party returned from tbe
[Repabi’cano, H; Democrat*, 8; Independnorth last week' nnd Dr, Baughmau
_ •« mni.w. xx
brought back a deer that dressed 325
Thomas Hunter of Sunfield was cala- pounds and distributed the venisop X George R. Davie.'
boosed on Friday night, and tried and among bi* many friends.
lined on Saturday ten dollars and coNte,
The Dakota fever still rageth; but
making about sixty-five dollars in fines when it is considered that tbe weather b. Il UKarn &lt; R'lcn.*
la * m. il Jiorr.wa6. LewU H. Pagean* HL IL W. Townshend.'
in one day. At this rate taxes ought of last Monday was the tail end of a 10. N. R. Worthington. 120. John IL Thomae.*
to be lighter next year under Demo­ Dakota Llizzard we shrug our should­
.
INDIANA.
[Democrats, fl; Republicans, 4.1
cratic rule.
ers and say, no thank you. do Dakota
L John J. Kleiner.
I A. John &amp; Lamb.
Jack Brady and Steve Miller of your in ours.
2. Thomas R. Cobb*
8. Thomas B. Ward.
8. M. Hlockilager.* I ML Thomas J. Wood.
city were convicted before Esq. Stevens
A petitiou Is in circulation to have a 8.
4. WilliamK. Holman.*!!. Georpe W. Steele*
of thin place last Saturday of assault daily,mail from Woodland to Hastings.
and battery upon Sylvester Hall, and This is a move in the right direction,
were fined, the former forty dollars as our preasnt mail facilities are far
[RoputJlcen-i. 8; Democrats, 2; Gi
and the latter five dollars, and every­ short of what they ought to be fur a
body thinks they got no more than they town which does the amount of busi­
2. Jerry H. Murphey.
deserved.
.
ness Woodland does.
3. Dirid B.Henaereon.
Occasional.
Qcill Pen.
i.LH. Wkli.kh.
L. Jama Wilton.
EATON
COUNTY.
BARRYVILLE.
M5BAS.

X Harkt Limbsy.
|7.
3. Georg® D. Wise.
-X
X Bssj. B. HOOP'R.
U George C Cabell-* [

t

a Jo*epb RsnklR.
“

I

TnUUTOUAL DRUB.

Arizona—GranvlB® IL Oury.*
Monsum-MarttD Martinis.*
Nc w M.-x loo-TranffuIUtio Luna.*
Utah-John F-Coin®.
__

Indnstria! Accidents In Germany.

A reccat hlonahehrifl zur Slaiistik
drj. DciUdicrn Rcid.a contains an in­
teresting census of accidents that oo
cuired in all the factories and manu­
facturing establishments throughout
Germany during the months of August,
September, October and November last
year.
The inquiries extended over
93,554 shops and factories, employing
1,615.258 workmen and 342,295 women
—in all. 1.967,548 individual*.
Of
these, during the four months, 662 were
killed, eleven of them being women.
In addition, there were 123 rendered
completely, though not permanently, in­
capacitated. Temporary loss of work
through accident happened to 27.644
men and 708 women, the total number
of those who had suilered be.ng 2J,57&lt;
Taking this calculation for the year
(although it should not be forgotten
Hoytville has a new saw mill.
Last Saturday about 10 o'clock fire
that accidents fluctuate accord ng to the
Min. B. IF. Perkin*.
Earnest Markham of Cheater goes to R.
was seen coming through the roof of
1. John A. Anderton.* 3. Thoma* Rmn.*
time of year), tho total would be 88,732,
2. DudUyC. Hatkea *
summer cook room at S. L. Feagles. Texas for his health.
or alxiut 45 per 1,000. A further re­
NKXTvear.
A Grand Ledge man raised 123 bush­
port tells us that out of the 38,352 in­
The neighbors were soon on the spot,
[Democrats, 10: Hepublk-nn. L]
L O»c*r Turner.*
7. J. &lt; . ri. Blackburn.' valided during the four months. 16,139
but it was found that the fire had gain­ els of corn to the acre.
caused a cessation of work amounting
The Potterville rake and handle
ed such headway in the siding and
to 126,.140 days, id this category being
shingles that it was was impossible to factory is being put In trim.
including the stoppages from one to
6. Albert 8. Willis.* !1L Frank Wolford.
Too much wheat screaoing* killed
C. John G. Carlisle.’ I
put it out till it had burned down, but
fourteen days; 6,532 came within the
LOUISIANA.
three
cows
’
lor
Simon
hart
near
Hoyt
­
the wind being favorable the main part
second category or ’rom fifteen to twen­
[Democrat*. 6; Republican, L]
ty-eight days, causing an aggregate loss
of the house and kitchen were saved. ville.
L Carleton Hunt.
I 4. N.C. Blanchard.'
of 180,606, the third catagory, embrac­
2. E. John Fill*.*
6. J. Fiord King.*
•a ,300 worth of staves have been
The buttery waa in this part of the
3. William P. KtUogg. I X A. 8. Herron.
ing all sufferers over twenty-eight days,
bouse—-over one half of the dishes were bought at Eaton Rapids so far this
including 5,681, causing a loss of 287.­
r
(Republicans. 4.1
burned the loss was estimated at the season.
913 days. The total loss of days in the
1. ThonwM B. Heed.’
The Eaton county horticultural
time at $ 100, fully one half of which
four months were 549,559. Among the
lists of industries that figure in these
waa in dried apples dried by Mrs. Feu- society meet* at Eaton Rapids the 18tb.
accidents, the greatest number of fa’aligles this fall. Last Monday night soon W. K. Gibson, a succeRSfuJ fruit grower
ties was experienced in coal-mines, which
2. J.F. C. Talbott.'
after dark tbe neighbors began to drop and intoreatiug talker, will lecture on
a. F. A HobllUeli.*
employ (not including women) 187.523
iu 8. L. Feagles till about twenty were the pear and grape and how to make
work-people, in which the number
[Republican*, b; Detnoorata, 3; Indepen­ of mortal or
present A hat was placed in the mid­ them profitable.
totally incapacitat­
dent, L]
The election majorities in Eaton Co.
dle of tbe room and all that felt dis­
ing accidents was 292; iron and
I. Robert T. Davin.
7. Wra F. Ntonr.
X John D. Lony.
steel
works,
employing
115,128,
posed dropped io some money.The con­ were as follows: Jerome 125, Crosby
IL A. A. lianney.'
showing
eighty-six accidents; ma­
tents of the hat was presented without 386, Pennington 205, Hull 98, Shepard L Patrick A. Colima.
6. Leopold Morve.* (II. IFgltam Whiling.
chine
shops,
em ploying 161,069,
counting to Mrs. Feagles to be used in 383, Lacey 907, Ell* 137, Perry 288,
X Henry B. Lovering.
with seventy-seven accidents; quarries,
M1CKI0AN.
replacing the things ahe lost by fire. Spaulding 578, Jones 118, Shiiner 395,
employing 47.037, with sixty-four ac­
(Reputl icon*. 8; Democrats, X]
We hear that when it was counted it DeGraff 877. Wood 387, Cowie* 880.
cidents; building-works, employing 44,­
1. Wm. C. Msybury. 7. Kara &lt;- Carleton.
?, N. B. Eldredge
X Ro«wcl G. Barr*
221, accidents 57; millsol various kinds,
A barrel of crackers and a whole
was found to contain about $15.
employing 70,103. accident* 57; sugarcheese was dispensed with many re­
My friends and neighbors will please accept
k. Julius Houaetnon. IL L’dioaetl BreOunp.
nulls, employing 44,402 accidents fiftymy sincere thanks, lor their friendship and marks of approval at election on Tues- I
six. etc. Class tying the occupations
kindness shown me after my loss by fire on day.—Bismark correspondence Repub­
according to theidegreea of danger and
Saturday, Nov. 11th. May you never be visit­
(Republican*, S.J
publican.
Yea,
aud
they
say
that
’
s
the
ed by the Are fiend but by true friends is you
the number of fatal accidents, we find
1.
While.
I 4. W. D. IF
have been to me.
way Pennington came to get so dan:
2. J. B. Wake Held.
I &amp;. KnuUJit
that mines are the worst, and to them
Mrs. Mkujl Fraoleb.
a. H. B. Stratt."
I
succeed building-works.chemical-works,
many votesout there.
MJ-OSISMIPTL
distilleries and sugar-beet mills, quarries,
[Democrwta, S: Republican. 1.1
L ILL Muldrow.* , K Otho IL Singleton.* works of lighting and heating (gas),
Macon Co., Ga., has citizen who has
BALTIMORE.
tJ, IL Chaimen.
i A
- ------H.8.V*
An Eaton.
saw-mills ami wood-workers, machine­
hurried six wives and is now living
7. Ethel Borkadalo.
works. metal-works, pa’per-mills and
Cooler.
L H. tt Money.*
I
with the seventh. He has been kept
tanneries, textile-factories, printing and
How are you Jerome ?
MISSOURI.
so busy getting married and attending
photographic establishments.
;
[DcmocntM,
14.)
Walter Warner is at present husking funerals that he only weighs ninety­
I. W. H. Hatch.*
I A John J. O’NeilL
L A. M. Alexander.
9. .lax. a Rroadhead.
south of the Creek.
eight pounds.
3. A. M. Docki-rey. ,10. Martin L. Qaray •
In
a
Russian
Prison.
D.C. Warner’s baby has been dan­
1. Jamca N. Burn**' |il. Richard P. Bland.*
gerously ill with lung fever.
Men who have married five or six
In the cells of tbe upper and middle­
tiers are put the least compromised
Oui^school commences Monday next wives now get out of the scrape by
criminals. All the cells arc of the same
with Earnest Haynes as teacher.
shooting themselves when discovery
[Republicans, 11
size—ton feet long, seven feet broad and
Mrs. Tybarker and son, of Kent, comes. The old plan was to go to pris­
1. A. J. Weaver
twelve loot high. The doors have each
mads Park Warner a call on their way on for two years and come out bleach­
two openings—one large enough for the
home, Monday last.
ed white assnow.
daily food and drink to bo put in through
[Republican*. L)
it and the otttSr of smaller size, to serve
Those having items for The News
NRW JKRSKY.
In a Calafornia town a lecturer was ।
as a spy-hole for tho jailers. The doors
will please band them in.
Nothing
[Democrat*. 3: Republicans, 4.)
airing his views on foreordmation, and
are also each fastened with two pad­
1. Thomas M. Ferrell । X IFflltam W. PTrnlji*
but items of news solicited.
2. J. Hart Brewer.*
X Wm. H. F. Fiedler. locks—the key of one being in the jail­
told
bi*
audience
that
thaking
precanI
Cold, bleak, winter is upon ris, and
X John Kean. Jr.
7. William McAdoo.
er’s custodv, while that of the other re­
|
how :many can welcome it? For my iions against death was tbe stupid fool­ 4. B»nj. F. Howey.
mains in charge of the commandant of
NBVADA.
part I can say well done. Those who ishness imaginable ; that when a man’s George W. Caaaldy.*
the fortress. The dish from which the
prisoner eats is pushed in through
are unprepared antic, ipate an Indian time came he would die, aud not be­
NRW TORR.
[Republican*. V'; Democrat*, 2L]
grooves cut in a plate of iron which
summer.
Nearly one-fourth of the fore. To test the speaker’s sincerity a
At
Large
—
Henry
W.
Slocum.
projects from the interior of the door,
native drew a revolver and sent a ball
Belmont.* ’ I IX F. A. Jahntan.
corn is unliusked.
L Perry BelmonL*
at tho height of about foul feet from the
X
E. Robinson.
2. Wm.
Wm-E.
Robinson.'’ IB. A. X. Parker.*
Estella, daughter of James Endsley, within six inches of his oar, when ho
floor. The dish cannot, therefore, be
aged 13 years, fell and broke one bone leaped from the window and made
removed by the prisoner, who must
such
good
time
across
the
commons
of her arm, Saturday last, near her
take his food standing against the door
X Samuel 8. Cox.*
L Wm. Dorabcitner.
—and this with a spoon which is at­
wrist, at the same time displacing her that a bull dog, which took after him,
X John J. Adam.*.
Eave up the chase before running a
tached to the plates. The drinking wa­
a. John Hardy.*
wrist joint. Dr. VanHorn reduced the
undred yard*.
10. A. 8, Hewitt.*
ter is put into a sort of jug hinged to
fracture. She went! into spasms Sun­
IL O. B. Potter.
the door. When the prisoner wishes to
12. Waldo Hutchins*
day night, they continuing most of the
A girl at Stanton, Va., who was giv­
drink he must get down upon his knees
day Monday. ..Dr. Upjohn of Hastings, en tho mitten after fooling away seven
and turn this vessel upon its hinges or
was called for council, .Monday night, years in courting, had her revenge by
pivots.
Food is supplied at eleven
IT. Henry G. BuHeloA.
o’clock in the morning aud six in the
but at the present writing Miss Endsley pounding tbe man with a hickory club
on the public street.
evening, and ordinarily consist* of oat­
_
SOHTH CAROLINA.
is no better.
meal gruel and a quarter of a kilogram
[Democrats, 7: Republican. L]
Doxy.
At I-artro— Rlailcn T. Bennett.
of meat; besides this there is a daily
A young man at Chester, Pa., got
1. I-ewl* C. Latham.* । 6. Alfred M. Scales*
allowance of a kildgruiu of rye bread.
mad and fled to parts unknown be­
2
X
J.
VBara.
|
6.
Clement
Dowd.*
WOODLAND.
The prisoner's bed consist* of a plank,
3. Wharton H. Green. 7. WtaM. Robbins.
cause his girl would not pay for bis 4.
William R. Cox.* | 8. Robert B. Vance.*
six feet by three, with a straw mattress,
wedding suit. Such a stingy girl
Mud is plenty now.
a sheet bo strong and coarse that it is
doesn
’
t
deserve
a
husband.
Business revives, this weather.
impossible to tear it, and a covering of
The farmers are hustling work along
felt— all of which articles are ti&amp;en
No matter who he is or what his col­
away during the day. The dress con­
The schools of this town have mostly or, tbe man guilty of rape south of tbe
sists of a gray woolen jacket quite short
begun.
Ohio stands nineteen chances of swing­
and tight-fitting; short pantaloonsof the
Our first snow storm made its appear­ ing to a limb to one of having a trial
same color, and long ielt boot*. For
ance on Monday.
before the courts.
women the jacket is supplied, and a
The Scott residence has been receiv­
gray skirt added. The prisoners must
ing a coat of paint.
-VaahviUc Markets.
get up at six o'clock, and go to bed.
again at eight. It has been ascertained,
Numerous marriages are reported
by. means ot the secret observations
hereabouts at present
. '
which are constantly taken through the
Teaming slacks up since the roads
peep-holes, thaA as a general rule, the
have became so rough.
grisonersspc-ii.f their long hours from
Monroe Bowlader spends Sundays in
leir rising until their broakiast in
pacing to and iro in their cells; after
Castleton quite frequently,
this they arc wont to remain quiet for
Some of our school houses are in need
an hour or so, only to pve way next to
of repairs before the stormy weather
an excess of desolate despair which their
pitiable situation may well inspire.
____________
__
Charles
Cole_moved
bis effects to the
village last week, to make it his fu­
tore home,
known by Kune in Florid, u .Ickla
A large portion of our population are
migrating to the north woods to spend
the winter.
J. W. Bessmer of Hastings visited
this place, laat week in the garijof~x
mi**ionary.

OLD FRIEND

�-

iy

W aayde baby raw*

SATURDAY,

btemhiwU
Hint in’ me had sn(
NOV. 18,18M.

BXPER1MKNTAL.

rorifl you're thrown,
rou'li be blown;
for silly fits*,

•

Look out for wi'-ks of ceiling whacks.
Ob bald beads you ma}* safely perch:
Tbey’rt) alwnyx fu--r as;rc|&gt;— in church;
Fly-paper-ir sure to bring you grief,
8o chart get ‘intwhed- on a fly-leaf;

Tbe little files with staring ey«*
Ix&gt;ok«&gt;&lt;! wise, hut acted inhcrwi.tc.
One flew right in a candy store.
But dltxl ere be could u.'k for “mor
Iu a inker's shop anotcr flew.
And found adulterations, too;
Jn grocery flew several others.
Who quickly joined their fly-ly brothers.
Have drug stores where, its doctor* tell.

-

One little fiy still keep* alive.
And will continue long to thrive;
For, knowing men adulterate,
Ilcalwnt-H take-* t^-jsilson straight,
And find*. Of couam^qo poison wbei
There ought to Ma gubdlv share.

A LITTLE TEXAN NURSE GIRL.
I ain’t done nothin' dis blessed day!
do, dal I ain’t; nuthin’ ’tall but trot my
legs off waitin' on de white folks, an’ I’m
goin’ to stop it I done tole Phebe
p’iatedly I ain’t goin’ to. put up wid it,
an’ I ain't! Mms Puttie, she come a
hour or so ’fo’ day, an' she lusted me
outen my bed wid her tones: “Git up,
Chatty; it’s suii-ri.se, an' de children
goin’ alter sweet gum, an’ luiby’s callin'
youP' So I get up an’ drew myself.
Miss Pattie, she so airy, she bluchcd to
have shots on her miss. I hauled ’Cm
uff Boon’s I got to de gum-grvbc. Blew*
dat baby! he de smothes’ an’ de putties'
thing in Texas, wid hb blue eye an’ hb
Sred curls; an’ when dat flankin'
1, Jewly Ann, cum down dere wid
Rogers’ gal-baby wid de black eyes,
an’ Inpinny black hyar, an’ said her toes
was puttier ’an Alfred’s whole body, I
jb kotch my sun-bonnet often de tree,
wha* I hung it outen de way while we
went over to t’other grove, an’ I war it
out 'on her! de splits was made ob white
pine, too, cans’ Mas’ Henry lie laugh
when Miss Pat tie was makin’ dem of
msebode, an’ he say Ac’ll make sumthin’
Chatty won’t war out. So when Miss
Pattie saw it all lode up, she ax me how
it werd, an’ I tole her I went in de
thicket fur dem jewberries I brung her;
an’ Mxs’ Henry, no say, ‘.'I spec some lit­
tle nigger could tell it diflerum.”
Jus’ den Mb’ Rogers she kum in her
fine cayadge wid her silks and her Batins,
an’J k no wed what’s de matter, kase she
say, “No, I will not kum in; ax her to
step to de do’;” an’I peeped outen de
parlor winder, an’ sec dat Jewly Ann
■ettin’ in de cayadge cryin’, wid her coat
all lore, an' de strings often her apon, an’
4e wool Rtan’in’ up in little patches all
ober her head, jus’ like I ler her at de
grobe, ’ceptin’ she had whelps all over her
face, an' one o’ her eyes would bin plenty
fortwo com'fii niggas. I wus mighty
Borry fur her, an’ me too, when I hear
Mbs Pattie say, “I’m eery sorry, Mrs.
Rogers— I will see it don't happen again.”
Anv den she kum out an’ say, “'Kuin
Kuu» 1
here, Cliatty! A pretty name for such a
as you are—go to your mother, and 1
tell her to give you a whipping, an’
A I’ll ’splain it when I see her.’’
Now my mammy she a square ole
ooman. De white folks likes her, an’ say
she ole-fashion, and I speck dat’s what b
de matter. She jus’ tuk me. Boon's I
tell her, an’ bump me up wid her strap,,
on’ den ahe ax me what I bin doin’. I
tole her’bout dat impiden Jewly Ann,
an’ she ray,'“Well, you wus right—dem
po’ white folks to set up an" ray dey
chillen putty es our’n, when ourin is
owned hundreds of niggers way back to
dey/o-fathera, and ills’* Rogera .was a
schoolteacher an’ touched fur her livin,’
*fo* she married Mas’ Nic Rogen-. Rut
den, Mira Pattie she known, anT I kin tell
you, ’b I been rayn’ all along, de niggers
de white folks didn't raise ain’ filten to
kill even. You go on! An’ tell Mira
Pattie if you cuts up anv more didoes
to keep you home from ’Mancipation.”
Ginger-cakes! ain’t I glad I got dat
whippin’? I clean forgot it, an' al’uyo
’lows to behave my very jimmiest 'bout
’Manspation time, kara'Mira Pattic she
got a foolish wayof rayin’, “1 won’t whip
any chile, bo you can jus’ stay home.
Chatty, till you learn to behave.” An’
. oacet when I put de’ chillen's book in de
flour baval, an’ hid’em ho dey could go
wid me an’ de baby winter-gnipeiu* '
Bat’day evenin’ ’arid o’ studyin’ dey
Bun’-school lesson, an’ Phebe fuun’ dem
When she went to make biscuits for sup­
per, Mias Pattie she keep me home from
de Baptises fcstbul wha’ me an’ all de
res’ de Mcth’db’ gab was gwine to make
fun o’ dem po’ Htuck-un, web-footed crit­
ters wha wadee water like a crane.
. Don’t care! I ain’t goin' to dredge
like I b today, hot if mygreat-gnin’chil'n
Is burned stayin’ borne: I wentup to de
big housj.* just smilin' as baskit o' chips
from mammy’s, lease dat Cicely Ann wha
/make de chil’nsclose, she always settin’
in Mias Pattie's room gigglin’ an* 'lowin’
she diden’ we to kt-teli it from her
DUMn-»ia. Dat gal fear spile up from
bein’ wid white folks. Den I took de
• baby an' de big quilt down to de big
live-oak tree in de front yard and played
tea-party wid wroe cake an’ milk, ‘an’
him an’ me went to deep, an’ when wo
woke it wux dinner time, an’ I fed
him
at
de
side
table
an’
eat my dinner
wid him. Den
I
fil’t de
big
bathin’ tub
wha stan’ under de fig-tree by de back
do’, all shady like little house, an’ can’t
see it frum de road, an’me an' de two
litiles ones, we bathed ouraelvea. Den I
tuk de baby in his waggin, an’ went jew-

i wanted de waggin to
iu-—:.!,
!'ru:^
lopper an put him in
■ea draw, an' tote her
mme some thread outen
how ahe did bolter!

in tain, but thewill of
ways toward

furniah-

u intelli-

heart, but a change of clothes that ails
them. We are informed that the hazing
has been effectually broken up. Just
after Sullivan whipped Ryan he jps
AN ENTHUSIASTIC ENDORSEMENT
called to Harvard, Mid a plan of breaking
„
’«• iw»-GeSTS-.—Whoever you are, I don't knowup hazing was unfolded to him by the
ut
1 thank tite Lord and feel grateful to you
Faculty, and be fell into it readily. He
was to attire himself as .a, Quaker young
man, and apply for admurion as a fresh­
man, and let nature take its course. On
the first day of April. Mr. Sullivan ap­
least excitement would make me shake like tbe
peared at the college under the name of
Abija Woteon, and was assigned to a
loom, and placed on the roll of freshmen.
His appearance inis commented on, and they are now aa steady as they ever were. It
used to take both baud* to write, but now tnv
a« he paraed through the college grounds good
right bend writes this, Now, if you eonwith bis peculiar garb, young fellows
shouted “Shoot the hat, “get on to his
nibs,” and other collegiate literature. It
was all Mr. Sullivan could do to restrain
TIM BURCH.
himself from whipping a couple of dozen mankind.
The gouty man U generally coualdered a high
of the boys then and there, out he de­
cided to wait.until the proper time, when I'.ver-too high to be reached by a liver pad.
he would be able to get enough for a
Now is tbe time to treat Catarrh of long
meae. That evening he was approached standing. Elya’ Cream Balm reaches old, and
tbe way of educating thtv young and in­ by a young mon who pretended to be his obstinate ca»e», where all other remedies fall.
troducing English styles of dress, but friend, ana invited to accompany him to Do not neglect procuring i bottle, as In it Ilea
their inroads into the Buddhist religion a room where a few boys were going to the relief you seek. Price &amp;0 cents.
Apply into nostrils with Rule finger.
do not amount to much. Between the open a few bottles of wine. Abija said
Catarrh. For fifteen years I have been great­
Protestant and Catholic missionaries the verily he didn’t go much on the sinful
Catholic seem to be more successful than beverage, but to oblige his friend ho ly annoyed with this disgusting disease, which
caused severe pain In my bead, continual drop­
the other, the Bishop telling me, jurt be­ went with him to a large room where ping Into my throat and unpleaaant breath. My
fore coming away, that he had fully 8,000 Bcventy smart young fellows were con­ retire of smell wu much Impaired. By a
communicants.” ■
gregated, with all of the appliances for thorough u»e for six month* of Elya’ Cream
“Where do you make your residence?" hazing. Sullivan rays there were seven­ Balm Ihave entirely overcome these troubles.
“At Bankok, the Capital. It b a city ty, but the Faculty only found sixty-five 8. B. Case. 8t- Denis Hotel, Broadway and 11th
of 500,000 population, situated on the smart Alecks when the door was opened,
Shoplifting la a profitable bad prefesalon. A
Nenam River, thirty miles inland from but Sullivan thinks a few might have
the Gulf of Siam. It is the chief port jumped out of the window and took to woman with a good face aud a lady-like manof entry, and in the neat of a large trade the woods: It seems that when they got
with China, Japan, and India.
Veasels tho “Quaker” into the room they locked
AN EXPLANATION.
of ordinary-tonnage can reach it, but the door, and the ringleader told the
The delicate, flowery am! ’astlug fragrance of
anything drawing over thirteen feet can­ peaceful man to strip off his coat, vest,
loreaton Cologne explain whr It such a favornot para the bars below the harbor. It b and shirt. He objected, but finally took
e wittribe ladies.
'
not often that an American ship gets them off.
there, although there are many things
and bccinnw: unable to u»c our Judgment, our
Some
of
the
fellows
who
have
since
peculiarly American that arc in common
passions hurry ua headlong.
use. Petrtleum, for instance, b used got out of the hospital say they noticed,
when he removed his shirt, that he wan
everywhere and in large quantities.”
WHY SHOULD THEY.
put
up
like
a
hired
man,
and
they
“Arc there many Europeans living
No man or woman can do satisfactory work
thought it queer thnt a Quaker should when lhe brain is dull, tbe nerves unsteady,the
there?” '
have an arm as big as a canvassed ham. system relaxed and they feel generally wretch­
"About 300 who speak English only. They then told him to “prepare to meet ed.
Why should anybody drag through their
Our trade with Siam is not by any means his God," and got out the iron to brand work In tills condition, when a bottle of Parkwhat it should be, and what I hope it him on the back. He told them that he era (linger tonic will at moderate cost give them
will come to be. There should be a free knew he was in their power, and was ibe strength and will u&gt; perform their duties
and common exchange with the Ameri­ willing to submit to anything that was satisfactorily.—Ed.
It is observable that several church conven­
can products and those of that country, right, but he asked as a favor not to bear
as much ns with China. Lctour United on too bard, as he was of a nervous tem- tions at Saratoga somehow liapjien to get there
States take Bold of it, and the great mara Serament, and . might faint. Then they
of English importation then could be
IMPOI1T4ST TOTRAJ'KLEBS,
ecided not to brand him until later, but
turned to come from here. Especially would throw him up in a blanket firat.
Special inducements are offered you by the
could cotton fabrics find a good place if So they got the blanket and tipped Sul­ Burlington Route, It will pay you to read their
American shipping took tbe part it livan over in it, and about twenty of advertisements to be found elsewhere In this
should in assisting the development of the smartest hazera lock hold of the sides issue.
Truth fa a good ‘log; but beware of burking
trade. In return there are nee, fish, and teracd him up.
When he came
and teak wood that could be exported down he knocked four fellows Benselera too close al tbe heels of error, lest you get your
with profit."
'
with his fista, kicked four mure across the brains kicked_out___
thenEW STORY.
“Are foreigners received pleasantly!" room, and then gut on his feet and begun
Not a talc of fellow disappointment; not the
“More eo than with most of the East­ to knock them right and left.
He had
ern Powers, the nobles being disposed to knocked down about twenty, and had old story of the victim of caustic applications
the'cvlfs attending their use; but the new
meet all on amicable terms. I nave al­ stopped to spit on his hands, when the and
story of success of freedom from pain and con­
ways been treated very handsomely. rest of the Razors huddled in a corner sequently absence of spots left in the flesh.
Among other marks of favor, the King and proposed to put an end to the slaugh­ Putnam's Painless Corn Extractor gives in­
invested me with tbe decoration of the ter. One raid: “O good Mr. Quaker, spiration for happier reports, and sufferers
White Elephant, as a recognition of my please let us alone. We belong to re­ from corns need not hesitate to try It. Bold
everywhere by druggists and dealers tn medi­
service in preventing a party of Amen- spectable families, and won’t do so any cine.
cans frum celling opium and ranchu, more.” Sullivan looked at them, ami
You muj like a physician without feeling
something forbidden by the Government. | raid: "It is hazing vez want.
Well,
They are all looking to America more yes can have plinty;’’ and he went at obliged to take his medicines. It is the same
than anywhere else, feeling so interested them, and "in about fifteen minutes he
that I was requested to subscribe for a corded up the whole gang, and hazing SICK HEADACHF?! NERVOUS HEADnuniber of the leading pa{x*ra and maga­ wm broken up in Harvard College.
As
zines.
Among the journals received
he threw hfecoat and shirt acrora'hurarm
Promptly relieved aud permanently cured by
there is the Scientific American, that is and walked out of the room and met the Zoa-Ebora, the Health bringer for Women.
literally wornoutby beingparaed around,
Faculty in the hall, he raid:
"Throw
and one Prince told me he had ordered water in their faces and they will all reWomen 80 years old are young enough to be
from New York a certain piece of ma­ piin consciousnera in from ten minutes arrested for bigamy in Penn.
chinery described in it. When I came to half an hour;” and he shook hands I HOF BITTERS ARE THE PUREST AND
over I brought n number of curiosities, with the Faculty, received his $500, nnd
BEST BITTERS EVER MADE
They are compounded from bops, malt, Buand quite a collection of pictures and left for New York with his trainer, Billy
instruments sent by tho King to the Madden, who was sitting on the fence chu, mandrake and dandelion,—tbe oldest, beat
and moat valuable medicines in lhe world, and
United States National Museum, and he outside waiting for him.
contain all the beat and moat curative proper­
also directed that a block of stone be cut
“Fot kind of a time did yez have wid ties of all other remedies, being the greatest
from the Herat hills and sent over for do b’ysf” asked Mr. Madden, as he Blood pu riffer, Liver Regulator and Life and
the Washington Monument I brought- hclpcit Mr. Sullivan on with hisahirt Health Restorer Agent ou earth. No disease
ill health can possibly long exist where these
over a few Iwajks in their language to the and changed the Quaker hat for another. or
bitters are used, so varied and perfect are their
Mercantile Library here in Louis, and a
“Verily,friend William," said Quaker operations.
They give new life and vigor to the aged and
spear to the Missouri Historical Awocia- Sullivan, as he counted thrf roll of bills
tion. This apear came from Zululand, to see that the Faculty had not shoved infirm. To all whose employments cause irreg­
of the bowels or urinanr organs, or who
and «‘a« used by the party killing the anv counterfeits on him, “it was the ularity
require an apetixer. Tonic and mild stimulant,
Prince ImjieriaL In fact, it is araerted cvint of the Beason; it is good exercise.” Hop Bitters are invaluable, being highly cura
that it is one of the identical' weapons And they started for Cornell University tire, tonic and stimulating, without intoxicat­
ing.
piercing his body. There were also two at Ithaca.—Milwaukee Sun.
No matter what your feeling* or symptoms
tings that I went to Jeffenvn City to be
are. what lhe disease or ailment Is, use Hop
added to the State collection.’’
Jurisprudence in Turkey.
■ Bitters. Don't wait until) you are sick, but if
“Is the K ing married ?”
you only feel l&gt;ad or miserable, use Hop Bitten
The “Museulnuin juriste” whom the at once. It may save, your life. Hundreds
"He has somewhereabout thirty wives,
have been saved by «&gt; doing. &gt;500 will be paid
I believe, with a half-sister to the late cable dispatches report to have given a for a case tbev will not cure or help.
Queen lhe favorite.—St. Louis Republi­ local opinion on the status of Arubi be­
Do not surfer or let your friends suffer, but
fore the law. must not be imagined to be use and urge them to u«e Hop Bittern.
can.
Remember Hop Bitters is no vile, drugged,
what we cull “jurists" in this country.
drunken
nostrum, but the purest and best med­
Law in Turkey, especially public law, is
(rood Water.
ever made: tbe “Invalid's Friend and
not discriminated from religion, and icine
Hope,” and no person or family should be with­
both
are
ascertained
by
a
construction
of
out them. Try lhe bitters to-day.
Stock cannot thrive on bad water.
Pure butter, with the imperial aroma, the textaof the Koran. Oriental jurists,
cannot be made if the cows drink from not being familiar with the principle of
stare
decisis,
decide
each
case
as
it
arises
foul sloughs or stagnant pools. Run­
ning streams or living springs are grand without reference to whether it is in con­
institutions on a farm,
but the mud flict or accordance with previous decis­
holes which are frequently dug on our ions, and consequently no two decisions UIIMmwW industrial Competition
prairies, or the heaa of ravines dammed are ueccfuarily alike. They have in giv­ for Sixteen Years: no other American organs
up so as to catch water in rains,' are un­ ing their replies only one fundamental
fit for any kind of stock in hot weather. guide, and that is to satisfy the t?yltan.
Animals love and need cool, pure water Knowing this, the Sultan wisely frames
just as much ns penons. Their health his questions in such a way that the
is equally injured by impure water. jurists may know what tlic answer ought
to be. In'the present case the cable dis­
* HAMLIN Organ and Plano
Heretofore, tire raink have been ample
1 &amp;..Boston-. M K. NthSU&gt;«« York;
.. tttssgp.
'____________ _
this season to furnish stock water any­ patch only gifes the answer, but we an
where. But now the hot sun is drying give the question. It whs ns follows:
IPCMTk*
reaping a bar
s AOtlllO "--^tagour
up the water courses. In all of the “O. jurists, is Asabi Pasha, in so far as
he
lias
disobeyed
the
Calipli,
a
rebel,
and
pools there is filth, slime and sedi ment,
Most merchants want their clerks to
Life in Sian.
| Kitche* mm ifill Lap
growing thicker and more poisonous may he be unwremoniously treated ns
get down to their work as early as pos­
■ sod other household articles.
Judge John H. Haldeman, United every day. Cows especially must not such; but in so far as he has been a de­
sible, but that b not the kind of business
■ The best selling articles ever put
f on the market. ForBampU"
man old Tennyson, of Austin, is. He States Minister to Siam, now making a drink from these cessptxils, for their sake fender of a ^lohaunnedan country
" and Terms, address the
against the aggrvwi ve designs of Chrissleeps in his store, and as business b not short visit to this country, arrived in St. and for humanity’s sake. The* sicknm
turns, hits he merely fulfilled ‘the duties
CLIPPER M’FO COLouis
last
week
for
a
few
days'
stay
be
­
and
suffering
of
the
family,
die
doctor
’
*
very brisk, lie does not care to Ixj disof
a
good
Mussulman?
May
tbe
Sultan
turiied by hb clerks coming to the store fore going to San Francisco to sail on the bills, and the pecuniary profit on stock
nuniidi Arabi Pasha, if some act,of re­
too early’. A few mornings ago he was return trip to his distant plave of office. demand attention to this matter. Farm
disturbed by one of the clerks coming to The Judge was called on yesterday after­ era can no longer neglect with impunity bellion is proved against him, while dis­
noon by a reporter of the Republican, to provide a plenty of cool water for cat­ associating himself from those who wish
Che store at "halfpast seven.
“What do you mean by getting down and interrogated regarding the far away tle, homes, hogs and sheep. The latter to crush Arabi Pasha as the defender of
Islam? A jurist who could not tell how
to the store at this hour of the morning? clime in which he makes his home as are often kept without water, and some
even contend that they do not need it. to answer this would be immediately dis­
Why are you not in your bed and asleep?" America’s official representative.
“ Well," said he, “the feeling in Siam But they live through such treatment, missed from the force.—The Nation.
raid the old man, angrily, as he opened
toward the United States is of the best yet they would do far better with it.
'
the store door in hb nightgown.
—Browns of every shade, and greens
“I am very sorry,” said the clerk, “that and kindest, as you may know from the ' Probstbly the best and most certain
I came down ao early, but the truth b, I fact that one of die Princes, with a royal water for a farm is obtained by • good ranging from the " greenery-yallery” of
the
iBHthetic to the darkest aud meet in­
suite,
is
now
on
the
way
here
to
reside.
wuat a ball last night, and it was so
and deep-laid tile drain. There are but
early when. I left that I thought I would His name b Prbdang, and he will repre­ few farms in the State but perpetually visible greens, will undoubtedly be the
sent his land with credit being highly fibwing cool water can be obtained. And reigning favorite* during the approach­
not go to bed at all.”
He qieaks a fountain of this kind, in the absence ing season; and as regards style, tiie
“That's a poor excuse, nir. Hereafter educated and cultured.
you must get here later than this, or I’ll French and English fluently, and cannof of natural spring*, will amply pay for a present indications are that but few.il yynxiAM jonks
discharge yon. If one ball is not enough fail to make the best of impressions. long line of tile drain.—Iowa Hlale. Reg- any, dreraes will be worn with flat trim­
mings—the more boufliuit the better.
to keep you up until a late hour of the For my own parti have been living
Dressmakers, by means of pennitra, puffs,
thereabout two years, first going out as
Consul under an appointment by Prroi—Nashville, Tenn., had an organiza­ full scarf draperies, ruches, and other
t ret here too early again.”
tion known as •‘The Natal Twin Amocia- rroourcwwt their command, contrive to
“Queer old coon,” muttered the clerk,
rea&amp;wrt-Gafflidd, and tator H.—t’-twhwh pars
-to
mrm-. make fashionable costumes as intricate
be stnSHed'oruntlT ItgOtlXtf TJlWUgfr
ster by Prerideat .Arthur, ’her producing a certificate of toe pater­ iud imjflSINA to follow as poodhie, andsuit hisprincipaL Business, we may ratident
--------nlty
of
a
pair
of
twin
babies.
No
provi- tht fuller tbe effect tun greater the tnmark incidentally, once more b a litof the mou is mode for triplew or higher.

nienttranrit, applicable to cities; but their
inventions have nnt been found bo perfect
as
to warrant■ universal adoption". 'An­
jus’ kum frum New Orleans. I fix it all
other step forward has been taken by a
nice as pie, an’ it look ao good I tumble
Cincinnati boy. To describe the new
down on it. an nex’ I know Mr. Hewett
motor scientifically would be but to con­
deyrelf to- death, an’ sayin’, "Come, fuse most readers. Suffice it to ray that
Char-bty, we won’t tell on you dis time;, the electric current ia supplied from a
but please git up, an’ hurry to your own stationary generator to two copper wires
laid between the ordinary rails, a few
department’* lie right good if he
inches apart and a trifle higher than the
does
want
Mias
Fannie,,
an’
rails. These wires will be protected by
always
look
like
he
got a
an iron tube, to which they will be at­
new gethrin'-string in his nx&gt;uf. It wua
tached by proper insulators. In this tube
so funny, I tole Cicely Ann when I got
in .bed, an’ to-m.orrer it’ll be hoorahed
all ober dis place. An’ de plain truth
wider, that dirt falling on the wires may
ob it is I’m done workin* like I sa - ben
pass through, and the wires be kept clean
doin’, an’ I’m goin’ to quit it! I don’t &lt;
keer fur de turn-out nohow, ’ceptin’ de and protected from interference, a
water-miliions—an’de candy—an'de ice­ decided advantage over previous methods.
Siemens at first used the ordinary rails as
cream—an’ aeein’ aunt Rachel dere, wid
cond uctoreof the currents, but it was found
her ugly self makin, eyes at ua gals; an*
that when the ties, rails, and hleepcra
oucet ahe ax me why diden’ I kum see
Alice, an’ I tole her it makes me nervous were moistened by rain tfr dew, or any
other means, {here was a great lorn of
to walk eo far, an’ how she take on ’bout
de chill’n now-days. Aunt Margrit she power, to say nothing of the danger to
persons or animals who might complete
good to Us gals, an* I likes to hear her
the current by touching both rails simul­
tell ’bout de white ladies where she go
taneously. Siemens has now discarded
an* stay, an’ help ’em wid dey chill’n an’
that method for wires placed above the
fruit-cake an' mince pies; an’ she say,
“Be smart, chill’n, tn’ even Mrs. Allen, track, from which the current is trans­
de grandest lady in all Texas, will even mitted to the motor underneath by means
of traveling pulleys attached to the car
let you help, win dat little jewel ob hers, —
a method both inconvenient and'un­
her little granchile, Peirce, if you behave
an’ work" But I ain’t guin’ to kill sightly, with the element of danger still
remaining. By Mr. Thomas’ method
myself workin', as I is ben doin’, an’ dat’8
the danger and the lorn of current are
de wood wid de bark on it. An’ I’m
both reduced to a minimum. The other
goin’ to sleep right now an’ sleep all day
distinguishing feature of Mr. Thomas’
to-morrer to begin wid—don’t de baby
invention is in the motor, which has been
wants me in de uiornin'!— Wide Awake.
constructed rupeeiall for rail way puqxij***,
and which enables him to overcome the
Cypress Wood.
extra-induced current usually present in
This truly excellent wood is now used such motors, and which has hitherto al­
for various purposes, and there » an in­ ways been found very troublesome'to in­
creasing inquiry for it. The wood is ventors. The engine or motor has five
fine-grained. After exposure to the air wheels, the two forward ones being sim­
it beconies of a dim, reddish color. It ply an ordinary truck, merely as supports
poraeraes great strength and elastic!tj, and as on an ordinary locomotive. The rear
is lighter and leas resinous than the" wood pair are larger, as ordinary driving
of the pines. Where it abounds it is ex­ wheels, and through them the power is
tensively used for building purpose.-*. applied. Back of them is the fifth wheel,
Roofs covered with.cypreas shingles from somewhat wedgeshaped, and divided by
timber cut in winter will last tor forty an insulator of guttapercha, so that either
years. The boards are preferred to pine side touches the wires before described
for the inside work of bnck houses in the through which the current flows, and
South, and for window-sashes and panels swinging lightly, both laterally rnd per­
of doors exposed to the weather. Cabinet pendicularly, in order to easily turn
makcra in the South use it for the inside curves or more easily jmws over possible
of mahogany furniture. It lias been elevations or depressions in the con­
used, for the insides of vessels and to a ductors. Directly above this wheel is
limited extent for masts. Large trunks the electric rut off, moved back and forth
are frequcutlv made into canoes, some of by a lever, for the reversing of the cur­
them thirty feet long and five feet wide. rent and consequent reversal of the mo­
They are more roliuand durable than tion of the car. The details of taking up
those of any other tree. It makes the the current from one conducting wire,
best pipes to convey water underground, the passing it to the motor, and from
especially the black variety. There is that to the othei- conductor—the power
some difficulty iu the manufacture of the being meantime transmitted to the
lumber. Many trees are quite defective, drivers by’oniinary mechanism—are in­
hollow, and shaky. The green wood is genious and havu many advantages over
very heavy and will not float. They are previous appliances, but would only con­
The new
sometimes girdled one year before felling fuse die ordinal^ reader.
in the swamp, to get them free from the points are the laying of tho conducting
sappy fluid, after which they can be wires as aforesaid and in the construction
of the electro motor by which die sec­
ralted.
Boat-builders use cypress to a ondary current, which has always before
seriously interfered with its working, is
considerable extent.
Many of the reduced to about one-eight of what it
small
boats
belonging ’ to
the
has heretofore been.
men-of-war in the United States service
The model when being placed on the
are constructed of it; much is used for
model railway, widi tracks about six
water-tanks on account of its durability;
some enters into the construction of inches apart, worked beautifully and
houses and house-finishing, it being ex­ with the utmost precision reversing mo­
tion widi tbe reversal of the cut off To
cellent in ceiling, and large quantities
are made into shingles and railroad crora- apply it to practice on an existing track,
no change whatever would be necessary
ties. The Lehigh Valley Railroad Com­
ordered "5,000
7o,000 of these ties .to
,to be to the rails or ties of either street or
Ipany
‘smv oHtered
steam railway, the only addition being
used upon its road this season. In some
instances the shingles are manufactured the laying of the iron tubing containing
the conducting wires. The power nec­
with the large end finished round and
essary is obtained from a stationary enoctagonal, that the roof might present a
and die length of road operated.
finer appearance. These kinds are used Sinc,
Ir. Thomas says, would only be limited
upon churches in the rural districts, and
upon villas where the builders wish to by the size of the conducting wire neces­
sary to overcome die resistance found in
display some taste in lines that'vary
n longdistance, and the number of en­
from the ancient, straight and conven­
gines operated simultaneously. For in­
tional methods. Some claim that shin­
gles, properly prepared, will last one stance, on a rojyl, say, of ten miles in
hundred years. They are certainly very length, ten motors of ten horse power
durable. Wood taken from submerged each would l»e u.*ed; then die power of
the generator necessary would be one.
swamps, which ha-* been in contact with
die decaying iutiuenccsof mud and water hundred horap power, though in practice
for untold centuries, is found to.be in an &lt;&gt;nc, or, say, one hundred and fifty
should be used, that there may be a
excellent state of preservation. Cypress
logs have been taken from the soil deep suqdiu of power for emergencies and the
loss in tnuismiwuon. The crossing of
underneath New Orleans in good condi­
tracks and the neceMary change of
tion. Evidences are abundant aud con­
switches
which have been found very
clusive in regard to the lasting proper­
serious obstacles by Seimens and Edison,
ties of tiie wood. Hence it is gradually are overcome by Mr. Thomas by the use
creeping into use more nnd more each
of flexible cables at those points, which,
vear. Already it is being used in many
passing under and over one another,
i, New York City in finishing,
with calls for more. Five million shin­ furnish the needed connections without
the least interference or difficulty! Be­
gles is the estimated amount of consumj&gt;sides die furnishing of power to the
tion in the New York market, with an ;
motor, the conducting wire may be as
increasing demand. Th&lt;* most of the-ore manufactured in North Carolina and well at the same time used for supplying
Virginia. At least 3,000,(MXI feet of electric lights, either to points along the
road or to tbe train, or both. If the
wood will be required to supply the mar­
ket in railroad tics the present year, and motor works as well in practice as in
about 2,000,000 feet of lumber for gen­ model—-and in view of wliiit has been
eral Use. It is exported to some extent done heretofore there is no reason to
doubt it—we may expect to sec it widely
to various i»rta. Railfttad tie* have been
Beiit to Cuba, France and England. Lum­ adopted, in cities, at least, where the ab­
sence of coal smoke, cinders, and oneber has been sent abroad, but in no great
quantities—Northwestern Lumberman. half the attendance on die engine ren­
ders such a method of traction an almost
inestimable boon.—Cincinnati Gazelle.
The Early Bird.

people since Ascending the throne. His
adviser, or Prime Minister,is called Surawong*e, and is an able diplomatist, well
up in outaide ideas and events. The peo­
ple are honest*, amiable, and generally
intelligent, there being but few not able
to read and write. The women arc of
fine feature and complexion, and appear
more freely in public than common in
most Eastern countries. The principal
means of livelihood are tilling the soil
and fishing. Siam is a rice-growing coun­
try, and nee is a great staple. The one
great drink is tea, although not much is
raised there, the supply coming for the
most part from Ch ina and Japan.”
Tho reporter inquired after the reli­
gious aentimenL
■,
“The prevailing belief is Buddhism, a
religion coming nearer true Christianity
than any other I know of. There are a
good many missionaries working out
there, but they do not make much pro-

MASON &amp; HAMLIN

ORfiANS^®8^152®^"

Q

S

PENSIONS^ll
.

dentists.

I

�Ip IO NEE R

STORE

|------SELLS GOODS EXCEEDINGLY LOW.
" .

—_

order to make room - for our Fall and Winter Goods we
Winter Goods! are Inrailing
our finest Btocta of Clothing at prices that re­
I-argrr and

bow the potato i» cut for seed
at importance, and that this is
an essential factor to be considered by

Wore Complete

------- —LN-

thia method. In order to secure *dll
■ther aamstanae in understanding the

CLOTHING
TV e have bought well and have some­
thing for every*ooc.
A flrot-clam Cold Weather Sult for $8.

&gt;*»« tacked bah, walltluc ■Jowly away.”

quire no bantering to sell.

HERE ARE BARGAINS FOR YOU!
Summer Pants for 95c—Think of It!

------- In glass vessels upon
the mantel in the office. Ln the field
EVEBY MAK WHO DRIVES A TEAM For fall and winter trade are comming in.
They are excel­
five varieties, the early rose, the snow­
------ ttHOJT.il HAVE-----flake, Burbank’s seedling, beauty of
lent and cheap. Examine them.
Ha»r Th, Fatter u&lt; Mother.
Hebron, and early Ohio, were used to
form the unit of our system, and were
planted in rows of one hundred hills
IN THIS LINE our stock will compare favor­
No one of the Ten Commandment* is
ably with any in Barry or Eaton counties,
each on manured and unmenured soil. 1 so frequently violated, and with so little
and good jaQges state that our prices are
Tbe seed used was cut in various ways sense of guilt on tho part of the vio­
lower.
OF the bent quality and lowest in price. Try our 40c Tea.
and planted both for level and ridge lators, as the Fifth. To think and speak
Don’t buy poor eggs unless you prefer them. Our egg tester
culture. In the garden, duplicate plats of parenta with disrespect is the rule,
----- OUR STOCKS OF---were planted for the purpose of furnish­ rather than the exception; to disregard
LONG KNOWN AB
tells you which are poor.
ing plants to be due at various intervals their advice and warnings is “to think for
Prints,
during the growing season. In these one’s selfto disobey their commands PENGELLT8 WOMAN’S FRIEND
Ladies Cloakings, Bhawh. Underwear,
garden plats the early rose variety alone i is to be spirited and manly, and shows
Blankets, Boots, Shoes, Hats, Caps,
was u*ed. Some rows were planted that one is not “tied to his mother’s Every mother of daughters should
• know about it—because ft brings
Mittens, Gloves, Groceries, Glass­
with potato Dealings, others with single apron-string.” In the dialect ot the
health
ware, Orockey and Queensware
eyes out stall larger, half potatoes, ' young man of the period the father Lu
whole potatoes, seed ends, stem ends, known as “the governor,” or “the old
And, In fact, everything usually kept tn a first
Ready pay secures for you all the advantages in trade.
and potato sprouts, under various cir­ man,” and terms little more respectful
cha general store arc larger than ever and
are being sold st copula- Tow prices. Come
cumstanced of level ’and rigid culture. designate the mother. If the young
see them, buy and be happy.
Some portions have been left undis­ woman of the period is mire careful to taring to Vsinful, beamy, or Frafusa Periods.
Woodland. Oct. 25, 1882.
turbed by tbe hoe, others hoed, others avoid this coarseness of speech, her aomulched; etc. Our first liona too often indicate that her sympa­
F. F. HILBERT.
the variation thies are with her brother. In how
which
t, between the »Bge- many families does the daughter play,
CUSTOM
of the various plants.
Some the 'fine lady, and ait in the parlor,
not only earlier in vegetating than dressed in her beet, while the mother
other*, but were also more uniform
Ln, , toils in tho kitchen or at the sewi
----- — —
the appearance of tbe plants.
A.I____
_
As soon
machine!
! Snfftring from or tErsaUMl wilA Prolapsus V tert
or Itearla*Down, with Us •ttendant UlcSratloa
as growth was well established we
GONF.
menoed digging uphills
*’
.
It will not do to attribute things like
nation of tbe and—
uie exami- 1 these to what is ordinarily call®® 1U”
from tb‘- •*
ground portion, and breeding.” They are ill-bred in the ex­
••
uate until the present onr ob- treme, but they are found to exist in the
rewTvations have aB harmonized with highest social circles as well as in tho Who inhac from Bat Flask**, aitbor before or And manufacturer of hardwood
each other, and the conclusions at first lowest; and young people whose man­
And is filled with Stoves of 20 Different Kinds.
arrived at as the record of the first ners In tho drawing-room are faultier Veering tba Critical Period, Blootta*. Numb- .
Lumber.
examinations have been in general sub­ exhibit them quite as often as those who &amp;•*•■ WakafulDea*. Palpitation. Ek.
AU
thaae,
aud
many
other
dutrearinc
com
­
stantiated and strengthened. We found eat with their knives and drink out of
that at no time haa there been any tho finger-bowls, either of wMch wan plaints, usually attributed to other cautei. but |
really peculiar to tho «cx. WIIJ. CERTAINLY
definate relation between ‘the appear­ unpardonable social
{’wrespect
ance of the tops and the tuber formation and disobedience may be better veded
at the roots. At no time could we ever bv an outward politeness in some social COMPLEXION.—Zu* 1’hor* curei thr former
feel certain that abundance or earlinesi11 circles than in others, but it is common and rtatore* th* tatter.
of tuber or that small top* meant a de­ to all. It is in the air, like the germs of
ficiency of tuber. This conclusion is• an epidemic, and the young seem to
MILL FEED and BEANan interesting one, in view of the fac". । tain it as they take the measles. Happy ▼lee. will furnish privately to persona aakincthat upon the manured and unmanarvd I for them if it proves to be only
Addreee
R. PENGELLY, M. D.,
portions of the field planted with varie­
stent attack from which thev quickly ra­
ties, at no time has there been any tions. Foreigners tell us that there is
FVKF. Cider VtNEOAll.
appearance of superiority of the cover with unimpaired moral constitumanured over the unmanured portion. something in the spirit of democratic
Judging from the tops alone, we might
institutions that promotes irreverence;
•ny, as many of our visitors have said, and that the highest virtues can only
HARDWOOD LVALUES.
the un manured portion of the field
grow in the shadow of an aristocracy
POINTS FOR ALL THE I.EADING PLOWS. BARBED WIRE.
chows a decided superiority over the
and a monarchy which the people rev­
manure portion.
lira lias n tarn I
erence. We do not believe this b true,
A Large assortment of Shelf Goods and Tinware, and the beet
: youthful color to trey
Our earlier diggings showed the and if it were, it would be merely say­
BASSWOOD LVALUES,
earliest and largest formation of tuber
Tinner in the County.
ing that our case h hopeless. An aris­
upon the plants derived from the shoots tocracy or a monarchy might possibly
FIXE FINISHING LUMBER
flmsht Wipe.
FOR COODS CHEAP CALL AND SEE ME.
which were broken from tbe potatoes be esteblbbed in thi country under
and covered as *eed. This fact held
certain conditions, but “j.oaldItbem.^et
good up to June IS, when growth tbe Empire of Napoleon III. It “»gh‘
I Mill on Sherman Street. Enst from
•eenied to cease and other plants took be feared by the people, but could not
Depot.
the precedence.
Continued examina­ be respected ; and ite moral influence
II. R. DlCKl.VNO* A GO.
tion aix&gt; gives origin to the following wAild bo bad, not good.
statement* of result*: In every case the
The doctrine that, as the Irishman
eye cut small produced later formation
of tuber and fewer and smaller tubers aud, one mu. u juet u eo&lt;^ M enotter
than other seed used. In the sipgle eyes end a good deal better, Ea. had ranch lo
A Pan tally Medldoe that Never Irinxicriti.
—DO TOC KNOW THAT—
cut larger we noticed an increase in do with earning tho irreverence that has
earlineM and prolificacy over the eve infected the young. When parents chafe
To show you a large and well •clrctrd Stock of
YOU
CAN
SAVE
against
acknowledging
that
they
have
cut small. In the eye cut large and deep Sv superiors, it is not strange that
we obtained the greatest uniformity of
their
children
should
manifest
the
same
plant/ind tbe earliest, largest, and most
abundant supply of tubers to the stalk. spirit. When parents defy lawful au­
In thoM cases where half potatoes, split thority nnd are constantly insubordinate
lengthwise, were used as seed we no­ theTr children may be WP®0** *
fractious and impudent. &gt;Sobody hates .
ticed a lack of uniformity in the product
of the different hi'Ls, and examination so to yield to outhoritu of any kind as |
has shown that where the vegeta,ingeye an American; and ” Jh?,od,?r°’*2 I
CONSISTING OF
mrst the young be. The idea that all
wm shortened in its depth, the yie'ld
Iu the lleuvy Line I iiuinufactinv Farm llariieaa. Bond liar*
was .markedly inferior to tnat produced mon are created equal has been preached
until
it
hax
been
perverted
from
its
from the corresponding half of the po­
neaa, and Lumber llariK-aa, usiuic tin- liest brand of “A" stock, stitchin
meaning-that all men are born
tato where the vegetating eye wm reft original
with • coni No. 10 thread, ami Elx-rlnird Trimmings.
witL equal rights before W&gt;®
at its full depth. These observations
। My Light .Single and Double llarneaa are the 1’ride of till ivbo
led the way toward a study into the the doctrine of absolute equality. Noth­
ERRORS OF YOUTH. !
uae them, an*
reasons which produced these differ­ ing can be plainer than thtft men are
ences and opened the question whether not equal in capacity, culture and moral
by the method of cutting the seed we worth ; and social distinctions in this
LOWEST
Made
all
country,
so
far
as
they
exist
at
aU,
are
could influence the results of planting.
of Youthful IndlKYcUon, will for the &gt;&gt;krut »uf—FttOM—
In our first search after causes we split founded on this patent fact. Bat those ferltiK humanity. Mod fre* lo all who. II red II lhe |
who
are
inferior
to
their
neighbors
in
recipe
«nd
direction
for
making
tbr
»iAple
remedy
•
r
01
C3.S11
01
K6HQy
xG-V.
potatoes tengthwisa and tried to trace
u
Stock
the
whether tbe eye penetrated the tuber, this respects refuse to acknowledge the by which hr wi» cured. Sufierer* wlihlng to pro'll j
fact, proclaim themselves tho equals of Ingin pcrtrrlconfidence.
Aho the Laurel
BUx-k ol
.
"
and to what depth—which we were led Shand
seek to obtain bV aggressiveness
.LAP WARBAXTED TO GIVE SATISFACTION.
■
•
.w,
LampS)
to think might be the case, from ob­
serving that in the seed taken from tbe the recognition that is denied them on
I also keep full lines of
growing plant the absorblion of sub­ th, score ol merit. Whet can b« ex­
fU---------- TIT-----CLstance seemed to follow definite lines— pected of children bom in such an at­
Saddles, Whirs, Robos, Blankets, Halters, Riding Bridles,
but although our conclusions became mosphere but insubordination and di»aathfactory to ourselves, yet this meth­ oontentT And if this feeling exists, it
TO BESEENJN^BARRY CO.
Collars and Pads, Curry Combs, Brushes,
od did not aMow the demonstration of will manifest itself against parents as
Harness Oils, Etc.
well as in other ways.
BOOTS AXD SHOES
our assumed facts to others. We, there­
AS CHEAT’ AS AXTBODT. Everything marked down to Bottom Prices and aattefnetion guaranteed.
But parents are themselves responsi­
fore, by soaking slices of potatoes in
ble
for
much
of
the
disobedience
and
carmine, succeeded in bringing out the
HERB, WALRATH,
intenor structure through the staining disrespect shown them. A large part
Is Recommended by Physician^
of the tissue*. This distinctly exhibited of this arises from a perversion of the
Went Side Mnn-at, Nashville Mioh.
the tuber m a swollen stem, each eye laudable desire that parents have to see
being a terminal bud on a branch, the their children rise higher than they have
branches running into a central stem. had a chance to get. They deny them­
guarantee that It will cure any
■K0IG1L III SD1GIUL S1HIT1BIUL
caae.MMl wvwill forfeit th* abort amount
We thus were able to assign a difference selves luxuries and even comforts to
ThU ItwtltMtkm.
in the character of the seed used, Sve their children an education, and
othe them ao that they can go “in bet­
whether cut with* reference to the quan­
ter
society.
”
The
children
gain
a
cer
­
-MUST UK—
tity of potato substance, or whether cut
cl»lr—ing sliMm.—k your Druggist for iLaqd
with reference to securing length of the tain kina of culture and polish—Jost
accarr ao imitatxos *b iumiihhi. If h*
haa not got It, tend to u* and we will forward
stem inclosed within the potato sub- enough to make them discontented with
/ hare opened a market
immediately.
Price.
n
centipor
bottJ*.
stanoe.
their lot, and to appreciate more keenly
F. L CHENEY &amp; CO., Toledo. Ohio.
Whole potatoes used as seed seemed the lack of their parents in these direc­
ATTACHED TO C. SMITH’S
give us results which were puzzling in tions They become ashamed of those
J JEft’RY ROE, Pbopbiktob
eir character, in some hills but few who have made such sacrifices tor them,
GROCERY
as developed, in others a multi- I snub them in public and lecture them
----- OLD RELIABLE___
icity of eyes and a forest of shoots. in private, ignore them when they can
TO
HAVE
THE
JOB
DONE
and
intend to keep a
&gt;r some time t his fact seemed to admit
of no explanation, but in attempting to
rvtrxt
destroy the vitality of eyes by boiling K.^r^b^'b^p^
water, and observing that these injured
eyes threw up shoot* in great abun­ “The old man” and “the old woman
SALT
FRESH MEATS.
dance, even to the limit of twenty-five sre hopeleMly behind the age, and.their
shoots to aa eye as an extreme, it seemed place is in the rear. If the parents BltRecognizing
These
Facts,
Aino
everything
pertaining
to n ^nri-dam
to us m if the injury to the eye of the po- ter'y lament this, they must lay part of
market.
tatoe, either before or during planting, the blame where ft belongs—on their
And
desiring
to
increase
my
prosperity
own
injudicious
indulgence
and
pamper
­
was sufficient to account for the increase
in shoot*; and it now seems quite prob­ ing of their children’s pride.
by affording the public
Good Goodsand Full Weight
able that potatoes whose eyes are abso­
The Ullore al pwraxU to mloroe ol»lutely uninjured rarely develop more dieno, wMk chlMrmt
&gt;»om
. Givejte a trial
than two to four eye*, while other pota­ ol lhe pnnwt root, ol thw raril. Chil­
toes whose erw have been injured, in dren will nmr iwpeot pnnmu »bo
». U IHRFEE.
part, may develop a dozen or more here not loree ol ohnrecvor enough to
In that line, I have employed
.
;Jhe
MMrkwt Price paid
♦yes. Wherever eyes are developed in compel obedlono. until It hM beoome • for Hides, Pelts, dte.
•xoeaa, while the tu»»er formation may hebil, end M they beoome older the
leek ol reepect wUI menilext iuell more | Fresh Good*, Full Weighte and
Satiafaction Guaranteed.
and more. We make no plea tor harttWhom I can recommend at an
land, seemi small. One interesting fact near and atornneaa—to rule b&gt; tore to I
connected with this experiment of pour- tar better than to rule by tte
but | _____________ _JBKNR Y MHL

Blankets and Robes.

Dress Goods, Flannels,

CASH ftlD FOR BUTTER AND EBBS.

NEW VICTOR SEWING MAC&amp; is VICTOROUS.

. . TO GIRLS

TO YOUNG LADIES

TO OVER-WORKED WOMEN

2Erilo-uLxixxg'

C. C. Wolcott

THE STORE REMAINS

To Women idvucod In Life

The MONUMENTAL is lhe Finest Round
Stove Madq.

0 A GOOD FAMILY FLOUR

PARKER'S 31

Paints, Oils and Colors, Doors, Glass, Sash and
Blinds Iron and Wood Pumps,Wagons, Buggies,
0
Carriages and Platforms, Drills, Cultivators
Seeders. Plows, Land Rollers, “Reed Spring­
tooth Harrow.

&amp;
0

PARKER’S

GINGERTONIC Alili
att p p a nv FARMERS. TEAMSTERS, HORSEMEN!
KlhAUI
MONEY

GROCERIES11 or HERB WALRATH

[.Sugars, Coffees, Teas, Tobaccos,
Spices, Fisb, Canned Goods,

.

PRICES

in

Styles
Best

HALL’S

in

Market,

Stone Ware, &amp;c.,

Catarrh Qure

cash paid

S1OO EMM md WE I

Tor produce.

C. W. SMITH.

New Meat Market.

Shod

ALWAYS BEST

MEAT MARKET.

SKILLFULLY.

and

Fresh and Salt Meats,

SmoIeA Ham aii Stoulden,

NO PATENT NO PAY.

Lard, by the lb. or barrel, THE BEST WORK
Chas. Middleton,

RATHBUN BODIE,

within the auk
Should tbs

ot thwe slndiM be | If parenta are tern honored than th
remind the

A No. 1 Workman.

PATENTS

iminoi^

INUITORS

J.M.W&lt;3t&gt;D
'FOUNDERand MACHINIST

Ull.I.IAKI) HALL
(So Liquors.)
Ovvadla FaMM

C. N- DUNH

�OFFER

WE

yiddywi €mtaljbultcai

The following point* are now reach-

SATURDAY.

-

NW. 1H18B,

MICHIGAN NEWS,
nearly 100 G. A. R. poet in
will soon light up with,
electricity.
Tbe stale horticultural society meets!
at Flint Dec. 4-5-A
Jerome ran liehind Crosby in the
former’s own county.
Three hundred new buildings are go­
ing up in Grand Rapids.
State conference of the Christian
church s( Marshall tbe 85th.
Test wells in search of .kerosene are
to be sunk near Port Huron.
Tbe .celery interests of Kalamazoo
support nearly, 1,000 persons.
Senator Edmunds of Vermont visit­
ed relatives at Romeo, tbe past week. Semi 4,000 sheep were recently ship­
ped from Waabtanaw county to Texas.
Woolston Comfort of Tecumseh finds
comf.irt in a patch of 40.000 cabliages.
Nearly half of Bancroft waa burned
the 13th. Loss $40,000. insurance light.
The beekeepers of western Michigan
meet at Grand Rapids the 29th and
80th.
'
/
Wm. Staples, nn old gentleman of
Medina, suicide^ by cutting his throat

. Sunday.
'
Win. Neinbouao haa been acquitted
ot the charge of murder at Grand
Rapids.
PoliticaUectnrea in place of sermons
are coming into vogue. The latest was
at Adrian.
The Grand Trunk railroad is to
build a 20-inile cut of! between Flint
and Owosso.
Smith’nz cottage villa at Algonac
burned recently. Loss $0,000, maurance $3,000.
$
Battle Creek haa a gambling bell, run
on the sly, with a nobby clerk for a
“roper in.”
Eight prisoners escaped from the
Jackson jail, laat week Friday.by saw­
ing off a lock.
The orthodoxy of Rev. Reed Stewart
ot Battle Creek has been certified to by
the state presbytery.
E. C. Loughborough of Battle Creek
has a son of which ho ia not the father.
’Twna left on his door step.
Ex-state Senator J.Webster Childs of
Ypsilanti died Nov, 9. Ho was widely
known and greatly respected.
Sauer’s cooper shop at Detroit was
burned by an incendiary Tuesday
night. Lose $13,000, insurance $2,000.
The ship bnilding into rests of Bay
City will furnish employment for .200
mrh. this winter, with one yard closed.
The wheat, lumlier, cooper and iron
product ot the state of Mjchgian this
year it estimated to be worth $HO,OOC,000.
T. I’. Arden of Cadillac, had his
right arm jerked from its socket aifd
three ribs broken, while taking off a
belt.
, Mackinaw^City and St. Ignace, on
opposite aides of the straits of Macki­
naw, are now connected by electric
cable.
An Episcopal rector nt Detroit, ex
communicated a member thia week,
which will be
new idea to rriany
iw-ople.
Some 1800 chickens were killed aud
dressed in four hours and a half in the
Coldwater institution devoted to that
business.
A number of Jay Hubbell’s friends
met with him at Detroit this week, to
devise means for the political death of
T. W. Fem-.
Mrs. Betsey Davis, a widow of 82,
wandered off into the woods of Glad­
win county and taking laudnum. laid
down and died.
Congressman Willits of
Monroe
couldn't get renominated to congress
but he has been chosen principal of the
state normal school.
Another free trade club organized, at
Ann Arbor. Tho coming contest will
be over the tariff and the p^ticians
might ns well awake to it.
The Tittabaw.isso boom company of
East Saginaw rafted this season 619,000,000 feet of logs,—tbe largest season's
rafting ever known to have been done
in the world.
L. r. Smith,|n boiler maker of Bay
City, can break a three-eights manilln
ripe with his hands, and claims to be
able to break a three-eighth inch iron
chain in the same manner.
Tom Navin, the swindling ex-mayoy
•f Adrian, has not been eauglit. and
the Etening Nam says be isn’t likely
to be unless some present Adrian of*
tlcials die, resign, or lose their
flooence."
rhe election of S. F. Snyder, repiile
licun candidate for representative in
Calhodn comity, will be contested on
Wie ground thnt Snyder was ineligebl
k» election Itecnnae he waa Mid is regis­
ter of deeil«.
The Cincinnati, Wabash A J take
Michigan railroad, recently completed.
began running through trains from
Cincinnati to Benton Harbor, this
week. This rood will be a great Mp
to Berrien county.
Marrin H. Cole, an oid ttuan of Battle
who hna several UmcB attempted
suicide, cried again last Snuirttav. He
live*.

He in afflicted with melancholy

It

probable that the eonMicntional

I&gt;exter. Ann Arbor, Ypsilanti. Detroit.
Pinckney, Saline, Tecumseh, Adrian,
Port Buren, Toledo, Pontiac erd Flint.
A drntffccn conductor on the Michi­
gan CefitvaL t&gt;ut a woman oft on a
railroad bridge at Battle Creek, one
dark night this week, and she missed
her footing, fell into the river and
would have drowned but for timely as­
sistance.
A boy named Earle died in Detroit
last week* of a pistol shot wound in tbe
head. Whether it was accident, sui­
cide or nfurder, docs not appear. He
was chief of a band of boys
and waa known as Billy the Burglar.
One of tbe results of dime of dime nov­
el reading.
Edward Mormon of Stanton died of
whisky and exposure at Big Rapids the
11th ; and in Cheboygan county some
roughs forced % temperate young man
co dring till be was drank, wheu he
wandered off into tbe woods and died
from inability to vomit, being black in
the face when found.
A number of the most intelligent and
progressive farmers of Calhonn county
have an association for the purpose of
encouraging better methods of raising
corn. It has been iu existance some
time and this year its annual prize was
tiesto wed upon Supervisor W. Simons,
of Emmett, who showed a field which
gave 200 bushels to the acre.

200 OVERCOATS AHD ULSTERS
ULSTERS and OVERCOATS—
$3.75
4.50
5.00
12.00
0.00
15.oo
$7.50
9.00
10.00
16.50

$2.75
3.00
4.75
5.oo

Cloaks and Dolmaris Cheap
UST THINK OF IT,—

main line.

GRAND RAPIDS DIVISION
STATIONS

Exp.

1224
had bM
120 taa
1:43 fr.57
2X3 724
XU IM
w tgi
SX1 A23
a.27 4;50
1*44 no
4J&gt;0 1140
pta

vanaomvilla
Charlotte —
Eaton Sapid*.

STATIONS.

Dtlrott,

NaabT'l e

HORSE BLANKETS AT 90 CENTS

The principal burglaries during the
We do not ask you to take our assertions on paper, but we do want you to come and ex­
week have been st Dowagiac, where a
amine our prices and see the largest stock of goods in Barry county.
safe in the post office was blown aud
$2,000 worth of W; B. Nichols’ jewelry
and $140 of J.O. Becroft’s cash secured;
at Dunham (or Sterling), where $840
were secured ; and at Frankfort, $25
cash aud $100 worth of goods were
taken. There have been a few other
minor ones committed, and a man calculation is that the Democrats will
CUT SHOWING THE SIMPLICITY OF THE
named Hass of Concord haa $300 taken have 183 members, the Republicans 138,
and the Bcadjusters 5. This will give al
from his pockets at Jackson.
tbe Democrats a clear majority of 40
Calhoun county is quite roused over
over nil. The senate will undoubtedly C3
the fact that Sheriff Henderson, who
be Republican by one or two majority 2E
was recently beaten for re-election,has
even with the loss of Colorado.
discharged Deputy Sheriff Waldo, who
The prediction is that the coming co
had only a few more weeks to serve.
season in the capital will be one of the I
It was from Waldo that Webester the gayest on record. This is a prediction I
castrator got away, and it has been
annually made by writers for tho press
strongly suspected that Waldo and in Washington. No one has yet given 5/5
Webester were in collusion regarding
any good reason why it should be so,as
the escape. It is tliought Waldo’s dis­
far as the public generally is concerned .
charge shows one of two things: that or as to whether the gayeties will be | Q
there waa collusion, or that Henderson
such ns will Include ladies.
A gay ।
(who was beaten principally by feeling
winter in Washington for gentlemen '
over the escape) is revenging himself does not necessarilly imply an especi-1
for his defeat on Waldo. It is thought
It combine* *11 the tried and proven merit* of all other machines with none of their dlsadally gay dne for ladies. Last winter, j rant
that if Waldo was guilty of collusion which was said bv hotel and restau-', Thl
, ,
. '
.. I from u&gt;oucv him it ob* lasee idc coca ireiarva iu ail oiner Mctu-esana put tbem In one irrand coni,
with Webster he should have been dis­
rant keepers (Ohave been their busiest ; LlnaUon, maklof tbe Hand*otue«t, Larraal, Moat silent and Lightest Banning machine yet oflcrr.1
charged long ago. As it is, stigma iu on record for dinners, lunches, break-,
“*°u'‘rt“rikn« &lt;ork’
’
| i&gt;*s proved to ue suaolutcly gnoa are to be lounn only in the Crown- Other machfoea may have one,
put upon him at least.
fasts and suppers for gentlemen, WM 1 two or throe of these point*, bat none hot Um Cnn ha* them all. Every device that la really dmlr,
,,
.
able In Other iztachlnes wUl ba found In the Crown. Advantage h*. h—n talran r.t »K—
----- ■
Fatal accidents have been reason­

CS^Butter, Eggs, and Dried Apples Wanted.

K. C. dHOWK,
H. B. LEDTARD
O*W&lt;UcOaiaSt’jMk''ID &lt;H,n W* D«ra
'

Gsn'IPaaaamJTlekai Aaant.Chlraao

£JR0&lt;ht8, MARSHALL A Q&gt;.

”

Nashville Elevator!
Pay the highestmarket price for all kind* of

Grain and Produce
---------- And sell---------eeds, Feed, Lime, Salt, Plaster, Stuc­
co, Hair, Pine Lumber, Lath
and Shingles,
AT THE LOWEST LIVING PRICES.

Eijmcncei, Eeliable, anfl Reuionsible.
A. H. WINN, Dentist.

BEST SET GUM TEETH $10.00
Teeth Extracted Without Pain.

OfflceOpen Day &amp; Evening

not until Lent began at all gay in res- | experience with all I

ably numerous this week. First there
wns J. H. Frisliie who fell from a
dwelling house window at Chelsea;
then John McCurh
who was drowned
at Bay City; Hannah Bellman, nn old
lady of 80 years, who fell across the
street car track at Detroit and wn»; run
over; Archibald Scott, who was killed
by the cars near Dexter; Joseph Aus­
tin, a switchman, who was crushed by
ths cars at Cadillac the 14th x Jas.
Burns and----- Thomson,. Canadians,
who met the grim monster in lumber­
ing campu; and last but not least nota­
ble as regards the strangeness of the
accident, the man at Lansing who in at­
tempting to throw a piece of boa^d into
tho river, broku the bridge railing, fell
in, came up twice, but was too drunk
to gut out.
DLR WASHIMITG

pcct to the number of parties given at • lhln« K’M&gt;3 ,n tb*°*
E. R, WHITE,
which ladies were included. This was ■
—
true even at houses occupiedby gentle- j &gt; y Ai harber, JI. D.,
men whose “wipes were with them. JlJL •
None of the officials who have lately
‘ IHOMCEorATlUC
.

moved or are about to move into new
bouses, which they bought or built,
have ever given anv large entertain-!

Office flrat door east of Opera House, and

NEW GOODS

Let every Woodlander re­
member that my new stock of
winter goods is larger than ev­
er and was bought at

meats here, nor are they likely to do 8uu StrccUi Na»hvllle, Mich.
so.
For instance, among the new ----------------------------- - ——-------- ---------houses recently described by your cor-;
the place to buy
respondent were those of Senator Pen-I
dleton nnd Representative Robeson, I
and mention was made of Senator1
Don Cameron’s, but no large parties of (
and will be sold at a slight ad­
any kind will probably occur iu their j
vance above actual cost.
CUTLERY, NAILS, PAINTS.
residences.
Prepare for cold weather by
Tbe plans for the arrangement of ex-1| Oils. Pumps. Cross-cut Nawa. ;•
hibita and program of entertainments ’
buying yoftr
Farm
Tools.
f
for tbe GarfieM Monument fair are as­
suming pretty definite shape
The
And everything in the hardware line, la at
rotunda of the Capitol, which is neces­
sarily the principal center of attrac­
now. Our stock is complete
tion. will have many rivals for popular
in every respect.
attention and be thus relived of that
VVOODI.AND.
Also New Dry Goods, Boots,
crushing and crowding that has been
experienced on other occasions, notably aj-Sttx-k larger and Prices lower than ever Shoes, Hats, Caps, Groceries,
before.
the reception by tbe Society of the
Etc., in endless profusion.
Army of the Cumberland, where Gen.
Every Description of Tinware Done
Thomas’ statute was unveiled. The Right aud Low.
We haven’t time to enumer­
ninety-feet of diametrical dimensions
L. FA UL.
ate, and if we had these goods
is to be u^ed asfollows: A platform six
must be seen to be appreciated.
feet across will extend tbe entire cir­
cumference, except where intersected
I will mall &lt; Free, tho recipe for ■
by the various entrances. This will be table Balm that will rewore Tan, F
surmounted by a counter occupying
nearly one half its width.
An aisle, act rrowlh of halt ou a bald head orataooih fane
AddreM.lacloalm.-5c. rtamo.BFN. VANDELFA
WOODLAND
twelve and a half feet wide, intervenes ,CO..
19 Ban-fry St-. K. &gt;*,____________________
between this nnd the exhibits of the
four great art houses. Messrs Tiffany
rwUsCcs.r
Ac Co. have been alloted tbe north­
KMLSFnc FITS.
eastern section, Saxony the northwest­
ern, tbe Gorham silver manufacturing
company the southwestern and the
First Japanese manufacturing com­
pany tbe southeastern.
August.

Hardware, Glass, Tin and Copperware,

LETTER.

Rock Bottom Prices

L. FAUL’S

Washington. D. C.. Nov. 11,1883.
Tbe time is fast coming upon us,
when the ({odgrcMional overcoat will
be seen on our streets, ami tbe voice
ot wisdom ascends upwards towards
that funny looking, frisking old female
called the Goddess of Liberty. Board­
ing bouse keepers have gone to clean­
ing their windows nnd raising their
prices; it might be a little more satis­
factory, perhaps, if they would raise
their board a little more instead of
prices; but one must not expect much
in tins world of sorrow. The heart al­
ways lightens when Congress draws

PIMPLES

iii-ar.

J.W. HOLMES &amp; CO

LEGGED WHEAT
N more grown wheat will be ground at the
Nashville mill.
I have foutid It impossible to make good
flour for those who have good wheat If I grind
grists of grown wheat.
There is no mill, old proceaa or new process,
that.can prevent the flour of different grist*
from mix Jig together.
Tbe idea of givIng a man the flour from his
own grist without mixing iu flour from other
grists is all gammon. It can't be done, and
never was done, and any miller knows that
he la trying to deceive bi* custonere when be
claims to ao IL
It la even impossible to even elevate grown
and good wheat alternately without mixing
them more or leas. If you doubt this, ask the
elevalpr men about it; then bow much more
they will become mixed iu a mil! where the
wheat and flour pass through so many eleva­
tors, conveyors, bolts, machineries, etc. No
miller can make good flour of grown wheat
A man who takes grown wheat to mill may get
much better flour than hla wheat would made
because be is apt to get some one's good wheat.
And tiie man who takes good wheat to a mill
when they grind all kinds will be Just as apt to
get flour from bad wheat. The only way to
make good flour for all is to grind nothing but
good wheat, and
oo from thia time

tween tbe flour I put into the market and that
which I give in exchange for grists, or that
which I make from grists when I grind them
• Those having good wheat can ret'good flour
here, an.: those taring grown wheat must pat
ronlxe some otlier mill.
Dated Nashville Sept. 30tb.

John M. Roe.

CONSUMPTIVES.

The President accompanied by bis
valet, Aleck, returned ta tho city from
Sew York this morning where they
went to cast their votes for Folger.
Those two votes are tbe only ones re­
corded eti that side while 199,000 are
claimed for the anti-Arthur candidate.
The President looked tired, worried
and disgusted, but not mote ao than
Mr. Folger who appeared at his desk in
the Treasury Department all day yes­
terday simply as u mass of disappoint­
ment. He was glad yesterday ta speak
upon almost any topic except the New
York election, .and now that it isov^r,
it is no use asking him whether or nut
he will resign. Tbe people have spok­
en. Tuesday they gave their opin ton
al»out River and Harbor and other
jolts, about Hubbell assessmentA, about
oppresive and needless taxation, about
federal Interference aud dictation in
politics, nnd about Stalwartisiu. whicji
lias long riotodjiu power, widening and
deepening political debauchery each
year, but it has at last not only been
halted, but it bartbeen overthrown and
doomed to tbe death that knows no

next House of Representatives wUT
Itaretmuivrin of not less than 40.

physician and SUTereOH.

Agt., at Kocher Bros.

LADIES LISTEN.
Having moved in our new aiore, Yates Block,
and added largely to my stock, I am better pre­
pared than ever to please my •patrons. My stock
contiata of fine Millinery of every description,
Beautiful Hate, Bonneta, Fancy Goods, Drew
Trimmings, Bilka, Satina, Lace*, Ribbons. Vel­
vet, Flowett, Feathers ami a thousand or more
oilier artie r* you will surely be lutereated in.

WHAT WILL THE WEATHER BE TO-MORROW?

F. T. BOISE,
-FOR-

DRUGS,
BOOKS,
JEWELB1,
WALL PAPKE.
WINDOW 8HABES.

D1ESTPFFH.

pbopbietaby

MEDICINES,

PRESCRIPTIONS

receipts.
TAR. F. 8. HULL. Graduate of Medical and
AJ Surgical department of (Joberatty of
Mich. Morgan.

S. S IN6ER80N 5 SON

PAINT AND BRUSH
RKPARTVIKNT

Grain-Lumber-Coal
i

Nashvill®, Mich

Call and Examine !
F. T. BOISE.

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                  <text>3l£W§
Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party undet the Sun.

ORNO STRONG, I
Editob ail PaoraixToa.

)

VOLUME X.
LIFE IE NASHVILLE

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1882
LOCAL

GIBBLE-GABBLE

And Her Environs.
The new aide track ia completed.

There’s nothing like a donation party

for cbaredea.

_____

The stores begin to put on holiday airs.
W. G. Aylswocth expects to winter in New
Sickneaa eonfinos Geo. F. Truman to his

Fowler A Campbell are getting set­

tled in their new quarters.

■ Rev. F. B. Bangs and wife visited at Homer
Wm. Shields is building a neat ad­ thU week.
dition to hit house, ou Sherman St.

Mrs. George Keith of Greenville is
▼initing her daughter Mrs. H. G. Hale.

0. E, and’sW^E- Hawthorne,. with
their .wivea, Sundayed with their

brother S. D.
Fowler A Campbell have built a
wooden addition in the rear of their
store building.
Mis* Emily Biaaell ia aojourning
with Mis* Evana at Mr. Worburtona’a

in Maple Grove. ___

D. A. Green, formerly with Calvin
Ainsworth, ia bow clerking for G. A.

Truman A Sod.
Elory Boise returned laat ^Friday
morning from Jamestown. D. T., to
spend the winter here.

Tbe donation for Rev. F. A. Bissell,
Tuesday evening, netted $11, and waa

a very pleasant affair.

Mr. Warner, leader of the Harting?
cornet band, and Frank Black of Hast­

ings were in town Tuesday.
Martin Cummin* of Maple Grove will
have a shooting match at his house the
99th. Prepare for your Thanksgiving

dinner.
Osxie Jenson and Walter Beauchamp
started Wednesday on a drive through
to the north woods with three span of

horses.

A magnificent and awe-inspiring dis­
play of northern lights occurred Friday
and Saturday night*. It was visible all
over the United States.

Pretty frosty mornings lately, but
that doesn’t prevent Dickinson's cider
mill from turning out the only pure
aniunadulterated winter beverage in
firefclaaa shape.

Tn* News has secured a new cor­
respondent at Assyria,—a gentleman
whom we believe will dish np the news
of that section in a style that will be a
credit to that community and entirely
satisfactory to all reasonable people.

E. Morgan wore a very happy
smile as he stepped into The News
office last Friday morning.
He had
just sold a load of wheat to our buyers
at 90 cent* a bushel while at Hastings
buyers had only offered 75 cents the
the day before, for tbe very same

The members of The News force
who trip the light fantastic and stay
out late nights, h*ve received a cordial
invitation to attend a benefit dance,
for the cornet band at Heatings on
Thanksgiving night. Tbe band is a
good one considering its age, and de­
serve* a rousing benefit.
The literary society bad a largely in­
creased membership at its meeting
Monday evening, and perused John
Fiske’s article in th* last Harper’s on
"New England in the Colonial Period.”
Tbe society will meet with Mias Mimi
Brown at T.C. Downing’s next Mon­
day evening, when Bryant’s United
States history will be begun.

Wm. Fowler, keeper of the Eaton
county poor house, Sundayed with
Thoa. Nile*. Mr. Fowler is said to be
the youngest keeper in the state,
and the statement is Dot bard to be­
lieve, aa he is but 23 yean ol$. He is
large for his age. however, weighing
250 pounds. Mr. Fowler was born and
brought up in Kalamazoo, and the
early age at which be has been placed
in hia present responsible position
shows the unusual confidence felt in
him.

Star lodge of Masonic Indie* enjoyed
a very pleasant social at their rooms
Friday evening, a number from Hart­
ing* being present. The occasion wm
tbe installation of officers, aa follows:
Mrs. B. F. Reynolds, W. M ; John M.

Mra. G. W. Francis, Secretary; Mr*.
C. M. Putnam, Treasure-; Mra. H.
Roe. C; Mrs. D. Dickaon, A. C; Mr.
J. Fleming, chaplain; Mrs. A. J. Beebe,

Mr*. J. M.Wood, Mrs. J. Fleming, rtars.

tumor, returned from a abort "trip to Ann Ar­
bor, Saturday. The surgeon* at the Univer­
sity hospital assured him that the affection
was not dangerous and that he would probably
recover from it in a few weeks.

The ladles’ mite society of Maple Grove will
the afternoon of December 1st- Mr. and Mrs.
Wm. Bivens will entertain the young people lu
the evening. All are cordially Invited.

TERMS; $1.50p«x Ykaji
Chepit Subscbiphom* $1 JU.

NUMBER 10.

TAXES! TAXES!
middle, letting the whole load to the ground.
VERMONTVILLE.
I win to al my office at F. T. Botae’s Drug
The editor’s father-in-law, Wm. Morgan of
ground In a sitting position, then bending •tore on Monday Wednesday and Friday of
Hastings, died Tuead*y.
each week during the month of- Dec., for the
him forward till hit head lay ou the ground be- purpose of collecting Taxea.
8-9
Wx. E. Martin, Town Treasurer.
here, and with 8. C. Hammood of Coopersville
leaving a cavity about ten inches deep where
W Linseed Meal at Brooks. M. A Co’*
Henry
lay,
with
a
Juist
across
hi*
bick,
his
An entertainment of charades, tableaux,
legs and left arm held fast by boards, one bereading and music will be given at the Con­

gregational church Thanksgiving evening.

HASTINGS.

of corn on top of hIm. Hr waa stunned for a
moment, but ou recovering halloed, and

ty Mi** Ida Parmenter or Vermontville
come to hla rescue. Mr. Henry realising hla give* lesson* ou piano, organ or in harmony,
Phln Smith has gone to Nebraska.
and any one desiring lesson* can leave word
tian Maaonic Rite* of Memphis convened at
Addle Parker baa returned from Illinois.
situation, told bls brother to get help for be at the Wolcott House. Term*, &gt;8 for 20
Grand Rapid* Thursday. Among tho*e who
Charley Wightman la tn the rity for a visit. , could not get him out alive, so help waa sum­
this week.
attende.1 from thl* place were Poatmaater PatWm. Morgan, an old resident of this dty, moned. Mliile the corn was being removed,
Henry, with bls right hand that waa free, kept succesa. Fresh floods full wolgbts, and
The aleet came down on a howling wind, ady, G. W. Francis, C. M. Putnam and wife, died suddenly Tuesday.
Wm. Buel, C. D. Coolqy, B. F. Reynold* and
Will Green started for Chicago Tuesday. He the dotted blood from his nose and mouth,
Thursday.
wife, James Fleming aud wife, Ira Bachelor, expects to take up land in Dakota next spring. thus taring himself from suffocating. After
O-Wbri* our stock of underwear like
Geo. W. Francis and Cap. Dunham have new O. F. Long and J. D. Dickson.
The November calender of tbe circuit nearly 30 minutes of hard work with willing Barnum* elephant Jumbo?
refrigerators.
Because It ia the largest ever
___ ________
seen inthl*
court was light Business all through and Jndge hands, be waa uy.covered. and with rails the
In 1880 a Maple Grove bridge broke and let Hooker went home last week.
covntiy, "Fact”
-----------Koches Bmos.
Prepare to eat turkey and be thankful on Henry Powle*' th re* her engine into the »tream.
Fred Sweet went to Saginaw Monday to put nearly suffocated. He could not have survived
INVENTION AHEAD.
Thursday ncxL
This week he obtained Judgment against the 18 of his electric docks in the school buildings more than a few momenta longer. There nev­
This 1* a [&gt;rogrc««lre age and fmprovemtnL*
er was a greater manifestation of courage aud are constantly f thing place and among thr
A. J. Free of Middleville, the tod-spring township for damages and costs amounting to of that dty.
1140, Mr. Powle* proving that the timbers of
David Forbes of Grand Rapids will address pluck than with Mr. Henry. Think of a man latcrt and most sensible I* that of the new de­
vice on the White Sewing Machine in the shape
the bridge were rotten and that the accident the temperance meeting next Sunday.
He shut up like a jack-knife with ton of weigh tv- with- all trouble of uneven winding aud thread
Dr. Toung has hi* office and house connect­ might have been prevented by proper care ou particularly desire* to eay a few word* to the on him, pools of blood forming around Srt* of a perfect self “Bobbin Winder,’’ doing away
the i'art of the township officers.
ed by telephone.
nose and mouth, death staring him in the face' .toeaKing and putting a third more on eacli bob­
young men and boys.
and winding as smooth a* a spool of *ilkThe band boys have some very neat invita­ tbe weight gradually shutting off bls breath, bin,
Brooks, Marshall A Co. bought 1,000 bush­
Remember thl* is only on tbe White. It also
C. W. Granger &amp; Co. have been giving cus­
tion* out for a dance Tbanlugivlng. The boy* yet at the same time be would give command ha* a splendid Beit Shifter, putting tbe belt off
els of wheat Tuesday.
•
tomers such good bargains during the put
are improving very fast, and deserve a hearty to hl* rescuers. Dr. VanHorn was on band, a* or on of ft* own accord at toe operator’s will.
month that their fall goods have been closed
he always is, to administer cordials, which soon These machines are reduced- in price U’.l Janu­
We are ready to accept a limited quantity of out and new goods for the winter trade arc now support from the citizens.
ary. None a* simple, strong or durable. “Tbe
revived Mr. I!., and at the present writing he White is King."
C. L. Glasgow.
wood on subscription.
arriving dally. As an expression of their good
recovering slowly. Luckily no bones were
will to th eir petrous for their liberal patron­
NORTH CASTLETON
gy We are dally receiving new goods, ail
broken.
M. Guy, jut south of town, is building
age In the put, they will, during the holidays
of which are being sold at-bottom prices at
commodious new barn.
A insworth's old stand,
make a present of the (value of at least one
Pleasant weather for this time of year.
WEST KALAMO.
Fowler A Campbell.
Mr*. 8. McMcllon’* child is no better.
C. A. French of the Grand Rapids Port was dollar to every person who purchase* good* to
the amount of tea dollars.or will discount such
Mr. Shrincr is building a new house on the
Whooping-cough 1* raging In this section st
nr Stoves going fast at Glasgow's. Don’t
in the village Thursday.
buy till you see him am! get prices.
purchases 10 per cent
county line.
present
Mr. B. Downing Is making arrangement* to
For some reason, horses are dying off quite
Curt Webster of Saranac wa* the guest of
ROCK BOTTOM PRICES.
Tbe ladles of Maple Grove have been for move In town.
numerously this fall.
hia brother Walter this week.
Don't buy a single pair of Boot* or Shoes be
some time preparing for a church fair, and we
New carriage*, like ulster*. are put away till
Farmers have had splendid weather for fin­ fore rUltlng Prindlc A Chipmau's, and inspect­
ishing up their work.
Winter’s advance agent Is in town, posting are requested to announce that ft will open on fine weather.
ing -their stock and prices. Stock larger and
the 7th of December and continue till the
John Wotrtng has put in a mammoth cistern
Mr*. H. J. Stocking started oo Monday to more complete than ev&gt;or and price* marked
bis unlettered bills every where.
right down to bed-rock. No competitors al­
goods are all sold ouL It will open at one
visit a sou in BhlawoMC county.
lowed to undersell u».
H. M. Lee again leaves for Buffalo with p'clock, and at two a bountiful dinner will be
Albert Parmentc.- ha* gone to tbe pine woods
Muskrat* are building their house* high and
another car-load of hogs this evening.
„ served. Those who have article* are request­ to spend the winter.
large, an old algu for a severe winter.
(lasgow.
ed to bring them In the morning. The ladle*
Bradley school commenced Monday with
Tbe auroral display has to.cn quite frequent
Mrs. G. A. Truman returned home Thursday have spent considerable time and been to Eliza EUertou as teacher.
and beautiful for a couple of weeks past.
W As we intend uloaing out our entire line
on account of her sou’s continued lllne&amp;s.
much trouble in this matter, and there Is rea­
Isaac Warner failed to raise bls barn Satur
Friday night of hurt week people were treated of Crockery and Glessware, and in order to
son to believe It will prove a gratifying suc- day, but finished Monday.
do so we Eave marked everything tn that line­
to a brillant display of “northern lights.”
This weather Is sort of a cross between a
to coat. Thl* is no bumbug. but a genu­
The farmers arc Improving this fine weather
Bert Stocking of Grand Rapids paid bls down
ine sale. Call and see for yourself.
California wet season and a Dakota blizzard.
by doing some fall plowing.
grand parent* In this section a visit a few day*
In order to realize a certain sum of muoey,
ago.
Marion
Shore*
ha*
bought
Vet.
Overemith
’
s
A reclining chair car is now run ou the Valley
L. J. Wheeler will offer unusual inducements
sir Sewing Machine*, Whites and other*
Rev. Bacon. Congregational pastor of Kal­
railroad. Only cost* you twenty-five cent* extra. to patrons of the “Pioneer Store” from now to 40. Who will Marion buy out next I
at 25 dollars, 35 dollar* and 50 dollar*.
Mr. Ira Warner and wife spent a few day* amo. preaches at the Matteson school house
C. L. Glasgow.
the first of Jan. Mr.W. has a mammoth stock
Mr. and Mr*. Ainsworth will entertain th*
tn Charlotte with her brother, G. E.,Hart.
everv alternate Sunday evening.
of desirable and seasonable goods and ha* fixed
THIS FOR LADIES ONLY.
M. E. church aocial at their tome next Wed­
Mr. F. Snore has bought Joel Kocher’* 40,
There is a widespread complaint among
price* so low that the most careful buyer can­
We open thl* week an elegant line of new
nesday evening.
which will make him one of the nicest farm* farmer* that tboir corn la spoiling tn tbe crib*,
not fall to be pleased. In addition to tbe stock
Cloakings, very pretty and very stylish. Also
being so.damp when put therein.
In Barry county.
Fur Trimming* and ornament* to match.
Mias Lettie Hammond, sister of Mrs. H. R. already on hand Mr. Wheeler is constantly add­
Who did not see the northern light* Fridsy
W. H. Rian returned last week from his
Kocneit Br&lt;&gt;“.
Dicklnson, arrived from Lapeer Thursday and ing new grxxjf, which be is throwing oa the evening I They were the finest *eeu for years. fruit tree deliveries in the northern counties.
market at rock bottom prices in order to turn
WOhlo Lime—fresh carload Just received.
will attend school here.
Where are our weather prophets 1
Will does a big busines* each year in the fruit
.
BnooK* Marshall A Co.
into cash as soon as possible. See them and
C. Dever of Hastings made Elder Spitler a tree line.
happy. For further
Postmaster Parody's son Bert wu accident­ note pricesand you
a pleasant call Wednesday afternoon eve. Mr
Mrs. H. J Stocking received a letter a few
BASS WOOD BOLTS.
ally scalded by hot water thrown from Roe's particulars bunt up his tiny advt., somewhere
Clever Is a brother of Mr* Spitler.
day* ago announcing the death of her father
In this issue.
meat market, Saturday.
whose sickness wa* recorded in these columns j S 1.25 per cord for 18 inch,
82.50 per contfor 35 inch,
recently.
Mrs. Maggie Fieybarty, the widow, lives in
Cash as fart delivered. For particulars m
Asa Smith, on examination before Justice
ASSYRIA.
Luther Matteson, thinking that be could
Geo. W. Fhaxcxs.
Parody, Monday, for mutilating grave stones, Wm. Burgess’ house, a little building opposite
thrive totter, has engaged to work for C. C.
tbe
Wolcott
House.
On
Thursday
be
went
Our
stores
at
the
Center
are
doing
a
very
was bound over to the circuit court.
C3F" Call and see our new line of Sugars.
Wheeler,
a
large
farmer
of
Convis,
and
will
down to see her about some ’ rent which he good trade for cash as cheap as anywhere.
Ivy Lodge, K. of P., Initiates two candi­ c'atms she has owed him for some time past,
Not much new* in Assyria, in fact the peo­ move bls family on Mr W*. farm in a
few days.
*/
dates thia (Friday) press evening and win and which he has tried in vain to geL She ple are very quiet and mind their own busi­
Dr. J I’. CeMfiVof Avilla, Ind., formerly a the new market of D. L. Dvefee.
work the “Armorial” next Friday evening.
claims to have offered to pay him the Saturday, ness.
resident of Ksfaiuo. spent last week among
MAKE A HOME PLEASANT.
when her goods are to be sold at auction pre­
Quarterly meeting at the M. P. church Tart
Don't forget that you can exchange your oL!
Suspicious circumstances of act and talk in­ paratory to removal to Ohio. But he doubted Saturday and Sundav. A full house and a friends In thl* section The doctor is a strong
temperance gentleman and one of tbe practical •ewing machine for one of tbo*e eiegaro
dicates that another tragedy after the manner her,—be wanted his money Immediately—and in good speaker.
Crown*. wlio»e lightness tnakr* toil a plea»of the Brady-Hall affair waa enacted thia week. the hope of forcing payment be began to re­
G. S. Tompkins, at his cider and sorgum mill workers of that cause in Indiana.
ure. It's size of arm surpoA*e* any other. It’s
Mr*. John Tomlin, t»e#i&lt;!es doing her bouse power i* shown by it* limitless variety of work
move the doors. But no money was forth­ is now making lot* of cider and apple Jelly, and
Mrs. Dr. Wickham returned on Saturday coming when the doors were off, and a* of exprtU to keep making • until It freeze# up work and caring for a family of children, has it Accomplishes. It'* duration 1* only measur­
ed by that of steel and forging*. Il'* brillian
busked
over
1000
bushel*
of
corn
thl*
fall.
from Grand Ledge, Her sister, Mias McCart­ course Burgess couldn’t humble himself by •olid.
cy of decoration leaves nothing to to- desire-'
Mr*. Tomlin's sister, bound not to to behind and without It home* are unfur'ilvhcd and
ney, accompanied her and la teaching the Mor- putting them back be carried them away, com­
The Advert church appears to stand idle at
tbe brag buskers, stripped tbe husks from 50 househok* unhappy.
E. A White, Agt.
pelling the family to remove their goods dur­ presenL It is a very comfortable bouse with a
bathe!* in one day.
ing the chilling rain and sleet of Thursday. good bor*c shed attached for the comfort of
C3T* We never had so full a. stock of Boot •
The funeral sermon for ' Mr. J. M. Roe's
and
*1
mw
«.
and
never
bought
so cheap as w.teams.
did this fall stock. You can save time an i
children will be preached by the Rev. J. F. pass, tried before Justice Killen and a jury,and
LOCAL MATTERS.
Frank Wright has bought the twenty acre*
money by looking u* over a* soon as possible.
Harder, at the M. E. church at 3 o’clock Sun­ assessed 110 for damages. He waa then ar­ of Charley Baker where hi* saw mill is located
KocherBbvsday afternoon.
KT Our Carpet department is fillet! with
rested under the village ordinance relative to which seems to to a good more for Frank a* he
choice selections and should to seen to be ap­
ty We are beadquarters for 50c tea.
disorderly persour. It seems to be William
preciated.
Kocher Bros.
Mim Zoe Sanford and Miss Cora Mitchell of
Mrs. McDerby ha* a new loom/for weaving
Middleville and Walter Vineent of Grand who is paying the rent.
cy Dressed Hogs Wanted. Highest price
rar For Steaks (either beef pork or mutton )
lUpid* are guests of their relatives, the Wel­
'
8. S. Ixqersox A Sox.
WEST SUNFIELD.
worthy the patronage of this community. It paid. 10-11.
anybody has a carpet to be wove, don't forget
ty Wood Wanted at tbe Depot.
10-22.
Henry Miller ha* hi* new *■ ou*e up and most Mrs. McDerby.
MONEY TO LOAN,
A car-load of elover seed wa* shipped to
ST FlemlDE has the tort stock of Jewelry
ready to move into.
On Real Estate at low rale of iuterert of
There have been a number of moves in this
Chicago from here, Thursday, by Ingerson A
Robert Down* still continue* to make Im­ vicinity. Rachel and Dud Shepard have mov­ ever »cen in this pai l of Michigan.
Lee A Dtkkee
Son and Brooks, Marshall A Co., each firm
provement* on hi* plate.
Cy DUNHAM'S is the only place you can
ed to Battle Creek, Sam Augden has moved on
having about half.
3T Bring your Butter, Egg* aud dried *|
Mr*. Wm. Hickok of Saranac I* visiting her the McCall farm, leaving Charley Serven’s get solid packed Oysters. Try them and yon pies direct to us and «c will par you tbe ca*;.
will to pleased.
Cap. Dcxkam.
Prof. K. J. Lindstrom is cooductlug a writ­ mother Mrs. Henry Hunter.
for them.
Fowlek A Camfbell.
house ready for him and hl* partner to occupy
Peter Week* ha* sold one of hi* boroe team* when they get ready.
*y An immense stock of Gold Pena, Ac.,
ing school at the school house with about
direct from the factory or John Holland at ,J3T After a most rigid examination of thtwenty scholars. Ten Isesons are given—four Mr. Teasman wa* the purchaser.
UncleAble T. Holton and bls two young boys Flkmixu's, look for the sign of the Gold Pen. Crown Sewing Machine we can recrommcnd n
The ladies aid society will meet with Mr*. G. have bought the old Tavern farm,which make*
a week, commencing last Monday.
to buyer* as a first ciao machine. Tbe work
Sine* upon Wednesday of next week.
Cy It is wonderful to think that Flemixg lug part* are perfest In material and const rutthe old folks a comfortable home and the toys can
supply all our want* for the Holidays Us the tlon and embrace all the late Improvesnent* &lt;•
Mrs. Fannie Ellis, fonneriy s resident of • Rev. Leavitt, p. E. of the east district, will will try and pay for IL They are a lively wide­ line of silver Wareall machines W* have IxHight one for On
own use. exchanging in part payment th.
this place, was married again on Wednesday to preach at the U. B. church on Thanksgiving.
awake pair of toys and chuck full of business.
Remington, and ire highly MUlsficd with ou
Thanksgiving day will be appropriately ob­
a druggist of Fretiont Center, Newaygo Co.,
BRING IN YOUR OATS!
exchange.
A C. Blxtox.
and they are expected here today on their served with service* at the Presbyterian church.
We want a carload and will pay highest
Buriy Thomas still continues to haul the
price."
10
8. 8. Iwobrsox A Sax.
W We bavc*a rare display of Dre**Fabric*
wedding trip.
BALTIMORE.
In fact tbe stock I* so large and varied Btron
wood he can obtain, and i* buying more every­
won't *p*re uz. the nx&gt;m to«i&gt;uxuerstc. Soy •
GOODS AT COST.
Jeaaie Erb is vbiUng in Indiana.
Wm. A. Aylsworth accompanied by bis day.
Haring-Purchased heavily for the f*U aud
Rev. Mr. Jewell of Ionia occupied tbe pulpit
Jessie Warner, by husking too much corn,
son Willie wu in town tbe first of
rioter trade ami having had buslnees comparof the Presbyterian church last Sunday, both carries hla hand In a sling.
ty Our Cloak* and Dolman* are beautlfui
J. Hall received a kick in tto stomach by a ing De with a large stock on hand I have con­
In the store here, returned to Big Rapids with morning and evening.
cluded to sell for the next thirty days at cost Over 300 to select from ranging tn price froi.
Tbe Sunday school at tbe U. B. church I* to colt, nearly felling him to tbe ground.
My stock Is
No, the average republican don’t feel hire rather than carry them over.
be reorganized next Sunday, when It is desired
complete in every thing and firot-claa*. Now I*
NT Call and see our large and elegant a».
John Conley of Maple Grove baa the misfor- that there be a fall attendance
•
up with Joy to any very great extent over the your time to secure Bargain*.
sortment of GerU Famishing Good*, just ii&gt;
Andrew Kilpatrick has returned from his late walkaway by tbe democracy. He feels
PuiXDLK A CniVMAX.
stove of C. M. Putnam un contract, paying Dakota trip a wiser and a richer man, having that he can waltz down the dark blue vale of
of all kinds and in tbe greatest
•5 down. This week it was taken from him for procured a first class farm in “the garden of defeat unwept and alone In pretty fair ahape' numberStoves
OYSTERS'
at Glasgow’s cheap.
failure to complete payment.
Fresh Oysters even- dav, served at my Ludci
but this thing of having those little beta to
tbe West”
Counter iu every style. Price per can 30 ceuiFOR SALE,
West Sunfield did not appear in Tua News swallow up bodily, two or three titpea a day
One .’ackson 3-»pring aud Tlffanv Bro*, Alaoc.-lebratcd Vafi A Crane Cracker*.
many friends here will
and having only one auspeuder to brace up ou,
platform wagon, cheap to close out fall stock.
they were mailed promptly on time. Please as it were, naturally makes us inclined to be­
Glasgow
Larimore, D. T., about the last of December
lieve that we are just as abused as we can be.
and spend a portion of the winter with Mrs. A.
SPRING BEDS.
There is a rumor of lively times in this ville
sort or a mourrx *ambom.
J. Bownc and relatives at Hastings.
over a horse trade that took place not tong ago,
Go to Braun Bro'*., NaskriUe. aud get the
A FEW THOUSAND DOLLARS
ert.
/
x
T. G. Henry had . previous to Sunday last
as a law suit coccering the cause is threatened
by one of the parties interested. The athtr cribbed fiOO bushels of corn over-bead In his
carriage bouse, »nl Sunday last to ran qut hl* Makstox—Detbo— At U&gt;e residence of the
are requested to meet at Mrs. Wilson's on Mon­
ATTENTION PATRONS.
day afternoon, Nor. 27th, at two o’clock. A
bride’* parent*, in Kalaino, Nov. 7th, 1882,
Warren D. Barry returned from Lam Ing ’.art carriage preparatory to going away. He had
by Elder J. N. Sloan, Bert Maretan and Zina
Friday and commenced teaching school In the
Dego both of Katam. '
purchased u large stock
Kilpatrick district on Monday. This is Warhold of the harness with hla right band, when 8ocT*wmjL—McIxtose—At Charlotte, Nov.
IMh. isee, byT. D. Green. Esq.. WlHlam H.
Marshal Gregory, who has been suffering for well for both district and teacher.
SauthweUaml Cora E. McIntosh, both of
' without any brace* or
tn the
Vermontville

�farmer, who*

WHEEL

(f

THS

with the Blinksea; Towser
(for sttcfi was his title) showed no disr»oMtion't«Mpden his circle of friends.
1 he first morning after his release, the
milkman was seen running frantically
away from the house with torn clothing
and horrified visage, while Towser was
peering at him over the high fenoe,
shouting his frog opera as well as a
mouthful of coat-tail would permit him.
The milkman did not come again, and
he had apparently told his misadventure
to all tho milk-ilealing fraternity; for
not one of them could be induced to
come within twenty rods of the Blinks
residence- But th’is was not all. The
butcher, the ' baker, the candlestick­
maker. ami even the grocer, one and
all, suddenly ceased their calls for on- ’
dcra, aud as iL was a good mile to the
nearest score, the Blinkses were in dan­
F«»r little by little tbe b'Mrt fa wv &lt;rtna.
Ukv the whevl o' th m 11. ns th.- tide m
ger of starvation in the midst of plenty:
tearing
“
for Blinks was in the city all day, and
Mi p&gt;uru’lhir harri.-dlv throurb th- breait
Mrs. B. was a very poor walker. As
Blinks trudged back from the village of
an evening, heavily laden with family
era i-aii«v. &lt;&gt;■
-Mt Whcti
supplies, he more than once h«ifwisned that Towser wasn’t quite such
BUNKS’ DOG.
an ideal dog. after all.
But with all these discouragements,
Mrs. Blinks declared she wouldn’t
that
dog gave the Blinkses a topic for
have another one of those little nui­
sances iu the house again; "for what conversation that was never dull hor
uninteresting.
On the contrary, it was
good are-they anyway?” Mrs. Blinks
quite thrilling and always possessed
asked in ::n IndiMtrhuinnte way.
she
something novel One evening Mra. B.
chair, had to tell bow Towser broke through
lhe French, cl
aud
e “God Bless
the fence and killed neighbor Jones's
Our Home”
____ T__
over
the _____
hall______
door.
-As no reply was vouchsafed from any pet pussy; the next day nis exploit con­
one of these, she went on: “If you’re sisted in making mutton of a stray
going to have a dog, you want a dog sheep, and the day following was marked
with the death of a goat or tho maim­
that .it a dog, and not a plaything.”
. Mrs. Blinks had read pi the watch­ ing of a cow.
And so it wont-on. until not a resi­
dog’s Ikiix'SL bark, and numberless nardent of the town was on speaking terms j
nAvv* wherein the watch-dog aforesaid
with the Blinkses. Visiting them was, .
-was the hero, and’ the thief and murdcrof course, long ago out of the question.
■er the victim, and by consequence if
there waa one thing more than another Suits at low began to flow in, - and be­
fore a month hail passed, bankruptcy I
that Mra. Blinks had set her mind upon
having it was “a dog that was a dog.” began to stare poor Blinks almost out i
countenance.
.
as she so happily and lucidly expressed it. of It
was clear that this state of things j
-So mui h had she said about this thing
could not go on much longer. Blinks
that Blinks.'one of the most devoted of
began to figure up the cost of keeping
husbands, could not find it in his heart to
discourage, much less to thwart her-ar­ an ideal dog. In the first place there
dent longing. It was some time, how­ was what the animal ate, at the current
rates about live dollars a week; then
ever, ere he coiild find just the dog that
there was the work of doing one's own
•came up to the ideal of what a dog
marketing and being one’s own truck
should be. Finally he heard through a
horse, the loss of all friends, ond
friend of a dog up country somewhere
Again Blinks
which seemed to fill the bill to a nicety, finally the lawsuits.
wished, this time quite heartily, that
and negotiations were at once entered Towser wasn't quite such an ideal dog. 1
into which resulted in the animal’s be­
The climax camo at last, the turning 1
ing forwarded by express. .
point in Towser's career. Not content i
The day for the canine’s arrival was
with cats and goaLs and such small ,
looked forward to with joy and impa­ game, ho had tho hardihood to attack i
tience, and when the day, which seemed
tho good minister, who essayed to call
so long coming, did come at last. Blinks
on the Blinkses in the performance of
ihurried down to the express office, with
his pastoral duties. Parson Brown lifted I
many a promise to his eager spouse that
the latch and got nearly half-way inside i
he would l»e back just as quickly as he
the gate, when there was a cataclvsm. |
possibly coukl.
The ground was covered with dust and ।
When Blinks got within a quarter­
clergyman and dog and blood and ।
mile of his destination, a noise reached
shreds of clothing, all mixed together ।
his ears such as had never reached them
in the most inextricable confusion.
before. It sounded like the croaking of
It took Blinks and Mrs. Blinks and
a legion of frogs, each with a very bad three pounds of beefsteak to withdraw ।
cold. It wns hot until he got a glimpse
Towser from the combination, and 1
of a dry-goods box and a vicious-looking much time and nursing and a good bit 1
nose protnid.ng through the flatted side
of Blinks’ money to bring the parson I
that he could so much as guess what and his raiment into anything near the I
was the cause of it all.
condition they were before his interview (
It was the dr»g. Blinks looked at his
property in the dry-goods box. He with that ideal dog.
This was the straw which broke the
didn't go very near it Possibly he felt
it would be Hide to gnze at short range camel’s back, or rather the event which
upon an imj|isoned fellow creature. drove Towser from his new home, j
inioetween tne
bull
viff the very next morn1
no animai
animal was
was a
a cross
cross between
the bull
and tbe maMiff, and cross as both put *nK n*tj,r Towser s ministerial exploit. |I
u—
-------l_. ihe
-----------1_ &gt; ami did not rest until he found a man |
together.
To
say ,that
was possessed
who could be hired to take tho *\iog |
of an amiable countenance would be the
grossest flattery. His prison-house was away. He did not ask the mon to buy .!
uttered with slireds of eoat-tails, trous­ •he ideal dog. Ho did not give the Ji
ers. etc., formerly part of the raiment animal away; but he paid a handsome
of the trainmen, which he hod sampled bonus for the accommodation. And he •
from time to time during his trip, as made no conditions ns to what should I1
opportunity afforded, and he looked as become of his ideal dog. He merely i
said: "Take him away—anywhere. Buy- |
though he would like very much to add
where: only take him away!”
to the collection.
।
Blinkses have never—
kept
Blinks was m a quandary. He stood
.The
---------------------------------------r- a dog
D ''
off and cosvingly remarked to the dog j since, not even “a dog that is a dog;'
that he was a nice fellow; but the anf- I “d
you want to make Blinks tearing
mal did not appear to take the compli- | n,ttdy°u have got to do is to ask him
mentinthe spirit that was intended, if he has bought another dog yet—ffosbut repeatedly knocked the muzzle lon TranseripL
againt Lie bars of bis cage in a most
ferocious manner, awakening the livliest
Congrrssioaal Reporting.
fears in Blink’s breast least one ot those
slate should suddenly give away.
That the stenographer's task is no
Blinks, therefore, retreated in good estsy one can m.xliiy be imagined,
■order and set about bribing somebody owing
„ to the complex character of pubto take his treasure home.
He finally j n_
lie speaking. j|
....
e must adapt himself
found an expressman whose needs were ' &lt;o every tomi of nrtictiiitio-.i. from the
greater than his fears, and after much i clear, resonant tones of tbe scholarly
labor and tbe loss of some skin and . orator to lie utterances oi the insipid
much blood, the man succeeded in | tyro. Coupled with this is die vast uifgetting the ideal dog into his wagon. ; ference in the nite of sjwnk ng.
The :
Excepting the frog o[&gt;era which the ani- average rapidity &lt;&gt;f ord nary eonrersamal indulged in, with an occasional in- I tiou is 125 w &gt;n« per tuinu.e, or about
termission which was devoted to testing two per second; but this is by no means
the strength of his prison bars, tho I an unqualified rule. A stenographer is
journey to Blink's house was devoid of I often obliged to report at the rate'of
.mteresL
I ISO words per m n’ute. and hometimes
The wagoner unloatled his living and it falls as low ns ninety-fiv^ which is
lively freight at Blinks’, ami with the mere play. Mrunge as It may seem,
lo*s of a few more square inches of cuti- [ the latter rate is exasperating to an ex*
de iu)d a few pint- more of blood, the pe^t "reporter, and his notes are not as
box anti the dog- were safely landed on reailily deciphered as if compelled to
pinzza.
i report at much greater speed. As most
Mrs. Blinks was, of course, delighted of the speaking in both nouses is done
at the noble beast. “So gentle-look- I under the -five n&gt;mute rule (which alteg,” she remarked, extending her hand j lows a member five minutes to debate
■to oat his head through the bars. She । any pending measure), it will readily
did not carry out her intention, howev- lie seen that the reporter’s art is often
er. There was something in the glare taxed to its utmost capacity.
Among
of that ••gentle-looking'’ dog’s eyes the faste-R speakers in' the House are
and glistening teeth that made her the following, given in their order of
changii her mind, bo she stepped Lack rapidity:
Mr. Thonne-on, of Iowa;
aevend .paces, and admired him from ' Mr. Blackburn, of Kentucky; Mr.
asa « distance.
Thompson, of Kentucky: Mr. Ramaey,
The'Biiukses congratulated each other I of Massachusetts; Mr Butterworth, of
teve;a! time* upon the acquisition of J Ohio-, Mr. Car.isle, of Kentucky; Mr.
sneh a treasure. Of coarse, he was a I Robeson, of New Jersey. The ma orJittlr frightened now—it did not occur ity of the members are’ gv»od. average
*lo them that anybody else was fright- 1 talkers, ye. there are many who never
ct&lt;d. or if it did neither said any tiling I rise in their seats, not possessing the
.about it—but he would grow aoctis- faculiv of extemporaneous speaking,
tomed to them in a little while, and The Senate possesses but few rapid
would be as docile as a kitten. In the speakers, among them being Mr. Beck,
meantime it wns concluded not to wor- | of Kentucky; Mr. Frye, of Maine; Mr.
ry him just at present but allow him Ingalls, of’ Kansas; Mr. Bayard, of
to remain on the piazza iu his dry-goods ! Delaware, and Mr. Jones, of Florida. I
»r v ,
.
। It goes without sayipg that much must j
bo Blinks lowered some meat and [ be left to the intelligence of the stenog!
I
errors in oon- ;
eal expressions,
infrequent with
ntlemen sent to tbe Na-

agriculture b what it should be—a con­. bop, but for
tract between rnan and Nature, in theI of work, tryi
United States* in Australia, and in somei children’s friends, will teach them mor?
parts of Switzerland—the plow-furrow■ of true charity and benevolence than al1
“I’ve got ths
w the Ntralghlest road to longevity; ini the talk in the world.
Canada, where Nature is rather a hardI best mother in the block,” said a litth
taskmaster, the. probabilities are in fa­ chap the o»her day; and when the otbei
vor of such half-indoor trades a-* car­. boys demanded proof he pointed proud­
pentering and certain branches of hor- b ly to the flag she had made ror*th&lt;
tieulture—summer farming, m the Ger­■ “company,” the epaulettes that adorned
mans call it. Cold bi an antiseptic, and every one of the squad, and announced,
the best febrifuge, but by no means a, triumphantly: “And she’s a-bskin’ ginpanaoea, and the warmest climate oni gerbread for the hull of us. Any of your
earth is out and out preferable even to। mothers done thatP”
1 wish some one with the tongne o*
the border-lands of the polar zone. The।
average Arab'outlives the average' Es­ an angel could show mothers what op­
portunities they are losing.
I meet
quimau by twenty-five years.
Tbe hygienic benefit of sea-voyages, women in the streets, day after day,
too, has been amazingly exaggerated. who have boys of eight, ten, or twelve
Seafaring is not conductive to longevity; or girls from six to sixteen, and yet
the advantage of the exercise in the rig­ these mothers are *lone. How often de
ging is more than outweighed by the you see a young mother with her boy of
effluvia of the cockpit, by tbe pickle­ twelve, and younger ones, hanging
diet, the unnatural motion, and tbe foul­ about her? and what a beautiful sighi
weather misery; and, from a sanitary every one finds it when they do see it!
I remember, when a girl at school,
stand-point, the rea-air Itself is hardly
preferable to mountain and woodland having as a subject of oompositioh:
air.- The eozoon may have been a ma­ “ Which is the Greater Incentive to In­
rine product, bu£ our Pliocene ancestor. dustry, the Fear of Punishment or the
Hope' of Reward?”
How my young
was probably a forest creature.
“ For what length of time would you teacher must have smiled as she read
undertake to warrant the health ot a my closing sentence: “I can’t tell very
seaman?” Varnhagen asked a Dutch well, as I always have the fear of pun­
marine doctor. “That depends on the ishment, but my children are going to
length of his furlough.” replied the have the hope of reward!” But now, a
frank libllander, ana it will require happy mother, with my boys about me,
Ths
centuries of reform to redeem our citids I indorse that girlish resolution.
from tho odium of a similar reproach. hope of a hearty romp, a long, delight­
In victuals and vitality towns consume ful walk, with- “a ‘penny round” for
the hoarded stores of the country, and candy, has swept my sitting-room,
oniy tho garden-suburbs of a few North cleaned our .door.-yard,' made a quiet,
American cities are hygienically self- faithful nurse of a very unquiet littk
Fiipporting.
Permanent In-door work six-year-old, and helped’me out of so
fc slow suicide, and lietween the various many difficulties that I wonder more
shop-trades and sedentary occupations mothers do not try to meet the great
the difference in this respect is only one necessity that exists among us all for
ot degree. Factories stand at the bot­ play.—Hope Ledyard, in S. 8.. Tima.
tom of the scale, and the dust and vapor
The Faithful Wires of Weinsberg.
generating ones below zero; the weav­
er’s chances to reach the average of his
Weinslierg is in the northwestern part
species have to be expressed by a nega­
of Wurtemberg, about thirty miles from
tive quantity.
In France,- where the
Stuttgart.
It is early mentioned as a
tabulation of comparative statistics is capital city of the bishopric of Wurz­
carried further than anywhere else, the burg, and later we read that in the year
healthfulness of tho principal town
814 Emperor Louis I. established the
trades has been ascertained to decrease
Freihcrrshaft of Weinsberg.
Aboul
in tho following order: Houso-fc-uilding,
1129, Freiherr Wolfram von Weinsberg
huckstering, hot-bed gardening (flor­ transferred the castle to the Rhenis*i
ists), carpenter and brick-mason trades, Palgravine, Gottfried of Caied.
Th&lt;
street-paving, street-cleaning, sower­ latter gave it as a marriage gift widt
cleaning, blacksmiths, artisan-smiths his daughther Uta to Duke Welf VI.,
(silver, copper, and tin concerns), shoe­ who regarded it as a part of the allodial
making, paper-making, glass-blowing,
tailor, butcher, l.ouse-pSnter, baker, estate of his wife, and refused to deliver
it to Konrad III. when this Emperor
cook, stone-masons and lapidaries, claimed it m a reversionary fee. An
operatives of paint and lead factories, intense hatred existed between the Howeavers, steel-grinders—the wide differ­ henstaufens and Welts.
It began in
ence between brick and stone masons the time of the unfortunate Emperor
being due to tho lung-infesting dust of Henry IV., and culminated when ir
lapidary work, which, though out-door 1070 Henry sent for Frederic 'of Hohenoccupation, is nearly as unhealthy as staufen, and in a solemn speech in
steel-grinding. Lead-paint makers have which he acknowledged his loyalty,
to alternate their work with jobs in the
gave him hh daughter Agnes in mar­
tin-shop, and, after all, can rarely stand riage and the Dukedom of Suabia av
it for more than fifteen years; needlo- dowry.
The death of Henry in 1139
grinders generally succumb after twelve brought new complications and feuds,
or fourteen years.—Dr. Felix L. Ot- and Konrad welcomed any event thai
wold, in Popular Science Monthly.
might make the Welf feel his power

Ho accordingly appeared with his army
before the castle, having in the mean
The Necessity of Play.
time:defeated the forces of Welf at
There is not one person whe has at­ Esslingen as they were hastening to the
tained majority, few who have even en­ help of the besieged Weinsberg.
The
tered their teens, but will agree that attack npon the castle {Wins begun.
Af­
work, in some form or other, is a ne­ ter a determined strtfljgle, Welf fell,
cessity. There is a great deal expressed wounded, and the surrender seemed
in the two lines by James Montgomery: , now to be inevitable. “Without grac?
Lnbor, the symbol of man’s punishment; ■ or mercy,” were the words of the
Labor, the secret of man's happiness.
Emperor, and the town was to share
The greatesi
We all find out, sooner or later, that the fate of the castle.
Then the high-born
an idle life is a miserable one, yet too terror prevailed.
manv of us strive hard to love work for Duchess and the wives of the town offi­
Itself, instead of understanding at the cers held a council, and determined to go
outset that the end of work is to enjoy in procession to the Emperor, implor­
leisure. We would be far more suo- ing him to let them escape, and also
cessful with our children if we took care allow them to carry away with them
The
not only to teach them how to work, but their most precious possessions.
to show them what a zest this very wori. Emperor who had no wish to wage war
with women, received them kindle,
gives their play. *
I hold that children too soon forgBt gave them permission to leave the
how to play in this nineteenth century; besieged town, and take with them all
and as for men and women—they need that they could carry upon their shoul­
play, recreation, badly enough, but how ders.
Tne women went away, night passed,
few of us know how to get it! I do not
know that much can be done for those and the morning came’. At an early
who are hinuiddle life; when tired from hour Konrad’s army was drawn up i*
hard study they take up light literature; file, the gates were opened at command
when feeling the need of exercise they of the Emperor, when Duke Frederic
go for a sober walk, carrying their per- the Emperor’s brother, turning, espied,
Elexitles and cares .with them, and come down in the village street, and along
ack a little more tired than they the stoep path that led from the castle,
a long line of women carrying on their
started.
Would that meh took the Bible, at backs, not clothing, jewels and silver,but
least Christ’s sayings more literally! each her husband; and, behold, U to, th*
There is such r. world of every-day nhys- stately duchess of the castle, leads the
ical happiness as well as spiritual uies8- procession, the wounded Duke Well
ing in his warning, “Except ye be con­ upon her back! Had not the Emperoi
verted (that is, turned around,’changed) distinctly said, “Take wi h you all yoi.
and become as little children, ye shall can carry upon your shohldera?” When
not enter the kingdom of heaven.” Now Duke Frederic’ beheld this sight, the
what can be nearer pure heavenly hap­ like of which had never before been seen
piness than that enjoyed by a healthy, since the world began, he cried ou
sanpv child, as he runs and leaps, de­ angrily to the Emperor: “That was not
lighting in God's free sunshine, the iu the compact!” but the Emperor,
glorious zky.and delightful, invigorating whose face showed quite plainly that he
wind? A few grown people know what j was not displeased by this exhibition o '.
it is to enjoy a run, to forget all cares womanly faithfulness, answered: “A
and troubles in the very joy of living King’s word is not to be broken;” an(
on .(tod’s beautiful earth, and so, al' while the Emperor and his army looked
times, playing like children, find that on in mute surprise, the strange proces
kingdom which is “within you.-” But sion wended its way patiently and silent­
too many could not understand such a ly down the road, carrying away tht
simple matter as a race, or an hour’s men, and leaving the castle and town to
skating, or a battle with the surf, giving the troops. The Emperor generouslj
ordered that all the treasures of thv
one perfect happiness.
Now, as I have said, we can’t do ■ women should at once be collected and
much for such people; but we mothers •arried out the them.
To perpetuate this instance of woman­
can do very much in bringing up our
children to regard good play as nearly1 ly fidelity, the guins have ever sioct
as holy and pleasant an offering to God borne the name “Weibertreue”—wo
as honest, faithful work.
We should man’s faithfulness. — Elite Allen, in
share our children’s sports, and, though Harpcr't Magazine.
it may be anything but play to us at
—It is proponed to practically abolish
first, we shall find it not only a wonder­
ful help in winning our children’s hearts, by cutting a canal 20 feet wide and 2(
but tbe effort will save us many a doc­ feet deep, the narrow isthmus which,
tor’s bilk Is it any wonder that your dividing the east and west lochs of Tan
little daughter of twelve or thirteen be­ bort, Sootland, unites the Mull of Kin­
Such a caaa
gins to stoop,and looks languid and pale. tyre to the mainland.
when a game of romps is only enjoyed would give a direct passage from the
by “children” and the wonderful feel­ Clyde to the Atlantic, saving about 1H1
miles
in
the
voyage
to
the
west ani
Ing of womanhood is drawing her, in |
ap&lt;te of her longings for “fun,” to copy 1 north of Scotland.—N. Y. Sim.
her mother—her ideal (how can

we J

—An Indiana man walked seven mile?
to find a neighbor and tell him that hit
barn came within ten 1
Who
w&gt; akly, delicate
woman
romp by lightning.
ito hei boys, by sitting tn a corner Rule is a de:.d rule?—

tried everything, to do advantage. I beard
your Hop Bitters recommcndod by so many, I
cuneioded to five them a trial. Idid.aDdobw
am around, and constantly Improving, and am
nearly a* strong as ever.
W.H. WELLER.
Bad men excuae tbelr fault*: good men wilt
leave them.

A BIG SUCCESS.

“My wife wu In bed two yean with a o

cured her, st a coel of a dollar and fifty cento,
and ahr in now u “"-----Buffalo.

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.

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An only Daughter Cu.od of *rmi
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Before he I

IF PAH* IN ADVANCE.

The first public riding-poet in Rome
camp in under Augustus, nearly six
oenturies later.
But the Chinese, who
are credited with Inta of gorid in thtwe
days, however" bad they mnv be now.

symptoms indicating that the human
machinery, h in nom« way out of order
and needs repairing.
Whether this is
best done by leaving nature to do her
own work or by agisting her with pills
notions, drag* and do*es, has not been bistora.
A queer point in Chineee
satisfactorily determined. Of one thing, postal history is that they had laws prohowever, we may be sure.
There is ridiug puni»hm«mt for writers of deexw
much Ices core taken to keep this human letter* and robbers nf the na.iik.
Chi­
They
" PERUKE THESE LIBERAL AD. RATER ’ machine in good working order than nese posts wore called jambs.
there should be.
As a rale, there is were looAted twenty-five miles apart,
not an animal on the' farm so much and Marco-Polo swears they numbered
himself. 10,000 and employed 200,000 hordes in
’» 1.75 ft 8.36 | * 5.00 *8.00 overworked as the farmer
__S.50| 5.0*1“
KM
14.00 Perhaps during the year he does no his day.
tteches.
These Chinese post houses
L95~| 7.001
12.00
I Inches L
20.00 more than he should, but his labor is were also inns, at which sumptuous
not equally divided, and is don* accord­ entertainment waa provided, if the Ve­
|~u»T~^a&gt;T~i4.«i
ing to time and seasons.
The inven­ netian traveler is to be believed.
Tbe
Lob| h.(rfjfOb
80.00
tion of various machines has enabled Peruvians and Aztecs had a regular
him, if ho will, to save his strength, but sys*em of postal oommtinication, evi­
Buxines
the way in which they are usually em­ dently the outgrowth of aoei of experi­
IxN-ul No!
ployed is.not much of a let-up to his la­
ence, when the Spaniards dissipated
bor after all. With a machine, ho is-not
ORNO MTRONG,
. willing to do the same work easier, but their felicitous barbarism. Many speci­
Editor and Proprietor. works just as hard and accomplishes mens of their hieroglyphicaTcorrespond*
enco exist in the museum now.
much more. Tho fresh air sjid exercise
Apart from the ridlng-nost, pigeons
therein that are so much talked about as
were extensively employed in the Orient
giving to country boys health and for the oonveyenoo of correspondence.
strength, are very good, but they are
In fact the practice continues there to
not u.sed io the best advantage.
this day.
In Syria, Arabia, and Egypt
VJILLAGKOFFICEBS.
In proof, we have only to turn to the every bashaw generally has a basketful
PrcxUMnt— Ellhu Chipman.
record
of
our
recent
civil
war,
when
it
of them with him oh his travels from
Recorder—Frank McDerby. .
wa* proved by actual experience that the grand seraglio, where they are bred,
companion recruited in cities could stand and uses them in cases of emergency
Marshall—James L. Gregory.
more hard usage and endure fatiguing
Trustees— H. A- Barber, F. T. Boise. H. TV. marches better than those made up of to communicate with his friends. There
are records of dogs haring been used
Demaray, H. R-- Dtcklnaon, H- M. Lee and
country boys. Of course this ought not for long-distance correspondence by
to be so, but it is nevertheless.
What the races of Northern Europe.
care does the farmer take of bis health
In those day* letters were generally
Jlorirtic*.
and bodily welfare? The great promot­ In the form of rolls, round a stick, or,
/THRI8TIAN CHURCH—F A. Blss?l,Pastor. er* of health and long life are acknowl­ if a long letter, round two sticks, be­
V/ Service* every Sabbath at 10.80 a. in. and edged to be air, water, exercise and diet ginning at each end and rolling them
7 p. m. Sabbath school at 12 in. Prayer meet­ Does the average farmer do all that he until they met in the middle. Books of
ing every Thursday evening
might to insure purity in the atmosphere every size were culled rolls. Onr word
that surrounds his homo? Are ponds in
IfETHODIST EPISCOPAL Cl/URCH—A. the vicinity drained and filled? Are the volume means just the same thing in its
original signification. The roll, book,
D. Newton, Pastor. Services every Sab­ barnyard and hog-pen prevented by
bath at 10.40 a. m. and 7 p. m.
Ssbtwlh proper care and treatment from filling or letter was commonly written on one
side. Letters then, as Is tho custom
school at 12 tn. Prayer meeting every Thurs­
tho air with poison? Is there proper ar­ in tho east at present, were sent in most
day evening.
rangements for carrying the waste and caves without being’ sealed; while those
TVY LODGE NO. 37, K. of P-. meets at IU dirty water from the house a sufficient ■•dilreased to persons of distinction were
I Castle Hall. Nashville, Michigan, every distance, and then giving it necessary
placed in a valuable purse, or bag,
Friday evening, tor tbe encouragement and
support of all worthy, true, steadfast and hon- treat mo nt, or is it allowed to contami­ which was tied, closed with clay or wax,
nate the ground adjacent until it is a and «&gt; stamped with the writer's sig­
ratfie Brother KnUpts.
D. L. Smith K. R. 8. Oaxo StboXQ, C. C- mass of ooisonous material? Are privies net. Tha Rouqrn scrinium, or bookcase,
properly constructed with arrangements a very oostly dabine’. shows how these
for disinfecting and deodorization? Are mils were preserv. d
Miseellunpous Cards.
They were put
cellars clean, dry, and well ventilated, in lengthwise ajjd labeled on the top.
H. YOUNG. M. D. Office east side of or are they generators of poisonous
Charlemagne'established a post on
. Main Sl, Nashville. Office hours from gn«es? If the poison in the atmosphere
the Persian plan In his empire in 807.
7 to9 s. tn., and 4 to 7 p. m.
surrounding most of our farmers’ homes But the first actual letter-post system
A. FOOTE, PHYSICIAN &lt;fc BURGEON. oould be seen, means to abolish it would extending beyond the mere conveyance
bo
more
readily
taken
It
is
well
the
. Sueeasor to Dr. Wickham. Office sec­
of letters between different parts of one
ond door north of tbe Nashville House; resi- breezes spread it abroad through field coyntry, and branching out into for­
dedc-c first dour north of the Wolcott House. and forest, for if.it was not carried away
eign lands, was originated by the Hanse
Prompt attention to calls night or day.
the effects would be terrible.
towns, about 11G2
The Hanseatic
~ R. F. 8. HULL, Graduate of Medical and
What is the water the farmer uses, league, established in north Germany,
Surgical department of University ot and how does he use it? The geological consisted chiefly of merchants in the
Mich. Morgan.
structure of the country makes it hard chief ports of Germany, France, Spain.
or soft, as it does or does not contain Portugal, Italy, Russia, Norway, and
V\R. C. W. GOUCHER, Electlc Physician and
lime. Hard water is an abomination in England; correspondence between them
JLr Surgwra. is prepared to amrwer all sails
itself. What is it, then, when the wells wa« a business necessity, and this ne­
Rial may be made fur hit MFricee. Office and
receive the water from the surface of the cessity led to the formation of a postal
residence opposite Roe's-meaX market.
VXTM. PARMENTER, M. D. Office over ground after It has absorbed the filth union, so to speak. Tho Hanse posts
and nastine&lt;s with which it comes in carried private correspondence, too, but
VV Hull's Drug store, Vermontville, Mich.
contact, or that which filters through at such rates that it c&lt;»st more to po*
HAR H. BRADY, Lawyer, Circuit Court tbe soil filled with all sorts of impurities. love-letters than it dne* to tell your girl
Com r»!winner, Real Estate and Insurance None but rain water properly filtered h »w you adore her through the' personal
AgL Prompt attention given to all business should be used for drinking or culinary
columns of a modern daily nt .*! a line.
entrusted to my care. Conveyancing a special
purposes.
As long as the Hunse towns stuck to
ty. OSce opposite Union House.
But there are other uses for water. business and letter-carrving they were
M. FLINT, JR. Law, Real Estate, and In- The skin has millions of pores through all right. But they became belligerent,
• surance. Conveyancing and Collections a which nature desires to throw off effete and started in to fight other confedera­
specialty.
matter. When tbe.se are closed, as they tions and power*, and about tl.o middle
must bo te a greater or less degree of the fifteenth century their power be­
MORY PARADY, Justice of the Peace.
. Office, Conus Main aud Sherman Streets. when the dust and perspiration conse­ gan to decline. In 1805 all that was
quent on labor in the field cover them, 'eft of what had been tho most powerful
LIEBHAUSER, Merchant Tailor and deal- their work must be done by other or­ commercial league and automatic con­
• er in Ready Made Clothing. See me gans, which are thereby unduly taxed. federation in Europe were the towns of
before you purchase clothing.
Fils guar­ There can be no healthy slpin that is not
Hamburg, Lu hock and Bremen. But
anteed. '
cleansed frequently.
In\ bow many four centuries before that their posial
HATCH &amp; CO., Manufacturers of Taffy farm houMH is there a bath room or any system had faded from monopolistic
conveniences
for
thoroughly
washing
the
powers. The Emperor Maximilian had
• Candles, Chocolate Drops and Cannels.
Fruita, Fancy Candies, Cigars, Tobaccos, etc., person ? Much as personal cleanliness established a post between Austria and
always in stock. Second door north of the is neglected in cities and towns, we be­ Normandy. About the same time Louis
post office.
lieve it is more so in the country. If XI. set up the first regular post-houses
TTlRANK BAKER, Manufacturer of Boots there is a panacea for human ills and in France since the decline of those es­
A? and Shoes, pegged or sewed. Repairing ailments, it is water. We may not b« tablished by Charlemagne. Post-horses
promptly attended to. at the sign of the red hydropathists in our therapeutics, but if and stages came in use in France in
boot, east Bide Main St.
we were to choose in our treatment oi 1483.
.
diseases between'all water and no drugs,
The mounted posts in France were
TACOB OSMUN. Liverrman, barn near Wol­ or the whole pharmacopeia and no watet stationed at distances of four mile*
ff cott Bouse. First class turnouts at reason­ we should take the water and throw apart, and were required to be readv
able rates. Special rates to commercial men. physio to the dogs.
The farmer, then, day and night to carry government uk-_sFuneral and weding parties furnished with car
fails to do juHtice to him^lf when he sagesas rapidly as possible.
Private
riaget on short notice.
fails to provide pure water and plenty correspondence, however, was carried
T&gt;RAUN BROS., Shoemakers. Special atlen- of it, and the proper places and appli­
on very differently. The students of a
-L&gt; ttoa given to fine and sewed boots also ances in and by which to use it.
univermty-in Paris established a postal
repairing. All manufactured work made from
We will add only a word about exer­ institution in the eleventh century. A.
best of stock nnd warranted. First dour south
Bobo’s hardware.
cise. The farmer’s labor exercises to an number of pedestrian messengers wore
injurious degree many of the muscles, employed, who bore letters from its
TTTALLACE. BEAUCHAMP, Liveryman, while others are undeveloped.
The thousands of students to the various
vv
Nashville House Barn.
Single and
double turn crate furnished promptly sad res- blacksmith’s right arm may be abnor­ countries of Europe from which they
souahly. Commercial men driven to neigh­ mally large ‘ and strong, while other came, and brought to them the money
limbs may be deficient in both size and they needed for the prosecution of their
boring towus at special rates.
strength. We like to see the fanner's studies.
England and America, however, were
ellogg a bell.
R^swing boys have a half holiday occasionally,
Mill. Planing and
and engage in a game of boll or some the nations which actually developed
other sport that brings into action the tne postal syatem'tn its present magnifi­
muscles not used at the plow, hoc, or cent proportions. The first post-houses
rood Turning In aU its bronchos.
scythe.
True exercise is that which in England were established in 1483.
C^*-vW J&gt;E¥AkAT' Dr*1,r ,n Watches
brings all the organs of the body into The regular riding-post system owes its
Clocks, fine Jewelry end Silverware. Being
harmonious use, not overtaxing some origin to Edward IV. But as far back
pfo— cau dammd upon
and giving no work to others; come- as Edward IL private letters were sent
»Jth^Tra^'s'Xre30 fl&lt;hU *** doo‘"’
ouently that which is called play some­ by regular post, as tho .Inscription on
times u of essential service. All work the envelope*, *Hsste, post, haste!”
and no play not only makes Jack a dull shows.
Little or no improvement was made In
boy, but really an unhealthy one—N.
England in tbe postal system until
T. Sun.
TT HUM R. DICKINSON, manufacturer ot
Queen Be»s’reign; £5,000 a year wa&gt;
JjL and dealer tn Hard Wood Lumber. Build—The California lion—which is only all the post cost then, even in its ad­
In 1858, disputes
a panther—can not be a very ferocious vanced condition.
creature. The Trinity Journal notei the among the foreign merchants resident
AME8 FLEMING, prartk-al Jeweler and
in I/ondon, in regard to the foreign po«t,
fact
that
a
citizen
passed
three
of
them
Watch-maker. CloduLWatelie*, Silver and
Plated Ware, Jewelry and Optical Goods. Rock­which seemed quite tame, and showed which up to now they had been permit­
ford Watches a specialty. Repairing and Engrav- n&lt;&gt; disposition to get away. Another ted to manage among themselves, which
Uir done iu a workmanlike manner.
citizen -by the name of Smith—found they had done with a jealous eye to their
the apone in the brash devouring a chicken. own
ow’iinterests,
”’ierosts, of course, led to
to-the
RNO STRUNG, plain aud lauey *od rnuicr. Smith—who can undoubtedly be writ U n
a
postn.’’ The
Tha best facilities fordoingwork of an^
to for a verification of the story—caught i
°"™ poetmaeter of tho world cr».
the lion by the tall and picked up a
thu"
?hon1*? Randolph. He
large "tone with which he broke the
wort rigorously, and in hia time
animal’s back.
The paper iccounta d,d Mrav T*? ,n?? °!th® nbu'e" which
for the unwonted harmhwness of the pr®'r 00n, - /nbted',lP ■ystom of
animals by tbe i
nearly etarred.'
’
] —George .Washington** right to the
I title of “Faihur of his Country" might
ASnVIL.DE HOLME,
—It was tho custom among the]
er- j well be diluted by the Indiana rnan
lean Indiana to burn up the wigw
of
who has fifty-three children and :J*.O
I. M- Flint &amp; Sox, Props,
- --------------------- r------------ ------- - res o'her dvs-.ji-hrr l G. W. may have
quarreling over hit property. It civil- lb
i;:.&gt;!r
«r of
rd the c..nutrv, but the
Ized nariuQs the property of tbe 4*d is ■ ■
&lt;"
• riareh b*-.c -rtainiy a ’riend-

To Advertisers:

5

—Tbe law of New York provides that
the owner or powMMsor of any dog that
..ball kill or wound any sheep or lamb
shall be liable for tbe value of such shesp
cm* iamb to the owner thereof, without
proving notice to the owner or possessor
of such dog, or knowledge by him, that
his dog was malicious or dispceed to kill
sheep.
—We have seen the sup-mtion that

0102010202010001013300010268163300000212020000010202010101020118702402

The way to

M^A-KJE

MOISEY

----1 s---

By Buying Your Dry Goods

W. S. GOODYEAR &amp; CO.,
IlaKtiugK. Mich.
We fully realize the

Very Low Prices
That most all kinds of produce are bringing this fall, so have
bought a large stuck of all kinds of

DRY GOODS, FANCY GOODS. NO­
TIONS, BOOTS and SHOES,
and CARPETS,
And arb selling at prices that will astonish you.

D

*

W.v.v wW..

X-ltill.-W 4 *41 tl

Rashrille girrrtorji.

L

Co.’wStove..

Penluxular

Of DHTBOIT.
Improved nod Fine,. I'nt.rrtt, &lt;.r
nnd Hc-aler, In (he
uinrket. Zinc*.
f*'ur««Hiire. Etc.
•
PAINTS. VARNISHES, COLOB, BRUSHES.
WELL and UISIERN PCMPS,
POINTS. PIPE. SINKS,. ETC.
■
• C//.I MP ION X’CVT SA WS, AXES, ETC.
Betroll White Lead Works &lt;iri&lt;&gt;i*i.--'Fh&lt;‘ Rest in the nnrkct.
BUILDERS HAIIDWAIIF. SASIL DOORS,
GLASS, LOCKS, KNOBS. &lt;fe. &lt;fr.
nails. IKON, AND STEEL.
*• hen 1h IXeed of thr Best G'rudrs &lt;»l* Hartlwnrc and 51a-

W. S GOODYEAR &amp; CO­

Hastings, October 4, 1882.

UMAN

WHO jo UMACOUAINTSD WITH THE CEOCRAPHY W THIS COUNTRY, WILL
SCH BY EXAMINING THIS MAP, THAT THE

C

I

E
S

P

K

□Chicago, Rock Island &amp; Pacific R’y,
,

L2J 3«»inc tho Croat Contra! Lino, affords to travolors, by reason of Its unrlrahxt goo­
;rnphlcal position, tho shortest and bost routs between the East, Northeast nnd
Southeast, and the West, Northwest and Southwest.
I ।
It fa lltorally and strictly true, that Its connections are all of tho prlndpalflnes
hF of road between the Atlantic and the Pacino.
By Its main Uno and branches It reaches Chicago, Joliet, Peoria, Ottawa,
La Salle, Oeneseo, Moline nnd Rock Island, tn Illinois} Davenport, Muscatine,
Washington, Keokuk, Knoxville, Oskaloosa, Fairfield, Des Moines, West Liberty,
iowa City, Atlantic, Avoca, Audubon, Harlan, Guthrie Center and Council Bluffs,
mln Iowa । Gallatin, Trenton, Cameron and Kansas City, In Missouri, and Leaven­
worth and Atchison in Kansas, and tho hundreds of citlas, vlllagoa and town*

W“GREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE,”

As it Is familiarly called, offers to travelers all the advantages and 'comforts
^4 incident to a smooth traok, safe bridges. Union Depots at all connecting points,
H Fast Express Trains, compote* of COMMODIOUS, WELL VENTILATED, WELL
HEATED, FINELY UPHOLSTERED and ELECAMT DAY COACHES ; a line of the
_J MOST MAGNIFICENT HORTON RECLINING CHAIR CARS e*er built | PULLMAN’S
1 latest designed and handsomest PALACE SLEEPING CARS, and DININC CARS
thnt_are acknowledged by press and people to be the FINEST RUM UPON ANY
ROAD IN THE COUNTRY, and In which superior meals are served to travelers at
the low rate of SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS EACH.
THREE TRAINS each way between CHICAGO and the MISSOURI RIVER.
TWO TRAINS each way between CHICAGO and MINNEAPOLIS and ST. PAUL,

ALBERT LEA ROUTE,

J

O

« •/.•?» Hwrttd.

E. ST. JOHN
CHICAGO.

AT THE NEWS OFFICE.
Get Our l?riceM Before Tuoo
Bloowhere.

�-

GREAT BARGAINS!
$10,000
From sales of Merchandise before the first of January, and in order to do so we will
offer GOODS SO low that to be seen is to be sold.
i

CLOTHING!
Wejwillfsell you a rattling good suit of Clothes for $6.50 and a better one for $16.50,
Now is just the season for

Of which we have a large stock. You can save in the purchase of one of these money­
enough to buy your wife a pair of Shoes or a' new Dress.

Children’s Suits, Children’s Ov’rcoats,
Boys’ and Youths’ Suits and Overcoats,
CD

Sheeting, Shirts and Drawers, Ladies’ Underwear, Hosiery,

c3
©

o
a
©

Dress Goods: Dress Goods: Dress Goods:
Trunks, Satchels, Floor Oil Cloths, Table Oil Cloths,

Grloves and. Mittens for Ladies and Grents,
Rubber Overcoats for Ladies and Grents

CD

©
&lt;D
O

In complete stocks, and never so good Goods sold for so little money.
o
05

o
o
-4-3
02

Cp
05
rt

g

Rubber Boots and Overshoes, Wool-Lined Boots, Felt Boots for Ladies and Gents,
Wolf Robes, Lap Robes, Blankets, Gloves and Mittens,

Grroceries, Crockery, Griassware, Notions, &amp;c., &amp;c.

o
©

§

So

Paid for Butter, Eggs, Beans, Corn, Dried Apples, Raspberries, Peaches and Cherries.
1000 Cords of 18-inch Wood wanted.

WINTER IS UPON US.
You need the goods and we need the money. We don’t say: “ you tickle me and I’ll
tickle you,” but we do say that our wants are mutual and we may do each other good.
Don’t fail to call with your produce and your cash for now is your time to strike.
Nashville, Nov. 22,1882.

S
O

�GOODS

TER
Ute j

bums.

-ARE

DOMES'

Our new goods

NOW ARRIVING

uLSrSnSbiltbl

AT PRICES THAT DEFY COMPETITION,
at Driftwood.
Paul U Chicago ou tha ®th

wm

SLOfl-

Thr

GRAND

RAPIDS

DIVI8H

During the Holidays,

an old dwelling.

-WE WILL GIVE­

reduced.

- A valuable present worth at least One Dolinr, or
height of 383 feet.
A iiti for aa imported cattle quarantine
United State. Cattle Commission.
Ths Bureau of Statistics reports the valu.

Turkish frontier.

A DISCOUNT OF TEN PER CENT.

theater tn Ban st, Hungary.
raised.

A petroleum

The people lumped from th. galteriea

Don't fail to take advantage of this offer.

On tbe purchase.

BUTTER, EGGS and DRIED APPLES
Are

killsd a few daya ago

. aud dairy products during the mouth of Ocmonths ended October 81, 878,0M,01L against
8111,728,571 during a similar period tn 188L

Jtrows 8. W. Wilzox'b residence in Ban
rsarlaco wm damaged to tbe extent of &lt;100,-

a deformed daughter with hflOO per year, but
•a prospect of vigorous litigation baa caused
a compromise, tn which tbe unfortunate girl
will obtain her rights.

Martha Rn&gt;

on tbe 30th—-Nosh Mitchell, a jeweler, for
8100,009; Joseph Geoid’s Sons, tea-dealers,
for 842,000, end James McKenna, military
goods, for 880,00a
Im New York City a few days sgo Mra

met at work on tbe Northern Padtle Road.
traders.

Tbe agent asks instruction.

cousin, one Pelllte.
wm

He also Inflicted a fatal

unknown..

Mountain colliery at Lykens, Pa.

The flames

-Ban Francisco claimed to be merchanta, bat
-did not poisesi tbe certtflcatee required by

lumber, were hoisted trom tbs mine. Fifteen

mission to Land, but the Collector of tbe Port

involved a-loss of 11,000.000, and wm subdued

mercantile cl see, while the prohibition applied

by a farmer near Niagara Falls, fatally
wounded a young aou of bls employer re-

pert, aud rifled tbe maU-bam of registered
letters.

Ths wholesale drug house of Gilbert Broth
era A Oo., tn Baltimore, wm destroyed by fire

tng-houses in the United State, for the week
ended on tbe 18th aggregated &lt;L888,011,986,
making an Increase over tbe showing tbe
previous week of fl 104,334,570, and Indicating
a healthy condition of trade.

fatally burned, five firemen were severely tojured by falling timbers, and a party of girls

Wdson, of Eddyville, Ky.,
Dubimo the month of October 48,966 Im­
migrant. arrived In tbe United Btatea
Thz annual report of tbe First Assistant
Postmaster-Generri. Issued on tbe 90th,

tango Valley Road th Brown street, Syracuse,
wore torn up by employes of tbe West Shore
Company on the 17th and a locomotive
ditched. Two hundred men were placed un-

eration. Tbe aggregate postage on local
matter at all the free delivery offices wm
83.816,576.09. Icing 8i42.945.70 more than for
tbe previous year, and &lt;1,198310-&lt;5 more
than tbe cost of tbe service The estimates
227,091 over tbe appropriations tor4be currant

bertflWllllama were instantly killed and Syl­
vester Williams was fatally injured, by tbe fall
of the roof.
Im Breathitt County, Ky.. a few evenings
ago Benjamin Harris and Henderson Fox
quarreled about a pack of cards, drew rwvolv-

PERSONAL AND POLITICAL.
Gzxzzal Gzamt kM contributed to the
A'ortk American Jbauv a lengthy article on
tbe case of Fitz John Porter, recommending

convicted cm mistaken testimony, whlet
would make him a Major-General of volun-

Milwaukee Western Union office tbe current

burning. Tbe telegraphic service

wm

re-

•

Thx North Carolina Democrat* hare elect­
ed tbe Judges of tbe Supreme and Superior
Court*.

Greenback State Committee It was decided to
thoroughly organise ter the next campaign
by a careful choke pf town committee*, wbo
arv-to be Instructed tn arrange for a achooldlatrkt campaign similar to the one a few
years ago, which resulted In a victory for the
Dn. Johx B. Wood, wbo for thirty years

, the Arctic Ocean, after he

MONZY.-

C.W. GRANGER &amp; CO
rtMhville------ November 90------ 1S8S.

Mis IU;.ld,...
Chariotte............
Vermontville,.
Nuhrllle,------

And buy your clothing of

Grand Rapid.,.

Council buildings, schools and post-office
were destroyed, sod a.teacher and eight chib

■•MMat, --­

killed by Indiana near Car litas recently, and
troops started on the 18th in pursuit of the

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN

men tin; anarchic feel .nga among the working
A LAZOS number of Egyptian troop, were

forwarded
arms and ammunition
separately.
A larok number of Nihilists were arrested

It wm alleged on the 90th that tbe CommUaton of Inqiury st Cairo was turning tbe
trial of Arabi Pasha Into a farce, and Counsel
Bradley had withdrawn from the case.
A DAXazaocs lunatic named Bandera has

Ur to Mr. Gladstone containing threats oi

ly injured, sad several were slightly bruised.
Dudlzt Ridix, Kiri of Harrowby, died tn
London on the morning of tbe 90tn, and his
brother, Frederick D. Ryder, died in the eve-

THE ONE-PRICE CLOTHINC

•ROOKS, MARSHALL A CO.

Fall and Winter Clothing Nashville Elevator!
Psy the highest market price for all kinds of

Everything New, Stylish, and Durable.

The attention ot Parent* ia respectfully called to our large stock of

----------- And sell-------- —

eedx, Feed, Lime, Salt, Piaster, Stuc­
co, Hair, Pine Lumber, Lath
and Shingles,

Which is the most complste ever laid down iu NaahviUe.

AT THE LOWEST LIVING PRICES.

HATS, HATS,

CAPS, CAPS,

And believe we have something desirable aol very cheap.

one dollar, until the debt of 83uQ£00 on Notre
Dame Cathedral ia wiped outA mmMo of the Irish National League
was bald at Tullagh on the 2'th, 10,9X1 per­
sons being present. O'Kelly, member of
Parliament, Intimated that Davltl was en­
deavoring to dismember the Irish party, and
waa virtually atabblng the country In tbe
men&lt;,.ba said, if the people wavered in their
allegiance to Parnell.
Tub Pope on tbe 20th exprssMd horror at
the recurrence of outrages lu Ireland, sod
charged the Bishops to exert themselves tn
preventing tbe people from violating the

Bcrolazs drilled tbe safe of J. K. Henry,
Son-A Co., at Brxlnsvllle. Out., a few nights
ago, mnd secured 85.00X

N more grown wheat will be ground at the
NaahviUe mill.
I have found it impossible to make good
flour for those who have good wheat if I grind
grists of grown wheal.
With tbe view of suiting the most particular customers.
There is no mill, old process or new precess,
Our stock of Boots and Shoes is larger than ever, and no competitor that can prevent the flour of different grists
from mixing together.
will be allowed to undersell n».
The Idea of pvtng a man the flour from his
own grist without mixing in flour from other
grists is all gammon. It can’t be done, and
never wm done, ami any miller knows that
be is trying to deceive his custoners when he
claim* ip do It.
It is even impossible to even elevate grown
and good wheat alternately without mixing
them more or )&lt;«. If you doubt this, ask the
elevator men about It; then how much more
they will become mixed In a mill where the
wheat and flour pass through so many ekvaton&gt;, conveyors, bolte, machineries, etc. No
miller can make good flour of grown wheat.
Annul who takes grown wheat to mill may get
much better flour than bis wheat would made
because be is apt to get some one's good wheat.
And the man who takes good wheat to a mill
when they grind all kind# will l&lt; just as apt to
get flour from bad wheat. The only way to
make good Hour for all Is to grind nothing but
Our surroundinga and tbe community at large
good wheal, and that is just what I propose to
do from this time on.

CAJL.L.

-A-IXD SEE.

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN.
NEW

NEW

STOREIGOODS

OUR EFFORTS TO IMPROVE
IHAVE BEEN APPRECIATED

LATER NEWS.

And our trade is larger than ever before.

the 91st a four-story building used for man­
ufacturing purposes took fire in the lower
story, thus cutt Dg off all means of escape
for the forty persons employed In tbe upper
•tone* All of the Ittter Jumped from tbe
windows, resultl .g in the kil-log of two
womenlmd serious injury to about a dozen
others.
Tuz Queen of England on tbe 31st formally
’decorated 371) officers and soldiers wbo dis­
tinguished themselves in the late Egyptian

The property stolen from tbe Gilchrist fam­
ily in- Chari ton, N. T., last August, aggre­
gating 8156,030 In money and securittea, was

tween the flour I put into the market and that
which I give In exchange for griate, or that
which I make from griste when! grind them.
W Those having good wheat can get good flour
here, an&lt;! those having grown wheat must pat­
A'A-ntACT ATTENTION.,.
Our store nx&gt;m though ample la completely tilled and our shelves fairly groan under them ron 1ze some other mill.
Dated Naahrille Sept. 30th.
And still they come. We have everything in the Grocery hue.

OUR NEW STOCK OF GROCERIES
Crockery and Glassware.

were 8408,525,250, and the expenditures out­
side cf the public debt aggregated 8257,98L-

Tax Naval Advisory Beard met.in Waah-

Magdalen Island aandaels. Ibis understood tbe Board will proceed

■curred at the asylum for imbecile youth st

J. H. Acxux, the late Democratic candf-

Mroying mall-mi tier, nnd coafraaed hia guilt.

trict, has given notice ef his intenttoa to

were drowned.
Coloxzl William H. McJMahox, member
of tbe Tariff Commission, died suddenly at

JUs. Faxxt Cxzwxtox. ef Lithopolis,

We have added a fine line of

.

roiling*mills st Birmingham, Ata., commit*

Oxhcial returns made oa tbe Itth tn Penusyte.nia ahow a plurality of 40,258 for Pattfson, the Democratic candidate for Governor

Omt K Owgx. formerly Teller of tbe Third
Nstiwiri Bank of St. Louis, wm arrested on

stituUoa of Virgtaia ab- lbhlng the capita1*&gt; election by a large majority.
laU Senator from Maine, dropped dead ou tbe

F. T. BOISE,

We keep tbe celebrates! Snow Flake Flour.

An examination will convince.

G. W. FRANCIS.
WHAT WILL THE WEATHER BE TO-MORROW?

Q Pool’s Signal Service Barometer

——w OB STOBS gt.ars AND THERMOMETER COMBINED,
W fliT&gt; WJdJT sT ■ YOG X

U-ry for killing her aged husband with an
ground that the latter is a non-resident.
"Dot.LT Dtrrrox, who has been exhlbtrd
throughout tbe United States m a Lilliputian,

John M. Roe.

If vou want to see a prettv and e«&gt;mplctc line of Crockery, see ours. We have only time tn
call your attention to China Tea Sctte. Majolica Ware, and Decorated Chamber Bette. In Glass­
ware our stock h complete Mid attractive. Our trade In LAM PM Is simply immense. We
have Pftxlants. Decorated Vase, and Common Goods. Low estimates given on Church and

Lantern*, and Oil Cans. Your specLal attention Is Invited to the former, m we fed assured thM
we have something that will suit.

Honed the Board of Audit to give him a poaL

vessels, rill provide tbe necessary funds al

LEGGED WHEAT

Boots, Shoes, Gents' Furnishing Goods, Groceries, Underwear, Etc,

Everything Mew. Fresb, and Cheap.

broth-, Ur, Oil— brtr. to »i,oa&gt;,wo
t,
am unde tn Melbourne.
Rumkt Mrbax. Treasurer of the Cathdle
Orphan Asylum in Brooklyn, is A defaulter
to tbe amount of 816,00a
Axdrhw NcrrzB. postmaster at Wood-

Grain and Produce,

CHILDREN’S, BOYS’, AND YOUTHS’ CLOTHING,

Table &lt;l?iit.lei-y.
Tas President has signed the Extradition

lasted all night, lamp-posts std show-windows
were generally destroyed by the firing of a
tbousaod shots.
Three men were fatally
wounded.

STORE,

And save from 15 to 90 per cent.

We have made additions to our

qull, Ecuador, recently, killing ten parsons
and destroying a church and several house*.
Tna Catholic Bishop of Montreal has or­
dered that tbe married male Csibollca shall

ot the ship's gun.
A WanuxoTox dispatch of tbe 17th says
Bervice will ■claim that counterfeiting is no

-

good to us and a little

We are proud of our new stork or
Nkab Oampbellrille, Ky., tbe other morn­
ing a masked robber stopped a stage, took

there were 139 bustnesa-fallures tn tbe United

territory tn tbe United States and Canada on
tbe 17th. In some cities tbe instnunenta

killed, and several other persons were badly
wounded.

borers wm thrown from tbe track recently at
Indian Pond, N. F., resulting in tbe Instant

A swow-rro&amp;M prevailed throughout tbe
New England Blates and New York Stale &lt;m

m

-BXTTER THAN
Bt a recent explosion of dynamite

DRIGH,
BOOKS,
JEHELR1,
WALL PAPER,
W1NMW NHADESr
DYESTUFFS,
PROPRIETARY MEDIOINEB,

PRESCRIPTIONN,
RECEIPTS.

Owns® 10 the prevalence of diphtheria and

PAINT AND BRUSH

sutboritles on the 21st issued aa order forbiding public funerals.
Nmab Froattmrg, Ky„ xheotberdaya young

DEPARTMEAT

heart and both died inside of five minute*.
Ax agreement for the exchange of money
ord&lt; -s has been signed by tbe United States
sod Belgium, to go into effect January 1.
The Comptroller of tbe Currency at WmIi-

Call and Examine!

Um, which ahow that tbe National Banks

F. T. BOISE

culalitm and tor public deposits and other

bonds of tbe UntLed States.

Eipfirifaeefi, Reliable, ant tapassiMe.

This is nearly

vember 1, 1*1. and about 87.000,000 teas

A. H. WINN, Dentist.
BEST SET fl

imported

The “Best” Newspaper in tbe Ceanty is The News, Nashville.

Office Open D

�Malet, of the French Cuiraaners) waa
still the same dashing fellow as ever.

with doves low-HiRUtrliur round

'anna be bothered—its Virginia IMxl

from Bpalatro, the Italian, bf whom he
had Dever hoard a word all thb while.
But if Bpalatro was gone, his teaching
wm not, and De Maict’s sword reemed to
be everywhere al once, keeping the
swarming Ruauanaat bay, as it had done
many a time already during the terrible
retreat which waa now approaching itaend.
“Leave him to me,” cried a deep voice
from behind; “he’s a man worth fightr
ing, thb fellow I”
“Ay, leave him to the Colonel,” chorareed the Russians. “HeHl soon settle
hb fine fencing trick*”

A tall dark man, whose close-cropped
black hair wax just beginning to turn
gray, stepped forward, ana crossed
swords with De Malet, who, feeling at
once' that he had met hb mat^h, stood
[reported Uy]
warily on the defensive. Tbe Russian
grenadiers watched eagerly as the swords
flashed and fell and rose again, while
A GOOD SWORD-STROKE;
tbe combatants, breathiftg hard and ret­
Hie ting their teeth, struck, parried, ad­
, HatcM.
I vanced and retreated by turn*
turns. At
rolic going on in a length Do Malet, finding himself hard
France one fine
morning toward tbe end of the
last century. The great local fair, which a whirling back stroke that whisked the
only came onco in six months, wns in sword clean out of hb hand. Instead of
full swing, and the queer little market­ cutting him down, however, the Raaaian
place of Ute town, with its old-fathioned seized nim by the hand with a cry of joy.
fountain in the middle, and its tall, dark
"There’s but one man in the French
houses all round, was crowded to over­ army who knows that stroke,” cried he,
flowing. Here was a juggler eating fire, ’* and I am glad to see you rcmeml&gt;er ao
or pulling ribbons out of hb mouth by well what I taught you.
Now at last
the yard, amid a ring of wondering peaa- Bpalatro the officer can repay the kind­
ant* There an acrobat was turning ness shown to Spftlatro the vagabond.
head over heels; and walking on his When I came over here with the Rus­
hands with hb feet up in the air. A lit­ sian Prince to whom you ao kindly rec­
tle farther on a ahow of dancing dogs ommended me, they soon found out that
had gathered a large crowd; and close I could handle soldiers as well as swords,
- by a dy-looking fellow in a striped frock, and gave me a commission in the army,
leaning over the front of a wagon, was and Iiere I am, Colonel Snalatro, with
recommending a certain cure for tooth­ the Crues of St. Geo. . and a big estate
ache, which, however, judging from the in Central Rweio. .Sow if you fall into
wry faces of those who ventured to try the hands of our soldiers you'll be killed
it. must have l&gt;een almost as bad as tho to n certainity, so you’d bettor come
complaint itself.
with me to headquarters, where I’ll re­
The chief attraction of the fair, how­ port you as my prisoner.
You will be
ever, seemed to be a tall, gaunt man, safe under my charge until there’s a
with an unmistakably Italian face, who chance of rending you home, and then
was standing on a low platform .beside you arc welcome to go as soon as you
tho fountain. He had been exhibiting please.”
some wonderful feats of swordsmanship,
And Colonel Spalatro was as good u
such as throwing an apple into the air his word.—Harper’s Young People.
and cutting it in two as it fell, tossing
up hu sword and catching it by the hilt,
Was Bunyan a Gypsy 1
striking an egg with it so lightly as not
even to break the shell, and others equal­
Did Bunyan come of a gypsy race?
ly marvelous. At length, having collect­
ed a great throng around him, he stepped This is the question which Mr. James*
forward, and challenged any one present Sinuon discusses in the pamphlet which
to try a sword bout with him, on the he has just published, and which he
condition that whichever, was first dis­ answers in the affirmative. Tho starting
armed should forfeit to the other half n point of the controversy is in a pannge
in Bun van's autobiography wherein ho
livreftrn cento),
Several troopers who were swaggering aaya: "Fur my descent it was, as is well
about the market-place, for there was a known by many, of a low and inconsid­
cavalry regiment quartered in the town, erable generation, my father’s house be­
came up one after another to try their ing of that rank which is meanest and
hand upon him. But to the great de­ the most despised of all the families in
light of the crowd they all got the worst the land." Those who refuse to believe
of it; and one might have guemed from that the illustrious author uf the "Pil­
the eagerness with which the poor Ital­ grims Progress” was of a gypsy race
ian snachcd up the money, as well os contend that this means simply that his
fipm hb pale face and hollow cheeks, family were tinkers. On the other side,
that he did not often earn so much in it is urged that the reference here ia
rather to blood than to any occupation.
one day.
Suddenly the crowd parted from right If Bunvan did not intend to do more
to left as a handsome young man in a than allude to the fact''that his family
fine gold-laced coat and plumed hat, with were tinkers, his-language was in this in­
a Buver-bilted sword by his side, forced’ stance wanting in the simplicity which
hb way through the press, and confront­ is characteristic of hia immortal allegory.
Those wbo deny that Bunyan came of a
ed tbe succeMful swordsman.
'
“You handle your blade co well, my gypsy race lay great strew upon the
friend,” cried he, “that I should like to tact that they have evidence of there
try a bout with you myself, for I’m being Bunyans in the country long be­
thought to be something of a swords­ fore the gypsies arrived in England.
man. But before we beein, take there They point out, too, that Bunyan was
two livres and get yourself some food at not of a swarthy complexion, but was a
the French Lily yonder, for you look so man of .‘‘fairish appearance.” Mr. Simtired and hungry, and it’s no'fair match son does nut trouble himself much
between a fasting man and a full one.”
about all this. Ho says that the whole
“Now may Heaven blew you, my mystery is solved by “the simple idea of
lord, whoever you may be!” said the n £JT*y family settling in the neighbor
man, fervently; “for you’re the firrt who hood of native families, of influence,
has given me a kindly word this manv a whore surnames they awumed^nd making
day. I can hardly expect to be a match Elstow their headquarters or residence,
for you, but if you will be pleased to as was tho uniform custom of die tribe
wait but ten minutes, I’ll gladly do my all over Great Britain.” This is really
best.”
’
’
all the evidence forthcomingon the sub­
The fencer was as good as hb word, ject We do not suppose that, the great­
and the moment he was seen to remount est admirers of Bunyan would object to
the platform the lookeraon crowded his being proved to Itave been a gypsy if
eagerly around it, expecting n well proof could be produced, but it is hardly
fought bout; for.they had all seen what likely that they will be prepared to in­
he could do, and they now recognized dorao
Mr. bimaon’a view.—London
hbnew opponent as the Marquu de Daily News.
Malet, who had the name of being the
best swordsman in the whole district.
Doctoring Wines.
Their expectations were not -disap­
pointed. for the first minute or so the
With regard to the doctoring of wine*
watching eye* around could hardly fol­ by adding of plaster of Paris, tho canton
low the swords, which flickered to and of Berne, in 1879, fixed as an upper limit
fro like flashes of lightning, feinting, for poUesium sulphate in wines two
warding,
striking, parrying tiM they grammes per liter. Merchants thought
•eemed to be .everywhere at once. De the regulation too stringent, and the di­
Malet at first pressed his man vigorously rectors of internal affairs nominated a
but finding him mure skillful than he 1commission to study the subject afresh.
had exjiected, ho began to fight more- In their report they cymo to the con­
cautiously, and to aim at tiring him 1clusion that wines strongly plastered
out.
have sometimes caused slight accident*,
This artful plan seemed likely to »uc- 'and that the prolonged use of such a
coed, for the Italian at length lowered drink
1
cannot be without prejudice to
his weapon for a moment, as if his hand Jhealth. While recognizing the difficulty
wa* growing wearied. But as De Malet 'of fixing an absolute limit for plastering,
made a rapid stroke at him, the other they approve as sufficient that of the
suddenly changed the ttrard-fro-n hit •ordinance in question; on one hand it
right hand to hit left, and catching the guarantee*
|
the public against i linen from
Marqu* blade "m reverse, rent it flying the use of wines too much plastered, and,
among tlie crowd below.
ione the other, it is not -a heavier fetter
ing man fdr the producer than similar preacriptions in France, where the interest in
bw most
one lik^ tolerance of plastered wines is vastly
greater. Each buyer who has ordered a
teach it t » your lordship in a natural wine should have the right to
v*~it—
&lt;• r*------- ■
o- refuse any having more than 10.6
gramme of neutral sulphate of potassium
ter liter.—FrescA Paper.

retires. But,
a crab on this line,
gan to dawn 1
until ba ia in right and then you slip the
not seen him ainoe my arrival. I Marched
net under him. SeeP”
for him along the magnificent boule­
“Yes, dear,” replied the ladv, a
vards of Berlin, through the glorious
little flustered as she contemplated her
avenues of Dreeden, alpng the narro -v
share of tbe performance.
“But, Mr. and crowded thoroughfares of Old LelpSpoopendyke, what shall I do when I
ri-., and, finally, in the crowds th.it
get tbe Det under hirnP”
surge through the quaint and crooked
“ Scalp him!” retorted Mr. Spoopen­
atreeta of Chemnitz, but I Bund him
dyke, drawing slowly on the line. “Now
not. I went to the theater* expecting to
wait, he’s there,” and Mr. Spoopen­ see his shaggy head sticking out over
dyke became even more cautious in his tbe upper balcony, or to find him pep­
movements. “See him!
There he fa! pering the people in the nnrqueue with
Scalp him, quick!”
paper wads, but 1 was disappointed. I
Mrs. Spoopendyke jabbed the net
even sought him in the circus, and
Into the water and swashed around
waited patiently to hear his savage veil
with great vigor.
aud his shrill whistle, but in vain. Not
“ What ye dolngF’
yelled
Mr. a trace of his exi-teoce could I find. If
Spoopendyke, straightening up and
he har ever lived and had his being in
glaring at her. as the crab struck a line
the dominions of the Emperor William
for Newark Bay.
“What’d ve think I
he had entirely disappeared before I
had there, the bottom of the river?
arrived.
What’d ye suppose ye was trving to
I don’t know but that my first
catch, a church P Take it out!
Give it thoughts upon making this discovery
here!” and he grasped the lady around
were pleasant Ones, and I am not sure
the waist, and took the net awav from
but that I hailed his absence with feel­
her:
ings of of unmixed delight. I was in­
“Did I scalp him?” asked Mrs.
clined to look upon his downfall and ex­
Spoopendyke, fluahe&lt;l with her exer­
termination as one of the results of a
tions and trembling with her excite­
higher and happier civilization than we
ment.
“Show. him to me! let me see enjoy in Amenca.
I noticed that the
What he looks like!”
law was supreme in Germany, and that
“ Looks like!” roared. Mr. Spoopen­ It ,&lt; bad routed out gamblers, bunkodyke.
“He looks like Sandy Hook by
■toererA,- tramps, garroters, burglars,
this time!
Why didn't you scalp him?
ward bummers, and other enemies of
What’s the matter with you?”
society and disturbers of tbe peace, aud
“I—I couldn’t tell which was his
R struck me that it had not spared even
head,” faltered Mrs. Spoopendyke. who .the .small boy, but swept him away,
hadn’t seen anything at all. “Pull him
too, as public nuisance and a living
up again, and you’ll see if I don’t
menace to the happiness of the people.
scalp the last hair on his skull!”
But I missed him, and the more 1
Tne English language lost its last missed him the more I felt that, if it
charm for Mr. Spoopenkyke, and he
were possible. I would like to gaze
turned to his strings with a withering
upon hl, machievou*. dirty, happy-golook of contempt for his wife.
lucky face again.
I would even allow
“Now you be careful,” he said at
him to trip me up on a piece of oronzelength. “Here’s another varmint, and
peel, and undergo the torture of his in­
you musn’t let him get away. When I born satire as my heels went up, if I
say ‘Scalp!’ you shove the net under could only enjoy his disreputable so­
him and just bring him aboard.”
ciety for ten minutes.
“Can you see him yet?" asked Airs.
The German people fee! no longings
Spoopendyke, waving the net over her
for him, for they have never known him.
head and peering into the water.
They have never seen a very angry and
“Wait! Yes, there he is! Careful,
excited dog running through the street
remember. Now, scalp!”
hotly purmibd by a tin can; they have
He must have been a crab of phe­
never witnessed the anguish of two in­
nomenal scholastic advantages to have
nocent and unsuspecting cats whose
gotten rid of that swoop,for Mrs. Spoop­
tails were firmly united with a piece ot
endyke, with a view to redeeming her­ fishlino; they are unacquainted with
self, went for the end of the string blind­
the stove-pipe bat in which is hidden
ly, bnt with a strength of purpose that
the silent but potent brickbat; never
made failure impossible. She not only
have they stooped to pick up the ple­
got the crab, but she slammed net,
thoric-pocket-book from the sidewalk,
crab and all over Mr. Spoopendyke’s
only to find that it vanishes like a
head.
“What- -wah-h ! !” shrieked
that dream; to them a soaped doorstep
would be an awe-inspiring novelty,
gentleman, aa he felt himself im­
the Saxon lover has never felt the
pounded.
pangs excited by the bent nin on the
“Lost him again 1” exclaimed Mrs.
chair which his sweetheart's younger
Spoopendyke, who hadn’t the remotest
idea what a crab looked like. “Why, brother has prepared for him, nor upon
bidding adieu has he found his hat to
dear, what's that awful big spider in be full of flour and confusion.
No
the net! Good gracious!”
honest wayfarer walks the street with a
“Take it off!” howled Mr. Spoopen­
hand-bill pinned to his coa’-tail. There
dyke. “Take it—wow! tbe thing has is not an.instance on record where the
got me by the ear! Haul him off, will
key-holes of the Saxon’s house have
ye?”
been filled with putty, and street-lamps
Mrs. Spoopendyke dropped the han­
cay stay out all night with perfect im­
dle of the net as if it were an old-fa-&lt;hpunity.—Cor. Chicago Herald
toned bonnet, and gazed upon her hus­
band in consternation.
“Gast the crab!’’ yelled Mr. Spoop­
A Petroleum Romance.
endyke, tearing the net away. “Let go,
ye brute! Wah-ha!” and the unfortu­
A fellow New-Yorker pointed out to
nate man wrenched the fish from off hfa
me this morning a citizen of Pittsbuifh
ear and dashed it in the bottom of tho
who was at one time a salesman in A
IxtaL “What’s your scheme in doing
retail grocery there, at a salary of $500
that?” he demanded, holding his ear
a year. When the petroleum excite­
with one fist and shaking the other at
ment became rampant, he went to Tlhfa wife. “Think you’ve got to eat ’em
tusviUe without any money, and after a
right out of the water? Got a notion
few weeks he fell in with a prosperous
that he came up cooked and you mnst
down him quick or he’ll spoil?” yelled speculator and “struck oil,’’ making
$40u,000 to $500,000 in a year. He in­
Mr. Spoukendyke, enraged beyond all
creased this sum to $1,500,000, and was
control by the sight of the carnage that
trickled down hfa fingers. • “What’d ye urged by his friends to retire from the
mean by it?" and he sprang into- the oil region with the wages of his luck.
air and alighted on the unhappy crab, This he refused to do, and before an •
other twolve-month he had lost it all bat
slipping up and sprawling full length in
a few thousand dollars. Then he re­
the bottom of the boat.
'
“ Was that a crab, dear?” asked Mrs. turned to Pittsburgh and went to work
In a legitimate way. But the fever ol
Spoopendyke, assisting her husband to
•peculation attacked him once more and
arise and contemplating the mangled
fish with anything but favor. “Is that he betook himself a second time to Oil
Creek. After various shifts and adven­
what you call a crab? I thought—”
tures fortune revisited him, and he was
“ You thought!" ripped Mr. Spoop­
able to count his million. Trying tn
endyke, kicking at tbe bewildered crab.
double this—he had fixed his figure at
“Tn^*» the t roublb with you—you think!
$2,000,000—he was again financially
Did ye think I was going to stand
wrecked. This time ho was so poor that
here and let that crab chew on my ear
he stayed among the wells, and w^s
till hfa legs ached? P’raps ye thought
forced to earn a livelihood by becoming
he was whispering to me! Maybe ye
a day laborer.
New opportunities
thought he was telling me a funny sto­
opeved to him, and a third time he got
ry! Well, he wasn't, and if he waa hfa
very rich. Reckless speculation ouoo
voice was aotoarse I couldn’t enjoy It!
more brought him low, and ho left for
Ye thought, did ye!” squealed Mr.
California, hoping to improve his pros­
Spoopendyke, his wrath ruing as the
pects
there. Tho fascination of petro­
pain and fear subsided; “thought a
crab talked with his toes, like some wo­
men think, did ye! Oh, you thought! If fortune and ioat it; and finally a fifth,
with the same result.
I had such a head as that I’d fit it up
Within a few months the fickle god­
with shuck beds and a stick of gum and
dess has smiled for the sixth time, and
start a female boarding-school! With
he
has invested all his money in Govern­
your ability to think, you only need a
ment bonds—well nigh $1,700,000—
squint and four long words to be a Con­
and forsworn speculation. He sold all
cord School oi Philosophy!” and Mr.
Spoopendyke plunged tne oars into the bis oil before the recent tumble in
prices, and says he has learned wisdom
waler and began to row vigorously.
by experience. Having more than he
“ Where are you going, dear?” asked
will ever spend, he ought to be contend­
Mrs. Spoopendyke, timidly, after her
ed financially, and run no more risks;
husband had pullod hard tor sometime.
but I doubt if be will. The $2,000,000
“ Homa!” grinned Mr. Spoopendyke,
he had fixed upon he has not yet reach­
with a horrible expression of visage.
ed ; and he will be different from most
“I’m going hbme to show the people
speculators if he ean resist the old
how much damage a rusticating idiot
greed. His wife, who is here, with four
asylum can do with od« measly crab
children—two grown-up girls and two
when she pins herself down to it!”
“ Of course,” assented Mrs. Spoop­ boys on the eve of manhood—was th*
counselor that induced him to buy gov.
endyke, humbly,
“but say, dear,
wouldn’t you get on faster if you untied ernmenta. He himself is not yet fifty—
Ration Advertiser.
the boat?”
Mr. Spoopenuyke turned aud gave a
—A Brooklyn boy wrote a composi­
chaip look at the bow. Then he hauled
hfa hat down over hfa ears, stepped tion on tbe subject of tho Quakers,
whom he described as a sect who never
ashore and struct out at a brisk walk.
“ I don’t know,” sighed Mrs. Spoop­ quarreled, never got into a fight, never
endyke, as I took her boat in tow, “I clawed each other, and never jawed
The production contained a
don’t know, but I don’t think I care back.
much for crabbing, though I’m not sure postscript in these words: “Pa’s •
u-------’•“.it’s morn fun.than walkin'. Quaker, but ma isn’t.”
the wrong side of tho river will
e within seven mitei eilhev
—Tho old proverb, “What’s one
man's meat is another

by tolual

I (Some staid, sober, religious people
can enjoy a good scandal if the oMecl
is a dencon in some other church than
their own.
"Where are rbc men of *781” shrieks
an excited exchange. Oh, to ^Halifax
with the men of *70. Give us the wo­
men of 88!
When young ladies learn ao to wick
a pin in their apron strings that it won’t
•cratch a fellow’s wrist, there will, be
more mamgea.

No one ever yet saw a man wboiuade
a move to separate two dogs engageed
in battle, as lung aa bis own dug waa
having the beat of it.

Apply into nortrils with little linger.
Catarrh, For fifteenyearal have been greatr allla.Vrx*
-ping into my

Uod &lt;| reaping u reward.

We sneer at the Siamese for wor­
shiping* the elephant; but think of the
money that is paid annually just to see
it in this country.

That admiration *!»»/. lewen. upon tatt
It is said of frank James that he nev­ mats sqnalutanca.
*
er never killed a man unless be felt that
WHY SHOULD THEY.
is was positively u«-Jcessary. Thia re­
l«o man or woman ean do satlsfacwrv
lieves Lira of much suspicion.
when the brain ta dull, the nerves unstaulT.the
system relax«i .nd they feel getwrally wmrbA tramp who rode from Buffalo to
New York iu a freight car loaded with er* Ginger tonic will al moderate cost give theta
10 pnto° ttel’
barrels of lime hadn't enough akin left
on him to make a patch for a No. 7
The man wbo cannot accommodate
boot.
■
to hie •urrouDding*

laPOAtTXSTTOTlUVKUUK,

Sitting Bull draws whisky rationMof
himself and three wives, and al) bis
wives get is what is left in the jug after

the old man baa bunted five minutes
for the last drop.
When a man or a pin loses its bead,
tho man or pin cannot lie pushed owith
safety: and if be or it enters into a
thing, tbe chances are ten to one that
the man or the pin goes too far.
A Paris letter says: "At a recent
Mackey ball tbe toilette of the bos tress
was a poem." If this thing is to be­
come tbe rage, we have a whole waste­
basketful of ball costumes to give

U*ue.

?menu are offered von by the
U’ Jlw,n P*-T7OU read their
to be found elsew here in this
___________

That money ireuy olwaya to get to* good
thing ou the market.
A MORAL POWER?
'
8tovc-p!p&lt;-H are •uppovvd to move the deep­
cat and moat profound deaire to »»car that it
poaaibie for man to experience. He that as ft
may. we venture tbe opinion that coma pro­
duce aa many atarthng exclamation* and the
iutruducUun of Putnam'a Painleaa Corn Ex­
tractor about d be hailed aa a moral influence
In the world. Independent uf ita power aa a rw
liever of physical ..offering. Sold everywhere
~ake only Putuani * Extractor.
That wbat ia new U .always xuoat generally
accefrted.

The daughters office is to lighten tbe burdens
of her careworn mother. Bad disappointment
a ben weakness make her only another burden.
Zoa-Pbora i* for just such cases.

The Baptist Weekly criticise* Judge
Women 80 years old ore young enough to be
Tourgee for saying that the live men
arrested f(ir bigamy in Penn.
are always found in front. That paper
Uokham, N. H., July 14, 1879.
says it lias noticed that funerals the
Gkkth:—Whoever you are. I don’t____ ,
sorpse is in front, while tbe live men but 1 thank tbe Lord and fed grateful to you
tu know that in thi* world of adulterated medbnng up tbe rear.
leitics there ia one compounded that proves and
and does all it advertises to do. and more.
VYes, my boy there are 58,200,000 Four years ago I had a slight shock of palsy,
which unnerved me to such an extent that the
people in this country, and you are on­ least excitement would make me shake like the
ly one of them—just one. Think of ague. l-xi-t may 1 was induced to try Hop Bit­
ter* 1 used one bottle, but did not see any
that once in a while, when you get to change; another did so change my nerves that
wondering what would happen to the they are now as steady aa they ever were. It
used to take U&gt;th bands to write, but now my
would if you should die."
good right hand writes thl* Now, if you con­
tinue to manufacture aa honest and good an
article aa you do, you will accumulate an hon­
"Yes,” remarked tbe man with tbe est fortune, and confer the greatest blessing on
soiled wristband. "Bil’s got a power­ your fel.ow men that waa evri coufcred ou
ful flow of language. Yon oughter mankind. _________________ TIM BURCH.

heerd him t’other day when his-brindle steer got mired down in the Stiggins swamp. I nev&lt; r heard a man
swear so eloquent in my Imrn days."
Rev. Charles Green, of Brooklyn—a
philanthropist for 22 years past, says
that nineteen cases out of twenty
where poor people ask for help is due
to their waste nnd extravavnnee. Five
dollrraleft with a family for medicines
aud fuel means beer, sweet meats and
perhaps a $2 liat for the man.

A considerate contemporary informs
motliers who form themselves into in­
vestigating committees,of one to see
whether Johny has any nasty tobacco
concealed in his pantaloons pocket,
that the best way to take a fish-hook
out of the thumb is to tun it through,
break off the barb, and bull it back and
out
"The Hiudnea thclieve that in the
world to come all_ drunkards__ are
changed into frogs.” They believe in
a watery Gehenna then ? What a ter­
rible punishment it will be to tbe to­
pers to lie obliged to associate with so
much pure dampness, and won’t tbe
reflection that they cannot brew their
hops and'mnke beer be to them a con*
stant torture! The average drunkard
would prefer the American brand of
Hades, with all its sultriness, to this
foreign article.

HOP BITTERS ARE THE PUREST AND
BEST BITTERS EVER MADE.
They are compounded from hops, malt, Bu­
ch u, mandrake and dandelion,—the oldest, test
and most valuable medicines in the world, and
contain all the best and most curative properI ie&gt; of all other remedies, being the greatest
Blood purifier. Liver Regulator and Life and
Health Restorer Agent on earth. No disease
or ill health can powubly long exist where these
bittern are used, so varied and perfect are their
operation*

ularity of the bowels or urinary orgsML or who
requlr e au spetlxcr. Tonic and mild stimulant.
Hop Bitters are invaluable, being highly cur*
tire, tonic and stimulating, without Intoxicat­
ing.
No matter what your feelings or symptoms
are. wbat the dlM-aae or ailment is, use Hop
Bitten. Don't wait untill you are sick. but if
you only feel laid or miserable, use Hop Bitten .
at once. It may save your life. Hundreds
have been saved by so doing. fSbO will be paid
for a case thev will not cure or help.
Do not surfer or let Wfcir friendH suffer, but
use and urge them to uaKiop BittersRemember Bop Hitters la no rile, drugged,
drunken nostrum, but the purest and best med­
icine ever made; the "Invalid's Friend and
Hole." ai«d no jwrson or family -tiouid be with­
out them. Tn the bittern uxtay.____________

MASON &amp; HAMLIN
0RGANS=SSS3

AGENTSS.’SSi
Kitchen Queen Safety Laws

Misa Josephine Baldwin may have a
sore heart, lint she has a sound head.
She lives at Fulton, near Syracuse, and
abdnt a year ago became acquainted
with a young man iu Bay City, Michi
gan, They were to be married in Oct.,
and a day or two {^iuce he arrived at
Fulton too full for utterance. When
she discovered he was drunk, she or­
dered him to l&gt;e removed. Her father
removed him, gave bitn bis supper,
lodging and breakfast. took him to the
station and advised him ’to teturn to
Michigan and reform. The young wo­
man congratulates herself ou the far!
that it will not lie- neepmary for hi
get a divorce in a year oi two .on
count of dtwukrnness and cruelty.

*"H*nd other hou&lt; "
[The best sailing

CLIPPER M'FG CO

PENSIONS^
WILLIAM JONAS.

�PIONEER STORE
SELLS GOODS EXCEEDINGLY LOW.
Dana.”
“Well, I don’t know him. I think an
such fellow* m him ought to be in jail.
Why, do you know, young man, I
narrativ* ot misplaced oonfldenoe. It wouldn't tit down to a game of draw
H'a maxim among gambler* that do with the best merchant on Front street.
nian will hesitate to swallow a book
“Then you haven’t touch oonfldenoe
baited with a “sure tbijg;” The story
about
related is Noundod on tbi* in the integrity of the mercantile com­
prindple'orgambling.
The steamer munity f”
"Well, ye.. Bat you gin. •» houeet
Sonora, which arrived at La Pax a week
or so before the 4th of July, brought to man a chance to stuff a deck of cards
that little Mexican town a smooth­ ud he’ll do it, you bet. Jo. we how
tongued gentleman who represented them Meiion. were trying to pUy that
himself as a mining expert about to in­ man for a sucker; but I don’t think he
spect several valuable pieces of property waa justified In robbing them, even for
.
located somewhere in the mysterious that.”
“You say poker players hare a ma­
country back of the town. . He gave his
name as William Curtis and wm, ho chine for transferring cards. What is
,
•aid. but recently from San Francbco. UP”
“I have heaid of them, but I never
To those who mat Mr. Curtis it was
quite evident that he had more money
than brain.*, although he might be aocounted a very good mining expert.
He oonduoted himself in a manner that
would be described in sporting circles
as “fresh," a condition for which a salt most usual way oi beating at poker,
water voyage is no remedy.
Immedi­ however, is to ring in an outside party
ately on arriving at La Paz, Mr. Curtis to play into somebody's hand. But I
sought an introduction to the Prelector don’t know anything about it, except
of the town. The Prafector of La Pax that everybody that plays poker will get
1* a very dignified person, who in the robbed, that sticks to it.”—Ban Fran­
BiliUcal register wot Id rank with our cisco Chronicle.
syor Blake, the gentlemen in both
cases being tbe chief magistrates of their
The Popularity of Kissing.
particular burgs.
The Prefector re­
ceived him cordially; in fact, was over­
In former year* the practice of salut­
joyed to meet bo distinguished a Qringo, ing ladies with a kiss seems to have been
and said in Spanish••‘Senor,, ( throw yery general, and many amusing anec­
myself at'the third dotes of this social custom are on record.
evening after/his acquaintance began, It was, however, occasionally severely
and afterPrefector had introduced censured as being open to abuse. Thus,
the innocent American to a countless for instance, John Bunyan, in his “Grace
number of bi* mercantile friends, Mr. Abounding,” speaking of it, strongly
Curtis wa* invited around to the clab. condemns it. “The common salutation
At tbe club Curtis met a number of his of women,” he says, “I abhor; it is
new acquaintances, and after the usual odious to me in -whomsoever I see it.
exchange of civilities, and after each of When I have seen good men salute those
tbe party had imbibed a quantity of women that tlfty have vivited, or that
aguardiente, a game of draw poker was have visited them, I have made my ob­
proposed. The Gringo’s innocent ante­ jections against it; and when they have
cedent* at once intervened, and he pro­ answered that it was but a piece of civ­
tested that he not only could not play, ility, I have made my objections against
but he was opposed to the game on It: I have told them'that it wm not a
principle. The Mexicans laid siege to comely sight. Some, indeed, have urged
the bashful young man’s scruples, over­ tbe holy kiss; but then I have asked
came them, and finally induced him to them why they made balks? why they
“take a hand.”
did salute tho most handsome, and let
The American asked foolish ques­ the ill-favored go?” In spite, however,
tions concerning the game, and gen­ of the censure poured on this old fashion
erally showed that his airly education by even conscientious moralists of the
had neen sadly neglected.
time, there can be no doubt that it found
“What is the biggest hand a man can fnvor in the eyes of most of tho ladies
St?” he inquired of one of his Cas(il- of our own and other countries. It h&amp;s
n friends.
l&gt;een often remarked, with more or less
“Four aces i* the biggest,” ho was truth, that there are few of the fair sex
informed, “except a royal flush, which who are in their inmost heart indifferent
nobodv ever gets unless he has a to the admiration paid to them in daily
stuffed deck.
But we never wait for life, and who wauld regard with disfa­
four aces,” whispered the Mexicans, vor a kiss politely offered to them from
“we often bet heavily on a single pair.” some gallant swain whom, it may be,
The party sat down and arranged a they have captivated by their countless
game at $1 ante without limit, of which charms. History, we know, is daily re­
proceeding the mining expert appeared peating itself, and it is difficult to . be­
to have no understanding.
In the first lieve that human nature is different
draw Mr. Curtis picked up three tens. nowadays from what it was in years
The man next to him bet £15. and the gone by, allhough tho manners of socie­
American raised him $20. Two of the ty may have undergone certain changes.
ft is easy to criticise in unmeasured
partv passed, but the third raised Curthe.---------social■—
nsage*
of ourrpredecesti»$10, to which the latter responded :terms
--------------&lt;,---------------------------with $200.
Tho Mexican called, and ',)rs» but, after all, it must not be forCurtis picked up another ten, while hi* Cotten that in the present age tho same
opponent, who had three sevens, did customs are often m popular as over;
— ------ V!hisv-_.
l- . at
. th,, Only difference being that, instead
not ’improve
hand. —
B- ’s. looked
the American.
Tho blank appearance of having public recognition, they find a
It may be remem­
of that person’s countenance reassured tacit acceptance.
him, and he bet $300.
Curtis refleeted bered how Cavendish, In his “Biography
for a moment, looked somewhat be­ of Cardinal Wolsey,” dwells on this
custom
when
describing
his visit at
wildered. and raised the amount to
“I being in a
$500. ThefMexican, astonished, threw Mons. Crequi’s Ca«tlo:
d,&gt;wn his rArds, and Curtis swept the fair great dining chamber,” ho tells us,
money off the table.
The Mexicans “where the table was covered for din­
held a mute consultation tor a moment, ner, and there I attended my lady’*
and shuffled the cards on another deal. coming; and after she came thither out
Before the draw the American picked of her own chamber, she received mo
up a jack full and lo-tt about $30 on it. most gently, like one of noble estate,
In bis next band he picked up tour fives. having a train of gentlewomen. And
This time the Mexicans were laying for when she with her train came all ont,
'For m much,’ quoth
their friend, and. under the impetus of she said to me:
good draws, the pot rapidly mounted she, *m ye be an Englishman whoso
up to $500.
At that point the Mexican custom it is in your country to kiss all
called, having prepared the deck to ladies and gentiewomen without offense,
swindle the unsuspecting Gringo. Cur­ and although it be not ao in this realm
tis passed, knowing his nervous oppo­ (France), yet will I be so bold to kiss
nent would bet,which he did.raising the you, and so shall all iny maidens.' By
amount of money on the table to about means whereof I kissed my lady and all
Chaucer frequently al­
$2,000. The Mexican then threw down her maidens.”
ludes to this old custom, and opr read­
his hand and exhibited feur jacks.
“ It’s not good,” said the American, ers may repollect bow in the “Somp“I have four aces.”
nour’s Tale” he notices the zeal with
The party wm struck dumb with as­ which Jhe holy father performs this act
When the mistress of the
tonishment, while the mining expert of gallantry.
coolly swept tbe pile of money into his house enters the room where he is busily
engaged in “grouping tenderly” her
pocket.
husband’s centcience, wo are told how—
But the Spanish blood of the retires
was up. They could scarcely brook the
Ho riacth up full curtlahly
presence of a"Gringo in La Pax, much And her emhracctti tn hu arnica narrow.
And k1««cth hlr sweet, and chirketb lik» a
leas endure seeing one of the hated race
sparrow
carry off $2,000 at their favorite irame, With hla Uppea.
especially when they had exnected to
Shakespeare, again, introduces it, as
gather in his surplus cash.
That same
evening they hunted up Don Carlos in the “Merry Wives of Windsor,”
Ramero. The don is a noted spor“. and where to kiss the hostess is indirectly
monte-dealer, and is justly celebrated spoken of as a common courtesy of the
In Lupton's "London,” too
throughout the Republic of Mexico Th® day.
(1632), an established attraction of a
matter was soon arranged, and the next
evening Mr. Curtis was again invited to country inn, we ore told, was a pretty
the club.
On this occasion Don Carlos hostess or her daughter to salute the
Ramero was introduced as a leading guests, without which, it would appear,
merchant of La Pax. who often in­ there was smal’ chance of its becoming
dulged in poker after dinner. The party a popular resort for tbe customers of
smoked a few cigarettes, gossiped a lit­ that period.—Belgravia.
tle about American affairs, and dis­
cussed the prospects of another Mexican
—A singular case of suicide occurred
revolution in tbe near future. Finally the other day in front of the Palatinate,
“draw” wm proposed. Don Carlos was New Kent road,London. A well-dressed
backward at first, but ultimatelv con­ man, apparently about 40 years of age,
sented, and they sat down. Two' hour* was seen pacing up and down in an ex­
afterward they arose. Don Carlos had cited manner, and looking closely at the
lost over $2,790. In all the San Fran­ passing vehicles. A van laden with five
cisco sport had captured over $5,000 of and a half tons of flour came along, and
the Mexicans’ money. The next day he as soon as it reached him tbe man
started for the mines to open a morte rushed into the road and threw himself
bank with a not-vdous Mexican sport undet the fore wheel, which passed over
who passe* for bis parser.
his chest and crushed it. The driver
Yesterday a Chromate reporter related pulled up a* quickly as possible, but
this story to a well-known gambler of was unable to prevent the occurrence.
this city, and asked him bow it was Tho man died in a few minutes.
possible to change a hand containing
four fives into four aces.
—Ida Foreman, of Camden, N. J.,
“I swear I don’t know.” he replied;
•‘he most iiave changed the cards. attempted to knife her father, Joseph
Foreman, to death because he, being
Some say you rub the spots off, bat I
never saw it done. The net is I don't wealthy, oppo*«d her receiving atten­
tion* from a fortune-hunting loafer, wbo
know much about poker.
Fellows that
play it generally ought to be in State ,regarded lhe girl as a Foreman worthy
of his steal.—N. f. Mad.
“Why soF” asked the newspaper man,
sorpri.wd at this opinion from a profeo■ional gambler.
“Well, I’ll tell you. Poker presenl
it*
■sore way* of robbing people than an
ny
game
int—
the ----------world. The
thieves
tha
—
------ —
——- —
—.— —
nt
practice It have all «ort* of trick* and

Winter Goods!
nd More Complete
than ever.

HERE ARE RARGAINS FOR YOU!
Summer Pants for 95c—Think of It!

Jams backed naa, walking aJowly away."

A first-class Cold Weather Salt for $8.

For fall and winter trade are comming in.
lent and cheap. Examine them1.

EVERY MAN WHO DRIVES A TEAM
------ «not:i.D UAVB------

Blankets and Bobes.
IN THIS LINE oar atoek'will compare'favorabtr with any in Harry or Eaton counties,
and good judges state that our prices are
lover.
(THE HEALTH BRINGEB.)
LONG KNOWN AS

PEN’GELLY’S WOMAN’S FRIEND
Every mother of daughters should
know about it—because it brings
health

TO GIRLS
owing to Painful. He Anty, or Profuao Periods.

TO YOUNG LADIES

Prints, Dress Goods, Flannels,

CASH PAID FOR BUTTER ANO EGGS.

Ladies Oloaldngs, Shawl*. Underwear,
Blankets, Boot*, Shoes, Hats, Gaps,
Mitten*, Glove*, Groceries, Glass­
ware, Orockey and Queensware

NEW VICTOR SEWING MACHINEas VICTOROUS.
Ready pay &lt;cures for you all the advantages in trade.

And, in fact, everything usually kept in a flnrt
cJaaa general store, are larger than ever and
are being sold at popular Tow price*. Come
see them, buy and be happy
Woodland. Oct. 25.1882. ’

F. F. HILBERT.

C. C. Wolcott

CUSTOM

TO OVER-WORKED WOMEN
Cirri

To Women Advanced In Life
Wbo suffer front lint Flushes, cither before or

HAS GOAK

And manufacturer of hardwood j

A BOOD FAMILY FLOUR
MJ LI. FEED and BEAN'

Mangle*.

PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM.

HA HD WOOD LUMBER.

BA SS WOOD L UMBER.

PINE FINISHING LUMBER
Mill ou Sherman Street, East
Depot.

CD

A Large assortment of Shelf Goodie and Tinware, and the best
Tinner in the County.
FOR GOODS CHEAP CALL AND SEE ME.

from

II. It. DICKIYKO.X A &lt;’O.

02776064
A Pm Faally Mtdlda* till Mtw Intoxicate*.

ALL READY

FARMERS, TEAMSTERS, HORSEMEN!
YOU CAN SAVE MONEY

Twabow you * large .indwell selected Stock of

CfiOCEK^

■ &gt;:■ UM■

LO Different Kinds.

H Paints, Oils and Colors, Doors, Glass, Sash and
■J
PlittAc Trnn *jni4 WcnA Pumnc
trnne "Rnmm’oc!
Blinds Iron and Wood Pumps,Wagons,
Buggies,
Carriages and Platforms, Drills, Cultivators
Seeders. Plows, Land Rollers, “Reed Spring­
tooth Harrow.

0

Florestto Cologne.

PARKER’S

And is filled wi

The MONUMENTAL is lhe Finest Round
Stove Made.

KALAMAZOO, MICH.

Im bite is tawi
lhe youthful coior to grey

THE STOKE REMAINS

Lumber.

tending tho Critical Period, Illoatlng. Niunbness. Wakeful»«-»», Palpitation. Etc.
All these, and many other distressing cnc.plalnta, usually attributed to other causes. but
really peculiar to tho sex. WILL CERTAINLY
BE RKLIEVED by Zoa Phons.
LEUCORHHCEA RI1NS THE FINES'’’
COMPLEXION.-Zoa 1‘hora curea tho former
and restore* tho latter.
Abundant testimonials i hare, from the beat
society, which, with other information and ad­
vice. will furnish privately to jwaona asking.
Address.
IL PENGELLY, M. D.,

(Soldby DrufffUUJ

They are excel­

Of the best quality and lowest in price. Try our 40c Tea.
Don’t buy poor eggs unless you prefer them. Our egg tester
tells you which are poor.

----- OUR STOCKS OF-----

OF HERB. WALRATH

CONSISTING OF

Sugars, Coffees, Teas, Tobaccos,
Spices, Fish, Canned Goods,
Provisions, 4c.,
ERRORS OF YOUTH.
CEXAT SA VINO BCTISG tXJLLAR SIZE.

A Gentlemau whos jlfervd for years from J»
rouedebility. I'rematurn decay and all the rffc
of vouthfnl Indiscretion. will for tbe sake nf *

lii the llenvy Line I manufacture Foran Ilaroess. ICoad llarnew, ami Lumber linrueNfi, using the Iwst brand of “A” stock, stitchin
with 0 coni No. 10 thread, and Elx-rhuril Trimmings.
My Uglit Single and llouble llnriirxa arv the Pride or nil wbo
une them, an/•

ATTHE LOWEST PRICES Made in all Styles
For Cash or Ready Pay.

lt)K in pcrlect eonfitkncc.
M lyr, JOHN B. OGDEN.42C«Jar fit,, X. Y.

HALL’S
flatarrhPurc
Is Recommended by PhyelclaneJ

S1OO

Crockery, Glassware, Lamps,
Stone Ware, &amp;C.,
TO BE SEEN IN BARRY CO.

saslug disease, ask your Druggist for it, and
rr wo imitatiow oi suBrrmmc. If ho

F. 1 CHENEY &amp;. CO., Toledo. Ohio.
pj ENTRY

ROE.

1 also keep full Hues of

Saddles, Whirs, Robes, Blankets, Halters, Riding Bridles,
Collars and Pads, Curry Combs, Brushes,

Harness Oils, Etc.

Tor produce
C. W. SMITH.

Everything tunrked down to Hot tom Prices* and auti»fuction guaranteed.

HERB. WALRATH,

cash paid

iranteo that It will cure any

immediately. Price, 75 cwnia per bottle.

AND WARRANTED TO GIVE SATISFACTION.

BOOTS AND SHOES

CTAM rliis fofltiiui 1

&gt;•, and aro will forfeit the above amount
aiuin •.single Instance.
;
La UnDkO sn* other Catarrh remedy,as

Best Stock in the Market,

Also tbe Largest Stock of

.16’ CHFAP AS ANYBODY.

West Side Main-st, Nashville

■KD1UL HD SUBGICAL SAHITABIUB.

Horses
Sliod.

This iMtltntloa.

Mich.

New Meat Market.

—MUST BE-

/ have opened a market

ATTACHED TO C. SMITH'S
PropsrxToK

------ OLD RELIABLE------

ALWAYS BEST
•

SKILLFULLY.

Fresh and Salt’Meats,

Recognizing These Facts,

Smoiei Hams and Shoulders,
FRESH FISH and FOHLTRI

And desiring to increase my prosperity
by affording the public

IN THEIR BEASON

Lard, by the lb. or barret,
Cy The Highest Market Price paid
for Hide*. Pelt*. Ate.

Frosh Goods, Full Weights and
Satisfaction Guaranteed.

RATHBUN HOUSE,

THE BEST WORK

SALT and FRESH MEATS
Also everything pertaining to a first-class
market.

NO PATENT NO PAT

XITfllTA obtalaodfor mechanical desk
Dll LN I V -.mediol. or other rwnjK&gt;.in.i.

Good Goodsand Full Weight
Give me a trial.

». U.WRFEE.

In that line, I hare employed

Chas. Middleton,

8775

NaihTlIli, Sggcrnh. I raj

Whom J can recommend as un

A No. 1 Workman.
J. M.WOOD

hll illtfm a. »w&lt; .rifnll. ■
(mm ia the *Mr tar th* bum

GROCERY
(iiirl intend to keep a

TO HAVE THE JOB DONE

MEAT MARKET.

_______________ HENRY BOE
---- - J---...V.
......
of Truckee, Cal., wm entirely wiped &lt;»tu
by fire. Now the town i« muc’i
and ennteina handaotner *„.( Iu ,re
■ tontia! budding*then • \-.-r b «&lt;•&lt;..- (*'*•
*.ux&gt; 7)*mf&lt;,

In order to make room for our Fall and Winter Goods we
are selling our finest stocKs of Clothing at prices that re­
quire no bantering to sell.

FOUNDER and MACHINIST

6611
THEiiOMARCH
tboaa of any rritabfe agrucy.
Wa rWw to Oflkdai. la tha Palest Offlea, and
Inraaton of «t»v $t*t* of tM Union. Address
LOIHH BAGGER A CO-

BlXJLtlARX) HALL
•

(No Liquor*.)

C. N. DUNHAM.

�THB (OIMT)

keted dm mg July. August, September,
October.

school text-book
rone* to thr surface every now and

1 be prospect for next year ia also very

Edward McFarlan ot Rutland, aged
I killed.
about 90, waa found dead iu hia bed
. Parkins, a burglar, broke jsD at Frankfort,

Elston
. and wife'of Maple Grove have result­ than a severe cold.
In Dewitt township, Clinton county,
ed in her leaving l.im. He accuses her
of non-attendance to household duties, just across the line, is a school district
with
40 children of school age and only
and lays much of tbe blame for the
. present state of things to some of her one girl among them.
Tbe Grand Ledge House block, with
Mr. Ehton denies the story, circulated B. F. Earl’s new building, will, when
Dy tbeM*aasoeiMte«, to the etfect that completed, i&gt;e an omainenr to the vil
be dragged his wife through the mud lags.—The Independent.
Married against single men is the
am]-7.!brrwgnff7t rested her last week.
~~Tbe‘ fehowtpg clipping from j the way they contort for the base-ball
Grand Rapids Leader ia of interest in championship at Otter Creek, and tbe
this county : “Tbe latest political ru­ married men are ahead, so far.
Tracey ic Steadman'* livery barn at
mor concerning tbe senatorship ia that
Congressman Lacey, chairman of the Grand Ledge, including four horse*
and miacellanecA contents, burned
republican state central committee,
will be tbe man dictated to tbe legisla­ Monday morning,—probably set a fire.
ture by Mr. Hubbell and Governor Loss $1900, insurance $700.
Mre. Byron H. Cole of Grand Ledge
Jerome, for Senator Ferry’* place, and
that in case be i* elected the republi­ gave her husband strychnine instead
can* will nominateCfor his place/io of quinine by mistake last week. By­
congress Nichols, the threAhiDg ma­ ron still lives, but be knows what it
chine man of Bpctie Creek, and tbe is to stand on the awful brink. '
nationals and democrats will unite od
Hon. George Willard.
The following in regard to Barry Co.
is culled from the crop report, iHaued by
tbe secretary of state for the month
ending Nov. 1st: Probable acreage
of clover seed compared with 1881. 83
per cent of potatoes 118; probable yield
■of seed clover 92, potatoes 136. Pres­
ent acreage of wheat, compared with
1881, 96 per cent. Estimated yield of
eorn this year per acre in ears, 67 bush­
els. Present condition of stock as re­
gards flesh, compared with Nov. 1,
18811 beef rattle 116 per cent., sheep
HA
Four correspondents in Barry
county said corn wss fully ripe at time
of first frost and eleven said it was not;
two said it was mut^i injured and eight

said it was not.

MAPLE GROVE.
The Dunham school began Monday.
Peter Kreller is talking of selling.bis
farm.
Alonzo Wolf has sold hia oxen to v.
H. Cole.
Beu Miller ia building a hog and
chicken bouse.
Stock buyers are plenty, consequent­
ly stock is not plenty.
John* Biggs baa . moved into tbe
house vacated by John Wolf.
Wm. Archer and Elmer Palmer
started for the north woods, Monday.
Tbe U. B. Sunday school ia prepar­
ing for another Sunday ochool insti­
tute.
Will Brooks of Potterville spent tbe
fore part of the week with friends
here.
•
Joe Smith and Pete Penfold are talkof farming a co-partnership in tbe well
digging business.
West Maple Grove to the front. Thia
time it ia Warren Seeley, that ia pa. A
fine girl aud boy seven and vight
pounds respectively.
Mother and
children doing we’l.
Y OUMG ElePH AN i .

MORGAN.
H. H. Hull i*on tbe sick list-erysip-

Miss McCartney commenced school
Monday.
Mre. Hale and daughter, Mre. Hull,
are in Ohio,
We hope we will have a Christian
social aud supper like unto last year.
Warren’* bible school social gave
several dollar*. A good time enjoyed.
Mrs. L. R. Mudge had a vendue
Thursday November 98rd on the farm.
Dr. Hull will dow receive bis patients
at Thornapple in Cole’s Hotel, new

Clara Ware, who baa been at Battle
Creek n few weeks,returned home Sat­
urday.
Mr. Carpenter speedily finished hit
medical course l»ecnnse of a fever. He
returned to hia brother’s.

CVK.
EATON COUNTY.
Charlotte has a skating rink.
Onondaga has a literary society.
Olivet has a book and ladder truck
and bucket*.
Chicken thieves are numerous at
.Bellevue will enjoy u course of lect­
ures this winter.
Diuipudair had a Sunday-school in­
stitute last week.
The Potterville band has dislteuded
—wo many members leaving town.
The Fox district, Brookfield, has de­
cided to keep tbe Harper text books.
A deed registered lately in thia Co.,
was from Mr. Cowherd to Mrs. Caftrey.
Mr. and Mra. Sturge of Bellevue will
celebrate their silver wtxlding, Dec. r 9.
A six-mouths pig in Cheater weighed
9471b*. dressed. Wm. Crocker own­
edit.
A new M, E. cltureii at Eaton Rapid*
ws* det irated this week Wednesday

Three black-oak paddles of immense
size, were dug up in a swamp south­
east of Bellevue last week The swamp
was once the bed of a lake, and the
paddles probably belonged to tbe In­
dians who once paddled over its silent
bosom.

Catharine Marshall ot Detroit bong herself

dlgging a wail at Grand Rapids.
Julias Gault of Bedford blew his left arm to
piece* whDe duck hunting Monday.
Tboa Fuller of near Ypsilanti killed by the
accidental discharge of a gun near Farwell.

$2.75
3.00
4.75
5.oo
6.oo

ULSTERS

caped from tbe Ionia prison for the second

$3.75
4.50
5.oo
12.00
15.00

$7.50
9.00
« 10.00
16.5o

ruder of Battle Creek, fell into* cistern and
was drowned.

tore Go's ware-rooms burned Tuesday. Net
toss 948,000.

•ATS—

Cloaks and Dolmans Cheap
---------JUST THINK OF IT,---------

THE COUNTY.
J ohn Lichty, county treasurer, will return to
Tbe whitefish planted in Onn Lake last
spring arc growing Uecly. One was caught ro-

Hastings A Lowell railroad must be rendered

HORSE BLANKETS AT 90 CENTS.
We do not ask you to. take our assertions on paper, but we do want you to come and ex­
amine our prices and see the largest stock of goods in Barry county.

Mrs. Hattie Bennett of Hickory Corners came
near sleeping the sleep of death tbe other day.
Laudnum.
The annual election of tbe county agricult­
ural society will occur in a few weeks. The
society is not in good financial condition.
The new T. A M. railroad, from Toledo to
MICHIGAN NEWS.
city the first of the week, our reporter of food distressed me and brought on '
A. BARBER, M. D„
Allegan, runs through the southwest part of
Pralrerllle
township, where work Is now being interviewed him aa to tbe cause of bis heavy dullness, dizziness and often .
It is estimated that 40.000 men are at
IHOMCEOFATIIIC
success. Mr. Carrier stated that be great depression of mind. A change
work in the Michigan pine forest.
of room, atmosphere or clothiug was .
Carlton: Tne school-house In the Cyrus first assorted tbe sheep in the infected almost certinn to cause a cold, accom- .
Part of tbe Muskegon car abops
flock
and
took
out
those
unaffected.
He
pained by most painful suffering. I
Brown district is finished, and a new one is to
burned recently—loss $110,000.
They
be built in the Bowler district; Dr. Wight se­ then pared the feet of those remaining attributed all thia to the severe work I
will be rebuilt.
and took oft the shell to the bottom of was obliged to do in the ministry, and 1
residence on corner of
cured 800 pounds of honey this season.
e Streets, Nashville, Mich.
the ulcer or sore, leaving none of the so did not attempt to atop 1L I next ‘
' Hon. Chandler Richards, a prominent
affected portion. The feet were then began to grow nervous and noticed that
man of Paw Paw, dropped dead on bis
BI8MARK.
swabbed once a week with the follow­ my feet were cold, while my left aide
way to dinner last week.
ing solution : Two ounces blue vitrol, 2 and back frequently pained me. I felt
We add F. M. to Esq.
ounces verdigris, both finely pulverized a drowsy or sleepy sensation after eat­
Battle Creek, Marshall and KalamaBusiness
at
Blamark
Is
good.
and mixed with one-half pint of cider ing, while a little excitement caused
sol. will soon be connected by tele­
vinegar and one-half pint of turpen­ me to lose my appetite entirely. At
Take in tout window screens.
phone. Tbe poles are going up.
tine. On some of the sheep one ap­ times my appetite would be light and
Eggs and butter are very high.
Squirrels are ravaging ths corn
plication will be found sufficient, and I would feel aa if I might live to good
Chair bottoming is in vogue now.
a* soon a* cured they should bo re­ old age, when possibly within an hour
shocks and literally overrunning the
T. Hulett la visiting at Greenville.
moved from the affected to tho well my head would reel, my body ache and
farms in Western Branch county.
Mince meat 1b nearly ready for harvest.
flock. This should be repeated until I would be overcome with a deathly
Harrison, the “boy” preacher has
Ed. Wells proposes a new well this fall.
all are cured, when care must be taken sickness. After such an attack a cold
Lumber, Halt, aul Coal.
made three persons insane since be
to keep the sheep from their former sweat would break out upon me and
Tbe season for oyster supper* ha* come.
auarters, for the slightest contact with this would be followed by complete
Vermontville ha* a noted colored barber.
commenced hia revival meetings at
le removed virus is contagious. If do prostration. It would be impossible to
Willard Freeman and Olbera are In the land
Grand Rapids.
NASHVILLE, MICH.
otherouartera are handy the ground describe the suffering I endured at
“Michigan in the War,” compiled
nboula be thoroughly littered anew.— these times, and yet I attributed it all
Look well to your chimneys or else insure Manhall Stateeuan.
to overwork and not to any special
by Adjutant-General Robertson and is­
your dwelling.
trouble oi disease.
sued by the state, is now being distrib­
It was more than a year from the
T. Bunter is ahead on com—119 bus. to tbe
A Change of Mind.
uted. Every ^Michigan soldier is en­
time the attacks first began that I conacre. How is that!
titled to a copy.
suited a physician.
He examined me
The boys from hereabouts are talking north“There is a man in this town whom
and declared that my lungs were af­
Three pioneers near YpsilantiI’m going to lick until he won’t be out fected and that I was ou the road to
Alanson Ambrose, Mrs. Stark and Mra.
Your success depends upon the savings of of bed for six months after, and I want consumption. I derided this idea and
to know what it will coat me f”
Aber—came to Michigan tbe same the odds and end of time.
CUTLERY, NA1L8, PAINTS.
so called upon another doctor. But he
So said a man who entered a Gris­ told me the same tiling, as did also the
week, settled on farms adjoining each
Julius Hull has sold his woods forty. Miss
wold street law offee yesterday, and it other medical men whom I consulted. 'Oils, Pumps, Cross-cut Bawi,
E.
Clark
Is
the
purchaser.
other, and died the same month of the
waa plmn to be seen that his dander Indeed, they all informed that unless I
Farm Tools,
Several nlmrods harq returned from the wa* way up.
same disease—paralysis.
went to Colorado, Dakota or the tea
“Let’s see 7” mused the lawyer. “PH coast there waa little hope.
“What station ia this 7” said a lady bunting grounds of the north.
And everything lu tbe b«nlw*re line, is at
However,
Our school will close the fall term this week. defend you for $10. If you lick him in
I did not change climate, but tried to
passenger of a passenger od the Cen­
a first-class manner your fine will be continue my work as best I could. A
The winter term will soon follow.
tral while going through Marshall
We bear a porker squeal once in a. while, about $25. Then there will be a few year ago last May and m the Novem­
Looking ont of the window and read­ some hungry ones must have meat.
dollars costs, say enough to make the ber and December following I had
whole thing foot up $40.
I think that three severe attacks of what the doctors
ing a sign on the fence, he said:
Who knows whether parties north of this
I can safely promise that it won’t cost said was lung fever or pneumonia. I
“Rough on Rats, I guess, mum.’’—B. £. burg, are married or not 1 Sarah wont toll.
you over tnat.”
recovered from these by the most
Moon.
y
.
Jerome Deuel started on a trip north on
“Forty dollars! Forty dollars for faithful nursing, but I felt all tbe time sar8toek larger and Prices lower than ever
Licking a man ! Why, I can’t go that!” aa I know now that my troubles did not
It isn’t exactly a state item, but yet Tuesday. Elm Hall is the prospective point
•before.
“Well pull his nose, then. The last originate in mr lungs, but in some
A Miss Hunter and another lady suffered a
in worthy a place: Margaret Scott,
Every Description of Tinware Done
caoe 1 ha&lt;l of that sort tbe fine was on­
aged 19, at Martintown, Ont., for three bruising by ceing capsized, last Saturday night. ly $15. That will reduce tbe gross sum other organs of the body. It is true, I
felt severe pains in my lungs and 1 exWmitibt.
years bed-ridden, her lower limbs useto thirty.”
pectorod a great deal. I was extremely
“I want to tear him to pieces, but I sensitive to tbe cold, and the least
leas, and Buffering intense pain—all &lt;jn
EATON COUNTY.
can’t afford to pay like that for the draft or change of apparel tended to
account of congestion of the spinal
fun. How much would it cost to spit bring on a cold.
My breathing was
Edward Silrerthorn of Carlisle died, lot
cord cauMxl by getting her fret wet—
n him 7”
often most dfficult and it frequently
suddenly became wall while her moth­ week, of consumption.^
“Well.-that’s an assault, you know,
Romeo King will give a party al bls hotel but the fine might not lie over ten dol­ seemed that with all my exertions I
er waa praying for her recovery,
could
not
get enough air into my lungs
Thanksgiving night. Neat Invitations are al lars.
1 guess $25 would see. you to satisfy them or keep my blood pure.
Oct. 18.
tnrough.”
As I am large m stature, weighing
Tbe same old story, thia time at De“Land*! how I do want to crush that over 900 pounds, and being in tbe
It was Will S. Titus of Charlotto, wbo seduc­
troti: Young man with small salary, ed Belle Hamlin, am! he will be made to p*y man ! Suppose I knock his hat off 7”
prime of my usefulness, yen ran imag­
“Well, about $90 would cover that.” ine how I shrunk from the inevitable
wanted to keep np appearance* with the expense* of her sickness snd death.
“I ran hardly hold myself, bat $90 is
rich associates, $1U to $15 a week for
Belle Hamlin, a young girl of near Charlotto pretty steep. Can’t I rail him a liar 7” fate which seemed to stare mo in the
face.
livery rigs, gave bis girl diamond ear­ wsnt to Batde Creek recently snd gave birth to
“Oh, ye*. I think $15 will cover
One Sunday evening last February,
rings worth $950, wore diamond* him­ a child, and both mother and babe died Sunday that.”
„
, ,
upon coming down from tbe pulpit, al­
“
Well,
I
’
ll
see
about
it.
Tm
either
night.
A
letter
signed
“
Will
8.
T.
”
raa
found
most prostrated and feeling that pos­
self, deficit of $3,000 in his accounts
going
to
call
him
a
liar
or
else
tell
discovered, restitution made—Young on her, and It evidently came from । married everybody that he is no gentleman, or sibly it would be the last I should ever
enter it again, a member of my church
are Investigating lb- afman. The officers
“
man drops out of public life. Moral—
else give him an awfal pounding.
I’ll approached me and said: “Brother
fair.
see you again.”
always live within your income.
Humphrey, I know just what you need
“My fee is $5,” observed the lawyer. to restore you to health. I have been
Hou. J. J. Woodman of Paw Paw,
MAHHlAGEh.
“What for P
troubled just as you are and I am per­
grand master of tbe national grange, Stoxb—Drxos—At Middleville, on the 11th
“For my advice.”
fectly well now.
I thanked him for
Inst., by Rev. B. Moore,.Mr. Sylvester Stone
The pulverizer glared at him for half
in his annual report at its sixteenth
and Mrs. Marth Dixon, both at Yankee a minute, and then laid down a “V,” his suggestions, but shook my bead
session, held at Indianapolis last week,
sadly, for I felt that there was little
Springs.
and started slowly out with tbe re­ hope for me. However, atter I return
discussed tbe objects of tbe grange, Conoox—Mclxrraa—By Rev. A. Hunsberger
mark :
ed borne I began to reflect upon the
at tbe Dibble H
’
" "
urged the members to avail them­
“I’m going straight to that man and subject, and finally sent my son to pro­
Mr. Morie* B.
beg hia pardon, and tell him I’m the cure some of tbe medicine which had
selves of all the benefits accruing from
biggest
fool
in
Detriot
!
Thank
Heaven
been so highly recommended. If faith
memberabip. He recommends the or­
that you didn’ get but on claw on me!” were an element necessary to the suc­
ganization of co-operative stores, near­ Broiata—Davtosom—In Charlotte, Nov. 9th,
1883, by T. D. Green, Esq., Mr. Charles 8ldcess of a medicine, it certainly was
ly 100 ot which are in successful opera­
ler and Miss Nellie T Davidson, both of
lacking in this rase, for I was really
Bellevue.
tion in Texas alone; that united action
hopeless. Greatly to my surprise* how­
AN ERRONEOUS BELIEF.
ever, I began to feei much better, and
lie taken to secure the elevation of the
1 the following Sunday 1 was able to
THE ANNUAL MEETING
bureau of agiculture into an executive
preach with compartive ease. I con­
Of the Union Mutual Fire Inaurence Co • paay
department 7 that congress be petition­ of Kent. Barry and loula countie*, will be held
tinued to grow better as I continued to
Chicago Standard.
ed to pass Mr. Burrows’ bill for the re­ at the office of tbe company in Ionia, ou'
use tbe medicine, for it seemed to reach
THURSDAY, JANUAKY4, 1888, .
The following remarkable statement; my entire system. I was able to preach
lief of purchaser* of patent right ar­
commencing at 10 a m.
sing and work without exhaustion, and
ticles ; that fust statutory laws be pass­
In addition to tbe election of officer*, propo­ made by a well-known Baptist clergy­ । to day I am well map, sleep soundly.
ed regulating transportation; and be sitions will be presented for change* of charter man. besides the unusual matter of' eat heartily, feel no lune troubles, snd
including tbe following: To change section 6
value
it
contains,
will
be
found
most
E I believe I owe my life and health
shows that 90 state* have an increase with reference to location of office of com­
wholly to Wsrnsr’s Safe Kidney and
iu membership, in five a little varia­ pany; To change section 10, so 4* to permit readable and interesting:
WOOPLAHP.
Mta. Editors: I have alwaysbe-. Liver Cure, which I consider a beuetion, and in throe a decrease. In the
। faction to suffering humanity.
pniper; Also to lieved most firmly in tbe brotherhood
year ending Oct. 1,1888,77 new granges
It is only natural that since my re­
add
*
section,
authorizing
tbe
President
a
of men, and that every hnman being is* covery I should feel enthusiastic over
were organised in the United states,
Secretary to bom if not to exceed 92,000, wh
in duty bound to assist his fellow mani tiie remedy which had restoredIm® aud
and 14 more.since then.
necessary to meet llabiltie* of tbs Company.
to tbe fullest extent of his power. The. also others. As a result, I am forced to
By order of Board of Director*.
Th* crop report for month ending
. the conclusion that very much sickness
.
J. C. Tatlos, Secretary
relation, therefore, of my personal ex­ which is supposed to originate, in the
November 1, made up from replies
loola. Not. 15, 1883.
10-15
perience will, I trust, prove of benefit
of correspondents in various parts of
to
many
thousands
in
this
land.
‘
‘by
the
How to Care Foot Rot.
the
state,
and issued
My earlier years were full of health
that
Secretary
of
state, show*
and pleasure. After tbe completion of
Foot rot in sheep it one the most mv educational studies I undertook the
tbe acreage of wheat sown
tin*
common disens** that attack stock.and profession of teaching, and under the
fall ia estimated at 8 per
lr**
than
that ot laat year aud yet many of tbe fsrmers in thia vicin­ severe strain to which I was subjected
Itradmdlx b«*n&gt;e rodo=ed io that the;
,h.
it* present condition a* 92 per cent ity regard it as incurable. Numerous Ileast
exposure or excitement would ,M*d.realtxing their jtnportanee to^ tne
compared with the average of former are the farmers who have sold out their
entire
flock*
because
they
became
in
­
years. The number of acres to corn
Learning
this year is estimated al 810,000, flated wjtii tills disease.
that Mr, E. B. Carrier, of Lansing, inter, and altiioui
and the yield as 97.000.000 bushels—
hen)th seemed to
300.000 more than tbe actual yield of formerly of Marengo, had bad very
1881. Oat* are credited with covering go m! success in curing the rot among The riigliieal amount of certain kinds
Ambot, IB., July $4,
teAOOO acre- and yielding 15,400,000 hia own sheep, aud finding hint iu the

EX"Butter, Eggs, and Dried Apples Wanted.
TRD1VIAJXT &lt;S^ SQTsF.

Physician and Surgeon.

S. S INERSOK &amp; SOM,

Hardware, Glass, Tin and Copperware,

L.FAUL’S
WOODLAND.

NEW GOODS.

Let every Woodlander re­
member that my new stock of
winter roods is larger than ever and was bought at

Book Bottom Prices
and will be sold at a slight ad*
vance above actual cost.
Prepare for cold weather by­
buying your

now. Our stock is complete
in every respect.
Also New Dry Goods, Boots,
Shoes, Hats, Caps, Groceries,
Etc., in endless profusion.
We haven’t time to enumer­
ate, and if we had these goods
must be seen to be appreciated.

J.W.HOLMES&amp;CO.
CONSUMPTIVES

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                  <text>Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun.
VOLUME X.
LIFE IN NASHVILLE,
And Her Environs.

—John McIntosh and Will Koons
distributed ten turkeys to lucky shots
at the chemical works on Wednesday.
—We learn that a daughter of David
Dickson of Maple Grove w&amp;i married
Thursday to a Mr. Beal, also of that
township.
/
—At three o’clock Sunday morning
mother earth w&gt;s drear and bare, bu t
at seven she Wfis-ooverod with four
inches of the “beautifnL12 --

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1882.
Ids text was Matt. 1:21: "Thoushalt call
his name Jesus: for he shall save his
people from their sins.” He spoke'of
the importance which ancient, people
attached to the meaning-of names of
persons. Inonrday the names of parties
and sects rather than of individuals
havq weight; often too much is made of
a party name both in politics and reli­
gion. The name of Jesus corresponded
exactly to the work he did for us; "for
he shall save his people from their iins.”
Mr- Warren considers Nashville quite a
favorable place for the organization of
a Congregational church, and we may#
expect another visit from bun before
long with such an end in view.

—John 8.' Gearhart of Woodland has
bought Samuel Hartman’s farm in Ea­
ton county, tw o miles east of Nashville,
—The baneful influence of the sa­
and has moved on to it this week.
loons is again forcibly illustrated this
—Kirbye’s “theater of occult science” week by the continued degradation of a
held forth to a meagre audience at the once promising young man of this place
opera house on Tuesday night How­ who has repeatedly given assurances
ever the audience was no more meagre of reform only to break them,—a fact
than the show.
which The News sincerely regrets, not
—The Hastings Banner shows up only for the sake of the individual him­
this week 46 columns of advertising— self but for the sake of those who,
probably the best showing any Hastings through no fault of theirs, must yet suf­
paper heretofore ever made. The Ban­ fer bitterly for his transgressions.
Toward those sympathy and kindly
ner is worthy of the patronage.
charity should be never-failing. We
—The News dislikes above all things
believe that the progress of public
to publish matters which hurt the feel­
opinion on the liquer traffic during the
ings of those who are in no wise to
last decade has been such os to justify
blame; but it has certain clearly defined
the belief that the time is close at
duties to the public which it proposes
.hand when the liquor business if
to perform, with, also, as much kind­
not entirely abolished will at least be
ness as is consistent.
drawn to the closest possible limits.
—Walter Mapes, living in the south­
—A battered German tramp, fresh
east corner of Maple Grove, took a load
of wheat to Bellevue and was offered from the Ionia prison, struck the vil­
lage
Saturday evening and applied to
seventy cents for it. Believing he could
do better—he, in the afternoon, hauled Marshal Gregory for lodgings in the
cooler.
He was the filthiest specimen
the same to Nashville and was readily
of humanity one ever gazed upon, and
paid eighty cents for it
Jim Lad some misgivings in regard to
—Jessie Erb of Baltimore drew two
the fate of the lock-up, and with some
loads of wheat to thia market last
reluctance accorded the privilege. The
week, which had been takca to Hast­
next morning it was found that- the
ings the forenoon of the same day.
Foj one load our dealers paid him fif­ tramp was a sick man. Then the vilteen cents more per bushel than Hast­ vage fathers, aided by the supervisor,
ings dealers offered and for the other came to the rescue. A better bed was
procured, a stove put in operation, wat­
twenty cents more.
er heated and the man stripped of bis
—The preparation of the "Spy of Shi­ filthy rags and given as good a scrub­
loh” is progressing nicely, and it will bing as he ever experienced in his
probably be put on the stage next Wed­ mother’s arms. A physician applied
nesday, to run four nights. The cast remedies and on Tuesday, clothed in
of characters includes, among others, new clothes and with a ticket for Niles
Mr. Frank Howard, Mr. and Mrs. W. I.
—where the man claimed to live—the
Marble, Frank, Charlie and Ida Wol- tramp left the village a changed man.
. cott, D. D. Fitzgerald, Dr. and Mrs. L.
A. Foote, Charlie Ingerson, and H. W.
EIRE!
Flint.
—The Thanksgiving exercises were
held at the Christian church Thursday
and were unusually well attended. Rev.
B. F. Bangs preached, taking for his
H. R. Dickinson and Co’s sa^ mill
text the words "And when be saw them took fire in a mysterious manner about
he took courage,” calling attention to 11 o'clock Saturday night and was en­
the entire change of opinion on the tirely destroyed.
unrighteousness of intemperance, to
Daniel Pratt, an employee of the
the growth of religious sentiment-and mill, was in the same shortly after nine
church membership, and to the increas­ o'clock and reports ever? thing quiet
ed morality of politics, as things frem and safe. He resides upon the premi­
which we should take courage and for ses and retired soon after his visit to
which we should be thankful.
the mill, but was awakened about the

—In the trespass case of Fleyharty vs
Burgess, jury rendered a verdic of $10
and costs in favor of Mrs, Fleyhearty.
Upon the conclusion of this case and up­
on complaint of Mrs. Fleyhearty, Bur­
gess was again arrested for disorder­
ly conduct. Burgess was arraigned tie fore Squire Killen about 10 o’clock p. m.
Friday, and asked untill 10 o'clock the
next day to put in a plea, promising
the marshal faithfully that he would be
on hand promptly at the hour specified;
but has failed to put in an appearance
up to the time we go to press.

—Saturday afternoon ns E. Chipman
and J. H. Smith were passing along
the sidewalk, the latter was so badly
jostled by a Maple Grover as to bump
the former nearly off the walk. John
recovered and said “that will do,” but
the Maple Grover had just enough beer
in him to think he had been insulted
and went in for a row. One rap from
John's knuckles, however, effectually
squelched him, and then another Ma­
ple Grover advanced his fists, and
went down like a pile-driver. Then
the two men proceeded on their way
without further molestion.
—Rev, Leroy Warren of Lansing,who
is Superintenden t for Mich of the Home
Missionary Society, occupied the pulpit
at the Christian church last Sunday, and
gave ns two excellent discourses. In
the morning be spoke on the subject of
•*Praver,” and illustrated bis theme by
the relation of the child to its earthly
father. Just as it is reasonable for the
child, when its own resources are ex­
hausted, to seek help from its parent
who have greater resources, so too men
sliould try to help themselves, but when
they reach a limit- beyond which they
have no control of nature’s laws, it is
equally reasonable lor them to go to
their heavenly Father whose control of
nature is unlimited. In the evening

' {

hour first mentioned above, by
sister who had discovered the flames
through openings in the mill. It ap­
peared to be in the upper portion and
soon broke through the* roof. The al­
arm was triven and plenty of help was
soon at hand, including the ffre engine
and brigade, but the flames had gained
such a headway,—the whole upper por­
tion of the mill being enveloped in
flames — and there being no water
available for the engine, that all efforts
to save the building were simply use­
less. When the fire first started there
was a slight east wind which must have
blown the flames into the grist mill,
had not the wind suddenly veered to
the west.
A portion of the lower part of the
mill was occupied by S. K. Deriar &amp;
Sons’ oar manufactory. They saved a
handle lathe, belting, two saws and
3500 brocm handles, but the only thing
• Mr. Dickinson saved was a barrel of oil.
H. R. Dickinson A. Co’s mill was one
of the handiest in the country., They
had everything necessary to turn out
work quickly and good. The mill and
machinery was a.total toss except boil­
er and engine. The first is supposed
to be all right bnt the latter must un­
dergo extensive repairs. In addition
to the mill they lost their cider mill
machinery, 5,000 feet of finisiiing lum­
ber, a stock of fence pickets, sleigh
stufl and tools. This loss is fully $4,­
000, with do insurance. The mill was
a busy one and destroyed just at the
opening of the busy season. Were the
loss oi time until the mill .pan be put
in operation again, figured it would
swell the figures given above consider­
ably.
S. K. Deriar A. Son’s lost an oar
latlie, three saws, 7,000 broom handles,
4,000 fork handles and had some shaft­
ing damaged. Their loss will approx­
imate $1,000, with no inanrance. It

was fortunate that their finishing and
stock room were located out of reach
of the devouring element.
Early Monday morning H. R. Dickin­
son had a squad of men picking uj*
iron, over-hauling the engine, scraping
up debris, building sheds, etc. The
engine has been packed off to Hastings
for repairs. Hiram is full of pluck and
energy and says in two weeks his flour­
ing mill will be_ in operation; mean­
time preparations go on with anabated
vigor. Mr. Dickinson will immediate­
ly buy a new mill-and locate it under
sheds for the winter’s cut and until
spring arrives, when he will proceed to
build a better mill than the one de­
stroyed. His pluck is commendable
but is no more than we expected in
such an ambitious, untireing worker as
Hiram R. Dickinson.
The origin of the fire is a mystery.
The mill hid been running up to six
o'clock, and the probabilities are that a
spark must have flew from the arch
and ignited dry dust or tinder in the
upper part of the mill, and thus started
the fire.
FIRE NOTES.

The fire laddies were somewhat ex­
cited.
The Dickinsons lost eight good cir­
culars.
Fire is the moat devastating of all
elements.
Such a disaster is a public as well as
a private loss.
Dr. Barber arrived upon the scene
minus hat and shoes.
Plucky Hiram ! An ounce of grit is
worth a ton of wealth.
S. K. Deriar A Sons haven’t lost their
grip by any means and will have their
institutidn in operation by Jan. 1st.
That shreaking whistle was not good
for nervous people. They looked upon
it as the fore-runner of a bursted boiler.
This institution was one of the first
enterprises erected in Nashville, and
has ever been of great help to the town.
How those old croakers did "cuss”
the engine because there was no water.Probably they expected it to throw
mud.

IN DUKANOE VILE.
"Gingie Ale,” alias Frank Jones, is

will go to jail like .the'martyr I am.”
So he went.
Sunday evening, when the seven
o’clock train came in, several hurrying
young men boarded it here as it stopped
for water, and with anxious inquiries
searched for-the fellows who had bor­
rowed their overcoats two.days before.
But they found neither them nor any
trace of them, until Monday, when a
man from Hastings called another aside
in Rasey’s barber shop and remarked
that if Griffith had any friends here
they dould make themselves useful at
the town of f. g.
Taking the hint, the gentlemen who
were minus their overcoats mode a
short trip west on Monday, finally ar­
riving at the county jail, where they
found the hero of more or less than n
thousand similar experiences, with his
shoes and coat off, tilted back in a chair
a newspaper in his band and bis face
wreathed in smiles. Only once during
the interview did a shade of care and
sadness pass over his placid features,
when, as he handed Cap’s overcoat
back to him, and the boya spoke of
Thanksgiving dinner, he wondered if
there would be any saved for him.
Thus jt is that "Gingie Jones” is
missing; that Jimmy Holbrook is mi­
nus a brand new overcoat and has con­
cluded that all the signs point to an
open winter anyhow; and that Will
Griffith, who made such fair promises
of reform only two weeks ago, now
languishes in durauce vile far from the
delights of home and Thanksgiving
dinner.
Drink, drink, drink. Those words
tell the story not only of the degrada­
tion of thia young man but of many a
promising youth. We are sorry that
the law gives saloons a right to exist in
the many places like Nashville wnere,
were a local-option law in force, the
community would close them up. But
as they do exist they should be watched
and made to comply strictly with the
law, and to that end we will lend our
aid.

LOCAL

GIBBLE-GABBLE

And Prresaal ChlLCkaL

A bit of winter this week.
W. G. Aylsworth is in York State.
F. T. Boise advertises holiday goods.
Our wheat buyers are still kept busy.
Dr. Young has moved into his new
house.
Elder Holler returned from Inland
last week.
Daniel Staley is repairing and paint­
ing his re-idence.
The.western prodigals are returning.
Kill the fatted hog.
The M. E. social Wednesday evening
was alimly attended.
John M. Roe and family have moved
into Miss Ware’s house.
Miss Stella Wilson returned from
Battle Creek Wednesday.
Miss Hattie Peckham and morher ar­
rived from Chicago Thursday eve.
Mr. and Mrs. Hoskins have been sore­
ly afflicted in the loss of their little son.
That excellent publication "Harper’s
Magazine,” is advertised in this issue.
Al. Whitcomb went to Woodland,
this week, to work till the first of Jdn-

missing, while “Dakota Bill,” alias
William Griffith, languishes in the
Hastings baatik,—and thereby hangs
a tale.
■
To describe the peculiar procedure
by which the one comes up missing and
the other is “at rest” is only, as it were, I
to repeat an oft-told tale; bnt the story
in this instance has an added interest I
from the fact that a good winter’s over­
coat disappeared with the missing man,
and a certain too generous young Nashvillelte is now left, something like
some other fellows, to shiver in the win­
ter wind and wonder where his summer
wages have gone to. But to get down
to business, the circumstances are
। something os follows: On Friday last
the hero of a western trip came to Cap.
Dunham with a’strong desire in his
heart and a smile upon his features.
There was a young lady 'at Hastings
who had just returned thither, who
The K. P’s expect to work the “ar­
had once loved him dearly, and whom
he longed to see. He of course desired morial” and "chivalric” next Friday
to make a good appearance, but his evening.
Arthur Ainsworth of Grand Rapids
summer’s wages had gone "where the
woodbine twineth” and l&gt;e was with­ ate turkey under the parental roof in
out an overcoat; would the proprietor Nashville.
A telegram to friends states that Mrs.
of the billiard ball please to lend him
his. He. would. Then- the borrower Fanny Ellis will not be here till about
wended his way to Rasey’s barber shop the holidays.
Frank Howard, the actor's wife and
where he proured Jimmie Holbrook’s
overcoat for the gentleman with a sum­ daughter are stopping with him at the
mer beverage title, under the solemn Wolcott House.
Maggie Jeffrey takes a half column
promise that they would both return
on Saturday. And having thus made to advertise a cost sale of millinery.
their toilet, the two gentlemen depart­ Peruse it carefully.
I. M. Flint, Sr., has has so nearly ieed for the town of "fly” girls.
“Babble, bubble, toil and trouble” covered from his latesevere illness, as
Shakespeare makes the witches say in to be able to be out.
.
their weird dance around the boiling
Mrs. Laura Fleet («ee Dunlap) of
kettle, and so also it was in this case. Tiffin, 0., is visiting her sister Mr*. Lee
According to William's story, he and old acquaintances here.
was imprisoned in the loving embrace
The village tax collector will see you
of his darling through nearly all the at Smith's grocery Tuesdays and Thurs­
long watcheaof Friday night; and in the days. J. H. Smith, collector.
morning, while yet he slept soundly, bis
M. B. Brooks has rented Burgess’
pardner-arose and with the borrowed house and will soon occupy the same
overcoat, softly hied him down to the with his mother as housekeeper.
train and away to the north woods.
Sam Gassier of Petoskey, is in the
Finally the hero of a box-car journey village on a ten days visit. He reports
arose from his slumbers and went forth, Mr. Olds’ people well and flourishing.
A couple of Nashville young' men
and— But why need we repent. Drunk
by afternoon, in the lockup at five went sleigh-riding to Hastings, Sunday,
o’clock, it is but the same old story, and and they say it wasn’t so very bad eith­
hardly had the new moan’s silvery er.
beams began to flcxxl the earth when
Miss Ota Wheeler is home to spend
the j ustice proDou need the awful word*: Thanksgiving, returning Monday. Site
" Young man, I sentence you to pay a is much pleased with school life at
W
a fine of $10 or go to jail for 15 days.” Albino.
"Your honor,” the culprit replied, "I
The removal of D. B. Ainger from
am a second George Wanhington; I tbe position of poatmaaUr of Wa*Mnga— been
»------- -----------vi_ discussed
----------- a in
cannot tell a lie; I have no money; so I ton, han
muchly

NUMBER 11.

Nashville this week, and it is almost
the universal verdic of our citizens that
Mr. Ainger was removed without
cause.
'
The ladies of the Christian church
have postponed the organization of,
their society till it can be seen what the
Coagregationalistc will do.
The literary society at its last meet­
ing adopted regulations, and at its
meeting with Mias Foote, the coming
week, will settle down to through busi-

WHITE ABH LOGS WANTED.
We will atlll continue In the Oar and Handle
business, report* to the contras y notwithstand­
ing. Look out for our bill* with prices and full
direction* tor cutting logo. Highest ca«h prices
paid for oar logs.
8. K. Deriar A 8oxm.

Bsrnuma &lt; ephant Jumbo!
it is the largest ever seen in th;
country, ‘Fart.’’
Kocher Bros.

INVENTION AHEAD.
are constantly taking place and among toe
latest and most sensible ia that of the new de­
vice oa tbe White Sewing Machine in the shape
with all trouble of uneven winding and thread
of a iwrrfeet self “Bobbin Winder/’ doing away
breaking and putting a third more on each i»ol»bln, and winding as smooth a* tc spool of silk.
Remember this is only on the White. It also
ha* a splendid Beit Shifter, putting the belt off
or on of its own accord at th? operator’s will.
These machines are reduced in price till Janu- ’
ary. None as simple, strong or durable. “The
White Is King.”
C. L. Glasgow.

Marshal Gregory is considerably un­
der the weater and has qualified J. H.
Smith to perform his various duties un­
til he can gain bis former health and
spirits.
*
The Wolcott House entertained a
number of invited guests at an elegant
Thanksgiving dinner; the company al­
so enjoying after-dinner, sociability in
the pleasant private parlors.
The extraordinary transfer of Balti­
more, Hastings, and Bellevue wheat to
this market of late has so elated the
junior member of the firm of Brooks,
Marshall A Co. that he has donned a
plug hat.
Clarence Crocker, an employe of The
News office for over three years, de­
parted for Hesperia Monday morning
to accept a position oa the Hesperia
News. Clarence is a quick and faithful
employee and has the good wishes of
The News in his new "poaisb.”

W&gt;fitoves going fast at Glasgow's. Don't
buy i.ll you see him and get prices.

gy- -?ngare and Coffics cheap,
pgr Booto and Shoes very chea^,
Crockcry and Glassware awful cheap
at C. W. Smith’s
ROCK BOTTOM PRICES.
Don’t buy a single pair of Boot* or Shoes be
tore visiting Prindlc &amp; Chipman’s, and inspect­
ing their stock and price*. Stock larger and
more complete than ever and prices marked
right down to bed-rock. No competitors al­
lowed to undersell us.
Wood Wanted at the Depot.

10-22.

THIS FOR LADIES ONLY.
We open thia week an elegant line of new
Cloakings, very pretty and very stylish. Also
Fur Trimmings and ornaments to match. *
Kocher Bros.

WOODLAND.

Brooks Marshall &amp; Ct..
Snow, slosh and wet feet; Coughs,
colds and sore throats.
Mrs. J. B. Hull of Lansing is visiting
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Colestock of
this place.
Mias Hattie Perry went to Grand
Ledge last Saturday to visit a week or
two.
,
Bert Holly commenced his third term
of school at this place last Monday.
Daniel Myers will commence his win­
ter school next Monday.
Our merchant* are receiving new
goods preparatory to the rush of trade.
Dr. Baughman is kept pretty busy
since his return from the north.
Samuel Rosencrance, who has been
an invalid for a number of years, died
last Monday at eleven o’clockOne night last week some miscreant*
entered the Galaway school house and
committeded numerous depredations.
Those young fellows must bear in mind
that they are laying themselves liable
to the law and a repetition of the of­
fence is likely to send them to Jack­
son or Ionia.
Qcru Fax.

HASTINGS.
The capital of the Hastings National
bank has been increased to $100,000.
The Presbyterian church has secured
the services of Mrs. M. J. Timmerman
as organist.
Isaac D. Swikert and Mrs. Mahala J.
Clifford were united in wedlock by Rev,
Knappen on the 21st ult.
Kennedy, the mesmerist, exerted his
influence upon several candidates, and
made lots of fun for his audiences.
It has been ascertained that the hoise
thief who stole Parker A Houghtaiin’s
team, also bagged one in Livingston
county.

BASS WOOD BOLTS.
Now is your time.
91.25 per cord for 18 inch,
93.50 per cord for 35 Inch.

Gao. W. Franco*.

ZST Dressed Hogs Wauled. Highest price
paid. 10-11.
&amp; 8. Ixgkbson &lt;E Son.
ty We never had so full a stock of Boots
and shoes, and never bought so cheap s» we
did thia fail stock. You can save time and
money by looking us over aa noon as possible.
•
Kocher Biros.
py We are beadquarters for 50c tea.

:*r Fleming has the best stock of Jewelry
ever reen tn this pa&gt; I of Michigan.

MONEY TO LOAN,
On Real Estate at low rate of Interest of
Lee A Dcrkee
I

X3T Bring your Butter, Eggs end dried ap
pics-direct to is and we will pay you tbe cash
for them.
Fowler A Campbell.
, HT After a most rigid examination of the
Crown Sewing Machine we can reccommend It
to buyers aa a first class machine. Tbe work­
ing parts are perfect in material and construc­
tion ami embrace all the late improvement* of
all machine*. We have bought one for our

Remington, and are highly batisSed with our
exchange.
A. C. Bcxtosc.

&lt;3T DUNHAM’S la the only place yon can
get solid packed Oysters. Tn- them and you
will be pleased.
Cap^DctXIUX.

Kf We have a rare display of Dress Fabrics.
In fact the stock is so large and varied Strong
won’t spare us the room to enumerate. So you
must come and see for yourself.
Kockeu Bnoa.
DON’T FORGET THIS.
«3~You can exchange yonx old machine for
one of thoac elegant Crowns.
E. IL White at Kocheh Baos.

C3T Our Cloaks and Dolmans are beautiful.
Over 300 to select from ranging in price from
93. to 930.
Kocher Bros.
CW Cal I and sec our largo and elegant aasonment of Gents Furnishing Goods, just in.

REMOVAL.
I have removed my stock j
»treet to toe Erb bulldin*. My
many articles suitable for Chn
tSPMIss Rattle Peckham, having taken a Evsrythifig very cheap.
L F.
thorough course In embroidery under the tui­
tion of one of the beat artists of Chicago, I*
prepared to do embroidering in a satisfactory
Kocbeb Bros.
manner. Leave orders at Tnz News office.
A FEW THOUSAND DOLLARS
To our kind friends and neighbors who have
ex tended their assistance and sympathies In our
Ute bereavement we tender our Mincers thanks.
Mm. axi» Mrs. Hoskins.
direct from the factory or Jehu Holland at
Fucking’s, look for the sign of ths Gold Pen.
the store formerly.occupied by W. A. Aylsworth
where we will be pleased to sec all of the cus­
ATTENTION PATRONS.
tomers from the old store and as many new ones
Owing to sickness in my family causing a
as may favor us with a call.
partial suspension of baalnemt, and having
purchased a targe stock of goods. I must call
on you to settle up at once, In order that I
^Highest Market Price paid for Oat*.
can pay tor ny goods. Ptcaae do not let thta
Brooks, Marshall A Co.

LOCAL MATTERS.

*arWe will keep a full line of Dry Goods,
Groceries, Boot* and Shoes and Clothing at our
fy It U wonderful to think that Flmmixg
new stand.
Fowler A Campbell.
can supply all oar wants for the Holidays In the
line of attver Ware.
choice selections and snould be seen to be ap­
preciated
Kocher Bros.
BRING IN YOUR OAT8!
rant a carload and will pay highest
ryWe have just received a lot of new Over­
10
8. 8. Ixgkbsox A 8kx.
coats that for Style, Quality and Price can’t be
TAXES! TAMES!

WANTED!
1063 bushels of CIotot Seed.
Brooks, Marshall A Co.
«3-Doo’t forget that we are selling all of
our Crockery and Glassware AT COST I
Fowler A Campbell.
For tile next 30 days we will «ell Cloth­
ing st price* that can’t be diipl lt »ud in this
county.
Fowler A Caxfkrll.

GF"Meny Christmas ! Holiday Good* in
endless j&gt;rofu«k&gt;n st Adda Nichols' store.
FOR SALE,
One Jackson
spring
and out
Tittaur
Bro*,
piXrm
wxS, cbAp
m dX
._______
taxform wagma, cheap to dose out fall stock.
'
Glasgow.

SPRING BEDS.
Go to Braun Bro’s., Nashville, and get the
GOODS AT COST.

�GIVEN AWAY.

iu&gt;‘. tnlretlng

Thai i.-.J tu the pi th I !&lt;&gt;n&lt;od to climb.
Bat a shadow fell on my spirit »traleht way.
For eh-* .it my
stood xrnytxmrd Timo.
1 mu* d n-i;b toot that wore fain to Unger
linril by t mi ff.irde i'n roldan pate;
But TlrtiB spoko, pulntmg with one stern

ina now, on iw
hfirtiw rt
mJ the I'tfht

cliff* rwMflw,
M-tWuxht to And,

When I think df the garden I left behind.
b&lt;&gt;uld I aland at but In Its aunimlt'a aplrod
Itrww full w -ll it would not repay

For wtmt man over succ-xxls In findlnx
A path to the garden of hla hat youth?
But 1 think sometime* when the June stars
glisten
That a rose-scent drifts from far away.
And I know when 1 lean from the cliff* and
listen
That a young laugh braaka on the air like
„

*p™r-

A WEDDIXG-DAY WITHOUT A WED•

DING.

It was tbe evening of Caleb Pollard's
Silden wedding, and the family, to the
ini and fourth generation, were as­
sembled in honor of the event
“This makes a good many weddin'
days we’ve seen—me 'n' the old ’oroan
there,” said Caleb from his own par­
ticular chimney-corner, where he sat in
state with his youngest grandchild on
one knee and his oldest great-grand­
child on the other—“ besides one,” he
added, “when there wa’n’t no wed­
din’.”
“ A wedding-day without a wedding,
Cmdpa?” spoke up Polly Pettigrew
m a game of romps she and a flock of
frolicksome cousins were organizing on
tbe outskirts of the sedatpr circle drawn
round the spacious, old-fashioned fire­
place—“how could that be?—it doesn’ t
stand to Reason.”
“Ask gran'ma,” replied Caleb, with
a quizzical smile, and a w%vo of his pipe­
stem toward the opposite corner where
dame Janet, his white-haired partner
through fifty years of joy and sorrow;
sat beaming through her spectacles,
her restless, withered hands betokening
how much they missed the accustomed
knitting laid aside in deference to the
occasion.
“Pray rfo, Caleb,” begged Grandma
Janet, “ find$ something else to talk
about.”
“ Pray don't, grandpa.” persisted
Pally—“ it's the very thing I want to
hear.”
Polly's motion was seconded and car­
ried without division.
“1 won’t go back to my courtin’
days,” began Grandfather Caleb, “an’
tell how 1 cut out all t'other fallows,
an’ got excepted by the han’somert gal
in—
“Law, Caleb!” interrupted Dame
Janet, blushing as she might have done
at seventeen. “ how you So talk!"
“ Well, you needn’t color up so,”
Caleb answered
• • How d’ye know it’s
yon I’m talkin' about?”
Having reduced the good dame to si­
lence by thus turning the laugh on her,
the old gentleman proceeded:
“I've said I wouldn’t dwell onto the
courtin’ port, so Ill jest come down to
the day -nt for my weddin’ with the
h.’Ui somest gal. as I Was remarkin' —
Bvw jest keep quiet over there'* (shak­
ing l-.is finger at Dame Janet)—“I’ve
been the.head o’ this house for half a
oent’ry. an‘ ain't goin’ to be eonterdici ‘-i no«r—with the han'somest gal. J
nay. in Pucvnon County.
“She lived about twenty-five mild
furder up the river nor where I bunked,
bnt there was a steamei* passed reg’lar
•v’ry m rain’. an' on that perticlar
mornin’ I was on the doublo-qurek to
.keu-h the boat, when nil of a suddent I
felt somebody ketch my arm.
“1 wheeled round quick, for 1 was
in a pe ky hurry, when who should I
find grnbbin" of me but the Sheriff?”
“The Sheriff?" chirped one of the
pair on the narrator’s knees, with a
rrighn-aeii look.
'•What could the
Ehci ir; want o
grandpa?”
*‘Just what J axed him.” continued
'CMex
“•To enrve onto a jury,’ says the
Sheriff
“ ‘Ca i’* do :t, ho wav.’ says I.
“ ‘You've gnf to,’ says he. ‘Judge
Testy’a sent for you lor a talisman.’

“ *But,'-Mys L ‘Tve got pertio—'
“ * Take your »eat’’ yelled tbe Judge,
‘an’if you cheep agin I’ll punish you
for aoUn’-contempcible to the court.’
“ '.Twa* on the top o’ my tongue to
tell him I thought ‘twas the court ns
was actin' contemptible to the; but I
thought Td wait till I ketched him out.
“ The dark made u*t lay our hands
onto a big book, an’ then rattled off
su'thin’ quick that sounded .like, ‘goin*
—goin’—gdn’- -gone!’arterwhich they
begun to try a caw where one feller was
Sum’ another for his cbaro* let, which
t’other* d said he never hadn't any; an'
he wan’t fur wrong.
“1 was in hopes the trial wouldn’t
last long, an’ that by hirin’ a fast hoes
I might still be in time to Ixj married at
the Mipointed hour, which 'twas in the
evenin'.
quesl’nin', an’ criss-cross-qnest'nin’, it
took a good spell to git through the
ev’dehce. Next the lawyers made longwinded speeches, arter which old Testy
took hu whack, and lambasted both
sides for nigh onto an hour. Thtfn a
constable took us to a room an’ locked
us up to agree onto a verdic', which I
thought we could in no time.
“The fust vote stood six an’ six; an’
then the argyfyin’ begun, an’ pootv
soon the two ring-leaders got to fightin'.
“We got ’em sep’rated at Ar they’d
woolcd one another cons'd’rable, au’
took another vote. I turned my coat
this time, which made it stand seven to
five. Tnen all the'five pitched into me
like p'ison for departin' of my flag; an’ I
b’lieve they’d mobbed me if Pothers
hadn't enterfarod.
‘•’Twas too late to think o’ jiltin’ to
my weddin* that day; so I jest sot down
sullen an’ let both sides jaw away.
. “We sent out a request to the Jedge,
arter a while, to be discharged for in incompaterbUity: but old Testy sent back
won! that he didn’t sec it, an’ onlessw'e
agreed he’d keep us out till the eend o’
the tarm, which he was sorry to say
warn’t furder off; an’ he was as good as
his word. I tried to geL a messidge
sent accountin' for my absence from
the weddin’, but the constable said
'twas agin the constitootion to allow any
outside commoonication.
“The day court rizwe was discharged
with a reeprimand, still standin’ stiff,
seven to five. The two leaders adjournec
to the court-house yard to resoom hostilerties, an’ I struck a bee line to find
the fastest boss to be bad for love or
money.
“I hadn’t got fur when 1 Leered a
piece o’ news that made me hurry faster
still. The boat I was expectin’ to go on
when the Sheriff ambushed me was
blowcd up an hour arterwards, an’
nearly erry soul aboard lost! Foor
Janet—1 was only jokin’ when I
hinted a bit ago ’twarn’t her I was a
meanin’—would think me numbered
with the dead!
“Faster time was never made in them
ports nor I made over that twenty mild
to Janet’s home.
“I busted in withoutknockin’. Janet,
who ’twas easy to see’d been cryin’,
jumped up with a little glad cry, an’
was runnm’ to mo, when a look her
father gave her made her stop.
“I hurried to explain what 'd kep’ me
awav, but the old gent still looked
black an’ onsadisfied.
“ ‘Prehaps you kin explain-/Ais, too,’
he said, placin' an opened letter in my
hand directed to myself. ‘Mr. Hoard,
here, picked it up where you drapt it, 1
’spose, an’ thought ’twas no more’n
his duly to egsposo your dooplexity.’
“ I hadn’t noticed afore the presence
o’ Misham Hoard, a sneakin' cu-s,
Janet’s fr ends had long wanted her to
marry instid o’ me, but. she wouldn’t
He &gt;ot back with a grim oi triump’ on
his ugly phiz.
I run my eye over the letter.

wcddln’-day. Too bfi to write more. Ohl reuxw, as tin-Fre tic h mllllnger says.
“ • Your lovin’ Katk’
“• Bein’ a’ ready ingnged to another
------begun Janet’s father, looking as
sevare as that Virginny parient in the
tragedy.
‘“Ingaged to another?’ says L
•Whntdo you mean. Mr. Stacy?’"
“ • That letter’s plain enough,' says
he: “it alioods to your com ir nuptials
with whoever writ it, and the Joe it
speaka of ’s her brother, doubtless.’
“ • That letter's from ray sister Kate,
says I. ‘The weddin' it del kitely re­
fer* to is her own. an’ the Joe men­
tioned ’* her intended husban’. I lost
it the day tbe Sheriff took me for a
tails man, an' I *t*pose (hat skunk—
pointing to Mishnm Hoard—’ picked it
up as’ tried to use. it to blarst a dead
man’s character behind his back.’
“Janet didn't wait to hear no more.'
She jest come an' Hung her arms about
my neck an*- kissed me afore ’em all
“ • An’ now, M she Hoard.’ says L
‘nixttime you think of administ’ring
onto another widder, hadn’t you better
make sartin the orig'nai purprietor's
defunct?' ”-rAT. Y. Ledger.

.—A soldier confined in an English
prison for desertion h .s written a plea
i? says he.
for pardon based wholly on the ground
ugly pieturd’
that his absence from duty was much
nnkey?’
lengthened by inability to surrender
it Intlin’.
himself, as hobody would take him back.
'j-ujc von’re n liule benighted. Mr. He says he walked from London to the
Pollard,’
he— •« taiUtnan s a innn headquarters of his regiment, and pre­
called to rack onto the tail ©end of a sented himself tot he guard, who growled
that he “knewnothing about deserters.”
At the main guard-room he was told
that he could not be taken in; lie must
mvm 1. -but *11 the name, head or tail.
g.ve himself up to the police.
So he
started to want London again, meeting
a constable i.i Lewisham road, who told
Lira: “You’re no uie to me. anyway,
now.” Finally he gave imself up at a
“ • Wh.-.t * the natur’ on It?* says he. jjolice court.—Chicago Herald.
•• • If* n itur’a MUictly private.’ says I.

—Enough sunflower seed to feed all
tbe fowls ordinarily kept ou tbe farm
a be raised along the sides of the road
in fence corner*, where tbe ground

live men. Nobody grope* in tbe grave­
yard except the medical student*.
Queen Victoria traces her bl&lt;x&gt;d back
to William the Conquerer. Well, she
can’t help it. She isn’t to blame for it,
nor does she dceerve any particular
credit for it. Such a woman ax Victoria,
my boy, reflects honor upon her ance+tor*; her pure womanhood would honor

her any greater honor. Why you, sup­
pose you can only trace your ‘ancenry
back to your father, why,- your father
is a better man, a better Christian, he
wear* hotter clothes, he lives in a better
house, he has more luxuries and con­
veniences in life than was or did or had
William the Conqueror, and so you are
that much ahead of the Queen. Look
me in the eye, Telemachns; would you
feel proud if you could prove that you
were a lineal descendant of the. four
Georges? Certainly you would uot. If
you should have said yes, I should have
advhod yon to stuff yourself and sell
yourself for a cigar-store sign.
If you
assert yourself, my boy, that is all tife
world asks of you. If the world has
work for you to do, if it wants you and
needs you, it isn’t going to bark up your
family tree. Who asked about Lincoln’s
ancestors? Who stopped in 1863 to as­
certain if Grant’s family came over in
the Mayflower? What “old family” did
the American people elect President in
1880?
What great-great-grandfather
invented the telephone? Who knows
Brigham Ydung’s mother-in-law? God
bless your grandfather, my boy.
Love
his memory, honor his name, revere his
teachings, but don’t try to wear his
shoes to-day. You can’t run and you
can’t climb in them. I tell you your
neighbor will question more closely the
pedigree of the blooded horse or the
milch cow you want to sell him than he
will your own.
When 1 hear a man talking too much
about his ancestors, 1 begin to think he
needs them very much. And I always
feel sorry for a man who died before he
was born, and lives only in the deeds
Md wonb oi M;

t die out two or three generations
before you begin, my boy. Live your
own life, if it kills yon. I have known
some men who were very proud of their
ancestors whose ancestors would have
been most dismally ashamed of them.
Pride of ancestry! It is dust under
your feet compared with pride of pos­
terity. You never in all your life felt
that pride^n your great-grandsire, who
fought at Bunker Hill and shivered at
Valley Forgo, that you will feel in your
first boy, oven when ho is three days old
and has nothing to show for bim«elf but
flannel and wrinkles. When a man, on
his way to the drug store for ten cents'
worth of paregoric, meet* tho younger
man going to tho furniture store to buy
a $35 cab for bis first, ho can not repress
the smile of pleasant pity that carves
his older lips. But, bless you, itdoesn*t
hurt tho young man a particle. Ho can
stop right there in tbe’ street and give
his older neighbor points on the treat­
ment and culture of children. Don't
waste your pride on your ancestors, my
bov. Save it for your posterity. They
will bo in better circumstances end live
in better times. While your ancestors
came over in the Mayflower, a leaky old
tub of a sailing vessel, that landed tho
Pilgrims and then went straight away
for a cargo of slaves to land in tho West
Indies, your children will go across in a
Cunarder, first cabin, faring sumptu­
ously and only ten days out. It is enough
for you, my boy, to know that your an­
cestors wore good, brave, honest, hard
working Christian men and women.
For tho rest of it, do you live your own
life, and live it so that you will honor
them and add now luster to thoir good
names; but don’t, my boy, I beg of you,'
don’t try to “boost” yourself up in the
world on what they did long before you
were born. Do something yourself.—
Burlington Hawkeye.
A Terrapin Farm.
Leaving the beach aad the sand dunes
upon which Atlantic City rests, tue eye
greets the great salt marshes of the Jer­
sey coait, which stretch back until the
level plain of coarse sedgy grass meets
the horizon’s edge. Dank and dark the
slimv morass, home of the crawling
reptiles and succeeding billions of mos­
quitoes, which hove remained undis­
turbed through countless ages of time,
until lo! hush! Some wide-awake Jer­
sey men have laid the hand of industry
upon the muddy water, and a so-called
“terrapin farm” is the result. While it
has been proved by actual experiment
that terrapin can be raised on a small
scale, it remains for the future to disclose
whether the Jersey farms will be able to
furnish our great cities with thh most
delectable dish, as pronounced by the
highest order of epicurean talent. For
many years terrapin have been found in
abundance in tab locality, but the in­
creasing demand of the New York and
Philadelphia markets has drained the
resources of the whole Jersey ooa^t, and
it is only a question of time near at. hand
when terrapin in its native wilds will
become nearly, if not quite, extinct. To
overcome thb fearful famine a limited
number of Jerseymeu have made this
delicious reptile a study, and the knowl­
edge secured resulted in the farm,which
bid* fair to rank among Atlantic City’s
r.ire*t attractions. So far not much
beauty has been evolved, but Cape M»v
has been beaten, and this alone is suflfeient to bring a profitabte return for the
outlay.
.
When State Senator Gardiner began
his searehin/ explorations into terrapin
lore, he found that ncientiffl* had sadly
neglected to inform themselves about
the domestic life of Che Jersey “diamond
back." Prof. Baird, of the Smithsonian
sepulture at Washington, was ap­
proached ou the sebject, bat he proud­
ly pointed to hi* fo«il remains of the

than six months of the year, losing noth­
ing, however, but apparently drawing
sustenance from tbe mad where it ia
traried. As thousands of dollar* have
l&gt;een already invested in this new in­
dustry, the importance of the subject is
readi y brought to mind,.
After five
years of existence a well-behaved terra­
pin leaves the bottom of the muddy salt
pond, crawls to the edge of the adjoin­
ing. warm sand in the balmy month cf
June, and deposit* from fourteen to
twenty eggs, which she carefully con­
ceals tn the warm sand. After this per­
formance Mme. Terrapin, goes back to
her boudoir of mud with all the calm
indifference of modern motherhood.
But a foe of the most relentless kind is
at hand in the shape of a bird called the
crow? which speedily unearths tbe ter­
rapin eggs, and they are dispatched at
one solitary banquet. Senator Gardiner
believes that the crow has more to do
with the extinction of the terrapin than
the hunter who makes it his business to
furnish the market*. It is known that
the young terrapin sleeps during the
first year of existence, never leaving the
spot where the egg is deposited, freesing and thawing within the. bosom of

I&gt;T. Klwc’a New

l»orilrriv cure you.

A find-clam ( cig Weather Kalt far

bis carriage and the kfftineaa of hl* gate.
GOOD ADVICE.

•

Blaiitets and Bobes.

You will prevent and cure the t
the ilia that afflict mankind in tl

IN TM19 i'F**2 °Yr u4** W1U COfnP*re f*vor-

medicine known tlurt uoei* this a*
Parker’* G Inger Tonic. Il will keep y
rich ana pure, and give you good be*
----- OUB STOCKS or-----

A mill pond hi Indians is Baid to be gdod for
800 casts of chill* and fever a year, and furulsbc» two drag store* a pretty fair rapport.
THE SAFEST WAY.

Tbe aafest and *ure*l way to restore the
youthful ctdor of the hair la furnished by Park­
er's Hair Balaam, which 1* deservedly popular
from its superior cleanliness.

Burton Be*crfbc* Idleness ** being “the cush­
ion upon which tbe devil rest*.” Johnaou des­
ignate* it u “the rust of the *oul.”
SKINNY MEN.

that surround them. It is believed by
some of the investigating Jerseymen
that two years of terrapin life are spent
in this torpid state, without movement
or scarce any change*.
From the sec­
ond to its fifth year the terrapin leads a
kind of vagrant life, and is let alene be­
cause of no market value.
It finds
safety from voracious crabs and fish,
because it continually burrows in the
soft mud, never venturing any distance
out to sea.
Hence its name “terra,”
which means earth, and “pin,” because
it sticks so close to it. Sometimes the
little reptile burrows three feet down in
the. soft'mud.
During this period of
youthful growth it feeds on the refuse of
clam, oyster, and other little shell-like
creations with which salt water so
abundantly abounds; but when permit­
ted to choose its own food, as it is al­
lowed to do when undergoing educa­
tion at the hands of a Jerseyman, it is

EVEBY MAW VHP DRIVES A TEAM

Prints, Dress Goods, Flannels,
Ladies Cloakings, Shawls. Underwear,
Blankets, Boots, Shoes, Hats. Caps,
Mittens, Gloves, Groceries, Glass­
ware, Orockay and Queens wax e

see them, buy Bnd bt happy.
Woodland, Oct 25,1882.

F. F. HILBERT,

‘

WdUs’ Health Hcnewer. Absolute cure for
nervoua debility and weakue** of the genera­
tive function*. SI. at drugguta Mich. Depot
JAMES E. DAVIS A CO., Detroit, Mich.
Everything wa* frozen sUid al tbe strait* at
-this time last year, and ft proved to be an open
winter, Ux-._____ ’
_____
HOP BITTERS AKE $HE PUREST AND
BEST BITTERS EVER MADE.
They are compounded from hop*, malt, Buchu, mandrake and dandelion,—the oldest, best
and most valuable medicine* in the wbrld, and
contain all the best and most curative proper­
tie* of all other remedies, being the jrreatest
Blood purifier. Liver Regulator and Life and
Health Restorer .Agent on earth. No disease
or ill health can poMibly Jong exist where these
bitter* arc uaed, »o varied and perfect are their
openftion*.
Thejr give new life and vigor to the aged and
f nflrm. To all whose employmenu cause irreg­
ularity of the towels or urinary organa, or who :
require an apeUxcr. Tonic and mild stimulant.
Hop Bitters are invaluable, being higliiy cure,
tire, tonic and stimulating, wlthouthitoxlcaling.
No matter what your feeling* or symptoms
are, what the disease or ailment I*, use Hop
Bitter*. Don’t wait until! you are sick, but if
you only feel bad or miserable, use Hop Bittern
at once, it may eave your life- Hundred*
have been saved by *o doing. 1500will be paid
for a case they wifi not cute or help.
Do Dot Buffer or let your friend* Buffer, but
use and urge them to use Hop Bitten*.
Remember Hop Bitters la no vile, dragged,
drunken nostrum, but tbe purest and best med­
icine ever made; the “Invalid’s Friend and
Hope," and no person or family should be with­
out them. Try the bitters to-day.

CUSTOM

And manufacturer of hardwood

Lumber.

©

A GOOD FAMILY FLOUR
MILL YEED and BEAM

least on dried beef—in Ocuci
_
when Senator Gardiner placed a bill of
PURE Cider VINEGAR,
fare before his terrapin, oyster, clam,
and other delicacies were examined and
rejected, while dried beef was found to
be exactly what was wanted. The ex­
HAP.DWOOD LUMBER,
periment’ was tried so often there can
be no doubt about a terrapin’s taste.
When the reptile is five years old it
measures nearly six inches across its
BASSWOOD LUMBER.
diamond armor. It is now ready for
the market, though it has not reached
FINE FINISHING LUMBER
Erfect maturity. When it has attained
seventh year its romantic flavor as­
sumes its highest perfection, and a
Mill on Sherman Street, East from
morsel has been found fit for the palate
Depot.
of the gods.
II. K.
&amp;. CO.
Senator Gardiner’s terrapip farm be­
I have opened a market
gins within a lew feet of his garden and
only a little way from the rear cottage
door. Let the reader imagine a strip of ATTACHED TO C. SMITH’S
narrow, dry earth joining to the great
GROCERY
salt ifiarsh which stretches to the “Inlet,"
covering acres in extent. To the right
To show you a large and well selected Stock of
aiid tnfend to keep a
a large shallow pond has been exca­
vated, which is filled afresh twice a day
by the salt water pushed in by the tides.
Winding here and there through the
sedgy plain are the narrow canals which
lead to the pond and terminate at tbe
inlet, and only tbe wind-mills are neces­
sary to complete a Holland landscape. AUo everything pertaining to a firtt-clau
.
market.
At intervals a rude construction of tim­
CONSISTING OF
ber is noticed, which is placed to govern
the inflowing waters as well as to ward Cood Coodsand Full Weight
off the deleterious consequences of frost
and ice.. A fence surrounds the pond,
Give me a trial.
which has been sunk three feot in tlx
mud, as this depth has been found
». D. DURFEE.
necessary to keep the terrapin frerr
crawlirig away. A brilliant panorams
appears before the vision of Atlantic
City’s “terrapin farmer.” In nis de­
clining years he site in his cottage by
For Cash or Ready Pay.
the sen. At his feet spread out his
financial possessions which he has
Alio the Largest Stock of
wrested from the savage morass. Be­
yond lie the placid waters of .the inlet,
gemmed with t£e fishing yachts which
carry his diamond-bock treasures be­
yond the sea.—Philadelphia Time*.
l« Recommended by PhyffldantJ

Ih

0

New Meat Market

ALL READY

SALT and FRESH MEATS.

GROCERIES

Sugars, Coffees, Teas, Tobaccos,
Spices, Fish, Canned Goods,
Provisions, 4c., ,

HALUS

QatarrhPure

Can’t Sake Him Hear.

** I doan’ know vhat I shall do mit
dat telephone of mine,” observed a citi­
zen as he entered the headquarters of
the company yesterday and sat down in
a discouraged way.
“Out of order, is it?"
“ Sometimes it vhaa, und sometimes
it vhas all right. If I go to speak mit
der coal man, or der City Hall, or der
butcher, it vhas all right, uud I can hear
every word. If somepody vhanta to or­
der my peer I get de name shusf as
plain as daylight?’
“And when does it fail?”
“ Vhell. shust like two hours ago. A
saloon man he owe* me $18, und I rings
him oop and calls out: ‘Hello! hello!
I likes dot monish to-day!’ Den he
vhanta to know who I am, und he says
he can’t catch dor name. I tell him
oafer und oafer, und by an’ by he call*
oudt dot he doan’ deal in watermelons,
und dot he goes in to pave Gratiot
street, und dot he is sorry he can’t sign
my betition to der Council. Den I haf
to go all oafer again, und he tells me to
stand bock, und to come closer, und to
speak louder, und at last he gits mad
und tells me dot if I call him a dandy
again he'll proke my head. It’s no
use—I can’t make one of my customers
hear me. If sometings doan’ ail my
telephone it may be ash my voice is giv­
ing‘out. I vhish you would examine
me und see if I had better let my son
Sbon do der talking while I keep der

—Myer*’ restaurant, in Brooklyn, i*
near the City Hall, and is much patron­
ized by swell politicians. Therefore
when the other day a uoal -black negro
camo in and wanted breakfast he waa
told that he could not be served. He sat
palientlv for three hour*, until bomgar

AT THE LOWEST PRICES

Crockery, Glassware, Lamps,
Stone Ware, 4c.,

TO BE SEEN IW BARRY CO.

S1OO
We manutaiar* anti mH ft vltb* pofflthre
guarantee that It will cure any
case, and vewiil forfeit tbe above amouat

BOOTS AND SHOES
AS CHEAP AS ANYBODY.

CASH PAID FOR PRODUCE.
dI*U«*Mncal*MM,adt your Draoist for ft. and
aocarr so nerranox oa xnaanrura If he

C. W. SMITH.

*. 73 cenUper bottle.

t CO., Tolsdo. Ohio.

enu vam au tin fails.

B«KCo«t&gt;SnpP; Taw KQQd.

Horses
Shod
ALWAYS BEST
TO HAVE THE JOB DONF

SEILLFULLY.
Recognizing These Facts,
by affording the public
Not Fail

FALL
■ ^L^VlVioe-LL:
■
for 1882.
Fm to any widresn u;on
:
applies:: ,n. Contal:
ecrip'.ioos of ewyiui.-ig
required far Pcrwmal or Family tw-,

THE BEST WOBK
Chas. Middleton,’

A No. 1 Workman.
J. M. WOOD

and proved that the turtle-* of that day
again and stay all day.—Detroit pMt.

I FOUNDER and MACHINIST

�“’Si110”0

THE STORE REPAIRS

out fraudulent njtes which are already
in circulation
■
There is but one practical method of
accomplishing the aes red end. and that
is to compel every Nat.ouni and State
Bank to brand every counterfeit pre­
! sented to if Everv prominent bank
teller will ssV that there is hardly a day
during wbicli some counterfeit is not
presented to him .in the oourst) of

The MONUMENTAL i» lhe Finest Round
Stove Made.

wtoadoubt-

And is filled with Stove« of 20 Different Kinds.

but was to be

mart' hai e been in bad conhad long been predicted
ur inter an accident must
happen. The.heavy current resulting
from tho flooded state of the river had
drifted all kinds of debris against the
bridge, which ttocs not appear to have
been provided with cut-waters. Hence,
the f oaling rubbish aocumula’ed. and culation. Were it branded it would be
this was doubtless the main cause of done with forever. Were a mistake made
yesterday’s disaster. Tho passengers as to a genuine issue there is an-existing
of the ill-fated train consisted almost provision for the redemption at par of
exclusively of a part of the Fifteenth a mutilated bill
Were the Treasury
Hussar regiment, returning home on oflicials to secure the co-ojieratipn of
leave from Semjevo and Mostar. Just the banks -and it will be given gladly
aa the first |*rt of it was crossing tho —the work in which the Secret Service
sixth and seventh arches of the bridge fails would be speedily and effectually
the woodwork gave way, and, aciom- accomplished.
After h little there
panfod by a lend crash, the engine, ten­ would be no counterfeits in existence.—
der, two goods vans and two passenger AT. F. Herald.
&lt;*rri^n*-^vero hurled, into the swollen
streain belo^j^jMfme thirty meii were
Sleeplessness.
.drowned, the number of thosa who escarwd being estimated at forty-nine.
The causes that produce this serious
The engine driver and stoker man­ trouble are various. Not infrequently
aged to swim ashore, and although the the tendency to it is inherited with a
breach measured sixty meters the rest delicate nervous organization, and over­
of tho train remained on the bridge, the work will increase it. it is difficult for
coupling chains having, fortunately, tlus sufijerer to know just how much
snapped asunder. Seventeen men were work, mental and physical, may IxJ ac­
more or less seriously injured, but the complished without producing ’the un­
officers, who were in the end carriage, pleasant result. For one so constituted
do not appear to have been hurt. An u most watchful care becomes impor­
engineer and his assistant,- who hap­ tant, and the most interesting emplovpened to be on the bridge when the went must be turned away from at the
accident occurred, also escaped, the •first sense of wesriness. ’
former by swimming ashore, and tho
An earnest conversation with a friend
latter by catching hold of a projecting exciting your sympathy, the demand
plank as he fell. They were the only upon your strength made by an invalid,
eye-witnesses of what occurred., Ono reading an article that stimulates the
of the carriages fell on a sand-btmk, mind to intense thinking, mav, any of
and thereof is just visible above water. them, cause you to spend weary wake­
The other fell in the middle of the tor­ ful hours and lead to severe exhaustion
rent, and i is carried throe hundred on tho morrow.
meters
down tho river.„ It
hardly By watchiulness you may learn to
--- -------------------------„ ishardly
necessary to aay that the news of this spare yourself the over-fa’igue, as a
his caused profound con- duty which others may not understand
fresh disaster has
sternation throughout the country. ' the re.ason for. You may avoid the conAlthougb less serious in its conseouenc'-s
Although
conseauenca I vernation and the book at evening, seekthan the catastrophe at Segodin,
Segedin, the ,j ing them at an earlier hour when the
burning of the Hir
------------------ —
King
Theater, or
the '! choice lies ...
with you. But with 'every
floods in the Tyrol, it is of a particularly ! care you are lia'blo to suiler from
distressing chant ter. The poor fellows causes you can neither foresee nor pre
who met with such an untimely end vent
yesterday had, aftpr three or four years’
Sometimes indigestion will awaken
exile and hardship obtained their well- you at the small hours, and take re­
earned dis -harge from the ranks, aud venge for some very sligirt departure
were, no doubt, eagerly looking for­ from the careul diet you uniformlv
ward to meeting their Iriends again. itflopt. Recently it has been discovered
Many of them hades-aped death on tho that many persons lose hours of sleep
battle-field in Bosnia, and others had because they are in need of nourishrecoxored from sickness that has lately i menu That the fart is too long that
so.prevalent
troop's in | continues from supper time at six
been so
prevalent among the troops
- the occupied provinces. Full of nope ! o’clock until sixoreighto' clock the next
and making merry as best they could morning.
on their journey, home, these thirty [ i’hysicians who used to prescril&gt;e bro­
.
—-----i-j r_,
joung
men were _.u*x
suddenly
hurried
to mide of soda or potassium for sleepless­
their account. It is ene of the saddest’ ness now urge their patients to take
accidents on continental railway record. beef tea instead The writer, after tryThe disaster was due In a greatC ing various prescriptions with little ben­
measure to negligeuoe. Several daysi ent, wai at length so fortunate as to re­
ago the bridge showed signs of • inso-. ceive such adfice. At first beef tea was
curity. Besides the locomotive and ten-. used with some light bread or biscuit
derAthe train consisted of an emptyr broken in it, sipped from a spoon as
brake van, an open goods van. two» warm as it could be taken. Afterwards,
closed vans loaded with com, two vansI milk just scaidod. not boiled, was sub­
occupied by fifty-seven hussars, a lug­. stituted, and to make it^more easy of
gage van, a post-oflioe car, and sevent digestion alablespocmfalcf lime water
passenger carriages.
The engine wasj was added to a half tumbler of milk,
creasing the sixth span when the bridgej To facilitate matters a pocket-stove with
gave way. The six vans composing thej an alcohol lamp or an arrangement for
front part of the train fell through withi the gas fixture should be at hand. If
tbe locomotixe. tlte coupling chainsi neitlier beef tea nor milk can be easily
having broken, thus dividing the train C&gt;cured. hot water w;th xm infusion o’f
in two. Not life slightest Vace has yet
ps or mint may be substituted, or
been discovered of the engine and ten­. even hot water alone will quiet rcstlessder. The four following vans werei Dess and induce sleep. A darkened
drifted by the torrent a considerable dis­. room that the tooenbeamscannot enter,
tance down the river, and eventually■ a little tresh air from nn open fire-place
stopped by‘a sand-bank.
Those con­ or window, are valuable assistants in
taining the hussars were carried along; making the deep continuous.
some three hundred yards and there।
When once the habit of wakefulness
brought tn a standalilL
None of the। is broken up. the beef tea or milk may
bodies has a yel b--en recovered. There' be taken cold, but.not iced. If you are
were a few miraculous-eases of cheapo always a poor sleeper It will be: well to
A pioneer managed to get out of one ofi 'Cont.nue this late supner as a penua■the ill-fated vans, and hang on to the। nent thing in your daily life.
telegraph wires, which, fat the point
'
Provide for It in the case of aged and
where the accident happened, pass1 delicate persons who may be under your
under the bridge. A lieutenant belong­; ioof; and as the troubles of life appear
ing to the hussars opened the door of; most weighty when scanned in the mid­
the other van in time to save seven of night hours, you may be able to lighten
his subordinates. Two civilians amongi the load for the real if their journey.—
those who happened to be on the bridge[ CArtstian Union.
as the train was passing got entangled
’
in the wreckage and were drowned.
Half a dozen more escaped by jumping Rough Lessen to a Bank Depositor.
into the waterbefore the final crash and
A practical lesson was taught to a
swimming ashore. The rescued sold tors
are all more or less seriously injured.— bank depositor a lew days ago in the
Queen street- branch of the Dominion
Oor. London Telegraph.
Baek. It appears be called to deposit
about S.j.OMl. which he laid on the
Brand the Counterfeits.
.
counter, and then tumud round toepeak
There is an immense volume of coun­ to aa acquaintance. On again facing
terfeit money known to be in circula­ the counter the money was gone, and
tion nt present Large sums of monwy eonslernat-on reigned supreme. Tho
are exj ended annually by the Secret depositor accused a painter, who was at
Service to detect the counterfeiters, and work near the counter, of abstracting
yet the country is at times Hooded with the money, and threatened to call in a
spun -us issues of National Bhnk notes. Constable if it were not at once given
This is because the attention of the up. While proceeding to‘carrv out bis
Secret Service is devoted, to the beixnre threat he happened to look toward tbe
of counterfeit platce and bills still in counter, and to his amazement he saw
possession of the makers or their con­ the misaing package of money lying in
federates, while there is no systematic tbe exact sjiot where he hid Hid it.
effort made to check the further circu­ One of the bank officials explained the
lation of the immense volume of coun­ mystery by stating that on entering the
ter e t money which has been ‘-shoved” office from a back room, aud seeing th&lt;
"•y tbe suoc-iaful ras al.-i. and is kept money so carelessly displayed, be picked
floating in tbe community by more or it up and carried It away to teach the
leM honest people. The Secret Service depositor a lesson. to be more canful
is totally unable to trace die individual in the future, and then quietly returned
bills, when cnee issued, through the it. An apology was tendered theacthousands of channels they have foL cased painter, and all unpleasantness
was removed.—Toronto (Cub.) Mail

erst* «o »uo.wd licmucnit*. *wt m»&gt;u to Hcpublicans to succeedi n-nuiurom.
Kcputllrens. or.
Of.tbe
th*
other 5. tbe DonxtoMU train I In L*&gt;ui&gt;Unsaad
lose I In Vinriula and 1 In Ortvm. Tbe Hopubtlcans gain 1 In Illinois and 1 In Oregon,
-n.l « k. *
loaf... .vl" 1 In V

Heptibiican**. and

Paints, Oils and Colors, Doers, Glass, Sash and
Blinds Iron and Wood Pumps,Wagons, Buggies,
Carriages and Platforms,
ms, Drills, Cultivators
Seeders. Plows, Land Roll
Rollers, “Reed Springtooth Harrow.
A Large assortment of Shelf Goods and Tinware, and the best
Tinner in the County.

-follows:
■JKE
YSST

FOR COOOS CHEAP CALL AND SEE ME.

QUlCttST ।

KANSAS CITY

Alabama.
C*pfom&gt;*......
Cotorwto..........
Connecticut...
Delaware
Ftortd*............
Georrta

iiunoi*..
Indiana......... '.
Iowa
.......
Kan-n*
Kentucky
I oulalau*........
Maine..?
Mary la"'1
MIm*&gt; hu*--tl*
Mlctii**n ......
MlMiaaippI

By Buying Your Dry
■IIIUL IM SltGlClL SIBITUIOE

MMatmri?...........

Xebrssxa.........
Nevada.
,. .
New H am pahtra

W. S. GOODYEAR &amp;

North Carolina.
Ohio \...
Oregon.
Pennsylvania...
Hbode Island. .
South Carolloa.

IlaHtingx, TVTicli.
We fully realize the

Vermont
VtndiHa:...... .
Went Vtndnla.
Total

That most all kinds of .produce are bringing this fall, so have
bought a large stock of all kinds of

following as an approximately correct table
showing tbe poUUcal complexion of the next
House:

Cblorsao..
ODOBectlm
Doi*war*.
Ftor»&lt;i* ...
Oeocnta...
Uiloota....

DRY GOODS, FANCY GOODS, NO­
TIONS, BOOTS and SHOES,
and CARPETS.
And are selling at prices that will astonish you.

DIRECTIONS
.SteAMEW

gyARRH COLO*'

will beabaoxbod.

W. S. GOODYEAR &amp; CO­

HTSttUlBlLI

Hastings, October 4, 1882.’

rtfretaaily

Mali*-.
M«n l*n*l.

HAY-FEVER

Nebraatau"."'.’
Nevada

MILLINERY

Now Hamp«hlm.

North Carolina
Ohio
Oregon..............
Pemuir Irani*...
Ehode Island...
S. Carolina
Tenne«i»e&lt;j........
Texas.
Vermont—
Virginia............
w vinrtnla.....
WiscoMin.........

Unequaled For Cold in the Head
The lubn h»* gained an cnrlatik reputation wl*cre
«’*» known. &lt;H«p'ar!nc a!) oibt-r preparation*.

Recognized as a Wonderful Discovery.
8„M *«v druori-u at.VicU.

FOR THE NEXT SIXTY DAYS

Patrons of Husbandry.

.

1MPIAXAFOI.IH, InA. November IS.
Tbe xixU-cnth annual S-'Mlon of the National
Grange of Patrons of Husbandry began Its
»e«*ic&gt;ni In Ctels city to-dny, with ifie followlnr
onicer* present: Master, J. J. Woodward, Paw
l"aw, Mich.; Overseer. Put Darden, Fayette,
MFa.; I.e&lt;&lt;urcr. Henry Eaaebaugti. Hanson,
Mo.; 8te*anl, William Sims, Topeka, Kan.:
Assistant Steward. John J. Hoss. Milford, Deb:
Cbaplnin. Henry O. Devries, Mamottxville.
Md.; Treasurer. F. M. McDowell. Wayne. N. V.

CURES ANO

&lt;1

SPECIAL BARGAINS IN TRIMMED HATS
Some people are never ready to take advantage of favorable
k. iKvurAiu. x'.i S5SSS, £5“
opportunities. Don’t let this be said of you.

Thirty-twoStates are repnwentod
ventton. Anwn&lt; tbe dcl&gt;icatca

Come Early, Come Late,

A puMtu Metins was bcijl at the courtat wtsn, addr-sac* &lt;&gt;t welcome were
delivered by Gov-rnor Porter and Mayor
Grutibn and re-pon**-* made by prominent
members of the order.
Th- Treasurer reported the finance* In good
order, tbe receipt* more ibantH;UHlIn« expend­
iture. nvut th,.

SAMAHITAm

I’fstytll offer my entire stock of millinery goods at cost dr
under.

IBS BB. 8.

Only that your wants are supplied.

ruzTS«7x»'iju“j.”&lt;5a*S&gt;

M. JEFFREY
FARMERS, TEAMSTERS, HORSEMEN
—IK) YOU KNOW THAT—

.

. .. ..... .. ... ,
v., .uvourcuu
of Agriculture Into an Executive Department;
thutl onirrre.be pctmonrd to pass Mr Bur­
rows bill for the relief of purchasers of patent
right urttolre; that just statutory laws bo
pawed regulating transportation; and he
shows that twenty Slates have an Increase in
membership.
In lire a .u.
nttto _variation,
~ X..I.,
■ ,-. ..1 _and in

■ , xy-, — » vu,
uvw unin&lt;«-s wore orS*nlxe&lt;l la tb&lt;K United mates and fourteen
more *incc tin*.

YOU CAN SAVE MONEY

The MANIPULATER
cxii'rol of TVrritory.
....
I.. it
tlri_ . ...

OF HERB. WALRATH.

PnblieLamJ !&gt;eclsie&lt;i.«.

WssntxoToa. November U.

Ill the Heavy Line I manufacture Farm Hanteas. Hoad ilnrnm, and Lumber IlarneaN, luting the best brand of MA” Block, stitchin
with 8 cord No. 10 thread, and Elierhard Trimmings.
My Light Single and Double Harness arc tbe Pride of all who

Antlny-ltocrrlary JtMlyii hat decided tbe

Made in all Styles

'liHamunn tb-yrt-und Hutt

Best Stock in the Market,

iflerf

AND WAEJRASTJiD TO GITS 8AUSTACTIOJi.

unmioK
. - 1-/V,.

night, at which Gotham’s

return the counterfeit to
vmwhooi they think they

On rteclpi of price

NOW 18 THE TIME TO BUY CHEAP.

Total...

—FROM—

—Mrs. W. K. Vanderbilt, who was a
hope that . the recording Mias Smith, and whose sister married «
vo who
said to attend to b5SihT
Mapleville, pre »
ten will see that they are “old-fashioned country datioe'* at he

rLanae*

Kentucky..
Loulo.an*...

Collars
id

guaranUttl. j

—are

�DEC.». 188*

WINTER GOODS

Grant's shoe-factory at Quebec wu de-

THE NEWS.

*100,000; Insurance, *80.000.
.
Mr. Glaxmtonr announced ta*the British

SNOw-moaM prevailed Id portions of Illi-

from Late Diipatohat.
DOMESTIC.

rsors-of-Rant bill had proven a failure, aad be
desired It known that' the Government did Dot
intend to present a measure to extend the

Hals Forsyth, a eoal-mtner at Belleview,
Fa., borrowed some dynamite at a quarry tbe
other day with which to kill fish. Ignorant

GOOD BARGAINS
though
he sought his children's hands. His grand­
niooKAPiiicAi-

parently died out

Two colored men were

pose of removing an obstacle. It is supposed

reduced to cinder*.
The report of Commissioner of Agriculture
Loring, which was submitted to tbe President
.on tbe 23d, estimates tbe crop yield of 1883 as
follows: Coro, 1,685,000.000 bushels; wheat,
410,000,000 bushels; oats, 470,000,000 bushels;
barley. 45,00J,0U0 bushel.; rye. 90,000,000
bushels, and buckwheat, 12.000,OX) bushcU.
The upper floors of Arrott's mills, In
Philadelphia, occupied by three manufactuIng a loss of *150,000.
la regard to tbe systematic robbing of mails
in Colorado, a Denver dispatch of the 23d
•ays there la no doubt that drafts and postal
orders aggregating *600,000 have been taken
from the pouches during the past year, while
tbe loss of currency can not be estimated.
Coxa for N
delivery In itew York

for tbe -find time tn the
nee Exchange, and closed
history of
at *1.03.
B. H. Chats ter, postmaster at Shelbyville,
Ky., for tbe pest ten year*, killed himself

kitchen.* Soon afterward bls house was blown
to fragments, two children were killed,, and
his wife wrs fatally injured.
Tuber men recently attempted to cross the
railway track at Uniontown, Pa., with a load
of flour, when their mules balked. * A paasenger train dashed along, killing the men and
utterly demolishing tbe wagon.
'At Springfield, 0.. D. H. Roche and F. (L
Case, agents of the Indianapolis Road, re­
cently went Into a vault where s.imebody had
blown out the gas, and lighting a match both
received fatal Injuries.
Ax explosion of an oil tank In the Brooklyn
Comjiany's works at Greenpoint, L. I., on
the afterncon of tbe 26th set tbe building on
fire, and tbe burning fluid floated on an adja­
cent creek to adjoining structures, causing
widespread destruction. Devoe’s oil works,
a box factory and a sal-soda establishment
were psrtlallT burned, and two men were.
drowned by J imping from a bark for safety.
Tbe explosions were numerous and terrific,
flying missiles filled tbe air, and the windows
of structures blocks away were shattered by
the detonations. The total damage was
*200,00).

old leader, Arabi Pasha.
Montex eoko has informed tbe Porto that,
unlesa the District of Kolatchln be Ceded Im­
mediately to Montenegro, 400 troops will be
sent to occupy It The Porto, for reply, sent
three battailous of Turkish troops Into the
disputed territory to maintain order.
The Canadian Department of Internal
Revenue has decided to keep leaf tobacco
under lock and key in the custody of an offi­
cer. #ho will issue It as required for mauufactoring.
By tbe fall of a railway bridge at Brom­
ley, England, a few mornings ago, sevei
workmen who were breakfasting beneath were
"killed and several others were Injured.
The Cathedral of St. Denis in Psris was
recently robbed of gold and sliver relics of
great historical value.
Officials in Ireland on the 34th reported
a probability of great distress this winter in
the districts ot Sligo, Balllna. Swinford and
tral Railroad, has been acquitted of the charge Galway, through the short potato crop and
of manslaughter in connection with the death lack o'! employment. Much destitution was
of Webster Wagner at Bpuyten Duyvll last apparent In West Clare and.Connaught'
Tse car-shops of the London A N orthwas tJanuary.
) era Railway at Wolverton, England, were
The body' of Dr. L. Ehrhart, a German burned a few days ago. Lost, *500,000.
physician of Allegheny City, Pa., was cre­
Detective Cox was shot dead In the streets
mated in the Lc Moyne Crematory at Wash­ of Dublin, Ireland, on the night of tbe 25th
ington, Pa., ou tbe afternoon of the 27th.
by a Fenian named Christopher Dowling. The
A few lays ago William Wright and wife,
assassin was followed by the police and fatally
residing at Webster, near BL Louis, beard wounled.'
the report of a gun in their house while they
A Rio Janeiro dispatch of the 25i:h states
were at work in a field. They soon discov­ thst tn consequence of several weeks of heavy
ered that their six-year-old son had playfully rains the estimated yisld of tbe next coffee
drawn a loaded shot-gun upon hl* younger crop will be much less than the previous
sister, actually blowing away her bead.
Tbe Mjrjregatc clear!uiji reported from
The Governor of Soudan reported on tbe
twenty-five clearing-house*'for tho weekend­ 36lh the defeat of the rebels at Derweer, with
ed on the 25th reached the stupendous sum of great loss, and a dispatch from Kordofan
*1,553,799,WK This was an increase of more , stated that tbe False Prophet had been captthan *300,0)0,000 over the previous week, and j
'
*
*"■
bu rveij. If
b«0 .qu.lrf In U, b .lory ' y«LU&gt;« mn b,, .ppe.nrf &gt;t St Ann.
of the American financial world.
I Je pocau^ M(j gL Pacouac. Quebec, from
Commimioneb Raum an the 27th reported I
broosbt from thc United Steles for In­
the net receipts of internal revenue for the , terment.
year at • 138,884,090. Distilled spirits con-,
Baron Manteuffel, one ol tbe oldest and
tri bn ted *69,873,408. and tobacco *47.384,028. I most prominent of German statesmen, died
Near Newburg, N. Y., recently a train on | at Berlin on the 27th, aged seventy-seven
the Lehigh A Hudson Railroad was wrecked.
The engineer and fireman were scalded to
A Constantinople dispatch of tbe 27th
death under the debris, and a brakeman was says: Turkey has refused to recognise the
fatally injured.
cession of Maaaamoh, or any territory on the
Kendall Brothers, of New York, whole­ Red Sea
sale dealer* in paper stock, have made so as­
A train on the North Scotland Railway
signment to cover liabilities of *200,000.
fell through a bridge at Fyrie. a few days ago,
II. A. Pitts A Sons, of Chicago, manu­ and fourteen persons were killed and many
facturers of thrashing machines, failed on others fbjured.
the 27th for *230.000. Neubouer A Bona,
Dennis Field, one of the jurors who conwholesale clothing-dealers at Milwaukee, vteted Hynet of murder, for which be was
made an assignment, to cover liabilities of &lt; hanged at Limerick, was stabbed to death in
JJOO.OUO.
Dublin on the 27tb. At night a bailiff named
At Osborne, Kan., the other day Frank Mallon wat stabbed In tbe bead, and received
Gaines’ five-year-old boy dropped a revolver a serious wound.
which he was playing with, exploding a
The Russian police on the 27th arrested 180
cartridge, the bullet Instantly killing his in­ students for revolutionary demonstrations.
fant brother.
Troops fired into a gathering at Kazan Uni­
SnaRira Martin, of Newcastle, Del., re} versity. snd killed three persons
cently gave two highway robbers forty lashes
An earthquake shock wu felt along ths
each, and three thieves received ten blows Welland Canal at 6:30 o'clock on the evening
apiece.
Four MILUoN acres of Texas lands have
Is the British House of Commons on the
been purchased by J. R. Walcott and other*, 27th Mr. Trevelyan, Chief Secretary for Ire­
of Minneapolis, representing a syndicate, for land, stated that the conflict between tbe
agricultural and grazing purjose*.
police of Dublin and organized lawlessness
seemed to have been inaugurated, and the
PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. Government would use all Its resource* to
Lewis C. Cassidy has been tendered the suppress disorder.
Attorney-Generalship of Pennsylvania by
Governor-elect Pattison.
LATER NEWS.
The obsequies of the late Thurlow Weed
The Chief of the Signal Service, General
were observed tn New York on the 24th. Hazen, predicts that tbe coming winter will
There was a large attendance of prominent be a mild one.
men from various parts of tbe Stale and
Virginia and North Carolina indulged in a
country. Tbe remains were taken th Albany
now-storm on tbe 28th.

Two BAD accidents occurred at Little Rock,
Ark., a few days sga Tbe eight-year-old
daughter of J. C. Dogsrdln was burned to a
crisp by her clothing igniting during tbe ab­
sence of her parents, and Miss Mattie Chris­
man, daughter of a prominent physician, took
a dose of strychnine by mistake, and died in
great agony.
Fire at Morris, Minn., early the other
morning destroyed several business strnctures, including the Tribune office. The loss
was estimated at *100,000, with but small in­
surance.
Buckden, the noted racing stallion,, for
which his owqcr, CsDtxln Cottrell, had just
refused *12,000, died at Danville, Va.; the
other nlghu
Toe coal miners' strike in the Pittsburgh
district is a fajlurc. But fourteen out of
fifty-nine pits stopped work, and in some of
these operations hive again been resumed.
There was a panic in the petroleum mar­
ket at Bradford, Pa., on - the 23d. prices
dropping in the afternoon from FLUX to *L
The highest figures of tbe day were *L14,
and tbe market dosed at *1.05. At Pitts­
burgh prices st one time fell to 97^c.
The business failures In tire United States
during tbe seven days ended on the 23d ag­
gregated 157, against 141 for the seven days
preceding.
A special census bulletin just issued
shows that in the United States there are
4,923,451 persons of ten years of age rfiid up­
ward who are unable to read, and 0,239,958
•ho are unable to write. Of tbe number of
persons returned as unable to write, 3,019,081)
are white; native whites unable to write,
2,255rl6); colored persons, ten years of age
uul upward, unable to write, 3,225,873, or
seventy per cent of tbe population.
Ox Lire 24th the Chicago, Milwaukee A St.
Paul Railroad commenced running through
trains between Rock Island and Chicago, by
way of Lanark, sdllng tickets for fifty cents
either way. $ The Rock Island retaliated by
making the' fare Don: Chicago to Cedar
Rapids fifty cents, and to Albert Lea one
dollar. '
By the destruction by fire of the Ontario
Cotton mills at Philadelphia oa tbe night of
tho 23J, about *250,OX) worth of property
was consumed.
Eastern capitalists have recently pur­
chased large quantities of timber land in
Breathitt and Rowan Counties, Kentucky,
and will erect mills to cut white o.k for ship­
building.
An inveatlon revolutionizing the envelope
Notice of contest has been served upon
and stamp business has been adopted by the
Government, ax^ will be put into practical William H. Calkins, Congressman-elect from
use by tbe tn I dare of January. It is nothing the Thirteenth District of Indisna, by John
I
HWlnterbotham, on the ground of fraud and
less than a letter-sheet, envelope and stamp
combined, which can be closed together with intimidation.
T
he Labor Congress In session at Cleveland
a single “lick.’’ Tbe publie will be saved the
price of envelope and pafter, as a contrivance, oa tbe 23d adopted a resolution asking mem­
large enough for an ordinary epistle, with a bers of the various unions to refrain from
purchasing cotton goods bearing the trade­
rtamp attached, will cost but three cent*
Notice of a redaction of wages in Dccem- mark of the Pacific Mills.
The Garfield Fair In the rotunda of the
Capitol at Washington was opened on the
25th
by President Arthur, who made a few
The Interior Department has recently de­
cided that public land which has been re­ formal remarks expressive of his hope that
duced in price to *1.25 must be offered at tbe wishes of thoae who had inaugurated it
public auction rt that rate before being open would be realized.
Mns. George Scoville, of Chicago, re­
to pre-emption. The decision i* applied
principally to tho valuable iron lands In cently declared to be insane by tbe Cook
Michigan, within the granted limits of tbe County Court, appeared in court on the 25th,
Marquette A State Line Railroad and joint and Judge Loomis granted her a new trial,
limit* of that road and the Oaton igon A Slate on the ground that public justice would
Line Boid, upon which a number of pre-emp­ thereby be promoted, fixing the date of the
tion entries have been made before tbe land trial December 18.
Bishop Crinxon, of Hamilton, Onu, died
was offered at a reduced rate.
Work on tbe Hudson River tunnel was in Florids a few days ago.
PnEstDENT Arthur on the 23th summarily
suspended on tbe 24th for lack of funds, after
tbe expenditure of &lt;940,000. Colonel H. akin dlsit issed from office United States Marshal
states that with *L50Q,QDO more the enter­ Henry, of tbe District of Columbia, the Post­
master and Assistant Postmaster of Wash­
prise can be completed In eighteen month*
ington. and two other officials. It was
self In the tea trade in New York City forty charged that nil these officers had obstructed
years ago. has failed, with liabilities of *300,- the administration of justice in the Star-route
cases, iltber directly or by public expressions
uCO.
,
Tine Mayor of BilUroote an tbe 34th re­ of sympathy.
Prop. O. J. Goldrick, a journalist, and
ceived the regular ounsal contribution of
*1,530 toward the conscience fund, which la founder of the first school and Sunday-school
at Denver, Cot, died in that city on the mornalways inclosed in an envelope from Boston.

The death of Commodore Henry Eagle,
burningfaease and lost her own life In gulng
swept to’ a terrible storm.

The velocity of

Tra&lt;!E rervanti in a boarding house at ladfatoqmLa were burned to death a few nights

York ou the 2tlth. He was eighty-three years
old.
gress and formerly United States Minister to
.Mexico, died at hie home in Hamilton, O., on
the 156th. He was seventy-one years old.
(fared Ids resignation was denied in a Wash­
ington dispatch on the afternoon of the 27th.

Tffij sUtUtirs of manufactnrss In the

pointed Government Director of tbe Union
Pacific Road, to succeed ex-Scuator Spencer.

SWmanutaetur ug .^rabllshuiestU, *2,790,223.KM of capital iar.-sted. ’2.035,379 men, 531,733
women and J81.VW children and youths em-

The AmeriEsa demand* iter indemnity for

was ¥3,8SI,Bf&gt;"17^5.

occupied the university in that city and
dosed those at Warsaw and Charkoff because
of a revolt among the students.
The Egyptian troops were reported on the
24 th to have declined to proceed to London

FOREIGN.

Power* to consider the Egyptian question.
The ex-Kcgeat of Cores has been sen­
tenced to captivity in on interior Ckiuess

Trx German. Government has nrchJWlad

I

hie param* biul nnlgmtod from Stamford.'

RE

NOW ARRIVING

PRICES THAT DEFY COMPETITION

Edward Lord Thurlow, but tho Edrard was

Grossweil, at Catskill.

During tbe war of

listed in a Herkimer County regiment under
Colonel Petrie, in 1SW. He was shortly after-1
ward made Quartermaster-Sergeant, und spent
several months in camp life at Sackett's Hsr-

to an parties who buy of us goods to the amount of ten dollars or upwards at one time,

-WE WILL GIVEA-valuable present worth at feast One Dollar, or

A DISCOUNT OF TEN PER CENT.
On the purchase. Don’t tai! to take advantage of this offer.

low-workman with James Harper, tho late
head of the great publishing house. In April.
)81f. Mr, We. d married Miss Catharine M. Oa-;
trander, of Coojicrstown, N. Y., a woman of |
remarkably good souse and prudence, Indus­
try, religious principle* nud 'domestic babies.
HI* first connection with tho press us tin edl-1
tor was in Chenango County, where he started'
tho weekly lUiniblican AuriculiurM in Dccemsupported the project of constructing tbe
Erie CanaL in 1«1 bo purchased an Interest;
in the Uanllua Time*, which bo sold out a year.
or two later. Going to Rochester he secured
tbe position of assistant editor on the Rocbw
ter 7'd&lt;vniph. In 1KM he ropre««nted the city
of Rochester in tho State Legislature. During
his service tn tbe
Legislature he
displayed the skill for political ma-,
nlpulation which characterized his after-'
life. Hcturnlng'to Rochester be became editor'
and half owner of the Tcltfjraph. whoso circu-'
lation and Influence was steadllr increasing.
The mysterious disappearance of Captain
William Morgan and the anti-Masonic ezcI to­
mcut which followed the alleged Masonic mur­
der suddenly became Important factors in Mr.
Weed's life. He took tho nntl-Masonic side,
and in the height of the excitement tho Tele-'
praph.wcnt down through the withdrawal of
all Masonic support Mr. Weed's tact u a
curing tho election of IM’ Witt Clinton as Gov­
ernor. suggested him ns a competent person
to oppose tho “ Albany Regency,** which, with

BUTTER,
EGGS
and DRIED APPT.ES&gt;
’
.
Are as good-to us and a little |
-BETTER THAN MONEY.-

C.W. GRANGER &amp; CO.
And buy your clothing of

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN
At Buxton's New Block,

THE ONE-PRICE CLOTHINC STORE,
And save from 15 L 20 per cent
A MAMMOTH STOCK OF

Fall and Winter Clothing
Evrr.vlblnx New, Styliih. and Durable.

The attention ol Fare nta in respectfully called to our large stock of

CHILDREN’S, BOYS', AND YOUTHS’ CLOTHING,

trollimr power, an&lt;! tfao Albany Evening Jour­
nal was established with Weed as editor. Dy
Which is the most complete ever laid down In Nashville.
the spring of 1KU the nucleus of the new
party, called the Whig, had been formed. It
at once h«)k Ann footbold f a New England.
We lire proud of our new stock or
In WM Seward and iiradisb, tho Whig candi­
dates, were elected Governor ant! Lieutenant­
Governor of New York State, and tbo Whig*
had a majority in tho State Assembly. So
accustomed hat! tho party grown to rely on
And believe we have something desirable and very cheap.
the guidance of the hreruno Journal and its
editor, that politicians of the State were In
constant consultation with Mr. Weed, who was
Wo have made additions to our
already called “the Dictator," “tho Warwick."
“the Old Man," etc. It is doubtful If any one
man ever bad sueh complete control of a
party or bad bis advice so Implicitly followed
by Its members as Mr. Weed in bls relation to
With the view of suiting the most particular customer*.
the Whig party. The great secret of his sway
uudoublcdly was bls dlsintere^t&lt;&lt;doesa. Ho
sought no jffioe himself and would take none. Our ntock of Bootn and Shoes i« larger than ever, and no competitor
He preferred to be the power behind tho
will be allowed to undersell u».
the throne. He was repeatedly urged to run
CLAJL.1^ _AJXr&gt; SEE.
for offices, ranging from Vlce-Preafdent down
to Mayor of Albany, but invariably declined.
Three timee be was ottered tho English Mis­
sion by throe different Presidents whom he
had helped elect. He wsa prominent In pne
curtng the Presidential nomination* of Harri­
son, Taylor and ScotL Ho warmlr advocated
the election of Fremont in IH&amp;rt and Lincoln lu
IMO. In IM1 ho was sent to Europe by Presi­
dent Lincoln tn a *emi-diplomaUc capacity.;

CAPS, CAPS

HATS. HATS,

Boots, Shoes, Gents’ Furnishing Goods, Groceries, Underwear, Etc.
PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN.

NEW

IN JEW

STORE GOODS

tbe shape of a formal presentation to him of
tbo freedom of tbo city, and several of his
more Intimate friend* united In presenting;
him with a costly memorial in sliver, which
one of tho most precious heirloom* in the’
family.
in January, 1643. Mr. Weed dissolved bis&gt;
connection with the Albany Journal, both as
Our surroundings and the community at large
editor and proprietor. During the summer
and autumn of 1843 the war of the rcbclilon a*
Burned an aspect which occasioned Mr. We*-!,
great solicitude. The consequence wi&lt; that
ho worked out a plan, after long reflection, by
And our trade is larger than ever before.
the adoption of which he believed the war
could not only lie more vigorously prosecuted,
but speedily endsd. Ho went to Washington
and laid the plan before tbe President, but it
was not adopted. Since tbe close of tho war.
Mr. Weed ha* lived in New York, and for al
time edited tbe Qonmcr-tal ArtrertUsr. He has
maintained a lively interest in all public ques­
store room though ample is completely filled and our shelves fairly groan under them
tion*. and has freqncntlv favored tho met­ AndOur
still they come. We have everything tn the Grocery line.
ropolitan naan with bls views on the
pended First National Bank of Bu laus N. topics of the day and with reminiscence*.
Y., wjs on th&lt;T28th convlc*ed of erffbezzllng In1812 bo returned to active politics for a
brief time, ana secured the nomination of
Crockery
Glassware.
1200,0.x) of the bank's funds and sentenced to General
John A. Dlx by tho Republican State
ten years' imprisonment.
If you want to see a pretto and complete line of Crockenr, see ours. We have only time to
Convention for Governor. On March 2&amp; 1880,
The estimate of the appropriations required ho onoe more mutinied the editorship of the call your attention to China Tea Setts, Majolica Ware, and Decorated Chamber Betts. In Glass­
—for one day—on tho occasion of the ware our stock la complete and attractive. Our trade tn LANIPN is simply immense. We
for the fiscal year ending June 33, 1884, for Journal
celebration of tho fiftieth anniversary of its have Pendants, Decorated Vase, and Common Goods. Low estimates given on Church and
“civil establishments’’ aggregate 822,350,­ foundation!
Ho leave* three daughters, Mr*. William Hall Chandeliers.
945. The amount appropriated for the current
Barnes, of Albany, N. Y.: Mr*. James Alden,
of Morrisanla, N. Y., and MIm Harriet Weed,
We have added a fine line of
The Rivers Rhine and Main in Germany who fans lx*en hl» constant companion since the
hl s'wife, about thirty year* ago. He
were on tbe 28th still overflowing their banks, douthof
loaves an estate estimated at over *1,000,000.
causing widespread inundation. Maye nee,
Lanterns, and Oil Cans. Your special attention is invited to the former, as we feel assured thM
Coblentz and Bonn were submerged, the
Public IlnildingB.
we have something that will suit.
water rising to tbe second stories In the lat­
Washington. November 22.
ter city. The Empre.s of Germany, tele­
Supervising Architect James G. Hill, of tho
We keep the celebrated Snow Flake Flour.
graphing from Cobjentx, said it was Imposai- Treasury
Department, has submitted to the
Secretary of the Treasury his annual report Everything New, Freah, and Cheap. An examination will convince
John Mubller, of Pittsburgh, Pa., while for the year ended September 3), irtie. The re­
under the influence of jealousy, cut his port shows tbe following amounts to hare
wife’s throat the other evening, and then bean expended upon various public buildings
did as much for himself.
in tho West, and also the unexpended balancct
Two passenger trains collided near Castle of appropriations remaining in the Treasury
Shannen, Pa., a few days ago, wrecking the
Amount
engines and baggage cars, and| injuring many
Krpendad. Mance.
of the travelers, but none seriously.
Cincinnati Custom Housc.f231jrM 21 r-------------- w
Gunam &lt;k Aitkin, dry goods dealers In id
Qjicajjo
Custom House..
New York, failed on the 28th for *150,000, ClovnTnnd Custom House. M.21HC8 ItCJilB 43
City CuKt'm House M,0445l
and Dodge Jc Sinclair, rubber dealers of the Kansai
Little Rock Custom House
1.670 83
154,313 10
same city, failed for *200,000.
Memphis Custom Hous*,..
4.473 3)
Nsafari lie Custom House.. ftlj® Ki
According to a scries of reports from Now
Orleans Cust'm House 98,4*&lt;M
Pittsburgh, Pa., no leas than five persona re Paducah Court House..... MJ»l 43
siding In that city or neighborhood have been Pittsburgh Court House.. TO.27S VI
8L Louis Custom House.. 441,480 43
cured of chronic disease within the past few Toledo
Custom House...... M.X0ff)
days by tbe power of prayer alone.
Topeka Custom House....
Tho report also ststee that considerable ex­
At a meeting of the Irish Privy Council on
traordinary
repairs hsvo been made upon
the 2Sth It was resolved to proclaim the City nubile buildinn
at Cairo. Ill . Indianapolis,
of Dublin under the curfew provisions of the
Repression act, which authorises the police
to arrest without warranti all suspicious per­
sona found on the street between one hour Lincoln, Nob., and to provide sufficient room
after sunset and one hour before sunrise.
Mr. Gladstone elated tn the British
House of Commons on the 28th that the
build
trait,
000.
Tub annual report of Colonel Irish, Chief
YOUNG missionary visiting Thibet for the
of tbe Bureau of Printing and Engraving at
Washington, Issued on tbe 98th, shows that
Co.’s Stoves
during tbe past year there were completed finding the practices of Mormonism reversed
OF DETROIT.
and delivered 7,641,108 sheets of notes and
securities of face value of *309,857,700, 24,­
Improved ond Flneat Palteriu or t ooka and Heatera In tho
251,459 sheets of internal revenue and custom
market, Zluea, Move Furniture, Kle.
dgar stamps, containing 987,231,148 stamps,
PA1KTS, VABHIBBEB. OOLOB, BRITBHFB.
and 6.400,919 sheets of checks, drafts, etc.
•
WELLuxB C1B1ERN PUMFS.
POTETB.
tU WB. AXFB. ETC.
The commercial traveler grows bright by
•W6.75K
■e rebuffs he it constantly receiving. Tbe

OUR EFFORTS TO IMPROVE
IHAVE BEEN APPRECIATED

OCR NEW STOCK! OF GROCERIES
and

Table

Cutlery,

G. W. FRANCIS.

SEWING

MACHINE

Peninsular. Stove

reported 2.000 majority for William Pitt Kel­
logg for Congress for the Third District
Governor MeEnery refused to issue a rcrtlfi-

^Se^^W
b^}^
ta **“
OLeBB, LOVE’S, ^OBB^sm
Forney’s ProffnM claims that billiard balls

When li

�wedding at U»

r. 12, IM

Tbo bal***
between ourMtlrcc and foreign twin trim u exciting
Cortrighr has sold his house and
tome unenakreM in bnizneM circle*.
month of October indicated do re­
tuff oi trade to that aide nt the sheet him a farm about one mile out of tbe
where our people would like to see it. corporation.
The exporta from New York were *28,177,820, not including *585,»6 of epoch- church progress rather slow, and it
and bullion, while,the imports were looks now m if tiie elder might have
fMtfS.Wl. Dot inclading *1,422,945 of cold fingers before he got them finished
Tiie jieople in this vicinity feel quite
apeeie and bullion. The balance
uh h a heavy one, and keen ob­ dissatisfied over the prospect of losing
server* are unable todiscover any in­ one trip a week of our mail route after
dication that it will soon shift. The the next letting, it is thought there
record of the foreign trade of the whole will bean effort made at the different
country for the first nine montan of the offices on the route to have the tri­
calendar years 1881 and 1882 is aa fol­ weekly mail continued,and we would be
thankful tor any assistance that The
.
Import*.
Export*
News could give us in that direction.
1881................. W23.338.flW

eases at home and expose tbe public f

Frank Allerton and. Peter Sidewalk
have been at Wm. Carbaag’s, Ionia Co.,
for the last week, helping threshing
and returned home Monday to husk
a few hundred bushels of corn.
Mrs. A. Linsey died Nov. 20th, at her
home od tbe old farm. Funeral servi­
ces were held at the U. B. church by
Rev. Spitler. Mrs. Linsey’was one of
tbe oldest settlers in Castleton, coming
here with her husband and family
when the country was a wilderness
and shared with the hardships of life
and raised a large family of children,
four boys and three girls, but she with
OUT INTO THE COLD WINTER’S NIGHT.
IMS .............. W.3M.944
her husband, who died some four years
The balance in our favor during the
Friday night of last week Edgar ago, baa passed over tbe river. Mrs.
tirvt nine months of 1881 was *121,163,- Clark and wife, three miles south, went Linsey leaves a large family besides a
108, and the balance against uh during to lied at tbe usual time. A few hours large circle of friends.
the first nine month* of the present afterward they were awakened from
year is *54,300,Ml. It is true that tho their sleep by hearing something drop
BARRYVILLE.
extensive purchase of foreign goods in­ up stairs. Jumping from their bed, ex­
Miss Minda Conley is recovering from
dicate prosperity among our people, pecting that there was burglars in the
but it alas indicates extravagance, and house, they opened the stair dour when a severe sickness of two weeks.
The sale at the Mudge farm was at­
unless e^ondmy is cultivated the mis­ they discovered that the upper half of
fortune if an kupTTHluctive year may the house was entirely destroyed by fire tended by a crowd and amounted to
nearly
*1600.
&gt;
plunge lite nation into a condition of and the roof bad fallen in. Hastily
Mr. Oscar Bergers, upwards of sev­
distress like that which followed the dreesiug they had liarely time to get
enty-five
years
old,
is
in
very
feeble
panic of lh8. But the people never their clothes on and carry out part of
begin to curtail their expenses until a one bed ' when the house with all condition at his daughter’s, Mrs. Hen­
panic is upon them, and it is not expect­ its contents were one mass of flames, ry Lathrop.
There are those in the Branch district
ed that even so plain a warning as and they were homeless on a cold win­
the statistics of trade are will be heed­ ter’s night. The building and contents who are full of the faith that the late
display
of northern Hghtsis ominous of
ed more than they have been in previ­ were insured in the Barry and Eaton
for *475, but still that amount will come the near approach of tbe second com­
ous years.
ing
of
Christ.
They inform ns there is
far short of covering the actual loss.
•‘Where there’s a will there’s a way.” Among the most valuable articles only one more step.
is a saying that Is apparently as true burned were a piano end a sewing ma“Better to be born lucky than rich”
m ever when applied to the determina­
chnie, two stoves and nearly all of Mrs. will be Warren Seeley's motto hereaf­
tion ef Detroit police court jurymen to Clark’s clothing, beside* a great many ter. There are now three pairs of
acquit the saloon-keepers tried before
things that were prized very much by twins and two living children of o—a—
them for breaking the Sunday law. Of
them, such as faintly pictures and pres­ set of three at one birth in that vicinity
28 saloomate tried 27 were acquitted,
ents from friends—things that money That is a good place for children.
thoughts almosbe very case at least two
Rev. D. G. Jennings is canvassing for
cannot buy. Among these latter arti­
witnesses swore positively to the guilt
cles was a beautiful photograph album a valuable family Bible at low prices.
of the accused. How a jury can acquit which was presented to Mrs. Clark las In exhibiting the peculiar and superior
in the face of such evidence is thus Christmas by her Sunday-school class, advantages of its contents, one man
explained by a juror: “I admit that
and which she prized very highly. Mr. suggested that one feature had been
the law compelling saloon-keepers to
and Mrs. Clark have plenty of friends omitted, namely, a place for divorce!
close oa Sunday is plain enough, but it
Evening meetings are being held at
all willing to share their homes with
doesn’t say anything about having the
church under the direction of the pas­
them till they can rebuild.
doors locked and it doesn’t say any­
Scribe.
tor of Assyria circuit. Rev. A. Byers,
thing about opening them and letting
assisted by Rev. D. G. Jennings. Your
men in ; neither does it say anything
ASSYRIA.
townsman, John Marshall, and his wife,
about selling liquor when the doors are
were with us in the morning service on
Don’t say anything about weather.
closed. People talk about the ‘spirit of.
Subday last.
the law,’ but what have we got to do Most everyone will find it out soon.
On Wednesday cf last week H. T.
If there is any one ready for winter
abvut that.f” It is evident that two
Miller took a load of wheat to Hastings
tilings should be done: abolish, if pos­ I would like to see them.
and was offered fifty-five cents. Not
Mike Wilbur’s wife has left nis bed
sible, tbe jury in the trial of offense*
satisfied, ho turned around and drew it
against the liquor law; and so amend and board ami Mika is forlorn.
to Nashville the same day and sold it
Friends, look to your chimneys and
the law that in a saloon on Sunday tkc
readily for seventy cents. He thinks
stovepipes,
for
it
is
time
to
have
hot
Aaadliap of liquor in any way under any
Mr. Badcock needn’t brag up Hastings
eircuuutancee and the aeaembling there of fires.
market any more.
Item Izek.
Augustus Sackett and family, of Verany number of perrons shall each consti­
tute an offense. “Where there’ll a will oua, are visiting friends in his neigh­
MAPLE GROVE.
there's a way” is ns true with regard to borhood-will stay till Thanksgiving.
Wm Price of Maple Grove will soon
Charley Servan married Thanksgiv­
the strengthening of the law as to the
ing day. Good wishes to Charlie and move into his new house.
escape of offenders against it.
Mrs. Geo. Potter of Chicago wm vis­
Dell. [Yes, and they ought to be n
During the latter part of last week thanks-giving couple.—Ed.]
iting friends here a few days ago.
and the first of this there was consider
Fred Quick and wife spent Saturday
Charley Baker baa bought his fath­
able stir at the University on account er’s farm, and will move on to it in the and Sunday with friends La Battle
of charges brought by a medical stu­ spring. He has gone north after hia
dent, a minister from
California, wife, who is visiting a sister.
Mrs. Geo. Baltx is confined to her bed
against Prof. Frothingham, accusing
Ed. Clark and wife, who were so un­ with erysipelas in the face. She has a
him of indulging in tirades against re­ ceremoniously turned out into the cold sister from Indiana visiting her.
ligion daring his clinical lectures. The by fire, deserve tbe practical sympathy
Tbe Hawk man made Maple Grove a
professor accused the student of false­ of the community. It is'bad to be call ou Saturday. From general ap­
hood, and he was tried at a slim meet­ turned out this time of the year.
pearance we should say be was in pain.
ing of the medical faculty and acquit­
A gentleman from Assyria has nought
Oscar Crofoot has bought an addition
ted; bat there m some reason for be­ to his lot of »ne acre for *90, and there a piece Orland of A. P. Cook, opposite
lieving that this verdict (rendered by is one hundred dollars worth of timber the V. 0. Buck place, and moved there
a bare majority of one) was more the on the same. Oscar is a good wagon- on.
result of ill feeling against the profess­ maker and knows what he is about.
Battle Creek parties have located a
ors entertained by some members of
There was a surprise party at Corneel saw-mill on Teach McKelvey’s farm,
the faculty than of the evidence in the Tompkins’, last - Thursday night, in and expect to run a force of 15 or 20
cane. After this verdict. Profs. Froth- honor of his daughter Belle’s birthday. hands this winter.
ingham and McLean threatened to re­ They had a good time, with plenty of
V. 0. Buck, an ex-reaident of Maple
sign ; but a more fully attended meet­ music and dancing. Tbe Russell boys Greyc but now of York state, who fans
ing of the faculty was held, the verdict played.
lieen visitigg friends here for some
annulled, and resolutions auoptod de­
We have one man in our town that time, returned heme Monday.
claring that the stadent exceeded his can husk corn. That man is Calvin
Citizens along the mill brook met in
rights in making the charges, and that Smith. He husked 1121 bushels inside council at1 the Beigh school-house a few
he exaggerated and.in one case misrep- of 10 hours, on Mr. Gay’s farm east of nights ago, and concluded that saw­
• resented tbe professor's language. The the Center. Calvin is one of tie best dust was not the best thing in the
medical students, with very few excep­ working men in our country.
world to put iu the brook. Mr. Hager­
tions, supported the professor’s version
There is a family by the name of man agreed to keep the same out of the
of the afiair and denied the student’s. French, just east of town, which has creek, and now everything is lovely.
It looks as-though the ministerial stu­ been sorely afflicted by sickness for two
Ben. Pearce has come to tbe conclu­
dent was unreasonably sensitive. The or three years, and now, a few days sion that he is not as young m he used
last verdict -of the faculty settles the since, their oldest son wm accidentally to be. He wm’ on jtop of tbe cowshed,
* matter satisfactorily to all.
shot in the arm by some others who and 4n trying to get down stepped upon
were fooling with a revolver.
a [Kile. It broke, and as be was going
The political guillotine was set in
We are having a very good school at down he thought he would turn a som­
operation by tho I’resident at Wash­ the Center, taught by Miss Wilcox. She ersault; but not being so agile as he
ington on Monday and Postmasrcr D. da an experienced teacher and thor­ used to be, he only got half way, and a
R. Ainger and half a dozen other prom­ oughly understands her business. We bruised face and a sprained wrist arc
inent officials have lost their head*— have voted to build a new school-bsuse the result
Babt Elefhaxt.
that is their positions; the persons but can’t do it this winter, consequently
bounced being charged with being in we will have to bmy tho old one up to
THE 8UNI1AT—SCHOOL INSTITUTE.
sympathy with the star routers. H is the windows to keep the scholars from
Another one of Rev. Bridenstein's
the universal opinion at Washington freezing their beds.
pleasant and profitable Sunday-school
T. C.
and through Michigan that in the case
institutes will be held at tbe Maple
of Mr. Ainger the President has been
Grove U. B. charch the evening of De
NORTH CASTLETON.
misled, for the former has nut even a
camber 10, commencing at
The
Fine snow storm Sunday.
epeaking acquaiutooee with tbe star
program is m follows: Vocal music;
Mr. fihriner has moved in hia new prayer; singing ; report of the Sun­
sroutent, is looked upon aa clean and
honest, in every respect, and lias made booae.
day-school secretary ; address by J. R.
Charley Bradley made a trip to Port­ McKee—“ Sunday-school Patronage”;
the best postmaster Waabingtoc ever
Lad. Tbe specific charges against Mr. land, Monday.
I singing; essay by Miss Mary Guy—
Mr. PeMter has lost bis black dog. “ Influence”;
Ainger are that he approval of some
recitation
by
Miss
,Jennie Troyer; aiaging; essay by Mias
star route siraw bonds, and wrote an ar- Please send him home.
Cal. Irlaud comes to the front with a Agues Deoa — “Hope”; recitotios by
tick for his paper, derogatory to the
prosecution. Id regard to the former big boy,—« lbs. Nor. 12.
Grace Potter; music ; essay by Mr.
We have thq finest school in the Co. ,Jesse Gay—“Office and Work of Sun­
charge he was exonerated by the post­
day school Superintendent”; recitation
master general some months ago, and at Hosmers school house.
Nathan Sheldon’s oldest daughter is by Bertha Palmer; music; recitation
in regard to tbe latter it seems simply
by Miss Lettie Whitney ; essay by Mitts
barbarous to prosecute or stigmatise sick with the diphtheria.
Who will be first to give the girl* a ;Mina Madge—“The Boy that Is and the
a man lecaase be expresses an opinion
;Man that Ought to Be"; music; reci­
of the innocence of a party before he sleigh ride. Don’t be bashful boys.
Our neighbors have killed their pork- itation by Mrs. Hill; music; recitation
is proves guilty.
e» made their sausage, aud are ready 1
&lt;
Prof. Frothingham of the University for cold weather and evening chats.
aocoaed of being an atheist, denies it.
green Plain."

their relatives a few days last week.
Dances ax Eastman Latriug's and
Sort of an Irish wake wm well con­
ducted in th* limits of Kalamo, ‘a few
evenings since.
•
Augustos Miller of Hillsdale paused
through this section on Saturday last,
looking for a farm to buy.
John Hunter's covered carriage wm
badly demoralised, the other day, by
the fall of the shed roof upon it.
Gill Northrup of Kalamo started for
Big Rapids on Saturday last to get a
job of woik in the'lumber woods.
On Friday night of last week our at­
tention was called to the experience of
riding the goat in favor of the I. 0. (x.
T. The goat was a spry and active lit­
tle animal, and be made several lunges
before he wm delivered of his burden.

U&lt;1&gt;

tln&gt;« It axpwud.

weeks sineb has token place. Chariee
Pritchard Iim sold his entire interest in
the mill, foundry, ahops aud farm to
his brother, Alonzo Pritchard of Wau­
seon, 0., The new partner takes pos­
session January fim- Mr. ChM. Prich­
Sarne
page a« tbe Weekly, eant*lnlng 1,000
ard intends to move to California, i
of the Ulustrstiou that app&lt;**red tn Harper'*
Phil Phin.
Weekly during tbe War.

MORGAN.

Don’t drink, even cider “traps.”
Mrs. Richard is much bettor.
Mrs. Lewis is visiting Mill.
Miss McCartney has 47 scholars.
Section hands are renairing the side
track at Thornaople. Obrien is pro­
moted. _
Mr. Winder of Ohio is here repairing
engines for a company at Canton-.
Mr. Troutline of Grand Haven has
moved on his Mud Creek farm.
A hunting party of five from Grand
Rapids at Cole’s hotel.
Quimby sewing society met at Wm.
Hill’s, Wednesday, Nov. 22.
Mrs. Hull and Hale family returned
home. It’s often safe to beware of unbottiiug advice “or. the first thing you
know you are bottom side ud.”
■'»
H. II. Hull is convalescing of ery­
sipelas. He was certainly sick,—but
never have a grave dug, hearse at the
door and a funeral sermou before a
man dies.
Six men found Jake Odell guilty and '
accordingly, Justice Sparks fined him
twenty dollars and costs, or forty days
in jail.
Mrs. Ed. Hyde has a bed spread up at
chance valued at *23. She will sell 100
tickets at *2.50 each, then some un­
known and also disinterested person
will name the number drawing.
Cor.

Harper’s Pictorial History of the
Rebellion,

WEST KALAMO.
Ez Parsons’ youngest child, an infant, in Harper's Weekly of July 1,1882, and previ­
ous numbers:
is very sick.
. L. Matteson left for Con via the first
January 31. 1880, tbe plate* aud numbers of
of the week.
Harper’s Weekly previous to 1870 have been
L. MeKinnis went up north with destroyed, .and they therefore cannot supply
any numberr prior to that time.”
teams to sell.
George Herring is making some im­
provements to his house.
P^lce, Delivered
A small sleighing spread itself over
this section last Sunday.
John Andrews and John Mix are each
getting material together fora barn.
,J. B. Hartwell of Potterville gave his
Kalamo friends a call a few days ago.
113 Dearbom-st, Chicago.
MissMcMore will begin tho winter
term of school in the Matteson district
next Monday.
J_£ A. BARBER, .21, D..
Mitch Heath ban sold his homestead
‘ |EEOMCEOI»ATinC
near Nashville to Air. Woodard who
lias got enough of Benzie county.
Jefl Showalter, having returned from
Office first door rest of Opera House, and
Calhoun Co., has moved and gone to,, near
residence on corner of Washington and
housekeeping m his brother Francis’ Bute Streets, Nashville, Mich.
house.
J^ROOKS, MARSH ALL A CO.
’
Will Rian had the misfortune to flnd^

McDonnell bros.

Physician and Surgeon.

bis household goods very badly damag­
ed when be received them from Cadil­
lac recently.
Andrew Reese of Battle Creek and
Pay tbe higbest market price for all kindsof
his brother-in-law William Cotton of
Gri-ain and Produce,
Grand Rapids were visiting West Kal­
---------- And sell------ -—
amo friends a few days ago.
The remains of Wm^ Decker deceas­ eeds, Feed, Lime, Salt, Plaster, Stuc­
co, Hair, Pine Lumber, Lath
ed, deposited in the West Kalamo cem­
and Shingles,
etery, were taken up last week and
placed in the Assyria cemetery in the AT THE LOWEST LIVING PRICES.
old family lot.
The Lyceum held their quarterly
election of officers last Saturday even­
ing. President, W. H. Pont; 1st Vice
President, Dell.Fitch; 2nd Vice Presi­
dent, Bert Smith; Secretary, Miss Bell
Showalter, Steward, J. J. Reynolds.
Mr. Editor, please correct the error
of last week where you gave Kalamazoo
as the place where William Fowler, our
young county farm keeper, was born
Teeth Extracted Wifliout Pain.
and raised. Mr. Fowler was born and
NORTH ASSYRIA.
grew to manhood in sight of where
Office
Open Day &amp; Evening.
tliesc linos are written. Can't West
Thanksgiving day, and may we all । Kalamo claim him?
be blessed with good digestion.
A. II. WIATV.
Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Chapman have
THE COUNTY.
gone to Iowa to visit relatives.
Tbe oily-tongued fruit treo man is
George Kent Is in Kalamo visiting
friends, and perhaps will spend the abroad in the land. Look out for him.
One of the finest school-houses in the
—DULIM IM—
winter tbeoe.
Charles Baker started on Wednesday county has just been completed iu the
Woodruff
district,
Irving.
for northern Mich. He was accompa­
Mrs. Estes Wilson of Prairieville fell
nied, we understand, by his sister, Sirs.
a vetim to that dread destroyer, con­
Henry Mayo.
There was a raffling match in our im­ sumption, on the 19th. Miss Belle.
Lumber, Salt, and Coal.
moral burg Wednesday evening, and Tombs of the same town died of the ty­
’
we fear it is only another name for phoid fever only the day before.
The official county canvass shows
NASHVILLE, MICH.
gambling. If those who participated
had stayed at home aud read T. S. Ar­ that tbe amendment relative to judge’s
thur’s “Advice to Young Men” the ef­ salary received 1,268 yeM to 1,183 nays ;
THE PLACE TO BUT
fect would probably have been quite as amendment relative to county auditors
215 yeas to 928 nays; relative to consti­
good.
At last, after many days of anxious tution 232 yeM to 568 nays.
waiting and watching on tbe part of
THE ANNUAL MEETING
Mrs. Grundy, Charlie Serven and Della Of tbe Union MutuxI Fire Insurance Company
OUTLURY, NAJL8, PAIHT8,
'Russell have entered the holy state of of Kent, Bsrrv and Ionia counties, will be held
matrimony. Rumor had it that they at tbe office of the company in Ionia, on
Oils, I’unips, Cross-cut bawi,
THURSDAY, JANUARY 4,1888,
were secretly married some months commencing at 10 a. m.
Farm Tools,
In addition to the election of officer*, propo­
ago. We believe Rumor is famous for
sitions will be presented lor changes of charter
never getting anything right
And everything tn the hardware line, is xt
including the following: To change section fl
There comes to our ears a tale of one with reference to location of office of com­
To change section 10, so os to pennit
Geo. McCartney of Maple Grove, who pany;
assessments at least once in each year, unlcas
has been hulling clover seed for one of tbe reserve fund shall exceed 15,000, or such
other
sum
a* shall be deemed proper; Aho to
our townsmen. It seems that he took
add a section, authorizing the President and
WOODLAND.
for his stint to hull a stack which he es­ Secretary to borrow not to exceed $2,000, when
timated at twelve tons, in a day. He necessary to meet llabiltlcs of the Company.
WStock larger and Prices lower than ever
By order of Board of Directors.
before.
called it hulling by tbe ton. Before
J. C. Tztlob, Secretary.
Ion!*, Nov. 15, 1883. ___________ ^0-15.
night bis machine seemed to get enough
Every Description of Tinware Dene
of “hulling by the ton,” and they were
obliged to dose for repairs. The fun­
niest of it is they didn’t repair, but one
by one made towards home. There is
about two hours more work to do, and
another machine will Lave to be en­
gaged. That is what might be called a
HALL
business-like transaction.
Let every Woodlander re­
Messenger.

Nashville Elevator!

EiDenenced, Reliable, and RespoMible.

A. H. WINN, Dentist.

BEST SET BUM TEETH $10.00

S. S IN8ERS0N A SjDN,

(Tit-JVI-N

Hardware, Glass, Tin and Copperware,

L. FAUL’S

NEW GOODS.

member that my new stock of
winter goods is larger than ev­
er and was bought at

FRICHARDV1LLE.

Mrs. Rhoda Daly is on the sick list.
A new-comer at Alex. Dunning’s—«
girt.
Winter is here, with “slapjacks and
sassages.”
School began Monday, with a fall
attendance.
Myron Emmons of Allegan visited
here last week.
Corn is not all husked yet, notwith­
standing the favorable fall.
Alonzo Pritchard of Wauseon, Ohio,
w as here, on business last week.
Mrs. H. C. Wooton is recovering from
a severe illness, though she is still quite
low.
Orf. Lenhart and family have moved
to White Cloud, where they will again
reside.
Harley Powers and wife of Johns­
town visited at Mr. Sulsbaugh’s last
Sunday.
A few from these paits attended the
crystal wedding of Dr. VanHorn at
Dowling.
Mr. and Mrs. Masson will go in a
week or two to Rock Falls,-*!., where
they intend to make their future home
with a sou who resides near that place.

Rock Bottom Prices
and will be sold at a slight ad­
DHJTTISTS, vance above actual coat.
Prepare for cold weather by
J-JENRY ROE, Proprietor buying your

CLOTHING

MEAT MARKET.

now. Our stock is complete
in every respect.
Fresh and Salt Meats, Also New BrJ Goods, Boots,
Shoes, Hats, Caps, Groceries,
Etc., in endless profusion.
Smotei Haw ui Stouten,
PKBSSt Fisa uul FOXH.TXl
We haven’t time to enumer­
u ntau auto.'
ate, and if we had these goods
Lard, bjf the lb. or barrel, must be seen to be appreciated.

J.W. HOLMES&amp;CO.
Fraah Oooda. FnU W«l*bts uid

—

WOODLANft,

�ctovw dried
id, I found myself
latter* m they were;
London I wrote to

it can be learned, is a remarkable one.
He claims to be seventy-seven years old,
is of German descent, and hu been a
after a
beggar for neaflyforty year*. What in­
duced.him
to take up such a business-four day«
whether it was financial troubles, or
III.
utter laziness and disinclination to work,
I was standing In my shop; It wm a or at first real necessity—is nol known ;
doll morning in November, and tho but it is certain that through it he has
visitor who camo in spoke first to my managed to acc u:n til ate much more of
assistant, who referred him to me, and this world's goods than falls to the ordi­
then in . a moment I rocognixud my nary worker. Different stories are told
fellow-passenger. Not wishing to make wi to his wealth. Some any that he owns
everything quite public, I led tbe way several houses In Gamden, valued at
. to tho inner room I reserved to myself, many thousand dollars, and has also laid
L JEWELER'S STORY.
and handed the gentleman a chair. Ho away a very pretty sum in cash. Con­
wm too excited to sit down, but began siderable sums have been found upon
him when arrested, but yesterday had
his story at once.
It wm on tho 29th of October, 1859,
“ You remember the day I traveled evidently.been a poor day with him up
that I was returning to England, having’
to the time of his arrest, for ho had only
’
with
yon
from
Holyhead,
sir,
”
said
he.
taken the steam or at Dublin for Holy­
“ Perfectly,” I replied. I* have too one dollar in cash with him, and a note
head. Busmen had taken me to Ireland
for eighty dollars.
—I am a jeweler—and it had been neces­. good reason to remember it.”
Hauk
ss
stand
of late has been at Sixth
“ So have I.
1 bad been on the . ^-.
—’r
---------sary for —*- -1-’* - v------ 4
-----I Anglesea coast all the night before, *n&lt;lJ Arch "
Streets, and
_2‘*_r
for a short time
firm in
he0A
has
been
searching for some relic, perhaps the I !l
M- ,be
?n boarding
nvover Charles C.
tain val
i which required ro­\ body of my drowned brother. I had )1 Onk
‘B*’ saloon, 312 1Market StnyeL “He
Ockins
____
of great value, and
was a good boarder,” said Ockins yes­
some other things of
of
loss, importance, only twenty-four hours, and was obliged terday, “and always paid me verv regnto hurry back, with only a few bits of
bnt still valuable. .
lariy every Saturday night I don’t
,
wood
and
iron
gathered
from
the
I carried the jewels which 1 have al­
know where he got his meals, but he
ready mentioned in a small black hand-’ wreckage which strewed the beach;
used to go out somewhere every morn­
, these I pot into a small black bag.”
ing and didn’t come back till night I
“
A
black-bagP
”
said
I
;
“
had
you
a
safe I was free from care. Arriving at
didn’t know much about him, and
Holyhead, I took- my seat in an empty: black bag.”
Schwarz, up the street, can tell you more
“ Listen,” said the gentleman.
firsV-cIxM railway carriage. Just as the
about him.” Mr. Schwarz also keeps a
train was moving off, however, a gentle­ saw that you had one,.and I remarked
. beer saloon, a class of residence to which
man suddenly got in. He sat down that it was like mine-^so much so that
Hauk seems to have been partial. In­
nearly opposite to me, so I had a good at Chester, where you got out and I did
deed he was German in all his tastes as
opportunity of observing his appear­ not, you may remember you took my
well as in his thrifts. Mr. Schwarz re­
ance. I noticed that he was young, ap­ bag with you Instead of your own. I
parently not more than foilr-and-twenty, felt sure you were coming back, for you membered him very well. “Why. he
that he had a broad black band round had left your coat and umbrella in the was my best boarder,” he exclaimed
when told of the old fellow’s arrest.
his hat, and that on his face were traces carriage, so I did not follow you.”
“ Yes,” said I, getting excited, “but “He was with me two or three years,
of recent sorrow, almost, in fact, of agi­
but I was glad to get rid of him when
tation. Ho seemed relieved at' having that does not account—”
“Wait a moment,” said the gentle­ they sent him to prison a while ago. He
caught the train; and being, like my­
self, quite disinclined for conversation, man. “I know perfectly well what you used to be awfully particular about his
would
say; ‘it does not account for my food, and was always saying that it
we proceeded on our journey in silence.
was n't fit to eat; but he used to drink a
l My bag lay beside me and quite under not advertising your bag, or making
my eves. I was tired after my crossing, some sort of a sign all this time’—ouite good deal of beer and wine. My other
boarders were mostly workingmen, who
and fell into a sort of doze. On waking so; you will understand presently now
could not afford. to take more than a
I instantly glanced at my bag. There it happened.”
I_sat down and begged him to do the glass of b$er at a time, but Hauk would
It lay, quite safe. . My companion,
take ten, fifteen, or twenty a day. and
same."*
however, had moved his seat. We
“ When I got out at Crewe, I took, a* wine, too. Sometimes he would say my
stopped at Chester, and here I thought
When I reached wine wasn’t good, and would send out
I would get out and walk ^bout a little, I supposed, my bag.
as we had ten minutes to wait. I took home I found that my poor mother, and get some that was more expensive.
my bag and got out. On my return to whom I had left in the most utter grief j When the old fellow was on the streets
the train there was my companion, ap­ and prostration at my brother’s death, he ujed tb'wear glasses and pretend that
parently asleep. I got into the cat- bad not rallied at all. I told our doctor, ho couldn’t see much, but I noticed that
rjage without disturbing him, and wc who was there, that my search for any when he was playing bagatelle with me
continued on our journey. At Crewe, personal relic of my brother had been he could see as well as I could. One dav
our next stopping-place, he got out and fruitless, but that I had a few bits of when he was going ont we noticed him
take off his coat and double one arm
did not come back. 1 was very tired iron and wood from th® wreck.”
“ Tho doctor advised mo to say noth­ under, so that people would think that
now, and-fell into a sound sleep, with
ho didn’t have but one arm. O, he was
ing
to
her
about
it
;
not
to
tell
her
even
my hand holding tbe handle of my
black bag.
I did not wake until I that I had these sad relics. I put the a smart old fellow, but he always paid
reachedCondon; then getting into the bag just m it wm into a cupboard in my me right up for everything, ami didn’t
cent when he went
first hanKom I saw, and still carrying own room and locked it up. That very owe me a
my precious bag, of which I was hearti­ day I had to leave England. I had a away. When he was sent to the prison
ly tired, I drove home. On my arrival, business engagement which took me to he gave me twenty dollars to take care
with a method which I suppose is Australia. If I had broken the engage­ of for him. and he always seemed to
habitual to a man in my trade, I in­ ment it would have involved my mother have all the money he wanted.”
This last arrest is not by any means
stantly went to the safe in which I kept in considerable pecuniary loss. She
valuable jewels, unlocked it, and de­ knew I had to go,’ and as she did not the first time Hauk has been behind
positing the bag on the table, I opened urge mo to stay, and as my sister and ■ prison-bars, but he seems as incorrigible
it. Imagine my dismay at finding that, her husband wore with her, and could • as Dickens’ Dutchman. Langhcimer.
instead of my diamonds, it contained Lake care of her, I left tho house that ! He was taken up in Centennial times for
only some rusty bits of iron, and very day, and journeyed back north to begging around the main building, and
wooden deftris.
Mv bag was gone; Liverpool, just in time to' catch my his last trip to the House of Correction
' wm but a short time ajjo. He always
this other bag was cleverly substituted steamer, bound for Melbourne.
“I only returned yesterday morning. returns to the old business, however,
for it, so cleverlj, indeed, that even the
weight, m well as the appearance, had Tho first thing I heard after greeting and by &amp; strict attention to duty,* if so it
my mother was, ‘Where is tbe nag you may be called, has probably now amassed
been judged.
enough to keep him in comfort for the
“ I put the affair into the hands of brought with you from Moelfra?’ “ *
“ ‘In my room,’ I said.
rest of his life, if he were willing to rest
the police, giving them exactly every
“ ‘ Get it for me,’ said she.x
; He does not seem to be a miser, ns begparticular as 1 have written it. The
“Without another word, though I Sra are so apt to be. but has taken to
aimnlv
it 4 nrwnr*
wondered how she had heard of it, I
e business noreruoMv
i*
.becanaa
‘
_
with ,Im
S 5.1,
went to my room, unlocked tho cup­ to bring iir more money with less exer­
A year after the events narrated in board, found the bag just as I had loft tion than an honest calling.—P/ufaddphia Press.
tho last chapter I was again traveling it, and took it down stairs.
on the line which takes passengers to
“I was just going to open it, when, tn
Why It Was Discontinued.
Holyhead.
It was in the beginning of my still further surprise, my mother
October, as well a&amp; I remember.
said, ‘Are you quite sure that this is
The post-office at Iron Rod, M. T., has
I traveled firat-chiss, my usual custom your bag, -Vrthur?.’
when I have a long jonrnev before me.
Ml looked at her in astonishment. been discontinued, and tho explanation
• During tbe year not a sign had been ‘Well, mother,’ I sajd, ‘I am as sute as j is thus given by an officer of the depart। raent: “A post-office agent, while ofgiven of my missing bag of the jewels, a human being can be of anything.’
but I had not really despaired yet of re­
“‘Did you open it after you came eially visiting various offices in Montana
covering it and them, for 1 had a cer­ home, dear?’ I thought for a moment, for the purpose of correcting any irregtain unaccountable feeling about the and then said, ‘No I am certain I did ularities of postmasters, stopped at Iron
Rod. Going into the pnstoffice he found
whole thing; that there was some mys­ not. I could not bear it.’
tery about it I felt sure
’’•Then,’ said my mother, ‘be pre­ the room divided into three sections—
Regularly every Wednesday in every pared for a surprise. I think that you first a saloon, next the postoffice, and
■ week I had called at Scotland Yard, and will find that you have some one else’* last a faro bank. Tho mall-bag was
brought in, a rough-looking customer
always had the same answer: “Nothing bog.’
opened it and emptied tho contents on
yet, sir.” Tbo reward I had offered
“I did not answer, for I was trying
was sufficient to in*-uro a certain inter­ to unlock the bag. ‘It is very odd,’I the floor. The entire crowd at onco got
down on their hands and commenced
est, and the police, I firmly believe, said, ‘my key won’t open it.’ "
overhauling the letters, among which
were as keen in the matter as I could
“My mother rang the bell, and in several were registered, and selected
wish.
walked tbe inspector.” Here my visi­ such as they wanted. After they were
On this October morning in 1860, I tor ceased speaking, and walking has­
traveled with a lady who was in deep tily to the shop door, be beckoned to through the remaining letters were
mourning. The day was chilly, and she some person seated in a hansom cab shoveled into a cAndie-box and placed
the bar. The
Tbespedal
thinking
tho
special agent, thin
‘s- ~
wore several wraps; but, getting warm close by. It was my friend, the Inspec­ on
thooniw needoda
n-aulndag. aulcad
‘
* UU1«
little regulating,
in the carriage, she presently threw tor of Police at Crewe. He continued the barkeeper,
who had receded and I
a«ide a fur cloak she was wearing, and tbe story. But first he placed on the
dutribated the mail, il he wu the po.t- .
my eye was instantly attracted bv a table my “black bag.” “There, sir,” tauter. He auwered -No.' Aro jou I
handsome brooch she bad on, in which s&amp;id“he, “is your bag—you were quite the.u.Uuntpo«mutor?- -No.' -wire
w» a portrait.
right—this gentleman took it by mistake.
-Outmining.' -Where
Without apiMsaring to do so, and with That morning when Mrs. Banks sent HtbepoetmiMerr
I. the uiutant poalmuter?' -Cion, to
a sudden feeling of interest and carios­ for me I found the bag unopened. I Heir. Cutout and br thunder Bill Jone, :
ity for which I can not account, I man­ forced the lock and found your name hu got to run thi. office next wook; It'.
aged to get a nearer view, of the 'por­ inside-the bag. The contents are intact, hi.tSra,' Tbe Governmeatofficial then
trait. It was die face of the young man as you will see.”
stated who he wu. and demanded tho
who had traveled with me the year be­
I opened my sate, and before I would key. of the office. Tho bartender coolly
fore when I lost my bag. I was so cer­ allow them to open my bag, I took his took the candle-box from the bar. placed :
tain of this that I resolved not to con-1 from the shelf, and placing it beside my
tinue my journey .until I had acquainted own, we all three saw that in size,make*,
the po'toe with this fact.
n^w
indeed in weight, they exactly resembled
J^^Knowiltr th*
i
The train stopped al Crewe, tbe place each other.
where I remembered the young man
Although I felt that I had really made
left the train on our up-journey the pre- the discovery myself, I cheerfully paid
the inspector the chock he deserved advice, and got,’ This is why the post­
«.a»il:=&lt;! her at the for tbo clever and prompt manner in office at Iron Rod was discontinued.”

by what I
tier came,
t from the
gentleman

» lady drove to.

which he must have conveyed my sus­
picion—a decidedly awkward one—to
Her Mrs. Bank*.-j?M£//i*A Maga^nc.

—Kings and princes are getting down
nowadays to the ssme prosaic, business*
my. of
ol thinking
thiaktog and
ud doir
doing
aiothir
like ways
------“
mortals. (bar Il..»v.reign ol Smdo.
and Norway, being about to undertake a
journey to tbe latter country, has had
his ....
life insured infavor
favorof
ofhis
his family
familyfor
for
—
the Bum of 600.000 crowns.
-U b boUerod IbM «tail-grown grtaly
bear ooulj pull a load of -Vl.WO pound,
oa a lord, but the (rouble I. io nod cay

I tbe beat methods for getting
e returns from clover, ia to sow
ction with other gra**m»; fur
instance, red top or herds grass.' In
this way, two crops of clover are secured.
| the second one a heavy crop, providetd
the conditions are matte favorable. Aft। er that the other grew* obtain the asi ccndency, tbe clover gradually di&lt;a;&gt;: pearing.' leaving a large amount of dead
; roots, which have penetrated the ground
j extensively to- n good depth, not only
I enriching the ground,- but opening up
numerous avenues through which water
and air can enter. All the advantages
obtainable fr»m clover are not secured
when the crop is pastured. Whengrown
for a full crop,
be cut for curing, tho
roots multiply and extend deep down,
the growth of these keeping pace with
the development of the plant above
ground: 'I nerefore, to secure the great­
est advantages to the soil'in the way of
cnrichmeL . and through the disintegra­
tion of its closely adherent particles, tbe
roots should be induced to go deep and
spread wide, by growing full crops for
ine purpose of curing.’/
.
Experiments made in Germany have
shown that tho roots and stubble ob­
tained from an acre of clover sod in a
depth of ten inches, had a weight of
nearly IT,000 lbs. There is no other crop
that compares with it in this regard;
hence, when its great value as food for
cattle and sheep, for turning under in
the green state, is considered, and add
to these its wealth of roots left to de.-ay
boneath tho surface, putting compact
clays in the best possible condition for
crumbling to pieces when turned over
by the plow, it is very evident that nine
farmers out of ten have not half enough
clover on thoir farms. If, in feeding it
out in winter, it be found that its rather
rank growth has rendered it so coarse
that stock show a disposition to se ect
the,loaves and more delicate stems, the
whole may be cut, mixed with ground
feed, and moistened. So prepared it
will be found to bo highly relished, and
will give good returns m growth and

and Kidney cumpUinu, even when *11 other
retiK-dU-s fall. We ko&lt; «• whereof we apeak,
ami ran freely recommend them tn all.-Etch
—Sold at fifty cents a bottle, by F. T. Boi*£.

MrtxxniiMw talk* of having an opera-house
WHY WELCOME!
every lady’s toilet table la It* lasting fragrance

Poverty may cxcum: n shabby coat but not
a shabby morality.
1XPORTAXTTO TRAVELERS,

Special inducement* are offered you by the
Buritnxton Route, It will payyou to read their
advertlaemeutii to be found clsexhcre In thia
—r
issue.
• •'
STATIONS.
Tbe flrat ahipment of wheat from Mackinaw
bar arrived at Port Huron.
D&lt; troll,.

NaahrUia.

Apply into nostrils with little finger.

several vears that ft seriouslv affected nir voice
I tried Dr.---- ’* rwnedy without the sllcbteet
relief. One hottie of Ely's Cream Balm did the
work. My voice Is fully restored and my bead
feel* better than for year*. B. F. Llepsener.
Ely’s Cream Balm na* given general satisfac­
tion. I would recommend it to everyone suf­
fering with Catarrh, Cold In the Head. Hay Fe­
ver, Ac., It being one of the best medicines we
hare ever used or sold. E. J. Wxus &lt;fc Co. J
Drngghto, Jackson, Mlvh.
Tbe product of salt In the state tbe present
season is estimated at 8,070,000 barrels.

JEL” Ji,?; K ™

do
Prete«d to fcnow. iTnt as the wise
“‘&lt;’rosc"P«l« contend that nu ulant or

HARPER’S PERIODICAL.
HARPER'S MAGAZINE
HARPER’S WEEKLY..
HARPER’S BAZAR
HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE1W
HARPKR’9 MAGAZINE
I

both together.

------ -—r-wreai western. On
trunk and Canada Southern Hallway.
.
H B LEDYARD.
Aaa t Aan’l rtarrt.
,, Q__ .

BUSH,
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BOOT AND SHOE MAKER,
HI CH.

Lai

JAMES A. 8WEEZEY,

Attorney &amp; Counsellor,

jglaACK A M&gt;ft,

American and Foreign Marble,
Monuments, Tntnhrtone*, Mantles, bo.,

AKTIM.S HOUSE,
N. T. PARKER, Prop.

This U the leading representative hotel of
Ranting*. Rates reasonable.

BOUSK.

''

A. R- AMTUDEL, Paorairroa.
Oramd

nxtoli*

SIFTED THEM OUT,
easily simplified.

trom Now I k**p only a tow, and cell
at
BENSON’S CAPCINE POROUS PIASTER. Whyf
Ikrauoe )b«y ar* |l&gt;e brtf 1 hare Alcock'n. the
Capriauni and kxm other* They are hannlaa

though 1 had been

An only Daughter Cu.ed of
, Consumption.

nptlon can
Tbedoctnt

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an*

-------- 800
we have to conclu de that corn fungus has HARPER’S YOUNG PEOPLE !
FRANKLIN HQUARE LIBRARY.
its special seeds, and that it is important HARPER'S
One Ver A.
«a a.
that they should as tar *3 possible be
.anni’allv destroyed. There is but little
doubt that corn smut i« injurious to ani­
mals, acting as a poison ,«■«
and as
an
“ «
1ES.TJ}
.
...
. wagon in the corn-field
□
tVa^nt

—The New Tori: State Fair rc
at Utica thia year were

Hammond
Grand Rapid*,.

"BUCHUPAIBA.”
New, quick, complete cure 4 dav*, urinary
NAIHVILLE,
.
affections, sinarting.frequcnt or difficult urina- ;
tlon, kidney diseases, fl. at druggist*. Mich.
Drpot, JAMES E. DAVIS A CO., Detroit,
Mich.
QLEKKH SMITH,
Tbe Muskegon street railway, just completed
is three, and one-half miles long aud coel f3,600.
Attorney at

Harper’s Magazine

'
”*',*• *
u. J-

&gt;&lt;e7,.

A new Idea embraced in Ely’s Cream Balm.

Mv neighbor, a creat sufferer from extreme
Prolapsus, who had taken almost everything to
no n»xl, has nsed one bottle of vour Zo* Phora
and has not been so well In rears.
Ma*. M. D. Feu.**,
March 3,1880.
Beuton Harbor.
Go Visiting.
Roan!Ing money is covetousness, but squan­
There may be time this month for dering It is equal folly and sin.
some of the fanners to take a little roo------- HETHE------rcation.This
4
can be done profitably by
Job went pretty hearlly into th* boll business,
making it a visit of information and in­ and tiie venture was a complete success. This
struction. There are many of our read­ reminds us tliat Putnam's Pa It.leas Corn Ex­
ers who do not know how to farm. tractor Is another success, and that It give*
There is an abundant evidence of this more comfort to the world th*n Job’s &gt;&gt;oll* did.
Kemetnlier the name then, for the little pUvful
in anv neighborhood—in fa-t, on three- corn
comelh, and the remedy therefor wifi glad­
fourtEs of i he farms. Too many farm­ den
tbe heart. Positively sold by all druggtst*.
ers never see the process by which some
In love-making the young people believe that
of their neighbors prosper. All they
see is along tho road from their home’s ardor Is heaven's first law.
to town, and that they see loo often.
"ROUGH ON RATS.’’
But if you have no neighbors who
The thing desired found at last Ask Drug­
know how to farm, make money and
for "Rough on Rata.” It dears out rau,
live happy, go into some other neigh­ gist
mice, roachca, fie*, bed-hugs. I6c. boxes.
borhood, or township, or an adjoining
county, until you find a good farmer.
HOW SflE SAVED HER DARLING.
This is the kind of visiting to do. There
"I shall not feel so nervous again about ba­
are many lessons to learn from such by’s teething.’’ write* a grateful mother. “Wc
farmers. When you get there do not almost lost our darling from cholera Infantum,
bappllv beard of Parker’s Ginger Tonic in
spend your time talking politics, but but
time. A few spoonfuls soon cured baby, and
examine the farm, the stock, the imple­ »n occasional dose keeps u» in good health.”—
ments used, tho systems of underdrain^ Brooklyn Mother.
manner of feeding stock, when and how
Man proposes, God dispose*,—but It takes a
to seed to grass, what kind of grasses
for pasture and what for meadow. A woman with her hair down to be indisposed
day spent in this way will be better when anybody calls.
than forty spent hanging about town.
BUCKLEN’S ARNICA SALVE.
A thousand more farmers might pros­
The :&gt;e«t salre In tiie world for Cuts, Bruises,
per and be independent if they would Sore*, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter.
Ury to know their business. And there
is an abundance of opportunities to
learn by having things ciemonstrated. Is piarauved to give perfect ratiafaction. c
money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. Ft.
Go visiting among your prosperous sale by F. T. Boise.
•
neighbor
no,Kn?°r farmers.
‘armors. There
Ibero is
is some
some rearoaUp at Saginaw they have a mau so pfoua be
-t™ "J*? ‘J1.'-’ “c«»d beyond .urronnding neighbors.
And this prosperous won’t work on Sunday, but he’ll curae another
class of farmers are pot generally man for asking him to.
selfish. They take pride in telling and
FEVER AND AGUE.
showing how good farming is done—.
Are you troubled with Ague, Chills and Fe­
why their stock is better than their
Bilious Fever, Remittent or Intermitting
neighbors’—why their land stands wet ver.
Fever, Night BweaU or any disease that comes
and drouth, and why their crops yield from Malaria or disordered Liver and Hot
more to the acre. "Such visits can not Sun*! If so, procure a bottle of Green's Ague
only be, made profitable, in stimulating Conqueror, which Is an acetic extract of strong
roots, c .inbtncd with Sulphate of Mag­
and awakening new processes, but will tonic
nesia, etc., and postlvely contains no Quinine.
be found to be pleasant and wholesome Arsenic or other poisons. It purifies the blood
recreation.—Iowa Stale Register.
cleanses the liver, spleefi and other secretive
organs so effoclolly that tbe chlUa will not re­
turn. We have never found any case of Fever
Corn Smut.
'
and Ague it will not cure. Price, SO cents dnd
SI .00 per bottle. One large bottle has cured as
As corn harvest will soon bo on hand five in one family. Sold by all druggists and
it is well to think of a few small mailers dealers everywhere.
'
15 Jan 83
in time. It is the prevalent opinion
of many good fanners and veterinarians
1883.
that com smut when eaten
by
cattle is injurious, and is the canse
in some cases of death. . lienee
the smut ears should be taken care of,
aud burned when harvesting tho com.
ILLUSTRATED.
A basket can be hung at tho ride, or be­
hind tho "•S™.
wagon, intowhich
into which nil
all of
of tbe
the
Harper’s Magarino begins it* alxty-aix volnme
b&lt;&gt; thrown by
h*m. and rich the Do-cinlte Number. It la not only the
‘«ken where II eon be burned. It U er,amount ol lh» com smut
mcreuing every your, and it can bo
«hoAed Ire mum .Uy bnnt.ag It. Sewaoe
c,i
t fcl tbl*.*mut or
dut h the oon""i.*?, * ’’I
“c
Pt?
through
ISJ

GRAND rapids DIVISIONSTATION*.

ERRORS OF YOUTH.

�Mattock

PRICE: •!.», IF PAID LN ADVANCE.

to Ef.gl.tud, was referred to by Canon
Farrar recently In Loudon M “one who
-i* at ooeo tbo American Minister and

To Advertiser*:

PERUKE THESE LIBERAL AD- RATM^

ttan and eight eant* for «*ch auiMoquant tasertion.

ORNO STRONG,

Editor and Proprietor.

Shshrillt girtrtonj.
QR OFFICERS.

Mareball—Ira;&lt; -L. Greg-.ry.
Trustee*—H. A. Barber, F. T. Boise. H. W.

JHdrtitM.
Z-lKRISTIAN C'HURCH-F A. Bissel,Pastor.
v&gt; Services every Sabbath at 10-30 a. m. and
7 p. m. Sabbath school at 12 in. Prayer meet­
tag every Thursday evening

TICETHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH-A.
IVA D. Newton, Pastor. Service* every Sab­
bath at 10.40 a. m. and 7 t&gt;. m. Sabbath
achool at 12 m. Prayer feeling every Thurs­
day evening.
____ __
FY LODGE N(5. B7, K. of P.. meet* at it*
Cutie Holl, NaahviUe, Michigan, ever;*
Friday evening, for the encouragement and

Miscellaneous Cards.
IL YOUNG. M. D. Office east aide of
• Main BL, Nashville. Office hours from
7 to9 a. m., rad 4 to 7 p. m.

W

a. FOOTE, PHYSICIAN &lt;fc SURGEON.
• Bacessor to Dr. Wickham. Office tec­
end door north of the Nashville House; residedcc first door north of the Wolcott House.
Prompt attention to calls night or day.

L

R. F. 8. HULL, Graduate of Medical rad

Surgical department of University of
DMich.
Cole’s Hotel, Tbornapplc.

TAR. C. W. GOUCHER, Electlo Physician and
XJ Burgeon, is prepared to answer all call*
Chat may be made for his services. Office and
Uni.PARMENTER, M. D. Offlre over
W Hull's Drug store, VarmontvlHe, Mich.

r, Circuit Court
sutnuted to my car*. Couveyanctag i
Iff. Owe* opposite Union Hou**. a

M. FLINT, JR. Law, Real Estate, and In• Burance. Conveyancing and Collection* a
apacialty.

I

TTtMORY PARADY, Justice of the Peace.
J-l Office, Corner Main and Sherman Streets.

LIEBHAU8ER, Merchant Tailor and deal• er ta Ready Made Clothing. Bee me
before you purchase clothing. Fit* guar-

S

HATCH &lt;fc CO., Manufacturer* nf Taffy
• Caudles, Chocolate Drop* rad Carmel*.
Fruita, Fancy Cradle*, Clgara, Tobaccos, etc.,
always in stock. Second door north of the
post office.______________________________

P

TpRANK BAKER, Manufacturer of Boot*
A rad Shoe*, pegxed or sewed. Repairing
promptly attended to, al the sign of the red
TACOB 08MUN, Ltvervman, barn near
U cott Houae. First claw turnouts at re*
able rates. Special rates to iunnnerdal ti
Funeral and weding partie* furnished with
riage* on abort notice.

•DRAUN BROS., Shoemaker*. Special atten-I * tlon given to fine and sewed boot*, also
repairing. AU manufactured work made from
best Of stock and warranted. First door south
Boise’s hardware.

\TTALLACE BEAUCHAMP, Liveryman.
»v Nashville Htra*u Barn. Single and
double turn out* funiUbcd promptly and reaaouahly. Commercial men driven to nelghnrwsnfp InwtiB ■*

DEMARAY, De*J« ta W.trhre,
Clock*, flue Jewelry and Silverware. TUfag

IRAM n. DICKINSON, amaufactorer of

H and dealer In Hard Wood Lntotter. BuildAMES FLEMING, practical Jeweler and

Watch-maker. CI. *. Watches, Silver and
J
Plated Wane, Jewelry rad Optical Good*. Rock­
ck

ford Watebe*a*pcci«!ty. Repairing rad Engrev-

W. N18KERN.

P• at Law, prartl

—Rev. Samuel Longfellow haa re­
signed hia pa*torate at Germantown,
Fa., and will live in the old Craigie
House, the poet’s houw. with his nieces,
while writing the authorised biography
.of his brother;
’
—Once when Miss Caroline Sedg­
wick, the New Englund authoress, was
in England, an aristocratic lady asked
her: “Have you any large old trees in
America? Oh, .1 Deg pardon; your
country haeu’t been settled long enough
for that”
—A resident of Cedar Key, Fla., is an
editor,
merchant, newsdealer. City
Clerk, Clerk of tbe Health Board. State
Collector of Taxes, County Collector,
' ex-AsMinblyman and planter—ninemen
in one, and Vet be can’t play base-ball.
—Chicago Herald.
—It is said, authoritatively, that Osear Wilde wrote a letter to Mr. Whist­
ler, in tbe course of which he declared:
‘•These people really take me serious­
ly.” And Mr. Whistler wrote back: “I
don’t believe there is an American fool
enough to take you seriously.”
—Mr. Freeman publishes in the Brit­
ish Fortnightly Review his impressions
of the United States. Ho acknowledges
cordially the constant and unmixed
kindness .received. He discusses Amer­
ica throughout in a tone of friendly en­
thusiasm. He speaks of his respect for
the character of its society, and insists
on the essential identity of England and
America.
—John Quincy Adams was never
known to be late during all his long
service in Congress. One time, just as
tho clock struck, a member asked the
Speaker if it was not time to call the
House to order. “No,” he answered.
“Mr. Adams is not yet in his seat",
Just then Mr. Adams appeared and
proved that tho clock was throe minutes
last—Chicago Tribune.
—All accounts of Sister Agnes, who
d-edafewdays ago, agree thatshfa hada
phenomenal voice. Her name was Louise
Gubert, and the memories aroused by
her death are those of thirty years' ago.
when she was a young girl, and all
Philadelphia was comparing her singing
of “I Know that My Redeemer Liveth”
with Jenny Lind’s. She was not hand­
some. and might not have developed
excellence as au actress; yet her voice
was so wonderful that opera managers
were anxious to hire her. It covered
tho entire contralto and soprano regis­
ters, and was highly cultivated. She
became a nun, and neversang in public
afterward.—A. F. Sun.
HUMOROUS.
—Paris husband and wife—He: “ As­
suredly you were bom to marry an
»diot!’r She: “Yes, and I made no mis­
take!"
—“Isn’t this shirred bonnet just too
sweet for anything?” asked Mrs. Smith
of her husband. “I shirred think it
was,” answered Mr. Smith, as he in­
spected the bill.— li'aif.
—Extract from a commencement ad­
dress: “Classmates, adieu.
To-day,
we part for year*; it may be, forever
(tears). But, the sacred, ties, of friend­
ship. welded, by the, fadeless—”
(storms of convulsive sobs.)—Burling­
ton Haw^ctfc.
—Coal is cheaper in Cleveland than
elsewhere in the country. Two und a
half loads of it were recently sold there
for seventy-five cents. But then the
old woman was away on a visit and the
son wanted to go to a circus, and he had
sold everything else about tho house.—
-V. F. Herald.
—Something awful will happen to the
bad boy whose sister Minnie was the
young preacher’s sweet-heort
Ho
pinned up a piece of paper in the parlor,
worto. “Minnie, Minnie, tickle the
parson!” on it, and then wanted to
know if sho had "seen the handwriting
on the walk"—Detroit Post.
—An old hag. while begging in front
of a gentleman’s bouse on Walnut
street, wim told by the owner to “move
on.” when she turned upon him and
dramatically uttered the following toi^
nble curse: “May y’ro daughters kindle
fires with kerosene and y’ro sons play
with toy pistols.”—Philadelphia sews.
—There is a man in Norristown who
invests no faith in the sign that if you
“make a wish when yon see the new
moon over your right shoulder you will
get what you wish for.” A year ago he
saw the new moon over his right shoul­
der, and wished for ten thousand dollars,
and says lie hasn’t got ’em yet. There
must have been something the matter
with the moon or his shoulder that night,
and he shouldn’t let one little disap­
pointment disparage him. — Norristown
Uerall.
—The committee appointed to collect
metal for cannon for General Beaure­
gard’s army, applied to u planter of
Adams County, Miss., for his bell. Not
having such an article, he mentioned it
to his wife, when she veiy patriotically
offered her brass kettle. The little ones
rather demurred to the sacrifice, and
one of them, with a sweet tooth, said:
“La,
what will wc do for pre­
serves?” •• My daughter,” said the wag
of a father, •‘our whole duty now is to
preserve our country.” The kettle was

—A Louisville young lady writes to a
modest and stupkl youth: “Yes, when
you asked me if I would marry vou—
oh! I ought not to have done 1L I sup­
pose—hut then it was such an oppor­
tunity. and to I smiled the cue to yon,
and answered ‘Never!’ And you stupid,
you froze and bowed like &amp; telegraph-

tional
knife*. raxorv. sj-oons, etc. Be had
not journeyed far before aa officer ac­
costed hini and called for a liccn*'. He
had none and so informed the official
who, finding the peddler a stranger and
—For a sanoc for boildd chicken m*
not familiar with the law, desired to be
as lenient as possible, and simply di­ two eggs boiled hard and the livers of
rected him to the City Hall to receive the chicken chopped fine, add a small
the necessary document. The Yankee quantity of thyme, lemon-peel and salt;
proceeded to find the proper official mix well together and melt half a pound
and inquired tho price of a lioense to of butter, keeping it as thick as possi­
run for a week, and found it more -than ble, and stir it in.—SL Loitit Globe.
his. surplus capital. Therefore ho so—Some farmers iu California do a
cured one for only a day. At night the thriving business buying stock bogs and
Yankee footed up his profits, and found feeding them in fields of lodged or
that he .had lost money, and resolved sprouted grain.' In some cases feeding
to continue without renewing his li­ wheat to hogs has paid handsomely.
cense. Several days passed, and he Tiie cost of harvesting w.-is saved, which
was in nowise molested, but one warm often amounts to a considerable sum.
day about ton o’clock in the morning,
—“What is the proper time and
he was approached by a corpulent Ger­ method of applying lime to land?"
man, with the inquiry: •• You got li­ Some prefer spring, but the prevailing
cense.” The Yankee said: “Oh. yes. opinion is that it should be put on in
certainly,” and moved, on. But the the fall. As it sinks in the soil fast
vigilant'special was not so easily satis­ enough without help it ought not to bo
fied. anti followed him up, saying: plowed under but only lightly covered
“ Meester, you got license, I look at with the harrow.— A7. K Tribune.
him.” The-Yankee again informed the
—Ono way to give variety to the'
officer that he had a license, but the lit­ breakfast is to cook some thin slices of
tle Dutchman said: “Veel, veel. you got salt pork thus: Put them in cold water,
license all right, but I look at him.” and set them on the stove, find let them
The Yankee, seeing he must get out of come to a boil; then drain off all the
his'difficulty either Icgallv or by his wits,
said: “Are you an officer!*” The Teuton­ water and fry them for about four min­
utes, or until they are nearly, free from
ic official said: “Yes, I vas an ofeecer.” grease; then dip them in a batter made
“Well,” said the Yankee, "where is your
badge, sir?'’ The officer was in his shirt­ of egg and flour, and fry them till a light
brown and crisp.—N. Y. Post.
sleeves. and looked as if he might have
■For poultry cholera Mr. Wright rec­
been a grocer or some other tradesman.
Ho did not say a word, but jumped into ommends a dose every* three hours of
his wagon anil drove rapidly away. The rhubarb, five grains; cayenne pepper,
Yankee concluded the Western people two grains; laudanum, ten drops, ad­
had learned tho game of bluff but ministering midway between each dose
thought they would nave to rise early to a teaspoonful of brandy, diluted with
get ahead of a down-easter. The ped­ loss than its bulk of water, into which
dler visited the next bouse and ottered have been dropped five drops of
his wares as before, making a sale, and fluid corbolato; or as a substL
bidding the lady good day started for - tute a few drops of carbolic acid may be
the street, when to bis horror and sur­ used.—Indianapolis Journal.
—The earliest honey of the season in
prise, he saw the persistent official
standing at the gate accompanied Ly the Boston market came from the “cold
another gentleman.
As the Yankee north” of Aroostook County, Me., a
reached the walk-the portly little Ger­ curious fact of which the American
man said: “You got no license, eh. Cultivator gives this explanation: “In
you come mid me, you my prisoner.” that section there are early snows which
The Yankee looked somewhat fright­ prevent the ground from freezing, and
ened, and in a low voice said: “Your when the summe- opens tiie iiowerbadge, sir.” The official was now robed bcaring plants spring at once into
with coat and vest, and pulling away bloom, giving the Dees a full supply of
the lapel of his coat and patting' his ' food as soon as thej' am able to work.”
breast violently, said: “Dere, dore be’s ;
—The importance of compacting or
I “ firming” the soil about the roots ol
my badge.”
“Ah, said the Yankee, “you are an newly-set plants or over seeds cannot
officer.” Tho official said:
“That’s!I be too strongly insisted upon. When
shust what I vas," and straightened up I seeds are sown, the soil should be well
in the usual official stylo and expanded i। patted down with a spade or rolled, so
his lungs as if to pounce upon his prey, | that tho earth will come into close con­
when the Yankee slowly placed hir. tact with the seed. In setting out gar­
fingers in his vest pocket and milled den plants, such as celery, cabbag.%
out
document branded, signed and etc., the soil should be pressed firmly
scaled. License. The official seeing the about the roots with the loot; and the
headline license, wilted without exam­ same course should he pursued with
ination. and turned and with one leap trees and shrubs, the soil being first
landed in his wagon and drove out of carefully worked in among the roots.—
sight.
Chicago Journal. •
The writer was an eye witness to the
scene, and. being amused by the circus, Barefooted Horses and Bad Shoeing.
strolled down the street to where the
I owned a marc for fourteen years
Yankee was. and accosted him. sayifg:
“That was well played.” “Ah.”'said which was never shod. 1 used her for
the Yankee, with a wink of his eye, breeding from a colt, and kept her with­
“you don't sec tho point. My license out shoes because it was bettor for my
expired a week ago.”—New Haven Reg- purpose, as she would not be so liable
to injure her colts, and she was hot
driven enough to require shoeing. This
mare was never lame or tender-footed,
He is Ont SI 05.
but she would slip on smooth ice, and
A very green youth, named J. B. Lin­ once fell down in crossing a pond, aud
ton, come up from Cynthiana. Ky„ the would have injured herself (as she
first of this week to indulge in the old­ could not gain a foot-hold) if she had
time pleasure of horse trading.
He not been held down until removed. She
brought a good nag with him from the was gotten off the ice by putting a rope
Blue Grass regions, which he offered tc around her body and hitching another
sell in the Fifth street stables for $150. horse to it and sliding her several rods
Several of the sharks who infest the broadside, to the shore. Her feet were
neighborhood, noticing tbe fresh and never cut. and contained all tho natural
veraant appearance of Linton. tried the rim on the bottom, which, it is claimed,
old game on him with remarkable sue-’ in a state of nature will hold horses
cgss.
They offered to trade a black up, keeping them from slipping any­
mare for bis horse; just as the bargain­ where.
ing was going on another of .the gang
There is a vast difference in the wear­
stepped up and said: “That’s a nne- ing effect on horses feet of prairie land
looking mare, that black there; 1’11 give where there is an absence of grit; on
you $185 for her.’’ He was refused, plains where there is mororor less grass
and then going into ecstacies of admira­ to soften the footfall, and also an ab­
tion. he ollered $200 for the mare. Mean­ sence ,of gravel, and a gravelly road.
while the simple-minded Kentuckian, On such a road a horse might go on a
aghast at the wonderful trade that he walk, if not driven too much, without
was missityj. hurriedly offered to give hi* wearing the hoofs to the extent of be­
own horse and $70 to boot for the black coming footsore, but if driven on a trot
mare.
His offer, after some seeming or galloped any considerable amount,
reluctance, was accepted, tbe mare bciny it would become footsore. I have known
warranted to be sound in bodv and wind. colts while running in the’nasture in
Linton bad hardly obtained possession summer on gravelly soil, by the natural
of his new piece of horse-flesh when he wear of the feet and in stamping on ac­
discovered that she was nothing but n count of flies—to wear tho hoofs away
broken-down hack; then he started out so that they became decidedly tender­
to find the man who was so eager to footed.
give two hundred dollars for the mare.
There Is a great difference In horses
But he was not to be found. Coming about stepping; some strike the feet very
upon the gang who had sold him the hard on the ground and others lightly.
animal, they coolly said that the beast I he former would be sure to get footsore
was worth about twenty-five dollars, without shoes, and with them unless
which sum they would give for it. Be­ well shod, while- tho latter might do
coming indignant, he threatened to ex­ very well basefooted, under possible
pose them, whereupon they agreed to circumstances. There is also a great
let him have one hundred and fifteen difference in the shape of horses’ Teet;
dollars if he would sigh a receipt in quit­ some are born flatfooted and become
tance- This he refused to do. saying he crippled unless extra care is had in their
was not able to write, but they, com­ shoeing; others have hoofs so upright
pelled him to make his mark on the re­ and hard that they will endure neglect
ceipt before they would let him have the and keep their feet in sound condition.
money. The green youth from Ken­ A flatfooted horse usually has a soft
tucky. who thought he cou.d tradt hoof, which wears out rapid! v. It is
bones, but found he could not, is out apparent from these facto that ii general
just one hundred and five dollars bv rule to deprive horses of shoes cannot
this little transaction, and now he seek's be made always practicable.
redress by making a complaint at police
A horse well shod.' so that the outer
headquarters.—Cincinnati Gazette.
rim of the hoof rests fully on the shoes,
will always travel better than one poor
ly shod or one barefooted. The curse
bsciety Note.
oi shoeing istbe buttress—an instrument
Mr. 8. S. Coxe, of Austin, who is not which a blacksmith seems to delight in
using to cut down a horse’s heels, and
precocious boy named Sammy, whose more horses are made tender-footed
luanncra and ways are a «ry objection­ from this abuse than all other causes.
able, so much so that ihfe father beaane Farmers are very apt to allow their
very much excited a few days ago aud, horses to wear their shoes so long that
without thinking what he said, rebuked the outside of the hoof grows ovei
Sammy in the following words:
them, and they grind the soft and ten­
“You miserable little scamp. I should der portion of the foot producing
------------------n------ —.
decent.
And then he wondered why even body
in the room laughed. — Teras Siftings.

ASHVILLK HOCHE.

I. M. run * Sox. Prop..

to valuable

nxs with. ‘Wtat
ply. -Wrt.
Journal.

g-toMlwl riming.

[. TtHmm.

PKXGHXrB WOMXKTJ FBIZKD.

GINGERTONIC
TEACHERS,
LADY C
HOUSEWIVES,

A Prevention and Cure
WOMEN know wbat thara &lt;!Ua**e* are, bat
do not alway* div*’ fwojirr ntientlaa to their
symptom*, vix:

1 Paskos'* Gmcsa Tome

Headaches,
Lassitude,
Pale or Mothy Complexion,
Sleeplessness,
Palpitation,
Numbness, Nausea, Dizziness,
Dry Cough, Nervous Irritation,
awask in your o&lt;rn town. T«rmi and fit cmtflt
Weak and Lame Back,
vvv.bw, 4&lt;MreM H.JUllbtt * Co., PorUawLMr

MASON &amp; HAMLIN

TESTIMONIALS I hare ta abundraeo
sy-MOTHEHS, ore yosr DAUGHTEBS alltar’

OR*ANS~^g£E
; °° ‘Hber *mcrJ&lt;-An ors*n.

toT

rrtrtiu. Alan for eaay payment*. New illu*-

R. PENCELLT, M. D.,
Sold bv DrufffftstsJ
Kalamxxoo, MtdL

PENSIONS^st
taj (one do»U«d. From(X w«k »ad

oicle h

inrUTP ore resptag absrAuLlTl U vest Rlllag our

m

I

UMS QusSAtjUsp

aad Back Fay and Dtackaetva pwtieaifftMWWrr eaUUed to

ertSKZiuPATENTSS^S
CLIPPER WI’FO CO,'

WaakieboMtytabk. N.W. FITZGERALD A CO.

UMAH

WHO IS UNACQUAINTED WITH THE CEOCRAPHY OF THI8 COUNTRY, WILL

Hl

i__ ।
ZJ
1

p'

ta

Uj
l |
m
LU
•J

Chicago, Rock Island &amp; Pacific R’y,
Betas the Great Central Line, affords fib travelers, by reason of Its unnvatod &lt;eographical position, the shortest and best route between the East, Northeast and
I Southeast, and the West, Northwest and Southwest.
!
It is lltoraliy and strictly true, that Its connections are all of the principal line*
, of road between tho Atlantic and the Pacific.
Dy Its main line und branches It reaches Chicago, Joliet, Peoria, Ottawa,
Lu Salle, Geneseo, Moline and Rock Island, In Illinois; Davenport, Muscatine,
Washington, Kepkuk, Knoxville, Oskaloosa, Fairfield, Des Moines, West Liberty,
Iowa City, Atlantic, Avoca, Audubon, Harlan, Outhrle Center and Council Bluffs,
ta Iowa ; Gallatin, Trenton, Cameron and Kansas City, In Missouri, and Leaven*
worth and Atchison In Kansas, and the hundreds of cities, villages and towns
Intermediate. The
•

&lt;“ GREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE,”
H A* It la familiarly called, offers to travelers all the advantages and comforts
Il
I •
l ।
M
L
L-J
|X|

Incident to a smooth track, safe bridges. Union Depots nt all connecting points,
Fast Express Trains, composed of COMMODIOUS, WELL VENTILATED, WELL
HEATED. FINELY UPHOLSTERED and ELE2ANT DAY COACHES ; a line Of the
MOST MAQNIFKJKNT HORTON RECLINING CHAIR CARS ever built t PULLMAN'S
latest designed and handsomest PALACE SLEEPING CARS, and DINING CARS
that arc acknowledged by press and people tc be the FINEST RUN UPON ANV
ROAD IN THE COUNTRY, and In which superior meals aro served to travelers at
the low rate Of SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS EACH.
THREE TRAINS each way between CHICAGO and the MISSOURI RIVER.
TWO TRAINS each way between CHICAGO and MINNEAPOLIS and ST. PAUL,

ALBERT LEA ROUTE
between Newport Newa, Richmond, C ncinnuti, indtanupolla und La Fny*'te,
and Council Bluffs, St. Paul, Minneapolis and intermediate points.
All Through Passengers carried on Fust Express Trains.
For more detailed Information, see Mane and Folders, which majr bo obtained, as
wall sso Tickets, nt all principal Ticket Offloc* in the United Statesand Canada, or of
R. ft. CA3LS.

E. ST. JOHN

CHICAGO.

MAKE HENS LAY^
ij^WHAT WILL
THE WEATHER BE
- TO-MORROW?
Q—
Poo—
Ps Signal Service
Barometer
sy
a*—Wg OR BTOiW GLASS AND TnrKJtfQMFTEK COMBINED,

�, B.a.i«&gt;&lt;rfU&gt;.Miii(uU7rolgnU»n
.1 Graod lUpia. U» UU&gt;.
table of the Senate unacted upon, al­
CoromilU. Price 4cCo.. paper dulm though it baa been amended in various
particulars. A motion to take it up
The Grand Trank railroad pays out promptly will doubtless be made and
carried without objection when the
Senate meets, when other amendments
at Lanning Dec. 27, for three days.
may be expected to be added to it. It
A new lumber company with $275,­ is not likely to get ifito such a shape
900 capital, formed at Grand Rapids.
as to receive the concurrence of the
The game around Marah all ia pre­ republican majority in the House, and
sumed to be protected by a Sportsman’s for this reason an attempt may be made
to report another bill for tbe action of
Mr. and Mrs. Jan»r« WalkiDidmw jr., the House. If the republicans, before
of Convia celebrated their crystal wed- they lose controC^f tiie House, cud pass
Tbe cjwc for murder against Dr. N.
G. Hall of Pontiac baa been venued to
Clinton county.
A severe gale on the lakes, tbe latter
jaart of last week, destroyed consldera• ble shipping and • few lives.

-

'mmtttedaneeide

at Frankfort
have waited.
though he m
Van Waggon and Root, the escaped
convicts from Ionia, were captured
near Zeeland, m Ottawa county, on
Mondny.
AtOvid, this season $18,000 worth of
butter and eggs were shipped by one
man, with several men doing business
■ in the same line.
•W. H. Boutham of this state, now 80
years old, was, with Erastus Corning
of New York, tbe first man to intro­
duce the Hei eford catttc into this
country.
'
Francis A. Wordell, a very efficient
government detective at Detroit, who
has been engaged in unearthing pen­
sion frauds, has come to grief. Fast
living, fast women, aud forgery tell the
storv.
Frederick Zimmerman, a German,
aged about 40, was murdered at Mt
Clemens last week Friday night—shot
through the head three times. Robert
Connor of Mt. Clemens has been arrest­
ed tor the murder.
Official returns from all counties ex­
cept Marquette, Chippewa, Oscoda, and
Isle Royal, give the following majori­
ties : Begole 6,445, Crosby 6,038, Conant
6J83. Butler 7,447, Stevens 6,910, Newell
8,167, VanRipcr 5,971, Cochran 13,436,
Jenks 7,483.
Creek matters: Mrs. Henry
has become insane from a se­
vere case of measles; farmers ask so
much for wood that dealers are ship­
ping it in by the tram-load; Mrs. YoeHinn’s, preaident of the W. C. T. U. ofCanada, lectured at the Creek this week
Monday.
Tbe election of quite a number of
representatives to the legislature, ofvarious political faiths, is being con­
tested because they held county offices
when voted for. The constitution says
votes for such candidates shall be void,
but the legislature has heretofore held
such candidates to be elected if they
resigned the county offices before be­
ing sworn in as legislators.
A play depicting the murderous career
of Jesse and Frank James, drew
crowded houses in Chicago and Detroit,
last week. In Detroit,-Dr. Rexford,
the eminent .Universalist divine, in his
pulpit denounced the damnable play
with all his force, and severely criticis­
ed C. J. Whitney, who opened his
theatre for it. It was proposed to pre­
sent the play at Battle Creek, but the
Daily Bfpublican waged fierce war
and the council was showered with*petitions against tbe exhibition till tbe
scow was officailly prohibited.
While visiting in Lansing, last week.
Gov.-elect Begole is reported to have
saia that be did not consider his elec­
tion as in any sense a partisan victory,
aa without the aid of many Republicans
he could not have been elected; and
further that be believed in civil service
reform principles and disclaimed any
obligation on his part to remove from
official position those Republicans iu
the service of tbe state against whom
do cause of complaint exists. Someliow
this doesn’t seem to be very much of a
Democratic victory, apyhow—whereat
we sigh.
It is altogether probable that Ferry
will succeed himself in the senate, be■ cause, while be has no real popularity
and there is much opposition to him,
• the sppoaition ia unorganized and blun'dering. Ferrys’ opponents charge,
firat, that during bls two terms he has
nqt shown himself posseesed of ability
a senator should have. and. second, that
he has secured an apjtearent popular
endoreem**nt and a majority of the Re­
publican repriMcintativea in the legisla­
ture favohddr to hia return by political
machine method a His opDonenta con­
tend that a man who tia« to use such
means t« get a “popular"endorsement

a measure materially lessening the
weight of taxation, it will to a material
extent take tbe wind out of the sails of
their democratic »uccesi*ors. But tbe
possibility that they will be able to
pass a measure of this character is
quite remote. The session will be short,
and by the time tbe appropriation bills
an*d other necessary measures are out
of tbe way there will be little or no
time left for action on a tax bill.
Secretary Lincoln will, in his annual
report recommend that no river and
harbor bill be introduced in the coming
session of Congress. He states that it
will be impossible to expend the
amount appropriated last sessiou dur­
ing the present fiscal year, and the bal­
ance, probably $8,000,000 or $9,000,000
will be carried over to tbe credit of
next year.
.
It is understood that President Arth­
ur will make civil service reform a
prominent feature of his forthcoming
message to Congress, taking strong
ground in favor of positive legislation
on tbe subject. This he can now very
conscientiously do since all of his
friends and admirers have been gener­
ously provided for.
It appears from an investigation
made into the rate of wages for farm
labor by the statistician of the Depart­
ment of Agriculture, that since the
year 1879 there has been an increase
amounting to 34 per cent in the east­
ern states. In the four years from 1875
to 1879. however, there was a great de­
cline, because of the great number of
artisans who had taken to farm labor in
consequence of the depression in man­
ufacturing. This seriously depressed
the rate of farm wages. Since 1879 the
increase in the Western States has been
14 per cent and in the southern 13.
Wages generally declined gradually
from I860 to 1875,but very rapidly from
that date until 1879, when an equally
rapid rise began. There was an ex­
ception to this rule in the South, when
between 1866 and 1869,in consequence
of the high pjice nf cotton, wages ad­
vanced. The South exhibits the least
fluctuation in tbe rate of wages, this
being attributed to the improvement
in Quality and efficiency of labor. For
example, tbe average rate of wages per
month was 16 dollars, when cotton
30 cents per pound and 154 dollars
when cotton was 12 cents per pound.
Statistics prove that the district*, of
high wages are also those of large pro­
duction and net profit in agriculture.
The average rate of wages at present
obtaining are—in the Eastern States,
38 dollars. Middle, 33; Southern, 13;
Western, 28; and Calafornia, 38. Al­
though these indicate a considerable
recovery since 1873, there is still a de­
cline of 30 per cent from the inflated
rates which immediately followed tbe
civil war.
The reception given by Gen. W. T.
Sherman at his residence on Fifteenth
street to-night was attended by almost
every arm/ officer in Washington. Gen.
Sherman says bis idea in giving this re­
ception to army officers exclusively
tfas to allow those who do not go out
into society an opportunity to spend a
sociable evening with their more ac­
tive comrades. Concerning Bob In­
gersoll's having nominated him for the
presidency in 1884, he said. "Oh yea!
Mr. Ingersoll says a great many things
tliatfee does not believe.
I am per­
fectly contented with my career, and
nothing could induce me to soil wy
military regprd by entering into poli­
tics at this late day,"

August.
WEST SUNFIELD.
Hi! wns’ot it a big "ad" for L. J.
George Swick and family visited
friends in Portland last week.
Cliarlry Childs Ims just finished a cis­
tern with a capacity of 83 barrels.
Charles Hill and Pea Thomas have
returned fsom school at Woodland.
Winter is fast approaching upon us,
now to the front with your cutters.
■ Teasman having procured him a
horse team ia now building a barn io
house them in.
John Welsh Jr. had tbe misfortune to

of abler men in the slut
hooked last Saturday.
djkw.

highly delighted with the sights seen on
d intelligence reached this

$2.75
3.00
4.75
5.oo
6.oo

ULSTERS and OVERCOATS—

$3.75
4.50
5.oo
12.00
15.00
$7.50
9.00
10.00
16.5o

Cloaks and Dolmans Cheap

PAIR OF WOOL BLANKETS $1.25
HORSE BLANKETS AT 90 CENTS.

if you alraady koov
UiotlnlhM It tai * lltl

We do not ask you to take our assertions on paper, but we do want you to come and ex­
amine our prices and see the largest stock of goods in Barry county.

CSTButter, Eggs, and Dried Apples Wanted.
BBSS
ty sympathize with Mr M. in the sore
affliction. and especially those who
have passed through like trials feel to
extend him their heartfnl sympathy.
j
Now Mr. Typo, we have another war 1
to wage with you. We are naturally |
very sensitive and were much abashed
" e want to realise 110,000 from soles of merchandise before the first of January, and in
last week upon looking over the News order to do so wo will offer goods so low that to be seen is to be sold.
7
to see the mistake about the animal Clothing.
harnessed up in a single buggy and We will sell you a rattling good suit for te.50 and a better one for 116.50. Now ia just tbe
driven by two women. It was an ox
Overcoats.
Mr. Typo and don’t you forget to cor­
Of which wc hare a large stock.
rect it.
One of the most interesting meetings J
Dress Goods
of the literary society was held at the
Trunks, Satchels, Floor Oil Cloths, Table Oil Cloths.
residence of James Hunter last Friday I
All-wool Flannels,
evening. The next meeting is to be {
Waterproofs, Cottonades, Sheeting, Shirts and Drawers, Ladles’ Underwear, Hosiery.
on Friday evening Dec. 8, when the fol­
Children’s Suits, Children’s Overcoats,
lowing question will be discussed: Re­
Boys’ and Youths' Suita and Overcoats.
solved, “That the enlightened state is
Boots and Shoes,
happier than tbe savage.” Affirmative,
In complete stocks, and never so good goods sold for so little money.
M. A. Fay, negative, P. T. Weeks.

Great Bargains

»10, aa eitn copy

1. K. ENGLAND, Pobllihcr

Probate Order

r of Probate.
OEORGB GILLIS,
and mine “»* Petition, duly verified.

Gloves and Mittens

For Ladles and Gent*.

BELLEVUE.

Rubber Overcoats for Ladles and Gents.

Felt Boots,

J. H. York fit Bro., have the nicest
Rubber Boots and Over-shoes, Wool-lined Boots, Felt Boots for Ladies and Gents.
store building in town. Will occuy it
Lap Robes,
Wolf Robes. Blankets, Gloves and Mittens.
December, 4th.
GROCERIES, CROCKERY, GLASSWARE, NOTIONS, Ac.
Miss Anna Birchard, daughter of J.
A. Birchard ia very ill with lung fever,
Trs Highest Market Price paid for Butter. Eggs, Beans, Corn, Dried Apples, Raspberries,
and it is doubtful about her recovery. Peaches and Cherries. 1000 cord* of IB-inch wood wanted.
Wcctsh Is upon us. You need the goods and we need the money. Wc don’t say, “You
A little daughter of Alfred Rounds tickle me and I'll tickle you,” but wc do say that our wauts are mutual and wc may do each
was seriously burned on the 38th, by other good.
Don’t fall to call with your produce and your cash, for now ia your time to strike.
sitting down into a pail of hot water.
She cannot possibly recover.
Business is very lively in Bellevue
Xashville, November 22, 1882.
this year, and we think if we should
have another fire, it would stir the
people up to build better bouses for
business.
The Bellevue schools are well attend-I
ed, as 1st primary room has 60 scholars,
3d, 50. The grammer department is
not as full as will be after the holidays,
—the average attendance is 60. Mr
Diamond, principal; Miss Averill as­
sistant.
Charles, the youngest son of Nelson
Eastman, was badly burned on the 28.
His mother had gone down street on an
errand leaving her daughter to fill a
boiler, preparatory to washing. The
little fellow who is about four years
old, looked into the boiler to see how
much was in, and was so intent watch­
in the water, that his clothes caught
fire and were nearly burned oft before
he knew what &gt;as the matter. He ran
dut doors as soon as he knew bis dress
was on fire but too late to put it out.
He was burned from his knee to hia
arm on the left side and all across his
bowel s. No hopes for him.

HOLIDAY PRESENTS!
The Largest Stock Ever in Nashville
---------COMPRISING IN PART------ &lt;—

Books, Books, Books,
Albums, Autograph and Photograph, Morrocco
and Plush Toilet Setts, Dolls by the Thousand,
Majolica, China and Class In all Forma, Stereo­
scopes and Vlewa, Toys of Tin, Wood and Iron.

Alpha.

EATON COUNTY.
Charlotte has a budding brass band
of boys.
A four-pound eel was caught in tbe
river at Grand Ledge.
And
Wm. Wray of Bell®vue sold 2000
pounds of honey recently.
Grand Ledge stone is the new build­
ing material coming into use at the
Ledge.
Grand Ledge has a cigar factory just
started there. Hope it won’t go up in
smoke, and yet we’re afraid it will.
Another through express train from
L/eiroii to
Detroit
iu Chicago
vuicago will
wm be
ne put on
ou the
tue ;
C. fit G. T. road during Decemlter. j
Bonnett’s cracker factory at Charlotte | ZZ
turns out daily forty barrels of crack- • 36
era, and from 150 to 2U0 loaves of bread.
toaay nothing of other stuff.
Samuel Mirriam luw traded hisiae
Carlisle property to A. C. Goddard for.
tlx National Hotel, at Kalamo, and . cz,

81

A local board of the Detroit Mutnal I
Benefit Awtociatiou has been formed at ;
Charlotte, with W. J. Bonnett presi-r./l P V Ms.-U-Il----- —I

Grand Ledge

Charlotte, Dec. 18.

Call and. See,
hear the music at the popular Drug and Book Store.

F. T. BOISE

' And It ia further ordered, that aald petitioner
&lt;1ve notice to the persona interested in Mid estate.
-.(J
lk^ U___ I__

Mid day ofliMrinf.
f A true copy,)
(11-U)

CLEMENT 8M1TH,
JudtooIPwlMte.

.Mortgage Sale.
Default haying been made in the conditions
of a certain mortgage, (whereby the power
therein contained to acll baa become operative)
executed by Ads T. Lee to Albert W. Okla,
October 16th, Jfi75, and recorded in the office of
register of deeds in and for Barry county, Mich­
igan. on October 21»t, 1875, in Uber 8 of mort­
gagee at page 880, which Mid mortgage wm by
m£1 Olda,on September 17.1878. assigned to HP
ram R. Dickinson, and aaid assignment waa on
December 10th, lb7t&lt;, recorded in the office of
register of deed* for Barry county aforeaaid, in
Uber 10 of mortgagee on page 5&lt;fi, upon which
mortgage there ia at thia date claimed to be
due One Thousand Four Hundred and Seventy
Eight Dollars, and no suit or proceeding! at
law having been instituted to recover the same
or any part thereof, notice is therefore given that or. Monday, the 26th dav of March next, at
ten o’clock in the forrn&lt;x&gt;n,T shall sell at public

gage or so much thereof as shall be necessary
to satisfy the amount due on such mortgage,
with ten per cent Interest and legal costs.
The premises to be sold as above referred to
are described in said mortgage aa follows, towit: Commencing st the center post on section
thlrty-elx. In township three north, of range
seven west, in Barry county, Mich., running
thence south with the quarter line thirty one
and 95-100ths rods to a post, thence west and

and parallel »ith the east line &lt;
nineteen aud 95-100th* red* to

36-KXXbs rods ’to the place of beginning, con-

tUM B. DICKINSON,
Assignee of wild mortgage.

LEGGED WHEAT
N more grown wheat will be ground at tho
NaahriHc mDl.
I have found It impossible to make good
flour for those who ha
grists o» grown wheat.
There is no mill, old

CUT SHOWING THE SIMPLICITY OF THE
grista is all jpunroou.
never was done, ant!

much batter

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                  <text>OkNO STRONG,!
Editor and Proprietor.

LIFE IN NASHVILLE,
And Her Environs,
—Mrs. Shepard-Lilly, the well known
Spiritualist lecturer, will speak at the
opera-house Sunday morning at half
past ten, and also iu the evening.
—Marshal Gregory, otherwise “Hap-pyJim,” reports for duty again this
week with something of usual geniali­
ties. He will begin the collection of
the village taxes next week Friday
and Saturday^ at Prindie &amp;■ Chipman’s
store.
/—&lt;
J
—Maxwell! the Xxell-known theatre’
man, and his company, will play in the
opera-house the 15 and 16th next week.
The person who hasn’t heard, and al­
ways favorably, of Maxwed and his
company, is inbeed ignorant of dra­
matic affairs.
—bn Wednesday of this week, Mrs.

—“Wonder if she could Icahn to .love
me dearly,” said a traveling man after
flirting with a school Miss. “Seems to
want to get married awful bad, and I’d
like to accommodate her,” he contin­
ued, as he wiggled hie hands with his
' thumbs in his arm-holes of his vest,
While a sarcastic grin overspread his
face, “if I only thought'she could leahn
to love me.”
—Mr.E. Morgan, you will please stand
up and be counted. The Haetingt
Democrat insinuates that your state­
ment to us that you received from Nash­
ville grain dealers 15c more per bushel
for your wheat than Hastings buyers
offered you, is a lie. It might be well
to stop into the Democrat office, some
time when you are at Hastings, and in­
quire for Mr. Clark, the editor. We be­
lieve your veracity is unquestioned by
those who know you.
—Mrs. Adam Wolf, who has been a
well known and highly respected Yesident of Maple Grove since about 1853,
died Thursday of this week about 5 p.
m. aged 69 years and six months. She
was arouftd during the day as usual

and got dinner and supper, but shortly
after cleaning the supper table a pecul­
iar look came over her face and setting
down in a rocking chair she apparent­
ly went to sleep and quickly expired
without saying anything.
She had
been in rather poor health along back,
but for the last week had been feeling
unusually well.
She was born in
Dauphin county. Pa, in 1818, and was
married in 1845. She had ten children,
all but one of them she raised to
adult age. Seven of them are nqw
living,—three sons in Maple Grove.
Her maiden name was Mary Sideos.
She united with the Christian church
in 1861. and baa ever since been a mem
her. The funeral services will be held
at Maple Grove Methodist church at
10:30 on Sunday, but the friends are
requested to meet at the house at 10
o’clock.
—The concert by Prof. N. P. Stanton
and company of Kalamazoo assisted by
.our leading home talent, advertised
this week to occur on Tuesday next,
will not occur. When the advance
agent was here about twq weeks ago he
desired to place the concert on this
week Saturday to save travel by the
company, but finding that that was im­
possible finally put it on Tuesday next,
and leaving directions and a special
injunction with Rev. F. A. Bissell to
degin advertising one week ahead, went
his way. On Wednesday, after the
reveraad gentleman aforesaid had on
the strength of his professional position
and general rccitude obtained 250
bills on time at the lowest cash price!
Dr. Barber received a telegram from
Prof. Stanton asking if the concert was
billed for Saturday. The doctor repli­
ed that it was not. Another telegram
was then received saying that they
would come Saturday or not at all as
otherwise they would have to travel ton
Saturday was occupied. Prof. Stanton
may be a floe violinist, but be will raise
himself in the estimation of this com­
munity if he will send a P. O. money
order for $S.5O to Rev. F. A. Bissell,
and a written apology to the feminine
portion of the heme talent that waded
through the snow and storm of Wed­
;
and
rill then
that they'll
will confer a

has kept
that "Grand
I in bis way
distribute it.

I

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1882.

VOLUME X,

Dr. Goucher received a letter informher of the death of her last remaining
aistet, in Wyanlotte county, 0. She
was the thirteenth one of a family of
fifteen brothers and sisters, who have
all died with that tatal disease con­
sumption. Mrs. Goucher and a brother
alone remain.

j TERMS; $1.50 per Year

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun

)

bit’s back, when he turned around and
LOCAL GIBBLE-G ABBLE
winked at Mosher a couple of times and
trotted off to his hole as if nothing had
Sleighing.
happened. They claim to have killed
G. A. Truman and Son, new udvt.
about two wagon-loads of game, but
Geo. F. Truman is able to be around. they got lost in the wilderness and
Jessie Austin is home from a hunt in traveled until they were tired out and
northern Michigan.
had to throw away the game to save
Mr. aud Mrs. Martin of Ypsilanti are themselves.
visiting her sister Mrs. Rolston.
They got in about dark, as sorry a
Rev. Mr. Bangs was the officiating looking lot as you would often. wish to
clergyman at the funeral of Mr. Hos­ look at, about W gaunt as the corpse of
kins' child.
,
a katydid, and all they needed was a
Every subscriber to The News is ex­ skylight in the top of their heads to
pected to be even, at least,by the first make first-class telescopes of • them.
of the year.
Nothing like a hunt to revive the
Messes Throp and Estes, teachers in drooling spirits.
the Hastings schools, were guests of
ITEMS.
Nashville friends last Friday.
Thanksgiving passed oft very quiet­
Rev. Jno. Hughes was in town this
ly
(and
pleasantly
to those who had the
week on the way to Muskegon. Ho
turkey.)
may make Nashville his home.
' Will. Cartright has bought the seven
Duncan Sinclair and wife, of Bald­
win’s near Jackson, relatives of. H Coe, acres formerly belonging to Mrs. Jas.
Lee, paying $400.
were his guests the first of the week.
The Congregational social will be en­
L. J. Wheeler was in. Lansing last
week and secured accommodations for tertained at Chas. W%gonlander’s next
the coming session of the Legislature. week Friday evening.
Business was booming at the black­
Senator Pennington called upon us
Saturday. During the coming session smith shop last week. Uncle Dove can
he can bo found “at home” at the Lans­ beat the world on nice shoeing, and if
any one doubts it just try him once and
ing House.
W. H. Burgess has appeared, paid up be convinced.
The Rev. Elder Wood has been a lit­
all coots in the suit brought by Mrs.
Flyhearty against him,and the case has tle out of health forsome time, but stilb
ho was able to go out and help dissect
been dropped.
The Catholics held service here or the turkey just the same.
The parties who own the saw-mill at
Tuesday. Rev. Mr. Ehrenstrasser of
of Grand Rapids afficiating. There St. Mary’s lake have bought all the
sawing timber on 300 acres, three miles
was a good attendance.
H. R. Dickinson informs us that his north of Lacey. They aro clearing the
new saw mill will be ready for business ground for the mill-yard now and ex­
in two weeks, and that he will continue pect to have the mill there some time
to do custom sawing and buy logs as this month. I understand that they in­
tend to haul the most of their lumber
formerly.
The M. E. Social held at Mr. and Mrs. to Battle Creek, so it will make busi­
C. Ainsworth’s last week was well at­ ness lively for people in that vicinity
tended, as is customary for social gath­ who wish to do teaming, and there will
erings held at the hospitable house of also be a good demand for hand work
at the mill and in the woods, so that
Mr. and Mrs. A. Receipts $4.50.
The fire company under Mr. Howard’s any one wishing for a winter job I think
management presented the Spy of Shi­ would find plenty of work and good
pay. And ns they intend to do some
loh in fine shape to good houses .Wed
nesday and Thursday evenings. They custom work, it would be well for those
who wish to have sawing done to have
play at VuVille Tuesday evening.
There will be no morning services their logs out and ready to run in on
Pink Eye.
or Sunday school at the Christian the first snow.
church, as the pastor officiates at the
THE COUNTY.
fuaeral of Mrs. Adam Wolf, in- Maple

Grove. Services in the evening as
usual.
C. C. Wolcott, so well known here,
fins, with Charles and A. J. Bowne of
Hastings and some minor stock holders,
formed the Larimore (D. T.) national
bank, with Charles Bowne as cashier.
Capital $50,000.
A call at the Hastings House, Hast­
ings, N. T. Parker, proprietor? disclos­
ed the fact that this hotel is as ]&gt;opnlnr
os ever and crowded with travelling
custom. As a hotel man Nell stands
Tight to the front.
Martin Reems and wife (nee Lola
Cooper), of Bellevue, are spending a
portion of their honeymoon this week
at A. Lewis’s having on Wednesday at
the bride’s home at Bellevue, been mar­
red by Rev. Mr. Maveety of that place,
amidst the congratulations of friends
and the reception of numerous hand
some presents.
.
LACEY.

Ktaagbtvr awosx tbs Wild Beasto.

Last Saturday, Will Bristol, Lee Mo­
sher and George Clark made np their
minds to take in what few animals
there might be running at large in the
wilderness round about Lacey. But as
neither of them was the lucky owner of
such a thing as a gun, something had
to be did to procure weapons; so Bris­
tol hired a livery and drove nine miles
and -borrowed an old revolutionary
musket. Mosher gave the Wild Irish­
man twenty-five cents to go and get
him a gun. After waiting about two
hours Mike came back with a double­
barreled cannon with a saber-bayonet
mounted on the muzzle. Clark bad a
poor devil living with him that had a
seven pound mortar, so he took that,
aud away they started for the forest,
and judging by the way they stepped
when they started out one would think
they weighed about five tons each.
They went as far as Bob Joy’s, and
there stopped
and borrowed his
hired man, four hounds and a ferret,
and then started for a heavy tract of
timber, where they proposed to bag the
game.
What transpired after that is known
only by the stories they told after they
came in; but if we take their word for
it they must have had some tall shoot­
ing. Bristol says they shot nine times
at one rabbit, and then he came aud
gave himself up. One of the boys says
Mosher shot at one rabbit sitting about
six feet from the end of his gun, and
the shot went seven feet over the rab- ■

New school-house iu the Pendill dis­
trict, Hickory Corners.
Rev. J. Archer, pastor of the M. E.
churchat Irviug, died o-&lt; Monda/ night
of bleeding at the lungs.
The farmer’s institute for Barry
county is to be held January 0-10, and
is to be attended by Secretary Baird.
Prof. Johnson, and President Abbott.
The Barry county agricultural society
will meet at the Hastings House in
Hastings ori Tuesday, December36th,
of ono n
u'r nffitwra
fit
o’’t'lrwV
clock. Nyw
officers nt'A
are fn
to lw*
be
elected.
It secma odd that neither the Hast­
ings Banner nor Democrat make any
mention of I he death of Rev. Mr. Aich­
er of Irving, though it occurred Mon­
day aud was reported in the state pa­
pers.
&lt;
L. Moire of Battle Creek and Miss
Mary Shoup of Maple Grove were unit­
ed, as the Frenchman said, «n the “hol­
low” bonds of matrimony on Wednes­
day, by the Rev. J. McKee, West Johns­
town. They intend to go on a touring
honeymoon in Germany.
The West Kalamo correspondent of
the Hawk says: “Mr. Alvado Welch
better set up the cigars for the boys.
Thanksgiving day he and the prettiest
girl of Maple Grove were united in
wedlock. Our beatjvishes go with the
bridegroom, bet God pity the bride P
That "prettiest girl in Maple Grove” is
the daughter of D. Dickinson.
r\
The recent meeting of the county
grange at Johntown was well attended
and thoroughly succesful, notwith­
standing inclement weather. Two es­
says were read, the subject iu both be­
ing ably handled; one in particular on
"Our common schools” by Mrs. Naomi
Slawson, was well done. The new of­
ficers elected at the meeting will be in­
stalled at the hall of the Glass Creek
grange on Friday January Sth.
We’ve been wondering for some time
why Lee Reed left Hastings and went
to Gull Lake; but they say “murder
will out,” and the reason has just come
to light—Lee’s bent on running a pleas­
ure resort. He has built a new hall at
the lake, capable of accommodating ten
sett of dancers, and will dedicate the
same to the presiding deity of the mer­
ry pastime on Christmas night. In the
spring be will fix up the grove and have
plenty of boats and other accommoda­
tions for pleasure and hunting parries.
On Friday last James B. Carpenter of
Carlton was arraigned before Esquire
Burgher of Hastings, charged with
committing rape upon Alice Fielbe,
now deceased, in' October last. It is

claimed that by reason of this assault
and oibers of a like character by Wm.
McMurray, she became afflicted with
nervous disorder of which she died.
The particulars of the assaults, the un­
fortunate girl’s sickness and death-bed
statements, and so forth, were first
published in The News shortly after
her death. Miss Fields was an orphan,
about sixteen years of age, and came to
Carlton from Ohio about eight months.
The examination is to be concluded at
Hastings this week Friday, and we hope
that if found guilty Carpenter.and Mc­
Murray will ba given the full penalty
of the law. A more atrocious crime
than they are charged with can scarcely
be conceived.
WEST K ALA MO.
Rain wanted over here.
A. R. Williams visited friends iu Rut
land this week.
Mr. and Mrs. Al Mix are visiting
Walton friends.
Cold, anew, slush, mud) disagreable
winter weather.
George Baxter of Washtenaw Co. is
the guest of Frank Hartwell.
Miss Melintha Barns of Grand Ledge
is visiting relatives and friends in this

section.
Anson Mitchell of Branch Co. former­
ly of this town, called upon friends here
this week.
Taxes and insurance levies come this
mouth, and that’s what makes the far­
mers groan.
I. M. Vandyke sent his axe into bis
foot a few days ago; result, he isobliged
to lay up for repairs.
Report—: said to be true that Alvar­
ado Welch and Miss Emma Dixon were
marred Nov. 39th. Can’t prove it by
me.
If “Wild Bill” of "The Hawk" don’t
quit tampering with the School board
that little girl won’t go to the party
with him again.
E. 8. Wheaton of Jonesville, Mich.,
and his brother Ezra of Onondago Co.,
N. Y. are the guests of their brother-in­
law Darins Fitch.
Thanksgiving day is past but John
.Mason’s turkeys are continually de­
creasing in number in an uncounable
manner. John’s bought an
army
musket.
Miss Belle Showalter (sensible lady)
declined to act as Secretary of the
Lyceum. and Will. Bruridige was elected
to fill vacancy. T’is not a suitable place
for a lady.
Oscar Barden of Iowa,_____
years ___
ago ..
a
merchant of this town, and son-in-law
I of Squire D. B. Bowen, will take posses'
""
’
‘1st., and "
aion
of
Bowen*’s "farm Jan.
the
’Squire will retire from the farm to the
village where he has bong lit a residen&amp;e.
T'l...
The following pupils were neither
tardy or absent during the,term:—Ear­
nest Hartwell, Mimic Hartwell, Mabel
Hartwell, and Eddie Long.
Mira
McMore began her winter terra ofachool
on Monday with an enrollment of about
fifty scholars, with prospects of over
sixty for a fall school.
The following is the average standing
of the named pupils in Miss McMore’s
school for the fall term: Mary Teich 95;
Ella Vandyke 90; Ella Herring 93;
Minnie Herring 93; Earnest Hartwell
94; Libbie Karcher 80; Frank Long 87;
Cora Mix M; Carrie Long 94; Harry
Ehret 90; Rose Herring 75. Bertha
Spencer 94; Newell SIomou 90; Milo
Ehret 95; Mimie Hartwell 100; Mabel
Hartwell 95; Herbert Wells 75.
Thefolloving important information
was found among the advertiesments in the Evening Next of Detroit:
“For sale—A widow lady having a
gold watch and chain, a diamond clust­
er ring, one do solitaire, one pair ear­
rings, a bracelet and some otherjewel­
ry.” Now, as such an animal is consid­
ered very valuable, if they don’t have
any spavins, ring worms, or is not windbroken, we rise to enquire if the said
property is white, black or bay, is she a
good traveler, will she work well in a
harness and with a mate, is she young
aud trim built and good property for n
young farmer to own! Anj
ma­
tion concerning her will be
ally
received by a young gent of th is town
who is after just such an animal.

MAPLE GROVE.

other night. He took a girl to the dance
and she went off with another fellow.
Twenty couple daneed and ate oysters
at Morton’s last Friday night. Peace
and quietness prailed and a good time
enjoyed.
There was a dance and oyster supper
at Sam. Norton's on Friday night last,
for the benefit of the young men that
took girls. Those that did not, were
excluded from the party.
James Perry has moved on to the
place-toe lately purchased of Hat. El­
dred, where it will be more con venient
for his business and a great deal b itter
for those wanting lumber.
'
Dug Slade is one of the most unfortu­
nate young man in ..Maple Grove. In
returning from the dance the other
night his horse Warne excited and
smashed up another borrowed buggy.
We have not heard of any chickens

being stole or any rash promises being
made, but Amos Wolfe has departed for
another clime. We were informed that

he had acontroling interest in the world
famed Baby Elephant and that be has
taken the same to Kentucky to win­
ter.

LOCAL MATTERS.
CHRISTMAS.
COLORED CAXbT AXD JUMPING JACKS

Are for children but articles of use as well aa
the ornamental form the substantial gifts ot
the present, and any of the following would be
appropriate os a Christmas present:
A string Sleigh Bells.
Pair Skates or a pair of Horae Blankets,
Jewell Carpet Sweeper,
While Sewing Machine,
Wringer, set Carrera,
Bet Rogers Bro’s Plated Knives,
Spoons, Forks and Pocket Knives,
Granite Tea or Coffee Pota,
A splended Cutter or Dexter Queen Buggy.
Any of the above can be found of the best
grade and at reasonable prices within the reach
of all till Jan. let, at
C. L. Glasgow's.
'
100 _
jK
.SO
.75
.60
.50
At the above prices you will find all wool CashOT

Credit Subscriptions $1.7B.

NUMBER 12
WHITE ASH LOGS WANTED.
We will still continue in the Oar and Handle
bust new, reports to the contrary not withstand­
ing. Look out for our bills with prices and full
directions for cutting log*. Highest ea*h prices
paid for oar logs.
8. K. Dfuar de 8oxs.
HOLIDAY GOODS.
I have the largest and finest line of HOLI­
DAY PRESENTS that has ever l&gt;een dis­
played in thia citf.
‘ Hau the Druggist.

INVENTION AHEAD.
। a progressive age and improvements
vice on the White Sewing Machine in the shape
with all trouble of uneven winding and thread
- ‘'‘Bobbin Winder," doing away
tinga third more on each bob.
--------- - _ smooth as a spool of silk.
Remember tl&gt;to u only on the White. It also
has a splendid Bei; Shifter, putting the belt off
or on ot Ila own scconl at tnc operator’s will.
These machine* an reduced in price till Janu­
ary. None m simple, strong or durable. “The
White is King.”
C. L. Glasgow.

Fi* I have a fine line of Gold Fens, which I
can offer at extremely l„w prices.
Hale the Druggist.
(tr Stoves going fast al Glasgow’s. Don’t
bujtl 11 you see him and get prices.

raf Sugars and Coffiea cheap,
HT Boots and Shoes very cheap,
C3jT Crockery and Glassware awful cheap

TOYS.
Come in and look over my STOCK of
TOYS, you are sure to find something to
please the children.
HALE, the Druggist.
ROCK BOTTOM PRICES.
Don’t buy a single pair of Boots or Shoes be
fore visiting Prindie A Chipman’*, sod inspect­
ing their stock and prices. Stock larger and
more complete than erer and price* marked
right down to bed-rock.
No competltora al­
lowed to undersell ua.

Wood Wanted at the Depot.

10-23.

Ohio Lime—fresh carload just received.
Brooks Marshall A Co.

n- E. P. Roe and Mra. Holmes* novels,
sold at reduced price of 81.25 copy.
Hale the Druggist-

BASS WOOD BOLTS.
Now to your time.
81.25 per cord for 18 inch,
82.50 per cord for 36 inch.
Cash as fast delivered. For particulars se
Geo. W. Fraxcis.

We arc now settled in our new quarters in
"’e arc headquarters for 30c tea. ,
the atorc formerly occupied by W. A. Ayiaworth
Fowu* A Campbell.
where we will be pleased to sec al) of the cus­
tomers from the old store and as many new ones
E3T Fleming has the beat stock of Jeweler
as may favor us with a call.
ever eeen In tills pa: t of Michigan.
Fqwleb A Campbell.
rar Cold weather Is upon us aud mankind
to withstand the season must cat Meat. A
complete Stock of the latter always found at
D. L. Durfee's market
SCARLETT UN DEB WARE.
Our 81-75, all wool, Reduced to $1.50, to
cloee out at
G. A. Ttumax A Sox.

WWe will keep a full line of Dry Goods,
Gr ecrics; Boots and Shoes and Clothing at our
new stand.
Fowler A Campbell.
WANTED.
100,000 feet of Soft aud hard maple tn lum­
ber or logs 13 feet long. Will pay highest
cash price.
J. Lentz de Box’s.

PAY UP.
All those indebted to tb8 undersigned will
please call aud settle their account without de­
lay, as my books must be balanced by Jau. 1st
1883. Don’t forget this.
__________________ Hexht Roe

nrWe have just received a lot of new Over­
coats that for Style, Quality and Price can't be
beat
’
Fowler A Campbell.
er Rubber boots and Shoes,
100 palm Rubber boots,
50 pairs of Buckel artic,
25 pairs self-acting overshoes,
50 pairs Rubbers,
G. A. Trcmax A Sox.
A Christmas dinner, no mattar how
it Incomplete without one of those
Roost* pat up at Durfee'* market.

iu

EWMta; Hattie Peckham, having taken a
thorough course In embroidery under the tui­
tion of one of the beat art bits of Chicago, ta
prepared to do embroidering in a satisfactory
manner. Leave orders at The News other.

MONEY TO LOAN,
On Real Estate at tow rate of Interest at

O' Photograph and Autograph Albums,
Handkerchief and Glove Boxeiu rocket Books,
Odor Cases. Toilet Setts. Vases nnd 'many
other articles. Shall be pleased to show you
our stock.
11alb the Druggist.

ty Bring your Butter, Egg* and dried ap
Silcs direct to us and we will pay you the cash
or them.
Fowler A Campbell.
ty After a most rigid examination ot the
Crown Sewing Machine we can reccosnmend it
to buyers as a first class machine. The work­
ing parts are perfect in material and conatructlou aud embrace all the late improvements of
all machines. We bare bought one for cur
own use. exchanging in part payment the
Remington, and are highly *aU«fied with our
exchange.
A. C. Buxton.
OT DUNHAM’S to the only place you can
get solid packed Oysters. Tn- them and you
will be pleased.
Cap. Dunham.

DON’T FORGET THIS.
jwYou can exchange your old machine for
one of those elegant Crowns.
. eTr White at Kocher Brom.
ar Call and see our Urge and elegant a»Boruncnt of Gents Furnishing Goods, just in.
Prixdle A Chifmax.

REMOVAL.
HOME* IN MICHIGAN.
‘ I have removed my stock just acroM lhe
It is daring the winter mouths that plans for street U&gt; the Erb baQ&amp;r
- -------- new homes are generally discussed, especially many articles suitable
among the farming population, and this to an Eve: ything very cheap.
I. F. Maxbfxaol
especially suitable time, therefore, to call the
attention ot readers of this paper to the fact
ty Highest Market Price paid for OaU.
that the pamphlet upon “Michigan and its ReBrooks, Marshall A Co.
courcea," published by authority of the state,
aud containing an excellent map, together with
A FEW THOUSAND DOLLARS
a large fund ol information concerning its re­
markable re ources and Its unoccupied lands, To Loan on good Real Estate Bcc^ri^:RJ. w
will be sent free of charge to anj- address on
application to the Commtoatoner of Immigra­
tion. Detroit An epitome of this jmmnblet direct from the factory or John Holland at
has been printed in the German and Holland Fleming’s, took foe the sign of the Gold Pen.
contemplating a change of residence may ren­
der them valuable service by sending their adW The finest dtoptav ot Meats iu seven
counties at II. Roe’s. There to the place to get
a choice roastjpf steak.

ATTENTION PATRONS.
Owing to sickness In ray family
on you to settle up at once, in &lt;
can pay for my goods. Please do
notice pass unobserved and oblige

THAT HUSBAND OF MINE
hto Tea at
G. A. Trcmax A Sox.

tf It to wonderful to think that FlkmiXl
cm supply all our wants for the Holidays in the
«7* D. L. Dvbfsb’s prepared Mince Meats line of silver Ware.
appreciated by the good housewife. Try It
BRING IN YOUR OATS!
and sec.
___________
We want a cirload and will pay highest
•5TDon
arDon’t forget that we are selling all
nil of
c
rice.
10
A S. Inokmox A Sax.
Crockery and Glassware AT COST !
Fowler A Campbell.
TAXES! TAXES!

NOBBY ULSTERS.

Dg men and loya, the most fa*hiotu»G. A. Txl'max’ A Sox.
George Spencer got kicked by ahoroe.
C. R. Palmer luu bought a hone of
WANTED!
1085 bushels of Ctorar Seed.
Gill Lapham.
Brooks, Marshall A Co.
No. 9 Hchvol began mondav Geo.
Moaey teacher.
There w*a a surprise party at J. K.
Wilcox's Tuemiyy night,
arMenv Christmas I Holiday Goods
Mr. Gateway, of Linoon Neb., is visit­ ecdtoM prariutoa at Anna Nichols’ store.
ing hia sister Mie. Baker.
FOR SALE,
I. J. Brooks of East Bal^more
been made happy again, it’a a girt,
Glasgow
A certain young man got left

SPRING BEDS.
। to Braun Bros., Naahrille, and get the

GOODS AT COST.

�“that’s ttie third bnrband y«&gt;u’vr&gt;
TDjght.h.iVft been a gri-t~m;il—he ca«u- nlip! I begin to think it’s all your bad ’.tin’? Ji-e pl.ic-- wbl be alive with tbetn,
m-n. -woroe-’. «n&lt;! children. A Her the
idly alltidi i to his dav’s &gt;d»e’&gt;tnre,,‘ jw rasnagranwnt. And this was a dreadful
Dr. Ptmgrih. KalaiiutAXb Mich.. wHI semi to
'-r »wd bM . a hered and been m *der'hemover h'*« broilad h.’nu
egg**1 likely man, too.’*
•ely wivlMod up, two ••gin.’r’l*” are *iiy «ppli&lt;-urii fnll information aud te&lt;tt(menial
A-* for Mr. Stark Moreau, he aearoely
.weak c&gt;-ff.e, and -frw*hly-Hed craltens '
meewniiis Baa-Phura, the Hv-dthbringer -for
“Oh, by-ttre-wav, Squire," *aid he; dared tn breathe freely until he was in nhoaen from among the _m'Mt famous Woman. ■..... _.
,.................... .
•torn-dhneker* o-» the ground, and lhe*r
to his landlord (up* in the A&gt;limt&lt;(fctek» ■ the Lake Champlain steamer.
Genuine MmpUdty ut heart tea hcahng and
all landk»rd-.am “S-jntre*,’’ mid an U-;
He had m-'rely intended to amn«e •f.K-ewl tn divide the ahuekera Into two
. cementing power.
•artie*. later omers reporting altereverytwdy tlsi), “1 came across your : h'.nrcR by a little flirtation with a wood­
rtv to one &lt;&gt;&lt;te dr the. other, ao a* to
district.rchoh’-h.»T:w to-dav.”
! land beauty; but the matter bad become
WHY WELCOME!
v »ep the fnrc*« equally divided. . The
“Diflye,"though?” said the tavern*-' decidedly Mrioua.
•*
What makes Flnrcshm Cologne welcome on Hi.iuuwii'J .
11M
rjrt. *t&lt;*p, which is one of great hfipor* every lady’s toilet table is ft* lasting fragrance MuMiaviU*.
keener. *&gt;Wal- ii.iw, aiuT that- kind o' ,
And perhaps be needed the leeeon.
,
•v ce, is to divide the corn-pile. This and rich, flowery odor.
eur’u*? M’hy, it’s :kc&gt;p’—the di—, trick Flirting young men sometimes do need
i'» v*!** 1 y toward the north j
- done bv laying a fence-rail scrtxs the
AChoo!—by my r&gt;i-w, Ketury Spikes!" . \v**on&amp;.^-JSaturday Night.
It ought to bi a cold day wlirn suinmer gets
.•in of the-onrn-pile, so that the vert'C-U WL
Ketamh Snikei!" renoated Mr. Mo-1
Charlotte
■
r
Kalon Rapid*.
■»lnne. passing throuzh-the rail, will 4iremi, rather taken aback.
Sap-Sncker Shooting.
DON’T DIE IN THE HOUSE.
l
ie
the
pile
into
two.
equal
portions.
Somehow, he had a-soKsiated soma
Ask
drtiggl-,!*
fi.r
“
Rough
on
’
Rata.
”
I
apirii broke,
Laying the rail is of great imnorUnne, rfeam &lt;» trat-c
Severn! of the smaller American
I very different Bpmenclatartf with the |
jll4» |HSO
ijirins'itiit rutiad
bed-bugs, roai-li,**, vermin
••nee noon this depemls the ao-*uracy ot
unce purvw juy
fair one with thu golden locks. “Keth- j
tie
division;
it
is
aeoompnnied
WESTWARD,
one kind, the oneof which I am writing,
rah” did uot seem to suit her at all.
f
’
'■ IGc'iC
vith much argument, n«t to sav wrang­
“Tea, Ketury Spikes/’said mine host’. ever pecks holes for the purpose of get­
t poor old ranld with fading check
HTh+lONH. i Exr.
Toil* on ta'Ut enrty in.'&lt;rnlna.
ling. The position of lha rail being de- unlcM he h*tu utretigth of character to l&gt;e wick“Natui-4 after an aunt as was expected ting, at tho sap. He is named by natd••rntined, the two generate tnonnt the
to leave hr.r money, but didn’t. w Pretty raltets Cenlurtu CaroiinM. He u a very
smart gnl, though, Ketury. Don’t need cunning bird. One of his habits i* to sum-pile, and tho work begins The FORTUNES FOR FARMERS AND MECHAN­
Jar kirn,.-.----nftvo around the bole of a tree just fa*t
ICS.
i-cesgi’v f »r the “gin’r’ls” to ocno legacy to Uxist her along.*’.
Rhea Junction,
•npy the .mb«t consnicuons position a&lt;$'Thousands of dollar* cun !&gt;c saved by using Eaton Rapid*,..
“I should think not,*’ remarked Mr. enough to Reep nearly hid from you as
moHjor) lift* the xlirond of rran,
you walk nround trying to get a good
dv.td ptwsertmly airawln*.
•e-sible, ,jr&lt;inj which to Meer their fr*L proper judgment in taking earc of the licrtih Chari Otte,
Moreau.
•
•w«rar L one reason wh^they get up of yourself and family, it you are Bilious, Vermottvlllfc,.
“ Got a history, Ketury has," went on look at him. This ho will continue to
have »Il&lt;iir complexlou. poor appetite, low am! NsahviUa
•n ton of the com; but them is another, deprewed rplriu, and pperally debilitated, do
tlie landlord, whose name was Lemuel do for a considerable length of time, but,
qually important, which te to keep the not delay a moment, but go at once and pro­ il*.u mood,—..
fipally getting the ir-xi-trank fairly be
Stites.
nil from Irtrng moved, it being no nu- cure a bottle of tb&lt;*c wonderful Electric Bit­ Grand Raptda,.
“Indeed!"
. tween you and him, he takes to his gay
•»mmon. thing for one side to change ter*. which never fall to cure, and that for the
“Dlsapp’lnted!" said Mr. Stiles. wings and fli(H in such a liae as to keep
triRing ram o» fifty cent*.—Tribune. Sold by
Usually ho •he p wition of tho rail, and thus throw
“Engaged to bo married.
Voting man hidden from, your eyes.
Thruurli Ccmcbe. and Hlccplntt Car* to anti from
Grand Rapid* and Detroit. All train* connect la
• n jmdue portion of their Work upon
give leg-bid! and enhsted, and went to says good-by with a keen squeal itsshe
Naturally bitter; There Is a fight over quinine «at.i« depot at Detroit with Great Wcvteru, Grand
•elr adversaries.
The position of*
. ,
Florida to fight the Injuns. And Ketury starts away.
trunk and Canada Southern Railway*.
In
thetnorket
and
It
1*
naturally
a
bluer
one.
■ •in’r’l” in a •nrn-*hncker differs from
Down in the mountain .valleys of
she made a vow."
K. V. BROWN.
H. B. LEDYARD.
k SEIUOUS'MISTAKB.
A**’t Gcn'l fiupt-Jackaon. Ucn’l Bnp’t Detro
“Never to marry?" asked Moreau, Northern Georglt I used to amuse my­ "hat df the «nldi«r, in.that the former is
CATARRH OFTHR BLADDER.
O. W. RraouaS,
self with watching the little half-naked , -) greater danger than any of his folStinging, sniartlne, irritation of the urltpry
Geh'lFa*»*ndTfeket Aucnt.Cbleag
•• And this, I suppose, is the village quickly.
negro
Boys
trying
to
shoot
sap-sucker*
|K*.«agVM,
dlMUtecd
dlAchnrge*.
cured
by
BuChu»wara; for the chance* are that, should
“No, td marry the first. Identickle
■chool-hou-e," sain Mark Moreau, as,
d&lt; side seem to bo gaining, one of their pabla. *1. at dru*zfet*. Mieh. Depot, FAS.
Such a
«... deep
—r gloom of the I\ chap as axed her,” retorted Mr. Stiles, by.means of their blow-guns.
BU8H,
•merging from the
E. DAVIS &amp; CO.. Dctn.il, Mich.
•pprinen's will knock tho lender off the
Adirondack woods, he stood in the little with a grin. “Our gate np here in the blow-gun ns they had is a straight rwd
“THL'BOSS"
’
• &gt;m-plle, and thne can«e a momentary
. cleared space, where the grass was as Adirondack* is .plucky, they is. -But or cane about six feet long, through tho
General Grant will spend numt of the winter
’.inio, which is eagerly taken advantage at Washington.
whole length of which a smooth boro fa
__a fine as -i:
-------somehow
close and.
velvet,
the
scent ofKetury never got tho chance.
■f-.
This
proceeding,
however,
h
oonmade
by
punching
out
the
jointe.
Tho
Fellers
is
scarce
in
these
pans,
ye
see.
white clover filled the air, and' a small,
IXPORTAXTYOTRAVELKBR,
Idered fair only in «ettreme oases, and
one-storied house, painted the dull color Yon ain’t a marrying man, be ye, Gran­ arrow used in this gun is mado of a
Special Inducentet.U are offered you by the
wh»vL would now bo called “Venetian ger?" with a sudden speculative gleam sharp piece of cane-wood not longer n.'t unfreqnentiy leads to a general Burtkurton'Route, It will nay you to read'their
row.
If
it
is
po&lt;rib&gt;e,
imagine
a
negro
or
larger
than
ip
knitting-needle,
with
a
tn
his
dull
eyes.
•red," rustled beneath the bough* of a
advertisement* to be found ebewberrin thia
ball of cotton-lint brand on the cud op. man standing np on a pile of corn^old- Issue.
Moreau smiled.
monster oi.vk sralnut tree.
“Only
QLEMEMT SMITH,
ng In hi* hand. an ear of corn, and
“ I might be,” said he. “If yon would posite tho point” Tho arrow is blown
there’s no village worth mentioning,
••Ye* air,” hcaaid, “I’m a Democrat, and I’ve
shouting
the
word*
of
n
song
bejow,
and
out
of
the
gun
by
tho
breath
from
trie
kindly
pve
mo
a
letter
of
introduction
unless you .choose to call the'stage station
Attorney at Law,
got the 1A!W hat to prove IL”—*
♦on
will
have
pictured
tho
“
corn
gin
’
r
’
l.
”
one. t'pon the whole, this portion of to Miss Spikes I Wieve I will try my shooter’s mouth. It flies with so groat
the world .«ecuis to be still In its primi- luck with her. Jor, to speak tho truth, force that I have seen a bird killed »t a it is a prime requisite that he should hi
Bad taste in the nu.utb unpleasant breath and
I was exceedingly plen-ed with what distance of forty yards. Some of the ••endv in hte.improvisations nnd have a Impaired hearing, when resulting from Catarrh,
( th e condition.”
little negro boys were very skillful in gis&gt;d voice, so that ho may lead in -the are overcome, and the nasal paoqgts which have
Mr. Moreau bad been fiching all day. little I saw of her this morning.”
The corn-song te a’.mo-t been closed for vears are made free by the use
“Sartin I will!" said Mr.‘Lemuel using the blow-gun, and as sly as cats in nnrn-aong.
His ‘creel was well-filled, his lunch­
of Elya’Cream Balm. Price 50 cents'. ■
.
creeping up close to a bird before shoot­ *1 ways’* song with a chorus, or to use
Stiles.
“
And
I
tell
you
what,
stranger,
J AMES k. SWEEZEY,
basket empty; his India-rubber boots
Apply Into nostrils with Httlefiitgcr.
he
language
of oorn-shnekera, the
Many people in Northern
besplashcd wiih mud; his countenance there ain’t many gals like my niece, ing at it.
Ely*’ Bream Haltn'.haa complefly cured me of
Georgia have China trees on their lawn*. “gin’r’ls give out,” and the shockers Catarrh, of which 1 have been ofllicted over ten
' .
'
bronzed with a. fine, healthy sunburn. Ketury.”
Attorney &amp; Counsellor,
As Mark Moreau sat before the,big Tho berries of these trees intoxicate ot “drone. ’ ’ These suing* are kept np con­ yean*, after teylng Almost every remedy recom­
He was tired out, with joints aching,
mended. none having proven so effective and
nn*e b’islered, face swollen with the un- fire of logs, which the chilliness of the render drowsy tho robins which fe«*d tinuously during the entire time the thorough- 8- J- AlKKN, Wholetale Dealer in
Iniermitling attacks of the block flies September evening rendered npt un­ upon them, and then the poor b’rtte are work is going on, and though extremely Boots and Shoes, 143 Federal fit., BoMon, Mass
and tnoequitos. And yet he exiled this comfortable, ho smiled to himself with a killed very easily by 'these blow-gun rimole, yet, when sung by fiftv pairs of
Ely's Cream Bolin la the beat remedy I have JJI.iCK &amp; SOX,
Nlmruds; but.the sap-sucker nevhr eaui Itp'v lungs, there are few things more ever sold for the cqre of Catarrh, Hay Fever,
Mephistophelran satisfaction. '
••caoital sport!"
Cold In the Head.&amp;c. Il affects a cure In all
“ At all events,” he thought, “this berries of any kind, so he keep/ sober stirring.^—7/rc Century.
“ Hello, ynu, sir!” said Moreau, to a
mot every case, and give* relief Immediately.
riy, white-headed little urchin, who was will open tho -way to a pleasant little, and giyes his persecutors groat trouble,
C. r.. Holmes Druggist, Ann Arlxir. Mich.
German Shovels*
coming down the hill with a pail. flirtation. And, if worst comes to worst, nearly always 'Outwitting them, for
I can but follow the example of the birds, like people, racecod "better by
“What’s in that nail?"
‘•There’* many a true word spoken in Jest”
keeping clear of everything intoxicating*.
Florida volunteer.”
The other dav Chicago nnd I were Ye*, but Mae people never Jest.
Monnmcr.ta, Toxnhrfcnea, Mantles, Ac.,
•♦ Nothin.’, sir,” was tho answer.
All that evening Mr. Lemuel Stiles,
In our Northern States, where the nasdng olon* tuo Ftreet whore soma
What are yon doing with it?”
imps. Mich.
who, ar-cording to his own frank ad­ winter is very cold and all the maples m -ti were at work shoveling sand. At
HOW.SHF. SAVED HER DARLING.
“Goin’ after water.
mission, was “not scbolard," wrestled and ash and hickory trees are frozen .*o
“1 aha 11 not feel hi nervous again aljout ba­ TTAMTIXuS HOUSE,
&lt;-a«t they had l&gt;een nt work, but were
. “ Is there a spring hereabouts?”
by*
teething,"
write*
a
ipatcful
timlher.
"We
that
their
sap
will
not
flow
into
our
with a sheet of paper, a musty ink­
then enjoying their noon rest. They
" i’es, sir.”
bottle, and a stump of a non, and at bird’s pots,-he is oimpelled to depend hsCd left their «Hovq1s sticking in the iiIm&lt;L«t lost &lt;&gt;ur darhng from cholera infantum,
Moreau nodded his head.
upon the cedar trees tor food, since their *snd bean, and as we had beeu looking but itapplly heard of Parker's Ginger Tonic in
N. T. PARKER, Prop.
“Good!" said he- “Show mo where ten o’clock produced tho following docu
time. A few spoonfuls foou curptl baity, and
resinous
sap
Is
not
affected
by
the
cold.
mont; not without a certain grave tri­
at the Germ in shovels for some tlma an iKxaefunal dore keejn. us la good health.’'—
it is. and I’ll give you a penny."
This to the leading repre$eutatlvc hotel of Often I have seen him pecking away nt 1V
ith curious eves, ’we seized tho oppor- Brooklyn Mather.
with
Tho little Ind, nothing lotb, ran light­ umph:
J l«ktti)|t*. Rate* reasouable.
the gnarled bole of an evergreen when tunity to
,v. test them,
I do not by nnv
ly on in advance, until he reached the
Man pnqxwi-.f, God disposes,—but It take* a
&gt;••••&lt;*» mtooran, this u to tntrrtincc mr.
* want to convey the idea that I
J^ATMBUN HOUSE.
•
spot, beneath a huge, gray rock, where mark mam. trim Want* n Wife, and you want tbc thermometer’s mercury stood ton moans
woman
with
her
hair
down
to
be
iudispoMsl
a tiny stream of waler bubbled into a a Hnabaml. autl there** a pare of von. From degrees below zero, and the air was am an expert in shovels, for I am not. when anybody calls.
k. B. ANTISDEL, Paoraiwroa.
your ufectlonetc Undo, to boiuiuh!.
fairly blue with winter’s breath. Even Neither is Chicago. But In our younger
rude stone ba^in, worn by iu continued
'
I. ftrtijta
in Georgia it is sometimes so cold that days, before we grew old and stiff, wo
p
Grand lUipld*. Mlobu
BUCKLEN;S ARNICA SALVE.
“I guess that there’ll do tho busi­ he chooses the pine' trees, finding be­ both of us had tossed the .golden, shim­
“ Here it is. mister," said he; “ and
Tlie U-*t solve in the world for Cut*. Bruises,
ur,,.„K sand a litllo, w
so we tackled those Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum. Fever Sores, Tetter,
ness," said Mr. Stiles, with pardonable tween their bark and tha underlying ,mering
here s a gonrd-ahell to drink outen."
wood
a
sort
of
diluted
turpentine,
upon
uhovnte.
We
shoved
them
into
the
sand
CLsprxnl Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all ttoaay.
And Mr. Moreau drank a deep, long pride, as he smeared out a blot from tho
which he feed*. While badly engaged heap with that peculior motion in which Skin Eruption*, and poritlvdy cures Piles. It
loop of the L with his coat-cuff.
draught.
is guarautt-eti to give perfect satisfaction, or
“Sweet a« champagne,” no said, . Mark Moreau glanced over it rather pecking his holes on cold, windy days, th&lt;« knee is so great A help and filled money refunded. Price 25 eente t&gt;er box. For
he
te
not
so
watchful
as
in
fine
weather,
them
full.
Thea
we
depressed
our
dubiously.
“and coolerthnn ice!”
ralebyF. T. Boibk.
“If she wasn’t such a little beauty,” At such times I have seen a little negro | right hand’.and with onr left as fulcrums
And he flung the penny to tho expect­
Up a» Saginaw they have a man bo plum be
ant Ind, who. having secured his largess, ho thought, “this would seem rather a “blow-gunner” stick three or four ar- tried to lift the shovel and deposit its
e»Hy ■lutplIS'd.
rows
into
the
soft
bark
all
around
tho
I
contents
over
our
left
shoulders
and
wo
won
’t work on Sunday, Irat he’ll curse another
But those sap­
apeediiy filled hU pail and trudged up Quixotic enterprise.
*Jfy friend,” mH the druggitl; "yon haro a l»mo
•
phire-blue eyes would light a man over busy bird before it would fly, and have RI1Ceetded tolerably well; that te, the man 'or asking him to.
the hill once more.
been just as much surprised at tho boy : success was not such m would fili with
“Johnny! Johnny! what keeps you the very Turpeian cliff!*
FEVEff'AND AGUE.
nt th,,
the bird
bin!;• hiwano*.
because, if it was strange on
(:nvv
w the soul of an exitert
expert in the man
man­
Inmi Now I keep only a few. *u&lt;! aell moat uf
And tho next morning he proceeded as at
ao long?"how the bird could be so busy as nut
not to | imitetion
Ipufation of tho
the shovel., But wo did
Arc you troubled with Ague, Chills and Fe­ HI •- »N ' A I-''INErOROUS FLAHTHi: Wl.u
It wM a sweet, bell-like voice, aud straight to the school-house.
ver, Bilious Fever, Remittent or Intermitting Berauae »lwy are the bwf J have Akbck's tba
. “ Bub!” be said, to a red-haired boy notice- an arrow •♦chucking” into She j tnlerabb. well. Half of the lotul slid off Fever, Night Sweats or any diaeasc that comes
Moreau Ik'ctind to it with a sort of
c:—
--------- 1 1 whm.
*
—* of
-* tho
strange
we raised the shovel’ out
dreamy satisfaction, as he lay there who wm shallling his feet outside the tree close by him, it was equally
from Malaria or disordered Liver and Hot
uld “htand it" gand bank.
The obher half began to Suns i If ao, procure a bottle of Green’s Ague
how that little negro conic
•AH right, do mu i
amonii the ferns staring np at the sky. door, “La Mbs Spikes within?”
“ Just come,” said the boy. “School to be out so long in such a mold, raw follow suit, and succeeded in parting Couquenir, which Is an acetic extract of rtrong
“The echunl-ma’am, in all probabil­
tonic roots, c .tnblnwl with Sulphate of Mag­
wind
with
nothing
on
but
1
a
shirt!
—
company
with
the
shovels
jurt
as
those
ity,’’ he said to him&lt;elf, and turned half­ ain’t in yet. Wants six minutes o’ nine
nesia.
etc.,
and
pcwtlrely
contains
no
Quinine.
Maurice Thontpson. iu St. Nicholas.
instruments were exactly over our left Arsenic or other poiaous. 11 purifies the blood CAit'INK eut in the uzMd.c of the H*»l»r, prov­
way around, among the green “hart’s- yet."
shoulders, and it ran down our shirt
“Give her/his slip of paper, please,"
cleanses the liver, spleen and other secretive ing it to b« iouulne."
tongues" to ree what manner of femalp
collars, got into our eyes, filled our organs so effectully that, the chills will not re­
said our hero, “ and tell her I am wait­
Practical Education.
ibeua-.
mouths, which we bad incautiously turn. We hare never found any case of Fever
.
IL-ii'id,-and dimpled, and rosy, with ing onu-ide."
The Rural New Yorker, in comment­ opened to make a few appropriate re­ and Ague It will not cure. Price, M cents aud An only Daughter Cu.ed of
Half a minute later there was a rush
hair Hke br..id&gt;*&lt;l sunshine, big blue eyes,
tl.OO per bottle. One large bottle has cured as
Consumption.
and ebeeks pinker than tho wild-roses like that of a buffalo, and a tall, lean ing upon the methods of education 01 the marks, and made iteelf generally fa­ fire in one family. Sold by all draggbus and
15 Jan S3
Wliend-mh
hourly r.*p&lt;-e&lt;c.l all moediM
. even i&gt;i»w scattering their petals over female, with a scanty knot of fox-colored present day, says: “It was Charles miliar and unpleasant with our persons. dealers everywhere.
havinc tailed, tad Dr. H. .lam** waa •xperlmentWe went away, from there, and the
li-r taco. Mark raised himself on his hair screwed on tho top of her head, Lamb who said that his Idea of educat­
The friendship composed cliiefiy of expecta­ h&gt;« wiih the manyjlu'rh* of CafcaUa. ho accident*
ing
a
girl
wan
to
turn
her
loose
in
a
welllaughter
of
the
resting
workmen
grated
watery blue eyes, high checc-bouas* and
ally made a prvpnraiioa which wired til* only child
tion
of
reaping
a
reward.
ofConvhDtpUon. Hl*child know in thi» country
•• She’s a beauty,” he said, half alouu badly-fitting ’false' Seth, flung herself chosen-library. Of coarse he wat think­ harshly upon our ears—that is, upon our
The foe who arms himself with ridicule and and enjxytait k»m*1 bwvith. Ho ban proved u&gt; ih«
—“a wild-flower &lt;.( the wilderness. on his shoulder, a fo.provincial thep- ing of a girl m a companion, hot as a right ears, for the left ones were so full
clerk or a lawyer.
In our own case, of sand that they grated anyway. These Striker, with satireAnd n«&gt;t a bit like the ideal district ters.
et-h *o1-h aoher.
1’11 get acquainted
“When I seen you go by the tavern some of the brightest n:&gt;d most intelli­ Germans shovels are a «nare and a d»
of the many wdelightful
„---------------------------- o------- women
--------------we
... lusioR, and we never see one now with1883.
with that girl, or I’ll know the reason yesterday, I felt you was mv counter­ gent
part!” sighed thia gentle srazeiie, with a meet have never had a college educa- I out smiling a pitying *”&lt;! disdainful
Roeeatrevt.Philadelphia, naming thl»paper.'
•He left his creel and rod among the strong scent of friedonion.-iin her breath; tion, know nothing of mathematics, and : smile upon the poor vic ims who have
g«a&gt;s and wild-flowers, by the clear lit­ “but little did I dream as yon were so not much of science; but instead, have to'worry along through life using them,
dipped
deep
into
good
literature,
and
An
American
shoyel.
a&lt;
everyh
&gt;dy
tle spri&gt; g, and walked slowly up the near me in soul. I was a-setting on the
ILLUSTRATED.
stoop path.
.
back-door stop when you went a-pa*t. can take ah intelligent interest in, nnd knows, h.a« a nice, comfortable hollow
The Ireanty.in the pink-calido dress did I had the face-ache, and Fanny Dorel give a sound opinion upon, the great In it, so th»' the sand c m not very well
questions of.tfie day.”
tear® it, and the load w so nicely bolnot turn and.flee, as he. had half sus- she took charge of the schopl for me yes­
—- ------ ,***~.----------,
nnaed in it that one baa to pul forth hut
irected she would, but stood awaiting terday."
—“ When I look at the moon in the n,tle effort,to keep it “on a level ked.” must popular 'Humrated perthite*! In Aniartc*
him: with calm composure worthy of a
“Fanny Dorel! ’' This, then, was the
sky,” said perfumed Adolphus to a The handle te small, curved and smooth;
«•&lt;» bvllo.
Cou&lt;t «, Cold., C&lt;-n»nmptlen. Aothma Branch,tia,
name of the gold-tressed divinity who
farmer
’
s
daughter,
and
was
about
to
;
,iO thMt it ia a pleasure to preside over
4c Pkrliea wlaNne the FrewriptloM will ptaaa
•• Pardon me,”said Mr. Moreau, in- had taken his heart by storm. There
a/ldrvw, ter.EXWlLSON, IN Fran 8l, WHLUmdilate upon that luminary which is the j t|ie destinies of a sand heap—a very
venth.g the first flagrant lie that he could' 'was a misapprehension all around, aud
! stock J?
in trade of all, lovers the world . email one of course—armed with one
Mark
Moreau
made
haste
to
disengage
think of, “but I am one of the trustees
*
'
“WclL sir, did of (hem. But the Gerdtim article is dif­
of the Andover District!”
himself from Miss Keturah Spikes’ cling t
™
,
snpen to gaze at it when it fP.ent. it te rt
like a spade. ■ n that
The achoolma’am &lt;N&gt;urto*fea prettily.
wits not in the sky?” He turned away onn can not get a load balanced upon rie*. aketehia, Ac,
“I'm deeply intere iod in elementary
“There is some mistake,” he said with a sigh, and she went into the kitohbutha&lt;to exert him-elf »o keep ihe
Only BO cents a Year.
edurektion," he went on, “and’—"
hurriedly.
,
cn and was soon elbow deep in dough. ; handle from twisting in his gra«p. The
ft hi* fits! c^aa* Arrirullur*! paper, publbhed
“ I t&lt;m so sorry," said the pretty girl,
■ T. »_
.L..
* -■ 1
a
I
J, nearI v straight, te large, and
■“but It is past three o'cl-vck, and 1 am
to
F.«r&gt;yik^,"
h'piMdol.
V
r
. generally rough and knotted. Taking
ju&gt;t going to dismiss the children. Per­
“It wwKrtu^h S^ike«nl»Jn raookh. ’uch f
2/troM.
j them altogether, I am afraid I don’t ad­ HARBOR’S MAGAZINK
hap- you would call to-morrow,- if you
HARPER’S WKBKLY..
A.4.~
don’t Itr- raid th. Udr, with gathering
_A preulhor*nd a merchant nt Wai-1 mire German shovels.—Berlin Cor. Son HABFI.RS BAZAR
arc ‘taxing io this neighborhood?"
“Uh, certainly," said Mr. Moreaa, clouda upon bw brow
ton, Ga, awapped now, the other day. ' Frandsw Chronicle.
HARTKR’N YOUNG FKOFLK--------- ------ - 1 «.
with a vague idea that he was beingMy dear Mimi Spies— he began, j jjoth of them think they know a good
—A Michigan man had a large twaa" HARPER’S MAGAZINE
-ttllnro Kwmdb- ^U.d.
X fleah when Urey ran lt,\nd
(3W
baffltxl by she dimpled, daisy-faced
of huckieberriee which he was too lazy KARPKR-8 YOUNG PROPI.E I
thing, who could
not have
been ’ aday
day ‘ “I ran that I1 __
--------- -------------am inlrndtrur —
on the ,
borated to hi, frienda what a to pick. The frail thus left attracted UARPEKW EBAN KUN cMfUARE LIBRARY,
-“certainly! Perhapsyou busiest
iwl part of your day,” he
be wgeu.
rmu.
™„j
mKje. b„t when swarms of gatherers. The oWner care­
“Snhrxil
I ".SLT. *
._____ at_______ l_____ * .u-s_
wn in ibe direction of the ‘
School ta*nhin'&lt;
toachin’ ah*'
ain’ tir-thin
nothin’ , whon
w
fully collected all the Bttmes, and eaad
the tenderrat feelin’s of the bear
each for trespass. Al! went willing to

£

BOOT AND SHOE MAKER,
HAHHVILLE, . KICK.

American and Foreign Marble,

&lt;14 -

SIFTED THEM OUT,

Harper's Magazine

CONSUMPTIVES.

“SOUTH &amp; WEST,"

HARPER’S PERIODICAL

ERRORS OF YOUTH

dr. Mark Moreau , our 1
the bland bright- thia

Tbr 1** Eifht VotaBM of Hurper'J
In nMirtotb biMlnc. will t*
l», mwl. pmiMM. w. rrrri).. of » W l*r V&lt;4UOW. Cfoth &amp;M&gt;

�Territories bmtuded
and c .loced:

in Jntfm

To Advertisi.rs:

—H yonr M»n has no brains, do not
send -him t. .tnlegje. You cmiwa. make
a balloon out &lt;&gt;: a abaaty by treattng it
to a Frcfinb rooi. — H -Yn’MlI Tirr.n.'
‘—Dr, Jo*- h »V. Taylor, a Quaker,
hna levt
«J :o ound uii iiwtltmfott*
for the eitni nlb’n
’
aon at Bryn
to be under

tlie I n.t-'d btatrs te, a member of Some
M'ange.'real church, and one in every
fifty -nix b a Sabbat .-school teaeher.
PERUSE THRHEf UWJUL AD.BATB&amp;.
—'Ibe English &lt; hureh has established
“ Bpaea.
M mon- 18 •** I ”
TH nioa a Ohyiwtian tuition at /rfua, a toWn
600 | ZS.00 w hit h reaches furtner baric than tbe call
FEto I
14.00 ot Abraham. Jt wtm on the way to G«u
iauo I" tooo that Philip bHptixud the eunuch of
piioorjstdio Ethiopia t
*—’1 be will of the lata Rov. Dr;
|_ft.00 1 30.00
Georgi* Mregruv.' oequenths MO.00D to
larger ads. gives upoti ap;&gt;!lr-*ti&lt;n», Brin cton Co.lege, el 2.000 to the PresBu»&lt;iic&gt;A cards of five lluos or Uv«. ff&gt; j*r yr.
Load N&lt;«lcr», ten cent* a tine for 0r«t Inara-. hyU riAn.Upsp.tai of I’liiladelj h a, and
Don and eight cents tor s*ch subsequent mtw- if i.OO • to tbe Theological bomin&amp;ry of
Ht*
ton.• ‘
O1L2NO MTTRODKi.
—'I he anth'irfth’s of Cornell Univar­
Editor and Proprirtor.
sity h.ive negrH.:tred the nalaof a largo,
jwrt of tie* institution s Western lanita.
by which about «&gt;2,(4W,0ti &gt; will be real­
. Ad. A few months‘ngo sales-were’
made to the amount of •?'&gt;00.000.
The
lan 1 nndb|MMed of belonging to the
'ILLAOK OFFICERS.
L nlverslty an- .’50,‘X«0 acres of pine
Prerfdent—EHbu Chlproau.
lamia and .ti',000 or 00,000 acrea of
imming laml-. — A’. Y. Tima.
TYcamrvr—Frank C. B4w.
Amctm«.w—John E. Barry.
—The ttapttets are extending .heir'
Mar*hail—L. G«cgory.
Trwleo*—IL A- Barber, F.T. BoAm. H. W. mission in 1ml.a ami Burman. Recent­
Demamy, H. IL Dickiumm, U. M. Lee mid ly the following mbaionaries sailed
fb«». Lentz. •
Iro n New York. Rev. D. K. Bayfaod
wile and Rev. E. Chute uit wife, who
^orictiri.
are to reside in Ongjiil, India.
Rev.
B. I*. Cross and wife, Rev. L. J. Dench-,
/CHRISTIAN UHURCH-F A. Hl«ri,Pa*tor. field and wife, Rev. J. E. Ca-c, Mrs. M.
VJ Serrirea every Sabbath at 10Jft&gt; a. u&gt;. and &lt;. Douginas, Mrs. F. H. Eveleth and
7 p. m. Sablatb irinml at 12 m. Prayer meet­ M as Ifimn go to Burmab.—CAnsfiun
ing every Thuraday evening
Union.
— It is reparted tbaf during the three
vrrrnoDiBT episcopal church-a.
years
in which Mr. Henry M. Stanley
1»L D. Newton, Paator. Service* every Sab­
bath at 10.40 a. in. and ip.ni,
BnbbaUi has been.conducting the Belgian Ex­
school al 12 tn. Prayer r-ecunjj every Thurs­ ploring Expedition on the Congo in
day crewing.
A rica. he has never had a quarrel with
the natives, and lias .su- ceeded in es­
VY LODGE NO. 37, K. of P., meet* at It* tablishing four trailing stations. This
Castle Hall, Naehville, Michifcau. every
Friday evening, for the rnenurakemeut and a ords ire-'h evidence that explornt on
support of air worthy, true, rfca*ifa*&gt;t tad hon- 1 mhng savage tribes ran be conducted
rable Brother Kntahj*.
■ on Christian principles, and Hint the
D. L. Smith K. R. s. Osmo Btbuxo, C. C. golden rule la a more potent force
towanl civilization than Gatling guns’
.YSfxrellniii^iux Carrin.
or steel bayuneta.—&amp; 2L lYmcs.
"

rillt giuctovu.

I

TXT H. YOUNG. M. I). Office mat able of
11» Mam St.. N.i-bvilie. Ullirr.i mr. |;„m
7 to9 a. m., and 4 to ' p. rn.

Nome of the Ik'Iiefii fiiat Pertain
Table Accidents.
.

tn

nation

zous have roll' d back their sleeves to
the shoulder (if thev possess such in•umbrarn.es), am! have placed them­
A. FOOTE, PHYSICIAN A SURGEON.
B'-Mod a fellow's chnlr.
selves oti their knees up.&gt;n the stone
• Simwmot to Dr. Wickham. Offitc weWhen easy e inir sinners
ond &lt;U&gt;&gt;r north of the XaahviHc Huuectn-nlfluor, with the inclined rough surface ot
Mi &gt;!&lt;&gt;*n.to -Uciimond dinner^
dedcc flm d&lt;tor north ot the Wok-.&gt;ll Hou-c.
the lava rnttale before them. Upon this
Prompt atteuttoc to calls night or &lt;Uy.
stooe 'hey place, from n wooden tray,
EE 8. HULL. Graduate of Medical and
Carn nmv not be an agre-ab’e waiter handful after handful of corn, which
Surgi.-aJ dcpartrnenl ot Univcndty of behind one’s chair or eisewhere. but he hu been soaked and heated in water
Mich. Cule'a Hotel, Thoniapplc. .
This
will not sj&gt;i 1 hot soup down your buck containing quicklime in solution.
n-.r leave the print ot hbthumb, n tour alkaline substance has softened and
Til C W. GOUCHER. RlacttoFhystrfso
A-J Gurgec®. h crcpsrurf u&gt; answer an call* glnsM, nor put hiseil-otvs in yotiret e« or loo-ened the exterior c -a'iug of the
Cbai m»T b« made foe Ms •ervices
Offic* sod ,n any wav disturb the natural- rppoise ot grain 'that in ordinary milts produces
the bran. With a. long, round stone
your outward lieinj;.
held like a rolling-pin, this corn LThere is only one thing can make a
M PARMENTER, H. D. Offira or«
person wretched in both mind and body, rubbed, to a course paste, which ti*
Hall’a Drug «o&lt;*, V«rmoolrU!e, Michat once.
That i* n pair of ti-rht bads’. purfied, aa last as it is deemed suffici
/~1HAS H. BRADY, lawyer. Circuit Court Then let the waiter be care, it he wan's enny crushed, rtpon a pine board placed
V&gt; CommlMloner, Real Eatat* and !n»urancw to, but don’t tLag in any dent h’s heads billow to receive !t. This past** now goes
. Aft. Prompt alt&lt;ntu&gt;n given to all buatueM
at our feast.
Let us eat, drink ami be to the Cake-maker, who stands near the
•atrumM to my care. Conveyancing a •pedal
She takes a small piece, and,
merry, for at a feast where friends are fire
ty. (mice oppMSte Union Ho'om.
aRseiubied and Ute viands are good holding her hands vertically* pate it
M. FUNT, JR Ur, Real Erfato, and lu- every sen-e h gratified: and it is wise rapidly into a thin dbh. This b thrown
• Mtrance. Conveyancing and Collcvthmr. a to forget tho past and take no thought at oiHM upon a hot earthen plate, where
apecialty.
tor the mo- row durjig the brief hours* it u mx&gt;d thoroughly baked or roasted.
It will last.
Given that rare and sen­ Tlie tortillas thus made are collected hot
T7»MORY FABA DY, Justice of tbu Peace.
Au (jflk-e. Comer Main and BJiennan FirerU. suous atmosphere. tilled with the into closely covered ba-keta, and are
heavenly breath &lt;&gt;i exotic flowers, the sold at three cents per dozen to the ]m&gt;&lt;&gt;
LIFBIL1USEJL Merchant Tailor and deab odor of daiijjy cooking, bright with the pie who flock around, ready to carry
• &lt;*r In Ready Made Clothing, aee nic sparkle of Eght reducted from burnished them off in their hands or beneath pieces
before you purchase clothing. Fit* guarglass and gie^nnng ehiniK the blended. of protecting cloth. Enormous a.* is the
sweetness of patchouli anti jockey club' aggregate ot this manufacture, each shop
and white rose, tlie admiring glances of is eminently a reUiii ufftiir. I once asked
HATCH A CO., Manufacturer&gt; of Taffy
■ Candle*. CboaoUle Drop* aud Camel*. well dressed men, the tiashing jewels tbe proprietress of such an establish­
Fruita. Fau«-y Candles, Clear*, Tobacccw, etc., and-amiies of -beautiful women, the ment how many tortillas she would sell’
ahray* iu rtock. Second door north of toe ■ympatbotio glances of social happiness, forh dollar; she threw op her hands
post office.
and the pride of strength and enjoy­ and eyes at the visionary immensity of
ment. and he would be worse than a the transaction, exclaiming:
“Good
"IpitANK BAK Eft, Manufacturer of Boots
A and Sh'-a, pega’-”d it rawed. Repatrins cynic who could find no pleasure in guch Heaven! I could not count—a very great
But there will be a death’s many!”—Ji. II. Lamhom, in the (knpromptly attended io, at 4fhe Mun of the red a picture!
bool, east side Main St.
head at the foast. It is inoviuble.
borne one will recall the fact th^t it is
TA COH OSMU N. Urcrrman, barn near Wol­ the ennivenMuy of the death of some
A Noteworthy Trial in Belgian.
or a caretz cott Houw, First cla- turnout* at reason­ friend or acquaintance;
able rate*. Special rat** to couimerrla! meu. I-™,
gnrst
will
.piU
ll.e
.nil
England, it airpears, is not the only
Funeral and wtding partica furnlahod with car And make an allusion
to its be­ country where it is possible to have an
riage* on abort notice.
ing unlncky; or another will discover indictment fifty feet long and for a trial
T&gt;RAUN BROB.,Si»oera*k&lt; r*. Special *Uet»- that there are thirteen at table and to last a month and 0031 several thou­
AJ lion given to fine and sewed boot*, abw&gt; ■ '.‘nder which one will bo dead before sand pounds. The great Bernays mur­
repairing. AU manufactured work made from the year is ouL Bad luck (osuch mala­
der case b coming on before tbe aasizea
beat &lt;rf stock *n&lt;] warranted. Flratr'door south
propos people. Is it likely that thirteen •f Brabant as soon as the. papers arc
BUae'4 hardware.
would sit down together anywhere with­ ready; 250 witnesses will bo examined,
VV ALLAGE BEAUCHAMP, Liveryman. out there being a possibility that one of and twenty writers are occupied night
Vv
NaahvUIc' Huura Bara.
Single and the company, might die in thecourse of a and day copying the documenta, which
double turn oats fumisbsl promptly and rea- re»rP Table zbpenttttiona are as strong alone will take a month. The expenses
■wonably. Oontmen-lal men driven to neigh­ in the beat society as among the ignor­
up to the present have reached £x,000,
boring unrna at
rMea.
ant and unrefined, if one chances to and the Indictment fills a big volume.
catch a glimpse of his face in a mirror If it b read entirely,m in France, it will
when he is eating he mutt at once leave take several days. It will be recollected
the table or he will be unlucky all the that Bernays, an avocat of Antwerp,
year. It two forks are taken iipiiutead
vrdar- Wood Turning In al! tta branebo*
of a knife and a fork it denotes a wed­
ding; two s{Krons, you will be lucky in empty house in BniMebi, sitting in an
love. A guest at a dinner was once so arm-chair, with a bullet through hb
much disturbed at some discovery he heart.
A letter received from Bade
mAde in a slice of bread that he ex­ some months afterward describing the
cused himsoit, went borne and took to hb
occurrence as the result of au accident
TONAII B RABEY, Exprew sod Onunnan. bed.
Au examination of the bread in showing a pistol, and purporting to
which he had regarded with so much be from a stranger who had come from
alarpj developed the fact that it had
TTUUM R. DICKINBOM, "■^nfsefurey *f the ominous words “Beet in peace” America to see him on business, was the
first c|ew to hw whereabouts.
There
AA aad dealer in Hard Wood Lumbar. BuBd- plainly imprinted on the crust Lt was wm a certain amount of bcmblance in
learned that the baker had a brother
the atory, but It ended in the arrest of
who wax a tombetoue cutter, aud he bad two brothers, by name Peltxor, and the
pared hb oven with some work that details of die coming trial will probably
ha ! "ot been called lor, and so got tlie
rival anything related by l-^fgar Poe.—
impression of part of an epitaph on hb
St. Jama dtueiU.
ioeves. No doubt the guest recovered
when be learned ;he facto.
—Chicago b not the only citv in which
There
is
a
guarded
decorum
at
a
fash
­
/ARNO UTKONG
judges of election are justified in exV TlxlWte
ionable dinner which usually prevents
preeaing indignation over the difficulties
g7i»*to from making t hemseives either
of their labors. The following are some
etmsjiicuous or disagreeable if they have
• faculty for being’.either; but at a homo of the Boston voters: Zanlxickiwerck
dinner, where there are only a few in&gt; Warier, Wolniewiexkae Tomasi, Mnmvited guests present many absurdities ningoe&gt;ka Menuac, Zigsworeki JohanDee,
Wortgaenstegt Marcus, Youlioccur. An elderly maiden lady who
•u dining but was asked by her host eauzskiwarcka Guiseppe, Wrinwawieski
Gustav, Sirxeleckibamnbicka Zinka.—
of the fowl she preferred.
Chieaao Orrald.
4*H VILLE HOLtME,
pie**,” she replied

L

D

W

I

S

P

I- M. Flint &amp; Sox, Prop*,

all the girls say
Ete smart

nature by mLpieoe, if yom

PENGELLVS WOMjkJPS HIIESD

3t,-»

qftt'to of cabinet muitaters arid literary
S*.1S»
t*M!8
moo, ami the imolomttn-- -’&lt;m* iu uwiu•P..'«*i
Nurture ore invariahly fomtd in the humJ44IAH
h &lt;«-t native hut. Victors t &gt; the On1.77V-tf
ler.uial wHl remember In tbe ttovernnv iii building w arge r*rswhig of iha
tit Xtj
interior of a Pueblo Indmu h»ne; thn
417AM
5.141
drawing, with a very few variation-,
7HN»
would represent the h’t'-k&gt;y of a hun­
1.1UAW
HtWI
dred "thoosand ludian home* existing
TO
ffotS the borders “f .Colorado to the Mt Mlarippi.
State ’of Yucatan. MjiIze ; • everywhere;
......... .
11X478
Ut.&lt;M
Iwu-thicd-Tcif 'the cukivaioi ground in NeiiHMkiL
» vaA*...............
I8.1M
I.M
Mexico is devoted &lt;•» raising Jt. There New Hwnpabir**- XTl.iM
e:v
M.t»4
L a raying* that there hi» but two pre- New J^rsc ............... Mo; uUJ
6.‘? 11
w York ................4,TB&gt;4?
rroni-ite-i for a hotwehoM outfit bv an NNorth t aroliirtk.... taUs.uM
•»&gt;!
■Judkui couple eaDtemp'a'ing maii^mo- &lt; • I
mji»
• 101AM
by; a petale, or m*i •*! rr*«U,' which
_______ _____________ AM.V* 4JPMB7
rerre? for a carpet and a bed, and n Kbotto i-l*."l__
SOl.Ttt
REl
08417
me'atc, a lint inclined ^tono placed upon HouU»Osr»4 a*.... LtaMU
4i
i
LM7JM
.............. IJSLMI
the earthen fliwjr, on whieh to pulverize , Tenure****'
. ■ 7-7 t»tats
Two....................... »!*,"»
i.r.M
the oorn before forming it futo cakes for I Vermont c».04l
MM
MA M
baking.. I concur in the- e-iimate of J Virginia.,............... iglM*0
| wet Vtactata------ *4«.slJ
well-iiifoimed aiative*, that so general
and exclusive b thu u«e of Indian corn, ,
that, were thb crop to fail, one-third to ; AlMka...
triinn*...,............
4S
one-hslf 1 he aboriginal population would Dskot*...*..............
perish of starvation.
A sinele fnwt Oi-irioS of Colum­
102.428
bia...............
t!.C»
that,'&lt;&gt;n tlie 29th of Augu-t, 1784, in- ! Idaho
7.733
77.44
4,410
l.au
Ju red the young plant, it. b calculated, . Indian Territory..
M7»
7.93
»4*7
■
resulted in the death of 8U.000* person*. Montana..........1
104, UI.
P.*7
Yew Mexico111.7M
A population ot*'miin&gt;&gt;ns is dependent it yfc - - - ■ - -----I'j.in
M.M
Ml
1MU
4.&gt;.*
tt.43»
upon the ,&lt;-:iccejs of tho crop.
Ireland WarfiioAton
4.001
.....
8419
L* not ro dependent upon the potato, Wyotulntf....
41 sea under Unit231
sod millions in India scarcely so de­
•d-duttoaflax..pendent o|k&gt;r rice, as the Mexican peo­
statement ....
shows tho
The following---------------ple are upon maize—-now the foremost number of persons residing in the United
of &lt;&gt;\ir cereals, the monarch of.our prai­ States in 1880 who were born in foreign
rie lands, and the arbiter of istock ex­ countries:
changes; it conceals from all who will
tra&lt;xj its ancestry, from even the most All forelxu
Britain
penl«tent.botanist, every chic to its na­
countries ....8
tive valley and to the form of its tropic
y.«M'Grt«nl:ind.
Africa
progenitor.
I.
OH
-Holland....
Arfa...................
11
The tortilla shop opens with wide Alla itir Irf'nds 741T Ilunrary...
doors &lt;nx&gt;n tbe street; tho citizen may
s'And unon the flags of the sidewalk, Detain &gt;n......... 14A» Japan.
buy hb cakes, and not only obey tbe Boh-mla.......... filial latxmnbiFR.
infurtertion of the -elder Weller regard­ BrttHb Amerting veiti pie, but, while making the ac­ Ceniral Atncri787 Pacific i Alanquaintance of the chief cook, may sc.-,
■MJMI Poliut i.........
China
examine, comment upon, and, if 'm-eds Cub*
M.ia
4.917 I*ortugal....
G4.1M Ru»la.........
be, direct tbe whole process of manu­ Denmark
Sandwich 1
Europe (n o t
facture.
1,147
specified}....
,, Imagine a blacksmith's shop from France ... .. IM^Ti *otuh America ifiM
MSI
^paln.......
whiefr the Amazons have driven Vulcan, German Em.1.9W.7I2 Sweden
KM,W
Ihaving only the grimy walls, the glow- ” .......... -.............
m/tii
.
1..W
big, unchimneyed hearth, and a store of Emrtand............ (Mi.'iTB Tnrkcv.........”...
pn ircoai piled in a corner.
Ths Am*- Ireland &gt;^D4Jl7l:WeK tndtea....

Everj' mathrt’ ot daughters should
know about rt—because it brings '
health

TO GIRLS

PARKZZ- x ut

GINGERY
APartF»t!j«l«!ic*M&amp;J

TO YOUNG LADIES
TO OVER-WORKED WOMEN

To Women Adiancod In Life
Who rufTcr from not FluahM. cither before or
aftj-r choaxo, or tram auy of the irregtilaritira at-

rcoHjr peculiarto tbi&gt; MI, WILL. IEUTA1XLY

Ju___

MASON &amp; HAMLIN

noRAMS^i^^siw

LEVCOKKH4EA BULNS THV7 YTNKKT
VHMftGWV indnatrlnl &lt; wuap«l' *
COMPLEXION.—Zoa f'bura core* tho former for
State** xoar* s tx&gt;
i
iiartnir taaa kraad equal M any. *l*t&gt; Chr*
Abundant. U-sttaKmlala I have, frutn ton b»*t
aoeiety. which, with other Information aud ad- i&lt;&gt; -rtx&gt;rf» «t
»t amx ETC. «r»&lt;*t*aii
,1... will tumUh Klnul, 10 pram.
KTSi w?
RULEf-T ’’

It. PENGELLY, M. D.,

t vtktr «rrMu. Al— tur t»rr I*J »* vt»- X»w Ulsa-

DmggitUJ

PENSIONS

»s Safrfy Litjs
botjwhol'i erticJea

u*4 lnw&amp;*&gt;«•• prvctfW. Ixfrrit.i

^.u."PATEftT.3
CLIPPER MTO CO.

CD
Ci

Ml/. ay EXMllNiKv. THIS MAP, THAT THE

CO
Q

i.otu

KRCAriTULATlOV,
.Y8,811«H
lllto............ ..................
. 8.«1’,54&lt;I
Total nnUre.

ARgreKntc population.

H

,43,47MU&gt;
,J0JS6,7dJ

Cyclone Phenomena.

Dr. Andries, of the WUhelm*hsren
Ob’crratory, has recently revived in an
Austrian meteorologic*! journal the
theory of cyclones which refers their
origin and translation to the unoer at­
mospheric currents. This important de­
duction, though not original with M.
Fave, of France, was forcibly nut forth
by lh&lt;' latter scienti-t in 1877. who, in
pre renting Dr. Andries’ views to the
Paris Academy of Schnees, on the Mth
ulL, strongly sustains tbe former’s con­
clusions.
These are, in brief, that
cyclonei, tornadoes and trombus are the
same mechanical phenomena, differing
only in dimensions, and that tbe force
I pOPiti'
to which they are indebted for their pro­
.4 literally and stiiotfir true, tint Its connectiona are all of the principal W*- '»
pagation resides in the powerful cur­
-J between the Atlantic m»;l the Pacific.
rents which hold sway above the earth.
Cy ita rnato tine and brane.":J It f'eachea Ohlcnso, 4oll t, Peo»4
In sustaining these views M. Faye ar-gues from the records ot American
ry, AtiantJfi, A*oca, Atrluboa.
storms and tornnd «c* th.it as 1 heir ra­
5 aal‘i*!‘S Triton, Camwon
pidity of translation (often “that of an
express train") is so great tbeir progres­ • -itiovuio. 1 on
sive motion in regular track* can not be
due to mere difference of barometric
pressure. These stonifs rush over the
~~| *n R is famIHartr called, offers to travelers all the aflvnnt
sea or tho continent, crushing bouse*
H incldfnt to a smooth track, sate bridgwa. Union Depots nt all
and rooting up trees in the twinkling ot
\r.-.ct Cvprcas Trrirn, e?- —-i of QOMMbOlOUS, WELL V
an eye with tho enormous velocities of
- . HZATTID, FINELY UPHoU VT-:.-'7 3’ -1 RLSCtNT DAY COAO
the aerial currents encountered by
-j «O3T MAONIFICCMT HOrfTOfl liECLlNIMQ CHAIR CA33 ever
. -Jtset deanjnod and handsomest PaLACZ SLCEPIMO CARS.
aeronaut* at high levels—velocities
—] .tnst are ack non-feared t&gt;z press and people to be tho FINKS
which,cloud observations prove some­
XI rlOAD IN THZ COUNTRY, and in which »upcr;or mvaio are eer
times reach one hundred and twenty
. * |o« rate of MVENTV-FTVt CENTS EACH.
miles an hoar. There Is certainly good
THRSZ TRAINS cash »ysy between Ci"OCO and tho Mi
reason tor tbe French invirftlgator’s eonTWO TRAINS c»c»: way betwoen CHtC.-"«. -Ihd P.1INNZAPC
clu-ion that “the storm is, as our ma­
chines, a simple organ f »r the,transmisskm of force—that b, a gigantic instru­
ment which receives in the upper atmos­
phere the vit vira in its vast funnel.”
M. Faye says:—“The public has le iraed
Fast Exprase
that stortns are not generated here or
:
For more detail
tai Ticket &lt;Mkr.
there; that they come to us from Ameri­ ^*811 o.j Tickets, nt
ca on the day named, and that they are .
,8.
.
not transient dbturbances, but the dis­
Cen’J 7
play of a grand law of terrestrial me­
KiCACQ
chanics, as fixed as the laws of e-testial
mechanics.” The origin of cyclones is
a confessed my-»tery with the balk of
weather students. But if the suggestions
which this scientist and Dr. Andris
make lead meteorologists to a practical
study of the cloud phenomena and other
indications of the high aerial strata in­
stead of confining their observations to
the comparatively calm lower strata,
they would lie in aposition to give much
more dmely and accurate storm warnings
and weather forecasts than are now pos­
rsible. We live at'the very bottom of the 25
aerial ocean, but in order to know the c.2
lower air currents which affect ns it is
as necessary to trace and track the up­
per currents os it is to gauge the Golf
Stream in order to study the force and
movement of the polar stream which
underruns it on the floor of tlie Atlan­
tic.—AT. Y. Htruld.

c

0

ciotiK .Island &amp; Pacife

3

■THREAT ROCK ISLAND F

%

ALBERT LEA- ROU1

MAKE HENS LAYSSt
WHAT WILL THE WEATHER BETO

if

—The bad oow-bov from Bitter Creek
was on tlie 'Comstock laat night.
He
went Into the Gem sdoou and thus de­
scribed himself: “I’m a raca-horsa in
an advanoe aud a tortoise in retreat!

i-acket you kin
land for a grave
the “race-horae*^ found Hmaelf doubled
the dripping blood from hie none and
bulging upper lip he exclaimed; “I

CO

r

�eat Bargains
nave
ago in the vtataHy at Lordsburg. New Mexico.

R

FOREIGN.

Two Chtaw

—n

THE JfEWS.

tows.-----

GOODS

piled from Late Diapa^
Tbe loss was e.Um.ted at $500,000.
Kjtzrow A Darns, grain and provision
operators ou' the Chicago Board of Trade,
sus'endc 1 i ay men t on tbe fid, with liabilities
estimated at WOO 001
Tua Garfield Fair at Washington closed on

Beveral factories In Quebec were de­
stroyed by fire recently, causing a loss of
$aou,ooa
Tmx steamship Cedar Grove, from London
for Halifax, struck on a ledge off Caps
the 30th ulL, durint * gale, and sunk au hour

Mbits sold. The managers announced that
several thousand dollars bad been realized.
Witbix a few deva four cattle-thieves have
been lynched in the vicinity of Comanche,
Texas.
Noar D. Smith. Deputy Collector of Cus­
toms at Memphis, has r.becondnd, and his
books show a deficit of $1,600.
'
Dlrixq the year ended with November tbe
Government bridge at Rock Island, HL. was
cro»se 1 by 13,443 trains, 534,058 pedestrians,
and 233,481 teams
Ax express train cn tbe Gulf Road was a
few days ago boarded st a station seventy
miles south of Dall-s, Tex., by three armed

tbe deceased the House adjourned.

DOMESTIC.
Cbicaoo negro, name! William Allen,
the other
“
'
made a fatal assault on
lace-car oo tbe Northwesti evening be killed Pol^eera track. ; In
'rigfiUwbo sought to arrest
Tn mercantile firm of McClellan A Colthorp, of Milliken's Bend, La., bas failed for
$140,000.
Duuxo the navigation season on the Great
Lakes, which closed on tbe 30th ult., there
were 102 vessel-disasters and over 150 live*
lost. Tbe great majority of these were on
Lake Michigan.
Oxb nan was killed and three others were
fatally Injured by the fall of a derrick at
Plattsburg, N. Y., a few dnys ago.
Is a carrisgu at North Newport. Me.,
Charles Crowell killed Miss Nellie Priley and
himself with a revolver. He had called at her
school to take her hone for Thanksgiving.
No cause was known for .the deed.
Tbe report of United States Treasurer GilAllan, issued ou tbe 29th ult., states that tbe
net reven ties for the past fiscal year amounted
to $403.525,25128, t*ing an Increase-of $42,­
742,957 over those of 188L The net expendi­
tures were $257.931.440, a decrease of $3,731,­
447. The silver dollars coined from February
3S. 1878, to betober 31,1882. aggregated $123.329.88D, of which $93,006,302 remain in tbe
Treasury.
The Lackawanna steel-mills at Scranton.
definlte ptrioL One thousand persons were
thrown out of employment.
At the Coliseum Theater, Cincinnati, on
the afternoon of the 3Uth ult. Frank Frayne,
in personating 81 Slocum, in the play of’ the
same name, shot Annie Von Behren dead
while attempting to shoot an apple from her
head. He fired with his back turned to tbe

due to a defect In tbe rifle.
Secretary Nimmo, Chief of the Bureau of
Statistics at Washington, in his report issued
on the 29th ult. says: The eurn crop this
year is estimated at 1,880,OTO,OOJ bushels,
against LlM.91fi.000 bushels in 1B8L The
latest estimates of ths wheat crop of the sea­
son of 1883 Is M0,OOO.OOU bushels, as against
380,280,090 in 1881. Tha value of ddmestlc
exports for the fiscal year ended June 30,
1882, was $733,230,732, as azainst $S8i,92j,M7
during 1881. a falling off of $150,686 215. Im­
ports during tbe fiscal year were $734,630,574
largeAban during any previous year in the
history of the country.
Bxow a foot deep covered the ground at
Watertown, N. Y., on the morning of the 1st.
A miutakt tribunal at Odessa recently
found Colonel Btavraky guilty of emtczzllng
125,000 rubles, and sentenced him to banlsh-

There were 143 business failures In the
United States daring tbe seven days ended on
the 30th ulL, against 157 for the seven days
preceding.
A vaix attempt was made on tbe 2Utb ult.
at Cheater, Pa., to l-iuach the monitor Puri­
tan, which has been on tbe stocks for six

yk ooixisiox recently occurred on the Fort
Wayne Rood, a ear New Waterford, O., be­
tween a freight train and an accommodation.
John Shouse, Jr., a fireman, was instzntiy
killed, and Engineer William Fitzsimmons
and John Snyder were seriously hurt.
Two childazx of Hiram Herkeypile per­
ished In a burning bouse at Johnstown, Pa.,
the other day.
Prop. Wtocixa, astronomer of tbe Canadi­
an Finance De;&gt;artment, warns President Ar­
thur that a greater storm thin has ever visit­
ed this continent will occur March IL
Lccm HartA Co., ot New York, dealers
F. W. Arend, a dry-goods dexler of Buffalo,
N. Y-, made au assignment for $330,000.
The verdict of the Coroner's Jury in the
esse of Miss Von Behren, recently killed by
Frank Frayne on the stage of a theater st
Cincinnati, was accidental ahooting. Frayne
would accompany the remains to Brooklyn,
and intended to quit the stage.
Traikb on the Kentucky Central Road col­
lided near Falmouth the other evening. Ben
Early, an engineer, and William Gray, a fire
man, were instantly killed, and a number of
passenger* were injured.
Thr North side rolling-mills l i Chicago,
employing over eighteen hundred men, hav?
shut down for tbe winter for want of work.
Av the Scoville Car Wheel Works In Buf­
falo recently a man named Fox attempted
suicide by plunging his head into a pot of
molten metal He was pulled out, but was
fatally burned.
The public-debt statement issued on the
1st makes tbe following exhibit: Total debt
(including interest of $11,100,058). $1,210,­
824,07?..
Cash in Treasury. $987,887,173.

DtxTease during Nove nber, $.-&gt;,534,142.

. miles, where a b.ilf-dozen more robbers made
thtir appearance. The guards in the mail-Car
opened fire, and the thieves retreated, when
the train pulled ont at full speed.
Gnonon Bcuca. Peter Martin jand Henry
Voight, pilots, were blown out to sea In an
•Ince, and were lost

Tiie notorious Cook brothers, of Mount
Sterling, IU., who recently wounded the
Sheriff and his deputy at Topeka, arrived at
Moberly, Mo., on the 4th, and registered un­
der false names. They were recognized, and
Marshal Lynch and two aids attempted their
capture on tbe street One of them fired
at tbe Marshal, when all three started on
a wild race about town, the citizens
Nicholas
and‘
keeping up a hot fire.
*
' '
John Cook seized
horses and rode
away, but were shot down, mortally wounded:
Richard Cook died on the street. Nicholas
made a confession, and sent telegrams to
their mother at Mount Sterling- One hundred
shots were fired in tbe battle, but none of tbe
pursuers were injuredv

PERSONAL AND POLITICAL,
29th ult. found indictments against thirteen
persons for election frauds, but tbe names
were withheld.'
J. T. Updegraff, Congressman-elect from
tbe Seventeenth Ohio District, died at Mount
Pleasant on the evening of tbe 30th ult.
Ox the recent celebration of the twenty­
fifth anniversary of Bishop Fitzgerald's (of
Arkansas) ordination as priest, he was given
$1,000 tn silver, a crosier, medal and missal.
All tbe priesU in the Stale were present at
the banquet which followed.
Govbrxok O’Nral, of Alabama, was inau­
gurated at noon on the 1st on tbe steps of tbe
Capitol at Montgomery, in presence of 10,000
persons.
Stmt bin W. Dorsvy addressed a letter to
tbe public on the 1st touching on tbe Star­
route scandals. He avers that a special in­
vestigation ordered by President Garfield was
never inaugurated; claims that spite and
malignity have been tbe main incentives to
his prosecution; charges that Government
funds have been wastefully expended tn ef­
forts to place him tn a prisoner's cell, and
avows his innocence of fraud or conspiracy.
hAMCEi. Rzmixgtox, President ot the
famous rifle company, died of pneumonia in
Reab Admiral Wtmab died in Waahlngtomon the 2d, of apoplexy.
Claytox McMichael, of Philadelphia, pro­
prietor of tbe North ArKrritan, baa been com­
missioned United States Marshal for the Dis­
trict of Columbia
lx Washington on tbe 3d the Garfield
Board of Audit allowed Dr. Bliss $8,500; Dra
Agnew and Hamilton $5,000 each ; Dr*. Rcyburn and Boynton $4,000 each; Mra Edson
$3,000; Steward Crump $300, and Private
Secretary Pruden $-00.
Dr. Bliss an-

were worth or present hLa bl!) to tbe exccutora
of tbe Garfield estite.

reef raeanUy. and Captain J. W. McDonald

thal city for thirty days, for refusing to dk
the morning of the 3d when about forty miles

Tks Bunday law was .inforced at New York
on tbe 3d with a strioCneM that surprised tbe
reoklents. Street v-udera of all commodities.
tbe drug stores were closed.

Tbe

miahing fund.
Tax Ster-raote cases were called in the
Criminal Court at Washington on the 4th.

Im iu report

tbe

Tariff Commlsoton

PRICES THAT DEFY COMPETITION,

slant trmptat.oti to extravagance In ' approprtatlooa. Another oonsiderat'.on attend­
ing an overflowing condition of tbe Pub-

launched only two reached the aborc In safe­
ty, the third, containing Um Captain, the
chief officer and sixteen paswngera, war

During; tlie . Holidays,

three years, after which tbe Government will
be com ;h:11c&lt;!. in order to dispose &lt;&gt;f Its au rplas
to all parties who buy of us goods to the amount of ten dollars or upwards at one time,
revenue, to bur in the open market 4&gt;4 per
The Council of tbe University of Russia cent
bonds which fall due In IwO, or tbe 4 per
-WE WILL CIVEhas decided to expel forty-six students for cent bonds which fall due In 1*07. Should the
-A valuable present worth at least One Dollar, or
Government
tbua'becomo
an
active
purchaser
participation * In tho late disturbances and
of these bonds before maturity, it seems clear
place their parents under police suiervialon.
Tns Turkish Government baa sent a spe­
tainly be rvgnrdrd as a waste of the people's
cial com miss on to tbe United States to attend money. It seeMs to mn Judicious that tho
On tbe purchase. Don’t fall to take advantage of this offer.
to its interests in a suit brought by the ProvL principal of tbe public debt should beextlnguishod. as originally contemplated, only at a
dcnce Tool Company.
A premayurs blast In a sliver mine at
Vellaldama, Mexico, the other day killed two $54,0)0,001 pcs annum. Therefore It tiecomes
obvious that a reduction of from $aU&gt;»,&lt;*&lt;0 to
men and seriously Injured a third.
-BETTER THAN MONEY.$70,000.00 In the annual revenues of the coun­
Falleroxi, a Radical member of the Ital­ try could bo safely entered upon, and, tn my
ian Chamber of Deputies, recently refused to judgment, such reduction te urgently called
take the oath of allegiauce, and was removed
The great bulk of Internal-revenue taxation
from the hall by off! era.
te derived from distil led spirits, malt liquors,
The German Parliament has voted not to tobacco and cigapu Three are arti&lt; lea of luxA'aaliville----- November SO----- IWSS.
permit the use of tbe French language tn the
provincial committee of Alsace-Lorraine.
strongly of opinion that, so long as tbe prin­
At Skopin. In the province of Rlazan, Rus­ ciple of deriving part or tbe revenue of the
Governmn t from Internal t &gt;xatlon la re­
sia. the municipal bank failed on tbe 1st for
tained, these articles and dealers therein arc
And buy your clothing of '
12,000,000 rubles, bringing ruin on thousands
proper subjects for taxation. There te no
A womax named Kathl, one of tbe twentyducts for a remission of taxes imposed upon
six who were arrested for poisoning their them: tbc.ro te no public sentiment calling for
husband?, was hanged at Vienna a few days their repeal. Other objects of Internal-revenue
ago, and confessed having poisoned two of taxation, w.th amounts rosllre-1 therefrom
tbe last fiscal year, arc: Friction matches,
At Buxton’s New Block,
her lords.
$3Xn.tM; jAtrnt medicines, perfumery, etc.,
bank &lt;loA Coxstaxtixopls dispatch of tbe 2d Sl.VTMJW: bank cheeks,
THE ONE-PRICE CLOTHINC STORE,
posits, $4,OU7 7O1: savlngs-tank deposits. $8H,says Mabemet Pas ba, convicted of consplr- 1 400:
bank capital, $1338,340; Mvtngwbank
And save from l!f U» 90 per cent.
* ing against the Sultvn, has been sentenced capital, $14.TXk. Add to th.-se Hems texes col­
lected by the Treasury of tbe United States
to exile. Ralib Pasha has been a; pointed
from National banks, and there tr a total de­
Minister of Marine, and Osman Pasha, tbe rived
A MAMMOTH STOCK OF
\
from three sources of $1H,748JSS. If to
present Minister of War, Commander of tbe $18,750,000 reduction thus proposed Congress
should add a reduction In the chances for
army.
special
taxes
to
dealers
In
articles
taxed
for
Queex Victoria, in proroguing Parlia­ Interns! revenues substantially as proposed
ment to Februiry 15. stated her intention to trrtbo blil now pending before tbe Semite, a
maintain international engagements In Egypt Still further diminution of taxation would be
Everything %eiv, Rtylish. and Durable.
attained, and supervision over dealers in tax­
and pro &lt; ote tbe happiness of the people and able articles, which experience has shown toM
the development of their institution*
Im- necessary In order to fully and fairly col­
The attention of ParentR i« respectfully called to our large Mock of
Archbishop Tarr, of Canterbury, England, lect the taxes from all alike, would be p;x&gt;served. lli'iminsr all these spec! I taxes 40
died on the 84.
percent. romlMions under this head would bo
The Iron firm of Btddulph, Wood dt Jevona, as follows: Ou the basis of last year's collec­
tions, *...iM7,*ak The act of March 1.187U. re­
of Liverpool, has suspended, with liabilities duced
the tax on tobacco from 24 cents per
Which te the most complete ever laid down in Nashville.
of £250,000.
pound to 1* c?nts per pound, but aid not re­
Arabi Pasha pleaded guilty on tbe 3d be­ duce the tax on cigars and clgarets. A cor­
responding reduction on cigars would bo to $4
We are proud of our new stock or
fore the court-martial at Cairo to rebellion,
per l.'KZ). This. 1 think, should be dona, and
and was sentenced to death. Tbe Khedive would amount to a reduction of taxes of $8.748.UX). 'ibis would make n total reduction of
commuted the decree of the court to exib
internal-revenue
taxes
(including
taxes
on
Na
­
for life, and it was believed Arabi wounl tional banks), of $.-H,W2,12H.
2nd believe we have something desirable and very cheap.
hereafter reside in British territory.
Tariff revision te considered by the Com
The Sultan of Turkey was ou the Sth re­ mlsaloner. He says:
1 venture to suggest whether It te not de­
ported to be terror-stricken by an attempted sirable to consider the practicability of taking
We bare made additions to our
the duty off sugar. About LOOJ.OOMXX) pounds
Fivx dragoons of Odessa, Russia, have been of sugar arc anunlly consumed In the United
States, 10 per cent of wh'ch is produce*! In this
sentenced to fifteen years each in the mines
country Upon 1,100,0)0.000 pounds Imported
With the view of suiting the most particular customers.
the Government realizes a revenue of $45.0 0,
for engaging in riots against the Jewa
It waa represented on the 4th that the Sul­ 000. should tbe duty bo removed there would Our stock of Boots and Shoes is larger than ever, and no competitor
be not only a certain and larg- reduction of
tan of Turkey hardly dare show himself out­ revenue, but the benefits of that reduction
will be allowed to underHell uh.
would Immediately inure to the peoplrt The
side the aarem, and that an attempt on his
best re fined sugar, wh'ch now sells at ten cents
life was made on the 1st.
a pound retail could be sold at seven cents if
It Is stated that the embezzlements and
the duty were removed. an«l tho total reduc­
tion would amount to 90 cents per capita per
robberies, private and official, Ln Russia, dur­
annum ot tho entire population of the country.
ing tbe year, will reach 36,001,000 rubles.
The objection to this measure would be tho
QCbex V (CTO KIa opened tbe new Courts of
BboUUan of protection now afforded the sugar
interests of Louisiana and other Staton. This
Jual.ce at London on the 4th, amid much
difficulty might bo met by giving a bounty, of
pomp and ceremony.
The streets were
say, two and a half cents per pound upon ail
crowded by persons eager to witness the
home produced sugar. The present law gives
tho sugar planters of this country directly
royal procession, and 400 Americans at the
$4.00(1,100 or $5,0*W00 per annum. My proposi­
American Exchange saluted the Queen, who tion would be to give th!* amount directly and
let the whole people have tho benefit of the
bowed her acknowledgments.
reduction of taxation of say $45.(00,000 which
The Italian Government has recently re­
would In thia way bo efTedod. Tbe principle
fused to surrender to Austria two natives of
of paying a bounty for the oncouragment
and
development or American Industry was
Trieste, charged with complicity In the manu­
adopted in the case of the tlsh'-rice as early a*
facture of bo nb» to be used in Vienna for
1813 and continued for more than fifty yeara.
treasonable purposes.
Millions hare been paid out during this period
Our surroundings and tbe community at large
to American fishermen for fish caught and ex­
The Welland Canal was dosed for the seaported, and we are still giving this Industry a
bonus, allowing them to withdraw salt free of
duty and requiring from them no tonnage
And our trade is larger than ever before.
due*. Theoe reductions, if made, would
LATER NEWS.
amount to FTyne,!®. Receipt* of internal
Tn a National Union Dairy Fair was form­ revenue taxation the last two fiscal years
ally opened in Mi waukee on the 5th with ad­ were; For IMl, $135,39,913; for ISC, 1148,523.Sti; increaac, $11.33,381. Tbe receipts the
dresses by promlnr it^fintlrnr n
Arrests were mad^Ct Phil, del phis on the first four months of the nrcsent ttecal year,
compared with tho corresponding months tho
last fiscal year, show an Increase In the
night of the 4th of persona who had stolen
Our store room though- ample Is completely filled and our shelves fairly groan under them
six bodies from the Lebanon Cemetery, and amount receive t from special taxes, and a de­ And still they come. We have everything tn the Grocery line.
crease In distilled spirits; an increase in
were conveying them to the Medics’ College.
etgara, eheroots, cigarcta, snuff of all deocripFour of the bodies have been Identified. One • tlons, and soec'.al tax of dealers in manufac­
tobacco, and a decreeae in the amount
ot the parties implicated made a full con­ tured
received from all other taxes on tobocoo nnd
fession. A determined attempt to lynch tbe
If you want to see a pretty and complete line of Crockery, see ours. We have only time to
call your attention to China Tea Bette, Majolica Ware, and Decorated Chamber Betts. In Glass­
ere
In
beer: an Increase on bank deposits nnd
As am amateur dramatic club at Makanda,
bank circulation: a decrease on taxes of every ware our stock Is complete and attractive. Our trade Ln LAMPS Is simply immense. We
have Pendants, Decorated Vase, and Common Goods. Low estimates given on Church and
HL, was rehearsing a border drama on the
other character on banka.
The entire amount collected In tbe fiscal year Hall Cliandellera. .
evening of tbe 4th John Perl took up a rifle
to send a bullet whizzing past tbe bead of his
brother James. But tbe excitement of tbe
$74&gt;,H34.(rn has been collected from internalWe have added a fine line of
play destroyed bls nerve, and be placed the revrnue, taxation and pnid Into tbe Treasury
without any loss by defalcation. The c x pense
leaden ball in the brain. Tbe Coroner’s jury
of collection the la«t six years was abont tSt,0*7.300. or about 3.S per ccnL &lt;&gt;n the amount Lanterns, and Oil Cans. Your special attention is invited to tbe former, as we feel assured th nt
exonerated the rifleman.
This sum has been disbursed witb- we have something that will zult
The Goverttor of Louisiana has given Will­ • collected.
out loss to the Government
iam Pitt Kellogg a certificate of election to
On tbe 30th of June. 1SK!, spirits remaining
In warehouses reached the highest point—
Congress from the Third District.
We keep the celebrated Snow Flake Flour.
Wi,flC,845 gallons. Bln-e that time
The recent decision by Attorney-General namely:
there bas been a gradual reduction In tbe Everything New, Fi*esh, mid Cheap.
An examination will convince
Brewster against tbe over-acceptance of amount remaining tn warehouses, and on tbe
1st
of
November.
188!.
tbe
amount
was
84.08,
­
checks caused tbe National Bank of tbe Bute
gallons. This large stock mainly consists
of New York to surrender its charter on the 831
of fine grades of whisky, the tex upon which
5th. It would immediately reorganize under
withdrawal must be made the tth of
State laws. The directors of the 8L Nicholas
December, 18rS. If tbe future demand of
National were considering tbe wisdom ot this class of goods is to be judged of by with­
drawals of similar goods, tax paid, during tho
taking the same course.
past few years, th' stock now on band is equal
The stockholders ot tbe Pacific National to
six years’ consumption. To postpone pay­
Bank of Boston have again been assessed $100 ment of the tax on this stock until its wltbper share by Comptroller Knox, to be paid
within sixty dsya Benyon, tbe former Presi­ its exportation and reimportation and stonure
dent, has fled the country.
in customs bonded warehouses. This La enWilliam C. Oaklet, of Chicago, has been
appointed Bank Examiner for Illinois and better to afford br lewtelation the relief sought
Wisconsin. He was formerly paying teller in to be obtained by this indirect means.
Tbe total amount of collections from tobac­
the Northwestern National Bank, and was
co for the fiscal year ended June 33. 1*2.
strongly indorsed by the bankers of tbe city.
was $47,$91,9HA This amount Include* tbe col­
Ox the 5th the grand jury at 8L[Louis ex­ lections of Internal revenue taxes Imposed
onerated John A. Cockerin in tbe matter of up .n Imported manufactured tub woo, snuff
and cigars (tn addit'on to customs duUea); tax-,
the slaughter of Colonel Slay back.
cs imposed on domestic 'Manufacture*! tobac­
snuff and cigars; special taxes paid by
M. C. Sutler was rp-elected United States co,
manufacturers of tobacco, snuff and cigars;
•t "i
Senator by the South Carolina Legislature on special taxea paid br dealers in leaf and deal­
tbe 5th, and Governor Thompson was Lnau- ers in manufactured tobacco: special taxes

A DISCOUNT OF TEN PER CENT.

BUTTER, EGGS and DRIED APPLES

C.W. GRANGER &amp; CO
TO INASHVILLE

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN

F11 and Winter Clothing

CHILDREN’S, BOYS’, AND YOUTHS’ CLOTHING,

HATS, HATS,

CAPS, CAPS

Boots, Shoes, Gents’ Furnishing Goods, Groceries, Underwear, EtcC-A.JL.1^

JVND SEE.

PRINDLE &lt;fc CHIPMAN,

NEW

NKW

STOREIGOODS

OUR EFFORTS TO IMPROVE
IHAVE BEEN APPRECIATED

OUR NEW STOCK) OF GROCERIES
Croekerj

and G-lassware.

Table

Cutlery,

G. W. FRANCIS.
MACHINE

SEWING
02

the United States Senate on the 5th Mr.
Barron was sworn in t-? fill the unexpired
term cf tbe late Mr. Hill, of Georgia Mr.
Saunders presented a memorial in regard to
the admission oi Dakota, remarkfug that the
doubt as to her having the requisite popula­
tion. Mr. Beck offered a resolution instructJudiciary
Committee to ro­
of
political
as
seumtuii collected
In tbe late cam­
paign, bow It was disbursed, and how
many persons dismissed from public service
bad failed to contribute. A MH was passed
to permit retired army officer• to hold official
Mr. Kelley reported a bfll to strike off the
internal revenue Ux on tobacco in all iu

passed providing that seamen diacbarged in
Rock. N. Y., is a dofault-

NOW ARRIVING,-

And If y»u cone early you will be sure to find anything you want and at

CiO

part of Wisconsin on tbe night of tbe 4th.
At Northboro, Maas., a few days ago Joseph
Moriarity, aged fifteen years, was playing
with a shot-gun supposes to have been un­
loaded. After indu'ging tn this aport for some
time, he went toward his eight-year-old slater
Winnla, who was standing on tbe top of a abort
flight of rtalra, and taking deliberate alm
said: "How easy I could kill you.” The re­
mark was followed by a loud report. When
tbe alarmed parents reached tbe room It was
found that tbe girl was fatally wounded.
The exchanges st twenty-etx clearing
houses during the week ended on tbe 3d ag­
gregated $1,301,513,5:2, indicating that a
large volume of trade was transacted.
Comptroller Kxox recently submitted to
Attorney-General Brewster cert .in questions
in regard to the acceptance of checks by
National banks In excess of tbe a nount ac­
tually on deposit, aud showed that In one
day nine banks in New York had certified
checks amount:ng to nine times their whole
capital. Tbe Attorney-General decides that
such operations are clearly in violation of tbe
laws of 1869 and 1882
The Albany iron-works, which employ
several thousand men, have recently reduced
wages from ten to twenty-five per cent.
Postmaster-Grxeral Howe reports tbe
receipts of the Department for the fiscal year
a* $41,576,409, and tbedisbursements $40,482,031—the excess of receipts being $1,894,388.
Tbe heaviest item of expenditure is that for
transportation of mails by railway, the sec­
ond being thesalariesof postmasters. The es­
timated excess of revenue for 1884 la $3,929,345.
The Postmaster-General recommends that a
system of postal savings-banks be inaugu­
rated. He Is also of o inion that tbe tele­
graph and postal systems cf the country
should be included under one management,
and that tbe Government should assume ex­
clusive control of tbe transmission of domes-

Do-

Twr schooner Henry Folger, of Cape Vin-

-ARE

export stamps sold exporters of tobacco.
The condition ot the service is all tha
be desired. Tbe reports of inspecting
elate show that admirable esprit do &lt;

lx Fan Luis Potosi, recently a keg of pow
der standing tn a store blew up, killed two
buys and wounded their mother. While she
was attending tbelr funeral on tbe following
an old bouse, killing her 1 stantly.
AX Med eiUzcn of Walpole, N. H., of feeble

wit, Warren Fairbanks, just gon.&gt; to tbe pooruouse, his be thought-himself of $450 which hr.
farm.

The money has been found and tbeold

who bas occupied a hut in tl»e Blue Mount­
ains, near Mechanicsburg, CuidferJand Conn-

Penins alar Stove Co.’s Stoves
OF DETROIT.

Improved and Finest PaUlerna of Cookw nn&lt;l Hentern in
market. Zincs, Stove Fu'*niturc. £tr,
PAINTS, VARNISHES, COLOS, BRUSHFS.
WELLtmd 0181ERN PUMPS,
•
POINTS, PIPE. SfNKS.ETQ.
CHAMPION X-CUT BA WB, anjb, jstu.

Detroit White Lead Works &lt;&gt;&gt;lerh.»Tt&gt;e Best In tbe Market.
BUILDER'S HARDWARE, SASH, DOORS,
GLASS, LOCKS, KXOBS. &lt;te
KAILS. IKON, AND BTBKL.

�AL8.
_______

VICIH
-- --

Jot.0 H. T«*&lt;n»« bM bolh
....
. . , ■ .
. . -J v-H

largely due, do doubt, Co tbe fact that

•Hppery lor.-cbe whole obarae ircio*
throuxb bi. .no vid ■Mint . rrarful

Hush! there is an item of history &lt;*onkected with timt matter,—nothing copi-

Will. Howell la preridoet aud Jo.

•with shop in this placeBev. L.' D. Abbott of Hickory Corners,
iaaasUting in carrying'on the services

Grandma Hartom had a surprise
Thanksgiving day, by her children
from Saginaw, coming to see her. She
is a very old lady and was much de­
lighted with tbe favor.
T. C.

him.
All tbe schools of onr neighborhood.
are progressing finely and all seems to
be well pieaMcd as a general thing with
the new system of examination, except
it be some fantie who would like to re­
turn to tb* old township system for
tlie sake of having the honor bestowed
upon him of being elected treasurer.
’

HOKTH ASSYRIA.

Winter seems to have arrived for cer­
at the chureli this week.
tain, and has probably come to stay
Mr. R. Dixon, who is running the old this time.
Hanchet milla. is getting a good run of
Mrs. Marietta Wright is in town vis­
eustom, and is well worthy of it.
iting old friends. She is a sister of L.
What means those loads of goods?
Cummings.
Al»a Babcock will occupy L. E. Mudges
Leroy Cummings is waiting on Mr.
bouse during his absence in Arkansas. Geo. McCartney at present, that is, he
Friday George Norton, the mil­ waiting for him tc finish threshing his
ler, was too busy to eat his dinner. He clover seed. Got about half done and
took the most grain into tbe mill that broke down again.
he has ever reeeived in one day. It is
We think the new arrival at ,M. F.
expected that children of tbe shoemak­ Strickland’s should be advertised. We
er must go barefoot, and why not the believe it is a daughter this time, so of

miller go ~•1iDg.
---

TERH0XTV1L1E.
Rev. Henry Marsh and family of Ed­
more are Id town.
D. W. Allen and George Bale are
liack from Dakota.
Mrs.'Charley Rouse will spend the
winter with tier parents.
The M. E. church will have a public
Christmas tree Christmas night.
Will Rawson and Will Warner are
teaching school in Saginaw county.
Tbe ladies’ aid society will meet with
Mrs. Loomis next Thursday afternoon.
The Ladies Christian association will
meet with Mrs. Vaughn Thursday af­
ternoon.
Fifty car-loads of forest products
were shipped from this place during
November.
Some of the young people meet this
Friday evening to consider the forma­
tion of a dramatic society.

cheaper and pay more for produce than
surrounding markets. They
. are rattling nice fellows, and deserve to* «uc*
16
Among the couple* that have recently
joined hands for better or for worse are
the following: Alex. Raney of Char­
lotte and Minnie D. Baker of Cheater;
Frank F. Boaworth of Chester and
Stella E. Moyer of Roxand; George
Lyon aud Melon Campbell, both of
r‘lL± k‘n4*01 m’cbio“ "rr *nT*“*-,a'1
Roxand ; L. W. Elmendorf and Sarah unsgrx.dtsitew.E, R, WHITE,
A. Hamilton, both of Bellevue; and
Cha*. Beamer of Con vis and Mary Chase
of Bellevue.
The Phi Alpha Pi society of Olivet
College held its 21st annual public ex­
ercise* this week Wednesday evening.
Tbe literary exercises were a salutation
in Latin by H. 0. Spellman of Covert,
And continues to dispense all kinds
a discussion, Are Dicken’s novels more
of
lieneficial than Scott’s, N. M. Hinidille
of Kewanee, Ill., for and E. F. Stanton
of Olivet against; declamation by F.
M. Hollister of Greenville; oration, To tbe satisfaction of its large and in­
Triumph of Truth, by J. B. Estabrook
creasing list of patrons.
of Olivet; essay, Literary Culture, by
H. R. McCartney, Nashville, oration,
Liberty of Opinion. C. E. Taggert, Oli­

THE NEW MARKET
Of D.L, Durfee
-IS ALIVE-

Fresh &amp; Salt Meats

course it is not of so much importance
ac it might otherwise be.
Tbe Ellis school began Monday last
•H CASTLETON.
with twenty names on the roll, but
there will probably be twenty-flve when
Fino roads.
vet
Miss Carrie Sheldon is on the gain.
the“bigboysn al! go. Miss Jennie Troy­
Boys, brace up—it is near Christmas. er from near Nashville wield* the ruler.
NelL Hager h»s his mill now in oper­
Young Mr. Keyes, who lives in our
vicinity met with quite an accident
ation.
Rufus Ainsworth and mother spent Wednesday. In stooping he accident­
MORGAN.
Thanksgiving with D. W. Smith.
ally struck bis eye against the hot end
Recovery of Mias Richard is expected.
James Allerton has a fine wood pile. of a hanging poker, and was senonsly
Those living id. glass houses should
That is right, prepare the way for cold burned. We hope he may not lose the
throw sponges.
sight of his eye.
weather.
Mr. Cyp. Hamlin of Battle Creek,
Messenger.
George Witte had two sheep shot by
•pent the Sabbath at.Cole’s hotel.
•ports. Buys, you want to be careful
Thanksgiving
evening, gave tbe boys
BISMARK.
bow you shoot.
an oyster supper at John Delong’s.
T. Scofield, family and parents, and
Holidays are nearing.
Jams
White
violated
the law by strik­
H. Hart and family helped to eat that
The season for slap-jacks is here.
ing S. B. Preston over.the left ‘’tolls.”
turkey of John Gaidner’a.
Stephen Bowen rhumatises lust now.
John
Mattock,
bas
always
been re­
Dogs must be Id quite a demand in
Wild, lost Monday, reminds one of' garded os a quiet, peacable good citizen.
some foreign city, as several of our
winter.
Refci ing to previous correspondence,
neighbors are minus their canines.
Tlie saw mill has its bonnet ou for there was n» reflection in any way upon
There is a certain young man who winter.
H. H.
says he is glad a certain other man has
E. F. Preston bas not put in
Emigration dues for the poor classes
lost his dog. It may be tliat the latter
pearance yet
what traveling accomplishes for the
has a fair daughter.
Martin Harris removed this week to rich.
Several young people, among whom his new abode.
Mrs. Ed Hyde bas sold quite a num­
were Charley Austin and lady. A. Carr
Our young nimrods are overtaking ber of tickets of chance, to win tbe
and lady, Mrs. J. Ellerton and daugh­ the sprightly rabbits.
quilt.
ter, Miss Price. Miss A. Allerton, and
Subscribe for The News. Give me
Morgan’nsks James Clay and C. W.
Miss A. Watring made Stella Ellerton’s your name and the ready go down.
Corwin through tbe courts for a settle­
school a pleasant call on Thanksgiving.
Milo Deuel will pay cash for saw­ ment.
Some of our neighbors would liketo logs,—lias his shingle out to tliat eflect.
Scothorn family returned from the
energy, etc. Try a bottle.
know who correspond* for The Nkwb.
Mrs. Wallace Preston is still alive, north to depart for their former home
Asi have seen him 1 will describe him. but hopes of her recovery are nearly in Ohio.
He is xatber tall—7 feet 10, of portly gone.
We are proud to Dote that several of
built, dark red hair, grizzly grey eyes,
Wilson Bowser guns the school at our young people are pledged to be
pug nose, a winding moustache, and Bismark this winter. His school be­ temperate.
he wears number 15% and may answer gun last Monday.
Miss Flora Harley of Judsonia. Ark.,
to the name of John. His weight is
Frank Hait lost a new pipe the other is visiting her grandparents, Mr. and
night but after a diligent search found Mrs. L. P. Cole.
10,000.
Whilst "Rash” Hosmer and Almon it in his mouth. How is that for young
Mrs. Northrup’s bible school will
Sheldon were hunting last Thursday, American.
have an oyster supper soon. They will
WlUTIST.
on the banA of Mud Creek, and as
also have a Christmas arch.
is the only Iron preparation that
“Rash.” was just about to capture one
_________ __ ________Cor.
BALTIMORE.
does not color the teeth, and will not
of those fine turkeys, he stepped into a
cause headache or constipation, aa
EATON
COUNTY.
mire hole and would have mired but
Guy Erb is teaching his first school
other Iron preparations will.
for Sheldon, who was near and heard in Hope.
The Charlotte skating rink has been
bis cry for help. It i. as a narrow es­
Stock is playing out, and it will soon closed.
cape, and no. turkey for "Rash.” tliat lie root, hog or die.
Walton complains of an enormous
X.
day.
Can get anything a man has, for ditch tax.

BROWN’S
IRON
BITTERS

BROWN’S
IRON
BITTERS

BROWN’S
IRON
BITTERS

HASTINGS.
Masonic ball New-Year night
New chandeliers at the Presbyterian
church.
Donati
ar Rev. Knappen Wednes­
day next.
L. N. Mixer and son have returned
from Dakota.
Mrs. P. A. Throop and family have
moved to Ionia.
Everett Stinchcomb was home from

Albion last week.
Mias Anna Holbrook of Mnskegon is
visiting her mother.
Mrs. Andrew Young started for Cali­
fornia last Wednesday.
The band boys made about $F50 clear
on their dance last week.
MissWebster of Albion spent Thanks­
giving with M»s Stella Wheeler.
The young people of the Presbyterian
ehurch give an oyster supper Dec. 12th.
Rev. Carnahan delivered a fine ser­
mon at the union services Thanksgiv­
ingThe annual meeting of the Woman’s
Foreign Missionary society for tbe
Grand Rapids district is to be held at
the M. E. church Dec. 7-8.
They are so well pleased with Fred
Sweet’s electnc clocks in the Muskegon
schools that they have ordered six more
in addition to the nineteen already in
Mr. and Mrs. Afton Smith of Rutland
celebrated tbe tenth anniversary of
their married life by entertaining about
60 of their friends on Monday evening
last. Everybody was srmixl with a tin

A

■noted with nun, kind wubee to the
happy couple.
The examination of J. B. Carpenter
of Carlton was commenced last Friday
and adjourned until this Friday. It is
before ’Squire Burgher, and creates
considerable excitement.
Evidently
where there is so much smoke there

lions, aud the violation of her person

husking corn now.
.
Guy Manning starts for the pinery,
Monday, fora winter’s job.
Henry Reynolds has been suffering
with a fever tbe past week.
J. Lichty visited his farm, Tuesday,
in company with bis father.
Warren Seely has struck it rich—a
pair of twins, a boy and girl.
Parke Wariner has 16 acres of clover
seed under the snow in the gavile.
P. G. Henry has nearly recovered
from his injury received two weeks ago.
Miss Maggie Durfee’s sister from
York State, made her a happy surprise
on tbe 5th.
Isaac Brooks is our road commission­
er, and be has another little Brook to
se* to—tis a girl.
J. Lichty bu made arrangements
with Parker Wariner, the present in­
cumbent, and will return to his farm
Jan. 1st.
E. Csnnom will soon return to the
north. He bas been spending a few
days with his famllv, looking after the
interests of his farm.
Doxy.

A lycenm has been organized at SevastopooL
There is talk of another cheese facte
ry at Ainger.
*
Bellevue has do hotel, and is much
troubled thereat.
A literary society bas been organized
at West Windsor.
’
The Charlotte red-ribbon club is in
good working order.
Brookfield lias decided in favor of
free trade. That settle* it
The U. B. revival meetings in Brook­
field are not very ^ucceraful.
Mrs. Chas. Cnykendall of Charlotte
died recently, of Bright’s disease.
Daniel Fnlger of Eaton Rapids will
started a cooper shop at Potterville
Two engines were derailed and badly
injured by a collusion on the Grand
Trunk at Charlotte Tuesday.
It took a Dimondale justice 'three
days to tell whether a man was entitled
to seventy-five cents of wages.
J. N. Thrift of Charlotte is reported
to have lost bis mind. Hope ’tis not so
or at least will not long remain so.
The Potterville Mfg. Co. ol Potter­
ville shipped eighty two car-loads of
WEST 8UKFIELD.
wood-ware during November. A large
Teaming is lively at present.
showing.
Sterling Green drives a new team.
Mrs. Wallace Preston of Sunfield died
Everybody is preparing for the holi­ Tuesday, leaving a babe. Many friends
day*.
mourn her untimely decease. The re
Wm. Hager smiles because he has mains were taken east
another heir.
Richard Maun, a wealthy and influen­
Chancey Ives and J. Tomlinson have tial fanner living seven miles west uf
gone north.
Charlotte, was found dead in bed, Tues­
Tbe carpenters are again working on day morning. Heart diseasy is the supWells Halstead’s bouse.
J. Childs will occupy rooms with
The Detroit Free Preu ot Thursday
Sterling Green hereafter.
published a dispatch stating that a lit­
The ground having frozen up, fall's tle daughter of Alfred Rotiuds of Kdplowing has come to an end.
amo had been scalded to death. The
Only a little more sdow at present despatch probally referred to such au
would make passably good sleighing.
accident which happened however,
A young gentleman boarder lias tak­ Nov. 26.
en up his quarters with James Bayles,
C- E. Brown and J. Cryderman of
Roxand. John Wells aud Delos Binhop
Miss Emma Newell has commenced of Sunfield, 8. P. Loomis aud John J.
tha school in tbe Patterson district. Rice of Vermontville, B. F. Sweet and
Not much vacation, we should say, for Elias Reynolds of Bellevue, and Frank­
lin Hartson of Kalamo are among the
jurors for the January term of court.
It is rumored that Mr. Gary Fox, late
candidate for renomination as county

BROWN’S
IRON
BITTERS

Ladies and all sufferers from neu­
ralgia, hysteria, and kindred com­
plaints, will find it without an equal

1883.
Dried Beef, Smoked Meats, Lard,
Harper
’
s
Weekly.
Etcetera,

/"illustrated.

—AND BT ALWAYS OlVIUg—

Good Goods, Full Weights,
and Low Prices

Harpvr’f'Wcekly Randi U the bmd of Anmkan
llloauated wE,kly journal'. By lu unpjftlaan po­
Shall endeavor to prove to the good people of sition In poliUcs, I la admirable llluatmlona. Ma
carefully
ebowm ecrial% abort atorWa, aketebea. anl
Nashville and vidrutv that It is good to bare a
second meat market In Nashville.

Cask for Hides, Pella. Ftc.
D. L. DURFEE.

|

Il will al way. bo tbe *1tn of tbe pwbUabera t
make Harper1* Weekly tbe mod popular and at
I tractive family newspaper in tbe world.

War Volumes of
“Harper’sWeekly.”

Harper’s Pictorial History of the
Rebellion,
Weekly, in neat eloU Nadin*.
Same size page as tho Weekly, containing 1,000
of the Illustration that appeared in Harper’s vo!um«X for &gt;7 CO per volume.
Weekly during tbe War.
Sec Messrs. Harper &amp; Bros.’ announcement
In Harper’s Weekly of July 1, 1882, and previ­
ous numbers:
taeaxprtM order of Burn A lUorxiu,
state witboot
Addrtaa HARPER A BROTHERS, Now York.
January 81, 1880, the plates and numbers of
Harper’s Weekly previous to 1870 have been
destroyed, aud they therefore cannot supply
any numbers prior to that time.”

Price, Delivered
THE MONARCH

BILLIARD HAL.L.
(No Liquor*)

McDonnell bros.

C. N. DUNHAM.

113 Dearborn-st, Chicago.

NEW GOODS.

J_J A. BARBER, M. D..
* fllOMlEOPATIIIC

Physician and Surgeon.
Office first door eAst of Opera House, and
near resilience on comer of Washington and
State Streets, Nashville, Mich.

BEST SET BUM TEETH $10.00
Teeth Extracted Wirho.t P«l».

a. h. wuvn&lt;

S, S IN6ERS0N &amp; SON,

Nashville Elevator!
Pay the highest marketprice for all kinds of

Gli-a.in and J&gt;i-odxxce,
Seeds, Feed, Lime, Salt, Plaster, Stuc­
co, Hair. Pise Lumber, Lath
and Shingles,

Lumber, Salt, and Coal.

AT THE LOWEST LIVING PRICES.

NASHVILLE, MICH.
•

now.

CUTLERY, RAILS, PAINTS

Also New Dry Goods, Boots,
Shoes, Hats, Caps, Groceries,
Etc., in endless profusion.
We haven’t time to enumer­
ate, and if we had these goods
must be seen to be appreciated.

J.W.HOLMES&amp;CO
WOODLAND.
THE MILLER BROS.CUTLERY CO.
AfXEipgy, conjt.

STANDARD
POCKET
CUTLEKT,
V
- ——J, v—v----

STEEL PEN

Farm Toots,
And everything In the hardware Hue, is st

■X2

VK

w oodi.aa i &gt;

for

i Ouxute*

Siam a

Our stock is complete

THE PLACX TO BUT

Hardware, Glass, Tin and CopMEAT MARKET.
penrare,

THEIR SKABOr
Lard, by the lb. or barrel,

and will be sold at a slight ad­
vance above actual cost.
Prepare for cold weather by
buying your

Office Open Day a Evening, in every respect.

Robskt Eujrrow.

Nresh and Salt Meats,
Smotrt Ham ail Slsalim,

Let every Woodlander re­
member that my new stock of
winter goods is larger than ev­
er and was bought at

Eiperienced, Reliable, aid Responsible. Rook Bottom Prices

ROOKS, MARSHALL k CO.

JJENRY ROE, Paontrro*

HARPER’S PERIODICALS.

HARPER-S WEEKLY---------------------------HARPER’S MAGAZINE*.------------- ---------- IQ
HARPER’S BAZAR....
--------------------- 4 Q
Tb« TURKE above poUicaUooa--------- ------- 1UQ
Any TWO above named....;.............................. 7 ‘j
HARPER’S .YOUNG PEOPLE„................. I n
HARPER’S MAGAZINE
I................ t L
.
We would cal) the attention of parties who HARPER’S YOUNG PE PLE I
’S FRANKLIN SQUARE LIBRARY.
hart not the files uf Harper’s Weekly during HARPER
One Year&lt;12 Nombmj-------------- ..-------- n.«

A. H. WINN, Dentist.
NOTICE.
Where, my wife. Della Ellston, bas left my
bed and board without just cause or provoca­
tion, this is to warn all persons from harbor­
ing or trusting her on my account, as I shall

Agt., at Kocher Bros.

‘
THE ANNUAL MEETING
Uf the Union Mutual Fire Inauranee Co nany
&lt;rf Kent, Barry und Ionia cuanUcs, will be bnid
at tbe office of the company in Ionia, on
THUMDAT, pANUARYLMM.
commencing at 10 a. Im.
In addition to the election - of officera, prnpnaitioua will be prencuted for changes of charter
including the following: To change aecttoo 8
with reference to location of office of com­
pany; To change aecUon 10, so aa to permit
asAwramenta at least once In each year, unkas
tbe reaerve fund shall exceed SS.OOO, or auch
other sum aa Bball be deemed proper; Aiao to
addascction, autboriziug tEe Preaident and
Secretary to borrow not to exceed S2.000. when

L.FAVL.

I will

�,&lt;«n■yt-arsouw
a»t tha: small sum

that tha w^wuweaihvr changes
few remaining teeth.
/They believed Lmwiu
Ludt»*-b-’» Was net nt the work this | **th the moon, «nd when
• change did occur at the appearance of a
j n&lt;vr, quarter, half or full moon they
■ I! Of 'it ______________
d and
.__________
ruisi
able. At tbb tenth viirit a Ih'tle pile of i( remembered it and sonMjtimm noted it
the dirtiest bilb and &lt;:rookedt-rt com pro­ ’ down. If the weather did notchange at
curable lay at hit elbow, and the widow about the sama time the moon did they
did not charge their memory with Hie
thus held forth:
“There’s your money., N(Sw you’ve failure. By means like the&gt;e they be­
extortioned it out of inn. take it. 'it was ., came more, strongly convinced iof the
give mo by a good lady to put the glass influence of the mook bn the weather.
in my windys and save iuu from rheu­ Other circumstances tended to confirm
matics agin*the winter; but no. I've got the lielief. Every almanac displays the
o. the faxpry
to suffer now. I h&lt;q&gt;e you’ll think of various phases of the mpon, with the
These
tliat when you’re worm ai toast in your time of tlie occurrence of each.
feather lietfs nnd blankets—yah!”
at leiwt suggest that the event is of very
"ludccd it’s not /. I couldn't ask it considerable consequence, for no notice
of you,” said Ludovico, almost in tears. would be taken of it if it was not of ifp•• Look here!" said the widow. •• Seq ■ Krtance. Many think, -without being
ormed of the fact, that the time of the
1JHE WIDOW WlCoi.TTS WINDOWS. my panes. Two windy*. Twelve panes
in’cach. Three whole in the lot. This moon’s changee are accurately given, so
Mr. Tibbetts was riding slowly along thorn boys lm&gt;kc. and this cracked un- that people may know when there is to
the road, thinking for once in a way knownst, and this’ my elbow went
bo a change in the weather. Farmers,
what a brief lito this was and how through; and when the stove-pipe fell, whose crops are largely influenced by
quickly we left it behind us., lie had it went through these four; and this is
the weather, study the almanac very
just been making old Mr. Parkman’s them boy® again ; and I put a*bit oi diligently, and often with a view of fore­
will..and it^lvas doubtful if old Mr. stick that give under it, is the way it was casting the weather. In fact they often
Park in an wvttbkiivp until nijjtiL The them wont. The cat was on the sill plan to commence a certain kind of work
nompoiiH, bU'l'ing
under it at the time. Ah. well! the at a glven.tline, or to put off certain la­
. dying. a»nd she wt
get along Coryner’ll have me this winter,"
bors on account of expected changes in
well enough withe
it would
Ludovico went away with a swelling the weather, which, they think, are,con­
heart. *
.
'
without any of us.
ditioned on changes of the moon.
One person would grieve for him. nnd
Scientific Tnen in different times and
“Ah!”, he said to himself. “If I
that tho very one who would be beneiiled were rich’ as mv dear old friend intended In various countries have attempted to
by hi* deatli. Years ’ ago Mr. Parkman 1 should be, l'u not oppress the poor.”
overturn the popular and almost uni­
had picked up In. the stteets of New
"There, sir," he said, handing the versal belief that tho moon influences
York, on a cold winter night, a jxior money to Mr.'Tiblndts. "the wretched
the weather.
They hare Iwien at tho
little Italian boy.’wRo had been sent-by oij soul has paid itj and now she can’t
trouble of keeping au accurate account
Li, padrone
—.....
. ■
.1 ...
his
to Ncrnjx! fl,,.
the '•Sr.ltn
violin ....
on. ....
a hate her window-panes put
in. She’ll of tho prevalence of winds, the fall of
bleak comer. Mr. Parkman had found die of cold. How ernel Mr. Van Note is.”
waler, the degree of temperature, and
that the little fellow was ill-treated, and
“O, Widow Wivk'-'lt’s paiYes. We all
other phenomena, with a view of show­
had taken legal tnpasuresTo roleasc and know about them," saia Mr. Tibbetts.
ing whether changes are more likely to
ado|&gt;L him, and this boy, now grown Ur •• They’re heratock in tnule. Why, lad,
occur at ono time in the lunar month
bo seventeen years ofd, was the old they’re always onL”
than at another. They have all coma
•
man’s great pride and comfort
.
"Alwaysfall these bittejr winters!”
to the conclusion that no coincidence
“I want to give everything to Ludo­ sighed Ludovico.
exists between the changes of tho moon
vico,” he had said to the lawyer. ••He
Then an heroic tlionght possessed him.
and those of the weather. At the meet­
deserves it. and 1 love him. My nephew, He would tak* the money he had saved
ing of the British Association for tho
Ralph Venier. woujd pounce upon vrvrv- for n coat nnd go to tlie glazier and bnv
Advancement of Science, this year, Sir
thing if 1 iett no will. No, I should nine panes of glass and some putty and
William Thomson stated that “careful
make one even if I h:ul never found this himself mend the Widow Wickett’s observation with the barometer, ther­
boy. .1 should leave al! to some charity. windows. And when office hours were
mometer, and anemometer, at the time
Ralph Is a brute—rich, greedy cou- over away he sped, carried out his good ‘of new moon, full moon, and half moon,
tcmplible. Luduvied will carry out jay intention, and appeared nt the Widow " has failed to establish any relation
ideas nnd do good with his money."
Wickett’s door with his bainls full of whatever between the phases of the
So the will was written, and it wav gla-s aud smiles of benevolence on his
moon and the weather,” and that “if
now in the lawyer’s brexst jxx?ket to be face, and announced his intention.
there is anv dependence of the weather
carried to his olllCc nnd locked up iu a
The widow wits horrified. The broken on the phases of the moon, it.lj only to
•certain box.
a
degree quite imperceptible to ordinary
windows brought her half her income in
. ••! may live Vor years,” said the old charitalilc gifts from pitying strangers, observation.” Still it is questionable if
man. “and Ralph would make no bones but she was obliged to submit, and pre­ this announcement will in the least
of destroying the will. Lie's a bad fel­ tend to be grateful.
She sat in her shake the faith of farmers and sailors,
low—a vc.iw bad fellow."
rocking-chair, ruefully looking on. while who, more fhm other cH’Mh of per­
But at the door Mr. Parkman's man Ludovico extracted the old haW. aud sons, are directly interested in the
had told him that the doctor bad said his pans, ami ripped off the parchment, and weather, in their old iddas about the in­
master’s hours were ■numbered; that he threw the whole outude the window
fluence of tho moon u|»o.ji it. They will
would not see the next sun rise. No into the door yard where the gooseberry
go through life not expecting to see a
wonder Mr. Tibbetts felt that this was
“drought broken” or the cessation of a
W.
Happily he worked, nml
an uncertain sort of world.
.
soon the windows were all restored to continuous rain till the moon changes.
* But (he boys’ down in the hollow be­ their original condition.
Neither will their faith be changed in
side the road on which Ins horse slowly
the favorable or unfavorable influence
“TheLord’sblessin’ on you," whined
trotted, who werv-making the most.of n the widow, meaning something else.
of the moon on certain crops planted at
holiday nnd some tire-crackers and other
different times in the lunar month.
“O, don't mention it." said Ludovico,
gunpowdery play-things, such as one politely. " You mtfan't wash them until
They erill continue to plant potatoes and
might fancy Satan had invented fof his to-morrow, or they'll fall out. Good- other root crops “in the dark of the
offspring, were troubled with no grave by."
moon," and to sow small grains “in the
thoughts or solemn emotions. The black
light of the moon.” They will slaughter
Mrs. Wickett never washed anything,
-figure of the lawyer, longand lean, -ent- but she began to medidatc on doing it their hogs and their bullocks, if they are
ed.on his quiet old horse, instead of instantly : and Ludovico marchcilnway.
intended for home consumption, when
awakeniigr awe in their small bosoms, He would have no coat, but his con­ the moon is on the increase so that “the
aroused them to deeds of mischief. Sud­ science would not trouble him.
meat will not waste away in the frying­
denly an invention nesembling a bomb'
•• O; if I were rich, how good I would pan.”
They will, however, lay up t&gt;il
shelf, though smaller and less destruc­ be to the jmor !” ho said.
fence while the moon is decreasing in
tive, hurled through the air. hit Mr.
At this instant^oincthfng hitms heel size, so as to prevent tho rail-, from
Tibbetts in the small of the back, nnd sharply. A bltusetl breeft had impelled warping and from rotting out before
exphxlc'd. Mr. -Tibbets started; tbu herse one half of the parchment he had taken their time.
rear&lt;-&lt;l. nnd in a moment more Mr. Tib­ from the widow’s window Mier him.
Jt may be said that no evil results
betts was on His back in the hollow, the He stooped and picked it np. ’ITjc fir.»t from believing in a harmless supersti­
horse a mile away up the road and the thing that struck him was his own name­
tion. Such, however, is not always the
will sticking in the solitary gooseberry­ lie looked at it closely. It' w» part of case. Dr. Draper has shown that su­
bush that decorated the Widow Wickett’s a will—in his favor. 'Back flew\hu boy;
perstitious people are very likely to be
front door yard.
They will not set
the widow was jus: cramming the other conquered in war.
Now the Widow Wickett was one of part under her tea-kettle, but he snatched
out on a march or engage in any hsrardthose people wiio are always wretchedly it from her without .a word, and rushed ous undertaking unless all tho signs and
poor, np matter what is done forthem', away. Mr.'Tibbetts saw him coming,
omens are favorable. If they place any
and though she had more given her than anil his prophetic soul saw a great reve­
reliance in lucky and unlucky days they
any other person in the town, site always lation in the boy’s pale face.
will accomplish less iu a given time than
bail broken panes of glass in bar window
"What have you got thera?” he people who regard all days us of fcqual
•and was always patdnng them up with shouted.
.
value. If they rely on supernatural aid
pasteboard, tut pans and stniw-hafa.
they will not use their best exertions.
Ludovico answered.:
Toddling out shortly after the aed*
•’■Thu Widow Wickett’s window They will attribute victory or defeat to
dent, of which she heard nothing, being pane.*."
other than human and natural causes.
’
down cellar at the time, she found a fine
A few days after the widow was in
If such are the effects in a belief in su­
piece of stiff parchment sticking in her court, explaining how she came by such
perstitions on a people engaged in war,
bush. and as it was just the size of two window panes.
similar unfavorable effects would be
panes of glass, appropriated it at once,
And eo the Ixjy came to his own, and observed among people engaged in a
lasteniri'X it well sin with many tacks. really is the rich man he dreamed of peaceful pursuit like tliat uf farming.
As she could not read writing, the names being m he daubed the putty against the The delay of two weeks in planting a
upon the sheet never struck hareyp. and frames of Mrs. Wicketvs window; and
crop would often result in a failure. It
as for the red tape, she used that for a that old lady is well provided for by the is likely that tho general belief iu certain
ahoe string immediately.
gratitude of the young heir, who bas agricultural finperxtilions has Lad much
Meanwhile, down nt the hotel to which bought her house ’for her. furnished it.
to do with rtnuering fanning unprofita­
he luidlwen carried. Mr. Tibbetts came and settled on her an income beyond ble. It is generally very difficult to dis­
to himself, found he was not greatly in­ her wants ;• but she keeps an empty cover the origin of a superstition, on
jured. expresstsd his opinion of boys in 'snuff-box in her pocket, and 'amiable
account of its great antiquity.
Super­
general, nnd waited Tor bis clothes, strapgens arc often beard to mention stitions beliefs are the oldest we incul­
which were being bruthed for him.
■ tint they gave a few pennies just now cate. They sre also among the first that
•• And. by the way," cried ?lr. Tib­ to a poor old soul, who never oould save are received in childhood.
They are
betts. rttiddenly. "bring me the docu­ enough for her one luxury—a pinch of taught in tho nursery long before we
ment in the waistcoat pocket. William-. snuff.—N. F. Ledger.
learn to read, and many years before
It’s yen- valuable.”
we commence to study science. Such
William could not turn pale ; he was
Middle Life.
beliefs are very difficult to dispose of.
tlie color of charcoal; buu he stared • at *
Our judgment may condemn them as
It is a solemn thought and feeling
iir. TiuL-etb..
connected with midditi life," says the follies, but they, remain to influence our
"’For de Lord, tunasa. your watch, late eloquent F. W. Robertson/’ that actions.
Few' persons are willing to
an’ pocketbook, an’ p
, .vj’card­
life’s last business is begun in earnest; acknowledge that they are superstitious,
case. an’ handkerchief, is all '‘•■re' was
nnd it is then, midway between the although they hold to beliefs having no
in de po-.ikefaf' he said. “ Dere wasn’t
cradle and the grave, that a man begins foundation on carefully considered ob­
no duckyment dar!"
.
•
to marvel that he let' the days of his servations made by themselves' or oth­
“A miH'r—a parchment," explained
ers. They hold to the doctrine that
youth go by so half-enjoyed. It is the
Mr. Tibbetts.
relations exist between certain things
jwnsive autumn feeling; it is the sqpsa
“Sartinly. 1 is aware what a dockytion of half-sadness that we experience tljat can not be explained with our pres­
ment am. sab,” replied William, with
when the longest day of the vear is ent knowledge of science.- Ohtcago
projier diguiiy ; “.but dar wasn't none,
&gt;PintU‘
passed, and every day that follows is
aah. ”
Vain search was mtuie on the road, in shorter, and the lighter and feebler shad­
Insect-Powder Plant.
ows -cell that nature is hastening with
the hollow—everywhere. The will was
gigantic footsteps to her winter grave.
There seems to be a great interest
gone. Sore as he was from bls fall. Mr
So docs man look back upon his youth.
taken in this new plant, and as there is
jUdn-tts had himself driven back to the
When the first gray hairs become visible,
He arrived there when the unwelcome truth fastens itaelf not much knowledge in regard to the
cultivation of it I will give what little
upon the mind that a man is no longer experience I have had with it; and in
going up hill, but down, and the sun is order to finish my article I will oopy
from a circular issued by tho Depart­
things I ►ehind, when we were children. ment of Agriculture in
jo PyBut now there lies before us manhood.

many am]
But vheu otrf

mixed

down with a siriuotb board until h
is as smooth and level as it well can h-%
than sow the seed over tho snritea. dis­
tributing it evnnly; then taks a engi-.
mon kiichen si-jve'a’id sift just so i^ach
“earth evenly over tha seed a* will dovvt
it nnd no more; then take a watering,
pot with the fined kind of a rone, and
shower the earth with spray, and then
give it a shower «»f ‘ epray whenever the
surface appears dry; -But few seeds will
fail to germinate under such conditions;
trad in a few weeks the plants will be
large enough to 'transplant to ttlxtoen
inches apart, and it well cultivated n
good many of them will have flowers
tho first season, the largest crop is pro­
duced the second season.
My plants
have a good many flowers on now. 1
also took notice that my plants did n
great deal belter in wet weather than it&gt;
dry weather.
.
Ln regard to manufacturing tho nowder, the flower .heads should be gathered
during fine weather, when they are
about to open, or at the lime when fer­
tilization takes place, an the essential oil
that gives tho insecticide qualities reach­
es, at this- time, its greatest developmont. When the blossoming has ceased
the stalks may bo cut within about four
inches from ’the ground nnd utilized,
being ground* and mixed with the flow­
ers in the prrijMirtioa ot one-third of
their weight. Great care must be takbn
not to expose the flowers to mchture,
or the rays of the sun, or still less tc
artificial heat.
Thev should be dried
under cover and hermetically dosed up
in sacks or other vessels to prevent uu
timely pulverizati&lt;m.
Th” liner th*
flower-heads are pulverized the inon
effectually the powder acts and the
more economical* is its use. The best
vessels for keeping the powder are frail
jars, with patent oovers, or any other
perfectly tight glass vessel or tin box.—
Our. N. Y. World.
What Dr. Siemens Expects from ths
Gas Engine.
.

In hh recent inaugural addreas ns.
Pre«i lent of the British Association, Dr.
C. W. Siemens suggested that theAimt
might not be far distant when the gat
engine would displace on board out
ships “tho sgmewhat complicated and
dangerous steam boiler” now in u*e
The advent of such an engine and of the
dynamo-machine,hode dared, must mark
a new era of material progre-s nt least
equal to that produc id by the introduc­
tion of steam power in the early part oj
the century. '
Tho great advantage of the gas engine
is believed to be ib&lt; saving of fuel. Ac­
cording to Dr. Siemens, tho best steam
engine yet constructed does not yield in
mechanical effect more than one-seventh
part of tho heat energy residing in ths
fuel oojtsurwd, whereas the factor ot
(•fficiency ot the gas engine is onequarter. If, therefore, it shall tn adapt­
ed to vessels, the gas engine, being of
half tho weight of tho present steam
engine and boilers, and working with
only about half the present expenditure
of fuel, will admit of an addition ot
thirty per cent, to the cargo of “an
Atlantic propeller vessel—no longer to
be called a steamer. ” That improve­
ment accomplished, the balance of ad­
vantages in favor of such vessels would
be sufficient, as he says, to restrict the
use of sailing crafb chiefly to tho regattas
of sportsmen.
As it is now, steam is rapidly driving
sail* from the ocean, just us iron and
steel are superseding wood for ship
cohstruction.
Om of tho 780 vessels
building. or preparing to be built, in the
United Kingdom on the Sdth of June
last, only. 13i&gt; wore sailing craft, while
650 were steam -bips; and of this whole
number only 49 sail.ng vessels and six
steam vessels were of w-nxl, while steel
or homogeneous iron, which is destined
to become, the great material (or ship
building, was used for 89 steam and 11
saUing ve«-»els.
The great advances hitherto made in
steam vessels hare been in the direction
of saving foe!, in lighter machinery, iu
the substitution o&lt; the screw for side
wheels, and in tho use of iron and steel
instead of wood for the constructioB. A
wooden suit) could not be built to per­
form like the Alaska or the Arizona.
Whereas in the days of tho old Collins
lino the steam was'expandud only twioe,
and the pressure carried was only 18
pounds, tho expansion now is ten or
twelve times, aud the pressure is 90 to
100 pounds. The old Cunarderx, the
Asia, Africa, and Canada, carried a
pre-urare of tan pounds merely.
The consequence lias been tho enor­
mous in er ease in the size uf tho ocean
steamers and the great advance in their
speed. In April, 1838, tho Sirius first
crossed tbo Atlantic in seventeen days
from Liverpool and fifteen days from
Queenstown.
She was of 700 tons and
830 horse power. The Scrvia, built in
1881, has an extreme length of 580 feet,
and a displacement of 18,000 tons. The
City of Rome, built in the same year, is
600 feet lung, and has a displacement of
13,500 tons. The Alaska, which is 500
feet long, and of 12,000 tons displace­
ment, has done the distance between
Queenstown and New York in 7 days, 4
hours, and 32 minutes, and the return
voyage in 6 days and 22 hours, a mean
ocean speed of about 17 knot* an hojir,
or more than double that of tbe first
steam vessel which crimed the Atlantic.
Undoubtedly if tiw gas engine shall
be able to do what Dr. Siemens antici­
pates, it will give ocean navigation
another and a strong impulse. Iu far
n as compared with the
id boilers, and ite lewer
coal to produce the sama

bnpntRude fa abbot-red by God and muu.

GOOD ADVICE?any kkand kid-

Hon if you keen
neya in perfect

A first-tu* Odd Weather Haft for #8.

F.VEBY MAN WEO DBIVES A TEAM

Parker »f.insw Tonic. It will keepyonr bw«d
rich and pore. and give «hi g&lt;xxi health at lit­
tle cneL Bee other column.
■
..
A mill pond in Indiana fa
to be good for
300 ofae* of chill* and fever a year, and furniahe»,t«ro drag stoma a pretty fair i-uppun,

the safest’ way.
ynuthfnl color of the hair fa furnished by Parker’a Hair Balsam, whll-h fa deservedly popular
from Iu superior cleanll.no*.
'

Faith la n higher factiltv than reason.
Be ignorance tby choice where knowledge
leads to woe.____
A CROWNINfl MERCY TO THE CORNED.
U neuuxlled by any remedy in the world-putnarn-a Palnlnm Corn Extractor, the new rented v
fur (o.tiM. _ Never falls to cure; nevgr produce*
[still; never make* deep cavities in the flesh
*5 f’.11*’ prompt and palulCM remedy for coms.
»»ld^by drvggcstx evoywbere. Don't fall to

Blankets and Robes.
IN THIS LINE ooTMnek rill compare favor-

----- OCR STOCKS OF-----

Prints, Drees Goods, Flannels,
Ladies Cloakings, Sli iwla. Underwear,
Blanket^ Boots, Shoes, Hata, Caps,
Mittens, Glfcvea, Groceries, Glass­
ware, Orockey and Queensware
And, in fact, every thing usually kept. In a flrvt
elaaa genenri sure an- larger than ever and
are faing sold at popular low prices, r.—
see tliem, buy and be iiappy
Woodland, Oct. 25, JSS.
■

______

I’ve heard o’ni cunning stagers say, foofa for
argumcn* use wagenu
A face that cnpixit smile, fa never good.
FREE OF COST.
AH jwrsons wishing to text the merit* of a
gnat remedy-&lt;mn tlmt wijl twitlvely cure
ConsumpUou, Coughs, Cold.*, Asthma. Branrbitfa, or any •fYcctlun of the Throat and Lungs
—are requested to call at F. T. Bonus's drug
store and get a trial bottle of Dr. King's New
PiMovery for Conaumption, free of cost, which
will show you what a regular dollar-xUe Untie

F. F. HILBERT.

CUSTOM

O-CLriZEXg*
A^Hiianufacturer of hardwood

Lumber. s

Women bO years old-are young enough to be
arretted fur bigamy In Penn.

A GOOD FAMILY FLOUR

Mells' Health Rcncwer, 'greatest remedy on
earth for lni|&gt;oti'nrc', leanness, rexued detJiHtv,
Ac., fl. at dniggfau. Mich. Depot. JAMES E.
DAVIS A CO.. Detroit Mich.

MILL FEED and BRAN

That good Inellnetlon never should be acsej»lcd when good action faila.

PURE Cider VINEGAR,
THE BAD AND TOOTHLESS
are never Imitated or cnuicrfeited. Thia fa
especially true of a family medicine, and It fa
JIA RD WOOD L UMBER,
positive proof that the remedy imitated fa of
hlgbect value. Ab soon ms It liad Ix-rn Usted
aud proved by the whole world tliat Hop Bit­
ters woe the purest, best and most viable fam­
BASS WOOD L UMBER,
ily medicine on earth many imitation* sprung
up and began to steal die noUcea In which the
FIXE FINISHING LI MBER
press ami people of tbecouutry hail expire cd
tne merits of H. B., ami tn even' way trying to
induce mllorlng invalids to use their Blufl in
Mill on Sherman Street, East from
stead, expecting to make money on the credi
and good name of H. B. Many others star rd
Depot.
noMrama put up In similar style to H. B„ wlU
Tariouslr devias-d names in which the worn
II. IU D1CKIXMON A CO.
••Hop” or “Hops” were Used in a way to induct
people to tielievc they were the uni.-' as jloj
Bitters. All such pretended remedies or cun-’,
no matter what Uteir style or name fa, and si
pccially tliose with tin- word “Hop” or “Hope’’
in their name, are imitations or counterfeits.
Beware of them. Touch none of them. Car
nothing but genuine Hop Bittern, with a bunch
or cluster of gn-eu Hop* on the white label
Trust nothing else. Druggists and deniers arc
warned against dealing In imltatioua or coun­
terfeits.

0

0

Hurrah
BOOTS AND SHOES
—HAVE BEEN—

^yiLLlAM JONES,

Double what we Expected
them to be.

Groceries
HALL’S
gatarrh Pure
Is Recommended by Physicians^

3100

Rm’JFhMM!

""womunfuiort and wll ItTiSa^ooIttVO
guarantee that it will cure any
CXltS
wo will forfeit the above amount
ttitfai&amp;in a Glngto Instance.
Ufa unlike any otnrr Catarrh remedy.as
dwtremlng disease,ask yourDruggiitforiLand
ACCKrr SO UHTATIOW OB MIBXTITUTX. If bo

ttamcdfafafa. Price, 74 cent* per bottle.

Provisions
Of nil kinds at lowest prices.

CROCKERY AND GLASSWARE,
Largest Stock and Ixiwest Prices.
10,(XX) article* cheap.

Hanging Lamps
Cheaper than ever.

C.W. SMITE

F. 1 CHENEY t CO., Toleoo. OUo.
ifSO S CURE FOR

-MUST HE-

Shod
SHOLD REND ALWAYS BEST
A
TO HAVE THE JOB DONF

SKILLFULLY.

OSNMMPT^; Recognizing These Facts,

I Iixtx c poauire noraC, f«r UM&gt; aU-ry OUmw: Wlia
#•.» tlx-moaifa at oaaaa or «ho »°r,‘ »*»S SfkJ
r-JuucrbmtMNcarod. fad—d.»n«trBtiitH mr r»l:£
la !1» edbaer. IM 1 wiU MBd TWO KOFEJ.K4 FHKE. to-

by affording the public

Mot Full

THE BEST WORK

our i«L I
for 1882.
to any oddnaa np .
Contain-

Chas. Middleton,
A No. 1 Workman.

of the cargo

FOUNDER md MACHINIST

�GONE
XXJJ

him tha* b-s app*U»
he hurried out fur further
n. l il
I.— W
Writ:

rail t hat ran dong

ilUo

excis*.!

tbe

And is filleil with Stove, of 20 Different Kinds.

The MONUMENTAL in lhe Finest Itdimfi
Store Mmle.

harrier broke, and b- w«i£ killed by tho

—Pa-.penguin on i h • Midland Rail- j RDAetful language, but nultofly «m in
road. in England. fait into a habit of i right vvcco'lng two boys Rome twenty
- ■ --— ---------- T Trod* down tbe ftxent. “Another mi row*
rere) perwm* had for tif0 Anxiliary,” murmured Hoxy,
pet up placard# aWSBowlng hh vexation.
b« mure omridWalking down tpwn ,the flueoAsims
■were ho frequently repeated that they
rorert tn the pettv | begun to grow monotonous: “Hoxy’s
,lh'' 2^* ! fWUng fast.” “1 wonder 'Itow myeh
courts of England ii gwrotiA,
‘
~
longer be*g going to wear that grea*v
•voder 5&lt; poor and L.---------------------ptitabte laborer* stole » bxndfnl each of old ooat.” “Hoxy*s still under nettf*
oate from a field to feM their hungry coat government, I mtnpote.” “Hadn’t
' a cent to his name. Owes everybody in
town who’s fool enough to trust him.”
—In a Rih-inn exile known as “No. These were a few of the Auxiliary’.* rev11” a Siberian traveler, lately recog- elationa. It is safe to say'that the puor; v*J at Ysktiiok the Graud iHr e Nico- ocas of the thing mirpa&gt;-ed his'wildest
oIm Cnn-’-nntinoriivh.
In 1S75 tho imaginings. .Yet he did not'. appear to
Grand Diikw wt&lt; exi-ed.to Orenburg for heltanpy, not cnn«qnimivtcly happy. On
steuHwg Ids
tier’s diamonds and in­ the contrary, he looked sad and de­
sulting the Czar. Afterward he plotted jected. More than once ho ’raised hh
with the Nthflhta to n«a«di&gt;ate the hand to hi* car to pull out that Iqng-felt
pn*cn! f'jtar. His banishment to Sibe­ want; but ho restrained himself and
ria i- &gt;Bdwed. x
.
walked on.
A« he entered the pr»bt-officcr-hc al­
—The sy«t^mY)L*eUing gopcs on in­
- stallments. 4iih the-pr^o that tho ways went tn- tho post-office, becau-»e
seller may WZW the nrtic'es whenever a that is the thing for a badness man to
do
—more evidence of the beautiful per­
single puvnSeut ha- b«en neglected, and
• Hr-i without refunding ant tiling, ha* fection of tbe Auxiliary revealed it-elf.
“
Hullo
J” whispered one, “here’A Hoxy.
feeeived a blow in an English County
Court. The Judge described .the agree- He looks more Tike?, baboon than ever.”
• meat in common u-e as most infamous, “Wonder wh it’s his hurry,” said an­
nnd ordered a‘nnn«uit, declining to hear other; “ 'fraid the ragman’ll get him, I
the plain tiff’d solicitor or to grant a ciuie guess,”. And a third remarked U[K»n the
benefit tliat would accrue to tho earth
’ of appeal..
were Hoxy out of it or under it.
—A Peking newspaper tellsof the sale
Hoxy didn't tarry kinglet tho post­
of a Chinese wife by her bn*band. bhe
office. There wa* a ROffiefhing tn the
had fallen in love with the purchaser,
. air of the place that made him feel rick.
who agreed to pay $130 for her, but ho So hb sought the street again.
But it
. jUideoted to bring the money when ho
waa no better ujxm the sti-not.
From
called to take her away, and so the hus­ every side camo fresh evidence of i ho
band refused to giro her tip. In that
peculiar esteem In which lie was held by
. emergency the enamored pair drugged his friends and acquaintances. 'The
him, forged his signature to the bill of
young ladies ’whom ho thought eaten
sale, ann (doped- They ware nrre--ted hp with envy of Mrs. Hoxy becanso of
while eating their wedding broakfrut, tho jewel of "a husband she had secured,
and put into dungeons, where both Com­
i, »w alluded to him as “that old fool;”
mitted suicide.
i lie married ladies wondered how “Mrs.
—A superstition is still current in Hoxy could live with that slovenly
snms parts fef Greece that the dead thing,” and tho street boys gave thrill­
occcrudooally leave their graves at mid­ ing proof that they shared the universal
night and return to their homes, where contempt in which a party by tho numo
they create all kinds of mischief. On the of Hoxy was held in the community.
labuid Andros the rumor circulated
Iloxy was now decidedly miserable
lately that several persons recently He began to doubt whether tho Auxiliary
buried had been seen in the streets. To was a long-felt want, after all. Ho bad
prevent a recurrence of this event sev­
about come to the conclusion that a
eral peasants went to the graveyard on man’s happiness is not necessarily in­
the following night, opened the grave* creased in direct ratio to tho acuteness
of these persons, cut off the heads of the I of his hearing.
corpse*, nnd mutilated them in a horri­
As these thoughts wore running
ble manner.
*
through his head there came a fresh' ex­
—Sir Edward Watkins’ muoh-Abused hibition of tho success of his Auxiliary.
channel-tunnel scheme ha* a formidable It was a female voice, and this was the
rival, and a. prize of $5,600 “in-fuliy awful revelation:
“He can’t live long,
pfcid np. shares” is offered to anyone anyway, and I ’guess Mrs. Hoxy won’t
who will execute tlie plan.
Tlie design shed many tears.
Charley Snowdon,
is to connect England and France by a who used to wait upon her, you know,
“direct railway across the channel,” on stands ready to take her just as soon aa
completion of which the Queen will be Hoxy’s gone.” .
able (so rues the notice) to “visit her
This was the straw that broke tho
dominions in India and return in the camel’s back, the blast that sounded
the death knell of? “Hoxy’s Ear Auxil­
with a family’’ will be in a position to iary.” With one convulsive grasp he
'‘travel all over Europe.” The scheme tore the bated thing from his ear, threw
has not b^*n hastily concocted, for it it to tho pavement and ground it to dust
and*five rival plans were submitted to under his heel. Then he turned about,
Napoleon III., when the direct railway rushed home, doffed his old clothes,
was selected by him as “the only one combed and dressed himself inta, an ap­
really politic and for his patronage.” pearance of respectability, and quietly
Tbe projector of tho enterprise is now but firmly announced to his affectionate
resident. kt BoHlog;,.-, wailing to point wife that ho never felt better in bis life,
out the position on the coast man which and thoroughly believed that he should
the new railway should start.
live to a green old.'age, as his father and
grandfather hail before him.
At last advices Hoxy bad not applied
Hoxy’s Ear Auxiliary.
for a patent for his Ear Auxiliary, but
Mr. Hoxy believed he had strnck it at in his confidential moods he sometimes
last. He had studied tbe thing for years, says that the happiest man on earth is
had spent no end of money in experi­ tbe deafest man.—Boston Transcript.
menting, and had heretofore only suc­
Mm? Gwelf.
ceeded in turning his “study” into a
junk-shop, him-elf into the outward
There is nothing in royal rank to de­
similitude of a remarkably seedy tramp, prive its holders and their families of
and Mr*. Hoxy’s amiable disposition
into a tetn|&gt;er quite as uncertain as, and any advantage derivable from having a
far more dangerous than, the Vesuvian surname. Bourbon, Romanoff, Witielsbach, Nassau, Bragauza, Wasa, HohenCrater,
zollern, Habsburg, Valois, Stewart,
But that wax all past now. Iloxy had
Jagellon, and Hohenstauffoa are all
struck it at last, or at least that is what
cases in point: and as regards Queen
he said and believed; and indeed ho
Victoria’s children, their family name
seemed to have good and sufficient
is their mother’s, not their father’s, as
grounds for tbe faith that was in him.
her rank was so much superior to his,
The thing that Hoxy had “struck”
and she was the heiress of a greater
WM nothing less than “Hoxy’s Ear
family. And her family name is Gwelf.
Auxiliary,” which was intended to fill a
When a late Duke of Brunswick was
long felt w«at and the exterior hu­
outlawed for debt in this country. I
man ear at the same time, and by means
of. which the wearer should be able to remember that tbe proclamation of out­
distinguish the slightest whisper in the lawry was directed against “George
William Frederick Gwelf, Esq.,-com­
largrwt apartment and hear wii h accurate
monly culled Duka of Brunswick.”
distinctness all sound* made within a
There
are, no doubt, .sovereign houses
half-mile of him, either under cover or
whose members do not. use any sur­
In the open air.
Hoxy bad worked out the problem to names, but in some of these cases they
P«msos8 them. That of the Saxon House,
his own satisfaction and had conceived
and constructed his working ’model. All for example, is Wettin, the surname of
th*’ remained was to secure his patents that Elector Frederick who was grand­
father of the Ernest and Albert from
* and count tbe ducats which of necessity
must flow in upon him from the hands whom the two main branches of the
and pockets cf an appreciative and family arc named. And lhe royal house
of Italy has used Savoy as ita family
grateful world.
name for many centuries,from Boniface,
But before filing his application, Iloxy
thought it would be as well to give the of Savoy, Archbishop of Canterbury in
Auxiliary a trial; a sort of dress rehear­
sal, as it were. So, without saying a
wore u» Mrs. H., Hoxy tucked the Aux- ough.— TtiC Spcciator.
z Alary into bis port ear and went down
A Sum In Arithmetic.
'
breakfast. ’Aside from tbe fact that
Mrs. H.’s ahriil voice wu magnified
“How are you coming on, Unde
MoeeF”
“Poorly, poorly, thank God.”
“What'e the matter?”
“I baa aeben gala to support, bom.
untn Hit costa a power of money to fill up

win

tversge-yearly &lt;Swt of the whine British
army in time of jieace for the part ten
stated at $’TJJXX).&lt;X»; of
the nst
.&lt;*) ',(W0; making a grand
—— —
..5,000,000 a year. But an
army In motion and an army at rest are
difleTBUt things in reckoning thof ex­
»lutHin«ry
pense. In the Ameriuim Bevt»lr
----------- ' *
war England never at any time hod
more than 25,Ox) men in this country;
yet the expense of tliat war for tho
seton yearn of Ite.hcondnuance amount­
ed to’ $510.t&gt;'K}.00!),
hr an aver­
age of $87, IO0.01M a year.
Our
war with Mexico, lasting two reach cost
us a-round $100,060,U‘K). We did not
are: age more than 25.&amp;Xlmca in-Mexico
on every line of advance. The cost per
mon was $2;(XM) a year. The cost j&gt;er
man to Uie ’British .Government in tho
i»e»en years’ American war was still
more, owing to the largo fleets of trans­
ports and armed cruisers England had to
maintain. The Egyptian war will be,
in all respects, an ’expendve one. The
anyal force must be kept up at the maxi-u'tm. and all supplies and niuhitionx
will have ‘to be transported from Englaud, .'Lilia, India and GibraltnE t An
extra expense of § 1,500 per man for one
year is the lowest estimate that .can be
made of tlie cost of this war withnafely.
It will sum up $^().0u),000. It will cost
ms much-pur month as the Crimean war,
and probably more, for England's con­
tingent bi that war was not as much as
40.000 mpn. When tho Cri'inehn war
began the debt of England was *.8,7W),000,000 in round numbers. When the
«ar bills lind all been audited the debt
was, placing it in round numbers,
$4,000.000,(XX). But this by no means
represents the whole cost of the war, for
..the yearly budget was increased more
titan $80,000.000,'-.* The- Crimean war
■lid not cost England less than.$250,000,000. If Arabi tights his way stub*bornly oack from tlie Nile delta to Cairo
and makes a resolute stand there, tho
Egyptian war will ebst at least half as
mucn. even if the campaign is success­
fully finished by next spring.
So far there is no sign that any other
Bower trill take a hand in the contest
but Turkey*, nnd it will cost England as
much to watch the Turkish army and
keep it from fraternising with the enemy
as to tight Arabi. If. then, England is
compelled to supply the army and navy
at her own cost, the Powers represented
in the Conference refusing to share the
expenses, it is certain that England will
seek indemnity in some riinpe or other.
This is what the London Tones insinu­
ates when I* says England's resolve is
not to retire from the country until she
has “mado snre that the difficulty shall
liot again recuradding that, ••when
it heroines necessary to seek the sanc­
tion of other Powers for this result, the
concert of Europe will be invoked in n
sense very different from that with
which we have lately been familiar.”
That is. England, having borne all the
expenses of the war. will hold its much
ground in Egypt as will repav her. and
if the Powers protest, they will be told
that they must cither share the costs.of
tho war and the additional cost of forti­
fications to secure the future safety of
the canal, or hold their peace.
It is at this point of tho business that
the most serious difficulties will lie encounleroil, threatening a general Eu­
ropean war. Franco and Russia will
protest against sharing the expenses of a
war which they say Imgland has forced I
for exclusive advantage to herself. But
as long as the British party is backed up
by Germany and Austria, French and
Russian growls will be harmless
The
one thing of tho future that may tie
counted on with unswerving confidence
is that England. l)eing master of
Egypt by means of lier military and n.-vval power, and at her sola expense, will
- not surrender her position without ex­
acting territorial indemnity.—Nan Fran­
cisco Chronicle.

Paints, Oils and Cplors, Doors, Glass, Sash and FRINCIPAL+LI
Blinds Iron and Wood Pumps,Wagons, Buggies,
Carriages and Platforms, Drills, Cultivators,
Seeders. Plows, Land Rollers, “Reed Spring­
tooth Harrow.

SHORTEST. QUICKEST sanf.

aoe.lMKaa.Gal-

.MtancM-tteaad

HARBED WIRfc.

A. Large assortment of Shelf G^ids and Tinware, and the best
.
Tinner in the County.
FOR COODS CHEAP CALL AND SEE ME.

KANSAS CITY
X.

Au eona«:U«»M
UtUua

ThrOTSh
&gt;5
TicUuvUtbUSnF
Ceteteatcd Lliw loXX/CXS
M:c=txUlcffice«!jXy-XX/\^v

Tryh.

luxury, lufiexj

&gt;&lt;Cy/z' Ar.umur-

UMC* (’! X/2/J'zX. •
r*^* S^ri*** CAniNflEy
.

X

By Buying Your Dry Goods

PEHCEYAL LOWEiA,
ter.
7^. nut. Ayr,, •
ChicucQ, Ill

1 1MD SCBGICAL SlHlTiUn
.-V-*'*? U*£T ~ ” n Ibl* InrtimfloB.

W. S. GOODYEAR &amp; CO

chronic Invalid*
than any oilier it
Unite.! Stataa.

Hr*. Hti !!£&gt;•!

We fully realize the

That most all kinds of produce are bringing this fall, so have
bought a large stock of all kinds of
.

a.drllghtltal rvtrr«t t&gt;r

DRY GOODS. FANCY GOODS. NO­
TIONS. BOOTS and SHOES,
Catarrh DIRECTIONS
and CARPETS.
“

lln».-:tultb IttUeto
a tmrilck- Ot ti-

And are selling at prices that will astonish you.

W. S. GOODYEAR &amp; CO­
Hastings, October 4, 1882.

u

?

**

tirSf8E.UB.U¥
eittnie*

jSt (ff.etuxJty

tStarrbalvirua emu
tns healthy «rfn*l«r
allay*
lortioiatimi
praiNta the men. ’
luw from. aMltiom i
jeoWe.
C-MOplrltly

HAY-FEVEra

MILLINERY

■i-nt m dirrctci

Uncqunlrd For Cold in tiro Heid

Rrcogfiizetl ns a ■Wonderful Discovery.
’ S rIJ &gt;■» .Irura(&lt;•!•
On nffi lpl of pste'

NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY CHEAP.

FOR THE NEXT SIXTY DAYS

O5JHES

*»\J

I shall offer my entire stock of millinery goods tit cost or
- under.

SPECIAL BARGAINS IN TRIMMED HATS

Venus.

Venus is becoming very brilliant in
the evening sly, throwing her fiery
neighbor .Man completely into the shade.
In Uie teleiseope she now resembles the
moon when it is a little pad half full.
Through'the autumn she will continue
to grow more and more brilliant, until
she appears us a thin crescent, S silver
bow. Then she will disappear as a
star, to reappear on the Glh of December
as a black dot on the sun. At that tima
she will have to face such a bristling
array of telescopes as was prolmbiy
never before turned Upon any celestial
body. Almost every civilized Govern­
ment has fitted out expeditions of as­
tronomers to observe the transit from
various parts of tlie world; and in west­
ern unit central Europe, North and
South America and Australia thousands
of telescopes will be trained upon the
sun from public and private observ­
atories, roofs, back-yards, lawns, city
parks nnd street comers. Evenbody
will want to have at least one good look
at Venus upon the sun’s disk, for all the
world will be talking about it, and
neither we of .this geuehuion nor our
children, and but few even of our grand*
ohildran. will behold another transit of
Venus, for the next occurs in tlie year
2,004
After it is over the astronomers
will set themselves down to figuring;
their calculations will extend Mmmgb
months and even years, and at the last
they will probably anhatanco that they
have not yet obtained exact knowledge
ot the distance of the sun, that thev
believe they are within a&gt;x&gt;nt 100,000
miles of the truth, and that at the next
transit of Venus they hope the astron­
omers of the twenty-first century will be
able to reduce the limits of error to
50,000 miles or tees. There are, how­
ever. other methods of measuring tlie
sun’s distance, which it is hoped will

—A drunken Denver burglar bhor
dared into hb own house and robbed

Some people are never ready to take advantage of favorable
opportunities. Don’t let this be said of you.

Come Early, Come Late,

ffh
Y/t

WwB
BEK®
-T-7

TiW mt. a

•»«*»* nrrvo tonic, IQ.
tdtwr o- rUmuinr
SAXAIITTAN XCrtViX:
1- invani*!4n
Thon;

niCAxrOj.

-ww»ar*» ^veksss.&lt;&amp;»»»?

Only that your wants are supplied.

M. JEFFREY
FARMERS, TEAMSTERS, HORSEMEN!
—DO YOU KNOW THAT—

YOU CAN SAVE MONEY
—in* Bvroso—

.

OF HERB. WALRATH.
In tbe Heavy Line 1 manufacture Farm ilumens, Bead liar-

The MANIPULATED

la tbr UrvairM Sdiiiijr Ardcl.-.»t&gt;£ moat '.opclar .
prwent la-fore tl&lt; jwopk. .X&lt;-uU »»tj(iK-d cxch
rive and control u! Territory. Sink at Wrw Agenu can handle ll. Wtai
are uukin&gt;
One nsvsit |.lt&gt; Io a wwk«; another uimSo ej&lt;t I.
flr»t month** work; onnthcr tnatlr »«r Ini hour ;
anotimr M7.M in one day, foots- am! w-e it ut act
fur a circular, Addo-ra MANnTLATEli. i-»
Meridian M^Cbicaao, ill.

newa, and Lumber Harness, using the best brand of "A” stock, stitchin
with 6 cord No. 10 thread, and Eberhard Trimmings.
.

My Light Single and Double Harams are the Pride of nil who
1
■
,

Made in all Styles
Best Stock in the Market
—FROM—

AND WARRANTED TO GIVE BAU8FACTION.

I also keep full lines of

Robes, Blankets, Halters, Riding Bridles,
Collars and Pads, Curry Combs, Brushes,
Harness Oils, Etc.

:Saddles, Whips,

_

Everything auriud down to

Price.

mmI

utufoclion gtunuttwd.

HERB. WALRATH,
W«t Side Mnin rt, Nashville Mloh.

NO PATENT NO PAT

�LES

LARG

•

*

of the district of Columbia, M. D.
Helm, foreman of the government
printing office, and ex-senator George
E. Spencer, government director of tbe
-Union Pacific railroad. The removals
were made in consequence of n report
made by George Bliss, government
counsel in the star route prosecution,
and a letter written by the Attorney
General, covering the report, which
•bowed that the dismissed officials in­
interfered with the administration of
justice in the star route cases. “The
marshal of the district." Mr. Brewster
says, “is responsible for much of the
opposing peutiment to the case of the
government that was exhibited in court
aud out of court during the trial of the
star ro u te, case.”
From
--------- ----------- • hero
with congy^flamen
the ithPi
. V'-'era*
_ ...to be. very
.
,
general
that nothing whatever will be done with
the tariff by this congress. It is also
believed that an internal revenue bill
will not be passed this session. This
view is taken particularly by tariff re­
formers, who belong to both aides of
the house and who will oppose the pas­
sage of any measure interfere with tar­
iff revision. It is claimed by this daas
of congressmen that the two measures
should be considered together, and tliat
nothing should be done chat will ren­
der it impracticable to reduce or abol­
ish the tariff on articles on which the
people demand it should be reduced or
abolished.
There ia a disposition on the part of
tbe Republican members of the House
to hasten tbe passage of the appropria­
tion bills during the first part of the
session. &gt;A conference was held yester­
day between Speaker Keifer and Mr.
Hiscock, chairman of tho committee on
appropriations, and this policy was
practically agreed upon. In pursuance
of this arrangement Mr. Hiscock will
hold daily sessions of his committee,
and the appropriation bills will be
pushed through by him to an early pas­
sage, and as rapidly as they are report­
ed from this committee. Mr. Hiscock
hopes to be able to present to the House
the majority of these bills before tbe
holiday recess, which it is the wish of
the. leaders shall be much shorter than
usual. It appears to betheir purpose
to dispose of the most needful legisla­
tion first and then make use of the re­
mainder of the time for the considera­
tion of measures relating to the tariff
and other subjects demanding tlie at­
tention of congress.
Wither, which ia due to-day by sched­
ule time, came in some days ago, and
came as if it bad business on hand and
was quite determined to attend thereto
with promptness and zeal. This will be
a lively winter in Washington, politi­
cally and socially. Ab the forty-sev­
enth congress has but throe months of
life remaining, it will bestir itself to
make the moat of that brief space. As
Lent comes in early society will push
things with bumming vim. Crowds are
coming here from all quarters, for the
fame of Washington—the new Wash­
ington—ss the winter resort of worth,
refinement, wit and beauty has gone
into all the land. A few thousand will
be here from the beginning to tlie end
of the season. Many other thousands
will moke firing visits or excursions to
the Capital. Not to have visited Wash­
ington is getting to be a reproach under
which no well intentioned citizen of tbe
great republic likes to exist Those
who came last winter will come again
thia winter. Happily there is room
enoogh for all, and the objects to be
seen here are interesting to every in­
telligent perron, traveled or untravel­
ed, learned or unlearned. As for social
advantages no other American city can
compare with Washington, nor is there
any other city where intellectual im­
provement is so delightfully blended
with social enjoyment. Of course all
this rush of viKitors will make business
lively. Tne outlook fora busy, happy,
prosperous winter in Washington is

.ppiivtmrou of importance will be
made by the President before the a*aembling of Congreaa. There is no
present necessity for the filling of va­
cancies, and -in about three weeks nom­
inations can be made direct to the Sen­
ate. Tbe moat important place to be
filled are Jioee of the aaaistaut Secre^
tariva created by act of the last Con*-

grees. Secretary Lincoln, when,asked
to-day who was to be bia assistant, re­
marked pleasantly that he had not the
slightest idea, and strange as it may
seem there appears little or no discus^
ion of candidates. There is probably
no intention on tbe part of any of the
President's cabinet to resign, if we are
to'take their word for it. Nevertheleaa,
it is thought altogether probable here
that this winter will see changes in at
least two, and those to tbe oqes I have
indicated. President Arthur is the
man who will do the business. It is
possible that they will be provided for
elsewhere, but tbe Treasury and port
office are wanted, the first for some
Stalwart who can unite die New York
Republicans against
the formida­
ble Presidential candidate,
Cieve
land, the second for some one for simular reasons. Brewster too, wants to
leave, but the Star Route cases will
not permit him. He is upon bis mettle.
The first trial was a fiaccu, through
the treachery and incompetence of his
own department. In the midst of the
demoralization incidental to the brib­
ery cases Brewster is harassed on the
inside and out. To retire now is dis­
grace. He realizes this and in his des­
peration he has begun to mend bis
fences by making a sweep of suspected
clerks preparatory to the piesentation
of his new cases.
Dr. Collins, of Minneapolis, brother
of Jerome J. Collins, who was last with
the Jennette party, has left Washing­
ton for home. He is disapointed with
the attempt to bring out the completed
facto with reference to the fate of the
Jennette party. He thinks there is an
erident intention cn the part of naval
officers to bush up the affair and to
smother the truth about the matter in
every way possible. The only way
left for him, he says, appeared to be
either ask the witnesses such questions
as he desired to put, or to sit by and
wat«b the careful avoidance of every
question which would tend to elicit
such a state of things as he has evi­
dence to show exists.
A democrat member cf Congress
from Maryland, discussing the question
of the Speakership of the House yes­
terday, said he thought the line be­
tween the free-traders protectionists
would be very closely drawn. He uaia
he would not bo surprised to see a split
in tlie democratic party result from tho
contest. He said he hadnot as yet
pledged himself to support either Ran­
dall or Carlisle, although both were
very able men. He said he was sorry
to see tbe bitternea that was being ex­
hibited between the protectionists and
free-traders, and expressed a hope
that the matter would be settled with­
out disturbing the harmony of the
grand old party.

’ FLEVIOUS

THOSE OF „
MONTH.

BARGAINS

Done It and

Have

IN DRESS

Will Continue

BARGAINS
GOODS -A-2ND

to

Do

It.
attauormen, M powerful eaoagh u&gt; be exenM
-C it. Kl.apJ. &lt;rf rwK

NOTIONS

BARGAINS
In Boots, Shoes, HatH and Caps.

BARGAINS
In Horse Blankets. Lap Robes, and Comfortable*.
As the season advances we find our stock moving off finely, and the visitors to our store tell
us’that our Large Stock and Low Price* are what is bringing us the
largest trade in town.
A single Fact is worth a ship-load of Argument. Our stock of OloalfH, Dol­
mans, and Overcoats Tur Men and Boys, is, beyond the shadow of a doubt,
the lai-g-est and most desirable to be found in the town.

ZS^Butter, Eggs, and Dried Apples Wanted.
.MfcUova:

Merry Christmas!
500 Vases.
All Kinds—all Prices.
We lead them all.

’Nuff ced.

Toilet Setts.
Beautiful designs.
Bright, tasty colors.

Odd Pieces.
Of Bisque, China,
Glass, Majolica, Etc.

Silverware.
A new departure,—will do the beat

Hanging Lamps.
Stock Larger aud
than ever.

Prices Cheaper

Majolica.
At Prices to suit all.
or Setts.

Single Pieces

Confectionery
Candy, Nuts, Etc.
Boots and Shoes,
Gloves and Mittens

of drawl**

1. W. ENGLAND. PuNUher.
Tct Oct, N.Y. Qty.

Probate Order.
। Court for tbe County

jeef Probata.
GEORGE GILLIS,

Thereupon It I*ordered that

All are invited to call and spend an
hour or more viewing the enormous
stock of holiday goods suitable for
Cups and Saucers, Mugs, Fruit Plates,
10,000 kinds in Wood, Tin, Iron and all.
Comports, Match Safes, Etc.
China. We can’t begin to tell.

French China.

Toys. Toys.

week*, previous to
underlies the village.
W. B. McCrecry of Flint has beeh
appointed to the state board of agricul­

CLEMENT SMITH.

Great Bargains

L. L VZTIEELER.

DKroitUq,

day edition, &lt;7*0.
’
SUNDAY—Eight pasta; &lt;1.30 ■
WEEKLY—&lt;1 a year. Eight
nuttUr of the dally Imims; an ■

In profusion — all best quality at
low prices.
•

ture, vice Childs, deceased.
J. King and Co., boot and shoe deal­
ers of Grand Rapids, have failed. Li­
abilities $17,000; assets $8,000.
Wc want to realize &lt;10,000 from Mie* of mcrcbandLtc before the first of January, and in
Grand Rapids saloon-keepers gave order to do ao we will oiler goods bo low that to be seen la to be sold.
over $200 to a benevolent institution Clothing.
there Thanksgiving day. They ought We will sell you a rattling good suit for 16.50 and a better one for (16.50. Now 1* juat tbe
to.
A Niles man gave the hose company
of that city $100 for coming promptly
to the rescue when his house was on
Press Goods.
fire.
Trunk*, Satchel*, Floor Oil Cloths, Table Oil Cloth#.
A Caro man sold $37,000 r-orth of
AT-wool Flannels,
cedar pdRts last year and expects to in­
Waterprocfs, Cottonades. Sheeting, Shirts and Drawers, Ladles’ Underwear, Hosiery.
August
crease bis business to $50,000 worth
Children’s Suits, Children’s Overcoats,
this year.
Boys’ and Youths’ Suit* and Overcoat*.
EAST MAPLE GROTE.
A. 11. Morrison of St Joseph’ bought
Boots and Shoes,
all tho turkeys in town the day before
Rossie Back of Thornapple ia stop­
Thanksgiving, and gave them to poor
Cloves and Mittens
ping in thia vicinity looking for work.
people of the place.
For Ladle* and Gent*. Rubber Overcoat* for Ladies and Gent*.
Wallace Matteson and wife were vis­
St Ignace, with a population of near­
Felt Boots.
iting relative* at Jackson, the fore part
ly 8,000, has not a sidewalk iu the vil­
Rubber Boot* and Over-shoe*, Wool-lined Boot*, Felt Boot* for Ladies and Gent*.
of this week.
lage, tbe people wading through the
A few days ago, a hone belonging to
slushy snow and mud in the middle of
Wolf Robes, Blanket*, Glove* and Mitten*.
Neal Lamb, became frightened and ran
GROCERIES, CROCKERY, GLASSWARE, MOTIO.W, Jte.
*way, which caused a little excitement tho street
Ira M. Clark, a prominent citizen of
for a few momenta, bnt no damage was
Lexington and grand lecturer of tbe Peaches andCherries. 1000 cord* of IS-lnch woodwaated.
done.
Wiwrss it upon u*. You need the good* aud we need the money. We don't say, “You
state of the Masonic fraternity, droptickle me and I'll tickle you," but we do say that our wants are mutual and we may do each
On Thursday of last week, the day
peed dead while returning from dinner other good.
that was announced for Thanksgiving,
Dox’T fall to call with your produce and your c**h, for now 1* your time to strike.
to his store, Nov. 27th.
was passed very pleasantly by a ring
Mrs. Wm. Fox of Bay City, mistook
bunt by tbe young men of this vicinity.
some oil of Wintergreen for essence
A'aahville, November 23, 1882.
James Moon and William Andrews,
and took six drachms of it at a dose.
were chosen as captains, the latter get­
A physician was called, but it was too
ting over two hundred more counts
late and she died before morning.
than tbe former. In the evening a
BATTLE CREEK MATTERSdance and oyster supper was given at
A printer with whom the writer
Eastman Lathings’, for the benefit of
of
this
worked in tho Battle Creek
the side that got the most counts,
which passed off very quietly, until Journal office only a little over a year
ago,
is
now
sticking type in au office
about four o’clock in tlie morning
when the party broke up and went on an island 2000 miles out in the Pa­

The Patent office is receiving num
erous complaints for its long and te­
dious delays in deciding and acting up­ home in a good humor.
on application for patents. . Every
l.C.
man is entitled to the protection of a
MICHIGAN NEWS.
law as quickly as it can be administer­
ed, and in tbe case of an invention,
Horse stealing at Corunna.
A small railroad collision at Port
where important contracts, i ita! to his
interests and those of the public are Huron.
Jas. A. Morris drowned at Rockford,
prndiog, to allow his application to
sleep months on an examiners desk Kent county.
The Lake shipping has suffered much
sewn* an injustic well worthy of publie
eoodeiBuation. For the last few years damage recently.
lire surplus revenue ianied into the
R. P. Hubburt of Grand Rapids was
Treasurer from the earnings of the buried alive in a well.
Patent Office was in tbe neighborhood
Mr. and Mn. U. 8. Grant, junior, are
of a million dollars, and this year it io Adrian visiting friends.
Calhoun county circuit court docket
has 15 divorce cases this month.
The state board ot corrections and
charities met at Jackson this week.

cover* o-t of jt* many skies that appea
Ucular force to Jite IndlrMtml liking.
It you already know T*« Bn, you
tharlnlSM lib * HUM better than

cific ocean.
Grave suspicion is now and has been
for some time entertained that Dr. F.
W. Bathrick of Battle Creek is a bad
mau. He is charged with criminal ac­
tions with Anna Prosaerof that place.
On account of such charge he sued the
Detroit Poet and Tribune for libel. Tbe
suit is to be tried next Tuesday. The
Poet baa filed a plea of justification,
and proposes to prove that Bathrick
did seduce and betray Anna Prosser;
tliat he did procure an abortion, which
nearly killed her; that he is a seducer,
abortionist and adulterer; and that it
is a fact that there was talk at one time
nt giving him a coat or tar and feathers.

HOLIDAY PRESENTS!

NlortjfHge Kale,
Default h*ving been made In tbe condition*
of a certain mortgage, (whereby the power
therein contained to *ell baa become operative)
executed by Ad* T. Lee to Albert W. Old*.
October lOtli, 1875, aud recorded In the office of
register of deed* In and for Barry county,Mich­
igan, on October 21st, 1875, in liber 8 of mort­
gage* at page 880, which said mortgage wa* by
Mid Old*.ou September 17,1878. aeSgued to H iram R. Dickinson, and said assignment wm on
December lOtii, 1878, recorded in the office of
register of deed* for Barry count? aforesaid, in
Uber 10 ot mortgagee on p*go-5(e, upon which
mortgage there is at this date claimed to be
due One Thousand Four Hundred and Seventy
Eight Dollar*, and do suit or proceeding* at
law having been instituted to recover the same
shall MU Upubhe
r, el the front door

gage or ao much thereof a* shall be necessary
to satisfy the amount due on *uch mortgage,
with ten per cent interest and legal coet*.
The premise* to be eold aa above referred to
are described Iu Mid mortgage a* follow*, towit: Commencing at tlie center post on section,
thirty-*!!. In township three north, of range
seven west. In Barry county, Mich., running
thence south with lhe quarter line thirty one
and 95-lOOth* rod* to a post, thence west *nd
parallel with the north Hue of said quarter thir­
ty-four and 6-lOth* rod* te a post, thence north
and parallel with tbe ca«t Hue of said quartcr
nlneteen and % 100th a rod* to a stake on tbe
twentv-Mtven rtxL- to a Blake on die north Hoc
ot said quarter, thence with Mid line ten and
36-100tha rod* to tbe place of beginning, centaintag «tx acre*.
Dated Hasting*. Nov. 80th. 1882.
114
HIRAM R. DICKINSON.
Clkmkxt 8m ith, Attorney for assignee

LEGGED WHEAT
N more grown wheat will be grotmd «t tbe
NaahTWe mill.

grists of grown wheat.
There h no mill, old process or new procr**,
that ear prrveut the flour of different grist*

and any milUr knows that

The Largest Stock Ever in Nashville.
---------COMPRISING IN PART---------

Books, Books, Books,

teke* grown wbesl to i
OortCu biawhau i
SHtOjMUMOM'l,

mill
but

Call and See,

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                  <text>ORNO STRONG, |
Epitok

amp

Proprietor.

I

VOLUME X.
LIFE IK KASHVILLE
And Her Environs.
—The total valuation of Castleton
township, according to the assessment

roll i* $868,205. Taxes $5,332.
—Joel Kocher has purchased the
Cooper property on Queen street, and
taken poeaesaion of the same.
—Excursion tickets to Lansing Dec.
18-33, inclusive, at $3 for the round
trip, — account stock-raiser’s conven­
tion.
—Nowis the time fora careful inspec­
ipea and chimneys. Give
tion of I
no-op^ortunity to gci|in
the fire
his wojl
—Little C. B., the year old sou of
John Marshall, while playingabouthis
home on Tuesday, ran against a hot
stove, burning hia hand quite badly. '

—A meeting was held at the Christian
church yesterday afternoon for the purpoa of organizing a Congregational
church, but we go to press too early to
give the result.
—The pork jparket is lively.
■ A i^ll-fed hog roused up in hl* aty
•‘The beautiful snow has come,” he said,
“And slaying will soon be here.”
—“Balance all” at the opera house
Christmas night ander the management
of James Clay to the music of Hoag’s
full quadrille band. Turn out, all you
fellows, &gt;nd have a good time.
—Geo Borgman, 10-year-old son of
Abram Burgman, was arrested for
stealing a watch from C.'M. Putnam’s
store on the 2d. He waived examina­
tion, and was bound over to the circuit
court.
—The value of Nashville, according
to the assessor’s roll, is $334,835, of
which $258,765 is real estate and the
balance personal. The roll provides
for the raising of $3027.88 tax for vil­
lage expenses for the ensuing year. ■
—The eight heaviest tax -payers of
Nashville are Hiram Coe, Brooks Mar­
shal &amp; Co., J. Lentz A Sons, G. A.
Truman, Barry Everts &amp; Co-, A. C.
Buxton, O. A. Philips and L.J. Wheel­
er—these paying in the order named,
largest first.
—And still the demand for tenement
houses keeps up. How can Nashville
expect an increase of population unless
she has a place for such! Where is the
capitalist enterprising enough to erect
fifty oi more cheap tenement houses!
We need every one of them this winter.
—The probabilities are that quite a
number of Nashville ladies will open
their houses for New Years calls. Gen­
tlemen make a note of this aud be pre­
pared to look your prettiest, and if the
ladies who intend to receive will hand
in their names as soon as possible we
will publish the list,

—The Knights have a large amouut
of work on hand and are holding twoconventions per week inorder to round
up the work by the first of the year.
The annual election of this lodge occur­
red on the 20th inst.,—the last session
of the Grand Lodge having changed it
from June to December.
v' —We understand that Hiram Coe,
8. C. Warren, Henry Feighner, the
Heckathornes and a few others, will
refuse to pay their taxes on the groundd
ofa defective charter. As theso gentle­
men have money and' are abundantly
able to pay, not only their taxes but the
expenses of a law suit, no one should
stand in the way of their fun.
—The gross receipts of the "Spy of
Shiloh” entertainments were $114.60,
but the expenses were enough more to
stand the fire boys in about fifteen dol­
lar*. But the play wa* well rendered,
and they have no reason to be ashamed
of the part they took in it although they
did come out short. At Vermontville
Editor Potter stated that it was the best
•however given in that town.

—Rev. Walter Radford preached two
excellent sermons from the Christian
pulpit last Sunday. He will preach at
the same place next Sunday. Topic of
morning discourse: “The risen Lord
giving his commission to the church.”
Evening; “Jews stilling the tempest.’’
Rev. R. » an entertaining and inttructivelogician and should have large au­
diences.
—Saturday morning Pat O’Brien pre­
sented himself at Fleming’s watch stand
nod deposited a $49 watch for repair*.
Mr. F. left the store for a few minutes
•nd upon returning stood aghast upon
noticing the time-piece missing from
his table. He immediately jumped'to
the conclusion that he was the fell vic­
tim to the depredations of some thief,
and sallied forth to endeavor to discov­
er some traces of the scamp. After
some three hours of vigorous search
•ad inquiries along Main street, Mr.F.
•uddenly encountered O’Brien and sad-

i TERMS; $1.50 per Year

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun.

I Credit 8vmcriftiok8 $1.78.

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1882.
LOCAL GIBBLE-G ABBLE
ly informed him of the loss, when the of news, and in at least one case the
lad Psrwaal Odt-Chst.
latter pulled the identical and miuiug publication was mad© at tho earnest
watch from his pocket. He had conclud­ request of the farmer who wa* fortunate
Do you attend the show !
ed to not leave it for repairs and re­ enough to get the extra 15 cent* a bush­
Let’s all take a sleigh-ride.
pocketed it. A light dawned upon Mr. el. Here ore the names of three of the
Wheels have given place to runners.
E., his phU underwent a change, and he fiien who got from 15 to 20 cent* more
A. 8. Winn is visiting friends at St.
looked ns happy as though he had just for the uerg same wheat here in Nash­ Johns.
ville than Hastings buyers offered them:
been married.
A. Burgman, shoemaker,, has put on
—In the matter of Christmas enter­ Jessie Erb of Baltimore, 15 and 20 cent* an extra hand.
G. F. Truman was in Detroit on busi­
tainment;, the Christian Sunday-school more; H. T. Miller of Barryville, • 15
has decided to render the beautifnl cent*more: and E. Morgan of Castle­ ness this week.
cantata of “ Immanuel,” by W. H. ton, 15 cfenta more. Brooks, Marshall &lt; Village taxes light. Heaviest asses-Doane, which will be giyen at the &amp; Co. are the men who paid these 15 mpnt only $91.8Q.
Sleighing good, and daily growing
church Sunday evening. The solos, cents a bushel more. Do the Democrat
.
duets, quartets, and choruses in this and Home Journal mean to insinuate better. •
that
Mesnrs.
Erb,
Miller
and
Morgan
The Masons did work in the third de­
cantata are par excellent, and will be
gree Wednesday night.
rendered principally by the scholars, didn't tell the truth to u»!
Of course the natural tendency of
Grandma Loomis of Grand Rapids is
who are now undergoing a thorough
such facts is to create an impression visiting Ngahville friends.
drill at the hands of Rev. Bissell.
Mrs. A. S. Foote visited a daughter
—Geo. H. Maxwell and wife, support­ that Neshville is a better wheat mar­
ed by » competent company, are in the ket than Hastings, and the Hastings at Battle Creek this week.
C.'Clever of Hostings was in the vil­
village. Thia press (Friday) evening Democrat attempts to break the force
they play'the greatest of all dramas, of these fact* by insinuating that The lage on business Thursday.
’Gene Cook is in the village and will
“Ingomar, or the Brigand Chief,” and News lies—that we concocted the sto­
Saturday evening “ Ticket-of-Leave ries butof whole cloth; while the Home remain untill after holidays.
Our merchants are enjoying a lively
Man.” The Maxwells are so well known, Journal, this week, tries to explain the
in this vicinity that we bespeak for matter to the advantage of Hustings by holiday trade—as they deserve to.
saying
that
the
wheat
in
question
was
Mrs. Louisa Kirby, of Battle Creek
them full houses. Miss these plays and
you miss the best thing of the season. damaged,—a* though 15c more a bushel IB visiting friends in this vicinity.
for
damaged
wheat
didn
’
t
make
a
fnrLooks as though we.s going to have
Admission 35 and 50 cants.
merjast as happy a* though his wheat a long “spell o’ weather,” don’t it!
—The M. E. Sunday school will have
was A 1 !—especially in a year when
M. F. Jordan of Middleville was in
a Christmas gathering at the church
there is so little No. 1.
the village on legal business Thursday.
on Monday evening, Dec. 25. A large
The
Home
Journal
thfhks
the
policy
L. M. Cnughlan of Conneaut, O., has
beautiful arch is being prepared and
will be nicely trimmed with evergreens of our buyers of paying more for dam­ been visiting bis cousin A. R. Wolcott.
aged wheat than the Hostings buyers
Dr. J. Campbell of Gobleville, visit­
for the occasion. The school are pre­
will, will prove a bad thing for our ed his brother, W. S. Campbell, this
paring a short program of exercises
which will consist in the singing of buyers. Well, maybe that’s so; but the week.
In bright colors and holiday styles
Christmas Carols, recitations and short buyers take their own risks, and it’s a
speeches from Rev. Bangs and others. mighty nice thing for the fellows with and holiday styles bedecked arc the
the
wheat.
And
if
our
buyers
are
will
­
stores.
A cordial invitation is extended to
B. T. Wynn of Grand Rapids has
everbody to attend and to avail them­ ing to take the risk they should have
opened a variety store in the A. R.
selves of tliis means of presenting gifts the credit of it, shouldn’t they!
The
two
Hastings
papers
mentioned
Wolcott
building.
to their children, friends and sweet­
hearts. Present may be left at L. J. charge The News with misrepresents- j P. T. Colgrove of Hostings attended
tion
aud
a
desire
to
hurt
Hastings.
As
_______
,_____
____K. of P.
an
extra
session
of Ivy
Lodge
Wheeler’s store, at Dr. Barber’s resi­
dence, or at Miss Jeffrey’s store. A col­ for the misrepresentation, every reader lost Wednesday evening.
may
judge
for
himself
whether
we
are
,
Born
to
Mrs.
and
Mr.
W.
S.
Campbell
lection of 10 cts for adults and 8cts for
guilty; and as for the latter charge, we j on Saturday morning last, a son. The
children will be taken at the door.
have taken particular pains nst to News extends congratulations.
—One load of “Spy of Shiloh” actor* InnL'n
utiv II
r, fr-inn rll v plain,.
Vf
M
make any
unfriendly
claims of ell.
fill­
Mrs.
Mary Palmater and Emma
went sprawling out into the middle of '
perionty for the Nashville wheat Mead started for Richlaud Co., Ohio,
the road, just in the edge of Vt.Ville, market over that of Hastings,
It has yesterday, on a protracted visit.
when returning from playing there has not seemed necessary to
do so.
R. W. Cross, haying bought a forty­
Tuesday night. The accident was due
The Hastings papers may proclaim the acre farm at Inland and built a house
to the condition of the driver, Clarence suoeriority of that place as a whe^t
upon it, moves thence this week. '
Batchelor, who mistook a high bank
.rnarket aa loudly as they please and we
Dr. E. W. Murray came home from
for the thoroughfare. Some of the oc­ will find no fault—it is one of their du­
Chicago Monday, sick with the mumps.
cupants of the cleigh were quite severe­ ties, of icourse ; but so far as the Nash­
He will remain till after New Year.
ly shaken u^. and the flag-staff was
ville market is concerned, we are con­
Geo. Dean has lived in Maple Grove
broken inU&gt;tevernl piece*. Roy Boise
tent to let the facts speak fur them­ hard on to eighteen years, and never
and Jimmy Holbrooh at first imagined
selves. Nashville dealers get enough brought a load of wood to town yet.
they were fatally injured, but now
wheat without attempting tv forge any
Our enterprising hardware merchant,
seem to feel pretty .good for wounded
from others, and The News is not C. L. Glasgow, hab lots of holiday
soldiers. There is always more or less
possessed of the slightest desire to goods and will have a new adv. next
fun in being tipped out of a sleigh load­ injure Hastings; but it believes that
week.
ed with pretty girls. We have tried it when men pay 15 cents more a bushel
Some of the young folks go sleigh­
ourself and know whereof we affirm. for wheat they are entitled to the credit
riding, this evening, out to Mr. War­
Jamie ’ McCartney and. lady were
of it, and the farmers who pay a dollar burton’s in Maple Grove, there to have
also tipped over in turning out for
and a half a year for their newspaper a jolly good time.
another rig on their way to the Ville, have a right to the benefit of seeing it
Asa Mattesoh and wife of Hesperia,
hurting the lady somewhat, but it is in prinff Now honestly, gentlemen,'
are visiting their numerous friends in
due to Mr. M. that we say that it was don’t you think so!
this vicinity. The latter, with baby,
not account of his “havin’ anything in
will tarry all winter.
hisn.” Take it all together the young
' HE HAD THE PAPERS FOR 'EM.”
The W. C. T. U. have removed their
ladies had a serious time of it, but they
library' to Mrs. Yates’ millinery store.
took it with much fortitude.
M. H. Bloom lives in north Castleton
New books have been added. Mem­
—And now personally appears before and his daughter and sister-in-law have bership fee $1.00 a year.
us for the second time on Dec. 13th, been keeping house for him this sum­
Mr. and Mrs. F. T. Boise and mother
mer.
They
concluded
to
leave
the
oth
­
Mr. E. Morgan, who being duly sworn,
went to Ann Arbor on Thursday, to
deposes and says; “lama resident of er day, and Bioom, while he seemed console Dr. McLean in regard to the
willing
enough
to
let
them
depart,
Cnsthtoq township, Barry Co., Michi­
condition of Mrs. B’e health.
gan, four miles north nf Nashville.and tramped up several excuses for refusing
Frank Howard, the "Spy of Shiloh,”
I did on the 16th of November last take a to let them take their household furni­
goes from here to Hastings, where he
load of wheat to Hastings. The highest ture with them. In tbeir distress they
will probably present his play under
bid I could get from any grain buyer came to our genial, goodnatured mar­
the auspices of the tire company.
there foil it was 75c per bushel, and shal, Gregory, for money to supply their
Jacob Shoup of Maple Grove took the
deeming that to be less than it wa* immediate needs, which he supplied
tvto o’clock express, Wednesday, for
worth, I did, on the day following, take them, taking in return a bill of sale of
Harrisburg, Pa., in which locality he
the same load of wheat to Nashville, their goods and getting possession of will visit friends for the next month.
where I bold it to Brooks, Marshall part of them. The remainder—a bed­
On dit: That Charlie Wolcott has
&amp;. Co.for 80c; and the wheat I sold them stead and a bureau—he took a man and gone on the stage, and will make his
for 90c waa the identical wheat for team and went- after, the other day. debut in the "Spy of Shiloh” at Hast­
which Hastings buyers offered me only He found Bloom at the barn, and told ings, under the management of Frank
75c. And furthermore, I am ready to him he “had come after those things.” Howard.
back my assertions above with docu­ “Well you can’t have ’em,” says Bloom.
Many subscribers have complied with
ments in writing, and I feel a good deal “But I must,” persisted Gregory, with oar gentle request, and paid up to the
better than 1 would if I had sold my one of bis genial smiles; “I’ve got the first of January, and we expect to hear
wheat for 75c. Signed E. Morgan.” papers for ’em,” and he started toward from every delinquent before the date
WlienTHR Nxws made the same state­ the house. Bloom stood a moment as mentioned.
ment a* above, a few weeks ago, the if dazed, and then started on a run.
Hastings Democrat said “a lie will tra­ For several seconds there was quite a
vel a league while truth is putting on race. But Bloom got to the dwelling
At the annual election of officers of
it* boots;” but Mr. Morgan says he'll first, and locking the doors defied the Jefferd's Post No. 83, G. A. R., in this
bet the Christmas present* for theDemo- marshal; and the latter, remembering village on Tuesday evening the follow­
erat editor's family that it won’t this that he had no search warrant and that ing were elected: P. C., Eli Evans;
‘‘discretion is the better part of valor,”
time.
S. V. C., Delton Durham'; J. V. C„
turned about and came home.
So
Jacob Young; Surgeon, T. E. Niles;
A DESIRE TO HURT HABTUGBBloom still keeps the women’s things,
Chaplain, James 0. Hall; Q. M., E. A.
The Hastings Home Journal and and the marshal yet “has the papers for Bush; 0. D^Francis Baker; 0. G.
.
F. H.Gokey. '
Democrat an attempting to work up ’em.”
a feeling among the fanners that The
Mrs A. J. Fenn of Bedford, Callronn
The regular meetings of the Post are
Nashville News is an unreliable Co., who has been under thetreatment held on the second and fourth Tuesday
newspaper. The circumstances are of Dr. Goucher for cancers,^ returned evenings of each month. There is nt
theae. Since tire marketing of thia years home this week the 12tb; minus sey«n present on the rolls a membership of
wheat began farmers wIiom trntbful- cancers, feeling well, with the except- 00, and could every ex-soldier but ap­
«esa no one who knows them will ques­ iono of a little sosenefls yet.
preciate the benefits to be derived
tion, have come to us and told ns that
Mr. J. McLean of Geneva. N. Y. is from becoming a true and faithful
they had received here at Nashville canvassing this locality in the interests worker id its ranks, no question but
from 15 to SO cents more per buahrtl •f the celebrated Geneva nurseries. liefore another year rolled ’round, the
for their wheat than they could get the Theae nurseries have a world-wide re­ Post would number on itaxjrojJ* the
putation in regard to their stock, sod name of every ex -soldier i* this vicin-------Niws hm paHwbed tbeir statement* tlrf&gt;se who give Mr. M. tbeir orders will ”whHe our country was in danger of!
without comment, merely a* matters be satisfied.

NUMBER 13.

a dissolution, and every loyal heart was
trembling for thp result, ’two* then the
brave and gallant boy* stepped forth
and marched to the ■ defence of our
country and our flag; ’twas then the
wive*, mothers, sweethearts, friends
and loved ones bid the brave boys
adieu and started them on their wav
with kind and cheering words, and, al­
though the heart was filled with 'grief
at parting, they all knew that the only
hope of an undivided country lie in the
bravery of those loving ones, who were
marching to it* defence.
,Call the roll! where are all those
brave boys! The bugle calls in vain.
Many, yes, very many are missing, all
that remain of them lie bleaching on
distant soil, where they gave their lives
in defence of of our glorious old flag.
But where are the rest of those brave
boys! Look around! Do you see
that grey-haired tottering form ; that
one-armed or one-legged cripple; that
sickly, nervous person, who looks as
though this life was a burden ! Those
are what is left of those strong, able­
bodied sons who stood so nobly for the
right. For these are the noble purpose
os of the “Grand Army of the Repub\
lie.” For these do wo maintain our
pledge of fraternity, charity and loyal­
ty, and jierpetuating our brotherhood,
watch over each other and care for the
needy ones, their wives and children,
and when the last bugle rings out the
call, “Fall in!” try to bo prepared to
honorably fill the ranks of that “Great
Army of the Republic” over the river
of death.
.
C.

WHITE ASH LOGS WANTED.*
- Wo will still continue in the Oar and Handle
business, rcporta to the contrary notwithstand­
ing. Look out for our bills with prices and full
directions for cutting log*. Highest ca«h prices
paid for oar log*.
8. K. Deri ar A Sorb.

HOLIDAY GOODS.
I have the largest and finest line of HOLI­
DAY PRESENTS that has ever been dis­
played In t$s city.
Hale the Druggist.
CHRISTMAS.
COLORED CAXDY AKD JUMPTRO JACKS

Arc for children but articles of use as well as
the ornamental form the *ubAUntlal gifts of
the preaent, and any of the following would be
appropriate as a- Christraaa present:
A .tring Sleigh Bell*.
Pair Skate* or a pair of Horae Blanket*,
Jewell Carpet 8weej&gt;er,
White Sewing Machine,
Wringer, Set Carvers,
Set Rogers Bro’r. Plated Knives,
Spoons, Fork* and Pocket Knives,
Granite Tea or Coffee Pota,
A aplended Cutter or Dexter Queen Buggy.
Any of the above can be found of the best
grade and at reaaopsble prleea within the reach
of all till Jan. 1st, at
C. L. Glamgow’s.
SW I have a fine line of Gold Pena, which I
can offer at extremely low prices.
' Hale the Druggist.,

KT Stoves going fast at Glasgow's. Don't
buy till you see him and get prices.
TOYS.
Come In and look over my STOCK of
TOYS, you are sure to find something to
please the children.
HALE, the Druggist.

ROCK BOTTOM PRICES.
Don't buy a single pair of Boots or Shoes be
fore visiting Priudle 4 Chipman's, and Inspect­
ing their stock and prices. Stock larger and
more complete than ever ami prices marked
.80
.75
right down to bed-rock. No competitors al­
.60
.59
At the above prices you will find oil wool Cash- lowed to undersell us.
tST" Wood Wanted at the Depot.
10-22.
LOST DOG.
*9*Ohk&gt; Lime—fresh carload just received.
Four weeks age, three miles north of Nash­
Brooks Marshall A Co.
ville, a rat terrie. dog with a small watch chain
aliout bl* neck. Return to M. M. Cooper, LST Rubber boots and Shoes,
Nashville. ________ ___________
100 pairs Rubber boots,
50 pairs of Bucket artic,
We arc now settled In our new quarters in
25 pairs self-actingoverabo*?*,
the store formerly occupied by W. A. Aylsworth
50 pairs Rubbers,
where we will be pleased to see all of the cus­
G. A. Truman A Sox.
tomer* from the old store and as many new ones
may favor u* with a call.
Kf
E.
P.
Roc and Mrs. Holmes’ novels,
Fowler A Campbell.
sold at reduced price of 11-25 copy.
Hale the Druggist.
MERRY CHRI8MAS.
During December and January I will sell oue
BASS WOOD BOLTS.
lb. of fine Japan Tea for 50c and give each
Now la your time.
purchaser One lb. Royal mixed Candy.
31.25 per cord for 18 inch,
Geo. W. Francis.
32.50 per cord for 36 inch,
Cash
a* fast delivered. For partlc
ty Cold weather is upon us and mankind
to withstand the season must cat Meat. A
complete Slock of the latter always found st
ar
We
arc headquarters for 50c tea.
D. L. Durfee's market.
Fowler A Campbell.
SCARLETT UNDERWARE.
WANTED!
Our 31.75, all wool, Reduced to 31-50, to
1065 bushels of Clovor Seed.
close out at
G. A. Ttcman A Son.
Brooks, Marsoall A Co.
Q[F“ Frank Baker Is sole agent in Nashville
EST Fleming has the l&gt;est stock of Jewelry
fortne German Shoe Oil. the best leather pre­
ver
eecu
in
this
ptu
t of Michigan.
servation in tbc world and warranted water
proof or no sale. Try It and you will not only
MONEY TO LOAN,
save your shoe*, but have no other.
On Rea! Estate at Iqw rate of interest of
We will keep a full line of Dry Goods, .
Lee A Durkee
Groceries, Boots and Shoes and Clothing at our
new stand.
Fowler A Campbell.
ar* Photograph and Autograph Albums,
Handkerchief and Glove Boxes. Pocket Books,
W ANTED.
Odor Cases, Toilet Setts, Vases and many
100,000 feet of Soft aud hard maple in lum­ other articles. Shall be pissed to show you
Hale the Druggist.
ber or logs 13 feet long. Will pay highest our stock.
cash pries.
QT Bring your Butter, Eggs and dried sp
__________ J. Lrxte A Box’s.
Sile* direct to us and we will pav vou the cash
EVERYBODY invited.
or them.
Fowler’A Campbell.
Large and beautifull Vases only 25c and 85c
After a most rigid exaiainatloo of the
per pair. Moustache Cups and Saucers 40c to
&lt;5c. Toys without number, Toilet setts, Crown Sewing Machine we can reccommeud It
Match safes, T&lt;*a setts, Chamber 8Ctts,Ma}ollca, to buyers as a first class machine. The work­
China. Bisque, I.ava, Glass, Tin, Wood, Paper, ing part* are perfect in material and constru.-aud 10000 other things. Come and spend a tion and embrace all the late Improvements of
half a day looking over the largest stock on all machine*. We have bought one for our
exhibition between Jackson and Grand Raplcs. own use. exchanging in part payment the
Remington, and are highly satisfied' with our
_______________ C. W- Smith.
exchange.
A. C. Buxton.
gy We have just received a lot of new Over­
coats that for Style, Quality and Price can’t be
HF* DUNHAM’S i* the only place you cau
beat
Fowler A Campbell.
get solid packed Oysters. Try them and you
will be pleased.
Cap. Dtxham.
YOUR BENEFIT.
DON’T FORGET THIS.
Great Bargains maybe had at the Variety
Store lust opened In the Wolcott building,
*3*You can exchange your old machine for
Nashville, Mich. Just received a large slock
le of those elegant Crowns.
of goods, consisting of Crockery, Glassware,
E. R- White at Kocher Bros.
Lamps, Cutlery, Notions, Tinware, Chromos,
Looking Glasses, etc. Call and examine our
HT Call and sec our large and elegant as­
5 and 10 cent counter goods. You can depend sortment of Gents Furnishing Goods, Just In.
upon getting the finest bargains of a lifetime.
Prixdle A Chipman.
We warrant our goods u recomm ended. Re­
member the place— Wolcott building, opposite
PAY UP.
the Carriage Shop, Nashville, MIcb.
All those indebted to the undersigned win
call and settle tbeir account without de­
MT I get my Oysters direct from Baltimore. please
lay. as my books must be balanced by Jan. 1st
‘
Geo. W. Francis.
fifed. Don't forget this.
_____ . Hekrt Roe
ty A Christmas dinner, no matter how
good. Is incomplete without one of those
gy Highest Market Price paid for Oats.
Luscious Roosts put up at Durfee's market
Brooks, Marshall A Co.
Their steaks, cu» with neatness, also, can’t be
A FEW THOUSAND DOLLARS
To Loan on good Real Estate aecuritv.
FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE.
____ ______
Lgx A Durkee.
The livery bam and premises now occupied
by J. Osmuri and store and lot adjoining,
known as the A- M. Daughterly property, lo­
or John Rolland al
cated in Nashville.
sign of the Gold Pen.
Address, S. Sellers, Bellevue.
nyMerrr Christmas ! Holiday Goods in
etxlk-se
profusion
al
A
dda
^i'ichols’ store.
W The finest display of Meats in seven
counties at H. Roc’s. There is the place to get
a choice most of steak.
ATTENTION PATRONS.

LOCAL MATTERS

THAT HUSBAND OF MINE
Buys hl* Tea at
G. A. Thvmax A Sox.
W D. L. Durfee's prepared Mince MeatA
appreciated by the good houaewife. Try it

can jay for my goods. Please do not let this
notice paaa unobserved and oblige

WDon’t forget that we are selling all of
ty It Is woitderful to think that Fleming
our Crockery ana Glassware AT COST 1
can *upply all our want* for the Holidays in the
‘
Fowler A Campbell.
Hue ofattver Ware.
NOBBY UL8TEBB.
BRING IN^YOUR OAT8!
For young men aud boys, the most fashiona­
want a .«n Kiui and will pay higher I
ble styles. ________ G. A. Tevman A Sox.
•»- Try saamjfie of Onr Candy Tea.
_____________ Grow. Francis.

ty For the next 30 days we will sell Cloth­
ing at prices that can’t be dupllr-i «! in thia
county.
CANDY.

SPRING BEDS.
Go to Braun Bni’rn Nashville,
GOODS A r HAST

Store
FOR SALE,

in era}

Glasgow

�TfrrXnrg*

HOMfEOPATinC

thing that lay In bed • thver, irrov ia*
distiuct and disappear.
Foor Jmuim
V I l71&gt; jr
wa* gone, and what add« the greatoet
SATURDAY
• - - DEC. 18,1888
poignancy to the grief of her parent* Is
t hat they cannot give their lost child a
SWOrnUM ABROAD.
sign of his urtwencc, and II wm not un­ funeral, for there are no remains.—.Son
A-V APPLE NR.VO HF
til after much per’Uitsion that tbn kind- Franci»t» Chronicle.
hearted restaurateur prevailed upon
with tbe word “Hope" In tbclrname, cheating
Gordin to leave the hotel aud accept the A Perplexing QueaUon In California.
,ln. honest
ui/uvt •. folks,
iu.kh, or
(II that
wu we
nr wUl pay any of their
t ot n l&gt;ir&lt;1,
“ bill, or MU, ttejare
Ibtjm frauds and swindler*,
hospitality of hli home.
of it rill.
and the victim should punlkh them. We deki
ThiFifltrodiiction'of the little‘doctor
A citizen who haa recently traveled in and pay only the blllg for the genuine Hop
to his enormous cousin k said to have through the mining diatricta at the foot' Bitters, the purest and best medicine on earth.
been most ludicrous. It was the meet­ hill country aaye so strong is the feeling
Hor Bittbu Manu'factvrixg Co.
ing of a pigmy and a mamm »th. • O.f of the miners against the valley men
Tbe Govenor-elact of Tenuesaee will sit down
the two tne mammoth wu% by far the
that when fruit teams make their ap- in a chair supported by the horns of twelve
most confused. Indeed, the pigmy was
peawnce in the mining diatricta the firs!
I cook the offer thanktolly.
not at all flii-tered; but, with his'bend
question asked by the minora ia:
perked to one side, ran his eye over the
Dr. PenxeJIy. Kalama
will promptUpon the kt**» I Uy, •
“ Where is this fruit grown?" If in tbe
g Zoft-Pbors,
Green whHperin? leaves o’erhead;
girl's amnlliQdin*’Q* figure as critically valley along or near the Sacramento Iv anawer all Inquiries
the Health-bringer for
1 ate the luicv trait,
a*« though he were examining her for
River, the miners will not buy a pound.
Pau irojd. fleeknd
red.
—throoeh
...—, with
MWOCli
the sla'-e m irket, and then, like another
Coffe* culture has been quite nucceiaful in
t^leei;
Dominie Sampson, growled; “Prodi­ They will only buy mountain fruit or
Florida.
that which is grown in valleys among
gious!”
.
,
Until the:
the mountains aud foothills where there
WHY WELCOME!
’ Theretitv n the Duvals related to their
are no interests adverse to mining.
What make* Floreston Cologne welcome ou
con4in the whole story of Jeanne’s mar­
There wm formerly a large trade be­ every lady’s toilet table la Ita laatiug fragrance
velous growth and of the'efforts .they
tween the fruit-grower* along the Sacra­ and rich, flowery oddr. «
had mad-/ to arre-t and reduce it.
mento and its affluents with the mining
“A thousand thunders!” roared Dr.
A man who gete a reputation for eccentricity
I thonxtit the rn«tlln&lt; leave*
diatricta. That trade is nearly or quite
Cordin; “it is not possible that you want destroyed.
A plea,apt “ Farewell•• sent;
will not be expected to return borrowed money.
I thought the loaded bough*
to make this magnificent creature any
DON’T Dft IN THE HOUSE.
It
was
further
noted
that
whenproces!
Unto my greeting bent.
thinur."
O apple tre*.. *o kind and free.
Ask druggia,te for "Rough on Rate.” I
was to be served upon any miners tc
“Well, not exactly that,” said Duval,
May aun and nda long nourish thee!
prohibit the running of’ tailing* into the clear* out rate* mice, bed-traga, roaches, vermin
-Harper* ITecty.
smiling rather sadly; “but we should streams, these miners stopped out and flies, anta, nacta. 15c. per box.
.
very much like to see her somewhat less
others took their places. The buninesi
No man deserves tobe praised for hla goodne *a
stout.
”
.
A STRANGE COLLAPSE.
was not arrested. There was always a unlea* he has strength of character to be wlck‘ “Holy blue! ” vociferated the returned
succosHion. Organized companies be­
“Why in Ji-ji-jow-jah this came intangible. It is difficult, to find
The Remarkable DI .appearance of Jeanne African.
A VEXED CLEGYMAN.
Duval—Awful Efleot of the Calabar aplenditl aui------ young woman would
presidents and secretaries or other rep­
be worth her weight in gold-dust. But
Even the patience of Job would become ex­
Bean.
resentative parties.
There is a large hausted
were be * preacher and endeavoring to
Mint Jeanne Duval, of 1220 O’Farrell then on the other hand,” he added, re­ community hving on mining industries. Interest hl* audience while they were keeping
flectively. “at Jah-jowf-jl-ji she would
street, was uaa o f the nicest/ girls that
They have no other means of support. up an incessant coughing, making it Impossible
ever breathed? ukhe could Rave orea:bed be stoned to death. And so you seri- They, of. course, look upon all attempts for him to be heard. Yet, how very casv can
mure easily! her cirote^Tacquaintance* iously wish to—to—diminish your to cripple their business in the most un­ all this be avoided by simply using Dr. King’s
New Discovery for consumption, Coughs and
might haw included as many admirers daughter?”
favorable light. The recent suit against Cold*. Trial boule* given *w»y at F. T.
“Do you mean to say that you can do
as it contained sympathizers. As it was,
the North Bloomfield ahd other mining Boisx’s drug store.
that?” cried father and mother Duval in
companies by Edward Woodruff, who
all her friends—ana they were many—
Naturally bitter: There la a fight over quinine
were sympathizers, for Miss Duval had a breath.
owns a block of stores in Marysville and
“I can,” replied the Doctor, quietly; an undivided interest in the Hock farm In the market and it Is naturally a bitter one.
an affliction. In two words, the poor
girl was outrageously fat. Up to the “but mind.” he went on emphasizing on the Feather River states the other side
CATARRH OF THE BLADDER.
age of five Jeanne was a fragile litt’e j his words with the slow movement of of the case. According to this showing,
Stinging, smarting, irritation of the urinary
thing, and her parents—M. Duval i« । hi.* right fore-finger, "you must remem­ 60,000 cubic yards of debris are daily passages, diseased discharges, cured by Buchubart proprietor of a restaurant on Mar­ ber this: I Hhall tell you exactly what deposited in the Yuba River, this dis­ nabla. tl, nt druggiste. Mich. Depot, JAS.
ket street—feeling alarmed about the to do, and furnish you with the means, placement being effected by 13,000 E. DAVIS A COTDetroit, Mich.
but there my respdnslbilty ends.”
health of their only child, sent her to a
The Pall Mall Gazette says that It Is as nat­
“What do you mean?’r asked Duval, miner’s inches of water. Grain barges
brother of Madame’s, who keeps a vine­
now find it difficult to get out of Feather ural for an Englishman to grumble as for an
yard in Sonoma County. Jeanne sta’d rather nervou-ly.
River if they draw more than seventeen American to whistle.
•4
mean
this,"
replied
the
strange
in the country for three years, and came
inches of water, and the navigation of
'
IMPOICTAXT TO TRAVELERS,
back as chubby as one of Raphael’s little man, “that while I can guarantee that river is threatened with ruin. The
Jeanne under the treatment r
Special inducements are offered you by the
angels. Nor was the change in her that
shall prescribe shall diminish, I will recent suits have been taken to the Fed­ Burlington Route, It will pay vou to read their
condition temporary. She continued to
eral Circuit Court. These great mining advertisements to be found elsewhere in this
not
guarantee
where
or
when
that
diplump up until at twelve she was the
companies have spent millions of dol­ Issue.
wonder of her cla&lt;«s at the Rincon Gram­ minuation shall end.”
lars in the construction of ditches and
“ Will the treatment impair her
• Fogg speaks of the cackling of the hen after
mar School. She spread and grew,
other preparation for successful mining.
health?
”
asked
the
anxious
mother;
she has laid an egg as ora tones.
waxed in rotundity and increased in
These are the outline facts.
stature until from a bouncing girl she and being answered no, the proposition
It can hardly escape notice that up to
Bad taste in the mouth, unpleasant breath and
became a young giantess. Her propor­ was laid before Joanne, who accepted this date there has been no successful impaired hearing, when resulUngfrom Catarrh,
tions at seventeen were astonishing. Her with tears of joy streaming down her solution of this most difficult of all the are overcome, and the nasal paaages which have
shoulders were huge, her corpulei.ee hemispherical cheeks.
industrial problems ever started in Cali­ been closed for years are made free by the use
The very next day Dr. Cordin asked fornia. Tne Chinese question was not of Elys' Cream Balm. Price 50 cents.
immen«e, and her limbs like those of a
Apply into nostrils with little finger.
well-fed 'Titan. But borne down a* «he permission to have the use of the kitchen so perplexing.
If hydraulic mining
Elys’ Bream Balm has completly cured me of
was by the burden of her obesity, MLv lor the afternoon, and there, having goes on in the old way, navigable Catarrh,
of which I bare been afflicted over ten
locked
the
door,
stowed
and
sweated
Duval never lost the sweet amiability of
streams will he made useless for "such years, after trying almost every remedy recom­
her disposition. She preserved that, over a hut fire, emerging in the evening purposes, and a large area of productive mended, none having proven so effective and
together with her pleasant girlish face, with two buttles, the one small and con­ valley land destroyed. If mining in­ thorough. 8. J. Aikkn, Wholesale Dealer In
and though debarred from nearly all taining a ruby-colored liquor, the other dustries are arrested, large sums invested Boots and Shoes, 143 Federal St-, Boason, Maas
Ely's Cream Balm is the l&gt;est remedy J have
the pleasures of society and public large and filled with a white,turbid sub­ in these mines will be as good as wiped
ever sold for the cure of Catarrh, Hay Fever.
amusements, she never complained. stance.
out'. .During all this controversy no Cold in the Head,Ac. It affects a cure in all
She knew that whenever she appeared I “Observe,” growled the Doctor to satisfactory plan of adjustment has'boen most every case, and gives relief immediately
on the streets her Fatetafflan figure the assembled family. “Of the contents found. The question has been adroitly C. r.. Holmkb, Druggist, Ann Arbor, Mich.
made her an object of wonder ana re­ of this large bottle you will put a wine­ withheld from platforms, but it will be
"There’s many a true word spoken in jest.’’
made, but she puffed complacently and glassful in Jeanne's bath, which she prominent enough in the next Legisla­
returned home out of breath, but never must take daily. The substance it holds ture. The mere platitudes of politicians, Yes. but some people never jest.
„out of temper. It must not be supposed, in partial solation is a preparation of the and even of parties, amount to nothing.
HOW SHE 8AVED HER DARLING.
however, that she accepted her immen­ pitn of the baobab tree, aoout one hun­ There are two great industries which
"I shall not feel so nervous again about ba­
sity as incurable, or at least undimin- dred times a more powerful astringent for years did not seemingly conflict. In­ by's
teething,” writes a fateful mother. “We
ishable.
' .
than alum. The smaller bottle contains, deed, they were mutually helpful. After almost lost our darling from cholera infantum,
She drank a pint of vinegar every on the other band, a preparation of the thirty years the fact assumes promi­ but happily heard of Parker’s Ginger Tonic in
A lew spoonfuls soon cured baby, and
lime.
morning for a month, but it acted like physostymia venoseum,commonly known nence that they really do conflict. And
occasional dose keeps us in good health."-—
“parritch” upon a Scotchman. She as the Calabar bean. Mind you, this is now the difficulty is to find some com­ tnBrooklyn
Mother.
practiced the Bantam plan for a whole a subtle and peculiar poison, as you may mon ground where justice can be done
spring and gained flesh at the rate of well imagine when I tell yon that it is to both interests. It does not appear
A word of kindness is seldom spoken in vain.
three pounds a week. She was once u^ed by the natives of certain .African that any such ground has yet oeen . —
It -----------is a seed,, which,
------ , even when dropped by
more sent to her uncle’s in the country, tribes as an ordeal out of which very, found. The legal question which ia I chance, spring* up * flower,
with instructions to ride hard every very few bring their lives as proofs of about to receive attention in the Federal
BUCKLEN’8 ARNICA SALVE.
morning, but after killing one poor their Innocence. In this form, however, Circuit Court will be of some conse­
The best Balve In tbe world for Cute, Brulaea,
horse her gentle soul revolted at whjit there is no danger, and as the secret of quence. Bnt it can hardly be expected
she knew must bo cruelty to animals, its distillation rests with me and a few tnat it will furnish such a solutioL of the Sores, fleers. Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter.
Chapr^d
ILauda, Chilblains, Corni, and all
and she returned home rounder, aud Equatorial Obiista, I am not afraid to question as is most to be desired. That, Skin Eruptions,
and positively cures Pile*. It
rosier, and vaster than ever. Her fa’her leave it with you. Its action is to con­ however, is the only tribunal competent Is guaranuxd to give perfect satisfaction, or
putnp a horizontal bar in the bath­ tract the tissues in an astonishing de­ to try the question on ita legal merits. money refunded- Price 25 cents per box. For
room, and her mother made her a gym­ gree. Taken as a dose this bottle full The State courts are not independent, sale by F. T. Boise.
nasium suit, but she broke the bar on would shrivel one up to utter nothing­ and can not be from the nature of the
A man in Syracuse boasts that be ban hod
the third day and outgrew her bloomers ness; taken by the ten drops every case. The Judges are elective, and even
on the fourth. Then she tried walking morning, as Jeanne must take it, the when exact justice is sought to be done, 303 colds In the head tn one year. He’d better
up and down the little strip of garden contraction will be gradual, painless and the defeated party will not accept the rent his head for an Ice-box.
that lies at the back of the house, but, efficient. How efficient I can not say, decision as a finally. The Federal &lt; .'tirta
FEVER AND AGUE.
after rambling there with patient perse­ for, as I told you, my bargain does not will now have to deal with the question
Are you troubled with Ague, Chills and Fe­
verance for a fortnight, she had to desist extend so far as that. Ahd now good- in its legal aspects, and it is now fore­ ver, Bilious Fever, Remittent or Intermitting
on account of the dangerous, settling of by. When I return from Borneo,” con­ seen that the question will never be set­ Fever, Night Sweat* or any disease that come*
th* party wail. Finally it was decided cluded the Doctor, with a peculiar smile, tled until it has reached the tribunal of from Malaria or disordered Liver and Hot
to quit experiment and—like Mr. Gil- “I’ll call on you and see the resultof the last resort. In any event, the mining Suns! If so, procure a bottle of Green's Ague
Conqueror, which te an acetic extract cf strung
hooly and the gondola*— to leave nature experiment.”
area will never be destroyed, because, tonic root*,1 combined with Sulphate of Mag­
to take her course. ’Her course was
He left on the 15th of last May, and taken as a whole, it is probably worth nesia, etc., and poslively contains no Quinine.
one of increased curves and greater the very next day Jeanne Duval com­ more for agricultural purposes, includ­ Arsenic or other poisons'. It purifies the blood
amplitude, of larger girth and still more menced the treatment recommended. ing the present facilities for irrigation, cleanses the liver, spleen and other secretive
so effectuliy that the chill* will not re­
ponderous proportions. When first met The effect was astonishing, or as Dr. than it is worth to melt down by hy­ organs
turn. We have never found any case of Fever
by a Chronicle reporter—now some eight Cordin would have expressed it, “rpou- draulic washing.—San Francisco Bulle­ and Ague it will not cure. Price, 50 cents and
$1.00 per bottle. One large bottle has cured a*
months ago—Miss Duval weighed close vanlable." The girl began to contract, tin.
a
five in one family. Sold by all druggiste and
onto 320 pound*, with every probability not gradually, as she had grown, but
dealers everywhere.
15 Jan 83
of her reaching the 400-pouna standard rapidly and visibly.
She shrank like
Mushrooms Always Poisonous.
before the year closed. Fat-bodied as an early ear of wheat in a norther, like
The foe who arms himself with ridicule and
•he was, she was anything but fat-witted, the shadows with the approach of noon,
»trik&lt;-.«
with
satire*
Prof. Ponfick of Breslau has lately
. and, though she was a burden to her­ like the honesty of a shoemaker turned
self, she never repined, except on those politician. Every day she saw the wane made experiments on the common mush­
room, of which the following are the
1883.
rare occasions when the doubt intruded of her bulk, and hugged her thinner
itaelf whether she was a burden to oth­ self for joy. Her spirits grew buoyant practical results: AU common mush­
rooms are poisonous, but cooking
ers. Her obese serenity was not easily as her weight grew less, and one Sun­
deprives them in a greater or less
ruffled, and even the brutal joke made day morning she surprised her parents
by a Coarse friend of the family, that she by bounding down-stairs three steps at degree of their poisonous Qualities. The
repeated washing with cola water which
ILLUSTRATED.
should stand as an advertisement for her a leap. Two dressmakers were em­
they usuaUy undergo to clean them
father’s restaurant, did nothing more ployed all the time “taking in” the
takes away a portion of the poison, and
than make her smile.
dresses of the young lady, but notwith­
On the 15th oi last April there arrived standing all their plaiting and tucking, boiling does the rest; but the water in
in San Francisco a cousin of the Duvals, her clothes bung on her, as one of them which they have been boiled is highly
poisonous, and should always be care­
Victor Cordin by name. Cordin was a said, “like a shirt on a bean-pole.” She
fully got rid of. Experiments made on
queer, vagabondish fellow who had been startled the whole neighborhood by
dogs showed that if a dog ate one per
brought up in the medical school of tripping along the sidewalks like a con­
cent, of its own weight of raw mush­
Dieppe, who had served in Algeria as valescent from dropsy, and to all won­
rooms it fell sick, but recovered; if it
an army doctor, and who afterward had dering remarks replied only by a smile.
effort* have been made for the lighter enato one and one-half percent, the poison Special
terUininetil of it* reader* through humoroo* •lo­
wandered away to the center of Africa. As the days went on, however, and the
had a more violent but not fatal effect, ries, (ketebca, Ac,
What he had done there no one exactly condensation of their daughter showed
and if it ate two per cent, it was inevi­
knew, bnt there were strange stories of no signs of coming to a stop, the Duvals
tably fatal. The water in which mush­
his having married a chief’s daughter, began to grow apprehensive, and when
HARPER’S PERIODICAL.
rooms had been boiled was far more
and with ner as partner, of having car­ Jeanne had actually become attenuat­
ried on a most abominable slave traffic ed as a match, they peremptorily or­ poisonous than even the raw mush­
rooms ; while the mushrooms thus boiled HARPER'S MAGAZINE
in Guinea. Finally, so ran the report, dered her to desist from taking any
WKEKLY..
oonld be taken, without hurt, to the HARPER'S
HARPER'S BAZAS-------he had dispo-ed of his wife aud partner further doses.
amount of ten per oenL of the weight of
by selling her at a good round price,
Like the dutiful girl she had always
tbe dog's body. Washing with cold
and had returned to France a rich man. been, .even at her heaviest, she gave up
IIARPEH-S YOUNG PEOPLE..
MAGAZINE
1
With hi restlessness unsatisfied he had both drops and bath; but, alas, the that mushrooms thus prepared were HARfTOTB
HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE I
once more left his native country, and poison had done its work.
Lan Tues­ poisonous when taken in larger auanti- HARPER'S FRANKLIN SQUARE LIBRARY.
was, when he reached San Francisco,on day evening, at the parents’ invitation, tities. Dried mushrooms are still dan­
his way to Borneo, with no good object the writer called at 1220 O’Farrell street, gerous for from twAve to twenty days,
in view, one may be sure. He was a and was actually shocked at the specta­ aud also the water in which they have
remarkable looking man when the writer cle. The once ieviathanio girl was now been boiled. They require to be dried
met him at the Duvals’ one evening as thin as a lath, as a wafer, as a thread for at least a whole month, and are
- boon after his arrival.
Standing only —paper—as anything that is emaciated really only safe after four months’ dry­
about five feet two inches in height, but and lank. She seemed literally a shad­
ing.
with the cheat and shoulders of a gladia­ ow, and in the. half light of the room
mH&amp;c. wtH be *ent I
tor. having a long bald head, pointed glided about like a weazened ghost.
of»&lt;»p*r volume,
—Joseph Kant, a- highly-educated
beard, twisted mustache, a solitary eye Her parents watched her (a* well as
•enu each—by nrall.
that gleamed in its socket like a fire in they oould) with tearful eyes; medical at­ German wm recently seeking the assis­
tance
of
capitalists
in
New
York
to
de
­
tendance
was
summoned,
but
Jeanne
a cave, a face burned almost black from
lung exposure to a tropical sun, with a collapsed, dwindled and ebbed until velop two aerial inventions—a balloon
taiooed chain abouthis ueek and strange yesterday morning, when the now with an air-ship attached, and a flying­
o»'ram&lt;!f* pricked lieavily into the heartbroken mother, stealing into machine to be lifted by gas and pro.
kudu 'h* bauds—make a mental pio- Jtapnfe’s room to see It her daughter

dress' and you will perk
(tf Dr. V’ictor Cotdin.

•S

Harper’s Magazine

~

ichiflan CmtnUfbilrsu
LINE.

Physician and Surgeon.

Ooina W—t From JacJxaop.

Bute

Eipracd, Reliable, asi Responsible.
A. H. WINN, Dentist.

.lteX0a.ai. Arrive Chk*«x&gt; *.»0&gt;■
.13:1* p.a&gt; Arrive Chicago 3:*»p a
-11SM p.m. Arrive Chicago IrSOaja
____________ Arrive Chicago*A*a ■
G-oing
t From Jaokaon: ""
--- MBp.m. Arrive DatroHftUI p m
is:: gsxsws
Night Kxprea- i«»a. Arrive Detroit 8:00a. at

BEST SET BUR TEETH $10.00

ThaAtlantle aad Paclflc Ezpreaeee raa daily;
jther run dally except8aaday.

GRAND RAPIDS DIVISION.

Teeth Extracted Without

Office Open Day
A. n. WINN

S. S INGERSON &amp; SON

Lumber, Salt, and Coal.

NASHVILLE, MICH.
THE PLACE TO BUY

Hardware, Glass, Tin and Copperware,
OiJTLERY, NAILS, PAINTS.

Oils, Pumps, Cross-cut Maws,
Farm Tools,
And everything In tbe iiardwarc line, Is at

L. FAUL’S

Hammond,....
Grand Raploa,.

Tbrouch Coacbr* and Slurping Cara to and frxwi
fraud Rapid* and Detroit. Alt train* connect la
»m«
al Detroit with Great Western, Oraad
'rank and Canada Southern Railway*.
&gt;. U SHOWS,
H.-B. LEDYARD.
Aaa't Ocn'IHopt'Jackson. Gen'I Sup’i Detra

A. BUSH,

BOOT AND SHOE MAKEB,
MASBTIl^JE.

-

HlCia.

"WOOI&gt;LAJNI&gt;.
«7*8tock larger and Prices lower than ever
before.
Every Description of Tinware Done
Right and Low.
L. FAUL.

QLEMEMT SMITH,

Attorney at Law,

JJENRY ROE, Prof bis to x
----- OLD RELIABLE------

MEAT MARKET.

JAMES A. 8WEEZET,

Attorney &amp; Counsellor,

Ks*|i* constantly on hand s big (lock of

Fresh and Salt Meats,

Smoled Ham aid Siioiilien,
FRESH FISH aad POULTRI
IS THEIR 8KASO*

JgLu4CK A, t»ON,

American and Foreign Marble,
Monuments, Tomhftones, Mantles, 4a,
Mioh.

Lard,, by the lb. or barrel, PJ .4STINTS norsE,
Ac., Ac., Ac.
cy Th® Highest Market Price paid
for Hides, Pelte, A-c.

N. T. I’AHKER, Prof.

Fresh Goods, Full Weights* and
Satisfaction Guaranteed.

This is the leading representative hotel W
Hastings. Rates reasonable.

IIBNKY KOK-

Rathbun

house,

A. B. ANTIfiDEL, PKoramron.

NEW GOODS
Let every Woodlander re­
member that my new stock of
winter goods is larger than ev­
er and was bought at

Rock Bottom Prices
and will be sold at a slight ad­
vance above actual cost.
Prepare for cold weather by
buying your

Grand Ftasplds, Mlolz.

1883.

Harper’s Weekly.
ILLUSTRATED.
IlluilnUnl w.-. kly journal*. Ur lu unpartisan po­
sition in politic*. Its admirable Illustration*, It*
thoni of the day It carri** Inslructlou and enter-

make Harper'* Weekly the most popular »t»d attrectFve family newspaper In tbe world.

CLOTBLI1XO

HARPER’S PERIODICALS.

now. Our stock is complete
in every respect.
Also New Dry Goods, Boots,
Shoes, Hats, Caps, Groceries,
Etc., in endless profusion.
We haven't time to enumer­
ate, and if we had these goods
must be seen to be appreciated.

HARPER'S WEEKLY................................... ..»J C
HARPEH-B MAGAZINE................ -............... 4 0
HARPER'S BAZAR...........................
40
Tti* THREE siwvc puMIcslioo*.-..................... 100
Any TWO above named....... ------------------------ "0
HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE......... -......... 15
HARPER'S MAGAZINE
»----------------- 6 0
HARPER'S YOUNG PR »PLE l
HARPER'S F RANKLIN SQUARE LIBRARY,

J.W. HOLMES &amp; CO.

Weekly. In neat cloth binding, will be »ent by
—r.ll
l.w
„r _ _

______ WOODLAND._______
THE ANNUAL MEETING
Of the Union Mutual Fire Insurance Co pai-y
of Kent, Barry aud Ionia countie*, will b*held
at tbe office or the company tn Ionia, on
THURSDAY, JANUARY 4. 1888,
commencing at 10 a. ru­
in addition to the election of officer*, nropo•itlona will be preaented lor ciiange* of charter
including the following: To change *ecUon 6
with reference to location of office or com­
pany; To change aection 10, *o *» to permit

other sum as shall bt deemed proper; Also to
add a acction, authorizing the President and
Secretary to borrow not to exceed B2.0Q0, when
netw—atv to meet liabllties of tbe Company.
By order of Board of Directors.
J. C. Taylob, Secretary,
lofcla, Nov. 15, 18H2.
10-1K

ERRORS OF YOUTH

When no time

Cloth ouk* for each volume'soluble for binding.
Hit k.
_____ I.__ ____

ithout tbe express order of Haar*■ A BaoTWias,
Addrea* HARPER A BRO FRER8, Xew York.

HLJVL.L.
(No Liquor*.)

C. N. DUNHAM.
THE MILLER BROS.CUTLERY CO.
MERIDJtli, CONif. .

.

A Gsntleman who »uffer®d for year* from
rouadaUllty, Premature decay and all th* si

STANDARD POCKET CUTLERY,

PIMPLES
les and BbtteteM, ImvIm tb*|akla aoft, clvir end
tMMtlful. alao f MtroctfoM ter pradacteg * taxariant growth of knir ou a bald head or moolh face
Adcic**, inri'&gt;*itiv3c. atsuiD, BPN. VANDKLFA

STEEL PENS.

�CUT RH3WniG THE SIMPLICITY

THE

fart box." “Th*nU
certain extent thia

■bat the stopper becomes loose. On this
principle of expanalon by heat a tight

by persons. screw may be withdrawn from a metal

PRICK: ILfiO, IF PAID IN ADVANCE.

—Prefer Sharplees has published
a new and popplar work on astronomy.
It will fill a long felt want in those cities
where banana-peel is thick on the side-

To Advertisers:
expatiating on its merits, about made
up her mind to purchase, but when he
said it would keep off chaps she said
she didn't want that kind.—Our ContiPtCTtpRt THESE LIBERAL AD RATES.

3.95 BAOO| SAOO
5.00_ aAO|_lAOO
7.001 12.001 20 00

4.00
Btecbea?
Local

ORFiO STRONG,
Editor and Pmprtetor.

—The Post-office Department han
ruled that a husband has no control
over the correspondence of his wife, but
this decision will not prevent a man
from carrying bls wife’s letter In his in­
side coat pocket three weeks before
mailing it.—Detroit Free Prett.
—“Howare vou, Brown?’’ exclaimed
Fenderson. “I have been on a regular
wild-goose chase, and I'm glad I found
Co at last.” Fenderson supposed he must
ve said something pretty smart, the
way the people around him laughed,but
he can’t for tbe life of him tell what if

—L«gal adviser (drawing up the old
gentie'man’s will): *‘Um—seems a pitv

^ashvillr girretory.

' ling. But If you’re determined—hem!
—what about the pictures P You have a
VILLAGE OFFICERS.
1 very valuable collection, sir.” Crusty
President—Ellhu Chipman.
invalid: “Oh, drat the pictures! Leave
Recorder—Frank McDerby.
Treasurer_j
—Frank
Boise.
An F CB rn
.
om to the blind asylum!”—Punch.
Manball—James L. Gregory.
•
—A traveler, being at a coffee-house
Trustee#— H. A. Barber, F.'T. Boise. H. W. with some gentlemen, was largely drawDemany, H. R. Dickinson, II. M. Lee aud lnjf OQ tho creda!ity of the company,
•teaa Lentz.
.
“Where did you say all these wonders
i happened, sir?’’ asked a gentleman
&gt;«rittir».
. present. “I can’t exactly say,” replied
-------------------------------------------------------- . the traveler, “but somewhere in Europe
pHRIBTJAN CHURCH-F A. Blsscl.Pastor —Ruw*, I think.” “I should rather
VJ Services every Sabbath at 1030 *- m. and ... .
thn other
7p.m. Babbathschool al 1'J m. Prayer meet- ,
“-a-ly, returned tne oilier,
lug rvery Tbursdtfy evening
I —An economical man has discovered
——-----r--------------------- - ----------------- ----- । what he is pleased to term a bedroom
ETHODIST EPISCOPAL CHL RCH-A. electric light. It Oontistn of a salt codQ; ¥5^°°’ P«»t&lt;«r Services even 8.b- fl,h n&amp;iled
az*inrt the wall where
\ U»
o.» .Un. upon i. .11 d.y. Th.
phosphorus
absorbs
tho light, and the
day evening.
—------------------------------------ ( two go into partnership and illuminate
IVY LODGE NO. 37. K. of P., meet* at it* I the room all night. Thus we are taught
ewtie Halt Naauville, Michigan, cv«n I how for a mere twenty-five cents we
support of nil worthy, tr,-------------------------- n&gt;.y dtap..- with .h.l g™&lt;l,n2 monnnoly known us tbe gas company.—;
rnblc Brother Knights.
D. L. Smith K. R. 8. Orno Stboxg, C. C.

SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY.

Yliacrllmi&lt;M»ux &lt; nrda.

—A steam launch, built entirely of
phosphor bronze, was given a successful
trial recently on the Thames.
— According to G. Forbes, the veloc­
A. FOOTE, PHYSICIAN A SURGEON.
• Sucesoor to Dr. Wickham. Office sec­ ity of blue light is greater than that of
ond door Dorth of the Nashville House; md- red, the difference being between one
dedee first door north of the Wojcotl House. and two per cent, of the whole velocity.
Prompt attention to calls night or day.
-.V. F. Post.
R. F, 8. HULL, Graduate of Medical and | —A factory for the manufacture of
^department of Uunendty of imitation sealskin is to be established at
Mich. Cole's Hotel, Tbuniappk-.
Holyoke, Mtyw., by men from Bradford,
England. It is stated that $ 100,000 will
R. C. W. GOL'CHER. Electio Physician and be invested, and that 100 men will be
Burgeon, b prepared U» answer all sails
that may be mad* for Ida services
Office aud employed in the business.
| ’ —A Dresden firm is making watch
The paper is made in
\YTM. PARMENTER, M. D.
Office over ; cases of pulp.
YV Hull's Drug store, Vermontville, Mich. ! such a manner as to be almost as serv­
iceable a* metal, particularly when it
i
i1 ha* a metallic rim; and the invention
’atunUoB gtnrn-toIn buitue** will bring watches within the means of
Afft Prompt attonUos given-to oU bualura*
-.----------- ..i * special
th0 peasants.
entruxted Io tny care. «
Conveyancing
­
ty. Office opposite Union Hous*.
—To produce light and dark shades
of gold leaf the metal is alloyed with
M. FLINT, JR. Law. Kcal Estate, and In- silver and copper. Tbe addition of tho
• surance. Couvevanclng and Collections a
taser metals lessens the mqlleabiiity,
specialty.
and a* the leaf is sold by superficial
MORY PARADY, Justice of tbe Peace­ measure, and not by weight, adultera­
Office, Corner Main and Sherman Street*. tion is kept at the minimum.
—An immense planer has been con­
LJEBHAU8ER, Merchant Tailor and deal• er In Ready Made Clothing. Sec me structed at Pittsburgh capable of plan­
before you purchase clothing. Fit* guar­ ing a niece of iron or otner metal ten
anteed.
long, and so arranged that four cutting
HATCH &lt;fc CO.. Manufacturers of Taffy
• Caudles, Chocolate Drops and Carmtda. tools may operate on the work at one
Fruita, Fancy Candies, Cimrs. Tobaccos, etc., time, two being on the crosshead and
always in stock. Second door north of tbe one on each upright.—Pittsburgh Post.

H. YOUNG. M. D. Office east side of
• Main 8t-, Nashville. Office hours from
7 to9 a. tn., aud 4 to 7 p. m.

W

L
D

D

I

E

P

fected the induction balance, which was

BAKER, Manufacturer of B
and Shors, pegged or sewed. Repairing unsuccessfully used in an attempt to lo­
FRANK
nrotuptly attended to, at tbe sign of tbe red
cate tho bullet with which President
oom

Garfield was shot. It was tried the
other day on an old soldier who had
TACOB O8MUN. Liveryman, bam near.Wel­ carried a bullet in his body ever since
ti cotl House. First class turnouts st reason­ the war, and locittod the boll instantly.
able rates. Special rates to commercial men. —Indianapolis Journal.
Funeral and wedlug parties f nrair bed with car
—An ertablishment for making putty
riages on abort notice.
RAUN BRO8.,8boeniakers_'~8pecIa] atten­ is about to be started at Elmira, N. Y.
tion given to fine and sewed boot*, also The putty will be made out of * sub.
pairing. All mauufactan d work made from stance culled American whiting, of
st of stock *i id-warranted. First door south which there are immense bods Tn that
vicinity, the most important being near
Savona, Steuben County. Other kinds
VVTALLACX BEAUCHAMP. Liveryman. of putty are made out of a foreign sub­
YV Naalirille House Bam. Single and
double turn out* furnished promptly and rea stance, and this can be made at less ex­
pense.

B

ordinary envelope may readily be
opened by moistening the paper over
the gum, after which operation, if done
neatly, the contents may be noted, and

xaikot Trunme’a

destination^ A perfect safety envelope,
however—not one admitting of any such
manipulation—may, it is said, be secured
by treating that part «t the paper cov­
ered by the flap with a solution ot
chromic ocid, ammonia, sulphuric acid,
sulphate of copper, aud fine white pa­

lution of isinglass in acetic add, and
when this is moistened and pressed
down on the under side of the envelope,
AMES FLEMING,
Cl'

J Watch-maker.

W. NIBKERN. Attorney and Councclkir
• at Law, practices in all State Courts. Col.
lections promptly attended to. Office o-er
Bpanldlog'a sure, Hastings, Mich.

A Large G»rjlla.

at one time the Uiw of a certain
African locality 400 miles from tbe Gahr&gt;nn un urn* nhnx«»&lt;i
* —**»-—--*■
Silled EnnJUJii the (Woval Riwr'Jd
i^

P

R

they bartered some beads for his car­
cass and shipped it U Philadelphia. The
aaimal is ovw fat feet eight inch's
high. His arm, arc four feet six inches

twenty-five or thirty years old.

R’Y,

&amp; P

I

“GREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE,”

ALBERT LEA ROUTE.

MAKE HENS LAYe

BALSAM.

COLOGNE.

For Women,

PARKER’S

GiNCER TONIC

A’SI0NSaS4

CONSUMPTIVES.

AteHVIULK BtelME,
I. M. Flimt Sl 8om, Props,

i pocket by surrounding tbe latter with a
•loth dipped in boiling water.—Prairie
taining to tbe business for which tbeir in­
ventions are designed. It is not denied
—It is sometimes very convenient
that many of our- most valuable inven­ know how to make cookies without
tions are the works of mechanics and eggs; tbe following recipe ia contributed
operatives of machinery; but it b a»- by a reader of the N. F. Pott: Take
•Hrtod that a great many valuable In­ two cups of sugar, one cup of butter,
ventions have been brought oat by men one oup of milk, one even teaspoonful
who had no practical experience either of soda dissolved in the milk; hot water
as mechanics or operatives in the line of may be used instead of milk, if It is
It combines all the tried anil proven
their inventions. It frequently happens thoughuadviaable; use flour enough to vantages.
that persons who have no special knowl­ make' a soft dough, roll thin, and bake
edge of machine'ry, when looking al in a quick oven.
the performance of some engine orother
—A lovely sofa pillow is made of a
machine, discover a chance for improve­
ment and drop suddenly into tbe high­ square of pale-blue satin embroidered or sblf lu otbrr m'schliMs will I* founo u ibe f'roww. Advantage baa Wn taken of lie- rx;rrttnrau ■
painted. Use this for the center of the
way to fortune.
expertenco with s’l kind, of mac.'ilne- vrr'xven'-t s t I • •Ur.'wniti twrf— • ^mU»iin&gt;eut of wr
The writer has just had an interview pillow, and at the top and bottom put
r»i|»E. R. WHITE. Agt., at Kocher Bros
with a young man recently graduated bands of terra cotta plush and at the
sides
old-gold
plash.
8c
w
all
the
seams
at a medical college. His mind is not on
pills or amputations; but he fancies ho together on the wrong side, and on the
can see opportunities for improvements right side finish in herring-bone stitch
all around him. and he h now develop­ with colored embroidery silk; edge with
ingseveral important railway Inventions, a short silk fringe. Cover the under
IE CLACOUAINTED WITH THE GEOGRAPHY OF THIS COUNTRY, WILL
a sheet-music turner and several other side of the pillow with pale-blue, satine,
SEE BY EXAMINING THIS MAP, THAT THE
devices not in any . manner connected and then put on the top covering.—Chi­
with his chosen profession. One would cago Newt.
—A oolt’a feet are sound and well
suppose that his inventive genius would
turn to surgical and dental instruments, formed before he Is shod, and the ills of
was.etc.
—Boston
artificial limbs,
; but Post.
he, like thou­ the horse's feet are occasioned by shoe­
sands of others, leaves.his chosen path.' ing, and cured by “running barefoot.”
seemingly led astray by some invisible Most ailments, such as spavin, ring­
off no
your
son withA a bone,
shlf- etc., can be traced to bad shoe­
power• you
overshould
which cut
he has
control.
man with no calling or profession is ing. A barefoot horse will travel freer,
usually styled a “loafer; ' yet many­ keep his footing freer, and show less fa­
valuable inventions have been produced tigue from a journey or a hard days’
work than if shod. The kick of an un­
by such men.
Ope of the greatest inventions the shod horse is not as dangerous as when
world has ever seen was whittled out by shod, and stumbling* rareiv occurs—cat­
an idler in a few minutes. He caught ting, interfering, overreaching and forg­
the idea by seeing a man trying to get ing never.—AT. C. Weld.
an implement repaired. He saw the
—“ Best crops of wheat have been
affair was imperfect, improved it, and grown on ground settled well after the
revolutionized the world m its most im­ first plowing, and then merely surface
portant industry. He was no longer loosened at seeding time.’’ This is ad­
called a loafer, and although long de­ ditional proof of what is now pretty
ceased, he is now. and will be as long at well established, that our mode ot pre­
the world exists, regarded as one of the paring for oorn or potatoes by having
,A»en’"llf
greatest inventors ever known. It is by the whole deep furrow filled loosely
no means meant that all inventors are with uncompact mold is not the prep­
’ X AJJjSAS CJTY A
men of no steady- occupation; but it is aration that suits wheat and rye. Our
an undeniable fact that many of our-----------„----r.rf —
common----------------practice of----------stirring
deeply
at
most valuable inventions are from the 1 seeding time, and then compacting the
brains of men who were considered as I surface with horses and harrow, is the
HiCACo,
ock sland
acific
idlers and of no account
| upside down cf what these plants reThis is not mentioned here to cart any i quire.—N. F. Tribune.
raahical position, the shortest and best route between tho East, Northeast and
reflections on inventors as a class; for it I —Boiled starch is much improved by
io. t.toast, and the Wait, Northwest and Southwest.
is well understood that we are wholly in- tjje addition of a little spermaceti or a
dcbte&lt;l to them for the wonderful pro- jjttj0 gait, Or both, or a little gum arabio
W road between the Atlantic and the Pacific.
gress.the world has male and is making. I dissolved. Beeswax and salt will make
By Its main line nnd branches It reaches Chicago, Joliet, Peoria, Ottawa,
La Salle, Cenesoo, Moline and Rock Island, In Illinois ; Davenport, Muscatine,
but to encourage that class who have no : flatirons as clean and smooth as glass; tie
/Washington, Keokuk, Knoxville, Oskaloosa, Fairfield, Des Moines, West Liberty,
faith or confidence in their inventive 1 a ]mop of wax in a rr.g, and keep it for
owa City, Atlantic, Aroch, Audubon, Harlan, Guthrie Canter and Council Bluffs,
abilities, apd therefore make«no efforts. ! that purpose; when irons are hot, • rub
In manv communities the man who [ them with the war rag, and scour with
worth and Atchison In Kansas, and the hundreds of cities, villages and town*
•fives his time to perfecting some device ; a paper or rag sprinkled with salt,
.ntermedlate. The
is styled a “lazy good-for-nothing;” but , Kerosene will make tin kettles as bright
when he linih himself successful his old as new; saturate
• a ----»--------woolen
rag---»
and—rub
acquaintances are pleased to know him. with it; it will also remove stains from
It will be seen that our inventors range cleaned varnished furniture.—Indiana
incident to a smooth track, safe bridges. Union Depots at nil connecting points.
from millionaires down to loafers, or State Sentinel.
rather vice verea. Perhaps the term
HEATED, FINELY UPHOLSTERED and ELEGANT DAY COACHES j a line of the
—Cold Catsup:
Chop fine half a
MOST MAGNIFICENT HORTON RECLINING CHAIR CARS ever built; PULLMAN'S
“loafer" is hardly appropriate; but as nook of tomatoes, two roots of grated
{latest daslsned and handsomest PALACE SLEEPING CARS, and DINING CARS
there are so many of them who ulti­ | horseradish, one small cupful of salt,
Jthat are acknowledged by press and people to be the FINEST RUN UPON ANY
mately take their places in the ranks of | half a capful of black and the same of
the industrious and wealthy, some allow­ | white mustard seed, two tablespoonfuls
the low rate of SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS EACH.
ance may bo made for the seeming slur I। of black pepper, one cupful of onions
THREE TRAINS each way between CHICAGO and the MISSOURI RIVER.
on a very worthy class of people.
| chopped fine, one tablespoonfui of powThe mechanic who has to win bread
derea
cloves,
one
of
mace,
one
of
ctnnafor himself and family has hardly time 1
I mon, one of' celery
'
seed,
’ one quart of
to devote to inventing; but the idle man | nasturtiums,
, half a cupful of sugar, and
who has nothin*;
----- p to rdo.. . if he. keeps
. • his ‘ one quart of vinegar.
vineg
between Newport News, Richmond, Cincinnati, Indihnapolis and La Fayette,
Mix all together
eve. open. came, oj tile pneo m many | and
d put, uu&gt;
J
end Council Bluffs, St. Paul, Minneapolis and Intermediate points.
into jars. Cork tightly. It will
in.tancc. Bnt there are many trim hare k
til 0,1,0,
All Through Passengers carried on Fast Express Trains.
keep until tomatoes come again, and is
For more detailed information, sec Mapsand Folders, which may be obtained, as
an idea that they cannot invent because
excellent.—Rural World.
well as Tickets, at all principal Ticket Officen in the United States and Canada, or of
theyarc not possessed of means to develop
their ideas. They look ahead to those who
R. R. CABLE,
E. 8T. JOHN,
Vlce-Pres't A Cen’l Manager,
Oen’l f'k’t A Pass'r Ag't,
have been successful and say: “ They
House Drcssea.
have been lucky, and have 'means to
CHICAGO.
handle their invention, while I am with­
The tasteful fancy at presort for house
out a dollar and can do nothing.” Most dresses is also an economical one, as it
of our successful inventors have been consists of a jacket of one color with
those who had no means in the shape of skirts of another. Thus a dark, wine­
f ! um«n«*ly
I 'r««pOOH{al
cash, but they had its substitute—pluck. colored or __
an electric blue basque of
There are hundreds of men who might cashmere or cloth may be worn with
pick up some valuable ideas
and
work
1
14^
skirts,
colored
skirts
of
silk
or
of
feet wide, ten feet high, twenty-four feet
them into shape tr
if ,u
they
&gt;i
....... werej possessed wool, apd also with the dark plaid woolPARKER'S
of the requisite pluck. It wi
rill not do ons&gt; Ladies who like to sew on braid
to sit down and say., “Ir —
!_1* ’I could in- in patterns trim these jackets fancifully.
wish
vent something.” Our
&lt;
successful in- while others prefer parallel rows of
. A perfect dm*
venters—were
not ofBell
stamp, to
•this
"Sclaims
andhave
this,per
braid,
or else very narrow black passeProfessor
­
ing.elcjar.tly peris written to encourage ill
..
all who
have a menterie that resembles braiding, while
taste for invention to reach for a success­ still others prefer the stitched, corded,
ful development of their- ideas and put or piped edges without trimming. In­
them in practical shape. To conclude: stead of tbe Jersey-shaped jacket, that
Our inventors are men of pluck, and with battlemented edges is now much
may be regarded as our best citizens, used, or else the front edges are plain,
(THE HEALTH BKlKGEK.i
tlohhtton
even if they were once idlers.—Scientific and the four forms of the back have the
Ixixo Known ab
American.
*
scams left open to the waist line, and
PENGELLY-8 WOMAN'S FRIEND.
are
made
to
form
four
squares,
with
tbe
What Has England Done for India I
trimming passing all around them.
The responsibility assumed by England These house jackets are invariably sin­
twenty-four years ago is one which was gle-breasted, though some have a
laid upon the back of every olocto- in notched collar at the top like that of a
this country. Yet nothing, absolutely gentleman’s morning ooat, and are TEACHERS.
LADY CLERKS, I
nothing, has been done te teach oui worn with a flat scarf, such as gentle­
HOUSEWIVES,
electors—that is te say. our people—what men use. For silk, velvet, and plush
Un Invigorating MetJlcin# that Merer IkJmitotM
is meant by our rule in India Mr. combination suits for nicest use in the
Tbit debawn combination of Ginger. Boerru.
Pidgeon has stated part of the case ad­ house, the plaited vest of Breton jackets
Mandrake, buffinp*. aod multy Ollier of tlx U»t
A Prevention and Cure
mirably. What, he asks, has England or else a shorter Breton plastron is much
vegetable remedies known. cures *11 &lt;!s»nr.!ers c(
the
bowels, stomach, liver, kidney * and lungs &amp;«*
done for this vast Empire? She
—has
The fact
used,is and
familiar
brightens
to all up
thatthe
an simplest
Tie Bnt and Ssreri Coegb Cars Ever U«d.
converted an immense amount of jungle toilette. This vest is of the silk or the
land into fertile land, she has drained inexpensive soft twilled satin used for
■ymptotu*. vu:
•
malarious swamps, joined the interior to the skirt, while the jacket is of velvet,
Lassitude,
the seaboard by railways, spanned great velveteen, or plush. All combinations Headache*,
rivers, constructed canals, irrigatedthe
bar­missive
againmuch
sealed
anddistinct
sent toin
Itathe way
are now
more
Palo or Motliy Complexion,
ren lands, made native races live peace­ the fabrics are employed and less patchy
• Palpitation,
ably. stopped the raids of Afghans. Per­ than those of last year, and to uo this Sleeplessness,
sians ami Tartars, pat down predatory the different stuffs are confined to differ­ Numbness, Nausea, Dizziness,
castas, substituted justice for oppression, ent parts of the dress; for instance, the
police for soldiers,schools for iaolatorous redingote is all of figured stuff and the Dry Cough, Nervous Irritation,
temples. She has further erected great skirt all plain, or else the figured stuff
Weak and Lame Back,
trading cities, introduced manufactures, forms the entire skirt and the basque or
opened mines, maria a beginning
per.in The
flap itself
is coated
with a so
­
redingote
is plain.
Brocaded
goods
that
Zoo-Pbor* I* nova Cnr*-*1L It applies to this
teaching the people and revived the are still considered the first choice in
:r^S£!WSSSJSS:
literature ot the country. Five thousand Paris are inexpensive here because they
•x„ PATENTS^:T.
native books were published in India In are so generally worn, hence it is a
the year 1878, and there arc 250 native
a solid good
cement
Is to
formed,
in
plan
buy ainsoluble
good brocade
of
journals. The family life of tbe Hindoo large detached flower pattern for one
has been touched by the modern intel- part of tbe dress that is to be made over,
• leotual movement; there are some signs and this may be made up in the redin­
*3-MOTHERS, a.^your DAUGHTERS Miim. ?
I of su uprising from the degradation of gote style.—Harper's Bazar.
I the Zenana; and the establishment of
—With a pond on every farm, It
।
Ufa* ^J’isa'whS would be impossible for these hot winds
? ne* !»“«&lt;» life- Thhi &gt;« *
! and an honorable record, aud cfTectuallv then, if we could add ten acres of tim­
of th® o!d "pyramid ot 6oer
Irottles” theory. ThW, h, however, a ber to every quarter section of the land,
tbe evaporation would be so great, End
the air would become eo heavy, that it
“»*-•*orer
jm.
ingtou {Kant.)
Patriot.
Uurtdl«ad ।

—There is still standing over tbe
iring at Soldier’s Rest, Clarke Cnanty,
—The New York Herald estimate*
that the New Yorkers paid during tbit
season's vacation, “twelve million dol­
lars for rest, refreshments and fun.”

gaa, and occupied by Washington as his
headquartars when he was a surveyor io
lb® Valley of Virginia.

�TfrrSIrwg
SATURDAY

OiupGrreat Bargains
tte Michigan Oen’.ral Block

WINTER

DEC.-M, MM
findlng.
however, but little money or valuAbles. The
burglars escapad.

NEWS.

FOBEIGN
lug points, which will ultimately

ly massacred by
dlans, near Chihuahua, in Northern Mexico.

Compiled from late Diipatchet.

GOODS

•tons according to tho disability rather than

CONGRESSIONAL.
bere, Sherman. McDfU, Vent. Ingalls. Ctoicott
and Miller (N. Y.) presented petitions for the

one-armed and one-leg rod soldiers.
we and parts of Uwe enlarging. extending,
amending it. Mr. Vest offered a resolution.
to a private
trig tbe late campaign, nnd Mr. Hale offered a
substitute calling al o for an investigation

agreed to ...The House passed a Joint resolu­
tion to print 91,000 copies of the report of the
Tariff CommlMlon. Tho Indian Appropria­
tion bill (9AXH.TO) was considered in Commit­
tee of the Wbolc, amended and passed. A bill
authorising tho Government to establlah at
Brie a bouse for indigent aoldlnra and sailors
was defentc&lt;t

Senate on tho fit
tax and urging

polltbuis;
Ivlng
to tha ground#
bankruptcy, and making
it an act of ban
ptcy to deal in “futures" in
certain articles
prime necessity, such as
corn, augar. cotter, rice, cto....Tho Consular
Appropriation bill (&gt;1.35tUS5) was reported in
the House. Mr. Bingham reported nbf 11 to re­
duce letter postage to two cents. In Commit­

tee of tho Whole tbe bill fnr tbo relief of tho
officers and men of the monitor which fought
tbo Merrimac waa defeated.
In tbe Senate on the 9th petitions of tobooao-dealcr# nnd manufacturers for u rebate,
equal to any reduction that may be made in
the tax oo tobacco, were presented by Messrs.
Hale, Miller and Edmun'ls. Mr. Vance offered
a resolution, which was agroed to, directing
tbe Secretary of tho Treasury to furnish os
soon os possible n detailed statement showing
tbo cost of collecting internal revenue In each
collection district, the number of employes In
each district, nnd the percentugo of cost upon
sums collected in each district. Mr. Hawley
introduced a bill, which was referred to the
Committee on Civil-Service Reform, to prevent
officer* of tho United Stnte# from collecting
subscriptions or kssiesments from cachothor.
.... A resolution wks reported In the House by
Mr. Page, from tho Committee on Commerce,
nnd adopted niter on exciting debate,
calling on tbe Secretary of War for informa­
tion ns to whether'the money appropriated by
the last Kiver nnd Harbor bill wi-s appropriated
for works or objects not in the interest of com­
merce nnd navigation, and. if So, requesting
that specifications be furnished. Mr. Kasson
reported n bill to improve the civil service,
and Mr. McCold introduced n bill to regulate
intfr-Statc commerce. Tho Consular-Diplo­
matic Appropriation bill was passed.
Mil Slater introduced a bill in tho Senate
on tbe Hth to forfeit tho unearned lands of the
Oregon Central Railroad, and Mr. Ferry pre­
sented n measure to Increase the pensions of
soldiers and sailors who lost an arm or a leg In
the service. A motion to postpone Indefinitely

revision, as a substitute, to the Judiciary Com­
mittee. A mot.on tn take up Mr. Pendleton's
Civll-Servico bill wan carried, but tho bill was
temporarily laid aside, and the bill to release
th&lt;*Mctnphi* &amp; Little R&lt;ick Railroad from Its
obligations to carry troops free and malls at
a reduced rate was taken up nnd Indefinitely
postponed....Mr. Townshend (Jill introduced
a resolu I Ion In the Houae reciting tho efforts
of certain railway managers to prevent the
constructiou of competing lines In tho North­
west, and directing tho Committee on Com­
merce to report a bill to prohibit and punish
such combination. BIHs were introduced: By
Mr. Waite, to stop the coinage of sliver dollars
until the stock is reduced to 950,0J0.i*M,
and by Mr. Dlbroll,to abolish Internal revenue
taxes nnd ull &gt;w u rebate on whisky and tobec913O.00U.tsQ. MY. Bprlneer proposed a Constitutlomd amendment relative to the election of
President. Vice-President and members of

DOMESTIC.
There were 190 business failures in tbe
United Stales during tbe seven days ended
on tbe 7th. Tbe number for the preceding
seven days waa 148.
A fire in Lyndonville, N. Y., the other
night was extinguished by means ,.f cider,
a thousand gallons being drawn from tanka
and thrown upon the burning building.
Thb United Slates Supreme Court has de­
cided that the Arlington estate. Just south of
Washington, which was bought by tbe Gov­
ernment at a tax-default sale for 330,000, be­
longs to tho heirs.
By a railroad collision in West Virginia on
tho afternoon of the 7th three persons were
killed and five injured.
Thb funded debt of New York City is an­
nounced to be 392,135.133.43.
Eleven convicts at work in tbe peniten­
tiary at Little Rock disarmed tbe guard on
the 8th and escaped. Bloodhounds were put
on their track, but tho fugitives killed three
of them. The worst man of the lot Is Monroe,
tbe Cincinnati safe-blower.
Jcdgb La whence, of the Supreme Court
of New York, having decided that magistrates
can only impose floes of ten dollars, two
police justices on the 8th released over two
hundred prisoners from Blackwell’s Island.
Should this example be followed by other
magistrates fifteen hundred disreputable
ebaracteni will be turned loose upon New
York City.
York against Harrison Johnston, formerly a
&gt;2,000,000 arising from tbe sale of confiscated
cotton, for which be has failed to account.
latlon of bonds to tbe amount ot 9950,030, be­
queathed to the Government by tbe late JoWestern Union Telegraph Company, on tbe
9th made application to the Attorney-Gen:
era! of New York to commence action against

hambra Theater, in London, was about 9730,­
000.
The extensive emigration from tbe mount­
ain districts of Hungary to America has
proxlmatinn shows that out of 2,068,891 caused tbe Hungarian Government to request
Austria to stop emigrants not provided with
soldiers enlisted In the war of tbe rebellion,
poMporia.
. "
Thb telescopic observations of the transit
Pennsylvania has a public debt of 930.­ of Venus were, entirely successful in Austra­
225,083. Tbe expenses of the State Govem- lia, New Zealand and South Africa.
ment last year were 91,161.001.
A female Nihilist, lately banished to Si­
By the explosion of a distillery at Bells beria, killed the Governor of the Territory
Vernon, Pa., ou the morning of the 11th tbe shortly after her arrival.
_ .
main building and a United States bonded
Thb eldest son pf the late King of Burwarehouse aud 4,000 barrels of whisky were
burned. Loss, 9403,000.
11c ved he is en route to Upper Burmah to raise
■ A heavy snow storm prevailed along tho a rebellion.
Spanish coast on tbe 11th. A number of
Thb severest snow storm known for many
shipwrecks were reported.
years occurred In Great Britain on the Gth and
Eight messengers ot the American Express 7th. Telegraphic and rail communication
Comp my, running between Chicago arl was greatly retarded, and in some sections
Minnesota, have been discharged for tlleged waa entirely suspended. Numerous ship­
crookedness.
wrecks occurred on the coast, and the lose to
A merchant of Troy, New York, where all descriptions of property was very great.
a police Imbroglio had for some time
Danveks, the soldier who aided the police
been in progress, on the Wth caused tbe of Dublin In securing the murderers of De­
arrest of an alleged swindler by Captain Cary, tective Cox, has been awarded £5 and a
of the new force. The warrant proving de­ medal.
fective, another was Issued by tbe Justice to
Three Pashas wer; on tbe 7th arraigned
Captain O'Laughlin, of the old force. Twen­ in Cairo-for participation in the revolt. They
ty of the new men aided Captain Cary in pleaded guilty an! were sentenced to death,
taking the prlaoner forcibly from tbe old of­ but tbe Khedive promptly commuted tbeh
ficer, but the Sheriff declined to receive the sentences to exile for lite.
accused from tbe new Captain. Then com­
The city of London suffered an extensive
menced a row which lea to the arrest of the conflagration in its old business center on the
contesting officers on warrants issued to the
old force, aud a pitched battle took place, waa burned over, Involving a loss of 915,000,many receiving hard blows. The Oounty 0J0.
Arabi Pasha and his chief followers are to
Judge liberated the new policemen on writs
of habeas corpus, but they were again locked be exiled to Ceylon.
Grneral Pierola telegraphs his rejection
up by their rivals.
. v
Tub total clearings at twenty-six leading of what he terms the unreasonable proposals
clearing-houses during tbe week ended De­ of Chill He will not enter Peru until the re­
cember 9 were 91,293,500,255, showing a fall­ turn of more favorable times.
Tnorou the principal seaports of Germany,
ing off ot nearly 9100,003,003 from the preced­
ing week. Trade generally was reported dull, by their Chambers of Commerce, have pro­
and business failures showed a large increase tested against the embargo on American
pork, atill the Government is resolved to pro­
in number.
William C. Frazibr, school teacher at hibit its importation.
Cumberland^ Ohio, in a general fight on the
11th with his pupils, stabbed and killed John feet of St. Petersburg had ordered the police
Hayes, aged twenty, end seriously cut John to expel all Jews residing in the c:ty without
official permission.
LuceA raw nights ago a thief in a theater at
Edmuxd English and his son James were
recently buried by the caving of a well at Barcelona, Spain, raised a false alarm of fire.
Danbury, Conn. Tbe young man was rescued One person was killed and eighteen injured
in tbe panic which followed.
Needy foreigners in large numbers prefound alive after fifteen hours' digging, but
sen ted themselves before the Consulates at
was killed by another fall of earth.
Robert S. Crampton, (Dshier and Pay­ Alexandria on the 10th, and entered protest
master of the Little Rock &lt;&amp; Fort Smith Rail­ against the delay in Indemnifying them for
road, has ’ absconded, leaving defalcations losses during tho bombardment.
Thb Mexican Government has appointed
which will exceed 910,000.
THE Edwards County Bmk. at Kinsley, Messrs. Romero and Zamacona Commission­
Kan., was robbed of 912,000 on the night of ers to mpet Messrs. Grant and Trescott in
Washington to negotiate a treaty of com­
the 9th.
Anakcbt prevailed at Opelika, Ga., on tho merce.
A Montreal (Can.) dispatch of tbe 9th
11th, Where the question of proper city of­
announces
the death, at Edinburgh, Scotland,
ficers bad occasioned bloodshed. The factions
Indulged In street fights, and shots were ex­ of Sir Hugh Allan, who came to the former
changed. Tbe Legislature had annulled the city from Scotland when fourteen years of
city charter, and had empowered the Gov­ age, and had acquired a fortune estimated at
S15,(XX).OOI He was President of one of tbe
ernor to appoint the oil.cers.
Two MONTE MEN, in prison at Washington
,
,
. ..
.
for robbery, have ntade &gt;tatemcnts that tbe other corporations, and gave each hu personal
attention.
detectives of the District received a regular
O, U»lHh HT Bchte,. ,» U» 0.™.
peicentage of tbe ill-gotten funds obtained
Reichstag, said the interdiction of tho imporby thieve* and crook*.
tation of American pork was more of a pn
PERSONAL AND POLITICAL tcction1st scheme than a sanitary mcaaura.

In tho Star-route cases at Washington,
Colonel Ingersoll on tbe 7th asked a continu­
ance on the ground of the Illness of Stephen
W. Dorsey! but Judge Wylie overruled it.
Then counsel read an affidavit by all the de­
fendants, seltlnz forth tbe recent removal of
officials at Washington, the selection of
alleged unfriendly talesmen by Marshall Mc­
Michael, and the alleged prejudice of Judge
Wylie as reasons why they could not safely go
to trial at the present term. Judge Wylie
pronounced the document an Insultto the
Court, but allowed it to be filed.
Thb Democrats of the Eighth Alabama
District have nominated General Joseph
• Wheeler to fill the vacancy caused by the
death of Congressman Lowe.
J. J. McDonald, of Philadelphia, was on
tho 7th elected President of the National But­
ter, Cheese and Egg Association.
The Wisconsin State Board of Canvassers
has canvassed tho vote cast at the late elec­
tion and announces tbe following figures:
Total vote polled, 216,934—Democratic, 103.­
630; Republican, 94,006; Prohibition, 13,SOO;
Greenback. 2,496; scattering, 2,392.
Jcdgb Otis P. Ixjrd. of the Supreme Court
ot Massachusetts, resigned on the 8th, on ac­
count of feeble health, aud the Governor ap­
pointed to the vacancy Oliver 'Wendell
Holmea, Jr.
Govebnob Fosteb, of Ohio, has Issued a
proclamation for an election to fill the vacan­
cy of both terms of the late Congressman Up­
degraff. Tbe election la to be held January 3.
W. F. Blakeney, Inventor of the turbine
water-wheel, died recently at Dayton, Ohio.
It waa Stated on the 9th that tho wife of
Engineer Melville had said she would consent
to a separation if he would give her two-thirds
of his nay and all tbe children.
*1 he Republican National Committee will
meet in Waahi^gton on the 17th of January
to consider a report upon a plan for calling
the next National Republican Convention.

custodian ao aoon aa the courts shall decide
who is entitled to receive ths skeleton.
ble Iowa election shows that only 202,400
oeraiic vote increased 0,835.

derived from transportaubn re-

ARE

NOW ARRIVING

And if you come e^rly you trill be sure to find anything you want and at

cotnponlea, in addition to the retention of tho
tml Pacific, 91JM3AM; Central Branch Union
Pacific, | UKJ; Union Pacific. F71.BJ7; total.
•©vend subsidised Pacific, railroad# to tho
principal, SffijaOAU; accrued interest, 990,ObO,98S; total, MB.flJO.MO; Central Pacific, prin­
cipal, 937.&lt;5,(H); accrued interest, 924^85.183;
total, 933.1«L813; Bioux City A Pacific, princtpal,91,f2s,33); accrued intorest.91.415,*47; total,
93,043,167; Central Branch Union Pacific, prin­
cipal. 91.603,000; accrued Interest, 9LS0L9QL9R

performed and money paid into the Treasury:
Union Pacific. 91X391.603; Central Pacific,
9a.aH.tkj6; Sioux City 4 Pacific. 935^78; Cen­
tral Branch Union Pacific. 913L5M; total. 918,­
503,102 Balance In favor of tho United States,
but not duo until maturity: Principal, 1806,
lt«', &gt;10X314,180. Tho sinking-fund accounts
amount, Juno 30, to $2,716j21. Tbe Oummla" Thia fund has evidently not accomplished
tbe result anticipated, and since April, 1801,
may be regarded as having practically failed

AT PRICES THAT DEFY COMPETITION

During the Holidays
-WE WILL GIVEA valuable present worth at least One Dollar, or

A DISCOUNT OF TEN PER CENT.
On the purchase. Don't fall to take advantage a| thia offer.

BUTTER, EGGS
and DRIED APPLES
Are as good to us nnd a little
-BETTER THAN MONEY.-

C.W. GRANGER &amp; CO.
Xaghvlile-—November 90—1SS9,

the low rate of interest. returned from tbe
Investments made by the Secretary of tbo
Treasury, 1 deem It my duty to recommend
And buy your clothing of
■ Invest tho slnklqg funds in first-mortgage
bonds of the companies, or such bonds as have

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in other good and sufficient securities, and
converttbo bondsnow held by tho United
states in said sinking funds into money at
market rates, and Invest tho same In like socuritlcs. As many doubts have been expressed
as to tbo ability of the companies to meet their
indebtedness st maturity, and as to tho effi­
ciency of the provisions for tho sinking fond,
I deem it proper to suggest whether it may
not bo profitable and highly desirable, with
the consent of the companies, to change tbo
form of tbeir indebtedness from a running
Look account into settlement and actual delivery ot Interest-bearing bonds for tbo
amount found to be due on a convenient day,
aay July 1.1888, at wbico time one-half of tbo
Interest will have been paid by tho United
Mates; let the ascertained amount be dlvld&lt;-d
Into. say. non hundred semi-annual install­
ments, e.ich to bo represented by a redemplion bond, ono payable each six months, with
Interest upon the whole unpaid remainder of
the debt, the lion to remain as it is."
Tbo report says:
“Tbo adjustment of railroad rates Is one of
the mo*t d:t!lcult and delicate questions of
modern times, and It Is specially complicated
Hi tho United Slab’s, where every trunk lino
run# through several States, each independent
within IU own Jurisdiction, and Jealous of nil
InterferAcc by the General Government. The
enormous extent of thia interest and tho ra­
pidity of its growth, both In increase of mile­
age and tonnage, demand# that its relation to
the public "hall bo under some Judficlou# legal
control Kates and discriminations are not co­
tlrcly within tbo arbitrary determination of
tbo railroad com panlest They arc subject to
competition* which they cannot control upon

vantageriusly located a* to trade, with their
num iron# far-reaching and widely-extended
navigable tributaries, carry water compctition into almost every portion ot
the country, with tho effect of so reducing
general rates that tbo United States enjoy*
the cheapest railroad transportation in tho
world. As yet no just basis of general npplb
®
that there arc hardships, neither few nor
small,
" arising from existing discriminations,
often arbitrarily imposed, which affect disas­
trously local trade at nott-compctlng points.
There M a growing and clamorous demand
the people that railroad management
the dense fogs for which It is so uncomforta­ among
shall bo subjected to tho restraints of .law;
bly famous, the result being that all traffic nor Is railroad manag&lt;-meut adverse to rea­
sonable control, it has become a necessity
that ’wars' of rates shall be controlled in tho
Interests of the people and tho roads. Such
The Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland has com­ ■wars' unsettle, within their operation, com­
muted the sentence of death imposed on tbe mercial values, affording sudden and unrea­
sonable profits to the few and entailing heavy
Ove murderers of tbe Joyce family to imprls- loss*-*
upon tbe oth&lt; rs.
onmen*. for life; “The Hallway Commissioners appointed In
| twenty-one States." the report continues. " excrcise
a healthful Influence over railroad manLATER NEWS.
»h.» th.
aircment. But railroad transportation strictly
IT is definitely ascertained that the Demo- eoaOmwl within Slate Jurisdiction ia so limited
erata will have a majority of fifty-eight in tbe
-* “ '----- -----------' -*——***-------- ■—-• —nearly unaffected. Tbe power of Congress
next National House of Representatives.
over the whole subject can hardly bo ques­
The Egyptian military expedition agai -t ' tioned. Tbe Supreme Court of Illinois con­
the False Propbt* ot Soudan has bean suc­ cede* ft, and the decisions of tho Supreme
of the United States seem to render it
cessful, the Propbet being repulsed and his Court
Indisputable. A commission is recommended
progress stayed.
to lake into consideration the whoib question,
The issue of standard silver dollars from and report to Congrees facta necewniry for In­
and efficient action upon thosubjccL"
the mints for the week ended December'9 telligent
Tbe Commissioner sjieaks of the unnecessa­
amounted to 91,189,499, against 9394,487 for ry and dangerous dissimilarity of railway sig­
the same period last year.
nal". and recommends tbe adonUon of a uni­
Samuel E. Hildreth, Republican and No­ form system. A review in detail of the opera­
tions of tho Pacific roads mentioned closes the
License candidate, was elected Mayor of report. The estimate of the expenses of tho
Worcester, Mass., on tbe 12th, by a small railroad office the next fiscal rear is 99X000.
malority over E. B. Stoddard.
Tub Enterprise Cotton Mills at Manayunk, Report of the Commissioner of Pensions.
Pa., burned on tht 12th. Tbe employes es •
ciped by descending a rope outside the bias­
The report of the Commissioner of Pensions
ing building, having to let themselves drop for tho fiscal year ended June 30,1883, is Isatied.
to the ground from the second story. Many Commissioner Dudley says the Bounty-Land
were Injured, but only one, a young girl, laws should bo generally remodeled and sim­
fatally. The loas on stock and building is plified. Congress should give thoughtful con­
sideration to tho entire regrading of pensions,
975.00(1
making disability rather than rank tho meas­
elected Mayor of Boston by 2,000 majority ure of tho pension, officers and men baring
walks of civil life. There are now 117 different
The War Office at Madrid waa destroyed
by Arc on tbe 12th, with the library and part
of the archives King Alfonso assisted in of simple Justice. It Is recommended also. In
fighting the flames. Twenty persons were In­ order to place all war claims more nearly upon
jured, one seriously.
Thb Toronto Corn Exchange has indorsed 4,713 be removed, ao that cases barred by the
the free canal scheme, with the proviso that threo-year limitation ofiall have their flate on
American vessels must pay toll when not
destined for Canadian ports. '
Thb business seetteo of Kingston, Jamai­
ca, was destroyed by fire on tbe 11th, involv­
ing a loas of 930,000,000. Supplies of all kinds allowed reasonable time to file tbeir applica­
were consumed. Hundreds of persons are
homeless.
The rubber manufacturers held a meeting
yearly salary of 95.000 is recommended
tlnue In reducing the outpiit until the raw
article decends to a reasonable price. It had

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN
■

At Buxton's NewUjIock,

THE ONE-PRICE CLOTHING STORE,
And save from 15 to 20 per cent.
A MAMMOTH STOCK OT

Ell and Winter Clothing
Everything New,. Stylish, and Durable.

Tbe attention ot Parents in respectfully called te our large stock of

CHILDREN’S, BOYS’, AND YOUTHS’ CLOTHING,
Which is tbe most complete ever laid down in Nashville.

We are proud of oar new stock or

CAPS, CAPS,

HATS, HATS,

And believe wc have something desirable aid very .heap.

We have made additions to our

Boots, Shoes, Gents' Furnishing Goods, Groceries, Underwear, Etc.
With the view of suiting tbe most particular customers.

Our Htock of Roots

and NIiocn in larger than ever, and no competitor
will be allowed to undersell ua.

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SF2E.

CALL

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN.

N;EW

NEW

STORE GOODS
OUR EFFORTS TO IMPROVE
Our surroundings and the community at large

•

IHAVE BEENiAPPRECIATED
And our trade la larger than ever before.

OUR NEW STOCK] OF GROCERIES
Our store room though ample is completely filled and our shelves fairly groan under them
And still they come. W e have everything tn the Grocery line.

Crockery and

&lt;3-las»s&gt;vare.

If you want to see a pretty and complete line of Crockcry, see ours.v (We have only time to
call your attention to China Tea Setts, Majolica Ware, and Decorated Chamber Setts. In Glass­
ware our stock is complete and attractive. Our trade tn LAMPS is simply immense. We
have Pendants, Decorated Vase, and Common Goods. Low estimates given on Church and
Hall Chandeliers.

We have added a fine line of

. Table

Cutlery,

Lanterns, and Oil Cans. Your special attention is Invited te the former, as wc feel assured that
we have something that will suit.
We keep the celebrated Snow Flake Flour.
Everything New, Fresh, and Cheap. An examination will convince*

G. W. FRANCIS.
SEWING

MACHINE

Rosa kt L. 8tvakt, tbe retired sugawpllncr of New York, died on the 12th, at the age

9th handed 95,950.000 in Lahatf of the Panama

United States Government for an armed
Lincoln detailed a Lieutenant and ten men

fa- or ot tbe Lowell Bankruptcy bill waa sub­
mitted. Bills were Introduced to pay certain

Thb last rail oa the Chicago &amp; Atlantic
Railway was laid near Huntlngtoa, Ind., cn

•bls information, that tt appears tai
riving soldier population of a little

A lady stood patiently before tbe receiving
teller's window In a Broadway l«nk the other
Brigadier Gemral, reapectlvsiy.

OF DETROIT

ct his Civil-Service bill, and an extended desndmsnta

PAINTS, VARNISHES. COLOR, BRUSHES.
WBLLa»i ClBl BENPOMPS.
POINTS, PIPE, SINKS. BTC.
OHAkPlON it-CUT SA WB, AXES, BTC.

of Illinois, providing for

PreaMM

IRON, AND STEEL.
three iaeoo-

�TH aWJRTY.
Tbe FMd* &lt;Me is the absorbing topic hBtfTEFtactety expected to exhibit ahd

SATURDAY,

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VICIBITY

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DEC. 16, I8M

LOCALS

the first gristmill ever erected in this
town, and now owned in Vermontville,
Marshall L. Cook intends to spend
(Stebbins mill). But never mind, if
Kalamo. get* * railroad she will also a few mouths in tbe south soon.
have a Gridley A Co’s flouring mill
Charlie Bowne is going to Laramore
come* to hand a slnr on the “ignoran­ that will lay that Vermontville concern to invest in the banking business.
Mr. Walchenheimer of LaCroaa Wia.
ce” aud ••superstition’’ ot "common” m the Shade. “You bet.”
is visiting bin daughter Mrs. Gero.
people, while the “wiae" and "learned"
BALTIMORE.
Thomas Brice waa in the city the
of every clime are trying to eradicate
fore part of the week visiting friends.
such "folly” from the min da of tbe
Pay your taxes.
W. H. Cook has bought the harness
Pecale go bobbing around.
poor ignoramuses. Let us look at the
shop aud business of E. F. Brown
subject a moutput and see if wa cannot
M. Pilgrim has a new pair of bobs.
Co.
find some excuse for the “superstition”
Julius Crosby will soon go north.
A little daughter of Henry Smith died
aa our “wise” men are pleased to term It.
Almanacs, like bachelors, will toon
of cholera infantum Wednesday morn­
Profeaaor Proctor, Professor this and be out of date.
that are continually bringing up some
Thirteen correspondents contributed ing.
Mrs. Milo Williams has gone to Iber­
recently discovered phenomena to to The News last week.
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prove that this little bit of a world can’t
J. Madison has tbe gable end of bis ville parish, Louisana, where her hus­
band is.
wabble through space but a short time barn decorated with skunk skins.
W. M. Scudder’s prospects of becom­
’ longer, that the comets are to fall into
Dowlingites listened to the play of
the sun, and, like cold water in hot lard "Babee in the woods,” the evening of ing an assistant engrossing clerk in the
legislature are said to be good.
explode the seething mass and blow this the 6th.
L. D. Quackenbush and wife will cel­
poor world in to smithereens; or else the
At 44 different times, in a year and a
aurora boraelit is a going to generate half. I have contributed, 590 items to ebrate their 60th wedding anniversary
on
Tuesday evening, the 96th.
electricity sufficent to blow us all into The News.
The New-Year ball of Barry lodge,
next wfeck; that the sup spots, which
Evening parties liave commenced,
F.
A
A. M., will be an elegant affair,
are gritting very numerous will e$e long and oysters, apples, popcorn and so
eoverihe facTdlour much abused lum­ forth have to suffer.
• with supper at the Hastings House.
’ inaxyf and the result will be terrible,
Margaret
B. Moore, a talented elocu­
Jessie Warner has lost one of his
causing earthquakes, cyclones, famines, work horses, making 3 that have tionist of Grand Rapids, will entertain
our people at Union Hall, Tuesday eve­
pestilencesand finally freeze this little diedin two years.
ball of earth so hard it will never thaw
A. T. Warner had his auction Fri­ ning next.
Charles Knappen of this place and
out; or else the earth is agoing to turn day. Mr. Warner intends to engage in
Mias Ella Baird of Lansing were mar­
tail and sail ’tother way, leaving us in the restaurant business.
the artic regions to shiver and growl.
Emmett Harrington has traded Iris ried Thursday. They take a western
Now, let us ask who makes the people farm of 80 acres to Peter Gendro for trip, and return to reside in Hastings.
The Cemetery association has elected
superstitious) are not the so called 96 acres, giving Gepdro $500 to boot.
"wise men” somewhat to blame) Look
Your scribe took a rabbit hunt J. A. Sweeaey president, John Bessmer
at the improved instruments with which with a ferret, and bagged nine in one clerk, J. P. Roberts treasurer, S. S. Gar­
people are premitted to view the heav­ hour and a hfilf. Cannot say that it rison sexton, aud J. Q. Creasy, H. A.
Goodyear, W.S. Goodyear, Miles Main,
enly bodies. Are they not far in a&lt;l- was a poor day for rabbits.
vimce of those used hundreds, yea, only
County clerk Mack moved to Hastings and P. A. Sheldon, directors.
The examination of J. B. Carpenter
twenty years ago) Is it not probably Wednesday. Mack will make a good
that all pecular phenomena now visible clerk, and his absence is some what re­ for foully dealing with Alice Fields re­
sulted
in binding him over to the cir­
by the aid of the greatly improved tel­ gretted ae neighbor and townsman.
escopes and other instruments, were
The Dowling produce market as cor­ cuit court in- the sum of $500. Car­
penter
tried
to impeach tho girl’s dying
common occurence* years ago, and that rected by Pierce brothers every Mon­
what are now considered as "signs” of day morning: Flour, unleged,firm and statement on the ground of insanity.
a great calamity is nothing more than good demand
Flour, legged, dull nnd
We venture to say that Bently Bros.
tho natural laws of the universe as heavy; —Corn shocking low and un­ A Wilkins will enjoy the coming holi­
ordered by a wise Providence. Ought banked, a little off-Oats, Dowling days if anybody does. Added to tbe
not the people as they view the won­ badly mixed in demand by car load ;— satisfaction of making one of tbe very
der* of nature to cry) “How wonder- Been*, cyclones a flying tendency to beat wugom in the market, they have
oub are thy works 0, God! in wisdom higherPork, fat and in the bottom that of knowing that the demand for
hast Thou made them all.”
of the barrel,—Potatoes with skins on, their work is rapidly growing, as they
are just a peeling lower,—Cabbage are reserving letters from all over the
ITEMS.
with heads off, ten cents apiece
Nom­ jitate from parties who wish to handle
A few robins are yet left here,
inal to strong; Rabbits, Ann and a their wagons next season. The firm
8. H. Preston spent Sunday in this hair lower.
will soon move its Hope saw-mill to
section.
The Durfee school bouse burned to Morgan, where it has a side track and a
Some corn yet to busk, but ’twill keep tbe ground the night of the 11th. In­ large supply of timber.
so awhile.
sured for $400 in the Watertown. The
Last Sunday was tbe first sleighing of teacher, Earnest Haynes staid after
NORTH CASTLETON.
school about an hour, making out his
Bert Smith is prepared to give the roll, leaving the stove all properly
Fine sleighing.
ladies a nde in hi* new cutter.
Orrin Manley has traded horses.
closed. A dim light was seen by two
A regular Dakota blizzard awept over persons, but they did not think any
J. St. John ba* his mill ready for bus­
this section Friday of last week.
wrong. E. Edmonds was aroused iness.
Tbe schools of this town are now in about ten o’clock by the barking of his
Mrs. McMelon and family has gone
full blast, and proving a success.
dog, and on arising Mr. E. saw a light west to spend the winter.
Y)- H. Prescott of Assyria was the at the school house. An alarm was
F. Snore made a. pleasant trip to
guelt of John Hurd over Sunday.
given and neighbors responded. The Charlotte last Wednesday.
Tho Good Templar* give a literary fire had burned a small hole through
Several ot our neighbors have treat­
entertainment this Friday evening.
the floor by the stove, but tbe pumps ed themselves with new sleighs.
8. P. Robart was called to Charlotte being frcztn up tire school house was
Mr. Ned Badger of Battle Creek vis­
last week as a witness in a mule law­ entirely destroyed,Dorr.
ited friends in this vicinity Wednesday.
suit.
Mrs. C. Thomas and family has gone
NORTH MAPLE GROTE.
Frank Hartwell is the lucky one
to Battle Creek to spend a few weeks.
from this town to serve as juror, Janu­
Jean
Weaver of Penfield spent a few
The lost dog has returned.
ary term.
days last week, with bis mother Mrs.
0. Durham is buildings stable.
Although our village has no railroad
J.
Lockhart.
Wm. Bivins’ children are on the sick
our merchants do a thriving business
Jay Carbaugh and F. Allerton of
list.
and sell cheap,
When does-Miss Clarie’s school be­ loniafounty, spent a few days with
"God pity the bride.” Isn’t that
E. Lockhart.
gin I
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rather strong language to use in a com­
MissVenila Feighner on the state
Mr. J. Graham has returned to his
pliment. “ Wild BillF
road, who received a burn some time
Town treasurer Jordan is at T. A. farm.
Mr. T. Fluke and wife start for Ohio ago is slowly recovering.
Crandall’s store each Friday of this
H. Hart and family are visiting Mrs.
next week on a visit.
month to receive taxes.
Hart’s brother, Chas. Schofield in Jack­
Erastus Clemons baa given upz his - Th* bos* horse trader of Maple Grove
son,
from there they intend to visit
has
gone
north
on
a
trip.
intentions of going farther north/and
Mr. J. Frantz and wife of Sunfield, friends at Battle Creek.
will remain in Kalamo.
Last
Wednesday on Battle street we
made a short visit with friend* here
Jerry Barns can tell you how an iron
had quite an interesting race between
last Sunday.
.
wedge sings as it flies through tbe air
James
Gregory
and M. H. Bloom, the
Miss Stella Elestou of north Castle­
on its way to a stopping place.
latter taking the first heat
Now’s the time when your wife begins ton, spent Saturday and Sunday with
Last
Friday
while
Frank Grow was
Miss McMore.
to look mysterious and hide something
O, say! did you see sir WalUce and coming home from Vermontville, bis
when you come into the room.
team
became
frightened
and ran away,
The writer is informed that H. J. his bride at the institute last Sunday
throwing Mr. Grow to the ground.
Stocking ha* taken an agency for the evening. O was’nt he attentive.
A literary society w** organized on Fortunately no harm was done.
sale of the "Mexican field bean.”
Joe Mix is making considerable im­ Tuesday evening, at tbe No. 9 school
house of Maple Grove, with the follow­
THORNAPPLE.
provements for the comfort of stock on
ing officers:
John Messimer, Pres;
his farm since he has taken poseaaion.
J.
D.
Guy,
Vice.
Pre*
j
Mary
E.
Guy.
Bentley
Bros,
are commencing work.
Charley Crandall returned from hi*
Miss Nellie Northrup has diphtheria.
Canadian visit last week, accompanied Sec; Annie Jacobs, Treasurer; B. W.
Graham.
Critic
and
R.
Shoup
and
0.
Eight
railroad
workmen took meals
by his brother Fred and wife, fonneriv
Durham, Marshalls. The next meet­ at Cole’s.
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of this town.
ing
will
be
heli
next
Tuesday
evening.
Mrs.
Hyde
’
s
brother
visited her re­
E. D. Williams will read a paper be­
'Puestiou for debate: Resolved that
fore tbe Lyceum on Saturday evening.
Maa. Varney comes to Thornapple
Subject: "A look into tbe future of tbe the Indian should receive more respect
tlian the Negro.
Kattie.
for treatment.
United States.”
No timber is to be taken from the
Dr. Adams ha* purchased a supply of
MAPLE GROVE.
Pelton 80.
drugs for his own practice, and is now
The Misses Harleys returned last
J. C. Elliott borsted hi* cylinder
better prepared than ever for his ex­
head a few day* ago. He wa* cutting month.
tensive buaine**.
Thornapple ice house is newly ven­
After many year* of neglect our town •talk, for 0. EL Cole.
Mrs. David Clark was helping re- tilated.
library Las been replenished by the
Bible school oyster social at Willis
ntuthue of several hundred volume*
■ticksand cut a fearful gash in her Lathrop’s.
of interesting reading matter.
AD speak well of Miss McCartney’s
school.
the Goddard Hotel property, and the
Jessie Cole is expecting to go to Arformer landlord Romen King, has mov­ Adam Wolf, late deceased, started for
home on Wednesday in company with
ed in temporarily with his father.
Mr. Burgess died Friday the 8th, at
Aidob Wolf, who has gone to Ken• o’clock.
tend religious or other meeting* at the
Mrs. C. Hamlin returned to Battle
Tbe U. B. Sunday achool in.titute
drawed a fall bouse Sunday evening aa Creek, much improved in health.
Rev. Peter Gurd, gives every othej
Sunday evening to the Banyvill* di­
TOTS' KALAMO.

■tote law ia regard to such conduct aa

Recently Dan Myer* and J. J. Reytn* which they wished to fell, and had
removed the saw and stepped back from

the tree, when it suddenly split nps

Union grange of Rutland is prepar­
ing to build a ball at Podunk.
New-Year ball at tbe Woodland
Hoose. Mine Host Pettit will do things
Mika Almira Honey well of Prairie-

of Hickory Corners.
,
Although the weather was very un­
favorable, the ladies’ church fair in Ma­
ple Grove netted them over &gt;100 cash,
and not all the article* wore disposed of.
Freeport has a new barber shop, the
band is getting to the front in fine style,
aud the handle factory is running with
a full sett of hands. Freeport ought to
be happy. '
Stock buyers have been thick in Rut­
land, lately. One man there who wasn’t
satisfied with $6.75 for pork in Hastings,
shipped to Grand Rapids and sold for
$7. losing about 35c a hundred.
Woodland: Orson Hager bos sold his
farm and goes to Dakota this week;
Mr. Cole’s health is improving; Olney
Wheeler has gone north to spend the
winter, leaving his wife with Geo. Ty-^
lev’s family'; and the boiler in St. John’s’
saw-mill is undergoing repair* made
necessary by firing np. without water.
Minor accidents have been numerous
at Lacey, the past week. Adlcy Clark
was knocked down and severely tram­
pled on by a cow, another female bovine
booked a gash out of Mr. Cortright’s
forehead, and 0. Adams cu9 off the 6nd
of bis thumb wliile butchering.—George
Murvin of near Mason is visiting* old
friends at Lacey, and Jim Spaulding
has returned from Calhoun county to
spend the winter.

BELLE) UE.
Rev. I. J. Mavrety is in Jackson attending the Ministeral association.
Mias Floy Fox, of Grand Rapids is in
town visiting her sister aud old triends.
Mr. Fres*man DeForest and Miss
Belle Eastman were married the fifth,
both of Bellevue.
George Sherbino was quite seriously
hurt by a snow bail, which was thrown
at a larger boy, but hit a small one in­
stead. The attending physician fears
he will lose his eye sight.
Alpha.
EATON COUNTY.

Dimondale ha* a singing school.
An unremunerative burglary at Eaton
Rapids last week.
Hudson &amp; Co. of Pottervillq have re­
opened their factory'.
State teacher’* meeting nt Lansing
Dec. 27-29, yon know.
The Baptist* of Grand Ledge ba re an
“Oriental Bazaar” this week.
Over 2000 barrel* of apple* have been
shipped from Bellevue this fall.
A man at Eaton Rapids has been
hunting rabbit* lately. He averaged
about 20 a day.
Edgar Burkofi of Potterville, accused
of stealing a yoke of oxeu, bound over
to the circuit court.
Erastus demon* of Kalamo is going
to Hubbardstown soon to engage in the
wagon nnd carriage business.
Almost every farm in the southwest
corner of Eaton Rapids township has
changed hands during the year.
A. Canedy, near Eaton Rapids, has b
now white field bean called the Eureka.
This year from one stalk he got 1325
beans.
Byron Godfrey ho* been appointed
supervisor of Brookfield by the town
board, in place of G. A. Perry, elected
county clerk.
Louis Jensen, n Dane aged about 41
years, died suddenly, last week, from
the effect of a bullet wound in the head
received some years ago. He lived near
The fall term of Oli vet college clos­
ed the 20th. The winter one begins
Jan. 4, when Shiperd Hall, just complet­
ed, will be ogened. The ziew dining
hall will seat 900.
The Eatou Rapids schools have been
reopened after being closed two weeks
on account of diphtheria in that town,
and the primary departments have a
larger attendance than before.
The Leader saya that dancing parties
seems to be a thing of the past in Char­
lotte. No one clique can muster enough
members to get up a respectable party,
and a* for inviting the members of any
other clique—humph!
The Journal nominate* editor Potter,
of the VermontviHe Hawk, for United
States senator provided no one else
get* it. Every other paper in the state
ha* named some one for that position,
why should not we! Good choice)
Well we should "hawk to spit!”—JS. R.
Journal.
Will Hayden aud wife, of Potterville,
quarreled, parted, and she went home
to her father’s bouse to live. In a few
days be went after her and demanded

refused smashed in the window. He is
now serving a sentence in the County
jail at Charlotte.
There have been eighteen saloons m
Eaton County the past year which paid
taxes amounting to $4,897 for retailing
malt and spiritsoas liquor*. Of these
Charlotte had nine paying &gt;9,490;
Grand Ledge, five paying &gt;1,400 Eaton
Rapids and Bellevue, two each, paying
respectively &gt;547 and &gt;500.
The Eatou County horticultural soci­
ety carried away the following pre­
miums at ths recent mating of the

Wore the best apples were sold in
market, they could have taken first pre­
mium on market apples as well aa not ;
a* it wa* they came very near doing *o.
Eaton County can not be beat ou ap­
ple*.
. .
On Tuesday evening, the Oak Land
and Lumber Compsny,. of Charlotte,
Mich., wa* incorporated under the law*
of thi* state aud the following officers
were elected: President, F. L. Belcher;
vice president, C. 8. Cobb; treas., H.
H. Cobb; sec’yM Geo. M. Ely. PaW up
capital $60,000. The company owns
between four aud five thousand acre*
of fine land in Arkansas. The lands
are not only valuable for timi»er but
for agricultural purposes. It is the in,tention of the company to take the
timber off the land and then sell it off
in small farms. They have bought
the iron and rolling stock for four mile*
of narrow guage rail-road ami will
commence building, the road at once.
As tbe business increases the road will
be extended. Machinery for. file mills
is partly on the ground and more is be­
ing shipped. The company already
have a contract for 400,000 feet of tim­
ber and can have more as soon as they
are in shape for getting it out. Aside
from the offeers mentioned but two
other gentleman are interested. They
are all men of capital, energy aud push.
That they win make a success of the
.venture goes without saying.—Char­
lotte Hepvblican.
Edwiu E; Raze, who was the author
of some Ix-anfiftil poems and pro»£.
died at hi* home near Eatou Rapius,
recently, of softeningof the brain. The
following poem is one of his:
Like an upturned wreck on a lonely shore.
Where tbe waves are jobbing evermore;
Like a voice bait heard in an olden dream.
Or tbe niellow noi»e of a silver stream;
Where tbe sea bird wheels in bis lonely flight
And never a tail greets the weary sight,
’Mongst the weed* that hare pierced tbe old
bulk through,
Lies tbe crumbling wreck of an old canoe.
Long years ago, when tbe summer breeze
Scant ruffled tbe breast of tbe tranquil seas.
Sweet Ruth and I, ’ncatb tbe azure blue,
RjxJe the tjHuklhi^ waves, in that old canoe.
And her voice went out on the silver? tide
To the gray, cold rocks, where tbe echoes bide;
And my heart, with the song, went floating
awar,
As we rocked on the tide through the beautiful
day.
k
Long years ago—but that voice is still,
'Ncatb the marble tomb on tbe sombre bill.
Where tbe willow bends to the shivering wind,
Aud the ivy green o’er bcr grave has twined.
Alone I wa'lk tbe strand today.
Alone I watch the waves at play,
Aa they chase each other through and through
। The broken wreck of the old canoe.
There’s a beautiful realm beyond the skies.
Where a j^fte of peace forever lies
On the «tr sea and the tranquil shore.
There a maidetfwalls for evermore;
Aud she roftly trims her silkeu sail
To catch the nrenth of tbe scented gale.
And she tunes bcr harp with an anthem sweet.
As she waits the approach of my weary feet.

Brown’s Iron Bitters
is one of the very few tonic
medicines that are not com­
posed mostly of alcohol or
whiskey, thus becoming a
fruitful source of intemper­
ance by promoting a desire
for rum.

Brown’s Iron Biti ers
is guaranteed to be a non­
intoxicating stimulant, and
it will, in nearly every case,
take the place of all liquor,
and at the same time abso­
lutely kill the desire for
whiskey and other intoxi­
cating beverages.

Rev. G. W. Rice, editor of
the American Christian Re­
view, says of Brown's Iren
Bitters:
Cm.,Q..Nov. 16.1S81.
Gents; —The iboihh wag­
ing oi vitalfcrcc in business,
pleasure, aud vicious indul­
gence of ocr people, makes
our preparation a nccessin ;
and if applied, will save hun­
dreds who resort to saloons
for temporary recuperation.

Brown’s Iron Bitters
has been thoroughly tested
for tiyspqiFk, indigestion,
biliousness, weakness, debil­
ity, overwork, rheumatism,
neuralgia,
consumption,
liver complaints, kidney
troubles, &amp;c., and it never
fails to render speedy and
pcrmijient relief

UBOOKS, MARSHALL A CO.

Nashville Elevator!

THE NEW MARKET

A FREE GIFT.
The Chicago, Rock Island &amp;. Pacific Railway. 1
have Id press nu Almanac aud Hand Book of
Useful Information, containing a vast amount
of matter which it is bandy to have available,
And continues to dispense all kinds
and which all classesof people want sometime
of
during tbe year. The book contains descript­
ion of tbe Western States and Territories, a list
of U. 8. Land Offices, where lands are available
at low rates, bow obtained, etc., etc., as well as
interesting tables, business law, rates of postage To the satisfaction of its large and in­
creasing list of patrons.
and political facts and figures. Id fact it is
“multum in parvo,” and ail tbe much is of
—We also keep—
every day use.
The same road also publishes a Christmas
Book for children, which contains several 11lusteratious, and Is original matter, and a very
fine piece of sheet music, arranged for piano
and a quartet it voices.
Either, or loth of these itooks and the music Good Goods, Full Weights,
will be sent post free. If requested, by postal or
and Low Prices
tetter. The earlier your name is sent to E. Shall endeavor to prove to the good people of
8Uohn, General Ticket and Puscuger Agent,
Nashville and vicinity that It i« good to have a
Chicago, the quicker you will get the books.
second meat market in Nashville.

Of D. L. Durfee
"-IS ALIVE--

Fresh &amp; Salt Meats

Dried Beef, Smoked Meats, Lard,
Etcetera,

Cash fbr Hides. PMta. Fte.

COMMON COUNCIL

PROCEEDINGS
D. L. DURFEE.
Council Rooms,
i
Nashville, Dec. 11, 1882. f
Regular meeting.
Present, Chipman, preaident, Barber, Boise,
Demaray, Dickinson and Lentz. Trustees.
Minutes of last.meeting read and on motion
approved.
The resignation of L. J. Wheeler, village
treasurer, was presented aud on motion accept­
ed On motion Geo. W. Francis was appoint­
ed village treasurer for balance of rear, by
aye* and nays as follows:
Wc would call Oie attention of ixrtiea who
Ayes, Bartier, Boise, Demarav, Dickinson
and Lentz; Nays none.
have not th* flies of Harper’s Weekly durinc
TbeTollowlng accounts were presented and the War to
.
on motion allowed by ayes and nays as follows:
Ayes, Barber, Boise, Demaray, Dickinson
and Lent*; Nays none.
•18 »

War Volumes of
“Harper'sWeekly.”

500
14 50

Harper’s Pictorial History of the
Rebellion,

8sme rise page a* tbe Weekly, containing 1,000

*3

David IrUud

Fmak McDsbby,

Ctak-

E. Chipman,
PmsIdenL

In Harper’s Weekly of Jdly I, 1883, and prevt-

MAIUUAOE8.
. A. Jones of Nashville, Sundav, Dec. 10.

that. Id Moordaac
January 3L MM,
HarperS Weekly

Hastings.______ ■ . _ _

MeDONNELL BBQS.

fineat plate of apple*; 2nd on desert

riethaipf potatoes; 2nd on the latgeat

No Whiskey!

Pay the highest market price for all kind* of
Brechcr remark* that the fools seem
to multiply very rapidly. Some one Grrain and Ir*i-odu.ee,
---------- -And sell---------must. Lave told Beecher that the de­
mand for divorce* in the Philadelphia Seeds, Feed, Lime, Salt, Plaster, Stiiccoart* wore than equal the supply,
’ co, Hair. Pine Lumber, Lath
A coroner’s jury in Colorado didn't
and Shingles,
take any. notice of the six ballet-boles
AT THE LOWEST LIVING PRICES.
in the dead body of a cow-boy, but con­
cluded that hn might have suffocated
while lying with hi* head in a ditch.

pleaaan1. visit, but diphtheria conviac-

Cob.

&lt;* of Ntthvilte, wiil'oeoir on Frida
Dec- Wth, 1M2. Nomination* abool
co tbe and.
Oxxo
C. C.

Hay. wr

�Ml. k«5WU M
the Deacon
so Jerry Barker afterward said—m a
frown cucumber.
“Good-evening, boys,” said he. He
took off hb hat as be spoke, and by the
light of tbe moon the boys could see
that be was making a desperate efiort to,
keep hb face straight “NowTm —
Hold on there! Stop!"
For Con and Iki&gt; Harris had started
Rolled. tumblnd and jumped about. early aud
to run. They stopped, however. There
was nothing else to do when the Deacon
spoke in that way, ahd they knew it
"Let’s see," said the Deacon, reach­
ing toward Ned Rogers’ basket, which
was forthwith handed over to him with
great alacrity—“lot’s see how many
ttalpfrity, auappimt. yellow and black. • •
you’ve got”
O naughty Blacktur. how could you do eof—
He examined every boy’s load in turn
over carefully and in silence, and all the
while the boys looked into each other's
1 wonder why boy-play* nnd puppy-play*. too, faces without speaking. Oh! if the
End so often In trouble aud tears ua they do.
moon would but go under a cloud!
When the Deacon had finished hb
Inspection, he spoke again, kindly, and
THE DEACON’N CHERRIES.
with a pleasant smile:
“Cherries? I should say so! There’s
“ Now,'boys. I’m much obliged to ye.
no end to 'em—trees are loaded, and I’ve laid out to go to town with a load'
red'a a burning-bush. 1 waa by there o’ truck to-morrow, an’. I was won­
to-day.”
derin' how I’d get my cherries pickyd.
It wa* an intensely eager voice, and I’m reely oblige to ye, and I’ll be more
Davy Kent, the sjteaker. ended Ids, lit- so if ye’ 11 carry ’em to the house for me.”
tile speech with tin expresshe smafck of
Not a boy felt like disobeying. Not
the bps.
'
X———' x
one'but silently picked up hb burden of
“He’d never missed tbe few we'd cherries and marched along before the
take, would be/boys?" That was Ned Deacon to the house and into the porch.
. Rogers. It was u|«&gt;n a straw pile be­
“Set’em right down here," directed
hind Mr. Roger's bam that the boys Deacon Gammon, cheerily, *’ an' I'Usee
were holding an earnest consultation. to ’em ’fore long. Now, boys, ye’ve
“Miss ’em? No. not if we took twice worked consider'ble hard, an’ you want
as many a* we will.”
some supper. Come iq an’ have acme
“A bushel wilj
enough to treat the cherry pie an’ cheese.”
whole crowd, won’t it?”
Every boy’s face said he would rather
"Oh. any amount."
die, and there was a sound of murmured
“Now sec here, boys”—and Clem negatives.
Goodrich lifted himself into, a sitting
“Yes you will,” said th® Deacon;
posture and knited his brows thought­ “ You’ve’workcd well, an’ deserve your
fully ns he spoke—“I think—isn’t this supper. Right into the kitchen now,
—doesn’t it seem a little bit like steal­ right in! Mother’s a-waitin' for ye.”
ing? Don’t you suppose he’d give us a
So she was—kind, motherly Mrs.
l-w if we were to ask him? It looks to Gammon. And there was a table loaded
with goodies waiting for them, too—’
But right here Clem’s mild voice was sandwiches, and plum-cake, and cherry
drowned in a roaring, boisterous pie. and cherry tarte, and cherries—
chorus.
’
. cherries everywhere.
"It's not staling, me bov,” said Con
“Good-evening.” said Mrs. Gammon,
O’Brien, with the faintest brogue in tho beaming upon the boys.
world: "it's only helping ourselves to a
“Take some chairs," ordered the
few cherries, th’nt otherwise might Deacon, behind them; •• and set right
spoil for want o’ tbe nicking, and so be up and have some cherry pie nnd seen."
wasted intirely. And if Dea.-on Gam­
The boys wondered whether they
mon don't know it. he’ll be nene the were awake or dreaming as they filed
wiser, fot he's got piles nnd hapes shamefacedly past Mrs. Gammon, hats
more'n he can taKe care of. Ten to in hand, and took seats at the well­
one he’ll be obliged to us for helping spread table.
him out a little—he isn’t a bad old
_________ _______________
“____
Now__help vourselves,"
said the Dea­
.1____________
i. ■boy
___ i-:I________
gintieman at heart, you know. And i eon’s___
wife.
A'nd each
in his
heart_
it’s fur the fun of it as well as the ating • wondered if she knew, and hoped she
we take ’em, that's the truth."
! didn’t.
But they helped themselves
“So ’tis.’’ echoed a good many of the , readily enough; and at length, between
boys.
'
I the Deacon's funny stories and the doliAs for. Clem. he*gaz.ed into Con’s , cious cherry pie, they came as near to
serious face doubtfully, yet, it must be enjoying themselves as was possible un­
confessed, very willing to be convinced. ’ der the circumstances.
••PTOnomeytaknowtajC'^dta..YOUM't csl icxrody u»-thing.'’
■•you fallows that b.ro lived here nil „id (pj |lera,n. wbcn th. boy, Tin. "Have
...» ---------•&gt;vourlives.
—-■— ’
„ ,
. , , ,
j ished their meal.
some cherries J
‘ -C.'
■• Of &lt;»ur»e. • I*ughc4 Jerry Parker. :I K(J cheniH1P lIo. h&lt;). ho,..
“
Why, my father
■•Why.
Ulher says
s»y« he always plants
plaa« I। .. Now fltberl" expostulated his wile,
jri
nrlr.
molnn
antxt
fnr
tin
hnv«
nn
w.tll
an extra melon seed for ua boy. a, well. mMlv. „nd [hcn the boy, l-new.he knew,
as
for the
-for
th" bugs."
b"*-’
“1 don't s'pose rd ought to." said
So they reasoned away their doubts the Deacon; and he walked to the head
and mode their plans; and somehow, of the table, and stood there looking
before the little party broke up, each down at his young guests with a queer
boy hail pre^y nearly succeeded in little smile. ’"I ain't much of a spcechpersuading himself that he would be ifier,” said he, “but I want to ask you
doing the Deacon a favor by helping boys a question. Which would ye rath­
him make away with a small portion of er l»e. when ye get ready to take your
his fruit. All the same. Ned Rogers fathers' places, honest men or. rogues?”
couldn't resist a little feeling of guilt.
Every boy caught hi* breath. The
not unmingied with &lt;h*ead. when his M
c
d eiwhudnv
eighuday
father said at tbe tea table that evening: | painf
”!lv lo^dclock in the corner ticked
••I wonder what Deacon Gammon . ,.....
th'o^hTor'thi'^-'Tr^i,^’^
■■Tho
rradm"e
up to look “w&amp;u;:;‘b.%t

Nobody oould tell what the Deacon ।
thought of tho hay, for nobody bad seen ; ™ „’?OQ”hooe*t n»
crio,i Co“
him. But Ned was thinking that he
,en*
.
., .
:♦
i
u„, „ «„-♦
Later
he saidlooking
ho couldn
t help
it,
In’S
with
tbe on
Deacon
at ’him.
‘and
.o
S
'
‘he Deacon's wife wiping her glrae,
whiMe ^d U bi. friends [? ^.t anxious.way; but
meant it all
when they met next night, all rector

“■

the proposed raid on the Deacon's cher­
"That’s right.” said Deacon Gam­
ries. There were not a few blank faces
mon—" that’s just right; and we won’t
in the little crowd when he told his story.
say another word about IL"
" He might have heard us if he was
“No, don’t,” said his wife.
there when we were talking.” stud Ned.
But, after all, it was Con O’Brien who
best, ng a lively tattoo on the bottom of
said the right thing in the right place,
his basket “I don't say he did. but he
n* he picked up his basket, which wasn’t
might”
i
" Oh. pshaw! ”
exclaimed
Con .1 entirely empty, in the porch.
■ no Deacon
Lteacon’s. deaf
neat a
a little,
uttio, II ." Wbuherer you want any help about
O’Brien. “The
)
.J0”
and-1 don’t ‘ slieve he could ' bear what
*
on
“ud h'- . , We 11
we were a-« ring. Why didn't you go m&lt;mwiv ki tlie «tr«wJ h*nr, 1 sure
co™6 when you sind for us. and
round, me toy. to
. the straw• tape. .
TOnl(. be(in! honMt lpjraiP,
and see if you could hear yourself into I
“That’s right.” said the Deacon—
Um bar-rn?’’
A shout went up at that which, to be i “that’s right.”
hire, was exactly what Con wanted, j Then his eye* twinkled, as the boys
since there is nothing batter than a | filed out into the night. “Edward.”
jolly-*ounding laugh to put a boy on said he to Ned Rogers, " tell your fath­
good terms with himself and everybody j er that’s the best mow of timothy I ever
else.
“It’s just the way I thought,’’ cried
“ It’s all right,” said he. “Come on, ;
now. and don’t you be afraid o’ the boys, when they got out of the Deanothin’.”
Not a boy among them was afraid, but
a.good many of them couldn’t keep tbeir i
hearts from fluttering in a very queer
way when they came, with their baskets A Snake-Visitation in Chester County.
and bags, to the gap in Deacon Gam­
If St Patrick ever revisits “the
mons orchard wall. Tbe orchard was
near tbe bouse, and the cherry-trees glimpses of the moon” he can find con­
were scattered about among tho apple­ genial work by descending in Chester
trees in a hap-hazard fashion.
Tbe County, Pa. 'where snakes of many
kinds have multiplied at such rate that
bouse looked dark and still
“It’s lust as I told you,” whispered it Is now scarcely safe to go on foot, and
laborers in the harvest fields are de­
Deacon and bis wife have gone tx manding double pay for their services
prayer-mating, and the coast i* clear in view of the danger that each day’s
’Rah for we! Look at ’em. me boys!" I work will be tbeir last. Old inhabit­
They did more than look al the ' anta of the ;county declare that. such
------a
great, delicious, clustering cherries visitation of venomous reptiles has uevhangiag from boughs which bent low cr afflicted them before, and people who
down with their weight
They pulled certainly tell the truth on other subjects
them bv handfuls, and bags and basket*
amusing stories of Lhe black
w»ro raoidlv filled.
snakes and copperheads which they aud
i hue Ain't look to beany less their neighbors have killed. G. R.

chuckle?
“ Now, harvest in Coventsy Township, and ths
help to the old reaper dec*pit*tod_*even snakes in cut­
ting two
“
cned the
but the farm-bands would not

shown upon a background of gold.
These holy personages In their purple
garments look like a procession of
Tbe iconosteaus of the Assumption Is
a dauHag wall of jewelry, a fabulous
display of gold, of precious stones, of
pearD, and diamonds. To this wonder­
ful wall are suspended miraculous,im­
ages of great' antiquity—virgins with
dark eyes and brown skins that be­
longed to grand dukes and were brought
from Novgorod, Pskoi, Kiew, and Con­
stantinople. Their halos are constellat­
ed with precious stones that twinkle Like

sltaOUgb IK*

which be re-enters the ancient palace by
tbe Red Staircase.
The repast .4 tho coronation is given
in the Terem. The Empwor and toe
EmpraM, served bv the marsh ah of the
court, eat alone. The superior officers
beaded by the chief marshal and escort­
ed by officers of the guards with drawn
swords, bring in tbe dishes that the
Metropolitan blesses one after the other.
When the Czar wants to drink, the di­
plomatic corp.« retires, walking back­
ward. and singers in gait costume, with
swords by their sides, advanoe and exe­
cute, during the rest of the renavt, dif­
ferent pieces of the old Russian reportoin.—Jintmal Di Rome.

Winter Goods!
------- ARE NOW Di AN

Underneath thia oouptet-are taqflwd the
.

n do believe, forsooth.
1bat in son&gt;e distant •Happy land’
The spotlare Virgin, Truth,
May exorcise supremo command.
But on oar worldly*semi®.

A HraJ-cUx, Cold Weoxher Soil tor M.

Our marshal fight* with them ia vain.

EVERY MAS WHO DRIVES A TEAM

'wwuui HulTra&lt;e La Orem.

New York Herald.
Oregon'is falling into fine on tho question of
woman suffrage. Tin- legislature of tbe &gt;ui«

thing for every one.

Blankets and Robes.
IN’ THIS LINE our stock will compare favor-

The Golden Robin.

When the robin sings no longer and a
their gar meats and dalmatics of gold,
----- OUR STOCKS OFL—
topazes, sapphires, emeralds, and rubies general alienee prevails among our fa­ assembly has just ratified its action. Tbe next
Prints, Dress .Goods, Flannels,
display marvelous embroideries that miliar birds, save the frequent brief
notes
of
the
song
sparrow,
it
is
delight
­
interlace each other like garlands of
Ladies Cloakings, Shawls. Underwear,
flowers. The miraculous image of the ful to hear onoe more the loud, musical
Blankets, Boots, Shoes, Hats, Caps,
Virgin of Wladimir that orthodox piety call of the golden robin just returned
Mittens, Gloves, Groceries, Glass­
and equal suffrage iu the election of offi.
attribute* to St. Luke wears a diamond from a month’s vacation in the woods. full
ears for all th® departments of iu government
ware, Orockey and Queens ware
I
have
never
ascertained
to
my
full
sat
­
necklace valued at 200,000 roubles. Em­
It may seem surprising that an experiment of
eralds as large as nubs are set In the isfaction why those birds leave u« imme­ thia kind should be find attempted in a region And, tn fact, everything usually kept tn a first
diately after their young hare flown, and which is on tbe skirmish lino of driVcs/inn;
massive goiden crown of this Virgin.
but it should not be forgotten that two hun­
Close to the ioonostasns a canopy why they return -about tbe middle of dred
yean or so ago an experiment in Roremcovers tbe chair of the Patriarch, and in August. 1 have never traced their ment which tbe world covered with ridicule
Woodtod, Oct 20,1882.
...
-----~ * d eoast •
front of it a velvet tent marks the place course, but have reason to believe they .
retire
to
the
woods,
perhaps
for
the
England
of the Emperor. Lamps of Silver ahd
F.F. HILBERT.
vermilion with flickering lights, and protection of their young. They are nineteenth century.
great wax candles with their steady and absent about three weeks, and on their
A true aasiMaut to nature m restoring
CUSTOM
return
we
hear
their
song
again,
though
soft jets, are not sufficient to awaken
system to perfect health, thus enabling it
the obscurity that sleeps under the som- it is not so loud or so frequent as in tne resist disease, Is Brown’s Iron Bluer*.
early summer.
.
her vaults of the old cathedral.
By bolding a little misery quite close to our
The
golden
robin
in
the
early
summer
The ceremonies of the coronation take
tyea, we entirely lose sight of a great deal of
place in this church with a pomp and is the most conspicuous and attractive
Slendor that are peculiarly Oriental. bird that visits the New England States. comfort beyond which might be taken.
lore the Czar arrives the high priests He is oonstantlv moving fr »m tree to
GET RICH.
with the cross, assisted by two deacons tree in quest of imsecte. His principal
When Hops are $1.25 per lb. as now, an aere
carrying holy water in a basin of gold, colors are scarlet and gold, and save the will vield tl.000 profit, am! yet the beat family
scarlet
tanager
he
is
the
most
gorgeously
Medicine
on
earth,
Hop Bitten, contain the And manufacturer of hardwood
sprinkle tbe passage that the Emperor
same quantity of Hops and are sold at tbe same
is about to take.
Then, arranging arrayed.pf all our summer visitants. price fixed years ago, although Hope now are
Lumber.
themselves upon the steps that surrouna His notes remind one of those ot the twenty times higher than then. Raise Hops,
the imperial platform, surmounted by a Virginia red bird; they are louder, but get rich iu p &gt;cket; use Hop Bitten and get
canopy of enmson velvet with tassels as often repeated, always charming and rich {^health.
and fringes of gold, come the grand never wearisome. The lively song of
The King of the Sandwich Islands is hard up
dukes and grand duchesses, all the the red bird is perhaps less varied, but and is borrowing money In California.
members of the imperial - family, the it is even more constantlv repeated.
I have always looked for the arrival
GOOD ADVICE.
diplomatic corps, the high dignitaries of
You will prevent and cure tbe greater part of
tho empire, senators in rod uniforms, of the golden robins on the first appear­
ministers bedizened with badges and ance of the cherry blossoms. Seldom the 1)1* tbst afflict mankind 1n tbi* or anv sec­
if jou keep your stomach, liver,’and kid­
* MILL-FEED and BRAN.
cordons, marshals in brilliant uniforms, in any year of my life have they failed tion
ney* In perfect working order. There ia no
ladies of the court, and young ladies of to make their appearance simultaneous­ medicine known that does this a* »urely a*
honor in the national costume, includ­ ly. If a dozen flowers could be counted Parker’* Ginger Tonic. It will keep your blood
ing the kakochnik (a golden diadem on a cherry tree in any of our gardens, rich and pure, and give you good health at lltPURE Cider VINEGAR,
embroidered in gold or pearls), repre­ we were sure to hear tho song of the j Ge cost. See other column.
sentatives of the merchants of all the golden robin poured forth as u to an­
Mr. Talmage allege* that silence I* only
cities of the empire, most of them in nounce them. In the sping of this year music asleep. Juslao. And tbe snoring du­
blue or black gowns fringed iu gold, (1882) this coincidence failed. A cherry ring a sermon i* only the congregation asleep.
HARDWOOD LUMBER,
deputations from Asiatic peoples allied tree near my window was in full bloom
THE SAFEST WAT.
to or subjects of the Emperor, Chinese, a week before any golden robin was seen
Tbe safest and surest way to restore the
Mongolians, Tartars, Baskirs, Kalmuks, or heard in the neighborhood. April
and
May
of
this
year
were
months
of
youthful
.color
of
the
hair
is
furnished
by
Park
­
Khirgees, • Boukharas,
Circassians,
er's Hair Balsam, which is deservedly popular
BASSWOOD LUMBER,
Georgians, Mingrelians, Ijiplanders, unprecedented cold, and the birds from ite superior cleanliness.
Esquimaux, Persians, Turcomans—a seemed to be affected by it more than
vegetation
;
but
a
rainstorm
of
a
week
’
s
IS IT WORTH THE MONEY?
strange and wild mixture of different
PINE
FINISHING LUMBER
That's the question. Will it pay to suffer day
races, half clad, and armed, some with duration, that began just as the cherry
bows or lances, others with yatagans blossoms appeared, was probably the after day when a twenty-five cent bottle of Put­
. nam's Painless Corn Extractor gives prompt and
chief
cause
of
the
lateness
of
the
golden
with silver handles, or swords with
■ pennanent ease aud comfort. Thousands les­ Mill on Sherman Street, East from
robin’s arrival.
Depot.
wooden hilts rudely carved.
' tifvthat it I* a good investment, and If you area
Tbe golden robin is not heard so early
This dazzling and picturesque proces­ in the morning as the common robin, sufferer from corn* try it. Sure, safe and painII. IL. DICKINSON A CO.
ie*«. Sold by druggiata everywhere
sion advances, preceded by a platoon of
and ho docs not, like that bird, sit on a
guards of honor, with cuirasses of red perch and warble continuously. When­ I Age I* Dot all decay ; it is the ripinlng, tbs
cloth starred with silver, and by two ever *be alights on a tree he utters his swelling of the fresh life within that withers
mounted heralds with gold embroidered few loud notes, and perhaps repeats the busk. __________________
brocades, red velvet caps, and maces. them, when he Is about to fly away.
WOMAN 8 TRUE FRIEND.
The Imperial arms, borne by high func Hence the song may be regarded as an­
A ftiend In need is a friend indeed. This none
tionaries, are placed at the left of the nouncing every change of his situation. can deny, especially when assistance is rendeOUR SALES OF
throne upon a table with a cover of gold. This loud and musical strain often re- ed when one is sorely afflicted with diseases
Grouped in front of the church under jwMed RrMUy enlir.ru lh« &lt;»rly mora- more particularly those complaints and
eaknessc* *o common to our female jxtpulallon
the portal draped with velvet, the clergy, ing chorus, and contributes more to the »ErCTy
W()tnan »bould know that Electric Bit­
with crosses and miters, are resplendent hilarity of early summer than the note _______________________
jtttveiers are woman'* true friend,________
and will—
poriUvc—HAVE BEEN—
in their chasubles and dalmatics, spark­ of any other biro.
ly restart
restore bey
bcr to health, even when all ottsr
other
I *y
ling with gems. The Metropolitans, led
remedies
fall. A single trial always proves our
Though the golden robiu sings no
Double what we Expected
They are pleasant to the taste, and
by the Metropolitan of Kiew, holding continuous song, he always finishes his assertion.
(
w fifty cents a boule. Sold by F. T.
cost
censers, await the arrival of the Em­ strain, so that his pauses are very unlike only
them to be.
Boisa
peror.
those of the cat bird, who repeats two or
A Baltimore man who lost HO,000 in bonds COOP GOODS aad LOW PRICKS U the SECRET.
At last the Osar appsars. He de­ three notes ns if he had begun to sing
in
the
street
waa
two
shilling!
glad
to
recover
scends the Red Staircase upon which a and then stops.
If he was going to say
a'
Persian carpet, flowered with roses, is the words, “Do ye know what ye are them.
placed. He wean the uniform of s about?" he would say, “Do ye,” then
BRAIN AND NERVE.
general of division, with red trousers, pause A minute. Again he would say,
Welli' Health Renewer, gmu*t remedy an
and he walks under a large canopy that “Do ye know—” then pause five min­ earth for impotence, leanncs*, M-xual dcbll Itr,
itdniggiKt*. Mich. Depot.JAMES E.
puts over his head a flock of golden utes. Perhaps tho next time he might Ac.,fl.
DAVIS A CO.TDctroit Mich. '
eagles in a blue sky.
repeat the whole sentence. His notes—
The Metropolitan of Moscow presents except on rare occasions, when be may
That good Inclinctlon never should be ac­
him the cross to kiss, while the Metro- sing perhaps five minutes without a cepted when px&lt;l action fat la.
Colitau of Novgorod sprinkles him with pause—are fragmentary. The golden
THE BAD AND WOTHLE88
oly water. The princes of the church robin delivers his whole strain, though
Of all kinds at lowest price*.
are never Imitated or coutcrfelted. This ta
conduct the Czar to the throne. Then it is short.
especially
true of a family medicine, and it ta
the Metropolitan of Moscow approaches
The nest of the golden robin Is an ex­ positive proof that the remedy imitated ia of
his imperial Majesty and presents him traordinary specimen of bird architec­
with thd orthodox profession of faith, ture; but it u so well known that any highest value. As aoanasit had been tested
Largest Stock and Lowest Prices.
which the Czar reads aloud, standing description of it to be new must be false. aud proved by tbe whole world that Hop Bit­
10,000 articles cheap.
the purrat,
beat
and-—
moat
ralable fam­
with his hand upon the guard of his It has been known sometimes to weave ten waa
- —
—7-----------------------sword. After reading ho receives the several yards of tope or twine into jU ID*d‘c,B« 00 earth many taitaUoos sprung
two Metropolitans of Kiew, who ascend nest. The bird evidently understands , UP and began to steal the notice* in which the
tbe steps of the throne and bring him tbe art of tying, though perhaps it oould press
— -and js-oplc of the country had expres cd
the coronation mantle. The Czar takes not tie a regular sailor's knot. It simply the merits of H. B., and In every way trying to
Cheaper than ever.
It from their hands aud places it upon winds a string or tape round the sup­ Induce suffering invalids to use their stuff in
stead,
expecting to make money on the crcdi
his shoulders. Then he bows before the porting branches, and then weaves the and good
uame ot H. B. Many other! star ed
Metropolitan of Moscow, who places his remainder into the nest. Iti knowledge nostrums nut up hi similar style to H. B., with
hands over him and recites a prayer.
of the art is just sufficient to answer its variously devun-d names in which the worn
. Finally, tho Czar arises, majestic and ends, and it can proceed no further.— “Hop” or “Hops” were used in a way to induct
Eople to believe they were the same as Hot
superb, dressed in his mantle of brocade WiUon Flagg,
Roeton Transcript.
Here. All such pretended remedies or rurea,
lined with ermine, and, taking tbe im­
no matter what tbeir style or name is, and es­
perial crown sparkling with diamonds,
The Last Man’s Club.
pecially those with the word “Hop" or “Hops”
in their name, art imitations or counterfeits.
he places it with his own hands upon his
The death of Robert Riddle, of No. Beware of them. Touch none of them. Use
head. At this moment the Empress
nothing, butgenuine Hop Bitten, with a bunch
advances and kneels before her august 1,837 Hanover street, on Sunday, leaves or
duster ofgreeu Hopa on the white label
spouse, who, taking off his crown, holds but four survivors of the original Last Trust nothing eisc. DruggUta and dealers are
it an inscant over the forehead of the Man's Club, of this city, which was or­ warred against dealing in UniuUous or coun­
Czarina in token of her share in his ganized with fifteen members thirty terfeits.
years ago. 'Mr. Riddle was tbe presi­
omnipotence.
clan, which was organized yyiLLIAM JONES,
In the courtyard of the Kremlin the dent of the clnb,
cannons thunder. The three hundred by the following members of old Vig­
churches of Moscow ring their joy bells, ilant Fire Company: James Gallaway,
TO HAVE THE JOB DOMF
and the vaults of the old cathedral are John Gallaway, William Riddle, Robert
filled with songs of gladness and of tri­ Riddle, W. Y. Otrans, W. Kucher, Wil­
liam Wilkison. Anthony White, W. C.
umph.
Tbe mass begins. The silver doors Fry, James Hennessey, Theodore Wil­
of the iconostasus are opened.
The son, John H. McIlwain, George K. Mo­
Archbishops of Novgorod and of Kiew llwain, John Boy, and Theodore Adams,
approach'the Emperor and inform him the last lour being the only survivors.
that all is ready for the anointment. It was agreed when tbe clnb waa or­
The Czar descends from his throne. ganized that on tbe 2d of January of each
Tbe Empress accompanies him to the year the members should all attend a
bg ajfurdmg the public
door of the sanctuary, the threshold of supper, and that a regular organization
which no woman can crass. The Metro­ should be maintained until the death of
politan of Moscow then dips in the vase all the members, the last survivor to take
that contains the holy oil the golden the club effects tn his home as a me­
branch that he holds m his hand, and mento. Through thirty years thia agree­
I, Ual Km, I
anoints the temples, the eyelids, the ment baa been kept. - At each supper
nostriU, the lips, the breast, and the dates were laid for all of the oqad
hands of tbe Czar while uttering the inumbers, and each was toasted in turn.
words, “Behold th® seal of the Holy On Jan. 2, 1882, there were eleven
Gbort.” And after each holy unction

A GOOD FAMILY FLOUR

0
4

0

d&gt;

Hurrah
BOOTS AND SHOES

Groceries
Provisions

CROCKERY AND GLASSWARE,

Hanging Lamps

C.W. SMITH.
Horses

Shod.

ALWAYS BEST

SKILLFULLY.

DENTISTS

Recognizing These Facts,

HALUS

QatarrhQure

rash the the other presidents of the club, die
before the other members. A
will have to be elected on

THE BEST WORK
taw
Chas. Middleton,

A No. 1 Workman,
J. M.WOOI),

backward about

FOUNDER and MACHINIST

�SATUSIIAY,

•

JECA.H GONK.

hcoe ancient
be denved in»tn.
i nome giooe.
|4asn enough, hut unfortunately it b
nut true.• Would • it ba true to awert
that the finger ot the rirenmn which
inquired: “We^ Charley, an’ them# the pull* tho trigger Buppliwi the &lt;uwiwy
can dwell.
things wojTJtea the papers. Be’e them with which the rifle bullet b auimatod?
And is filled with Stoves of 20 Different Kinds.
Of oourke, it would nut. The energy
which we
b derived from the explorioa of the
Overworked Americana: A travel- gunpowder, and the pulling of the In which, perhaps, all the oceans of the
trigger ia merely' the mean* by which
stained tramp was seen setting under that energy is liberated. In a soma* earth are suspended as clouds. I see
th&gt;t the sun still rises and sets to give
the protecting aegis of a stone wall what similar manner tho tidal wave the success on of day and of night, out
this morning with a newspaper in his
the day and the night together only
whereby
a
large
part
of
tho
energy
hand. “Ye^" he remarked, sadly,
amount to three hours, instead of twen­
stored m the earth is compelled to ex­ ty-four. Almost touching the chaotic
*Herbert i* right; overwork is what’s
pend itself in work. Let me illustrate
raising the deuce with us. Americans.; this by a comparison between the earth : thus of the earth is another much small­
er and equally chaotic ‘body. Around
But as long as I live it shall be my en­ rotating on it* axis and the,fly-wheel of
the earth I see this small body rapidly
deavor to'stand as a living rebuke to an engine. The fly-wheel is a sort of rotating. The two revolve together, as
the spirit of unrest which animatea so .reservoir, into which tho engine pours if »hey were bound by invisible bauds.
its
power
at
each
stroke
of
tha
piston.
many of our people, and which u hid­
The smaller body is the moon.—Nature.
ing so many of our young and promis­ Tbe various machines in the mill merd- j
ly draw off the power from the store j
The City Girl on Horseback.
ing men in early graves-" _
accumulated in the fly-wheel. The earth ;
Spending her summer in a remote
A Pekin newspaper tells of the is like a gigantic fly-wheel detached
from the engine, though still connected country place, she is tempted daily by
POINT, POM ILL THE LELDI.L PLOWS. BARBED WIRE.
■ml» uf a Chinese wife by her husband. with the machines in the milL In that a thousand shady lanes and by-ways, to
She had fallen in love with the mighty fly-wheel a stupendous quantity learn to ride on horseback. On the A Large assortment of Shelf Goods and Tinware, and the best
purchaser, and the husband, wishing of energy &gt;s fftored up, and a stupen­ eventful day on which she makes her
Tinner in the County.
‘
at realise some advantage out of his dous quantity of energy would be given tint attempt, our young lady standi
state of affairs, agreed to sell her to tbe out before that fly-wheel would come to before her glass, contemplating with
FOR COOD8 CHEAP CALL AND SEE ME.
rest The earth’s rotation is the reser­ considerable satisfaction the braid and
gallant for $150. Bnt when he came to voir from whence the tides draw the
buttons adorning her trim figure, and
get the property he failed to bring the energy they require for doing work. the soft felt hat, whose long plume
money with him, and the husliaiid de­ Hence it is that though the tides are droops against her hair. She tiptoes
clared the bargain off. But the lovers caused by tbe moon, yet whenever they about »little, puttings curl or so into
were not to beilxttteed. They drugged require energy they draw on the supply place, gathering over her arm the folds
The way to
the husband, f»eixed\all-Hv property Ready to hand in tho rotation of the of the Jong .skirt she wears, and lashing
earth. The earth differs from the fly­ the toe .of her dainty ga ter boot with a
and eloped. Tii^y were afterward ar­ wheel of the engine in a very impor­
riding-whip. She even, in the privacy
rested and put into dungeons, when tant point. As tlie energy is with­ of her chamber, perches sidewise on
drawn from the fly-wheel by the ma­ tho arm of a big easy-chair, and ener­
both committed suicide.
chines in the mill, so it is restored getically whips up the foot-stool, view­
The mention of General Sherman as thereto by the power of the steam-en­ ing the eOects iu the mirror from the
a good candidate for the Republican* gine, and the ily runs uniformly. But corner of her eye.
At last some one cries from tbe hall
to nominate for tbe. Presidency, is call­ the earth is merely the fly-wheel with­
out the engine. When the work done below that tbe horses have come, and
ing out some criticism as to his avail­ by the tides withdraws energy from the
she hastens* down stairs. She stumbles
ability. Tho Des Mobioes Register earth, that energy is never restored. It once
_____or
________________________
twice on the way. and___at____
the
things that he Would be popular and therefore follows that the earth’s rota- j last step catches her foot in her dress
probably invincible, but he might tion must be decreasing. This leads to and plunges headlong, only rescued from
weaken himself by his inclination to a consequence of the most wonderful1 a fall bv one of the members of the
talk to much. He would doubtless importance. It tells us that the s|&gt;eed * household, who is, of course, present to
with which the earth rotates on its axis ! see her off.
poll a nearly unanimous soldier vote- is diminishing. We can state the result, Regaining her balance, she advances
As to his executive qualifications, it be. in a manner which has the merits- of more cautiously and inspects her steed,
We fully realize the
lieves that “he would make b president simplicity and brevity.
The tides are She is not wholly satisfied. It is true
At I that she requested a quiet animal, but
of good intentions. There would be increasing the length of the day.
fircsent
no
doubt
the
effect
of
the
tides
'
there
are
degrees
of
quietness,
and
she
some to donbt’bis judgment sometimes,
ti changing the length of .the day is I would have been conuml to stop short
perhaps, but never his honesty."
very small.
A day now is not anprec-i- j ol absolute detection.
She conceals her disappointment, That most all kinds of produce are bringing this fall, so have
While upon t£e subject of revising ably longer than a day a hundred years
ago. Even in a thousand years the however, and wonders how she is to get
the tariff, congress ought to do some­ change in the length of the day is only J on the animal’s bach The good-nabought a large stock of all kinds of
thing to restore to this country its ship­ a fraction of a second. But tho ini-1 hired stable-man, who is to accompany
ping. The joint congressional com­ portance arises from the fact that tho | her, has dismounted, but does not show
mittee that has fust closed its labors in change, slow as it is, lies always in one i the slightest intention of offering his
the city of New York has made a very direction. The day is continually in- &gt; band for her to put her foot in. accord­
complete inquiry into this subject. creasing. In millions of years the accu- ing to all traditions of the courtesies of
mulalive effect becomes not only ap- horsemanship.
From the slfo wing, it ought to bo the preciable, but even of startling magni- I There is a pause. Some one suggests
problem of congress to restore the tude. The change in the length ofthe I that she better'have a stool. Her soul
And are selling at prices that will astonish you.
American flag to its former place upon day must involve a corresponding i revolts at tho thought. Nevertheless
L , the rtool’is brought, and from its sumthe seas. The committee found that change in the motion of the moon.
while 82.9 per cent of the total exports the moon acts on the earth and retards mit she makes a desperate leap for the
the rotation of tho earth, so. conversely, saddle, fully expo ting to fall over the
and imports of the fiscal year 1840, does the earth react upon the moon. J other side.' A clutch at tho mane of her
Hastings, October 4, 1882.
amounting to $339,227,485 in value, was The earth is tormented by the moon, so ' steed saves her, however, and in anotlicarried in Americau vessels, only 15.5 it strives to drive away Its persecutor, er moment they are off.
Iler sensations arc peculiar. She nevper cent of the total exports and Im­ At present tbe moon revolves round
ports of 1883, amounting to $1,567,071,­ the entire earth at a distance of about' er knew before that a horse was so tall,
700 in value, waa carried by American two hundred and forty thousand miles. | How very toll the animal is! She waa
The reaction of tho enrth tends to in-1 not aware that he had such a longitude
vessels. The revelation of such a loss crease that distance and to force the ; of backbone, or that it heaved so when
to our shipping can hardly fail to arouse moon to revolve in an orbit which is . hu walked. She has not long to reilect
the people to a resolute endeavor to re­ continually getting larger and larger, on those marvels, for presently hercomstore our almost extinct shipping to As thousands of years rollon, the length I panion chirrups, and the animal she is
something of its former power and com­ of the dav increases second by second, I on starts into a trot. She gasps, clutches
and the distance of the moon increases ■ her saddle and bids good-bye to earth,
mercial importance.
That congress mile by mile.
A million years ago the | When she returns to her country
will give the matter its serious atten­ day, probably, contained some minutes . home an hour later, she is pale but effution is foreshown by the appointment less than our present day of twenty- sivrly cheerful, and tells her friends it
(for retrospect does not w as “perfectly lovely,” but she thinks
of a joint committee to consider the four hours,
halt here. We at once project our view 1 she shall like it better when she is used
question.
___
back to an incredibly remote epoch I to it.
NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY CHEAP.
The outlook fnr the iron interest which was a crisis in the history of our | The next day she spends upon the
been at least | sofa m tbe house with a novel, and she
in this country is by no means flatter­ system. It must have
fifty million years ago.
It may have । smites a faint but bitter smile when she
ing. Nearly every steel rail mill is
been very much earlier.
This crisis was .reads tlrnt the heroine of the novel
making preparations to close, and pres­ tho interesting occasion when th^ moon
ra
“touched her black mare lightly with
ent appearances indicate that by the was born. TL»inr.rwi,
n
f
n ,1...
The length of t&gt;,
the
day was the whip, an&lt;l took a five-barred gate I shall offer my entire stock of milliqpry goods at cost or
1st of January not a mill will be in only a very few hours. If we call it with the fearless ea.se of a practised
under.
’
operation in the country. The reason three hours’we shall not be far from the horseman.”—goulA'j Companion.
assigned for the decline in this industry truth. Perhaps you may think that if
we looked back to a still earlier period
An Officer’s Situation.
is low prices. Steel rails have reached the &lt;iay would become still leas and
a price, $43 per ton, at which mill own­ finally disappear altogether! This is,
When the Michigan cavalry brigade
ers say they cannot be manfactured. however, not the case. The day can was sent West to wallop the Indians after
— close of tho
. war,. one of the comSome people are never ready to take advantage of favorable
and this, with a corresponding decline never have been much less than three • the
in tile orders received from railroads, hours in the present -order of things, j panics in tbe Sixth was commanded by opportunities. Don’t let this be said of you.
Everybody knows that the earth is not a ' » Lieutenant who was hated by eveiy
makes it impossible to carry on their
sphere, but there is a protuberance at | man in bis command. He realized this
manufactories. There are many reasons the Equator, so that as our school books ! fact, and lost no opportunity to make it
assigned for this decline in prices, and tell us, the earth is shaped like an or-! warm for tho boys. One evening when
theorists* in political economy have not ange. It is well known that this pro- the regiment went into camp on tbe
tho Platte,
I’latie. far beyond
bevond Omaha, Only that your wants are supplied.
failed to discover the facts that amply tuberance is due to the rotation of the banks of the
explain this unpleasant condition of af­ earth on its axis, by which the equato­ the Lieutenant rigged up a tish line and
rial p^rts bulge out by centrifugal slipped off-down'Ute stream to try his
fairs. Some have seen in tbe recent force. The quicker tho earth rotates
luck.
Rattlesnakes were plenty out
election a threatened abolition of tariff the greater b the protuberance. If, there then, and it was well known that
duties which acts as a perpetual scare however, the rate of rotation exceeds a the officer had a horror of them. He was
to tbe manfacturing interest in this certain limit the equatorial portions of fishing away, getting a nibble now and
country. The mi'.l owners fend manu­ the earth could no longer cling together. then, when one of the boys stole for­
facturers’ however.declare that neither The attraction which unites them would ward to within ten feet of him and
bo overcome by centrifugal force, and a hoarsely whispered:
the elections nor any possible future general break up would occur. It can
“For Heaven’s sake. Lieutenant,
action of congress have anything to do be shown that the rotation of the earth don't move hand or foot! There’s a big
—IX) YOU KNOW THAT—
with the matter of prices. The shutting ■ when on the point ot rupture corre­ rattler in the grass behind you!”
The ollicer was a man of nerve, and
down of tbe mills is to lie more easily* sponds to a length of the day some­
accounted forthan in any such indirect where about the critical va ue of three though he heard every word ho made no
He realized the situation, and
sdnner. Tbe steel-rail mills of this hours, which we have already adopted. move.
'
—BY BL'YFNG—
.
It is. therefore, impossible ’for us to after a moment replied;
country have a capacity of something suppose a day mucn shorter than three
“Can’t you kill it?”
over two million tons a year, which is hours -Let us leave the earth for a few
“No—he's too near you!
PH.go to
nearly double tbe capacity of two years minutes and examine the past history carnpfora gun nnd borne up bn the
ago. while this is true, the demand of the moon. We have seen the moon
The officer heard tbe man crawl
for steel rails for the coming year is es­ revolve around the earth in an ever
widening orbit, and consequently the away, and he sat like a s'atue. The
timated at about one million tons, or
moon must in ancient times have been fish began to bite, but he dared not
only one-half of the capacity of the nearer the earth than itis now. No doubt move his arms.
He saw the sun go
In the Heavy Line I manufacture Farm Harnett, Uuad Har­
mills. This shows that the increased the change is slow. There is not much down, and the darkness1 found him as
When he had been in ness, and Lumber Harness, u»ing the beat brand of “A” stock, stitebin
zinill capacity is far in the excess of the difference between the orbit of the rigid as a post
demand, and that the production is moon a thousand years ago and the or­ that situation for forty minutes ho could with 6 cord No, 10 thread, and Eberhard Trimmings.
Gathering his
greater than the demand. Under such bit in which the moon is now moving. stand it no longer.
My Light Single and Double Harness are the Pride of nil wbe
But when we rise to millions of years breath an-’ muscle, he made a leap into
conditions it is easy to see that either the difference becomes very apprecia­
the water, and after swimming and use them, are
the mills must go on shorter time or ble. Thirty or forty millions of years wading for thirty rods, he climbed out
stop. That the election cuuld have ago the moon was much closer to the and struck for camp, as wet as a rat
bad nothing whatever to’ do with this earth than it is st present; very pos­ aid loaded down with mud. The story
—mow—
condition of tilings is evident from the sibly the moon was then only half its had gone around the camp and at least
present distance. Wo must, however, 400 men were out to greet his return
tact that tbe orders upon which tbe milk
should now be working should have look still cariier, to a certain epoch not and question him regarding the length
AND WARRANTED TO GIVE 8AII8FACTION.
been given at least four weeks ago, and less than fifty millions of years ago. At of the reptile. The officer took a solemn
certain no one so far back could foresee that epoch the moon must have been so vow to make somebody .sweat for that
what would bet-be result of the Novem­ close to the earth that the two bodies trieK. but be fell before an Indian’s
I also keep lull lines of
Everybody bullet before he hud secured his revenge.
ber voting. Tbo whole matter in a nut­ were almost touching.
shell is. there has been an over-product­ knows that the moon revolves now —Detroit Free Frcn.&lt;.
Saddles, Whips, Robes, Blankets, Halters, Riding Bridles,
ion of iron and steel, which, in the nat­ around the earth in a period of twenty­
Collars and Pads, Curry Combs, Brushes,
—A woman of Tucwmbia, Ala., was _
ural order of things, has broken down seven days. 'The period depends upon
the prices and is reducing the manufac­ the distance between the earth and the struck bv lightning and found upon re­
Harness Olis, Etc.
ture, aud this cause ha* been in opera­ moon. In earlier times the month must covery that her hair, once a beautiful
tion for several months. The present
brown,
had been
inKtaataueousiy Evetything marked down to Bottom Prices ami Mtiataction guanuitood.
condition of things » none the less de­
turned to a snow white color.—SC. Xuuu
*
HERB. WALRATH,
plorable. but it is the legitimate result moon .completed it» journey in a week. uh*.
West Side Main-rt, Nashville Mich.

THE STOKE REMAINS
The MONUMENTAL ig lhe Finest Round
‘ Sto ve IHade.

Paints, Oils and Colors, Doors, Glass, Sash and
. Blinds Iron and Wood Pumps,Wagons, Buggies,
Carriages and Platforms, Drills, Cultivators,
Seeders, Plows, Land Rollers, “Reed Spring­
tooth Harrow.

C. L. GLASGOW.

PRINCIPAl+UINE
The BUOnTEST. WUK KF-ST #r.d

aob.pAUas.asl

SatluuaUy reputed as
;-^bctng uxs Brest
^^^&gt;»^lhrou8h Car

KANSAS CITY
^^AUeonnecUoMtMde .
IB UbIon

Ticket* vUtt
Celebrated Ltoe

tod

PERCEVAL LOWELL.

By Buying Your Dry Goods

1K0 SOBGICAL SAR1TARIU1;

W. S. GOODYEAR &amp; CO

DRY GOODS, FANCY GOODS, NO­
TIONS, BOOTS and SHOES,
and CARPETS.

DIRECTIONS
unciiJiMii

W. S. GOODYEAR &amp; CO.

effectually e!"*n»c»
I In&gt; naaal paaMkera ot
| Catarrhal vires cauaInic healthy aecrv'l •! «

COST SALE

MILLINERY

hay-fever
erlclal resells »re rcsllxed by a few applications A
tbomueb Irratment ar dlrecU-d wl
e Catarrh

I'nequaird For. (’ohl In the Head
The Bala has Rained an envlabl" repeiaUon where
crea known, dltpiaelng ell other pryparallvlls,

Kecogntred as a Wonderful Discovery.
full Information and reliable le*tlinou!ali.
ELY CREAM HALM CO.. Owers,

FOR THE NEXT SIXTY DAYS

CUBES AND

SPECIAL BARGAINS IN TRIMMED HATS.

Jj kk. »*id.

Come Early, Came Late,

tsss:, «■

vejssauje-isiea.

M. JEFFREY.

FARMERS, TEAMSTERS, HORSEMEN!
YOU CAN SAVE MONEY

OF HERB. WALRATH.

Made in all Styles

Best Stock in the Market,

U road way New York. Hla booit with I’hotu^rspl-

Not Full
u» Basil fur
■our FALL
Price-List
for1882.
Free a&gt; any kddres? upon
appli^tion. Contain-■!cacripuoQA of everything
required for Personal or Family uno,
with over 2,200 illustraliona. Wc sell
all goods at whole.sale price*, in
quantities to suit the purrhwr. 1*116
only iiutitutfon in Atifojca who make
this their Bpeeial busineaB.
Addraaa
■

MONTGOMERY WARD &amp; CO.,
NOTICE.

*5 h

�A W
jh3k JLJL
1TOVEMBEB

Battle Creek taxes are unusually
high this year, because improvements
mos to have been made and the school bonds
fall due.
_
The Calhoun county Pomona grange
meets
at
Union
grange
hall,
Emmet
taoitdinu acboola aud churches com­
township, Dec. 21, at 10 a. in. All 4th
bined.
•
The henktorial pot still babbles, aud degree members are wanted.
Walter Clark’A fast horse Minnie was
itlooks as though. Perry would get
stolen the pane week, but recovered
there;
near
Michigan City, and a colored man
At East Tawas tbe snow is three
feet ou the level and the bay is covered named Jos. Brown will pay the penalty
of
the
theft. ‘
with ice.
Tbe Case and Willard thresher
The steam heater in a ferry waiting
Mfg.
Co.,
made nnd sold 55 machines
room at Detroit, exploded the other
last year, and will make 100 for next
day, injuring four men.
season.
The
demand was greater than
Washington Beeman of Waterloo,
Jackwon county, had nearly &gt;18,000 in tbeir ability to supply, and they intend
to
enlarge
their
works, and increase
bonds aud rnortgagages stolen from a
their capital.
valise, this week.
On Friday of last week, Freer de
A new disease has appeared at Gar­
field, in northern Michigan, said to Palmer’s foundry at the Creek was de­
be caught from horses suffering with stroyed by fire; loss &gt;4,000, insurance
The owners are young men
Pinkeye, and three children have died &gt;1300.
who hud their all invested in the busL
therefrom.
y.
Gen. Stephei) Bronton'bfBig Rapids, teas, which was proving a success,
of whom sotpe very bad things were and effort is being made to give them
said during the campaign, has begun] financial assistance to resume business.
Tbe Bathrick Post and Tribune libel
some libel suits. No trouble to begin
things, but its usually something to case progresses at Detroit. Bathrick’s
uefense
is that Anna Prosser and her
finish them.
E. P. Allis, of Milwaukee, has com­ mother tried to blackmail him on the
strength
of appearances when he had
menced suit in the United States Cir
cuit Court here against forty-two committed no crime. Miss Prosser com­
mitted
suicide
by jumping, into the
prominent lumber firms, all over west­
ern Michigan, for infringing his patent river at Battle Creek Monday morning
at
0
o
’
clock.
Her
mother drowned her­
dog for saw mills.
The ninth annual session of tbe self last May. The girl’s body was
drawn
under
the
ice,
and may not be
Michigan grand division of Sons of
Temperance was recently held at Fen­ recovered till spring.

EicharJ McLain of Caro,
ittote priaou for life for rape.

ton, with 200 delegates. There are
4,000 "Sons” in this state, and the
grand division is out of debt The
Michigan grand division is the banner
one in the .west.
The comparative shipments for lum­
ber in feet to Chicago from the princi­
pal lake ports are: Muskegon. 417,867,­
000; Grand Haven. 138,861,000; White
Lake, 108,896,000 ; Ludington, 111,736,­
000; Manistee, 150,471,080; Menominee,
280,418,000: Cheboygan. 88,197,000! Al­
pena, 83,511,000.
A colored boy at Paw Paw can take a
handkerchief or any other inflammable
material, and rubbing it between bis
bands and breathing on it set it afire.
He will do it under tbe most rigid pre­
cautions against trickery. He will set
tlje leaves afire when out gunning/The
operation exhausts him.
Fires: The works of tbe Saginaw bar­
rel Co. were destroyed by fire last Fri­
day. Loss $175,000, insurance &gt;130,750.
Planing mill at St. Louis, Gratiot, Co.,
burned. lx»s &gt;7,000, insurance &gt;1500.
—At Petoskey the other day, a flour
mill, bridge, etc., total loss about
&gt;4,000.—T do small tires at St. Louis,
aggregate loss &gt;500.
Mother White has bad somu more
visions—she sees it is necessary that
something be done to make it uncom­
fortable for certain of ber prominent
followers—Elder U. Smith and Mayor
Gage—who do not bow low enough, and
the bead qnyters of odvent(ur)ism are
quite stirred up, but she fails to com­
mand the solid support she once did.
Tbe Michigan Central proposes to
build a branch railroad 75 miles long,
between Beaver Lake and Alpena, to
catch lumber traffic, and the Grand
Trunk will probably in tbe spring,
build a new line from Battle Creek to
Jackson or Stockbridge, or in that
section for the purpose of getting an air
line through to Chicago.
St. Ignace is having lota of trouble.
First tbe abrupt departure of one who
but recently filled a prominent and
trusted position in ono of the leading
business firms, then the elopement of
one of tbe most industrous young men
with another man's wife, aud finally tbe
arrest of tbe village Marshal, charged
with robbing a man of &gt;400.
The state horticultural society held
a successful meeting at Flint last week.
Lieut. Gov. Crosby, Thomas W. Pal­
mer of Detroit, and other prominent
men were preuent and took part. Tbe
society has 177 life members, and tbe
treasurer has a balance on hand of
&gt;402. T. T. Lyou of South Haven was
elected president, C. W. Garfield of
Grand Rapids secretary, and 8. M.
Pearsall of tbe same place treasurer.
Tbe society will ask for tbe appoint­
ment of a state officer' to compile hor­
ticultural statistics. The society's next
meeting is to held at Marshall in June.
Fatal accidents have been quite nu­
merous this week. A two-year-old
daughter of Jos. Arnold's at McBrides,
get bold of the kerosene can and set
bwi self on fire ; Giles Smith fell in a
fit on the Port Huron and Northwest — “-M-o ul,'and was terribly mangled:
in and Joseph Kroner killed
county by the etploaiou of
ining a hay press; Bene. 80,

BARGAINS

BARGAINS

IN DRESS GOODS - A?fD NOTIONS

BARGAINS
In Boots, Shoes, Hatu and Capa.
fr^o

BARGAINS

Washington. D. C., Dec. 9,1882.
And here we are again looking down
upon the assembled Senatorial wisdom
again in session. The Senate Cham­
ber has been newly dressed and be­
decked, and oiled and varnished and
painted and carpeted until it looks
wonderfully improved in appearance.
The seats and desks shine like so many
new pewter dollars, while the new
green carpet covering tbe floor gives
the chamber the appearance of verdure
that is both pleasant and pleasing to
the eye. The reader is begged to be­
lieve that this particulai color-green
was Intentionally selected for the cham­
ber not to mark, the “Eternal Fitness
of things” but in order to present te the
world and the balance of man and wo­
mankind the greatest possible contrast
between the trappings and trimmings
of the chamber and its sage, sedate
and dignified occupants.
Thu popular demand for economy
found a responsive chord in the House
of Representatives to-day, and it was
brought about by an aspirant for the
speakership of the next House. After
several attempts Mr. Spnngerj. of Ill­
inois was recognized to introduce a res­
olution providing for the printing of
2.000 copies of the digest of the rules
of the House. Objector Holman, ot
Indiana, did not neglect the opportu­
nity offered to carry out his policy and
entered a protest. To^his manifest
surprise Republicans and Democrats
rallied to his support, and although Mr.
Springer exclaimed that the number
of copies asked waa not in excess of
the usual session allowance only nine­
teen Representatives were willing to
stand by him. and he was compelled to
succumb to superior numbers. The
incident was the subject uf consider­
able comment as indicative of tiie ten­
dency of the House, for among Mr.
Holman’s adherents were Robeson, of
New Jersey, Horr, Michigan; Fuller
of Pennsylvania: Hiscock, of New
York, and Urner of Maryland.
Some comment has been made be­
cause of the failure ao far of the Presi­
dent to send to the Senate notices of
the recent suspensions of officials in
this District, with the nominations of
their successors. Under the law the
President has thirty days from the begining of the session to do this, so that
he has plenty of time, as yet.
Mr. McPherson, clerk of the House of
Representatives, has prepared a table
of members of the next House of Rep­
resentatives, in which he figures up a
clear majority for the democrats of 69
over all. Some of the democratic
members who have seen this estimate
think Mr. McPherson has not given the
democrats credit for all the straightouts of their party and that the demo­
cratic majority will be at least several
above the figure fixed by Mr. McPher­
son.
The'Premdent’s levees will not begin
until after the holidays. There is much
talk about CuugreM not adjourning for
the holidays, but this is an ancient
farce that ia gone through with every
year with commendable regularity and
ends iust where it begin*, in talk. As
Leut begins early in Feboary. things
will have to be rushed, and tbe levees,
which will be four in number, will

iorled

iu;

Chm^uitTiT^ruudirtu^

In Horae Blankets. Lap Robes, aud Comfortable*.
As the season advances we find our stock moving off finely, and the visitors to our store tell
us that our I.arge Stock and Low Prices are what is bringing us the
largest trade in town.
A single Fact is worth a ship-load of Argument. Our stock of Cloaks, Dol­
mans, and Overcoats for.Men and Boys, is, beyond the shadow of a doubt,
the largest and most desirable to be found in the town.

that It to tbe best RopcMIcxB
W U-- -1~_- A- — 1.1.___

Hete« Il to be the beat muaxloo ofgeorv*! literal
turn In exbttnee, b«cta&gt;M It. reader. rX
nothingworthy of notice ths*. U ament In the
world of thought. Bo every friend of Tn« Sew dU
enter* one nf Iu many aide* that appeal* with par­
titular force to I.-. individual Hklr»%.
‘
If yon alrrsdr kno&lt; ?■« Sen, you will obeerro
that In 18M H u a HtU. better than ever before.
If you .Io not already know Tne Bor. you will
find It to be a mirror of all human activity. a etorr-

Ci"Butter, Eggs, and Dried Apples Wanted.
po-taiMea. follows:

Merry Christmas!

OUR WASHINGTON LETTER.
[From our regular correspondent. J

7T^^1UU’ w,d lb* dUb&lt;,B«*
*1

500 Vases.
All Kinds—all Prices.
We lead them all.

’Nuff ced.

Toilet Setts.

A new departure,—will do the best
we can.

Confectionery
Candy, Nuts, Etc.

Hanging Lamps.

In profusion — all best quality at
low prices.

Silverware.
Stock Larger and Prices Cheaper
than ever.

Beautiful designs.
Bright, tasty colors.

Odd Pieces.
Of Bisque, China.
Glass, Majolica, Etc.

Majolica.
At Prices to suit all.
or Setts.
•

Single Pieces

Boots and Shoes,
Gloves and Mittens

“ssKair"1'

■

’

'

a year.
WEEKLY—M a year. Eight |arti of tbe beat
nu.lt- r of tbe daily Imuos ; an agricultural depart­
ment of unequalled merit, market reports, *ndllt•rary •denude, and domestic lutclligenee make
Ta» Wsbklt Sc« the newipaper for the fanner**
household. To elnbs ot ten with |W, an extra copy

Address

l.W. ENGLAND. Publisher.

•

Probate Order.
rsTB or Micmoan, I
County of Barry, { ,

, Judge of Probate.
ite of GEORGE GILLIS,

On reediDK and filing tho petition, duly verified.

be dtochiuTtot from bl* said trust.

'clock In the forenoon, be MMlgoed f&lt;
All are invited to call and spend an
fsald petlUoo, aud that the bcirei
hour or more viewing the enormous
stock of holiday goods suitable for
10,000 kinds in Wood, Tin, Iron and all.
Cups and Saucers, Mugs, Fruit Plates,
China. We can’t begin to tell.
Comports, Match Safes, Etc.
•how c»t*c. if any there be, why tl

French China.

Toys. Toys.

petitioner ehuuld not be granted.
of tbe pendency of said petition, and tbe hearixg
therrrf.br earning * copy of this order to be pub­
lished In the N**arii.i.BNswN,aDev*neperprinted
and circulated In said County of Barry, once In

makes people indulgent toward him.
On the contrary, he is subjected to
keener scrutiny and severer criticism.
He is a perfeet master of social fence.
No man was ever so anxious for a social
persecution as Mr. Blaine- was. To
have been kicked out of office and or­
dered out of the White House, would
have suited his purpose exactly. In­
stead of that he was let down as easy
as possible, and treated with the most
marked social deference being repeat­
edly invited to dinner at the White
Hoose, both formally and informally.
The same may be said of half a dozen
other men whom the President knew
to be vindictively opposed to Mm.
They might plot against him, but he
refused to oblige them by opening a
social warfare. As for the President’s
multitudinous love affairs, which are
regularly telegraphed over the country
by hysterical correspondents, he has no
more idea of being married than the
Pope.
The Supreme Court of the United
States on the 4th instant rendered a
decision on the' tax sale case of the
United States against the Arlington
estate, affirming the decision of the
lower court in favor of the Lee heirs.
Chief Justice Waite and Justices Gray,
Bradley and Woods dissented.
August.
MY MOTHER,-A DREAM.
BT DO. A.

n.

CLEMENT SMITH.

Great Bargains

NlortK*ffe Sale.

Default having l&gt;een made in the condition*
of a certain mortgage, (whereby tbe power
therein contained to sell has become operative)
executed by Ada T. Lee to Albert W. Old*.
October 16th, 1875, nnd recorded in tbe office of
Wc want to rcallre 110,000 from sales of mcrchandijc before the first of January, and in register of deed* tn aud for Barry county, Mich­
igan, on October 21st, 1875, in liber 8 of mort­
order to do so wc will offer goods so low that to be seen Is to be Bold.
gage* at page 380, which said mortgage wa* by
Clothing.
Qd Otd*.on September 17,1878. **3gned to HL
We win sell you a rattling good suit for 16.50 and a better one for &lt;16.50. Now is just the
season for
register of deeds for Barry countr aforesaid, in
Overcoats.
10 of mortgages on page
upon which
Of which we have a large stock. You can save in the purchase of one of these money enough liber
mortgage there i* at thl* date claimed to be
. - K_ _
_*
... ..
due One Thousand Four Hundred und Seventy
Eight Dollars, and no suit or proceeding* at
llresJt Goods.
law having been Instituted to recover the same
Trunks, Batchela, Floor OU Cloths, Table OU Cloths.
or any part thereof, notice b therefore given
that on Mondav. the 26th day of March next, at
All-wool Flannels,
ten o’etoek in the forenoon,! shall sell at public
Waterproofs, Cottonades, Sheeting. Shirts and Drawers, Ladles’ Underwear, Hosiery.
auction to the highest bidder, at the front door
.... ti__ TL____ .Irvnl
Children’s Nulls, Children’s Overcoats,
Boys’ and Youths’ Sults and Overcoats.
gngc or so much thereof a* shall be necessary
Boots and Shoes,
to satlriv tbe amount dne on such mortgage,
with ten per cent interest nnd legal coat*.
In complete stocks, and never ho good goods sold for so little money.
Tbe premise* to be sold as above referred to
Gloves and Mittens
are described in said mortgage as follow*, towit: Commencing at the center post on Bectior.
For Ladies and Gents. Rubber Overcoats for Ladles and Gents.
thlrtv-slx. in township three north, ot range
Felt Boots,
seven west. Id Barry eonnty, Mich., running
Rubber Boots and Over-ahoe*, Wool-lined Boots, Felt Boots for Ladies and Gents.

K*ap Robes, parallel with tbe north line of said quarter thir-

Wolf Robes, Blankets, Gloves and Mittens.
GROCERIES, CROCKERY, GLASSWARE, NOTIONS, Ac.

Tua Highest Market Price paid for Butler, Eggs, Beans, Corn, Dried Apple*. Raspberries,
Peaches and Cherries. 1000 cords of 18-tach wood wanted.
... . .
Wijttxb is upon us. You need the goods and we need tbe money. We don t say, lou
tickle me and I’ll tickle you,” but we do say that our want* arc mutual and we may do each
other good.
...
•
•
Don’t fail to call with your produce and your cash, for now is your time to strike.

L. CT. "SAmEjjELZETd.

Nashville. November 22, 1882.

thenre north©**: along the margin aforesaid
tweDtv-teven rods to a stake on the north line
of said quarter, thence with said Hoe ten and
36-lOOUis rod* to tbe place of beginning, con­
taining atx acre*.
DaZed HasUng*. Nov. 30th.188211-gX
HIRAM R. DICKINSON,
Assignee of Bald mortgage.

LAPBAM.

A-weary with life’s fruitless race,
I sought my office kiall,
To gaxc on mother’s pictured fact
Up-hanging ’gainst the wall.

LEGGEDWHEAT.

And as I looked, a dreamy maxe

N more grown wheat will be ground at tbe
NasbriUe mill.
I have found It impossible to make good
flour for those who have rood whest if 1 grind
grists of grown wheat.
There Is no mill, old process or new process,
that can prevent the floor of, different gri*t*

gome childish grief bad stirred my heart;
I sought my mother’s chair
That it to her I might Impart—
But mother was not there.

HOLIDAY PRESENTS!

own grist without mixing In flour from other
grists is all gammon. It can’t be done, and
never was done, and any miller knojra that

In eager haste I anxious flew
’Mid flowers rich and rare;
I traced the garden through and through,—

I turned and rushed with hasty tread

Where art thou, mother, where;

The Largest Stock Ever in8006
'
---------COMPRISING IN PART--------- .

Id mother's easy chair;

I felt i

adta«Mhalr;

Books, Books, Books,
Albums, Autograph and Photograph, Morroooo
and Pluah Toilet Bette, Dolls by the Thouaand,
Majolica, Chine and Class In all Forme, Stereo­
scopes and Views, Toys of Tin, Wood and Iron.

Call and. See,

It Is even impossible to even elevate grown
and good wheat altermWy ^Ibout »teln«
them wore or lew. If you doubt this, ask tbe
elevator men about It: then bow much more
they will become mixed In a mill where the
wucac MMU UUMJ
- - ----- v--- tor*, conveyors, bolts, machinenea, etc. No
miller can make goodAuur of grown wheat.
A num who take* grown wheat to mill may get
much t-ettcr &lt;our than bls wheat wmikl made
because be t* apt to get aosne one’s pyd wbrat.
And the man who take* mml wheat to a mill
when they grind al’.
wfn ju»t as apt to
ert flour Inuabna wheat The only way to
make nood flour for all is to grind nothing but

or that
d them.

I And hear the music ah the popular Drug and Bunk Store.

F. T. BOISE.

John M. Roe.

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                  <text>ORNO STRONG,)
Editor amdPkopriktor.

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the Sun.

)

VOLUME XAnd Her Environs.
—It is asserted that the chemical
works will start up on the manufacture
of excelsior in early spring.
—Transactions in live stock continue
lively. Recently seven cars were sent
from this station by one train.
—Henry Roc bought 10,000 lbs. of dead
hog Tuesday, and acts as though he
was liable to db_even better any day.
—This is thq time\wji£n-the young
lady who insends to receive calls or*
New-Year day plans, and plans, and
plans. *
—On Christmas day the post-office
will -be open only from 6:30 to TO in the
forenoon and from 1 to 6 in the after­
noon.

. —Nashville merchants are doing a
rushing holiday trade. And no wonder
for they have provided themselves with
full stocks and many novelties.
—The public school pupils have been*
undergoing rigid examinations, this
week; but the pains pf the process have
been mitigated by the vision of ten
“hurrah-days.”
—''Behind the bars.—the bank of­
ficial,—the new railing having arrived
and being up. They hope also to have
a furnace in by next week, and get fix­
ed up in style for the new year.
—No more suitable present than a
.' subscription to The News could bese­
’ lected. Sent to a distant friend it
would prove a weekly reminder to
him of your esteem and friendship..

—Farmers Zeb Parks and Cooper
Oversmith had a tilt before Esq. Parody
on Tuesday. Both had claims against
the other. Parks’ bill was adjudged at
$12 and Oversmith’s at 50 cents, and a
judgment rendered in favor of Parks
for the difference.
—Tuesday seemed to be "red letter
day” for the purchase of holiday pres­
ents and our stores were made lively by
. the presence of bright faced parents,
sons and daughters, eager to observe
the time-honored day by selecting pres­
ents for loved ones.
—Dan. L. Smith has purchased C. M.
Putnam’s hardware stock and will as­
sume contrdle of the same Jan. 1st.
Dan. has had considerable experience
in the hardware business, is a young,
enterprising and untiring worker, and
has the good wishes of The News ir
his now venture.

—H. C. Kellogg 8c Co. is a new firm
which has opeupd a furniture store at
the old stand of Kellogg, Bell &amp; Co. on
Main St. They have put in a good
stock and are still adding toit^nd will
attempt by fair dealing and reasonable
prices to build up a good trade. H. C.
is a son of I. N. Kellogg.
‘
—Cards were recently issued from
The News office inviting the friends of
Mi. and Mrs. Selah W. Mapes to be pre­
sent at their home in Kalamo on Christ­
mas day, when they will make Mr. Chas.
E. Matteson the best if not the biggest
Christmas present he ever had in his
life,—their daughter Carrie.
—At a regular communication of
Nashville Lodge No- 355, F. and A. M.,
the following officers were elected for
the ensuing year:
F. T. Reynolds, W. M.

John Koeber, Trm
John Mix
Adelbert

NUMBER 14.

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICH., SATURDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1882.
LOCAL GIBBLE-G ABBLE

LIFE IN NASHVILLE

•

| TERMS; $1.50 per Year
I Credit Subscriptions fil.75.

,J.D.

—Several farmers have stated to our
grain buyers that tbe Boatingt Banner
of last week contained an announce­
ment that after Jan. 1,1888, no damaged
wheat would be bought in that market
We ourselves did not see such an an­
nouncement, and have no “desire to
hart Hastings* by publishing the above.
order.

—A very merry company of twentyone Nashville young folks spent last
Friday evening at Mr. J Warburton’s
in Maple Grove (what time they didnlt
spend on tbe road to and fro, enjoying
the beautiful sleighing), where they
were right royally entertained by
Misses BisaeH and Evans, and Mr. W’s
people. Charades were indulged in,
and a first class oyster supper served to
give solidity to the fun.
—The depwfttlor. of Eugene Cook in

fore Eaq. Parady on Tuesday, Clement
Smith appearing for Smith and Jamee
bronjcht by Smith to recover of A. J.

had been girea to the plaintiff by Cook
।

Sleighing “ausgespeilt.” •
Ozzie Jenson lost a horse this week.
Mr. Chaa. Fowler is visiting in the
country.
Ed. Owens and family leave for Ar­
kansas next week.
Latest style of New Years cards just
received at this office.
Jerry Wolcott has returned from Da­
kota, to winter in Nashville.
* D. R. Conley arrived home from the
University Thursday evening.
Charles Hoffman and wife of Hast­
ings Sundayed at Harry Hale’s.
The literary society meets with Miss
Ingerson next Tuesday evening.
'
Maxwell and troupe wore guests of
the Wolcott House over Sunday.
C. L. Glasgow has been laid up with
neuralgia a portion of this week.
Mr. D. C. Loo of St. Louis, Mo., is
visiting Herb, and other relatives.
H. Gordon .and wife of Kent Co., are
visifing Nashville friends this week.
An auction sale of goods belonging
to Alex. Blair took the crowd Satur­
day.
y
C. L. Clasgow and wife will spend
Christmas at their old home in Jones­
ville.
It’ta lucky package that gets into the
bureau drawer without the children
seeing it.
Miss Ota Wheeler camo home on
Wednesday, to remain till after the
holidays.
A new and elegant 3,300 lb. Debold
safe does duty in Geo. W. Francis live­
ly grocery.
H. R. Dickinson is in Cleveland on
business connected with his mill build­
ing operations.
Frank and Jerry Wolcott and C. N.
Dunham were smong the visitors to
Hastings this week.
In the matter of mumps Dr. Murray
has come off conqueror, and is about
and smiling as usual.
Our druggists are generous,
Boise furnishes his customers music
and Hale gives his candy.
M. L. Cook, of tbe Hustings Banner,
"attended the Wednesday’s evening
session of the Knight* of Pythias.
Household goods belonging to Loren­
zo Paddock of Woodland were shipped
from this place to Albion this week.
A. J. Arnold
Co. ship throe car­
loads of potatoes to New York this
week. They are worth there about a
dollar a bushel.
C. W. Smith’s gift enterprises, result­
ed in the drawing of the China tea set,
by Miss Mattie Frace, and of the^clock,
by A. J. Beeby.
The regular fellowship meeting of
the Christian church takes place on
Saturday, Dec. 30th. A large at­
tendance is desired.
Telegraph messages may now bo sent
from here to Chicago by way of Grand
Rapids alone. They formerly went ria
Grand Rapids and Detroit.
For what is manf Behold, be goeth
forth in the morning with alacrity, but
long before noon be feeletli that he hath
not a whole bone in his body.
j
Rev. W. Radford returned to Lansing
on Tuesday. An effort will be made to
secure his services as pastor of the new
Congregational church, recently fojin-

Dr. J. T. Goucher of North Lawrence,
is daily expected to become a resident
of Nashville and form a co-partnership
with his father for tbs practice of med­
icine.
Jake Miller and Lew Etx, old Nashvilleites, are in the village for a few
days. They have tired of Ohio and
are on their way to locate farms in
Northern Mich.
The Nashville Chapter O. E. 8. will
entertain a social Friday Eve. Dec. 39th
at the residence of Dr. H. A. Barber, a
cordial invitation Is extended to all.
Refreshments served.
‘It’s the handsome girl that catches
the early sleighride” says a fellow edi­
tor; but if be had said It*. tbe early:
boarder that catches the cream, he’d
have got nearer to our heart.
Rev. F. A. Bissell will aasisi in tire
rendition of tbe cantata, “Birth of
Christ,” to be given at Eaton Rapids un­
der the auspices of the Congregationals
of that place on Christmas night.
There will bo an oyster suoper and
•octal at J. K. Wilcox’s on Thursday
evening, Dec. 38th, under the anspic^a
of the ladies society. They have some
articles left from the fair for sale.
A. W. Ingerson, of Kalamazoo Co.,
accompanied by his family, took a
sleighride across tbe country this week,
to visit his brother here and friends at
Woodland, bat tbe thaw caused a pro- [
cipitatc return.
Excursion tickets will be sold be­
tween all stations on M. C. R. R. during
the holidays, beginning Saturday nd.

|
i
’

for for one fare and a third for the
round trip. A good thing for us. but
hard on our friends.
These are very dull days for news.
About 'the only exciting thing is the
slipping—on the sidewalks.
We, us and family have received an
invitation from the courteous superin­
tendent of the Battle Creek sanitari­
um to spend the holidays at that insti­
tution. Were it possible tor us to
leave home we would accept the invi­
tation with alacrity and glpdness.
Tbe holiday ‘trade in silverware
this year, is said to be small compared
with that of last year, there being com­
paratively few people now inspecting
goods. But Mr. J. L. Fleming proposes
to close out his large and varied stock,
nevertheless—if not one way, then
another— so he offers some extraordi­
nary inducements this week, in another
column.
The Washington World and Citizen­
Soldier, the Old Soldiers’ paper, the
People’s Paper, is now in its eighth
year, enlarged to 48 columns, 8 page, in
entire new dress, every week, at only
one dollar a year. Specimen vopy free
to any address, on receipt of postal
card request; by tbe World and Soldier
Publishing Company, World Building.
1006 F St., Washington, D. C.
—In accordance with the notice duly
given, a meeting was held at the Chris­
tian church on Friday afternoon last,
to consider the proposition of organiz­
ing a Congregational church. Mr. Wm.
Brice was elected chairman and Rev.
F; A. Bissell scribe. After deciding to
proceed in the matter of organizing,
tbe chair, on motion, appointed a com;
niittee to draw up a constitution, con­
fession of faith, and convenant. This
committee reported last Monday even­
ing, Dec, 18tb, and the report was, with
slight modification, adopted. The fol­
lowing officers were then elected: Dea­
cons, Messrs. Wm. Brice and James
Fleming; clerk. Miss L. Adda Nichols;
treasurer, C. L. Glasgow. A committee
of three was appointed to call a council
to recognize the church. It was then
voted to extend a call to Bev. Walter
Radford in case the salary could be
raised, and for this purpose a committee
of live was appointed to solicit sub
scriptious. The meeting adjourned till
Thursday evening, Dec. 28tli. A num­
ber of prominent citizens were present
and expressed their hearty sympathy
•with the movement by a unanimous
rising vote. We understand the sub­
scriptions thus far are quite encourag­
ing.:
_______ ___ ; _
WEST KALAMO.

A merry Christmas to ail.
Did’nt we htfve some weather!
.
Hog killing and "sassage" making is
still progressing.
Spelling "scbtile” at the Lyceum this
Saturday evening.
Who will be the first one to make me
a valuable Christmas gift.
Christmas will be celebrated by
dances, Christmas trees and fun in these
parts.
*
Asa Matteson of Hesperia paid a Hy­
ing visit to his old home and parents
on Sunday.
Tbe splendid sleighingthe past week
has been used to good advantage by
fanners in hauling logs and wood.
Jimmie Walker not ta be ontdone
sports a new cutter, harness and string
of sleigh bells. Jimmie won’t Walk(ber) any more.
■
Manning and Jerry Barns will get
hurt yet if they don’t watch sharp.
The other day a limb fell from a tree
they were felling and droppeef between
them just close enough to tarn them
white.
Next week Friday evening, 39th, is
the annual meeting of the North West
Kalamo Cemetery Association, and all
persons interested are earnestly re­
quested to be present. E. C. Williams,
President.
t
Mrs. C. Baker is again in poor health.
Arangemcnts are being tr.ade to s^tart a
weekly paper at the village. Don’t
know what ’twill be called, but proba­
bly the "Kalamo Chicken” so the Haul
will want it.
Other correspondents are announcing
plenty of weddings in their territories,
but this poor scribe must be content by
simply stating that there’s several over
here who act as though they want to
get married.
A resident of this section received a
letter Dec. 9th from a lawyer in Isabella
county who dated his letter Dec. 18th,
ninedaysbeforehand, and the recipient,
not to be outdone, replies on the 10th
and dates the reply the 38rd. Who
says a lawver didn’t get an appropriate
answer once.
Clark, did the "salt#” remove that
"messager If so, here is a good one
from Tksrw Ni/tmps: "The editor of a

Texas Greenback paper advertises for
a wife who knows leas than he does.
He fe probably joking. Nobody can
possibly know less than the editor of a
editor of a Greenbadk paper.” Of
course this is not intended as anything
personal, but os a tonic after a severe
'spell.”
Nothing has appeared in The News
as yet in regard to two very sad affairs
which has recently transpired, and in
which this town is greatly shocked, viz:
The sudden death of Richard Mann,
then a resident of Kalamo, Carmel
town line, who was found dead in his
bed on Tuesday morning December 5th
having retired the night previous in his
usual bealte. Apolexy. And the find­
ing dead in the moil wagon, of Peter R,
Johnson the mail corrier between Kal­
amo and Charlotte, who left Kalamo in
appaaent usual health on the morning
of the 12th and was first discovered by
n person who met him on Ins rout to
Charlotte. Heart disease, from which
he bad long suffered.

NORTH CASTLETON.
Fine evenings for sleigh-riding.
Wm. Clever is on the sick list.
Rev. Spitler’s children are on the gain.
Is not this time to pay Uncle Sam bis
rent!
James Van Austin has gone to tbe
north woods.
The young people enjoyed a social
hop at Zeb Parks’ Friday evening.
The Big.Man wishes you all Merry
Christmas and a Happy New Year.
The way that a certain young man
lost his rubbers was not very agreeable.
Miss Minnie Parks of Minnesota is
spending the wintar with her uncle
Zeb. '
Miss Elsa Owens of Farwell is spend­
ing a few weeks with Nathan Sheldon
and old friends.
Frank Brown and wife started last
Monday New for York state; to spend a
few weeks with friends.
Rev. Lane is holding meetings at the
Schlappi’s U. B. church. Several of
oug neighbors are attending.
Austin and brothers have bought an
80-acro farm one-halt mile south of
Hoffner’s cornel s, paying fl,000.
Several sports from town spent Fri­
day hunting on Battle street. Among
them were Wm. Buel and James Clay.
Thomas Knowland of Adrian spent
last week with his sister, Mrs. Scofield,
and friends. He speaks well of our
country.
James Allerton’s youngest daughter,
aged two years i eceived quite a severe
burn on her left arm last week. She
upset hot tea on her in getting up to
the table..
Last Saturday night, during the lyce­
um debate at the Feighner school­
house, a certain young man who lives
near the township center, attempted to
make off with another fellow’s rig, "just
for the fun of the thing.” The next
time he won’t think it’s so funny.
There are two brothers in Vermont­
ville township who have agreed that
the one who is first to get one of the
opposite sex to share the pleasures and
trials of life with him shall receive from
the other f 100. Fair ladies, this is a
rare chance, as each has a good home
and is classed amongst the handsome.

but school was just out. They did the
visiting just the same though. Oh!
they were so familiar that the scholars
saw at once that they were from some
big town, and were out for a large
time. Of course they gave them the
freedom of the cit—we mean school
house. Mr. Morse rode home with
them that night.
Nuz* Baumer.

TH0R5APPLE.

• ,

Daniel -P. Bollinger is bedfast.
Sol. Troxel’s family gave jis a call.
Mrs. Sparks is in unfavorable health.
Levant Mead had a pleuretic attack.
We presume S. M. don’t mean all he
says.
Ladies sewing society met at Wm.
HUl’a.
News items hurt, if one proves to be
guilty.
Dr. Hull has been very busy the past
month.
New Year’s tree for the juveniles in
the hall.
Please hand in tbe little amount* to
Dr. Hull.
diphtheria is repeated at Bidlemau’s ;
Quimby.
. The Barryville divine admonished
the boys.
Tickets are still being sold for the
bedspread.
The Misses Harley’s have not return­
ed,—mistake.
Nellie Northrup has recovered from
the diphtheria.
J. Cole, Hamen, Wright and Corwin,
have gone up north.
Joseph Pittenger, gives over his
farm to Mr. Scothorn, an Ohio gentle­
man who brings his family here to re­
side.
It tickled Corwin so : Uncle Johnie
waltzed into court four minutes late,
therefore non-suit, accordingly they
amicably settled.
Typhoid, abdominal, typhus, enteric
and pythogenia, are different names
for the same fever, hence arises, to the
unlettered, the disagreements of doc­
tors.
George went to our Baker,—"mine
host,” mine bobs. “Those bobs are
mine from tongue base; vey mom.”
Night brought its changes—the bobs
bobbed out. Now who owns the bobs
we pretend not. Story.
Chylo.

LOCAL MATTERS.
A REQUEST.
All parties who are Indebted to me by note
or account are requested to settle tbe —me *t
once, as I wish to close up all my matters here.
14 lw
W. G. Aylswobth.

WHITE ASH LOGS WANTED.
We will still continue.in tbe Oar and Handle
business, reports to the contrary notwithstand­
ing. Look out for our bills with prices and full
directions for cutting logs. Highest ea«h prices
paid for oar toga.
8. K. Deriak A Sows.
CHsilSTM AB.
COLORED CANDY AND JUMPING JACKS

Arc fcr children but articles of use as well as
tbc ornamental form. the substantial gifts of
tbe present, and any of the following would be
appropriate aa a Christmas present:
A string Sleigh Bells.
Pair Skates or a pair of Horse Blankets,
Jewel! Carpet Sweeper, S
White Sewing Machine,

Spoons, Forks and Pocket Knives,
Granite Tea or Coffee Pots,
A spleoded Cutter or Dexter Queen Buggy.
Any of the above can be found of tbe best
grade and at reasonable prices within the reach
of all till Jan. lai, at
C. L. Glasgow's.
MERRY CHRISMAS.
Dnxtag December and Januarr I will sell one
lb. c£ fine Japan Tea for 5rtc and give each
purchaser One lb. Royal mixed Candr.
Geo. W. Francis.
rar Cold weather is upon us and mankind
to withstand the season must eat Meat. A
complete Stock of the tatter al wavs found at
D. L. Durfee’s market.
EVERY BODY INVITED.
Large and beautifull Vases only 25c and 35c
per pair. Moustache Cups and Saucers 40c to
&lt;5c- Toys without number. Toilet setts.
Match safes, Tea aette, Chamber settaMajollca,
China, Bisque. Lava. Glass. Tin, Wood, Paper,
and 10000 other things. Come and spend a
half a day looking over the lamest stock on
exhibition between Jackson and Grand Rapies.
_
8strlHStoves going fast at Glasgow's. Don't
buy till you see him and gel prices.

ROCK ROTTOM PRICES.
Don’t buy a single pair of Boots or Shoes be
fore visiting Prindle A Chipman’s, and inspect­
ing their stock and prices. Stock larger and
more complete than ercr and prices marked
right down to bed-rock. No competitors al­
lowed to undersell us.
awOhlo Lime— fresh carload just received.
Bkook-m Marshall A Co.

Frank Baker is sole agent in Nashville
forthe German Shoe Oil, the best leather pre­
servation in the world and warranted water
proof or no sale. Try it and you will not only
save your shoes, but have no other.
YOUR BENEFIT.
Great Bargains may lie bad at the Variety
Store iust opened in the Wolcott building,
Nashville, Mich. Just received a large stock
of goods, consisting of Crockery, Glassware.
Lamps, Cutlery, Notions, Tinware. Cbrotnos,
Looking GlsMes, etc. Call and examine our
5 and 16 cent counter goods. You can depend
upon getting the finest bargains of a lifetime.
We warren t v.ur goods us recommended. Re
member the place*Wolcott building, opposite
the Carriage Sbop^Naahville, Mich.

BASS WOOD BOLTS.
Now is your time.
SI,25 per cord for 18 inch,
12.50 per con! for 30 inch.
Cash as fast delivered. For particulars see
Geo. W. Fraxcu.
WANTEDI
1005 bushels of Cloror Seed.
Brooks, Marshall A Co.

C2U Fleming has the best stock of Jewelry
l-dT A Christmas dinner, no matter how ever seen In this pai t of Michigan.
good, is Incomplete without one at those
ecr Tbe finest display of Meats In seven
Luscious Roasts put up at Durfee’s market
at H. Roc ’s. There is tbe place to get
Their steaks, cut with neatness, also, can't be counties
a choice roast of steak.

Buy your Christmas Toys of.
L. J. Wheels h.
A BARGAIN.
I have for aale a portable saw mill of the
Cooper manufacturing Co. at a bargain.
H. M. Lrb, Nashville.

«T I get my Oysters direct from Baltimore.
Geo. W. Francis.
MONEY TO LOAN,
On Real Estate at low rate of interest of
Lee A Dvrsbb

After a most rigid examination of the
Crown Sewing Machine we can rcccommend it
to buyers as a first class machine. Tbe work­
ing parts are perfect In material end construc­
tion and embrace all the late improvements of
W We are selling Dry Goods cheap.
oil machines. We have bought one for our
. Fowlkh &lt;k Campbell.
own use. exchanging in part payment the
49* Trunks, Satchels and Valise*, make Remington, and are highly satisfied with our
good Christmas presents, you will find a good exchange.
’ A. C. Buxton.
assortment at
L. J. Wheeler’s.
DON’T FORGET THIS.
FOR SALE,
*7* You can exchange your aid machine for
One Jackson 3-spriug and Tiffany Bros, one of those elegant Crowns.
MAPLE GROVE.
platform wagun, cheap to dose out fall stock.
E. R. Wkkce at Kocmer Bbos.
___________________ Glasgow
Call and see our large and degunt as­
or We arc selling Boots and Shoes cheap. sortment
Albert Foster has returned to New­
of
Gents
Furnishing Goods, just in.
Fowler &amp; Camfbblx.
Prxnole A Cripmax.
aygo* p a~y~up7
Frank Cummings is doctoring horses
TAKE NOTICE.
near White Cloud.
My Mill is tn shape to do grinding only on
All those Indebted to the nnderaigneti will
please call and settle their account without de­
A small, good looking, very young Mondays end Thursdays.
Maple Grove, Dec. 21st, 1883.
lay, as my books most be balanced by Jan. 1st
girl at Sam. Shoup’s.14-17
.
N. C. Hagerman.
1883. Don't forget this.
Sam. Cotton has purchased John
,
Henry Roe
tr D. L. Ddrvre's prepared Mince Meat3
Brown’s sewing machine.
£3THighest Market Price paid for Oats.
appreciated by the good houagwife. Try it
.________________
Brooks, Mammall A Co,
Wm. Phiniscy has traded places with atxlsec. ___
Martin Darling of Assyria.
RATTAN ROCKERS.
A FEW THOUSAND DOLLARS
P. M. Hyde is visiting a son and
Hare you seen those elegant RaUan Rockers To Loan on good Real EsUte security.
.
just received at J. Lentz A Son’s! If not,
daughter in Newaygo county.
'
Lee A Dvrkke.
Mr. McAlravy and wife of Rutland do ao at once. They are offered very cheap.
•7- An itnaiense stock of Gold Pens, &amp;e.,
direct from tbe factory or John Holland at
HT We are ecllingClothlng cheap.
were visiting at J. Endinger’s, Friday
Fleming's, look for the sign of the Gold Pen.
■
Towlee A Campbell.
and Saturday.
Christmas I Holiday Goods in
Mrs. G. W. Marshall and Geo. Mar­
aion at Adda Nichols’ store.
shall went to Ohio on an extended visit,
Thursday night.
ATTENTION PATRONS.
Wm. Sutton and wife of Battle
10-38.'
Creek, were visiting Leanddr Lapham
and other friends over Sunday.
The M. E. ladies society will have a
social and oyster supper at X R. Wil­
cox’s, next Thursday evening.
A ( AMi-nri iHT B k wonderful to think that Fi emixg
The benefit dance for Levi Goodrich,
can supply alt cur wants for the Holidays in the
FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE.
at Wm. Anderson’s Friday night, was
a success. The net proceeds about ten
SPRING BEDS.
dollars. Mr. Goodrich has been sick known as the A. M. Daughterly property,
'
Go to Tb-utn Bro’s., NashvUle, and get the
for several months, and ot coarse is CEted in NaahvIHe.

very thankful.
Some big boys and girls left Hastings
last Friday for a high old time in the
country. There was about as magy as
one team could get away with, and
more than the sleigh could carry, so
tbey run in for repairs at Ad. Wolfs.
Tbey came to visit Will Morse’s school

W Try asample of Our Candr Tea.
Gao. w. Francis.

GOODS AT COST.

FANCY FOOTSTOOLS.
complete in ven- thing and fir»t-cl*w. Now is
your time to secure Bargains.

�=

■

MbutUR in itK

wm*. HuldaKthalart, and apparently
with
vitality than tbe seven other*
mound* aod

*BAFX IN UOTHKVB

ARMS

Hide ehltd erf four,
m her f an ei ’• door,
knew Uirnvah citie* three.

Bringing imtooc to oxinir)' i
In nurm-ri-*
Ixiwly knelt in the fadtng light;
Mother* dropped on the shlnlmr hair
Kiowa to fluidi the good night prayer.
Where
Jjxaic? Whose couch »hould
hold
Tbe rifled lamb rrf a sheltered fold?
Haply in «’«'• dart haunt of sin.
Where toil- of evil th«- tempter* spin;
Haply some * lie and poisonous brew
•A flend might pre** to b« r Up* &lt;rf dew|
Curse* might ring In the baby ear,
t’wd to a father's e«uw*»*w dear;
Blow* nn the quivering flesh mltbt fall—
The sternest well might the thought appall.
'

; Two day* crept, ’tnld *&lt;i»pen»e distilled
Hour bv hour, hope glowed and chilled:
Then there came with an awe profound
Fear le*t stir miuht never be found.
Better to clow the violet eye*..
Better t

—

_

Thun to
ot anguish and ion® despair?
and pit)- we paled and burned.
»‘«-r tbe loot one grieved and
yearned.
Flashed a
along the wire*,
ThriUlngtbe joy th* wont inspire*.
Through three great cic e«. and thence afar,
Wherever parent* and children are:
Traced and found, to her homo restored.”
Oh. tbe rapture of.thanks outpoured 1
Ended tIs— anvuUh.the gnawing p.4i»:
She is safe in her mother** arms again.”
One moment supreme, when the mother**
gr*»i&gt;
Gathered the child In the passionate clasp.
When strong men • Itook with tiiclr tierce
heart-throbs,
And bid their faces nnd ainothcred their
*ol»a.
When tbe father, white with the ordeal past,
And a thousand voice, took up the strain,
bide! sale la her mother'll arm* again!"

CROPPLE-CRDWN’S WEDDING.

“ An’ now, air you goin' to toll me, or
ain’t you?”
^Dead silence, broken only by the rat­
tle of beans from hand to pan.
“ You can’t cover it up nor hide it,
nohow.
Slocum saw ye, an’ more’n
once, too, an’ he knows there’s letters.”
Still silence. Mrs. Jennison pushed
up her glasses, gave a pull to the black
silk sheath which d;d duly t-s cap, and
from which her wisps of gray hair
seemed to sprout, and gasped once or
twice, as words crowded faster than
tongue could manage or thought ar­
range. Then she bunt out, determina­
tion evident under a snarling tone,
which might have been taken as an indi­
cation of mere peevishness, had not the
face held something much stronger and
more persistent in quality than would
be indicated by any characteristic
marked as peevishness alone.
1
“ You’ll go your own way when yon’re
twenty-one, an’ not a day before. Talk
to me! ’Siah Perkins! *A hoss-drivin’,
godlesa feller, never inside a meetin’house Unless he's on the lookout for
some gal, an' never the same gal three
months runnin’. His father afore him,
way fur way, the same, an’ not two gal*
in the borongh that he didn't cackle over
their weavin' the willow for him.
A
thrif’less, mis’ablc set, an’ I wash my
hands o’ you if you give in to one of
’em. Now, mark my words! Out of
this house you don't go without me. I
haven't slaved an’ toiled ar.' brought you
up to be some stand-by to me, to have
ynu throw it away on ’Siah Perkins.
That’s the end on’t.”
Mrs. Jennison picked up her knitting,
dropped in tbe energy of accusation,
and knit a round with her sharp, small
eyes still fixed on the flashed cheeks
turned from her and bending over tbe
pan of beans. Midsummer, it is true,
and pork and beans hardly in order,
even for the most ingrained New Eng­
lander, but to Mrs. Jennison beans and
dried apples, codfish and salt pork, rep­
resented all the possibilities and com­
pressibilities as well of food. Who
sighed for anything beyond was guilty
of worse weakness than the old Israel­
ites in their moan for the leeks and
onions of Egypt Dried beans and dried
beans only—even string beans being a
wild and 'wicked wa-tc, a reckless de­
struction of what should make six dinners,
where, in their infant state, but one
could be had.
For Mrs. Jennison belonged to the
happily decreasing number of women
who. having been born to the New Eng­
land farmer's unending struggle with
the foundations of the earth, which crop
up more persistently and battle with tbe
soil more steadily there than in any
• other portion of the farmer’s territory,
■valued proportionately every product
wrested from the soil.
Hardscrabble had been her native dis­
trict, and Hardscrabble it remained, the
hillsides a wilderness of ledges or rolling
stones, and the sunniest meadow still
bolding more rocks than grew.

took iietr place in the

love
had gradually died out. Interruptions
from beginning to end, Peter Huggins—
lean and weazened, with myriads of fins
wrinkles about his eyes, and the look of
a musty parchment—bad always re­
garded them, and frowned determi'tfenG-bony, sari-eyed objects, the babies

more and more wistful, till the low,
damp kitchen, sunless and cheerless, in
which tbe grinding days went by, had
done its work, and the little lives flick­
ered out. to find a kindlier welcome in

up j flower delh-a'- and fragrant

m

the i

held to life
but, on the

thing.

Of all the

CITIZEIS OF WOODLAH,

wertby of a trial, 1* Brown’* Iron Biker*.

ATTENTION!

often a bad one.
bcat. You’re Blower ’n oold molasses.”
GET RJCh7~
By ihi» time Mr*. Jenniaon hod reechod
Wbea Hop* are |1.® per lb- a* now, an acre
the shav, and l&gt;eut forward to aoe where will ykld tl.(M» profit, and yet the tert family
Medicine on carte. Hop Bitter*, contain the
the diffionltr l»y“Lawful heart! If that ain't the pe*- •ame quantity of Hop* »nd are »&lt;&gt;ld at the *ame
kieat hen! An’ she’* the one that woh’t. prb-e fixed yean* *«&lt;&gt;, allbMUfh Hop* now are
twenty time* higher than then. Kai*e Hop*,
stan’ movin’ one inch, and her brood’s get
rich in pocket; u*c Hop Bitter* and get
worth any three common ones. Run rich in health.
------------- IN
and tel! Antoine to bring up the light
If people could alwaya do a* well .a* tbey
wagon, an’ I'll go in that, though
want
to
the
world
would
be
far
better
than
it
gracious knows how I’ll evei; get in.”
Mary started obediently, to return
shortly with the word that Antoine had
GOOD ADVICE.
A first-class Cold Weather Sult for fig.
gone to Claremont, and would not be
You will prevent and cure the greater part of
back before night.
the 111* that afflict mankind in this or anv Me­
“Then get his boy to carry the bas­ tlon if you keep your stomach, liver, and kid­
MAH WHO DRIVES A TEAM
ney* in perfect working order. There i« Do
ket.”
--- SUOt'LD HAVE-----mediclnr known that doc* thi* a* surely a*
“Tbe boy has gone, too.” ‘
Parker’* Ginger Tonic. It win keep your blood
Mrs. Jennison stamped with vexa­ rich
and pure, and give you good health at lit­
tion.
'»
tle co«l See other column.
IN THIS LINE our stock will compare furor“As much as a man is worth. Always
■ alily with any fa Barry or Eaton countie*,
Out of the 2.400 disease* to which tbe human
nnder foot when you don’t want ’em,
and good judges state that our prices are
lower.
and not within gunshot when you do. frame U liable whiskey fa used a* a remedy for
2,
M0
of
them,with
complete
*ucee«a.
You’ll have to take it, Mary, and I give
—ouk stocks or—
vou lust forty minutes to go an’ come.
THE SAFEST WAY.
I know the length o’ the road, and I
Prints,Dress Goods, Flannels,
know ’Siah Perkins is workia' down at youthful color of tiie hair l» furni«hed by Park­
ladies Oloddon, Shawls. Uodenrur,
the Falls, else I wouldn’t trust, you even er’s Hair Bal*ani.wwhich I* deservedly popular
that fur. Go on, now, and be back at from it* *uperior cleanllnes*.
the minute I say.”
Mittens, Gloves, Groceries, Glass­
There i* need of a truthful, comsipondent at
Mary’s heart leaped up, flaming in
ware, Orockey and Queensware
her cheeks, as she turned to lead back SL Petcrsburgb. Nine-tenth* of tbe ao-called
And,
fa fact, everythin* usually kept In a first
RuMian
nc£*
is
cooked
feed.
.
Dobbin.
cl*&gt;» general »tore are larurr than ever and
“ Yon needn’t go off in a rage." Mrs.
are being sold at popular low price*. Come
Jennison said, happily mistaking the THERE-8 WHERE THE SHOE PINCHES.
*ee them, buy and be happy.
Com* are a captial indicator. They tell to a
moaning of- the crimson flag just dis­ hat*
WiwjMknd, OcL 25, J883.
’
*
breadth
whether
your
shoemaker
baa
played, and turned back to take just one made allowance for their dlmen-lon or not.
J*F. F. HILBERT.
more look at the cake which should Com* will n-quln- an ao ideut ;x&gt;lity at once,
show her supremacy'in that as well as for Putnam’* Painless Com Extractor remove*
I them in a few days. &gt;No pain, no discomfort,
custom
ip everything else.
permanent benefit Try Lt- SoW by drug
Mary walked lightly over the rough and
gist* everywhere.
.
way, her heart dancing as she. went.
Connecticut'* oldest printer bung on until
All this long fret and forlornness was
near -its end.
Keen as wore the sharp
eyes she dreaded, lovers’ wits are keen­
er, and Antoine could have told of many
DO NOT BE DECEIVED.
a letter slipped into measure of corn or
In these time* of quack medicine advertise­
lying deep in meal or flour bin. And ment*
everywhere it i* truly gratifying to find
though ’Siah could not know of this one remedy that i« worthy of praise and which, And manufacturerof hardwood
happy chance, at least.she should pass really due* as rveomtnended. Electric Bitter*
the nouse, and Mrs. Perkins would S4» we can vouch for ua being a true and reliable
Lumber.
and one that Will do a* rtcommended.
and perhaps speak. She looked wist­ remedy,
Tbey invariably cure Stomach and Liver Com
fully toward the chimneys, just visible plaints, Diteasc* of the Kidney* and Urinary
over the Mule_ wood
between
her
and
------- — - difltoultfea. We know whereof we speak, and
lulckened her pace
can readily say, give them a trial. Sold at fifty
them, then ouickened
pac as sht?
’
—
heard a stop Ibehind
her, and remem-' cents a bottle, by F. T. Boise.
bored how dark and lonely the wood
Some bead waiter* at »ea-«ldc hotel* picked
was.
up F2.&lt;xw tn pin-money thia *ea*on.
“ Mary,” a voice said, softly, and she
turned to meet her lover, who wasted
BRAIN AND NERVE.
MILLFEED and BRAN.
no time, but then and there took her in­
Well*' Health Renewer, greatest remedy on
to his arms and kissed her with a most earth for Impotence, leannec*. sexual debility,
-v
(or* Meal.
un-New-England-like ardor, and then Ac., fl. at druggist*. Mich- Depot. JAMES K. [0 PUBJi Oder PINEGAB.
without a word drew her through DAVIS de CO., Detroit Mich.
a thicket
into an open space,
Tl&gt;at gtMMl Inc-Jinctlon never should be ac­
shut in absolutely from road or cow­ ne pted when good action tail*.
path, and thus from chance of intrusion.
THE BAD AND WOTHLE83
What word- were said then there is no
H HARDWOOD LUMBER.
need to write, events holding all their arc never imitated or coulerfeited. This u
substance, and these events being, first, especially true of a family medicine, and it 1*
FleoriD*,
the emergence and then the disappear­ positive proof that the remedy Imitated f* of
ance of the two, who walked straight to highest value. A* noon a* It had been tested
BASSWOOD LUMBER.
the minister’s house, and then and there and proved by the whole world that Hop Bit­
were married, without question or pause, ter* was the purest, best and most valable fam­
PINE FINISHING LUMBER
by the old man, who knew the storv ily medicine on earth many imitation* sprung
well, and who held bis own youth still up and began to steal the outlce* in which the
.so well in mind that even ’Siah had nev­ pres* and people of tbe country had expres ed
Mill on Sherman Street, East from
er failed to love and honor him.
the merit*of II. B., ami in even- way trying to
Depot.
“ She didn’t know she was makin’ induce Buffering invalid* to u«g tbelr sluff In
the weddin' cake,” the latter chuckled, »te*d, ezpectiug to make money on the credi
II. K. DICKINSON' A. CO.
good name of H. B- Many other* «tared
as tbe basket, being left on the way end
nostrum* put up la similar style to H. B., wttt
home, Mrs. Evans, who saw the state of variously devised names it* which tbe worn
tbe case, cut huge slioes of each and in­ E
“llop” or "Hop*" were used in u way to Induct
i-oplc 10 tx licvc tbFj- wire tiw MUM ** Ho|
sisted upon their being eaten then and
liter*. All such pretended remetile* or cures,
there, the girls rushing forward and
no matter w hat their style or name is, and es­
claiming bits of Mary’s to dream on.
pecially those with the won! ••Hop” or "Hope”
’
OUR SALES OF
An hour later Mrs. Jennison, shading In their name, are imitation* or counterfeit*.
her eyes as she looked down the road, Beware of them. Touch none of them. Use
and vowing this was the last time that nothing but genuine Hop Bitters, with a bunch
cluster ot green Hop* on the white label
gal should get out of her sight, turned or
Trust nothing else. Druggist* and dealers are
first red and then pile, ana sat down warm'd against dealing in Imitations or counsuddenly &lt;&gt;n the doorstep. Two figures
advanced toward her, one hesitant, the
Double what we Expected
\yiLLIAM JONES,
other with calm assurance.
“ Hold your bosses!” called the last,
them to be.
as Mrs. Jennison, still sitting, opened
GOOD GOODS sad LOW I’RIJLS to the NECBET.
her mouth, but could give no other sign
of the indignation and wrath behind.
“ Hold vour houses, for sure as you
don’t, 1’11 take her off this minute, and
you may go on then all you’re a mind

otoeed tort room,
work quilt of a pa*t generation for the
bedroom, where “thing*" would be token
“cricket” to waah dishes and pound off, and prepared a supper beyond the
clothes; at five made a bod-quilt, and wildest dream of the average Society
at six oould knit her father’! stockings. mind. Mary followed with bewilder­
Pinched and preternaturally old, she ment but Inward delight tbe unaccount­
followed her mother about like some able and unaccustomed lavuh®e*a, and
gray, uncanny elf or gnome, born in studied the cook-book bought for the
mine or mountain, and old always from occasion with a wonder that such de­
sun and air. She knew the market value lights had been so long known to human
of every egg, the poaaibilitiM of • every palates.
drop of cream, and at seven had made
Whatever qualms may have come,
a bargain with her father—a bargain Mrs. Jennison gave no sign, and there­
which drew from him a chuckle of ad­ after the ceremony was gone through
miration —to exchange the maple sugar with onoe a year. The outer world, hav­
of her crust coffee or occasional cake or ing once gained admission, wm not to
doughnut for its full ^equivalent in be pat out Mary wm looked for as an
money.
"■©
essential in the few and rather mournful
Schooling was had only that Peter festivals of tbe New England hfll-town,
Huggins might secure his share of the and, gird as. Mrs. Jennison might, the
tax, grudgingly paid, and grumbled young people claimed her. In spite of
over from one collecting time to anoth­ the poor house taint, the expectation
er, and Huldah learned quickly and well, gained more and more ground that she
taking especially to figures, and casting must finally be Mrs. Jennison’s heir,
up interest with something almost en­ and, though restric’od to calico, pain­
thusiasm. Tbe sugar' fund grew year fully skimpy at that, Mary’s beauty had
by year in the Claremont Savings Bank, come to be undeniable.
ana Peter shook his head over the bar­
Long ago ’Siah Perkins had found it
gain which he was too honest to evade out, and with small care whether money
or end. For honesty ruled and was the would be gained or lost in the suit,
one saving grace. Mean, miserly, nar­ pressed it .with an ardor irresistible and
row almost beyond belief, he never lied carrying its own surety of response.
and never cheated, and Huldah grew to
Once more the course of true love had
womanhood—girlhood being left out al­ been troubled, and Josh Slocum, a sulky
together—so true a copy of him that the and rejected admirer, bad walked with
neighbors who at long intervals pene­ Mrs. Jennteon to her “shay,” as she left
trated the mysterious region of the best the village store, and, as he helped her
room said:
in^ said some words that brought a
“ It’s a pity she hadn't been a boy, to flush and a quick snap of the sharp eyes.
keep up the farm after old Huggins And so vre are back once more to where
died.*’
our story negins, and Mary, very deter­
Old Huggins died at last, followed mined and very silent, picked over her
quickly by his wife, who had lived too beans and gave no sign, save in a flush
long under the direction of bis Qle-iiko that would not be pnt down, that she
voice to find independent action possi­ heard or cared.
ble, and who closed her eyes, as he had
That was three months ap), and Mrs.
done, with no sign of what picture Jennison had kept her word. No mnre
either past or future held In that last hunts for eggs and precious stray min­
moment of pause between the two. utes reading book or letter.
Up and
Huldah reigned alone, and contented to down, through the lot, in the barn, not
be alone; and, when the long winter one moment was allowed in which Mary
ended, hired a silent and wiry little oould have given word or look to the
Frenchman from the Hollow and ran lover who at first haunted the place,
the farm on shares. Whatever thought then took to moody silence and much
Antoine Duprez may have had as to pondering of ways of escape for both.
possible money to be made out of her
Une point alone was uninvadod—.the
ignorance or oversight was quickly dis­ far corner of the npper loft, where
missed, and the farm, where long ago Croppie-Crown still lay, and where only
every loose stone had taken its place tn Mary could climb, but w hich Mrs. Jenthe well-built walls, came to be regardwl nison approached as nearly as possible,
as one of the best pieces of property in going up the first ladder to the mow.and
that region.
eying tne pegs leading to the second
In time Miss Huldah, as she came to with a half-determination to try them.
be called, owned her shay and drove The half one day became a whole, and
into town with her own butter and eggs, when, after repeated calls, Mary, driven
and on Sundays to the old church on to desperation, had failed to answer and
the green, the faces in which she had deliberately remained looking over the
kaown from childhood, but with no in­ precious bundle, she climbed cautiously
terest or attempt at other knowledge. up the post and had put out one foot for
Then, to the consternation of everyone, a final stretch to the loose boards of the
she had married, without warning or in­ loft, when the treacherous peg gave way,
timation that even the most indefatiga­ and with a clutch that covered her with
ble news purveyor could glean, a man hay she fell, sliding from the friendly
who had appeared from “the West,” mow tc a manger just below, and fall­
otherwise Central New York, and ing, to the painful amazement of old
bought a farm In the same district.
Dobbin, at his side and almost under his
There was no change in life or look. feet. A scream, and Dobbin’s fright­
The same routine went on from hour to ened neigh brought Mary at once, who
hour and day to day. The bank ac­ searched everywhere but in the manger,
count swelled slowly and surely, and and who was nearly in despair, when
the Jennisons came to be looked upon
Mrs. Jennison’s voice sounded from
as one of the rich famine*. Then slowly some unknown region:
Jennison himself sickened and died, and
“ Call a man from somewhere, for my
his wife, who gave but this one token of leg’s broke."
bereavement or loneliness, cast about
Happily Dobbin*wm not a kicker and
for some one to, in degree, fill the emp­ merely turned his head inquiringly at
ty place, and found it in a waif and intervals until Antoine and then a doc­
stray, born in the poor-house and hav­ tor appeared.
ing grown up in its shadow. Silent and
The fracture was compound, and there
shrinking, people wondered that Huldah followed a long.dreary season of confine­
Jennison chose this child from stronger ment, and, as it seemed to the girl, a
and bolder ones; but.the end justified slow fire for nerve and body. The need
her choice, and Mary Nichols grew into of quiet was absolute, and the old wo­
a housewife as practical and busy as man, suddenly aged and haggard,raged
Mrs. Jennison herself.
against it with a fury that did mucn to
How she bore the unending nagging retard recovery.
of her daily life it was hard to tell, for
Close prisoner for the first time in all
as Mrs. Jennison camo to middle age her sixty-five years, no wild animal ever
her tongue moved as steadily and with girded more fiercely at the bars that
as cutting a quality as her father’s, and
shut him in, and when common sense
she ordered every inch of her hand­ asserted ^itself, and for the sake of
maiden’s goings out and comings in. speedier recovery, she lay passive, if
“ She’s under age. I’ll have the law
Hardship and often abuse having filled not silent, the conflict weakened and
of ye!” gasped Mrs. Jennison.
the first twelve years of the girl’s life, a depressed her almost beyond bearing.
“ She'll be over it by the time you get
home and enough to eat seemed at first
Two months of miserable endurance for it," returned tbe imjierturbable ’Siah.
all that was necessary, and as she grew the unhappy Mary, who, day and night, “See hero, now, you’ve had your way
older custom did the rest, and she hoard
must be within sight and call, and whose with her for seven years, an' that's as
with unhearing ears sharp command or roses had long ago departed, and then,
long as the Bible ’lows tor one term o’
rasping and unceasing run of comment.
as Mrs. Jennison once more began her aerrice. She's goin’ to give me a turn
One pleasure wu always sure, and Mrs. daily round, a stiffened limb made the now, but she’s too much conscience to
Jennison’s one weakness secured it to old freedom of movement impossible.
leave yoa as I'd have her do, and she
her, very grudgingly and with many a
But vigilance did not relax. Mary says she’ll stay till you find somebody
plan for its cassation, till Mary proved riaa here, texly and soul, and hers she
else. I've got her now, and kin afford
so valuable a helper that she oould not should remain; and, certain that her
to be generous. Hut look out how vou
be dispensed with.
purpose was in part accomplished, and sass her, or I’ll have her away before
liens and chickens were Mrs. Jenni- that 'Siah at least was tired of tbe pur­
you can say Jack Robinson.*’
son’s passion, and the only softness ever suit, she chuckled audibly over her suc­
Still speechless, Mrs. Jennison rose,
discoverable in her tone was when sh® cess.
closed the door, pushed the bolt, and, as
counted the downy beads of a new brood
In the meantime £ new order of things
or coddled a setting mother. There was had developed in the “Society.” Worn she lowered the window, shot throogn
no attempt at a hennery or any modern out with the always-increasing burden it two words of final defiance.
“Git eont!”
method. The hens laid where they of a supper, which each member had,
a That suite me,” said ’Slab to the
would, and being nomadic beyond the since Mrs. Jeanison’s ever-memorable
common run gave Mary moments out of one, sought to make more and more girl, down whose cheeks a few tears
doors that would otherwise have been elaborate, the sensible ones had at last were running. “You beat all, Mary
denied. Instinct seemed to lead her to revolted, and decided that each should Even if I was a gal, seems to me 1
tbe last hi ling-place of the most secre­ bring a sufficient portion for one-and the shouldn't prr to be well rid of an old
tive hen, and’ there were conveniences table be set with this provision, the termagant like that."
“ It isn't her exactly, but it's the place,
for such in strange nooks in the ram­ hostess providing only tea and coffee.
sobbed
bling old bam built by a man of ampler Gradually this had changed, and one nnd—and—Croppie-Crown!"
Mary, and Cropplo-Crvwn answered
notions than old Peter Huggins.
provided cake, another biscuit, and so
In one of these nooks, from which the on, the names of such being given out with a clock.
Many broods chipped the Jihell and
hay was never fully removed, the new in turn at each meeting. Mrs. Jennison
crop piling in on tbe remnants of the had said she should be at the next one, grew from flufliness to pin-feathcm and
old, Mary kept the few treasures her and her name was sent up as the all the usual course of hen hood before
mistress’s prying eye would long ago maker of cake for the coming meeting, Mrs. Jennison relented; but relent she
have rooted out from ebest or drawer— snd once more butter and eggs and fruii did at last, and had even been known to
a book or two, tbe property of her un­ were used with a lavishness, that was smile at the curly-headed 'Siah, Jr.,
known mother; a shell some one had never atty less confounding than in the who, in time, made his way - fearleasly
into the old lady’s domain. And, when
given, and In time, as she grew into a beginning. 7 be loaves were ready­
delicate, even graceful girl, a little pin,
dark and rich under the smooth frost­ at last grim death took poeeeasion of the
soma ear-rings, put on on tbe way to ing, and lying la the basket ready for victim, almc-st as grim, meadow and
bill-farm wpre found to be left, not for
church after tbe house was well out of canwing. sight and taken off in the same way;
The day wm bright and cool, and at Mary, bat Mary's children, their heirs
then a little package of letters, awk­ three o’clock Mrs. Jennison called to and MBigns forever. Croppie-Crown’s
wardly written and spelled as awkward­ Mary to harness Dobbin, and stood in last brood eame thus to the pair who
ly, but holding the secret Mrs, Jennisen the uoor to oversee the operation. Dob­ owed sudden defiveraoce from the long
tangle to her good offices, and, though
had just discovered.
bin bent his head to receive tbe eollar,
for the deliverer herself alucking and
scratching oeased long ago, ’Slab still
might bold all the refreshment she Then she led him to the shay, ancient tells the story of Crappie-Crown's Wednow and weather-worn from Its long
year* of service, but as she dropped the
bridle and took up the shafts to wheel
church-going, when she listened With it forward slightly, a subdued and well■“— contempt to the flowing periods of known duck warned her of some new
toly-settled young minister, freak vagary of Croppie-Crown’s. The cush­ interesting operation upon a young man
ivinity School, ions had been taken out to beat. The whose eye had been so burned? with
box-lid in the *»»at was open, and had sulphuric acid that the conjunctiva wm
er Tiew* in fall on been for a fortnight, and there, on a destroyed. A correspond!^* section of
for which it worked. “buffalo,” folded and half filling it, sat a rabbit’s eye wm cut out and stretched
Utt'unmoved Croppla-Crown, top-knot
nod-bright eyes ja* visible above the
and stayed-at home three weeks. Having
log will be entirely successful.

Winter Goods!

JBlankets and Robes.

:

cv.rixxg

© A GOOD FAMILY FLOUR

0

4

0

CD

Hurrah
BOOTS ANO SHOES

ENTISTS,

HALUS

Groceries
Provisions
Of all kinds ut lowest prices.

fiatarrh Qure CROCKERY AND GLASSWARE,
Lnrgest Stock and Lowest Prices.
10,000 articles cheap.

Is Recommended by Physician^

Stop EEWASa

W* nanaflMtar* and &gt;«U it rith* positive
Caae.*nS *«wiU rorf«1l tee above amount

Hanging Lamps
Cheaper than ever.

guarantee that It will cure any

— —— * — •
...... W W.
imswdiatsly. Price, 7&amp; cent, per botlto.

—

F. I. CHENEY *. C0., Toledo. Ohio.
The best way to catch a grizzly bear
ia to let him lick salt from your hand
while a necond psrty slips around and
ties bls hind legs to a tree.
A ghtet made its appearance in
Evansville the other night and ran
against * bull-dog, Tbe doctor says it
wifi be long" weeks before the young
I tran enn do another cunning tL’ingA '’tired and over-worked locom°Dve
dashed into a freight train on a CoOiT’ecticut railroad and tossed six freig/'t
cars into a ditch. What it would have
done had it been fresh and lively hi left
to conjecture.
A French doctor makes a buaiueM^f
curing snoring and warrento a cure for
ten dollars. But be isn't making much
money, as few men wHfoAimit that tbey

snore.
Now and then* a great ado is made
almut a case where some eouple were
marred for fun apd it turned out that
the officiating party whs a real clergy­
man or a justice.
It is said that Govcnor-elect Cleve­
land cnnld have his nick of twenty-five
of the hansomeat girls of the Eippire
State in case he decided to take a wife
Love in a oottage Ua fine thing if a
fellow can take his meals at bis motberju-htw’s mansion and have the week’s

’

C, W. SMITH.
Horses
Sliod
-MHBT BE-

ALWAYS BEST
TO HAVE THE JOB POMF

SKILLFULLY.
Recognizing These Facts,
by affording Ike public

TTff!

WORK

Chas. Middled.&gt;n'

A No.l Workman.
,j. M:WOO»
FOUNDER and JJACHIHI8T

�tbe destroying band of time, and on die
door was inscribed those words, “Don’t
May in this bonne—It’s haunted.” As
tlie shades of night were fast falling
and I was badly in need of a lodging
place, I concluded to investigate the
interior of the old buildins with a view
to “layfng over.”
Being unable to gain an entrance
through the door, I gently placed a stick
under the window and slipped in. As
nothing of a suspicious nature met my
g«»*, I revolved to accept its humble
hospitality and take my chances on the
gliosis. Making my bed on the cham
her floor and placing my revolver at
command, 1 lay down and had soon
left cares and trouble behind, but only
for a a:.art timeHardly an bo6r bad elapsed when
thbrie caase from the-Iowcr stoiy of the
old AlilapidatesTEuilding what* seemed
thy'report of a pistol, followed by the
sharp, shrill scream of a woman. It
rings in my ears yet. I at on&lt;5e thought
of the wonts on the door—“Don’t stay
in the house—it’s haunted” What
should I do! It was a terrible night
out; the wind blew an crfect gale, the
trees were cracking and falling and the
rain beat heavily against tbe roof; a
lonely owl had., to seek refuge from the
storm, perched himself under the roof,
and was asking, “Whoo whoo, whoo,
wlioo, the h—1 are you.”
- Could it be reality, I argued, or was I
dreaming. However, I would let my
presence be known. “Who’s there !
In answer eamu a doleful moan, like as
of a buninn being in the agonies of
death. That sound will remain em­
blazoned on my memory to my dying
day?
Similar rounds were reported again
and again, it was reality sure ; at last
I was convinced ; and could it be pos­
sible thpt I must tell and teach my
children—tbe dear little deals—as I
trotted them on my knee that, “mons­
ter’s” from the unknown world visit the
earth to tattle chains in grave-yards,
and to make old buildings resound
with screams and yells. .
•
I shall never be obliged to go to toe
dictionary for toe correct meaning of
“fear,” I thought of tbe words, a good
woman said, “man is a coward at mid­
night.” Oh! bow I longed for day.
yet there was sweet consolation in the
thought that, “after the severest storm
there will cornea calm, after the dark­
night, a morning.” “It came at last,
and just as the rays of the golden sun
from over tbe sunsets of the western
fountains shot througbt the chamber
vrindow of tho old historical mansion,
I awoke, alas, I bad been dreaming,
but such is a cruiser’s life.
V. D. A.
Fixing A Lever.

A motherly old woman, considerably
troubled with tbe asthma. and also lame
called at Che Twentieth Street Station
tbe other afternoon to state her case.
Site made the sergeant in charge place
his hand otra copy of Brown’s grammer
wbich happened to be lying there and
awear that he would never tell anybody,
and then etae began;
“I have a daughter.”
“Yes.”
“And my daughter has a beau.”
“Perfectly natural.”
“Tbey are engaged, and die wedding
day has been set three times, but he
flasks oat of it every time. The first
time he claimed, that bis father was
dead; the second be was afraid he had
the small-pox, and the third time, which
was yesterday, he said it would bring
bad luck to marry when a comet was
risible. Now, then, I don’t like thia
fooling around. When me and the old
min were ready to marry we walked
over to tbe ministers and were jined
without any backing out or bearing
around.”
“WeM.”
“Well, I want to bring thisyoung man
to time. Paet la, he’s either got to come
up to tbe rack or jump the fence.”
“Yes, he must”.
■ “I want to aek you how far I can go
in the case. Suppose, at tor be arrives
to-morrow evening, I walk into tbe
room with a pistol in one band and a
minister of tbe gospel in the other!
Wouldn’t that precipitate a climax!
“1 think so.”
“IfbarewHy fovea Susie I think he
would stand up and be married. If he
m only fooling around he’d jump
through the window, wouldn’t he.
“Looks that wav to me.”
“Well, I’ll try iL I shan’t indulge in
no threats, you knew. I’ll hold th«
piaM cariesalv la my left hand, and
bang to tbe minister carieasly with the

,
;
I

tbe
igrngu. at MKh &lt;&gt;&lt;V&gt;n U bu«in-», doring toe appointed time being reckoned
Mtoe flny-aecotid part of the business
of the year Obviously the closeness of
the approximation hinges entirely upoa
the fitness of the selected week to rep’Maen’ the average Weekly work of the yen.;
Knowing approximately tin* number
of pieces of each -ort of mall matter
handled, it is possible to estimate rough­
ly the re venue-the Government ought to
receive from tho sale of stamps, cards,
■tamped envelopes, etc., and from, other
postal chargee. Tho estimate would
neisMsarily involve a good deal of as­
sumption and guesswork; yetlftho es­
timated or calculated volume©! business
done is not unreasonably wide of the
truth, the entimsted revenue ought to be
something near the actual revenue as re­
ported in sales of&lt;stomns and the rest.
The Evening Poti has gone to too
trouble of collating the* statistics given
in the last annual report of the Postoffice
Department, and comparing the sums
which, according to its calculation,
should have been paid for the convey­
ance of toe matter embraced in the
year's work as officially estimated, with
the sums actually received, finding very
serious discrepancies.
Tho sale of stamps, cards, stamped en­
velopes, etc., for the year aggregated
$31.Gi'»,43G. Assuming the department's
estimate of annual business to be correct,
and the PoiC» analysis of it equally cor­
rect. the department should have re­
ceived from the sources named $12,795,­
815. The deficiency in receipts for the
amount of matter convoyed thus exceed­
ed eight million dollars. The Po»t re­
marks: “ The immense deficiency in the
number of postage stamps sold, accord­
ing to the department’s figures, is made
especially striking by adding together
the postage values of the letters and
postal canls which made up the firstclass mail. By so doing wo obtain the
sum of $34,028,784.84. If we deduct
from this tho $34,625,435.91 of postage
•tamps sold, without allowing for the
special stamps and wrappers not used on
letters, we have a deficiency of $3,348.93
—leaving the whole of too second, thin!
and fourth class mails to be carried for
nothing, and treating registration as
free. If the $1,398,674 of newspaper and
periodical stamps and the $431,164.60 of
newspaper wrappers be deducted from,
the mm total of stamps sold, and tho re­
mainder bo -deducted from the value of
tho first-class mail, adeficiencyiof $1,8S3.'177.53 appears in tho revenue from that
clan of matter alone.”
Tho experienced postmaster of' this
city, Mr. Pearson, to whom the Pofl'i
figures and deductions wore submitted,
mentioned four causes which might have
contributed to produce toe discrepancy:
(1) Issued but unused Stamps carried
over from tho previous year; (2) over­
estimation of the number of pieces of
mail matter handled; (3) unwise selec­
tion of the time for making toe set?n
days’ count, toe week chosen being first
before too holiday season, when the
mails are more heavily loaded than nt
uny other period; (4) the washing and
fraudulent re-issue of stamps. That the
last cause was a very efficient one, Mr.
Pearson did not belitfve. He admitted
that there werryarieus ways of washing
canceled stamyis so that toev could be
used again, and it was possible that per­
sons in different parte of the country
practiced these methods independently
of each other; he was confident, how­
ever, that no organiitod conspiracy ex­
isted for this purpose, since it would not
be possible to dispose of large quantities
of washed stamps without the plot bcingdboovered.
The assumption that tho concerted
washing of stamps on a large scale
would be necesury to cause the Govern­
ment to lose materially by re-used stamps
will hardly hold. There are. nearly
45.000 post-offices in toe country, anil
If the department were to carry from
each offiou a single fraudulently stamped
letters day, the Government would be
cheated to the extent of nearly half a
million dollars a year. It may not be
possible to dispose of $8.OOO,O6O worth
of washed stamps in bulk; yet out of
ten million letter writers it would not be
possible to find enough who are willing
to use again cleaned or imperfectly can­
celed stamps, and having opportunities
enough to do it to cheat the revenue
outof all that the deficiency is found to be.
That the cancellation of stamps is
very frequently imperfect is known to
all who handle many letters. In many
instances the stamp is not defaced at
all; in more the mark is so slight that it
may be easily rubbed oft Mr. Pearson
admits that no cancelling ink Is inefface­
able, and expresses the opinion that
novtage stamps ought to be printed in
fugitive colors, which would be removed
by any attempt to wanh off the cancelling
mark.
The conditions under which stamps
miiHt often be handled, however, by
children and other unskillful persons,
both before and after they are put upon
matter U» be mailed, forbids the me of
other thiM fairly permanent ink in printare held in sweaty
hands, can
pockets, where they
are. subject
nooning by rain. per­
uke, and always liable
urn the gum is moist-

PRINCIPAL* MN

The most obvious way of stopping
frauds of tiiis nature would seem to be
too use of stamped envelopes and wrap­
pers; and iu view of toe probable saving
to the revenue by preventing reuse, the
Government might find it profitable to
encourage toe more general employment
of stamped envelopes, by allow.ng to
purcha’H'ffl of them a considerable dis­
count from the price of toe stomps. It
might be practicable also to print the
stamps across the face of tbe envelopes
in such a way that in too writing of the
address toe stamp would noeessarily be
canceled. The usual pent marks would
suffice to show whether any wrapper had
done its appointed service.—Scientific

SHORTEST. QtlCKfeT'

Peninsular Stove Co.’
OF DETROIT.

PAINTS, VARNISHES, COLOR, BRUSHES.
WELL and CISTERN PUMPS,
POINTS, PIPE, SINKS, ETC.
CHAMPION XWT SA WR, AXES, BTC.

Detroit White I&gt;*nd Work* Colors,—The Best in she market.
BUILDEE8 BARDW ARF. SASH. DOORS.
(JLAS8, LOCKS, KNURS, rfr. &lt;fce.
NAILS. IRON, AND STEEL.

When !■ Need of the Best Grades of Hardware and ma­
chinery Cail nnd Mee me.

Medical Technical Tcrais.
There are some people uncharitable
enough to think that 'nodical practice
would be much less productive to its
professors If they would break down tho
barrier of Greek and I-atin nomencla­
ture, which is the principal clement in
ita mystery.* Whether such is,*or is not,
the fact there can be no doubt that med­
ical knowledge is becoming mure gen­
eral, and tiiot the employment of classic
technical names is in process of gradual
abandonment. This fact may lx- amply
proved by a glance at reports of Boards
ot Health, and even, by medical jour­
nals, which have chosen to adopt popular, not to say vulgar, noineiiuiinure in
technical reports. There b enough of
technical naming left, however, to make
a riddle of their tables and disquisitioni
to one not familiar with the parent lan­
guage. This is the case even when the
effort is to popularize knowledge and in­
formation. Take, for instance, the pe­
riodical reports of the Board o* Health
of this city, one of whose fuueticos is
supposed to be the collation of informa­
tion ou health matters for th&lt;* Instruction
of citizens. Their sources of information are chiefly practicing pnysiciana,
and if they adopted the pecuoar utiLography of some of the practiliGoeis, ai

-

;
j

By Buying Your Dry Goods

■IDIUL IH SBHEIC1L SllITlVOl

W. S. GOODYEAR &amp; CO?,
IlaHtingN, iMLicli
We Killy realize the

j
|
j
।

most all kinds of produce are bringing this fall, so have
r
«
llOUght a large StOCK OI all KinUS 01

DRY GOODS, FANCY GOODS, NO­
DiRtCTIONS
CATARR
TIONS, BOOTS and SHOES,
MM
’
ciVsTj
and CARPETS,
UXtTAXnX. AatCs Stm*. £aa.

recognize under the term “aphthaj”
those disagreeable little curd-li’re ■''res
on her baby’s mouth, which she always
heard call “thrush." It might comfort
tho’ aged darkey, who finds himself
••powerful weak,” to know that he is
really afflicted with "asthenia.” The
"inipery in the chest” of old-time suffer­
ers is known to experts as "iu.gi.iu pec­
toris.”
When musclea wru-t .• awav '
without traceable disease they irr said
to be "atrophied.” The, to HwctMors. I
painful affliction, “St, Vitus dance.” is
"chorea” in medical parlance- Rest­
disturbing, soul-harrowing carbuncles
would hardly be recognized under the
name "anthrax.”
Many of the teshnical namci
made
by adding the suffix "itis” to the classic
names of the organ affected. Thus in­
formation of the brain substance be­
comes "cerebritis” of the stomach and
bowels is "gastro enteritis,” of the
bowels alone "enteritis.” The common
and recognizable affliction, dropsy, is
"acites,” with changes in name accord­
ing to the location. Thus, dropsy of the
brain is "hydro-cephalus,” of the chest
♦•hydro-thorax,” of theeafhydro’ius,”
of the flesh "anasarca,” or oi the joints
"bydrosteon.” Heart disease generally
is described as "carditis.” Blood vom­
iting is “hacniatemesis.” The "yaller
jandera,” which were more common
when the prairies of Illinois were first
brnkcu, and is by no means uncommon
now, would haraly be recognized as
"meloena cnol&lt;ja,"’"icterus,”’and ••ic­
terus veri dis," according-to tbe type
and virulence of the complaint. "Leucoeythcmia” is a very long name to de­
scribe the milky condition of blood inci­
dent to insufficient nutrition. "Maras­
mus” is another way of saying "lean­
ness,” altbpugh it means something
more, a lean condition that comes of
lack of power to assimilate nourishment.
"(Edema” is the word doctors use to
describes general dropsical condition.
Scrofula was once a technical term, but
has become common through long use.
Not ad "choreas.” which means the same

And are selling at prices that will astonish you.

annul Mil

W. S. GOODYEAR &amp; CO­

rompktty
•erv* aud

hay- fever :s:a,X's-»

MILLINERY

"Mai rruilla irr realkrtd ny a few application*
ibnmurh t:&lt; attorot a&gt; directed w|
eCata
Hav F«w. Xe.

L'nequaled For Cold In the Head
• Tea known. dlaplac!n&lt; all other prrparaUona.
Recognized eh a Wonderful Discovery.
8 &gt;MI by drwod-ta al M&gt; eta. On nxvlpl of prtoa
will mail apockaga. HeM foi circular contains
full •ntbrmaiion and reliable Uatimouiala.
BLT CEE AM BAEM CQ. Owago. W. T.

NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY CHEAP.

FOB THE NEXT SIXTY DAYS

OMARHXb
^&lt;1
CURES ANO

LJiStE®

I shall offer my entire stock of millinery goods at cost or
under.

SPECIAL BARGAINS IN TRIMMED HATS
Some people are never ready to take advantage of favorable
opportunities. Don’t let this be said of you.

Come Early, Come Late,
Only that your wa^ta are supplied.

M. JEFFREY

ing credited by the ancients with
incubating and spreading the dlsease. “Scleroderma” is a fine, mouth­
tilling word, meaning •‘scally’’ applied
to the skin. It probably would not help
—DO YOU KMOW THAT—
the scamstres-r to bear her backache to
know she sfifferod with "tnyeletis,” nor
cure her headache to hear it called
“cephalagia.”
"Synoirtis” is inflam­
mation of the joints; “tetanus” look-jaw;
“trismus naaoentium,” a sort of lock­
jaw which afflicts very young babies.
“Tabes deraalis” is better known under
its old-fashioned name, “the ripple#-”
Many of tbe technical words, however,
ara of real assistance to practitioners,
Ixjcausc they indicate diseases, condi­
tions, or parts of toe human anatomy
that would require several English words
In the Heavy lAate 1 manufacture* Farm Harneaa, Road Harto describe. Thus “peritonis” is inflam­
mation of a membrane that envelopes all with 0 cord No. 10 thread, and Eberhard Trimmings.
the inferior viscera. "Menangit'j” an in­
flammation of too covering membrane of

whose knowledge of English is limited,
and of other longues zero. The claaafa
words and phrases become a safeguard,
inasmuch aa instruction in the art of
suitable taeans. medicine-making must be preceded by a

rfrauita

..ffrclw»ilf

Hawings, October 4, 1882.

FARMERS, TEAMSTERS, HORSEMEN!
YOU CAN SAVE MONEY

■MU VMM Alt KUS fAU.
li-.u: C.nicti Mjv-un.

OF HERB. WALRATH.

Nutluil
to send tic
owFAU.

h fcrlShir.
address anon

required for Personal or Family use,-

Made in all Styles
•

be coerce when I get started.
“Well, don’t -break the tew.”
“Oh, no. no! If he skips I shan’t do
ny sbeoting. Bl let the dog give him

KANSAS CITY

—FROM-

, ’

Best Stock in the Market,
ASD WJJiRAKT£I&gt; 7V fllVH BJLHeritrr/ON.
1 alao keei&gt; fuU lines of

wtoh. «f

�Not.t

■nd yet I
i "»t ooet.”

HARDWARE, BUILDERS’ MATERIAL,
SASH, DOORS, ETCETERA

Thk United Stales AffricaMural Department
500,000,001 bushels.
Irh.-A been ascertained that the defalcations

Bobbs, Conors, and Sleigh Bells

prot«bly too much frightened or too lazy to

Half the city is burned. McDawell'BoRloe

tbe House Mr. Heed pre:
’s H. McLean. wh ■
9 Joint

.. —. —
oonaldcrablo
debate it was resolved—1M to 15—to swear in
Mr. McLean, and ho took the oath. Tno P&lt;*t-

p«ua.«
iblta offices.

total of DB0,000.
Chablbs Deriit, a recent arrival from 8an
Francisco, has developed into a, leper at the
altns-house in Saiem, Mass. Ho wu botanist
to Queen Emma at Honolulu for some years.
Tbaxns on tbe Pittsburgh, Cincinnati &lt;fc
St. Louis Road collided on the 18th on a hlgtf
curve al King’s Station, O. ■ Poke Petero, an
engineer, was beheaded; W. IL Wharton,
postal dork, wm killed, and four other post-.
office employes were seriously injured.
Twenty-six leading clearing-houses in the
United States showed exchanges for the week
ended on the 18lh of &gt;1,316,849,496, an in

rious week, indicating a fair increase '.n the
volume of trade throughout ths country.

Rouke, who was drinking a cup of coffee at
tho time, and killed him instantly.
Am incendiary fire at Corsicana, Tex., a few.
days ago burned a number of business houses,
destroying property rained at &gt;150,000.
If was stated on the 18th that tbe cotton
crop would be fully seven million bales, and
labor was so scarce along tbe Mississippi

FOREIGN

In which a few persons perished, destroyed
property tn tbe value of »l.!50.000. It is a

Derby asserted that a few million pounds
Cpuld ba profitably expended In expediting
immigration from Ireland. He was greatly
opposed to the Home-rule Issue, and said the
Government should refuse to listen to the
claims of the Irish Nationalists.
■ A Constantinople dispatch of the 15th
says the Sultau wm exhibiting evident symp-

17th, too late for the public reception which

And general stock eqnal to any andlfiryUclasa.

Patrick and Mylbs Joycb and Patrick
Casey were hanged In tbe Galway (Ireland)
jail on the morning of tbe 15th for the murder

nlahed with verandas below and
lories above, white those in the &lt;---- - ---------detadhed and surfoundod by delightful gar-

Five nox»3U&gt; Egyptians, chargeJ with In-

, a Scottish, somo

Mr. Alyxxd Clock, aged seventy, an old

United States Agricultural Deportment, to

reports."

TU United States Supreme Court has

variety

Holiday Goods!

solidly constructed of brick or wood,
and painted green or
white. Tbe

£

they reopen to reduce the output by one-halt

ktvi^i.ehh

the gentle slope of

and two synagogues; but neither
been released on account of in-ufficlent evi­ churches,
these nor the other public edlflees, such as tho
dence against them.
theater, ho.pftul, court-bouae, new peniten­
Sknob Rivas, ■ leading supporter of Mar­ tiary, work-house,-commercial Bub-’crlptlooshal Serrano, occasioned great excitement in
Appropriation bill
the Spanish Cortes on the 15th by an­ tectural beauty. ,
— ._ Committee of the
debate, the
house near Paterson, N. J., three men lost nouncing that the Dynastic Left would ac­
'Th ? situation of Kingston, between Europe
their lives.
cept tbe constitution of 1878, and, if called and tbe center of the American continent, has
The medical students and their assistants to power, would reform It in a liberal sense rendered It an important commercial entrorecently caught while robbing graves near on the lines df the constitution of 1889.
rhall receive for carrying ths malls but fl f ty Richmond, Vo., have been sentenced to six
Westgate, who in South America accused
months imprisonment each.
. v
himself of participation,in tbe murder of mnlnly consist of manufactured goods, flour,
The business portions of Clayton, Ala., and Cavendish and Burke, arrived tn England on wine, ale and salted meats. Its exports annutbe 8d of January.
the 15th, by the steamer NQe. Ills fellow­ ally aggregate something like $8,000,000, and
Several petitions were presented In tho Sen­
tho Imports are about the same amount.''
A recent dispatch from Dallas, Tex., passengers regard him as a lunatic.
ate on the IMh asking prompt action in relation
A letteh was received on tbe Iftth by high
to tbe reduction of the tobacco tax. The Indian stales that two brothers, mimed George W.
Strange Freak of a Crazy Man.
omcuus at
ai London,
touuon, threatening
lurcainnmg to
io blow
mow up one ,
Appropriation bill ($&amp;,434.t(X)i was taken up,and and James Fraley, charged with stealing cot­ officials
several amendments were adopted. Mr. Hoar, ton, were captured In the Comanche country, or more of the Government offices within five | * 1 recent Westerly (R. I.) dispatch says:
from tho Committee on Judiciary, reported, and both were banged from the same limb days, In tevenge for the banging of the
Just before daylUht yesterday morning.
with amendments, the Bankruptcy bill,*which
murderers of the Joyce family at Galway,
*J C. K. Backbt, a leading stock and grain Ireland.
' given way under religious excitement. and
Ur to the 17th 1,000 applications for aaaUt1X1 a substitute for the House bill provtd- broker of Cleveland, O., disappeared on the
for th? entry of distilled spirits In dia­ 18th, leaving heavy liabilities. His property
t tried once before to kill Mrnself. wu seen to
ry warehouses. Mr. Pugh offered an had been seized by credltoru.
leap suddenly from tho window of h la bodLaw Union at Westport, Ireland.
amendment to the pending Ciril-Servtoc bilk
. Db Lb&amp;skps informed the French Geo­ room just u his father entered the room to reThe House resolutions in relation to the death
A boiler exploded in the Globe Rolling
of Representative Orth were presented, and a Mills at Cincinnati a few days ago, killing graphical Society a few days ago that tbe
committee of three was appointed to attend
door, with a view to overtaking him and bringtho funeral... In tbe Hbuse the death of Con­ one man, fatally wounding one other, and se­ Panama Canal would be finished In 1888.
gressman Orth, of Indiana, was referred riously injuring several of the employes.
Westgate, the self-accused participant in
to in touching words by the Chaplain.
the Pbcenlx Park assfsslnstlcn* at Dublin, ' beard the sound of chopping at tho wood-pl la,
The desk of the late Representative was
j
Ireland, denied on the 17th that he ever mads and thought the young man was ebopp‘ng
decked In-black. After a long and spirited
PERSONAL AND POLITICAL
wood. Stealing softly up to tbe pile, old Mr.
debate on the resolution for a holiday
Mabia Applet, one of the thirteen girls a confession, or that he knew anything about ! Barber beard his son repeating over and over
recess tbe proposition was defeated—IOS
to 123—nnd a resolution wav adopted Imposing who represented the States in Washington's ths crime.
Tub Hematite Iron Company of Maryport,
a Ono of f.'iO n day on absent members during funeral procession in New York, died on tbe
England, has failed for •1,000,000.
accomplishcd. Tho old man saw him fall over.
ment was agreed tn, out of re*|&gt;oct to the mem­ 14th at Morristown, N. J., aged 104 years.
The Turkish Government has officially anory of the lute Representative Orth.
The Ohio State Grange has elected tbe fol­
, young man bad done. Stooping down, he
lowing officers for the enaung year: Master, supplylng correct information to correspond­ found that tbe young man had fainted. Aid
D0MESTIC.
J. H. Brigham; Overseer, L. C. Richardson; ents of foreign papers, and stated the pen­
The Commissioner of the Freedmen’s Sav­ Lecturer, R. 8. Thompson; Steward, R. M. alties for spreading falsehoods.
ing and Trust Company has received durteg Coulter; Assistant Steward, Z. 8. Paulson;
Information reached this country on the
tbe current year &gt;455,334. and is preparing to Chaplain, 8. K. Haltain ger; Treasurer, Hen­ 18th of extensive fires in Canton and Foo Choo,
ry Talcott, of Ashtabula County; Secretary, China, in the early part of November, where­ the hacked and nearly severed limb being held
pay gnotber dividend.
A Chicago jury has declared that Theresa T. R. Smith, of Marlon County: Gate Keep­ by over 1,0)0 bouses were destroyed and Im­ together only by a fragment of flesh. Tho
Sturla, who killed Charles Stiles some months er, Lewis F. Smith. Among ths resolutions mense losses suffered, added to which wm a young man probably failed, from losing his
ago, wu guilty of manslaughter, and fixed adopted was one declaring that "tbe serious loss of life.
her term of Imprisonment In the Penitentiary •State Grange of Ohio resognlzei in the
Mr. Parnkll stated in Parliament on ths
manufacture, sale and use of Intoxicating 18th that he was opposed to any emigration i possible by the two men, and a surgeon whs
There were 908 business failures In the? drinks one of the greatest evils of scheme of tbe British Government which ; thcuUnatlc had partially recovered from bls
United States and Canada during tbe the times, and one that has brought disgrace would simply effect tbe landing of Dishmen
seven days ended on tbe 14th. The upon the country, corrupted our Legislatures, in America In a penniless condition.
seemed satisfied that bo had done right, and
number duriug the preceding week wo*- and is destroying our hom«*s and wrecking tbe
Nearly three thousand persons in.Carrick, quoted such scripture as: 'All things work
190l. Of- the former the Eastern States lives of the land. We, therefore, urge upon Donegal County. Ireland, were on the 18th 1 together for good to them that love God,' and
had 94. the WcAern 60, the Southern 41, tbe the Grange tbe importance o! resisting the said to be in danger of starvation. Indian 1 called for a reading from too book of ItovclaMiddle 3). tbe Pacific States and Territories
meal was the only article of food to be had. • tten. Young Barber has been for some time
a morbid state of mind respecting rellgfbus
14, Canada 18, and New York City 12. Dun • known to favor the liquor Interest. We also
Nine persons were burned to death in a in
subjects, and tried a few weeks since to kill
fire at Le Puy, France, a few days ago.
himself by holding his breath becauM he
generally, are not so large In amount or tbe home foiytbe total eradication of this great
thought it was a sin to breathe."
liabilities so important as in the previous
LATER NEWS.
honorable means for the suppression of the
Thkkb wm an cxploelon in the cartridge
The Timber-Culture Queutlon.
Tub finest Lutlness block In Toledo, O,
factory near Paris on the 18th. Thirty women
was destroyed by tire on -the morning of the of the evils that attend the use of Intoxicating were seriously injured and three killed.
The following resolutions were adopted by
drinks."
15th. Loes, 8650,000.
Thomas Dotlk and Katie A. Morgan, a tho National Agricultural Association at its
runaway couple from Oneida County, N. Y., session in Chicago on the Uth:
large percentage of-increase In some States Pennsylvania re-ciecled the Master, Secreta­ were found suffocated In their room at
of the cotton belt, and t pproxlmttes the crop ry, Tie sorer and Chairman of the Executive Rochester, N. Y^ on the morning of the 19th. able wasting of tho forest lands of the United
at 0,TOO,000 bales of 46) pounds each.
The prosecution of members of the Ob.\&gt;
Princb Takdbito, an ancle of the Mikado Legislature on thF"charge of bribery has ro- their destruction upon tho climate and water­
Tubeb days' .continuous Tain has recently
supply of the country, and are forced to concaused great flood* in Washington Territory of Japan, who left home In June and made a sulted in the acquittal of the accused.
and Oregon, mills, houses and bridges being
carried away. The Pendleton River rose so 15th. After visiting President Arthur, the dis­ tlnguish gas-lights and send people flying possessed by the people; therefore.
rapidly that dwellers in some districts were tinguished guest will return by wsy of Son into the streets was felt on tbe evening of
•• Hatoltxd, That w« urge upon the State
Francisco.
the 19th at Concord, N. H. Shocks were also Legislatures the propriety of selecting judiRobert Ould, Assistant Secretary of War felt at Manchester, Dover, Contocook, Pitts­
Thb steamer Kate Kinney, with a valuable
under the. Confederate Government, died at field and other towns.
his home In Richmond, Vs., a few days ago. .
A rraz at Grand Forks, Dakota, a few days
Godlove 8. Orra die-1 on the evening of ago swept away buildings and goods valued
turned, a high wind carrying blazing brands
tbe 16th.at Lafayette, Ind.,of blood-poisoning at &gt;100,1)00.
superinduced
by
cancer.
Ho
was
tho
sixth
A collision of freight trains occurred the lands In their respective commouwealths;
sangers lost, all their baggage.
other day near Melroeo. N. Y. John Reardon,
-/tadral, That we beg of all the agricult­
of
Pittsfield, Mass., was Instantly killed, and ural colleges established under the land-grant
Medical College at Philadelphia Were held
Judge Clinton Briggs, a pioneer resident four at the train men were fatally injured.
of Omaha, who was a candidate for election
Ross J. Alexander, tbe opponent of the late
charge of complicity in the robbery of bodies to tbe United States Senate, toll from a train
J. T. Updegraff in the Seventeenth Ohio Con­
rosn Lebanon Cemetery.
gressional contest, has been renotnlna. cd by
killed.
the Democrats for the vacant scat.
James L. Gilmore, who hod bad the day for
At Lougbrca, Ireland, on tho 19th a large
bls execution seven times appointed and had bls seventy-fifth birtb-day on the 17th.
number of laborers paraded the streets, as­
serted they were starving, and demanded
Ifrrotced, That Congress bo asked to establish
the Legislature, calls attention to the fact food or work. The Catholic Bishop dis trite
that in several counties Mormons vote and
bold office, and suggests that tbe Edmunds
Govxbnob Pobtxb, of Indians, has called
Tub rubber manufacturers decided at New bill should be extended over that Territory.
. special election for January 9 in the Ninth
York on tbe 15th to close their factories for
d Jones (Fla.) also speko on
House the Senate Mil author-

piAted goods,

troualyXrom fire. In February. K®, tho town
was almost completely destroyed; and another

creditor, ai&gt;

The Proposed Bankruptcy Law.

WHITE HEWING MACHINES
ESTCall and see.

C. L. GLASGOW

Our Great Bargains
Have nearly cleaned our store of Fall Goods, and we are now filling up with

WINTER

GOODS

----- XX TOWN.—•
GOOD HAHGAIN8 nnrt
I&gt;ILA.ILrNG

I
I

Have attracted the attention of all classes of people tooth- store, and our trade has been im
mense. Our new goods.
•

-ARE NOW ARRIVING
And W you come early you will be sure to find anything you want and at

AT PRICES THAT DEFY COMPETITION,
i

During the Holidays
. ■ &lt;~~T
...
. :
to all parties who buy of us goods to the amount of ten dollars or upwards at one time,

-WE WILL CIVEA valuable present worth at least One Dollar, or
■
I

A DISCOUNT OF TEN PER CENT
On the purchase. Don't fall to take advantage of this offer.

.

BUTTER, EGGS and DRIED APPLES
Are m good to us and a little

-BETTER THAN MONEY

C.W. GRANGER &amp; CO
And buy your clothing of

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN
At Buxton's New Block, '

THE ONE-PRICE CLOTHINC STORE
ve from 15 to 90 per cent

Every thing Aew, Stylish, and Durable.

Tbe attention ol Parents is respectfully called to our large stock of

CHILDREN’S, BOYS’, AND YOUTHS’ CLOTHING,
Which' te the most complete ever laid down in Naahville.
We are proud of our new stock or

HATS, HATS,

CAPS, CAPS,

And believe we have something desirable and very cheap.
We have mode additions to our

Boots, Shoes, Gents’ Furnishing Goods, Groceries, Underwear, Etc.
Our stock of

Boots and Shoes is larger than ever, and no competitor
will be allowed to undersell u«.

CALL

ATNI&gt; SEE.

PRINDLE &amp; CHIPMAN

NEW

TSTEW

STORE GOODS
OUR EFFORTS TO IMPROVE
Our surroundings and the community at large

Ing illegal political assessments, and denied
Bankruptcy bill substituted by the United

Rrv. Mosbly Dwiobt, a venerable Meth-

(HAVE BEENIAPPRECIATED

wrecked near Twllllngatc and several lives

OUR NEW STOCK OF GROCERIES
the CivU-ServZa HU pending in the United

And stUl they come.

halted &lt;m tbe public highway tbe other day

Crockery and Glassware
It provides that

U2

•150,001
lx the Untied Ftatee Senate

Table Cutlery
(■ftMlMsil

�SATURDAY,

-

VICIKITY

-

DEC.«. 18M.

LOCALS

HASTINGS.

rat coorri.
Bauuc: recounts as
kble occurrence in the
Hastings school: Consideraide com-,
motion was created in tho school* just
before the noon hour on Friday. One
of the teachers fainted away, frighten­
ing the children in her department,
who made a mad ru*h for tbe door and
a wild charge down the stairs. ■ Just at
this point another lady teacher appear­
ed upon the acene, inquiring into the
cause of the hubub. and wm gravely
informed by one of tbe
u®0;
cent* that their teacher "bad fallen out
the window." Some of the aforesaid
innocents thereupon began screaming
"firn! fire !•’” Then the whole of the
lower grade became Ma volcano, belch­
ing forth torrents of panic stricken
children who ran, slid, tumbled and
hustled out of the building. The noise
nnd uproar at last came to the ears of
the high school, and then there wa* fim
in dead earnest The students made «
promiscuous grab for such o’. 'ten be­
longings as came Lj
handy,
.‘.eicl.eu
out/Of
—
---------the doors and down W’ft^ajtiih-even
leas regard for ordjdr tnan the lower de­
partment. one ^oung lady in trying
to cover six steps at one jump, shed her
overskirt, but didn’t stop for repairs.
In the afternoon there was a general
hearty laugh indulged in by the schol ars, each claiming that he or she was
the last to leave the room. One teacher
declared that she "wasn’t afraid a bit;”
but certain pupils have it that she was
among the very first to don bat and
shawl. No blame is attached to any of
the teachers, and fortunately no serious
accident happened. Tbe alarm came
so suddenly, the panic assumed such
proportions before anyone iu authority
knew about it, that any effort to have
controlled the scholars would have
proven abortive.

this point.
1-rr.Mleat Anitrfl will tall u« «b»nt
China Jau. 5th.
Among the visitors in town this week
are Mr*. Clara Alien of Olivet and Mrs.
Slingeriaod of
Creek, to spend
the holidays. Geo. Bowers and wife
have returned to spend the winter, and
Mr. and Mn». Geo. Preston are home
.from Florida. Postmaster Nevins is
going to move to Gull Corners to take
care of his mother’s farm, add Billy
Powers is strongly talked of as his suecensor. Charlie Bowne has gone to Da­
kota, and Geo. Goodyear is back to his
poet after a short “illne**.”

BARRYVILLE.

;

Mr. OscarS. Burges, died of bron­
chial consuqu'tion yn tne 7th in*t, at
the residence vi bis son-in-law, Henry
Laturon :n Castleton. He was born in
Alburn, N. Y, Feb. 27th. 1806and was
the third child iu a family of sixteen
children, only one of which is living.
His father was a batter and of him he
learned the trade when a boy. When
about eighteen years of age, he entered
Hamilton college without means, and
like many other self-made men worked
to pay his way through. When he was
twenty-one years old he entered the
law office, as a student, of Wm. H.
Seward, and was a member of his fam­
ily for a time, and ho proved to be a
man of more than ordinary intelli­
gence and ability. After completing
his studies he located in Columbus,
Ohio, where he was married to Miss
Elixa Dunham in 1838. In a short time
be removed to Emmet, Calhoun Co.,
and became a farmer. In the fall of
I860 hb| wife died and was buried in
tbecemetry at Marshal, on a lot made
beautiful by his own careful hand, and
where his remains were deposited to
rest, untltiie resurrection morn. They
leave four children to mnurn their loss,
and with whom he lived the most of
the time during tho last few years of
bis life aud it was the unspeakable
pleasure of bis daughters to minister
to his wants in bis last sickness.

sou,in the person of Adalbert Olmstead,
who wm married the last week to his
daughter, Miss Elna Cargo.
Bellevue chapter of Royal Arch Ma­
sons hM elected the following officers:
F. E. Andrews, H. P.; Silas Anson,
king; H. A. Hunaiker, S-; L.B. Mor
gan, treasurer; J. K. Taylor, secretary;
Hiraia Ovenshire, C. H.; James Huggett, P. 8.; J. R. Hall, R. A. C., Wm.
Dexter, 8. Palmer, H. D. Hull, masters
of veils; H. A. Hodgman, sentinel. ‘
Alpha.
EATON COUNTY.

Onondaga hasa "Community” Christ­
mas tree. .
The West Windsor Lyceum is pro­
gressing finely.
The free reading room at Eaton Rap­
id*
been opened.
A Hi pound pickerel wm recently
speared nt Grand Ledge..
The Potter(ville) flouring mills ore
doing a big busin&amp;s this fall.
Grand Ledge has a literary society,
and public entertainiuhnta byri t.
Statler’s flour mill at Winfield is be­
ing repaired to the time of $2,000.
Lorin Hall, an old and respected resi­
dent of Vermontville, died recently.
Carmel township is enjoying a U. B.
revival meeting and a “gipsy” party.
Ralph N. Willicut of Roxand and
Hattie Tiffany qf Morenci are married.
Open bouses will be extensfveljrkept
by the ladies of Charlotte on New-Year
day.
J. Q. Thomas has bought a half in­
terest in Whitford’s shoe store at Char­
lotte.
Will Sprague of Kalamo has gone to
work in the Nichols &amp;. Shepard shops
at the Creek.
Geo.iWhelpby of Hoytville had three
sheep killed and six badly wounded by
dogs recently.
The Grand Ledge Baptist church
choir gives concerts in the surrounding
country towns.
You can dance at the Grand Ledge
Grange Hall or thj Mineral Spring
house, Christmas night.
‘
Geo. H. Frayer and family of Grand
Ledge recently lost everything by fire,
। and they are destitute.
"A Social Glass” is to be played at
Bellevue about Jan. 10, under the man­
agement of the fire company.
Mr. and Mrs. Sturge of Bellevue re­
cently celebrated their silver wedding,
and got oh! such lota of presents.
T. Henry Brooks, of near Bellevue,
has sold bi* farm to Frank and Wm.
McNamee, and will go to Kansas.
Tbe building of the new court-house
has been indefinitely postponed by the
burning of the plans in a recent fire.
Some workmen in Brookfield town­
ship sawed through a bullet buried in a
tree under 150 consecutive layers of
yearly growth.
Bismark: New baby at A. Truxton’s.
—Daniel Hulett and wife are going east
on a visit soon.—Tom Hulett and John
Grant are home again.
Clinton Trail: The protracted meet­
ings are successful.—Christmas trees in
the Presbyterian church and at the
Shaytown school-house tbp 23d.
Ann Elixa Young, the woman who
once had oue-ninetentb part of a hus­
band and now hasn’t any, lectured at
Eaton Rapids this week Monday.
Hnytville has Free Methodist revival
meetings and a high ditch tax, a new
feed barn and grocery, and the grangers
will have a Xmas tree on Christmas.
Later advices say that four draughts­
men are at work reproducing the court­
house plans, and they will probably be
ready by Jan. 3d. The old plans were
valued at $1,500.
Mrs. Julia Millp of.Olivet ha* gone to
Texas to engage in educational work.
No doubt her efforts are needed but
whether Texas can appreciate them,
aye, that’s the rub.
The father of Belle Hamil, tbe girl
who wm seduced and died in child-birth
at Battle Creek, *ay* that Will. 8. Titus
of Charlotte, who wm claimed to be the
seducer, is iu no way guilty.
VL Ville has a dramatic club and
Henry Brown a new 9 lb. boy, while
Editor Potter claim* that some candi­
dates who asked for puffs and got them
before election have forgotten it since.

The new postmaster at Carlisle is
Edwin Bordeau.
Middleville has a Musical Clique, and
a concert every few weeks.
.
Mr. Gordon, an old and respected res­
ident of Yankee Springs, is dead.
_ The Republican says I. H. Keelflr.i#
putting up the finest residence in Mid­
dleville.
The meetings in the church are still
Caledonia, just across the line above
continued.
Middleville, has a female preacher and
H. T. Miller can’t resist. He with
a gambler.
his family have gone to Ohio to spent
•The Middleville Congregationalism
the holidays.
will have their Christmas tree on Sat­
Air a Badcock is settled on L. E.
urday night.
Freeport has a paper, the Herald, Mudge’s place, and -Mudge has gone
to Arkansas to spend the winter.
which is said to be quite spicy. DrHiram Feagles had a horse become
H. C. Peckham does tbe business.
lame recently, and after two days time
Hickory Cornerg will have a Christhe found it with a broken leg, all in an
mM(evening) tree at tbe Baptist church
unaccountable manner.
and a New-Y ear dance at the hotel.
There is to be a tree at the church
Wm. McMurray of Carlton was ar­
Saturday evening, in connection with
rested on Monday for complicity with
the Sunday school and all are invited
Carpenter in qpuaing Alice Field’s
to be present and help make and en­
death.
'
joy a good time.
Chas. Severn and wife of Assyria
Item Izer.
have returned from their wedding trip,
and Charles Baker and wife froir Point
EAST MAPLE GROVE.
St. Ignace.
The sleigh bells ring merrily.
There will be an oyster supper on the
8. D. Robart is getting lumber for a
evening of the 27th at the M- P. church
of Barry ville for tbe benefit of Rev. D. house.
Dances are getting thicker, fastey,
Byrt, and all are cordially invited to at­
and more of them.
tend.
James Perry is talking of attaching
The Hastings Banner man seems to be
everywhere present. Something less a feed-gnnder to his saw-mill.
N. C. Hagerman grinds feed at his
than fourteen of his correspondents
this week mention that his “smiling busy mill every Monday and Thursday.
Neal Lamb has come down with
phix" was seen on their streets.
The Middleville Congregationalism blood in his eye and bid farewell to old
have a fair this week Thursday and Fri­ glory.
day evenings, with a chicken pie the
Lorenxo Andrews’ cat came home,
first evening, an oyster supper the next, the other day, in rather a bad condition,
and ice cream both evenings. Think tail and both ears cut off close to the
|body.
of it.
A dance was given at Amos Dixon’s
Geo. S. Hartom of Assyria has ar ested the man Smith that obtained a gun on Wednesday evening, and another
of his wife under false pretences. He occurs at Jrmes Perry’s on thia Friday
wm bound over to the session of court evening, to which all are cordially in­
and sent to jail for safe keeping. Har­ vited.
There was a dance at W. Anderson’s
tom is a squar dealer, and don’t propose
an Friday night of last wt ek for the
to fool with such fellows as Smith.
benefit
oPLevy Goodrich, a young man
Orangeville: Dogs killed three sheep
for L. Bingham.—The stave-mill is do­ of thia vicinity who has been sick for
ing a big business, and a saw-mill is some time. The proceeds amounted
soon to be added.—Job England in one to about $12.
day killed six wild turkeys, total weight
We understand that a couple of men
I. 00 pounds.—Charged that the report of who reside on tbe town line between
the drain commissioners is a little twis­ Maple Grove and Assyria got into
ted, making a Mr. Mason bear an an us­ words over a wood rack. One of them
ually heavy tax, which his friend# are allowed his angry passions to rise to
trying to raise by subscription.
such an extent a* to take np a stick of
Henry R. Staudt of Charlotte wm ar­
wood and hit the other over the head,
NORTH MAPLE GROVE.
knocking him senseless for a few rested on Friday last for feloniously
taking a horse from G. 8. Brown of
Sleighing rather thin.
Lansing, but Staudt claims that the
Mis* Chance is teaching a No. 1 school
horse is hi*, that hd raised it from a
BELLE? DE.
colt, that it was wrongfully taken from
fl, just the name.
A q^aiterly meeting wm held in the him and secreted to avoid legal process,
FZWallaoe And wife axe keeping M. E. church here last Sunday, Elder
and afterwards disposed of. and that
house far T. Fluke during- bis family’s Taasett of Olivet preaching.
he hM been in search of her for tbe
Mrs. Henry Hart, near this village, is
Mias Mary Guy returned from a visit very iM. Dr. Hull is her physician. Dr.
Much fault hM been found at Char­
to Woodland Center Tuesday.
Robertson of Battle Creek wm called lotte because the taxes this year are
The U. B. Sabbath whoo! reorgan :xes
about a third higher than last, and on
wovt, Sunday.
Editor Perry is laboring hard to make Tueeday evening a meeting to ascertain
Those who trip “tbe light fantastic'’ tbe GmsOs a good, live readable paper, if poouible the reason of the increase
and the improvment over the old reTbe writing school at McKeiry’a

p-jnence” by rcmebody, wm decidedly
applicable and witty, and I think I can
well aquaintod with his past history. guess itis author. I sonidtimea get to
This wedding is positive proof of the thinking uf the time When there wm
fact that the fools are not all dead yet, Some pretty lively akirmishingalong the
but the neighbors derive some satisfac­ line on the old battlefield of The News,
tion from the fact that wife No. 8 will when the wounded were earned off the
comb his hair with the boot-jack should field, crying for vengeance and declar­
occasion require it.
ing they would never enter the field
Tho old school-house site was not sold 'again; some more thoughtful withdrew
last Saturday afternoon, as had been crying "he that fights and runs away
advertised, and it will probably not be may live to fight some other day.”
Butalas! as Orno Strong wrote “time
sold nbW until the matter In laid Jwtore
the supreuit '-ourt and h decision ren­ changes all.” We live, prosper nnd die
dered. Saturday afternoon, just before .and others fill our places, jjwt so. The
the time set for the sale,-the conclusion &gt; Bugle sounded it's blast, tbe Olio wm
waa arrived at that an order from the spread for all, bu&lt; the poor wounded
court authorising the sale would be nec­ ones of the-old field of strife beard the
essary before any further steps could be cry from afar off, and buckling on their
taken, and a postponment was had at armor of brass hastened for tbe latest
the time for one week. J. M. Powers News nnd boldly entered the old field,
and H. M. A lieu visited Charlotte- and, like one "cousin Jack” after quar­
Tuesday, nnd the case-was laid before reling with his brother cried "I’ll for­
Judge Hooker, by Mr. Powers; repre- give thee, but PH always remember
serting the district, and Mr. Dean, of thee,” and now there’s no more use for
the firm of Pennington &amp;. Dean, for the the Bugle or Olio, as all is calm and se­
*
complainants. At that time it .was de­ rene.
cided by the complainants to appeal the.
But enough of this, so good bye, for
V. D. Andkewn.
case. This matter is going to be fought tliis time.
step by step by both sides, and neither
CHINK INGS.
lacks the determination.—The Bellevue
'Gazette.
Five of tiie sweetest words in the
English language begin with h—which
The Land of Snow.
is only a dreath; heart, hope, home,
Ontomagos, Mich., Dec. 7.
happiness and heaven.
Dear Friend : Couldn’t write soon­
At the alter she vowed to cling to hiur
er; same old story, "overtaxation of and he says she keep# her word, but it
brain,”aud unless I get relief soon I is generally to bis hair that s’»e clings
shall have to spend the rest of my dayu with all the tenacity of a fond heart.
in the north woods.
A Vermont man sealed a frog up in a
1 was on the North Mountain Range stone box and buried him three feet un­
up to the 24th of Novembu , at which der ground, and yet when he opened
time it began to snow, nnd it never him up at tbe end of fourteen months
stopped to rest or get a better hold till, the frog hopped off about his business
well it’s now the 7th of December and as though nothing uniiHaal hadocctired.
the snow is still falling.
Senator McPherson, of New Jersey,
Well on the morningof the 24th I had has purchased 500 cows and gone into
two and a half feet of snow to contend the dairy businemi. That ends his
with, "nary” a snow shoe, and 15 miles career as an honest man. No man ever
to the nearest inhabitant, no guide; no yet stood the temptation to add a quart
road, only a pocket compass and an old of water to three of milk where he had
abstract map. But I’ve seen sicker the chance.
men live, and so I said "life is sweet,”
and I’ve got lots of pluck, grip and
PITH AND POLTT.
perseverance, and away I started on my
15 mile journey, aud actually made the
—Eloquence is the best speech of th*
distance by 8 o’clock p. m. next day, and best soul.
reached thia place two days later, all
—It is difficult for a woman to keep a
used up, but I immediately crawled in­ secret, and I know more than one man
to my room and watched things out­ who is a woman.—La Fontaine.
side and made up my mind that it was
—The average man is suppo«ed to lose
the worst storm I ever witnessed—ex­ six cuff buttons per year, and he is just
cept one, where my friend "West Kal- mean enough not to.throw away the old
amo” got struck by lightning at the R. ones so that tbe finder can make a pair.
I R. club—. Why, it is colder than the —Detroit Free Preu.
—“ The astronomers at Harvard Uni­
d—reary Artic regions. The snow is
falling, blowing and drifting; one can’t versity have figured out that the comet
went
around the sun at the rate of 400
see the nearest building; it is tbe third
miles a second. Probably the sun had
day of the storm, and yet no signs of let a bill against the comet.’’— Chicago
up out&amp;de.
Tribune.
Terrible! terrible! to one notaccustom—An English woman says: “English
ed to such weather, and when I think women can’t hold a candle to French
how deep the snow must bn on the women in the matter of flirting.” Per­
Range, and bow I would have suffered haps if they could it would throw some
light on the
subject.—Norrutoum
had 1 remained there, I truly thank
Herald.
Pro ridence that I escaped to this place.
—There is a cow in Pennsylvania that
But, by the way, you will remember goes limping through life with a
what a time we bad looking up the de­ wooden leg. What a bonanza the owner
rivation, definition and pronunciation would have if he could turn that leg
of Ontonagon. Well I got ’em at last into a pump and make the animal stand
and here it is: "A band of Flambeau in a stream of water while he wm milk­
Indiana were encamped on the banks ing.— N. T. Advertieer.
—Orchestra] players are getting to be
of the nyer where this village now
■tands, and, at that time an unknown intolerably conceited. Th* piccolos are
dreadfully high-toned, the trumpeters
wilderness to the white man. A beauth are always blowing their own horn, the
ful and lovely Indian maiden had wend­ fiddlers oomplain that they are sub­
ed her way to the river for water,' and jected to such violint exereise, and tho
with a guprd shell,—an article which drummers are all on a strike.—N. Y.
they use for the purpose— was in the Post.
—A. great many things are accepted
act of dipping up the water, when, to
her horror, the shell slipped from her by us as a matter of course in this coun­
try. An Austin notary was called to
hand and went floating down the take the acknowledgment of a witness
stream. The poor maiden raised her to a deed. He wrote out: “To me, well
eyes and gaxed after her treasure known, personally appeared------ by the
which was fa^t nearing the lake, and way, what is your name, anyhow P”—
while intently watching her lost re­ Texas Siftings.
—Which arm—the right or left—
ceptacle, she was surprised to behold a
canoe advancing slowly toward her, should be given a lady when walking in
impelled by a couple of .adventurous a crowded street?—George. In Phila­
delphia and other orderly cities give her
white men, and as she watched it M it
the right arm, so that she may not be
came nearer and nearer her treasure,
an idea seemed to suddenly occur to cago and St. Louis give her the left
her, and after attracting their attention arm and carry your right hand in your
she pointed her index finger first at the pistol-pocket.—Philadelphia New.
men in the canoe and then at her fast
—“What makes you ask such a high
receding gourd and cried “On-ton- price for this little room?” asked Koagon! On-ton-agon! On-ton-agon!” the sfosco Murphy of an Austin landlord.
word* meaning "Oh, my bowl! Oh, my “Well, there is a young man next door
who plays on the aooordeon. You don’t
bowl! Oh, my bowl!” The men secur­ expect to have your innermost soul
ed the shell and banded it to it’s now stirred up from the bottom every even­
happy owner, and from thence both ing and not pay anything for it, do you P
nver and locality was called On-ton- Me sings, tool”-7taa* Siftings.
agon.’’ I give this bit of historical in­
cident to you with the belief that it will
CARDS OF THANKS.
be of great interest to you.
Well, ’tis now one day later; tbe wind
has abated, but the air is aa keen as a
Mendabip which
razor; people are busy shoveling roads LheartCy appreciate, pure
to the neighbor# wbo
and preparing to start up business felt slighted beeauiw I did not etee them an In­
again. The snow will average 4 ft deep vitation to the huaking bee. I wUl my that I
knew nothing of ft until they drove^ugHto jny
on a level throughout the country, and
where it ain’t level it’s "awful deep.”
This is a beautiful country when it ia returns their siocere thanks
beautiful, and a terrible country when tbe Oepartineat who ass '
it i* terrible, and were 1 to try to give tag IM "for of Sbftab.
you any idea of it’* freak* and fancies,
I would make a flat failure of the effort,
and disgust both you and myself.

the wealthiest and most prominent men
Geo. W. Walker, who waa kicked In
Bat tbe u wealthiest and
tbe face and badly b art by a horee, is
in
lage Saturday, though he stall looks a*
if be had received hard usage.
There is to be a wedding in this town-

Roxand baa lately enjoyed a matri-

Mr. Editor we won’t tell you

took advantage at it were Albert Allen,

r.

m

1 coaid not make it plain and in-

The Newscoomo very irregular, no

No Whiskey!
BrowN's Iron Bitters
i$ one of the very few tonic
medicines that are not com­
posed mostly of alcohol or
whiskey, thus becoming a
fruitful source of intemper­
ance by promoting a desire
for rum.

Brown’s Iron Bitters
is guaranteed to be a non•intoxicating stjmulant, and
it will, in nearly every case,
take the place pf all liquor,
and at the same time abso- •
lutely kill the desire for
whiskey and other intoxi­
cating beverages.

Rev. G. W. Rice, editor of
the American Christian Re­
view, says of brown’s Iron
Bitters:
On..O., Not. iC.iSSi.
GcnU:—The foolish wwii ’ ing of vital force in business,
1 pleasure, and vicious indulpMje of our people, makes
your preparation a necessity
and 11 applied, will save hun­
dreds who resort to saloons
for temporary recuperation.

Brown’s Iron Bitters
has been thoroughly tested
for dyspepsia, indigestion?
biliousness, weakness, debil­
ity, overwork, rheumatism,
neuralgia,
consumption,
liver complaints, kidney
troubles, &amp;c., and it never
fails to render speedy and
permanent relief

£JR00K8, MARSHALL ti CO.

---------- Proprietors----------

.

Nashville Elevator!
Pay the highest marketprice for all klndaof

Grain and Produce,
----------- And Sill-----------

Seeds, Feed, Lime, Halt, Plaster, Stuc­
co, Hair, Pine Lumber, Lath
and Shingles,
AT THE LOWEST LIVING PRICES.

THE NEW MARKET
Of D. L. Durfee
-IS ALIVEAnd continues to dispense all kinds
of

Fresh&amp;Salt Meats
To the satisfaction of its large and in­
creasing list of patrons.

—We also keep—

Dried Reel; Smoked Meats, Lard,
Etcetera,
Cbod Coods, Full Weights,
and Low Prices
Shall endeavor to prove to tbe good people of
Nashville and vicinity that It la good to have s.

( uh fbr Hides, Pelts, Fte.
D. L. DURFEE.

War Volumes of
“Harper’sWeekly.”
We would call the attention of parti co who

Harper’s Pictorial History of the
Rebellion,
Weekly duriig the War.

thst, In accordance with

Price, Delivered:

McDOHNELL BROS.

�SATURDAY,
MAKS BtLltl’X.

to tbe r«n*.

. tain b&gt;*X platter
A n«h from a milk weed, qo fifth could be fatter.

spriinr.
■re hkiiu
bring

sort:

Our butter, a daisy with petal* plpcked off.

From ii
Ofl£n&lt;

to; no money couM

I tophtxl nt notnc palntjinn when dinner was
With omabed petal* of Dower* and tbe leave*
Union.

OLD AND HARE BIBLES.

The sale of old and rare Bibles forms
an important branch of the second-hand
book trade in New York. Bibles of an
»arly date, or of which small editions
only have been published, are eagerlv
sought after, and, for good copies high
prices are occfuiiohally paid. The uemnnd. of course, fluctuates from time to
time, but certain books meet at all times
with a njady sale, and American houses
find the trade lucrative enough to eraplov European agentsand to send buyers
to Europe at certain periods for the-spe­
cial-purpose of seaivhing out old and
curious Bibles. The majority of" the
Bibles which apjwar in the market
through American channels are of little
value. The uninitiated arc likely to at­
tach great value to mere age; whereas
unless an old lx»k possesses peculiarities
of text oris a bibliographical rarity it is
almost worthless.
From information gathered by a World
reporter on the subject it appears that
the Bibles most in demand hre the “Vin­
egar.” “Breeches,” “Presbyterian,"
and Douai versions. Of the first named
there are probably twenty copies in
America. •The version takes its name
from the substitution -of the word “vin­
egar" for “vineyard” in the twentieth
chapter of Matthew. It was pub­
lished in two volumes by Bassett, of
London, in 1717. and there are perhaps
a hundred copies extant It Is embel­
lished with a frontispiece and vignettes
by Von der Gricht A. fine copy has
been sold in England for as much as
twenty guineas, Uiougli a fair one could
be bought here for seveuty-five dollars.
So impressions were taken on vellum.
i of which is in the British Museum
and the other in tho Bodleian Library at
Oxford. The “Breeches” Bible is so
called from the use of the word “breech­
es" in place of “aprons” in Genesis HL,
7. The Breeches Bible was }&gt;rinted in
1560 at Geneva by Rouland Hall, and
went through fifty editions within thirty
years. U is common in America, but
Erfect specimens are hard togeL Copies
ve been sold in New York at from ten
to twenty dollar*. The “Presbyterian”
Bible is found in the American market
from time to time. It is a King James
version, and was published by Buck &amp;
Daniel of Cambridge, in 1638. The sub­
stitution of the word -“ve” for “we” in
Actavi. 3. materially afters the import
of the text. The error was. without
foundation, imputed to the Presbyte­
rians, hence the name of the book. Con­
ks may be bought for tliirty dollars each.
The number extaut is unknown.
Cop­
ies of the version printed by Johri Cou­
turier at Douai in 1635, are numerous,
and are sold at low prioen.
There are innumerable other versions
of the Bible which attract purchasers on
account' of their containing typography
ical or other errors. During the Com­
monwealth in England tbe press was
prolific of Bibles, which wery not re­
markable for accuracy of text. Dr. CoL
ton. tbe famous bibliophile, stigmatized
the Bibles of the Protectorate as “filled
with egregious blasphemies and damn­
able errata." It is well known that a
Bible formed part of the eouipment of
each of Cromwell's Ironsides. “The
Soldier’s Pocket-Book,’’ published iu
London in 1648, and reprinted at Cam­
bridge, Maaa., in 1861, has on the title
page the characteristic sentence: "Trust
in the Lord and keep the powder dry.”
Copies of the reprint are valued at *4 to
85. Of tbe originals two only are said
to be in existence. One of them is it
the British Museum and the other formed
part of the collection of iho late Mr.
Geums Livermore. Mr. Sotheran, the
Lonuon publisher, reproduced in 1862
the “Soldier’s Pocket-Book” in foe sim­
ile. Five copies were printed on vellum,
on- ol which was sold at the Men­
zies side in New York for $17.
The first Bible printed in a foreign

version issued at Germantown, Pa. in
1743. It is becoming rather valuable, a
2y having been ftoid at the Brindley
»in April of last year for $360. .The
WTintt Indian

Samuel Green
•on. It is believed that no

Eijmicti, Rename, ni RnjouiMt.

In

of Mina Muller. Her bnabaod. in Whose
Therein on.view at Messrs._____
Leavitt
. , „’s,
.., house the trunk* were found, wm too ill
tho book auctiomwrs, n “
• Bible of to attend. Soberer died shortly after the
the 8word,” printed in 1535 at
“*__Neu■ oonviutkm. ' Hi* widow wm the widow
chatel, Switzerland, by Peter de। of Mr. Beta, to whom «he wm united
Wingle. This book. Wtod st tbsi aboutthree years ago, After her second
instance of the Waldense*.
wasI husband’s demise abo fell desperately in
published under the personal super­ love with Charles Parker, a handsome
vision of Calvin and Olivetan. hi* coad­' young fellow, and a favorite in Hoboken
jutor. It takes its name from the emblem। society. Tbe widow is not yet thirtyfive, and still possesses some beauty.
। Parker apparently reciprocated, the af___
____ which are rare fectidh. and became a regular visitor at
_____ The Messrs. -Leavitt also
। her hotel. He finally persuaded her to
rshow a copy of one of the first printed move to Hoboken that she might be
editions cf the Scriptures, wliich wasi nearer to him, and she, willingly dis­
published in Latin at Nuremberg by posed of her property, and, with a snug
Anthony Coberger In 1475. The'cap­ sum of money- -about $15,000—engaged
itals are illuminated by band. The rooms in a fashionable boanling-nouse
volume is bound in vellum on oak on Park Avenue. She herself tells the
panels, the covering stamped with rellgr rest of the story. She says about March
lous designs. It was bought at Frank­ 1 she and Parker agreed to be married;
fort last summer. There are copies in but he, according to her statement, was
Aip&lt;’rica of Bexa’s Geneva Bible (1660), not disposed to wed her until he was in
tire first printed in Roman characters'' business and would in no wise be depend­
instead of in black letter. It is curious ent upon her’bounty. This pleased tho
to note that the finrt book ever stereo­ widow, and she wm willing to wait.
typed was the New Testament in*Syriac, Shortly after this Parker informed her
and that the first book published by of a brilliant opportunity to make a for­
subscription was a Polyglot Bible in six tune. It wm tho nurphaae of a glsasvolumes, edited by J. Walton, and dated lettering establishment at No. 42 Cham­
London. 1657.
bers Street, this city. 8he was re«dy to
Original copies of the King James aid him in making the purchase, and'adversion are occasionally soldin America. vanced bin! $1,000, but being a shrewd
Mr. John Carter Brown, of Providence, woman she loaned the amount with the
It I., purchased for £40 at Sir William understanding that he was to have the
Tite’s sale in London in 1874 on imper­ business assigned to her. Several
fect volume of Tyndall's translation of smaller loans were obtained, raising her
the Pentateuch- • At the same sale Cov­ lover’s indebtedness to $1,700.
erdale's “ English Translation of the
She tarried long and many dates were
Holy Scriptures,” in black letter, sold assigned &gt;for the marriage, but when
for £750, and a Breeches Bible brought they arrived he would give some plaus­
£27. Mr. Brown was formerly propri­ ible reason why the ceremony ought to
etor of the.four great national Polyglot be still further delayed. She finally grew
Bibles—the Complutonsian (1514-17), impatient, os his visits become less fre­
the Paris Polyglot (ten fqlio volumes, quent She made inquiry, and ascer­
large paper edition), the Antwerp Poly­ taining that he bat! not had the business
glot (six volumes), and Walton’s Poly­ he purchased assigned to her she mad-’
glot, with “ Castell's Lexicon” (eight this the bMis of an action to bri ighim
volumes folio). An interesting work to to terms. On Saturday last she applied
bibliographers is the “Great” or Crom­ to Justice Rusch, of Hoboken, for a war­
well’s Bible, which bears the arms of rant alleging that Parker had obtained
Thomas,' Lord Cromwell,, on the title­ money from her under false pretenses
page. It was begun by Gratton and In court the widow was willing to with­
Whitchurch in Pons in 15*28 and finished draw the complaint if the alleged lover
in London in 1533. The titles were de­ would have tne justice unite them in
signed by Hans Holhein. Imperfect marriage. This was the shortest way
copies only of the black-letter edition of out of the trouble anti ho accepted her
Tyndall and Coverdale’s Dutch and proposition. Tho bride came un smil­
Latin translation, printed in double col­ ing, but the bridegroom looked glum
umns, with wood-cuts by Hans. Gebald and requested the justice to “cut it
Beham, are in existence in America. A short” The bride, when she gave her
moderately good specimen is valued at age to the justice, drew from the other
from 8750 to $1,000.
high contracting party the ungallant re­
Fabulous prices are on occasion paid mark; "Well, you're old enough to be
for scarce books. The highest sum re­ marriedj that’s sure.” This incensed
corded as having been given for a Bible her. and she said that She would not
waa that paid for a “Mazarin” copy at wed him and insisted upon nrossing the
the Perkins sale in London in 1873— charge. This frightened Parker. He
£3,400. Two leaves were in ,fac simile. wm defiant however, until the justice
Mr. Perkins had bought it in 1825 for commenoed filling up die commitment
£564. The highest figure ever realized when he appraichea the bride. There
in America was for a two-volume copy was a reconciliation, and they were made
of the same edition, which Messrs. mon and wife. They, with the justice
Leavitt sold recently for $8,000. Mr. and others who were assembled in the
Hamilton Cole, an' amateur collector, court, adjourned to a neighboring restau­
was the purchaser. For the Sykes copy rant and partook of the wedding feast.
of the same book £2,630 was paid iu —N. I’. /Trrtrid.
1873. A specimen is at the Lenox Li­
brary. The Mazarin Bible in the BibDisobedieut Parents.
.
liotheque Natiouale of Paris is the most
Some years ago Lucius Woodworth, of
valuable copy of the Scripttires in the
world. Thisveision is called also tho Omaha, was in tbe wagon business, and
“Guttenberg,” having been the first desired to sell William H. Root’afathera
Ctrinted with movable types. It is printed buggy. He didn't know how he could
n double columns in two volumes. De work it without outside help, so be esked
Brue, the great French bibliographer, William to start in with him, and said
discovered it in the library of Cardinal he wouldn't mind a five dollar note if the
Mazarin, whose name the edition has scheme worked all right.
William made the effort, but failed,
since bore. There are only eleven
copies known to exist, and none of these and went to Mr. Woodworth to tell him
■
is perfect. At the Menzies sale in New about it.
••I’ve tried the old gent a little, Mr.
York, $15.50 was paid for two leaves of
Woodworth," said he, “but I don't
Faust &amp; Shaeffer’s 1472 version.
I’m afraid
An industry which is prosecuted with seem to get ahead much.
success and has received great impetus that I haven't^ that influence with my
of late years is the purchase of biblical father that I used to have. I don't know
and other works for the sake of their whether it is because he has lost faith in
plates, the books being torn up and their my judgment or not Anyhow I didn't
cute used for illustrating valuable copies seem to catch on as I bad hoped I would.’ ’
“Well” said Lucius Woodworth, “the
of the Bible. Tbe idea may be said to
have been first carried into effect in the trouble is, that a* a matter of fact your
pubUcation of Granger’s “Historv of father is getting so old and trifling Billy,
England” in 1769-74, of which work that I don't belcive you will be able to
It's a bad
twenty seta were struck off on Atlas manage him much longer.
paper, space being loft for the insertion state of affaire when a father goes beyond
of illustrations. Old Bibles, which are the control of his son. I had a father
not rare, d-rive their value from the use once who got thkt way. I did all I could
to which their plates mav be put. Mr. to win him back to obedience and suc­
Wright, from the firm of John Wiley’s cess, but he mocked my endeavors and
Sons, nas constructed some valuable tilled an early grave at the age of nine­
books in this manner. The famous • 'ten ty-one years. If he had availed himself
thousand dollar” Bible contains about of my ripe advice he might hav lived
60,000 illustrations, most of which have to bless his atm instead oi making his life
been inserted. A London bookseller a miserable failure.
‘•You will sec Billy that your father
named Brown spent about thirty years
of his life in collecting engravings for will be just that way. He will gradually
this book from all conceivable sources. pay less and less attention to your warn­
It is a Kitto’s (1837) Bible, chosen on ing and advice till bye and bve he wont
account of possessing a greater number care a continental for a word you say.”
of iiiuitrahons than onv other Bible. —Nyes Boomerang. Mr. J. W. Bouton, the New York book­
seller, valued it at $10,000, seme years
The Rew Mozart.
So. It is now in a private library at
The son of David Neal, the famous
wego, N. Y.
Manuscript Bibles are valued at much American painter, who lives in Munich,
higher prices generally than most of the at the ago of nine yeans exhibited (he
early printed edition*. A rare volume most marvelous musical powers, and
is the “Biblia Pauperum,” written and heard his own compositions played by tbe
illuminated by hand, of which there were band of the famous Prince Royal regi­
five editions of some twenty volumes ment He was lifted above the heads of
issued. It receives its name from the people and musicians to receive the ap­
fact of its having been the only copy of plause and their recognitions m a comthe Scriptures within the reach of poor poaer. The new Mozart they call hjn.
He is now eleven yearsold, and isaU the
In very bad condition, but arc worth time coratxising. He improvised on the
thousands of dollars each. Temperley piano while he wore bibs. In one of his
accounts for tbe destruction of this book letters at CnristmM to the “ChriMkfad.”
he mentioned but ooegift. and that the
was subjected. A reprinted copy by most involved and learned volume at es­
John Russell Smith, of London, brought says on composition. For days after
$10.50 at the Menzies sale. A copy of receiving it he was up at five o'clock iu
a German mahuacript missal of about the morning devouring its pages. Strauss
1350 is in MMMMiM ol Meaart. Wiley. has bean to see him. taken him In his
Vellum is the material uw-d and the Il­ arms and shed some tears over him.
luminations are superb. The volume is
—It i* estimated that the teeth uadeigt
being o&lt; very
Maud stwktod

The beet

A. H. WINN, Dentist.
Blttert/ttepirw*! _
_
Hof Bittsm* MAXUvacHtaixo Co.
My doctor'* bill l»-l *uYutncr"wi* oyer $100,
wlt-ij uo apparent benefit- Since taking /&gt;••Fhora tbfe MH l» *4, mJ 1 have nut been so well
in year*. .
Mas. Wm. H. Ruru.
Oct 9, leSl.__________ Sedgwick City, Kan.
An old ruaty iron box retcntly found al the
nxita of a tree In Gwinnett county, Ga., con­
tained 4300 in gold.
\.

BEST SET BUM TEETH 110.00

DON’T DIE IN THE HOUSE.

Ask druggta,te for “Rough on Rate-”

KAPID8 DIVISION.

Teeth Extracted Without Paia.

Office Open Day &amp; Evening.
A. H. WINN.

WHY WELCOME I

What make* Ftorefttoo Cologne welcome on
every ladv'* toilet table Utt* larting fragrance
and rich, flowery odor'■
Ornon, an African king, who died a abort
time ago, leave* TfiO widow* and 77 childrenHU eldest son has 400 wire*.

brtrott
p 31
A'riyapMrollfrMfMB

1&gt;. V Eiprv»«
AtGuule Ki. .

STATIONS.

Ml.I.Ho-.HIr.

S. S INBERSON 4 SON
Ri»*» JOfcCliOB
Jaekcoa
IHtrolt.

I
STATIONS.

A woman In Butler Countj, Penney’rank,
•talc »erru boras* before *he waa detected, and

Lumber, Salt, and Coal

NASHVILLE, MICH.
FREE OF CHARGE.
All perron* suffering from Cough*. A*tbm*
Bronchltt*,
of Voice, or any affection of
tbe throat and Lung*, arc requeued to call at
F. T. Bows’* and. get a trial bottle of Dr.
King'* New Diacovery for Con*umptlon, free
of charge, which will convince them of ft* won­
derful merit*and show what a regular dollarBlzc bottle will do. Call early.

A Berlin butcher who named one of bla
product* tbe Blamarck Muaage haa been arrest­
ed for Insulting the gouty statesman.
CATARRH OF THE BLADDER.
Stinging, smarting, irritation of Ute urinary
iiasaages, diseased discharges, cured by Buchutrnbla tl, at druggist*. Mich.- Depot, JAB.
E. DAVIS &amp; CO.. Detroit, Mich.

A farmer in Statesville, N. C-, ha* rallied five
•ucceaaive crop* of strawberries from his plant*
this year.
•"
IMPORTANT TO TEA YELERN,

Special Inducements are offered you .by the
BurlitigtoaRoute, it will payyou to read their
advertisement* to be found elsewhere In this

There are now living in tbe United Stale* 291

aud Stripe*.
■
■ .
Now I* tbe time to treat Catarrh of long
*tand:ng. Elys' Cream Balm reacbe* old, and
obstinate case*, where all other remedies fail.
Do not neglect procuring a bottle, a* in it lie*
the relief you neek. Price 50 cent*.
Apply Into nostril* with little Unger.
Catarrh, For fifteen years I have been great­
ly annoyed with this disgusting disease, which
causeii wvere pain In my bead, continual drop­
ping into toy throat aud unpleasant breath. My
»&lt;-n*c of smell wm much impaired. By a
tlHirvugb use for six month* of Elys' Cream
Balm I have entirely overcome these troubles.
8.B. Case. St. Deni* Hotel, Bruodwiyand 11th
St.. N.Y.
• •__________
“What are'egg* thl* morning!". “'Egg*, of
ofcousre" says th* dealer, humorously. “Well”
adds the customer,“I am glad of It, for the last
I bought of you were chickens; '
BOW SHE SMTID HER DARLING.
“I shall not fee! so nervous again about babv’» teething,” write* a grateful mother. "We
aonost lost our darling from cholera Infantum,
but happily heard of Parker's Ginger Tonic iu
time. A lew spoonful* aoou cum! baby, and
au occasional do*c keep* u» in good health.”—
Brooklyn Mother.

A word of kindness is seldom spoken in vain.
It Is a seed, which, even when dropped by
chaoce, springs up a flower.
BUCKLEN’S ARNICA 8ALVE.
Tbe best salve in the world for Cuta, BruUe*,
Sorts, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sore*, Teller,
Chapped Hands, Chilblain*, Corus, aud all
Skin Eruptions, and positively cures rile*. It
la guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or
money refunded. Price 25 cent* per box. For
sale by F. T. Boisz.
A man tn Sfracnac tx»a*ta that he lias bad
303 qolds in the bead in one year. He’d better
rent his bead for an Ice-box.
FEVER AND AGUE.
Are vou troubled with Ague. Chill* and Fe­
ver, Bilious Fever, Remittent or Intenuittlng
Fever, Night Sweat* or any disease that come*
from Malaria or disordered Liver and Hot
Suns! If so, procure a bottle of Green'* Ague
Conqueror, which la an acetic extract of strorg
tonic root*, c mblncd with Sulphate of Mag­
nesia, etc., and po*tlvc)y contain* no Quinine.
Arsenic or other poison*. It purifies the blood
cleanse* the liver, spleen and other secretive
organ* so effectully that the chills will not re­
turn. We have never found any case of Fever
and Ague it will not cure. Price, 30 cents and
|1 00 per bottle. One large bottle has cured a*
five in one family. Sold by all druggist* and
15 Jan 83
dealers everywhere.

1883.

Harper’s Magazine
ILLUSTRATED.

T1IK PLACE TO BEY

Hardware, Glass, Tin and Copperware,

D.ttott,.

V«rn&gt;or tvllle,.

SS'KK-ir
Hammond,--Oread Rapid*,.

a

i 1!.

8

CUTLERY, NAILS, PAINTS.

Oils, Pumps, Cross-cut Sans
Farm Tools,
And everything in tbe hardware Hoe, is at

BUSH
“THE BQ6&amp;

BOOT AND SHOE MAKER,
WOODLAND.
SW Stock larger and Price* lower than ever
before.
Every Description of Tinware Done
Right and Low.
L. FA UL.

JJENBV ROE,

QLEMEMT SMITH,

Attorney at Law

PROPRIETOR

----- OLD RELIABLE------

MEAT MARKET.
Fresh and Salt Meats,

Smoked Earns and Shonlden,

JAMES A. SWEEZET,

Attorney &amp; Counsellor,
gL.AC'14 A MOV

American and Foreign Marble,
MomunOTte, T'’irthr*OTi3, Mantlet, 4c.,

Lard,, by the lb. or barrel,
•
dx., de., de.
US'" The Highest Market Price paid
for Hides, Pelts, fltc.

Fresh Goods, Full Weights and
Satisfaction Guaranteed.
________

HENRY ROE-

JJAMTINuM HOLME,
N.T. PARKER, Prop.
Hasting*. Rate* rvaeuaible.

HOLME,

NEW GOODS.
Let every Woodlander re­
member that my new stock of
winter goods is larger than ev­
er and was bought at

1883.

Harper’s Weekly.
ILLUSTRATED.

Rock Bottom Prices
and will be sold at a slight ad­
vance above actual cost.
Prepare for cold weather by
buying your
HARPER’S PERIODICALS.
now. Our stock is complete
in every respect.
Also New Dry Goods, Boots,
Shoes, Hats, Caps, Groceries,
Etc., in endless profusion.
We haven’t time to enumer­
ate, and if we had these goods
must be seen to be appreciated.

HARPER’S WEEKLY ...
KARPKK'd MAGAZIN E.
HARPER'S BAZAR........
HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLK......... ........„ 11
HARPER’S MAGAZINE
I —.......
»i
HARPER’S YOUNG PE ‘PLE I
HARPER'S FBftNKUN SQUARE LIBRARY,
O*« Y**r(»SNaml»r»,
...............
101
— - .—
...I-—— I — .U_

J.W.HOLMES&amp;GO.
WOODLAND.
THE ANNUAL MEETING'
Of the Unkm Mutual Fire Insurance Co * panv
of Kent, Barry and Ionia countiea, will be held
at the office of the company in Ionia, on
THURSDAY, JANUARY 4, 1888,
commencing at 10 a. m.
In addition fo the election of officers, propo­
sition* will be presented for change* of charter

tbo.ld l« uud. br r«K)«« MooW .Wblaw/bb. tTvmft
---- 1 * .1 — — _— — . . -

ri-boat tbe exprpword«rorHA»r«R * Baa-rm a*.
Addrret HAKPKRA BROTHERS, New Turk.

change section 10, no a* to permit
HARPER’S PERIODICAL.
ft at least once In each year, unlena
fund FJta.Il exceed fS.OOO, or such
HARPER'S MAGAZINE
THE M0MARCH
HARI'ER'S WEEKLYHARPER’S BAZAR.........................
Secretary
to
borrow not L.i exceed S2.000, when BILLIARD HALL
THREE above pubileAlio.A----io &lt;•' nec«8arr to meet liabfitlM of tbe Company.
(No Liquors.)
Any TWO above ...med.................
By order of Board of Director*.
HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLK-----C. M. DURHAM.
HAMPER'S MAGAZINE
I
HARPER* YOUN® PROPER J —’
HARPER’S FRANKLIN SQUARE LIBRARY,
THE MILLER BROS.CUTLERYCO.
Ono Year (ia N

ERRORS OF YOUTH

ureech year Wbcn
understood that the

■fHWfKBK

rou»d«Mntr. Prwutredwiuxl all lb* eflscu
ofyouthftU IMlMrttkin. will for tbe sake of «uL

STANDARD P0

RY,

hours. and the wonder is

■MU'.

Now it b a Na A

PIMPLES

STEEL. PENS

�kbtaMfc.

•nrtvaJ of * Murry Aadrew
mm teMtcW to the health

PRICE; HAO, IF PAID IN ADVANCE
To Advertisers:

.

MOUB1 THI81 UajULAP KATBa.
Itacto

If MO
p-Mftt~8.60 _IAOO
iso.00
|“25.00
| 80.00

OIUEO STRONG,
Editor sod Proprietor.

^isltyilUJ|k«torg.
/VILLA O E 0FFICEE8.

Trustees—H. A. Barber, F. T. Bollr. H. W.
Demaray, II.. R-. Dickinson, H. M. ^ec and

JltcUtiM.
XHRI8TTAN CHURCH-F A. Blnecl.P
J Service* every Sabbslh at 10.30 *. m.
7 p. tn. Sabbath school at 12 m. Prayer
ing every Thdraday evening

C

TMTETHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCIIHA
school at 12 to. Prayer r'ectlng every Thur*

VT LODGE NO. 37, K. of P.. meet* at it*
Castle Hall, Naahville, Michigan, every
Friday evening, for the cncouragcin. nt aud
sup|x&gt;rt of all worthy, true, steadfast and honrable Brother Knights.
D. L. Smith K. R. 8. Okxo Sthoko, C. C.

—Ktw!p all st«&gt;ck thriving by giving a
stable ration of some kind And not oy
‘feeding the me Allow*. When the eo’d
storms come give tbe animAte shelter
and extra grain rstioos to keep up ths
heat I&gt;o not let the animate take this
fuel from the fat already stored up, as it
in a practice that no stockman can
afford.—Mirror and Fanner.
—Ham cooked in cider: Put a pint
of cider and a cup of brown sugar into
.enough water to cover the ham; boil
three boars, or till tho skin will peel off
easily. Kemdve the skin, cover the ham
with a crust of sugar, and bake in a slow
oven three hours. Dissolve n cup of
sugar la a pint of cider and baste tho
ham frequently while baking. If the
cider is very sweet, use less sugar.—
Cjiicago Journal.
—To fricassee chicken cut it up and
boil with one or two slices of pork, in
enough water to cover the chicken; fry
some pork, and when it has cooked a
little, drain the chicken and fry it with
the pork until nearly browned; then take
the broth and pour it into the frying-pan
with the pork, and make a gravy, t Sick­
ening with brown flour; season well and
pour over the chicken.—Chicago Newt.
—The Agricultural Department at
Washington estimates the. shortage of
the hog crop in the great hog-rauing
Stales as follows: “ In Kentucky the de­
crease from last year, as returned by our
correspondents, is 25 per oenL; 29 in
Ohio; 25 in Indiana; 24 In Illinois; 20 in
Iowa; 30 In Missouri. The decrease is
but five per cent in Kansas and two in
Nebraska.” It also says there is a small
decline in the South and in tho Middle
States.
—If there are fence corners or other
places about the farm where weeds are
growing they should be moved out to
prevent the seeds from being scattered
to adjoining fields.. Farm fences afford
one of the most common sources for
weed destribution, and It is pour policy
to allow the seeds to mature and become
scattered to the detriment of the adjoin­
ing land. Pasture land, too often pro­
duces heavy growths of noxious weeds
which Bhould be cut before maturing
their seeds.—Couidrij (rcnllcinan.
How to Locate Lameness in a Horse,

I

In examining a case of lameness, we
diould, if possible, first see the horse in
tie stable, and without disturbing him,
oUcrve whether ho points a foot, and in
wlat particular manner ho so favors it.
Wishouldthen have him led from toe
Miscellaneous Cards.
staUc and trotted gently in hand on a
H. YOUNG, M. D. Office es»l *ldc of hari road or pavement, giving him his
. Main St, Nashville. Office hours from headat tho tinde.
Having thus ascer­
tain ai what leg he is lame in. wo should
A. FOOTE, PHYSICIAN A SURGEON. proceul to discover the actual scat of
For this purpose, the
• 8uce*»ar to Dr. Wickham. Office see- tho nfschief.
otxl door north of the Naahville House; re*i- finger ind thumb should be carefully
Sedce drat door u.ulh of tbs Wolcott House­ passed town the leg, from the knee to
Prompt alien Uoa to calls night or day.
the foot, to ascertain if there be any un­
R- F. a HULL, Graduate of Medical and due beat, or enlargement, or tenderness
Surgical department of University of from preHure; wo should also feel care­
Mich. Cole’* Hotel, Tbornapple.
fully the front and sides of tbe pat­
terns, as veil as round tho coronet. If
a splint betoe caosq of lameness, the
horse will Wince considerable pain when
it is pressed and so likewise will he in
lesions of th| sinews.
M. PARMENTER, M. D. Office ow
Supposing\hat we have found no suf­
HuJJ'b Drug store, Vermontville, Mich. ficient cause, of lameness above, we
RAM. H BRADY. Lawyer, Ctrcait Court must now ditict our attention to the
CommfMioner, Real Estate and Insurance feeL In neark every case, unless tho
mischief siiouJi be very' clearly ex­
hibited clsewhefc, it would be advisable
ty- Offlc* opposite Union Hou**.
to remove the shte; the foot should then
M. FLINT, JR. Law, Real Estate, and In- be paired out, to ascertain if there be
• Balance. Conveyancing and Collection* a any wound or briise in "ML The nail
specialty.
_____________________ _ I holes sho'tid be carnally examined and
pressed with pincew, or gently struck
MORY PARADY, Ja«ttae of tbe Peace. with a hammer, to Escover any symp­
Office, Corner Main and Kbcrmau Street*. toms of tenderness; fie heels of the sole
LIEB HA UBER, Merchant Tailor and deal- should be pared dovfcj, nnd the parts
• er in Ready Made Clothing. 8oe me struck gently with a Winner; this is
before you purchaoe dotuing. Fits guar­ preferable to pressing tie'bar and crust
anteed.
with toe pincers, as is ikually done, for
this often produces pai» in some feet,
HATCH A CO., Msnufacturer* of Taffy when there is no disease, and often fails
• Candle*, Cbocolste Drop* and Carmel*.
Frolta, Fancy Candle*, Cigars, Tobacco*, etc., in causing pain in others, when there is
si way* in Block. Second door Dorth of tbe a deep-seated corn.
After paring awhile^ the smith will
post office.
very probably say thert is no corn; but
TpRANK BAKER, Manufacturer of Boot* we must not be satisfioi until we have
JC and SbiMis jigged or sewed. Repairing pared almost to the quick. If too horse
Kptly attended to, at tire »lgu of the red
, be very lame from a cornihe will almost
esat ride Main SL
always favor the foot; butln so doing he
TACOB OSMUN, Liveryman, barn near Wol­ will not, however, extent his limb out
tz cotl Hoose. Firat class turnouts at reason­ straight to its fall length, bu will elevate
able rates. Sjieciid rate* to commercial men. the heel without extendinglbe foot very
Funeral and wedlng parties furnished with car far, which will give a knuckling appear­
riage* oa aiiort notice. ,
ance to the limb. Should nvne of these
BRAUN BROS., Shoemaker*. Special atten­ symptoms bo exhibited, we must con­
tion given U&gt; tine and sewed boots, also sider the disease to be deep-seated, and
alri ng. All manufactured work made from then it is all-important to ascertain if toe
t of slock sod warranted. Flrat door south animal points his foot, for, t such is
Boise'* hardware.
the case, in all probability the cause of
lameness exists In the navicuhf joint,
WALLACE BEAUCHAMP, Liveryman.V V Nashville Hooae Barn. Single an;! supposing it was a fore foot we Were ex­
amining.
\
double turn out* furuiahed promptly andrea
It will seldom be necessary to go
through these various manipulations
plauin* seriatim; we may sometimes pounoe
upon the seat of lammess at onci. and
very often detect it alter a moderate ex­
amination: but then are cases that
will demand our utmest attention and
ZTHAB. W. DEMARAT, Dealer ta Watches, experience, and will often pat to i aeXJ Ctocta, fine Jewelry and flllvarware. Bstaf -rere test the professional talents and.
tact even of the most skilled vetcriaa-

W

L

D

C

I

E
S

P

I

R. DICKINSON, masafacturar of
sad dealer tn Hard Wood Lumber. BoBA^RAM

XMB rLBMINC, pwUtal Je«l»
Watcb-Mksr. Clock*. Waicbes, Silver sod
J
Plated Ware, Jetratay and Optiral Good^ Rock-

fsadWatelmasHaiaMf. BspaMvaaAEngrav-

ideas In all Bute Courts. Col
r attended to. Office over.
HsMtoSaMfck-

Horses sometimes exhibit a slight
lameness immediately after being shod,
though quite sound before. Such cases
may arise from the shoe being nailed on
too tight, and are often relieved by re­
moving the shoe and ru-a&gt;plying it more
gently; this lameness mast frequently
occurs in horses with —
*-—
and is ascertained bj
absence of
which it comes on, T

such
•ole may have teen pared Uo much, or
unevenly.
Persons unaccustomed toAorse*, will
more frequently pronouuuc tho wrong
limb than lb« right in cam of alight

immediately conclude

d. They
| moment
and they
t must be

ofths;

‘•What time

great annihilator of time. The days are
crowded together in thin layers, and the
nights are like a smear from a blacking
brush.— N. Y. Star.
—Mr. Boucicault says: “Egypt was
fatal to Assyria: to the Hebrews; to SL
Goorge, who was hanged for looting, aud
to Napoleon. It is the graveyard of toe
world, and England ha* gone there to
•teal a 1st for a quiet family vaulL”
—An old man who ha« long lived atone
at Medway, Mass., was found dead,
recently, in his .cellar, b&lt;U&lt;l down by a
barrel of sand. It is supposed that'he
had lain in a dying condition several
days, the-barrel resting on his legs were
ithad fallen.—A. ¥. Sun.
—A man who has been herding sheep
near Dripping Springs, Hays County,
Tex., became suddenly insane, and with­
out known cause attacked a lady eighty
years old and literally tore her eyes out
He then attacked two young ladies, but
they escaped him. Ho was arrested.—
Chicago Timet.
—Two men in Cleveland would not
refrain from- smoking in a horse car.
After whipping the driver they were ar­
rested. and then they tried 'to convince
the justice that they were not smoking
in tlu- &lt;• tr, because ’they had held their
heads out of the window. It did not
work—five dollars and cost?.—Chicago
Herald.
—A conference of Chinese merchants
was held in London a few days ago, del­
egates being present from California and
New York. Resolutions were adopted
expressing regret at tho action of the
Governmental the United States re.&lt;pecting Chinese immigration, and it was de­
cided to recommend emigration to En­
gland and Cyprus.—Si. Louts Globe.
—During the funeral of Miss Margaret
Street, at Slateville, Hartford Countv,
Maryland, toe horses attached to t£ie
hearse liccame unmanageable and crea­
ted much confusion. The hearse col­
lided with one of the carriages, and m&gt;
excited Mr. John Robinson, one of tho
pall-bearers and an old friend of the de­
ceased lady, that befell over and expired
in the arms of-Mr. John B. Roberts, with
whom lie was riding. Mr. Robinson was
buried tho following Sunday, in the fam­
ily burial-ground on too farm where be
had lived.—Chicago Times.

What a Blind Colored Man Can Do.
Tho Messrs. Breslin, of Selma, Ala.,
have in their employ as hostler, garden­
er and general workman, a negro named
Dick, twenty-four years old, who. since
his fifth birthday has been as blind us
tho proverbial bat. The amount of work
he does and the neatness, accuracy and
dispatch with which all his chores and
odd Jobs are done are simply marvelous.
He attends to several horses, feeds them,
washes their harness, and. when occasion
demands, can hitch up a team as well as
any one. His stable-yard is a model of
cleanliness, aud toe garden is well work­
ed. He washes the carriages, horses and
wagons, oils vehicles and sees that they
arc all right before allowing them to be
taken out of the loL He is as light-heart­
ed as most Africans, and can enjoy a
ioke and laugh al it, though he wastes
but few moments in idleness of any
variety, his whole mind seemingly being
bent upon a careful discharge of his vari­
ous duties. He is as stout as an ox, and
is a bail man to tease, as a bantering
loafer found out to his sorrow not long
since. He had been tormenting Dick
until the latter's stock of patience gave
out, when he turned furiously on his
tormentor, and the first thing that indi­
vidual knew he was landed, all bruLsed
up, in a heap some yards away.
Per­
haps the most remarkable gift tbe man
has is his ability to tell within a few mo­
ments tho time.of day. Day. or night,
when ^ked what time it was, ho replies
without hesitation, and is randy further
off froif the exact marking of' the diol
than ten minutes. To test this gift, after
having talked with him about his work
the reporter quickly asked, “What time
is it DickP” "Half past ten.” came tho
immediate response. A look at the watch
showed that at that instant iL was 10:2$,
within four minutes of the time guessed
by the man, who probably knows not the
appearance of either watch or dock. He
goes to Mis home some blocks distant
to remain during the night, but is al­
ways on-hand bright and early as toe
morning sun to begin his day’s work.
In all sorts of weather ho never fails to
be on time. He is seldom sick and then
only slightly indisposed.
The Polish Jews.
Ths Polish Jews have been horribly
treated for centuries; every form that
tyranny, oppression and extortion could
take has been -practised against them.
It is not wonderful that forced in upon
their own superstitions, crushed into ob­
stinacy and driven into fanaticism, their
moral natures should have become
twisted and contorted into strange and

into the inner life of tbe PodolisnGhetto,
given by the tales of Herr Francos, are
like visions of media-val timea. Horrible
cruelties are practised in family and
social relations io extraordinary conjunc­
tion with tender family affection and
parental solicitude. Tho Jeffs do not
educate their women. The powerful
story: ‘The Shy lock of Barnow,’ tarns
on tliis vital error. Esther Freudenthal,
tho adored only child of her wealthy
father,
is
taught to cook.
to

iU of turpentine. I prefer the boiled oil,
AB it dries better, ana also gives ths paint
.gio. that i* not Attained in the use oi
rtw oil. I take two quarts of thin oil, a
pint of japan, and one-half teacup!al of
spirits of tarpentine, and stir in three ox
focr pounds of French yellow ochre,
making it just thick enough to spread
with toe brash. A aixty-cent brush is
good enough. After the work is done in
the afternoon, tbe floor in mopped with
weak soapsuds, in which » put a trifle
of washing sodn. After it dries for half
an hour or so, it b ready for the pdinL
The firat coal U then spread oh, and in
the morning it will be quite hard. But
I have a few strips of boards laid down,
so as not to walk on it too much, and the
children must be kept out for three or
four dayw.. Thp second afternoon an­
other coat is spread on in like manner,
and in less than a week the paint will be
firmly set Sometimes I have added a
pound or two of white lead, but I have
Dot been able to see much, if any, ad­
vantage in iL One year I used all whits
lead, and made it a dark slate color, by
adding a little lampblack, but the floor
never looked dean, and had a dingy sppearanee. "
Painting the floor saves a large amount
of work, for. then if you spill grease on.
it, all you have to do is to wash it off with
warm, weak soap suds, when it will look
clean a nd neat In. case qne does not use
a carpet on the dining-room floor, it should
be painted in the same manner. A kitch­
en floor kept well painted will last at
least twenty years, if not more, while the
Bame .floor wqpld not survive more than
a half dozen under tho ordinary scrub­
bing process.
nitil a floor thus painted, and the
house grained and varnished, the labor
of keeping it clean is but a trifle com­
pared to the old plan of an unpainted
kitchen. In tho cleaning of grained
work pure, tepid water is too best And
here is jebere the wife is to have charge,
to order and direct when and how the
kitchen is to be kept in order. If she is
able to look after it, it is her duty to do
so—not that she is compelled to do the
work, but
bat to know how it is to be dffne,
d»nr,
and to c_2
ordcr
___and
’ superintend
’ ‘ * “
the doing.
’ ’
Armor’s wife
or. the mechanic's i
The farmer
n..u v
wife cannot shirk this duty, even if she
have six children to look after. The
lady, in city or country, who is to be
waited upon by a score of servants, and
who hires her thinking and planning
done -for her, doe* not come within my
list, for she has o.'her skeletons in the
closet more portentious than the care of
six children, her husband's neatness, a
tbe mangement of the household.
To thf • farmer's wife the kitchen is a
small kingdom, over which she rules as
doc* the husband on the farm, or too
workman at his bench. With a good,
smooth, nicely painted floor, white ceil­
ing, grained wood work, handy closets,
shelves and drawers, a large'stove or
range, on which is a hot-water tank,
holding fifteen to twenty gallons, etc.,
she will be crmbled to do her work and
always have warm water for a bath.
Should she need help, her husband can
fill up toe water tank each morning, fill
the coal or wood box, and carry out the
slops. Married life on the farm is a co­
operative association, in which husband
and wife have a joint interest, and must
mutually aid each other.—Cur. Chicago
Tribuna.
Flret-l lass Road Horae*.

■

•

Very fast rcadstera are the most valu­
able in the market of any clam of homes I
produced, being in demand nt high prices
for gentlemen’s driving. The extrava­
gant prices paid for these fliers by
wealthy gentlemen who hare a pride io
owning fine-stvled drivers, that will take
the lead on tBe road, is sometimes al­
most Incredible.
Any breeder who
raises first or accond-cuus trotters can
find a market for them at high figures.
Those able to trot a mile in 2:25 or bet­
ter will sell far $.5 000 to 110,000, both
the first and M.&lt;coDd class,with good style,
finding a ready market at these high
figures, and bringing considerable more
for private driving than they are worth
for public rac-ng. The principal reason
why breedera train and nt their colts for
tbe track, and enter them for trotting
engagements is, that they want to ex­
hibit their sp-ed and style of going to the
public, with a view of negotiating with
private partie* for theix sale for gentle­
men’s driving horaea. It is often. Dot
the temptsrjon to win large sums in
purses that induces owners to engage
their stock it trotting circuits, far it is
only the fastest steeds that win any con­
siderable amount over expenses in the
trotting ciicuits, but breedera enter theix
stock in thev trotting events to give
them market value. There is • an ex­
tensive denuuid for first-class roadsters,
that will continue to increase as the
country groa&gt; in wealth and population.
Should the p eseut wonderful rate of in­
crease oontin je for tbe next forty years,
it requires but little sagacity to foresee
that we mun doable our animal and
vegetable jjiuluctions in order to supnly
the demands jf our own population. No
breeder need to be discouraged for fcai
that the market will be overstocked with

the professions. To accumulate coin,
therefore. fa all UuU fa left to them, ud

I. X. Fuvt t So., Projfa.

3

£
Ik'
a as
-iz
ca

IS"

•ifnrtno* with
thin&lt; good In tlx

E. R. WHITE, Agt., at Kocher Bros.

mmah

m

•/HQ »3 UNACQUAINTED WITH THZ CEOCRAFHY OF THIS COUNTRY, WILL

,

' t*;nneapolif.

NN-Kfld

Q

H
tri

0
rrs
*M ci

L_
t1
&lt;7

Chicago, Rock Island &amp; Pacific R’y,

3

craphlcol position, th# shortest and best route between tho East, Northeast and
toutheast* and the West, Northwest and Southwest.
it is literally and strictly true, that Its connections are all of the principal llnee

CD

'-a Salle, Geneseo, Moline and Rock Island. In Illinois; Davenport. Muscatine.
Washington, Keokuk, Knoaville, Oskaloosa, Fairfield, Deo Moines, West Liberty,
lows City, Atlantic, A»ooa, Audubon, Harlan, Cuthrle Center and Council Bluffs,
worth al

“GREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE,”

b

As It Is famfllarty called, offers to travelers all the advantages and comfort*
Incident to » smooth track, safe bridges, Union Depot* nt all connecting point*,
Fa*r Eipres* Trains, composed of COMMODIOUS, WELL VENTILATED, WELL
HEATED, FINELY UPHOLSTERED and ELEGANT DAY COACHES j a line Of tbe
MOST MAGNIFICENT HORTON RECLINING CHAIR CARS over built | PULLMAN’S
latest designed and handsomest PALACC SLEEPING OARS, and DINING CARS

THREE TRAINS eich way between CHICAGO and the MISSOURI RIVER.

3

ALBERT LEA ROUTE.
between Newport News, Richmond, Cincinnati, Indianapolis and La Faywtte,
and Council Bluffs, St. Paul, Minneapolis and intermediate-point*.
For more detailed information, see Map* and Folders, which may be obtained, a*
well as Tickets, at all principal Ticket Officeo in the United States and Canada, or of

IE. ST. JOHN

R. R. CABLE,
Vloe-Pres’t A Oon’l Manager,

CHICAGO.

MAKE HENS LAYss
PARKED
HAIR

BALSAM.
A perfect drew

iafcrieganilyper-

(THE HEALTH BRINGEK.)

the turf, at extravagantly high P™re,
for their own use. Speed and style art
the qualities they require, and the more
of these a bone possewes, the higher the
price he will command.—National Live

and
day if Eastern Europe.—London Jfswa

yiQBISTCK

[COLOGNE.

PENGELLY'8 WOMAN S FRIEND.

For Women,

TRIOIFRS.
LADY CLERKS,
HOUSEWIVES,

A Prevention and Cure

PARKER’S

GINGER TONIC
vegetable

WOMEN know what these til****** are. but
do no* always ci to proper atUnUon to theix
sympScns. vlx:

Headaches,
Lassitude,
Pale or Mothy Complexion,
Sleeplessness,
Palpitation,

Paid fori

pensions;

TESTIMONIALS I bai

NO PATENT NO PAY.
MM.'ka UH
CavMU

iminoirs^
TIVES
Mtow-auf
wtd awtxl a eopy ut ttw pr»crl|*lon W

bears hi* whole weight on the i

m

;

It combines all the tried and proven merit* of all other machine* with txnw of their disad­
vantage.
lb* Urowa eomra Into the market the iaat of all the machloe*. I&gt;*1 ha« »prune 'o front rank at *nce

Numbness, Nausea, Dizziness,
I&gt;ry Cough, Nervous Irritation,
will more than equal the supply for half
Weak and Lame Back,
a century to come. Ths present de­

mand, and future prospects, ought to en­
courage the breeder to raise an additional
supply of all kinds of stock to meet the
rapidly increasing demand at home and
abroad. 8o bag as the public prefer fast
roadsters for driving purposes, they will
pay a good profit on tne cost of produccion. The public demand for fast driving
horaes has taken from the track some of
its brightest ornaments, which have been
She had an inborn instinct for knowl- purchased and retired from tbe raosrounr to private stables., The intense rival­
ry between gentlemen of wealth to have
allowed Io have.any choice in marriage,
neither, tor that matter, have tbe young
men. It is a family arrangt ment, and
husband and wife often meet for the first
tims on their wedding-day. Gain is tbe

r

IIUNTORS

�Cl

■ICHIBEM HEWS.

well .(YpdUsti.

M. E. church at Plain field.

"Only thirry-aeven days for the gay
MMAon." rigbed a young lady, “and
$4,000 incendiary fire at Ypsilanti.
tlmi is including Sundays.'’ This es­
A eaae of infanticide at Mt. Clem cue. timate is made of the number of day*
N'elMJU Rhodes, convict, escaped from between New Yean aud the begining
of Lent, on Febuaty 7th, aud within
Catholic hoepital nt Big Rapid* de­ that period there will'be five Sundays,
stroyed by fire.
leaving only thirty-two days on which
Mis* Harriet Fox nf Girard, deranged, it will be poaaibic ■ to give parties by
has cuminitled auieide. ‘
day or night, for Sunday evening re­
t Lyaander Jacobs and James'Moore ceptions. attempted by a few here,
killed in luml*r camps.
have never been sufficiently dneouragWm. R. AnuHtrong of Romeo drives vd tu be long coutinuecf. Those who
ami*? span of horses.
have received on that evening were,
Martin Lhsell tun over and killed on ah a rule, foreigners and Catholics, who
the railroad at East Saginaw.
followed the custom, common in Cath­
Detroit has a medical college and a olic countries but rarely sanctioned by
. publishing bouse— both frauds.
those of that faith who are natives of
The old 3d regiment, infantry, reun­ .the United States, of making Sunday,
ioned at Grand Rapids last week.
after attending Maas. the great-feteA sheep at Plainwell grows wool on day of tbe week. One or two Ameri­
the white part of one of its eyeballs.
can Pi oteataut ladies have bad for a
New post-ofiices: Wickware, Sanilac time informal receptions for their
county ; Iron Mountain, Menominee.
friends on Sunday evenings, but I hear
’ Hickj«r-ef Kalkaskaz/county, three of none now. The brevity of the sea­
yeans iu s|atejixMum-fer taanslaughter. son and of tho session of Congress has
T!ie/CaMu&gt;|K&gt;liK high school scholars not caused anyone to hasten here to
chipjfrd in $9.65 for shoes for poor class make the most of the allotted time.
mates.
Iu fact, there seems to lie an unusual
Ransom Byington of Battle Creek, indifference to social diversions for
•eribusly stabbed by Walter Culver, the present, or in anticipation, where­
who escaped.
fore no one among tho residents of
A baby weighing 16 pounds was re­ Washington versed in its social customs
cently born at Corunna. Mother and expects the season tube a gay one. No
baby both living.
event of special interest is as yet an­
W. H. Hathaway of Jackaon countv nounced fur this mouth—that is/ none
gets $0,000 fur an arm lost in the em­ at which a large company will assemble.
ploy of tiie M. C. railroad.
General Bingham’s efforts for cheap
The ex-prisouers of war in westeni postage are likely to bring good fruit
Michigan formed u local organisation at an early day. His ripe experience
at Grand Rapids last week.
in postal af^iirs and bis exhaustive and
IL M. Dudley and wife were nearly practical methods of research in all
suffocated at a Greenville hotel recent­ questions which command his special
ly. They blowed out the gas.
care, peculiarly fitted him for the task
Matily, the Detroitclothier, has been of solving the problem of cheap post­
convicted of viuiadug the lottery law age. He has finally been able to make
by his gift tickets to customers.
a unanimous report from his commit
A young sou of Henry Conan of tee in favor ot reducing letter postage
Hillsdale county, was killed while as­ to two cents, and there is little doubt
sisting his father iu felling trees.
of its passage of the measure during
Mining operations on the Menominee the present session. Cheap postage is
and Marquette iron ranges, employ one of the agents of intellectual and
14,000 men and $2,050,000 of capital.
business progress as well as one of the
Will McGraw, Thoa. H. McGraw, and most conspicuous monuments of ad­
Mrs. Curtiss oi Bay City.each received vancement. It cost many years of ag­
$100,000, this week, from a New York itation to make Congress understand
estate.
.
that the Post-office Department was
Amos aud Jaiuee Hawkins for mur­ something more than a mere business
der, aqd Morse a cattle thief, all of enterprise on the part of the govern­
Corunna, have gone to their rest—the ment. For half a century the postal
state prison.
system didn't pay mainly because it
Nearly all the business portion of was too costly to command the support
Hopkins Station, Allegan county, was of tbe people ; and a self sustaining
burned Saturday last Loss about $£0,­ postal system has been more and more
000, inanranco about $12,000.
nearly reached just as we reduced the
A boot and shoe firm at Allegan failed rates of postage. Now with the cheap­
for $95,000, tho proprietor baying $5,000 est of our national history, the postal
worth of property in his wife’s name a department pays, aud General Bing­
few days previous. A $16,000 failure at ham, iu an able and complete review of
Alml
the whole system, now demonstrates
Gov. Begole goes about the duty of that two cents postage will pay as tlie
preparing Ida inaugural message in a higher rate has paid in the past.
business-like manner. For some weeks
Mrs. Labouchere,. the ex-friend and
ho harf been pei Ronally inspecting the confidants of Mrs. Langtry’, who ac­
state institutions.
companied the beauty to this country ,
Catharine Gered, charged with mur­ arrived in this city on Monday after­
der in Oakland county, escaped from noon. Mrs. Labouchere is a woman of
the officers.— Richard Connor of ML about forty years of ag*, with light
Clemens, charged with murdering F. hair tinged with gray, reserved nnd
Timmerman, acqnittod.
dignified in manners and in con versa
Dr. Bathrick of Battle Creek was tion betraying the evidences of English
awarded $2,500 damages in his libel birth. She will sail for England on
suit against tbe Pott and Tribune, but the Servia on Wednesday. “When I
the case will probably go to the supremo was about starting for this country.”
court on a bill of exceptions.
said Mrs. Labouchere. "my husband
Col. E. H. Thomson of Flint, own­ told me not to miss visiting Washinged probably the fluestS’aakeoperean li­ ten, where he was stationed twentybrary in tbe world; but Hon. J. McMil­ five years ago as an attache' of the
lan of Detroit bought it for $20,000, the British Legislation. “It is true that
other day, and gave it to thoUniversity. Mrs. Langtry and I have had a misun­
Jay A. Hubbell charges Collector Beil derstanding. Yea, I must confess that
of Detroit with defrauding the govern­ it is, at least in a measure, Mrs. Lang­
ment, and Congress will investigate. try, when she first came to Loudon, en­
But men of unquestioned integrity who gaged a social triumph and was receiv­
are iu i&gt;osition to know say that Beil is ed anywhere, her grace and beauty
not guilty.
giving he a passport into the most re­
Tbe old state capitol building, built fined and exclusive circles. Her social
in 1847, burned last Saturday, also de­ position seemed assured, when tbe un­
an-eying Piatt Bros.’ wood-ware facto fortunate scandal came into circulation
ry. This is the fourth time Piatt Bros, and materially affected her position in
have been burned ouL but this time tbe fashionable world. Her husband
they are heavily insured.
having lost his money, she adopted the
Three young men of Monroe county
stage as a profession—not alone with
—Sbincvare, Roberta, and Raume—re­
the object of making money, but with
cently went iuto the lumber woods to­
an earnest desire to succeed a* an ar­
gether, not liking the work came out
tist
Avgust.
together, were all taken sick with the
pleurisy, and have all died.
THE ECHO
The Medical and Surgical Sanitarium
at Battle Creek is booming as it never New*. It ba* Ju*t entered upon ft* fifth year,
boomed before, at this time of,,year,— and both in popularity and circulation ba*
both main buildings aud many of the
M Tbe New* contain* little or no ad wrttoing,
cottages being filled with patients, an­ and to filed from U»e first column to the tort
xious to enloy the salutary effects of with tbe cboiemt matter that can be procured.
this praiseworthy institution. Under All the be»t Items, paragraph* and article* arc

skillful superintendent, J. H. Kellogg,
M. D.» tbe aauitarium ia closing the is devoted to choice original or selected stories
Boat prowprrotw year of it* cxiatauce. —something superior, on tbe average, to the
ordinary newspaper taies. Altogether ft I* a

MO1TTH.

BARGAINS

Have Done It avid

Will Continue to ■ Do It.

BARGAINS

ITV DRESS G-OODS A.TVII NOTIONS

•

BARGAINS

•

In Boots, Shoes. HatH and Caps.

BARGAINS

'

In Horse Blankets, Lap Robew, and Comfortable*.

500 Vases.
All Kinds—all Prices.
We lead them all.

Silverware.

’Nuff ced.

Toilet Setts.

A new departure,—will do the beat

Hanging Lamps.

Beautiful designs.
Bright, tasty colors.

Stock Larger and Prices Cheaper
than ever.

Majolica.

Odd Pieces.
Of Bisque, China,
Glass, Majolica, Etc.

At Prices to suit all.
or Setts.

Single Pieces

Confectionery
Candy, Nuts, Etc.
Boots and Shoes
Gloves and Mil .8

All art invited to call and sp
hour or more viewing the en&lt;
stock of holiday goods Suita)
Cups and Saucers, Mugs', Fruit Plates,
/
10,000 kinds in Wood, Tin. Iron and all.
Comports, Match Safes, Etc.
China. We can’t begin to tell.

French China.

StlNl
WESKLY-II a year. Eight porn of tbe beat
matt- - of tbe daily issues ; an agricultural departmeelrt weoualled merit, market report*, endllterarv wienufle, and domoatio Intrtllgcncw make
Tn* Wbsklt Sea tbe newipaner for the farmer’*
bewehold. To dob* ot Un with |10, an extra copy
AdtreM
1. W. ENGLA ND, Pnbibber.

Probate Order.

In profusion — all best quality «
low prices.
debt hundred and dxhtr-tvo.
I’reaant. Clement Stnlia, judge of Probate.
In tho matter of the estate of GEORGE GILLI8,

Toys. Toys.

be diac bargee from bl* nid traat.
Thereupon Illa ordered that

o’clock in tbe forenoon, be bmIsdkI f&lt;
of sold petition, and that the beitai

IOUS
for

r
the reef.

MAKE YOUR

DISTANT

CLKM EMT SMITH.

&lt;11-

Great Bargains
FRIEND

.

.VIortgage Sale.

Default haring been made In tire condition*
of a certain mortgage, (whereby the power
therein contained to sell has become operative)
executed by Ada T. Lee to Albert W. Old*..
October 16th, 1875, and recorded in the office of
We want to realize 810,000 from sales of merchandise before the firs^uf January, and in register ot deeds tn and for Barry county, Mich­
igan, on October 21rt, 1875, in fiber &amp;of mort­
order to do so we will offer good? so low that to be seen to to be sold.
gage* at page 380, which said mortgage wm bv
Clothing.
/
sahl Oldmou September 17,1678. assigned to HlWe will sell you a rattling good stflt for S6.50 and a better one for SlflfiO. Now is jurt the

A HOLIDAY PRESENT.
10 of mortgage* on page 50i, upon which
You can aave In the purchase of otf of these money enough liber
mortgage there in at this date claimed »o bt
due One Thousand Four Hundred and Seventy
Kight Dollars, and no suit or proceeding* at
/ ..
law having been instituted to recover the same
Trunk*, Satchels, Floor OU Cloths, Table Oil Cloth*.
or any part thereof, notice to therefore given
that on Monday, the 30Ch dav of March next, at
AU-wool Flannels,
/
Waterproofs, Cottonadea, Sheeting, Shirt* and Drawers, Ladas’ Underwear, Hosiery.

Of which we have a large stock.

Dress Goods.

A

teak’s subscription to

it*, Children’s Overt*
routbs* Bolte and Overcoat*. /
title money.

In complete i

Gloves Ind Mittens
Would be a most suitable

and
such

prove a
friend of

present,

For Ladies and Gents.

Rubber Overcoat* for Lades and Gents

Feit Boot*,

weekly reminder to

your esteem

and

Rubber Boot* and Over-shoe^ Wool-lined Boot*, Fait BooU for Ladle* and Gent*.
WoU

friendship.

BlMk.U, Olo,» rt&gt;l

GROCERIES, CROCKERY, GtASSWARE/SOTIOXS, 4c.
tert MeErt Erie. prtd tor ButUr. tm B«u». Orts Plted Applte, Rrtpterrtrt.

Only $1.50 postpaid.

of tbe Barry county court-house In tbe city of
Hasting*, the premiac* described tn said mort­
gage or *0 much thereof a* uliall be necei*«arv
to eattofy tbe amount due on such mortgage,
with ten per cent intereat and legal corta.
Tbe premise* to be sold u above referred to
are described in said mortgage a* follow*, towit: Commencing at the center post on Bectlon
thirty-rtx, tn township three north, of range
resell west, in Barry county. Mich., running
thence south with the quarter line thirty one
and 95-lOOtb* rods to a post, thence west and
parallel with the north line of said quarter tldrty-four and 6-10ths rod* to a poet, thence north
and parallel with the eart line of said quarter
nineteen and 95-100chs rod* to a stake on the

Wnrraa U upon da Too Deed tbe good* and we need *e money. We dout eay.
tickle me and I'll tickle you," but we do *ay that our want, are mutual and we may do
other good.
«
t
Dom’t fall to call with your produce and your caah, for n* to your tlae to «trikc.

’ Dated Hartinn. Nov. 80th, 1883.
11-33
HIKAM R. DICKINSON,

0BH0 8TB0BG. Pobliiher.

Nashville, November E. 1S82.

STOP and READ 1

LEGGED WHEAT
N more grown wheat will be ground at the
NaabvtUc mill.

Next Thirty Days

HOLIDAY PRESENTS!

&lt;laudruple-|&gt;laled. HoUow and

SILVERWARE

The Largest Stock Ever,in Nashville.
--------- COMPRISING IN PLRT—

Books, Books, Books,
article* ।

tbeeholowl product
InaJon, a utafn»tar f
ius*nt. a Metinel for

Kc*Butter, Eggs, and Dried Apples Wanted.

OCR WAbHBGTvJA LETTER.

&lt;Uy thatG
bill fur tin-

A third b*-

Aa the Reason advances we find our stock moving off finely, and the visitors to our store tell
us that our’ Large Stock and T.ow Prices are what is bringing us the
largest trade in toWn.
A single Fact is worth a ship-load of Argument. Our stock of Cloaks. Dol­
mans, and Overcoats for Men and Boys, is, beyond the shadow of a doubt,
the largest and most desirable to be found in the town.

ALL OTHER GOODS IS BAMS
PSOPOSTWK.

Majolica, China and

I Forms, Stereo­
Wood and Iron.

Cqll andpee,
And hear the music at the popular Drug and

wheat aad flour paw through
wheat Io i

a mill

I -I

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                  <text>1 TERMS :»150 m

Devoted to the Interests of the Best Party under the 8un.
VOLUME X;

(

Credit Subscbiftioms tl-TO,

NASHVILLE, BARRY CO., MICHm SATURDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1882.
19 Jeffords Post, G. A. R., organized.
—Mrs. Sherman of.Kalamo died.—Conr
stable Riley Wilson of Sunfield shot
five times by Walter Dunn of Sebewa.
He recovered.
23 Jennie Wooten, recently deceased,
and Chas. Schumann’s lower limbsparalized, both ot Hastings.—Mat Carrigan
seriously injured Alvin Price at Hast­
ings—both drunk. .
35 Mrs. Aseneth’ Balch of Rutland
died at Lansing.—Ella, daughter of
Rev. Cross, dted.
28 Amos, son of Isaac Purkey, died.
—Horeoaiid buggy stolen from. Park­
er’s livery stable, Hastings.
30 Clyde R., son of E. R. Mallory,
died. ,

sisters. Claimed they couldn’t tell their Vt.Villa township, burned.
11 Frank Rickies’ home in Baltimore
wives apart, or the wives couldn’t tell
burned.—P. B. Cranston of Irving died.
12 Phillip Shaffer’s leg nearly cut off
27 Dacons-Everts wrestle, Everts
by a companion’s ax.
losing on account ot a sprained knee.
14 Levi Kenyon, Assyria, Idk broken.
’38 Rey. F. A. Bissell ordained to the
16 G rimes’ saw-mill at Bismark burnJAJTCART.
Congregational ministry.—Mrs. Amos
Downs
of
Bismark
died.
1 Diphtheria still quite prevalent at
18 Terrible wind storm.
.30 Charles Cook of Woodland died.
Hastings.
*
,
30 Ethlyn Cooperof Woodland—both
3 Herring’s tavern, Kalamo Center,
1 Clothing firm of Prindle A Chipman bones of one arm broken.
old landmark, burned.
24 Lightning strikes a telephone wire
6 ProLNiles’ wife died at Breedsville. formed.—An Assyria man made $150 by
fl Steve Cassasaoer gets one year at watching advertisements in *The News and sfite the Nashville mill afire.
26 R. Vester of Carlton arrested for
Ionia forgaahing Harry Jones of Kala­ —Jake Heckathorn’s little son breaks
his arm .—Willis boy’s barn in Assyria abdneting and marrying Miss Chase,
mo.
1
'
aged 15.
'
burnt by lightning.
11
:ing".
’ 28 Wm. Jarrard died.
2 Adam Shaffer's house at Biamark
14 VRlage charter vacation jwtitlon
80 Guiteau hung in effigy at Hastings
dies.—Daniel Hobbs is disturbed by bis, burned.
OCTOBER.
.
JVLT.
8 Township election—republican ex­
wife’s ghost, and seeks relief in the।
3 Green backers and Democrats nom­
1 Chas. Smith of Barry died.
saloon at midnight.—Fire at Middle cepting Supervisor Barry, Treasurer
inated H. F. Pennington for senator.
—
David
Mason
of
Orangeville,voice
re
­
Martin
and
Constable
Hilton.
—
Dan.
ville, loss $5,500, little insurance.
cently destroyed by paralysis.—Three —Nashville K. P’s have nicest lodge
18 G. W. Dewey looking into ’Squire Hildreth of Vermontville died.
4 Fine showers and buds bursting. gambling bells in operational Hastings. room in the county.—Benj. Dcmaray of
Killen’s Rado Reynolds case.
8 Nashville House opened by I. M. Woodland, died.
1ft Deriarfe Sons commenced turning More paid for maple sugar in Nashville
8 Mrs. Cheater Honeywell and Ferris
Flint ic Son.
than Vt. Ville.
FEBRUARY.
4 Nashville celebrated in elaborate Bennett of Prairieville died.
6 Cyclone through North Assyria and
4 Chester McMore of Maple Grove
3 C W Smith falls from step-ladder, southern Kalamo. Silas Reynolds, and and successful style, oration by Hon.E.
fell from his wagon and broke his neck.
breaking arm at elbow.
Nin. Sherman, were killed, 15 acres of P. Allen—6,000 people in attendance.
—
D. Pratt’s little daughter died.
4 Phiny Durfee died at-AUegan, and timber demolished, and other damage * 5 Catholic church dedicated.
5 Mrs. Robinson died.—Mrs. Mary
Mn?. Sylvneus Doty ot Woodland.
B Uncle Mosherburied at Cedar Creelc.
E aggregate of $35,000 done.
Barhan,
Hastings, tried to commit sui­
5 Mr. Eno of Maple Grove died—Ver­
8 The Barry and Eaton decides to in­
latbolics buy the Ba &gt;tiat churcefor
montville boy accidentally shot in the
L—Alva Armitage hung himself in sure grange and agricultural halls, cide.—S. J. Cazier of Bismark died. •**
/?
M.
J.
Glasgo and family, Baltimore.
thigh on the pond here.
QUios Cole’s barn in Kalamo.—Board of churches and school-houses, and *to
6 Miles Lipscomb of Woodland loses supervisors stands 12 greenbackora, 5 petition for power to insure against 'have killed 20 rattlesnakes.—Mrs. Jas.
Mikesell
Sr.,
of Carmel, Eaton Co., re­
third child in four days with diphtheria. republicans, and 1 democrat.—Dakota cyclones.—Mrs; Jno. Donaldson of
cently deceased.—County fair, quite
ft Samuel Root, near Bellevue, pur­ fever very fatal in Vt. Ville.
West Kalamo died.
posely shoots himself through the bow­
10 Dr. and Mrs. Barber and Mrs. Geo. ^successful.—F. Warner's little daugh­
10 Council discusses *aloon bonds,
els, and resist the doctor's ministra­ and by vote of 3 to 9 fixes them at $5,000 Crancis barely rescued from a watery ter, Carlton, broke her neck.
8 B. A. Sherwood of Jackson assault­
tions.—Hopper and Damroth, Middle­ —Rumsey hand fire engine bought for
“ave.in Thomapple Lake.—Base ball:
er and robbed in Baltimore township.
ville burglars, get three years at Jack­ $1150.
Charlotte 44, Middleville 4.
12 Brooks, Marshall &amp;. Co. bought
son.
11 Mr. Puriun of Woodland died.
11 Harvest abundant, wages two to
1,807 bn. wheat.—Wm. Decker, Eaton
11 Reuben Hall of Bellevue, convict­
14 Ed. Slater ahd Bake Mix of Kala­ per day.
ed of rape, granted new trial by su­ mo airested for wheat stealing.
14 Mrs. Emily Green of Baltimore Co. line, fell dead.—Clara Martin of
preme court.—6 year old son of Wm.
15 Village excited o rer threats tc died.—Graves of the Plaindealer arrest­ Irving died.
14 Lewis Lentz lent bis fingers to a
Bivins drowned through a hole in the “bust” the charter.—Mud, rain, hail, ed for mailing obscene matters.
ice at Eaton Rapids.—Jos. Oversmith’s snakes, birds, frogs, mosquitoes, bad
•15 On a farm near Middleville buzz saw. Returned with damages.—
little boy severely burned—John Giger roads, sickneas,and matrimony abound­ a bubbling sulpher springs breaks out Twenty-nine teachers examined, 18
of Woodland thrown from a buggy and ing.—Dick Leggett of Maple Grove of high dry ground, up rooting a big passed.—Ghosts at North Irving.
15 John Osterberg, a Swede, drown­
a rib broken.
died in the county house and his un­ oak.
ed himself near Middleville.
12 Mud two feet deep.
human son refused to care for his re­
22 The Bugle is dead.
10 Alice Fields of Carlton died of
13 First shipment of maple sugar. mains, whieh went to the Ann Arbor
34 W. H. Ryan of Kalamo discovers
his wife witu a handsomer but wicked-- outrage alleged to have been commitwmin at Grand Rapids, and threaten*
Shrank gains one fall and the match ^23 Ladies Hall of Olivet college burn­
shoot. Wife blandly smiles, and the Murray. Courtnunity highly wi ought
up.—Phillip Shaffer of Maple Grove se­
is postponed.
ed during the week. Loss $94,000, in^“ affair is settlen without bloodshed.
18 Catharine Ralston draws her $150 surance $10,000.—D. Sprague's house at
35 Wilt Bennett, Hastings, w^ps riously injured by a falL
91 Ella Bignold.onceof Bellevue, re­
indemnity for land used in extending
fourth glass ball contest.
Main and Everts street.—Editor of The
Potter, publisher,
37 Milt. Fleyharty nearly chokes to cently suicided at Battle Creek, ruined
New* prostrated with hemorrhage of .born.
by
J. C. Hickock.
death, and scares Wm. Troxell into re­
the tonsils and not expected to live.
38 Mrs. D. R. Perry of Woodland
29 Spring, ethereal spring. A freeze forming. Good thing.
General rejoicing.—Jno. Perryman of every night in Apnl. and an east wind
99 Mra.Louisa Henderson of West Kai died suddenly.—Willie Kimbell of
Assyria murders his mule, burying it ten consecutive days.—Barry and Eaten atoo recently deceased; and“Wild Bill” Charlotte fell and broke his neck.
while alive. —Hurst acquitted of embez­ medical society organized.
30 Ketcham’s saw-mill at Chester,
starts from Masons barn far h—ades
zlement, at Hastings —Seventeen build­
Eaton Co., burned.
80 M. H. Clark, of the Hatting* Demo­ but stops on earth.
ings worth $86,000 in the main uusineea crat, and M&lt;ss Lida E. Connor married.
NOVEMBER.
21 Geo. Tomlinson, Hostings, arm
part of Bellevue, burned. Insurance —Hastings M.E. church raised $225 for
3 C. C. Cummings of Charlotte died.
broken.
small.—Child of Jno. Mason, Kalamo, benevolent purposes.—Charley Pflug
4 Three wooden buildings at Char­
80 Horatio Hull of Baltimore died.
part of fingers on one hand chopped off. of Hastings died of drink.
31 Geo. Corsett fatally'injured by a lotte burned., county offices narrowly
:
L.__ • \
31 D. Hall of Assyria died.
board from a buzz saw, and died.
j escaped.—Dipthcria done with.
35 Joshua Martin died.
7 County, state, legislative, and con­
augubV.
1 Jacob Franck died.—Milo Wiliams’
34 D. H. Pratt’s boy drowned through house at Hastings burned.—33 berths
1 Mrs. Jno. Sylvester of Au,yria dies gressional elections. Barry, Republi­
the ice in the river.
can on county and representative;
and 8 deaths in Maple Grove during the in an apoplectic fit.
35 Irving farmers get judgment of
"Combination” on senator, congress­
8 Mrs. Tyler of Woodland died.
$3,043 agzinst Irving mill.—Daniel
man, and state.
7 Al. Rasey’s residence fired into by
4 Lorenzo Mudge died.
Palmatier died.—J. Huffman of Maple midnight marauders.
8 Otto, son of C. N. Young, died.—
5 Harrison Post’s boy drowned in
Grove chopped one set of fingers off.
9 Michael Kearney of Assyria died. Brookfield.Eaton Co.—Milt Fleyharty Twq-day meeting district W. C. T. U.
at
Hastings.
MARCH
10 Irwin Mann, a young man, on the given four mos. free board at Ionia,—
11 S. H. Porter of Vermontville died.
Wm. Gazette, a printer, uied at Kalamo-Carmel line, hung himself.— too much drunk.—Alice Jackson of
Hasting*.—Golden wedding of Geo. W. Charley Bailey of Hastings while drunk Bellevue tries to suicide.
—Mrs. Susan Graves died at Hastings.
and Lucy Knapp of Assyria.
—Democrats and Grecnbackcrs “glori­
is robbed of $350 at Charlotte.
8 Small cyclone in Assyria.
.4 Balmy spring weather, only two
18 Mrs. S. C. Prindle died at Grand
9 Lizzie Larkins takes laudnum and fy .”—8. L. Feagle*’ residence at Barrysnow storms so far; Thornapple flats Rapids.
ville burned.-Little Ned Griswold of
’a miniature wa, and muskrat* navi­
15 Mrs. Bogardus died at Carlton.—
11 At Hastings Dr. Lathros’s knee Vt. Ville died.
gate It by dozen*.—Twenty-five young S. D. Lewis of Carlton wants a divorce and ankle dislocated in a runaway.
18 Bellevue man hires a young man
men agree to form a fire company. from his 18-year-old wife because she
12 E. L. Parrish raised white black­ to elope with his wife. She don’t elope.
^^-Dickinson’s new mill started.—An 18 plays with the children too much.—H. berries.—Mrs. M. A. Fay of. Sunfield ..Grand northern lights, two nights
mo*, daughter of John Ehret of West Barley’s house in Kalamo burned.
deceased.—Wm. Bishop of Cedar Creek and matinee.
Kalamo does a churning all alone.
19 T. G. Henry of Baltimore nearly
17 Abel Simonds of Maple Grove died died.—Continued rains cause wheat to
5 Little child of James Andrews, at Big Rapids.
grow in shocks. Estimated that one- crushed to death.—Mrs. Estes Wilson
.Maple Grove, di, d.
of Prairieville died.
30 John McIntire and Jennie and third of the wheat crop is ruined.
20 Tracy &amp;. Steadman’s Grand Ledge
[ 6 Treasurer’* report show* village out Lillie Shoup buried in a Maple Grove
14 State teacher’s institute at Nash­
\ of debt and $844.33 in treasury.
sand bank, but rescued by the cool ef­ ville.—Mias Halleck of Cedar Creek livery burned...Mrs. A. Linsey died.
HL0 Human-auction social at Dowling. fort of one of them.
34
Edgar Clark’s bouse south of Lacey
guilty of infanticide.—Mrs. J..L.
11 Boysassault John Bullingof Wood­
burned.
21 Thus. McPharlin of Rutland died. SliQantz of Cedar Creek died.
25
Dickinson’s saw-mill and Deriar’s
land and are licked by his wife.
33 Frankie Lentz broke both boqes
15 Will. Bennett wins the glass ball
oar factory burned...Capital of Hast­
13 Mrs. Stewart of Hastings, daughter of one arm.—Mr*. Wm. Bartley is rescu­ championship nt Hastings.
of M. H. Clark, died.
ings
National bank has been increased
ed from the river and suicide.
16 Son of Jacob Hoffman of Maple
18 Village election, E. Chipman pres­
38 Peter Nieewander died.—Henry Grove died of diphtheria.—County Re­ to $100,000.
ident.
28
Little Charley Eastman of Belle­
Clever nearly killed by a falling limb. publican convention at Hastings.
16 Bosworth and Strank wrestle re­
35 Christian church gives esthetic
1» Tri-weekly mail to Lacey, Assyria, vue fatally burned.
sults in a draw.—Andrew Guest of social at the opera-house.
and Maple Grove.
I J. B. Carpenter of Carlton arraign­
Thomapple froze to death while drank.
96 E. H. Sleeper and Mrs. Harris of
30 Geo. Miles of Woodland died.
18 Mrs. Hindmarch’s house struck by Partello elope.
37 A. Linnet's little son broke both ed at Hastings for foully dealing with
lightning.
Alice Fields.
37 Mrs. G. R. Durfee’s daughter of
5 Richard Mann of Carmel found
30 Son of James Andrews. Maple Dowling has become paralired on one
99 Mrs. Clark of Barney’s mills insane
dead in .bed.
Grove, died of diphtheria.
side.
7 Mrs. Adam Wolf of Maple Grove
tl Henry Covey of Eaton Rapid* died.
81 Hoyt &amp; Wasson’s drug store at
Supposed to be poor. $10,000 found in Hoytville is destroyed by lightning.
died.
I Mrs. Preston of Bismark died.
8 Oscar 8. Burges of Morgan died.
his tranks.
,
JCJTB.
5 Eugene Cook, carriage builder, fails,
0 Geo. Wertz of Assyria shot himself
23 Drabb silver wedding at B. W.
3 Foundation for Francis and the and A. J. Hardy takes possession.
in
the arm.
.
8 Olio publisher gives his grit a rest.
I1 7 cars of stock shipped from this
died.
8 Wm. Parr, Brookfield twp., Eaton
28 Hattie Keltocg died of typhoid
village.
6 Mr*. Elias Jones of Orangeville Co., suicides.
15 Congregational church organized.
peran* bnlating the streets ”doing Jesus’
ft Judge Melendy of St. Joe county,
16 Talk of refusal to pay taxes on the
died of paralysis at Eaton Rapids.
ground* of defective village charter...
• two children at MMI1 Diphtheria began.
Hastings
taxes aggregate $16,000.. .The
by the law-ateding citizen*.-Old
with a loaded m«sket.
18 Republican convention at Hastings
Fields case is the absorbing topic of
owner of the Olds
7 Henry Thurston of Carlton died.
16 Apple crop light.—Verdi, son of talk at Carlton.

1882.

ed for complicity io the Field, case
It Dickinson A Ce-’s grist mill rwnj

। brother*,

1 Grove died..

ofVt.

■1882.

N UMBER 15.
WHITE ASH LOGS WANTED.
We will still contlaue in the O*r and Handle

FrMi, W.ll Tkaak I*.dlrectlaia for cutting log*. Highest ca*h price*
paid tor oar log*.
8. K- Dekiax &amp; Bose.
As this issue of The News goes to its
Gao. W. Francis.
many readers, the Joys and sorrows
of 1889 are about over and we stand
e are selling Dry Goods eheap.
|
Fowl** a Cixmu.
upon the threshbold of another year.
MF?RRY CHRI8MA8.
All, or nearly all, there is of the old
year is numbered among the things
that were. Those of us who have im­
proved toe opportunities of the dying
Gao.’ W. Fbaxci*.
year are wiser, better and happier than
Off" Cold weather is upon us and mankind
those who have been heedless of its
advantages. We trust that The News
patrons are amoirg the former and that D. L. De wn'a market.
they find not only a satisfactory bal­
EVERY BODY INVITED.
lance, financially, but, morally, in their
favor.
&lt;5c- Toys without number, ToUet setts.
Naahville.bas enjoyed a goodly pros­ Match Bafes, Tea setts. Chamber petts.MaJolit*.
perity during the past year. In (he Chins, Blsqne, Lava. G1*m, Tin, Wcxxl, ftper,
and 10000 other things. *€ome and spend a
matter of building operations there has half a day looking over the Unrest stock on
not been that marked improvement. "cxblbitloh between Jackson and Grand Raples.
characteristic of former yearaof this vil-V
----------- s-------------- ?—■-8MITHtog.’.
I,Min th. rnntur nt
IS A gS3ET’‘
trade die advancement has been far
'
T-- - ” pnoT—
ROCK BOTTOM PRICKS.
beyond our fondest anticipation*. We
Don’t buy * single pair of Boots or Shoes be
believe $100,000 will not cover the fore
rial ting Prindle &lt;s Chipman’s, and inspect­
amount of increa*ed trade that has ing tbeir stock rind prices. Stock larger and
been Nashville’s portion this year. Our more complete than e rer and price* marked
right down to bed-rock. No competitors al­
wheat buyers have been unusually fair lowed to undersell us.
and liberal in their dealing* with farm­
GT We are selling Boota and Shoes cheap.
ers and the shipments of wheat, and
other farm products have been largely
TAKE NOTICE.
in excess of that of any previous year
My Mill I* In ohape to do grinding oaly on
of the village’s existence. Below we Mondays and Tburadsya.
Maple Grove, Dec. 21*1, 1W2.
give the list of new buddings erected
14-17
N. C, Haoebmax.
during the year:
Geo. W. Frenda. brick »tore.
O- D. U Dcbtee’s prepared Mince Meat-S
Earrr and Downing, brick bank.
appreciated by the good iwuacwlfe. Try It
W. R. Young, ’.rick dwelling.
and see.
John Bell, frame dwelling.
Onio Strong, frame residence.
RATTAN ROCKERS.
H. R. Dickinson, frame dwelling.
u see- those elegant Rattan Rocker*
E. R. Mallory, frame dwelling.
it received at
A. Sellick, frame dwelling.
so at once. ’
A. J. Beebe, frame dwelling.
MatL Howell, frame dwelling.
tgy We are selling Clothing cheap.
•
Fowl** A: Cxwrmu
In addition to the above there has
been several tine bains erected, Christ­
ian church re seated, re-furnished, etcM
and extensive repairs and addition* to serration
proof or n
dwellings in every portion of the vil­
lage. Our streets have been materially
YOUR BENEFIT.
improved, a tire engine purobaaod and
Great Bargain* may be had at the Variety
means provided to fight the fire fiend.
The village has been orderly, gener­
ally free from drunkenness and broils.
With the exception of a six weeks’ run Looking Glasses, etc. Call and examine
5 and 10 cent counter good*. You can dep
of diphtheria the village bos been un­

£

usually healthy. To day “all is well”
member the place—Wolcott bn Udlngr opposite
with u*. We do not know of a case the
Carriage Shop, Naabvtlle, Mich.
of sickness within the corporation.
BASS WOOD BOLTS.
Everybody is healthv, and, judging
Now is your time.
from-their cheerful countenances, are,
evidently, prospering. Nashville upon
delivered. For particulars see
the whole, enters upon the new year
Gso. Wi Fbaxcis.
with bright prospects.
selling Groceries cheap. /
Fowlzm A CxmtbeU.
—The Potter woodland, just outside
FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE.
the corporation north-ear. t, is the scene
of considerable activity just now. A
large body of choppers, sawyers, team­ known as die A. M. Daughterly .property,
sters, etc., aie engaged in getting 800,­ rated in NaahviUe.
Address, 8. Ski-Lers, Bellevue.
000 feet of logs on skids. The same
will be converted into lumber at H. R.
t3T We are selling everything In our line *?
priSa
that
wbl
oston&amp;h you. We keen none
Dickinson’s saw-mill.
but first cIom goods and sell them aa low u
the lowest
Fowi.ru &amp; CxMFSatL.
—W. H. Northrup, residing three
FANCY FOOTSTOOLS.
miljs west, was arrested on Tuesday
by Deputy U. S. Marshall Vrooman,
upon a charge preferred by P. W.Niskern of Hastings, of taking illegal
A BARGAIN.
pension fees from the widow of a sol­
Jea portabit
mill of Uedier. The hearing was commenced be­
fore U. S. commissioner Knappen on
Tuesday but was continued until the
the ph*'--: to gef. ’
10th.
counties at
—Mrs. Dell Bacon eloped with an
Ionia felllow by the nameC. R. Coe on
Tuesday morning last. The Bacon
abode has been the fellow’s *‘stumping
ground” for three weeks,—he apparent­
ly running the ranch to suit his deprav­
ed tastes. Christmas Dell and one of
the children went to Assyria on a visit.
He returned Tuesday morning to find
his hearthstone fire out, cage empty
and the other child at his father’s.
The couple had occupied the premises
alone, none being pear to molest or
make them afraid. It is presumed they
took the four o’clock train for the west.
Coe has a wife and child at Ionia.

LOCAL MATTERS.
TO MY PATRONS AND THE PUBLIC
IN GENERAL.
•

J3T I get my pyatersi

tram Bfittta *«

MONEY TO LOAN,

Lee A Dvrsa«
Crown Sewing Machin* we can nrefonunewl it
to buyers as u first claw raachtut:. The work­
ing parts are perfect In materia! and constnae....I....... .11
1....

exchange.

A. C. Be:

DON’T FORGET THIS.

or Urge u.-_I eh-gjwat u
inilfching Good*, &gt;&lt;IK I:
PKHttNbKft CaiFMAW.
PAY UP.
All tlMMe Indebted te the andsnigneJ wfll
lease call and settle their wruunt without de-

A FEW THOUSAND DOLLARS

SPRING BEDS.

A REQUEST.
a* I wish to

�........
lanterns at its tna^tealled “iighuiiqa,"

DEC. an,

ihm

*11 Umr
AixdMsi

Nut day he pon&lt;l-r&lt;-1 much, aa wise folks do,
Efcencraved of ra । a tn11 • br»&gt;ti;
“Aymt J&lt;tunN». why don’t you ret marriod, too?
. tin &lt;1 stroke*) hteourly head.

HiaA»&lt;v-rrewVreve, for te bad nnly thought
WMdinr cakM aud-ic.-b ,wr*i;
But, It w.th «&gt;*• of AuiiL-c II w. re tKiught,
. Th. feast would to a doubtful treat.
*cboek, *
Then said the lovinr littl. rtf:
Aunt Jennie, don't sr&lt;t tn trrlM Ull

THE DAGGERS OF THE DEEP.

Ever since men began’to go to sea.
fights have been placed on shore toguide
them to a landing-place; but in early
time* these were nothing more than
fires on headlands. Three hundred Tears
ver, ”
there
wab- built.
before Christ, ’
—
---------on an island
yramld
ofer four hun
night,
__ , on
__ top
of which agpdtt lire was kept burning'
■which, we ore told, was visible to the
■com-flhips going to Egypt when fortyone miles away in the Mediterranean.
This pyramid was called the Pharos, and
to-day tho French name for a lighthouse
is phare, and the Spanish faro. The
. rocky coasts on both sides of the British
Channel centuries ago snowod beacon­
fires on Tery dark nights. These wore
generally tar-barrels, whjch would burn
brightly in a high wind when a fire
•of sticks would no blown away. And
they were generally lighted for the ben­
efit of the fishermen, by their wives, with­
out any iutiiority from the Government.
. I* was an easy matter to imitate such
beacons, and bad men would often erect
false lights, steering by which a ship
Would come crashing to sure destruction
at the foot of tho crags which thrust their
■erutl edgeathrough the surf. When the
ship went to pieces, her goods coming
ashore would te seized and sold by the
wreckers, as these wicked people were
called.
Many a fearful tradition has
come down of the doings pf wreckers,
not only in England and Spain, but in
America and in the East. One of the
tricks of the West Indian pirates, when
they saw a ship approaching their i-land
in tho evening, was to hang a lantern
upon a horse’s neck, and let him graze,
well hobbled, along the beach. This
would apjjear like the rocking of a
lantern on a vessel ' at rest, and.
deceived by the hope of d safe an­
chorage, the stranger would only
discover how he had teen cheated when
his»kecl struck the sand-bars and the pi­
rates had begun their villainous attack.
Though scaffoldings and towers of
wood, iron and stone wefe built here
and there at especially dangerous points
by governments long before the begin­
ning of the last century, they were
lighted by fires of wood or con) up u&gt;
1760, when Smeaton introduced wax
•candles at Eddystone. The Eddystone
shoals were ajfroup of reefs exceedingly
dangerous, because they wore almost
Invisible, and lay precisely in the track
of ships bound up or down the English
Channel. Two hundred years ago a
lighthouse pf wood and iron trestle-work
was built there bv Sir Henry Winstanley
and stood so well that he boasted, like
King Canute, that the f?ca had not
strength enough to throw it down. Soon
after, he went out with a company of
men to make repairs, when one of the
worst gales »in history arose, and the
morning afterward not a trace of the
structure remained. Another wooden
frame took .it* place for several years,
but was burned. Then tlfb engineer
Smeaton pro|josed to build a tower of
•tone, which shonld take the shape of a
massive tree-trunk, with a swelling base,
like roots, founded upon a level flexjr
•cut in the rock of the reef. This stands
to-day, rivaling its magnificent neighbor
on the Biscay shore opposite, the light­
house of Carduan, which was built to
support a bonfire of oak, but has re­
mained to be lighted successively by oil
lamps, by gas-burners and finally by elec­
tricity. Thus, everywhere, and in all lati­
tudes the beacons and wooden towers and
augfe pyramids of long ago have given
place to slendar spires of solid masonry,
Bolding powerful signals, perhaps hun■dreds of feet above the waves, and visi­
ble as far as the curve of the earth's sur­
face will permit Yet in place of the
. sturdy bonfire of oak, or the huge iron
«age full of coals, there is only a single
lamp, whose rays are gathered by deep
reflector* into a comnact bundle of un■wnsted rays, and doubled and redoubled
by row* of magnifying lenses until they
can dart to the furthest horizon in a
strong beam of steady light
The United States expends $2,000,000
annually in looking after her lighthouses,
lightships and buoya Indeed, these
been found necessary to distinguish betwasn them in order to avoid mistaking
one for another. Thus some of them are
simply fixed white lights: some are white
and revolve—the whole lantern on the
summit of the tower being turned on
wheels by machinery, and the flame dis­
appears for a longer -or shorter time;
while others are white “flash” lights.
•.glancing only for an instant, and then
dMtf fur A leWAeconda, or giving a long
w*^SHBd then aahert one with a space
of darki&gt;*« between. Some lighthouses
show a steady, wd light, others alternate
red and white. By tbsse colons and varytar p«ri&lt;«l" ol •PI***™*'- “d &lt;li«pp«»rm!*TipaUUbed by the GmeniiMol l&gt;&gt;
back called th. " Cozart. Pilot”) nangakm know which light they are looking

fined in their rolling and pitching home metallio boot, called iba life-oar, is sent
with almost nothing to do.
•
out. into which several persons can get
Even • the electric b«*«m from a flrst- at once.
cIjus lantern fails to penetrate a fog io
Such are the principal menus of saving
any great distance; yet when the coast life practised by the Lili Saving Service,
Is shrouded in thick &gt;mist is the most and you will'believe that they art good
dangerous of all times to an approaching in device, and managed with great skill
■hip. The Only way. in wuch an emer­ and grand courage, when I teU you thM
gency, in which a warning can be given, in 1880, out of nearly two thousand
is by sound. In' many places bells are persons whose lives were endangered by
rung; biit often the point to lie avoided shipwreck upon the American coasts,
is eo placed that the roar of the stlrf all but nine wore saved.—Ernest Inger­
would drown a bell's note, and then fog­ soll, in Wide Awake.
horns are blown. These fog-horns are
of a size so immense, and voices eo sten­
English Hunting.
torian, that it requires a steam engine to
The value of shooting properties or
blow them; and they utter a booming,
hollow blast, a dismal note-as we hear it “moors,” as they are called, have, risen
when we are Afe on the land, but sweet In value enormously of late years. Game
to the anxious captain whose vessel is preserving in the Highlands has become
laboring through the gloom uridpr close- not only an amusement but a lucrative
reefed topsails, and. uncertain of her industry, at least to ths landlords. To
exact position. One of'these hornsis the unfortunate tenants and small farmer
very complicated in its structure, and it has become just the reverse. They
screeches in a rough, broken blare, a have literally in many districts been eaten*
note far-reaching beyond any smooth, out of house and home by ground game,
whistling sound that could be made. sheep runs hare been depopulated to
Finally, buoys, which at first wore sim­ make room for deer, while in not a few
ply tight canks, but now are usually districts of Sntherlandshire and other
made of boilerdron, are anchored on counties the human inhabitants . have
small reefs, to which are hung bells, teen dispossessed in order that ths land
rung constantly by the toning of their might return to a state of nature. The
support; and on other reefs, buoys are grouse moors and doer forests are. in­
fixed having a hollow cap so aieipged deed, almost tho only source of wealth
that when a big wave rushes over, it in the non-manufacturing portion of
shuts in a body of air. under great and Scotland.
An American, Mr. Winans, owns or
sudden pressure, which can only escape
through a whistle in the topofthe cap, rents one of the largest deer forests in
uttering a long warning wail to tell its Great Britain. It extends from the At­
position.
Buoys in harbors are also lantic to the German Ocean; right across
made to carry lights, some by ordinary Scotland for a distance of seventy miles.
oil-lanterns, others by having their hol­ Blackwood is another of these huge
low interiors filled with greatly com­ shooting moors of some 80,000 acres.
pressed gas, which burns in a strong It was rented to tho Earl of Dud­
t'lobe of glass, and cannot be blown or ley for &lt;25,000 a year, and last year
drenched.out.
was tenanted by the great brewer. Sir
But the ordinary duty of the buoy is Henry Allsopp. As the grouse shooting
to mark the lino of inner channels, and season lasts only some six weeks, an
bv their color they tell on which side of idea may bo formed of the Immense
them the pilot must steer.
amount of money spent on this amuse­
To keep the boysail anchored, replace ment by wealthy Englishmen. The
them if lost, or put new ones where mere rent is only a small item in coraneeded; to visit the light-ships, and fiarisou with the cost of entertaining the
carry provisions and letters to their argo parties of guests, who, like New
crews; to see that all the lighthouses uro Yorkers, flock North as summer advan­
in shape, and the various parts of the ces. What with guests, dogs, gillies,
machinery in good working order, is the rent and a host of other expenses; every
duty of an inspector, who has a certain bird shot is calculated to cost at least
district of coa-t un ler his care, and con­ five dollars. Some of the "bags" made
tinually travels up and down it in a are, however, enormous. On a wellsteamer colled a "tender.”
known moor in Yorkshire, Sir Frederick
Lighthouses and sirens and buoys and Milbank shot, not long ago, 191 grouse
coast surveys are all intended to in twenty-eight minutes. On the same
prevent shipwreck; but, us I have moor, in one day, six guns killed 2,070
said; th« ocean ia still supreme. grouse, while tho total for tho season
So we add to our precautions ar­ was 17,064.
rangements to help those cost away.
These tremendous bags came into
Societies to save wrecked persons have fashion with breech-loaaing guns, for
existed in China, it is said, for centuries, of course, it would bo quite impossible
but in Europe are scarcely over a hundred to load and fire fast enough with the
years old : and the first life-boat was not old-fashioned fowling piece. Nothing
made until 1784. Those European hu­ more unlike real sport can be conceived
mane societies, especially in Great than a mbdern English battue. The
Britain, placed life-boats and gears in birds are, as a rule, quite tame, having
certain shore towns, and organized crews been fed by Land by the keepers for
who promise to go out to the aid of any months previously. They are at the ap­
lost ship, and to lake good care of the pointed lime driven in great flocks over
persons rescued. In America, however, certain spots whore the sportsmen lie in
our coasts abe so extensive, and so much wait. Each man has two game keepers
of the dangerous nut of them Is far behind him, who load his guns and hand
away from any villages, or even farm­ them to him. He simply Sires m quickly
houses, that the gover meat was obliged as he can pull the trigger into the mass
to do anything that was to be done. of birds as they fly over and past him.
Thus came about the Life Saving Service, The whole thing lasts but a few minutes.
as it is called, which now has its stations The dead are then picked up, and the
close together along our whole sea-coast, same evening are sen’ off to London to
and upon the great lakes, covering more the poulterers’ shop.—Philadelphia Press.
than ten thousand miles in all.
Each of these stations is a snug house
The Hedgehog’s Mode .f Defense.
on the beach, tenanted by a keeper and
The hedgehog is one of the best protec­
six meh. all of whom are chosen for
their skill in swimming, and in handling ted of living animals. “Marching se­
a boat in the surf—something-nvery man curely under the guardianship of its
thorn-spiked armor, it recks little of any
who "follows the sea” cannot do.
During all the season, from October foe save man. . . . The formidable
till May, two men from each station are array of bristling spines with which the
incessantly patrolling the beach al night, back is more or less covered offers a
each walking until he meets the patrol­ cheval-defrise of sharp spikes toward
man from the next station. No matter any animal that may present itself as an
how foul the weather, these watchmen enemy. Another peculiarity is the power
are out until daylight looking for disas­ possessed by these creatures of rolling,
ters. The moment they discover a vessel themselves into aground ball, by placing
ashore, or likely to become disabled, they the head on the breast, drawing up the
summon their companions, and hasten to । legs, and curling the body firmly round
launch their boat. These boats are of the members. By this posture the hedge­
two kinds. On the lakes and on the hogs reader themselves invulnerable to
steep Pacific coast is used the very heavy almost any animal that may attack them.
. . . When in this curious attitude,
English life-boat, fitted with masta anil
sails if necessary, and which a steam the hedgehog cannot be unrolled by
tug is required to tow- to the scene of main force, as long as any life remains
the wreck, if it is not close in shore.' in the body, for there is an eoonnotulr
But upon our llat, sandy Atlantic beaches developed muscle, with a very thick
a lighter kind of surf-boat, made of margin, which spreads over the back
cedar, can only be handled. This is and round the sid&amp;i, and which, when
built with air-cases at each end and contracted, holds the creature in so firm
under the thwarts, so that it cannot sink. an embrace that it will be torn in pieces
The station-men drag it on its low wagon rather than yield its point.”
The spines of this animal are about an
to the scene of its use, unless horses are
to be had, and when it is launched, they inch long, and naturally lie flat on the
sit at the six oars, each with his cork back, directed toward the tail But by
belt buckled around him, and his eye a peculiar arrangement they are erected
fixed on the steersman, who stands in when the owner coils himself. In shape
the stern, ready to obey bis slightest the spine “ is not unlike a large pin,
motion of command, for rowing through being sharply [jointed at one extremity,
the angry waves that dash themselves and furnished at the other with a round,
on a storm-beaten beach ia a matter re­ bead-like head, and rather abruptly bent
quiring extraordinary skill and strength. near the bead. If the skin be removed
Then, when the vessel is reached, comes from the hedgehog, the quills are seen
another struggle to avoid being struck to be pinned, as it were, through the
and crushed by the plunging ship, or skin, being retained by their round neads.
the broken spars and rigging pounding which are acted upon by the peculiar
about the bull. But skill anil caution muscle which has already been men­
generally enable the crew to rescue tioned
" Protected by this defense, the hedge­
the unfortunate castaways one by one,
though frequently several trips must bo hog is enabled to throw itself from con-1
made, in each one of Which every surf­ siderable heights, to curl itself into a
man risks his life, and in many a sad boll aa it descends, and to reach the
ground without suffering any harm from
case has lost it
It is a common occurrence, however, its fall. A hedgehog has been seen re­
that the sea will run so high th al no boat peatedly to throw itself from a wall
could possibly be launched. Then the some twelve or fourteen feet ia height,
only pornbility of rescue for the crew is and to fall upon the hard ground'without
by means of a line which shall bridge appearing to he even inconvenienced by
the space bptween the ship and the land its tumble. Un reaching the ground, it
,1.* I...II — ----- VX'* Maori
would unroll itself and trot off with perseaman would tie a light line around his
waist, and dari the dreadful waves, and
the more dreadful undertow, to save his
comrades. If he got safely upon the
beach, he drew a hawser on shore and
made it fast. Now we do not ask this ;,
but with a small cannon made for the।
purpose, a strong cord attached to thei
cannon-ball b fired over the ship, eveni
though it be several hundred yards dis­
tant. Seiring this line as it falls across
their vessel, the imperilled noilora haul to
them a target line, called a “ whip.”

os hl* legal DutwBtataadta* tb. oM aw, “Better
the dsy.bettwthe deed."
RICHES IN BOP FARMING.

in. lor.

The Langtry clothespin Is the latest—straight
A fint-clam Cold Weather Sult fer $8.

the Langtry underpinning.
GOOD ADVICE.'

EVEKY JUN WHO DRIVES A TEAM

tion if you keep your stomach, liver, and kWn'eys .In perfect warktnR order. There la no
medicine known that does this an surely a*
. Parker** G Inger Tonie. It will keep j'onr blood
rich and purr, and give yow good health U illtic cost' See other column.

Profeawr—"If you attempt to squeeze any
solid body It will always resistpniraurc.” Class
smile* and cites example* of exceptions which
prove the rule.________________ _

An old rusty iron box recently found at the
root* of a tree In Gwinnett county, Ga., con­
tained $2&lt;W in gold.
MLLldNSGIVEN AWAY.
Millions of bottles of Dr. King's New Dis
coverv for Gmsumption, Coughs and Colds­
have l&gt;ecn given away as Trial boules of the
Jargc size. This enormous outlay would be
disaalrious to the proprietors, were it not for
the rare merits possessed by tho wonderful
medicine. Call atF. T. Boisz's drug store
and &gt;et a trial bottle free.^nd try for yourself.
Il never fails to cure.

gome head waiters at,sea-side hotels picked
up *2,000 In pin-money tills season.

.
BRAIN AND NERVE.
Wells’ Health Kencwer, greatest remedy on
earth for Impotence, leanness, sexual debility,
Ac., * 1. at druggists. Mich. Depot. JAMES E
DA V IS A CO., Detroit Mich.

" And everybody bays you hav. such
a tony air about you.”

----- OU^ STOCKS OF-----

Prints, Dress Goods, Flannels,
Ladies Cloakings, 8b*wls. Underwear,
Blankets, Boo|a, Shoes, Hats, Caps,
Mittens, Gloves, Groceries, Glass­
ware. Orockey and Queensware

F. F. HILBERT.

CUSTOM

And manufacturer of hardwood

Lumber.

0
cC

A GOOD FAMILY FLOUR
JfILL FEEb and BEAN’

PURE Cider VINEGAR,

Out of the 2,400 diseases to which the human
frame U liable whiskey is used as a remedy for
2,860 of them with complete success.

0
4

HA ED WOOD L UMBER,

0

THE BAD AND WOTHLESS
are'never imitated or couterfeltcd. Inis Is
especially true qf a family medicine, and It la
BA SS WOOD L UMBER,
positive proof that the remedy Imluu-d Is of
highest value. As soon as it bad been tested
FINE FINISHING LUMBER
and proved by the whole world that Hop Bit­
ters was the purrtt, best and most valablefam­
ily medicine on earth many imitations sprung Mill on Sherman Street. East from
Depot.
up and began to steal the notices lu which the
press and people of the country had expres cd
II. It. DICKI.WMOX A CO.
the meriu ut H. B-, and in every wax toJ igg to
Indues •uHcrinx Invalids to um toetr sluff tn
stead, expectlug to make money on the credl
and g&lt;xxl name of II. B. Many others Maned
nostrums put up in similar style to H. B., wilt,
variously devised names In which the worn
"Hop" or "Hops” were used lu a way to induce
people to believe they were the same as Hop
OU A SALES OF
Bitters. All such pretended remedied or curea,
no natter whatthelr style or name Is, and es­
pecially those with the word “Hop” or "Hope”
In their name, arc Imitations or counterfeit*.
Beware of them. Touch none of them. Use
nothing but genuine Hop Bitters, with a bunch
•
—HAVE BEEN—
or cluster of green Hops on the while label
Trust nothing else. Druggist* and dealers arc
Double what we Expected
warned against dealing lu imitations or coun­
terfeit*.
them to lie

0

Hurrah
BOOTS AND SHOES

yyiLLIAM JONES,

Groceries
Provisions
HALUS

Of all kinds at lowest prices.

CROCKERY AND GLASSWARE,

gatarrhgure
S1OO IMURiM
I* Recommended by Physician^
■L■■

'■

!■■■■■■'■»............... I

Largest Stock and Lowest Price*.
10,000 articles cheap.

Hanging Lamps
Cheaper than ever.

____ ■ T

0. W. SMITH,

The Vain Pullet.

saw you look better. Your figure is per­
fectly lovely.”
,
" Do you really think so P"
••Certainly I do. I’d give anything
if I could wear my hair done up in a
French Toll and have it become me as it
does you.”
“ Aren’t you joking ?”
“I was never more serious In my life.
Your small feet and pretty mouth are
the envy of all the Pullets in the neigh­
borhood.”

IN* THIS LINE our stock will compare favoc-

DON’T DOUBtTt?
•
Failure is not always followed hy failure,
and although you may Live tried remedies
repeatedly without benefit,*don't doubt that
you will find the right thing yet- Putnam's
1’alnlets Corn Extn. ctor is a positive remedy
for corns, aod once used at once cured. Thl*
fact has been vouched for by thousands who
have used it. Boldby druggists.

That’s what the old Saratoga grave­
yard philosopher said.—Saratoga Cor.
N. I. Commercial Advertiser.

A fine, fat Pullet who wa* rooetiuf on
the limb of a tree safe from danger was
saluted by a Fox with:

Blankets and Robes.

THE SAFEST WAY.
’
Tile safest and surest way io restore the
youtbfnl color of the hair Is furnished by Park­
er’s Hair Balsam, which I* deservedly popular
from iu'superior cleanlines*.
,
And, In fact, everything usually kept In a first
class general store are larger than ever and
There lj need of a truthful correspondent at
are being sold at popular Tow prices. Come
see them, buy and l&gt;e happy
St Petersburgh. Nine-tenths ot the so-called
• Woodland, Oct. 25, 1382.
Ruwlan nc xs Is cooked feed.

UanvdUuly. Frio*. 75 wanner bottle.

F. 1 CHENEY &amp; CO.. Toledo. Ohio.
MAKE YOUR

DISTANT FRIEND

Horses
Shod,
ALWAYS BEST
TO HAVE THE JOB DONF

SKILLFULLY.

A HOL.IO.iV PUEUHyr.

Recognizing These Facts,
year's

9C BACKDTION TO-

'tyrXnr*

“ Really, now F*
The Fox gave her more soft Milder,
"Pray to God, but continue to row to and in th. end the rain Pullet flew down
Would be a most suitable present,
the shore.” Sanscrit, "SilenoB is the
ornament &lt;rf the ignorant” China, Villian.
and prove a weekly reminder to
Moral“Flattery,” said an old Roos­
"There are two good men: one dead and
the other unborn." Tamnl. "The han­ ter, as he looked down al the few boaea such friend of your esteem and
die of the ax ia Um Mremy wf its kind.”
__ t—
...&gt;
_
friendship.

er the extreme
it is out of the such a way that a Mill heavier line out be i "It is
to erect a light- j stretohed brt wem the wreck and the land. . hares.’

---------- IN----------

Wo have bought well and have *oa&gt;e-

on the balcony, always stands ready
with a music programme, looks after
her mail, always compliments her
clothes, and------”
“And what elw?" I asked. impotlsjiUy.
“Why, the eourting-for-monsy lover
even looks after his sweetheart's table.
He even goes and bribes the head cook
to send her chickeh livers tn brochette,
woodcock and Spanish mackerel. The
cooks always hare these delicacies for
guests provided and they are well paid
lor them. O! he gives his girl an ele­
gant time, but there’s no love in it.”
“But how does the all-for-love young
man go to work?" I interrupted.
•• Why, he don’t fool around at a dis­
tance,” said the old sexton. • “ with bou­
quets, and chairs, and programmes, and
nice breakfasts. He just quietly walks
his sweetheart over to the graveyard,
and, sitting on one of those benches but
under the trees -yonder, lie takes her
hand. He sits right down and attacks
her heart. He don't fool around buy­
ing flowers for her eyes, nor candies for
her tonguo, nor perfumes for her nose;
he just gets his arm right around her
heart, and when It begins to throb, and
when her cheek gets red and warm he
knows that .girl .is his’n. (Don’t stand
eo near the grave or it’ll cave in.) Why,
that girl would rather have one hour of
our warm graveyard courting than 400
years of such iceberg courting as i sea
going on over in the States parlors. I’ve
seen this courtin' goin’ on . for forty
years. (By jimminy, there's a bone!
I’m getting too near that other grave.)
I sea old grey-headed men every day
riding up here in carriages who courted
their wives in this graveyard forty years
■go. There's R. L Stuart, the wealthy
sugar re liner
”
" But ha’s an old bachelor,” I inter­
rupted.
“ Nover mind that. I tell yon, my
benches could tell why he never got mar­
ried. Ho loved the girl well enough,
and------ "
"But who else do you remember see­
ing here?” I asked.
“Why, there was Mr. Winston, of the
Mutual'Life. He used to walk around
here, thirty years ago, with a beautiful
blonde girl. I can see him now kissing
that girl—but I’m not going to tell all I
know. Andrew H. Green, he married r.
girl ho courted in my graveyard. Fer­
nando Wood used to have a seat here,
and Charles A. Dana, he used to know,
forty years ago, all about flirting in a
graveyard. Old General James Watson
Webb used to walk the young ladies up
here fifty years ago, and his son, the
Doctor, why he could never get along
at all in courting MIm Vanderbilt till he
got her away from the stuck-np States
Hotel, and found himself one day in one
of my seats. I knew Vanderbilt would
lose p daughter that night. I tell you.
these graveyard seats mean business
»svery time. Did I ever have any Sena­
tors or Governors on my seats? Why, of
course. Senator Kernan courted two
girls at orrnu in this graveyard, and Pres­
ident Arthur knows where all the best
seats are. They needn’t be ashamed of
it either, for Hamilton and De Witt Clin­
ton used to do the same thing when they
were boys. Boys will be boys." contin­
ued the old man. as he jumped out of
thd grave, “and girls will be girls. Girls
with big hearts-like to be loved, and fel­
lows with big hearts wiil kiss and love
them. I don’t care how straight their
parents make thefn sit up and down at
the States, they will occasionally get
away and come up here in the graveyard
to act natural, and I'm the last man to
hinder ’em. Wrhy I often keep these
graveyard gates open till nine o’clock
when'thero arc genuine lovers enough
around to warrant it I don't mean
flirters. I mean real, genuine lovers.”
"But how do the lovers manage down
at Long Branch and over at Newport,
where they have nograveyards handy?”
I asked.
“I don’t know, but they have mating
places somewhere. I ’spect they sit out
in the sand under the bluffs, or sit around
under umbrellas in the pavilions, or get
in dismal corners bn the balconies.
They’ve got to—by gosh, they’re got

Popu'ar Hcier.ce Monthly.

•mb a'

Winter Goods!

lor money
don't aoe him
girl over au
irnite^g ', and, Iftlirre i«a consuiiwr
' &lt;;r
who thtak*
price of Hop Bitten
high, remember tbit .top* are »1.25 per lb.,
and the quantity and quality of Hopa in Hop
Bitten and the price remains the »athe aa tor“Why, ha spends his time around the

Anri detiring to increase my prosperity
’ by affording the public

THE BEST WORK
I* that

Km. e'iau -mplo^d

Chas. Middleton,
A No. 1 Workman.

Detroit Free Press.

—A surgeon in London offers to teach
in thia country

Only $1AO poslpaid.

OHIO BTBOSG. VnWWiir I FOUNDER

and MACHINIST

�, CON8U up­
loading pby•1.00

fcwwi mun- lbau
M. WILLOUGHBY, M. D.

Dr. Howard, Profoww of Anatomy, College
of Physicians and Surgeons, Buffalo, N. Y.,
DEAR DOCTORtft-1

UU*A'F. HOWARD, M D.

DR. RUSH'S.
REGULATOR”
Heart Troubles.
A BURE CURE FOR ALL DISEASES OF
- THE HEART.
DR. RUSH’S “REGULATOR” baa never
.failed to giro relief. It has been used success
tally for yean, in subduing tbe moat stubborn
cates of heart difficulties.
Large Size,
....
&gt;1.00 '

Wm. G. Osgoodby, the weU-known safe
"manufacturer of Buffalo, Philadelphia, Pitta­
burgh, Newark, and Atlanta, Ga., says;OFFICE OF OflQOODBY'S &lt;M PROVED SAFES

Mt physician, upon caamfnaOon, pronounod it
•nlarxmaent oTU-e heart «i;d was unabto to &lt;&lt;re
■wanyrellof. TttotroubJeimnr worse, until 1 had

D^. Bush’s

BLOOD FHOT OIL
reumatisM
Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache,
Sorenex of the Cheat, Gout, Quincy.
Bore Throat, Swell Inga and Sprain*,
Burna and Scalds, General
Bodily Pains,
Ears, and all other Fains anil Aches.

DR. RUSH’S BLOOD ROOT OIL haa no

HUTCIIINriON.

DR. RUSH’S

Catholic and Anti-BiUious PiHs

this century. If railway bridges cannot
S what security is there for the gidsm which alone ia to stand bethe swollen Chagrea and the in­
stant destraction of the oanal? it is pro­
verbially dangerous to build a house
upon sand, but it is worse to rear a dam*
upon au earthquake. The eattutrophe
not only will impair the value of the
railway property for which M. de LeSseps has paid such a handaome price,
but it is likely to shake public coniidence
in the ultimate success of the canal it­
self. Even before the earthquake the
outlook’was by no means inspiriting, and
if the truth about the canal were fully
known it would hardly conduce to the
comfort of holders of Panama stock.
’
Take; for instance, the question of tho
health of the Isthmus.
“ Although the.
rainy season is very light this year,”
says a recent telegram from New York,
“ It has been found necessary to Ardor
the stoppage of all heavy work on the
canal. No laborer is able to work three
days together or he would be stricken
down with fever.” The thermometer in
the hot season stands.ISO to 140 degrees
in tho sun; the mean heat alike in hot
seasons and 4fy b 85 degrees. For five
months in the year during the rains work
is almost impossible. YetM. de Lesseps
declares that there is hardly a healthier
place in the whole world than Panama,
and not so long ago is reported to have
said that “if his family were sick he
would send them to the Isthmus to con­
valesce.” It must be admitted, howev­
er, tn justice to the “great Frenchman”
that if they did go there they wonld find
hospital accommodation provided by the
company on a scale which shows a much
more accurate appreciation of the exi­
gencies of the climate. “The Canal Com­
pany's hospital -buildings in Panama,”
we are told, “will form a small city of
eighty-four buildings, and will cost
£100,000.” Another large hospital has
been established at Colon, with dispen­
saries along the line of' the canal; but?
numerous as they are the number of
rick is in excess of the accommodation.
According to the official report, the mor­
tality among those employed on tbe
canal was no higher than the European
average, -in July, 1881, only twelve
deaths occurred among 1,118 workmen,
and last April only five out of 2,652.
This year the correspondents on the spot
represent the mortality as appalling. “In
four days recently the company lost nine
officers from fever. Instead of averag­
ing five to ten deaths per month, they
are averaging that number daily. Two
of the ablest engineers of the company
Bucoecded each other as chiof-of-works
only to be swept off by fever, one after

the Suez precedent, it ia far from rraaxuring for the holders ot Panama stock.

INCIPAL+UNE

Little more than eight million* alerting.
Before it was opened it coat little less than

SHORTEST. Mt a

Canal at twenty-six million pounds. At
Peuinsuliizr Stove Co.’
£4
4
the Suex rate it will not bo completed at
OF DETllOlt.
much below sixty millions. At present
he has raised six millions, not including Improved and Fittest Pat rerun of Cooks and Heaters in the
J
the money required to purchase the rail­
market. Zincs, Stove .Furniture. Etc.
road. There is only one point more to PAINTS, VARNISHES OOIAJ8, BRVSI1F&amp;
&lt;»v«5
which-we need advert. Al Sues. M. de
WELL and Cl81BRN PI MPS,
b «•«Leeseps has a monopoly of the traffic,
POINTS PIPE. SINKS, ETC.
* “2?
CHAMPJON i-CVT (U H'S. ASPS. BTC. f JS1
whereas the Foreign Affairs Committee
of the American House ot Representa­ lietroit White Lead Works 4’olorx.—The Kest in the Market.
tives has already reported in favor of a BUILDER'S HARDWARE. SASH. DOORS.
bill incorporating a company with a
GLASS, LOCKS, KNOBS, dr, &lt;fc.
Government guarantee to cut a maritime
NAILS. IRON, AND STEEL.
canal through Nicarauga. There may When in Xced of the Best Crudes.ol* linedwurc uud Mnchlncry Call an&lt;l Sec Me.
be traffic enough to pay for making one
canal from the Atlantic to the Pacific;
but what prospect is there of a dividend
if there are two?—Pali Mall Gazelle.

Crime-Inciting Story Papers.

Reference has- already many times
been made in theeeoolumns to the de­
moralizing effect of what used to be
styled “yellow-covered literature” ex­
erted on the minds of youthful readers.
The old dime novel has been replaced in
those days by a cheap weekly •tory
paper, and the average novel* itself,
which was in its ancient form believed to
have reached the very lowest notch In
the scale ot senBatlonalism and vice, has
£ne still lower as its form has taken on
s new phase, until now its baneful ef­
fects are still more hideous than when
the yellow cover was its flaunting sign.
The deplorable influence of this sort
or scurvy literature has recently been
strikingly exemplified in this State.
Two young boys, aged respectively four­
teen and sixteen years, sons of respecta­
ble parents, became engaged in a quar­
rel about a girl while going to church.
Angry words were exchanged, and Sud­
denly, without warning, one of the boys
took a knife from his pocket and stabbed
the other, killing him instantly. Subse­
quent investigation developed the fact
that both of these boys had been ad­
dicted to reading every week a great
quantity of this trashy literature, in
which just such scenes as they them­
selves finally enacted were of frequent
occurrenne. Doubtless every number of
the weekly publications so eagerly de­
voured by these young boys was filled
with sensations equally startling with
the one which they at last enacted. Long
mental familiarity with such deeds of
violence had made them ready for the
riwiWy. That familiarity breeds con­
tempt Is as true in such a matter as this
secretary shared their fate, together with as in any other. There can be no possi­
many other officers, and laborers by the ble doubt that reading such fiction, in
hundred." Ths lady superior of the which horrid scenes of violence are de­
hospital died the same night as the last scribed. and looking at their accompany­
chiof-of-works. It is difficult to conceive ing illustrations—which frequently ropa more sombre picture, of a pest-stricken resent the murderer or the assassin in
district than that which is painted, by the act of committing a crime, his mur­
those who are living in M. de Leseep’s derous knife raised nigh in the air, or
sanitorium for convalescents. Small-pox pistol cocked and aimed—is productive
has been succeeded by yellow fever and of the very results which are eo vividly
the health authorities at Jamaica and portrayed in words and engravings. The
New Orleans order all vesseis arriving cause and the effect go hand in hand,
fromtho Isthmus Into quarantine.
and the bad results are becoming of
American observers, whether journal­ alarmingly frequent occurrence. No­
ists. naval officers or consuls, agree in body was surprised to learn that Jesse
declaring that little work has been done James was a regular reader of the
on the Isthmus. Tho latest testimony Police Gazelle. It would naturally be
on this head is dated July 16, and de­ expected that such was the case. For
clares that beyond a few wooden villages the sheet in question is simply a grown­
and a lano hewn through the woods up edition of the present day boy's story­
marking the sight of the canal, next to paper, substituting facta for fiction, ana
nothing has been done.. From one to yet unscrupulously exaggerating the facts
two thousand workmen, mostly negroes to nearly as great au extent as to become
from Jamaica, together with some Chi­ fiction fuel!. So it would naturally be
namen, have been employed since Feb­ expected that when a boy of sixteen ia
ruary, 1881; but so far the ground has murdered by a boy of fourteen, some of
hardly been broken. A diten has been this trashy literature is at the bottom
dug here and there, butexeavatiou must of IL
be began in earnest before any concep­
There is a lesson and a warning in this
tion cm be formodof the trustworthiness last boyish tragedy. The same cause
of the estimate or the passibiliLy of its ex­ which brought about this deplorable re­
ecution. The canal is divided into sec­ sult may result in the death of some one
tions, sod much satisfaction has been ex­ who is wear and dear to any one of us.
pressed that in letting the first two con­ If our young boy goes to the new. -stand
tracts the excavation has been under­ each week and purchases a paper which
taken at fifteen pence per metre instead &gt;e instinctively feels can be read by
of two shillings allowed for in the orig&gt; aim with safety -only in a wood-shea,
nai estimate. Sofar.'of course, this .
&gt;r at tbe wood-shed of a playmate, or
very good. But it remains to be see. in some secluded spot, we may be sure
whether the adventurous speeuiatorawiii WIU
that, ,
seeds of future sorrow are being
J* *bU &lt;• oompiri* Uwir COUITM, u th« WTO.. I.
u. if
„ the boy, seeing &lt;u
But
the ueaheedbjraro riUrf. Ike 6r»l ucuon. from
ud ureleme., of i»fhtr .nd
Colon toGum .dfriuoe^MMB ud, mochor. bring, tin. Srebrud rf Mo,
a half miles, is to be completed in three *tional
’—’ ”
*
- —
literature
right into -•
the ■household,
yean; but as the Uno passes through n and gloats over the fiendish tale before
swamp to which Oaat Moss was solid him, while parent* neglect to examine
ground, aad a breach of contract only into tho character at the mental stimu­
involves the forfeiture of £4.000, it h lant eo greedily seif-administered, bow
premature to conclude that the work much more likely is the result to be heart­
which is not yet begun will be com­ rending aaguish to those who, by exer­
pleted at contract price. According to cising control over the boy’s habile, could
a French cjorrespondent, tbe dredgers hare stored that mind with theetaments
and excavator# sent out from Europe

The way to

'

J

’

■ FAM. to cite

dHaetiiig-s. IVIicli.

We fully realize the
a d—i.b.nn

That most all kinds of produce are bringing this fall, so have
bought a large stock of all kinds of

DRY GOODS, FANCY GOODS, NO­
Catarr
TIONS, BOOTS and SHOES,
■BT'clvs''
and CARPETS,

3IRECTICNS
■tT’ICkf

And are selling at prices that will astonish you.
KUSCMAS RALF

W. S. GOODYEAR &amp; CO­
Hastings; October 4, 1882.

------- OF--------

MILLINERY

Ituc healthy actrtilot*

AY-FEVER
Bev. F« ver, Xc.
Agreeable toise-

Uneqnaled For Cold in the Head'
The Balm ha. K«lne&lt;I an rnvlabk reputation when
«vea knows. dUplaelnj «U other prr&lt;nnulon».

Recognized ns a Wonderful Discovery.

GOODS.
NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY CHEAP.

FOB THE NEXT SIXTY DAYS
I shpll offer my entire stock of millinery goods at cost or
under.

SPECIAL BARGAINS IN TRIMMED HATS
Some people are never ready to take advantage of favorable
opportunities. Don’t let thia be said of you.

Come Early, Come Late,
Only that your wants are supplied.

M. JEFFREY
FARMERS, TEAMSTERS, HORSEMEN!
—DO YOU KNOW THAT—

YOU CAN SAVE MONEY

In the Heavy lAne I manufacture Farm Harness, Road Har.ni^ ,!n , S4.??!"*
?" dO
"“? cause
’
**■ nrm, and Lawther BarneM, using the beat tjrand of “A" stock, stitchin
pwnu b
wm
aouble
Vtuiwith 6 cord No. 10 thread, and Eberhard Trimmings.
Uao. Io guard agribri then. For
severing tbalof Panama. But the ditch «f the P^en. ar fim clupen ot tbrir
My U*ht Mafk and Rouble 11 arnew a are the Pride of aH who
which he dug in the sand from Port Said rtdoM .Urie*. are .dreolatad Hk. hud
bill, ud fhroro nto door-vud* In
STof S.U

taken to hew through the rocks and
awampr of Panama. The new canal
will only b« half as long an the old one. Ue to head off Uu« derice of tbe &lt;kn d in

rtscorit unreu.

W, S. GOODYEAR &amp; CO.,

wluch they bare to surmount
jn
,.outh u d&lt;iIv exoo_.&gt;
y’.Egff1.,**}Uui UmptUuInf Uron ririoj papers,

•OLD BT AlL DRUGGIST*.

T. J POTTER.

By Buying Your Dry Goods S”,

OF HERB. WALBATH.
Pleaa^R to take and

UITY

KANSA

Made in all Styles
t

—FROM—

Best Stock in the Market,
AJUD WABRIBTBD TO G1VB SAllBPACTIOB.

RUPTURE
Urwuinaj

�: CLOTHINC S'

TUB ONE-1
,611 immigrants landed in the United

Tall and Winter Clothing

J.X tbe Hungarian Diet on tbe 30th Tisza,
President of the Hungarian Council, said ibe

Everything Sew HtyliRh. and Durable.

murder at Louisville, Miss.
Thb United States steamer Bassler arrived

nrssssx itsuk
' bill was taken up and furtb-r

months*- survey of the Alask.n coast They
discovered many excellentharbors, and speak
Tub Automation of American Economists
Bm betn.organized *t Waahlngton, having
for its oblecta the gathering of business and
industrial statistics and the dissemination of

CHILDREN’S, BOYS', AND YOUTHS’ CLOTHING,

OrxnnANK, tbe Austrian bomb, mauufoct-

Vernon, a, by an open’swilcb, resulting In
serious bruises to several travelers.

wrecked bridges, swept away houses, and
seriously interrupted travel. .
resolution declaring it
Erie &lt;k Western Road was thrown from a
trestle near Carrol ton, N. Y-, a few days ago,
by the rails spreading, and two coaches fell a
distant* ot fifteen feet, seriously injuring 0L

should
resolution providing for a re-

Agrioul oral Appropriation btil wm amended
and pM &lt;L...in tiM House majority and mi­
nority resolutions were reported from tho
daring in favor ofa rebate on tobacco in stock

o taxation. Both resolutions were ro­
ll® Army Appropriation bill (&gt;&gt;4,681.i considered in Committee of the Whole.

unices umpio previous notice of tho limo when
the act U to take effect la given, a proportion­
ate retxtc of taxes paid on the atocks on hand
should be allowed." Tbe Pendleton Qvti-Ber-

aence were granted, making, with those pre­
viously granted, u total of 181 members absent

A bill was passed providing for tho holding of
a term of the United States District Court at
Wichita, han. The 0x11-Service bill came up,
the question being on Mr. Pugh’s amendment
that tbe present employee in Departments
should be subjected to competitive examina­
tion*. After debate tbe amendment was
finally rejected— W to Zk Other amendments
wen' dtapoaed of, after which on adjournment
was bad until the 27th. with the unanlmauH
agreement that the pending bill should be
taken up after the morning buslneM. debated
day ..Without transacting any business th*
House adjourned to tbe S7th.

'We nre proud of our uew stock or

tho recent ex;.4o«ion in the French cartridge
factory bad died up to tho 20th.
on application or frocly distributed on call.

DOJCESTIC.
Lxwis Tbomfsox, a mulatto, elghty-ons

for six mouths for stealing in New York. Over

grated windows.
Tukez pickpockets were arrested at Lock­
port, M Y., on the 20th, tried, convicted and
sentenced each to seven years' imprisonment.
all done Inside of six boars.
Geoxiu Lavery, who In 1873 Billed a New
York C3ty policeman, and was sentenced to
imprisonment far life, escaped from Sing
A rail-storm at Huntsville, Tex., a few
days ago blew down a milling-house, killing a
white man and four negro women who bad
■ought shelter.
A dhsft on the Manhatta.: Bank of New
York for $17.63 was on tbe 20th presented by
the owner to the Manufacturers’ and
Traders’ Bank of Buffalo, calling for $5,678.­
48. Tbe bank paid the money, and officers
were Inquiring as to the whereabouts o: the
Chicago o n the 20th. voted to increase the
price of Veer one dollar per barrel.
Thb failure of the Rochester City Bank has
caused the failure of Moore's banking kgusn,
at Victor, N. T., with liabilities of flOO.lMl

of letters from New York for Chicago, and
much of tbe European mail from three steamALEXANDER jEmnsoN, a jealous negro,
fired s double-barreled shot-gun through a
window in Brooklyn. N; T.. the other night,
killed one man Instantly, serlon*’- - ’“Nied

A FIRE in Buffalo, N. Y., on tbe evening of

boUding and burned two floors of the Masonic
Temple, the total loss being estimated at

three little ch 11 Iren were left alone. It was
presumed they were playing with the fire, lot
upon the mother's return I wo of them were
burned to desth, and the clothing of a third,
an Infant six months old, wm on fire. Tbe
mother's efforts to save tbe little one nearly
cos’ her life, as tbe baby died of its injuries,
and the mother was so badly burned that her
life was despaired of.

stroyed six stores and tenements, causing

Wiluam Smith, a lad of Covington, Gx,
while intoxicated recently, killed two white
men and a negro who attempted to arrest
h*™»

PERSONAL AND POLITICAL.
Hexrt James, Se., tbe philosopher and
metaphysician, an Msodate of Greeley, Emer­
son and Thoreau on thia side of tho Atlan­
tic, and of Carlyle, Mill and Tennyson on the
other, died in Boston on tbe iftth.
Gexeral Curtis was discharged from cus­
tody at New York on the AJth upon payment
of tbe fine of Si.-OX) inflicted for collecting
political assessments.
Axx Carmoll, a maiden descendant of
Charles Carroll, of Carrollton, tie signer of
the Declaration of Independence, died of
pneumonia at Duddington mansion, Capitol
HUI, at tn ailTonoed age, on tbe 20th.
Colonel Ixgersoll on tbe 21st made hla
opening address for the defense in tbe Btarronte trial at Washington.
.
Rear Admiral Jambs F. Sciuxac died at
A COXHMXCT of the Greenback-Labor
National Committee was held at 6L Louie a
in favor of having a National Convention
c Bed for the purpose of uniting into one
party the different elements opjxjsed to tbe
Republican and Democratic parties. Lee
Crandall, Secretary of the Committee, is re­
ported as aulhorizlnj tbe statement that
there was a strong fusion element in the
meeting, but after a full discussion of all
questions bearing od the welfare of the
party, all propositions
for fusion
witha either
recently
to rob

new party, were squarely beaten, and tbe
members of tbe Committee were directed to
.build up the party under Its present organi­
sation, that being deemed as perfect na it

has been i.rrestod for taking money from reg­
istered letters.
Wiggms, of Canada, lhat on the 11th of

General Hasen, Chief Signal Officer of the
Lotted States, says: ’Too swere rebuke
statements
■ so Informed

Bexiamix G. Humfubbts. who was ex­
pelled from the Governorship of Mississippi
tn 1885 by Federal bayonets, •Bled suddenly tn
The S88J anniversary ot the landing of the
Pilgrims was celebrated at Plymouth, Mass.,
historic. Kock was saluted by a military fuslL
lade, and by in ns were sung, addresses da'llvered, and a banquet indulged in.
A rumor wm current In Washington on

CAPS, CAPS

We have made addition* to our

at Longh Mask, Ireland, has teen convicted tract of said pamphlet is forwarded
containing full and complete lostnicEx-EmFbsm Euozxib has instructed M.
Roaher to convey to the city of Marseilles the
Cour-

A fibe at St. Petersburg a few days ago
destroyed several iron-work establishments
stocks.
Fortt soldiora mutinied recently at Tampi­
co, Mexicc, and escaped after killing a Cap­
tain and wounding a Lieutenant and several
privutes. One-half tbe party were captured,
and would be shot.
A Dvbltx (Ireland) dispatch of tbe 2£d
states that signs ot distress among the small
fanners and laborers were becoming more
visible tn some atstrtcta. Tho Government
was being pressed to establish relief works.
Or fifty Socialists who have recently been
tried at Prague, one was sentenced to two
years’ imprUonm-nt and forty-four to terras
varying from six months to two weeka
'
The decree degrading Arabi Pasha and bls
titled followers was published at Cairo on tho
23th, and put Into effect In tbe afternoon,
when tbe irisoncrs started for Ceylon, via

Pkesidext Zaldua, of the United States of
Colombia, died at Bags a few days ago.
At Grand Seminary, In Montreal, Blabop
Fabre recently ordained 140 students, over
fifty of whom reside Ln the United States.

LATER HEWS.
koutak, a city of EMtern Siberia, lhat he has
arrived there with the bodies of Lieutenant
DeLong and hla companions.
C E. pTOX, late President o. the City
Bink of Rochester, N. Y-, has been arrested
and held to bail in the sum of $50,000 for
embexxllng 6200,000 of the funds of that fa­
sti tutjon.
. 5
Katb Ytrld’s Co-operative Dress Associa­
tion In New York dosed its store on the 26th,
with liabilities of 8125,000.

With the view of suiting tbe most particular customers.-

AIWII SEE.

PRINDLE &lt;fc CHIPMAN.

Great Bargains

We want to realize 810,000 from sales of mi
before tbe first of January, and in
nlw
'
o.ilcr to do so we will offer goods so low that to
Clothing.
,
Wu will sell you a rattling good suit for $6.50 u J a better one for $16.50. Now is just the
season for
Overcoats.
.
Of which we have a large stock. You can save in the purchase of one of these money enough
to buy your wife a pair of shoes or a new dress. ’
Dress Goods.
/
Trunks, Satcbds, Floor Oil Cloths, Table Oil Goths.
AU-wool F amiels.
Waterproofs, Cottonades, Sheeting, Shirts and Drawers, Ladles’ Underwear, Hosiery.
Children’s Suits, Children’s Overcoats.
‘
Boys’ and Youths’ Sults and Overcoats.
Boots and Shoes.
*
advance and tho abandonment of the claim as
Id complete stocks, and Dever so good goods sold tor so little money.
soon m the fee is received. advertisements
bolding out inducements not warranted by
Gloves
and
Mittens
law, by which boncat soldiers uro led to prefer
bes-leM claims, the only advantage in such
For Ladles and Gents. Rubber Overcoats for Ladles and Gents.
Felt Boots.
8u&lt; h facta are principally predatory upon
Rubber Boots and Ot££sbi&gt;es, Wool-lined Boots Felt Boots for Ladies and Gents.
the claimant rather than upon the Govern­
ment. but are Just an mcritricious and blame­
worthy. Very n"&gt;poctfully.
Wolf Robes, Blankets, Gloves and Mittens.
W. W. DUDLBY, Commissioner.
GROCERIES, CROCKERY, GLASSWARE, NOTIONS, Ac.
A Remerkahle Story.
Thb Highest Market Price paid for Butter, Eggs, Beaus, Corn, Dried Apples, Raspberries,
Tbe.St. TboiMs (taulftKnlno Journal tells Peaches and Cherries. 1000 cords of 18-lnch wood wsnted.
Wimtbb is upon ns. You need tbe goods and we need the money. We don’t say, “You
the following excoodlngly wonderful story
tickle me and Fll tickle you," but wc do say that, our wants are mutual and we may do each
concerning a Michigan man:
other good.
.
Dom’t fall to call with your produce and your cash, for now is your time to strike.

from ms neat and ran hastily along the aisle to -

wm

XStallville, November 23, 1883.

HARDWARE AT COST

not the slightest chance for hla life

Not at my store, and
I am selling really cheaper than
those who advertise “at cost.”
soon m bo was aboard and tbe train making
headway toward Buffalo again hewM besieged
with questions, trainmen, conductor and paasengrrs all being eager to know tbereasouof
hUhMty dlsembarkaticn. He said his name
Indiana Hallway. He wm going homei
— V — — —— —
—
«ln tnc coach. «s one naturally would at
o’clock in the morn'ng. While be slept
' he dreamed that bo was In tbe cab of hl* en­
gine and his mate shouted to him: "Tbe
throttle 1* siopped, if you want to save your
life. junjp7’ And he Jumped, as has been de­
scribed- sit is a good thing be did not Jump a
minute sooner, or be would bare landed in
tae stream below the bridxe tbi* side of Tliburv. As it was. he wm scarcely injured at
all, bls arm being slightly Orotsed and
acraP bod. Ho did not wakeup till be struck

Whs Write the Letters.
mills, Wftberell d: Co-’s machine works, and
Tbo-foUowlng table is from tbe report of
other manufactories, dosed on tbe 26th, on.
account of a iepresslon In trade.
The Republican* of tbe Seventeenth Ohio bee of letters written and mailed tn each Mate
District have nominated Colonel J. Ik Taylor oentage per capita of populationto fill tbe vacancy in Congress caused by the
No. ItiUn. Kiink.
death of
T. Updegraff.
TOBIES.
..
..
6.813
ter, uged ten. who had attempted to save Br». LX«,4»
aic’a life, were drowned a Mt days ago while Arkansas 0.4IUJM
OsHfornta.................... SMJM
skating at Merriton, Ont.
Cotorndo............. JO,7».&lt;BI
Cbbibtxam Timmax, who recently rescued Connecticut
two gir.s from a burning building in ProvL Dakota,...................... 4..K171M
................ £&gt;«.&lt;«
denev. IL L, was called to the Mayor’s office IMaware.,
D strict of Columbia. 1AV4.W)
on Christmas and presented with 8873 in cur­ Florida...................... 8jJ71^7$
Georgia..
-------Mjw»ns
rency and a suit of clothes.
Tnoxas KsMR,_yho deliberately killed an Idaho.....
Illinois' . ....I ..
12. Id
unoffending man, was lynched nt Pioneer, Indiana
Territory ——Arizona, a few days aro. He confessed to ’Indian
---SSjaMABS
icveral murders before be was handed.
m
H.r.-ior.
A5MIB 8CM.IYAX, more than one hundred Kentucky!'.
years of age, was kille.l by a train at Wln17
®,010..XM
Tnz Increase of small-pox in Baltimore, Michiana
ML, caused tbe man gers of several public

HARDWARE, BUILDERS’ MATERIAL,
SASH, DOORS, ETCETERA.

Robbs, Cutters, and Sleigh Bells,
PLATED GOODS,
E?iI&gt;JL.ES8

And general stock eqnal to any and first-class.
WHITE SEWING MACHINES

C. L. GLASGOW.

Our Great Baro;aiiis
Have nearlv cleaned our store of Fall Goods, and wc are now filling up with
the largest stock of

:: 9S

a

Institutions to establish quarantine against

i,

weUville, Mass., Fr.-d Williams and Marshall
Mmo w re instant y killed.

H.r«.7iM

SS*.

WINTER GOODS
------ IX TOWS.

•

Have attracted the attention of all classes of people to our store, and our trade han been Im

|'

New HaimipeMre*.
n
New Mcxioo.*".’.\.... l.'-MJiW
New York.................. ai.OMW
North Carolina 8,W.0I2
•■7
Qteto............................. «A8pM

VARIETY

Holiday Goods!

55 ESTCall and see.

sued for the revaccination of the police. Tmm Secretary of the New York Chamber of
Commerc • re&gt; rtad on tbe 26lh that tbe ex­
ports for tbe post year by American vessels
aggrecat d «-17.S8'&gt;.SftJ, «hlle foreign vessels

'

Boots, Shoes, Gents’ Furnishing Goods, Groceries, Underwear, Etc.

all in and sufficient tbe claim is aettiedstonce.
O
the claimant la called upon for tho
purtieutar kind of evidence required, and

Immediately upon the tiling of the claim
or before. An agent well posted in the law
and the requirements of this office can thus
anticlputo tho calls of tho office and greatly
shorten the time consumed In ths a&lt;Qudlcation of the claim, as well as save tho office
much labor As to tho absolute necessity of
tho intervention of an agent, each must judge
for himself.
,
In response to your second question, I would
say that tho criminal files of this office show to
many and various prosecutions against dishon­
est agents that I should be unable to classify
and enumerate tho different violations of law
and the deviors usod in defrauding pensioners*
within the limits of such a oommunicatton as

.

Our stock of Boot# and Khoex is larger than ever, and no competitor
will be allowed to undersell us.

CAI. I.

denburg (Prussia) mine a few days ago tbe
chain broke, -nd the cage was precipitated to
the, bottom. Twenty persona were killed.
A comfant with a capital of £1,000,00) la
forming at Dublin to develop Iriah manulact-

young la !y, met her death 'instantly at her

cording to the same rumor, tbe chief object

HATS, HATS,

.

IsU'waa ditched a lew days ago nt Monnt
Benson, Bishop ot Truro.

Faxlitbes were announced as follows on the
23d: New York City, flieodore Weston,
architect, for 8170,822; Joseph H. Adams &amp;
Son. for 8105,643. Philadelphia, James &amp;
Pkbxt de Cassiua, of Montreal, shoe manu­
Smyth &amp; Co., cotion-goods manufacturers,
facturers, have failed for 6100,0X1.
for 8450,000.
Thmxb shocks of earthquake occurred at
Thumb ice gorges in the Allegheny River
broke on the 84th. carrying away 65,000 feet Santiago de Cube a few days ago.
Gexbiul 8tonb Pasna, la'.c Chlcf-of-8laff
of lumber at Pittsburgh belonging to Joseph
of the Egyi tian army, has resigned his com­
Couch.
Two great-grandsons of Daniel Boone re­ mission, and Intends to return to America.
Fubthkb advices received on the 2ist state
ceived mortal wounds at the hands of Will­
iam Vaughan, of Ladonia, Texas, on tbe 24 th, that tbe recent great fire at Kingston, Jamolfor whom one hundred citieens were engaged
destroyed six hundred buildings. Total loss,
Im tbe mstter of Sunday trading by He­ £2,500,000. Twelve persons perished in the
brews In New York, Judge Arnoux holds that flames.
PbixCb Kbafotkine, the Russian Nihilist,
Jews and Gentiles are alike under the Consti­
at present domiciled in France, has bean ar­
tution.
rested for complicity tu tbe various anarchist
movements in French territory.
ylvania State Treasury Department, was shot
Tn Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs
man Dukes, a member-elect of tbe Legisla­ thinks the removal of the bodies of De Long
and
his men impracticable at thia season of
ture. Tbe affray took place in tbe room of
tbe latter at a hotel, and was believed to have
been caused by domestic troubles.
The whaling bark Hercules put into New near Naples, Italy, a few days ago.
W. C. Axdbrsox, a Montreal telegraph op­
Bedford, Mass., the other day with ten cases
erator, has, it is Said, fallen heir to a fortune
of small-pox on board.
ot $730,050 by tbe death of an uncle in ScotA coixisiox of trains occurred a few nights
Mlllboro, Va., by which five men were killed
and two wounded, all but one being employes.
Lccius W. Poxd, tbs famous forger of
Worcester, Mass., was on the 25th pardoned
from the penitentiary, alter serving six years—
half hi* term.
At Estelline, Dak., a few days ago, while

'

Which Is the meat eompiete ever laid down tn Nashville.

peror, was public’/ executed a. Trieste on

A-traix carrying three hundred excurslon-

bill

ss-&lt;

Tbe attention ot Parents it* reapectfuHy called to onr large stock of

&lt;1.M

— ARE

NOW ARRIVING,-o

PRICES THAT DEFY COMPETITION,
I ATDuring
the Holidays,

tol which fell from the coat-pocket of George

.
upon a black Ml r«V
but when they bear

WILL C!V«-

A valuable preMont worth at I.-as-. One Dollar, or

A DISCOUNT OF TEN PER CENT,
______ L___ rx—,.

__ _______

r

zetor

NTONKY.-

;er

&amp; co

�nf Woodlaod arr&lt;

invited.

it»nu c&lt; inte,«U for

pcwtofficr, sddreoeed to box 11, when tt

STRONG
FACTS!

tor’s nativity wm npprvj
rd iu Nashville, both by ;
and private gathering*.

it is high time to arise and assert' their
right*, and it will la* dune. The writer piratioiiH tor-the future, but alaal who
would not say «o much &lt;m the sutdect ran
______
nun
toll. what that future hold* in *tore
were it not for tbe fact that he doe* j for us f This then, is a good and ap- |
tempting to «*veau mu met* uungera, cantata of ’’luimanuH presen
»y ., j
---- .7--------- ,
ut—
v-ii— the
*k,.practice
—
Mihbatti-school at tlie Christian not►hims&lt;
‘lf follow
spoken3 propriate lime' for making new resolu- '
Thursday and Friday nights’ hut maV have to eat,away ’ the little I
r. hemnzlnxn,
fa&gt;f« .nd put of tb. pdm. TU» «• cllllrrll sun.l.y ,«»lu«. Tb. ...UU Iilium
&lt;■' »bore.
i ■iihiihl™t bM tor
■ I,- too
„_i yen, boroes tiona, ami denouncing all bad .habits;
Nenraigu
‘cident will neriowdy interfere with i
pr^*i*dr&lt;l by* tenor solo by Rev. ’
1 th
the
* instills of »“
having
**“ «"*
not ««lv'w&lt;-d.
only wood, but let ns see if wa can live up to thc*«
—8. K. Denar &amp;. Hon, hare pure!
logs, trees and fence*,
fences, but even
e'vena
r gate resolutions,
i
and avoid these bad habits
building operations contempkteil by j p. a. BisM*H, a quartet song by Mra. log*,
JSVC power i»
"
while
it remains 1888.
. '
'
made across his road and neither path1
street, and will locate their oar factory dte Rising*, a fact which thf**iitfured | Brady, rtiss Trnmnn. ami Mew*.
NORTH l l?TL£T0S.
m*n was quick, to refer to.
Bind! jtadCook, who also formed-dbe master or highway commissioner had
them removed, but they were not
cantata quartet. Beaiddi the quartet*
the foundation, and by building up
—Our market continued to . attract
placed there for insult or obstruction
Did you have Santa Claus?
choruses, and recitutioiiH, solos were
LOCAL GIBBLE-GABBLE
attention from neur and far. In the
the svUem, drives out all dto i r
to
him, but for the convenience of bis
Elder Hngbe* is on the sick list.
rendered by Rev. Bissell, Miss Ida
matter of clover swd our receipts have
Claud Price is building a sheep shed.
Wolcott, Minnie gotten «od Grade and neighbors. ■ Now let us have fair play,
been double that of any previous sea­
A Lady Cured pF
either
get
down
on
our
knees,
or
else
H. Hart has returned from the Booth.
Sleighing is utilized for nil it is worth. Markle Foote; a duett by Mr. Bissell
son.
every one clear the highway its legal
Frank Flint spent Christ max at home. and Mias Truman ; and Gracie Potter width and keep it so for tffr k'poor as . B. Hart has gone to Battle Creek on
—This issue of The Nkws contains
a visit
Miss Maggie Jeffrey is spending a few i Edim Truman, Gracie Foote. Ina Hobbs
many tilings of interest to it« friends
Fin Winnina is spending* few day*
and Zilla Crocker rendered rhe "Lily well as tbe rich.
.
and Nashville’s, and should l&gt;e pre­ days at Homer.
with friend*.
Mrs. Dr. Adams of Kalatno Sundayed Song,” a beautiful solo and chorus.
A
liappy
new
year
to
all
T
he
N
ews
served. Extra copies can he procured
Mr. Noyes talks of going to winter in
with friends here.
. Miss Belle Troman organist. Tbe ex­ readers.
at this office.
- ’
Mias Gertie Ingereon is spending tbe ercises dosed with the singing of coroHarry Jones aqd wife of Hastings 1Grand Ledge.
Wm. Clever has gone to Ohio to
natiop by andieuce and school and the spent Christmas with Al Mix.
week at Woodland.
rard's nouse, two miles south, caught
.
A. J. Hardy and wife will spend benediction. On all hands it was ar­
Mrs. Cooly ot Lansing, spent Christ­ spend a few weeks.
Kidney Diseue Cured.
fire from a Atove-pipe that projects
Mr*. Austin,.mother ot Austin brothgued that the cantata was a fine one, mas with West Kalamo friends.
,
through the roof, and a two-foot hole
era,
arrived
Dec.
Slat.
T. T. Green and wife spent Xmas and presented with perfect and
Oscar Wilson is negotiating for the
burned through the rp6f was the result.
•Jake Bartholf returned Tuesday
charming raccetw, for which much cred­ Beal firm just over the line in Maple
with Charlie De manty.
—Apparant!y~weilgrounded suspicion
from a trip to Virginia.
Geo^ Tomlinson of Hasting*, Christ- it!* dun'to Mr. Bifwll. Oue excellent Grove.
Lewis Lockhart litis bought a new
is wfitertained at Hastiues and Carlton, niased at Al. Sellick’s.
feature of tbe concert waathat it ended
.
Not much of a "spell” at the lyceum
that au almrtion was performed upon
J. L. Webber and family, of Sandus­ early. The church was nicely decorated last Saturday, but they are bound to pair of sleigh*. Tally one.
Toball GaHinger sport* a new swell
Alice Felds, and that tho verdict of ky, O., arc now arrivals here.
with evergreens.
try again.
'
“death from natural causes” was ob­
Miss Mimi Brown is at home in the
The Christmas gathering at the M.
Messrs. Hurd and Niles are building box cutter. Now, gals look out.
Heart
Freman Gates and family from Ionia
tained by what was called “soap” when country during the holiday*.
E. Chnrch on Monday evening, wa* all u splendid croMway on motion line of
county
‘
had
his
Christmas
with
E.
Dorsey used it in Indiana.
Hofir L. J. Wheeler departs for the anyone could wish for. The program 18 anti 19.
Ixickliait.
of exercises, though almost exclusively
.—There will be a union temperance "White House” next Tuesday.
L. Z., son of Ambrose Slosson and
R. Hosmer and family £rom Carltqp,
Miss Effie Morey of Ypsilanti, is Mrt. carried by small children; was perfect Minnie, daughter of Marsh Grant, were
meeting at the Methodist church next
spent
Sunday with his motbei, Mrs/'L.
in
ever
respect.
The
singing
of
T.
M.
Brady
’
s
guest
over
New
Year.
.
. Sunday evening. Prof. Geo. B. Holmes
married on Wednesday.
D. Hosmer.
’ *
V,
Sixty-four couptea tripped the light Christmas carols, by a class of twelve
and his agents, who spend their Sab­
Your Kalamno village correspond­
Elias
Gate* and wife from Orange
bath in this place, and who are strong "fantastic” at Jas. Clay’s Christmas children from ten to fourteen years of ent can find plenty to write about in
spent Sunday with Mra. Geo. Witte,
age, was ibe finest we ever had tbe that vicinity now-a-days.
tomperancomen, will be present and dance.
For the peculiar troubles to whicH
their daughter.
.
Mrs. Chiu. Mason and children of pleasure of listening to, and reflected
assist Let usjiave a rousing meeting.:
The weather lias been pleasant tor a
ladies are subjefl. Brown’s Iron
Wm.-P. Wilkinson, one of the oldest
Hastings
are
Mrs.
Hale
’
s
guests,
this
much
credit
upon
themselves
as
well
as
few days past; the roads are splendid
—The annual meeting of the Barry
Bitters is invaluable. Tty it.
*ettlers
in
Castleton,
has
nnother
at
­
upon Dr.'Barber, who had charge of wheeling but thin sledding.
county agricultural society was held at week.
’
.
Richard Drako is enjoying a ten the music. The recitations were all by
L. S. Smith has just erected dbe of tack of neuralgia.
the court bouse in Hastings on Tues­
Be sure and get the Genuine.
W. Reynolds and F. Feighner gave
day, when the following officers were days visit with friends in Lawrence chidlren under ten years of age, and his star wind mills for Joe Mix on the
the young folks of Maple Grove and
could
not
well
l»e
excelled.
"Merry
county.
elected: President, Milan Waldorff;
old homestead. What little your scribe
Oue third off on railroad return tick­ Christmas;” by Aubry Francis, and has seen of the "Star,’’ for which Mr. north Castleton a free oyster Supper
Vice President A. D. Kennedy; Secre­
last Friday evening. A splendid good
tary Will. Hays; Treasurer, H.C. Carter. ets Dec. 80, 81, Jan. 1, good returning “The Christmas Tree,” by Orly Gran­ Smith is agent, he can say it is the
ger, were exceedingly well rendered. easiest running and most powerful of time was enjoyed by the participants.
Jan.
3d.
—sweetly she woke from her slumbers
Would it not be better for some of
Amos Nichols and wife of Lansing The little’fellows proved themselves to any put up around here. The great
only to hear the last rich cadences of a
Sundayed. with hi* mater, Mrs. Dr. be modern embryonic Ciceros. “Christ­ trouble with most wind mills is that it our young bloods to bo careful how
beautiful serenade, as they floated away
they
call pet names on church steps,
mas Eve,” by Allie Martin, was very takes too much wind to run them, and
in tbe golden moonlight, and softly she Young.
’
P. T. Colgrove and F.R. Timmer­ nice, and Hortie Omuu’s "Playing when a stiff breeze plays on them they afterJJunday school!
crept to her window and listened—but
O.
ti.
McOmber of. Baltimore is can­
man of Hastings, was in the village Grandmother,” too cute for anything. start off as though on a tare. Not so
only to hear the crow of a Shanghai
vassing
the count^yfor Dr. Chase’s re­
Little
Anna
Downing
’
s
“
Hunting
for
Tuesday.
with the "Star,” and Mr. Smith is to be
rooster—did a .beautiful maiden of
J. B. Mills of Webster &amp; Mills, took Sauta Claus,” more than brought the congratulated on being able to handle ceipt book and die American diction­
Nashville.
ary. Those in want of such will do
his Christmas turkey at his old home house down. “A Christmas dialogue” the beat
And continues to disnensc nil kinds
—We are informed that a certain
well to see him before buying else­
iu Assyria.
•
by Misses Bertha Wood, Belvia Swift,
of
Your scribe has been badly but agree­
“lady” living not more than a thousand
An effort is being made to again Mary Collier. Minnie Fowler, Alice ably “sold” for once. Last week West where. *
miles from Nashville, came very near pre*?nt “Tho Gunmaker of Moscow.”
One evening last week, while Rome
Evans, Percie Dcmarny.Nora Ainsworth Kalamo announced the finding dead in
causing herself a great deal of trouble,
of tbe young people^iring in the town­
Good idea.
and Clarence Barber, was very appro­ the mail wagon of Peter R. Johnson,
a few days since by attempting to
Mr*. I. D. McCutcheon of Leslie is priate and well rendered. Misses Ber­ mail carrier. In this section such was ship, were coming home from the To the satisfaction of its large and in­
blackmail two prominent citizens, but
visiting at P. McOmoer’a and with other th* and Belviadisplaying rare talent In the report, and your scribe by inquiry Schlappi U. B. church, tiiey had die
creasing list of patrons.
being iuformed Uy har aLUwney tiutt Trtetx** here.
personating old ladies—Charlie Wol­ could not learn to the contrary, but, pinna.,re of picking themselves out of
she bad no case, she concluded not to
-We also keepMr. and Mr*. F. C. Caurter and child­ cott as "Old Santa Claus,”was immense. after the article went to press wo were a fine snow bank. But never mind,
spring her net.
ren of Battle Creek have spent the The display of presents were fine and
agreably surprised to leani that tho re- for such is life.
—Id the hurry of press day we can week in town.
December 30th, Miss Ella Ellerton
gave the best of satisfaction to nil, or »*ort was false, and caused by failure of
devote but a moment to Prof. Holmes’
Must be pleasant at J. Warburton’s. at least to all those receiving them.
Mr. Johnson to arrive at night with the had a birth day party, it being her 17tb
elocutionary entertainment at the M. Miss Bissell’s health improved during The chureh was l&gt;enutifiilly decorated
mail as expected. Now, this writer birth day. Owing to die storm, there
E. church Tusday evening; but ajiffioent her stay .there.
with evergreens in the form of fes­ very humbly begs Mr. Johnson’s par­ was not as many ns diere would have
| be it to saytliat a large audience inuanibeen. Sbo received several presents.. Good Goods, Full Weights,
Mis* Marie Hindmarch spend* New toons, stars, crosses and various other
don for announcing his death, which
and Low Prices
- xnously pronounced ^exceedingly good Year day in Lawton, having departed devices. A collection was taken at the
it is hoped will not occur for.many a The company enjoyed themselves by Shall endeavor to prove to the good people ot
splendiiL Tho professor will present during the week.
door which amounted to over f35.
year yet, and trusts that there were no music and singing,' and afterwards an Nashville and vicinity lhat It fc&gt; good to have *
a new program at the church'Saturday
Prof. Holmes at the M E. church Sat­
CHRISTMAS JOY*.
evil effects resulting from it. Mr. J. ample supper was served. Among the second meat market in Nashville.
evening, admission 35c, tickets at F. T. urday evening. 'More Shakeperean
Caab Cor Hides. I’eUa, Fte.
C. w. Smith received an elegant gold continues to cany the mail, and, if guests were J. Guy and sister from
Boise’s.. He appears at Hastings this readings this time.
D. L. DURFEE.
Maple Grove, the Mudge Bisters from
watch fr.»nk his father.
dead is a very lively corpse.*
Friday evening.
Messrs. DeGraff, Bryan, and Mun»on.
Barryville, Miss Bridenatine, Wood­
The Footes’ had a Christmas tree,
' At a meeting of the teachers and of­ ^typographical artists-of Charlotte, were from which was distributed $150 worth
land, Charles and Wilber, Austin and
BISMARK.
ficers of the M. E. Sunday School, held in town Christmas.
ladies. Rash Hosiner and lady from
of gifts.
Misses Stella Wildbn and Lena Walat the Chnrch on Tuesday evening, the
Bismark survived).
CasdetoD, Lewis Gardner, Vermont­
Mr. Geo. Morgan, in pursuance of hi*
following officers were elected for the rath took their Suhday-school classes regular custom, brings tbe printers :t
Milo Deuel tarrieth behind the yard ville. Number in all, 40.
sleigh-riding Tuesday.
ensiling year:
stick.
big basket of nice apples.
TIIORNAPPLE.
Mra. F. Baker and Freddie started
We have been having a spell of
Orqo Strong receive,, from his Sun­
for Ogdensburg, N. Y., to spend the day School class MacCanla/s History weather.
ewe, or toy kinder trotaMv acting like it :I tell,
balUnce of the winter.
Who rode the goat!
Dan Hulett and wife have gone east
• of England, in five volumes.
hitnto pat on BENBOX’S CAP81XE POROOE
A. Jarrard departed
for Grand Rap-1
- I The News has been sent a pair of on a visit.
Visit sick rooms forenoons only.
PLASTER wil boat delay.”
ids
on
Thursday
to
run
a
way
^freight
'
The doctor •poke by Ibe card. Tbe Cipelnv «oe*
id. on Thur^l.j lo n.n » way -frrlgbl I
witl, thw lllh!K
Last sewing society at McIntire*.
Wood.
Arne Hulett has taken a wise step.
on the G., R. and 1. R. R.
Young men are leading the world.
He up and got married.
—The commissionera to adjust claims
Dickinson’s grist mill is on the grind I
New ladies sewing society selected.
To all an opening ere of gladness;
Dell Hope, Charley Deuel and Hade
in the Joshua Martin estate, met at again. The saw-mill will commence
May never sorrow around you fall.
Dr. Scott visited his daughter Jessie.
Kimball went north last Tuesday.
More dark than evening’s twilight
Parody’s office on Tuesday. P. T. Col- operations in three weeks.
I
Wallis i« *till in unfavorable health.
James Walch lias sold bis goods and
C. L. Glasgow returned from Jones-1
grove, Esq., appearing for Alonzo
Hoover of Jackson at the Lake House.
chatties, preparatory to setthug in bus­
ville Tuesday, but his wife will tnrrv
Tbe wintiy winds may wbUtle *liriU,
Frounfelter of Crestaline, Ohio,pre*ent
Three Hydes are come to Thornap­
iness at Vermontville.
“* And elands bedew tbe peace of beaven;
ed a note of three hundred dollars, with tliere until after New Year’s.
Peter Chatfield cut his knee on Wed­ ple.
Tb«ee band# arc nd your wrists will sene
Mr. and Mra. W. H. King of Kalamo,
the signature of Joshua Martin, claim­
Jessie Cole and the Misses Harleys'
nesday. Burt Fast cut his foot die
• To keeo off tbe cold of a Christmas even*.
ing the same was given in the settle­ enjoyed Sunday and Christmas with
De­
mime day, and it wasn’t much of a day are now in Judsonia, Arkansas.
'
ment of an estate of which Martin was their daughter, Mr*. M. T. Brady.
parted Tuesday.
cutting either.
NEW YEAR’S CALLS.
Dance at the opera-house New-\ear
administrator for years ago. Martin’s
Mrs. Northrup’s social gave some
Life insurance men are infesting this
I COUGHS.COLDS,
heirs.claim that the note is a forgery, night. Good music, gowl manageThe’following named ladies will keep Province these days with some display money for* the little folks, The evenand will contest it at a special meet­ meut, and no gent admitted without a "open bouse” on New Years to receive of eloquence and other perfumery. ing was unfavorable.
ClITLO.
lady.
ing for its hearing in March next.
calls. There may l&gt;e others who will They may yet seduce some, and carry
fl
E. W. Fleming, student in the medi­ observe tbe day, but up to going to home the spoil*.
THMT A LUKWLuL
Nashville Jlarkrla.
cal
department
of
the
state
University,
press
we
have
no
infoi
mation
to
war
­
Dear News readers: My surround­
TWO AOOIDENTS—ONE FATAL.
PRICE 25 Ctt.
s{mnt Christmas and the week with rant us in giving a better list than the ings,are such tiiat must drop the quill.
Two accidents happened northwest bis mother here.
following:
Thankful for past favors and many
of this place on tbe holy Christmas
Byron Lee of Hardy, Neb., and Joseph
MIm Bell and Nellie Truman, asaUted by pleasant associations with The News,
day, by one of which a man lost his Munce of Ohio Sundayed with S. S. Mins Stella Wilson, and MIm Fio Pickard of I close my reportorial career, wishing
Kalamazoo, will receive st their home from
life, and by the other a man had his Ingereon’* and other relatives here, and
success to the editor and readers of one
head blown to piece*,—and the-inno­ are visiting at Woodland.
Mrs. Oroo Strong and Mb* Hattie Peckham of the best paper in central Michigan.
cent rabbit was the cause of it all.
Rev. Bissell preaches his farwell ser­ will receive rail# from 12 u&gt; 3p. ni., cl residence
zWritist.
Timothy per bu,
The first accident happened just mon at tbe Christian churckto-morrow.
Ctowi
pert
WOODLANB.
over the line in Campbell township, Hu ha* accepted a call to become pastor
Ionia comity, about eight miles north­ of the Congregational church nt Otoe- VICINITY
LOCALS
Christmas is past and gone.
west of Woodland Center, and a young
Mr. Furlong has friends visiting him
WEST KALAMO.
gentleman named Frank Darby, was
BOOKS, MARSHALL A CO.
Mr. and Mra. D. I* Smith’s friends
from Ohio.
,
tbe victim. It seems that himself and tendered them a pleaaaut reception nt
Do not foiget the grand New Year's
one Qiaff, a youth of thirteen, were their room* on their return from a vi4t
W. H. Brundige/ira poor, hard work­ party nt the Woodland House.
banting rabbits about a straw stack, in Kalamazoo county, Wedncmlay ing, honest man, and far from being a*
St- John’s sawmill i* started up again
penrnn who would wish to lojnire any last Wednesday, after a two weeks’
Pay the hlgbcslinarkct price for all kinds of
handled Um; gun in an exceedingly
Frank McDerby will manage L. J. OT'*, but lie unfortunately comes under
lay-off.
Grain a.n&lt;l Produce,
■ Wheeler’s mercantile business this win­ the thumb of tbe so called wealthy
There is to be a watch meeting at the
ter, during tbe latter's absence at the class. Sow, thia correspondent docs
M. E. Church, also, at the Kilpatrick
state capital, and Frank is abundantly not wish to do any oue au unju*tic&lt;*,
Church.
.
qualified to do this to the, perfect satis­
eo, Hair, Fine Lumber, Lath
Christmas seemed to be an unlucky
faction of all concerned.
•
persecuted, it is high time to say some­ day for Woodland’s, by the report of
and Shingles,
Miss Lottie Evans took her Christmas thing., The facts as reported are these:
people shot that day.
AT THE LOWEST LIVING PRICES,
Tiie victim of the &lt;
in town.
Understand her Maple Mr. Brundige druwed out and piled
All speak in high praise ol the Christ­
near tbe roadside, but at a reasonable mas tree at the Mi E. Church Monday
distance from the track, a load ot stave night, and there certainly wa* never a'
eV
,h
larger house in Woodland.
tbnoi to Durkot, but in U» mruttlm.
ntbbit
came to town laat Sunday night to
steal robe*, may find a different kind

THE NEW MARKET
Of D. L. Durfee
-IS ALIVE-'

Fresh &amp; Salt Meats
Dried Beef, Smoked Meats, Lard,
Etcetera,

ALMOST AS BAD

YRUP.

SOLDIERS

Nashville Elevator!

Can Make

I of which be

�EijcrieM ReliaSlB, ai WHc.
men ot Nature’h work.' At the first
blow or th* chisel It sank deep into the

yielding. Before davi^h*. we had ownpleled our singular dividend. We caved
down the bank near the mouth of tbe
with
r balls.
drift.-took a brief sleep, got breakfast
rolled up our blankets, and. 'passed
through town early, not caring to bld
Aw tnkjr ftioe at tba el:iB'-r«»oni i! &gt;or,
Tbe sudden plnohand lbu muitk-J roai
any one good-by. and then no explana­
tions were required. We left the cabin
and everything for the first lucky ones
to possess.
Tbtre was plenty more
gold, no doubt, for the ground wo left
contained big pay; but we had $16,000
or $17,000 ea h. and wc were satisfied^
with our good fortune.
We tried to
appear like three prospectors, carrying
Grimace and^nrie, ^rin mid wink.
our blankets, nnd na sed Goodyear Hdl
and tho dreaded Nigger Tent (then the
beat of the road agents), and hurried to
San Francisco, arrived in time to board
the next steamer, and landed safely in
’-Buriirtjton HawkM.
New York. I have many a time regret­
ted tlio way we destroyed that natural
gold specimen, perhaps the largest ever
A BIG NUGGET.
found in tho world, inzuicient or modern
times.
‘•When I returned to Downieville
In the early times in California claims after fourteen years’ absence, I visited
nad-agenU
numerous, old Slate Castle Ravine and triedit once
•were small and ir*
J -- --- ------------------and men. if they, found a nugget of ex­ morb, but twenty years had nearly ex­
traordinary sire , ^rare juraid their hausted ita riches; still I tried, and
ground-might bej jumj^d or .themselves made small wages, but its glory had de­
robbed and pyi ,
murdered going parted. My old partner. Dodge, was
largest
gold an earnest, truthful man. I bol'eve
below, and thus keptthe
---------— o—
finds a secret until they could get out tons of gold were carried below in early
ot the mountains and the State. Tne foi­ times by the lucky ones, and all kinds
advices
were —
adopted
to evade
lowing facts, that have never before been . of
——
---------------— -------- the
.
in print, 1 came across in a most sinra- highwaymen, and often large parties
lar way, and I can rely on tne worn of I went below together, well armed and,
largo nugget, besides
the narrator:
In 18ul and 1852 I ’ perhaps, many a lArgo
m ned with a man froth Ma-isachusetts ) millions of dollars in gold
gold dost, ucver
never
de­
named John Dage on several fiats nnd . saw the light until it was safely (deplaoers around Down eville nnd the ! posited in the banks
the Atbanka or mints of tho
Middle Yuba. In 1853 I lost sight of Jantic States.”— Downieville (Cal.),Mc.,him, but heard that he had gone East tengcr
In 1858 I went with the rush to British
Eight Angry Men.
Columbia, and worked out a good
claim, an.I then took a trip to Australia.
A sauntercr in the Bowery saw that,
tho red Hag over the door at 186 wai so
; ’°u“d "&gt;“"&gt;• «* »t*ff th.1 iho lura. oi
ih.ir nn^nd down' trin. ■■ w.rLr J' ' the Mctionoer. idwed Ibemuolacuio-

T1,A .Xnt
nn.I \
’ d°Q frOm V1CWnloni- .&lt;&gt; Jnl «™ing । SI*

H° «tePP‘ «l ID.

ontbnddsek in a porfS-t Mream.
I gW«“odonoor on a platform, an aedro
Al »• wore eatm- supper wo hoard ;'erk h«“dh"K
bch&gt;"J
a teamster » roice that I thought was dMk°Udn™
lamillar, and driving into &lt;wmp, I ?“k;“d’’••Mraarad men bidding
.trolled among tho teams, And almoat J°r *!“ Kood5'
»“ brt"ktho first man I met wa. my old Jtownio- I Th!
°” '*!? cS“'»t‘,r
ville partner. He waa mwl gla.l u, see m lo,u
»,J°“n h”5”'? ,n'
me. and I befog so reamdr (rom
“■« bnye™. knocked down at
Ifowniovillo he ni jucsled mo to call a
,or t*°’,
d!? ‘ ,d o*l'c’
alter he had led his animal., and oaten ' “W?
of
°! m0D,'5''
bis own meal, to talk over old time, in 1
’ nxeiaimod a
Caiifornia. He owned tho whole Btoot'
S!?g-rU S'
that he was driving—waa -freighted up. s?,1,liler?r’_n^°U leGtbat- J we ho
naming hidra, Ujlnw and other ok- b"n,lJ'd
o gar, for two dollars,
fonial products on his own amount for
™ «« W
'■,1 °’bj ,'°“r
back freight Ifo bad married in foe S,d«k- “d. “ tho.’ re
cmcountry, and wa. doing a profitable TbeI"2,^1 J?™,' “d
btuin&amp;s with his team.
for 'hc poor dev.l that’, being sold out’
After talking of old times here in Cal- I
n&gt;»Jo wreral
&lt;=»■»fersia. tho whereabout, ot old friend, I
7. i
K'G^-XT.ve-r-k^wh^h?:
a
of’b^
blTM Caflfontia so aJddenlvV I mt- toK- “d 'or ®““ mlnulM lh’ ?&gt;***

swervri. ••No;” but he bad not slipped
l°f
from my mcmoiy; but nymymcn in tho ipnAi.^ ^on t JOU b,li‘

^Tt^Tl^o^aw^i

b°

.
at

Th.'
: ei^aaSC:

«o0^tow’',Ugi''y“

o7^m®tu£: i

,-7 r -!• “ ■
I heard rou toil ol the rich claim and Itor&gt; lo‘
eoarro gild you found on SlMo Ca.de ;
[“"1*! “l*11F'?to 9? “J”"'
Ravine on the South Ffirk. uno mile L1 «“d‘•■•‘I h*'“&gt;ly bought a .ingle
above Downieville.
Myself and Bill
*• 11 "2"ld ,*» * m «nden.t.ndmg
Hopkina together with a German
partner, went quiotlv to work in the
boxes as I pleased at two
^mmer of -M.’ and’ occupied an old do,1 ,“"l,ln ‘
“i-’
ebbin that had been descried and the money back. That is aU clew enough,
ground abandoned.
We stripped the,
..v?? ,
bAre* ^OW,
•• &gt;
claim in another direction, id camo i „
b“ 1 d?? 1 und'I’tyn1d “ ko’
aoroas the lead containing eoarso gold. “*5’ J*”1 thlnK prohtahlo. It takes
as you haddescrib«i. anu made fortwo i
f0H'0 WOT—T°n
wemu per day per man from one to : *°
&lt;b« boxes mu« cost something
threeounoM. ’ The ground was getting “dkoreyonr. been doing your best
deeper nnd heavy to strip, and 1 started for »
°' “ h°“r without m^a small drift.to.ee how wide the lead hq aoent
vu brfme we .tripped further ahead. .
«• b"t
*h"
It was Saturdsy. about noon.
The &lt;»“ fo“t»|foa»&lt;'&gt;» ™
«d
ground oontinuisUU to pay, and we
ouraed by tlm handsome man; the
were down In a soft slate crevice, when (at J10* ll'“,cd
&lt;?.unler J°
I Stro k the pick into a bright lump of .bout dreadful epithet, at h m as he
gold that seemed to run into tho -olid “Wh'CTed out; the rest of the gang
gravel. 1 tried to pry it out, but II wa.
• mo,t. '■‘&gt;lcnt d,P'"’ »&lt; wnsfo;
Ux&gt; firmlv imlieddrit
Then I worked
“«rehan: nest door subsequent,
carefully around it. and if appeared to 7
,h»‘ *&gt;• b“d
•* “J b“'
_____ t*______ _
__'.As
since Un;
too auct on xaln
aalo hetnm.
began, beam
heard, an
so
grow
larger as Iv dug -t
the gravel
awav. Since
We placed one on the lookout to sec much noise in tiro place.—N. Y. Sun.
that no one surprised xi?, and 1 tell you
The “Mllch-Cow Rocket.”
wo were startled; nnd after some time I
got it loooe. and by hard lifting, and
During his wanderings through the
there ft lay, almost pure gold, nearly
yards
yesterday
the reporter stumbled
the shape of a heart, and ft fitted ex­
actly the bottom of the crevice. The onto another little sclrome which it wae
quartz attached io ft was crystallized, thought was exterminated a few months
and would not exceed three pounds in ago, but while there are “suckers” in
weight Wo got it in the cabin as quick the world scalpers and other not overas possible, in a sack, and placed it scrupulous persons will always do a
under one of tbe bunks, intending to ex­ ■■rushing business.” The “milch-cow
mume „
reoroogwy at
m night.
mgm.
. 5 thp
"“d T, «bo« who
amine
it more
more thoroughly
“We .mid .wny from town on SUUri I “ !»«•&lt;*••»&lt;* "?m the prow, derived
dxy ud Sundv. end brought it out u
“fo^'t “ • pn.0tW.le one
night to feraLXr eye. ufim It xgWn.
In d«mwd. xml
end uch guenod it woVld wolAT.t
”bul“»d •I'Prox.mtU. xlxtv
lout two Hundred pound. We eon- i doll*~ , **•“ tb' d&lt;^“d exceed,
eluded not to l^e it ro town to weigh,
’"PP'Z tbe •■ecWper
in order to
but divide it rome w«y; for if It wire ‘•mxommodwe lhe cu.tomer. goo, to
known there would be Interne excite, xomo remote pen x-.l -oreh.ww . ™
fne whose
menu We hxd gold eralax but they
«,riPP«^
—
--------.-------would only weigh only one xml a haff I*
5 ”&gt;?'
UKfu
nM!as a milker we over.
poiwiU. After rome time .pent moon- A calf.a few days old is then purchased
and
tied“in” a pen
sultaihm.
Hastings suggested
» | for a few dollars
----LiV,
rough j Wr Bill
ot origindwrele^w.
piled
“”—
'• »***
J? •“PP“~'d

&lt;m rook and ironi weighed by
cold
hv the &lt;mld
fixlimce' ud*’lb«
■calcs till we got the
1
fo-» two hundred and
da gold weight
We
rat.
Wc
horoughly
if a knife;
two hun-

10 “ 118 .mother.
“other. The
Tho customer
euetomer noon
.oon
to
•"»&gt;■«’ &gt;&gt;U *pfk»nuiM and .trade l&gt; «fpunfox-r Ukra the bogu.
cu
calf and the accommodating
••scalper” the sixty dollars. The trick
is soon found out,-and tbe buyer makes
a strenuous complaint, but there is no

specimen looked more beautiful
irer.
If we had taken it to the
m express office there would have afterwards.
On Mon­
ter ot th.
-When

oaoe a tortnifAt to oonduct service. I
had been told that there was to bo a
second Uturgia said at seven o’clock for
the master and family; so I waited for
that hour, when we all walked down together. On entering the church we found
there a goodly number ot peasants, who
had not been able to get to the early
mass. As is the custom in the Greek
church, the congregation remained
standing during the entire service? the
men on tbe right and the women on the.
left. They were very devout in manner,
looking toward the picture ot the Virgin
near the altar; and to her they addressed
their prayers in .a low voice, their
only
motion being the frequent
sign of the cross. Several mothetv.
were there, holding babies in tneir
arms, with small children clinging
to their skirts. Tbe little ones crossed
themselves with their tiny fingers, in
imitation of their elders. Sometimes a
person coming in would step forward,
put down a small coin, and light a little
taper, which he would put into the
candlestick, saying a prayer for tbe soul
of a dead friend, or would kiss the pict­
ure of the Virgin. The priest.who offldntod at the Star, hadf exchanged hu
usual black robe for a gayly-colored one
of some common stuff, and his hair, al­
ways concealed under his high cap, ex­
cept in church, hung down in heavy
black curls over his shoulders. He went
through the prayers in a loud, nasal
chant, and rtyid tbe Gospel in tiro same
tone, with great speed, assisted in his
duties by a peasant lad/ whom he had
trained, and who was probably destined
to be a priest. The worshipers made
their responses with fervor, and after
the doxology was said, went up and
kissed the priest’s hand, and the Bible
which he held. This was handsomely
bound in silver and gold, set with col­
ored stones, and was a family relic; so
also was tho sacred picture, worn and
effaced, ns if ft dated from Byzantine
days. The Greeks often .have these
valuable religious pictures hanging on
the wall at the head of tho be&lt;L and a
devout soul keeps a lighted taper burn­
ing day and night before them.—S. IF.
Futon, in Atlantic Monthly.
Exercise and Malaria.

Dr. Pinkham whites in tho Sanitarian
regarding the tendency nowadays to
assign malarial poison as a cause for all
kinds of physical disturbances. “This
fashion, as it may now bo called, of as­
signing malarial poison as a cause for all
kinds of physical disturbance, came
about, I think, somewhat in this way:
Quinine became recognized a» a specific
for malaria when to this agency were
referred only the periodic fevers. These
fevers intermittent and remittent, were
found to leave behind, after the fever
proper had taken its departure, certain
morbid conditions, eopeoudly of the liver
and spleen, which conditions produced a
variety of obscure symptoms, all of which
were helped by the same remedy which
cured the fever, and, being given for
these obscure troubles, it was soon given
for all obscure troubles resembling them,
and it was found to be of service in all;
hence, reasoning from effect to cause, it
Wils inferred that all were of malarial
origin. A person eats heartily and exer­
cises little; ho soon finds himself ill; ho
has headache, pain in his side, languot
and a variety of uncomfortable sensations.
Quinine is a tonic, and aids digestion;
ac takes it, and is better. What more
natural conclusion than that his symp­
toms are duo to malaria, being relieved
as they are by the great anti-malarial
remedy? Thus quinine became, as it is
to-day, an ingredient of nearly all pre­
scriptions—the great cure-all. It also
became a great aidrin diagnosis, and in
many cases settled the question, con­
vincing the prepossessed patient and tho
wavering physician that malaria was
the great bottom fact in the case in hand.
Now, I believe more than half the ail­
ments which are in this off-hand way
ascribed to malaria are due to some­
thing else, and largely to lack ol phys­
ical exercise. There are other causes of
■ diseases which wo do not overlook—
overeating and drinking and smoking,
I improper clothing and exposure to cold
' and heat, worry and care, idleness
and overwork, over-excitement and
all
kinds of excess, work destruc­
tion, as they did before malaria wm in­
vented. Lack of exercise produces de­
rangements of the liver, spleen, nerves,
brom and ever? organ in the body. It
produces a multitude of symptoms sim&lt; liar to those produced by malaria. Let
| exercise be supplied and the occasion
for quinine in these cases will no longer

Sacrifice of au Indian Bride.
Naches, the Hute chief, informs us
that a courier who left Camp Bidwell re­
cently. reported old Winnemucca alive,
but speechless and liable to die af any
moment. His young wife, whom he
married last Joly, ran away, but was
followed by Winnemucca’s friends and
taken back to his camp. She escaped a
second time and was again caught, when
Oohobo's Indians, numbering about
sixty braves, held a council and decided
to loll her. They took the woman and
her year-old child—by a husband who
died nome mouths before she married
old Winnemucca—to a rocky bluff and
stoned her to death. Naches says that
it has been customary with the tribe to
sacrifice squaws who arc suspected of
bewitching men and making them sick,
by stoning them to death, nut tbe-ex­
cuse which Ocbobo’s men give for killing
this woman and child is, that she threat­
ened to burn a white man's house.—
Nevada Silver Stale.

A. H. WINN, Dentist
1

WHY WELCOME!
What makes Fforcstoci Cokigne weieoihe on

'
,
ithe ktnw-grow.
DON’T DIE INThFhOUBE.
Atk drugti»,l* for “RnuXh on Rato.”

.

I

The newest royal child of Spain is naniml
“YtabeL” Y, loabell
‘
CATARRH OF THE BLADDER.
Stinging, NDortfott, irritation of the urinary
paaaage*, dlieaacd df*eharpes, cured by Bucliupabla. $1, at drujqrOu. Mich. Depot, JAS.
E. DAVIS A CO.. Detroit, Mich.
(

BEST SET BUM TEETH 110.00
Teeth Extracted Wlfhoat Pain.

*

QB AND RAPIDfe DIVISION.

Office Open Day dt Evening:

S. S INGERSON &amp; SON,

Wc admire ajilritcd animals, but deliver ua
from a wildly cutbusaiatic mule.

developement into womanhood tuts been Im­
perfect. .Zoa-Phora, by assisting nature, will
impart the finishing touches—the color and
grace of health.‘
.
Tbe u»e of Iron auiuot hicrnuw tbe running
qualities of a dog, but tin can.
.

Lumber, Salt, and Coal.

NASHVILLE, MICH.
THE PLACE TO BUY

IM PORTA ST TO TEA V FLKBK,

Special Inducements are offered yoa by the
Bunmgtou Route, It will pay you to read their
advcrtiM-iuenta to be found elsewhere in this

One of the recent poets O’s for “a pen whose
ropy ink were purged by piteous tears.’'
nevehgivFop,
If you are suffering with low and- depressed
spirits, loss of appetite, general debility, disor­
dered blood, weak- constitution, headache, or
any disease of a bilious nature, by all means
procure a bottle Electric Hitlers. You will be
surprised to see the rapid Improvement that
will follow; you will 1* inspired with new life;
strength and activity will return; pain and
misery wilLccaac, henceforth you will rejoice
in Uiu praise of Electric Bitten. Bold at fifty
cents a bottle ry F. T. Boise.
.
“You language U wholly uncalled for," as
the publisher told the author whose works
failed to sell.'
.

staixl.ng. Elya’ Cream Balm ■ reaches old, and
&lt;4&gt;»tinate cases, where all other remedies toll.
Do Dot neglect procuring a txHtle, M In it lies
the relief you Mck. Price 50 cents. .
.
Apply into nostrils with little pnger.
Catarrh, For fifteen years I have been great­
ly annoyed with this disgusting disease, which
caused severe naln hi my head, continual drop­
ping Into my throat and unpleasant breath. My
sense of nuiell wa* much tm[aired. By a
thorough use for six months of Elya’ Cream
Balm Ihavc entirely overcome these troubles.
8. B.^Csse. 8L Denfs Hotel, Broudwi yand 11th

Tbe rielns young tnau of the future ia one
who will be wUlfug to jump up and build tbe
morntug fires.__________
HOW SHE SAVED HER DARLING.
“I shall not feel so nervous apdu about ba­
by’s teething,” writes a grateful motlicr. “We
ainMwt lost our darling from cholera infantum,
but happily lieard of Parker's Ginger Tonic In
lime. A few spoouful* auon cured baby, and
nn occasional dose keeps us in good health.”—
Brooklyn Mother.
A member of the school iioard said in his re­
mark
“Well, children, you spell well and
you read well, but you han’t sot still”
BUCKLER'S ARNICA SALVE.
The best salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises,
Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rlirum, Fever Sores, Tetter,
CnapMd Hands, Chilblains, Corus, and all
Skin Eruptions, and positively cures Piles. It
is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or
monev refunded. Price 26 cents tier box. For
sale byF. T. Borax.

FEVER AND AGUE.
Arc rou troubled with Ague, Chills and Fe­
ver, Bilious Fever, Remittent or Intermitting
Fever, Night Sweats or any disease that comes
from Malaria or disordered Liver and Hot
Kuns! If so; procure a bottle ot Green’s Ague
Conqueror, which is an acetic extract of strorg
tunic roots, c mbined with Sulphate of Mag&gt;esla, etc., and postively contains no Quinine.
Arsenic or other poisons. It purities the blood
cleanses tho liv«&lt;r. spleen and other secretive
organs so cffectully that the chills will not re­
turn. We iiave never found any case of Fever
and Ague it will not cure. Price, 50 cents and
ShtJO per bottle. One large bottle has cured us
tire in one family. Bold by all druggist* and
dealers everywhere.
15 Jan 83

Hardware, Glass, Tin
perfare,
OUTISST, NAILS, PAINTS.
Oils. Pumps, Cross-cut Saws,
Farm Tools,
And everything tn the hardware line, Is at

L. FAUL’S BOOT AND SHOE IAKEN,
yv OODLAND.
S3* Stock larger and Prices lower than ever
before.
Every Description of Tinware Done
Right and Low.

Attorney at Law,

L. FA UL.

IJEN’RY ROE.

Pxopeietom

----- OLD RELIABLE-----

MEAT MARKET.
Fresh and Salt Meats,

Smoted Haus and Shoulders,
IN THEIR BEABOr

Lard, by the lb. or barrel,
ry The Highest Market Price paid
for Hides, Pelts. &amp;c.

Fresh Goods, Full Weight* and
Satisfaction Guaranteed.

HEX RY BOE

Attorney A Counsellor,
gDACKASOM,

American and Foreign Marble,
Monuments, Tomhrtonea, Mantles, &amp;a,

pjAMTI.YfcrM HOUSE,
Hairing*, Mich.
N. T. PARKER, Prop.
This Is the leading representative hotel of
Hostings. Rates rcaaonable.

RATMBUN HOUSE.

NEW SOODS.
Let every Woodlander re­
member that my new stock of
winter goods is larger than ev­
er and was fought at

Rock Bottom Prices
and will be sold at a slight ad­
vance above actual cost.
Prepare for cold weather by
buying your

INVESTORS

1883.

Harper’s Weekly.
ILLUSTRATED.
Hiu»u»ted werkiy journal. By IU unpanWu
•Ulan fn poHU'a, lu admlrhtte UtooMtiono,

HARPER’S PERIODICALS.

Paying Mocks or Monds yielding
TK&gt; PEH &lt;-PJIT per annum or o

WELL SECURED,
IrnUanlMa paper.

QLEMEMT SMITH,

IMS

CONSUMPTIVES.

tho Prwerlpilom will p|.M
OLSON, IM Pena BL, Wfll-

now. Our stock is complete
in every respect.
Also New Dny Goods, Boots,
Shoes, Hats, Caps, Groceries,
Etc., in endless profusion.
We haven’t time to enumer­
ate, and if we had these goods
must be seen to be appreciated.

HABFEB’S WEEKLY ...
HARPER'S MAQABNE.
HARPER’S BAZAR____

Any iwoa»»v« ctibm.—------- - —------- n
HARPER'S YOUNO PEOPLE-------------------- 11
HARPER'S MAQAZINE _ |---------- ------ 6 ।
HARPER’S YOUNO PEOPLE I
HARPER'S FRANKLIN SQUARE LIBRARY,

J.W.HDLMES&amp;CO.
WOODLAND-

THE ANNUAL MEETING
Of the Vnlou Mutual Fire Insurance Co pony
of Kent, Barry and Ionia counties, will be held
at the office of the compan v In luula, on
THURSDAY, JANOAKY 4, 18B8,
commencing at 10 a. m.
in addition to tbe ck-rtton at offioen, propo■itiotM win be presented for changes of charter
including the following r~ To change section 6
with reference to lodition of office of com­
pany; To change section 10, »o aato penult

rilboal the axnrwa order of Haans A Bsornsss,
AddHM HARPER * BROTHERS, New York.

THE MONARCH

BILLIARD HALL
Deceiwary to meet Ihbdlttai of the Ownpony.
By order of Board of Directors.
J. C. TxYLOa, Secretary.
lonta, Nov. 16, l&amp;C.
____ 10-11

ERRORS OF YOUTH.
I. will

The buyer on thb occasion
*Hyr,

JOHN E.OOLEM,«Od»w8l., N.Y.

PIMPLES.

(NoIAquora.)

C. N DUNHAM.
THE MILLER BROS.।

�n’s Christian aa82,375 member*
last year averaged but thirty-two years

“I aim gwins ter do hit" said Uacte
,
York. Il la dM«d 1410. 14 Jan «n« Mose, sullenly.
Ute discovery by Columba", and con­ . “Why don’tyer hire a cart,” continued
veys Fisher « bland. in Long bUnd the colored porter, and hab him moved
To Aovsrtiwlm:
Sound, from certain Indian Chiefs. to out inter de mesquite bushes whar ds
John Cabot, wh&lt;*e signature it lean. buxxard* kin hold a convention on de
ole bag ob bones? Ontie your hoes, ole
—N. Tints.
man, lut am agin de law ter tie bosses
ter lamp pueteses.”
“I haint gwine. ter do hit,” replied old
announce tho foilorring as tho amount
of busineu done in that city for tho Mose.
•Til see about dat ar,” responded the
year
ended
April
1,
1882:
Iron
and
rtKUSK THZU LIBERAL Ab RATS*
steel, *24,828.800; glass, *5,505.600; colored porter, eo ho went in and told the
sundry manufacturers. *33,288,120; clerk, who came out and said: ,
“Look here, uncle, you will have to
*14» general business, *46,784,520.
‘
move that horse. Ho draws flies, and
KCO
—According to tho report of thoScot- besides, he may fall down on somebody
tish herring fishery for 1881, the yield
And break some customer in two. You
consisted of L 111.155 barrels of cured
herrings. This number has only once will be fined if you tie your horse to a
lamp post Unhitch him right off."
been exceeded—in 1880, when 1,473,600
"1 haint gwine ter do hit?’
barrels were obtained. In 1881, 14,809
“You ain’t?—wall, I'll show you,” so
boats were employed in tho fisheries, me clerk went in and told Mose'Schaumwith 48,121 men ana boys, being an in­
crease over 1880 of 58’ boats and 990 burg himself, that a sassy nigger had
ORNO STRONG,
tied his horse to the Igmp post, and cash
■
Editor and Proprlet.Tr. fishermen.
—E’ght million three hundred andb customers were afraid of being kicked,
and were doing their trading at other
sixty-six thousand bushels of salt were stores.
•
,
•
made ins the Onondaga reserva­
Schaumburg came out in his shirt­
tion during the fiscal year ended Sep­ sleeves, with a yard-stick in his hand,
tember 30. 1882, being the largest pro­ and said coaxingly to old Mose, with a
riLLA Ol^bmOERS. ■
duction of any year since 1871, and an genial smile:
increase over last year of 732,000
“Mine fren. vere you gets dot fine
bushels. .-The receipt* for duties from plooded animal? I vish you vould dome
the year 1818 to 1882, Inclusive, have the favor to move him avay mine door
been *4,295,478.-27. Y. Sun.
pefore.”
—Cincinnati has .received about
“I haint gwine tor do hit”
1,500,000 baskets of peaches this season,
“I dells you vat,” urged Schaumburg,
and about 500,000 went direct to New “ven you dukes dot horse avay right off
England cities.
The Baltimore and some of dcse fine days don’t you forget
jhtinia.
Philadelphia cannera are said to .have it I makes you a splendid Christmas
used up another million and a half
IHKI8TIAN CHURCH—F A. BUael,Pastor. baskets. Eighty evaporating establish­ present of aoairof nish new shuspend-&lt;
I Services everv Sabbath at 10.80 a. tn. and ments have been engaged in Delaware era, by schimminy grashus.”
8 m. Sabbath school nt 12 m. Prayer mecl“I dons tolft ver, 1 haint gwine tor do
and Maryland ever since June fruit has hit”
[ every Thursday evening
been ripe. Preservers have taken liber­
Then Schaumburg lost control of him­
TTHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH—A ally the large crop, believing it well to self.
Before anybody could prevent
■ D. Newton, Pastor. Services cVery 8ab- provide for a possible short supply in him. he ran his hand into his hip pocket
st 10.40 a. tn. and 7 p. m, Sabbath 1883.—Chicago Tribune.
Old Uncle .Mose’s eyes began to stick
—The number of pieces of mail mat­ out and his legs to wabble about when
ter handled during the last fiscal year Schaumburg drew forth, not a pistol, but
I ’LODGE NO. 87, K. of P., meets at Its by nine of tho largest cities was as fol­ a police whistle, upon which he began to
3astle Halt Nashville, Michigan, every lows: Baltimore, 30,495,159; Boston.
£ y evening, for tbe encouragement and 82,589,760; Brooklyn. 29,485,154; Chi­ improvise a lively tune.
About forty, men, supposing a fight
cago, 114,832,007; Cincinnati, 27,285,­ was going on. poured out of a neighbor­
8. O&amp;xo Stboxo, C. C. 207; New York, 238.578,203; Philadel­ ing saloon, like bees out of a hive. The
phia. 144,894,869; St Louis, 41,665,249;
gentlemen who sit in front of the Bruns­
San Francisco, 23,046,513. Of tho 3,115
Miscellaneous Cards.
wick hotel, and squirt tobacco juice on
carriers. 543 are employed in New York.
the sidewalk, went on lhe doublequick
u, ox. u. v;ucc c*»i siue or The mail letters delivered in New York &gt; to where Schaumburg was still engaged
Nashville. Office hears from numbered more than 53,000,000, tho
postal cards more than 11,000,000, lhe on his solo. There were-men in the
local letters delivered nearly 33,000,000, crowd with towels about their necks
KITE, PHYSICIAN &lt;t SURGEON, and the letters collected nearly 75,000,- and lather on one side of their faces.‘
sssor to Dr. Wickham. Office sccUpwards of tvjo hundred excited men
uorth of the Nashville House; real- 000.—A'. Y. Graphic.
were gathered around Schaumburg and
door Dorth of tbe Wolcott House.
Uncle Mose, the former still playing on
WIT A.\D WISDOM.
his wind instrument, while the sly old
J. T. GOUCHER, Physicians and
nigger
was holding his hand to his ear,
—The man who tells about his fights
sous, will promptly attend all calls
and his head on one side, as if ttenaumor night Office hours from 9 to 12 seldom has a black eye.
burg intended the musical performance
—A miner fell in love with a girl at forlhe special amusement of lhe %g«l
!. NaaUvUlc.
African. Everybody in. town, except
the police, seemed to be there, and every­
pc*.Y' “You bet!”
body suspected Uncle Mose of some hor­
—•• When arc we going to get our rible crime.
Gilt-Edged Tonic?” asked a prisoner in
Finally two policemen in uniform
Hell’s Dru&lt; store, Vermontville, Mich. the Austin jail of the jailer. “What do pushed their way through the crowd,
you want it for?” “I read in the pa­ and with drawn revolvers wanted to
pers that persons of sedentary habits .enow what was the cause of the riot.
ought io use it.”—Texas Siftings.
Schaumburg brought his concert to a
—Never let go ol a good thing that close, and pointing, to Uncle Mose, said:
opposite Union House.
“He vont dnkc bis old horse from dot
you really have for a better thing about
which there is some doubt The dog lamp post avay.”
“1 haint gwine ter do hit,” said Uncle
Conveyancing and Collections a in the fable who dropped a piece of'
meat to snap at a shadow went hungry Mose, solemnly.
the rest of the day.—N. Y. Herald.
'
“Unde Mose, why don't you untie (
PARADY, Justice of tbe Peace.
—A wife wanted her busband to sym­ that horse and lead him off?” asked a'
, Corner Main and Sherman Streets.
pathize with her in a feminine quarrel; friendly voice in the crowd.
“Because dat ar hoew don’t belong ter
but he refused, saying: *T ve lived long
me. I hain’t gwine ter ontie and lead
you purchase clothing. Fits guar enough to learn that one woman jf just as off a hoss I nebber seed before. I’se
good as another—if not better!” " “And
L” retorted his exasperated wife “have seed too many men in Texas tied up so
dar feet didn’t reach the ground for
HATCH A CO., Manufacturers of Taffy lived long enough to learn that one man
is just ns bad as another—if n not foolin’ wid horses whM didn't belong to
’em.”
worse.”—Bohemiajx.
There was a roar from the crowd.
—“As you are going past tho grocery
“Why didn’t you say before that it
store,” said Mrs. Brown to her son. “it
wasn’t your horse?” asked the indignant
iK BAKER, Manufacturer of Boots will save time if you step in and get a
Shoes, pegged or sewed. Repairing pound of tea.” “What do I care about policeman.
“Bekase nobody asked me.”
y attended to, at the sign of u&gt;c rtn saving time?” replied, young Brown,
it side Main BL
Tho crowd began to disperse goodcoutcmptuously. “I sruess I shall have
B'l the time there is as long as I live, and hnmCredly, notwithstanding the voice of
k&gt;B O8MUN, Liveryman, bam near Wol- laint’t a-going to hoard up any for my Schaumburg could be heard severe'
blocks off, like the voice of one crying in
vymse. Flrat class turnouts at reaaoo. / Special rates to commercial men. heirs to squander.—Boston Transcript. the wilderness: “Scheotlemens, don’t
—“Grandpa, does hens make their
w'iU
weding parties furnished with car’.
own eggs?’f “Yes, indeed they do, tear yourselves avay. Choosl vidk right
Johnnie.” "An’ do they always put in and inspect my new stock of schenUethe yoke in the middle?” “ Guess they manly underwear, shoes, boots, hats,
which vas being given avay to make
og. All manufactured work made from do, Johnnie.” “An’ do they put the room for new goots.”—Texas Siftings.
|stock and warranted. First door south starch around it to keep the yellow from
hardware.
rubbing off?” “ Quite likely, my little
Patting Up a Job.
boy.” “An* who sews the cover on?”
LLACE BEAUCHAMP, Liveryman. This stumped the old gentleman, and
Each new comer at a Paris art studio
Nashville House Barn. Single ana
h©
barricaded
Johnnie's
mouth
with
a
turn outs furnished promptly and reais put through “a course of sprouts' ’ be­
Cj. Commercial men driven to nelgb-lollipop.— London Society.
fore he is admitted to full fellowship.
lowns al special rate*.
— "Do you mix anything with your The latest practical joke ia as follows:
candies?”'he asked, as ho laid his
The new-oomer on entering the studio
money down and picked up the pack­ and proceeding to select a seat is in­
age of gum drops. "Well- ahem a
formed by the senior of the corps that
little glucose, perhaps.” “Anything he has been made the subject of an im­
else?” “ Perhaps a little clay.” "Any
portant wager.
chalk?”
“Only a very little—not
“ What wager P"
enough to speak of.” “It's of no inter­
“ A bet has been made'that you will
est to ms. you "know,” continued the Dot open your box of colors. I have taken
stranger; "but I was wondering why you it because I am sure you will.*'
didn t have your candies made at a reg­
•'Butwhy did they bet I wouldn’t?”
ular brick-yard. of tbe regular mate­
“That I can’t say, bat they say you
rial, and have something you could war­ daren’t, but 1 know you wilt”
rant to your customers.”—Street
“PH soon show you that I will.”
raid-, *uo, grarom AbVAXot

Rashvilb ^ixtrtoru.

i

—The Protestant Episcopal Church
tn Massachusetts proposes to introduce
the free-new system in all their church
edifices throughout the State.
-Dallas Ctty. Tex., is building five
public school-houses at a cost of *5.000
each. San Antonio is erecting a high­
school at a cost of *34,090. Corsicana
has just built two school-houses at a
cast of *12,000 each.
—The richest colored congregation

NSW

.

NEW

►STOREGOODS
0!UR EFFORTS TO IMPROVE
HAVEJBEEN.'APPRECIATED

OUR NEW STOCK OF GROCERIES
Our store room though ample is completely filled and our shelves fairlyferoan under them
And rtUl they come. We have everything in the Grocery line.

Washington. The best church mtisio
'at the capital is alleged to be that of its
choir.—Chicago JournaL
.
—President Welch, of the Iowa State
Agricultural College, has left his home
for Europe, whore be goes by appoint­
ment of the United States Government
to inspeol tbe agricultural and industrial
schools of foreign countries, and make
a report as to the systems anil methods
of those schools.—27. F. Pod.
—There is a beadman of a kraal in
Natal, South Africa, who does not pbIect to his people becoming Christians,
mt who decidedly objects to their be­
coming bad Christians:. “If you be­
come better men and women by being
Christians, you may remain so, u not, I
won’t let you be Christiana at all.”—
Christian union.
&gt; —The North American Review says:
“ During the century just passed the
population of the United States baa in­
creased eleven-fold, and churches have
increased thirtj^sevea fold, and while a
hundred years ago there was one church
to every seventeen hundred inhabitants,
there is now one for every five hundrccT
and twenty-nine.”
—A lease for 999 years nowadays is
regarded as equivalent to a sale, but such
a lease has just expired in England, and
the property has reverted to the original
owner—the -Church of England. It is
thus legally decided that the Church of
Englanij has had a corporate entity
since the time of Alfred the Great, and
that it did not. as has been supposed by
many, originate in the time of Henry
VHL—C/iicago Iribune.

Crbckery and

Glaarvrare.

If you want to see * pretty and complete line of Crockety. see oura. fWe have only time to
call your attention to China Tea Setts, Majolica Ware, and Decorated Chamber Setts. In Giaxwarc our Rtock i* complete and attractive. Our trade in l.AMFS la simple Immense. We
hare Pendants, Decorated Vase, and Common Goods. Low estimates given on Church sod
HaU ChaudeHera.

Wc have added a fine line of

Table

.

Cutlery,

Lanterns, and OU Cana. Your special attention is Invited to the former, as we feel assured that
wc have something that will aulL
.
We keep the celebrated Snow Finke Flour.
Everything New, Freali, nnd Cheap. An examination 'will convince

G. W. FRANCIS.
- I'MACQUAIMTaO WITH TH«

Better Work.

“ What Is worth doing at all. is worth
doing well.” was a motto that adorned
tbe waits of an old academy far away
among the hills, years ago, but the truth
of the adage remains tlic tame, and
never has there been a time when tho
demand for good work, the very best
work that men and women can do, was
greater than now. Systematic order is
the corner-stone of all successful under­
takings. physical, mental or moral, and.
we think we mry add. even spirituaL
What could a man accomplish in his
ord naiy business, or a woman in her
household arrangements, lhat hod no
regard to time, or place, or methocl?
11 *a ,,lt?fallr
truo’ that ,ts connections are all of the principal line*
Our schools are founded on systems.
Our churciuja ara oAiabiished an this
basis. We say, “the system of tho
La Salle, Geneseo, Molino and Rock Island, In Illinois j Davenport, Muscatine,
universe;” f’thc planetary system;”
Waahlncton, Keokuk, Knoxville, Oskaloosa, Fairfield, Dee Moines, West Liberty,
"orler is Heaven's first 'law;” thus
Iowa City, Atlantic, Avoca, Audubon, Harlan, Guthrie Center and Council Bluffs,
proving our constant and unconscious
acknowl* Igment of this fact After the
time is fixed for the doing, and the
place, comes the way thereof, wh ch
should always, everywhere, be the best,
As It is familiarly called, offers to travelers all the advantages and comforts
and whatever we undertake wc should
incident to a smooth track, safo bridges. Union Depots at all connecting points,
study to do it in the best jxisslble way.
Fnst Express Trains, comoosod of COMMODIOUS, WELL VENTILATED, WELL
Consider it for yourselves; pay. atten­
HEATED. F^liELY UPHOLSTERED and ELEGANT OAV COACH£3 ; a line of the
tion; and then go forward and do it,
MOST MAGNIFICENT HORTON RECLINING CHAIR CARS ever built I PULLMAN’S
■hough the heavens fall. If we stop to
latest designed and handsomest PALACE SLEEPING CARS, and DINING CARS
that
are acknowledged by press and people to be ths FINEST RUN UPON ANY
advise with all our friends, first trying
ROAD IN THE COUNTRY, and In which superior meals are served to travelers at
this way, and then that, we will proba­
the low rate of SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS EACH.
bly .fail where we should have succeeded.
THREE TRAINS each way between CHICAGO and the MISSOURI RIVER.
Our business should be to thoroughly
TWO TRAINS each way between CHICAGO ana MINNEAPOLIS and ST. PAUL,
via tho famous
master the thing in hand for ourselves;
then do it in our owr way. If we ever
accomplish Anything of any value wo
must be constant in our endeavor; selfbetween Newport News, Richmond, Cincinnati, Indianapolis and La Fayette,
dc.nying. persistent, turning neither to.
and Council Bluffs, St. Paul, Minneapolis and Intermediate points.
tbe right hand nor the left It was this'
AU Through Passengers carried on Fast Express Trains.
dogged persistence that caused Rich­
For more detailed information, see Maps and Folders, which may bo obtained, ns •
mond to surrender. The most success­
well ns Tickets, at all principal Ticket Offices In the United States and Canada, or of
ful men do not win their victories by
R. R. CABLE,
E. ST. JOHN.
wor.s. We often bear: “O, it’s easy
Vloe-Pree't A^Oen'l Manager,
Oen’t T’k’t A Pasz'r A^t,
to talk!” The. minister knew how easy
CHICAGO.
when he told his congregation to do ns
he sai l, not as he did. Everything
worth having in this world is the price
of some sort of labor. “ Labor not for
the meat that perisheth. but for that
valaablc Kctelng on earth will make bena lay Ilka Sheridan’* C
U» 1 pint toad. aiiA evaryvhara. er acai by mall tor t laltar^Urap
which endureth unto eternal life.”
In the above connection we are led to
consider the value of time, and the reprvhensibility of those who infringe
upon, or waste the time of others.
Something is due to courtesy, and the
maintaining of friendly relations; but
all this requires considerate attention
for others, consideration for their time
and duties. There are people in the
world who never seem tc have anything
to do, and no special object in 'life
They answer to swell, the census ac­
(THE HEALTH BRINGER.)
count; perhaps to educate others in jmtience,* like Illes and mosquitoes; but
LONG KNOWN AS
really such remedies seem worse than
most diseases.
They seem like those PENGELLY’S WOMAN’S FRIEND
people whom a Swedenborgian lady re­
marked "would never come up.
Why Every mother of daughters should
should they? They never did anything
when they were up.” This accordea
health
with an idea of the resurrection, and
we confess to haring some sympathy
with it at certain times.
lioardingaurewa tn oUainlnc a
housc ladies, as a rule, ore great
i test your inn-ntlon la
wasters, not only of their own tune, but
that of others. They seem to regard it
m a something to be disposed of and

Chicago, Rock Island &amp; Pacific R’y,
---- ----------- —..

“GREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE,”

ALBERT LEA ROUTE.

MAKE HENS LAYS

CAN I OBTAIN A PATENT ?

What will a Patent Cost?

T0 81RLS

TO YOVNa LAMES

Ordering Two Coffins.

anxiously, j
*• What have you fellows been putting
in this box?”
(No answer. They slowly retreat)
Evans began making arrangements for
I know you are only trying to fool
the funeral of his wife, and visited tho
establishment of Undertaker Drcis­ BM.”
He thru, ts the key into tbe key-bole.
igacker to select a coffin. The underWith wild shrieks ot alarm half tbe stu­
dents throw themselves on tbe floor, and
min .itea. Finally. tho oftiers dash tc the door and 11 y down

। street he ia informed

•on Milton.

Tbe

ive account for himself.

to be. We bayc no right to -MU our
own time in a just, view of the subject;
but for this we are tbe losers, and must
give an account for ourselves. When
we waste another’s time, we defraud
him of a portion of his property as truly
as if we took a well-filled purse from hb
pocket. Have we a right to exelude air
and sunshine from another, because it is
free to all? Do the moon and the stars
shine for us only? Shall we say to an-

TO OVER-WORKED WOO

Ts Wmii Mrucsd la Life
CEO. E. LEMON,

5 ISSb Nf.. T A'SHINIITON. ». C.

College, once said: “AH true
ust be solitary.” If this be so.
ny true students do we have?

B. PEaaJLLT, M. IX,

*

�.... '—LS.1

TfcEBrwg.
NAMirVIIAJ:.
SATimilAY, - - - DEC. HO, 18*.

uid dhordured look.
Almort over,-Udug which iuut a groi n aurfacs kswium
no* only betittiBg' hut beautiful, in
April cud May. The incipient weeds,
•PRI('H ARDV1LLE.
sven, are oniamfntal, and oiend so with
the generally fresh color of graxs and
foliage that, whether wo relish their ap­
Wooton ia still yety sick. pearance or not, we do npt feel that
Christmas prceenta were slim in these their mere presence offends tho sight
Th* tender-leaved spear-mint ia a pret­
parts.
Carrie Metahot). apont Christinas at ty. tootluome morsel when % ft first
pieroes its way through the roadside
Ban field.
sward in spring; but when August
Mr. and Mrs. Munson have gone to
Illinois to live.
tldv gannentarc. And this coarse, re­
Night meetings ore being held at the pulsive look comes to all the various in­
school house by Rev. S. D. McKee.
truders on the roadside grass-plats in
Gen. nnd Chan. Prichard went to this latar period.
1 confess, when our long, cold win­
Hickory Corners.on business last.Tuesters are over, I feel a .sympathy with
day.
every effort that is made' to »over the
Miuses Rosa and Carrie Bostwick ..of brown, bare earth. 1 can almost giro
Haatiugs spent Christmas at J. E. De­ a sort of lenity to the widespread plan­
lano**. '
tain, and am not so eager to strike the
Frank Edmons and Eddie Reynolds hoe at the root of the persistent bur­
are attending our school, from the Dur­ dock as I am now. . But there are too
many who leave the hoe and scythe al­
fee district.
together alone, so far as concerns the
Myron Emmonn and family from Al­ roadside, and suffer even now. when
legan have moved into the building va­ they are in their worst estate, all man­
ner of unsightly weeds to overrun" the
cated by Ben Toby.
ri. C. Toby has moved from here to roadside lawns. In one place you will
Dowling and we hear he has moved see large patches of tho thick-branch­
ing May-weed; in anothet? such high
from tli^re north. He will bo greatly stalks as the angelica nnd elecampane
spread themselves Into a nearly im­
The '«leigbjng_Ja being improved passable thicket; and even such' pests
by tll,&gt;oung ns well as old; parties as snap-dragon nnd Canada-thistle' are
and (Nmccsin gieat abundance, and all in frequent and shameful occurrence.
Now, it is neither good taste nor good
seem to have good times and enjoy
farming where you can make these ob­
themm-dves.
servations and frame this indictment.
The burning of the Durfee school In fact, k is hard to do good fanning,
house leaves the teacher, Earnest Hay­ and keep your own fields free from
nes without a school. If there is a weed-posts, when your neighbor's road­
school in the county needing a teacher space is made a nursery for every evil­
they will do well to call ou Mr. H., /or tearing seed. The solidarity of'inter­
est between man and man is nowhere
be is au excellent tutor.
tetter illustrated than where care and
We were one of the many who had slovenliness come together on two ad­
Uie fortune to be present at the Christ­ jacent farms. It is even exasperating
man tree at the Johnson church. To to do well when your neighbor barters
say that it was splendid would be to the very enemies you .strive, year by
f ear, to exterminate, nnd. after'giving
slightly represent it. The tree was a
iteral hospital, leaves them-whero tho
large one, reaching to the top of the winds and the elements send them back
church, and was tilled to the- verj top upon you in refreshed battalions.
It
with ‘presents, while lines stretched would seem to be enough to te obliged
across the church were also filled with to tight the evil forces tnomsclves with­
presents. Lights burning behind the out having to encounter human help
leagued in their behalf.
.
tree made everything on it plain to be
So many State legislature have
seen. There were a good many trivial
come to this conclusion that we have
things on the tree and some things, in­ now in nearly every State some law
tended to amuse the crowd; as, for in­ about weeds that only needs to bo en­
stance, a mud turtle for a young lady, forced to compel their destruction on
In this State tho law
half a dozen pipes for a person who every highway.
never smokes, a jumping jack for an­ is sufficiently special and stringent for
every purpose that a law can ‘ fulfill;
other young lady and many other such but, so certain is law not valuable
things, but there were many costly •where public sentiment is itself languid
presents of which the receiver might and slothful on the subject, tho result is
well be proud, In all it was an elegant only partially what one would wish.
affair and any one present could not Where there is village or neighborhood
fad to 4njoy themselves for it was a pride on the subject, the weeds are dis­
posed of without notice of the law,
/gathering intended to be enjoyed. The and whore no one cares the law is not
exercises before tho distribution of the operative.
There is, of course, some reason why
presents-was equal to the latter part.
laws of this kind aro not oasily sus­
Phil Phin.
tained. It is certainly not pleasant to
complain of your near neighbor, who
MAPLE GROVE.
may bo kind and neighborly in every
Merry Christmas party at Ben. Pear­ respect but this; and ono feels that it is
a little in the nature of officiousness to
ces', Monday night.
complain of those who live afar off. If
Wm. Covell and family, spent Christ- you are prompted by a virtuous motive
nnA on Climax prairie.
to do so. your good intention will be
Will Phinesy scent Christman at either misconstrued or set down to some
Elausible ill-suspicion. ‘ At any rate, the
Howell, Livingston county.
iw stands in all its firmness and integ­
Carrie McOmber has returned from
rity, and as I rido along the dusty
L ielie to epend the holidays.
August roads I pfircoive that the weeds
P. Allen, «-f Isabella county, was the stand, too, i» all their ugliness and de­
guest of Wm. Phinisey last week.
formity. The Canada-tmstle seed, in
Geo. Elliston and family of Lacey, large patches, is winged for its flight;
are holidaying in South Maple Grove. the brown spikes of dock are full of
Wm. Archer ha.* returned from Mc­ evil fruitfulness, and a motley of other
Bride* with his health somewhat im­ undesired growths ia strung along the
road borders.
proved.
I suppose if Oscar Wilde hod come
The ladies- mite Mciety of Maple amongst us to uphold an esthetic treat­
will meet at the residence of Mr. and ment of tho landscape he would hardly
Mrs. Clio*. Slade, Friday eve., Jan. 5th. have succeeded In gaining his present
Ed. Mosey is taking lessons on the notoriety, and would no! have won his
violin at Battle Creek of Prof. Martin. estimated $30,000. But the field ia well
worth working on its economical aspect.
Ed. lias got a future before him ii lie
One cannot easily overrate the increased
touches tbe right string, and here is value which a farm or country hou*c
our ear for it he’ll touch ’em.
gains by having ail the approaches to it
The boys chimed tho belle for Ira look neat and thrifty, as against a cor­
Cummins, Saturday night. Each one responding one where the roadways ore
played their part well. They had met deformed ny every careless and pestifer­
ous growth. A clean lawn is itself a
twice previous to this and played just mantle of beauty and a badge of value;
enough to get cigars. The better half and where the whole domestic land­
wm absent, hence the Saturday night scape Is kept in a conspiracy to this end
performance. Thia is a noted troupe the township and neighborhood at once
bnt they seldom play mon? than one rise is value and popular estimation.
A correspondent of a prominent Bos­
night in a place.
ton paper has lately described a model
Nuze Balmer.
Massachusetts town where every man’s
MORE ITEMS.
door-yard frontage fins teen put in con­
spicuous healthy rivalry with its Heigh­
Another heir at Sam. Miller's.
Concert last Sunday at the Evangeli­ ten It is impossible to find a piece of
litter either on the street or lawn. It
cal church.
J. K. Smith has gone north to buy is all as if it were ‘ swept Before he
thought he carelessly threw away an
him a farm.
abandoned card on the sidewalkj but
Mr. Whitneys father and mother are
this seemed at once auch an offense he
visiting him.
Kicked it up and tossed it further oS.
Charles Slade is laid np witherysipe;. L was still out of place, nnd ho threw
Its in his feet.
it in the roadway itself. Even there it
Mr. Woodward formerly of this place eluded him, and was so glaring he was
is here on a visit.
’
compelled to go and pocket it for a more
' Mr*. L. B. Potter has been quite sick, ignoble and secret destruction and bur­
but is on the gain now.
ial.’ The neatness and thrift of tho
■ Enoch Andruss is to teach the Quail street pierced his conscience and made
Trap school this winter.
him seem a solitary and dreadful of­
Miirrv H&lt; nderson’s sister Jennie, of
fender. What a beneficent mission it
AnguxtH, is making him a visit.
Mr. Myron Pennock spent Christmas would prove if several hundred country
residents in evenr county to-day could
with friends at Hickory Corners.
George Pearce has been unable to at­ spend a week in Stockbridge, Massachu­
tend schiMi! for tbe past two weeks. - setts!—Joel Benlon, in Christian Union.
Rnsael Slade has a sister visiting him.
Mra Elisa Frazer of Memphis, Mich.
—There ia a proverb in England that
Mr. Charles Bnile i* making preperations to build a brick house next sum­ ••a white willow-tree will bay the
owner a home before other trow will
mer.
Mr. and Mra. Green of Oakland coun­ pay for the saddle.’* The wood of thia
ty ore visiting relative* in Mnple Groye tree is highly regarded there, no other
and Amyria.
x
Albert Green., one of the boys that
went nortn to work, has sent home for end will bear more poundingand knocks
money. He has ft broken arm and the than any other English wood. .It is
used extensively for cricket-bate floats
dlpthfria.
The U, B. Sunday atihool elected the for paddle-wheels, brake-blocks on ears.
following officer* last Sunday: Horace
Dixon Supreininndent, Bery MrKerby
tuumcHiit, M«ry E. Gny.Hecretary, J. D.
Guy, Trcaaurrr, Aggie Dixon cholstar.
The following families celebrated
Cliiiatru** with CiirMtnas tree and dwg
'dinin***: Frank Quick, Chart** Slade.
—There is one firm in St Louis which
D. P. Wolf. Fred Q .kk.uhd E. G. I’m- convert* 1,400 barrelso: flour into crackter. Tlw'present.* on the tree ummhirc-

k

UkM.»L*OOi int­

।

-

-HURRA
B E Td

1ST O-V E

LARGER
MONTH.

Have

ITN

Done

OTTT2,

BAE&amp;AIKS
and

It

DRESS

Will

Continue

BA1&amp;AIITS
GOODS

to

Do

It.

tbe'rtnct wfcX “iu?rtodp‘te, o'n®^

MOTIONS

BARGAINS
In Hoots, Shoe*,

and Ca-ps.
rtlirfotii newspaper ever pul
Chrfalfanit y U andilatcd with c

In Horse Blankets, Lap Robes, and Comfortables.

As the season advances we find our stock moving off finely, and the visitors to our stare tell
us that our Large Stock and Lo'w Prices are what is bringing us the
largest trade in town.
A single Fact is worth a slyp-load of Argument. Our stock of Cloaks, Dol­
mans, and Overcoats for Men and Boys, is, beyond the shadow of a doubt,
the largest and most desirable to be found in the town.

^’Butter, Eggs, and Dried Apples Wanted.
THE COUNTY.

CUT SHOWING THE SIMPLICITY OF THE

Tbe dow M. E. church of_ Maple
Grove, will be dedicated ou tho 11th of ffiE
of Jan. Sermon by Rev. H. M. Joy of 2
Grand Rapids, at. 10} a. m.
।
The Hastings Banner Bays the grain I “
deotera of that town have not refnaed | co
to take grown wheat and that that pa- 2E
per has not stated that they refused to.:
We think the misunderstanding among :
the farmers grewout of a recent article |

if you almdy know Ta* 8cX, yoa
thUlplWJ ft fa ■ Hille better than

•nd imaglaation, a nafa«tey for tb« &lt;*om of hoae*t Kovernn&gt;ct&gt;t.a tenUoel far xannlae .JcflVtwnfat,
Dra»oeTary,a »eaurge for wlckednon of «v«ry
•pec!e«, anl an uncommonly good Investment for
Un coming year.

MMtpald, aa rtUowa :
DAILY—Meant* a u«
dar edition, ST.70.
SUNDAY—Eight pagea; &lt;1 JO a year.
WEEKLY-11 . year. Eight tMgn

1. W. ENGLAND. Publfabw,

Probate Order.

in the Home Journal. Tho Hastings
dealers will continue to buy grown
wheat
■»
County Grange of Barry county will IO
hold its next meeting with the Glass
Creek Grange, nt their ball in the C3
It combines all the tried and proven merit* of ■all other machines with none of their disad­
(ownship of Rutland on Friday, Jan.
vantages.
5th at 10 a. m. All members who have
3.1 »ca and pul then. In one grand comroceived’the 4th degree, are cordially
Li ah teat Running machine yet offered.
invited to attend. After the regular
order of business has been disposed of,
the following questions will be con­
i r&lt;or mieniro, ina u«e urown 111 perieci ara-jouiuicin oi ot.
sidered * 1, Should our daughter* re­
E. R. WHITE, Agt., at Kocher Bros.
ceive the same compensation for labor
as our sons if equally an well perform­
It is said there will be a fine display iteen went through the front of his cap.
ed ; 2, Are the benefits derived from of Eaton county poultry at the poultry
The adjourned meeting held on Sat­
our organization satisfactory for the
sacrifices we have made to secure them; and fat stock association, meeting at urday evening last to ascertain the
qause of the annual increase of taxes
8. Is a protective tarift detrimental to Marshall, January 11th, 1888.
the beat interests of the agriculturist.
Some men in Brookfield have long in Charlotte was well attended by bus­
A. Parker, Secretary.
faces. Orders from headquarters have iness men and those especially inter­
cut the stave and heading bolt business ested in the payment of taxes. It was
EATON COUNTY.
short, and they are out of a winter's shown that taxes in the city were about
forty per cent, higher than any pre­
oh.
Saw-logs in demand at ’’otterville.
The Charlotte schools have been vious year. It also appeared as though
Chester is to have a table-leg factory. chosen to furnish samples of tbe work much more money had been levied as
Eaton Rapids taxes are $13,000 this •done under that system for the en- taxes than was actually needed. Two
year.
committees of five business men wore
lightmcnt of a -Nevada town.
Charlottans saw “Esmeralda,” this
Two couples called on a Charlotte appointed to investigate the matter,
mfoistor, last week, to get married; hut both as regards the school fund and
The Valley House, Charlotte, has re­ after the first couple were bound with generaijfund. They will report at
opened.
hymens’ golden halter, bride No. 2 some su sequent meeting.
Kennedy, the mesmerist,'» operating backed out.
nt Clfsrlotte.
*
President Garfield’s physicians say
W. H. Griffin of Carmel, has a twoA gambler operated at Eaton Rap­ year-old colt that stands eighteen they would rather wait 100 yean for
ids last week.
the
amount of their claims than to cut
hands high, weighs 1,460 pounds, and
A Charlotte man w buying sheep is a bright bay, well proportioned and them down one-half and receive tbe
there to take to Texas. *
money
an once. No doubt the govern­
good looking.
Mra. Dwight Curtiss of Charlotte,
A. M. Cheney is to present a granrf ment can stand it if they can.
A Newbury parrot, which had been
died on Thursday ot last week.
concert at Charlotte, the first week in
Anson Harmon of Charlotte, raised the New Year; Boston and Oberlin in one family for ove&lt; fifty years, died
25,000 cabbages this year.
Conservatory talent assisting. Oh ! it’s last week. It was a great relief to the
family when the bird died, if he bad
Rural school district literary socie­ going to be bon ton*
ties are thick in Eaton county.
ever gut out of the house alive, there
Senator Pennington will introduce a
would have been tbe richest dish of
An excellent new grist mill will soon
bill to regulate local freight traffic on
gossip that ever delisted the good
be running at Eaton Rapids.
Michigan railroads into the legislature.
Miss Cornelia Brown of Kalamo. has
people of Newberyport.
That's l&gt;ecn done repeatedly; the last
“You say your wife gets mad and
gone to Laramie count?*; California.
time by a republican senator from
raises a row f” “I should say she did.
R. D. Wheaton of Charlotte, has
Calhoun.
She make* enough fuss to run a freight
erected twenty-live bridges this year.
At Bellevue the question of building train four miles an hour.” “But if you
Maybe the Grand Trunk road will re­
move its Charlotte depot to the cross­ an engine house and town hall agitate knew she was in the habit of getting
the
public mind, the town and tho vil­ mad, why did you marry her !” “Be­
ing.
Mra. B. Gage of Bellevue recently lage each to pay half.—Duel A. Anson cause if I had held back she would
dned
3,000 bushels of apples, this sea­ have cot mader than ever.”
killed her baby by an overdose of land­
son.—Josephus Lane and wife celebrat­
num.
MARRIAGES.
ed
their
silver wedding last Saturday
Thecounty agricultural society meets
Smith—Aftloman.—In Nashville, Dec- 22, by
at Charlotte the 30th, to get some new evening. *
Rev. P. Holler. D. L. Smith and Mfas L. B.
Horatio Higgins, near Bellevue, is
officers. '
Applemao. of Natiivillc.
Dan. Farrah of Chester, and Cora both fanner and wood-worker. Tbe Matteson—Mates.—At the residence of tbe
bride's parent* tn Kalamo, Dec. 25th, by Rev.
Nichols, of Carmel, were married re­ tilling season being naased, he is now
P. J, Maveety. Charles E. Matteson of Belle­
turning out about one thousand han­
cently.
vue and Mia* Carrie A. Mapes of Kalamo.
A company to manufacture the A. R. dles a day, and finding ready sale for ■ Gordon—Fkigbxbr.—Mr. George W. Gordon
!
of
Gratiot
Gratlot county and Mist
Mte* HerietU FeigbMoore patent land-roller has been or­ more than he can make. Let’s- see, a!
of Noh ville Dec. 281b.
thousand handles a day. The Garotte
ganized at Charlotte.
A Charlotte man raised 588 bushels says, f‘big bnsineM.”
MAKE YOUR
Down at Eaton Rapids, tbe other day,
of Marrow pea beans on eighteen acres

of Barry, bolder, at the Probate Ofliea in the City
HastingsJu aaid county, on Wadmaday, Ibe »
day of NoTenber, in the year one tttMisai
eight hundred sod eighty-two.
Present. Clement Bmith. Judge of Probate.
I
of GEOBOK OIL! 1

be dfach»r**&lt; from bit raid trurt.
Thereupon tt la ordered that

cd In said exUU. are required to appear a*, a »realof aald Court, then to be hoi Jen at tbe Probate &lt;
flee, ia Un otty of Halting*, in aaid county, am
•how cause, if any there be, why tbe prayer of ash
petitioner thouId nol bo granted.
«
I. I.

•aid day at l;e*rtn&lt;.
J A true copy.)

CLEMENT SMITH

,
florfgHge Sale.
Default haying been made in tho comllU*
executed br Ad* T. Lee to Albert W. O’
October Ifldi, 1875, and recorded In the office
regihter of deeds in and for Barry county, Mllg*n, on October 31st, 1875, tn liber 8 of mr
gsge* at page 880, which aald mortgage wa*
Baid Old&amp;,on September 17.1878, aevlgned t
ram R. Dickinaomand ar1-' —---------------December 10th, 1 STS. rec
the offict
register of deeds for Ban
Uber 10of mortgage* ou
----... .
mortgage there Is at this dale claimed to *
due On* Thousand Four Hundred and Sever !
Eight Dollar*, and do suit or proceedi ng I
law having been instituted to recover the a
or any pan thereof, notice f* therefore gi
I
lhat ouMondaV, the 20th day of March neJ
'
ten o'clock tn the forenoon,! shall sell at pu .
auction to the highest bidder, at north front c •
of the Barry countv court-house in the citv
Hasting*, the premutes described in said n.
gage or so much thereof as ahall lie nccei*ai
to satisfy the amount due oo such mortgage,
with ten per cent interest and legal cnata.
The premise* to l&gt;e sold as above referred
are descrilicd in said mortgage as follows, n
wit: Commencing at the center poet on sect ]
thirty-six, in township three north, of ra. I
seven west, in Barrr county, Mich., runni I
thence south with the quarter Hoc thirty &lt;■ J
and U5-100tha rods to a post, thence west n I
parallel with the north line of aaid quarter t J

margin of the Grand River Valley Ralln 1
thence north*** along lhe margin aforr&gt; &gt;
twenty-seven rods to a Blake on the north I
of said quarter, thence with said Hue ten i
86-lOOths rods to tbe place of beginning, ■ !
talnlng alx acres.
Dated HaaUnga. Nov. 30th. 1882.
11-38
HIRAM ILDICKJN6ON
AMlgnce of said mor* .
Clbmemt Smith, Attorney for assign-

LEGfiEDWHEAj
N more grown wheat will be ground a*
NaahviUe mJ).
I have found it impossible to make ri|
flour for those who have good wheat If I j 1
grists of grown wheat.
There fa no mill, old

a man hired a four-horse team and
took the school children outnding, and
,11MB, ••
a couple of other men, not to be out­
done, got a six-horse team and
lot of married women a ride. Great
A HOLIDAY PRESENT.
town, that Eaton Rapids; “awful nice
miller can make good flour of grown w
town,” tbe ladies say.
year’s subscbiftion TO
The Sevastopol lyceum is ambitious
but quite practical withal. Recently
they discussed the proposition that la­
bor-saving machines are detrimental
to the laboring classes, and next they
will try their heads on the statement Would be a most suitable present,
Robert Davidson lire* at Bellevue, that the President was not justified in and prove a weekly reminder t •
such friend of your esteem and
and a log rolled against hif leg^ last removing Postmaster Ainger.
friendship.
A short time since “BiRy” Sturdevant
week, and broke one bone near the
of East Roxand was loading a doubleankle.
'
Elisha Shephard and Curtis &amp; Benneti barreled shotgun, wWn pas of the barare preparing to burn charcoal on al,
__ _ was
______
____ the
___
। j rcls
discharged,
charge pasting_
farm of thelra near Charlotte. They ! through h&gt;« hand near the thumb joint,
have orders for 5000 tons.
' Several shot struck his face, and seven |
OHO BTBOIQ. FnHtahr.

this year, and sold them for $1,108.
The various temperance organisa­
tions of Charlotte have formed a repre­
sentative reunion, and will hold a series
of meetings.
U. B. revived at South Walton, and
Free Methodist one at Hoytsville; and
tbe latter place will open with dub
dances the 20th.
•
F. W. Waterbury of Convis, and
Lucy M. Jenksof Bellevue.wcre recent­
ly married, with lots of presents and

DISTANT FRIEND

T^e2ttrw£

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                <text>&lt;strong&gt;The Hastings Public Library wishes to thank Smith Imaging of Rockford, MI for their work digitizing the Nashville News.&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Library also wishes to thank the Nashville Michigan Historical Society for their generous support in underwriting all digitizing expenses to have the Nashville News scanned into PDFs.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The Nashville News is one of the oldest newspapers in Barry County, MI. All copies held by the Hastings Public Library have been scanned to PDF for easy public access. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Available years cover 1873 - 1966.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Note some years are incomplete while others are missing (1942-1943).&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;strong&gt;See &lt;a href="https://www.barrycountyhistoryportal.org/files/original/676/How_To_Use_Online_Newspapers_8x11.pdf" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;How to Use Online Newspapers&lt;/a&gt; for more information about using and searching online newspapers.&lt;/strong&gt;</text>
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